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                  <text>-The Dailv Sentinel. Mlddleoo~Pomernv. 0 .. Sent. 11..1!1'12

· Guerrillas

Centennial
of Zion Church of Christ Observed
'
THE 10«rH BffiTHDAY OF THE Zion Church of Christ on
the Pomeroy-Harrisonville Road was observed at a homecoming
on Aug. 20. Morning speaker was Mr. Ray Russell who entered
the ministry at Kentucky Christian College as a youth from the
Zioo Church in 1950, and is now pastor of a church in Lexington,
Ky.

. (Continued from page 1)
· telephone lines in the area had
been cut.
It was the first guerrilla
attack in the west bank since
Aug. 10, 1971, whe~ a grenade
was thrown at a tourist bus in
the biblical city of Hebron,
wounding two passengers and
10 pedestrians.
Most guerrilla activity In
recent years has been confined
to the Gaza Strip, formerly
administered by Egypt.
l,!rael struck back with a
vengeance Friday for the
ldlling of its top athletes, and
said Su~day the results might
have been different had its
units been at the West German
airport near Munich Tuesday
night.
"If there had been an Israeli
unit there, most probably the
result would have been different," a military spokesman
said of the unsuccessful West
German rescue attempt of nine
Israeli hostages held by
guerrillas
at
Feurstenfeldbruck Airfield. Two of
the hostages · were killed
earlier.

former pastor.
Approximately 175 persons attended the event with a basket • Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
dinner enjoyed at noon. The Pomeroy National Bank and the
Pomeroy Flower Shop provided floral arrangements for the - Clyde Roy , Racine; Dale .
Wright, Rutland; Paul Jones,
occasion.
At right, above, is Kenneth Eberts of Athens, the pastor of Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
the Zion Church of Christ which is marking a century of history in
Perry Hoffman, Flora
Afternoon speakers were Mr. Eugene Underwood, pastor of the
Meigs County this year. Mr. Eberts is a social worker at the
Williams,
Dale Connolly, Cathy
church for tO years, 195Uil, now at Tuppers Plains, and Mr. C.E.
Chillicothe Correctional Institute. Paul McElroy is Sunday
Searles, lola Howell, Barbara
Shepard, now on the staff of Winston-Salem Bible College, also a
school superintendent.
Douglas, Robert Cwtis, Cora
Christy, Delores CW1diff, Sue
Seelig
and Betty Gilkey.
AT BAND DAY
SUNDAY
ADMISSIONS Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler
Drake, Pomeroy RD. attended William Barrett, Langsville ;
Band Day at Ohio Umversity William Buchanan, Pomeroy;
SAIGON (UPI)--South Viet- replaced, probably in a matter Vietnamese withdrew earlier Saturday. Their grand- Benny Spears, Syracuse ;
nam said today it lost more of months. Mobile, helicopter- reports of a rocket attack at daughter, Pamela Higgins, Cassie Baum, Pomeroy ; Linda
than 70 helicopters Sunday in a borne task forces have been Bien Hoa and said the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roy Lute, Long Bottom ; Gene
series of explosions ·at the used particularly in the possibility of sabotage was Higgins of Westerville, was one Chaney, Minersville: Frances
sprawling Bien Hoa airbase 14 fighting to reopen Highway 13 being investigated.
of the band day participan ts. Alkire, Harrisonville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES miles northeast of Saigon. to the An Loc region 30
John
Reese, Dora Carpenter,
Sabotage was suspected.
miles north of Saigon .
The attacks on the Hanoi
BITTEN
BY
SNAKE
Hazel Russell and Mary
The U.S. command reported
The explosions at Bien Hoa region Sunday knocked out
Paul McDaniel, Middleport, Berkley.
one of the more devastating ·wounded 45 Americans. They three spans of the mile-long
attacks of the war on the Hanoi came when a stockpile of 200 Paul Doumer Bridge linking a custodian al Meigs High
School, was squirrel hunting
area.
South Vietnamese air force Hanoi and Haiphong and Satw·day when he was bitten
Sume of the helicopters were bombs blew up, killing two heavily damaged three others.
RACER KILLED
by
a
snake.
McDaniel
is
in
an
destroyed and others were South Vietnamese soldiers, In addition the raids hit anny
THOMPSON, Ohio (UPI ) hadly damaged in what milita- wounding 20 others, destroying barracks areas four and two a1·ea hospital.
William Levee ~ 30, Lakewood,
ry sources said could be the four South Vietnamese tanks miles from Hanoi, leaving
qualify ing a modified 1939
SALES ARE UP
heaviest Suuth Vietnamese air and heavily damaging a U.S. them in flames and covered
Chevrolet, was killed Saturday
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Retail night when his car crashed at .
loss of the war.
Air Force AC119. The South with smoke.
sales in Ohio during July were the finish line at the T:1ompson
Their loss could cripple
6 pet. above July, 1971, the Drag Raceway here. Track
government military
Center for Business and officials said the car, doing 147
operations in the Saigon
Econo.mic Research at Ohio m.p.h. at the time, ran off the
military district'until they are
State University report s. The course and roiled over .
(Continued from page I)
her homecoming reception in Depere, Wis., next month as one of increase was led by service
the highlights of her one-year reign. The 23-yer.()ld former Miss stations with a 2&gt; pet. jump.
Wisconsin, a political conservative and devout fundamentalist, Deparlment stores sales in·
(1) Obelisk
will return to the small town near Green Bay in mid-October, a creased 13 pet.: lumber·
(2) Frederic Chopin
public figure in her own right and a young woman guaranteed an building materials and drug
(3) Ethel Waters
stores. 12 pet., appliance stores
income exceeding $60,000 during the year.
(4) Joseph Holt Ingraham
Miss Meeuwsen told how she had distributed leaflets at and farm and garden stores. 11
(5) Brag!
peL
football games for President Nixon's campaign in 1968 and said
her Christian beliefs did not allow for approval of premarital sex,
LODGE TO MEET
at least for herself. The winner, a brunette songstress, conceded
White Rose Lodge will meet
at a Sunday morning news conference that her new title will
at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
mean separation from her steady boyfriend, 3ii-year.()ld Tom
American Legion Hall in
September 11 &amp; 12
Camburn, the divorced father of a 3-year.()ld child.
Middleport.

70 Copters Lost In Explosions

News. • • in Briefs

Answers

Walt Disney's

EATER
(lechnicolorJ
Earl Hollimon
Patricia Cro w ley

Colorcartoon :

Cured Duck

tG)

Blue Chip Number Now at II

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The Cincinnati Reds almost
IGJ · certainly will win in the
National League West. The San

1.---------rl
AdultsSl.SO

Children 75c

Show Starts 7p.m.

Francisco Giants have no

chance.
And so attention turns to

By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Buffet ...

AN EVENING
BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5 to q : JQ-$2 .50 all you can eat , (or AI a Carte)

individual goals and several
were reached as the Reds and
Giants spli t a doubleheader
Sunday at Candlestick Park.
The Reds reduced their
magic number for cllnching

the Western Division flag to 11
by winning 8·7 in the first
game. The Giants used the long
ball to win the second game 8-2.
Johnn y Bench of the Reds
had four runs batted in for the
day to lift his season total to
101. He also has 31 homers.
"I go into every season with
three goa ls," Bench said.
"First of ail is to win the
pennant. And from a personal
standpoint I want to hit 30
homers and drive in at least 100

Wide Menu
Choice

Drinks and
Dessert Extra .

&amp;der our r eg ular menu every night 51o 10.

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR
MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
PRETZELS &amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.

You'llbe happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
(

Pleasant Valley Hospiai
DISCHARGES:
Lewi s
Green, Apple Grove; Mark
Smith , Point Pleasant ; Orville
Casto, Leon : William Plants,
Point Pleasant; William
Rardin, Sr., George Wamsley,
Henderson: Alford Casto, Ray
Roush, Point Pleasant, and
John ·Doss, Cown City.

.
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 P.M.
· Open Both Friday and Saturday 9: 30

Here's Just One

Ot Many Outstanding
Values In Wearing
Apparel You'll Find
In Our
Second Floor
Ready-to-Wear
Department .

.....,

JACQUARD

DOUBLE KNIT
100% POLYESTER

JUMPERS

. POMEROY

~ame .

Marichal, wl10 had left the
game for a pinch-hitter just
before Ronds' homer, picked
up his sixth victory. He has lost
15. II assured him of not losing

1 \ lll't&lt; Rr 111111
..... . . .. ~ Cl• ..... t

•

•

at y

enttne

Devoted To The Interest&amp; OJ The Meigs-Mruon Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1972

VOL. XXIV NO. 104

Weather

PHONE 992·2156

Scattered thundershowers
throu gh Wednesday. Lows
tonight in the 60s and Wed·
nesday's highs ranging to
upper 80s south.

TEN CENTS

2 Bus Bids Accepted by Meigs Local

Sizes 12 to 20
and 14'12 to 22'12

The Meigs Equipment Sam Smith of Rio Grande
Company bids for two bus College who explained the
chassis with automatic trans· Community College pian for
mission were accepted, as the four-county area, Meigs,
were bids on tires submitted by Gallia, Ja ckson and Vinton .
Rizer Oil Company by the The four boards of county
Meigs Local Board of commissioners have approved
Education Monday night. Both the community college, a two.
firmS are located in Pomeroy. year technical college.
The bid by Meigs Equipment
Smith said since the program
was $6,134.11. Other bidders has been approved by the State
were the Pomeroy Motor Co., Board of Regents and the
Keith Goble Ford, and R. H. county commissioners, the
Rawlings Sons, the la tte r two next step is to appoint a
of Middleport.
com munity college board.
Another bidder on the tire
Smith as ked that board
contract was the Pomeroy members each submit four
Home and Auto Store .
names of persons they felt
Also accepted was the bid qualified to serve on planning
submitted by Edwin H. Davis committees, and from the 20
and Son of Danville, for a names choose four to submit at
Superior body totaling $3,590. the next mee ting. The board
There was no other bid.
agreed to do so.
Frank ·w. Porter, president,
Smith explained that one
presided W1til he left to attend third of the cost per student at
a Pomeroy PTA meeting. the Com munity College is to be
Donald Mullen took the chair. paid locally, one third by the
Meeting with the board was state, and the balance b~

ONLY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JENNY PROFFITT
80)(. 94

RACINE, OHIO 45771

P.ORDEROF_
tJTHE , ----------------------------------

Resurface Bids Invited
Middleport Village Council
voted unanimously Monday
night to advertise for bids to
resurface Park St. from Custer
to Broadway.
The action followed Coun.
cilman Fred Hoffman's
pointing out that $16,000 has
been appropriated for street
resurfacing by contract. He
recommended that some
resurfacing be done each year.
Council decided Park St. is
most in need of resurfacing of
all streets in the town. It had
been dropped from a list of
streets to be resurfaced when
work was done the .last time
due to. lack of funds.
.. .

Hoffman emphasized that
the public should be well·
informed on how the money
raised from a proposed $5
increase in auto license fees
would be spent. The levy will
be voted upon in the community in the November
election.
It was pointed out that the
entire proceeds from ths auto
license tax - under law would be earmarked exclusively for street main·
tenance and repair . There are
about 2,200 vehicles in the
community, so the tax would
prOduce about Sll,OOO a year
for street work, Mayor John

~~::::::~o?.::::::;:..~n:::o

.. m.~~'*·W.W.i@J~

ews•. in Briefs •
"'"'0'--------------------

FOTOaCCENl
If you have a Checking Account with us, come in or if you

don't, come in and open one with the "Wide-Awake Bank"
and 200 Foto Accent Checks will be yo1U'8

FREE.

second game .:md give the

vic tory lo Marichal. He scored "~:::~..:::";
•• olhooo ••
twice to bring his season total · vo
llo "'""' ...... lot
to 100 runs .
- -""'''' lloll- It,"
"I figw-e I should score at
Seei ng is believing, so, make
least 1110 rW1s every year. If I a li st of ill! your needs i'nd
bring it down to The
don'l I'm not doing my job as a
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
leadoff man . I also think I
Our
"FRIENDLY ONES"
should hit about 25 homers and
pride themselves in showing
steal as many bases as I can,"
how you can get the very
Buncts said.
be st in quality merchandise
~I
il price lo Iii your budget .
Bonds connected for a threerun homer off los;ng pitcher
Jim McGlothlin in the second

periences of almost 30 years ago when ~e was a prisoner of the
Japanese on Bataan and completed the Death March even
though he had shrapnel in his leg at the time. Along with other
prisoners, he was moved to a prison camp on the island of
Honshu and was assigned to assist a Japanese blacksmith .
However, one day he accidentally the wrist or the blacksmith
with a hammer and was ordered into the coal mines as punishment.
It was in the mines that he was injured in a fall of rocks. Five
of the men who were at he reunion were among those who
removed Van lnwagen from under the rocks. His leg was amputated by the Japanese, but after that, Van lnwagen, recalls, it
was a case of "take care of yourself."
Even though an amputee, he was forced to work in the camp,
trying to balance himself on one leg. There were the skimpy
rations of rice in the morning and at noon, a bowl of "dog soup"
being added to the rice for the evening meal .
Veterans of Bataan and Corregidor meeting for the reunion
held business sessions for a half of each of the five days. Besides
discussing serious business, the veterans, including Army nurses
who were also prisoners, reminisced of what they considered
(Continued on page 10)

Navy-Black· Brown

"RBis are rea lly the most
important. TI1at's what wins
games. If you hit homers, you
get RBls. I would like to hit .280
but that really isn't quite as

fur Bobby Bonds and Juan
Marichal of the Giants.
Bonds bla sted his 22nd
homer to break a 2-2 tie in the

Nations and peoples through all lime have been reminded or
man's inhumanity to man.
Survivors of the infamous Bataan Death March in 1942 need
no reminder. They recall all too vividly their forced march from
Bataan in the Philippine Islands to island Jap prisoner of war
camps and to ports of embarkation for the Japanese home
Islands were American prisoners furthered the Empire's war
objectives against the U.S. by forced labor, or died.
Edgar Van lnwagen, Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, like the
others - dwindling now in numbers -remembers.
For the first time in roughly 27 years since his release as a
POW on the island of Honshu: Van Inwagen this year attended
the annual reunion of The American Defenders of Bataan and
Corregidor, Inc. Meeting five days at Fontana Village Resort,
Fontana Dam, N.C. The survivors have been gathering regularly
since shortly after their release in 1945 following the triumphant
entry of American Armed Forces in Tokyo shortly after V-J Day,
Aug. 14, 1945.
Van Inwagen, a leg amputee, remembers well his ex-

Although uranium is usually
regarded as one of the rarer
elements, there is actually
more of It present in the earth's
crust than
uco mmon "
elements such as mercury,
silver and iodine .

.

runs.

Yes, too ·Well

Now You Know

Picture here

Reds the tyi ng and winning
runs in the eigh th inning of
Sunday's first game .

mark .
It was a noteworthy day too

•

CHESTER ·- Graveside
services will be conducted at
11:30 a.m. Tuesday in the
Chester cemetery for Mrs.
Lorena E. Whiteside, 83, native
of Meigs County or Akron, who
died Saturday following a brief
illness.
She was the daughter of the
late William and Elizabeth
Hoff, formerly of Middleport.
Mrs. Whiteside moved to
Akron in 1910. She later lived in
Hollywood, Calif. where she
worked as a photographer 20
years.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. David (Marguerite)
Warshaw, Valley Cottage, N.
Y., two granddaughters, Mrs.
Charles Peterson, Longwood,
Fla., and Mrs.
Totka, Altamonte Springs,
Fla., a great-grandson; three
nephews, George Reuter,
Canton; Frank Burlingame,
Cleveland, and Harrison Hart·
man, Akron, and a niece, Mrs.
Floyd Carter of Akron.
Mrs. Whiteside was a
member of the Eastern Star,
Nehta Chapter, Akron, and of
the Social Order of Beucant K.
T., of which she was a past
president.
Eastern Star services will be
held at 8 this evening at the
Eckhard-Baldwin Funeral
Home in Akron.

run-scol' ing single to give the

good year without hitting .280."
Bench had three hits in the
doubleheader to keep his
batting average around the .260

PH. 992-3629

Died Saturday

20 games this year, a dismal
but likely prospect at one time.
" I was lhrowing hard but I
didn't know where the ball was
going," Marichal said. "I don't
like to give up runs on walks. I
can understand if they get runs
.by hitt ing th e ball ."
Sam McDowell uncorked a
Wild pitch and then gave up a

important. You can have a

-

Mrs. Whiteside

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Be the first to have your

THE BISCUIT

(Technicolor)

William R. Bailey, 80, of 405
Grant St, Middleport, died
Sunday morning at the Holzer
Medical Center after a long
illness.
Mr.' Bailey was born March
18, 1892, the son · of the late
Henry S. and Maggie Becker
Bailey. He was a retired
employe of 'the New York
Central f.ailroad, employed as
a car repairman 46 years.
Preceding him in qeath was his
wife, Florence.
Mr. Bailey was a member of
the Modern Woodman Lodge

STUDENTS!

MEIGS THEATRE

Walt Disney's .
BEAVER VALLEY

Funeral services will be 1\eld
at 11 a.m. WedneMay at !he
and of Railroad organizations. Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Surviving are a daughter, wih the Rev. Raulin Moyer~
Miss Jane Bailey, librarian of pastor of the Middleport
the Middleport Public Library; Church of Christ, offlclatjng .
a son Clarence of Springfield, Burial will be in the .Rock
Ohio;' two grandson, and two Springs Cemetery. Fnends
sisters, Mrs. Ada Zeishler and may call at the funeral home,
Mrs. Helen Radfor!l, Pomeroy. any time.

Wmiam Bailey Died at .Holzer

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see one
of the Friendly Tellers ...
'

lHE FARMERS BMK &amp; SAVINGS 00.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal R -.. Sytlem

On Fridoya Our Drlv•tn WlMowla
Opon to.m.lo 7 p.m., (ConHnuoliSly).
120.000 Mlximum l,.ureiiCt
For Eeclt Dt!teaitw

By United Press International
STOCKHOLM - SWEDISH AND DANISH police are
searchlnl! for Leila Khaled, the Palestinian guerrUia and alr·
plane hijacker, the Stockholm newspaper Expressen said today.
The Swedish National Pollee Board would not confirm the report
but a spokesman said Interpol, the internatiooal police
organization, circulated a warning two weeks ago that the 26year&lt;Jld guerrilla girl was hiding somewhere in Europe.
Expressen said Miss Khaled was in West Germany during
the guerrilla attack at the Munich Olympic games and then fled
to Denmark and possibly across to Sweden. The newspaper
quoted ''reliable sources" as saying Miss Khaled had been seen
in Denmark last week and in western Sweden this week.

ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER GOLDA MEIR SAID today in
Jerusalem the new wave of Arab guerrilla attacks threatened
Middle East peace efforts. She vowed that Israel would "smite
the terrorists wherever it can reach them."
Mrs. Meir was addressing a special mid-recess session of the
Knesset parliament called to dlacuss the Arab guerrilla killing of
the 11 members of the Israeli team at the Munich Olympic
Games. She commended the West German government for its
decision to use force against the guerrillas but said there was
"room for criticism" for the way the rescue attempt was carried
out. She did not elaborate, but nine Israelis died in the shootout.
COLUMBUS- COLUMBUS REALTOR Kemet~ F. Wright
Jr. told a seminar on property management Monday rea) estate
lntereata must get tOgether llll reforms that eliminate "evil slum
owDer." from their bualnesa.
"We must see that the reformB are written in such a mamer
that we can live with thi!m," Wr!Rht said at the seminar held
during the U"d annual cooventlon of the Ohio Assn. of Real
Eltate Boards. "Change Is necessary and we've got to parUclpate ),Of) pet. in writing them," he said. "We must get Involved
to pruteet legitimate landlords."
(Continued on page 10)

Zerkle reported.
Fire Chief Bob Byer conferred with council on a 36-hour
required state vocational fire
school which will be held in
Middleport each Wednesday
evening. The Meigs Board of
Education and Middleport
Village share in the cost of the
school, Chief Byer said.
He also dis cussed the
existing burning ordinance in
effect. It was decided that
burning can continue in containers, and that residents
wishing to do "open burning "
must secure burning pennits
either from Byer or from Pete
Kloes at the Middleport Lunch
Room or the Dudley Florist
Shop.

Hours of such burning will be
designated in the permit, Chief
Byer said. Burning of leaves
and garbage in the community
is prohibited by the ordinance.
Council approved a second
reading of a new ordinance
which levies a charge for
refuse, other than garbage,
being hauled away for
residents by village employes.
This includes waste refuse
which is too cumbersome for
garbage collection service in
the community to handle.
Mayor Zerkle reported that
he had conferred with state and
oounty officials on the planned
improvements to Page St., to

Fire, Aid Units

Go Out 27 Times
The Middleport Fire
Department answered 27 calls
during August, Fire Chief Bob
Byer reported to Middleport
Council Monday night.
Of the total calls, seven were
fire calls and 20 were first aid
calls. Of the 20 first aid runs, 12
were in town and eight were
out of town with ·three calls
Involving motor vehicles in
accidents, one being a fatality.
Miles driven during the month
for all vehicles totaled 252,7
and there were 35 man hours
involved in the seven fire calls.
The average men per fire call
was 13.3.

be paid for from State Bond
Issue I fW1ds and that the
project should be ready to
advertise for bids in the spring .
The report of the mayor for
August showing receipts of
$1 ,746.75 in fines and fees and
$183 in merchant police
collections for a total of
$1,929.75 was approved.
Charles Searls, Pearl St.
resident, met with council to
request that some action be
taken against customers or the
M. and R. Bargainland cluttering up the street with papers
and oth~r articles from their
cars . He asked also that
council request some relief
from the dust on the parking lot
of this business. Council agreed
to confer with the management ·
on possible relief.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Zerkle, Councilmen
David Ohlinger, Hoffman, Dick
Vaughan, Lawrence Stewart
and William Walters ; Chief of
Police J. J . Cremeans,
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase, and Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate.

tuition whi ch i s estim&lt;1ted to
cos t
each
s tudcn l
ap-

proximately $600 per year

High School at a cos t of $4,659.

The planning co mmi ssion
wi ll consist of a business and
industry committee, educC~tion

The bui lding fs presently being
used for mining classes.

The board also increased
committee, historical com- substitute tea chers pay from
miltee, and an economic and $11; to $18 a day and $18 to $20
~ocir)logical committee.
after the 11th day .
In other business the school

The followin g

::~ppointmenLo;;;

re commended by George
Hargraves, Supt., were approved : Samuel Crow as
assistant freshman football
coach , Richard Sweet as
assistant jum or high football
coach, John Bentley as wrestling coach (Mr. Taylor: who
was the wrestling coach, left
the post due to his duties as

assistant princi pal!, Margaret
Parsons as h81f-time Title I
teacher at Salem Center, Mrs.
Linda Hunter as a teacher,
beginnmg Sept. 5, at Salem
Ce nter ; the following as aides
at $1.80 per hour for 180 da ys
eac h, Mrs. Phyllis Dugan, Mrs.
Kathy Hood , Mrs. Gracie
!Con tinued on page 10)

Stalemate Cracked
SAIGON (UPI )-South Viet·
nam ese marines racin g a
Wednesday deadline have bro·
ken the bloody stalemate at
Quang Tri City by storming the
walls of the 19th cen tur y
Citadel and linking up inside its
high brick walls, field reports
said today.
While th e marines scored
their impressive victory at
Quang Tri City over North
Vietnamese ordered to battle

to the death, the U.S. command
was reporting what it called
the most destructive ra ids over
Nor th Vietnam since heavy
bombing was resumed more
than five months ago. The U.S.
planes using ''smart" bombs
hit three bridges within 28
miles of China.
The military situation wor·
sened below Da Nang,
however, and field reports
today said a battalion of 250

Suuth Vietnamese troops at bombed to keep North VietnaTien Phuoc, 38 miles south of mese reinforcements away.
Da Nang, broke and ran under
Marine Scale Wall
a furious Communist assault
The first marine units en'that included a 200 round of 130 tered Sunday night through a
mm artillery.
hole blasted in the southeast
Initial reports from .Quang corner or the Citadel by a u.s.
Tri said contact with Commu- Air Force laser-guided
nist troops was light inside the "smart" bomb July 10, UPI
Citadel, but the biggest guns in reporter Ted Kurrus said. On
the North Vietnamese arsenal Monday night, reinforcements
were pounding the advancing plunged through the hole in the
marines while U.S. B52s 15-foot-high wall while another
unit scaled over the opposite
northeast corner, he said.
The.two W1its, totaling about
300 men, soon joined up along
the eastern wall and hegan
Means Co., Huntington, went pushin g toward the heavy
left of center, striking the bunkers in the western sector.
Communists have held the
Johnson vehicle.
Citadel
for 135 days.
Reval L. Patterson, Mid·
President Nguyen Van Thieu
dleport, filed suit for divorce
against Charles E. Patterson, has set Sept. 19 as the deadline
Pomeroy, charging gross for the recapture of all occupied territory. Kurrus said
neglect of duty.
military sources told him the
marines at Quang Tri were
ordered to secure the forbidding Citadel by Wednesday.
The Citadel, captured by the
William Walter Benson, Rt.
Communists
May I, loomed
3, Albany, and Adam J.
Jacobson, Rt. I, Rutland have clearly today against blue
been charged with cultivating skies as the highest point in
marijuana without first ob- battle-flattened Quang Tri
taining a lice nse as a City. Kurrus said more than 15
by
low-flying
manufacturer of drugs as attacks
American
and
South
Vietrequired by the state board of
pharmacy , a violation of namese planes hit Commun ist
Section 371902 of the Ohio bunkers on the floor and along
the western wall today.
Revised Code.
North Vietnamese troops,
The men are in Meigs County
under
orders to "hold until
Ja il.
(Continued on page 10)

$307,000 Asked in 2 Suits
Lawsuits as king com·
pensatory and other damages
in two court actions totaling
$307,000 have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Carl H. Rairden and Beatrice
Rairden, Hartford, W. Va.,
filed suit againt William R.
Hayes, Jr., and William R.
Hayes, Sr., Syracuse, for
compensatory damages in the
amount of $222,000.
The plaintiffs petition that on
Sept. 14, 1971, on SR 7, approximately five miles northeast of Pomeroy, the defendant, William R. Hayes, Jr .,
unlawfully, intentionally and
maliciously struck the
plaintiff, Carl H. Rairden with
an auto driven by William R.
Hayes, Jr. The suit is for in·
juries received, earnings lost,
and medical an d hospital
expenses.

Boyd Eugene Johnson, Rt. 1,
Tuppers Plains, filed suit in the
amount of $115,000 as a result of
injuries suffered in an auto
accident on July 30, 1971 on SR
7. The plaintiff charges that
Dallas Gambill , driving a
vehicle belonging to F. W.

Air Space High on Pot
A mari juana cro p confiscated Saturday in Meigs
County north of HarrisonviUe
valued now by officials between $70,000 and a quarter of a
million dollars, was burned in
Athens Monday afternoon.
In Athens to work with police
there in the destruction of the
3,000 plants were represen·
tatives of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept and Middleport
Police Dept. The plants were
burned outdoors.

Directors Elected by ~amber

Seven directors were elected
Monday to two-year terms by
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce in a regular session
at the Meigs Inn.
An essay contest on
Elected by secret ballot were
Americanism for fourth, filth Fred Crow, Jack Kerr, Ralph
and sixth graders of Meigs Graves, Tom Cassell, Ted
County will be conducted by Reed, Louis Osborne and Don
the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Pearch.
Webster Post 39, American
Carry over officers from last
Legion.
year are Marge Hoffner, Earl
Mrs . Edith Fox, auxiliary Ingels, Bill Grueser, Jack
Americanism chairman, an- Carsey, Bob Ja cobs and
nounced details of the contest Ri cha rd Chambers. The
which will offer a prize to each directors will meet at a later
grade winner plus a prize for date and elect the president of
the hest essay written by a the chamber for the 1972-73
fourth, fifth or sixth grader on year.
the subject.
In other business, C. E.
Mrs. Fox said that essays Blakeslee presented copies of
must be 100 words or less and the 1970.1990 Meigs County
deal with the subject, "I'm Comprehensive Plan which
Glad I'm An American ." covers all planning proposals
Judging will be on the basis of for Meigs County. The report
essay content. Entries are to he I represents an integration of all
sent to Mrs. Grace Pratt, the individual plans and
auxiliary president, North policies that have evolved
Third Ave., Middleport, and. through planning to date. It
lllust be postmarked by Oc- will he the official policy guide
tober 15.
for growth during the next 20

Essay Contest
Is Announced

bow·d approved repair to the
fu rnace at the Pomeroy Junior

years .
Th e report deals with
existing land use and housing,
community facilities, utilities,
and thoroughfares in Meigs
County and the projected needs
of each.

Blakeslee noted that a
meeting with the Meigs County
Commissioners on sub-division
reguiarions will be held Sept.
28. Any changes in the subdivision regulations will be
made at that time, Blakeslee
said.
If sub-division regulations
are adopted, they will be of no
use unless enforced, Blakeslee
said.
Cop ies of U1e Comprehensive
Plan in book form were given
to those who were interested.
Persons wishing to have a book
as a souvenir may buy one for
$6. Blakeslee made these other
poinls, that Meigs Is '" the
second year of planning, the
state has n·ot said how much
money it will contribute toward
comprehensive planning, but it

is hoped Pomeroy will be part
or the program.
Federal funds which pay the
salary of Joyce Bunch, who is
employed at the Chamber
office located on the ground
floor of the courthouse, will not
be available at the end of the
month. It was indicated that
the chamber office perhaps
may be closed for a 31klay
period.
However, it was concluded
that the chamber might bear
the expense of the secretary
until the program is refunded .
Jack Kerr, president, is to
con tact Richard Sayre of the
C.A.P. to see what is available
and when.

pie with d1·ugs, their effects
and
what
to
do. There are two medical
people on the staff at the
present time, nurses, and it is
hoped a doctor ca n be added.
Kerr in other business stated
that plans lor the Christmas
promotion should get underway soon. It was also
suggested that merchants be
contacted, and if they are in·
terested in the Christm as
promotion, an evening dinner
meeting he set to discuss and
make plans. Letters will be
sent to all merchants in regard
to the promotion and meeting.

It was noted that rental
homes and houses for sale are
Rolf Stangel, co-ordinator of being sent to the Meigs Mine as
the Meigs County Coffee submitted by local realtors.
House, met with the chamber · Attending were Kerr, Marge
to explain the use of the Coffee Hoflner, Bob Jacobs, Doc
House.
Schuler, Fred Crow, Blakeslee,
He said plans call for arts Jack Carsey, Bill Grueser,
a nd crafts, services, coun Earl Ingels, Joyce Bunch, Tom
seling on , drug abuse Cassell, Jim Mees, Rolf
and adult evening work- Stangel, Beulah Jooes and
shops familiarizing peo- Katie Crow.

�WIN ATBRIDGE

&amp; THINGS

Over-Reliance on Blackwood
I

12

NOKfll
+KQ
. AQIOHf

t AQI• 1
... 2
WES1

fAST
+10532

.2
t9 4

.4

+AJKI

... 97h54

+AJ9 Hl4

t 761

Si)U111 (II)

+6

.KJ9 751
t K i08

I.

... KQIO
Both vulnerable
\\csl ' North
l'ast Sout h

Pass

ofK II

••

Pas." Pass

ng lead- · A

held up he could lose a lot
more 1f Not th ~new what he
was dotng and was votd of
one of the black smts
North was very apo!ogettc
m the ensumg conversat10n
He satd that hts hand looked
so good that he JUSt forgot
about the posstbthty that ht s
partner mtght not have even
one ace
We were drawn mto the
d1scusston We pomted out
that we sympathized a !title
wtth North but hoped that
North would not let enthu
stasm run away wtth htm m
the future After all we re
marked There ts no extra
bonus for a slam btd all at

once

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIU: AUN)

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

PEP TALK - Betsy Koonce, (standing), New York
representative of Commumty Concerts Inc Monday night
urged 1972 73 membership drtve workers to gtve their total
dedication lhts week durmg the Trt.County Commumty
Concert Assoctalton s 26th annual membership ktckoff

dinner Others left to rtght are Mrs Pat Mtlls co-chatrman of
the memberstup drtve Dr U!wts Schmtdt, assoctation
preSident, Mrs Jan Thaler general drive chatrman and
Mrs Carolyn Rodertck secretary Not ptctured - C M
McGmness treasurer

Membership Drive is Full Go
Gtve the Trt Coun ty
Community Concert
Association membershtp dnve
your total dedtcallon thts
week,' satd Betsy Koonce,
Commumty Concert, Inc ,
representative from New
York, In addressmg 85 persons
at Monday mght s 26th annual
'ktckoff dmner at Grace
Ututed Methodtst Church m
Gallipolis
The 1972 membershtp drtve
wtll run through Saturday
rught One hundred and two
workers are parltctpatmg m
thts year s membershtp
campatgn m the Mason Galiia,
Metgs County area
Famtly membershtps are
$25 adult memberships $10
and student memberships $5
Thus far, three concerts are
slated for the In-county area,
includmg the Texas Boys Chotr
and the Rounte Kole Trto
' Wtth a successful mem
bership drtve this week, the trt
county area will be able to
sponsor a fow-th concert
·remarked the New York
,representative
Mrs Koonce added, we wtll
have somethmg for everybody
thts year " She w-ged workers
to get young people In the area
Inspired Student membership
teams have been formed for
area high school and college
students
Dr U!wts A Schmtdt, Trt·

Coun ty Commuruty Concert
Assoctalton prestdent served
as master of ceremomes
Although no spectftc goal has
been established for the 1972-73
season workers are shootmg
for at least 600 members this
year
Dr Schmtdt announced Mrs
L R Ford has been named the

new concert master suc-

Or ebaugh Sue Patterson Jane

Yocum Norma Dell nger and
Lmda Fann mg
Addte Wuerch Capta n
Mrs John Silvey Judy lsaccs

Penny Moore and Pat M li s
Joan Schm 1dl Captam
Betty and Ma c McGumness

Ed th Ross Mr and Mrs H 0

Franc1 s Dorotha Su1ter and
Eldon Wuerch
Mo.ry Ellen Lmg o Capt am Mtldred Lee Ltz Cornell Dene

ceeding Eldon Wuerch It was
also announced Mrs Saundra
Koby was responsible for the
street banner on Second Ave
remmding restdents of the
1972 73 membershtp campatgn
Mrs Jan rhaler, drtve
Births
chatrman, named the 1972-73
Sept 8 - Mrs Mtchael
membership captams and thetr Ryan son Syracuse and Mrs
respective workers Mrs Pat Robert J Hoff daughter RIO
Mtlls ts co-chatrman of the Grande Se pt 9 - Mrs
drtve
Clayton Farber son Galhpohs
Concert Membership Ferry and Mrs George Ttlley
Headquarters ts located at II son Wellston Sept 10 - Mrs
Court St 10 Galltpobs
James Terry son Patnot
Prtor to Monday's bus10ess
meetmg,a 22-ptece stage band,
Dtscharges
The Swmgmg Sqwres under
Mane Turner Linda Henry
the dtrectton of Gary Stewart, Glona Carpenter Mrs Ralph
PI Pleasant band dtrector,
Gibbs and son
Ltnda
presented SIX numbers The Rutherford Mrs Robert
West Vtrginia mustctans were Hmnphreys and son Kevm
Introduced by former GAHS Yenan John U!e Chck Shawn
band dtrector A K Sutter
Paugh Judy Young Mrs
Area capta10s and thetr Floyd Knapp and daughter
workers are
Juha Plunkett Troy ~hiler
Coffman
Wanda
Cha•rman Jan Thaler and Edwtn
Co cha 1rman Pat Mtlls
Mahne Donald Brown Okte
Galltpohs Teams - Sarah
Camp Ida Conley, Lots
Shee ts
Capta n
Satly
Peoples Lon Dtllon Rtta
Baker Daryl Bowlmg Thelma
Dunn Shelby Mehl Eh
(o".- ~ :&amp;la:z:::;;:xow~-:.~
Lambert Vtrgmta Htcks Steve
:'.:
,,"" Wilson Henry Wtlhs Agnes
,, Wtlhams Carl Stewart Jr
2 Carmen Pugh Irene Neal,
By Helen and Sue Bottel
&gt;
Opel!
Meadows
Gwen
Longhotham Kathryne Knotts
MIRROR MIRROR ON THE WALL
Juantta
Green
Herbert
Dear Helen
Calhcoat, Connte Brumfteid
We have a problem wtth Terry our gtrl fnend she thtnks Mrs Roger McKmney and son
she's skmny but her stomach bangs over her pants and her htps Cathy Stevens Mrs Stephen
are too hig for short shorts What she does to a mtru sktrt ts Wood and daughter Conme
ndiculous She InSISts her watst ts 24 but tl s more hke 31'
Knapp Robert Staats Gene
When we walk down the street she th10ks people are lookmg Swmgle Carne Johnson
ather because she has a good ftgure, but they re really starmg at M1ldred Lucas Mary Grant,
ber poor taste
U!roy McCoy, Gary Goodman
Should we tell her drop her or JUSt keep on bemg - THE James Webb
Margaret
EMBARRASSED TWO
Stebelton Mtchael Smtih ,
Henry Sloan Elste 0 U!ary
Dear Emb
Cora McGhee, Edna Hulshort
Velva Farley, Fred Bosltc
II you re good enough frtends you can be truthful but tactful
Walter
U!t Terry know thts k10d of ego only wetghs you down, and she s Kermtt Pauley
fooling nobody but herself
Loveday III, Mtsha Frazter
Sometimes a gtrl s mtrror tells her only what she wants to Enabelle See Hazel Jewell
Juamta Ltevmg Dtana Sue
see, and tt takes PEOPLE to make her see what she really IS Rtchards
Mrs
Eugene
SUE
Tillotson and daughter Chad
+++
Stckles
Rtta Wtckhne Pamela
Dear Embarrassed
Jeadtng
Paul McDamel
Potntmg out a gtrl s faults for her own good' IS nsky
busmess - unless yours ts the spec tal ktnd of fnendshtp that can Gregory Kntpp Mtchael
S1mms Wendy Gatewood,
sw-vtve truthful hurts (And somehow I don tthink tt IS )
Wtnston Saunders Steve
My I G ~ P ( I'm Guessing Agam Perceplton ') tells me
Brand Elvtra Barcus, Ernest
you'd just as soon change thts threesome to a twosome and Wtseman Charles Johnson,
you're usmg embarrassment' to JUStify tl - HELEN
Norma Johnson U!land Riggs,

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Generation Rap

+++

Dear Rap
I am a 14-year-old guy, and gelling high grades m school has
never been a problem But I don t do well athiehcally
Now the ktds who don t do well scholasttcally are treated JUst
fine by tbe school system which makes sure that they are
developed to thetr full potenttal They are put 10to separate
groups COIIStsllng of underachievers Uke themselves, so thetr
prectous egos won't be damaged They are coddled, protected,
given sympathy and shielded from would-be verbal assailants
Now let us constder how I am treated As an 'un
derachiever 'tn athlehc abtlity, have I had the spectal attention
given to my scholastic counterparts' No' I have been put in wtth
everyone else who ts almost certamly more able than I am at any
sport As a result, I have been laughed at, mocked out and gtven
patronizing looks from tgnorant gym teachers
Contrary to what you are probably thmking, l am not a
scrawny little weak runt with btfocals I am six feet tall, and
have no problem coordmatmg my body movements I certainly
have potential It ts the same potenttal of the stuptd kid who tsn t
reaDy stupid Tbe only dtfference ts that hts potenttai ts helped to
develop and mme ts pamfully Ignored - MARTIN
Dear Martin
Thanks for making a good pomt Phystcal fttness ts great,
but too often gym classes can be total PAIN for 'un
derachlevers
Conunents anyone' We'd like to hear from gym teachers as
well as students - HELEN AND SUE

One of the commonest m1s
takes tubber bndge players
make 1s over reliance on the
Blackwood conventiOn
They don t realtze that
Blackwood ts more a method
of keepmg out of bad slams
than of gettmg to good ones
and tn some places it ts a!
most considered Illegal to
btd a slam Without chtrpmg
four no trump somewhe re
along the way
Thus 11 was very sm prts
tng lo see North With a hand
Jus t bu1tt for Blackwood use
101gettmg about Easley s

Mary Powell Jack Schlosar
Mrs Donald R Warehtme, Jr
and daughter Margaret
Saunders, Davtd Russell Clara
Neal Mrs Mtchael Kmcatd
and son Geneva Howell Mrs
Davtd Hammond and son and
Mrs Larry Ashburn and
daughter
BIRTHS - Mrs Terry
Uoyd, son Jackson and Mrs
Randy Westmoreland, son ,
CottageVIlle, W Va
DISCHARGES - James
Lucas George Cupp Jr , Mrs
Jacky Dotson and daughter,
Howard Tucker Lowell Jones
Jr , Charles Parks Juaruta
Green, Juantta Sanders Arlen
Owens U, Wtlllam Wagaldon,
Helen Flood Enuna Hines and
Ellen Carr

In hot weather grass re
fleets heat and m the wm
ter absorbs warmth that
may otherw1se escape

Wagn er M1ck e Calhou 1 and
Cook 1e Johnson
Ca pt a n Bern ce Bucc
Kat e Sprow V rg ma Blowers
W lee 1
Edwards
Jan
Wetherholt Martha M cKenZi e
and Dr and Mrs Carl Woods
Mar a me Campbell Caplatn
Ann W1cl ne Jean Nea l
June Lew 1s Steve Elberfled
and Margte Adk ns
Mar on Ford Capta n
Ma)(me Carman Lyd a Groth
June Adams Ida Thaler and

M ke I Hand

Martha Roder ck Capt an
Dora Jo Gnff1 1 Judy Par sons
G lllan Moore Kathy Anderson
and V ck e Mrlchel l
Flor e 1ce L nlala Cap t am Bev Ge l ie s Jean Coope r
Peggy Evans Jan Thal er and
0 anna Ha ley
Sue Beverly Capt an - Else
Nea
Cather ne Haywa rd
Carol Polen Bobby Holzer and

Gladys Grant

Pomeroy Nancy Reed
Cap tarn Mr s
Palr1 ck
Lochary Mrs John Reece and
Mrs Jarnes 0 Bnan
Middleport
Faye Sauer
Capta.n - Mrs Joan Ha rnson
Rutland Mr s S1bley Slack
Mr s Jean Wh tehead Reeds
v lie
Racme - Mrs John R1 chard

Lee Caplatn Mrs Bob J Ord

Syracuse
Jackson - AI Evans
Pomt Pleasant - Mrs 81 I
Grady Capt am - Mrs Joseph
Antal Mrs Will am Rard n
Jr Mrs Gordon M cM ll an
M1 ss Halt e Jordan and Mrs
Russe l B10bee
R1o Grande Laurence
Huber Ca pta n Carol ne
Roden ck Zelma Northcutt
June Lee (Mrs
Arch e)
Saundra Koby and Carre Da e
Mason W Va - Mrs Nolan
Swackhammer
Area Busmesses Ja ck

Gnffm
Poml Pleasant Student Team
- A K Su ter Caplatn - Bt l I
Ra r ey Dav d Kayse r K m
Dunsmoor Kar en Long and

Bel nda L tchl eld

R1o Grande- Student Team
(Col lege) - Mer l yn Ros s
Caplatn - Steve Ldtl e and
Joyce Madey
Galhpohs - Gall1 a Academy
- El zabeth Roder &lt;k Capt
Brant Adams Wendy Or r and
Sarah Wetherholl

fhe btddmg has been
Wes1
North
East

Pass

1•

South

I+

Dblc

Pass

'

You South hold

.AQ87 ¥KJ4 t32 .K984
What da you do now J
A-Pass You doni have
enough strength for a b1d at th1s
pomt

TODAY S QUESTION
You pass West brds two daa

monds North and East pass
Wha t do you do now ?

fllle conventiOn and JUmpmg

n ght to stx heat!&gt;
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
West hoped to be ab le to
Steers - chOice 35 75 36 25
cas h both h•s aces but was good 33 70-35
too smatl to double He could
Hfrs - chotec, 33 25 34
gam 100 pumts tf the aces good 31 50-32 50
Cows - commerctal 2526 35 uhiity 22 50-24 canner
and cutter 17 60-20
Bulls - commercial 30 85PT PLEASANT
32 , stockers and feeders- steer
LIVESTOCK SALES CO
calves 41-47 75 heifer calves
PT PLEASANT W VA
28 50 36 90 heavy feeders
Saturday Sept 9 1972
HOGS -175 to 220 28 to 28 70 27 50-42
Veals -chOice 50-53 good
Heav1es 27 to 28, L1ghts 26 to
27 Fat Sows 25 JO to 26 50, 37 41
Lambs - chOice 27-29 90
Boars 21 80 to 22 Ptgs 16 to 20
Hogs - 2()().240 28 75 No I
Stock Shoats 25 to 30
CATILE - Steers 29 to 31 29 230-240, 28 50 sows 2(j 50Hc1fers 28 30 to 32 50 Fat Cows 27 70 boars 21 80
25 to 26 20 Canners 22 to 25
Bulls 29 to 35 Stock Cows and
GETS SHRIVER JOB
Calves 250 to 410 Stock Steers
WASHINGTON
(UP! )
35 to 40 Stock Hetfers 30 to
Shtelds,
former
36 25 Stock Steer Calves 38 to Mark
Washmgton
represcntahve
for
47 75 Stock Hetfer Calves 35 to
Gov John J Gilligan has been
41 50
named nahonal pohttcal
VEAL CALVES - Tops 54
for the campatgn of R
dtrector
Seconds 53 25 Medtum 49 75 to
Shnver
the
53 Common &amp; Heavtes 50 to Sargent
Democrahc
candtdate
for
vtce
52 50 Culls 46 to 49
president

Market Report

1!41 LIPOLJS, OHIO,
SALES REPORT OF
Oh1o Valley L1vestock Co

BY PAUL CRABTREE
Continuing with our double-barreled ratings of the new
shows as the 1972-73 TV season opens, I remind you thai the
ratmgs are based on my unpresstons from crttlcs' previews, the
trade press, ad agency comments, and synopses from the net
works
Onward and UJIWard
On CBS
The New Btl! Cosby Show,'' Monday at 10 I'm violently
prejudiced on thts one, because l thmk Cosby ts one of the fun.
ruest men ahve But he's bucking pro football for the men, and
movtes for the women Excellence, A minus Survival, C mmus
' Maude,'' thts IS a spm-off of 'All m the Family,'' which
couldn t be bad, at all (Remember tbe Beverly Hillbillies Petticoat Junction - Green Acres whtrligtg, which produced a
goldmme that s stlll turning out the ore') Excellence, B SurVIval, B (It ll ftght 'Bonanza' for the Tuesday ratings lll the
early gomg )
'The Wa!toiiS, • Thursday at 8 This could easily be one of the
fmest shows of the new season Set m the Appalachians, tt tells
the story of a close-knit family durmg the Depresston Ortgmally,
tt was ' Spencers Mountam tracmg the Spencer family, a
pseudonym adopted by autobtographtcal author Earl Hammer
Jr For reasons unknown, the Spencers are now the Waltons
(both names of towiiS m Roane Countv. W Va bv a crazv
coinctdence) If told wtth tbe wrtter s honest lack of treacle, tt
could be a warm, unsltcky worthwhile series The ad agencies
have already wrttten tt off as a loser Darn the ad agenCies 1
Excellence, B plus (if they go easy or. tbe goo J Survival, D
Brtdget Loves Berme ' Saturday at 8 30 This ts as
hackneyed a plot as you re likely to fmd-a shcked-up ' Ables
Irtsh Rose, whtch was a funny play of the Twenhes and a fatrly
good radio sertes of the Forties The actmg and wrttlng to Its
credtt are srud to be very professiOnal but tt would seem we've
outgrown the culture-barrter, mter-marrtage theme that this
one's based on But the ad agenctes declare It an instant hit, even
before tl shows up Darn the ad agenctes' Excellence C mmus
Survival A mmus
Bob Newhart Show ' Satw-day at 9 30 Following Mary
Tyler Moore' ts a tough! act to follow but tt helps the ratings
frtend Newhart IS a droll fellow, who doesn 'I come across on TV
as well as he should I like hun, and wtth such a lead~n tbe show
mtght make It Excellence Cplus Survtvai Cplus
'Anna and the King, Sunday at 7 30 Yul BryMer, pale
aglow ts back as the ktng, and tbe show has a sohd pretruse- tl
was a good book, a better Broadway play, and a pretty good
movie Nevertheless, tts demtse ts likely It appeals to older
!olks, mostly, who have ktds who'll be watching Disney at this
hour Excellence C plus Survtval D
M·A..S-H, ' Sunday at 8 Also besed on a hit movte this
black-humor comedy of the milttary probably wtll make it for the
same reason Anna won t Appeallng mostly to the younger set,
not old enough to have Disney watchers but too old for Mtckey
Mouse themselves, they'll probably sltce off enough of the
audtence to survtve Excellence, C Survtval B minus

+++
ON THE TV DIAL The new Bonanza" valtantly returns at
8, WSAZ-TV 'Temperature RISing' debuts at tbe same time,
WHTN-TV Actd-tongued Maude' cbec~s in from the Bunker
household at 8 on WCHS TV
Returrung also are 'Marcus
Welby, MD" at 10 on WHTN TV, and Hawau Ftve-0" 8 30 on
WCHS TV
NBC News spectal looks at penston plans at 10,
WSAZ-'l'V

The Da1~ SentiQ~I

H

Programs for Tonight

C•ty Ed1tor
Publ shed dally tn~:cet:~t
Saturday by Tile Ohio Velltv
Publ St'11ng Company
111

Court

St

Pomeroy

and Tomorrow

Onlo

AS769 Bus ness Off1ce F'hone
992 11.56 Eo tor at Phone 99~
11S7

Second class postage pa ICI at

Pomeroy Oh o
Naf onal &amp;d'o'ert l s.ng

representat ve
Bon nell I
Galll!gher Inc 17 East A'nd
St New York C tv New York
SlibSCr pt on rates
De
livered by c&amp;rrler whereava !able- 50 cents per week
By Motor Route where c&amp;rr er
ser ... ce not ava•I&amp;D ie One
month Sl 75 By rna I .n Oh o

and W Va One vur 114 00
S•'~ months 51 2S
Thru

months u so Subscr lpt•on
pr ceo mcloctes Sunday T•mes
Sent• nel

•
TUESDAY SEPT 12
00 - News J 4 8 10 15
6 JO - News J 4 15 6 8 10 I Dream of Jeannie 13
7 00 - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Elec Co 20 Andy Griffith
15 tnstght3J BealtheCiock4 I veGotaSecrell J
7 JO - Masterp ece Theatre 33 This Is Your Life 3 Doctors On
Call4 To Tell the Truth 6 Prtce Is Right 8 10 Beat the Clock
1)
6

8 00 - Bonanza J 4 15 Temperatures RISing 6 13 Maude 8 10
8 30 - Hawatl Five 0 8 10 Even ng at Pops JJ Movie The
Longest Ntght 6 13
9 30 - Movie The Family R• co 8 10 Towers ol Frustration
JJ
10 oo - NB C Reports J 4 15 Marcus Welby MD 6 13 Ftrlng
Line J:J
11 OO - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson J 4 15 Vlrgmtan 8
Mov1es law of War 10 Strangers at Sunnse 13
1 00 - Your Health 4

McGuff Johnny Mercer and Mtchel U!grand
were startled by the flash Cyrano will be a
thts season mustcal - they d already wrttten a
dozen songs for another long nosed tuneshow
Charlton Heston 's SkyJacked' !tim tn
three months already ts at the $15,000,000 mark
Ch uck takes percentages of hts fltcks so he's up
for another mtlhon The "Clockwork Orange '
mov1e s choppmg-out of formcatton scenes to
get an R" mstead of an X ' IS Simply an un
courageous ploy to lure the kids barred from X
f!tcks What happened to all of Stanley
Kubrtck s brave words about never compromtsmg his raunchy prt~ctples when tl first
emerged from under the dtrty rock' Thts sort of
stck fltck really deserves an RX
Ted Wtlhams pals says he s ttred of ptlot10g
a losmg ballclub and wtll pack m hts Rangers'
Job tho hts pact has another season to lunp
ABC TV couldn t steal up any of the big tenms
tourneys from NBC &amp; CBS, so tl's startmg one m
Las Vegas from scratch - and the $150 000 prtze
sure ts scratch
Gen 1 Motors hetr Stew Molt s gifts to the
Dems wtil total $800,000 thts year - plus another
half a mtil to chartttes
His dad, Charles
Stewart Molt, 97 with an $800 milliOn fortlllle,
gave hts stx chlldren (m two litters) $30 mtllton
each Stew told Women s Wear Datly, also satd
he dtdn 't pay any taxes last year because he
gave away all hiS mcome - but tsn t that just
the sort of platinwn loophole George McGuv's
promtsmg to solder up
Alan Arkin gets the top b1ll10g 10 ' Last of
the Red Hot Lovers,' but tl 's Sally Kellerman
who runs away brilltantly With the movie, such
as tt ts Dan Jenkins' Semt-Tough' novel Is
the funmest filthy novel in decades read it
(adults only') and cringe between howls
Piaywrtght Jonathan Katz decided to come out
of the closet and admit- proclaun' - that he s
gay His candtd homo-play, "Coming Out,' wtll
open this week - prey tell- at the Washington
Square Methodist Church' Katz meows that his
opus wtll sketch-lustortcal gays "from Willa
Cather to Horatio Alger '

News Weather

o4

local News 13

WEDNESDAY SEPT 1J
Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Farmllme 10 Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey IJ
Columbus Today 4 Btble Answers 8 Urbah League 10
Today3 4 IS CBSNews8 10 News 6
SieepyJeflers8 RomperRoom6 RockyandBullwlnkle

00 6 15 6 25 6 JO 7 OO 7 JO tJ
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue IJ Sesame St 33
6

FREDDIE-THAT'S SORT
OF ITALIAN FROST
NEW YORK (KFS ) - Dtahann Carroll's
recent defrosttng d1dn t leave her mourmng for
Davtd her new Gohath Fredde Glucsman ts
nch and gtves her Jewels and owns the ladtes'
Internahonal and the men s boo-teek at the
Sahara hello young lovers Will Jet to PariS
thts month so there Davtd Ruth Gordon 76
11as the most stylish ktd m U! Cote Basque and
plamly younger than autmnn Federal Judge
Ted Kupferman limped mto Loutse s E 58th
spot - busted hts ankle not the one he wrttes
hts optmons wtth
Gmger Rogers looked
younger than smnmer tn Loutsc s wtth George
Abbott younger than wmter
If Rudy Vallee rates a deadend street m"hts
name Henny Youngman feels he s entttled to a
left turn
Stop press 1 Warners Love tn
Blume fl1cks changed titles - to ' Blmne m
Love
Demse Taren the nuts n butts beauty
at the Gashght Club retw-ns for her second year
at the statd Amencan Academy of Dramatic
Arts She ll keep peddhng coffm natls to fmance
her drahma tutormg - tf tl ktlls you
The
Bdw) -47th St amusement parlor charged twobits for four machme made photo poses, now
tt s half a hue&lt; new prtce pasted over the old
one you sttll can read More Age of Inflation
hospttai rooms averagmg $140 a day here wtll be
$500 to $800 a day m 2000
The Negro-ortented Blacula ' has run up
such a huge scare Blackenstem ' next wtll
straighten you hatr More mfiatton the new
'72- 73 phone hook has 128 more pages than last
Superfly ' got an R' ratmg but Warners
wtll try to sertes TV tt anyway The Tunes
ordered more aelton ptctures mto tis pages, JUSt
let the slanted stortes fall flat Instead Har
per s Bazaar has a brt!IIanl crttuque of theN Y
drama crtttcs (P 128), bnlliant we sa:; '
Busmess exec Trudy Webster ts so tired of
bemg asked tf s~e tsn t Alt MacGraw, she just
stgns the autographs LBJ won t campatgn for

. !

Euc Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH

1 30 -

HY JACK 0 BRIAN

I

Television 'Log

DE VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNEHILL

HOGS 175 to 220 lbs 27 85 to
28 50 220 to 250 lbs 28 to 28 75
L•gh t 26 50 to 27 25 Fat Sows
25 50 to 26 Boars 18 50 to 20
Ptgs 10 to 15
CATILE - Steers 31 50 to
39 He1fers '!I to 36 Baby Beef
42 to 54 Fat Cows 20 to 25
Canners I8 to 26 25 Bulls 26 to
32 Mtlk Cows 240 to 360
\ EAL CALYES - Tops 54
Seconds 51 to 52 50 Medtum 47
to 50 Com &amp; Hvs 45 to 52 50
Culls 45 Down
BABY CALVES - 35 to 85
LAMBS - Tops 30 Seconds
25 to 26 50 Ltght Wts 23 to 25
Common 22 50 Down

Astros Edge LA; Mets Top Phils

T tmmv and Lasste 6

8 JO - Jack LaLanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
9 00 - Paul Dlxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Mr Rogers 33 What
Every Woman Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Capt

Kangaroo 8 Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
9 30 - Electric Co 33 To Tell the Truth J Jeopardy 6 Hazel8
10 00 - Dinah Shore J 15 Dick Van Dyke 13 Columbus 6 Callmg
6 Jokers Wlld 8 10 Hathayoga 33
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Spltt Second 13 Phil Donohue 4
Price Is Rtght 8 10 In School lnst 33
11 00 - Sale of Century 3 15 Love American Style 6 Gambit 8
10 Password 1J
11 30 - HollywoodSquares4 15 Loveol LileS 10 Bewltched6
13 Sesame St 33
12 00 - Jeopardy J 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s so so Club 4
News 14 Contact 8 News 10
12 30 - Split Second 6 Search lor Tomorrow 8 tO Who What
What Where 3 15 Electric Co 33
1 00 - News Weather Sports J All My Children 6 IJ Its Your
Bet 8 Green Acres 10 Walch Your Child 15 French Chef 33
1 20 - Lucille Rtvers J
I JO - Three on a Match 3 4 15 Lers Make A Deal 6 13 As
The World Turns 8 10 Deslgntng Women JJ
2 00 - Days ol Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglas 6 Guldlng Ltght 8 10 Bridge 33
2 JO - Dallng Game 13 Doctors 4 15 Edge ol Night a 10
Sporlscope 33
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospltal6 13 Love Is a
Many Splendored Thing 8 10 Masterpiece Theatre 33
3 30- Return to Peyton Place J 4 15 One Ltfe to Live 6 13
Secret Storm 8 10
4 00 - Mr Cartoon J Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Love
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Fllnlslon.. 6 Gilligan s
Island 8 Movie Winchester 7J ' 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Petltcoat Junction J Merv Grllfln 8
Daniel Boone IJ Andy Grtffllh 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers33 DtckVanDykell Ponderosa) 4 Danlel
Boone 6
S 30 - Marshall Dlllon15 Elec Co 33 Dragnef8 Gomer Pyle
USMC IJ --,
6 00 - TruthorConseq 6 NewsJ 4 810 IS HathayogaJJ
6 30 - News 3, 4 6 8 10 15 Bridge 33 I Dream of Jeannie IJ
7 00 - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Conseauences 3,
!!eat "'The Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 13 Saint lS
Milestones of Progress 33
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 The Judge 10 E pisode Action 33,
Pollee Surgean 3 4 Protectors 8 Beatthe Clock 13
8 00 - Adam 12 4 A Public Affair 33 Paul Lynde 6 13 Carol
Burnell 8 10
8 30 - Banacek J 4 15 Movie The Daughters of Joshua Cote'
6 13 Attica Report 33
9 00 - Medical Center 8 10
to 00 - Search3 4, ts JulleAndrews6 13 Cannons 10
10 30 - Soul 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30-JohnnyCarsonJ 4 15 DlckCavett6 Virginians Movie
Father Came Too 10 Movie Let • Dance t3
100-News4
1 Jll - News 13

By Vito Steliino
UPI
Sports Wrtter
UPI Sports Editor
A fly ball homerun and a lack
MUNICH (UP!)-The last day matched tbe general mood m
of
support at critiCal tunes
the Olymjllc Village Gray, dtsma! and overcast There wasn t
proved
Steve carlton s undotng
much laughter to be heard
Monday
rught, as the Phi!s
In tbe recreation area, where the athletes from all the different
suffered a 4-2 loss to the New
countries gathered durtng tbetr off~une each day to play chess
York Mets The loss left
ping pong or mmtature golf, there was no one mstght
Carlton wtth a 23-9 record and
Many didn t even buther wattlng for the early evenmg cloSing three of those losses have been
ceremony 10 the O'ymptc Stadium which tradittonally wmds up at the hands of the Mets This
the games They bad packed thetr belongings and hurrted home
loss JUSt about rumed any
If you had to put your fmger on the prevallmg feeltng among remote chance Carlton hsd of
those who lingered for those last few hours, tt would have to be reachmg the 30 ftgure
one of fruitlessness and diSIUustorunent, a sense of not havmg
Carlton was beaten by Duffy
achieved what they had really come bere for
Dyer's homer that snapped a 2Feeling Is Shared
2 tie m the stxth mrung Duffy
ThiS let-down feellng seemed to be shared by wmners and also trtpled man msurance run
losers alike
m the etghth mnmg
Jerry Koosman now 9-11
Randy Williams tbe ]!).year-old US gold medaltst m the long
jump, didn t have to think long wben someone wanted to know
how hefeltahout these Olymptcsnow that they were commg to a
close
"DIS8ppomted, rephed the Fresno, Calif, ) oungster
Why•
'Because I expected the Olympic Games would be full of life
love and gatety and they turned out to be ugly and disastrous
Disastrous for a 19-year-old ktd who had come over bere and
won himself a gold medal'
Williams dtdn't back down
' We put so much emphasis on gold, he satd "Wtuntng gold
medals is conSidered more unportant than wmmng frtendshtp
and peace You've seen that flame on top of the stadimn haven t
you• Its supposed to symho!tze peace and frtendshtp ISn t tt'
Those doves they turned loose and those balloons they sent up are
symbolic of the same thing Peace and friendship SitU tbere was
Rhodesta and then tbe Israelis
Pollllcs Distresses Williams
By JOHN G GR!FFfN
The politics here also diStressed Willtams a Umverstty of
UP! Sports Editor
Southern California student
MUNICH (UPI )- The call
' When the Olympics no longer have politics in them they Ube went out m the clear cool mght
good, but! don t think that Uever happen "Williams satd
atr of Bavarta, for the youth of
The old fogeys at the head of thts thing run tt like some kmd of the world to meet agam m
rmlit.ary lnstttutton They think m terms of 1936 mstead of 1972
Montreal four years hence m
The average athlete IS 24 The guys rt!Mtng thtngs are 65 How cheerfulness and concord for
can they identify wtth the problems of somebody 25'
the 1976 Olymptc Games
Yes, Williams S81d, he was talking about the US Olymptc
The moment was more
Conuntttee members
pOignant than ever before
because th• 85 000 people m the
'They're too old, ' satd the young long Jtnnper 'Certamly
Olymptc
Stadtum here were ail
theresa generation gap How could there help but be• • You take
too well aware that the 1972
these Olymptc Commtttee ll\OYS They stay at some of the fmest
Oiymp
tcs bemg formally
hotels m Muruch They pay $5 a day for a room Someone s
closed
wtll
go down m htstory
]licking up tbe tab Who s dotng it' Regardless, when a ktd has a
problem and wanta to call home, these guys tell htm they can t as the one m whtch gunftre
destroyed concord
afford the money for such calls '
And there had to be a
Utile Praise
In common with practically all other U S athletes Wtlhams questton about what four years
from now will bnng m Mon
bas little praise for the work of offtcta!s here at the Olymptcs
treal when once agam the
particularly those who were asstgned to events tn whtch tbe US
athlettc youth of the world trtes
was involved
to meet for 15 peaceful days of
'The referees and judges were a farce,' he satd
competition m sport and game
Williams merely IS echomg most of the other athletes Tbey not
The Montreal orgamzers
only say the offtclating was bad, but also say tbey came here
who have not completed thetr
essentially to engage tn sports and games and found themselves
ftnal preparations for the
engaged in situations they never dreamed SituatioiiS like Bloody
phystcal factiiites or the
:I'uelday wben Araba terrorized the Olynipic Village and
program l;tave promised to
ultimately killed 11 Israelts
retu,n the games to the
On that day Rodney Patti3son a 29-year-old former Royal
athletes, an mdicatton that
the 76 games wtll be on a
Navy offtcer, clinched a gold medal for Brttain myachltng
considerably less lavtsh scale
He saw little reason to cheer, however, saymg
than tbe $620 mtllion enterprtse
I worked for this day four years but nght now, m the face of
staged
by West Germany here
what has happened, I wish I were a thousand rmles away from
Changes
to he Proposed
bere '
In addttton there ts an unportant congress of the In
ternattonal Olymptc Committee scheduled m Varna Bulga
rta m August 1973 at which
many changes m the program
'x

By MILTON RICHMAN

In the Amencan League

Anderson Big
Question mark
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
team phystclan of the CUICtnnatl Bengals satd today tt
would be ' touch and go ' this
week on whether quarterback
Ken Anderson ts able to start
the season Sunday agamst the
New England Patrolts
II depends on the pam
whether be can gnp the bali, '
Dr Wally Tlmperman said af.
ter examining Anderson 's
jammed fingers, an injury
suffered during tbe second
period against the Atlanta
Falcons Saturday night
' With rest It should be 0 K ,
but we don t know now," he
said 'It's a matter of touch
and go"
The Bengals ended thetr
exhibition season wtth a 3-3
mark after losing 44-14 to the
Falcons bere It was the second
worst margin of defeat for the
team, the worst being the 38-3
defeat in a regular season
game against Detroit In 1970
Head Coach Paul Brown told
the team at their weekly skull
session the loss particularly
pointed up weaknesses in his
veterans
' I am not that worried about
our three rookies on defense,"
Brown said "They don't concern me I think they'll be all
right
' The thing I don t Uke is that
some of our better players had
a bad day We've sot some
players have got to get

with the Braves tonight,
1e11dlng Wayne Simplon lfw
hll ninth win
The Reds Wllre idle Monday
lfta' concluding a West Coot

l1rinl
$AI,Z'IS TOrAL
NEW YORK (UPI)-BURe
Jell! Kinl's $10,000 v!clu'y in
the U.S Open lelllil cblaJ.
p!Oillhlp ~e~~~ 11er 1o111 rar a.

M1ke Jorgensen drove in
three runs \\tth a double and
his 12th homer and Balor
Moore pttched hts second
stratght shutout as Montreal
blanked St Louts Moore
allowed JUSt SIX htts as the
Expos pulled mto a fourth
place lie tn th e Eastern
DtVIston wtth the Cardtnals

By Un1ted Press International
National League
East
w I pet 9 b
Pdtsburgh
86 48 642
75 61 551 12
Ch ca~o
New ork
70 64 522 16
51 l OUI S
64 73 467 23 '
Mo1 I real
63 71 467 231 :.&gt;

Ph lade phta 49 87 360 38
West
w t pel g b

C no n nat

83 53

610

Houston
Los Angeles
At an t a
San FranCISCO

76 60
7J 63

559 7
537 10

Sa ' Doego

64 73

46 7 19

2

60 77

438 23

2

51 83 381 31

Monday s Results
New York 4 Ph Ia 2
Montreal 4 51 Louts 0
Houston 4 Los Ange les 3

MUN I CH

at

th e

Sov ret Un•on
Un l ed States
Ea st Germany
West
Ge rmany
Hunga ry
Japan
Poland
Italy

Aus tr al a

games
Gold S•lver Bronze Total
50
27
ll
99
30
33
30
93
20
23
23
66
12
11
16
39
6
34
"8
136
8
29
7
5
9
21
5
3
9
17
8
7
2
17

Swe d en

2

6
6

'6

16
14

2
2

4
3

I

I3

3

1

'
'

9
8

Holland

2

'

North Korea
Yugos l av i a
Canada

2
0

Norway

2

Roman a
France
Kenya

Cuba
Czechoslovak a

New

Zea l and

Alls lr a

Co omb a
Sw t zertand
Uganda
Beg urn
Gre ece
Mongo l a
Bra zII
Eth op a

ran

De nmark
Argent na
Lebanon
Me)( co
Pak sia n
Soutll Korea
Tun1 s a
Turk ey

Gha na
Jam a ca
N ger a
N ger
Sp a n

lnd a

'

3
I

2

8

I
I

I
3

5
5

I
2

2
3

5
5

'33

I

I

I

0
0
0

I
I
3

2
2

3

0

3

I

I

0
0
0

l
2
2

0
0
0

2
2
2

0
0

0
0

0
2

0
I

I
0

0

I

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

1

I
1
I
I
0
0

(Hooton

9 12)

2 30

pn

medal sandngs

(UPI) - Fnal

Olymp c

Ch cago

,

Browns A cquzre

G'cO R.ICrut~n
L __ .J__
CLEVELAND (UP!) Gloster Richardson, a siX-year
veteran recetver was acqwred
Monday by the Cleveland
Browns from the Oakland
Raiders
The Browns wtll relinqUISh a
1974 draft choice to the Raiders
in return for tbe 6-2, 200-pound
Richardson
Rtchardson played wtth the
Dallaa Cowboys last season,
snaring etght passes, three for
touchdowns
The Browns, who open their
regular season Sunday here
agamst the Green Bay
Packers, lost all six exhlbttion
games, a feat that the players
are still talking about
' It's not good to lose all of
them," runrtlng back Bo Scott,
said "Somewhere along the
llne you should taste what a
victory Is like "
U!roy Kelly however, said he
did not think the losses would
affect the team "It hasn'I in
the past," he said
"We haven't had many really good exhibition seasons
since I've been with the club,"
Kelly said 'This team sun has
confidence In itself "
In Kelly's six years with the
Browns they have been 9-26 tn
exhibition play
The Browns were the ooly
National U!ague team not to
win a game this summer

BIG JUMP
NEW YORK (UPl)-DeWttt
Weaver made the btggest Jump
tn the money standmgs of the
Professional Golf Association
thts week after scormg a
playoff victory over Chuck
Courtney Sunday tn the Southern Open and picktng up a ftrst
place check for $20,000
Weaver, who moved up from
65th to 37th in tbe stand10gs
with $51,655, still trails, as do
all the other pro golfers, money
leader Jack Ntcklaus by a
considerable amount Ntcklaus
has thus far earned $280,482
whlle his nearest rival, Lee
Trevino, has 'only ' $168,655
SVARE MEETS THOMAS
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Con-

troversial ruMing back Duane
Thomas met wtth San Diego
Chargers Coach Harland Svare
durmg the weekend and !ben
departed
"I'd have to say now that
be's not going to play,'' Svare
said "I don't krtow what to
think I can't believe he doesn't
want to play He never has told
me he doesn't With him tl'a
difftcult to tell '
Svare acquired Thomas from
year on the Virginia Slims the Dallas Cowboys during the
WCI!len 's Circuit to $48,2'15 and training season In an uncondiput ber In a plllil!on to total tional deal for runrung back
$100,000 for the second straight Mike Montgomery and
receiver Billy Parks

,...

\

16th VIctory Monday rught and
gave Baltimore a 3-2 verdtct
over Milwaukee as tbe OriOles
completed a fow-.game sweep
of the Brewers
Powell s 18th homer was a
three-run shot In the fourth
tunmg off losmg pttcher Jtm
Colborn Bob Gnch and
Tommy DaVIs were on base
wtth smgles
The vtctory coupled wtth
Boston s 6-5 loss to Cleveland
and New Yorks 4-2 ralllabbrevtated victory over Detrot!, left the Ortoles one-half
game behind the dtviston
leading Red Sox New York ts
I 'h back and Detroit Is fourth
two games off the pace
They'll Continue
I m gomg to continue
playmg tt tbe way I have been
the last three years,' Weaver
satd We can wm tt but we
bavedo It ourselves We're still
m tt and every club in it Is
going to have a reprteve before
it's over '
In other American League
games Mmnesota swept a
doubleheader from Oakland, 21, m 10 mmngs, and 3-2, and
Chicago edged Kansas C1ty, 21

Bos ton
Ba lli mor e
New York
De tro t
Cleveland
Mrlwaukee

Kan sas C ty
Call lorn a

St Lou s (C leveland 1313) at Te xas

Mon trea l
pm

(Morton 6 13)

8 05

0

Roy Foster's sacriftce fly
scored Buddy Bell With the gt&gt;ahead run m the Sixth and Tom
McCraw drove tn three ruiiS
With a homer and a trtple to
lead Cleveland over Boston
Stx home runs were htt 10 the
contest wtth the Red Sox
belting four and the lndtaiiS
two ,
Reese Is Hero
Rtch Reese, who entered
both games as a defeiiStve
replacement, drove m the
wmnmg runs With a double and
a walk to lead Minnesota to
thetr doubleheader sweep over
Oakland The dual losses
combmed with Chtcago s
vtctory over Kansas Ctty,
shaved the A's lead over the
White Sox m the American
League West to two games
Consecuttve home runs by
Bobby Murcer and Felipe Alou
started a three-run fourth
lnnmg which carried New York
past Detrott Time was called
m the top of the sixth mnlng
wtth a 3-1 count on leadoff
batter Norm Cash and the

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511

9 '7

66 68

493

12

63 72

467

15

2

51 84 378 27 h
Monday s Results

M nn 2 Oakland I l si

C n(lnnat. (Stmpson 8 5) at
Atlanta (Freeman 2 OJ 8 05

pm

Los Anqeles (Joh

1

11 5)

N Y 4 Del 2

S / 2 mns ram

Chtcag o 2 Kansas Ctly 1
COn ly games scheduled)
at
Today s Probable P1tchers
(All Ttmes EDT)

Amen can League

Texas (Gogolewskt 3 9) at
Cal for n1a (Messersmith 6 9} 11
p '
Cl cago (Ba hnsen 17 15) at
Ka l Sas Crty (Montgomery 1 ll
9 pm

and Tenace
Duncan (7)
Perry LaRoche (7) Granger

Bos ton (T1ant 11 4) at New
Yor k (Peterson 14 14 )
7 30

Linescores

Oakland !Hunter 197) at
(1 st Gamel
Oakland
000 000 001 - 1 10 0 Minnesota ( Corbtn 8 7) 9 p m
Bait more (Dobson IS 15) at
M nnesota
100 000 001 - 2 8 0
D
etrotl
(Fryman 521 8 30 p m
Blue Lock('r (7) Fmger s (9)
pm

2
2

Butter 0 0 Lamb 3 4) at
Mtlwaukee (Bell 2 1 and Par
so ns 11 12 ) 2 6 30pm
(2nd game)
Wednesday s Games
Oakland
000 010 010- 2 6 1
Te
xas
at Caltl n ght
Mtnn
100 001 01x- 3 51
Horlen Locker (5) Ftngers Oakland at Mtnn ntght

2I

'l

0
0

I
I

(8) Knowles (B) and Duncan
Blyeven { 13 16) and Borgmann

0

I

Ch1cago at Kan C.ty n ght
Ball a1 Detroit n1gM
Cleveland at M lw mght
Boston at New York ntght

0
0
0
0
0

LP- Fmgers 18 8)

(51 7 1nnmgs ram)

New Yor k

100 30Q- 4

Cleve land { Wtl&lt;ox 7 12 and

62

Detro I
200 OOx - 2 4 1
Kl ne ( 16 6) and Mun son
Scherman Seelbach (4) and
Hai ler
LP Scherman (6 3)

I

Th1s We.Jk s Spec1a I

·~~~-·

Hrs- Murcer (28th) Alou (llh)

0
0
0
0

000 000 101- 2 7 0
M lw
Bait
000 JOO Ollx- 3 7 0
Colborn Stephenson (l) L n

USED CARS

Watl (9) and Oates WPCuel lar ( 16 10) LP- Colborn (7
6) HR - Powell (18th)

York topped Philadelphia and
Steve Carlton, 4-2, Houston
edged Los Angeles, 4-3, and
Montreal blanked Sl LouiS, 4

69 66

New York (Webb 0 0) at M nn 3 Oakland 2 2nd
Ph adelph a (Reyno ds 2 121
Cleve land 6 Bos ton 5
8 05 p m
Balhmor e 3 Mtlw 1

zy (7) and Rodnguez Cuellar

But when the lime came to
leave the stadtmn and the band
played tis liveliest tune of the
rught the natural sptnts of
young people broke forth
Gomg out they flung thetr
arms about each other the
athletes from some 120 nations,
and loped around tbe track As
the large electric scoreboard at
one end of tbe stadtmn flashed
the ftve rmged Olymptc em
blem and the words 'Montreal
1976,' groups of tbe athletes

East
w I pet gb
73 61 545
74 63 540
73 64 l3J t ;,'
72 64 529 2
63 IJ 463 11
54 83 394 20 '
West
wlpctgb
79 57 581
77 59 566 2

(9) and Rool WP- Granger 14
5) LP- F ngers (8 7) HRBando ( I4th)

began wavmg at the crowd
The mood of excitement grew
Then groups of athletes
broke ranks and took one last
buoyant run around tbe red
track Among the most
exuberant, were those of
Bntam and Australia , Kenya
Mex1co and Argentina
If the OlympiC Spirt! IS to
clunb back from the tragtc
events here the tmpetus could
come from that prectous spmt
of youth

Birds Remain Alive, Win 3-2
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Baltimore Ortoles may
be down but Earl Weaver
caultons not to count tbe Birds
out
The Ortoles have won the
title m the Amertcan League
East eastly the past three
seasons and Weaver tsn'tabout
to do things dtfferently now
that his club IS m a hotly
contested pennant race Boog
Powell s ftrst home run m 21
days helped Mtke Cuellar to his

P ttsburgh at Ch1cago
St Lou sat Montreal n1ght
New York at Ph Ia n1ght
Cmct at Atlanta n1ght
Los Ang at San Fran n1ghl
San D1eqo at Hou ston n ght
Amencan League

Chocajjo
Kan Clly
Bradl ey

200 000 000- 2 l 1
000 000 001- 1 3 0
Forster (9) and

Herrm an n

Spl 1tlorff

( 11 11)

game was called one hour and
43 mmutes later Steve Kbne
won hts 16th game m 22
deciSIOns
Dtck Allen became the smgle
most productive season home
rtlll httter m White Sox htstory
by hammermg his 34th tn the
ftrst mrung to lead Chicago
over Kansas C1ty
'They say he's human but
I'm not convmced because I
got htm out once,'' losmg
ptlcher Paul Spltttorff satd
afterwards

'68 OLDS 88
H.T. SEDAM

and K rkpatr ck WP- Bradley
114131
HRS- AIIen (J4lh l
Hov ley (Jrdl

Turq uo1se with black vmyl
roof V 8 eng me auto
trans P S P 8 1 owner

200 210 ooo- 5 11 0
Bos ton
Cleve
302 001 OOx- 6 10 0
Sebert Lee (3) and FISk
T d r ow Rtddleberger (4)
Lamb (5) Mtngort (7) and
Mos es WP- Lamb (4 5) LPLee (6 4) HR s- Ftsk (2l sl)
Lee (lsj) Yastrzemsk (7th)
McCraw (6th) Sm tih (19th)

'1295

Brot amer (5th)

(On ly games sched uled)

over a tendency that you play
pro football every other week
ThiS ts one game where if
you don t get ready to play, you
get your block knocked off, ' he
satd

pm
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday s Games

Oakland
(A It Ttmes EDT)
Ch cago
P tt sburgh (E lls 13 7) at Mmne so ta

Final Standings

1t

San Franc1sco (Bryant 11 6)

Today s Probable Pttchers

1976 Olympics
"'ll be proposed among them
the ehnunatwn of all team
spo rts
And, too, the Oiymptc move
ment now ts commg out of the
Brundage era ' whtch ended
offtctally Sept 30 when Avery
Brundage tbe 84-year-old Chi
cago mtlltonatre who has been
prestdent of the IOC for the
past 20 years steps mto
rettrement and ts replaced by
Lord Mtchael Kallamn a bluff,
hearty lrtshman w1th 1deas
different m many respects
from Brundage
So the shape of thtngs to
come m the Olymptcs ts not
clear today as the 12 000
athletes and offtctals who came
here for the games or at least
the thousands sttll here on
closmg day scattered to thetr
homes m all parts of the world
But tf two notes came
through clear and loud m the
55-mmute long closmg ceremt&gt;ny Monday mght m Olymptc
Stadtum tl was the determtna
tion of Olympic ofliclals that
thetr movement shall not dte as
a result of the vtolen ce here
and the exuberance of the
youths assembled
Supposed to be Toned Down
Thts was supposed to be a
toned-down ciosmg ceremony,
out of deference to the memory
of the JI Israeh team members
who came here m pecce and
died on Sept 5 wben Arab
guerrtllas mvaded the Olymptc
Vtllage

But Cedeno snared tbe drtve
wtth a dtVIng catch to end the
game and preserve the Astro
trmmph
Jun Wyun hit hts 22nd homer
and tnpled m another run for
the Astros Don Wtlson and
Jerry Reuss combmed on a
seven httter

(On ly games schedul ed)

Team Sports In

Cincinnati Reds open a Rrles

(

0

Mmnesota swept two from
Oakland 2-1 and 3-2 Cleveland
edged Boston 6-5 Baltunore
mpped Mtlwaukee, 3-2 New
York beat Detrott 4-2 m a
game called by ram after 5'h
mnmgs and Chtcago mpped
Kansas Ctty, 2-1
Cedeno Shows Why
Many experts thmk Cesar
Cedeno IS the best young player
m baseball and he showed why
as the Astros edged the
Dodgers Cedeno not only
smgled m a run, he saved the
game wtth hts glove Wtth two
out and two on tn the mnth
Wt!IIe Davts hit a shot up the
alley that seemed likely to wm
the game for the Dodgers 5-4

May Eliminate

REDS AT ATLANTA
ATLANTA (UPJ) - The

•

went seven tnrungs to get the
wm and Tug McGraw went the
!mal two tunmgs f!lr his 2:trd
save
Both Runs m F1rst
Phtladelphta got both of Its
rtlllS m tbe ftrst mrung on Larry
Bowa s smgle a walk Greg
Luzmskt s run-scormg double
and Roger Freed s sacrifice
fly But the l'luls couldn t t.ke
advantage of thetr other opportumttes and were blanked
the rest of the way
In the onl) other games m
the NatiOnal League Houston
edged Los Angeles, 4-3 and
Montreal blanked St Louts 4

Karr &amp; Van lafidt
Y~u

II LlkeOurQualtly

Way of Do1ng Bus1ne ss

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
,Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs T1l8 00

TitS PM Sat,

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992 2342

Ml DOLE PORT. 0

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

WE'RE HAVING ATIRE SALE!

BUT ALL TIRES MUST GOTO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR

WINTER TIRESI
•All Grades •All Sizes
•All 'At Low, Low Prices
THAT GIVE YOU MORE Mll.fS
FOR YOUR MONEY.

-.

�WIN ATBRIDGE

&amp; THINGS

Over-Reliance on Blackwood
I

12

NOKfll
+KQ
. AQIOHf

t AQI• 1
... 2
WES1

fAST
+10532

.2
t9 4

.4

+AJKI

... 97h54

+AJ9 Hl4

t 761

Si)U111 (II)

+6

.KJ9 751
t K i08

I.

... KQIO
Both vulnerable
\\csl ' North
l'ast Sout h

Pass

ofK II

••

Pas." Pass

ng lead- · A

held up he could lose a lot
more 1f Not th ~new what he
was dotng and was votd of
one of the black smts
North was very apo!ogettc
m the ensumg conversat10n
He satd that hts hand looked
so good that he JUSt forgot
about the posstbthty that ht s
partner mtght not have even
one ace
We were drawn mto the
d1scusston We pomted out
that we sympathized a !title
wtth North but hoped that
North would not let enthu
stasm run away wtth htm m
the future After all we re
marked There ts no extra
bonus for a slam btd all at

once

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIU: AUN)

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

PEP TALK - Betsy Koonce, (standing), New York
representative of Commumty Concerts Inc Monday night
urged 1972 73 membership drtve workers to gtve their total
dedication lhts week durmg the Trt.County Commumty
Concert Assoctalton s 26th annual membership ktckoff

dinner Others left to rtght are Mrs Pat Mtlls co-chatrman of
the memberstup drtve Dr U!wts Schmtdt, assoctation
preSident, Mrs Jan Thaler general drive chatrman and
Mrs Carolyn Rodertck secretary Not ptctured - C M
McGmness treasurer

Membership Drive is Full Go
Gtve the Trt Coun ty
Community Concert
Association membershtp dnve
your total dedtcallon thts
week,' satd Betsy Koonce,
Commumty Concert, Inc ,
representative from New
York, In addressmg 85 persons
at Monday mght s 26th annual
'ktckoff dmner at Grace
Ututed Methodtst Church m
Gallipolis
The 1972 membershtp drtve
wtll run through Saturday
rught One hundred and two
workers are parltctpatmg m
thts year s membershtp
campatgn m the Mason Galiia,
Metgs County area
Famtly membershtps are
$25 adult memberships $10
and student memberships $5
Thus far, three concerts are
slated for the In-county area,
includmg the Texas Boys Chotr
and the Rounte Kole Trto
' Wtth a successful mem
bership drtve this week, the trt
county area will be able to
sponsor a fow-th concert
·remarked the New York
,representative
Mrs Koonce added, we wtll
have somethmg for everybody
thts year " She w-ged workers
to get young people In the area
Inspired Student membership
teams have been formed for
area high school and college
students
Dr U!wts A Schmtdt, Trt·

Coun ty Commuruty Concert
Assoctalton prestdent served
as master of ceremomes
Although no spectftc goal has
been established for the 1972-73
season workers are shootmg
for at least 600 members this
year
Dr Schmtdt announced Mrs
L R Ford has been named the

new concert master suc-

Or ebaugh Sue Patterson Jane

Yocum Norma Dell nger and
Lmda Fann mg
Addte Wuerch Capta n
Mrs John Silvey Judy lsaccs

Penny Moore and Pat M li s
Joan Schm 1dl Captam
Betty and Ma c McGumness

Ed th Ross Mr and Mrs H 0

Franc1 s Dorotha Su1ter and
Eldon Wuerch
Mo.ry Ellen Lmg o Capt am Mtldred Lee Ltz Cornell Dene

ceeding Eldon Wuerch It was
also announced Mrs Saundra
Koby was responsible for the
street banner on Second Ave
remmding restdents of the
1972 73 membershtp campatgn
Mrs Jan rhaler, drtve
Births
chatrman, named the 1972-73
Sept 8 - Mrs Mtchael
membership captams and thetr Ryan son Syracuse and Mrs
respective workers Mrs Pat Robert J Hoff daughter RIO
Mtlls ts co-chatrman of the Grande Se pt 9 - Mrs
drtve
Clayton Farber son Galhpohs
Concert Membership Ferry and Mrs George Ttlley
Headquarters ts located at II son Wellston Sept 10 - Mrs
Court St 10 Galltpobs
James Terry son Patnot
Prtor to Monday's bus10ess
meetmg,a 22-ptece stage band,
Dtscharges
The Swmgmg Sqwres under
Mane Turner Linda Henry
the dtrectton of Gary Stewart, Glona Carpenter Mrs Ralph
PI Pleasant band dtrector,
Gibbs and son
Ltnda
presented SIX numbers The Rutherford Mrs Robert
West Vtrginia mustctans were Hmnphreys and son Kevm
Introduced by former GAHS Yenan John U!e Chck Shawn
band dtrector A K Sutter
Paugh Judy Young Mrs
Area capta10s and thetr Floyd Knapp and daughter
workers are
Juha Plunkett Troy ~hiler
Coffman
Wanda
Cha•rman Jan Thaler and Edwtn
Co cha 1rman Pat Mtlls
Mahne Donald Brown Okte
Galltpohs Teams - Sarah
Camp Ida Conley, Lots
Shee ts
Capta n
Satly
Peoples Lon Dtllon Rtta
Baker Daryl Bowlmg Thelma
Dunn Shelby Mehl Eh
(o".- ~ :&amp;la:z:::;;:xow~-:.~
Lambert Vtrgmta Htcks Steve
:'.:
,,"" Wilson Henry Wtlhs Agnes
,, Wtlhams Carl Stewart Jr
2 Carmen Pugh Irene Neal,
By Helen and Sue Bottel
&gt;
Opel!
Meadows
Gwen
Longhotham Kathryne Knotts
MIRROR MIRROR ON THE WALL
Juantta
Green
Herbert
Dear Helen
Calhcoat, Connte Brumfteid
We have a problem wtth Terry our gtrl fnend she thtnks Mrs Roger McKmney and son
she's skmny but her stomach bangs over her pants and her htps Cathy Stevens Mrs Stephen
are too hig for short shorts What she does to a mtru sktrt ts Wood and daughter Conme
ndiculous She InSISts her watst ts 24 but tl s more hke 31'
Knapp Robert Staats Gene
When we walk down the street she th10ks people are lookmg Swmgle Carne Johnson
ather because she has a good ftgure, but they re really starmg at M1ldred Lucas Mary Grant,
ber poor taste
U!roy McCoy, Gary Goodman
Should we tell her drop her or JUSt keep on bemg - THE James Webb
Margaret
EMBARRASSED TWO
Stebelton Mtchael Smtih ,
Henry Sloan Elste 0 U!ary
Dear Emb
Cora McGhee, Edna Hulshort
Velva Farley, Fred Bosltc
II you re good enough frtends you can be truthful but tactful
Walter
U!t Terry know thts k10d of ego only wetghs you down, and she s Kermtt Pauley
fooling nobody but herself
Loveday III, Mtsha Frazter
Sometimes a gtrl s mtrror tells her only what she wants to Enabelle See Hazel Jewell
Juamta Ltevmg Dtana Sue
see, and tt takes PEOPLE to make her see what she really IS Rtchards
Mrs
Eugene
SUE
Tillotson and daughter Chad
+++
Stckles
Rtta Wtckhne Pamela
Dear Embarrassed
Jeadtng
Paul McDamel
Potntmg out a gtrl s faults for her own good' IS nsky
busmess - unless yours ts the spec tal ktnd of fnendshtp that can Gregory Kntpp Mtchael
S1mms Wendy Gatewood,
sw-vtve truthful hurts (And somehow I don tthink tt IS )
Wtnston Saunders Steve
My I G ~ P ( I'm Guessing Agam Perceplton ') tells me
Brand Elvtra Barcus, Ernest
you'd just as soon change thts threesome to a twosome and Wtseman Charles Johnson,
you're usmg embarrassment' to JUStify tl - HELEN
Norma Johnson U!land Riggs,

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Generation Rap

+++

Dear Rap
I am a 14-year-old guy, and gelling high grades m school has
never been a problem But I don t do well athiehcally
Now the ktds who don t do well scholasttcally are treated JUst
fine by tbe school system which makes sure that they are
developed to thetr full potenttal They are put 10to separate
groups COIIStsllng of underachievers Uke themselves, so thetr
prectous egos won't be damaged They are coddled, protected,
given sympathy and shielded from would-be verbal assailants
Now let us constder how I am treated As an 'un
derachiever 'tn athlehc abtlity, have I had the spectal attention
given to my scholastic counterparts' No' I have been put in wtth
everyone else who ts almost certamly more able than I am at any
sport As a result, I have been laughed at, mocked out and gtven
patronizing looks from tgnorant gym teachers
Contrary to what you are probably thmking, l am not a
scrawny little weak runt with btfocals I am six feet tall, and
have no problem coordmatmg my body movements I certainly
have potential It ts the same potenttal of the stuptd kid who tsn t
reaDy stupid Tbe only dtfference ts that hts potenttai ts helped to
develop and mme ts pamfully Ignored - MARTIN
Dear Martin
Thanks for making a good pomt Phystcal fttness ts great,
but too often gym classes can be total PAIN for 'un
derachlevers
Conunents anyone' We'd like to hear from gym teachers as
well as students - HELEN AND SUE

One of the commonest m1s
takes tubber bndge players
make 1s over reliance on the
Blackwood conventiOn
They don t realtze that
Blackwood ts more a method
of keepmg out of bad slams
than of gettmg to good ones
and tn some places it ts a!
most considered Illegal to
btd a slam Without chtrpmg
four no trump somewhe re
along the way
Thus 11 was very sm prts
tng lo see North With a hand
Jus t bu1tt for Blackwood use
101gettmg about Easley s

Mary Powell Jack Schlosar
Mrs Donald R Warehtme, Jr
and daughter Margaret
Saunders, Davtd Russell Clara
Neal Mrs Mtchael Kmcatd
and son Geneva Howell Mrs
Davtd Hammond and son and
Mrs Larry Ashburn and
daughter
BIRTHS - Mrs Terry
Uoyd, son Jackson and Mrs
Randy Westmoreland, son ,
CottageVIlle, W Va
DISCHARGES - James
Lucas George Cupp Jr , Mrs
Jacky Dotson and daughter,
Howard Tucker Lowell Jones
Jr , Charles Parks Juaruta
Green, Juantta Sanders Arlen
Owens U, Wtlllam Wagaldon,
Helen Flood Enuna Hines and
Ellen Carr

In hot weather grass re
fleets heat and m the wm
ter absorbs warmth that
may otherw1se escape

Wagn er M1ck e Calhou 1 and
Cook 1e Johnson
Ca pt a n Bern ce Bucc
Kat e Sprow V rg ma Blowers
W lee 1
Edwards
Jan
Wetherholt Martha M cKenZi e
and Dr and Mrs Carl Woods
Mar a me Campbell Caplatn
Ann W1cl ne Jean Nea l
June Lew 1s Steve Elberfled
and Margte Adk ns
Mar on Ford Capta n
Ma)(me Carman Lyd a Groth
June Adams Ida Thaler and

M ke I Hand

Martha Roder ck Capt an
Dora Jo Gnff1 1 Judy Par sons
G lllan Moore Kathy Anderson
and V ck e Mrlchel l
Flor e 1ce L nlala Cap t am Bev Ge l ie s Jean Coope r
Peggy Evans Jan Thal er and
0 anna Ha ley
Sue Beverly Capt an - Else
Nea
Cather ne Haywa rd
Carol Polen Bobby Holzer and

Gladys Grant

Pomeroy Nancy Reed
Cap tarn Mr s
Palr1 ck
Lochary Mrs John Reece and
Mrs Jarnes 0 Bnan
Middleport
Faye Sauer
Capta.n - Mrs Joan Ha rnson
Rutland Mr s S1bley Slack
Mr s Jean Wh tehead Reeds
v lie
Racme - Mrs John R1 chard

Lee Caplatn Mrs Bob J Ord

Syracuse
Jackson - AI Evans
Pomt Pleasant - Mrs 81 I
Grady Capt am - Mrs Joseph
Antal Mrs Will am Rard n
Jr Mrs Gordon M cM ll an
M1 ss Halt e Jordan and Mrs
Russe l B10bee
R1o Grande Laurence
Huber Ca pta n Carol ne
Roden ck Zelma Northcutt
June Lee (Mrs
Arch e)
Saundra Koby and Carre Da e
Mason W Va - Mrs Nolan
Swackhammer
Area Busmesses Ja ck

Gnffm
Poml Pleasant Student Team
- A K Su ter Caplatn - Bt l I
Ra r ey Dav d Kayse r K m
Dunsmoor Kar en Long and

Bel nda L tchl eld

R1o Grande- Student Team
(Col lege) - Mer l yn Ros s
Caplatn - Steve Ldtl e and
Joyce Madey
Galhpohs - Gall1 a Academy
- El zabeth Roder &lt;k Capt
Brant Adams Wendy Or r and
Sarah Wetherholl

fhe btddmg has been
Wes1
North
East

Pass

1•

South

I+

Dblc

Pass

'

You South hold

.AQ87 ¥KJ4 t32 .K984
What da you do now J
A-Pass You doni have
enough strength for a b1d at th1s
pomt

TODAY S QUESTION
You pass West brds two daa

monds North and East pass
Wha t do you do now ?

fllle conventiOn and JUmpmg

n ght to stx heat!&gt;
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
West hoped to be ab le to
Steers - chOice 35 75 36 25
cas h both h•s aces but was good 33 70-35
too smatl to double He could
Hfrs - chotec, 33 25 34
gam 100 pumts tf the aces good 31 50-32 50
Cows - commerctal 2526 35 uhiity 22 50-24 canner
and cutter 17 60-20
Bulls - commercial 30 85PT PLEASANT
32 , stockers and feeders- steer
LIVESTOCK SALES CO
calves 41-47 75 heifer calves
PT PLEASANT W VA
28 50 36 90 heavy feeders
Saturday Sept 9 1972
HOGS -175 to 220 28 to 28 70 27 50-42
Veals -chOice 50-53 good
Heav1es 27 to 28, L1ghts 26 to
27 Fat Sows 25 JO to 26 50, 37 41
Lambs - chOice 27-29 90
Boars 21 80 to 22 Ptgs 16 to 20
Hogs - 2()().240 28 75 No I
Stock Shoats 25 to 30
CATILE - Steers 29 to 31 29 230-240, 28 50 sows 2(j 50Hc1fers 28 30 to 32 50 Fat Cows 27 70 boars 21 80
25 to 26 20 Canners 22 to 25
Bulls 29 to 35 Stock Cows and
GETS SHRIVER JOB
Calves 250 to 410 Stock Steers
WASHINGTON
(UP! )
35 to 40 Stock Hetfers 30 to
Shtelds,
former
36 25 Stock Steer Calves 38 to Mark
Washmgton
represcntahve
for
47 75 Stock Hetfer Calves 35 to
Gov John J Gilligan has been
41 50
named nahonal pohttcal
VEAL CALVES - Tops 54
for the campatgn of R
dtrector
Seconds 53 25 Medtum 49 75 to
Shnver
the
53 Common &amp; Heavtes 50 to Sargent
Democrahc
candtdate
for
vtce
52 50 Culls 46 to 49
president

Market Report

1!41 LIPOLJS, OHIO,
SALES REPORT OF
Oh1o Valley L1vestock Co

BY PAUL CRABTREE
Continuing with our double-barreled ratings of the new
shows as the 1972-73 TV season opens, I remind you thai the
ratmgs are based on my unpresstons from crttlcs' previews, the
trade press, ad agency comments, and synopses from the net
works
Onward and UJIWard
On CBS
The New Btl! Cosby Show,'' Monday at 10 I'm violently
prejudiced on thts one, because l thmk Cosby ts one of the fun.
ruest men ahve But he's bucking pro football for the men, and
movtes for the women Excellence, A minus Survival, C mmus
' Maude,'' thts IS a spm-off of 'All m the Family,'' which
couldn t be bad, at all (Remember tbe Beverly Hillbillies Petticoat Junction - Green Acres whtrligtg, which produced a
goldmme that s stlll turning out the ore') Excellence, B SurVIval, B (It ll ftght 'Bonanza' for the Tuesday ratings lll the
early gomg )
'The Wa!toiiS, • Thursday at 8 This could easily be one of the
fmest shows of the new season Set m the Appalachians, tt tells
the story of a close-knit family durmg the Depresston Ortgmally,
tt was ' Spencers Mountam tracmg the Spencer family, a
pseudonym adopted by autobtographtcal author Earl Hammer
Jr For reasons unknown, the Spencers are now the Waltons
(both names of towiiS m Roane Countv. W Va bv a crazv
coinctdence) If told wtth tbe wrtter s honest lack of treacle, tt
could be a warm, unsltcky worthwhile series The ad agencies
have already wrttten tt off as a loser Darn the ad agenCies 1
Excellence, B plus (if they go easy or. tbe goo J Survival, D
Brtdget Loves Berme ' Saturday at 8 30 This ts as
hackneyed a plot as you re likely to fmd-a shcked-up ' Ables
Irtsh Rose, whtch was a funny play of the Twenhes and a fatrly
good radio sertes of the Forties The actmg and wrttlng to Its
credtt are srud to be very professiOnal but tt would seem we've
outgrown the culture-barrter, mter-marrtage theme that this
one's based on But the ad agenctes declare It an instant hit, even
before tl shows up Darn the ad agenctes' Excellence C mmus
Survival A mmus
Bob Newhart Show ' Satw-day at 9 30 Following Mary
Tyler Moore' ts a tough! act to follow but tt helps the ratings
frtend Newhart IS a droll fellow, who doesn 'I come across on TV
as well as he should I like hun, and wtth such a lead~n tbe show
mtght make It Excellence Cplus Survtvai Cplus
'Anna and the King, Sunday at 7 30 Yul BryMer, pale
aglow ts back as the ktng, and tbe show has a sohd pretruse- tl
was a good book, a better Broadway play, and a pretty good
movie Nevertheless, tts demtse ts likely It appeals to older
!olks, mostly, who have ktds who'll be watching Disney at this
hour Excellence C plus Survtval D
M·A..S-H, ' Sunday at 8 Also besed on a hit movte this
black-humor comedy of the milttary probably wtll make it for the
same reason Anna won t Appeallng mostly to the younger set,
not old enough to have Disney watchers but too old for Mtckey
Mouse themselves, they'll probably sltce off enough of the
audtence to survtve Excellence, C Survtval B minus

+++
ON THE TV DIAL The new Bonanza" valtantly returns at
8, WSAZ-TV 'Temperature RISing' debuts at tbe same time,
WHTN-TV Actd-tongued Maude' cbec~s in from the Bunker
household at 8 on WCHS TV
Returrung also are 'Marcus
Welby, MD" at 10 on WHTN TV, and Hawau Ftve-0" 8 30 on
WCHS TV
NBC News spectal looks at penston plans at 10,
WSAZ-'l'V

The Da1~ SentiQ~I

H

Programs for Tonight

C•ty Ed1tor
Publ shed dally tn~:cet:~t
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Publ St'11ng Company
111

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and Tomorrow

Onlo

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and W Va One vur 114 00
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Thru

months u so Subscr lpt•on
pr ceo mcloctes Sunday T•mes
Sent• nel

•
TUESDAY SEPT 12
00 - News J 4 8 10 15
6 JO - News J 4 15 6 8 10 I Dream of Jeannie 13
7 00 - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Elec Co 20 Andy Griffith
15 tnstght3J BealtheCiock4 I veGotaSecrell J
7 JO - Masterp ece Theatre 33 This Is Your Life 3 Doctors On
Call4 To Tell the Truth 6 Prtce Is Right 8 10 Beat the Clock
1)
6

8 00 - Bonanza J 4 15 Temperatures RISing 6 13 Maude 8 10
8 30 - Hawatl Five 0 8 10 Even ng at Pops JJ Movie The
Longest Ntght 6 13
9 30 - Movie The Family R• co 8 10 Towers ol Frustration
JJ
10 oo - NB C Reports J 4 15 Marcus Welby MD 6 13 Ftrlng
Line J:J
11 OO - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson J 4 15 Vlrgmtan 8
Mov1es law of War 10 Strangers at Sunnse 13
1 00 - Your Health 4

McGuff Johnny Mercer and Mtchel U!grand
were startled by the flash Cyrano will be a
thts season mustcal - they d already wrttten a
dozen songs for another long nosed tuneshow
Charlton Heston 's SkyJacked' !tim tn
three months already ts at the $15,000,000 mark
Ch uck takes percentages of hts fltcks so he's up
for another mtlhon The "Clockwork Orange '
mov1e s choppmg-out of formcatton scenes to
get an R" mstead of an X ' IS Simply an un
courageous ploy to lure the kids barred from X
f!tcks What happened to all of Stanley
Kubrtck s brave words about never compromtsmg his raunchy prt~ctples when tl first
emerged from under the dtrty rock' Thts sort of
stck fltck really deserves an RX
Ted Wtlhams pals says he s ttred of ptlot10g
a losmg ballclub and wtll pack m hts Rangers'
Job tho hts pact has another season to lunp
ABC TV couldn t steal up any of the big tenms
tourneys from NBC &amp; CBS, so tl's startmg one m
Las Vegas from scratch - and the $150 000 prtze
sure ts scratch
Gen 1 Motors hetr Stew Molt s gifts to the
Dems wtil total $800,000 thts year - plus another
half a mtil to chartttes
His dad, Charles
Stewart Molt, 97 with an $800 milliOn fortlllle,
gave hts stx chlldren (m two litters) $30 mtllton
each Stew told Women s Wear Datly, also satd
he dtdn 't pay any taxes last year because he
gave away all hiS mcome - but tsn t that just
the sort of platinwn loophole George McGuv's
promtsmg to solder up
Alan Arkin gets the top b1ll10g 10 ' Last of
the Red Hot Lovers,' but tl 's Sally Kellerman
who runs away brilltantly With the movie, such
as tt ts Dan Jenkins' Semt-Tough' novel Is
the funmest filthy novel in decades read it
(adults only') and cringe between howls
Piaywrtght Jonathan Katz decided to come out
of the closet and admit- proclaun' - that he s
gay His candtd homo-play, "Coming Out,' wtll
open this week - prey tell- at the Washington
Square Methodist Church' Katz meows that his
opus wtll sketch-lustortcal gays "from Willa
Cather to Horatio Alger '

News Weather

o4

local News 13

WEDNESDAY SEPT 1J
Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Farmllme 10 Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey IJ
Columbus Today 4 Btble Answers 8 Urbah League 10
Today3 4 IS CBSNews8 10 News 6
SieepyJeflers8 RomperRoom6 RockyandBullwlnkle

00 6 15 6 25 6 JO 7 OO 7 JO tJ
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue IJ Sesame St 33
6

FREDDIE-THAT'S SORT
OF ITALIAN FROST
NEW YORK (KFS ) - Dtahann Carroll's
recent defrosttng d1dn t leave her mourmng for
Davtd her new Gohath Fredde Glucsman ts
nch and gtves her Jewels and owns the ladtes'
Internahonal and the men s boo-teek at the
Sahara hello young lovers Will Jet to PariS
thts month so there Davtd Ruth Gordon 76
11as the most stylish ktd m U! Cote Basque and
plamly younger than autmnn Federal Judge
Ted Kupferman limped mto Loutse s E 58th
spot - busted hts ankle not the one he wrttes
hts optmons wtth
Gmger Rogers looked
younger than smnmer tn Loutsc s wtth George
Abbott younger than wmter
If Rudy Vallee rates a deadend street m"hts
name Henny Youngman feels he s entttled to a
left turn
Stop press 1 Warners Love tn
Blume fl1cks changed titles - to ' Blmne m
Love
Demse Taren the nuts n butts beauty
at the Gashght Club retw-ns for her second year
at the statd Amencan Academy of Dramatic
Arts She ll keep peddhng coffm natls to fmance
her drahma tutormg - tf tl ktlls you
The
Bdw) -47th St amusement parlor charged twobits for four machme made photo poses, now
tt s half a hue&lt; new prtce pasted over the old
one you sttll can read More Age of Inflation
hospttai rooms averagmg $140 a day here wtll be
$500 to $800 a day m 2000
The Negro-ortented Blacula ' has run up
such a huge scare Blackenstem ' next wtll
straighten you hatr More mfiatton the new
'72- 73 phone hook has 128 more pages than last
Superfly ' got an R' ratmg but Warners
wtll try to sertes TV tt anyway The Tunes
ordered more aelton ptctures mto tis pages, JUSt
let the slanted stortes fall flat Instead Har
per s Bazaar has a brt!IIanl crttuque of theN Y
drama crtttcs (P 128), bnlliant we sa:; '
Busmess exec Trudy Webster ts so tired of
bemg asked tf s~e tsn t Alt MacGraw, she just
stgns the autographs LBJ won t campatgn for

. !

Euc Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH

1 30 -

HY JACK 0 BRIAN

I

Television 'Log

DE VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNEHILL

HOGS 175 to 220 lbs 27 85 to
28 50 220 to 250 lbs 28 to 28 75
L•gh t 26 50 to 27 25 Fat Sows
25 50 to 26 Boars 18 50 to 20
Ptgs 10 to 15
CATILE - Steers 31 50 to
39 He1fers '!I to 36 Baby Beef
42 to 54 Fat Cows 20 to 25
Canners I8 to 26 25 Bulls 26 to
32 Mtlk Cows 240 to 360
\ EAL CALYES - Tops 54
Seconds 51 to 52 50 Medtum 47
to 50 Com &amp; Hvs 45 to 52 50
Culls 45 Down
BABY CALVES - 35 to 85
LAMBS - Tops 30 Seconds
25 to 26 50 Ltght Wts 23 to 25
Common 22 50 Down

Astros Edge LA; Mets Top Phils

T tmmv and Lasste 6

8 JO - Jack LaLanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
9 00 - Paul Dlxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Mr Rogers 33 What
Every Woman Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Capt

Kangaroo 8 Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
9 30 - Electric Co 33 To Tell the Truth J Jeopardy 6 Hazel8
10 00 - Dinah Shore J 15 Dick Van Dyke 13 Columbus 6 Callmg
6 Jokers Wlld 8 10 Hathayoga 33
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Spltt Second 13 Phil Donohue 4
Price Is Rtght 8 10 In School lnst 33
11 00 - Sale of Century 3 15 Love American Style 6 Gambit 8
10 Password 1J
11 30 - HollywoodSquares4 15 Loveol LileS 10 Bewltched6
13 Sesame St 33
12 00 - Jeopardy J 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s so so Club 4
News 14 Contact 8 News 10
12 30 - Split Second 6 Search lor Tomorrow 8 tO Who What
What Where 3 15 Electric Co 33
1 00 - News Weather Sports J All My Children 6 IJ Its Your
Bet 8 Green Acres 10 Walch Your Child 15 French Chef 33
1 20 - Lucille Rtvers J
I JO - Three on a Match 3 4 15 Lers Make A Deal 6 13 As
The World Turns 8 10 Deslgntng Women JJ
2 00 - Days ol Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglas 6 Guldlng Ltght 8 10 Bridge 33
2 JO - Dallng Game 13 Doctors 4 15 Edge ol Night a 10
Sporlscope 33
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospltal6 13 Love Is a
Many Splendored Thing 8 10 Masterpiece Theatre 33
3 30- Return to Peyton Place J 4 15 One Ltfe to Live 6 13
Secret Storm 8 10
4 00 - Mr Cartoon J Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Love
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Fllnlslon.. 6 Gilligan s
Island 8 Movie Winchester 7J ' 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Petltcoat Junction J Merv Grllfln 8
Daniel Boone IJ Andy Grtffllh 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers33 DtckVanDykell Ponderosa) 4 Danlel
Boone 6
S 30 - Marshall Dlllon15 Elec Co 33 Dragnef8 Gomer Pyle
USMC IJ --,
6 00 - TruthorConseq 6 NewsJ 4 810 IS HathayogaJJ
6 30 - News 3, 4 6 8 10 15 Bridge 33 I Dream of Jeannie IJ
7 00 - News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Conseauences 3,
!!eat "'The Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 13 Saint lS
Milestones of Progress 33
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 The Judge 10 E pisode Action 33,
Pollee Surgean 3 4 Protectors 8 Beatthe Clock 13
8 00 - Adam 12 4 A Public Affair 33 Paul Lynde 6 13 Carol
Burnell 8 10
8 30 - Banacek J 4 15 Movie The Daughters of Joshua Cote'
6 13 Attica Report 33
9 00 - Medical Center 8 10
to 00 - Search3 4, ts JulleAndrews6 13 Cannons 10
10 30 - Soul 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30-JohnnyCarsonJ 4 15 DlckCavett6 Virginians Movie
Father Came Too 10 Movie Let • Dance t3
100-News4
1 Jll - News 13

By Vito Steliino
UPI
Sports Wrtter
UPI Sports Editor
A fly ball homerun and a lack
MUNICH (UP!)-The last day matched tbe general mood m
of
support at critiCal tunes
the Olymjllc Village Gray, dtsma! and overcast There wasn t
proved
Steve carlton s undotng
much laughter to be heard
Monday
rught, as the Phi!s
In tbe recreation area, where the athletes from all the different
suffered a 4-2 loss to the New
countries gathered durtng tbetr off~une each day to play chess
York Mets The loss left
ping pong or mmtature golf, there was no one mstght
Carlton wtth a 23-9 record and
Many didn t even buther wattlng for the early evenmg cloSing three of those losses have been
ceremony 10 the O'ymptc Stadium which tradittonally wmds up at the hands of the Mets This
the games They bad packed thetr belongings and hurrted home
loss JUSt about rumed any
If you had to put your fmger on the prevallmg feeltng among remote chance Carlton hsd of
those who lingered for those last few hours, tt would have to be reachmg the 30 ftgure
one of fruitlessness and diSIUustorunent, a sense of not havmg
Carlton was beaten by Duffy
achieved what they had really come bere for
Dyer's homer that snapped a 2Feeling Is Shared
2 tie m the stxth mrung Duffy
ThiS let-down feellng seemed to be shared by wmners and also trtpled man msurance run
losers alike
m the etghth mnmg
Jerry Koosman now 9-11
Randy Williams tbe ]!).year-old US gold medaltst m the long
jump, didn t have to think long wben someone wanted to know
how hefeltahout these Olymptcsnow that they were commg to a
close
"DIS8ppomted, rephed the Fresno, Calif, ) oungster
Why•
'Because I expected the Olympic Games would be full of life
love and gatety and they turned out to be ugly and disastrous
Disastrous for a 19-year-old ktd who had come over bere and
won himself a gold medal'
Williams dtdn't back down
' We put so much emphasis on gold, he satd "Wtuntng gold
medals is conSidered more unportant than wmmng frtendshtp
and peace You've seen that flame on top of the stadimn haven t
you• Its supposed to symho!tze peace and frtendshtp ISn t tt'
Those doves they turned loose and those balloons they sent up are
symbolic of the same thing Peace and friendship SitU tbere was
Rhodesta and then tbe Israelis
Pollllcs Distresses Williams
By JOHN G GR!FFfN
The politics here also diStressed Willtams a Umverstty of
UP! Sports Editor
Southern California student
MUNICH (UPI )- The call
' When the Olympics no longer have politics in them they Ube went out m the clear cool mght
good, but! don t think that Uever happen "Williams satd
atr of Bavarta, for the youth of
The old fogeys at the head of thts thing run tt like some kmd of the world to meet agam m
rmlit.ary lnstttutton They think m terms of 1936 mstead of 1972
Montreal four years hence m
The average athlete IS 24 The guys rt!Mtng thtngs are 65 How cheerfulness and concord for
can they identify wtth the problems of somebody 25'
the 1976 Olymptc Games
Yes, Williams S81d, he was talking about the US Olymptc
The moment was more
Conuntttee members
pOignant than ever before
because th• 85 000 people m the
'They're too old, ' satd the young long Jtnnper 'Certamly
Olymptc
Stadtum here were ail
theresa generation gap How could there help but be• • You take
too well aware that the 1972
these Olymptc Commtttee ll\OYS They stay at some of the fmest
Oiymp
tcs bemg formally
hotels m Muruch They pay $5 a day for a room Someone s
closed
wtll
go down m htstory
]licking up tbe tab Who s dotng it' Regardless, when a ktd has a
problem and wanta to call home, these guys tell htm they can t as the one m whtch gunftre
destroyed concord
afford the money for such calls '
And there had to be a
Utile Praise
In common with practically all other U S athletes Wtlhams questton about what four years
from now will bnng m Mon
bas little praise for the work of offtcta!s here at the Olymptcs
treal when once agam the
particularly those who were asstgned to events tn whtch tbe US
athlettc youth of the world trtes
was involved
to meet for 15 peaceful days of
'The referees and judges were a farce,' he satd
competition m sport and game
Williams merely IS echomg most of the other athletes Tbey not
The Montreal orgamzers
only say the offtclating was bad, but also say tbey came here
who have not completed thetr
essentially to engage tn sports and games and found themselves
ftnal preparations for the
engaged in situations they never dreamed SituatioiiS like Bloody
phystcal factiiites or the
:I'uelday wben Araba terrorized the Olynipic Village and
program l;tave promised to
ultimately killed 11 Israelts
retu,n the games to the
On that day Rodney Patti3son a 29-year-old former Royal
athletes, an mdicatton that
the 76 games wtll be on a
Navy offtcer, clinched a gold medal for Brttain myachltng
considerably less lavtsh scale
He saw little reason to cheer, however, saymg
than tbe $620 mtllion enterprtse
I worked for this day four years but nght now, m the face of
staged
by West Germany here
what has happened, I wish I were a thousand rmles away from
Changes
to he Proposed
bere '
In addttton there ts an unportant congress of the In
ternattonal Olymptc Committee scheduled m Varna Bulga
rta m August 1973 at which
many changes m the program
'x

By MILTON RICHMAN

In the Amencan League

Anderson Big
Question mark
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
team phystclan of the CUICtnnatl Bengals satd today tt
would be ' touch and go ' this
week on whether quarterback
Ken Anderson ts able to start
the season Sunday agamst the
New England Patrolts
II depends on the pam
whether be can gnp the bali, '
Dr Wally Tlmperman said af.
ter examining Anderson 's
jammed fingers, an injury
suffered during tbe second
period against the Atlanta
Falcons Saturday night
' With rest It should be 0 K ,
but we don t know now," he
said 'It's a matter of touch
and go"
The Bengals ended thetr
exhibition season wtth a 3-3
mark after losing 44-14 to the
Falcons bere It was the second
worst margin of defeat for the
team, the worst being the 38-3
defeat in a regular season
game against Detroit In 1970
Head Coach Paul Brown told
the team at their weekly skull
session the loss particularly
pointed up weaknesses in his
veterans
' I am not that worried about
our three rookies on defense,"
Brown said "They don't concern me I think they'll be all
right
' The thing I don t Uke is that
some of our better players had
a bad day We've sot some
players have got to get

with the Braves tonight,
1e11dlng Wayne Simplon lfw
hll ninth win
The Reds Wllre idle Monday
lfta' concluding a West Coot

l1rinl
$AI,Z'IS TOrAL
NEW YORK (UPI)-BURe
Jell! Kinl's $10,000 v!clu'y in
the U.S Open lelllil cblaJ.
p!Oillhlp ~e~~~ 11er 1o111 rar a.

M1ke Jorgensen drove in
three runs \\tth a double and
his 12th homer and Balor
Moore pttched hts second
stratght shutout as Montreal
blanked St Louts Moore
allowed JUSt SIX htts as the
Expos pulled mto a fourth
place lie tn th e Eastern
DtVIston wtth the Cardtnals

By Un1ted Press International
National League
East
w I pet 9 b
Pdtsburgh
86 48 642
75 61 551 12
Ch ca~o
New ork
70 64 522 16
51 l OUI S
64 73 467 23 '
Mo1 I real
63 71 467 231 :.&gt;

Ph lade phta 49 87 360 38
West
w t pel g b

C no n nat

83 53

610

Houston
Los Angeles
At an t a
San FranCISCO

76 60
7J 63

559 7
537 10

Sa ' Doego

64 73

46 7 19

2

60 77

438 23

2

51 83 381 31

Monday s Results
New York 4 Ph Ia 2
Montreal 4 51 Louts 0
Houston 4 Los Ange les 3

MUN I CH

at

th e

Sov ret Un•on
Un l ed States
Ea st Germany
West
Ge rmany
Hunga ry
Japan
Poland
Italy

Aus tr al a

games
Gold S•lver Bronze Total
50
27
ll
99
30
33
30
93
20
23
23
66
12
11
16
39
6
34
"8
136
8
29
7
5
9
21
5
3
9
17
8
7
2
17

Swe d en

2

6
6

'6

16
14

2
2

4
3

I

I3

3

1

'
'

9
8

Holland

2

'

North Korea
Yugos l av i a
Canada

2
0

Norway

2

Roman a
France
Kenya

Cuba
Czechoslovak a

New

Zea l and

Alls lr a

Co omb a
Sw t zertand
Uganda
Beg urn
Gre ece
Mongo l a
Bra zII
Eth op a

ran

De nmark
Argent na
Lebanon
Me)( co
Pak sia n
Soutll Korea
Tun1 s a
Turk ey

Gha na
Jam a ca
N ger a
N ger
Sp a n

lnd a

'

3
I

2

8

I
I

I
3

5
5

I
2

2
3

5
5

'33

I

I

I

0
0
0

I
I
3

2
2

3

0

3

I

I

0
0
0

l
2
2

0
0
0

2
2
2

0
0

0
0

0
2

0
I

I
0

0

I

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

1

I
1
I
I
0
0

(Hooton

9 12)

2 30

pn

medal sandngs

(UPI) - Fnal

Olymp c

Ch cago

,

Browns A cquzre

G'cO R.ICrut~n
L __ .J__
CLEVELAND (UP!) Gloster Richardson, a siX-year
veteran recetver was acqwred
Monday by the Cleveland
Browns from the Oakland
Raiders
The Browns wtll relinqUISh a
1974 draft choice to the Raiders
in return for tbe 6-2, 200-pound
Richardson
Rtchardson played wtth the
Dallaa Cowboys last season,
snaring etght passes, three for
touchdowns
The Browns, who open their
regular season Sunday here
agamst the Green Bay
Packers, lost all six exhlbttion
games, a feat that the players
are still talking about
' It's not good to lose all of
them," runrtlng back Bo Scott,
said "Somewhere along the
llne you should taste what a
victory Is like "
U!roy Kelly however, said he
did not think the losses would
affect the team "It hasn'I in
the past," he said
"We haven't had many really good exhibition seasons
since I've been with the club,"
Kelly said 'This team sun has
confidence In itself "
In Kelly's six years with the
Browns they have been 9-26 tn
exhibition play
The Browns were the ooly
National U!ague team not to
win a game this summer

BIG JUMP
NEW YORK (UPl)-DeWttt
Weaver made the btggest Jump
tn the money standmgs of the
Professional Golf Association
thts week after scormg a
playoff victory over Chuck
Courtney Sunday tn the Southern Open and picktng up a ftrst
place check for $20,000
Weaver, who moved up from
65th to 37th in tbe stand10gs
with $51,655, still trails, as do
all the other pro golfers, money
leader Jack Ntcklaus by a
considerable amount Ntcklaus
has thus far earned $280,482
whlle his nearest rival, Lee
Trevino, has 'only ' $168,655
SVARE MEETS THOMAS
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Con-

troversial ruMing back Duane
Thomas met wtth San Diego
Chargers Coach Harland Svare
durmg the weekend and !ben
departed
"I'd have to say now that
be's not going to play,'' Svare
said "I don't krtow what to
think I can't believe he doesn't
want to play He never has told
me he doesn't With him tl'a
difftcult to tell '
Svare acquired Thomas from
year on the Virginia Slims the Dallas Cowboys during the
WCI!len 's Circuit to $48,2'15 and training season In an uncondiput ber In a plllil!on to total tional deal for runrung back
$100,000 for the second straight Mike Montgomery and
receiver Billy Parks

,...

\

16th VIctory Monday rught and
gave Baltimore a 3-2 verdtct
over Milwaukee as tbe OriOles
completed a fow-.game sweep
of the Brewers
Powell s 18th homer was a
three-run shot In the fourth
tunmg off losmg pttcher Jtm
Colborn Bob Gnch and
Tommy DaVIs were on base
wtth smgles
The vtctory coupled wtth
Boston s 6-5 loss to Cleveland
and New Yorks 4-2 ralllabbrevtated victory over Detrot!, left the Ortoles one-half
game behind the dtviston
leading Red Sox New York ts
I 'h back and Detroit Is fourth
two games off the pace
They'll Continue
I m gomg to continue
playmg tt tbe way I have been
the last three years,' Weaver
satd We can wm tt but we
bavedo It ourselves We're still
m tt and every club in it Is
going to have a reprteve before
it's over '
In other American League
games Mmnesota swept a
doubleheader from Oakland, 21, m 10 mmngs, and 3-2, and
Chicago edged Kansas C1ty, 21

Bos ton
Ba lli mor e
New York
De tro t
Cleveland
Mrlwaukee

Kan sas C ty
Call lorn a

St Lou s (C leveland 1313) at Te xas

Mon trea l
pm

(Morton 6 13)

8 05

0

Roy Foster's sacriftce fly
scored Buddy Bell With the gt&gt;ahead run m the Sixth and Tom
McCraw drove tn three ruiiS
With a homer and a trtple to
lead Cleveland over Boston
Stx home runs were htt 10 the
contest wtth the Red Sox
belting four and the lndtaiiS
two ,
Reese Is Hero
Rtch Reese, who entered
both games as a defeiiStve
replacement, drove m the
wmnmg runs With a double and
a walk to lead Minnesota to
thetr doubleheader sweep over
Oakland The dual losses
combmed with Chtcago s
vtctory over Kansas Ctty,
shaved the A's lead over the
White Sox m the American
League West to two games
Consecuttve home runs by
Bobby Murcer and Felipe Alou
started a three-run fourth
lnnmg which carried New York
past Detrott Time was called
m the top of the sixth mnlng
wtth a 3-1 count on leadoff
batter Norm Cash and the

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511

9 '7

66 68

493

12

63 72

467

15

2

51 84 378 27 h
Monday s Results

M nn 2 Oakland I l si

C n(lnnat. (Stmpson 8 5) at
Atlanta (Freeman 2 OJ 8 05

pm

Los Anqeles (Joh

1

11 5)

N Y 4 Del 2

S / 2 mns ram

Chtcag o 2 Kansas Ctly 1
COn ly games scheduled)
at
Today s Probable P1tchers
(All Ttmes EDT)

Amen can League

Texas (Gogolewskt 3 9) at
Cal for n1a (Messersmith 6 9} 11
p '
Cl cago (Ba hnsen 17 15) at
Ka l Sas Crty (Montgomery 1 ll
9 pm

and Tenace
Duncan (7)
Perry LaRoche (7) Granger

Bos ton (T1ant 11 4) at New
Yor k (Peterson 14 14 )
7 30

Linescores

Oakland !Hunter 197) at
(1 st Gamel
Oakland
000 000 001 - 1 10 0 Minnesota ( Corbtn 8 7) 9 p m
Bait more (Dobson IS 15) at
M nnesota
100 000 001 - 2 8 0
D
etrotl
(Fryman 521 8 30 p m
Blue Lock('r (7) Fmger s (9)
pm

2
2

Butter 0 0 Lamb 3 4) at
Mtlwaukee (Bell 2 1 and Par
so ns 11 12 ) 2 6 30pm
(2nd game)
Wednesday s Games
Oakland
000 010 010- 2 6 1
Te
xas
at Caltl n ght
Mtnn
100 001 01x- 3 51
Horlen Locker (5) Ftngers Oakland at Mtnn ntght

2I

'l

0
0

I
I

(8) Knowles (B) and Duncan
Blyeven { 13 16) and Borgmann

0

I

Ch1cago at Kan C.ty n ght
Ball a1 Detroit n1gM
Cleveland at M lw mght
Boston at New York ntght

0
0
0
0
0

LP- Fmgers 18 8)

(51 7 1nnmgs ram)

New Yor k

100 30Q- 4

Cleve land { Wtl&lt;ox 7 12 and

62

Detro I
200 OOx - 2 4 1
Kl ne ( 16 6) and Mun son
Scherman Seelbach (4) and
Hai ler
LP Scherman (6 3)

I

Th1s We.Jk s Spec1a I

·~~~-·

Hrs- Murcer (28th) Alou (llh)

0
0
0
0

000 000 101- 2 7 0
M lw
Bait
000 JOO Ollx- 3 7 0
Colborn Stephenson (l) L n

USED CARS

Watl (9) and Oates WPCuel lar ( 16 10) LP- Colborn (7
6) HR - Powell (18th)

York topped Philadelphia and
Steve Carlton, 4-2, Houston
edged Los Angeles, 4-3, and
Montreal blanked Sl LouiS, 4

69 66

New York (Webb 0 0) at M nn 3 Oakland 2 2nd
Ph adelph a (Reyno ds 2 121
Cleve land 6 Bos ton 5
8 05 p m
Balhmor e 3 Mtlw 1

zy (7) and Rodnguez Cuellar

But when the lime came to
leave the stadtmn and the band
played tis liveliest tune of the
rught the natural sptnts of
young people broke forth
Gomg out they flung thetr
arms about each other the
athletes from some 120 nations,
and loped around tbe track As
the large electric scoreboard at
one end of tbe stadtmn flashed
the ftve rmged Olymptc em
blem and the words 'Montreal
1976,' groups of tbe athletes

East
w I pet gb
73 61 545
74 63 540
73 64 l3J t ;,'
72 64 529 2
63 IJ 463 11
54 83 394 20 '
West
wlpctgb
79 57 581
77 59 566 2

(9) and Rool WP- Granger 14
5) LP- F ngers (8 7) HRBando ( I4th)

began wavmg at the crowd
The mood of excitement grew
Then groups of athletes
broke ranks and took one last
buoyant run around tbe red
track Among the most
exuberant, were those of
Bntam and Australia , Kenya
Mex1co and Argentina
If the OlympiC Spirt! IS to
clunb back from the tragtc
events here the tmpetus could
come from that prectous spmt
of youth

Birds Remain Alive, Win 3-2
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Baltimore Ortoles may
be down but Earl Weaver
caultons not to count tbe Birds
out
The Ortoles have won the
title m the Amertcan League
East eastly the past three
seasons and Weaver tsn'tabout
to do things dtfferently now
that his club IS m a hotly
contested pennant race Boog
Powell s ftrst home run m 21
days helped Mtke Cuellar to his

P ttsburgh at Ch1cago
St Lou sat Montreal n1ght
New York at Ph Ia n1ght
Cmct at Atlanta n1ght
Los Ang at San Fran n1ghl
San D1eqo at Hou ston n ght
Amencan League

Chocajjo
Kan Clly
Bradl ey

200 000 000- 2 l 1
000 000 001- 1 3 0
Forster (9) and

Herrm an n

Spl 1tlorff

( 11 11)

game was called one hour and
43 mmutes later Steve Kbne
won hts 16th game m 22
deciSIOns
Dtck Allen became the smgle
most productive season home
rtlll httter m White Sox htstory
by hammermg his 34th tn the
ftrst mrung to lead Chicago
over Kansas C1ty
'They say he's human but
I'm not convmced because I
got htm out once,'' losmg
ptlcher Paul Spltttorff satd
afterwards

'68 OLDS 88
H.T. SEDAM

and K rkpatr ck WP- Bradley
114131
HRS- AIIen (J4lh l
Hov ley (Jrdl

Turq uo1se with black vmyl
roof V 8 eng me auto
trans P S P 8 1 owner

200 210 ooo- 5 11 0
Bos ton
Cleve
302 001 OOx- 6 10 0
Sebert Lee (3) and FISk
T d r ow Rtddleberger (4)
Lamb (5) Mtngort (7) and
Mos es WP- Lamb (4 5) LPLee (6 4) HR s- Ftsk (2l sl)
Lee (lsj) Yastrzemsk (7th)
McCraw (6th) Sm tih (19th)

'1295

Brot amer (5th)

(On ly games sched uled)

over a tendency that you play
pro football every other week
ThiS ts one game where if
you don t get ready to play, you
get your block knocked off, ' he
satd

pm
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday s Games

Oakland
(A It Ttmes EDT)
Ch cago
P tt sburgh (E lls 13 7) at Mmne so ta

Final Standings

1t

San Franc1sco (Bryant 11 6)

Today s Probable Pttchers

1976 Olympics
"'ll be proposed among them
the ehnunatwn of all team
spo rts
And, too, the Oiymptc move
ment now ts commg out of the
Brundage era ' whtch ended
offtctally Sept 30 when Avery
Brundage tbe 84-year-old Chi
cago mtlltonatre who has been
prestdent of the IOC for the
past 20 years steps mto
rettrement and ts replaced by
Lord Mtchael Kallamn a bluff,
hearty lrtshman w1th 1deas
different m many respects
from Brundage
So the shape of thtngs to
come m the Olymptcs ts not
clear today as the 12 000
athletes and offtctals who came
here for the games or at least
the thousands sttll here on
closmg day scattered to thetr
homes m all parts of the world
But tf two notes came
through clear and loud m the
55-mmute long closmg ceremt&gt;ny Monday mght m Olymptc
Stadtum tl was the determtna
tion of Olympic ofliclals that
thetr movement shall not dte as
a result of the vtolen ce here
and the exuberance of the
youths assembled
Supposed to be Toned Down
Thts was supposed to be a
toned-down ciosmg ceremony,
out of deference to the memory
of the JI Israeh team members
who came here m pecce and
died on Sept 5 wben Arab
guerrtllas mvaded the Olymptc
Vtllage

But Cedeno snared tbe drtve
wtth a dtVIng catch to end the
game and preserve the Astro
trmmph
Jun Wyun hit hts 22nd homer
and tnpled m another run for
the Astros Don Wtlson and
Jerry Reuss combmed on a
seven httter

(On ly games schedul ed)

Team Sports In

Cincinnati Reds open a Rrles

(

0

Mmnesota swept two from
Oakland 2-1 and 3-2 Cleveland
edged Boston 6-5 Baltunore
mpped Mtlwaukee, 3-2 New
York beat Detrott 4-2 m a
game called by ram after 5'h
mnmgs and Chtcago mpped
Kansas Ctty, 2-1
Cedeno Shows Why
Many experts thmk Cesar
Cedeno IS the best young player
m baseball and he showed why
as the Astros edged the
Dodgers Cedeno not only
smgled m a run, he saved the
game wtth hts glove Wtth two
out and two on tn the mnth
Wt!IIe Davts hit a shot up the
alley that seemed likely to wm
the game for the Dodgers 5-4

May Eliminate

REDS AT ATLANTA
ATLANTA (UPJ) - The

•

went seven tnrungs to get the
wm and Tug McGraw went the
!mal two tunmgs f!lr his 2:trd
save
Both Runs m F1rst
Phtladelphta got both of Its
rtlllS m tbe ftrst mrung on Larry
Bowa s smgle a walk Greg
Luzmskt s run-scormg double
and Roger Freed s sacrifice
fly But the l'luls couldn t t.ke
advantage of thetr other opportumttes and were blanked
the rest of the way
In the onl) other games m
the NatiOnal League Houston
edged Los Angeles, 4-3 and
Montreal blanked St Louts 4

Karr &amp; Van lafidt
Y~u

II LlkeOurQualtly

Way of Do1ng Bus1ne ss

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
,Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs T1l8 00

TitS PM Sat,

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992 2342

Ml DOLE PORT. 0

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

WE'RE HAVING ATIRE SALE!

BUT ALL TIRES MUST GOTO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR

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•All Grades •All Sizes
•All 'At Low, Low Prices
THAT GIVE YOU MORE Mll.fS
FOR YOUR MONEY.

-.

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,I

I

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept . 12,1972

BY JOE CARNICEW
Mackey has been dropped to
UPI Sports Writer
·second string behind Tom
Tom Woodeshick was placed Mitchell and is looking to play
on waivers and John r.fackey elsewhere. The Colts want him
wasn't and both are unhappy to remain as a backup man.
about It.
Joe Thomas, the Colts'
Woodeshick and Jim Nance, general manager, announced
both Ill-year veterans, were Monda y that Mackey had
cropped by the Philadelphia re tired but the former
Eagles. Monday as National Syracuse star denied lhal
· Football League clubs pared report immediately.
"I haven 't retired and 1 won't
their rosters to the regular
season limit of 40 players .
retire," Mackey said. "I just
"I'm extremely bitter, told Coach (Don) McCafferty 1
: there 's no avoiding It," . wasn't going to sit on the
Woodeshick said Monday after bench. I'm in too good a shape
learning the news. "I love this to sit on the bench."
ball club and the people in
Thonias Insists be tried to
PI!Uadelphia. Nobody deserves trade Mackey and that he had
a winner !I)Ore than they do." no takers. Mackey asked to be
Woodeshick, in his prime one
of the finest power fullbacks In
the .NFL, has been plagued by
knee injuries ·in recent years.
But he. claims the only thing
bothering his leg this year Is a
cyst.
Pomeroy Bawling Lanes
Also released by the Eagles
Saturday Junior League
Standinas
were veteran light .end Don
Team
Pis.
Brumm and rookie linebacker Ball Bu ster s
3
Will Foster.
Impacts
2
Impossi bl e Dr ea ms
2
Mackey Is Seethillg
Rams
1
Mackey, meanwhile, was N
o. 2
1
seething because he hadn't Alley Cats
o
Hig h Individua l Game
been waived. Once the most
feared tight end in football, M ick Davenpor t 170.

Local Bowling

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Second High Ind. Ga me M ick Davenpor t 168.
Hig h
Se ri es
M ick
Davenport 476.
Second High Ser ies - Sieve
Bachner 41 8.
Team Hig h Game - Impacts

879.

Team Hi gh Se r ies -

2458.

Rams

Ba ntam League

Sepl. 2, 1972

Standings
Team
Pts.
Ball Bom bers
2
Banana Splits
I
All Star s
I
Red Ba r ons
I
Pin Busters
I
Cyclones
0
High Indi vidual Gam e
Kevin Yeaug er 146.

plaeed on waivers and McCaf,
fer ty refused, sayin g, " I
couldn't do thai to a player of
your caliber."
Most clubs were expected to
announce their final low- cuts,
which must be made by 4 p.m.
EDT and are irrevocable,
today . Waivers cannot be
recalled on any o( the final four
cuts this week.
In moves announced Monday, Atlanta dropped quarterback Leo Hart, pWlter Billy
Lother idge, tackle Steve
Okoniewski and running back
Bill Holland and Denver sent
tight end John Mosier to
Baltimore, apparently to take
Mackey's slot on the Colts'
roster.
l
Leypoldt Clears Waivers
Second-year place kicker
John Leypoldt cleared waivers
and was added to Buffalo's taxi
squad. Leypoldt was dropped
when the Bills obtained Mike
Clark from Dallas but Clark
suffered a broken arm in his
debut with Buffalo and his
condition is questionable.
Oakland lraded veteran wide
receiver Gloster Richardson to
Cleveland for a draft choice.
Richardson became expendable with the outstanding
play of rookies Mike Siani and
Cliff Branch.
Dallas waived veteran linebacker Leroy Caffey and four
rookies-Charlie McKee, Brian
Goodman, Harvey Phillips and
Robert West-and Green Bay
picked up linebacker Tim
Kearney from the Cowboys and
lopped off veteran receiver
· John Spills and rookies Don
Heater, Lee Hit and Wimpy
Winther.
The New York Gi ants
trimmed Ralph Heck , Ed
Baker, Bart Buetow and Dick
Kotite and
Washington
released return specialist
Alvin Haymond, much traveled linebacker Steve
Kiner and Dave Cahill and
Conway Hayman. Cincinnati
dropped Tim Beamer and
Dennis Pete, a pair of defensive backs.

All Middleport Village funds
as of /lug. :11 totaled
$218,718:01, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Gra te reported to Middleport Council Monday night.
R eceipl~ and disbursements,
respectively, of each of the
fu nds an d the Augus t 31
balance include :
General, $6,601.47, $5,609.4S,
$33,01 4.07; cemetery, $827.14,
$556.71 , $1,446.55; fire equip·
men!, $50, $181.1 4, $504.42;
swimmi ng poo l, $1, 021.90,
$1;:!05.16, $4,136.25; planning
commission , no receipts;
~ll 9 .13, $564.39.
REV. LAPARL

DR. BATEMAN

SEMINAR SPEAKERS - Or. Mildred M. Bateman,
director of the West .Virginia Department of MenU!! Health.
and Rev, Harold A. La Pari, chaplain supervisor for the West
Virginia Department of Mental Hea lth , will be guest
speakers for the Fall Chaplaincy Seminar, to be held in the
French 500 Meeting Room at Holzer Medical Center between
9:30 a.m., and 3:30p .m., Wednesday.

Mrs. Irene At kin son, 48,
'former resident of Meigs
County, died Monday morning
at her home in Millersport .
She was the daughter of Mrs.
Esta Roush of Portland and the
late Byron Roush. Surviving
besides her mother are her
husban d, William, four sisters,
Mrs. Kathryn Price of Johnstown ; Mrs. Maxine Deem
Belpre; Mrs. Audrey Will iams:

Pittsb urgh, Pa., and Mrs.
Hild a Davis, Ra cine; fi ve
brothers, Bert Roush, Bar·
bour svill e, W. Va .; Ivan
Rous h, Gallipolis; William
Rous h, Por tla nd ; Dona ld
Roush, Woodbridge, Va .; and
Rober t H. Roush, Racine.
Mrs. Atkinson was preceded
in death bv a sister, Naomi
Tea ford, and two brothers, Neil
and Harold Roush.
Get to Sleep." This not-often Funeral services will be held
used concept rec~ived a rare
at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the
ecs tat ic reaction from the
Slu·oyer Funeral Home, 1278
Eagle and Wildca t fan s.
W. Broad St., Columbus, with
Former Resident
After little sleep the night
buri al in a
Columbu s
befo re, the Hann an Trace
cemetery. Friends may call at
Of Chester Dies
musicians arrived in , Athens
the funeral home from 7 to 9
early Saturday morni ng to
p.m. Tuesda y and from 2 to 4
rehea rse fo r the Ohio
CHESTER
Harold p.m. and 7 to 9 p .m. on WedUniversity Ba nd Day. At tha t Talkington , Co lumbus, for- nesday.
time. the members learned merly of this community, died
they were selected to lead the Sa turday night at home. Mr.
37-band parade into Pedan Talkington is survived by his
wife,
Paulin e
Manuel

HT Band Led 0. U. Parade
Mr; HCER Vf LLE - The
Hannan Trace Wildcat Band
kicked off its marching season
with an en terta ini ng musieal
presen tation at Eastern High
School last Friday night. After
playin g the popular, "You've
Got a Friend ," and " I'd Like to
Teach the World to Sing," the
Eastern band entered th e fi eld
and the two bands combined to
play, "Last Night I Couldn't

St ree t maintenan ce,
$5,0S4.28, $1,646.52, $14,526.42;
sani tary sewer, · $4,129.79,
$3,141. 34, $24,561.48; wate r, .
$6,968.55, $5,817.94, $24,417.28;
· water meter deposit trusts,
$575, $2116, $6,316.23; sanitary
sewer escrow, no r eceipts , no
disbursements, $58,837.82 ; fire
ho u~e
constru ction, no
rece ipts, $26,397, $33,467 .40;
general bond r etir ement, ·no
receipts, no dis bu rs e JI~ent s,
$17,025.69.
Rece ipt~ for the month
totaled $2S,228.13 compared to
disbursements of $45,260.39.

Mrs. Atkinson Died on Monday

I

- --·-·-1

-- ~M~RK V MEAT
SPECIALTIES .
CHARLES YOST
RACINE - Charles Yost,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Yost, Racine Houle I, a 1972
graduate of Southern High
Sc.hoolln Raelne, will be one
of the flrsl of approximately
200 students to take part In a
new branch of Ohio State
University to be Initiated at
Wooster the first time this
fall. The branch, to be known
as
the
Agricultural
Technical Institute, wlll be
based at the e•perlment
station In Woosler. Dairy
management and production
will be the primary subject
matter to be studied by Yost
who will receive an assoolate
degree after two years. The
work Is tranferrable to Ohio
State University if he wishes
to go ahead wllh collge work
for a bachelor's degree. Yost
will leave for Wooster on
Sept. 26 with classes to begin
Sept. 27.

~~~~:lA SALT ~ROUND cHOPPED~
FISH

BACON
lb.

69¢ 69¢ 99¢
lb.

lb.

lb.

700

w Ma1n' " pomerov

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89¢

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Average

lb.

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wt l h our love ly jewelr y. New brooches. pi ns,
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·- · -· -·---·-·-·- - - ----- ---...J

Lll:aUID
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oooo

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

EVERYDAY

For just pennies a day, you can get her
an extension telepho ne in her own
room.
We have a choice of colors and styles
from dai nty to mod.
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Cq]J us at our Bus iness Office ... when
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EACH

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PHONE: 992-3480
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to 10

ONLY
AT

MARK V
STORE

, MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PRODUCE SALE!

am
6EnERALTElEPHDnE

Goad .Onoy ar ~I'll V
Limit 1 COUpon
Per t.ustom.,

BANANAS

REGUlAR
89'

CHOICE, RIPE

NESTEA

'

WITH LEMON '.

.

.

a.....iWiiiiiTHiii.iioA•'3._00_0_k_M..,oR.t....,..,.......... l6 OZ.

4 01·

Jar

LA-2:-BOV

Dad's Root Be.,r·

CHAIRS

Lebanon.

10 to 14 lb.

-------

Every chatterbox needs achatterbox.

MASON
FURNITURE
Herm••Muon, W. Yt.
777-5592

Armour,Gold Star Brand

SPECIAL SALE

CHUCK SIRLOIN

•

'

I

TRY OUR ·
SPECIALLY PRICED
TURKEY THIS WEEK

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

the

7

HIGH MEAT PRICES GOT

SEE' OUR BEAUTIFUL
NEW LINE

LEADING ~--=-,•,," ~~~~:':~nT~~05~~~~ig:a~~o~: ~~~~~~gton, for merl y of
"11' .. ..,. [ Ohio took part in a massed Funera l services will be
BATTERS l~
\
extravaganza performanc~ of Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at the
II, =
'
halftime of the script-like,

Lynn E. Shuler, Johanne D.
Shuler to Delbert Milliron,
Goldie Milliron, .S Acre ,
Letart.
,\
Jerry Spears Funeral Home,
th rill ing Ce ntral Michi ga n- West Broad St., Columbus.
Clair Shenefield, Lela
By United Press International O.U. football game.
Graveside ri tes will be at
Shenefield to James 0. New,
Leading
Bailers
The
Han
nan
Trace
Band
will
Letart Falls Cemetery WedDella Rae New, ! Acre, Sec. 36,
National League
resume rehearsa ls for several
Second High Ind . Game I Acre, Sec. 26, Salem.
g. ab r. h. pet.
t
.
d'
nesday afternoon with the Rev.
Kevi n Yea ug er-Ronni e Casci
Wilms, Chi 133 512 82 175 .342 au1umn even s •nc 1u •n g Charl es Norris offi ciating.
Doris J. Epling to Ronald R. 126.
Mola, LA 105 341 55 113 .331 football games, parades and at Friends may call at the funeral
High
Series Ke vin
Epling, Divorce Decree, .6
Cdeno. Hou 122 492 95 161 .327 least one concert in October.
Yea uger 272.
Acre, Olive.
Carr . Al l
m 480 7J 155 .323
home until time of services.
Second High Series - Ronni e
George Casto, Lucille Casto Casci 240.
Oliver
P i tI
123
499 53
80 120
158 .317
Baker., At
11 0 380
.316
Team High Gam e
Ball
to Jack W. Carsey, Neacll E .
Slrgel.
Pi
I
123
439
68
138
.314
Bam
bers
71
5.
Carsey, Russell L. Wood ,
Bckner
,
LA
95
343
42
107
.312
Team Hig h Seri es - Ba ll
Wlson, Hou 132 495 68 153 .309
Rhonda R. Wood, Lots, Bombers 1350.
By United PreSs International Santo, Chi
117 414 57 128 .309
Pomeroy.
National
league
Ameri
can
League
James E . Dotson, Georgia E.
Saturday Senior League
New York
000 201 OlD- 4 8 1
g. ab r. h. pet.
Dotson to Clair F . Shenefield,
·
Standings
Phila
200 000 000- 2 6 0 Shblm, KC 111401 55 128 .3 19
Team
Pts.
Koosman , McGra w (8) an d Carew, Min 126 483 55 1 J .3 17
Parcel, Salem. .
No. 5
2 Dyer; Carlion (23-9) and D. AIln. Chi 136 469 83 148 .316
Joseph K. Connolly, Eloise No.3
2 Bateman. WP- Koosman( 9-11). Rudi,Oa k 131529 82163 .308
Connally to Charles D. Ne . 2
Pniela, KC 131 500 59 153 .306
2 HR Dyer t8th ).
-Otis. KC
125 477 67 143 .300
4!,o~ard, Eilene Leonard , 6 No. 6
1
No
.
l
l'f'1":~~·"'
,.,
·S
t.
Lo
ui
s
.
OOOOOOOOD0
•
6-l
...
Berr
y,Cal
104365
38109.299
.
..
:.:..
Or
•
"
1
"H Ills, , ange . , ,...
...~..
"' • Monfrea1 • 201 010 oox.......:. 4. ! a ·a Mabery, KC 129 438 53130.297
No.4 ,.
1
,·'"'Kenneth R. Keesee, Acfa
Hig hfi . Ind iv idual Gam e
Palmer, Bar e (7) , Hrabosk y Pnson. ~a l
11 9 424 53 126 .297
•K'eesee to Ray Williams, Iris Rich Bcii ley 187.
(8) and J ut ze; Moore (8-7) and ~ay.C h•
134 479 77 142 .296
Second High Ind . Game _
Hum phre y. LP- Pal m er (Q. J ) . F1 sk. Bos
11 1 389 65 115 .296
Williams, S Acres, Rutland.
Rich Bai ley 180.
HR - Jor ge nsen ( 12th ).
.
Home Run s
Rufus
R.
Browning,
High Ser ies _ Rich Ba ile y
Nat10na l lea gue : Colbert, SO
37 ; Stargell , Pi tt 33 .- Bench . Cin
Josephine M. Browning to Guy .486 .
Second Hig h Series _ Cher ie
31 ; Williams , Chi 29 ; Aaron ,
L. Casto, Catherine Casto, 2.65
Reu ter 446.
Keith Goble Ford
Atl and May , Hou 28.
Acres, Rutland.
Tea m High Game _ No. 5
Bowling l eague
Am eri can Lea gue: D. Al len,
Lizzie Wood to Stephen C. 780.
Sta nd i ng s week of Se p- Ch i 34 ; Murcer,
NY 28:
Tea m High Seri es _ No. 5
tem ber 5, 1971.
Killebrew Minn. Epstein and
Campbell, LiiUan M. Camp·
2197.
Tea m
W. L. Jackson, Oak 23.
bell, Parcels, Letart.
No. 5
8 0
Runs gballed In
!!hamar D. Weed, E•ec.,
No. 12
8
o
. N a tion a l ~ l eagu e: Sla r geiL
No. 4
6
2 Pi!t 110 ; William s, Chi 102;
Besse Ann Weed, Dec. to Larry
Pomeroy Bowling Lan es
N
o.8
6
2
Col bert. SD 101 ; Bench, (in
Early Sunday
Joe Queen, Myrta Queen, Lots ,
No. 9
6
'} 100 ; Simmons, St. L 88.
Mi xed League
Middleport.
No. 13
6
2
wam erica n Lea gue: D. Allen,
Sepl. 10, 1972
No .1
4
4 Chi 104 ; Murcer. NY 87 ;
Donald Manuel to Joyce
Standings
4
4 Mayberry , KC 79: Scolt , Mi l
No.2
Manuel, 2 Acres, Sutton.
W. l.
Team
No. J
2
6 77 ; Darwin , M•nn 72.
14 2 N ~7
S Ease., General Telephone Eagles Club
2 6
~l c hing
Team No.3
12
4
No. 10
2
6
National l eagu e: Carl to n,
Co., Pomeroy.
Farmer s Bank
10 6
No. 14
2
6 Phil 23-9 ; Jenkins , Chi 20 -10 ;
Clarence Douglas , Della Tom's Carry Ou t
4 12
No.6
0
8 Blass, Pitll 76; Seaver. NY 17FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
4 12
Douglas to James Alfred Will, Rac i ne Food Market
No. 11
0
8 11; Tor rez , Mont 16·9; Osteen,
Mark V
4 12
Ca rol Will, Parcel, Chester.
On 9·5-72. Tea m 5 took 8 LA 16 10.
High Individual Game
Ameri can League: Wood, Chi
,
Thomas A. Ma ys, Patty E. Paul Tay lor 234; Ju li a Boy les pa ints from Team 6. Bur l Cook
~as high for Tea m 5 wit h 629 24-lJ ; Loli ch , Del 20-12 ; Perry,
I
1
79.
Mays to Gary E. Van Meter,
pins. and John Full er was high Clev 20·15; Hun1er. Oak 19·7;
!I t o !I Daily- Sunday 1· 9
for Team 6 with 505 pins.
Palmer , Batt 19-8.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.,_ _ _ _ _ __,
High In d. Game - A.
Iva M. Van Meter, 1.03 Acres, L.Second
Phelps 212 ; Son ja Waylan d
Team 12 took 8 points from
Olive.
177.
Team 11 . Dave Holley wa s high
High Series - Paul Ta ylor for Tea m 12 with 538 pins, and
Orner Hess, Dorothy M. Hess
Julia Boy les 484.
Betty Gooch was high for Team
to Eldred Hess, Dorrence Hess, 567:
Second Hig h Seri es - A. L.
11 w ith 427 pins.
Prentice Hess, Parcel, Bed- Phelps 555; Sonja Way land 476.
Tea m 4 took 6 points from
ford.
Team High Ga me - Team
Team 3. Jack Janey wa s hig h
for Tea m 4 wi th 565 pins a nd
Donald McKenzie, Adm ., No. J 694.
Tedm High Ser ies - Team
Steve
Carter was high for
Bertha McKenzie, dec. to Ira No. 3 1966.
Tea m 3 with 477 pin s.
Van Cooney, Lots, Pomeroy.
Tea m 8 took 6 points from
Paul E . Harris, Marylyn
Team 7. Charlie Nea l was hig h
for Team 8 with 581 pins a nd
Harris to Lois V. Roberson, II&gt;
POM EROY LANES
Walter
All ie was hig h for Tea m
Wednesday late
Acre, Pomeroy.
7 wi th 478 pin s.
Mixed league
Robert Peoples, George
Team 9 took 6 poi nts from
Sept. 6, 1972
Tea
m 10. Ga ry Ellis was high
Anna Peoples, Helen M. Rea ,
Wan Last for Team
9 with 476 pin s and
6
2
Edythe Faye Ford, Wallace B. Cassell .Carsey
Blakeslee. Hoy t
6
2 M ike Dobbins wa s high for
Ford, Florence 111. Mickey to M oore.Morrow
4
4 Team 10 with 428 pin s.
Team 1 spli t 8 poin ts wit h
Charles Gibbs, Ellen Gibbs, Holler -Rawl ings
4
4·
Team 2. Harold lookado was
Rosenbaum -MeBdows 2
6
Lot, Pomeroy .
high for Team I with 513 pins
2
6 and
Archie R. Caster, Fontelle Fultz.Ben ll ey
Jack Mink was high for
Hig h lndi. Game - Men·
Spencer, Spence Spencer to Dick Rosenbaum 201 ; Art Hoyi Tea m 2 with 503 pins.
Team 13 took 6 po ints fr om
Lavern Jordan, Mary Jordan, 199, Dan Meadows 191 ; Women Team
14. Mario Bush was hig h
- Joy Bentley 164, Pat Hol ler for Team
Parcels, Colwnbia.
13 with 522 pins and
162, Ru lh Cassell 146.
Helen Oseland wa s high for
9 Ease., Col. &amp; Southern Ohio
High Series - Men - Dick
Team 14 with 480 pins.
Elec. Co., Pomeroy .
Rosenbaum 530. Di ck Rawlings
High single game for the
Delbert Ours to William L. 526, Arl Hoyt 520; Women ladies for the evening was 172
Joy Ben tl ey _436, Neaci l Car sey
pins held by Helen Oseland and
Foster, Arlyn I. Foster, Par· 41 1, Hope M oore 404.
for the m en wa s 228 pins he ld
eels, Chester.
. Team High Game - Ful tz. by Burl Cook.
Elsie Cross to Robert C. Hill, Bentl ey 598.
series for the ladl es was
Team High Series - Cassell - 480High
lola
l pins, held by Helen
Etta Mae Hill, .505 Acre, Carsey
1723.
Oseland and for the men 629
Racine.
lotal pins held by Burl Cook.
Bernice Bowen to Charles C.
Lewis, Margaret Ella Lewis,
Lot 104, Behan's Add., Mid·
dleport.
· Clovis L. Strausbaugh, Ada
Strausbaugh, Ease ., lo Ohio
Power Co., Saleni..
.. Leroy wyan~ Goldie .Wyant
.to !)alias G. DeBord, Janice M.
DeBciid; ~l'i Acres, Scipio. ·
Now you can buy that
William Thomas, :. Lucy E.
comfortable
Lo-Z-Bay
Thomas to . Charles :Albert
chair you 've always
I,elst, Marilyn T, Leiat, .64.90
dreamed of at our law
Acre&amp;, Colwnbi&amp;. · . ·
prices.
. B!airMi L..sDnth · to Robert
Ji;dw~ Daille!S;., Fern .1M
Authorized Dealer
Dilnle... ·, P~IS. Ballsbw-y.
Ethel Hatfield 1o JMuie. E.
srown; Pafctl,' Salisbw-y.
lfl!rold ;Evans, Mary Lou
Evans to William Evans,
Grtte
Maxine Powell, 5 ·Acres ,
?·

What's Your "Beef"

Balance is at $218,.718

Woodeshick, Nance Dropped

8 Pak
·' PEPSI-COlA

10!

BOLD

POTATOES
u. s. 20 lb.
NO. 1 bag 99~

8

"""

16 oz.

59~~

.N IInA

..... 69'
'

10 •

MlltC . ' I •• ·

'STOll

.A

j·

-

.~Mod "' IWint ., o.ly
. EXPIRES: .......,

CARROTs·
,GOLDEN
SOLID
CRISP

.

.
I

I

'

·J"'a"•

�l

j

,I

I

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept . 12,1972

BY JOE CARNICEW
Mackey has been dropped to
UPI Sports Writer
·second string behind Tom
Tom Woodeshick was placed Mitchell and is looking to play
on waivers and John r.fackey elsewhere. The Colts want him
wasn't and both are unhappy to remain as a backup man.
about It.
Joe Thomas, the Colts'
Woodeshick and Jim Nance, general manager, announced
both Ill-year veterans, were Monda y that Mackey had
cropped by the Philadelphia re tired but the former
Eagles. Monday as National Syracuse star denied lhal
· Football League clubs pared report immediately.
"I haven 't retired and 1 won't
their rosters to the regular
season limit of 40 players .
retire," Mackey said. "I just
"I'm extremely bitter, told Coach (Don) McCafferty 1
: there 's no avoiding It," . wasn't going to sit on the
Woodeshick said Monday after bench. I'm in too good a shape
learning the news. "I love this to sit on the bench."
ball club and the people in
Thonias Insists be tried to
PI!Uadelphia. Nobody deserves trade Mackey and that he had
a winner !I)Ore than they do." no takers. Mackey asked to be
Woodeshick, in his prime one
of the finest power fullbacks In
the .NFL, has been plagued by
knee injuries ·in recent years.
But he. claims the only thing
bothering his leg this year Is a
cyst.
Pomeroy Bawling Lanes
Also released by the Eagles
Saturday Junior League
Standinas
were veteran light .end Don
Team
Pis.
Brumm and rookie linebacker Ball Bu ster s
3
Will Foster.
Impacts
2
Impossi bl e Dr ea ms
2
Mackey Is Seethillg
Rams
1
Mackey, meanwhile, was N
o. 2
1
seething because he hadn't Alley Cats
o
Hig h Individua l Game
been waived. Once the most
feared tight end in football, M ick Davenpor t 170.

Local Bowling

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Second High Ind. Ga me M ick Davenpor t 168.
Hig h
Se ri es
M ick
Davenport 476.
Second High Ser ies - Sieve
Bachner 41 8.
Team Hig h Game - Impacts

879.

Team Hi gh Se r ies -

2458.

Rams

Ba ntam League

Sepl. 2, 1972

Standings
Team
Pts.
Ball Bom bers
2
Banana Splits
I
All Star s
I
Red Ba r ons
I
Pin Busters
I
Cyclones
0
High Indi vidual Gam e
Kevin Yeaug er 146.

plaeed on waivers and McCaf,
fer ty refused, sayin g, " I
couldn't do thai to a player of
your caliber."
Most clubs were expected to
announce their final low- cuts,
which must be made by 4 p.m.
EDT and are irrevocable,
today . Waivers cannot be
recalled on any o( the final four
cuts this week.
In moves announced Monday, Atlanta dropped quarterback Leo Hart, pWlter Billy
Lother idge, tackle Steve
Okoniewski and running back
Bill Holland and Denver sent
tight end John Mosier to
Baltimore, apparently to take
Mackey's slot on the Colts'
roster.
l
Leypoldt Clears Waivers
Second-year place kicker
John Leypoldt cleared waivers
and was added to Buffalo's taxi
squad. Leypoldt was dropped
when the Bills obtained Mike
Clark from Dallas but Clark
suffered a broken arm in his
debut with Buffalo and his
condition is questionable.
Oakland lraded veteran wide
receiver Gloster Richardson to
Cleveland for a draft choice.
Richardson became expendable with the outstanding
play of rookies Mike Siani and
Cliff Branch.
Dallas waived veteran linebacker Leroy Caffey and four
rookies-Charlie McKee, Brian
Goodman, Harvey Phillips and
Robert West-and Green Bay
picked up linebacker Tim
Kearney from the Cowboys and
lopped off veteran receiver
· John Spills and rookies Don
Heater, Lee Hit and Wimpy
Winther.
The New York Gi ants
trimmed Ralph Heck , Ed
Baker, Bart Buetow and Dick
Kotite and
Washington
released return specialist
Alvin Haymond, much traveled linebacker Steve
Kiner and Dave Cahill and
Conway Hayman. Cincinnati
dropped Tim Beamer and
Dennis Pete, a pair of defensive backs.

All Middleport Village funds
as of /lug. :11 totaled
$218,718:01, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Gra te reported to Middleport Council Monday night.
R eceipl~ and disbursements,
respectively, of each of the
fu nds an d the Augus t 31
balance include :
General, $6,601.47, $5,609.4S,
$33,01 4.07; cemetery, $827.14,
$556.71 , $1,446.55; fire equip·
men!, $50, $181.1 4, $504.42;
swimmi ng poo l, $1, 021.90,
$1;:!05.16, $4,136.25; planning
commission , no receipts;
~ll 9 .13, $564.39.
REV. LAPARL

DR. BATEMAN

SEMINAR SPEAKERS - Or. Mildred M. Bateman,
director of the West .Virginia Department of MenU!! Health.
and Rev, Harold A. La Pari, chaplain supervisor for the West
Virginia Department of Mental Hea lth , will be guest
speakers for the Fall Chaplaincy Seminar, to be held in the
French 500 Meeting Room at Holzer Medical Center between
9:30 a.m., and 3:30p .m., Wednesday.

Mrs. Irene At kin son, 48,
'former resident of Meigs
County, died Monday morning
at her home in Millersport .
She was the daughter of Mrs.
Esta Roush of Portland and the
late Byron Roush. Surviving
besides her mother are her
husban d, William, four sisters,
Mrs. Kathryn Price of Johnstown ; Mrs. Maxine Deem
Belpre; Mrs. Audrey Will iams:

Pittsb urgh, Pa., and Mrs.
Hild a Davis, Ra cine; fi ve
brothers, Bert Roush, Bar·
bour svill e, W. Va .; Ivan
Rous h, Gallipolis; William
Rous h, Por tla nd ; Dona ld
Roush, Woodbridge, Va .; and
Rober t H. Roush, Racine.
Mrs. Atkinson was preceded
in death bv a sister, Naomi
Tea ford, and two brothers, Neil
and Harold Roush.
Get to Sleep." This not-often Funeral services will be held
used concept rec~ived a rare
at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the
ecs tat ic reaction from the
Slu·oyer Funeral Home, 1278
Eagle and Wildca t fan s.
W. Broad St., Columbus, with
Former Resident
After little sleep the night
buri al in a
Columbu s
befo re, the Hann an Trace
cemetery. Friends may call at
Of Chester Dies
musicians arrived in , Athens
the funeral home from 7 to 9
early Saturday morni ng to
p.m. Tuesda y and from 2 to 4
rehea rse fo r the Ohio
CHESTER
Harold p.m. and 7 to 9 p .m. on WedUniversity Ba nd Day. At tha t Talkington , Co lumbus, for- nesday.
time. the members learned merly of this community, died
they were selected to lead the Sa turday night at home. Mr.
37-band parade into Pedan Talkington is survived by his
wife,
Paulin e
Manuel

HT Band Led 0. U. Parade
Mr; HCER Vf LLE - The
Hannan Trace Wildcat Band
kicked off its marching season
with an en terta ini ng musieal
presen tation at Eastern High
School last Friday night. After
playin g the popular, "You've
Got a Friend ," and " I'd Like to
Teach the World to Sing," the
Eastern band entered th e fi eld
and the two bands combined to
play, "Last Night I Couldn't

St ree t maintenan ce,
$5,0S4.28, $1,646.52, $14,526.42;
sani tary sewer, · $4,129.79,
$3,141. 34, $24,561.48; wate r, .
$6,968.55, $5,817.94, $24,417.28;
· water meter deposit trusts,
$575, $2116, $6,316.23; sanitary
sewer escrow, no r eceipts , no
disbursements, $58,837.82 ; fire
ho u~e
constru ction, no
rece ipts, $26,397, $33,467 .40;
general bond r etir ement, ·no
receipts, no dis bu rs e JI~ent s,
$17,025.69.
Rece ipt~ for the month
totaled $2S,228.13 compared to
disbursements of $45,260.39.

Mrs. Atkinson Died on Monday

I

- --·-·-1

-- ~M~RK V MEAT
SPECIALTIES .
CHARLES YOST
RACINE - Charles Yost,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Yost, Racine Houle I, a 1972
graduate of Southern High
Sc.hoolln Raelne, will be one
of the flrsl of approximately
200 students to take part In a
new branch of Ohio State
University to be Initiated at
Wooster the first time this
fall. The branch, to be known
as
the
Agricultural
Technical Institute, wlll be
based at the e•perlment
station In Woosler. Dairy
management and production
will be the primary subject
matter to be studied by Yost
who will receive an assoolate
degree after two years. The
work Is tranferrable to Ohio
State University if he wishes
to go ahead wllh collge work
for a bachelor's degree. Yost
will leave for Wooster on
Sept. 26 with classes to begin
Sept. 27.

~~~~:lA SALT ~ROUND cHOPPED~
FISH

BACON
lb.

69¢ 69¢ 99¢
lb.

lb.

lb.

700

w Ma1n' " pomerov

TURKEY LEGS
lb.

89¢

That Good.

•

29¢

Average

lb.

I

SLICED
BOLOGNA
lb.

~·

FAIRMONT NICE 'N UTE

ICE MILK

SUPERIORS

SO GOOD
WITH

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

'~·.

Fashion Jewelry

fRIZEI Fl

6
9¢
39¢
WIENERS •••••••••• •.
6
9¢
Smoked
Ham
Hocks
POLISH SAUSAGE ••• -~~
8
9¢
$ 00
LUNCH MEATS ••••••••
5
$1
00
·PORK NECK BONES.....
SUPERIORS All MEAT

SUPERIORS

5

SCOT lAD

6oz.$100
cans

ORANGE JUICE
NORTH STAR 6 FlAVOR

lb.

.

POPSICLES

u~

lb.

fMt~~t:m~t!~!~II!!~ !i!i!i!i!!Wl~tttt:::~::::::::::::::::::::::;::::mM~1:Mi~i~i~i~ii!~if:~!~iii:i!iilt:::::i::?!i!i!i!~I!~'~!~!iit~!~iil@@Mim!Mi!i~~mm:ii i im~i 'i ~iiii!ii!!~i!i~ !~t~Ni!!i!if!i!~lW

~~

I

~~ SPECIA~ATWELL MACKEREL
~:;:i

VAWE BUY!

4

~;s

$1 OO

·····

CANDY REESE CUPS
SPECIAL
P~!

3

$1OO

•·••••••

WITH 25
FREE CUPS

bo

HOOP EARRINGS
WITH WIRE &amp; POST

Court Sl.

SCOT lAD

ICE _MILK

PURE PAK

. .Strawberries

::::::~

fl!

OHIO BOOK MATCHES

.·.·.;.;

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DISPOSABLE DIAPERS

-

lll 50 ct. box . 14e ~~~~~;A:sroDDLERs
•.,.. · ...... ·..............................·,·;:;:;o::;:····m·········m ···· ········· .... ·::;:;:·-·-·- ·-·...... .. .. · :::::.... ·

!·!·'·!·

~~;~ $1 49

I•

pkgs.

ON-STREET
PARKING

4

'· ..

16 oz.

FREE
AFTER 5:00 PM

;:;t?:~~l:;~:;:~m;:~~:1:~lr:~:~:l:~;:;:l:l:~~~:~:l:i:;:;:~:~ili:!:i::::s;:~:=~~::::;:.::r~~~::--:-v:::~::::::~::r:f:~:m;l#~;~;;:~;~:f:l:l*i:l:l~~-=1:1:l:l~l~llll::::::;:;:~§;;~~=~*-~~;~:.~.~-~=~=;:l:l:i*~:!':S:l:i:J:l:J:i:~:;~~=~r::l:!:l:~~===::;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;~J.:
.::;:;:;:;:;*~-·==:::~:ili~~=
··--..-w;•• ' •.•••• ••. ... :~•..........•...
.. .. ••:•:-.•.·.···-···-·

STERLING
RINGS, modern design s

Goessl~r

~

SCOT LAD

each

:·:·:·:·

'2.00 up

Ill
%

16 oz.

·age

REAL WINNERS

:.·.·.-.

M

N?w you can accent your new fall fa shions
wt l h our love ly jewelr y. New brooches. pi ns,
earrm gs. neckl aces and sets.

FROZEN .
. DINNERS

\I~

MARK VIS HOLDING PRICES D-0-W-N

~m

I

•

0. 0 • •

.COUPON SA VlNGS

Jewelry Store

EXTRA SPECIAL!

Pomeroy

8-TRACK TAPES

·- · -· -·---·-·-·- - - ----- ---...J

Lll:aUID
ONLY
oooo

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

EVERYDAY

For just pennies a day, you can get her
an extension telepho ne in her own
room.
We have a choice of colors and styles
from dai nty to mod.
'
Cq]J us at our Bus iness Office ... when
you get a chance at the telephone.

EACH

LOW

PRICE!

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. "We Reserve The Right To Urnlt Quantities"

to 10

ONLY
AT

MARK V
STORE

, MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PRODUCE SALE!

am
6EnERALTElEPHDnE

Goad .Onoy ar ~I'll V
Limit 1 COUpon
Per t.ustom.,

BANANAS

REGUlAR
89'

CHOICE, RIPE

NESTEA

'

WITH LEMON '.

.

.

a.....iWiiiiiTHiii.iioA•'3._00_0_k_M..,oR.t....,..,.......... l6 OZ.

4 01·

Jar

LA-2:-BOV

Dad's Root Be.,r·

CHAIRS

Lebanon.

10 to 14 lb.

-------

Every chatterbox needs achatterbox.

MASON
FURNITURE
Herm••Muon, W. Yt.
777-5592

Armour,Gold Star Brand

SPECIAL SALE

CHUCK SIRLOIN

•

'

I

TRY OUR ·
SPECIALLY PRICED
TURKEY THIS WEEK

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

the

7

HIGH MEAT PRICES GOT

SEE' OUR BEAUTIFUL
NEW LINE

LEADING ~--=-,•,," ~~~~:':~nT~~05~~~~ig:a~~o~: ~~~~~~gton, for merl y of
"11' .. ..,. [ Ohio took part in a massed Funera l services will be
BATTERS l~
\
extravaganza performanc~ of Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at the
II, =
'
halftime of the script-like,

Lynn E. Shuler, Johanne D.
Shuler to Delbert Milliron,
Goldie Milliron, .S Acre ,
Letart.
,\
Jerry Spears Funeral Home,
th rill ing Ce ntral Michi ga n- West Broad St., Columbus.
Clair Shenefield, Lela
By United Press International O.U. football game.
Graveside ri tes will be at
Shenefield to James 0. New,
Leading
Bailers
The
Han
nan
Trace
Band
will
Letart Falls Cemetery WedDella Rae New, ! Acre, Sec. 36,
National League
resume rehearsa ls for several
Second High Ind . Game I Acre, Sec. 26, Salem.
g. ab r. h. pet.
t
.
d'
nesday afternoon with the Rev.
Kevi n Yea ug er-Ronni e Casci
Wilms, Chi 133 512 82 175 .342 au1umn even s •nc 1u •n g Charl es Norris offi ciating.
Doris J. Epling to Ronald R. 126.
Mola, LA 105 341 55 113 .331 football games, parades and at Friends may call at the funeral
High
Series Ke vin
Epling, Divorce Decree, .6
Cdeno. Hou 122 492 95 161 .327 least one concert in October.
Yea uger 272.
Acre, Olive.
Carr . Al l
m 480 7J 155 .323
home until time of services.
Second High Series - Ronni e
George Casto, Lucille Casto Casci 240.
Oliver
P i tI
123
499 53
80 120
158 .317
Baker., At
11 0 380
.316
Team High Gam e
Ball
to Jack W. Carsey, Neacll E .
Slrgel.
Pi
I
123
439
68
138
.314
Bam
bers
71
5.
Carsey, Russell L. Wood ,
Bckner
,
LA
95
343
42
107
.312
Team Hig h Seri es - Ba ll
Wlson, Hou 132 495 68 153 .309
Rhonda R. Wood, Lots, Bombers 1350.
By United PreSs International Santo, Chi
117 414 57 128 .309
Pomeroy.
National
league
Ameri
can
League
James E . Dotson, Georgia E.
Saturday Senior League
New York
000 201 OlD- 4 8 1
g. ab r. h. pet.
Dotson to Clair F . Shenefield,
·
Standings
Phila
200 000 000- 2 6 0 Shblm, KC 111401 55 128 .3 19
Team
Pts.
Koosman , McGra w (8) an d Carew, Min 126 483 55 1 J .3 17
Parcel, Salem. .
No. 5
2 Dyer; Carlion (23-9) and D. AIln. Chi 136 469 83 148 .316
Joseph K. Connolly, Eloise No.3
2 Bateman. WP- Koosman( 9-11). Rudi,Oa k 131529 82163 .308
Connally to Charles D. Ne . 2
Pniela, KC 131 500 59 153 .306
2 HR Dyer t8th ).
-Otis. KC
125 477 67 143 .300
4!,o~ard, Eilene Leonard , 6 No. 6
1
No
.
l
l'f'1":~~·"'
,.,
·S
t.
Lo
ui
s
.
OOOOOOOOD0
•
6-l
...
Berr
y,Cal
104365
38109.299
.
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•
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"H Ills, , ange . , ,...
...~..
"' • Monfrea1 • 201 010 oox.......:. 4. ! a ·a Mabery, KC 129 438 53130.297
No.4 ,.
1
,·'"'Kenneth R. Keesee, Acfa
Hig hfi . Ind iv idual Gam e
Palmer, Bar e (7) , Hrabosk y Pnson. ~a l
11 9 424 53 126 .297
•K'eesee to Ray Williams, Iris Rich Bcii ley 187.
(8) and J ut ze; Moore (8-7) and ~ay.C h•
134 479 77 142 .296
Second High Ind . Game _
Hum phre y. LP- Pal m er (Q. J ) . F1 sk. Bos
11 1 389 65 115 .296
Williams, S Acres, Rutland.
Rich Bai ley 180.
HR - Jor ge nsen ( 12th ).
.
Home Run s
Rufus
R.
Browning,
High Ser ies _ Rich Ba ile y
Nat10na l lea gue : Colbert, SO
37 ; Stargell , Pi tt 33 .- Bench . Cin
Josephine M. Browning to Guy .486 .
Second Hig h Series _ Cher ie
31 ; Williams , Chi 29 ; Aaron ,
L. Casto, Catherine Casto, 2.65
Reu ter 446.
Keith Goble Ford
Atl and May , Hou 28.
Acres, Rutland.
Tea m High Game _ No. 5
Bowling l eague
Am eri can Lea gue: D. Al len,
Lizzie Wood to Stephen C. 780.
Sta nd i ng s week of Se p- Ch i 34 ; Murcer,
NY 28:
Tea m High Seri es _ No. 5
tem ber 5, 1971.
Killebrew Minn. Epstein and
Campbell, LiiUan M. Camp·
2197.
Tea m
W. L. Jackson, Oak 23.
bell, Parcels, Letart.
No. 5
8 0
Runs gballed In
!!hamar D. Weed, E•ec.,
No. 12
8
o
. N a tion a l ~ l eagu e: Sla r geiL
No. 4
6
2 Pi!t 110 ; William s, Chi 102;
Besse Ann Weed, Dec. to Larry
Pomeroy Bowling Lan es
N
o.8
6
2
Col bert. SD 101 ; Bench, (in
Early Sunday
Joe Queen, Myrta Queen, Lots ,
No. 9
6
'} 100 ; Simmons, St. L 88.
Mi xed League
Middleport.
No. 13
6
2
wam erica n Lea gue: D. Allen,
Sepl. 10, 1972
No .1
4
4 Chi 104 ; Murcer. NY 87 ;
Donald Manuel to Joyce
Standings
4
4 Mayberry , KC 79: Scolt , Mi l
No.2
Manuel, 2 Acres, Sutton.
W. l.
Team
No. J
2
6 77 ; Darwin , M•nn 72.
14 2 N ~7
S Ease., General Telephone Eagles Club
2 6
~l c hing
Team No.3
12
4
No. 10
2
6
National l eagu e: Carl to n,
Co., Pomeroy.
Farmer s Bank
10 6
No. 14
2
6 Phil 23-9 ; Jenkins , Chi 20 -10 ;
Clarence Douglas , Della Tom's Carry Ou t
4 12
No.6
0
8 Blass, Pitll 76; Seaver. NY 17FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
4 12
Douglas to James Alfred Will, Rac i ne Food Market
No. 11
0
8 11; Tor rez , Mont 16·9; Osteen,
Mark V
4 12
Ca rol Will, Parcel, Chester.
On 9·5-72. Tea m 5 took 8 LA 16 10.
High Individual Game
Ameri can League: Wood, Chi
,
Thomas A. Ma ys, Patty E. Paul Tay lor 234; Ju li a Boy les pa ints from Team 6. Bur l Cook
~as high for Tea m 5 wit h 629 24-lJ ; Loli ch , Del 20-12 ; Perry,
I
1
79.
Mays to Gary E. Van Meter,
pins. and John Full er was high Clev 20·15; Hun1er. Oak 19·7;
!I t o !I Daily- Sunday 1· 9
for Team 6 with 505 pins.
Palmer , Batt 19-8.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.,_ _ _ _ _ __,
High In d. Game - A.
Iva M. Van Meter, 1.03 Acres, L.Second
Phelps 212 ; Son ja Waylan d
Team 12 took 8 points from
Olive.
177.
Team 11 . Dave Holley wa s high
High Series - Paul Ta ylor for Tea m 12 with 538 pins, and
Orner Hess, Dorothy M. Hess
Julia Boy les 484.
Betty Gooch was high for Team
to Eldred Hess, Dorrence Hess, 567:
Second Hig h Seri es - A. L.
11 w ith 427 pins.
Prentice Hess, Parcel, Bed- Phelps 555; Sonja Way land 476.
Tea m 4 took 6 points from
ford.
Team High Ga me - Team
Team 3. Jack Janey wa s hig h
for Tea m 4 wi th 565 pins a nd
Donald McKenzie, Adm ., No. J 694.
Tedm High Ser ies - Team
Steve
Carter was high for
Bertha McKenzie, dec. to Ira No. 3 1966.
Tea m 3 with 477 pin s.
Van Cooney, Lots, Pomeroy.
Tea m 8 took 6 points from
Paul E . Harris, Marylyn
Team 7. Charlie Nea l was hig h
for Team 8 with 581 pins a nd
Harris to Lois V. Roberson, II&gt;
POM EROY LANES
Walter
All ie was hig h for Tea m
Wednesday late
Acre, Pomeroy.
7 wi th 478 pin s.
Mixed league
Robert Peoples, George
Team 9 took 6 poi nts from
Sept. 6, 1972
Tea
m 10. Ga ry Ellis was high
Anna Peoples, Helen M. Rea ,
Wan Last for Team
9 with 476 pin s and
6
2
Edythe Faye Ford, Wallace B. Cassell .Carsey
Blakeslee. Hoy t
6
2 M ike Dobbins wa s high for
Ford, Florence 111. Mickey to M oore.Morrow
4
4 Team 10 with 428 pin s.
Team 1 spli t 8 poin ts wit h
Charles Gibbs, Ellen Gibbs, Holler -Rawl ings
4
4·
Team 2. Harold lookado was
Rosenbaum -MeBdows 2
6
Lot, Pomeroy .
high for Team I with 513 pins
2
6 and
Archie R. Caster, Fontelle Fultz.Ben ll ey
Jack Mink was high for
Hig h lndi. Game - Men·
Spencer, Spence Spencer to Dick Rosenbaum 201 ; Art Hoyi Tea m 2 with 503 pins.
Team 13 took 6 po ints fr om
Lavern Jordan, Mary Jordan, 199, Dan Meadows 191 ; Women Team
14. Mario Bush was hig h
- Joy Bentley 164, Pat Hol ler for Team
Parcels, Colwnbia.
13 with 522 pins and
162, Ru lh Cassell 146.
Helen Oseland wa s high for
9 Ease., Col. &amp; Southern Ohio
High Series - Men - Dick
Team 14 with 480 pins.
Elec. Co., Pomeroy .
Rosenbaum 530. Di ck Rawlings
High single game for the
Delbert Ours to William L. 526, Arl Hoyt 520; Women ladies for the evening was 172
Joy Ben tl ey _436, Neaci l Car sey
pins held by Helen Oseland and
Foster, Arlyn I. Foster, Par· 41 1, Hope M oore 404.
for the m en wa s 228 pins he ld
eels, Chester.
. Team High Game - Ful tz. by Burl Cook.
Elsie Cross to Robert C. Hill, Bentl ey 598.
series for the ladl es was
Team High Series - Cassell - 480High
lola
l pins, held by Helen
Etta Mae Hill, .505 Acre, Carsey
1723.
Oseland and for the men 629
Racine.
lotal pins held by Burl Cook.
Bernice Bowen to Charles C.
Lewis, Margaret Ella Lewis,
Lot 104, Behan's Add., Mid·
dleport.
· Clovis L. Strausbaugh, Ada
Strausbaugh, Ease ., lo Ohio
Power Co., Saleni..
.. Leroy wyan~ Goldie .Wyant
.to !)alias G. DeBord, Janice M.
DeBciid; ~l'i Acres, Scipio. ·
Now you can buy that
William Thomas, :. Lucy E.
comfortable
Lo-Z-Bay
Thomas to . Charles :Albert
chair you 've always
I,elst, Marilyn T, Leiat, .64.90
dreamed of at our law
Acre&amp;, Colwnbi&amp;. · . ·
prices.
. B!airMi L..sDnth · to Robert
Ji;dw~ Daille!S;., Fern .1M
Authorized Dealer
Dilnle... ·, P~IS. Ballsbw-y.
Ethel Hatfield 1o JMuie. E.
srown; Pafctl,' Salisbw-y.
lfl!rold ;Evans, Mary Lou
Evans to William Evans,
Grtte
Maxine Powell, 5 ·Acres ,
?·

What's Your "Beef"

Balance is at $218,.718

Woodeshick, Nance Dropped

8 Pak
·' PEPSI-COlA

10!

BOLD

POTATOES
u. s. 20 lb.
NO. 1 bag 99~

8

"""

16 oz.

59~~

.N IInA

..... 69'
'

10 •

MlltC . ' I •• ·

'STOll

.A

j·

-

.~Mod "' IWint ., o.ly
. EXPIRES: .......,

CARROTs·
,GOLDEN
SOLID
CRISP

.

.
I

I

'

·J"'a"•

�Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 12,1972
6- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Sept 12,1972 .

•

mas;uae·~·-··.::::.w..w::::~~:~:~$

Money ·Raising 'l Soci,cd 1Preparatzons
.

..

"•

i i~

.

.

'. &lt;.J,Vork.Reviewed

.•

..

• •.•

•

.

.

'

..

. ..

?

iii!

•

. · RejxJtrs ~n f.und . raisirig
· · pro]e.~~. ·. the · proceeds · ffom
'which ' ·. wi l.l : go . toward
redecorating the. sanctuary of
Trinity· ChUrch, were given
ctur.in g the Friday ni ght
ni~t!ng of . the Happy Har.ve~ters ·Class.
It was noted that $274 was
cleared on the rummage sale,
and that the "bakeless" bake
sale was a success . The
committee for the rummage
sale thanked those who worked
and given special thanks for
large contributions- in the
"bakeless " bake · sale were
Miss Sybil Ebersbach, Miss
Erma Smith, ·Mrs. Mabel
· Wolfe, and Mrs. Frances
! Reibel.
., The class gave a vote of
• thanks to the news media for
1publicity on the rummage sale.
· A discussion was held on the
redecoration of not only the
sanctuary but also the upstairs

Mrs. Neva Seyfried presidedat the meeting opening it with·a
prayer from the yearbook. A
hymn sing was · held and the
birthdays of Mrs. Stella Klees,
Mrs. Seyfried, Mrs. ·Edith
Lanning, and Mrs. Lillie Houck
were observed. Mrs. Kloes
repm·ted :hat she still has getwell and birthday cards for
sale.
Games were played with
pt·ize~ going to Mrs. Eva
De s::; e~uer,
Mrs . Carrie '
Meinhart, Mrs. Thelma
Terrell, and Mrs. Ruth Massar.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Seyfried, Mrs. Reibel,
and Mrs. Gladys Cuckler to
those named and Mrs. Ella
Smith, Mrs. Ethel Williamson,
Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs. Freda
Duffy, Mrs. Carrie Neutzling,
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart, and
Miss Sybil Ebersbach, and two
guests, Mrs. H. B. Powell,
Bradenton, Fla ., and Mrs. J.P.
women 's lounge. Fruit cakes Burnell, Charleston, W. Va.
will not be sold this year.

TeachingTeamMeets
With School Parents

'
c

.

'I :· ..d·. .f

Go Forward
a en .ariili For Revival
.

TUESDAY .
.EXECUTIVE COMMITI'EE
of theHacine Elementary PTA
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m.
at the grade school.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 1:30 Tuesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. office, Mrs. Walter
Hayes, hostess chairman .
EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters Tuesday at high
school at 6 p.m. Movies of
Hannan Trace game will be
shown. Refreshments .
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday,
1:30 p.m. at Syracuse
Elementary School.
AMERICAN LUTHERAN
Church Women, St. Paul's
Lutheran Church, potluck
dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday
followed by a meeting and
program on drugs to be
presented by Pastor Arthur
Lund.

the various type of materials to

be used were displa~ed. A
resume of the school operation
- a non-graded individualized

program - was outlined by the
teaching staff. A question and
answer period was held at the
conclusion of the teachers'
presentation, and a demonstration was given on the new
spelling program.
Mrs. Hackett also introduced
the PTA officers, considered a
part of the team, including
Mrs .
Manning
Kloes,
president; Mrs. Naomi King,
vice president ; Mrs. Bonnie
Pickens, secretary; Mrs. Sue
Grueser, treasurer; Mrs. Jean
Kelly, membership chairman;
Mrs. Jean Thomas, magazine
chairman , and Mrs. Rachel
Smith; hospitality.

visitation,

Crowser Family Met
LANGSVILLE - A reunion
of the Crouser family was held
Sept. 3 at the W. E. Crouser
home at Langsvule. The group
had a basket dinner at noon,
and the afternoon was spent
playing games, fishing and
taking pictures.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Rex Crouser, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Crouser and son, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Crouser and
sons, Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Crouser, Mrs. Sybile Yoak,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Carte and sons of
Elkview, W.Va. ; Mr . and Mrs.
Daniel Levingston, and
daughter, Dunbar, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Everly Crouser of
Wheeling, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Crouser and
family of Sherman, W. Va .;
William Crouser of Spencer, W.
Va.; Mrs. Mary C•ouser and
daughters, Mrs. Wayne Wigal
and son, Washington, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. William Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Hobstetter and daughters ,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs .

Two-Week Visit
In West Ended
Mrs. Charles Sauer and
granddaughter, Debbie Welker
of ' Gahanna, have returned
from a two week visit in San
Mateo, Calif. with Mrs. Sauer's
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. James Illingworth.
Mr. Illingworth, who suffered a heart attack last
spring, has recuperated sufficienUy to return to his employment with United Airlines.
During their visit in California ,
the Illingworths took them on
the 17 mile ocean drive from
Monterey to Carmel by the
Sea . Several whales were
sighted during their drive down
the coast.

EFFECT

telephone

Df.PAATMtNT STORE

and

Ch '1 J
rtVe t~aren
A nd Di'
z:;o·

'Richard Jewell and son,
Newton Falls ; Roy Crouser
and daughter, Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Bayless of Nitro, W.
Va .; Mr . and Mrs. Larry Welty
and sons, Mansfield ; Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Gatton of Bellville ;
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Crouser,
Rutland, and Mrs . James
Chaffee of Dallas, Texas.

ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 Thursday at the grange
hall .
REGULAR MEETING,
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
8 p.m. Thursday at temple. All
Master Masons invited.
REVIVAL THURSDAY,
Friday and Saturday, 7:30p.m.
each night at Mt. Olive Church
near Long Bottom. Special
singing, the Rev. John Dill,
pastor, evangelist.
XI GAMMA MU Sorority
Thursday, 7 p.m. home of
Margare t Follrod . Potluck ,
beverage furnished .
POMEROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AM, will hold past masters
RACINE - Debbie Holter, night at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
Mrs. Margaret Freitag and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . the temple. All Master Masons Mrs. Alice Gruber, Akron ,
Ronald Holter, Racine, was are invited .
were Sunday guests of Miss
honored on her fifth birthday
Lucille Smith, Chester.
anniversary with a party at her
Mr. and Mrs . William
home. Cake, ice cream and
Lehew,
John, Cheryl and Bill,
IN HOSPITAL
Kooi·Aid were served to Sandy
and
Miss
Jyl Beaver, MidMrs. Ralph (Stella) Frank,
Harden, Becky and Melanie Pomeroy Route 3, is confined dleport, and Ted Lehew, a
Van Meter, Lois and Melissa to Camden-Clark Hospital, freshman at Heidelberg
!hie, Rachael Reiber, Billie Room 323, in Parkersburg, W. College, Tiffin , spent Sunday at
Jean Rice, Jimmy, Randy and Va., where she is scheduled to Cedar Point.
Ricky Werry , Kevin Holter , undergo eye sur gery on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B.
and Tammy Holter.
Burdette
and Mrs. Violet
Wednesday. Mrs. Frank is a
Also atlending were Mrs. former employe of the Swisher- Hysell visited over the
Roy Van Meter, Mrs. Jim Lohse Drug Store and this is weekend in Berrien Springs,
Werry, Mrs. Randall Reiber, her first hospitalization.
Mich . with Mrs. Hysell's sonMrs . Mar tha Ro se, Mrs .
in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Thomas Holter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Randy Humphreys and
FIRST OBSERVED .
Bill Clonch, Mrs. Faudree, and
son, Jay. They toured the
Mr. aod Mrs. Gene Carson Donald Cook Nuclear Plant on
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Holter.
entertained recently with a Lake Michigan. Mr. Humwiener roast honoring their phreys is working at the
son, Chad, on his first birtbday. nuclear plant at Bridgman .
Hotdogs, baked beans, potato They also visited points of
chips,
marshmallows, soft interest in Michigan and InTWO HONORED
drinks,
cake and ice cream diana.
The birthdays of Lori Kloes,
10 today, and Mrs. Stella Kloes were served. Guests were Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm,
were observed Monday and Mrs. Charles Carson and Letart Falls, have returned
evening with a dinner party Debbie, Mrs. Maxine Owens, from a visit at St. Clairsville
given by Lori's parents, Mr. Mrs. Freda Casto, and Mr. and with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Mrs. Jack Sigman.
and Mrs. Manning Kloes .
Grimm a nd family, and
Guests were Mr. aod Mrs, Paul
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Smart, Mr. and Mrs. George
Bob Grimm and family .
WEDDING DAY SET
Hackett, Dennis Hackett, Miss
The open church wedding of
Marla Neui21ing, the hosts and
Miss Wanda Yvonne Cardillo to
their daughter, Lynn. Unable
to attend was Kent Kloes, a Mr. David Keith Gardner will
ENROLLS IN COLLEGE
be
an
event
of
Sept.
23
at
1:30
pre-pharmacy student at Ohio
Melanie Hackett, daughter of
p.m. at the Danville Wesleyan
Northern University, Ada.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett,
Church on Route 325. The Rev.
Jr., has enrolled at St. Marys
College, Notre Dame, Indiana.
Lawrence
ficiate
and aSullivan
receptionwill
will ofbe
held following the ceremony at
' the bride's home.
73 AT PICNIC
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene held its
ATI'END ANNIVERSARY annual picnic on Labor Day at
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hap- the Syracuse State Park with
tonstall were in Point Pleasant 13 persons attending.
Sunday for the golden wedding
anniversary observance of Mr.
1
and Mrs. Norman FOilS.
1I
You'll
.I

Fifth Birthday

Is Celebrated

World Famous Choir is Signed

The first reunion of the Little
family was held on Aug. 13 at
Fort Meigs. The group had a
dinner foll owed by recreation .
Annual reunions were set lor
the second Sunday of each
August.
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Vern Little, Mr. an d Mrs.
Marvin Little, Mrs. Vernon
Little and sons, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Wise and children , Mrs.
Geneva Wise and Missy, Mr.
and Mrs. Sidney Little and
daughters . Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Clonch and Dale, Mrs.
Sandy Clortch and children,
Fona Wt'se an d daug hters, p ete
Haley and Valarie, Mr . and
Mrs. Mark Haley and
daughter, Danny Wise, Peggy
Skinn, Don Little ,.Sue Dugan
and children, all ofMiddleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Larkin
and children, Dayton; Mrs .
Johnny Endicott and son, Point
Pleasant, W. Va .; Mr.and Mrs.
David Jiv iden and daughter,
Cleveland; Mrs. Joanna Bissell
and daughters, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Jack Phillips, Gypsy,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Haley, Gypsy, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Drenner and sons,
Shinnston, W. Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Little, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Garren and
children, Columbus.

underscore the versatility of a
choir acclaimed at home and
abroad.
Following a · recording
session of his opera, "Persephone," in Hollywood, the
late master composer, Igor
Stravinsky
called
the
youngs ters "the best boys
choir in the world."

After a visit to Salt Lake
City, home of another famous
choral organization, the Desert
News reported: ' "They won an
enthusiastic reception at a
school famous for its a cappella
chorus. The perforiJlllnce won
the hearts of the Tabernacle
Choir members."
Well past their 25th anniversary season today, the
records .are most impressive.
The chotr has sung more than
2,500 times in most of the
states, in parts of Canada and
in six countries of Europe. A
non-denominational ensemble,
the choir has sung in Westminster Abbey in London and
sung mass before Pope John
XXIII in St. Peter's Basilica in
Rome.
The variety of founder director George Bragg's duties
is indicated in the choir's
uncommon versatility. In a
single season audiences may
see them as urchins; they may
sing as well-scrubbed vestment
wearers in a cathedral; in top
hats they may regale a convention, or, in their smart
uniforms, they may serenade
the world with contemporary
music.
Over the years, recordings
have helped widen the
celebrity of the Texas Boys
Choir. lt has made a total of 12
albums for such highly
re garded companies as
Co lumbia Masterworks and
Decca Re cords , Columbia
chose the Texas boys
for its Eurppean· series
when many older choirs
were available on the continent. The re sults ? The
boys are two-time winners
of the Grammy Award from
the National Academy of
Recording Arts and Sciences.

In 1967 the award was for their
"best recorded choral performance of 1006" - Charles
Ives' ·"Music for Chorus." ·
In 1968 !he boys began
another important recording
project. For the New York
tex tbook publishers, , Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, they
started and have since com·
pleted an important part of an
educational series, "Exploring
Music ."

The choir has appeared
frequently on television variety
shows and specials. In 1970, for
ABC-TV, it recorded the music
of tbe Spanish Renaissance
composer, Thomas Louis
Vittoria, for a television show
concerning the great Spanish
master painter, El Greco.
On the home front as well as
abroad, critics and audiences
have shown great enthusiasm
for the smart appearance of
the choir in concert,

••lli•••••••lll..ill••lll••••'

il

1
BOOSTERs TO MEET
The Eastern Band Boosters
will
evening at the
high meet
schoolthis
at 7:30p.m.

I
I

tract it down
much faster
witha

19 BAPTIZED
Ninetee n persons were
baptized at the baptismal
service conducted Sunday by
the pastors of the Racine,
Rutland and Syracuse Churches of the Nazarene. Visiting
minister was the Rev. Loren
Strahm, evangelist of Grove
City, Ohio.

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Uniforms,
vestments ,
costumes are expecially
designed . All of which adds
uncommon eye appeal to.
programs chosen from a
varied repertory and offered
with staging and colorful
theatrical effects where appropriate . The program here
will be typical. At this writing,
the choir will offer the lirst half
of itJ; program in Renaissance
robes. Following intermission,
the boys wi:l reappear to sing
music in a lighter vein. For this
section, they will be Slllllrtly
dressed in Edwardian jackets
and Eton collars.
The concluding group
features "The Continental
Soldier," a work composed for
the boys by Ray Charles. In
colorful red and blue uniforms,
the choir will bring the concert
to an exciting close as it sings
of early American and
American traditions.

The Singer
20°/o off sale is on
this Zig-Zag machine.
It's a Liza Special Special.

•••••... •iillll•••••••••••!!ltta
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"TUCKER QUALITY"

Texas Boys Choir, World Famous, Coming in March

·
tte
nner
To Honor Mother
.
Mrs. Martha Rose of Portland was honored with a birthday dinner at her home
recently.
Attending the dinner were all
five of her children, Mrs.
Thelma Walton , Warren Rose
and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
(Evelyn) Holter, Sharon and
Kevin, Racine; Mr . and Mrs .
Dean (Grace) Earich, Dave
and Jill, Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Rose and Kenny ,
Portland .
Also attending were Mrs .
Don Dorst, Cindy, Becky ,
Teresa and Delores, Mr. and
Mrs, Ronald Holter, Debbie
and Tammy, Fritz Teaford and
Jimmy, Randy, and Ricky
Werry. Mrs. Rose has 15
grandchildren and 17 greatgrandchildren.

SHOP YOUR NEARESI; STOr=RE
=-""!_ _ _ __

l6:Y2 Gallon Trash Can

Ramz.,
/d.S
:.J'
First Reunz.On

The public is welcome.

5 P.M.I

Pt. Pleasant or Mason
Open 6 Nlg"ts Till 9 P.M.

The appearance in the
Meigs-Gallia-Mason area next
winter of the Texas Boys Choir
is another in a series of high
caliber
musical
enfine services, and many tertainments over the past 25
commitments. Discipleship is years provided by the Ti'ithe main objective. Rev . County Community Concert
Dempsey 's sermon topics will Association .
be :
One of the most musically
Sunday, Sept. 17, "Send The satisfying and exciting concer t
Fire."
events of several seasons is
Monday, Sept. 18, " If Every scheduled next March 13, when
Christian Went to Hell For Five the world-famous Texas Boys
Minutes."
Choir will sing in the Ga!Ua
Tuesday, Sept. 19, "The Way Academy
High
School
Of The Penitent."
auditorium . The program will
Wed•esday, Sept. 20, "The
Blood Of Christ. "
U
Thursday, Sept. 21, "Seeing
f.1J 110

God .n

TUESDAY

A DISCOUNT

'

publicity committees have
been busy preparing for a
revival to begin in the Clifton
Uni ted Methodist Church on
Sept. 17 and continue through
Sept. 23 nightly at 7:30.
Rev. James Dempsey · will
deliver the message&lt; the first
five nights and Rev . Wallace
Adkins will spea k Friday,
Saturday and Sunday .
Mrs. James Dempsey will
deliver the messages the first
five nights and Rev . Wallace
Adkins will speak Friday ,
Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. James Dempsey will be
the choir director with Mrs.
Harley Powell and Mrs. Helen
Barker sharing at the piano
and organ. Several visiting
singers will participate.
The church is anticipating

THE MEIGS Athletic
Boosters Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
at Meigs High School. This is
the first meeting of the season.
WEDNESDAY
W.S.C.S. of Forest Run
United Methodist Church will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
home of Mrs. Denver Holter.
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club noor. luncheon
Wednesday at Meigs Inn with

program ,
POMEROY Chapter 80,
RAM , 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Long form opening to be ob· served.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30
p.m. Wednesday at the Middleport Legion Hall.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners family picnic, 6
p.m. Wednesday, Shrine Park,
Racine. Members to take
covered dish and table service.
Installation of officers.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs . James
Daniels.
THURSDAY
PAST OFFICERS Club,
· Racine Chapter, Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at the Shrine Club
House. Potluck dinner.

IN

CLIFTON, W. Va. - Prayer,

" Energy Crisis" topic of

"Meet the Team Night" was
observed at the Bradbury
School for fifth and sixth
graders Thursday night.
Introduced to a good
representation of parents at
the meeting by Mrs. Phyllis
Hackett, team leader for the
school, were members of the
teaching staff, Mrs. Sabra
Morrison, Mrs. Betty Fultz,
Mrs. Maxine Philson, and Don
Hanning.
· The overall program offered
at the school was explained and

PRICES
ARE

�Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 12,1972
6- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Sept 12,1972 .

•

mas;uae·~·-··.::::.w..w::::~~:~:~$

Money ·Raising 'l Soci,cd 1Preparatzons
.

..

"•

i i~

.

.

'. &lt;.J,Vork.Reviewed

.•

..

• •.•

•

.

.

'

..

. ..

?

iii!

•

. · RejxJtrs ~n f.und . raisirig
· · pro]e.~~. ·. the · proceeds · ffom
'which ' ·. wi l.l : go . toward
redecorating the. sanctuary of
Trinity· ChUrch, were given
ctur.in g the Friday ni ght
ni~t!ng of . the Happy Har.ve~ters ·Class.
It was noted that $274 was
cleared on the rummage sale,
and that the "bakeless" bake
sale was a success . The
committee for the rummage
sale thanked those who worked
and given special thanks for
large contributions- in the
"bakeless " bake · sale were
Miss Sybil Ebersbach, Miss
Erma Smith, ·Mrs. Mabel
· Wolfe, and Mrs. Frances
! Reibel.
., The class gave a vote of
• thanks to the news media for
1publicity on the rummage sale.
· A discussion was held on the
redecoration of not only the
sanctuary but also the upstairs

Mrs. Neva Seyfried presidedat the meeting opening it with·a
prayer from the yearbook. A
hymn sing was · held and the
birthdays of Mrs. Stella Klees,
Mrs. Seyfried, Mrs. ·Edith
Lanning, and Mrs. Lillie Houck
were observed. Mrs. Kloes
repm·ted :hat she still has getwell and birthday cards for
sale.
Games were played with
pt·ize~ going to Mrs. Eva
De s::; e~uer,
Mrs . Carrie '
Meinhart, Mrs. Thelma
Terrell, and Mrs. Ruth Massar.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Seyfried, Mrs. Reibel,
and Mrs. Gladys Cuckler to
those named and Mrs. Ella
Smith, Mrs. Ethel Williamson,
Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs. Freda
Duffy, Mrs. Carrie Neutzling,
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart, and
Miss Sybil Ebersbach, and two
guests, Mrs. H. B. Powell,
Bradenton, Fla ., and Mrs. J.P.
women 's lounge. Fruit cakes Burnell, Charleston, W. Va.
will not be sold this year.

TeachingTeamMeets
With School Parents

'
c

.

'I :· ..d·. .f

Go Forward
a en .ariili For Revival
.

TUESDAY .
.EXECUTIVE COMMITI'EE
of theHacine Elementary PTA
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m.
at the grade school.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 1:30 Tuesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. office, Mrs. Walter
Hayes, hostess chairman .
EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters Tuesday at high
school at 6 p.m. Movies of
Hannan Trace game will be
shown. Refreshments .
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday,
1:30 p.m. at Syracuse
Elementary School.
AMERICAN LUTHERAN
Church Women, St. Paul's
Lutheran Church, potluck
dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday
followed by a meeting and
program on drugs to be
presented by Pastor Arthur
Lund.

the various type of materials to

be used were displa~ed. A
resume of the school operation
- a non-graded individualized

program - was outlined by the
teaching staff. A question and
answer period was held at the
conclusion of the teachers'
presentation, and a demonstration was given on the new
spelling program.
Mrs. Hackett also introduced
the PTA officers, considered a
part of the team, including
Mrs .
Manning
Kloes,
president; Mrs. Naomi King,
vice president ; Mrs. Bonnie
Pickens, secretary; Mrs. Sue
Grueser, treasurer; Mrs. Jean
Kelly, membership chairman;
Mrs. Jean Thomas, magazine
chairman , and Mrs. Rachel
Smith; hospitality.

visitation,

Crowser Family Met
LANGSVILLE - A reunion
of the Crouser family was held
Sept. 3 at the W. E. Crouser
home at Langsvule. The group
had a basket dinner at noon,
and the afternoon was spent
playing games, fishing and
taking pictures.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Rex Crouser, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Crouser and son, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Crouser and
sons, Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Crouser, Mrs. Sybile Yoak,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Carte and sons of
Elkview, W.Va. ; Mr . and Mrs.
Daniel Levingston, and
daughter, Dunbar, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Everly Crouser of
Wheeling, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Crouser and
family of Sherman, W. Va .;
William Crouser of Spencer, W.
Va.; Mrs. Mary C•ouser and
daughters, Mrs. Wayne Wigal
and son, Washington, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. William Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Hobstetter and daughters ,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs .

Two-Week Visit
In West Ended
Mrs. Charles Sauer and
granddaughter, Debbie Welker
of ' Gahanna, have returned
from a two week visit in San
Mateo, Calif. with Mrs. Sauer's
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. James Illingworth.
Mr. Illingworth, who suffered a heart attack last
spring, has recuperated sufficienUy to return to his employment with United Airlines.
During their visit in California ,
the Illingworths took them on
the 17 mile ocean drive from
Monterey to Carmel by the
Sea . Several whales were
sighted during their drive down
the coast.

EFFECT

telephone

Df.PAATMtNT STORE

and

Ch '1 J
rtVe t~aren
A nd Di'
z:;o·

'Richard Jewell and son,
Newton Falls ; Roy Crouser
and daughter, Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Bayless of Nitro, W.
Va .; Mr . and Mrs. Larry Welty
and sons, Mansfield ; Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Gatton of Bellville ;
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Crouser,
Rutland, and Mrs . James
Chaffee of Dallas, Texas.

ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 Thursday at the grange
hall .
REGULAR MEETING,
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
8 p.m. Thursday at temple. All
Master Masons invited.
REVIVAL THURSDAY,
Friday and Saturday, 7:30p.m.
each night at Mt. Olive Church
near Long Bottom. Special
singing, the Rev. John Dill,
pastor, evangelist.
XI GAMMA MU Sorority
Thursday, 7 p.m. home of
Margare t Follrod . Potluck ,
beverage furnished .
POMEROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AM, will hold past masters
RACINE - Debbie Holter, night at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
Mrs. Margaret Freitag and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . the temple. All Master Masons Mrs. Alice Gruber, Akron ,
Ronald Holter, Racine, was are invited .
were Sunday guests of Miss
honored on her fifth birthday
Lucille Smith, Chester.
anniversary with a party at her
Mr. and Mrs . William
home. Cake, ice cream and
Lehew,
John, Cheryl and Bill,
IN HOSPITAL
Kooi·Aid were served to Sandy
and
Miss
Jyl Beaver, MidMrs. Ralph (Stella) Frank,
Harden, Becky and Melanie Pomeroy Route 3, is confined dleport, and Ted Lehew, a
Van Meter, Lois and Melissa to Camden-Clark Hospital, freshman at Heidelberg
!hie, Rachael Reiber, Billie Room 323, in Parkersburg, W. College, Tiffin , spent Sunday at
Jean Rice, Jimmy, Randy and Va., where she is scheduled to Cedar Point.
Ricky Werry , Kevin Holter , undergo eye sur gery on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B.
and Tammy Holter.
Burdette
and Mrs. Violet
Wednesday. Mrs. Frank is a
Also atlending were Mrs. former employe of the Swisher- Hysell visited over the
Roy Van Meter, Mrs. Jim Lohse Drug Store and this is weekend in Berrien Springs,
Werry, Mrs. Randall Reiber, her first hospitalization.
Mich . with Mrs. Hysell's sonMrs . Mar tha Ro se, Mrs .
in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Thomas Holter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Randy Humphreys and
FIRST OBSERVED .
Bill Clonch, Mrs. Faudree, and
son, Jay. They toured the
Mr. aod Mrs. Gene Carson Donald Cook Nuclear Plant on
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Holter.
entertained recently with a Lake Michigan. Mr. Humwiener roast honoring their phreys is working at the
son, Chad, on his first birtbday. nuclear plant at Bridgman .
Hotdogs, baked beans, potato They also visited points of
chips,
marshmallows, soft interest in Michigan and InTWO HONORED
drinks,
cake and ice cream diana.
The birthdays of Lori Kloes,
10 today, and Mrs. Stella Kloes were served. Guests were Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm,
were observed Monday and Mrs. Charles Carson and Letart Falls, have returned
evening with a dinner party Debbie, Mrs. Maxine Owens, from a visit at St. Clairsville
given by Lori's parents, Mr. Mrs. Freda Casto, and Mr. and with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Mrs. Jack Sigman.
and Mrs. Manning Kloes .
Grimm a nd family, and
Guests were Mr. aod Mrs, Paul
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Smart, Mr. and Mrs. George
Bob Grimm and family .
WEDDING DAY SET
Hackett, Dennis Hackett, Miss
The open church wedding of
Marla Neui21ing, the hosts and
Miss Wanda Yvonne Cardillo to
their daughter, Lynn. Unable
to attend was Kent Kloes, a Mr. David Keith Gardner will
ENROLLS IN COLLEGE
be
an
event
of
Sept.
23
at
1:30
pre-pharmacy student at Ohio
Melanie Hackett, daughter of
p.m. at the Danville Wesleyan
Northern University, Ada.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett,
Church on Route 325. The Rev.
Jr., has enrolled at St. Marys
College, Notre Dame, Indiana.
Lawrence
ficiate
and aSullivan
receptionwill
will ofbe
held following the ceremony at
' the bride's home.
73 AT PICNIC
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene held its
ATI'END ANNIVERSARY annual picnic on Labor Day at
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hap- the Syracuse State Park with
tonstall were in Point Pleasant 13 persons attending.
Sunday for the golden wedding
anniversary observance of Mr.
1
and Mrs. Norman FOilS.
1I
You'll
.I

Fifth Birthday

Is Celebrated

World Famous Choir is Signed

The first reunion of the Little
family was held on Aug. 13 at
Fort Meigs. The group had a
dinner foll owed by recreation .
Annual reunions were set lor
the second Sunday of each
August.
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Vern Little, Mr. an d Mrs.
Marvin Little, Mrs. Vernon
Little and sons, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Wise and children , Mrs.
Geneva Wise and Missy, Mr.
and Mrs. Sidney Little and
daughters . Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Clonch and Dale, Mrs.
Sandy Clortch and children,
Fona Wt'se an d daug hters, p ete
Haley and Valarie, Mr . and
Mrs. Mark Haley and
daughter, Danny Wise, Peggy
Skinn, Don Little ,.Sue Dugan
and children, all ofMiddleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Larkin
and children, Dayton; Mrs .
Johnny Endicott and son, Point
Pleasant, W. Va .; Mr.and Mrs.
David Jiv iden and daughter,
Cleveland; Mrs. Joanna Bissell
and daughters, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Jack Phillips, Gypsy,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Haley, Gypsy, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Drenner and sons,
Shinnston, W. Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Little, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Garren and
children, Columbus.

underscore the versatility of a
choir acclaimed at home and
abroad.
Following a · recording
session of his opera, "Persephone," in Hollywood, the
late master composer, Igor
Stravinsky
called
the
youngs ters "the best boys
choir in the world."

After a visit to Salt Lake
City, home of another famous
choral organization, the Desert
News reported: ' "They won an
enthusiastic reception at a
school famous for its a cappella
chorus. The perforiJlllnce won
the hearts of the Tabernacle
Choir members."
Well past their 25th anniversary season today, the
records .are most impressive.
The chotr has sung more than
2,500 times in most of the
states, in parts of Canada and
in six countries of Europe. A
non-denominational ensemble,
the choir has sung in Westminster Abbey in London and
sung mass before Pope John
XXIII in St. Peter's Basilica in
Rome.
The variety of founder director George Bragg's duties
is indicated in the choir's
uncommon versatility. In a
single season audiences may
see them as urchins; they may
sing as well-scrubbed vestment
wearers in a cathedral; in top
hats they may regale a convention, or, in their smart
uniforms, they may serenade
the world with contemporary
music.
Over the years, recordings
have helped widen the
celebrity of the Texas Boys
Choir. lt has made a total of 12
albums for such highly
re garded companies as
Co lumbia Masterworks and
Decca Re cords , Columbia
chose the Texas boys
for its Eurppean· series
when many older choirs
were available on the continent. The re sults ? The
boys are two-time winners
of the Grammy Award from
the National Academy of
Recording Arts and Sciences.

In 1967 the award was for their
"best recorded choral performance of 1006" - Charles
Ives' ·"Music for Chorus." ·
In 1968 !he boys began
another important recording
project. For the New York
tex tbook publishers, , Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, they
started and have since com·
pleted an important part of an
educational series, "Exploring
Music ."

The choir has appeared
frequently on television variety
shows and specials. In 1970, for
ABC-TV, it recorded the music
of tbe Spanish Renaissance
composer, Thomas Louis
Vittoria, for a television show
concerning the great Spanish
master painter, El Greco.
On the home front as well as
abroad, critics and audiences
have shown great enthusiasm
for the smart appearance of
the choir in concert,

••lli•••••••lll..ill••lll••••'

il

1
BOOSTERs TO MEET
The Eastern Band Boosters
will
evening at the
high meet
schoolthis
at 7:30p.m.

I
I

tract it down
much faster
witha

19 BAPTIZED
Ninetee n persons were
baptized at the baptismal
service conducted Sunday by
the pastors of the Racine,
Rutland and Syracuse Churches of the Nazarene. Visiting
minister was the Rev. Loren
Strahm, evangelist of Grove
City, Ohio.

WANT AD

$ 99

¢
EA.

EA.

EACH

EACH

HERE'S A REAL BUY!

BUCKET
OF
SPONGES

INDOOR
OR
OUTDOOR
GET ORGANIZED!

REPLACEMEN'f

STAINLESS STEEL

TOILET
SEAT

DINNERWARE

I

MASONITE

CLIP
BOARD

RIOT
FORK5SPOON
TEA 5- 1
SPOON5KNIFE512 ITEMS!

METAL
CLASP!

9E!.

·

COMPARE
AT $35.00

PORTABLE 8-TRACK
STEREO TAPE PLAYER

4¢
4

Comes in handsome

styrene
case.
Automaliccarry
program
changer or manual
changer. Seperate
volume

and

$

2988
EA

tone

"CHILTON"- TEFLON l l

GLEAMING CHROME FINISH

purpose size chest Is 24" x 13%" x 11" or

+B INCH SQUARE

+ 1\ol QT. DEEP LOAF DISH

REG$}
$1.99

e~:::'r:tbe size for closets or under the bed. Give

the added storage area you always
While they last !

Vacuum Oeaner Bags
TO FIT MOST ANY SWEEPER

3 SIZES - Boz. -lOoz. -12oz.

SALE! $136
Ia ell you ply for IIIII &amp;IJ111J• Zlg-Z.g maclllne.
It has a drop-in front bobbin, Flexi·Siitch• discs,
and butlt-ln blind stitch. A Liza Special Special
at 20% off the regular price.
Wa have a Credit Plan dealgned to Ill your budget.
Singer preaents the Liza Mlnnelll Special
·sunday night,
Sept. lOth on NBC.

' Our Free Parking Lo,
use

SAVE BIG NOW!

115 W. Second

aeaners

Pomeroy, 0.
•A

Trademark of THE

SINGER COMPANY

EACH

New Fall Styles

REGULAR49c EACH

GffiLS

STEAK

PANTS

$

KNIVES

Every important fabric and style
is now in our huge coUection of
girls pants . She practically lives
in them from now one-so get her
supply while our selection is
complete. Sizes 3 to 14.

EACH

SABRE SAW
$

Hollow ground, rosewood handle,
serrated edge - -- A real savings!

TEMPERED
STEEL!

2·2¢
EA_

amp motor, 3 conductor power
cord. Regular $16.95 value.

EA.

WHILE THEY LAST!

EUREKA. wESTINGHOUSE,
ELECTROLUX, LEVET,
GE, SINGER AND OTHERS.
3-4 OR 5 PACK BAGS!

THE WEATHER IS CHANGING
SO GET YOURS NOW!

WOMENS FALL

PANTS

"ST. REGIS" BRAND

$224T0$394

Deluxe sabre saw with lop
handle and control switch. 3

•

992-2284

WE HAVE A REALLY
GIANTIC SELECTION!

lf4 INCH DRILL
2-4RPM Drill with geared key chuck. 3
conductorpower cord. Compare at $15.95.

BAGS FOR ALL HOOVERS, SUNBEAM

FAMOUS JEANETTE GLASS!

MANNING BOWMAIV
POWER TOOLS

SINGER SAlES I SERVICE
McCAlL'$&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

In At 9-0ut At 5

CAKE DISH

+ 2V, QT·. UTILITY Dl SH

67¢

10 INCH SIZE

+I QT. ROUND CASSEROLE WITH COVER

NO SCOUR CLEANING!

HOLDER
REG. 79'

+2 QT. ROUND CASSEROLE WITH COVER

GOLD-RED-AVACADO

PAPER TOWEL

NDER BED OR ALL PURPOSE CHEST TYPES
LIGHT WOOD GRAIN FINISH!

DECORATED OVENWARE

COVERED
CAKE PAN

•

controls. ·

IBRE BOARD STORAGE CHES

~]
·

CAN ' T DE NT - RUST
OR CRACK - SAVE
NOW AT THE MART!

CT QUALITY

SAVE 14c ON EACH ONE-REGULAR 39c

SAME DAY
SERVItE

216 t: . 2nd, Pomeroy

Give your back a rest. Seal is
constructed of polished aluminum
tubing. 21ncb poly foam seat covered
with 12 gauge vinyl plastic. Size 12"
x 13" • IS Inches high - Folds To
Carry.

Select now from denims, polyesters,
corduroy, nylon or colton. Falls newest
colors and leg treatments. Size 8 to 18 and
e•lra large 32 to 38.

94

$

:$,
TO

Extra Heavy Gauge Vinyl Runn~r

94

OTECT YOUR FLOORS AND CARD"'"''"'

' COMP-ARE AT$15.95

REPLACE
BRAKE LINING
MUFFLERS

V

TIRES

INSTALI.ATJON SERVICE
ON ABOVE ITEMS

For MYour Needs
GQ Strai&amp;fd To

3 PIECE SINK SET
"TUCKER" REGULAR Si.89

-

Dish drainer, drain
rd, silverware
drainer, red, avocado,
gold.

.EA. '

.

3
$1].2
Briefs or T -Shirts
WIHTE ~OITON

AND 97c

t=oR

cue. com,.re al ~.15.

TEENS AND MISSES

88
EA.

BA
.

$}'94

AVARIETY
OF
I
NOW FALL COLORS

BOYS PANTS
REGULAR OR SLIM SIZES
SOLIO~ ­

STRIPES.
TWOTO-Nt:S -

$

UP

87

SIZE6to18

AND
$4.87

COMPLETE NEW SELECTION!

AMERICAN MADE "RIEGEL"

KITCHEN
TOWELS_
PRINTED
TERRY CLOTH
FRINGE ENDS ·

.STRAP STYLE

BATTERIES OR ELECTRICITY

$

·

33
SET

BOYS"DERBY"BRAND

AM-FM
'PORTABLE RADIO
At..·IJt.. --WORKS ON

$

NEW.-STOCK HAS ARRIV~D!

ROYAL HAND TOOLS
sei,

Powerful two hand ndlo wllb balll
fD ballet')' cbarcer, complete wlill
eel'pbtae, CoiiiH ID amart carry

POMEROY

$ 67

NON-SLIP SURFACE

U amp motor, direct
gear
drive.
3
conductor power
cord. Regular $18.95

. Adjustable wrench, iunnmers, 13 pc . drill
hacluaw
bladel, steel poekellape, padloclu, wood Clevel, vise wench,
heavy power coni and many other Items.
· ·

/·

PH. 992-2848

.... .·;;o,: o

"Manning Bowman"-tis I Price $1U5
Gleemlng- chrome fiDisb. AUtoJ1U!IIc of
course. Great for coming glfl needs.

BATTERY

MOORE'S

27"WIDE
GRIPPER CLEAT

POLY PLA,STIC

~SHOCKS

124 W. MAIN

SANDER
$

ln11der wllb 2800 rpm.

~ POINTS &amp; PLUGS.
,.. .

6 FEET LONG

Motor driven orbllal

V
Y
y

1

·--------------

THERMOS
UMBRELLA BOTTLE

BUBBLE TOP

Model 413 With Clll

SHIRt
FINISHING
Robi~~SCJM

STADIUM
SEAT

PINT SIZE-RUSTLESS

$ 00

WITH FITTINGS!

EN.TOY THE GAME

GLASS BEER MUGS

APPROVED IINQI .. DEAlER

1

I
I

SEE THRU VINYL

USE IN
CARSBOATS-

Y•

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

1

Uniforms,
vestments ,
costumes are expecially
designed . All of which adds
uncommon eye appeal to.
programs chosen from a
varied repertory and offered
with staging and colorful
theatrical effects where appropriate . The program here
will be typical. At this writing,
the choir will offer the lirst half
of itJ; program in Renaissance
robes. Following intermission,
the boys wi:l reappear to sing
music in a lighter vein. For this
section, they will be Slllllrtly
dressed in Edwardian jackets
and Eton collars.
The concluding group
features "The Continental
Soldier," a work composed for
the boys by Ray Charles. In
colorful red and blue uniforms,
the choir will bring the concert
to an exciting close as it sings
of early American and
American traditions.

The Singer
20°/o off sale is on
this Zig-Zag machine.
It's a Liza Special Special.

•••••... •iillll•••••••••••!!ltta
•:

POLY PLASTICSEAL TIGHT LIDSILVER COLORWHILE THEY LAST

4/add/n

...--N-E-W-LO_W_PRI. =
CE~""!- . . . .

"TUCKER QUALITY"

Texas Boys Choir, World Famous, Coming in March

·
tte
nner
To Honor Mother
.
Mrs. Martha Rose of Portland was honored with a birthday dinner at her home
recently.
Attending the dinner were all
five of her children, Mrs.
Thelma Walton , Warren Rose
and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
(Evelyn) Holter, Sharon and
Kevin, Racine; Mr . and Mrs .
Dean (Grace) Earich, Dave
and Jill, Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Rose and Kenny ,
Portland .
Also attending were Mrs .
Don Dorst, Cindy, Becky ,
Teresa and Delores, Mr. and
Mrs, Ronald Holter, Debbie
and Tammy, Fritz Teaford and
Jimmy, Randy, and Ricky
Werry. Mrs. Rose has 15
grandchildren and 17 greatgrandchildren.

SHOP YOUR NEARESI; STOr=RE
=-""!_ _ _ __

l6:Y2 Gallon Trash Can

Ramz.,
/d.S
:.J'
First Reunz.On

The public is welcome.

5 P.M.I

Pt. Pleasant or Mason
Open 6 Nlg"ts Till 9 P.M.

The appearance in the
Meigs-Gallia-Mason area next
winter of the Texas Boys Choir
is another in a series of high
caliber
musical
enfine services, and many tertainments over the past 25
commitments. Discipleship is years provided by the Ti'ithe main objective. Rev . County Community Concert
Dempsey 's sermon topics will Association .
be :
One of the most musically
Sunday, Sept. 17, "Send The satisfying and exciting concer t
Fire."
events of several seasons is
Monday, Sept. 18, " If Every scheduled next March 13, when
Christian Went to Hell For Five the world-famous Texas Boys
Minutes."
Choir will sing in the Ga!Ua
Tuesday, Sept. 19, "The Way Academy
High
School
Of The Penitent."
auditorium . The program will
Wed•esday, Sept. 20, "The
Blood Of Christ. "
U
Thursday, Sept. 21, "Seeing
f.1J 110

God .n

TUESDAY

A DISCOUNT

'

publicity committees have
been busy preparing for a
revival to begin in the Clifton
Uni ted Methodist Church on
Sept. 17 and continue through
Sept. 23 nightly at 7:30.
Rev. James Dempsey · will
deliver the message&lt; the first
five nights and Rev . Wallace
Adkins will spea k Friday,
Saturday and Sunday .
Mrs. James Dempsey will
deliver the messages the first
five nights and Rev . Wallace
Adkins will speak Friday ,
Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. James Dempsey will be
the choir director with Mrs.
Harley Powell and Mrs. Helen
Barker sharing at the piano
and organ. Several visiting
singers will participate.
The church is anticipating

THE MEIGS Athletic
Boosters Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
at Meigs High School. This is
the first meeting of the season.
WEDNESDAY
W.S.C.S. of Forest Run
United Methodist Church will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
home of Mrs. Denver Holter.
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club noor. luncheon
Wednesday at Meigs Inn with

program ,
POMEROY Chapter 80,
RAM , 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Long form opening to be ob· served.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30
p.m. Wednesday at the Middleport Legion Hall.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners family picnic, 6
p.m. Wednesday, Shrine Park,
Racine. Members to take
covered dish and table service.
Installation of officers.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs . James
Daniels.
THURSDAY
PAST OFFICERS Club,
· Racine Chapter, Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at the Shrine Club
House. Potluck dinner.

IN

CLIFTON, W. Va. - Prayer,

" Energy Crisis" topic of

"Meet the Team Night" was
observed at the Bradbury
School for fifth and sixth
graders Thursday night.
Introduced to a good
representation of parents at
the meeting by Mrs. Phyllis
Hackett, team leader for the
school, were members of the
teaching staff, Mrs. Sabra
Morrison, Mrs. Betty Fultz,
Mrs. Maxine Philson, and Don
Hanning.
· The overall program offered
at the school was explained and

PRICES
ARE

�\

8- The OailyStntinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, O., Sepl . l2, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!IVANT ADS .
INFORMATION

.
t

·.s P.M.

Monday Deadline 9 a.m .

Of
QUALITY

Cancellation - Corrections
Will b£o·accepted until 9 a.m . for.

.'

Day of Publ ication

REGULATIONS

• The' Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads,.
deemed
obje ct ional.
The
publisher will not be responsible

tor more than one incorrect'
Insertion .

R,t,TES

t For Wan' Ad Service

5 cents per ·word one inserrJon
Min imum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three

conncutlve lnstrtloris.

ta cents per ' word sflt con·

secutlve Insertions .•
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads. and ads paid within 1G days .

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word min i mum .
Each addJtlanal word 2c.

BLIND

Additional

2SC

ld)S

Charge

per

Advertisement.
OFFICE HOU'IIt \
~ 8 : 30a.m,.. to 5:00.p.m, Oallv.
1 : 30 a .m . to 12 :00 Noon

Po11eroy
Motor Co.

2

OEADl.INES
Day Before Publica flo

•

12895 .
1970 CHEVROLET
Monte Carlo, loc:ai l·owner car and less than :11 ,000 miles/
new white·wall tires, factory air conditioned , aqu~ fini sh,
bla ck vinyl top, disc brakes, power steering, turbo·
hydramatic, radio, wheel covers, truly luxur y and
PRICED TO SUIT!
'
1971 PINTO FORD
Sl79l
2-door. local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires. clean in.
terlor. green finish, radio, 2000cc engine, 4 speed.
1970 CAMARO
12295
Hardtop coupe, local low mileage, 1-owner car. 350 v.e
engine, 4 speed transmission, power steering , (not
teenage driven). green vinyl bucket seats, console, rear
air deflector, sharp gr~n finish , rad io. Sharp Is the word!

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

•PMI!ROY, OHIO

Satur~a y.

'Not1ce
YARD SALE, Tvesday and
Wednesday, Sept. 12 and 13.
Fourth St., Racine. Clothing,
Men's,
women ' s
and
children's. All sizes. good
c0&lt;1dlllon. Old bottles, electri c
churn , Malle chain saw, small
6: Coleman lamp and heater ,
never used ; cow milker ,
complete, fence charger,
never used ; gas refrigerator
trailer :
Philcc
for
refrigerator
and
de·
:humidif ier.
9· 11·31c

Employment Wanier

Notice

BLOC K Laying by contract .
Phone 997 3364.
9.7.12tc

Wanted To Rent

For Sale

L f\1-!1\171:'. 'lo JJ :lce 11 • M•ddiC'port . CANNING
Prt.' l • ~ra bly

llCo) l

EICclri c. 99:1.5468.

lm periil l
9 !'J.:Jic

lorndl oes and
mangoes . Ger"'ld inc Cleland,
Racine, Ohio.
8-16-tfc

1970 HONDA Cl 350, low
mileage, excellent cond ition,
2 helme ts included . For more
OLD Furnit ure, oak tables
information ca ll 985-3989.
organs, di shes, clock s, bras;
9-10·3tp
1
~":11~ o;_,colpt ~~~~use~flds. 1972 OLOS Cutlass. 2 dr . HT, 350
Pomeroy. Ohio. Cal{992 .62714• cu. m., v.s, 4 barrel car~ ..
· . dual ex hau st , ~utomat1c
6-28-ffc
tr ansm ission, power steering ,
power
brakes, factory ta pe
INT ERESTE D in buy1119 land, 1
ac re or more in Eastern deck.._ _deluxe mOdel interior,
School Di stri ct, house not forc ed air .induction hood ; A-1
importanl. Cal l 985·4117 condition ; phone 992·2064 .
9-I0-61c
any tim e.
9· 12-3tp
CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
zig -zag sewing machine . For
sewin g s tretch fabric s,
Sales
1955 CHEV ROLET 2 ton lruck, buttonholes·, fancy designs;
elc. Pain I sl ighlly blemi shed .
1200. Ca ll 949-4717 .
9 12 3t
Choice of carrying case or
- · P sewi ng stand. S49.80 cash or
- - -- - - - ler ms available. Phone 9921970 OUSTER aulo, 6 cyl. Phone 5641.
9-10-61c
9&lt;17 5468.
9.12.31c - - - - - -- - - ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe
·-'----- - - model. Complete with all
"69 DODGE Coronet. ps , pb.
bu ckets, automatic, vlnrl top, c lean ing attachments and
low mi leage, excellen con. uses paper bag s. Slightly used
difion. Leaving state, must but cleans and looks like new.
se ll . Phone 992·7753 afler 4 Will se ll for $37 .25 cas h or
te rms available. Phone 992p.m.
9-11 3tc 5641.
- - - -- - - 9-I0.61c.69 PLYMOUTH GTX 440, 4 -----~--speed ; phone 992-7624.
CO NTEMPORARY Console
9·8-61p Slereo. AM·FM radio. 4 speed
--------changer . 4 spe,a ker sound
sysle m . Walnut finished
1967 FORD Galaxie 500, 390 cu.
veneer cabinet. Balance
in . two door hardtop, power
$66.39. Use our budget plan .
steer ing. Phone 992.7016.
9·10·31&lt; Ca ll 992-7085.

Wanteo To Buy

Auto

Business Services.

Lost

TH ' PORE SOU L··
ELVINEY WENT OFF
TO VISIT HER MAW IN
CRVSTAL S PRINGS AN'
LEFT LU KEY HOME
TO ROOT FER
HISSE LF

I'LL FIX UP
A BASKET OF
GOOD IES .AN'
'IE CAN TAKE
IT OVER .
TO HIM

I 1LL

F IX
TH'GOODIES

tlfi!v
-:_- ·

.EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
OpenS Till
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

•ROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

CONSTRUCTION,~==============~

PRICE
roofing, porch repair and
electrical ; phone 742·4286.
8·16·301c

BACKHOE AND DOZER work)
Septic tanks Installed. Georqe .
(.Bill I Pullins. Phone 992-2~/Q...
4·25·1fC
WILL CUT ·o r trim trees,
reasonable ; also clean out
ba sement s,
attics
and
cellars; phone 949·3221.
8-29·301c

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Esllmates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
!rucks and low.boy lor hire.
See Bob or Roger Jelhlrs,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9925232.

largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathen Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS. INC.
·
Pomoroy

Real Estate For Sale

..

ABLISC·

RIG~T t I C&gt;ON'T SEE r"J&gt;J:71:'1"iu~~t:;'r;r----9-i21
~OW T~EV bO IT 1 rT

1'/E ~VEAUNIQ U E,NIN E·
MONTH, WORK·STUbY
RANCII MANAGEMI'NT
TRA INING PRO&lt;?RAM
~eRE AT TEXAS

!RUTALilY...

TAKES THAT LONG,,

IIJQ, PJ.MA . IT W~
"Tt-IEIR PAREN1'G WHO

BUT BEN, I "1l10f..IGHT
YOU WERE Wl11-l
1\-IE FI?LICE

VIOLENCE,

CAMPUS CLATI'ER

DIDN'T .1..11&lt;£ 1HE WAY
I W/16 UMPIRING .

A1H£TIC

LE.AGUE.

CI/~ISTIAN

Ph. 992-2174

SURELY "R£
L.tTT1.£ i..EAGUE

SEE US FOR: Awnings; i)onn•
doors and windows, c.\rporls./
marqvees, alum Inurn 'l;ldlng
and railing. "A. Jacob, salet
representative . For free
estimates, ··phone Charleol
lisle, Syracvse, V. V.j
John•on and Son, Inc. · ·
3·2-Ht

BALL PLAYEI&lt;'S
DIDN'r ro 1HI5.

A
A

S:t.e\t:N

CR:.l. a:::K
ANDI\LI.ls

-AN ' IT WINDS

THISAWA'i AN'
THATAWA'I --

LEGAL NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE
Public Not ice Is hereby given
babysitting, Elm &amp; Broadway
that Columb ia Gu of OhiO, Inc .
~1'"-...-l'":'l
. ~ '
5 ROOM house for sal e, one
Streets, Front apartment
ha t iled a Complaint with the
third acre ground , fr ont
downs ta irs, Rac ine. Ohio.
Publi c Utilities Commission of
( ' .. 1
.
porch. fu ll basement. S. n
Ohio In which rt alleges that its
9·6·6tp
Do vou hnt curly Dr tlard to
Buskirk . 341 Page 51.. Mid·
existing rates and charges for
- - -- - - manatt hair?
its Rural and Un incorporated
dleport .
Stop In and tlave Mlck or
9-11 -3tp
Ccmmun lty General Servlc~
Help
Wanted
Fred relax your tlalr for a
customers In Meigs Ccunty are
UNION Optical Center has
more- manageable- hair .
unreasonably low in relation to
LADY to live in and ca re tor
7 ROOM house, bath, hot water
switched to the normal winter
Us area and charges tor service
elderly
lady
startmg
Oct.
1.
furnace heat , doubl e garage,
hours as posted on your
KARR'S BARBER SHOP
with in
the
Incorporated
Good pay. nic• conditions.' ~or Sale
Lynn st. t92· 2l67 Pomerov
yellow Union discount card .
MAPLE ste reo.radio co m- outbui !ding, 77 · 100 acres,
mun icipalit ies of Metos county .
Phone 742·4681.
Barbtrl' LoCI I 401-AFL·CIO
Harri sonv ille , Dale William s.
Columbia has asked the
bination, AM·FM radio, 4
Closed Wednesday , open
DOZER and back hoe ·wur "' Comm isSion to fiJc the rates of
9-10·31c POODLE puppi es, Silver Toy , speed changer, 4 speaker
phone
742·4837.
Sa lurday.
Park view Kennels, Phone 9929·10-61p ponds and septic tanks , dit. its Rural and Unincorporated
9·12-61c WILL give away kittens . Call
sound system. Balance $78.53.
5443.
ching service; top soil. fill Community General Serv ice
SOMEONE
wanted
to
dr
ive
for
--------992-5247 .
Use our budget plan. Cal l 992·
In Me igs County et
8·15·1fCI
newspaper
route
driver
who
5 ROOMS &amp; bath , 2 slory block dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex· customers
YARD SALE. Sept. 15 and 16,
9·10·61c
7085.
the same level as the- rate In
cava
l
ing
.
Phone
992·5367.
is
hos
pital
ized.
Phone
985·
house; gas fo rced air furna ce,
Rt. 124, near Evelyn' s
9·10 6tc
effect in the- mun icipality
BUNDY trombone, excellent
Oitk Karr , Jr .
4116.
1,4 acre lot, Rt. 7 &amp; Old Chester
Grocery and Service Stat ion NO HUNTIN G or trespassing on
9·l·tfc nearest to suc h customers, and
condition,
call
949·4951.
9·1Hic
Juni or Hunt and Earl Hunt
Rd . $5,500; phone 992·3874.
thereafter to ma intain such
near Rutland.
9-10 3fc 5G UN S and 1.72 acre lot; phone
- -.tes at the lev el of rates within
B·29.ft c ~-1----------9·12·2 farms, Long Bottom .
742·3656.
SEPTIC tanks clean'ed. Miller· such municipal ity .
9.1Q.Jtp ATTE NTION LADIE S- Sell
9·10-2fp
1950 11, TDN Ford pickup ; pigs;
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Pn .·
Pre-sent rare :
Toys
&amp;
Gifts
now
lhru
OF
STATE
.
IDE
AL
5.
OUT
...
cows ; 22 rifle ; phone 247-2161. 1969 HONDA Scramb ler, 175
Me igs County :
ACRE RANCH . lake Con - 662·3035.
December with the oldest Toy
Thirty Ce-nts (JOe ) per one
2·12-Hr...
9·6·51c c.c. phone 992·7016.
chas, New Mexico. $2975 . No -~-----:-:--::-::-::
Par ly Plan In the Counlry.
LOST - lan st raw lady 's
hundred
(100 ) cubic fel!t for the
9·10.31c
Highest commissions, No
down . No interest. $25 per mo .
CONCRETE first 500 cubic Ieel , used through
pocketbook, Rl. 33 at park,
R EAOY .MI X
JU ST TAKEN IN , Sing er
Cash
Outlay.
Call
or
write
fo
r
119
mos
.
Va
cation
each mete-r each month ;
reward . Faye Stanley, phone
Sewi ng Ma chine. Will sel l for APP LE S, Fitzpatrick Or seve-n cents (7cl per one
delivered right to y.our
Pa radi se. Free Bro chure.
"Santa's Parties", Avon Ct.
797-3133 or 593-8607.
small balan ce of S36.21 or char ds. Stal e Route 689.
prolect. Fast and easy. Free hundred (100) cub ic teet for the- .
06001.
Tel.
1
12031
673-3455.
Ranchos
Lake
Conhas
:
Box
'
9·12-31p
payments may be arranged.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
2001 OD, Alameda , California est mates . Phone 992-328• 1 next 4,500 cubic feet , used
Phone Wilk esvi ll e 669.3785.
Goegleln Ready -Ml &gt;e Co . , through each meter e-ach
Phone
992-5331.
94501.
9·1-tfc
8 ._
30~
· 11C
LOST - male apricot poodle,
9.J-ttc _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
8·29.30tp
Middleport, Ohio.
m~~~he~ and one.half Cents
Harrisonville area. Reward
HAVE
immediate
opening
for
C
(7 111 c l per one hundred (100)
6·30·tf
BUN DY E fla l clar inet, good
offered. Phone 742·3592.
part time oflic:e girl ; typing 8 TRACK STER EO, fr eight
cub ic teet tor tht next 95,000
OLD house &amp; lot , can be
condit
ion.
Phone
949.2113
.
9·1Hip
damaged, in beau! iful walnut
Window
essential, shorthand he lpful
AUTOMUBILE Insurance been cubic feet , used through each
finanted ; phone 992·5786.
9-I0-31c
console . Will se ll for $101.50 or
but
not
required
;
Wr
ite
Box
Lost
your meter each month ;
9·8·61c · cancelled?
Air Conditiouers
WALKER - Bluetlck mixed, all
1
pa yS 1.50perweek. Phone992·
Sellen Cenh (7c) per one
m
.A,
operator
C·O
The
Daily
Sentinel.
s
license
?
Call
992while with black licks. black
USED CHRYSLER, 125. 000
hundred
1100) cubic feet for 111
5331.
Pomeroy,
Oh
io
-45769,
givi
ng
~66 . .
Hot Water Heaters
ears and black over tall ;
BTU LP gas fur nace with PT PLEASANT - 6 room
. 15.tfr In excess of 100,000 cubic feet ,
9-7·tfc
tul!
resume
with
references
.
6
reward ; II you know where it
duel pipe. Magic Chef used
Plumbing
used through each mete-r eactt
house, 1'11 baths , recreation - -,-"'--,....,.--previous employment, and
~
,
month ;
LP
gas ~ ra nge . See Marvin
Is or see II ; phone 992-6959 or
new
bu
ilt·in
kitchen.
room.
Electrical Work
16 " CA MPIN G TRAILER .
train ing.
SEWING Mac.hlne Service,
A Minimum Chargt for eactt
Whi le, Flatwoods, or ca ll 992·
~ ·9979 .
must sell. lea vi ng town . Da ys clean, oil , ad just, $399, ln your customer eactl monlh of One
Shasta, like new . Phone 985·
9-3-lfc
6780.
H ·61P
ph one 992 ·3502. evenings home ; phone 992·5331.
3849.
Dollar and Filly Cants lll.SOI
9-11 -31p
-:-:-:-----phone 675·2372.
9·7
-JOic
a. n .JOtc sha tl be- made.
EXPERIENCED
beaul
ifi
cian
LOST - Silver toy poodl e,
B-Jo.lf c
Bradbury :
in high s tyling needed at once.
Silver Run area . Phone 992.
First 800 cu bic fee t, per meter
Pratt's Beauty Salon, phone AN TIQUE Walnul bed, $125. Mobile Homes For Sale
7124.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANtu
per montn. 25.0c per 100 cubic
5
ROOM
house,
bath.
1
acre,
walnut
wardrobe.
$50.
Phone
9'12·3751.
tee t,
9·10-31p
'cASH paid for all ma"kes ana
Ches ler, Dhio, phone 992-2355. REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446949-2813.
9-8-61c
Next .t,200 cubic feet , per
992 -2448
4782.
Gallipolis,
John
Russell,
models of mobil e homes .
9. 12-3fp
9·12-31c
meter per month, 7.0c per \00
-Owner
&amp;
Operator.
,
Phone
area
code
61.4-.423-9531
.
Pomeroy, 0 .
tnt,
WAITRE SS wanted day and
.
&gt;·12·11C cubic
.
4·1J.tfC • HOUSE for sale In Portland, 5
Ne-xt 45 ,000 CUb iC fttt, per
night shift ; apply in person: BEAU TIFUL 6 year old gelding
meter per month , 7.Sc ptr \00
For Sale or Trade
rooms, ba th, 2 acres, $4,500. C
for show and ri de . Gentle, can
Crow's Steak House.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
BRADFORD, Aucli0&lt;1eer
cubic
teet,
Phone!'i!43·2873
.
·
be seen at Bur l R. Tennan t
wigs, mere new products
9-8-0fc
Complete Servi ce
Over 50,000 c.ublc rut, per
9-12·
121c
2 - 60,000 BTU gas stoves.
residence,
Fron
t
St.,
Mason,
coming soon. For free - - - - - meter per month. 6.5c ptr 100
Phone 949·3821
·Air Conditioners
Phone 992 -234:1 or see at 1273 demonstration, phone 992· HELP WANTED, Toy Coun - W. Va.
cubic teet .
Racine', Ohio
• Awnings
VIne St .. Middleport.
5113.
Mini mum Monthly Charge
9·12·3tp
se lors. Santa Claus jus t tol d
'Crill Bradford
9-I0-3tc
8-17-lfc
· • Underpinning
5· 1· lfc 12.00.
m.e. someth ing to tell you .
Ree-dsv ille :
He IS very bus y, this Christma s COAL , Limeston e, Excelsior
----~ -----First 2,000 cubic le-tt , per
'72 ;
Salt Wor ks, E. Main St., 'c omplete mobile home
·sE.WING
MACHINES
.
RepaiF:
meier
per month , 3l.872c per
Pomeroy, Phone 992·3891 .
So join our Playhouse Party
service - p~us giganti c
service, all makes . 992·228&lt;4. 100 cub ic feet ,
4-12.tfc
gang.
The Fabri c Shop, Pomeroy.
Nexl 98,000 cubic tut. per
'di splay of .mobile homes
Earn money and Green Stamps,
Authori zed Singer Sales and • meter per month , 9.8'22c per 100
always
available
at
...
too;
1 cubic teet ,
Service. We Sharpen Sclssors .. o ver 100.000 cub ic te-et, per
Give Sa nta Claus a helping
Bargain For You!
MILLER
J . ~ . tfc ,. meter per month , 7.872c per 100
hand ,
- -- - - - - - cubic feet .
This Christmas ' 72 .
Minimum Monthlv Charge
MOBILE
HOMES
.
PANTS &amp; JEANS
CAL L Margaret Fortune, 949.
13 .50.
1220 ~ashington Blvd.
5414 or Barbara Lam bert,
Rat es to apply lf reque-st Is
granted ;
446;3411 .
SPECIAL
423·7521
BELPRE, 0.
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
LEGAL NOTICE
Customers who reside ne-arest
9-10-lfc
Mr . and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
Buy 2 Pairs and
Bids will be accep ted by to Coolville-, Oh io :
By Mrs. Herbert Rouoh
Volunteer
Fire
Fi rst 2,000 cu bi c teet, per
Rutland
have returned home after
Get I PAIR FREE
De-partmen t for 600 h:et of 111~", meter per month , 36.176C per
Real
Estate
For
Sale
Mr . Wld Mrs. Ru~ll Roush visiting with her mother , Mrs.
400 feet of 2112 " fire hose . 100 cub ic tee-t ,
All kinds, all sizes for men ,
and children Sharon, Cindy, Ora Russell of Great Falls,
Dacron double ia cket, rubber ·
Ne-xt 8,000 cubic feet , per
LOT S ON Wright Street.
women, young men, boys
line d mild ew resistan t, 400 lb . meter per month , 11 .176&lt;: per
Pomeroy;
phone
742·5930.
David and Edward, Mr. and Mont.
and girls. Hurry to
test, nat ional standarct thread . 100 cub ic fee-t ,
8·29.121c
Mrs . Ronnie Russell and
brass rocker lug cup lings. Ma il
Next 10,000 cu bi c feet , per
POMEROY
Mrs . Ben Buckley is a patient
or submit bids to Rutland meter per mon th, 11 .676&lt;: per
daughter Mandy; Mr. and Mrs. at the Camden-Clark Hospital
'1'.
_
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
IN
HOUSE in long Bottom . phone
Would you like to make a Volunteer Fire Depar tment , 100 cub ic feet ,
. . . Phone 992 -2181
Dana Lewis attended a in Parkersburg .
985-3529.
Brown , Sec retary ,
Next 80,000 cubic feet. per
change but can't do a thing William
Rutland,
Oh
io
45775 and mark meter per month , 12.116&lt;: per
6-11
.tfc
rniscellWteous shower for Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoffman
until you sell your present outside of envelope "F Ire- Hose 100 cubic fe-et ,
Clifton and
MODERN wa lnu t slereo. AM· - - - - - - - - - - property?
THEN LIST Bid ." Bids will be opened ,
and Mrs. Steve Hagey at the of Morehead, Ky ., were
Over 100,000 cubic tee-t , per
FM radio, 4 speed changer, 4 5 ROOMS and bath, close tc
WITH US where a constant Monday, September 18, 1972 at meter per month , 8.576c per 100
home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard weekend guests of her parents,
spea
ker
sou
nd
system.
school
in
Syracuse.
Phone
992·
Hartford, W. Va.
procession of buyers will 7:30 p.m . at the regu la r cu bic feet.
Ba lance $68 .27. Use our
5162.
Russell at Wolfpen Saturday Mr. and Mrs. John Hetzer.
firemen's meeting at th e
Minimum Montttly Char511
bring
action.
lerms.
Call
992-7085.
budget
9-10-61c
firehouse In Rutland .
$3.60.
evening.
Recent visitors
Mrs.
A
CALL
Will
BRING
ALL
9-1Hic
The r ig ht is reser11ed to rejec t
Cus tom erswtlo reside nearest
PHONE 992-2156
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson Eunice Sprague at Arcadia
any or all bids.
to Midclleport. Ohio :
RACINE - 10 room house ~· DETAILS.
Wlltiam Brown,
First 2,000 cubic feet, per
MAPLE stereo.radio com.
and Chuck of Letart, W. Va. Nursing Home at Coolville
bath, basement. garage, two
Secretary meter per month , 30.0c per 100
AM.FM
radio,
4
bination,
.lots.
Phone
949.4J1
3.
spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. were Mrs. John Metzer, Mrs.
(9) 5, 8, 12, 3t cubic fee t,
speed changer, 4 speaker
4-5-lfp'
Next 98.000 cubic fe-e-t , per
Charles Lawson and family . Terry Hoffman, Mrs . Ernest SUB-CONTRACTOR wanled tor
sound sysfems . Balance
meter
per month, 9.5c per 100
8
~
R~
OO
~
M-H
O
~
U
~
S
~
E
,
~
-t
h,
~
lar~
fram ing ; phone 992·3918,
$73.45 . Use our budget terms.
NOTICE OF
Mrs. Hazel Lawson, Mr. and Whitehead and Mrs. Denver
cub ic feet ,
APPOINTMENT
Middlepor
t.
Call 992-7085.
lot, gas and electric, Rt . 1,
Over 100,000 cubic fe-et, per
Mrs . Bob Lawson and daughter Weber .
Case No. 20750 meter
9·6-61c
per month, 7.2Sc per 100
9-12-6tc
Middleport . Phone 992-2602.
Estate of Mary Wr ig ht cubic feet
Cathy spent Labor Day with
.
Mr . and Mrs. John Riebel - - - - - Dece-ased .
Minimum
Monthly Ctlarue
NEW 1972 Zlg . Zag sewing
Mrs . Lucy Davis at Charleston , and family of Pomeroy Road
Notic e Is hereby given that suo.
For
Rent
mac
hine
in
ori
g
inal
factory
Charles
w.
Miles
or
1791
Sale
W. Va .
visited recently with Mr. and
w.,o reside- nearest
ca rt on. Zig .Zag to mak e
Road , Columbus, Ohio and to Customers
3 ROOM apartm en t. un .
Pomerov
.
Oh io :
Mr . and Mrs . Herbert Sayre Mrs . D. C. Riebel.
Lerov L. Miles , Route No. 1,
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
furnished, 408 Spring Ave.,
First 2.300 cubic fee-t, per
Marengo
,
Ohio,
have
been
duly
and son David and Mrs .
monogram
s,
and
make
fan
cy
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Sellers
per month / 31.082c per
Pomeroy .
appointed Co ·E&gt;eecutors of the mete-r
100
cub
ic feet,
Dorothy Glenn spent the week of Columbus were weekend
8-10-lfc des igns with just the tw is t of a
Es tat e ot Mary Wright,
si ngl e-dial. Left in lay-away
Ne-xt
97,7 00 cubic feet , per
110
Mechanic
Street
deceased , late of Me igs County, meter per
end with Mr. and Mrs . Norman guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otis K.
month , 10.782c per .~
and never been used . Will sell
Ohio.
.
4
ROOMS
&amp;
balh
furnished
100 cub ic feet ,
Styer at Waterford . Paul Sayre Casto.
for
only
$47
cash,
or
credit
creditors
are
re-q_ulret:t
to
file
apartment. 114 Mulberry
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Over 100.000 cubic reet, per
terms available. Phone 992·
their claims with said fidu cia ry meter
also spent Labor Day week
Ave .. Pomeroy. references ;
Guests of the 0 . K. Castos
per monttt, 8.332c per 100
5641.
within four months .
feet .
phone 992-6698.
NEW LISTING
with the Styers.
Sunday were Mrs . Marge
Dates this 31St day of August, cubic
9-12-61c
Minimum Monthlv Charge
9-3-lfc
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace. Storm
1972.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mitchell of Parkins and mother, Cody
- ----SJ .OO .
doors
and
windows.
Aluminum
siding.
A
neat
house
on
a
M
I
D
W
b
ann ng · e ster
Note (l) : The proposed rates
Columbus spent the week end Dyer and Mrs. Nellie Parkins 2 BEDROOM mobile home, ai r ELECTROLUX vacuum
nice lot Only $7500.00 .
Probate Judge of said County reflect applicable escalation for
cleaner
complete
with
at
.
condit ioned , 10 miles east of
with Mrs. Bertha Robinson . • of Charleston, W. Va . Mrs .
191 S. 12, 19
cost of tuel .
COUNTRY HOME
tac hments, cordwinder and
Pomeroy
.
Phone
992·6329
.
NEAR
POMEROY
3
bedrooms
with
large
closets,
nice
Note (2) : Any customer who
VIsiting Miss "Ada Rowe Dyer is 83 years young, very
paint spray . Used but in like
9·12·ft C new
n ~e ds assistance In determining
~th,
natura
l
gas
forced
air
furnace
.
Ni
ce
kitchen
wth
lots
condition . Pay $34.45
Sunday were Mrs. Anna Wines, alert and such a lovely lady
LEGAL NOTICE
h1s nearest municipality for
of ca binet space and cook units . Rec. room , carport. Only
cash or budget plan available .
Sea led bids, subject to the purposes ot rate chtsslflcatlon
daughters Jackie and Karen , who visits the Castos at least FURNISHED 2 bedroom
117.500.00.
Phone 992·5641.
c~ ndlt l on s contain ed here in , stlould contact anv local office
apartment , a dult s on ly
Mrs . Joyce White, children once each year.
7 ACRES NEAR TOWN
Will be recei ved by the Ohio In the- county .
9·12-61c
'
Middleporl, 992·3874.
Valley Health Service Faun .
In eddltlon to the- above
Darla, Deanna , Keith and
NEARLY NEW - 4 bedrooms, l'h baths, split level
Mr. Wld Mrs . Gay Fields,
dation
, In c., Southeast Ohio change In rates , the Rural and
9·10-ftc
design. Cook un its, basement. All electric home.
TRY it . you' ll like il - The Sew
Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp local, spent Sunday evening
Eme-rgency Medical Serv ice, 19 Unin corporated Community
530,000.00.
&amp; Go Shop in 'Alfred area ; a
W. Wash ington , Athens, . Ohio , Cu.stomers would becarnt
and sons.
EXPANOO mobile home fur - ~ew
with the Castos.
NICE HOME
of polyester just
unlit 4 o'clock p.m. October 13, •ubja~t to the following
ni shed, utilities paid, Mrs. 1n ; supply
Mr. Wld Mrs. Dana Lewis of
1972, for furni sh ing ap . reconnection charge :
ow
ner,
Mrs
.
E.
T.
3
BEDROOMS
Office
space.
gas
fireplace
with
book
Pearl Williams, phone 992 · Calaway.
proximately 20 fully equipped Rtconnectlon Charge:
Clifton spent Monday with the Help Wan led
shelves. Nice modern kitchen with disposal, refrigerator·
7384 or 992·7133.
ambulances . Equipment shalt
If service under this rate
9.8.61c
freezer and modern stove with oven over. 2 car garage.
Russell Roush family and WOMAN lo live with elderly
be bid as options.
sched_ule rs discont inued at the
9-10·3tc
'
lady . Good wages, room and
StorM
doors
and
windows
.
Specification$
may
be reque't of customer, the
attended a weiner roast at
R :;;
OOM
=::hous_e_w_i..,
th_4_b_ed
roo
-ms "' SO NGS by: Joh n Mohler" board. Phone 992 -5397 or 992- 8;;-~
HOT WATER HEAT
acquired at the offi ce of o H Company shall not be under any
3507.
Portland Park.
2 baths, laundry room and hot
Four beautiful songs on
Koeplin. Director , Scuthiut obligation to resume aervlce to
3 BEDROOMS - Nice kitchen, bath. dining and large
water heat , modern, phone
Action Records (J. p. album)
Oh io Emergency Me-dical the iame customer on the same
9·12-51c
li ving. Modern gas boiler, lots of closet space. Fenced
Service, 19 w. Wnh lnoton ,. prem ises untll the customtr has
9&lt;12-2676.
No. AC 1043A, . only 12.00.
yard and carport. Only ;20,000.00.
Athens , Ohio .
IC&amp; W si de)
" Rainbow
made payment of an amount
Auto Sal es
9' 10"61 C Va
54.000.00
Warrant ies will be required equal to the minimum monthly
lley'" and '"Snowbells in Ihe
IN THE COUNTRY - 2 bedrooms, l~rge kitchen with ..
' 1967 CAMARO convertible, 396,
With each bid as specified in th.e char~• for each montll of the
Rockies" (Sacred) ' 10ur lord
specifications.
stove and refrigerator. 2 wells on good gravel road .
,.,..
standard, new paint. Phone "j AND 4 ROoM lvrnfshed ~ifti
intervenln51 period, but not to
God Physician •• and '"God's
The right Is reserved as the eJected twtlve (12) months
992-5637.
17500.00
unfurr~lshed
apartments .
Sweet Love." Pick up your
Interest of said foundation may
The ~ommlnlon will aiYt 1
RUTLAND-2 bedrooms, modern bath , nice kitchen, gas
9·1Hip
·~hone. 992·54~4.
.
•i album loday at Bill and lee's
require to reject any and all further notice of the time and
heal . Utility building, gorage. and garden near school.
4·12-IICJ
Musi
c
Center.
116
Main,
bids and to waive any In -- place of hearing, which will be
For Rent
142 ACRES
formality In bids received .
----~~~~-~
Pomeroy, Dhlo. Ask for a free
at Its office In Columbus, Ohio,
AVAILABLE trailer (mobile 4 ROOM furnished apartment demon stration, try II! you'll
Envelope containing bids unless
SALEM TOWNSHIP - Only a few miles to the new coal
the
Commlaslon
must be sealed, marked , ad . otherwise orders.
home) parking space. Inquire
and bath located on Se&lt;:ond
boy it! Free records to OJ's,
mine. 3 bedroom home, 2 barns, and several outbuildings.
dressed as follows and
evenings 992·3429.
Further Information may be
Sl .. Pomeroy ; references
address : John Mohler , Rt. 1,
Minerals and nice clear farm pond on stale route. 100
delivered to the Director, secured by lddrtnlng en
.,
9·12·61p
required ; phone 992-5293.
Bo&lt; 210, Middleport, Ohio,
acres of good clean pasture. 35 acres of meadow.
Southeast Ohio Emergency Inquiry to lht Public UIIIIIIH
9·6·1ft
45760, ph one 992·3911.
IF INTERESTED CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
Medical Servic-e, 19 w. Com million ot O~lo, 111 North
· For Sale
Washington, Athens . Ohio: "Bid High Street, Columbus, Ohio
-------9·8·61c
SEE.
WE'
ll
LOCATE
THE
LINES
AND
SHOW
YOU
l972 SUZUKI GTJso excellent 4 ~ OOM apartment , modern - - - - - - - - - on fully equipped ambulances 43215.
THROUGH.
THIS
WILL
SAVE
YOUR
TIME
.
AND
condition, manY extras
and equipment options."
kitchen,
stove
and FR IG IDAIRE Refrigerator, 10
MONEY.
+++
Sacrifice at 57(5. Phone 667:
Tnt bid 'must be coinplete for
PubllshtG by: tolumble G••
refrigerator. furnace . Mid · years old , good condition, $75;
fully equipped ambulances and of Ohio, Inc ., " .. orth Front
3364 or 667·3953. Must sel:.
phone 9&lt;9-3873.
dleport. Ph0&lt;1e 992·2676.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
all equipm·ent options .
992-3325
Street, Columbus, Ohio 432U.
9-12-6tc
9-8-61p
:__
9-_:::
12·31c
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
----~-~
lfl ·12,1t
(;J 12, 19, u, 3tc
WORK Wanted - housework or

· BARNEY

I
I
I

~L.L.!

E
E
WINNIE WINKLE
, .., ' &gt;UU

KNOW HOW

0~ I 'DIMKE

M'1SELF USEFUL ,
MUCH l LOVE YOU, WINNIE. I'MAN OLD
DEAR ... I WANT ID WORKHORSE FROM
DO WHA1'S RI$11T
WAY BACK!

FORlOu ... eur

At/08 .

I KNOW \OU A~ 1 6ES51E. THOUGHT SO
THAI"S WHY l IHOUGHT
MYSELF... FOR
YOU WERE CONTENT ID AW~ILE ... BUT
RETIRE FROM THE
IT DIDN 'T WORK.
HU$TLE AND llU$TLE
I 'M R55TLES&amp;1
OF OUR BUSINESS!
BORED...•

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

-----~---

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Fairview Reedsville
News Notes News, Notes

haa plent4 of

room on the other

~ome

Wh4

nitwit

40U park
LjOt.lr car

~hopper

in front

acres~

ofm4

mine!

drive? V":f t

parked

I DOli' HRROLY
TtilNK SO, Uf'tCLE

WENDELL! JUST

THIMKitl' 'BOUT THAT
CREEP GIVES ME
ASWIFT PAIH!

LEGAL NOTICE

CARRIERS
WANTED

ACROSS

HANDS TIED FOR
LACK OF CASH?

a trial

DICK TRACY
VOU NOTICE A SMALL
AC.E , SA'f, 9 OR 10?

rule

6. Song .
refrain
7. Wing
(Lat.)

zo.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

f!ol...-----.....--.......' _______

.

ANP HMAL 05ft&gt; AN O\II·Of'·St4.TE
AIIPA COI'fP AIXOUNT AS A ~PEUNE FOR
THAT .STOlEN rou6H •••"IIQ!; f!; A Wlf{ETAP
TAPE Of TilE OOL

W&gt;'/, 1!115 TIES KElT TO ••urAL
HE'S STILL
HEIITAI., TilE CORP:iE!

EM8ElllE~ .

l •y lltl"ojHf /\II Ntllll

B. Pleasant
(4wds.)
9. Authorize

21. Not a
wbit
22. Heraldic
wreath
23.Shabby
(sl.)
15. Burdened
28. Reverber·
ate
27. Pastry
goody
28, Actor

UMe.....,blethtse four Jumbleo,

I
Yesterday'• Alllwer
10, Grew
bicuspids
16. Refuse
18. Drive
21. Plank
23. Habitual
24. llrlan-.
made
fabric
25. llrllss
Turner
27. Rotated

~ION ON fOIHC
I'II'~IRI!NT "TRIP&lt;!!~ ...

POII'f Ml&lt; M! WHY!

AMAGioiETl

• :.::.'%.;:~·-

I

DYADD

I

tPANNKJ

~

I [) [ J I

30. Explosive
liquid
(colloq.)
31. One of the
Aliens
33. Headland
( var.)
36. Floor
coverins
37. Calendar
abbrevla·
lion

J I

t

BOUJ'ID
'l

.A

I

I [j

II

HOW HE LIKE!/
TO SMOKE..

orranre
I I aurre~ted

Now
the circled !etten
to form the IUrpriM wwer, ..
br the above Cllloon.

IPrilllll--... 1WITH "0-( I l I J-[TI"
, (Aalwen lo•orro•)

Ye••erd.1'•

!

Ju•b1"' MANGE CHICK ORIOU
AJ.wer1 Co11lrl be lou•e

STANZA

habifl in}opan - KIMONOS

Will
28.Rulned
32. Colorado
IndlaD ·
33. Initial! of
the New

I HAVE A
SURPRISE FOR

You ...

·34. Wee bird
35. Non·
eccleslas·
tic
37, School
lubj.
SB. Comfort·
able
(2wds.)
UI'JCLe?IP
DIDN'T ?t!~M
TO I'NJOY IT··
....1 THi PLACI!
Dtf!W "IM LIKe

TCHAB

(

Deal

WEi VI!'ITI! P THI!
6!N!RAl MONKTOfol_

=

, , tii iJ!I I££

one Iotter to each oquore, to
form four ordinary wordt.

DOWN
1. Dia·
phanous
2. Word
for
Dolly
3. Attractive
(colloq,)
(4wds.)
4. Altar
constella·
Uon
5. Imperial

12. Actress
Dorothy
13. Lohen·
grin's
wife
H . Nebraska
river
15. Region of
England
16.Through
· (comb.
form )
17.SROproduction
18. Boarder
Turkish

~================9=-7=-6~1~c~~~~====~~;;::~

ON YOUR DIAL

~·

~&amp;Mffi~;IJ..I ::::!!:!! -J

39. Gumbo
U. Refreshed
41. Inert gas

1.Home of
the Mets
5. Type of
·hawk
11. Conduct

The Daily Sentinel

··~
·wMP0/1390

.. .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

of

We talk.to JOU

~Mf·~~tt'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to

work lt:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFBLLOW

Ia
One leiter simply stand&amp; for another. In this sample A Ia
wed for !he three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Sirille I~
apo.ttrophos, the lensth and formation of the words Ill Ill
hints. Each day tho code letters are dift'erent.

JUST WHAT I NEEDED... A

60WL FULL OF NUMBERS !

CRYPTOQUOTBS
XHIKHDXJH
MJZD's

•

YN

W J H Y D.S Y H

XN

DSK

WZORGKHD

DYEKHD
XN

JQ

N A X QD

Yellercla,.o •~aote: cHARITY SEES· THE

NOT"THE .CAUSE.-GERIIriAN SAYING

(0 lt'll Jtinl" Ftalono S7ndl&lt;alt, !no.)

THIS 15 A NEW DOG FOOO
WITH Q-800 ADDED PLUS
R-455, M·l7 AND W~9000

JQ

YB!t.-

L:::::::.:::~~~~~~

NBBD - ·

�\

8- The OailyStntinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, O., Sepl . l2, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!IVANT ADS .
INFORMATION

.
t

·.s P.M.

Monday Deadline 9 a.m .

Of
QUALITY

Cancellation - Corrections
Will b£o·accepted until 9 a.m . for.

.'

Day of Publ ication

REGULATIONS

• The' Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads,.
deemed
obje ct ional.
The
publisher will not be responsible

tor more than one incorrect'
Insertion .

R,t,TES

t For Wan' Ad Service

5 cents per ·word one inserrJon
Min imum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three

conncutlve lnstrtloris.

ta cents per ' word sflt con·

secutlve Insertions .•
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads. and ads paid within 1G days .

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word min i mum .
Each addJtlanal word 2c.

BLIND

Additional

2SC

ld)S

Charge

per

Advertisement.
OFFICE HOU'IIt \
~ 8 : 30a.m,.. to 5:00.p.m, Oallv.
1 : 30 a .m . to 12 :00 Noon

Po11eroy
Motor Co.

2

OEADl.INES
Day Before Publica flo

•

12895 .
1970 CHEVROLET
Monte Carlo, loc:ai l·owner car and less than :11 ,000 miles/
new white·wall tires, factory air conditioned , aqu~ fini sh,
bla ck vinyl top, disc brakes, power steering, turbo·
hydramatic, radio, wheel covers, truly luxur y and
PRICED TO SUIT!
'
1971 PINTO FORD
Sl79l
2-door. local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires. clean in.
terlor. green finish, radio, 2000cc engine, 4 speed.
1970 CAMARO
12295
Hardtop coupe, local low mileage, 1-owner car. 350 v.e
engine, 4 speed transmission, power steering , (not
teenage driven). green vinyl bucket seats, console, rear
air deflector, sharp gr~n finish , rad io. Sharp Is the word!

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

•PMI!ROY, OHIO

Satur~a y.

'Not1ce
YARD SALE, Tvesday and
Wednesday, Sept. 12 and 13.
Fourth St., Racine. Clothing,
Men's,
women ' s
and
children's. All sizes. good
c0&lt;1dlllon. Old bottles, electri c
churn , Malle chain saw, small
6: Coleman lamp and heater ,
never used ; cow milker ,
complete, fence charger,
never used ; gas refrigerator
trailer :
Philcc
for
refrigerator
and
de·
:humidif ier.
9· 11·31c

Employment Wanier

Notice

BLOC K Laying by contract .
Phone 997 3364.
9.7.12tc

Wanted To Rent

For Sale

L f\1-!1\171:'. 'lo JJ :lce 11 • M•ddiC'port . CANNING
Prt.' l • ~ra bly

llCo) l

EICclri c. 99:1.5468.

lm periil l
9 !'J.:Jic

lorndl oes and
mangoes . Ger"'ld inc Cleland,
Racine, Ohio.
8-16-tfc

1970 HONDA Cl 350, low
mileage, excellent cond ition,
2 helme ts included . For more
OLD Furnit ure, oak tables
information ca ll 985-3989.
organs, di shes, clock s, bras;
9-10·3tp
1
~":11~ o;_,colpt ~~~~use~flds. 1972 OLOS Cutlass. 2 dr . HT, 350
Pomeroy. Ohio. Cal{992 .62714• cu. m., v.s, 4 barrel car~ ..
· . dual ex hau st , ~utomat1c
6-28-ffc
tr ansm ission, power steering ,
power
brakes, factory ta pe
INT ERESTE D in buy1119 land, 1
ac re or more in Eastern deck.._ _deluxe mOdel interior,
School Di stri ct, house not forc ed air .induction hood ; A-1
importanl. Cal l 985·4117 condition ; phone 992·2064 .
9-I0-61c
any tim e.
9· 12-3tp
CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
zig -zag sewing machine . For
sewin g s tretch fabric s,
Sales
1955 CHEV ROLET 2 ton lruck, buttonholes·, fancy designs;
elc. Pain I sl ighlly blemi shed .
1200. Ca ll 949-4717 .
9 12 3t
Choice of carrying case or
- · P sewi ng stand. S49.80 cash or
- - -- - - - ler ms available. Phone 9921970 OUSTER aulo, 6 cyl. Phone 5641.
9-10-61c
9&lt;17 5468.
9.12.31c - - - - - -- - - ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe
·-'----- - - model. Complete with all
"69 DODGE Coronet. ps , pb.
bu ckets, automatic, vlnrl top, c lean ing attachments and
low mi leage, excellen con. uses paper bag s. Slightly used
difion. Leaving state, must but cleans and looks like new.
se ll . Phone 992·7753 afler 4 Will se ll for $37 .25 cas h or
te rms available. Phone 992p.m.
9-11 3tc 5641.
- - - -- - - 9-I0.61c.69 PLYMOUTH GTX 440, 4 -----~--speed ; phone 992-7624.
CO NTEMPORARY Console
9·8-61p Slereo. AM·FM radio. 4 speed
--------changer . 4 spe,a ker sound
sysle m . Walnut finished
1967 FORD Galaxie 500, 390 cu.
veneer cabinet. Balance
in . two door hardtop, power
$66.39. Use our budget plan .
steer ing. Phone 992.7016.
9·10·31&lt; Ca ll 992-7085.

Wanteo To Buy

Auto

Business Services.

Lost

TH ' PORE SOU L··
ELVINEY WENT OFF
TO VISIT HER MAW IN
CRVSTAL S PRINGS AN'
LEFT LU KEY HOME
TO ROOT FER
HISSE LF

I'LL FIX UP
A BASKET OF
GOOD IES .AN'
'IE CAN TAKE
IT OVER .
TO HIM

I 1LL

F IX
TH'GOODIES

tlfi!v
-:_- ·

.EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
OpenS Till
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

•ROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

CONSTRUCTION,~==============~

PRICE
roofing, porch repair and
electrical ; phone 742·4286.
8·16·301c

BACKHOE AND DOZER work)
Septic tanks Installed. Georqe .
(.Bill I Pullins. Phone 992-2~/Q...
4·25·1fC
WILL CUT ·o r trim trees,
reasonable ; also clean out
ba sement s,
attics
and
cellars; phone 949·3221.
8-29·301c

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Esllmates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
!rucks and low.boy lor hire.
See Bob or Roger Jelhlrs,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9925232.

largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathen Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS. INC.
·
Pomoroy

Real Estate For Sale

..

ABLISC·

RIG~T t I C&gt;ON'T SEE r"J&gt;J:71:'1"iu~~t:;'r;r----9-i21
~OW T~EV bO IT 1 rT

1'/E ~VEAUNIQ U E,NIN E·
MONTH, WORK·STUbY
RANCII MANAGEMI'NT
TRA INING PRO&lt;?RAM
~eRE AT TEXAS

!RUTALilY...

TAKES THAT LONG,,

IIJQ, PJ.MA . IT W~
"Tt-IEIR PAREN1'G WHO

BUT BEN, I "1l10f..IGHT
YOU WERE Wl11-l
1\-IE FI?LICE

VIOLENCE,

CAMPUS CLATI'ER

DIDN'T .1..11&lt;£ 1HE WAY
I W/16 UMPIRING .

A1H£TIC

LE.AGUE.

CI/~ISTIAN

Ph. 992-2174

SURELY "R£
L.tTT1.£ i..EAGUE

SEE US FOR: Awnings; i)onn•
doors and windows, c.\rporls./
marqvees, alum Inurn 'l;ldlng
and railing. "A. Jacob, salet
representative . For free
estimates, ··phone Charleol
lisle, Syracvse, V. V.j
John•on and Son, Inc. · ·
3·2-Ht

BALL PLAYEI&lt;'S
DIDN'r ro 1HI5.

A
A

S:t.e\t:N

CR:.l. a:::K
ANDI\LI.ls

-AN ' IT WINDS

THISAWA'i AN'
THATAWA'I --

LEGAL NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE
Public Not ice Is hereby given
babysitting, Elm &amp; Broadway
that Columb ia Gu of OhiO, Inc .
~1'"-...-l'":'l
. ~ '
5 ROOM house for sal e, one
Streets, Front apartment
ha t iled a Complaint with the
third acre ground , fr ont
downs ta irs, Rac ine. Ohio.
Publi c Utilities Commission of
( ' .. 1
.
porch. fu ll basement. S. n
Ohio In which rt alleges that its
9·6·6tp
Do vou hnt curly Dr tlard to
Buskirk . 341 Page 51.. Mid·
existing rates and charges for
- - -- - - manatt hair?
its Rural and Un incorporated
dleport .
Stop In and tlave Mlck or
9-11 -3tp
Ccmmun lty General Servlc~
Help
Wanted
Fred relax your tlalr for a
customers In Meigs Ccunty are
UNION Optical Center has
more- manageable- hair .
unreasonably low in relation to
LADY to live in and ca re tor
7 ROOM house, bath, hot water
switched to the normal winter
Us area and charges tor service
elderly
lady
startmg
Oct.
1.
furnace heat , doubl e garage,
hours as posted on your
KARR'S BARBER SHOP
with in
the
Incorporated
Good pay. nic• conditions.' ~or Sale
Lynn st. t92· 2l67 Pomerov
yellow Union discount card .
MAPLE ste reo.radio co m- outbui !ding, 77 · 100 acres,
mun icipalit ies of Metos county .
Phone 742·4681.
Barbtrl' LoCI I 401-AFL·CIO
Harri sonv ille , Dale William s.
Columbia has asked the
bination, AM·FM radio, 4
Closed Wednesday , open
DOZER and back hoe ·wur "' Comm isSion to fiJc the rates of
9-10·31c POODLE puppi es, Silver Toy , speed changer, 4 speaker
phone
742·4837.
Sa lurday.
Park view Kennels, Phone 9929·10-61p ponds and septic tanks , dit. its Rural and Unincorporated
9·12-61c WILL give away kittens . Call
sound system. Balance $78.53.
5443.
ching service; top soil. fill Community General Serv ice
SOMEONE
wanted
to
dr
ive
for
--------992-5247 .
Use our budget plan. Cal l 992·
In Me igs County et
8·15·1fCI
newspaper
route
driver
who
5 ROOMS &amp; bath , 2 slory block dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex· customers
YARD SALE. Sept. 15 and 16,
9·10·61c
7085.
the same level as the- rate In
cava
l
ing
.
Phone
992·5367.
is
hos
pital
ized.
Phone
985·
house; gas fo rced air furna ce,
Rt. 124, near Evelyn' s
9·10 6tc
effect in the- mun icipality
BUNDY trombone, excellent
Oitk Karr , Jr .
4116.
1,4 acre lot, Rt. 7 &amp; Old Chester
Grocery and Service Stat ion NO HUNTIN G or trespassing on
9·l·tfc nearest to suc h customers, and
condition,
call
949·4951.
9·1Hic
Juni or Hunt and Earl Hunt
Rd . $5,500; phone 992·3874.
thereafter to ma intain such
near Rutland.
9-10 3fc 5G UN S and 1.72 acre lot; phone
- -.tes at the lev el of rates within
B·29.ft c ~-1----------9·12·2 farms, Long Bottom .
742·3656.
SEPTIC tanks clean'ed. Miller· such municipal ity .
9.1Q.Jtp ATTE NTION LADIE S- Sell
9·10-2fp
1950 11, TDN Ford pickup ; pigs;
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Pn .·
Pre-sent rare :
Toys
&amp;
Gifts
now
lhru
OF
STATE
.
IDE
AL
5.
OUT
...
cows ; 22 rifle ; phone 247-2161. 1969 HONDA Scramb ler, 175
Me igs County :
ACRE RANCH . lake Con - 662·3035.
December with the oldest Toy
Thirty Ce-nts (JOe ) per one
2·12-Hr...
9·6·51c c.c. phone 992·7016.
chas, New Mexico. $2975 . No -~-----:-:--::-::-::
Par ly Plan In the Counlry.
LOST - lan st raw lady 's
hundred
(100 ) cubic fel!t for the
9·10.31c
Highest commissions, No
down . No interest. $25 per mo .
CONCRETE first 500 cubic Ieel , used through
pocketbook, Rl. 33 at park,
R EAOY .MI X
JU ST TAKEN IN , Sing er
Cash
Outlay.
Call
or
write
fo
r
119
mos
.
Va
cation
each mete-r each month ;
reward . Faye Stanley, phone
Sewi ng Ma chine. Will sel l for APP LE S, Fitzpatrick Or seve-n cents (7cl per one
delivered right to y.our
Pa radi se. Free Bro chure.
"Santa's Parties", Avon Ct.
797-3133 or 593-8607.
small balan ce of S36.21 or char ds. Stal e Route 689.
prolect. Fast and easy. Free hundred (100) cub ic teet for the- .
06001.
Tel.
1
12031
673-3455.
Ranchos
Lake
Conhas
:
Box
'
9·12-31p
payments may be arranged.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
2001 OD, Alameda , California est mates . Phone 992-328• 1 next 4,500 cubic feet , used
Phone Wilk esvi ll e 669.3785.
Goegleln Ready -Ml &gt;e Co . , through each meter e-ach
Phone
992-5331.
94501.
9·1-tfc
8 ._
30~
· 11C
LOST - male apricot poodle,
9.J-ttc _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
8·29.30tp
Middleport, Ohio.
m~~~he~ and one.half Cents
Harrisonville area. Reward
HAVE
immediate
opening
for
C
(7 111 c l per one hundred (100)
6·30·tf
BUN DY E fla l clar inet, good
offered. Phone 742·3592.
part time oflic:e girl ; typing 8 TRACK STER EO, fr eight
cub ic teet tor tht next 95,000
OLD house &amp; lot , can be
condit
ion.
Phone
949.2113
.
9·1Hip
damaged, in beau! iful walnut
Window
essential, shorthand he lpful
AUTOMUBILE Insurance been cubic feet , used through each
finanted ; phone 992·5786.
9-I0-31c
console . Will se ll for $101.50 or
but
not
required
;
Wr
ite
Box
Lost
your meter each month ;
9·8·61c · cancelled?
Air Conditiouers
WALKER - Bluetlck mixed, all
1
pa yS 1.50perweek. Phone992·
Sellen Cenh (7c) per one
m
.A,
operator
C·O
The
Daily
Sentinel.
s
license
?
Call
992while with black licks. black
USED CHRYSLER, 125. 000
hundred
1100) cubic feet for 111
5331.
Pomeroy,
Oh
io
-45769,
givi
ng
~66 . .
Hot Water Heaters
ears and black over tall ;
BTU LP gas fur nace with PT PLEASANT - 6 room
. 15.tfr In excess of 100,000 cubic feet ,
9-7·tfc
tul!
resume
with
references
.
6
reward ; II you know where it
duel pipe. Magic Chef used
Plumbing
used through each mete-r eactt
house, 1'11 baths , recreation - -,-"'--,....,.--previous employment, and
~
,
month ;
LP
gas ~ ra nge . See Marvin
Is or see II ; phone 992-6959 or
new
bu
ilt·in
kitchen.
room.
Electrical Work
16 " CA MPIN G TRAILER .
train ing.
SEWING Mac.hlne Service,
A Minimum Chargt for eactt
Whi le, Flatwoods, or ca ll 992·
~ ·9979 .
must sell. lea vi ng town . Da ys clean, oil , ad just, $399, ln your customer eactl monlh of One
Shasta, like new . Phone 985·
9-3-lfc
6780.
H ·61P
ph one 992 ·3502. evenings home ; phone 992·5331.
3849.
Dollar and Filly Cants lll.SOI
9-11 -31p
-:-:-:-----phone 675·2372.
9·7
-JOic
a. n .JOtc sha tl be- made.
EXPERIENCED
beaul
ifi
cian
LOST - Silver toy poodl e,
B-Jo.lf c
Bradbury :
in high s tyling needed at once.
Silver Run area . Phone 992.
First 800 cu bic fee t, per meter
Pratt's Beauty Salon, phone AN TIQUE Walnul bed, $125. Mobile Homes For Sale
7124.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANtu
per montn. 25.0c per 100 cubic
5
ROOM
house,
bath.
1
acre,
walnut
wardrobe.
$50.
Phone
9'12·3751.
tee t,
9·10-31p
'cASH paid for all ma"kes ana
Ches ler, Dhio, phone 992-2355. REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446949-2813.
9-8-61c
Next .t,200 cubic feet , per
992 -2448
4782.
Gallipolis,
John
Russell,
models of mobil e homes .
9. 12-3fp
9·12-31c
meter per month, 7.0c per \00
-Owner
&amp;
Operator.
,
Phone
area
code
61.4-.423-9531
.
Pomeroy, 0 .
tnt,
WAITRE SS wanted day and
.
&gt;·12·11C cubic
.
4·1J.tfC • HOUSE for sale In Portland, 5
Ne-xt 45 ,000 CUb iC fttt, per
night shift ; apply in person: BEAU TIFUL 6 year old gelding
meter per month , 7.Sc ptr \00
For Sale or Trade
rooms, ba th, 2 acres, $4,500. C
for show and ri de . Gentle, can
Crow's Steak House.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
BRADFORD, Aucli0&lt;1eer
cubic
teet,
Phone!'i!43·2873
.
·
be seen at Bur l R. Tennan t
wigs, mere new products
9-8-0fc
Complete Servi ce
Over 50,000 c.ublc rut, per
9-12·
121c
2 - 60,000 BTU gas stoves.
residence,
Fron
t
St.,
Mason,
coming soon. For free - - - - - meter per month. 6.5c ptr 100
Phone 949·3821
·Air Conditioners
Phone 992 -234:1 or see at 1273 demonstration, phone 992· HELP WANTED, Toy Coun - W. Va.
cubic teet .
Racine', Ohio
• Awnings
VIne St .. Middleport.
5113.
Mini mum Monthly Charge
9·12·3tp
se lors. Santa Claus jus t tol d
'Crill Bradford
9-I0-3tc
8-17-lfc
· • Underpinning
5· 1· lfc 12.00.
m.e. someth ing to tell you .
Ree-dsv ille :
He IS very bus y, this Christma s COAL , Limeston e, Excelsior
----~ -----First 2,000 cubic le-tt , per
'72 ;
Salt Wor ks, E. Main St., 'c omplete mobile home
·sE.WING
MACHINES
.
RepaiF:
meier
per month , 3l.872c per
Pomeroy, Phone 992·3891 .
So join our Playhouse Party
service - p~us giganti c
service, all makes . 992·228&lt;4. 100 cub ic feet ,
4-12.tfc
gang.
The Fabri c Shop, Pomeroy.
Nexl 98,000 cubic tut. per
'di splay of .mobile homes
Earn money and Green Stamps,
Authori zed Singer Sales and • meter per month , 9.8'22c per 100
always
available
at
...
too;
1 cubic teet ,
Service. We Sharpen Sclssors .. o ver 100.000 cub ic te-et, per
Give Sa nta Claus a helping
Bargain For You!
MILLER
J . ~ . tfc ,. meter per month , 7.872c per 100
hand ,
- -- - - - - - cubic feet .
This Christmas ' 72 .
Minimum Monthlv Charge
MOBILE
HOMES
.
PANTS &amp; JEANS
CAL L Margaret Fortune, 949.
13 .50.
1220 ~ashington Blvd.
5414 or Barbara Lam bert,
Rat es to apply lf reque-st Is
granted ;
446;3411 .
SPECIAL
423·7521
BELPRE, 0.
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
LEGAL NOTICE
Customers who reside ne-arest
9-10-lfc
Mr . and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
Buy 2 Pairs and
Bids will be accep ted by to Coolville-, Oh io :
By Mrs. Herbert Rouoh
Volunteer
Fire
Fi rst 2,000 cu bi c teet, per
Rutland
have returned home after
Get I PAIR FREE
De-partmen t for 600 h:et of 111~", meter per month , 36.176C per
Real
Estate
For
Sale
Mr . Wld Mrs. Ru~ll Roush visiting with her mother , Mrs.
400 feet of 2112 " fire hose . 100 cub ic tee-t ,
All kinds, all sizes for men ,
and children Sharon, Cindy, Ora Russell of Great Falls,
Dacron double ia cket, rubber ·
Ne-xt 8,000 cubic feet , per
LOT S ON Wright Street.
women, young men, boys
line d mild ew resistan t, 400 lb . meter per month , 11 .176&lt;: per
Pomeroy;
phone
742·5930.
David and Edward, Mr. and Mont.
and girls. Hurry to
test, nat ional standarct thread . 100 cub ic fee-t ,
8·29.121c
Mrs . Ronnie Russell and
brass rocker lug cup lings. Ma il
Next 10,000 cu bi c feet , per
POMEROY
Mrs . Ben Buckley is a patient
or submit bids to Rutland meter per mon th, 11 .676&lt;: per
daughter Mandy; Mr. and Mrs. at the Camden-Clark Hospital
'1'.
_
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
IN
HOUSE in long Bottom . phone
Would you like to make a Volunteer Fire Depar tment , 100 cub ic feet ,
. . . Phone 992 -2181
Dana Lewis attended a in Parkersburg .
985-3529.
Brown , Sec retary ,
Next 80,000 cubic feet. per
change but can't do a thing William
Rutland,
Oh
io
45775 and mark meter per month , 12.116&lt;: per
6-11
.tfc
rniscellWteous shower for Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoffman
until you sell your present outside of envelope "F Ire- Hose 100 cubic fe-et ,
Clifton and
MODERN wa lnu t slereo. AM· - - - - - - - - - - property?
THEN LIST Bid ." Bids will be opened ,
and Mrs. Steve Hagey at the of Morehead, Ky ., were
Over 100,000 cubic tee-t , per
FM radio, 4 speed changer, 4 5 ROOMS and bath, close tc
WITH US where a constant Monday, September 18, 1972 at meter per month , 8.576c per 100
home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard weekend guests of her parents,
spea
ker
sou
nd
system.
school
in
Syracuse.
Phone
992·
Hartford, W. Va.
procession of buyers will 7:30 p.m . at the regu la r cu bic feet.
Ba lance $68 .27. Use our
5162.
Russell at Wolfpen Saturday Mr. and Mrs. John Hetzer.
firemen's meeting at th e
Minimum Montttly Char511
bring
action.
lerms.
Call
992-7085.
budget
9-10-61c
firehouse In Rutland .
$3.60.
evening.
Recent visitors
Mrs.
A
CALL
Will
BRING
ALL
9-1Hic
The r ig ht is reser11ed to rejec t
Cus tom erswtlo reside nearest
PHONE 992-2156
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson Eunice Sprague at Arcadia
any or all bids.
to Midclleport. Ohio :
RACINE - 10 room house ~· DETAILS.
Wlltiam Brown,
First 2,000 cubic feet, per
MAPLE stereo.radio com.
and Chuck of Letart, W. Va. Nursing Home at Coolville
bath, basement. garage, two
Secretary meter per month , 30.0c per 100
AM.FM
radio,
4
bination,
.lots.
Phone
949.4J1
3.
spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. were Mrs. John Metzer, Mrs.
(9) 5, 8, 12, 3t cubic fee t,
speed changer, 4 speaker
4-5-lfp'
Next 98.000 cubic fe-e-t , per
Charles Lawson and family . Terry Hoffman, Mrs . Ernest SUB-CONTRACTOR wanled tor
sound sysfems . Balance
meter
per month, 9.5c per 100
8
~
R~
OO
~
M-H
O
~
U
~
S
~
E
,
~
-t
h,
~
lar~
fram ing ; phone 992·3918,
$73.45 . Use our budget terms.
NOTICE OF
Mrs. Hazel Lawson, Mr. and Whitehead and Mrs. Denver
cub ic feet ,
APPOINTMENT
Middlepor
t.
Call 992-7085.
lot, gas and electric, Rt . 1,
Over 100,000 cubic fe-et, per
Mrs . Bob Lawson and daughter Weber .
Case No. 20750 meter
9·6-61c
per month, 7.2Sc per 100
9-12-6tc
Middleport . Phone 992-2602.
Estate of Mary Wr ig ht cubic feet
Cathy spent Labor Day with
.
Mr . and Mrs. John Riebel - - - - - Dece-ased .
Minimum
Monthly Ctlarue
NEW 1972 Zlg . Zag sewing
Mrs . Lucy Davis at Charleston , and family of Pomeroy Road
Notic e Is hereby given that suo.
For
Rent
mac
hine
in
ori
g
inal
factory
Charles
w.
Miles
or
1791
Sale
W. Va .
visited recently with Mr. and
w.,o reside- nearest
ca rt on. Zig .Zag to mak e
Road , Columbus, Ohio and to Customers
3 ROOM apartm en t. un .
Pomerov
.
Oh io :
Mr . and Mrs . Herbert Sayre Mrs . D. C. Riebel.
Lerov L. Miles , Route No. 1,
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
furnished, 408 Spring Ave.,
First 2.300 cubic fee-t, per
Marengo
,
Ohio,
have
been
duly
and son David and Mrs .
monogram
s,
and
make
fan
cy
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Sellers
per month / 31.082c per
Pomeroy .
appointed Co ·E&gt;eecutors of the mete-r
100
cub
ic feet,
Dorothy Glenn spent the week of Columbus were weekend
8-10-lfc des igns with just the tw is t of a
Es tat e ot Mary Wright,
si ngl e-dial. Left in lay-away
Ne-xt
97,7 00 cubic feet , per
110
Mechanic
Street
deceased , late of Me igs County, meter per
end with Mr. and Mrs . Norman guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otis K.
month , 10.782c per .~
and never been used . Will sell
Ohio.
.
4
ROOMS
&amp;
balh
furnished
100 cub ic feet ,
Styer at Waterford . Paul Sayre Casto.
for
only
$47
cash,
or
credit
creditors
are
re-q_ulret:t
to
file
apartment. 114 Mulberry
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Over 100.000 cubic reet, per
terms available. Phone 992·
their claims with said fidu cia ry meter
also spent Labor Day week
Ave .. Pomeroy. references ;
Guests of the 0 . K. Castos
per monttt, 8.332c per 100
5641.
within four months .
feet .
phone 992-6698.
NEW LISTING
with the Styers.
Sunday were Mrs . Marge
Dates this 31St day of August, cubic
9-12-61c
Minimum Monthlv Charge
9-3-lfc
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace. Storm
1972.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mitchell of Parkins and mother, Cody
- ----SJ .OO .
doors
and
windows.
Aluminum
siding.
A
neat
house
on
a
M
I
D
W
b
ann ng · e ster
Note (l) : The proposed rates
Columbus spent the week end Dyer and Mrs. Nellie Parkins 2 BEDROOM mobile home, ai r ELECTROLUX vacuum
nice lot Only $7500.00 .
Probate Judge of said County reflect applicable escalation for
cleaner
complete
with
at
.
condit ioned , 10 miles east of
with Mrs. Bertha Robinson . • of Charleston, W. Va . Mrs .
191 S. 12, 19
cost of tuel .
COUNTRY HOME
tac hments, cordwinder and
Pomeroy
.
Phone
992·6329
.
NEAR
POMEROY
3
bedrooms
with
large
closets,
nice
Note (2) : Any customer who
VIsiting Miss "Ada Rowe Dyer is 83 years young, very
paint spray . Used but in like
9·12·ft C new
n ~e ds assistance In determining
~th,
natura
l
gas
forced
air
furnace
.
Ni
ce
kitchen
wth
lots
condition . Pay $34.45
Sunday were Mrs. Anna Wines, alert and such a lovely lady
LEGAL NOTICE
h1s nearest municipality for
of ca binet space and cook units . Rec. room , carport. Only
cash or budget plan available .
Sea led bids, subject to the purposes ot rate chtsslflcatlon
daughters Jackie and Karen , who visits the Castos at least FURNISHED 2 bedroom
117.500.00.
Phone 992·5641.
c~ ndlt l on s contain ed here in , stlould contact anv local office
apartment , a dult s on ly
Mrs . Joyce White, children once each year.
7 ACRES NEAR TOWN
Will be recei ved by the Ohio In the- county .
9·12-61c
'
Middleporl, 992·3874.
Valley Health Service Faun .
In eddltlon to the- above
Darla, Deanna , Keith and
NEARLY NEW - 4 bedrooms, l'h baths, split level
Mr. Wld Mrs . Gay Fields,
dation
, In c., Southeast Ohio change In rates , the Rural and
9·10-ftc
design. Cook un its, basement. All electric home.
TRY it . you' ll like il - The Sew
Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp local, spent Sunday evening
Eme-rgency Medical Serv ice, 19 Unin corporated Community
530,000.00.
&amp; Go Shop in 'Alfred area ; a
W. Wash ington , Athens, . Ohio , Cu.stomers would becarnt
and sons.
EXPANOO mobile home fur - ~ew
with the Castos.
NICE HOME
of polyester just
unlit 4 o'clock p.m. October 13, •ubja~t to the following
ni shed, utilities paid, Mrs. 1n ; supply
Mr. Wld Mrs. Dana Lewis of
1972, for furni sh ing ap . reconnection charge :
ow
ner,
Mrs
.
E.
T.
3
BEDROOMS
Office
space.
gas
fireplace
with
book
Pearl Williams, phone 992 · Calaway.
proximately 20 fully equipped Rtconnectlon Charge:
Clifton spent Monday with the Help Wan led
shelves. Nice modern kitchen with disposal, refrigerator·
7384 or 992·7133.
ambulances . Equipment shalt
If service under this rate
9.8.61c
freezer and modern stove with oven over. 2 car garage.
Russell Roush family and WOMAN lo live with elderly
be bid as options.
sched_ule rs discont inued at the
9-10·3tc
'
lady . Good wages, room and
StorM
doors
and
windows
.
Specification$
may
be reque't of customer, the
attended a weiner roast at
R :;;
OOM
=::hous_e_w_i..,
th_4_b_ed
roo
-ms "' SO NGS by: Joh n Mohler" board. Phone 992 -5397 or 992- 8;;-~
HOT WATER HEAT
acquired at the offi ce of o H Company shall not be under any
3507.
Portland Park.
2 baths, laundry room and hot
Four beautiful songs on
Koeplin. Director , Scuthiut obligation to resume aervlce to
3 BEDROOMS - Nice kitchen, bath. dining and large
water heat , modern, phone
Action Records (J. p. album)
Oh io Emergency Me-dical the iame customer on the same
9·12-51c
li ving. Modern gas boiler, lots of closet space. Fenced
Service, 19 w. Wnh lnoton ,. prem ises untll the customtr has
9&lt;12-2676.
No. AC 1043A, . only 12.00.
yard and carport. Only ;20,000.00.
Athens , Ohio .
IC&amp; W si de)
" Rainbow
made payment of an amount
Auto Sal es
9' 10"61 C Va
54.000.00
Warrant ies will be required equal to the minimum monthly
lley'" and '"Snowbells in Ihe
IN THE COUNTRY - 2 bedrooms, l~rge kitchen with ..
' 1967 CAMARO convertible, 396,
With each bid as specified in th.e char~• for each montll of the
Rockies" (Sacred) ' 10ur lord
specifications.
stove and refrigerator. 2 wells on good gravel road .
,.,..
standard, new paint. Phone "j AND 4 ROoM lvrnfshed ~ifti
intervenln51 period, but not to
God Physician •• and '"God's
The right Is reserved as the eJected twtlve (12) months
992-5637.
17500.00
unfurr~lshed
apartments .
Sweet Love." Pick up your
Interest of said foundation may
The ~ommlnlon will aiYt 1
RUTLAND-2 bedrooms, modern bath , nice kitchen, gas
9·1Hip
·~hone. 992·54~4.
.
•i album loday at Bill and lee's
require to reject any and all further notice of the time and
heal . Utility building, gorage. and garden near school.
4·12-IICJ
Musi
c
Center.
116
Main,
bids and to waive any In -- place of hearing, which will be
For Rent
142 ACRES
formality In bids received .
----~~~~-~
Pomeroy, Dhlo. Ask for a free
at Its office In Columbus, Ohio,
AVAILABLE trailer (mobile 4 ROOM furnished apartment demon stration, try II! you'll
Envelope containing bids unless
SALEM TOWNSHIP - Only a few miles to the new coal
the
Commlaslon
must be sealed, marked , ad . otherwise orders.
home) parking space. Inquire
and bath located on Se&lt;:ond
boy it! Free records to OJ's,
mine. 3 bedroom home, 2 barns, and several outbuildings.
dressed as follows and
evenings 992·3429.
Further Information may be
Sl .. Pomeroy ; references
address : John Mohler , Rt. 1,
Minerals and nice clear farm pond on stale route. 100
delivered to the Director, secured by lddrtnlng en
.,
9·12·61p
required ; phone 992-5293.
Bo&lt; 210, Middleport, Ohio,
acres of good clean pasture. 35 acres of meadow.
Southeast Ohio Emergency Inquiry to lht Public UIIIIIIH
9·6·1ft
45760, ph one 992·3911.
IF INTERESTED CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
Medical Servic-e, 19 w. Com million ot O~lo, 111 North
· For Sale
Washington, Athens . Ohio: "Bid High Street, Columbus, Ohio
-------9·8·61c
SEE.
WE'
ll
LOCATE
THE
LINES
AND
SHOW
YOU
l972 SUZUKI GTJso excellent 4 ~ OOM apartment , modern - - - - - - - - - on fully equipped ambulances 43215.
THROUGH.
THIS
WILL
SAVE
YOUR
TIME
.
AND
condition, manY extras
and equipment options."
kitchen,
stove
and FR IG IDAIRE Refrigerator, 10
MONEY.
+++
Sacrifice at 57(5. Phone 667:
Tnt bid 'must be coinplete for
PubllshtG by: tolumble G••
refrigerator. furnace . Mid · years old , good condition, $75;
fully equipped ambulances and of Ohio, Inc ., " .. orth Front
3364 or 667·3953. Must sel:.
phone 9&lt;9-3873.
dleport. Ph0&lt;1e 992·2676.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
all equipm·ent options .
992-3325
Street, Columbus, Ohio 432U.
9-12-6tc
9-8-61p
:__
9-_:::
12·31c
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
----~-~
lfl ·12,1t
(;J 12, 19, u, 3tc
WORK Wanted - housework or

· BARNEY

I
I
I

~L.L.!

E
E
WINNIE WINKLE
, .., ' &gt;UU

KNOW HOW

0~ I 'DIMKE

M'1SELF USEFUL ,
MUCH l LOVE YOU, WINNIE. I'MAN OLD
DEAR ... I WANT ID WORKHORSE FROM
DO WHA1'S RI$11T
WAY BACK!

FORlOu ... eur

At/08 .

I KNOW \OU A~ 1 6ES51E. THOUGHT SO
THAI"S WHY l IHOUGHT
MYSELF... FOR
YOU WERE CONTENT ID AW~ILE ... BUT
RETIRE FROM THE
IT DIDN 'T WORK.
HU$TLE AND llU$TLE
I 'M R55TLES&amp;1
OF OUR BUSINESS!
BORED...•

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

-----~---

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Fairview Reedsville
News Notes News, Notes

haa plent4 of

room on the other

~ome

Wh4

nitwit

40U park
LjOt.lr car

~hopper

in front

acres~

ofm4

mine!

drive? V":f t

parked

I DOli' HRROLY
TtilNK SO, Uf'tCLE

WENDELL! JUST

THIMKitl' 'BOUT THAT
CREEP GIVES ME
ASWIFT PAIH!

LEGAL NOTICE

CARRIERS
WANTED

ACROSS

HANDS TIED FOR
LACK OF CASH?

a trial

DICK TRACY
VOU NOTICE A SMALL
AC.E , SA'f, 9 OR 10?

rule

6. Song .
refrain
7. Wing
(Lat.)

zo.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

f!ol...-----.....--.......' _______

.

ANP HMAL 05ft&gt; AN O\II·Of'·St4.TE
AIIPA COI'fP AIXOUNT AS A ~PEUNE FOR
THAT .STOlEN rou6H •••"IIQ!; f!; A Wlf{ETAP
TAPE Of TilE OOL

W&gt;'/, 1!115 TIES KElT TO ••urAL
HE'S STILL
HEIITAI., TilE CORP:iE!

EM8ElllE~ .

l •y lltl"ojHf /\II Ntllll

B. Pleasant
(4wds.)
9. Authorize

21. Not a
wbit
22. Heraldic
wreath
23.Shabby
(sl.)
15. Burdened
28. Reverber·
ate
27. Pastry
goody
28, Actor

UMe.....,blethtse four Jumbleo,

I
Yesterday'• Alllwer
10, Grew
bicuspids
16. Refuse
18. Drive
21. Plank
23. Habitual
24. llrlan-.
made
fabric
25. llrllss
Turner
27. Rotated

~ION ON fOIHC
I'II'~IRI!NT "TRIP&lt;!!~ ...

POII'f Ml&lt; M! WHY!

AMAGioiETl

• :.::.'%.;:~·-

I

DYADD

I

tPANNKJ

~

I [) [ J I

30. Explosive
liquid
(colloq.)
31. One of the
Aliens
33. Headland
( var.)
36. Floor
coverins
37. Calendar
abbrevla·
lion

J I

t

BOUJ'ID
'l

.A

I

I [j

II

HOW HE LIKE!/
TO SMOKE..

orranre
I I aurre~ted

Now
the circled !etten
to form the IUrpriM wwer, ..
br the above Cllloon.

IPrilllll--... 1WITH "0-( I l I J-[TI"
, (Aalwen lo•orro•)

Ye••erd.1'•

!

Ju•b1"' MANGE CHICK ORIOU
AJ.wer1 Co11lrl be lou•e

STANZA

habifl in}opan - KIMONOS

Will
28.Rulned
32. Colorado
IndlaD ·
33. Initial! of
the New

I HAVE A
SURPRISE FOR

You ...

·34. Wee bird
35. Non·
eccleslas·
tic
37, School
lubj.
SB. Comfort·
able
(2wds.)
UI'JCLe?IP
DIDN'T ?t!~M
TO I'NJOY IT··
....1 THi PLACI!
Dtf!W "IM LIKe

TCHAB

(

Deal

WEi VI!'ITI! P THI!
6!N!RAl MONKTOfol_

=

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The Daily Sentinel

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�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,!)., Sept. 12,1972
~:O:i('M:;:!~::;:~:::!$!::

School Bus Price Ceilings Up
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Board of Education has
established new cel)lng prices
for school bus purchases, with
all but one of tile maximums
being higher than last year.
Ohio statutes provide the
state reimbursement to school
districts for bus purchases will
be based on tile ceiling price.
The new maximums reflected
tile average 'purchase price of
buses during tile 1971-72 aca· demic year·
The ceiling price for a • 66passenger vehicle, the most
commonly·· purchased, was
raised from $8,668 to $9,057.
However, the maxunum pr1ce
on a 6(1.passenger bus was .
dropped from $8,027 to $7,975.
During the past school year,
Ohto dlStncts bought 962 buses
at a total cost of $8,981,343, of

which tile state paid $4,324,-863.
The just starting academic
year will be the first full year in
which Ohio's new school bus
construction standard will be
in effect. The regulations require small capacity vehicles
to have the same type construction as tile larger models.
Buses also must be equipped
with a rear sign flashing
"backing" whenever they are
put in reverse gear.
The board also allocated $3.3
million in federal funds from
the Vocational Act of 1968 toward tile cost of constructing
tile Medina County Joint Vocationa! District School (JVDS) .
It is designed to accommodate
1,540 pupils in the district,
which includes city school
districts of Brunswick and
Medina , and local districts of

Black River, Buckeye,
Cloverleaf and Highland.
In other action, the board:
- Voted to establish new
Buckeye JVSD which includes
the Conotton Valley Local
Schools in Harrison County and
the Dover City Schools, New
Philadelphia City Schools and
Strasburg-Franklin Local
Schools in Tuscarawas County.
- Voted to establish . a Coshocton Area JVSD, encompsssing the Coshocton City
Schools, Ridgewoqd Local
Schools, Riverview Local
Schools and Newcomerstown
Exempted Village Schools.
- Granted a request to
change the name of the Miami
County JVSD to Upper Valley·
JVSD.
- Agreed to expand the vocational district sponsored by

a

· Alliance to inclu!le Salem City
Schools.
- Approved an application
by the Hocking Techni~o I
College for $445,631 itt AJ&gt;paiachian funds to construct
new facilities. ·
- Approved a request for
$54,880 in Appalachian funds by
the Jefferson County Technical
Institute.
- Accepted preliminary
contracts with eight non-prulit
corporatioq~
to provide
television .if!!ltfuction for Ohio

IT WASN'T GRATE
RUTLAND - Arnold
Grate, local ·businessman,
said today reports here are
false that the curb In front of
the Rutland post office was
painted yellow lor "no
parking" purposes, at his
request.
Grate added that he
wanted to verify publicly the
fact that he had nothing
whatsoever to do with II, was
not consulted about It, nor
did be even know about It
until after it was done.
"If anyone has any
compalnts, It should be taken
~~~ - ,IIIith the town counclfiijen;" Grate said.

Nixon, McGovern Hot
After the Youth Vote

By United Press IDiernatlooal that the "tide is begiming to u.S. conS1DIIIlrs md fanners
President ·Nixon and Sen. run in our direction." He said ·on the grain sale to Russia.
George S. McGovern continue the Vietnam "War goes on and McGovern replied that ·~ may
to duel fot the youth vote with our men are IIIUl being killed be a UWe ~it bald butl'm 11ot a
McGovern winning the en- and imprlaoned."
liar."
dorsement of a student
-Agriculture Secretary Earl
- VIce President Spiro T.
association and Nixon SUJ&gt;- L. Butz caUed a Wuhlngton Agnew said at Las Vegas,
porters setting a goal of putting news conference to say Me- Nev., that unconditional
500,000 "under 30" campaign Govern told "a bald-faced Ue" limllesty for Americans who
wlunteers to work in 30 days. wben he said grain dealers got. ·, i!ed to avold Vietnam service
McCovern received the en- Ins.! de lA...... aIion ~nabUIIC :;~ . "dlvide and embll\er
studentS~ •:i''
dorsement Monday of the them toiiit'~t the~·· l/¥ aauOO."
- Established new ceiling
80,000-member Student
prices for school bus purNational Education
chases.
Association (SNEA), an
- Approved contracts with
organization of college
five universities to provide new
students preparing for careers
or expanded education for teain education.
chers of hanilicapped children.
The organization's president,
(Continued ·fi,9jn.pafe I)
~ Granted · ele!llentary
Thomas D. Creighton, 22, of
WASHINGTON - TIIJtdi~nC SENATORS
school charters to the Heritage
Lincoln, Neb., said McGovern
Christian School of Canton and
was ''the first man to speak out from !be "hit Chai"Jied Man~jFiftat flipubllcan senators are
the Maranatha Christian
publicly In the U.S. Senate dragging their feet on leglslai!Ob: to control strip mining. The
against the Vietnam War and three -llllilocralic leader Mikdlan.t!eld of Montana, Sen. Lee
School of COIU!IlbUS.
- ExemJlled the Celeryville
·
its atrocities." He also praised Metcalf, ~t.. and Sen. Fr~ M!lll, D-Utah- called for a
Christian School of Williard,
the Democratic candidate for temporary halt to the opening a!"any new coal mines on federal
MUNICH, Germany (UPI) championiilg the participation Ianda.
By United Press International
West Cleveland Christian
Wall
ace
Bennett,
while
Mark
gubernatorial races.
Voters in eight states will
Metcalf introduced a resoluli9!! callln1 for a ban on future
School and the Hewbrew - The Defense Ministry, of youth in politics.
E.
Anderson
was
given
little
In
New
Hampshire,
two-term
already
jittery
due
to
the
decide among a variety of
Academy of Toledo from
The endorsement came In coalleaaea until CoJ181"88S acts on·legialatlon providing controls
candidates today vying for chance of defeating incumbent Republican incumbent Walter compliance with minimum Olympic massacre, scrambled the wake of a Gallup poll which on surface mining operatlona. MoBil, chalnnan of a Senate
Peterson and Democratic busiDemocratic and Republican Rep. Sherman P. Lloyd.
two jet fighters and closed
In Wisconsin, two in&lt;:umbent nessman Roger J . Crowley standards for elementary airspace over Munich Monday showed Nixon leading Mc- subcommittee to which the strip mining bill was sent, told the
nominations for governor and
Govern 61 per cent to 36 per Senate that Republicans were blocting actiOn on the measure.
Republicans with a combined were expected to win their schools.
Congress.
night when it received a report cent among young voters.
Allocated
$279,000
in
The primary elections, being total of 52 years of congression- nominations liy small margins . federal work-study funds to 17 of a nightmare plot to bomb the Poll Referred To
COLUMBUS - . THE omo CIVIL Service Employes
conducted just eight weeks al service were being chal- The two met in 1970. Former school districts.
packed Olympic Stadium
Sen.
Bill
Brock,
R-Tenn.,
Association says it will go to the Ohio General Assembly next
before the general election, lenged by a pair of political Gov. Wesley Powell was
- Gave permission to 10 during closing ceremonies.
referred to that poll Monday year with another request for a 48-cent-4111-hour pay raise.
newcomers.
Rep.
Alvin
E.
favored to capture the GOP
were held in Colorado, South
The Defense Ministry said when he announced the
O'Konski, wbo has served 28 Senate nomination and tile school districts to submit bond
The OCSEA asked for the 48-cent-an-hour raiBe two years
Carolina, Minnesota, Utah,
tile
painful episode began with Republican
issues to electorates, to get
campaign ago, but was given a 38-cent-an-hour raise or 10 pet., whichever
years
in
the
House,
was
up
right to run
against
Wisconsin, Arizona, New
against David Connor, a Democratic incumbent money to build classroom a ('confirmed police report" at organization had lined up was greater. That request was delayed for three months by the
Hampshire and Vennont. In
8:03 p.m . that "Arab 300,000 ''under 30" ·volunteers Pay Board.
lumber executive. Rep. Glenn Thomas J. Mcintyre, who was facilities.
addition, voters in Rhode
terrorists" had stolen a private to work for Nixon's re-election
Davis, first elected in 1947, was unopposed.
Island and Florida were
plane from Leonberg airport, and would attempt to recruit
trying to beat back the
In Vermont, Luther S.
deciding primary contests, but
near
Stuttgart. The report said 200,000 more within a month.
challenge of Verne Read, a Hackel, a former Social Weiwitll no major nominations at
the
terrorists
planned to drop a
McGovern was joined by : • • • • • • • •
deparirnent store executive. fare Board chairman, was a
stake.
bomb
on
the
huge
Olympic
(Continued
from
page
1)
Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D- •
Three Arizona congressmenThe closest race was expect- Democrat Morris Udall and slight favorite over Attorney Wilson, Mrs. Nancy Jo Clot- Stadium, packed with up to Mass., today for a series of •
ed in Colorado, where Demo- Republicans Sam Steiger and General James M. Jeffords in worthy, Mrs. Myrville Brown, 60,000 spectators and several campaign rallies in the big •
tile GOP gubernatorial battle.
cratio Rep. Wayne Aspinall,
tllousand athletes participating industrial cities of the Mid- •
John Rllodes-were expected On the Democratic side, and Mrs. Donna Ohlinger.
chairman of the House Interior to easily gain renomina lion.
in
ceremonies closing out tile west. The appearances in- •
The resignation of Hie!
Thomas S. Salmon was unopand Insular Affairs Com~
1972
Games.
eluded OJicago, Detroit and •
French was accepted as bus
Voters in New Hampshire
mittee, was attempting to win and Vermont were deciding posed.
Cleveland.
•
Twelve
minutes
later
came
driver and hired to replace him
his 13th term. His opponent,
the
report
that
an
'"unidentified
Nixon
planned
to
work
at
the
:
was Buster Barrett.
attorney Alan Merson, was
as seen in
Mr. Porter was asked io flying object" UFO had been White House, scheduling a •
given a strong chance by party
lreakfast
with
his
Cabinet
and
e
picked
up
on
civil
and
military
SEVENTEEN
represent the board at the Ohio
officials to score an upset.
School Board Associations radar screens. Defense Republican congressional e
Colorado Democrats were
Minister Georg Leber im- leaders and a late afternoon •
convention.
also nominating ·a candidate to
The board approved con- mediately ordered the two F104 reception for GOP National •
(Continued from page I)
oppose Republican Sen.
Starfighters off the runway at Committee members, state •
Gordon Allott, with former humorous incidents that occurred during their imprisonment. tinuance of the adult basic Neuburg airbase.
Republican chairmen, and •
education program this year,
State Rep. Floyd Haskell These were tape recorded.
chairmen of state committees •
favored over State Sen. Tony
All was not work at the reunion . Each day the veterans and approved an easement for
of
the Committee for the Re- •
Voiiack.
their families had times for horseback riding, swimming seeing Follrod and Morgan , Inc ..
election
of the President.
:
a~ross school board property,
In South Carolina, Rep. John a show at the Cherokee Indian Vilia~e, and other activities .
In other political develop- •
changed the kindergarten
L. McMillan, 74, was expected
Van fnwagen hopes to return to next year's reunion .
ments:
•
schedule from all day classes
to win a Democratic runoff
In
a
campaign
appearance
•
to half-day classes, appointed
at Minneapolis Monday night, •
Mrs. Charles Barrett as subIRONTON - Ironton District McGovern predicted Dally he •
stitute cook and Craig
Ranger
T. Allan Wolter said would win Nov. 7 despite •
Rawlings as substitute
Columbia Committee, is
The Rio Grande Volunteer
(Continued from page 1)
today
the
Big Bend Beach, Oak Nixon's big lead in the polls. •
seeking his 18th term.
Fire Department will have death," have defied all govern- custodian, appointed Mrs. Hart Hill Campground and Boat
"Gap WW Narruw"
as hail-time elementary
In Minnesota, an incumbent
its fourth annual fish fry ment efforts to retake the
- ·At Chicago, Herbert G.
Dock areas have been closed
expected to have little trouble Saturday, Sept. 16, at 5 p.m. Ci lade! until now. ~outh Spanish teacher beginning Oct. for the season. The Rock House Klein, Nixon's director of
in gaining a spot on tile
at the Community Hail on Vietnamese airborne troops ~. and approved payment for a picnic ground and Two Points communications, said he beNovember ballot was Sen.
Rio Grande college campus. reentered the outskirts of net at the ·Pomeroy tennis area will remain open through lieved tile "gap will narrow" In
Walter F · Mondale. He is
This annual fish fry is the Quang Tri City July 4 as the cour t.
the election and that Nixon
The president of the Salem Sunday, September 17. Ef- would not carry all 50 states.
seeking the Democratic Farm
only fund-raising activity of first big step of the governCenter PTA invited all board fective Monday, Seplember 18, But he predicted Nixon would
Labor Party's nomination
the Volunteer Fire Depart- men t's counter-offensive.
members, Mr. Hargraves and the entire road from tile Lake win.
against three opponents. Phil
ment for the year. Food
Troops Under Fire
.
Vesuvius Dam to Big Bend
Hansen, a Lutheran minister,
available will be homemade
After 21 days of agonizing Larry Morrison , assistant Beach will be closed to traffic
-Democratic vice presidenis running unopposed on the
pies, cakes and baked beans house-to-house fighting, the superintendent, to attend tile to permit reconstruction work. tial candidate Sargent Shriver
llepublican ticket. The state is
and ice cream, coffee and paratroopers got some men Oct. 2 PTA meeting to discuss
People with boats at the boat said at Beverly Hills, Calif.,
illso holding four congressional
pop. Door prizes will he inside tile Citadel July 25 and what can be done to pass the dock are urged to remove them
~::::.:::::::::::;:;:;:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;;
primaries.
. ed a fl ag a t th e school levy in November. prior to Sept. 18.
given away and Benny even rats
Board
members
agreed
to
In Utah, two John Birch
Simpkins and his Guyan highest point. But tlley were
According to Wolter, the Iron
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Society members were heavy
v 11 B
pulled out suddenly in heavy attend.
111
Ridge
Campground and the
underdogs In thell"· bi"ds to Will
.
a ey oys w provide
Hargraves
reported
that
a
Oblo Extended Outlook square danc1og mus 1c. Any fighting and the marines took
picnic area near the Vesuvius
GOP congresalonal nominapian
must
be
submitted
to
tile
Thursday
through Saturday :
food items left will be auc- over tile ~ang Tri assignment
Furnace will remain open on a
State
Department
or
Education
A
chance
of showers and
lions. Joseph Ferguson was
tloned at the end of the two days later. The attempt to
half service use charge of $I
from
every
school
district
in
mild Tbunday and Friday. •
expected to lose to Robert
take the Citadel was abanYou 're into naturals now •
per day.
Walthius, a former &amp;"de to Sen.
square dance.
Ohio
for
handicapped
youngLows
In the upper 50s to
doned temporarily in favor of
Forest and flower imagery creates !he enchanted mood •
lower tilhJ. High Thursday in •
cleaning up resistance in the sters by Dec. I.
•
of
this longie dress by Vicky Vaughn ... a natural winner. :
Following
a
report
from
the
the mid 70s to tbe lower tilhJ,
heavy bunkers planted in
U· shape neck and pouf sleeves emerge above the empire t
lowering to mostly In the 70s :
almost every destroyed house state auditor, the board
commended
Lee
McComas
,
on Friday. Fair and cooler • waist. All-over ecology print in jersey knit of Acritan® t
in the city.
Saturday with lows in the e .acrylic. Orange. turquoise or purple. 5-15.
The marines slowly moved clerk, for an excellent job.
•
Tonight
Porter,
A
!tending
were
mid
40s
to
lower
50s.
Highs
toward the 500-yard-square
September 12
Saturday in tbe low to mid
Citadel from the north and Mullen, Joe Sayre, Virgil King,
and
Carroll
Pierce,
board
70s.
south
sides
since
assuming
the
Paul Mitchell, 17, Langsville,
Walt Disney's
members,
and
Hargraves,
•
SllopWoelcO.vst:30ToJp.m.
•
THE BISCUIT EATER
task
July
'!1.
Kurrus
said
they
is listed in good condition at the
:::&lt;:::::::~~:::::::;:;:;:!,;:::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: •
Frldavsand
Saturdavs
9:JOto,
P
m
•
I Technicolor)
Morrison
and
McComas.
Holzer Medical Center where have put tllree-man scouting
Earl Hollimon
There were 52 arrests made
he was admitted Saturday teams inside tile walls during
Patricia Crowley
by the Middleport Police
following an accident Friday the past week to spot CommuDepartment
in August, inWall Disney's
night on Rt. 124, four tenths of a nist strongpoints.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
cluding
nine
for
driving while
BEAVER VALLEY
The Marines inside the
mile east of the Rutland
(Tchenlcolor)
ADMITTED Dennis intoxicated, nine lor disturbing
Cqrporation sign. Mitchell's Citadel now have come under
Colorcartoon:
McKinney, Dexter; Ethel the peace and 17 for inheavy
fire
from
130mm
artilleauto was struck in the rear by a
Cured Duck
Collins, Shade; Bernard toxication.
Adults Sl.50
car driven by Ronnie Spencer, ry guns and huge 160 mm
Children 7lc
Other offenses acconling to
mortars, the largest weapons Henninger, South Point;
23, Rt. 2, Long Bottom.
William
Slover,
Racine;
the
report of Chief of Police J .
A hospital spokesman today in the Hanoi arsenal. The
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
James
Arthur
Nease.
J. Cremeans made Monday
• Sept. 13-14
said Mitchell suffered neck, Saigon high command said
. Pomeroy ; Clovis Doerfer, night to Middleport Council
· NOT OPEN
more
tllan
1,700
rounds
landed
back and arm injuries. There
Fostoria ; Marjorie Hunt, were, four for assault and
was moderate damage to in Quang Tri Monday.
Show Starts 7 P.M.
The Air Force jets bombing Albany ; Charles Humphreys, battery, two each for running a
Spencer's car while the Mitdeep in North Vietnam Monday New Haven, and Irene red light and illegal drugs, and
chell auto was demolished.
one each for speeding, failure
dumped 3,000-pound block- Gilmore, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED
Salem
to transfer license plates ,
busters guided by laser beams
to destroy the Lang Kay, Lang Yates, Elsie Brewer, Orville reckless operation, running a
Bun and Lang Thi railroad Gaul, Isabelle Lewis, David stop sign, petty larceny,
bridges be tween 110 and 12() Huddles ton, Charles Bailey, spinning tires, followipg too
Maxine Brumley, Virgil close, blocking allqlo and
miles northwest of Hanoi .
Yarbrough, William Snyder, profanity to police.
Sharon Barrett, and Charles
There were eight accidents
Smart people save regularly. Saving for the future is
HOMECOMING SET
Beegle.
investigated
and
the
police
The annual homecoming of
cruiser was driven 4,311 miles
mighty important. Stop by soon and we'll show )tlu
the
Alfred Methodist Church
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
during
the month. Parking
will be heid Sunday beginning
meter collections for the month
Pleasant Valley Hospital
with Sunday School at 9:45
how easy it is to become a regular smart saver. '
IS CELEBRATING
Discharges:
Reub en lotaied $1.168.50.
a.m., followed by worship
services at II a.m. A basket Sturgeon, Point Pleasant ·
Get the savings habit.
WITH A
dinner will be held at 12:30 Doris Dalton, Gallipolis; Mrs:
p.m. The Revelations Quartet James Lilly, Point Pleasant·
KILLED IN CRASH
of Athens will be featured Bill Cunningham, Point
WHf ~ YOI 1 ~' 1: PAR~ fPf f
Mrs.
Thomas
Pleasant;
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - A
during the afternoon program
Oldaker, Letart, and Mrs. man was killed and another
which begins at 2.
Robert Vince, Gallipolis ,
injured in a two-car crash
LOCAL TEMPS
Monday night, police 1181d.
Temperature in downtown
Leon Burich, 30, of Warren,
CLUB T(l MEET
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
The Tup~rs Plains Com- was dead on arrival at EucUd
was 73 degrees under rainy munity Club will meet at 7:30 General Hospital. He was the
skies.
p.m. Wednesday at the com- driver of one of the cars. James ·
Marriage License
mUnity building. Ail members Magri,~~. of Euclid, the driver
Ira Gordon Wiseman, 53, are urged to attend to help of the olber car, was listed in
MIDDLI:I'ORT1 Oi!to
Athens, and Barbara King complele plans for Sunday's satisfactory condition today at
Memlter Feclel'll Dep ...l....._
:!
Rossignol, 50, Atllens.
tile same hoopitai:
Horse Show.

Nef1Js • • • in Briefs

Nightmare

Plot Didn't
Come About

8 States Voting Today

Bus Bids

they remember

~~:t~;~i:Fi~:t~~~ ~,,,,,,,,,,:::;:,;:=;=''';';;::'''''&lt;'''' Stalemate

•

Camp, Boating
Areas Oosed

.•

:

•

: vicky vaughn .

:

•

•
•

•

•

•

MEIGS THEATRE . Mitchell is in

Good Condition

Intoxication
Charges Total
17 in August

!

ELIERFELDS IN POMEROY

FURNITURE

.

20th

ANNIVERSARY

SALE

1952--1972

c..-

'
I

f.

:

........................... ....:

BAKER

'

er
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH STUDENTS have purchased 35 new desks and chairs with money earned by seiling
candy and pop during the last school year under the
leadership of Jennings Beegle, principal. The desks were

coral and gray, the chairs, yellow, green, black, blue or
coral. Total cost of the project was approximately $800.
Seated at new desks are, 1-r, Scott Wolfe, David Bass, Debbie
Norris and Lisa Grindley, eighth grade students.

Now You Know

\
oil

Rio Grande College officials
today denied reports that
negotiations were being
pressed for a merger of Rio
Grande College and Ohio
University.
According to a report in
Wednesday's Citizen-Journal
signed by Haske! Short of The
Ohio Scripps-Howard Bureau,
"Ohio University is negotiating
to take over Rio Grande

•

The first collegiate football
team to fly to a game was the
University of New Mexico
which went by plane to a 1929
contest with Occidental College
in California.

Devoted To

VOL. XXIV NO. 105

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OIJIO

~

enze

request for a Community
College."
Dr. Aiphus R. Christnsen, College. Dr. John Millett,
Rio Grande College president. form er Board Chancellor,
said today, " There are n.1 made the suggestion.
On May 11, a meeting was
negotiations at the present
held at the residence of .Dr .
time."
He said the Ohio Board of Cari Sowle, President of Ohio
Regents last March suggested University. Jack Stiffler,
the two colleges get together to chairman of the Rio Grande
discuss points of "mutual College Board of Trustees,
concern." This was after the Attorney John Halliday and
college had submitted a Dr. Christensen represented

Rio Grande College.
Rio officials made it clear
during that discussion that
their college would remain a
four-year institution and that it
would maintain its present
name.
President Sowle wrote to
Chancellor Millett concerning
the meeting and submitted Rio
Grande's two requests. Millett
(Continued on page 16)

Weather

•

at y

enttne

Cloudy south tonight witll
scattered thunderstorms.
Cooler Thursday, thundershowers in tile morning,
south portion. High Thursday
in the 70s.

lnteresu Of The Meigs-Mason Area

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1972

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Mayer the Baker
Winner with Film
Pomeroy's talented Bill
Mayer, a baker by trade, has
scored in another artistic field,
photography.
Mayer has been declared one
of eight area winners in the
Kodak international Newspaper Snapshot Contest conducted in recent weeks by the
Huntington (W. Va.) Herald
Disptach .

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ELBERFELD$ :
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Mayer's entry , a color film

mE TWO ELDEST MEMBERS of the MI. Moriah Church of God are pictured with the
pastor, the Rev. James Muncy, formerly of Mason, Ohio, at the altar in the new sanctuary . On
tile left is Mrs. Ruth Parsons, and on the right, Mrs. Bessie Stitt. They have been members of
tile church since about the rnid-308.

New Church Occupied
,.,aro ol
patience, fortitude "and ambition have paid off for tile
congregation of the Mt. Moriah
Church of God near here.
Members of the congregation
Sunday moved into their new
church for the first time after
~CINI!l

.

-

FOOir

having spent the past lour

years in a "labor of love"
constructing their new church.
The former church of the
group, located on Mile Hili
Road, was destroyed by fire
four years ago. There was
some insurance, but not

. "»X-:~~::x:::~~::m..~······. ...

r«~~~~$.

ews .. in Briefsl
.,.

By United Press International
WASHING'OON - MARTHA MITCHELL has spoken out
again - this time to insist that she was indeed given an injection
against her will in the incident that led her to describe herself as
a "political prisoner." Mrs . Mllchell disputed a Parade
Magazine report which said that Steve King, the new security
director of the Committee to Re..,iect the President "was not
involved" in the incident at Newport Beach, Calif., and did not
give her the injection.
The wife of former Attorney General John N. Milchell said
King held her down while a doctor administered the Injection in
tile buttocks "against my will." She also said King kicked her.
She said he hurt her band, causing a wound that required six
stilches. "He threw me down and kicked me with his rubber
soled shoes," Mrs. Mitchell said .
FARMINGTON, W. VA. -THE DISCOVERY of nine more
bodies Tuesday revived the horrifying memory of the 1968 coal
mine disaster which killed 78 men in this northern West Virginia
mining town. Sifting through a collection of dental recoree, lamp
numbers, watches and other personal effects, state police experts identified all nine In a matter of hours.
One miner was identified through his wedding band.

enough to rebuild. However,
men of the congregation,
giving whatever time they
could, started building the new
church. The Rev. James
Satterfield was the pastor
when the project go t un derway. He is now overseer of
the Chester ·District of the
denomination.
Although the exterior of the
new church is not quite compl ete, the interior has
progressed to a point where the
structure can be used. There
are plans aiso to make five
Sunday school rooms and a
fellowship hall in the basement
of the frame building. The new
church, 30 x 60, has walls in
birch paneling. A formal
dedication is planned soon.
Meanwhile, tile congregation is
delighted to be able to hold
services in tile new building
after having attended church
in the basement of the parsonage the past four years.
Pastor of the new church is
the Rev. James Muncy of
Mason, Ohio, who came to this
pastorate 17 weeks ago. He
replaced the Rev . Charles
Hand.

portrait of the late Morgan
French. 90-year-oid Pomeroy
resident who died a few months
ago, was judged a winner in a
field of 3,700 pictures in the
contest.
Mayer's picture was selected

STILL ACCEPTING
RetervaUont for the UCMh ,

anniversary dinner of
Racine Lodge F&amp;AM No. 461
Tuesday at Southern High
School in Racine are stili
being accepted. Ali master
masons in the county
wisbing to make a reservation may do so by contacting Jesse Brinker,
Racine at 949-3303.

Moto-Cross Set
Sunday Afternoon
The Meigs Motorcycle Club
of Pomeroy will sponsor a
Moto-Cross Sunday on its club
grounds located five miles
north of Pomeroy on U.S. 33.
Practice will be from 10 a.m.
to noon with races to begin at I
p.m. Refreshments will be
available at the club house .
Trophies will be awarded in ail
classes. Points will count
toward a high point club trophy
to be awarded at the end of this
season.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Delbert
Romine Middleport; William
Hayes, Syracuse; Edith Sayre,
Mason; Beth Cassell, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Charles
PITTSBURGH- SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN says he
Beegle, Fannie Aleshire, Ray
til inks he turned the corner In his uphill presidential race during
Eight defendants were fined Watson, Lottie Roush, Effie
a series of emotion-charged joint appearances with Sen . Edward and three others forfeited Pyle, Gene Chaney, Edna
M. Kennedy.
bonds in Middleport Mayor · Faulk, Bernard Henniger.
McGovern and Kennedy were to campaign in Pittsburgh and
John Zerkle's· court Tuesday
Phlladelphia today following a 16-llour day Tuesday which
night.
LOCAL TEMPS
produced generally large and enthusiastic crowda for rallies in
Fined were Charles W.
Temperature
in downtown
Boyles, 34, Middleport, $25 and
Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland. "I have a feeUng that we are
turning the corner in these last few days," McGovern told costs, into:tication, and $10 and Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m.
costs, disturbing the peace; was 81 degrees under sunny
newsmen. "I think weare on the way up."
Michael Gravely, 21, Mid- skies.
DAYTON, OHIO - AN AMERICAN Airlines 7!YI with 84 dleport, $25 and cost~,
passengers aboard made a forced landing at Wright Patterson disltirbing the peace; Aretta
Air Force base here early today alter part of Its lsnding gear M. Parker, 40, Pomeroy, $100
and costs and three days in jail,
system malfunctioned. Three persons were treated for minor
injuries. The plane was enroute from Los Angeles to Chicago and driving while intoxicated;
Allen Lee King, Middleport, $5
Detroit when Captain Dale CUmmings reported the nose landing fine
suspended, assessed costs Three non-academic emg~ar could not be lowered.
·
only, pennitting dogs to run; ployes were hired Tuesday
Cummings was told he could not make an emergency landing
Le 1 w s ith M"ddl
night by the Eastern Local
w s · m ' 1 eport, School District Board of
at Detroit because of poor vlslbility and low ceilings and the
$25 and costs, lnto:ticalion;
flight was diverted to CincimaU Airport which Ia located in
William Smith, Middleport, $25 Education in regular session at
F1orence, Ky. The plane was diverted to Wright Pattenoit when and costs, discharging gun in the high school. .
Cincinnati Airport officials told Cummings they did not have village; $25 and · costs, inEmployed as office aides at
enough time to foam the runway.
toxication, and $25 and costs, grade schools . of the district
disturbing the peace ; Mary were Mrs. Kay Bailey,
, WASHINGTON- THE SENATE ARMED Services Corn· King, Middleport, intoxication Chester; Miss Kathy Dill,
mlttee IIUDUROOed Gen. Creighton W. Abrams for questioning and resisting arrest, $75 and Riverview, and Mrs. patricia
today about m~authorlzed air raids and !alae repOrts about the air . costs; James King, Mid- Life, Tuppers Plains.
In another acUoo, Mrs. Rose
ltrlkea wbUe he was U. S. commander in lndooltina. The raids dleport, $75 and costs, intoxication
and
resisting
arrest.
Jonas
was employed as the
.Wer North Vietriam and the false reports led lo the forced
Forfeiting bonds were teacher of !be Tille I Reading
reUrementli Air Force Gen. John D. Lavelle. Alrama, wbo has
. been nominated for ArmY chief of Staff, was Lavelle's boss. William R. Crow, 52, New Program In Tuppers Plains.
York, N. Y., •....,
..., pos ted for She is a graduate of Bowling
Lavelle cOOtmanded tbe 7th Air Force in Southealt Alia .
111e Air Force, after an internallnvatlptiiln, reported that driving while intoxicated; Green University and has had
Lavelle ordered 21 unautltor!Jed ml1110111 involvinll 147 air Gary R. Basham, 31 , five years teaching experience
sanies between November, It'll, and Mardi, 1971 Reporta about Cleveland, $25! stop sign in the Sandusky area.
The resignation of Mike
the raids were falallled tAt make It appear they were in reaponse . violation· and Donald Craig 24
Athens, ' $30, disturbing 'th~ Morgan as asa~tant basketball
(Coatinued Cll Plfl 11)
peaf?.
' coach.wasaccepted and Archie

8 Fined in

Middleport

first as a weekly winner in the
contest, then as a grand prize
winner, color class. He will
receive $25. The photo now will
go to Rochester, N. Y., home of
the Kodak Co., for judging at
the International level where
contestants will share $55,000
in cash. and travel trips.
Widely known for his paintin gs and wood carvings,
Mayer is living proof that
artists are born, not made . He
has been turning out excellent
paintings for 25 years. About 10
years ago he began wond
carvmg. His carvings have
been well received.
He has made numerous sa les

Federal
·-V
Sharing
Coming
..!!""""" :&amp;\.,.; _...,"'

~~

WASHINGTON (UPI) - To
the fiscal relief of officials in 50
states and 38,700 towns, townships, cities and counties, both
houses of Congress now have
passed bills to share about $30
billion in federal revenue with
local and state governments
over the next five years.
But whetller the legislation
will live up to its backers'
promises and decelerate local
and state tax increases
remains in doubt.
The billions provided from
the federal treasury amounts
to only a small fraction of what
state and local governments
spend and their spending in
most places still trends upward.
The Senate adopted its bill by
a vote of 63 to 20 Tuesday night.
House approval of a different
version occurred in June.
Now a House-senate conference committee must meet to
approve a compromise version
which will get quick
from
both
ratification
chambers and be sent to
Presid~nt Nixon, who first
!roached the idea to Congress
in August, 1969.
The Senate bill, reflecting
rural strength in that body, is
more generous to 33 rural
states-at the expense of 17
urban states and the District of
Columbia-tban the House bill, .
where city strength is felt.
The likelihood is that the
(Continued on page 16)

of both paintings an! wood·
carvings . In fact. most of his
carvings now are sold before
he even starts them. Quite
popular· are his Early
American Eagles which are in
demand in the East.
Mayer has had no formal
training in any field of art. He's
doing what comes naturally.
Neither has he had any camera
training. He has been taking
pictures about 10 years, having
purchased his presen t camera
because he and his wife were
dissatisfied with results they
were getting on film of their
vacation trips. This is the first
time Mayer has entered any
photograph into competition .
A member of the French Art
Colony at Gallipolis, Mayer has
demonstrated · his carving
techniques before crowds at
. the Bob Evans Fal"lllll at Rio.

Grande. He heads the art show
at the Meigs County Fair and
frequentiy is asked to judge
local art contests.
Mayer is a part owner of tile
Pastry Shop where he is employed as a baker.

BILL MAYER, painter and wood carver of renown, now
has won recognition with 'his camera. He also makes the belt
tasting bakery products this side of Shangri La at ·the
Pomeroy Pastry Shop, East Main St., Pomeroy.

New Hits Feared
United Press 1nternatlonal
Egyptian newspapers said
Damascus Radio reported
today Israel is preparing to dogllgbts between Syrian
launch new attacks against and Israeli planes over the
Lebanon and Syria. Lebanese Israeli-occupied Golan
Prime Minister Saeb Salam Heights today at a time when
pledged his nation would fight newspapers In tbe Arab
an expected attack from Israel world were predicting new
although he admitted Lebanon Israeli attacks against
lacks the power "to fully repel Lebanon and Syria.
Israeli aggression."
Tbe Damascus broadcast
The semiofficial Cairo news- monitored in Beirut said
paper AI Abram said "it Is "one of the Intruding Israeli
clear now that Israel, while planes was shot down and
preparing to resume its was seen falling, exploding
aggression along the northern in midair."
front (Syria and Lebanon), has
the unlimited support of the
newspaper, AI Akh bar, said the
United States .
AI Ahram and another Cairo U.S. veto in the United Nations
means only one thing: "To give
the justification of the Israeli
aggression against Syria and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Lebanon and provide a pretext
Ohio Extended Outlook for new acts of aggression
Friday Through Sunday
Israel is preparing."
A chance of showers
Special Session
Friday and Saturday. Fair
Salam, addressing a special
Sunday wllh lows Friday in
the mid 40s to lower 50s .
Highs in the low to upper 70s.
Warmer Saturday and
DIVORCED GRANTED
Sunday with lows in the 50s
Divorces have been granted
to near 60s. Hlgbs Saturday in Meigs County Common
and Sunday In the 70s to low Pleas Court to Joyce Manuel
80s.
from Donald W. Manuel, and
Karen S. Sprouse from John W.
Sprouse both on charges of
gross neglect of duty, and
Nancy K. Jeffers from Richard .
K. Jeffers fer gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

Three Hired by Board
Rose of the Tuppers Plains
school was named to succeed
him.
Dr. Herman Koby of Rio
Grande College reviewed with
board plans lor the new
com!llunity college at Rio
Grande. The board went on
record in support of the plan,
and will make recommendations ' at its October
meeting on names of residents
in the district who would serve
on planning committees
leading to establishing the
college.
The board approved attendance of a twO'day guidance
meeting in Columbus later this
month by Tom Kelly, new
guidance counselor of the
district.
The board had p~ to sell

two used school buses last
night but when questions were
raised it was agreed to accept
bids on the buses at the
superintendent's office until
noon this Friday. Anyone
wishing to inspect buses for
sale may do so at the bus
garage in Tuppers Plains.
Five parents of kindergarten
pupils met with the board on
the present policy of kiitdergarten children attending
classes a full day rather than
half a day. They believed a full
.day of classes is too long for the
kindergarten aged child.
However, the board felt that
the full day policy had not been
in effect long enough for a fair
trial and agreed to continue
with tbe present system the
(Continued on psge 16)

CAP, Public to
Review Programs
Administrative penonnel
of the Gallia-Mel1• Community Action Ageoey hu
announced an ope11 publle
meeUog to dlscuu ageooy
pn1rama . and . eoc.o~raie
eommllnity lavolvemeot In
plallniag future proJRIDS
and priorities lor next year.
Tbe mettlq will be belclat
. the Cheshire Commaalty
Center on 'fl!ellday mo1"DIII&amp;,
Sept. I9, at 9:30 a.m. All
lntertsted penons of GaiDa
and Melc• Couotleo are
ur1ed to attead.
~;~?.=~"««~~!!:i:::=:::::w::;:~au

session of parliament in Beirut
Tuesday, said a "propaganda
campaign" by Israel following
the slaying of 11 members of its
Olympic team in Munich by
Arab guerrillas was aimed at
"paving the way for the
aggression which took place
and possibly for a much larger
aggression."
Israeli planes hit targets in
Syria and Lebanon Friday.
Salam said, "We do not
claim, and this is no liecrel,
that we have the ability to fully
repel Israeli aggression. But
the Lebanese army has
received orders to resist the
successive aggressions with all
its . might, regardless of

sacrifices.•'

OU Sticking
With Big Bear
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio University trustees
Tuesday voted to stand by their
decision to lease part of the
abandoned OU airport to a
Columbus supermarket finn
headed by Wayne Brown, a
former trustee.
The trustees said the
decision was in "the beat interests of the university and
the Athens community."
Undet the proposal, the land
would be leased to Big Bear
Stores for 40 years at $25,000 a
year plus a percentage of the
gross business.
Kroger Co. offered $50,000 a ..
year plus a percentage of the
gross two clays after the board •
made its decision to award the
70 acres to Big Bear.
Thetrustees~dtbeyatayed

with Big Bear because "i~
would not be fair to all of tboee
c&lt;irnpanles who complied with
the bid regulaU001 publiCi).
advertised.''

BOOSTERS TO MEET
Meiga Band Booaten will
meet Monclly at I p.m. at tbe
~h tchool.
.

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