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·.:::::::::~:!::~~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:::::::=:::f:;:,
•,•,·

Miners Like it ; .
~:~: Operators ·wm
~::

Audience of
Over 1,()()()

Iii

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Likes Follies

Jeff Morris

Fred Lee

Tiny Williams

ALL-LEAGUE MARAUDERS - Jeff Morris, end; Fred Lee, tackle;
Tiny Williams, fullback and middle linebacker, were named to the AllSoutheastern Ohio football team Sunday by the Southeastern Ohio Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association. Wirming honorable mention from

OtJR, BOARDING HOUSE
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COULD SIT DOWN AND
FIND "TROUBLE!

MY WOI&lt;D, TrlE: OWLS
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by Les Carroll

PACE-SETTER

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MARTHA WILL HAVIO
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NO. XXIV NO _ 150

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

POOR Mcl&lt;EE~ •.,
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EVER. GINCE: 'IOU

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COUitTEH 81Llii80NII

Ted Lehew

John Thomas

Meigs were guard and linebacker Ted Lehew and middle guard defensive
artist John Thomas. See account of selections, and the entire "dream team,"
on page 3 today .

!it,:,:,:':,:,:,:,:,:,:,: : :,: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :J~!

... Admi•tS

TEN CENTS

··:;::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-.:::::::::::~:::::::~:::;:::::::::::::::::::::.:::::~:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::.:.-::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::

Thieu Warns Of Disaster ~ Senior Citizens Needs
I»

SAIGON (UP! ) -President
Nguyen Van Thieu said today
South Vietnam faces economic
disaster. He proposed a series
of major reforms to try to get
the nation back ·on its feet.
Thieu, in a 41-minute speech
'"to a joint session of the senate
and house of delegates,
proposed a free market for the
Vietnamese piaster, sweeping
tat and tariff reforms and
major pay increases for soldie!'!! and cl vii serv an Is.
The economic crisis in South
Vietnam WBB touched off by the
U.S. Senate's foreign aid cut,
coupled with the rapid decline
in the amount of dollars spent
by American servicemen as
they are being withdrawn.
Thieu mentioned this only in
passing, saying he hoped to
"continue to receive assistance
from the people and the
government of the U.S.A. in our
efforts to build prosperity ."

"However, he went on, "we
will receive aid with the deep
awareness that it will not be
forever, and that there will be
a day when it is going to be
reduced and then terminated."
He said "we are living in a
state of dependence on foreign
aid and the rich potentials of

the country are not yet fully
exploited."
Thieu said the Vietnamese
economy needed "fundamental
changes" and said the first two
steps would be proposed in bills
he would send to the legislature
later this week asking for a
"free exchange system" for the

piaswr and "to simplify and
reduce import and export
taxes ."
He did not, as had been
expected, devalue the piaswr,
which currently is being traded
at 400 to the dollar on the black
market. The official rate is 275
to the dollar.

Butz Draws Opposition
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon's nomination
of Earl Butz to be secretary of
agriculture has run into some
outright opposition, and the
Senate Agriculture Committee
decided to hold more extensive
hearings on the appointment
than had originally been
planned.
Sen. George S. McGovern, DS.D., was among the more
blunt, calling Butz the worst
choice Nixon could have made .·

He said he would work to defeat
the nomination.
"He is identified," McGovern
said, "with. the big corporate
farming interests and while he
was in the Eisenhower administration working with Ezra Taft
Benson he did everything he
possibly could to work against
the interest of family farmers
who are ... the backbone of
American agriculture."
McGovern, a memher of the
Agriculture Committee, is the
only announced Democratic
,-----~----------- ----------, presidential candidate. The
I
7\T
•
I committee now has decided to
1 1
hold at least one day of public
confirmation
hearings for Butz,
I
I
according to Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey, !).Minn.
By United Press lnternatlooal
The committee had planned
SAIGON - SEVEN MEN WERE KILLED and four others
InJured today when three U.S. helicopters crashed near Saigon. to consider, and possibly conFour of the fatalities and all of the injured were Americans. The firm, the nomination without
choppers collided near the Cambodian frontier about 60 miles hearings. But the committee
northwest of the capital after they had ferried some South Viet- could now hold extensive public
namese soldiers into the field. Another helicopter crashed hearings if the demand is
because of mechanical trouble 21 miles west of Saigon. Three sufficient, and possibly call
South Vietnamese passengers were killed and an American Butz as its first witness.
"Mr. Butz was one of - if not
crewman was InJured.
the chief architec of -and
spokesman for -Secretary
VIENNA- THE SIXTH ROUND OF the Strategic Arms Benson's farm policies,"
Umltation Talks opened today wllh a ceremonial welcome of the Humphrey said in a statement
American and Russian delegations by Austrian President Frans Sunday. "Those of us who were
Jonas. The chief executive wished the delegates success and around during that period
apressed optimlBm on tile talks' prospects. The heads of the two remember only too well the
delegations toasted each other in champagne and then entered a adverse impact that Mr.
nearby room for a 10-minute private chat.
Be!IS()n 's farm policies had on
American agricultur• ."
Humphrey also said Butz had
CLEVELAND- MAYOR RALPH J. PERK broke the SO· been a director of several
called "racial barrier" Sunday as he visited four black chW'ches major corporations connected
on the city's east side asking to make Cleveland "one com- with agriculture and that he
munity." Perk, in an effort to muster bliick support for his had
"es tablished
and
coalition administration, also asked those in attendance at the maintained close relationshi[lll
·churches for "prayerful guidance.
with the banking interests of
"Remember me in your prayers so I might have the strength the country." He said these ties
and wisdom \Q make the right decisions so Cleveland can move should be examined to make
ahead to greatness," the newly-elected mayor said. "It doesn't
matter how people voted in the last election. It is Important now
that we work together so that we can make Cleveland a safe city,
safe for me, for you, for ali of us."

sure "no conflict of in wrest will
zither occur or be implied."
Sen. Fred R. Harris, D.Okla .,
demanded during the weekend
that Nixon withdraw Butz'
nomination because of his
business ties.
The president of the National
Farmers Organization, which is
outspoken in its opposition to
the Betz appointment, Sunday
asked for a chance to testify
against the nomination. before
the Senate committee.
Oren Lee Staley, in a
telegram to the committee,
urged its members to scrutinize
Butz' past policies and pro(Continued on Page 8)

i!1i

I»

: :: Topic at College Meet : ;
~

~

Needs of senior citizens in
Gallia, Jackson, Vinton and
Meigs counties will be the topic
of community leaders in a
special meeting at Rio Grande
College Wednesday .
The session will begin at 10
a.m., in the Moulton Ha ll
Recreation Room .
Additional purposes of the
meeting are to : discuss the
establishment of a council on
aging, esta blishment of an
information center for senior
citizens, and the development of
several local senior citizen

Weather

Ask Price Boost

CHARLESTON, W. Va . (UPI) - The new coal contract,
calling for wage increases of nearly twice those permitted by the
President's cost of living council, evoked enthusiasm in this coal
rich area but faced an uncertain future before the pay board in
Washington.
The c~ntract will raise wages from $37 to $50 per day, and
double the soft coal industry's mandatory contribution to the
union 's pension fund from 40 cents to 80 cents per ton of coal
mined, by 1913.
United Mine Workers (UMW) officials here said the 80,000
strikers, half of them in this state, would receive $100 in delayed
he nefits hefore Thanksgiving. The cash gifts from the union would
«
he the first since the strike began Oct. I.
West Virginia Gov. Arch summ ary dismissals and
Moore, who played a key role in establishing gr ievance
the negotiations in New York, procedures would reduce
predicted upon his return here wildcat strikes.
the contract would win approval
The contract grants im·
from the pay board.
mediate raises from $37 to
Moore, a member of the $41.50 per day for the highest
productivity commission on the paid miners, to $45.75 a day in
Cost of Living Council, said the 1972 and to $50 a day in 1973. The
union and the industry should pension fund contribution inreceive a hearing this week on crease is also spread over three
their case for exceptions from
(Continued on Page 6)
the limits of 5.5 per cent on

~

Devoted To 'l'he Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH!O
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1971
PHONE 992·2156

B
.
...f.
'ews ... zn rze1 s :

CAPTAIN EASY

A responsive audience orl
over 1,000 gave its approval;~
to the 30-act Fall Follies or::;;
the Big Bend Minstr e l:;:~
Association Saturday night~~~!
at Meigs High School.
;:;:
Kermit
Walt on}~
presiden t of the Meigd!
Athletic Boosters, which;!;!
sponsored the production, ;~;~
said that $1,061 was cleared ;:~
by the organization. The~~~
booswrs presented a gift of :t
~ $200 to the Big Bend;~!
~ Mi nst rel Assn . for i ts:~
~::: treasury.
::::

*'

groups
Mrs. Bettie Bjorn , field
representative for Southeas t
Ohio , Division of Administration on Aging, State of
Ohio will be present to guide the
group.
Jerry Ramsay, Director of
Special Services· at Rio Grande
will act as coordinator of the
initial meeting.
In terested citizens, of any
age, or any agency .that would
like more information about
this mee ling should call Mr .
Ramsay at Rio Grande College,
245-5353 extension 19.
NOW YOU KNOW
The world hallmark comes
from the mark impressed on
gold and silver articles attesting to their purity by
Goldsmiths' Hall in London.

.
Mostly sunny and warm today
with highs mainly in the 70s.
Clear and mild tonight with
lows from the upper 40s to the
LOCAL TEMPS
mid f&gt;Os. Consider ahie sunshine
The temperature in downtown
Tuesday with highs from the
Pomeroy
at II a.m. Monday
mid 60s in the north to the mid to
under partially cloudy skies
upper 70s in the south .
was 66 degrees.

annual wage increases.
G~ ~
A spokesman for the
.~.£
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association (BCOA) said the
industry would apply to the
price board for permission to •
I
raise the price of coal.
The members of the UMW's
wage and policy committee.
which approved the contract in
New York Sunday, went back to
nation 's coal fields to explain it A female juvenile of West
to the rank and file mem- Virginia confined in the Mason
bership.
County Jail at Pt. Pleasant told
Joe Ellis, president of District Meigs County, Ohio authorities
17 here, said he expected some Friday afternoon that she was
mines in his district to be involved in a check forgery in
working today. "There will be Ohio.
full production by Tuesday Sheriff Robert C. Harafwrnoon at the latest."
tenbach's Dept. said a detainer
In Western Pen nsy lvania, has been lodged for the girl. She
where ~.000 affected miners will be returned here to answer
work , officials predicted a to the check charge.
return by Tuesday morning, Sunday the sheriff's dept.
slowed by the need for safety learned that two persons
inspections of long idled mines. wanted in Ohio and West
Moore reported UMW Virginia, James D. Howard and
president W. A. (Tony ) Boyle Leah Jane Little Napper, alias
was "a tough hard bargainer, Leah Jane Howard, were aptesty as the devil as late as prehended on warrants frorr•
Saturday for the first time in the sheriff 's office at
four days."
Wapakoneta, Ohio.
Industry negotiators were
Both are wanted in Meigs
just as "adamant, " Moore said. County on several charges of
The industry considers the forgery; the Howards also by
contract the most expansive in the FBI on charges of interstate
history, he said. Some sources transportation of stole n
put its cost at $1.5 billion, or 39 property.
The Sheriff's Dept. reported
pet. of current labor cosl.s.
Moore said the agreement today that counterfeit $10 bills
would improve productivity, are being passed in the Meigs
becaUBe of claUBeS prohibiting area.

Comp1• City
•

In Forgery

~··,
' ·

Four Fined in
Mayor's Court

""

~

.

'

.

.

Four defendants were fined
COLUMBUS- MISS AMERICA, Laurie Lea Schaefer, was
given honorary membership in the Ohio Association of Public by Pomeroy Mayor Charles
School Employes Sunday when she participated in the ribbon- Legar Saturday night. A fifth
cutting for new state offices ofthe organization. The association is forfeited his bond.
an Independent school employe group which represents more Fined were Robert E. Burton,
Pomeroy, $$ and costs, failure
than 30,000 persons in 543 locals.
to yield tile right of way; Jack
W. Haggy, Pomeroy, $15 and
COLUMBUS -LOCAL MEMBERS OF mE Amalgamated costs, speeding;
Ronnie
Trnnsit Union ended tlleir three-day wildcat strike against the Williams, Pomeroy, $25 and .
·Greyhound Bus Line at midnight Sunday after agreement was costs, no operator's lincense ,
reached in a dispute believed to have centered around job and $10 and costs, excessive
security. The strike started at midnight Thursday and pickets at speed for conditions, and Betty
tile bus station forced management to load passengers at the curb Flowers , Pomeroy, $5 and
rather than the gates. Supertisors replaced the striking bus costs, disturbing the peace, and
drivers, ticket salesmen and baggage ·handlers.
$5 and costs, destruction of
poroperty .
·
'
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY Legal
F orfei ling a $50 bond pqsted
Clinic said Sunday it has received numerous reports of police on an assault and battery
charge was Richard Friley,
(Continued on Page 8)
Pomeroy ..
\

.'
'

.......

•'

BEST OF ~HOW - This arrangement of modern dep' , ,
entered in "Christmas Festivities" class of the artistic
division of the Rutland Garden Club 's holiday show by Mrs.
Tom Stewart received \he best of show award.

BLUE RIBBON WINNERS in the artistic division of the "Christmas Everywhere" flower
show were Mrs. Homer Parker, seated, holding her winning arrangeme nt in the "Humble
Stable" class; and standing, left to right, Mrs. Robert Canaday with her entry in ''Gracious
Living," Mrs. Bruce Davis with "Peace, "·and Mrs. James Titus with "Light With Joy. "
' ·I

.

Garden Club's Creativity Displayed
RUTLAND
Colored Of the 149 total entries in the
'laubles , glitter, candles and show, 86 were in the artistic
madonnas used with holly and arrangements division where
pine in elegant arrangements, the creative talents of the club
wreaths and swags carried out members were well disp:ayed.
to perfection the "Christmas ·
Everywhere" theme of the Mrs. Tom Stewart, a member
Rutland
Garder. Club 's of the Rutland Friendly Garweek.end flower show.
deners, took the best of show

award along with three blue
ribbons in the ar tistic division .
Scoring tht' most points ov~rall
in the show was Mrs. Homer
Parker, also a memb•'r of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
Of the total entries in the
artistic division the Rutland
· Friendly .Gardeners entered 36

••

arrangements and won 21 two entries.
ribbons, while the Rutland Club
entered 50 and won 15 ribbons.
Mrs . Frank Christy of
Marietta, an accredited judge
In the blooming and non- . of the Ohio Association of
blooming plant division, the Garden Clubs, judged the show
Rutland Club won seven ribbons following a luncheon hOsted by
with 12 entries, and the Friendly
(Continued on Page 5)
Gardeners won one ribbon wilh

�·'
,•·

,

2-'lbf Dally9elllnel,M!Hh,crt-Pwwtoy,O.,Nw. ~.1m

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

1

Voice along BroadWay

.S - The Dilly Sentinel, MlddleportoPamey, 0., Nov, 15, 1971

The Foreign Aid Package

BRUCE BIOSSAT
U.S. Economic Edicts

j

BY JACK O'BRIAN
&amp; 3rd Ave . post office a zoo ... Can't even claim
MAKING UP FOR LOST ROLES
Utey're malemen . Ari &amp; jackie dined at the new
NEW YORK (KFS ) - Audrey Hepburn's. Ma Pomme with her children - surrounded by
neely to pick up Ute greasepaint again ... secret servicemen and some of Ari's own guards
·Everyone Utoughl Lawrence Wellt's 16 years of ... P. J . Clarke's owner .Danny Lavezzo says his
taped TV musicals would earn him a rerun- horse called New Tricia runs like Old Nixon ...
for!Wle. Not so. The sponsor insisted its name go Who always wins eventually, if Utat 's c onsolation
lpl!ng in the middle olthe TV picture (behind the for past losses.
band) at all times, and there went the residuals
Singer-bowling.,show host Johnny Johnston
... Oscar nominee Sylvia Miles talked about one and his Carol decided io give it another try ... In
o1 her ex-llusbands in a news interview and Arizona .. . The Dance Theater of Harlem (for
promptly got a call from the lawyer of one of which gifted ballet star Arthur Mitchell quit the
them (NBC's deejay Ted Brown) warning her to N. Y. City Ballet after 10 years ) has another
cut it out .. . Sylvia's a judge in the current N. Y. ballet coach known in the entrechat set as a
lly IIRUCE BIOSSAT
Erotic Film Festival; wonder how Ted'll like brave kid : Tanaquil LeClercq , ballerina
OSAKA, Japan (NEA )
that ... Sylvia cops out by telling us she doesn't · paralyzed by polio . Teaches .!rom her
I've just seen some of the Japanese p!lople on the lac·
necessarily subscribe to the erotic flicks, "no wheelchair, using her hands alone to
tory assembly lines and m the rnanagenal rooms who are
more than a judge in Supreme Court subscribes choreograph and coach.
"doing it" to us economically. And it's pretty easy to
understand why they're giving us such fits . .
to the guilt or innocence of a murder suspect."
The 5Ut Ave. (at 56th ) Hallmark Gallery's
At Matsushita Electric in the vast industnal complex
Susan Watson relinquished the "No, No, annual Yule tree exhibition (trimmed suparound
this second largest city in Japan, one plant is putNanette" ingenue role, pals say, because she's posedly by VIPs) this year will have fashionable
ting together color television sets. Signs shout remmders
yes, yes expecting ... Tony Curtis has his firs ornamented by such names as Archbishop
that quality is vital.
Bevhills home up for sale. May settle in London Fulton J. Sheen, pitcher Vida Blue, diva Beverly
The girls 1 saw on the lines were dressed in neat blue
uniforms and thin white gloves. They were young- averfor good ... Yanks in Loodon now totallOO,OOO ... Sills, nostalgia maven Busby Berkeley, Rex
age age 23. Guided by simply marked blueprints, they
TV's Sandy Duncan (recuperating from drastic Reed, Doris Day, Joe Frazier and other ulterior
were
doing intricate wiring and soldering work ·w1th
eye surgery) won't tell her husband actor- decorations ... Beautiful Helen O'Connell tunes
speed skill efficiency and enormous concentration.
composer Bruce Scott Zahariades why she or- up her perennially hardy tonsils at Ute Rainbow
Tho~gh they were shoulder to shoulder on the lines,
dered him out of their house . "I don't want a Grill Nov. 15 for three weeks ... Canada Dry did
there was little talking . It was no soctal center. But
divorce," he torched at Ute Piraeus My Love well a year ago with a panel of stars rapping on
neither was it a sweatshop. It was just a very businesslikP
Greek spot, "and I'm hoping Sandy will come to drugs, sex, politics and repeats this year with a
workshop.
In Nagoya, an hour's .train ride away, young rn~le
her senses. She won't even accept my phone "Love and Money" (notice the "and" isn't "or" )
workers
were going at 1t the same way, assembling
calls.
panel sounding off on that titular subject: inautomobiles for Toyota , Japan's biggest and the world's
Ex-NBC newsie Sander Vanocur is eluding Mel Brooks (funniest man in the world),
fourth largest car manufacturer. The assembly work is
recuperating from a busted leg, a ditto heart Carl Reiner , Tony Randall, Peggy Cass and Don
set up in a fashio~ that hardly allows workers l? cluster
for idle conversatiOn. The JOb gets all the attention.
(Shirley MacLaine, who switched to Pete Adams, ABC-TV just before Christmas.
At Matsushita the company tries to control quality
Hamill) and a few sour grapes against the
Artist Isabelle Magar's oils at the Carlyle
by makin'g most of the components it need~ for
partly
networks where he earned his rich bread so long Hotel's Van Der Straeton Gallery have an
the television set. It devtses tls own automated machmes .
... Sandy did some public beefing about networks unexpected, or is it, irobalance of onlookers:
The Dai~ Sentinel
some of them computer-controlled. More and mo~e . of
DEVOTED TO THE
letting themselves be used as propaganda more attention is drawn to Bishop Sheen's
these are being invented. Soon much of the hand wmng
INTEREST OF
podiums for politicians ; precisely what he was portrait Ulan to Jackie Onassis at age 14 ... The
by whole lines of girls will be done mechanically.
MEIGS·MASON AREA
For years now, Japanese auto makers and television
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.
accused of when he marched at enthusiastic and 30 Ritual Persian Acrobats at the Brooklyn
Exec. Ed.
uncritical length behind the Kennedys.
Academy of Art are making their first apROBERT HOEFLICH .
set makers have been selling quality and making it go
City Editor
. big especially in the g r e a t American market. Now
'Last Vegas casino manager has a per- pearance since they entertained the inPub l is hed da i ly e x cept I
they've been called up short. They've been told-and they
manent bodyguard after an attempted burnpoff. ternational swells during Iran's 2,500th anSat ur day by The Ohio Valley
and
many others in Japan agree-that they've been pushPubi 1Sh 1ng Company , 111
Plus a phone call ("Next time we won't miss" as niversary bash.
Court Sl , . Pomeroy , Oh io.
ing their products too hard in the United States.
45 769 Bus iness Ofl ice Phone
they did with four shots) ... Faces in Places: The
Muhammad Ali's trainer, Bundini Brown, at
The figures are indeed astonishin~. Th~ car makers'
99 2-2156, Ed 1tor ial Phone 992 ·
Sen. Jake Javits catching "The Last Picture Ute Skylioe Motor Inn 'said Sugar Ray Robinson
trade association shows that in the f1rst etght months of
1157 .
Second class postage pa id at
Show" at the last picture show.
was the greatest in all ring history. That's our
1971 their exports to the United States were S2ll.OOO units.
Pomeroy , Oh io .
surpassing the 42ll,OOO sent to us in all 1970 and the t969
Insurance : a dozen priests sat on the Notre opinion, too, but we don' t have to pass Ali's
Nat 1onat
adverti s ing
annual total or 280,000.
representat1ve
Bolf i nelli
Dame bench versus Navy . Plus eleven prayers loyalty tests ... W. 56th St. near 20th-Fox's N.Y .
Gallagher. Inc .• 12 East 42nd
Says Seishi Kato, vice-president of Toyota:
nate
enough
to
live
in
a
lo·
on the field ... Dina Merrill stole Ute scene at offices is being patrolled closely by the cops and B~· Lawrence Lamb. M.n.
Sr .• New York City , New York
"lt will not be wise lor us to increase exports to the
cality where a suicide pre·
Subscription rates : oe .
Michel Kazan's from younger zofticker Raquel Feds: known junkie shooting galleries nearby .. .
United
States over the present level."
.
l
i
vered
by
carr
i
er
where
!lear Ilr. Lamb _ Plea se vent ion center is active. help a v ailable 50 c ents per week ;
Welch ... Cops are cracking down on trans- Andy Griffith &amp; his wife are like aw, shucks, but
In
plain
fact,
the
Japanese
makers
of
cars
and
televihelp me . 1 don 't understand . can be gotten m v..enods of By Motor Route whefe carrier
sion sets may, one way or another, cut back from curvestites who make the f!laza in front of the 54th maybe just a tiff . .
what' s wrong. nned lo kill severe stress by callmg the serv 1ce not ava il able . One
rent record exports to America. Voluntary restraints are
month S1.75 . By mall in Ohio
myse lf today w1t h an over- center. lf you have one, 11 and
.---------------------~-----1
w. Va , One year 514 .00
being
discussed as one element in a possible " package' ·
WIN AT BRIDGE dose of pill s. but I couldn 't wtll be hsled m your tele- Six month s 57 .25 . Three arrangement
Japan might work out in economic talks
1 don't under stand wh y I was phone d1rectory. These cen· month s \4 .50 . Sub s cript ion
with
the
United
States.
price
in
cludes
Sunday
T
i
mes
.
put on earth . Everyone was ters have saved a lot of hves Sent1n e1.
But
all
this
really
stuns these industrial managers. They
rut here for some reason . and helped man Y people
are
more
than
a
little
intoxicated with their amazing outbut I don 't ha ve one . I'm 18. through some rough spots .
Helen Bottel
put and are genuinely upset and frustrated over the idea
still shy, 1 dislike people.
Overeatin g to the degree
Clara is a Latin name that some damper may have to be put on Uteir efforts.
THOSE MARRIED "BACHELORS"
and . at the present. rm ver y ) ou de sc nbe is ofte.n part or which means "bright ; illusThey do not yield easily. At Matsushita, officials talked
ashamed of myself for gam- the picture of emollonal dt S· trious."
Dear Helen:
convincingly of devising new clock radios and other elecing back 20 pounds in one lress.
How can wives expect to keep their husbands when the
tronic goodies so attractive that American buyers won ' t
NORTH
month . 1 eat u n t i I I get
No one should ignore an·
15
"single" life is made so attractive?
The curved tail of the sea· be able to resist them. At another car maker's plant,
physically sick . l don 't know other person 's "cry for help'' horse
.AK10
o3
is used for holding on Toyo Kogyo in Hiroshima , I rode -100 miles an hour on a
Over half the fellows in my husband's place of business are
why , bul it' s drivmg me when he talks about his to narrow
¥Q S
bfades of turtle track in a car with a new rotary engine that promises
divorced. They live in "singles" apartments and maintain
crazy . I hate myse lf beca use death wish or suicide. It is grasgcor seaweed
• Q4
,. whiclllhey compact efficiency, less vibration, less pollution.
IIWingin' bachelor pads that naturally turn married men green
•KQ o2
ol il.
.,
t1me to li sten and to try to do most of the time .
(HEWSPAPil ENTUPIISE ASSH .)
Willi envy.
·
l'·
WEST ( D )
EAST
1 hate to hale myself. but ge t help .
• 8j
About Utree-fourths of the still-married men have a little
when 1 lost tha t 20 pounds I
¥AKJ84
3
•
10
9
6
2
was never so proud of mysomething going on Ute side. They figure it's their due.
t KB S
tl0 9 7 2
self
in my entire life . There
And divorce Is so EASY these days: if you wake up one
oloJ95
oloAlOJ
was .pr1de to live on Now
morning and think "All this responsibility isn't for me," by
SOUTH
there 's no pride and I want
evening you can set the wheels in motion to have your marriage
.QJ94 2
to die so badl y.
dissolved. That goes for women as well as men but, if the woman
¥7
The main reason tha t 1
t AJ6 3
has children, she isn't so apt to follow her inclinations.
can 't go through with my
... 874
I'm not really worried about my own security - yet; but with
suicide allempts is because
Both vulnerable
I don 't want to hurt anyone
all Ute temptation around -girls Utrowing themselves at married
West North East South
1es peciaily my famil yt. I've
men, conventions, persuasive high-flyers (male) who poke fun at
1¥
Dble
2¥
tried
to explain my problems
the "faithful Fenways," Ute free stnff waiting at bars, etc.- how
Pass
4•
Pass Pass
to my mother but she just
loog will it be before my good faithful husband decides he's
Pass
laug hs and says thai 1 don't
missing out on the action? -GETTING MORE WORRIED WITH
Opening lead - ¥ K
have an y problems.
EACH WRINKLE
1 hate myself and 1 don 't
Dear GMWWEW:
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby want to live, but I'm scared
''Good, faithful husbands' may dream a bit (as do good faithOswald : "The new ency· 10 die . Please help me. I'm
ful wives, right') but if home fires keep burning extra bright, only clopedia of bridge is out. It so miserable. Thank you for
is a wonderful compendium being there . lt gives a per·
their minds wander - usually.
son someone to talk to.
Here's an added Utought: if the single life were so action- ol bridge information ."
Jim : "The first sample
near Reader- ! hope you
packed-great, how come divorced men remarry at such a fast
hand
is
under
the
title
'Asare
feeling better now . The
clip?
sumptions in p I a y.' The best thing I could think of to
... And I refuse to believe that "Utree-fourths of all married game is rubber bridge so
help you was to ha ve the
men" have a little something going on the side. Even our free and South wants to be sure of New York Suic1de Prevene&amp;llY modern world doesn't offer THAT much opportunity. -H. his contracl ·' He ruffs the tion Center informed of your
second hear! and d r a w s ~roblem and hope they could
Dear Helen:
arrange for someone near
The man I've been going with for two years was involved wiUt trumps with two leads ."
Oswald : " If West holds the your home to get in touch
an older woman. Jon lived with this 40-year-old dame before he ace of clubs and East the
with you .
met me, but we thoughtshewasoutofhis life for good.
king of diamonds, South will
M a n y young people do
The other day, while he was visiling me, she moved all her make an overtrick. If either
h
a
v e emotional problems.
holds
both
South
opponent
stuff into his new apartment. Told Ute (very priro) landlady she
Health
authorities at col·
was his wife and got away with it. Sinee then Jon has been staying will make his contract by
leges
and
universities will
leading clubs toward dumm y
at my place ashe doesn'tknow how to face her.
bear
this
out.
It is a difficult
and diam onds loward his
What worries me is Utat this woman is a strong believer in hand ."
time, establishing life values
Jim "South should start and goals . You are not
Voodoo and other mystic stuff, and she has Jon scared, too. He
here
with his assumption s. unique in having difficulty .
may be enticed back against his wiU -and who knows what will
West
has
opened the bidding .
happen to me, if she starts sticking pins in my image'
Almost everyone has had
East has gi ven a s i n g 1 e temporary thoughts of SUI1:1 there some way we can safety get rid of her? - SCARED raise. Between t h e m they
cide. If it is anything more
(HANNAH AND JON)
·'
h o 1 d ¥A K J +K "'A J in than a temporary thought
Dear Hannah and Jon:
high cards. West must hold such a person should talk
What you're asking is "how to undo Voodoo." That's easy: either the t K or the oloA lor over the problem with his
simply don't believe in it! "Hexes" only work because the vic- lois opener : East a I m o s t doctor. Sometimes it will be
surely holds the other for his necessary to see a psychiatim's imagination produces symptoms, so forget all that magic 1aise."
trist to rtiscuss one's probmumbo jumbo and tell the lady to leave.
Oswald : "Aller these as· lems, to resolve the inner
H she won't go peacefully, I'm quite ~ure Jon's landlady will sumptions, South plays ab· conflicts that have led to so
persuade her - after she discovers there is no marriage cer- solutely safe lor his contract much unhappiness.
by leading a diamond toward
tificate. - 11.
For people who are forlu·
dummy's queen . This will
Dear Helen:
cost him a diamond trick if
I'm 63, alone, with only one close relative, my brother who is East holds the king, but then
10 years younger. He lives 600 miles away and is constantly West will hold the club ace
11te Almana
calllng me on the phone - only to deal out abuse. If I tell him I'm As it is , West holds the dia•
mond king . lf he takes it. By United Press lute · ilona!
not well and can't take his meanness, he curses me.
South
can
discard
two
clubs
Today
is
Monday,
l'&lt;ov.
15,
He misconstrues everything I write in my letters, then calls to I rom dummy on the ace-jack
tell me how worthless I am. He's constantly bringing up old un- of diamonds . If he ducks ihe 319th day of 1971.
pleasantness ..,. what happened when we were children, and how South will not lose a dia- The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
mond."
ourparen(salways favored me (as if that were my fault!).
The morning star is Saturn.
(N£WSP.A.P(R ENTERPRISE ASSN .!
He left home 30 year~ ago, and never once helped wiUt the old
The evening stars are Mercu•
folks - 1stayed home aw· "" ' r them until they passed on. He
ry, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
and his wife visit me once .
1d he picks at every little thing
Those born on this day are
until I'm a nervolls wreck by 1he time they leave.
under the sign of Scorpio.
The bJdd in.': has been :
He has a good life - grown children, an executive position. We!it NOrth' East South British astronomer William
'lbere'a DO reason for his bad temper. It's as if he enjoys making
It
Herschel was born Nov. 15,
•
Dble
Pass
P
t'lsS
1
•
me cry,
•
.,
1783.
.
. 14
Pa ss
' Yet, be'aaU the famlly I have, and still my "little brother." Pass
••
On this day in history:
You, South. hold :
0
rrlendl 117 to hang up on hhn. 1:1 this the only way? - OLDER .AQ4 ¥K6 tAQI085 ... KII19 In 1492 the first recorded
Mail all out-of-town packages. Mall all local packages and
Mail all local cards. Thanks•
llS'I'ER
.
What do y ou· do now ?
·we'll be sure to deliver
out-of-town cards. Christmas
reference to tobacco was made.
and Happy Holidays I
"
A-Pass. Yuu arc happ,,· with by Christopher Columbus, notlhem by Christmas.
means a lot more when it's on time.
Dllr Sliter:
spades. but dun't wanl tn in ft'a tbe anly way - unless you subconsciously want to be a vite a J(&amp;mc.
ing in his journal the use of it
t~ru•osr\
..,.... ,,.,.. pu11CbinC bag. A woman who has expended most cif
by the Indians he had found in
TODA Y'S QUESTIO!\
•
••
1111' lift• IMr r.mlb' 11111 be programmed to "take it" the rest of , West bids two hearts. Thi ~ 'i:-; the New World.
•
Wilt, 10 1 bnU Wllll't be euy. But It also may not be per- passed e~ round to .vou . Wh ut do In 1806.explorer Zebulon Pike
•' • *•••••
sighted the Rocky Mountain
T
I; w11111 yGIII' bra&amp;ber realizes you'll only listen if he's civil, yo'u do'!
Sp.1ce lor II)IS 3dver!lscmcn tll as Oeen ronli1butcd ,15 a P111J1Ic Strwlt'~ hy lh l ~ nl•w~p.1prr.
pe~k lhal.bears his name.
t..:.::::.:.::::..:;;.:;::;;;;;;:;.::::::..::.::.:..::::..:::::.::.:::::::.:::~::::::::.:.:::.:.:::.:.:::.:.;;;;;;:.;;:;:.;,:__-:--.:....-.:....-----:------------......1.:
Ans',\'c•· 1'1tRIIIITit\\
• "4llll
r 1111 ~~me. - H.
'

Morris, T. Williams, Lee, on All-SEOAL Squad
.

Damper on

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Talk. It Over With Your Doctor

Suicide Thoughts
Not Unique

!Helen ·Help Us\
I

By

!

Assump t 'IOnS

GUI'd e PI. ay

.,

By ODIE O'DONNELL
Athens and Ironton, 1971 cochampions of the SEOAL,
dominated Ute 1971 edition of
Ute AUSEOAL football team
selected Sunday at Jackson by

1971 SEOAL
Dream Team

Japan's

Industry?

1971 ALL-SEOAL FOOTBALL SQUAD
BACKS
PLAYER-SCHOOL
HT. WT. YR . .
Don Wood - Athens
6·1 190 Jr.
Mike Green - Athens
6·2 175 Sr.
Stu Smith- Athens
S-8 165 Sr.
Pete Neal-Gallipolis
6-0 181 Sr .
Larry Snowden - Gallipolis
5-9 •~a Sr.
Hal Spears - Ironton
6-1 185 Sr.
Jim Payne -Ironton
5·11 165 Sr.
Bobby Smith - Ironton
5·8 185 Sr.
Rick Boy kin - Ironton
6-0 200 Sr.
Greg Smith - Logan
5-8 •~o Sr.
Ken Culbertson - Logan
6-1 205 Jr.
Tiny Williams - Meigs
5·11 178 Sr .
Toby Helton - Waverly
5·5 145 Sr .
Terry Stewart - Wellston
5-10 160 Sr .
LINEMEN
Allan Ackerman - Athens
6-0 223 Sr .
6-1 210 Sr .
Chuck Wood - Gallipolis
6-0 190 Sr.
Mike AI brink .,- Ironton
S-9 183 Sr.
Dave Beckley - Jackson
Chris Onder a - Jackson
6-J 185 Sr.
Brian Davidson - Logan
6·0 185 Sr.
6·3 190 Sr .
Jell Morris - Meigs
6·2 201 Sr .
Fred Lee - Meigs
HONORABLE MENTION
ATHENS: Jim Swearingen and Jim Scott.
GALI.IPOLIS: Eric Saunders and Jim Miller.
IRONTON : Benny Scherer and Steve Massey .
JACKSON : Kenny Valentine and Jell Duncan .
LOGAN : Jeff Stewart and Don Sigler.
MEIGS : Ted Lehew and John Thomas.
WAVERLY : Jell Lightle and Tom Varney .
WELLSTON : Danny Sellles and Ron Argabright.
HONORARY MEMBER
Rick Krebs - Logan
5-11 186 Sr .
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Hal Spears - Ironlon
COACH OF YEAR
Gerald Inbody - Athens

please
By Dec.1 st

By Dec. 10th

•

+

•

NHL St1ndlngs
By United Press lnternalional
American Conference
East
W. L. T. Pet.
Miami
7 I I .875
Baltimore
7 2 0 .778
4
New England
5 0 .~44
NY Jets
3 6 0 .333
Buffalo
0 9 9 .000
Centr~l

Pittsburgh
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Houston

w.

4

4
2

I

West
W.
Oakland
6
Kansas City
6
San Diego
3
Denver
2

St. Louis

L. T.

s
5
7
7

Pet.

0 AM
0

.4~4

0 .222
1 .125

L. T. Pet.
I 2 .857
2 I .ISO
5 0 .375
6 I .250

3

s o .375

:.

Many team and individual
records were broken or tied
during the recently completed
1971 SEOAL football campaign.
Another record of sorts was
established Sunday at Ute fall
meeting of the SEO Sportswriters and Broadcasters
Association meeting in Jackson
to select the 1971 All-SEOAL
Football Team.
For the first time in history
the group, which was organized
in 1949, welcomed a female
sportswriter as a regu1ar,
authorized,
dues-paying
member.
The new member Is Sis
Baker, representing the
Wellston Sentry newspaper.
Mrs. Baker Is the former
Mary Starr of Wellston and is
the sister of two former gridiron
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Newark Catholic 20
Portsmouth Notre Dame a

Akron St. Vincent 21 Akron
Hoban 7

Mllssillon 29 Canton McKinley 6

Steubenville Central Catholic 28
Austintown FitchO
Cincinnati Withrow 7
Clnclnnall Woodward 6
Cincinnati St. Xavier 33

Cincinnati Purcell7
Easlmoor
20
Columbus
Columbus linden 9
Parma 28 Cleveland HeiQht. 12
Cleveland East 32 Cleveland J.
Adams 22
East Canton 10 Malvern 0
Cleveland Bened ictine 37
Cleveland Collinwood 8
Cleveland South 24 Cleveland
W Tech 0
University School 8 Western
Rsv Acdy 6

;;

Minnesota
7 2 0 .778
Chicago
6 3 0 .667
standouts of the Golden Rocket Detroit
5 J 1 .625
3 s 1 .375
teams in the late 1940's and Green Bay
West
early 50's.
W. L. T. Pet
Her brothers are Jack Starr San Francisco 6 3 0 .667
5 3 I .625
and yoWlger brother Dick, who Los Angeles
Atlanta
4 4 I .500
was named to Ute All-s.EOAL New Orleans
J 4 2 .429
learn in 19S3 after playing Wlder
Sunday's Results
Ute late Rocket coach, Ben Baltimore I~ NY Jets 13
New England 38 Buffalo JJ
Wilson.
Los Angeles 21 Detroit 13
"Sis," as she prefers to be NY Giants 21 Atlanta 17
called, is the mother of Utree Miami 24 Pittsburgh 21
children, Tommy, age 11, Minnesota J Green Bay 0
Dallas 20 Philadelphia 7
Karen, age 9, and four-year old Chicago 16 Washington IS
Kelly, a beautiful little Wellston Cincinnati 24 Denver 10
Kansas City 13 Cleveland 7
futur , majorette.
Oakland
~• Houston 21
Sun• •Y she participated in New Orleans
26 San Francisco
Ute nominations and balloting 20
IOnly games scheduled I
for Ute 1971 team and did it with
Games
the poise of any male coun- St. LoisMond•y's
at San Diego Inight)
terpart.
IOnly games scheduled)
Sund1y's Game~
Sis also enjoys one other
advantage in her profession, as Dallas at Washington
Denver at Kansas City
her husband, Torn, is one of Ute Detroilal Chicago
co-head coaches of Ute Wellston Houston at Cincinnati
Baltimore at Miami
Rocket football team.
Minnesota al New Orleans
A1l one veteran sportswriter New England at Cleveland
observed, "she has scooped me NY Giants at Pittsburgh
all year on football here NY Jets at Buffalo
Philadelphia al 51. Louis
because she lives with Ute San Diego at Oakland
coach."
San Francisco at Los Angeles
(Only games scheduled I
Monday's Gamos
THIS WEEK'S
Greenbay
at Atlanta (night)
OHIO COLLEGE
(Only
game
scheduled]
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
By United Press lntern1tional
Ol&gt;io Slate at Michigan
AHL Standings
Bowling Green at Dayton
By United Press Intern1tion•l
Kent State at Toledo (n )
Eut
Cincinnati al Miami
W. L. T. Pis
Ol&gt;io University at Marshall
Boston
11 I 2 24
Xavier at Northern Illinois
Springfield
8 J J 19
Central State at Tennessee Nova Scot1a
7 S 3 17
State
Rochester
6 8 J IS
Youngstown State at Akron
Providence
~
9 5 13
Baldwin-Wallace at Ashland
·West
Findlay at Wilmington
W. L. T. Pis
Ohio Northern at Georgetown Hershey
10 2 2 22
IKyl .
Cincinnati
6 4 s 17
N - night game
Cleveland
s 7 4 1~
Baltimore
4 10 ~ 12
Richmond
4 7 2 10
Tidewater
J 12 J 9
Sunday Results
Hershey 5 Clnclnnatl 4
Nova Scotia 2 Richmond 1
Springfield~ Providence 3
Tidewater 5 Baltimore 2
Boston 4 Rochester 1
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)

New York
Montreal
Boston
Toronto
Vancouver
Buffalo
Detroit

members of the Southeastern ·coach, and athletic director at
Ohio Sportswriters and A-thens before accepting the
Broadcasters Association.
head coaching post this year.
Assisted by Ute league's head
A Iota] of 33 players were
coaches the members named recommended by the eight
five players from Ironton and head coaches and of this
four from Athens of the 22 group 14 1!3cks and eight
players accorded positions on linemen were selected by the
Ute all-league team.
members to be honored at the
In lbe race for most AU.SEOAL Football Banquet
valuable player honors
in Ironton in December.
Ironton's fine quarterback,
Six of Ute players chosen are
Hal Spears, won out over repeaters from last year's team
latlback Pete Neal of and include Mike Green of
GalllpoUs, who led the.league Athens, Pete Neal and Chuck
in rushing and scoring.
'pVood of Gallipolis, Hal Spears
Gerald Inbody, concluding his and Bobby Smith of Ironton,
first season as head coach of the and Tiny WiUiams of Meigs.
Athens Bulldogs, was selected Rick Krebs, Logan's great
over . Coach Bob Bruney of tailback and an unaniroous
Ironton for coach of Ute year. choice on last year's team, was
Inbody, who succeeded Don accorded an honorary rnernEskey at the helm of Ute bership this year after playing
Bulldogs, guided the team to a in only Utree league games
9-1 season record and 6-1 in Ute before suffering a crippling
SEOAL.
knee injury that required
He formerly coached at the surgery.
old The Plains high school Five players of Ute 22 were
before it consolidated with unanimous choices, receiving 15
Athens five years ago and had votes each and included Neal
served as an eighUt grade and Wood of Gallipolis, Spears
coach, assistant basketball and Jiro Payne of Ironton, and

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Coach Hank Stram followed his
usual procedcre Sunday. His
Kansas City Chiefs built a lead,
then sat on the football while
the defense flexed its muscles.
The strategy · could have
backfired, but didn't primarily
because the Cleveland Browns
ran out of tiroe.
The Chiefs built a I~ halftime lead, then held Ute
Browns until Ute final two minutes when Bill Nelsen flipped
four straight completions, Ute
last one an 11!-yarder to Milt
Morin for a score.
But Ute touchdown didn't
come Wl til 55 seconds remained and Ute Chiefs successfully
maintained control of the ball
until tiroe ran out for a
13-7 victory.

11

EBERSBACH HOWE. CO;·

. now. Main

This trophy award will be
similar to those now awarded in
the Big Ten and Mid-American
Conferences with eight points
for a championship, seven for
second place, six for third, and
etc.
A committee composed of
Earl James,. Waverly, Tom
Metiers , Athens , and Odie
O'Donnell , Gallipolis , was
authorized to consult principals
and athletic directors of Ute

The payoff came OQ a 26-yard
swing pass to Wendell Hayes.
The big running back tip-toed
down the sidelines, hurdling a
defender at the five and diving
into the end zone.
The Chiefs held Leroy Kelly
and Scott to 45 yards rushing
in 19 carries.
. "The fact Utat we were able
to contain Kelly and Scott is a
great compliroent to our de-

1t wasn't very spectacular/' Phipps for the first time since

Stram conceded, "but it was a
win and that's important."
Added Cleveland's Nick Skorich : "Our defensive team played well. Unfortunately, our offensive team wasn't able to put
enough points on the board.
We made some adjustments at
halftime which enabled us to
stop Kansas City, but then we
proceeded to hurt ourselves
with interceptions and a fumble."
Emmitt Thomas picked off
two of Mike Phipps' passes at
the Chiefs' end of the field and
Willie Lanier recovered a Bo
Scott fumble at the Kansas
City 17.
Skorich did not insert Neisen
until 13: 28 remained in the
game, choosing to go wiUt

Ute exhibition season.
The loss was the Browns'
fourth straight, the first time
Ute team has lost that many in
a row in its 26-year history.
Still, the Browns remained
tied with Pittsburgh, boUt at
oh'i, for the lead in the American Football Conference's Central Division.
The Chiefs, trailing Oakland
in the Western Division with a
6-2-1 record, scored all their
points in the first hall.
Jan Stenerud kicked 14 and
27-yard field goals before Len
Dawson guided Kansas City 86
yards to its lone touchdown in
Ute second quarter. Dawson hit
4-of-4 in Ute seven-play drive,
including a 24-yarder to Morris
Stroud.

fense,"

By United Press International three points for the Lakers, but
Is Los Angeles joining Mil- his contribution was on defense
waukee in making a runaway where he blocked 13 shots and
of NBA division titles'
on offense with 10 assists. He
Milwaukee, as expected, also grabbed 31 rebounds.
raised its record to IS-I Sunday The Lakers were relegated to
night ~ith a ~25-114 victory an also-ran status by many
over Phtladelphta. Los Angeles, after Elgin Baylor retired, but
unexpectedly, is off to a 14-3 Los Angeles has surprised its
record. The Lakers beat Bos- critics .
ton, 128-115, Sunday.
Jo Jo White of Boston shared
The Bucks, who set a record game scoring honors with 36
of 15 consecutive victories last points as Ute Celtics maintained
season, continued to roll as Uteir one-game lead over
Kareem Jabbar ripped the Philadelphia in the Eastern
76ers for 46 points to make it Conference.
eighth straight for Milwaukee.
Philadelphia, contesting Boston for Ute Atlantic Division
SEASON UNDERWAY
lead, closed to Utree points at COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
99-96 in the fourth period, but upland game hunting season
Jabbar lanced the 76er began today in Ohio.
comeback with some quick Rabbiis were expected to be
point work.
most numerous in central, south
Tries To Rally Philly
central,
southwest
and
Billy CWlningharn attempted southeast sections of the state.
to rally Philadelphia with his 32 Pheasants can be found in
points, but the Milwaukee central and west central
firepower was too devastating counties and quail in south
as Jon McGlocklln added 22 central, west central and southpoints and Bob Dandridge west counties.
netted 19 for the Bucks.
The victory opened a fivegame bulge over t;:hicago in the
Midwest Division.
Los Angeles moved three
gaiDes up on Seattle and
Golden State in the Pacific ·
Division as the Lakers' backcourt duo of Gall Goodrich and
Jerry West dominated Boston.
Goodrich scored 30 of his 36
points in the first half and West
took up Ute cannonading with 13
points in the Utird quarter ·
enroute loa 26-point night.
WUt Scores 3 Points
Wilt Chamberlain scored only

Dick Van Arsdale scored 21
points as the Phoenix Suns beat
the . Cleveland Cavaliers, 119·
105, in the only other SWlday
action .
Cleveland, despite a 4-11
record, is only 211! games out of
first place in Ute Central
Division. The Cavs were led by
Charlie Davis' 21 points.
Lasting Record
Two players s h a r e the
1
NFL record for most dropkick field goals in one game.
Paddy Driscoll of the Chlrago Cardinals and Elbert
Bloodgood ol Kansas City
each k i c k e d four In one
g a m e, Driscoll In 1925,
Bloodgood in 1926.

Stram said.

Pomeroy,O.

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

DauiW...Ia
"""""
114 Court
St. 992-:INI
......,.,

358 Second Avenue
Phone 446-1973

r------:-- - -- -- - - - - - - - -

Wilkes 1Pa.) 41 Muskingum 6
Heidelberg 21 Marietta 13
Central State 21 Wayne State 14
Wash . &amp; Jeff . 27 Kenyon 15
Kalamazoo IMich .) 14 Hiram 6
Case Western Reserve 29
Carnegie Mellon 19
Mount Union 40 John Carroll 20
Oh io Northern 13 Findlay 7
Capital 35 Otterbein 20
Wilmington 37 Rose Po!y 23

LARRY'S ASHLAND
SERVIa STAnON
190 Mulberry Ave.

lnturlftCII
Aveni
·o.IeW•n.r

NEED MORE THAN THIS ?
We bave loans up to·

Lour aud war li11e sidr by &gt;Jdr
"' ihr history of mm1. A 1vorld of s.td
m1d oftr~o cnul conl rasis. 'We as k ''WIJy )'
WIJy poverty ir1a laud of plwty) 'Why almwliou whr11
"'' arr all born lo the sa me family of 111au1 Jhe aching
chasm brtwern ihr rral mrd the 1dral rvery~ lmr
provokts ill&lt; qurstro11 .

HY?

In a world looking for answers
maybe God is the place to start.
God is hope. God is now.

g

Phone· 992-2366

992-2811

"The

Browns are a dangerous team.
They could catch fire and
knock you right out of the box
at any time."
Frank Pitts, traded by the
Chiefs to the Browns earlier
Utis season, was the leading
pass receiver. Pitts caught five
passes for 129 yards.

Lakers Are Off And Running

MIANS IAJIJrACJrOH eUAIAHriU

.;

league schools to work out
details on Ute award.
Members were bopelul lbal
the first trophy of tbls tyte
could be awarded at tbe end
of the currenl school year.
Association members attending Sunday's meeting were
Frank Houston, WIRO, Iron tor. ;
Harold Roach, Ironton Tribune ;
Bud McGhee, WMPO, Middleport ; Keith Wisecup,
Pomeroy Sentinel; Williard
Fitzpatrick, WLMJ, Jackson; .
Dave Mossbarger, Jackson Sun
Journal ; Torn Metiers, AU!ens
Messenger; Jim Myers, Logan
Daily News ; Lee Hamilton,
WLGN, Logan; Bill Grey,
Odie
WJEH , Gallipolis;
O'Donnell, Gallipolis Tribune;
E a r 1 James, WaverlyWat-·
chman; Bob Roof, WPKO,
Waverly; Sis Baker, Wellston
Sentry; Bob Willis, Wellston
Telegram.

Browns Lose Again,13-

Keep up your car's start power with
our expert engine tune-up. It's a fast,
inexpensive job that pays big dividends
with trouble-free starts all winter long.
Bring in your car-today.
I

'

ceremony.
In other business Sunday,
Earl James of the Waverly
News· was elevated from vice
president of. the organization
to president to succeed Lee
Hamilton, WLGN, Logan,
who has accepted a new radio
position In Utica.
Frank Houston, Radio WIRO,
Ironton, was then elected vice
president to fill the vacancy .
Following
a
lengthy
discussion the association then
voted to award an All.Sports
trophy to the SEOAL school
with the best all-around athletic
program.

Jeff Morris of Meigs.
Only two juniors were named
to the 22-man squad as 1971
appeared to be the year of the
seniors.
The pair of underclassmen
who will return next yeur in
SEOAL competition are Ken
· Culbertson , a 200-pound
fullback from Logan, and Don
Wood , a powerful 19!l-pound
fullback from Ute c&lt;rehampion
AU!ens Bulldogs.
Head coaches attending
Sunday's meeting to aid in the
selection of the team included
Gerald Inbody, Athens ; John
Ecker, Gallipolis; Bob Bruner,
Ironton; Dick Mikes, Logan ;
Charlie Chancey, Meigs ; Mike
Shumaker , Waverly; Ben
Buckles, Jackson, and cocoaches Tom Baker and .Mark
Mullin of Wellston.
An additional group of 16
players, two from each school,
were named to the select list of
honorable mentions.
Ali of these players will also
attend the banquet in Ironton
and receive certificates of
recognition during the awards

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

By Dec. 15th

!

Monday's Games

(No games scheduled)

L oopNewsmen Have ~~~~f:~::" ; ~ ~ .~~
First Lady Scribe Philadetphiac.nt~.~ ~.

.

!

ABA Stondings
By United Press International
E1st
W. L. Pmt. GB
Virginia
II 5 .668
Kentucky · 10 5 .667
If &gt;
New York
88 .5003
Floridians
7 8 .467 3'12
Piltsburgh 7 10 .~12 ~·I&gt;
!;arol ina
7 9 .357 5
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
9 6 .600
Utah
10 7 .588
Dallas
7 9 .438 2'12
Memphis
7 9 .438 2'12
Denver
4 9 .JOB 4
Sundly's Results
New York 130 Pittsburgh 125
(Only game scheduled) ·

East
W. L. T. Pel.

-

early.

Rro Stand'
'
mgl

National Conference

From·the people
helpt)ring you
ChriStmas...

tz:e:t:Jt8fM&amp;Xl

'

Pomeroy, Ohio
/

�·'
,•·

,

2-'lbf Dally9elllnel,M!Hh,crt-Pwwtoy,O.,Nw. ~.1m

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

1

Voice along BroadWay

.S - The Dilly Sentinel, MlddleportoPamey, 0., Nov, 15, 1971

The Foreign Aid Package

BRUCE BIOSSAT
U.S. Economic Edicts

j

BY JACK O'BRIAN
&amp; 3rd Ave . post office a zoo ... Can't even claim
MAKING UP FOR LOST ROLES
Utey're malemen . Ari &amp; jackie dined at the new
NEW YORK (KFS ) - Audrey Hepburn's. Ma Pomme with her children - surrounded by
neely to pick up Ute greasepaint again ... secret servicemen and some of Ari's own guards
·Everyone Utoughl Lawrence Wellt's 16 years of ... P. J . Clarke's owner .Danny Lavezzo says his
taped TV musicals would earn him a rerun- horse called New Tricia runs like Old Nixon ...
for!Wle. Not so. The sponsor insisted its name go Who always wins eventually, if Utat 's c onsolation
lpl!ng in the middle olthe TV picture (behind the for past losses.
band) at all times, and there went the residuals
Singer-bowling.,show host Johnny Johnston
... Oscar nominee Sylvia Miles talked about one and his Carol decided io give it another try ... In
o1 her ex-llusbands in a news interview and Arizona .. . The Dance Theater of Harlem (for
promptly got a call from the lawyer of one of which gifted ballet star Arthur Mitchell quit the
them (NBC's deejay Ted Brown) warning her to N. Y. City Ballet after 10 years ) has another
cut it out .. . Sylvia's a judge in the current N. Y. ballet coach known in the entrechat set as a
lly IIRUCE BIOSSAT
Erotic Film Festival; wonder how Ted'll like brave kid : Tanaquil LeClercq , ballerina
OSAKA, Japan (NEA )
that ... Sylvia cops out by telling us she doesn't · paralyzed by polio . Teaches .!rom her
I've just seen some of the Japanese p!lople on the lac·
necessarily subscribe to the erotic flicks, "no wheelchair, using her hands alone to
tory assembly lines and m the rnanagenal rooms who are
more than a judge in Supreme Court subscribes choreograph and coach.
"doing it" to us economically. And it's pretty easy to
understand why they're giving us such fits . .
to the guilt or innocence of a murder suspect."
The 5Ut Ave. (at 56th ) Hallmark Gallery's
At Matsushita Electric in the vast industnal complex
Susan Watson relinquished the "No, No, annual Yule tree exhibition (trimmed suparound
this second largest city in Japan, one plant is putNanette" ingenue role, pals say, because she's posedly by VIPs) this year will have fashionable
ting together color television sets. Signs shout remmders
yes, yes expecting ... Tony Curtis has his firs ornamented by such names as Archbishop
that quality is vital.
Bevhills home up for sale. May settle in London Fulton J. Sheen, pitcher Vida Blue, diva Beverly
The girls 1 saw on the lines were dressed in neat blue
uniforms and thin white gloves. They were young- averfor good ... Yanks in Loodon now totallOO,OOO ... Sills, nostalgia maven Busby Berkeley, Rex
age age 23. Guided by simply marked blueprints, they
TV's Sandy Duncan (recuperating from drastic Reed, Doris Day, Joe Frazier and other ulterior
were
doing intricate wiring and soldering work ·w1th
eye surgery) won't tell her husband actor- decorations ... Beautiful Helen O'Connell tunes
speed skill efficiency and enormous concentration.
composer Bruce Scott Zahariades why she or- up her perennially hardy tonsils at Ute Rainbow
Tho~gh they were shoulder to shoulder on the lines,
dered him out of their house . "I don't want a Grill Nov. 15 for three weeks ... Canada Dry did
there was little talking . It was no soctal center. But
divorce," he torched at Ute Piraeus My Love well a year ago with a panel of stars rapping on
neither was it a sweatshop. It was just a very businesslikP
Greek spot, "and I'm hoping Sandy will come to drugs, sex, politics and repeats this year with a
workshop.
In Nagoya, an hour's .train ride away, young rn~le
her senses. She won't even accept my phone "Love and Money" (notice the "and" isn't "or" )
workers
were going at 1t the same way, assembling
calls.
panel sounding off on that titular subject: inautomobiles for Toyota , Japan's biggest and the world's
Ex-NBC newsie Sander Vanocur is eluding Mel Brooks (funniest man in the world),
fourth largest car manufacturer. The assembly work is
recuperating from a busted leg, a ditto heart Carl Reiner , Tony Randall, Peggy Cass and Don
set up in a fashio~ that hardly allows workers l? cluster
for idle conversatiOn. The JOb gets all the attention.
(Shirley MacLaine, who switched to Pete Adams, ABC-TV just before Christmas.
At Matsushita the company tries to control quality
Hamill) and a few sour grapes against the
Artist Isabelle Magar's oils at the Carlyle
by makin'g most of the components it need~ for
partly
networks where he earned his rich bread so long Hotel's Van Der Straeton Gallery have an
the television set. It devtses tls own automated machmes .
... Sandy did some public beefing about networks unexpected, or is it, irobalance of onlookers:
The Dai~ Sentinel
some of them computer-controlled. More and mo~e . of
DEVOTED TO THE
letting themselves be used as propaganda more attention is drawn to Bishop Sheen's
these are being invented. Soon much of the hand wmng
INTEREST OF
podiums for politicians ; precisely what he was portrait Ulan to Jackie Onassis at age 14 ... The
by whole lines of girls will be done mechanically.
MEIGS·MASON AREA
For years now, Japanese auto makers and television
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.
accused of when he marched at enthusiastic and 30 Ritual Persian Acrobats at the Brooklyn
Exec. Ed.
uncritical length behind the Kennedys.
Academy of Art are making their first apROBERT HOEFLICH .
set makers have been selling quality and making it go
City Editor
. big especially in the g r e a t American market. Now
'Last Vegas casino manager has a per- pearance since they entertained the inPub l is hed da i ly e x cept I
they've been called up short. They've been told-and they
manent bodyguard after an attempted burnpoff. ternational swells during Iran's 2,500th anSat ur day by The Ohio Valley
and
many others in Japan agree-that they've been pushPubi 1Sh 1ng Company , 111
Plus a phone call ("Next time we won't miss" as niversary bash.
Court Sl , . Pomeroy , Oh io.
ing their products too hard in the United States.
45 769 Bus iness Ofl ice Phone
they did with four shots) ... Faces in Places: The
Muhammad Ali's trainer, Bundini Brown, at
The figures are indeed astonishin~. Th~ car makers'
99 2-2156, Ed 1tor ial Phone 992 ·
Sen. Jake Javits catching "The Last Picture Ute Skylioe Motor Inn 'said Sugar Ray Robinson
trade association shows that in the f1rst etght months of
1157 .
Second class postage pa id at
Show" at the last picture show.
was the greatest in all ring history. That's our
1971 their exports to the United States were S2ll.OOO units.
Pomeroy , Oh io .
surpassing the 42ll,OOO sent to us in all 1970 and the t969
Insurance : a dozen priests sat on the Notre opinion, too, but we don' t have to pass Ali's
Nat 1onat
adverti s ing
annual total or 280,000.
representat1ve
Bolf i nelli
Dame bench versus Navy . Plus eleven prayers loyalty tests ... W. 56th St. near 20th-Fox's N.Y .
Gallagher. Inc .• 12 East 42nd
Says Seishi Kato, vice-president of Toyota:
nate
enough
to
live
in
a
lo·
on the field ... Dina Merrill stole Ute scene at offices is being patrolled closely by the cops and B~· Lawrence Lamb. M.n.
Sr .• New York City , New York
"lt will not be wise lor us to increase exports to the
cality where a suicide pre·
Subscription rates : oe .
Michel Kazan's from younger zofticker Raquel Feds: known junkie shooting galleries nearby .. .
United
States over the present level."
.
l
i
vered
by
carr
i
er
where
!lear Ilr. Lamb _ Plea se vent ion center is active. help a v ailable 50 c ents per week ;
Welch ... Cops are cracking down on trans- Andy Griffith &amp; his wife are like aw, shucks, but
In
plain
fact,
the
Japanese
makers
of
cars
and
televihelp me . 1 don 't understand . can be gotten m v..enods of By Motor Route whefe carrier
sion sets may, one way or another, cut back from curvestites who make the f!laza in front of the 54th maybe just a tiff . .
what' s wrong. nned lo kill severe stress by callmg the serv 1ce not ava il able . One
rent record exports to America. Voluntary restraints are
month S1.75 . By mall in Ohio
myse lf today w1t h an over- center. lf you have one, 11 and
.---------------------~-----1
w. Va , One year 514 .00
being
discussed as one element in a possible " package' ·
WIN AT BRIDGE dose of pill s. but I couldn 't wtll be hsled m your tele- Six month s 57 .25 . Three arrangement
Japan might work out in economic talks
1 don't under stand wh y I was phone d1rectory. These cen· month s \4 .50 . Sub s cript ion
with
the
United
States.
price
in
cludes
Sunday
T
i
mes
.
put on earth . Everyone was ters have saved a lot of hves Sent1n e1.
But
all
this
really
stuns these industrial managers. They
rut here for some reason . and helped man Y people
are
more
than
a
little
intoxicated with their amazing outbut I don 't ha ve one . I'm 18. through some rough spots .
Helen Bottel
put and are genuinely upset and frustrated over the idea
still shy, 1 dislike people.
Overeatin g to the degree
Clara is a Latin name that some damper may have to be put on Uteir efforts.
THOSE MARRIED "BACHELORS"
and . at the present. rm ver y ) ou de sc nbe is ofte.n part or which means "bright ; illusThey do not yield easily. At Matsushita, officials talked
ashamed of myself for gam- the picture of emollonal dt S· trious."
Dear Helen:
convincingly of devising new clock radios and other elecing back 20 pounds in one lress.
How can wives expect to keep their husbands when the
tronic goodies so attractive that American buyers won ' t
NORTH
month . 1 eat u n t i I I get
No one should ignore an·
15
"single" life is made so attractive?
The curved tail of the sea· be able to resist them. At another car maker's plant,
physically sick . l don 't know other person 's "cry for help'' horse
.AK10
o3
is used for holding on Toyo Kogyo in Hiroshima , I rode -100 miles an hour on a
Over half the fellows in my husband's place of business are
why , bul it' s drivmg me when he talks about his to narrow
¥Q S
bfades of turtle track in a car with a new rotary engine that promises
divorced. They live in "singles" apartments and maintain
crazy . I hate myse lf beca use death wish or suicide. It is grasgcor seaweed
• Q4
,. whiclllhey compact efficiency, less vibration, less pollution.
IIWingin' bachelor pads that naturally turn married men green
•KQ o2
ol il.
.,
t1me to li sten and to try to do most of the time .
(HEWSPAPil ENTUPIISE ASSH .)
Willi envy.
·
l'·
WEST ( D )
EAST
1 hate to hale myself. but ge t help .
• 8j
About Utree-fourths of the still-married men have a little
when 1 lost tha t 20 pounds I
¥AKJ84
3
•
10
9
6
2
was never so proud of mysomething going on Ute side. They figure it's their due.
t KB S
tl0 9 7 2
self
in my entire life . There
And divorce Is so EASY these days: if you wake up one
oloJ95
oloAlOJ
was .pr1de to live on Now
morning and think "All this responsibility isn't for me," by
SOUTH
there 's no pride and I want
evening you can set the wheels in motion to have your marriage
.QJ94 2
to die so badl y.
dissolved. That goes for women as well as men but, if the woman
¥7
The main reason tha t 1
t AJ6 3
has children, she isn't so apt to follow her inclinations.
can 't go through with my
... 874
I'm not really worried about my own security - yet; but with
suicide allempts is because
Both vulnerable
I don 't want to hurt anyone
all Ute temptation around -girls Utrowing themselves at married
West North East South
1es peciaily my famil yt. I've
men, conventions, persuasive high-flyers (male) who poke fun at
1¥
Dble
2¥
tried
to explain my problems
the "faithful Fenways," Ute free stnff waiting at bars, etc.- how
Pass
4•
Pass Pass
to my mother but she just
loog will it be before my good faithful husband decides he's
Pass
laug hs and says thai 1 don't
missing out on the action? -GETTING MORE WORRIED WITH
Opening lead - ¥ K
have an y problems.
EACH WRINKLE
1 hate myself and 1 don 't
Dear GMWWEW:
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby want to live, but I'm scared
''Good, faithful husbands' may dream a bit (as do good faithOswald : "The new ency· 10 die . Please help me. I'm
ful wives, right') but if home fires keep burning extra bright, only clopedia of bridge is out. It so miserable. Thank you for
is a wonderful compendium being there . lt gives a per·
their minds wander - usually.
son someone to talk to.
Here's an added Utought: if the single life were so action- ol bridge information ."
Jim : "The first sample
near Reader- ! hope you
packed-great, how come divorced men remarry at such a fast
hand
is
under
the
title
'Asare
feeling better now . The
clip?
sumptions in p I a y.' The best thing I could think of to
... And I refuse to believe that "Utree-fourths of all married game is rubber bridge so
help you was to ha ve the
men" have a little something going on the side. Even our free and South wants to be sure of New York Suic1de Prevene&amp;llY modern world doesn't offer THAT much opportunity. -H. his contracl ·' He ruffs the tion Center informed of your
second hear! and d r a w s ~roblem and hope they could
Dear Helen:
arrange for someone near
The man I've been going with for two years was involved wiUt trumps with two leads ."
Oswald : " If West holds the your home to get in touch
an older woman. Jon lived with this 40-year-old dame before he ace of clubs and East the
with you .
met me, but we thoughtshewasoutofhis life for good.
king of diamonds, South will
M a n y young people do
The other day, while he was visiling me, she moved all her make an overtrick. If either
h
a
v e emotional problems.
holds
both
South
opponent
stuff into his new apartment. Told Ute (very priro) landlady she
Health
authorities at col·
was his wife and got away with it. Sinee then Jon has been staying will make his contract by
leges
and
universities will
leading clubs toward dumm y
at my place ashe doesn'tknow how to face her.
bear
this
out.
It is a difficult
and diam onds loward his
What worries me is Utat this woman is a strong believer in hand ."
time, establishing life values
Jim "South should start and goals . You are not
Voodoo and other mystic stuff, and she has Jon scared, too. He
here
with his assumption s. unique in having difficulty .
may be enticed back against his wiU -and who knows what will
West
has
opened the bidding .
happen to me, if she starts sticking pins in my image'
Almost everyone has had
East has gi ven a s i n g 1 e temporary thoughts of SUI1:1 there some way we can safety get rid of her? - SCARED raise. Between t h e m they
cide. If it is anything more
(HANNAH AND JON)
·'
h o 1 d ¥A K J +K "'A J in than a temporary thought
Dear Hannah and Jon:
high cards. West must hold such a person should talk
What you're asking is "how to undo Voodoo." That's easy: either the t K or the oloA lor over the problem with his
simply don't believe in it! "Hexes" only work because the vic- lois opener : East a I m o s t doctor. Sometimes it will be
surely holds the other for his necessary to see a psychiatim's imagination produces symptoms, so forget all that magic 1aise."
trist to rtiscuss one's probmumbo jumbo and tell the lady to leave.
Oswald : "Aller these as· lems, to resolve the inner
H she won't go peacefully, I'm quite ~ure Jon's landlady will sumptions, South plays ab· conflicts that have led to so
persuade her - after she discovers there is no marriage cer- solutely safe lor his contract much unhappiness.
by leading a diamond toward
tificate. - 11.
For people who are forlu·
dummy's queen . This will
Dear Helen:
cost him a diamond trick if
I'm 63, alone, with only one close relative, my brother who is East holds the king, but then
10 years younger. He lives 600 miles away and is constantly West will hold the club ace
11te Almana
calllng me on the phone - only to deal out abuse. If I tell him I'm As it is , West holds the dia•
mond king . lf he takes it. By United Press lute · ilona!
not well and can't take his meanness, he curses me.
South
can
discard
two
clubs
Today
is
Monday,
l'&lt;ov.
15,
He misconstrues everything I write in my letters, then calls to I rom dummy on the ace-jack
tell me how worthless I am. He's constantly bringing up old un- of diamonds . If he ducks ihe 319th day of 1971.
pleasantness ..,. what happened when we were children, and how South will not lose a dia- The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
mond."
ourparen(salways favored me (as if that were my fault!).
The morning star is Saturn.
(N£WSP.A.P(R ENTERPRISE ASSN .!
He left home 30 year~ ago, and never once helped wiUt the old
The evening stars are Mercu•
folks - 1stayed home aw· "" ' r them until they passed on. He
ry, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
and his wife visit me once .
1d he picks at every little thing
Those born on this day are
until I'm a nervolls wreck by 1he time they leave.
under the sign of Scorpio.
The bJdd in.': has been :
He has a good life - grown children, an executive position. We!it NOrth' East South British astronomer William
'lbere'a DO reason for his bad temper. It's as if he enjoys making
It
Herschel was born Nov. 15,
•
Dble
Pass
P
t'lsS
1
•
me cry,
•
.,
1783.
.
. 14
Pa ss
' Yet, be'aaU the famlly I have, and still my "little brother." Pass
••
On this day in history:
You, South. hold :
0
rrlendl 117 to hang up on hhn. 1:1 this the only way? - OLDER .AQ4 ¥K6 tAQI085 ... KII19 In 1492 the first recorded
Mail all out-of-town packages. Mall all local packages and
Mail all local cards. Thanks•
llS'I'ER
.
What do y ou· do now ?
·we'll be sure to deliver
out-of-town cards. Christmas
reference to tobacco was made.
and Happy Holidays I
"
A-Pass. Yuu arc happ,,· with by Christopher Columbus, notlhem by Christmas.
means a lot more when it's on time.
Dllr Sliter:
spades. but dun't wanl tn in ft'a tbe anly way - unless you subconsciously want to be a vite a J(&amp;mc.
ing in his journal the use of it
t~ru•osr\
..,.... ,,.,.. pu11CbinC bag. A woman who has expended most cif
by the Indians he had found in
TODA Y'S QUESTIO!\
•
••
1111' lift• IMr r.mlb' 11111 be programmed to "take it" the rest of , West bids two hearts. Thi ~ 'i:-; the New World.
•
Wilt, 10 1 bnU Wllll't be euy. But It also may not be per- passed e~ round to .vou . Wh ut do In 1806.explorer Zebulon Pike
•' • *•••••
sighted the Rocky Mountain
T
I; w11111 yGIII' bra&amp;ber realizes you'll only listen if he's civil, yo'u do'!
Sp.1ce lor II)IS 3dver!lscmcn tll as Oeen ronli1butcd ,15 a P111J1Ic Strwlt'~ hy lh l ~ nl•w~p.1prr.
pe~k lhal.bears his name.
t..:.::::.:.::::..:;;.:;::;;;;;;:;.::::::..::.::.:..::::..:::::.::.:::::::.:::~::::::::.:.:::.:.:::.:.:::.:.;;;;;;:.;;:;:.;,:__-:--.:....-.:....-----:------------......1.:
Ans',\'c•· 1'1tRIIIITit\\
• "4llll
r 1111 ~~me. - H.
'

Morris, T. Williams, Lee, on All-SEOAL Squad
.

Damper on

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Talk. It Over With Your Doctor

Suicide Thoughts
Not Unique

!Helen ·Help Us\
I

By

!

Assump t 'IOnS

GUI'd e PI. ay

.,

By ODIE O'DONNELL
Athens and Ironton, 1971 cochampions of the SEOAL,
dominated Ute 1971 edition of
Ute AUSEOAL football team
selected Sunday at Jackson by

1971 SEOAL
Dream Team

Japan's

Industry?

1971 ALL-SEOAL FOOTBALL SQUAD
BACKS
PLAYER-SCHOOL
HT. WT. YR . .
Don Wood - Athens
6·1 190 Jr.
Mike Green - Athens
6·2 175 Sr.
Stu Smith- Athens
S-8 165 Sr.
Pete Neal-Gallipolis
6-0 181 Sr .
Larry Snowden - Gallipolis
5-9 •~a Sr.
Hal Spears - Ironton
6-1 185 Sr.
Jim Payne -Ironton
5·11 165 Sr.
Bobby Smith - Ironton
5·8 185 Sr.
Rick Boy kin - Ironton
6-0 200 Sr.
Greg Smith - Logan
5-8 •~o Sr.
Ken Culbertson - Logan
6-1 205 Jr.
Tiny Williams - Meigs
5·11 178 Sr .
Toby Helton - Waverly
5·5 145 Sr .
Terry Stewart - Wellston
5-10 160 Sr .
LINEMEN
Allan Ackerman - Athens
6-0 223 Sr .
6-1 210 Sr .
Chuck Wood - Gallipolis
6-0 190 Sr.
Mike AI brink .,- Ironton
S-9 183 Sr.
Dave Beckley - Jackson
Chris Onder a - Jackson
6-J 185 Sr.
Brian Davidson - Logan
6·0 185 Sr.
6·3 190 Sr .
Jell Morris - Meigs
6·2 201 Sr .
Fred Lee - Meigs
HONORABLE MENTION
ATHENS: Jim Swearingen and Jim Scott.
GALI.IPOLIS: Eric Saunders and Jim Miller.
IRONTON : Benny Scherer and Steve Massey .
JACKSON : Kenny Valentine and Jell Duncan .
LOGAN : Jeff Stewart and Don Sigler.
MEIGS : Ted Lehew and John Thomas.
WAVERLY : Jell Lightle and Tom Varney .
WELLSTON : Danny Sellles and Ron Argabright.
HONORARY MEMBER
Rick Krebs - Logan
5-11 186 Sr .
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Hal Spears - Ironlon
COACH OF YEAR
Gerald Inbody - Athens

please
By Dec.1 st

By Dec. 10th

•

+

•

NHL St1ndlngs
By United Press lnternalional
American Conference
East
W. L. T. Pet.
Miami
7 I I .875
Baltimore
7 2 0 .778
4
New England
5 0 .~44
NY Jets
3 6 0 .333
Buffalo
0 9 9 .000
Centr~l

Pittsburgh
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Houston

w.

4

4
2

I

West
W.
Oakland
6
Kansas City
6
San Diego
3
Denver
2

St. Louis

L. T.

s
5
7
7

Pet.

0 AM
0

.4~4

0 .222
1 .125

L. T. Pet.
I 2 .857
2 I .ISO
5 0 .375
6 I .250

3

s o .375

:.

Many team and individual
records were broken or tied
during the recently completed
1971 SEOAL football campaign.
Another record of sorts was
established Sunday at Ute fall
meeting of the SEO Sportswriters and Broadcasters
Association meeting in Jackson
to select the 1971 All-SEOAL
Football Team.
For the first time in history
the group, which was organized
in 1949, welcomed a female
sportswriter as a regu1ar,
authorized,
dues-paying
member.
The new member Is Sis
Baker, representing the
Wellston Sentry newspaper.
Mrs. Baker Is the former
Mary Starr of Wellston and is
the sister of two former gridiron
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Newark Catholic 20
Portsmouth Notre Dame a

Akron St. Vincent 21 Akron
Hoban 7

Mllssillon 29 Canton McKinley 6

Steubenville Central Catholic 28
Austintown FitchO
Cincinnati Withrow 7
Clnclnnall Woodward 6
Cincinnati St. Xavier 33

Cincinnati Purcell7
Easlmoor
20
Columbus
Columbus linden 9
Parma 28 Cleveland HeiQht. 12
Cleveland East 32 Cleveland J.
Adams 22
East Canton 10 Malvern 0
Cleveland Bened ictine 37
Cleveland Collinwood 8
Cleveland South 24 Cleveland
W Tech 0
University School 8 Western
Rsv Acdy 6

;;

Minnesota
7 2 0 .778
Chicago
6 3 0 .667
standouts of the Golden Rocket Detroit
5 J 1 .625
3 s 1 .375
teams in the late 1940's and Green Bay
West
early 50's.
W. L. T. Pet
Her brothers are Jack Starr San Francisco 6 3 0 .667
5 3 I .625
and yoWlger brother Dick, who Los Angeles
Atlanta
4 4 I .500
was named to Ute All-s.EOAL New Orleans
J 4 2 .429
learn in 19S3 after playing Wlder
Sunday's Results
Ute late Rocket coach, Ben Baltimore I~ NY Jets 13
New England 38 Buffalo JJ
Wilson.
Los Angeles 21 Detroit 13
"Sis," as she prefers to be NY Giants 21 Atlanta 17
called, is the mother of Utree Miami 24 Pittsburgh 21
children, Tommy, age 11, Minnesota J Green Bay 0
Dallas 20 Philadelphia 7
Karen, age 9, and four-year old Chicago 16 Washington IS
Kelly, a beautiful little Wellston Cincinnati 24 Denver 10
Kansas City 13 Cleveland 7
futur , majorette.
Oakland
~• Houston 21
Sun• •Y she participated in New Orleans
26 San Francisco
Ute nominations and balloting 20
IOnly games scheduled I
for Ute 1971 team and did it with
Games
the poise of any male coun- St. LoisMond•y's
at San Diego Inight)
terpart.
IOnly games scheduled)
Sund1y's Game~
Sis also enjoys one other
advantage in her profession, as Dallas at Washington
Denver at Kansas City
her husband, Torn, is one of Ute Detroilal Chicago
co-head coaches of Ute Wellston Houston at Cincinnati
Baltimore at Miami
Rocket football team.
Minnesota al New Orleans
A1l one veteran sportswriter New England at Cleveland
observed, "she has scooped me NY Giants at Pittsburgh
all year on football here NY Jets at Buffalo
Philadelphia al 51. Louis
because she lives with Ute San Diego at Oakland
coach."
San Francisco at Los Angeles
(Only games scheduled I
Monday's Gamos
THIS WEEK'S
Greenbay
at Atlanta (night)
OHIO COLLEGE
(Only
game
scheduled]
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
By United Press lntern1tional
Ol&gt;io Slate at Michigan
AHL Standings
Bowling Green at Dayton
By United Press Intern1tion•l
Kent State at Toledo (n )
Eut
Cincinnati al Miami
W. L. T. Pis
Ol&gt;io University at Marshall
Boston
11 I 2 24
Xavier at Northern Illinois
Springfield
8 J J 19
Central State at Tennessee Nova Scot1a
7 S 3 17
State
Rochester
6 8 J IS
Youngstown State at Akron
Providence
~
9 5 13
Baldwin-Wallace at Ashland
·West
Findlay at Wilmington
W. L. T. Pis
Ohio Northern at Georgetown Hershey
10 2 2 22
IKyl .
Cincinnati
6 4 s 17
N - night game
Cleveland
s 7 4 1~
Baltimore
4 10 ~ 12
Richmond
4 7 2 10
Tidewater
J 12 J 9
Sunday Results
Hershey 5 Clnclnnatl 4
Nova Scotia 2 Richmond 1
Springfield~ Providence 3
Tidewater 5 Baltimore 2
Boston 4 Rochester 1
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)

New York
Montreal
Boston
Toronto
Vancouver
Buffalo
Detroit

members of the Southeastern ·coach, and athletic director at
Ohio Sportswriters and A-thens before accepting the
Broadcasters Association.
head coaching post this year.
Assisted by Ute league's head
A Iota] of 33 players were
coaches the members named recommended by the eight
five players from Ironton and head coaches and of this
four from Athens of the 22 group 14 1!3cks and eight
players accorded positions on linemen were selected by the
Ute all-league team.
members to be honored at the
In lbe race for most AU.SEOAL Football Banquet
valuable player honors
in Ironton in December.
Ironton's fine quarterback,
Six of Ute players chosen are
Hal Spears, won out over repeaters from last year's team
latlback Pete Neal of and include Mike Green of
GalllpoUs, who led the.league Athens, Pete Neal and Chuck
in rushing and scoring.
'pVood of Gallipolis, Hal Spears
Gerald Inbody, concluding his and Bobby Smith of Ironton,
first season as head coach of the and Tiny WiUiams of Meigs.
Athens Bulldogs, was selected Rick Krebs, Logan's great
over . Coach Bob Bruney of tailback and an unaniroous
Ironton for coach of Ute year. choice on last year's team, was
Inbody, who succeeded Don accorded an honorary rnernEskey at the helm of Ute bership this year after playing
Bulldogs, guided the team to a in only Utree league games
9-1 season record and 6-1 in Ute before suffering a crippling
SEOAL.
knee injury that required
He formerly coached at the surgery.
old The Plains high school Five players of Ute 22 were
before it consolidated with unanimous choices, receiving 15
Athens five years ago and had votes each and included Neal
served as an eighUt grade and Wood of Gallipolis, Spears
coach, assistant basketball and Jiro Payne of Ironton, and

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Coach Hank Stram followed his
usual procedcre Sunday. His
Kansas City Chiefs built a lead,
then sat on the football while
the defense flexed its muscles.
The strategy · could have
backfired, but didn't primarily
because the Cleveland Browns
ran out of tiroe.
The Chiefs built a I~ halftime lead, then held Ute
Browns until Ute final two minutes when Bill Nelsen flipped
four straight completions, Ute
last one an 11!-yarder to Milt
Morin for a score.
But Ute touchdown didn't
come Wl til 55 seconds remained and Ute Chiefs successfully
maintained control of the ball
until tiroe ran out for a
13-7 victory.

11

EBERSBACH HOWE. CO;·

. now. Main

This trophy award will be
similar to those now awarded in
the Big Ten and Mid-American
Conferences with eight points
for a championship, seven for
second place, six for third, and
etc.
A committee composed of
Earl James,. Waverly, Tom
Metiers , Athens , and Odie
O'Donnell , Gallipolis , was
authorized to consult principals
and athletic directors of Ute

The payoff came OQ a 26-yard
swing pass to Wendell Hayes.
The big running back tip-toed
down the sidelines, hurdling a
defender at the five and diving
into the end zone.
The Chiefs held Leroy Kelly
and Scott to 45 yards rushing
in 19 carries.
. "The fact Utat we were able
to contain Kelly and Scott is a
great compliroent to our de-

1t wasn't very spectacular/' Phipps for the first time since

Stram conceded, "but it was a
win and that's important."
Added Cleveland's Nick Skorich : "Our defensive team played well. Unfortunately, our offensive team wasn't able to put
enough points on the board.
We made some adjustments at
halftime which enabled us to
stop Kansas City, but then we
proceeded to hurt ourselves
with interceptions and a fumble."
Emmitt Thomas picked off
two of Mike Phipps' passes at
the Chiefs' end of the field and
Willie Lanier recovered a Bo
Scott fumble at the Kansas
City 17.
Skorich did not insert Neisen
until 13: 28 remained in the
game, choosing to go wiUt

Ute exhibition season.
The loss was the Browns'
fourth straight, the first time
Ute team has lost that many in
a row in its 26-year history.
Still, the Browns remained
tied with Pittsburgh, boUt at
oh'i, for the lead in the American Football Conference's Central Division.
The Chiefs, trailing Oakland
in the Western Division with a
6-2-1 record, scored all their
points in the first hall.
Jan Stenerud kicked 14 and
27-yard field goals before Len
Dawson guided Kansas City 86
yards to its lone touchdown in
Ute second quarter. Dawson hit
4-of-4 in Ute seven-play drive,
including a 24-yarder to Morris
Stroud.

fense,"

By United Press International three points for the Lakers, but
Is Los Angeles joining Mil- his contribution was on defense
waukee in making a runaway where he blocked 13 shots and
of NBA division titles'
on offense with 10 assists. He
Milwaukee, as expected, also grabbed 31 rebounds.
raised its record to IS-I Sunday The Lakers were relegated to
night ~ith a ~25-114 victory an also-ran status by many
over Phtladelphta. Los Angeles, after Elgin Baylor retired, but
unexpectedly, is off to a 14-3 Los Angeles has surprised its
record. The Lakers beat Bos- critics .
ton, 128-115, Sunday.
Jo Jo White of Boston shared
The Bucks, who set a record game scoring honors with 36
of 15 consecutive victories last points as Ute Celtics maintained
season, continued to roll as Uteir one-game lead over
Kareem Jabbar ripped the Philadelphia in the Eastern
76ers for 46 points to make it Conference.
eighth straight for Milwaukee.
Philadelphia, contesting Boston for Ute Atlantic Division
SEASON UNDERWAY
lead, closed to Utree points at COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
99-96 in the fourth period, but upland game hunting season
Jabbar lanced the 76er began today in Ohio.
comeback with some quick Rabbiis were expected to be
point work.
most numerous in central, south
Tries To Rally Philly
central,
southwest
and
Billy CWlningharn attempted southeast sections of the state.
to rally Philadelphia with his 32 Pheasants can be found in
points, but the Milwaukee central and west central
firepower was too devastating counties and quail in south
as Jon McGlocklln added 22 central, west central and southpoints and Bob Dandridge west counties.
netted 19 for the Bucks.
The victory opened a fivegame bulge over t;:hicago in the
Midwest Division.
Los Angeles moved three
gaiDes up on Seattle and
Golden State in the Pacific ·
Division as the Lakers' backcourt duo of Gall Goodrich and
Jerry West dominated Boston.
Goodrich scored 30 of his 36
points in the first half and West
took up Ute cannonading with 13
points in the Utird quarter ·
enroute loa 26-point night.
WUt Scores 3 Points
Wilt Chamberlain scored only

Dick Van Arsdale scored 21
points as the Phoenix Suns beat
the . Cleveland Cavaliers, 119·
105, in the only other SWlday
action .
Cleveland, despite a 4-11
record, is only 211! games out of
first place in Ute Central
Division. The Cavs were led by
Charlie Davis' 21 points.
Lasting Record
Two players s h a r e the
1
NFL record for most dropkick field goals in one game.
Paddy Driscoll of the Chlrago Cardinals and Elbert
Bloodgood ol Kansas City
each k i c k e d four In one
g a m e, Driscoll In 1925,
Bloodgood in 1926.

Stram said.

Pomeroy,O.

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

DauiW...Ia
"""""
114 Court
St. 992-:INI
......,.,

358 Second Avenue
Phone 446-1973

r------:-- - -- -- - - - - - - - -

Wilkes 1Pa.) 41 Muskingum 6
Heidelberg 21 Marietta 13
Central State 21 Wayne State 14
Wash . &amp; Jeff . 27 Kenyon 15
Kalamazoo IMich .) 14 Hiram 6
Case Western Reserve 29
Carnegie Mellon 19
Mount Union 40 John Carroll 20
Oh io Northern 13 Findlay 7
Capital 35 Otterbein 20
Wilmington 37 Rose Po!y 23

LARRY'S ASHLAND
SERVIa STAnON
190 Mulberry Ave.

lnturlftCII
Aveni
·o.IeW•n.r

NEED MORE THAN THIS ?
We bave loans up to·

Lour aud war li11e sidr by &gt;Jdr
"' ihr history of mm1. A 1vorld of s.td
m1d oftr~o cnul conl rasis. 'We as k ''WIJy )'
WIJy poverty ir1a laud of plwty) 'Why almwliou whr11
"'' arr all born lo the sa me family of 111au1 Jhe aching
chasm brtwern ihr rral mrd the 1dral rvery~ lmr
provokts ill&lt; qurstro11 .

HY?

In a world looking for answers
maybe God is the place to start.
God is hope. God is now.

g

Phone· 992-2366

992-2811

"The

Browns are a dangerous team.
They could catch fire and
knock you right out of the box
at any time."
Frank Pitts, traded by the
Chiefs to the Browns earlier
Utis season, was the leading
pass receiver. Pitts caught five
passes for 129 yards.

Lakers Are Off And Running

MIANS IAJIJrACJrOH eUAIAHriU

.;

league schools to work out
details on Ute award.
Members were bopelul lbal
the first trophy of tbls tyte
could be awarded at tbe end
of the currenl school year.
Association members attending Sunday's meeting were
Frank Houston, WIRO, Iron tor. ;
Harold Roach, Ironton Tribune ;
Bud McGhee, WMPO, Middleport ; Keith Wisecup,
Pomeroy Sentinel; Williard
Fitzpatrick, WLMJ, Jackson; .
Dave Mossbarger, Jackson Sun
Journal ; Torn Metiers, AU!ens
Messenger; Jim Myers, Logan
Daily News ; Lee Hamilton,
WLGN, Logan; Bill Grey,
Odie
WJEH , Gallipolis;
O'Donnell, Gallipolis Tribune;
E a r 1 James, WaverlyWat-·
chman; Bob Roof, WPKO,
Waverly; Sis Baker, Wellston
Sentry; Bob Willis, Wellston
Telegram.

Browns Lose Again,13-

Keep up your car's start power with
our expert engine tune-up. It's a fast,
inexpensive job that pays big dividends
with trouble-free starts all winter long.
Bring in your car-today.
I

'

ceremony.
In other business Sunday,
Earl James of the Waverly
News· was elevated from vice
president of. the organization
to president to succeed Lee
Hamilton, WLGN, Logan,
who has accepted a new radio
position In Utica.
Frank Houston, Radio WIRO,
Ironton, was then elected vice
president to fill the vacancy .
Following
a
lengthy
discussion the association then
voted to award an All.Sports
trophy to the SEOAL school
with the best all-around athletic
program.

Jeff Morris of Meigs.
Only two juniors were named
to the 22-man squad as 1971
appeared to be the year of the
seniors.
The pair of underclassmen
who will return next yeur in
SEOAL competition are Ken
· Culbertson , a 200-pound
fullback from Logan, and Don
Wood , a powerful 19!l-pound
fullback from Ute c&lt;rehampion
AU!ens Bulldogs.
Head coaches attending
Sunday's meeting to aid in the
selection of the team included
Gerald Inbody, Athens ; John
Ecker, Gallipolis; Bob Bruner,
Ironton; Dick Mikes, Logan ;
Charlie Chancey, Meigs ; Mike
Shumaker , Waverly; Ben
Buckles, Jackson, and cocoaches Tom Baker and .Mark
Mullin of Wellston.
An additional group of 16
players, two from each school,
were named to the select list of
honorable mentions.
Ali of these players will also
attend the banquet in Ironton
and receive certificates of
recognition during the awards

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

By Dec. 15th

!

Monday's Games

(No games scheduled)

L oopNewsmen Have ~~~~f:~::" ; ~ ~ .~~
First Lady Scribe Philadetphiac.nt~.~ ~.

.

!

ABA Stondings
By United Press International
E1st
W. L. Pmt. GB
Virginia
II 5 .668
Kentucky · 10 5 .667
If &gt;
New York
88 .5003
Floridians
7 8 .467 3'12
Piltsburgh 7 10 .~12 ~·I&gt;
!;arol ina
7 9 .357 5
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
9 6 .600
Utah
10 7 .588
Dallas
7 9 .438 2'12
Memphis
7 9 .438 2'12
Denver
4 9 .JOB 4
Sundly's Results
New York 130 Pittsburgh 125
(Only game scheduled) ·

East
W. L. T. Pel.

-

early.

Rro Stand'
'
mgl

National Conference

From·the people
helpt)ring you
ChriStmas...

tz:e:t:Jt8fM&amp;Xl

'

Pomeroy, Ohio
/

�Bertg s End

Slump

all over the field, grinding out
213 yards on the ground and
Broncoo lost more than a game
260 more in the air.
SUnday. They lost their starting
Cincinnati quarterback Virgil
quarterback, Don Horn, and it
Carter finally reached pr~a­
lobks as if he may be out for
son expectations, throwing a
the rest of the season.
71-yard touchdown pass to
The Cincinnati Bengals snapBruce Coslet to open the scorped a seven-game losing streak
ing
in the first quarter and hitwith the 24-10 victory over Denting Essex Johnson on a 67ver, but the loss of Horn was
yard
scoring pass in the final
an even worse fate for the
Broncos.
period.
Fred Willis, Cincinnati's top
Horn suffered an apparent
rusher
with 67 yards, smashed
shoulder separation when he
in from three yards out and
was hit by the Bengals' Nick
Horst Muhlmann hit a 14-yard
Roman at 2:11 in the second
fieia goal for the Bengals' oth. er points.
It's Time Now For Basketball Action
Reserve quarterback Ramsey
hit Dwight Harrison on a 43COLUMBUS (UPI) - The . basketball season Nov. 19.
yafd scoring pass in the fourth
Ohio high school basketball Those schools with football quarter · for Denver's only
season officially opens Friday teams will not start basketball touchdown and Jim Turner connight for some teams.
competition until next week.
Those schools that did not The high school football
field a football team were season officially ends Nov. 27,
allowed to start basketball but most schools close their
practice Oct. 29 and open their campaigns this weekend.
RACINE - The Southern
Local Tornado grid squad was
honored here Saturday night in
their annual banquet following
a potluck supper.
JYJ:
Head Coach Bruce Wallace
awardedlettersandcertificates
to the Tornado squad, which
wound up with a very respecPALM BEACH GARDENS, score in the 19-year-old tour- table 3-6 slate. Wallace said
Fla. (UPI) - World Cup win- nament . Player was seven things were definitely " looking
ners Jack Nicklaus and Lee strokes behind with scores of 69- up, football-wise ," at Southern.
Assistant coach Bill Jewell,
Trevino banked only $1,000 each 67·71-71 - 278.
Trevino,
wh9
was
7:Hl9-7l&lt;l9
who
awarded letters to the
for the prestige victory, which
is something like dumping a cup - 284 for the tournament, said backs, tipped off the future for
of water in the nearby Atlantic he feels he "played as well as Southern football in one
anyone out there except Jack." statement, "Nobody is going to
Ocean.
"I just didn't · make any laugh at Southern anymore. "
Nicklaus, who had rounds of
putts,"
he added.
~3-71 - 271 on the tough
New Zealand's Bob Charles,
5,09&amp;-yard PGA course, also
with
a 74 Sunday, and John
collected the international
trophy which goes to the in- Lister, who shot a 68, claimed
OHIO COLLEGE
dividual posting the lowest third place 14 strokes off the
FOOTBALL
RECORDS
pace at 569.
By United Press International
DENVE~ ( UPI )-The Denver

SATURDAY'S
OHIO. COLLEGE
FOOTBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Northwestern 14 Ohio State 10
Toledo 43 Marshall 0
Miami 30 i&lt;enl Stale 0

quarter. The Broncos went the
rest of the way with reserve
quarterback Steve Ramsey,
who had not seen actioh in
over a month.
"It looks as though he'll be
our quarterback the rest of the
season," head coach Lou Saban
said.
Ramsey hit 6-of-13 passes for
106 yards, but it was little
enough against a Bengal team
that failed to live up to its record of one victory and seven
losses.
The Bengals pushed Denver

nected on a 37-yard field goal.
Turner, a former New York
Jet, pushed his career total to
760 points in the game and
moved into a lOth place tie
with former Green Bay Packer
Paul Hornung in career scoring.
The only bright spot for the
Broncos outside of Turner's
scoring mark was the rushin~
of running back Floyd Uttle,
who had 101 yards in 22 car-

ries.
"We're a chopped up team
and we just got beat," said Saban, who lost to his former
coach. Saban was team captain
for the Cleveland Browns when
they were coached by Paul
Brown, now coach of the Bengals.
"We weren't sharp in any

1epartment," Saban said. " It is
hard to figure why we were so
flat in this one after a good
game last week. We just played poorly, especially on defense .
"We tried some different
things on defense, and we were
poor. Added to this was our inability to control the ball. We
thought we could use a double
tight end setup and control the
ball. But we couldn't."
Ramsey said he was looking
forward to becoming the Broncos' starting quarterback, "but
I am sorry it is happening this
way."
Ramsey said the Bengal rush
was surprisingly tough. "They
just keep coming, and they're
a better team than their record," he said.

Gridders Dine, Recognized

Nicklaus, Trevino Grab
ld upCh ampwns
• h lp
•
w or

c

Standings

Mid-American Conference

Eddy Has New Books Listed
New books released by Mr .
Eddy are :
Humphrey , Mary low,
and Song
Cheer leading
Leading.
Brown , Ronald, Telecommunications.
Feversham, Charles, Great
Yachts.
Alexander, Edwin, Down at
. " the .Depot.
McEntee, Howard, The Model
Aircraft Handbook.

Attend Seroice
In Gallipolis
Funeral services for Mrs.
John Russell, 63, of Gallipolis,
sister ()( Mrs. Karl Owen,
Middleport, were conducted
Sunday afternoon at the
Gallipolis Church of Christ.
Burial was in the Memory
Gardens.
Among those attending the
services were Mr. and Mrs.
Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Johnson, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Russell, Mr.
:. and Mrs. Clayton Russell, West
Columbia; Mr. and Mrs. Lew
Edwards, Mason, W. Va.; Mrs.
Jack Bowman, Mrs. Paul
Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs.
George Swisher, Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Swisher, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Merz, all of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Russell,
Cleveland; Jim Shell, Rozwell,
N. M.; Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Shell, Mr. and Mrs. George
Shell, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Grimes, Mrs. Howard Johnson,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Besides Mrs. Owen, Mrs.
Russell is survived by three
sisters, Mrs. George Russell,
Mrs. Robert Merz, and Mrs.
Howard Johnson, and two
brothers, Jim Shell and Grant
Shell.

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, special
, meetlnl Mon~y , 7:30 .p.m.
; 1 Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
: Purpole to convey most ex: ceDent master's degree.
'•
WEDNESDAY
·~
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
; Royal and Select Masters,
: llltld . .mbly, 7:30 Wed~ ..._,, to be followed by a
; -~~~~~ o1 Pomeroy Chapter 80
~ wllb tile Royal Arch degree to

f be c Cened.
''

:'
~

'

w.

Arctander, Erik, The New
Book of Motorcycles.
Smith, LeRoi, How to Fix Up
Old Cards.
Kramer , Jack, Gardens
Under Glass.
Parke, Gertrude, The Big
Chocolate Cookbook.
Jones, Candy, More Than
Beauty.
KUh', Katharine, The Open
Eye;l ln Pursuit of Art.
Perry,
Margaret
C.,
Christmas Card Magic.
Clark, Kenneth, Pottery
Throwing for Beginners.
Kuykendall, Karen, Art and
Design in Paper-Mache.
McClinton, Katharine, The
Complete Book of American
Country Antiques.
MacDonald, Byron, The Art
of Lettering with the Broad Pen.
Cutler, Katherine N., How to
Arrange Flowers for all Occasion!.
Smallman, Kirk, Creative
Film-Making.
Samachson, Dorothy, The
Russian Ballet and Three of its
Masterpieces.
Cavallo, Diana, The Lower
East Side.
Seib, Charles B., The Woods.
Austin , Anthony,
The
President's War.
Miller, Douglas, The Birth of
Modern America, 182~1850.
Andrew Jackson wa s the
only U.S. president ever to
have been a prisoner of war .

league All Games
WLT WLT
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Toledo

Bowling Green

410

630

Western Michigan

230 730
2 3 o 6 3 0

Miam i

Ohio University
2 3 0

KentState

0 4 0

4 5 .0

3 7 0

Ohio Conference

League All Games

WLTWLT

Ohio Wesleyan

600 810
Baldwin.Wallace
410 810
Mount Union 310 720
Heidelberg 420 630
Wooster
32 0 530
430 540
Denison
33 0 450
Marietta
220 540
WiHenberg
Otterbein

Capital

Kenyon
Muskingum
Oberlin

~

:
~
; ~ ~

3 4 0

Purdue
Minnesota
2J 54
Indiana
1 6
Iowa
ot1e:s
Akron
Wilmington
Cincinnati

4 5

6 2

Defiance

Case Western Reserve
Young stown State
Oh io Northern
Hiram
Xavier

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POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department StQre Of Building Since 1915.

.'
(Continued from Page 1)
~~Gracious Uving, n a mantle
piece
: Mrs. 'Robert Canaday,
the show chairmen, Mrs. Roy
Snowden and Mrs. Robert Mrs. Williamson, Mrs. Stewart,
Canaday and the Rutland Club and Mrs. Carpenter.
"Peace, This Holy Night,"
members.
Making the show a "family featuring a Madonna : Mrs.
affair" were the Russell UtUe Davis, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
and Roy Snowden families . Johnson, and Mrs. Titus.
"Light With Joy," using a
Mrs, Snowden, her daughter,
candle
or candles : Mrs . Titus,
Mrs. Homer Parker, and her
granddaughter, Mrs. James Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Joe Bolin,
Carpenter, both members of the and Mrs. Williamson.
"At Home," a dinner table
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
and Mrs. Carpenter's son, Jay, arrangement: Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Miss Ruby
all exhibited in the show.
Mrs. Russell Little, her Diehl, and Mrs. Carpenter.
"The Humble Stable," using
daughter, Mrs. Howard Birchdriftwood
: Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
field of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners, and her grand- William Willlord, Mrs . Titus,
daughter, Kimberly Birchfield and Mrs. James Nicholson.
"Spreading the Christmas
of 1be Merry Gardeners, were
Spirit," using baubles and
also among the exhibitors.
A total of 105 guests viewed glitter: Mrs. Parker, Mrs .
the show held at the Rutland 'Harold Wolfe, Mrs . Victor
United Methodist Church social Nelson, and Mrs. Ralph Turner.
"Christmas Festivities," a
room Saturday and Sunday.
Winners of ribbons in the favorite arrangement : Mrs .
.
'
• artistic .auangements Stewart, Mrs, Carpenter, Mrs.
category, listed first through Parker , and Mrs . Fred
.
fourth respectively, were as Williamson.
Taking
ribbons
in
the junior
follows:
"Hollday Greetings, " a division were Jay Carpenter,
wreath or swag: Mrs. Parker, first ; Chard Williams, second,
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Bruce and Darian Wolfe, third, in
is
Coming,"
Davis, Mrs. Harry Williamson . "Santa
arrangements
in
toys
; and
HWelcome," an arrangement
for a hall table : Mrs. Stewart, Tammy Martin, Abby Martin,
Mrs. James Titus, Mrs. Cush and Kimberly Birchfield in
a
favorite
Johnson, and Mrs. Carpanter. "Caroling, "

-

SALE
PIICE

t

Friday~

t

nyou expect

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tit E. lnd
I

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,

Social Calendar

arrangement.
In the horticulture division
there were 41 entries with the
Friendly Gardeners receiving
nine ribbons and the Rutland
Garden Club, nine, while six
ribbons went lo non-garden-club
exhibitors.
Winners listed first through ·
fourth were Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins, Roy Snowden,
and Mrs. Carpenter, short
needle pine; Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
Snowden, Roy Snowden, Mrs.
Carpenter, long needle pine;
Mrs. Parker, Roy Snowden,
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Snowden,
spruce; Mrs . Snowden, Mrs.
Carpenter, Roy Snowden, and
Mrs. Parker yew; Mrs . Parker,
Mrs. Canaday, Roy Snowden
and Mrs. Snowden, American
holly ; Mrs. Snowden, Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Atkins, and Mrs.
Carpenter, arborvitae.
ln the houseplant division the
winners in the flowering
division were Mrs. Bolin, Miss
Diehl, Mrs. Snowden and Mrs.
Atkins . In the foliage class,
ribbons went to Miss Diehl,
Mrs. Canaday, Mrs. Snowden,
and Mrs. Atkins .
Junior horticulture winners
were Jay Carpenter, pine, and
juniper, and Abby Martin,
Tammy Martin , and Jay
Carpenter, yew.
The educational exhibit
arranged by the Rutland
Garden Club members was noncompetitive. It featured a
poster showing pictures of
holiday plants including the
Chrislmas cactus, poinsettia,

azalea ,
MONDAY
SALISBURY PTA, Tuesday,
7:30 p,m. Room visitation along
with a display of work from the
J!rt classes.
CHESTER Elementary PTA,
Monday, 7:30p.m. Open house.

7:30p.m. Tuesday in cafeteria.
Program to be presented; West
Virginia members as hostesses.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN Club,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., home of
Mrs . Harliss Frank . Mrs.
Ronald Osborne and Mrs. Roy
Hannum, co-hostesses.
RACINE Elementary PTA, Members, take gifts for Athens
7:30 p. m. Monday at school. State Hospital.
OLD FASHIONED revival,
Sutton United Methodist
WEDNESDAY
30
M
d
WINDING
TRAIL Garden
h
h
7
C urc , : p. m. on ay,
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew Clu~ Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.,
home of Mrs. Robert Thompspeaking; special singing.
son. Members who have not
THEODORUS Council 17 , furnished bulbs for civic
Daughters of America, 59th planting, take them to meeting.
an niversary observance, 6 p.m. Mexican ltems for card table
potluck dinner with members to display s~ tid be taken also.
take their own table service and
SYRACUSE THIRD Weda covered dish. Initiatory work nesday Homemakers Club, 10
to be performed and members a.m. Wednesday, meeting hour
are asked to wear white.
at Municipal Park. Potluck
ALFRED METHODIST dinneratnoon. Homemaderock '
Church will hold a week of candy or painting will be
revival services nightly, projects.
beginning Monday evening ,
MIDDLEPORT CU,ll Scout
Nov. 15, with Rev. Jacob Leh- Pack, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the
man doing the preaching. On American Legion Hall, MidTuesday
and
Thursday dleport.
evenings the Bissell Brothers
PAST
PRESIDENTS,
wlll provide special music, and American .Legion Auxiliary,
on Saturday. evening a quartet Drew Webster Post 39, will
from Junction City will sing . meet at 7:30 Wednesday night
Everyone who sings "specials" at the home of Mrs. Olin Knapp,'
is welcome.
Gallipolis.
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:JO
LOU (THE TOE) Groza, a
p~m. at the Elementary School. retired professional Cleveland
Thanksgiving program by the Brown team member, speaking
third graders. Books and at Eastern High School football
learning center materials to be banquet at 6:30 p.m. Wedon display for purchase by the nesday. Tickets, $3, adults;
parents. First grade mothers to $1.75 students, available at high
serve. Fathers Night to be school office, Village Pharooserved.
•
CANDYSTRIPERSwlllmeet macy , Middleport; Nelson's
at 7 p.m. Monday at Veterans Drug Store, Pomeroy. Bathlnqu~t
Memorial Hospital. Capping sponsored by Eastern A etic
ceremony with tea to follow. All . Boosters.
girls are to .wear uniforms. MIDDLEPORT Literary
Parents welcome.
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
'ruESDAY
harne of Mrs. M. L. French.
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity Mrs. Richard Owen Will review
Church, 8 p.m. Tuesday with "Willa Cather - Her Life and
Mrs. Elza Glbnore, leader, and Art," and Mrs. Nan Moore will
Ml'll. Kenneth Harris and Mrs, review,
"My
Antonia."
BW Perrin, hoetesses.
Members are to respond with a
' WOMEN ' S A uxlllary, comment on Willa Cather's llfe.
V terans Memorial Hoepltal,

mums,

gloxinia,

begonias and cyclamen and
gave tips on their care.
Pest control materials were
also displayed along with
various kinds oi soils - clay,
potting soil, sand, loam sand,
and gravel.. Among the
fall
bulbs
displayed
were
grape
hyacinth,
Dutch iris, tulips, crocus,
daffodils, fritillaria, and
bearded iris. Numerous garden
pamphlets on flowering
perennials, flowering annuals,
pruning and plant care were
exhibited .
Mrs. Tom Martin displayed
ceramic containers and
Chrislmas candles, and Russell
Little exhibited a thistle
Christmas tree. Also on display
was a 5o/• pound turnip grown by
Ernest Molden of Rutland.
.........._ _ _ _ _..,.

,.,.

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the bride to be, members of your
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Span ish suite in pecan tone
Romantic dining group has ornate simulated
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Mei~

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The Athens County
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296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

mber Federal Home Loan
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$20,000,00,

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it is undcrript' . 1hen dried in
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DELIVERY

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SANDER

EXPERT
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bcrnes of tlw Si.lln e vi ne.
Black pepper is picked when 1

HOLIDAY WREATHS AND SWAGS were popular with the 105 visitors at the Rutland
Garden Club's Christmas show Saturday and Sunday. Two of the winning entries were
displayed by Mrs. Edith Williamson, seated, and Mrs. James Carpenter.

___.J'll\

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CLEANING

{~ft.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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3 6 o:
is Open
~
3 6 o -tc
9 A.M. to7 P.M. iC
~ ~ ~ iC
(Continuously)
iC
1 7 0 other Banking Hours 9 to
1 B 0 ~and 5 to 7 as usual on-tc

Emmett R. Osborne will conduct the service. Burial will be ~
i[
in Cherry Ridge Cemetery, .;:
Meigs County. Friends may call iC
at the funeral home after I p.m. ...
today.

He is survived by his wife,
Frances M.; a son, Richard R.,
Ashland, Ky.; two daughters,
Marlene and Doris Miller, both
at home ; a granddaughter,
Jennifer Miller; two brothers,
Chester, of Caledonia, Ohio, and
Dorsel, Tuppers Plains, and
three sisters, Mrs. Helen
Brooks, Reynoldsburg, Ohio;
Mrs. Ruth Kinnan, Parkersburg, and Mrs. Lola Ziegler,
Albany, Ohio.
Spencer Funeral Home in
Belpre is in charge of
arrangements . The Rev. ~-•

PTON. 0.

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John Miller Died Saturday
BELPRE - Funeral services
will be conducted Wednesday at
2 p.m. for John B. Miller, 59, of
816 Warren " Ave., who died
Saturday at 1:55 p.m . at
Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg after a short
illness.
Mr. Miller, who had been
. employed by the Monangehela
Power Co., Parkersburg the
past 25 years, was born and
raised at Sumner, Ohio in Meigs
County, the son of the late Eber
and Elsie Carsey Miller. He was
a veteran of World War II when
he served in the U. S. Air Force.

l

meeting.

Carter, and Mrs. Delma Karr
gave a report on wa y!:: and
means projects. Refreshments
were served following the

II

for the man who deserves
the very best .

...,
iC
i'
-1&lt;
.;:
iC
iC

Mrs. Fultz reported that the
teac hers prefer that children
not give them gifts during the
remainder of the year, but that
in lieu of this, contributions be
made to a special project for the
school. The unit approved the
payment of $5 to a cook who will
be at the school during each
meeting.
Mr. Carter, president of the
Bradbury Church of Christ,
gave devotions using · a
Thanksgiving theme , "The
Pilgrim Way ." The treasurer 's
report was given by Mrs.

. AT SPECIAL FALL SAVINGS ........

SANTA'S WORKSHOP

t

operated a concession stand
during the day .
A report on the recent convention of the Ohio Congress of
Parents and Teachers was
given by Mrs. Dale Walburn.
Fred Lewis , membership
chairman, reported that the
unit has a total of 60 paid
members.
Bill Carter, publications
chairman, reported to the group
and Mrs . William Swisher,
president, commented on the
recent Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers meeting.

SANTA SUGGESTS:

Shop The Friendly One!®

.!:**************\.
~~
A Thought ~

The parents went to class at a
recent meetina of the Bradbury
PTA held at the school.
Purpose of the program
conducted by Don Hanning,
Mrs. Betty · Fultz and Mrs.
Sabra Morrison in reading
calaphone and vocabulary was
to familiarize the parents with
1be classroom activities of their
children.
During the PTA business
meeting the yard sale held
Saturday was discussed and
Mrs. Fultz thanked the parents
for contributions. The P.T.A.

You are invited to come. look, create beautiful
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comfort.;md styling in this ar~a .

AGIFT FOR

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The man who wakes up
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7 0 0 10 0 0
and finds himsell a
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5 2 0 6 3 0 i' success ha sn' t been
MIChigan Slate
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5 2 0 6 4 0 iC as eep.
N~rlhwestern 5 J 0 6 4 0 ·.fc
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Coach Ralph Wigal awarded Johnson, Steve Boso, Tim
letters and certificates to his Curfman, and Mike Roberts.
undefeated junior high squad.
He said "these boys are some of
the best I've ever worked with."
He also discussed the value of
high school athletics.
Boys recognized were Tim
Maurer, Don Shaffer, Dave
Huddleston, Mitch Nease, Bob
Johnson, John Salser, Glen
Simpson, Tom Barnhart, Monty
Hart, Jeff Circle, Buddy Ervin,
Jim Ferrell and Tim Hill, freshmen. The sophomores were Jim
Williams, Bob Eynon, Mike
Codner, Rodney Allen, Randy
Forbes, Dennis Hawk, Greg
Middleswart and Vern Ord.
Juniors included were Jay Hill,
Larry Wilcoxen, Mike Nease,
Ed Lawson, Nick lhle and Ron
Hill. The graduating seniors,
I I •••
who Wallace pointed out will be
•'
sorely missed, are Neil Baker,
Charles Yost, Jim Smith, Bill
Cornell , Terry Varney and
INCl UDES
Raymond Robinson.
22.95
Junior high players were
VALUE
Jerry Johnson, Chris Hill, Eric
LEGSTAND
Dunning, Greg Cundiff, Kenneth Guinther, Cork Cleek,
~---...:.:.
Doug Warden, Tony Carnahan,
Bryon Robinson, Frank Shane,
Steve Nease, Chris Forbes, Joe
C/H
Brown, Tim Jenkins, J. F.
Young, Brady Huffman, Rick
Findley, Jimmy Riffle, Jim
10" blodc cui~ 3" deep. Blade brake, fror1t pU.lh ·button controls far ,ofety.
26" ~ 32" workloble.
Cundiff, Greg Davis, Keith
Circle, Greg Dunning, Greg
Johnson, Jeff Knighting, Danny
Brown, Paul Schultz, Ronnie

~ ~ ~
; ~

Bradbury PTA Hosts Parents ' at School

Baldwin-Wallace 24 Ferris
Xavier •2 Bowling Green 27
State (Mich.) 14
Cinclnnall23 Ohio University 15
Youngstown Stale 14 Gustavus
VIllanova u Dayton 7
Adolphus o
.
Akron 34 Indiana (Pa.) Slate 14
Wooster 3! Oberlin o
Ohio Wesleyan 31 Denison 0
Defiance 22 Olivet· (Mich.) 12
Willenborg 21 A5hland 14

MIDDLEPORT

m-5421

�Bertg s End

Slump

all over the field, grinding out
213 yards on the ground and
Broncoo lost more than a game
260 more in the air.
SUnday. They lost their starting
Cincinnati quarterback Virgil
quarterback, Don Horn, and it
Carter finally reached pr~a­
lobks as if he may be out for
son expectations, throwing a
the rest of the season.
71-yard touchdown pass to
The Cincinnati Bengals snapBruce Coslet to open the scorped a seven-game losing streak
ing
in the first quarter and hitwith the 24-10 victory over Denting Essex Johnson on a 67ver, but the loss of Horn was
yard
scoring pass in the final
an even worse fate for the
Broncos.
period.
Fred Willis, Cincinnati's top
Horn suffered an apparent
rusher
with 67 yards, smashed
shoulder separation when he
in from three yards out and
was hit by the Bengals' Nick
Horst Muhlmann hit a 14-yard
Roman at 2:11 in the second
fieia goal for the Bengals' oth. er points.
It's Time Now For Basketball Action
Reserve quarterback Ramsey
hit Dwight Harrison on a 43COLUMBUS (UPI) - The . basketball season Nov. 19.
yafd scoring pass in the fourth
Ohio high school basketball Those schools with football quarter · for Denver's only
season officially opens Friday teams will not start basketball touchdown and Jim Turner connight for some teams.
competition until next week.
Those schools that did not The high school football
field a football team were season officially ends Nov. 27,
allowed to start basketball but most schools close their
practice Oct. 29 and open their campaigns this weekend.
RACINE - The Southern
Local Tornado grid squad was
honored here Saturday night in
their annual banquet following
a potluck supper.
JYJ:
Head Coach Bruce Wallace
awardedlettersandcertificates
to the Tornado squad, which
wound up with a very respecPALM BEACH GARDENS, score in the 19-year-old tour- table 3-6 slate. Wallace said
Fla. (UPI) - World Cup win- nament . Player was seven things were definitely " looking
ners Jack Nicklaus and Lee strokes behind with scores of 69- up, football-wise ," at Southern.
Assistant coach Bill Jewell,
Trevino banked only $1,000 each 67·71-71 - 278.
Trevino,
wh9
was
7:Hl9-7l&lt;l9
who
awarded letters to the
for the prestige victory, which
is something like dumping a cup - 284 for the tournament, said backs, tipped off the future for
of water in the nearby Atlantic he feels he "played as well as Southern football in one
anyone out there except Jack." statement, "Nobody is going to
Ocean.
"I just didn't · make any laugh at Southern anymore. "
Nicklaus, who had rounds of
putts,"
he added.
~3-71 - 271 on the tough
New Zealand's Bob Charles,
5,09&amp;-yard PGA course, also
with
a 74 Sunday, and John
collected the international
trophy which goes to the in- Lister, who shot a 68, claimed
OHIO COLLEGE
dividual posting the lowest third place 14 strokes off the
FOOTBALL
RECORDS
pace at 569.
By United Press International
DENVE~ ( UPI )-The Denver

SATURDAY'S
OHIO. COLLEGE
FOOTBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Northwestern 14 Ohio State 10
Toledo 43 Marshall 0
Miami 30 i&lt;enl Stale 0

quarter. The Broncos went the
rest of the way with reserve
quarterback Steve Ramsey,
who had not seen actioh in
over a month.
"It looks as though he'll be
our quarterback the rest of the
season," head coach Lou Saban
said.
Ramsey hit 6-of-13 passes for
106 yards, but it was little
enough against a Bengal team
that failed to live up to its record of one victory and seven
losses.
The Bengals pushed Denver

nected on a 37-yard field goal.
Turner, a former New York
Jet, pushed his career total to
760 points in the game and
moved into a lOth place tie
with former Green Bay Packer
Paul Hornung in career scoring.
The only bright spot for the
Broncos outside of Turner's
scoring mark was the rushin~
of running back Floyd Uttle,
who had 101 yards in 22 car-

ries.
"We're a chopped up team
and we just got beat," said Saban, who lost to his former
coach. Saban was team captain
for the Cleveland Browns when
they were coached by Paul
Brown, now coach of the Bengals.
"We weren't sharp in any

1epartment," Saban said. " It is
hard to figure why we were so
flat in this one after a good
game last week. We just played poorly, especially on defense .
"We tried some different
things on defense, and we were
poor. Added to this was our inability to control the ball. We
thought we could use a double
tight end setup and control the
ball. But we couldn't."
Ramsey said he was looking
forward to becoming the Broncos' starting quarterback, "but
I am sorry it is happening this
way."
Ramsey said the Bengal rush
was surprisingly tough. "They
just keep coming, and they're
a better team than their record," he said.

Gridders Dine, Recognized

Nicklaus, Trevino Grab
ld upCh ampwns
• h lp
•
w or

c

Standings

Mid-American Conference

Eddy Has New Books Listed
New books released by Mr .
Eddy are :
Humphrey , Mary low,
and Song
Cheer leading
Leading.
Brown , Ronald, Telecommunications.
Feversham, Charles, Great
Yachts.
Alexander, Edwin, Down at
. " the .Depot.
McEntee, Howard, The Model
Aircraft Handbook.

Attend Seroice
In Gallipolis
Funeral services for Mrs.
John Russell, 63, of Gallipolis,
sister ()( Mrs. Karl Owen,
Middleport, were conducted
Sunday afternoon at the
Gallipolis Church of Christ.
Burial was in the Memory
Gardens.
Among those attending the
services were Mr. and Mrs.
Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Johnson, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Russell, Mr.
:. and Mrs. Clayton Russell, West
Columbia; Mr. and Mrs. Lew
Edwards, Mason, W. Va.; Mrs.
Jack Bowman, Mrs. Paul
Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs.
George Swisher, Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Swisher, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Merz, all of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Russell,
Cleveland; Jim Shell, Rozwell,
N. M.; Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Shell, Mr. and Mrs. George
Shell, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Grimes, Mrs. Howard Johnson,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Besides Mrs. Owen, Mrs.
Russell is survived by three
sisters, Mrs. George Russell,
Mrs. Robert Merz, and Mrs.
Howard Johnson, and two
brothers, Jim Shell and Grant
Shell.

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, special
, meetlnl Mon~y , 7:30 .p.m.
; 1 Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
: Purpole to convey most ex: ceDent master's degree.
'•
WEDNESDAY
·~
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
; Royal and Select Masters,
: llltld . .mbly, 7:30 Wed~ ..._,, to be followed by a
; -~~~~~ o1 Pomeroy Chapter 80
~ wllb tile Royal Arch degree to

f be c Cened.
''

:'
~

'

w.

Arctander, Erik, The New
Book of Motorcycles.
Smith, LeRoi, How to Fix Up
Old Cards.
Kramer , Jack, Gardens
Under Glass.
Parke, Gertrude, The Big
Chocolate Cookbook.
Jones, Candy, More Than
Beauty.
KUh', Katharine, The Open
Eye;l ln Pursuit of Art.
Perry,
Margaret
C.,
Christmas Card Magic.
Clark, Kenneth, Pottery
Throwing for Beginners.
Kuykendall, Karen, Art and
Design in Paper-Mache.
McClinton, Katharine, The
Complete Book of American
Country Antiques.
MacDonald, Byron, The Art
of Lettering with the Broad Pen.
Cutler, Katherine N., How to
Arrange Flowers for all Occasion!.
Smallman, Kirk, Creative
Film-Making.
Samachson, Dorothy, The
Russian Ballet and Three of its
Masterpieces.
Cavallo, Diana, The Lower
East Side.
Seib, Charles B., The Woods.
Austin , Anthony,
The
President's War.
Miller, Douglas, The Birth of
Modern America, 182~1850.
Andrew Jackson wa s the
only U.S. president ever to
have been a prisoner of war .

league All Games
WLT WLT
4 0 0 10 0 0

Toledo

Bowling Green

410

630

Western Michigan

230 730
2 3 o 6 3 0

Miam i

Ohio University
2 3 0

KentState

0 4 0

4 5 .0

3 7 0

Ohio Conference

League All Games

WLTWLT

Ohio Wesleyan

600 810
Baldwin.Wallace
410 810
Mount Union 310 720
Heidelberg 420 630
Wooster
32 0 530
430 540
Denison
33 0 450
Marietta
220 540
WiHenberg
Otterbein

Capital

Kenyon
Muskingum
Oberlin

~

:
~
; ~ ~

3 4 0

Purdue
Minnesota
2J 54
Indiana
1 6
Iowa
ot1e:s
Akron
Wilmington
Cincinnati

4 5

6 2

Defiance

Case Western Reserve
Young stown State
Oh io Northern
Hiram
Xavier

ICE HOURS f:IUTO ,l; l TO 5 (CLOSE
ON THURS.) - EAST COURT "ST.,

1e

o .;:

JIG SAW

lfs Quick! Easy :

REG . 11 .49

/aiNCH DRILL

3

i/21NCH
COMPACT
DRILL
C/ H

JIG SAW
KIT
'7516

KIT
~.7116

•

1999e
•

SANDER
ASSORTMENT

4-IN-1

SCREWDRIVER

239

3/8 INCH DRILL

YOUR
CHOICE!

REG. 3.79

-tc

I

Two trigg er positions. Pre:
focuseJ spotliglll illumiooln

%INCH DRIVE
SOCKET
SET

REG. 3.19 EA.

war•.

s.tt TOOlS

Five 6 pl.. socket1 1/4" · 1/2".

6 SABRE
SAW BLADE
ASSORTMENT

3:

397

&gt;::JA...:.
•

STEEL
TOOL BOX

REG.

727

9.49

i 7ARMERS BANK f .................
• and SAVINGS CO. •
POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

f

~

iC
.;: ·

i'

mm

REG. 2.49

l/.4·1nch universal shank.

**************~

3 PIECE

"C"CLAMP

_SET

Hip roof design. lift·out troy.
18" long.

3 PIECE
CHISEL SET

16 FT. POW ERLOCK
TAPE RULE

REG . 2.19

DIAL SAW
ADJUSTABLE

STEEL
FULlER

a raw. IJO'MlffiA.Il1al11ificent lcrd:
majestK: wildife, endless river.~
r::Mtelina 111ru1tains. and the real peqlie
who live oo AmerK:a's Last Frontier.

An all new theabe special fur the a1tie fa1lily
lAST TWO DAYS ENDS TOMORROW

MEIGS THEATRE ..
7:00 • 9:00 P.M.

PH. 992-5393
Ol9il

277
FUllER

IEG.419

298

CRESCENT

481NCH
WORK LIGHT

IEG.'3.99

Autl a etic
True-lb-Ufe
Adveim.re!

8 INCH ADJUSTABLE
WRENCH

544.

REG. 8.5.9

.......

10 PT. HAND SAW

MARION

100 FOOT

.,.,~

1644

RIG. 6.29

STANLEY '

7 PIECE
SCREWDRIVER
SET

lEG. 21 .95

Gripl melol, wood, pip• ot any
angle.

OZ. CLAW HAMMER

427

REG. 3.99

·FLIP GRIP
VISE

~

MITRE BOX

c
lEG. 12.95
REG . 19.95

.AMERICAN FLUOIIESCENT

'

HEMPE

\

REG. 10.49

oCJr•ltNI!'~

.

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department StQre Of Building Since 1915.

.'
(Continued from Page 1)
~~Gracious Uving, n a mantle
piece
: Mrs. 'Robert Canaday,
the show chairmen, Mrs. Roy
Snowden and Mrs. Robert Mrs. Williamson, Mrs. Stewart,
Canaday and the Rutland Club and Mrs. Carpenter.
"Peace, This Holy Night,"
members.
Making the show a "family featuring a Madonna : Mrs.
affair" were the Russell UtUe Davis, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
and Roy Snowden families . Johnson, and Mrs. Titus.
"Light With Joy," using a
Mrs, Snowden, her daughter,
candle
or candles : Mrs . Titus,
Mrs. Homer Parker, and her
granddaughter, Mrs. James Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Joe Bolin,
Carpenter, both members of the and Mrs. Williamson.
"At Home," a dinner table
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
and Mrs. Carpenter's son, Jay, arrangement: Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Miss Ruby
all exhibited in the show.
Mrs. Russell Little, her Diehl, and Mrs. Carpenter.
"The Humble Stable," using
daughter, Mrs. Howard Birchdriftwood
: Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
field of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners, and her grand- William Willlord, Mrs . Titus,
daughter, Kimberly Birchfield and Mrs. James Nicholson.
"Spreading the Christmas
of 1be Merry Gardeners, were
Spirit," using baubles and
also among the exhibitors.
A total of 105 guests viewed glitter: Mrs. Parker, Mrs .
the show held at the Rutland 'Harold Wolfe, Mrs . Victor
United Methodist Church social Nelson, and Mrs. Ralph Turner.
"Christmas Festivities," a
room Saturday and Sunday.
Winners of ribbons in the favorite arrangement : Mrs .
.
'
• artistic .auangements Stewart, Mrs, Carpenter, Mrs.
category, listed first through Parker , and Mrs . Fred
.
fourth respectively, were as Williamson.
Taking
ribbons
in
the junior
follows:
"Hollday Greetings, " a division were Jay Carpenter,
wreath or swag: Mrs. Parker, first ; Chard Williams, second,
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Bruce and Darian Wolfe, third, in
is
Coming,"
Davis, Mrs. Harry Williamson . "Santa
arrangements
in
toys
; and
HWelcome," an arrangement
for a hall table : Mrs. Stewart, Tammy Martin, Abby Martin,
Mrs. James Titus, Mrs. Cush and Kimberly Birchfield in
a
favorite
Johnson, and Mrs. Carpanter. "Caroling, "

-

SALE
PIICE

t

Friday~

t

nyou expect

/..

e

6-1/2or7-1 /41NCH 1
SAW 1
BLADES

I ..

999

.;:
iC

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

ROBINSON.'S
CLEANERS

tit E. lnd
I

;

. ..

,

Social Calendar

arrangement.
In the horticulture division
there were 41 entries with the
Friendly Gardeners receiving
nine ribbons and the Rutland
Garden Club, nine, while six
ribbons went lo non-garden-club
exhibitors.
Winners listed first through ·
fourth were Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins, Roy Snowden,
and Mrs. Carpenter, short
needle pine; Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
Snowden, Roy Snowden, Mrs.
Carpenter, long needle pine;
Mrs. Parker, Roy Snowden,
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Snowden,
spruce; Mrs . Snowden, Mrs.
Carpenter, Roy Snowden, and
Mrs. Parker yew; Mrs . Parker,
Mrs. Canaday, Roy Snowden
and Mrs. Snowden, American
holly ; Mrs. Snowden, Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Atkins, and Mrs.
Carpenter, arborvitae.
ln the houseplant division the
winners in the flowering
division were Mrs. Bolin, Miss
Diehl, Mrs. Snowden and Mrs.
Atkins . In the foliage class,
ribbons went to Miss Diehl,
Mrs. Canaday, Mrs. Snowden,
and Mrs. Atkins .
Junior horticulture winners
were Jay Carpenter, pine, and
juniper, and Abby Martin,
Tammy Martin , and Jay
Carpenter, yew.
The educational exhibit
arranged by the Rutland
Garden Club members was noncompetitive. It featured a
poster showing pictures of
holiday plants including the
Chrislmas cactus, poinsettia,

azalea ,
MONDAY
SALISBURY PTA, Tuesday,
7:30 p,m. Room visitation along
with a display of work from the
J!rt classes.
CHESTER Elementary PTA,
Monday, 7:30p.m. Open house.

7:30p.m. Tuesday in cafeteria.
Program to be presented; West
Virginia members as hostesses.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN Club,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., home of
Mrs . Harliss Frank . Mrs.
Ronald Osborne and Mrs. Roy
Hannum, co-hostesses.
RACINE Elementary PTA, Members, take gifts for Athens
7:30 p. m. Monday at school. State Hospital.
OLD FASHIONED revival,
Sutton United Methodist
WEDNESDAY
30
M
d
WINDING
TRAIL Garden
h
h
7
C urc , : p. m. on ay,
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew Clu~ Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.,
home of Mrs. Robert Thompspeaking; special singing.
son. Members who have not
THEODORUS Council 17 , furnished bulbs for civic
Daughters of America, 59th planting, take them to meeting.
an niversary observance, 6 p.m. Mexican ltems for card table
potluck dinner with members to display s~ tid be taken also.
take their own table service and
SYRACUSE THIRD Weda covered dish. Initiatory work nesday Homemakers Club, 10
to be performed and members a.m. Wednesday, meeting hour
are asked to wear white.
at Municipal Park. Potluck
ALFRED METHODIST dinneratnoon. Homemaderock '
Church will hold a week of candy or painting will be
revival services nightly, projects.
beginning Monday evening ,
MIDDLEPORT CU,ll Scout
Nov. 15, with Rev. Jacob Leh- Pack, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the
man doing the preaching. On American Legion Hall, MidTuesday
and
Thursday dleport.
evenings the Bissell Brothers
PAST
PRESIDENTS,
wlll provide special music, and American .Legion Auxiliary,
on Saturday. evening a quartet Drew Webster Post 39, will
from Junction City will sing . meet at 7:30 Wednesday night
Everyone who sings "specials" at the home of Mrs. Olin Knapp,'
is welcome.
Gallipolis.
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:JO
LOU (THE TOE) Groza, a
p~m. at the Elementary School. retired professional Cleveland
Thanksgiving program by the Brown team member, speaking
third graders. Books and at Eastern High School football
learning center materials to be banquet at 6:30 p.m. Wedon display for purchase by the nesday. Tickets, $3, adults;
parents. First grade mothers to $1.75 students, available at high
serve. Fathers Night to be school office, Village Pharooserved.
•
CANDYSTRIPERSwlllmeet macy , Middleport; Nelson's
at 7 p.m. Monday at Veterans Drug Store, Pomeroy. Bathlnqu~t
Memorial Hospital. Capping sponsored by Eastern A etic
ceremony with tea to follow. All . Boosters.
girls are to .wear uniforms. MIDDLEPORT Literary
Parents welcome.
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
'ruESDAY
harne of Mrs. M. L. French.
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity Mrs. Richard Owen Will review
Church, 8 p.m. Tuesday with "Willa Cather - Her Life and
Mrs. Elza Glbnore, leader, and Art," and Mrs. Nan Moore will
Ml'll. Kenneth Harris and Mrs, review,
"My
Antonia."
BW Perrin, hoetesses.
Members are to respond with a
' WOMEN ' S A uxlllary, comment on Willa Cather's llfe.
V terans Memorial Hoepltal,

mums,

gloxinia,

begonias and cyclamen and
gave tips on their care.
Pest control materials were
also displayed along with
various kinds oi soils - clay,
potting soil, sand, loam sand,
and gravel.. Among the
fall
bulbs
displayed
were
grape
hyacinth,
Dutch iris, tulips, crocus,
daffodils, fritillaria, and
bearded iris. Numerous garden
pamphlets on flowering
perennials, flowering annuals,
pruning and plant care were
exhibited .
Mrs. Tom Martin displayed
ceramic containers and
Chrislmas candles, and Russell
Little exhibited a thistle
Christmas tree. Also on display
was a 5o/• pound turnip grown by
Ernest Molden of Rutland.
.........._ _ _ _ _..,.

,.,.

Refurnishing? Going
into a new home? Look·
ing for a long lasting gift
for ~omeone dear to you ...
the bride to be, members of your
growing·up family'? We oll'cr these
atul other grouping~ at very
~pecial savings and with our
best holhlay wi,Jw,, See our
exciting tlisplay NOW!

Span ish suite in pecan tone
Romantic dining group has ornate simulated
hand carved detailing . Glowing pecan veneers
on hardwood. 6b42-in., table extends to 78-in.,
6 ladder back side chairs, glass door breakfront cabinet included. B·piece group.

WAS 1699.95

NEwf488
COMPLETE

•

eontemporary walnut group
Sleek styling with rich walnut veneers. handrubbed for lasting beauty . 62x42-in. surfboard
table extends to 74-in .. 6 ladder back side
chairs are upholstered in luxurious damask
fabric. Glass door breakfront completes 8piece group.

Make 49 payments. soc
to $10.00 and we make
the

50TH

Mei~

•

The Athens County
Savihgs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

mber Federal Home Loan
Bank. •
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
accounts insured
$20,000,00,

up to

' -1

Was $499.95, Now

Co. Branch

....
GIFT·A-RAMA
......._________

~· ~----~-------\,

TIL---------

INGELS
FURNITURE
·PH. 992-2635

.

Po!Mtoy

1.-••••-11111!!-·
:&gt;~~eM

Creativity is Displayed

I

7-1/41NCH
CIRCULAR
SAW '7301

iC
.;:
i(

frrnwn l in pi les.

(Upon Requmt) ·

''":-./J

/)

f

***

it is undcrript' . 1hen dried in
t he sun : white pepper is
npened lon ger. 't hen lcfl to

DELIVERY

•

SANDER

EXPERT
"SOLDERING
KIT

Q- D&lt;l b/a('k ""'/ w illie
pepper come fm " l different
nlrrnt s?
A- l'&gt;u. bot h are tlw dried
bcrnes of tlw Si.lln e vi ne.
Black pepper is picked when 1

HOLIDAY WREATHS AND SWAGS were popular with the 105 visitors at the Rutland
Garden Club's Christmas show Saturday and Sunday. Two of the winning entries were
displayed by Mrs. Edith Williamson, seated, and Mrs. James Carpenter.

___.J'll\

-tc

t-HOUR
CLEANING

{~ft.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

iC
iC

iC
Only
iC
The Drive-In Windowie
3 6 o:
is Open
~
3 6 o -tc
9 A.M. to7 P.M. iC
~ ~ ~ iC
(Continuously)
iC
1 7 0 other Banking Hours 9 to
1 B 0 ~and 5 to 7 as usual on-tc

Emmett R. Osborne will conduct the service. Burial will be ~
i[
in Cherry Ridge Cemetery, .;:
Meigs County. Friends may call iC
at the funeral home after I p.m. ...
today.

He is survived by his wife,
Frances M.; a son, Richard R.,
Ashland, Ky.; two daughters,
Marlene and Doris Miller, both
at home ; a granddaughter,
Jennifer Miller; two brothers,
Chester, of Caledonia, Ohio, and
Dorsel, Tuppers Plains, and
three sisters, Mrs. Helen
Brooks, Reynoldsburg, Ohio;
Mrs. Ruth Kinnan, Parkersburg, and Mrs. Lola Ziegler,
Albany, Ohio.
Spencer Funeral Home in
Belpre is in charge of
arrangements . The Rev. ~-•

PTON. 0.

1288

YOUR CHOICE!

54 0-tc
4 5 o .;:
~ ~ ~ -1&lt;

John Carroll
Central State
Dayton
Bluffton

TERMS

19999

.~ ! ~ t

.Ashland
Findlay

FREE

BAKER FURNITURE

EASY

10" DELUXE
POWER SHOP

0
i(
0 3
3 6
6 01 iC
0 2 8 0 iC
o 1 9 o ~
WLTi[
720.;:

John Miller Died Saturday
BELPRE - Funeral services
will be conducted Wednesday at
2 p.m. for John B. Miller, 59, of
816 Warren " Ave., who died
Saturday at 1:55 p.m . at
Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg after a short
illness.
Mr. Miller, who had been
. employed by the Monangehela
Power Co., Parkersburg the
past 25 years, was born and
raised at Sumner, Ohio in Meigs
County, the son of the late Eber
and Elsie Carsey Miller. He was
a veteran of World War II when
he served in the U. S. Air Force.

l

meeting.

Carter, and Mrs. Delma Karr
gave a report on wa y!:: and
means projects. Refreshments
were served following the

II

for the man who deserves
the very best .

...,
iC
i'
-1&lt;
.;:
iC
iC

Mrs. Fultz reported that the
teac hers prefer that children
not give them gifts during the
remainder of the year, but that
in lieu of this, contributions be
made to a special project for the
school. The unit approved the
payment of $5 to a cook who will
be at the school during each
meeting.
Mr. Carter, president of the
Bradbury Church of Christ,
gave devotions using · a
Thanksgiving theme , "The
Pilgrim Way ." The treasurer 's
report was given by Mrs.

. AT SPECIAL FALL SAVINGS ........

SANTA'S WORKSHOP

t

operated a concession stand
during the day .
A report on the recent convention of the Ohio Congress of
Parents and Teachers was
given by Mrs. Dale Walburn.
Fred Lewis , membership
chairman, reported that the
unit has a total of 60 paid
members.
Bill Carter, publications
chairman, reported to the group
and Mrs . William Swisher,
president, commented on the
recent Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers meeting.

SANTA SUGGESTS:

Shop The Friendly One!®

.!:**************\.
~~
A Thought ~

The parents went to class at a
recent meetina of the Bradbury
PTA held at the school.
Purpose of the program
conducted by Don Hanning,
Mrs. Betty · Fultz and Mrs.
Sabra Morrison in reading
calaphone and vocabulary was
to familiarize the parents with
1be classroom activities of their
children.
During the PTA business
meeting the yard sale held
Saturday was discussed and
Mrs. Fultz thanked the parents
for contributions. The P.T.A.

You are invited to come. look, create beautiful
room's! With the finest furniture for beauty,
comfort.;md styling in this ar~a .

AGIFT FOR

040 080i(
Big Ten
iC
For 1 oday
League All Games
WLT WLT
The man who wakes up
Michigan
7 0 0 10 0 0
and finds himsell a
~~o~tate
5 2 0 6 3 0 i' success ha sn' t been
MIChigan Slate
iC I
5 2 0 6 4 0 iC as eep.
N~rlhwestern 5 J 0 6 4 0 ·.fc
- Wilson Mizner
llllnoos
4 J 0 4 6 0 iC
Wisconsin

~

If Jt;s Fine ·Upholstered Furniture
You Are Looking For• •.•

Coach Ralph Wigal awarded Johnson, Steve Boso, Tim
letters and certificates to his Curfman, and Mike Roberts.
undefeated junior high squad.
He said "these boys are some of
the best I've ever worked with."
He also discussed the value of
high school athletics.
Boys recognized were Tim
Maurer, Don Shaffer, Dave
Huddleston, Mitch Nease, Bob
Johnson, John Salser, Glen
Simpson, Tom Barnhart, Monty
Hart, Jeff Circle, Buddy Ervin,
Jim Ferrell and Tim Hill, freshmen. The sophomores were Jim
Williams, Bob Eynon, Mike
Codner, Rodney Allen, Randy
Forbes, Dennis Hawk, Greg
Middleswart and Vern Ord.
Juniors included were Jay Hill,
Larry Wilcoxen, Mike Nease,
Ed Lawson, Nick lhle and Ron
Hill. The graduating seniors,
I I •••
who Wallace pointed out will be
•'
sorely missed, are Neil Baker,
Charles Yost, Jim Smith, Bill
Cornell , Terry Varney and
INCl UDES
Raymond Robinson.
22.95
Junior high players were
VALUE
Jerry Johnson, Chris Hill, Eric
LEGSTAND
Dunning, Greg Cundiff, Kenneth Guinther, Cork Cleek,
~---...:.:.
Doug Warden, Tony Carnahan,
Bryon Robinson, Frank Shane,
Steve Nease, Chris Forbes, Joe
C/H
Brown, Tim Jenkins, J. F.
Young, Brady Huffman, Rick
Findley, Jimmy Riffle, Jim
10" blodc cui~ 3" deep. Blade brake, fror1t pU.lh ·button controls far ,ofety.
26" ~ 32" workloble.
Cundiff, Greg Davis, Keith
Circle, Greg Dunning, Greg
Johnson, Jeff Knighting, Danny
Brown, Paul Schultz, Ronnie

~ ~ ~
; ~

Bradbury PTA Hosts Parents ' at School

Baldwin-Wallace 24 Ferris
Xavier •2 Bowling Green 27
State (Mich.) 14
Cinclnnall23 Ohio University 15
Youngstown Stale 14 Gustavus
VIllanova u Dayton 7
Adolphus o
.
Akron 34 Indiana (Pa.) Slate 14
Wooster 3! Oberlin o
Ohio Wesleyan 31 Denison 0
Defiance 22 Olivet· (Mich.) 12
Willenborg 21 A5hland 14

MIDDLEPORT

m-5421

�''

''

•

'

1-'lb.: Dally Sentlnei, Mlcldlepoff-Pwneroy,O., Nov.l5,1171

•

EEKANDMEEK

,

Sentinel 'Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
For Sale
ANTIQUE upright plano, ex•
cellent condition, with bras!
candleholders . Brought from
London , England one year

ago. $700 ono. Phone 7•2-59.3.
11 -15-3tc
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY
CERN :

CON

Notice Is hereby given that on
November 2o1 , 1971. at 9 : 30a .m

1 public sale w dl be held at

Stewart's Wrecker Serv ice ,
Gellipolls Ferry, W Va . to se ll
for
cash
the
lollow1ng
collateral, to w1t · 1965 Cadillac
Coupe Deville , Ser i al No .
J5123072, said collateral be ing
held to secure an obli~ation
arising under a reta i l i n stalment security agreement
executed by Charles E . Smtth
and held by General Motors
Acceptance Corporation as
secured party Satd public sale
Is to be conducted accord1ng to
the laws of the State of Oh1o
General Motors Acceptance
Corporation reserves the right
to bid at this sale.
The collateral 1S present ly
stored and may be seen at
Stewart's Wrecker, Service ,
Gallipol is Ferry, w. va. ·

(Il l 15, lt

GENERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION

APPLE GROVE
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Norris, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
Ferne Hayman, Mrs. June
Wickersham, Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Norris, Mrs.
Eula Bracken, attended revival
meeting at the Racine Nazarene
Church where the Rev. Paul
Ha}man retired minister, a
former resident now of Gallon,
is the evangelist.

Of
QUALITY
t969 CHEVROLET

front axle, 15000 lb 2 speed rear e~xle, 23000 lb. rear
springs &amp; au)Ciliary spr ings. H duty frame, &amp; frame
re inforcement, front tow hooks. custom comfort &amp; ap

,pearance cab , w.c. mirrors , radto, power steenng, 900x20
tires Locally owned &amp; looks &amp; drives r ight

1968 CHE\1. '• TON PICKUP

10 X 52 HOME CREST lraller, 2

Phone 7•2-•461.

on good highway. Reybolds
Flower Shop, 773-5147, Mason, ·
W Va
11 -9-61p

SPECIAL 11695

Pomeroy Motor Co.

sta ndard , phone 742-487•.
ll -14-61p

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
f'I)MEROY, OHIO

1968 PONTIAC GTD, Black with
red inlerior, 400 cu . in., 4

speed. A-1 sha pe, Phone 773-

Notice

5417, Clifton, Wes t Virginia.

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ..
overweigh t lad ies, teens and
men interested in a Weight

5 P .M Day Before Publication

,/)\QI'lday Deadline 9 a .m.

_"'!.an~J iqtlon &amp; Correction$
Will be accepted until9a.m . for"

REGULATIONS

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cr~nts per Word one in sertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecutive inserttons.
18 cents per word six con .

secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent D1scount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
;:ach additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

By Unltect Press lnternationa I
East
OFFICE HOURS
Columbia 17 Penn 3
8:30a
.m to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Penn St. 35 North Car. St. 3
a
30
am
to 12 : 00 Noon
We I VIrginia 28 VMI 3
Saturday
Dartmouth 24 Cornell 1•
Boston Coli. 20 No. Ill 10
In Memory
Rutgers 14 Holy Cross 13
Navy 17 Syracuse 14
IN LOVING memory of Earl
Yale 10 Princeton 6
Foit, Sr ., who passed away
Williams 31 Amherst 14
15, 1969.
November
Harvard 24 Brown 19
Our
hearts
still ache \w'tth
Army 17 Pittsburgh u
sadness, Secret tears stil l
C. W. Post •7 Kings Point 0
flow ;
Lehigh 23 Bucknell 0
What
it meant to lose you, Earl,
Wash &amp; Jeff 27 Kenyon 15
No
one
will ever know .
Gettysburg 21 Wagner 16
When days are dark and dreary
Delaware 5-4 Boston. U. o

{R)

Pomtroy

wri~e:

Class

11 9-91p

------

in

Weight

Watchers {RI. 1863 Section
Rd .. Cincinnat i. Ohio 45237.
10-3-lfl

Day of Publi cati on
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objecttonal.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .

Wat chers

1966

MERCURY

Camel

Cyclone, 289 V 8, Hurs l 4
speed, new pain I, new engine,
good condi li on Phone 992

6015

11 -12-31c

- - -- - -

KOSCDT Kosmetics for sale,
delivered to you r door. New
products
coming
out
regularly Would you like to

try them? Call 992-5113 .
10-5-lfc
__:__:

condition, new tires, 4 wheel
drive, $995. Harold Brewer,

Long Bottom , Ohio, phone 985
3554.
11 -t4 -8tc
-----~

____

1r---------..I

LARGE Warm Morning coal ·
wood circulating heater, $40
Large Warm Morning heater,

Save $10.00 Now!

l

I

SIEGLER
HEATERS

I

S20. Phone Chester 985-3862

11 -14-Jtp
olfl
HONDA, little 50. Excellent
1 1969condi
tion . Phone 992·3564.

laring this ad and get SlO
on your purch(lse ot a new
Sieg ler heater

I

11 -1Ole

IAL sa le all types
1 SPEC
shr ubbery Musl make room

I
FUEL OIL
I
IAH
sizes in st~clo'•. we install, I
I f1nan ce , serv1,.e
I l:d
POMEROY
••
W. Cersty, Mgr.
I • JldcPhoneffl-2111
J

·---------Help WaniAd

Three large rooms and bath.

Adulls only. See at 256 South
Fourth Ave., M1ddleporl.
11-8-tc
~----

'2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Middleport . Couple preferred .

No pets. Phone 992-5247.
tl-12-61p
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's 'Mobile
Court. Rt . 12•. Syracuse
Jhio. 992-2951.
'
4·2-lfc
NEW, 2 bedroom mobiieh~e
with

ai r

conditioning

tn

Middleport area. Adults only,
Phone 992-5443.
11 -7-lfc

COAL, l i mestone. Excelsior

Ll KE new 5 pc . bron~etone
dinette - $45; bronze tone gas
range - $35 ; stereo, twin
spea kers - $35; Kenmore
co mbination washer and
dryer $125, Gulbransen
double keyboar d electric

organ, Original price $1,300,
will sacrifice for $450; Phone

992-3020 or see a! 765
Broadway, Middleport ,
11 -12-31c
---------RCA TV ., bl ack and white, 21"
walnut cabine1, good con ·
dilion. Phone 992-7016.

- - - --

ll-12-3tc
- --

- -- --

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
985-3529.
'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _l_l-9-61p

10-28-lfc

THE SOUND

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
11 -3-11&lt;

OF THE

BEDROOM trailer apart-

GOon ·

- -- - - ment,

ideal

for

couples .

Con tact McClure's Dairy Isle.
992-5248 or 992-3•36.
11 -5-lOtc

'

11 -14-Jic

MOBILE home space, on \
farm . Farm work can apply
to rent. Util ities paid. Call614-'
985-3832 ' '
11 -5-8tc

MAS4nvl

, J 1\SKED RlR "' LJGHT,
t&lt;I(JT NJ ILlUMIIJATION I

STAR

DARK AS PITCH
OUT TONIGHT,

C~-rnplete

Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Addition~
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endtoader Work

NEW &amp; OLD WORK'
All Weather !tooling &amp;
Construction Co. ond Anthony flumbing '&amp; Holing.
Complete
Plumbing, j
Heating and r.Jr Con· .

Septic Tanks
And LNch Bed,,

ditioning.
24~

992-7601

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 $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
s~~~~~o:~f,!$5,000.00 and- three children . 7'1• Pet. annual

Backhoe
1-420 John Deer Dozer

Chev. Short Wheel

Base Dump Truck
1-No. 95 International
Trailer

.E

EARL R. WERNER

Lincoln St.,,Middlopoo'l

EXPERIENCED
"

ra1e.

:.;;s:..(. ..

LEN SEc mr
PLAV ONCI MORE!,

PROJfCTION 1ST

~

1

HE 11liED TO ESCAPE 8V CAR,

HE DIGS niAT
RED~EAD SITTING IN
THE FRONT ~W

BUT, COACH, W~VE
SSEN TEN

(i

DURING '!HE RU&amp;H HOUI?I

I

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
-lnst.alation.

Selling

1-3414 International
Tractor with Loader
1- 3120 International

..

ROOFING l CARPENTER
WORK
f
SPOUTING, _
ROOF PAINTIN~

Radiator Service

FRISK AN0-1

CJoJ,.IGHT HIM 50 FEET
FROM 1HE BANK.

ll'L AntlER
-i&gt;UT
WH'/ 'IOU CR'/INK,
M'/ DOLLINK DOTTERS?
( -!5HOULI&gt; ONLY HA~
RA/S£0 PEN6VINS ""'-•"'-...

&amp;IFORFI. I

WA$

PROCLAIMED SADIE

LIST I

HAWKINS DA'r' -'!Oll

TO

WIO.RE.. &amp;OTH GUNG
l05E. HIM.~' r--nrl

M'/ NO-GOOD

515T£R. GAT HIM!!

•

INST.6,D-)

Rt. 1 Middleport, at Brad-

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

HILTON WOLFE 949-32fl
DALE DUTTON, 992-2S34

From the ·Largest Truck or

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

al uminum vinyl and wood .
Buy 10 white storm windows

Original Cabinet

and gel 2 storm doors FREE
l st 50 order s, 100 storm doors
to give away with this Grand

Company

Opening Sale. 10,000 feel of
Reynolds Aluminum siding at
huge
discount .
Gutfer,
awnings, patios, all lypes of
windows, kitchen cabinets,
indoor .outdoor carpe t, 501
nylon . Your com plete Home
Improvement Headquarters.
Easy credit lerms available.

On now. Reynolds, 773-5147 .
lt -10-151p

Now Offering A

New Service

•

HOME &amp; AUTO

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

with 2:0 years experience in
roofing to our staff.

Ph. 992-7796

I

SMITH ·NELSON
MOTORS, INt

I

992-2094
'
606 E'. Main Pomeroy

We have added a craftsman

Real Estate For Sale

NATHAN BIGGS
PARTS MGR.

PdMEROY

Ph. 992-2174

LIFE

Johnson and Soo, Inc .

MIDDLEPORT -

7 room

5-27 -tfc

house, llh baths, 3 bedrooms,
storm windows and doors,
front and back. porch, 2 car
garage, on cor ner lot. 383 N.

Third St .. Middleport. Phone
742-487 •.
11-IA-61p
CONVENIENT but secluded

AUTOMOBILE

FURNITURE .

been cancelled? Lost your

operator' s license? Call 992·

2966.

-

6-15-tfc

-----,-

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.

6887 .
--------

11-l4-61c

Mobile Homes for Salt

Virgil B.
· ~..
'•

__

~.~.

....,_ .... "'"'.
.' l ___ }

.

'

'•

flbmeroy , Ohio

POMEROY - warm 3 bedroom
renovated home, ceramic
bath, gas furnace, new kit chen w!lh range, ALL

PANELED .

MILLER

MOBiLE. HOMES
1220 Washinglon aivd.
Belpre, Ohio

REPOSSESSED. -1 10 x 50
R&lt;chardson - $2,395 ; 1 1970
kitchen, sink with pump .
Schull
- save $1 ,000 ; I 1970
Fronl porch, extra lot. Only
Broadmore c lass - save
$2,500.00.
11.000 , 1 1969 Schull all
electric - bargain; 1 1970
POMEROY - nice 7 room
Flee!w oo d, 4 bedroom home, 11!2 baths, gas forced
bargain ; 1 1970 Vision, 65 x 12
air furnace. wall to wall
- bargain ; R. A. Miller,
carpeting . 3 bedrooms, double
Belpre, Ohio - phone 423 ·
garage. REDUCED Sl,500.r".
9531.
11 -12-121c
RURAL - 8 room home , bath,

RURAL - 6 room older house,

gas heat. Drilled

well

on

Chesler water. Only $4,500.00.
BUSINESS -

30 room brick

with excellent view of the
Ohio river. D-1-2-3 licenses.

Parking lot.
BUSINESS- 3 bedroom home,
bath, 2 acres of land. NEW
building 30 x 44.

Real Estate For Sale

Cleland
Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY

LAND - 27 acres on blacktop
road.
$2,500.00.
NEW
LISTING.
MR. PROPERTY OWNER
WANT ACTION, SEE
JUST a phone call to our office
US NEAR KROGER'S
992-2259 will get your property
992-3325 992·2378
the complete service of our
Helen L. Teaford,
"PROSPECT FILE and
Associate
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
11 -14-6tc
for REAL ESTATE." CALL
TODAY AND MAKE AN
'SiX ROOM house, bath , }uli' APPOINTMENT, PLACE
THE SALE OF YOUR
basemeijl, 133 Bulternw Ave.,
PROPERTY
IN
COMjus t walking distance" from
PETENT
HANDS.
downtown 'Pomeroy . Contact·
HENRY E. CLELAND
~d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswo11t~
REALTOR
Urive. Columbus, Ohio, phone;
11 -14-3tc
237-4334, Columbus.
5-9-ttd

3 ROOMS
NEW·
FURI41JURE
. '349.95
S35.od "Down'Selan~e On
Convenient
Terms. ·
~

---- ·

.--....1···-MASON.
-- - -

WMP0/1390 !fURNITURE
ON YOUR DIAL
va. ·
,

Mason~W.

delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free

ro Mf:!

IS GU IDED AUT0-

MI\11CAU.Y ANP
REQUIRES NO
r1LDrl

Could LjOU
people
me an' m4 po' ,;ick
ol' p11pa
a ridet'

th' nex'
town!

aluminum siding, softet and

gutter. Call Donald Smith,
Racine, Ohio.
_ __ __ _ _ _10:_-l -tfc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Se ptic tanks Installed. George
1Bi Ill Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-lfc

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

3-29-tfc

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

60PMOTHER

NEIGLER Building Supply .
Free estimate on building
your new home. WUI draw
prJnts to suit the lay of your
land . Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and

Comolete Serv ice

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

I!Mker
110 Mechanic Street

LIKf: A FAIRY

Open BTil~
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

CONCRETE

.... . ..

5HE:S 5EEN MORE

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

SEW ING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

,-&lt;,1-·_

1.',

ALTHCo3H I CALL

HER'AUNr'BE~IE 1

Phone 992-2094

----~--

,

TEAPORD
SR.

ROOMS
$12,000.00.

-·

YOU!

- GUARANTEED-

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service. Reasonable rates. Ph . 4-46 -4782,
balanced
elec·
Gallipolis . John Russell.
Wheels
ONner &amp; Operator .
tronically .
All
work
5-12-lfc
guaranteed
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992-3213.

building lots on T79 at Rock
Sprin gs. Wit hin walking
distance of Meig s High
Sc hool. a 5 mmute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends , or after 5
7·_:_:
27-tfc
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992· _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_

Pomeroy

,,55

2-12-tfc

- - -- - - -

TOASTE'FI: ANP
l'LL SHDHI

Wheel Alignment

662 - ~03.1

estl mates . Phone 992-328•.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co. ,
Middleport. Ohio
6-30-tfc

IN ~E COilP
FWOM THIS

EXPERT

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

insurance READY -MIX

PLEI\SE PLUG

. ~~~

·HOUSE, i642 Li'ncoln Heights.
Call Danny Thompson, 992- HARRISON'S TV and Antenna HOUSE MOVING: Hous .. , etc .
for Christmas trees , one and
Se r vice. Phone 992 -2522.
raised, moved, underpinned,
2t96.
two gallon cans, also balled
6-10-tfc
remodeled. Estimates free ,
and burlap. holly, Camillas, ~-------_:_1.:.:_18- tf• - - - - -anywhere. National House
u pright
and
spreading
AWNINGS, storm door.s and
Movers, Box 5002, Charl ..ton ,
iunipers, blue cypress, pink NICE 2·Siory home "IIH1 full
windows . car port s,
W. Va. 25311 , or phone 304-925basemen t, 2 lot s, new 1orced
and white dogwood. Midway
marquees, aluminum siding
3279
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
Markel, Pomeroy, phone 992and railing. Call A Jacob,
9-30-60tp
Phone
Elementary School
2582.
sa les representative. For free
992 7384 to see
11 -l•-31c
es t imates , phon e Charles SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Mill er
11 -7- lfc
Lisle. Syracuse. V.
V. Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
- - - -- -

-----~-

iaid a:way!"

Separate

1- 64

15,E.LVI~EY --

::\MOKii.JG 1"- 1'&gt;'\D
F()R YOJR H€ALTH !

GOT A LIGHT ?

bury

For Sale

and everything goes wrong ,
We seem to hear you whisper , EARN at home addressing
Cheer up and carry on.
envelopes. Ru sh stam ped
Each lime we see your picture,
self .addressed envelope. The
You seem to smile and say
Ambrose Co., 4.125 Lakeborn,
Don'l cry, I'm only sleeptng, we
Dav1sburg , Mich . 48019.
will meet agatn some da y.
10-24-JOip
Sa~
missed by wife
Minr,1e, and children EarL
Jr .. Vio la and Vada

" •• , but I can hue it

No

.~IOHNsQN

-S PECIALS-'November 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. suo
Now su ,
November 8 thru 13
PERMANENT
Reg. Sl2.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

992-2769
BEGINNING
Monday, '69 FORD pickup truck , exNovember 15, we will hull
ce llent condition . Phone 742·
walnuts only on Monday,
GRA ND OPENING SALE
5032
Wednesday and Saturday
11 -12-3tc
Reynolds Aluminum Builders
from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m ., Midway
Supply of Mason City . Amrax
Market, Pomeroy .
Stone and Bri ck siding,
11 -t2-3tc 1967 JEEP Wagoneer, good

Slippery Rock 28 Clarion 7
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
South
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Wake Forest 23 Duke 7
4-9-lfc
Clemson 20 Maryland 14
Florida 35 Kentucky 24
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy ,
Auburn 35 Georgia 20
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
Georgia Tech 12 Florida St . 6
54.3.
Alabama 31 Miami {Fla .) 3
8-15-tfc
Loulsvl 24 Southern Ill. u
lanteci
To
Buy
11 -15-llp
Western Ky. 31 Buller 0
Fitzpatrick OrOLD Furniture, dishes, clocks, APPLES North Carolina 32 Virgin ia 20
chards
,
State
Route 689 ,
and.or com plete households.
5amford 21 Newberr~ 0
Wilesville,
669·3785.
phone
Write M 0 . Miller, Rt. 4.
Card o! Thanks
Hampden-Sydney 37 Drexel 6
9 3-lfc
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Ca
ll
992-6271.
Southern Miss 24 LA. Tech 20
THE
FAMILY
of
Jo
seph
8-25-llc
Tenn St. 5-4 Wls St. {Superior) 7
London wishes to express its - - - -EARLY Amencan stereo·rad1o
Notre Dame 21 Tulane 7
sincere t hanks and ap. SET 10" gas logs. Phone 949combination, AM-FM radio, 4
Grambling 55 Norfolk St. 0
prec i ation to l r 1ends and
3811 or see Roberl Hill,
speake r sound system , 4
LSU 28 Mfss 51 3
neighbors who remembered
Rac1n e
speed automatic changer.
Jackson St. 34 MorQan St 29
them with floral offer1ngs,
11 11-31p
Balance 578.59 . Use our
cards, calls and food. Special
budge!
lerms. Call 992-7085.
thanks to Rev . M. C.
Midwest
ll -15-61c
Larimore. Ewing Funeral
Northwestern 14 Oh io Ut. 10
Instruction
Home, the Syracuse Ladies
Michigan 20 Purdue 17
MODERN Walnut slyle stereoAuxiliary, the Meigs County THOUSANDS of men needed in
Michigan St. 40 Minn 25
radio, AM . FM radio, 4
Sheriff's Dept ., and the
Toledo 43 Marshall 0
Trucking lnduslry . 129,000
speaker sound systems, 4
Pomeroy Pollee Department
Ill inois 35 Wisconsin 27
iobs open annually accord ing
automatic changer .
speed
lt -14llp
Indiana U Iowa 7
to U. S. Depl. ot Labor. Ex Separate controls . Balance
Cincinnati 23 Ohio U. 15
ce llen t earnings after short
$69.32. Use our budget terms
Nebraska« Kansas St. 17
training
period.
For
ap
·
Call
992 7085.
Notice
Eastern Mlch 35 S. Oak. St. 2
plication and interview call or
ll -15-61c
Villanova u Dayton 7
NOT ICE lo all members Me1gs
wrile: TRI -STATE DRIVER
Western Mlch 25 Pacific 21
Aerie 2171 Fraternal Order of
TRAINING , 602 Kanawha
Ohio Wesleyan 31 Denison 0
Eagles . First reading of new
Valley
Bank
Bldg .. COR N, any amounl. Picking
Iowa St. 45 Missouri 17
daily, Dale Kautz, Rt. 3,
by laws will be he ld at regular
Charleslon, W. Va. 25301.
Central Mich 24 Hofstra 13
Pomoroy, Ohio 985-3831.
meeting Monday, Nov . 15,
Ph one:
1304)
346-1556.
I
l ] . J2 .3fp
Southwest
1971, at 8 p.m . All members
Licensed by Sla te of Ohio 552.
Qklahoma 56 Kansas 10
are urged lo at lend .
11 -14 21c
Arkansas 18 SMU 13
11 -12-31c
PAINT Damage. 1971 Zig -Zag
Texas Tech 27 Baylor 0
sewing machines. Still in
Texas 31 TCU 0
or ig inal ca rt ons. No at .
RUMMAGE
Sa le,
Coals Salesmen Wanted
Texas A&amp;M 18 Rice 13
tachments needed as our
Building, Middleport. StartTEXAS REFINERY CORP.
Air Force 17 Tulsa 7
ing Monday, Nov. 15. ·
con lrol s are built -in . Sews
offers opportunity for high
Arizona St. 52 Wyoming 19
with I or 2 needles, makes
11-14-3tc
income PLUS regu lar cash
Southwest Tex 33 Sui Ross 7
bultonholes. sew on buttons,
and
vacation
bonuses,
Houston 56 Virg inia Tech 29
monograms, and blind hem
abundant fringe benefits to
Howard Payn~ 20 Texas A&amp; I 1• PUPPIES logive away , 6 weeks
Full cash price, $38.50
stitch.
old . Ph one 742-•874.
mature men 1n Pomeroy
McNeese 31 S.E . Louisiana 0
or budget plan available.
11 -14-61p
area Regardless of ex ·
West
Phone 992-5641
peri ence, air mail A. I, Pale,
Colorado 40 Okla. St. 6
ll -9-6tc
Pres ., Texas Refinery Corp.,
Arizona 27 BYU 14
Box 711, Fort Worth, Texas E l ECTROLUX
Idaho 40 Montana St. 2
vacuum
76101.
Utah St. 21 Utah 17
For Rent
cleaner complete with at.
ll -14-41p
California 17 Oregon 10
tachments, cordwinder and
SOIJthern Cal 13 Washington 12
BRAND NEW, 12x60, 2paint spray . Used but in like
Oregon Sl 21 Wash St u
bedroom mobile home across
new condi tion . Pay $37.45
5an Jose St 13 Stanford 12
from Bradbury School. Call Employment Wanted
cash
or
credit
terms
New Mexico 49 Ulep 19
992·5308 or see Charles Lewis, HOUSECLEANING In Racine,
available. Phone 992-5641.
Northern Colo 42 Fort Hays 21
from
2nd hou se south
11 -9-6tc
Syracuse and Pomeroy area.
SF St. 18 Hayward St. 17
Bradbury Schoo l.
Pets
-Phone
992-2876.
Chico St 41 USF 7
welcome.
10-24-llc 1965 DODGE Panel Truck, $300.
Cal Poly slo 9 Sla . Barbara 3
11 -15-tfc
Ingels Furniture, Ph. 9922635
For Rent
11-l4 -31c
CARNIVAL
by Dick Turner FURNISHE·D apartmenl.

"Maybt I oan't buy
, happn·-~.... • ~ ...
•

JPHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

(GROUP SALE)

1960 FORD J;• ton truck, ex ce llent condition, 4 speed

LOOKV -- IT'S

sAY, euoov, 'rt&gt;u

-- EXCEPT FER
ONE OADBURN

Business Services

EQUIPMENT SALE

Auto Sales

Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .

Northeastern 42 Vermont 7

For Rent or Sale

der, Econoline Van, including
good motor. Also good used
Burroughs Adding Machine.

bedroom, furn1shed, gas heat.
good condit ion . Home Crest

8' Body , good 750xl6 ttres . V 8 eng ine. std . trans .. radio,
sol1d cab . Worth more.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

.

ll -15-31c PARTS for 1962 Ford, 6 cylin-

CE -50-2 Ton , 84" cab to axle. 350 C}l tn VB engine. 7000 lb

IT SHORE

LOWEEZ.V..

SLEEP ING rooms for rent in I SET 1971 World Boo~ of En cyclopedia, 1 sel 1969 Wor~
n1ce
mobile
home
in
Book,
Childcrafl ,
DicPomeroy, Ohio. $20 weekly
l•onaries,
Atlas
,
1
set
1970
per occupant
Nice ac .
Chlldcrafl
Eldon
R.
commodations with bed linen
Kraeuler, 949·2491.
and towels furnished . If in 11 12-61p
terested write P. 0 . Box 712,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Secur~ty
deposit must be made.

• NOWS2995

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

College Scores

For Sale-

For Rent

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 Sf611S

'

II•IS

LEGAL NOTICE

Charles F . Powell , whos~ last
known place of r~slden ce is
Route 1, M lddl~po rt , Oh io, Is
hereby notified that on the 21st
day of September , 1971 Leta A
Powell , being pld intiff filed her
pelilion against h im as
deten dan! in the Court ot
Common Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio, Case No . 14,935, praying
lor divorce from sa id Charles F .
Powell on the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty , support and alimony
and division of property , and
other proper relief ; said cause
will be for hear ing on or nfter
the llth day of December , 1971 ,
Lela A. Powell , plaintiff
J B. 0' Brien, attorney
tor plaintiff .

lt11

5-1 -Hc

I. 8,

TilE ·BORN LOSER

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNlE.'
STRIKfS ME THAT A STIFF WIMO'D BLOW
TIIAT RICKETY OL' BUILDIH' RIGHT !!'III\
M R~! WOitDER WHAT HOMEi'rS
-ru5i STASHED AVIA'f IH IT .

I

~

15, 22, 29 {12 16, 61

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS

Noti ce 1S hereby given , In
- - ------,_-:=,_ -- compliann with Section 5715 ·
17 revised code, that the ta•
~UBBER stamps made to
returns
of Meigs County , for the
order, 24·hour service. Dwaln
year 1971 have beP.n revised and
or Wilma Casto, Portland.
the valuations comp leted and
10·2•-30tc are open for public inspection at
the office of the County Auditor
in the Court House, Pomeroy ,
Ohio. Complaints aga inst any
valuation or assessment, ucept
the valuations t 1xed and
NOTICE OF
assessments made by the Ta x
APPOINTMENT
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
Case No . 2DS73 heard by the County Board of
Estate of
CHARLES
E . Revision, at Its office In the
STO BART Deceased .
Court House , Pom~roy, Ohio, on
Not ice is hereby given that or after Nov . 12, 1971 . Com·
Frances M Yost of Middleport, pla ints must be made in
Oh io, has been duly appointed writing, on blaftkS furnish~d by
Adm inistralrix of the Estate of the County Auditor and flied in
Charles E Stobart, deceased , his off ice on or before the time
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
lim ited for payment of taxes for
Cred itors are required to file the f irst half year, or at any
their claims with said fiduciary time during which taxes are
within tovr months
received by
the
County
Dated th is 1st day of Treasurer, without penalt y for
Nov embe r 1971.
the f irst half year .
John C. Bacon
Gordon H . Caldwell
Actlno Judge
Auditor of Meigs County
(lll 8, 15, 22, 31
{11 ) l4·10tc

ACROSS
I. Fit fora
king
6. Yonder
-11. Baffled
c"'~=::-::~:'-=:-:-::-=:-, 12. Luau
TI-IAT
diversion
NEVER 13. Break in
~
.,,E ME." 14. Prefix
rank
~,..Y,
for
dexterity
15. Relative
of the
ostrich
16, Repeatedly, to a
poet ·
18. Big19, Informal

LEGAL NOTICE

affirma-

tive

D.farmer
tf.Royal
diggings
46, City in
Nevada
n.Oftheeye
48. School·
boy's
ordeal
49. Yule
symbol

5.Make
believe
{2 wds.)
6. Well nowl
7. See 3
Down
(3 wds.)
8. "Tiny

Alice"

play·
wright
9. Pluvious
11. Postpone
DOWN
17. Athletic
group
1. Hootch
2. Factor
23. Consume
3. Botch
25. Phosgene
(4wds.) 27. Informal
farewell
4. Unnecessary
29. Au
activity
courant

Solurclay'o Cryptoquole: THE MIND OUGHT SOMETIMES

TO BE DIVERTED, THAT IT MAY RETUR~ THE BETTER
TO TIIINKING.-PHAEDRUS
(C 1971 King Feature! Syndicate, Inc!.)

JI~WID~;p,J=::!~c:

31, Rate of
move·
men!
33. Bottling
establish·
men!
34. Officer
material
35. Nimble
37. Attain
43. Liquor
portion
45. Nilotic

Unocramble lhue four Jumble~,

one letter to tll'h oquare, to
form rour ordinary wordo.

CHOAR

tribesman

20. By birth
21. Grassland
(var.)

WH/J:r 'fOU HAV&amp; 1l&gt;
MAKE lt.l ~I:R 10 15!:

22. Being
(Sp.)

WANTEDII

IJIIT, TfRRY, IT SOUNDED

LIKE A PLOT- AIID 1 HAVE
Ttlf 0Wf5T FelliNG
TliAT HE'S SERIOUS!

10 Homes In Need
Of Siding
Homeowners in this general area will be

d'-

strate
34. Craw's
cry
36. Thrice
(mus.)
. 38. Spire

given an op.

CAPTAIN EASY

FREE TEFLON COATED ELECTRIC SKILLET,
TO FIRST FIVE (5) PEOPLE GETIING .
ESTIMATES.

•
•
·Yo• rni;hl JOY U coven tiN

1Antwert

___.::~:l!!H~I_:"LAND'S CAH"
I'M

AREN'T
5HAKIN6

I'
I

'1111 '77
." " '

·Is-LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
al'ostropheo, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are different.

l
!

lA

ELUSRWM

ARADP

ELUSRWII(
IWM

j

Fl

lVFRWLVP
ULW

Fl · DSM

DSM
~

===....t:;."-'.J

1

MADE IT 1HROJ6H THE
WEEKEND WITHOUT M't'

ZIVT

EMW.
ZIVT

WI
IA

MHDVLIVF!tWLVP-' ELW. - MGNMVD

SJNN-LVF
'

ULW

b

"
t;=::~~;:~~==~~

BLANKET! I DID IT!! OlD iT.!

A Cryptogram Quotation
IWM

~1~~~

AN!( MORE ...

I'M ACTVALL't' HVN6R'&lt;!

~~~~HANDS

AXYDLBAAXK

NOT DIZZ't'

Ml( ~TOMACH OOE~N'T HURl' ..

???!??

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

SIDING, BOX 729C THE DAILY
SENTINEL, ?OMEROY, OHIO

lO.,..,

Ju 10 bi&lt;t 1 PIECI ASSAY NORMAL DECENT
S.aurday'•

ornament

the chemrcalondustry. After years ol testing and research
was recently introduced to the public . It carries 1
guarantee in writin~ and provides maximum insulollon, .both summer and Winter, thereby lowering the cost of air
conditioning and heating. The new product can bo used
over every type of home including frame, asbestos
stucco, brick, etc. Many different decorator colors ar~
available. Homeowners who act now will rectlvt specltl
decorative work at no additional cost. An oppalnlment
will be made to see your home without any obligation
whatsoever. All types of financing oro ovolloblo.
SEND NAME, A~DRESS AND PHONE NO. TO:

(,\Mwe"

39. In the
past
40. Wooden
core
4l.Storage
box

the most. trusted names In '

1t IS espectalty recommended for use in Ohio climate and

Now ........., the drclod lellen
to form the ourprioe 1111wer, u
ounealecl b1 the above .,.toon.

Kitty's
friend
30. Coup

'32. Demon·

portuni_tv_of havin~ the new Vydel, the rigid, all vinyl
home Sldt.ng matertal applied to their homes 1t a very low
cost . It wtll be of special interest to Homeowners who are
fed up with constant painting and other maintenance
costs. The new MIRACLE SIDING was developed by 1
Chemical_Co~poration, one of

I

24. Frenzy
26. 11-ain't
hay"
28. Miss

;

�''

''

•

'

1-'lb.: Dally Sentlnei, Mlcldlepoff-Pwneroy,O., Nov.l5,1171

•

EEKANDMEEK

,

Sentinel 'Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
For Sale
ANTIQUE upright plano, ex•
cellent condition, with bras!
candleholders . Brought from
London , England one year

ago. $700 ono. Phone 7•2-59.3.
11 -15-3tc
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY
CERN :

CON

Notice Is hereby given that on
November 2o1 , 1971. at 9 : 30a .m

1 public sale w dl be held at

Stewart's Wrecker Serv ice ,
Gellipolls Ferry, W Va . to se ll
for
cash
the
lollow1ng
collateral, to w1t · 1965 Cadillac
Coupe Deville , Ser i al No .
J5123072, said collateral be ing
held to secure an obli~ation
arising under a reta i l i n stalment security agreement
executed by Charles E . Smtth
and held by General Motors
Acceptance Corporation as
secured party Satd public sale
Is to be conducted accord1ng to
the laws of the State of Oh1o
General Motors Acceptance
Corporation reserves the right
to bid at this sale.
The collateral 1S present ly
stored and may be seen at
Stewart's Wrecker, Service ,
Gallipol is Ferry, w. va. ·

(Il l 15, lt

GENERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION

APPLE GROVE
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Norris, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
Ferne Hayman, Mrs. June
Wickersham, Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Norris, Mrs.
Eula Bracken, attended revival
meeting at the Racine Nazarene
Church where the Rev. Paul
Ha}man retired minister, a
former resident now of Gallon,
is the evangelist.

Of
QUALITY
t969 CHEVROLET

front axle, 15000 lb 2 speed rear e~xle, 23000 lb. rear
springs &amp; au)Ciliary spr ings. H duty frame, &amp; frame
re inforcement, front tow hooks. custom comfort &amp; ap

,pearance cab , w.c. mirrors , radto, power steenng, 900x20
tires Locally owned &amp; looks &amp; drives r ight

1968 CHE\1. '• TON PICKUP

10 X 52 HOME CREST lraller, 2

Phone 7•2-•461.

on good highway. Reybolds
Flower Shop, 773-5147, Mason, ·
W Va
11 -9-61p

SPECIAL 11695

Pomeroy Motor Co.

sta ndard , phone 742-487•.
ll -14-61p

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
f'I)MEROY, OHIO

1968 PONTIAC GTD, Black with
red inlerior, 400 cu . in., 4

speed. A-1 sha pe, Phone 773-

Notice

5417, Clifton, Wes t Virginia.

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ..
overweigh t lad ies, teens and
men interested in a Weight

5 P .M Day Before Publication

,/)\QI'lday Deadline 9 a .m.

_"'!.an~J iqtlon &amp; Correction$
Will be accepted until9a.m . for"

REGULATIONS

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cr~nts per Word one in sertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecutive inserttons.
18 cents per word six con .

secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent D1scount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
;:ach additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

By Unltect Press lnternationa I
East
OFFICE HOURS
Columbia 17 Penn 3
8:30a
.m to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Penn St. 35 North Car. St. 3
a
30
am
to 12 : 00 Noon
We I VIrginia 28 VMI 3
Saturday
Dartmouth 24 Cornell 1•
Boston Coli. 20 No. Ill 10
In Memory
Rutgers 14 Holy Cross 13
Navy 17 Syracuse 14
IN LOVING memory of Earl
Yale 10 Princeton 6
Foit, Sr ., who passed away
Williams 31 Amherst 14
15, 1969.
November
Harvard 24 Brown 19
Our
hearts
still ache \w'tth
Army 17 Pittsburgh u
sadness, Secret tears stil l
C. W. Post •7 Kings Point 0
flow ;
Lehigh 23 Bucknell 0
What
it meant to lose you, Earl,
Wash &amp; Jeff 27 Kenyon 15
No
one
will ever know .
Gettysburg 21 Wagner 16
When days are dark and dreary
Delaware 5-4 Boston. U. o

{R)

Pomtroy

wri~e:

Class

11 9-91p

------

in

Weight

Watchers {RI. 1863 Section
Rd .. Cincinnat i. Ohio 45237.
10-3-lfl

Day of Publi cati on
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objecttonal.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .

Wat chers

1966

MERCURY

Camel

Cyclone, 289 V 8, Hurs l 4
speed, new pain I, new engine,
good condi li on Phone 992

6015

11 -12-31c

- - -- - -

KOSCDT Kosmetics for sale,
delivered to you r door. New
products
coming
out
regularly Would you like to

try them? Call 992-5113 .
10-5-lfc
__:__:

condition, new tires, 4 wheel
drive, $995. Harold Brewer,

Long Bottom , Ohio, phone 985
3554.
11 -t4 -8tc
-----~

____

1r---------..I

LARGE Warm Morning coal ·
wood circulating heater, $40
Large Warm Morning heater,

Save $10.00 Now!

l

I

SIEGLER
HEATERS

I

S20. Phone Chester 985-3862

11 -14-Jtp
olfl
HONDA, little 50. Excellent
1 1969condi
tion . Phone 992·3564.

laring this ad and get SlO
on your purch(lse ot a new
Sieg ler heater

I

11 -1Ole

IAL sa le all types
1 SPEC
shr ubbery Musl make room

I
FUEL OIL
I
IAH
sizes in st~clo'•. we install, I
I f1nan ce , serv1,.e
I l:d
POMEROY
••
W. Cersty, Mgr.
I • JldcPhoneffl-2111
J

·---------Help WaniAd

Three large rooms and bath.

Adulls only. See at 256 South
Fourth Ave., M1ddleporl.
11-8-tc
~----

'2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Middleport . Couple preferred .

No pets. Phone 992-5247.
tl-12-61p
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's 'Mobile
Court. Rt . 12•. Syracuse
Jhio. 992-2951.
'
4·2-lfc
NEW, 2 bedroom mobiieh~e
with

ai r

conditioning

tn

Middleport area. Adults only,
Phone 992-5443.
11 -7-lfc

COAL, l i mestone. Excelsior

Ll KE new 5 pc . bron~etone
dinette - $45; bronze tone gas
range - $35 ; stereo, twin
spea kers - $35; Kenmore
co mbination washer and
dryer $125, Gulbransen
double keyboar d electric

organ, Original price $1,300,
will sacrifice for $450; Phone

992-3020 or see a! 765
Broadway, Middleport ,
11 -12-31c
---------RCA TV ., bl ack and white, 21"
walnut cabine1, good con ·
dilion. Phone 992-7016.

- - - --

ll-12-3tc
- --

- -- --

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
985-3529.
'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _l_l-9-61p

10-28-lfc

THE SOUND

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
11 -3-11&lt;

OF THE

BEDROOM trailer apart-

GOon ·

- -- - - ment,

ideal

for

couples .

Con tact McClure's Dairy Isle.
992-5248 or 992-3•36.
11 -5-lOtc

'

11 -14-Jic

MOBILE home space, on \
farm . Farm work can apply
to rent. Util ities paid. Call614-'
985-3832 ' '
11 -5-8tc

MAS4nvl

, J 1\SKED RlR "' LJGHT,
t&lt;I(JT NJ ILlUMIIJATION I

STAR

DARK AS PITCH
OUT TONIGHT,

C~-rnplete

Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Addition~
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endtoader Work

NEW &amp; OLD WORK'
All Weather !tooling &amp;
Construction Co. ond Anthony flumbing '&amp; Holing.
Complete
Plumbing, j
Heating and r.Jr Con· .

Septic Tanks
And LNch Bed,,

ditioning.
24~

992-7601

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 $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
s~~~~~o:~f,!$5,000.00 and- three children . 7'1• Pet. annual

Backhoe
1-420 John Deer Dozer

Chev. Short Wheel

Base Dump Truck
1-No. 95 International
Trailer

.E

EARL R. WERNER

Lincoln St.,,Middlopoo'l

EXPERIENCED
"

ra1e.

:.;;s:..(. ..

LEN SEc mr
PLAV ONCI MORE!,

PROJfCTION 1ST

~

1

HE 11liED TO ESCAPE 8V CAR,

HE DIGS niAT
RED~EAD SITTING IN
THE FRONT ~W

BUT, COACH, W~VE
SSEN TEN

(i

DURING '!HE RU&amp;H HOUI?I

I

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
-lnst.alation.

Selling

1-3414 International
Tractor with Loader
1- 3120 International

..

ROOFING l CARPENTER
WORK
f
SPOUTING, _
ROOF PAINTIN~

Radiator Service

FRISK AN0-1

CJoJ,.IGHT HIM 50 FEET
FROM 1HE BANK.

ll'L AntlER
-i&gt;UT
WH'/ 'IOU CR'/INK,
M'/ DOLLINK DOTTERS?
( -!5HOULI&gt; ONLY HA~
RA/S£0 PEN6VINS ""'-•"'-...

&amp;IFORFI. I

WA$

PROCLAIMED SADIE

LIST I

HAWKINS DA'r' -'!Oll

TO

WIO.RE.. &amp;OTH GUNG
l05E. HIM.~' r--nrl

M'/ NO-GOOD

515T£R. GAT HIM!!

•

INST.6,D-)

Rt. 1 Middleport, at Brad-

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

HILTON WOLFE 949-32fl
DALE DUTTON, 992-2S34

From the ·Largest Truck or

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

al uminum vinyl and wood .
Buy 10 white storm windows

Original Cabinet

and gel 2 storm doors FREE
l st 50 order s, 100 storm doors
to give away with this Grand

Company

Opening Sale. 10,000 feel of
Reynolds Aluminum siding at
huge
discount .
Gutfer,
awnings, patios, all lypes of
windows, kitchen cabinets,
indoor .outdoor carpe t, 501
nylon . Your com plete Home
Improvement Headquarters.
Easy credit lerms available.

On now. Reynolds, 773-5147 .
lt -10-151p

Now Offering A

New Service

•

HOME &amp; AUTO

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

with 2:0 years experience in
roofing to our staff.

Ph. 992-7796

I

SMITH ·NELSON
MOTORS, INt

I

992-2094
'
606 E'. Main Pomeroy

We have added a craftsman

Real Estate For Sale

NATHAN BIGGS
PARTS MGR.

PdMEROY

Ph. 992-2174

LIFE

Johnson and Soo, Inc .

MIDDLEPORT -

7 room

5-27 -tfc

house, llh baths, 3 bedrooms,
storm windows and doors,
front and back. porch, 2 car
garage, on cor ner lot. 383 N.

Third St .. Middleport. Phone
742-487 •.
11-IA-61p
CONVENIENT but secluded

AUTOMOBILE

FURNITURE .

been cancelled? Lost your

operator' s license? Call 992·

2966.

-

6-15-tfc

-----,-

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.

6887 .
--------

11-l4-61c

Mobile Homes for Salt

Virgil B.
· ~..
'•

__

~.~.

....,_ .... "'"'.
.' l ___ }

.

'

'•

flbmeroy , Ohio

POMEROY - warm 3 bedroom
renovated home, ceramic
bath, gas furnace, new kit chen w!lh range, ALL

PANELED .

MILLER

MOBiLE. HOMES
1220 Washinglon aivd.
Belpre, Ohio

REPOSSESSED. -1 10 x 50
R&lt;chardson - $2,395 ; 1 1970
kitchen, sink with pump .
Schull
- save $1 ,000 ; I 1970
Fronl porch, extra lot. Only
Broadmore c lass - save
$2,500.00.
11.000 , 1 1969 Schull all
electric - bargain; 1 1970
POMEROY - nice 7 room
Flee!w oo d, 4 bedroom home, 11!2 baths, gas forced
bargain ; 1 1970 Vision, 65 x 12
air furnace. wall to wall
- bargain ; R. A. Miller,
carpeting . 3 bedrooms, double
Belpre, Ohio - phone 423 ·
garage. REDUCED Sl,500.r".
9531.
11 -12-121c
RURAL - 8 room home , bath,

RURAL - 6 room older house,

gas heat. Drilled

well

on

Chesler water. Only $4,500.00.
BUSINESS -

30 room brick

with excellent view of the
Ohio river. D-1-2-3 licenses.

Parking lot.
BUSINESS- 3 bedroom home,
bath, 2 acres of land. NEW
building 30 x 44.

Real Estate For Sale

Cleland
Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY

LAND - 27 acres on blacktop
road.
$2,500.00.
NEW
LISTING.
MR. PROPERTY OWNER
WANT ACTION, SEE
JUST a phone call to our office
US NEAR KROGER'S
992-2259 will get your property
992-3325 992·2378
the complete service of our
Helen L. Teaford,
"PROSPECT FILE and
Associate
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
11 -14-6tc
for REAL ESTATE." CALL
TODAY AND MAKE AN
'SiX ROOM house, bath , }uli' APPOINTMENT, PLACE
THE SALE OF YOUR
basemeijl, 133 Bulternw Ave.,
PROPERTY
IN
COMjus t walking distance" from
PETENT
HANDS.
downtown 'Pomeroy . Contact·
HENRY E. CLELAND
~d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswo11t~
REALTOR
Urive. Columbus, Ohio, phone;
11 -14-3tc
237-4334, Columbus.
5-9-ttd

3 ROOMS
NEW·
FURI41JURE
. '349.95
S35.od "Down'Selan~e On
Convenient
Terms. ·
~

---- ·

.--....1···-MASON.
-- - -

WMP0/1390 !fURNITURE
ON YOUR DIAL
va. ·
,

Mason~W.

delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free

ro Mf:!

IS GU IDED AUT0-

MI\11CAU.Y ANP
REQUIRES NO
r1LDrl

Could LjOU
people
me an' m4 po' ,;ick
ol' p11pa
a ridet'

th' nex'
town!

aluminum siding, softet and

gutter. Call Donald Smith,
Racine, Ohio.
_ __ __ _ _ _10:_-l -tfc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Se ptic tanks Installed. George
1Bi Ill Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-lfc

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

3-29-tfc

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

60PMOTHER

NEIGLER Building Supply .
Free estimate on building
your new home. WUI draw
prJnts to suit the lay of your
land . Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and

Comolete Serv ice

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

I!Mker
110 Mechanic Street

LIKf: A FAIRY

Open BTil~
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

CONCRETE

.... . ..

5HE:S 5EEN MORE

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

SEW ING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

,-&lt;,1-·_

1.',

ALTHCo3H I CALL

HER'AUNr'BE~IE 1

Phone 992-2094

----~--

,

TEAPORD
SR.

ROOMS
$12,000.00.

-·

YOU!

- GUARANTEED-

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service. Reasonable rates. Ph . 4-46 -4782,
balanced
elec·
Gallipolis . John Russell.
Wheels
ONner &amp; Operator .
tronically .
All
work
5-12-lfc
guaranteed
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992-3213.

building lots on T79 at Rock
Sprin gs. Wit hin walking
distance of Meig s High
Sc hool. a 5 mmute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends , or after 5
7·_:_:
27-tfc
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992· _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_

Pomeroy

,,55

2-12-tfc

- - -- - - -

TOASTE'FI: ANP
l'LL SHDHI

Wheel Alignment

662 - ~03.1

estl mates . Phone 992-328•.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co. ,
Middleport. Ohio
6-30-tfc

IN ~E COilP
FWOM THIS

EXPERT

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

insurance READY -MIX

PLEI\SE PLUG

. ~~~

·HOUSE, i642 Li'ncoln Heights.
Call Danny Thompson, 992- HARRISON'S TV and Antenna HOUSE MOVING: Hous .. , etc .
for Christmas trees , one and
Se r vice. Phone 992 -2522.
raised, moved, underpinned,
2t96.
two gallon cans, also balled
6-10-tfc
remodeled. Estimates free ,
and burlap. holly, Camillas, ~-------_:_1.:.:_18- tf• - - - - -anywhere. National House
u pright
and
spreading
AWNINGS, storm door.s and
Movers, Box 5002, Charl ..ton ,
iunipers, blue cypress, pink NICE 2·Siory home "IIH1 full
windows . car port s,
W. Va. 25311 , or phone 304-925basemen t, 2 lot s, new 1orced
and white dogwood. Midway
marquees, aluminum siding
3279
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
Markel, Pomeroy, phone 992and railing. Call A Jacob,
9-30-60tp
Phone
Elementary School
2582.
sa les representative. For free
992 7384 to see
11 -l•-31c
es t imates , phon e Charles SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Mill er
11 -7- lfc
Lisle. Syracuse. V.
V. Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
- - - -- -

-----~-

iaid a:way!"

Separate

1- 64

15,E.LVI~EY --

::\MOKii.JG 1"- 1'&gt;'\D
F()R YOJR H€ALTH !

GOT A LIGHT ?

bury

For Sale

and everything goes wrong ,
We seem to hear you whisper , EARN at home addressing
Cheer up and carry on.
envelopes. Ru sh stam ped
Each lime we see your picture,
self .addressed envelope. The
You seem to smile and say
Ambrose Co., 4.125 Lakeborn,
Don'l cry, I'm only sleeptng, we
Dav1sburg , Mich . 48019.
will meet agatn some da y.
10-24-JOip
Sa~
missed by wife
Minr,1e, and children EarL
Jr .. Vio la and Vada

" •• , but I can hue it

No

.~IOHNsQN

-S PECIALS-'November 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. suo
Now su ,
November 8 thru 13
PERMANENT
Reg. Sl2.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

992-2769
BEGINNING
Monday, '69 FORD pickup truck , exNovember 15, we will hull
ce llent condition . Phone 742·
walnuts only on Monday,
GRA ND OPENING SALE
5032
Wednesday and Saturday
11 -12-3tc
Reynolds Aluminum Builders
from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m ., Midway
Supply of Mason City . Amrax
Market, Pomeroy .
Stone and Bri ck siding,
11 -t2-3tc 1967 JEEP Wagoneer, good

Slippery Rock 28 Clarion 7
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
South
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Wake Forest 23 Duke 7
4-9-lfc
Clemson 20 Maryland 14
Florida 35 Kentucky 24
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy ,
Auburn 35 Georgia 20
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
Georgia Tech 12 Florida St . 6
54.3.
Alabama 31 Miami {Fla .) 3
8-15-tfc
Loulsvl 24 Southern Ill. u
lanteci
To
Buy
11 -15-llp
Western Ky. 31 Buller 0
Fitzpatrick OrOLD Furniture, dishes, clocks, APPLES North Carolina 32 Virgin ia 20
chards
,
State
Route 689 ,
and.or com plete households.
5amford 21 Newberr~ 0
Wilesville,
669·3785.
phone
Write M 0 . Miller, Rt. 4.
Card o! Thanks
Hampden-Sydney 37 Drexel 6
9 3-lfc
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Ca
ll
992-6271.
Southern Miss 24 LA. Tech 20
THE
FAMILY
of
Jo
seph
8-25-llc
Tenn St. 5-4 Wls St. {Superior) 7
London wishes to express its - - - -EARLY Amencan stereo·rad1o
Notre Dame 21 Tulane 7
sincere t hanks and ap. SET 10" gas logs. Phone 949combination, AM-FM radio, 4
Grambling 55 Norfolk St. 0
prec i ation to l r 1ends and
3811 or see Roberl Hill,
speake r sound system , 4
LSU 28 Mfss 51 3
neighbors who remembered
Rac1n e
speed automatic changer.
Jackson St. 34 MorQan St 29
them with floral offer1ngs,
11 11-31p
Balance 578.59 . Use our
cards, calls and food. Special
budge!
lerms. Call 992-7085.
thanks to Rev . M. C.
Midwest
ll -15-61c
Larimore. Ewing Funeral
Northwestern 14 Oh io Ut. 10
Instruction
Home, the Syracuse Ladies
Michigan 20 Purdue 17
MODERN Walnut slyle stereoAuxiliary, the Meigs County THOUSANDS of men needed in
Michigan St. 40 Minn 25
radio, AM . FM radio, 4
Sheriff's Dept ., and the
Toledo 43 Marshall 0
Trucking lnduslry . 129,000
speaker sound systems, 4
Pomeroy Pollee Department
Ill inois 35 Wisconsin 27
iobs open annually accord ing
automatic changer .
speed
lt -14llp
Indiana U Iowa 7
to U. S. Depl. ot Labor. Ex Separate controls . Balance
Cincinnati 23 Ohio U. 15
ce llen t earnings after short
$69.32. Use our budget terms
Nebraska« Kansas St. 17
training
period.
For
ap
·
Call
992 7085.
Notice
Eastern Mlch 35 S. Oak. St. 2
plication and interview call or
ll -15-61c
Villanova u Dayton 7
NOT ICE lo all members Me1gs
wrile: TRI -STATE DRIVER
Western Mlch 25 Pacific 21
Aerie 2171 Fraternal Order of
TRAINING , 602 Kanawha
Ohio Wesleyan 31 Denison 0
Eagles . First reading of new
Valley
Bank
Bldg .. COR N, any amounl. Picking
Iowa St. 45 Missouri 17
daily, Dale Kautz, Rt. 3,
by laws will be he ld at regular
Charleslon, W. Va. 25301.
Central Mich 24 Hofstra 13
Pomoroy, Ohio 985-3831.
meeting Monday, Nov . 15,
Ph one:
1304)
346-1556.
I
l ] . J2 .3fp
Southwest
1971, at 8 p.m . All members
Licensed by Sla te of Ohio 552.
Qklahoma 56 Kansas 10
are urged lo at lend .
11 -14 21c
Arkansas 18 SMU 13
11 -12-31c
PAINT Damage. 1971 Zig -Zag
Texas Tech 27 Baylor 0
sewing machines. Still in
Texas 31 TCU 0
or ig inal ca rt ons. No at .
RUMMAGE
Sa le,
Coals Salesmen Wanted
Texas A&amp;M 18 Rice 13
tachments needed as our
Building, Middleport. StartTEXAS REFINERY CORP.
Air Force 17 Tulsa 7
ing Monday, Nov. 15. ·
con lrol s are built -in . Sews
offers opportunity for high
Arizona St. 52 Wyoming 19
with I or 2 needles, makes
11-14-3tc
income PLUS regu lar cash
Southwest Tex 33 Sui Ross 7
bultonholes. sew on buttons,
and
vacation
bonuses,
Houston 56 Virg inia Tech 29
monograms, and blind hem
abundant fringe benefits to
Howard Payn~ 20 Texas A&amp; I 1• PUPPIES logive away , 6 weeks
Full cash price, $38.50
stitch.
old . Ph one 742-•874.
mature men 1n Pomeroy
McNeese 31 S.E . Louisiana 0
or budget plan available.
11 -14-61p
area Regardless of ex ·
West
Phone 992-5641
peri ence, air mail A. I, Pale,
Colorado 40 Okla. St. 6
ll -9-6tc
Pres ., Texas Refinery Corp.,
Arizona 27 BYU 14
Box 711, Fort Worth, Texas E l ECTROLUX
Idaho 40 Montana St. 2
vacuum
76101.
Utah St. 21 Utah 17
For Rent
cleaner complete with at.
ll -14-41p
California 17 Oregon 10
tachments, cordwinder and
SOIJthern Cal 13 Washington 12
BRAND NEW, 12x60, 2paint spray . Used but in like
Oregon Sl 21 Wash St u
bedroom mobile home across
new condi tion . Pay $37.45
5an Jose St 13 Stanford 12
from Bradbury School. Call Employment Wanted
cash
or
credit
terms
New Mexico 49 Ulep 19
992·5308 or see Charles Lewis, HOUSECLEANING In Racine,
available. Phone 992-5641.
Northern Colo 42 Fort Hays 21
from
2nd hou se south
11 -9-6tc
Syracuse and Pomeroy area.
SF St. 18 Hayward St. 17
Bradbury Schoo l.
Pets
-Phone
992-2876.
Chico St 41 USF 7
welcome.
10-24-llc 1965 DODGE Panel Truck, $300.
Cal Poly slo 9 Sla . Barbara 3
11 -15-tfc
Ingels Furniture, Ph. 9922635
For Rent
11-l4 -31c
CARNIVAL
by Dick Turner FURNISHE·D apartmenl.

"Maybt I oan't buy
, happn·-~.... • ~ ...
•

JPHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

(GROUP SALE)

1960 FORD J;• ton truck, ex ce llent condition, 4 speed

LOOKV -- IT'S

sAY, euoov, 'rt&gt;u

-- EXCEPT FER
ONE OADBURN

Business Services

EQUIPMENT SALE

Auto Sales

Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .

Northeastern 42 Vermont 7

For Rent or Sale

der, Econoline Van, including
good motor. Also good used
Burroughs Adding Machine.

bedroom, furn1shed, gas heat.
good condit ion . Home Crest

8' Body , good 750xl6 ttres . V 8 eng ine. std . trans .. radio,
sol1d cab . Worth more.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

.

ll -15-31c PARTS for 1962 Ford, 6 cylin-

CE -50-2 Ton , 84" cab to axle. 350 C}l tn VB engine. 7000 lb

IT SHORE

LOWEEZ.V..

SLEEP ING rooms for rent in I SET 1971 World Boo~ of En cyclopedia, 1 sel 1969 Wor~
n1ce
mobile
home
in
Book,
Childcrafl ,
DicPomeroy, Ohio. $20 weekly
l•onaries,
Atlas
,
1
set
1970
per occupant
Nice ac .
Chlldcrafl
Eldon
R.
commodations with bed linen
Kraeuler, 949·2491.
and towels furnished . If in 11 12-61p
terested write P. 0 . Box 712,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Secur~ty
deposit must be made.

• NOWS2995

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

College Scores

For Sale-

For Rent

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 Sf611S

'

II•IS

LEGAL NOTICE

Charles F . Powell , whos~ last
known place of r~slden ce is
Route 1, M lddl~po rt , Oh io, Is
hereby notified that on the 21st
day of September , 1971 Leta A
Powell , being pld intiff filed her
pelilion against h im as
deten dan! in the Court ot
Common Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio, Case No . 14,935, praying
lor divorce from sa id Charles F .
Powell on the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty , support and alimony
and division of property , and
other proper relief ; said cause
will be for hear ing on or nfter
the llth day of December , 1971 ,
Lela A. Powell , plaintiff
J B. 0' Brien, attorney
tor plaintiff .

lt11

5-1 -Hc

I. 8,

TilE ·BORN LOSER

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNlE.'
STRIKfS ME THAT A STIFF WIMO'D BLOW
TIIAT RICKETY OL' BUILDIH' RIGHT !!'III\
M R~! WOitDER WHAT HOMEi'rS
-ru5i STASHED AVIA'f IH IT .

I

~

15, 22, 29 {12 16, 61

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS

Noti ce 1S hereby given , In
- - ------,_-:=,_ -- compliann with Section 5715 ·
17 revised code, that the ta•
~UBBER stamps made to
returns
of Meigs County , for the
order, 24·hour service. Dwaln
year 1971 have beP.n revised and
or Wilma Casto, Portland.
the valuations comp leted and
10·2•-30tc are open for public inspection at
the office of the County Auditor
in the Court House, Pomeroy ,
Ohio. Complaints aga inst any
valuation or assessment, ucept
the valuations t 1xed and
NOTICE OF
assessments made by the Ta x
APPOINTMENT
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
Case No . 2DS73 heard by the County Board of
Estate of
CHARLES
E . Revision, at Its office In the
STO BART Deceased .
Court House , Pom~roy, Ohio, on
Not ice is hereby given that or after Nov . 12, 1971 . Com·
Frances M Yost of Middleport, pla ints must be made in
Oh io, has been duly appointed writing, on blaftkS furnish~d by
Adm inistralrix of the Estate of the County Auditor and flied in
Charles E Stobart, deceased , his off ice on or before the time
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
lim ited for payment of taxes for
Cred itors are required to file the f irst half year, or at any
their claims with said fiduciary time during which taxes are
within tovr months
received by
the
County
Dated th is 1st day of Treasurer, without penalt y for
Nov embe r 1971.
the f irst half year .
John C. Bacon
Gordon H . Caldwell
Actlno Judge
Auditor of Meigs County
(lll 8, 15, 22, 31
{11 ) l4·10tc

ACROSS
I. Fit fora
king
6. Yonder
-11. Baffled
c"'~=::-::~:'-=:-:-::-=:-, 12. Luau
TI-IAT
diversion
NEVER 13. Break in
~
.,,E ME." 14. Prefix
rank
~,..Y,
for
dexterity
15. Relative
of the
ostrich
16, Repeatedly, to a
poet ·
18. Big19, Informal

LEGAL NOTICE

affirma-

tive

D.farmer
tf.Royal
diggings
46, City in
Nevada
n.Oftheeye
48. School·
boy's
ordeal
49. Yule
symbol

5.Make
believe
{2 wds.)
6. Well nowl
7. See 3
Down
(3 wds.)
8. "Tiny

Alice"

play·
wright
9. Pluvious
11. Postpone
DOWN
17. Athletic
group
1. Hootch
2. Factor
23. Consume
3. Botch
25. Phosgene
(4wds.) 27. Informal
farewell
4. Unnecessary
29. Au
activity
courant

Solurclay'o Cryptoquole: THE MIND OUGHT SOMETIMES

TO BE DIVERTED, THAT IT MAY RETUR~ THE BETTER
TO TIIINKING.-PHAEDRUS
(C 1971 King Feature! Syndicate, Inc!.)

JI~WID~;p,J=::!~c:

31, Rate of
move·
men!
33. Bottling
establish·
men!
34. Officer
material
35. Nimble
37. Attain
43. Liquor
portion
45. Nilotic

Unocramble lhue four Jumble~,

one letter to tll'h oquare, to
form rour ordinary wordo.

CHOAR

tribesman

20. By birth
21. Grassland
(var.)

WH/J:r 'fOU HAV&amp; 1l&gt;
MAKE lt.l ~I:R 10 15!:

22. Being
(Sp.)

WANTEDII

IJIIT, TfRRY, IT SOUNDED

LIKE A PLOT- AIID 1 HAVE
Ttlf 0Wf5T FelliNG
TliAT HE'S SERIOUS!

10 Homes In Need
Of Siding
Homeowners in this general area will be

d'-

strate
34. Craw's
cry
36. Thrice
(mus.)
. 38. Spire

given an op.

CAPTAIN EASY

FREE TEFLON COATED ELECTRIC SKILLET,
TO FIRST FIVE (5) PEOPLE GETIING .
ESTIMATES.

•
•
·Yo• rni;hl JOY U coven tiN

1Antwert

___.::~:l!!H~I_:"LAND'S CAH"
I'M

AREN'T
5HAKIN6

I'
I

'1111 '77
." " '

·Is-LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
al'ostropheo, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are different.

l
!

lA

ELUSRWM

ARADP

ELUSRWII(
IWM

j

Fl

lVFRWLVP
ULW

Fl · DSM

DSM
~

===....t:;."-'.J

1

MADE IT 1HROJ6H THE
WEEKEND WITHOUT M't'

ZIVT

EMW.
ZIVT

WI
IA

MHDVLIVF!tWLVP-' ELW. - MGNMVD

SJNN-LVF
'

ULW

b

"
t;=::~~;:~~==~~

BLANKET! I DID IT!! OlD iT.!

A Cryptogram Quotation
IWM

~1~~~

AN!( MORE ...

I'M ACTVALL't' HVN6R'&lt;!

~~~~HANDS

AXYDLBAAXK

NOT DIZZ't'

Ml( ~TOMACH OOE~N'T HURl' ..

???!??

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

SIDING, BOX 729C THE DAILY
SENTINEL, ?OMEROY, OHIO

lO.,..,

Ju 10 bi&lt;t 1 PIECI ASSAY NORMAL DECENT
S.aurday'•

ornament

the chemrcalondustry. After years ol testing and research
was recently introduced to the public . It carries 1
guarantee in writin~ and provides maximum insulollon, .both summer and Winter, thereby lowering the cost of air
conditioning and heating. The new product can bo used
over every type of home including frame, asbestos
stucco, brick, etc. Many different decorator colors ar~
available. Homeowners who act now will rectlvt specltl
decorative work at no additional cost. An oppalnlment
will be made to see your home without any obligation
whatsoever. All types of financing oro ovolloblo.
SEND NAME, A~DRESS AND PHONE NO. TO:

(,\Mwe"

39. In the
past
40. Wooden
core
4l.Storage
box

the most. trusted names In '

1t IS espectalty recommended for use in Ohio climate and

Now ........., the drclod lellen
to form the ourprioe 1111wer, u
ounealecl b1 the above .,.toon.

Kitty's
friend
30. Coup

'32. Demon·

portuni_tv_of havin~ the new Vydel, the rigid, all vinyl
home Sldt.ng matertal applied to their homes 1t a very low
cost . It wtll be of special interest to Homeowners who are
fed up with constant painting and other maintenance
costs. The new MIRACLE SIDING was developed by 1
Chemical_Co~poration, one of

I

24. Frenzy
26. 11-ain't
hay"
28. Miss

;

�Pay
Board
Has
·Muscle Added to. Meigs Law ruid Order Forces
Teacher Issue

Coal Pay
(Continued from Page 1)
years, after an immediate ~
cent increase.
The fund will go for Improved
widows beneflts, sick, lea\·q,
1ccldent benefits and hospi~ ·l
·care. Effects of the seven week
1trlke were light in the utilities
and steel Industry, which had
1tockpiled to avoid shortages,
but caused serious lo'iS of mcome to coal-baullng railroad
lines.
SUPPER PLANNED
The Ladles Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy Church
Gl Christ wUI hold a planned
potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Tllesday at the church.

THE CONTESTANTS - Eleven of the 12 contestants
vymg for the Mason County·Junior Miss honors this year pose
during Sunday's Tea. They are front row, from left, Joyce
Casto, Rox Anne Wallis, Sheila Russell, Debbie Gilland,

REFRESHMENTS SERVED - Diane Harris, right, serves last year's Mason County
Junior Miss Pageant winners, Chetti Hayes, Libby Brown and Theresa Lanham, refreshments ·
during the Sunday Tea held at the Wahama High Band room. Three winners will be selected
again in this year's Pageant with each to get $100 bonds .

Candidates Honored at Tea
Candidates for the title of 1971
Mason County Junior Miss were
honored during a. tea held
Sunday at the Wahama High
School Band room.

Butz
·

(Continued from Page I )
grams under Benson.
"We cannot conceive a
secretary being approved who
supports government policy of
liquidating all but 600,000
farmers , thousands of rural
businesses and thousands of our
rural small towns," Staley's
telegram said.
"The National Farmers Organization opposes the transfer
of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture either to the
Department of Commerce or to
Checkerboard Square," Staley
said. Checkerboard Square is
the St. Louis headquarters of
Ralston-Purina, of which Butz
is a director .

Eleven of the 12 contestants
entered in this year's pageant
were introduced by Steve
Halstead of the Point Pleasant
Register advertising staff after
Mrs." C. M. Adams welcomed
those attending.
Last year's winners, Theresa
Lanham, Libby Brown and

News ... in Briefs

PASADENA, CALIF. - MARINER 9 SWEPT around the
dust-cloaked world of Mars today, teasing scientists with hints of
revelations to come when the planet's still.ragil)g dust storm ends
and unveils its surface to the satellite's cameras.
Scientists complained that "a shroud has been drawn about
this planet" by a phenomenal dust storm, affording them only
peek-a-boo glimpses of Martian features through the what they
called "monotonous" mass of dust. But they added hopefully
there are signs the dust storm is tapering off.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - With
the wage-price-rent freeze now
history and the system which
replaced it largely untried,
there were few visible signs
today that the country was in
the most intensive era of
peacetime economic control in
its history.
Many people who went to
work today werre earning more
money for the first time since
Aug. 15, even ' though it won't
show up in their paycheck until
next payday or whenevr
bookeeping adjustments are
made. Military men and women
shared in an immediate $2.4
billion pay hike.
But movements on the price
front were slower, at least
partially because of the more
complicated rules governing
post-freeze price changes.
Stores now are required to post
a list of freeze-level prices
before any of those prices may
be increased, and getting that
done was time-consuming.
The Phase II control groups
still were making decisions on
many unsettled aspects of the
situation: The Pay Board meets
again on Tuesday to coll8ider
some aspects of the retroactive
pay dispute, probably as it
applies to teachers. .
Before the freeze ended at
midnight Saturday, there were
two added decisions:
The Price Commission

'

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

Grand Jury Report Burned

Chetti Hayes; attended and told
the 1971 contestants of th~ thrill
of competing in the State
Pageant.
A film regardin~ the National
Junior Miss Pageant was shown
the group of entrants and their
families prior to the servmg of
tea.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Tommy
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Grube, Gallipolis; Keith Cook,
Extended Outlook
Wednesday through Friday: Southside; Mrs. Jeffery Rose,
Partly cloudy and warm Cheshire; Earl Bonecutter, Jr.,
Wednesday, chance of Mrs. Jack Randolph, Mrs. Edna
showers Thursday and Cook, all Point Pleasant; Cindy
Friday and turning cooler. Holley, Pomeroy; Mrs. John
Highs Wednesday In lhe Carpenter, New Haven ;
upper 50s and the 60s, Virginia Carter, Columbus;
dropping by Friday to 50 lo 55 Mrs . Maxine Moore , Midnorth and 55 to 60 south dleport; Mrs. Franklin Parportion. Lows early Wed- sons, Racine; Dallas Wright,
nesday morning in lhe 40s and Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Johnny
low 50s, dropping by Friday Steart, Point Pleasant; Ida
morning lo the 30s and lower Barnette, Perry Langston,
Hartley Perego, Huntington;
40s.
Bryan Holley, Pomeroy, and
?i
.. lll'btb~bbjijiJJAAcf/S':**·i::~••~UUII'IZC'*.L'*l":;;'*'-':':
..:jii:C&lt;'l~;mcm.
George Wamsley, Henderson.
DISCHARGES: Aaron Ennis,
Mrs. Morton Woodall, Robert
Brotherton, Mrs. Charles Willis,
Holley Oliver, Mrs. Lowell
Wingett, Mrs. Edith Dent.
(Continued from Page I)
brutality during the Nov. 5 disorders near the campus. The cltruc,
as part of its investigation into thl\ ,cause and nature of the
disturbance, has mterviewed 131 persol)s, 42 of whom were
DAMAGEUGHT
arrested durmg the fracas that began when police arrested a
Light
damages were reported
youth accused of seUing drugs.
·
The clinic said from information it has compiled, it appears to two cars and one driver was
cited to mayor's court as the
'long haired youths were deliberate targets of police. "They were result of an accident on West
beaten with clubs both before and after arrests and many who Main St., Pomeroy, Saturday
were beaten were not arrested," the report said.
afternoon. Police said a car
driven by Anna M. Theiss,
MIDDLETOWN , OHIO -TilE JAPANESE ambassador to Syracuse, was attempting a left
the United States said Sunday night trade barriers this country is turn from Main when it struck a
setting up will not improve its competitiveness but, instead, will westbound car driven by John
have "a depressmg effect" on the world's economy.
W. Jeffers, Albany. Mrs. Theiss
"The world economy cannot prosper without a healthy was cited for failing to yield
c'Onpetitive and open American economy," Nobuhiko Ushiba said right of way.
ma speech delivered as part of Japan Week at the branch here of
Miami University.
QUICKER, CHEAPER
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (UP!)
- Muskingum College will
launch
an
accelerated
education plan next fall, so
students can earn a coUege
degree in three years by going
to school three summers, for a
savings of about $2,700.

asked the Cost of Living low. The inflation psychology
Council to change a price has not been broken. The stock
exemption gra~ted some com- market continues to fall. "
panies. The council had ruled
Pay Board Chhairman
Friday that companies obligat- . George H. Boldt, meanwhile,
ed to a pay raise between denied reports that his panel
Sunday and Jan. 1 could raise would reconsider its earlier
their price to match wage hikes ruling that most workers were
without
notifying
the not entitled to back pay that
government in advance. This they would have received in
attected the auto industry, raises had the freeze not been
among others. But the Price m effect.
Commission decided Saturday Boldt said his board's Tues.
that the ruling had a great day meeting, however, would
impact and asked for a include discussion of "a numreversal. It promised, however, ber of matters mcldental to or
that all such raises would be connected with retroactive
approved 72 hours after they wage increases ..."
are filed. if not challetWed.
- The Pay Board ruled Saturday that companies may give Veterans Memorial Hlllipltal
their employes longevity and
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS automatic progression raises Lora Grant, ,Vmton; Paradene
starting Sunday with regard to Brown, Bell, W. Va.
the 5.5 per cent wage hike
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
guideline and without challenge - Wendell Rose, Holly Friend,
from the government.
Barbara Snyder, Sherry JeweU,
The end of the freeze also James Myers, Naomi Bissell,
prompted ·an assessment of Mary Ford, Rhoda Hackett,
failure from Lawrence F. Frank Niggemeyer, Clara
O'Brien, the I;lemocratic Na- Garland, Lottie Sheffield ,
tiona! Chairman.
MiMie Johnson.
"Unemployment still hovers SUNDAY ADMISSIONS near 6 per cent," O'Brien said. Michael Harris, · Middleport ;
rebounded strongly. Un- Avanell Bass, Pomeroy; Lillie
Cl'rtainly and chaos surround Starcher, Minersville; Ronald
Uncertainty and chaos surround Bachtel, · Pomeroy; Vera
the implementation of PhaSe II Thompson, New Haven.
... the inequities of the freeze . SUNDAY DISCHARGES period have not been corrected. Don Hendricks , Paradene
Consumer confidence is still BrQwn.
·

.,

Eeverly Knapp, Kathy.Roush. Second row, Carolyn Barnett,
&amp;le Ann Smith, Jane McDaniel, Joy Pumphrey and Karen
Froendt.

.

~

£
$..
~
~~

~!

~
~

RAVENNA, Ohio (UPI) - The special
grand jury report that accused 25 persons of
"deliberate, criminal action" in the disorders that preceded the killing of four Kent
State University students by National
Guardsmen May 4, 1970, was destroyed by
fire today.
In related action Portage County Common
Pleas Court Judge Edwin W. Jones lifted
. both the gag rule on the report an an injunction which had prohibited picketing on
the issue at the courthouse. Jones had imposed the gag rule, to try to prevent talk of
the report, on Sept. 14, 1970, and ordered an
injunction against picketing on Oct. 5, 1971.
Minutes after the burning, an attorney
representing some of the defendants filed
with Jones a motion to delay the scheduled
Nov . 22 trials "until the report is dissipated
from people's minds." The report, issued
Oct. 16, 1970, by a grand jury investigating
the violence on the campus, was ordered
destroyed by a federal judge.

?.&lt;

i·:::

John BaTTOws

,,·. Died on Sunday

CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
will meet at 7:30 p.m'. Thursday
at the club house 1;. Racine to
elect officers for i971.

P·

Barrows, 86,
formerl y of '
Stewart, dted early Sunday
morning at the Arcadia Nursing
Home in Coolville following an
extended tliness.
Born tn Athens County, he
was the son of the late WiUiam
H. and Fanny Jackson Barrows.
He was preceded in death also
by his first wife, Iva, in 1942,
and a second wife, Ethel, in
1969; two brothers, and a sister.
Surviving are two sons, John
W. of Franklin, Va., and Robert
C. of Dayton; a daughter, Mrs.
Wanda Rose of Athens, nme
grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren.
Mr. Barrows was a farmer
and well driller in Stewart for
the greater part of his life. He
was a member of Savannah
Lodge 466, G&amp;AM, GuysviUe.
Funeral services wUI be held at
2 p.m. Tuesday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev . Roy W. Rose officiating . Burial will be in the
Stewart Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time.
DIVORCE ASKED
A suit for divorce has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Charlene Kay
Frederick, Minersville, Rt. I,
against Louis B. Frederick,
Long Bottom, on charges of
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.

YOUNG MEN'S

[~~~~r::~--1

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

from the left, Diana C&amp;rsey, VIcky Clelland, Cindy Farrar,
Brenda Donohue, Donna Francis, Nancy Gill, Amy Hamm,
Sheila ijawk, Debbie Heaton, Julia Holter, Denise Hendricks. See Page 8 pictures, officiating officers.

Rosenlary Reed, Venedla Young, Olnnle Gnleaer, vice

president; Sandra Van Meter, Glenda Lawson, Paula Morris,
Connie Radford, Cherie Reuter, Diane Ridgway, Cathy
Rayburn, Kim Mowery, Patti Well, and Becky 'Wright,
Jresident. Refreshments were served to parents and guests
at the close of the capping ceremony.
'

I

By United Prl!ls International
SAIGON -AU. S. Ft PHANTOM JET fighter-bomber, in the
latest American air strike north of the Demilitarized Zone, today
attacked an enemy antiaircraft battery which had fired at the
American plane as It was making a raid on a truck convoy on the
.Ho Chi Minh Trail in nearby Laos. Meantime, the U. S. command
revealed' that three Gls were killed and four injured M~nday m
accidents .
UNri'ED NATIONS -COMMUNIST China may today have

MIAMI BEACH .2.. AFL-CIO President George Meany said
America Is m trouble economically and faces an uncertain future
m foreign affairs because of President Nixon's policies.
"The economy Is in a state of uncertainty," Meany said
Monday In the union executive coWJcil's report to the labor
federation convention opening here Thursday. "Intolerable high
unemployment prevails," Meany said. "The cost of livmg has not
declined. Poverty has mcreased. The states and major cities are
on the lrmkofbankruptcy. The nation ism trouble."
YOUNGSTOWN,OHIO- THE DRIVER of a car that plowed
through a large group of pedestrians mthe downtown area, kUlmg
seven persons, today was charged with seven counts of vehicular
homicide m the flrst degree.
• James Anderson, 30, Youngstown, was also charged ·with
&lt;i'ivmg without a ltcense and attempting to escape from a room at
South Side hospital where he was taken late Friday after he began
· !flaking m a Jail cell. Anderson has a history of alcoholism and
had been treated at several h~itals over the past two years.

AND HIS STAFF
FOR A SUCCESSFUL
FOOTBALL SEASON
LET'S ALL SUPPORT THE FOOTBALL
BANOUET NOVEMBER 16

CAU

''"'f"'" c_..,

AMONG THE Candystripers capped at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Monday night were, front, from the left,
Melinda Amsbary, Bobbie Archer, Karla Beal, Opal Berry,
Jan Betzing, Janie Brewer, Nancy Buskirk, Susy Card; back,

I

COACH CHARLES CHANCEY

Citizens National Bank
'

' .....,,

~

Ml

~

TEN CENTS

------------------------------------------------------

(---------------------------.
! News ••• in Briefs ! Fitness

MEIGS MARAUDERS

LOW COST INSUR EO
AUTO FINANCING
I 'I' NATIONWIDE

f) ~;r~~~~

TUFSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1971

Coal Miners
Staying Out

ltsfirstchancetocasta votem the U.N. The General ¥5embly is
expected to put to a ballot a resolution requesting the United
States to give up Its plans to purchase chrome from Rhodesia.

"''""~·

..., _ Ull

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

A SEOOND GROUP receh!ng their cape It Veter11111
Memorial Hospital Monday night is pictured with two of the
Candystrlper officers. The group mcludes, front, from the
left, Debbie Jeffers, Jill Swain, Sherry McCarn, Jeannie
Stanley, C8thy Pickens, Sandy Wood, Vicki Spencer, Annie
Cbllnger; back row, from the left, Chris Miller, Diane Norris,

witt.

117 ,...... Avo., Pomeroy

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BRIGHT STRIPE
PATTERNS
_AND SOLID
COLORS.
SIZES 10 TO 20

TO THE

NEW CAR

P.J., . _PAUUY
. ff:l-2311

NO. 151

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (UP!)
-Distrustful of the president's
pay board and suspicious of
their union, tens of thousands of
coal miners prolonged their
walkout into its 47th day today.
Well over half the 80,000 soft
coal miners refused to return to
work today despite the singmg
Saturday in New York of a
contract that met major
demands of United Mine
Workers (UMW) union leaders,
and despite the fact the contract
does not require ratification.
The miners at three big locals
in the Fairmont, W. Va., area
voted to stay out. Five locals m
the Morgantown, W. Va., area
declined to return to work
without meetings today. Miners
at two Pennsylvania's biggest
mines voted to stay off the job
tiD the end of the week. The
Consolidation Coal Co. reported
only one quarter of its 13,000
miners were at work, in only 18
of Its 52 mines.
A UMW leader here said,

however, 80 per cent of miners
in the Charleston area would
return today.
Leonard Pnakovich,
president of UMW District 31 m
Fairmont, said late Monday
following a raucous mass
meeting that "some serious
questions are being raised
about whether the wage board
would approve our wage mcrease."

Brief Notes :

No .Otange
In Recount

A recount of votes cast on
Nov. 2 in Scipio Township for a
trustee position was conducted
Monday night by the Melga
County Board of Elections. Tbe
result was exactly the same u
the earlier official count, with
...... ·:.··:·:·:·:·:·: Joseph Carsey defeating Earold
Dean, 122-121.

Note to Winners,
Losers too ·

SAVE

~

VOL. XXII

. . . . ..·.·.·.·.·.·..·

AND TO

COST OF BUYING A

IkJoted To 'fhe lntere.ts O.f The Meigs- Mwon Area .

Velour
KNIT
SHIRTS

.

TO

difficulty parking. He further
stated that one way parking
would be beneficial to the few
residents living in the area. A
survey of the area Is to be made.
The mayor's report for October in the amount of $346.40
was accepted .
Attendmg were Mayor Legar,
Franklin Rizer, Ralph Werry,
Elma Russell, Mees, Don
Collins, council members
Jane Walton, clerk, and PhyiU~
~•nnessy, treasurer.

at.

SOUP SUPPER SET
SYRACUSE - The Asbury
United Methodist Church here
will hold a soup supper Thursday with serving to start at 5
p.m. Soup, sandwiches, pie and
coffee will be available. Soup
~Y also be taken out for those
bringing contamers.

[:::;~0~C~

,._Ke yOur new car
ORANGE QUEEN
MIAMI, Fla. (UP!) - Coni
Enso, 22, Cincinnati, . was
chosen 1972 Orange Bowl Queen
from a field of 11 finalists . The
brown-eyed brunette will reign
over the King Orange Jamboree
parade New Year's Eve and the
Orange Bowl game the next
night.

John

Parkersbu~g ,

village , has been without a
police radio for some time. The
rtdio now being used in the
police cruiser belonged to the
fire department, Werry noted'.
Council agreed the fire
depat·tment .should either be
reimbursed for the radio or the
radio should be replaced.
Councilman Jim Mees
suggested imposing one way
traffic from Fourth to Seventh
Sts. on Mechanic St. He said
residents of the area are •·~ · ·i""

•

yeUow and green and carried Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Ingels,
out the pageant theme, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young,
"Happiness Is." Each pageant Mrs. Robert Sylvester, Mrs.
~ ontestant wore a corsage of Ann Sauvage, Area Koscot
tinted mums . Napkins and Representative, and Ralph H.
candelabras were decorated in Werry.
mums of the same colors.
The Ninth Annual Meigs
Attendmg were Mr. and Mrs. County Junior Miss Pageant
James Soulsby and Susie, wiD be presented at 8 p. m.
sponsored by the New York Saturday at Eastern High
Clothing House; Mr. and Mrs . School. Advance tickets' may be
William King and Sherry, purchased at the New York
sponsored by I(tng Builder Clothing House, Pomeroy, and
Supply ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Village Phannacy, Middleport,
King, Mrs. John Groves and ·or from any of the contestants
Cathy Yates, sponsored by or pageant officials. Advance
Village Pharmacy; Mrs. Walter tickets are $1.25 and the price at
Burke and Renee , sponsored by the door Is $1.50.
Davis-Warner Insurance· Mr
The winner of the Meigs
and Mrs Dale warner' Mr · County event wUI represent the
Arthur Enlow and Karen: county at the Ohio Junior Miss
sponsored by Virgil B. Teaford, Pageant to be held in East
Real Estate Broker· Virgil Uverpool Jan. 21 and. 22.
'
•••••••••••••••••••

strongly," he said, "that there's
an awful lot of conscience m
people and a strong desire of
people to make this system
work."

ON THE

and lnstallatioil of a traffic light
at Butternut and West Main St.
No action was taken.
Council approved the pur·
chaie of an addiljonal water
hydrant to have on hand in case
of an emergency. Afire hydrant
was recently placed on Lincoln
Hill near the A. R. Knight
residence - that had been approved two years ago. The
hydrant could not be placed on
Lincoln Hili until the lines were
drained, Mayor Charles Legar

25 Attend Junior Miss Tea

Sunday at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy sponsored by Meigs
County Junior Miss Inc.
Preceeding the -tea, a film
~ entitled, " The Junior Miss
Spirit" was shown. Miss Irene
Cooper, Meigs County Junior
Miss of lVIII, was shown in
several parts of the film .

General Assembly President
Adam Malik of Indonesia,
Malik then was opening the
session to a series of welcoming
speeches.
Chiao and Huang Hua,
Communist China's former
ambassador to Canada, met lor
:;o minutes Sunday with Secretary General Thant 'in Thant's
lith floor room at Le Roy
Hospital in Manhattan. Thant is
recuperating from a bleeding
peptic ulcer and may leave the
hospital today or Tuesday.
Huang will be the permanent
delegate at the U.N. and will
represent Communist China on
the important Security Council.
For the most part, the time
since the new delegation
arrived last Thursday has been
uneventful .
About 500 demonstrators
gathered outside the delegation's temporary headquarters
at the Hotel Roosevelt Sunday,
protesting the expulsion of
Nationalist Chma and the
admission of the Communist
delegation.

n1J

the villages and the sheriff's
depi. have been notified of the
program by ·the Meigs County
Col!liilissioners.
Webster said that Terry Lee
Beecher has been hired in
Pomeroy but Beecher would not
work full time until details such
as insurance could be worked
out. Webster was to meet with
the commisSioners again today.
In other business, council
reviewed
the
proposed
replacement of certain curbs

: · County Junior Miss Tea held "hot" colors of pmk, orange, Hawk's Chrysler-Plymouth;

Otina Takes Seat

One of those issues, he added,
was back pay for the nation's
2.2 million teachers. Some
sources close to the Pay Board
mdicated last week that leachers might win retroactive pay,
particularly in areas where
taxes have been increased in
anticipation of salary hikes that
did not materialize.
Both Boldt and C. Jackson
Grayson, chairman of the Price
Commission, were interviewed
Sunday on CBS.TV's "Face the
Nation."
.
Grayson said he thought the
2.5 per cent annual price
increase yardstick was realistic, and that competition would
helo keeo orices down. anvwav.
"I still believe very

The F~deral Emergency
EmJ)loyment Act will pay the
salaries of one additional offieer
in Pomeroy, Middleport, and
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept., accordmg to Pomeroy
Chief of Pollee Jed Webster.
- Webster told Pomeroy
Council meeting Monday night
the wages for the additional
men wUI be paid with federal
funds allocated through the
Emergency Employment Act
for 11 months. He explained that

~ Twenty-five persons attended The refresluneni table was Teafofd, Mrs. Robert Gwinn
~ the Second Annual Meigs decorated with mums tinted in and Sussn, sponsored by Bob

&amp;oxv.~--.~~=~ym,w.~·-·
• w ..:O:......,w,
~~=-~w
···~~~~~~
~X99?~YOYo....._'lf,'0°o'•'No'o'o'o'o'X'o•:O;;;o
....•;v;.•..:V."o.:o)j,

UNITED NATIONS ( UPI) Communist China claimed its
seat in the United Nations
today, forll)l!lly taking its place
with the Soviet Union and the
United States as a diplomatic
superpower.
The first item on the General
Assembly agenda after China's
entrance was debate on a
Soviet proposal for a world
disarmament
conference.
Discussions on the issue were
to begin today.
The seatmg of the Communist
Chil)ese came 3 weeks to the
day after delegates approved
an Albanian resolution admitting the People's Republic and
tossing out the Tawaln-hased
Nationalist Chinese.
China's seat was claimed by
Deputy Foreign Minister Chiao
Kuan-hua, a tall, imposing
fig-dl'e with an impressive list of
diplomatic credentials. He will
occupy the same chair once
beld by Nationalist Chll)a
between Chile and Colombia.
The delegation ·ted by Chiao
was being formally greeted by

'

said.
William Baronick, mayorelect, now servmg on the board
of public affairs, thanked those
who helped drain the water
lines and reservoir on Lincoln
Hill recently.
Mayor Legar suggested that
council consider trying to help
get the road repaired on Lincoln
Terrace and purchase a new
ffr~ siren for Breezy Heights.
Tom Werry of the fire
department told council the

.

ONE NEW liquor permit In
Meigs
County is among 20 new
All candidates in the Nov. 2
election, winners and losers, permits issued in Ohio.
Director
Richard
E.
must fOe statements of e.penses incurred In their Guggenheim, director, said a Ccampalgos, the Meigs County 2 perljlit for high powered beer
Board of Elections reminded and wine carry out has been
issued to Mary Wright,
today.
The board office, located In Harrisonville, Scipio Township.
the Pomeroy · Masonic
Temple,wlllbeopenfrom1to
PAUL HARTLINE of Lees4 p.m., Monday through ville was admitted at the
Friday, so that candidates Veterans Memorial Hospital at
may pick up the necessary 3:23 p.m. Monday for possible
forms to complete. The ex- chest and back mjuries. Harpense statements must be tline was reported atop an oil
filed within 45 days fo!lowlag rig on Route 7 near the Gilbert
the election. Failure of a Service Station below Mldcandldale to file an ac- dleport to insure there was
counting disqualifies him proper clearance. The rig
from nmnlng for election to stopped suddenly and Hartlme
any office for a period of five was thrown down Into the rig.
yean.
The Middleport E-R squad took
:;,,'1."'-':'::::mom-;l'lm:::&lt;o.»1ri'I:'01.:.~R~.'ll88i8l~tl!
· · him to the hospital.

Up for Review
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Three months of back pay for the
nation's 2.2 million teachers, and perhaps others as well, hung m
the balance today as the Pay Board prepared to consider possible
revisions of its stand against retroactiw wage increases.
The board called an afternoon meeting at which the retroactive
pay question was reportedly a major item of business, although
its basic position m the matter was not expected to change.
Pay Board c!lairman George H. Boldt was on record as
saying that the board's orlgmal ruling against paytng raises that
would have come had the freeze not been in effect would not be
reconsidered. But he said there would be discussion of matters
incidental to or connected with the Issue -including back raises
for school teachers, marly of whom were paid at last term's wages
durmg the freeze.
The Cost of Living Council
meanwhile reversed an earlier but '72 model prices will now
ruling which had granted an remain at their freeze levels
exemption for some firms until the Price Commission
which want to raise prices. 'fhe receives applications from the
earlier position had been that car makers and puts them
companies faced with a wage through the 72-hour test.
In other economic developraise between Nov. 14 and Jan.
ments:
I could raise their prices
without notifying the govern- - The Dow Jones average feU
to its lowest point in 11 months
ment in advance.
on
Wall Street Monday as the
But the council changed that
stand Monday, saymg that any stock market continued to
of the nation's 1,300 large~! reflect investor uncertainty
firms in that position now will over which way the economy
have to tell the Price Commis- was headmg iil Phase II.
- The Commerce Department
sion of plans to raise their
prices. If the conunission does revealed the nation suffered its
not object the price rises will worst balimce of payments
go into effect 72 hours later - deficit in history during the
still much faster than the 30- July-Augus.t..september period.
day period generaUy required The difference between the
of all companies with annual inflow and outflow of dollars
sales of $100 million or more and foreign currencies grew by
who want to raise their prices. $64. billion, to bring the year's
Monday's reversal had the total to a record $12.1 billion.
greatest impact on the auto - AFL-CIO, President George
industry which is scheduled to Meany, a member of the Pay
pay United Auto Workers Board, said the nation is in
members a 6.5 per cent trouble because "the economy
contract raise within the next is in a state of uncertainty.
few weeks. Detroit had been Intolerably high unemployment
planning to raise new car prevails. The cost of livmg had
prices by about 2.5 per cent, not declined. Poverty has
.
increased. The states and
major cities are on the brink of
bankruptcy."
-Sen. William Proxvire, DWis., said May, 1972, should be
11et as the goal for ending the
Phase II economic controls.
After that, he said, voluntary
wage-price controls should take
over.
-{;ommerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans made an apparent
1ppealfor the nation's businessmen to spend more money on
apanslOI\ and development. He
uid consumers are becoming
more confident but "for some
strange reason our businessmen
are uncertain, hesitant and
filled with gloom."
AIRMAN MORA
Airman David H. Mora, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald C.
Mora, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, has
completed hls U. s. AJr Force
basic trabdng at the AJr
Training Command's
Lockland AFB, Tes. He has
been aulgoed to Lowry AFB,
Colo., for training In the
munitions and weapons
maintenance field. Airman
Mora, a llllt graduate of
Eastern High School,
received his associates
degree
in
ceramic
engineering in 1971 from TriCounty Technical lDBtltate,
NelsonvUie, Ohio.

Issue
Gets New Life Special Election Approved
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sworn affidavits that William
H. Rehnquist harassed black
voters in the 19M election
sparked new demands today
that the Senate Judiciary
Committee further mvestigate
his fitness to serve on the
Supreme Court.
Rehnqulst had denied any
such harassment in direct
testimony to the col!liilittee last
week . He said he never served
as a challenger - only as an
arbiter - in setting election day
disputes . And the Justice
Department Monday said the
renewed charges were false.
The cl\arges that Re'hnquist
Interfered .with voting in two
~redominantly black precmcts
of Phoenix, Ariz., in 1964 were
made by Clarence Mitchell,
Washil)gton representative of
the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored
People.
Mitchell told the committee

last week he had no
documentary proof, because
witnesses were reluctant to risk
economic retaliation if they
came forward.
But Monday he turned over to
Sen. Birch D. Bayh, D-Ind.,
affidavits from a deputized
Democratic Party chaUenger
and a precinct committee, both
Negroes, that they saw
Rehnqulst harass voters at
Bethune School Precinct.
' Jordan Harris swore that
Rehnqulst was a challenger for
the Republican Party. "I met
with Rehnqulst because I
noticed him harassing unnecessarily several people at
the polls who were attempting
to vote. He was attempUng to
make them recite portions of
the Constitution, and refused to
let them vote until they were
able to comply with his
requests," Harris' affidavit
ssld.

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
VeteransMemorialHospltal
· Partly ,cloudy Thursday.
ADMITTED - Franklin Chance of showers late
UNfrED NATIONS -:-TilE HONEYMOON is over.lt lasted Laudermilt, Middleport; Thanday and Friday, confour days. Communist China's smUmg deputy foreign mmlster, William Nichols, Rutland; Dora Unulag north portion on
Chiao KuarH!ua, took off his glasses, wiPed away his grit) and France, Langsville; Paul Saturday, Turning cooler
leveled a,3Q.mlnute ~tack on the United states and the Soviet Hartline, Leesville; Mary Friday and Saturday. High
Union Mel!day in Ills lint &amp;peech In the United Nations.
" Rudolph • Athens; August ' Thunday upper 50uorth and
Chiao may have a chance 1o follow through with China'slirst · Weber, Tuppers Plains; ,Jenny lowtomld eeuoath, dropping.
u. N. vote today. 'lbe Gtrleral Alsembly Is espected to take up a Williamson, C&amp;tlettaburg,, Ky.; by Saturday to upper .et and
•utlon alklnll the United Sl!ltes to abandon plans to purchase Herman Michael, ,Pomeroy; lower~. Lowsat lllaht in the
chrome frqm Rhodnia.
Andrea Johnson, Pomeroy.. .
4ta Thursday and ID the 301
.
DISCHARGED - Robert and low 4011 Friday and
Craig, Harrr Hall, !laY Byers, saturday.
WAIHiNGftlN- 'IHE tEDERAL Bure~u oi Inve.stigation, Uhda Patterson, John Hanning,
·
(0onlln1Md on Jlilll B)
·
Frahcil Kle\n,
i!W!lii\WMMtfiBBWWillllfl

The Gallla County Board of
Elections Monday approved the
request of the Kyger Creek
Board of Education to place a
two miD levy on a special
election baUot for Tuesday,
Dec. 14. The levy was defeated
334-274 in the November 2nd
General Election.

"

A county board spokesman
said today the levy is needed to
offset Increased costs of books,
materials, equipment and
school insurance which was
$3,000 and now Is $3,000 on the
district's three · buildings;

complete the heating and
plumbing at the high school:
install heating control lines on
thermostats, and for overaU
maintenance repair.
Another important reason is
to offset the loss m tax
evaluation f~om the Kyger
Creek Power Plant..
OVEC offtcfals 19ld the
board earlier thl1 year,lhat a
$2 million deduction was
expected at the Kyger Creek
Plant, however, that figure
represented the reduction In
the entlrt system.
Kyger
Creek
Plant 's

evaluation in 1970 was
$66,137,170 and has been set at
$65,997,780, or a decrease of
$139,370 in the Kyger Creek
School District.
Accordmg to the board, 9.5
mills was needed for operation
in 1970 plus 2.7 mills for bonds.
The 1972 operational millage
needed is 10.9 plus 1.9 mill for
bonds making a total of 12.8
mills for school purposes.
It was pomted out that no
one's taxes will be Increased in
the district over six tenths of
one mill.

More Streets may be Paved
MASON - Mason's Town
Council Monday night discussed
street paving, truck traffic
regula lions and the fire
department charter and ordinance with Its legal adviser,
Attorney Michael Shaw.
Additional steps were taken
toward proposed street pavmg
of certain streets. Council
agreed to prepare a list of
streets along with names of all
p~operty owners and submit
these to Shaw. Once this list is
prepared, a public information
meeting will 1 be announced.
Following , this action, the
proposed ordinance will be
written and published.
Attorney ShaW' agreed to
~ontact the pbbllc service
commission concerning Ohlb
resldtnli . hallllrl&amp; garbage tu

West Virginia. No action will be
taken by council until It
receives a report from Shaw.
A copy of Ripley's contract
between that town and the
Ripley
Volunteer
Fire
Department has been requested
by Attorney Shaw. Council will
take no action until a report has ·
been received concernmg this
matter.
Council is studying the
possibility of a storage building
to house the town's tools. It was
reported that the proposed
building would cost approximately $1,000, but no
action was taken to proceed
with the project.
Council decided to keep Its
1964 model Ford pickup half-ton
truck for the water dejlllrtlnent
aih~'l! the hlgheii bid for It wat

only $155. It will be used as a
spare and for hauling purposes:
A complaint against the
discharge of soapy water from a
local car wash in Mason was
discussed and it was agreed by
council will check what legal
que,stions are involved.
Cleaning and clearing of lots
and of Ltraller under-penning
were discussed, then tabled.
Town bUis were $35.66 and
water department
bills
amounted to $546.22. Mayor Roy
Harless presided and Gary
Gibbs served as recorder.
Counollrnen preaent were Fred
SamSIII, Richard FOYfler, Joe
Jones, John Sisson. Others
preseht were Charlotte JehU,
water ~larY. and Chief of
Police John Harrah ,,

Capture of

Bald Eagle
Is Puzzler
CINCINNATI (UP!)' - A
federal judge given the case of
two men charged with Ulegal
possession of a bald eagle said
Monday there "could he a serious question" about the law's
constitutionality.
U.S. District Court Judge
Timothy S. Hogan took under
advisement the request of the
two suspects, Uoyd D. Brown,
35, and Emerson R. Henson, 53,
both of Chesapeake, for a jury
trial. They pleaded innocent:
The men were arrested and
charged un~Ser the Endangered
Species Act after they claimed
to havz captured the eagle alter
it lost a fight with a rooster Oct.
16.
Norbert Nadel, 1st U.S. attorney here, told the court that the
fight was a hoax. The eagle was
found to be suffering from .a
lroken leg and . wing from
gunshot wounds, not from
wounds inDicted by the rooster.
Judge Hogan reviewed the
history of ho)l' the bald eagle
became the national symbol,
and how a law was passed by
Congress in 1940 makmg private
possession or harming of the
rare bird a crime.
"ThiS court is not exactly
certain whether this law's basis
is conservation or whether its
basis Is for lrilage," Hogan said.
"H it's the latter,there could be
a serious question about its
constitutionality, in that a
number of courts around the
country bave held that the
destrue\lon, shall we say, of the
American flag Is an exercise ot
the First Amendment right of
freedom of expression."
The ea8Je in question was
taken to Ohio State University's
veterinary clinic in Columbus
for treatment.
U convicted, the men would
be flned $500 and given a sls.month jail sentence.

Weather

Cloudy tonll!ht, lows near 50
south. Wedlleaday ' increasing
cioudlness. ' Cont1n11ed mild
Wednesday With hllhllln lht 80s
noc!h and mid 8011 to IOftl' ~
etnlth,
- r . .

..
'

...

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