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                  <text>Renee Burke is Junior Miss

II

H~AiH~it WA'S ~~lJ\.~D FROM
iHE. WAT~R FOR WINTER. S1"0R
ANP we. SE.Tri. . ED DOWN TRYIN&amp;
ADJUST 1"0 A PI/\ E.')(IST!:.Nl:f.
INSTEAD OF A 51:-AF'ARING I..\ FE.
WINTE:R. SET IN, AND &amp;e.cAU6e THE
HOL.IDA.'IS W!:F.E NEAR WE PUT~
DE.CORAIION ON HE.ATI:-\E.It! II

' IT'~ MO~S ~AN WINO n4.&amp;.iS HOWL.!N&amp;,
17AD! SOMS G-Ll'i IS '{1:~1..1 N&amp;
i\ND POUNDIN~ ON
--:
"""""'i~H~ DOOFt.

WINNERS in the Junior Miss Pageant Saturday night at Eastern High School were, 1-r,
Susan Gwinn, first runnerup; Renee Burke, Junior Miss, and Susie Soulsby, second runnerup.
Miss Gwinn also won the Scholastic Award . Miss Cathy Yates won the Miss Congeniality
Award.

Miss Renee Burke, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Walter Burke,
Racine, was awarded the Junior
Miss Tille Saturday night at the
Meigs County Junior Miss
P,ageant at Eastern High
School.
~usan
Louise
Gwinn,
daughter ol Mr , and Mrs.
Robert Gwinn, Athens Rt. 2,
was the first runnerup and Susie
Soulsby, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James Soulsby, Po!lleroy,
was se~ond runnerup.
Miss Cathy Yates, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs . John Groves,
Middleport , won the Miss
Congeniality award.
Miss Burke is a senior at
Southern High School in Racine.
She is head majorette and is a
member of the Modern Music
Masters, choir, girls basketball
team, French Club, College
Club and the Pep and Concert
Bands.
She was the Belpre "Tomato
Queen" in 1969, a contesumt in
the Meigs County Heart
Association's "Queen of

Hearts" contest, a rega tta

oueen contestant, a Buckeye
Girls' State alternate, and attended the Teenage Instilute on
Alcohol and Drugs at Oluo
Dominican College last swnmer.

Miss Burke also won the
Youth Fitness, Poise and Appearance and Talenl Awards.
Miss Guinn won the
Scholastic Award. She is a
senior at Alexander High
School, Albany.
Miss Soulsby is a senior at
Meigs High School.
Jack Kane of WCAW Radio,
Charleston, was master of
ceremonies . Earl Ingels 1s

Weather
Partly cloudy and cold tonight
with a chance of snow flurries
northeast. Lows in the upper
leens and low 20s. Partly cloudy
and not quite as cold Tuesday.
Highs in the 30s.

•

prcs ld c rll uf Me i~s t;Oun ly
Juni or Mi tiS 1 Jn c., wh ic h ·
sponsu red the eve nt. Ap-

proxima tely 600 peopl e a ttended the Saturday evening
performance .

Miss Burke was awarded a
$200 scholarship . Miss Burke
and Miss Soulsby and Miss
Gwinn were also given a
camera and a self portrail from
Besl Studios.
Judges were Fred Cannan,
Gallipolis; Ned Tanner, Best
Photo ; Rhomal Hopkins,
Athens , and Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Null , representative of Ohio
Junior Miss, Inc.
Pre sen ling bet ween -act
entertainme nt were Karen
Griffith, a trumpet selection;
Irene Cooper, a vocal number to
her
own
guitar
accompaniment; Marjorie Jeffers, last year's Junior Miss, a
number on the piano, and a
clown act from the Big Bend
Minstrel by Cindy Patterson,
Sandy Hamilton and Becky
Thoma s .

•

J ,.•
.
'

MISS RENEE BURKE, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Walter
Burke , Racine, Meigs County's .Junior Miss, is a senior at
Southern High School. She was sponso red by the DavisWarner Insurance Agency of Pomeroy. Miss Burke alsa won:
the Youth Fitness, Poise and Appearance and Talent
Awards.

~oted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXII

NO. 155

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

r---------------------------,
1\.T
•
B . ,.t,

I

:
I

Rotten Times
Ahead for
P.otten
SHOOT!.' -MEREL'I SASHA'I DOWN TH' TRASHBEAAJSTALK
WIF ME 1D PROJE TO A BIG -EYED GAL AH WAS HERE.. THEN '1()' KIN SKEEDADDLE BACK UP --

-AN'THI5
PLACE'LL
BE
TOTALL'I
UNINHABITED

A61N --,.

AH-$0'b!-

C:AIN'T
OOMtK,
CHILE.-

NEVAH!!

AH IS A DISGRACE
lO MAH "'AME:WHICI-\ IS-l!LU54!·

rJUaii.ATION

T.~PONr.

rJUHIO"!! -"'

AH BIN
BRUNuUP

lOLOVE
AA!' RE.SPI!.CK

Ra!J~~ 'e
,:,08!- TRUE!! AAJ'
THE'( THUI-IK Ali
INHERITED HIS
BRAVER'/-

'/ORE.
PAPf7'1 !!

1

'ews ... zn rze1 s :
I
I

By United Press International
SAIGON - SIX BATTALIONS OF SOUTH Vietnamese
airborne forces, according to field reports, enlered Cambodia
today . The reporls added thai thousands more are assembled
along the frontier . The troops have been assigned to crush a
Communist threBt to Phnom Penh . Saigon military sources said
that, despite today's preliminary crossings of the border, lhe
main drive has yet lo start. They indicaled that D-Day will be
Wednesday .
MANILA- THE PHILIPPINE COAST guard said today that
a boal with 200 passengers, mainly studenls, sank Sunday nigh I in
turbulent waters in the central Philippines. A spokesman
reported that only one survivor has been discovered so far .

DEADLINE NOTED
The
Meigs
Counly
Agriculture, Stabilization and
Conservation Community
committee election this year
will be held Dec. 1 which Is
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!) - The murder case of
the final date for mailing or
Dr . and Mrs. Charles D. Cottrell is "open," today as
delivering voted ballots to the
lar as police here are concerned despite the death of
county ASCS office.
Official ballots were mailed Cottrell's son Sunday, reportedly the chief suspect in
to all known farmers In Meigs the slayings.
Charles D. Cottrell Ill, 21, was killed instantly
County Friday, Nov. 19.
Sunday
when his car swerved orr the left side of Ohio
Farmers who did not receive
a ballot should requesl one 308 and crashed into a tree, bursting into flames about
from the ASCS ofllce, three miles east of Mt. Vernon, Ohio. Knox Coun ty
sheriff's deputies said young Cottrell, a student al West
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
The voted ballots will be Virginia University, was pinned inside .
The bodies of Cottrell's father, 50, and his stepcounted at the county ofllce
on Dec. 8. The counting may mother. Betty, 36, were found early last Tuesday
be witnessed by anyone.
morning shot lo death in their fashionable suburban

WASHINGTON - THE JUSTICE Departmenl has 41 ,742
employes who earn $15,1100 or more a year ; but only 243 of them
are women. The departmenl turned up that statistic during a
review of its female staff prompted by administration orders to
all government departments and agencies to find more women for
top jobs.
'
Three of the highest paid women in the department work for
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, including Miss Helen W. Bandy,
Rose Marie Fry, Middleport,
70, who earns between $32,546 and $36,1100 yea rly as Hoover's daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
executive assistant .
George Hacketl, Jr., is among
14 Ohioans accepted for
THE MAJORITY OF THE 15,1100 SOF'f COAL miners who professional study by the
stayed on strike alllasl week returned to work today, apparently Xirksville , Mo ., College ol
pleased by the Pay Board 's approval ol the first year round of Osteopathic Medicine.
Mrs. Fry is a 1971 graduate of
wage increases .
A few dissident groups held out. One West Virginia mine Ohio State University where she
union leader claimed the United Mine Workers (UMW) union got earned a Bachelor of Science
its members n6ihing but "a clothmg allowance." The vast Degree .
Mrs . Fry is one of 109 freshmajority or the 80,000 soft coal miners under the UMW contract
men
entering KCOM this year.
returned peacefully to work last week, following the signing of a
three year contract between the UMW and the Association ol Coal Twenty-three states and one
foreign country are represented
Operators.
in the firsl year class. She will
undertake four years or
HEAVY SNOWFALLS, INCLUDING A FOOT at Kent, forced
professional study including
mosl schools to close in Portage and Summit Counties today and basic sciences and clinical
winds up to 30 miles per hour caused "serious drilling" which training to fulfill requirements
temporarily forced the closing or a highway . The National loward the degree of Doclor of
Weather Service early loday reported 12 inches or snow at Kent , Osteopathy and toward eveneight inches at Stow in Swnmil County, six inches at Youngstown tual licensure as an osteopathic
and four inches at Brecksville, in Guyahoga Counly .
physician.

Rose Marie Fry

Enrolled for
Medical Degree

"" ·-'""""''..,

..
THASSWH'i
T14 E'( SENT ME
TO CAPTURE. TH'
FIERCE IN&lt;JUN
PRINCESS
-.--..

POCAHAUNTINGE'f£S!!

~.CHILE!! SHE
CAPTUR£0 MI.,WIF

BUT THAT
W!':RE. A LON6

HER BIG HAUNT!~·

TIME t&gt;GO!!-

E'IES-AN'AH BIN
HIDIN'OUT HE.P.E
EVER SINCE.!-~

IT'SALL

STOP Pl:l ~ IIIlTH
1-1'~ ,_, u~~&amp;.r.

c.HuCKLE!!- '&gt;()'IS HAPP'I NOW,
PDrTEN RALPHlE-BUT IN 80
u~~ "'u 'IAAS, '10' WON'T &amp;.!!

OVE.R-

CAPTAIN EASY

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

COUNTS%
U5BD THI? TO lf'I'PNOTI.US·
'IOU INTO 5AI!&gt;OTAGIN6
McK~~·5- "MAGIQUJ:MUD'1 6~AUTY
BATH~

.
'

•

home. Each had been shot four times by a .22 caliber
weapon, according to police.
"The case is open," said Del. Lt. Arlie Robinson, who
has ' been directing the investigation. Police Chief
Lawrence Morris was quoted Sunday as saying Cottrell
was the chief suspect in the deaths of his parenls.
"In fact, Lt. Arlie Robinson and his men had
narrowed the field or suspects to him," Morris said.
Shortly thereafter , however, a police spokesman
denied this.
Robinson said he would not make any comments.
"Talll to the chief," he said, when asked today about
the statement. However, Morris was not available
today .

Cottrell had taken his sister, Sharon , 18, to visit her
boyfriend, Andy PleMinger, Parkersburg, al Kenyon
College , Gambier, Ohio. Knox County deputy sheriff
Paul Rowe sa id Sharon lold him Cottrell was driving
the car to charge the battery when the accident occurred .
"The car hit the tree squa1·e between the
headlights," Rowe sa id . "He was going at least 100
miles an hour. "
The discovery of the Cottrells' bodies was made onlv
a lew hours before a neighbor 111 the same neigh·
borhood found the bodies of a man who apparentl y
killed his wife and two sons before committin1l suicide.

10

r:::;~:~: '1eoat Price Jump Next
Two cars were demolished In
a collision Sunday at 6:50 p.m.
on Salem St. in Rutland .
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. said William T. Evans, 44,
Reedsville, Rt. I, was traveling
west on Salem St. when .he hit a
parked car owned by Janet
Stafford, Rutland.
Evans and a passenger, Owen
Dailey, suffered minor injuries
but were not immediately

Terrorist
Parolled

treated. Evans was cited to
county court on charges of
excessive speed for road and
weather conditions.
The Sheriff 's Dept. also
reported that additional
counterfeid $10 bills were
passed here over the weekend.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
government's economic control
machinery, under. attack for
endorsing a 15 per cent pay hike
for the nation 's soft coal miners,
today faced the other side of the
coin -a request lor a jump in
the price of coaL

While it was the Pay Board
which okayed the pay increase,
the price question was up to the
Price Commission at its meeting today. There were unconfirmed reports the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association was
after an 8.5 per cent price hike.

The gover nment 's off i cia~
price in crease guideline is 2.5
per cent per year . The official
pay increase yardstick is 5.5 per
cent -a figure exceeded almost
thr~e times by the coal miners
wage settlement.
1Continued on pa~c 10 1

terribly relevant, perhaps

Oh Lord, Exercise Patience on Us

By LOUIS CASSElS
UPI Religion Wrller
A prayer for this season :
That time is here again, 0
HILlSBORO, Ohio (UP!) Lord.
Everett Crum, who terrorized
The season we call "Thankssoutheastern Ohio in 1960, has
giving."
been granted parole effective
By act of Congress and
Dec. 9 by the Ohio Adult Parole
solemn proclamation of the
Board.
President, we AmericanS' are
Crum, 42, was sentenced to
supposed to join together
life in Highland County in 1960
Thursday in thanking you for
after he broke out of jall at
the blessings you have bestowed
Wilmington where he had been
upon us as a nation.
serving two lenns for auto
Actually, Llrd, as you well
theft. He shot a police officer at
lmow, most of us will put the
nearby Lynchburg, shot at
holiday lo more "practical"
Hillsboro police officers, slole a uses, such as starting a four-day
car and held Mayor Wilbur weekend trip, or raking leaves,
Trotter of Manchester hostage or watching a football game, or
for about four hours.
having the family in for a big
He surrendered afler several turkey dinner.
days of a wild chase at Cherry
We feel a little constrained
Fork in Adams County on Feb . about this business of being
21, 1960 after nearly 100 lawmen publicly thankful for what we
had surrounded him.
have logether as Americans.
Crum has spent most of his Some of us - the younger
Ierro at the London Prison ones especially - are not so
Farm.
The parold board granted
Crum his parole on the condition that he does not enter
Highland County at any time
during his parole period.

sure what we've got is worth
bra gging about - or being
thankful for . Many more of us
simply take it all for granted.
A few of us are embarrassed
by the riches of a nation which ,
having six per cent of the
world's people, annually gobbles up nea rly 50 per cent or its
goods. We wonder whether we
should thank you for this
largesse - or fall to our lmees
in repentance for failing to be
more generous in sharing our
wealth with hunger-bloated
babies in Calcutta refugee
camps and African children
whose bodies are turtured by
bilharzia.
Of course, Lord, there also
are among us people who think
we deserve lo be richer and
better-fed and bett er-housed
than anyone else . We got here
by hard work and good old
American ingenuity , they say,
so let's live it up and enjoy it,

land to enJOY 1ts fruit s :md its
good things.
''But when you came in you
defiled my land and made by
herita ge an abomination .
"This people has a stubborn
and rebellious heart ; Uwy have
turned aside and gone away ...
"They have become great and
rich .
"They have !::Town fat cmd
sleek .
"They know no bounds in
deeds of wickedness;
"They judge not with justice
the cause or the fatherless and
they do not defend the rights of
the needy.
"Shall I not punish them for
these
things' says the Lord .
God ."
"And ,shall I not avenge
Give us grace , merciful Lord ,
myself
on a na tion such iiS
to apply honestly to our own
nation and our own time the this?"
Not the must cheerful thought
words of warning you spok e to
lu
ponder next ·n, w·sday bcfthe people of Israel 2,5110 years
ago th rough the prophet ween your lurkey din ner and
t)le footba ll game. But it jus l
Jeremish:
"! brought you into a plentiful might be terribl y relevan t.
and don 't kid ourselves about
giving God any credit for it.
And that suggests something
that a majority of us might
agree tha t we can and should be
thankful for on this coming day
of national Thanksgiving.
We thank you, gracio us
Father, for your infinite
patience with us.
We thaok you for not having
- yet - administered the kind
of come-uppance to us which
you were always dolin g out to
the people of ancient Israel who
dared to call themselves God 's
people, just as we, with perhaps
greater temerily, like to refer to
America as "a nation under

AUTOS DAMAGED
Damages were heavy and one
driver was cited to mayor's
court in an accident on West
Main St. at 11:25 a. m. Saturday. Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Richard Russell,
Middleport, struck the rear of a
car driven by Dollie Mowery,
also of Middleport. There were
no injuries . Russell was cited on
an assured clear distance
charge .

I WA? co.e;METICIZE:D WITtt MY 0Wp,J
EXGUI~ITE COUNTe~9 lit.LII80NI
''WONP~R

TEN CENTS

Mur er Case Unsolved

::::::::::::: :~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~

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

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1971

WA&amp;..I.OW" ~

. ATTENDING TH~ ANNUAL EXAMPLAR TEA of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Plu Sor~rlty Sunday mght were front row, from left, Mrs. Marcia Hobstetter, sponsor, sea ted ;
Tana SIIDollton, Pearl Welker, Margaret Follrod; second row, from left •Jeanette Thomas
Mildred Karr, Lucille Williamson; third row, from left, ,Rosie Sisson, Ap;il Smith, June Va~
Vranken, Ann Rupe; fourth row, from left, Phyllis Mullen, Reva Vaughan, Velma Hue, Shirley
Custer; flllh low, from left, Jane Walton, 1£leanorThomas, Nellie Brown, Roberu. O'Brien, Ihe
' 1See Page 2. annthl'r picture l
hostess.

TWO FINED
Fined in the court or Pomeroy
Ma yor Charles Legar Saturday
FORMER ATHLETES OF Southern High School who
night were Clarence Lee,
Pomeroy, $10 and cos Is on a will be playing in an alumni football ganoe against meml\ers
reckless operation charge, and . of 11io nramle v··atl'r llit y ~1 ,:1' fro nt !'OW , 1-r, Mile IhlP, Rot!er
!\dams, David Fux. Bruce Neigler, Don Smilh , lk · .;c J·;,·:ons
Geur ~ e McDaniel. '1iddlepurt,
$5 cmd costs, intoxicnlion .

and Willie Cundiff; ba~k row, Roger Manuel, Don Hardt•n.
Dallas Jarrell, Amos Walbrown, Dan McTurner, Ed Cozart.
Tom Smith, Clifford Ashley and Bruce Wallace, coach and
player . 'i1Je game will be played al Southern Stadiu111 in
Racine. Kickoff is 7:30p.m.
·

�1-'l'l!e Dli!YSc~l,Middlepoirt-l'uoMIOt,O., Npw. z:&amp;,IS'II

Associated Press All-District

Overnight
Reports

car sales skeptically and are not
boosting productiOn schedules
to replenish or bwld up dealer
stocks, Iron Age magaune saHl
over the weekend The national
metalworking weekly sa1d httle
upward reviSIOn 1n car
production, a major steel user,
Ia expected before next year
Iron Age sa1d the auto
compames are placmg steel
orders for January delivery at
about tw1ce December 's
depressed rate but they may
-also be waiting to see what kmd
of price increases they Will be
allowed before increasing
production " The trade weekly
said one automottve parts
supplier has reported a
t1gnH1cant mcrease m orders
from the car makers and, based
on normal auto produchon
cycles, th1s would md1cate
higher car output around
February
WASHINGTON
Both
part1es predicted an extrcrnt ly
close and part1san v•
toda y's Senate showdOWI•
plan to U&gt;e tax funds - ra t' r
tllan pnvatc contnbutJOn - 10
finance 1he election campaigns
of prel[denUal candidates
"The erma are twisted until
they are almost twisted off on
both aides," said Sen Russell B
l..onJ, D-La., in advance of the
vole, In a polltically charged
atmosphere, the Republicans
IOIJihl to swttch a few Southern
Democrats Only a handful of
Cllllverla would be needed to
defeatlhe plan

Pro Standings

Football Teams Are Announced

By Wire
By tbe UP!
CLEVELAND - A rocky
profit road 1s ahead for buSiness
due to the pnce controls under
Phase 2 of the new economic
policy ,
Industry
Week
magazme sa1d today Next year
IS expected to he a recovery
year and m normal times,
profits would nse about 15 pet ,
the magaune reported But
w1th the 2 5 pet pnce mcrease
gutdellne and the rule that
higher pnces cannot be used to
mcrease a busmess' margm of
prof1t, the only way compames
would be able to boost earmngs
would be by ra1smg their
bijsmess volume
The busmess magaune also
reported firms were hopmg for
higher worker productivity next
year as another means to raiSe
profits
WASHIN GTO N
PROSPECTS for committee
approval of Wilham H
Rehnqu1st's Supreme Court
nommat1on appeared certam
today followmg RehnqUist's
fresh and flat demals of ever
havmg harassed black voters
durmg the 1964 electwn or of
ever belongmg to a John Birch
type orgamzation
The Senate JudiCiary Com"ll1lttee planned to meet Tuesday
to vote on the nommatwns of
both Rehnqwst and President
Nixon's other nommee , LewiS
F Powell Jr It was Vlftually
certam the committee would
approve both nommatwns and
send them to the full Sens te for
a confll'llUition vote
DAYTON - FIVE thoussnd
un1on workers at two local
Fr1g1dalre appliance plants
Sunday voted to g1ve up most of
ihelf pay raiSes durmg the next
two years m order to keep the
company from movmg away
Each man will forego about
$18 per week m ra1ses and cost
of livmg mcreases, under terms
of the modifications m the unwn
contract reached after f1ve
months of negotiations
The General Motors diVISion
refused to comment Sunday
mght Instead, Frigi daire
scheduled a Monday mormng
press conference to announce
the s1gmng of the agreement
Fngtdau-e agreed to rehire by
next February 8Sil of the 3,348
members of the International
Umon of Electrical Workers
(IUEW) la1d off
RAVENNA -THE lrlal of
the first of 25 persons md1cted
011 charges stemmmg from the
Kent State Umvers1ty diSorders
of May 1970 that clunaxed With
the killing of four students by
National Guardsmen began m
, Portage County Common Pleas
Court today
Jury selection 10 the trial of
former Kent State student Jerry
Rupe, 23, Ravenna, was
scheduled Rupe IS charged
wttl: r1~1lng, slashing a fire rope
and throwmg rocks at flfemen
Most of the 25 had sought
through the courts to have thelf
indictments rescmded The
appeal went all the way to the
U S Supreme Court, which last
Friday reJected their motion
and indicated prosecutiOn could
begin
NEW YORK - Automobile
industry executives continue to
view the recent surge 10 new

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov, 22, 1971

LUCilLE WILUAMSON, New Haven, left, was received into membership at the annua'
exemplar tea of X1 Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta S1gma Ph1 Sorority Sunday mght at the home
of Robe~ta O'Brien m Pomeroy W1th Mrs W1ll1amson are those who conducted the r1lual of
Jewels, from the left, Eleanor Thomas, SOCial chrurman , Pearl Welker, pres1dent, Shlfley
Custer, secretary, and Margaret Follrod, v1ce president.

Story of
Israel in

Film, Music

Twenty.(hree Southeastern
Ohio League players received
All-District honors m Class AAA
and Class AA selections announced today by the
Assoclllted Press
Eastern of Me1gs County
placed five members of Its
undefeated team oo the first
and secood Class A All-District
squads while North Galha
rece1ved one second team
selection
Gerald Inbody, Athens, was
named Triple A Coach of the
Year for the SEO District.
Ironton's Bob Bruney was
named top Class AA coach, and
Ed Miller, Portsmouth Notre
Dame, was named Class A
Coach of the Year
Triple A Back of the Year
honors went to Manetta's Mike
Burke, IBGilound semor
Athens • 223-jJound semor tackle
Al Ackerman was named top
Class AAA lineman
Top Class AA back honors
went to Ironton's Hal Spears.
Gallipolis' Chuck Wood was
named Class AA lineman of the
year Spears IS a 17liilound
semor quarterback, Wood a 21().
pound semor tackle
Class A Back of the Year
honors went to FrankfortAdena's Dw1ght Pettiford, !50pound senior who gained 3,900
yards m hiS four-year career
Eastern's AI Holter, 200-pound
semor tackle of Eastern-Me~gs,
was named the top Class A
Lineman of the Year
Area gr1dders ratmg AP
honors for All-District were
CLASS AAA OFFENSE

AI Ackerman, Athens, tackle,
Dave Beckley, Jackson. guard ,
Greg Smith, Logan, quar
terback

Don Wood, A1hens,

lull back
CLASS AAA DEFENSE
Bryan Davidson, Logan, end,
Jim Scott, AtHens. end , Mike
Green, Athens, safety
Honorable mention went to
Jom Swearingen, Athens . Ken
Valentine, Jackson and Rick
Krebs, Logan

CLASS AA OFFENSE
Jim Payne, Ironton, end
Chuck Wood, Gallipolis tackle .
Mark Werry. Meigs tackle .
M1ke Albrlnk, Ironton, guard
Bob Rlst, Ironton, guard Ed

Young , Meigs, center Hal
Spears, Ironton, quarterback ,

Pete Neal, GallipoliS, leflhalf
and Ri ck Boykln. Ironton.
halfback
CLASS AA DEFENSE
Danny Settles, Wellston, end
Jim Miller, Gallipolis, tackle
Fred Lee, Meigs, tackle, Tolby
Helton, Waverly, middle gua d
Bob Smith, Ironton, llnebac •er

and Tom

Varney,

Waverly,

Ed. Note: This newspaper understands AP
selectiqns was made by a "special board of
reporters" of Associated Press aligned
newspapers and radio stations in the Southeast
District. II may be embarrassing to Meigs'
Mark Werry to be named on this team when he
was injured early in the second half of the
Marauders' second game of the season at
Belpre and saw no more action during the
entire SEOAL season. It definitely is embarrassing to Unitell Press International
aligned newspapers and radio statwns that any
sports reporters given the responsibility of
awarding recognition to athletes of our high
schools, would overlook the Marauders who
were legitimate candidates for recognition
after a full nor near-full gnd campaign.
The credibility gap between reader and
media is born of such bloopers.
Mark Werry, a fine athlete, may have won
the selection fair and square had he not been
injured. A 244 lb. junior, he will be back in 1972.

halfback
CLASS A OFFENSE
AJ Holter, Eastern, tackle
CLASS A DEFENSE
AI Duvall, Eastern, end
Second team honors (offense)
went to Bob Caldwell, Eastern
end Rock Sanders Eastern
back Second team defensive MAILMAN's ULTIMATUM
honor s went to Loren Neal,
BEIRIIT (UP!) - The mallNorth Gallia Iackie and Jim
Amsba,y, Eastern halfback man who delivers letters to the
home of Georgma Rlzk, the
DANCE SET
current Miss Universe, bas
The Meigs Athletic Assn will threatened to slop coming
hold a Teen Thanksgtvmg dance unless he gets an autographed
from 8 to II p m. Thursday at photograph of the beauty
the Meigs Junior High School m Georgina's siSter, Vilchina,
Middleport wtth the Jays em- sa1d the mallman complamed
ceemg Admission IS 75 cents there was just too much work
'
I
In dehvermg hundreds of letters
BOOSTERS TO MEET
daily, most of them addressed
The
Eastern
Athlellc sunply to "Miss Umverse,
Boosters Club will meet at 8 BeirUt" and he wanted the
p.m Tuesday at the high school photo as a reward
Refreshments will be served
The family agreed

Na11onal Conference

East

W L T Pel
Dallas
7 3 0 700
Washington
6 3 1 IXJ7
NY Giants
4 6 0 400
Philadelphia
J 6 1 333
St Louis
3 7 0 300
Central
W L T Pet
Minnesota
820800
Detroit
631/XJ7
Chicago
640600
Green Bay
J 5 1 375
West
Los Angeles W 6 L 3 T I Pets
647

DANCE AT WAIIAMA
The annual Thanksglvmg
dance of Wahama High School
will be held from 8 lo II p m
Wednesday m the school
aud1tonum w1th the Ja ys
emceemg Admtsslon 1s 75
cents

NEW HAYEN - Across a
barren land, scarred by centuries of war and neglect, the
spectres of anc1ent Israel appear, hover, and fade away
Suddenly there ts movement of
a different sort, and slowly.
stead1ly, a startling transTALLEST XMAS TREE?
formation beg1ns to take place
TRACYTON, Wash (UP! )Thus begins "His Land," the
Residen ts of this tiny Puget
thfllhng story of Israel from
Sound community claun they
8(1Cient to modern times "His
have the world's tallest ChristLand/' a one.hour color feature
mas tree -a 127 foot, 4 inch
motwn p1cture, takes one on a
g~ant that has served as the
Journey through space, lime
town's Yuletide ornament since
and current events to see Chns Ondera , Jackson end
1929
graphically the fact that Israel
today ts a hvmg testimony to
the words of the prophets when
they proclauned that Israel
•
would take her place among the
natwns of the world
In the compan y of Chff
Barrows and Cl1ff Richard,
England's popular star who
s1ngs a number of new Ralph
Carmichael songs, some of J Tim Evans, president of mdustry, then we must show by this year before the money waa
which were actually written on Evans Packing Company m actions, not JUSt words, tllat we m hand," be sa1d, "and I believe
locatwn, one travels the v1brant Gall1pohs, wtU be cha1rman of believe lhere IS a need for both this accurately reflects the
streets and lonely solitary paths the Holzer Medical Center beauty and growth "
confidence they have ln the
of th1s nation whose destiny 1s $165,000 Landscapmg and
Evans sa1d he would be people of 1he community "
da1ly d1scussed m the counsels ExteriOr Beautification Fund enhshng support of every Volunteer workers for the
of governments all over the RaiSmg Drive
segment of the conunun1ty to fund raising campatgn are
world, the same paths taken by Chairman of the Holzer help m the completloo of the asked to contact J Tim Evans
Jesus and the prophets Gahlee Hosptlal Foundation Board of projec\1, •
at Eyans packtnB Co, II) ,
the :Wllllerness, Jeru..;lein,'th; Trustees, Harland . Marlm,
"~ fe!jl the board of lrll$jeejl Gallipolis, Ohio Contr,lbutiol}l,
Mount of 011v"" mmgle with the made the announcement today showed much forestght m their can be mailed to the Holzer
people of modern Israel as they m Gallipolis
deciSion to proceed with what Medical Center Fund Ralsinl
work, play and build a nation
"I know Tim w1ll put every landscapmg could be completed Drive, P 0 Box 280, GallipoUa,
Words of Scnpture come to effort mto the project," Martin
Ohio t5631
J Tim Evans
hie as the two men reflect upon said, "and With the support of
the events that m recent years other mterested Citizens we'll
have confirmed much of the be able to reach the $165,000
anc1ent prophecies One IS goal by January I "
wttness to the fact that out of Accepting the challenge,
death and desola tiOn 1s Evans sa1d
emergmg a new land, a "land "I'm honored that the board 1
'
of m1lk and honey," where the of trustees have placed their
and up to 5th row seats, stoppmg every few feet
By JACK O'BRIAN
future chmachc events of confidence m me and I am
to kiss everyone m Sight Burt bussed a few ,
h1story will take place
confident we will succeed "
but blew kisses to the multitude, a veritable
' HIS Land,' riCh m color and Evans sa1d he will name the
KAY'S LAST TAPE
virile Tmy Tim
aut hentic sights and sounds cbalriTian later thiS week m
WAS ADHESIVE
The "21" crowd was virtually New Year's Eve
w1th a popular musical scor~ each of 1he seven counties
NEW YORK (KFS) - Marvelous character
after
the Sunon opemng that premiere plua a
composed and arranged by served by Holzer Medtcal clown Key Medford Is back tapmg Dean Martin
Lincoln Center play prenuere, the usual afterRalph Carmichael has been Center
1 TV showa after serious surgery The Bdwy
called a musical JOurney mto "These seven men w1U be the1 musical version of "Two for the Seesaw" will opera mob, the Kntcks' post-basketball game
the soul of a nation and w111 be key to the success of this drlve," 1 have a score by Dorothy F1eldsand Cy Coleman, mourners, and the regular early-eurtam aftershown on Nov 28 ~t The New he sa1d "$165,000 IS a lot of a book by Mike Stewart, whispers Shubert Alley theater gangs aU trymg to get tables The Ed
Haven Umted MethodiSt Church mooey to raiSe, but compared to gosslp
Liza Minnelli can have the role &amp;illivans preferred the Lincoln Center theatriCS
at 9 45 a m
the $20 mllhon already financed Originated by Anne Bancroft oo superbly 011 to the Simon unveiling The Alan Kings also
for construction of the new stage (oppostte Henry Fonda 1n a two-eharacter fought the "21" Ooodand leftm lrieforder It's
center, 11 1s relatively small " cast) and by Shirley MacLalne so emptily In the the sort of headache every Manhattan
He sa1d he felt the driVe was film .. The staguole of "G1ttel" was delight- restaurateur would adore
GAME RESCHEDULED
for a worthwhile cause and he fully Jewish, but the scared rucker nabobs tried
Contemporary porno-eustomers think they're
The Eastern · Southwestern was confident the people of the to make 1t sheer non-ethnic, middle-America, on a new trip Sigmund Freud adored dirty
basketball game scheduled for area would wholeheartedly which removed rich juices of the character stories 01' Slgalso announced he'dqult sex at
Friday, Nov 26, Will be played support the protect
com letel
42, convmced he was too old Freudycat'
mstead at 7 30 p m on Wed- "I feel Holzer Medical Center
~ y
nesday, Nov 24, at Eastern must set the example for the
Ygal member of theN. Y. Critics Circle, Boston took another film away from the unionH1gh School
rest of the area "he said "If we Marilyn StaSio of Cue mag, spearheads a theater wracked Manhattan scene - "Fuzz", screenare to keep thl; entire portion of district cleanup, and belabors Mayor Lindsay play by Evan Hunter from the Ed McBBln novel
Southeastern Ohio beautiful and with the same broom· "Lindsay always baa been about the fictional 87th N Y police precmct all
still attract new business and Interested In the theater, but he's never come very familiar to Hunter masmuch as McBam IS
across with anything for the theater district. He just one of his pseudonyms . It stars Raquel
comes to shows In a llmousme and looks good VVelch, Burt Reynolds, Jack Weston, Yul
and has a good time and goes home In a Brynner
Todav's Subject. More Bad News for 'Speed' Users llmousine He'snotaccostedbypanhandlersand
Gene Hackman plays the cmema role
I Methampetamines)
prostitutes" True.
_
origmated in real life by detecttve Ed Egan for
Jerry Lacy created a peripheral sensation "The French Connectton " Egan wasn't the type
playing Woody Allen's fantasy-Humphrey Now Egan has completed a role lJl "Kansas City
the discovery Will hasten the removal from the market of am- Bogart with amazing verisimilitude 10 "Play It Prune" playm~ a Ch1cago moblord who hires
phetammes wh1ch reportedly have "very litUe therapeutic Again, Sam" and, since that marvelous conceit, Lee Marvin to klll - Gene Hackman
value " I.SD Is also suspected as cause of the same blood vessel has been Eileen Fulton's latest love Interest m
"The French Connection " Incidentally IS
disease
the ooap opera "loa The World Turns." He's now collecting the b1ggest profits of any current
One mteresting case, a woman patient mvolved m the study written out of the aoap to recreate Bogle In the movie Oscar-oormnee Sylvta Miles stars offhad been takmg 30pllls a day, orlgmaUy prescribed to control her film version of "Play It Again, Sam."
Bdwy. In Jan opposite Gary Merrill In
diet The dosage for that purpose IS two pills a day It seems thiS is Somehow Ute rumor got arowtd that Lacy is off "Rosebloom"
Att'n Boston. the mus1cal
a startlmg example of how diet pills, used under a doctor's the show because EUeen's real~ife groom, "Different Times," due this sea !!On on Bdwy , is
prescnption m the begmnmg, can get completely out of hand quite Denny Fortunato, supposedly is consumed with about four generations of a very wealthy fiCeas1ly In my first article I mentioned that the purpose of these jealousy 8(1d demanded his removal. SUch are tional (lt says here) Boston family Michael
"letters" was not to pm the blame for the drug problem on aoap fans ... We love Instrumental music as we Brown, who's written hi! own supperclub
anyone However, one can hardly consider aU available In- thrt!Mot Utls gosslpy trivia at 5·30 a m , but material (for the Blue Angel 1111d other stylish
formation on the subJect without commg to the conclusion that hOw often can you harken to "Some Enchanted pubs Including Plaza 9 and the London savoy),
adults have been m1susmg drugs for many years now and have by Everung" without d•al-twi.stlng? No one ever bas created myalc, lyrlc8 ond oook, arld will
so domg certainly contributed to _the spread and mcrease of the hear of Michel IJogrand' ... New folk singer In direct.
pract1ce
town ls named ' orne ZUckerman. Honest I
Charles Nelll()n ltellly Ht!l8 IICuda o! partyHave you checked your mediCme chest lately to see what
Centimllhonau e Lew Rosenstlel (IHetlme boss laughll telling about the M
ull TV'• OrMhlllll Kerr
dangerous drugs lt may contam? Do you know exacUy what drugs of Schenley's) has been taking Dr. Rusk's post- filed alter O!arles performed '"'lle Giddyap
you keep m the house and whether they are potentially dangerous stroke therapy at the hospital and was able to Gourmet"ln a TV llel'in ep!Jode . We thought
m the hands of children or young people? How would you feel if skip out for dinner at Louiae's with his lawyer the Galloping Graham had a crackers IM!lll8 of
one of your children became mvolved with the misuse of drugs Roy M Cohn, which means Lew's progressing humor .. Charles now challenges Kerr to a
and you found 1t all started with somethmg he found m your famously . The brand-new Cwtard cruise-liner cooking match
med~eme chest?
"Adventurer" will have a gambling caslno
"Macbeth" director Roman Polanski
We are discussmg facts, fnends, and cons1dermg all aboard. London's Clnon Club will prov1de chips, (dlscuaslng the Sharon Tate murder In the next
poss1blltt1es That 1s why some unpleasant subjects are likely to wheels, dealers and cards ... Angle Dickenson Playooy ISSUe) blasts Elke Sommer and her'
come up durmg our consideratiOn of the national drug problem madt thi evening's most exllibittonlstic en- husband Joe Hyams for writing "inside dope"
Be w1th me next week I thmk you'll fmd the subject of dfep trance at"The Prisoner of ?ndAve." openb.g by about the murder of his wife. Says he met the ,
interest and 1f you ar• concerned about drugs I know your reading entering down one center aisle, crossing over to Hyarnses only ooce, and "They kn,ew nothing
lime will not be wa ~ted
another In !root ot the flrlll row of Uteatergoers about the way Sharon illld lllved."

J Tim Evans to Lead

7 County Fund Drive

MRS JAMES WALKER, GALLIPOUS, presented the
program at the exemplar tea of XI Gamma Mup Chapter of
Beta S1gma Phi Sorority Sunday rught She gave two
humorous monologues, ' The Children's Party" and A
Southern Girl at a Dance" by the late Ruth Draper

-

Provocation is Charged
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) -Sen
Hubert H Humphrey charged
Sunda y mght that President
N1xon had deliberately tned to
provoke unwn leaders mto an
ugly confrontatiOn for h1s own
political gam
Referrmg to NIXon's blunt
address last Fnday to the AFL·
CIO conventton here, Humphrey said an opportunity for
bnngmg Amencans together
was cast as1de m the mterest of
personal pohllcal gam He went
to the pomt of seekmg to
provoke th1s aud tence "
The Mmnesota Democrat
made h1s charges m a press
release outhmng h1s VIew to
AFL-CIO President George
Meany and later m an
mterv•ew with UP!
Humphrey also Jomed labor
offlctals m chargmg there IS a
"deliberate attempt to make
the labor movement look as tf
1t was rude to the President,
that 11 had a lack of respect for
the offwe, which lS not true
They dtd not Jeer, boo or h1ss
"The fact that the dldn t
y

break out m tumultuous applause lS because they don't
happe n to agree wtth lhe
Pres1de nPs pohc1es / Hum·
phrev satd
An AFL-CIO spokesman earher had charged the Whlte
House 11as try mg to ' falsely
trump up" the 1mpresswn that
labor leaders gave N1xon an
Insulting reception when he
spoke to the convention and
told delegates he would press
ahead w1th h1s wage and pnce
controls w1th or wtthout thetr
cooperation
CLOTHING OFFERED
Free Clothmg Day will be
observed VVednesday at the
Salvahon Army HQ on Butternut Ave m Pomeroy from 10
a m to noon Anyone needmg
clothmg ts welcome
IWLA TO MEET
The November meeting of the
Ken Amsbary Chapter, Isaac
VValton League, will be held thiS
evenmg at the chapter farm
near Chester

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

1

Voice along Broadway

Parents Should Kno'v
Prov1ded By J J Cremeans
Last week we talked bnefly about InJected Methamphetammes commonly called m the Jargon of the street, "Speed "
You 'll recall that the effects of usmg th1s drug, m this manner,
were very diSturbmg to l!aY the least Now, more bad news about
"Speed" has come to hght On Thursday. November 5th, 1970, 11
was reported by a USC Med1cal Center team at Los Angeles that
as many as 20 pet of the youths who "shoot speed," (take 1t by
InJect ton ), may develop a blood vessel disease that has been falal
m about 30 pet of cases detected to date
•
It seeiTIS to be md1cated the disease kills by blockmg blood
vessels m v1ta l organs such as ktdneys and the hea rt ThiS will be
the ftrst deadly disease of the system that doctors have found
associated with drugs which are a bused
Speed ts as we have satd, a form of amphetamme - the
&lt;P ptll drug Users InJect 1t to get a qu1cker, htgher response
• cordo og to one doctor, workmg w1th the study, persons who
take am~het&lt;ommes orally to control their appetite may possibly
be m danger of acqutnng the letha l blood vessel disease There
were e1ght doctors on the med1cal team wh1ch made the
discovery, at USC, from the departments of med1cme, radtology
and pathology Dr B Phlhp Citron, who headed the team, has a
report appearmg m the November 5th ISSue of the New England
Journal of Med1cme In 1t he !(lis of extenSive studies done on 14
p;lbents , four of them d1ecl and one 1s now near death Eight of the
14 were males and s1x were Jemales
Most of those who died succumbed to heart failure or k1dney
fat lure, due to the blockage by scar tissue of blood vessels w1thm
these organs Autops1es showed vessels m the pancreas, stomach
and smallmtestlnes also were severely affected It 1s hoped that

I

NFL $t1ndtngo
By United Prns lnltrnollon•l
Ameriun Co:o~tertnee
Eost
W L T Pet
Miami
811889
Baltimore
730700
NY Jets
460400
New England
4 6 0 400
Buffalo
0 10 o 000
Central
W. L T Pet
Pittsburgh
5 5 0 500
Cleveland
550500
Cincinnati
370300
Houston
1 8 I 111
West
W L T Pet
Oakland
7 1 2 87S
Kansas City
7 22 1 778
San Diego
4 6 0 400
Denver
2 7 1 222

!

San
Francisco 64 44 o
Atlanta
I 600
500
New Orleans
J 5 2 37S
Sunday's Results
Dallas 13 Washington 0
Miaml17 Baltimore 14
Cincinnati 29 Houston 13
Pittsburgh 17 NY Giants 13
Cleveland 27 New England 7
NY Jets 20 Buffalo 7
Kansas City 28 Denver 10
Detroit 29 Chicago 3
Minnesota 23 New Orleans 10
Philadelphia 37 St Louis 20
Los Angesles 17 San Francloco
6

Oakland 34 San Diego 33
(Q&lt;lly games scheduled!
Monday~t

Gamts

Green Bay at Atlanta (night)
(Q&lt;lly game scheduled!
Thunday•a Games
Kansas City at Detroil
Los An~eles at Dallas
I Only games scheduled)
Sundoy's Gomes
Allanta at Minnesota
Baltimore at Oakland
Cleveland at Houston
Denver at Pittsburgh
New England at Buffalo
New Orleans vs Green Bay at
Milwaukee
51 Louis at NY Giants
San Diego at Cincinnati
San Francisco at NY Jets
Washington at Philodolph la
IQ&lt;liy games scheduled)
Mondoy's Gomeo
Ch icago at Miami (night)
(Q&lt;lly game scheduled)
AHL Stondlngs
By United Pross lntornol1onol
Eash
W L T Pis
13 2 2 28
Boston
9 6 3 21
Nov o Scotia
8 • 4 20
Spr ingfield
7 10 3 17
Rochester
S 10 S IS
Providence
West
W L T Ph
Hershey
10 3 3 23
Ci~~Nlli
7 7 6 20
Cltvetlll'ld
1 1 S 19
Richmond
6 9 2 u
Baltimore
5 10 • u
Tidewater
3 12 3 9
Sundoy's Results
Novo Scotla7 Cincinnati 3
Providence 5 Boston 3
Richmond 3 Rochester I
(Q&lt;lly games scheduled!
Mond1y's G1mes
1No games scheduled)

NHL Stond1ngs
By Unc1ted Press lntornat&lt;onal
Eut
W
New York

Montreal
Boston
Toron1o

Detroit

Vancouver

Buffalo

West

L

T Pis

13 2 4 30
12 2 s 29
13 s 1 27
1 6 7 21
5 II 4 14
5 13 4 u
4 II 5 13

W L T Pis

Chicago
IS S 0
Minnesota
13 4 3
Philadelph ia
7 8 4
Pittsburgh
8 12 2
California •
6 12 3
Sl Louis
5 II 3
Los Angeles
4 IS I
Sundoy's Rosulls
Toronto 4 Buffalo 3
New York 12 California I
Boston 6 St Louis 2
Delroll2 Vancouver 2
Chicago 7 Pittsburgh 3
Minnesota I Philadelphia 1
1Q&lt;lly games scheduled!
Mondoy's Gomes
1No games scheduled!

30
29
18
18
IS
13
9

ABA Slondtngl
By Unotod Press lnternatoonol
Eut
W L Pet GB
13 s 722
Kehtucky
11 7 611 2
Virgonia
995004
New York
10 10 500 4
Pittsburgh
8 II 421 5'12
Floridians
6 II 3S3 61/2
Carolina
West
W L Pel GB
Utah
12 7 632
lnd lana
9 9 500 2'12
Memphis
8 II 421 4
Dallas
7 10 412 4
Denver
7 10 412 4
Sunday's Rtoults
Floridians 103 Memphis 86
Ionly game scheduled)
Mondov's Gomes
(No games scheduled!
NBA St•ndlngs
By Un1ltd Preas lntornoHonol
Eutern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L. Pel GB
Boston
12 1 632
New York
9 9 500 2'12
Philadelphia
9 9 500 2'12
Buffalo
7 II 389 4'12
Cent~a I Division
W. L. Pet GB
Baltimore
8 10 444
Cincinnati
6 9 400 '12
Atlanta
S II 312 2
Cleveland
4 14 222 4
Welltrn Conference
Mldwul Division
W L. Pet GB
Milwaukee
17 3 850
Chicago
12 5 706 3'12
Detroit
9 9 500 7
Phoenix
7 11 389 9
PoclfiC Division
W L. Pet GB
Los Angel•s
11 3 850
GoldenState 14 7 IXJ7 3'12
Seattle
13 7 650 4
Houston
4 17 190 13'1,
Portland
3 14 116 12112
Sundoy's Ruulls
Boston 128 Cleveland 105
Los Anoeles 112 Milwaukee 105
Seattl!l21 Philadelphia 117

•
Ins

I0
By BOB Dl PIETRO
UPI Sports Writer
Marv Fleming, the veteran
tight eud of the Miami
Dolphins, recently paid the
highest sort of compliment to
his coach, Don Shula.
"He comes the closest of
anybody to Mr Vmce Lombardi," said the man who played
under the legendary Vincent for
six years at Green Bay
Fleming caught a touchdown
pass from Bob Griese Sunday
to help Miami to a 17·14 win
over Baltimore, wtdening the
Dolphins' lead over the Colts to
I 'h games in the Ameman
Conference East
The victory raised Shula's
nine-year coaching record to 89-

Ra

~es

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Oh10
State Coach Woody Hayes said
he expects "to he called on
the carpet" for his outburst
near the end of Saturday's 1().7
loss to Michigan ln protest to
an official's call
The call which Hayes vehemenUy protested Involved a pass
from Don Lamka to Dick Wakefield which was intercepted on
the Michigan 32-yard line by
the Wolverines' Tom Darden
Hayes insisted interference
should have been called on the
Michigan defender
"It was just a horrible, horrible call by an offtclal who
evidently lacked the courage to
make the right call In their
stadlwn," Hayes 881d on hiS
weekly Saturday mght television show Hayes refused to
meet newsmen after the game
After the play, wh1ch came ln
the closmg two m1nutes of the
game and the Buckeyes on the
move, Hayes rushed onto the
f1eld m a rage He was assessed a !$-yard penalty and was
escorted off Ute field by players
and some of his assistants
Only moments later, when
linebacker Randy Gradlshar
was ejected from the game for
unnecessary roughness, Hayes
ripped the bun~ng off both the
yard sticks and threw them onto the field

~-a

761 percentage, tops m
the league for that span of
ilme
Lombardi Style
Ths win was even more
deilghtful for Shula and the
Dolphms smce lt came agamst
a team that he had guided to 71
wins and a Super Bowl
appearance in seven years.
Miam1 used the Lombardi
style -power running, Iough
defense and opportlmiStic quarterbacking - to defeat the
Colts
The l().yard-Gries.-to-Flemlng score came less tllan two
minutes after Jun Klick had
tied the score at 7·7 with a oneyard plunge.
Garo Yepremlan accounted

"I expect to be called on the
carpet," Hayes told WBNS
TV's Ted Mullins, "I hope
I am I'm really b1tter about
1t "
Runs 85 Yards
The Buckeyes, 14-pomt underdogs going Into the game
aga1nst the unbeaten and third
ranked Wolverines, took a 7-3
lead late ln the third quarter
on a brilliant 85-yard punt return by senior Tom Campana,
the third long return of the
day for 1he former wingback
from Kent
On Michigan's first punt of
the day, Campana returned the
ball 49 yards to the Wolverme
29 where he was caught from
behind on a desperation tackle
by Billy Taylor He also had a
50-yard return nullified by a
cUpping penalty
Mlch1gan had taken a 3-0
lead on a 32-yard second
second quarter fteld goal by
Dana Com, but missed another
scormg opportunity when Taylor, a senior from Barberton,
Ohio, fumbled a p1tchout on the
Buckeye e1ght and tl was recovered by Harry Howard on
the !I
The Buckeyes' Fred Schram
miSSed a 38-yard field gnal attempt which was set up by
another fwnble by Taylor on
the M1chigan 28, the ball JUSt

Southweatern (35) -Snuth, 34-10, Dillon, 4-4-12; Wh1tt, 3-1-7;
Chambers, 11-2-2, Trowbridge, III-I; and Lew1s, 0-3-3 Totals 111~.

drifting w1de to the left
With another Buckeye powerBut for the Buckeyes, •t was house a diStinct poss1bllity for
about the same story for the next year, 1t's gomg to be a
last three games of the season, long wa1t for Hayes until Nov
Gradlshar, Vic Koegel and Stan
While, and an offel)SC which
just couldn't make anythmg
resembllng a touchdown drive
Bolstered By Returns
The Buckeye ~ffense accounted for only 138 yards against
1he tough Michigan defense, but
Campana's 166 yards In punt
returns was a big factor m
keeping the auckeyes ln faiT
f1eld pos11lon
Despite h1s disappomtment
over the bitter ending to the
season, Hayes sa•d he "couldn't
be more proud of this team 11
they had won 40-l)
"I just can't believe th1s
team played that good a game
as decimated as they were by
mjurles "
Bes1des the many players Injured earher, fiVe who started
jus! a week ago against Northwestern were etth.er s1ck or In·
jured and unable to go agamst
Michigan
Hayes sa1d 1! the Wolvermes
were the No I team in the
country as their Coach Bo
Schembechler had been clatmmg, then "Purdue and Oh10
Slate must be No 2 and I
don't think we deserve to be
rated that highly "
Michigan beat the Boilermakers ro-11 last week on a field
goal m the dosmg rrunutem

Houston II 5 Golden State 96
(Q&lt;lly games scheduled)
Monday's Gamn
INo games scheduled)

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Bradshaw to Ron Shanklin set
up by Preston Pearson's 77yard k~ekoff return to defeat
the Gtants
Pitt T1es Cleveland
The wm gave the Steelers a 5
-5 record and kept them even
w1th Cleveland 10 the AFC
Central race
Bob Davis threw touchdown
passes of 33 yards to Don
Maynard and 19 yards to
George Nock and the Jet
defense mtercepted four Denms
Shaw passes to extend Buffalo's
two-year losmg skem
Bill Nelsen threw a palf of
sconng passes, Leroy Kelly
caught one of them and also
scored on a one-yard plunge as
the Browns snapped a fourgame losmg streak
Steve Owens, the No 2 rusher
m the NFC, scored on a pall' of
short plunges and teammate
Allie Taylor , the siXth-leading
rusher m the conference,
scored on a 19-yard run as the
Lions took over second place m

Flon•dians

: : : : : : : : : •: : : : : : : :;,~ -' FinallY

.·&gt; ··: :,·.:·: :·:

the bowl picture

~

By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
Bill Sharman knew the Los
Angeles !..akers could fastbreak
the Milwaukee Bucks off the
court.
The !..akers coach, a master
tactician who charts the opposllion's every move, predicted
By Quarters.
durmg the exhibition season
Southwealern 14 6 6 9--35 that the old Celtic fast break
South Webster 29 32 22 17- 100 tllat bu1lt a Boston dynasty
Reserve Score - South would work just aa well for Los
Webster 69 Southwestern 25.
Angeles He especially was

Richmond which upset WUIIam
&amp; Mary 21·19 for the Southern
Conference championship
Arizona State, the host team
for the first annual Fiesta Bowl
ln Tempe, Ariz , won tis ninth
game m 10 decisions by
crushing San Jose Slate 49-6
The Sun Devtis' likely opponent
In the Fiesta will be e1ther
Florida Slate or Boston College
now that the Btg E1ght and
SEC bave had their ranks
depleted

the NFC Central from mistakeprone Ch1cago
Bob Lee's TD
Mmnesota upped lis lead to
I'" games m the NFC Central
as quarterback Bob Lee scampered four yards m the thlfd
period to g1ve the V1k1ngs their
f1rst touchdown ln 11 quarters
Clint Jones scored the other
Mmnesota touchdown and Fred
Cox added three field goals
Len Dawson uncorked bombs
to Moms Stroud, Elmo Wnght
and OtiS Taylor as the Chiefs
spoiled the coachmg debut of
Jerry Sm1th, who took over the
Denver rems from Lou Saban
earher m the week
The Ra1ders mamtamed thelf
half-game lead m the AFC West
m a w1ld affalf as Daryle
Lamomca h1t on three scoring
tosses, two to Ray Chester and
44-year-old George Blanda
added an unportant 39-yard
fteld goal
Mtke Garrett scored tw1ce for
the Chargers, on an II yard run
and an 18-yard catch of a John
Had! pass

Win

; . forward
The Flofldlans, led by rookie
Willie Long, snapped a
~l

NEW YORK (UP)) _ Bowl participants :;~ ftve-game losmg streak and
and records for 1971 major post season college J( grabbed an easy 103-86 vtclory
z over the Memphis Pros Sunday
games:
mght m the only act10n m the
Dec. 18 - Sun Bowl at El Paso. Tex ~ Amerocan Basketball Assoc•aIowa State 17-3) vs. Louisiana State 17-3).
): twn
The Florld1ans broke ahead
Dec. 20 - Liberty Bowl at Memphis,
early
m the second quarter and
Tenn.- Tennessee (7-2) vs. Arkansas (8-2-1) . .
Dec. 27- Fiesta Bowl at Phoenix, Ariz ::: never relinqwshed their lead
At the half, Florida led 50 to 41
Florida St. 17-3) vs. Arizona St. (9-1) .
Long logged 27 minutes of
Dec. 28 - Tangerine Bowl at Orlando,
playmg time, h1s h~gh for the
Fla. - Toledo (11-0) vs . Richmond (5-5).
season In so domg, he tossed
Dec. 30 - Peach Bowl at Atlanta .. m 22 pomls, had e1ght rebounds
and two ass1sts The 6-ll rook1e
Georgia Tech (7-4) vs. Mississippi (8-2) .
h1t for 10 of 18 shots from the
Dec. 31 - Gator Bowl at Jacksonville,
Fla. - Georgia (9-1) vs . North Carohna (9-2) . ·· f1eld and two of four from the
foul hne
Dec. 31 - Astm-Biue Bonnet Bowl at
Forward Ron Franz had 20
Houston, Tex.- Colorado (9-2) vs. Houston (8pmnls, while Warren Jaball had
2 )•
19 as they helped pace the
Jan . 2- Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif Floridian v1ctory Guard Larry
Mtchigan ( 11-0) vs. Stanford (8-3).
Csnnon was h1gh scorer for the
pros
w1th 16 pomts
Jan. I -Orange Bowl at Miami. Fla In rebounds, Floridian center
Nebrasks ( 10-0) vs. Alabama ( 10-0),
Ira Harge was h1gh w1th 17
Jan. 1 - l'lugar Bowl at New Orleans Forward Will Jones led the
Oklahoma &lt;9-0) vs . Auburn (9-0).
pros w1th 12
Jan. I - Cotton Bowl at Dallas - Penn
State 00..0) vs. Texas (7·2).- Texas plays in
Cotton Bowl if it defeats Texas A&amp;M on
Thanksgiving Day A tie or loss by Texas will
g1ve Arkansas the Cotton Bowl berth.

$

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Insurance

Avent

Dille Warner

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see us. Easy terms.

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·· ·:·· : ·....··.·:·:· ::-:: :·,{o:..~~~»w.«~~~-;:m:~.·::~m.. ::: . _.....·:·······

Lakers Use Long Pass
To Take Bucks 112-105

South Webster (100) Taulbee, 7-2-16, Clsxton, 3-1420; Faullmer, &amp;-1-17, Summers,
5-2-12; Green, ~10, Hanes, 3-410, R Bowman, 2-3-7 ,
Hamllton, 348; B. Summers, 211-4; Adams, 2-G-4; and Martin,
24-4 Totals 4Z.~100.

SECare Georgia, which will
play North Carolina m the
Gator Bowl at Jacksonville;
Tennessee, whch will host the
Liberty Bowl at Memphis
against probably Arkansas and
Mississippi which will oppose
Georgia Tech In the Peach
Bowl at Atlanta
The North Carolina-Georgia
Gator Bowl matchup will also
pit brother against brother In
the coaching ranks GeorgiA Is
coached by VInce Dooley while
the Tarheels, who wrapped up
the Atlantic Coast Conference Iitle Saturday by
blanking Duke 38-0, are
coached by Bill Dooley
'!'he Rose Bowl picture was
also cleared up Saturday when
Stanford officially clinched the
Pacific E1ght Iitle by defeating
California 14-ll The Indians' Bit
Ten opponent in Pasadena,
Michigan, had a tougher time
In edging Ohio State !().7 to
complete a perfect 11~ season
Unbeaten and sixth-ranked
Penn State upped Ill record to
J()..l) by crushing hapless Pittsburgh 56-18 and immediately
accepted a bid to the Cotton
Bowl to face the winner of the
Southwest Conference (probably Texas )
Tangerine Bowl-bound Toledo
extended the nation's longest
winning streak to 34 by blasting
Kent Slate 41-6. The 12thranked Rockela w1U oppose

Lou1s fwnbles and four mterceptions to score a 37-20
VIctory, and Oakland edged San
Diego, 34-33
Roger Staubach helped hand
Washmgton 1ts tlnrd defeat m
the last f1ve games when he
scrambled for 29 yards and a
score m the f1rsl quarter
M1ke Clark -a last mmute
addition for the mJured Tom
Fritsch - kicked f1eld goals of
26 and 48 yards to aid the
Cowboy attack
The Rams' secondary had a
field day at the expense of John
Brodie as they mtercepted the
Forty Nmer passer four times
Gene Howard grabbed three of
the way ward tosses and Jun
Nettles ran another back 29
yards for a touchdown Ramon
Gabriel hit Jack Snow w1th a 13
-yard pass for L A 's other
touchdown San Francisco
scored on a palf of f•eld goals
by Bruce Gossett
In a surpnsmgly w1de open
contest playe&lt;t on wet and
slippery arbflclal turf, Pittsburgh got a 7().yard mterception
return by John Rowser and a
four-yard pass from Terry

~;":~~~~:~r~~:':c~~rs b~ :*~~~~~X=«·~:::::·.~:-:::-:·:·: ··.· ·-.-~·: -:-:

It's the Big 8 vs So-East
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
The B1g Eight versus the
Southeast - that seems to be
college football '71's recurrmg
lheme as the season w1nds to
lis close with an endless parade
of bowl activity
With the upconung NebraskaOklahomaandAiabama-Auburn
clashes sUU clouding both the
national and Big Eight-SEC
tiUe pictures, no less than 10
schools from the two conferences wiD be participating in
post-season bowls
Top-ranked Nebrask and
fourth-ranked Alabama have
accepted bids to the orange
Bowlin Mlamt, Fla , while No '
2 Oklahoma and No 5 Auburn
have agreed to meet In the
Sugar Bowlin New Orleans,
In addition to Nebraska and
Oklahoma, the B1g Eight w1U
be represented by tenth-ranked
Colorado ln the Astro-Biuebonnet Bowl host agamst school
Houston and Iowa State m the
Sun Bowl at El Paso, Tex.
versus LSU of the SEC The
Bayou Bengals clinched their
berth Saturday night by easily
whipping punchless Notre
Dame, 211-8
Jommg Alabama, Auburn and
I.SU In the bowl f1eld for the

lne National Conference East,
Los Angeles dropped San
Francisco, 17-6, to grab the top
spot ln the NFC West,
Pittsburgh edged 1he New York
Giants 17-13, the New York Jets
defeated Buffalo 211-7, to hand
the Bills their lOth loss th1s
season and the1r 15th consecutive defeat ; Cleveland routed
New England 27-7 and Cmcmnati downed Houston 28-13 as
rookie Fred Willis of Boston
College ran for two touchdowns
and veteran quarterback V1rgll
Carter passed for two more
Also, Detroit trounced Chicago 28-3, Mmnesota decked New
Orleans 23-10, Kansas City
foiled Denver 28-10, Philadelphia capitalized on four St

Wants the Carpet

Highlanders
Drop Opener
South Webster of SciOto
County Saturday mght 1nn1cted
a 100-35 loss on Coach Richard
Hamilton's Southwestern
Highlanders
Thewumers led 2&amp;-14alter the
first period, 6t-20at the half and
83-26atthe end of three periods
T Claxton led South Webater
with 20 points T Taulbee had
16, R Faulkner 17 points and R
&amp;uruner 12 points
Mike Dillon, $-10 jun1or forward, led Ute Highlanders with
12 points Mark Smith, ii-8
senior guard added 10
Southwestern wlll meet
Eastern Friday night m an
5VAC contest at Eastern

for the wmmng points wtth a 20
-yard f1eld goal with 6 30
remaining hhe game
Ray Perldrul Hurt
Baltimore scored on four
yard runs by Don Nottingham
and Norm Bula1ch
Johnny Unitas drew hiS f1rst
starting assignment of the
season and directed a 711-yard
drive for Baltimore'a f1rst
score He was shaken up
attempting to block early In the
th1rd quarter and was removed
m favor of Earl Morrall
Baltimore wide receiver Ray
Perkms also suffered a severe
concussion on the same play
In other contests Sunday,
Dallas blanked Washmgton, !3D, to take a half-game lead In

•

anx1ous to try out the long down·
court pass theory against the
Bucks, who elimmated Los
Angeles from last Season's
playoffs
The Lakers used the tactic to
perfection Sunday mght to
defeat Milwaukee, 112-105, and
tie a club record of II consecutive vtctorles It was the
Bucks' second straight loss
alter a one-point triumph over
Seattle Friday mght. The
!..akers and Bucks now have
ldentlcall7-3 records as the two
best teams m the National
Basketball Association
Gall Goodrich scored 27
points and Jim McMUllan added
25 to offset the 39-pomt performance by Kareem Jabbar
The Laker defense, borrowmg
another leaf from the Sharman
book of old Celtic strateg~es,
stole the ball from Jabbar three
times In the first period
W1th Chamberlain, who
scored II points, wns the old
board master as he controlled
the Milwaukee center m rebounds, 26-17. Jerry West
contnbuted a valuable 22
points, mcluding 10 m the fourth
quarter when the Lakers
received enough margin to

For the B1g Eight's Iowa
State Cyclones, the trip to the
The Daily Sentinel
Sun Bowl wiD mark the first '
DEVOTED
TO THE
post-season activity ln 1he
INTEREST OF
school's history.lowa State, (7MElGS MASON AREA
CltESTER
L TANNEHILL,
3), nearing tl's greatest season
Exec Ed
ever, pounded Oklahoma State
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
.
54-0 Colorado, meanwhile, tmPublished dally elC.cept
by The Ohio Va lley
proved its record to 9-2 by Salurday
PubliShing Company
111
cutting down the Air Force 53- Court St Pomeroy Oh•o
45769 Business Off1 ce Phone
17
992 2156 Edotoroal Phone 992
2157
the
small
college
ranks,
Socond class poSiaQe pald al
In
Pomeroy , Ohio
top-rated Delaware may have
Na lion al ad v .,, •s '"9
berth
In
1he
representollve
Boll'"'" '
Clinched a
Ga l lagher, tnc, 12 Easl A2nd
Boardwalk Bowl at Atlantic 51. Now York Clly Now York
Subscription rates De
City, N J, bY comp1eting its livered by carrrer where
season at 9-1 with a ~ , avorloble so ceols per weok
By Molar Roule where carr ier
thump Ing of Buckn eU N0 2 ser~ICe not available on~
McNeese Slate finished at 9-0-1 manlh S1 75 By mar l lo Ohio
._
So th t Lo lsi
and w Va Ono year Sl4 00
v~ beating U wes
U ana Sl• monlhs Sl 25 Three
2().10 and fourth-rated Tennes- monlhs u so Subscrrpt lon
see State clobhe·ed Central ~:~ct';n';,c ludes Sunday Times
State 6H1 to wind up at IJ.l

coast
In other NBA action, Houston
surprised Golden Slate, 115-96,
Seattle topped Phlladelph•a. 127
- 117, and Boston bombed
Cleveland, 128-105
Rookte Mtke Newlm became
Houston's newest'scormg threat
With a 31-pomt burst and the
Rockets held high-Bcormg Jeff
Mullms to a season-low seven
pomts In beatmg the Warnors
Houston held Golden State to
just 10 pomts m the fmal quarter
while turning on w1th a 32-polnt
spurt Cazzle Russell was the
Warriors' high man w1th 24
pomts
Don Smith's hot stresk of 10
stra1ght pomts late m the fourth
penod enabled Seattle to pull
away from Philadelphia and
move within a half game of
Golden State In the Pacific
DIVISIOn Smith finished with 26
points, one more than Spencer
Haywood. Billy Cunningham,
With some sensational outs1de
shooting, led the 76ers w1th 32
pomts

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Associated Press All-District

Overnight
Reports

car sales skeptically and are not
boosting productiOn schedules
to replenish or bwld up dealer
stocks, Iron Age magaune saHl
over the weekend The national
metalworking weekly sa1d httle
upward reviSIOn 1n car
production, a major steel user,
Ia expected before next year
Iron Age sa1d the auto
compames are placmg steel
orders for January delivery at
about tw1ce December 's
depressed rate but they may
-also be waiting to see what kmd
of price increases they Will be
allowed before increasing
production " The trade weekly
said one automottve parts
supplier has reported a
t1gnH1cant mcrease m orders
from the car makers and, based
on normal auto produchon
cycles, th1s would md1cate
higher car output around
February
WASHINGTON
Both
part1es predicted an extrcrnt ly
close and part1san v•
toda y's Senate showdOWI•
plan to U&gt;e tax funds - ra t' r
tllan pnvatc contnbutJOn - 10
finance 1he election campaigns
of prel[denUal candidates
"The erma are twisted until
they are almost twisted off on
both aides," said Sen Russell B
l..onJ, D-La., in advance of the
vole, In a polltically charged
atmosphere, the Republicans
IOIJihl to swttch a few Southern
Democrats Only a handful of
Cllllverla would be needed to
defeatlhe plan

Pro Standings

Football Teams Are Announced

By Wire
By tbe UP!
CLEVELAND - A rocky
profit road 1s ahead for buSiness
due to the pnce controls under
Phase 2 of the new economic
policy ,
Industry
Week
magazme sa1d today Next year
IS expected to he a recovery
year and m normal times,
profits would nse about 15 pet ,
the magaune reported But
w1th the 2 5 pet pnce mcrease
gutdellne and the rule that
higher pnces cannot be used to
mcrease a busmess' margm of
prof1t, the only way compames
would be able to boost earmngs
would be by ra1smg their
bijsmess volume
The busmess magaune also
reported firms were hopmg for
higher worker productivity next
year as another means to raiSe
profits
WASHIN GTO N
PROSPECTS for committee
approval of Wilham H
Rehnqu1st's Supreme Court
nommat1on appeared certam
today followmg RehnqUist's
fresh and flat demals of ever
havmg harassed black voters
durmg the 1964 electwn or of
ever belongmg to a John Birch
type orgamzation
The Senate JudiCiary Com"ll1lttee planned to meet Tuesday
to vote on the nommatwns of
both Rehnqwst and President
Nixon's other nommee , LewiS
F Powell Jr It was Vlftually
certam the committee would
approve both nommatwns and
send them to the full Sens te for
a confll'llUition vote
DAYTON - FIVE thoussnd
un1on workers at two local
Fr1g1dalre appliance plants
Sunday voted to g1ve up most of
ihelf pay raiSes durmg the next
two years m order to keep the
company from movmg away
Each man will forego about
$18 per week m ra1ses and cost
of livmg mcreases, under terms
of the modifications m the unwn
contract reached after f1ve
months of negotiations
The General Motors diVISion
refused to comment Sunday
mght Instead, Frigi daire
scheduled a Monday mormng
press conference to announce
the s1gmng of the agreement
Fngtdau-e agreed to rehire by
next February 8Sil of the 3,348
members of the International
Umon of Electrical Workers
(IUEW) la1d off
RAVENNA -THE lrlal of
the first of 25 persons md1cted
011 charges stemmmg from the
Kent State Umvers1ty diSorders
of May 1970 that clunaxed With
the killing of four students by
National Guardsmen began m
, Portage County Common Pleas
Court today
Jury selection 10 the trial of
former Kent State student Jerry
Rupe, 23, Ravenna, was
scheduled Rupe IS charged
wttl: r1~1lng, slashing a fire rope
and throwmg rocks at flfemen
Most of the 25 had sought
through the courts to have thelf
indictments rescmded The
appeal went all the way to the
U S Supreme Court, which last
Friday reJected their motion
and indicated prosecutiOn could
begin
NEW YORK - Automobile
industry executives continue to
view the recent surge 10 new

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov, 22, 1971

LUCilLE WILUAMSON, New Haven, left, was received into membership at the annua'
exemplar tea of X1 Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta S1gma Ph1 Sorority Sunday mght at the home
of Robe~ta O'Brien m Pomeroy W1th Mrs W1ll1amson are those who conducted the r1lual of
Jewels, from the left, Eleanor Thomas, SOCial chrurman , Pearl Welker, pres1dent, Shlfley
Custer, secretary, and Margaret Follrod, v1ce president.

Story of
Israel in

Film, Music

Twenty.(hree Southeastern
Ohio League players received
All-District honors m Class AAA
and Class AA selections announced today by the
Assoclllted Press
Eastern of Me1gs County
placed five members of Its
undefeated team oo the first
and secood Class A All-District
squads while North Galha
rece1ved one second team
selection
Gerald Inbody, Athens, was
named Triple A Coach of the
Year for the SEO District.
Ironton's Bob Bruney was
named top Class AA coach, and
Ed Miller, Portsmouth Notre
Dame, was named Class A
Coach of the Year
Triple A Back of the Year
honors went to Manetta's Mike
Burke, IBGilound semor
Athens • 223-jJound semor tackle
Al Ackerman was named top
Class AAA lineman
Top Class AA back honors
went to Ironton's Hal Spears.
Gallipolis' Chuck Wood was
named Class AA lineman of the
year Spears IS a 17liilound
semor quarterback, Wood a 21().
pound semor tackle
Class A Back of the Year
honors went to FrankfortAdena's Dw1ght Pettiford, !50pound senior who gained 3,900
yards m hiS four-year career
Eastern's AI Holter, 200-pound
semor tackle of Eastern-Me~gs,
was named the top Class A
Lineman of the Year
Area gr1dders ratmg AP
honors for All-District were
CLASS AAA OFFENSE

AI Ackerman, Athens, tackle,
Dave Beckley, Jackson. guard ,
Greg Smith, Logan, quar
terback

Don Wood, A1hens,

lull back
CLASS AAA DEFENSE
Bryan Davidson, Logan, end,
Jim Scott, AtHens. end , Mike
Green, Athens, safety
Honorable mention went to
Jom Swearingen, Athens . Ken
Valentine, Jackson and Rick
Krebs, Logan

CLASS AA OFFENSE
Jim Payne, Ironton, end
Chuck Wood, Gallipolis tackle .
Mark Werry. Meigs tackle .
M1ke Albrlnk, Ironton, guard
Bob Rlst, Ironton, guard Ed

Young , Meigs, center Hal
Spears, Ironton, quarterback ,

Pete Neal, GallipoliS, leflhalf
and Ri ck Boykln. Ironton.
halfback
CLASS AA DEFENSE
Danny Settles, Wellston, end
Jim Miller, Gallipolis, tackle
Fred Lee, Meigs, tackle, Tolby
Helton, Waverly, middle gua d
Bob Smith, Ironton, llnebac •er

and Tom

Varney,

Waverly,

Ed. Note: This newspaper understands AP
selectiqns was made by a "special board of
reporters" of Associated Press aligned
newspapers and radio stations in the Southeast
District. II may be embarrassing to Meigs'
Mark Werry to be named on this team when he
was injured early in the second half of the
Marauders' second game of the season at
Belpre and saw no more action during the
entire SEOAL season. It definitely is embarrassing to Unitell Press International
aligned newspapers and radio statwns that any
sports reporters given the responsibility of
awarding recognition to athletes of our high
schools, would overlook the Marauders who
were legitimate candidates for recognition
after a full nor near-full gnd campaign.
The credibility gap between reader and
media is born of such bloopers.
Mark Werry, a fine athlete, may have won
the selection fair and square had he not been
injured. A 244 lb. junior, he will be back in 1972.

halfback
CLASS A OFFENSE
AJ Holter, Eastern, tackle
CLASS A DEFENSE
AI Duvall, Eastern, end
Second team honors (offense)
went to Bob Caldwell, Eastern
end Rock Sanders Eastern
back Second team defensive MAILMAN's ULTIMATUM
honor s went to Loren Neal,
BEIRIIT (UP!) - The mallNorth Gallia Iackie and Jim
Amsba,y, Eastern halfback man who delivers letters to the
home of Georgma Rlzk, the
DANCE SET
current Miss Universe, bas
The Meigs Athletic Assn will threatened to slop coming
hold a Teen Thanksgtvmg dance unless he gets an autographed
from 8 to II p m. Thursday at photograph of the beauty
the Meigs Junior High School m Georgina's siSter, Vilchina,
Middleport wtth the Jays em- sa1d the mallman complamed
ceemg Admission IS 75 cents there was just too much work
'
I
In dehvermg hundreds of letters
BOOSTERS TO MEET
daily, most of them addressed
The
Eastern
Athlellc sunply to "Miss Umverse,
Boosters Club will meet at 8 BeirUt" and he wanted the
p.m Tuesday at the high school photo as a reward
Refreshments will be served
The family agreed

Na11onal Conference

East

W L T Pel
Dallas
7 3 0 700
Washington
6 3 1 IXJ7
NY Giants
4 6 0 400
Philadelphia
J 6 1 333
St Louis
3 7 0 300
Central
W L T Pet
Minnesota
820800
Detroit
631/XJ7
Chicago
640600
Green Bay
J 5 1 375
West
Los Angeles W 6 L 3 T I Pets
647

DANCE AT WAIIAMA
The annual Thanksglvmg
dance of Wahama High School
will be held from 8 lo II p m
Wednesday m the school
aud1tonum w1th the Ja ys
emceemg Admtsslon 1s 75
cents

NEW HAYEN - Across a
barren land, scarred by centuries of war and neglect, the
spectres of anc1ent Israel appear, hover, and fade away
Suddenly there ts movement of
a different sort, and slowly.
stead1ly, a startling transTALLEST XMAS TREE?
formation beg1ns to take place
TRACYTON, Wash (UP! )Thus begins "His Land," the
Residen ts of this tiny Puget
thfllhng story of Israel from
Sound community claun they
8(1Cient to modern times "His
have the world's tallest ChristLand/' a one.hour color feature
mas tree -a 127 foot, 4 inch
motwn p1cture, takes one on a
g~ant that has served as the
Journey through space, lime
town's Yuletide ornament since
and current events to see Chns Ondera , Jackson end
1929
graphically the fact that Israel
today ts a hvmg testimony to
the words of the prophets when
they proclauned that Israel
•
would take her place among the
natwns of the world
In the compan y of Chff
Barrows and Cl1ff Richard,
England's popular star who
s1ngs a number of new Ralph
Carmichael songs, some of J Tim Evans, president of mdustry, then we must show by this year before the money waa
which were actually written on Evans Packing Company m actions, not JUSt words, tllat we m hand," be sa1d, "and I believe
locatwn, one travels the v1brant Gall1pohs, wtU be cha1rman of believe lhere IS a need for both this accurately reflects the
streets and lonely solitary paths the Holzer Medical Center beauty and growth "
confidence they have ln the
of th1s nation whose destiny 1s $165,000 Landscapmg and
Evans sa1d he would be people of 1he community "
da1ly d1scussed m the counsels ExteriOr Beautification Fund enhshng support of every Volunteer workers for the
of governments all over the RaiSmg Drive
segment of the conunun1ty to fund raising campatgn are
world, the same paths taken by Chairman of the Holzer help m the completloo of the asked to contact J Tim Evans
Jesus and the prophets Gahlee Hosptlal Foundation Board of projec\1, •
at Eyans packtnB Co, II) ,
the :Wllllerness, Jeru..;lein,'th; Trustees, Harland . Marlm,
"~ fe!jl the board of lrll$jeejl Gallipolis, Ohio Contr,lbutiol}l,
Mount of 011v"" mmgle with the made the announcement today showed much forestght m their can be mailed to the Holzer
people of modern Israel as they m Gallipolis
deciSion to proceed with what Medical Center Fund Ralsinl
work, play and build a nation
"I know Tim w1ll put every landscapmg could be completed Drive, P 0 Box 280, GallipoUa,
Words of Scnpture come to effort mto the project," Martin
Ohio t5631
J Tim Evans
hie as the two men reflect upon said, "and With the support of
the events that m recent years other mterested Citizens we'll
have confirmed much of the be able to reach the $165,000
anc1ent prophecies One IS goal by January I "
wttness to the fact that out of Accepting the challenge,
death and desola tiOn 1s Evans sa1d
emergmg a new land, a "land "I'm honored that the board 1
'
of m1lk and honey," where the of trustees have placed their
and up to 5th row seats, stoppmg every few feet
By JACK O'BRIAN
future chmachc events of confidence m me and I am
to kiss everyone m Sight Burt bussed a few ,
h1story will take place
confident we will succeed "
but blew kisses to the multitude, a veritable
' HIS Land,' riCh m color and Evans sa1d he will name the
KAY'S LAST TAPE
virile Tmy Tim
aut hentic sights and sounds cbalriTian later thiS week m
WAS ADHESIVE
The "21" crowd was virtually New Year's Eve
w1th a popular musical scor~ each of 1he seven counties
NEW YORK (KFS) - Marvelous character
after
the Sunon opemng that premiere plua a
composed and arranged by served by Holzer Medtcal clown Key Medford Is back tapmg Dean Martin
Lincoln Center play prenuere, the usual afterRalph Carmichael has been Center
1 TV showa after serious surgery The Bdwy
called a musical JOurney mto "These seven men w1U be the1 musical version of "Two for the Seesaw" will opera mob, the Kntcks' post-basketball game
the soul of a nation and w111 be key to the success of this drlve," 1 have a score by Dorothy F1eldsand Cy Coleman, mourners, and the regular early-eurtam aftershown on Nov 28 ~t The New he sa1d "$165,000 IS a lot of a book by Mike Stewart, whispers Shubert Alley theater gangs aU trymg to get tables The Ed
Haven Umted MethodiSt Church mooey to raiSe, but compared to gosslp
Liza Minnelli can have the role &amp;illivans preferred the Lincoln Center theatriCS
at 9 45 a m
the $20 mllhon already financed Originated by Anne Bancroft oo superbly 011 to the Simon unveiling The Alan Kings also
for construction of the new stage (oppostte Henry Fonda 1n a two-eharacter fought the "21" Ooodand leftm lrieforder It's
center, 11 1s relatively small " cast) and by Shirley MacLalne so emptily In the the sort of headache every Manhattan
He sa1d he felt the driVe was film .. The staguole of "G1ttel" was delight- restaurateur would adore
GAME RESCHEDULED
for a worthwhile cause and he fully Jewish, but the scared rucker nabobs tried
Contemporary porno-eustomers think they're
The Eastern · Southwestern was confident the people of the to make 1t sheer non-ethnic, middle-America, on a new trip Sigmund Freud adored dirty
basketball game scheduled for area would wholeheartedly which removed rich juices of the character stories 01' Slgalso announced he'dqult sex at
Friday, Nov 26, Will be played support the protect
com letel
42, convmced he was too old Freudycat'
mstead at 7 30 p m on Wed- "I feel Holzer Medical Center
~ y
nesday, Nov 24, at Eastern must set the example for the
Ygal member of theN. Y. Critics Circle, Boston took another film away from the unionH1gh School
rest of the area "he said "If we Marilyn StaSio of Cue mag, spearheads a theater wracked Manhattan scene - "Fuzz", screenare to keep thl; entire portion of district cleanup, and belabors Mayor Lindsay play by Evan Hunter from the Ed McBBln novel
Southeastern Ohio beautiful and with the same broom· "Lindsay always baa been about the fictional 87th N Y police precmct all
still attract new business and Interested In the theater, but he's never come very familiar to Hunter masmuch as McBam IS
across with anything for the theater district. He just one of his pseudonyms . It stars Raquel
comes to shows In a llmousme and looks good VVelch, Burt Reynolds, Jack Weston, Yul
and has a good time and goes home In a Brynner
Todav's Subject. More Bad News for 'Speed' Users llmousine He'snotaccostedbypanhandlersand
Gene Hackman plays the cmema role
I Methampetamines)
prostitutes" True.
_
origmated in real life by detecttve Ed Egan for
Jerry Lacy created a peripheral sensation "The French Connectton " Egan wasn't the type
playing Woody Allen's fantasy-Humphrey Now Egan has completed a role lJl "Kansas City
the discovery Will hasten the removal from the market of am- Bogart with amazing verisimilitude 10 "Play It Prune" playm~ a Ch1cago moblord who hires
phetammes wh1ch reportedly have "very litUe therapeutic Again, Sam" and, since that marvelous conceit, Lee Marvin to klll - Gene Hackman
value " I.SD Is also suspected as cause of the same blood vessel has been Eileen Fulton's latest love Interest m
"The French Connection " Incidentally IS
disease
the ooap opera "loa The World Turns." He's now collecting the b1ggest profits of any current
One mteresting case, a woman patient mvolved m the study written out of the aoap to recreate Bogle In the movie Oscar-oormnee Sylvta Miles stars offhad been takmg 30pllls a day, orlgmaUy prescribed to control her film version of "Play It Again, Sam."
Bdwy. In Jan opposite Gary Merrill In
diet The dosage for that purpose IS two pills a day It seems thiS is Somehow Ute rumor got arowtd that Lacy is off "Rosebloom"
Att'n Boston. the mus1cal
a startlmg example of how diet pills, used under a doctor's the show because EUeen's real~ife groom, "Different Times," due this sea !!On on Bdwy , is
prescnption m the begmnmg, can get completely out of hand quite Denny Fortunato, supposedly is consumed with about four generations of a very wealthy fiCeas1ly In my first article I mentioned that the purpose of these jealousy 8(1d demanded his removal. SUch are tional (lt says here) Boston family Michael
"letters" was not to pm the blame for the drug problem on aoap fans ... We love Instrumental music as we Brown, who's written hi! own supperclub
anyone However, one can hardly consider aU available In- thrt!Mot Utls gosslpy trivia at 5·30 a m , but material (for the Blue Angel 1111d other stylish
formation on the subJect without commg to the conclusion that hOw often can you harken to "Some Enchanted pubs Including Plaza 9 and the London savoy),
adults have been m1susmg drugs for many years now and have by Everung" without d•al-twi.stlng? No one ever bas created myalc, lyrlc8 ond oook, arld will
so domg certainly contributed to _the spread and mcrease of the hear of Michel IJogrand' ... New folk singer In direct.
pract1ce
town ls named ' orne ZUckerman. Honest I
Charles Nelll()n ltellly Ht!l8 IICuda o! partyHave you checked your mediCme chest lately to see what
Centimllhonau e Lew Rosenstlel (IHetlme boss laughll telling about the M
ull TV'• OrMhlllll Kerr
dangerous drugs lt may contam? Do you know exacUy what drugs of Schenley's) has been taking Dr. Rusk's post- filed alter O!arles performed '"'lle Giddyap
you keep m the house and whether they are potentially dangerous stroke therapy at the hospital and was able to Gourmet"ln a TV llel'in ep!Jode . We thought
m the hands of children or young people? How would you feel if skip out for dinner at Louiae's with his lawyer the Galloping Graham had a crackers IM!lll8 of
one of your children became mvolved with the misuse of drugs Roy M Cohn, which means Lew's progressing humor .. Charles now challenges Kerr to a
and you found 1t all started with somethmg he found m your famously . The brand-new Cwtard cruise-liner cooking match
med~eme chest?
"Adventurer" will have a gambling caslno
"Macbeth" director Roman Polanski
We are discussmg facts, fnends, and cons1dermg all aboard. London's Clnon Club will prov1de chips, (dlscuaslng the Sharon Tate murder In the next
poss1blltt1es That 1s why some unpleasant subjects are likely to wheels, dealers and cards ... Angle Dickenson Playooy ISSUe) blasts Elke Sommer and her'
come up durmg our consideratiOn of the national drug problem madt thi evening's most exllibittonlstic en- husband Joe Hyams for writing "inside dope"
Be w1th me next week I thmk you'll fmd the subject of dfep trance at"The Prisoner of ?ndAve." openb.g by about the murder of his wife. Says he met the ,
interest and 1f you ar• concerned about drugs I know your reading entering down one center aisle, crossing over to Hyarnses only ooce, and "They kn,ew nothing
lime will not be wa ~ted
another In !root ot the flrlll row of Uteatergoers about the way Sharon illld lllved."

J Tim Evans to Lead

7 County Fund Drive

MRS JAMES WALKER, GALLIPOUS, presented the
program at the exemplar tea of XI Gamma Mup Chapter of
Beta S1gma Phi Sorority Sunday rught She gave two
humorous monologues, ' The Children's Party" and A
Southern Girl at a Dance" by the late Ruth Draper

-

Provocation is Charged
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) -Sen
Hubert H Humphrey charged
Sunda y mght that President
N1xon had deliberately tned to
provoke unwn leaders mto an
ugly confrontatiOn for h1s own
political gam
Referrmg to NIXon's blunt
address last Fnday to the AFL·
CIO conventton here, Humphrey said an opportunity for
bnngmg Amencans together
was cast as1de m the mterest of
personal pohllcal gam He went
to the pomt of seekmg to
provoke th1s aud tence "
The Mmnesota Democrat
made h1s charges m a press
release outhmng h1s VIew to
AFL-CIO President George
Meany and later m an
mterv•ew with UP!
Humphrey also Jomed labor
offlctals m chargmg there IS a
"deliberate attempt to make
the labor movement look as tf
1t was rude to the President,
that 11 had a lack of respect for
the offwe, which lS not true
They dtd not Jeer, boo or h1ss
"The fact that the dldn t
y

break out m tumultuous applause lS because they don't
happe n to agree wtth lhe
Pres1de nPs pohc1es / Hum·
phrev satd
An AFL-CIO spokesman earher had charged the Whlte
House 11as try mg to ' falsely
trump up" the 1mpresswn that
labor leaders gave N1xon an
Insulting reception when he
spoke to the convention and
told delegates he would press
ahead w1th h1s wage and pnce
controls w1th or wtthout thetr
cooperation
CLOTHING OFFERED
Free Clothmg Day will be
observed VVednesday at the
Salvahon Army HQ on Butternut Ave m Pomeroy from 10
a m to noon Anyone needmg
clothmg ts welcome
IWLA TO MEET
The November meeting of the
Ken Amsbary Chapter, Isaac
VValton League, will be held thiS
evenmg at the chapter farm
near Chester

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

1

Voice along Broadway

Parents Should Kno'v
Prov1ded By J J Cremeans
Last week we talked bnefly about InJected Methamphetammes commonly called m the Jargon of the street, "Speed "
You 'll recall that the effects of usmg th1s drug, m this manner,
were very diSturbmg to l!aY the least Now, more bad news about
"Speed" has come to hght On Thursday. November 5th, 1970, 11
was reported by a USC Med1cal Center team at Los Angeles that
as many as 20 pet of the youths who "shoot speed," (take 1t by
InJect ton ), may develop a blood vessel disease that has been falal
m about 30 pet of cases detected to date
•
It seeiTIS to be md1cated the disease kills by blockmg blood
vessels m v1ta l organs such as ktdneys and the hea rt ThiS will be
the ftrst deadly disease of the system that doctors have found
associated with drugs which are a bused
Speed ts as we have satd, a form of amphetamme - the
&lt;P ptll drug Users InJect 1t to get a qu1cker, htgher response
• cordo og to one doctor, workmg w1th the study, persons who
take am~het&lt;ommes orally to control their appetite may possibly
be m danger of acqutnng the letha l blood vessel disease There
were e1ght doctors on the med1cal team wh1ch made the
discovery, at USC, from the departments of med1cme, radtology
and pathology Dr B Phlhp Citron, who headed the team, has a
report appearmg m the November 5th ISSue of the New England
Journal of Med1cme In 1t he !(lis of extenSive studies done on 14
p;lbents , four of them d1ecl and one 1s now near death Eight of the
14 were males and s1x were Jemales
Most of those who died succumbed to heart failure or k1dney
fat lure, due to the blockage by scar tissue of blood vessels w1thm
these organs Autops1es showed vessels m the pancreas, stomach
and smallmtestlnes also were severely affected It 1s hoped that

I

NFL $t1ndtngo
By United Prns lnltrnollon•l
Ameriun Co:o~tertnee
Eost
W L T Pet
Miami
811889
Baltimore
730700
NY Jets
460400
New England
4 6 0 400
Buffalo
0 10 o 000
Central
W. L T Pet
Pittsburgh
5 5 0 500
Cleveland
550500
Cincinnati
370300
Houston
1 8 I 111
West
W L T Pet
Oakland
7 1 2 87S
Kansas City
7 22 1 778
San Diego
4 6 0 400
Denver
2 7 1 222

!

San
Francisco 64 44 o
Atlanta
I 600
500
New Orleans
J 5 2 37S
Sunday's Results
Dallas 13 Washington 0
Miaml17 Baltimore 14
Cincinnati 29 Houston 13
Pittsburgh 17 NY Giants 13
Cleveland 27 New England 7
NY Jets 20 Buffalo 7
Kansas City 28 Denver 10
Detroit 29 Chicago 3
Minnesota 23 New Orleans 10
Philadelphia 37 St Louis 20
Los Angesles 17 San Francloco
6

Oakland 34 San Diego 33
(Q&lt;lly games scheduled!
Monday~t

Gamts

Green Bay at Atlanta (night)
(Q&lt;lly game scheduled!
Thunday•a Games
Kansas City at Detroil
Los An~eles at Dallas
I Only games scheduled)
Sundoy's Gomes
Allanta at Minnesota
Baltimore at Oakland
Cleveland at Houston
Denver at Pittsburgh
New England at Buffalo
New Orleans vs Green Bay at
Milwaukee
51 Louis at NY Giants
San Diego at Cincinnati
San Francisco at NY Jets
Washington at Philodolph la
IQ&lt;liy games scheduled)
Mondoy's Gomeo
Ch icago at Miami (night)
(Q&lt;lly game scheduled)
AHL Stondlngs
By United Pross lntornol1onol
Eash
W L T Pis
13 2 2 28
Boston
9 6 3 21
Nov o Scotia
8 • 4 20
Spr ingfield
7 10 3 17
Rochester
S 10 S IS
Providence
West
W L T Ph
Hershey
10 3 3 23
Ci~~Nlli
7 7 6 20
Cltvetlll'ld
1 1 S 19
Richmond
6 9 2 u
Baltimore
5 10 • u
Tidewater
3 12 3 9
Sundoy's Results
Novo Scotla7 Cincinnati 3
Providence 5 Boston 3
Richmond 3 Rochester I
(Q&lt;lly games scheduled!
Mond1y's G1mes
1No games scheduled)

NHL Stond1ngs
By Unc1ted Press lntornat&lt;onal
Eut
W
New York

Montreal
Boston
Toron1o

Detroit

Vancouver

Buffalo

West

L

T Pis

13 2 4 30
12 2 s 29
13 s 1 27
1 6 7 21
5 II 4 14
5 13 4 u
4 II 5 13

W L T Pis

Chicago
IS S 0
Minnesota
13 4 3
Philadelph ia
7 8 4
Pittsburgh
8 12 2
California •
6 12 3
Sl Louis
5 II 3
Los Angeles
4 IS I
Sundoy's Rosulls
Toronto 4 Buffalo 3
New York 12 California I
Boston 6 St Louis 2
Delroll2 Vancouver 2
Chicago 7 Pittsburgh 3
Minnesota I Philadelphia 1
1Q&lt;lly games scheduled!
Mondoy's Gomes
1No games scheduled!

30
29
18
18
IS
13
9

ABA Slondtngl
By Unotod Press lnternatoonol
Eut
W L Pet GB
13 s 722
Kehtucky
11 7 611 2
Virgonia
995004
New York
10 10 500 4
Pittsburgh
8 II 421 5'12
Floridians
6 II 3S3 61/2
Carolina
West
W L Pel GB
Utah
12 7 632
lnd lana
9 9 500 2'12
Memphis
8 II 421 4
Dallas
7 10 412 4
Denver
7 10 412 4
Sunday's Rtoults
Floridians 103 Memphis 86
Ionly game scheduled)
Mondov's Gomes
(No games scheduled!
NBA St•ndlngs
By Un1ltd Preas lntornoHonol
Eutern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L. Pel GB
Boston
12 1 632
New York
9 9 500 2'12
Philadelphia
9 9 500 2'12
Buffalo
7 II 389 4'12
Cent~a I Division
W. L. Pet GB
Baltimore
8 10 444
Cincinnati
6 9 400 '12
Atlanta
S II 312 2
Cleveland
4 14 222 4
Welltrn Conference
Mldwul Division
W L. Pet GB
Milwaukee
17 3 850
Chicago
12 5 706 3'12
Detroit
9 9 500 7
Phoenix
7 11 389 9
PoclfiC Division
W L. Pet GB
Los Angel•s
11 3 850
GoldenState 14 7 IXJ7 3'12
Seattle
13 7 650 4
Houston
4 17 190 13'1,
Portland
3 14 116 12112
Sundoy's Ruulls
Boston 128 Cleveland 105
Los Anoeles 112 Milwaukee 105
Seattl!l21 Philadelphia 117

•
Ins

I0
By BOB Dl PIETRO
UPI Sports Writer
Marv Fleming, the veteran
tight eud of the Miami
Dolphins, recently paid the
highest sort of compliment to
his coach, Don Shula.
"He comes the closest of
anybody to Mr Vmce Lombardi," said the man who played
under the legendary Vincent for
six years at Green Bay
Fleming caught a touchdown
pass from Bob Griese Sunday
to help Miami to a 17·14 win
over Baltimore, wtdening the
Dolphins' lead over the Colts to
I 'h games in the Ameman
Conference East
The victory raised Shula's
nine-year coaching record to 89-

Ra

~es

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Oh10
State Coach Woody Hayes said
he expects "to he called on
the carpet" for his outburst
near the end of Saturday's 1().7
loss to Michigan ln protest to
an official's call
The call which Hayes vehemenUy protested Involved a pass
from Don Lamka to Dick Wakefield which was intercepted on
the Michigan 32-yard line by
the Wolverines' Tom Darden
Hayes insisted interference
should have been called on the
Michigan defender
"It was just a horrible, horrible call by an offtclal who
evidently lacked the courage to
make the right call In their
stadlwn," Hayes 881d on hiS
weekly Saturday mght television show Hayes refused to
meet newsmen after the game
After the play, wh1ch came ln
the closmg two m1nutes of the
game and the Buckeyes on the
move, Hayes rushed onto the
f1eld m a rage He was assessed a !$-yard penalty and was
escorted off Ute field by players
and some of his assistants
Only moments later, when
linebacker Randy Gradlshar
was ejected from the game for
unnecessary roughness, Hayes
ripped the bun~ng off both the
yard sticks and threw them onto the field

~-a

761 percentage, tops m
the league for that span of
ilme
Lombardi Style
Ths win was even more
deilghtful for Shula and the
Dolphms smce lt came agamst
a team that he had guided to 71
wins and a Super Bowl
appearance in seven years.
Miam1 used the Lombardi
style -power running, Iough
defense and opportlmiStic quarterbacking - to defeat the
Colts
The l().yard-Gries.-to-Flemlng score came less tllan two
minutes after Jun Klick had
tied the score at 7·7 with a oneyard plunge.
Garo Yepremlan accounted

"I expect to be called on the
carpet," Hayes told WBNS
TV's Ted Mullins, "I hope
I am I'm really b1tter about
1t "
Runs 85 Yards
The Buckeyes, 14-pomt underdogs going Into the game
aga1nst the unbeaten and third
ranked Wolverines, took a 7-3
lead late ln the third quarter
on a brilliant 85-yard punt return by senior Tom Campana,
the third long return of the
day for 1he former wingback
from Kent
On Michigan's first punt of
the day, Campana returned the
ball 49 yards to the Wolverme
29 where he was caught from
behind on a desperation tackle
by Billy Taylor He also had a
50-yard return nullified by a
cUpping penalty
Mlch1gan had taken a 3-0
lead on a 32-yard second
second quarter fteld goal by
Dana Com, but missed another
scormg opportunity when Taylor, a senior from Barberton,
Ohio, fumbled a p1tchout on the
Buckeye e1ght and tl was recovered by Harry Howard on
the !I
The Buckeyes' Fred Schram
miSSed a 38-yard field gnal attempt which was set up by
another fwnble by Taylor on
the M1chigan 28, the ball JUSt

Southweatern (35) -Snuth, 34-10, Dillon, 4-4-12; Wh1tt, 3-1-7;
Chambers, 11-2-2, Trowbridge, III-I; and Lew1s, 0-3-3 Totals 111~.

drifting w1de to the left
With another Buckeye powerBut for the Buckeyes, •t was house a diStinct poss1bllity for
about the same story for the next year, 1t's gomg to be a
last three games of the season, long wa1t for Hayes until Nov
Gradlshar, Vic Koegel and Stan
While, and an offel)SC which
just couldn't make anythmg
resembllng a touchdown drive
Bolstered By Returns
The Buckeye ~ffense accounted for only 138 yards against
1he tough Michigan defense, but
Campana's 166 yards In punt
returns was a big factor m
keeping the auckeyes ln faiT
f1eld pos11lon
Despite h1s disappomtment
over the bitter ending to the
season, Hayes sa•d he "couldn't
be more proud of this team 11
they had won 40-l)
"I just can't believe th1s
team played that good a game
as decimated as they were by
mjurles "
Bes1des the many players Injured earher, fiVe who started
jus! a week ago against Northwestern were etth.er s1ck or In·
jured and unable to go agamst
Michigan
Hayes sa1d 1! the Wolvermes
were the No I team in the
country as their Coach Bo
Schembechler had been clatmmg, then "Purdue and Oh10
Slate must be No 2 and I
don't think we deserve to be
rated that highly "
Michigan beat the Boilermakers ro-11 last week on a field
goal m the dosmg rrunutem

Houston II 5 Golden State 96
(Q&lt;lly games scheduled)
Monday's Gamn
INo games scheduled)

~.

~:
~

·~·

i:

i:
1
-:;:

i:·

,.;:
..,
.
:
··~

·:'

:~

::

;1

i~:
:;:

ll
i:

i

I
~l
~

Bradshaw to Ron Shanklin set
up by Preston Pearson's 77yard k~ekoff return to defeat
the Gtants
Pitt T1es Cleveland
The wm gave the Steelers a 5
-5 record and kept them even
w1th Cleveland 10 the AFC
Central race
Bob Davis threw touchdown
passes of 33 yards to Don
Maynard and 19 yards to
George Nock and the Jet
defense mtercepted four Denms
Shaw passes to extend Buffalo's
two-year losmg skem
Bill Nelsen threw a palf of
sconng passes, Leroy Kelly
caught one of them and also
scored on a one-yard plunge as
the Browns snapped a fourgame losmg streak
Steve Owens, the No 2 rusher
m the NFC, scored on a pall' of
short plunges and teammate
Allie Taylor , the siXth-leading
rusher m the conference,
scored on a 19-yard run as the
Lions took over second place m

Flon•dians

: : : : : : : : : •: : : : : : : :;,~ -' FinallY

.·&gt; ··: :,·.:·: :·:

the bowl picture

~

By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
Bill Sharman knew the Los
Angeles !..akers could fastbreak
the Milwaukee Bucks off the
court.
The !..akers coach, a master
tactician who charts the opposllion's every move, predicted
By Quarters.
durmg the exhibition season
Southwealern 14 6 6 9--35 that the old Celtic fast break
South Webster 29 32 22 17- 100 tllat bu1lt a Boston dynasty
Reserve Score - South would work just aa well for Los
Webster 69 Southwestern 25.
Angeles He especially was

Richmond which upset WUIIam
&amp; Mary 21·19 for the Southern
Conference championship
Arizona State, the host team
for the first annual Fiesta Bowl
ln Tempe, Ariz , won tis ninth
game m 10 decisions by
crushing San Jose Slate 49-6
The Sun Devtis' likely opponent
In the Fiesta will be e1ther
Florida Slate or Boston College
now that the Btg E1ght and
SEC bave had their ranks
depleted

the NFC Central from mistakeprone Ch1cago
Bob Lee's TD
Mmnesota upped lis lead to
I'" games m the NFC Central
as quarterback Bob Lee scampered four yards m the thlfd
period to g1ve the V1k1ngs their
f1rst touchdown ln 11 quarters
Clint Jones scored the other
Mmnesota touchdown and Fred
Cox added three field goals
Len Dawson uncorked bombs
to Moms Stroud, Elmo Wnght
and OtiS Taylor as the Chiefs
spoiled the coachmg debut of
Jerry Sm1th, who took over the
Denver rems from Lou Saban
earher m the week
The Ra1ders mamtamed thelf
half-game lead m the AFC West
m a w1ld affalf as Daryle
Lamomca h1t on three scoring
tosses, two to Ray Chester and
44-year-old George Blanda
added an unportant 39-yard
fteld goal
Mtke Garrett scored tw1ce for
the Chargers, on an II yard run
and an 18-yard catch of a John
Had! pass

Win

; . forward
The Flofldlans, led by rookie
Willie Long, snapped a
~l

NEW YORK (UP)) _ Bowl participants :;~ ftve-game losmg streak and
and records for 1971 major post season college J( grabbed an easy 103-86 vtclory
z over the Memphis Pros Sunday
games:
mght m the only act10n m the
Dec. 18 - Sun Bowl at El Paso. Tex ~ Amerocan Basketball Assoc•aIowa State 17-3) vs. Louisiana State 17-3).
): twn
The Florld1ans broke ahead
Dec. 20 - Liberty Bowl at Memphis,
early
m the second quarter and
Tenn.- Tennessee (7-2) vs. Arkansas (8-2-1) . .
Dec. 27- Fiesta Bowl at Phoenix, Ariz ::: never relinqwshed their lead
At the half, Florida led 50 to 41
Florida St. 17-3) vs. Arizona St. (9-1) .
Long logged 27 minutes of
Dec. 28 - Tangerine Bowl at Orlando,
playmg time, h1s h~gh for the
Fla. - Toledo (11-0) vs . Richmond (5-5).
season In so domg, he tossed
Dec. 30 - Peach Bowl at Atlanta .. m 22 pomls, had e1ght rebounds
and two ass1sts The 6-ll rook1e
Georgia Tech (7-4) vs. Mississippi (8-2) .
h1t for 10 of 18 shots from the
Dec. 31 - Gator Bowl at Jacksonville,
Fla. - Georgia (9-1) vs . North Carohna (9-2) . ·· f1eld and two of four from the
foul hne
Dec. 31 - Astm-Biue Bonnet Bowl at
Forward Ron Franz had 20
Houston, Tex.- Colorado (9-2) vs. Houston (8pmnls, while Warren Jaball had
2 )•
19 as they helped pace the
Jan . 2- Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif Floridian v1ctory Guard Larry
Mtchigan ( 11-0) vs. Stanford (8-3).
Csnnon was h1gh scorer for the
pros
w1th 16 pomts
Jan. I -Orange Bowl at Miami. Fla In rebounds, Floridian center
Nebrasks ( 10-0) vs. Alabama ( 10-0),
Ira Harge was h1gh w1th 17
Jan. 1 - l'lugar Bowl at New Orleans Forward Will Jones led the
Oklahoma &lt;9-0) vs . Auburn (9-0).
pros w1th 12
Jan. I - Cotton Bowl at Dallas - Penn
State 00..0) vs. Texas (7·2).- Texas plays in
Cotton Bowl if it defeats Texas A&amp;M on
Thanksgiving Day A tie or loss by Texas will
g1ve Arkansas the Cotton Bowl berth.

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·· ·:·· : ·....··.·:·:· ::-:: :·,{o:..~~~»w.«~~~-;:m:~.·::~m.. ::: . _.....·:·······

Lakers Use Long Pass
To Take Bucks 112-105

South Webster (100) Taulbee, 7-2-16, Clsxton, 3-1420; Faullmer, &amp;-1-17, Summers,
5-2-12; Green, ~10, Hanes, 3-410, R Bowman, 2-3-7 ,
Hamllton, 348; B. Summers, 211-4; Adams, 2-G-4; and Martin,
24-4 Totals 4Z.~100.

SECare Georgia, which will
play North Carolina m the
Gator Bowl at Jacksonville;
Tennessee, whch will host the
Liberty Bowl at Memphis
against probably Arkansas and
Mississippi which will oppose
Georgia Tech In the Peach
Bowl at Atlanta
The North Carolina-Georgia
Gator Bowl matchup will also
pit brother against brother In
the coaching ranks GeorgiA Is
coached by VInce Dooley while
the Tarheels, who wrapped up
the Atlantic Coast Conference Iitle Saturday by
blanking Duke 38-0, are
coached by Bill Dooley
'!'he Rose Bowl picture was
also cleared up Saturday when
Stanford officially clinched the
Pacific E1ght Iitle by defeating
California 14-ll The Indians' Bit
Ten opponent in Pasadena,
Michigan, had a tougher time
In edging Ohio State !().7 to
complete a perfect 11~ season
Unbeaten and sixth-ranked
Penn State upped Ill record to
J()..l) by crushing hapless Pittsburgh 56-18 and immediately
accepted a bid to the Cotton
Bowl to face the winner of the
Southwest Conference (probably Texas )
Tangerine Bowl-bound Toledo
extended the nation's longest
winning streak to 34 by blasting
Kent Slate 41-6. The 12thranked Rockela w1U oppose

Lou1s fwnbles and four mterceptions to score a 37-20
VIctory, and Oakland edged San
Diego, 34-33
Roger Staubach helped hand
Washmgton 1ts tlnrd defeat m
the last f1ve games when he
scrambled for 29 yards and a
score m the f1rsl quarter
M1ke Clark -a last mmute
addition for the mJured Tom
Fritsch - kicked f1eld goals of
26 and 48 yards to aid the
Cowboy attack
The Rams' secondary had a
field day at the expense of John
Brodie as they mtercepted the
Forty Nmer passer four times
Gene Howard grabbed three of
the way ward tosses and Jun
Nettles ran another back 29
yards for a touchdown Ramon
Gabriel hit Jack Snow w1th a 13
-yard pass for L A 's other
touchdown San Francisco
scored on a palf of f•eld goals
by Bruce Gossett
In a surpnsmgly w1de open
contest playe&lt;t on wet and
slippery arbflclal turf, Pittsburgh got a 7().yard mterception
return by John Rowser and a
four-yard pass from Terry

~;":~~~~:~r~~:':c~~rs b~ :*~~~~~X=«·~:::::·.~:-:::-:·:·: ··.· ·-.-~·: -:-:

It's the Big 8 vs So-East
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
The B1g Eight versus the
Southeast - that seems to be
college football '71's recurrmg
lheme as the season w1nds to
lis close with an endless parade
of bowl activity
With the upconung NebraskaOklahomaandAiabama-Auburn
clashes sUU clouding both the
national and Big Eight-SEC
tiUe pictures, no less than 10
schools from the two conferences wiD be participating in
post-season bowls
Top-ranked Nebrask and
fourth-ranked Alabama have
accepted bids to the orange
Bowlin Mlamt, Fla , while No '
2 Oklahoma and No 5 Auburn
have agreed to meet In the
Sugar Bowlin New Orleans,
In addition to Nebraska and
Oklahoma, the B1g Eight w1U
be represented by tenth-ranked
Colorado ln the Astro-Biuebonnet Bowl host agamst school
Houston and Iowa State m the
Sun Bowl at El Paso, Tex.
versus LSU of the SEC The
Bayou Bengals clinched their
berth Saturday night by easily
whipping punchless Notre
Dame, 211-8
Jommg Alabama, Auburn and
I.SU In the bowl f1eld for the

lne National Conference East,
Los Angeles dropped San
Francisco, 17-6, to grab the top
spot ln the NFC West,
Pittsburgh edged 1he New York
Giants 17-13, the New York Jets
defeated Buffalo 211-7, to hand
the Bills their lOth loss th1s
season and the1r 15th consecutive defeat ; Cleveland routed
New England 27-7 and Cmcmnati downed Houston 28-13 as
rookie Fred Willis of Boston
College ran for two touchdowns
and veteran quarterback V1rgll
Carter passed for two more
Also, Detroit trounced Chicago 28-3, Mmnesota decked New
Orleans 23-10, Kansas City
foiled Denver 28-10, Philadelphia capitalized on four St

Wants the Carpet

Highlanders
Drop Opener
South Webster of SciOto
County Saturday mght 1nn1cted
a 100-35 loss on Coach Richard
Hamilton's Southwestern
Highlanders
Thewumers led 2&amp;-14alter the
first period, 6t-20at the half and
83-26atthe end of three periods
T Claxton led South Webater
with 20 points T Taulbee had
16, R Faulkner 17 points and R
&amp;uruner 12 points
Mike Dillon, $-10 jun1or forward, led Ute Highlanders with
12 points Mark Smith, ii-8
senior guard added 10
Southwestern wlll meet
Eastern Friday night m an
5VAC contest at Eastern

for the wmmng points wtth a 20
-yard f1eld goal with 6 30
remaining hhe game
Ray Perldrul Hurt
Baltimore scored on four
yard runs by Don Nottingham
and Norm Bula1ch
Johnny Unitas drew hiS f1rst
starting assignment of the
season and directed a 711-yard
drive for Baltimore'a f1rst
score He was shaken up
attempting to block early In the
th1rd quarter and was removed
m favor of Earl Morrall
Baltimore wide receiver Ray
Perkms also suffered a severe
concussion on the same play
In other contests Sunday,
Dallas blanked Washmgton, !3D, to take a half-game lead In

•

anx1ous to try out the long down·
court pass theory against the
Bucks, who elimmated Los
Angeles from last Season's
playoffs
The Lakers used the tactic to
perfection Sunday mght to
defeat Milwaukee, 112-105, and
tie a club record of II consecutive vtctorles It was the
Bucks' second straight loss
alter a one-point triumph over
Seattle Friday mght. The
!..akers and Bucks now have
ldentlcall7-3 records as the two
best teams m the National
Basketball Association
Gall Goodrich scored 27
points and Jim McMUllan added
25 to offset the 39-pomt performance by Kareem Jabbar
The Laker defense, borrowmg
another leaf from the Sharman
book of old Celtic strateg~es,
stole the ball from Jabbar three
times In the first period
W1th Chamberlain, who
scored II points, wns the old
board master as he controlled
the Milwaukee center m rebounds, 26-17. Jerry West
contnbuted a valuable 22
points, mcluding 10 m the fourth
quarter when the Lakers
received enough margin to

For the B1g Eight's Iowa
State Cyclones, the trip to the
The Daily Sentinel
Sun Bowl wiD mark the first '
DEVOTED
TO THE
post-season activity ln 1he
INTEREST OF
school's history.lowa State, (7MElGS MASON AREA
CltESTER
L TANNEHILL,
3), nearing tl's greatest season
Exec Ed
ever, pounded Oklahoma State
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
.
54-0 Colorado, meanwhile, tmPublished dally elC.cept
by The Ohio Va lley
proved its record to 9-2 by Salurday
PubliShing Company
111
cutting down the Air Force 53- Court St Pomeroy Oh•o
45769 Business Off1 ce Phone
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992 2156 Edotoroal Phone 992
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the
small
college
ranks,
Socond class poSiaQe pald al
In
Pomeroy , Ohio
top-rated Delaware may have
Na lion al ad v .,, •s '"9
berth
In
1he
representollve
Boll'"'" '
Clinched a
Ga l lagher, tnc, 12 Easl A2nd
Boardwalk Bowl at Atlantic 51. Now York Clly Now York
Subscription rates De
City, N J, bY comp1eting its livered by carrrer where
season at 9-1 with a ~ , avorloble so ceols per weok
By Molar Roule where carr ier
thump Ing of Buckn eU N0 2 ser~ICe not available on~
McNeese Slate finished at 9-0-1 manlh S1 75 By mar l lo Ohio
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U ana Sl• monlhs Sl 25 Three
2().10 and fourth-rated Tennes- monlhs u so Subscrrpt lon
see State clobhe·ed Central ~:~ct';n';,c ludes Sunday Times
State 6H1 to wind up at IJ.l

coast
In other NBA action, Houston
surprised Golden Slate, 115-96,
Seattle topped Phlladelph•a. 127
- 117, and Boston bombed
Cleveland, 128-105
Rookte Mtke Newlm became
Houston's newest'scormg threat
With a 31-pomt burst and the
Rockets held high-Bcormg Jeff
Mullms to a season-low seven
pomts In beatmg the Warnors
Houston held Golden State to
just 10 pomts m the fmal quarter
while turning on w1th a 32-polnt
spurt Cazzle Russell was the
Warriors' high man w1th 24
pomts
Don Smith's hot stresk of 10
stra1ght pomts late m the fourth
penod enabled Seattle to pull
away from Philadelphia and
move within a half game of
Golden State In the Pacific
DIVISIOn Smith finished with 26
points, one more than Spencer
Haywood. Billy Cunningham,
With some sensational outs1de
shooting, led the 76ers w1th 32
pomts

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- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Nov . 22, 1971

After BG quarterback Joe Babies put the Falcons hack in
front with a ·one-y'ard run, the
Flyers' Ron Krechting hit Denny Whitehead with a 77-yard
touchdown pass and Kosins'
third TD iced it.
Marshall Rebuilding
Ohio University, riddled by
injuries, still had to much for.
the young Marshall team as
quarterback Dave Juengenan
for two touchdowns and passed
for another in the Bobcats' 31Hl
win.
OU finished the season with
a S-5 record while Marshall, rebuilding after last November's
tragic airplane crash which wiped out the squad, wound up 2-8.
Tim Worner caught Juenger's
six-yard touchdown pass and
Steve Hodgson scored the other
OU touchdown on a five-yard
run .
Xavier, which got in the win
colwnn for the first time only
last week, dropped a 14-9 decision Saturday to Northern lllinois.
The only Musketeer touchdown came late in the game

Rockets Blitz Kent State for 34th.Win
By UDlted Press IDtemalional

The University of Toledo has
10111 put away three perfect
~easons of football . Only a Tan!erine Bowl date with the Unilerslty of Richmond stands in
the way of the Roc~ets being
mdefeated since the final game
~ the 1968 season.
Toledo blitzed Kent State 41-0
to cap its season Saturday mght
the lith win of the season and

34th in a row.
Tailback Joe Schwartz, a junior from Adrian, Mich ., sored
five touchdowns and totaled 167
yards in 27 carries. Schwartz'
five touchdowns set a single
game record for the Mid-American Conference. His 16 for the
season also is an all-time high.
The Rockets and Richmond's
Spiders, who won the Southern
Conference title Saturday by

edging William &amp; Marry 21-19,
will meet in the Tangeri'!_e Bowl
at Orlando, Fla ., Dec. 28.
The last time the Rockets lost
a game was 1().3 against Dayton in 1968.
No MAC Wins
Their last opponent of the 1971
season, hapless Kent Stale, finished its first season under
Coach Don James with a 3 - 8
mark and winless in five MAC

Kelly Back In Form,

Browns Trip Patriots
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Leroy
Kelly, who said he had "a hard
time getting started" against
the New England Patriots.
couldn't be slopped once he
started.
Kelly, an eight-year veteran
hampered by injuries this year
and last, ran Sunday like the
man who led the NFL in rushing
in !967 and !968, and who gained
more than 1,000 yards in 1966.
1967 and !968.
He scored two touchdowns in
the Browns' 27-7 victory and
gained 113 yards, the 24th time
in his pro football career he
surpassed the 100-yard mark in
a single game, but only the
fourth time in the last two
years.
"I had a hard time getting
started because the Patriots
were a hard team to run
against," Kelly said. "But once
we got ahead, it loosened things
up a lot and everything carne

our way .
"They (the Patriots ) have exceptional linebackers and their
blitzing was very effective. We
went up the gut quite a hit and
tiJat 's where I drove for most of
my yardage, boun cing off
defenders."
"Some Great Running ~·
Kelly put the Browns ahead 70 after he snagged a Bill Nelsen
pass and waltzed over the goal
line from two yards · out with
5:09 remaining in the first
quarter. Kelly's second TD of
the game, the seventh this season, came in the final period on
a right-side sweep from the twoinch l.ii\e.

cause of the wind, but he kept us
off balance," Skorich sa id.
"The ball sort of sailed through
the wind and didn't reach his
intended receivers," resulting
in four interceptions by the

New England 's only score
came on an IS-yard aerial from
rookie Plunkett to tight end
Tom Beer with :48remaining on
the clock in the first half. It was
the former Stanford standout's

games.
Kent's only touchdown came
early in the fourth quarter when
fullback John Matsko dived into the end zone to cap a 52-yard
drive in eight plays.
Miami, which started the season will' four wins in a row
and then lost the next three,
finished with a resounding 43-7
victory over Cincinnati, the
Redskins third straight win.
As usual, it was the running
o! sophomore Bob Hitchens,
whose 138 yards in 30 carri.es
broke both the school yards
gained and attempts records
for the year, who led the Redskins to victory.
Hitchens scored three touchdowns giving him 13 for the
year, as Miami finished with a
7-3 mark. Cincinnati, which was
slopped cold by the Redskin defense, got its only touchdown on
a 27-yard interception return
by linebacker AI Mason.
Sets New Marks

~on with 1,157 yards rushing in
271 carries, a 4.2 average,
break the marks of 1,063 and
2;t set last year by Tim Fortney.
Cincinnati is now 6-4 on the
season and winds up next Saturday at the University of
Louisville.
At Dayton, Gary Kosins, who
hasn't had a year to compare
with last season, scored three
touchdowns and rushed for 122
yards in 9 carries to lead the
Flyers to a 26-16 victory over
Bowling Green .
The loss, the third in the last
four games for the Falcons,
marked the first time since 1947
Bowling Green has been beaten by Dayton.
Bowling Green has taken a
liHl first quarter lead on a 2().
yard touchdown run by Paul
Miles and a 27-yard field goal
by Stu Shes tine, but Kosins'
two second quarter TD runs
gave the Flyers a 14-10 inter-

Northern 15, with Paul Smith
OHIO COLLEGE
·
h ., d J h M C
FOOTBALL SCORES
hittmg tig I en
n c or- By United Press International
mick with a 12-yard pass. Xa- Michigan 10 Ohio State 7
vier got a safety in second quar- Toledo 41 Kent Stale 6
ter on a blocked punt.
Miami 43 Cincinnati 7
Dayton 26 Bowling Green 16
In other games Saturday, Oh io University 30 Marshall 0
Baldwin-Wallace finished 9 - I Northern Illinois 14 Xavier 9
with a 24-17 victory over Ash- Baldwln"Wallace 24 Ashland 17
Findlay 37 Wilmington 20
land, Akron edged Youngstown Tennessee Stale 61 Central
state 7-0, Tennesse State
State o
swamped Central Slate 61 _ o, . Akron 7 Youngstown State 0
Findlay downed Wilmington 3720, Ohio Northern beat Georgetown (Ky .) 37-7 and Michigan
edged OhioState 1().7.

°

IF YOUR SHOES

OON1 BECOME
YOU
YOU SHOULD

This Week's
Ohio College
Football Schedule

COME TO

By United Press International

Thursday
Stagg Bowl

•

Ohio Wesleyan vs . Samford at

Columbua. Ga .

Saturday

Cincinnati at Loui svi lle

W. CQ...Mp~Q
NQD
n.
I'
.
' OPTOM_
ET_RIST.

Ill

I

•

•

•

•
, !F F ICE HOURS 9, JO TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS .}- EAST COURT ST.. , ,,.

1144~th~T~D~t~o~ss~o~f~t~h~e~se~a~so:n~.--~H~i~lc~h:en~s~w=oun~d~u~p~th~e~se~a~--m~iss~i:o~n~le~a:d~.-------a:f:te:r~a~f:um:b~le~re:c:ov:e:r~y~o:n~t:he~~~P~O~M~E~R~O~Y~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Browns' defense.
Nelsen, who was replaced by · _
Mike Phipps in the fourth quarter after his arm went numb
after he was decked on a blitz
and was kneed in the back,
completed 12 of 23 attempts for
158 yards and two touchdowns
- the second coming on a 35yarder fired to wide receiver
Frank Pitts.
Beat His Cover
Pills, pried loose from Kansas City last September for a
draft choice, had been used
sparin gly until . last week 's
game against the Chiefs. He
garnered 75 yards on four receptions against the Pats and
the touchdown.
"I tried to find out how I could
beat the guys covering me for
awhile and then tried to put
something over on them ," Pitts
said. "Then when Bill saw me
open he'd toss the ball my way.
I was open a lot more but he
couldn't see me because they
ilhe Pals) were always gambling with the blitz."
· Don Cockroft, now concentrating on the placekicking,
booted field goals of 34 and 31
yards to help notch the victory
for the Browns, who remain tied
with the Pittsburgh Steelers at
S-5 for first place in the American Football Confer ence's Central Division.

we care----.,

HOLIDAY HAMS!

HOLIDAY TURKEYS!

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Because we at A&amp;P have much .

·~•• PkJ.

''Super-Right' '

We' re thankful forGod's blessings on our great country.

.

Vir St. 14'1i&gt;.ll'f llan St. 12
"Leroy had quite a number of M
iles 54 Afi!lbama A&amp;M 0
good bursts and he did some Fl orida St . 45 Tulsa 10
great running, " said Coach LSU 28 Not r e Dame 8
Houston 27 Miami 6
Nick Skorich. "He made people Tenn
St 61 Central St 0
miss tackles because he flew off Sam for d 30 Delta Sta te 24
so fast . Once he got started he Louisiana Tech 23 N. E. La . o·•
Lvng sln 28 Tenn-Mrt n 7
was hard to stop."
Southwest
Skorich, who said his team Arkansas 15 Texas Tech o
,"played better overall than in TCU 20 Ri ce 19
the past four losses, " added the SMU 20 Baylo r 6
New Mex 49 Wyoming 14
55 mph wind ripping off Lake Ark Tech44 Ark AM&amp;N 20
Erie was a big factor.
Drake 32 West Tex St 28
"Plunkett (the Pats' quarter- Southwest Tex 29 Tex A&amp; I 24
Howard Pa yne 45 McMur ray 10
back ) had some bad breaks be- Colo
Sf 24 Utep 7

We're thankful for the free enterprise system that has

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We're thankful. that again this year we'll be privilegeJ

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patronage and loyalty.

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•

•

better than words how thankful we are.

•

• •

Some Cures for Canine':,;

Flower Garden Caper~

69c

DEAR POLLY
Karen's dog may stay out of he r
flower bed if she liberally sprinkles it with gra in s of
pepper . I have never known this to fail, but if it does
for her she can tie a small balloon to each blossom and
when her dog bites down on the blossom the balloon
will pop and startle him enough that he will then stay
away . Leave pepper and balloons on for several davs
in case he should try again . - BARBARA
·

• • •
•

• •

•

• • .lb. ~
•

Md•

dependability of our values will tell you

• •

•
•

A&amp;P . Cranberry Delight

POINTERS

By POLLY CRAMER

•

••

BaconA :,:"·:y~

Fresh Oysters stood .. d •
Sh '
l I to 41
e IUm
rlmp Co,nt

serv ice, the completeness of our selection and the

• •

•
•

1

Sliced

When you come in we hope that the warmth of our

•
•

Young Ducks

But most of all we're thankful for you ... for your

•

POLLY~s

• lb ·7SC

• • •

Sausage Co,nlry Tr"t ,

Tulip and crocus bulbs have free form and abstract, Mrs.
been planted , in the Meigs Terrell gave as f&lt;ome of the
County
Infirmary civic characteristics a minimwn use
beautification project of the of plant materials, simplicity,
Winding Trail Garden Club, and clarity, clean, free of confusing
the necessary fall cleanup has detail, uncluttered , open
been made, it was reported at a silhouette, big, bright, bold,
meeting Wednesday night at the expressing feelings rather than
home of Mrs. Robert Thomp- thing..
son.
She said the container is
Mrs. Earl Thoma, Mrs. Don never traditional or period in
Thomas, Mrs. John Terrell, design in modern floral art and
Mrs . Thompson, and Mrs. that the plant . material and
Lewis Shields completed the dedgn tell the story not relying
work. The club voted to pur- on the crutch of accessories.
chase grass seed which the Modern arrangements include
junior garden club will plant on free style, free form, abstract,
the infirmary lawn.
and avant garde.
Read at the meeting was a Commenting on judging she
Utank you note for a con- reported that in modern
lribution to the Wahkeena Fund arrangements design receives
and the Highway Planting Fund 50 points, relationship of
of the Oh1o Assoc1atwn of materials, 10, distinction, 20,
Garde~ Clubs. .
and originality, 20.
Participation m the county In judging Christmas
flower Christmas show was wreaths, swags, garlands, etc.,
dtscussed and the . group design is given 25 points, percompleted plans for the1r card fection of workmanship, 20.
table display on Mexico. Mrs. color textural and dimensional
Thompson and Mrs. Thoma will quality, 20, suitability and
have charge of the pte and salad combination of materials 15
which the club is to furnish .
and distinction, 20.
' '
Mrs. Aaron Kelton will Mrs. Terrell said that flower
provide the Jan. 21 Green arrangements are disqualified
Thwnb notes. Mrs. Shields will on th~ hasis. of failure to meet
take care of the radio program. the
requirements
and
"The Art of Judging and specifications of the schedule,
Exhibiting': was the topic of the interference with the judge, use
program g1ven by Mrs. John of artificial or artificially
Terrell. She said that modern colored plant materials, except
floral art pertains to recent and in Christmas shows or when so
current trends, a brea~ from designated , improper count,
the traditional, something new. accessories, unsuitable conShe noted that now more than tainers.
ever arrangers are being given Garden tips for November
a freedom in choice of given by Mrs. Kelton included
materials,
designs
and fall landscaping, setting out
techniques. They may alter dormant, hare root rose bushes,
mat~rial,
disregard con- hilling up soil around roses,
ventional geomelric forms and applying extra mulch. She
use new man-made products to suggested cleaning sprayer and
help express an idea, feeling or other materials and preparing
mood, she commented.
them for storage, sewing hardy
She pointed out, however, that annual flowers such as sweet
always the basic principles and peas, larkspur, petunias,
elements of design remain the calundulas, and poppies.
same, only the materials and Mrs.
Thompson
had
the methods change.
devotions. Members responded
Modern floral art includes to roll call by naming an

~.109

I

A great deal we hope .

Fall Project Completed

•

DEAR POLLY- Like Karen 's dog, my poodle ate my
lomalo plants and the tops of the onions. We were amused
at first as we had a dog who thought he was a rabbit. Our
~arden was just an experiment so we let him get by with
1t. but when he knocked over my beautiful big rubber
plant and ate some of the leaves, that was too much . I
took him to the upset plant, scolded him and then spanked
him hard enough to make a real impression . He has
never again gone near that plant or any other.-MRS.
W. L. B.

2

lb. $119

pk&amp; .

Save

•

$100 WITH THIS COUPON

ON YOUR PURCHASE
OF A BONElESS

,

8-lb. "Super·Right" Canned Ham

•
l8-oz.39C

•

•

CUp

Good thru Wed. Nov. 24 at your A&amp;P Store

ONE PER FAMILY

Polly's Problem
y

HOLIDAY PRODUCE BUYS!

STORE HOURS
MON., TUES. &amp; WED.

WHITE OR PINK SEEDLESS

FLORIDA

Grapefruit

Oranges

9 AM TO 6 PM

CLOSED
ThanksCJivinCJ
Day
Pdces Good Thro W•d., Nov. 24. 1q71

bag

Fresh Cranllerries
Soulhern Yams •
Red Radishes • •

COUPON
c WITH THIS COUPON
ON YOUR PURCHASE
OF 3, q.oz. CANS

... 29c
1-tb.

Yellow Onions
3~~i:39c
Red Delicious Apples Bib, Sl
Acorn Squash • ..," 10c

Birds Eye Frozen Awake

28-oz.

Good Thru Saturday, November 27th At
Your Friendly A&amp;:P Store.

cans

ONE PER FAMILY::::::
COUPON
Layer Cake ,Mixes
'
.
WITH
THIS
COUPON
Good Thro s.t., Nov. 27th.

3pkg•·89c

At Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

J/ 1('

Som e 1/lt 'fl I1P t 111 d't' t''''' 1 vj rt'lllttt•'
0//lt' r l J/)' H I t/w tl/)(' H d·111 t'j/l•t \fiHII
/ltc:::/o//q
Ctl ll/l"illh fl'l' \('t' Ill i.JI! I /ll'tl, 11 '1 oi ' ~· !Itt •/lit \/111 11 l/ 1/l)''
l P/1r {'01'('1/)' 11 1 !llitll(/ t•//dtll/)' 1 1/'h ltllldrJ:t ll
Il l 1l IPtlrf i/1/ •!1 / ll'tl U/d /l 1111 /•r!J ll/ 1 l lf')'l 11'&lt;11 w l• t' ll
! ,._ tl!t· l!ll{ !l ti lt' o/t h· /1u 1rl 11 1~1 kll't 1
1/IL' 1!(/1111!) t/1111111 /tt'/U'l'nl J/•t /('[,/ 1lf11 / ll•t' ldt'n/
fllt' r )' U'f•crl' /HtJPUh·; fi1('

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1r

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Fun Size Candy Bars
MARS AlMOND 12-oz.
Your
THREE MUSKETEERS 16-oz.
Choice
MilKY WAY OR SNICKERS 16-&lt;&gt;z. 1·1ag

69(

A&amp;P JElliED OR WHOlE

Cranberry Sauce

With Thi$ Coupon-Good Thru Sat., Nov. 27th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Store. Without Coupon
79c.

Golden Corn

• • • •

$1
00
3
Mott's Cherries • •
S100
3
Mushrooms •
• •
14'12·••·

•

• • •

•

4 lAGS mE

Liver In Creamed Gravy . .... . 2'!.:''41•
Kidney In Creamed Gravy . . . . 2'~-;::· 41•
Chicken Kitty Burgers . . . . . . . 2'~: 41•
Chicken &amp; Kidney Kitty Burgers 2'','::.:':· 41&lt;
Chicken &amp; liver Kitty Burgers .. 2'~:·41•
Super Supper . . ... . .. . . . .. 2"~' 41&lt;
Mackerel Cal Foort . . . . . . . 2'';t":·4I•
Sea Food Pl~ttP.r
2 ·~;;:· a]&lt;
,___.

Glad Garbage Bags

GlAO

Sandwich Bags
WITH fAtE

IC~ CREA t-~

3 roll• 89(
160'

8111,.
3 .....
of
if•
&amp;)

3!~g~; 89c

SCOOP-GLAD

Food Storage Bags 3 ~~~~ 89c
'.J.'ITI-4 'U~ TU"I(EV BAG

Cooking Ma~ic Bacs

L_," . ·.. -,

s 00

Jumbo

Rolls

Purple Plums •
IONA CUT
Green Beans •
A&amp;P BRAND
Sweet Potatoes •
JANE PARKER PlAIN OR SEEDED
Rye Bread •• 4
JANE PARKER
StuffinCJ Bread •

l-Ib.

•

DARK SWEET

Glad Wrap

· NINE LIVES CAT FOOD

-------·.... _____

.4

c:an~

A&amp;P WHOlE KERNEl OR CREAM STYlE

4ci0Ff LAIEL

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

•

16·01.

GREEN GIANT SliCED OR WHOlE

ONE PER FAMILY -tclil::a:tiiDl.!j

HY?

HOLIDAY PRICED!

c

lb.

bag

p::~~:~~~:a:::u::sVALUAILE

SaVe 15

C·

lb.

;; DEAR POLLY - 1 have a large assortment of
H Indian Navaho rugs and some are very old . I would
~ like to know how to clean them.-MRS . T. L. A.

cans

ZY•·••·
Jars

MRS. FILBERTS

Soft Whipped Margarine~~~:49c
ANN PAGE

Stuffed Olives •
ORCH,RO QUEEN
Maraschino Cherries 3 J"~:· s1

lVI ,

'lt-oz.

eloaf

$100

37c

Birds Eye Frozen Buys!
COOL WHIP
TOPPING •.•• 9-or., 59c

..

BABY LIMAS
CAULIFLOWER
.
BRUSSEL SPROUTS ...................

3pkgs. 1
10·oz. $

:tf pkgs.

10·oL49c
pkg.

1

""OlSON C•NOIED"

Dill Pickle Chips

CHOCOLATE

Her$hey Syrup

"'""'· 59c
jar

AlP

Colombian Coffee

rooa;. PURE
COLO,.IIAN
COFFEE

'

1-lb.ggc
can.

-~-

·. ,.,_ , -~&gt;

&lt;·

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with ALL greeting
card companies. I call my parents " Mom and Dad ," as do
so many others , but I can ne ver find a card for an an niversary card with "Mom and Dad" on it. They say
"Mother..,.nd Father ," "Mom and Pop" or " Mother and
Dad" so please , g reetin ~ card artists and writers. give
us some " Mom and Dad ' cards .
When I am near a greeting card counter I always stop
and browse and often find the perfect card for a friend
or relative whose birthday or anniversary may be months
away but I buy it anyway . 1 paper clip such cards 10
the proper month on my calendar and if the month has
passed lor that year I clip it to December and then
transfer to the proper month when I get a new calendar
for the coming year.- NAOMI
DEAR POLLY - While
at my daughter's house I
was going to make mashed
potatoes and found she did
not have a potato masher.
'· .·
·. :.~·
I finally tried her wire
pastry blender and it did
a beautiful job- better than
a potato masher .
Paper clips are great to
use for holding small
things together while glue
sets.
My son used clear shoe polish to finish some picture
frames he had made out of scrap lumber and it looked
like lacquer.-MRS . J. K. S.
{NEWSP*'PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

Gift Exchange,
Party Planned
A Christmas party with a gift
exchange was planned Dec. 9 at
the home of Mrs . Marjorie
Bowen Thursday night when the
Willin~ Workers Class of the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church met at the home of Mrs.
Cordelia Bentz. The group also
agreed to order umbrellas and
rain bonnets to sell as a fundraising project.
A Thanksgiving theme was
carried out in the program with
Mrs. Beatrice Buck reading
scripture from Psalm 95. Mrs.
Delores Will read a poem and
each member gave a
Thanksgiving thought from the
Bible. There was group singing
of "Count Your Blessings" and
a Thanksgiving prayer by Miss
Frieda Leiving. Mrs . A~nes
Dixon won the wonder box
donated by Mrs. Buck.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Ethel
Smith, Mrs. Nancy Smith , Mrs .
Agnes Weeks, Mrs . Beulah
Utterback, Mrs . Brenda Filch,
and, Patty Edwards .

Health Club to
Treat Patients
Mrs. Fred Goeglein, Mrs .
Welby Whaley, and Mrs . Clifford Leifheit were appointed to
provide a treat for the residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary
in December when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club mel
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
W. A. Morgan.
The club made a contribution
to the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health Association.
Mrs.HaroldBlackstonandMrs.
George Skinner reported on the
sick in the community. A
Christmas party was set lor
Dec. !6.
Mrs .
Amos
Leonard
presented the program which
opened with Mrs . Lewis
Grueser reading the Thanksgiving proclamation. Mrs. Scott
Folmer read "First Aid Supplies ;" Mrs. George Skinner,
"Identifying Drug Users; .. Mrs.
William Grueser, "Bring Back
the House Call;" Mrs. William
Witte, "The Passing Scenes,"
and Mrs. William Folmer,
"Prayer of Thanksgiving."
The contest conducted by
Mrs. Lewis Grueser was won by
Mrs. Harold Blackston.
Refreshments were served to
the above and Mrs. Homer
Radford, Mrs. Hugh Bearhs,
Mrs. Mark Grueser, Mrs. Oliver
Clark, and Mrs. Jim Conkle.

CHESTER - Listen more,
give a~vice less, and your child
will be healthier mentally and
err otionally, said a team of
speakers
from the Southeastern
TUESDAY
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band Ohio Mental Health Center to
Boosters, 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, a,t the Chester P .T.A.
Miss Claudia Evans, R.M .,
high school, Racine.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter 186, OES, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Marie
Curd.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
post home . Members to take
towel bibs for hospital patients.
Junior members will meet at
the same time.
POMEROY American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 6:30p.m. turkey dinner . New
members to be guests. Members to·· take covered dish.
Turkey furnished.
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at temple to honor
Past Masters. All Master
Masons invited.
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, home of
Mrs. Robert Arnold. Auction of
homemade articles.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, 6:30 Tuesday ,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 hall.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, B: 15
Tuesday night, Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Susan Baer, cultural program
on Poetry in Music, Becky
Anderson and Jennifer Anderson, hostesses.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7:30Wednesday, at the hall.

A contribution was made to
the June Glaze family whose
home and furnishings were
extensively damaged by fire
recently by members of the
Helping Hands Missionary
Circle of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
During the recent meeting of
the group at the church,
possibilities of establishing a
"welcome wagon club" were
discussed, but action was
deferred.
The group agreed to purchase
small crosses to be used on the
Christmas baskets which will be
taken to the sick and shut-in of
the community and the
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary .
Mrs. Eleanor Hoover was
appointed to purchase the cloth
for the new communion scarves
and to make them. A layette
shower for Mrs. Delores Hawk
was announced for Nov. 27 and
the group voted to assist the
Young Adult Class with the
expenses.
It was noted that Mrs .
Mildred Sisson and Mrs. Eleanor Hoover are working .on
Christmas play to be presented
on Dec. 12. Cards were sent to
Dallas Lightfoot, a patient at

completion of the PTA manual
study course were Mrs. Barbara Tripp, Mrs . June Epple,
Mrs. Lucille Ridenour, Mrs.
Kathryn Windon, Mrs. Donna
Nelson .
Following a talk by Pat Wood
on the need for establishing a
seoul program in the Chester
area, the PTA voted to serve as
sponsor,
Avote of thanks was extended
to Mrs. Ethel Hart, Modern
Woodm en Insurance Co .
representative, for favors at the
Halloween parties.
A meeting of the executive
committee was announced for
1:30 p.m. on Dec. 2. There will
be no evening meeting of the
PTA in December. Religious
services will be held at the
school on Monday, Dec. 13, 2
p.m. and all parents are invited
to attend.
·
Hostesses for the January
meeting will be Mrs. Roy
Holter, Mrs. Louise Burke, Mrs.
membership contest was won Robert Shook, Mrs . John
by the first grade of Miss Chaney, Mrs. Grover White,
Mrs. Hayward Bissell, and
Carolyn Parker.
Herbert
Matheny.
Awarded ce rtifi cates for
against letting children handle
overwhelming, or major,
problems without assistance.
Although mental health is a
"personal thing," the speakers
suggested teachers can help by
being alert to detect an inability
to get along wi th others,
frequent depression or inability
to leHrn as signs of poor mental
health.
Ounn g the · recent meeting, · a
$25
cintribution was made to the
scholarship of the Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers. ll was reported lhal
the sick room project has been
completed with di sposa ble
sheets, pillow cases, curtains,
first aid supplies having been
provided . Four tether balls
have also been purchased, it
was noted.
The attendance award which
was changed from a book to $10
a meeting was won by Mrs.
Robinson 's third grade. A PTA

•'

Today's
Almanac

Second Nominations Held
Second nomination of officers
was held at a recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, attended by 26
members .
Nominated were Thelma
Farnsworth, outside sentinel;
Alice Curtis, inside sentinel;
Letha Woods, councilor;
Dorothy Lawson, junior past
councilor ; and Mary Jo Pooler,
warden. Enzy Newell, councilor, presided.
Mary K. Holte r ·IS horne from
the hospital and Mary Rose is ill
at home . The miscellaneous
committee announced that a
blanket will be sold at the next
meeting. Letha Woods thanked
tnose who visited her and sent
cards during her recent illness.

t

t
!

Cont¥ibut4on
MaUi,.]e
I"
"

bi1J
.f

C''UJ~ss t

-l&lt;

-l&lt;

A contri bution to the
ChristmassealsaleoftheMeigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Association has been made by
the Busy Bee Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Mrs .
Leora
Sigman,
president, opened the meeting
at the home of Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt with prayer.
Devotions by Mrs. Dana Hamm
. 1 ded h
d'
me u
t e rea mg of scriplure and a · meditation, "Give
Thanks for This is the Will of
God ." The group gave the
Lord's Prayer in unison and
sang the class song.
Plans were made for the

D-SIZE
BATTERIES

annual holiday dinner party to
be held at the church. Names
were drawn for a gift exchange.
Officers for 1972 were
nominated.
Members sang ''Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Harold Chase,
Mrs. Victor Grim, Mrs. Betty
Gilkey, Miss Kathryn Werner,
Mrs. Asa Jordan, and Mrs.
Golda Mourning. Refreshments
were
served by Mrs.
Houdashelt, Mrs. Jacob Turner,
Mrs. Mourning, and Mrs.
Charles Sauer, assisted by Miss
Freddie Houdashelt.

~

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if:
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t

***

It's

Easy

REG. 7.88

1488
TABLE TENNIS TABLE
Fold-N-Roll

if:

!

Fridays Only
The Drive- In Windowi&lt;
is Open
:
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
+:
(c ·
-+c
onttnuously)
-l&lt;

't FARMERS

~

l'HS

DRIVE-IN
BANKING +:~

if: Fridays.

-l&lt;
.&gt;&lt;
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BASKETBAll

J.~G .

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! ~~rs B~;k;ng.~o~;~:l ~~~~
""
:

BACKBOARD &amp;
GOAL SET
:;::..:----......_

i&lt;

3788

REG.
49.95

No n·glo re finish to p. T
lvr m o~ob i l • ty .

cos ier ~

Striped court lines .

FOlDS TO

MICHIGAN LADDER

22" WIDE

BANK "t 1
':=======::::;-;::=======::!1
lr

and SAVINGS

co.:

POMEROY, OHIO
Member F Dl c
Member Federal
Reserve System

-l&lt;

""

-"
""
-l&lt;

+:

!

TABLE TENNIS SET

788

SALE PRICE
UNIVfRSAl

FELT TOP
GAME TABLE

i1

***-***********~

::::~:::::::::;:::~:i:::~:~:::i:i:~"!~:!."!~::::::::s::::::::::?.i8?.·

r l 0 we I' s

me nlloned in the
Bib le. of wll icll several hun-

KEEP BETTER
CONTROl ..

()- Hr JVi did t11e l.JmJOitel
fJ CI i t::&gt; rtnme'}
·

A- In ve nl eU in Bayonne,
Fran ce. 11 gets it s name
fro m Hw nanw of the city .

As a rule, only the large
single muscle which holds
the shell together is the part
of the scallop that is eaten .

fdld, HUNTII m&amp;JrMBALANCED WHEELS!

(HW1JI;ItlW,..
BEVELED EDGE

2888
Fold s /l ot. Felt

I

w~er, SBn ls 8.

.
"

KES TEll FURNITURE

. DOOR
MIRROR
16 "

.·.·..
·...·
·-·-

REG . 36.95

tfll ('/ ?
A- A bouq uet l'onsisting of

•'

CHILD'S WOODEN
TOY CHEST

6Q"

REG . i 1.95

gsa

1688

REG. 19.95

.•

',
',

HM•I IllON

Don' t trud to luck! lrritoiin g, tiring,

Need a florist
a budding genius?

/): • ,, l1 / ·~

nerve-rackinq whct'l-unbolnnri" con lower

(.1,1-''•

your .~ afety-lc
vt&gt;I-bath in loco1 o nd hiq h'
.
.

llocl~d

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in

spe('d hiqhway driving. You'll qc-1 up to
so ~~ ~o~e fl'l ii \' C19 ~ from your f'1t pen '.i¥ 1'·1o-

rrplacc tires, (lnd you 'll ('njoy

~m aoth,

moncy·sa ving , toro·frec driving, fOIJ!

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See Howard Well . Front End Spe.~~.alist.

V,w;e -fit for

REG.

u fREE

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WHEEL BALANCE CHECK!

NEW

1688

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'349.95 '

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

$3s:oo Down- .
"Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

J99

12FOR

t

Yellow
Pages

3 ROOMS

Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
Bernard Gilkey, also at
Veterans; Mrs. Sylvia Midkiff,
at the Holzer Medical Center,
and Ora Sinclair of Pomeroy,
Route 3.
Mrs. Tressie Hendricks
presided at the meeting which
opened with group singjllg of
"Close to Thee ." Mrs . Norma
Russell led in lhe responsive
reading, "The Triumph of the
Gospel" and had prayer.
Others attending were Mrs.
Ruby Rife and Becky, Mrs.
Vada Hazelton and Cynthia,
Mrs. Verna Hysell, Mrs. Bennie
Pickens, Mrs. Helen Miller,
Mrs. Evelyn Wood , and Mrs.
Frances Hysell.

By United Press lnternalional
Today is Monday , Nov . 22,
the 326lh day of 1971.
The moon is between its n •&gt;~'
phase and first quarter.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury , Venus, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Sagittarius .
French President Charles de
Gaulle was born Nov . 22, 1890.
On this day in history:
In 1852 the 2nd French
Empire gai ned recognition
A report on the recent friend- when more than seven million
persons voted to back the
ship meeting in Marietta was
given by Mrs. Erma Cleland. It regime of Emperor Napoleon
was noted thai Olan Genheimer lll.
replaced the windows in the
lodge hall . At the next meeting
quarterly birthdays will be ~**************\.
observed and potluck refreshA Thought 't
ments served.
if:
;
Attending besides those if:
For Today -l&lt;
named were Ada Morris, Mae +:
if:
Spencer, Ada Neutzling, Hattie +: A man has to li ve with f(
Frederick, Barbara Sargent,
hi mse lf, and he should see ~
Betty Roush, Mary Hayes , if:
+: good
to it compan
that he yalways ha s -l&lt;
~
Zelda Weber, Ada Van Meter, .
-l&lt;
Ethel Orr, Ada Bissell, Joe
-Charles Evans Hughes
Bissell, Dorothy Myers.. +:
if:
Elizabeth Wic~am, Mabel Van'· +:
if:
Meter, Margaret Tuttle, Opal
-l&lt;
Hollon, Zona Biggs, and Jean if: ·
Qul'ck,l
Summerfield.
+:
if:
·-l&lt;
-l&lt;
-l&lt;
-l&lt;

dred a re refe rred to .

The Mediterranean saffron
is the most expensive of all
spices . About 4,000 flowers
yield about one ounce of
commercial saffron .
The mandolin known and
played today owes its exact
form and proportions to Pasquale Vinaccia of Nap 1e s .
Italy , according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Mrs . Norma DeShang, a
psychiatric aide, and Mr. Jim
LePage, psychologis t, said
parents can contribute to good
mental health simp ly by
learning to understand how
children fee. They ca utioned

New Club Proposed

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
lo a problem. Wrlle Polly In care of Ibis newspaper.

00

PEAS, CORN, SPINACH,
FRENCH STYLE GREEN
Al10-oL $100
BEANS, MIXED YEGETAILES ...
INTERNATIONAL VEGETABLES,
HAWAIIAN VEGETAILES,
PARISIAN VEGETABLES .................

,. .".

exhibitor's experience, many
amusing, · humiliating, and
joyous events being reJated.
Mrs. Robert Lewis displayed
evergreens in preparation for'
the Christmas flower show.
Handcraft items including dried
apple dolls, driftwood plaques,
and tree ornaments made from
plastic glasses were displayed,
and techniques were given for
making each item.
'
Judging the crescent flower
arrangements on display was
·Mrs. Charles Hayes. The theme
was "Christmas in the Big
Bend."
A Christmas dinner will be
held on Dec. B at 6:30 p.m. at
Crow's Steak House with a
party to follow at the home of
Mrs. Terrell.

Social
Calendar

Child Mental Health Disc,ussed for PTA

•i

soo

I

MASON ·.
FURNITURE
Mason·.
Va.

Phone 992 -2174
East Main St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

DElPHOS BENDING

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO.

The Department Store
of Building Since 1915

'

'·

�L

-

''

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 22,1971 ·
- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Nov . 22, 1971

After BG quarterback Joe Babies put the Falcons hack in
front with a ·one-y'ard run, the
Flyers' Ron Krechting hit Denny Whitehead with a 77-yard
touchdown pass and Kosins'
third TD iced it.
Marshall Rebuilding
Ohio University, riddled by
injuries, still had to much for.
the young Marshall team as
quarterback Dave Juengenan
for two touchdowns and passed
for another in the Bobcats' 31Hl
win.
OU finished the season with
a S-5 record while Marshall, rebuilding after last November's
tragic airplane crash which wiped out the squad, wound up 2-8.
Tim Worner caught Juenger's
six-yard touchdown pass and
Steve Hodgson scored the other
OU touchdown on a five-yard
run .
Xavier, which got in the win
colwnn for the first time only
last week, dropped a 14-9 decision Saturday to Northern lllinois.
The only Musketeer touchdown came late in the game

Rockets Blitz Kent State for 34th.Win
By UDlted Press IDtemalional

The University of Toledo has
10111 put away three perfect
~easons of football . Only a Tan!erine Bowl date with the Unilerslty of Richmond stands in
the way of the Roc~ets being
mdefeated since the final game
~ the 1968 season.
Toledo blitzed Kent State 41-0
to cap its season Saturday mght
the lith win of the season and

34th in a row.
Tailback Joe Schwartz, a junior from Adrian, Mich ., sored
five touchdowns and totaled 167
yards in 27 carries. Schwartz'
five touchdowns set a single
game record for the Mid-American Conference. His 16 for the
season also is an all-time high.
The Rockets and Richmond's
Spiders, who won the Southern
Conference title Saturday by

edging William &amp; Marry 21-19,
will meet in the Tangeri'!_e Bowl
at Orlando, Fla ., Dec. 28.
The last time the Rockets lost
a game was 1().3 against Dayton in 1968.
No MAC Wins
Their last opponent of the 1971
season, hapless Kent Stale, finished its first season under
Coach Don James with a 3 - 8
mark and winless in five MAC

Kelly Back In Form,

Browns Trip Patriots
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Leroy
Kelly, who said he had "a hard
time getting started" against
the New England Patriots.
couldn't be slopped once he
started.
Kelly, an eight-year veteran
hampered by injuries this year
and last, ran Sunday like the
man who led the NFL in rushing
in !967 and !968, and who gained
more than 1,000 yards in 1966.
1967 and !968.
He scored two touchdowns in
the Browns' 27-7 victory and
gained 113 yards, the 24th time
in his pro football career he
surpassed the 100-yard mark in
a single game, but only the
fourth time in the last two
years.
"I had a hard time getting
started because the Patriots
were a hard team to run
against," Kelly said. "But once
we got ahead, it loosened things
up a lot and everything carne

our way .
"They (the Patriots ) have exceptional linebackers and their
blitzing was very effective. We
went up the gut quite a hit and
tiJat 's where I drove for most of
my yardage, boun cing off
defenders."
"Some Great Running ~·
Kelly put the Browns ahead 70 after he snagged a Bill Nelsen
pass and waltzed over the goal
line from two yards · out with
5:09 remaining in the first
quarter. Kelly's second TD of
the game, the seventh this season, came in the final period on
a right-side sweep from the twoinch l.ii\e.

cause of the wind, but he kept us
off balance," Skorich sa id.
"The ball sort of sailed through
the wind and didn't reach his
intended receivers," resulting
in four interceptions by the

New England 's only score
came on an IS-yard aerial from
rookie Plunkett to tight end
Tom Beer with :48remaining on
the clock in the first half. It was
the former Stanford standout's

games.
Kent's only touchdown came
early in the fourth quarter when
fullback John Matsko dived into the end zone to cap a 52-yard
drive in eight plays.
Miami, which started the season will' four wins in a row
and then lost the next three,
finished with a resounding 43-7
victory over Cincinnati, the
Redskins third straight win.
As usual, it was the running
o! sophomore Bob Hitchens,
whose 138 yards in 30 carri.es
broke both the school yards
gained and attempts records
for the year, who led the Redskins to victory.
Hitchens scored three touchdowns giving him 13 for the
year, as Miami finished with a
7-3 mark. Cincinnati, which was
slopped cold by the Redskin defense, got its only touchdown on
a 27-yard interception return
by linebacker AI Mason.
Sets New Marks

~on with 1,157 yards rushing in
271 carries, a 4.2 average,
break the marks of 1,063 and
2;t set last year by Tim Fortney.
Cincinnati is now 6-4 on the
season and winds up next Saturday at the University of
Louisville.
At Dayton, Gary Kosins, who
hasn't had a year to compare
with last season, scored three
touchdowns and rushed for 122
yards in 9 carries to lead the
Flyers to a 26-16 victory over
Bowling Green .
The loss, the third in the last
four games for the Falcons,
marked the first time since 1947
Bowling Green has been beaten by Dayton.
Bowling Green has taken a
liHl first quarter lead on a 2().
yard touchdown run by Paul
Miles and a 27-yard field goal
by Stu Shes tine, but Kosins'
two second quarter TD runs
gave the Flyers a 14-10 inter-

Northern 15, with Paul Smith
OHIO COLLEGE
·
h ., d J h M C
FOOTBALL SCORES
hittmg tig I en
n c or- By United Press International
mick with a 12-yard pass. Xa- Michigan 10 Ohio State 7
vier got a safety in second quar- Toledo 41 Kent Stale 6
ter on a blocked punt.
Miami 43 Cincinnati 7
Dayton 26 Bowling Green 16
In other games Saturday, Oh io University 30 Marshall 0
Baldwin-Wallace finished 9 - I Northern Illinois 14 Xavier 9
with a 24-17 victory over Ash- Baldwln"Wallace 24 Ashland 17
Findlay 37 Wilmington 20
land, Akron edged Youngstown Tennessee Stale 61 Central
state 7-0, Tennesse State
State o
swamped Central Slate 61 _ o, . Akron 7 Youngstown State 0
Findlay downed Wilmington 3720, Ohio Northern beat Georgetown (Ky .) 37-7 and Michigan
edged OhioState 1().7.

°

IF YOUR SHOES

OON1 BECOME
YOU
YOU SHOULD

This Week's
Ohio College
Football Schedule

COME TO

By United Press International

Thursday
Stagg Bowl

•

Ohio Wesleyan vs . Samford at

Columbua. Ga .

Saturday

Cincinnati at Loui svi lle

W. CQ...Mp~Q
NQD
n.
I'
.
' OPTOM_
ET_RIST.

Ill

I

•

•

•

•
, !F F ICE HOURS 9, JO TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS .}- EAST COURT ST.. , ,,.

1144~th~T~D~t~o~ss~o~f~t~h~e~se~a~so:n~.--~H~i~lc~h:en~s~w=oun~d~u~p~th~e~se~a~--m~iss~i:o~n~le~a:d~.-------a:f:te:r~a~f:um:b~le~re:c:ov:e:r~y~o:n~t:he~~~P~O~M~E~R~O~Y~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Browns' defense.
Nelsen, who was replaced by · _
Mike Phipps in the fourth quarter after his arm went numb
after he was decked on a blitz
and was kneed in the back,
completed 12 of 23 attempts for
158 yards and two touchdowns
- the second coming on a 35yarder fired to wide receiver
Frank Pitts.
Beat His Cover
Pills, pried loose from Kansas City last September for a
draft choice, had been used
sparin gly until . last week 's
game against the Chiefs. He
garnered 75 yards on four receptions against the Pats and
the touchdown.
"I tried to find out how I could
beat the guys covering me for
awhile and then tried to put
something over on them ," Pitts
said. "Then when Bill saw me
open he'd toss the ball my way.
I was open a lot more but he
couldn't see me because they
ilhe Pals) were always gambling with the blitz."
· Don Cockroft, now concentrating on the placekicking,
booted field goals of 34 and 31
yards to help notch the victory
for the Browns, who remain tied
with the Pittsburgh Steelers at
S-5 for first place in the American Football Confer ence's Central Division.

we care----.,

HOLIDAY HAMS!

HOLIDAY TURKEYS!

Se

A&amp;P Br•nd Alftc:
up lb ....,
If- B a st •mg T ur k eys16-lb

Fresh Hams w~;if or

&amp;

Butterball Turkeys 1s-~b.a~\p • lb.55c

·e

Boneless

• • •
Hams s,p8~i~;~~~~:"''

,lb. $1 39
• lb.98c

Honeysuckle

Virginia Farm

Hams~.h"~~.H~~~

Turkey

Semi-Bonele~'S

Ham w~!i o•

Fresh

Turkeysls~b~ • ~·- 55&lt;
Roast H~~~~i::;'· • • ~ '"·ggc

Turkeys~·~b~

•

•

•

"·-49c

•

Sweet

'N Tender

1 • lb.6t
Ham B~~~\:;, . lb.89c

Because we at A&amp;P have much .

·~•• PkJ.

''Super-Right' '

We' re thankful forGod's blessings on our great country.

.

Vir St. 14'1i&gt;.ll'f llan St. 12
"Leroy had quite a number of M
iles 54 Afi!lbama A&amp;M 0
good bursts and he did some Fl orida St . 45 Tulsa 10
great running, " said Coach LSU 28 Not r e Dame 8
Houston 27 Miami 6
Nick Skorich. "He made people Tenn
St 61 Central St 0
miss tackles because he flew off Sam for d 30 Delta Sta te 24
so fast . Once he got started he Louisiana Tech 23 N. E. La . o·•
Lvng sln 28 Tenn-Mrt n 7
was hard to stop."
Southwest
Skorich, who said his team Arkansas 15 Texas Tech o
,"played better overall than in TCU 20 Ri ce 19
the past four losses, " added the SMU 20 Baylo r 6
New Mex 49 Wyoming 14
55 mph wind ripping off Lake Ark Tech44 Ark AM&amp;N 20
Erie was a big factor.
Drake 32 West Tex St 28
"Plunkett (the Pats' quarter- Southwest Tex 29 Tex A&amp; I 24
Howard Pa yne 45 McMur ray 10
back ) had some bad breaks be- Colo
Sf 24 Utep 7

We're thankful for the free enterprise system that has

,

,

Roasting Chickens

allowed us to serve you for more than a century .

•

Stewing Chickens

We're thankful. that again this year we'll be privilegeJ

Young Capons

to play a part in rnaking Thanksg,iving feasting a

Plumb Geese

memorable occasion for so many .

patronage and loyalty.

•

•
•
•

•

better than words how thankful we are.

•

• •

Some Cures for Canine':,;

Flower Garden Caper~

69c

DEAR POLLY
Karen's dog may stay out of he r
flower bed if she liberally sprinkles it with gra in s of
pepper . I have never known this to fail, but if it does
for her she can tie a small balloon to each blossom and
when her dog bites down on the blossom the balloon
will pop and startle him enough that he will then stay
away . Leave pepper and balloons on for several davs
in case he should try again . - BARBARA
·

• • •
•

• •

•

• • .lb. ~
•

Md•

dependability of our values will tell you

• •

•
•

A&amp;P . Cranberry Delight

POINTERS

By POLLY CRAMER

•

••

BaconA :,:"·:y~

Fresh Oysters stood .. d •
Sh '
l I to 41
e IUm
rlmp Co,nt

serv ice, the completeness of our selection and the

• •

•
•

1

Sliced

When you come in we hope that the warmth of our

•
•

Young Ducks

But most of all we're thankful for you ... for your

•

POLLY~s

• lb ·7SC

• • •

Sausage Co,nlry Tr"t ,

Tulip and crocus bulbs have free form and abstract, Mrs.
been planted , in the Meigs Terrell gave as f&lt;ome of the
County
Infirmary civic characteristics a minimwn use
beautification project of the of plant materials, simplicity,
Winding Trail Garden Club, and clarity, clean, free of confusing
the necessary fall cleanup has detail, uncluttered , open
been made, it was reported at a silhouette, big, bright, bold,
meeting Wednesday night at the expressing feelings rather than
home of Mrs. Robert Thomp- thing..
son.
She said the container is
Mrs. Earl Thoma, Mrs. Don never traditional or period in
Thomas, Mrs. John Terrell, design in modern floral art and
Mrs . Thompson, and Mrs. that the plant . material and
Lewis Shields completed the dedgn tell the story not relying
work. The club voted to pur- on the crutch of accessories.
chase grass seed which the Modern arrangements include
junior garden club will plant on free style, free form, abstract,
the infirmary lawn.
and avant garde.
Read at the meeting was a Commenting on judging she
Utank you note for a con- reported that in modern
lribution to the Wahkeena Fund arrangements design receives
and the Highway Planting Fund 50 points, relationship of
of the Oh1o Assoc1atwn of materials, 10, distinction, 20,
Garde~ Clubs. .
and originality, 20.
Participation m the county In judging Christmas
flower Christmas show was wreaths, swags, garlands, etc.,
dtscussed and the . group design is given 25 points, percompleted plans for the1r card fection of workmanship, 20.
table display on Mexico. Mrs. color textural and dimensional
Thompson and Mrs. Thoma will quality, 20, suitability and
have charge of the pte and salad combination of materials 15
which the club is to furnish .
and distinction, 20.
' '
Mrs. Aaron Kelton will Mrs. Terrell said that flower
provide the Jan. 21 Green arrangements are disqualified
Thwnb notes. Mrs. Shields will on th~ hasis. of failure to meet
take care of the radio program. the
requirements
and
"The Art of Judging and specifications of the schedule,
Exhibiting': was the topic of the interference with the judge, use
program g1ven by Mrs. John of artificial or artificially
Terrell. She said that modern colored plant materials, except
floral art pertains to recent and in Christmas shows or when so
current trends, a brea~ from designated , improper count,
the traditional, something new. accessories, unsuitable conShe noted that now more than tainers.
ever arrangers are being given Garden tips for November
a freedom in choice of given by Mrs. Kelton included
materials,
designs
and fall landscaping, setting out
techniques. They may alter dormant, hare root rose bushes,
mat~rial,
disregard con- hilling up soil around roses,
ventional geomelric forms and applying extra mulch. She
use new man-made products to suggested cleaning sprayer and
help express an idea, feeling or other materials and preparing
mood, she commented.
them for storage, sewing hardy
She pointed out, however, that annual flowers such as sweet
always the basic principles and peas, larkspur, petunias,
elements of design remain the calundulas, and poppies.
same, only the materials and Mrs.
Thompson
had
the methods change.
devotions. Members responded
Modern floral art includes to roll call by naming an

~.109

I

A great deal we hope .

Fall Project Completed

•

DEAR POLLY- Like Karen 's dog, my poodle ate my
lomalo plants and the tops of the onions. We were amused
at first as we had a dog who thought he was a rabbit. Our
~arden was just an experiment so we let him get by with
1t. but when he knocked over my beautiful big rubber
plant and ate some of the leaves, that was too much . I
took him to the upset plant, scolded him and then spanked
him hard enough to make a real impression . He has
never again gone near that plant or any other.-MRS.
W. L. B.

2

lb. $119

pk&amp; .

Save

•

$100 WITH THIS COUPON

ON YOUR PURCHASE
OF A BONElESS

,

8-lb. "Super·Right" Canned Ham

•
l8-oz.39C

•

•

CUp

Good thru Wed. Nov. 24 at your A&amp;P Store

ONE PER FAMILY

Polly's Problem
y

HOLIDAY PRODUCE BUYS!

STORE HOURS
MON., TUES. &amp; WED.

WHITE OR PINK SEEDLESS

FLORIDA

Grapefruit

Oranges

9 AM TO 6 PM

CLOSED
ThanksCJivinCJ
Day
Pdces Good Thro W•d., Nov. 24. 1q71

bag

Fresh Cranllerries
Soulhern Yams •
Red Radishes • •

COUPON
c WITH THIS COUPON
ON YOUR PURCHASE
OF 3, q.oz. CANS

... 29c
1-tb.

Yellow Onions
3~~i:39c
Red Delicious Apples Bib, Sl
Acorn Squash • ..," 10c

Birds Eye Frozen Awake

28-oz.

Good Thru Saturday, November 27th At
Your Friendly A&amp;:P Store.

cans

ONE PER FAMILY::::::
COUPON
Layer Cake ,Mixes
'
.
WITH
THIS
COUPON
Good Thro s.t., Nov. 27th.

3pkg•·89c

At Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

J/ 1('

Som e 1/lt 'fl I1P t 111 d't' t''''' 1 vj rt'lllttt•'
0//lt' r l J/)' H I t/w tl/)(' H d·111 t'j/l•t \fiHII
/ltc:::/o//q
Ctl ll/l"illh fl'l' \('t' Ill i.JI! I /ll'tl, 11 '1 oi ' ~· !Itt •/lit \/111 11 l/ 1/l)''
l P/1r {'01'('1/)' 11 1 !llitll(/ t•//dtll/)' 1 1/'h ltllldrJ:t ll
Il l 1l IPtlrf i/1/ •!1 / ll'tl U/d /l 1111 /•r!J ll/ 1 l lf')'l 11'&lt;11 w l• t' ll
! ,._ tl!t· l!ll{ !l ti lt' o/t h· /1u 1rl 11 1~1 kll't 1
1/IL' 1!(/1111!) t/1111111 /tt'/U'l'nl J/•t /('[,/ 1lf11 / ll•t' ldt'n/
fllt' r )' U'f•crl' /HtJPUh·; fi1('

t /H O / IUII

~::::::~:.PER FAMILYII:IICIIIC:B::ttz:IIIJ!

1r

VALUABLE COUPONEII-:a:liiiCfl

Fun Size Candy Bars
MARS AlMOND 12-oz.
Your
THREE MUSKETEERS 16-oz.
Choice
MilKY WAY OR SNICKERS 16-&lt;&gt;z. 1·1ag

69(

A&amp;P JElliED OR WHOlE

Cranberry Sauce

With Thi$ Coupon-Good Thru Sat., Nov. 27th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Store. Without Coupon
79c.

Golden Corn

• • • •

$1
00
3
Mott's Cherries • •
S100
3
Mushrooms •
• •
14'12·••·

•

• • •

•

4 lAGS mE

Liver In Creamed Gravy . .... . 2'!.:''41•
Kidney In Creamed Gravy . . . . 2'~-;::· 41•
Chicken Kitty Burgers . . . . . . . 2'~: 41•
Chicken &amp; Kidney Kitty Burgers 2'','::.:':· 41&lt;
Chicken &amp; liver Kitty Burgers .. 2'~:·41•
Super Supper . . ... . .. . . . .. 2"~' 41&lt;
Mackerel Cal Foort . . . . . . . 2'';t":·4I•
Sea Food Pl~ttP.r
2 ·~;;:· a]&lt;
,___.

Glad Garbage Bags

GlAO

Sandwich Bags
WITH fAtE

IC~ CREA t-~

3 roll• 89(
160'

8111,.
3 .....
of
if•
&amp;)

3!~g~; 89c

SCOOP-GLAD

Food Storage Bags 3 ~~~~ 89c
'.J.'ITI-4 'U~ TU"I(EV BAG

Cooking Ma~ic Bacs

L_," . ·.. -,

s 00

Jumbo

Rolls

Purple Plums •
IONA CUT
Green Beans •
A&amp;P BRAND
Sweet Potatoes •
JANE PARKER PlAIN OR SEEDED
Rye Bread •• 4
JANE PARKER
StuffinCJ Bread •

l-Ib.

•

DARK SWEET

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· NINE LIVES CAT FOOD

-------·.... _____

.4

c:an~

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4ci0Ff LAIEL

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

•

16·01.

GREEN GIANT SliCED OR WHOlE

ONE PER FAMILY -tclil::a:tiiDl.!j

HY?

HOLIDAY PRICED!

c

lb.

bag

p::~~:~~~:a:::u::sVALUAILE

SaVe 15

C·

lb.

;; DEAR POLLY - 1 have a large assortment of
H Indian Navaho rugs and some are very old . I would
~ like to know how to clean them.-MRS . T. L. A.

cans

ZY•·••·
Jars

MRS. FILBERTS

Soft Whipped Margarine~~~:49c
ANN PAGE

Stuffed Olives •
ORCH,RO QUEEN
Maraschino Cherries 3 J"~:· s1

lVI ,

'lt-oz.

eloaf

$100

37c

Birds Eye Frozen Buys!
COOL WHIP
TOPPING •.•• 9-or., 59c

..

BABY LIMAS
CAULIFLOWER
.
BRUSSEL SPROUTS ...................

3pkgs. 1
10·oz. $

:tf pkgs.

10·oL49c
pkg.

1

""OlSON C•NOIED"

Dill Pickle Chips

CHOCOLATE

Her$hey Syrup

"'""'· 59c
jar

AlP

Colombian Coffee

rooa;. PURE
COLO,.IIAN
COFFEE

'

1-lb.ggc
can.

-~-

·. ,.,_ , -~&gt;

&lt;·

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with ALL greeting
card companies. I call my parents " Mom and Dad ," as do
so many others , but I can ne ver find a card for an an niversary card with "Mom and Dad" on it. They say
"Mother..,.nd Father ," "Mom and Pop" or " Mother and
Dad" so please , g reetin ~ card artists and writers. give
us some " Mom and Dad ' cards .
When I am near a greeting card counter I always stop
and browse and often find the perfect card for a friend
or relative whose birthday or anniversary may be months
away but I buy it anyway . 1 paper clip such cards 10
the proper month on my calendar and if the month has
passed lor that year I clip it to December and then
transfer to the proper month when I get a new calendar
for the coming year.- NAOMI
DEAR POLLY - While
at my daughter's house I
was going to make mashed
potatoes and found she did
not have a potato masher.
'· .·
·. :.~·
I finally tried her wire
pastry blender and it did
a beautiful job- better than
a potato masher .
Paper clips are great to
use for holding small
things together while glue
sets.
My son used clear shoe polish to finish some picture
frames he had made out of scrap lumber and it looked
like lacquer.-MRS . J. K. S.
{NEWSP*'PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

Gift Exchange,
Party Planned
A Christmas party with a gift
exchange was planned Dec. 9 at
the home of Mrs . Marjorie
Bowen Thursday night when the
Willin~ Workers Class of the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church met at the home of Mrs.
Cordelia Bentz. The group also
agreed to order umbrellas and
rain bonnets to sell as a fundraising project.
A Thanksgiving theme was
carried out in the program with
Mrs. Beatrice Buck reading
scripture from Psalm 95. Mrs.
Delores Will read a poem and
each member gave a
Thanksgiving thought from the
Bible. There was group singing
of "Count Your Blessings" and
a Thanksgiving prayer by Miss
Frieda Leiving. Mrs . A~nes
Dixon won the wonder box
donated by Mrs. Buck.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Ethel
Smith, Mrs. Nancy Smith , Mrs .
Agnes Weeks, Mrs . Beulah
Utterback, Mrs . Brenda Filch,
and, Patty Edwards .

Health Club to
Treat Patients
Mrs. Fred Goeglein, Mrs .
Welby Whaley, and Mrs . Clifford Leifheit were appointed to
provide a treat for the residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary
in December when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club mel
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
W. A. Morgan.
The club made a contribution
to the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health Association.
Mrs.HaroldBlackstonandMrs.
George Skinner reported on the
sick in the community. A
Christmas party was set lor
Dec. !6.
Mrs .
Amos
Leonard
presented the program which
opened with Mrs . Lewis
Grueser reading the Thanksgiving proclamation. Mrs. Scott
Folmer read "First Aid Supplies ;" Mrs. George Skinner,
"Identifying Drug Users; .. Mrs.
William Grueser, "Bring Back
the House Call;" Mrs. William
Witte, "The Passing Scenes,"
and Mrs. William Folmer,
"Prayer of Thanksgiving."
The contest conducted by
Mrs. Lewis Grueser was won by
Mrs. Harold Blackston.
Refreshments were served to
the above and Mrs. Homer
Radford, Mrs. Hugh Bearhs,
Mrs. Mark Grueser, Mrs. Oliver
Clark, and Mrs. Jim Conkle.

CHESTER - Listen more,
give a~vice less, and your child
will be healthier mentally and
err otionally, said a team of
speakers
from the Southeastern
TUESDAY
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band Ohio Mental Health Center to
Boosters, 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, a,t the Chester P .T.A.
Miss Claudia Evans, R.M .,
high school, Racine.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter 186, OES, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Marie
Curd.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
post home . Members to take
towel bibs for hospital patients.
Junior members will meet at
the same time.
POMEROY American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 6:30p.m. turkey dinner . New
members to be guests. Members to·· take covered dish.
Turkey furnished.
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at temple to honor
Past Masters. All Master
Masons invited.
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, home of
Mrs. Robert Arnold. Auction of
homemade articles.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, 6:30 Tuesday ,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 hall.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, B: 15
Tuesday night, Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Susan Baer, cultural program
on Poetry in Music, Becky
Anderson and Jennifer Anderson, hostesses.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7:30Wednesday, at the hall.

A contribution was made to
the June Glaze family whose
home and furnishings were
extensively damaged by fire
recently by members of the
Helping Hands Missionary
Circle of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
During the recent meeting of
the group at the church,
possibilities of establishing a
"welcome wagon club" were
discussed, but action was
deferred.
The group agreed to purchase
small crosses to be used on the
Christmas baskets which will be
taken to the sick and shut-in of
the community and the
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary .
Mrs. Eleanor Hoover was
appointed to purchase the cloth
for the new communion scarves
and to make them. A layette
shower for Mrs. Delores Hawk
was announced for Nov. 27 and
the group voted to assist the
Young Adult Class with the
expenses.
It was noted that Mrs .
Mildred Sisson and Mrs. Eleanor Hoover are working .on
Christmas play to be presented
on Dec. 12. Cards were sent to
Dallas Lightfoot, a patient at

completion of the PTA manual
study course were Mrs. Barbara Tripp, Mrs . June Epple,
Mrs. Lucille Ridenour, Mrs.
Kathryn Windon, Mrs. Donna
Nelson .
Following a talk by Pat Wood
on the need for establishing a
seoul program in the Chester
area, the PTA voted to serve as
sponsor,
Avote of thanks was extended
to Mrs. Ethel Hart, Modern
Woodm en Insurance Co .
representative, for favors at the
Halloween parties.
A meeting of the executive
committee was announced for
1:30 p.m. on Dec. 2. There will
be no evening meeting of the
PTA in December. Religious
services will be held at the
school on Monday, Dec. 13, 2
p.m. and all parents are invited
to attend.
·
Hostesses for the January
meeting will be Mrs. Roy
Holter, Mrs. Louise Burke, Mrs.
membership contest was won Robert Shook, Mrs . John
by the first grade of Miss Chaney, Mrs. Grover White,
Mrs. Hayward Bissell, and
Carolyn Parker.
Herbert
Matheny.
Awarded ce rtifi cates for
against letting children handle
overwhelming, or major,
problems without assistance.
Although mental health is a
"personal thing," the speakers
suggested teachers can help by
being alert to detect an inability
to get along wi th others,
frequent depression or inability
to leHrn as signs of poor mental
health.
Ounn g the · recent meeting, · a
$25
cintribution was made to the
scholarship of the Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers. ll was reported lhal
the sick room project has been
completed with di sposa ble
sheets, pillow cases, curtains,
first aid supplies having been
provided . Four tether balls
have also been purchased, it
was noted.
The attendance award which
was changed from a book to $10
a meeting was won by Mrs.
Robinson 's third grade. A PTA

•'

Today's
Almanac

Second Nominations Held
Second nomination of officers
was held at a recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, attended by 26
members .
Nominated were Thelma
Farnsworth, outside sentinel;
Alice Curtis, inside sentinel;
Letha Woods, councilor;
Dorothy Lawson, junior past
councilor ; and Mary Jo Pooler,
warden. Enzy Newell, councilor, presided.
Mary K. Holte r ·IS horne from
the hospital and Mary Rose is ill
at home . The miscellaneous
committee announced that a
blanket will be sold at the next
meeting. Letha Woods thanked
tnose who visited her and sent
cards during her recent illness.

t

t
!

Cont¥ibut4on
MaUi,.]e
I"
"

bi1J
.f

C''UJ~ss t

-l&lt;

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A contri bution to the
ChristmassealsaleoftheMeigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Association has been made by
the Busy Bee Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Mrs .
Leora
Sigman,
president, opened the meeting
at the home of Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt with prayer.
Devotions by Mrs. Dana Hamm
. 1 ded h
d'
me u
t e rea mg of scriplure and a · meditation, "Give
Thanks for This is the Will of
God ." The group gave the
Lord's Prayer in unison and
sang the class song.
Plans were made for the

D-SIZE
BATTERIES

annual holiday dinner party to
be held at the church. Names
were drawn for a gift exchange.
Officers for 1972 were
nominated.
Members sang ''Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Harold Chase,
Mrs. Victor Grim, Mrs. Betty
Gilkey, Miss Kathryn Werner,
Mrs. Asa Jordan, and Mrs.
Golda Mourning. Refreshments
were
served by Mrs.
Houdashelt, Mrs. Jacob Turner,
Mrs. Mourning, and Mrs.
Charles Sauer, assisted by Miss
Freddie Houdashelt.

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It's

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REG. 7.88

1488
TABLE TENNIS TABLE
Fold-N-Roll

if:

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Fridays Only
The Drive- In Windowi&lt;
is Open
:
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
+:
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onttnuously)
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DRIVE-IN
BANKING +:~

if: Fridays.

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GOAL SET
:;::..:----......_

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3788

REG.
49.95

No n·glo re finish to p. T
lvr m o~ob i l • ty .

cos ier ~

Striped court lines .

FOlDS TO

MICHIGAN LADDER

22" WIDE

BANK "t 1
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lr

and SAVINGS

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POMEROY, OHIO
Member F Dl c
Member Federal
Reserve System

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TABLE TENNIS SET

788

SALE PRICE
UNIVfRSAl

FELT TOP
GAME TABLE

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***-***********~

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·

A- In ve nl eU in Bayonne,
Fran ce. 11 gets it s name
fro m Hw nanw of the city .

As a rule, only the large
single muscle which holds
the shell together is the part
of the scallop that is eaten .

fdld, HUNTII m&amp;JrMBALANCED WHEELS!

(HW1JI;ItlW,..
BEVELED EDGE

2888
Fold s /l ot. Felt

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w~er, SBn ls 8.

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KES TEll FURNITURE

. DOOR
MIRROR
16 "

.·.·..
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REG . 36.95

tfll ('/ ?
A- A bouq uet l'onsisting of

•'

CHILD'S WOODEN
TOY CHEST

6Q"

REG . i 1.95

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1688

REG. 19.95

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Don' t trud to luck! lrritoiin g, tiring,

Need a florist
a budding genius?

/): • ,, l1 / ·~

nerve-rackinq whct'l-unbolnnri" con lower

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~m aoth,

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WOODEN TABLE &amp; CHAIR SET

See Howard Well . Front End Spe.~~.alist.

V,w;e -fit for

REG.

u fREE

19.95

WHEEL BALANCE CHECK!

NEW

1688

FURNITURE

'349.95 '

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

$3s:oo Down- .
"Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

J99

12FOR

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Yellow
Pages

3 ROOMS

Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
Bernard Gilkey, also at
Veterans; Mrs. Sylvia Midkiff,
at the Holzer Medical Center,
and Ora Sinclair of Pomeroy,
Route 3.
Mrs. Tressie Hendricks
presided at the meeting which
opened with group singjllg of
"Close to Thee ." Mrs . Norma
Russell led in lhe responsive
reading, "The Triumph of the
Gospel" and had prayer.
Others attending were Mrs.
Ruby Rife and Becky, Mrs.
Vada Hazelton and Cynthia,
Mrs. Verna Hysell, Mrs. Bennie
Pickens, Mrs. Helen Miller,
Mrs. Evelyn Wood , and Mrs.
Frances Hysell.

By United Press lnternalional
Today is Monday , Nov . 22,
the 326lh day of 1971.
The moon is between its n •&gt;~'
phase and first quarter.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury , Venus, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Sagittarius .
French President Charles de
Gaulle was born Nov . 22, 1890.
On this day in history:
In 1852 the 2nd French
Empire gai ned recognition
A report on the recent friend- when more than seven million
persons voted to back the
ship meeting in Marietta was
given by Mrs. Erma Cleland. It regime of Emperor Napoleon
was noted thai Olan Genheimer lll.
replaced the windows in the
lodge hall . At the next meeting
quarterly birthdays will be ~**************\.
observed and potluck refreshA Thought 't
ments served.
if:
;
Attending besides those if:
For Today -l&lt;
named were Ada Morris, Mae +:
if:
Spencer, Ada Neutzling, Hattie +: A man has to li ve with f(
Frederick, Barbara Sargent,
hi mse lf, and he should see ~
Betty Roush, Mary Hayes , if:
+: good
to it compan
that he yalways ha s -l&lt;
~
Zelda Weber, Ada Van Meter, .
-l&lt;
Ethel Orr, Ada Bissell, Joe
-Charles Evans Hughes
Bissell, Dorothy Myers.. +:
if:
Elizabeth Wic~am, Mabel Van'· +:
if:
Meter, Margaret Tuttle, Opal
-l&lt;
Hollon, Zona Biggs, and Jean if: ·
Qul'ck,l
Summerfield.
+:
if:
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dred a re refe rred to .

The Mediterranean saffron
is the most expensive of all
spices . About 4,000 flowers
yield about one ounce of
commercial saffron .
The mandolin known and
played today owes its exact
form and proportions to Pasquale Vinaccia of Nap 1e s .
Italy , according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Mrs . Norma DeShang, a
psychiatric aide, and Mr. Jim
LePage, psychologis t, said
parents can contribute to good
mental health simp ly by
learning to understand how
children fee. They ca utioned

New Club Proposed

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
lo a problem. Wrlle Polly In care of Ibis newspaper.

00

PEAS, CORN, SPINACH,
FRENCH STYLE GREEN
Al10-oL $100
BEANS, MIXED YEGETAILES ...
INTERNATIONAL VEGETABLES,
HAWAIIAN VEGETAILES,
PARISIAN VEGETABLES .................

,. .".

exhibitor's experience, many
amusing, · humiliating, and
joyous events being reJated.
Mrs. Robert Lewis displayed
evergreens in preparation for'
the Christmas flower show.
Handcraft items including dried
apple dolls, driftwood plaques,
and tree ornaments made from
plastic glasses were displayed,
and techniques were given for
making each item.
'
Judging the crescent flower
arrangements on display was
·Mrs. Charles Hayes. The theme
was "Christmas in the Big
Bend."
A Christmas dinner will be
held on Dec. B at 6:30 p.m. at
Crow's Steak House with a
party to follow at the home of
Mrs. Terrell.

Social
Calendar

Child Mental Health Disc,ussed for PTA

•i

soo

I

MASON ·.
FURNITURE
Mason·.
Va.

Phone 992 -2174
East Main St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

DElPHOS BENDING

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO.

The Department Store
of Building Since 1915

'

'·

�'

8-Tile !:&gt;aUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-P&lt;merOY ;.o., Nov. 22, 1971

Day Care Bill Under Attacks

Laver and Rosewall
Prepare For Match
OHIO COLLEGE

Laver, who has won four
FOOTBALL RECORDS
By
Uliited Press International
tournamnets this year, wasn 't
Mid-Amer1can Conference
sure he could continue his
League All Games
mastery over Ashe at the start
WLTWLT
Toledo
5
0 0 II 0 0
of the match.
Bowling Green
1
'1t was a case or him serving
4 I 0
6 4 0
so well, " Laver said of his Western Michigan
2 3 0 7 3 0
early troubles . "his first
Miam
i
(serve) was a little wide and O'lio University2 J 0 7 3 0
his second was very wide. The
2 3 0 5 5 0
0 5 0
3 8 0
first one going away was Kent Str. te
Ohio
Conference
almost impossible to return .
WLTWLT
"But you can't go on hitting X -- Ohio Wes leyiln
6 0 0 8 1 0
the ball as hard as you can,"
Baldwin-Wallace
Laver said. "You'll hit yourself
4 I 0
9 1
out of form and he got out of Mount Union 3 I 0 7 2 00"
4 2 0 6 3 0
Hei delberg
his rhythm in the late games."
3 2 0 5 3 0
Ashe blamed the loss on his Woos fer
4 3 0 5 3 0
Deni son
volley .
Marie tta
3 3 0 4 5 0
"He's left handed and Yllt! Wittenb erg 2 2 0 5 4 0
2 4 0
3 6 0
start instinctively to do some- Otterbein
2 4 0 3 5 0
Ca pital
thing and have to change in Kenyon
I 4 0
3 6 0
midswing, " he said. "I knew Musk in gum I 5 0 I 8 0
0 4 0 0 8 0
what 1 was doi ng, but Oberlin
Big Ten
sometimes the ball didn't go in
League All Games
or go over the net.
WLTWLT
8 0 0 11 0 0
''This is the first time Mi ch iga n
Northwestern 6 3 0 7 4 0
Houston has seen this kind of Ohio
State
5 3 0 6 4 0
tennis on this type of surface Mi chigan Sta te
530 550
(Sporlfact)," Ashe said. "Most
of the people didn't know what
they were seeing. I thought the
tennis was at a very high level
By United Pre ss International
for a very long time .
East
"If the New York or Dartmouth 33 Prince ton 7
Wimbledon crowds would have Te mple 13 Vil lanova 13
seen it, they would have known, Penn St . 55 Pitl 18
Lehigh 48 Lafayette 19
but they didn't down here,'' Syracuse 28 West Vir 24
Ashe said . "A point here or a Ohio U. 30 Marshall 0
point there was the difference." Rutgers 28 Colgate 16
Cornell411 Pnne 13
Laver said he has played Boston Coli. 35 Ma ss 0
Rosewall more than 100 times Har vard 35 Yale 16
and he does not know who has Delaware 46 Bucknell 0
Edinboro 51. 14
won the most. Rosewall has West Chstr 35
Midwest
beaten Laver only once since Michiga n 10 Ohio St. 7
shots were so 1968 and Laver has an 8-1 edge Indiana 38 Purdue 31
North wes tern 28 Mich St. 7
he regularly hit in the last two years, including Minn esota 23 Wis 21
farthest from 3-1 this year.
lnd Centra l 17 Butler 17
· Illi nois 31 Iowa 0
became more
Kansas 7 Missouri 2
as the match
Iowa St. 54 Okla St. 0

HOUSTON (UPI) - Rod
Laver. tennis' first millionaire,
111d Ken Rosewall, the old man
of the net pros, began
preparations today for their
$50,000 match Friday. which
will determine the 1971 world
champion of professional tennis.
To make the finals, the two
litU~ A~stralians had to tame
the powerful serves of two of
the game's big men -Arthur
!\she or Miami and Tom Okker
of the Netherlands - in the
World Championship Tennis
(WCT) Tournament semifinals.
Laver beat Ashe 6-3, 1-6, 6-3,
6-3 in Sunday's semifinals
before 6,500 indoors at Hofheinz
Pavilion. It was the 12th
straight time Laver has beaten
Ashe. The Virginia native has
never defeated Laver.
Rosewall, 37, and a pro for 14
years, had an easier time with
Okker, who lost his big serve
late in the first set and his
volley in the final set. The
score was 6-3, 6-3, 6-1 - the
fourth straight time Rosewall
has defeated Okker since losing
to him in the semifinals in
Forest Hills in 1968.
"I couldn't do anything with
my serve," Okker said. "It
seemed to put me in trouble all
the time with his returns. I
tried to stay back and that
didn't work. "
Rosewall's uncanny placements kept Okker from charging the net, but even by staying
back Okker couldn't cover both
sidelines.
Rosewall's

accurate that
the sideline
Okker, who
demoralized
continued.
"I thought he eased up on his
serve," Rosewall said . "I could
get his shots fairly early and
come to the net. And I've been
serving a bit better the last two
days."

Rosewall's victory assured
him of $20,000 -the second
place money -and a total of
$106,677 for 1971, the second
straight year he has surpassed
the $100,000 mark. A triumph
over Laver would boost it
another $30,000 to $136,677.
Laver, by clinching the
$20,000 second place money,
raised his total earnings this
yea~· to $292,717 and his career
total to $1,006,947, the first
tennis player to earn more than
$1 million on the lour. Laver
didn't know it.
"ls that right?" he said when
he was told about it. "I haven't
kept a close check on that. It's
nice to know you're making
good money. It's great to be
playing well and winning so
many-tournamnets."

College Scores

Clark lnjurt:d

In Scrimmage
Coach Carl York's Fairland
Dragon~ rallied from a 20 point
deficit late in the fourth period
Saturday to nip Coach Jim
Foster 's North Gallia Pirates,
61-59 in a scrimmage . at
Fairland.
Coach Foster said today his
team shot 64 pet. from the field .
With a 20 point lead, Foster
inserted some new faces into
the lineup In order to find a sixth
and seventh man. Arthur Clark,
6--5 senior center, sustained a
minor ankle injury in the last
six minutes of action and never
reenetered the game.
Pat Stout, 5-10 senior guard,
paced the Pirate scoring attack
with 18 points. Clark had 16
rebounds before he left the
game. North Gallia will open its
1971-72 season Dec . 3.

Akron 7 Youngstown 0
Tol edo 41 Kent Sl6
South
M cNeese Sl. 20 SW . La. 10
Tennessee 21 Kentu cky 7
Nort h Carol in a 38 Duk e 0
N. Car . 5t. 31 Clemson 23
Virgin ia 29 Maryland 27
Citdadel47 Da vidson 7
Va nderbilt 10 Tampa 7
Wester n Ky. 24 Murray Fl. 10
West
Colorad o 55 Alr Force 17
Uta h 17 Br igham Young 15
Sout hern Ca ll UCLA 7
Utah St. 42 Ida ho 13
Sta nford 14 Ca li I 0
Oregon St. 30 Oregon 29
Wa shington 28 Wash St. 20
Nor thern Colo 25 Ada ms St . 15
Boi se St. 28 Coli. of Idaho 21
Weber St 28 Idaho Sl 21
Arizona St 49 San Jose S.t 6
San Diego St 39 Ariz 10
Portland St 36 Montana 29
Chi co St 53 Sonoma Sl 14

STARR ACTIVATED
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)Green Bay coach Dan Devine
named rookie Scott Hunter as
the sta rting quarter back
agai nst the Falcons in Atlanta
Monday night and said quarterback Bart Starr hod been
activated for the game .

Illin ois
Wisconsin
Purdue
Minne so ta
Indiana
Iowa

5
3
3
3

3
5
5
5
i 6
I 8
Others

0
0
0
0
0
0

Akron
w :lminqton
x - Cincinnat i
Ashland
Findlay
Defiance
Day ton
John Carroll
Cen tra l State
Bluffton
Case Western Re serVe
Ohio Northern
You11gslown State
Hiram

WASHINGTON (UP!) --Con5 6 0 servatives in Congress and
4 6 1 ocross the country are mobiliz3 7 0 ing to try to kill a proposed
6 I
. 3 8 0 child day care center plan that
1 10 0 they lear will lead to "collectivized child raising·• reminiscent
WLT
8 2 0 of the Nazi youth movement.
6 J 0
"Conservatives are uniting on
6 4 0 this as never before," said Rep.
6 4 0
6 4 0 John Ashbrook, R.Ohio. "School
5 ' 0 busing didn't get this much

'

5 6 0
4

5 0

3 5 0
J 6 0
3

6

0

3 6 0
2 6
1 7

Xavier
1 9
X - one. game remaining

0
0

o

Johnson
Excited
After Win

action."

'

child could be enrolled without
parental consent.
One amendment says nothing
in the bill "shall be construed
or applied in such a manner as
to infringe upon or usurp
the moral and legal rights
and responsibilities of parents
or guardians with respect to the
moral, mental, emotional or
physical development of their
children."
Another specifies that "no
child shall be subject to any
research or experimentation
under this act, other than
routine testing and normal
program evaluation." .
The conservative publication,
"Human Events," has begun an
editorial campaign against the
hili. The American Conservative Union has urged citizens to
flood Congress and the White

The objective of a nationwide
letter-writing campaign urging
a presidential veto is a
provision in the $5 ' biliion
authorization bili for the Office
of Economic Opportunity that
would finance day care .center
offering health, educational and
nutritional services free for
needy children and at a fee for
youngsters from more affluent
families .
The compromise bill, approved by House..S.nate negotiKEITH GOBLE FORD
ators, authorizes $100 million in
BOWLING LEAGUE
spending for the voluntary child
care program this year and up
Standings week ol November
to $2 billion in the 1972-73 fiscal 16. 1971.
Team
W. L.
year.
No.6
62 26
If the measure clears Con- No. 4
60 28
gress, it faces a possible veto No. 10
50 38
No.
13
50 38
by President Nixon, not on the
No. II
48 &lt;10
basis of the conservatives' No.3
46 42
arguments but because the No.8
46 42
No.
2
43 45
child care plan might undo his
No.5
42 46
welfare reform proposal • to No. 7
42 46
provide help for working No. 9
42 46
31 57
mothers. The OEO provision No. 14
12
30 58
would provide free day care No.
No. 1
24 64
services for non-working moth- On Nov . 16, Team No.3 took 6
ers as well as those with jobs. points from Team No. 6. Stelle
Carter was high for Team 3 with
Sen. James Buckley , the 482
pins, and Don Horan was
Republican-Conservative from high for Team 6 w ith 520 pins.
Team No. 10 took 6 points
New York., said it "may prove
from
Team No . 2. Paul Joyal
to be one of the most deeply was high
for Team No. 10 with
radical steps ever taken by .470 pins, and Jack Mink was
Congress" and won approval of high for Team No. 2 with 489
amendments stating that no pi ns.

House with letters of protest.
Chapters of a new "Emergency
Committee for Children" have
sprung up ln many states.
Ashbrook said the chlld care
plan is "a giant step down the
road toward a totalitarian
state."
Rep. Durward G. Hall, R-Mo.,
said: "I think it is antiAmerican in concept and
tradition. It Is a question of
collectivized child raising."
"This is certainly reminiscent
of the Nazi youth movement; in
fact it goes far beyond Hitler's
wlldest dreams of the most
outlandish of the Communist
plans," said Rep. John Rarick,
0-La.
But the chief sponsor of the
House plan, Rep. John Brademas, 0-lnd., stressed the day
care centers would be strictly

I

.

I

From Superiors USDA Choice Beef

G·
R
OUND
'

p•11111••••••11111

.

to R'lant DolawoodTree
1:&gt;
The Christmas party was set
lor Dec. 21 at the home of Mrs.
Carpenter. There will be a gift
exchange. Mrs. Carpenter led in
the club poem and prayer to
open the meeting. Mrs. Grimm,
devotional leader, read a
portion of Psalm 26 and gave
two readings,

11

Make 49 payments, SOc
to $10.00 and we make
the

Stew Beef••••••••••••

50TH
Me~

216

E. 2nd,

SIRLOIN STEAK

lb.

lb

Member Federal Home Loon
Bank.

Polish Sausage

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loon insurance Corp. Ali
accounts insured up to

$2(1,000.00.

lb.

1
•••••• ~••59~

Open Thanksgiving Day 10: 00-6: 00

Wieners •••••••••••••••••••• ~. 59
lb

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

~

SATURDAY ONLY!

FRIDAY ONLY!

FAVORITE

Slic. Bologna ••••••••••••••• 39~
Fairmont Ice Cream
Cherry Nut, Maple Nut, Vanilla. etc.
l&gt;~ULAR 99c-~ GAL CAR·

,

. I

-~

N

LARGE SIZE

POTATO CHIPS

5loaf
pkg.

BREAD
Harris Pwnpkln &amp; Mince

MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

Reg. 79c
SPECIAL

PIES

Pomeroy

.

DAN DEE
REG. 59'
TWIN PACK

,

'

Elm Tree Frozen

FURNRURE

69~

'\

Scol Pride

gal.
only

ICE MILK

$

lvs.
for

BREAD

lb.

Thanksgiving Dairy Buys!

FOUND
AT

Half or
Whole

CHOPPED

.
5
$1
Neck Bones...... ·

The Athens County
Savings &amp; L.. n Co.
296 second st.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ARE

BAKER

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

Budget Bacon ...4 lb. $1

Co. Branch

amER
VALUES

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9-0ul At S

Semi-Boneless

89~

SUPERIORS

SHIRt
FINISHING

Robinson's Ceaners

lb.

BONELESS

"IT'S TRUE"---

and "God Met Me."

SUPERIORS

lb.

.

My Garden,"

Use Our Free Parking Lot

lb.

Ground Chuck ••••••

Team No. 13 took 6 points

round from fellow AtlantanC/ub
Ralph Johnston to wm the
tourney on the extra hole .
Both men had finished LETART FALLS - A
regula lion play with identical 72 dogwood tree will be planted at
-hole scores of 274, 10 under the Letart Cemetery b• the
par , in the $35,000 event played Bend 0' the River Garder, Club .
at the Cape Fear Country Club. The planting is a part .of the
Johnson birdied the first hole club's cemetery beaullficallon
of the playoff, while Johnston project, started several months
could manage only a par four. ago. Meeting recently at the
Johnson had been lour holes home of Mrs. Andrew Cross, the
ahead of Johnston at the start of club members heard highlights
Sunday 's play, having carded a of the Region 11 meeting held in
54-hole total of 204, which had Gallipolis from Mrs. Robert
put him in a tie with Deane Kuhn, Meigs. County co.ntact
Beman at the end of Saturday''s chairman, Mrs. Bert Grumn,
round. Beman finished five and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
strokes of! the pace with a 279 The holiday flower show of
total.
the county clubs was discussed
Johnson toured the course and several members will be
with a one-under-par 70 Sunday entering classes. The show will
to earn the right to the playoff. be staged Saturday and Sunday
Ron Funseth and Terry at Meigs High School. Mrs.
Wilcox both finished with nine- Kuhn and Mrs. Carpenter also
under-par 275 totals to tie lor noted that they had attended the
third place. Funseth fired a 67 Rutland Garden Club nower
Sunday while Wilcox came in show.
with a 69.
•

NOLIMIT!

BEEF·······················
79~

Local Bowling

WILMINGTON , N.C. (UP!)
-George Johnson of Atlanta
said he was "pretty excited"
after winning his first pro-tour
golf tournament Sunday but
said he had other things to think
about today.
"Now I just want to qualify
for the Heritage Open," he told
newsmen after collecting $7,000
first place money for the Azalea
Open , whic)l he won with a 15fool putt on the first hole or a
sudden-&lt;leath playoff.
Though it was his first win, it
was only the second-largest
che ck of his professional
career. He collected $50 more
earlier this month when he
finished fourth in the Kaiser
Open .
Johnson withstood chilling
winds and a sizzling 66 final

Hens, Fryers, Hams, Oysters

Swift's Butterball Turkeys; Welker's Fresh Turkeys, Roasti

:·

A liberal spokesman who
helped draft the Senate measure and asked not be
identified, said, "the conservatives have a fear that we're
giving up our children to the
slate and that the kids will be
guinea pigs. It's a kooky fear.
.It's like fluoridation ."

from Team No . 7. Wayne
Shaver was high for Team No .
13 with 476 pins and Kerm
Malone was high tor Team No.7
with 417 pins .
Team No. 8 fook 8 points from
Team No. 12. Charlie Neal was
high tor Team No . 8 with 578
pins and Jim Isaac was high for
Team No. 12 with 428 pins .
Team ·No. 11 took 8 points
from Team No. 5. John Evans
was high for Team No. 11 with
505 pins and Ralph Johnston
was high for Team No. 5 with
417 pins.
Team No. 9 took 8 points from
Team No. 14 by forfeit. Olen
Neal tsub) was high lor Team
No. 14 with 524 pins .
Team No. 4 split 8 points with
Team No. I. Dick Taylor was
high for Team No. 4 with 518
pins and Dwight Unger was
high tor Team No. I with 481
pins .
.
High single game tor the
ladles for the eV"enlng was" 186
pins held by Sheryl Bush and tor
the men was 213 pins held by
Charlie Neal.

·• •

,

ij
:, 1
J

vohmtary. "Nobody wants to
conunand mothers and lathers
to have their children particlpate in these programs," he
said.

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 22,1971

59~
49~

S,f~CJ4L

CARNATION

HOT COCOA N~X

HOFFMAN HOUSE

-Fairmont Egg Nog
Quart 59~

89~

..

DILL PICKLES
quart ~r

49e
Get Big Dollar's Worth!

HOLSUM
Brown &amp; Serve

3
CONVENIENT
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU NOV. 27
BBY

21Jz
SIZE

59~

AT RACINE
PlAINS
LYONS MARKEr

·AT RllllMD
RllllAND DEPT. STDRE

FLORIDA NEW CROP

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Bunch

3.

for

'

SUPERIORS BRAND

DAIRY SPECIAL

With $7.50 or More Purchase
Excluding Hams and Turkeys

FULLY COOKED

Best Grade

TEEN QUEEN

Corn

W.K.

or

c.s.

2~~~s35e
7

oz.

B

PURE
EGGNOG

Qt. sg~

Nice-N'Iite

1
15oz.

OCEAN SPRAY

GOLDEN ISLE

.

RIGHT
LIMIT

QUANTITIES

GINGER AL£, TONIC MIX,
WHISKEY SOUR, VODKA MIX.·
TOM COLLINS MIX

e·

MIXED NUTS ...........................~~:59
MIRACLE MARGARINE:.~~~~~~....2~~~·. 69e

28 oz.
bots.

89~

HOLSUM

Golden Ripe

Choice Fruit

00

lb.

4 PKGS.S'l

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lOlSE··
CO~F~FE!oE ·
Expires 11·27-11

MIX OR MATCH

SOUTHERN YAMS

5

lb.

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY. A_lO~OZ. JAR OF

10 OZ. JAR QIILY

WHOLE KERNEL CORN
GREEN BEANS
SHELL OUT BEANS
SPINACH - PEAS

Throw-Away Bottles

BIRDSEYE COOL WHIP

AT_Big 3 Mkts.

PAN ROLLS'

Scot Lad Canned
Goods Values!

BANANAS

MIXERS

RESERVED
TO

DESSERT

CROUTETTES..................... ?.~. 3.5 e CO'ITAGE · 29~
CHEESE
CRANBERRY SAUCE....... 3 ;~~e 89 ~ ...Bii!Oi~iiiiiiiKE_R_YB-U-YS..t
KELLOGG

CW~ole .

•

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(SEMI BONELESS)

$.1.00

SHASTA

BANQUn
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R~ d Grapes ......lb:. 250

F;R

$1 09 ·

cans
for

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$

SHASTA CAN

POP

1

10 cans

SCOT LAD

25e

Cranberries......1 ~:.29°

FOIL
25 Ft. Rolls

WAID CROSS SONS

PRODUCE

Big

ALUMINUM

•

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LOCATIONS

"CLOSED
THANKSGIVING
DAY"

SCOT LAD

3 loaves

10
cans

'1
Puddings 10 bxs. S1
10 $
BREAD MIX bxs. 1
BISCUITS

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MY-T-FINE

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10 . ,
POTATOES Pk&amp;s.
BORDEN'S INSTANT

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY AJQ_OZ. JAR OF

· · Instant
MAXWELL HOUSE®
COFFEE

COUPON

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AT MARK V STORE

10

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REG. 1.59

1.19

19

10 oz . ~
-

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.

I

With ·

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Without Coupon 1.59
Good
WITH COUPON

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SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to ·10 • Sun.
· ·

We Accept Federal Food Stumps
PHONE-: 992·3480
Corner Mill anG Second Sts. " We Reserve The Right To L imit OuontitiO'S:.: Mlll.QUPORT, o.-,

I,

I.

'

.

.

�'

8-Tile !:&gt;aUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-P&lt;merOY ;.o., Nov. 22, 1971

Day Care Bill Under Attacks

Laver and Rosewall
Prepare For Match
OHIO COLLEGE

Laver, who has won four
FOOTBALL RECORDS
By
Uliited Press International
tournamnets this year, wasn 't
Mid-Amer1can Conference
sure he could continue his
League All Games
mastery over Ashe at the start
WLTWLT
Toledo
5
0 0 II 0 0
of the match.
Bowling Green
1
'1t was a case or him serving
4 I 0
6 4 0
so well, " Laver said of his Western Michigan
2 3 0 7 3 0
early troubles . "his first
Miam
i
(serve) was a little wide and O'lio University2 J 0 7 3 0
his second was very wide. The
2 3 0 5 5 0
0 5 0
3 8 0
first one going away was Kent Str. te
Ohio
Conference
almost impossible to return .
WLTWLT
"But you can't go on hitting X -- Ohio Wes leyiln
6 0 0 8 1 0
the ball as hard as you can,"
Baldwin-Wallace
Laver said. "You'll hit yourself
4 I 0
9 1
out of form and he got out of Mount Union 3 I 0 7 2 00"
4 2 0 6 3 0
Hei delberg
his rhythm in the late games."
3 2 0 5 3 0
Ashe blamed the loss on his Woos fer
4 3 0 5 3 0
Deni son
volley .
Marie tta
3 3 0 4 5 0
"He's left handed and Yllt! Wittenb erg 2 2 0 5 4 0
2 4 0
3 6 0
start instinctively to do some- Otterbein
2 4 0 3 5 0
Ca pital
thing and have to change in Kenyon
I 4 0
3 6 0
midswing, " he said. "I knew Musk in gum I 5 0 I 8 0
0 4 0 0 8 0
what 1 was doi ng, but Oberlin
Big Ten
sometimes the ball didn't go in
League All Games
or go over the net.
WLTWLT
8 0 0 11 0 0
''This is the first time Mi ch iga n
Northwestern 6 3 0 7 4 0
Houston has seen this kind of Ohio
State
5 3 0 6 4 0
tennis on this type of surface Mi chigan Sta te
530 550
(Sporlfact)," Ashe said. "Most
of the people didn't know what
they were seeing. I thought the
tennis was at a very high level
By United Pre ss International
for a very long time .
East
"If the New York or Dartmouth 33 Prince ton 7
Wimbledon crowds would have Te mple 13 Vil lanova 13
seen it, they would have known, Penn St . 55 Pitl 18
Lehigh 48 Lafayette 19
but they didn't down here,'' Syracuse 28 West Vir 24
Ashe said . "A point here or a Ohio U. 30 Marshall 0
point there was the difference." Rutgers 28 Colgate 16
Cornell411 Pnne 13
Laver said he has played Boston Coli. 35 Ma ss 0
Rosewall more than 100 times Har vard 35 Yale 16
and he does not know who has Delaware 46 Bucknell 0
Edinboro 51. 14
won the most. Rosewall has West Chstr 35
Midwest
beaten Laver only once since Michiga n 10 Ohio St. 7
shots were so 1968 and Laver has an 8-1 edge Indiana 38 Purdue 31
North wes tern 28 Mich St. 7
he regularly hit in the last two years, including Minn esota 23 Wis 21
farthest from 3-1 this year.
lnd Centra l 17 Butler 17
· Illi nois 31 Iowa 0
became more
Kansas 7 Missouri 2
as the match
Iowa St. 54 Okla St. 0

HOUSTON (UPI) - Rod
Laver. tennis' first millionaire,
111d Ken Rosewall, the old man
of the net pros, began
preparations today for their
$50,000 match Friday. which
will determine the 1971 world
champion of professional tennis.
To make the finals, the two
litU~ A~stralians had to tame
the powerful serves of two of
the game's big men -Arthur
!\she or Miami and Tom Okker
of the Netherlands - in the
World Championship Tennis
(WCT) Tournament semifinals.
Laver beat Ashe 6-3, 1-6, 6-3,
6-3 in Sunday's semifinals
before 6,500 indoors at Hofheinz
Pavilion. It was the 12th
straight time Laver has beaten
Ashe. The Virginia native has
never defeated Laver.
Rosewall, 37, and a pro for 14
years, had an easier time with
Okker, who lost his big serve
late in the first set and his
volley in the final set. The
score was 6-3, 6-3, 6-1 - the
fourth straight time Rosewall
has defeated Okker since losing
to him in the semifinals in
Forest Hills in 1968.
"I couldn't do anything with
my serve," Okker said. "It
seemed to put me in trouble all
the time with his returns. I
tried to stay back and that
didn't work. "
Rosewall's uncanny placements kept Okker from charging the net, but even by staying
back Okker couldn't cover both
sidelines.
Rosewall's

accurate that
the sideline
Okker, who
demoralized
continued.
"I thought he eased up on his
serve," Rosewall said . "I could
get his shots fairly early and
come to the net. And I've been
serving a bit better the last two
days."

Rosewall's victory assured
him of $20,000 -the second
place money -and a total of
$106,677 for 1971, the second
straight year he has surpassed
the $100,000 mark. A triumph
over Laver would boost it
another $30,000 to $136,677.
Laver, by clinching the
$20,000 second place money,
raised his total earnings this
yea~· to $292,717 and his career
total to $1,006,947, the first
tennis player to earn more than
$1 million on the lour. Laver
didn't know it.
"ls that right?" he said when
he was told about it. "I haven't
kept a close check on that. It's
nice to know you're making
good money. It's great to be
playing well and winning so
many-tournamnets."

College Scores

Clark lnjurt:d

In Scrimmage
Coach Carl York's Fairland
Dragon~ rallied from a 20 point
deficit late in the fourth period
Saturday to nip Coach Jim
Foster 's North Gallia Pirates,
61-59 in a scrimmage . at
Fairland.
Coach Foster said today his
team shot 64 pet. from the field .
With a 20 point lead, Foster
inserted some new faces into
the lineup In order to find a sixth
and seventh man. Arthur Clark,
6--5 senior center, sustained a
minor ankle injury in the last
six minutes of action and never
reenetered the game.
Pat Stout, 5-10 senior guard,
paced the Pirate scoring attack
with 18 points. Clark had 16
rebounds before he left the
game. North Gallia will open its
1971-72 season Dec . 3.

Akron 7 Youngstown 0
Tol edo 41 Kent Sl6
South
M cNeese Sl. 20 SW . La. 10
Tennessee 21 Kentu cky 7
Nort h Carol in a 38 Duk e 0
N. Car . 5t. 31 Clemson 23
Virgin ia 29 Maryland 27
Citdadel47 Da vidson 7
Va nderbilt 10 Tampa 7
Wester n Ky. 24 Murray Fl. 10
West
Colorad o 55 Alr Force 17
Uta h 17 Br igham Young 15
Sout hern Ca ll UCLA 7
Utah St. 42 Ida ho 13
Sta nford 14 Ca li I 0
Oregon St. 30 Oregon 29
Wa shington 28 Wash St. 20
Nor thern Colo 25 Ada ms St . 15
Boi se St. 28 Coli. of Idaho 21
Weber St 28 Idaho Sl 21
Arizona St 49 San Jose S.t 6
San Diego St 39 Ariz 10
Portland St 36 Montana 29
Chi co St 53 Sonoma Sl 14

STARR ACTIVATED
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)Green Bay coach Dan Devine
named rookie Scott Hunter as
the sta rting quarter back
agai nst the Falcons in Atlanta
Monday night and said quarterback Bart Starr hod been
activated for the game .

Illin ois
Wisconsin
Purdue
Minne so ta
Indiana
Iowa

5
3
3
3

3
5
5
5
i 6
I 8
Others

0
0
0
0
0
0

Akron
w :lminqton
x - Cincinnat i
Ashland
Findlay
Defiance
Day ton
John Carroll
Cen tra l State
Bluffton
Case Western Re serVe
Ohio Northern
You11gslown State
Hiram

WASHINGTON (UP!) --Con5 6 0 servatives in Congress and
4 6 1 ocross the country are mobiliz3 7 0 ing to try to kill a proposed
6 I
. 3 8 0 child day care center plan that
1 10 0 they lear will lead to "collectivized child raising·• reminiscent
WLT
8 2 0 of the Nazi youth movement.
6 J 0
"Conservatives are uniting on
6 4 0 this as never before," said Rep.
6 4 0
6 4 0 John Ashbrook, R.Ohio. "School
5 ' 0 busing didn't get this much

'

5 6 0
4

5 0

3 5 0
J 6 0
3

6

0

3 6 0
2 6
1 7

Xavier
1 9
X - one. game remaining

0
0

o

Johnson
Excited
After Win

action."

'

child could be enrolled without
parental consent.
One amendment says nothing
in the bill "shall be construed
or applied in such a manner as
to infringe upon or usurp
the moral and legal rights
and responsibilities of parents
or guardians with respect to the
moral, mental, emotional or
physical development of their
children."
Another specifies that "no
child shall be subject to any
research or experimentation
under this act, other than
routine testing and normal
program evaluation." .
The conservative publication,
"Human Events," has begun an
editorial campaign against the
hili. The American Conservative Union has urged citizens to
flood Congress and the White

The objective of a nationwide
letter-writing campaign urging
a presidential veto is a
provision in the $5 ' biliion
authorization bili for the Office
of Economic Opportunity that
would finance day care .center
offering health, educational and
nutritional services free for
needy children and at a fee for
youngsters from more affluent
families .
The compromise bill, approved by House..S.nate negotiKEITH GOBLE FORD
ators, authorizes $100 million in
BOWLING LEAGUE
spending for the voluntary child
care program this year and up
Standings week ol November
to $2 billion in the 1972-73 fiscal 16. 1971.
Team
W. L.
year.
No.6
62 26
If the measure clears Con- No. 4
60 28
gress, it faces a possible veto No. 10
50 38
No.
13
50 38
by President Nixon, not on the
No. II
48 &lt;10
basis of the conservatives' No.3
46 42
arguments but because the No.8
46 42
No.
2
43 45
child care plan might undo his
No.5
42 46
welfare reform proposal • to No. 7
42 46
provide help for working No. 9
42 46
31 57
mothers. The OEO provision No. 14
12
30 58
would provide free day care No.
No. 1
24 64
services for non-working moth- On Nov . 16, Team No.3 took 6
ers as well as those with jobs. points from Team No. 6. Stelle
Carter was high for Team 3 with
Sen. James Buckley , the 482
pins, and Don Horan was
Republican-Conservative from high for Team 6 w ith 520 pins.
Team No. 10 took 6 points
New York., said it "may prove
from
Team No . 2. Paul Joyal
to be one of the most deeply was high
for Team No. 10 with
radical steps ever taken by .470 pins, and Jack Mink was
Congress" and won approval of high for Team No. 2 with 489
amendments stating that no pi ns.

House with letters of protest.
Chapters of a new "Emergency
Committee for Children" have
sprung up ln many states.
Ashbrook said the chlld care
plan is "a giant step down the
road toward a totalitarian
state."
Rep. Durward G. Hall, R-Mo.,
said: "I think it is antiAmerican in concept and
tradition. It Is a question of
collectivized child raising."
"This is certainly reminiscent
of the Nazi youth movement; in
fact it goes far beyond Hitler's
wlldest dreams of the most
outlandish of the Communist
plans," said Rep. John Rarick,
0-La.
But the chief sponsor of the
House plan, Rep. John Brademas, 0-lnd., stressed the day
care centers would be strictly

I

.

I

From Superiors USDA Choice Beef

G·
R
OUND
'

p•11111••••••11111

.

to R'lant DolawoodTree
1:&gt;
The Christmas party was set
lor Dec. 21 at the home of Mrs.
Carpenter. There will be a gift
exchange. Mrs. Carpenter led in
the club poem and prayer to
open the meeting. Mrs. Grimm,
devotional leader, read a
portion of Psalm 26 and gave
two readings,

11

Make 49 payments, SOc
to $10.00 and we make
the

Stew Beef••••••••••••

50TH
Me~

216

E. 2nd,

SIRLOIN STEAK

lb.

lb

Member Federal Home Loon
Bank.

Polish Sausage

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loon insurance Corp. Ali
accounts insured up to

$2(1,000.00.

lb.

1
•••••• ~••59~

Open Thanksgiving Day 10: 00-6: 00

Wieners •••••••••••••••••••• ~. 59
lb

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

~

SATURDAY ONLY!

FRIDAY ONLY!

FAVORITE

Slic. Bologna ••••••••••••••• 39~
Fairmont Ice Cream
Cherry Nut, Maple Nut, Vanilla. etc.
l&gt;~ULAR 99c-~ GAL CAR·

,

. I

-~

N

LARGE SIZE

POTATO CHIPS

5loaf
pkg.

BREAD
Harris Pwnpkln &amp; Mince

MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

Reg. 79c
SPECIAL

PIES

Pomeroy

.

DAN DEE
REG. 59'
TWIN PACK

,

'

Elm Tree Frozen

FURNRURE

69~

'\

Scol Pride

gal.
only

ICE MILK

$

lvs.
for

BREAD

lb.

Thanksgiving Dairy Buys!

FOUND
AT

Half or
Whole

CHOPPED

.
5
$1
Neck Bones...... ·

The Athens County
Savings &amp; L.. n Co.
296 second st.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ARE

BAKER

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

Budget Bacon ...4 lb. $1

Co. Branch

amER
VALUES

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9-0ul At S

Semi-Boneless

89~

SUPERIORS

SHIRt
FINISHING

Robinson's Ceaners

lb.

BONELESS

"IT'S TRUE"---

and "God Met Me."

SUPERIORS

lb.

.

My Garden,"

Use Our Free Parking Lot

lb.

Ground Chuck ••••••

Team No. 13 took 6 points

round from fellow AtlantanC/ub
Ralph Johnston to wm the
tourney on the extra hole .
Both men had finished LETART FALLS - A
regula lion play with identical 72 dogwood tree will be planted at
-hole scores of 274, 10 under the Letart Cemetery b• the
par , in the $35,000 event played Bend 0' the River Garder, Club .
at the Cape Fear Country Club. The planting is a part .of the
Johnson birdied the first hole club's cemetery beaullficallon
of the playoff, while Johnston project, started several months
could manage only a par four. ago. Meeting recently at the
Johnson had been lour holes home of Mrs. Andrew Cross, the
ahead of Johnston at the start of club members heard highlights
Sunday 's play, having carded a of the Region 11 meeting held in
54-hole total of 204, which had Gallipolis from Mrs. Robert
put him in a tie with Deane Kuhn, Meigs. County co.ntact
Beman at the end of Saturday''s chairman, Mrs. Bert Grumn,
round. Beman finished five and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
strokes of! the pace with a 279 The holiday flower show of
total.
the county clubs was discussed
Johnson toured the course and several members will be
with a one-under-par 70 Sunday entering classes. The show will
to earn the right to the playoff. be staged Saturday and Sunday
Ron Funseth and Terry at Meigs High School. Mrs.
Wilcox both finished with nine- Kuhn and Mrs. Carpenter also
under-par 275 totals to tie lor noted that they had attended the
third place. Funseth fired a 67 Rutland Garden Club nower
Sunday while Wilcox came in show.
with a 69.
•

NOLIMIT!

BEEF·······················
79~

Local Bowling

WILMINGTON , N.C. (UP!)
-George Johnson of Atlanta
said he was "pretty excited"
after winning his first pro-tour
golf tournament Sunday but
said he had other things to think
about today.
"Now I just want to qualify
for the Heritage Open," he told
newsmen after collecting $7,000
first place money for the Azalea
Open , whic)l he won with a 15fool putt on the first hole or a
sudden-&lt;leath playoff.
Though it was his first win, it
was only the second-largest
che ck of his professional
career. He collected $50 more
earlier this month when he
finished fourth in the Kaiser
Open .
Johnson withstood chilling
winds and a sizzling 66 final

Hens, Fryers, Hams, Oysters

Swift's Butterball Turkeys; Welker's Fresh Turkeys, Roasti

:·

A liberal spokesman who
helped draft the Senate measure and asked not be
identified, said, "the conservatives have a fear that we're
giving up our children to the
slate and that the kids will be
guinea pigs. It's a kooky fear.
.It's like fluoridation ."

from Team No . 7. Wayne
Shaver was high for Team No .
13 with 476 pins and Kerm
Malone was high tor Team No.7
with 417 pins .
Team No. 8 fook 8 points from
Team No. 12. Charlie Neal was
high tor Team No . 8 with 578
pins and Jim Isaac was high for
Team No. 12 with 428 pins .
Team ·No. 11 took 8 points
from Team No. 5. John Evans
was high for Team No. 11 with
505 pins and Ralph Johnston
was high for Team No. 5 with
417 pins.
Team No. 9 took 8 points from
Team No. 14 by forfeit. Olen
Neal tsub) was high lor Team
No. 14 with 524 pins .
Team No. 4 split 8 points with
Team No. I. Dick Taylor was
high for Team No. 4 with 518
pins and Dwight Unger was
high tor Team No. I with 481
pins .
.
High single game tor the
ladles for the eV"enlng was" 186
pins held by Sheryl Bush and tor
the men was 213 pins held by
Charlie Neal.

·• •

,

ij
:, 1
J

vohmtary. "Nobody wants to
conunand mothers and lathers
to have their children particlpate in these programs," he
said.

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 22,1971

59~
49~

S,f~CJ4L

CARNATION

HOT COCOA N~X

HOFFMAN HOUSE

-Fairmont Egg Nog
Quart 59~

89~

..

DILL PICKLES
quart ~r

49e
Get Big Dollar's Worth!

HOLSUM
Brown &amp; Serve

3
CONVENIENT
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU NOV. 27
BBY

21Jz
SIZE

59~

AT RACINE
PlAINS
LYONS MARKEr

·AT RllllMD
RllllAND DEPT. STDRE

FLORIDA NEW CROP

CELERY
Bunch

3.

for

'

SUPERIORS BRAND

DAIRY SPECIAL

With $7.50 or More Purchase
Excluding Hams and Turkeys

FULLY COOKED

Best Grade

TEEN QUEEN

Corn

W.K.

or

c.s.

2~~~s35e
7

oz.

B

PURE
EGGNOG

Qt. sg~

Nice-N'Iite

1
15oz.

OCEAN SPRAY

GOLDEN ISLE

.

RIGHT
LIMIT

QUANTITIES

GINGER AL£, TONIC MIX,
WHISKEY SOUR, VODKA MIX.·
TOM COLLINS MIX

e·

MIXED NUTS ...........................~~:59
MIRACLE MARGARINE:.~~~~~~....2~~~·. 69e

28 oz.
bots.

89~

HOLSUM

Golden Ripe

Choice Fruit

00

lb.

4 PKGS.S'l

1111111
.
lOlSE··
CO~F~FE!oE ·
Expires 11·27-11

MIX OR MATCH

SOUTHERN YAMS

5

lb.

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY. A_lO~OZ. JAR OF

10 OZ. JAR QIILY

WHOLE KERNEL CORN
GREEN BEANS
SHELL OUT BEANS
SPINACH - PEAS

Throw-Away Bottles

BIRDSEYE COOL WHIP

AT_Big 3 Mkts.

PAN ROLLS'

Scot Lad Canned
Goods Values!

BANANAS

MIXERS

RESERVED
TO

DESSERT

CROUTETTES..................... ?.~. 3.5 e CO'ITAGE · 29~
CHEESE
CRANBERRY SAUCE....... 3 ;~~e 89 ~ ...Bii!Oi~iiiiiiiKE_R_YB-U-YS..t
KELLOGG

CW~ole .

•

~~EAM ~~a··sge

(SEMI BONELESS)

$.1.00

SHASTA

BANQUn
. PUMPKIN PIES

R~ d Grapes ......lb:. 250

F;R

$1 09 ·

cans
for

•1

$

SHASTA CAN

POP

1

10 cans

SCOT LAD

25e

Cranberries......1 ~:.29°

FOIL
25 Ft. Rolls

WAID CROSS SONS

PRODUCE

Big

ALUMINUM

•

'

I '

LOCATIONS

"CLOSED
THANKSGIVING
DAY"

SCOT LAD

3 loaves

10
cans

'1
Puddings 10 bxs. S1
10 $
BREAD MIX bxs. 1
BISCUITS

.

'"\

MY-T-FINE

JIFFY CORN

10 . ,
POTATOES Pk&amp;s.
BORDEN'S INSTANT

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY AJQ_OZ. JAR OF

· · Instant
MAXWELL HOUSE®
COFFEE

COUPON

· folp~s Instant

COFFEE

AT MARK V STORE

10

OZ. JAR ONLY
REG. 1.59

1.19

19

10 oz . ~
-

Jar

.

I

With ·

coupon

Without Coupon 1.59
Good
WITH COUPON

Dlllr.ftiiPnN PJ'I JIMU ,IJIFtl EXPIRES 1?..1~71

~AI

Your

rk V

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to ·10 • Sun.
· ·

We Accept Federal Food Stumps
PHONE-: 992·3480
Corner Mill anG Second Sts. " We Reserve The Right To L imit OuontitiO'S:.: Mlll.QUPORT, o.-,

I,

I.

'

.

.

�,,

j

\

1-TbeDIIIJ SeNIDII,II~"'epprt.Pwwsoy,O., NIIV. 22,1171

For Rent

@)

WANT AD WAY
·Help Wanted

ONE

envelopes . Rush stamped
self -addressed envelope. The

Ton 8' Stepsi de, V-8 eng ine. H. Duty 15" tire s. std.
trans., H. Dut y sprgs., radio, low mileage, l own er unit.

1966 CHEVROLET

Wanted To Buy

$495

2 Ton H. Duty 84" C. A., 825 tires, 2 speed, re:ar axle, V -8
eng.

OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks.
and-or complete households.

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call '192·6271.
n5.tfc

budget terms. Cal l 9927085.
11 ·22-6tc

-:-::-=-:----

MODERN walnut stereo-radio
combination , 4-speaker sound
system, 4-speed automatic

changer. separate controls.
Balance

S64 . 10.

Use

our

budget terms. Call 992 ·7085.
11 22-6tc

LEGAL NOTICE
The undersigned will offer for
sale a hOusi and . 17 acre lot now
owned by Charlettt Wilcoxen,
Racine, Ohlo. Property will be
sold to the highest bidder at the
offices ot Crow, Crow and
Porter , Attorneys at Law .
Pomeroy. Ohio , at II : 30 A .M . on
Wednesday , Nov em ber 2-'1, 1971 .
Real estate appraised at
S2.1BO .OO and cannot be sold tor
~ess than this sum . Sale subject
to the approval of Charlelte
Wilcoxen and Oivls iGn of Aid for
the Aged .
Crow . Crow &amp; Porter
Attorneys at Law
Pomer oy, Ohio
(ll) 14, 22 , 23. 31

I

I
I

By Helen Bottel

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
M&lt;111da y Deadline 9 a .m.
.Can_ce!lqtlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m. for
Day of Publication

t AQ86
• QI02

WEST
• J8643
.A763
• 10 7
.94

EAST

• KIO
• Q J 109
• J 54 2
.853

SOUTH (D)

.Q92

• K4
t K93
• AKJ76
Both vulnerable
w.. t North Ea•l South
Pass
Pass

3N.T.

I N.T.
Pass Pass

Opening lead- · 4

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "There are a lot
of lessons in loday's hand.
The first two involve the
bidding, With 16 high·card
pomts and 5·3·3·2 distribu.
·•, lion, South's hand qualifies
as ;m opening no·trump. A
good rule for anyone from
beginner to world's cham·
pion is to open one no·trump
any time your hand meets
all requIrements. Then
North should take his part.
ner right to game. With a
balanced 12 high-card points.
he should neither look for a
slam nor for a minor-suit
game."
Jim : "The bidding should
be short and simple. The
early play should be just as
easy in rubber bridge. South
may have been taught to
play second hand low, out.
th1s is one time to throw i.hat

12x60 ,

School.

Pets

Middleport area. Adults only.
Phone 992·5443.
11 ·7·1fc
FURNISHED ,
apartment.

2· bedroom
Adults

only ,

Middleport. Phone 992·3874.
11 · 16·6fc

For Rent or Sale

RATES

12' 14' · 24' :. WIDE

·MILLER

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Btvd.
Belpre, Ohio

JPHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP
- SPECIALsNovember 1 thruA
LOVING CARl!"
Reg. $6.50
Now $l.OO
November 8 thru 1l
PERMANENT
Reg . $12.l0
Now Sl.lO
FREE PARKING
FREE COfFEE
Phone 992-7474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

25c Charge per

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8· 30 a.m .
Saturdrty .

to

12 : 00

Noon

COAL. lime st one . Excelsior

Notice

seen at 199 Mill St ., Mid·
dleport , Ohio.
11 ·17·5tc

Salt Works, E. Main St..
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
250 FORD pickup, 4 wheel
4·9·ffc 1968,
drive, good condition , lockout
POOD L E puppies. Si lver Toy ,
Par k view Kennels , Phone992 -

5443 .

hubs, power brakes - $1 ,495.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,

Ohio, phone

985·355~.

8·15·ttC

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT

overweigh t ladies, teens and APPLES

men interested in a Weight
Wa tc her s (R) Class in
Pomer oy wr i te :
We ight

9·3· tfc

REQUCE safe and fasl with
Gobese tablets and E.Vap·

2936.

cellent

condition,

4 speed

standard . Phone 742·4874.
11-21·61p

11 ·21·31p

Open8TIIl
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy~ 0 .

Drugs.

2 Beagle male dogs, 3 years

KOSCOT Kosmetlcs ~nd wigs : " old . Phone 843·2476.

11.17.6tc

Yes we have Koscot Products
and wigs in stock for your
immediate needs. Yes we do
lractors , 1972
deliver . Would you like to GRAVELY
model s at 1971 prices . Buy
select your own customers
now and get q specia l Winter
and have your own route and
discount . A 10 pet . deposit
make good money? Call
now w ill hold your tractor and
Brown's in Middleport 992eq ui pment until Spring and
5113, distributors of Koscot
you can take advantage of the
Kosmet ics.
prices now in effect.
Winter
11-16.tfc
Al so Grave ly owners can get
specia l Winter repair rate s by
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop ,
ha ving your tra ctor repaired
Chester, Ohio . Over a
now . Grave l y Tractor Sa les,
thousand items to choose
Pomeroy , phone 992 -'1 975.
from for Christmas gifts,
11 ·18·6fc
flower arrangements for
Christmas, large collection of
Avon Bottles, lots of loys. 197 1 Z IG-ZAG sewing machine
Open Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 9
left in layaway. Beautiful
a .m. to 6 p.m., Thursday,
pastel colo r. full size model.

transaxle , front end , steering
bo'JC. for bus . High per formance equlpment tor 36

h. p. Roger Hooker, Rt . 2.
Albany (Pagevi lle ).
11.·19·6tc

Real Estate For Sale

Oeland
Realty

------

Friday and Saturday 9 a .,n. to
9 p.m. Closed Monday.
11 ·17·12tc

SPECIAL meeting of Racine
Lodge No . 461 F&amp;AM,
Tuesday, November 23 at 7:30

All

builf.in to

buttonhole,

overcast and fancy stitch.
Pay just $48 .75 cash or terms
available. T ra de -in s ac -

cepted . Phone 992·5641.
11 ·16·61c

p.m . to honor Past Masters . VACUUM cleaner , brand new
All Master Masons invited.
1971 mode l. Complete with all
cleaning tools . Sma ll paint
11 ·21 ·3tc
damage in shipping. Will take

WOULD THE person who took
the

locker

Junior High School .

$27 cash or

budget plan
11 ·16-6tc

POTATOES , Char les Hillon ,
Portlan d, Oh io. Ph one 843-

2268.

10·28·ifc

SAVE up lo one half. Bring your GRAND OPENING SALE .
Reynolds Aluminum Builders
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

Phone 992·5080.
11 ·21 .ttc

want

property

ticular _property . SO It's no

available. Phone 992 -5641.

11 ·21·3tc

these

I·I

SIEGLER
HEATERS

ESPECIALLY
FO~ TJ.IIS COU!lSE IN

VOUR I'A!lTtCtf'ATION

I'AIHA5T/!ICN
/)/ f'LOMACY L
-- - -· --~-

~ETHOD Of' TEAC~I NG

IS Till! GREATEST"

GIFT SHOP
MARTHA ROSE, OWner
Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park . Watch
Open every day except
Monday
1 P.M. till P.M.

BLUBBER,

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

BILL NELSON 992-36l7
TOM CROW, 992-2l80

HILTON WOLFE 949.3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

ORIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

JOHNSON M~NRY
Remodeling

I~

Endloader Work
Leach Beds.

PH. 992·7796

W. Va. 25311, or phone 304·925·
3279.
9·30·60tp

Ph. 992·2174

PdMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE

CONCRETE

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

1

est imates . Phone 992 ·3284 .
I
Goegl ein Ready · Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
DELL . WHEEL alignment
'
6.JO.tfc O'located
at Crossroads , R1. 12-'1 .
S.E.PTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell.
C:Nmer &amp; Operator .

5·12.tfc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tank s Installed. George
1Bil l) Pullins, Phone 992·W8 .
4·25·HC

Com plete frorit end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels

balanced

tron ically .
guaranteed .

elec ·

All
work
Reaso nable

rates . Phone 992.3213.

1·27·ffc
~UBBER

stamps made to

order , 24-hour service. Dwaln
or Wil ma Casto , Portland.

10·24-lOtc

SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir
service, all makes. 992 -2284 .

LEGAL NOTICE
Charles F . Powell , whose la st
known pljJce of res idence is
Route 1, M iddleport. Ohio, Is
he reby no1ified !hal on the 21st
day of Sept em ber , 1971 Lela A.
Powell , being pla intiff filed her
him
as
pet i t ion against
defendant in the Court of
Cor:r' mon Pleas , Meigs County ,
Oh 10, Case No, 1.4,9JS , pray ing
for divorce from sa id Charles F.
Powell on the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty , support and alimony
marquees, aluminum siding and division of property , and .
and railing . Call A. Jacob, 0iher proper relief; said cause
sales representative . For free will be for hearing on or after
the 11th day of De cember . \ 97 1.
esti mat es, phone Charle s
Lela A. Powel l, pla ihfiff
Lisle, Syracuse,
V. V.
J . B. O'Brien , attorney
Johnson and Son, Inc.
for plaintiff
·
5-27-ffc (ll l l.8 , 15, 22 , 29(f2)6, 6t
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 2057J

Estate of
CHARLES
E.
STOBART Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Fra nces M . Yost of Middleport,
Con tractors, Gallipolis. Ohio. Oh io, has been duly appo inted
inistratrix of the Estate of
Complete line of aluminum, Adm
Cha r les E. StobarL deceased,
viny l and steel si ding . late of Me igs Cou nty, Oh io.
Complete line of building,
Creditors are required to file
additions, and remodeling . the ir claims wi th sa id fiduciary
All work guaranteed. Com . wit hin four months .
Dated th is lsi day of
mer c ial and residential
roofing . No 1ob too sma II. · November 1971.
John C· Ba con
Phone 446 ·3839 for free
Act ing Judge
es timates.

A-PI~!!.

You have lnld your

scury and your partner i~ un - . TRAILER LOTS, Bob's ...
inte·rcsh.-d. Thi.o; is nul .vuur
Cou rt , Rt . 124, Syracuse

hand.
TODAY'S QUFSf!ON
You hold Ihe ~ me hanrl.

opt•n.&lt;; ont• cluh. What

Ea ~ l
rtn .vn11 '

tin?
1\ n~\Wr Tumurruw

Mobu;·

Jhio. 992·2951.

'
4·2-lfc

2 BEDROOM mobile home In
Racme area . Phone 992 ·6329 .

11 ·3·ll c

- - - - --

1111 8, 15, 22, Jt

ON YOUR DIAL

TIZEATMENT?

Phone"i92-2550

Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See
for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnst.alation.

-us-

HEN-H61l.~ M'DJf

"THAT... 011, MM I AAiif
1 TH!HW.L!

NEIGLER Building Supply ,
Free estimate on building
your new home. Will draw
pr)nts to sull the lay ot your
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and

'--. ... •.

•

___.......,.

I KMOW THAT, "DAPO'f"! A~' MA'IBE
I'LL COME ~OME WITH THECIIECK
All' !:!Q TAKERS!

aluminum siding , soffet and

gutter. Call Donald Smith,
Racine, Ohio.
10-7-tfc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Ser.vice. Phone 992-2522.
6-1o.ttc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
.
.
Not• ce ts hereby g iven , in
compll~nce with Section 5715 . 17 rev tsed code. that the ta x
returns of Meigs County , for the
year 1971 have been ,.evlsed and
the valuations ~ ompleted and
are op~n for publiC Inspection at
~he off1ce of the County Auditor
m the Court House. Pomeroy ,
Ohio. Complaints against anv
va luat ion or assessment , except
the valuations fi xe d and
assessments made by the Tax
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
heard by the County Board of
Revision, at Its off ice In the
Court Hou se , Pomeroy , Ohio, on
or after Nov . 12, 1971. Com .
plaints must be made In
wrillng, on blanks furnished by
the County Aud itor and filed In
his office on or before the time
lim Ited for payment of texes for
the f irst halt ye,ar , or at any
time during which taxes are
the
County
r eceived by
Treasurer , without penalty for
the first halt year .
Gordon H . Caldwell
Aud itor of MtiQs County

ACROSS
I. Popular
sandwich
5. Oklahoma
oil city
ONE LOOK
8.
Of
speech
AT THEIR
9. Nursery
PRESCRIPTION
WE
rhyme
RECORDS, AND• WAITING
in iss
FOR? 13. Bugbear
U.Chant
15.Thrice
(mus.)
16. Gobbled
11. Colorado
Indian
~"'"'!~S,=&gt;.-1 18. Feebleminded
&lt;E!~~~ 2t. Links
hazard

SOMEONE WHO

COULD AFFORD
EXPENSIVE
OLASSES BOUGJ.IT

THESE.

1

21.

(Il l "10tc

SIDE GLANCES

LAU&amp;H! THAT'S WHAT
YOU'RE POIII6,

by Gill Fox

AREN'T

:=1

YOU?/

·==

11

Salurdly'l Cryptoquole: GOD HELP THE MAN WHO
WON'T MARRY UNTIL HE FINDS A PERFECT WOMAN,
AND GOD HELP HIM STILL MORE IF HE FINDS HER.BENJAMIN TILLETT

10. Base
esteemed
on balls
39. Distribute
(3 wds.)
40. -goods II. Require
41. Consumer
12. Indian
housing
DOWt:il
16. Expiate
I. Train
19. Acknowl·
signal
edge
2. 1nslsted
20. Poisonous
on
3. One·sided 22. Hold fast!
4.Ginger- 23. Off the
ship
5. Friend·
24.Mul!le
ship
29. Charon's
6. Sand
transpor·
ridge
7. Rearward ,. tat! on
38. Make

(C 1971 ~ing Features Syndicate, Ine.)

.

Jll]JW®~®Jk,J M&gt;IGwM..I.-4 F-..
tl'l' HlNIU AHNOl

[l

· ""1 UOIJ l££

Unscramble these four Jumble11,
one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordinary words.
30. Hack·
neyed
32. Conduct
a trial
34. European
river
36. Nour·
isbed
37. Ostrich·
like bird

-

steals my
purse ... ''
22. An Alamo
hero
23. Madison
Avenue
toiler
25. Expatri·
ate
26. French
river
21. Blow the
-oft'
28. Skein of
yam
29. Aspect
n. Indivlsl·
ble by two
32. Hold It!
33. Gold
(Sp.)
35. Seaman's
jacket
37. Geralnt's

I

ll',..'NlJ

C1 =~O'&lt;IfOTt .. "'

I (

j
(X

!.'iMAif:O

III
11· 12.

II

(;UIWI\( J

Now arran&amp;• the cil'tled !etten

to,) Corm the turpriae answer, u
suneoted by the above cartoon.

~:::l'ril::.lllie=SU::R:PRISI~ANSWII~:::
:;
IIer:....e-=_:;

a 1l1l j

(An1wen tomorrow)

Jumhl"' RliiNY CANA~ IMPUGN HAWKER
S1111rd•y'•

An~wrr:

h
1 &lt; d
No dnudin,c for lhi11 l1iJ! 11 ol If" tt&gt;n ne til' I

hie job- THE "CHAIR MAN"

HERE, I MADE

f10W DO '&lt;'OU LIKE IT ?

U5 SOME HOT
CHOCOLATE

wife

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXlt
le LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for tnother. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's1 etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon or the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

. hfHR
'"'~'liNeS

eAct&lt;.

fROM THe
vUN(;~I!

H06PITAL,
I!!A~Y

~POT~

A

t&lt;l~~E'R'l!J ·

.'

•

WMP0/1390 .

WELL, t&gt;OC, WHAT 'LL
IT BE ... TH' FULL

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Huting."
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and ol\jr Con.
ditioning.
, 240 Lincoln St., /oliddlefiO"t

' '·

15 YOUNG ducks. Phone 992- POMEROY - 2 bedroom hom e.
6300.
Na tura l oak floors . Large
11 ·21·3tc rooms . Nice old fashi oned
. balh . Only $6.500.00.
USED Bottled Gas floor
BUY NOW AND
furnace, 1 used oil c'irculatlng
MOVE BEFORE CHRIST·
healer with electric ignili on.
MAS.
Arn old Bros.. Pomeroy, Oh io,
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Pl&gt; one 9~2 · 2448 .
ASSOCIATE
1121 ·31c

WE'D t:&gt;O Will-lOUT HIM .
'THESE: MACHINE5 WERE
IN DEPLORABLE

WOW! THIS LOOKS
LIKE A DAY'S WORK!

KEEP UP 'THE GOOD
WORK,R06ER'ID, AND

Pomeroy

SR.

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

1 i:ON'T KNOW WHAT

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

992-2094

2· 12.tfc

d eliv ered right to your
project. Fast and easy . Free

.. .

....n••..,,..

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS, INC.

992-7608

remodeled. Estimates free ,
anywhe re . National House
Movers, Bo)( 5002 , Charleston,

FROM 50011-1

ANDHE'e&gt;A
AT REPAIRING
WINNIE:

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speciotist

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

, ,From drafting to completion
of home or business.

READY·MIX

-~

Co!flp]et~!.._

COMPLETE
BUILDING
SERVICES

66 2·3035.

" ,.,,_,.,,_

TEAPORD·

f)

t.

TRA.\/ELLINK

I

JI

W~N1'0Ff

WHI·~
WA6
C~"ANING rf!

-SO WHEN THE

1

I •

IT

SHI!.P.P.OP AND 'lliiiKE

for Signs.

Virgil B.

Ir---------~I
II
I

I

SALESMAN
'MJKE.UPIN
IGLOO--

and get 2 storm doors FREE.
WINTER potatoes. Robert D.
11 ·21 .ttc
ceremony.''
lsi SO orders, 100 storm doors
Ashley, Rt. 2, Racine. Phone
to give away wlth this Grand
Oswald : "After takin g
247-2344 .
Opening
Sale. 10,000 feet of RUTLAND ~ Hous~. 6 rooms ,
those first nine tricks. he
11-21·3tp
Reynolds
Aluminum siding at
can look around for more .
bath, laundry, city gas and
huge
discount .
Gutter,
11 ·18·30tc
I
WILL
not
be
responsible
for
Against any reasonable line
water , paved drive and
awnings, palios, all types of
any
debls
contracted
by
any
carport.
Phone
742-5045.
of play by the defense, those
windows, kitchen cabinets ,
11 ·21 ·31c
extra tricks aren't likely to one other than myself.
i ndoor -o utdoor ca rpel , 501
Real Estate For Sale
Signed
:
Louie
Bert
Frederick
be there for him."'
nylon . Your com plete Home
11-21·31p
MIDDLEPORT 7-room
Improvemen t Headquarters.
Jim : " Let's see what will
house, 11/~ baths, 3 bedrooms ,
terms
ova
ilable
.
Easy
credit
happen if South' plays low
storm w tndows and doors.
On now , Reynolds, 773·5147.
on the first spade. East will Instruction
front and b~ck porch 1 2 car
11
·10·15tp
take his king and, if he leads THOUSANDS of men needed In
garage, on carndr lot. 383 N
Trucking Indu stry. 129,000
a spade back, South will co l·
Third St., Middleport. Phone
'obs open annually according
742·4874.
lect the next 10 tricks."
o U. S. Dept. of Labor. Ex·
ll·2J.6tp
Save
$10.00
Now!
Oswald: "O ppvnents are cel lent earnings after short
not always that friendly. lf training period . For ap lsring th is ad and get S10 off
East planks down the queen
NICE 2·slory home with full
plication and Interview call or
on vour purchase of &amp; new
llr.Oker
ba semen!. 2 lots, new forced
of hearts, South will wind up
write : T.RI-STATE DRIVER • Siegler heater .
110 Mechanic Street
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
TRAINING , 602 Kanawha
co mplaining of the bad luck
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Elemenlary School . Phone
Valley
Bank
Bldg ..
that .ius! cost him game and
I
992·7384
to see .
Charleston,
West
V
irgin
ia
rubber."
25301
.
Phone
:
(304)
346·1556.
11 ·7·1fc
40PROPERTIESinour
(NEWSPAPER EHTUPIIlSE ASSN .)
I
listing files .
Licensed by State of Ohio S52.
FUEL OIL
11 ·21 ·21c I
SE; i642 Lincoln Heights.
I All sizes ;n st?ck . We inSia ll,ll 3 HOMES - 2 with INCOME. HOU
Ca
II
Danny Thompson, 992.FREE GAS Ia all. 1 moderN,
Lost
2196.
l fmance, servtce.
one fl oor . 3 bedrooms. 19
The bidding his been:
1·18.1f•
LC.ST - Man's gold diamond I ~
POMI!IIOY
acres of land. All for only
West
North
Ea~t
Jacll w. Cusev, M1r.
$16 000 00
Suuth solitaire ring. Small diamond ,
~hono ff2·1111
It
big sentimental
value.
Pass
Pass
Dble Rcdblc Reward . Bob Hoefl ich, 992·
· - - - - -·· - • • • NEW
COUNTRY
HOME
1¥
Pass
Pass
5292 or 992-2156.
'spacious
bedrooms
, 2 -nice4
11 ·1 9·31c 20 FT . self .rnade camper · baths, hot water heat. Copper
You. South, hold:
--------~
trailer. musl sell quick.
plumbing,
FULL
.AQ4 .KG tAQIORo .K109
Phone 949·4365.
BASEMENT. 2 car garage. 15
11 ·21 ·3tc acres. Ask ing $37,500.00.
What do you do now?
For Rent

l

R.!&amp;.IC

TREASURES

salary of 55,000.00 and ·three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
per·cerJta,,e rate .

SECRET why we are able lo
SELL your property.
AUTOMOBILE insurance
NO SALE NO CHARGE,
been cancelled? Lost your
LIST WITH US TODAY.
operator's license? Call 992 HENRY G. CLELAND
2%6.
REALTOR
6·15·tfc
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2l68
11·21 ·6tc ALLSIDE Builders &amp; General

Supply of Mason 'City. Amrax SIX ROOM house, t33 Butter nut
Stone and Brick si ding ,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
aluminum vinyl and wood .
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus.
Buy 10 white storm windows
Ohio, phone 237·4334.

IS . .

HIDDEN

The Fabr ic Shop. Pomeroy.
CLELAND REALTY
Authorized Singer Sa les and
608 East Main
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
POMEROY
3·29·tfc
MR . PROPERTY OWNER;
ABOUTBO PCT. of our sales are C. BRADFORD, Auctioreer
Jo people outside MEIGS
Comolete Service
COUNTY . WHY? We ADPhone 949·3821
VERTISE in 10 different
Racine, Ohio
NEWSPAPERS loc ated
Critt Bradford
lhroughout OHIO and WEST
5·1·tfc
VIRGINIA. We have HUN.
DREDS of PROSPECTS IN AWNINGS, storm doors and
OUR FILES. SUREL Yone of
w i ndow s,
carports ,
SIMILAR to yours. We make
MANY LONG DISTANCE
PHONE CALLS, LETTERS
and PICTURES are sent to
PROSPECTS on your par·

... LU&lt; cNJ 'T
RE Pf'&gt;..,. IT IIV

Tl&lt;OUB(E

gift.

monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base

11 ·21·3tc

11 ·11·301p

fr om

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

Sani tat ion , Stewart, Oh io. Ph.

3043, Eugene Young .

1965 PONTIAC GTO. excellent
3 POLLED Hereford co ws . con dition , phone 949 -2632 ,
Phone 247·2161.
John lhle, Rt. I, Racine.
11 ·21·5tc
11 ·19.Jic
PUPPIES to give away, 6 weeks
old . Phone 742··1874.
11 ·21-6tp UNABLE to hunt and musl sell V.W. REBUILT engines and
Water Pills . Nelson

PROI'ESSCA
SIIERIIERr; I THINK

Dells, all dressed In style,
knitted and. crochtted. ( Hos
to be seen to be appreciotedl
Many items you heve been
looking for , for that perfect .

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can. be purchased with a

Watchers IRJ. 1863 Section
Rd. , Cincinnat i. Ohio 45237 . AGUN CABINET built in Ea,ly 1967 RED Volkswagen , ex .
10·3·1fc
ce ll ent condit ion , pflone 742 - SE PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Amer ic an Style. 7 gun
capaci ly , Cherry. Phol)e 992 -

Christmas
decorations. wearing
apparel. jewelry,
ceramics.

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

MOVING : Houses. etc .
11·17-Stp HOUSE
raised , moved, unde rpinned,

Fitzpatrick Or· 1960 FORD 'I• ton truck. Ex .

char ds , State Rout e 689,
phone Wi lesv ille, 669-3785.

'5.55

1969 Schult all

I

electric ~ bargain ; 1 1970
Flee t wood , 4 bedroom ~
barga in ,' 1 1970 Vision, 65 x 12
bargain ; R. A. Mill er ,
Belpre , Ohi o ~ phone 423 -

For Sale

Additional

HANDCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS

Broadmore cla ss ~ save

$1.000 ;

Auto Sales

BLIND ADS

EXPERT
Wheel ,Alignment

REPOSSESSED. 1 10 x 50
Richardson - $2,395 ; 1 1970
Sc hull - save $1 ,000; I 1970

For Want Ad Service
10X52 HOME Crest trailer, 2.
5 cents per Word one insertion
bedroom, furni shed, gas heat,
Minimum Charge 75c
good condition . Home Crest
9531 .
12 cents per word three.
on good highway. Reynolds
11 -12-12 1c
consec utive insertions.
Flower Shop 773-5147 , Mason,
18 cents per word six con w. Va .
secu tive insertions.
11 ·16-6tp
25 Per Cent Discount on paict
1963 CHEVROLET, 327 cu. in .
ads and ads paid within 10 day s.
engine, needs work done on
CARD OF THANKS
automatic
transmission ,
&amp;OBITUARY
engine is in fine runn ing
$1.50 for SO word min im um . TRAILER bed . Phone 992·5947.
condition. $150 cash. May be
11 ·21 .3tc
·
Each additional word 2c.

please return it to the Meigs

basic principle out the win·
dow. Sou t h should play
dummy's ace of spades and
rattle off five clubs and
three diamonds without any

2·

• The Publi sher reserves the HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath on
Peacock
Ave .
Rent
r ight to edit or reject any ads
reasonable.
Phqne
992-5293.
deemed
objectionaL
The
11 .16.ttc
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one Incorr ect
insertion .
·

WIN AT BRIDGE

zz

NEW,

REGULATIONS

label. The Put' On Shop,

NORTH

BRAND

NEW, 2 bedroom mobile home
wi1h air conditioning in

WRRAINE NAPIER, 113 Genoa, Apt. C, Arcadia, Calif.,
91006.

• A 75
• 852

Mobile Homes for Sale

Bradbury

room.
Wednesday, Nov . 17, by
mistake a boy 1S new brown
corduroy coat, slze 18, Sears

Take the Tricks and .Run

11 -21 -3lc

welcome.

Adver tisem~nt .

DEAR HELEN:
My trouble is I can't say "No." I want everybody to love me
as much as I love them, and when I'm grateful I have to show it .
That's why I'm having affairs with the ushand -and the son
- of this wonderful woman I work for. I think that she is the
greatest, and it seems the only way I can he a part of her life is by
sharing all of It with her. They 're the most beautiful people I've
ever met.
But I'm afraid she wouldn't understand that this ishappening
because I love her. You see, I lived in a commune before coming
here, and I guess I have different attitudes. To me, sex is giving
and sharing and the best way to show you want to be part of the
family. - NEARLY 19
Dear 19:
Either you're putting me on (somehow I doubt it- you didn't
show up on my hoax radar screen), or you 're fooling yourself to
salve your conscience, or you honesi-!Oilosh BELIEVE sex
proves love, as you've been taught in the commune.
Wbe~ -you're maltln&amp;..,.cuees or you'actua\lyOO march to
a different dnmuner, you need a refresher course in "life as it is."
Look, my naive "giver and sharer," you're being used and "took"
by two (mor more) men who see you as a dumb little pushover
who can conununica!A! only with her body.
Wbenyour employer learns of your "great love," you'lllearn
what ha!A! is ! I'd suggest you either drift back to a commune
where at least you're understood, or revise your thinking to fit the
eolilformist outside world ... and that may mean prolonged
sessions with an unsusceptible (or resistive) therapist.
Otherwise, you're destined to have a Jot of mad women baying
at those round heels. -H.
Dear Helen:
This letter is a long overdue thanks. The undelievable happened after you published my name as a candida !A! for "shut-in"
mail several montha ago. I'm grateful beyond words !
I have rdcelved thousanda of letters ;. od cards from people in
all walks of life, all kinds of backgrounds: the rich , the poor; the
educated, the not~duca!A!d; the young, the old, the teenager,
the middle-aged (youngest correspondent, age seven; oldest, 94);
men, women, hoys, girls; the professional, the homemaker, the
1\udent ... Not one negative Jetter or remark in the entire lot. It
has been a most fantastic experience - one which has convinced
me (if in reality I needed convincing) that our country is still in
the hands of wann, friendly, concerned, happy, compassionate,
generous, BEA UTJFUL human beings !

dryer . M &amp;G Food Mkl., 3 mi.
south of Middleport on . Rt. 7.

11 .15.ttc

1
I

TIUS LOVE HAS NO BOUNDS

motor , automati c washer and

from Bradbury School. Call

.,PMEROY, OHIO

·---------------------------,
!Helen Help Us !
I

TRAILER space. M &amp; G Food
Mk t., 3 mi. south of Mid·
dleport or Rt . 7.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

LEGAL NOTICE

~ -speaker sound system , 4speed automatic changer .
Balance $78 .40 . Use our

11 ·18.6tc

TH€

NAME
ONE!!

I CAN THINK OF
WU55 THii\165
HAPPENIN'
TO 'IE

Business Services

992 ·5308 or see Charles Lewis,
from
2nd hou se south

Pomeroy Motor Co.

USED deep·well jet pump. Jim
Nally , Rt. 3, Pomeroy . Phone
985·4118 or 985·4233.
11 ·16·12tp

·

trailer. 35 h:P· Cros,_ey motor.

12ft . alummum boat. 7 h.p.

bedroom mobile home across

(

.,

combinat ion, AM-FM radio,

Park . Minersville . Phone 992 _

$169l

19ll CHEVROLET

For Sale or Trade

TRAILER. Brown 's Traller ' FORCATTLE - 15H.boatand
3314

2 Ton 84" · cab to ax le . 292 cu . in. engine . Good 825x7 0
tires. 2 speed r . axle, solid ca b &amp; was used on paved roads.

EARLY Amer ic an stereo-radio

11 .21 .61c

$169l

3 '8

Ambrose Co ., 4325 Lakeborn,
Davisburg , Mich. 48019.
10·24-JOtp

For Sale

BEDROOM

animals. Phone 992-5786.

1968 CHEVROLET

C HIRK UP, SNUFFY-·

. .-

For Sale

lrailer SONY stereo lape recorder, 2
speakers, 2 microphones.
apartment. idea l for couples.
public address, AC voltage,
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
selec;:~or and many ot her
992-5248 or 992·3436.
feature-s , 43 -7 inch tapes .
11-21 .3tc
Phone 992·5655 .
11 ·19·3tc
I wo.BEDROOM !railer. No

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

'

EARN at home addressing

.-·

EEK AND MEEK

SentinelClassifieds (;et Action! SentinelClassifieds Get Results/
EVERYBODY
Shops the

~

'I

&amp;/

"Cive it to me
·

OTRFZDK

AIRFifi!"D

•
llol.

trlr ., MIA. loc. T.M, .... U ""· 011.

strai~~:ht,

I MI6HT
GOOO...

A Ccyplol!l'am Quotation

!7HADOW
OW THE;
MAIJAU!&gt;'

lot

IU l'.t. DH,

ZY

EFDBA

YWADNJIWTWY .

JTN

OTR

PDBN

ODDP,

ZY

XFZEF

XFBR
BR

TOD
B

I ll?Nl 9Jft'05E IHAT~ REALL'(
MUCH Of A COMI'I.IMENT

ZY

P1' DY

ADOOG .-

AIW~KNEF

Doc. Is it something 1 can

afford?"

•
I

'I

.........

�,,

j

\

1-TbeDIIIJ SeNIDII,II~"'epprt.Pwwsoy,O., NIIV. 22,1171

For Rent

@)

WANT AD WAY
·Help Wanted

ONE

envelopes . Rush stamped
self -addressed envelope. The

Ton 8' Stepsi de, V-8 eng ine. H. Duty 15" tire s. std.
trans., H. Dut y sprgs., radio, low mileage, l own er unit.

1966 CHEVROLET

Wanted To Buy

$495

2 Ton H. Duty 84" C. A., 825 tires, 2 speed, re:ar axle, V -8
eng.

OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks.
and-or complete households.

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call '192·6271.
n5.tfc

budget terms. Cal l 9927085.
11 ·22-6tc

-:-::-=-:----

MODERN walnut stereo-radio
combination , 4-speaker sound
system, 4-speed automatic

changer. separate controls.
Balance

S64 . 10.

Use

our

budget terms. Call 992 ·7085.
11 22-6tc

LEGAL NOTICE
The undersigned will offer for
sale a hOusi and . 17 acre lot now
owned by Charlettt Wilcoxen,
Racine, Ohlo. Property will be
sold to the highest bidder at the
offices ot Crow, Crow and
Porter , Attorneys at Law .
Pomeroy. Ohio , at II : 30 A .M . on
Wednesday , Nov em ber 2-'1, 1971 .
Real estate appraised at
S2.1BO .OO and cannot be sold tor
~ess than this sum . Sale subject
to the approval of Charlelte
Wilcoxen and Oivls iGn of Aid for
the Aged .
Crow . Crow &amp; Porter
Attorneys at Law
Pomer oy, Ohio
(ll) 14, 22 , 23. 31

I

I
I

By Helen Bottel

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
M&lt;111da y Deadline 9 a .m.
.Can_ce!lqtlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m. for
Day of Publication

t AQ86
• QI02

WEST
• J8643
.A763
• 10 7
.94

EAST

• KIO
• Q J 109
• J 54 2
.853

SOUTH (D)

.Q92

• K4
t K93
• AKJ76
Both vulnerable
w.. t North Ea•l South
Pass
Pass

3N.T.

I N.T.
Pass Pass

Opening lead- · 4

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "There are a lot
of lessons in loday's hand.
The first two involve the
bidding, With 16 high·card
pomts and 5·3·3·2 distribu.
·•, lion, South's hand qualifies
as ;m opening no·trump. A
good rule for anyone from
beginner to world's cham·
pion is to open one no·trump
any time your hand meets
all requIrements. Then
North should take his part.
ner right to game. With a
balanced 12 high-card points.
he should neither look for a
slam nor for a minor-suit
game."
Jim : "The bidding should
be short and simple. The
early play should be just as
easy in rubber bridge. South
may have been taught to
play second hand low, out.
th1s is one time to throw i.hat

12x60 ,

School.

Pets

Middleport area. Adults only.
Phone 992·5443.
11 ·7·1fc
FURNISHED ,
apartment.

2· bedroom
Adults

only ,

Middleport. Phone 992·3874.
11 · 16·6fc

For Rent or Sale

RATES

12' 14' · 24' :. WIDE

·MILLER

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Btvd.
Belpre, Ohio

JPHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP
- SPECIALsNovember 1 thruA
LOVING CARl!"
Reg. $6.50
Now $l.OO
November 8 thru 1l
PERMANENT
Reg . $12.l0
Now Sl.lO
FREE PARKING
FREE COfFEE
Phone 992-7474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

25c Charge per

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8· 30 a.m .
Saturdrty .

to

12 : 00

Noon

COAL. lime st one . Excelsior

Notice

seen at 199 Mill St ., Mid·
dleport , Ohio.
11 ·17·5tc

Salt Works, E. Main St..
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
250 FORD pickup, 4 wheel
4·9·ffc 1968,
drive, good condition , lockout
POOD L E puppies. Si lver Toy ,
Par k view Kennels , Phone992 -

5443 .

hubs, power brakes - $1 ,495.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,

Ohio, phone

985·355~.

8·15·ttC

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT

overweigh t ladies, teens and APPLES

men interested in a Weight
Wa tc her s (R) Class in
Pomer oy wr i te :
We ight

9·3· tfc

REQUCE safe and fasl with
Gobese tablets and E.Vap·

2936.

cellent

condition,

4 speed

standard . Phone 742·4874.
11-21·61p

11 ·21·31p

Open8TIIl
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy~ 0 .

Drugs.

2 Beagle male dogs, 3 years

KOSCOT Kosmetlcs ~nd wigs : " old . Phone 843·2476.

11.17.6tc

Yes we have Koscot Products
and wigs in stock for your
immediate needs. Yes we do
lractors , 1972
deliver . Would you like to GRAVELY
model s at 1971 prices . Buy
select your own customers
now and get q specia l Winter
and have your own route and
discount . A 10 pet . deposit
make good money? Call
now w ill hold your tractor and
Brown's in Middleport 992eq ui pment until Spring and
5113, distributors of Koscot
you can take advantage of the
Kosmet ics.
prices now in effect.
Winter
11-16.tfc
Al so Grave ly owners can get
specia l Winter repair rate s by
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop ,
ha ving your tra ctor repaired
Chester, Ohio . Over a
now . Grave l y Tractor Sa les,
thousand items to choose
Pomeroy , phone 992 -'1 975.
from for Christmas gifts,
11 ·18·6fc
flower arrangements for
Christmas, large collection of
Avon Bottles, lots of loys. 197 1 Z IG-ZAG sewing machine
Open Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 9
left in layaway. Beautiful
a .m. to 6 p.m., Thursday,
pastel colo r. full size model.

transaxle , front end , steering
bo'JC. for bus . High per formance equlpment tor 36

h. p. Roger Hooker, Rt . 2.
Albany (Pagevi lle ).
11.·19·6tc

Real Estate For Sale

Oeland
Realty

------

Friday and Saturday 9 a .,n. to
9 p.m. Closed Monday.
11 ·17·12tc

SPECIAL meeting of Racine
Lodge No . 461 F&amp;AM,
Tuesday, November 23 at 7:30

All

builf.in to

buttonhole,

overcast and fancy stitch.
Pay just $48 .75 cash or terms
available. T ra de -in s ac -

cepted . Phone 992·5641.
11 ·16·61c

p.m . to honor Past Masters . VACUUM cleaner , brand new
All Master Masons invited.
1971 mode l. Complete with all
cleaning tools . Sma ll paint
11 ·21 ·3tc
damage in shipping. Will take

WOULD THE person who took
the

locker

Junior High School .

$27 cash or

budget plan
11 ·16-6tc

POTATOES , Char les Hillon ,
Portlan d, Oh io. Ph one 843-

2268.

10·28·ifc

SAVE up lo one half. Bring your GRAND OPENING SALE .
Reynolds Aluminum Builders
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

Phone 992·5080.
11 ·21 .ttc

want

property

ticular _property . SO It's no

available. Phone 992 -5641.

11 ·21·3tc

these

I·I

SIEGLER
HEATERS

ESPECIALLY
FO~ TJ.IIS COU!lSE IN

VOUR I'A!lTtCtf'ATION

I'AIHA5T/!ICN
/)/ f'LOMACY L
-- - -· --~-

~ETHOD Of' TEAC~I NG

IS Till! GREATEST"

GIFT SHOP
MARTHA ROSE, OWner
Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park . Watch
Open every day except
Monday
1 P.M. till P.M.

BLUBBER,

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

BILL NELSON 992-36l7
TOM CROW, 992-2l80

HILTON WOLFE 949.3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

ORIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

JOHNSON M~NRY
Remodeling

I~

Endloader Work
Leach Beds.

PH. 992·7796

W. Va. 25311, or phone 304·925·
3279.
9·30·60tp

Ph. 992·2174

PdMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE

CONCRETE

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

1

est imates . Phone 992 ·3284 .
I
Goegl ein Ready · Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
DELL . WHEEL alignment
'
6.JO.tfc O'located
at Crossroads , R1. 12-'1 .
S.E.PTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell.
C:Nmer &amp; Operator .

5·12.tfc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tank s Installed. George
1Bil l) Pullins, Phone 992·W8 .
4·25·HC

Com plete frorit end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels

balanced

tron ically .
guaranteed .

elec ·

All
work
Reaso nable

rates . Phone 992.3213.

1·27·ffc
~UBBER

stamps made to

order , 24-hour service. Dwaln
or Wil ma Casto , Portland.

10·24-lOtc

SEWING MACHINES. Repa ir
service, all makes. 992 -2284 .

LEGAL NOTICE
Charles F . Powell , whose la st
known pljJce of res idence is
Route 1, M iddleport. Ohio, Is
he reby no1ified !hal on the 21st
day of Sept em ber , 1971 Lela A.
Powell , being pla intiff filed her
him
as
pet i t ion against
defendant in the Court of
Cor:r' mon Pleas , Meigs County ,
Oh 10, Case No, 1.4,9JS , pray ing
for divorce from sa id Charles F.
Powell on the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty , support and alimony
marquees, aluminum siding and division of property , and .
and railing . Call A. Jacob, 0iher proper relief; said cause
sales representative . For free will be for hearing on or after
the 11th day of De cember . \ 97 1.
esti mat es, phone Charle s
Lela A. Powel l, pla ihfiff
Lisle, Syracuse,
V. V.
J . B. O'Brien , attorney
Johnson and Son, Inc.
for plaintiff
·
5-27-ffc (ll l l.8 , 15, 22 , 29(f2)6, 6t
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 2057J

Estate of
CHARLES
E.
STOBART Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Fra nces M . Yost of Middleport,
Con tractors, Gallipolis. Ohio. Oh io, has been duly appo inted
inistratrix of the Estate of
Complete line of aluminum, Adm
Cha r les E. StobarL deceased,
viny l and steel si ding . late of Me igs Cou nty, Oh io.
Complete line of building,
Creditors are required to file
additions, and remodeling . the ir claims wi th sa id fiduciary
All work guaranteed. Com . wit hin four months .
Dated th is lsi day of
mer c ial and residential
roofing . No 1ob too sma II. · November 1971.
John C· Ba con
Phone 446 ·3839 for free
Act ing Judge
es timates.

A-PI~!!.

You have lnld your

scury and your partner i~ un - . TRAILER LOTS, Bob's ...
inte·rcsh.-d. Thi.o; is nul .vuur
Cou rt , Rt . 124, Syracuse

hand.
TODAY'S QUFSf!ON
You hold Ihe ~ me hanrl.

opt•n.&lt;; ont• cluh. What

Ea ~ l
rtn .vn11 '

tin?
1\ n~\Wr Tumurruw

Mobu;·

Jhio. 992·2951.

'
4·2-lfc

2 BEDROOM mobile home In
Racme area . Phone 992 ·6329 .

11 ·3·ll c

- - - - --

1111 8, 15, 22, Jt

ON YOUR DIAL

TIZEATMENT?

Phone"i92-2550

Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See
for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnst.alation.

-us-

HEN-H61l.~ M'DJf

"THAT... 011, MM I AAiif
1 TH!HW.L!

NEIGLER Building Supply ,
Free estimate on building
your new home. Will draw
pr)nts to sull the lay ot your
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and

'--. ... •.

•

___.......,.

I KMOW THAT, "DAPO'f"! A~' MA'IBE
I'LL COME ~OME WITH THECIIECK
All' !:!Q TAKERS!

aluminum siding , soffet and

gutter. Call Donald Smith,
Racine, Ohio.
10-7-tfc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Ser.vice. Phone 992-2522.
6-1o.ttc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
.
.
Not• ce ts hereby g iven , in
compll~nce with Section 5715 . 17 rev tsed code. that the ta x
returns of Meigs County , for the
year 1971 have been ,.evlsed and
the valuations ~ ompleted and
are op~n for publiC Inspection at
~he off1ce of the County Auditor
m the Court House. Pomeroy ,
Ohio. Complaints against anv
va luat ion or assessment , except
the valuations fi xe d and
assessments made by the Tax
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
heard by the County Board of
Revision, at Its off ice In the
Court Hou se , Pomeroy , Ohio, on
or after Nov . 12, 1971. Com .
plaints must be made In
wrillng, on blanks furnished by
the County Aud itor and filed In
his office on or before the time
lim Ited for payment of texes for
the f irst halt ye,ar , or at any
time during which taxes are
the
County
r eceived by
Treasurer , without penalty for
the first halt year .
Gordon H . Caldwell
Aud itor of MtiQs County

ACROSS
I. Popular
sandwich
5. Oklahoma
oil city
ONE LOOK
8.
Of
speech
AT THEIR
9. Nursery
PRESCRIPTION
WE
rhyme
RECORDS, AND• WAITING
in iss
FOR? 13. Bugbear
U.Chant
15.Thrice
(mus.)
16. Gobbled
11. Colorado
Indian
~"'"'!~S,=&gt;.-1 18. Feebleminded
&lt;E!~~~ 2t. Links
hazard

SOMEONE WHO

COULD AFFORD
EXPENSIVE
OLASSES BOUGJ.IT

THESE.

1

21.

(Il l "10tc

SIDE GLANCES

LAU&amp;H! THAT'S WHAT
YOU'RE POIII6,

by Gill Fox

AREN'T

:=1

YOU?/

·==

11

Salurdly'l Cryptoquole: GOD HELP THE MAN WHO
WON'T MARRY UNTIL HE FINDS A PERFECT WOMAN,
AND GOD HELP HIM STILL MORE IF HE FINDS HER.BENJAMIN TILLETT

10. Base
esteemed
on balls
39. Distribute
(3 wds.)
40. -goods II. Require
41. Consumer
12. Indian
housing
DOWt:il
16. Expiate
I. Train
19. Acknowl·
signal
edge
2. 1nslsted
20. Poisonous
on
3. One·sided 22. Hold fast!
4.Ginger- 23. Off the
ship
5. Friend·
24.Mul!le
ship
29. Charon's
6. Sand
transpor·
ridge
7. Rearward ,. tat! on
38. Make

(C 1971 ~ing Features Syndicate, Ine.)

.

Jll]JW®~®Jk,J M&gt;IGwM..I.-4 F-..
tl'l' HlNIU AHNOl

[l

· ""1 UOIJ l££

Unscramble these four Jumble11,
one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordinary words.
30. Hack·
neyed
32. Conduct
a trial
34. European
river
36. Nour·
isbed
37. Ostrich·
like bird

-

steals my
purse ... ''
22. An Alamo
hero
23. Madison
Avenue
toiler
25. Expatri·
ate
26. French
river
21. Blow the
-oft'
28. Skein of
yam
29. Aspect
n. Indivlsl·
ble by two
32. Hold It!
33. Gold
(Sp.)
35. Seaman's
jacket
37. Geralnt's

I

ll',..'NlJ

C1 =~O'&lt;IfOTt .. "'

I (

j
(X

!.'iMAif:O

III
11· 12.

II

(;UIWI\( J

Now arran&amp;• the cil'tled !etten

to,) Corm the turpriae answer, u
suneoted by the above cartoon.

~:::l'ril::.lllie=SU::R:PRISI~ANSWII~:::
:;
IIer:....e-=_:;

a 1l1l j

(An1wen tomorrow)

Jumhl"' RliiNY CANA~ IMPUGN HAWKER
S1111rd•y'•

An~wrr:

h
1 &lt; d
No dnudin,c for lhi11 l1iJ! 11 ol If" tt&gt;n ne til' I

hie job- THE "CHAIR MAN"

HERE, I MADE

f10W DO '&lt;'OU LIKE IT ?

U5 SOME HOT
CHOCOLATE

wife

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXlt
le LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for tnother. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's1 etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon or the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

. hfHR
'"'~'liNeS

eAct&lt;.

fROM THe
vUN(;~I!

H06PITAL,
I!!A~Y

~POT~

A

t&lt;l~~E'R'l!J ·

.'

•

WMP0/1390 .

WELL, t&gt;OC, WHAT 'LL
IT BE ... TH' FULL

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Huting."
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and ol\jr Con.
ditioning.
, 240 Lincoln St., /oliddlefiO"t

' '·

15 YOUNG ducks. Phone 992- POMEROY - 2 bedroom hom e.
6300.
Na tura l oak floors . Large
11 ·21·3tc rooms . Nice old fashi oned
. balh . Only $6.500.00.
USED Bottled Gas floor
BUY NOW AND
furnace, 1 used oil c'irculatlng
MOVE BEFORE CHRIST·
healer with electric ignili on.
MAS.
Arn old Bros.. Pomeroy, Oh io,
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Pl&gt; one 9~2 · 2448 .
ASSOCIATE
1121 ·31c

WE'D t:&gt;O Will-lOUT HIM .
'THESE: MACHINE5 WERE
IN DEPLORABLE

WOW! THIS LOOKS
LIKE A DAY'S WORK!

KEEP UP 'THE GOOD
WORK,R06ER'ID, AND

Pomeroy

SR.

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

1 i:ON'T KNOW WHAT

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

992-2094

2· 12.tfc

d eliv ered right to your
project. Fast and easy . Free

.. .

....n••..,,..

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS, INC.

992-7608

remodeled. Estimates free ,
anywhe re . National House
Movers, Bo)( 5002 , Charleston,

FROM 50011-1

ANDHE'e&gt;A
AT REPAIRING
WINNIE:

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speciotist

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

, ,From drafting to completion
of home or business.

READY·MIX

-~

Co!flp]et~!.._

COMPLETE
BUILDING
SERVICES

66 2·3035.

" ,.,,_,.,,_

TEAPORD·

f)

t.

TRA.\/ELLINK

I

JI

W~N1'0Ff

WHI·~
WA6
C~"ANING rf!

-SO WHEN THE

1

I •

IT

SHI!.P.P.OP AND 'lliiiKE

for Signs.

Virgil B.

Ir---------~I
II
I

I

SALESMAN
'MJKE.UPIN
IGLOO--

and get 2 storm doors FREE.
WINTER potatoes. Robert D.
11 ·21 .ttc
ceremony.''
lsi SO orders, 100 storm doors
Ashley, Rt. 2, Racine. Phone
to give away wlth this Grand
Oswald : "After takin g
247-2344 .
Opening
Sale. 10,000 feet of RUTLAND ~ Hous~. 6 rooms ,
those first nine tricks. he
11-21·3tp
Reynolds
Aluminum siding at
can look around for more .
bath, laundry, city gas and
huge
discount .
Gutter,
11 ·18·30tc
I
WILL
not
be
responsible
for
Against any reasonable line
water , paved drive and
awnings, palios, all types of
any
debls
contracted
by
any
carport.
Phone
742-5045.
of play by the defense, those
windows, kitchen cabinets ,
11 ·21 ·31c
extra tricks aren't likely to one other than myself.
i ndoor -o utdoor ca rpel , 501
Real Estate For Sale
Signed
:
Louie
Bert
Frederick
be there for him."'
nylon . Your com plete Home
11-21·31p
MIDDLEPORT 7-room
Improvemen t Headquarters.
Jim : " Let's see what will
house, 11/~ baths, 3 bedrooms ,
terms
ova
ilable
.
Easy
credit
happen if South' plays low
storm w tndows and doors.
On now , Reynolds, 773·5147.
on the first spade. East will Instruction
front and b~ck porch 1 2 car
11
·10·15tp
take his king and, if he leads THOUSANDS of men needed In
garage, on carndr lot. 383 N
Trucking Indu stry. 129,000
a spade back, South will co l·
Third St., Middleport. Phone
'obs open annually according
742·4874.
lect the next 10 tricks."
o U. S. Dept. of Labor. Ex·
ll·2J.6tp
Save
$10.00
Now!
Oswald: "O ppvnents are cel lent earnings after short
not always that friendly. lf training period . For ap lsring th is ad and get S10 off
East planks down the queen
NICE 2·slory home with full
plication and Interview call or
on vour purchase of &amp; new
llr.Oker
ba semen!. 2 lots, new forced
of hearts, South will wind up
write : T.RI-STATE DRIVER • Siegler heater .
110 Mechanic Street
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
TRAINING , 602 Kanawha
co mplaining of the bad luck
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Elemenlary School . Phone
Valley
Bank
Bldg ..
that .ius! cost him game and
I
992·7384
to see .
Charleston,
West
V
irgin
ia
rubber."
25301
.
Phone
:
(304)
346·1556.
11 ·7·1fc
40PROPERTIESinour
(NEWSPAPER EHTUPIIlSE ASSN .)
I
listing files .
Licensed by State of Ohio S52.
FUEL OIL
11 ·21 ·21c I
SE; i642 Lincoln Heights.
I All sizes ;n st?ck . We inSia ll,ll 3 HOMES - 2 with INCOME. HOU
Ca
II
Danny Thompson, 992.FREE GAS Ia all. 1 moderN,
Lost
2196.
l fmance, servtce.
one fl oor . 3 bedrooms. 19
The bidding his been:
1·18.1f•
LC.ST - Man's gold diamond I ~
POMI!IIOY
acres of land. All for only
West
North
Ea~t
Jacll w. Cusev, M1r.
$16 000 00
Suuth solitaire ring. Small diamond ,
~hono ff2·1111
It
big sentimental
value.
Pass
Pass
Dble Rcdblc Reward . Bob Hoefl ich, 992·
· - - - - -·· - • • • NEW
COUNTRY
HOME
1¥
Pass
Pass
5292 or 992-2156.
'spacious
bedrooms
, 2 -nice4
11 ·1 9·31c 20 FT . self .rnade camper · baths, hot water heat. Copper
You. South, hold:
--------~
trailer. musl sell quick.
plumbing,
FULL
.AQ4 .KG tAQIORo .K109
Phone 949·4365.
BASEMENT. 2 car garage. 15
11 ·21 ·3tc acres. Ask ing $37,500.00.
What do you do now?
For Rent

l

R.!&amp;.IC

TREASURES

salary of 55,000.00 and ·three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
per·cerJta,,e rate .

SECRET why we are able lo
SELL your property.
AUTOMOBILE insurance
NO SALE NO CHARGE,
been cancelled? Lost your
LIST WITH US TODAY.
operator's license? Call 992 HENRY G. CLELAND
2%6.
REALTOR
6·15·tfc
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2l68
11·21 ·6tc ALLSIDE Builders &amp; General

Supply of Mason 'City. Amrax SIX ROOM house, t33 Butter nut
Stone and Brick si ding ,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
aluminum vinyl and wood .
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus.
Buy 10 white storm windows
Ohio, phone 237·4334.

IS . .

HIDDEN

The Fabr ic Shop. Pomeroy.
CLELAND REALTY
Authorized Singer Sa les and
608 East Main
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
POMEROY
3·29·tfc
MR . PROPERTY OWNER;
ABOUTBO PCT. of our sales are C. BRADFORD, Auctioreer
Jo people outside MEIGS
Comolete Service
COUNTY . WHY? We ADPhone 949·3821
VERTISE in 10 different
Racine, Ohio
NEWSPAPERS loc ated
Critt Bradford
lhroughout OHIO and WEST
5·1·tfc
VIRGINIA. We have HUN.
DREDS of PROSPECTS IN AWNINGS, storm doors and
OUR FILES. SUREL Yone of
w i ndow s,
carports ,
SIMILAR to yours. We make
MANY LONG DISTANCE
PHONE CALLS, LETTERS
and PICTURES are sent to
PROSPECTS on your par·

... LU&lt; cNJ 'T
RE Pf'&gt;..,. IT IIV

Tl&lt;OUB(E

gift.

monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base

11 ·21·3tc

11 ·11·301p

fr om

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

Sani tat ion , Stewart, Oh io. Ph.

3043, Eugene Young .

1965 PONTIAC GTO. excellent
3 POLLED Hereford co ws . con dition , phone 949 -2632 ,
Phone 247·2161.
John lhle, Rt. I, Racine.
11 ·21·5tc
11 ·19.Jic
PUPPIES to give away, 6 weeks
old . Phone 742··1874.
11 ·21-6tp UNABLE to hunt and musl sell V.W. REBUILT engines and
Water Pills . Nelson

PROI'ESSCA
SIIERIIERr; I THINK

Dells, all dressed In style,
knitted and. crochtted. ( Hos
to be seen to be appreciotedl
Many items you heve been
looking for , for that perfect .

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can. be purchased with a

Watchers IRJ. 1863 Section
Rd. , Cincinnat i. Ohio 45237 . AGUN CABINET built in Ea,ly 1967 RED Volkswagen , ex .
10·3·1fc
ce ll ent condit ion , pflone 742 - SE PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Amer ic an Style. 7 gun
capaci ly , Cherry. Phol)e 992 -

Christmas
decorations. wearing
apparel. jewelry,
ceramics.

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

MOVING : Houses. etc .
11·17-Stp HOUSE
raised , moved, unde rpinned,

Fitzpatrick Or· 1960 FORD 'I• ton truck. Ex .

char ds , State Rout e 689,
phone Wi lesv ille, 669-3785.

'5.55

1969 Schult all

I

electric ~ bargain ; 1 1970
Flee t wood , 4 bedroom ~
barga in ,' 1 1970 Vision, 65 x 12
bargain ; R. A. Mill er ,
Belpre , Ohi o ~ phone 423 -

For Sale

Additional

HANDCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS

Broadmore cla ss ~ save

$1.000 ;

Auto Sales

BLIND ADS

EXPERT
Wheel ,Alignment

REPOSSESSED. 1 10 x 50
Richardson - $2,395 ; 1 1970
Sc hull - save $1 ,000; I 1970

For Want Ad Service
10X52 HOME Crest trailer, 2.
5 cents per Word one insertion
bedroom, furni shed, gas heat,
Minimum Charge 75c
good condition . Home Crest
9531 .
12 cents per word three.
on good highway. Reynolds
11 -12-12 1c
consec utive insertions.
Flower Shop 773-5147 , Mason,
18 cents per word six con w. Va .
secu tive insertions.
11 ·16-6tp
25 Per Cent Discount on paict
1963 CHEVROLET, 327 cu. in .
ads and ads paid within 10 day s.
engine, needs work done on
CARD OF THANKS
automatic
transmission ,
&amp;OBITUARY
engine is in fine runn ing
$1.50 for SO word min im um . TRAILER bed . Phone 992·5947.
condition. $150 cash. May be
11 ·21 .3tc
·
Each additional word 2c.

please return it to the Meigs

basic principle out the win·
dow. Sou t h should play
dummy's ace of spades and
rattle off five clubs and
three diamonds without any

2·

• The Publi sher reserves the HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath on
Peacock
Ave .
Rent
r ight to edit or reject any ads
reasonable.
Phqne
992-5293.
deemed
objectionaL
The
11 .16.ttc
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one Incorr ect
insertion .
·

WIN AT BRIDGE

zz

NEW,

REGULATIONS

label. The Put' On Shop,

NORTH

BRAND

NEW, 2 bedroom mobile home
wi1h air conditioning in

WRRAINE NAPIER, 113 Genoa, Apt. C, Arcadia, Calif.,
91006.

• A 75
• 852

Mobile Homes for Sale

Bradbury

room.
Wednesday, Nov . 17, by
mistake a boy 1S new brown
corduroy coat, slze 18, Sears

Take the Tricks and .Run

11 -21 -3lc

welcome.

Adver tisem~nt .

DEAR HELEN:
My trouble is I can't say "No." I want everybody to love me
as much as I love them, and when I'm grateful I have to show it .
That's why I'm having affairs with the ushand -and the son
- of this wonderful woman I work for. I think that she is the
greatest, and it seems the only way I can he a part of her life is by
sharing all of It with her. They 're the most beautiful people I've
ever met.
But I'm afraid she wouldn't understand that this ishappening
because I love her. You see, I lived in a commune before coming
here, and I guess I have different attitudes. To me, sex is giving
and sharing and the best way to show you want to be part of the
family. - NEARLY 19
Dear 19:
Either you're putting me on (somehow I doubt it- you didn't
show up on my hoax radar screen), or you 're fooling yourself to
salve your conscience, or you honesi-!Oilosh BELIEVE sex
proves love, as you've been taught in the commune.
Wbe~ -you're maltln&amp;..,.cuees or you'actua\lyOO march to
a different dnmuner, you need a refresher course in "life as it is."
Look, my naive "giver and sharer," you're being used and "took"
by two (mor more) men who see you as a dumb little pushover
who can conununica!A! only with her body.
Wbenyour employer learns of your "great love," you'lllearn
what ha!A! is ! I'd suggest you either drift back to a commune
where at least you're understood, or revise your thinking to fit the
eolilformist outside world ... and that may mean prolonged
sessions with an unsusceptible (or resistive) therapist.
Otherwise, you're destined to have a Jot of mad women baying
at those round heels. -H.
Dear Helen:
This letter is a long overdue thanks. The undelievable happened after you published my name as a candida !A! for "shut-in"
mail several montha ago. I'm grateful beyond words !
I have rdcelved thousanda of letters ;. od cards from people in
all walks of life, all kinds of backgrounds: the rich , the poor; the
educated, the not~duca!A!d; the young, the old, the teenager,
the middle-aged (youngest correspondent, age seven; oldest, 94);
men, women, hoys, girls; the professional, the homemaker, the
1\udent ... Not one negative Jetter or remark in the entire lot. It
has been a most fantastic experience - one which has convinced
me (if in reality I needed convincing) that our country is still in
the hands of wann, friendly, concerned, happy, compassionate,
generous, BEA UTJFUL human beings !

dryer . M &amp;G Food Mkl., 3 mi.
south of Middleport on . Rt. 7.

11 .15.ttc

1
I

TIUS LOVE HAS NO BOUNDS

motor , automati c washer and

from Bradbury School. Call

.,PMEROY, OHIO

·---------------------------,
!Helen Help Us !
I

TRAILER space. M &amp; G Food
Mk t., 3 mi. south of Mid·
dleport or Rt . 7.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

LEGAL NOTICE

~ -speaker sound system , 4speed automatic changer .
Balance $78 .40 . Use our

11 ·18.6tc

TH€

NAME
ONE!!

I CAN THINK OF
WU55 THii\165
HAPPENIN'
TO 'IE

Business Services

992 ·5308 or see Charles Lewis,
from
2nd hou se south

Pomeroy Motor Co.

USED deep·well jet pump. Jim
Nally , Rt. 3, Pomeroy . Phone
985·4118 or 985·4233.
11 ·16·12tp

·

trailer. 35 h:P· Cros,_ey motor.

12ft . alummum boat. 7 h.p.

bedroom mobile home across

(

.,

combinat ion, AM-FM radio,

Park . Minersville . Phone 992 _

$169l

19ll CHEVROLET

For Sale or Trade

TRAILER. Brown 's Traller ' FORCATTLE - 15H.boatand
3314

2 Ton 84" · cab to ax le . 292 cu . in. engine . Good 825x7 0
tires. 2 speed r . axle, solid ca b &amp; was used on paved roads.

EARLY Amer ic an stereo-radio

11 .21 .61c

$169l

3 '8

Ambrose Co ., 4325 Lakeborn,
Davisburg , Mich. 48019.
10·24-JOtp

For Sale

BEDROOM

animals. Phone 992-5786.

1968 CHEVROLET

C HIRK UP, SNUFFY-·

. .-

For Sale

lrailer SONY stereo lape recorder, 2
speakers, 2 microphones.
apartment. idea l for couples.
public address, AC voltage,
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
selec;:~or and many ot her
992-5248 or 992·3436.
feature-s , 43 -7 inch tapes .
11-21 .3tc
Phone 992·5655 .
11 ·19·3tc
I wo.BEDROOM !railer. No

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

'

EARN at home addressing

.-·

EEK AND MEEK

SentinelClassifieds (;et Action! SentinelClassifieds Get Results/
EVERYBODY
Shops the

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·

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afford?"

•
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.........

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Cnal Price

Words so far, No Guns

(Continued from page 1)
George H. Boldt, chairman of
the pay panel, came under
attack for the board's decision
in the miners wage case. Sen.
William Proxmire, D-Wis., said
the wage agreement "puts the
whole stabilization set up in the
gravest possible jeopardy" because of the precedent it set.
Boldt, in an appearance
Saturday before a House-Senate
Economic Committee, denied
Proxmire's allegation, although
he said the wage increase
probably was excessive. He also
defended the board's ban
against retroactive payment of
wage increases which fell due
during the 91Hlay freeze, saying
anything less would be inequitable and unfair.
On another front , the controversy continued over President
Nixon's speech at the AFL-ClO
convention in Miami Beach,
F1a. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey ,
0-Minn ., the man Nixon defeated for the presidency three
years ago, said Nixon went to
the labor meeting "with a set
script to provoke confronta-

By United Press International
Israeli military sources said
today Egypt so far has not
moved men and materiel to
back President Anwar Sadat's
weekend statements that there
is "no alternative". to another
war in the Middle East.
Sadat, in two speeches to
frontline troops along the Suez
Canal, said "every hope we
used to have for a peace
settlement is finished; and we
have no alternative but to fight
to regain our land, our honor
and our dignity."
The only hope for peace, he
said, would be for Israel to
withdraw completely from Arab
lands -something Israel has
steadfastly refused to do.
Sadat said "I have asked the
U.S. representative (in Cairo,
Donald C. Bergus ) to tell his
government there can be no
further discussions. All this is
finished unless Israel ... accepts
complete withdrawal.
"Only then can the dialogu '
be resumed on the basis of our
forces crossing the canal and a

tion.' '

/

I

·.

10-The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Polneroy, 0 ., New. :12. 1971

The cool reception Nixon
received drew criticism of the
labor federation and its leader,
George Meany . But Humphrey ,
in a wire to Meany Sunday
night, said Nixon went to the
meeting "not to correct inequities but to accentuate differences; not to explain to the convention and the American
people his economic program
but rather to demand obedience
to executive edict. "
"An opportunity for bringing
America together was cast
aside in the interest of personal
political ga in ," Humphrey
added . "A president should act
to unify, not divide.' '
The White House continued to
insist that Nixon was not surprised by the reception he
received and that his sudden
decision to scrub his planned
weekend stay in Florida was not
prompted by the incident.
But House GOP Leader
Gerald R. Ford of Michigan
called the reception a "shocking
display of bad manners " and
Sen. William E. Brock II, RTenn ., sa id Meany was
"crotchety, out of touch and out
of tole rance" and did a
disservice lo the 14 million
workers represented by the
AFL-CIO.
A spokesman for the federation said in Miami Beach
Sunday that the White House
was trying to ''falsely trump
up " the impresaion that Nixon
drew an insulting reception.
In other developments :
- Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, DArk., chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee,
said the government cannot
block the freeze-delayed pay
increases on a retroactive basis
without voiding the labor
contracts involved.
-Sen . Alan Cranston, DCalif., introduced an amendment that would exempt the
publishing, broadcasting and
film h1dustries from wage-price
controls. The Senate Banking
Committee last week rejected
the proposal by an 8to 5 vote but
Cranston said he would try to
attach it to the Phase II
Economic Control Bill when it
reaches the Senate floor.
- Two agriculture and business-{)riented groups - the
Committee for Economic Development and the Agriculture
Committee of the National
Planning Commission -{:ailed
Sunday for an end to the 10 per
cent surtax on imports.

Mrs. Pierotti
Died Saturday
Mrs. Odella Pierotti, 87, 218
East Second St., Pomeroy, died
Saturday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center.
A member of the Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy, Mrs.
Pierotti is survived by a son,
Geno, Pomeroy : two daughters,
Olga Pierotti of Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Robert (Licia ) Ebersbach,
Columbus; her son-in-law,
Robert Ebersbach, Columbus,
an d several nieces and
nephews. Funeral services will
be held at 9 a. m. Tuesday at the
Sacred Heart Church w1th the
Rev. Father Bernard Krajcovic
officiating. Rosary services will
be held at the Ewing Funeral
Home where fri ends may call
after 7:30 this evening .

WINNERS, RUNNERS-UP - Three fli'St place winners
and two runners-up were selected in the Second Annual
Mason County Junior Miss Pageant staged Saturday night at
Wahama High School sponsored by the Wahama High School
Band BOosters. From left, are Joy Pumphrey, Point Pleasant

Ohio Farmers
To be Sampled
During Survey
A representative sample of
Ohio farmers will be visited
between Nov . 22 and Dec. 3 as
part of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture ' s nationwide
enumerative survey program.
Dan C. Tucker, statistician in
charge of the Ohio Crop and
Livestock Reporting Service,
said the survey will be conducted in all states except
Hawaii and Alaska to gather
information about cattle and
hogs, chickens, and wheat
acreage. Farmers contacted by
the locally-hired enumerators
are a cross-section of the
nation 's producers . Their
reports provide USDA with
valuable material for estimates
on agriculture .
Statisticians use the findings
from this survey and da ta
supplied by other farmers in
mail questionnaires to form
state and national estimates.
All information on individual
farms is confidential.
The winter wheat acreage
information will be issued Dec.
22, the hogs and pigs inventory
Dec. 22; the poultry inventory
Jan .l8, and the ca\Ue lnvenlory

Feb. 4.
USDA conducts two major
enumerative surveys yearly.
The June program involves
more than 50,000 farmers
operating in about 17,000
scientifically selected land
segments, nationa lly. The
number of segments in a State
varies from about 2:i0 to over
1,000. There are 350 in this State
involving 2,200 interviews,
Tucker stated. Approximately
one-third of those farmers interviewed in June are visited
again in November-December.
The enumerative sur vey
provides a better basis for
esti mates than the mail
responses alone. Responses in
the mail survey may not be
representative of all farms. For
lhj!. .enumerative survey, the
nation is divided into thousands
of .land segments, each with a
known chance of being part of
the survey. This allows
statisticians to determine a
sampling error and thus more
reliable estimates.
INTEREST RATES
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) ruled today that stores
and lenders must state their
interest rates by annual percentage only. It said other
tefms were confusing to consumers.
The ruling under the truth in
lending law barred such credit
terms as "$6 per $100" or "6
percent add -{ln." Both mean 6
per cent interest a year, the
FTC said and the stores and
lenders should stick to the
annual percentage rate.

High School, second runner-up ; Beverly Knapp, Wahama
High School, first place winner ; Carolyn Barnette, Wahama
High School, first place winner, Joyce Casto, Point Pleasant
High School, first place winner and Karen Froendt,
Wahama High School, first runner-up.

Howard Donahew 'Died on Sunday
, .MONEY NEEDED
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) The Athens County sheriff's
office will be forced to close
Friday for the rest of the year
if county commissioners do
not fork across operating
funds, Sheriff Harold Shields
has warned.
Shields said he could not
pay his personnel after this
week unless commissioners
agree to transfer to his salary
fund about $6,600 left in his
1971 budget. The money had
been earmarked to pay bills.

RACINE - Howard Daniel
Donohew, 77, Racine Route 2,
di ed Sunday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A member of the Letart UB
Church, he is survived by his
wife , Mary Bachus Donohew;
three daughters, Mrs . Jlillles
Roush, Glenna, Ohio; Mary
Donohew, Akron, and Mrs. Sue
Laudermilt, Columbus; two
sons, Billy Joe, of Detroit,

8 more ma1l 1ng days
for out-of-town
oackages

Mrs. Ruth Warren Quickle,
66, Vinton, retired school
teacher, died in the Holzer
Medical Center Sunday evening
following a two-weeks illness.
She was born June II , 1905, at
lronoon , daughter of the late
Minerva Lambert and Calvin
Warren .
Three persons were slightly
She married G. V. (Cook)
injured in a traffic accident at
9:40p.m. Sunday on Rt. 35, one Fire Losses Set
and nine-tenths miles west of
At $9,000 Sunday
Rt. 588.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Losses were set at $9,000 in a
Post State Highwa y Patrol , fire that destroyed the Ernest
Sharron K. Ramsay , 31, Powell home, Albany Route 2,
Gallipolis, lost control of her car in Bedford Township Sunday
on a slippery spot in the high- afternoon .
way, ran off the roadway,
Pomeroy firemen were called
struck a guard rail and turned to the scene about 3: 30 p.m.,
over. There was heavy damage Fire Chief Henry Werry said.
to her car.
Cause of the blaze apparently
Scott Ramsay, 10, Stephen was a defective flue, he said.
Ramsey, age 5, and Dena Damages to the frame home,
Ramsay, age 2, were all taken owned by Raymond Young ,
to the Holzer Medical Center for were set at $8,000 with losses to
treatment of minor injuries. No the contents set at $1,000. There
is insurance coverage, Werry
citation was issued.
A second mishap occurred at indicated.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
7:35 p. m. on Rt. 35, one and
ADMISSIONS : Oden Austin ,
seven-tenths miles west of Rt.
Joyce
Randolph, both Point
588. William K. Coulson, 35,
Fairmont, W. Va., attempted to Pleasant ; Mrs. Jeffery Rose,
pass an auto operated by Cheshire; Mrs. Donald Shinn,
Thomas R. Hutchins, 19, Rt. 4, Sr ., Leon; Larry Miller, Point
Oak Hill, who was making a left Pleasant; Ormond Blackman,
turn. There was moderate Parkersburg; Fred St. Clair,
damage to both . cars. No one Cheshire; Gail Plants, Point
was injured or cited.
Pleasant; Mrs. Thelma Carter,
A deer was killed in an ac- Pomeroy; Catherin e Darst,
cident at 10: 20 p. m. Saturday James Dabney , Point Pleasant;
on Rt. 7, one and eight-tenths Mrs. Clark Vickers, Charles
miles north of Rt. 35. The Rayburn, Point Pleasant.
animal ran into the path of a car DISCHARGES - Ernest
driven by Constance J. Cotton, Knopp, Don Murphy, Bryan
17, Gallipolis. There was minor King , Keith Cook, Mrs. Johnny
damage to her car.
Stewart, Mrs. Lottie Wilfong,
Darrell Haney, 19, Rt. 2, Ralph Anderson, Donald
Patriot, was ·charged with Belcher, Dolph Hill, Mrs. Mary
driving left of the center Nibert, Yonna Jordan, Mrs.
following a collision at 3:35 p. John Carpenter, Jack Spears,
m. Saturday south of Rt. 233. Jr ., Mr s. Charles Forshee,
Officers sa id Haney's car Ralph Young, Mrs. James L.
collided with an auto operated Hall, Hartley Perego and
by Robert E. Evans, 20; Rt. 2, Richard Fielder.
Pataskala, Ohio. There was BIRTH - Nov. 21, a daughter
moderate damage to both cars. to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Rose,
Charles L . Frum, 47, Pt. Cheshire
Pleasant, was charged with
failure to stop within the
assured
clear
distance
following a rear end collision at
2:30p.m. Saturday on Rt. 7, sixtenths of a mile north of
Gallipolis. The Frum car siruck
the rear of a car driven by Sara
J. Fowler , 35, Middleport.
There was minor damage to
both cars.
Randolph Blackburn, 29,
NATIONWIDE Insurance canGallipolis, was treated and
wit h one simple program .
Call
now for details.
released at the Holzer Medical
Center for minor injuries
sustained in a two car collision
at 3:25 p. m. Saturday on the
Bidwell-Rodney Rd., two and
eight-tenths miles north of Rt.

Three
Hurt

•

HUNTERS TO MEET
The Meigs County Foxhunters
Assn. will meet at 7:30 p, m.
Wednesday at the clubhouse on
Snowball Hill to make plans for
a field trial.

Visit Elberfelds Toy Store
In The Middle ·Block

Quickie in 1924. He survives,
along with one son, William G.
Quickie, Vinton. Two brothers
and one sister preceded her in
death . One granddaughter
survives.
Mrs. Quickie served 36 years
in public schools. She taught at
Dundas before going to Vinton
elementary in 1~5.
She was a member of the
Vinton Baptist Church and
served as church organist the
past 25 years .
Funeral services will be held
3 p.m., Wednesday at the Vinton
Baptist Church with Rev. Kirby
Oiler and Rev . Charles Lusher
officiating.
The body will lie in state at
the church one hour prior to the
services.
Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may
call at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home on Tuesday between 2-4
and 7_9 p.m.
·

This year in our new location - you'll like the selection of toys . ·
If you need books for your chil dren stop in and see what's new. Coloring .
books - activity books - Follow the Dots - story books - plus these popular
ones. Big Golden Animal ABC - Storybook Didionaries - Golden Bible Atlas Adventures of Browni e and Puff - Big Book of Bedtime Stories - Mother
Goose - Animal Stories - Dogs of the World · Golden Treasury of Poetry and
many , many others . Yo u'll want to see th em all.

Elberfelds Toyland Store Hours : Monday through
Thursday 9:30A.M. to 5 P.M. Fridays and Saturdays
9: 30 A.M . to 9 P. M.

USE ELBERFELDS SENSIBLE CREDIT SERVICE OR LAYBY SERVICE
AT THE TOY STORE

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monda y at II a.m.
was 30 degrees under sunny
skies.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Yes, we can install
time for Christmas

Complete selection of textures and colprs
including shog, plush, hi-lo, sculptures
.. . more! In soil resistant
polyesters, nylons and acrylic piles.
Greot for the whole house and priced
lor holiday savings.

•
•

0

1)ay the
mortgage?

•

new

The patrol said Blackburn 's
car collided with an auto driven
by Lawrence H. Theiss. ~4 . Rl.
1, Vinton .

heavy

TWIST
ID!Al FOR HIAVY
TRAFFIC ARIAS .
VIllANI COlORS.

MEIGS THEAIIl£~ :

Pomeroy, Ohio
oO hahmr&lt;'

of

you die. or pay

J ue to injury or ill ne ss.
• Pro tcctJ wmr home and
posse.,sio ns i•g;1i11sl all usual

November 22·23
" BIG JAKE "

hazard .~-

(Technicotor)

John

Wayne and sons:
Michael. 36 yrs . old ; Patrick,
31 years old ; John Ethan, a
yea rs old , ym1ngest son.

Gln·A·RAMA
Sltl£

"G"

Feature He:
Ditzy Detective,

J

Stooges

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

NAME ___,

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IIAUTifUl COlOII.

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sq. yd • .

DEPOSIT AT MY IIIIIDOO

wor~

Tonight &amp; Tuesday

THICll, DURAll! .

' '5.95 sq, yd.

PAULEY
PH. 992-2318
307 Spring Ave.
• Cr111 JHIY
111ort~:u,.:t' if

SHAG

handsome

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-

- --

-·-

--

INGELS

Is Home
WARREN, Mich. (UPI)-S.
Sgt. John Sexton Jr., released
· after 26 months as a captive of
the Viet Cong, stood at
attention on Wagner Avenue,
his body lrembling with emotion . His high school band was
playing "When Johnny Comes
Marching Home."
"Hey Johnny, where the hell
have you been for the past two
years," called his neighbor,
Mrs. Rose Sherrill, from the
house next door.
"It's so good to have him
back," she said. "Nobody knew
where he. was for so long ."
Sexton, 23, was captured Aug.
12, 1969, when the armored
personnel carrier he was riding
in was ambushed. He wu
wounded in the right arm, le1
and face, suffering a permanent partial loss of vision in
his right eye.
He walked into U.S.-held
territory in South Vietnam on
Oct. 8, spent nearly six weeks
in an Army hospital in Denver,
and Monday re turned home for
the first time since going to
Vietnam.
He was met at Detroit's
Metropolitan Airport by nearly
500 persons, including the
cheerleaders and 'IS-piece band
froni Lincoln High School,
where he graduated in 1966.
Sexton, hi:! parenlll and two
llWTled sisters went home by
pollee escort and saw American
flags waving in the frosty
breeze on the front lawns of his
neighbors' homes on Wagner
Avenue.
Nearly 200 friends were
waiting on the front lawn of his
home and a large sign
proclaimed, "Welcome Home
John."
Sexton, who lost 50 pounds as
a prisoner and has gained back
only 10 since hi:! release, said
he planned to eat "four meals a
day." On Thanksgiving he will
dine with 100 friends and
relatives at a local restaurant.

Weather

Snow likely tonight and
Wednesday, becoming mixed
with sleet or rain in south,
ending and becoming partly
cloudy west Wednesday afternoon. Lows tonight in the mid
20s to low 30s. Highs Wed·
nesday from the mid 30s to the
low 40s.

~

"(:

"Your Christmas
Furniture Store"

32 more shopp1ng days
7 more ma1ling days

.

...................
.'

In a time of trouble, with tyranny tumbling over violence, population
pressing against pollution, and threats to human dignity and .life on every
hand, nevertheless ;
·
We give thanks
for Christ, born in antiquity yet as modern as tomorrow, who is God 's
revelation of himself, and the constant reminder of human potential under the
discipline of love ; •
for the Church, which makes it possible to unite a fellowship of hope and
service, lending evidence of community in the midst of division;
for each other, with all the infinite variety which spares us from dull
monotony ;
for the tangible and intangible resources God has allowed us to man&lt;Jf(t ·
for him ;
for the vision of the world that is yet to be but is even now bee om 111g,
whenever his will is echoed in our own, and ;
for the mind and body by which we may perceive, and then bend energie'
and skills toward the achievement of His divine purpose.
- Goldie Clendenin, Portland, Oh1o.

Saxton

Christmas
Countdown

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
OPEN FRI. f, SAT. NIGHT

Thanksgiving

The Gallia County Sheriff's
Department, following five
weeks of intensive investigation, made its first
arrest Monday In the burglary
on Oct. 14 of Bob Saunders'
Quaker State Service Center at
the corner of Second Ave. and
Pine St.
Booked at th~ county jail on
suspicion of pijssessing stolen
guns was Walter Melvin
Mooney, 49, Rt. l, Cbeshir,,
Mooney entered a not guilty
plea this morning in Gallipolis
Municipal Court. A preliminary
hearing was set for Nov. 30.
Judge Robert S. Betz set the
bond at $10,000.
Mooney was arrested by
Sheriff Denver A. Walker and
his chief Deputy Sgt. James E.
Baldwin with the assistance of
three agents from the Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms Division
of the U. S. Internal Revenue
Service.
Confiscated were six guns
missing in the burglary from
the Quaker State Service
Center. The weapons were
found in an outbuilding at the
Mooney home on the MooreJericho Rd. Sheriff Walker said
today that other arrests are
anticipated.
The service station was entered by breaking a window on
the Pine St. side of the
establishment. Taken were 15
guns, (12 shotguns, two rifles
and a pistol) and four and onehalf cases of shotgun ammunition valued at $2,500.

GIVE
m

Johnny

Suspect
Charged

\Vho~ll

&gt;J

NOW YOU KNOW
Grants, N. M., about 80
miles west of Albuquerque, is
known as the "uranium capital
of the wor ld" because an
estimated 70 pet. of the world's
known uranium reserves are
located in the area .

Veterans Memorial Hollpllal
SATURDAY ADMISSION Bliss Wilson, Mason.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Gertrude Mees, Darryl
Swarb:, Avanell Bass, Bernard
Gilkey, Caiherlne Pierce,
Lillian Greene, Ruth Terrell.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Homer Gilkey, Middleport ;
Richard Butcher, Mldtlleport:
Manning Kloes, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES John HarriBon, Vera Thompson,
Lillie
Starcher,
Rose
Roseberry, William Scott.

Mrs. Quickie, 66, Oaimed

yu u mont hl y if you can't

PROGRAM PLANNED
A program of reci!&lt;ltions,
songs and a play will be
presented Wednesday evening
at the MI. Hermon UB Church.
The public is invited . The Rev.
Robert Shook is pastor. The
annual Christmas program has
been set for Sunday evening ,
Dec. 19.

" Dado" Elazar, 46, as the new
chief of staff. He repla~;ea Lt.
Gen. Halm Bar-Lev, who Is
expected to Join the cabinet. . '

•

Mich., and David, of Racine;
eight grandchildren, and four
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Letart UB Church with the Rev.
Edward Griffith officiating.
Burial will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery . Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home until
11 a.m. Wednesday when· the
body will be taken to the church.

35.

33 more shopping days

cease-fire duration of six
months."
Sadat added that "if Israel
does not withdraw during ~~)is
period, our armed forces will
do their duty in driving out the
enemy.''
In Tel Aviv, Israeli military
sources said the Egyptians
have not made any military
moves to back their threats to
end the 16-month-{)ld cease-fire
along1the Suez. They said that
according to latest reports from
the canal zone there was no
extraordinary Egyptian activity
on the frontline positions.
Foreign Minister Abba Eban
said following Sunday's weekly
cabinet meeting that Sadat
should "stop the bombast and
begin free negotiations." He
said Sadat's speech combined
''military "threats and political
extortion. Israel must take it
seriously in both contexts. Of
course, we shall not yield to
either military intimidation or
political pressure."
In another development, Israel chose Maj . Gen. David

for out-of-town

packages

•

She Won't Forget
MEMBERS OF DREW WEBSTER POST 39, American
Legion, will be delivering loaves of bread such as these to
Pomeroy homes Wednesday evening.ln exchange, members
hope to pick up contributions for the "Gifts for the Yanks
Who Gave" program, designed to provide Christmas

remembrances for hnspltah7P.d veterans. Taking an active
role in the program are from the left, Edgar Van lnwagen,
World War II veteran; George Grate, branch manager of the
Holsum Baking Co., and Eddie Whaley, a veteran of the
Vietnam War.

By WILLIAM P. OPPEL
DALLAS (UP I)- Asmall girl,
her pigtails dampened by rain,
edged her way through the
crowd of about 200 persons and
placed a card among the yellow
chrysanthemums.
"We'll never forget. Love,
Barbara," it read.

•

•

at

e

The rain and raw winds were
a sharp con trast to that day
eight years ago, the kind of
November day that comes
occasionally in Texas with
summerlike temperatures and
clear blue skies.
On that day- Nov. 22, 1963President John F. Kennedy was
•

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meig!-Mmon Area
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EN~T~S

::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;;

Middleport Meters Made }'ree
Official acti on to "free "
Middleport's parking meters
for the II days preceding
Christmas was taken Monday
night by Middleport Village
Council in a regular session.
The request from Middleport
businessmen to provide free
parking for Christmas holiday
shoppers is a traditional action,
as is granting it. The free
parking this year will start
Monday, Dec. 13, and will run
through Dec. 24 . In appreciation
to the council, the Retail
Merchants Assn. and the
Chamber of Commerce each
will give the village $150, or a
total payment of $300.
Council, in discussing a recent
report on the sewerage lreatment operations of the village
received from the S.tate Health
Department
offices
in
Nelsonville, registered surprise
at the criticisms in the report. A
recommenda tion in the report
that a tester be employed to

check the water and complete
reports on the checks was
discussed . lt was indicated that
a plan perhaps could be worked
out to ta ke samples of the water
to Ne lsonvi lle for regular
checks since employment of a
tester would be a financial
problem .
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase warned that by
1977 the village will be required
to chlorinate waste water from
the sewerage lagoon flowing
1nto the Ohio River.
Council granted Mrs. Terry
Beechler, the new nigh t
dispatcher, eight hours off each
week. Previous night dispatchers who reside in the villageowned aparlment over town
hall, have been permitted only
12 hours off each month .
Council gave Chase authority
to purchase catch basin covers
and to repair a large catch
basin cover at the corner of
Oliver and Beech. The need for

THESE SENIORS OF Southern High School band were
honored recently at the last home game of the season. 1.rr
are, Bob Cwnmins, Candy Hoback , Roger Wilford, Renee

repa irs and improvements to
the ja1l was discussed, but
council took no action until it is
determined if there is money
available . The need for street
department workers to have
telephones was also di&gt;cussed
and Clerk-Treasure r Gene
Grate will check to see what
plan may be worked out
whereby the village would
make the initial $38 deposit for
such phones when workers
cannot afford to make the
deposits .
Allen Lee King sugge;lt.A .hat
meters being removed from
North Second-Ave. for an improveme nt to the Citizens
National Bank be relocated. He
suggested more meters on Race
and Coal Sts. However, he was
told that the Race St. area in
question is a part of an
emergency route for vehicles
duri ng fires and that some
streets should be left unmetered
so that workers who must enter

stores for the day may have
some place to park where they
do not have to leave their
positi ons to feed meters all day.
On the status of auxiliary
police, King was advised that
there is no present active
auxiliary. Chief of Police J. J.
Cremeans, however, sa id
persons riding in the police
cruiser other than regular officers are covered by workmen's compensation anct these
persons are ric'. ng in the car for
a purpose.
ln. regard to a "hole" in the
street at Second and Mill, King
was told that a water meter is
located there and that repair
materials will not hold in the
location.
Council agreed that the
recrea tion commission ca n
sponsor a fifth and sixth grade
basketball
program
in
coopera tion with the school
district as long as the village
has no liability.

Burke, Ed Cross, Connie Warner, Bill Wheeler, and John
Eichinger. Absent were Debra West, Beth Theiss, and Denny
Hart, manager. Mrs. Connie Romine is the band instructor.

EXTENDED WEATHER
Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday:
Seasonally cool through the
period with a chance of
showers or snow flurrie s
northeast portion Thursday
and Friday. Highs mostly In
the 40s and lows from the
upper 20s to the mid 30s.

Attendmg the meeting were'
Mayor C. 0. Fisher, Council
members John Zerkle, Mrs.
Roger Morgan, Lawrence
Stewart, and David Ohlinger;
Clerk-Treas ur er Grate, .;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Maintenance Supervisor Chase,
Chief Cremea ns, and the
visitor, King .

Bluegrass
Artists at

Three Ki11s

Are Claimed

NEW DELHI (UP!) - Indian
and Pakistani je,t fighters
clashed over Indian territory
Monday and three of the
Pakistani sabrejets were shot
down, a cabinet minister told
The Hannan Trace High Parliament today .
School Band has announced a In Pakistan, the government
Bluegrass Music Festival to be declared a state of emergency.
held at the high school on Dec. A broadcast heard here by
official Radio Pakistan said:
II from 5 to 11 p.m.
The six hour show will have a " In ·Pakistan a state of
donation - admission of $1 per emergency has been declared.
adult and 75 cents for high A proclama lion issued in
school or yo unger students. Islamabad says the president is
Proceeds will go into the satisfied that a grave
Hannan Trace Band fund for the emergency exists in which
purchase of new band uniforms. Pakistan is threatened by exSeveral outstanding ternal aggression."
Bluegrass Musicians will Indian Minister of Defense
perform, including recent Production Vidya Charan
fiddling champions of Ohio and Shukla told Parliament four
West Virginia. Banjo and guitar Pakistani sabrejets iniruded
pickers and mandolin players into Indian airspace near the
village of Boyra Monday. Three
will also be abundant.
Among other groups per- of them were shot down by
iorming will be the Kanawha Indian Air Force Gnat fighters
Valley Ramblers of Leon, W. and two of the Pakistani pilots
Va .; the Blackwater Swam- were captured after they
prats from Oak Hill, Ohio; the parachuted from their planes.
Log Cabin Bvys from near He did not say what happened
A!hens ; and the local Plowboys to the other pilot. There was no
of Crown Ci ty. Other groups are damage to the Indian jets,
Shukla told a cheering
also expected.
The public is invited to arrive Parliament.
at any time during the informal
LOCAL TEMPS
event at Mercerville in GaUia
Temperature
in downtow n
County.
Other plsns such as a bean Pomeroy Tuesday at II a.m.
dinner are tentative and will be was' 34 degrees, under partly
cloudy skies.
announced later.

H-T School

shot to death with a high
powered rifle by an assassin
perched in the Texas School
Book Depository.
The Depository is boarded up
now,with "no trespassing "
signs posted on it. Two blocks
away, the small group gathered
in the ram and chill Monday to
pay their respects on the eighth
anniversary of the late President's death.
"Let us declare today that we
will renew ourselves in the
spirit of John F. Kennedy and
for the ideals he stood for ,"
Mayor Wes Wise said in the
brief ceremony .
The ceremony was conducted
at the John F. Kennedy

~:~~~~:\w~ b~~~:tfr:~ua~:
assassination site. A wreath of
multicolored flowers was laid
on the center slab bearing the
simple gold inscription "John
F. Kennedy."
Then there was a moment of
silence.
The Memorial has no roof
and rain fell on the residents
and tourists who attended.
Seven young black children
huddled under a piece of
canvas to protect themselves
from the rain. An elderly man
in a white raincoat held his
brown felt hat over his heart
throughout the service.
A tall, wiry-haired young man
stepped from the crowd and
from under his coat pulled a
long-stemmed red rose ,
wrapped in wax paper to
protect it from the elements.
He took the rose from the
paper and placed it on the slab.
He bowed his head silently and
backed away.

Murtaugh
Bows Out
PITTSBURGH ( UPI) Danny Murtaugh, who twice
has managed the Pittsburgh
Pirates to World Series victories,
announced
hi s
retirement today and Batting
Coach Bill Virdon was named to
succeed him.
Neither the retirement nor
the replacement came as a
surprise.
Murtaugh, 54, has a history of
heart trouble that once before
forced his retirement - only to
have him return again at the
start of the 1970 season - and
Virdon had filled-in during the
past two seasons when Murta ugh was
temporarily
sidelined due to illness.
Virdon, 40, was the National
League Rookie-of-the-yea r in
1955 and played centerfield on
Murta ugh's
first
world
championship club in 1960. He
batted .267 in an 11-year career.

·F ree Parking Plan Given Up
The proposal to make parking
free on Pomeroy's two village
owned parking lots during the
Chrislmas shopping sPason was
dropped by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Monday
at Bowers' Restaurant.
The chamber had proposed
free parking in its Chrislmas
promotion, which included free
cash prize and new Christmas
lights.
However, the response from
local merchants not being what
was anticipated, the chamber
concluded it shoul~ drop the
parking plan which had been
approved by Pomeroy Council.
The chamber was to reimburse
the village $500 for two weeks u(
free parking. .
At the time of the meeting
$1,289 had been received from
24 merchants. Following the
meeting, Jdck Kerr, president ,
reported that five more merchants had conlributed to the

prug ram . A Lutal of $300 was
donated toward new Christmas
lights.
The chamber voted to approve a motion made by Earl
Ingles to spend $500 for a cash
prize, $200 for Santa 's appearance, $600 for adver tising
and $100. [or incidental expenses.
Merchants participating in
the promotion will give two $5
gift certificates. A drawing of
the gift certifica tes will be
made each Friday beginning
Dec. 3 at 2 p.m.
A drawing for the $500 cash
prize will be held on Dec. 24at 2
p.m. All drawings will be
cunducl&lt;.'d on the upper parking
lot. Anyone over 13 years uf ogt·
may participale in the
promotion. Tickets for the give
aways will be given by merchants partidpating in the .
pr o~ran1. No purchase is
nt•t•t.•ssary tu receive a lll'kct.

Kerr said the Retail
Merchants
Committee
worked three weeks on the
Christmas promotion and it
was disheartening to come up
with only $1,289 for the entire
program.
It was also re ported that
available Christmas lights have
been installed throughout the
downtown area.
!t was suggested by Ted Reed
that sin ce the Christmas
promotion was lacking in fu nds
the program be dropped for this
season. Reed suggested that
merchants be notified by letter
and suggest that the money
collected this year be kept for
Chrislma 0 lighting next year.
It was cuncluded·, however.
tl1at smce the p1·ogram had been
&gt;tarted it would not be fair to
the 24 merchants wishing to·
parti t~ pate to drop il.
PltO'tidpuling in he ChristIHi.ls ~·rumutton are Pomeroy

Flowe r Shop, Fabric Shop,
Sears Catalogue, Hartley Shoes,
K &amp; C Jewelers, Pomeroy Ben
Franklin, lola's Dress Shop,
Pomeroy Sunoco, Farmers
Bank and Savings, Nelson's
Drugs, Moore's Store, Pomeroy
Cement Block, J &amp; R Sports
Shop, Crow 's Steak House,
Swisher . and Lohse Drugs,
Chapman 's Shoes, Blue and
Grey Restaurant, Goessler's
Jewelry, ,Pomeroy National
Bank, Stiffler's Department
Store, Elberfelds Department
Store, Marguerite Shoe Store, L
&amp; Z Shop, Landmark, Athens
County Savings and Loan,
Krog er's Store , Ebersbach
Hardware, New York Clothing,
Po111eroy Motor Company , and
WilliS Ashland .
Contributors to the pNgram
are Davis Warner Insurance,
Cleland Really, Smith-Nelson
Buick, DHily Seo 11nel. 1\Lilen..
!\&gt;lt•sse llt!t'r, and WMPO Hadio .

BONNIE MORftiS , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Morris, and Rantly Marshall, son or Mr .
and Mrs . Ch"rle• M&lt;~rshall, sixth graders, were crowned queen and king of a fall festival
Satuniay nign. 1i1hc Salisbury Elementar)' School by the PI'A. A profit of $254.91 was realized
from tlw fcs11 \':!! .

I; .

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