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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.

�..
',M" F mt-."''awoy,O.,Nov.l1,1171
j f

--.

County Farmer Gets
Conservation Honor

1be DHJ Sentinel .
DEVOTIDTOTHE

1

LNnRESTOF
ME105·MA50N ARI!A
'
CHESTER 1.&lt; TANNIHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROB&amp;RT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
,

nr: u "

1

rwr ::

I

SEOAL Standings

1971 SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHI,ETIC
LEAGUE STATISTICS
(Includes t~mH through Nov. 61
OVERALL SCORING
Publtshed datly e&gt;ecept
NAME,
TEAM
TO PAT PI&amp;. (Gl Avg.
Saturday by The Ohto Valley
(8) 16 s
18 24 132
• PubliShing Company, 111 Pete Neal, Galllpoll•
(9)
Court Sf , Pomeroy , Ohio, ' Rick Sanders, Eastern
13 10 88
98
(9)
.45769 Business Office Phone Mark Williams, Meigs
10 14
74
82
Editorial Phono 992 Brian Davidson, Logan
(9)
8 20
68
16
A Mason Counzy dairyman ·is leadership in promoting con.
Last year, the corn crop was 9922156,
2157
(5)
Rick
Krebs
6
2
38
16
1 Logan
Second class postage Pl•d at Ken Valentine, Jackson
West Virginia's "Conservation servation and understanding of sod.seeded in a tleld ol orchard
(6)
7 2 «
13
1 Pomeroy , Oh tO
Farmer for 1971" 11 was the Soil Conservation program. grass.
(9)
It Is harvested by
Rick
Boykln,
Ironton
11
0
66
73
Nattonal advertising
(9)
61
;
Bob
Smith,
Ironton
10
o
60
lormally amoonced at Jack. The Conservation Farmer fi. mechanical cutting and hauling. reprtsentatlve Bottlnelll
(9)
Ken Culbertson, Logan
9 4 58
64
Gall.lgher, Inc, 12 East .42nd
son's Mill Wednesday night at rst must win the coont;y compe. Fertilization Is CClllductedonre- St,
(9)
New York City, New York
Phil Hollanbaugh, N Galila
9 4 58
64
Subscription rates
Oe
the 30th annual meeting ol the tition, which makes him eligible commendation from soli tests,
SEOAL SCORING
II vend by clrr ier where
NAME, TEAM
TO PAT Pis (G) Avg.
West Virginia Soli and Water for district honors. Once the in consultation with Soli Conser_ 1 ava
llttble SO cents per week . Pete Neal, Gallipolis
16) 17 3
14
20 104
Conservation District Supetv1. 14 district winners are chosen, vatlon Service Specialists.
Bv Motor Roule where carrier Rick Boykln, Ironton
(7)
9 o 54
17
•
service
not
available
One
l'llrpose ol the Conservation month Sl 75 By mall m Ohto Mark Williams, Meigs
sors Association
five JUdgeS toor the farms and
(7)
7 12
54
17
(71
Farmer contest is toencoura~ and W Va , One year SU 00
Brian Davidson, Logan
6 14 50
71
As state winners, Woodrow make the final selection.
(7)
'S
u(
months
S7
25
Three
Ken
Culbertson,
Logan
7
4
46
66
Wilson Brown and his wife of
The Browns represent the more !armors In West VIrginia months $-4 SO Subscr.plton
(7)
Bob SmIth. Ironton
7 o 42
60
Letart, near l'llint Pleasant, Western Soli Conservatloo Dis. to preserve natural resources prtce mcludes Sunday Ttmes
{1J
Chns
Onder
a,
Jackson
6
0
36
s1
{4)
earned an all-expense paid trip trict, made up of Jackson, Mil. by adopting soond soil, water, Sent mel
Ken Valentine, Jackson
3 2 20
so
Jim Payne, Ironton
s 0 30 (7) 4J
forest and wildlife cooserva.
to tlle annual meeting of the son and l'lllnam Coontles.
(7)
Dan
Sellles,
Wellston
4 o 24
34
National Association of Soil
George Sharpe, State Exten. tion programs.
(7)
Andy Vaughan, Meigs
4 0 24
34
Conservahon Distncts m s1on Soil Conservation Specia.
(7)
Mike Green, Alllflns
4 0 24
34
(7)
Don Wood, Athens
4 0 24
34
Washington , D C m February list with the West Virginia !Jni.
SVAC
SCORING
They also received engraved vers1ty Appalachian Center aod
NAME, TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (Gl Avg.
Wrist watches, a plaque and one of the JUdges, said the
(51
Rick Sanders. Eastern
7 6 48
96
(4)
Harver
Brown,
North
Gall1a
s
0
30
1
s
recogmt10n m the hall offame m B~own rarm is a remarkable
Attendance at Nazarene Lou1e ouden, Kyger Creek
(3)
3
0
18
6
0
the Mount Vernon dinmg room example a[ conservation
at
Sunday School Nov. 7 was 66. Mike Nease, Southern
(4)
3
4 22
55
at Jackson's Mill
work
(4)
Jackie Smith, North Galila
3 2 20
Collection was $140.
50
(5)
Second.place
was flas
It IS markedbyexcellentstrlp
4 0 24
48
BY BERTHA PARKER
Mrs. Ray Thomas spent Bob Caldwell. Eastern
(S)
4 o 24
48
kell Campbell of Union, In the cropping, lertiilzation pro. Sabbath School attendance Fnday afternoon w1tll Mrs. Ralph Parker, Eastern
(5)
Randy Bormg, Eastern
4 0 24
48
Greenbner Valley Soil Conser grams, dramage systems and Nov 7 at the Free Metllod!St Harry Lodwick, Sr.
(4)
N1ck Ihie, Southern
3 0
18
45
vacatiOn DIStrict, while third· overall stewardship of land and Church was 125 Offermg for the
Phil
Hollanbaugh,
N
Gail&gt;a
2
4
16
40
I
41
Michael King and girl friend Jim Amsbary, Eastern
(S)
3 2 20
40
place went to George Ringer of ammals, Mr Sharpe said.
day was $149 85
of Columbus spent Sunday w1tll
TRI·VALLEY
CONFERENCE
Terra Alta, m the Monongahela
The farm encompasses 283
Rev Eugene Gill attended au his grandmother, Mrs. GeorgJa NAME, TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (Gl Avg
SCD
acres, mcluding 100 acres of area mm1sters meetmg m Thoma
(3) 8 7
Denny Morrow. Warren Local
4 2 26
(4)
Dan Dishong, Nels York
5 0 30
75
The Campbells earn an ex. cropland. There are 30 to 35 Zanesville Tuesd~y
Mr. and Mrs Roy EISel of Greg Kirk, Belpre
(3
)
3
2
20
7
6
pense.pa1d tnp next August to acres m corn, With the remam. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl, Logan, W. Va spent the week Greg Smathers, Nets York
(4)
4 0 24
60
the annual area meeting of the der m small gram and hay. Stockdale, VISited recently Willi With Wilbur Dean and the Earl Jerry Meeley, Belpre
2 4 16
(31
53
(4) 5 3x
Bill Woodson, Nels York
1 12 21
National Association of Soil
Mr. Brown mamtains a dairy Mr and Mrs. Norman Schaefer. Dean fallllly.
(3)
Jeff Bradford, Warren Local
2 2 14
47
Conservation DIStricts in New herd of 71 Holstems, Which
Mr and Mrs. Harmon Fox
Elizabeth Wickham spent a Bob Linch, Belpre
2 2 14
(3)
47
England, and a second.place produce a yearly average of and Mrs Fran Cline spent the few days wltll her daughter,
Five tied for ninth w&gt;lh 3 0 averages
plaque; the Ringer's get a $100 14,218 pounds or milk per cow. weekend w1th Mrs. Irene Enna Heilman
OVERALL STANDINGS
U.S, Savings Bond and a third. With replacement heifers and Countryman, Frankfort
Mrs Harry Lodwick, Sr TEAM
W L T POP Federal Hockmg 1 3 0 28 94
place plaque.
Holstem bull calves, the farm
9 0 0 346 18
Mr and Mrs Gene Alkire, spent Sunday afternoon witll Eastern
0 4 0 38 153
Wahama
6 1 2 174 64 Vinton Co
Mr. Brown IS the 18th farm. carries 114 animals.
Ktmberlee
and
Kevm, her son, Harry, and farmly
OFFENSIVELY
Ironton
8 1 0 273 80 TEAM
er to wm the IItle smce the
Helpmg with the chores are Columbus, spent tlle weekend
Pis (G) Avg
carol Pooler has been on the Athens
8 1 0 209 91 Eastern
346
(9) 38 4
contest was organized In !954. Mr Brown's wife and son Ro. with Mrs. Allure's mother, Mrs SICk list
Meigs
1 2 o 184 115
Ironton
273
(91 30 3
Last year's winner was Dale bort (Butch) a graduate of Mar. Bertha Parker, and Mr. and
6 3 0 213 133 Nels York
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma and Gallipolis
253
(9)
2S 1
Nels York
s 4 0 253 138 Jackson
Guthrie In Monongalia County. shall Universlzy with a degree Mrs Thomas Gene Parker.
221
191
24
6
family of Pomeroy called on hiS Logan
s 4 o 216 158 Logan
Winners are selected for (!) in busmess admmistration.
216
(9)
24
0
5 4 0 204 104 Gallipolis
Mr and Mrs William Perry, mother, Mrs Georgie Thoma North Galli a
213
191
23
7
proper land use..Iarmmg m "Butch has a real love and
S 4 0 154 185
Athens, VISited Sunday With
Mrs Edith King has been Alexander
Athens
209
(9)
23
2
Kyger Creek
4 4 1 127 207 Wahama
accordance Wit! the capabihzy feel for the land and cows, Mr.
174 (B) 21 8
Mrs Perry's parents, Mr. and spendmg the past ten days w1th Jackson
4 s 0 221 166 Meigs
of the soiJ according to soil Brown beams, "and he's using
184 (9) 20 4
3 4 2 131 107 Alexander
Mrs Norman Schaefer
her daughter, EloiSe at East Miller
154 (9) 171
survey and land capabiii(y h•s education nght here ( on
Southern
3 S 0 18 155 Miller
Liverpool.
Mrs
Allen
EIChinger
was
131 (9) 14 6
maps, (2) establishment of soil the farm).''
PI Pleasant
2 1 0 61 181 Kyger Creek
127
(9) 14 1
hostess Thursday everung to the
Mr
and
Mrs.
Willard
Heines,
Federal Hock&gt;ng 2 1 0 S6 216 Wellston
and water conservationpractic.
The Brown's other children-124
(9) 13 8
I 7 0 44 311 Vinton Co
Laurel Clilf Health Club Mrs. Athens Rd., spent Thursday GlOtJster
108
(9) 12 0
es m accordance with the !arm two boys and a g~rl..l!avemarr­
Woliston
t 8 0 124 279
Max
Eichmger
and
Mrs.
Paul
evening
wltll
lier
parents,
Mr.
Southern
78
(8) 9 8
plan drawn up by the So1l Con ied and chosen other occupa.
Waverly
1 8 0 63 203 PI Pleasant
67
191
74
Eichinger were c&lt;&gt;-hostesses. and Mrs. Charley Woodie
Vinton Co
0 9 0 108 359 Waverly
servatlon Service; (3) mamten. lions.
63
191
70
SEOAL STANDINGS
Mrs Ellen Thoma and
snce of practices established, Since 1966 the Browns have Thirteen members were
Fed.Hock&gt;ng
56 (9) 6 2
(FINAL)
44 181 5 5
mcludlng care and use or d1. installed about hslf.a.mlle or present The birthdays of Mrs. children called on Mrs. Georg1e TEAM
W L T POP Glouster
Thoma.
Clarence
Curtis,
Mrs.
Carmon
North
Gall
Ia
204
191 22 7
Ironton
6 1 0 206 64
version ditches, ponds, outlets, drain tile and constructed a
DEFENSIVELY
Robert Wood and Lenore Athens
6 1 0 143 48
drainage ditche, contour strlpp. diversion ditch to protect the Evans, Mrs Georgia Diehl
Pis. (Gl Avg
Meigs
S 2 0 132 95 TEAM
were
observed.
Birtllday
cake
Betzing
haave
had
vinyl
siding
Eastern
18 (9) 2 0
ing, and other factors and (4) crops
Gallipolis
4 3 0 151 101
and Ice cream were served.
on their houses.
Wahama
64
181 8 o
Logan
4 3 0 136 117
Ironton
80
19)
89
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burton Jackson
2 5 0 112 166 Athens
91
(9)
10
1
Waverly
1
6
0
49
139
WIN AT BRIDGE
REVIVAL SET
spent Sunday and Monday In
North
Gallla
104
(91
11
6
Wellston
0 7 0 72 261 Miller
107 191 11 9
Doc and Garnet Sexton of Reynoldsburg and Columbus.
SVAC STANDINGS
Meigs
115
191 12 8
TEAM
W L T POP
Ashland, Ky., will conduct
GallipoliS
133
191 14 8
Eastern
s 0 o 203 6 Nels York
weekend service at Syracuse
13S
191 15 3
Kyger Creek
4 1 0 95 80
Nazarene
Cl!urch
Friday
and
~an
158
l9j 11 6
to
make
mne
tncks
Without
North Gall Ia
2 2 0 84 34
You 'II
NORTH (D)
II
Jackson
166
1
9 18 4
havmg
to
Jose
the
lead
but
Sunday Services nightly at 7:30
Southern
2 2 0 58 85 Southern
.J 3
ISS
181
19 4
tract It down
Southwestern
1 4 0 38 123 PI Pleasant
decided to settle for down p.m. and Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
•108
181
191
20
1
Hannan Trace
0 5 0 6 156 Alexander
one Therefore she knocked The Sextons are evangellats and
t AKIO
185
(9)
20
6
11uch faster
TRIVALLEY
out the ace of clubs and went will conduct tlle services and
203 (9) 22 6
• KQ 1095 4
TEAM
W L T POP Waverly
down one as expected
Kyger
Creek
(91 23 0
with
a
WEST
EAST
Bel
pro
3 0 0 85 38 Federal Hocking 207
will also be featured in vocal
216
(91 24 0
Thts result was one pomt
Warren Local
.A7542
.K96
300 84 7 Wellston
rmmbers.
The
public
is
cor279
(9)
31 0
WANT
AD
Nels York
2209942 Glouster
from top Three no·trump
.Q64
.7532
311 (8) 38 9
dially
invited
to
attend.
t652
tQ4J
was played at every table
VInton Co
359 9) 39 9
.7 3
ofoA62
and all other declarers ex·
FINAL
SOUTH
cept one had !ned the fin. ~-----------------------------------------INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
• QI08
RUSHING
esse and gone down two
• AKJ 9
Yds C.r Avg
What happened at the ta·
• J 98 7
Neal.
Gallipolis
640 142 4,5
ble that scored top ' The
of,J8
Wood,
Athens
637 136 4 7
queen had made three no
Boykln,
lron
89 69
None vulnerable
' M Williams, M 613
trump with an overtnck I
463
123
38
West North East South
The defense had started out
Culbortson,
L
401
100
40
BY JACK O'BRIAN
lofo
Pass
PASSING
the same wav as Ahce and
HERE'S HOW TO GO
which switched from off·Bdwy plays to old
Pass 2of,
Pass 2NT
Cmp.Att lnt Yds TO
the queen had knocked out
Poss 3 N T Pass Pass
FLAT BROKE
filmUSicals, has come up w1tll a dandy duo Settlos, W 54 120 12 771 2
the
ace
of
clubs
JUSt
as
Alice
Pass
I so 80 2 845 10
had Then she had glared
NEW YORK (KFS) -Chase bank has the "Roberta" and "Show Boat" had been filed Spears,
Sm
lth,
L
42 9.1 4 679 8
Openmg lead- · 4
at East and he had Wisely late Gov Tom Dewey's Bal Harbor, Fla., fiat away for more than 30 years, never appeared on Snowden. G 33 59 3 358 3
led back a club to let the (three rooms) up for estate sale at $100,000 .
TV, MGM had remake rights but never exer· Hughes. J 29. 77 10 531 s
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby queen make her contract
PUNTING
Tno at the Stage Deily: Jack E. Leonard ... cised them . Both star Irene Dunne, both have
( 14 or more)
What a cunous duplicate
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1
Eltham, Bob Hope's English brrtllplace, 1s Kern mUSic, and both came to the screen
Yds No. Avg
game thought Alice The red
1041 26 40 0
naming a theater after Bob ... E. Humperdinck or1gmally after Bdwy. triumphs ... "Show Bo9!" MOIZer, L
queen was playmg at the
Snowden.
G
899 23 39 1
and the US mternal revenue aren't seeing eye~ parentlletically IS a London revival as smash· Ughlle, W
1092 28 38 9
next t a b I e Allee had
wallet VIctor Mature didn't make a film for successful tllere as "No, No, Nanette" Is here Ondera, J
The b1ddmg has been
953 26 36 7
heard her say, "You are
Green,
A
722 20 36 1
West
North
East
Soulh f1ve years He's m Cy Howard's "Every little
not doubling me at four
The Park-sheraton Hotel's changing Its
RECEIVING
hearts You are btddmg fiVe
I + Crook &amp; Nanny," and it's strrnulated him to stick name to theN. Y. Sheraton . As the old "Park
No Yds TO
1•
Pass
2NT
diamonds and I am doubling Pass
Payne,
I
25 392 3
Cenoral,"
It
starred
m
several
murder-headlines
Pass
:J.,.~
Pass 4 •
around. he'll do former L A. police chief Tom
~ you "
Ondera,
J
18 .ws s
~..
Pass
•
Reddin's life story if he can buy It ... 20th·Fox mcluding the sensational daytime rubout of A Stewart, W
The white rabbit who was Pass
17 323 0
You, South hold
subsidiary (Wylde Films) lined up against Anastasia while the latter was being shaved m B Davidson. L
16 343 6
Allee's partner remarked
Helber•L
14
195 1
very qmetly, " We should •AQ4 ¥K6 tAQtoss of,KI09 management In tlle recent stock battle- and the barbershop ... $6 11111lion in renovation also
Morris,
M
14
170 1
try for second The last time
What do you do now'
still are operatmg wltll tlle same dissidents maprred the name change.
KO
RETURNS
the queen lost, the director
A-B1d five diamonds. Your runmng 1t Has Wall St. and film row mystified.
Kevin Phillips' new Washington newsletter,
Yds No. TO
and the wmnmg pa1r lost partner has shown the ace of
301 18 0
Nancy Dickerson's trying desperately to get "The American Political Report," has some Stewart, W
their heads "
Smith. A
268 t1 o
clubs Your b1d shows a good
TV
1
Allee found herself play· diamond sull headed by !he ace back mto network . She was a c ose pal of good gossip : some $15,000,000 wW be spent for Meadows, J
252 11 o
242 10 o
mg three no·trump East and accepts hiS slam invilation LBJ's, which made networking easy ... Jack ads m the media lor "The Re-Selling of the Helton, w
Payne,
I
211
1 1
won the spade lead with the
TODAY'S QUESTION
Kennedy also had an an old pal the networks President" .. Also that Nixon's contribution PUNT
RETURNS
kmg and returned the nme
Your partner contmues ti&gt; never looked at until JFK was President; and not collectors are feuding with Jeremiah Milbank,
Yds. No. TD
West played low and Allee love hearts What do you do &amp;nee ... Denun now really Is as internationally
Payne, I
103 9 0
chairman
of
tlle
GOP
Nat'l
Fmance
Committee
was on lead She could try now"~
Smith, A
89 9 0
Amer~can as Coca Cola, American EIJII'eas &amp;
.... Milbank IS a Utile-known, multi-ncb New Stevenson, J
heart and diamond !messes
76 2 1
Hertz : Japan hasn't been able to duplicate the Yorker whose qwet lile style even had Fortune Gullion. W
73 9 o
Faulk.
M
60
10 ri
blue-jeans culture and has asked American Mag miSSing him as one of the richest men in
INTERCEPTION RET.
denrrn firms to jom with tl1em ... Denim even 18 America; fantastic interests ... The Dem Nat'l
No. Yds. TD
Harrisonville
proper t) of Harold Gr aham .
h K
th J
desig ed
•
6 106 1
Mrs. Mary Wright has pur- getting ~ 1c enne . Lane
n a men s Comnuttee stlll is $9,300,000 m the soup. Plans Green, A
S
Massey.
I
4 23 o
chased the home of Mr. and bluedenrrntrenchcoallinedwllhbluefoxbyBen are to help chop the deficit by cutting an LP Smith, A
Society News
3 20 o
album of broadcast speech·ncerpts by Dem Ash, M
3
2 0
Mrs. Will Clonch.
Kahn ... For stylilh ap.les:
2 53 0
Dale Williams, who has been Mrs. Paul SteJmetz and
Shecky Greene, rowdiest of the Las Vegas PreSidents from Woodrow Wilson through LBJ Par,ne, I
Va entlne, J
2 Sl o
a patient at a Huntmgton children VISited the Joe Carseys clowns, moves into the very posh Plaza Persian for issuance next year when everyone will be Neai.G
2 46 2
Room next April .. Film sexpot Sue J.,yon and politics-happy Or crazy.
Davis. Gall
2 21 0
Hospital, returned home Sunday.
R.
Massey,
I
2 21 o
Friday, Nov. 5 carlos Cain IS The emergency squad took her groom, Roland Harrison, expect their first
Woody Allen's next filck, "Everythmg You Handley, A
2 18 o
helpmg his siSter care for hrrn. Charles Kmg to Veterans babym May.He's the black coach of a Pasadena Always Wanted to Know About Sex," wW be Ondera, J
2 17 c
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodin Memorial Hospital.
2 13 o
football team ... Australian Prime Minister Wm. filmed m a strange and unexpected spot: White, Gall
2
3 0
lost their trailer by frre early Guy Bolm and Dana Welsh McMahon's wife's daring slashed-ekirts and Hollywood ... Black actor Yaphet Kotto, who Saunders, G.
Buckley,
J
,
2
1 0
Sunday mornmg
were in Pomeroy on busmess consequent worldWide photo-coverage dellghts succeeded James Earl Jones in "The Great
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Clinton Gilkey of Albany recently.
( Flnalt~meiDf sea lOIII
the P.M.: "I like the shape of her legs," he ad- White Hope" (brilliantly), 18 directing his first
FRIDAY
visited h1s mother Sunday Robert Alkrre put m a septic mJred ... At Washington's Nat'! Preaa Club, he film, "Speed Umlt 85" for MGM ... Roland La
Tri·VIIIey
evening.
lank on the former Charles was mtroed as "The husband of Sonia McMahon Starza, who twice fought Rocky Marciano, weni Belpre at Warren Local
E. R. carr and Robert Alkire Wmce farm for Mr. Hill.
SVAC
and also Prime Minister of Australia"; he loved to H'wood to become an actor. Now he's a calif.
Southern at North Gallla
have been doing some work for
TerryPayneiSIUandundera 1t
Top Bdwy. show's casting problem: the construction worker.
Others
Lorenzo Davis.
Athens
at
Circleville
doctor's care
casting director must ""like" the chorus boy
Amazing: every World Series team that '
Mrs. Earl McGrath spent an Mike Epple visited Dale ~spiranfs or tller don't get the jobs. Very Gay
Gallipolis at Po•tsmoulh
to
go
to
Japan
later
lost
the
series:
contracted
Ironton at A•hland, Ky
afternoon w1th Mrs. Earl Folt. Williams recently
LiberatiOn
The
Orioles
this
year,
tlle
Dodgers
In
'56,
Giants
Portsmouth West at Jackson
Two of our young men are on
Mrs. GIOI'la Riggs sponsored
Milton Berle wants a good Bdwy. musical in '62, Cards In '68 ... Wonder If our Assistant N. Meigs at Point Pleasant
crutches. Kenneth Payne, as
at Waverly
a products party Thursday role Bdwy. actor Harold Gary was hired for Y State All's General can smg; or compose: his Greenfield
Wellston
at
Qak Hill
the result of a hunting acctdent,
Federal
Hocking
at Glouster
aiCtehrnarooln
.
M
G
th
d
some
PhWy
commercials
dl!ling
which
he
plays
name's
Irving
Berlin
Manhattan
and Raymond Cotterlll, who fell
Fort
Frye
at
es
c
ra
an
ha
ter
Ued
"Big
AI"
h
redi
ts
ts
restaurateurs aren 'I choked up about the three·
while at work at his em- children were dinner guests of a c rae ca
,
w o P c apor
Nelsonville York
results : so far Harold s batted triumphantly for day holiday weekends: too many New Yorkers Vinton County at Unloto
ployment and broke his heel the Earl McGraths Sunday.
Botll are well on the way to Sgt. Roger Alkire and wife of lour weeks, eight events; In football he even hit who didn't leave for one-day holidays now go Buffalo Putnam at Wahama
recovery.
Calflroma recently spent a the scores almost 100 pet. right ... He caUed the traveling ... The new men's hair stylist shop run FOX TRADED
CHICAGO (UP!) - The Chi·
Mr. and Mrs Robert Alkire leave here with the Felix World Series for the Pirates in seven games, and by Larry Mattllews in the Hotel Great Northern
had dinner wtth their son, Ray, Allures and the Charles Kings .. said Roberto Clemente would win the playing uses more than a&lt;:lssprs and clippers: one of the cago Bulls traded center Jim
at The Plains Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jackson award . That's far better than Las Vegas' stylists is "Utile Athens," erstwhUe belly Fox and their No. 2 draft
Mr. and Mrs. Roush of West have sold therr r.,rm to Mr. Jimm&gt; lhe Greek.
dancer m cafes here. She now has her barber'• choice Tuesday to the Cmcinna11 Royals for Norm Van Utr
VirgmJa moved into the rental Howard. •
The downtown 10 St. Marb Place 'lbealer, llcenee.
an~ the Royals' No. 3 plck.

,
~

"'

•'•

RACINE - Southern's
annual football banquet will
be held Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
_ •t lbe hlgb school In Racine.
The varsity and junior •'l!lads
wlll he honored as well as 1he
ebeerleaders.
The potluck dinner will be
prepared and served by
parents and cheerleaders.

.
:
1:1................................

-~=·~=··~:::·.:::::~:::::::;:;:::;:;:·!·! !·!•!•!•!•!•'':·~·:·

~····················,;.•.•,•,•..........: !·!·!•! !•!•! !•!•!•'•!·!·!

CHAMPS - Southern's Junior High School football

Chester

Laurel QifT

~--

WILDUFE FOOD Pim - Wood""' WUson Bron, the
West Virginia 11 Conservation Farmer for 1971" is shown at
his Letart farm m a wildlife food plot consiStmg of corn,
sorghwn, sunflowers, soybeans, buclmheat ard wllet.

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
NEEDED-A FOSTER HOME
Dear Helen and Sue
I have a father who has made a habit of throwmg my mother
out of the houseforthe past 15years Nowhe'sstartmg on me
Last night he had his worst fit ever He threw the vacuum
cleaner down the starrs and broke It He also smashed two
statuettes agamst the wall and threw the dog across two rooms,
then kicked hrrn so hard he's still at the vet's Our dog didn't do
anythmg-my father hurt hun because we love hun, and that was
a way of hurting my mother and me
Next, because I tried to protect Mom, he told me to leave and
never come beck, then pushed me outside and locked the door I
stayed at a neighbor's.
Mom won't leave hrrn because she says be's SICk and needs
her. He's well enough to keep a good JOb, but he lets out all hiS
frustrations on us The least little thing will set off a temper
tantnun that won't quit She says "Don'lf1ght beck," but when he
calls me an SOB and screams at me and beats on me, should I Just
stand there and take It- like she does '
I'm beck home now (home'-that's a laugh! ) thanks to Mom,
but if I stay here much longer I may kill my fatller Besides, he
keeps asking me to leave, even though I'm not qu!le 16.
Is there a better way of solvmg my problem-and Mom's' TEMPTED
Dear Tempted:
YOUR problem may be solved by a VISit to the Juvenile Hall
m your town, and a placement m a foster home. After all, your
fatller threw you out, and expects you to stay out. Under tllese
Circumstances I believe you can become a ward of the county.
Let's hope this opens your mother's eyes g1vmg in to a
psychopatl!Ic bully seldom helps anyone-111cludmg hrrn HELEN

Dear Tempted
Why doesn't your Mother turn the tables and throw the bum
out' Or lock the door and not let him m' If he's as bad as you say,
you need this "husband and father" like VIetnam needs another
war 1-SUE
Dear "GeneratiOn Rap"
My siSter 1sa blackmailer, too, like the one in your column not
long ago Only m a different way
She has two pictures of me. She's good at sneaking up w1tll her
camera ' One IS of me smokmg The other IS even worse : she got a
shot of my mother spanking me across her knee-With my pants
down You know what that would do for a 13-year-old guy if 1! got
shown around school
And if my mother saw proof that I smoked, I'd get It agam 1
I'm no angel I'm practically always m trouble, so I don't
want any more or I won't be able to play on the football team, plus
I'll get another sore bottom My folks use a plywood paddle and
that hurts !
So my sister demands $1 00 from my allowance every week,
and makes me do most of the chores. I also have to let her watch
HER TV programs, which aren't mme OtherwiSe, the pictures
get sllown around where they'll do the most harm.
'Ibis may sound corny, but I love my sister m spite of
everything, and I don't want to get her m trouble by !inking.
Besides, it would get me m more trouble What shall I do' -.JOEY
Dear Joey·
In most parents' books, blackmailing is a worse crime than
smoking. So why not try this: AI the dinner table, hand your sister
ber "hUBb-money," and tell her you'll get her work done first
lhlng In the morning. Naturally, your folks will be curious, but
IR'ugoffauyquestlonswith "It's justa business deal"
Later, tell Sis you'll explain the whole "busmess" if she
doesn't band over the pictures-AND THE NEGATIVES!- and
stay mum. Should she stay greedy-tell' One punishment IBn'! as
bad aunmtbl of being broke and overworked.--sUE &amp;: HELEN.
GOT A PI\OBLEM? Or A SubJect For Discuulon, Two·
Gtneration Style? Send your question to THE GENERATION
RAP, care of thla newspaper. Drrect them to eltller Sue or Helen
Bottel-« both, If you want a combination mother-daughter

-·

NATIONALLY REGISTERED
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
National Park Service an·
nounced Tuesday it had
designated tlle Mahoqing
Avenue Historical Area In
Warren as a National
Reglatered Historic l'lace.

I
BROWN BREAKS TIE
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Secrelary of State Ted W.
Brown cast the lie-breaking
vote to reqwre county-wide
registratiOn m Champaign

County

Off One Is Off One Point

squad went undefeated this season with a 7..0 record. The
team was coached by Ralph Wigal. Front row, 1-r, are Jerry
Johnson, ChriS Hill, Enc Dunning, Greg Cundiff, Kennetll
Guinther, Cork Cleek, Doug Warden, Tony Carnahan, Bryon
Robmson, Frank' Shane; second row, Steve Nease, ChriS

News Notes

News Notes

a---------

Royals Top NY; LA Five Romps
By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
You've got to take notice of
Los Angeles when tlle Lakers
hsnd one of the better tesms m
the National Basketball Associ·
alton a near-record pasting
The Lakers creamed Ph•·
!adelphia, 143-103 Wednesday
night lor the club's second worst
defeat In Its history Gail
Goodrich agam showed the way
wltll a game-high 34 pomts that
dropped the 76ers two games
beck of Boston m tlle Atlantic
DiVISIOn
Boston routed Houston, 142103, Cmc1nnati stopped New
York, 99-85, Milwaukee beat
Atlanta, 116-110, DetrOit smotll·
ered Portland, 139-122, and
aucago natled Baltimore, I~
106
Philadelphia, suffenng 1ts
worst loss smce the 43-pomt
setback by San FranciSCO tn
1961, was out of the game
almost from the opemug tapoff
The Lakers rolled up a 39-20
first quarter margm and were
in front, 72-15 at halftime
Happy HalfSton netted 21 pomts
and Jerry West added 20 The
Lakers received strong bench
support from Flynn Robmson 's
18 pomts. Hal Greer and Dave
Who! shared Philadelphia scor.
mg honors w•th 16 pomts each
Dave Cowens scored 29 pomts
and John Havlicek tallied 28 m
lhree periods as Boston handed

!Voice along Broadway i

1•

"Blondes have
more fun,
don't they?"
Our fun ts to see fhe smiles
of sattsfled custome rs
when we arnve with 011
deliveries You can add to
our fun by phoning R1zer
011 , 992 2101. for your
healing all

Houston Its 13th loss m 15 • th!lfl spun away With a 29-19
games A merciful coach Tom tl!Jrd quarter. Nate Archbald
Hemsohn benched his one-two scored 22 pomts for the Royals.
scormg punching m tlle fourth New York's startmg guards,
quarter after the Celtlcs Walt FriiZier and D1ck Barnett
wrapped up the game with a 43- each had 15 pomts
pomt third period Elvm Hayes
Milwaukee, preparmg for
led the Rockets with 30 pomts another runaway season, raiSed
Willis Reed played 12 mmutes Its record to 14-1 as Kareem
for New York, his first game Jabber netted 33 pomts AUansmce Oct :!8, but tlle Knick ta, led by Lou Hudson's 39
center's presence failed to pomts, held a ftve-pomt lead
generate any spark m the with nme rrunutes remallling,
lifeless defending Atlantic D1vi- but couldn't mamtam the pace
swn champwns who now have as It lost Its fifth straight game.
lost etght of 14 games an.
Detroit made Earl Uoyd's
cmnati allowed New York a 42- coachmg debut a wlnnmg one
all mtermiSSJon deadlock and by beatmg Portland The

Ma u·d
~lJ

e~s

By KEITH WISECUP
The Me1gs Marauders will be
attemptmg to come home with
thm f ~r st wm over the Pt
Pleasant Btg Blacks m three
t1 1es Lh1s Fnda) mght on th~
Wesl Vtrgtmans home fteld.
Coae h D1ck Ware 's B1g
Blacks have had a rough season
tlus year , but a wm m their
fmale this week would enlive n
Lhm post.season doldrums JUSt
a little Their reeord IS a not.toogreat 2·7, the wms commg over
Milton, 21).)4, and Ripley, 27·17
Meanwhile, back at Me1gs,
Coach Charley Chancey 's · Big
Maroon" are enJoymg a great
season, displa)mg a surpnsmg
7·2 slate This also will be the
Marauders' fmale
Metgs has never beaten Pt
Pleasant m their two previous
years of competition In 1968,
the B1g Blacks brmsed the
Marauders on U1e1r own field,
u.s, and the No 3 ranked
"AAA" Blacks 10 West V~rgmia
topped the 1969 Marauders, 2312, puihng awa) m the second
half The teams dtd not play last
year
In the Southeastern OhiO
Athlehc
League's
!mal
slahsllcs, Metgs'
Mark
Williams flmshed fourth m
rushmg with 463 yards The
Rutland-prnducl also was third
m sconng Andy Vaughan,
Meigs' answer to y A Title,
completed the season 10 lith
place on the scormg hst. Tmy
W1ihams , the Marauders '
fullback, was m the top 10 m
scoriOg most of the year, but
was InJured m the latter half of
the season, droppmg hun out of
the race
In other slattstlcs, Jeff Morns
flmshed Sixth m receptions with
14, Chuck Faulk was f1flth m
punt returns w1th 60 yards, and
RICk Ash was lied for third m
the league m InterceptiOns wtth

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Both
Warren Hardmg and Cmcmnatt
Moeller, the Nos I and 2 teams
10 the Umted Press lnternahonal Ohio High School Board of
Coaches' Class AAA football rat.
10gs fell from their top spots
m the latest Ohio High School
Athletic AssociatiOn computer
ratings
Hardmg, despite bemg 61)..()
w10ner over Cmcmnah Taft Fn·
day mght, was replaced by Par·
rna Semor 1n Regwn I while
Moeller, whtch dropped a 6-3
decision to C10cmnah St Xav•er, has been diSlodged from
lhe Regwn 4 lead by unbeaten
Tro1
Akron Garfield and Upper Ar·
hngton held to the No I POSI·
!tons m regtons 3 and 2 m the
next to last computer ratmgs
JJst
_ _
The lop 10 learns &gt;n each of
the 12 reg1ons are
Class AAA
Roglon 1
1 'Parma Senior, 2 Warren
Hardmg . 3 Men!or; 4 Lake
wood St Edward, 5 Elyria . 6

three

Warren Western Reserve , 7

f.eld and on the hne Metgs, wtth
the help of beefy 264 lb Randy
Faulk, will average 184 ibs per
man from end lo end on offense
The Blacks wtll counter wtth a
l6tl lbs per man
In the backfield, Metgs Will
sp01 t a 155lbs per man group of
runners while Pt Pleasant will
have a small 145 lbs per man
backf1eld
The Big Blacks, however.
should have somethmg m store
for the future The) wtll starl an
ali·Jumor' ' tla~kf•eld w11h two

••

Et~stern
'

·fjH$tOnt

7T~m-~~
WIN'l'EBl'BEADS

RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES

ANY SIZE

Pistons' victory came after the
Blazers took a 33-31 first Los Angeles al Buffalo
quarter lead. Junmy Walker Vancouver at Phtladelphta
IOnly games scheduled)
sparked the Detrmt comeback
as he scored 31 points. Rookie
Sidney Wicks matched that PATRICK'S NEW JOB
NEW YORK IUPI) - Murra)
total for Portland.
"Muzz'' PatrJCk, a former New
Bal ltmore fell a game back of York Ranger hockey star, was
Central DivJSlon.Jeading Cln· named today managmg director
cinnatl m tlle lopSided loss to of the New York Chiefs Roller
Chicago. Jerry Sloan paced the Derb) Franchise Patrtck Is a
winning Bulls with a season vtce president of Madison
high 35 pomls, Including 14 m Square Garden Center
tlle secoll!l period when Chicago
The Chiefs, formed for the
broke open tlle game. Archie 197!.72 season, defeated the
Clark led Baltimore With Z3 Red Devils, 31·30 1n therr Oct
points.
31 home opener

jumors and a sophomore on the Is disregarded and the next step
offensive lme The) have only on the ladder ts third place Th1s
lwo JUniors on their defensive Is where Meigs has to he If
untt, however
Meigs was counted as the
second
place team, ever} team
There has been a good
natured tongue-In-check hassle m the league would also be
recent!) on the positiOn that the moved up one place This would
Marauders placed m the !mal make Wellson, with an ().7 slate,
league standmgs With two m seventh place out of eight
teams havmg better records, teams
Ironton and Athens, Meigs
would have to be third place
So Metgs, no matter how you
team
look at it, IS the thtrd place
' When the two top teams have team, somethmg the) should be
6'1 records, th~ :;econd pos11Lon vef) proud of

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Wheel Alignment &amp; Wheel Balance Your "Complete" Ttre Dealer!

'

PomiiiiJ, 0.

'IS 21 over VirgmJa Teci
Three of the four teams lied
for 15th rank as sobd favorites
Texas IS 21 over Texas ChrisUan
m a key Southwest Conference
game, North Carolina IS 14 over
Vrrgm1a and Michigan State IS
14 over Minnesota. , Southern
catiforma IS a threeiJOml underdog to Washington
Florida State IS a threeiJOmt
underdog
to GeorgJa Tech whil,e
(Fia )
Penn State 17) Is 30 over Ohio State, also ranked 19th, 18
Nortll Carolma State, Notre seven over Northwestern
Dame (8) IS Z8 over Tulane,
ABA Slandmgs
AriZona State (9) IS a big chmce
By Un.ted Press International
agamst Wyommg and lOth·
East
ranked Stanford Is 'tl over san
W L Pet GB
V1rg nta
10 4 714
Jose State
Kentucky
10 4 714
Colorado (II) IS 14 over Flor1d1ans
775003
Oklahoma State and 12th. P1 llsburgh
7 8 467
31/ 2
1/ 2
6
7
462
3
New
York
ranked Tennessee 1s tdle
112
Car alma
3
9
250
5
Toledo, with the nation's longest
West
wmmng streak, 1s a big choice
W L Pel GB
9 6 600
over Marshall and Houston ( 14) Ulah
No 5 team in the nauon and
howl representatives will be
watching thiS one closely
Elsewhere, all of the remain·
ing top 10 teams are heavy
favorites No I Nebraska IS a
33-pomt chmce over Kansas
State while Oklahoma IS 30 over
Kansas Third ranked Michigan
IS 17 over Purdue and No 4
Alabama IS 24 over MJamt

Weal Bowling
Mormng Glones League

While tlle Georgia defense
will get the stiffest test, the
Bulldog offense may do some
testmg of Its own Georgia, led
by sophomore quarterback
Andy Johnson and replacement
James Ray m the last two
games, has averaged JUS! short
of 34 pomts a game Auburn
scouts rate Robert Honeycutt,
Jrrnmy Poulos and Ricky Lake
as the best trw of runmng backs
they've faced this season
Georgia (No 6) IS a three
pomt favorite over Auburn, the

November 2, 1971
Excels1or Oil Co
Spencer's Ma rkel

VIew, 9

lisle

Dallas

lnd1ana

B
6

6

571

Denver

4

7

1

Memphos

5 9 357

a

429
64

Kenlucky 115 Dallas 69
Ulah 127 New York 110
Pis !Only games scheduled)
43
Thursday's Games
40 Carolma at P1tlsburgh

Newe ll Sunoco
G1bbs Grocery

38
33

G&amp;J Aulo PariS

32

Dom1ga n Soh10

30

H1gh Team 3 games - G&amp;J

Utah at Denver

(On ly games scheduled)
AHL Standmgs

By Un1ted Press International

East

Auto Pari s 2144, Dom1gan Soh 1o

2107, Newell Sunoco 2074
Team H19h Game - Newell

Sunoco 769 Excels1or Oil Co
145 G&amp;J Auto Parts 736

W L T Pis

Boston
Spnngt1eld
Nova Scot 1a
Prov1dence

Hogh lnd 3 Games - Mary
Gillilan 41 3, Margaret Foilrod Rochester
407, Sandy Korn 403
H1gh lnd Game ~ Mary
Gillilan 176, Sandy Korn 166, Hershey

1

7

2

5

5
8
7

"

L

Cleveland

9
6

6

3

5 17

R1chmond

4
3

5
9

2 10
4 10

Ball1more

Tidewater

T. Pis
1 2 20

4 4 12

2 12

Thursday 's Games

(No games scheculedl

Meigs Starting Lineup
OFI=ENSE
E Jeff Morns

T Fred Lee
G Roger D1xon

c

Ed Young

G Tee Lehew

Randy Faulk
E 8111 Chaney

T

WT
190
205
155
15.1
160
250
170

or Larry Harmon 187

QB Andy Vaughan
WB Ron Smolh
TB Mark Williams
FB K Van ln waqen

175
150
150
146

DEFENSE
YR
E Jeff Morri S
12
T F red Lee
12 MG John Thomas
12
T Jon Grueser
12
E Larry Harmon
12
or B1il Chaney
9 LB Dallas Weber
11 LB Ted Lehew
12 CB Ron Sm1th
11 CB K Van ln wagen
12 DB Chuck Faulk
12 DB RICk Ash
12

190
205
155
199
187
170
174
160
150
146
160
146

12
12
12
12
12
11

11
12
12
12
11
12

OFFENSE

LE
LT
RT
RE
LB
LB
LB

DEFENSE
SteveMartm
Terry Tyree
Clem Long
Buddy Collen II
Frank Dol ollie
Wayne Sanders
Terry Rollins

FOR'72 .........

Make 49 payments, SOc
155 . 12
200 12
230 12
170 12
148 11
175 11
155 12

LB

Donn1e McDe rmott

HB

Steve Thomas

HB Chuck Adk1ns
S Rody Harden

11111
I

Point Starting Lineup

160
128

147
143

to $10.00 and we make
the

50TH

Meigs Co. Branch

12
12
12
12
The Athens County

LURTSEMA ON WAIVERS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
New York Gmnls placed
defensive tackle Bob Lurtsema
on watvers Wednesday and are
expected to fill the roster
vacanc) b) acbvatmg e11her
Dave Ttpton or Vernon Vano)
from the taxi squad

Savmgs &amp; loan Co

296 Second St
Pomeroy, Oh10

Member Federal Home Loan

Bank

IVIember Federal Sav1ngs &amp;

Loan Insurance Corp All
accounts Insured up to
$20,000 00

SWEATERS
NOW IN AWONDERFUL SELECTION

Hey, Gangl
SEE YOU AT
SONNY'S
KARLYN

This Week's Special

~

Ulatflldut
,.

::~:~~-----~~19~

Coirm

•Brown/Comh •Nat'JIC omh

FASHION COLLAR INDUSTRIAL ZIPPER
PLACKET Full FashiOned Throughout
Gcometnc Jacquard Pattern. Completely
Washable. 100% V~rgm Wmtuk Orion Acrylic

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY
NOVEMBER 13·14

Shop or Field
Ph. 9f2·2511

KERM'S KORNER
.

. ....··.·.·.·.. ··.·:·.·.··:·:-.:····.· ..·. ··.· ·.·.

.: .·.·..·.

New York Cothing House
4th &amp; Locust

1

992·5241

Middleport, 0.

5

Wednesday's Results
Cmc1nnat1 4 Rochester 4 {tie)
Hershey 2 Baltimore 2 {t1e)
Ttdewater 1 Cleveland 0
Providence 2 Rtchmond 2 (tie)

Class A

Portable Equipment

21
16
13
13
13

(On ly games scheduled)

Reg1on 9

CERTIFIED WELDER

1
2
3
5
3

5
West
W

Ctncmnat 1

Dor1s Grueser 162

10

Mariemont , 10 Car

1 LoramCalhol&gt;c , 2 Keystone
3 Smithville, 4 Smithfield, S
Mineral Ridge , 6 McDonald , 7
Fa&gt;rporl Harbor , 8 Leetonia ;
9 K&gt;rlland, 10 Lisbon.
Region 10
1 Marion Pleasant , 2 Ada ,
3 Manon Calhollc, 4 Cory .
Rawson, 5 Monroeville, 6.
Monlpeller , 1. Norwalk St Paul.
8 Fostoria St Wendel in, 9 u.
berty Center. 10 Lucas
Reg1on 11
1 Crooksville. 2. Newark Ca.
lhol!c, 3. Zanesville Rosecrans ,

3'12

Wednesday 's Results
lnd1ana 154 P11tsburgh 125
V1rg1n1a 119 Flond1ans 116

POMEROY LANES

viCtories

WT YR
LE Jay W1seman
154 12
LT Terry Tyree
200 12
LG Barry Redman
160 10
c Buddy Collen II 170 12
RG Terry Rollms
155 12
RT Bill S1lver
1\&gt;Q 11
RE Dave Stncklen
147 11
QB Gene Pickens
151 l1
RH Sieve M&gt;lier
147
11
4 Toledo Wa1te , 5 Columbus 4 Ironton St Joseph , 5 Tus FB Steve Evan s
155 11
Linden, 6 Oregon Clay 7 Bow ca rawas Cathol1c, 6 Tuscara LH Bill Vance
125 11
lmg Green, B Wor thmgton, 9 was Valley , 7 M11iersporl , 8
Columbus Eastmoor 10 Colum
Sc1o Jewett , 9 Eastern ( Me&gt;gs I
bus Northland
10 Amanda Clearcreek
Reg1on 3
Reg1on 12
1 Akron Garfield 2 Lancas
1 Middletown Fenwick 2
ter 3 Massillon , 4 Youngs
NBA Standmgs
West Jefferson , 3 Covmgton, 4
By Umted Press International
town M ooney , 5 Wal sh Jesu1 f, Porlsmoulh Noire Dame 5 Jo
6 Lou1svdle , 7. Zanesville, 8 nathan Alder, 6 Southeastern
Eastern Conference
Newark , 9 Barberton , 10 Can (Clark) 1 Manon Local , 8 Ce
Atlanttc OtVISIOn
ton Central Catholic
W L Pet GB
darvllle , 9 Portsmouth East.
Reg1on 4
Boston
10 2 833
10 Canal Wmchester
Philadelphia 8 4 667 2
1 Tr oy, 2 Cmcmnat1 Moe I
ler 3 Cmcmnal1 St Xav1er , 4
New York
6 8 429 5
Pnnceton , 5 Cincinnati Roger SCOUTS EYEING 5 GAMES Buffalo
6 8 429 5
Bacon, 6 Kettermg Fairmont
Central
DIVISIOn
East, 7 Keltenng Fa&gt;rmont JACKSONVILLE, Fla (UP!)
W L. Pet GB
4 7 364
West . 8 Dayton Carroll. 9 Ket - Ftve games Saturda} wtll Cmcmnat1
tenng Aller. 10 Cmcmnal1 El attract attention from Gator Balllmore
4 9 308 1
der
3 9 250 1112
Bowl scouts They mclude Penn Cleveland
Atlanta
3 10 231 2
Class AA
St-North carolina St, Auburn·
Reg1on s
Western Conference
1 Cleveland Holy Name. 2 Georgta, Notre Dame-Tulane,
Mtdwest D•vtston
Campbell Memorial, 3 Warren Oklahoma-Kansas and Flonda
W L Pet GB
Kennedy. 4 Cloverleaf, Chag.
Milwaukee
12 1 923
Choca9o
8 S 615 4
nn Falls , 6 Youngstown North, St -Georgia Tech
1 Poland . 8 Ashlabula Har .
Detr01l
7 6 538 s
bor. 9 (t&gt;e) Elyria Catholic and
Phoen&gt; x
S 7 417 61f2
Card mal
PacifiC DIVISIOn
FIGHT POSTPONED
Reg1on 6
W L Pet GB
NEW YORK (UP!) -A Los Angeles l1 3 786
1 Oregon Cardmal Stntch, 2
Columbus Watterson . 3 St scheduled !().round fight be· Golden State 10 4 714 1
Marys Memorial, 4 Napoleon ,
Seal lie
8 4 667 2
2 9 182 71f2
5 Fostona , 6 Vermilion , 7 Co- tween former heavyweight Portland
lumbus Wohrle , 8 G&gt;bsonburg , champiOn Floyd Patterson and Houston
2 13 133 91f2
Wednesday's Results
9 Columbus Mohawk, 10 (l&gt;e) Oscar Bonavena at Madison
Bexley and Fremont St Joseph Square Garden, Dec 7, was Chicago 125 Balt1more 106
Reg1on 7
Cincmna11 99 New York 85
1 Sleubenvdle Cenlral Catho postponed Wednesday because Oelro1t 139 Porlland 122
l1 c, 2 Ironton. 3 New Lexmg of a pmky mjury suffered by Los Angeles 143 Philadelphia
ton, 4 River View , 5 New Con
103
cord Glenn. 6 Hartville Lake , Bonavena In a trammg mishap Boston 142 Houston 103
7 Minerva, 8. Barnesv&gt;iie, 9
M&gt;lwaukee 116 Allanfa 110
Carrollton, 10 Tn Valley
IOilly games scheduled)
Q- What type of boat IS a
Reg1on 8
Thursday's Games
Golden Slate at New York
1 Dayton Jefferson , 2 Spring catamaran?
A- It IS a sailboat w1th Cleveland at Sealtle
f&gt;eld Shawnee, 3 M&gt;ilon.Unlon
twm
hulls side by s1de
(Oilly games scheduled)
4 Made&gt;ra , 5 Graham, 6 Love
land , 1 Greenon, 8 Valley

Pbla 37¢ to 68e per lire Fed Ex tax

I

Ch1cago 3 Boston 1
Detrotl 2 Mmnesola 1

Ptltsburgh 3 Vancouver 1
Thursdayls Games
Callfornta at Boston

and 2 tire&amp; of !&amp;me 11ze off your car

Phone 992·2094

New York 7 Los Angeles 1

Ninth In Region
II; Ironton Second In 7

Get in on our pre-season winter RETREAD offer!

606 t Mlin

Montreal 5 Toronto 2

By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Test time will come a little
early tll!S year at the Umvers1ty
of Georgia.
Georgia's defense, one of the
best m the nation, will gel Its
stiffest test saturday when the
Bulldogs play host to Auburn
and Pat Sullivan m a hattie of
unbeatens
Sullivan, one of the country's
top college quarterbacks, ranks
thrrd nationally m passmg and
IS fifth m total offense. He's
completed better than 58 per
cent of his passes thiS season
and has tllrown 16 touchdown
passes, nme to Terry Beasley,
the Tigers' outstanding flanker
"To beat Auburn we must
contam Pat Sullivan," says
GeorgJa Coach Vmce Dooley,
and his club has all the
credentials Smce a 56-25
openmg game victory over
Oregon State, the Bulldogs have
logged four shutouts and have
perrmtted only one touchdown
m each of therr other four

Take on Underdog Point

Gettmg back to Fnday •s Mayfield , 8 Eastlake North , 9
Garfield Helghls , 10 N1les Me
game, the Btg Blac ks w1 11 be Kmley
heavtly outweighed by the
Reg1on 2
1
Upper
Arlmglon,
2 Toledo
Meigs eleven, both m the back·
Woodward , 3 Spnngf&gt;eid South,

'

•

Forbes, Joe Brown, Tim Jenkins, J F Young, Brady Huffman, Rick Findley, Jrrnmy Riffle, Jrrn Cundiff, Greg DaVIS,
third row, Keith Crrcle, Greg Dunmng, Greg Johnson, Jeff
Knighting, Danny Brown, Paul Schultz, Ronme Johnson,
Steve Boso, Tim Curfman, Mike Roberts and Coach Wigal

NHL Standings
By Un1ted Press International·
East
W L T. Pis
New York
10 1 4 24
10 2 2 22
Montreal
Boston
8 5 1 17
Toronto
4 6 s 13
Vancouver
5 9 2 12
4 7 4 12
Bulfalo
De troll
4 10
2 10
West
WLTP!s
ChiCago
12 4 0 24
Mmnesota
10 J 2 22
P1llsburgh
7 8 2 16
Cal1forn1a
5 6 3 13
Ph&gt;ladelph&gt;a
5 7 1 11
Sl LouiS
3 10 1 7
Los Angeles
2 11 1 5
Wednesday's Results

Unbeatens Clash

POMEROY, OHIO

�..
',M" F mt-."''awoy,O.,Nov.l1,1171
j f

--.

County Farmer Gets
Conservation Honor

1be DHJ Sentinel .
DEVOTIDTOTHE

1

LNnRESTOF
ME105·MA50N ARI!A
'
CHESTER 1.&lt; TANNIHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROB&amp;RT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
,

nr: u "

1

rwr ::

I

SEOAL Standings

1971 SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHI,ETIC
LEAGUE STATISTICS
(Includes t~mH through Nov. 61
OVERALL SCORING
Publtshed datly e&gt;ecept
NAME,
TEAM
TO PAT PI&amp;. (Gl Avg.
Saturday by The Ohto Valley
(8) 16 s
18 24 132
• PubliShing Company, 111 Pete Neal, Galllpoll•
(9)
Court Sf , Pomeroy , Ohio, ' Rick Sanders, Eastern
13 10 88
98
(9)
.45769 Business Office Phone Mark Williams, Meigs
10 14
74
82
Editorial Phono 992 Brian Davidson, Logan
(9)
8 20
68
16
A Mason Counzy dairyman ·is leadership in promoting con.
Last year, the corn crop was 9922156,
2157
(5)
Rick
Krebs
6
2
38
16
1 Logan
Second class postage Pl•d at Ken Valentine, Jackson
West Virginia's "Conservation servation and understanding of sod.seeded in a tleld ol orchard
(6)
7 2 «
13
1 Pomeroy , Oh tO
Farmer for 1971" 11 was the Soil Conservation program. grass.
(9)
It Is harvested by
Rick
Boykln,
Ironton
11
0
66
73
Nattonal advertising
(9)
61
;
Bob
Smith,
Ironton
10
o
60
lormally amoonced at Jack. The Conservation Farmer fi. mechanical cutting and hauling. reprtsentatlve Bottlnelll
(9)
Ken Culbertson, Logan
9 4 58
64
Gall.lgher, Inc, 12 East .42nd
son's Mill Wednesday night at rst must win the coont;y compe. Fertilization Is CClllductedonre- St,
(9)
New York City, New York
Phil Hollanbaugh, N Galila
9 4 58
64
Subscription rates
Oe
the 30th annual meeting ol the tition, which makes him eligible commendation from soli tests,
SEOAL SCORING
II vend by clrr ier where
NAME, TEAM
TO PAT Pis (G) Avg.
West Virginia Soli and Water for district honors. Once the in consultation with Soli Conser_ 1 ava
llttble SO cents per week . Pete Neal, Gallipolis
16) 17 3
14
20 104
Conservation District Supetv1. 14 district winners are chosen, vatlon Service Specialists.
Bv Motor Roule where carrier Rick Boykln, Ironton
(7)
9 o 54
17
•
service
not
available
One
l'llrpose ol the Conservation month Sl 75 By mall m Ohto Mark Williams, Meigs
sors Association
five JUdgeS toor the farms and
(7)
7 12
54
17
(71
Farmer contest is toencoura~ and W Va , One year SU 00
Brian Davidson, Logan
6 14 50
71
As state winners, Woodrow make the final selection.
(7)
'S
u(
months
S7
25
Three
Ken
Culbertson,
Logan
7
4
46
66
Wilson Brown and his wife of
The Browns represent the more !armors In West VIrginia months $-4 SO Subscr.plton
(7)
Bob SmIth. Ironton
7 o 42
60
Letart, near l'llint Pleasant, Western Soli Conservatloo Dis. to preserve natural resources prtce mcludes Sunday Ttmes
{1J
Chns
Onder
a,
Jackson
6
0
36
s1
{4)
earned an all-expense paid trip trict, made up of Jackson, Mil. by adopting soond soil, water, Sent mel
Ken Valentine, Jackson
3 2 20
so
Jim Payne, Ironton
s 0 30 (7) 4J
forest and wildlife cooserva.
to tlle annual meeting of the son and l'lllnam Coontles.
(7)
Dan
Sellles,
Wellston
4 o 24
34
National Association of Soil
George Sharpe, State Exten. tion programs.
(7)
Andy Vaughan, Meigs
4 0 24
34
Conservahon Distncts m s1on Soil Conservation Specia.
(7)
Mike Green, Alllflns
4 0 24
34
(7)
Don Wood, Athens
4 0 24
34
Washington , D C m February list with the West Virginia !Jni.
SVAC
SCORING
They also received engraved vers1ty Appalachian Center aod
NAME, TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (Gl Avg.
Wrist watches, a plaque and one of the JUdges, said the
(51
Rick Sanders. Eastern
7 6 48
96
(4)
Harver
Brown,
North
Gall1a
s
0
30
1
s
recogmt10n m the hall offame m B~own rarm is a remarkable
Attendance at Nazarene Lou1e ouden, Kyger Creek
(3)
3
0
18
6
0
the Mount Vernon dinmg room example a[ conservation
at
Sunday School Nov. 7 was 66. Mike Nease, Southern
(4)
3
4 22
55
at Jackson's Mill
work
(4)
Jackie Smith, North Galila
3 2 20
Collection was $140.
50
(5)
Second.place
was flas
It IS markedbyexcellentstrlp
4 0 24
48
BY BERTHA PARKER
Mrs. Ray Thomas spent Bob Caldwell. Eastern
(S)
4 o 24
48
kell Campbell of Union, In the cropping, lertiilzation pro. Sabbath School attendance Fnday afternoon w1tll Mrs. Ralph Parker, Eastern
(5)
Randy Bormg, Eastern
4 0 24
48
Greenbner Valley Soil Conser grams, dramage systems and Nov 7 at the Free Metllod!St Harry Lodwick, Sr.
(4)
N1ck Ihie, Southern
3 0
18
45
vacatiOn DIStrict, while third· overall stewardship of land and Church was 125 Offermg for the
Phil
Hollanbaugh,
N
Gail&gt;a
2
4
16
40
I
41
Michael King and girl friend Jim Amsbary, Eastern
(S)
3 2 20
40
place went to George Ringer of ammals, Mr Sharpe said.
day was $149 85
of Columbus spent Sunday w1tll
TRI·VALLEY
CONFERENCE
Terra Alta, m the Monongahela
The farm encompasses 283
Rev Eugene Gill attended au his grandmother, Mrs. GeorgJa NAME, TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (Gl Avg
SCD
acres, mcluding 100 acres of area mm1sters meetmg m Thoma
(3) 8 7
Denny Morrow. Warren Local
4 2 26
(4)
Dan Dishong, Nels York
5 0 30
75
The Campbells earn an ex. cropland. There are 30 to 35 Zanesville Tuesd~y
Mr. and Mrs Roy EISel of Greg Kirk, Belpre
(3
)
3
2
20
7
6
pense.pa1d tnp next August to acres m corn, With the remam. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl, Logan, W. Va spent the week Greg Smathers, Nets York
(4)
4 0 24
60
the annual area meeting of the der m small gram and hay. Stockdale, VISited recently Willi With Wilbur Dean and the Earl Jerry Meeley, Belpre
2 4 16
(31
53
(4) 5 3x
Bill Woodson, Nels York
1 12 21
National Association of Soil
Mr. Brown mamtains a dairy Mr and Mrs. Norman Schaefer. Dean fallllly.
(3)
Jeff Bradford, Warren Local
2 2 14
47
Conservation DIStricts in New herd of 71 Holstems, Which
Mr and Mrs. Harmon Fox
Elizabeth Wickham spent a Bob Linch, Belpre
2 2 14
(3)
47
England, and a second.place produce a yearly average of and Mrs Fran Cline spent the few days wltll her daughter,
Five tied for ninth w&gt;lh 3 0 averages
plaque; the Ringer's get a $100 14,218 pounds or milk per cow. weekend w1th Mrs. Irene Enna Heilman
OVERALL STANDINGS
U.S, Savings Bond and a third. With replacement heifers and Countryman, Frankfort
Mrs Harry Lodwick, Sr TEAM
W L T POP Federal Hockmg 1 3 0 28 94
place plaque.
Holstem bull calves, the farm
9 0 0 346 18
Mr and Mrs Gene Alkire, spent Sunday afternoon witll Eastern
0 4 0 38 153
Wahama
6 1 2 174 64 Vinton Co
Mr. Brown IS the 18th farm. carries 114 animals.
Ktmberlee
and
Kevm, her son, Harry, and farmly
OFFENSIVELY
Ironton
8 1 0 273 80 TEAM
er to wm the IItle smce the
Helpmg with the chores are Columbus, spent tlle weekend
Pis (G) Avg
carol Pooler has been on the Athens
8 1 0 209 91 Eastern
346
(9) 38 4
contest was organized In !954. Mr Brown's wife and son Ro. with Mrs. Allure's mother, Mrs SICk list
Meigs
1 2 o 184 115
Ironton
273
(91 30 3
Last year's winner was Dale bort (Butch) a graduate of Mar. Bertha Parker, and Mr. and
6 3 0 213 133 Nels York
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma and Gallipolis
253
(9)
2S 1
Nels York
s 4 0 253 138 Jackson
Guthrie In Monongalia County. shall Universlzy with a degree Mrs Thomas Gene Parker.
221
191
24
6
family of Pomeroy called on hiS Logan
s 4 o 216 158 Logan
Winners are selected for (!) in busmess admmistration.
216
(9)
24
0
5 4 0 204 104 Gallipolis
Mr and Mrs William Perry, mother, Mrs Georgie Thoma North Galli a
213
191
23
7
proper land use..Iarmmg m "Butch has a real love and
S 4 0 154 185
Athens, VISited Sunday With
Mrs Edith King has been Alexander
Athens
209
(9)
23
2
Kyger Creek
4 4 1 127 207 Wahama
accordance Wit! the capabihzy feel for the land and cows, Mr.
174 (B) 21 8
Mrs Perry's parents, Mr. and spendmg the past ten days w1th Jackson
4 s 0 221 166 Meigs
of the soiJ according to soil Brown beams, "and he's using
184 (9) 20 4
3 4 2 131 107 Alexander
Mrs Norman Schaefer
her daughter, EloiSe at East Miller
154 (9) 171
survey and land capabiii(y h•s education nght here ( on
Southern
3 S 0 18 155 Miller
Liverpool.
Mrs
Allen
EIChinger
was
131 (9) 14 6
maps, (2) establishment of soil the farm).''
PI Pleasant
2 1 0 61 181 Kyger Creek
127
(9) 14 1
hostess Thursday everung to the
Mr
and
Mrs.
Willard
Heines,
Federal Hock&gt;ng 2 1 0 S6 216 Wellston
and water conservationpractic.
The Brown's other children-124
(9) 13 8
I 7 0 44 311 Vinton Co
Laurel Clilf Health Club Mrs. Athens Rd., spent Thursday GlOtJster
108
(9) 12 0
es m accordance with the !arm two boys and a g~rl..l!avemarr­
Woliston
t 8 0 124 279
Max
Eichmger
and
Mrs.
Paul
evening
wltll
lier
parents,
Mr.
Southern
78
(8) 9 8
plan drawn up by the So1l Con ied and chosen other occupa.
Waverly
1 8 0 63 203 PI Pleasant
67
191
74
Eichinger were c&lt;&gt;-hostesses. and Mrs. Charley Woodie
Vinton Co
0 9 0 108 359 Waverly
servatlon Service; (3) mamten. lions.
63
191
70
SEOAL STANDINGS
Mrs Ellen Thoma and
snce of practices established, Since 1966 the Browns have Thirteen members were
Fed.Hock&gt;ng
56 (9) 6 2
(FINAL)
44 181 5 5
mcludlng care and use or d1. installed about hslf.a.mlle or present The birthdays of Mrs. children called on Mrs. Georg1e TEAM
W L T POP Glouster
Thoma.
Clarence
Curtis,
Mrs.
Carmon
North
Gall
Ia
204
191 22 7
Ironton
6 1 0 206 64
version ditches, ponds, outlets, drain tile and constructed a
DEFENSIVELY
Robert Wood and Lenore Athens
6 1 0 143 48
drainage ditche, contour strlpp. diversion ditch to protect the Evans, Mrs Georgia Diehl
Pis. (Gl Avg
Meigs
S 2 0 132 95 TEAM
were
observed.
Birtllday
cake
Betzing
haave
had
vinyl
siding
Eastern
18 (9) 2 0
ing, and other factors and (4) crops
Gallipolis
4 3 0 151 101
and Ice cream were served.
on their houses.
Wahama
64
181 8 o
Logan
4 3 0 136 117
Ironton
80
19)
89
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burton Jackson
2 5 0 112 166 Athens
91
(9)
10
1
Waverly
1
6
0
49
139
WIN AT BRIDGE
REVIVAL SET
spent Sunday and Monday In
North
Gallla
104
(91
11
6
Wellston
0 7 0 72 261 Miller
107 191 11 9
Doc and Garnet Sexton of Reynoldsburg and Columbus.
SVAC STANDINGS
Meigs
115
191 12 8
TEAM
W L T POP
Ashland, Ky., will conduct
GallipoliS
133
191 14 8
Eastern
s 0 o 203 6 Nels York
weekend service at Syracuse
13S
191 15 3
Kyger Creek
4 1 0 95 80
Nazarene
Cl!urch
Friday
and
~an
158
l9j 11 6
to
make
mne
tncks
Without
North Gall Ia
2 2 0 84 34
You 'II
NORTH (D)
II
Jackson
166
1
9 18 4
havmg
to
Jose
the
lead
but
Sunday Services nightly at 7:30
Southern
2 2 0 58 85 Southern
.J 3
ISS
181
19 4
tract It down
Southwestern
1 4 0 38 123 PI Pleasant
decided to settle for down p.m. and Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
•108
181
191
20
1
Hannan Trace
0 5 0 6 156 Alexander
one Therefore she knocked The Sextons are evangellats and
t AKIO
185
(9)
20
6
11uch faster
TRIVALLEY
out the ace of clubs and went will conduct tlle services and
203 (9) 22 6
• KQ 1095 4
TEAM
W L T POP Waverly
down one as expected
Kyger
Creek
(91 23 0
with
a
WEST
EAST
Bel
pro
3 0 0 85 38 Federal Hocking 207
will also be featured in vocal
216
(91 24 0
Thts result was one pomt
Warren Local
.A7542
.K96
300 84 7 Wellston
rmmbers.
The
public
is
cor279
(9)
31 0
WANT
AD
Nels York
2209942 Glouster
from top Three no·trump
.Q64
.7532
311 (8) 38 9
dially
invited
to
attend.
t652
tQ4J
was played at every table
VInton Co
359 9) 39 9
.7 3
ofoA62
and all other declarers ex·
FINAL
SOUTH
cept one had !ned the fin. ~-----------------------------------------INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
• QI08
RUSHING
esse and gone down two
• AKJ 9
Yds C.r Avg
What happened at the ta·
• J 98 7
Neal.
Gallipolis
640 142 4,5
ble that scored top ' The
of,J8
Wood,
Athens
637 136 4 7
queen had made three no
Boykln,
lron
89 69
None vulnerable
' M Williams, M 613
trump with an overtnck I
463
123
38
West North East South
The defense had started out
Culbortson,
L
401
100
40
BY JACK O'BRIAN
lofo
Pass
PASSING
the same wav as Ahce and
HERE'S HOW TO GO
which switched from off·Bdwy plays to old
Pass 2of,
Pass 2NT
Cmp.Att lnt Yds TO
the queen had knocked out
Poss 3 N T Pass Pass
FLAT BROKE
filmUSicals, has come up w1tll a dandy duo Settlos, W 54 120 12 771 2
the
ace
of
clubs
JUSt
as
Alice
Pass
I so 80 2 845 10
had Then she had glared
NEW YORK (KFS) -Chase bank has the "Roberta" and "Show Boat" had been filed Spears,
Sm
lth,
L
42 9.1 4 679 8
Openmg lead- · 4
at East and he had Wisely late Gov Tom Dewey's Bal Harbor, Fla., fiat away for more than 30 years, never appeared on Snowden. G 33 59 3 358 3
led back a club to let the (three rooms) up for estate sale at $100,000 .
TV, MGM had remake rights but never exer· Hughes. J 29. 77 10 531 s
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby queen make her contract
PUNTING
Tno at the Stage Deily: Jack E. Leonard ... cised them . Both star Irene Dunne, both have
( 14 or more)
What a cunous duplicate
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1
Eltham, Bob Hope's English brrtllplace, 1s Kern mUSic, and both came to the screen
Yds No. Avg
game thought Alice The red
1041 26 40 0
naming a theater after Bob ... E. Humperdinck or1gmally after Bdwy. triumphs ... "Show Bo9!" MOIZer, L
queen was playmg at the
Snowden.
G
899 23 39 1
and the US mternal revenue aren't seeing eye~ parentlletically IS a London revival as smash· Ughlle, W
1092 28 38 9
next t a b I e Allee had
wallet VIctor Mature didn't make a film for successful tllere as "No, No, Nanette" Is here Ondera, J
The b1ddmg has been
953 26 36 7
heard her say, "You are
Green,
A
722 20 36 1
West
North
East
Soulh f1ve years He's m Cy Howard's "Every little
not doubling me at four
The Park-sheraton Hotel's changing Its
RECEIVING
hearts You are btddmg fiVe
I + Crook &amp; Nanny," and it's strrnulated him to stick name to theN. Y. Sheraton . As the old "Park
No Yds TO
1•
Pass
2NT
diamonds and I am doubling Pass
Payne,
I
25 392 3
Cenoral,"
It
starred
m
several
murder-headlines
Pass
:J.,.~
Pass 4 •
around. he'll do former L A. police chief Tom
~ you "
Ondera,
J
18 .ws s
~..
Pass
•
Reddin's life story if he can buy It ... 20th·Fox mcluding the sensational daytime rubout of A Stewart, W
The white rabbit who was Pass
17 323 0
You, South hold
subsidiary (Wylde Films) lined up against Anastasia while the latter was being shaved m B Davidson. L
16 343 6
Allee's partner remarked
Helber•L
14
195 1
very qmetly, " We should •AQ4 ¥K6 tAQtoss of,KI09 management In tlle recent stock battle- and the barbershop ... $6 11111lion in renovation also
Morris,
M
14
170 1
try for second The last time
What do you do now'
still are operatmg wltll tlle same dissidents maprred the name change.
KO
RETURNS
the queen lost, the director
A-B1d five diamonds. Your runmng 1t Has Wall St. and film row mystified.
Kevin Phillips' new Washington newsletter,
Yds No. TO
and the wmnmg pa1r lost partner has shown the ace of
301 18 0
Nancy Dickerson's trying desperately to get "The American Political Report," has some Stewart, W
their heads "
Smith. A
268 t1 o
clubs Your b1d shows a good
TV
1
Allee found herself play· diamond sull headed by !he ace back mto network . She was a c ose pal of good gossip : some $15,000,000 wW be spent for Meadows, J
252 11 o
242 10 o
mg three no·trump East and accepts hiS slam invilation LBJ's, which made networking easy ... Jack ads m the media lor "The Re-Selling of the Helton, w
Payne,
I
211
1 1
won the spade lead with the
TODAY'S QUESTION
Kennedy also had an an old pal the networks President" .. Also that Nixon's contribution PUNT
RETURNS
kmg and returned the nme
Your partner contmues ti&gt; never looked at until JFK was President; and not collectors are feuding with Jeremiah Milbank,
Yds. No. TD
West played low and Allee love hearts What do you do &amp;nee ... Denun now really Is as internationally
Payne, I
103 9 0
chairman
of
tlle
GOP
Nat'l
Fmance
Committee
was on lead She could try now"~
Smith, A
89 9 0
Amer~can as Coca Cola, American EIJII'eas &amp;
.... Milbank IS a Utile-known, multi-ncb New Stevenson, J
heart and diamond !messes
76 2 1
Hertz : Japan hasn't been able to duplicate the Yorker whose qwet lile style even had Fortune Gullion. W
73 9 o
Faulk.
M
60
10 ri
blue-jeans culture and has asked American Mag miSSing him as one of the richest men in
INTERCEPTION RET.
denrrn firms to jom with tl1em ... Denim even 18 America; fantastic interests ... The Dem Nat'l
No. Yds. TD
Harrisonville
proper t) of Harold Gr aham .
h K
th J
desig ed
•
6 106 1
Mrs. Mary Wright has pur- getting ~ 1c enne . Lane
n a men s Comnuttee stlll is $9,300,000 m the soup. Plans Green, A
S
Massey.
I
4 23 o
chased the home of Mr. and bluedenrrntrenchcoallinedwllhbluefoxbyBen are to help chop the deficit by cutting an LP Smith, A
Society News
3 20 o
album of broadcast speech·ncerpts by Dem Ash, M
3
2 0
Mrs. Will Clonch.
Kahn ... For stylilh ap.les:
2 53 0
Dale Williams, who has been Mrs. Paul SteJmetz and
Shecky Greene, rowdiest of the Las Vegas PreSidents from Woodrow Wilson through LBJ Par,ne, I
Va entlne, J
2 Sl o
a patient at a Huntmgton children VISited the Joe Carseys clowns, moves into the very posh Plaza Persian for issuance next year when everyone will be Neai.G
2 46 2
Room next April .. Film sexpot Sue J.,yon and politics-happy Or crazy.
Davis. Gall
2 21 0
Hospital, returned home Sunday.
R.
Massey,
I
2 21 o
Friday, Nov. 5 carlos Cain IS The emergency squad took her groom, Roland Harrison, expect their first
Woody Allen's next filck, "Everythmg You Handley, A
2 18 o
helpmg his siSter care for hrrn. Charles Kmg to Veterans babym May.He's the black coach of a Pasadena Always Wanted to Know About Sex," wW be Ondera, J
2 17 c
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodin Memorial Hospital.
2 13 o
football team ... Australian Prime Minister Wm. filmed m a strange and unexpected spot: White, Gall
2
3 0
lost their trailer by frre early Guy Bolm and Dana Welsh McMahon's wife's daring slashed-ekirts and Hollywood ... Black actor Yaphet Kotto, who Saunders, G.
Buckley,
J
,
2
1 0
Sunday mornmg
were in Pomeroy on busmess consequent worldWide photo-coverage dellghts succeeded James Earl Jones in "The Great
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Clinton Gilkey of Albany recently.
( Flnalt~meiDf sea lOIII
the P.M.: "I like the shape of her legs," he ad- White Hope" (brilliantly), 18 directing his first
FRIDAY
visited h1s mother Sunday Robert Alkrre put m a septic mJred ... At Washington's Nat'! Preaa Club, he film, "Speed Umlt 85" for MGM ... Roland La
Tri·VIIIey
evening.
lank on the former Charles was mtroed as "The husband of Sonia McMahon Starza, who twice fought Rocky Marciano, weni Belpre at Warren Local
E. R. carr and Robert Alkire Wmce farm for Mr. Hill.
SVAC
and also Prime Minister of Australia"; he loved to H'wood to become an actor. Now he's a calif.
Southern at North Gallla
have been doing some work for
TerryPayneiSIUandundera 1t
Top Bdwy. show's casting problem: the construction worker.
Others
Lorenzo Davis.
Athens
at
Circleville
doctor's care
casting director must ""like" the chorus boy
Amazing: every World Series team that '
Mrs. Earl McGrath spent an Mike Epple visited Dale ~spiranfs or tller don't get the jobs. Very Gay
Gallipolis at Po•tsmoulh
to
go
to
Japan
later
lost
the
series:
contracted
Ironton at A•hland, Ky
afternoon w1th Mrs. Earl Folt. Williams recently
LiberatiOn
The
Orioles
this
year,
tlle
Dodgers
In
'56,
Giants
Portsmouth West at Jackson
Two of our young men are on
Mrs. GIOI'la Riggs sponsored
Milton Berle wants a good Bdwy. musical in '62, Cards In '68 ... Wonder If our Assistant N. Meigs at Point Pleasant
crutches. Kenneth Payne, as
at Waverly
a products party Thursday role Bdwy. actor Harold Gary was hired for Y State All's General can smg; or compose: his Greenfield
Wellston
at
Qak Hill
the result of a hunting acctdent,
Federal
Hocking
at Glouster
aiCtehrnarooln
.
M
G
th
d
some
PhWy
commercials
dl!ling
which
he
plays
name's
Irving
Berlin
Manhattan
and Raymond Cotterlll, who fell
Fort
Frye
at
es
c
ra
an
ha
ter
Ued
"Big
AI"
h
redi
ts
ts
restaurateurs aren 'I choked up about the three·
while at work at his em- children were dinner guests of a c rae ca
,
w o P c apor
Nelsonville York
results : so far Harold s batted triumphantly for day holiday weekends: too many New Yorkers Vinton County at Unloto
ployment and broke his heel the Earl McGraths Sunday.
Botll are well on the way to Sgt. Roger Alkire and wife of lour weeks, eight events; In football he even hit who didn't leave for one-day holidays now go Buffalo Putnam at Wahama
recovery.
Calflroma recently spent a the scores almost 100 pet. right ... He caUed the traveling ... The new men's hair stylist shop run FOX TRADED
CHICAGO (UP!) - The Chi·
Mr. and Mrs Robert Alkire leave here with the Felix World Series for the Pirates in seven games, and by Larry Mattllews in the Hotel Great Northern
had dinner wtth their son, Ray, Allures and the Charles Kings .. said Roberto Clemente would win the playing uses more than a&lt;:lssprs and clippers: one of the cago Bulls traded center Jim
at The Plains Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jackson award . That's far better than Las Vegas' stylists is "Utile Athens," erstwhUe belly Fox and their No. 2 draft
Mr. and Mrs. Roush of West have sold therr r.,rm to Mr. Jimm&gt; lhe Greek.
dancer m cafes here. She now has her barber'• choice Tuesday to the Cmcinna11 Royals for Norm Van Utr
VirgmJa moved into the rental Howard. •
The downtown 10 St. Marb Place 'lbealer, llcenee.
an~ the Royals' No. 3 plck.

,
~

"'

•'•

RACINE - Southern's
annual football banquet will
be held Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
_ •t lbe hlgb school In Racine.
The varsity and junior •'l!lads
wlll he honored as well as 1he
ebeerleaders.
The potluck dinner will be
prepared and served by
parents and cheerleaders.

.
:
1:1................................

-~=·~=··~:::·.:::::~:::::::;:;:::;:;:·!·! !·!•!•!•!•!•'':·~·:·

~····················,;.•.•,•,•..........: !·!·!•! !•!•! !•!•!•'•!·!·!

CHAMPS - Southern's Junior High School football

Chester

Laurel QifT

~--

WILDUFE FOOD Pim - Wood""' WUson Bron, the
West Virginia 11 Conservation Farmer for 1971" is shown at
his Letart farm m a wildlife food plot consiStmg of corn,
sorghwn, sunflowers, soybeans, buclmheat ard wllet.

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
NEEDED-A FOSTER HOME
Dear Helen and Sue
I have a father who has made a habit of throwmg my mother
out of the houseforthe past 15years Nowhe'sstartmg on me
Last night he had his worst fit ever He threw the vacuum
cleaner down the starrs and broke It He also smashed two
statuettes agamst the wall and threw the dog across two rooms,
then kicked hrrn so hard he's still at the vet's Our dog didn't do
anythmg-my father hurt hun because we love hun, and that was
a way of hurting my mother and me
Next, because I tried to protect Mom, he told me to leave and
never come beck, then pushed me outside and locked the door I
stayed at a neighbor's.
Mom won't leave hrrn because she says be's SICk and needs
her. He's well enough to keep a good JOb, but he lets out all hiS
frustrations on us The least little thing will set off a temper
tantnun that won't quit She says "Don'lf1ght beck," but when he
calls me an SOB and screams at me and beats on me, should I Just
stand there and take It- like she does '
I'm beck home now (home'-that's a laugh! ) thanks to Mom,
but if I stay here much longer I may kill my fatller Besides, he
keeps asking me to leave, even though I'm not qu!le 16.
Is there a better way of solvmg my problem-and Mom's' TEMPTED
Dear Tempted:
YOUR problem may be solved by a VISit to the Juvenile Hall
m your town, and a placement m a foster home. After all, your
fatller threw you out, and expects you to stay out. Under tllese
Circumstances I believe you can become a ward of the county.
Let's hope this opens your mother's eyes g1vmg in to a
psychopatl!Ic bully seldom helps anyone-111cludmg hrrn HELEN

Dear Tempted
Why doesn't your Mother turn the tables and throw the bum
out' Or lock the door and not let him m' If he's as bad as you say,
you need this "husband and father" like VIetnam needs another
war 1-SUE
Dear "GeneratiOn Rap"
My siSter 1sa blackmailer, too, like the one in your column not
long ago Only m a different way
She has two pictures of me. She's good at sneaking up w1tll her
camera ' One IS of me smokmg The other IS even worse : she got a
shot of my mother spanking me across her knee-With my pants
down You know what that would do for a 13-year-old guy if 1! got
shown around school
And if my mother saw proof that I smoked, I'd get It agam 1
I'm no angel I'm practically always m trouble, so I don't
want any more or I won't be able to play on the football team, plus
I'll get another sore bottom My folks use a plywood paddle and
that hurts !
So my sister demands $1 00 from my allowance every week,
and makes me do most of the chores. I also have to let her watch
HER TV programs, which aren't mme OtherwiSe, the pictures
get sllown around where they'll do the most harm.
'Ibis may sound corny, but I love my sister m spite of
everything, and I don't want to get her m trouble by !inking.
Besides, it would get me m more trouble What shall I do' -.JOEY
Dear Joey·
In most parents' books, blackmailing is a worse crime than
smoking. So why not try this: AI the dinner table, hand your sister
ber "hUBb-money," and tell her you'll get her work done first
lhlng In the morning. Naturally, your folks will be curious, but
IR'ugoffauyquestlonswith "It's justa business deal"
Later, tell Sis you'll explain the whole "busmess" if she
doesn't band over the pictures-AND THE NEGATIVES!- and
stay mum. Should she stay greedy-tell' One punishment IBn'! as
bad aunmtbl of being broke and overworked.--sUE &amp;: HELEN.
GOT A PI\OBLEM? Or A SubJect For Discuulon, Two·
Gtneration Style? Send your question to THE GENERATION
RAP, care of thla newspaper. Drrect them to eltller Sue or Helen
Bottel-« both, If you want a combination mother-daughter

-·

NATIONALLY REGISTERED
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
National Park Service an·
nounced Tuesday it had
designated tlle Mahoqing
Avenue Historical Area In
Warren as a National
Reglatered Historic l'lace.

I
BROWN BREAKS TIE
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Secrelary of State Ted W.
Brown cast the lie-breaking
vote to reqwre county-wide
registratiOn m Champaign

County

Off One Is Off One Point

squad went undefeated this season with a 7..0 record. The
team was coached by Ralph Wigal. Front row, 1-r, are Jerry
Johnson, ChriS Hill, Enc Dunning, Greg Cundiff, Kennetll
Guinther, Cork Cleek, Doug Warden, Tony Carnahan, Bryon
Robmson, Frank' Shane; second row, Steve Nease, ChriS

News Notes

News Notes

a---------

Royals Top NY; LA Five Romps
By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
You've got to take notice of
Los Angeles when tlle Lakers
hsnd one of the better tesms m
the National Basketball Associ·
alton a near-record pasting
The Lakers creamed Ph•·
!adelphia, 143-103 Wednesday
night lor the club's second worst
defeat In Its history Gail
Goodrich agam showed the way
wltll a game-high 34 pomts that
dropped the 76ers two games
beck of Boston m tlle Atlantic
DiVISIOn
Boston routed Houston, 142103, Cmc1nnati stopped New
York, 99-85, Milwaukee beat
Atlanta, 116-110, DetrOit smotll·
ered Portland, 139-122, and
aucago natled Baltimore, I~
106
Philadelphia, suffenng 1ts
worst loss smce the 43-pomt
setback by San FranciSCO tn
1961, was out of the game
almost from the opemug tapoff
The Lakers rolled up a 39-20
first quarter margm and were
in front, 72-15 at halftime
Happy HalfSton netted 21 pomts
and Jerry West added 20 The
Lakers received strong bench
support from Flynn Robmson 's
18 pomts. Hal Greer and Dave
Who! shared Philadelphia scor.
mg honors w•th 16 pomts each
Dave Cowens scored 29 pomts
and John Havlicek tallied 28 m
lhree periods as Boston handed

!Voice along Broadway i

1•

"Blondes have
more fun,
don't they?"
Our fun ts to see fhe smiles
of sattsfled custome rs
when we arnve with 011
deliveries You can add to
our fun by phoning R1zer
011 , 992 2101. for your
healing all

Houston Its 13th loss m 15 • th!lfl spun away With a 29-19
games A merciful coach Tom tl!Jrd quarter. Nate Archbald
Hemsohn benched his one-two scored 22 pomts for the Royals.
scormg punching m tlle fourth New York's startmg guards,
quarter after the Celtlcs Walt FriiZier and D1ck Barnett
wrapped up the game with a 43- each had 15 pomts
pomt third period Elvm Hayes
Milwaukee, preparmg for
led the Rockets with 30 pomts another runaway season, raiSed
Willis Reed played 12 mmutes Its record to 14-1 as Kareem
for New York, his first game Jabber netted 33 pomts AUansmce Oct :!8, but tlle Knick ta, led by Lou Hudson's 39
center's presence failed to pomts, held a ftve-pomt lead
generate any spark m the with nme rrunutes remallling,
lifeless defending Atlantic D1vi- but couldn't mamtam the pace
swn champwns who now have as It lost Its fifth straight game.
lost etght of 14 games an.
Detroit made Earl Uoyd's
cmnati allowed New York a 42- coachmg debut a wlnnmg one
all mtermiSSJon deadlock and by beatmg Portland The

Ma u·d
~lJ

e~s

By KEITH WISECUP
The Me1gs Marauders will be
attemptmg to come home with
thm f ~r st wm over the Pt
Pleasant Btg Blacks m three
t1 1es Lh1s Fnda) mght on th~
Wesl Vtrgtmans home fteld.
Coae h D1ck Ware 's B1g
Blacks have had a rough season
tlus year , but a wm m their
fmale this week would enlive n
Lhm post.season doldrums JUSt
a little Their reeord IS a not.toogreat 2·7, the wms commg over
Milton, 21).)4, and Ripley, 27·17
Meanwhile, back at Me1gs,
Coach Charley Chancey 's · Big
Maroon" are enJoymg a great
season, displa)mg a surpnsmg
7·2 slate This also will be the
Marauders' fmale
Metgs has never beaten Pt
Pleasant m their two previous
years of competition In 1968,
the B1g Blacks brmsed the
Marauders on U1e1r own field,
u.s, and the No 3 ranked
"AAA" Blacks 10 West V~rgmia
topped the 1969 Marauders, 2312, puihng awa) m the second
half The teams dtd not play last
year
In the Southeastern OhiO
Athlehc
League's
!mal
slahsllcs, Metgs'
Mark
Williams flmshed fourth m
rushmg with 463 yards The
Rutland-prnducl also was third
m sconng Andy Vaughan,
Meigs' answer to y A Title,
completed the season 10 lith
place on the scormg hst. Tmy
W1ihams , the Marauders '
fullback, was m the top 10 m
scoriOg most of the year, but
was InJured m the latter half of
the season, droppmg hun out of
the race
In other slattstlcs, Jeff Morns
flmshed Sixth m receptions with
14, Chuck Faulk was f1flth m
punt returns w1th 60 yards, and
RICk Ash was lied for third m
the league m InterceptiOns wtth

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Both
Warren Hardmg and Cmcmnatt
Moeller, the Nos I and 2 teams
10 the Umted Press lnternahonal Ohio High School Board of
Coaches' Class AAA football rat.
10gs fell from their top spots
m the latest Ohio High School
Athletic AssociatiOn computer
ratings
Hardmg, despite bemg 61)..()
w10ner over Cmcmnah Taft Fn·
day mght, was replaced by Par·
rna Semor 1n Regwn I while
Moeller, whtch dropped a 6-3
decision to C10cmnah St Xav•er, has been diSlodged from
lhe Regwn 4 lead by unbeaten
Tro1
Akron Garfield and Upper Ar·
hngton held to the No I POSI·
!tons m regtons 3 and 2 m the
next to last computer ratmgs
JJst
_ _
The lop 10 learns &gt;n each of
the 12 reg1ons are
Class AAA
Roglon 1
1 'Parma Senior, 2 Warren
Hardmg . 3 Men!or; 4 Lake
wood St Edward, 5 Elyria . 6

three

Warren Western Reserve , 7

f.eld and on the hne Metgs, wtth
the help of beefy 264 lb Randy
Faulk, will average 184 ibs per
man from end lo end on offense
The Blacks wtll counter wtth a
l6tl lbs per man
In the backfield, Metgs Will
sp01 t a 155lbs per man group of
runners while Pt Pleasant will
have a small 145 lbs per man
backf1eld
The Big Blacks, however.
should have somethmg m store
for the future The) wtll starl an
ali·Jumor' ' tla~kf•eld w11h two

••

Et~stern
'

·fjH$tOnt

7T~m-~~
WIN'l'EBl'BEADS

RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES

ANY SIZE

Pistons' victory came after the
Blazers took a 33-31 first Los Angeles al Buffalo
quarter lead. Junmy Walker Vancouver at Phtladelphta
IOnly games scheduled)
sparked the Detrmt comeback
as he scored 31 points. Rookie
Sidney Wicks matched that PATRICK'S NEW JOB
NEW YORK IUPI) - Murra)
total for Portland.
"Muzz'' PatrJCk, a former New
Bal ltmore fell a game back of York Ranger hockey star, was
Central DivJSlon.Jeading Cln· named today managmg director
cinnatl m tlle lopSided loss to of the New York Chiefs Roller
Chicago. Jerry Sloan paced the Derb) Franchise Patrtck Is a
winning Bulls with a season vtce president of Madison
high 35 pomls, Including 14 m Square Garden Center
tlle secoll!l period when Chicago
The Chiefs, formed for the
broke open tlle game. Archie 197!.72 season, defeated the
Clark led Baltimore With Z3 Red Devils, 31·30 1n therr Oct
points.
31 home opener

jumors and a sophomore on the Is disregarded and the next step
offensive lme The) have only on the ladder ts third place Th1s
lwo JUniors on their defensive Is where Meigs has to he If
untt, however
Meigs was counted as the
second
place team, ever} team
There has been a good
natured tongue-In-check hassle m the league would also be
recent!) on the positiOn that the moved up one place This would
Marauders placed m the !mal make Wellson, with an ().7 slate,
league standmgs With two m seventh place out of eight
teams havmg better records, teams
Ironton and Athens, Meigs
would have to be third place
So Metgs, no matter how you
team
look at it, IS the thtrd place
' When the two top teams have team, somethmg the) should be
6'1 records, th~ :;econd pos11Lon vef) proud of

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Wheel Alignment &amp; Wheel Balance Your "Complete" Ttre Dealer!

'

PomiiiiJ, 0.

'IS 21 over VirgmJa Teci
Three of the four teams lied
for 15th rank as sobd favorites
Texas IS 21 over Texas ChrisUan
m a key Southwest Conference
game, North Carolina IS 14 over
Vrrgm1a and Michigan State IS
14 over Minnesota. , Southern
catiforma IS a threeiJOml underdog to Washington
Florida State IS a threeiJOmt
underdog
to GeorgJa Tech whil,e
(Fia )
Penn State 17) Is 30 over Ohio State, also ranked 19th, 18
Nortll Carolma State, Notre seven over Northwestern
Dame (8) IS Z8 over Tulane,
ABA Slandmgs
AriZona State (9) IS a big chmce
By Un.ted Press International
agamst Wyommg and lOth·
East
ranked Stanford Is 'tl over san
W L Pet GB
V1rg nta
10 4 714
Jose State
Kentucky
10 4 714
Colorado (II) IS 14 over Flor1d1ans
775003
Oklahoma State and 12th. P1 llsburgh
7 8 467
31/ 2
1/ 2
6
7
462
3
New
York
ranked Tennessee 1s tdle
112
Car alma
3
9
250
5
Toledo, with the nation's longest
West
wmmng streak, 1s a big choice
W L Pel GB
9 6 600
over Marshall and Houston ( 14) Ulah
No 5 team in the nauon and
howl representatives will be
watching thiS one closely
Elsewhere, all of the remain·
ing top 10 teams are heavy
favorites No I Nebraska IS a
33-pomt chmce over Kansas
State while Oklahoma IS 30 over
Kansas Third ranked Michigan
IS 17 over Purdue and No 4
Alabama IS 24 over MJamt

Weal Bowling
Mormng Glones League

While tlle Georgia defense
will get the stiffest test, the
Bulldog offense may do some
testmg of Its own Georgia, led
by sophomore quarterback
Andy Johnson and replacement
James Ray m the last two
games, has averaged JUS! short
of 34 pomts a game Auburn
scouts rate Robert Honeycutt,
Jrrnmy Poulos and Ricky Lake
as the best trw of runmng backs
they've faced this season
Georgia (No 6) IS a three
pomt favorite over Auburn, the

November 2, 1971
Excels1or Oil Co
Spencer's Ma rkel

VIew, 9

lisle

Dallas

lnd1ana

B
6

6

571

Denver

4

7

1

Memphos

5 9 357

a

429
64

Kenlucky 115 Dallas 69
Ulah 127 New York 110
Pis !Only games scheduled)
43
Thursday's Games
40 Carolma at P1tlsburgh

Newe ll Sunoco
G1bbs Grocery

38
33

G&amp;J Aulo PariS

32

Dom1ga n Soh10

30

H1gh Team 3 games - G&amp;J

Utah at Denver

(On ly games scheduled)
AHL Standmgs

By Un1ted Press International

East

Auto Pari s 2144, Dom1gan Soh 1o

2107, Newell Sunoco 2074
Team H19h Game - Newell

Sunoco 769 Excels1or Oil Co
145 G&amp;J Auto Parts 736

W L T Pis

Boston
Spnngt1eld
Nova Scot 1a
Prov1dence

Hogh lnd 3 Games - Mary
Gillilan 41 3, Margaret Foilrod Rochester
407, Sandy Korn 403
H1gh lnd Game ~ Mary
Gillilan 176, Sandy Korn 166, Hershey

1

7

2

5

5
8
7

"

L

Cleveland

9
6

6

3

5 17

R1chmond

4
3

5
9

2 10
4 10

Ball1more

Tidewater

T. Pis
1 2 20

4 4 12

2 12

Thursday 's Games

(No games scheculedl

Meigs Starting Lineup
OFI=ENSE
E Jeff Morns

T Fred Lee
G Roger D1xon

c

Ed Young

G Tee Lehew

Randy Faulk
E 8111 Chaney

T

WT
190
205
155
15.1
160
250
170

or Larry Harmon 187

QB Andy Vaughan
WB Ron Smolh
TB Mark Williams
FB K Van ln waqen

175
150
150
146

DEFENSE
YR
E Jeff Morri S
12
T F red Lee
12 MG John Thomas
12
T Jon Grueser
12
E Larry Harmon
12
or B1il Chaney
9 LB Dallas Weber
11 LB Ted Lehew
12 CB Ron Sm1th
11 CB K Van ln wagen
12 DB Chuck Faulk
12 DB RICk Ash
12

190
205
155
199
187
170
174
160
150
146
160
146

12
12
12
12
12
11

11
12
12
12
11
12

OFFENSE

LE
LT
RT
RE
LB
LB
LB

DEFENSE
SteveMartm
Terry Tyree
Clem Long
Buddy Collen II
Frank Dol ollie
Wayne Sanders
Terry Rollins

FOR'72 .........

Make 49 payments, SOc
155 . 12
200 12
230 12
170 12
148 11
175 11
155 12

LB

Donn1e McDe rmott

HB

Steve Thomas

HB Chuck Adk1ns
S Rody Harden

11111
I

Point Starting Lineup

160
128

147
143

to $10.00 and we make
the

50TH

Meigs Co. Branch

12
12
12
12
The Athens County

LURTSEMA ON WAIVERS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
New York Gmnls placed
defensive tackle Bob Lurtsema
on watvers Wednesday and are
expected to fill the roster
vacanc) b) acbvatmg e11her
Dave Ttpton or Vernon Vano)
from the taxi squad

Savmgs &amp; loan Co

296 Second St
Pomeroy, Oh10

Member Federal Home Loan

Bank

IVIember Federal Sav1ngs &amp;

Loan Insurance Corp All
accounts Insured up to
$20,000 00

SWEATERS
NOW IN AWONDERFUL SELECTION

Hey, Gangl
SEE YOU AT
SONNY'S
KARLYN

This Week's Special

~

Ulatflldut
,.

::~:~~-----~~19~

Coirm

•Brown/Comh •Nat'JIC omh

FASHION COLLAR INDUSTRIAL ZIPPER
PLACKET Full FashiOned Throughout
Gcometnc Jacquard Pattern. Completely
Washable. 100% V~rgm Wmtuk Orion Acrylic

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY
NOVEMBER 13·14

Shop or Field
Ph. 9f2·2511

KERM'S KORNER
.

. ....··.·.·.·.. ··.·:·.·.··:·:-.:····.· ..·. ··.· ·.·.

.: .·.·..·.

New York Cothing House
4th &amp; Locust

1

992·5241

Middleport, 0.

5

Wednesday's Results
Cmc1nnat1 4 Rochester 4 {tie)
Hershey 2 Baltimore 2 {t1e)
Ttdewater 1 Cleveland 0
Providence 2 Rtchmond 2 (tie)

Class A

Portable Equipment

21
16
13
13
13

(On ly games scheduled)

Reg1on 9

CERTIFIED WELDER

1
2
3
5
3

5
West
W

Ctncmnat 1

Dor1s Grueser 162

10

Mariemont , 10 Car

1 LoramCalhol&gt;c , 2 Keystone
3 Smithville, 4 Smithfield, S
Mineral Ridge , 6 McDonald , 7
Fa&gt;rporl Harbor , 8 Leetonia ;
9 K&gt;rlland, 10 Lisbon.
Region 10
1 Marion Pleasant , 2 Ada ,
3 Manon Calhollc, 4 Cory .
Rawson, 5 Monroeville, 6.
Monlpeller , 1. Norwalk St Paul.
8 Fostoria St Wendel in, 9 u.
berty Center. 10 Lucas
Reg1on 11
1 Crooksville. 2. Newark Ca.
lhol!c, 3. Zanesville Rosecrans ,

3'12

Wednesday 's Results
lnd1ana 154 P11tsburgh 125
V1rg1n1a 119 Flond1ans 116

POMEROY LANES

viCtories

WT YR
LE Jay W1seman
154 12
LT Terry Tyree
200 12
LG Barry Redman
160 10
c Buddy Collen II 170 12
RG Terry Rollms
155 12
RT Bill S1lver
1\&gt;Q 11
RE Dave Stncklen
147 11
QB Gene Pickens
151 l1
RH Sieve M&gt;lier
147
11
4 Toledo Wa1te , 5 Columbus 4 Ironton St Joseph , 5 Tus FB Steve Evan s
155 11
Linden, 6 Oregon Clay 7 Bow ca rawas Cathol1c, 6 Tuscara LH Bill Vance
125 11
lmg Green, B Wor thmgton, 9 was Valley , 7 M11iersporl , 8
Columbus Eastmoor 10 Colum
Sc1o Jewett , 9 Eastern ( Me&gt;gs I
bus Northland
10 Amanda Clearcreek
Reg1on 3
Reg1on 12
1 Akron Garfield 2 Lancas
1 Middletown Fenwick 2
ter 3 Massillon , 4 Youngs
NBA Standmgs
West Jefferson , 3 Covmgton, 4
By Umted Press International
town M ooney , 5 Wal sh Jesu1 f, Porlsmoulh Noire Dame 5 Jo
6 Lou1svdle , 7. Zanesville, 8 nathan Alder, 6 Southeastern
Eastern Conference
Newark , 9 Barberton , 10 Can (Clark) 1 Manon Local , 8 Ce
Atlanttc OtVISIOn
ton Central Catholic
W L Pet GB
darvllle , 9 Portsmouth East.
Reg1on 4
Boston
10 2 833
10 Canal Wmchester
Philadelphia 8 4 667 2
1 Tr oy, 2 Cmcmnat1 Moe I
ler 3 Cmcmnal1 St Xav1er , 4
New York
6 8 429 5
Pnnceton , 5 Cincinnati Roger SCOUTS EYEING 5 GAMES Buffalo
6 8 429 5
Bacon, 6 Kettermg Fairmont
Central
DIVISIOn
East, 7 Keltenng Fa&gt;rmont JACKSONVILLE, Fla (UP!)
W L. Pet GB
4 7 364
West . 8 Dayton Carroll. 9 Ket - Ftve games Saturda} wtll Cmcmnat1
tenng Aller. 10 Cmcmnal1 El attract attention from Gator Balllmore
4 9 308 1
der
3 9 250 1112
Bowl scouts They mclude Penn Cleveland
Atlanta
3 10 231 2
Class AA
St-North carolina St, Auburn·
Reg1on s
Western Conference
1 Cleveland Holy Name. 2 Georgta, Notre Dame-Tulane,
Mtdwest D•vtston
Campbell Memorial, 3 Warren Oklahoma-Kansas and Flonda
W L Pet GB
Kennedy. 4 Cloverleaf, Chag.
Milwaukee
12 1 923
Choca9o
8 S 615 4
nn Falls , 6 Youngstown North, St -Georgia Tech
1 Poland . 8 Ashlabula Har .
Detr01l
7 6 538 s
bor. 9 (t&gt;e) Elyria Catholic and
Phoen&gt; x
S 7 417 61f2
Card mal
PacifiC DIVISIOn
FIGHT POSTPONED
Reg1on 6
W L Pet GB
NEW YORK (UP!) -A Los Angeles l1 3 786
1 Oregon Cardmal Stntch, 2
Columbus Watterson . 3 St scheduled !().round fight be· Golden State 10 4 714 1
Marys Memorial, 4 Napoleon ,
Seal lie
8 4 667 2
2 9 182 71f2
5 Fostona , 6 Vermilion , 7 Co- tween former heavyweight Portland
lumbus Wohrle , 8 G&gt;bsonburg , champiOn Floyd Patterson and Houston
2 13 133 91f2
Wednesday's Results
9 Columbus Mohawk, 10 (l&gt;e) Oscar Bonavena at Madison
Bexley and Fremont St Joseph Square Garden, Dec 7, was Chicago 125 Balt1more 106
Reg1on 7
Cincmna11 99 New York 85
1 Sleubenvdle Cenlral Catho postponed Wednesday because Oelro1t 139 Porlland 122
l1 c, 2 Ironton. 3 New Lexmg of a pmky mjury suffered by Los Angeles 143 Philadelphia
ton, 4 River View , 5 New Con
103
cord Glenn. 6 Hartville Lake , Bonavena In a trammg mishap Boston 142 Houston 103
7 Minerva, 8. Barnesv&gt;iie, 9
M&gt;lwaukee 116 Allanfa 110
Carrollton, 10 Tn Valley
IOilly games scheduled)
Q- What type of boat IS a
Reg1on 8
Thursday's Games
Golden Slate at New York
1 Dayton Jefferson , 2 Spring catamaran?
A- It IS a sailboat w1th Cleveland at Sealtle
f&gt;eld Shawnee, 3 M&gt;ilon.Unlon
twm
hulls side by s1de
(Oilly games scheduled)
4 Made&gt;ra , 5 Graham, 6 Love
land , 1 Greenon, 8 Valley

Pbla 37¢ to 68e per lire Fed Ex tax

I

Ch1cago 3 Boston 1
Detrotl 2 Mmnesola 1

Ptltsburgh 3 Vancouver 1
Thursdayls Games
Callfornta at Boston

and 2 tire&amp; of !&amp;me 11ze off your car

Phone 992·2094

New York 7 Los Angeles 1

Ninth In Region
II; Ironton Second In 7

Get in on our pre-season winter RETREAD offer!

606 t Mlin

Montreal 5 Toronto 2

By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Test time will come a little
early tll!S year at the Umvers1ty
of Georgia.
Georgia's defense, one of the
best m the nation, will gel Its
stiffest test saturday when the
Bulldogs play host to Auburn
and Pat Sullivan m a hattie of
unbeatens
Sullivan, one of the country's
top college quarterbacks, ranks
thrrd nationally m passmg and
IS fifth m total offense. He's
completed better than 58 per
cent of his passes thiS season
and has tllrown 16 touchdown
passes, nme to Terry Beasley,
the Tigers' outstanding flanker
"To beat Auburn we must
contam Pat Sullivan," says
GeorgJa Coach Vmce Dooley,
and his club has all the
credentials Smce a 56-25
openmg game victory over
Oregon State, the Bulldogs have
logged four shutouts and have
perrmtted only one touchdown
m each of therr other four

Take on Underdog Point

Gettmg back to Fnday •s Mayfield , 8 Eastlake North , 9
Garfield Helghls , 10 N1les Me
game, the Btg Blac ks w1 11 be Kmley
heavtly outweighed by the
Reg1on 2
1
Upper
Arlmglon,
2 Toledo
Meigs eleven, both m the back·
Woodward , 3 Spnngf&gt;eid South,

'

•

Forbes, Joe Brown, Tim Jenkins, J F Young, Brady Huffman, Rick Findley, Jrrnmy Riffle, Jrrn Cundiff, Greg DaVIS,
third row, Keith Crrcle, Greg Dunmng, Greg Johnson, Jeff
Knighting, Danny Brown, Paul Schultz, Ronme Johnson,
Steve Boso, Tim Curfman, Mike Roberts and Coach Wigal

NHL Standings
By Un1ted Press International·
East
W L T. Pis
New York
10 1 4 24
10 2 2 22
Montreal
Boston
8 5 1 17
Toronto
4 6 s 13
Vancouver
5 9 2 12
4 7 4 12
Bulfalo
De troll
4 10
2 10
West
WLTP!s
ChiCago
12 4 0 24
Mmnesota
10 J 2 22
P1llsburgh
7 8 2 16
Cal1forn1a
5 6 3 13
Ph&gt;ladelph&gt;a
5 7 1 11
Sl LouiS
3 10 1 7
Los Angeles
2 11 1 5
Wednesday's Results

Unbeatens Clash

POMEROY, OHIO

�'

.

'·•·

New Haven Social Events

World Cup Tourney Und_erway
t

By Col. Mole
As the bitter cold sets in, a hint begins flashing in the mind of
the Moleman that winter is upon us, meaning football has once
again come and gone. This is the loth and final week of the 1971
gridiron seBSQn which has past rapidly to say the least.
Now our attention must turn to the old round ball as area
teams in the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League and Southern
Valley Athletic Conference prepare for another ,season.
With winter here, yours truly must fade into his hibernation
period once again.
Its been fun despite two public hangings. Before we sign off
though I must give you the latest on the prediction race with
Major Amos B. Hoople. Last week, the Moleman recorded a
perfect slate, hitting 16 out of 16. Hoople recorded a 13-J record.
Now going into the final week, Mole stands at 120-27-4 while
Hoople's record is 1~.

SEOAL
Portsmouth 16 Gallipolis 12. Trojans have had their problems
oot so have the Big Blue.
Waverly 8 Greenfield 0. Defense is the difference. Tigers to
win second game .
Wellston 22 Oak Hill 12. I must stick with the SEO Golden
Rockets.
Portsmouth West 16 Jackson 6. It has been along year for the
lronmen.
Athens 20 Circleville 16. Bulldogs have been tough in the
clutch.
Ironton 28 Ashland, Ky., 8. Cross town rivals are no match
this year.
Meigs 24 Pt. Pleasant 6. Marauders going for 8-2 season with
winning show against punchless Big Blacks.
North Gallia 18 Southern 14. This will decide third place in the
SV AC. It should be interesting aU the way.
OTIIERS

Wahama 26 Buffalo 12
Fairland 26 Symmes Valley 0
Ironton St. Joe 17 Wheelersburg 8
South Point 37 Rock Hill 12
Coal Grove 32 Chesapeake 12
Fort Frye 20 Nelsonville·York 13.

Therapy Program Given Patients
Thanksgiving therapy
program was conducted for the
18 members of the Good Luck
Garden
Club
of
the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center Tuesday by
members of the Rutland
Garden Club.
Dish gardens with materials
and supplies being provided by
the RuUand Club members
were made by the patients.
Turkey replicas were presented
to each along with two gifts.
'l:he club also contributed $5
~ard tile annual Christmas
party of the therapy group.

SCHOOLS BUlLT
The Ohio Lions, as part of
their international friendship
program, presented a check for
$10,140 to CARE , Inc. during the
State Fall Conferen ce at the
Southern Hotel in Columbus last
weekend to build four schools in
Honduras. Ohio Lions have
established a remarkable
record by building over 40 new
schools in Central and South
America since 1963.

Homemade pumpkin pie with
whipped cream, candy corn and
coffee were served. Good Luck
Club members answered roll
call with their favorite color and
also presented a program.
Going from here to assist with
the therapy work were Mrs .
Victor Nelson, chairman, Mrs.
Dayton Parsons, Mrs. Marie
Bishop, Miss Ruby Diehl and
Mrs: Harvey Erlewine .

REVIVAL NIGHTLY
Revival services are being
held at 7:30p.m. each evening
this week at the Salvation Army, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
with
Dorothy
Overton ,
evangelist, in charge. An all day
meeting will be held Sunday
with a hymn sing to he featured
at 2 p.m. Brigadier Howard
Burr, divisional secretary ,
Cincinnati, will be guest for the
day . Brigadier Burr was
assista nt officer at Athens and
Pomeroy in 1940 and is hoping to
meeting former friends during
his Sunday visit.

Be first in line when
you pay your monthly bills.
Make the first payment
to yourself, and put
the money in your
Savings Account at this bank.
Come in and start that account.

L_

The Farmers Bank
and .Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve
System
On Fridays Our Drive - In
Window is Open 9 a.m. lo 1
p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
.For Each Depositor
.

NEWCXJM£RS TO
OUR OOMMUNITY
. WE INVITE 'I'OUR ACCOU'NT
COME IN ANO SEE USI

PALM BEACH GARDENS,
Fla. (UPI)-Defending champions Bruce Devlin and David .
Graham of AustraUa were first
on the tee today to start the 19th
World CUp Golf Tournament,
but the heavy betting was on the
U.S. team of Jack Nicklaus and
Lee Trevino.
'l'Wo,man teams from 46
countries are entered in the 72hole tournament over the PGA's
7,1)96.yard east course, tough
layout anytime and tougher now
because of rains that have made
. the ground soft and the grass

"I didn't play well," Trevino
complained after his Pro-Am
round. "But I had fun ." His
l?lggest trouble was with his
putting.

HElPING TO SAfi6UARD HfAlTH

a

BOBCAT SENIORS- Seven seniors were honored Wednesday night during the annual
football banquet sponsored by the Kyger Creek High School Athletic Boosters Club. They are,
left to right, Glenn Smith, Terry Moles, Ken Blankenship, Gary Collins and Richard Rumley.
Second row, Bill Roush, Dan Swisher and Luu Louden.

Kyger Creek Gridders
Honored Wednesday
Presentation of trophies
highlighted the annual grid
banquet Wednesday night at
Kyger Creek High School,
sponsored by the Kyger Creek
Athletic Boosters Club.
Robert Gordon, booster
president, presented the Best
Defensive Lineman trophy to
Terry Moles, 145 pound senior
and co-captain of the 1971
Bobcats ; Glenn Smith, senior
quarterback who sat out the
entire 1970 season with a
fractured leg, was named the
Best Offensive Back ; Dan
Swisher, another senior cocaptain was named the Best
Offensive Lineman and Lou
Louden , 151 pound senior, was
honored as the Best Defensive
Back . The Most Valuable
Player trophy will no longer he
presented at Kyger Creek High
School in either football or
basketball.
The outgoing team captains,
Swisher, Moles and Bill Roush,
announced that George Curry, a
170 pound end and Greg MeCarty, a 145 pound halfback,
will serve as co-captains of the
1972 Bobcat squad.
Dick Adams, former All·
SEOAL gridder and All
American at Miami University,
completing his first year at the
helm of the Bobcats, thanked
everyone who helped during the
1971 season. "This was one or

n'/ed.'ge BOXeS

r,

Are Presented
Pledge boxes were presented
at a meeting of the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the East Letart United
Methodist Church Tuesday
night. Mrs. Marlene Fisher
presided at the meeting which
opened with singing "In the
Light." Officers reports were
present:ed by Mrs. Hazel Fox
and Mrs. Eileen Roush .
"Where Am I?" was the
program topic used by Mrs.
Doris Adams. Purpose of the
program was to challenge the
members of the WSCS to an
awareness of world needs, to
assist in supplying their needs
and to encourage the use of
local resources.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Eileen Roush and Mrs.
Lucy Donahue. Members at.
tending besides those named
were Mrs. Nora Pearson, Mrs.
Margaret Gloeckner, Mrs .
Mildred Donahue, Mrs. Doris
Sayre, Mrs. Focie Hayman,
Mrs. Eula Wolfe, and Mrs.
Mary Roush.
WORKSHOP SET
NEW HAVEN - A workshop
for the New Haven Grade
School Winter Festival will be
held Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 1
p.m . at the Allex Quiilen
Building. For those who cannot
work during the festival, the
P .T.A. would appreciate
donations or felt, nylon net,
styrofoam balls, sequins, beads,
paints etc. These items, inay be
taken to Mrs. Shelia Goheen,
. Haven Heights, or call her at
882-2378 and she will pick them
up.
BLUES RETURN 2
ST. LOOIS (UPIJ - Defense·
man Billy Plager and forward
Gary Veneruzzo were returned
by the St. Louis Blues
Wednesday to their Denver
farm club. The players were
with the National Hockey
League club for a three.game
road trip.

Q- Is the Rocky Mounta in
goat a true goat?
A- No, although it loo~s
like a true goat. it is a closer
relative · of Europe's cham·
ois.

the fastest seasons I have put in Coach Paul Brown and serv~
in my life." We finished 4-4-1 but as head coach at Portsmouth
I krow we were in better shape High School.
physically than any school we Rohr said a coach must he
played, he said. Injuries to key honest must teach fun·
players played a major role in damenlals, instill team play
the Bobcats' final record. Kyger and motivate men. "You must
Creek, for the second straight be competitive, you must strive
year, finished second in the to win . Make every effort to win
Southern Valley Athletic but if you lose pick yourself up
Conference behind the Eastern and try again," he said.
Eagles.
Rohr said athletics teach
Adams will build his 1972 . organization , loyalty, tolerance,
squad around II juniors, nine perseverance, and ways to live
sophomores, and nine fresh· with a public image. "America
men.
needsyouworsttodaytha~ever
in reviewing the past season, before . With the outside threat
the former Miami star praised of communism and the inside
his team for its hard work and threat of moral decay, America
dedication. He said several needs strong willed inplayers showed lots of heart dividuals, " he emphasized.
while playing with injuries Rohr closed his remarks with
which should have put them on "Thank God you were born and
the bench.
live in America."
Guest speaker was William D. Letters were presented to
"Bill" Rohr, Athletic Director seniors _ Ken Blankenship,
at Ohio University. Rohr moved Gary Collins, Terry Moles, Bill
to OU in 1963 after a successful Roush, Richard Rumley, Glenn
coaching career at Miami and Smith and Dan Swisher.
Northwestern Universities. He Juniors _ Jim Bias, John
also coached high school Baird, Orland Cremeans,
basketball at Massillon under George Curry, Mark Darst,
Marshall French, Mike Hughes,
Lou Louden, Greg McCarty,
Meigs
David Stump and John Roush.
Sophomores - Clay Hudson,
Marc Lawhon, Ronnie Roush,
John Rumley, Keith Sargent,
Terry Sheets, Eddie Skaggs,
Dwight Thompson and Rick
Smith.
Freshmen - Wendell Baylor,
Lawrence E. Klein, Gdn., Robert Donnet, Jeff Icard,
Robert Klein, Mary Klein, David Meaige, David Rife,
Timothy Klein, Larry Klein, Mike Rife, Joe Stidham, Dave
Rodney Klein , to Calvin lm· Stroud and David Wise.
boden, Betty Imboden, Lot,
Manager letters were given to
Pomeroy.
Jerry Bias and Tommy Stump.
Virgil Yarbrough , Glema
Cheerleader awards went to
Yarbrough to Pearlie F. Jewell, Ramona Amos; Brenda Grim,
Jr., Patricia A. Jewell, 25 Pam McCarty, Diane Polcyn,
Acres, Rutland.
Rosalie Reese and Nancy
M. H. McDole to Roy Franklin Rodgers.
Riffle, !'rona Kathryn Riffle, 2.5 The players presented special
Acres, Chester.
gifts to the team coaches, Dick
Leo E. King, Helen Pauline Adams, Jim Arledge, Adam
King to Helen Pauline King, Krahel, and Deryl Well.
Earl 0. Thomas, Guy M. Bob Gordon, on behalf of the
Thomas, Parcels, Chester.
Athletic
Boosters Club,
Clara Heilman, dec'd., to Carl presented Adams with a special
Heilman, Cecil Heilman, gift in recognition of his first
Evely,n Midkiff, Aff. of Trans., year in the coaching profession.
Salisliury.
Carl Heilman, dec'd . to Lena . - - - - - - " " " - -..
Heilman, Cert . of Trans .,
s_
I'
Salisbury.
Lena Heilman , Evelyn
Midkiff, Homer Midkiff to Cecil
Heilman, 3 Acres, Salisbury.
SAME DAY
Cecil
Lena
Heilman,
SERVICE
Heilman, Virginia Heilman·,
In
At9-0ul
Al5
Evelyn Midkiff, Homer Midkiff
to Walter Wilson , Betty Wilson,
Use Our Free Parking Lot
86.57 Acres, Salisbury.
U. S. Veterans' Affairs to
William L. Neville, Dolores E.
2t6 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
Neville, Lot, Pomeroy.

Property

Transfers

ASKED TO MEET
The Junior American Legion
Auxiliary members of Racine
Post 602 are asked to meet at
the hall at 6:30p.m. Tuesday to
prepare gift cards· for
hospitalized vete rans. Girls
attending are to take pinking
shears if they have them
available. Senior members are
invited to assist with the
project.

FOOTBALL ON CABLE TV
.

MEIGS AT
PT. PLEASANT
HEAR IT
7:15PM FRIDAY
SE.E IT I 10:30 AM
SAT. AND SUN.
•

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professionalism, speed. Check with us.
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AJ?ZbM~
SPRAY
COLOGNE

Scenes from the Film, North Country
North Country, an outdoor, color, action..,dventure
motion picture about the exploits of modemday Alaskan
trapper, Jeff Graham, opens Nov. 14, at the Meigs Theatre.
This exciting fllm follows woodsman Graham through one
year of his life as he camps in the fro~en wilds of the far north
country trapping beaver, fox, and muskrat. In this true-tolife feature, Graham pans gold and serves as a backcountry
guide over some of Alaska's roughest terrain to earn just
enough to pay for what little he needs from civili:zation.

Today's Subject: Some Other Drugs most Commonly Used

by

Provided by J. J. Cremeans
Middleport Pollee Otlef
On Beball of Lawmen of Meigs County

Ambush •.. Dana's fabulous fragrance •••
bright, fresh and young In a sleek, sophisticated

A'ITENDED MEETING
RUTLAND - Mrs. James
Carpenter, a member of the
Rutland Friend!)· Gardeners,
attended the opening meeting of
the Chester Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Roy Holter last
Wednesday evening. Mrs. Earl
Dean was the demonstrator for
a program on floral arranging .

spray bottle. A gift she'll want to get,
you'll want to give.

$400

a gift

Open daily 8 a.m . to 10 p.m. - Sunday 10:30
a.m.to 12:30 p.m. and S:OO!o 9p.m.

Early Shopper Bargain At •..

Today we will go over some of
the drugs most commonly used
and abused so we will all be
familiar with terms and types
for later discussion .
· ORAL AMPHETAMINES:
T.1ese are stimulants. On the
street they are referred to as
"Bennies, '! "Whites" (round
and white) . Also in this
category are "Dexies" {green

and white capsu les) and
"Hearts" (green, heart-5haped
tablets) . These are what are
commonly called "pep pills" or
diet pills. Taken orally, Am·
phetamines . stimulate the
central nervous system, the
brain and spinal column. Users,
under the influence of these
drugs, will usually be
argumentative, overactive,
unusually talkative, generally
unable to eat much, unable to
sleep, and show a marked
release of inhibitions. (It is not
unusual for one under the in·
fluence of these drugs to suddenly remove his clothing for no
reason .)
Users usually demonstarte
mental
confusion,
un~
predictable and irrational
behavior, even violent behavior
may result. Use is biologically
harmful too because it destroys
body reserves and makes the
user extremely vulnerable to
disease. These are illegally
available on the "street

..·.·.·..·.·.•.•.........·.· ·:

eTIPPY TUMBLES
eTUMBUNG TOMBOY
eBABY FIRST STEP
eBABY PEEK 'N' PLAY
eBABY WALK &amp;RUN

. ..

market" (about 8-10 for $11 yet
many youngsters obtain oral
Amphetamines from the home
medicine chest (parents' pep or
diet pills ).
Nole: Most "street market"

(black market) Amphetamines
are
made
by
illegal
laboratories, often by ex·
perimenting amateurs, using
imbalanced chemicals in un·
sterile surroundings.
INJE CTED
METHAM·
PHETAM!NES : These are
referred to, among other terms,
as "Speed " or "Meth" and are

far more potent, faster acting
and , of course, extremely
ha1·mful. Users of injected
( in travenously) Metham phetamines are usually ex·
tremely confused, very un.
predictable and irrational.
Violent behavior is common and
toxic psychosis (sick and in·
sane ) may result. Sometimes
users get on a "Speed" or
"Meth" run. A .. run" is an

intravenous injection as often
as every 4 hours for 3 to 6 days,
with no eating and no sleeping.
During these periods the user is
extremely overstimulated and
out of control, or in terms of the
street he is "strung-aut" or "UP·
tight' '. And he will show acute
signs of paranoia -he
sometimes collects weapons
because he is convinced that
people are plotting his death. On

. .. . .

COSTUME JEWELRY
Decorative holiday pieces
sleighs, deers, trees, candles,
Come. take a look .

Moore'$ In Pomeroy
•

.PH. 992-2848

Goessler JEWELRY STORE
· COURT ST.

being imported in increasing
volume from South America
and Cuba and is being used at
alarmin g rates by young
people . (A gram costs $40 to $50
and makes 10 capsules.)

Let's go further into drugs
next week. We have more information to cover on the
subject that will be beneficial
for you to know. If you already
kr ow this data, it will be helpful
to brush up on it.
...,..,

Mason County

...

- .......

Thelma Capehart.
During the program period
Mrs. Miller discussed "Thank·
fulness and Appreciation," and
used a blackboard for the
purpose of writing the many
things for which a per.
son should
be thankful, and which money
cannot buy. Mrs. Capehal'l gave
a talk on the seventh verse of
Psalm 26, which dealt with the
life of David.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Ottie Roush,
Mrs . George Jewell , Mrs.
Howard Burris, Mrs. Thelma
Capehart and Mrs. Clayton
Athey.
THE REBECCA Circle of the
Un ited Lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church meJ Wednesday af.
ternoon wtth Mrs . Carroll
Adams, Jr. as hostess. The
program was in charge of Mrs.
J. V. McGrew, who 'continued
the discussion in the book of
Paul 's Letters. Attending were
Mrs. John C. Fry, Mrs. William
Powell, Sr., Mrs. Otto Grimm,
Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. J. V.
McGrew, Mrs. Edna Burris,
and the hostess.
THE REGULAR meeting of
the Julia T. Bryant Sewing Club
was held at the home of Mrs.
Ottie Roush. Plans were made
for their annual Thanksgiving
turkey dinner which will be held
at the home of Mrs. W. T. Stone.
!tis to be a covered dish dinner,
with Mrs. Stone preparing the
turkey. The November 2
meeting was to be held at the
home of Mrs. F. A. Batey. AI·
tending were Mrs. James
MacKnight,
Mrs.
Eula
MacKnight, Mrs. W. T. Stone,
Mrs. N. 0. Wein, Lelah Jane
Powell, Mrs. J. W. McMurray,
Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs. John
Fry, Mrs. F. A. Batey, Ruth
Ann Fry and the hostess.

POMEROY ·

·EVERYBODY WANTS

BOOTS
FOR MEN

THE BEST

ON
EARTH
BOOTS WITHOUT
EQUAL.

AND BOYS

1------•

---=-~

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced .

Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Roush
of Dearborn, Michigan were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald F. Roush and Sheryl.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

lOLA'S

mber C\earance

tto~e

STARTS TOMORROW

NEW FALL

R·esses-..
1 Rack -Values to 25.00

12.95

MISSES DRESSES .

1

All - OCcasion-- dresses in or Ions, polyesters and

rayons. Sizes a to 20.

1 Rack-R_eg . 7.95 lo 14.95

3.95 TO sg,95

JUN lOR DRESSES

1

Cotton s and polyesters in sizes 3 to 15.-

1 Rack -Values to 15.00

7.95

DRESSES
Cottons and

1

polyesters

in misses and

half

sizes.

Many other markdowns now in
our store. Come! Shop! Save!

LADIES' APPAREL
234 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

By Alma Marshall

News Notes

Replace your weak battery now and save

Sears High Voltage Battery
~;.n~~

Guaranteed 42 months

ave
Was~•Hhtnde-ia

45

··,.: Now

MR. AND MRS. MILTON RADCLIFF and two child!:en of
Otarleston, Mr. and Mrs. Jlmmy Wise and children, Brian and
Michelle of Ollumbus visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. James
Wise in New Haven .

· only
).

• I

•

with

trade-in

•

SEARS
HIGHVOLTAGE

BATTERY

$1939

With Trade

48 Mil. Guar.

SEARS

'DIEHARD
BATTERY
$29-45'

TheBe High Voltage Batteries (e&amp;ture polypropylene cases to give superior strrngth to battery walls at the same
time allowing walls to be made thinner than on rubber-case batteries. This gives more room inside for additional
acid and greater plate surface, providing more power than rubber-case batteries.

etc.

PINS
1.00
·NECKLACES
TO
BRACELETS 15.00

ALL BY MATTEL
AND REMOO

CHIEF CREMEANS

The regular dinner meeting of
the New Haven Rotary Club
was held Thursday evening and ·
followed with a short business
session. Attending were Karl
Wiles, Floyd Carmack, Dick
Ord, John Thorne, Lloyd Roush,
James N. Roush, Donald F.
Roush, Harry Miller , Rev.
William DeMoss, John Marshall
and Rome Williamson.
THE FOLLOWING members
of a bowling team and their
families enjoyed a dinner
Sunday at the Uptowner in
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald F. Roush and Sheryl,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Miller
and Amanda, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Capehart, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Miller and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert D. Roush.
THE FINAL results of the
UNICEF drive in the New
Haven area was $141.28. Youth
from the New Haven United
Methodist Church, St. Paul
Lutheran Church, First Church
of God and Bachtel United
Methodist Church participated
in the drive. Refreshments were
served following the drive to
those from the first three
churches, but the youth from
the Bachtel United Methodist
Church met at their own church
for refreshments.
MRS. F. A. BATEY entertained members or the Julia
T. Bryant Sewing Club Tuesday
afternoon. Those attending the
meeting were Mrs. Ottie Roush,
Mrs. Eula MacKnight, Lelah
Jane Powell, Mrs . Donald
Smith,
Mrs.
Howard
Wagenhals, Mrs. John C. Fry,
Mrs. Emil Knight, Mrs. James
MacKnight, Mrs. Lloyd Roush
and the hostess.
The annual turkey dinner of
the club will be held at the home
of Mrs. W. T. Stone Nov. 16.
THE ESTHER Circle of the
United Lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church met Tuesday evening in
the social room of the church for
their November meeting. Mrs.
Melvin Knapp served as
hostess, and Mrs. David Roush
as leader in charge of the
program . Mrs. Roush discussed
another chapter in the book of
Paul 's Letters. Others present
were Mrs. Harry Layne, Lelah
Jane Powell and Mrs. Lloyd
Roush.
MEMBERS OF the New
Haven Firemen 's Auxiliary
held a Tupperware party at the
home of Mrs. Thelma Capehart
Tuesday evening with Mrs.
Donald Bumgardner as guest
dem onstrator. Guests were
Mrs. Thomas Grinstead, Mrs.
John C. Fry, Mrs. Harold Rose,
Mrs. Cliff Roush, Mrs. William
MacFarla nd, Mrs. Clayton
Athey, Mrs . Melvin Knapp,
Mrs. Cecil Duncan , Mrs .
William Grinstead, Mrs. Iva
Capehart, Mrs. Nelson Roush,
Mrs. G. 0. Roush, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. Ray Weaver,
Mrs. Hazen Roush, Mrs. Freda
Hart, Mrs . Charles Roush ,
Becky Roush, Mrs. Capehart
and Mrs. Bumgarner. Funds
realized from the party will be
used to benefit the fire depart·
ment.
THE RUTH CIRCLE of the
United Methodist Church met in
the social room for their
November meeting with Mrs.
Clayton Athey as hostess and
ti1e Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller as
program leader. The meeting
opened with singing of the hymn
"I'm a Child of the King"
followed with a prayer by Mrs.

DARRELL C. HOFFMAN, LETART, bagged a doe deer while
hunting with bow and arrow back of Racine, Ohio on Tuesday. It
weighed 80 pounda hog dressed.

CHRISTMAS SELECTION

EACH

occasion a user gels the feeling
he must "kill or be killed." A
zoom lens effect of the eyea
(like a camera zoom lens)
makes the user even more
paranoid because objects and
people loom up before him,
disappear and alarmingly
reappear.
When injections are stopped
after a "run ,11 the user
"crashes"- this means he goes
in to a period of hallucinations
and deep sleep coma lasting
from 18 to 48 hours. He awakens
famished, eats huge amounts of
food, ·pa: .icularly sweets and
liquids. He is extremely
fatigued, very suspectible to
disease and deeply depressed.
At this point, many users will
take an oral Amphetamine to
get going again.
"Speed" is available on the
"street 'market" in papers, a
small paper package, at about
$3 to $5.11 sells for about $100 an
ounce . Speed aggravates any
heart condition and can cause
strokes in suspectible people . It
is toxic to any healthy heart and
also to the blood vessels as it
increases heart rates, blood
pressure and can cause shock
and death!
Another powerful stimulant is
Cocaine. Its effects on the body
and mind may even exceed
those of Speed. Cocaine, an
extremely hazardous drug, is

DAVID SMITH, MASON, WAS ELECTED president of the
Happy (l() Lucky 4·H Club at a meeting at his borne recently.
Other officers are as follows, Mary Fox, vice president; Paula
Bocook, treasurer ; Cindy Workman, secretary; Cheryl Adams,
scrapbook; Timmy Adams, Game Leader, and Vicki Bissell,
reporter.
The group made plans to have a Christmas party and to exchange gifts. Project leaders were elected for the year. Attending
were Paula Bocook, Cindy Workman, John Workman, Timmy
Adams, Cecilla Smith, Vicki Bissell and 'leader, Mrs. Cecil Smith.

Jmt
4rrived!

VALUES TO $17.95
NOW

124 W. MAIN

otherwise, he lives off the land, hunting only out of necessity.
None of the characters in North Country is actors . These are
all real Alaskans portraying their real lives.
Ron Hayes filmed, directed, and appears in North
Country. He has masterfolly captured on film this land's
magnificent scenery, rare wildlife, and unique people. North
Country, G-rated, is released by American National Enterprises, the company that brought you Cougar Country.

Parents Know the Drug·Threat

HIR
fl NISHI NG.

Robinson's Deaner$

&gt;

Road to
Recovery•••

long.
The golfers will be playing for
pory and not for money. First
prize for the winning team ls
tl,OOO each and another $1,000
goes to the individual low
scorer. As Nicklaus says, It's
less than he makes for a one'ffiinute television commercial.
But the blond "Golden Bear"
of the U. S. Professional Golf
Tour and "Super Mex" Trevino
say they'll go aU out to win for
the United States. They were
scheduled to tee off shortly
before noon, among the last of
Ule teams.
Given the best chance of
beating tbe Americans were
Devlin and Graham, the
English team of Tony Jacklin
and Peter Oosterhuis, and South
Africans Gary Player and
Harold Henning. Player and
Henning won in 1965.
Neither of the Americans was
spectacular in Wednesday's
Pro-Am round, which they
played with Jackie Gleason and
Bob Hope. Nicklaus ahot a 70,
twounderpar,andTrevinoa 74
over the breezy course.
"The course is going to be a
little tougher than it was for the
PGA," said Nickl~us, who won
that t?"rnament 10 ~ebruary.
· He ~td he figured lf he and
Trevmo can each average 282for a team total ~. 564 for the
four-day contest-;, that ought
to he pretty good.

,

LoW individual scorer ln the
Wednesday round was an Chl
Rodriguez of Puerto Rico with a
69. Player hilda 70, and so did
Japan's Haruo Yasuda.

Thanks very much to my supporters in
the last election. My heartiest
congratulations to the first aid squad,
the fire department and Mr. Baronick
in their victory. I wish them much
success in the future. If I can help
them at any time to make Pomeroy a
better place to live I hope they wi II not
hesitate to call on me.
Yours ttu ly,

Delmar A. Canaday

GUARANTEE: If baltery Ia found defective we replace It free within 00 dl!iys of purchase or, after 90 days, e"change 11-charg·

With Trade

5

Yr.

Guar.

lng only for the time you've owned it. Month ly charge will be current selling price tess trade-in at lime of ralum divided by
gu'~~ranlee

months. Batteries In vehicles withoul proper chargino eQuipment not guaranteed.

Authorized
Catalog Merthant

RE.f.AP AND NEW
SNOW TIRES ON SALE

220 E. Main
992-2178
Pomeroy
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TIL 9

Pd. Pol. Ad.v . '

'

If

�'

.

'·•·

New Haven Social Events

World Cup Tourney Und_erway
t

By Col. Mole
As the bitter cold sets in, a hint begins flashing in the mind of
the Moleman that winter is upon us, meaning football has once
again come and gone. This is the loth and final week of the 1971
gridiron seBSQn which has past rapidly to say the least.
Now our attention must turn to the old round ball as area
teams in the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League and Southern
Valley Athletic Conference prepare for another ,season.
With winter here, yours truly must fade into his hibernation
period once again.
Its been fun despite two public hangings. Before we sign off
though I must give you the latest on the prediction race with
Major Amos B. Hoople. Last week, the Moleman recorded a
perfect slate, hitting 16 out of 16. Hoople recorded a 13-J record.
Now going into the final week, Mole stands at 120-27-4 while
Hoople's record is 1~.

SEOAL
Portsmouth 16 Gallipolis 12. Trojans have had their problems
oot so have the Big Blue.
Waverly 8 Greenfield 0. Defense is the difference. Tigers to
win second game .
Wellston 22 Oak Hill 12. I must stick with the SEO Golden
Rockets.
Portsmouth West 16 Jackson 6. It has been along year for the
lronmen.
Athens 20 Circleville 16. Bulldogs have been tough in the
clutch.
Ironton 28 Ashland, Ky., 8. Cross town rivals are no match
this year.
Meigs 24 Pt. Pleasant 6. Marauders going for 8-2 season with
winning show against punchless Big Blacks.
North Gallia 18 Southern 14. This will decide third place in the
SV AC. It should be interesting aU the way.
OTIIERS

Wahama 26 Buffalo 12
Fairland 26 Symmes Valley 0
Ironton St. Joe 17 Wheelersburg 8
South Point 37 Rock Hill 12
Coal Grove 32 Chesapeake 12
Fort Frye 20 Nelsonville·York 13.

Therapy Program Given Patients
Thanksgiving therapy
program was conducted for the
18 members of the Good Luck
Garden
Club
of
the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center Tuesday by
members of the Rutland
Garden Club.
Dish gardens with materials
and supplies being provided by
the RuUand Club members
were made by the patients.
Turkey replicas were presented
to each along with two gifts.
'l:he club also contributed $5
~ard tile annual Christmas
party of the therapy group.

SCHOOLS BUlLT
The Ohio Lions, as part of
their international friendship
program, presented a check for
$10,140 to CARE , Inc. during the
State Fall Conferen ce at the
Southern Hotel in Columbus last
weekend to build four schools in
Honduras. Ohio Lions have
established a remarkable
record by building over 40 new
schools in Central and South
America since 1963.

Homemade pumpkin pie with
whipped cream, candy corn and
coffee were served. Good Luck
Club members answered roll
call with their favorite color and
also presented a program.
Going from here to assist with
the therapy work were Mrs .
Victor Nelson, chairman, Mrs.
Dayton Parsons, Mrs. Marie
Bishop, Miss Ruby Diehl and
Mrs: Harvey Erlewine .

REVIVAL NIGHTLY
Revival services are being
held at 7:30p.m. each evening
this week at the Salvation Army, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
with
Dorothy
Overton ,
evangelist, in charge. An all day
meeting will be held Sunday
with a hymn sing to he featured
at 2 p.m. Brigadier Howard
Burr, divisional secretary ,
Cincinnati, will be guest for the
day . Brigadier Burr was
assista nt officer at Athens and
Pomeroy in 1940 and is hoping to
meeting former friends during
his Sunday visit.

Be first in line when
you pay your monthly bills.
Make the first payment
to yourself, and put
the money in your
Savings Account at this bank.
Come in and start that account.

L_

The Farmers Bank
and .Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve
System
On Fridays Our Drive - In
Window is Open 9 a.m. lo 1
p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
.For Each Depositor
.

NEWCXJM£RS TO
OUR OOMMUNITY
. WE INVITE 'I'OUR ACCOU'NT
COME IN ANO SEE USI

PALM BEACH GARDENS,
Fla. (UPI)-Defending champions Bruce Devlin and David .
Graham of AustraUa were first
on the tee today to start the 19th
World CUp Golf Tournament,
but the heavy betting was on the
U.S. team of Jack Nicklaus and
Lee Trevino.
'l'Wo,man teams from 46
countries are entered in the 72hole tournament over the PGA's
7,1)96.yard east course, tough
layout anytime and tougher now
because of rains that have made
. the ground soft and the grass

"I didn't play well," Trevino
complained after his Pro-Am
round. "But I had fun ." His
l?lggest trouble was with his
putting.

HElPING TO SAfi6UARD HfAlTH

a

BOBCAT SENIORS- Seven seniors were honored Wednesday night during the annual
football banquet sponsored by the Kyger Creek High School Athletic Boosters Club. They are,
left to right, Glenn Smith, Terry Moles, Ken Blankenship, Gary Collins and Richard Rumley.
Second row, Bill Roush, Dan Swisher and Luu Louden.

Kyger Creek Gridders
Honored Wednesday
Presentation of trophies
highlighted the annual grid
banquet Wednesday night at
Kyger Creek High School,
sponsored by the Kyger Creek
Athletic Boosters Club.
Robert Gordon, booster
president, presented the Best
Defensive Lineman trophy to
Terry Moles, 145 pound senior
and co-captain of the 1971
Bobcats ; Glenn Smith, senior
quarterback who sat out the
entire 1970 season with a
fractured leg, was named the
Best Offensive Back ; Dan
Swisher, another senior cocaptain was named the Best
Offensive Lineman and Lou
Louden , 151 pound senior, was
honored as the Best Defensive
Back . The Most Valuable
Player trophy will no longer he
presented at Kyger Creek High
School in either football or
basketball.
The outgoing team captains,
Swisher, Moles and Bill Roush,
announced that George Curry, a
170 pound end and Greg MeCarty, a 145 pound halfback,
will serve as co-captains of the
1972 Bobcat squad.
Dick Adams, former All·
SEOAL gridder and All
American at Miami University,
completing his first year at the
helm of the Bobcats, thanked
everyone who helped during the
1971 season. "This was one or

n'/ed.'ge BOXeS

r,

Are Presented
Pledge boxes were presented
at a meeting of the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the East Letart United
Methodist Church Tuesday
night. Mrs. Marlene Fisher
presided at the meeting which
opened with singing "In the
Light." Officers reports were
present:ed by Mrs. Hazel Fox
and Mrs. Eileen Roush .
"Where Am I?" was the
program topic used by Mrs.
Doris Adams. Purpose of the
program was to challenge the
members of the WSCS to an
awareness of world needs, to
assist in supplying their needs
and to encourage the use of
local resources.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Eileen Roush and Mrs.
Lucy Donahue. Members at.
tending besides those named
were Mrs. Nora Pearson, Mrs.
Margaret Gloeckner, Mrs .
Mildred Donahue, Mrs. Doris
Sayre, Mrs. Focie Hayman,
Mrs. Eula Wolfe, and Mrs.
Mary Roush.
WORKSHOP SET
NEW HAVEN - A workshop
for the New Haven Grade
School Winter Festival will be
held Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 1
p.m . at the Allex Quiilen
Building. For those who cannot
work during the festival, the
P .T.A. would appreciate
donations or felt, nylon net,
styrofoam balls, sequins, beads,
paints etc. These items, inay be
taken to Mrs. Shelia Goheen,
. Haven Heights, or call her at
882-2378 and she will pick them
up.
BLUES RETURN 2
ST. LOOIS (UPIJ - Defense·
man Billy Plager and forward
Gary Veneruzzo were returned
by the St. Louis Blues
Wednesday to their Denver
farm club. The players were
with the National Hockey
League club for a three.game
road trip.

Q- Is the Rocky Mounta in
goat a true goat?
A- No, although it loo~s
like a true goat. it is a closer
relative · of Europe's cham·
ois.

the fastest seasons I have put in Coach Paul Brown and serv~
in my life." We finished 4-4-1 but as head coach at Portsmouth
I krow we were in better shape High School.
physically than any school we Rohr said a coach must he
played, he said. Injuries to key honest must teach fun·
players played a major role in damenlals, instill team play
the Bobcats' final record. Kyger and motivate men. "You must
Creek, for the second straight be competitive, you must strive
year, finished second in the to win . Make every effort to win
Southern Valley Athletic but if you lose pick yourself up
Conference behind the Eastern and try again," he said.
Eagles.
Rohr said athletics teach
Adams will build his 1972 . organization , loyalty, tolerance,
squad around II juniors, nine perseverance, and ways to live
sophomores, and nine fresh· with a public image. "America
men.
needsyouworsttodaytha~ever
in reviewing the past season, before . With the outside threat
the former Miami star praised of communism and the inside
his team for its hard work and threat of moral decay, America
dedication. He said several needs strong willed inplayers showed lots of heart dividuals, " he emphasized.
while playing with injuries Rohr closed his remarks with
which should have put them on "Thank God you were born and
the bench.
live in America."
Guest speaker was William D. Letters were presented to
"Bill" Rohr, Athletic Director seniors _ Ken Blankenship,
at Ohio University. Rohr moved Gary Collins, Terry Moles, Bill
to OU in 1963 after a successful Roush, Richard Rumley, Glenn
coaching career at Miami and Smith and Dan Swisher.
Northwestern Universities. He Juniors _ Jim Bias, John
also coached high school Baird, Orland Cremeans,
basketball at Massillon under George Curry, Mark Darst,
Marshall French, Mike Hughes,
Lou Louden, Greg McCarty,
Meigs
David Stump and John Roush.
Sophomores - Clay Hudson,
Marc Lawhon, Ronnie Roush,
John Rumley, Keith Sargent,
Terry Sheets, Eddie Skaggs,
Dwight Thompson and Rick
Smith.
Freshmen - Wendell Baylor,
Lawrence E. Klein, Gdn., Robert Donnet, Jeff Icard,
Robert Klein, Mary Klein, David Meaige, David Rife,
Timothy Klein, Larry Klein, Mike Rife, Joe Stidham, Dave
Rodney Klein , to Calvin lm· Stroud and David Wise.
boden, Betty Imboden, Lot,
Manager letters were given to
Pomeroy.
Jerry Bias and Tommy Stump.
Virgil Yarbrough , Glema
Cheerleader awards went to
Yarbrough to Pearlie F. Jewell, Ramona Amos; Brenda Grim,
Jr., Patricia A. Jewell, 25 Pam McCarty, Diane Polcyn,
Acres, Rutland.
Rosalie Reese and Nancy
M. H. McDole to Roy Franklin Rodgers.
Riffle, !'rona Kathryn Riffle, 2.5 The players presented special
Acres, Chester.
gifts to the team coaches, Dick
Leo E. King, Helen Pauline Adams, Jim Arledge, Adam
King to Helen Pauline King, Krahel, and Deryl Well.
Earl 0. Thomas, Guy M. Bob Gordon, on behalf of the
Thomas, Parcels, Chester.
Athletic
Boosters Club,
Clara Heilman, dec'd., to Carl presented Adams with a special
Heilman, Cecil Heilman, gift in recognition of his first
Evely,n Midkiff, Aff. of Trans., year in the coaching profession.
Salisliury.
Carl Heilman, dec'd . to Lena . - - - - - - " " " - -..
Heilman, Cert . of Trans .,
s_
I'
Salisbury.
Lena Heilman , Evelyn
Midkiff, Homer Midkiff to Cecil
Heilman, 3 Acres, Salisbury.
SAME DAY
Cecil
Lena
Heilman,
SERVICE
Heilman, Virginia Heilman·,
In
At9-0ul
Al5
Evelyn Midkiff, Homer Midkiff
to Walter Wilson , Betty Wilson,
Use Our Free Parking Lot
86.57 Acres, Salisbury.
U. S. Veterans' Affairs to
William L. Neville, Dolores E.
2t6 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
Neville, Lot, Pomeroy.

Property

Transfers

ASKED TO MEET
The Junior American Legion
Auxiliary members of Racine
Post 602 are asked to meet at
the hall at 6:30p.m. Tuesday to
prepare gift cards· for
hospitalized vete rans. Girls
attending are to take pinking
shears if they have them
available. Senior members are
invited to assist with the
project.

FOOTBALL ON CABLE TV
.

MEIGS AT
PT. PLEASANT
HEAR IT
7:15PM FRIDAY
SE.E IT I 10:30 AM
SAT. AND SUN.
•

ALL ON CHANNEL 5

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All it takes is rest, c~re
m
,
. and the ·proper medications. We're ready to answer sick calls with
professionalism, speed. Check with us.
0

Voporfllers

At Our Cosmetic Counter \
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completely by
surprise -with

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AJ?ZbM~
SPRAY
COLOGNE

Scenes from the Film, North Country
North Country, an outdoor, color, action..,dventure
motion picture about the exploits of modemday Alaskan
trapper, Jeff Graham, opens Nov. 14, at the Meigs Theatre.
This exciting fllm follows woodsman Graham through one
year of his life as he camps in the fro~en wilds of the far north
country trapping beaver, fox, and muskrat. In this true-tolife feature, Graham pans gold and serves as a backcountry
guide over some of Alaska's roughest terrain to earn just
enough to pay for what little he needs from civili:zation.

Today's Subject: Some Other Drugs most Commonly Used

by

Provided by J. J. Cremeans
Middleport Pollee Otlef
On Beball of Lawmen of Meigs County

Ambush •.. Dana's fabulous fragrance •••
bright, fresh and young In a sleek, sophisticated

A'ITENDED MEETING
RUTLAND - Mrs. James
Carpenter, a member of the
Rutland Friend!)· Gardeners,
attended the opening meeting of
the Chester Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Roy Holter last
Wednesday evening. Mrs. Earl
Dean was the demonstrator for
a program on floral arranging .

spray bottle. A gift she'll want to get,
you'll want to give.

$400

a gift

Open daily 8 a.m . to 10 p.m. - Sunday 10:30
a.m.to 12:30 p.m. and S:OO!o 9p.m.

Early Shopper Bargain At •..

Today we will go over some of
the drugs most commonly used
and abused so we will all be
familiar with terms and types
for later discussion .
· ORAL AMPHETAMINES:
T.1ese are stimulants. On the
street they are referred to as
"Bennies, '! "Whites" (round
and white) . Also in this
category are "Dexies" {green

and white capsu les) and
"Hearts" (green, heart-5haped
tablets) . These are what are
commonly called "pep pills" or
diet pills. Taken orally, Am·
phetamines . stimulate the
central nervous system, the
brain and spinal column. Users,
under the influence of these
drugs, will usually be
argumentative, overactive,
unusually talkative, generally
unable to eat much, unable to
sleep, and show a marked
release of inhibitions. (It is not
unusual for one under the in·
fluence of these drugs to suddenly remove his clothing for no
reason .)
Users usually demonstarte
mental
confusion,
un~
predictable and irrational
behavior, even violent behavior
may result. Use is biologically
harmful too because it destroys
body reserves and makes the
user extremely vulnerable to
disease. These are illegally
available on the "street

..·.·.·..·.·.•.•.........·.· ·:

eTIPPY TUMBLES
eTUMBUNG TOMBOY
eBABY FIRST STEP
eBABY PEEK 'N' PLAY
eBABY WALK &amp;RUN

. ..

market" (about 8-10 for $11 yet
many youngsters obtain oral
Amphetamines from the home
medicine chest (parents' pep or
diet pills ).
Nole: Most "street market"

(black market) Amphetamines
are
made
by
illegal
laboratories, often by ex·
perimenting amateurs, using
imbalanced chemicals in un·
sterile surroundings.
INJE CTED
METHAM·
PHETAM!NES : These are
referred to, among other terms,
as "Speed " or "Meth" and are

far more potent, faster acting
and , of course, extremely
ha1·mful. Users of injected
( in travenously) Metham phetamines are usually ex·
tremely confused, very un.
predictable and irrational.
Violent behavior is common and
toxic psychosis (sick and in·
sane ) may result. Sometimes
users get on a "Speed" or
"Meth" run. A .. run" is an

intravenous injection as often
as every 4 hours for 3 to 6 days,
with no eating and no sleeping.
During these periods the user is
extremely overstimulated and
out of control, or in terms of the
street he is "strung-aut" or "UP·
tight' '. And he will show acute
signs of paranoia -he
sometimes collects weapons
because he is convinced that
people are plotting his death. On

. .. . .

COSTUME JEWELRY
Decorative holiday pieces
sleighs, deers, trees, candles,
Come. take a look .

Moore'$ In Pomeroy
•

.PH. 992-2848

Goessler JEWELRY STORE
· COURT ST.

being imported in increasing
volume from South America
and Cuba and is being used at
alarmin g rates by young
people . (A gram costs $40 to $50
and makes 10 capsules.)

Let's go further into drugs
next week. We have more information to cover on the
subject that will be beneficial
for you to know. If you already
kr ow this data, it will be helpful
to brush up on it.
...,..,

Mason County

...

- .......

Thelma Capehart.
During the program period
Mrs. Miller discussed "Thank·
fulness and Appreciation," and
used a blackboard for the
purpose of writing the many
things for which a per.
son should
be thankful, and which money
cannot buy. Mrs. Capehal'l gave
a talk on the seventh verse of
Psalm 26, which dealt with the
life of David.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Ottie Roush,
Mrs . George Jewell , Mrs.
Howard Burris, Mrs. Thelma
Capehart and Mrs. Clayton
Athey.
THE REBECCA Circle of the
Un ited Lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church meJ Wednesday af.
ternoon wtth Mrs . Carroll
Adams, Jr. as hostess. The
program was in charge of Mrs.
J. V. McGrew, who 'continued
the discussion in the book of
Paul 's Letters. Attending were
Mrs. John C. Fry, Mrs. William
Powell, Sr., Mrs. Otto Grimm,
Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. J. V.
McGrew, Mrs. Edna Burris,
and the hostess.
THE REGULAR meeting of
the Julia T. Bryant Sewing Club
was held at the home of Mrs.
Ottie Roush. Plans were made
for their annual Thanksgiving
turkey dinner which will be held
at the home of Mrs. W. T. Stone.
!tis to be a covered dish dinner,
with Mrs. Stone preparing the
turkey. The November 2
meeting was to be held at the
home of Mrs. F. A. Batey. AI·
tending were Mrs. James
MacKnight,
Mrs.
Eula
MacKnight, Mrs. W. T. Stone,
Mrs. N. 0. Wein, Lelah Jane
Powell, Mrs. J. W. McMurray,
Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs. John
Fry, Mrs. F. A. Batey, Ruth
Ann Fry and the hostess.

POMEROY ·

·EVERYBODY WANTS

BOOTS
FOR MEN

THE BEST

ON
EARTH
BOOTS WITHOUT
EQUAL.

AND BOYS

1------•

---=-~

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced .

Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Roush
of Dearborn, Michigan were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald F. Roush and Sheryl.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

lOLA'S

mber C\earance

tto~e

STARTS TOMORROW

NEW FALL

R·esses-..
1 Rack -Values to 25.00

12.95

MISSES DRESSES .

1

All - OCcasion-- dresses in or Ions, polyesters and

rayons. Sizes a to 20.

1 Rack-R_eg . 7.95 lo 14.95

3.95 TO sg,95

JUN lOR DRESSES

1

Cotton s and polyesters in sizes 3 to 15.-

1 Rack -Values to 15.00

7.95

DRESSES
Cottons and

1

polyesters

in misses and

half

sizes.

Many other markdowns now in
our store. Come! Shop! Save!

LADIES' APPAREL
234 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

By Alma Marshall

News Notes

Replace your weak battery now and save

Sears High Voltage Battery
~;.n~~

Guaranteed 42 months

ave
Was~•Hhtnde-ia

45

··,.: Now

MR. AND MRS. MILTON RADCLIFF and two child!:en of
Otarleston, Mr. and Mrs. Jlmmy Wise and children, Brian and
Michelle of Ollumbus visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. James
Wise in New Haven .

· only
).

• I

•

with

trade-in

•

SEARS
HIGHVOLTAGE

BATTERY

$1939

With Trade

48 Mil. Guar.

SEARS

'DIEHARD
BATTERY
$29-45'

TheBe High Voltage Batteries (e&amp;ture polypropylene cases to give superior strrngth to battery walls at the same
time allowing walls to be made thinner than on rubber-case batteries. This gives more room inside for additional
acid and greater plate surface, providing more power than rubber-case batteries.

etc.

PINS
1.00
·NECKLACES
TO
BRACELETS 15.00

ALL BY MATTEL
AND REMOO

CHIEF CREMEANS

The regular dinner meeting of
the New Haven Rotary Club
was held Thursday evening and ·
followed with a short business
session. Attending were Karl
Wiles, Floyd Carmack, Dick
Ord, John Thorne, Lloyd Roush,
James N. Roush, Donald F.
Roush, Harry Miller , Rev.
William DeMoss, John Marshall
and Rome Williamson.
THE FOLLOWING members
of a bowling team and their
families enjoyed a dinner
Sunday at the Uptowner in
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald F. Roush and Sheryl,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Miller
and Amanda, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Capehart, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Miller and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert D. Roush.
THE FINAL results of the
UNICEF drive in the New
Haven area was $141.28. Youth
from the New Haven United
Methodist Church, St. Paul
Lutheran Church, First Church
of God and Bachtel United
Methodist Church participated
in the drive. Refreshments were
served following the drive to
those from the first three
churches, but the youth from
the Bachtel United Methodist
Church met at their own church
for refreshments.
MRS. F. A. BATEY entertained members or the Julia
T. Bryant Sewing Club Tuesday
afternoon. Those attending the
meeting were Mrs. Ottie Roush,
Mrs. Eula MacKnight, Lelah
Jane Powell, Mrs . Donald
Smith,
Mrs.
Howard
Wagenhals, Mrs. John C. Fry,
Mrs. Emil Knight, Mrs. James
MacKnight, Mrs. Lloyd Roush
and the hostess.
The annual turkey dinner of
the club will be held at the home
of Mrs. W. T. Stone Nov. 16.
THE ESTHER Circle of the
United Lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church met Tuesday evening in
the social room of the church for
their November meeting. Mrs.
Melvin Knapp served as
hostess, and Mrs. David Roush
as leader in charge of the
program . Mrs. Roush discussed
another chapter in the book of
Paul 's Letters. Others present
were Mrs. Harry Layne, Lelah
Jane Powell and Mrs. Lloyd
Roush.
MEMBERS OF the New
Haven Firemen 's Auxiliary
held a Tupperware party at the
home of Mrs. Thelma Capehart
Tuesday evening with Mrs.
Donald Bumgardner as guest
dem onstrator. Guests were
Mrs. Thomas Grinstead, Mrs.
John C. Fry, Mrs. Harold Rose,
Mrs. Cliff Roush, Mrs. William
MacFarla nd, Mrs. Clayton
Athey, Mrs . Melvin Knapp,
Mrs. Cecil Duncan , Mrs .
William Grinstead, Mrs. Iva
Capehart, Mrs. Nelson Roush,
Mrs. G. 0. Roush, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. Ray Weaver,
Mrs. Hazen Roush, Mrs. Freda
Hart, Mrs . Charles Roush ,
Becky Roush, Mrs. Capehart
and Mrs. Bumgarner. Funds
realized from the party will be
used to benefit the fire depart·
ment.
THE RUTH CIRCLE of the
United Methodist Church met in
the social room for their
November meeting with Mrs.
Clayton Athey as hostess and
ti1e Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller as
program leader. The meeting
opened with singing of the hymn
"I'm a Child of the King"
followed with a prayer by Mrs.

DARRELL C. HOFFMAN, LETART, bagged a doe deer while
hunting with bow and arrow back of Racine, Ohio on Tuesday. It
weighed 80 pounda hog dressed.

CHRISTMAS SELECTION

EACH

occasion a user gels the feeling
he must "kill or be killed." A
zoom lens effect of the eyea
(like a camera zoom lens)
makes the user even more
paranoid because objects and
people loom up before him,
disappear and alarmingly
reappear.
When injections are stopped
after a "run ,11 the user
"crashes"- this means he goes
in to a period of hallucinations
and deep sleep coma lasting
from 18 to 48 hours. He awakens
famished, eats huge amounts of
food, ·pa: .icularly sweets and
liquids. He is extremely
fatigued, very suspectible to
disease and deeply depressed.
At this point, many users will
take an oral Amphetamine to
get going again.
"Speed" is available on the
"street 'market" in papers, a
small paper package, at about
$3 to $5.11 sells for about $100 an
ounce . Speed aggravates any
heart condition and can cause
strokes in suspectible people . It
is toxic to any healthy heart and
also to the blood vessels as it
increases heart rates, blood
pressure and can cause shock
and death!
Another powerful stimulant is
Cocaine. Its effects on the body
and mind may even exceed
those of Speed. Cocaine, an
extremely hazardous drug, is

DAVID SMITH, MASON, WAS ELECTED president of the
Happy (l() Lucky 4·H Club at a meeting at his borne recently.
Other officers are as follows, Mary Fox, vice president; Paula
Bocook, treasurer ; Cindy Workman, secretary; Cheryl Adams,
scrapbook; Timmy Adams, Game Leader, and Vicki Bissell,
reporter.
The group made plans to have a Christmas party and to exchange gifts. Project leaders were elected for the year. Attending
were Paula Bocook, Cindy Workman, John Workman, Timmy
Adams, Cecilla Smith, Vicki Bissell and 'leader, Mrs. Cecil Smith.

Jmt
4rrived!

VALUES TO $17.95
NOW

124 W. MAIN

otherwise, he lives off the land, hunting only out of necessity.
None of the characters in North Country is actors . These are
all real Alaskans portraying their real lives.
Ron Hayes filmed, directed, and appears in North
Country. He has masterfolly captured on film this land's
magnificent scenery, rare wildlife, and unique people. North
Country, G-rated, is released by American National Enterprises, the company that brought you Cougar Country.

Parents Know the Drug·Threat

HIR
fl NISHI NG.

Robinson's Deaner$

&gt;

Road to
Recovery•••

long.
The golfers will be playing for
pory and not for money. First
prize for the winning team ls
tl,OOO each and another $1,000
goes to the individual low
scorer. As Nicklaus says, It's
less than he makes for a one'ffiinute television commercial.
But the blond "Golden Bear"
of the U. S. Professional Golf
Tour and "Super Mex" Trevino
say they'll go aU out to win for
the United States. They were
scheduled to tee off shortly
before noon, among the last of
Ule teams.
Given the best chance of
beating tbe Americans were
Devlin and Graham, the
English team of Tony Jacklin
and Peter Oosterhuis, and South
Africans Gary Player and
Harold Henning. Player and
Henning won in 1965.
Neither of the Americans was
spectacular in Wednesday's
Pro-Am round, which they
played with Jackie Gleason and
Bob Hope. Nicklaus ahot a 70,
twounderpar,andTrevinoa 74
over the breezy course.
"The course is going to be a
little tougher than it was for the
PGA," said Nickl~us, who won
that t?"rnament 10 ~ebruary.
· He ~td he figured lf he and
Trevmo can each average 282for a team total ~. 564 for the
four-day contest-;, that ought
to he pretty good.

,

LoW individual scorer ln the
Wednesday round was an Chl
Rodriguez of Puerto Rico with a
69. Player hilda 70, and so did
Japan's Haruo Yasuda.

Thanks very much to my supporters in
the last election. My heartiest
congratulations to the first aid squad,
the fire department and Mr. Baronick
in their victory. I wish them much
success in the future. If I can help
them at any time to make Pomeroy a
better place to live I hope they wi II not
hesitate to call on me.
Yours ttu ly,

Delmar A. Canaday

GUARANTEE: If baltery Ia found defective we replace It free within 00 dl!iys of purchase or, after 90 days, e"change 11-charg·

With Trade

5

Yr.

Guar.

lng only for the time you've owned it. Month ly charge will be current selling price tess trade-in at lime of ralum divided by
gu'~~ranlee

months. Batteries In vehicles withoul proper chargino eQuipment not guaranteed.

Authorized
Catalog Merthant

RE.f.AP AND NEW
SNOW TIRES ON SALE

220 E. Main
992-2178
Pomeroy
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TIL 9

Pd. Pol. Ad.v . '

'

If

�'

_,_

,.

· ' 7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Nov. 11, 1971

WEEKEND VISITORS
Mrs. Arthur Wells Lambert,
Ironton ; Miss Eunice Kuenzli,
Springfield; Miss Marlon S.
Lambert, and Miss Allee Jane
Lambert, Youngstown, were
elevation. The facility will weekend guests of Mrs. David
consist of three steel sheet pile Chase Miller, Middleport.
mooring cells 15 feet by 3¥,
inches.
According to the Corps of
Engineers, the decision lor the
permit will be based upon
evaluation of the "Impact of the
proposed work on the public
interest.
Conditions taken under
consideration are navigation,
fish and wildlife, water quality,
economics, conservation,
recreation, aesthetics, the
needs and welfare of the people
involved. AU objections must be
in by Nov. 30. ·
Cheshire Mayor Walter
(Scotty) Lucas will contact the
U. S. Corps of Engineers to see
what if any assistance is
available to help the village
alleviate their problems. The
Ohio Power Company has also
agreed to bring an engineer in
Middleport, o.
r . . . . . .. . ·~
to discuss the situation.

uestions ·Raised

YOUNG CHEF Certificates were presented to members
of Brownie Troop 171 by Miss Joanna Distler, left, home
service agent of the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. at a mothers' tea Wednesday. Receiving the certificates
for having completed the four-week cooking course were, left

to right, Lena Phalin, Jayne Hoeflich, Sue Taylor, Kenda
Braun, Linda Eason, Jan Betzing, Beth Perrin, Lori Rupe,
Andrea Riggs, and Linda Kovalchik. Lorra Wisecup was
unable to attend tbe tea due to illness. The Brownies served
cupcakes, punch, nuts and mints to their mothers and other
relatives attending.

Insurance Firm Shows Gain
COLUMBUS - Columbia
National Corporation has announced operating results for
the nine months ended last
September 30.
Insurance in force rose to
$377,507,678, an increase of 34
pet. over the $280,195,674 at the
end of the same period last
year. Premium income rose 31
pel. from $4,930,211 to
$6,471,389.
Statutory net profit amounted
to $186,630, or 12 cents per share
based on 1,530,597 shares out-

standing, compared to $215,076,
or 14 cents per share based on
1,511,474 shares outstanding
ea rn ed in the nine months last
year.
Earnings per share adjusted
to take into account deferred
profits on insurance written
during the period, however, \vas
$1.09, versus the 77 cents earned
in the like period las t yea r - an
increase of 4! per cent.
Assets on September 30 increased substan tially from
$12,505,878 in 1970 to $17,151 ,148,

Funds Approved
MARI ETTA - John H.
Beasley, executive director of
the Buckeye Hills-Hockin g
Valley Regional Development
District. announced Saturday
final approval has been given
for $!3!,000 in Emergency
Employment Act funds and jobs
for six .Southeastern Ohio
countles. Gallia and Meigs were
not included.
They were Athens County,
.$19,725 to assist in hiring one
deputy sheriff, one secretary,
one engineering technician and
one tax collector.
City of Athens, $32,379 to

16 Make
College
Who's
Who
RIO GRANDE - Sixteen Rio
Grande College students have
been selected to appear in the
1911 ed ition of "Who's Who
Among Students in American
Colleges and Universities ."
They were selected by a
campus nominating cornmitlee
and reviewed by the editors of
the directory.
Cri teria used by the campus
groups and the ditorial board
include academic achie'bel!)ent,
serv ice to the communi ty ,
leadership in educational and

.

e:dracurric ula r

activities,

citizenshi p and future potential.
Listed a re Danny Davis,
Amanda, Math major; Fred
Dee!, Vinton, history, and a
member of Alpha Delta EpMary
Divelbliss,
silon;
Fredri cktown , elementary
education; Eleanor Fadele)'.
Rio Grande, Math ; Jo Fisher,
North Gallia, and Delbert Kail,
North Can ton, his tory; Larry
Landaker, president of the
Student Senate and the only
junior named ; Pat Lindauere,
Ambridge, a physical education
major and a resident assistant ;
Gary Reeds, history ; Sheila
Ri ngh iser. biology. both of
Columbus; Brenda Stewart ,
Gallipolis, speech, and tnember
of both the Forensics team and
th e College Theatre; Evie
Taylor. biology, Gallipolis, and
a member of Zeta Theta Chi ;
Margare t Thomas, English,
Oak Hill; David Warne, Math,
and Susan White, elementary
' education; Gallipolis.
NOT THE SAME
In a recent re~ hearings
held in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Frank W. Porter,
Clifford E. Manley, Middleport,
was fined on a driving while
intoxicated charge. This is not
the Cliffor,d Manley who
operates Ch!f's Shoe RPnair on.
,.,A_..... t:'l- - __. •- -

assist in hiring one auditor 's
clerk,
one
engineering
technician, two police of£icers,
one assis tant recreation
director, and one code enforcement officer.
Mon roe County. $6 ,600 to
assist in hiring two sheriff's
dispatchers.
Morgan· County, $6,600 to
assist in hiring one draftsman .
Perry County, $14,000 to assist
in hiring one deputy sheriff and
two clerks.
Noble County, 16,600 to assist
in hiring one engineering aide
and one mechanic.
Washington County, $24,175 to
assist in hiring one denuJy
sheriff, two draftsmen , one
trai ler tax man, and one
assistan t county engineer.
City of Marietta, $13,825 to
assist in hiring one building
inspector and one housing inspector.
City of Belpre, $5,000 to assist
in hiring one police officer .
The Feder.al funds will, in
most cases provide 90 pet. of the
salaries and fringe benefits for
the new public employees hired.

Syracuse
News, Society
. BY ADA SLACK
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Hildore
of Steubenville were weekend
guests of Mrs. T. G. Hildore.
Mrs. Donald Kouns spent the
we~kend in Graceland, Ky.
vU.iting her mother who is in a
hospital there.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
and son, Charles Robert, spent
a weekend with their daughter
and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs.
Max Folmer and daughter.
Pam, in Cincinnati.
Miss Sandy Zerkle, Columbus, and Danny Carol, of
Detroit, Mich. were weekend
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs . William Zerkle.
Mrs. Pauline Morarity was a
recent guest of Mrs. Allie
Carmen of Athens.
Mrs. Ada Slack has returned
to her home after spending two
weeks with her · son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger A. Slack and sons, Roger,
Jr., and James, of Milwaukee,
Wis. On her return trip she was
met at the airport by her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Harley Johnson and
children of Wolf Pen road.
Mr . and Mrs. William Brown
are visiting in Texas for ten
days.
Mrs, Harry Potts, acco mp ~ n ie d by her granddaughter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Rc) Jenkins of St. Marys,
W. Ya. visited the forme r'•
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Nease at
Weston, W. Va. Mr . Nease, who
is 91, is quite ill .
Mr: and Mrs. Melvin Grimm
visited in Columbus with their
lhrll!~

.lilnnc Rni"..- rl

lt'lr.url .. nrl

while book value per share
during the comparative period
1adjusted to account for
deferr ed profits on total insurance in force at the end of
the nine months) also increased
to $9.29 from the $8.07 in 1970.
Investmen t income rose to
$651,642, up 40 per cent from
$465,091 in 1970. Policy reserves
increased 60 per cent from
$4,383,438 to $7,C15,719. Benefits
paid to policyholders and
beneficiaries amounted to
$1,754,057 ,
compared
to
$1,054,164 at the end of nine
mon ths in 1970.
According to Ray C. Gilbert,
President of the Columbusbased firm , the decline in
statutory ne t profit in the period
can primarily be attributed to
costs associated with acquiring
some $20 million more in new
business th3n was acquired in
the nine nionths of 1970. The
lung term contribution of this
new business to profits ,
however. is reflected in the
company's adjusted earnings
per share.

Columbia Nationa l Corporation is an insurance holding
company whose wholly-&lt;Jwned
subsidiaries include Columbia
National Life Insurance
Company (of Ohio), Columbia
Life Insurance Company of
Illinois, Columbia Life Insurance Company of Florida
and Columbia National Service
Company.
Columbia
National
is
represented locally by Andy
Toler, Maurice A. Toler and
Bryce Smith.

Alfred
Social Note.~
Sunday School attendance on
Nov. 7 was 47, the offering
$17.80.
Worship services were held at
11, with an attendance of 28,
with the Rev . Lehman bringing
the message from Acts 3:1-10.
Communion was administered
to 21 people.
Lloyd Dillinger. Finance
Chairman, attended the In·
terpretation meeting, held at
the Heath United Methodist
Church at Middleport on
Tuesday evening, Nov. 2. He
gave a report on what he
learned at the meeting Sunday
morning, at the church here,
and passed out printed information . He will present
slides on the subject next
Sunday morning.
Re v. and Mrs . Randy
Lavender and son, Shayn, of
Athens took Sunday evening
supper with Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Taylor and John.
There was an attendance of 10
at last Wednesday evening
prayer service, with Nina
Robinson, leader.
Revival services will begin
here on Monday evening, Nov .
15, and continue until the end of
the week, with Rev. Leh.nan
bringing the message. The
Bissell Brothers will render
special music on Tuesday and
Thursday evenings. A quartet
from Junction City will sing on
Saturday evening, other nights
will feature local singers and
talent from other churches.
Everyone is welcome .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
Sue Ann of Athens visited Clara
Follrod and Nina Robinson,

Sev.eral property owners
residing along the Ohio River in
the Village of Cheshire raised
questions to the town council
Tuesday night about the
proposed construction of a coal
loading dock south of the village
for Ohio Power Company's $488
million James M. Gavin Plant.
The U. S. Corps of Engineers
has notified Cheshire residents
that Ohio Power Company has
applied for a permit to cOn·
struct a coal and oil unloading
facility at its Gavin plant on the
Ohio River. Residents appeared
not as concerned over the coal
dock as they are over the additional river traffic which they
believe will create "more
problems" to their properties
along the river.
In recent years, backwash
111d under currents have caused
considerable erosion to the
banks behind the homes of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hern, Mr. and
Mrs. Otto Rothgeb, Mr. and

relatives in Columbus.
Robert and Reece Grimm of
Columbus visited their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Grimm .
Mrs . Luther Friend of
Basham visited Sunday with
her mother, Mrs. Alice
Capehart.
Mr . Melvin Grimm was at
University
Hospital
in
Columbus for his scheduled
check-up.
Mrs. Ada Slack, while in
Milwaukee was a Sunday dinner
guoot of Mr. and Mrs. George
Dragovich, and visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow Hendrix,
who were former residents
here.

and Mrs. Mike Fry,
Residents fear that additional
traffic could cause permanent
damage to their homes.
The coal unloading facility
would consist of 24 steel sheet
pile mooring ceUs 15 feet by 3¥,
Inches in diameter; two steel
sheet pile anchor cells, 37 feet
by 7'4 inches in diameter and
four steel sheet pile anchor cells
35 feet by 7'4 inches to support a
barge unloader.
It will extend a distance of
approximately 3,279 feet along
the river bank, The coal loader
would be located 1,408 feet
upstream from lhe downstream
en~. of the facility; the two
anchor cells at the upstream
end perpendicular to the shore
line. The mooring cells and
barge unloader cells would.
project 31 feet above normal
pool elevation; two anchor cells
37 feet above normal pool

My
'Buy What YOU Need-At These SAVINGS
re® COVER GIRL~
Goricidin®
at the first sign
of a cold!
atura noxzema®
MEDICATED MAKE-UP

BY

REG. 11.67

Control
Hair
REG. 99'

lOO's

99~

.BAKER

~:· FURNITURE ·

[OOCE AS FA$T AS ASPIRIN!

Sunday .
Paul Kelly and his brother,
Jake Kelly and wife of Lead
Mine, W. Va. took Sunday
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Robinson and family. Supper
guests were the above and
Lester Seaman

and

son,

Charles, ofBarlow,O. ; Mr. and
Mrs . Wilbur Robinson and
daughters, local; George
Donovan of Syracuse.
Calling in the evening were
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul of
Sumner, and Janet Connolly of
Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode visited at the Elmwood
Nursing Home.

;;;E· UP

IHf iC.III .. I ,

flU

REG.

98~

1(1 1(1 Of

Mls.ll UIO IIIIYS tO • C£ , 1!1111

llfll · •r Rrtl · NWliUIICIU

lfz

OZ.

001•

1'01'• . • •

IOOH

Jumbo Pack Gum

614

COMES IN 4
FlAVORS

•-

26'~

'

SAVE

UN ICAP

ONE ADAY.

STARTING SUNDAY
3 DAYS ONLY

MEIGS
THEATRE
7:00 · 9:00 P.M.

VITAMINS

••ll

ifl·

REG.
1111

20 oz.

ARTERS

TWIN TRAY 400'S
REG. 11.65 ONLY

REG. 99'
13 oz.

'LOTION
.

REG. '1.35
7 oz.

'•

TO FIT
YOUR_

· 100's

PLEDGE
Untapped pockets of clean noturaf gas lie.
miles beneath the surface Of lhe earth. And we
mean to reach them. We lislan to the eanh's
heanbeat deep underground in the Appate·

chiao area and our sophistice1ed prospecting

inslruments.guide us 10 poten1ial de~sits of
na1Ural gas. So we're tooling up to dnll further
down than we've ever gone before. Wildcat

992-2709

MII)DL'E PORl

exploratiOn is expensive and the chances of

REG.

finding gas in commercial quantities are one
ou1 of nine. But the rewards in more clean

modern natural gas for heating an·d cooling·

i

cookin9, clothes drying. water h..ting and
industnal u..s will be well w0r1h it. Drilling

o•• lend
is just one of the wavs we will meet youf

deeper in America's Oftginal natural

ever~

increasing nHd 1or vah.lable natural gas.
Gas is right there. ·
·

•

I

70i.

TOWELS
9~3ROtlS89

PLA~ING REG.
,(QI
I • IDL.&amp;

4 57~

Desert Flower

Max Factor Spray-A- Wave

BAN ROLL ON
DEODORANT

VOJ
SHAMPOO
REG. sus
15 oz.

HAIR SPRAY. .........1,5..~:·..~~.'~.....$1.25
Old Spice Super

SMOOTH

REG. '1.09

Coty _L'Aimiant

2 FOR
99'

Coty L'Aimianl

HAl-KARATE
After Shave Lotion
·REG: $1.75
4 oz.

REG. '1.99

84's

1.29

SPECIAL
REG. $1.89

c

COUGH
SYRUP

REG. '2.25

ROCKET
TAPE

By Scotch Tape
REG. 44'
lih''dW"I

.-

3 oz.
REG. 11.49-

ALADD,,.

·Pint
thermos

. NO. 23&amp; ·

TALCUM POWDER ...............$1.50
New Clairol

LIP GLOSS KIT.. ..~~.~~.~~~~~ ... }l.66

4
rolla
for
with this coupon

IS GOLDEN .

LILT

-

99~

NEW • SILENCE
POLl DENT
TABLETS ·

SHAVE.~.1..0.z:..~~.~-..5•1:~.5.. 77'

TOILET WATER.....................$2.50

1

L

77

5 oz.

- ·- -

~:;:;;;::~

VALLEY
WMBER &amp;I'SUPPLY CO.
,

88~

ONLv99~

REG. '1.35

REG. 51.59

REG. 51.69

BUDGET

TRIPLE TRACK. OR BLIND STOP
' WINDOWS

SPRAY

7 oz.

31b.

ULTRA
BAN
5000

BAN

2 FOR sse
DISTILLED
WATER GAL

EXTRA DRY
.

llltiLAI.
IU
II DIY
FOIIIW

Jt=4of.motto
SWABS

HAIR
SPRAY

_(Ill_ _ _ __

CX-126-12
EASTMAN

DEODORANT

SUAVE

COLOR Po\CK mM

99~

Shampoo

ggt sse

$3.99

JERGENS

$3.88

TI08

KODAK FILM
REG. '1.35

250's

•1.77

REG. '5.49

',,

' - -..........1 .REG. 11.59

BARBARA ELLEN RUM &amp;
BRANDY FLAVORED.

No. 108 Color

gge

MOUTH
WASH
·~

REG. '6.57
24
FREE

16 oz.

59°

oz.

_59e

D
FILM

CEPACOL

LIFE SAVERS

Tn.te-lb·Ufa
Advant1re!

only

26~

REG. 89'

6PACK

CROSS COUNTRY lUSH , •• Hunting for a
great lackat? Thl1 11 II. Rugged 100%cotlon corduroy with a plulh llni"SS of Orlontt
acrylic plla. Datal! atltchlng and Iota of
big rooony pockaiL

9 oz.

SHAVE CREAM

5-3t 2\KG&amp;25e

Audtentic

77°

~ ~
BABY babY. with the World's
Finest Powder!
POWDER

NOXZEMA
18 STICKS

40Z.

Reg. 51.35

6~

ASSORTED
SHADES

FOR CHILDREN
REG. 43~

Vital is
REG. 9:r

NOVEMBER 14

$1.75

Blsinol

25's

"BABY
YOURSELF"

69~

lt•JH)I. ..u•s ' ~"•'"'

Ina
magnificent
majesti::
wildlife. eroless rivers
tCMering ll10Liltains, ard
the real people who live
on
America's Last Frontier.
Aoll _ _ , . . _ _ _ ...,

Reg . $1.75
Reg. $1.75
,

Reg. $2.25

REG. SlJ7
100's

Ujll~ o tU~ o.O:

l O . ClASli ~C

·~

I

..

Nasa/Spray

offices were secretary, Mrs.
Grace M. Dorst, Rt. I, Shade,
and treasurer, Mrs. Margaret
White, Rt. 5, Jackson. They are
secretaries for the Alexander
and Jackson City Schools
respectively. The election was
held at the OAPSE Soulheast
District's annual meeting Nov.
5 at Fairland High School near
Proctorville.

~~eg.

,12·-9
•

®

®

NA_
SAL
SP-RAY

r

, Reg. 11.09
8 oz.

MAKE·UP

{iiQ;")

McNerlin Heading
District OAPSE
Thomas E. McNerlin, 229 W.
Hill St., Oak Hill, has been
elected president of the Southeast District of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees (OAPSE ). MeNerlin is a custodian for the Oak
Hill Union Local Schools in
Jackson County .
McNerlin is a former member
of the OAPSE State Executive
Board from the Southeast
District• and is a member of
OAPSE Chapter No. 455, Oak
Hill.
Other newly~lected district
officers are First Vice
President Earl M. Fradd, Rt. 1,
Kitts Hill, and Second Vice
President William D. Siple, 2421
S. Fourth St., Ironton. Fradd is
a bus driver for the Rock Hill
Local Schools in Lawrence Co.,
and Siple is attendance officer
for the Ironton City Schools.
Re~lected to their respective

I

PRESSED POWDER

4-WAY
-- '

REUEF

TABlETS

ITOMACN

gge

FOR

ECOID.

I'OIUPftT

TOZ.

-2-~ -

PECANS GOING
Reese and families for two
weeks.
Saturday night visitors of Mr.
and Mrs . Sampson Hall, and
David Lawson were Arthur Hall
and Dee Hall, of Logan, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Largent
of Florida visited his brother ·
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Largent.
Mrs . Ellen Newland and
daughter, Lucille, of Athens
visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Guinther and family .
Mark Kouns, attending
Marshall College in Huntington,
spent a weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Kouns.
Mrs. Pauline Morarity was a
recent supper guest of Mrs.
Lena Bunce, of Middleport,
Mrs. Melvin Grimm visited
Mrs . Margaret Aisel in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins of
St. Marys, W. Va. visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Lisle and other relatives.
Myla Hudson spent a few days
with her sister and brother·inlaw, Mr. and Mrs . Clyde
Gerlach Sr. of Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Bess
visited several days with

Mrs. James Preston, and Mr.

-

.

I

~

�'

_,_

,.

· ' 7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Nov. 11, 1971

WEEKEND VISITORS
Mrs. Arthur Wells Lambert,
Ironton ; Miss Eunice Kuenzli,
Springfield; Miss Marlon S.
Lambert, and Miss Allee Jane
Lambert, Youngstown, were
elevation. The facility will weekend guests of Mrs. David
consist of three steel sheet pile Chase Miller, Middleport.
mooring cells 15 feet by 3¥,
inches.
According to the Corps of
Engineers, the decision lor the
permit will be based upon
evaluation of the "Impact of the
proposed work on the public
interest.
Conditions taken under
consideration are navigation,
fish and wildlife, water quality,
economics, conservation,
recreation, aesthetics, the
needs and welfare of the people
involved. AU objections must be
in by Nov. 30. ·
Cheshire Mayor Walter
(Scotty) Lucas will contact the
U. S. Corps of Engineers to see
what if any assistance is
available to help the village
alleviate their problems. The
Ohio Power Company has also
agreed to bring an engineer in
Middleport, o.
r . . . . . .. . ·~
to discuss the situation.

uestions ·Raised

YOUNG CHEF Certificates were presented to members
of Brownie Troop 171 by Miss Joanna Distler, left, home
service agent of the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. at a mothers' tea Wednesday. Receiving the certificates
for having completed the four-week cooking course were, left

to right, Lena Phalin, Jayne Hoeflich, Sue Taylor, Kenda
Braun, Linda Eason, Jan Betzing, Beth Perrin, Lori Rupe,
Andrea Riggs, and Linda Kovalchik. Lorra Wisecup was
unable to attend tbe tea due to illness. The Brownies served
cupcakes, punch, nuts and mints to their mothers and other
relatives attending.

Insurance Firm Shows Gain
COLUMBUS - Columbia
National Corporation has announced operating results for
the nine months ended last
September 30.
Insurance in force rose to
$377,507,678, an increase of 34
pet. over the $280,195,674 at the
end of the same period last
year. Premium income rose 31
pel. from $4,930,211 to
$6,471,389.
Statutory net profit amounted
to $186,630, or 12 cents per share
based on 1,530,597 shares out-

standing, compared to $215,076,
or 14 cents per share based on
1,511,474 shares outstanding
ea rn ed in the nine months last
year.
Earnings per share adjusted
to take into account deferred
profits on insurance written
during the period, however, \vas
$1.09, versus the 77 cents earned
in the like period las t yea r - an
increase of 4! per cent.
Assets on September 30 increased substan tially from
$12,505,878 in 1970 to $17,151 ,148,

Funds Approved
MARI ETTA - John H.
Beasley, executive director of
the Buckeye Hills-Hockin g
Valley Regional Development
District. announced Saturday
final approval has been given
for $!3!,000 in Emergency
Employment Act funds and jobs
for six .Southeastern Ohio
countles. Gallia and Meigs were
not included.
They were Athens County,
.$19,725 to assist in hiring one
deputy sheriff, one secretary,
one engineering technician and
one tax collector.
City of Athens, $32,379 to

16 Make
College
Who's
Who
RIO GRANDE - Sixteen Rio
Grande College students have
been selected to appear in the
1911 ed ition of "Who's Who
Among Students in American
Colleges and Universities ."
They were selected by a
campus nominating cornmitlee
and reviewed by the editors of
the directory.
Cri teria used by the campus
groups and the ditorial board
include academic achie'bel!)ent,
serv ice to the communi ty ,
leadership in educational and

.

e:dracurric ula r

activities,

citizenshi p and future potential.
Listed a re Danny Davis,
Amanda, Math major; Fred
Dee!, Vinton, history, and a
member of Alpha Delta EpMary
Divelbliss,
silon;
Fredri cktown , elementary
education; Eleanor Fadele)'.
Rio Grande, Math ; Jo Fisher,
North Gallia, and Delbert Kail,
North Can ton, his tory; Larry
Landaker, president of the
Student Senate and the only
junior named ; Pat Lindauere,
Ambridge, a physical education
major and a resident assistant ;
Gary Reeds, history ; Sheila
Ri ngh iser. biology. both of
Columbus; Brenda Stewart ,
Gallipolis, speech, and tnember
of both the Forensics team and
th e College Theatre; Evie
Taylor. biology, Gallipolis, and
a member of Zeta Theta Chi ;
Margare t Thomas, English,
Oak Hill; David Warne, Math,
and Susan White, elementary
' education; Gallipolis.
NOT THE SAME
In a recent re~ hearings
held in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Frank W. Porter,
Clifford E. Manley, Middleport,
was fined on a driving while
intoxicated charge. This is not
the Cliffor,d Manley who
operates Ch!f's Shoe RPnair on.
,.,A_..... t:'l- - __. •- -

assist in hiring one auditor 's
clerk,
one
engineering
technician, two police of£icers,
one assis tant recreation
director, and one code enforcement officer.
Mon roe County. $6 ,600 to
assist in hiring two sheriff's
dispatchers.
Morgan· County, $6,600 to
assist in hiring one draftsman .
Perry County, $14,000 to assist
in hiring one deputy sheriff and
two clerks.
Noble County, 16,600 to assist
in hiring one engineering aide
and one mechanic.
Washington County, $24,175 to
assist in hiring one denuJy
sheriff, two draftsmen , one
trai ler tax man, and one
assistan t county engineer.
City of Marietta, $13,825 to
assist in hiring one building
inspector and one housing inspector.
City of Belpre, $5,000 to assist
in hiring one police officer .
The Feder.al funds will, in
most cases provide 90 pet. of the
salaries and fringe benefits for
the new public employees hired.

Syracuse
News, Society
. BY ADA SLACK
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Hildore
of Steubenville were weekend
guests of Mrs. T. G. Hildore.
Mrs. Donald Kouns spent the
we~kend in Graceland, Ky.
vU.iting her mother who is in a
hospital there.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
and son, Charles Robert, spent
a weekend with their daughter
and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs.
Max Folmer and daughter.
Pam, in Cincinnati.
Miss Sandy Zerkle, Columbus, and Danny Carol, of
Detroit, Mich. were weekend
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs . William Zerkle.
Mrs. Pauline Morarity was a
recent guest of Mrs. Allie
Carmen of Athens.
Mrs. Ada Slack has returned
to her home after spending two
weeks with her · son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger A. Slack and sons, Roger,
Jr., and James, of Milwaukee,
Wis. On her return trip she was
met at the airport by her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Harley Johnson and
children of Wolf Pen road.
Mr . and Mrs. William Brown
are visiting in Texas for ten
days.
Mrs, Harry Potts, acco mp ~ n ie d by her granddaughter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Rc) Jenkins of St. Marys,
W. Ya. visited the forme r'•
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Nease at
Weston, W. Va. Mr . Nease, who
is 91, is quite ill .
Mr: and Mrs. Melvin Grimm
visited in Columbus with their
lhrll!~

.lilnnc Rni"..- rl

lt'lr.url .. nrl

while book value per share
during the comparative period
1adjusted to account for
deferr ed profits on total insurance in force at the end of
the nine months) also increased
to $9.29 from the $8.07 in 1970.
Investmen t income rose to
$651,642, up 40 per cent from
$465,091 in 1970. Policy reserves
increased 60 per cent from
$4,383,438 to $7,C15,719. Benefits
paid to policyholders and
beneficiaries amounted to
$1,754,057 ,
compared
to
$1,054,164 at the end of nine
mon ths in 1970.
According to Ray C. Gilbert,
President of the Columbusbased firm , the decline in
statutory ne t profit in the period
can primarily be attributed to
costs associated with acquiring
some $20 million more in new
business th3n was acquired in
the nine nionths of 1970. The
lung term contribution of this
new business to profits ,
however. is reflected in the
company's adjusted earnings
per share.

Columbia Nationa l Corporation is an insurance holding
company whose wholly-&lt;Jwned
subsidiaries include Columbia
National Life Insurance
Company (of Ohio), Columbia
Life Insurance Company of
Illinois, Columbia Life Insurance Company of Florida
and Columbia National Service
Company.
Columbia
National
is
represented locally by Andy
Toler, Maurice A. Toler and
Bryce Smith.

Alfred
Social Note.~
Sunday School attendance on
Nov. 7 was 47, the offering
$17.80.
Worship services were held at
11, with an attendance of 28,
with the Rev . Lehman bringing
the message from Acts 3:1-10.
Communion was administered
to 21 people.
Lloyd Dillinger. Finance
Chairman, attended the In·
terpretation meeting, held at
the Heath United Methodist
Church at Middleport on
Tuesday evening, Nov. 2. He
gave a report on what he
learned at the meeting Sunday
morning, at the church here,
and passed out printed information . He will present
slides on the subject next
Sunday morning.
Re v. and Mrs . Randy
Lavender and son, Shayn, of
Athens took Sunday evening
supper with Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Taylor and John.
There was an attendance of 10
at last Wednesday evening
prayer service, with Nina
Robinson, leader.
Revival services will begin
here on Monday evening, Nov .
15, and continue until the end of
the week, with Rev. Leh.nan
bringing the message. The
Bissell Brothers will render
special music on Tuesday and
Thursday evenings. A quartet
from Junction City will sing on
Saturday evening, other nights
will feature local singers and
talent from other churches.
Everyone is welcome .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
Sue Ann of Athens visited Clara
Follrod and Nina Robinson,

Sev.eral property owners
residing along the Ohio River in
the Village of Cheshire raised
questions to the town council
Tuesday night about the
proposed construction of a coal
loading dock south of the village
for Ohio Power Company's $488
million James M. Gavin Plant.
The U. S. Corps of Engineers
has notified Cheshire residents
that Ohio Power Company has
applied for a permit to cOn·
struct a coal and oil unloading
facility at its Gavin plant on the
Ohio River. Residents appeared
not as concerned over the coal
dock as they are over the additional river traffic which they
believe will create "more
problems" to their properties
along the river.
In recent years, backwash
111d under currents have caused
considerable erosion to the
banks behind the homes of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hern, Mr. and
Mrs. Otto Rothgeb, Mr. and

relatives in Columbus.
Robert and Reece Grimm of
Columbus visited their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Grimm .
Mrs . Luther Friend of
Basham visited Sunday with
her mother, Mrs. Alice
Capehart.
Mr . Melvin Grimm was at
University
Hospital
in
Columbus for his scheduled
check-up.
Mrs. Ada Slack, while in
Milwaukee was a Sunday dinner
guoot of Mr. and Mrs. George
Dragovich, and visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow Hendrix,
who were former residents
here.

and Mrs. Mike Fry,
Residents fear that additional
traffic could cause permanent
damage to their homes.
The coal unloading facility
would consist of 24 steel sheet
pile mooring ceUs 15 feet by 3¥,
Inches in diameter; two steel
sheet pile anchor cells, 37 feet
by 7'4 inches in diameter and
four steel sheet pile anchor cells
35 feet by 7'4 inches to support a
barge unloader.
It will extend a distance of
approximately 3,279 feet along
the river bank, The coal loader
would be located 1,408 feet
upstream from lhe downstream
en~. of the facility; the two
anchor cells at the upstream
end perpendicular to the shore
line. The mooring cells and
barge unloader cells would.
project 31 feet above normal
pool elevation; two anchor cells
37 feet above normal pool

My
'Buy What YOU Need-At These SAVINGS
re® COVER GIRL~
Goricidin®
at the first sign
of a cold!
atura noxzema®
MEDICATED MAKE-UP

BY

REG. 11.67

Control
Hair
REG. 99'

lOO's

99~

.BAKER

~:· FURNITURE ·

[OOCE AS FA$T AS ASPIRIN!

Sunday .
Paul Kelly and his brother,
Jake Kelly and wife of Lead
Mine, W. Va. took Sunday
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Robinson and family. Supper
guests were the above and
Lester Seaman

and

son,

Charles, ofBarlow,O. ; Mr. and
Mrs . Wilbur Robinson and
daughters, local; George
Donovan of Syracuse.
Calling in the evening were
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul of
Sumner, and Janet Connolly of
Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode visited at the Elmwood
Nursing Home.

;;;E· UP

IHf iC.III .. I ,

flU

REG.

98~

1(1 1(1 Of

Mls.ll UIO IIIIYS tO • C£ , 1!1111

llfll · •r Rrtl · NWliUIICIU

lfz

OZ.

001•

1'01'• . • •

IOOH

Jumbo Pack Gum

614

COMES IN 4
FlAVORS

•-

26'~

'

SAVE

UN ICAP

ONE ADAY.

STARTING SUNDAY
3 DAYS ONLY

MEIGS
THEATRE
7:00 · 9:00 P.M.

VITAMINS

••ll

ifl·

REG.
1111

20 oz.

ARTERS

TWIN TRAY 400'S
REG. 11.65 ONLY

REG. 99'
13 oz.

'LOTION
.

REG. '1.35
7 oz.

'•

TO FIT
YOUR_

· 100's

PLEDGE
Untapped pockets of clean noturaf gas lie.
miles beneath the surface Of lhe earth. And we
mean to reach them. We lislan to the eanh's
heanbeat deep underground in the Appate·

chiao area and our sophistice1ed prospecting

inslruments.guide us 10 poten1ial de~sits of
na1Ural gas. So we're tooling up to dnll further
down than we've ever gone before. Wildcat

992-2709

MII)DL'E PORl

exploratiOn is expensive and the chances of

REG.

finding gas in commercial quantities are one
ou1 of nine. But the rewards in more clean

modern natural gas for heating an·d cooling·

i

cookin9, clothes drying. water h..ting and
industnal u..s will be well w0r1h it. Drilling

o•• lend
is just one of the wavs we will meet youf

deeper in America's Oftginal natural

ever~

increasing nHd 1or vah.lable natural gas.
Gas is right there. ·
·

•

I

70i.

TOWELS
9~3ROtlS89

PLA~ING REG.
,(QI
I • IDL.&amp;

4 57~

Desert Flower

Max Factor Spray-A- Wave

BAN ROLL ON
DEODORANT

VOJ
SHAMPOO
REG. sus
15 oz.

HAIR SPRAY. .........1,5..~:·..~~.'~.....$1.25
Old Spice Super

SMOOTH

REG. '1.09

Coty _L'Aimiant

2 FOR
99'

Coty L'Aimianl

HAl-KARATE
After Shave Lotion
·REG: $1.75
4 oz.

REG. '1.99

84's

1.29

SPECIAL
REG. $1.89

c

COUGH
SYRUP

REG. '2.25

ROCKET
TAPE

By Scotch Tape
REG. 44'
lih''dW"I

.-

3 oz.
REG. 11.49-

ALADD,,.

·Pint
thermos

. NO. 23&amp; ·

TALCUM POWDER ...............$1.50
New Clairol

LIP GLOSS KIT.. ..~~.~~.~~~~~ ... }l.66

4
rolla
for
with this coupon

IS GOLDEN .

LILT

-

99~

NEW • SILENCE
POLl DENT
TABLETS ·

SHAVE.~.1..0.z:..~~.~-..5•1:~.5.. 77'

TOILET WATER.....................$2.50

1

L

77

5 oz.

- ·- -

~:;:;;;::~

VALLEY
WMBER &amp;I'SUPPLY CO.
,

88~

ONLv99~

REG. '1.35

REG. 51.59

REG. 51.69

BUDGET

TRIPLE TRACK. OR BLIND STOP
' WINDOWS

SPRAY

7 oz.

31b.

ULTRA
BAN
5000

BAN

2 FOR sse
DISTILLED
WATER GAL

EXTRA DRY
.

llltiLAI.
IU
II DIY
FOIIIW

Jt=4of.motto
SWABS

HAIR
SPRAY

_(Ill_ _ _ __

CX-126-12
EASTMAN

DEODORANT

SUAVE

COLOR Po\CK mM

99~

Shampoo

ggt sse

$3.99

JERGENS

$3.88

TI08

KODAK FILM
REG. '1.35

250's

•1.77

REG. '5.49

',,

' - -..........1 .REG. 11.59

BARBARA ELLEN RUM &amp;
BRANDY FLAVORED.

No. 108 Color

gge

MOUTH
WASH
·~

REG. '6.57
24
FREE

16 oz.

59°

oz.

_59e

D
FILM

CEPACOL

LIFE SAVERS

Tn.te-lb·Ufa
Advant1re!

only

26~

REG. 89'

6PACK

CROSS COUNTRY lUSH , •• Hunting for a
great lackat? Thl1 11 II. Rugged 100%cotlon corduroy with a plulh llni"SS of Orlontt
acrylic plla. Datal! atltchlng and Iota of
big rooony pockaiL

9 oz.

SHAVE CREAM

5-3t 2\KG&amp;25e

Audtentic

77°

~ ~
BABY babY. with the World's
Finest Powder!
POWDER

NOXZEMA
18 STICKS

40Z.

Reg. 51.35

6~

ASSORTED
SHADES

FOR CHILDREN
REG. 43~

Vital is
REG. 9:r

NOVEMBER 14

$1.75

Blsinol

25's

"BABY
YOURSELF"

69~

lt•JH)I. ..u•s ' ~"•'"'

Ina
magnificent
majesti::
wildlife. eroless rivers
tCMering ll10Liltains, ard
the real people who live
on
America's Last Frontier.
Aoll _ _ , . . _ _ _ ...,

Reg . $1.75
Reg. $1.75
,

Reg. $2.25

REG. SlJ7
100's

Ujll~ o tU~ o.O:

l O . ClASli ~C

·~

I

..

Nasa/Spray

offices were secretary, Mrs.
Grace M. Dorst, Rt. I, Shade,
and treasurer, Mrs. Margaret
White, Rt. 5, Jackson. They are
secretaries for the Alexander
and Jackson City Schools
respectively. The election was
held at the OAPSE Soulheast
District's annual meeting Nov.
5 at Fairland High School near
Proctorville.

~~eg.

,12·-9
•

®

®

NA_
SAL
SP-RAY

r

, Reg. 11.09
8 oz.

MAKE·UP

{iiQ;")

McNerlin Heading
District OAPSE
Thomas E. McNerlin, 229 W.
Hill St., Oak Hill, has been
elected president of the Southeast District of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees (OAPSE ). MeNerlin is a custodian for the Oak
Hill Union Local Schools in
Jackson County .
McNerlin is a former member
of the OAPSE State Executive
Board from the Southeast
District• and is a member of
OAPSE Chapter No. 455, Oak
Hill.
Other newly~lected district
officers are First Vice
President Earl M. Fradd, Rt. 1,
Kitts Hill, and Second Vice
President William D. Siple, 2421
S. Fourth St., Ironton. Fradd is
a bus driver for the Rock Hill
Local Schools in Lawrence Co.,
and Siple is attendance officer
for the Ironton City Schools.
Re~lected to their respective

I

PRESSED POWDER

4-WAY
-- '

REUEF

TABlETS

ITOMACN

gge

FOR

ECOID.

I'OIUPftT

TOZ.

-2-~ -

PECANS GOING
Reese and families for two
weeks.
Saturday night visitors of Mr.
and Mrs . Sampson Hall, and
David Lawson were Arthur Hall
and Dee Hall, of Logan, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Largent
of Florida visited his brother ·
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Largent.
Mrs . Ellen Newland and
daughter, Lucille, of Athens
visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Guinther and family .
Mark Kouns, attending
Marshall College in Huntington,
spent a weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Kouns.
Mrs. Pauline Morarity was a
recent supper guest of Mrs.
Lena Bunce, of Middleport,
Mrs. Melvin Grimm visited
Mrs . Margaret Aisel in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins of
St. Marys, W. Va. visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Lisle and other relatives.
Myla Hudson spent a few days
with her sister and brother·inlaw, Mr. and Mrs . Clyde
Gerlach Sr. of Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Bess
visited several days with

Mrs. James Preston, and Mr.

-

.

I

~

�r

• -'f.'llelllllylemlne!,Mf" F~r.o., Nov. II, 1971

a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 11, 1971

Questions-Answers ·about Phase II

Mariner 9
Getting

WA SHINGTON (UPI) -

Ques1lons and answers based on
.th e
government's
late st
economic decisions :
Q. Will pri ces go up when the

freeze ends at midnight Sa tur,
da y.7
A. Some undoubtedly will. but

Mars Shots

which ones and the amounts by

PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) America's Mariner 9 closed in
on Mars today. its cameras tak·
ing a picture every hour to
show scientists the extent of
the most severe dust storm ev.
er seen on the puzzling planet.
The 165 million spacecraft,
less than half a million miles
away, will attempt to orbit
Mars late Saturday for the first
time to give its two television
cameras and other instruments
an unmatched view of the plan·
et for at least three months.
Mariner 9 began its scientific
examination of Mars late Wed·
nesday by starting a 24 - hour
sequence
or
photographs
planned to show the whole planet during one Martian day. The
camera also was programmed
to snap six shots of the tiny
Martian moon, Deimos .
Engineers at the Mariner control center at the jet propulsion
laboratory monitored the cam·
era operation and reported the
spacecraft was operating normally.
The pictures were being re·
corded on tape aboard Mariner
and were to be radioed back to
earth, 72.5 million miles away,
between 6:16p.m. and 9:23p.m.
EST. today.
Dr. Bradford Smith, a Mariner project scientist from New
MexicoState University, reported Wednesday that the massive
yellow dust storm first observed
by ea rth • based telescopes in
September is still raging on
Mars although recent observations indicated it might be smrting to subside.

which they will rise should
become clear today when the
Price Commission hands down
its guidelines.
Q.

Sunday?
A. Some will - specifical ly
those for persons due a rai se
during the freeze, or for whom
a new contract was negotiated
si nce Aug . 15. But the raise will
start as of' Sunday and w ill not
be retroactive to when the
freeze began, except in a few
specia l cases.
Q. Jhen is it correct to say
the freeze really expires at
midnight Saturday?
A. Not exactly. Most wages

aM prices will be allowed to
rise but only tQ a specified leve l
determined by the Pay Board

NOT FROM OUTER SPACE 'but from a laboratory at Trinity University In San
Antonio, Tex .. comes this catfish with the broad grin and unusual headgear. It's a
key participant in experiments using surgically Implanted electronic sensors lo
determi ne effects of animals' sense of smell. Exposed to foul·smelllng chemicals, the
caiHsh reacts with changes in brain electrical activfly analyzed by a computer
developed for special scientific uses by IBM.

Raleigh Elias
Died Thursday
LETART, W. Va. - Raleigh
Henry Elias, 58, Lemrt, W. Va.,
Route 2, was dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospital where
he was taken Thursday by the
New Ha ven E-R unit.
The son of the late Joseph and
Margaret Dailey Elias, he was
born May 26, 1913 at Caswell,
Ill. He was a farmer who during
his career also worked 17 years

for the West Virginia State
Liquor Commission. Prior to his

C. H. Randolph
TYI- .1

Will wages go up as ot

J_

Died ,., eanesuay
REEDSVILLE - Carroll H.
Randolph, 61, Reedsville, died
Wednesday morning at MI.
Carmel Hospiml in Columbus
following a brief illness.
Mr. Randolph was born at
Harris Ferry, W. Va ., the son of
the late Earl and Irene Arnott
Randolph. He was a veteran or
World War ,ll, having served
with the U. S. Army in the
European Theater and was a
retired head Iockman , having
served 33 years with the U. S.
Corps of Engineers on the Ohio
River. Huntington District.
Surviving are his wile, Mrs.
Opal Baker Randolph; two
sisters, Mrs . Doris Hayes, of
Virginia, and Mrs. Inez Wilson,
Hockingport, and several nieces
and nephews . Besides his
parents, he was preceded in
death by a sister, Mrs. Ruby
Buckhannon and a brother,
Calvin Randolph .
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Elden Blake officiating. Burial will be in Eden
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 7 p. m.
Thursday.

Mixed Choir
See Super Show
Mrs. Lee Lee and members of
her mixed choir at Southern
High School attended a showing
of Jesus Christ Super Smr last
Sunday a t the Veterans
Memorial Auditorium in
Columbus.
They were Rodney Neigler ,
Steve Yonker, Vallerie Johnson,
John Eichinger, Vern Ord,
Debra West, Denise Cross,
· Della Cross, Doug Reese , Janie
Reese, Beveraly Hart, Dave
Hudelston, Mike Nease, Lee
Ann Neas(!, Jay Hill, Cindy
Lawson, Jeannie Sellers, Hope
Bird, Judy Roberts, Pam Hill,
Sandy Randolph, Jane Allen,
Barbara Nease, Debbie Arnott,
Debbie Harden, Jane Johnson,
Helen Wilcoxen, Mitch Nease,
Rodney Holman, Willie Sellers,
Nick Ihle, Bob Cummins, Roda
South, Randy Pyles, Reness
Burke, Cookie Weddle, Mrs.
Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hill and
Mrs . Eber Pickens. The
students were take n to
Colwnbus on a school bus. Mr.
HID drove.

death he was employed as an
ad junctive therapist at the
Lakin Smte Hospital. Mr. Elias
was a member of $L Mark 's
Lutheran Church where he
served as Sunday School
superin tendent.
Surviving are his wile, Marie ;
two sons, James of Lemrt Route
2, and Joseph, of New Haven;
five grandchildren ; four sisters,
Mrs. J . H. (Belva) Farley,
Point Pleasant; Mrs . Howard
(Clara ) Burris, New Ha ven;
Mrs. W. R. (Emogene) Crow,
Mason , and Mrs. Harry Joe
I Maxine) Grimm, Tiffin, Ohio;
a brother. Emmett, Clifton, and
his stepmother , Mrs. Josephine
Elias, Mason.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. George Weirick offi ciating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Garden.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after 3 p.m .
Friday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Saturday through Monday:
Chance
of
showers
Saturday and northeast on
Sunday. Lows in upper 30s to
lower 40s. Highs in 40s north
and 50s south increasing to
50s north on Monday.

Anna Burton

Mrs. Anna Burton, 89," died
Thursday morning at her home
at East Main St., Pom er oy,
following a lingering illness.
Mrs. Burton was preceded in
death by her husband, W. C.
;:~::::&amp;:~;:~~::sm.~:;:;;::;; , , •, : A~ Bur Ion ; a daughter, Clarys
Burl on, and an infant son, Guy.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Goldie Hawk, Pomeroy;
two sons, Roy, of Pomeroy, and
Dwight. of Los Angeles, Calif.;
seven grandchildren, eigh t
great -gra nd children and
WASHINGTON t UP[)
several nieces and nephews.
Alter a quarter of a million Mrs. Burton was a member of
dollars, the well went dry for Ihe Church of Christ.
Sen. Fred R Harris, the poor
Funeral services will be held
man's candidate. He was a at 1p. m. Saturday at the Ewing
11ctun of poverty ~n the .cost Funeral Home with Mr . Hoyt
ar~na .of prestd~ntial pohtics . Allen officiating. Buna l will be
...1m broke, HarriS said . in the Fairview Cemetery at
when he withdrew Wednesday Coolville. friends may call at
as a candtdate lor the the funeral horne anytime.
Democratic pr eSidential
nomination. "I ·owe a lot of

Harris Out of

Race, Broke

Title Office
With that announcement ,
Harris ended a hectic six-weeks Reports Sales

money and I'm out of money."

campaign in which he sought to
form a coalition of new
Populists and win the
nomination. He never was given
much chance. He aiso announced he would not seek re.
election to the Senate.

.
.
Meigs Countt'!ns purchased
146 used vehicles and 116 new
vehicles dunng the month of
Oc tober accordi ng to Mrs.
Nellie Brown, deputy clerk of
the Clerk of Courts.
Of the 146 used ve hicles sold
there were 117 passenger cars,
19 trucks, seven trailers and
three motorcycles. or lhe 116

Landfill Sites
new vehicles there were 76
Toured Tuesday passenger
cars, 26 trucks, 11
trailers and three motorcycles.
Sites for a proposed county
landfill were toured Tuesday by
the Meigs County Com-

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Thursday
missioner s and representatives
Veterans Memorial Hospital
was 46 degrees under suMy
ADMITTED - Joe White, of the government Appraisal skies.
Mi nersville; Kathleen Noble, Services.
Several sites are being
Cheshire; Darryl Swartz,
considered
fo r the la ndfi lL
Pomeroy; Doris Adams,
Racine; Lucille Lambert, Federal funding for the
TEXARKANA, Tex. (UP!) Rutland; Jean Kiser; Racine. proposed project has been
Former
West Virginia Gov. W.
DISCHARGED
Anna arranged.
W. Barron bas arrived at the
Berigan, Jacquelyn Moye r, In other business an anima l Taxarkana Fedral Coorectional
Stanley Trussell, Elmer Blank- claim in the amount of $593 was Institution to serve his 12-year
man, Robert Bailey, Jane paid to Robert Paynter for the
term lor jury tampering.
Snider, Diane Wickerhsam, loss of 35 sheep killed by dogs.
Attending were Charles R. Barron was flown here
Minnie HalL
Karr, Robert Clark and Warden Tuesday night, and began the 30
Ours, comm1ss1oners and day orientation period required
Martha Chambers, clerk.
DANCE ANNOUNCED .
SUIT FILED
A dance will be held at
A suit for $392.32 has been
Southern High School Saturday
filed in Meigs County Common
from 9 to II p. m. following the Hazelton Will be
Pleas Court by the State of Ohio
annual football banquet. Music
Ordained
Sunday
against Ohio Valley Mfg. Co.,
will be provided by "Tiny True
Tuppers Plains, allegedly due
Review" of Pt. Pleasant. AdMichael Hazelton , son of Mr.
mission is 75 ce nts. Senior and Mrs. Jim Hazelton , Mid- the Bureau of Workman's
football
players
and dleport, Rl. 1, will be ordained Compensation.
cheerleaders will be admitted as a minister of the Church of

involved · to roll back
inc rea ses

to

an

the

acceptable

level. If the firm refused the

government cou ld file a civil
suit against it.

Income Tax
(Continued from page I)
nery-Taft bilL
_:_ A mx on stocks and bonds
dealers and pre-mixed cocktails, the same ·as in the Flannery. Taft bilL
Corporations Benefit
Corporations also would benefit under the bill from a reduction in their intangible personal property tax, applied as an
exclusion to their income tax.
The bill contains $60 million
worth of general property mx
relief keyed to persons whose
property mx is high in proportion to their income. The Flannery-Taft proposal included an
across-the-board properly mx

and Price Commission. Other
areas ma y stay frozen until
government poI i c y makers
come to a decision. The rul e is:
Your pay , pric e or rent is
frozen until the governm ent
specifical ly says it isn't.
Q. What companies will have
to tell the government in
advance that they are rais ing r eduction .
th ei r prices and will have to
The conference committee
ask for permission to do so?
A. Those wi th annual sa les of bill also includes homestead ex$100 mill ion or more. This emption for the elderly, bul.it
covers the 1.300 biggest U.S.
f irms who account for 45 per would not mke lull effect until
cen t of all U.S. sales.
1973.
Q.

Died Thursday

decides a pay raise or a price
bigger than its
hike is
guidelines?
'
A. It ca n order the firm

What

about

Q. Certain items were ex - stone specimens; handcrafts ;
empt from the price freeze. royalties and coyprlghts; InterWilt they also be exempt tram nationa l shipping rates and
po st-freeze control s?
dues
to
non.proflt
A. Yes. These include raw. organizations.
unprocessed agricultural pro:
Q. What about rea l estate?
A. Exempted from control will'
duct s; raw sugar; raw seafood
(i ncluding. for the first time. be unimproved real esta te and

real esta te without newly

that which has been shelled.
shucked. skinned. sea led, be·

constructed Improveme nts.
Rea l estate on whic h new improvements have been made

headed, eviscerated or iced);
financial securities; exports
and new imports.
Q. Will some Items covered
by the pri ce freeze be free
from control during the post.
freeze era?

wi ll alsobeexemptfrom control
-

if

ttie sales

A. Yes. These Include all used

Q. What rents will be exempt
·
sold at disposal sa tes. including from post. freeze controls?

goods. even used cars; items

government real and personal
property, damaged goods, insurance sa les etc. ; custom
made goods, Including leather
goods, wig s and
toupees ,
~ ~o~h ~ng, furs, dressmaking for
mdwtdua l customers ; ta xidermy services; picture and
mirror framing- jewelry ; an·
tiques ; paintings, etchings and
sculpture; coll ectors' coins and
stamps; precious stones and
mountings therefor ; r ock and

A. Commercia l,

industr ia l
be
exempt. So will be new or
substantially rehabilitated ren·
tal units that were offered for
tenancy for the f irst time at
any point after Aug . 15, when
the freeze began . By "substan -

and farm property .wil l

t i a I t y rehabilitated,"

LAMP

BUY 'EM FOR GIFTS!

Collins

Follies' Tickets

Early Til Friday
The sale or advanre tickets
for Saturday night's presentation of the Fall Follies of the
Big Bend Minstrel Assn. will
end Friday evening at six
locations.
Advance tickets are $1 each.
Admission at the door of Meigs
High School Saturday night will
be $1.25 a person. Tickets may
be purchased at Village
Pharmacy and Dutton Drugs in
Middleport, the Rutland furniture Store, Rutland , and
Swisher-Lohse. Drugs, Nelson's
Drugs and the New York
Clothing House in Pcmeroy.

''For es t Service records show

we have been working for
many yea rs, politely, in a businesslike manner without getting
toug h and without setting deadlines, " he said. "But we are at
the point where we cannot tolerate any more smiling."

TABLE LAMPS
TREE LAMPS
POLE LAMPS

ONE GROUP

TABLE
LAMPS
Greatly Reduce
VALUES TO 113.95

Sale

,.

Price

98

Foreman &amp;Abbott
PH. 992-5321
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SUIT fiLED
Patricia Bailey, Reedsville,
RL 1, has filed su it for divorce
in Meigs County Common. Pleas
Court against Jimmie Bailey,

Christ Sunday evening at 7:30 at
Hemlock Grove Church of
Christ.
Officiating at the services will
be Dr. Jim Quisenberry of
Moorehead State University.
Dr ...Quisenberry is a former
minister of the Hemlock Grove

Reedsville, Rt . I, charging Church. Hazelton is a senior at
gross neglect of duty and ex- Kentucky Christian College ,
treme cruelty.
Grayson, Ky.

AmO DEMOUSHED
SORORITYTO MEET
A car was demolished in an
Xi Gamma Mu will meet this accident Wednesday at 11 :50
evening at the home of Mrs. p.m. on Fourth St. in ReedsMargaret Follrod at 7:45p.m. viDe, the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported. Roger A.
Westfall, 19, Reedsville; Rt. 1,
Slid
he saw an object on the
Be Ready For The Cold
b:gbway and .in attempting to
Blast· · •
avoid It, lost control. His car
went through a fence, over a
bill, and landed on its top. There
)ll'ere no injuries or arrest .

,

is.~uP.fl citaUons.·

IPRIAiS
WEATHER STRIPPING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PLASTIC S"(ORM WINDOWS
WARM MORNING HEATERS
!Gas &amp;

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
lor Your

of the Pumpkin Told

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Woman 's Club regular
meeting Oct. 26 at the social
coom 'of the Library waJs opened
by the president, Mrs. Robert
Gurtis with Mrs. Tom offman
leading the devotions.
Mrs. Jerry Scott, Home Life
Committee Chairman, introduced the speaker, Mrs.
Vicki Keefer, Mason County
Home Demonstration Agent,
who presented an interesting
program on the pwnpkin , its
history, and recipes for it this
Thanksgiving season. She

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center First
Ave. and Cedar St. c;;,neral
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward .

~~h 5 Clarence

Mr . and
c.
Gillenwater , Jackson, a son and
Mr. andMrs. FrankieRaymond
Cooper . Pt. Pleasa nt , a
daughter.
Discharges
Mrs . Larry Bailey , Roy
Baisden, Mrs. Autye Baker,
Mrs . John Biship, Mrs. Robert
Board and daughter, Mrs .
Donald Brafford, Diana Cooper,
Sanford Cozart, Bertha Craig,
Elizabeth Fetty, Gerald Grate,
Mrs . George Rawson and
daughter, Edward Rollins,
Eddie Russell, Mrs . Ralph
Scott, Robert Smith, Mrs. Larry
Spencer, Mrs. Mildred Tolliver,
Mrs. Floyd Wallace, Jr., John L
Kerr, Annette Johnson and Mrs.
Harold Pope.

PRACTICES SET
The junior choir will practice
at the Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church each Thursday at 3:30 p.m. At 7:30 p.m.
each Thursday, the adult choir
wfll hold practice sessions.

showed the group how to make
pumpkin bread which was
served by the hostesses with
coffee at the end of the meeting.
The club voted to hold a
chicken barbecue and donate
the proceeds to the New Haven
Rescue Squad, and to write
letters to the various
organizations in the area asking
them also to have different
ac~vities and donate to the
rescue squad.
Mrs. Jess Abel, chairman of
the Budget and Finance
Committee, discussed ways the
club could earn money. It was
vo ted to purchase seven dozen
umbrellas to sell.
Mrs. Paul Powell, librarian ,
announced thai November 14
thru 19th is National Book
Week. The New Haven Library
will hold open house on Thurs-'
day, Nov. 18 from I ID 5 p.m.
and from 6 to 8 p.m. on that
dale . The club voted to serve
refreshments at that event.

Meeting Films
CLown to C'l--s
.JfJ
IUJ,
Class meeting films were
shown during a meeting of the
Adult Class of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Olurch beld recenUy
at the church.
Raymond Walburn gave tbe
opening JWayer, and William
Stephenson showed films of
previous class !llCftings. There
was group singing, a fellowship
hour, and refreshments.
Attendhig were the Rev. and
Mrs. Clude Hender8011, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Colmer, Mr . .and
Mrs. Arthur Koenig, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Pullins and
daughter, Glen · McClung,
·Madeline Haggy , Raymond
Walburn, Myj'tle Durst, Ruby
Erb, Gladys Gibson, Clyda
Bing, Mrs. Don Brickles,
William Stephenson, Mrs. Ben
Brown, Mrs. Barbara Klein,
Mrs . Mamie Snider, Mrs.
Frelda Mossman and Mrs.
Paulette Leach and son.

Coail

MAGNUS CHORD ORGANS
TABLE MODEL

COLEMAN OIL HEATERS
ELECTRIC HEATERS
WINDOW GLASS - THERMOMETERS
PIPE INSULATION
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHO..,LDERS,
COAL BUCKETS; ETC.

6

STOCK YOUR MEDICINE CHEST NOW

SAVE $1 .51

SPECIAL '18A4

3 Music Books
Reg. Value, $61.40

Reo. s29.95
Reo. s1o.oo
I Reg. $16.95
Reg. 54.50
SAVE$23.52

'37
. ORGAN ENSEMBLE
12 Chord Organ
Hassock Bench

Ph. 992·2811
Pomeroy, 0.

3 Music Books
Reo. Valvo, $91 .40

. Jliq Toytowl)

C9mina

Reg. $69.95
Reg. $16.95
Reo. 54.5o
SAVE$23.52

Our
..,..,ru

~.:;t::~:::::=;:;:;:~::::::;~:::::=::::;=:::::::t~:::.:::;.:;:_::;:::::::::~:::::?.:m.::::.::::::::::m::::::~'::.:::;:;:;~::::~t~:::f.:i;:;:::::::::::-~~:::::·.

i8E(1
·. ' FRAN~uN·•·
" E~ierything

In Hardw.are"

Drills Shown ·Distri~t, State Officers

Social
Calendar

Drills for district and state Jean Wolfe, new District 13 gift from that Council; lor Edna
officers were featured at the deputy, with Esther Ridenour, Reibel of Pomeroy , state
annual friendship observance of past district deputy giving her a legislative committee members
District 13, Daughters of gift on behalf of the district; lor and deputy of Theodorus
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, America, held at the Civitan Iva Stacey, state conductor by Coun,cil, by . Theodorus with
7:30p.m. Thursday at the haD. building in Marietta SWlday. Golden Gleam Council with Mrs . Nettie Hayes presenting
The drills were presented lor Lina McVay presenting her a her a gift.
Members to take gifts for the
Athens Mental Health Center.
THURSDAY, Nov. II, annual
"Sluffing Bee" lor Christmas
Seals will be held at the First
Baptist Church, corner of Sixth
and Palmer Sts., Middleport,
RUTLAND- Mrs. Joe Bolin, Ohio Power Co. offices in Meigs High School Cafeteria
·beginning at 9 a.m.
chairman of the 1971 Meigs Pomeroy this past week to with help being asked from
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT County Christmas Flower review show rules and duties of members or all Meigs County
Lions Club, 7 p.m. Thursday, Show, "There's NO' Place Like the various committees.
Garden Clubs and Mrs. Reid
United Methodist Church, Joe
Home for the Holidays" and It was decided that the Young a nd Mrs. William
Haning, Nelsonville, zone
Mrs. Robert Lewis, co- smging for the show will be Willford as chairmen.
chairman to be presen't. District
A!tending the meeting were
chairman, conducted a meeting done on Friday, Nov. 26,
meeting. All local Lions urged of committee members at the starting at 12:30 p.m. at the Mrs. Bobn, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs.
to attend.
Robert Kuhn, schedule comSPECIAL MEETING, Racine
mittee; Mrs. William Willford,
American Legion Post 602,
staging; Mrs. Bert Grimm and
Thursday, 8 p.m. at halL Plans
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, show
lor gun shoot and collection of
theme decoration ; Mrs. James
dues.
Carpenter, photography; Mrs.
Mrs. Herbert Hoover and Varian.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Don Thomas, Juniors; Mrs.
Mrs.
Betty Young entermined Cake and ice cream were Char les Lewis, educational;
Heath United Methodist
Church, 2 p.m. Thursday at the recently with a bridal shower served by Mrs. Hoover, Mrs. Mrs. Roy Snowden, judges
church . Devotions by Mrs . honoring Miss Linda Young. Bridgett Johnson, Miss Snyder committee and clerks; Mrs.
James Jividen, Program by The shower was held at the and Miss Hutton to those named Homer Parker, publicity, and
above and Mrs. Karen Young, Mrs. Robert Thompson , entry
Mrs. M. L. French; hostesses Hoover home.
Gifts were placed on a table Mrs. Annie Searles. Mrs. Betty and classification.
Mrs, Mildred Zeigler, Mrs.
decorated
in yellow and white Young, Mrs . Peggy Hutton,
Emerson Jones. Bazaar plans
Concluding the meeting, Mrs.
slrreamers and wedding bells. Mrs. Delma Karr, Miss Sharon Bolin and Mrs. Lewis served
to be completed.
Games were played under the Karr , Miss Carrie Karr, MrS. coffee and cookies. Several of
PAST
COUNCILORS,
direction of Jackie Hutton and Dru Hart, Miss Tammy Hart, the group left the meeting early
Theodorus CoWicil, D. of A.•
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of Dixie Snyder with prize~ going Sleven Hoover, David Hoover, to attend the open meeting of
to Mrs. Karen Young, Mrs. Rick Hoover, Mrs. Margaret the Chester Garden Club.
Mrs. Kate Goodwin, New Shirley
Wolfe , Mrs. Helga Wolfe, Mrs. E ileen Snyder, Mrs. Mrs . Parker is asking that
Haven.
Evelyn Murra y, Mary Lip- each club in the county make at
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
,penc
ott, Mrs. Geraldine least two posters advertising
PARTIES STAGED
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p.m .,
Halloween par ties were Mowery , and Mrs . Hazel Mc- the show.
·
election of officers and work in
Cloud,
Columbus.
staged
a
I
the
Pomeroy
feUowcralt degree. All Master
Nazarene Church lor the kin- Others presenting gifts were
Masons invited .
Mrs. Evelyn Holter, Mrs. Virgil
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30p.m. dergarten , primary, juniors,
junior high and senior high Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Thursday at school.
LOSE UGLY FAT
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612, classes. Games were played Wolfe, Mrs. Elizabeth Parsons,
Virginia Thorn, Mrs. Opal You can start losi n g weig ht
Letart F~lls, home of Erma and refreshments served by the Mrs.
Hollon, Mrs. Doris Goodrich, today . MONADEX is a tiny
tablet and easy t o t ake.
Wilson 7:30 p.m. Thursday. teache rs and assismnts of each
Miss Paula Watkins, David MONADEX will help curb your
class.
Refreshments of pie, coffee.
Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. John de si re tor e)( cess food . Eat less .
weigh l ess. Contains no
FRIDAY
Chaney, Mrs. Arthur Orr, Mr. dangerou s drugs and w ill not
SUNDAY
DANCE FRIDAY following
vou nerv ous. No
andMrs.ClarenceGrueser, Mr . . make
strenuous exercise. Change
FAMILY
STEWARDSHIP
Wahama-Bullalo football game
and Mrs. Bob Ritchie, Mr . and your life . . . start today .
at Wahama High School from 10 night Sunday , 5 p.m. at St. Paul Mrs.
James Hollon, M~. and MONADEX cos ts SJ .OO for a 20
day sup ply . Lose ugly fat or
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
to 12. Jays will emcee.
Mrs.
John
Brewer,
Mrs.
Betty
your money wil l be refund ed
YOUTH RALLY, Pomeroy
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
t
M
e
Stiltn
with no ques t ions asked .
B
t
R
M
er, MONADEX is sold with this
Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m. Friday at Church of Christ, 2 p.m. Sun· oss, rs . e Y a
Mrs.
Edward
Young,
Mrs.
E
lva
guarantee by : Swisher &amp; Lc;hse
the Episcopal Parish House, day.
Lewis, Mrs. Janis Parker.
Drugs- 112 E. Main &amp; Dutton
Drug Store . Middleport. Mail
CHICKEN AND spare rib
Pomeroy. Joseph Struble to be
Orders Fill e d .
·
barbecue
Sunday,
starting
II
the guest speaker. Roll call will
be a favorite American hero; a.m. at Chester fire House.
hostesses, Mrs. Guy Neigler, Homemade ice cream also.
Mrs. George Skinner, and Mrs. Sponsored by Chester Fire
Department.
Mark Grueser, Jr.

Show Rules, Duties.Reviewed

Bridal Shower Given

REGULAR MEETING, Mary
MONDAY
Shrine , White Shrine of
RACINE Elemenmry PTA,
Jerusa lem , 8 p.m. Friday, 7:30 p. m. Monda y at schooL
IOOF Hall, Pomeroy. Officers
OLD FASHIONED revival,
and members asked to attend ;· Sutton United Methodist
potluck refreshments.
Church, 7:30 p. m. Monday,
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
SATURDAY
speaking ; special singing .
THANKSGIVING Dinner and
THEODORUS Council 17,
bazaar Saturday, serving Daughters of America, 59th
starting 4 p. m., St. Paul's anniversary observance, 6 p. m.
United Methodist Church anpotluck dinner with members to
nex, Tuppers Plains. Baked mke their own mble service and
chicke n,

dressin g,

ham,

mashed potatoes , sweet
pomtoes, noodles, green beans,
cole slaw, rolls, pie and cake.
DUE TO FALL Follies
Saturday
night,
dance
scheduled Saturday at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport is
cancelled.
CHICKEN AND noodle dinner
Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. by
Middleport Pentecoslal Church,
s. Third, Middleport, in building
next to church. For free
deliveries caD 992-2502 or 9926042 before 9 a.m. Saturday.
$1.25, including pie .

.PHON!:
.
··
202 East Main St.
992-3498
.
· Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY i. SAt'U , I NIGHTSTIL 9'.

a covered dish. Initiatory work
to he performed and members
are asked to wear white.
ALFRED METHODIST
Church will hold a week of
revival serv ices nightly,
beginning Monday · evening,
Nov. 15, with Rev. Jacob Lehman doing the preaching. On
Tuesday
and
Thursday
evenings the Bissell Brothers
will provide special music, and
on Saturday evening a quartet
from Junction City will sing.
Everyone who sings "specials"
is welcome.

BY PHIL MAID
Dreamy confections,

softly detailed with

young or old.

DACRON&amp;
NYLON
ASSORTED
STYLES
AND.
COLORS

And Happiness Everywhere.
They Have Big. Looks For
Our Littk Friends This Year.
Perky things for her .
Manly duds for him .
Infant thru size 12.

To Make Their Wardrobe
The Most BeautifUl, Shop At

THE KIDDIE
SHOPPE
On the T in Middleport

$AVE

REG. 98'

REG. •5.49
POLAROID

THANK YOU

OOLOR

CARDS

108

2Bom99~
REXALl

REG. 19.99

LADY SHAVE

DOUBLE OOMFORT
TWO-SIDED SHAVING HEAD

Reg. $1.89

2 FOR $11JO

REG. •1.29
BINACA

EYE

1
REG.
- - 1.19
- .

JERGENS
LOTION

79~

REG. 11.89

14 Ol

24's39~ gg~·

REG.

69'

Elec. Alarm

$2.99
6Sc

LITTLE GIRLS

M.usical
Jewel Box

PEANUTS

KODAK ·

.White Rain
Hair Spray

CX126
12

REGUlAR AND
EXTRA HOLD
REG. s1.49

•3.90

.

g~

Flavor House

ROASTED
.
--

LYSOL
SPRAY

Cepacol®Lozenges

BREATH SPRAY

9~ oz59~
· REG. 13.98
WESTCLOX

'7,

Golden

luscious lace and delicate
embroidery. Just

Holidays In The Air..

$AVE

11 /liT A BlEAM

Ill

Mrs . Erma Jenkins also
presented a gilt to her da"Jhter,
Mrs. VVoHe.
.
The 50th annual rally to be
held on April 13 at Syracuse was
announced by the district
deputy. It was also noted that
the district past councilors.club
Christmas party will be held on
Dec. 12 at the Redwood Inn.
The deputy club party will be on
Dec. 5 at Gallipolis. Millie
Moberly
was
reported
hospitalized.
Ada Morris of Chester Council
323, past state organizer,
presided at the ritualistic
opening ol the meeting.
Received officially were Mrs.
Wolfe, Mrs. Stacy, Mrs. Edith
Be !zing, Chester Council, a past
state councilor; Mrs. Erma
Cleland, deputy state councilor
of Chester Council; and Mrs.
Reibel, slate legislative com-

member and deputy of
Theodorus Council.
A potluck dinner preceded the
meeting with Mrs . Ruby
Matheney giving grace.
Decorations carried out a fall
theme.
..
Attending besides those
named were Bertha Parker and
Ferne Roush, 'Theodorus , ·
Pomeroy; Barbara Sargent,
Jean Summerfield, Zelda
Weber, Opal Hollon, Ethel Orr,
Marcia Keller, Dorothy Ritchie,
Doris Grueser, Dorothy
Lawson, Margaret Tuttle, all of
·Chester Council 3230.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. lWbert
Van Lehn, Hattie Shai, Lina
McVay, Annabelle Kehl, Erma
Jenkins, Grace Smith, Vade
Morganstern, Sara Jane Riddle,
Jessie Ryan, Geneva Eday.
Norma Milan, Margaret
Douthett, Lucille Van Dusan,
Reba Ammon, Edna Best,
Martha Hudnall, Violet Bishop,
Sally Smith, Barbara Huffman,
aU of Golden Gleam Council,
Marietta . ·

YOUR DRUG STORE

FAST
PERMANENT

~~M~~~~~

what the girls crave

ENSEMBLE

12 Chord
4Legs
Hassock Bench

Main Street

'THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"

Chord Organ. Music Rack, M•Jslc

Book :
Reg . Value, $19.95

Ebersbach Hardware

Electric, c.iaf and

RADAR REACTIVATED
MASON - Due to increasing
disregard for pos ted speed
limits in the town of Mason,
Police Chief John Harrah said
today the police department
radar uml will be put into
service and violators will he

Grande Chorale will present ·a
JH'Ogram at Meigs High School
on Nov. 22 under sponsorship of
the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers.
PTA members were asked lo
assist
with
Christmas
decoration for the various
classrooms. Mrs. Joe Grass
spoke to the group on
techniques of speech therapy.
Special mU8lc was provided by
Vernon Weber, soloist, and his
daughter, Donna Weber ,
pianist. The attendance banner

and $5 award was won by tbe
third grade.
A report was given on the' faD
festival held Nov. 6. Elected
were Mike Wayland , king ;
Sherrie Tackett, queen; Lanneta Whittington, princess; and
Brian Wilcox, JWince. It was
noted that the eight candidates
securing votes by the penny-avote system raised $156. A tDtal
of $453 was made on the festival.
Contests were conducted with
Angela Kennedy, Robin
Sou!he~. Lori Snowden, Abby
Martin, Homer Parker and
Pauline Tillis winning the
JWfzes. A ceramic tree was won
by Mike Edwards, and Sherrie
Michael won a table lamp.
Winners in the apple eating
contest were Doug and Ronnie.
Starcher. Rusty Starcher and
Tommy Sinunons won in a
magic word game, and among
those receiving door prizes
were Russell Little, Eva
McKinney, Rosemary Snowden,
Larry Edwards, Melanie
Sinunons and Shirley Simmons.
Evelyn's Grocery and Miller
Bros. assisted in ticket sales
and numeroU8 stores donated
JH"izes.
Refreshments were served by
the fifth grade and the Dec. 13
meeting will be hosted by the
fourth grade parents.

HEAT TAPES- DOOR STRIPS

HEATERS
Fuel 011 ·

WITH THESE

SALES SET
The Southern Cluster Youth
Fellowship of the Methodist
Church will hold a bake sale
beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday at
the Racine Home National Bank
and the Racine Food Market. ·

It was announced that the Rio

~tory

lor aU new prisoners, Warden L.
M. Connett said.
The 60-year-old former

governor's
~~needs"
academic,
health
and
vocational - will be studied
during the orientation. Rules of
the prison will be explained,
then Barron will be assigned
some type of duty, unless he Is
ill.

The Rutland PTA bas gone on
record as opposing JH'Oposed
legislative bills which would
pe1'111i,t the sale of candy containing a significant amount of
alcohol, and establish govern.
ment operated and controlled
develqpment centers through
the proposed Child Development Act.
During a meeting Monday
night at the Rutland Elementary School the contents of tbe
two bills - S.B. 2007. which is
the Child Development Act, and
H.B. 7785 the alcohol candy one
- were discussed and members
were urged to direct letters to
Pres. Richard M. Nixon and
Congressman Clarence MiUer,
urging that they oppose both

bills.

Gillmor said one of the chief
companies which want to raise
points of contention in the contheir prices?

coal sediment into Long Branch
Hollow, a natural gorge.
Wolter said the Collins company has "a his tory with this
station of doing little, if anything, to comply with correction
requests made under the terms
of the l9nd·use l/"lfllits.
''l,.!"et with "'fr. ,:.c.ollins early
this week and he promised corrections," said Wolter. "But we
have had his promises in the
past that were not kept.

the

government means a rehablllta -.
tlon of at least one -third or.
mor e of the property 's tota~
va lue.

smaller

A. Those with sales of from ference committee was making
$50 mil l ion to $1 00 million will the property mx relief "visible"
have to tf ll the government
every three months - but not in as such and not as a credit
advance - of changes in pr ices. against income mx liabili ty.
costs and profits. This covers
1. 100 firm s doing 5 per cent of
the tota l U.S . business. Firm s
with sales under $50 milli on wi ll
not have to repo r t but will be
spo t-checked by th e gover nment.
(Contin ued from page I )
Q. What firms must get
advance government approval clean out sediment trapping babefore giving their employes a sins from which sand and coal
raise?
wash into llearby
A: Those with 5,000 or more waste
employ es covered by the raise . streams.
Q. What about smaller firms?
- failure to correct slippage
A. Those where from 1,000 to
5,000 employes are covered by on fed eral lands strip mined by
the Collins several yea rs ago.
the · raise mus t tell
government what the raise is
Wolter also told the Plain
and how many are covered. at
the time the raise becomes Dealer that a Collins Mining Co.
effect ive. Those w ith fewer sediment pond had been fi lled
than 1,000 worker s will not ha ve far past the safety point and
to report but will be monitor ed
its wall broke out several yea rs
by the government .
Q . What if the government ago, spilling tons of sand and

was

provements were made or If
subsequent wage hikes force the
pr ice of construction up.

Barron Getting Prison Lowdown 1

free'.

price

determined after the lm·

Two Bills Draw
Fire from PTA

~ttee

Reg. 89c

Flavor House

MIXED NUTS
71h Ol
JAR

69$

LADIES' PANTY HOSE
ONE SIZE . . REG.

FITS All

1.29

1

LADY SUNBEAM

9 CUP

PERCOLAlOR

2 . 1.29

'!1

88 ELEtriUC
t....i

'

.

�r

• -'f.'llelllllylemlne!,Mf" F~r.o., Nov. II, 1971

a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 11, 1971

Questions-Answers ·about Phase II

Mariner 9
Getting

WA SHINGTON (UPI) -

Ques1lons and answers based on
.th e
government's
late st
economic decisions :
Q. Will pri ces go up when the

freeze ends at midnight Sa tur,
da y.7
A. Some undoubtedly will. but

Mars Shots

which ones and the amounts by

PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) America's Mariner 9 closed in
on Mars today. its cameras tak·
ing a picture every hour to
show scientists the extent of
the most severe dust storm ev.
er seen on the puzzling planet.
The 165 million spacecraft,
less than half a million miles
away, will attempt to orbit
Mars late Saturday for the first
time to give its two television
cameras and other instruments
an unmatched view of the plan·
et for at least three months.
Mariner 9 began its scientific
examination of Mars late Wed·
nesday by starting a 24 - hour
sequence
or
photographs
planned to show the whole planet during one Martian day. The
camera also was programmed
to snap six shots of the tiny
Martian moon, Deimos .
Engineers at the Mariner control center at the jet propulsion
laboratory monitored the cam·
era operation and reported the
spacecraft was operating normally.
The pictures were being re·
corded on tape aboard Mariner
and were to be radioed back to
earth, 72.5 million miles away,
between 6:16p.m. and 9:23p.m.
EST. today.
Dr. Bradford Smith, a Mariner project scientist from New
MexicoState University, reported Wednesday that the massive
yellow dust storm first observed
by ea rth • based telescopes in
September is still raging on
Mars although recent observations indicated it might be smrting to subside.

which they will rise should
become clear today when the
Price Commission hands down
its guidelines.
Q.

Sunday?
A. Some will - specifical ly
those for persons due a rai se
during the freeze, or for whom
a new contract was negotiated
si nce Aug . 15. But the raise will
start as of' Sunday and w ill not
be retroactive to when the
freeze began, except in a few
specia l cases.
Q. Jhen is it correct to say
the freeze really expires at
midnight Saturday?
A. Not exactly. Most wages

aM prices will be allowed to
rise but only tQ a specified leve l
determined by the Pay Board

NOT FROM OUTER SPACE 'but from a laboratory at Trinity University In San
Antonio, Tex .. comes this catfish with the broad grin and unusual headgear. It's a
key participant in experiments using surgically Implanted electronic sensors lo
determi ne effects of animals' sense of smell. Exposed to foul·smelllng chemicals, the
caiHsh reacts with changes in brain electrical activfly analyzed by a computer
developed for special scientific uses by IBM.

Raleigh Elias
Died Thursday
LETART, W. Va. - Raleigh
Henry Elias, 58, Lemrt, W. Va.,
Route 2, was dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospital where
he was taken Thursday by the
New Ha ven E-R unit.
The son of the late Joseph and
Margaret Dailey Elias, he was
born May 26, 1913 at Caswell,
Ill. He was a farmer who during
his career also worked 17 years

for the West Virginia State
Liquor Commission. Prior to his

C. H. Randolph
TYI- .1

Will wages go up as ot

J_

Died ,., eanesuay
REEDSVILLE - Carroll H.
Randolph, 61, Reedsville, died
Wednesday morning at MI.
Carmel Hospiml in Columbus
following a brief illness.
Mr. Randolph was born at
Harris Ferry, W. Va ., the son of
the late Earl and Irene Arnott
Randolph. He was a veteran or
World War ,ll, having served
with the U. S. Army in the
European Theater and was a
retired head Iockman , having
served 33 years with the U. S.
Corps of Engineers on the Ohio
River. Huntington District.
Surviving are his wile, Mrs.
Opal Baker Randolph; two
sisters, Mrs . Doris Hayes, of
Virginia, and Mrs. Inez Wilson,
Hockingport, and several nieces
and nephews . Besides his
parents, he was preceded in
death by a sister, Mrs. Ruby
Buckhannon and a brother,
Calvin Randolph .
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Elden Blake officiating. Burial will be in Eden
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 7 p. m.
Thursday.

Mixed Choir
See Super Show
Mrs. Lee Lee and members of
her mixed choir at Southern
High School attended a showing
of Jesus Christ Super Smr last
Sunday a t the Veterans
Memorial Auditorium in
Columbus.
They were Rodney Neigler ,
Steve Yonker, Vallerie Johnson,
John Eichinger, Vern Ord,
Debra West, Denise Cross,
· Della Cross, Doug Reese , Janie
Reese, Beveraly Hart, Dave
Hudelston, Mike Nease, Lee
Ann Neas(!, Jay Hill, Cindy
Lawson, Jeannie Sellers, Hope
Bird, Judy Roberts, Pam Hill,
Sandy Randolph, Jane Allen,
Barbara Nease, Debbie Arnott,
Debbie Harden, Jane Johnson,
Helen Wilcoxen, Mitch Nease,
Rodney Holman, Willie Sellers,
Nick Ihle, Bob Cummins, Roda
South, Randy Pyles, Reness
Burke, Cookie Weddle, Mrs.
Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hill and
Mrs . Eber Pickens. The
students were take n to
Colwnbus on a school bus. Mr.
HID drove.

death he was employed as an
ad junctive therapist at the
Lakin Smte Hospital. Mr. Elias
was a member of $L Mark 's
Lutheran Church where he
served as Sunday School
superin tendent.
Surviving are his wile, Marie ;
two sons, James of Lemrt Route
2, and Joseph, of New Haven;
five grandchildren ; four sisters,
Mrs. J . H. (Belva) Farley,
Point Pleasant; Mrs . Howard
(Clara ) Burris, New Ha ven;
Mrs. W. R. (Emogene) Crow,
Mason , and Mrs. Harry Joe
I Maxine) Grimm, Tiffin, Ohio;
a brother. Emmett, Clifton, and
his stepmother , Mrs. Josephine
Elias, Mason.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. George Weirick offi ciating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Garden.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after 3 p.m .
Friday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Saturday through Monday:
Chance
of
showers
Saturday and northeast on
Sunday. Lows in upper 30s to
lower 40s. Highs in 40s north
and 50s south increasing to
50s north on Monday.

Anna Burton

Mrs. Anna Burton, 89," died
Thursday morning at her home
at East Main St., Pom er oy,
following a lingering illness.
Mrs. Burton was preceded in
death by her husband, W. C.
;:~::::&amp;:~;:~~::sm.~:;:;;::;; , , •, : A~ Bur Ion ; a daughter, Clarys
Burl on, and an infant son, Guy.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Goldie Hawk, Pomeroy;
two sons, Roy, of Pomeroy, and
Dwight. of Los Angeles, Calif.;
seven grandchildren, eigh t
great -gra nd children and
WASHINGTON t UP[)
several nieces and nephews.
Alter a quarter of a million Mrs. Burton was a member of
dollars, the well went dry for Ihe Church of Christ.
Sen. Fred R Harris, the poor
Funeral services will be held
man's candidate. He was a at 1p. m. Saturday at the Ewing
11ctun of poverty ~n the .cost Funeral Home with Mr . Hoyt
ar~na .of prestd~ntial pohtics . Allen officiating. Buna l will be
...1m broke, HarriS said . in the Fairview Cemetery at
when he withdrew Wednesday Coolville. friends may call at
as a candtdate lor the the funeral horne anytime.
Democratic pr eSidential
nomination. "I ·owe a lot of

Harris Out of

Race, Broke

Title Office
With that announcement ,
Harris ended a hectic six-weeks Reports Sales

money and I'm out of money."

campaign in which he sought to
form a coalition of new
Populists and win the
nomination. He never was given
much chance. He aiso announced he would not seek re.
election to the Senate.

.
.
Meigs Countt'!ns purchased
146 used vehicles and 116 new
vehicles dunng the month of
Oc tober accordi ng to Mrs.
Nellie Brown, deputy clerk of
the Clerk of Courts.
Of the 146 used ve hicles sold
there were 117 passenger cars,
19 trucks, seven trailers and
three motorcycles. or lhe 116

Landfill Sites
new vehicles there were 76
Toured Tuesday passenger
cars, 26 trucks, 11
trailers and three motorcycles.
Sites for a proposed county
landfill were toured Tuesday by
the Meigs County Com-

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Thursday
missioner s and representatives
Veterans Memorial Hospital
was 46 degrees under suMy
ADMITTED - Joe White, of the government Appraisal skies.
Mi nersville; Kathleen Noble, Services.
Several sites are being
Cheshire; Darryl Swartz,
considered
fo r the la ndfi lL
Pomeroy; Doris Adams,
Racine; Lucille Lambert, Federal funding for the
TEXARKANA, Tex. (UP!) Rutland; Jean Kiser; Racine. proposed project has been
Former
West Virginia Gov. W.
DISCHARGED
Anna arranged.
W. Barron bas arrived at the
Berigan, Jacquelyn Moye r, In other business an anima l Taxarkana Fedral Coorectional
Stanley Trussell, Elmer Blank- claim in the amount of $593 was Institution to serve his 12-year
man, Robert Bailey, Jane paid to Robert Paynter for the
term lor jury tampering.
Snider, Diane Wickerhsam, loss of 35 sheep killed by dogs.
Attending were Charles R. Barron was flown here
Minnie HalL
Karr, Robert Clark and Warden Tuesday night, and began the 30
Ours, comm1ss1oners and day orientation period required
Martha Chambers, clerk.
DANCE ANNOUNCED .
SUIT FILED
A dance will be held at
A suit for $392.32 has been
Southern High School Saturday
filed in Meigs County Common
from 9 to II p. m. following the Hazelton Will be
Pleas Court by the State of Ohio
annual football banquet. Music
Ordained
Sunday
against Ohio Valley Mfg. Co.,
will be provided by "Tiny True
Tuppers Plains, allegedly due
Review" of Pt. Pleasant. AdMichael Hazelton , son of Mr.
mission is 75 ce nts. Senior and Mrs. Jim Hazelton , Mid- the Bureau of Workman's
football
players
and dleport, Rl. 1, will be ordained Compensation.
cheerleaders will be admitted as a minister of the Church of

involved · to roll back
inc rea ses

to

an

the

acceptable

level. If the firm refused the

government cou ld file a civil
suit against it.

Income Tax
(Continued from page I)
nery-Taft bilL
_:_ A mx on stocks and bonds
dealers and pre-mixed cocktails, the same ·as in the Flannery. Taft bilL
Corporations Benefit
Corporations also would benefit under the bill from a reduction in their intangible personal property tax, applied as an
exclusion to their income tax.
The bill contains $60 million
worth of general property mx
relief keyed to persons whose
property mx is high in proportion to their income. The Flannery-Taft proposal included an
across-the-board properly mx

and Price Commission. Other
areas ma y stay frozen until
government poI i c y makers
come to a decision. The rul e is:
Your pay , pric e or rent is
frozen until the governm ent
specifical ly says it isn't.
Q. What companies will have
to tell the government in
advance that they are rais ing r eduction .
th ei r prices and will have to
The conference committee
ask for permission to do so?
A. Those wi th annual sa les of bill also includes homestead ex$100 mill ion or more. This emption for the elderly, bul.it
covers the 1.300 biggest U.S.
f irms who account for 45 per would not mke lull effect until
cen t of all U.S. sales.
1973.
Q.

Died Thursday

decides a pay raise or a price
bigger than its
hike is
guidelines?
'
A. It ca n order the firm

What

about

Q. Certain items were ex - stone specimens; handcrafts ;
empt from the price freeze. royalties and coyprlghts; InterWilt they also be exempt tram nationa l shipping rates and
po st-freeze control s?
dues
to
non.proflt
A. Yes. These include raw. organizations.
unprocessed agricultural pro:
Q. What about rea l estate?
A. Exempted from control will'
duct s; raw sugar; raw seafood
(i ncluding. for the first time. be unimproved real esta te and

real esta te without newly

that which has been shelled.
shucked. skinned. sea led, be·

constructed Improveme nts.
Rea l estate on whic h new improvements have been made

headed, eviscerated or iced);
financial securities; exports
and new imports.
Q. Will some Items covered
by the pri ce freeze be free
from control during the post.
freeze era?

wi ll alsobeexemptfrom control
-

if

ttie sales

A. Yes. These Include all used

Q. What rents will be exempt
·
sold at disposal sa tes. including from post. freeze controls?

goods. even used cars; items

government real and personal
property, damaged goods, insurance sa les etc. ; custom
made goods, Including leather
goods, wig s and
toupees ,
~ ~o~h ~ng, furs, dressmaking for
mdwtdua l customers ; ta xidermy services; picture and
mirror framing- jewelry ; an·
tiques ; paintings, etchings and
sculpture; coll ectors' coins and
stamps; precious stones and
mountings therefor ; r ock and

A. Commercia l,

industr ia l
be
exempt. So will be new or
substantially rehabilitated ren·
tal units that were offered for
tenancy for the f irst time at
any point after Aug . 15, when
the freeze began . By "substan -

and farm property .wil l

t i a I t y rehabilitated,"

LAMP

BUY 'EM FOR GIFTS!

Collins

Follies' Tickets

Early Til Friday
The sale or advanre tickets
for Saturday night's presentation of the Fall Follies of the
Big Bend Minstrel Assn. will
end Friday evening at six
locations.
Advance tickets are $1 each.
Admission at the door of Meigs
High School Saturday night will
be $1.25 a person. Tickets may
be purchased at Village
Pharmacy and Dutton Drugs in
Middleport, the Rutland furniture Store, Rutland , and
Swisher-Lohse. Drugs, Nelson's
Drugs and the New York
Clothing House in Pcmeroy.

''For es t Service records show

we have been working for
many yea rs, politely, in a businesslike manner without getting
toug h and without setting deadlines, " he said. "But we are at
the point where we cannot tolerate any more smiling."

TABLE LAMPS
TREE LAMPS
POLE LAMPS

ONE GROUP

TABLE
LAMPS
Greatly Reduce
VALUES TO 113.95

Sale

,.

Price

98

Foreman &amp;Abbott
PH. 992-5321
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SUIT fiLED
Patricia Bailey, Reedsville,
RL 1, has filed su it for divorce
in Meigs County Common. Pleas
Court against Jimmie Bailey,

Christ Sunday evening at 7:30 at
Hemlock Grove Church of
Christ.
Officiating at the services will
be Dr. Jim Quisenberry of
Moorehead State University.
Dr ...Quisenberry is a former
minister of the Hemlock Grove

Reedsville, Rt . I, charging Church. Hazelton is a senior at
gross neglect of duty and ex- Kentucky Christian College ,
treme cruelty.
Grayson, Ky.

AmO DEMOUSHED
SORORITYTO MEET
A car was demolished in an
Xi Gamma Mu will meet this accident Wednesday at 11 :50
evening at the home of Mrs. p.m. on Fourth St. in ReedsMargaret Follrod at 7:45p.m. viDe, the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported. Roger A.
Westfall, 19, Reedsville; Rt. 1,
Slid
he saw an object on the
Be Ready For The Cold
b:gbway and .in attempting to
Blast· · •
avoid It, lost control. His car
went through a fence, over a
bill, and landed on its top. There
)ll'ere no injuries or arrest .

,

is.~uP.fl citaUons.·

IPRIAiS
WEATHER STRIPPING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PLASTIC S"(ORM WINDOWS
WARM MORNING HEATERS
!Gas &amp;

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
lor Your

of the Pumpkin Told

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Woman 's Club regular
meeting Oct. 26 at the social
coom 'of the Library waJs opened
by the president, Mrs. Robert
Gurtis with Mrs. Tom offman
leading the devotions.
Mrs. Jerry Scott, Home Life
Committee Chairman, introduced the speaker, Mrs.
Vicki Keefer, Mason County
Home Demonstration Agent,
who presented an interesting
program on the pwnpkin , its
history, and recipes for it this
Thanksgiving season. She

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center First
Ave. and Cedar St. c;;,neral
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward .

~~h 5 Clarence

Mr . and
c.
Gillenwater , Jackson, a son and
Mr. andMrs. FrankieRaymond
Cooper . Pt. Pleasa nt , a
daughter.
Discharges
Mrs . Larry Bailey , Roy
Baisden, Mrs. Autye Baker,
Mrs . John Biship, Mrs. Robert
Board and daughter, Mrs .
Donald Brafford, Diana Cooper,
Sanford Cozart, Bertha Craig,
Elizabeth Fetty, Gerald Grate,
Mrs . George Rawson and
daughter, Edward Rollins,
Eddie Russell, Mrs . Ralph
Scott, Robert Smith, Mrs. Larry
Spencer, Mrs. Mildred Tolliver,
Mrs. Floyd Wallace, Jr., John L
Kerr, Annette Johnson and Mrs.
Harold Pope.

PRACTICES SET
The junior choir will practice
at the Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church each Thursday at 3:30 p.m. At 7:30 p.m.
each Thursday, the adult choir
wfll hold practice sessions.

showed the group how to make
pumpkin bread which was
served by the hostesses with
coffee at the end of the meeting.
The club voted to hold a
chicken barbecue and donate
the proceeds to the New Haven
Rescue Squad, and to write
letters to the various
organizations in the area asking
them also to have different
ac~vities and donate to the
rescue squad.
Mrs. Jess Abel, chairman of
the Budget and Finance
Committee, discussed ways the
club could earn money. It was
vo ted to purchase seven dozen
umbrellas to sell.
Mrs. Paul Powell, librarian ,
announced thai November 14
thru 19th is National Book
Week. The New Haven Library
will hold open house on Thurs-'
day, Nov. 18 from I ID 5 p.m.
and from 6 to 8 p.m. on that
dale . The club voted to serve
refreshments at that event.

Meeting Films
CLown to C'l--s
.JfJ
IUJ,
Class meeting films were
shown during a meeting of the
Adult Class of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Olurch beld recenUy
at the church.
Raymond Walburn gave tbe
opening JWayer, and William
Stephenson showed films of
previous class !llCftings. There
was group singing, a fellowship
hour, and refreshments.
Attendhig were the Rev. and
Mrs. Clude Hender8011, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Colmer, Mr . .and
Mrs. Arthur Koenig, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Pullins and
daughter, Glen · McClung,
·Madeline Haggy , Raymond
Walburn, Myj'tle Durst, Ruby
Erb, Gladys Gibson, Clyda
Bing, Mrs. Don Brickles,
William Stephenson, Mrs. Ben
Brown, Mrs. Barbara Klein,
Mrs . Mamie Snider, Mrs.
Frelda Mossman and Mrs.
Paulette Leach and son.

Coail

MAGNUS CHORD ORGANS
TABLE MODEL

COLEMAN OIL HEATERS
ELECTRIC HEATERS
WINDOW GLASS - THERMOMETERS
PIPE INSULATION
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHO..,LDERS,
COAL BUCKETS; ETC.

6

STOCK YOUR MEDICINE CHEST NOW

SAVE $1 .51

SPECIAL '18A4

3 Music Books
Reg. Value, $61.40

Reo. s29.95
Reo. s1o.oo
I Reg. $16.95
Reg. 54.50
SAVE$23.52

'37
. ORGAN ENSEMBLE
12 Chord Organ
Hassock Bench

Ph. 992·2811
Pomeroy, 0.

3 Music Books
Reo. Valvo, $91 .40

. Jliq Toytowl)

C9mina

Reg. $69.95
Reg. $16.95
Reo. 54.5o
SAVE$23.52

Our
..,..,ru

~.:;t::~:::::=;:;:;:~::::::;~:::::=::::;=:::::::t~:::.:::;.:;:_::;:::::::::~:::::?.:m.::::.::::::::::m::::::~'::.:::;:;:;~::::~t~:::f.:i;:;:::::::::::-~~:::::·.

i8E(1
·. ' FRAN~uN·•·
" E~ierything

In Hardw.are"

Drills Shown ·Distri~t, State Officers

Social
Calendar

Drills for district and state Jean Wolfe, new District 13 gift from that Council; lor Edna
officers were featured at the deputy, with Esther Ridenour, Reibel of Pomeroy , state
annual friendship observance of past district deputy giving her a legislative committee members
District 13, Daughters of gift on behalf of the district; lor and deputy of Theodorus
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, America, held at the Civitan Iva Stacey, state conductor by Coun,cil, by . Theodorus with
7:30p.m. Thursday at the haD. building in Marietta SWlday. Golden Gleam Council with Mrs . Nettie Hayes presenting
The drills were presented lor Lina McVay presenting her a her a gift.
Members to take gifts for the
Athens Mental Health Center.
THURSDAY, Nov. II, annual
"Sluffing Bee" lor Christmas
Seals will be held at the First
Baptist Church, corner of Sixth
and Palmer Sts., Middleport,
RUTLAND- Mrs. Joe Bolin, Ohio Power Co. offices in Meigs High School Cafeteria
·beginning at 9 a.m.
chairman of the 1971 Meigs Pomeroy this past week to with help being asked from
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT County Christmas Flower review show rules and duties of members or all Meigs County
Lions Club, 7 p.m. Thursday, Show, "There's NO' Place Like the various committees.
Garden Clubs and Mrs. Reid
United Methodist Church, Joe
Home for the Holidays" and It was decided that the Young a nd Mrs. William
Haning, Nelsonville, zone
Mrs. Robert Lewis, co- smging for the show will be Willford as chairmen.
chairman to be presen't. District
A!tending the meeting were
chairman, conducted a meeting done on Friday, Nov. 26,
meeting. All local Lions urged of committee members at the starting at 12:30 p.m. at the Mrs. Bobn, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs.
to attend.
Robert Kuhn, schedule comSPECIAL MEETING, Racine
mittee; Mrs. William Willford,
American Legion Post 602,
staging; Mrs. Bert Grimm and
Thursday, 8 p.m. at halL Plans
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, show
lor gun shoot and collection of
theme decoration ; Mrs. James
dues.
Carpenter, photography; Mrs.
Mrs. Herbert Hoover and Varian.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Don Thomas, Juniors; Mrs.
Mrs.
Betty Young entermined Cake and ice cream were Char les Lewis, educational;
Heath United Methodist
Church, 2 p.m. Thursday at the recently with a bridal shower served by Mrs. Hoover, Mrs. Mrs. Roy Snowden, judges
church . Devotions by Mrs . honoring Miss Linda Young. Bridgett Johnson, Miss Snyder committee and clerks; Mrs.
James Jividen, Program by The shower was held at the and Miss Hutton to those named Homer Parker, publicity, and
above and Mrs. Karen Young, Mrs. Robert Thompson , entry
Mrs. M. L. French; hostesses Hoover home.
Gifts were placed on a table Mrs. Annie Searles. Mrs. Betty and classification.
Mrs, Mildred Zeigler, Mrs.
decorated
in yellow and white Young, Mrs . Peggy Hutton,
Emerson Jones. Bazaar plans
Concluding the meeting, Mrs.
slrreamers and wedding bells. Mrs. Delma Karr, Miss Sharon Bolin and Mrs. Lewis served
to be completed.
Games were played under the Karr , Miss Carrie Karr, MrS. coffee and cookies. Several of
PAST
COUNCILORS,
direction of Jackie Hutton and Dru Hart, Miss Tammy Hart, the group left the meeting early
Theodorus CoWicil, D. of A.•
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of Dixie Snyder with prize~ going Sleven Hoover, David Hoover, to attend the open meeting of
to Mrs. Karen Young, Mrs. Rick Hoover, Mrs. Margaret the Chester Garden Club.
Mrs. Kate Goodwin, New Shirley
Wolfe , Mrs. Helga Wolfe, Mrs. E ileen Snyder, Mrs. Mrs . Parker is asking that
Haven.
Evelyn Murra y, Mary Lip- each club in the county make at
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
,penc
ott, Mrs. Geraldine least two posters advertising
PARTIES STAGED
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p.m .,
Halloween par ties were Mowery , and Mrs . Hazel Mc- the show.
·
election of officers and work in
Cloud,
Columbus.
staged
a
I
the
Pomeroy
feUowcralt degree. All Master
Nazarene Church lor the kin- Others presenting gifts were
Masons invited .
Mrs. Evelyn Holter, Mrs. Virgil
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30p.m. dergarten , primary, juniors,
junior high and senior high Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Thursday at school.
LOSE UGLY FAT
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612, classes. Games were played Wolfe, Mrs. Elizabeth Parsons,
Virginia Thorn, Mrs. Opal You can start losi n g weig ht
Letart F~lls, home of Erma and refreshments served by the Mrs.
Hollon, Mrs. Doris Goodrich, today . MONADEX is a tiny
tablet and easy t o t ake.
Wilson 7:30 p.m. Thursday. teache rs and assismnts of each
Miss Paula Watkins, David MONADEX will help curb your
class.
Refreshments of pie, coffee.
Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. John de si re tor e)( cess food . Eat less .
weigh l ess. Contains no
FRIDAY
Chaney, Mrs. Arthur Orr, Mr. dangerou s drugs and w ill not
SUNDAY
DANCE FRIDAY following
vou nerv ous. No
andMrs.ClarenceGrueser, Mr . . make
strenuous exercise. Change
FAMILY
STEWARDSHIP
Wahama-Bullalo football game
and Mrs. Bob Ritchie, Mr . and your life . . . start today .
at Wahama High School from 10 night Sunday , 5 p.m. at St. Paul Mrs.
James Hollon, M~. and MONADEX cos ts SJ .OO for a 20
day sup ply . Lose ugly fat or
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
to 12. Jays will emcee.
Mrs.
John
Brewer,
Mrs.
Betty
your money wil l be refund ed
YOUTH RALLY, Pomeroy
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
t
M
e
Stiltn
with no ques t ions asked .
B
t
R
M
er, MONADEX is sold with this
Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m. Friday at Church of Christ, 2 p.m. Sun· oss, rs . e Y a
Mrs.
Edward
Young,
Mrs.
E
lva
guarantee by : Swisher &amp; Lc;hse
the Episcopal Parish House, day.
Lewis, Mrs. Janis Parker.
Drugs- 112 E. Main &amp; Dutton
Drug Store . Middleport. Mail
CHICKEN AND spare rib
Pomeroy. Joseph Struble to be
Orders Fill e d .
·
barbecue
Sunday,
starting
II
the guest speaker. Roll call will
be a favorite American hero; a.m. at Chester fire House.
hostesses, Mrs. Guy Neigler, Homemade ice cream also.
Mrs. George Skinner, and Mrs. Sponsored by Chester Fire
Department.
Mark Grueser, Jr.

Show Rules, Duties.Reviewed

Bridal Shower Given

REGULAR MEETING, Mary
MONDAY
Shrine , White Shrine of
RACINE Elemenmry PTA,
Jerusa lem , 8 p.m. Friday, 7:30 p. m. Monda y at schooL
IOOF Hall, Pomeroy. Officers
OLD FASHIONED revival,
and members asked to attend ;· Sutton United Methodist
potluck refreshments.
Church, 7:30 p. m. Monday,
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
SATURDAY
speaking ; special singing .
THANKSGIVING Dinner and
THEODORUS Council 17,
bazaar Saturday, serving Daughters of America, 59th
starting 4 p. m., St. Paul's anniversary observance, 6 p. m.
United Methodist Church anpotluck dinner with members to
nex, Tuppers Plains. Baked mke their own mble service and
chicke n,

dressin g,

ham,

mashed potatoes , sweet
pomtoes, noodles, green beans,
cole slaw, rolls, pie and cake.
DUE TO FALL Follies
Saturday
night,
dance
scheduled Saturday at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport is
cancelled.
CHICKEN AND noodle dinner
Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. by
Middleport Pentecoslal Church,
s. Third, Middleport, in building
next to church. For free
deliveries caD 992-2502 or 9926042 before 9 a.m. Saturday.
$1.25, including pie .

.PHON!:
.
··
202 East Main St.
992-3498
.
· Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY i. SAt'U , I NIGHTSTIL 9'.

a covered dish. Initiatory work
to he performed and members
are asked to wear white.
ALFRED METHODIST
Church will hold a week of
revival serv ices nightly,
beginning Monday · evening,
Nov. 15, with Rev. Jacob Lehman doing the preaching. On
Tuesday
and
Thursday
evenings the Bissell Brothers
will provide special music, and
on Saturday evening a quartet
from Junction City will sing.
Everyone who sings "specials"
is welcome.

BY PHIL MAID
Dreamy confections,

softly detailed with

young or old.

DACRON&amp;
NYLON
ASSORTED
STYLES
AND.
COLORS

And Happiness Everywhere.
They Have Big. Looks For
Our Littk Friends This Year.
Perky things for her .
Manly duds for him .
Infant thru size 12.

To Make Their Wardrobe
The Most BeautifUl, Shop At

THE KIDDIE
SHOPPE
On the T in Middleport

$AVE

REG. 98'

REG. •5.49
POLAROID

THANK YOU

OOLOR

CARDS

108

2Bom99~
REXALl

REG. 19.99

LADY SHAVE

DOUBLE OOMFORT
TWO-SIDED SHAVING HEAD

Reg. $1.89

2 FOR $11JO

REG. •1.29
BINACA

EYE

1
REG.
- - 1.19
- .

JERGENS
LOTION

79~

REG. 11.89

14 Ol

24's39~ gg~·

REG.

69'

Elec. Alarm

$2.99
6Sc

LITTLE GIRLS

M.usical
Jewel Box

PEANUTS

KODAK ·

.White Rain
Hair Spray

CX126
12

REGUlAR AND
EXTRA HOLD
REG. s1.49

•3.90

.

g~

Flavor House

ROASTED
.
--

LYSOL
SPRAY

Cepacol®Lozenges

BREATH SPRAY

9~ oz59~
· REG. 13.98
WESTCLOX

'7,

Golden

luscious lace and delicate
embroidery. Just

Holidays In The Air..

$AVE

11 /liT A BlEAM

Ill

Mrs . Erma Jenkins also
presented a gilt to her da"Jhter,
Mrs. VVoHe.
.
The 50th annual rally to be
held on April 13 at Syracuse was
announced by the district
deputy. It was also noted that
the district past councilors.club
Christmas party will be held on
Dec. 12 at the Redwood Inn.
The deputy club party will be on
Dec. 5 at Gallipolis. Millie
Moberly
was
reported
hospitalized.
Ada Morris of Chester Council
323, past state organizer,
presided at the ritualistic
opening ol the meeting.
Received officially were Mrs.
Wolfe, Mrs. Stacy, Mrs. Edith
Be !zing, Chester Council, a past
state councilor; Mrs. Erma
Cleland, deputy state councilor
of Chester Council; and Mrs.
Reibel, slate legislative com-

member and deputy of
Theodorus Council.
A potluck dinner preceded the
meeting with Mrs . Ruby
Matheney giving grace.
Decorations carried out a fall
theme.
..
Attending besides those
named were Bertha Parker and
Ferne Roush, 'Theodorus , ·
Pomeroy; Barbara Sargent,
Jean Summerfield, Zelda
Weber, Opal Hollon, Ethel Orr,
Marcia Keller, Dorothy Ritchie,
Doris Grueser, Dorothy
Lawson, Margaret Tuttle, all of
·Chester Council 3230.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. lWbert
Van Lehn, Hattie Shai, Lina
McVay, Annabelle Kehl, Erma
Jenkins, Grace Smith, Vade
Morganstern, Sara Jane Riddle,
Jessie Ryan, Geneva Eday.
Norma Milan, Margaret
Douthett, Lucille Van Dusan,
Reba Ammon, Edna Best,
Martha Hudnall, Violet Bishop,
Sally Smith, Barbara Huffman,
aU of Golden Gleam Council,
Marietta . ·

YOUR DRUG STORE

FAST
PERMANENT

~~M~~~~~

what the girls crave

ENSEMBLE

12 Chord
4Legs
Hassock Bench

Main Street

'THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"

Chord Organ. Music Rack, M•Jslc

Book :
Reg . Value, $19.95

Ebersbach Hardware

Electric, c.iaf and

RADAR REACTIVATED
MASON - Due to increasing
disregard for pos ted speed
limits in the town of Mason,
Police Chief John Harrah said
today the police department
radar uml will be put into
service and violators will he

Grande Chorale will present ·a
JH'Ogram at Meigs High School
on Nov. 22 under sponsorship of
the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers.
PTA members were asked lo
assist
with
Christmas
decoration for the various
classrooms. Mrs. Joe Grass
spoke to the group on
techniques of speech therapy.
Special mU8lc was provided by
Vernon Weber, soloist, and his
daughter, Donna Weber ,
pianist. The attendance banner

and $5 award was won by tbe
third grade.
A report was given on the' faD
festival held Nov. 6. Elected
were Mike Wayland , king ;
Sherrie Tackett, queen; Lanneta Whittington, princess; and
Brian Wilcox, JWince. It was
noted that the eight candidates
securing votes by the penny-avote system raised $156. A tDtal
of $453 was made on the festival.
Contests were conducted with
Angela Kennedy, Robin
Sou!he~. Lori Snowden, Abby
Martin, Homer Parker and
Pauline Tillis winning the
JWfzes. A ceramic tree was won
by Mike Edwards, and Sherrie
Michael won a table lamp.
Winners in the apple eating
contest were Doug and Ronnie.
Starcher. Rusty Starcher and
Tommy Sinunons won in a
magic word game, and among
those receiving door prizes
were Russell Little, Eva
McKinney, Rosemary Snowden,
Larry Edwards, Melanie
Sinunons and Shirley Simmons.
Evelyn's Grocery and Miller
Bros. assisted in ticket sales
and numeroU8 stores donated
JH"izes.
Refreshments were served by
the fifth grade and the Dec. 13
meeting will be hosted by the
fourth grade parents.

HEAT TAPES- DOOR STRIPS

HEATERS
Fuel 011 ·

WITH THESE

SALES SET
The Southern Cluster Youth
Fellowship of the Methodist
Church will hold a bake sale
beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday at
the Racine Home National Bank
and the Racine Food Market. ·

It was announced that the Rio

~tory

lor aU new prisoners, Warden L.
M. Connett said.
The 60-year-old former

governor's
~~needs"
academic,
health
and
vocational - will be studied
during the orientation. Rules of
the prison will be explained,
then Barron will be assigned
some type of duty, unless he Is
ill.

The Rutland PTA bas gone on
record as opposing JH'Oposed
legislative bills which would
pe1'111i,t the sale of candy containing a significant amount of
alcohol, and establish govern.
ment operated and controlled
develqpment centers through
the proposed Child Development Act.
During a meeting Monday
night at the Rutland Elementary School the contents of tbe
two bills - S.B. 2007. which is
the Child Development Act, and
H.B. 7785 the alcohol candy one
- were discussed and members
were urged to direct letters to
Pres. Richard M. Nixon and
Congressman Clarence MiUer,
urging that they oppose both

bills.

Gillmor said one of the chief
companies which want to raise
points of contention in the contheir prices?

coal sediment into Long Branch
Hollow, a natural gorge.
Wolter said the Collins company has "a his tory with this
station of doing little, if anything, to comply with correction
requests made under the terms
of the l9nd·use l/"lfllits.
''l,.!"et with "'fr. ,:.c.ollins early
this week and he promised corrections," said Wolter. "But we
have had his promises in the
past that were not kept.

the

government means a rehablllta -.
tlon of at least one -third or.
mor e of the property 's tota~
va lue.

smaller

A. Those with sales of from ference committee was making
$50 mil l ion to $1 00 million will the property mx relief "visible"
have to tf ll the government
every three months - but not in as such and not as a credit
advance - of changes in pr ices. against income mx liabili ty.
costs and profits. This covers
1. 100 firm s doing 5 per cent of
the tota l U.S . business. Firm s
with sales under $50 milli on wi ll
not have to repo r t but will be
spo t-checked by th e gover nment.
(Contin ued from page I )
Q. What firms must get
advance government approval clean out sediment trapping babefore giving their employes a sins from which sand and coal
raise?
wash into llearby
A: Those with 5,000 or more waste
employ es covered by the raise . streams.
Q. What about smaller firms?
- failure to correct slippage
A. Those where from 1,000 to
5,000 employes are covered by on fed eral lands strip mined by
the Collins several yea rs ago.
the · raise mus t tell
government what the raise is
Wolter also told the Plain
and how many are covered. at
the time the raise becomes Dealer that a Collins Mining Co.
effect ive. Those w ith fewer sediment pond had been fi lled
than 1,000 worker s will not ha ve far past the safety point and
to report but will be monitor ed
its wall broke out several yea rs
by the government .
Q . What if the government ago, spilling tons of sand and

was

provements were made or If
subsequent wage hikes force the
pr ice of construction up.

Barron Getting Prison Lowdown 1

free'.

price

determined after the lm·

Two Bills Draw
Fire from PTA

~ttee

Reg. 89c

Flavor House

MIXED NUTS
71h Ol
JAR

69$

LADIES' PANTY HOSE
ONE SIZE . . REG.

FITS All

1.29

1

LADY SUNBEAM

9 CUP

PERCOLAlOR

2 . 1.29

'!1

88 ELEtriUC
t....i

'

.

�..

'

''

. .. .

..•

&gt;

lt-TheDIIIyllel!' I.Wti!S . W' *Vf,O.,NoY.Il,lt71

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassifieds Get Results_!
Lost
Business
Services
\L ___
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLIN'E$
SMALL black minialure terr ier·
S
P.M.
Day
Before Publlcatio
with brown paws wearing
MQnday
Dea~llne 9 a.m.
collar wi th license, in Rutland
C~!lofiOI)_&amp; cor_r~jqn~ .
ar ea . Answers to name of __
Wlll be accepted until9 a.m . fo r
Ja ke. Phone 742-5484.
Day of Publication
11 -ll -2tc
REGULATIONS

APPOINTMENT
Case No . 20567
Estate of
H A T TI E MAE

RATES
For Want Ad Serv ice
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c

J
Noti c e is hereb y g i \len that
cents per word th ree,
C~ r l W B ilikam , of Pom eroy , · 12
Oh io , ha s been duly appointed consecutive insertions.
:
Adm in ist r ator of t he Estate of
18 cents per word six cOn·

Ha ttie Mae Bili kam , de ceased . secutive insertions.

·
25
Per
Cent
OiscoiJnt
on
paid1
Cred it ors are re qui red to fil e
the ir cla i m s w ith sa id f idu ci a ry ads and ads paid with in 10 da ys.

1/lt e of M eigs Count y . Ohio .

w it h in four months .
Dat ed th is 22nd day of Oc -

,

40 LEGHORN hens. SO cents
NI CE 2-slory home with full
eac h. Phone 9-19-3051 .
11 -11 -3tc basement, 2 lois, new forced

CARD QF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
·

For Rent
UNFURNISHED aparlmen t
Ave .. Pomeroy. Ohio. Call
992-3957 .
11 -11 -31p

Reynolds Aluminum Builders

Urive, Columbus, Ohio. phon

Supply of Mason City. Amrax
Slone and Brick siding .
aluminum vinyl and woad.

237-4334, Columbus.

Reynolds Aluminum siding at

EARLY,

PAW!!

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Selvice

FOUR NEW HOMES ._ .
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516.900.00 home con be purchased with a
mqnthly paymenf as low as S6s:oo for a family with a base
sal~ry of $5,000,00 and ' three children. I 'I• Pel. annual
Der·cei.ifacui rate:· ·
·

5-9-lfa1

,,
GUYS

ReLAX, WATCI.f 't'OUR. ~I&amp;T,
GET PI.ENTV OF R£s1; TAKE VOUR
MEDICATION, ANI&gt; A90v&amp; AU.••

-·DO NOT

50 -gallon electric water '
to ber 1971.
S1 .50 for 50 word m iniiTium . BRAND NEW. 12x60, 2 bedroom
heater,
2 large recreation
mobile home across fr om
Jo hn c . Ba con Each additional word 2c.
windows , k i tchen cabinets ,
rooms,
paneled
in basement,
·
·
Bradbury
School.
Call
992·
Acting Pr oba t e Ju dge
BLIND ADS
i n do or -outdoor Car pet , 501
2 porches. garage, concrete: 81 LL NELSON 992-3657
HIL TQN WOLFE ,94,·~11
5308
or
see
Charles
Lewis,
2nd
of said Co unty
Additional 2Sc Charge pe r
nyl on . Your complete Home
(10 128 11114.11. 31 Advertisem~nt
house south from Bradbury
drivewar· large yard with
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
Improvement HeadqiJarters.
.
School.
Pels
welcome
.
OFFICE HOURS
Easy credit terms available.
plenty
o shade frees.
located
on
largelof.250ft.
by 250ft.
on :=======~:=~g:-:;=~::=;~~~~===~·
· -- ~
11 -11 -3tc
8:30a.m. to 5:00 i&gt;.m. Dail y,
On now, Reynolds , 773-5147.
NOTICE OF
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2174
SR
124
in
Syracuse,
Ohio.
8:30a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
APPO,INTMENT
11 -lOc1Stp Available for Immediate'
Case No. 20563 Saturday .
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's ·~.blle
Estat e Of OS CAR L . WINCE ,
NICE Normandy Clarine! $50. occupancy. To see, phone
Courl.
Rt.
124.
Syracuse
..
Dec eased .
5
Phone 742-4211 or after S p.m.
Jh io. 992-2'151.
Noti ce is hereby given that
4-2-tfc
742-5163.
POIVlEROY
Vernon 0 . Winc e, of Box 1074,
10-· 3_·"
Card
of
Thanks
n
-1o-6tc
.
.
Ro selo'ille, Califor nia , has bee n
BEDROOM trailer apartdu ly appo inted Executor of the
&amp;
Est ate of Osc ar L . Win ce, I WI SH to e xpress my sincere
m ent, ideal for coupl es. NICE . USED bathroom outfit.
NEW&amp;OLD WORK·
de ce ased, late of Me igs County ,
complele
,
cast
ir
on
tub
.
.
-GUARANTEEDAll
Wufher
Roofing
&amp;
Contact
McClure's
Dairy
Isle,
than ks and appreciation to
992-2094
Oh io
992-5248
or
992-3436.
742-4211
or
after
S
p.m
.
Phone
992-2094
Construction
Co.
and
AnPhone
t
he
nur
ses
and
staff
of
Creditors are required to
606 ~.Main Pomeroy
11-5-10tc
742-5163.
·
lhony flumblng ·&amp; Hatting.
Veterans Memor ial HospitaL
fil e the ir claims wit h sa id
.
fidu ci ary with in four months .
Dr . Telle , t he Pomer oy
ll -l0-6tc
.
Pomeroy
Home
·
&amp;
Auto
.
complete . Plumbing,
Dated this :!2nd day of
Emergency Squad , and the MOBILE home space. on a
Healing and ~&lt;Jr Confarm . Farm work can apply FOUR BEAGLE dogs . All
Octo ber , 1971
friends and neighbors for
608 East Main
·
Open
Hin
dllioning.
And
John C . Be con
to rent. Util ities paid . Caii6W
running . Phone 992-6871.
POMEROY FARMMon day lhru ·Safurday
their beautiful cards , flower s
Ac t ing Probate Judge
240
Lincoln
Sf.
,,Middleporf
HARRISONVILLE985-3832.
ll -10-31c
and gifts I received during my
of sa id County
6:06:::::E:.Ma=t:n:,:Po:m:•:r~o~y,:O:.={
11 -5-8tc
stay
in
the
hospital
and
after
130 ACRES, 35 lillable, barn.
·
•
(10)28 (11 ) 4.11 . 31
1961
CASTLE
.
10
x
SO
trailer,
2
silo, 4 buildings. 3 bedroom 'f:
Pho-ne 992:i5So
Stop. In and
Our
my return home . M.ay God
bedrooms. 683 Locust St.,
NEW. 2 bedroom mobile home
bless each and everyone.
home. bath , building sites
Insured. Experienced
Floor
Display.
wi lh air condi tioning in
Middleport. Phone 992-5509. along the road, MINERALS,
.,,.
Mrs . Reed Will
11 -10-3tp
ALL THIS FOR JUST $19,000.
~Work Guaranteed
Middleport area . Adults only .
11 -11 -llp
NOTICE OF
Phone 992-5443.
See
us -ior Free
APPOINTMENT
11-7-ft c 2 - 13" RIMS - S8 tor both . RACINE - 35 wooded acres.
Case No. 20,541
Estimate on Furnace
Phone 992-5260 after S p.m . pond , so me limber , EX ·
Estate of Newell S . Hy sell ,
CELLENT
HUNTING,
apar
tm
enl.
FURNISHED
ll
-9-3tp
-SPECIALsDeceased
building si tes along t he road ,
Thr ee large rooms and bath . - - - ----,---:-:-':
Not ice is hereb y given that
November 1fhru 6
POTATOES
.
Charles
Hi
lton
.
Oor tha Lyma n of 3646 E . Ma in
~3. 500.
Adul
ts
only.
See
at
256
South
LOVING CARE
DEER HUNTERS
Street, Columbus, Ohio , has
Porlland . Ohio. Phone 843Fourth Ave., Middleport .
Reg. $6.50
Now S5.00
been duly appointed Executr ix
SPECIAL
Now Offering A
CHESTER GRACIOUS
2268.
11
-8-lc
November
8
fhru
13
of !he Estate of Newel l S.
10-28-lfc
COUNTRY
LIVING
3.05
PERMANENT
Hys ell , de ceased , ta t e of
l;omplete
BEAUTIFUL ACRES HO US E in Long Bollom. phone
Rev. $12.50
Now S8.50
1970 Banner Truck Camper,
Pomeroy , RD No . 1, Me igs
;
FREE PARKING
985-3529 .
County , Ohio .
gas -elec . refrigerat or , 3
practically new 3 bedroom
Remodeling
11 -9-6lp
S
0
home, bath, modern kitchen ,
Cred itors are required to file
FREE COFFEE
burner stove-oven , furnace .
-- -- We have added 1 cr1ftsm1n
ave $1 .00 Now!
ulility room, large summer
their c la i ms with sa id fiduc ia ry
- - - - -Phone 992-7474
stool · pressure water
Kitchens, Baths
with
20 yurs experience In
with in four mon ths .
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rl. 1
N EW, 2 bedroom home with air
Brin g th is ad and get $10 off I
pat io, fuel -oil forced -air
system · 2 bottle-gas tanks .
Room AddlllonJ
roofing
fo our staH.
Dated th is 22n.d day of Oc on your purchase of a new
furna ce, large garage and
cond i tioning in Middleporl
Bock Jacks .
And
Patios
tober 1971 .
Si egler heater .
work shop , modern outside
area. Adults on l y. Phone 992This Fri .-Sat.-Sun, Only
John C. Ba con
Backhoe And
s
1695.00
for
s
1295.00
5443.
NEIGLER Building Supply .
Ac t ing Probate Judge
Endloader
Work
~USIT~~9ci~~ils
and
berries.
11-7-tfc
of sa id County
Free estimate on building
(1 0) 28 (111 4, 11. 31
your new home. Will draw
Septic Tanks .
Gaul Trailer Sales, Inc. 2 BEDROOM mob ile home in
PLACE THE SALE OF
prjnts to suit the lay of your
TREE trimming and removal.
And
Leach Beds.
I YOUR PROPERTY IN
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
John Koehler, phone 992-5056.
Racin e area . Phone 992 -6329 .
FUEL OIL .
I
CAPABLE HANDS
Chesler, 0 .
ORDINANCE NO . 420
985-3832
11-9-Aic
Racine. Ohio. For repair and
11-3· tfc I
AN
ORDINANCE
TO
I
~II s;zes ;n stoc k. We ;ns tall. l
HENRY E. CLELAND
aluminum siding, soffet and
AMEND ORDINANCE 401 TO
fon ance. serv oce.
Office 992-2259
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
FIX SALARIES AND WAGES GUN SHOOT. Sunday, Nov. 14,
Sale
I
Residence
992-2568
Racine. Ohio.
OF EMPLOYEES OF THE
1 p. m., Mile Hill Road . 20 lb.
10-7-tfc
VILLAGE OF POMEROY .
I ~
POM!ROY
steak , turkeys , baco~s .
JotkW.
Carooy,Mtr . I - - - - - -- - 11-7-6tc
•
-SECTION l. Be it ordained as
I
Sponsored by Ra cine F~re
P~onoff2·2111
HOUSE MOVING: Houses, etc .
follows by 1he Council of the
Oepl.
Village of Pomeroy , Ohio, two
raised, moved, underpinned,
11 -11-31c
th irds of all members elected
remodeled. Estimates free.
1 Case diesel model 850 CK BLACK and while pony , saddle
thereto concurring , that Or anywhere.
National House
Tractor,
loader
and
backhoe
and br idle, Jani e Coleman ,
dinan ce No. 379 dated February
Movers,
Box
5002, Charleston.
with
18"
and
24"
buckets.
Mo nday .
5, 1969 and Ordinance No . 401 , BEGINNING
Phone 742-582'1.
w. Va. 25311, or phone 304-925·
power shuttle. Cost newdated June 1, 1970 Is hereby
11 -7-61c
November 15, we will hull
$10,675.00. Will sell for
3279.
amended to the extent that
walniJts only on Monday,
$8.600.00
.
Section 1, Paragraph c is
Wednesd.iiY an.d Saturday
General 2 axle frailer wilh CONTE MPI).JUR,¥,. c~onsole
changed to read as follows :
tram· ~ a.,m : to ·5! p. m ~
stereo, AM-'f''filo rs"ddil; 4 speed
ball hitch tnd brake iit. Cost
C. W1ter end Stwer Dtplrt.
Miller
SEPTI tank'$
•
•
11 -11 -31&lt;.
changer, 4 speak~r' sound
men1 - Clas~ II Operator or
new-11,575.00. Will sell for
Ph.
Sanitation. Stewart,
111:6ker
Pump Station Supenisor ,
system. Walnut veneer finish
11,000.00. Equipment t year
110
Mechanic
Street
6&lt;12-3035.
UOO .OO per month .
·
old, 250 hours. Phone 992-7608
cabinet. Balance S69.52. Use
THE BRADBURY School
2-12-lfc
~me roy, Ohio
SECT ION 2. That Ordinance
days. and 142-4902 evenin9s.
our budge! plan. Call 992-7085.
P.TA
will
have
a
food
379 dated February 5, 1969 end
Can be seen at corner Un1on
11 -8-6tc
concession stand at the
CONCRETE
Ordinance No. £01. dated June
29 ACRES - 6 room home , READY -MIX
Avenue and Rt. 7, Pomeroy .
forthcoming
yard
sale,
1, 1970, and all other ordinances
delivered
right
to your
bath, FREE GAS HEAT.
MAPLE stereo-radio com In conflict with this amendment Saturday , Nov. 13 . at the
project.
Fast
and
easy
. Free
Spring wa ter, small barn .
bination, AM-FM radio, 4
shall be and are hereby Bradbury School starling at 9 FIREWOOD. Phone 992-7595.
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284
.
Minerals, oil and gas well.
ll -9-41c
repeated .
speed changer, 4 speaker
11 -7-6tc
a.m.
Goeglein
Ready
-Mix
Co.,
NEW LISTING. SlJ.SOO.OO.
SECTION 3. That this Or sound system . Balance $79 .89 .
Middleport, Ohio.
--:-~::-:--:-::~-:--­
dinance shall take effect and be
Use
our
budget
plan
.
Caii992SIEGLER fuel oil healer . new
6-30-tfc
in force from and after the PRAYER meeting at Glenn is
ROUTE 7 BY-PASS - New 3
708S .
- $125, Sofa bed and mal earliest per iod allowed by law .
bedrooms, spl if level. 11/2
11 -8-61c
Hoffman residence, 1 mi.
t hing cha ir - S45, bed and
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
PASSED : October 18. 1971.
baths, electric heat. A acres .
North ot Chester on Rt. 7. spring s - $7, Hoover washing
ATTEST: Jane Walton
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782.
Saturday . Nov . 13. 7:30p.m.
$90 ,
mach i ne , new
CLERK
Gallipolis . John Russell,
ROUTE 7 - modern S rooms.
APPROVED ; Char les Leger
Rev . Freddie Steel. MI. Hope.
Magna vox Record PlaYer and For Rant or Sale
ONner
&amp; Operator.
bath , gas heat . Paneling, 4
CE -50 · 2 Ton , ~ .. cab to axle, 350 cu. ln . V-e engine, 70oo
MAYOR
W. Va . Sermon: Water
recor ds - $35, Stereo B tape 10 X 52 HOME CREST tra iler, 2
S-12-lfc
acres.
lb. front axle. 15000 lb. 2 speed rear axle, 23000 lb. r"r
Baptism . Everyone welcome.
bedroom , furnished. gas heat,
player and 15 tapes plus case
(11 ) 4, 11 , 21
springs &amp; auxiliary sprlnQ!. H. duly frame. 1o !rami
condition
.
Home
Crest
good
11-7-5tp
- $75, Wri ting desk - S12.
on good highway . Reybolds CHESHIRE - bl oc k building BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
reinforcement, front tow hooks, custom comfort 1o ap- - - -- Phone 742-4864 .
for business .
Flower Shop, 773-5147, Mason.
Sepfic tanks Installed. George
l l-9-31p
pearance cab. w.c. mirrors. radlo, power sfe«lng. \l00x20·
YARD SALE , Saturday and
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
w. Va .
tires. Locally ownad &amp; looks &amp; drives rlghf.
11 -9-61p MINERSVILLE
nice 3
Sunday, November 13 &amp; 14th,
4-25-lfc
starts at 9 a .m. David Haggy COAL , l i me stone . E xc el sior - - -- - -- - bedrooms , bath, furnace , - - - - - Salt Works, E. Main St.,
basement . Garage . 2 acres . SEWING MACHINES. Repair
residence . left of Happy
Pomeroy . Phon• 992-3891.
Auto
Sales.
Hollow. follow signs.
service, all makes. 992-2284.
4-9-tfc
ll -10-31p
SALEM
CENTER4
bedroom
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
1968 PONTIAC GTO, Black with
modern
homes,
lli2
baths,
Authorized Singer Sales and
red Interior, 400 cu. in ., 4
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
radiant panel heat. Modern
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
GUN shoot, Forked Run
speed,
A-1
shape,
Phone
773Park v-Iew Kenn els, Phone 992kitchen , cook unils, stainless
3-29-lfc
Sportsman Club , Sunday ,
5417,
Clifton,
West
Virginia.
5443.
sink.
Insulated.
10
ACRES.
November 14, 12 noon .
11 -9-91p
8' Body, good 750x16 tires. V-8 engine, std. trans .. radio,
8-1S-tfc
S22,500.00. NEW LISTING c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
11 -10-Jtc
solid cab. Worth more.
Comolete Service
Fitzpatrick Or- 'S9 FORD pickup truck, ex Mrs. Jean Summerfield, Mrs. SHOOTING Match , Saturday . APPLES
PROPERTY
SELLING.
Phone
949-3821
cellent condition . Phone 742chard s, State Route 689,
YOU BET
Nora Brown , Mrs. Ada Morris, November 13. , at Ihe Racine
Racine, Ohio
SQJ2.
phone Wilesvllle, 6&lt;19-3785.
992-3325 992-2378
Crill Bradford
Mrs. Ross Cleland and Mrs.
Planing Mill at 6p.m. Factory
11-10-Jtc
9-3-ttc
Helen L. Teaford,
5-1 -ffc
James Ridenour and sons choke guns only . Assorted
Associate
1961
WHITE,
two
door
coupe,
visited Wednesday evening with meat. Sponsored by the CASH and carry sale
Parll -7-6tc
Syracuse Fire Dept .
Cadil lac. A-1 shape, $300. See
son 's Furniture Store on State
RUBBER stamps made to
Mrs . Letha Wood at the home of
11 -10-3tc
Phil
Burbridge.
Rt.
2,
Albany,
Rt. 7 in Kanauga. Living room
order, 24·hour service. Dwaln
Super H. dufy, 6 cyl. Lots of servlceleflln th is one.
su i tes, were $249.95 now
Mrs .. Harold
Hawk
~t THE ANNUAL Sacred Hearl
or
Wilma Casto. Portland.
Ohio.
.
_
c
Business
Services
_
11
10
31
$159.95 , Early American .
10-24-JOfc
Hockmgport. Mrs. Wood lS Church Bazaar wlll be held
bedroom suites were $269 .95,
AWNINGS.
storm
doors
and
staying with the Hawks since Thursday night November 11
now $199.95. Matlress and box
windows,
carports, HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
she injured her foot in a fall at slarting with a dinner t~om
springs
$28.95
each,
no
butmarquees. 81umlnum siding
84" cab to axle, V-8 engine, 2-speed axle, solid truck for
Service. Phone 992-2522.
4:30 to 6: 30 p.m . Donatoons
ton
s,
recliners
were
$79.95
,
and
railing.
Call
A.
Jacob.
6-10-lfc
model.
her home.
.
dinner , adults. $1.75. children
now
$47
.50.
Swi
vel
rockers
sales
representative.
For
free
-Mrs. Jean Swnmerfleld and $1. Dinner , fancy work
were $59.95, now $35.95.
estimates , phone Charles
Mrs . Nora Brown have returned booths. games and ratt)es .
11-9-3tc
Lisle, Syrocuse. V. V. O'DELL WHEEL alignment
·
· wo'II be goven
Pme
home after a visit with Mr and
ev er Y half
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Johnson
and Son. Inc.
·
hour from 6 to 9 p.m.
tront end service.
Complete
S-27-tfc
Mrs. Larry Roush and Jean
11 -2-9tc PAINT Damage. 1971 Zig-Zag
tune up and brake service.
sewing machines. Still in
.
-Ann, Winter Haven, Fla.
Wheels balanced elec·
AUTOMOBILE insurance
origina l cartons. No at Local1 owner cor, 6 cyl., std. trans .• radio, good tlreo.
Ironically .
All
work
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy KOSCOT Kosmetlcs for sale,
been cancelled? Lost your
lachmenls needed as our
delivered to your door. New
guari!lnteed.
Reasonable
operator's license? Call 992controls are built -in. Sews
spent the weekend with Mr. and
products
coming
out
roles. Phone 992-3213.
296&lt;1.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Mrs. Virgil Wood, Springfield.
regularl(. Would you like to
6-15-tfc ..;.__
7-27-lfc
buttonholes. sew on buttons,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles fry them? Call 99~ - 5113 .
V-8, aufomatlc, p . steering, white finish, blk. vinyl Inmonograms, and blind hem
·
10 - ~-ff c
slilch. Full cash price, $38.50
ferior •. radio.
Eichinger and daughter,
or budget plan available.
Columbus, spent the weekend
Phone 992-5641.
with Mrs. OpAl Eichinger and
ll -9-61c
- - - - - -- - ·12io washington liivd. ·
family .
Std. trans., new tires. needs grille &amp; pain f. Special! f' -ELE CTRO LUX vacuum
Belpr•, Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Fred V. Rice
cleaner complete wilh at - 1-- - - - -- - ----U
have returned home after a two
la chments, cordwlnder and
weeks visit with relatives in
pain t spray. Used but in like
For Sale
4 Dr .• 6 cyl .. std. Irons .• runs good. Special!!
new condition . Pay $37.45 Real
Virginia .
cas h or
credi t
term s , HOUS-E, lo•' Loncoln--Helghfs.
Miss Lucille Smith has Emplovmenf Warited
available. Phone 992-5641 .
Call Danny Thompson, 992- ·
returned home after a visit with
1
ll -9-61c
2196.
~:.'695
7-18-ffMrs. John Reuter, Akron, and a
Locally owned, 6 cyl., automaflc, radio, spotless clean
1Q
Interior.
tour of the New England states.
Mrs . Virgene Elberfeld and
Mrs. Opal Wickham visited
operation .
Saturday evening with Lucille HOUSECLEANING in Racine,
Remember, our selection of new 72 Chevy
Syracuse and Pomeroy area.
~-ti~ilc e~ of water
Smith.
temps .
Auto·.
Phone 992-2876.
Trucks are . all priced to save you mo!'ley.
· wa·ter
lelo'el
10-24-ffc
Mrs. Roy Christy and Mrs.
control.
LfnT
Blazers &amp; Pickups in 4 wheel drives. All mode.l
Clayton Allen spent a recent --~-----­
Filter ol"" Power'
pickups, vans &amp; 2 Ton trucks in stock.
Fin Agitator .
day in Parkersburg.
Permi~Preu ·
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Will,
Moyfog
HIIOOf Hilt .
Syracuse, visited recently with
Dryers
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Cleland.
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
Also calling on the Clelands was
heat. No hot spots, .
1
Mrs. Rose Girllher .
no overdrylno .J
Plus Recappable Casing
\Fine Mesh Llnf
Mr. aad Mrs. Edgar Hartung
FIller. .
and son of Mississippi and Mr .
Wt SptCIIIIZe In
MOUNTED FREE
MAYTAG
and Mrs. Kenneth Hartung of
. Red Corp at
. . . :.t~
Maryland,
a few days
•.
Strvl~~:e
with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice,
llllvfuc been called here by the
.
992-2126
death of their grandfather Mr.
Open Eves. Ti I 8
Pof11eroy.
Phone
992-7161
742-4211
Middleport,
Arnold Grate
Rutland, 0 ..

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment .
s:i5S
·

~~~~p~~:~~r ~~~~~~~~.;~:

Clelan·· a··l
RealtY

ROOfiNG &amp;
WORK
·sPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING. ·

HOME

.

NEW&amp;PAPEit,!

OH,OLI\JER WEf.JDELL

THERE. IS WA'I
NO'W.'IOUR

POM'ES!!-1-'DW CAN
HI'.NTITLED "I WANT A GIRL
-, , 'JOJ WRITE SUCH
J UST L IKE THE GIRL WhtJ DIDN'T
POMES?
I WROTE. A NE.W PO"'' E.

AUTO

~f'.ER!·MAJfST'/.'!

IS GONf.lA BE

MARRY OEAR OLD PAD-~' " -~

SADIE IIAWKitoiS
DA"' !!

'

See

-·-.. _

, ... .... ...
~ ·--

Original Cabinet

-

r---------..

iliATI5 A PRETTY
LOFTY AMBITION.

--------'"1

For

r

FOR SALfl.

IF ANYONE
CAN DOlT,
M~ WINKl-E
CAN!

New Service

II

1

••

'

•

Company

I

M'/ .w:lTHER·IN·LAW!

FURNITURE

Notice

SIEGLER
HEATERS

t KNOW, BUT ITS 10 .

SHE MIGHT ATfACK
Will-lOUT WAIINING I

FRISK~iL~ TAKE IT,
BUT wvt:R ME ,

OFFICE SUPPliES

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

I
I

. '

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

L::

I

If

~SA!&gt; .'Tf.f E S'!U~ENT

,,.,,

From fhe Largesf Truck or
Bulldozer Radlafor to the
Smallest Heater Core.

floors . Natural gas furnace,

huge discount.
Gutter ,
awnings, patios. all types ot

1

'le GOT OUT

_:_----------------------'------~

Buy 10 white storm windows
block house, 4' ·
and gel 2 slorm doors FREE. 7-ROOM
bedrooms, living room , dining
lsi 50 orders . 100 storm doors
room. bath wlfh shower, large :
to give away with thi s Grand
kitchen
wlfh lots of bullf-ln
Opening Sale. 10,000 feel of
birch cablnefs. Hardwood

with
carport,
newly
decorated . Locat ed on Nye

GLORV BE!!

Real Estate For Sale

I anted -to

'deemed objectiona l.
The
publ isher will not be respon sible
lor more than one incorrect
i nsert ion.

BI LI KA M . Deceased .

EARN at home addressing

en velopes. Rush stamped

The Pub I isher reserves t ht

NOTICE OF

For.Sale

self-addressed envelope. The
air furnace. Near Pomeroy
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lake~orn ,
Davisburg, Mic h. 48019.
8x3S MOBILE HOME . Phone Elemenlary School. Phone
992-7384 to see .
10-24-JOip
992-3324.
11 -11 -6tc
11 -7-lfc
WINTER POTATOE S. Rober! - - - -- - -- Buy . ..
D. Ashley. RL 2. Racine. 'srx ROOM house. bath, · full'
OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks ,
Phone 247-2344.
basemeQI, 133 Butternw AVe .•;
and-or complete households.
1
1
11
31
_
_
_
__
__
_
_·
C
jus I walk ing dislaoce' from:
_
·_
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. GRAND OPENING SALE . downlown Pomeroy . Contac~
8-25-tfc
=d Hedrick. 2l:V Wadswoo~

right to edit or reject an y ads

LEGAL NOTICE

Help Wanted

~EP -,•
SHERIFF
GIVE ME TWO OA'IS OFF
FER GOOD BeHAVIN'

'THIS IS 'TH' t&lt;INP O' C/'&gt;lot
GIVES YA STA'TURE, r - - - 1
PltESTio&amp;Ei!
OKAY,
I'LL TAKE
IT!

WHEN YA PRIVE
UP 1' TH' HOUSE,
TH' NIOIGH~S 'LL
BE GAWI&lt;IN' ...
EATIN' THEIR
HliARTS OUT!

Ph. 992·7796

992-7608

I

·----------

J

Virgil B.

·TEAFORD,

•

GASOUNE AILEY

•

•••

f.fa! ~erve
LJOU riqht!

•

..

Jl

S.R.\

Yes, We Are Pricing the
Following Units to Save You
Money Now - ! ! !

.

.•
•

1969 CHEVROLET

Chester
News Notes

------

1968 atEV.

*

rfOW YELL ME, WHY
00 'IOU ~SI&lt;. ME
THAT QOESTIOrt ;'

•

•
_•,
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I FEEL THAT THE REWARD
FOR DOING IS THE OPPORTUNITY TO DO MORE -JONAS t
SALK
.
'·

TON PICKUP

CARS - LOWER PRICED
1966 OiEVROL£T IMPAlA CPE..... tS99

·MILLER

1966ll1DS. CUTlASS CPE. ..........f695

.

M0Bfl£HOMES
Estate

1966 COMET 2DJt, 6 CVL ......... '495

1966 FORD FAIRlANE_500.-.~ ....:-1595

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR ABEnER PRICE:

l

.•",

....
''TERfiY
•

•

i•

AmR 1'1HN!R

•

.,T Alll'l!fW

•

'~1Vt' '5

'•
.

PARTY...

'

WINTER RETREADS

spent

~tunJ.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

15" SIZE ,

RUTLAND FURNITURE

o.

'

'

II I I

rr1:::::Pril~llll;iuii~r•~•iin~~~n;;-==11
I I
0 ( XI X]
.

V~
~ _,d

.

Now IITUII" the circled letten
to fonn the lllf)lriae anawer,u
. IUI(tllted by the above ouloon.

\

(AIItwen tomorrew)

Jumbleoo GUIDI CUSS UNOLI FLURRY
l'etlerd•y'•

ataple

~;:~~~md~~:!''~~~~·~~~-~~~~~~L~IN=O~====~--HE HAD TIJO 51'0RT COAT5
MADE OUT OF M~ BLANKET!!
Tf!l5 15 ALL 11-!AT'G LEFT!

of eye

ti.Chlrce
fl. Tnnapor" .
tiUon
. 171tem
flo. Swerved

- ··

br-t--+-+-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
II

AXYDLBA .AXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is

utecl for the ·three L'8, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and. formation of the words are
hints. Each d17 the code letters are dlll'erent.
i\ Cryptolt'aa Quotelion
IPJWF

NPJ

NLZIF

LFTSFLW; IPJWF

Your Chevy Dealer

GENERAL TIRE .SALES

tj I

H. One kind

··-~

--

$=~=:.;-

NOT IX

(J

/

~.

F:..;L;U::.:G::.:ARr=-tl-"""'::r-l

II. Stable

Pomeroy .Motor .Co.·:

.

h-+-+-

com or
color

13"

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

I KARNC

ILEEXUD
()

Ill. Noted
blll·p11er
1'1. Pref!J: for

I

Unscramble these four Jumble1,
one letter to each IQuart, to
form four ordinary wordo.

.

musicians
M.Smlte

Wff~ENP

rJJ!YWill~®Jk.i u. ••-.,ld ,..j .;;,-.

16.~am's

boozle

••
•

(0 1971 King Features Syndicate, Jr... . )

9. "Great

46.Epocb
ExpectaDOWN
tions"
I. N. Z. tribe
heroine
2.Green- 10. Fascinat3. Concocted
4. "Ain'tSweet"
grandson Yetterd•r'• Am1t'tr
5. Midnight 20. Musical
(2wds.)
30. Originate
. group
6. River past 2%. Al~ne
33. Stopwatch
35. Cross out
Plsa
24. Arranged
7. Boston
ln a series 36. Rarln'
staple
to go
8. Spenser's ·:16. Hit the , to.Claireroad
.,TheChennault
28. Moistened H.-soup
Queene"

lL Electrical
unit
lt. Tithe
ILProblema
I&amp; Day
Ill. A maca·
ron! shape
11. Tendon
ZI. Troubled
ll.Monater
U.Nlne

THE RIGHT AD ••• .

IN STOCK NOW!

45. Border

ACROSS
1. Poorest
Ieece
'-Sailor
L Rankle
11, Take on
help
U. Yearn for
li.Spirit
lamp
l'- Cannes
aeason
111. Lambkin'!
parent
U.Bam•

1966 atEVEil fMAIJBU 4-DR...

YOU'VE COME

..

~

f

1955 atEV. 2 TON ....................1495

_____

t

·•i

1967 FORD ECONOUNE VAN .... ;.. f695

1.2'. • 14' · 24' :. WIDE:

I

1

SPECIAL '1695

ai

•:

KLFHX
/

.

'

NPJ

'.

'

all

LOOK! THIS

TlNI( SCRAP!

I'

I'LL ~T I COVLD
HAVE ANICE 6ELT
MADE OUT Of
THIS ...

~.-

PTEF

NLZIF · JMWA ·

AJCCFUI't;IJLW ..:rHMFLI ~

ATCKW

• ,.

• l

PTEF

AHFTL-HX

~~~=======~===:=~ -i;;;:::~~;=;~~::~~

•••

•

�..

'

''

. .. .

..•

&gt;

lt-TheDIIIyllel!' I.Wti!S . W' *Vf,O.,NoY.Il,lt71

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassifieds Get Results_!
Lost
Business
Services
\L ___
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLIN'E$
SMALL black minialure terr ier·
S
P.M.
Day
Before Publlcatio
with brown paws wearing
MQnday
Dea~llne 9 a.m.
collar wi th license, in Rutland
C~!lofiOI)_&amp; cor_r~jqn~ .
ar ea . Answers to name of __
Wlll be accepted until9 a.m . fo r
Ja ke. Phone 742-5484.
Day of Publication
11 -ll -2tc
REGULATIONS

APPOINTMENT
Case No . 20567
Estate of
H A T TI E MAE

RATES
For Want Ad Serv ice
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c

J
Noti c e is hereb y g i \len that
cents per word th ree,
C~ r l W B ilikam , of Pom eroy , · 12
Oh io , ha s been duly appointed consecutive insertions.
:
Adm in ist r ator of t he Estate of
18 cents per word six cOn·

Ha ttie Mae Bili kam , de ceased . secutive insertions.

·
25
Per
Cent
OiscoiJnt
on
paid1
Cred it ors are re qui red to fil e
the ir cla i m s w ith sa id f idu ci a ry ads and ads paid with in 10 da ys.

1/lt e of M eigs Count y . Ohio .

w it h in four months .
Dat ed th is 22nd day of Oc -

,

40 LEGHORN hens. SO cents
NI CE 2-slory home with full
eac h. Phone 9-19-3051 .
11 -11 -3tc basement, 2 lois, new forced

CARD QF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
·

For Rent
UNFURNISHED aparlmen t
Ave .. Pomeroy. Ohio. Call
992-3957 .
11 -11 -31p

Reynolds Aluminum Builders

Urive, Columbus, Ohio. phon

Supply of Mason City. Amrax
Slone and Brick siding .
aluminum vinyl and woad.

237-4334, Columbus.

Reynolds Aluminum siding at

EARLY,

PAW!!

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Selvice

FOUR NEW HOMES ._ .
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516.900.00 home con be purchased with a
mqnthly paymenf as low as S6s:oo for a family with a base
sal~ry of $5,000,00 and ' three children. I 'I• Pel. annual
Der·cei.ifacui rate:· ·
·

5-9-lfa1

,,
GUYS

ReLAX, WATCI.f 't'OUR. ~I&amp;T,
GET PI.ENTV OF R£s1; TAKE VOUR
MEDICATION, ANI&gt; A90v&amp; AU.••

-·DO NOT

50 -gallon electric water '
to ber 1971.
S1 .50 for 50 word m iniiTium . BRAND NEW. 12x60, 2 bedroom
heater,
2 large recreation
mobile home across fr om
Jo hn c . Ba con Each additional word 2c.
windows , k i tchen cabinets ,
rooms,
paneled
in basement,
·
·
Bradbury
School.
Call
992·
Acting Pr oba t e Ju dge
BLIND ADS
i n do or -outdoor Car pet , 501
2 porches. garage, concrete: 81 LL NELSON 992-3657
HIL TQN WOLFE ,94,·~11
5308
or
see
Charles
Lewis,
2nd
of said Co unty
Additional 2Sc Charge pe r
nyl on . Your complete Home
(10 128 11114.11. 31 Advertisem~nt
house south from Bradbury
drivewar· large yard with
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
Improvement HeadqiJarters.
.
School.
Pels
welcome
.
OFFICE HOURS
Easy credit terms available.
plenty
o shade frees.
located
on
largelof.250ft.
by 250ft.
on :=======~:=~g:-:;=~::=;~~~~===~·
· -- ~
11 -11 -3tc
8:30a.m. to 5:00 i&gt;.m. Dail y,
On now, Reynolds , 773-5147.
NOTICE OF
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2174
SR
124
in
Syracuse,
Ohio.
8:30a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
APPO,INTMENT
11 -lOc1Stp Available for Immediate'
Case No. 20563 Saturday .
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's ·~.blle
Estat e Of OS CAR L . WINCE ,
NICE Normandy Clarine! $50. occupancy. To see, phone
Courl.
Rt.
124.
Syracuse
..
Dec eased .
5
Phone 742-4211 or after S p.m.
Jh io. 992-2'151.
Noti ce is hereby given that
4-2-tfc
742-5163.
POIVlEROY
Vernon 0 . Winc e, of Box 1074,
10-· 3_·"
Card
of
Thanks
n
-1o-6tc
.
.
Ro selo'ille, Califor nia , has bee n
BEDROOM trailer apartdu ly appo inted Executor of the
&amp;
Est ate of Osc ar L . Win ce, I WI SH to e xpress my sincere
m ent, ideal for coupl es. NICE . USED bathroom outfit.
NEW&amp;OLD WORK·
de ce ased, late of Me igs County ,
complele
,
cast
ir
on
tub
.
.
-GUARANTEEDAll
Wufher
Roofing
&amp;
Contact
McClure's
Dairy
Isle,
than ks and appreciation to
992-2094
Oh io
992-5248
or
992-3436.
742-4211
or
after
S
p.m
.
Phone
992-2094
Construction
Co.
and
AnPhone
t
he
nur
ses
and
staff
of
Creditors are required to
606 ~.Main Pomeroy
11-5-10tc
742-5163.
·
lhony flumblng ·&amp; Hatting.
Veterans Memor ial HospitaL
fil e the ir claims wit h sa id
.
fidu ci ary with in four months .
Dr . Telle , t he Pomer oy
ll -l0-6tc
.
Pomeroy
Home
·
&amp;
Auto
.
complete . Plumbing,
Dated this :!2nd day of
Emergency Squad , and the MOBILE home space. on a
Healing and ~&lt;Jr Confarm . Farm work can apply FOUR BEAGLE dogs . All
Octo ber , 1971
friends and neighbors for
608 East Main
·
Open
Hin
dllioning.
And
John C . Be con
to rent. Util ities paid . Caii6W
running . Phone 992-6871.
POMEROY FARMMon day lhru ·Safurday
their beautiful cards , flower s
Ac t ing Probate Judge
240
Lincoln
Sf.
,,Middleporf
HARRISONVILLE985-3832.
ll -10-31c
and gifts I received during my
of sa id County
6:06:::::E:.Ma=t:n:,:Po:m:•:r~o~y,:O:.={
11 -5-8tc
stay
in
the
hospital
and
after
130 ACRES, 35 lillable, barn.
·
•
(10)28 (11 ) 4.11 . 31
1961
CASTLE
.
10
x
SO
trailer,
2
silo, 4 buildings. 3 bedroom 'f:
Pho-ne 992:i5So
Stop. In and
Our
my return home . M.ay God
bedrooms. 683 Locust St.,
NEW. 2 bedroom mobile home
bless each and everyone.
home. bath , building sites
Insured. Experienced
Floor
Display.
wi lh air condi tioning in
Middleport. Phone 992-5509. along the road, MINERALS,
.,,.
Mrs . Reed Will
11 -10-3tp
ALL THIS FOR JUST $19,000.
~Work Guaranteed
Middleport area . Adults only .
11 -11 -llp
NOTICE OF
Phone 992-5443.
See
us -ior Free
APPOINTMENT
11-7-ft c 2 - 13" RIMS - S8 tor both . RACINE - 35 wooded acres.
Case No. 20,541
Estimate on Furnace
Phone 992-5260 after S p.m . pond , so me limber , EX ·
Estate of Newell S . Hy sell ,
CELLENT
HUNTING,
apar
tm
enl.
FURNISHED
ll
-9-3tp
-SPECIALsDeceased
building si tes along t he road ,
Thr ee large rooms and bath . - - - ----,---:-:-':
Not ice is hereb y given that
November 1fhru 6
POTATOES
.
Charles
Hi
lton
.
Oor tha Lyma n of 3646 E . Ma in
~3. 500.
Adul
ts
only.
See
at
256
South
LOVING CARE
DEER HUNTERS
Street, Columbus, Ohio , has
Porlland . Ohio. Phone 843Fourth Ave., Middleport .
Reg. $6.50
Now S5.00
been duly appointed Executr ix
SPECIAL
Now Offering A
CHESTER GRACIOUS
2268.
11
-8-lc
November
8
fhru
13
of !he Estate of Newel l S.
10-28-lfc
COUNTRY
LIVING
3.05
PERMANENT
Hys ell , de ceased , ta t e of
l;omplete
BEAUTIFUL ACRES HO US E in Long Bollom. phone
Rev. $12.50
Now S8.50
1970 Banner Truck Camper,
Pomeroy , RD No . 1, Me igs
;
FREE PARKING
985-3529 .
County , Ohio .
gas -elec . refrigerat or , 3
practically new 3 bedroom
Remodeling
11 -9-6lp
S
0
home, bath, modern kitchen ,
Cred itors are required to file
FREE COFFEE
burner stove-oven , furnace .
-- -- We have added 1 cr1ftsm1n
ave $1 .00 Now!
ulility room, large summer
their c la i ms with sa id fiduc ia ry
- - - - -Phone 992-7474
stool · pressure water
Kitchens, Baths
with
20 yurs experience In
with in four mon ths .
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rl. 1
N EW, 2 bedroom home with air
Brin g th is ad and get $10 off I
pat io, fuel -oil forced -air
system · 2 bottle-gas tanks .
Room AddlllonJ
roofing
fo our staH.
Dated th is 22n.d day of Oc on your purchase of a new
furna ce, large garage and
cond i tioning in Middleporl
Bock Jacks .
And
Patios
tober 1971 .
Si egler heater .
work shop , modern outside
area. Adults on l y. Phone 992This Fri .-Sat.-Sun, Only
John C. Ba con
Backhoe And
s
1695.00
for
s
1295.00
5443.
NEIGLER Building Supply .
Ac t ing Probate Judge
Endloader
Work
~USIT~~9ci~~ils
and
berries.
11-7-tfc
of sa id County
Free estimate on building
(1 0) 28 (111 4, 11. 31
your new home. Will draw
Septic Tanks .
Gaul Trailer Sales, Inc. 2 BEDROOM mob ile home in
PLACE THE SALE OF
prjnts to suit the lay of your
TREE trimming and removal.
And
Leach Beds.
I YOUR PROPERTY IN
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
John Koehler, phone 992-5056.
Racin e area . Phone 992 -6329 .
FUEL OIL .
I
CAPABLE HANDS
Chesler, 0 .
ORDINANCE NO . 420
985-3832
11-9-Aic
Racine. Ohio. For repair and
11-3· tfc I
AN
ORDINANCE
TO
I
~II s;zes ;n stoc k. We ;ns tall. l
HENRY E. CLELAND
aluminum siding, soffet and
AMEND ORDINANCE 401 TO
fon ance. serv oce.
Office 992-2259
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
FIX SALARIES AND WAGES GUN SHOOT. Sunday, Nov. 14,
Sale
I
Residence
992-2568
Racine. Ohio.
OF EMPLOYEES OF THE
1 p. m., Mile Hill Road . 20 lb.
10-7-tfc
VILLAGE OF POMEROY .
I ~
POM!ROY
steak , turkeys , baco~s .
JotkW.
Carooy,Mtr . I - - - - - -- - 11-7-6tc
•
-SECTION l. Be it ordained as
I
Sponsored by Ra cine F~re
P~onoff2·2111
HOUSE MOVING: Houses, etc .
follows by 1he Council of the
Oepl.
Village of Pomeroy , Ohio, two
raised, moved, underpinned,
11 -11-31c
th irds of all members elected
remodeled. Estimates free.
1 Case diesel model 850 CK BLACK and while pony , saddle
thereto concurring , that Or anywhere.
National House
Tractor,
loader
and
backhoe
and br idle, Jani e Coleman ,
dinan ce No. 379 dated February
Movers,
Box
5002, Charleston.
with
18"
and
24"
buckets.
Mo nday .
5, 1969 and Ordinance No . 401 , BEGINNING
Phone 742-582'1.
w. Va. 25311, or phone 304-925·
power shuttle. Cost newdated June 1, 1970 Is hereby
11 -7-61c
November 15, we will hull
$10,675.00. Will sell for
3279.
amended to the extent that
walniJts only on Monday,
$8.600.00
.
Section 1, Paragraph c is
Wednesd.iiY an.d Saturday
General 2 axle frailer wilh CONTE MPI).JUR,¥,. c~onsole
changed to read as follows :
tram· ~ a.,m : to ·5! p. m ~
stereo, AM-'f''filo rs"ddil; 4 speed
ball hitch tnd brake iit. Cost
C. W1ter end Stwer Dtplrt.
Miller
SEPTI tank'$
•
•
11 -11 -31&lt;.
changer, 4 speak~r' sound
men1 - Clas~ II Operator or
new-11,575.00. Will sell for
Ph.
Sanitation. Stewart,
111:6ker
Pump Station Supenisor ,
system. Walnut veneer finish
11,000.00. Equipment t year
110
Mechanic
Street
6&lt;12-3035.
UOO .OO per month .
·
old, 250 hours. Phone 992-7608
cabinet. Balance S69.52. Use
THE BRADBURY School
2-12-lfc
~me roy, Ohio
SECT ION 2. That Ordinance
days. and 142-4902 evenin9s.
our budge! plan. Call 992-7085.
P.TA
will
have
a
food
379 dated February 5, 1969 end
Can be seen at corner Un1on
11 -8-6tc
concession stand at the
CONCRETE
Ordinance No. £01. dated June
29 ACRES - 6 room home , READY -MIX
Avenue and Rt. 7, Pomeroy .
forthcoming
yard
sale,
1, 1970, and all other ordinances
delivered
right
to your
bath, FREE GAS HEAT.
MAPLE stereo-radio com In conflict with this amendment Saturday , Nov. 13 . at the
project.
Fast
and
easy
. Free
Spring wa ter, small barn .
bination, AM-FM radio, 4
shall be and are hereby Bradbury School starling at 9 FIREWOOD. Phone 992-7595.
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284
.
Minerals, oil and gas well.
ll -9-41c
repeated .
speed changer, 4 speaker
11 -7-6tc
a.m.
Goeglein
Ready
-Mix
Co.,
NEW LISTING. SlJ.SOO.OO.
SECTION 3. That this Or sound system . Balance $79 .89 .
Middleport, Ohio.
--:-~::-:--:-::~-:--­
dinance shall take effect and be
Use
our
budget
plan
.
Caii992SIEGLER fuel oil healer . new
6-30-tfc
in force from and after the PRAYER meeting at Glenn is
ROUTE 7 BY-PASS - New 3
708S .
- $125, Sofa bed and mal earliest per iod allowed by law .
bedrooms, spl if level. 11/2
11 -8-61c
Hoffman residence, 1 mi.
t hing cha ir - S45, bed and
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
PASSED : October 18. 1971.
baths, electric heat. A acres .
North ot Chester on Rt. 7. spring s - $7, Hoover washing
ATTEST: Jane Walton
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782.
Saturday . Nov . 13. 7:30p.m.
$90 ,
mach i ne , new
CLERK
Gallipolis . John Russell,
ROUTE 7 - modern S rooms.
APPROVED ; Char les Leger
Rev . Freddie Steel. MI. Hope.
Magna vox Record PlaYer and For Rant or Sale
ONner
&amp; Operator.
bath , gas heat . Paneling, 4
CE -50 · 2 Ton , ~ .. cab to axle, 350 cu. ln . V-e engine, 70oo
MAYOR
W. Va . Sermon: Water
recor ds - $35, Stereo B tape 10 X 52 HOME CREST tra iler, 2
S-12-lfc
acres.
lb. front axle. 15000 lb. 2 speed rear axle, 23000 lb. r"r
Baptism . Everyone welcome.
bedroom , furnished. gas heat,
player and 15 tapes plus case
(11 ) 4, 11 , 21
springs &amp; auxiliary sprlnQ!. H. duly frame. 1o !rami
condition
.
Home
Crest
good
11-7-5tp
- $75, Wri ting desk - S12.
on good highway . Reybolds CHESHIRE - bl oc k building BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
reinforcement, front tow hooks, custom comfort 1o ap- - - -- Phone 742-4864 .
for business .
Flower Shop, 773-5147, Mason.
Sepfic tanks Installed. George
l l-9-31p
pearance cab. w.c. mirrors. radlo, power sfe«lng. \l00x20·
YARD SALE , Saturday and
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
w. Va .
tires. Locally ownad &amp; looks &amp; drives rlghf.
11 -9-61p MINERSVILLE
nice 3
Sunday, November 13 &amp; 14th,
4-25-lfc
starts at 9 a .m. David Haggy COAL , l i me stone . E xc el sior - - -- - -- - bedrooms , bath, furnace , - - - - - Salt Works, E. Main St.,
basement . Garage . 2 acres . SEWING MACHINES. Repair
residence . left of Happy
Pomeroy . Phon• 992-3891.
Auto
Sales.
Hollow. follow signs.
service, all makes. 992-2284.
4-9-tfc
ll -10-31p
SALEM
CENTER4
bedroom
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
1968 PONTIAC GTO, Black with
modern
homes,
lli2
baths,
Authorized Singer Sales and
red Interior, 400 cu. in ., 4
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
radiant panel heat. Modern
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
GUN shoot, Forked Run
speed,
A-1
shape,
Phone
773Park v-Iew Kenn els, Phone 992kitchen , cook unils, stainless
3-29-lfc
Sportsman Club , Sunday ,
5417,
Clifton,
West
Virginia.
5443.
sink.
Insulated.
10
ACRES.
November 14, 12 noon .
11 -9-91p
8' Body, good 750x16 tires. V-8 engine, std. trans .. radio,
8-1S-tfc
S22,500.00. NEW LISTING c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
11 -10-Jtc
solid cab. Worth more.
Comolete Service
Fitzpatrick Or- 'S9 FORD pickup truck, ex Mrs. Jean Summerfield, Mrs. SHOOTING Match , Saturday . APPLES
PROPERTY
SELLING.
Phone
949-3821
cellent condition . Phone 742chard s, State Route 689,
YOU BET
Nora Brown , Mrs. Ada Morris, November 13. , at Ihe Racine
Racine, Ohio
SQJ2.
phone Wilesvllle, 6&lt;19-3785.
992-3325 992-2378
Crill Bradford
Mrs. Ross Cleland and Mrs.
Planing Mill at 6p.m. Factory
11-10-Jtc
9-3-ttc
Helen L. Teaford,
5-1 -ffc
James Ridenour and sons choke guns only . Assorted
Associate
1961
WHITE,
two
door
coupe,
visited Wednesday evening with meat. Sponsored by the CASH and carry sale
Parll -7-6tc
Syracuse Fire Dept .
Cadil lac. A-1 shape, $300. See
son 's Furniture Store on State
RUBBER stamps made to
Mrs . Letha Wood at the home of
11 -10-3tc
Phil
Burbridge.
Rt.
2,
Albany,
Rt. 7 in Kanauga. Living room
order, 24·hour service. Dwaln
Super H. dufy, 6 cyl. Lots of servlceleflln th is one.
su i tes, were $249.95 now
Mrs .. Harold
Hawk
~t THE ANNUAL Sacred Hearl
or
Wilma Casto. Portland.
Ohio.
.
_
c
Business
Services
_
11
10
31
$159.95 , Early American .
10-24-JOfc
Hockmgport. Mrs. Wood lS Church Bazaar wlll be held
bedroom suites were $269 .95,
AWNINGS.
storm
doors
and
staying with the Hawks since Thursday night November 11
now $199.95. Matlress and box
windows,
carports, HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
she injured her foot in a fall at slarting with a dinner t~om
springs
$28.95
each,
no
butmarquees. 81umlnum siding
84" cab to axle, V-8 engine, 2-speed axle, solid truck for
Service. Phone 992-2522.
4:30 to 6: 30 p.m . Donatoons
ton
s,
recliners
were
$79.95
,
and
railing.
Call
A.
Jacob.
6-10-lfc
model.
her home.
.
dinner , adults. $1.75. children
now
$47
.50.
Swi
vel
rockers
sales
representative.
For
free
-Mrs. Jean Swnmerfleld and $1. Dinner , fancy work
were $59.95, now $35.95.
estimates , phone Charles
Mrs . Nora Brown have returned booths. games and ratt)es .
11-9-3tc
Lisle, Syrocuse. V. V. O'DELL WHEEL alignment
·
· wo'II be goven
Pme
home after a visit with Mr and
ev er Y half
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Johnson
and Son. Inc.
·
hour from 6 to 9 p.m.
tront end service.
Complete
S-27-tfc
Mrs. Larry Roush and Jean
11 -2-9tc PAINT Damage. 1971 Zig-Zag
tune up and brake service.
sewing machines. Still in
.
-Ann, Winter Haven, Fla.
Wheels balanced elec·
AUTOMOBILE insurance
origina l cartons. No at Local1 owner cor, 6 cyl., std. trans .• radio, good tlreo.
Ironically .
All
work
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy KOSCOT Kosmetlcs for sale,
been cancelled? Lost your
lachmenls needed as our
delivered to your door. New
guari!lnteed.
Reasonable
operator's license? Call 992controls are built -in. Sews
spent the weekend with Mr. and
products
coming
out
roles. Phone 992-3213.
296&lt;1.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Mrs. Virgil Wood, Springfield.
regularl(. Would you like to
6-15-tfc ..;.__
7-27-lfc
buttonholes. sew on buttons,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles fry them? Call 99~ - 5113 .
V-8, aufomatlc, p . steering, white finish, blk. vinyl Inmonograms, and blind hem
·
10 - ~-ff c
slilch. Full cash price, $38.50
ferior •. radio.
Eichinger and daughter,
or budget plan available.
Columbus, spent the weekend
Phone 992-5641.
with Mrs. OpAl Eichinger and
ll -9-61c
- - - - - -- - ·12io washington liivd. ·
family .
Std. trans., new tires. needs grille &amp; pain f. Special! f' -ELE CTRO LUX vacuum
Belpr•, Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Fred V. Rice
cleaner complete wilh at - 1-- - - - -- - ----U
have returned home after a two
la chments, cordwlnder and
weeks visit with relatives in
pain t spray. Used but in like
For Sale
4 Dr .• 6 cyl .. std. Irons .• runs good. Special!!
new condition . Pay $37.45 Real
Virginia .
cas h or
credi t
term s , HOUS-E, lo•' Loncoln--Helghfs.
Miss Lucille Smith has Emplovmenf Warited
available. Phone 992-5641 .
Call Danny Thompson, 992- ·
returned home after a visit with
1
ll -9-61c
2196.
~:.'695
7-18-ffMrs. John Reuter, Akron, and a
Locally owned, 6 cyl., automaflc, radio, spotless clean
1Q
Interior.
tour of the New England states.
Mrs . Virgene Elberfeld and
Mrs. Opal Wickham visited
operation .
Saturday evening with Lucille HOUSECLEANING in Racine,
Remember, our selection of new 72 Chevy
Syracuse and Pomeroy area.
~-ti~ilc e~ of water
Smith.
temps .
Auto·.
Phone 992-2876.
Trucks are . all priced to save you mo!'ley.
· wa·ter
lelo'el
10-24-ffc
Mrs. Roy Christy and Mrs.
control.
LfnT
Blazers &amp; Pickups in 4 wheel drives. All mode.l
Clayton Allen spent a recent --~-----­
Filter ol"" Power'
pickups, vans &amp; 2 Ton trucks in stock.
Fin Agitator .
day in Parkersburg.
Permi~Preu ·
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Will,
Moyfog
HIIOOf Hilt .
Syracuse, visited recently with
Dryers
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Cleland.
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
Also calling on the Clelands was
heat. No hot spots, .
1
Mrs. Rose Girllher .
no overdrylno .J
Plus Recappable Casing
\Fine Mesh Llnf
Mr. aad Mrs. Edgar Hartung
FIller. .
and son of Mississippi and Mr .
Wt SptCIIIIZe In
MOUNTED FREE
MAYTAG
and Mrs. Kenneth Hartung of
. Red Corp at
. . . :.t~
Maryland,
a few days
•.
Strvl~~:e
with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice,
llllvfuc been called here by the
.
992-2126
death of their grandfather Mr.
Open Eves. Ti I 8
Pof11eroy.
Phone
992-7161
742-4211
Middleport,
Arnold Grate
Rutland, 0 ..

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment .
s:i5S
·

~~~~p~~:~~r ~~~~~~~~.;~:

Clelan·· a··l
RealtY

ROOfiNG &amp;
WORK
·sPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING. ·

HOME

.

NEW&amp;PAPEit,!

OH,OLI\JER WEf.JDELL

THERE. IS WA'I
NO'W.'IOUR

POM'ES!!-1-'DW CAN
HI'.NTITLED "I WANT A GIRL
-, , 'JOJ WRITE SUCH
J UST L IKE THE GIRL WhtJ DIDN'T
POMES?
I WROTE. A NE.W PO"'' E.

AUTO

~f'.ER!·MAJfST'/.'!

IS GONf.lA BE

MARRY OEAR OLD PAD-~' " -~

SADIE IIAWKitoiS
DA"' !!

'

See

-·-.. _

, ... .... ...
~ ·--

Original Cabinet

-

r---------..

iliATI5 A PRETTY
LOFTY AMBITION.

--------'"1

For

r

FOR SALfl.

IF ANYONE
CAN DOlT,
M~ WINKl-E
CAN!

New Service

II

1

••

'

•

Company

I

M'/ .w:lTHER·IN·LAW!

FURNITURE

Notice

SIEGLER
HEATERS

t KNOW, BUT ITS 10 .

SHE MIGHT ATfACK
Will-lOUT WAIINING I

FRISK~iL~ TAKE IT,
BUT wvt:R ME ,

OFFICE SUPPliES

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

I
I

. '

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

L::

I

If

~SA!&gt; .'Tf.f E S'!U~ENT

,,.,,

From fhe Largesf Truck or
Bulldozer Radlafor to the
Smallest Heater Core.

floors . Natural gas furnace,

huge discount.
Gutter ,
awnings, patios. all types ot

1

'le GOT OUT

_:_----------------------'------~

Buy 10 white storm windows
block house, 4' ·
and gel 2 slorm doors FREE. 7-ROOM
bedrooms, living room , dining
lsi 50 orders . 100 storm doors
room. bath wlfh shower, large :
to give away with thi s Grand
kitchen
wlfh lots of bullf-ln
Opening Sale. 10,000 feel of
birch cablnefs. Hardwood

with
carport,
newly
decorated . Locat ed on Nye

GLORV BE!!

Real Estate For Sale

I anted -to

'deemed objectiona l.
The
publ isher will not be respon sible
lor more than one incorrect
i nsert ion.

BI LI KA M . Deceased .

EARN at home addressing

en velopes. Rush stamped

The Pub I isher reserves t ht

NOTICE OF

For.Sale

self-addressed envelope. The
air furnace. Near Pomeroy
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lake~orn ,
Davisburg, Mic h. 48019.
8x3S MOBILE HOME . Phone Elemenlary School. Phone
992-7384 to see .
10-24-JOip
992-3324.
11 -11 -6tc
11 -7-lfc
WINTER POTATOE S. Rober! - - - -- - -- Buy . ..
D. Ashley. RL 2. Racine. 'srx ROOM house. bath, · full'
OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks ,
Phone 247-2344.
basemeQI, 133 Butternw AVe .•;
and-or complete households.
1
1
11
31
_
_
_
__
__
_
_·
C
jus I walk ing dislaoce' from:
_
·_
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. GRAND OPENING SALE . downlown Pomeroy . Contac~
8-25-tfc
=d Hedrick. 2l:V Wadswoo~

right to edit or reject an y ads

LEGAL NOTICE

Help Wanted

~EP -,•
SHERIFF
GIVE ME TWO OA'IS OFF
FER GOOD BeHAVIN'

'THIS IS 'TH' t&lt;INP O' C/'&gt;lot
GIVES YA STA'TURE, r - - - 1
PltESTio&amp;Ei!
OKAY,
I'LL TAKE
IT!

WHEN YA PRIVE
UP 1' TH' HOUSE,
TH' NIOIGH~S 'LL
BE GAWI&lt;IN' ...
EATIN' THEIR
HliARTS OUT!

Ph. 992·7796

992-7608

I

·----------

J

Virgil B.

·TEAFORD,

•

GASOUNE AILEY

•

•••

f.fa! ~erve
LJOU riqht!

•

..

Jl

S.R.\

Yes, We Are Pricing the
Following Units to Save You
Money Now - ! ! !

.

.•
•

1969 CHEVROLET

Chester
News Notes

------

1968 atEV.

*

rfOW YELL ME, WHY
00 'IOU ~SI&lt;. ME
THAT QOESTIOrt ;'

•

•
_•,
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I FEEL THAT THE REWARD
FOR DOING IS THE OPPORTUNITY TO DO MORE -JONAS t
SALK
.
'·

TON PICKUP

CARS - LOWER PRICED
1966 OiEVROL£T IMPAlA CPE..... tS99

·MILLER

1966ll1DS. CUTlASS CPE. ..........f695

.

M0Bfl£HOMES
Estate

1966 COMET 2DJt, 6 CVL ......... '495

1966 FORD FAIRlANE_500.-.~ ....:-1595

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR ABEnER PRICE:

l

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....
''TERfiY
•

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spent

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WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

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RUTLAND FURNITURE

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
II

AXYDLBA .AXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is

utecl for the ·three L'8, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and. formation of the words are
hints. Each d17 the code letters are dlll'erent.
i\ Cryptolt'aa Quotelion
IPJWF

NPJ

NLZIF

LFTSFLW; IPJWF

Your Chevy Dealer

GENERAL TIRE .SALES

tj I

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THE SOUND
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LIFE

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blll·p11er
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Unscramble these four Jumble1,
one letter to each IQuart, to
form four ordinary wordo.

.

musicians
M.Smlte

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boozle

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9. "Great

46.Epocb
ExpectaDOWN
tions"
I. N. Z. tribe
heroine
2.Green- 10. Fascinat3. Concocted
4. "Ain'tSweet"
grandson Yetterd•r'• Am1t'tr
5. Midnight 20. Musical
(2wds.)
30. Originate
. group
6. River past 2%. Al~ne
33. Stopwatch
35. Cross out
Plsa
24. Arranged
7. Boston
ln a series 36. Rarln'
staple
to go
8. Spenser's ·:16. Hit the , to.Claireroad
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28. Moistened H.-soup
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unit
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11. Tendon
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THE RIGHT AD ••• .

IN STOCK NOW!

45. Border

ACROSS
1. Poorest
Ieece
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L Rankle
11, Take on
help
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li.Spirit
lamp
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aeason
111. Lambkin'!
parent
U.Bam•

1966 atEVEil fMAIJBU 4-DR...

YOU'VE COME

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_____

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1.2'. • 14' · 24' :. WIDE:

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ai

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�1

12- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Purueroy, 0., Nov.ll, 1971

~----------------------------------------------------------~
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ARE OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 IN THE EVENING. AGOOD TIME FOR FAMILY SHOPPING, FURNISHINGS

Hours for
Viewing
Show .Set

FOR YOUR HOME AND WEARING APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMILY. CAPABLE SALESPEOPLE TO HELP YOU ALL OVER UtE STORE AND IN THE NEW TOY
STORE IN THE MIDDLE
BLOCK. BE THRiffi! SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLIPS FROM ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.
.
.

Sale Friday and Saturday

Hours for the public to view
the Christmas flower show of
lhe Rutland Garden Club have
been announced for Saturday,
from 2 lo 6 p. m. and Sunday
from 1 to 4 p. m.

The' show, "Chtistmas
Everywhere" will be staged in
1he social room of the United
Methodist Church.
Eighl classes are included in
1he arti!itic division and these"

are open to the Rutland
Fnendly Gardeners and
mem bers of the Rutland Club.
The invilational class rs
"Christmas Festivities" favorit~

SALE! BOYS' SWEATERS

WOMEN'S DRESSES
A special group of dresses selected from our
regular stock . All new styles and fab.r ics ·
· dresses i.n junior ,_ sizes - misses sizes and half
sizes.
Regular 12.95 to 29.50

w~~~

they

.

1fz price

SALE!

.are six classes in the horticulture division of specimens
and a class of blooming and non-

blooming houseplants which are
open to the public.
The junior di vision includes

two classes, "Santa is Coming",
an arrangement in a toy, and
"Carohng," a favorite holiday
arrangeme nt. Also open for
exhibi ts by the juniors is a class
of evergreen specimens.
The educational division is
non-&lt;'ompetitive and will be set
up by lhe Rutland Garden Club.
An accredited OAGC judge
will begin oral judging at 1 p.
m. and exhibitors will be permilled in the room during
judging . Exhibits must be
placed by 11 a.m. Saturday and
may not be removed before 4 p.
m. Sunday. Those arriving after
that hour will be marked for
exhibit only.
No artificial flowers may be
used but glitter and baubles
may be used along with painted

Boys .3.95
Boys 4. 95
Boys 5. 95
Boys 6.95
Boys 7. 95
Boys 8. 95
Boys 9. 95

Se lect several sk irts
at a great savi ng s
th is
weekend .
Several styles and
fabric s t o c hoose
fr om · all lop nam e
brand s - .pla ids
stripes and so lids:

Save !his week end on womens slacks - hundreds to choose from . Straioht leg and bell
bottoms · wool flannels - wool tweed - polyester
knits · nylon knits, crushed velvets and corduroy .

1.75

Mens P/4 inch width Leather Belts. Sizes
32 to 44.

Stretch lace bra
matching bikini. One
tits all. White, navy,
beige, brown, or chid
rust .

40" UNBLEACHED
MUSLIN
Friday and Saturday

Many, many new ideas in jewelry - new colors - new item&lt;.
Boys rings . i nitial pins . "Smi le " co llar tack - pins and
necklaces . li ttle gir ls necklaces and pins - Pendant necklaces
- Blazer pin s- Pierced earrings - Cameo pins - necklaces and
earrings - monogram pins - Engraved initial and Pinky rings
- Scarf holders- Chri stmas pins and many, many others.
You 'l l enjoy seei ng this selection.

Sale!
-Men's
Sweaters
A
fine
big
selection
of
cardigan
sweaters
slipovers
sweater vests in
sol id colors and
smart
patterns. t.
You'll find the
popular styles for
the younger set
and more co nservative
sty les
for
the
more
mature
man .
SmaiL medium,
la rge and extra
large sizes.

MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS

5.95 SWEATERS
6.95 SWEATERS
8.95 SWEATERS
9.95 SWEATERS
10.95 SWEATERS
11.95 SWEATERS
12.95 SWEATERS
14.95 SWEATERS

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

5.00
5.80
7.50
8.30
9.25
10.25
11.25
12.75

TOBOGGANS AND KNIT HEADWEAR

November 12· 13

HOMER
(Technicoli&gt;rl

Be sure to see the selection of toboggans in so.l ld colors and
fancy patterns. Knit face masks in all sizes - wools and
or Ions.
Get ready for cold weather now . Mens and boys departm ent-

1st floor .

Don Scardlno
Tlsa Farrow

"GP"

WILD REBELS
Technicolor)
Moiorcycle Gangs! Hard·
riding! Hard.fighting!
"GP"
SljOW STARTS7 P;M.

For Christmas
Gift Wrapping
25 jewel bows in a package
assor1ed br ight colors .

49' PKG. •

Winter trims - braids
heavy Swiss Venise
embroideries . fringes.
A fine assortment of
trimmings . Our price -

Sale 19' yd.

BATH MAT
SETS
100 percent Viscose Rayon
3 Pc.- Rug,

Lid Cover.
Contour Mat. Machine

washable

This year Elberfelds Toyland is in the middle block . Open
every day 9:30 to 5 . Fridays and saturdays 9:30A.M. to 9

:~~g the children to Tqyland -

4.49
l------------1
STEVENS

Take time to look around .

See what's new tor Christmas 1971. Use our convenien t lay-

LINEN

away plan 1o hold your selections 't il Christmas.

Bicycles . Tricycles - Wagons - Sleds · Games. Dolls . Punles
- Race Sets . Furniture. You' ll find the right Items for boys

TOWEUNG

and girls of a II ages.
Christmas

17 Inches Wide

Decorations and Trim · Ornaments - Tree and

Outdoor Lights . Extra Bulbs . Christmas Candles. Trees .
Door and Interior Decorations. A complete new sel«tion

Bleached with blue, green
or yellow border.

electric Rutland Bank, a branch of the Pomeroy National
Bank Thursday afternoon . Taking part in the ceremonies
were, front, 1-r, Alfred E. Elberfeld, Eldon Weeks, directors,

Bill Hobstetter, vice president and braneh manager, Edison
Hobstetter, president, Warren Pickens and Manning Webster, directors; second row, Dr. Raymond Boice, Horace
Karr and Roger Morgan, directors.

Bank Optimistic about
Rutland Area, County
RUTLAND - Edison Holi·
stetter, president of the
Pomeroy National Bank, said
here Thursday the directors.
officers, and sta ffs of the
Pomeroy bank and its Rutland
Branch are "sold on the future
of Meigs County."
Mr. Hobstetter, presiding at
groundbreaking ceremonies for

the new all-electric Rutland
Bank bra nch fa cility, said "The
Ohio Power Company's an·
nouncement of the opening of a
min e,
furthe1·
housing
development, and the im·
provements to US Rl. 33 and SR
7 encouraged us to make this
move."
He introduced 'Rutland Mayor

Eugene Thom pson who ex·
pressed his appreciation and
congratulations to the members
of the bank . Also introduced
were Rutland Council members, Bill Brown , Harvey
Erlewine, Ernest Nicholson and
Jim Fry. The invocation was
gi ve n by the Rev. Robert
(Continued on page 21

BAILEY ASHAMED
COLUMBUS (UPil
Noted defense atlorney F.
Lee Bailey said here he was
"ashamed" of himself and his
profession for representing
mostly only those cllenls able
to afford, high legal fees.
Bailey, whose defense of
Capt. Ernest Medina re~ently
ended in acquitlal of My Lal
charges , took part in a
television
program
originating Thursday from
within the Ohio Penitentiary.
(See Page 5, "Bailey" for
early aecounl.)
X;;::·~~·:~®.~::~:?.?.!:

ready for you to bily.

MEN'S AND BOYS' JACKETS AND COATS
Be ready for cold weather days ahead. Select a new jacket in
the busy mens and boys department.
Corduroys - wools · nylon . Dacron and cotton blends.
Waist length and the popular car coat lengt h. Boys sizes 1 to 4
- 3 to6 and regular boys sizes 8 to 20. Mens sizes 36 to 54.

Mens Awnin!j Stripe

short bi II.

1.00

See the big selection of mens winter caps and

Lee Rider 13.98 · Blanket lined

WESTERN STYLE JACKETS

ANTIQUE SATIN DRAW DRAPERIES
Rayon Acetate with Roc .lonized self lining that insulates
while it decorates. Save on heating and air conditioning . 100
percent washable and dry cleanable. Shrinkage controlled.
Needs little or no ironi ng. White.

50x6J
50x84
75x63
75x84
75x90
100x63
100x84

55.95
7.95
510.95
512.95
S13.95
l14.95
516.95

11.19

POPLIN

65 percent Dacron - 35
percent Cotton, 45" . solid
color.
Wash and wear , preshrunk ,

drip dry, little or no
ironing, permanent press.
Choose from a complete
selection of colors.

Friday and Saturday

99* YARD

100x90
12Sx63
125x84
125x90
150x63
15DXB4
150x90

517.95
$11.95
518.95
52D.95
$20,95

m .95
523.95

VISIT THE FURNITURE
DEPT. AND SEE
THE NE~ lAMPS!
Light up for Fall and
Christmas!
Colorful, functional and

BISSELL
SWEEPERS
Ideal for quick pick ups.

.
Handy to use and store.

Large, double dust pans
empty completely and
easily. Models tor all type
carpets. Visit the Drapery
Depl. and see the complete
line of Bissell Sweepers all at substantial savings.

Felt Squares
Pastel and Holiday Colors

priced right. Table and
Floor
Lamps.
Con.
temporary - Traditional
and
Early
Amer i can

styles.

Heavy weight blue denim - warm blanket lininQ · cOrduroy

collar. Waist length -neat fitting jacket. Sizes 36 to SO. Stop In
the mens department 1st floor . See this fine jacket and buy
Sale! Friday and Saturday

12.00
Lee 7.98 Blue Denim

BIB OVERALLS
All sizes 34 to _50 waist. Select your correct
length . Famous lee jell denim · tailored sizes . 4
in 1 bib pocket · rust proof buttons - shield back .
Sanforized shrunk.
Stock up on your needs this weekend and save.

6.88
LEE 7.98 HICKORY STRIPE BIB OVERAllS
SIZES 36 to 50.

SALE 6.88
For Really Active Boys

Made with double knees . western cut . slim
fitting . Sizes 4 to 12 in blue denim or heavy twill
in brown or green. Slims or regulars. Complete
selection of sizes.

SALEI DINEnE SETS
Early American . Moder.n - Mediterranean · Spanish Harvest Tables .
Round Tables - Rectangular Tables and Drop leaf ·Tables with 2 Chairs, 4
Chairs, 6 Chairs and 8 Chairs.
Large selection of. colors.
REG. 69.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 56.00
REG. 79_00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 64.00
REG.119.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 99.00
REG. 139.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 114.00
REG. 149.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 122.00
REG. 169.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 136.00
REG. 179.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 144.00
REG. 189.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 152.00
REG. 209,00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 168.00
REG. 319.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 254.00
REG. 369.00 DINETTE SETS
SALE 299.00
Third Floor Furniture

DELIVERY OF ALL FURNITURE -~ND ~PPLIAfiCES TO YO~R HOME. CAPABLE MEN TO lAY THE CARPETS OF YOUR CHOICE AND OUR OWN SENSIBLE CREDIT AU. OVER THE
'

GROUND WAS BROKEN at the site of the new all-

machine

dryable. Big selection of
colors .

LEE PREST NO -IRON JEANS

Mens and . Boys

Expecting His Freedom

TRIMS

your correct size.

Tonight, Nov. 14

Fr.iday &amp; Saturday

STICK-ON BOWS

Select Toys for Christmas

hats - warm . serviceable. Select the style you
like in your correct size.

ON THE 1ST FLOOR.

popular wide widths and plenty of ready-tied ties.

Now Is a Wonderful Time to

112.

TAKE TIME TO SEE OUR
EXCELLENT SELECTION OF JEWELRY

shirts for men. Solid colors · stripes - novelty patterns. The

Sale 1.00 pkg.

WORK
CAPS
Sizes 6'1• to 7
Bright awning stripe patterns .

5 yds. 1.50

WEMBLEYTIES - BuyWembley Ties to mix or match with

·ELBERFELD$ IN P MEROY

CENT~

Yonnie Licavoli, at 68,

39' and 25e

You really sho uld see our fine selection.

Five rolls in package . Each
26 inches wide, 56 Inches
long. Assorted Christmas
wrap design.

and
size
reeL
and

39c American Home

large (16·16'1'), extra large 117-17'12). Taper shirts .
non.taper styles . body shirts - knit shirts . zipper neck styles.

GIFT WRAP

BESTFORM 3.00
BIKINI SETS

SALE 2 for 5.00

NOT OPEN

1 59
.

Two Day Sale

15'/,),

TEN

Ex -Gangster
Near ·P arole

Dens,

/ 1.00

Sale! Christmas

2.98 WOMEN'S GOWNS

Sale 5.00

'PHONE 992·2156

'

Friday and Saturday

Sizes 30 to 50 in black or brown. Full grain
cowhide bridle leather.
inches wide.

. 1.29 -1.69 . 1.99 . 2.59

Sturdy construction
popular style . Clear pla st ic
with contrast color trim .

'

While · Lt. Tan . Green

Solid colors - stripes - plaids in his favorite stYle. All shirts
are permanent press - Sizes small (1.4-14112 ). medium (15-

'

WOMEN'S SLACKS

BUBBLE
UNBRELLAS

12' . 1971
--FRIDAY, .NOVEMBER
.

Window
Shades
36"x6'

MEN'S SHIRTS

PHILMAID AND KATZ

MEIGS- DJEATR£'

Satur~ay.

MEN'S LEATHER WORK BELTS
w.

Sale! Friday and Saturday

7.00 and 7.so

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHlO

Hallways, Basements.
Washable. Light and dark
stripes.
Friday and

8.66

Regular and
Sizes

99~

-

14.99

Red. black. olive solid colors.
Sale Friday and . Saturday

Sheer a II the way to the top .
One size fits most
everyone. Excellent co lor
se lection.
Friday and Saturday Sale

NO. XXIV NO. 149

Of The Meig&amp;-Mason Area

ALL PURPOSE
·.•
THROW RUGS

Bedrooms,

Completely washable. SmaiL medium, large and extra large
sizes. Lee and Carhartt brand.

1.25 Scanty Hose
by Stevens

"MT. MADE

lnter~b

Size 2~&gt;&lt;45. -For use In
Kitchen, Bathrooms,

QUILTED
NYLON
JACKETS
Fabric Is 100 per cent nylon . lining 100 per cent Polyester.

SALE 1.89 ASET

-

Friday and Saturday

Sale 3.35
Sale 4.2~
Sale 5.00
Sale 5.80
Sale 6.75
Sale7.50
Sale 8.30

Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters

BESTFORM BRAS

~

Adion back - made by the makers of famous Wrangler wear.

Mens 9.98

99~
Entry cards will be furnished
and should include the 1--·-·-·~~~~---""------------l
exhibito r 's na me. All plant
Special Value
materials used in arrangements
will be labeled on a card furSizes 32 to 48. Cup sizes A, B, C and D. Lace cups mshcd by the show chairman . A
lu ncheon will be held at 12 noon
smooth cups · cottons - nylon - blends. Exceptional value .
honoring the judge .
The commtltees for the show
are Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman ,
regis tration; Mrs. Roy Snowden
Special tor this Sale
ami Mrs. Robert Canaday,
staging: Mrs. Charles Lewis,
awar ds; Mrs. Lewis, Mrs .
. Harvey Erlewine and Miss
Ruby Diehl, clerks and judges:
Waltz length . Sizes 32 thru 40. Solid pastels and prints . 100
Mrs. Ralph Turner, publicity;
percent Nylon and Polyester and Cotton blends. Choose
Mrs. Victor Nelson, Mrs .
tailored or lace trimmed styles .
Dayton Parsons and Mrs. Harry
Williamson, hospitality.

NEW HAVEN - Jennifer
Caroline Wiley, infan t daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wiley,
was christened Sunday at the
United Methodist Church in
New Haven, W.Va ., by the Rev.
William DeMoss.
Godparent' are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert C. Lemert, Jr . of
Tucker, Ga. , and Mrs. David
Richard Wiley , Ravenswood .
Present for the chriswning
were Mrs. David Chase Miller,
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wiley,
grandparents of Middleport ;
Miss Marion Lambert and Miss
Ailee
Jane
Lambert,
Youngstown; Mrs . Eunice
Kuenzli, Springfi eld; Mrs .
Arthur Wells Lambert, Ironton;
David R. Wiley, William
Lambert and Miss Linda Staab.
For her christening, Jennifer
wore her mother's christening
dress which had bee n a gift to
Mrs. Wiley fr om her aunt, Miss
Marion S. Lambert. She wore a
gold ring, gift fr om Mr . and
Mrs. Harry Pickens, and a
small gold hear t whic h was a
gifl to Mrs. Wiley from her
fathe r, the late David Chase
Miller, many years ago.
On Saturday evening. Mrs.
Miller entertained at her
Middleport home with a party.
Joining those who attended the
christening for the party were
the Rev . and Mrs. William
'
DeMoss,
the Rev. and Mrs.
Stanley P. Plattenburg, Mr. and
Mrs. David Simonton, son,
Steven, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Pickens, and Mr . and Mrs.
Richard V. Gibson, Beth. Andy,
and Sarah.

Sizes 36 to~ In forest green or dark olive. Fully Insulated
with nylon quilt lining . Adlustable snaps on each leg bottom .

Devoted To The

$1.89

~1.49 VY..nCic.e l

WOMEN'S SKIRTS

mater ial.

Christening
Seroice Held

MEN'S 16.95 INSULATED OOVERALLS

Friday and Saturday

a

arrangement. There

Juvenile sizes 2 to 6 - Boys sizes 8 to 20. Cardigans and ·
slifXlvers - new zipper necks - the new sweater vests - the
skinny look - Truly an excellent se lection of boys sweaters
on sale. Save Friday and Saturday.

.

·---------------------------,
! News ... in Briefs ! Lions
By United Press lnternalional
NEW YORK -THE NEW CHINESE Communist delegation
to the U. N. will make its formal diplomatic debut on Monday,
instead of today, as observers had thought possible. The
delegation's leader, Viee Foreign Minister Chiao Kuanhua, will
make a courtesy call on U. N. General Assembly President Adam
Malik of Indonesia atlO a.m. EST Monday.

P:rojects

By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
head of the Ohio Adult Parole
Authority said today a decision
would be made in early Decem·
ber on a parole for former
prohibition era killer Thomas A.
"Vonnie" Licavoli, 68, and
chances are "good" that he will
be freed .
"I think his chances are
good," said George Denton.
"After all his age is a factor
and his health conditions and
the fact that he has served 37
years."
Licavoli became eligible for
parole in 1969 when then Gov.
James A. Rhodes commuted
his first degree murder sen·
tence to second degree.
However, that parole request
was denied when Licavoli's post
parole living plan was rejected
because of alleged gangland
links.
Licavoli's brother, Peter, was
listed by the U.S. Justice Department in 1969 as an "underboss" of the Mafia in the Detroit area. He had a home in
Grosse Pointe and Licavoli was
going to live in that area .
"We have a review policy
and we went over his case,"
said Denton . "The review com·
mittee is made up of two. institutional staff members and one
member of the parole board. "
Board To Meet
The board will meet the first
week in December. Denton said
and the results will be announced the second week.
Licavoli suffered a heart attack in 1969 and has also been
bothered with eye trouble and

Prizes valued at $1,500 will be
awarded in the annual
Christmas Holiday promotional
program by Middleport merchants according to plans made
at a meeting Thursday evening.
Members of the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce and
representatives of participating
merchants attended the session
at the Columbus and Sou' :1ern
Ohio Electric Co.
Advertising by participating
merchants will begin Monday.
Their notices will include a
coupon enabling shoppers to
participate in the program. The
coupon may be deposited at any
of the participating merchants'
store.
Included in the 30 prizes to be
given away are a portable TV,
mini bike, rec ord player' and
bicycles . Prizes will be
awarded in a single drawing on
Dec. 23.
Santa will arrive in the annual
Christmas Parade on Nov. 29.
June Kloes is parade chairman.
In other business members
voted to send the Middleport
American Legion $100 for its
Christmas promotion and $15 to
the Middleport Garden Club
toward Christmas lighting.

Studies of Meigs Graduates Continued

Speaking of Schools-No. 213
graduate has, if he or she is working full time. For this
purpose we say that a person is working ''here," if he
or she is living in Meigs Ccunty and working close
enough to commute to work daily, A graduate is
working "away," if he or she is not living In Meigs
County and is, indeed, working "away,"
·
Using this background, let me show where o':u- 1971
' .

DR. JOHN W. CASHMAN, &lt;!rector-designee of the Ohio
Department of Health, Cclumbus, right, and Dr . R. R.
Pickens, Middleport, chief of staff of Veterans Memorial
Hospital, discuss medical personnel shortages at a coffee
break Thursday afternoon at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
During an informal discussion on the need for more general
practitioners and pari-professional personnel to assist
doctors and relieve physicians of menial tasks, suggestions
were made that could lead to a doctor recruitment program
and training hospital for medical personnel at Ohio
University. Attending were representatives of the hospital
administrative and medical staffs, the Meigs County Board
of Ccmmissioners, the hospital hoard, Jack Farrington of the
Ohio Valley Health Services, Athens; Dr. Cashman, and
several of his staff. In the background is Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
president of the Meigs County Board of Commissioners.

Weather
Mostly sunny and mild today
and Saturday. Highs both days
from the 50s north to the low and
mid 60s south. Clear and cool
tonight with lows in the 30s.

No One Injured

No one was injured or cited in
minor traffic inciden ts investigated Thursday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post State High·
way Patrol and Gallipolis City
Police.
The fir.st occurred at 10:35
a.m. on North Main St., in
Rutland where a pick-up truck
driven by Robert Imboden, 24,
Rutland, sideswiped a semi rig
operated by Tom Gilkey , 25, Rl.
3, Malta , Ohio. There was light
damage to the piek-up.
The seeond misllap occurred
····=· ···.· ·:· ... ·.·..·.·.·... , .. . ... ·... .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Sunday Through Tuesday :
Mostly fair •nd mild
Sunday and Monday, followed
by chance of showers and
cooler Tuesday. Gaily high
readings from lhe mid 50s to
lhe upper 60s Sunday and
Monday and from the mid 40s
lo the low 50s on Tuesday.
Lows at night mainly in the
30s.

at 11:50 p.m . on Rt . 7, three
te nths of a mile north of
Gallipolis, whe re vehic les
driven by Mae Williams, 56,
Gallipolis. and Ronald White,
26, Thurman, collided. There
was modera te damage to both
cars.
Gallipolis police investigated
an accident on the Shake
Shoppe parking lot where an
auto driven by Melvin Va nMeter, 25, Pomeroy, stru ck the
right front fende r on a car
(Continued on page 21

$1500
Given Priority in Prizes .
Planned

Priority projects of Ohio two out of every 10 dogs finally
Lions were reviewed by John completing
the training
Dollmeyer, Lan caster, past satisfactorily . Blind people
SAIGON -AMERICAN HELICOPTERS, in an accident;&gt; I district governor and now on the receiving the training with a
assault on South Vietnam's central coast, killed eight South state govern or's cabinet for the dog must spend four weeks in
Vietnamese soldiers and wounded 21 others. Meantime, U.S. jets Int e rnational Relations training . Thereis nocosttothe
launched an attack today inside North Vietnam for the fifth time Program, Thursday night when individual, and the dog training
in a week. The raid was directed against an enemy missile radar the Pomeroy . Middleport Lions is also free of charge through
site. The U.S. command did not reveal whether the site was hit Club was host at a 13K Lions the Lions program.
Club zone meeting .
Of eye research, the speaker
and destroyed.
The three priority projects of said a contribution of $1,400 has
LITTLE ROCK, ARK. - A C130 CARGO plane with 11 per· Ohio clubs this year are been made by the Athens Club
sons aboard crashed on takeoff at Little Rock Air Force Base research for the blind, in· to the O'Bleness Hospital in
early today and exploded in flames. "The number of survivors ternalional relations working Athens for the purchase of
through CARE , and a pilot dog eq uipment dealing with eye
has not been determined," a spokesman said.
program.
problems. As it turned out, the
The aircraft left the runway and burst into flames while on a
It was pointed out that CARE first patient to benefit from the
routine replacement training mission, the spokesman said. The
provides $5.83 for each dollar eq uipment was the president of
Air Force would not release further details of the crash.
the Lions Clubs contribute for the Nelsonville Club. The role of
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO EDUCATION Association has aid to the needy. Lions the Lions Clubs in eye research
currently have contributed and aid "hits close to home at
come out in support of a bipartisan compromise income tax bill
$10,000 for the construction of times" the speaker said.
rather than the one authored by Republicans. OEA lobbyist John four new schools in a South It was reported also that
Hall claimed Thursday only the tax formula worked out last week American country which will Lions Clubs have raised $52,000
mainly by Sen. William Taft, R-Shaker Heights, and Rep. James make a total of 38 schools built in Ohio through collection and
Flannery, !).Cleveland, and the Gilligan administration could through the program in South . redemption of labels from Vets
muster enough votes to pass both the House and Senate.
and Central America.
Dog Food. This has gone also to
Hall charged that a "small minority" in the legislature had
It was reported · that the the eye research program.
managed to keep the Taft-Fiannery bill off the floor , which he said Campbell Soup Co. has con- Each club outlined projects
was "a sham and total abdication of responsibility of those in tributed pork and beans valued carried out the past year and
leadership positions."
at $75,000 to the Lions Clubs. reported on money raised and
This will be distributed around how it was spent. Clarence
CLEVELAND -THE U. S. CHAMBER of Ccmmerce con· the world in conjunction with Struble, Pomeroy, a past
president and secretary of the
eluded a 15-dty, countrywide series of meetings here today aimed CARE. ·
Dolbneyer said 81 Ohio people local club, was master of
at developing what it calls "a business strategy for the 70S."
Chamber executive vice president Arch N. Booth said the received seeing eye dogs ceremonies.
concern of almost 10,000 business leaders who participated in the through the pilot dog program Joe Hanning, zone chairman,
meetings revealed general support of the President's new the past year . Four months is who presided , stressed the
(Continued on page 2)
economic policy, but a deep concern over the future of the required to tl·ain a dog with only
economy.

By George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
Last Friday 1 provided part of the information
accumulated by our studies of the classes of 1967-1971
made each fall after each class's spring graduation.
Following is additional information obtained jn these
studies.
We like to designate the location of the job that a

malfunctioning kidneys.
Three others senwnced with
Licavoli to life jn prison after
being convicted of first degree
murder are also still in the
Ohio Penitentiary.
John Rai, 65, Serafina Sinatra, alias John ~~ wop" English,
72 and Ralph Carsells; 66, all
of the Toledo area have asked
Gov. John J. Gilligan to commute their sentences to second
degree murder, which would
make them eligible for parole .
"The governor has the re·
quests but has made no decision," said Robert Tenenbaum,
Gilligan 's news secretary. "But
(Continued on page 2)

graduates are working (in percentages): Boys, Here,
65.8; away, 34.2. Girls, here, 66.7; Away, 33.3. All
graduates of 1971, here, 66.1; away, 33.9. As you can
see, two of every three graduates who are working did
find employment in this immediate area.
Now let's compare the location of jobs for our
graduates over the period 1967-1971.
Boys, 1967, here, 58.2; away, 41.8; 1968, here, 67.5;
away, 32.5; 1969, here, 52.2; away, 47.8; 1970, here,
85.0; away, IS.O; 1971, here, 65.8; away, 34.2.
Girls, 1967, here, 41.9; away, 58.1; 1968, here, 32.0;
away, 68.0; 1969, here, 56.1; away, 43.9; 1970, here,
71.5; away, 28.5; 1971, here, 66.7; away, 33.3.
AIIJitaduates, 1967, here, 52.0; away, 4ii.O; 1968,
here, 53.2; away, 46.8; 1969, here, 54.6; away, 45.4;
1970,here, 80.3; away, 19.7. 1971, here,66J ; away, 33.9.
As can be selln.ahove , there is a .different pattern for
boys and girls. Over the years more of our hoys have

found jobs here than have the girls. The total of local
employment opportunities seems to have improved for
both boys and girls over the five year period. There
was a noticeable decrease from 1970 to 1971. It will be
interesting to see what takes place in 1972.
In the previous column that reported the major
portion of this study I included a lot of numbers without
attempting to interpret those numbers. The fact is that
space did not ~ermit. Let me try to give you some in·
1
terpretations as I see thein.
The percentage of students going on to college has
not varied much during the 1967-71 period. The high for
boys was 28.3, in 1967; the low was 21.4'in 1970. The high
for girls was 22.5 in 1971; the low 17.8 in 1968. Tne high
for all graduates was 24.1 in 1967, the low, 20.0 in 1969.
About 2? pet. of our graduates go to college - just less
(Continued on page 21

CHRISTMAS SEAL STUFFING BEE - Volunteers meeting at the Middleport First
Baptist Church Thursday morning prepared 3,400 Christmas seal sale letters for the Meigs
Ccunty Tuberculosis and Health Association. Among those assisting were, left to right, seated,
Mrs. Cora Beegle, Racine, representing the Twin City Shrincttes; Mrs. Herschel Nor ris,
Racine, of the Racine American Legion Auxiliary; Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, Pomeroy, of the
American Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39; Mrs. Glenn DiU, Syracuse, president of
the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health Association , and Mrs. 0 . A. Martin, Pomeroy ,
representing Meigs Ccunty Salon 712, Eight and Forty. Mrs. Charles Hayes, standing,
executive secretary ofth~ Association, and Mrs . Manning Kloes, a board member, had charge
of the stuffing bee.

Seals Goal is $4,000
The 65th annual Christmas
seal campaign of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Association got underway today
with the mailing of 3,400 letters
of appeal to Meigs County
residents.
A goal of $4,000 has been set
for the local Seal Sale headed
\his year by the Rev. Charles W.
Simons of Middleport. The seal
sale is the only fund raising
project of the Association.
The money is used to strike
out against tubercul9sis and
respiratory diseases such as
emp,hysema , as thma . and
bronchitis. "By contributi ng to

Christmas Seals one helps
provide free x-rays, tuberculin
tests, medical research, aid to
tubercu lar pa tients, nursing
scholarships, free literature,
equipment for our county
tuberculosis nurse, and for
many other projects," the Rev.
Mr . Simons said .
,
The minister notes that
through Christmas seal contributions every person can
sha re the gift of good health.
Last week volunteers labeled
the 3,400 envelopes and Thurs·
day women .representing
:levera! organizations met in the
basement of the Middleport
First Baptist Church lor the

"stuffing b~e. "
In the group working under
the direction of Mrs. Charles
Hayes, executive secretary ,
and Mrs . Manning Kloes,
executive board member, .were
Mrs. Cora Beegle, Mrs. Julia
Norris, Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. Glen Dill. Mrs. J. M.
Thornton, Mrs. Julia Hysell,
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, Mrs. 0. A.
Martin, Mrs. Virgil Wal~er ,
Mrs . Mar tha Childs , Mrs .
Dwight Wallace, Mrs. Virgil
Roush, Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mrs. Guy Neigler, Mrs. S11e
Imboden, and Mrs. Eula
J . Wolfe.

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