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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pc u...-oy, 0., Nov. 9, 1971

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By United' Press Inlematlooal
LEGHORN , ITALY- A MILITARY spokesman said that all
52 persons aboard were presWiled killed when a British RoyaL Air
Force transport crashed into the Tyrrhenian Sea shortly after
takeoff today. The craft carried 46 Italian paratroopers and a six·
man British crew.
MANILA - PRESIDENT FERDINAND E. Marcos suffered
a major reverse today in the Philippine eJections. The opposition
Liberal party elected a mayor of Man.;a and a majority of the
eight senate seats on the ballot.
CAIRO - THE INFLUENTIAL CAIRO newspaper AI Ahram
reported today that Egypt has chosen to delay for two weeks the
U.N. General Assembly debate on the Middle East. It said the
government wished to allow more time for four African leaders to
seek to accomplish their peace mission. The African olficials left
for home Monday after a week of conversations in Israel and
Egypt, but they pledged lo come back tmer next week for more
talks.
.
BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND - A BRfTISH Army
source said today that 38 persons had been arrested in Belfast, a
number of them on the army's "wanted list" of Irish Republican
Army suspects. A seven-hour search was carried out Monday
night and today in the embattled Roman Catholic Turf Lodge
region of the capital .
CLEVELAND - STATE SCHOOL Superintendent Martin
Essex today proposed a four point program to provide fiscal
stability fo r Ohio schools. Essex, in remarks prepared lor the
annual meeting of the Ohio School Boards Association, recom·
mended :
- A unifo rm property tax collected by the state and
redistributed to local schools; - Adoption of a progressive income tax for both industry and individuals; - Continuation of the
"continuing levy " which does not have to be renewed
periodically, - Further school redistricting to provide greater
economy and greater educational opportunities in Ohio school
districts.
"A uniform basic tax rate of about 20 mills collected by the
state and redistributed to the local schools on a per capita basis
would counteract the wide discrepancies in the ability ol Ohio
school districts to support their schools," said Essex.
WASHINGTON- HERE IS HOW Ohio U. S. Representatives
•·oted Monday when the House, by a 240 to 162 roll call, failed to
· &gt;rove a proposed amendment to the nation's constitution that
would have permitted voluntary prayer or mediation in public
places such as schools. A two-thirds majority of those voting, or
268, was required for approval. Ohio has 7 Democrats, 17
Republicans.
Democrats for , Carney, Hays; Democrats against, Ashley,
Seiberling, James Stanton, Stokes and Yanik; Republicans for ,
Ashbrook, Betts, Bow, Brown, Clancy, Devine, Harsha, Keating ,
Latts, Miller, Minshall, Powell and Wylie ; Republicans against,
McCulloch, Mosher and Whalen ; Republicans not voting, J.
William Stanton .
COLUMBUS -THE HOUSE SCHEDULED a vote for later
today on a package of $832 million worth of net new taxes, including an increase in the state sales tax from four to 5'h pet .
House Republicans scheduled a caucus for 11:30 a.m., preceding
the floor session by one-half hour.
The tax package, designed to fmance new spending in a
proposed $8.1 billion two-year budg~t, was approved Monday
night by a joint House-Senate conference committee on a 4-2 vote
along party line~. with Republicans supporting it. House Speaker
Claarles F. Kurfess, R-Bowllng Green, who has expressed a
preference lor an income tax, said he would reveal how he will
vote when he polls his caucus prior to the session .

••,.,••·

·X•'•'

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:~~=~

Mn. O!arles Kessiuger Pomi!I'Oy Eighth Distrlet :~;:;~ .
.
.
:·i~:·
Ide 1
t'
S nd '
th =:&lt;:::: COLUMBUS(UPI)-Approval lederalvocahonaleducalioncon- minimum standards for elemen- schools in Ohio. All fall below
1
1
1
·::;::·: pres n , was gues spes er u ay even ng a
e :·:·:···
.
d
.
·
th 1
t to
tary schools, as well as 10 Sev- \he · minimum required enroll;:;:,
.;: v 1
D dinn h ted by p lo p 1 78 A 1 :~;:~; o1 vocallona1 an specaa 1 edu- slrucllon grants, e arges
08
05
0
08
;::~;: e erans ay
er
mer •.an .~;;;;;; calion classroom units was giv- he $3.9 million to . the Parma en til-Day Adventist elementary ' ment of 60 students.
:;:~:; Legion Auxiliary·
:;:;:;:;: en Monday by the. Ohio Board City Schools for additions to two
00
11
i!i!~!
Mrs. Kessinger spoke
demouacy and what :;!:!:!:! of Education here.
high schools, Parma Senior and
m~ means to each Individual. Alllo reeogalzed following the :\~:!:!: The board action, according Valley Forge.
j:~';:; potluck dinner was Mrs. Osby Martin, departemental ;j:;:;:; to Martin Essex, state superin_ Granted Cleveland City
)!!!§ ehapeau, Ejghl and Forty, and hospital dlreelor for the :!i:!:l tendent of schools, will provide , Schools $1.7 million to establish
j;;;;~ American Legion Auxiliary. Both were presented gifts.?,:;;~ an increase of 9.1 per cent in a training facility for persons
'!t:~ Mrs. Everet'l Bates, visiting at the home of Mrs. Martin, :ii:!~ special education units and an preparing for employment in the
';:;:;:; accompanied her to the meeting.
;:;:;::~ increase of 11.5 per cent in vo- air transport industry. The new
:::::::
Presented by the American Legion were reporta on :~t:l cational education units over facility will be constructed at
.;:;:;:; membership and contributions to the Gifts for the Yanks. ;:;:;:;~ levels of the 197().71 school Burke Lakefront Airport to
!!l Following the dinner there was group singing of World '!!~!:!: year .
serve 300 students. ,
;:;:;:( War I songs.
!~;:!::
Esse• said a unit is basical- Approved a grant of $240,:;:;:;:,
.. :,:,:::: ly a lulltime instructor of a 625 lor renovation and expan:ft:m:~:!:!:::::H:!~!:t!:!~!ff~!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:~!:!::i:!:!:!:!:!:!t=::;;::::::::::t::!t!!::::::::::!!i!!!!i!!!:!!!:!::::::: . class or an individual provid- sions of facilities in the Canton
ing personal services. Special City Schools lor teaching cosme'&lt;:::=:;;::,:;~~~,:;.-,~:~,,,:,:,:,:,::&lt;:::,:::::::::,::::::::::::::::::: educa lion units provide ass is- to logy, welding, sheetmetal, dis12nce to handicapped children tributive education , job training
while vocational units provide homeeconomics,commericalart
career preparation to students. and occupational work experi- .
The board also approved the ence.
reorganization of 29 one-man
- Voted to grant a charter
area coordinators' offices into to the Wayne Trace Local School
Meigs County dairymen are
16 two-man offices, effective District in Paulding County, a
invited to participate in the
Jan. I. Essex said the reorgan- district of 1,600 students comDairyman's Vacation and
ization would save money in prised of the former Blue Creek, .
Nutrition Tour this week,
COLUMBUS {UPI) - The rent, utilities and secretarial Grove Hill and Payne Local
Friday and Saturday, Nov. 12 head of the Stale Employes
and 13, planned by the Ex- Union said today Its 11,000 services amounting to $233,000 School Districts.
· -Gran ted a charter to a nontension Service in neighboring state workers would walk off for the biennium .
In other action during Mon- public school, Agnon Elem~nGallia County . It is open to their jobs Monday morning if
tary School, in Pepper Pike in
dairy farmers, their wives, they do not receive pay as day 's meeting, the board :
Voted
to
consider
the
reCuyahoga
County.
agribusiness men, and others scheduled Friday.
vocation of the charter ol Jef- Approved enlargement of
interested in dairying in Ohio,
Hershel Sigal~ president of ferson High School, one of five the Gallia County Joint VocaWest Virginia and Kentucky. the American Federallon of
HANESET'I T·shlrts
high
schools
in
the
Ohio
Valley
tional
School
District
Board
of
The lour group will be Slate, County and Municipal
You can wash them and
traveling by private car, Employes Union said the Local School District (Adams Education from five to seven
wash them and
wash them. And
lea ving Gallipolis at 7 a.m., walkout would not be a strike Coun ty), for failure to meet members.
nW\leroussl2teminimumstandApproved
appointment
ol
they'll still feel good .
Fnday morning and be back in because the employes have
ards
.
Dr.
Robert
Lucas,
superintenThey're
made ol fully
Gallipolis Saturday evening by no obligation to continue
combed cotton that keeps
Approved
four
requests
for
dent
of
the
Princeton
City
9 p.m . Farmers lo he visited
1ts shape. And reinforced
working without salary.
Schools, to the State Advisory
include H. B. Owens, Homerwhere it counts, to resist
"There Is no requirement
Council on Vocational Educaville, Ohio ; Homer Hange, for people lo work when
sagging
. Small, medium,
VICA TO MEET
tion
.
large,
extra
large.
Spencer, Ohio; Be-De-Be Farm, there's no requirement for
The Vocational Industrial
Allocated
$10,433
in
federal
Wellington , Ohio; Art Crocker, the state to pay them," Sigall Clubs of America (VICA) Meigs
lunds to three school districts :
Woos ter, Ohio : and Wayne
Chapter,
at
Meigs
High
School
said.
Lancaster, $5,600; McComb LoSpeect, Dover , Ohio.
" As the present situation will elect officers Wednesday at cal in Hancock County, $2,836;
All Meigs County farmers and exists there will be no pay for 7 p.m. al the high schooL 01wives interested should call the employes on Friday," he ficers of the VICA club at and Northridge Local in LickDouble-Panel Briefs
E•tension Office for further said. "And should that Lancaster will install the new ing County, $1,996.
Give him perfect comfort.
- Extended two construction
details. The only cost will be situation renlaln, I will In· officers. Refreshments 'will be
Hanes briefs have
...
reinforced seams and a
motel room, meals and a share · struct local unloas throughout served . The public is invited . contracts totalling $526,396 with
.
the
Wayne
County
Joint
Vocascientific cut - for gentle
of the travel expenses, ac- Ohio to cease and desist their
honal
Sc
hoo
l
District
until
support all day long. The
cording to C. E. Blakeslee, employment. "
elastic
wa1stband is heat
March
I,
1972.
The
extension
WORKER HURT
county Extension agent.
resistant.
so the comfort
The New Haven E-R squad was reportedly necessary he·
lasts
longer.
Sizes 28 to
was called to the Foote Mineral cause an extensive community
MRS. WILL DIES
DRIVER INJURED
Mrs. Patricia Will, Syracuse, Plant today for Kenneth Gilkey, survey delayed the architect's
A car was a tol21 loss and its
lirst plans.
driver was taken to Holzer was found dead in bed this 22, New Haven, who was injured
- Granted reimbursement,
Medical Center at 6:30 a.m. morning at her Syracuse when metal fell on him. He was pending approval of a biennial
Tuesday. Pomeroy Police Chief residence. Olficials reported taken to Pleasant Valley budget by the General AssemJed Webs te r said that vehicle dea th was due to natural Hospil21 by the squad, treated bly, lor preparation of teachers
dnven by Doy Nitz, Lincoln causes. Funeral arrangements and released.
for handicapped children. UnivHeights, was coming down will be announced by Ewing
.
ersi ties to receive the reimburseLincoln Hill when his brakes Funeral Home.
YUM, YUM, YUM
ment funds include Akron Univgave way . The vehicle struck a
There will be a chicken and -"9'ity, $6,000 ; Kent State, $20,·
tree. Nitz was taken to the
spare nb . barbecue at the 000; Ohio State, $150,000; and
LOCAL TEMPS
Ewing Funeral Home by the
Temperature in downtown Chester Fare House Sunday Ohio University, $15,800.
Pomeroy E-R squad and
sl&lt;lrtang at 11 a.m. Homemade
- Exempted the Washington
transferred to an ambulance for Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m. ace cream wtll also be available. Elementary school in the Swil·
transportatiOn to the Medical was 38 degrees under cloudy The event is sponsored by the zerlandofOhioLocalSchoolDisskies.
Center.
Chester Fire Department.
trict in Monroe County, from • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -

Elberfelds·In .Pomeroy
Give Him

Comfort
from

Hanes

Meigsites Can
Also Take Tour 11,000 State
This Weekend Workers Will
Walk

6ft Jobs ·

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Hills and Marina Del Rey Hotel, Inc., both in California;
Stratojet of Indianapolis; and
British Frontier General Assurances, Ltd., o[ Nassau, the Ba·
ham as.
Arrested last weekend were
Charles Cornet, a Las Vegas

promoter; Marvin G. Douglas,
44, a Tarzana, Calif., real esl&lt;lle broker; and James L. Ladd,
48, Long Beach, Calif., a Las
Vegas insurance broker.
Still at large today were T.
Sharron Jackson, 49, Sherman
Oaks, Calif., founder and president ol the Baptist Foundation; John Danyluk, 37, Palos
DINNER PLANNED
The Middleport Pentecostal Verdes Peninsula, Calif., a toy
Church, South Third Ave., manufacturer and loan broker ;
Middleport, will hold a public Herman "Nat" Rosenberg, 47, a
chicken and noodle dinner
Saturday from noon until6 p.m.
al the building next door to the
church. Cost is $1.25 a person ,
including pie. For free
deliveries of dinners, residents
Joseph London, 63, Syracuse,
may call 992-2502 or 992-0042
died Monday at Holzer Medical
before 9 a.m. Saturday.
Center. Mr . London was
preceded in death by his
PTA TO MEET
The November meeting of the parents, Joe and Molly Quillen
Bradbury PTA will be held at London . He was a member ol
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the the Syracuse Nazarene Church .
.Mr. London is survived by his
school.
wife, Louise; a daughter,
Maxine Varian, Syracuse; a
grandso n, Robert Joseph
shop now
Varian,
Syracuse; two sisters,
for... ·
Mrs. William Dye and Mrs.
Ralph Roush, both of New
Haven ; one brother, Mayor
Herman London of Syracuse;
one half-brother, Fred Quillen,
Toledo ; three half-siters, Mrs.
George Hood, Poca, W. Va .;
• Cards
Mrs. William Birtcher, Toledo,
• Wrap
and Mrs. Clarence Stillwagner,
• Candles
Wooster.
now on display. , •
Funeral services will he held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
WE INPHINT TOO!t
Funeral Home with the Rev. M.
. C. Larimore officiating . Burial
will be in Letart Cemetery.
41 8 MAIN ST. PT. PLEASANT
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

Joseph wndon
Died Monday

.Hallmark

City Card Shop ·

Downing-Childs ·Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

"

'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE • BONDS
.MUTUAL FUNDS

Meigs County's Oldest and La~
Insurance Agency

ACCEPTING THE GOODYEAR AWARD lor Horace Karr for outstanding farm practices
Tuesday night was Carl Bilikam, left. Presenting the award was Franklin Rizer, Goodyear
representative.

ABOVE, RIGHT, mEREoN JOHNSON AND HAROW
CARNAHAN ,1-r, congratulate the guest speaker, Floyd Heft,
Chief of Ohio Soil and Water District, Department of Natural
Resources, at the annual Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District (SWCD) dinner. Johnson is chairman of the Meigs
SWCD board of supervisors. Carnahan was master of
ceremonies.
ABOVE, RECEIVING THE MEIGS SOIL and Water
Conservation District, SWCD, award presented by the Meigs
board of supervisors for outstanding farm practices were
Jim Meredith, left, and . Earl Cross. The awards were
pr~sented at the annual SWCD dinner held Tuesday night at
Salisbury elementary school.

Environment Involved
Environment, how it can he
impro ved, and how the Meigs
County Soil and Water Conservation District is · directl~·
involved, was the topic Tuesday
evening of a top Ohio Conservationist on the occasion of
the 28th annual Meigs Soil and
Water Cons ervati on District
banquet.

Floyd Heft, chief of the Ohio that no deaths have been
Soil and Water District, reported from the use of DDT.
Department
of Natural He believes it is the duty of the
Resources, also reviewed SWCD te keep the public inpositive and negative aspects of formed of major problems in
the much-maligned pesticide, the use of pesticides.
DDT. He said :
, Serving as master of
"Both must be weighed to see ceremonies was Harold Carwhich has the greater effect, nahan . Re-elected as supervisor
(Continued on page 16)
posi tive or negative." He said

•

Now You Know
In 1965 the aluminum indus·
lry rescinded price increases

Weather
Mostly sunny in afternoon.
Highs in 40s and lower 50s.
Clear and cold tonight. Lows in
,20s to lower 30s. Mostly sunny
and warmer Thursday. Highs in
upper 40s to mid 50s north an~
upper 50s to lower 60s south

under admin istration pressure.

1

Trickery Indictments Brought In
WASHINGTON 1UP!)- A
IHkoun l secret indictment has
been ret urn ed by a lederal
grand jury in Toledo, Ohio,
against nine men, three companIes and a religious foundation ,
charging them with attemptin~
to bilk the Progress National
Bank of Toledo of $720,000.
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell said Monday the indictment was returned last
Wednesday. He said three of the
suspects ha ve been arrested, another is already in prison and
five others are still at large .
The indicirnent charged the
suspects with conspiring to bilk
the Toledo bank by obtaining
funds by fraudulent representations of the value of collateral,
false sta tements on loan applications and with making lalse
financial statements of borrowers.
Namedwerethe Baptist Foundation ol America , Inc., Be~ly

Units Ap·proved.

DAMAGE MINOR
Minor damages were incurred at 9:30a.m. Tuesday on
South Fifth Ave. in Middleport
when a pickup truck driven by
Lawren~e E. Darst, Pomeroy,
backed an to a parked car owned
by Dorothy Baker ol Mid·
dleport. No charge was filed.
LODGE TO MEET
Election of officers will be
held at '1 :30 p.m. Wednesday
when While Rose Lodge meets
.at the American Legion Hall in
'Middleport. Members afe to
bring rituals.

Van Nuys, Cali!., loan broker;
James H. McConnell, 36, a St.
Petersburg, Fla., broker ; and
James H. Dondich, 38, a Las
Vegas used car dealer and promoter.
Already in prison is John E.
Morgan, 46, Los Angeles.
All also are accused of mis·
applying bank funds and intersl&lt;lte transportation of property
obl2ined by fraud and mail
fraud.

Outlook Meeting

Planned Nov. 17
Meigs Counly Agri-Business
leaders are invited to attend an
" Agri-Business Outlook
Meeting" for the Jackson Area
to be held at Rio Grande College
on Wednesday, Nov. 17.
This meeting is designed
especially for
farmers,
representatives of farm
marketing,
supply
and
processing firms, including
feed, fertilizer, seed and farm
machinery dealers, P.C .A.,
F.H .A. and F.L.B .A. folks,
bankers, ASCS and SCS, and
any other downtown business
people who can attend.
Dr. Wally Barr, Extension
Economist,
Ohio
State
University, will he the speaker.
Dr . Barr is nationally
recognized lor his work in the
areas ol economic policy and
public affairs.
The program will start
promptly at 5 p.m. in the
recrea tion room of Moulton Hall
of Rio Grande College. The
group will go through the
cafeteria line at Rio Grande so
the only cost will he the cost lor
your meal.

MEIGS THEAIR£
TONIGHT ONLY

Ross H,unter's
AIRPORT
t Technlcotorl

One

admission only,

"G"

Sl

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; 'thursday

Nov. 10-11

NOT OPEN

VOL. XXIV NO. 147

Tlw Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1971

County Supt. of Sch ools
Rober t Bowen proposed
Tuesday night at Eastern High
School that the Eastern School
Board and the County Board of
Education meet jointly to seek
an amica ble solution to the
problem ol 15 students who at
the end of this school term will
1 !ver t to Eastern District.
The superintendent, meeting
with the Eastern Board,
reviewed the problem to dale,
disclosing that at least "several
parents" met recently with the
coun ty board seekin g reliet·
from a ruling that their children
will have to attend Eastern next
year.
The 15 students who live in the
Eastern District were attending
schools in the Meigs District
when il was discovered recently
that they did not actually live in
the Meigs District. The Eastern
Board has re leased the 15 to the

Meigs District, but only for the The efforts are now being possibly different course of
rest of the current school year. directed toward setting a action at the end of this year. No
~.· ··
date was set for a joint meeting
.,
between the Meigs Cojnty
Tickets on Sale
Board and the Eastern Board.
In other matters, the Eastern
Fans are urged to
at
the
Rutland Board accepted the high bid of
obtain tickets at once
Department Store in Edwin Davis and
for the 1971 banquet
Rutland, and from the ville,' on two:schoolltit~i't
ned Tuesday evening
Meigs High School new bus to replace those being
at 6:30 honoring the
oHice, Rock Springs. sold already has arrived and a
second new bus is expected to
Meigs High School
Air
Force
General
arrive in two weeks.
Marauder
football
James
Hartinger,
a
The board passed a resolution
team. Priced at $2.50,
native of Middleport, in support of the Right to Read
they are available at
Program and accepted the
will be the speaker.
the New York Clothing
resignation of Carl Doddrill as
Store and Swisher and
Coach
Charles assistant football coach. Tri·
Lohse Drug Store . in
Chancey will pres~nt State Roofing Col. of ParkersPomeroy; at Bahr
his 1971 team which burg was authorized to proceed
Clothiers. the Citizens
finished in third place with roof repairs at the high
MODERN
MOTOR
National Bank. and the
in the Southeastern school. The board also agreed to
purehase 60 new elementary BANK FACILITY will
clerk's office in the
Conference
behind desks
and chairs from the J. S. be added tu the Citizens
• ••••• '1,",

•• . .......••••••• · .·.·.·.· .·,·.·.•.· ••

Meigs Junior High
School, in Middleport;

Athens and Ironton
who tied for first.

(Continued on page 16)

Re·nz·onal Councz·l
To Honor Builder

CHECKS FOR

~

$50,000.00
START YOUR
CHRISTMAS
SAVINGS CLUB
JOIN NOW
HORACE KARR

NEW CLUB STARTS NOVEMBER 10

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Joint Meeting Proposed
On Fate of 15 Students

fiM•ItiiiiRIM!atg••••••S!l&gt;.!.:::il.·:~:~~~-&amp;8N&amp;".=:::~::::::::::::.-::::::~:::;:~~~~.J8J_,I!l;U8l.:;l!l;:cf4.Uf4CI'JC~latR!liR!li:OjljujljPjlj"~.,~.,llllU"'??"''M~=

southeastern Ohio by participation and
leadership in community affairs.
Introduced to the membership lor
recognition will be Earl Hilleary and
William G. Hoffman of Nelsonville;
William Mooney, New Lexington; the
Rev . William G. Black, Athens;
William S. Miller, Logan; Leo L.
Crownover, McArthur; Horace Karr,
Chester; Roger Barron, Gallipolis;
Edward C. Glockner, Portsmouth; Dr.
Ralph F. Massie, Ironton; Ronald L.
Hand, Waverly, and Robert W. Talbott,
Jackson.
Fred Rice, former president of the
SEORC, will make the presentations. A
hospitality hour will begin at 5:30 and
dinner follows at 6:30. Tickets may be
purchased from Jack Welch, Collll':lbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co ., Mid·
dleport, or Roger Barron, Gallipolis .

Horace Karr, owner of the Karr
Construction Co., Pomeroy Route 2,
will be one of 12 outstanding
Southeastern Ohio men who will be
honored by the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council on Thursday, Nov . 18.
The annual awards dinner in their
honor will be at Ohio University Inn in
Athens.
E. E. Davis, SEORC president, said
the honored guests, who represent 10
counties in Southeastern Ohio, were
nominated by the chambers of commerce and business groups in their
home counties. It will he the fourth
annual awards meeting. Honorees
include ministers, physicians , in dustrialists ,
merchants,
and
newspapermen .
Awards by the council are made on
the basis of contributions to
·.·:-

....

...

'•

··:·:·:····· ··:· ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·.·:·:·:·:·:·····.···:·····:·.·:·:···:····· .·.·.·..·.

Na tiona I
Bank
of
Middleport through the
qua r t er s
for m e r Iy

~ ~:~~pi~~~e b~oat•h:edsh::;
::!~

:;:l
~;!~
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I

. ..

front adjoining the left
side of the bank, above.
Paul Smart is presiden t
of the bank.

Turner to Speak
Benjamin F. Turner, a
World War I veteran, will
deliver a 15 minute address at
11 a.m. Thursday over
WMPO Radio, Armistice
Day .
Turner is a charter
member of American Legion
Post 128 at Middleport and
organized Chapter 53 of the
Disabled American Veterans
In Meigs County. He Is a
County
former Meigs
representative to the General
Assembly and resided In
Lancaster lor 15 years bel ore
returning to Meigs County to
live. He and Mrs. Turner are
living at 415 Page St., Mid·
dleport.

Bank Plans Expansion
The Citizens National Bank of
Middleport today an nounced
plans for a major expansion of
its banking operation.
The bank is in process of
acquiring adjoining real csl2te
now owned by Dale M. Dutton
and Eva Stout occupied by the
Shoe Box. This building was
recently damaged by fire and it
is understood that the Shoe Box
willhemovedto anothernearby
location.
The bank plans to remove the
first floor of this building and to
install a Motor Bank to permit
drive up banking at a window to
be installed on the lo wer side of
the present commercial
deparhllent of lhe :X.nk.
Middleport Village Council.
has been contacted relative to
permission to make a driveway
from the alley at the rear of the
bank building and to exit on
Second Ave. Traffic from the
drive up window would turn
south on Second Ave. and it
would require the removal of
three parking meters to provide
the proper rlea rance. Per mission for the removal of the
parkin g meter s has bee n

gran ted .
Middleport Village Council In
grnn t1 11g permission for the
above improvement ha s
recogmzcd tl1at Uois project
prov1rles a necessary step·
forward in offering to the people
of Middlepor t and the
swTound ing area the kind of

Like most projects of this
kind it will require some time
to co'mplete the project but bank
officers stated that they expect
to push it ahead to a speedY
completion.

With an eye toward spring,
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education set the
dates for high school baccalaureate and commencement
at a regular board meeting
Tuesday night.
Baccalaureate for the
graduating class will be Sunday, May 21, and commencement Tuesday, May 23.
The hoard appointed Mrs.
Lucy M. White and Mrs. Rose
Ann Lisle Jenkins lo the substitute teacher list and appointed Charles Corder as high
school play director.
A leave of absence for Mrs.
Evelyn Sweet was approved
from Dec. 22 until April4, next

year and a leave was approved
for teacher Kim Neal from Nov.
11 until Dec. 22 to enable him to
complete his student teaching,
Mrs . Martha Chapman was
employed for the same period to
serve as Neal's supervising
teacher.
Board members Don Mullen
and Hiram Slawter were named
to meet for discussions on Nov.
17 with representatives of the
Meigs !.Deal Teachers Assn.
Attending the board meeting
last night to ,represent the
association were Mrs. Rita
Slaven and Mrs. Phyllis Miller.
The board discussed the
sta Ius of the school lunch
(Continued on page 16)

banking service that present
da y needs requ ire.

commencement Set

Cast of Over 100 Ready for Fall Follies Curtain Saturday

OUR GIFT TO 1972 CLUB MEMBERS

With a cast of over 100, the musical,
"Fall Follies," wi ll be presented at 8:10
p.m. Saturday at the new ljleigs High
School auditorium by the Big Bend Min·
slrel Assn .

FOR EACH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES
49 PROMPT WEEKLY PAYMENTS, THE
BANK WILL MAKE THE 50TH PAYMENT

November9

Dean Martin
Burt Lancaster

Now In The Mail
.Christmas Club

Devoted To

Citizens National B.ank
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I

A parody to "Hi Neighbor," using
blacklight effects, by sixth graders of the
Pomeroy Elementary School under the
direction of Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer will
open the show. The specially trained
choral group will swing Into "Powder Your
Face With Sunshine ," backing a_dancing
chorus of yo un gsters from the lower
grades of the Pomeroy Elemen t&lt;~ry School
including Andrea Riggs, Linda Kovalchik,
Kenda Braun, Lori Rupe, Kristin An·
derson , Beth Perrin Hnd Jayne Lee
B flich .

Rounding out the appearance of the O'Brien, Maureen Hennessy, Leanne Sebo,
sixth grade chorus .will be "Little Grass Jenny Chapman, Sherry King, Milisa
Shack" which will bring on a hula line, Rizer, Brenda Stanley, Tina Nieri, Jeanie
Jeanie Schneider, Leanne Sebo, Sherry Schneider, Jan Holter. and Shelly Mankin.
King, Shelly Manking and Sonya Ohlinger,
The Meigs High quartet will appear
again using the blacklights.
doing "Spinning Wheel" and again later in
Aveteran association performer, Mrs. the show, "Fill the World With Love."
Alice Nease, will perform from the runway Accompanied by Donna Weber, the
in her "feathers and plumes" as she does quartet is composed of Melanie Hackett,
"Louisville Lou" and veteran baton --...Jo Ellen Diehl, Steve Powell and Wayne
twirlers Becky Eichinger .~nd Tammy WelL
Eichinger will be featured in "Hey, Look
Coming !rom Columbus to do the show
Me Over. "
·
will he Karen Griffith, Tim Glaze and
The capable master of ceremonies, Rogea· Gilmore presenting a mod number
Joe Struble, backed by a piano medley, with guita rs. Miss Gri ffi tl.. " \'ClCrun of
will inti'Oduce in verse the Big Bend many Bi g BcJtd shows, will also be
" Calendar girl ," each costumed to leatua·ed on her trumpet with "Blues in the
represent a holiday or event in a particular Night." Members of the t: io are all
montl.'. They are S~sie Souisby, Peggy siudcn iS uf Ohio State University .

A veteran of shows lor live years, Soulsby .
seven-yea r-old Jayne Lee Hoeflich will
Cindy Pallcrson will be leatured in a
perform on the runway her version of dance and a wheel twirling routine to
" Rhythm in My Nursery Rh ymes.'' "Alley O!t" with Mrs. Nease doing the
Reflections of the Roaring 20s will be vocal work on "Underneath the Harlem
shown on "That 's My Weakness Now" by Moon" to bring on a blacklight dance line,
dancers, Dick Nease and Susie Soulsby Cathy Werry, Susie Soulsby, Tina Nieri,
with Nease doing the vocal work on the Milisa Ri zer, Lynn Baker, Maureen
number.
Hennessy, Sonya Ohlinger and Brenda
Mrs. Katie Crow, president ol the Big Taylor .
Bend Minstrel Association since its forMaking a first appearance with the
mation 18 years ago,' will do a comedy show group is Jan Van Vranken whose
monologue, "Football ," to bring on a number "Me and My Shadow" will he
cheerlcading chorus li ne composed of backed by Prggy O'Brien :md Jeanie
An ita Kmg, .J r1 \ TI' J~u t chi~o n, Debtdc SclnH'tdPI .
Taylor, I.u1tla Hupe, Cindy Schneider ,
\Vuy'nc Well, a member of the Ohio
Judy Owen, Barbara Fultz, Vicki Kelly University 's Men's Choir, will solo on
and Linda Gerard. Doing Ihe vocal honors "That Lucky Old Sun" and April Fraser,
&lt;• n the salut e lo fr•olball will he Jim · dau~h ter of Mrs. Ernie (Judy) Jacobs

Fra ser , who danced on Meigs stages
frequently a generation ago, will he
featured lapping on "Everywhere You
Go.''
Being introduced vocally lor the first
time in the show also wiU he Sherry King,
head majorette of the Meigs High School
marching band. Miss King will he doing a
"today" number, "I Don't Know How to
Love Him," from "Jesus O!rist Super·

star."
Dick Nease will vocalize "When My
Sugar Walks Down the Street" to bring on
a sequinned costumed dance line made up
nf Melanie "Hackett, Maureen Hennessy,
l&gt;renda Sta nley, Tina Nierl, Shelly
Mankin,Jan Holter, Brenda Ta)·lor, Jenny
Chapman. Lvnn Baker and Cath)· Werrr.
(Continued on page 16)
--"' .

�S- The DaUy Sentinel, Midllepurt-Pmu!roy, 0., Nov. 10, 1971
2- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pulrero~. 0., Nov. 10, 1971

Southern At North Gallia

House-S~nate Com·m ittee Takes Up Income Tax Scheme Again
By LEE LEONARD
· UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A new
House-Senate conference committee has begun work on a
new budget-tax package, probably including an income lax. in
hopes of presenting a report to
both chambers by the end of
the week.
Meanwhile ,lhe House Finance
Committee is expected to vote
today on a Senate-passed interim budge t fo r November to
ward off the threat of a strike
by slate employes &lt;f they don't
receive their paychecks Friday .
The new conference commit·
tee was appointed Tuesday after the first one saw its five
weeks o£work and recommend·
ation of a sales tax hike go
down the drain on an overwhelming 2~ vote in the House.
The inlenm budget was seen
no t only as a buffer to the
strike threat but as a contingency to the possibility that negotiations may, as they ha ve so
many limes in past months,
blow up aga in .
While 10 days would have to
elapse before an in te rim budget would Lake effect without
Gov . John J. Gilligan's signa-

canceled a trip lo Atlanta, Ga .,
to remain in Colwnbus for the
day .
In return. he probably would
wan t assura nces that the second conference committee an.d
Republican legislative leaders
would do their best to get an
incom~ lax bill on the floor of
both chambers by the end of
the week.
Income Tax Indicated
. While various lawmakers were
trying to promote a flat rate income lax, a county income tax
and a continuation budget with
no ne\'.' taxes, the direction of
the new conference committee
appeared to point toward resw-rection of the same graduated
tncome tax proposals which
have been batted around since
the governor recommended one
last March.
One thing appeared certainthe sales tax increase which
was htunbled in the House Tuesday seemed dead, at least for
this round .
"We have to begin with the
premise that the sales lax has
been destroyed and the conferees are going to have to come
up with an income lax," said
Sen. Michael J . Maloney, Rture, there were indications the Cincinnati, one of the new congovern or might relent on his re- ferees.
cent policy and sign the measMaloney, who has favored a
w-e if it goes to his desk , ma k- sa les lax increase in the past,
ing it effective immediately. He said his preference would be a

1 to 3 per cent Republican-wntlen income lax bill which never
made it out of his Senate Ways
and Means Committee when the
push developed for a sales tax
vote in the Senate last September.
But the most lively proposal
appeared to be a one-half to 4
per cent income tax dt·afted by
an ad hoc committee of Rep.
JamesJ. Flannery, D-Cleveland,
and Sen. William W. Taft, RCleveland and rejected· by the
confereoce committee last week
for lack of approval by either
of the two Republican senators
on the committee.
Those two senators - Oakley
C. Collins of Ironton and Robert R. Shaw of Colwnbus, have been replaced by Maloney
and Sen. Paul E. Gill mor, R·
Ttffin . Senate Minority Leader
Anthony 0. Calabrese, D-Cleveland remains on the commiltee,
as do Reps. Norman A. Mu rdock, R-Cincinnah, and A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire. All three
agreed to the Tafl-r lannery proposal last week.
Kurfcss Replaces Kerns
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green. replaced Rep. Lloyd George
Kerns, R-Raymond , a foe of the
income tax. with Rep. E. W.
Lampson, R - Jefferson, a supporter.
The Gilligan administration

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

1

Voice along Broadway l
I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NANETTE'S NO NO-NO FOR JUNE
NEW YORK (KFS ) - June Allyson
probably will win the best touring plwn of all the Ruby Keeler role in the "No, No, Nanette"
road company ... Don Rickles' Las Vegas casino
switch has a funny secret: he wanted a huge pay
raise (to $100,000 ) at the place he'd worked for
years, but they cited the nat'! pay freeze ; he said
he could get it elsewhere ; he got a raise
elsewhere aU right but only to $80,000, still a big
hike; and couldn't that be construed as breaking
the freeze-11piril' ... Ed Sullivan 's spending more
time in Vegas than in New York.
The confessed (proclaimed ) ho-house
madam of Knapp Conunission infame here,
Xaviera Hollander, is back offering bed-anctlroad again ... Near her front-paged E. 55th St.
layout ... The very cute little singing-&lt;lancing
sprite in "The Grass Harp " is the niece of the
Ralph Bellamys and retired NBC-director Marx
B. Loebs, Name 's Chrilitfue Stabile; Has talent,
will prosper ... Julie Budd, 17, opens at the
Copacabana here next May 4 - her 18th birthday. Makes her the youngest headliner in the
history of any Manhattan floor show. It's against
the law to appear any earlier.
The David Frost TV review-&amp;low cast
dassn 't leave personal stuff at the studio between
tapings: everything left behind was stolen ...
Tony Award winner (for "Promises, Promises")

Jerry Orbach was asked to model men's fur
coats at Ohrbach 's store but cringed in feat:
"My wife would kill me" ... Capuletli (one of the
three best Spanish painters; Picasso and Dati
the others ) won the great royal plrm -selected
to paint the official portrait of Juan Carlos, to be
Spain's King after Franco steps down . Capuletti
one-man-&amp;lows his fine daubs here next yea r at
the Hammer Gallery .
Jose Ferrer's new love is Ann Blake, a traychic waitress ... RCA Victor told us Van
Cliburn's the sole classical artist whose albums
ever sold more than a million copies ; Jean
Dalrymple tells us her old beau Jose Iturbi 's
"Clair de Lune" sold almost 2,000,000 and his
Chopin Polonaise ditto I Jose has two gold
records as proof); both also RCA, the red-faced
Victor lads might note.
Faces in .. Piaces: Danny Thomas, daughter
Marlo and Ben Gazzara at Piraeus My Love,
eating and gabbing from 7 p.m . until! a.m., but
Danny folded around ten. Marlo hung in there
with Ben and three pals ... Alice Faye in Bill
Chan's Gold Coin, showing off pictures of
daughter Alice Jr. (Mrs. Doug Regan ) and her
grandkids ... Adam Qayton Powell and wife in P.
J. Clarke where he told us he's feeling fine .
Adam, who said a year ago he had cancer, now
sighs: "I'm in great health except I'd like to lose
a few pound-;.''

had daimed last Friday that
enough voles were ava ilable in
the Senate and House to pass
the Flannery-Talt bilL
"The votes for that compromi se measure are still there /'

said the governor after Tue~­
day's House vote. " With th·e
sales tax rejected in the House,
there is only one choice l'ernaining to the Republican leadership . They must permit a floor
vote on the Taft-Flannery compromise , and they must do so
at once."

dtiigan said the House rejection of the sales lax increase
"rea ffi rms even more clearly
what we have said all along _:
lha t a sales lax is simply not
an acceptable meth od of raising
the money we need to solve the
problems confronting us."
Kurfess, whom many believed
to be the key lo the downfall
of the sales lax proposal declined to vole on the bill although
he was prese nt at the session.
He has expressed preference for

an income tax.

Mrs. Reynolds
Will Attend
Banker Meeting
Mrs. Rose S. Reynolds, Vice
Presiden t and Director of The
Citizens National Bank, Middleport, will attend the fall
meeting of the Ohio Group of the
National Association of BankWomen, Inc., to be held in
Columbus , November 13 and 14,
1971. More than tOO women
officers or banks throughout the
state are expected to attend .
Saturda y afternoon's guest
spea ker will be Mrs. Lois A.
Morlock, Executive Vice
President, First National Bank,
Bowling Green , Oh io. Mrs.
Morlock is a member of the
Ohio Group of the National
Association of Bank-Women,
Inc. and has re cently been
elected Regional Vice Presiden t
of the Lake Region, which includes Illi nois, Indiana,
Michigan and Ohio. ·
The featured speaker lor the
evening session will be William
A. Stroud. President, FirstKnox National Bank, Ml.
Vernon, Ohio. Mr . Stroud will
speak on "Women's Role in
Marketing,.

The Na tional · Association of
BankWomen, In c., is an
organization for women holding
execunve and official positions
in banks, savings banks and
trust companies . There are
approxi mately 8,000 members
in all 50 states and four foreign
countries.

Rep. Corwin M. Nixon, RLebanon, was among four
others not recorded, although he
also was present. The other absentees were Reps. Robert E.
Netzley , R ·. Laura ; James
Thorpe, R-Alliance, and Arthur
R. Bowers, D.Sleubenville.
Democrats Oppose Bill
Only Republicans supported
the package of $832 million
worth of new revenues and accompanying $8.1 billion .budget.
Twenty-two Republicans joined
44 Democrats in opposition.
The defeated measure alsO
contained corporation tax increases, a three-cent boost in
the tax on a pack of cigarettes,
extension of the Sales tax to
auto repairs and other services,
and several other minor taxes.
It was supported on the floor
by the two House conferees who

agreed to it - Reps. Lloyd
George Kerns, R-Raymond, and
Norman A. Murdock, R-Cincinnati.
Kerns said the bill was a
combination of taxes on sales
and corporations, and noted it
would finam!e spending somewhere between the House and
Senate levels.
Murdock said the measw-e
would add $390 million to existing appropriations for primar.i·
and secondary education .
Loud And Clear"
Rep. Alan E. Norris, R-Westerville, said the meassage from
his constituents had been "coming through loud and clear - if
new revenue is needed in yowjudgment, hold it to a minimwn
and raise it through an increase
in the sales tax."
But House Minority Leader A.

G. Lancione, D -Bellaire, said
the tax package was "regressive in nature and puts the tax
on U.e little people. It's a series
of nuisance taxes," he said.
"My mail averages 200 letters
from those who want an income
tax to one who doesn't want
one," Lancione said in reply to
Norris. "And he doesn't want
any lax at all."
Lancione complained there
was no property tax reform in
the bill, that it ignored the
recommendations of a special
citizens' task force O!l tax reform, and that an .extension of
the sales tax to automobile repairs would drive insurance
rates up.
"There are so many things in
this bill that are bad for you
and me and the people of Ohio, "
Lancione said . "You pass this

Bong Slain with Bomb
SAIGON I UP!) - Assassins
tossed a bomb into an
automobile in downtown Saigon
today and killed Nguyen Van
Bong, mentioned as a .potential
prime minister in the regime of
President Nguyen Van Thieu.
The attack killed Bong, his

bodyguard and wounded eight
other persons, Bong's family
said.
Bond , 42, was the first
progovernment politician slain
in South Vietnam since the
firebombing death of Education
Minister Le Minh Tri in early

Herbert Joins Sen. McGovern
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Ll.
CoL Anthony Herbert, the
highly decora ted soldier who is
retiring from the Army in a
dispute invo lving alleged
atrocities in Vietnam, will join
th e sta ff of Sen . George
McGovern ,
0-S .D.,
the
Democratic presidential contender an nounced Tuesday.
Herbert charged that he and
his family had been harassed
and pressured by the Army

since he accused two superior
officers for hushing up
atrocities, will become a
military advisor to McGovern
when his retirement beromes
effective in February, 1972.
McGovern praised Herbert as
"a man who personified the best
in the American armed services; a man who finally felt
that he must speak out against
the atrocities he saw. "
----~ ·

1969.
Reports in Saigon had
mentioned Bong as a possible
prime minister for more than a
year .
Police were unable to say
whether Bong had just left his
home in the residential section
of Saigon at noon today or
whether he was returning to his
house. They said the assassins
tossed the plastic explosive
charge into the car and
escaped.
Ambulances took Bong and
the others involved in the
bombing to a hospital a mile
from the blast scene. Top
government officials, including
Saigon Mayor Col. Do Kien
Nhieu, showed up at the hospital
almost immediately and police
blocked off the approach to the
front of the building . They
apparently were unable to talk
to Bong before he died .

The Dai~ Sentinel

PT. PLEASANT

DEVOTED TO THE
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
INTEREST OF
Pl. Pleasant, W.Va .
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL .
Saturday, Nov. 6, 1971
Exec . Ed .
HOOS - 115 to 220 18.60 to
ROBERT HOE FLlCH.
Cily Editor
19.75, Heavies 15.75 to 17.75,
Published daily except
Lights 16 to 19, Fat Sows 15 to 18, Saturday by The Ohio Va lley
Publishing Company, Ill
Boars I4 to 15.50, Pigs 7 to 11, Co
urt St ., Pomeroy , OhiO ,
d5769 Bus i nes s Off ic e Phone
Stock Shoats 12 to 19.
99 2.2156, Ed i tor ial Phone 992 .
CA TI'LE - Steers 24 to 31, 2151 .
5econd class postage paid at
Heifers 23.50 to ?,8.75, Fat Cows Pomeroy
, Ohio .
18 to 22.50, Canners 14 to 19.50,
N.ational ativertising
epresen 1a tiv e
Bot! in ell i Bulls 21 to 26, Milk Cows 100 to rGallagher
, Inc ., 12 East 4'lnd
250, Stock Cows and Calves 150 St ., New York City , New York .
Su bscr i ption r ates : Oe .
to 310, Stock Steers 25.50 to 36, livered
by carr ie r where
Stock Heifers 22 to 28.50, Stock ava ila ble 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carri er
Steer Calves 26 to 41, Stock sennce no t available · One
month $1 75 . By mail in Ohio
Heifer Calves 23 to 36.50.
and W . Va ., One year Sl4 .00 .
VEAL CALVES - Tops 45, Si • month s $7 . 25 . Thr ee
months 54 .50 . Subsc ript io n
Seconds 42.75, Mediwn 33 to pr
ice i n clud es Sunday Time s .
39.75, Common &amp; Heavies 32 to Sent in el
39.75.

,,
,..

today and you'll be faced with
problems you never dreamed of

next session."

Third place will be up for
grabs Friday night when Coach
John Blake 's North Gallia
Pirates host Coach Bruce
Wallace's Southern Tornadoes
in the season finals for both
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference learns.
Eastern won first place for
the second straight year in a
row last Saturday with a 51-0
romp over the Tornadoes.
Kyger Creek finished second
·with its only loss coming at the
hands of the unbeaten Eagles.
Both teams enter the contest
with identical records in league
play. Overall, the Pirates stand
at 4-4 while the Tornadoes are 3-

Friday at Nelsonville-York.
North Gallia 's offense has
scored 194 points while the
Pirate defense has permitted
104 points. Southern's offense
has pushed across 78 points. The
Tornado defense has permitted
155 points.
In addition, to the 3rd place
finish, the game will featw-e a
meeting of the minds between
the two coaches who last year
were assistants at Southern
High School under Coach Bob
Ashley.
· North Gallia owns victories
over Southwestern and Hannan
Trace as does Southern. Both
teams lost to Eastern and
5.
Kyger Creek.
North Gallia had a four game
On comparative scores, both
winn!!Jg streak broken last schools were edged two points

Tax For The Rich
Rep. Harry J. Lehmap, DShaker Heights, said the proposed 40 per cent hike in the sales
lax would be "downright inhu.
mane" to persons on fixed i.ncomes.
He said it would hurt least the
families with annual incomes of
$10,000 and more, "and I've got
a lot of those in my district,"
Lehman said. "This is a tax of,
by and for the rich people of

our state."
Rep. Richard G. Reichel, R·
Massillon, one of a coalition of
conservative Republican House
members.opposed to an income
tax, attempted to get sepa~ate
votes on the portion of the sales
tax going toward education and
the portion for other services
such as welfare. He was overruled by Kurfess.
Rep. John A. Bechtold, R-Cincinnati, a,nother member of the
GOP faction against the income
tax, termed the sales tax proposal a "vague and treacherous"
measure, although he ended up
voting for it.
"The leadership through its
chicanery has divided the Republican caucus so we can 't do
ow- duty," Bechtold said. "What
we are doing today is not the
will of the majorit)· of the Republican caucus."

All members of the
Southeastern Ohio Sportswriters and Broadcasters
Association will meet Sunday in
Jackson to select the 1971 AllSEOAL Football team, it was
announced by Lee Hamilton ,
president.
The meeting is scheduled for 1
p.m. at the Jolly Lanes Bowling
Center and all of the League's
eight head coaches are invited
to attend and aid in the selection
of the honored squad.
As had been the custom for 10
years each coach wiU be asked
to recommend the players from
his team whom he feels should
be recognized and also players
from the opponent teams that

THE NEXT TIME
YOU BUY A·PAIR
OF SHOES!

AGALLON UNDER MAJOR ETHYL
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he felt deserving of the honors.
The voting members then
screen the players recommended by the coaches and
proceed to select the best 22
players in the league, regardless of position they played or
the standing of their team in the
league .
In addition to the 22 best
players the members also name

I

Sports

High School
Ratings

Briefs

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Joe Torre
vows that he never again will go
near those starchy foods that he
learned to like as a boy in
Brooklyn.
Victoria Torre gave her son a
fine Italian upbringing and sent
him into manhood with more
weight than he needed . But
Torre, now 31, trinuned off the
fat with a protein-and-water
diet last winter and he credits
the weight loss with being
responsible in great part for his 8. Fremont Ross
(8-l) 68
winning the Most Valuable
9.
Princeton
(7-t -11 6t
Player award in the National 10. (tiel. Worthington
League.
Ill 18-l) 46
to. lliel Jtpper Arl ington
(7-2) 46
CLEVELAND I UP!) - Jerry
Second Nine: 12. Columbus
Williams, fired last month as Easlmoor Ill 44 ; t3. Canton
head coach of the Philadelphia McKinley 43 ; 14. Cincinnati St.
31'/,; t5 . Lancaster and
Eagles, was hired by the Xavier
Lakewood St. Edward 29 each ;
Cleveland Browns Tuesday as 17. Mentor 27 : 18. Parma 21 ; 19.
an assistant coach in charge of Dayton Carroll 17: 20. Warren
Western Reserve l6 1h.
the passing offense.
Others with 10 or more points:

Youngstown Mooney , Cin CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ken cinnati Roger Bacon, GreenAspromonte was named ville, Cincinnati LaSalle ,

manager of the Cleveland
dians Tuesday and he said
lop job will be to "motivate
team" to recover from

Inhis
the
its

Meet Redmen ThursdJJy
The annual "Meet the Team Night" for Rio
Grande College's Redman basketball team will
be held at the Paul R. Lyne Center Thursday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited.
Following these activities, Rio Redmen
Boosters will hold their annual business meeting,
and elect orficers for the 1071-72 fiscal year.

Points

Denver

4

7

.364

7. Tuscarawas Catholic

otic and Marion Local· of Marie
Stein.
Tuscarawas Catholic, which
was blasted 5fi • 6 Saturday by
Class AA Elyria Catholic, is the
only team in the Class A top ten
to have a loss. Marion Catholic
is 8-0-1.

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Memphis
S 9 .357 3
Tuesday's Resu Its
Dallas 90 New York 86
Pittsburgh 133 Indiana 123
Kentucky 106 Denver 96
Utah 93 Memphis 90
Pittsburgh at Indiana
Virginia at Floridia ns

Dallas at Kentucky

HENS STILL BEST
NEW YORK (UPI) - Delaware maintained its season-long
domination in voting for the
best Division ll college team in
the East. The Blue Hens
gathered all eight first-place
votes.

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(6) (9-0) 149
2. Portsmouth Notre Dame
(2) (9-0) 137
3. Cory Rawson
14) (9-0) 136
4. Newark Catholi c
Ill 19-01 100
S. West Jefferson
131 (9-0) 95
6. Zanesville Rosecrans
Ill (8-0)

As in Class AAA, Steubenville
Central Catholic needs only a
victory over Austintown Fitch
(t&gt;-3) Friday night to wrap up
the Class AA championship.
The Crusaders of Coach Tom
Korab rolled to their ninth win
of the season Saturday with a
convincing 31 - 0 decision over
Youngstown North, ranked fourth in AA this week, one notch
higher than last week.
Steubenville Catholic has 246
points this week and holds a 69
point spread over Warren Kennedy which moved ahead of
Cleveland Holy Name into second pla ce. Holy Name slipped
to third with 174 points, three
less than JFK.
Ironton In Filth
Youngstown North took over
fourth despite its loss and Ironton jumped from eighth last
week to fifth. New Lexington,
Napoleon, Minerva, Campbell
Memorial and Dayton Jefferson
round the top ten.
For the Second Straight week,
Marion Pleasant holds the top
spot in the Class A race with
Portsmouth Notre Dame moving into second place, one point
ahead of Cory Rawson .
Pleasant, unbea ten in nine
games, has 149 points to 137 for
Notre Dame and 136 for Cory
Rawson. Newark Catholic is
fourth with 100 and West Jefferson fifth with 95.
Rounding out the top ten are
Zanesville Rosecrans, Tuscarawas Catholic, Ada, Marion Cath-

ABA Standings
By United Press tnternationa I
East
W. L Pet. GB
Virgin ia
9 4 .692
Kentucky
9 4 .692
Floridians
7 6 .538
New York
6 6 .500
Pittsburgh
7 7 .500
Carolina
3 9 .250
West
W. L Pet. GB
Utah
8 6 .571 ...
Ind iana
I 6 .538
r;,
Dallas
6 7 .462
l •;,

New York at Utah

Class A
Patterson , Lima Senior and
Team
Sycamore .
1. Marion Pleasant
Class AA

Vermilion, Harrison,

COLUMBUS (U PI)-With
only on_e week remaining, Warren Harding has
taken a commandin g lead
in the United Press International Ohio High School
Board of Coaches' Class AAA
football ratings.
The Panthers, who meet seventh ranked Niles McKinley Friday night with a chance to sew
up the title, hold a 25().214 lead
over runnerup Cincinnati Moeller.
Moeller, only two points behind Harding last week, dropped a 6-3 decision in the snow
Saturday afternoon to Cincinnati
St. Xavier, with all the scoring
coming on field goals.
But Friday night's game between the Red Dragons and
Panthers, to be played at Niles,
is one of those back yard affairs in which anything can happen, one of those "throw the
records out the window" games.
Aloss by Harding would throw
the Class AAA title chase into
a turmoil, with Moeller, Elyria,
Akron Garfield and Troy all
within striking distance.
Title On Line
Elyria, third again this week
with 190 points, dwnped Mansfield Senior 39 - 6 Friday night
for its ninth in a row . Akron
Garifled is fourth with 146 and
Troy fifth at 130.
Moeller winds up its season
Friday night against Cincinnati
LaSalle (8-1) with the Cincinnati Catholic League title all on
the line .

Wednesday's Games

Columbus Nortland, Columbus
Linden. Sandusky, Oregon Clay
(1), Toledo Woodward, Dayton

Points
second worst season in history . Team
1. Steubenville Central
(15) 19-01 246
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Miami 2. Warren Kennedy
sophomore Bob Hitchens and
(31 19-0) 177
Paul Miles of Bowling Green 3. Cleveland Holy Name
(l) (8-0) 174
are co-winners of "player of the 4. Youngstown North
week" honors in the Mid(7 -11 94
i ll (8. 1) 88
American Conference this S. lronton
7. Napoleon
(8-ll 73
week .
8. Minerva
(8.1) 53
9. Campbell Memorial
(l) (7 -2) 36
COLUMBUS (UP!)
10.
Dayton
Jefferson
Hunters will find the rabbit
(9-0) 35
population significantly higher
Second ten : lL Springfield
next Monday when the upland Shawnee Ill 34; 12. Ashtabula
Harbor (1)27; 13. Poland26; 14 .
game season begins, the slate St
. Clairsville 24 ; 15. Madeira
Division of Wildlife reported and Riverdale 23 each ; 17 .
today.
Elyria Catholic 22: 18. St.
Marys
Memorial t II 18; 19.
The division said reports
Carrollton 16; 20. Milton Unioo
indicated that rabbits are most 15.
numerous in Ohio 's south
Others with 10 or more points:
Oregon
Strllch, Hartville Lake
central, southwest, southeast
(l) Leavittsburg LaBrae IlL
and central hills regions.
Chagrin Falls, Gattlpolis,

Harding Can Sew
Up Crown Friday

•

If something in your house goes on the blink,

you better hope it's your telephone.

76

(8-ll 75
Ill (9-0J 67

•

(1)

8. Ada

9. Marion Catholic

10. Marion

Local

(8-0-ll 50

(9·0) 39
Second ten: 11 . Covington and
Lorain Catholic 2~ each; t3.
Jewett-Sclo 22 ; 14. Smithfield
(2) 20; 15. Canal Winchester 16;
16. Cedarville and Norwalk St.
Paul 15 each ; 18. Jonathan
Alder and Southeastern I Clark)
13 each; 20. Middletown Fenwick t2.
Others with 10 or more points:
McDonald (t) , Sidney Lehman
Wyoming and Frankfort Adena.

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295 square inch viewing

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SUGAR ..~~~~. !~.~........~.~.!~..~..'12'

•1•'

Desk

by the Bobcats but were soundly
trounced 'by .the Eagles.
All other Southern Valley
Athletic Conference teams
closed out their season last
Wellston High School, in a death rattle battle to keep up in
week.
· Southeastern Ohio League footbaU, apparently is ready to give it
up. WeUston School Board members meeting there earlier this
week brought the subject onto the floor for discussion. No decision
SVAC STANDINGS
was reported publicly, but indications were strong a committee
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP will make overtures to the Ohio Valley Conference (Oak Hill, St .
Eastern
9 0 0 346 18 Joe, Chesapeake, Rock HiD, South Point etc.). .
North Gallia
4 4 0 t94 t04
U U.is comes to pass full circle will have been reached, and
Kyger Cr~ek
4 4 t t27 227
Southern
3 5 0 78 155 exceeded.
Southwestern
l 8 0 46 225
It was in 1925that the late Bill Thomas, Wellston postmaster
Hannan Trace
0 9 0 20 249
and publisher, put together the old Southeastern Ohio League
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP which included Portsmouth, Athens, WeUston, Jackson, Logan,
Eastern
s 00203 6
Kyger Creek
4 t 0 95 80 Ironton, Pomeroy, Gallipolis, and Nelsonville (nine teams).
North Ga II ia
2208434 Middleport joined for the 1928 season upon Portsmouth seeking
Southern
2205885 greater glories in the Greater Ohio League. Ironton dropped out
Southwestern
l 4 0 38 123
Hannan Trace
0 5 0 6 156 later, but returned in 67-68for football. New Bciston was in and out
Totals
14' 14 0 484 484 early. Middleport and Pomeroy became Meigs in 67-68.
Through it all, Wellston has batued for honors which came
frequently enough in the early days to claim athleti~ prestige. In
basketball three titles, in football six titles. Not good. Hardly fair,
in an overaU field of 14 teams over the period 1925 through half of
1971 (basketball yet to be settled this season).
Over those years Wellston in football has won 123 games, lost
173and tied 19, a won-lost percentage of .428, and lith place in the
field standings.
In basketball the Rockets have won 230, lost 313, for .424 pet. ,
16 other players to the
also ranking 11th in a field of 14.
honorable mention group, with
But the past three years, since Meigs and Athens coneach school permitted two
solidations and the entry of Ironton, the Rockets have fallen on
honorable mentions.
Also chosen will be the bad days.
In league football games Wellston in '71, '70 and '69 has been
league's most valuable player
been 2-18-1 and in basketball in '70, '69 and '68, has won 20 and lost ·
and the coach of the year .
The entire group will be 22, which isn't had.
But football is the crusher. That's the sport in which it is the
honored at the All-SEOAL
more
demoralizing to the hays playing to be constantly overFootball Banquet to be held
either in Ironton or Athens on powered.
So, Wellston apparently wants out, and will get out as soon as
Thw-sday, December 2.
feasible. "We have no place to get more school population," say
Rocket fans. "There is only one way to go."
So, who wants in?
Rwnbles are a dime a dozen with the impending change of
cast in the old SEOAL, granddaddy of all athletic conf~rences in
Ohio.
COLUMBUS IUPI J - The
Portsmouth wants to return. Chilllcothe is looking south, not
United Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches' north, west, or east. Both have been campaigning for years in fast
football ratings (wi th first place company: Chillicothe in the Ceniral Ohio League, Portsmouth in
votes and won -lost records in the Greater Ohio League. They would like to fare better.
parentheses) :
Does the SEOAL want either of them?
Class AAA
Team
Points
There will be diverse opinions on this proposition. Sports Desk
1. Warren Harding
(161 (9.0) 250 has a feeling that the fans of the several schools athletic teams
2. Cincinnati Moeller
should have decisive weight in answering it. After all, the fans
(61 (8-l) 214 actually make this whole package of high school sports possible;
3. Elyria
Ill 19-01 190
it's tbeir $1.25 per Friday, their kids in the bands, their tax dolll!rs
4. Akron Garfield
(8-0) 146 twice a year that put the schools and their teams into the field.
5. Troy
121 19-0) 130
Therefore, take a good look at, talk it up, and down, and let
6. Massil loo
(1 -2) 83
your
hometown newspaper know how it is with you. The school
I . Niles McKinley .
Ill 11-l-ll 78 dads, we'd guess, would like to know. As would Sports Desk.

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East Conference

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel.
1~---------"1 Philadelphia
Boston
.818
89 32 .727
.ALSO WITH
New York
6 7 .462
·
"'
Buffalo
6 . 8 .429
Central Division
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
4 8 .333
Cincinnati
3 7 .300
Atlanta
3 9 .250
Cleveland
3 9 .250
·'
Western Confe renee
Midwest Division ·
W. L.. Pet.
$
Milwaukee
11
1 .9t7
Chicago
7 5 .583
Detroit
6 6 .500
S 7 .417
All Stereos include Phoenix

PoriJ -Fi.

Ballard Buttermilk

NBA Standings
By United Press lnt~rnationat

GOBLE

GB

GB

IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR

GB
4
S
6

Pacific Division

W. L. Pel. GB
Los Angeles 10 3 .769
Golden State 10 4 .714 •12
Seattle
8 4 .667 l '12
Portland
2 8 .200 6'12
Houston
2 12 .143 8lf2
Tuesday's Results
Milwaukee 118 Phoenix llJ
Los Angeles 122 Chicago 1~9
Buffalo 109 Portland 100 ·
Golden State 1'15 Houston 99
Wednesday's Gomes
Chicago at Baltimore
New York at Cincinnati
Portland at Detroit
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
Boston at Houston
Milwaukee at Atlanta

AT••••

KEITH.GOBLE FORD

.

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Our repair service is good- we'll fix you r phone withi n 24 hours. Our price is even better:
no charge for repairs,

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A.

�S- The DaUy Sentinel, Midllepurt-Pmu!roy, 0., Nov. 10, 1971
2- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pulrero~. 0., Nov. 10, 1971

Southern At North Gallia

House-S~nate Com·m ittee Takes Up Income Tax Scheme Again
By LEE LEONARD
· UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A new
House-Senate conference committee has begun work on a
new budget-tax package, probably including an income lax. in
hopes of presenting a report to
both chambers by the end of
the week.
Meanwhile ,lhe House Finance
Committee is expected to vote
today on a Senate-passed interim budge t fo r November to
ward off the threat of a strike
by slate employes &lt;f they don't
receive their paychecks Friday .
The new conference commit·
tee was appointed Tuesday after the first one saw its five
weeks o£work and recommend·
ation of a sales tax hike go
down the drain on an overwhelming 2~ vote in the House.
The inlenm budget was seen
no t only as a buffer to the
strike threat but as a contingency to the possibility that negotiations may, as they ha ve so
many limes in past months,
blow up aga in .
While 10 days would have to
elapse before an in te rim budget would Lake effect without
Gov . John J. Gilligan's signa-

canceled a trip lo Atlanta, Ga .,
to remain in Colwnbus for the
day .
In return. he probably would
wan t assura nces that the second conference committee an.d
Republican legislative leaders
would do their best to get an
incom~ lax bill on the floor of
both chambers by the end of
the week.
Income Tax Indicated
. While various lawmakers were
trying to promote a flat rate income lax, a county income tax
and a continuation budget with
no ne\'.' taxes, the direction of
the new conference committee
appeared to point toward resw-rection of the same graduated
tncome tax proposals which
have been batted around since
the governor recommended one
last March.
One thing appeared certainthe sales tax increase which
was htunbled in the House Tuesday seemed dead, at least for
this round .
"We have to begin with the
premise that the sales lax has
been destroyed and the conferees are going to have to come
up with an income lax," said
Sen. Michael J . Maloney, Rture, there were indications the Cincinnati, one of the new congovern or might relent on his re- ferees.
cent policy and sign the measMaloney, who has favored a
w-e if it goes to his desk , ma k- sa les lax increase in the past,
ing it effective immediately. He said his preference would be a

1 to 3 per cent Republican-wntlen income lax bill which never
made it out of his Senate Ways
and Means Committee when the
push developed for a sales tax
vote in the Senate last September.
But the most lively proposal
appeared to be a one-half to 4
per cent income tax dt·afted by
an ad hoc committee of Rep.
JamesJ. Flannery, D-Cleveland,
and Sen. William W. Taft, RCleveland and rejected· by the
confereoce committee last week
for lack of approval by either
of the two Republican senators
on the committee.
Those two senators - Oakley
C. Collins of Ironton and Robert R. Shaw of Colwnbus, have been replaced by Maloney
and Sen. Paul E. Gill mor, R·
Ttffin . Senate Minority Leader
Anthony 0. Calabrese, D-Cleveland remains on the commiltee,
as do Reps. Norman A. Mu rdock, R-Cincinnah, and A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire. All three
agreed to the Tafl-r lannery proposal last week.
Kurfcss Replaces Kerns
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green. replaced Rep. Lloyd George
Kerns, R-Raymond , a foe of the
income tax. with Rep. E. W.
Lampson, R - Jefferson, a supporter.
The Gilligan administration

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

1

Voice along Broadway l
I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NANETTE'S NO NO-NO FOR JUNE
NEW YORK (KFS ) - June Allyson
probably will win the best touring plwn of all the Ruby Keeler role in the "No, No, Nanette"
road company ... Don Rickles' Las Vegas casino
switch has a funny secret: he wanted a huge pay
raise (to $100,000 ) at the place he'd worked for
years, but they cited the nat'! pay freeze ; he said
he could get it elsewhere ; he got a raise
elsewhere aU right but only to $80,000, still a big
hike; and couldn't that be construed as breaking
the freeze-11piril' ... Ed Sullivan 's spending more
time in Vegas than in New York.
The confessed (proclaimed ) ho-house
madam of Knapp Conunission infame here,
Xaviera Hollander, is back offering bed-anctlroad again ... Near her front-paged E. 55th St.
layout ... The very cute little singing-&lt;lancing
sprite in "The Grass Harp " is the niece of the
Ralph Bellamys and retired NBC-director Marx
B. Loebs, Name 's Chrilitfue Stabile; Has talent,
will prosper ... Julie Budd, 17, opens at the
Copacabana here next May 4 - her 18th birthday. Makes her the youngest headliner in the
history of any Manhattan floor show. It's against
the law to appear any earlier.
The David Frost TV review-&amp;low cast
dassn 't leave personal stuff at the studio between
tapings: everything left behind was stolen ...
Tony Award winner (for "Promises, Promises")

Jerry Orbach was asked to model men's fur
coats at Ohrbach 's store but cringed in feat:
"My wife would kill me" ... Capuletli (one of the
three best Spanish painters; Picasso and Dati
the others ) won the great royal plrm -selected
to paint the official portrait of Juan Carlos, to be
Spain's King after Franco steps down . Capuletti
one-man-&amp;lows his fine daubs here next yea r at
the Hammer Gallery .
Jose Ferrer's new love is Ann Blake, a traychic waitress ... RCA Victor told us Van
Cliburn's the sole classical artist whose albums
ever sold more than a million copies ; Jean
Dalrymple tells us her old beau Jose Iturbi 's
"Clair de Lune" sold almost 2,000,000 and his
Chopin Polonaise ditto I Jose has two gold
records as proof); both also RCA, the red-faced
Victor lads might note.
Faces in .. Piaces: Danny Thomas, daughter
Marlo and Ben Gazzara at Piraeus My Love,
eating and gabbing from 7 p.m . until! a.m., but
Danny folded around ten. Marlo hung in there
with Ben and three pals ... Alice Faye in Bill
Chan's Gold Coin, showing off pictures of
daughter Alice Jr. (Mrs. Doug Regan ) and her
grandkids ... Adam Qayton Powell and wife in P.
J. Clarke where he told us he's feeling fine .
Adam, who said a year ago he had cancer, now
sighs: "I'm in great health except I'd like to lose
a few pound-;.''

had daimed last Friday that
enough voles were ava ilable in
the Senate and House to pass
the Flannery-Talt bilL
"The votes for that compromi se measure are still there /'

said the governor after Tue~­
day's House vote. " With th·e
sales tax rejected in the House,
there is only one choice l'ernaining to the Republican leadership . They must permit a floor
vote on the Taft-Flannery compromise , and they must do so
at once."

dtiigan said the House rejection of the sales lax increase
"rea ffi rms even more clearly
what we have said all along _:
lha t a sales lax is simply not
an acceptable meth od of raising
the money we need to solve the
problems confronting us."
Kurfess, whom many believed
to be the key lo the downfall
of the sales lax proposal declined to vole on the bill although
he was prese nt at the session.
He has expressed preference for

an income tax.

Mrs. Reynolds
Will Attend
Banker Meeting
Mrs. Rose S. Reynolds, Vice
Presiden t and Director of The
Citizens National Bank, Middleport, will attend the fall
meeting of the Ohio Group of the
National Association of BankWomen, Inc., to be held in
Columbus , November 13 and 14,
1971. More than tOO women
officers or banks throughout the
state are expected to attend .
Saturda y afternoon's guest
spea ker will be Mrs. Lois A.
Morlock, Executive Vice
President, First National Bank,
Bowling Green , Oh io. Mrs.
Morlock is a member of the
Ohio Group of the National
Association of Bank-Women,
Inc. and has re cently been
elected Regional Vice Presiden t
of the Lake Region, which includes Illi nois, Indiana,
Michigan and Ohio. ·
The featured speaker lor the
evening session will be William
A. Stroud. President, FirstKnox National Bank, Ml.
Vernon, Ohio. Mr . Stroud will
speak on "Women's Role in
Marketing,.

The Na tional · Association of
BankWomen, In c., is an
organization for women holding
execunve and official positions
in banks, savings banks and
trust companies . There are
approxi mately 8,000 members
in all 50 states and four foreign
countries.

Rep. Corwin M. Nixon, RLebanon, was among four
others not recorded, although he
also was present. The other absentees were Reps. Robert E.
Netzley , R ·. Laura ; James
Thorpe, R-Alliance, and Arthur
R. Bowers, D.Sleubenville.
Democrats Oppose Bill
Only Republicans supported
the package of $832 million
worth of new revenues and accompanying $8.1 billion .budget.
Twenty-two Republicans joined
44 Democrats in opposition.
The defeated measure alsO
contained corporation tax increases, a three-cent boost in
the tax on a pack of cigarettes,
extension of the Sales tax to
auto repairs and other services,
and several other minor taxes.
It was supported on the floor
by the two House conferees who

agreed to it - Reps. Lloyd
George Kerns, R-Raymond, and
Norman A. Murdock, R-Cincinnati.
Kerns said the bill was a
combination of taxes on sales
and corporations, and noted it
would finam!e spending somewhere between the House and
Senate levels.
Murdock said the measw-e
would add $390 million to existing appropriations for primar.i·
and secondary education .
Loud And Clear"
Rep. Alan E. Norris, R-Westerville, said the meassage from
his constituents had been "coming through loud and clear - if
new revenue is needed in yowjudgment, hold it to a minimwn
and raise it through an increase
in the sales tax."
But House Minority Leader A.

G. Lancione, D -Bellaire, said
the tax package was "regressive in nature and puts the tax
on U.e little people. It's a series
of nuisance taxes," he said.
"My mail averages 200 letters
from those who want an income
tax to one who doesn't want
one," Lancione said in reply to
Norris. "And he doesn't want
any lax at all."
Lancione complained there
was no property tax reform in
the bill, that it ignored the
recommendations of a special
citizens' task force O!l tax reform, and that an .extension of
the sales tax to automobile repairs would drive insurance
rates up.
"There are so many things in
this bill that are bad for you
and me and the people of Ohio, "
Lancione said . "You pass this

Bong Slain with Bomb
SAIGON I UP!) - Assassins
tossed a bomb into an
automobile in downtown Saigon
today and killed Nguyen Van
Bong, mentioned as a .potential
prime minister in the regime of
President Nguyen Van Thieu.
The attack killed Bong, his

bodyguard and wounded eight
other persons, Bong's family
said.
Bond , 42, was the first
progovernment politician slain
in South Vietnam since the
firebombing death of Education
Minister Le Minh Tri in early

Herbert Joins Sen. McGovern
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Ll.
CoL Anthony Herbert, the
highly decora ted soldier who is
retiring from the Army in a
dispute invo lving alleged
atrocities in Vietnam, will join
th e sta ff of Sen . George
McGovern ,
0-S .D.,
the
Democratic presidential contender an nounced Tuesday.
Herbert charged that he and
his family had been harassed
and pressured by the Army

since he accused two superior
officers for hushing up
atrocities, will become a
military advisor to McGovern
when his retirement beromes
effective in February, 1972.
McGovern praised Herbert as
"a man who personified the best
in the American armed services; a man who finally felt
that he must speak out against
the atrocities he saw. "
----~ ·

1969.
Reports in Saigon had
mentioned Bong as a possible
prime minister for more than a
year .
Police were unable to say
whether Bong had just left his
home in the residential section
of Saigon at noon today or
whether he was returning to his
house. They said the assassins
tossed the plastic explosive
charge into the car and
escaped.
Ambulances took Bong and
the others involved in the
bombing to a hospital a mile
from the blast scene. Top
government officials, including
Saigon Mayor Col. Do Kien
Nhieu, showed up at the hospital
almost immediately and police
blocked off the approach to the
front of the building . They
apparently were unable to talk
to Bong before he died .

The Dai~ Sentinel

PT. PLEASANT

DEVOTED TO THE
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
INTEREST OF
Pl. Pleasant, W.Va .
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL .
Saturday, Nov. 6, 1971
Exec . Ed .
HOOS - 115 to 220 18.60 to
ROBERT HOE FLlCH.
Cily Editor
19.75, Heavies 15.75 to 17.75,
Published daily except
Lights 16 to 19, Fat Sows 15 to 18, Saturday by The Ohio Va lley
Publishing Company, Ill
Boars I4 to 15.50, Pigs 7 to 11, Co
urt St ., Pomeroy , OhiO ,
d5769 Bus i nes s Off ic e Phone
Stock Shoats 12 to 19.
99 2.2156, Ed i tor ial Phone 992 .
CA TI'LE - Steers 24 to 31, 2151 .
5econd class postage paid at
Heifers 23.50 to ?,8.75, Fat Cows Pomeroy
, Ohio .
18 to 22.50, Canners 14 to 19.50,
N.ational ativertising
epresen 1a tiv e
Bot! in ell i Bulls 21 to 26, Milk Cows 100 to rGallagher
, Inc ., 12 East 4'lnd
250, Stock Cows and Calves 150 St ., New York City , New York .
Su bscr i ption r ates : Oe .
to 310, Stock Steers 25.50 to 36, livered
by carr ie r where
Stock Heifers 22 to 28.50, Stock ava ila ble 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carri er
Steer Calves 26 to 41, Stock sennce no t available · One
month $1 75 . By mail in Ohio
Heifer Calves 23 to 36.50.
and W . Va ., One year Sl4 .00 .
VEAL CALVES - Tops 45, Si • month s $7 . 25 . Thr ee
months 54 .50 . Subsc ript io n
Seconds 42.75, Mediwn 33 to pr
ice i n clud es Sunday Time s .
39.75, Common &amp; Heavies 32 to Sent in el
39.75.

,,
,..

today and you'll be faced with
problems you never dreamed of

next session."

Third place will be up for
grabs Friday night when Coach
John Blake 's North Gallia
Pirates host Coach Bruce
Wallace's Southern Tornadoes
in the season finals for both
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference learns.
Eastern won first place for
the second straight year in a
row last Saturday with a 51-0
romp over the Tornadoes.
Kyger Creek finished second
·with its only loss coming at the
hands of the unbeaten Eagles.
Both teams enter the contest
with identical records in league
play. Overall, the Pirates stand
at 4-4 while the Tornadoes are 3-

Friday at Nelsonville-York.
North Gallia 's offense has
scored 194 points while the
Pirate defense has permitted
104 points. Southern's offense
has pushed across 78 points. The
Tornado defense has permitted
155 points.
In addition, to the 3rd place
finish, the game will featw-e a
meeting of the minds between
the two coaches who last year
were assistants at Southern
High School under Coach Bob
Ashley.
· North Gallia owns victories
over Southwestern and Hannan
Trace as does Southern. Both
teams lost to Eastern and
5.
Kyger Creek.
North Gallia had a four game
On comparative scores, both
winn!!Jg streak broken last schools were edged two points

Tax For The Rich
Rep. Harry J. Lehmap, DShaker Heights, said the proposed 40 per cent hike in the sales
lax would be "downright inhu.
mane" to persons on fixed i.ncomes.
He said it would hurt least the
families with annual incomes of
$10,000 and more, "and I've got
a lot of those in my district,"
Lehman said. "This is a tax of,
by and for the rich people of

our state."
Rep. Richard G. Reichel, R·
Massillon, one of a coalition of
conservative Republican House
members.opposed to an income
tax, attempted to get sepa~ate
votes on the portion of the sales
tax going toward education and
the portion for other services
such as welfare. He was overruled by Kurfess.
Rep. John A. Bechtold, R-Cincinnati, a,nother member of the
GOP faction against the income
tax, termed the sales tax proposal a "vague and treacherous"
measure, although he ended up
voting for it.
"The leadership through its
chicanery has divided the Republican caucus so we can 't do
ow- duty," Bechtold said. "What
we are doing today is not the
will of the majorit)· of the Republican caucus."

All members of the
Southeastern Ohio Sportswriters and Broadcasters
Association will meet Sunday in
Jackson to select the 1971 AllSEOAL Football team, it was
announced by Lee Hamilton ,
president.
The meeting is scheduled for 1
p.m. at the Jolly Lanes Bowling
Center and all of the League's
eight head coaches are invited
to attend and aid in the selection
of the honored squad.
As had been the custom for 10
years each coach wiU be asked
to recommend the players from
his team whom he feels should
be recognized and also players
from the opponent teams that

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he felt deserving of the honors.
The voting members then
screen the players recommended by the coaches and
proceed to select the best 22
players in the league, regardless of position they played or
the standing of their team in the
league .
In addition to the 22 best
players the members also name

I

Sports

High School
Ratings

Briefs

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Joe Torre
vows that he never again will go
near those starchy foods that he
learned to like as a boy in
Brooklyn.
Victoria Torre gave her son a
fine Italian upbringing and sent
him into manhood with more
weight than he needed . But
Torre, now 31, trinuned off the
fat with a protein-and-water
diet last winter and he credits
the weight loss with being
responsible in great part for his 8. Fremont Ross
(8-l) 68
winning the Most Valuable
9.
Princeton
(7-t -11 6t
Player award in the National 10. (tiel. Worthington
League.
Ill 18-l) 46
to. lliel Jtpper Arl ington
(7-2) 46
CLEVELAND I UP!) - Jerry
Second Nine: 12. Columbus
Williams, fired last month as Easlmoor Ill 44 ; t3. Canton
head coach of the Philadelphia McKinley 43 ; 14. Cincinnati St.
31'/,; t5 . Lancaster and
Eagles, was hired by the Xavier
Lakewood St. Edward 29 each ;
Cleveland Browns Tuesday as 17. Mentor 27 : 18. Parma 21 ; 19.
an assistant coach in charge of Dayton Carroll 17: 20. Warren
Western Reserve l6 1h.
the passing offense.
Others with 10 or more points:

Youngstown Mooney , Cin CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ken cinnati Roger Bacon, GreenAspromonte was named ville, Cincinnati LaSalle ,

manager of the Cleveland
dians Tuesday and he said
lop job will be to "motivate
team" to recover from

Inhis
the
its

Meet Redmen ThursdJJy
The annual "Meet the Team Night" for Rio
Grande College's Redman basketball team will
be held at the Paul R. Lyne Center Thursday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited.
Following these activities, Rio Redmen
Boosters will hold their annual business meeting,
and elect orficers for the 1071-72 fiscal year.

Points

Denver

4

7

.364

7. Tuscarawas Catholic

otic and Marion Local· of Marie
Stein.
Tuscarawas Catholic, which
was blasted 5fi • 6 Saturday by
Class AA Elyria Catholic, is the
only team in the Class A top ten
to have a loss. Marion Catholic
is 8-0-1.

Make 49 payments, soc
to SlO.-oo and we make
the

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Member Federal Home Loan
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PACKED

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Memphis
S 9 .357 3
Tuesday's Resu Its
Dallas 90 New York 86
Pittsburgh 133 Indiana 123
Kentucky 106 Denver 96
Utah 93 Memphis 90
Pittsburgh at Indiana
Virginia at Floridia ns

Dallas at Kentucky

HENS STILL BEST
NEW YORK (UPI) - Delaware maintained its season-long
domination in voting for the
best Division ll college team in
the East. The Blue Hens
gathered all eight first-place
votes.

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(6) (9-0) 149
2. Portsmouth Notre Dame
(2) (9-0) 137
3. Cory Rawson
14) (9-0) 136
4. Newark Catholi c
Ill 19-01 100
S. West Jefferson
131 (9-0) 95
6. Zanesville Rosecrans
Ill (8-0)

As in Class AAA, Steubenville
Central Catholic needs only a
victory over Austintown Fitch
(t&gt;-3) Friday night to wrap up
the Class AA championship.
The Crusaders of Coach Tom
Korab rolled to their ninth win
of the season Saturday with a
convincing 31 - 0 decision over
Youngstown North, ranked fourth in AA this week, one notch
higher than last week.
Steubenville Catholic has 246
points this week and holds a 69
point spread over Warren Kennedy which moved ahead of
Cleveland Holy Name into second pla ce. Holy Name slipped
to third with 174 points, three
less than JFK.
Ironton In Filth
Youngstown North took over
fourth despite its loss and Ironton jumped from eighth last
week to fifth. New Lexington,
Napoleon, Minerva, Campbell
Memorial and Dayton Jefferson
round the top ten.
For the Second Straight week,
Marion Pleasant holds the top
spot in the Class A race with
Portsmouth Notre Dame moving into second place, one point
ahead of Cory Rawson .
Pleasant, unbea ten in nine
games, has 149 points to 137 for
Notre Dame and 136 for Cory
Rawson. Newark Catholic is
fourth with 100 and West Jefferson fifth with 95.
Rounding out the top ten are
Zanesville Rosecrans, Tuscarawas Catholic, Ada, Marion Cath-

ABA Standings
By United Press tnternationa I
East
W. L Pet. GB
Virgin ia
9 4 .692
Kentucky
9 4 .692
Floridians
7 6 .538
New York
6 6 .500
Pittsburgh
7 7 .500
Carolina
3 9 .250
West
W. L Pet. GB
Utah
8 6 .571 ...
Ind iana
I 6 .538
r;,
Dallas
6 7 .462
l •;,

New York at Utah

Class A
Patterson , Lima Senior and
Team
Sycamore .
1. Marion Pleasant
Class AA

Vermilion, Harrison,

COLUMBUS (U PI)-With
only on_e week remaining, Warren Harding has
taken a commandin g lead
in the United Press International Ohio High School
Board of Coaches' Class AAA
football ratings.
The Panthers, who meet seventh ranked Niles McKinley Friday night with a chance to sew
up the title, hold a 25().214 lead
over runnerup Cincinnati Moeller.
Moeller, only two points behind Harding last week, dropped a 6-3 decision in the snow
Saturday afternoon to Cincinnati
St. Xavier, with all the scoring
coming on field goals.
But Friday night's game between the Red Dragons and
Panthers, to be played at Niles,
is one of those back yard affairs in which anything can happen, one of those "throw the
records out the window" games.
Aloss by Harding would throw
the Class AAA title chase into
a turmoil, with Moeller, Elyria,
Akron Garfield and Troy all
within striking distance.
Title On Line
Elyria, third again this week
with 190 points, dwnped Mansfield Senior 39 - 6 Friday night
for its ninth in a row . Akron
Garifled is fourth with 146 and
Troy fifth at 130.
Moeller winds up its season
Friday night against Cincinnati
LaSalle (8-1) with the Cincinnati Catholic League title all on
the line .

Wednesday's Games

Columbus Nortland, Columbus
Linden. Sandusky, Oregon Clay
(1), Toledo Woodward, Dayton

Points
second worst season in history . Team
1. Steubenville Central
(15) 19-01 246
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Miami 2. Warren Kennedy
sophomore Bob Hitchens and
(31 19-0) 177
Paul Miles of Bowling Green 3. Cleveland Holy Name
(l) (8-0) 174
are co-winners of "player of the 4. Youngstown North
week" honors in the Mid(7 -11 94
i ll (8. 1) 88
American Conference this S. lronton
7. Napoleon
(8-ll 73
week .
8. Minerva
(8.1) 53
9. Campbell Memorial
(l) (7 -2) 36
COLUMBUS (UP!)
10.
Dayton
Jefferson
Hunters will find the rabbit
(9-0) 35
population significantly higher
Second ten : lL Springfield
next Monday when the upland Shawnee Ill 34; 12. Ashtabula
Harbor (1)27; 13. Poland26; 14 .
game season begins, the slate St
. Clairsville 24 ; 15. Madeira
Division of Wildlife reported and Riverdale 23 each ; 17 .
today.
Elyria Catholic 22: 18. St.
Marys
Memorial t II 18; 19.
The division said reports
Carrollton 16; 20. Milton Unioo
indicated that rabbits are most 15.
numerous in Ohio 's south
Others with 10 or more points:
Oregon
Strllch, Hartville Lake
central, southwest, southeast
(l) Leavittsburg LaBrae IlL
and central hills regions.
Chagrin Falls, Gattlpolis,

Harding Can Sew
Up Crown Friday

•

If something in your house goes on the blink,

you better hope it's your telephone.

76

(8-ll 75
Ill (9-0J 67

•

(1)

8. Ada

9. Marion Catholic

10. Marion

Local

(8-0-ll 50

(9·0) 39
Second ten: 11 . Covington and
Lorain Catholic 2~ each; t3.
Jewett-Sclo 22 ; 14. Smithfield
(2) 20; 15. Canal Winchester 16;
16. Cedarville and Norwalk St.
Paul 15 each ; 18. Jonathan
Alder and Southeastern I Clark)
13 each; 20. Middletown Fenwick t2.
Others with 10 or more points:
McDonald (t) , Sidney Lehman
Wyoming and Frankfort Adena.

• Big 23" diagonal picture,
295 square inch viewing

• Pre-set fine tuning, VHF

Pro Standings

SAVE WITH

• Colo r-mind er controls

• INSTA-COLOR*

SUGAR ..~~~~. !~.~........~.~.!~..~..'12'

•1•'

Desk

by the Bobcats but were soundly
trounced 'by .the Eagles.
All other Southern Valley
Athletic Conference teams
closed out their season last
Wellston High School, in a death rattle battle to keep up in
week.
· Southeastern Ohio League footbaU, apparently is ready to give it
up. WeUston School Board members meeting there earlier this
week brought the subject onto the floor for discussion. No decision
SVAC STANDINGS
was reported publicly, but indications were strong a committee
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP will make overtures to the Ohio Valley Conference (Oak Hill, St .
Eastern
9 0 0 346 18 Joe, Chesapeake, Rock HiD, South Point etc.). .
North Gallia
4 4 0 t94 t04
U U.is comes to pass full circle will have been reached, and
Kyger Cr~ek
4 4 t t27 227
Southern
3 5 0 78 155 exceeded.
Southwestern
l 8 0 46 225
It was in 1925that the late Bill Thomas, Wellston postmaster
Hannan Trace
0 9 0 20 249
and publisher, put together the old Southeastern Ohio League
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP which included Portsmouth, Athens, WeUston, Jackson, Logan,
Eastern
s 00203 6
Kyger Creek
4 t 0 95 80 Ironton, Pomeroy, Gallipolis, and Nelsonville (nine teams).
North Ga II ia
2208434 Middleport joined for the 1928 season upon Portsmouth seeking
Southern
2205885 greater glories in the Greater Ohio League. Ironton dropped out
Southwestern
l 4 0 38 123
Hannan Trace
0 5 0 6 156 later, but returned in 67-68for football. New Bciston was in and out
Totals
14' 14 0 484 484 early. Middleport and Pomeroy became Meigs in 67-68.
Through it all, Wellston has batued for honors which came
frequently enough in the early days to claim athleti~ prestige. In
basketball three titles, in football six titles. Not good. Hardly fair,
in an overaU field of 14 teams over the period 1925 through half of
1971 (basketball yet to be settled this season).
Over those years Wellston in football has won 123 games, lost
173and tied 19, a won-lost percentage of .428, and lith place in the
field standings.
In basketball the Rockets have won 230, lost 313, for .424 pet. ,
16 other players to the
also ranking 11th in a field of 14.
honorable mention group, with
But the past three years, since Meigs and Athens coneach school permitted two
solidations and the entry of Ironton, the Rockets have fallen on
honorable mentions.
Also chosen will be the bad days.
In league football games Wellston in '71, '70 and '69 has been
league's most valuable player
been 2-18-1 and in basketball in '70, '69 and '68, has won 20 and lost ·
and the coach of the year .
The entire group will be 22, which isn't had.
But football is the crusher. That's the sport in which it is the
honored at the All-SEOAL
more
demoralizing to the hays playing to be constantly overFootball Banquet to be held
either in Ironton or Athens on powered.
So, Wellston apparently wants out, and will get out as soon as
Thw-sday, December 2.
feasible. "We have no place to get more school population," say
Rocket fans. "There is only one way to go."
So, who wants in?
Rwnbles are a dime a dozen with the impending change of
cast in the old SEOAL, granddaddy of all athletic conf~rences in
Ohio.
COLUMBUS IUPI J - The
Portsmouth wants to return. Chilllcothe is looking south, not
United Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches' north, west, or east. Both have been campaigning for years in fast
football ratings (wi th first place company: Chillicothe in the Ceniral Ohio League, Portsmouth in
votes and won -lost records in the Greater Ohio League. They would like to fare better.
parentheses) :
Does the SEOAL want either of them?
Class AAA
Team
Points
There will be diverse opinions on this proposition. Sports Desk
1. Warren Harding
(161 (9.0) 250 has a feeling that the fans of the several schools athletic teams
2. Cincinnati Moeller
should have decisive weight in answering it. After all, the fans
(61 (8-l) 214 actually make this whole package of high school sports possible;
3. Elyria
Ill 19-01 190
it's tbeir $1.25 per Friday, their kids in the bands, their tax dolll!rs
4. Akron Garfield
(8-0) 146 twice a year that put the schools and their teams into the field.
5. Troy
121 19-0) 130
Therefore, take a good look at, talk it up, and down, and let
6. Massil loo
(1 -2) 83
your
hometown newspaper know how it is with you. The school
I . Niles McKinley .
Ill 11-l-ll 78 dads, we'd guess, would like to know. As would Sports Desk.

and River.

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SEO Scribes, 'Casters To
M~ke Choices Sunday

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·the Sports

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East Conference

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel.
1~---------"1 Philadelphia
Boston
.818
89 32 .727
.ALSO WITH
New York
6 7 .462
·
"'
Buffalo
6 . 8 .429
Central Division
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
4 8 .333
Cincinnati
3 7 .300
Atlanta
3 9 .250
Cleveland
3 9 .250
·'
Western Confe renee
Midwest Division ·
W. L.. Pet.
$
Milwaukee
11
1 .9t7
Chicago
7 5 .583
Detroit
6 6 .500
S 7 .417
All Stereos include Phoenix

PoriJ -Fi.

Ballard Buttermilk

NBA Standings
By United Press lnt~rnationat

GOBLE

GB

GB

IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR

GB
4
S
6

Pacific Division

W. L. Pel. GB
Los Angeles 10 3 .769
Golden State 10 4 .714 •12
Seattle
8 4 .667 l '12
Portland
2 8 .200 6'12
Houston
2 12 .143 8lf2
Tuesday's Results
Milwaukee 118 Phoenix llJ
Los Angeles 122 Chicago 1~9
Buffalo 109 Portland 100 ·
Golden State 1'15 Houston 99
Wednesday's Gomes
Chicago at Baltimore
New York at Cincinnati
Portland at Detroit
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
Boston at Houston
Milwaukee at Atlanta

AT••••

KEITH.GOBLE FORD

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4- The DaUy !'entlnel, Mlddleport-Porai!I'Oy, 0., Nov. 10, 19'11

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Something's Got To Give

n ..f.
1

116

Georgia And Auburn 1r~atc
Records In Saturday's Headliner
ly MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE I
Pigskin Prophet
I

Egad . friends. this Satur·
day at Sanford Stadium in
Athens, Georgia. will indeed
be a day to remember' The
undefeated Georgia eleven
t9.0 1 and the unbeaten
Auburn stalwarts (8·01 meet
head-on.
Both clubs have outstand·
ing offenses and stingy de·
lenses with Georgia a shade
better in both departments
according- ka lf-kalf- to the
Hoople slats. Yas . dear read·
ers. it 'll be the end of the
The Old Boy Himself
line for the Tigers as Vince
Doolev 's best -ever Georgia
team ·marches off the field Indiana, to meet in-and-out
with a hard-ea rned 33·24 de· Purdue. We confidently pre·
diet a 35·2D triumph for the
cision- har -rumph!
The other members of the Michigan Wolves.
Alabama 's Crimson Tide
perfect nine-Nebraska t9.01.
Alabama (9.0 1. Michigan 19· coming off a hard-fought win
01. Toledo !9·0 1. Penn State over bruising LSU will have
t8.01. Oklahoma !8.01 and an easier time disposing of
Cornell ti.OI-figure to stay Miami's Hurricanes. Bear
Bryant's boys will flatten
undefeated.
·
The Toledo Roc·kets. pos· Miami , 29·12, to give the
sessors of the nation's long. coach his 209th career vic·
est •·in streak. will make it tory , making him the fourth·
:l3 in·a-row as the y wallop winningest mentor in colle·
Marshall. 42·7. Meanwhile , giate history- har-rumph'
Now go on with the fore·
the Big Red of Cornell will
mo\'e into the Iv y League cast.
throne room as they turn Alabama 29, Miami, Fla. 12
back rugged Dartmouth. The
big difference between these Arizona St. 33, Wyoming 11
two fine team s w1U be Ed Pittsburgh 16, Anny 14
Mar i n a r o who has been Boston Col. 28, No. Ill. 12
a,. er a g i n g just over 210 Bowling Green 47, Xaxier 27
yards rushing per game . Ariz. 26. Brigham Young 17
Jove' That young man re· Harvard 18. Brown 12
minds me of my college da ys Clemson 24. Maryland 22
when 1 was Yale's leading Colo . St. U. 20. West Texas
St. 12
rusher-um-kumph ~
Colorado
31. Oklahoma St. 19
Still dri\·ing all-out for
Columbia
21, Penn. 20
their Turkey Day shootout.
CorneU
24,
Dartmouth 22
Kebraska and Oklahoma will
Villanova
35,
Dayton 7
score decisi ve victories O\'er
Big Eight foes. Kansas State Florida 28, Kentuckv 6
and Kansas . The Hoople Sys· Florida St. 20, Ga. Tech 10
tern calls 'em . 'liebraska 28. Georgia 33, Auburn 24
Kansas State 6. and Oklaho· Houston 29, VIrginia Tech
8 (Ni
rna 29. Kansas 14.
Missouri
17, Iowa State IS
Penn State. shooting for its Iowa 32, Indiana
14
14th straight. entertains
Nebraska 28, Kansas Si. 6
!\orth Carolina State. The Miami,
0. 27, Kent State 21
!\ittany Lions will prevail. 39· Loufsvllle 34, Southern Ill. 14
12. Michigan . driving for the Toledo 42 , Marshall 7
Big Ten crown and a trip to Memphis St. 42, No. Texas
the Rose Bowl to meet Stan·
St. 29
ford. journeys to Lafayette. Michigan St. 30. Minnesota 8
LSU 22. Miss. State 12 (N)
Mississippi 35, UT ChattaCongratulate
nooga 7
Syracuse 24, Navy 21
The
New Mexico 17, Utex. El
New Mother &amp; Baby
Paso 14
With A
Notre Dame 38, Tulane 16
Ohlo State 27 , Northwestern
21
In A
Ohio U. 34, Cincinnati 31
Novelty Container
Oklahoma 49, Kansas 14
Washington Si. 28, Oregon
St.J5
CaWornla 40, Oregon 25
Semng : G&lt;tttipotis.
Penn State 39, N.C. State 12
Pomeroy, Middleport, o .•
Yale 10, Princeton 7
&amp; Mason Co .• W. Va .
)lfchigan 35, Purdue 20

Foliage Garden

Dudley's Fbbi

Texas A&amp;M 24, Rice 21
Holy Cross lO. Rutgers 10
Arkansas 33, SMU 12
Stanford 28, San Jose St. 7
Wm. &amp; Mary 18, Temple U
Baylor 17; Texas Tech 14
Texas 24, TCU 12
Air Force 41, Tulsa 16
Utah State 21, Utah 18
No. Carolina 27, Virginia 17
Duke 17, Wake Forest 16
Southern Cal. 35, Wash. 28
Western Mich. 32, Pacific 21
West Virginia 42, VMI 20
Illinois 26, Wisconsin 20
( N) Night Game
Gallipolis 30 Portsmouth 28
Waverly 22 Greenfield 18
Wellston l4 Oak Hill 20
Meigs 28 Pt. Pleasant 14
Jackson 22 Portsmouth West 20
Ironton 28 Ashland, Ky., 7
Athens 20 Circleville 6
North Gallla 22 Southern 20
Wahama 44 Bullalo 0
Fairland 28 Symmes Valley 6
Ironton St. Joe 14 Wheelersburg
0
South Point 66 Rock Hlll 8
Coal Grove 20 Chesapeake 14
Nelsonville-York 44 Ft. Frye 12

Lakin
Patients'
Gift List

CHICAGO (UP! )-President
Nixon looked and wunded like a
candidate but did not give the
official word Tuesday night
when his supporters from coast
to coast, led by Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew, raised a chorus
urging him actively to seek a
second term.
In a jet age swing, Nixon
appeared at $500-a-plate Repulr
lican fund-raising dinners in
New York and ·Chicago, sweetening the party coffers by
nearly $5 million . Nixon's
appearances were linked by
closed circuit _television to 18
other Republican dinners across
the country.
Nixon's trip, regarded by
many as the launching pad of
his 1972 candidacy, was not
without stormy sidelights.
Protesters Mass
An estimated 2,500 persons
opposed to the Vietnam War
and Illinois welfare cuts
massed in front of the Conrad
Hilton Hotel, scene of the riots
of the 1968 Democratic National
i:onvention. There were three
arrests, but by the time the
President slipped in a side door
of the hotel, the nwnber of
protesters waiting in the chilly
night had dwindled to 50.
Union demonstrators were on

LAKIN , W. Va . - Operation
Santa Claus at Lakin State
Hospital needs \he following
items for Christmas packages
for the patients:
For children, aged 8 to 16,
pocket books and billfolds,
socks, stockings, woolen gloves,

scarves, underwear, shirts,
panties, hair brushes, combs,
hair spray, cotton dresses,
pants for boys, both robes for
boys and girls, bathroom
slippers, ties, both bow and
neck, deodorant in plastic

containers, sweaters.
For females , all sizes, cotton
stockings, underwear, pocket
books, scarves, bobby pins,
curlers , hair spray, home
permanents, hair brushes,
combs , cotton robes, night
gowns, sweaters , cigarettes,
deodorant in plastic containers,
face powder, lipsticks, woolen
gloves, bed jackets for patients
in infirmary, bobby socks, cold
cream in plastic tubes, cotton
dresses , bathroom slippers .

For males, all sizes, socks,
shirts, belts (especially ),

Loeal Bowling

hand outside the New Yoi'k
hotel where Nixon spoke. At
Beverley Hills, Calif., where
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell featured a $500-a-plate
affair, a 14-cents..a-plate dinner
of boiled rice and tea was
served to sidewalk crowds who
later jeered the arriving guests.
The President and his wife
were slated to return to
Washington today after spending the night at a Chicago
hotel.
Agnew Sounds Keynote
Agnew sounded the keynote
when he told some 1,800
Republican faithful at Chicago's·
Conrad Hilton Hotel, "Let
tonight be the moment we
launch a united effort to urge a
great President to seek re·
election.''
''We have the man, we have
the issues in 19l2," he said.
"With your assistance, with the
assistance of Republicans all
over the United States, we are
going to see Richard Nixon
returned to the presidency by
an overwhelming majority in
1972."
It was worthy of a nominal·
ing convention. But Nixon
played it cool.
Taking his turn at the
Chicago podiwn, Nixon heaped
praise instead on the vice
president in terms that ap·
peared designed to dispel talk
of a "dwnp Agnew" move.

Lauds Agnew
Womenjs Thursday
"May
I say tonight that I
Afternoon League
Nov . 4, 1971
know that all or you will agree
Standings
with me that this country is
T~m
W L fortunate in having as its vice
New York Clothing
62 18
Pomeroy Lanes
50 30 president a man who is loyal, a
Dave's Tire La nd
46 34 man who is courageous and a
.
•
Simon 's Market
41 39
Forest Run Block
23 57 man who ts competent in
Smith 's Body Shop
28 62 handling his duties at home and
High Team 3 games - New a man who with great dignity
York Clothing 1638i Dave's Tire
Land t621 ; Smith 's Body Shop and great ability and bas
represented America in 25
1542.
High Team game - New countries since he has.,een vice
York Clothing 577 ; Dave's Tire president" Nixon said.
Land 555; Forest Run Block 547.
The audiences in New York
High Ind. game - Drema
Smith 191 ; Belly Sm ith t90 ; and Chicago were a contrast in
Sonya Wayland t82.
High Ind . 3 games - Drema dress and response. The New
Smith 497 ; Sonya Wayland 492 ; Yorkers seemed carriage trade
Betty Smith 460.
and were elegantly attired. The
Midwesterners gav~ Nixon the
long , thwnpmg ovatiOn and the
woolen gloves, sweaters, un· ,.._ _ _ __ , _ _ _
derwear, pajamas, combs, bath
robes, bathroom slippers,
cigarettes, cigars, pipes, pipe
tobacco, tobacco pouches,
snuff, ties, shaving lotion in
plastic container s, playing
s:~REVI~~y
cards, dominoes, checkers.
"The staff and patients at
In At 9-0ut At S
Lakin State Hospital will ap·
U
se Our Free Parking Lot
preciate all kindness and effort
in behalf of our people," said
lnSOII 1S
Sam L. Nichols, Jr ., hospital
administrator.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

SHIR
Fl NISHI NG.

Rob•

Cleaners

enthusiasm that appeared to
turn him on.
AB he has for the past several
months, he told his audiences
that '.'peace is in sight" in
Vietnam; that his forthcoming
trips to China and the Soviet
Union .will not solve all of the
profound problems of the
world; and that his new
economic plans will bring
prosperity.
For the first time, he made
public statements on two
controversial issues.
Castigates Senate
He castigated the Senate for
killing the $3.2 billion foreign
aid bill, saying the · action
increased the danger of war.
"There are no constituencies
for foreign aid," he said. "We
know ~~at. But let us recognize
this: V the United States at
thit_.,particular time should
determine that it will discontinue its programs of mutual
assistance for countries abroad
... it can only mean that the
world will become much more
unstable, that the dangers of
war in the world will greatly
increase and that the United
States will no longer be a world
power respected in the world,
no matter how strong we are at
home."
And he explained his decision
to go ahead with the five

For T od

ay

RUMMAGE
NOV. 1.. -..

I
L".iol l

FRY BUILDING,
MIDDLEPORT
Sponsored by
Legi_on

JfS Quick! Easy

~

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iC
iC
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DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Friday~ Only

4x8

Sheet

Webster Post Unit 39.

!PECIA~

&amp;

·~
~
~

~

-t&lt;
iC

CEILING
TILE

~

~·

-t&lt;

~

u •••••••

4.75

SAVE 60c lb.

Sliced
PORK
LOIN LB.

773-5554

FURRING
STRIPS

69

69tlb. 10'Savelb. I

SLICED

PORK STEAK

llbton
Roll
Boneless Pork Roast

OCEAN SPRAY

pkg.

4

~:

1.00

PHILADELPHIA

CREAM CHEESE

Special Money-Saver!

3 !: 1.00

Sylvania Blue Dot

· FLASH CUBES

Right reserved to limit 'quantities

We

Glad~

APPLE SAUCE

5

=!

9 99

~E·_ ~ ~Pk,
4

STOKELY

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE''

.....·¢.

1.00

39~

3 lb.
or more

69~b.

9For99~1

BANANAS

S

Ground Round

.,.__e.,.. . . .__ FRESH

.....· -

Prices Effective Nov. 10-16

GRAPEFRUIT
5~ 69°

Mon. Tues., WecL..... _9 to I
Thu~, Fri., Sat. ---9 1o 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

'

STOKELY PEARS~~.~~.~::~.~~~.~~~.-~~~~..~ ~ - 29e
FOLGER'S COFFEE.~~~-~:.i~~~......... 2 ~~" '1 4'
WHITNEY TUNA ..............................~~~.. 39e
REYNOLD'S FOI L~~~.~:. ~~:~..~.~·:.............~;~'...49e·

YELLOW ON I&amp;NS 3~ 29~· .·
.Phebe Says:
.. You're Always Welcome
At Racine Food Market
Plenty .Of Free Pa~ng

:·:...

PORK_HOCKS
lb. 29e

FRENCH CITY

)11

9¢

-

OPEN
SUNDAYS

Bes
Dairy Buy!

FAIRMONT
CHOCOlATE
.

12 Noon Til 6 P.M.

MILK

$ 09 '.

P·ORl·ERH:OUSE STEAK
For A King
Size Appetite

SAVE
60C lb.

lb•

...

19
LB.

I.G.A.
PANCAKE
MIX .

5 LB. BAG
1 BAG

2 LB. box

LIMIT

KRAFT
MACARONI
&amp;

WIENER'S

BAG

12 OZ. CAN

MA
BROWN

CHEESE
DINNER\

APPLE
BUTTER

14 Ol.

28 Ol.

Castleberry

STOKELY

Hot Dog

Chopped

'

SAUCE
10~

oz.

3 cans

KRAUT
15 oz.' can

CHEF BOY
AR DEE
SPAGHETTI
'

&amp;

MEAT
DINNER
19 oz.

....:
\
.,

2 49c

.. ....

soe lb.

SLICED PORK
SLICED BEEF
STEAK &amp; GRAVY

LB.

'

./ 20 ct.

Save

MORTON HOUSE
MEAT &amp; GRAVY

75

STEA K.".J.~•••.

BUYS!
NEW CROP
PINK OR WHITE

'

pkg.

GOLDEN RIPE

.

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

/l)/''"'

12 oz.

IHam
Sandwiches

ROUND
STEAK lb.

•

Save
20' lb.
--

JUICY TENDER

CRANBERRY SAUCE
1

59~

1 lb.

Eagles Pride
Chicken Franks

CHOICE

..

49~lb. 10'
Save
lb.

Cirtle K
·Sliced Bacon

USDR

\ Phebe Says:

'

Counby Style
Pllf'k Sausage

~~OUND
EEF

"Check Our '1 Savings"

CSA

10• lb.
Center &amp; First Cuts Mixed

MASON

We Deliver

T-BONE
STEAK

1/4

MATERIALS CO.

t

8ig tlavor, big seledion and big volues·
that's whot you get when you buy
our guo ran teed tender steaks· plus
the very bigges~ovings in town!

DELICIOUS

Foot

BANK ~
and SA:VINGS CO.!...
i:

LB.

11 ~~Square
6~Running
.fbOt
HOGG &amp; ZUS.PAN ',,

"'

POMEROY, OHIO
M b FDIC
"'
~
em er
~
-t&lt;
Member Federal
"
~
Reserve System
~
.
~
***************'1

CLUB
STEAK

Santa Fe ......................... 5.29

~

i

~

JUICY

2.99

Andorra .................

~
~

t

l:

LB.

Granada ....................·..... 4.75

is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
iC
!Continuously)
~
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3~
and•
s to 7 •• usual
Fridays.
_ _on~;.

...

Mouth
Watering

Almond Wood .............. 3.89

~

~ F8~~E_RS

.

--~- ._---~-~- ..

Medium Lauan

iC The Drive - In Window~

iC

/

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Now On Sale!

-{;onfucius ~

~

,I

Drew

Hazelnut......................... 4.98

:f

i

..I

American

Auxiliary

t

***

i'

;

i' who. Is. free from fear and iC
iC anx1ettes.
-tc
.~
-t&lt;

~

/

/

TENDER

~

iC

I

SAVE 60c lb.

~ A superior man is the one iC

ic

''

I

Steak At It's Best!

lr~~················ ·············· ~.~II
Sandstone ...................... 4.98

~

I

9 A.M. TO 4

Truckload

r**************~
A "'h .
iC
iC
• ought. ~

~

"Unless we have an adequate
progr. am for defending the
United States, we won't have
any environment to
"

megaton underground nuclear
test at Amchltka in the
Aleutians.
"! had to make a decision
with regard to testing a
defensive weapons," he said .
"It was a controversial weapon
to begin with. It was, in my
view, a necessary one due to
the fact that another nation in
the world had already tested a
similar type of weapon. "

•

iC

' '

'• "

I

'

qts.
for

..
r

•

�•
N
lxon
h
Drums
Beaten
for
.re. ect

4- The DaUy !'entlnel, Mlddleport-Porai!I'Oy, 0., Nov. 10, 19'11

.

~

Something's Got To Give

n ..f.
1

116

Georgia And Auburn 1r~atc
Records In Saturday's Headliner
ly MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE I
Pigskin Prophet
I

Egad . friends. this Satur·
day at Sanford Stadium in
Athens, Georgia. will indeed
be a day to remember' The
undefeated Georgia eleven
t9.0 1 and the unbeaten
Auburn stalwarts (8·01 meet
head-on.
Both clubs have outstand·
ing offenses and stingy de·
lenses with Georgia a shade
better in both departments
according- ka lf-kalf- to the
Hoople slats. Yas . dear read·
ers. it 'll be the end of the
The Old Boy Himself
line for the Tigers as Vince
Doolev 's best -ever Georgia
team ·marches off the field Indiana, to meet in-and-out
with a hard-ea rned 33·24 de· Purdue. We confidently pre·
diet a 35·2D triumph for the
cision- har -rumph!
The other members of the Michigan Wolves.
Alabama 's Crimson Tide
perfect nine-Nebraska t9.01.
Alabama (9.0 1. Michigan 19· coming off a hard-fought win
01. Toledo !9·0 1. Penn State over bruising LSU will have
t8.01. Oklahoma !8.01 and an easier time disposing of
Cornell ti.OI-figure to stay Miami's Hurricanes. Bear
Bryant's boys will flatten
undefeated.
·
The Toledo Roc·kets. pos· Miami , 29·12, to give the
sessors of the nation's long. coach his 209th career vic·
est •·in streak. will make it tory , making him the fourth·
:l3 in·a-row as the y wallop winningest mentor in colle·
Marshall. 42·7. Meanwhile , giate history- har-rumph'
Now go on with the fore·
the Big Red of Cornell will
mo\'e into the Iv y League cast.
throne room as they turn Alabama 29, Miami, Fla. 12
back rugged Dartmouth. The
big difference between these Arizona St. 33, Wyoming 11
two fine team s w1U be Ed Pittsburgh 16, Anny 14
Mar i n a r o who has been Boston Col. 28, No. Ill. 12
a,. er a g i n g just over 210 Bowling Green 47, Xaxier 27
yards rushing per game . Ariz. 26. Brigham Young 17
Jove' That young man re· Harvard 18. Brown 12
minds me of my college da ys Clemson 24. Maryland 22
when 1 was Yale's leading Colo . St. U. 20. West Texas
St. 12
rusher-um-kumph ~
Colorado
31. Oklahoma St. 19
Still dri\·ing all-out for
Columbia
21, Penn. 20
their Turkey Day shootout.
CorneU
24,
Dartmouth 22
Kebraska and Oklahoma will
Villanova
35,
Dayton 7
score decisi ve victories O\'er
Big Eight foes. Kansas State Florida 28, Kentuckv 6
and Kansas . The Hoople Sys· Florida St. 20, Ga. Tech 10
tern calls 'em . 'liebraska 28. Georgia 33, Auburn 24
Kansas State 6. and Oklaho· Houston 29, VIrginia Tech
8 (Ni
rna 29. Kansas 14.
Missouri
17, Iowa State IS
Penn State. shooting for its Iowa 32, Indiana
14
14th straight. entertains
Nebraska 28, Kansas Si. 6
!\orth Carolina State. The Miami,
0. 27, Kent State 21
!\ittany Lions will prevail. 39· Loufsvllle 34, Southern Ill. 14
12. Michigan . driving for the Toledo 42 , Marshall 7
Big Ten crown and a trip to Memphis St. 42, No. Texas
the Rose Bowl to meet Stan·
St. 29
ford. journeys to Lafayette. Michigan St. 30. Minnesota 8
LSU 22. Miss. State 12 (N)
Mississippi 35, UT ChattaCongratulate
nooga 7
Syracuse 24, Navy 21
The
New Mexico 17, Utex. El
New Mother &amp; Baby
Paso 14
With A
Notre Dame 38, Tulane 16
Ohlo State 27 , Northwestern
21
In A
Ohio U. 34, Cincinnati 31
Novelty Container
Oklahoma 49, Kansas 14
Washington Si. 28, Oregon
St.J5
CaWornla 40, Oregon 25
Semng : G&lt;tttipotis.
Penn State 39, N.C. State 12
Pomeroy, Middleport, o .•
Yale 10, Princeton 7
&amp; Mason Co .• W. Va .
)lfchigan 35, Purdue 20

Foliage Garden

Dudley's Fbbi

Texas A&amp;M 24, Rice 21
Holy Cross lO. Rutgers 10
Arkansas 33, SMU 12
Stanford 28, San Jose St. 7
Wm. &amp; Mary 18, Temple U
Baylor 17; Texas Tech 14
Texas 24, TCU 12
Air Force 41, Tulsa 16
Utah State 21, Utah 18
No. Carolina 27, Virginia 17
Duke 17, Wake Forest 16
Southern Cal. 35, Wash. 28
Western Mich. 32, Pacific 21
West Virginia 42, VMI 20
Illinois 26, Wisconsin 20
( N) Night Game
Gallipolis 30 Portsmouth 28
Waverly 22 Greenfield 18
Wellston l4 Oak Hill 20
Meigs 28 Pt. Pleasant 14
Jackson 22 Portsmouth West 20
Ironton 28 Ashland, Ky., 7
Athens 20 Circleville 6
North Gallla 22 Southern 20
Wahama 44 Bullalo 0
Fairland 28 Symmes Valley 6
Ironton St. Joe 14 Wheelersburg
0
South Point 66 Rock Hlll 8
Coal Grove 20 Chesapeake 14
Nelsonville-York 44 Ft. Frye 12

Lakin
Patients'
Gift List

CHICAGO (UP! )-President
Nixon looked and wunded like a
candidate but did not give the
official word Tuesday night
when his supporters from coast
to coast, led by Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew, raised a chorus
urging him actively to seek a
second term.
In a jet age swing, Nixon
appeared at $500-a-plate Repulr
lican fund-raising dinners in
New York and ·Chicago, sweetening the party coffers by
nearly $5 million . Nixon's
appearances were linked by
closed circuit _television to 18
other Republican dinners across
the country.
Nixon's trip, regarded by
many as the launching pad of
his 1972 candidacy, was not
without stormy sidelights.
Protesters Mass
An estimated 2,500 persons
opposed to the Vietnam War
and Illinois welfare cuts
massed in front of the Conrad
Hilton Hotel, scene of the riots
of the 1968 Democratic National
i:onvention. There were three
arrests, but by the time the
President slipped in a side door
of the hotel, the nwnber of
protesters waiting in the chilly
night had dwindled to 50.
Union demonstrators were on

LAKIN , W. Va . - Operation
Santa Claus at Lakin State
Hospital needs \he following
items for Christmas packages
for the patients:
For children, aged 8 to 16,
pocket books and billfolds,
socks, stockings, woolen gloves,

scarves, underwear, shirts,
panties, hair brushes, combs,
hair spray, cotton dresses,
pants for boys, both robes for
boys and girls, bathroom
slippers, ties, both bow and
neck, deodorant in plastic

containers, sweaters.
For females , all sizes, cotton
stockings, underwear, pocket
books, scarves, bobby pins,
curlers , hair spray, home
permanents, hair brushes,
combs , cotton robes, night
gowns, sweaters , cigarettes,
deodorant in plastic containers,
face powder, lipsticks, woolen
gloves, bed jackets for patients
in infirmary, bobby socks, cold
cream in plastic tubes, cotton
dresses , bathroom slippers .

For males, all sizes, socks,
shirts, belts (especially ),

Loeal Bowling

hand outside the New Yoi'k
hotel where Nixon spoke. At
Beverley Hills, Calif., where
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell featured a $500-a-plate
affair, a 14-cents..a-plate dinner
of boiled rice and tea was
served to sidewalk crowds who
later jeered the arriving guests.
The President and his wife
were slated to return to
Washington today after spending the night at a Chicago
hotel.
Agnew Sounds Keynote
Agnew sounded the keynote
when he told some 1,800
Republican faithful at Chicago's·
Conrad Hilton Hotel, "Let
tonight be the moment we
launch a united effort to urge a
great President to seek re·
election.''
''We have the man, we have
the issues in 19l2," he said.
"With your assistance, with the
assistance of Republicans all
over the United States, we are
going to see Richard Nixon
returned to the presidency by
an overwhelming majority in
1972."
It was worthy of a nominal·
ing convention. But Nixon
played it cool.
Taking his turn at the
Chicago podiwn, Nixon heaped
praise instead on the vice
president in terms that ap·
peared designed to dispel talk
of a "dwnp Agnew" move.

Lauds Agnew
Womenjs Thursday
"May
I say tonight that I
Afternoon League
Nov . 4, 1971
know that all or you will agree
Standings
with me that this country is
T~m
W L fortunate in having as its vice
New York Clothing
62 18
Pomeroy Lanes
50 30 president a man who is loyal, a
Dave's Tire La nd
46 34 man who is courageous and a
.
•
Simon 's Market
41 39
Forest Run Block
23 57 man who ts competent in
Smith 's Body Shop
28 62 handling his duties at home and
High Team 3 games - New a man who with great dignity
York Clothing 1638i Dave's Tire
Land t621 ; Smith 's Body Shop and great ability and bas
represented America in 25
1542.
High Team game - New countries since he has.,een vice
York Clothing 577 ; Dave's Tire president" Nixon said.
Land 555; Forest Run Block 547.
The audiences in New York
High Ind. game - Drema
Smith 191 ; Belly Sm ith t90 ; and Chicago were a contrast in
Sonya Wayland t82.
High Ind . 3 games - Drema dress and response. The New
Smith 497 ; Sonya Wayland 492 ; Yorkers seemed carriage trade
Betty Smith 460.
and were elegantly attired. The
Midwesterners gav~ Nixon the
long , thwnpmg ovatiOn and the
woolen gloves, sweaters, un· ,.._ _ _ __ , _ _ _
derwear, pajamas, combs, bath
robes, bathroom slippers,
cigarettes, cigars, pipes, pipe
tobacco, tobacco pouches,
snuff, ties, shaving lotion in
plastic container s, playing
s:~REVI~~y
cards, dominoes, checkers.
"The staff and patients at
In At 9-0ut At S
Lakin State Hospital will ap·
U
se Our Free Parking Lot
preciate all kindness and effort
in behalf of our people," said
lnSOII 1S
Sam L. Nichols, Jr ., hospital
administrator.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

SHIR
Fl NISHI NG.

Rob•

Cleaners

enthusiasm that appeared to
turn him on.
AB he has for the past several
months, he told his audiences
that '.'peace is in sight" in
Vietnam; that his forthcoming
trips to China and the Soviet
Union .will not solve all of the
profound problems of the
world; and that his new
economic plans will bring
prosperity.
For the first time, he made
public statements on two
controversial issues.
Castigates Senate
He castigated the Senate for
killing the $3.2 billion foreign
aid bill, saying the · action
increased the danger of war.
"There are no constituencies
for foreign aid," he said. "We
know ~~at. But let us recognize
this: V the United States at
thit_.,particular time should
determine that it will discontinue its programs of mutual
assistance for countries abroad
... it can only mean that the
world will become much more
unstable, that the dangers of
war in the world will greatly
increase and that the United
States will no longer be a world
power respected in the world,
no matter how strong we are at
home."
And he explained his decision
to go ahead with the five

For T od

ay

RUMMAGE
NOV. 1.. -..

I
L".iol l

FRY BUILDING,
MIDDLEPORT
Sponsored by
Legi_on

JfS Quick! Easy

~

~
iC
iC
iC

~

DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Friday~ Only

4x8

Sheet

Webster Post Unit 39.

!PECIA~

&amp;

·~
~
~

~

-t&lt;
iC

CEILING
TILE

~

~·

-t&lt;

~

u •••••••

4.75

SAVE 60c lb.

Sliced
PORK
LOIN LB.

773-5554

FURRING
STRIPS

69

69tlb. 10'Savelb. I

SLICED

PORK STEAK

llbton
Roll
Boneless Pork Roast

OCEAN SPRAY

pkg.

4

~:

1.00

PHILADELPHIA

CREAM CHEESE

Special Money-Saver!

3 !: 1.00

Sylvania Blue Dot

· FLASH CUBES

Right reserved to limit 'quantities

We

Glad~

APPLE SAUCE

5

=!

9 99

~E·_ ~ ~Pk,
4

STOKELY

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE''

.....·¢.

1.00

39~

3 lb.
or more

69~b.

9For99~1

BANANAS

S

Ground Round

.,.__e.,.. . . .__ FRESH

.....· -

Prices Effective Nov. 10-16

GRAPEFRUIT
5~ 69°

Mon. Tues., WecL..... _9 to I
Thu~, Fri., Sat. ---9 1o 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

'

STOKELY PEARS~~.~~.~::~.~~~.~~~.-~~~~..~ ~ - 29e
FOLGER'S COFFEE.~~~-~:.i~~~......... 2 ~~" '1 4'
WHITNEY TUNA ..............................~~~.. 39e
REYNOLD'S FOI L~~~.~:. ~~:~..~.~·:.............~;~'...49e·

YELLOW ON I&amp;NS 3~ 29~· .·
.Phebe Says:
.. You're Always Welcome
At Racine Food Market
Plenty .Of Free Pa~ng

:·:...

PORK_HOCKS
lb. 29e

FRENCH CITY

)11

9¢

-

OPEN
SUNDAYS

Bes
Dairy Buy!

FAIRMONT
CHOCOlATE
.

12 Noon Til 6 P.M.

MILK

$ 09 '.

P·ORl·ERH:OUSE STEAK
For A King
Size Appetite

SAVE
60C lb.

lb•

...

19
LB.

I.G.A.
PANCAKE
MIX .

5 LB. BAG
1 BAG

2 LB. box

LIMIT

KRAFT
MACARONI
&amp;

WIENER'S

BAG

12 OZ. CAN

MA
BROWN

CHEESE
DINNER\

APPLE
BUTTER

14 Ol.

28 Ol.

Castleberry

STOKELY

Hot Dog

Chopped

'

SAUCE
10~

oz.

3 cans

KRAUT
15 oz.' can

CHEF BOY
AR DEE
SPAGHETTI
'

&amp;

MEAT
DINNER
19 oz.

....:
\
.,

2 49c

.. ....

soe lb.

SLICED PORK
SLICED BEEF
STEAK &amp; GRAVY

LB.

'

./ 20 ct.

Save

MORTON HOUSE
MEAT &amp; GRAVY

75

STEA K.".J.~•••.

BUYS!
NEW CROP
PINK OR WHITE

'

pkg.

GOLDEN RIPE

.

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

/l)/''"'

12 oz.

IHam
Sandwiches

ROUND
STEAK lb.

•

Save
20' lb.
--

JUICY TENDER

CRANBERRY SAUCE
1

59~

1 lb.

Eagles Pride
Chicken Franks

CHOICE

..

49~lb. 10'
Save
lb.

Cirtle K
·Sliced Bacon

USDR

\ Phebe Says:

'

Counby Style
Pllf'k Sausage

~~OUND
EEF

"Check Our '1 Savings"

CSA

10• lb.
Center &amp; First Cuts Mixed

MASON

We Deliver

T-BONE
STEAK

1/4

MATERIALS CO.

t

8ig tlavor, big seledion and big volues·
that's whot you get when you buy
our guo ran teed tender steaks· plus
the very bigges~ovings in town!

DELICIOUS

Foot

BANK ~
and SA:VINGS CO.!...
i:

LB.

11 ~~Square
6~Running
.fbOt
HOGG &amp; ZUS.PAN ',,

"'

POMEROY, OHIO
M b FDIC
"'
~
em er
~
-t&lt;
Member Federal
"
~
Reserve System
~
.
~
***************'1

CLUB
STEAK

Santa Fe ......................... 5.29

~

i

~

JUICY

2.99

Andorra .................

~
~

t

l:

LB.

Granada ....................·..... 4.75

is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
iC
!Continuously)
~
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3~
and•
s to 7 •• usual
Fridays.
_ _on~;.

...

Mouth
Watering

Almond Wood .............. 3.89

~

~ F8~~E_RS

.

--~- ._---~-~- ..

Medium Lauan

iC The Drive - In Window~

iC

/

,. /

Now On Sale!

-{;onfucius ~

~

,I

Drew

Hazelnut......................... 4.98

:f

i

..I

American

Auxiliary

t

***

i'

;

i' who. Is. free from fear and iC
iC anx1ettes.
-tc
.~
-t&lt;

~

/

/

TENDER

~

iC

I

SAVE 60c lb.

~ A superior man is the one iC

ic

''

I

Steak At It's Best!

lr~~················ ·············· ~.~II
Sandstone ...................... 4.98

~

I

9 A.M. TO 4

Truckload

r**************~
A "'h .
iC
iC
• ought. ~

~

"Unless we have an adequate
progr. am for defending the
United States, we won't have
any environment to
"

megaton underground nuclear
test at Amchltka in the
Aleutians.
"! had to make a decision
with regard to testing a
defensive weapons," he said .
"It was a controversial weapon
to begin with. It was, in my
view, a necessary one due to
the fact that another nation in
the world had already tested a
similar type of weapon. "

•

iC

' '

'• "

I

'

qts.
for

..
r

•

�'· ·

o.• !Cclt'.to,m

Mother Guest
at Dinner Party

Katie's Korner

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holtet
entertained Sunday with a
dinner party in observance of
the birthday of his mother. Mrs .
Homer Holter .
A decorated cake was served
with the dinner . Gilts were
presented to Mrs. Holter who
also received flowers from her
sister, Mrs. Arlene Ashbaugh in
Virginia ; and a telephone call
from another sister, Mrs. Mabel
Bailey, Euclid.
Attending were Miss Ann
Holler , Richard Fox, Ohio State
University students; Mrs.
Roger Starcher, Tammy, Terri
a nd Scott , Mrs . John
Mclxlughlin and children, Mr.
and Mrs . Raymond Frecker,
Randy Hand , and the Holler
children , Janice, Eddie and
Alan .

Social Calendar
",yq..q___________NN--"'41"'41~.

WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
REGULAR MEETING, PAST
COUNCIJ,ORS ,
By Katie Crow
Middleport Amateur Garden Theudurus Council, D. of A. ,
Club, Wednesday. Tour of Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of
Dudley Florists, 2419 Dudley Mrs ., Kate Goodwin , New
Ave., Parkersburg . Leave Haven .
IT'S AONE AND·TWO AND THREE AND AWAY WE GO, to
Citizens National Bank corner
SHADE RIVER Lodge "'453,
the Fall Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel Association , that is.
Middleport, 6:30p.m. For ride~ F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.,
The Big Show will be presented Saturday night at Meigs High
call Mrs. Roger Morgan by noon election of officers and work in
School under the direction of Bob Hoeflich. Curtain time is 8:10
Tuesday.
fellowcraft degree. All Master
p.m.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Masons invited.
As usual, the show is excellent. There are outstanding dance
Royal Arch Masons, Wed- BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
lines and beautiful costumes, tremendous talent and black light
nesday, 7 p.m. Most. excellent Thursday at school.
numbers which are always show stealers.
master degree to be conferred. OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
One of the greatest little troopers of the Big Bend Minstrel
Refreshments.
Letart Falls, home of Erma
Association is Jayne Lee Hoeflich .
THURSDAY
Wilson 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Jayne is seven years old and in the third grade class at
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, .Refreshments of pie, coffee .
Pomeroy Elementary SchooL
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
FRIDAY
Members to take gifts for the DANCE FRIDAY following
Jayne is amazing .She has been performing in the shows since
Athens Mental Health Center. Waham,a-Buffalo football game
she was two years old. Jayne will be featured with her father and
THURSDAY, Nov. 11, annual at Wahama High School from 10
mother in an Appalachian number, a dance line and made up of
"Stuffing Bee" for Christmas to 12. Jays Will emcee.
.
second and third graders; she will be singing "Rhythm in My
Seals
will
be
held
at
the
First
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs
Nursery Rhymes." She too is a show stealer. Tickets to the
Baptist Church, corner of Sixth Chapter, DAR, 2 P·~· Friday at
event may be purchased in advance for $1. At the door tickets will
and
Palmer sts., Middleport, the Episcopal Pansh House,
be sold for $1.25. It is wise to purchase tickets in advance as the 25
beginning at 9 a.m.
Pomeroy. Joseph Struble to be
cents savings adds up when a family of four or five plan to attend .
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT the guest speaker. Roll call will
The Meigs Athletic Boosters are sponsoring the show. Carl
Lions
Club, 7 p.m. Thursday, he a favorite American hero;
Wolfe , head basketball coach, will oversee the parking area with
United Methodist Church Joe hostesses, Mrs. Guy Ne1gler,
the aid of school athletes.
Holzer Medical Center, First Haning, Nelsonville, 'zone Mrs. George Skinner, and Mrs.
Mrs. Pearl Williams will oversee the members of the sixth Ave. and Cedar St. General
chairman to be present. District Mark Grueser, Jr.
grade chorus. The chorus will be featured in three numbers.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m . meeting . All local Lions urged
SATURDAY
Residents of the Children's Home and the Meigs County In- Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
to attend.
DUE TO FALL Follies
firmary have been invited to the show free of charge. However, 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine Saturday
night,
dance
transportation for the 20 children to and from the show is needed. Pediatrics Ward .
American Legi on Post 602, scheduled Saturday at Meigs
Any resident, especially those owning s~ tion wagons, who wish to
Births
, Thursday, 8 p.m. at hall. Plans Junior High in Middleport is
transport the children are asked to call the home 99U287 and
Mr · and Mrs. Earl Dean fur gun shoot and collection of cancelled.
volunteer their services.
Malone, Jackson, a daughter; dues
CHICKEN AND noodle dinner
The show is being presented one night only. I'd like to add that Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ar·
AFTERNOON CIRCLE Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. by
the auditorium at the school seats several thousand people. nold, Syracuse , a daughter; Mr. Heath United Methodist Middleport Pentecostal Church,
Seating will be no problem.
and . Mrs. C. Edward Clonch, Church, 2 p.m. Thursday at the S. Third, Middieport, in building
F. 0. Day of Marietta will be in charge of the sound system. Galhpohs, a daughter' and Mr. church. Devotions by Mrs. next lo church. For free
He does an excellent job. Mr. Day has been in charge of the and Mrs. Carl E. Kennedy, James Jividen Program by deliveries call 992·2502 or 992minstrel 's sound system many years, having worked with the Rutland , a ~on .
Mrs. M. L. Fr;nch; hostesses 6042 before 9 a.m. Saturday.
Minstrel Assn. 's show at the Meigs County Fair 15 years.
. Discharges
Mrs. Mildred Zeigler, Mrs. $1.25, including pie.
Moms Brown, Mrs. Stella Emerson Jones. Bazaar plans
SUNDAY
It is a hometown show with hometown talent. There is nothing
Booton, Mrs. Edna Brown, Mrs. to be completed
FAMILY
STEWARDSHIP
better!
Richard
Fielder
and
son,
Robin
·
For an evening of sheer enjoyment, see the Fall Follies.
Finley , Mrs. Carrie Hamm,
You'll be glad you did.
Elmer Haskins, Mrs . Ruben
Hill, Mrs. Eva Holley, Edward
Jordon, Angela McGuire,
James
Patrick,
Danny
Strickland, James W. Swingle,
Mrs. Okey Van Meter, Dempsy
I attended a fashion show in the Charleston Room, Holiday Wickline and Benjamin A.
Inn in Charleston last Wednesday, where I was told what's new Shenefield.
for spring of 1972 in the way of colors and fabrics by a specialist
coordinator, Frances Campbell. Others attending the show from
RIPON SOCIETY'S SUIT
this area were Mrs. Vicki Keefer, Mason County Homemakers
WASHINGTON
(UP[} - The
Agent, Mrs. Harry staats, Letart; Mrs. Otis Randolph, Leon;
Ripon Society, a group of liberal
Mrs. Ray Fox, Clifton, and Miss Hattie Jordan, Pt. Pleasant.
Clothes were modeled by ladies from the Charleston area. Republicans, has filed suit in U.
The models aU wore stockings to match their outfits and the S. District Court asking that the
delegate selection formula for
colors ranged from red to purple. ·Sculptured corduroy was used
the 1972 GOP National Conextensively. Also featured was a garment of Aztec fabric lined vention be declared un\11
with sebonne. She recommended using woven interfacings with constitutional. The suit claimed
woven fabrics. "Hong Kong tape," she said, ''was bias tape cut the formu la discriminates

HOSPITAL
NEWS

THOUGHT I WOULD pass on a household hint that proved
helpful to me - I have a piano bench that was marked with a big
white spot about the size of a baseball (my granddaughter spilled
alcohol on it and I thought I would have to refinish the whole top to
get rid ofthe eye sore). All I did was rub the white spot with toothpaste, and lo and behold, it is as good a new. The spot is gone.

held . over
several
period. Emphasis wlU be · on
helping parents develop a basic
understa.~ding of Modern Math
so that they can assist their
children . with homework, if
needed.

Martin Luther, founder of
Protestantism, was born Nov.
10, 1493.

RED HEART

REG. *1.39 VALUE

4 oz. 4 Ply

45 INCH WIDE

KNiniNG YARN

Am=e~r~ic~a~~;

hol1da,·

~~en.ng$ beR&lt;O~

a

SP•lr~hnB

w1th

night Sunday, 5p.m. at St. Paul
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
YOUTH RALLY, Pomeroy
Church of Christ, 2 p.m. SWl·
day.
CHICKEN AND spare rib
barbecue Sunday, starting 11
a.m . at Chester Fire House.
Homemade ice cream also.
Sponsored by Chester Fire· •
Department.

99

DRESS PANTS

GOLD

Reg . $10 .00 va lue first
quality men' s famous
Dickies Brand dress
pants. Out they go at a
big savings for you.

1

Choose a Keepsake Diamond
Ring .. . crafted In fine 14K gold
and set .with .a guaranteed perfect
diamonsl . R'egislered and pro·
tected against diamond loss, too.

BATH TOWELS
e22x44

.souos &amp;
PRINTS

eCHOIC£ Of
LENG!MS

•2'!
Values to '2. 99 Assl
24x34 Decorative 27x40

While Quantities Last! !

BRAIDED RUG

00

el7x29

PAPER TOWELS

each

PAIR

Annual

Christmas
Openftouse

Loom
Underwear
BRIEFS AND
T-SHIRTS

e2 TO PKG.

$265P~

el2"x25'
eBY ANAOONDA

eREG.

'

77

SPORT SHIRTS

CPO
SHIRTS

New arrivals "'en's famou s
Campus brand lon\1 sleeve sport
shirts. No-iron stripes, laney
plaids and pla, !r ..::olors. S-M-L-

XL

•FlEECE UNED

BRAS

. PlAIDS
eSIZES 6 TO 16

99
TO

AT 52.99

A,B&amp;C

FANCY UNDIES

FUN

Quick Service

Government Inspected
Cut To Your S~ecificotions

Useful &amp; ·Exclu•ive Gill$

Dale u'""'
992-6346

.

Lad ies 11alues to 49c Assl. co lor s
and fc1ncy styles. Sizes 5·6·7. A new
low pri ce for you arid your budget
Yes
save money at Slilflers,

Dick Vaughan
992-3374

RACING HELMET
ellURABLE
·PLASTIC
eREG. 11"

ERED CHERR
eREG. 69'
'

• Uffi OZ. lOX

GLOVES
.ONE SIZE
FITS ALL

eBLACK OR .
BROWN

00
. PAIR

eREG. 11"

·

49
BOX

..

POMEROY, OHIO

Reg . $2.49v alue . Boy s perma nent
pr ess new long sle eve Sport
Shirts in str ipes and plain colors
Size 6 to 18_

DRESSES

pr

•

2nd Floor

ladies fall and winter
dresses lo go. Smart
styl es, new fabrics.
One big rack to clear,
be here and get yours
now. Second Floor
Ready to Wear .

REG. '6,99 VALUE
MENS QUILTED LINED .

'

To Wear

Boys Aare Per. Press

Buy On Lay-Away

Sport Pants

NOW-SHOP
OUR GIFT
DEPT.•

TANKER JACKETS
Men s quilted li ned tan ker

Boys 6 to 18 new ta ll flare School
Pa nts in ass t . pla i n colors .
Per manent press. Well made
f1rst qua lil y at a new low price for
YOU .

99

For Every Day • Christmas
MAIN FLOOR
SEOOND FLOOR

Ja.cket s for work or dress. '
Bla ck or ol ive co lor 5 ML·XL. Spec ial new low
pnce at Stittl cr s.

Others 14.99 to 15.99

pair

CLOSE OUT GROUP

·Fashions
For Fall
By
• Bobbie Brooks
• Russ Togs
• Aileen
Sport Tops, Sweaters, Skirts,
Rare Leg Pants, Jackets, Vest,
BlouseS, Coordinates
Beautiful Fall Selection
Stifflers new winter
·
A' 1
Bobbie Brooks, 1 een,
Russ Togs sportswear
featuring pants, blouses,
knit tops, coordinates.

From
. I

PER. PRESS LONG SLEEVE

Values to 112.99 of

PAMPERS
eDAYTIME 30's

NEW-BOYS SMART

· VALUES TO· 112.99
Ladies Fall and Winter

Smart new styles, in new
fall and winter colors.

(-. ,_ ----""

!' If I have to go',

---- ... - ... __ .

Christmas Decorations

"

Ladies Size 5-6-7 Asst. Styles
Reg . 49c and J9c

eSIZES

EA.

Sport Shirts

CHOCOLATE

, '- take me to The&gt;
, _- '. Shop
!

Open Night. Tilt 9:00
O.zzling Array of

____ __

MEN'S CAMPUS LONG SLEEVE

"custon,1 meat cutting"
'

Reg. ? fl', ~. 51000
MENS
00,

SPORTSWEAR

'I"

,

Pleasant Midge Road
POMEROY OHIO

Pair

LADIES

The Shop

Nov. 1st Thru Nov. 13th

2419 Dudley Ave. ,
Parkersburg,
W. Va.
,...._

.................

(Continued on page 16)

$

00

Brand

150 Pair To Sell Mens

e4 TIE

YAHTZEE GAME
eFAMILY

Reg. $&lt;1 .99 value,
72x90 size Thermal
weave, sol id color s
blanket. Buy several
now at this low price,
Stiffler 's Main Floor .

USE OUR
EASY
LAY-AWAY PLAN

Reg . $7 .00, $8 .0v , $9 .00,
$ 10 .00 values men's
famou s Dickie Brand
dre ss pants, f lare leg
and reg . sty l es, 150 pair
of close· out no's to go at
thi s low , low price .

eSCOT lAD

FAMOUS MAID

eSHOP EARLY

Blanket

Values to $1.00 and $1.19 in
this clo se-out group of
asst. Viscose Rayon loop
and shag rugs . Stiffler's
Main Floor, yes , you save
money here .

DRESS
PANTS
Mens Fruit Of

Stifflers
Mens
Dept.

BOYS' LINED

TEA SETS

in your choice of six colors.
Cushioned insole in matching
colors.

ASST. THROW RUGS

FOIL

99

OR PRINTS

Airweave Thermal

VIscose Rayan Loop and Shag

I

DRAPES
eSOI.ID OOLORS

Solid Color

Values to 'J.J9 and 'J.OO

Broadcloth
Shorts
ALSO FROM 200
WED. RING 71
MAN'S RING 12.1

72x 90

Pome.....,

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU
SATURDAy NOVEMBER 13TH

FIBER GlASS

yard

CUSHION
SOLE SCU
Comfortable acrylic pil e scuffs

Sizes '
S-M-L

pr.

MRS. BERTIIA CLARK, MASON, recently observed her 9001
birthday at the Herdman Rest Home in Mason. A party in her
honor was given on Sunday by her daughters, Mrs. Eliza Roush,
Mrs. Helen Grinstead and Mrs. Theresa Ohlinger, aU of Rt. I,
Letart.
The birthday of Mrs. W. S. Billups, also a patient ther~, was
also observed.
·Mrs. Clark received 70 birthday cards, gifts, and a call from
her son, Harry, who resides in lllinois.
Attending were the honorees, Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Billups,
and Mr. and Mrs. William Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Clark, and
Leo Clark, Ethel Herdman, Roy Herdman, Bonnie, Wayne
Herdman, Macil Ellen Herdman, Christina Ann Howard, Karen
Sue Smith, Helen Grinstead, Shirley Sullivan, Juanita Gibbs, Mrs.
Harold King, Duford Bragg, f!.upert Howard, Dorothy Howard,

Dudley's ·

Shop

Stiffler's

music.

'·

Plump, non.allergenic foam
filled lounge pillows, with
Colon ial style Early American
printed covers . Save -

3.

THE REV . PARKER HINZMAN has announced that a Parish
Wide Thanksgiving Service of the United Methodist Churches will
be held at the Bachtel United Methodist Church at Letart Nov. 24
at 7:30p.m. The Rev. William DeMoss will be the speaker. Choirs
from both New Haven and Union Churches will bring special

visit

COLONIAL PAITERNS

ChQ pma n r 5 SHOES.

eMULTICOLOR

CANNON

~

box

HIGH ACRYLIC PILE

. Stiffler's Men Dept

PAIR

CAI'IOltNI
U50

Reg . 35c yard . Famou s Hope
Mu slin . 36 in ches wide . Snowy
white . Slack up now at this low,
low nnr·p

~

3
ROLL

Reg. 'H99 mens tan cy and
str ipes Per manen t press
Spor t Shir ts. S M L Srri art
new fall co l ors and styles
Long sleeve

e24x72

Hope Muslin

Reg. 59c, 3 roll box fancy
Christmas wrap. Big asst. of
fancy patterns. Yes, Stiffler's
save you money. Main Floor.

OPEN 9-5 MON. THRU THURS. - 9-8 FRIDAY - 9-9 SATURDAY

OR SOLIDS

LATE THIS SPRING I PLANTED some old zucchini seeds
(green summer squash) and forgot about them, never dreaming
that they would produce (but I thought nothing ventured, nothing
gained ).
After the first frost, I believe it was Nov. 4, I was looking at
my miniature size garden when I happened to spy thiB fUJUly
looking thing hidden Wider the leaves. You guessed it: I picked a
foot~ong zucchini on Nov. :;, We ate part of it Sunday, with other
foods , and foWld that it still was very good.

CHRISTMAS WRAP

I!:::':M:IG:I:n:S:t:'=============·~-·~

SET LINED

REG. 35' YARD
36 Inch Famous

Value

LADIES'

LOUN ER PILLOWS

MENS DICKIES

sMt

e SILVER

e

RUNNERS

ofi.ORAL PRtNl&gt;

yd.

EARLY AMERICAN

REG. •1000 FAMOUS

for those

Drt~ums
dream~

BROADlOOM CARPET
P~

00

Open
Friday
9:30 to 9:00
Saturday
9:30 to 9:00

59~

- TOY DEPT. MAIN FLOOR

2 PACK

oJ

Reg. $1.39 yard, 45 inch
plain color corduroy, '
first qual ily. Big asst. of
co tors, main floor, Piece
Goods Dept.

.Main Aoor

One big group of viscose
rayon Loop and Shag
Rug s. Values to 5 ~ . 99 .
Ass ! . cotor s. 27 x-1024x34 Size

PLASTIC DRAPES

PLAIN CORDUROY

Reg .
$1.39
value,
famous
Red
Heart
Knitting Yarn . Knit for
Christmas . Big asst.
colors, Stiffler's Main
Floor. The store that is
here to please you.

Reg.

Stifflers

Miss
. points the way to the
glistening magic
of evening

SALE AT CABIN
Acountry store and bake sale
will be held at the Fred
Goeglein log cabin near the
Salisbury Elementary School
Saturday. Free coffee and
donuts will be served and a door
prize will be awarded. The sale
will be held from 10 a.m . to $
p.m.

129 'MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO·

agains t the eight most populous
The nautical look in fabrics, buttons and trim will continue states by giving them fewer
through spring. Gingham and seersucker were the fabrics which delegates than their population
will be used extensively ili spring and will be used in suits and would warrant.
jackets. Blazers, she said, are very much with us and will be the
......... 11 • • • • • •
fitted type and single-breasted.
Hanging snaps were introduced and displayed on garments
made by the pattern company.
When You Know
In the spring of 1972she said we will see the revival of linens.
It's For Keeps
· Colors will be bright, such as goldenrod, hot pink (azalea color),
orange, purple grape and tomato! The natural, or earth colors,
will aiso be good. They are white, string color, copper shade,
black, navy, carrot red, khaki green and dark chocolate.

a

Aclass for parent$ interested
In learning Modern Math will.
begin Tuesday night at the
Bradbury School.
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett will
instruct the class which Is open
to all interested parents of the
Meigs Local School District,
particularly of the Middleport •
Bradbury area. First session
has been set for Tuesday, Nov.
16, at the Bradbury School from
7 to 8:30 p.m. Classes will be

RAC!biE - Penny Smith
observed her lOth birthday
Tuesayay, Nov. 2, with a party
given at her home at Racine RD
by her mother, Mrs. Harrison
Smith, and sister, Connie.
Games were played and
prizes awarded to Carol Morris,
Teresa Ervin, and Beverley
McClain. After opening her
gifts, refreshments of ice
cream , fudge , potalo chips, and
cake inscribed "Happy Birth- ~~~.~
day Penny" were served to
the .- guest;, Linda Norris,
Teresa Ervin, Cathy and Cindy
Cross, Carol Morris, Brenda
Johnson, Beverley McClain,
and the honoree, Miss Penny
Smith:

l

from sebonne."

Class to Offer Modem Math

Tenth Birthday
Celebrated by
Penny Smith

Stiffler 2nd Floor
Ready To Wear

.00

FALL and WINTER SPORTSWEAR
Famous Bobbie Brooks - Russ Togs • Aileen
Famous Bobbie Brooks, Rus
Togs and Aileen new fall and
winter sportswear . Grouped
for quick clearance, sport
slacks, knit top s, Jamaica
shorts, coordinates. Save
now on this group.

Irs Not Too Soon

Buy
'

To Begin Planning

On

Your Fall Wardrobe

Ladies Fall

COATS

"

Here is a collection for the
Fall ' Fashion featur ing the
tatesl in new style s and
color s. Atl new Fall fabrics .
Budget pri ced tor your
Budg £1.
Shop
St i If 1er s
Second Floor Ready to Wear

$12 99
TO

$80~ .t!
BUY ON LAY-AWAY

�'· ·

o.• !Cclt'.to,m

Mother Guest
at Dinner Party

Katie's Korner

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holtet
entertained Sunday with a
dinner party in observance of
the birthday of his mother. Mrs .
Homer Holter .
A decorated cake was served
with the dinner . Gilts were
presented to Mrs. Holter who
also received flowers from her
sister, Mrs. Arlene Ashbaugh in
Virginia ; and a telephone call
from another sister, Mrs. Mabel
Bailey, Euclid.
Attending were Miss Ann
Holler , Richard Fox, Ohio State
University students; Mrs.
Roger Starcher, Tammy, Terri
a nd Scott , Mrs . John
Mclxlughlin and children, Mr.
and Mrs . Raymond Frecker,
Randy Hand , and the Holler
children , Janice, Eddie and
Alan .

Social Calendar
",yq..q___________NN--"'41"'41~.

WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
REGULAR MEETING, PAST
COUNCIJ,ORS ,
By Katie Crow
Middleport Amateur Garden Theudurus Council, D. of A. ,
Club, Wednesday. Tour of Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of
Dudley Florists, 2419 Dudley Mrs ., Kate Goodwin , New
Ave., Parkersburg . Leave Haven .
IT'S AONE AND·TWO AND THREE AND AWAY WE GO, to
Citizens National Bank corner
SHADE RIVER Lodge "'453,
the Fall Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel Association , that is.
Middleport, 6:30p.m. For ride~ F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.,
The Big Show will be presented Saturday night at Meigs High
call Mrs. Roger Morgan by noon election of officers and work in
School under the direction of Bob Hoeflich. Curtain time is 8:10
Tuesday.
fellowcraft degree. All Master
p.m.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Masons invited.
As usual, the show is excellent. There are outstanding dance
Royal Arch Masons, Wed- BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
lines and beautiful costumes, tremendous talent and black light
nesday, 7 p.m. Most. excellent Thursday at school.
numbers which are always show stealers.
master degree to be conferred. OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
One of the greatest little troopers of the Big Bend Minstrel
Refreshments.
Letart Falls, home of Erma
Association is Jayne Lee Hoeflich .
THURSDAY
Wilson 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Jayne is seven years old and in the third grade class at
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, .Refreshments of pie, coffee .
Pomeroy Elementary SchooL
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
FRIDAY
Members to take gifts for the DANCE FRIDAY following
Jayne is amazing .She has been performing in the shows since
Athens Mental Health Center. Waham,a-Buffalo football game
she was two years old. Jayne will be featured with her father and
THURSDAY, Nov. 11, annual at Wahama High School from 10
mother in an Appalachian number, a dance line and made up of
"Stuffing Bee" for Christmas to 12. Jays Will emcee.
.
second and third graders; she will be singing "Rhythm in My
Seals
will
be
held
at
the
First
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs
Nursery Rhymes." She too is a show stealer. Tickets to the
Baptist Church, corner of Sixth Chapter, DAR, 2 P·~· Friday at
event may be purchased in advance for $1. At the door tickets will
and
Palmer sts., Middleport, the Episcopal Pansh House,
be sold for $1.25. It is wise to purchase tickets in advance as the 25
beginning at 9 a.m.
Pomeroy. Joseph Struble to be
cents savings adds up when a family of four or five plan to attend .
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT the guest speaker. Roll call will
The Meigs Athletic Boosters are sponsoring the show. Carl
Lions
Club, 7 p.m. Thursday, he a favorite American hero;
Wolfe , head basketball coach, will oversee the parking area with
United Methodist Church Joe hostesses, Mrs. Guy Ne1gler,
the aid of school athletes.
Holzer Medical Center, First Haning, Nelsonville, 'zone Mrs. George Skinner, and Mrs.
Mrs. Pearl Williams will oversee the members of the sixth Ave. and Cedar St. General
chairman to be present. District Mark Grueser, Jr.
grade chorus. The chorus will be featured in three numbers.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m . meeting . All local Lions urged
SATURDAY
Residents of the Children's Home and the Meigs County In- Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
to attend.
DUE TO FALL Follies
firmary have been invited to the show free of charge. However, 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine Saturday
night,
dance
transportation for the 20 children to and from the show is needed. Pediatrics Ward .
American Legi on Post 602, scheduled Saturday at Meigs
Any resident, especially those owning s~ tion wagons, who wish to
Births
, Thursday, 8 p.m. at hall. Plans Junior High in Middleport is
transport the children are asked to call the home 99U287 and
Mr · and Mrs. Earl Dean fur gun shoot and collection of cancelled.
volunteer their services.
Malone, Jackson, a daughter; dues
CHICKEN AND noodle dinner
The show is being presented one night only. I'd like to add that Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ar·
AFTERNOON CIRCLE Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. by
the auditorium at the school seats several thousand people. nold, Syracuse , a daughter; Mr. Heath United Methodist Middleport Pentecostal Church,
Seating will be no problem.
and . Mrs. C. Edward Clonch, Church, 2 p.m. Thursday at the S. Third, Middieport, in building
F. 0. Day of Marietta will be in charge of the sound system. Galhpohs, a daughter' and Mr. church. Devotions by Mrs. next lo church. For free
He does an excellent job. Mr. Day has been in charge of the and Mrs. Carl E. Kennedy, James Jividen Program by deliveries call 992·2502 or 992minstrel 's sound system many years, having worked with the Rutland , a ~on .
Mrs. M. L. Fr;nch; hostesses 6042 before 9 a.m. Saturday.
Minstrel Assn. 's show at the Meigs County Fair 15 years.
. Discharges
Mrs. Mildred Zeigler, Mrs. $1.25, including pie.
Moms Brown, Mrs. Stella Emerson Jones. Bazaar plans
SUNDAY
It is a hometown show with hometown talent. There is nothing
Booton, Mrs. Edna Brown, Mrs. to be completed
FAMILY
STEWARDSHIP
better!
Richard
Fielder
and
son,
Robin
·
For an evening of sheer enjoyment, see the Fall Follies.
Finley , Mrs. Carrie Hamm,
You'll be glad you did.
Elmer Haskins, Mrs . Ruben
Hill, Mrs. Eva Holley, Edward
Jordon, Angela McGuire,
James
Patrick,
Danny
Strickland, James W. Swingle,
Mrs. Okey Van Meter, Dempsy
I attended a fashion show in the Charleston Room, Holiday Wickline and Benjamin A.
Inn in Charleston last Wednesday, where I was told what's new Shenefield.
for spring of 1972 in the way of colors and fabrics by a specialist
coordinator, Frances Campbell. Others attending the show from
RIPON SOCIETY'S SUIT
this area were Mrs. Vicki Keefer, Mason County Homemakers
WASHINGTON
(UP[} - The
Agent, Mrs. Harry staats, Letart; Mrs. Otis Randolph, Leon;
Ripon Society, a group of liberal
Mrs. Ray Fox, Clifton, and Miss Hattie Jordan, Pt. Pleasant.
Clothes were modeled by ladies from the Charleston area. Republicans, has filed suit in U.
The models aU wore stockings to match their outfits and the S. District Court asking that the
delegate selection formula for
colors ranged from red to purple. ·Sculptured corduroy was used
the 1972 GOP National Conextensively. Also featured was a garment of Aztec fabric lined vention be declared un\11
with sebonne. She recommended using woven interfacings with constitutional. The suit claimed
woven fabrics. "Hong Kong tape," she said, ''was bias tape cut the formu la discriminates

HOSPITAL
NEWS

THOUGHT I WOULD pass on a household hint that proved
helpful to me - I have a piano bench that was marked with a big
white spot about the size of a baseball (my granddaughter spilled
alcohol on it and I thought I would have to refinish the whole top to
get rid ofthe eye sore). All I did was rub the white spot with toothpaste, and lo and behold, it is as good a new. The spot is gone.

held . over
several
period. Emphasis wlU be · on
helping parents develop a basic
understa.~ding of Modern Math
so that they can assist their
children . with homework, if
needed.

Martin Luther, founder of
Protestantism, was born Nov.
10, 1493.

RED HEART

REG. *1.39 VALUE

4 oz. 4 Ply

45 INCH WIDE

KNiniNG YARN

Am=e~r~ic~a~~;

hol1da,·

~~en.ng$ beR&lt;O~

a

SP•lr~hnB

w1th

night Sunday, 5p.m. at St. Paul
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
YOUTH RALLY, Pomeroy
Church of Christ, 2 p.m. SWl·
day.
CHICKEN AND spare rib
barbecue Sunday, starting 11
a.m . at Chester Fire House.
Homemade ice cream also.
Sponsored by Chester Fire· •
Department.

99

DRESS PANTS

GOLD

Reg . $10 .00 va lue first
quality men' s famous
Dickies Brand dress
pants. Out they go at a
big savings for you.

1

Choose a Keepsake Diamond
Ring .. . crafted In fine 14K gold
and set .with .a guaranteed perfect
diamonsl . R'egislered and pro·
tected against diamond loss, too.

BATH TOWELS
e22x44

.souos &amp;
PRINTS

eCHOIC£ Of
LENG!MS

•2'!
Values to '2. 99 Assl
24x34 Decorative 27x40

While Quantities Last! !

BRAIDED RUG

00

el7x29

PAPER TOWELS

each

PAIR

Annual

Christmas
Openftouse

Loom
Underwear
BRIEFS AND
T-SHIRTS

e2 TO PKG.

$265P~

el2"x25'
eBY ANAOONDA

eREG.

'

77

SPORT SHIRTS

CPO
SHIRTS

New arrivals "'en's famou s
Campus brand lon\1 sleeve sport
shirts. No-iron stripes, laney
plaids and pla, !r ..::olors. S-M-L-

XL

•FlEECE UNED

BRAS

. PlAIDS
eSIZES 6 TO 16

99
TO

AT 52.99

A,B&amp;C

FANCY UNDIES

FUN

Quick Service

Government Inspected
Cut To Your S~ecificotions

Useful &amp; ·Exclu•ive Gill$

Dale u'""'
992-6346

.

Lad ies 11alues to 49c Assl. co lor s
and fc1ncy styles. Sizes 5·6·7. A new
low pri ce for you arid your budget
Yes
save money at Slilflers,

Dick Vaughan
992-3374

RACING HELMET
ellURABLE
·PLASTIC
eREG. 11"

ERED CHERR
eREG. 69'
'

• Uffi OZ. lOX

GLOVES
.ONE SIZE
FITS ALL

eBLACK OR .
BROWN

00
. PAIR

eREG. 11"

·

49
BOX

..

POMEROY, OHIO

Reg . $2.49v alue . Boy s perma nent
pr ess new long sle eve Sport
Shirts in str ipes and plain colors
Size 6 to 18_

DRESSES

pr

•

2nd Floor

ladies fall and winter
dresses lo go. Smart
styl es, new fabrics.
One big rack to clear,
be here and get yours
now. Second Floor
Ready to Wear .

REG. '6,99 VALUE
MENS QUILTED LINED .

'

To Wear

Boys Aare Per. Press

Buy On Lay-Away

Sport Pants

NOW-SHOP
OUR GIFT
DEPT.•

TANKER JACKETS
Men s quilted li ned tan ker

Boys 6 to 18 new ta ll flare School
Pa nts in ass t . pla i n colors .
Per manent press. Well made
f1rst qua lil y at a new low price for
YOU .

99

For Every Day • Christmas
MAIN FLOOR
SEOOND FLOOR

Ja.cket s for work or dress. '
Bla ck or ol ive co lor 5 ML·XL. Spec ial new low
pnce at Stittl cr s.

Others 14.99 to 15.99

pair

CLOSE OUT GROUP

·Fashions
For Fall
By
• Bobbie Brooks
• Russ Togs
• Aileen
Sport Tops, Sweaters, Skirts,
Rare Leg Pants, Jackets, Vest,
BlouseS, Coordinates
Beautiful Fall Selection
Stifflers new winter
·
A' 1
Bobbie Brooks, 1 een,
Russ Togs sportswear
featuring pants, blouses,
knit tops, coordinates.

From
. I

PER. PRESS LONG SLEEVE

Values to 112.99 of

PAMPERS
eDAYTIME 30's

NEW-BOYS SMART

· VALUES TO· 112.99
Ladies Fall and Winter

Smart new styles, in new
fall and winter colors.

(-. ,_ ----""

!' If I have to go',

---- ... - ... __ .

Christmas Decorations

"

Ladies Size 5-6-7 Asst. Styles
Reg . 49c and J9c

eSIZES

EA.

Sport Shirts

CHOCOLATE

, '- take me to The&gt;
, _- '. Shop
!

Open Night. Tilt 9:00
O.zzling Array of

____ __

MEN'S CAMPUS LONG SLEEVE

"custon,1 meat cutting"
'

Reg. ? fl', ~. 51000
MENS
00,

SPORTSWEAR

'I"

,

Pleasant Midge Road
POMEROY OHIO

Pair

LADIES

The Shop

Nov. 1st Thru Nov. 13th

2419 Dudley Ave. ,
Parkersburg,
W. Va.
,...._

.................

(Continued on page 16)

$

00

Brand

150 Pair To Sell Mens

e4 TIE

YAHTZEE GAME
eFAMILY

Reg. $&lt;1 .99 value,
72x90 size Thermal
weave, sol id color s
blanket. Buy several
now at this low price,
Stiffler 's Main Floor .

USE OUR
EASY
LAY-AWAY PLAN

Reg . $7 .00, $8 .0v , $9 .00,
$ 10 .00 values men's
famou s Dickie Brand
dre ss pants, f lare leg
and reg . sty l es, 150 pair
of close· out no's to go at
thi s low , low price .

eSCOT lAD

FAMOUS MAID

eSHOP EARLY

Blanket

Values to $1.00 and $1.19 in
this clo se-out group of
asst. Viscose Rayon loop
and shag rugs . Stiffler's
Main Floor, yes , you save
money here .

DRESS
PANTS
Mens Fruit Of

Stifflers
Mens
Dept.

BOYS' LINED

TEA SETS

in your choice of six colors.
Cushioned insole in matching
colors.

ASST. THROW RUGS

FOIL

99

OR PRINTS

Airweave Thermal

VIscose Rayan Loop and Shag

I

DRAPES
eSOI.ID OOLORS

Solid Color

Values to 'J.J9 and 'J.OO

Broadcloth
Shorts
ALSO FROM 200
WED. RING 71
MAN'S RING 12.1

72x 90

Pome.....,

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU
SATURDAy NOVEMBER 13TH

FIBER GlASS

yard

CUSHION
SOLE SCU
Comfortable acrylic pil e scuffs

Sizes '
S-M-L

pr.

MRS. BERTIIA CLARK, MASON, recently observed her 9001
birthday at the Herdman Rest Home in Mason. A party in her
honor was given on Sunday by her daughters, Mrs. Eliza Roush,
Mrs. Helen Grinstead and Mrs. Theresa Ohlinger, aU of Rt. I,
Letart.
The birthday of Mrs. W. S. Billups, also a patient ther~, was
also observed.
·Mrs. Clark received 70 birthday cards, gifts, and a call from
her son, Harry, who resides in lllinois.
Attending were the honorees, Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Billups,
and Mr. and Mrs. William Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Clark, and
Leo Clark, Ethel Herdman, Roy Herdman, Bonnie, Wayne
Herdman, Macil Ellen Herdman, Christina Ann Howard, Karen
Sue Smith, Helen Grinstead, Shirley Sullivan, Juanita Gibbs, Mrs.
Harold King, Duford Bragg, f!.upert Howard, Dorothy Howard,

Dudley's ·

Shop

Stiffler's

music.

'·

Plump, non.allergenic foam
filled lounge pillows, with
Colon ial style Early American
printed covers . Save -

3.

THE REV . PARKER HINZMAN has announced that a Parish
Wide Thanksgiving Service of the United Methodist Churches will
be held at the Bachtel United Methodist Church at Letart Nov. 24
at 7:30p.m. The Rev. William DeMoss will be the speaker. Choirs
from both New Haven and Union Churches will bring special

visit

COLONIAL PAITERNS

ChQ pma n r 5 SHOES.

eMULTICOLOR

CANNON

~

box

HIGH ACRYLIC PILE

. Stiffler's Men Dept

PAIR

CAI'IOltNI
U50

Reg . 35c yard . Famou s Hope
Mu slin . 36 in ches wide . Snowy
white . Slack up now at this low,
low nnr·p

~

3
ROLL

Reg. 'H99 mens tan cy and
str ipes Per manen t press
Spor t Shir ts. S M L Srri art
new fall co l ors and styles
Long sleeve

e24x72

Hope Muslin

Reg. 59c, 3 roll box fancy
Christmas wrap. Big asst. of
fancy patterns. Yes, Stiffler's
save you money. Main Floor.

OPEN 9-5 MON. THRU THURS. - 9-8 FRIDAY - 9-9 SATURDAY

OR SOLIDS

LATE THIS SPRING I PLANTED some old zucchini seeds
(green summer squash) and forgot about them, never dreaming
that they would produce (but I thought nothing ventured, nothing
gained ).
After the first frost, I believe it was Nov. 4, I was looking at
my miniature size garden when I happened to spy thiB fUJUly
looking thing hidden Wider the leaves. You guessed it: I picked a
foot~ong zucchini on Nov. :;, We ate part of it Sunday, with other
foods , and foWld that it still was very good.

CHRISTMAS WRAP

I!:::':M:IG:I:n:S:t:'=============·~-·~

SET LINED

REG. 35' YARD
36 Inch Famous

Value

LADIES'

LOUN ER PILLOWS

MENS DICKIES

sMt

e SILVER

e

RUNNERS

ofi.ORAL PRtNl&gt;

yd.

EARLY AMERICAN

REG. •1000 FAMOUS

for those

Drt~ums
dream~

BROADlOOM CARPET
P~

00

Open
Friday
9:30 to 9:00
Saturday
9:30 to 9:00

59~

- TOY DEPT. MAIN FLOOR

2 PACK

oJ

Reg. $1.39 yard, 45 inch
plain color corduroy, '
first qual ily. Big asst. of
co tors, main floor, Piece
Goods Dept.

.Main Aoor

One big group of viscose
rayon Loop and Shag
Rug s. Values to 5 ~ . 99 .
Ass ! . cotor s. 27 x-1024x34 Size

PLASTIC DRAPES

PLAIN CORDUROY

Reg .
$1.39
value,
famous
Red
Heart
Knitting Yarn . Knit for
Christmas . Big asst.
colors, Stiffler's Main
Floor. The store that is
here to please you.

Reg.

Stifflers

Miss
. points the way to the
glistening magic
of evening

SALE AT CABIN
Acountry store and bake sale
will be held at the Fred
Goeglein log cabin near the
Salisbury Elementary School
Saturday. Free coffee and
donuts will be served and a door
prize will be awarded. The sale
will be held from 10 a.m . to $
p.m.

129 'MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO·

agains t the eight most populous
The nautical look in fabrics, buttons and trim will continue states by giving them fewer
through spring. Gingham and seersucker were the fabrics which delegates than their population
will be used extensively ili spring and will be used in suits and would warrant.
jackets. Blazers, she said, are very much with us and will be the
......... 11 • • • • • •
fitted type and single-breasted.
Hanging snaps were introduced and displayed on garments
made by the pattern company.
When You Know
In the spring of 1972she said we will see the revival of linens.
It's For Keeps
· Colors will be bright, such as goldenrod, hot pink (azalea color),
orange, purple grape and tomato! The natural, or earth colors,
will aiso be good. They are white, string color, copper shade,
black, navy, carrot red, khaki green and dark chocolate.

a

Aclass for parent$ interested
In learning Modern Math will.
begin Tuesday night at the
Bradbury School.
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett will
instruct the class which Is open
to all interested parents of the
Meigs Local School District,
particularly of the Middleport •
Bradbury area. First session
has been set for Tuesday, Nov.
16, at the Bradbury School from
7 to 8:30 p.m. Classes will be

RAC!biE - Penny Smith
observed her lOth birthday
Tuesayay, Nov. 2, with a party
given at her home at Racine RD
by her mother, Mrs. Harrison
Smith, and sister, Connie.
Games were played and
prizes awarded to Carol Morris,
Teresa Ervin, and Beverley
McClain. After opening her
gifts, refreshments of ice
cream , fudge , potalo chips, and
cake inscribed "Happy Birth- ~~~.~
day Penny" were served to
the .- guest;, Linda Norris,
Teresa Ervin, Cathy and Cindy
Cross, Carol Morris, Brenda
Johnson, Beverley McClain,
and the honoree, Miss Penny
Smith:

l

from sebonne."

Class to Offer Modem Math

Tenth Birthday
Celebrated by
Penny Smith

Stiffler 2nd Floor
Ready To Wear

.00

FALL and WINTER SPORTSWEAR
Famous Bobbie Brooks - Russ Togs • Aileen
Famous Bobbie Brooks, Rus
Togs and Aileen new fall and
winter sportswear . Grouped
for quick clearance, sport
slacks, knit top s, Jamaica
shorts, coordinates. Save
now on this group.

Irs Not Too Soon

Buy
'

To Begin Planning

On

Your Fall Wardrobe

Ladies Fall

COATS

"

Here is a collection for the
Fall ' Fashion featur ing the
tatesl in new style s and
color s. Atl new Fall fabrics .
Budget pri ced tor your
Budg £1.
Shop
St i If 1er s
Second Floor Ready to Wear

$12 99
TO

$80~ .t!
BUY ON LAY-AWAY

�!;~, .:~.::!:~~::.~.:~~.~.•,_. ~-.:_o· . t_; ·_. N_/.o¥:.·•.i.-. ~~.~~~
~tr:~~~~::::~::~~:::::.iie.~m~:~:::~~:::::::~::::::!::k~~~::::~::H:::::::::::::: :

·

o_;_•• .•

·Ilk/I Fun with Foods

.
·
, u tt.on. to Ga~,~en
'
uome Economt.st
Gt.ves C''rJ. . n.stmas
Demo··nst""/l_
C'.l:'.ub.·

•..•.··_.·.·. ·._· .•··. ·.•.·.....
· 111

u~

,ii

A-Christmas demonstration
Distler. home
by Cha-rlene Hoeflich
+'\. economist for the Colwnbus and
~' ; Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
··~t:Jt+
hi?tit¥\Fi
featured the most recent
meetin
g of the Wil~wood
Sara Roush of Minersville has a Japanese sister-in-law who
Garden Club.
contends that Sara's hickory nut cake is the best thing she has
Mrs. Distler demonstrated
eaten in America. She passes the recipe along to us.
techniques of making wrealhs,
HICKORY NUT CAKE
using styrofoam corles with
1 ~. cups nuts ; 31'.! cups sifted cake flour, 5 teaspoons baking
miniature lights and orpowder. 1 teaspoon salt, sifted together.
naments, attractive displays of
Cream 1v, cups shortening, I teaspoon almond extract ; I candy in a brandy bowl, and a
teaspoon vanilla with II&gt; cups sugar added gradually .
Madonna piece. She was
Add four egg yolks well beaten and I¥.! cups milk. Beat until
smooth.
Beat the four egg whites until frothy, add v. cup sugar. fold
this into the batter ; bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes or more in
a large angel food cake pan . Can be topped with a thin icing.
Plans for hosting members of
EVELYN HILL OF 4975 WOODMAN PARK DRIVE , Apt. 7, the Choral Club of Roanoke
Dayton, sent us a recipe for a Nestles quick chocolate cake which Bible College on Dec . 10 were
she says is very moist.
.
made during a meeting of the
2 cups flour. 2 cups sugar. I cup oil, 2 cups buttermilk, \\&lt; Martha Bible Class of the
teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons soda, 2 eggs. 2 teaspoons vanilla. 6 Bradbury Church of Christ.
The vocal group will be at the
tablespoons Nestles·quick chocolate.
Bake in a sheet pan at 350 degrees 50 to 55 minutes. Use your church on that date to present a
program which will be open to
favorite icing. Now that really sounds quick and easy!
the public . Sleeping acAPPARENTLY LOTS OF PEOPLE make pwnpkin bread . commodations and meals were
Mrs. Hill's recipe is as follows:
3¥.! cups all purpose flour . 2 teaspoons soda, II&gt; teaspoon salt.
1\\&lt;teaspoon cinnamon, I teaspoon nutmeg, 3 cups white sugar. I
cup cooking oil, 4 eggs, 2 cups pwnpkin.
Grease bottom of four one-pound coffee cans. Sift togetber the
dry ingredients. Beat the eggs, add the sugar and beat until fluf(y.
Add the oil and pwnpkin and mix with dry ingredients.
Fill the cans half full and bake one hour at 350 degrees. When
cool remove from cans by opening bottom with can opener and
pushing the bread through the can. Cool, wrap in foil and either
serve or freeze.

\ { · b)' Miss Joanna

:_,..,_:_''.'.•.t.
¥_:_ ·

t \i :%

m:t:c

;;;:;;w;m:m

held on Nov. 27 and 28 at the
Meigs Local High School
cafeteria .
Several members attended
the recen l Gallipolis meeting
and also the Chester Garden
Club open meeting. At the latter
meeting Mrs. Betty Lou Dean
gave demonstrations on
Thanksgiving arrangements.
Mrs. Pal Thomas was given
the thanks of the club for
arrangements she made for the
Masonic meeting. Mrs. May

presenWd a mwn corsage by
Mrs. Hiram Fisher.
Mrs . Evelyn Hollon presided,
with Mrs. Mary Nease giving
devotions.Mrs. Fisher and Mrs.
Homer Holter reported on
articles donated by the club for
the coun try fair at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center. Pointers on
arrangements of articles from
foreign lands for the Christmas
flower show special display
were given. The show will be

Holter and Mrs. Evelyn Hollon
were given blue ribbons for
arrangements ' of mwns with
Madonnas.
A talk .on "Spring time Gems"
was given by Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger . Tips on planting tulips
were given by Mrs. Kenneth
Harris and Mrs. Nease spoke on
anemone or gay poppies. She
said to soak them good before
planting to insure good growth.
They are also excellent, she
said, for indoor forcing, and

feeding the birds ..
Guests were Mrs. Herschel
Rose, Mrs. J.aron Kelton, Mrs.
Brad Maag, Mrs. Charles
Grueser. Melva, Henrietta and
Me lisa Thomas, · Christmas
cookies, punch and a dessert
sala&lt;) . were served by Mrs.
. Hiram Fisher and Mrs. Teresa
Fisher .
HOFFNER IS ILL
Herman Hoffner. Pomeroy, is
a patient at Riverside Hospital
in Colwnbus. Cards may be sent
to Room 417.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
The birthday anniversary of
Harry Ohlinger of Colwnbus
was observed Sunday with a
dinner at the home of Mrs.
.•rthur Fick. Attending the
observance were Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Roush, Dr. and Mrs. Joe
Ohlinger and daughter, Debbie,
Columbus;
Mrs.
Clara
Hamilton, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Isabelle Powell, Mrs. Ruth Ann
Dowler. Middleport, and Mrs.
Ruth Wallace, Cable, Wis.

College Choral Club Coming to Bradbury Church
arranged.
It was noted that new cupboards have been installed in
the church kitchen and a plaque
will be placed on one of the
cupboards in memory of Mrs.
Edith Russell . A kitchen shower
WDS held following the meeting.
Officers elected for neKt year
were Mrs . Dale Barnhart,
president; Mrs , Bill Carter,

make a good border plant, She
noted that these plants
originated in Palestine and are
often called the Biblical plant.
Mrs. Mason Fisher exhibited
various types of spring bulbs.
Mrs. Karl Grueser gave tips
for November gardening. She
said now is the time to plant
trees, leaving the burlap
wrapping on the roots, collect
leaves for mulching, cleaning
garden tools, preparing the
motor for winter storage, and

Dried
Flower
•
Arrangements

vice president ; Mrs. Max scripture (rom the Psalms and
Davis, secretary ; and Mrs. a poem, "Sight and Sound of
Paul Winn, treasurer . Mrs. !"aiL"
Oleva Cotterill will serve. as Cookies and coffee were
program chairman .
served to Mr. and Mrs. Bill
The annual Christmas party Carter. Mr. and Mrs. Dale
was discussed with a 6:30 Barnhart, Mr . and Mrs .
potluck to be held at the church. Clarence Murray, Mr. and Mrs.
A program and gift exchange Paul Winn. Mr. and Mrs. Walter
will be held . Mrs. Walter Bunce Bunce, Mrs. Rpbert King, Mrs.
opened the meetin g with Cotterill , Mrs. Alice Johnston, and Mrs. Davis.

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9 -SUNDAY12TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, NOV.14, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

From '3.00
Dudley's Florist
Serving: Gallipolij,
Pomeroy, Middleport. 0 ..
&amp; ¥ason Co., W. Va .

'

we care------------

CHECK AND COMPARE! QUALITY AND PRICE!

LR71

UPRIGHT

Pledge Service Held
A pledge service highlighted
the Monday night meeting of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of . the Heath United
Methodist Church .
Mrs . C. F. Hibbs had charge
of the service which opened
with singing "This Is My
Father's World." There was a
responsive reading and a
meditation with Mrs. Forest
Bach tel reading the hymn ,
"Lord , Speak to Me ." After
members turned in their pledge
cards, the purpose of the WSCS
was given in unison and the
members sang "Blest Be the
Tie That Binds."
Mrs . Geneva Yates used the
Thanksgiving theme for

K-320

G. E.

VAC

devo tions with "Come Ye
Thanksful People Come " as the
h)mn and scripture from the
tOOth Psalm. She read a poem,
o'The First Thanksgiving Day,"
an article . "The Evidence of
Things Unseen" by Norman
Vincent Peale, and a prayer
entitled "I Thank Thee, Lord ."

...__

What
Quality Beef
Does A&amp;P Sell?

Mrs . Jack Bechtle presided at
the meeting and reported on a
mi ssi onary meeting and a
cluster meeting held at the
church recently. Yellow mwns
in milk glass with yellow tapers
were used on the table.
Hostesses were Mrs. M. L.
French, Mrs. Everett Davis,
and Mrs. James Euler.

"Super-Right" P.g. Will 6 or 8 Chops On Top

PROCTOR SILEX

Cut From Chuck

Pork Loin Roast :~~~E . . • '"·69c Boneless Beef Roast
Top Round Steak • • •
Round Roast • • •

CLAIROL

MIST -CONDITIONER

•

HAIR SETTER

"Super-Right" Top Cut

Tops For Pan Frying-Bonelen

G i~tes

di rt . Dtsig ned with e ye · pl eo~ ­
in g dur a b ili ty . Make s the
t oughest car pe t pro ble ms
reem easy.

3 ~el!ing choices- co n·
ditioned 1et , wa ter mist set ,
and r ·1ulor set. 20 roller ~ in
the m....t popular sizes. Packed
with 6 o:r. . bailie of Cus tom
Cor e Con ditioner and 2 o:r. .
con of KHA C. 120 vol tl , 60
cycles AC.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG .

$51,96

$21.96

~ -'

•

U-5
Plen ty of power lor

REMINGTON

LADIES' DELUXE
t

That's a fail· question. But not an easy one to answer

SHAVER
Super-sharp hea d • Gentle head •

· Easy to handle t On -o ff 1 w itc:~ .

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK 'S REG. $14.88

because we have our own quality standards.

Not
727
Exactly SUNBEAM MEN'S
As
Illustrated
HECK'S REG. 124.88

SHAVER

Pl Pleasant.Store On~

Dept

JEWElRY DEPT.

KODAK
INSTAMATIC

CAMERA

htr)lhi n'il yc u nu d IO IO~~ Q"OI r&gt;•&lt;IUI&lt;I rndoan
o r o;ul . 11,1 1on o co rd . end ollrrody 10 90 - No mo rt
lookin ~ OIO~ n d lo1 o"UIO&lt; ' i1tml , U" ''!h e AA"
for 1nopoholl or 1li dr1. in cole• cr b lo&lt;i&lt; gnd whitt .
~ · , limple lo op• •ole Ju•l dmp rn l h ~ film COl•
trid1Jt,pop on the tla•hcub o, ond yo u'&lt;e roady l_a
v o. 11' 1 a g&lt;t&lt;&gt;l lout.! camtro fr om Kod&lt;&gt;k . And ~

l&lt;&gt;kt•

v•~ c l pi&lt;l~• • • !

STEAM.IRON

CORSAIR DELUXE

Plenty of steam for easier

SMITH CORONA

iron i ng. Cle a n-view heel

PORTABLE
TYPEWRITER

for iro ni ng in any direction
... lets you see as you iron .
Ea sy·1o -see fa bri C dial.
l eak · proo f.lightweigh1.
Block ha ndle , ch rome cov*
er, 1200 watts, 120 volts .
AC only . Und e rwrite rs'
laboratorie s, Inc. listed.

Measure the value of this amazing
portable by ils line performance,

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG .

then

by i ts han dy si ze

lation

$9.88

$8.88

$49.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

and bantam

wei g ht . ll ' s durab le and ho1 aU
neceHo ry feature s induding tabu -

JEWElRY DEPT.

different from any other meat merchant.
These standa1·ds don't fit exactly the familiar terms

Thanksgiving Dinner
Plans for hosting a potluck
dinner on Thanksgiving Eve for
churches of the Southern
Cluster of UniWd Methodist
Churches were discussed wlien
the Women's Society of
Christian Service met recently
at the Portland Church.
The Portland Church will
provide coffee, tea and rolls for
the fellowship dinner. Mrs.
Ruth Ebersbach, president ,
also announced that a breakfast
would be served by the members to the ministers of Meigs
County on Nov. 15 at the Portland Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs .
Esla Roush, the program
centered on Thanksgiving . Mrs .
Cora Hil ton led the program
readin g fr om the !36th Psalm
and the group participated with
a responsive reading. Readings

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Rachel Emerson to Wilson R.
Powell, Kathy A. Powell, .83
Acre, Olive.
Frank L. Jones, Victoria W.
Jones to Randall Richardson,
Sue Carol Richardson , 118
Acres , Bedford.
Lillie V. Dyke to Robert W.
Hayman , Shirley A. Ha yman,
Parcels, Rutland .
Bethel M. Cook, Nevillis M.
Cook to Burdell Black, Effie
Black, 4 Acres, Salisbury.
George W. Knapp, Bertha
Knapp to Virgi! Casto, Thetma
G. Casto, Lots, Middleport._
An na
Klements,
John
Klements to Anastasia Staats.
Parcel, Olive.
Ralph Henderson , Alberta
Henderson to Wayne F. Ward,
Unda L. Ward, two-thirds Acre,
100 A. Lot IS2, Lebanon.
Mildred Garnet Rhodes to
Eugene E. Davis, Hilda C.
DaviJ, 91 .4 Acres, Letart.
Frank Murray, Amanda
Murray to Jesse W. Dowdy,
Shirley M. Dowdy, Pt. Lots 101,
102, Middleport.
Jesse W. Dowdy, Shirley
Dowdy to Raymond M. Baker,
Dorothy Baker, Pt. Lots 101,
102, Middleport.
Frank Bowman. Macie
Bowman to Edward U!Ue, 36
Acres, Rutland.
·
Nellie Borgan to Irion
Johnson Holley, !Doris Ann
. Holley, Parcel, Scipio.
'

WHOLE
OR
HALF

you know for grades of meat. As an example,
dirl you know that some beef, grarled U.S. Choice.

were " Tha nksgiving On a
Summer Day " by Mrs .
Kathl ee n Ward ;
"Thanksgivin g" by Mrs.
Roush ; "Faith Without Words"
b)' Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew; "A
Woman 's Conversation with
God," Mrs. Hilton . Each
member then related things
which they are thankful for .
Officers • reports were given.
The treasurer reported that the
yard sale netted $126.95. A free
will offering was taken and the
meeting adjourned with !he
hostess serving refreshments.
Mrs. Shirley Johnson will have
the Christmas meeting . Atlending besides those named
were Mrs. Ethel Johnson , Mrs.
Margery Roush, and Mrs .
Carolyn Price.

don'~

CALIFORNII\

Beef Roast •

buy by grade. We use our own

high standards to bring you the best

lb.

31/._-lb.
AVG.
PKG.

lb.

value~ .

•

10.

THIN SLICED

89'

CUT

Sirloin Tip Roast

That doesn't mean we don't approve of such grading ...

10.

FRO~

CHUCK

SULTANA

$12s Cube Steaks

"SUPER.-RIGHT"

,._ $1 29

lb,$1 19 Slice~

• ~2.~~- SJ1 9

Bacon

IY THE

•

lb.

SJOt

Jumlto lolo1na •

752·1

5 69
lb.
bog

10~

c

Florida Oranges
NEW
CROP

ACORN SQUASH

C

5 69C
lb.
ba1

pt,.

6 ~~ 69c

lb.

HEAVY DUTY
•

:

==~

.5 ~~·39

C WITH

THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Se.turd•y. Novem bor llth,
AI Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

YALUAILI COUPON
BAKER'S .

Angel Flake Coconut
WITH
1
THIS
:k:-59~ cOUPON
Good Thru Saturday, Novom bor 13th,
At Your Fritndly A&amp;P .Stort.

==~

:

ONE Pll fAMILY
YALUAILE COUPON
GENERAL MILLS

Wheaties
12-oa.
bo•

29c

1.....

ean•

.

Good Thru Soturday, Novem ber 13th,
AI Your Friendly AlcP Store.
Htti::.:~-CI ONI ~~~FAMILY
•'.-~···

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

1

Baker's cHJ6~ L~~EE~HIPS
12..L
pit,,

VACUUM PACK

Marshmallow Creme 3 ::~ $1°0

:

'/4

Pound Cake · .

• •

PRINCILLA

lo-o.,39c

• Pkr.

lb.
can

$149 1~~

COUPON

Good Thru Soturday, Novombor 13111,
AI Your Friondly A&amp;P Store.
k!.=-:~-=-: ONE PER FAMILT

--=a

--·-

GREEN GIANT FROZEN

Sweet Peas 'Ns!~rr •
GREEN GIANT FROZEN
••,.,.•3gc Niblets Corn • • •

B1111

.'~·45'

Green Beans INs!~rr.

10-&lt;11. IJAc
• pk,. R .

50~ OFf •

~ C~RTONII
OF
t.M

IO-o•39C

I
I

• Pkr.

•

lirr;

Heck's Reg. $11.88
Pt Pleasant Store Only

_ ...

-~
'

_

, .
•

!.&lt; ••
•

'

V'·
. .·,

I :"j

,

..

~--

C-4510

Not•Exactly As Illustrated

G. E.
TABLE
RADIO

··"-

'(~

G.E.

G.E. ·
ELECTRIC

CHORD ORGAN

PHONO-RADIO

.COMBO

AM-FMCLOCK

• Easy·Pioy keyboard I 25 m1lody keys ploy 2
full octo~tet e 6 chord key) designed for easy
play • Variable Volume Control • Acoustically
de$lgnad, high·irnpact
cabin11.

HECK'S REG.

lilltn to 9 " 0' FM Cl ~d AM, "' ' ' " bio-•pea ktr
IOUnd , gtl full-ft CIMtd Cla(· -olorm •y lltm Co!rll·
w ni t m:t , too; • Soli.:htole cir&lt; uit do1i g n l liQ htt d
Clod Dio ll . .. fr cn l -l i,ed dyn""' '' 1p t oh1 I
Clock •r •le m lootur• • Slumbe r S"'rllh and Wok • ·.
lo M\lloi&lt; or !o'oni&lt; &amp; Alor m I lk&lt;ilt-in Af ( fo;r d riii I•H fM • Orih Corn.,t naali&lt;:Jn I Avro;ma tic Volumt Con!fol.

$26.96

HECK'S REG. $26.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

2.96

HECK'S

2 Slice

RADIO

Here ' 5 a g reat entertain er .
Plart either radio or record~ .
P l oy~ on e ither bo tter ie \ or

house current .

HamiHon-Beach

TOASTER
Heck's Reg. 114.96
Pl Pleasant Store Only

.'

~"k:."3t

Coffee .. 3 ~:; 51,99 ' AlP Frozen Fren:h Fries ... 3:.;~: SI.OO

I
I

•

G.E.
PORTABLE·
VAC
....

your cleaning load \ Storing is ,
a cinCh! So ~tersalile - and easy to

HECK'S REG. $25.56

REGAL
HI DOME
TEFLON

FRY PAN
Hi·dome Electric fry pan and mul· \
ti ·cooker. Scratch resistant Teflon.
Completely immerlible, Jewelry

...., ..., .t AlP ,.., ...,... c.t-" wntrl N.r. IJttt, ~llllt Ht ,., !Mih'·

~.i·~; ~ -~~!d ~~!;~ r~ ll ;i(l~;d·: .::·~·~,t :~ j,· ~;;, ~·.....
The ma"ufacturer btar-s .cost of thi s .coupo 1

G. E.
TOASTER
OVEN

HECK'S REG. $18.8 8

SUNSET
2-HOUR
MM lOOW

SUNBEAM
DELUXE MIXMASTER
.

Heck's Reg. '29.96

Dept.

JEWElRY DEPT.

•

GREEN GIANT. FROZEN

Cut Yams • . • •
Ll&amp;hf O'Ciack

2
•

..

T-93

U;hten~

Maxwell House Coffee

HEINZ WHOLE OR SLICED

Dill Pickles • •
GREEN GIANT FROZEN
Mexicorn INs!~r:R •

WITH
THIS
COUPON

-===~YALUAILE
~NE PER COUPON
fAMILY~==:
fi1
:

Dial Soap • • •
CARNATION
Coffee Mate • • • ' Jor c
-lb, STICKS
Mrs. Filbert's Marg~ 3:i.';;. $1°0
JANE PARKER
Dinn'er Rolls ~R~fv~ . 4..... $1 00
7
" 9

39c

Good Thru Soturdoy, Novombor llth,
At Your Friendly A&amp;P Store,

cana

HI P-O-LITE

l&amp;-01.

II.·'·

·--~

•

W7194
I

Sc OFF LABELl

BATH SIZE

JANE PARKER-CRESCENT
WITH
THIS
cOUPON

$6.79

--ll(l

~==~YALUAILI
ONE PER FAMILY~==
fll
C.OUPON 1

1.....

•

m:::~ ONE PER FAMILY

1j1

HECK'S REG. $12.96

HECK'S REG.

49C

II".ZS'
roll

111-oL

ONE PEl FAMILY
YALUAILE COUPO N
ALL PURPOSE

Gold Medal Flour
Virginia was the fIrs t
southern state to officially
proclaim Thanksgiving Day
as a holiday. in 1855.

in one a larm clock- Snoot-Alarm•
and lighted Dial t S no o z - Aiorm~
wakes yo u, leh you ~ no o a, then
wa kes you a gain a lighted Dial for
eoty nig httime viewing • ~ltrocti~te
beige color.

WITH
THIS
COUPON
1
Good Thru Saturdoy, Novombor 131h.
M Your Friendly A&amp;P Store,

Cream Style Corn • •
Shellie Beans . . • 4 88'
Bavarian Kraut • • . .4.... 38c
Vacuum Pack Corn . • 4~t_:. 88e
Sweet Peas • . • • • 4~· 88C
Tomato Juice • • .• . 3!:98c
Fruit Cocktail • • . 4 $100
Yellow Cling Peaches • 3'::~ 98c
•

t 2 featur-s in 1 t ')hand y feat ure s

Trim, tale nted, lhr ihy. Compact: to·
pare d st yli ng . Zips o pen a ll m es,
shop u . Sha rp ens no n-,e rra ted
blad es, too. Super -h o rd cuifer . Re·
mova ble ch rr:. me mag net. Cord star·
age , carrying handle. "Fold-A-Wa y"
table rest. Ul 752R ope n ~erjS harpen ·
er: Wh ite or Avocado.

Alcoa Wrap

UPON
Good Thru Soturdoy, Novem ber 13th.
At Your Friendly A&amp;P St Ort.

ALARM CLOCK

I

.

' ' ,_,_
I ...

" •

G.E.

'lj

'

Stayman Winesap Apples

lj1EI-=-:• YALUAILE COUPON

tTH
"f
HIS
co

.

• Clr.ll

~

1

.I,'/
' .I

.

'

8

RIVAL

KNIFE SHARPENER

WHITE
OR
PINK

, ,.' ' .: I · ,

/ , •· 1&gt;

CAN OPENER

Seedless Grapefruit

69c

:

fll ·,

America's number one meat merchant.

3~b. 1..L

.. .

. I"1'

... ......... r:t

PIEC~

It stands to reason we have to be or A·~ P wouldn't be

GOLDEN RIPE

~ .' ~.r::_r_ Jfl:l: ;c;;-c--/. ~:':·-·:"ri,1

~~~'
..'.z.'

• 5~91c

the beef we label "Super-Right."

Cheer Detergent

BAKER
FURNITURE

Meat Pin

ALL GOOD

Chuck Fillet Steaks

not at all, It just means we're very fu ssy about

FULL CUT IOHEL!SS

Chipped Steaks • ... $1sa Cubed Round Steak

BONELESS R.Ut.tP OR

VISITED HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnson .
Jr . of Wheeling spent the
weekend in Middleport with Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Grueser. On SEI! DISPLAY FOR
Friday Mr. and Mrs . Johnson
and Mr. and Mrs. Grueser were p:i-CE VALUAILE COUPON
IOc OFF LABELl
dinner guests of Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe, Pomeroy.
HERE FROM AKRON
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Holter of
Akron visited over the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Robert Duck·
worth , Middleport, and Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Holter, Racine.

lb.
7268K

just doesn't meet our "Super-Right" specifications?
You see...we

BOTTOM
CUT

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

CASSETTE
RECORDING
TAPE

'

MIXER

Gover"or contrOlled motor for full
power at all spttds. Remo'l(l bit cord
for eo1y ltofGOe. I 2 speeds for every·
thing from cakt rnl;w;tl to mashed po·
to loti.

HECK'S
REG.
' $2.49
JIWiliY DEPT.

818

KAKO

STROBE LIGHT

The mighty mite with the tiny price
tog . The Kako 818 feotvnu both AC
and Penlight bollery operation . Open
flash button, neon ready light, expo·
sure computer dial , and dip -on shoe
far vertical or horh.ontol mounting .

HECK'S REG. 18.88

BISSELL

CARPET SWEEPER
Poli)hed ha rdwood, deep-pile
corpef . , . !hit great aU-floor
appl iance tweeps them equal •
ly wel ll Wh iik! dirt and gril
!rom tile, cement , t late, lino·
leum an d any oth1r floor, too .

.

HECK'SREG.

$9.96

JEWElRt DEPT.

�!;~, .:~.::!:~~::.~.:~~.~.•,_. ~-.:_o· . t_; ·_. N_/.o¥:.·•.i.-. ~~.~~~
~tr:~~~~::::~::~~:::::.iie.~m~:~:::~~:::::::~::::::!::k~~~::::~::H:::::::::::::: :

·

o_;_•• .•

·Ilk/I Fun with Foods

.
·
, u tt.on. to Ga~,~en
'
uome Economt.st
Gt.ves C''rJ. . n.stmas
Demo··nst""/l_
C'.l:'.ub.·

•..•.··_.·.·. ·._· .•··. ·.•.·.....
· 111

u~

,ii

A-Christmas demonstration
Distler. home
by Cha-rlene Hoeflich
+'\. economist for the Colwnbus and
~' ; Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
··~t:Jt+
hi?tit¥\Fi
featured the most recent
meetin
g of the Wil~wood
Sara Roush of Minersville has a Japanese sister-in-law who
Garden Club.
contends that Sara's hickory nut cake is the best thing she has
Mrs. Distler demonstrated
eaten in America. She passes the recipe along to us.
techniques of making wrealhs,
HICKORY NUT CAKE
using styrofoam corles with
1 ~. cups nuts ; 31'.! cups sifted cake flour, 5 teaspoons baking
miniature lights and orpowder. 1 teaspoon salt, sifted together.
naments, attractive displays of
Cream 1v, cups shortening, I teaspoon almond extract ; I candy in a brandy bowl, and a
teaspoon vanilla with II&gt; cups sugar added gradually .
Madonna piece. She was
Add four egg yolks well beaten and I¥.! cups milk. Beat until
smooth.
Beat the four egg whites until frothy, add v. cup sugar. fold
this into the batter ; bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes or more in
a large angel food cake pan . Can be topped with a thin icing.
Plans for hosting members of
EVELYN HILL OF 4975 WOODMAN PARK DRIVE , Apt. 7, the Choral Club of Roanoke
Dayton, sent us a recipe for a Nestles quick chocolate cake which Bible College on Dec . 10 were
she says is very moist.
.
made during a meeting of the
2 cups flour. 2 cups sugar. I cup oil, 2 cups buttermilk, \\&lt; Martha Bible Class of the
teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons soda, 2 eggs. 2 teaspoons vanilla. 6 Bradbury Church of Christ.
The vocal group will be at the
tablespoons Nestles·quick chocolate.
Bake in a sheet pan at 350 degrees 50 to 55 minutes. Use your church on that date to present a
program which will be open to
favorite icing. Now that really sounds quick and easy!
the public . Sleeping acAPPARENTLY LOTS OF PEOPLE make pwnpkin bread . commodations and meals were
Mrs. Hill's recipe is as follows:
3¥.! cups all purpose flour . 2 teaspoons soda, II&gt; teaspoon salt.
1\\&lt;teaspoon cinnamon, I teaspoon nutmeg, 3 cups white sugar. I
cup cooking oil, 4 eggs, 2 cups pwnpkin.
Grease bottom of four one-pound coffee cans. Sift togetber the
dry ingredients. Beat the eggs, add the sugar and beat until fluf(y.
Add the oil and pwnpkin and mix with dry ingredients.
Fill the cans half full and bake one hour at 350 degrees. When
cool remove from cans by opening bottom with can opener and
pushing the bread through the can. Cool, wrap in foil and either
serve or freeze.

\ { · b)' Miss Joanna

:_,..,_:_''.'.•.t.
¥_:_ ·

t \i :%

m:t:c

;;;:;;w;m:m

held on Nov. 27 and 28 at the
Meigs Local High School
cafeteria .
Several members attended
the recen l Gallipolis meeting
and also the Chester Garden
Club open meeting. At the latter
meeting Mrs. Betty Lou Dean
gave demonstrations on
Thanksgiving arrangements.
Mrs. Pal Thomas was given
the thanks of the club for
arrangements she made for the
Masonic meeting. Mrs. May

presenWd a mwn corsage by
Mrs. Hiram Fisher.
Mrs . Evelyn Hollon presided,
with Mrs. Mary Nease giving
devotions.Mrs. Fisher and Mrs.
Homer Holter reported on
articles donated by the club for
the coun try fair at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center. Pointers on
arrangements of articles from
foreign lands for the Christmas
flower show special display
were given. The show will be

Holter and Mrs. Evelyn Hollon
were given blue ribbons for
arrangements ' of mwns with
Madonnas.
A talk .on "Spring time Gems"
was given by Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger . Tips on planting tulips
were given by Mrs. Kenneth
Harris and Mrs. Nease spoke on
anemone or gay poppies. She
said to soak them good before
planting to insure good growth.
They are also excellent, she
said, for indoor forcing, and

feeding the birds ..
Guests were Mrs. Herschel
Rose, Mrs. J.aron Kelton, Mrs.
Brad Maag, Mrs. Charles
Grueser. Melva, Henrietta and
Me lisa Thomas, · Christmas
cookies, punch and a dessert
sala&lt;) . were served by Mrs.
. Hiram Fisher and Mrs. Teresa
Fisher .
HOFFNER IS ILL
Herman Hoffner. Pomeroy, is
a patient at Riverside Hospital
in Colwnbus. Cards may be sent
to Room 417.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
The birthday anniversary of
Harry Ohlinger of Colwnbus
was observed Sunday with a
dinner at the home of Mrs.
.•rthur Fick. Attending the
observance were Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Roush, Dr. and Mrs. Joe
Ohlinger and daughter, Debbie,
Columbus;
Mrs.
Clara
Hamilton, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Isabelle Powell, Mrs. Ruth Ann
Dowler. Middleport, and Mrs.
Ruth Wallace, Cable, Wis.

College Choral Club Coming to Bradbury Church
arranged.
It was noted that new cupboards have been installed in
the church kitchen and a plaque
will be placed on one of the
cupboards in memory of Mrs.
Edith Russell . A kitchen shower
WDS held following the meeting.
Officers elected for neKt year
were Mrs . Dale Barnhart,
president; Mrs , Bill Carter,

make a good border plant, She
noted that these plants
originated in Palestine and are
often called the Biblical plant.
Mrs. Mason Fisher exhibited
various types of spring bulbs.
Mrs. Karl Grueser gave tips
for November gardening. She
said now is the time to plant
trees, leaving the burlap
wrapping on the roots, collect
leaves for mulching, cleaning
garden tools, preparing the
motor for winter storage, and

Dried
Flower
•
Arrangements

vice president ; Mrs. Max scripture (rom the Psalms and
Davis, secretary ; and Mrs. a poem, "Sight and Sound of
Paul Winn, treasurer . Mrs. !"aiL"
Oleva Cotterill will serve. as Cookies and coffee were
program chairman .
served to Mr. and Mrs. Bill
The annual Christmas party Carter. Mr. and Mrs. Dale
was discussed with a 6:30 Barnhart, Mr . and Mrs .
potluck to be held at the church. Clarence Murray, Mr. and Mrs.
A program and gift exchange Paul Winn. Mr. and Mrs. Walter
will be held . Mrs. Walter Bunce Bunce, Mrs. Rpbert King, Mrs.
opened the meetin g with Cotterill , Mrs. Alice Johnston, and Mrs. Davis.

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9 -SUNDAY12TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, NOV.14, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

From '3.00
Dudley's Florist
Serving: Gallipolij,
Pomeroy, Middleport. 0 ..
&amp; ¥ason Co., W. Va .

'

we care------------

CHECK AND COMPARE! QUALITY AND PRICE!

LR71

UPRIGHT

Pledge Service Held
A pledge service highlighted
the Monday night meeting of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of . the Heath United
Methodist Church .
Mrs . C. F. Hibbs had charge
of the service which opened
with singing "This Is My
Father's World." There was a
responsive reading and a
meditation with Mrs. Forest
Bach tel reading the hymn ,
"Lord , Speak to Me ." After
members turned in their pledge
cards, the purpose of the WSCS
was given in unison and the
members sang "Blest Be the
Tie That Binds."
Mrs . Geneva Yates used the
Thanksgiving theme for

K-320

G. E.

VAC

devo tions with "Come Ye
Thanksful People Come " as the
h)mn and scripture from the
tOOth Psalm. She read a poem,
o'The First Thanksgiving Day,"
an article . "The Evidence of
Things Unseen" by Norman
Vincent Peale, and a prayer
entitled "I Thank Thee, Lord ."

...__

What
Quality Beef
Does A&amp;P Sell?

Mrs . Jack Bechtle presided at
the meeting and reported on a
mi ssi onary meeting and a
cluster meeting held at the
church recently. Yellow mwns
in milk glass with yellow tapers
were used on the table.
Hostesses were Mrs. M. L.
French, Mrs. Everett Davis,
and Mrs. James Euler.

"Super-Right" P.g. Will 6 or 8 Chops On Top

PROCTOR SILEX

Cut From Chuck

Pork Loin Roast :~~~E . . • '"·69c Boneless Beef Roast
Top Round Steak • • •
Round Roast • • •

CLAIROL

MIST -CONDITIONER

•

HAIR SETTER

"Super-Right" Top Cut

Tops For Pan Frying-Bonelen

G i~tes

di rt . Dtsig ned with e ye · pl eo~ ­
in g dur a b ili ty . Make s the
t oughest car pe t pro ble ms
reem easy.

3 ~el!ing choices- co n·
ditioned 1et , wa ter mist set ,
and r ·1ulor set. 20 roller ~ in
the m....t popular sizes. Packed
with 6 o:r. . bailie of Cus tom
Cor e Con ditioner and 2 o:r. .
con of KHA C. 120 vol tl , 60
cycles AC.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG .

$51,96

$21.96

~ -'

•

U-5
Plen ty of power lor

REMINGTON

LADIES' DELUXE
t

That's a fail· question. But not an easy one to answer

SHAVER
Super-sharp hea d • Gentle head •

· Easy to handle t On -o ff 1 w itc:~ .

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK 'S REG. $14.88

because we have our own quality standards.

Not
727
Exactly SUNBEAM MEN'S
As
Illustrated
HECK'S REG. 124.88

SHAVER

Pl Pleasant.Store On~

Dept

JEWElRY DEPT.

KODAK
INSTAMATIC

CAMERA

htr)lhi n'il yc u nu d IO IO~~ Q"OI r&gt;•&lt;IUI&lt;I rndoan
o r o;ul . 11,1 1on o co rd . end ollrrody 10 90 - No mo rt
lookin ~ OIO~ n d lo1 o"UIO&lt; ' i1tml , U" ''!h e AA"
for 1nopoholl or 1li dr1. in cole• cr b lo&lt;i&lt; gnd whitt .
~ · , limple lo op• •ole Ju•l dmp rn l h ~ film COl•
trid1Jt,pop on the tla•hcub o, ond yo u'&lt;e roady l_a
v o. 11' 1 a g&lt;t&lt;&gt;l lout.! camtro fr om Kod&lt;&gt;k . And ~

l&lt;&gt;kt•

v•~ c l pi&lt;l~• • • !

STEAM.IRON

CORSAIR DELUXE

Plenty of steam for easier

SMITH CORONA

iron i ng. Cle a n-view heel

PORTABLE
TYPEWRITER

for iro ni ng in any direction
... lets you see as you iron .
Ea sy·1o -see fa bri C dial.
l eak · proo f.lightweigh1.
Block ha ndle , ch rome cov*
er, 1200 watts, 120 volts .
AC only . Und e rwrite rs'
laboratorie s, Inc. listed.

Measure the value of this amazing
portable by ils line performance,

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG .

then

by i ts han dy si ze

lation

$9.88

$8.88

$49.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

and bantam

wei g ht . ll ' s durab le and ho1 aU
neceHo ry feature s induding tabu -

JEWElRY DEPT.

different from any other meat merchant.
These standa1·ds don't fit exactly the familiar terms

Thanksgiving Dinner
Plans for hosting a potluck
dinner on Thanksgiving Eve for
churches of the Southern
Cluster of UniWd Methodist
Churches were discussed wlien
the Women's Society of
Christian Service met recently
at the Portland Church.
The Portland Church will
provide coffee, tea and rolls for
the fellowship dinner. Mrs.
Ruth Ebersbach, president ,
also announced that a breakfast
would be served by the members to the ministers of Meigs
County on Nov. 15 at the Portland Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs .
Esla Roush, the program
centered on Thanksgiving . Mrs .
Cora Hil ton led the program
readin g fr om the !36th Psalm
and the group participated with
a responsive reading. Readings

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Rachel Emerson to Wilson R.
Powell, Kathy A. Powell, .83
Acre, Olive.
Frank L. Jones, Victoria W.
Jones to Randall Richardson,
Sue Carol Richardson , 118
Acres , Bedford.
Lillie V. Dyke to Robert W.
Hayman , Shirley A. Ha yman,
Parcels, Rutland .
Bethel M. Cook, Nevillis M.
Cook to Burdell Black, Effie
Black, 4 Acres, Salisbury.
George W. Knapp, Bertha
Knapp to Virgi! Casto, Thetma
G. Casto, Lots, Middleport._
An na
Klements,
John
Klements to Anastasia Staats.
Parcel, Olive.
Ralph Henderson , Alberta
Henderson to Wayne F. Ward,
Unda L. Ward, two-thirds Acre,
100 A. Lot IS2, Lebanon.
Mildred Garnet Rhodes to
Eugene E. Davis, Hilda C.
DaviJ, 91 .4 Acres, Letart.
Frank Murray, Amanda
Murray to Jesse W. Dowdy,
Shirley M. Dowdy, Pt. Lots 101,
102, Middleport.
Jesse W. Dowdy, Shirley
Dowdy to Raymond M. Baker,
Dorothy Baker, Pt. Lots 101,
102, Middleport.
Frank Bowman. Macie
Bowman to Edward U!Ue, 36
Acres, Rutland.
·
Nellie Borgan to Irion
Johnson Holley, !Doris Ann
. Holley, Parcel, Scipio.
'

WHOLE
OR
HALF

you know for grades of meat. As an example,
dirl you know that some beef, grarled U.S. Choice.

were " Tha nksgiving On a
Summer Day " by Mrs .
Kathl ee n Ward ;
"Thanksgivin g" by Mrs.
Roush ; "Faith Without Words"
b)' Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew; "A
Woman 's Conversation with
God," Mrs. Hilton . Each
member then related things
which they are thankful for .
Officers • reports were given.
The treasurer reported that the
yard sale netted $126.95. A free
will offering was taken and the
meeting adjourned with !he
hostess serving refreshments.
Mrs. Shirley Johnson will have
the Christmas meeting . Atlending besides those named
were Mrs. Ethel Johnson , Mrs.
Margery Roush, and Mrs .
Carolyn Price.

don'~

CALIFORNII\

Beef Roast •

buy by grade. We use our own

high standards to bring you the best

lb.

31/._-lb.
AVG.
PKG.

lb.

value~ .

•

10.

THIN SLICED

89'

CUT

Sirloin Tip Roast

That doesn't mean we don't approve of such grading ...

10.

FRO~

CHUCK

SULTANA

$12s Cube Steaks

"SUPER.-RIGHT"

,._ $1 29

lb,$1 19 Slice~

• ~2.~~- SJ1 9

Bacon

IY THE

•

lb.

SJOt

Jumlto lolo1na •

752·1

5 69
lb.
bog

10~

c

Florida Oranges
NEW
CROP

ACORN SQUASH

C

5 69C
lb.
ba1

pt,.

6 ~~ 69c

lb.

HEAVY DUTY
•

:

==~

.5 ~~·39

C WITH

THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Se.turd•y. Novem bor llth,
AI Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

YALUAILI COUPON
BAKER'S .

Angel Flake Coconut
WITH
1
THIS
:k:-59~ cOUPON
Good Thru Saturday, Novom bor 13th,
At Your Fritndly A&amp;P .Stort.

==~

:

ONE Pll fAMILY
YALUAILE COUPON
GENERAL MILLS

Wheaties
12-oa.
bo•

29c

1.....

ean•

.

Good Thru Soturday, Novem ber 13th,
AI Your Friendly AlcP Store.
Htti::.:~-CI ONI ~~~FAMILY
•'.-~···

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

1

Baker's cHJ6~ L~~EE~HIPS
12..L
pit,,

VACUUM PACK

Marshmallow Creme 3 ::~ $1°0

:

'/4

Pound Cake · .

• •

PRINCILLA

lo-o.,39c

• Pkr.

lb.
can

$149 1~~

COUPON

Good Thru Soturday, Novombor 13111,
AI Your Friondly A&amp;P Store.
k!.=-:~-=-: ONE PER FAMILT

--=a

--·-

GREEN GIANT FROZEN

Sweet Peas 'Ns!~rr •
GREEN GIANT FROZEN
••,.,.•3gc Niblets Corn • • •

B1111

.'~·45'

Green Beans INs!~rr.

10-&lt;11. IJAc
• pk,. R .

50~ OFf •

~ C~RTONII
OF
t.M

IO-o•39C

I
I

• Pkr.

•

lirr;

Heck's Reg. $11.88
Pt Pleasant Store Only

_ ...

-~
'

_

, .
•

!.&lt; ••
•

'

V'·
. .·,

I :"j

,

..

~--

C-4510

Not•Exactly As Illustrated

G. E.
TABLE
RADIO

··"-

'(~

G.E.

G.E. ·
ELECTRIC

CHORD ORGAN

PHONO-RADIO

.COMBO

AM-FMCLOCK

• Easy·Pioy keyboard I 25 m1lody keys ploy 2
full octo~tet e 6 chord key) designed for easy
play • Variable Volume Control • Acoustically
de$lgnad, high·irnpact
cabin11.

HECK'S REG.

lilltn to 9 " 0' FM Cl ~d AM, "' ' ' " bio-•pea ktr
IOUnd , gtl full-ft CIMtd Cla(· -olorm •y lltm Co!rll·
w ni t m:t , too; • Soli.:htole cir&lt; uit do1i g n l liQ htt d
Clod Dio ll . .. fr cn l -l i,ed dyn""' '' 1p t oh1 I
Clock •r •le m lootur• • Slumbe r S"'rllh and Wok • ·.
lo M\lloi&lt; or !o'oni&lt; &amp; Alor m I lk&lt;ilt-in Af ( fo;r d riii I•H fM • Orih Corn.,t naali&lt;:Jn I Avro;ma tic Volumt Con!fol.

$26.96

HECK'S REG. $26.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

2.96

HECK'S

2 Slice

RADIO

Here ' 5 a g reat entertain er .
Plart either radio or record~ .
P l oy~ on e ither bo tter ie \ or

house current .

HamiHon-Beach

TOASTER
Heck's Reg. 114.96
Pl Pleasant Store Only

.'

~"k:."3t

Coffee .. 3 ~:; 51,99 ' AlP Frozen Fren:h Fries ... 3:.;~: SI.OO

I
I

•

G.E.
PORTABLE·
VAC
....

your cleaning load \ Storing is ,
a cinCh! So ~tersalile - and easy to

HECK'S REG. $25.56

REGAL
HI DOME
TEFLON

FRY PAN
Hi·dome Electric fry pan and mul· \
ti ·cooker. Scratch resistant Teflon.
Completely immerlible, Jewelry

...., ..., .t AlP ,.., ...,... c.t-" wntrl N.r. IJttt, ~llllt Ht ,., !Mih'·

~.i·~; ~ -~~!d ~~!;~ r~ ll ;i(l~;d·: .::·~·~,t :~ j,· ~;;, ~·.....
The ma"ufacturer btar-s .cost of thi s .coupo 1

G. E.
TOASTER
OVEN

HECK'S REG. $18.8 8

SUNSET
2-HOUR
MM lOOW

SUNBEAM
DELUXE MIXMASTER
.

Heck's Reg. '29.96

Dept.

JEWElRY DEPT.

•

GREEN GIANT. FROZEN

Cut Yams • . • •
Ll&amp;hf O'Ciack

2
•

..

T-93

U;hten~

Maxwell House Coffee

HEINZ WHOLE OR SLICED

Dill Pickles • •
GREEN GIANT FROZEN
Mexicorn INs!~r:R •

WITH
THIS
COUPON

-===~YALUAILE
~NE PER COUPON
fAMILY~==:
fi1
:

Dial Soap • • •
CARNATION
Coffee Mate • • • ' Jor c
-lb, STICKS
Mrs. Filbert's Marg~ 3:i.';;. $1°0
JANE PARKER
Dinn'er Rolls ~R~fv~ . 4..... $1 00
7
" 9

39c

Good Thru Soturdoy, Novombor llth,
At Your Friendly A&amp;P Store,

cana

HI P-O-LITE

l&amp;-01.

II.·'·

·--~

•

W7194
I

Sc OFF LABELl

BATH SIZE

JANE PARKER-CRESCENT
WITH
THIS
cOUPON

$6.79

--ll(l

~==~YALUAILI
ONE PER FAMILY~==
fll
C.OUPON 1

1.....

•

m:::~ ONE PER FAMILY

1j1

HECK'S REG. $12.96

HECK'S REG.

49C

II".ZS'
roll

111-oL

ONE PEl FAMILY
YALUAILE COUPO N
ALL PURPOSE

Gold Medal Flour
Virginia was the fIrs t
southern state to officially
proclaim Thanksgiving Day
as a holiday. in 1855.

in one a larm clock- Snoot-Alarm•
and lighted Dial t S no o z - Aiorm~
wakes yo u, leh you ~ no o a, then
wa kes you a gain a lighted Dial for
eoty nig httime viewing • ~ltrocti~te
beige color.

WITH
THIS
COUPON
1
Good Thru Saturdoy, Novombor 131h.
M Your Friendly A&amp;P Store,

Cream Style Corn • •
Shellie Beans . . • 4 88'
Bavarian Kraut • • . .4.... 38c
Vacuum Pack Corn . • 4~t_:. 88e
Sweet Peas • . • • • 4~· 88C
Tomato Juice • • .• . 3!:98c
Fruit Cocktail • • . 4 $100
Yellow Cling Peaches • 3'::~ 98c
•

t 2 featur-s in 1 t ')hand y feat ure s

Trim, tale nted, lhr ihy. Compact: to·
pare d st yli ng . Zips o pen a ll m es,
shop u . Sha rp ens no n-,e rra ted
blad es, too. Super -h o rd cuifer . Re·
mova ble ch rr:. me mag net. Cord star·
age , carrying handle. "Fold-A-Wa y"
table rest. Ul 752R ope n ~erjS harpen ·
er: Wh ite or Avocado.

Alcoa Wrap

UPON
Good Thru Soturdoy, Novem ber 13th.
At Your Friendly A&amp;P St Ort.

ALARM CLOCK

I

.

' ' ,_,_
I ...

" •

G.E.

'lj

'

Stayman Winesap Apples

lj1EI-=-:• YALUAILE COUPON

tTH
"f
HIS
co

.

• Clr.ll

~

1

.I,'/
' .I

.

'

8

RIVAL

KNIFE SHARPENER

WHITE
OR
PINK

, ,.' ' .: I · ,

/ , •· 1&gt;

CAN OPENER

Seedless Grapefruit

69c

:

fll ·,

America's number one meat merchant.

3~b. 1..L

.. .

. I"1'

... ......... r:t

PIEC~

It stands to reason we have to be or A·~ P wouldn't be

GOLDEN RIPE

~ .' ~.r::_r_ Jfl:l: ;c;;-c--/. ~:':·-·:"ri,1

~~~'
..'.z.'

• 5~91c

the beef we label "Super-Right."

Cheer Detergent

BAKER
FURNITURE

Meat Pin

ALL GOOD

Chuck Fillet Steaks

not at all, It just means we're very fu ssy about

FULL CUT IOHEL!SS

Chipped Steaks • ... $1sa Cubed Round Steak

BONELESS R.Ut.tP OR

VISITED HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnson .
Jr . of Wheeling spent the
weekend in Middleport with Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Grueser. On SEI! DISPLAY FOR
Friday Mr. and Mrs . Johnson
and Mr. and Mrs. Grueser were p:i-CE VALUAILE COUPON
IOc OFF LABELl
dinner guests of Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe, Pomeroy.
HERE FROM AKRON
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Holter of
Akron visited over the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Robert Duck·
worth , Middleport, and Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Holter, Racine.

lb.
7268K

just doesn't meet our "Super-Right" specifications?
You see...we

BOTTOM
CUT

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

CASSETTE
RECORDING
TAPE

'

MIXER

Gover"or contrOlled motor for full
power at all spttds. Remo'l(l bit cord
for eo1y ltofGOe. I 2 speeds for every·
thing from cakt rnl;w;tl to mashed po·
to loti.

HECK'S
REG.
' $2.49
JIWiliY DEPT.

818

KAKO

STROBE LIGHT

The mighty mite with the tiny price
tog . The Kako 818 feotvnu both AC
and Penlight bollery operation . Open
flash button, neon ready light, expo·
sure computer dial , and dip -on shoe
far vertical or horh.ontol mounting .

HECK'S REG. 18.88

BISSELL

CARPET SWEEPER
Poli)hed ha rdwood, deep-pile
corpef . , . !hit great aU-floor
appl iance tweeps them equal •
ly wel ll Wh iik! dirt and gril
!rom tile, cement , t late, lino·
leum an d any oth1r floor, too .

.

HECK'SREG.

$9.96

JEWElRt DEPT.

�11 - The Dally Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 101 1971

I'J

OPEl DAILY

10 TO 9

0'-IDAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY

'10 TO 9

SUNDAY

12 TO. 7

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, NOV. 14, WHILE QUANTITIES LA~S-T- - - -

------

TOPPER

LADIES'

CORDANA

LADIES'

WORK SETS

DUSTER

SWEATERS
Stylish acrylic , cardigan and pull·
over sweaters . Four styles to choose
from . Cable design front . Available
in wh ite and pastel. Sizes 5-M·l.

Heavy polyester and cotton blend, that
is rugged enough for today's working
man.

MEN'S

WRANGLER IVY

HONDO PANTS

Co mfor tab le cordono du sters in as·
sorted prints . Wosh and wear. Sizes

FLANNEL PAJAMAS

5-M-L.

Worm flannel pajamas in $Oiids or
prints. Notch co llar a nd lace trim .
Choose from pink , blue , mint, or
ma ize. Sim 32/ 40.

$444
HECK'S REG .
$5.94

HECK'S REG. $2 .88

HECK'S
REG.

CLOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHINC DEPT.

•3.94

Permanent press, stra ight leg, Wran ·
gler Ivy Hondo Pants. A¥ailable in
asso rted colors. Perfect for aro und
the house or casual wea r. Sizes 29 to
38.

.

'r,'.... """ ~
)
. , •.

,, · . ' I ,

'/} '
I

I

I

'·.'

.

CLOTHING DEPT.
~--=

.. .,_
r- - ~
·

I

llo&lt;l bac~ lilt CO&lt;I,~g m•r~on i om , iMtr·
llllntnlly p~U lho ' " !19•r ond •h• "'"'I~
do,..lop.d Mo" combo! .,lie ;""' elf
.SO " P'O'alt "reof 10~/ld" oholl OpttCII·
lng on 0 lpl'i~t ·mttt,o"'cof p t~nd~l. . lht

$1]88

-~

$1688

··t':l..' ·•'

GIRLS'
SLACKS

.·

.,

HECK'S REG. $1.88

CLOTH/I

CLOTHINGDEPT.

~ DEPT.

•12

99

.,••

HECK'S REG.

'17.99
·'

PL Pleasant Store

HECK'S REG.
'1.77
On~

$199
HECK'S REG. $2.68.

SPORTS DEPT.

~.DELUXE

..

AGGRAVATION
GAME
AS

SEEN
ON T.V.

COLT

SPORT SHIRTS

w,

Condy Ap~lt •ed or whit•.
me ;, L·19~• ", W-9 \;'', H-21
'•" lhe •oddleheight il 12".

HECK'S
REG.
$6.44

HECK'S REG. $4.48

HECK'S REG.
$3.24

INFLATED

Brush denim girls' slacks with patch
pockets. Four bv1ton . Sizes 7 lo 14.

$]00

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$6.99

MINI
SA NTAS

c

HECK'S
REG.
$2.99

3PC. GIFT BOX SET
WHITE OR HOLLY

HECK'S
REG.
58 1

S]44

2 FOR

CLOTHIHC DEPT.

These gloves ore heavy duty and
idea l lor the hunting season.

TOY DEPT.

CHOOSE FROM
2 STYLES.

These modern boysr sp ort shi rts ore
available in prints, solids, or stripes.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

HUNTING GLOVES

$178

High g lo ss varr'li sh o n h e a ~ y
slock. Shaped seat, hea d rest
and wide shaped a rms 3 spin·
d ie bo ck. 2 leg stre t,t hers,
steam bent ro cke rs ... 22 "1 "
high , 14" wide. Seal sets 9 J,"
hi9h .

She 11 12" toll w 1th so h vinyl arms.
leg'i and heo d. The baby doll hm
rooted •O •· a nd is filled with " Vir·
gin " \flrruJed foam.

PERMANENT PRESS

ClOTHINC
DEPT.

HECK'S NO. 100

SLEEPING
BAG

HECK'S
REG •
$2.77

HECK'S REG. $13.94

HEC.K'S REG .
$8.66

WOOD OAK ROCKER

HECK'S
REG.
84 1

$155
HECK'S REG.

$1.99

SPORTS DEPT.

72~

HUNTING

HECK'S REG. 961

PL

SHIRT

HUNTING HATS
Camouflage and solid calor hu nli ng
hat. Choose from auorted colors
and sizes.

MENS
WOOL PLAID

TOOTH PICK TREE KIT

DOCTOR
KIT

HECK'S
REG.
$1.06

·cHRISTMAS
CARDS

Coming in 20 count solid po ck selectio ns
Cho ice of three differe nt styles.

$199

Store On~

~ANDLE RINGS

99

Convertse¥er;day candle hold11t to Christmas
candles. There are lhree florg l designs from
wh ic h to choose.

Heck's Reg. '2.68

HECK'S
REG .
$1.50

Pl Pleasant Store

AMSCO

DAWN'S APARTMENT

11 INCH

COLD ELECTRIC

CANDLE

28C sac

HECK'S REG.

'7.77

HECk'S
REG.

Pl Pleasant Store On~

371

I

•

88(

NURSES
KIT

FLORAL

'

'

~leasant

AMSCO BEAUTY SETS

64(

REINDEER

CENTER PIECE .

GLADDIN'G
SLEEPING
BAG

NURSING AND FEEDING SET

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

AREA RUGS

HECK'S REG. $3.44

HECK'S REG.
.48

Baby Dvmpling hos sleeping g lo~·
si ne .eyn wit h lo.ng curled la sh es.

They have lo'hg co llars and permo·
nent press. Si zes 8 to 18 .

ASSORTED

Available in four
assorted pallerns .
Size 24x36.

DOLLS

BABY DUMPLING

These stylish cardigans are available

$299

AMSCO

ROCK FLOWER

"'· · HORSMAN

)~
·;

ptppi&lt;nl ~1d1 o•ound- fuitlntoly d, Uorut
S ~ilt fo r d u•oba1 ty. Bor l ed tn om ol ,, • • j
'"""' " ,.;,j, tmoo!h neal inlt• iar a..G har d·
bo ord bollam. Po dd ed lid ho&lt; on odj~!lo ble
control h1nge (No pinched li"Qtrt o • brvi'lld
he-a d &lt;) A.d ;u&lt;!l t o lily fo r propot &lt;lobil 1!y .,. jrll
o coin. S.:o/1 ' " ' " ' om end de oM oo 1il, witn
mil d dolor ge nl

_...;:-~
. AS SEEN ONT

48

HECK'S REG. $3.66

BOYS'

GIRLS' SWEATERS

$148

Power up

BY MATTEL

il of h i g~ i1111po" in 1""r1on moldod plo&lt;lk
'"'ilh bl~~ gild ~old cok.rin~

$ 22

in white , red, green, brow'n a nd
navy. 100% orion. Sim 71o 14.

$

'"'11'1 fMO I Ufll n \. " IOnQ , On\1 0 "' h1gh ,

CLOTHINC DEPT.

Available in polyester and cotton .
Assorted multi-color stripes . Sizes
2/ 4.

th is

~~~~ · 15 1• "•30",17" hi1Jh. ~or the Pep ·pep·

LOUIS MARX
SPACE RIFLE

'~

···.

comfo rt . Raglan sleeve,

SPORT SHIRTS

HECK'S REG. $1.66

Il l&lt;. ~

tLOTHINC DEPT.

The ulmosl in rugged

BOYS'
LONG SLEEVE

HECK'S REG . $3.58 ·

your Di n9 A. Lin~
With th£&gt; ilmatrn~
Di ng·A·Ling Powrr

HECK'S REG. TO $19.88

SWEAT SHIRTS
$222

M-l -XL.

cov••. 1 ougor bowl, I
1 crto"'"

o~d

REDMAN

FULL SIZE
SINGLE CONTROL ••••

·~\
I

· ~---~~

_K.m:t e1\-ond Cotton
. blend . C hoo ~ e from
assorted co lors . Sizes S·

CO"lr,

$118

•wh oodmo lal wi_rh
poly base. • 8 Y1" d1a .
~ 10 %" high. • 4 true·
lon ed reed .

W.&lt;.

TWIN BED
SINGLE CONTROL ••••

- . ·' ·I

MEN'S

!IQ ""'

HECK'S REG . $2 .66

These Sunbeam Electric Blankets ore ideal for the winter ahead . Single
Control. Choose from assorted colors.

\· .::~

7

I '

pol, I

1u~r b~w l

MUSICAL TOP

CLOTHINC
DEPT.

/ / .·. . 'i\

$ 99

"1!1

ELECTRIC BLANKETS

r

&lt;)_,,_;
·' :/4
' ..
·./ ...'"
_.
'\·
.

/

.

$199

....... "'"' ...., •. r,;, "'

$266

SUNBEAM

----~~~~_&gt;&lt;,

Stylish ladie s po lyester pa nts with a pu ll -o n
wai st . Choos e f ro m navy , green , and brown.
Sizes: 8 to 16.

'~""'·•

rl~.&lt; eu -.

Mort lt ho"o
heQunnc
f l···.
'"hon
. Of .Pinl"l•on lmold
td "lo1M
ltlroullhoul, don t in o &lt;olt bl..;, !tie l a'"'"9
Phont meoo ~rtl 9 " Ionto and S '• " l11g~
Po .. e•td b~ one olon&lt;klrd D·&lt;~ll bn Hory,
!~! •oi&lt;e mechomom fe o lvrft 0 lO ICI)'R9
random oelt('l•on tt c ord, ~g

gl ide on their own· Din~ ·
A-lin g Sp ac e Sk y-

P ack.

~~: , .."? y
, . .. .. ,..,..,.

TALKING TELEPHONE

CHINA TEA SET
,., (Onliota o f ~ &lt;upl , b oOOKtl\ . 6 plattl . I

Th e Di ng -"A ~ Li ngr. are here! A wi l d wcicky
wor l d of mini ature robot!. that do al l
kind s of Ding-A-ling 1hing s! Ju st one
Ding -A-ling Power Pock powers
them al l ~ and they wa lk , or

LOUIS MARX

23 PIECE

SHIRTS

CLOTHIHC DEPT.

,{~

PANTS

W ide tunne l bl!1t l oop \ .

Deep pockets. A'loiloble in
d a r~ oli,.e, no ¥y, ' pruce,
a nd ·char coal. Siztu 29 to
41.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

CLOTHIHC DEPT.

POLYESTER

PANTS

Permanent press work
~h irh . Sins 1-4 1'2 tol7

10

LADIES'

HECK'S
REG.
$6.88

DING-A-LING
TURN-AROUND
SET

BIG YANK MEN'S
'PERMANENT PRESS

HECK'S
REG.
$1.24 '

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

RED FLOCKED BOOTS

WITII HOLLY &amp; POIIISETTIA

HECK'S
REG.
$1.12

88(

IACI

HECK'S REG. s2.68

Pl Pleasant
S1Dre

�'

"

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

(

'

OPEIDAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 T09

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9 .

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, NOV. 14, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, NOV. 14, WHILE·QUANTITIES LAST.

CHECK HECK;S PLUMBING &amp;ELECTRICAL DEPT. FOR SAVINGS
COPPER PIPE
&amp; FITTINGS

WATER
FILTER LID

I -SECTION

TRASH
BAGS

FOR

CORNBREAD

FRY PAN

SKILLET

Made of rugged expondeJ olumi·
num en cased ir1 5moo th , roun d
aluminum frame, complete with

metal ring handle. The "Fry Crisp"
filter lid serves o vor iety of kitchen
usei.

$166

HECK'S REG .
$2.28

..

-·

WINDEX .

ADHESIVE
· PAPER

Co me in bea utiful bri ght
colors a nd. severa l a sso rt .
styles. A love ly wa y to dec-

surfaces
4 YARDS

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

• 8 Inch cen ter-to -center

$218

38' YARD

$1.77

HOUSIWAIE
DEPT.

' JUSEWAIE DEPT.

HANDLE

.. •,
..,. •,.'
•, ·.··

· ...
·····

,• ' . '. •,

HECK 'S
REG.
$2.88

HECK'S
REG.
59 1

27&lt;

DIAL

BATH
SOAP
6FOR

HECK'S
REG.
$2.88

FES00 20 GAL

SLACK RACK

ggc

3 _PIECE
SKILLET SET

oz.

COMET
CLEANSER

2 FOR

HECK'S
REG.
$1.60

43(

II
1:

Heck's Reg. '
14.99

HECK'S REG. 26 1 EACH

pt,

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

55

14"0UTDOOR

Reg,

BROOM

13,99

Pleasant Store On~

COSMETIC DEPARTMENT

WALDORF

PROTEIN
SHAMPOO

3 oz.

CLOSE-UP TOOTHPASTE

BAYER ASPIRIN

"

SINK STOPPER

"

HAIDWARE
DEPT.

30" FLEXIBLE HEATER
CONNECTOR

$133

24" · ••....
36" . - . . , , .

HARDWARE DEPT.

88'
99•

100Z.

13

oz.

CORICIDIN

RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT

DECONGESTANT

JERGENS
LOTION

$19

COLD RELIEF TABLETS
D12's

HECK 'S REG. $ 24 •88

,.

· SILENCE IS GOLDEN
COUGH FORMULA

~

·rpllllfl'/1! llll!lll,,

512

,., V1f,.,. 1151'

HECK'S REG. $1 . 82

E

OECO«rlOIJIT

HECK'S REG.
$1.19

Cold R!lit!
Tabhts

HECK'S REG.
74'

12&lt;

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

FLUSH
OUTLET

HANDY BOX

BRt)WN ............ 38~
IVORY ____ .. .. .. . .. . 4Qi
HARDWARE DEPT.

23(

HAR, WARE DEPT.

OCTAGON BOX

DUPLEX OUTLET

23&lt;

BROWN ..... 26(
· IVORY...... 28'

HECK'S REG. 29'

OLD

SINGLE POL~
SWITCH
28~
30~

WORKBOX

2(

·
'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
36 1
HARDWARE DEPT.

:------1

WILKINSON

1 GAL

BONDED RAZOR

WINCHESTER

22 CAL. RIFLE
Bo ll a ction, sing le shot sta nda rd.
Am eric an ha rdw ood stoc k wi th
Monte Carlo profile. Posi tive safety.
Red cocki ng indi cator. Strong, front
lo cking bolt. Fi res shorts, longs, or

$

s 86

FUEL

3-BLADE

Heck's ·Reg,

KNIFE
• Best quality , finest steel , e xpert

HECK'S
R.EG. $2.38

00

workmanship

e

Attractive design,

rugged, practical • Sensibly priced
• Full gua ranteed • America n
made.

$166

HECK'S REG. $1.97

Pl Pleasant Store Orily

SI'DRTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. s2.99

299

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

. CHEX
PELLET
JON-E

DAISY B. B. GUN
OFfiCIAl MRA CEUUMIAL COMIIIORA·
Tliii.B
. CUMS o"'"'""' ""'""""'"'"
tl~~t• -:- th~ tp.~ig l modt lt dt.lii)Mtd to l&gt;coc.r lmpor?ont

$1888

.. O&lt;n '' lo~ .. , ptu1 afl•ttal CtnltMial 111t doltiantond

,HECK 5 REG. $24.99

hitto&lt;,lclt•t~l l. And Oci\y it the ONL T' 8.8. QVft mohr
t i¥tn IJ&gt;e&lt;iat pormiuion to tommR...,ra lo 100 ytan al
' "''"•• to •port lf,ootin&lt;; by~"" ~ti.,"ol l ollt A.,odo ·
li Dn . 5ptciat by rnh~i ng ll' ... ' on CIWT ~ tn l l t "to ddlt

99

'

HECK'S REG.
$28.95

SPORTS
DEPT.

Coleman

GUN CASES

SPORTS DEPT.

long rifles.

$1.39
@

12&lt;
DEEP

48~

HECK'SREG.
63'

3500 BTU flameless heater. Puts out
capacity BTU at all times . .. no molter how
cold the weather. Ideal for cabin, tent, boat,
duck blind.

HECK'S REt

3 oz.

IVORY

CIRCUIT TESTER

HARDWARE
DEI'T.

OLEMAN HEATER

1OO's

HECK'S REG.
94 1

IVORY

Pt Pleasant Store On~

48(
HECK'S REG.
581

10&lt;

IVORY ........

99

HECK'S REG.
67'

10&lt;

BROWN ......

SOLID HEATER CONNECTORS

HECK'S REG. 2 3'

BROWN

HARDWARE DEPT.
HECK'S REG.
$1 '12

WHITE

BROWN

DUPLEX

VALVE

j

99;

DEPT.
16 oz.

%"COPPER

HARDWARE DEPT.

16(

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

A. %"101t.COPPERPIPE ....... 1"
B. 'h" COPPER TEE .. -.. _.. .. .. . 15'
(. Y," COPPER COUPLING _.. __ .. __ 8•
D. 'h" COPPER ELBOW . -__ ... _. ___ 9'
E. 'h" COPPER UNION .. . _...... _. 55'
1

.,

SWEEPS LEAVES, GRASS,
LITTER , SNOW .. .

HECK'S
REG.
$1.69

FIX ALL

HECK'S REG.
$1.02

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heck's

E.

WASHER KIT

HECK'S
REG.
$1.16

PLASTIC
rRASH CAN

T~is luilrous ch rome rock hold!. 5 ~loch
(plus belh) in the space of one. Keeps
slacb wrin~le free . Open end allows
garment to be removed wi thout tok irtg
~· e m closef.

j:

leoky sinks, grease proof, a cid
proof, and gives tig ht lea kproof seal.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

26' EACH
NDIISEWAIIE DEI'T.

LEE ROWAN

21

HARDWARE
DEPT.

BASKET STRAINER

S t op~

HECK'S REG.

HDUSEWARE
DEPT.

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

·,

HECK'S REG.
71'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

$1.00

HDUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 16' EACH

!~'

WITH
FLANGE

• 40'

DUPLEX PLATE

TOGGLE PLATE

'

2FOR
·'

29&lt;

......, .....1·- -·

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

WAX
SEAL

WN&lt; IOWL RINf&gt;

HECK'S
REG.
$16.18

HECK'S
REG.
88 '

HARDWARE
DEPT.

TANK BALL

$1288

c

FIX ALL

WITH

Mak e your yard and
drivewa y sole; · with this
black lantern and post
li ght . Wate rpr oof and
easy to install.

_/ ~

HECK'S REG.
$3.43

QUART SIZE
THERMOS
BOTTLE ....... . . "'•·

15 TO 18LBS.
CAPACITY

'.I"

I
HECK'S REG. $9.67

OVAL ROASTER ·

long la sting , 50,000 hou r
bulb . Ju st rota te to turn on or
off .

,)

$

8"x10"

HECK'S REG.

' COLUMBIAN

100COUNT

DIXIE
3 oz.
DISPENSER

Chro me

HARDWARE DEPT.

REFILLS

\..

"

BLACK LANTERN
&amp; POST LIGHT

ment.

plated • Spray a fl achme nl not in·
eluded.

QIXIE 3 OZ.

•'

e

~~

I'

Stop noisy tonk valve
with a quiet replace-

FAUCET

18"x24"

$100

Pt. Pleasant Store
Only

INCH
KITCHEN SINK

SUBJECTS TO SUIT
ANY DECOR

I'
\..

8

·FRAMED PICTURES

• Covers most

Heck's Reg, 49'

Heck's Reg_ 79'
Pt Pleasant Store
Only

ASSORTED

• Use on walls
or on shelves

orate any modern home ..

39~

55e

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

HDU$EWARE DEPT.

20
- oz.

10's

HECK'S REG.
$1.28

VALVE..

MAGIC
COVER

Household

11 1/ziNCH

JEWEL
NITE-LITE

HAND WARMER
E a~y to carry. ldaa l for all outdoor ~porb ond
cold weathe r UJel. No flame . Mointoin~ eve!! haot
lor opproximat11ly 24 hours on one fil ling of ordi ·
nary lighter fluid .

1

tg"'mtmgootiw mc olo onv 1

SPORTS DEPT.

•

,.
'

t
I

PISTOL

Made by one of the ~ine's t Euro·
peon gunsmiths tha t hove put all
of thei r ~kill into thi s preci~ion pistol. Blade type front sight. lne•peMive to ~hoot . .

$277

$1]88

HECK'S REG. $3.88

HECK'S REG. $16.8 8

SPORTS.,T.

SJIDRTS IIPT•

�' •

14 - Th" Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-PIIncroy, o., Nov.

to, It'll ·

_

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Blusm·e·ss' Servt·ce's
Z SIGNS
Pomeroy
WIN AT BRIDGE

.--- - - -- - - - - - - - , ; lanted To BiiY .. .

South's Play
Not at Fault
NORTH
4 K J75
¥ A63
t K 65 4

"Q,

10

\VEST
. 1094

EAST
4 86

¥ 1

¥ Jl09842

t QJI0 72
t 8
-' AK83
o!o 974 2
SOUTH ( D )
4 AQ3 2
¥ KQ5
t A93
" Ji0 6
Both. vu lne rab le
'"''est North East South
I N.T.
Prtss
3 NT. Pass Pass
Pass
Open ing lead- · Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The Staym an convention is
in alm ost un iver sal use by
dup lica te players . North and
South were usi n g it. but
North dec ided wi th 4-4-3-2
distributi on a nd hon ors in all
four suits he would forget
about looking for a 4-4 spade
fi t and raise hi s part n er
directly to th e no · t r u m p
game.
South wasn't happy about
the no-tr ump con(ract when
he saw t he dumm y. There
were nine easy tricks. but it
was apparent if spades broke
3-2 there would be 10 easy
tr icks for a spade decla rer.
He noted furth er that without a di amond ope ning a notr ump de cla rer wo ul d have
tim e to set up a club tri ck
to score four no-tru mp.
Ail th is lhoug ht would be
u nne c e ss a r y at r ubber
bridge. but this was matc hpoi nt duplt cate. Sou th decoded to go afte r the ove rtric k. He du cke d one diamond and won the second .
Then he ran off three spade
tric ks to see tf that s ui t wa s
dinded 3-2. II wa s :
Sout h's n ext pI a y w as
clum m y's five of clubs. Wes t
won with the ace. not the
kin g a nd led anoth er di a mond. The last di a mond
stoppe r was gone but South
did not cash ou t. Instead he
played a second club from
dum m y. Down one at a cinc h

Motor Co.

OF
IUAUTY

1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA CPE
$699
Local 1 owner car , 6 cyl., std. tra ns., radio, good tires.
1966 OLDS CUTLASS CPE .

$695

V-S, au tomati c. p. stee ring, white fin ish, blk . vinyl in-

terior , ra di o.

CHEVELLE MALIBU 4 DR .
$69$
Loca ll y owned, 6 cy l., automatic , radio, spotless clean
interior .

Pomerot Motor Co.
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Dorothy Garn es, whose last
Kn own addre·ss is Columbus ,
Ohio, an d wh ose- exact addr ess
is unK nown . is hereby not ified
that on th e ls t day of November ,
1971. Pa ul E . Garn es being
plai nt iff filed hi s peti tion
ag ams t her as defenda nt, in the
Co urt ot Co mm on Pleas , Meigs
Count y, Ohi o, case No. -14,963, ,
pray ing for di¥or ce from said
Doroth y Garnes on the grounds
ot gross neglect of duty and
extre me cr uelty, restora tion of
maiden name and other proper
relief: sa id -ca use will be for
hear ing on or after the 18th day
ot Decem ber . 1971 .
Paul

E.

l0-24.tfc

Garn es, Plaintiff

B O' Br ;en Atto rn ey
for Paul E . Ga rnes .
11113.10.17,241121 1, 8, 61c
J

nose would have been worth
'f.! match point only. Every
othe r table had played at
and made f o u r s p ad e s.
North' s bidding, not South's
play was at fault.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

The bidd ing has been:
West
North
East
Soutl•
1•
Pass
P ass
14
Pass
Pass
; : -T.
34
PR»
5t
Pass
'
You, So uth, hold:
4AQ4 ¥K6 tAQI085 -'K109
Wha t do you do now?
A-Bid six diamonds. Your
partner surely holds one ace

and you want to be declaa·er in
North didn 't a ppr ov e of case he has two small in th l'

contr act !

For R~!Jl _

on your purchase of a new

I Siegler heater . .

_ . _1

TRAILERLOTS, Bob's ~oblle ;
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse ,,
Jhlo. 992-2951.

SIEGLER
·HEATERS

for

couples .

992-5248 or 992-3436.

I

11 -5-lOtc • • • • • - • - • • •

- - - - -- - - BLACK and white pony. saddle
MOBILE home space, on a
and bridle, Janie Coleman ,
farm
.
Farm
work
can
apply
Phone 742-5829.
WANT AD
to
rent.
Utilities
paid.
Call614-'
11 -7-6tc
INFORMATION
985-3832.
DEADLINES
11 -5-81c CONTEMPORARY console
5 P .M. Day Before Publication
stereo. AM-FM radio, 4 speed
MQ.nday Deadline9a .m.
NEW, 2 bedroom mobile home
~ --~an~e"!lafion _&amp; Corrections
changer, 4 speaker sound
with air condit ioning in
Willbeacceptedunfil9a.i-rl . frir
system . Walnut veneer finish
Middleport area. Adults only .
Day of Publication
cabinet. Balance $69.52. Use
REGULATIONS
Phone 992-5443.
our
budget plan. Call992-7085.
Th p bl ' h
th
11 -7-tt c
1J -8.6tc
. e u _IS er r:eserves e
--nght to edd ~r r~1ect any ads
deemed ob1ect1onal. The FURNISHED apartmen t. MAPLE stereo-radio com Three large rooms and bath . bination, AM-FM radio, A
publisherwillnotberesponsible
Adults only. See at 256 South speed changer, 4 speaker
for more fhan one Incorrect
inserti on
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
sound system . Balance$79.89.
·
11 -6-lc
RATES
Use our budget plan . Call 992For Want Ad Service
7085.
5 cents per Word one in serf ion
NEW, 2 bedroom home with air
ll -8-6fc
Min imum Charge 75c
conditioni ng in Middleport - - - -- - -- 12 cents per word fhree,
area . Adults only . Phone 992·
For Rent or Sale
consecutive insertions.
5443.
18 cents per word six con 11 -7-lfc 10 X 52 HOME CREST trailer, 2
sec utive inserflons.
bedroom , furnished , gas heaL
25 Per Cent Discount on paid: HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
good · condition . Home Crest
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
on good highway. Reybolds
985-3529 .
CARD OF THANKS
Flower Shop, 773-5147, Mason ,
11 -9-6lp
&amp; OBITUARY
W. Va .
ll -9-6tp
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .· 2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Each additional word 2c.
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
BLIND ADS
Addition a I 25c Charg'e per
11 -3-tfc Auto Sales
Advertisement.
1968 PONTIAC GTO. Black with
OFFICE HOURS
Sale
red interi or, 400 cu. in ., 4
6:30a.m. to 5 : l~ p.m. Daily,
speed, A-1 shape, Phone 7736. 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
541 7, Clifton , West Virginia .
Saturday.
11 -9-9tp
FOR SALE!

For

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD

LIFE

WMP0/1390

1 Case diesel model 8SO CK
Tractor, loader and backhoe
with 1811 and 24~' buckets,
power shuHie. Cost new$10,675.00. Will sell for
$8,600.00.
General 2 axle trailer with
ball hitch and brake kit. Cost
ne-SI,S7S.OO. Will sell for
$1,000.00. Equipment 1 year
old, 2SO hours. Phone 992-7608
days. and 742·4902 evenin9s.
can be seen at corner Unton
Avenue and Rt. 7, Pomeroy.

'59 FORD pickup truck, ex -

cellent condition . Phone 7425032.
1l-10-31c
1961 WHITE . two door coupe.
Cadillac, A-1 shape, $300. See
Phil Burbr idge , Rt. 2, Alban y.
Ohio .
11 -10-3tc

1.2'. -

!Helen Help Us!I
l

-MILLER .

MOBil£ HOMES

l

LUKEI( JEST BOUGHT HISSELF A
SNUFF'! '5 BEEN A
''DO-IT- 1./0RESELF " BOOK, LOWEE2'1-- " DO· IT- 'IORESELF "
_IT SHOWS 'IE HOW TO DO AlL
MAN FER 'IEARS
SORTS OF ODD
JOBS AROUND
TH' HOUSE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph . 992-2174

BILL NELSON 992-3457
TOM CROW, 992-2580

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER,
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

POMEROY

Company

' HOME &amp; AUTO '

New Service

•

.

m-2094
'

.

I

•

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLiES
And

KtN G
HE NRY

FURNITURE

M'l DOTTERS ( 1 SH!)UL D
ONLY HAVE RAISED
PENGUINS INS TAD -)
BOTH WANT - -

- ro MA"IN

TH E.

POE.T LAUREATE OF
SLOBBOVIA - OLIVER

WENDE LL POM ES-

THE

Stopo ln and See Ouo
Floor Display.

}8th
OF

'LIS TEN M Y 0 1/LDH..EN M D YO U

WON'T HEA R
THE WOICE O F A WIFE ,
HOLL ERINK "DEAR" -·
IS NU T TIN ' 50 GOOD
AS 8ACHELURHOOD

S"-OBBOVIA

EXPERT
wheel Alignment
1li55

--

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .
· Open &amp;Til'S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Comp]ete
Remod~li_n_g

AWNINGS, storm doors and
windows , carports ,
marquees, aluminum sldlng
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sales representative. For free
estlmate1 , phone Charles
Lisle. Syracuse. V. v .
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-lfc

JPHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP
-SPECIALSNovember 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. S6.so
Now $$.00
November 8 thru 13
PERMANENT
Reg . 512.50
Now SI.SO
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

HASA
PROBLEM

1------o,--- - - -

OH YE51 THE 800X.S ! 1

AUTOMOBILE insurance
been cancell~d? Lost your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-IS-tfc

SO I 51\IP TO HElOt..,

5UPF05E I MIGHT A5 WELL
BR-ICE MYSELF AND r ' / -..
FIND OUT J U9T
MANY

YAk ... BLA· YAK ...

Liederkranz merely means
'~ song

Kitchens, Baths
Room Addition~
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work

992-7608

.

£. Main

606

roofing to our staff.

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranlf'~&gt;d
See us
for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnsl.alation .

Septic .Tanks
And Leach Beds.

.

We have added a craftsman

ditioning.
,. 24~ Lincoln St., ,fAiddlepai·t

IOHNSON MASONRY

-

with 20 years experience in

Ph. 992·7796

YOU MEAN I HAVE TO
OPEN MY EYE$ 1

LOOK DOWN AND
SEE IF YDU CAN
&lt;;;EE THEM .

HIL TQN WOLFE :94_9-~1-•
OALE DUTTON, 992-2534

Original Cabinet
Now Offering A

,-----------~

300 ftfT UP, OFFICER BEEBC .
WITH THIS OPEN·SIDED
COPTER .WE 'LL SPOT
THE CROOKS.

~ E ~UNG IT
Sl DE'WAY$l

Pomeroy

NEW &amp; OLD WORK·
All Weather Roofing &amp;
ConstructiOn Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Heating.'
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Ajr Con .

·-

.

circle" or " singing so-

ciety." The cheese was
named after the singing so·
ciety, not a city .
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
FRANKLIN REAL
ESTATE COMPAN Y,
Pla infiff.
vs.
ROBERT KING , et a l.
Defendants .

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
The unknown he irs , dev isees ,
lega tees , adm in lstrators ,
executors and ass igns of Mar lon
King , deceased ; the unknown
he irs , dev isees, legatees, ad RUBBER stamps made to min istrators , executors an d
order, 2-4-hour service. Owain ass igns of Anise L. King ,
deceased ; the unknown heirs ,
or Wilma Casto. Portland.
devisees ,
legatees ,
ad 10-24-JOtc ministrators , exe cutors and
ass igns
of
Edwin
M.
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna McElh inney , decea s ed ,
Service. Phone 992-2522 .
Garland Minor and Jane Minor,
6-10-tfc Whose last known address was
691 - 99th . Street , Niagara
Falls, New York 1-430-4. but
AIIE11'10Io, DELL WHEEL alignment whose address is otherw ise
unknown ; the unknown he irs ,
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. dev
lsses ,
legatees ,
ad Real Estate For Sale
Complete Iron! end service. ministrators
, executo r s and
tune up and brake service. assigns of Ga r land Minor ,
1
-Wheels balanced elec- deceased ; the unknown heirs,
.
Ironically .
All
work devisees ,
legatees ,
ad guaranteed .
Reasonable minis trator s , executors and
assigns of Jane Minor .
rates. Phone 992-3213.
, wil l take notice tha t
7-27-tfc deceased
on the 26th . day of October , 1971 ,
the unders igned filed his
- - AND DOZER work. complaint
608 East Main
BACKHOE
against you in the
POMEROY
Common Pleas Co!Jrl of Me igs
Se~lic tanks installed. George
HARRISONVILLE- FARM(Btl I) Pull ins. Phone 992-2478. County , Oh io, praying tor
130 ACRES. 35 tillable. barn ,
partition of the following
4-25-tfc described
sil o, 4 buildings, 3 bedroom
real property and
home, bath, building sites SEWING MACHINES. Repair demanding that you set up such
cla ims as you may have against
along the road, MINERALS,
service, all makes. 992-2284. said real estate or be forever
ALL THIS FOR JUST $19,000.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. barred from assert ing ume .
The following real estate
Authorized Singer Sales and
RACINE - 35 wooded acres,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. situated in the County of Me igs,
pond , some timber , EX .
In the State of Oh io, and in the
3-29-tfc Townsh
CELLENT HUNTING,
ip of Salem and bounded
and descr ibed as follows :
building sites along the road , C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Parcel One : Being the south $3.500.
Complete Service
west quarter of the northeas t
Phone 949-3821
quarter of Section 16, Township
CHESTER
GRACIOUS
Racine, Ohio
8, Range 15, of the Ohio Com .
COUNTRY LIVING - 3.05
pany's Purchne , contain ing
Crill Bradford
BEAUTIFUL ACRES s.l.tfc 40.00 acres, more or tess .
pract ically new 3 bedroom -;:::-;:;=;::;;;:;=~::;,=:;;==;;=:
Parcel Two : 8 eing a par t of
Section 16, Townsh ip B, Range
home, bath, modern klfchen, ....
utility room . large summer NE IG LE R Building Supply . 1$, Ohio Company 's Purchase
Free esflmate on building · and being that part of th e north patio. fuel -oil forced -ai r
your new home. Will draw west quarter of the southeesl
furnace, large garage and
prints to suit the lay of your quarter of sa id section ly ing
workshop , modern outside
land . Call Guy Neigler, north and east of the public
fruil room, fruit s and berries .
Radne, Ohio. For repair and road, contain ing 10.00 acres,
JUST S1S,900.
.
'dl
ff
d more or less.
a 1ummum St ng, so e1 an
Said tracts are also bounded.
gutter. Cell Donald Smith, as follows : On the North by
PLACE THE SALE OF
Racine, Ohio.
lands now or formerly owned by
YOUR PROPERTY IN
10-7-tfc
Charles
R. Sheets et at ; On the
CAPABLE HANDS
-Eest
by
lands now or formerly
HENRY E. CLELAND
HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc. owned by Henry H. Rogers - D.
Office 992-2259
raised, moved, underpinned. 0 . Mutchler ; On the South by
Residence 992-2568
remodeled. Estimates free, lands now or formerly owned by
11-7-6tc
anywhere . National House Elizabeth Nelson ·- Sherman
Ballangee ; On the West bi
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston, lands now or formerly owned by
W. Va . 25311 , or phone 304-925- Iva Miller
She r man
3279.
Ballangee .
Referen ce Deeds : Vol. 246 ,
9-30-60tp
--------Page 431 ; Vol. 242, Page 16$ ;
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller Vol. 241 , Poge Jl1 : Vol . 2&lt;1 ,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. Poge 189 ; Vol. 241, Page 187 :
Vol. 241 , Page 171 ; Vol. 241 ,
662-3035.
Page 183; Vol. 241. Page 177 ;
2-12-tfc Vol. 241 , Page 175; Vol. w ,
--------Page 169; Vol. 241, Page l!S ;
READY -MIX
CONCRETE Vol . 2&lt;\, Page 15S ; Vol. w,
Jll;liker
delivered right to your Page 1-49, Deed Records of
110 fllechanoc Street
pro/'ect. Fasf and easy. Free Meigs County , Ohio.
flbmeroy, Ohio
est mates . Phone 992·3284 .
You are required .to answer
· •• r.
...:.... ___. _ .
~
' the complaint within 28 days
29 ACRES - 6 room home,
Goeg Ieln Reody-Mix Co. , after
the last ·publication which
bath, FREE GAS HEAT.
Middleport, Ohio.
date Is the 5th . day of Janu 11 ry
Spring water, small barn.
6-30-tfc 1972, or rudgment by dotouti
Minerals, all and gas well.
witt be rendered against you .
NEW LISTING. $13,500.00. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Franklin Real
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782,
Estat• Comr,any
ROUTE 7 BY-PASS - New 3
Gallipolis . John Russell , Crow, Crow &amp; Porter, Pta ntlff
bedrooms, split level, 11!2
Owner &amp; Operator.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
baths, ele&lt;:tric heat. 41 acres .
5-12-tfc !101 27, (111 3, 10, 17, 24, (121 1
- - - - - -- 8, 71
'
ROUTE 7 - modern 5 rooms,
bath, gas heat. Paneling, 4
acres.

SIEGLER fuel oil hea ter. new
South 's pla y and expressed other suit.
- $125, Sofa bed and matON YOUR DIAL
himself about it. However,
TODAY'S QUESTION
ching chair - $45, bed and
when the scores were tabuInstead of bidding five dia springs - 57 , Hoover washing
machine , new
590,
lated, down one at three no- monds he has bid fi ve clubs
Record
Player
and
Magnavox
Card
of
Thanks
tnwup was a zer.o, w hi 1e over your fo1.1r spades. What do
records
$35,
Stereo
8
tape
thtl!'e' ·no-trump mad e on the you do now'
WE WOULD like to thank the
player and 15 tapes plus case
owners of The Meigs Inn, our
- $75, Writing desk - $12.
14' - 24' :. WIDE'
associates, Cleo Smifh, Toni
Phone 742-4864.
Brannon. Bill Jacobs and
ll -9-3tp
Ollie Young , our many friends - - - - - for the kindnesses shown to us FIREWOOD . Phone 992-7595.
while managers of Meigs Inn .
ll -7-6tc
I
George &amp; Imogene Jarvis
1220 Washington' Bl~d.
ll-10-ltp
By Helen Bottel
COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Be Ipre, Ohio
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
WITH FRJENDS UKE THIS ...
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Notice
.
Dear Helen :
4-9-tfc
THE BRADBURY School
I treat my expensive deer rifle like a member of the family,
P.T .A. will have a food POODLE puppies, Silver Toy, Real Estate For Sale
·HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
concession stand at the
and lend it only to people 1 can trust - even then, grudgingly.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992Call Danny Thompson, 992forth
com
\ng
yard
sale,
5443.
This guy at the office is not in that category. He freeloads Saturday , Nov . 13 , at the
2196 .
8-15-tfc
7-18-11•
everything from cigarettes to weekends at your beach house (he Bradbury School starting at 9
a.m.
11
-9-4tc
just shows up ), andhe 'sgoodat turning "No" into "Yes."
APPLES
Fitzpatrick Orblock house, 4
chards. State Route 689 , 7-ROOM
When he asked to borrow my rifle for a deer trip, I made my
bedrooms,
living room, dining
phone Wilesville. 669-3785.
room, bafh with shower, large
big mistake. I didn 't give a flat " No!" because his cousin (a guy I PRAYER meeling at Glenn is
9-3-tfc
Hoffman residence, 1 m i.
kitchen with lots of built-In
can trust ) had used it the week before, which put me in an emNorth of Chester on Rt. 7,
birch cabinets . Hardwood
barrassing spot. So I implied every way I could that he should go
Saturday, Nov. 13, 7:30p.m. CASH and carry sale at Par- floors . Natural gas furnace,
son's Furniture Store on State
Rev . Freddie Steel , MI. Hope,
50-gallon electric water
rent a gun : told him mine was worth $350 and could he afford a
Rt. 7 in Kanauga . Liv ing room
W. Va . Sermon : Water
heater, 2 large recreation
replacement? Said it didn't have a scracth on it- and besides I
suites, were $249 .95 now
rooms, paneled In basement,
Bapti sm. Everyone welcome.
$159 .95, Early American , 2 porches, garage, concrete
needed it in five days. I figured I'd discouraged him. But the next
11 -7-51p
bedroom suites were $269.95,
-drlvewa(, large yard with
morning he came by the house and told my wife he was there to
now $199.95. Mattress and box
plenty o shade trees, located
pick up the gun I'd so kindly offered him. Assured her he'd have it YARD SALE , Saturday and
springs 528.95 each, no bu t- on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on
tons , recliners were $79 .95, SR 124 in Syracuse, Ohio.
Sunday, November 13 &amp; 14th,
back by the time I needed it. What could she do? She lent it to him.
now
$-47.50. Swivel rockers
starts
at
9
a.m.
David
Haggy
Available for Immediate'
WeD, the night before MY deer trip, I caUed his house and his
were
$59.95, now $35 .95 .
occupancy. To see, phone
residence, left of Happy
wife said, "Didn 't you know ? John won't be backtiiiSunday! "
11 -9-3tc Gallipolis 446-9539after 5 p.m.
Hollow, follow signs.
11 -10-3tp
week days for appointment.
I supPressed some choice phrases and asked, "What am I
PAl NT Damage. 1971 Zig -Zag
10-3-H
go ing to do without my rifle ?" She suggested I go out and rent
GUN
s
hoo
t.
Forked
Run
sewing
machines.
Still
in
one !
original cartons. No at - NICE 2-story home with full
Sportsman Cl ub, Sunday ,
tachments needed as our
The gun came home two weeks later (I went after it!) . There's
basement, 2 lots, new forced
November 14, 12 noon .
controls are buill-in . Sews
a
ir furnace . Near Pomeroy
a big scratch on the stock and the scope is knocked out of line. I
11 -10·3fc
wit h 1 or 2 needles, makes
Elementar
y School. Phone
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
spent a whole day cleaning it and must take it to the shop for other
992-7384
to
see .
SHOOTING Match. Saturday·,
monograms, and blind hem
work , perhaps major .
11 -7-tfc
November 13, at the Racine
stitch . Full cash price, $38.50
Would any jury convict me if I did wbat I'd like, to do? Planing Milt at 6 p.m. Factory
or budget plan available. '" tx ROOM ho"use bath f II'
choke guns only . Assorted
Phone 992 _5641
v
,
, , u
SEEING RED
'.
·
basement, 133 Butlerntjl Ave.,
meat. Sponsored by the
119
61
Dear S.R.:
Syracuse Fire Dept.
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
· - c
just walking distance -.. from:
11
-10-3tc
E
LECTROLUX
downtown
Pomero.J'i Contactl
Don't take a chance : all jurors aren't gun buffs.
cleaner complete ~~fhuua'r.
.=.d Hedrick. 2137 adswo. t~
Instead, send John the repair bill, plus an added fee for rent . THE ANNUAL Sacred Hearl
tachments, cordwinder and
Uri ve, Columbus, Ohio, phone1
Church Bazaar will be held
237-4334, Columb•Js.
And if he doesn 't kick through, keep reminding him at the office Thursday night November 11
paint spray . Used but in like
59 lid
in front of your co-workers.
starting wifh a dinner from
new condition . Pay $37.45
. 4:30 fo '6:30p.m. Donations
cash or credit terms
When people stop being polite to fr eeloaders, maybe they 'll
dinner. adults, $1.75, children
available . .Phone 992-5641.
start paying their own way! - H.
Sl . Dinner , fancy work
ll -9-61c
Dear Helen:
booths, games and raffles .
HARRISONVILLE
Prize will be given every half GRAND OPENING SALE . Approx . 175 acres, excellent
The neighborhood alley cat crawls in my car when it's parked
Reynolds Aluminum Builders land for crops and P.asture,
hou r from 6 to 9 p.m.
outside. The other day l took off in a hurry, and suddenly there
Supply
of Mason City . Amrax several good outbutldlngs,
ll -2-9tc
Stone and Brick siding , three ponds and Free Gas.
was a screeching clawing fiend on my neck. (The cat likes cars,
aluminum vinyl and wood . First floor of house has carha tes riding.)
KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
Buy 10 white storm windows peted living room with
to
your
door.
New
delivered
Trying to fend the beast off, I lost control and rear-ended the
and
get 2 storm doors FP.EE. fireplace, dining or family
products
coming
out
1st
50
orders, 100 storm doors room, oven counter top range,
car in front of me, which in turn hit the car in front of it.
regularly. Would you like to
to give away with this Grand plenty of cupboard space,
try
them?
Call
992-Sl13.
I'm judged at fault, but the cat is the culprit. My insurance
Opening Sale. 10,000 feet of large bedroom and bath. The
10-5-tfc
company may raise my premiums, not to speak of my getting
Reynolds Aluminum siding at second floor has 1hree
huge discounf. Guffer , bedrooms. This house also has
slapped with damage suits, plus having my car wrecked, and out
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .. . awnings, patios, all types of a clean, dry basement. A
of commission.
great buy for a beauflful farm.
overweigh t ladies, teens and
windows, kitchen cabinets, $38,000.
men
interested
in
a
Weight
indoor -outdoor carpet, 501 171 ACRES
No one claims the cat. He just appeared one day, and
Watchers (R) Class in
nylon . Your complete Home Between
AI bany
and
scrounges food from people on the block. I can't sue an animal
Pomeroy write : Weight
Improvement Headquarters. Harrisonville. Nice 4 bedroom
R).
1863
Section
W
atchers
(
with no master. What recourse do I have ? - CAT HATER
Easy credit terms available. home, bafh, 3 barns, fenced,
Rd ., Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
On now, Reynolds, 773-5147. excellent
Dear C.H.:
pasture
and
10-3-H_f
•
11
-10-lltp
$24,000.
meadows.
You need a lawyer, not a columnist ! My only advice would be : :--- - - - . . , . . -120 ACRES, SNOWVILLE
- block building
find a home for that darn cat - preferably 500 miles a~ay! - H. Help Wanted
room house, 3 bedrooms, 1 CHESHIRE
NICE Normandy Clarinet $50. 6bath,
for
business.
2 barns, pond, other out
Dear Helen :
,
Phone 742-4211 or after 5 p.m. buildings,
mineral rights
EARN
at
home
addressing
742-5163
.
nice 3
Here's a suggestion :
Can
be
bought on land MINERSVILLE
clear.
envelopes. Rush stamped
11 -10-6tc contract, $15,000.
bedrooms
,
bath
,
furnace
,
self-addressed envelope. The
As we all know, hospitals and nursing homes are notoriously
Garage.
2
acres
.
basement.
SNOWVILLE
Ambrose Co .. 4325 Lakeborn. NICE , USED bathroom outfit, 80AcresonState Route681 , n
understaffed. They especially need semi-trained people who will
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
complete , cast iron fub . buildings, just land at $5,900. SALEM CENTER- 4 bedroom S35.00Downtake the load off nurses. Patients need ~J~Ore tender loving care
10-24-30tp
Phone 742-4211 or after 5 p.m. FARM IN SNOWVILLE
modern homes, 1112 baths,
between shots and II'Ofesalonal visits. There's also a shortage of
742-5163 .
105 acres, good land and
radiant panel heal. Modern 'h-la nc;e On
ll -10-6tc outbu ildings,
free gas,
janitors.
.,
kitchen , cook units, stainless : Convenient
mineral rlghts, house i
HHP WANTED
sink . Insulated. 10 ACIIES. Terms.
States are troubled with unemployment, spiraling relief rolls,
Mature m1n · 1nd wife FOUR BEAGLE dogs . All completely remodeled - fully
m ,soo.oo. NEW LISTING
carpeted and built-in kitchen
etc. Why not put these unempl~yed.persons to work where they
running . Phone 992-6671 .
wanted for the position of
ll -10-3tc with wall oven and counter to
· PROPERTY SELLING,
matron - superintendent of
could do the moat good : in hospitals? U IJ9spitals were unable to
range. 120,7 50.
YOU BET
the Galli• County Children's 1961 CASTLE, 10 x 50 trailer, 2
KEY REAL ESTATE
pay thern, then let wt!lfare recipients Earn their checks. There's
992-3325
992-2378
Home. · For Information
Ray Douglas . Broker
bedrooms, 683 Locust St ..
plenty to do! - SADLY NEGLECTED PATIENT.
Helen
l
.
Teaford,
Ph.
592-3414
I
conlacl Jerry E. Miller. 446Middleport . Pho.&gt;e 992-5509 . Bill and Dottie Kelton. Assoc,
Associate
P.S. And they'd II'Obably be happier than sittir!g on their duffs
•m-G.illlpolls.
.
11 -10-3tp Phone 592-1349
Athens, 0 ,
- - ' - - - - 11 .7.61 c ~
- · .-Ma-:-s-:o_n,~_v_a_._ _ _ _ _ ___: __......,:___ --11
at home, right?
·

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

M'l MAN

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

TREE tr-imming and rerhOVai ...
Joh n Koehler, phone 992-505&lt;1.
ll -9-4tc

Mobile Homes for Sale

·SHUX·-

··'

- - --, EEK, AND MEEK

FOUR NEW HO.MES .L _
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly p,1ymentas tow as $65.00 for a family with a base
sallory_ of J-5,000.00 and ' three children. 711&lt; Pet. annual

I
1

POMeRoY
l
II ~
• .J1ckPhono
W. Cuuy, Mgr. I
tt2-111.1
J

---·

- - ' - - - - - - - .....,;---- -EVER' 8LESSET T IM E
I AST HIM TO DO
N' HE SA'IS ---

'

Radiator Service

I
I
I
I
FUEL OIL
I
4-2-tfc , I All siz~s in stock . We instalr, 1
-- - - - - - = == - /I finance , service .
1 BEDROOM trailer apart.. 1
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,

·-----· ·

EXPERIENCED

r---------.
.
I

ment , ideal

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
1'pjo!EROY, OHIO

· •·

OLD
Furniture,
dishes,
clocks, 2 -Phone
13" 992-5260
RIMS - after
$II for5 both.
and-or
. complete
households.
p.m:
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
11 9 31
Pomeroy, Ohio. call ~W-if1~
· - P
-::---:----:---,----,=~
. POTATOES, Charles Hilton ,
Employment Wanted ·
Portland , Ohio. Phone 84322.68.
.
LIGHT housekeeping or nur 10-28-lfc
sing . $10 a week, room and
board . Phone 992-6766.
11 -10-Jtp
_H_o_u_s E:-:-C
::-L_E_A_N_I_NG
- 1n---'-~ac ine. I Save $1 0.00 Now! I
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .
I
Phone 992 _2876 _
Bring this ad and get 110 off

_ _

1966

For.Sa!e

. .

1akin' Unca' K u,· u~"
f ood! &lt;;tealin'
Mio;ta'

Joel's
donkew!

Promisin'
13eck~

-oau6'qe
what -ohe
won' qit .'

Ydu is

a lowdown

thief

0 eland
Realty

1

-

1

CLEAN SHEETS--· A HI fl
12ECORD KIT... ALL THE
LATES1 AMD SIOST
MUSIC ...

/~~~~;~·~~~~~:Y,

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE IS NOTHING SO ABSURD OR RIDICULOUS THAT HAS NOT AT SOME TIME
~~~~SAID BY SOME PHILOSOPHER.- OLIVER GOLD-

~~~~~~iiil
i
' ---

------ - - -

•cEMENT
GALOSHES
!!
250
POUNDS

OF•

T"EM'."
"

Virgil B.

-

SR.

3 ROOMS
NEW·
FU~RE

. 9.95

MASON
FURNITURE

•

ill'"

AHD SOME NEW Cl01HES
' " AND A SOFT BfD -WrTH

--------

TEAFORD

FARMS FOR SALE!

~=:o,....-;--:----

---- WITH SlEAK AHD FREliCH FRIED
POTATOES· .. ~ OF 'EM·-- AND A
~ouNm ln OF ~ ... AND FRESH
bus -- ARb ~E A COUPLE OF
EAR S Of FRESH CORM ... AND ABOOT
ll TON Qf jg CREA" €@ APPl E

.

'

'l

THE USUAL
MIX CAlLS FOR &gt;OME•

SURfAUCRAl!&gt;
;~~~~~~;~-~~f~F'ROM~~THE~C~A8~1NET,
THE

tl

F'OliiTICIAHS

BE IMI'Re55E[/ TE~~Y! WE'RE ABOUT
TO SEE 00 ~ f AVORITE El DER 51Alf5 •
IMN PO HIS THING.
EI\CITIMG~

40. Colonng
man
tl. - hand

ACROSS
1. Drink on
5. Pant
9. Sara
the Ginza
Teasdale
lt. Mexican
painter
12. Nichols
13. Diminished
14. Yield
15. Rosary
bead
16. Sioux
n. Said "you
must"

19. Catnip
20. Com·
poser, Legrand
22. Suffix for

8. Make·
believe
10. Complicate
DOWN
I. Short
11. Espoused
distance
2. First-cia" 15. Senile
18. Fluidity Veeaerday'• An1wer
3.11 began
unit
in 1875
(2 wds.) 20. Distort
29. Taste
4-.Summer
33. Alleviate
21. Burled
(Fr.)
34. Bring
5. Scoffed
to bay
24. Languish
6. Hum·
36.
An addi25. Worker
min~ bird
tion to
7.Pay
Brooklyn
27. Thin
court to
3'7. Rover's
(4 wds.)
down
bark

(10 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc. )

~1:g'irJJID~;ti.Juuw~H.-J,_
Uns&lt;:ramble these rour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

I JJUGIE

r

1

JII

I
I (] I

GL48EN

exist
23. Signed a
pact
24. Old-fashioned
26. Eye
problem
27. Flinched
28. Fiery
29. One of the
Claras
30. Before
31. Devoured
32. Unpopu·
Iar pupil
35. Make the

I

RUJ:fXU

I

(J

I I I

Nowarranptheelr&lt;lodlettero

V 'I
to form the •UJ'IIl'IH a~~~wer, u
~~h:;::.A~~~~-~~-==-·-=;•uue•tod by the obot-e cut.a.

._I_

=*:..=SIM=PiliSl.:.:..:ANSW!Il+==•'--'1 [ X

__,
l'rilt·

I 1 I XI J

(Aatwen •••arrow)
Jumbl'"

FEVER ANISE EXPOSE TIMING

"\'e11erday'•
An~wrr : ~lnlu~ il tu yofl 10 out-AN EXIT

scene

3?. From a
r....;~31
distance
38, Oneln
hock
39. Wllliam
- Benet

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lo 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
l)ints. Each day the code letters are dUferent.

'·

A Cryptosram Quotation
S

YUUP

ABSIT

SL

QONQ
QOU

QOU

JUXNJA

BDDBJQMISQZ

W B J U . - H B I N L- L N P V

QB

YBJ
AB

•

�' •

14 - Th" Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-PIIncroy, o., Nov.

to, It'll ·

_

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Blusm·e·ss' Servt·ce's
Z SIGNS
Pomeroy
WIN AT BRIDGE

.--- - - -- - - - - - - - , ; lanted To BiiY .. .

South's Play
Not at Fault
NORTH
4 K J75
¥ A63
t K 65 4

"Q,

10

\VEST
. 1094

EAST
4 86

¥ 1

¥ Jl09842

t QJI0 72
t 8
-' AK83
o!o 974 2
SOUTH ( D )
4 AQ3 2
¥ KQ5
t A93
" Ji0 6
Both. vu lne rab le
'"''est North East South
I N.T.
Prtss
3 NT. Pass Pass
Pass
Open ing lead- · Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The Staym an convention is
in alm ost un iver sal use by
dup lica te players . North and
South were usi n g it. but
North dec ided wi th 4-4-3-2
distributi on a nd hon ors in all
four suits he would forget
about looking for a 4-4 spade
fi t and raise hi s part n er
directly to th e no · t r u m p
game.
South wasn't happy about
the no-tr ump con(ract when
he saw t he dumm y. There
were nine easy tricks. but it
was apparent if spades broke
3-2 there would be 10 easy
tr icks for a spade decla rer.
He noted furth er that without a di amond ope ning a notr ump de cla rer wo ul d have
tim e to set up a club tri ck
to score four no-tru mp.
Ail th is lhoug ht would be
u nne c e ss a r y at r ubber
bridge. but this was matc hpoi nt duplt cate. Sou th decoded to go afte r the ove rtric k. He du cke d one diamond and won the second .
Then he ran off three spade
tric ks to see tf that s ui t wa s
dinded 3-2. II wa s :
Sout h's n ext pI a y w as
clum m y's five of clubs. Wes t
won with the ace. not the
kin g a nd led anoth er di a mond. The last di a mond
stoppe r was gone but South
did not cash ou t. Instead he
played a second club from
dum m y. Down one at a cinc h

Motor Co.

OF
IUAUTY

1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA CPE
$699
Local 1 owner car , 6 cyl., std. tra ns., radio, good tires.
1966 OLDS CUTLASS CPE .

$695

V-S, au tomati c. p. stee ring, white fin ish, blk . vinyl in-

terior , ra di o.

CHEVELLE MALIBU 4 DR .
$69$
Loca ll y owned, 6 cy l., automatic , radio, spotless clean
interior .

Pomerot Motor Co.
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Dorothy Garn es, whose last
Kn own addre·ss is Columbus ,
Ohio, an d wh ose- exact addr ess
is unK nown . is hereby not ified
that on th e ls t day of November ,
1971. Pa ul E . Garn es being
plai nt iff filed hi s peti tion
ag ams t her as defenda nt, in the
Co urt ot Co mm on Pleas , Meigs
Count y, Ohi o, case No. -14,963, ,
pray ing for di¥or ce from said
Doroth y Garnes on the grounds
ot gross neglect of duty and
extre me cr uelty, restora tion of
maiden name and other proper
relief: sa id -ca use will be for
hear ing on or after the 18th day
ot Decem ber . 1971 .
Paul

E.

l0-24.tfc

Garn es, Plaintiff

B O' Br ;en Atto rn ey
for Paul E . Ga rnes .
11113.10.17,241121 1, 8, 61c
J

nose would have been worth
'f.! match point only. Every
othe r table had played at
and made f o u r s p ad e s.
North' s bidding, not South's
play was at fault.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

The bidd ing has been:
West
North
East
Soutl•
1•
Pass
P ass
14
Pass
Pass
; : -T.
34
PR»
5t
Pass
'
You, So uth, hold:
4AQ4 ¥K6 tAQI085 -'K109
Wha t do you do now?
A-Bid six diamonds. Your
partner surely holds one ace

and you want to be declaa·er in
North didn 't a ppr ov e of case he has two small in th l'

contr act !

For R~!Jl _

on your purchase of a new

I Siegler heater . .

_ . _1

TRAILERLOTS, Bob's ~oblle ;
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse ,,
Jhlo. 992-2951.

SIEGLER
·HEATERS

for

couples .

992-5248 or 992-3436.

I

11 -5-lOtc • • • • • - • - • • •

- - - - -- - - BLACK and white pony. saddle
MOBILE home space, on a
and bridle, Janie Coleman ,
farm
.
Farm
work
can
apply
Phone 742-5829.
WANT AD
to
rent.
Utilities
paid.
Call614-'
11 -7-6tc
INFORMATION
985-3832.
DEADLINES
11 -5-81c CONTEMPORARY console
5 P .M. Day Before Publication
stereo. AM-FM radio, 4 speed
MQ.nday Deadline9a .m.
NEW, 2 bedroom mobile home
~ --~an~e"!lafion _&amp; Corrections
changer, 4 speaker sound
with air condit ioning in
Willbeacceptedunfil9a.i-rl . frir
system . Walnut veneer finish
Middleport area. Adults only .
Day of Publication
cabinet. Balance $69.52. Use
REGULATIONS
Phone 992-5443.
our
budget plan. Call992-7085.
Th p bl ' h
th
11 -7-tt c
1J -8.6tc
. e u _IS er r:eserves e
--nght to edd ~r r~1ect any ads
deemed ob1ect1onal. The FURNISHED apartmen t. MAPLE stereo-radio com Three large rooms and bath . bination, AM-FM radio, A
publisherwillnotberesponsible
Adults only. See at 256 South speed changer, 4 speaker
for more fhan one Incorrect
inserti on
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
sound system . Balance$79.89.
·
11 -6-lc
RATES
Use our budget plan . Call 992For Want Ad Service
7085.
5 cents per Word one in serf ion
NEW, 2 bedroom home with air
ll -8-6fc
Min imum Charge 75c
conditioni ng in Middleport - - - -- - -- 12 cents per word fhree,
area . Adults only . Phone 992·
For Rent or Sale
consecutive insertions.
5443.
18 cents per word six con 11 -7-lfc 10 X 52 HOME CREST trailer, 2
sec utive inserflons.
bedroom , furnished , gas heaL
25 Per Cent Discount on paid: HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
good · condition . Home Crest
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
on good highway. Reybolds
985-3529 .
CARD OF THANKS
Flower Shop, 773-5147, Mason ,
11 -9-6lp
&amp; OBITUARY
W. Va .
ll -9-6tp
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .· 2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Each additional word 2c.
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
BLIND ADS
Addition a I 25c Charg'e per
11 -3-tfc Auto Sales
Advertisement.
1968 PONTIAC GTO. Black with
OFFICE HOURS
Sale
red interi or, 400 cu. in ., 4
6:30a.m. to 5 : l~ p.m. Daily,
speed, A-1 shape, Phone 7736. 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
541 7, Clifton , West Virginia .
Saturday.
11 -9-9tp
FOR SALE!

For

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD

LIFE

WMP0/1390

1 Case diesel model 8SO CK
Tractor, loader and backhoe
with 1811 and 24~' buckets,
power shuHie. Cost new$10,675.00. Will sell for
$8,600.00.
General 2 axle trailer with
ball hitch and brake kit. Cost
ne-SI,S7S.OO. Will sell for
$1,000.00. Equipment 1 year
old, 2SO hours. Phone 992-7608
days. and 742·4902 evenin9s.
can be seen at corner Unton
Avenue and Rt. 7, Pomeroy.

'59 FORD pickup truck, ex -

cellent condition . Phone 7425032.
1l-10-31c
1961 WHITE . two door coupe.
Cadillac, A-1 shape, $300. See
Phil Burbr idge , Rt. 2, Alban y.
Ohio .
11 -10-3tc

1.2'. -

!Helen Help Us!I
l

-MILLER .

MOBil£ HOMES

l

LUKEI( JEST BOUGHT HISSELF A
SNUFF'! '5 BEEN A
''DO-IT- 1./0RESELF " BOOK, LOWEE2'1-- " DO· IT- 'IORESELF "
_IT SHOWS 'IE HOW TO DO AlL
MAN FER 'IEARS
SORTS OF ODD
JOBS AROUND
TH' HOUSE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph . 992-2174

BILL NELSON 992-3457
TOM CROW, 992-2580

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER,
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

POMEROY

Company

' HOME &amp; AUTO '

New Service

•

.

m-2094
'

.

I

•

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLiES
And

KtN G
HE NRY

FURNITURE

M'l DOTTERS ( 1 SH!)UL D
ONLY HAVE RAISED
PENGUINS INS TAD -)
BOTH WANT - -

- ro MA"IN

TH E.

POE.T LAUREATE OF
SLOBBOVIA - OLIVER

WENDE LL POM ES-

THE

Stopo ln and See Ouo
Floor Display.

}8th
OF

'LIS TEN M Y 0 1/LDH..EN M D YO U

WON'T HEA R
THE WOICE O F A WIFE ,
HOLL ERINK "DEAR" -·
IS NU T TIN ' 50 GOOD
AS 8ACHELURHOOD

S"-OBBOVIA

EXPERT
wheel Alignment
1li55

--

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .
· Open &amp;Til'S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Comp]ete
Remod~li_n_g

AWNINGS, storm doors and
windows , carports ,
marquees, aluminum sldlng
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sales representative. For free
estlmate1 , phone Charles
Lisle. Syracuse. V. v .
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-lfc

JPHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP
-SPECIALSNovember 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. S6.so
Now $$.00
November 8 thru 13
PERMANENT
Reg . 512.50
Now SI.SO
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

HASA
PROBLEM

1------o,--- - - -

OH YE51 THE 800X.S ! 1

AUTOMOBILE insurance
been cancell~d? Lost your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-IS-tfc

SO I 51\IP TO HElOt..,

5UPF05E I MIGHT A5 WELL
BR-ICE MYSELF AND r ' / -..
FIND OUT J U9T
MANY

YAk ... BLA· YAK ...

Liederkranz merely means
'~ song

Kitchens, Baths
Room Addition~
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work

992-7608

.

£. Main

606

roofing to our staff.

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranlf'~&gt;d
See us
for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnsl.alation .

Septic .Tanks
And Leach Beds.

.

We have added a craftsman

ditioning.
,. 24~ Lincoln St., ,fAiddlepai·t

IOHNSON MASONRY

-

with 20 years experience in

Ph. 992·7796

YOU MEAN I HAVE TO
OPEN MY EYE$ 1

LOOK DOWN AND
SEE IF YDU CAN
&lt;;;EE THEM .

HIL TQN WOLFE :94_9-~1-•
OALE DUTTON, 992-2534

Original Cabinet
Now Offering A

,-----------~

300 ftfT UP, OFFICER BEEBC .
WITH THIS OPEN·SIDED
COPTER .WE 'LL SPOT
THE CROOKS.

~ E ~UNG IT
Sl DE'WAY$l

Pomeroy

NEW &amp; OLD WORK·
All Weather Roofing &amp;
ConstructiOn Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Heating.'
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Ajr Con .

·-

.

circle" or " singing so-

ciety." The cheese was
named after the singing so·
ciety, not a city .
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
FRANKLIN REAL
ESTATE COMPAN Y,
Pla infiff.
vs.
ROBERT KING , et a l.
Defendants .

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
The unknown he irs , dev isees ,
lega tees , adm in lstrators ,
executors and ass igns of Mar lon
King , deceased ; the unknown
he irs , dev isees, legatees, ad RUBBER stamps made to min istrators , executors an d
order, 2-4-hour service. Owain ass igns of Anise L. King ,
deceased ; the unknown heirs ,
or Wilma Casto. Portland.
devisees ,
legatees ,
ad 10-24-JOtc ministrators , exe cutors and
ass igns
of
Edwin
M.
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna McElh inney , decea s ed ,
Service. Phone 992-2522 .
Garland Minor and Jane Minor,
6-10-tfc Whose last known address was
691 - 99th . Street , Niagara
Falls, New York 1-430-4. but
AIIE11'10Io, DELL WHEEL alignment whose address is otherw ise
unknown ; the unknown he irs ,
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. dev
lsses ,
legatees ,
ad Real Estate For Sale
Complete Iron! end service. ministrators
, executo r s and
tune up and brake service. assigns of Ga r land Minor ,
1
-Wheels balanced elec- deceased ; the unknown heirs,
.
Ironically .
All
work devisees ,
legatees ,
ad guaranteed .
Reasonable minis trator s , executors and
assigns of Jane Minor .
rates. Phone 992-3213.
, wil l take notice tha t
7-27-tfc deceased
on the 26th . day of October , 1971 ,
the unders igned filed his
- - AND DOZER work. complaint
608 East Main
BACKHOE
against you in the
POMEROY
Common Pleas Co!Jrl of Me igs
Se~lic tanks installed. George
HARRISONVILLE- FARM(Btl I) Pull ins. Phone 992-2478. County , Oh io, praying tor
130 ACRES. 35 tillable. barn ,
partition of the following
4-25-tfc described
sil o, 4 buildings, 3 bedroom
real property and
home, bath, building sites SEWING MACHINES. Repair demanding that you set up such
cla ims as you may have against
along the road, MINERALS,
service, all makes. 992-2284. said real estate or be forever
ALL THIS FOR JUST $19,000.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. barred from assert ing ume .
The following real estate
Authorized Singer Sales and
RACINE - 35 wooded acres,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. situated in the County of Me igs,
pond , some timber , EX .
In the State of Oh io, and in the
3-29-tfc Townsh
CELLENT HUNTING,
ip of Salem and bounded
and descr ibed as follows :
building sites along the road , C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Parcel One : Being the south $3.500.
Complete Service
west quarter of the northeas t
Phone 949-3821
quarter of Section 16, Township
CHESTER
GRACIOUS
Racine, Ohio
8, Range 15, of the Ohio Com .
COUNTRY LIVING - 3.05
pany's Purchne , contain ing
Crill Bradford
BEAUTIFUL ACRES s.l.tfc 40.00 acres, more or tess .
pract ically new 3 bedroom -;:::-;:;=;::;;;:;=~::;,=:;;==;;=:
Parcel Two : 8 eing a par t of
Section 16, Townsh ip B, Range
home, bath, modern klfchen, ....
utility room . large summer NE IG LE R Building Supply . 1$, Ohio Company 's Purchase
Free esflmate on building · and being that part of th e north patio. fuel -oil forced -ai r
your new home. Will draw west quarter of the southeesl
furnace, large garage and
prints to suit the lay of your quarter of sa id section ly ing
workshop , modern outside
land . Call Guy Neigler, north and east of the public
fruil room, fruit s and berries .
Radne, Ohio. For repair and road, contain ing 10.00 acres,
JUST S1S,900.
.
'dl
ff
d more or less.
a 1ummum St ng, so e1 an
Said tracts are also bounded.
gutter. Cell Donald Smith, as follows : On the North by
PLACE THE SALE OF
Racine, Ohio.
lands now or formerly owned by
YOUR PROPERTY IN
10-7-tfc
Charles
R. Sheets et at ; On the
CAPABLE HANDS
-Eest
by
lands now or formerly
HENRY E. CLELAND
HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc. owned by Henry H. Rogers - D.
Office 992-2259
raised, moved, underpinned. 0 . Mutchler ; On the South by
Residence 992-2568
remodeled. Estimates free, lands now or formerly owned by
11-7-6tc
anywhere . National House Elizabeth Nelson ·- Sherman
Ballangee ; On the West bi
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston, lands now or formerly owned by
W. Va . 25311 , or phone 304-925- Iva Miller
She r man
3279.
Ballangee .
Referen ce Deeds : Vol. 246 ,
9-30-60tp
--------Page 431 ; Vol. 242, Page 16$ ;
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller Vol. 241 , Poge Jl1 : Vol . 2&lt;1 ,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. Poge 189 ; Vol. 241, Page 187 :
Vol. 241 , Page 171 ; Vol. 241 ,
662-3035.
Page 183; Vol. 241. Page 177 ;
2-12-tfc Vol. 241 , Page 175; Vol. w ,
--------Page 169; Vol. 241, Page l!S ;
READY -MIX
CONCRETE Vol . 2&lt;\, Page 15S ; Vol. w,
Jll;liker
delivered right to your Page 1-49, Deed Records of
110 fllechanoc Street
pro/'ect. Fasf and easy. Free Meigs County , Ohio.
flbmeroy, Ohio
est mates . Phone 992·3284 .
You are required .to answer
· •• r.
...:.... ___. _ .
~
' the complaint within 28 days
29 ACRES - 6 room home,
Goeg Ieln Reody-Mix Co. , after
the last ·publication which
bath, FREE GAS HEAT.
Middleport, Ohio.
date Is the 5th . day of Janu 11 ry
Spring water, small barn.
6-30-tfc 1972, or rudgment by dotouti
Minerals, all and gas well.
witt be rendered against you .
NEW LISTING. $13,500.00. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Franklin Real
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782,
Estat• Comr,any
ROUTE 7 BY-PASS - New 3
Gallipolis . John Russell , Crow, Crow &amp; Porter, Pta ntlff
bedrooms, split level, 11!2
Owner &amp; Operator.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
baths, ele&lt;:tric heat. 41 acres .
5-12-tfc !101 27, (111 3, 10, 17, 24, (121 1
- - - - - -- 8, 71
'
ROUTE 7 - modern 5 rooms,
bath, gas heat. Paneling, 4
acres.

SIEGLER fuel oil hea ter. new
South 's pla y and expressed other suit.
- $125, Sofa bed and matON YOUR DIAL
himself about it. However,
TODAY'S QUESTION
ching chair - $45, bed and
when the scores were tabuInstead of bidding five dia springs - 57 , Hoover washing
machine , new
590,
lated, down one at three no- monds he has bid fi ve clubs
Record
Player
and
Magnavox
Card
of
Thanks
tnwup was a zer.o, w hi 1e over your fo1.1r spades. What do
records
$35,
Stereo
8
tape
thtl!'e' ·no-trump mad e on the you do now'
WE WOULD like to thank the
player and 15 tapes plus case
owners of The Meigs Inn, our
- $75, Writing desk - $12.
14' - 24' :. WIDE'
associates, Cleo Smifh, Toni
Phone 742-4864.
Brannon. Bill Jacobs and
ll -9-3tp
Ollie Young , our many friends - - - - - for the kindnesses shown to us FIREWOOD . Phone 992-7595.
while managers of Meigs Inn .
ll -7-6tc
I
George &amp; Imogene Jarvis
1220 Washington' Bl~d.
ll-10-ltp
By Helen Bottel
COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Be Ipre, Ohio
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
WITH FRJENDS UKE THIS ...
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Notice
.
Dear Helen :
4-9-tfc
THE BRADBURY School
I treat my expensive deer rifle like a member of the family,
P.T .A. will have a food POODLE puppies, Silver Toy, Real Estate For Sale
·HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
concession stand at the
and lend it only to people 1 can trust - even then, grudgingly.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992Call Danny Thompson, 992forth
com
\ng
yard
sale,
5443.
This guy at the office is not in that category. He freeloads Saturday , Nov . 13 , at the
2196 .
8-15-tfc
7-18-11•
everything from cigarettes to weekends at your beach house (he Bradbury School starting at 9
a.m.
11
-9-4tc
just shows up ), andhe 'sgoodat turning "No" into "Yes."
APPLES
Fitzpatrick Orblock house, 4
chards. State Route 689 , 7-ROOM
When he asked to borrow my rifle for a deer trip, I made my
bedrooms,
living room, dining
phone Wilesville. 669-3785.
room, bafh with shower, large
big mistake. I didn 't give a flat " No!" because his cousin (a guy I PRAYER meeling at Glenn is
9-3-tfc
Hoffman residence, 1 m i.
kitchen with lots of built-In
can trust ) had used it the week before, which put me in an emNorth of Chester on Rt. 7,
birch cabinets . Hardwood
barrassing spot. So I implied every way I could that he should go
Saturday, Nov. 13, 7:30p.m. CASH and carry sale at Par- floors . Natural gas furnace,
son's Furniture Store on State
Rev . Freddie Steel , MI. Hope,
50-gallon electric water
rent a gun : told him mine was worth $350 and could he afford a
Rt. 7 in Kanauga . Liv ing room
W. Va . Sermon : Water
heater, 2 large recreation
replacement? Said it didn't have a scracth on it- and besides I
suites, were $249 .95 now
rooms, paneled In basement,
Bapti sm. Everyone welcome.
$159 .95, Early American , 2 porches, garage, concrete
needed it in five days. I figured I'd discouraged him. But the next
11 -7-51p
bedroom suites were $269.95,
-drlvewa(, large yard with
morning he came by the house and told my wife he was there to
now $199.95. Mattress and box
plenty o shade trees, located
pick up the gun I'd so kindly offered him. Assured her he'd have it YARD SALE , Saturday and
springs 528.95 each, no bu t- on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on
tons , recliners were $79 .95, SR 124 in Syracuse, Ohio.
Sunday, November 13 &amp; 14th,
back by the time I needed it. What could she do? She lent it to him.
now
$-47.50. Swivel rockers
starts
at
9
a.m.
David
Haggy
Available for Immediate'
WeD, the night before MY deer trip, I caUed his house and his
were
$59.95, now $35 .95 .
occupancy. To see, phone
residence, left of Happy
wife said, "Didn 't you know ? John won't be backtiiiSunday! "
11 -9-3tc Gallipolis 446-9539after 5 p.m.
Hollow, follow signs.
11 -10-3tp
week days for appointment.
I supPressed some choice phrases and asked, "What am I
PAl NT Damage. 1971 Zig -Zag
10-3-H
go ing to do without my rifle ?" She suggested I go out and rent
GUN
s
hoo
t.
Forked
Run
sewing
machines.
Still
in
one !
original cartons. No at - NICE 2-story home with full
Sportsman Cl ub, Sunday ,
tachments needed as our
The gun came home two weeks later (I went after it!) . There's
basement, 2 lots, new forced
November 14, 12 noon .
controls are buill-in . Sews
a
ir furnace . Near Pomeroy
a big scratch on the stock and the scope is knocked out of line. I
11 -10·3fc
wit h 1 or 2 needles, makes
Elementar
y School. Phone
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
spent a whole day cleaning it and must take it to the shop for other
992-7384
to
see .
SHOOTING Match. Saturday·,
monograms, and blind hem
work , perhaps major .
11 -7-tfc
November 13, at the Racine
stitch . Full cash price, $38.50
Would any jury convict me if I did wbat I'd like, to do? Planing Milt at 6 p.m. Factory
or budget plan available. '" tx ROOM ho"use bath f II'
choke guns only . Assorted
Phone 992 _5641
v
,
, , u
SEEING RED
'.
·
basement, 133 Butlerntjl Ave.,
meat. Sponsored by the
119
61
Dear S.R.:
Syracuse Fire Dept.
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
· - c
just walking distance -.. from:
11
-10-3tc
E
LECTROLUX
downtown
Pomero.J'i Contactl
Don't take a chance : all jurors aren't gun buffs.
cleaner complete ~~fhuua'r.
.=.d Hedrick. 2137 adswo. t~
Instead, send John the repair bill, plus an added fee for rent . THE ANNUAL Sacred Hearl
tachments, cordwinder and
Uri ve, Columbus, Ohio, phone1
Church Bazaar will be held
237-4334, Columb•Js.
And if he doesn 't kick through, keep reminding him at the office Thursday night November 11
paint spray . Used but in like
59 lid
in front of your co-workers.
starting wifh a dinner from
new condition . Pay $37.45
. 4:30 fo '6:30p.m. Donations
cash or credit terms
When people stop being polite to fr eeloaders, maybe they 'll
dinner. adults, $1.75, children
available . .Phone 992-5641.
start paying their own way! - H.
Sl . Dinner , fancy work
ll -9-61c
Dear Helen:
booths, games and raffles .
HARRISONVILLE
Prize will be given every half GRAND OPENING SALE . Approx . 175 acres, excellent
The neighborhood alley cat crawls in my car when it's parked
Reynolds Aluminum Builders land for crops and P.asture,
hou r from 6 to 9 p.m.
outside. The other day l took off in a hurry, and suddenly there
Supply
of Mason City . Amrax several good outbutldlngs,
ll -2-9tc
Stone and Brick siding , three ponds and Free Gas.
was a screeching clawing fiend on my neck. (The cat likes cars,
aluminum vinyl and wood . First floor of house has carha tes riding.)
KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
Buy 10 white storm windows peted living room with
to
your
door.
New
delivered
Trying to fend the beast off, I lost control and rear-ended the
and
get 2 storm doors FP.EE. fireplace, dining or family
products
coming
out
1st
50
orders, 100 storm doors room, oven counter top range,
car in front of me, which in turn hit the car in front of it.
regularly. Would you like to
to give away with this Grand plenty of cupboard space,
try
them?
Call
992-Sl13.
I'm judged at fault, but the cat is the culprit. My insurance
Opening Sale. 10,000 feet of large bedroom and bath. The
10-5-tfc
company may raise my premiums, not to speak of my getting
Reynolds Aluminum siding at second floor has 1hree
huge discounf. Guffer , bedrooms. This house also has
slapped with damage suits, plus having my car wrecked, and out
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .. . awnings, patios, all types of a clean, dry basement. A
of commission.
great buy for a beauflful farm.
overweigh t ladies, teens and
windows, kitchen cabinets, $38,000.
men
interested
in
a
Weight
indoor -outdoor carpet, 501 171 ACRES
No one claims the cat. He just appeared one day, and
Watchers (R) Class in
nylon . Your complete Home Between
AI bany
and
scrounges food from people on the block. I can't sue an animal
Pomeroy write : Weight
Improvement Headquarters. Harrisonville. Nice 4 bedroom
R).
1863
Section
W
atchers
(
with no master. What recourse do I have ? - CAT HATER
Easy credit terms available. home, bafh, 3 barns, fenced,
Rd ., Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
On now, Reynolds, 773-5147. excellent
Dear C.H.:
pasture
and
10-3-H_f
•
11
-10-lltp
$24,000.
meadows.
You need a lawyer, not a columnist ! My only advice would be : :--- - - - . . , . . -120 ACRES, SNOWVILLE
- block building
find a home for that darn cat - preferably 500 miles a~ay! - H. Help Wanted
room house, 3 bedrooms, 1 CHESHIRE
NICE Normandy Clarinet $50. 6bath,
for
business.
2 barns, pond, other out
Dear Helen :
,
Phone 742-4211 or after 5 p.m. buildings,
mineral rights
EARN
at
home
addressing
742-5163
.
nice 3
Here's a suggestion :
Can
be
bought on land MINERSVILLE
clear.
envelopes. Rush stamped
11 -10-6tc contract, $15,000.
bedrooms
,
bath
,
furnace
,
self-addressed envelope. The
As we all know, hospitals and nursing homes are notoriously
Garage.
2
acres
.
basement.
SNOWVILLE
Ambrose Co .. 4325 Lakeborn. NICE , USED bathroom outfit, 80AcresonState Route681 , n
understaffed. They especially need semi-trained people who will
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
complete , cast iron fub . buildings, just land at $5,900. SALEM CENTER- 4 bedroom S35.00Downtake the load off nurses. Patients need ~J~Ore tender loving care
10-24-30tp
Phone 742-4211 or after 5 p.m. FARM IN SNOWVILLE
modern homes, 1112 baths,
between shots and II'Ofesalonal visits. There's also a shortage of
742-5163 .
105 acres, good land and
radiant panel heal. Modern 'h-la nc;e On
ll -10-6tc outbu ildings,
free gas,
janitors.
.,
kitchen , cook units, stainless : Convenient
mineral rlghts, house i
HHP WANTED
sink . Insulated. 10 ACIIES. Terms.
States are troubled with unemployment, spiraling relief rolls,
Mature m1n · 1nd wife FOUR BEAGLE dogs . All completely remodeled - fully
m ,soo.oo. NEW LISTING
carpeted and built-in kitchen
etc. Why not put these unempl~yed.persons to work where they
running . Phone 992-6671 .
wanted for the position of
ll -10-3tc with wall oven and counter to
· PROPERTY SELLING,
matron - superintendent of
could do the moat good : in hospitals? U IJ9spitals were unable to
range. 120,7 50.
YOU BET
the Galli• County Children's 1961 CASTLE, 10 x 50 trailer, 2
KEY REAL ESTATE
pay thern, then let wt!lfare recipients Earn their checks. There's
992-3325
992-2378
Home. · For Information
Ray Douglas . Broker
bedrooms, 683 Locust St ..
plenty to do! - SADLY NEGLECTED PATIENT.
Helen
l
.
Teaford,
Ph.
592-3414
I
conlacl Jerry E. Miller. 446Middleport . Pho.&gt;e 992-5509 . Bill and Dottie Kelton. Assoc,
Associate
P.S. And they'd II'Obably be happier than sittir!g on their duffs
•m-G.illlpolls.
.
11 -10-3tp Phone 592-1349
Athens, 0 ,
- - ' - - - - 11 .7.61 c ~
- · .-Ma-:-s-:o_n,~_v_a_._ _ _ _ _ ___: __......,:___ --11
at home, right?
·

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

M'l MAN

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

TREE tr-imming and rerhOVai ...
Joh n Koehler, phone 992-505&lt;1.
ll -9-4tc

Mobile Homes for Sale

·SHUX·-

··'

- - --, EEK, AND MEEK

FOUR NEW HO.MES .L _
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly p,1ymentas tow as $65.00 for a family with a base
sallory_ of J-5,000.00 and ' three children. 711&lt; Pet. annual

I
1

POMeRoY
l
II ~
• .J1ckPhono
W. Cuuy, Mgr. I
tt2-111.1
J

---·

- - ' - - - - - - - .....,;---- -EVER' 8LESSET T IM E
I AST HIM TO DO
N' HE SA'IS ---

'

Radiator Service

I
I
I
I
FUEL OIL
I
4-2-tfc , I All siz~s in stock . We instalr, 1
-- - - - - - = == - /I finance , service .
1 BEDROOM trailer apart.. 1
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,

·-----· ·

EXPERIENCED

r---------.
.
I

ment , ideal

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
1'pjo!EROY, OHIO

· •·

OLD
Furniture,
dishes,
clocks, 2 -Phone
13" 992-5260
RIMS - after
$II for5 both.
and-or
. complete
households.
p.m:
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
11 9 31
Pomeroy, Ohio. call ~W-if1~
· - P
-::---:----:---,----,=~
. POTATOES, Charles Hilton ,
Employment Wanted ·
Portland , Ohio. Phone 84322.68.
.
LIGHT housekeeping or nur 10-28-lfc
sing . $10 a week, room and
board . Phone 992-6766.
11 -10-Jtp
_H_o_u_s E:-:-C
::-L_E_A_N_I_NG
- 1n---'-~ac ine. I Save $1 0.00 Now! I
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .
I
Phone 992 _2876 _
Bring this ad and get 110 off

_ _

1966

For.Sa!e

. .

1akin' Unca' K u,· u~"
f ood! &lt;;tealin'
Mio;ta'

Joel's
donkew!

Promisin'
13eck~

-oau6'qe
what -ohe
won' qit .'

Ydu is

a lowdown

thief

0 eland
Realty

1

-

1

CLEAN SHEETS--· A HI fl
12ECORD KIT... ALL THE
LATES1 AMD SIOST
MUSIC ...

/~~~~;~·~~~~~:Y,

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE IS NOTHING SO ABSURD OR RIDICULOUS THAT HAS NOT AT SOME TIME
~~~~SAID BY SOME PHILOSOPHER.- OLIVER GOLD-

~~~~~~iiil
i
' ---

------ - - -

•cEMENT
GALOSHES
!!
250
POUNDS

OF•

T"EM'."
"

Virgil B.

-

SR.

3 ROOMS
NEW·
FU~RE

. 9.95

MASON
FURNITURE

•

ill'"

AHD SOME NEW Cl01HES
' " AND A SOFT BfD -WrTH

--------

TEAFORD

FARMS FOR SALE!

~=:o,....-;--:----

---- WITH SlEAK AHD FREliCH FRIED
POTATOES· .. ~ OF 'EM·-- AND A
~ouNm ln OF ~ ... AND FRESH
bus -- ARb ~E A COUPLE OF
EAR S Of FRESH CORM ... AND ABOOT
ll TON Qf jg CREA" €@ APPl E

.

'

'l

THE USUAL
MIX CAlLS FOR &gt;OME•

SURfAUCRAl!&gt;
;~~~~~~;~-~~f~F'ROM~~THE~C~A8~1NET,
THE

tl

F'OliiTICIAHS

BE IMI'Re55E[/ TE~~Y! WE'RE ABOUT
TO SEE 00 ~ f AVORITE El DER 51Alf5 •
IMN PO HIS THING.
EI\CITIMG~

40. Colonng
man
tl. - hand

ACROSS
1. Drink on
5. Pant
9. Sara
the Ginza
Teasdale
lt. Mexican
painter
12. Nichols
13. Diminished
14. Yield
15. Rosary
bead
16. Sioux
n. Said "you
must"

19. Catnip
20. Com·
poser, Legrand
22. Suffix for

8. Make·
believe
10. Complicate
DOWN
I. Short
11. Espoused
distance
2. First-cia" 15. Senile
18. Fluidity Veeaerday'• An1wer
3.11 began
unit
in 1875
(2 wds.) 20. Distort
29. Taste
4-.Summer
33. Alleviate
21. Burled
(Fr.)
34. Bring
5. Scoffed
to bay
24. Languish
6. Hum·
36.
An addi25. Worker
min~ bird
tion to
7.Pay
Brooklyn
27. Thin
court to
3'7. Rover's
(4 wds.)
down
bark

(10 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc. )

~1:g'irJJID~;ti.Juuw~H.-J,_
Uns&lt;:ramble these rour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

I JJUGIE

r

1

JII

I
I (] I

GL48EN

exist
23. Signed a
pact
24. Old-fashioned
26. Eye
problem
27. Flinched
28. Fiery
29. One of the
Claras
30. Before
31. Devoured
32. Unpopu·
Iar pupil
35. Make the

I

RUJ:fXU

I

(J

I I I

Nowarranptheelr&lt;lodlettero

V 'I
to form the •UJ'IIl'IH a~~~wer, u
~~h:;::.A~~~~-~~-==-·-=;•uue•tod by the obot-e cut.a.

._I_

=*:..=SIM=PiliSl.:.:..:ANSW!Il+==•'--'1 [ X

__,
l'rilt·

I 1 I XI J

(Aatwen •••arrow)
Jumbl'"

FEVER ANISE EXPOSE TIMING

"\'e11erday'•
An~wrr : ~lnlu~ il tu yofl 10 out-AN EXIT

scene

3?. From a
r....;~31
distance
38, Oneln
hock
39. Wllliam
- Benet

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lo 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
l)ints. Each day the code letters are dUferent.

'·

A Cryptosram Quotation
S

YUUP

ABSIT

SL

QONQ
QOU

QOU

JUXNJA

BDDBJQMISQZ

W B J U . - H B I N L- L N P V

QB

YBJ
AB

•

�-,·
'·

.·

16-T:te Dally Sentinel, Ml"''eport-Ptoueroy, 0 ., Nov . 10, 1971
Fultz, Leanne Sebo. and Ci.;uy Sc'u•elder. · tradilionally closes the Big Bend shows.
Mrs. Olive Weber will accompany a
0
John Lisle , principal of the Salisbury
lion's
share of the numbers at the piano,
1Continued from page I l
Elemental) School, who produces a grade
Another first time vocalist will be Larry sclmol minstrel. will retw·nto the Big Bend and the drummer will be Tim Glaze.
Coleman doing "Anytime." Coleman is a spullighl for lhc firsllime in seve~al years Making up the stage and lighting crew are
sophomore at Meigs High School.
in a medley of. "A Time for Us," "We\·e Mrs . Martha Struble, Mrs. James Soulsby.,
Aprecision acrobatic number lo "Be a Only Just Begun," and "Happy Toge ther," Mrs. Maxine Griffith , Mrs. Paul ChapClown '-' will be an innovation in this year 's :.tl'companied by his sister, Mrs. Rose Ann man , James Wiles, Pat Gress, Ronni ~
Hoffman and Mike McDaniel.
show by Becky Thomas, Sandy Hamilton . !.isle Jenkins.
Sponsoring the show are the Meigs
and Cindy Patterson in colorful clown
Ann Holter. a student of Ohio State
Athle
tic Boosters.
outfits . "Stranger in My Place" will be the University, will return also to this fall 's
Men'lbers of the sixth grade chorus are
vocal solo of P ome r o~··s singing post· show wit h an acrobatic ballet ro utine to
Alan
Seth, Dwayne Qualls, Kim Krautter,
master, James Soulsby .
"Another Day ."
Can-can dancers, using the rum\·ay,
Usi"ng blacklighl and special props, a Teresa Tay!or, Lisa Jctt, Susan Wright,
may possibly "shoe~ " local audiences as puny line wi ll da11Ce to "That 's En- Melody Snouffer, Dora Doefer, Ellen
they perform to "Kansas City" from tc r tainment'' with J oyl'e Hutchinson, McDaniel, Rema Chafin, Cheryl LeFebra,
"Oklahoma" with miris trel veteran June · Maw·een Hennessy , Lynn Baker. Jenny Kim Williams, Rhonda Hudson, Blaine
VanVranken doing the vocal work on the Chapman, Brenda Stanley. Peggy Qualls, Charles Follrod, Susan Burns, Jill
nwnber . Dance rs are Mary Midkiff, Susie O'Brien, Jeanie Schneider. Milisa Rizer, Baily, Marcia Dillard, Cathy Blaettnar,
Soulsby, Milisa Rizer, Sherry King, Jean Sherry King , Jan Holter. Tina Nteri, Shell y Randy Houdashelt, David Harris, Trent
Schneider and Peggy o ·Brien.
Mankin, Brenda Taylor, Mary Mid kiff, Liitte, Tim Coats, Paige Smith, Jeff
Couc h, Mark Mitch, Becky Fry, Ricky
The annual Appalachian number of• Susie Soulsby and ~l e l a nie Hac kett.
the associalton will be by Charlene, Jay ne
Danny Thompson, another show Glaze, Jim Soulsby, Todd Rawlings, Jim
and Bob Hoeflich and dancers, Judy Owen. ve teran returning to the cast for the firs t Rosen baum, Randy Phillips, Jim Webster,
Linda Rupe, Son ya Ohli nger, J oyce time in several yea rs, will pn~sC:' n t Vicky Hycell, Jane Sisson , Jerry
Hutchison, Cathy Werry, Vicki Kelly, "Prayer Is the Key to Heaven" as a part of Faulkner, Randy Roach, Nita Rusche!,
Linda Gerard , Debbie Taylor. Barbara the God and Country theme whicb Steve Snyder and Peggy Girolami.

Fall F llieS

Environment
tConlinued from page I )
to a Utree-year term was David
Koblentz . Following the dinner ,
entertainment was provided by
the Big Ber.d Minstrel Assn.
Taki ng par t were Alice

performing to "When My Sugar
Walks Down the Stree t," and
three clowns do ing an acrobatic
act were Ci nd y Pa tterson,
Bec ky Th omas an d Sandy

Nease, sin ging "Lo uisvi lle
Lou," Jayne Hoeflich. smging
" Rhy thm in My Nurse ry
Rhymes,"
Wayne
Well
presenting. "That Lucky Old Hamil! on.
Sun, " Dick Nease and da ncers

. . ..._..__ - - - ..... ,. . __ ................ __.. ,. __ -.. . . . . . . . 1

son County

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

I
j

(Continued from page 61
Steven Howard , Tracey Howard, Lou Howard , James, Phyllis,
Timothy, Joelynn, Michelle King, Theresa Ohlinge r, Reverend
and Mrs. Tennant and Tim, Sandra Long, Larry Clark; Ein1er
Donahue, Mrs. Bertha Kettler, Ha ttie Reed, Lou G. Kin g, Mr. and
Mrs. D. Richard Roush , Virginia Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
Roush, Emogene Roush , Larry Gibbs, Jim Gibbs, Tom Gibbs,
Bernice Gibbs, Charlie Sullivan, Mr . and Mrs. Eddie Edwards,
Mrs. Estyl Clark, Mrs. Fannie Clark, Faye Wolford , Gene
Wolford, Reverend Clyde Henderson, Mrs. Forrest Casto and
F1ossie Bowen.

SWCD board of
superv!S\li'S a re The reo n
J ohnson, chair m an; Rex
)henefield, vice chairman, and
Hoy Miller . secretary a nd
treasurer.
Me i ~s

Salis bury PTA members
prepared and served the dinner .
Favors we re fu rn ished by
Citizens National Bank, Farme rs Bank and Savings Co .,
P omeroy Nat ional Bank ,
Racine Home National Bank ,
the Farm Bureau, and the
Sugar Run Flour Mill .

You've Never Seen A

Color ·rv
Picture
Come! See!

daughters, Mrs. Mary Walburn,
Middleport; Mrs.,Emma Ruble,
Vienna , W.Va., and Mrs. Bruce
Saylor, Prague, Okla., and 35
grandchildren .
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral .Home with the Rev.
Kathleen Sargent officiating.
Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens . F{iends
may call at the funera home
any time after 3 p.m. Thursday.

A Da
d
2 A~s, nouse re Tnage

One car was demolished and a
home and a second car had
heavy damages in a traffic
accident Tuesday at 6 p.m. in
Syracuse.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
dept. said Sharon Adkins, 27,
Minersville, Rt. I, pulled from
Fourth St. onto SR 124 into the
path of a car driven b)' Michael
Ryan, 20, Syracuse. After
colliding with the Ryan car,
Adkins' vehicle went a,cross the
(Continued from page I )
Latta Co., Huntington, W. Va . highway into the side of a house
Several parents from lhe owned by Floyd Diddle.
Sharon Adkins complained of
Tuppers Plains Community
voiced complaints on the
heating syste(ll at the Tuppers
Plains School :' ll was explained
•
that thermostats planned fo1 Mrs . Augusta Will, 69,
installation in conjunction with Syracuse, died Tuesday at her
tmprovements made to the Syracuse home. Mrs. Will was
heating sy·stem have not been preceded in death by her .
properly instal ·ed as yet and husband Evan (Pat) Will.
that, perhaps, when this is done, Surviving are two daughters,
!he system will be adequate. Mrs.
James
(Pauline)
However, the board indicated Autherson, Syracuse, r.!ld Mrs.
further action will be taken if Raymond (KaUtryn) Butcher,
this does not impr ove the Winston Salem, N. C.; two
situation .
sisters, Mrs. Floyd Bentz and
The board also voted to send a Mrs. Fred Frost, both of
sehoul bus into the Arbaugh Marion; three grandchildren,
Addition in Tuppers Plains to three great-grandchildren, and
pick up studen ts al two slops several nieces and nephews.
and transport them to their Funeral services will be at 2
schools .
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Several other parents met Funeral Home with Mr. Charles
wi th the board to discuss Bush officiating. Burial will be
di sc ipline and punishment in Beech Grove Cemetery .
carried out at the high school in Friends may call at the funeral
reference to studen ts being home anytime.
given delenlion . There were no
changes made in the policy
per mi tt ing the delenlion Cited To Court
periods from being given .
A Pomeroy man was ci ted to
cour t on twu charges following a
single car accident Tuesday at
Eight defendants were fined 10:07 p.m. on Pomeroy's East
and lwo others forfeited bonds Main St. Pomeroy police said
in the court of Middleport Ronnie Williams , 20, was
Mayur C. 0 . Fisher Tuesday traveling north on East Main
mghl.
when an oncoming car forced
Fined were Robert J . Kuhne, him off the highway. Williams
Jacksonville, Ohio, $t25 and applied his brakes but skidded
costs and three days in jail, into a power pole.
driving while intoxicated, and
Williams was cited on
$10 and costs , resisting arrest ; charges of no operator 's license
Clifford Kauff, Middleporl, $10 and excessive speed for road
and costs. intoxication; Jerry conditi ons. His car was
Ward , Middlepor t, $10 and demolished . There were no
costs. illegal parking; James P. injW'ies.
Riepenhoff, Wellston, 110 and
costs, assured clear distance;
Larry Nelson, Middleport, $10
MARRIAGE LICENSE
and costs, spteding; Theodore Fred Keirns, 81 , Millfield, Rl.
R. Davis, Mason, $10 and costs, I. and Zelia Perry, 72, Pomeroy,
speeding; Gary D. Slavtn, Rt. 4.
Middl eport, $tO and cusls,
speeding, and Steve Tatlerson ,
Pomero y, $1 5 and costs ,
reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds of $25 each
were George Moo re , Middleport, disturbing the peace,
and David Marcum, Rutland,
speeding.

Joint Meet

Mrs Will Dies

CALLED OUT TWICE
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called Tuesday at I: 10 p.m. to
the William Watson residence
at East Shade for Edith Nutter
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and admitted . The squad was called
today at 9:13 a.m. to 402 West
Main St. for Danny Jeffers who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center by Ewing ambulance .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Larry Ward,
Middleport; Ruth Simpson,
Racine ; Claude Roy, Racine ;
Eunice Nutter , Reedsville;
Murl Ours, Long Bottom ;
Wendell Rose, Athens.
DISCHARGED - Darrell
Swartz, Edith Watkins, Naomi
London , Mauri ce Wright,
Maxine Bailey.
SHRINE TO MEET
A regular meeting of Mary
Shrine, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will be held at 8
p.m. Friday at the IOOF Hall in
Pomeroy . All officers and
members are asked to attend.
Potluck refreshments will be
served.

MEIGS lliEAU£.
Model C4730X

Tonight &amp; Thursday

,,

Nov. 10-11
NOT OPEN

LAY-AWAYS FOR
CHRISTMAS ACCEPTED!

...............................................,
Ingels Furniture
~ before the nam e goes on~

Daniel Columbus Harrison,
90, of 2300 Lincoln Ave., Point
Pleasant, died Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial HOspital.
A retired coal miner, Mr.
Harrison was born Dec: 23, 11131
in Clifton, the son of the late
John H. and Jane Oliver
Harrison. He was also preceded
in death by his wife, Catherine
Knopp Harrison in 1955, four
sons, and a daughter.
Surviving are a son, Granville, of Clifton; three
U

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Friday &amp; Saturday
November 12-13

(Continued fr om page I )
program in which \here is a
possibility the price for lunches
will have to be iitcreased .
However, due to the price
freeze, the board could take no
action . The board passed a
resolution supporting the Right
Ill Read Program.
A proposed Mine Maintenance Mechanic Course was
discussed. It may get underway
in the high school in January .
The board also reviewed bus
routes to the high school dW'ing
the construction of the highway
in the Laurel Cliff area. It was
reported that buses will have
access to the school duri'}ll ·all of
the work .
·
- ·
The board approved a
resolution to accept some 15
students from the Eastern
District who were released
recently from that district to the

\he school year. The acceptance
of the students was retroactive
to the first day cl schooL A
discussion was held on possibly
securing fill dirt from the roaa
construction project for ,the high
school grounds . Nothing
definite was worked out.
Due to the home baaketba~
game with Athens on the next
regular meeting nJght, Dec. 14,
the next regular meeting was
moved to Tuesday, Dec. 7. The
resignation of Mrs. Katherine
Swansonatlhehighschoolasof
Jan. I, 1972 was accepted and it
was voted to send a letter of
commendation to. Mrs. SWanson .
Attending the meeting were
board members Frank W.
Porter, Joe Sayre, Virgil King,
Mullen and Slawter , Supt.
.George Hargraves, Larry
Morrison, assistant superin·
tendent, and L. W. McComas,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
HEADQUARTERS FOR
®
You'll find a complete selection
of Hanes Underwear for men
and boys in the mens-boys
department on the first floor .
Hanes underwear is nationally
known for its fine qua lily ,
excellent fit, long wear and
exceptional value.

SHow· START :, 1

" GP"

P.M. '

A " New Bird"

Gillmor described the bill in
the conference committee as a
" new bird" as opposed to the
Flannery-Taft proposal. "Now
we have to see if it has
wings," Gillmor said.
While the bill was not in
written form for public consumption, .Gillmor said it raised
less money than either the
Flannery-Taft bill or the original Senate Ways and Means

Instruction booklets by .the
Italian Fiat Auto Company
refer to the car horn as an
avvisalore eletlropneumatico
- electro·pneumatic warner in
English .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Lucas, president of VICA at Lancaster. He also presided over
the Emblem Ceremony. James Diehl, principal of Meigs
High School was presented an honorary certificate in appreciation of his assistance in Voc-e&lt;! programs.
Voc-Ed teachers introduced were John Teaford,
welding; Dale Harrison, Radio and TV; Mitchell Szopa,
drafting, and Mrs. Powell, cosmotology. Aguided tour of the
vocational labs followed the program. Refreshments were
served. Dinner was served before the installation .

The Vocational Industrial Cluhs of America (VICA),
Meigs Otapter, installed officers for the 1971-72 school year
Wednesday night at Meigs High School cafeteria. Front row,
1-r, Charlie Lane, parliamentarian; Debbie Jewett,
treasurer; Robin Duckworth, VICA queen; Adell Davidson,
reporter; Paul Miller, sergeant-at-arms, and Mrs. Gerald
Powell, VICAadvlsor; second row, Barbara Klein, chaplain;
Chris Robinson, secretary; Jan Kennedy, historian ; Danny
White, president, and Ron Harrison, vice president.
Impressive candlelight services were conducted by Vic

HANES SWEATSHIRTS
Mens and
boy s sizes in re gu lar style s hooded
styles flee ce l ined cmd th ermal lined.
Comple te selec tion of sizes for men and

boys

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

By .GENE CARlSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
administration has laid down
the framework for the next
phase of its economic controls.
General Motors will be covered
but your neighborhood used car
dealer escapes scot-lroo.
Rents will remain under
government control -except
for houses or apartments which
took in their first tenants alter
Aug. 15, or those on which
major improvements ha~e been
made .
·
In the second of three major
policy announcements on the
post-freeze economy, the Cost of
Living Council Wednesday
revealed which companies will
havetoaskpermissionfromthe_
government to raise their prices
and wages when the freeze
officially ends at midnight
Saturday,
It also unveiled a large list of
items whose prices were frozen
during the last three months but

I

~--lvews::.i,;-Brief;-~ Martha Buttoned
1

syumtedPreoslnternauonai
SAIGON - THE U.S. COMMAND SAID TODAY that
American 85:13 dumped almost 90 tons of bomhs on NorUt Vietnamese storage bunkers in the southern half of Ute Demilitarized
Zone. It was the first U.S. raid in more than five weeks inside the
DMZ. A second wave of the big planes hit an enemy infiltration
trail between the A Shau Valley and the LaoUan border. Tbe
conunand also announced that eight G!s were killed in the
fighting last week and 13wounded, Ute smallest casualty list since
March, 1965.

NAHA, OKINAWA - rr WAS BACK to work today for
lhousanda of union members who took part in strikes and rioting
Wednesday in protest against' the American military presence on
Okinawa. During the rioting, a pollee sergeant was burned, and
\hen battered to death -and at least 80 persons were injured.

Now

WASHINGTON ..c. THE SENATE PREPARED today to
consider the second bill of a twoiJ8rt package designed to bring
partly back to life Ute foreign aid bill It rejected almost two weeks
ago. The Upper Chamber faces a Monday deadline on the
meas\D'e, due to a ruling by Ute General Accounting Office that
the entire aid program will be dead unless Congress moves Ill
continue approprl~tlons by tbat date.

With A Christmas Savings Account
from our bank you always have cash
to pay for gifts. Start your Savings
Account today.

•

JOIN NOW-F IRST WEEK NOV. 8 - AND
GET ON THE 1972 MAIL CALL.

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
Low Rate Auto Loans
Ea sy Location &amp; Ample Parking
checking Accounts
.
Savings Certificates &amp; Savings

peeftbMe"eMetWhW.Mo............................ lllllillooo ............. ~- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . .

·

LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Attorney General John N. Mitchell recently had two weeks of
silence .
His wife, Martita, revealed
Wednesday that she was so
angry she didn't speak to him
for two weeks when a woman
wasn't nominated to the Supreme Court.
"We 're just now back on good
terms," Mrs. Mitchell said with
a grin.

In a staccato news conference
before appearing at lunch of
the California Federation of
Republican Women, Mrs.
Mitchell was asked whether Pat
Nixon shared her disappointment.

"Oh yes," she replied. "!told
her I had finished packing my
bags and I would come over
and help her. We were both
moving out."
Asked if her husband would
resign his post to direct Nixon's
1972 presidential campaign,

Mine Road in Jeopardy

OVER 106 CHECKS HAVE BEEN
MAILED TO OUR CLUB MEMBERS FOR CHRISTMAS-1971.
$16,608.50.

ln·statlment Loans
Member of F,D;l,C.

Up £or 2 Weeks

,

RACl NE o
.
.

.I

•

. . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _.:... ~ ..1-

IRONTON, Ohio (UP!)- The
U.S. Forest Service has notified
state Sen. Oakley Collins, RIronton, that proceedings have
been started to revoke his permit for a coal hauling road
through a national forest here
which would shut down his strip
mine operations, it was reported today.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
said District Forest Ranger T.
Allan Wolter, told Collins ,he
bad started action against the
Collins Mining Co. to close the
I().JTiile long haul road through
Wayne National Foreet which Is
the only connection. betw.lhe
.

preparation plant at · Hanging
Rock and the company's active
mine area at Center Station.
Wolter sai~he permit was
violated by the aumping of coal
waste and trash on and along
Ute haul road.
"Our objection is to coal
wastes on ahd alongside the
road and the creation of acid
forming conditions which occur
when coal is in the presence of
air and moisture," said Wolter,
Collins, in Columbus for a
session of the Ohio General Assembly, acknowledged the Forest Service had contacted him.
. "We 11ol a letter irom them,"
'

Collins said . "They wanted
lome things done and it's going
tn get taken care of.
"! don't have any further
comment on that/' he said:
"It's just a lot of crap."
Woller also said he has set
deadlines for cotrection of longexisting problems with Collins
and his operations in the Wayne
National Forest near here.
They include:
- Failure to abandon use of a
sediment settling pond that the
Forest Service nrdered closed
in October, 1969.
- Failure to maintain and

(Continued un Page

8)

Mrs. Mitchell said,
"Mr. Nixon and I have not
decided that yet."
Other exchanges:
Q. What did you think of the
defeat of the amendment on
school prayers?
A. "I thought it was terrible
the amendment did not go
through. "
Q. What kind of prayers
would you have said in school?
A. "The kind I said when I
was a girl. We said the
morning prayer and saluted the
flag and were real Americans."
Q. Do you think Nixon is
doing a good job?
A. "Yes, Ute crazy liberals
are shutting up."

Chileans Make

Castro Grin
SANTIAGo, Chile (UP!)
Cuban Premier Fidel Cstro
reflected on the tumultuous
welcome he got Wednesday
from a ·million Chileans,
grinned and said, "I would
sincerely recommend tbat Utey
make a movie of Utis arrival
and send it to Nixon."
Police said one-third of
Santiago's population of Utroo
million lined the H.mile route
into town from Pudahuel Airport as Castro rode in an open
'convertible with President
Salvador Allende . It was
Castro's first visit outside Cuba
in seven years.
"The imperialists have again
lost the ideological battle.
Because this meeting with
Allende would never ha~e occurred if they had been able to
bury the revolutloa in a sea of
lies," CastrO' Sllld.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

In Phase II
increases.
employed by firms · with
The Cost of Living Council payrolls of that size or larger.
decided Wednesday that all U.S.
Companies employing 1,000 to
corporations with annual sales 5,000 persons will have to make
of $100 million or more must ask reports to the government when
Ute government in advance for their workers get raises, but not
permission to increase prices. in advance.
This will cover such giants as
The bulk of Ute American
General Motors and, in general, work Ioree ~ per cent -is
the I ,300 biggest American employed by firms with 1,000 or
firms doing 45 per cent of all fewer workers. These firms
U.S. business.
will not have to report their
Firms with annual sales wage raises but Ute government
between $50 million and $100 will make spot checks on them
million will have to report to the to see if the raises fall within the
governmenteverythreemonths 5.5 per cent increase standard
on changes in prices and profits laid down by the Pay Board
and those with sales under $50 earlier this week.
million will not have to report
Rents will not be controlled on
but will he monilllred on a spot commercial property, such as
basis.
office space, or on industrial
Companies with 5,000 or more . and farm property. But most
employes will have to notify the rental u~its, houses and apartgovernment madvance if those ments ahke, Will remam under
employes are due lor a pay some form of rent controL H
raise. It is estimated that 10 per rental property is improved in
cent of Ute U.S. work Ioree is such a way Utat the rehabilita-

lion costs at least a third of the
property's value, then the rent
can be raised wiUtout controL
Houses put up for sale, if Utey
have been lived in, will not be
subject to control since they are
"used" items. The same •'used"
proviso also. ·covers used cars,
although new cars prices will he
controlled. New houses and
extensively remodeled ones will
also be free of controL
Items such as stocks and
bonds and raw agricultural
products not covered by tbe
current freeze likewise will
remain free of controls during
Pltase IL
,.But the government added a
new list of items which will also
be exempt from price control,
largely those which are custom
made, band-crafted or in some
other way difficult to set value
on. This included taxidermy
items, wigs, jewelry, coins and
stamps in collections, and furs.

Rartt·ng,nr E•o Athlntes
:~fs.s~~~usa:~:e~~~:~ Welcome to Grid Event·
~~:;ill
~~:e b~n!:~edof :~
used products -such as houses,

cars and machinery - plus

Johnson to
ServeNBA

Committee

• U

lll:i

·

lll:i

.

·

The Phase 11 control structure
Players of the former Midwill be largely complete today dleport, Rutland and Pomeroy
when the Price Commission
football teams during the years
announces the standards it will
of 1941, 1942 and 1943 are
use to govern requests for price
especially invited to attend the
Meigs High School football
~:.:lll.:.elll
.J.Jl8'U.:8'
.L.~C
..!l:m&amp;l:lll'..ll~
.:.~~&gt;:1: :.~::;~
banquet Tuesday evening.
This group of athletes is being
EARLY SKATERS
especially asked to be on hand
MOSCOW (UPI) - Exbecaq§f they played at Ute
cavations at a Bronze Age
same1ime
as the guest speaker
settlement in Kazakhstan
for Ute occasion, Air Force
have revealed that the
Brigadier Genera l James
prehistoric residents used ice
Hartinger, played at Midskates ma~e from the hones
dleport.
of large domestic animals,
General Hartinger played
the Tass news agency said basketball , baseball and
today.
football at Middleport High. He
"The shape of the skates
closely resembles modern was a member of the 1943
football team when it was Ute
ones," Ta_ss said.
Southeastern Ohio League
~-.;:::::::::~-;:~;:~~:?.~:~:~::::8::~:~::8
championship team. He was
leading scorer in the league and
was an all-league back.
At West Point, General
Hartinger played football, took
part in boxing and was captain
of the All American lacrosse
team lor three yea rs and was U.
S. Player of the Year in 1947.
Aller graduation he quarter backed an Air Force
championship team in England .
Thereon Johnson, executive General Hartinger is still a
vice presiden I of The Farmers sports enthusiast.
Bank and Savings Co ., Guests at the Tuesday night
Pomeroy, has been appoin led to banquet, sponsored by the
the 16-member executive Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
committee of the American Club, will include not only the
Bankers
Association ' s Meigs High team but the freshAgricultural and Rural Affairs men team~ varsity cheerDivision .
leaders, Melanie Hackett,
Allen P. Stults, president of Mary Midkiff, Liz Blaettnar, Jo
lhe
American
Bankers Ellen Diehl, Susie Soulsby, Debi
i'lSociation , and chairman and Gallagher, Lynn Baker, Karla
chief
executive
officer' Kuhn and their advisor Mrs
American National Bank and Joy Bentley, and the 'junio~
Trust Co ., Chicago , said varsity cheerleaders, Tina
Johnson will assist in Nieri, Diana Lynn Ridgeway,
·
establishing policy , and
programs lor the agricultural
and rural affairs division of the Eagle Band Will
American Bankers Assn.'s
13,500 member banks. Thomas Play at Marshall
R. Smith, president of the First
National Bank, Perry, Iowa,
The Eastern Eagles Marand chairman of the division, ching Band will participate in
indicated that one of the main Band Day Saturday at Marshall
objectives of the division in the University. Twenty-two bands
coming year will be to Unite the · from West Virginia and Ohio
vast interest . and talents of will participate' in the event.
community bankers into an
The Eas tern Band will
e£Jeclive voice within the present "Chester Overture,"
banking industry .
"1812 Overture," "Washington
In addi lion , Johnson is Post" and "Fire and Rain".
currenll)' serving as chairman Eastern participated in Band
of the Agricultural Committee Day-at Ohio University earlier
~f the Ohio Bankers Assn.
this year.
:rc;:::;
:

1

package, close to $400 million,
would be raised by:
- A four-mill tax on Ute net
worth of corporations, plus 2
per cent on income up to $25,000 and 5 or 6 &lt;per cent on net
income over that amount. The
Flannery-Talt bill had higher
corporate tax rates.
- A one-mill increase in the
taxes on insurance companies
and financial institutions. A
severance tax on Ute mining of
natural resources contained in
the Flannery-Taft bill has been
eliminated.
-A net three-eenter increase
in the tax on a pack of cigarettes, the same as in Ute Flan(Continued on Page 8)

Cloudy north, partly cloudy
south and chilly today. Highs in
upper 40s to lower 50s. Variable
cloudiness and cold tonight.
Low in 30s. Increasing
cloudiness and warmer Friday.
Highs in 50s north and 50s to
lower 60s south.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER II, 1971

·New VICA Officers of Meigs Chapter

•

approval or disapproval would
affect whether the bill goes to
the floor . Democral$ have indicated they feel the "new bird"
could be floated and defeated
as a demonstration by Republicans an income tax bill will not
pass.
Income Tax For Half
Maloney said a one-hall to 3
per cent personal income lax
would raise between $466 million and $598 million, depending
on where the income brackets
are set.
This would furnish more than
half the amount agreed upon
by the committee.
'' The conferees tentatively
agreed Utat the rest of the

Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

Big Business Haltere

col d weather wear Thermal dra wers
and shi r t s. A lot of the boys like Hanes
Wint erset drawers w hich is a cotton rib
knit .

Your Christmas Club
Will Pay
The Bills

Committee bill drafted by Sen.
Michael J . Maloney, R-Cincinnali, chairmarr of that commitl&gt;!e and a member of the. second conference committee.
Maloney said the FlanneryTaft bill would lose three of
fiv e Republican senators needed to adopt a measure. The administration claimed the "new
bird " would lose Democratic
votes.
"! think it's a good income
tax bill if there has to be an
income tax," Maloney said, reluctanlly agreeing his name
could be associated with the
Republican bill.
None of the Republican leaders would say whether caucus

Weather

JAKARTA - A REPORT FR~ THE Indonesian government~perated MerpaU Nusantara Airlines said today Utat one of
Ute company's airliners is missing with 69 persons aboard. The
plane was on a flight from Jakarta to Padl!ng on Sumatra. Airline
soW'ceS said two of Ute passengers were Britons.

I

their paychecks Friday and
avert a threatened strike. He
said he had "every expeclatatfon," but no assurances, that
a personal income tax bill
would see its way to the floor
by lhe end of the week .

Now You Know

FOR BOYS - All sizes. too. tr om J to

I

3RD ·sJ

proved an increase in the sales
tax .
Hovey Predicts Defeat
"They're trying to pass a Republican income tax bill with
Democratic votes and it just
won't work," said state Finance
Director Harold A. Hovey.
"I don't hear anything that
makes me happy, but I don't
know what they're going to end
up with," said Frank W. King,
president of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
after the new tax package was
described as softening the business tax burden from the
amount in other versions.
The Gilligan administration
has said it prefers a compromise one-half to 4 per cent in-

10 . In the Boys Hanes Underwear
th ere's T shir ts
kn it br-ie l s
gym
shorts
muscle T shi r ts that ar e
sleeveless
Therma l Union Suits f or

1972
Club

'

sure," said Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, R-Tiffin, chairman of the
conference committee.
"We will have at least one
more meeting, probably Thursday afternoon," Gillmor said.
"If everything goes right,· we
could have a bill on the floor
by Friday. "
There were indications the
administration of Gov. John J.
Gilligan, which was represented at the conference talks, and
organized labor were not happy
with the latest proposal-a
modification of the Republicanwritten income lax bill left behind in the Senate Ways and
Means Committee last September when that chamber ap-

. .
come tax bill drafted by an ad
hoc committee headed by Rep.
James J. Flannery, D-Cleveland, and Sen. William W. Taft,
R-Cleveland.
The Flannery-Tall proposal
was rejected by a prior conference' committee which approved a sales tax increase and
saw it go down to defeat in the
House Tuesday . .
The governor repeated as he
signed an interim budget Wednesday that the Flannery-Tall
bill was "the only viable alternative" and said it should be
sent to the floor at once.
The governor signed the interim budget lor November to
permit state employes to get

FOR MEN t__ Sel ect from T Shi rl s . Kn1 r
Brie ts, m id· length bri ef s . boxer short s
shoulder gr i p
w ith gr ipper front
s l eeve less union sui t s. Sam5onbak
a t hle t ic un ion suit s plus a comp lete
selec t ion ol w int er underwea r Ther ma l and ln su l kn it shirts and
dra wers u.1ion sui t s . colton r ib k nit
union suits shir ts and drawe rs. Buy
the st yle you lik e bes t. Com plete si1e
rang e fr om 3.! to 46 and ex tra large
sizes 48 and 50

Join
Our

"GP"

WILD REBELS
Technlcolor&gt;
M otor cyc le Gang s! Hardr iding! Hard -flght ing!

COLUMBUS (UP! )- AHouseSenate conference committee
was Ill present to party caucuses in boUt chambers today
a tentative agreement on a
package of new taxes totaling
between $950 million and $1
billion, including what was believed to be a one-hall to 3 per
cent graduated personal income
tax.
The aim of the conferees,
who met behind locked doors
for 21&gt; hours Wednesday night,
was to gain approval from all
corners to finalize a settlement
· and gel it on the floor of the
Senate and House Friday .
"We think we may be clos.e
to an agreement, but we're not

VOL XXI.V NO. 148

HOMER·
(Technicolorl
Don Scardino
Ti sa Farrow.

t

MIDDLEPORT
'

Income Tax, Billion Dollar ·BUdget, in Caucus

Baccalaureate,

an injury to her right a1·m but
was nut immediately treated.
She was cited to court on
charges of failure to yield right
of way at an intersection.
At 8:45 p.m. on coun ty road
16, Wanda A. Swearingen, 46,
Rutland, driving a car south hit
one of several deer that ran
across the highway . There was
light damage to the vehicle. The
dd:ee~r~w:a~s~n:o~l~k~il~led!_._ _,__,:~~D~is:t~r~ic~l~u~n~til~th:e~e~nd~o!f~c~le~rk~,--------,
I

8 Draw Fines

-LIKE THIS BEFORE!

~ The quality goes in

D. C. Hanison Died Tuesday

Donna Powell, Shelly Manking
and Jeanie Schneider.
All members of the coaching
staff will be guests also of the
Rotary Club.

Ticket deadline for the
banquet is 8:30 a. m. Mondsy.
Dinner will be served at 6:30 p,
m. Tuesday at the Meigs High
School cafeteria.

Autos Collide
Cecil H. Notter, 59, Gallipolis,
was cited to Meigs County Court
for failure to slop within the
assured
clear
distance
following a rearend collision of
automobiles Wednesday on Rt.
7, lhree and seven tenths miles
north of Pomeroy.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post ~tale Highway Patrol,
Notter's car slammed into the
rear of one driven by Beatrice
F. Duncan, 36, Rutland . There
was moderate damage to both
CiJfS .

A second Meigs County accident occurred on Rt. 124, west
of Rutland where Larry L.
Cleland, 22, Rt. I, Langsville,
lost control of his car, ran off
the roadwa)·, and into a ditch .

There was minor damage to his
car. No citation was issued.
' A Gallia County accident
occurred on Rt. 7, one and four
tenths miles south of Gallipolis
where a car driven by Michael
Lee Johnson, 21, Rt. 2, Crown
City, attempted to pass just as
an auto operated by Glenn Lee
Thompson, 41, Gallipolis, made
a left turn into a private
driveway. There was minor
damage to both cars. No one
was injured or cited.
A deer was killed in a single
car accident on Rt. 35 north of
the Gallia-Jackson County line.
The patrol said the animal ran
inlll the paUl of a car operated
by Carl Thomas Rhodes, 48,
Stuart's Draft, Va.

USDA Refuses
Farm Subsidies
WASHINGTON (UP!) Democrats from the West and
·Mid-west, citing b~per g~ain
crops whtch h~ve driven pr~ces
down to depressiOn era levels,
have pleaded for emergency
legislation to boost farmers'
income in 1971 and 1972.
But the Agriculture ·Departme nt opposed their bills
Wednesday, arguing they would
"put the government back lntn
the grain business in a big way"
and reverse the new dlrectloo
adopted in the 1970 farm biU.
Testifying before tl)e Senate
Agriculture Committee, the
Democrats said the 1970 law
had failed.
The 1970 act ·encourages
farmers to idle a specified
number of crop acres in order to
qualify lor a guaranteed price.
It didn't work as Intended this

year because the Agriculture
Department asked for the "set
aside" of too little acreage,
an Ucipa ling a renewal of the
1970 corn blight.
Excellent weaUter and the
failure of the blight to spread
resulted in record grain yields.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, DMinn., urged adoption of his bill
under which the government
would buy grains and slllre
them. By removing them from
the market, supplies would fall
and prices raise, he argued.
He also called for adoption of
a resolution setting celllngs on
corn acreage for 1972, offering
feed grain and wheat farmers
payments for voluntarily setting aside more acreage and
increasing governinent support
loanS for 1971 crops by 25 per
cent.

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