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•

I- Tilt DailySentirM!t,Middltport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Sept. l7, 1973

J

~Ill

Task Force agenda is outlined

-·

Tile agenda for the Sep- Gallipolis this Wednesday ,
tember 19 meetlf18 of the September 19 lor a morning
Federal Tuk Force lor the tour of the Meigs - VInton •
Economic Development of
Southeutern Ohio hu been
111nounced by Rep. Clarence
Pltasant VaUey Hl8pltal
Miller.
Di5Charges- Hom.!r Vanco,
Representatives from a Vinton, 0 . :. Mrs. Warden Ar·
munber of Federal And State nold, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
agencies will gather in Harry Bush. daughter, Letart ;
. . Mrs . :William Plumley, New
IIIII
Haven ; John David, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Richard JetTonight&amp; Tuesdoy
lers , s·outhside ; Michael
$opt. 17-18
Bailey, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
CHARLOTTE'S WEB
Frank Henson , Galli polis;
(Techntcotorl
Tano Perry, Leon; William
Voices of Debbie Remolds, Robbins; Point Pleasant;
Paul Lynde, Henry Gibson, Jacqueline S.mith, West.
Rex Allen, Martha scott,
Agnes Moorehead. (Gl
Columbia; Perry sayre, Point
FeatureHe ' Pleasant; Rosie Dolson, Rickie
The Horse Man.
Bush, Point Pleasant; Della
Disney Cartoons :
Boo on Guard
Hazlell, Letart; Daisy Nickel,
Pluto's Housewar ming
Hartrord ; Lorie P_ierce,
Admissioni1.50and 7Sc

Pomeroy ; Mrs. Herbie Lance,

Bidwell ; Verease Samuel,
.,.__l!lli..,lllllliioool__.. Point Pleasant.
Sh ow

7p.m.
-

YOUR- FULL
SERVICE BANI&lt;
- - - - - - ------

---

1\'larket Her~H1
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday,Sept.l5,1973
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio VaUey Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 42.75
to 43.25; 220 to 250 lbs. 43 to 45 ;
Light 34 to 42; Fat Sows 38 to
44 ; Stags 34 Down; Boars 3lto
37.75; Pigs 13lo 30; Shoats 25 to
37.75.
CATTLE - Steers 48 to
54.50; Heifers 42 to 50; Baby
Beer 46.50 to 72.25; 'tat Cows 33
to 39; Canners 28.50 to 34. 75;
Bulls 38 to 44; Milk Cows 275 10
515.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 63 to
65.50; Seconds 57 to 63- Medium
50 to 56.50; Com. &amp; Hvs. 50 lo
71; Culls 53.50 Down.
BABY CALVES- 50 to llO.

dollan
·'

Gallla economic Impact area .
Later that morning, the
representatives are scheduled
to meet with members of the
press.
At 1 p.m. a public meeting
will be held at the GaiUa
County
Courthouse
in
Gallipolis to discuss the findings and recommendations of
an economic deve.topment
arilllysis of the tri-eou nty
Impact area. Major discussion
areas wiU inc!!tde highway
development, the need lor
public laciliUes,local busine!S
expansion and _the general
impact the new Meigs Mine
complex and Gavin Power
Plant is having on the region.
Area residents are invited to
attend the mt:eting and will be
given the opportunity to bring
matters of concern to the attentio n or the agency
representatives in attendance.

.•. in a Savings Account
with us •. ;
' and watch them grOW
safely ..• at a
•
guaranteed rate
No speculative risk ... just
maximum Income from your
money without risk. Plus
accessibility if you should
need lt.

,

The Farmers Bank

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Steers: Good to choice, 46.9().
48.10; good, 44-45 ; Holstein
steers, 44.50-46.25.
Heifers: Good, 46.35-47.60;
Standard, 42-44.50.
Cows : Commercial, 38.7540.10; Utility, 3f&gt;.37.50; Canner
and Culler, 31-33.85.
Bulls: Commercial, 39.7543.25.
Stockers and Feeders : Steer
Calves, 53. 50-67.50; Heifers
Calves, 41-63.25 ; Holstein
Feeders, 51-54.
. Veal Calves: Choice, 77.50;
Good, 59-67.75.
Lambs : Good, 32-34.
Hogs : 20().230, 45 ; No. 145.25;
2311-240 4475· Sows 38 2S-44•
Boars.' 39.io.'
' · ·. '

WORLD AI}'
A \.T A,C
-,
!YJ..tli~ ·
FACTS
Ratings for mot;on pictures are issued by the Code
and Rating Admimstration of
the Motion Picture Association of America which· re·
ceives about 5110 movies an·
nuaiiy lor classification, The
World Almanac says . This
rating sys tem began with
lilms released after Nov. 1,
1968. and has 4 types of ratings - G. .general audi·
ences: PG , parental guid ·
ance suggested ; R, restricted : and X. no one under 17
admitted.

and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
$20,000.00 Maximum Insurance For

Eath Depositor

U!

~I!

!I !

~

.~

Some taxpayers get relief ·. ,

lbe truck went oil the roadway
and turned over.
Taken to lbe Holztr Medlca1
Center in the Southeaatern .
Ohio Emergency AJnbulance
were Kithy ·OIUon. 18, Ethel
Dillon, 15, Margaret {.IIUon, 44,
and Christopher File her, 16,
were all treated 1111d releued
for minor Inj uries. Kathy
Dillon was thrown out from the
back oflbe truck.
•
Dillon wa1 charged wltli
drivln~ left of center.
No one was ln!ured or cited
In a two car colllaion at 7:15
p.m. on Rt. 160, one and two
tenths miles north of Rt. 1M
where cars .. drlven by Dorothy
L. Rippey, 48, Galllpolls, and
Eugene L. Fannin, 95, Fairborn, sideswiped on a
hUlcreast.

Eight persona were Injured
In a rash of trafflc accidents
Pf . PLEASANT - Tax- !ember 30 this .utme year.
Immediately by contac.Ung the Investigated over the week~nd
by the Gallla-Melgs Post St.le
payers 65 years of age or over
Since there are only two oflloo of L. W. Getty, County
Highway
Patrol.
may have returned to them a weeks , left to make claim, Clerk, where they wUI be given
The first accident occurred
portion of the taxes they paid eligible persons should do so . forms and assistance . II
at
9:1$ a.m. Saturday bn Rt.
necessary . .
last year If neeessary steps are
160, one and four tenths mlles
taken Immediately.
south
ol Rl. 664.
Two persons who have been r----------------------~--.
Officers said an auto driven
employed for two weeks by the
by Dorothy A. Wheeler, 57, or
County Court to assist eligible
Vinton, struck a pickup truck
taxpayers ir1 filing the
operated
by Albert H.
necessary inlormallop to
MacKenzie,
Jr
., 45, Galllpolls .
son. Harold F., Grove City ;
obtain a refu~d are Mrs.
WILLIAM WAGNER
three sisters, Helen Strong, Mrs. Wheeler was take~ to_the
Howard Garland and Mrs. Wllflam H. Wagner , 85, Go
lllpol ls; Myrtle Gardner, Holzer Medical Center ,lor
Route
2,
died
Pomeroy
Wayne Hart Jr ·
Rutland,
and Hozel Grate.
Saturday .nlght at the Holzer
Requiremdnts include ;
~leal Center. Mr. Wagner Wilkesville ; seven grand- ·treatment. of visible Injuries .
- Be 65 years of age or over was preceded In death by his ch·lldr en, and .seven great · She was also cited to Municipal
parents, John and Molly grandchildren.
Court lor exceMlve speed.
on December 31, 1972.
Wagner, and his wife, Minnie ·Funeral services will be held
Cynthia Sexton, 21, of
Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the
- Must have resided In this Arnold Wagner.
Surviving . are three sons, Martin Funeral Home with the Gallipolls, was admitted to the
state for at least a portion of
Wilbur Perrin officiating. Holzer· Medical Center with a
last year·, their income must Charles H. and William , both ol Rev.
Pomeroy Route 2. and George Burial will be In the Wright fractured vertebra following
not have exceeded $5,000; be F., Columbus ; five grand· Cemeterr, Langsville. Friends
the owner or renter of the chil dren . and two great- may cal at the funera! home an unusual accident Sunday on
anytime Tuesday.
Brick School Rd. in Addison
ho
te d th
'ed 10
· grandchildren .
mes a
ey occupt
Funeral services will be held
Twp.
She was reported In
1972; must not have received at 1 p. m. Tuesday at the Ewing
POMEROY LANES
·RANDOLPH FRALEY
satisfactory condition today .
Public money for payment of Funeral Home with the Rev.
Marnlng
Olorlu Lngue
Mrs. Sexton told inEdward Griffith officiating. · Randolph H. Fraley, Sr. , 57,
s~ nt . 11.1tn
.
Ph.
rea1 proper tY Iaxes or ren t Burial will be In the ~elart Falls Rt. 2, Cheshire, died Saturday vesUgating oflicers that she
during 1972, and they must not · Cemetery. Friends may call at at the Holzer Medical Center.
Team 'No. 6
6
6
owe any delinquent taxes.
the funeral home anytime.
· Mr. Fraley, born Sept. 20, pa!aed a man standing along Team No: I
1915, at Colecord, W. Va .• was the roadway and when she Team N o . ~
~
· Only one person of a
ORA v. KILE
~
preceded in death by his father, looked into the rear view Team NO.5
-Teem No.2
2
household may file a claim.
Ora v. Klle, former Meigs Robert Fraley .
i
He is survived by his wife, mirror, the man appeared to be Teem No. 4
A Homestead Relief claim County resident. died Sunday In
High Ind . Game - Sally
Georgia
R.
Long
Fraley;
his
pqlnting
a
gun
at
her
car.
for 1972 must be filed between Wadsworth, Ohio, following a
Lambert 184 ; Second High Ind .
Mrs
.
Ackey
(Lois
"
Mrs
Sexton
accelerated
her
mother
,
Game·
Wilson 181.
·
d"
th
·
ll
ngerjng
Illness.
· causlnR her to lose High -SerMarlene
an d me1u mg e respective
Mrs. Klle was born April 22, Oeanl Fraley, of Dorothy, w.
res - Sally Limbert
Va
.;
two
daughters,
Mrs
.
auto,
-437 and Sandy Phalln 0-4.
dates of July I, 1973 and Sep- 1890. In Worth , Mo .. the
High Game and Series
daughter of the late Rev. and Kenneth !Mary Lou) Erickson, controlofthevehicle.Itranoff - Team
Team No . 6, 158 and 2,1.49.
Mrs. George Eagan . She Is Caymont, Delaware, and Mrs . the ro•d striking an em·
"
by her husband, Ira B. Leslie (Frances Jane) WhitHOSPITAL ~EWS survived
Klle, Wadsworth ; a daughter, tingtonof Rl. 1. Middleport ; one bankmenl. There was heavy
WednndiY Early Bird
Veterans Memorial Hospital Mrs. Helen While. Wadsworth ; son, Randolph W. Fraley, Jr. , of damage to the auto. Also in·
Seotember 12. 1973
Rt. 1, Cheshire ; three sisters, jured was lt&gt;-month old Lori
Won Lost
Saturday Admissions - two sons, Forest Klle, Mrs.
Sam (MadQe l Robinson.
Stewart He~rdware
16
,8
Columbus.
and
Raymond
Kile
Charles Beller, Rutland ; Uoyd of Medina, and a foster E'alatlne, Ill. ; Mrs. Darwin Ann Sexton.
Team No . 2
16
8
Five persons were injured In Helen 's Beauty Shop 1.- 10
Peyton, Dexter; Paul Sigman, daughter , Ella Booker of (Wilma! Dillon. Patriot, an~
Rawllhg's Auto .Part!
1.10
Middleport; Avis Bissell, Long Bellaire. Also 'preceding here In Mrs . Denver (Margaret Lois) a truck-car accident at 3:50 Ben -rpm Corp. ·
6 18
death was a daughter, Mona ~:~t~r;:,.s~t ~~~~=~ °·J~ 1 · ~r~l~~ p.m. Sunday on .Rt. 141, three Bertha's G.rocerv
6
18
Bottom.
1
Archer, several years ago, and
Team
High
Game
Cleveland
;
Dar
let
Fraley,
and
seven
tenths
miles
west
of
Saturday Discharges - her parenis.
Rawlings Auto Parts 813 ;
Mrs. Klle was united In Artie, W. Va .. and Roger D. Rt. 775. The patrol said a plck- Team High Series- Rawlings
Anna Welch, Worley Davis,
marriage to Ira B. Klle In Tyler Fraley, Dorothy, W. Va ., and 10 up
· operated by Earl D DlUon Auto Parts 2351.
Dana Covert.
Ind . High Game - Mary
·
'
County. W. Va., 65 years ago. grandch ildren.
Hoffman
190 and Maxine
Services
lor
Mr.
Fraley,
who
43,
of
Crown
City,
and
a
car
Sunday Admissions - Doyle
Funeral services will be
Dugan
186.
was
a
member
of
the
Sliver
Run
driven
by
Donald
A.
Fischer,
Ord , Mason; Ann Barrett, conducted at !he Hilliard-Cox
Ind . High Series - Ma xine
Funeral Home In Wadsworth . Baptlsl Church, will be held 16 of Ga!Upolis sideswiped on Dugan -48-'. and Marlene Wilson
Rutland ; Jack Stafford, The
Tuesday
at
II
a.
m.
at
!he
'
'
location of burial has not
Rawlings- Coats Funeral Home a curve. FoUowing the Impact, and Marv Voss -453.
Mason; Patricia Robson, been determined.
with the Rev. Raymond File
Pomeroy ; Maizie Holsinger,
officiating.
Burial will be In !he
Reedsville ; Raymond Ruasell,
Meigs
Memor
ial Gardens.
HAROLD GARDNER
Middleport; Anthony Lacomb;
Harold F. Gardner. 66, RD 1, Pomeroy .
Tuppers Plains.
Langsville. passed away
. (Continued from Page I)
i)unday Discharges - Nancy Sunday morning at home.
Mr . Gardner, a retired
suburban Lakew,IJOd, Colo. All but the first child were born by
Neulzling.
CLUB TO l\IEET
construction wbrker, Is surCaesarean
section . Mrs. Springer said the motber, Edna Stanek,
vived by his wile, Lillian : two
The Magnolia Club will meet
daugh_
t
ers,
Mrs.
Wanda
Felty,
had expected "a multiple birth hut no one anticipated sextuplets.
Holzer Medical Center
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Juan ita at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the She had·been taking a fertility drug. Multiple births often occur
!Discharges Sept.15)
Hersman , Deer Wood, Minn.; a home of Mrs. Aaron Kelton.
Thomas Alban, Dorothy
in such cases."
Butcher, Martha Cheesebrew,
Everett Conley, Ruth Pullin;
Mary Ooeffinger, Mrs. Stephen
Burris and daughter, Mrs.
Robert J. Eynon and daughter,
Mrs. James Tape and
daughter , Donald Fischer,
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 pm . :. Open Both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 pm
AletHa Funk, Matthew
Galloway , James Geer,
Timothy Gibbs, Goldie Green, ·
Debra Howell, Mary Owens,
Donald Pearce: William
Pettery, Peggy Plymale, Clyde
Porter , Sahana Priyanath ,
Balsan Slaughter, Rachel
Somerville, Tina Spaun, Donna
Seward, Evelyn Winter,
William Wooldridge.
(Births)
. Mr. and Mrs., Roy Grimm,
Jr., ason,NewHaven ; Mr. and
Mrs. Mikel Esque, a daughter, ....,._
Galiipolis.
.
(DischargedSeptember16i
Charley Allen, Hazel Allison,
Stella Beagle, James Bennett,
Lewis Cemden, Stanley Cook,
Lula Cremeens, Luke Fields,
Mrs. Bobby Cline and
daughter, Mrs. Ronald WalkON THESE GREAT PLAYTEX8 STYLES.
er and son, Mrs. clarance
Floyd and son, Margaret
Gentry , Audley Hensley,
Richard Kern , Adelaide
Magnani, Goldie Muse, Terry
Save up to $1.51 when you buy two at these Cross Your Hearte Bras
Osborne, Sharon Pennington,
Style #36- Stretch Bra, Stretch Straps 32/36A, 32/40B, 32/42C- 2 tor $5.99
Eleanor Smith, Artist Taylor,
William Wagner .
Style #39-Undercup Support panels 32/36A, 32/40B,
(Birth)
32/40C- 2 For $5.99, 32/420- 2 For $7.99
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Trout, a
Style *56-Padded Bra- Lace cups 32/36A, 32/38B-2 For.$8.49
daughter, Gallipolls.
Style #173-Stretch Bra Hall Lace Cups-Stretch Straps
32/36A, 32/42B, 32/42C- 2 lor $6.89, 32/420- 2 For $9.99
Style t 181 -Stretch Bra-lace Cups 32/36A, 32/40B, ·
32/42C- 2 For $6.89, 34/420-,2 For $9.99

! ·Area Deaths !

Local Bowling

News . •. in Briefs

'ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SAVE UP TO *2~

INGELS FALL SALE!
SUPER VALUES IN HOME FURNISHINGS

SPECIAL MILL PURCHASE

Save $1.01 when you buy a "No Visible,Means ot Support"®bra
1146-Sheer Lace-White
#148-Sheer- White
#6148-Sheer Beige- 32/36A, 32/40B, 32/42C,
Now only $4.49, 32/42D $1.00 more

.Sale I Traditional

Style #1 0- Regula r Cup- 34·36A, 32·42B 32-42C- $4.94
32-420...:$5.94
•
Style 112- Fiberlill Lined- 32· 38A,
32-40B, 32-40C- $5.94

3-PC. LIVING ROOMS

Style i1&gt;200-Long Line- 34·429, 34·44C$9.94, 34-440- $10.94

As ~~~ant' a grouping as you ~auld hope to own, perfect for the

tradthonally decorat~ home. Sutte Includes 3-cushion sofa, 2-cushion
love ~at, and matchtng lounge cltair. All superbly conslructed with
reverstble foam cushions! in outstandin·g fabrics.
"Searching for perfection

AND aiAIR

·$299

is a good Ideo but It's
seldom found by looking

Shortie

into

Average Leg Now $11.99 High Waist Girdlet

il

mirror". , ,

Personal ser vice by our

LOVE SEAT, $.149

"F RIENDLY ONES" Is
the mirror ot our business
achleilemenls. Without th is
we would be jus1 another

All 3 Pieces Specially Prlcedll

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

Now $10.99 High Waist Long Leg tNow $15.99
Now $13.99

Long Leg
Now $12.99
All Styles-S,M,L,Xl" ,XXL' except Briel In S,M,L,XL •.
(X~ ~. XXL' - $1 .00 more) (tNot available In small)

reasonable pr lc:es we feel

stand

petition.

192·2&amp;35

Now $10.99

store . With thlo, plus
quollly materials. and
we

INGELS FURNITURE

Save $2.01 when you buy
"I Cln't btliiVelt'll girdle"~ girdle
Brief
Now S 9.49 Regular Girdle

above

com .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
(Sale Ends October 13, 19TJ)

0
I,

I

•

INSTALLATION - In a candlelight ceremony, the new officers of the Candystripers of
Veterans Memorial Hospital were installed Monday night. Mrs. Thomas M. Theiss, director,
and Mrs. Donald Diener, assistant director, conducted the installation ceremony for Mary
Krawsczyn, president; Patsy Proffit.!, secretary; JoAnn Blevins, vice prellidenl; and Cherie
Reuter, news reporter, pictured left to right. Mary Ruth Sauer, the treasurer, was not present
for the meeting . New members welcomed during t)le meeting were Brenda Gampbell, Cindy
Thomas , Cherrie Bass, Cheryl Lehew, Kathy Rizer; and Mary Smith.

1111--

"-""-•Iiiii
•

While garbsoge contlnueij to
pile up in severn! !lections or
the county, t&gt;otneroy council
met Monday evening at city
hall with Don Griffin- or
Scientific Sanitation Inc .,
which is in charge of collecUnR
the in-town w~stes,lo work out
a soluti on to the problem. •
Griflin stated that one of his
trucks was dcmollsiwd In an
accident recently, and one he
rent&lt;;d to replace it has broken
down, leaving him "in a bind"
for trucks to collect ga rba ge.
· Griffin added thst he Is
trying to get another truck, and
in the mea ntime, as ked
residents to bear . with him as
he ''will catch up soon ."
In other council action,
Mayor Don Collins' report lor
the month of August showing
$2,329. in fines being collected
was accepted. Police Chief Jed
-We bster declared that the
amount way be the highest in
Pomeroy's history.
Besides the lines collected,
Mayor Collins reported 22
accidents, 62 arrests, $1 ,808 in
street money collected, $1,822
in lot money collected ,
distribution of 1,238 parking

meter ttckets and -a tol;il or
4,664 miles were driven by the
pollc • ct·uiscrs.
Councilrniln Jim Mccs
dlsl;ussed the fe&amp; slbliity ur
gelling a striper to [Jainl centci·
lines on several town streets.
Mecs estimated the cost as
somewhere around '300, and
Ust&lt;;d top priority streets us
Lincoln Hill, Butt&lt;;rnut, and
Main St.
Council also considered the
purchase of attractive trash
conlainers to place along town
street~. Chief Webster ~Jell ­
tioned thai he thought they
would be an excellent idea
since they would add to the
beauty of the downtown area,
however council look no action.
An application for a job with
the street department filed by
Richard A. Cogar, was read
and council submitted it to the
street
department
lor
recommendation .
In other action, Eimer Althou.se was appointed, upon the
recommendation of Chief
Webster , as an extra
policeman, on a part lime
basis. Althouse's appointment
will become effective the 30th

(If this HUJfllh ,,

Althouse told council he hus
hturd nurnurouR cornplainl•
from resident~ about trash left
on the sidewalk oul&lt;idc Luigi 's
aft&lt;;r the" rcsl&lt;turanl's closing
hours. Council agreed to send a
ielU,r to the owner, Gary
WaltOn , asking him to see thai
the area is cleared up every
night.
frank Hizer reported thst
when the new Kroger Store was
buill, in the process or installing a storm drain, the
builders ran pipes. under his

YUP, IT WORKED
CINCINNATI I UPfi Robe rt Thompson Itt · a ·
newH papcr, climbed a ladder
to reach a wa•p nest under
an cave on his porch - and
burned down 11,200 worth of
his home.
Alter mpondlng to the lire .
alarm, Fire Marshal
Thomas Guifoyle said the
method worked.
" The · wa sps were all
cleaned out."

property, tearing up new , case over to lls solicitor.
reinforced concrete sidewa lk.
Attending were council
Rizer added that he has asked
the builders to repair the Members ,Ralph Werry , !:larry
damagA, but that nothing has Davis, W(lllam Snouffer, Jim
Mees, Mayor Collins, Clerk
been done .
Jane
Walton, Don Griffin ,
Mayor Collins advised Rizer
Rizer, Elmer Althouse I
to try again, and if nothing is Frank
'
Ltnda
Roush
and Denny Fobes.
done, the village will turn the

Hunt gulled
court told

•

enttne

...

Devoted To The lllleJ;"etll Of The Meigs-Mown Area
VOL. XXV NO. 109

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

;· ']\J""~'&gt;'X'i:=x=:::::::::::::::::&gt;.:::::::::::;::::::::~::::::~:::~~~===::::;:,:,:,:,~~,:~:=x::::::::::~:&gt;:~::::;:::::

f

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER
18, 1973
.
.

TEN CENTS

~ews .• in Briefsf Water

By United Presslnternatloi)Bl
NEW YORK - THE PERJURY-CONSPIRACY trial of
· former Cabinet officers John Mitchell and Maurice Stans was
reset for Oct. 23 Monday, but U. S. District Court Judge Lee
~~~~~rdi, who will preside, left open the possibility of further
The trial was originally supposed to begin six days ago, but
Mitchell, former U. S. attorney general, and Stans, former
commerce secretary, said they weren't ready and won a postponement. Both defendants are involved in the Watergate investigation, and their attorneys have also argued thst Watergate
publicity has· made.a fair tl'ial impossible .
WASHINGTON - THE UNITED STATES is prepared to
ffiilitary aid lo flOod·r~~aged
· Pakistan, whose pr;irle minister, ZuHikar Ali Bhutto, begins
talks today with President Nixon. Bhutto arrived in the United
States Monday and spent the afternoon touring colonial
Williamsburg, Va.
State Deparlment officials said the U. S. response to Bhutto's
expected request for economic aid would be "generous and
sympathetic.
They said there would be no further military
commitments between the U. S. and Pakistan. State Department
officials said that the United States will continue to provide
Pakistan with spare,parts and non-lethal military equipment but
wlll not sell it lethal arms, under a policy generally followed
since the Indo-Pakistan war of 1965.
·
IJ1cr~se eCQ~~Omi~ ~ut_ not

CLEVELAND - THE ROTARY ENGINE Mazda may some
day be built in the United States, according to vice president and
general manager C. R. Brown of Mazda Motors of America.
Brown told a meeting of sales and marketing executives here
Monday that there are no definite plans for Mazda plant in the U.
S. "at this time," but such a move might be made after 1978.
Sales of the Japanese-bulll car in the U. S have grown from
20,000 units In 1971 to 57,000 last year and an estimate of 130,000
has been made for this year. "We are looking at 240,000 next
year," Brown said. "Actually,! am more hopeful about the U. S.
economy for next year than I am for the balance of this year."
WASHINGTON - PROTECTED BY IMMUNITY, a &lt;:t&gt;nvicted dealer In stolen securities, wa~ called for questioning by a
Senate subcommittee today on a multimillion dollar scheme to
victimize legitimate businesses. Louis P. Mastriana, of New
York, who trafficked in stolen securities from Florida to Texas,
was a key witness before the perrnanen,t Investigations subcommittee, which is beginning five days of hearings on the role of
organized crtme In the stolen securities racket.
,
Mastriana, according to subcommittee investigators, was
convicted in 1971 and 1972 and given two lour-year sentences lor
passing off worthless Bank of sark drafts and bogus Zurich International Investment Co. letters of credit. The Zurich firm was
a phony operation based in Nassau and operated in several other
countries, and the Sark bank was a "paper" operation that was
based In England, according to Investigators.

·

.

.

.

The Middleport Board of
Public Affairs, unable financially to provide water service
to several Middleport Hili
families, apparently has no
objections II the service is
provided by the Leading Creek ,.
Conservancy District.
'!;hiS was llQ.))' \11\Djll _s).oll9
after a special meeting ol
Middleport Village Coilricll and
the community's board of
public affairs at village hall
Monday night. Some 20
residents of Middleport Hill
and of Rutland St., actually
within the Pomeroy corp .
limits, discu!aed the problem
of water service to those
districts.
The problem developed last
week when it was reported at a
council meeting that the
conservance distric t was
laying lines to serve water
customers within the Middleport corp. limits. It was
pointed out that the district had
been given permission in
December, 1972, only to cross
· over the road, not to provide
water service on Middleport
· Hill.·The Conservancy District
was notified by Village
Solicitor Bernard Fullz to hall
laying these lines. Residents of
the hill were perturbed by the
action as they were expecting
the water service and so the
meeting was called last night
to discuss the situation.
The board of public affairs
members attending last night's
meeting were Jack Hawley and

TULSA, Okla . (UP!) - For petitors
claim
lorces
the first lime , a smaller customers to accept systems
computer company has been · comprised entirely of IBM
successful In an antitrust suit components.
flied against IBM, and comIBM's unit price practices,
puler analysts believe the long Telex said, effectively shut off
term effects of the decision the market for their comcould stagger the monolith or potible units which can be used
the industry.
with IBM systems.
"II IBM doesn't win its apThe loss was the firstin court
peal this matter could be ugainst IBM and Industry
damn' serious," Stover 13ab- spokesmen said lhe outcome
cock of the Dreyfus Fund said. could bring a deluge of similar
The immediate effects of suits by smaller peripheral
Monday 's $352.5 million data processing llrms. But
decision in favor of Telex nothing will be known until the
Corp ., an Oklahoma-based appeals are settled.
computer company, was to
send IBM's stock down $26 a
share to t272 on !.he New York
CALLED TWICE
Stock Exchange. Telex shares ' Runs made Monday by the
nearly doubled , rising $3.38 to SEOEMS were at 3: 65 p.m. tq
transport Lloyd P•tton,
fi,63JI share.
u.s. Dla~lct Court Judge A. Dexter, !rom Veterans
Shennan Christensen, in a 217· Memorial H()flpitlll to Holzer
page decision, granted a $352.5 Medical Center ~ nd at 8:20
million •ward lu Telex ond p.m. to take Goldie Roush,
ordered IBM . to halt Ita unit Railroad St., Middleport to .
prioe tactics, which com- Holzer Medical Center.
y

service expected
t 0 .Me1ddi.
· · a·
. ep.0·'rt h 1•II ·are·
.

IBM is hurting

Save $1.01 on "I Can't Believe It's A Bra"'" bra

SOFA

Plea made for patience

eight persons injured

Otild's head

hit by gate
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - A
four-year-old New Haven girl
was admitted to Sl. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington Monday
afternoon with a head injury
suffered in an accident on the
family farm.
Little Amy Hollman,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
sammy Hollman of Letart
Route, according to relatives
"is seemingly all right" and
expects to be returned home
·today.
Relatives ex plained that
Amy's mother, Sharon, was in
Point Pleasant serving on jury
duly and because of this Amy
was spe n~ing the afternoon
with her father, They were
m•ound the barn arcn when a
gale can1e shut and struck her
hea\1.
The New Haven E-R squad
ombul•nce transported her to
HunUn8ton where she was
admitted.
Sammy Holiman operates a
dairy farm In partnership with
his fat her, Robert Hoffman,
near New Haven.

·

.

·

James Brewington. The third
member, Richard Gress, is
working a 4 to midnight shift
and was unable to be present.
villa ge Main te n an ce
Supervisor Harold Chase said
early -in the meeting that it
would cost Middleport village
an.uUmated $lb,OOO to provide
service to 15 families on
Middleport Hill. There are only
about six families to be serviced, however.
The board of public affairs
pointed out thai it would have
to borrow funds lor such an
extension of service aild that
the income to be derived would
in no way cover the costs involved . water rates to other

.

customers would have ·to be
increased to raise funds for the
loan and the increase would
make water costs exorbitant,
they said.
Hawley pointed out thst the
board of public ' affairs has
made several efforts over the
paol four or flv.e ,years 1!1.' up·
date •nd expand the water
system but has not been able to
secure any federal money for
such a project.
The discussion brought ouf
that residents of Middleport
l;lill are drinking water that
has been determined to be
unsafe. A spokesman for the
group said that they ha ve
asked for water service in

previous years from the village
but have not been able to
persuade the village to begin a
program.
The board pointed out that it
could proceed with a program
of providing service if there
were a large number of homes
involved, but could not ipel\4\
extensive funds "for only about

six families."
Members of the board of
public affairs indicated that
since it cannot provide the
service to the Middleport Hill
families it would have no objections to the Leading Creek
Con servancy Distri ct
providing it. It was suggested
(Coniinued on page 81

Meigs extension agent
is Marta _. Sue Guilkey
Miss Marla Sue Guilkey,
Meigs County's new extension
agent, home economics, began
her employment in the
Mulberry Heigh_ts, Pomeroy,
Extension Office Monday,
A June graduate of Ohio
Stale University where she
received her degree in home
economics education, Miss
Guilkey has moved to Meigs
County from her home . In
Por'tsmouth. She j s the
daughter of Mrs. James E.
Guilkey of Portsmouth and the
late Mr : Guilkey .
Her appointment was fll!lde
by Ohio Stale University and
approved by the Meigs County
Exte nsion Advisory Committee headed by Carl Barnhill
and made up of representatives !rom various groups In
the county active in the ex•
tension program.
Miss Guilkey's experience
includes counseling at the
Presmont Church Camp and
some pre-fair evaluation of
projects for the Extension
Service. She participates In
most sporls and makes most of
her own clothing .
All for her plans for the extension program here, she
indicated her Interest in
developing projects lor ull ag,e

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
newspaper report that Presi·
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - E. dent Nixon's brother, Donald,
Howard Hunt Jr., the former was wiretapped by agents . .
CIA agent and spy novelist who
Hurit's petition, similar · to
pleaded guilty in the Watergate one filed recently by lour
burglary, now wants to change Miami defendants who also
that plea to innocent, saying It had pleaded guilty In the case,
was "coerced" from him by claimed that his constitutional
"outrageous" government rights "were violated by the
conduct.
outrageous conduct of the
Hunt's lawyers Monday government in depriving him
asked U.S. District Court of valuable evidence ."
Judge John J . Sirica to allow He Cites Removal of Papen
him to change his plea arul to
It said tw-o of his notebooks
dismiss the charges of con- · "disappeared" and cited the
spiracy, burglary, bugging and removal of p~pers from hill
wiretapping on which he Is now safe and their subsequent
serving a provisional sentence destruction by acting FBI
of 35 years in a federal prison director L. Patrick Gray, along
at Danbury, Conn.
with false testimony which has
His attorneys argued that he been admitted by former aides
should be allowed to change his Jeb Stuart Magruder and
plea because the government · Herbert L. Porter.
"subovned and concealed perHW~t's petition conceded he
jury," broke into his White IY,a5 "responsible" for planning
House safe and destroyed the Watergate break-in. But 1•
evidence thai might have said he had been told by cohelped him.
defendantG.Gordon Liddy and
They also argued that the others that the effort was
burglary and bugging of approved by then Attorney
Democratic headquarters at General John N. Mitchell to
the Watergate June 17, 1972, seek evidence .of campaign
"flowed directly and lawfuUy contributions to the Democrats
from the President's office" from
"foreign
governand was justified by national menta."
security, or thst Hunt at least
Assistant Special Prosecutor
thought it was and therefore Rtc,,ard Davis told a sevenlacked criminal intent.
minute court hearing Monday
Other Developments
that Segretti was "now being
In other developments :
cooperative with \he · govern- The Senate Watergate ment. " The indictment to
committee meets in private which he agreed to plead guilty
today to pian its next round of broadened and superseded a
hearings beginning next Mon- two-court Indictment returned
day.
against him In' Florida last
- Donald. H. Segretti, a 32- May .
It accused him of distrlbuyear-old California lawyer,
agreed Monday to plead guilty tion, without discloalng the
toanew,tciut'-Ciillllt~t ~~ ~

in Flot)ida, · acciiSing him ~t ··
conspiracy and illegal distribtllion of anti.-Democratic campsign material.
-Sen. Joseph M. Montoya,
DN .M., said officials of the
Treasury Depsrtment, which
operates the Secret Service,
invoked the doctrine of executive privilege and refused to
"confirm or deny" to him a

'

a\t'MI'lnl

Qot,

Beef simplified
under new system
United Press !ntemallonal .
What's the difference belween a Delmonico and a
Spencer steak? There is none
and shoi&gt;pers wlll be able to
buy them both as "beef rib eye ·
steak," although probably at
. higher prices.
The National Livestock and
Meat Board announced plam
Monday for a new standard for
identifying cuts of meat to
reduce shopper confusion. The
plan will reduce more than
1,000 names for cuts or beef,
pork,. veal and lamb to about
300.
SO Delmonico and Spencer
steaks, as well as filet steaks as
they are called In some parts of
the country, will be called
·" beef rib eye steak."
A Kansas City steak, which
also is called a New York strip
or club steak, wlll be labeled
"beef loin , top loin steak."
But filet mignon still will be
.

filet mignon .
The new system-Is voluntary
and butcher shops will not have
to go ruong with it.
David li. Stroud, president of
the meat board, said "It may
be the most significant meat
counter Improvement since the
introduction of self-service
nearly four decades agom"
No matter what a steak is
called, Its price is up. In
Chicago Monday, the price of
round steak in a major
supermarket jumped to cents a
pound, to $1.59. Lean hamburger was 98 cents a pound, up five
cents.
Saleway stores In Los An·
ge les raised most beef prices
an average of 10 cents because
of "increased cost." Premium
ground beef was $1.38 a pound,
up 10 cents. But lamb dropped
as much as 10 cents a pound.
"I'm just glad the govern.ment is out of the prlce-~~ettlfl8
MARTASUEGU1LKEY
buslneM," Herbert Kramer,
president of the Retail Grocers
As•ociation , . said In New
()I' leans. "I think II they let our
groups inc luding senior Expanded Nutri tion Program,
. 8S0tt WJUI'e super.marketa just operate the
citizens . She said that the and U1e Mvisory Committee in 0
developing
programs
of
ap·
way they'·are suppOiled to, on
program will depend on the
supply and demand, I'm sure
"needs of the women in the peal, are Miss Guilkey's immediate
objectives.
MASON
Seventeen·
year
·
that In a very short time thla
county and what they want."
She
succeeds
Mrs.
Jennifer
old
Timmy
Roush
of
Mason
thing is gOlfl8 to settle out
Working
with
the
homemakers' clubs already Lohse Sheets, who has was sent to Holzer Medical nicely ,"
Center with injuries suffered in
active, the three aides of IJle· resig ned.
n motorcycle accident Friday
Veterau Memorial Hotpllll
night near here. Timmy, son of
Admissions - Patty Jtan
Mr. nnd Mrs. Lawrence Roush,
expects to be returned home Saarles, Pomeroy; Earlie ~ .
today. Relatives said he has a Scarberry, rutclne; Deborah
the legislature towurd public the state Wclfnre Deplirlrncnl fractw·o of the right leg and Gilliand, Cheater; Joann
should be in .the pOsilion o! bruises. Police were unable to McLaughlin, Pomeroy :
payment for abortions.
"IL.ls one thing lot· people to supporting life, not ter- disclose details of the mlshsp. Randall F'rlend, Lana Bottom:
Ross Morrla, New H1ven 1
do this on their own, but it Is minating it, by paying for
Stephen HouchiN, Mlcldllport;
another thing for the state to abortions," he added.
Charlea Nelaon, MlddiiPCifl:
pay for it," Mottl said . "The
Clarem:e Spurrier, I'Gnllfop;
DEMSTOMEET
The Welfare Depart,ment
state would be en(;ouragt ng
The · Meigs
County Opal cwnm1111, Rlctne.
abor lions by paying for them. reported. earlier it would inDllchar&amp;et - landra 84Je,
"This is repugnan t to the clude legal abortions In the Democratic party will meet at
conscience of many people fn medical serv ices to be paid lor 8 Thursday evening at Grace Clinton Dou,laa, Ltltlt
Ohio, Including many in my thr011gh a · federal-state Episcopal Parl•h House, East Sptnctr, VIncent Brodtrtck,
Uoyd Payton .
Main St., Pomeroy.
district. As a matter of policy, Medicaid program.

Timmy Roush
fM
, , d

Welfare abortions opposed
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Sen.
Ronald MotU, D-Parmu, today
demanded that the s\a le
Welfare Department not
uuthorize payments for
for
welfare
abortions
recipients.
MotU said he would seek
adoption of such a resolution by
the legislature. II approved, it
would not have the eflecl of law
but would express the policy of

c.

Georse Wallace In the 1972
Florida preshlentlal primary,
reading: "If you llke HlUer,
you'lllove Wallace ... vote for
Muskle."
Another count charged
distribution of posters stating,
"Help Muskie, Support Busing
Our Children now." Sen. Ed·
round Muskle, D-Malne, was
then a candidate.

J

�•
2- The Do&lt;ily Sentinel. Mlddleport-Pooneroy, 0., Sept.18, 1973

YQung Adults meet

Television Log
TUESDAY, SEPT. 11 , 1973
6: UO - News J, 4. 8. 10, 15. 6: &gt;es~ m e Street 20 : Sporlscope 33:
ABC News 13.
6::10 - NBC News J, 4, IS ; ABC NeW. 6; CBS News a, 10;
Hogan's Heroes 13: Human Dimension 33.

Hy Hdt•n

7: 00 - What's M v I I n~ R· FL.ar ,.., 70 ~ RPI'!t T he Clock 4: News

10: Lee Trevi no's Golf 15; "Trulh or Consequences 3 6 ·
Dust y's Trail 13 ; En vi ronment Today tt nd Tomorrow 33.'

I: JU - 10 teii TheTruth6 ; RFD ZO; Cancer: Lileor Oeat hJ3 ;
Charles ~la i r 's Better World IS: New Price is Right 8, 10 ;
New Dahng Gam e 3: World of Su r vival 4 ; America Now 13.

'

a: 00 -- Maude a. 10: Eveni ng AI Pops 33 : Chase J, 4, 15 : Egan 6,

13; Ohio: l:h1s Week 20.
8:30 - Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Movie " Dying Room Only" 6. 13;
The Session 20.
.
9:00 - Movies " The Snoop Sisters 3, 15: '' An Eye For An Eye"
4; MIT Sy mphony 20, 33.
·
9:30 - Movie " r error on the Beach" 8, 10.

10:00 - Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13: News 20 ;
Thunder God 33.

Ma r uk~ m l

The

11 : 00 - NewsJ 1 4, s , n , 15, 10, 6.
11 : 30 -;-- Johnny Carson 3. 4, lS ; J ack Paar Tonite 6 : Movies " 'The

Venetian Altair" 8; " Th~ Candy Man" 10; " Lady lor a Night"
13.
1:00 - Your He~ lth 4: Jack Paar Toni te 13.
1 : 30 - New s ~ .

,.

2:30 - News 13.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1973
6: 00 -

Sunr ise Sem inar 4; . Sa cr ed Hea r t 10.

6: IS - Ur ban Leag ue 10.

6:25- Pa ui"Har vey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4: Bible Answers 8: The Story IJ ; News
Corncob Reports 3; Farmt lm e 10.

7:00 - Today 3. 4, 15; CBS News a, 10; Fli nts tones 13 ; Romper
Room 6.
·
7:30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwi n&lt;le13 ; New Zoo Rev ue 6.
8:00 - Cap!. Kangaroo 8, 10: New Zoo Rev ue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Lassie ·6.

a:30 -

Huck &amp; Yogl 6: Dick Van Dyke 13.

a:55 ~ News 13.

Her Rlval'sa Cave W\lman
Rap :
I like th is ooy and he's beginning to like me, but his girlfriend
says she'll heat me up if I even speak to hlon.
What's more her mother gets into the acl, and if he doesn't
call the girl every day , she calls up and Invites him over.
They broke up once, but the girl and her mother made such a
fuss that he went back to her. He Wid her though, that if she
OOES jWllp me, he's through with her. Do you think he means it'!
- J ENNY ANN
Dear Jenny Ann :
There's one way IQ find out - but you may get some lumps
doing it. Do you like this boy well enough to fight for him? HELEN

+++

Jermy Ann :
You'd be doing this guy a favor to get the girl and her mother
off his back. Hut maybe you wouldn't really want a boy woo lets
two females boss him around. - SUE

9:30 - To Tell the Truth 3; Wild, Wild West 6: Secret Storm 8.
9:55 - Chuck White Reports 10.
10:00 - DinahShore J, IS ; Joker's Wild 3, 10.
10:30-Balfle3, 4, 15; $15,000 Pyram id 8, 10; Mike Douglass 6.
11 : 00 - Gambit a; 10; Password 13; Wi zard of Odds 3, 4, 15.
11 :30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love ol Life 8, 10; Brady
Bunch 13; Book Beat33; Bowllng6 ; Sesame Street 33.
11 :55 - CBS News a: Dan Imel's World 10.
·
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 ; Password 6; Bob Braun' s News 4; NeWs -

13, to. a.
12:30 - Search lor Tomorrow B, 10; Split Second 6, 3 W's 3, 15.
12:55 - NBC News 3, 15.
I:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; No! For Women Only 15 ·
Ca.n centration 8; What's My Line 10.

'

1:30 - ThreeonaMatch3 . 4. 15: Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As the
· World Turns a. 10. ·
.
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15: Newlywed Game 13 6 ·
, Guiding Light a. 10.
·
' ,
2:30 - Ooctors3, 4,15; Edgeot Nighl8, 10; Girl in My Life6, 13.
3:00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital6, 13; Price Is
Right a, 10; RFD 20.
Return o{. Peyton Place 3, 15 ; One Life to Live 13; Secret

Storm 10; Ph1l Donahue 4: Match Game '73 8: Film 33 ·
Flinlstones 6: Gnio: This Week 20.
· · '
4:00 - Mr . Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33, 20; Love,
American Style 13; Merv Gr iffin 4 ; Speedracer 6i 1 Love
Lucy 8; Movie " The Secret Partner" 10.
4:30 - My Little Margie 15; I love Lucy 6; Green Ac res 3·
Jeopardy 4; Hazel 8; Gilligan's Island 13.
!

. ·s:oo- Mr. Rogers 20, 33; Bonanza.3; Big Valley 6: Western Star

The~t~r 15: I Dream of Jeannie 13 ; Merv Griffin 4; Andy

.

.
.
5:30 - Elec. Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13 ; Beverly Hillbiliies 8:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Trails West 15. ,
·
5:55 - Earl Nightingale 15. ,
6:00 - News 3, 4, a, 10, 15; Sesame Street 20 ; ABC News 13;
~~~~

Personal /tv and Behavioral Develooment 33.
6: 30 - NewsJ, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 ; Hoaan' s Heroes 13.

7: Oh~ews 10; What's Mv Line a; Truth or Con seq. 6, 3; Beat the

Clock 4: Anything You Can Do 13; Elec. Co. 20 : Saint
Know Your Schools 33.

Dear Helen and Sue:
My two girlfriends have got into this religion where they go
door to door and try to convert people. They 're trying it with me
too , and alii hear lately is what a "sinner" I am. They load me
with .tracts and booklets.
I don't want to lose their friendship, but how can I shut them
up J I'm not an atheist, but I can't believe TIIEIR way. )t's too
far-&lt;&gt;ut. - TIRED OF ARGUING

.

Paul Dixon 4; Ph il Don,:, hue 15; F r ie ndly Junct ion 10;
A.M. 3; Brady Bunch 6 ; Abbott and Costell o 8: Movie
''Caprice" 13 ; Co\'er to Cover 33.

9: 00 -

3:30 -

Stw Uulh•l

+++

6: 15 -:._ Farm Report 13.

6.
6: 45 -

UtHI

.

15 ·

'

7:30- The Judge 10; Police Surgeon 3; How Do Your Children
Grow 20; Episode Action 33; To Tell the Truth 6 ; On the

Dear Tired :
Don 't arg11e: walk away when your friends start
proselytizing.
But also don't expect much of this friendship while they're so
wrapped up in their lar-&lt;&gt;ut religion. If they can't convert you,
they maydropyou. (Or you may keep walking, you can't take the
sermons.) - HELEN

+++

8: J~......,. Mo_ vi~s "Marooned" 3, 4, 15 ; ''" Satan 's 'SchO:,I for Girls"

9:00 - Cannon 8, 10.
9:30- Man Builds, Man Destroys 20, 33 , . ·.
·
10:00 - News 20; Owen Marshall 6, 13; Homewood 33 : Dan
August 8; The Dev1l's Triangle 10.
11 :00- News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10, 13; 15.
•
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson J, 25; Jack Paar Tonite 6 · Movies " Killer

by Night" 8; "The Juggler" 10; "Daughter ~I the Mind" 13.

1:00 -

News 4; Jack Paar Tonite 13.

2:30 - News 13.

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
ThiS isn't the column you were supposed to be reading nere
today, fans, but my conscience ,and ~old hard facts got in the way
of what I sat down to write .,
1 was going to put the bad..fnouth en Jerry Lewis, the annual
Labor Day long-playing telethon, and the Muscular Dystrophy
Assn. of America.
· Not that I have any particular ax to grind, understand. My
criticisms were three in number , and-went something like this:
1 "- Too many famous names in TV and show business boost
their "~nage " with slavish devotion to some worthy cause, in a
cheap bid for publicity. However, I was ready to admit that
Jerry's got as much right as other celebrities to champion a
special cause, and his association with MD is at least as worthy
as Danny Thomas' hospital in Memphis, probably a notch above
Bob Hope's self«rving tours to cheer up the boys overseas, and
certainly superior to Bing Crosby's annual tournament for the
benefit of impoverished pro golfers.
2- Therewasa general lack of information on the Muscular
Dystrophy Assn ., and oow inuch •o~the.nationwide take actually
went to research on MD WJ&lt;hfj)bab!Ut~Uon of its victims.
3- Muscular dystropl).);·~~lf, w\jile it is a baffling killer and
crippler of our children, ~ertainly dpes not rank in the top 10
among diseases which heed to be eradicated. In fact, it may not
be in the top 50, and certainly isn't in the same league with heart
ailments and circulatory diseases, cancer, auto fatalities or even
drug abuse. (Some doctors doubt that the kind of dystrophy that
strikes and kills the very young - mostly boys - can ever be
conquered, because it is hereditary and defies a "cure." )
Okay, on that basis, I was somewhat anti-telethon, although I
respected Lewis' efforts, as well as those of the volunteers both
celebrities on the screen and anonymous voiW!teers all ov~r the
country, including the Meigs-Gallia-Mason area. They were well·
intentioned, beyond question ,
But my negative reaction was dispelled when the MDAA and
Jerry Lewis opened their books as well as their hearts, and I'm
glad I didn't put the rap on anyone Involved.
The Jerry Lewis telethon on TV netted about $12 million in
pledges. That figure makes up almost half of the MDAA's annual
budget of about $25 million; and that figure isn'i too much, in my
judgment, to fight a tragic killer,.even though other diseases are

The Minersville United
Methodist Church wiU observe
its homecoming and dedication
or new church furnishings this
SWlday.
Sunday school at 9 a.m. will
be followed by worship service
at 10 a.m. with the Rev ,
Richard Jarvis speaking. A
basket dinner will be held at
noon and at 1 p.m. the Rev.

'

S.O.:
... Not unless you want one mad mother! - HELEN

+++

Spied On: '
... Not unless you want snail trails in your room, when the
little rascals go over the top of your wastebasket. - SUE

Robert Bumgardner, Mid·
dleport, will dedicate the new
furnishings . At ·2 ·p.m. a
program will be presented by
the Uhrig Brothers Gospel
Singers. The public is Invited to
attend Sunday's events.
SET FAMILY NIGHT
A family night observance
with a guest speaker will be
held Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy First
Baptist
Church . The potluck supper will ~ held at 6:30
p.m. followed by a talk by
· the Rev. G. W. Danielson, area
director for Judson College, a
BaptistSchOQI at Elgin, Ill. The
Rev. Mr. Danielson will show
slides and tell about the
college.

~&amp;tJJ.ID11rn; lkJ """:"l!J ..-~ ,_
Unscramble thue four Jumbles.
one letter -to eat":h · aquart, to
.,
form four ordinary words.
hylifNiliAfiNillrl

!0~ 1,

""IIHJf!lf[

I'm tired of

b.Lflll pv1hed around!

more frequent a~d possibly more important.
The MDAA funnels an amazing 81 pet. of its budget into
actual research and rehabilitation activities.
This is marvelous '
.
eSpecially when :You consider that some so-c&amp;lled "charities"
oRen spend up to 98 pel. of theil: budget for high-priced "of·
ficials'' and ''administrative costs.''
Therefore, instead of making this article a mild attack on
Jerry Lewis and the MDAA, it is instead a hymn of praise to all of
them, their honesty with the public, and the openness and
prudence with which they handle their donations.
stay with it, Jerry, and we'll be watching for your annual
bash again next Labor Day.

worker
12. Dis·
lressing
13. Gangster's
· utterance
, (2 wds.)
U. Attilla
15. Do a
wi~e­

tapper's
job
16. Japanese
river
17. Albanian
capital
19. Frenzy
20. Indigence
21. Prepare
a path
22. Puzzling
problem

WHAI
T"'E DA'I
FIR&amp;i!MDE
'r'OUR&amp;EL.F "'gp,~D.

IIRENZA

I I
\WUBED~
f' ,

1,

~:::"=::-=:::~~~·::;::~·~~·;·~~~~r:ea:ted:_:b~y the above cirtoon.

IL...____:Ptitl="=II.=B::::PIIISI::..:MSWIR=.::•::....____JI (

X XX)

(Auwen lomorrowJ

lumbleo, CRAZE fETID IMMUNE GUILTY
Yetlerd•y'•
Anf'lltrt COuld be on expert weWht lifter-or

dropper-A DIETICIAN

WIN AT BRIDGE

40. Be
peevish
DOWN
1. Flesh
wound
2. More or
less
3. Ransack
(3 wds.)
4. Season
after
prlntemps
5. Blue suit
materiai
· 6. Duffer's
Item
7. Excited
(4,wds.)
8. Impatient
9. Handled
11. Throb
15. Humorist
1
' Bugs"

WEST
EAST
+A 97
+ 8654 3
•Js 4
" 1072
t KQJ
t a
+97'.1 10
+K546
")
SOUTH !DI
+ QJ 102
" AKQ

18

Yesterday's Answer '
• A 9J
18. Clarin•t
26. Be a
+108~
or bassoon
manikin
None vulnerabl e
21. "-But·
28. Manu·
West
North
East South
terfty''
facturer
lN .T.
22. Biblical
29. Common
Pass
2+
Pass
2•
story
item
Pass 3N .T,
Pass Pass
23. Invested ;
33. Ship's
Pass
marauded
ngglng
Opening lead- tK
24. Old
support
Roman
35. Mining Ond .L -_;_ _:_~:._::.:.:__ _ __J
pla~boy
36. Sprite
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

suit. How could East tell that it
called for a spade return this
time'
It is a matter of the diamond
plays. West continued with his
highest diamond at each turn to
lead. That was an unmistakea·
ble suit preference signal be·
cause if he wanted the normal
heart return he would have
played the 10 of diamonds at
trick two and continued with
the jack at irick three.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.!

The bidding has been :
West

Nortb
l'f

Eul
Pass

,.

18
South

2t
2+
Pass
3+
Pass
4+
Pass
You ,South,hold :
+Q 8 61 t •t tA I +A K J I 7

30. "You -

Never
Away"

31. Commotion
32. Egyptian
sun deity
34. Senator

·Marta 'D

JUNIOR
.DRESSES

from

Mass.

36. Sicilian
volcano

lOlA'S

37. Bay tree

38. Minu s
39. Enroll ;
writ('

·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Her·e's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW ·
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample .A is
used for the three L's, X for the two o·s. etc. Single letter~
apostrophe!, the length and formation of the words ore oti
hln)s. Each day the code letters are different.

KeLI/ln.ator

HAR CWOF
XDEDYGD ·

Y. P

6,000 to' .

\W.· lOi~ Ki n~t"l-'l· nlu t l!l' ~J'!t d l,•tdl·, 1 11 r. )

t

24,000 BTU
Have coot clean air
tonight. Tolel ven'
Illation .

Y DR . - B Y X Q 0 R

Yeoterdoy's Crypt~quote: IF YOU CAN'T SAY NO YOU
CAN'T EXPECT ' TO LIVE WITll!N YOUR INCOME
'• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., WILLIAM FEATHER

"
'

·· ·~

CINCINNATI I UP[) - Pete
Ro&amp;c has some remar·kublc
baseball r~ ords, but even
more remarkable Is Ruse, the
person . 11lls is the upinlon of
Cincinnati Manager Spar ky
Anderison .
Sure Spar~y was impressed
Monday nlghl wheh Rose
lashed two hits to ~lvc him 220
this season, topping by one a
club rerord which had been set
by Cy Seymour in 1905.
What AnderMn finds most
amazing, though, is the !act
that Rose is a cinch to bat .JOO. plus for the ninth.straight year ,
" You can look through
record books an awfully long
lime before finrlin&gt; Pnv~ who
have done that," Anderson said
Mond~y night alter the
Houston Aatros beat the Reds
~2 .

".i'm talking about a guy
too," Sparky went on, "who
goes up to the plate every year
from 600 to 700 times. He walks
up there and does the job
whether it's hot or cold.
"And let me tell you, " he
added, "early this season Pete
was really hurting. He had a
real bad thigh . I know I've seen
many a g11y with a lot less pain

Yard sale slated
asked to either take to the
Stewart home or contact Mrs.
Stewart for pickup.
Mrs. Iva Stewart Sisson is
heading the sale, the proceeds
from which will' be used to
contact Middleport High
School graduates and stage a
banquet in May, 1974. Ml'l! .
Sisson asks for the support of
allimni and promises that if she
gains support with .t he' yard
The Almanac
By United Press lnternatlual sale and the assistance she
Today is Tuesday Sept. 18, needs in compiling lists of
the 261st day of 1973 with 104 to graduates with current ad·
follow.
dresses, she will handle the
The moon is approaching Its detaiis of the reunion.
last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars .
and Saturn.
Dai~
The evening sl;lrs are MerDEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
cury, Venus and Jupiter.
MEIGS· MASON AREA
Those born on this date are
CHE.STER L . TANNEHILL,:
·
Exec, Ed .
,
under the sign of Virgo.
ROBERT H_OEFLICH,
CU" Editor"
British poet Samuel Johnson,
Published da l ly e)(cept
Safurelay
by Tl'le Ohio Valley
writer of the first English
Publishing Company, 111
Courl St., Pomeroy, Ohlq,
dictionary, was born Sept. 18,
~5169 . Bus l n~s Ofl ice Phone
1709.
992 ·2156 . Editorial Phone 992·
2157 .
.
On this day in hiatory:
Second class postage paid
111 Pomeroy , Ohio .
In 1850, the Fugitive Slave
Nat i onal advertising
representative Sottlntlll ·
Act was passed by Congress,
Gol1e~her, Inc., 12 East llnd
allowing a slave owner with a
St ., New York .,New York .
Subscr-Iption rat.u :
certificate to reclaim any slave
Del ivered by carrier whare
avaiiable 55 cents per week ;
who escaped Into another slate.
By Motor Route where
carrier .. serv i ce
not
In 1851, the New York Times
available : One month , 12 . Sy
was published for the first
mail In Ohio and W, Va ., One
Year, 516 ; Si;. months. ·1.50 ;
time.
TArte
monlt'is , · $5 .50 .
Eluwhere . SIH veer ; tlx
In 1928, it was estimated that .
months $9 .50 ; three months ,
U . Subscription price In ·
4,000 persons had been killed
eludes
Sunday
Times .
Sentinel.
and $30 million damage caused
by a devastating hurricane
which had lashed Florida and
the West Indies for five days.
SPRING &amp; SUMMER .
In 1961, U.N. Secretary
General Dag Hammerskjold '
ARTIFICIAL FLOWER
was killed when his plane
crashed In northern Rhodesia.

Items of every kind · and
description will be available at
a yard sale sponsored by the
Middleport Alwnni Association
to be held Thursday beginning
. at 9 a.m. at the home of Mrs.
Iva Stewart, Main St., Rutland.
Contributions for the sale are
still being received and anyone
with items to contribute are

Sent Cal

1h PRICE

TIIURSDAY
A SPECIAL meeting of the
Shade River Lodge No. 453 F
and AM will be held at 8 p.m.
with work In the EA degree. All
Master Masons are invited and
relreslunents will be served.

..

Sentinel

ARRANGEMENTS

Dudley's Aorist
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

••
••
•

••
••
••
•••

•••
•"'

•

·l

..•'
.~

111

"'•.'

$135

"•
•
:
•

•

"

•:

__...;;;;:;:;p--

•

•
•
•

Reg . $159.95
Carrying case #574
sale· priced al S16.95
Famous §Jy.!l§J ' sewing
machine, for knits,
stretch fabrics , wovensl
It sews alii With choice
of buill-In slltches. in·
eluding bllndstitch.,
EKcluslve
lront drop ·ir
bobbin.

;

•

••
•

:

•
•
'"

Mason Furniture
I,

New York { Med l ch 12 ·8) at
Boston { Lee 16·9 ), 7 :30p .m .
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Cl eve land
New York at Boston , night
Chicag o atKa n Cily , night
Ba!tlmore at Detroit , night
Calif at Te xas, 2, tw l nile
Oaklan d at Minn . 2. twl .nlte

,y:

Major Leegue ResOits

Bench will
make appeal

BY United Press Internat ional

CINCINNATI (UP! ) _ ~ohn·
ny" Bench, Cincinnati Reds'
(1st Game)
St. Louis
002 000 110- • 14 1 catcher, will have a hearing
Montreol
010 001 102- 5 10 2 Thursday to appeal a two-day
Wls~ .
HrabOsky (9)
e~nd
Simmons; Rogers , Marshall (81 suspension and $200 fine im·
and Stinson . WF'- Marshall (12 - posed on him after an argu.
9). LP- Hrobosky (2·31. HR •- .
menl with plate umpire Andy
Fairly (17th), St inson (3rd l .
Olsen during las! Saturday
(2nd, 12 inns)
.
SI.L
000 002 001 001- 5 11 I night's game with the Atlanta
Mtl
012 000 000 000- 3 4 2 ·Braves.
Folkers. Peno !51 , Seoul !71.
National League President
F isher ( 11 1 and Simmon s :
Stoneman , Tarlor {6 ), Wa lker Chub Feeney., who will hold the
IIOL Mar shal ( 12) end Boc hearing while the Reds are in
cabella . WP - F iaher (2 . 1) . LP M~rshall I 12·10 l. H Rs - Srccden San Francisco to play the Gl·
ll l rh l, carbo !7th I,
ants, said penalties Imposed
San Fran
000 000 011 - 2 8 2 would be rescinded pending the
Los Ang
100 2•0 00x- 7 12 0
Barr, WIUou~hby &lt;• J. Ct~rrith · outcome of the session.
ers (5) , D 'Aqulsto (6l. McMa Bench allegedly bumped 01·
hon (8) l!lnd Rader i Sut ton { 17 ·
9) and Ferguson LP - Berr {11 · sen and used abusive language.
151 . HR- Dov il 1lllh l.
Reds Manager Sparky An· ·
San Diego 000 000 000- 0 10 1 derson, ejected along with
Allant..,
000 004 03~&lt; - 7 13 1 Bench from the game during
Jonn. Ros~ (7) , Romo (7l the same argument, also was
National League
Phil a al Chi. ppd .• ra in

and Kendell : Morton (1 3. \Q J
and CaunOvft . LP -- Jonea ( ~ · Sl .
HAs . Perez (8th) , AMOn

---

•
1111

Bllll"gham , Bon ey { 8) 41'1 d
Btnch . LP- Blll!nghlim ( 18·91 .

• HRo - ~ edeho !2lrdl. Watson
• 11 5thJ ,
•
- -~ NowVork
000030000 ' 3 10 1
• Plfllbtih
Il l Q3 1 lOX lo ll 0
suvor. Sndoc kl (Ii i, Swtm
(~I . copra !11
ond 'Orolo.
HDdQttl (61 1 Kl1orL Mc Ket (6),
Zltc:harv 9) •nd Mev . WP -

AMUICin L'lgue

I'OMIItQY
j
I

000 200 001 - 3 8 3
511 000'30• - IO 10 I

Kaat , Johnson {31. Goasa ge
(6 1, Geddes (8 ) and Br inkman ;

Slebcrl , Wolls !91 an d Bil lings.
WP Siebert 11 121 LP- Kaal
(ld 111 . ~ Rs - H arr lh !lOth),
M6diockl 1stLFrogosi!Sthl .
c

-

Mlnr1

Kon Clly

000 ~1 0 4 1~

8 12 1

100 0'1 100

3 92

Corb. ln , Ca mp o il (7) Md
Borg mann, Roof 01 1 Bu sb y 1
~oernor 17 \, Bird (7 1 an~

KIIDh [2·01 , LP - $tover !)).10 ).
HRoiHtbntr 123rd!. Stargoll Kirkpatri ck. WP- COrb ln (1·$).
LP - 8UibV fi •·ISI . HR - tilslo
t•Oth l, ZltM l!thl , Mov 171h l.
(lith ).

The
Fabric Shop
McColl't&amp; llntpllclty Poltttnl

.

METS .BUY PITCHER ··
PITI'SBURGH (UP!) - The
New York Mets, in contention
for the National League East
division title, announced Monday that they have purchased
pitcher Bob Apodaca from
their Tidewater !ann club in
the International League .
·
Apodaca started only three
games In 34 appearances for
the Tides. He was credited with
II saves and had a 1.80 earned
run average.
ENGLISH ON WAIVERS
PHOENIX (UP!) - For·
ward Scott English, a secondyear player from Texas·El
Paso, was placed on waivers
Monday by the Phoenix Suns of
,lhe National Basketball
Association.
English, 6-foot-6, averaged
2.2 points in 29 games for the
Suns last season.

;s 152 .!01

Carw, M in 1316 535 It~ IBJ
Mur c r, N Y 149 .S7 ~ 80 117

whu wuu l(l not huvc lx'en
pl uyln~ ."

Twlre Mooday

~6•

1•1 6.46 9i! 194

300

Amtr•c•n Let 9ve
g. i b r . h . pet.

nl ~h l, Jl{l.qjj

n~ n~i vl'd Mtandlng ova l ions .

M1y , Ml.l
on,,
KC

lt~6 59'J
i!IJ 360
146 119

vu , o0,

140 505 79 l'il

91 IHl

34~

)OIJ
J06

'" Am erica n

Lu gut : Jackson ,
112 , Maybf!rr&gt;/ . KC 97;
·~co n , Mil 9.4 ; M &amp;y, M it 91 ;
Oli!l, .KC and Mu r cer , N V 90.
Pitchlnt
Na t lonll L4!1 QIIt : &amp;ry, al'll .' SF
'nil. Billing ham , C n 18 9 :
Gotlelf , Cl n 11 fJ . ~u fl on. LA 17
? ; S~i!lve r , NY 17 10
Am t r iun L e1gu1 : Wood , Cht
14 19 , ' Palmer .
6a 11
21 -&amp;:
l~olt.tm&amp;n. Oak 70 1:1 ; Coleman.
Dct 10 15 , Hun ter . Oa" 19 .tl ;
Co lborn , Mil 19 10
Olltr.

till 110 .JO.t

~c o tt , M i l
89 167 199
Dvi\. Bal 129 m 51 156 , ••
Cpoda . BO$ 133 SIB 50 ISS 19?
199
19 14 7 .299

CASUALTY
Mass.!UP! )
Center Derek Sanderson
Seym our 's r ecord . 'lllc second
Natio nal Lea gue : . JOhn so n.
All .42 , ,SI 1J r gell 1 Pitt 40; Evan s , became the first training camp
came when Rose singled home All J9. Aaron . All ono Bono&gt;. casualty or the Boston Bruins
Dl'nis Menke in lite fourth .
s•· Ji .
" I ju•..~I ·wish· I could have . Oak
A·m er iCin Le•gu e: Jackson, Monday when he hurt his back
31; Fisk. Bos, Rob ln s() n , while ch&lt;!()klog Gregg Shepturned it Hf OWld and ~ot that C&amp;J, 81111~0 , Oak ilnd Bur
pa rd during a scrimmage.
r oug hs, T&amp;M 26.
double in the ninth inning in·
"" '"" of the first," lamented
Ruse. " If I had , we might still
be playi ng out there. "
The Reds had two runners on
in the ninth when Rose hit inw
a force play for the second out
or the inning. .
Rose's .immediate goal now
Is his 224th hit of the season,
one which will shatter the
season record · for a switch
hitter held by Hall of Farner
Frankie Frisch.
Then Pete will go alter
Frisch's career hit · total of
2,880.
"! can't be the No. I home
rWl hitter, the No . 1 RBI man,
th e No. I base stealer, the No. I
right handed hitter and the No.
!left handed hitter," Pete said,
"but I can become the No. I
switch hitter! '

The first came in the first In- Mun• n. Nv "o 491
nl n ~ when his double tied Holl ,Mtn H ~~. '2~ n ;o 119 .198

( 13. lnnln9'1

---

.~

72 Pontiac
Catalina
4door
With pt&gt;wer and air con.
ditlonlng .
·

'3695
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

110 lnnlnul
Colllorn ll
"You'll Llkt Our QV•II1Y.
N.Y. - 01! 100000 0- A d 0
000 100 010 000 0- 2 9 1
Wo~oiOolng Bu!lnut.'
Pall
001 000 201 1- l 15 2 OokiOnd
0 AC FINANCING
MeDon lei, Gronoor !101 and
. QOD 010 010 ooo 1 ~ 3 10 o
MUniDA / Cuoller 116 13) ond · May 17 lSI and Torborg , "2-53 42 . ·
Pomon~y
Wlllltmo. LP- Ortngor to 1). Sle ltt~euol&lt; (91 J Hollimon . Fin .
OsttnEvtnl~gt'TIII I OO
HRo - Hart lUI~ I. Wlillom o; gero ! Ill ond Fosso, WP ~ · ·---Tiitt•S•P•.M
...S•l•l•
. _ _,
(IIIII .
Finger; t7 61.
j.

game when Namath directed a
7f).yard . drive to. the Packer
five-yah! line.
But . the threat ended in
Namath 's most frustrating
series of the night. Three times
he threw to his favorite target
of the evening, Jerome
Barkum, and lhree times
cornerback Ken Ellis batted
the ball away to keep the Jets
scoreless.
"I thought Ellis· wouldn't
expect it three times in a row/'
a frustrated Namath said after
the game.
The Packers apparently expected just about anything
from Namath and that anticipation, plus crucial
mistakes by the Jets, proved to- ···
be a winning combination for
"Green Bay . .
''We know they can score
from anywhere," said safety
Jim Hill. "We just tried to do
things to eliminate that pos.
sibility." Hill recovered two
fumbles thai led to Packer
scores!
Marcul Kicks
Ches.ter Marco! kicked field
goals of nine, 37 and 10 yards,
the latter coining in the third
quarter after a New York
fumble. Another Jet fumble
late in the first half led ta the
Packers' first touchdown on a
19-yard pass from Scott Hunter
to Rich, McGeorge.
The .final Packer score, a
one-yard run by John
Brockington, who finished as
the game's leading rusher with
73 yards, followed Ellis' in·
terception of a Namath pas~
!hat bounced off Barkum.
Packer Coach Dan .Devine
explained 1\ow EUis was
awarded the game ball.
"When we were walking off
the field," Devine said, "Gilly
rguard Gale Gillingham) said,
'Is Ken Ellis ok?' I wasn't
going to argue with him. Ellis
got a big hand from the te"am IK!
it was by popular decision."
Oevine was asked how he felt
about losing the shutout in the
last minute.
"I would have even liked a
one-point win," he said.

This Wo.•·• &gt;pect•l

fined $300 for alleged "abusive
uctlons und language ."

(3!1h J. JOhn iOO 1•2nd l.
Houston
100 120 100- S 8 I
• Clnclnnall 010 100 000- 2 7 I Chicogo
: Roberts (15·101 ond JUt iB II Tox ~5

•
••

We hive 1 credll Plln dulgned lo 111 your budge!.
We 1110 h1ve allbml trade-In-policy.

11l W. SECOND
fn ·ll14
'A Trodomtrto ol THE SINGE~ CO!.tP~Y

Sen Diego (Arlin JQ. lJ) at
Atlanta ( Harrison IO.S), 8 p.m.
San Francisco (Marlchal 10 .
at Los Angeles (John 13·7),
11 p .m . •
Houston ( ReusS: 15 · 11) at
Cincinnati (Gullett 17-8), 5 p.m .
.
Wednesday's Games
Montreal at Chicago
san Diego at Hous 1 2, twi ·ni,le
St . Louis at Phi Ia, n loht
PittsiJurgh at New York , night
Atlante at Los Angeles , night
Cincinnati at San Fran . night

•

,.

C~OSEOUT Qis~~~~~ued

MILWAUKEE (Uf'I ) - The
New York Jets narrowly
averted their first ·shutout in
two years Mooday night b.ut a
determined Green Bay Packer
defense prevented Joe Namath
Dave Roberts, Houston lefty
.from enjoying that small
consolation . .
The Packers, rolling to a 23-7
victory in the season opener,
dogged Namath for almost the
entire game before Broadway
Joe finally yielded to reserve
AI Woodall, who took the Jets
Major League S1andings
AmeriCiJn League
By United Press International
over the goal line on a 17-yard
East
N.atlonal League
w. 1. pet. g .b. pass to rookie David Knight
East
BB 61 .591
.
w. 1. pet. g.b. Baltimore
Boston
81 69 .540
711:. with 33 seconds left In the
Pittsburgh
75 72 .510
Detroit
79
70
.530
9
game.
Montreal
75 74 .503 1
New York
75 76 .497 14
St . Louis
74 76 .493 ' 2'h Milwaukee
"Man, after that first drive,
71 79 . . 473 171/2
New York
73 77 .487 311:2 Cleveland
66
BS
.437
•
2
3
those cats really came on,"
Chicago
70 78 .473
5 1f~
West
Philadelph ia ~5 84 .436 11
·Namath
.said of the Packer
w. 1. pet . g.b.
West
Oakland
88
61
.591
defenders
who soaW him
· w I pet : g.b . KansasCity 8'1' 69 .540 11!2
Cincinnati
92 , sa .61 3
M innesota
73 ·75 .493 · -i 41h three times for 35-yards and
LosAngeiP.s
B~ 64 .576
S1/ 2 Chicago
73 77 .487 .1S1h intercepted one of his 32
San Francisco 83 66 .557
8 /~
Califor: nia
69 78 .469 18
Houston
77 75 .507 16
Te~&lt;as
52 96 .3 51 35112 passes.
Atlanta
73 79 .480 20
.
Monday's Results
Namath finished with 16
San Diego
54 95 .362 37 1!2 Te;xas 10 Chi cago 3
.
Monday's Results
complelions for 203 yards but
Mlnn 8 Kansas City J
Phila at Ch !, ppd ., rain
Bt!!ll 5 New York 4, 10 Inn s
time after time was unable to
Montreal 5 St. Louis 4, lSI
Oakl and J Calif 2, 13 inns
sustain
a drive long enough to
St.L s Mil. 3. 2nd . 12 l.nns
.(Only games schedu led }
Houston 5 Cincinnati 2
Today•s Probable Pitchers
score.
Woodall's
TD pass saved
Pittsburgh 10 New York 3
(All
Times
EDT
I
·
'
Atlanta 7 San Diego 0
California (Tanana 1· 1) at Namath from his first shutout
Los Angeles 7 San Fran 2
Oakland !Hunter 19 . 4) , 4 : 30 in 75 pro games . .
Today's Probable Pitchers
p .m .
Gul to 3( In First Drive
,(All Times EDT!
Chl~ago
(WOOd 23 · 19) at
St. Louis !Cleveland IJ.91 at TeMaS
(Ciyde4 ·6), 9 p .m .
Namath got the Jets to the
Montreal ZMOore 7-15), 5 p :m .
Minnesota ( Blyl even 18 · 15 ) at Packer 34 on his first drive, but
. New York {Matlack 13· 15) at Kansas Cit y (F it zmotfis 7·2),
Pittsburgh (Moose 11 ·1\ J. 8 8: 30p . m.
Bobby Howfield's 41-yard field
p.m .
.
Baltimor e (Je fferson 4.5) at goal attempt was wide and that
Philadelphia (Brett 12·7 and Detro it ( Lolich 15·13), 8 p .m .
Carlton
11 -19 }
at
Chi cago
M il wa ukee (Co lborn 19 -10 ) a t was the last time the Jets
(Bonham 1·4 and Pappas 7-12 ), Cleveland (Timmerman 9-7) , 6
threatened until late· in the
2, 1:30 p.m.
p .m .
,
1

.,..

lln9tr stretch-stitch
sewing machi.ne

Mthwl.S • 138

Garr , /\ II

.

Nu n!t Bi Ue'd I n

Natio nal Lnt ue : , StarC)tll 1
P11t 111 . Bench . Cin 103 ; M ay,
llou
100 .
Evant..
All 99 .
Juhn!ion. All And SlngleJon , Mtl

FIHS'r

~TI'C HBU RG ,

•'

..· .·.·.. ··.· ·.

·.·:·..·

·..·.·.·............·..··. . .... .

City Lonn is &lt;I dilfcr•:nt kind of loun .j
company. We handle ovc:r $1SO,o00,000 In
·
s~ving~ for Ohio people. Handling
peoples snvmgs rec.Juires cxpcrictKe and
integrity. So you know you can trust us
.
to handle your lonn.
We offer you n reol understanding of
money inntters. And your situation. We'll
nrrnngc your loan promptly, disrrcctly,
expertly. ·You can count on it.
With offices all over Ohio, we're
rea_dy to serve your money needs the
·
best wny for you .
What makes Ul a different kind or
loan company1 makes ue a better kind
of loan company,

What a fire
and nu
marHhmallows!
The cost ot building ln.

..

creases rm average of 3 per

cont per yeer. Ahomo built
l.ve y e~rs •go tor 120,000
would cos t ove.r 123,000 . to

replace today . Fire ln .
surf'n c e
to
full
" replacement " vftlue Is
ftvft llable from • , .

Downing·
1.11:. lfliltii,·..U71

AGENCY, INC.
i' MIPDLE

PalhiiV)'' Olllo

'

O.

•

.

CHICAGO fUPl )- Ohlo State University footb•ll COIIch
Woody Hayes Monday denounced the lifting of the blackout ·
@ televised home football games, Yylng it would make
things too eat1y for the fans .
'You sho w me !IOmelhing Utili's t~t sy and I'll show you
something that Isn't worth a damn, " Hayes said ln heated
ton es. "The day it gets easy to run our oil-tackle play Ia the
day we'll stop running II.
·
"And the persons who can't figure their way into the sti.
dlum - it's too easy for them - they'll lose reapect for foot·
ball," Hayes Sil ld. " If all you have to do Is put on the tube1ll
can't be worth a damn."
Hayes , speaking at a Quarterback Club luncheon here also
noted that the IP-glslation lifting the ban on televising games
sold out 72hours In adva~ e breezed through CongreSII.
"Anyth ing that goes through that easily, you better re~xamin e , " the Buckeye coach said. "It could be a real
destruc1ive force ."

...,..

Childs

.·

Lifting of blackout wrong

Pack·:rips NY

SINOU IALU UIIIVIC.
PH. m-m2
MASOI~. W. VA.

Rose sets squad mark

MEIGS COUNTY is still without a Big Bend Neighborhood
chairwoman which means that there is no local contact for either
the potential leaders or girls interested In joining scouts.
However, there is progress being made as Mrs. Isabelle
Foster talks with local people interested in promoting the Girl
Scout program. She reports that Mrs. Jacob Johnson is planning
to organize two troops in the Rutland area. The Salisbury troops
are active, one Middleport troop ia about to start meetings.
Where else are things happening in Girl Scouting? Let us
hear from you i

AIR
OONDITIONERS

CRYPTOQUMES
WEYDL HAR PRG flAJDLB DYBHJDL
EYI;R HAWD WD RTXOWHJYD HYTWV

JB

,,'

What do you do now ?
A-Bid four no·lrun:ip Intending
lo bid siX spades unleu partntt

Here is another one of Bill
McKenney's hands illustrating
the suit preference signal.
shows no aces.
West is allowed to bold the
TODA Y'SQUESTION
first diamond; he continues
Instead of bidding two spades
with the queen and then the your partner jumps lo three !lpades
jack alter South ducks for the over West's two diamonds . Whal do
second time.
you do now?
South has to win that third
diamond and proceeds to lead
New For Fall
and finesse the 10 of clubs.
East takes his king . His
normal return l• a heart which
will allow South to romp home
with nine tricks, but since West
has played the nine of clubs
East reads it as a preference
signal for the higher suit. He
leads a spade and down goes
South.
This hand illustrates the
. Main at Sycamore
&gt;Veakness of tho~~e wh() get suit
preference happy. The normal
POMEROY, OHIO
purpo•e olthe nine of clubs
nlav would be

trlous '
25; Athirst
26. Cal's cry
21. Blushing
28. Wayne or
Chester

.,"

A. MOTHER'S PLANNING session for Middleport JWllor
Troop 39scheduled for today has been postpon~ by Mrs. Roscoe
Wise, leader. The mothers will meet Instead next Tuesday at I
p.m. at the Middleport He.ath United Methodist Church. Present
at that meeting also will be Mrs. Foster, the new Council
representative for the Meigs-Gallia area .

The

the clrcleti !etten
I I I toNowform""""'•
the iurpriH aJIIWer, u

NORTH
: ~8 ~ 3
• 7~2
+A QJ 42

24. Illus·

in

rJ I I I

1

r--'----..:.....:...___, even number of cards in the

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ll.KP

I

Suit preference sets 3 N. T.

~
ACROSS
1. Receipts .
5. Initiate
10. Border on

." iiJMJI

Llild•n• Ba tter'

IUilon at LU IIU!t
rf . ab r . h. pc.t,
~OU , (IO ·149 619 108 7~0
)\0
C.tlc.mo, Hou llO 49A U IH JIB
Wltin. Hou 1~1 ~~3 9J 11~ J ib
C:rdnl , Chi 13? AI} 16 II" I 309
Hvnt.MII Ill 401 61 lltl .30'1
Mlldox . sr. 131 533 /3 16A 108
Stroel , Pll 133 A1') 93 14~ 307
Pcre..:.Cin 147 )J I 68 16l JO~

'

Charlene Hoeflich

+++

NOTE TO "SPIED ON'S" MOTIIER (And all overly snoopy
parents) :
How would YOU react if your children rummaged through
your drawers and wastepaper baskets, read your private mail,
etc.? You've no right expecting privacy if you don't respect it
where other family members are concerned.-HEI..EN AND
SUE
·

Girl Scout
By
Diary

M ill tor lCU Ut Ln(lttn
Oy U tt lt od P reu tntar na i iDn al

•

home Of Mr. and Mrs, Richard
Gilkey.
Prayer by Mr. Smith opened
thQ meeting with Mrs. Smith
giving devotions. Her scripture
was from Sl. Mark and !he had
a poem, "In my Pocket." Mrs.
Roger Stobar t will hav e
Officers were elected at the first meeting of the Salls~ury
devotions at the Oct. II
Junior Troop 100 Tuesday night at the school.
meeting . ,
Carol Morris is the patrol leader, and the other officers are
Ganles were played under Uncia Williams, assistant patrol leader ; Joyce Baker, treasurer ;
the 'direction of Mrs. Smith.
Kathy Quivey, scribe ; Becky Dorst, reporter ; Laura Smith,
Homemade Ice cream, pie and recreation ; Regina Dorst, refreslunents : Gwen Folmer, flrsl
coffee were served to Mrs.
Homer Forrest, Mr. and Mrs. ald.The pledge to the flag and the girl scout promise opened the
Smith and Christy , Mr. and
meeting , Four new members were welcomed. . ·
Mrs. John Blake and Chuckle,
·The girls dooided to collect bottle caps and use the redemption
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stobart, H. money to purchase flower bulbs to plant around the nag pole.
J.,Eddle, Belinda, and Shellie,
This will complete a part of the civic badge for the troop.
Mrs. Ralph Painter and VIctor,
Plans were also made for the troop to send birthdaY carda to
Mr. aPd Mrs. Guy Hysell and patients of a local nursing home this year, and also to be regular
Donna Kay, Mr. and Mrs. part of the Salisbury PTA by having the flag ceremony each
Richard Gilkey, Mrs. Wal;er
month.
Morris and Carol.
Meetings of the troop will be held at the school every
Tuesday immediately following the dlll!llissal of school.

Dedication planned

Tired :
There's an old saying: Never argue about religion or politics
OES TO BE HOST
if you want to stay friends. How about typing this up on cards,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
and when these gids hand you their tracts and booklets, hand will be hosts to the Meigs
them YOUR rule. And change the subject. - SUE
County 's combined friends
night observance at 7:45p.m..
Rap :
tonight. The program will be
My mother is so nosey she even checks through my presented by the Pomeroy,
wastepaper basket . Do you think it might cure her if I got some Racine , Harrisonville and
live snails and put them in among the papers? - SPIED ON
Evangeline chapters.
I
P. S. Should I?

Money 4; Sale of the Century 8; America Now 13 .

8:00-: Adam.J2 J, 4, 15; Love Thy Neighbor 6 ; Black Dragon
ReSidence 20. 33; Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour a 10 . .

Several church eventa in·
eluding distribution of Oyers
and posters announcing the
revival, Sept. 30 through Oct. 6,
were discussed during a
meeting of the Young Adult
Class of the Bradford Church of
Christ held Thursday night at
the home of Mr. a n~ Mrs.
Clifford Smith.
Richard Gilkey presided at
the meeting. II was noted that
the William Brandt family ,
missionaries in Africa assisted
by the Bradford Church, will be
here from Jan . 2~ to kick off
the Faith Promise Rally. The
class agreed to sponsor a film
to be .shown for the New Year's
Eve watch service at the
church.
Plans were discussed for the
Halloween party, details of
which will be completed at the
Oct. II meeting at 7 p.m. at the

3- 'fheDallySt
· . ·Pomeroy,
.
• ntlne,1 Middleport
o.. sept. 18, 1973

~~~~~~~~

•

�•
2- The Do&lt;ily Sentinel. Mlddleport-Pooneroy, 0., Sept.18, 1973

YQung Adults meet

Television Log
TUESDAY, SEPT. 11 , 1973
6: UO - News J, 4. 8. 10, 15. 6: &gt;es~ m e Street 20 : Sporlscope 33:
ABC News 13.
6::10 - NBC News J, 4, IS ; ABC NeW. 6; CBS News a, 10;
Hogan's Heroes 13: Human Dimension 33.

Hy Hdt•n

7: 00 - What's M v I I n~ R· FL.ar ,.., 70 ~ RPI'!t T he Clock 4: News

10: Lee Trevi no's Golf 15; "Trulh or Consequences 3 6 ·
Dust y's Trail 13 ; En vi ronment Today tt nd Tomorrow 33.'

I: JU - 10 teii TheTruth6 ; RFD ZO; Cancer: Lileor Oeat hJ3 ;
Charles ~la i r 's Better World IS: New Price is Right 8, 10 ;
New Dahng Gam e 3: World of Su r vival 4 ; America Now 13.

'

a: 00 -- Maude a. 10: Eveni ng AI Pops 33 : Chase J, 4, 15 : Egan 6,

13; Ohio: l:h1s Week 20.
8:30 - Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Movie " Dying Room Only" 6. 13;
The Session 20.
.
9:00 - Movies " The Snoop Sisters 3, 15: '' An Eye For An Eye"
4; MIT Sy mphony 20, 33.
·
9:30 - Movie " r error on the Beach" 8, 10.

10:00 - Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13: News 20 ;
Thunder God 33.

Ma r uk~ m l

The

11 : 00 - NewsJ 1 4, s , n , 15, 10, 6.
11 : 30 -;-- Johnny Carson 3. 4, lS ; J ack Paar Tonite 6 : Movies " 'The

Venetian Altair" 8; " Th~ Candy Man" 10; " Lady lor a Night"
13.
1:00 - Your He~ lth 4: Jack Paar Toni te 13.
1 : 30 - New s ~ .

,.

2:30 - News 13.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1973
6: 00 -

Sunr ise Sem inar 4; . Sa cr ed Hea r t 10.

6: IS - Ur ban Leag ue 10.

6:25- Pa ui"Har vey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4: Bible Answers 8: The Story IJ ; News
Corncob Reports 3; Farmt lm e 10.

7:00 - Today 3. 4, 15; CBS News a, 10; Fli nts tones 13 ; Romper
Room 6.
·
7:30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwi n&lt;le13 ; New Zoo Rev ue 6.
8:00 - Cap!. Kangaroo 8, 10: New Zoo Rev ue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Lassie ·6.

a:30 -

Huck &amp; Yogl 6: Dick Van Dyke 13.

a:55 ~ News 13.

Her Rlval'sa Cave W\lman
Rap :
I like th is ooy and he's beginning to like me, but his girlfriend
says she'll heat me up if I even speak to hlon.
What's more her mother gets into the acl, and if he doesn't
call the girl every day , she calls up and Invites him over.
They broke up once, but the girl and her mother made such a
fuss that he went back to her. He Wid her though, that if she
OOES jWllp me, he's through with her. Do you think he means it'!
- J ENNY ANN
Dear Jenny Ann :
There's one way IQ find out - but you may get some lumps
doing it. Do you like this boy well enough to fight for him? HELEN

+++

Jermy Ann :
You'd be doing this guy a favor to get the girl and her mother
off his back. Hut maybe you wouldn't really want a boy woo lets
two females boss him around. - SUE

9:30 - To Tell the Truth 3; Wild, Wild West 6: Secret Storm 8.
9:55 - Chuck White Reports 10.
10:00 - DinahShore J, IS ; Joker's Wild 3, 10.
10:30-Balfle3, 4, 15; $15,000 Pyram id 8, 10; Mike Douglass 6.
11 : 00 - Gambit a; 10; Password 13; Wi zard of Odds 3, 4, 15.
11 :30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love ol Life 8, 10; Brady
Bunch 13; Book Beat33; Bowllng6 ; Sesame Street 33.
11 :55 - CBS News a: Dan Imel's World 10.
·
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 ; Password 6; Bob Braun' s News 4; NeWs -

13, to. a.
12:30 - Search lor Tomorrow B, 10; Split Second 6, 3 W's 3, 15.
12:55 - NBC News 3, 15.
I:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; No! For Women Only 15 ·
Ca.n centration 8; What's My Line 10.

'

1:30 - ThreeonaMatch3 . 4. 15: Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As the
· World Turns a. 10. ·
.
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15: Newlywed Game 13 6 ·
, Guiding Light a. 10.
·
' ,
2:30 - Ooctors3, 4,15; Edgeot Nighl8, 10; Girl in My Life6, 13.
3:00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital6, 13; Price Is
Right a, 10; RFD 20.
Return o{. Peyton Place 3, 15 ; One Life to Live 13; Secret

Storm 10; Ph1l Donahue 4: Match Game '73 8: Film 33 ·
Flinlstones 6: Gnio: This Week 20.
· · '
4:00 - Mr . Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33, 20; Love,
American Style 13; Merv Gr iffin 4 ; Speedracer 6i 1 Love
Lucy 8; Movie " The Secret Partner" 10.
4:30 - My Little Margie 15; I love Lucy 6; Green Ac res 3·
Jeopardy 4; Hazel 8; Gilligan's Island 13.
!

. ·s:oo- Mr. Rogers 20, 33; Bonanza.3; Big Valley 6: Western Star

The~t~r 15: I Dream of Jeannie 13 ; Merv Griffin 4; Andy

.

.
.
5:30 - Elec. Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13 ; Beverly Hillbiliies 8:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Trails West 15. ,
·
5:55 - Earl Nightingale 15. ,
6:00 - News 3, 4, a, 10, 15; Sesame Street 20 ; ABC News 13;
~~~~

Personal /tv and Behavioral Develooment 33.
6: 30 - NewsJ, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 ; Hoaan' s Heroes 13.

7: Oh~ews 10; What's Mv Line a; Truth or Con seq. 6, 3; Beat the

Clock 4: Anything You Can Do 13; Elec. Co. 20 : Saint
Know Your Schools 33.

Dear Helen and Sue:
My two girlfriends have got into this religion where they go
door to door and try to convert people. They 're trying it with me
too , and alii hear lately is what a "sinner" I am. They load me
with .tracts and booklets.
I don't want to lose their friendship, but how can I shut them
up J I'm not an atheist, but I can't believe TIIEIR way. )t's too
far-&lt;&gt;ut. - TIRED OF ARGUING

.

Paul Dixon 4; Ph il Don,:, hue 15; F r ie ndly Junct ion 10;
A.M. 3; Brady Bunch 6 ; Abbott and Costell o 8: Movie
''Caprice" 13 ; Co\'er to Cover 33.

9: 00 -

3:30 -

Stw Uulh•l

+++

6: 15 -:._ Farm Report 13.

6.
6: 45 -

UtHI

.

15 ·

'

7:30- The Judge 10; Police Surgeon 3; How Do Your Children
Grow 20; Episode Action 33; To Tell the Truth 6 ; On the

Dear Tired :
Don 't arg11e: walk away when your friends start
proselytizing.
But also don't expect much of this friendship while they're so
wrapped up in their lar-&lt;&gt;ut religion. If they can't convert you,
they maydropyou. (Or you may keep walking, you can't take the
sermons.) - HELEN

+++

8: J~......,. Mo_ vi~s "Marooned" 3, 4, 15 ; ''" Satan 's 'SchO:,I for Girls"

9:00 - Cannon 8, 10.
9:30- Man Builds, Man Destroys 20, 33 , . ·.
·
10:00 - News 20; Owen Marshall 6, 13; Homewood 33 : Dan
August 8; The Dev1l's Triangle 10.
11 :00- News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10, 13; 15.
•
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson J, 25; Jack Paar Tonite 6 · Movies " Killer

by Night" 8; "The Juggler" 10; "Daughter ~I the Mind" 13.

1:00 -

News 4; Jack Paar Tonite 13.

2:30 - News 13.

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
ThiS isn't the column you were supposed to be reading nere
today, fans, but my conscience ,and ~old hard facts got in the way
of what I sat down to write .,
1 was going to put the bad..fnouth en Jerry Lewis, the annual
Labor Day long-playing telethon, and the Muscular Dystrophy
Assn. of America.
· Not that I have any particular ax to grind, understand. My
criticisms were three in number , and-went something like this:
1 "- Too many famous names in TV and show business boost
their "~nage " with slavish devotion to some worthy cause, in a
cheap bid for publicity. However, I was ready to admit that
Jerry's got as much right as other celebrities to champion a
special cause, and his association with MD is at least as worthy
as Danny Thomas' hospital in Memphis, probably a notch above
Bob Hope's self«rving tours to cheer up the boys overseas, and
certainly superior to Bing Crosby's annual tournament for the
benefit of impoverished pro golfers.
2- Therewasa general lack of information on the Muscular
Dystrophy Assn ., and oow inuch •o~the.nationwide take actually
went to research on MD WJ&lt;hfj)bab!Ut~Uon of its victims.
3- Muscular dystropl).);·~~lf, w\jile it is a baffling killer and
crippler of our children, ~ertainly dpes not rank in the top 10
among diseases which heed to be eradicated. In fact, it may not
be in the top 50, and certainly isn't in the same league with heart
ailments and circulatory diseases, cancer, auto fatalities or even
drug abuse. (Some doctors doubt that the kind of dystrophy that
strikes and kills the very young - mostly boys - can ever be
conquered, because it is hereditary and defies a "cure." )
Okay, on that basis, I was somewhat anti-telethon, although I
respected Lewis' efforts, as well as those of the volunteers both
celebrities on the screen and anonymous voiW!teers all ov~r the
country, including the Meigs-Gallia-Mason area. They were well·
intentioned, beyond question ,
But my negative reaction was dispelled when the MDAA and
Jerry Lewis opened their books as well as their hearts, and I'm
glad I didn't put the rap on anyone Involved.
The Jerry Lewis telethon on TV netted about $12 million in
pledges. That figure makes up almost half of the MDAA's annual
budget of about $25 million; and that figure isn'i too much, in my
judgment, to fight a tragic killer,.even though other diseases are

The Minersville United
Methodist Church wiU observe
its homecoming and dedication
or new church furnishings this
SWlday.
Sunday school at 9 a.m. will
be followed by worship service
at 10 a.m. with the Rev ,
Richard Jarvis speaking. A
basket dinner will be held at
noon and at 1 p.m. the Rev.

'

S.O.:
... Not unless you want one mad mother! - HELEN

+++

Spied On: '
... Not unless you want snail trails in your room, when the
little rascals go over the top of your wastebasket. - SUE

Robert Bumgardner, Mid·
dleport, will dedicate the new
furnishings . At ·2 ·p.m. a
program will be presented by
the Uhrig Brothers Gospel
Singers. The public is Invited to
attend Sunday's events.
SET FAMILY NIGHT
A family night observance
with a guest speaker will be
held Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy First
Baptist
Church . The potluck supper will ~ held at 6:30
p.m. followed by a talk by
· the Rev. G. W. Danielson, area
director for Judson College, a
BaptistSchOQI at Elgin, Ill. The
Rev. Mr. Danielson will show
slides and tell about the
college.

~&amp;tJJ.ID11rn; lkJ """:"l!J ..-~ ,_
Unscramble thue four Jumbles.
one letter -to eat":h · aquart, to
.,
form four ordinary words.
hylifNiliAfiNillrl

!0~ 1,

""IIHJf!lf[

I'm tired of

b.Lflll pv1hed around!

more frequent a~d possibly more important.
The MDAA funnels an amazing 81 pet. of its budget into
actual research and rehabilitation activities.
This is marvelous '
.
eSpecially when :You consider that some so-c&amp;lled "charities"
oRen spend up to 98 pel. of theil: budget for high-priced "of·
ficials'' and ''administrative costs.''
Therefore, instead of making this article a mild attack on
Jerry Lewis and the MDAA, it is instead a hymn of praise to all of
them, their honesty with the public, and the openness and
prudence with which they handle their donations.
stay with it, Jerry, and we'll be watching for your annual
bash again next Labor Day.

worker
12. Dis·
lressing
13. Gangster's
· utterance
, (2 wds.)
U. Attilla
15. Do a
wi~e­

tapper's
job
16. Japanese
river
17. Albanian
capital
19. Frenzy
20. Indigence
21. Prepare
a path
22. Puzzling
problem

WHAI
T"'E DA'I
FIR&amp;i!MDE
'r'OUR&amp;EL.F "'gp,~D.

IIRENZA

I I
\WUBED~
f' ,

1,

~:::"=::-=:::~~~·::;::~·~~·;·~~~~r:ea:ted:_:b~y the above cirtoon.

IL...____:Ptitl="=II.=B::::PIIISI::..:MSWIR=.::•::....____JI (

X XX)

(Auwen lomorrowJ

lumbleo, CRAZE fETID IMMUNE GUILTY
Yetlerd•y'•
Anf'lltrt COuld be on expert weWht lifter-or

dropper-A DIETICIAN

WIN AT BRIDGE

40. Be
peevish
DOWN
1. Flesh
wound
2. More or
less
3. Ransack
(3 wds.)
4. Season
after
prlntemps
5. Blue suit
materiai
· 6. Duffer's
Item
7. Excited
(4,wds.)
8. Impatient
9. Handled
11. Throb
15. Humorist
1
' Bugs"

WEST
EAST
+A 97
+ 8654 3
•Js 4
" 1072
t KQJ
t a
+97'.1 10
+K546
")
SOUTH !DI
+ QJ 102
" AKQ

18

Yesterday's Answer '
• A 9J
18. Clarin•t
26. Be a
+108~
or bassoon
manikin
None vulnerabl e
21. "-But·
28. Manu·
West
North
East South
terfty''
facturer
lN .T.
22. Biblical
29. Common
Pass
2+
Pass
2•
story
item
Pass 3N .T,
Pass Pass
23. Invested ;
33. Ship's
Pass
marauded
ngglng
Opening lead- tK
24. Old
support
Roman
35. Mining Ond .L -_;_ _:_~:._::.:.:__ _ __J
pla~boy
36. Sprite
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

suit. How could East tell that it
called for a spade return this
time'
It is a matter of the diamond
plays. West continued with his
highest diamond at each turn to
lead. That was an unmistakea·
ble suit preference signal be·
cause if he wanted the normal
heart return he would have
played the 10 of diamonds at
trick two and continued with
the jack at irick three.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.!

The bidding has been :
West

Nortb
l'f

Eul
Pass

,.

18
South

2t
2+
Pass
3+
Pass
4+
Pass
You ,South,hold :
+Q 8 61 t •t tA I +A K J I 7

30. "You -

Never
Away"

31. Commotion
32. Egyptian
sun deity
34. Senator

·Marta 'D

JUNIOR
.DRESSES

from

Mass.

36. Sicilian
volcano

lOlA'S

37. Bay tree

38. Minu s
39. Enroll ;
writ('

·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Her·e's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW ·
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample .A is
used for the three L's, X for the two o·s. etc. Single letter~
apostrophe!, the length and formation of the words ore oti
hln)s. Each day the code letters are different.

KeLI/ln.ator

HAR CWOF
XDEDYGD ·

Y. P

6,000 to' .

\W.· lOi~ Ki n~t"l-'l· nlu t l!l' ~J'!t d l,•tdl·, 1 11 r. )

t

24,000 BTU
Have coot clean air
tonight. Tolel ven'
Illation .

Y DR . - B Y X Q 0 R

Yeoterdoy's Crypt~quote: IF YOU CAN'T SAY NO YOU
CAN'T EXPECT ' TO LIVE WITll!N YOUR INCOME
'• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., WILLIAM FEATHER

"
'

·· ·~

CINCINNATI I UP[) - Pete
Ro&amp;c has some remar·kublc
baseball r~ ords, but even
more remarkable Is Ruse, the
person . 11lls is the upinlon of
Cincinnati Manager Spar ky
Anderison .
Sure Spar~y was impressed
Monday nlghl wheh Rose
lashed two hits to ~lvc him 220
this season, topping by one a
club rerord which had been set
by Cy Seymour in 1905.
What AnderMn finds most
amazing, though, is the !act
that Rose is a cinch to bat .JOO. plus for the ninth.straight year ,
" You can look through
record books an awfully long
lime before finrlin&gt; Pnv~ who
have done that," Anderson said
Mond~y night alter the
Houston Aatros beat the Reds
~2 .

".i'm talking about a guy
too," Sparky went on, "who
goes up to the plate every year
from 600 to 700 times. He walks
up there and does the job
whether it's hot or cold.
"And let me tell you, " he
added, "early this season Pete
was really hurting. He had a
real bad thigh . I know I've seen
many a g11y with a lot less pain

Yard sale slated
asked to either take to the
Stewart home or contact Mrs.
Stewart for pickup.
Mrs. Iva Stewart Sisson is
heading the sale, the proceeds
from which will' be used to
contact Middleport High
School graduates and stage a
banquet in May, 1974. Ml'l! .
Sisson asks for the support of
allimni and promises that if she
gains support with .t he' yard
The Almanac
By United Press lnternatlual sale and the assistance she
Today is Tuesday Sept. 18, needs in compiling lists of
the 261st day of 1973 with 104 to graduates with current ad·
follow.
dresses, she will handle the
The moon is approaching Its detaiis of the reunion.
last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars .
and Saturn.
Dai~
The evening sl;lrs are MerDEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
cury, Venus and Jupiter.
MEIGS· MASON AREA
Those born on this date are
CHE.STER L . TANNEHILL,:
·
Exec, Ed .
,
under the sign of Virgo.
ROBERT H_OEFLICH,
CU" Editor"
British poet Samuel Johnson,
Published da l ly e)(cept
Safurelay
by Tl'le Ohio Valley
writer of the first English
Publishing Company, 111
Courl St., Pomeroy, Ohlq,
dictionary, was born Sept. 18,
~5169 . Bus l n~s Ofl ice Phone
1709.
992 ·2156 . Editorial Phone 992·
2157 .
.
On this day in hiatory:
Second class postage paid
111 Pomeroy , Ohio .
In 1850, the Fugitive Slave
Nat i onal advertising
representative Sottlntlll ·
Act was passed by Congress,
Gol1e~her, Inc., 12 East llnd
allowing a slave owner with a
St ., New York .,New York .
Subscr-Iption rat.u :
certificate to reclaim any slave
Del ivered by carrier whare
avaiiable 55 cents per week ;
who escaped Into another slate.
By Motor Route where
carrier .. serv i ce
not
In 1851, the New York Times
available : One month , 12 . Sy
was published for the first
mail In Ohio and W, Va ., One
Year, 516 ; Si;. months. ·1.50 ;
time.
TArte
monlt'is , · $5 .50 .
Eluwhere . SIH veer ; tlx
In 1928, it was estimated that .
months $9 .50 ; three months ,
U . Subscription price In ·
4,000 persons had been killed
eludes
Sunday
Times .
Sentinel.
and $30 million damage caused
by a devastating hurricane
which had lashed Florida and
the West Indies for five days.
SPRING &amp; SUMMER .
In 1961, U.N. Secretary
General Dag Hammerskjold '
ARTIFICIAL FLOWER
was killed when his plane
crashed In northern Rhodesia.

Items of every kind · and
description will be available at
a yard sale sponsored by the
Middleport Alwnni Association
to be held Thursday beginning
. at 9 a.m. at the home of Mrs.
Iva Stewart, Main St., Rutland.
Contributions for the sale are
still being received and anyone
with items to contribute are

Sent Cal

1h PRICE

TIIURSDAY
A SPECIAL meeting of the
Shade River Lodge No. 453 F
and AM will be held at 8 p.m.
with work In the EA degree. All
Master Masons are invited and
relreslunents will be served.

..

Sentinel

ARRANGEMENTS

Dudley's Aorist
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

••
••
•

••
••
••
•••

•••
•"'

•

·l

..•'
.~

111

"'•.'

$135

"•
•
:
•

•

"

•:

__...;;;;:;:;p--

•

•
•
•

Reg . $159.95
Carrying case #574
sale· priced al S16.95
Famous §Jy.!l§J ' sewing
machine, for knits,
stretch fabrics , wovensl
It sews alii With choice
of buill-In slltches. in·
eluding bllndstitch.,
EKcluslve
lront drop ·ir
bobbin.

;

•

••
•

:

•
•
'"

Mason Furniture
I,

New York { Med l ch 12 ·8) at
Boston { Lee 16·9 ), 7 :30p .m .
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Cl eve land
New York at Boston , night
Chicag o atKa n Cily , night
Ba!tlmore at Detroit , night
Calif at Te xas, 2, tw l nile
Oaklan d at Minn . 2. twl .nlte

,y:

Major Leegue ResOits

Bench will
make appeal

BY United Press Internat ional

CINCINNATI (UP! ) _ ~ohn·
ny" Bench, Cincinnati Reds'
(1st Game)
St. Louis
002 000 110- • 14 1 catcher, will have a hearing
Montreol
010 001 102- 5 10 2 Thursday to appeal a two-day
Wls~ .
HrabOsky (9)
e~nd
Simmons; Rogers , Marshall (81 suspension and $200 fine im·
and Stinson . WF'- Marshall (12 - posed on him after an argu.
9). LP- Hrobosky (2·31. HR •- .
menl with plate umpire Andy
Fairly (17th), St inson (3rd l .
Olsen during las! Saturday
(2nd, 12 inns)
.
SI.L
000 002 001 001- 5 11 I night's game with the Atlanta
Mtl
012 000 000 000- 3 4 2 ·Braves.
Folkers. Peno !51 , Seoul !71.
National League President
F isher ( 11 1 and Simmon s :
Stoneman , Tarlor {6 ), Wa lker Chub Feeney., who will hold the
IIOL Mar shal ( 12) end Boc hearing while the Reds are in
cabella . WP - F iaher (2 . 1) . LP M~rshall I 12·10 l. H Rs - Srccden San Francisco to play the Gl·
ll l rh l, carbo !7th I,
ants, said penalties Imposed
San Fran
000 000 011 - 2 8 2 would be rescinded pending the
Los Ang
100 2•0 00x- 7 12 0
Barr, WIUou~hby &lt;• J. Ct~rrith · outcome of the session.
ers (5) , D 'Aqulsto (6l. McMa Bench allegedly bumped 01·
hon (8) l!lnd Rader i Sut ton { 17 ·
9) and Ferguson LP - Berr {11 · sen and used abusive language.
151 . HR- Dov il 1lllh l.
Reds Manager Sparky An· ·
San Diego 000 000 000- 0 10 1 derson, ejected along with
Allant..,
000 004 03~&lt; - 7 13 1 Bench from the game during
Jonn. Ros~ (7) , Romo (7l the same argument, also was
National League
Phil a al Chi. ppd .• ra in

and Kendell : Morton (1 3. \Q J
and CaunOvft . LP -- Jonea ( ~ · Sl .
HAs . Perez (8th) , AMOn

---

•
1111

Bllll"gham , Bon ey { 8) 41'1 d
Btnch . LP- Blll!nghlim ( 18·91 .

• HRo - ~ edeho !2lrdl. Watson
• 11 5thJ ,
•
- -~ NowVork
000030000 ' 3 10 1
• Plfllbtih
Il l Q3 1 lOX lo ll 0
suvor. Sndoc kl (Ii i, Swtm
(~I . copra !11
ond 'Orolo.
HDdQttl (61 1 Kl1orL Mc Ket (6),
Zltc:harv 9) •nd Mev . WP -

AMUICin L'lgue

I'OMIItQY
j
I

000 200 001 - 3 8 3
511 000'30• - IO 10 I

Kaat , Johnson {31. Goasa ge
(6 1, Geddes (8 ) and Br inkman ;

Slebcrl , Wolls !91 an d Bil lings.
WP Siebert 11 121 LP- Kaal
(ld 111 . ~ Rs - H arr lh !lOth),
M6diockl 1stLFrogosi!Sthl .
c

-

Mlnr1

Kon Clly

000 ~1 0 4 1~

8 12 1

100 0'1 100

3 92

Corb. ln , Ca mp o il (7) Md
Borg mann, Roof 01 1 Bu sb y 1
~oernor 17 \, Bird (7 1 an~

KIIDh [2·01 , LP - $tover !)).10 ).
HRoiHtbntr 123rd!. Stargoll Kirkpatri ck. WP- COrb ln (1·$).
LP - 8UibV fi •·ISI . HR - tilslo
t•Oth l, ZltM l!thl , Mov 171h l.
(lith ).

The
Fabric Shop
McColl't&amp; llntpllclty Poltttnl

.

METS .BUY PITCHER ··
PITI'SBURGH (UP!) - The
New York Mets, in contention
for the National League East
division title, announced Monday that they have purchased
pitcher Bob Apodaca from
their Tidewater !ann club in
the International League .
·
Apodaca started only three
games In 34 appearances for
the Tides. He was credited with
II saves and had a 1.80 earned
run average.
ENGLISH ON WAIVERS
PHOENIX (UP!) - For·
ward Scott English, a secondyear player from Texas·El
Paso, was placed on waivers
Monday by the Phoenix Suns of
,lhe National Basketball
Association.
English, 6-foot-6, averaged
2.2 points in 29 games for the
Suns last season.

;s 152 .!01

Carw, M in 1316 535 It~ IBJ
Mur c r, N Y 149 .S7 ~ 80 117

whu wuu l(l not huvc lx'en
pl uyln~ ."

Twlre Mooday

~6•

1•1 6.46 9i! 194

300

Amtr•c•n Let 9ve
g. i b r . h . pet.

nl ~h l, Jl{l.qjj

n~ n~i vl'd Mtandlng ova l ions .

M1y , Ml.l
on,,
KC

lt~6 59'J
i!IJ 360
146 119

vu , o0,

140 505 79 l'il

91 IHl

34~

)OIJ
J06

'" Am erica n

Lu gut : Jackson ,
112 , Maybf!rr&gt;/ . KC 97;
·~co n , Mil 9.4 ; M &amp;y, M it 91 ;
Oli!l, .KC and Mu r cer , N V 90.
Pitchlnt
Na t lonll L4!1 QIIt : &amp;ry, al'll .' SF
'nil. Billing ham , C n 18 9 :
Gotlelf , Cl n 11 fJ . ~u fl on. LA 17
? ; S~i!lve r , NY 17 10
Am t r iun L e1gu1 : Wood , Cht
14 19 , ' Palmer .
6a 11
21 -&amp;:
l~olt.tm&amp;n. Oak 70 1:1 ; Coleman.
Dct 10 15 , Hun ter . Oa" 19 .tl ;
Co lborn , Mil 19 10
Olltr.

till 110 .JO.t

~c o tt , M i l
89 167 199
Dvi\. Bal 129 m 51 156 , ••
Cpoda . BO$ 133 SIB 50 ISS 19?
199
19 14 7 .299

CASUALTY
Mass.!UP! )
Center Derek Sanderson
Seym our 's r ecord . 'lllc second
Natio nal Lea gue : . JOhn so n.
All .42 , ,SI 1J r gell 1 Pitt 40; Evan s , became the first training camp
came when Rose singled home All J9. Aaron . All ono Bono&gt;. casualty or the Boston Bruins
Dl'nis Menke in lite fourth .
s•· Ji .
" I ju•..~I ·wish· I could have . Oak
A·m er iCin Le•gu e: Jackson, Monday when he hurt his back
31; Fisk. Bos, Rob ln s() n , while ch&lt;!()klog Gregg Shepturned it Hf OWld and ~ot that C&amp;J, 81111~0 , Oak ilnd Bur
pa rd during a scrimmage.
r oug hs, T&amp;M 26.
double in the ninth inning in·
"" '"" of the first," lamented
Ruse. " If I had , we might still
be playi ng out there. "
The Reds had two runners on
in the ninth when Rose hit inw
a force play for the second out
or the inning. .
Rose's .immediate goal now
Is his 224th hit of the season,
one which will shatter the
season record · for a switch
hitter held by Hall of Farner
Frankie Frisch.
Then Pete will go alter
Frisch's career hit · total of
2,880.
"! can't be the No. I home
rWl hitter, the No . 1 RBI man,
th e No. I base stealer, the No. I
right handed hitter and the No.
!left handed hitter," Pete said,
"but I can become the No. I
switch hitter! '

The first came in the first In- Mun• n. Nv "o 491
nl n ~ when his double tied Holl ,Mtn H ~~. '2~ n ;o 119 .198

( 13. lnnln9'1

---

.~

72 Pontiac
Catalina
4door
With pt&gt;wer and air con.
ditlonlng .
·

'3695
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

110 lnnlnul
Colllorn ll
"You'll Llkt Our QV•II1Y.
N.Y. - 01! 100000 0- A d 0
000 100 010 000 0- 2 9 1
Wo~oiOolng Bu!lnut.'
Pall
001 000 201 1- l 15 2 OokiOnd
0 AC FINANCING
MeDon lei, Gronoor !101 and
. QOD 010 010 ooo 1 ~ 3 10 o
MUniDA / Cuoller 116 13) ond · May 17 lSI and Torborg , "2-53 42 . ·
Pomon~y
Wlllltmo. LP- Ortngor to 1). Sle ltt~euol&lt; (91 J Hollimon . Fin .
OsttnEvtnl~gt'TIII I OO
HRo - Hart lUI~ I. Wlillom o; gero ! Ill ond Fosso, WP ~ · ·---Tiitt•S•P•.M
...S•l•l•
. _ _,
(IIIII .
Finger; t7 61.
j.

game when Namath directed a
7f).yard . drive to. the Packer
five-yah! line.
But . the threat ended in
Namath 's most frustrating
series of the night. Three times
he threw to his favorite target
of the evening, Jerome
Barkum, and lhree times
cornerback Ken Ellis batted
the ball away to keep the Jets
scoreless.
"I thought Ellis· wouldn't
expect it three times in a row/'
a frustrated Namath said after
the game.
The Packers apparently expected just about anything
from Namath and that anticipation, plus crucial
mistakes by the Jets, proved to- ···
be a winning combination for
"Green Bay . .
''We know they can score
from anywhere," said safety
Jim Hill. "We just tried to do
things to eliminate that pos.
sibility." Hill recovered two
fumbles thai led to Packer
scores!
Marcul Kicks
Ches.ter Marco! kicked field
goals of nine, 37 and 10 yards,
the latter coining in the third
quarter after a New York
fumble. Another Jet fumble
late in the first half led ta the
Packers' first touchdown on a
19-yard pass from Scott Hunter
to Rich, McGeorge.
The .final Packer score, a
one-yard run by John
Brockington, who finished as
the game's leading rusher with
73 yards, followed Ellis' in·
terception of a Namath pas~
!hat bounced off Barkum.
Packer Coach Dan .Devine
explained 1\ow EUis was
awarded the game ball.
"When we were walking off
the field," Devine said, "Gilly
rguard Gale Gillingham) said,
'Is Ken Ellis ok?' I wasn't
going to argue with him. Ellis
got a big hand from the te"am IK!
it was by popular decision."
Oevine was asked how he felt
about losing the shutout in the
last minute.
"I would have even liked a
one-point win," he said.

This Wo.•·• &gt;pect•l

fined $300 for alleged "abusive
uctlons und language ."

(3!1h J. JOhn iOO 1•2nd l.
Houston
100 120 100- S 8 I
• Clnclnnall 010 100 000- 2 7 I Chicogo
: Roberts (15·101 ond JUt iB II Tox ~5

•
••

We hive 1 credll Plln dulgned lo 111 your budge!.
We 1110 h1ve allbml trade-In-policy.

11l W. SECOND
fn ·ll14
'A Trodomtrto ol THE SINGE~ CO!.tP~Y

Sen Diego (Arlin JQ. lJ) at
Atlanta ( Harrison IO.S), 8 p.m.
San Francisco (Marlchal 10 .
at Los Angeles (John 13·7),
11 p .m . •
Houston ( ReusS: 15 · 11) at
Cincinnati (Gullett 17-8), 5 p.m .
.
Wednesday's Games
Montreal at Chicago
san Diego at Hous 1 2, twi ·ni,le
St . Louis at Phi Ia, n loht
PittsiJurgh at New York , night
Atlante at Los Angeles , night
Cincinnati at San Fran . night

•

,.

C~OSEOUT Qis~~~~~ued

MILWAUKEE (Uf'I ) - The
New York Jets narrowly
averted their first ·shutout in
two years Mooday night b.ut a
determined Green Bay Packer
defense prevented Joe Namath
Dave Roberts, Houston lefty
.from enjoying that small
consolation . .
The Packers, rolling to a 23-7
victory in the season opener,
dogged Namath for almost the
entire game before Broadway
Joe finally yielded to reserve
AI Woodall, who took the Jets
Major League S1andings
AmeriCiJn League
By United Press International
over the goal line on a 17-yard
East
N.atlonal League
w. 1. pet. g .b. pass to rookie David Knight
East
BB 61 .591
.
w. 1. pet. g.b. Baltimore
Boston
81 69 .540
711:. with 33 seconds left In the
Pittsburgh
75 72 .510
Detroit
79
70
.530
9
game.
Montreal
75 74 .503 1
New York
75 76 .497 14
St . Louis
74 76 .493 ' 2'h Milwaukee
"Man, after that first drive,
71 79 . . 473 171/2
New York
73 77 .487 311:2 Cleveland
66
BS
.437
•
2
3
those cats really came on,"
Chicago
70 78 .473
5 1f~
West
Philadelph ia ~5 84 .436 11
·Namath
.said of the Packer
w. 1. pet . g.b.
West
Oakland
88
61
.591
defenders
who soaW him
· w I pet : g.b . KansasCity 8'1' 69 .540 11!2
Cincinnati
92 , sa .61 3
M innesota
73 ·75 .493 · -i 41h three times for 35-yards and
LosAngeiP.s
B~ 64 .576
S1/ 2 Chicago
73 77 .487 .1S1h intercepted one of his 32
San Francisco 83 66 .557
8 /~
Califor: nia
69 78 .469 18
Houston
77 75 .507 16
Te~&lt;as
52 96 .3 51 35112 passes.
Atlanta
73 79 .480 20
.
Monday's Results
Namath finished with 16
San Diego
54 95 .362 37 1!2 Te;xas 10 Chi cago 3
.
Monday's Results
complelions for 203 yards but
Mlnn 8 Kansas City J
Phila at Ch !, ppd ., rain
Bt!!ll 5 New York 4, 10 Inn s
time after time was unable to
Montreal 5 St. Louis 4, lSI
Oakl and J Calif 2, 13 inns
sustain
a drive long enough to
St.L s Mil. 3. 2nd . 12 l.nns
.(Only games schedu led }
Houston 5 Cincinnati 2
Today•s Probable Pitchers
score.
Woodall's
TD pass saved
Pittsburgh 10 New York 3
(All
Times
EDT
I
·
'
Atlanta 7 San Diego 0
California (Tanana 1· 1) at Namath from his first shutout
Los Angeles 7 San Fran 2
Oakland !Hunter 19 . 4) , 4 : 30 in 75 pro games . .
Today's Probable Pitchers
p .m .
Gul to 3( In First Drive
,(All Times EDT!
Chl~ago
(WOOd 23 · 19) at
St. Louis !Cleveland IJ.91 at TeMaS
(Ciyde4 ·6), 9 p .m .
Namath got the Jets to the
Montreal ZMOore 7-15), 5 p :m .
Minnesota ( Blyl even 18 · 15 ) at Packer 34 on his first drive, but
. New York {Matlack 13· 15) at Kansas Cit y (F it zmotfis 7·2),
Pittsburgh (Moose 11 ·1\ J. 8 8: 30p . m.
Bobby Howfield's 41-yard field
p.m .
.
Baltimor e (Je fferson 4.5) at goal attempt was wide and that
Philadelphia (Brett 12·7 and Detro it ( Lolich 15·13), 8 p .m .
Carlton
11 -19 }
at
Chi cago
M il wa ukee (Co lborn 19 -10 ) a t was the last time the Jets
(Bonham 1·4 and Pappas 7-12 ), Cleveland (Timmerman 9-7) , 6
threatened until late· in the
2, 1:30 p.m.
p .m .
,
1

.,..

lln9tr stretch-stitch
sewing machi.ne

Mthwl.S • 138

Garr , /\ II

.

Nu n!t Bi Ue'd I n

Natio nal Lnt ue : , StarC)tll 1
P11t 111 . Bench . Cin 103 ; M ay,
llou
100 .
Evant..
All 99 .
Juhn!ion. All And SlngleJon , Mtl

FIHS'r

~TI'C HBU RG ,

•'

..· .·.·.. ··.· ·.

·.·:·..·

·..·.·.·............·..··. . .... .

City Lonn is &lt;I dilfcr•:nt kind of loun .j
company. We handle ovc:r $1SO,o00,000 In
·
s~ving~ for Ohio people. Handling
peoples snvmgs rec.Juires cxpcrictKe and
integrity. So you know you can trust us
.
to handle your lonn.
We offer you n reol understanding of
money inntters. And your situation. We'll
nrrnngc your loan promptly, disrrcctly,
expertly. ·You can count on it.
With offices all over Ohio, we're
rea_dy to serve your money needs the
·
best wny for you .
What makes Ul a different kind or
loan company1 makes ue a better kind
of loan company,

What a fire
and nu
marHhmallows!
The cost ot building ln.

..

creases rm average of 3 per

cont per yeer. Ahomo built
l.ve y e~rs •go tor 120,000
would cos t ove.r 123,000 . to

replace today . Fire ln .
surf'n c e
to
full
" replacement " vftlue Is
ftvft llable from • , .

Downing·
1.11:. lfliltii,·..U71

AGENCY, INC.
i' MIPDLE

PalhiiV)'' Olllo

'

O.

•

.

CHICAGO fUPl )- Ohlo State University footb•ll COIIch
Woody Hayes Monday denounced the lifting of the blackout ·
@ televised home football games, Yylng it would make
things too eat1y for the fans .
'You sho w me !IOmelhing Utili's t~t sy and I'll show you
something that Isn't worth a damn, " Hayes said ln heated
ton es. "The day it gets easy to run our oil-tackle play Ia the
day we'll stop running II.
·
"And the persons who can't figure their way into the sti.
dlum - it's too easy for them - they'll lose reapect for foot·
ball," Hayes Sil ld. " If all you have to do Is put on the tube1ll
can't be worth a damn."
Hayes , speaking at a Quarterback Club luncheon here also
noted that the IP-glslation lifting the ban on televising games
sold out 72hours In adva~ e breezed through CongreSII.
"Anyth ing that goes through that easily, you better re~xamin e , " the Buckeye coach said. "It could be a real
destruc1ive force ."

...,..

Childs

.·

Lifting of blackout wrong

Pack·:rips NY

SINOU IALU UIIIVIC.
PH. m-m2
MASOI~. W. VA.

Rose sets squad mark

MEIGS COUNTY is still without a Big Bend Neighborhood
chairwoman which means that there is no local contact for either
the potential leaders or girls interested In joining scouts.
However, there is progress being made as Mrs. Isabelle
Foster talks with local people interested in promoting the Girl
Scout program. She reports that Mrs. Jacob Johnson is planning
to organize two troops in the Rutland area. The Salisbury troops
are active, one Middleport troop ia about to start meetings.
Where else are things happening in Girl Scouting? Let us
hear from you i

AIR
OONDITIONERS

CRYPTOQUMES
WEYDL HAR PRG flAJDLB DYBHJDL
EYI;R HAWD WD RTXOWHJYD HYTWV

JB

,,'

What do you do now ?
A-Bid four no·lrun:ip Intending
lo bid siX spades unleu partntt

Here is another one of Bill
McKenney's hands illustrating
the suit preference signal.
shows no aces.
West is allowed to bold the
TODA Y'SQUESTION
first diamond; he continues
Instead of bidding two spades
with the queen and then the your partner jumps lo three !lpades
jack alter South ducks for the over West's two diamonds . Whal do
second time.
you do now?
South has to win that third
diamond and proceeds to lead
New For Fall
and finesse the 10 of clubs.
East takes his king . His
normal return l• a heart which
will allow South to romp home
with nine tricks, but since West
has played the nine of clubs
East reads it as a preference
signal for the higher suit. He
leads a spade and down goes
South.
This hand illustrates the
. Main at Sycamore
&gt;Veakness of tho~~e wh() get suit
preference happy. The normal
POMEROY, OHIO
purpo•e olthe nine of clubs
nlav would be

trlous '
25; Athirst
26. Cal's cry
21. Blushing
28. Wayne or
Chester

.,"

A. MOTHER'S PLANNING session for Middleport JWllor
Troop 39scheduled for today has been postpon~ by Mrs. Roscoe
Wise, leader. The mothers will meet Instead next Tuesday at I
p.m. at the Middleport He.ath United Methodist Church. Present
at that meeting also will be Mrs. Foster, the new Council
representative for the Meigs-Gallia area .

The

the clrcleti !etten
I I I toNowform""""'•
the iurpriH aJIIWer, u

NORTH
: ~8 ~ 3
• 7~2
+A QJ 42

24. Illus·

in

rJ I I I

1

r--'----..:.....:...___, even number of cards in the

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ll.KP

I

Suit preference sets 3 N. T.

~
ACROSS
1. Receipts .
5. Initiate
10. Border on

." iiJMJI

Llild•n• Ba tter'

IUilon at LU IIU!t
rf . ab r . h. pc.t,
~OU , (IO ·149 619 108 7~0
)\0
C.tlc.mo, Hou llO 49A U IH JIB
Wltin. Hou 1~1 ~~3 9J 11~ J ib
C:rdnl , Chi 13? AI} 16 II" I 309
Hvnt.MII Ill 401 61 lltl .30'1
Mlldox . sr. 131 533 /3 16A 108
Stroel , Pll 133 A1') 93 14~ 307
Pcre..:.Cin 147 )J I 68 16l JO~

'

Charlene Hoeflich

+++

NOTE TO "SPIED ON'S" MOTIIER (And all overly snoopy
parents) :
How would YOU react if your children rummaged through
your drawers and wastepaper baskets, read your private mail,
etc.? You've no right expecting privacy if you don't respect it
where other family members are concerned.-HEI..EN AND
SUE
·

Girl Scout
By
Diary

M ill tor lCU Ut Ln(lttn
Oy U tt lt od P reu tntar na i iDn al

•

home Of Mr. and Mrs, Richard
Gilkey.
Prayer by Mr. Smith opened
thQ meeting with Mrs. Smith
giving devotions. Her scripture
was from Sl. Mark and !he had
a poem, "In my Pocket." Mrs.
Roger Stobar t will hav e
Officers were elected at the first meeting of the Salls~ury
devotions at the Oct. II
Junior Troop 100 Tuesday night at the school.
meeting . ,
Carol Morris is the patrol leader, and the other officers are
Ganles were played under Uncia Williams, assistant patrol leader ; Joyce Baker, treasurer ;
the 'direction of Mrs. Smith.
Kathy Quivey, scribe ; Becky Dorst, reporter ; Laura Smith,
Homemade Ice cream, pie and recreation ; Regina Dorst, refreslunents : Gwen Folmer, flrsl
coffee were served to Mrs.
Homer Forrest, Mr. and Mrs. ald.The pledge to the flag and the girl scout promise opened the
Smith and Christy , Mr. and
meeting , Four new members were welcomed. . ·
Mrs. John Blake and Chuckle,
·The girls dooided to collect bottle caps and use the redemption
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stobart, H. money to purchase flower bulbs to plant around the nag pole.
J.,Eddle, Belinda, and Shellie,
This will complete a part of the civic badge for the troop.
Mrs. Ralph Painter and VIctor,
Plans were also made for the troop to send birthdaY carda to
Mr. aPd Mrs. Guy Hysell and patients of a local nursing home this year, and also to be regular
Donna Kay, Mr. and Mrs. part of the Salisbury PTA by having the flag ceremony each
Richard Gilkey, Mrs. Wal;er
month.
Morris and Carol.
Meetings of the troop will be held at the school every
Tuesday immediately following the dlll!llissal of school.

Dedication planned

Tired :
There's an old saying: Never argue about religion or politics
OES TO BE HOST
if you want to stay friends. How about typing this up on cards,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
and when these gids hand you their tracts and booklets, hand will be hosts to the Meigs
them YOUR rule. And change the subject. - SUE
County 's combined friends
night observance at 7:45p.m..
Rap :
tonight. The program will be
My mother is so nosey she even checks through my presented by the Pomeroy,
wastepaper basket . Do you think it might cure her if I got some Racine , Harrisonville and
live snails and put them in among the papers? - SPIED ON
Evangeline chapters.
I
P. S. Should I?

Money 4; Sale of the Century 8; America Now 13 .

8:00-: Adam.J2 J, 4, 15; Love Thy Neighbor 6 ; Black Dragon
ReSidence 20. 33; Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour a 10 . .

Several church eventa in·
eluding distribution of Oyers
and posters announcing the
revival, Sept. 30 through Oct. 6,
were discussed during a
meeting of the Young Adult
Class of the Bradford Church of
Christ held Thursday night at
the home of Mr. a n~ Mrs.
Clifford Smith.
Richard Gilkey presided at
the meeting. II was noted that
the William Brandt family ,
missionaries in Africa assisted
by the Bradford Church, will be
here from Jan . 2~ to kick off
the Faith Promise Rally. The
class agreed to sponsor a film
to be .shown for the New Year's
Eve watch service at the
church.
Plans were discussed for the
Halloween party, details of
which will be completed at the
Oct. II meeting at 7 p.m. at the

3- 'fheDallySt
· . ·Pomeroy,
.
• ntlne,1 Middleport
o.. sept. 18, 1973

~~~~~~~~

•

�•
•'
4- The DIJiy_Senllnei,MiddlePori-Pomeroy, 0 ..•Sept. 18, 19'13

Long odds face
Denver babies

OOliTIIERN LETTERMEN - '!'~_year's veterans on
the Southern Local High School football team, from left,
front, are .Ron Johnson, tackle ; Greg Dunning, fullback ;

Dana Huddleston, center ; Mitch Nease, halfback, and Tim
Maurer, end ; back row, Randy Forbes, guard; Jim
Williams, end; Dennis Hawk,tackle ; Vern Ord, quarterback,
and Mike Codner, guard.

Excitement over in AL
By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Now that all the competitive
edge has been removed from
the American League, about
the only excitement left for the
contestants is to ·challenge the
umpires.
That was the name of the
game at Baltimore ' Monday
night when the two opposing
managers lost .decisions to a
pair of umpires. By the time
the Orioles took a ii-I decision
from the New York Yankees, in
a !().inning affair, Earl Weaver
of Baltimore and Ralph Houk
of New York had been evicted
from the premises.
Weaver was bounced by
second base umpire Bill
Kunkel in the eighth inning for
what Kunkel termed ''using
profanity," and Houk joined
him on the sidelines in the ninth
after engaging in a violent
argument with first base
umpire Russ Goetz, for
disputing a call that would
have given the Yankees a
victory.
While Weaver took satisfaction in winning the game, he
gave full credit to Houk for
putting on a. better per. formance against the umpires
after watching the Yankee boss
dance 'and scream and throw
his hat in the ait..
"Honk's the best at ihat-he
canreally do it," Weaver said.
Orioles Boost Lead
By winning·, the Orioles
boosted their firsti)lace iead in

the AL East to 7'12 games over
idle Boston and lowered their
magic number to six. The
situation is just as dull in the
West, where the Oakland A's
also reduced their magic
number to six by nipping the
California Angela, 3-2, in 13
innings, after .Kansas City
dropped an 8-3 decision to
Minneso\1\. Oakland leads the
runnerup.Royais by 7'12 games.
In the only other · game
played, Texas scored five runs
in the . first inning as Toby
Harrah, Bill Madlock and Jim
Fregosi ail homered and the
Rangers went on to rout the
Chicago White Sox, 10-3.
In the National League,
Pittsburgh ripped the Mets, 103, Montreal and St. Louis split,
the Expos taking the opener, s4, and the Cardinals winning
the 12-innlng nightcap, ii-3,
Houston beat Cincinnati, · 6-2,
Los Angeles beat San Francisco, 7-2, Atlanta beat San Diego,
7.0, and Plliladelphia at Chicago was rained out.
Earl Williams' leadoff homer
in the bottom of the loth gave
Baltimore its win over the
Yankees, although Houk stlll
believes his club won it in the
.ninth;
New York' carried a 4-3 lead
into the riinth but pinch-bitter
Boog Powell and AI Bumbry
singled. With two out, Tomrily
Davis hit u chopper to second
baseman Horace Clarke and
Goetz said Dayis beat the
throw to first. Pinch-runner

•
c
d
F. lve . . ar S

ss.pop· up
ml._

By VJTo STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
There were almost more
guys chasing a pop fly on the
pitching mound in Montreal
Monday night than were in the
siadiwn in Atlanta watChing
Hank Aaron hit his 7llth
homer.
Five St. Louis players con-

verged on a popup to the
mound with two out in the ninth
inning, but they let it drop for a
run-scoring single that gave
the Montreal Expos' a crucial
5-4 victory over the Cardinals,
in the hectic Eastern Division
pennant race.
Biowing that game cost the
Cards a shot at a doubleheader
ll'"::"':=="=:==='.:::_:::::::;:::::=:r, sweep since they sruvaged the
U
second game, ii-3, in 12 innings.
......
That left them 2'h games
behind Pittsburgh while MontV.
real is a game behind.
I J"l ~
In Atlanta, only 1,362 fans.
-the smallest crowd ever to see
a Braves' game in Atlantawere ·on hand when Aaron hit
his 38th homer of the season
and 7llth of his career to pace
the Braves to a 7-0 victory over
San Diego.
The crowd was held down tiy
raih before the game but if this
keeps up, there may be more
baseball officials, newsmen
1\n ln.trument lor
detecting and locating
and TV technicians on hands
cardiac damage called· a
than fans if Aaron hits 714 in
polarcardlograph (PPG)
Atlanta
this year.
permits !he
family
·
St. Louis Leads
physician, with very lillie
St.
LoUis
went into the ninth
Instruction to diagnose
coronary thrombosis more
inning with a 4-3 lead over
quickly and better than a
Montreal in the opener but the
trained· cardiologist ...
Expos tied it on Jim Lyttle's
The National Gallery of Art
single,
a wlld pitch and Ted
In Washington, D. C. is the
Simmons' wide throw on Felipe
largest marble structure In
Alou's grounder. ' Alou took
existence, houses many of
the world's greatest art
second on . the play but the
works ·.. , The Canadian
game seemed headed for extra
National Railway Is the
innings when Ron Woods
largest railroad In the
popped to the mound.
world . It employs 93,000
Pitcher AI H~abosky, first
pecple and runs 32.000
baseman Joe Torre, shortstop
miles of track Into .all ten
Canodlan Provinces and
Mick Kelleher, third baseman
!he northern U. S.
Terty Hughes and Simmons all
According to published
converged on the ball but it feU
results of studies by the U.
in al Alou acored.
S. Department of Com·
In the second game after an
merce and the Bureau of
hour and, 12 minute rain delay,
Statistics; the average
family can save at least $12
mly abqut :IJJO of the 20,168 fans
• Sl5 a month by using fully
were left when Bernie Carbo
conditioned relined water,
slngJecl with two out in the 12th
Instead of taP water. 1\nd
did you know that relined · to break a 3-3 tie am lelid the
Carda to the triumph .. There
water unll&gt; are sold .In
were two on and one out when
many pArts of the world?
O.Vn 1 watar rellnll' from
the pme waa delayed.
S.yre Hdwe. "II .,_,.,
AarM baa 10 11J1111 left In
COlt, It NVII.'' ,
1111 nee to catdl Jibe Ruth's
record of714 this year. He said
he wan~ to play In 81 DIIIIY as
he can but he doeln 1 want to
play when he's tired beca111e
he's afraid he'll hurt the team.
"The Important thine II not

'

Curt Motion scored from
second on the play.
"The runner was out by half
a step and that cost us the
game,'' Houk said. "What else
can you say ?"
Weaver Protests CaD
In the previous inning,
Weaver protested a call at
second on which Kunkel called
Yankee catcher Thurman
Munson safe on a steal.
"Only Kunkel and I know I
didn't curse at him," Weaver
said later. "I swear to it.
Kunkel knocked my hat off and
he stepped on my foot and he
ground it (the foot ) into the
ground. It wasn't an accident."
Williams' 21st homer provided Mike CUellar, who went the
distance, with his 16th victory
against 13 losses. Wayne
Granger, in relief of Lindy
McDaniel, took his first loss
without a win.
·
Rudy May issued a basesloaded walk to Bert Campaneris with two out in .the 13th inning to force home the winning
run in Oakland's triumph over
California. May seemed in
control of a tight situation
when he retired Bill North on a
short fly for the second out but
he walked Campaneris to allow
pinchrurmer John Odolil to
walk home from third.
. A three-run double by Tony
Oliva in the seventh inning
lifted Minnesota past Kansas
City and enabled Ray Corbin to
stretch his record to 6-5.

1RAC·LES
DQ

.l

whether 1 get a hom~r but
whether 1 can help the ream.
You may not .believe this,
considering that we are out of
the race, but no matter where
we stand, that's the way 1
feel."
Aeron, who's always a good
bet to tag San Diego pitchers,
connected against Gary Ross
in the eighth inning. Dave
Johnson also hit his 42nd homer
to tie Rogers Hornsby's record
for second basemen.
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn was at the game
and said Aaron would become
the first player to throw out the
first bail at the World Series.
• other Games
In the other games, Pittsburgh routed New York, 10-3,
Houston beat Cincinnati, s-2,
and Los Angeles routed san
Francisco, 7-2.
.
In the Amerli!Bn League,
'Baltimore edged New York,~
4, In 10 innings, Texas routed
Chicago, 10-3, Oakland nipped
Callfornilj, 3-2, in 13 innings,
and Minnesota beat KanSil!l
City, 11-3.
Willie Staigeil, the guy who
carries Pittsburgh, drove in
four runs with his 40th horner

Agnew
•
may qwt
as veep
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
Republican party leader says
he is "99¥.! per cent certain"

"When you're talklag about
numbers like that, wbat't
another one or twa?"
By JOHN J, SANKO
DENVER I UP!) - Doctors
beli~ve the four boys and two
girls born to an accountant's
34-year-oid wife, who took
fertility drugs, can suecessfuliy buck odds of
4~,980, 450 to I and be the first
Sextuplets of the century to:
. survive. .
"Their chances are excellent," Dr. Tlbor Engel said
Monday evening. ''They are in
excellent condition."
Pediatrician James Slrain
said the next 48 hours are
important in determining the
odds for survival of the babies
which range in weight from 2
pounds, 15 ounces to 3 pounda,
.11 ounces . One of the girls w""
treated with a respirator, but
Strain said respiratory probiems are not unusual in babies
born
seven
· weeks .
prematurely.

c~:rf~s~:l:'::yborn
at
10:45 p.m. Sunday and the

other five were delivered by
Caesarian section from 11 :34 to
11:38 p.m.
"We're very happy," Eugene
Stanek, 31, the dazed father
said. "For the past month or
so, we knew there would be five
and maybe six."
They had i)repared for the
eventuality by plGking out six
names, three for children of
each sex. The girls have been
named Julia and Catherine and
three of the boys are John,
Stephen and Jeffrey.
"We still need one more
(boy's) name," Stanek said.
"We.agreed on three for each
sex b~t it didn't work out that

•

••

altendlfll! obstetrician, said he
knew of no other case in thla
century in which all six lnfan~
survived. Reference books say
there have been at least 12
cases of sextuplets in the 1~,
but none survived .
"This is an historic event,"
Engehald. "So far It looks just
terrific,"
·
Engel said Mrs. Stanek is in
satisfactory condition and
"pretty cheerful. Her attitude
has been just delightful. "
The infants will rem~~ in in the
hospital at least six weeks.
Stanek saw his six new
children during the afternoon,
"They're a little thin and
have some hair on top," he
said. "That's an awful lot of tax
deductlons."

E~

•

MARKET • Open [J.aily 9 to 10.· Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
~HONE : 992·3480

~~~=~~ "We Reserve The

.•

FROZEN FOOD SAVING.)
•
. MISS KENTUCKY WORLD, Anne Thompaon, helped :
Kawa.sald introduce it!! new 1974 motorcycle tine with a :
flourish in Louisville. Getting a final briefing from Anne on :
the features of the new models, now on dl$play at the local •
cteaiership, is James Frecker of J &amp; R Sport Shop in !
Pomeroy.
:
:
•
'•

•

••

0

Hall of Fame Ceremonies 'at
the college.
ll!e creation of the Athletic·
Hall of Fame is sponaored by
the Rio Grande College Alumni
Association; and 12 former
Redmen athletes ·wiU · bP the
rarstind!lctees during half-time ·
of the Rio Grande - Cedarville
game at 2 p.m., Saturday, Dec.
8. Bob Leith, Rio Grande JV
coach, is in charge of the Red
and White Game which will
Include players from 1950
through 1973.
The Red and White Game,
hopefully,
will become an
GRANTED HEARING
annual event sponsored by the
CINCINNATI (UP!) _ John- Alumni Association. accord,ing
ny Bench, Cincinnati Reds to Mr. Leith: The Red and
catcher, has been ~ranted a White Game .will be played at
lle3!:ing with National League 12:30 p.m., pnor to the Redmon
President Chub Feeney to . • Yeilowjackets varsity game
appeal a two-day suspension of Dec. 8. Leith has n~ed Hall
and $200 fine imposed on him of .F~er N~t Oliver of
as a result of his argument with Spnngf1eld, Oh10, and Mid Oh!o
plate wnpire Andy Olsen last Conference Coach of the Year
Saturday night.
Art Lanham as opposing
The hearing will be held coaches.
Thursday when the Roils are in
~ong. the 133 players to
San Francisco to play the rece1ve mvitations are All·
·Giants. Feeney said the penai- American Bob Mabry and
ties imposed would be rescind- former Captain Jun Marshall.
ed pending the outcome of the Marshall an&lt;! Mabry led Rio

SHERBET

NAJA District 22 Play.()ffjl
during the 1969-70 season. :
Inductees to the Hall cil
Fame are Lester Berridge,
Lloyd Saunders, Newt Oliver.,
Jack
Duncan,
George
Stevenson, Paul Dillon, and
seven members of the legendary basketball team of 1952-53.
Inductees from the undefeated
1952-53 squad that WOII 39
games include coach Newt
Oilver, Ail-American Clarence
" Bevo" Francis, Wayne
Wiseman, Roy Moses, Richard
Barr, Jim McKenzie, and Bill
Ripperger.

WORK. nl\1\TS·

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0

that Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew will resign, the Washington Post reported today .
The unidentified "senior
Republican figure," who said
he spent four hours with Agnew
late last week attempting to
talk him out of the decision,
predicted the resignation may
come this week, according to
the newspaper. ·
. The Post, however, said
Agnew staff members and
political supporters were way/'
bighly skeptical that the vice He said they expected a
'
multiple
birlh
because
of
the
president would step down.
One unnamed associate of fertility drug, which Mrs.
Agnew's said the resignation Stanek took before she got
would be ''unthinkable. I would pregnant. The couple has one
OPTOMETRISTS
be shocked ... flabbergasted." other child, a 4-year-old boy.
"When
you're
talking
about
Agnew was notified Aug. I by
181 N, Second Ave.
U.S. Attorney George Beall numbers like that, what's
another
one
or
two?"
he
said.
that he was under investigation
MIDDLEPORT
· as part of an inquiry into "We live in a three bedroom
, PH. 992-3279
alleged kickbacks by Maryland ho\Uie now, so I guess we'll go,
contractors to state political house hunting shortly."
Office hours by appointment: Mon .. Fri. 9. tit 4,
officials. Agnew said he was Odds 496,980,451 to ] •
Saturday
9 until noon. ·
Engel
said
the
odds
for
birth
innocent.
of six babies at ~· same time
Agnew Refuses Requests
were
496,980,451 to 1:Engel, the
The Post said Agnew repeathearing. .
. . - - - -···
edly refused requests from the
~----------------------newspaper for either an· interview or a direct comment on do·"
panel wlil specifically conhis reported discussions of "I don't regard this current . sider.
resignation. Agnew, according story as'having any more to It
According to the GOP
to the Post, said he would not than the many others that have source-, his conversations with
respond to stories !rom un; been coming and ar~ getting Agnew convinced him that the
named sources.
undue attention due to the vice president w88 "deterJ. Marsh Thomson, the vice 'current a trnosphere," mined to prove his innocence"
WEDNESDA -Y ONL
president's press secretary, Thomson said.
. of the charges of alleged
told UPI that he believed the GOP National Chairman bribery, extortion and tax law
story to be "very far off the George Bush, in Cincinnati for violations."
.
mark."
a convention, said the report
But, the source told the Post
"I did consult closely with "comes as a surprise to me." that Agnew gave two reasons
the vice president when 1 first He added that he had heard fo.r believing he should step
heard about this," Thomson nothing of it prior to leaving down before getting involved in
said, "and I am quite sure that Washington Monday evening. a full-scale legal defense.
this is not ali what he pla:ns to Attorney General Elliot L.
The source said that Agnew
:On Sale In Dish Barn
Richardson has according to · cited the "terrific tension and
several news reports decided pressure" placed upon his
Sweet Treat Crushed
and three extra b~e hits to to allow a federal grand Jury in family and indications that the
pace the Pirates to the victory Baltimore to l)egin looking into White House wants the vice
,over New York. Tom Seaver, allegations that Agnew W88 president to resign.
v2 case
17-10, was belted for five runs involved in political kickback
in three innings. Stargell broke schemes while serving as
the National League record by Baltimore County, Md., execuDUU
12 cans
14 oz. cans
collecting four .extra hits for ·tiveand governor of Maryland.
the fourth time in one game.
No Decision Yet
SAFETY TOE
Richie Hebner, Richie Zisk and
Richardson, however, has
Milt May also homered for the reportedly not decided whether
· SLIP~RS, SHOES
Pirates.
to seek indictment of the vice
Cesar Cedeno and Bob president. The Justi~e DepartAND BOOTS.
Watson homered to pace ment has so far neither conHouston over Cincinnati. Dave . firmed nor derued the reports.
Roberts picked up his 15th
The grand Jury will begin
&amp;
victory with a seven-bitter ' meeting Thursday. Those close
Your T!iOM MeAN Store
· while Jack Blilingham 111-9 to the investigation have been
Middleport, o.
took the loss.

.9
Pohsh Sausage..

•

RIO GRANDE - One •
hundred and · thirty-three
former Rio Grande. College
basketball players have been
·invited to play in the Red an.d
White Game prior to the Rio
Grande - Cedarville basketball
game on Dec. 8 at Lyne Center.
The Red and White Game will
be one of many features during
Homecoming Weekend and the
- -- - -- -- -

lb.

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13.3 ex-R_zo R·..ed men zn Vl_ted :·
to 1973 Homecoming Dec. ~
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4- The DIJiy_Senllnei,MiddlePori-Pomeroy, 0 ..•Sept. 18, 19'13

Long odds face
Denver babies

OOliTIIERN LETTERMEN - '!'~_year's veterans on
the Southern Local High School football team, from left,
front, are .Ron Johnson, tackle ; Greg Dunning, fullback ;

Dana Huddleston, center ; Mitch Nease, halfback, and Tim
Maurer, end ; back row, Randy Forbes, guard; Jim
Williams, end; Dennis Hawk,tackle ; Vern Ord, quarterback,
and Mike Codner, guard.

Excitement over in AL
By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Now that all the competitive
edge has been removed from
the American League, about
the only excitement left for the
contestants is to ·challenge the
umpires.
That was the name of the
game at Baltimore ' Monday
night when the two opposing
managers lost .decisions to a
pair of umpires. By the time
the Orioles took a ii-I decision
from the New York Yankees, in
a !().inning affair, Earl Weaver
of Baltimore and Ralph Houk
of New York had been evicted
from the premises.
Weaver was bounced by
second base umpire Bill
Kunkel in the eighth inning for
what Kunkel termed ''using
profanity," and Houk joined
him on the sidelines in the ninth
after engaging in a violent
argument with first base
umpire Russ Goetz, for
disputing a call that would
have given the Yankees a
victory.
While Weaver took satisfaction in winning the game, he
gave full credit to Houk for
putting on a. better per. formance against the umpires
after watching the Yankee boss
dance 'and scream and throw
his hat in the ait..
"Honk's the best at ihat-he
canreally do it," Weaver said.
Orioles Boost Lead
By winning·, the Orioles
boosted their firsti)lace iead in

the AL East to 7'12 games over
idle Boston and lowered their
magic number to six. The
situation is just as dull in the
West, where the Oakland A's
also reduced their magic
number to six by nipping the
California Angela, 3-2, in 13
innings, after .Kansas City
dropped an 8-3 decision to
Minneso\1\. Oakland leads the
runnerup.Royais by 7'12 games.
In the only other · game
played, Texas scored five runs
in the . first inning as Toby
Harrah, Bill Madlock and Jim
Fregosi ail homered and the
Rangers went on to rout the
Chicago White Sox, 10-3.
In the National League,
Pittsburgh ripped the Mets, 103, Montreal and St. Louis split,
the Expos taking the opener, s4, and the Cardinals winning
the 12-innlng nightcap, ii-3,
Houston beat Cincinnati, · 6-2,
Los Angeles beat San Francisco, 7-2, Atlanta beat San Diego,
7.0, and Plliladelphia at Chicago was rained out.
Earl Williams' leadoff homer
in the bottom of the loth gave
Baltimore its win over the
Yankees, although Houk stlll
believes his club won it in the
.ninth;
New York' carried a 4-3 lead
into the riinth but pinch-bitter
Boog Powell and AI Bumbry
singled. With two out, Tomrily
Davis hit u chopper to second
baseman Horace Clarke and
Goetz said Dayis beat the
throw to first. Pinch-runner

•
c
d
F. lve . . ar S

ss.pop· up
ml._

By VJTo STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
There were almost more
guys chasing a pop fly on the
pitching mound in Montreal
Monday night than were in the
siadiwn in Atlanta watChing
Hank Aaron hit his 7llth
homer.
Five St. Louis players con-

verged on a popup to the
mound with two out in the ninth
inning, but they let it drop for a
run-scoring single that gave
the Montreal Expos' a crucial
5-4 victory over the Cardinals,
in the hectic Eastern Division
pennant race.
Biowing that game cost the
Cards a shot at a doubleheader
ll'"::"':=="=:==='.:::_:::::::;:::::=:r, sweep since they sruvaged the
U
second game, ii-3, in 12 innings.
......
That left them 2'h games
behind Pittsburgh while MontV.
real is a game behind.
I J"l ~
In Atlanta, only 1,362 fans.
-the smallest crowd ever to see
a Braves' game in Atlantawere ·on hand when Aaron hit
his 38th homer of the season
and 7llth of his career to pace
the Braves to a 7-0 victory over
San Diego.
The crowd was held down tiy
raih before the game but if this
keeps up, there may be more
baseball officials, newsmen
1\n ln.trument lor
detecting and locating
and TV technicians on hands
cardiac damage called· a
than fans if Aaron hits 714 in
polarcardlograph (PPG)
Atlanta
this year.
permits !he
family
·
St. Louis Leads
physician, with very lillie
St.
LoUis
went into the ninth
Instruction to diagnose
coronary thrombosis more
inning with a 4-3 lead over
quickly and better than a
Montreal in the opener but the
trained· cardiologist ...
Expos tied it on Jim Lyttle's
The National Gallery of Art
single,
a wlld pitch and Ted
In Washington, D. C. is the
Simmons' wide throw on Felipe
largest marble structure In
Alou's grounder. ' Alou took
existence, houses many of
the world's greatest art
second on . the play but the
works ·.. , The Canadian
game seemed headed for extra
National Railway Is the
innings when Ron Woods
largest railroad In the
popped to the mound.
world . It employs 93,000
Pitcher AI H~abosky, first
pecple and runs 32.000
baseman Joe Torre, shortstop
miles of track Into .all ten
Canodlan Provinces and
Mick Kelleher, third baseman
!he northern U. S.
Terty Hughes and Simmons all
According to published
converged on the ball but it feU
results of studies by the U.
in al Alou acored.
S. Department of Com·
In the second game after an
merce and the Bureau of
hour and, 12 minute rain delay,
Statistics; the average
family can save at least $12
mly abqut :IJJO of the 20,168 fans
• Sl5 a month by using fully
were left when Bernie Carbo
conditioned relined water,
slngJecl with two out in the 12th
Instead of taP water. 1\nd
did you know that relined · to break a 3-3 tie am lelid the
Carda to the triumph .. There
water unll&gt; are sold .In
were two on and one out when
many pArts of the world?
O.Vn 1 watar rellnll' from
the pme waa delayed.
S.yre Hdwe. "II .,_,.,
AarM baa 10 11J1111 left In
COlt, It NVII.'' ,
1111 nee to catdl Jibe Ruth's
record of714 this year. He said
he wan~ to play In 81 DIIIIY as
he can but he doeln 1 want to
play when he's tired beca111e
he's afraid he'll hurt the team.
"The Important thine II not

'

Curt Motion scored from
second on the play.
"The runner was out by half
a step and that cost us the
game,'' Houk said. "What else
can you say ?"
Weaver Protests CaD
In the previous inning,
Weaver protested a call at
second on which Kunkel called
Yankee catcher Thurman
Munson safe on a steal.
"Only Kunkel and I know I
didn't curse at him," Weaver
said later. "I swear to it.
Kunkel knocked my hat off and
he stepped on my foot and he
ground it (the foot ) into the
ground. It wasn't an accident."
Williams' 21st homer provided Mike CUellar, who went the
distance, with his 16th victory
against 13 losses. Wayne
Granger, in relief of Lindy
McDaniel, took his first loss
without a win.
·
Rudy May issued a basesloaded walk to Bert Campaneris with two out in .the 13th inning to force home the winning
run in Oakland's triumph over
California. May seemed in
control of a tight situation
when he retired Bill North on a
short fly for the second out but
he walked Campaneris to allow
pinchrurmer John Odolil to
walk home from third.
. A three-run double by Tony
Oliva in the seventh inning
lifted Minnesota past Kansas
City and enabled Ray Corbin to
stretch his record to 6-5.

1RAC·LES
DQ

.l

whether 1 get a hom~r but
whether 1 can help the ream.
You may not .believe this,
considering that we are out of
the race, but no matter where
we stand, that's the way 1
feel."
Aeron, who's always a good
bet to tag San Diego pitchers,
connected against Gary Ross
in the eighth inning. Dave
Johnson also hit his 42nd homer
to tie Rogers Hornsby's record
for second basemen.
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn was at the game
and said Aaron would become
the first player to throw out the
first bail at the World Series.
• other Games
In the other games, Pittsburgh routed New York, 10-3,
Houston beat Cincinnati, s-2,
and Los Angeles routed san
Francisco, 7-2.
.
In the Amerli!Bn League,
'Baltimore edged New York,~
4, In 10 innings, Texas routed
Chicago, 10-3, Oakland nipped
Callfornilj, 3-2, in 13 innings,
and Minnesota beat KanSil!l
City, 11-3.
Willie Staigeil, the guy who
carries Pittsburgh, drove in
four runs with his 40th horner

Agnew
•
may qwt
as veep
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
Republican party leader says
he is "99¥.! per cent certain"

"When you're talklag about
numbers like that, wbat't
another one or twa?"
By JOHN J, SANKO
DENVER I UP!) - Doctors
beli~ve the four boys and two
girls born to an accountant's
34-year-oid wife, who took
fertility drugs, can suecessfuliy buck odds of
4~,980, 450 to I and be the first
Sextuplets of the century to:
. survive. .
"Their chances are excellent," Dr. Tlbor Engel said
Monday evening. ''They are in
excellent condition."
Pediatrician James Slrain
said the next 48 hours are
important in determining the
odds for survival of the babies
which range in weight from 2
pounds, 15 ounces to 3 pounda,
.11 ounces . One of the girls w""
treated with a respirator, but
Strain said respiratory probiems are not unusual in babies
born
seven
· weeks .
prematurely.

c~:rf~s~:l:'::yborn
at
10:45 p.m. Sunday and the

other five were delivered by
Caesarian section from 11 :34 to
11:38 p.m.
"We're very happy," Eugene
Stanek, 31, the dazed father
said. "For the past month or
so, we knew there would be five
and maybe six."
They had i)repared for the
eventuality by plGking out six
names, three for children of
each sex. The girls have been
named Julia and Catherine and
three of the boys are John,
Stephen and Jeffrey.
"We still need one more
(boy's) name," Stanek said.
"We.agreed on three for each
sex b~t it didn't work out that

•

••

altendlfll! obstetrician, said he
knew of no other case in thla
century in which all six lnfan~
survived. Reference books say
there have been at least 12
cases of sextuplets in the 1~,
but none survived .
"This is an historic event,"
Engehald. "So far It looks just
terrific,"
·
Engel said Mrs. Stanek is in
satisfactory condition and
"pretty cheerful. Her attitude
has been just delightful. "
The infants will rem~~ in in the
hospital at least six weeks.
Stanek saw his six new
children during the afternoon,
"They're a little thin and
have some hair on top," he
said. "That's an awful lot of tax
deductlons."

E~

•

MARKET • Open [J.aily 9 to 10.· Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
~HONE : 992·3480

~~~=~~ "We Reserve The

.•

FROZEN FOOD SAVING.)
•
. MISS KENTUCKY WORLD, Anne Thompaon, helped :
Kawa.sald introduce it!! new 1974 motorcycle tine with a :
flourish in Louisville. Getting a final briefing from Anne on :
the features of the new models, now on dl$play at the local •
cteaiership, is James Frecker of J &amp; R Sport Shop in !
Pomeroy.
:
:
•
'•

•

••

0

Hall of Fame Ceremonies 'at
the college.
ll!e creation of the Athletic·
Hall of Fame is sponaored by
the Rio Grande College Alumni
Association; and 12 former
Redmen athletes ·wiU · bP the
rarstind!lctees during half-time ·
of the Rio Grande - Cedarville
game at 2 p.m., Saturday, Dec.
8. Bob Leith, Rio Grande JV
coach, is in charge of the Red
and White Game which will
Include players from 1950
through 1973.
The Red and White Game,
hopefully,
will become an
GRANTED HEARING
annual event sponsored by the
CINCINNATI (UP!) _ John- Alumni Association. accord,ing
ny Bench, Cincinnati Reds to Mr. Leith: The Red and
catcher, has been ~ranted a White Game .will be played at
lle3!:ing with National League 12:30 p.m., pnor to the Redmon
President Chub Feeney to . • Yeilowjackets varsity game
appeal a two-day suspension of Dec. 8. Leith has n~ed Hall
and $200 fine imposed on him of .F~er N~t Oliver of
as a result of his argument with Spnngf1eld, Oh10, and Mid Oh!o
plate wnpire Andy Olsen last Conference Coach of the Year
Saturday night.
Art Lanham as opposing
The hearing will be held coaches.
Thursday when the Roils are in
~ong. the 133 players to
San Francisco to play the rece1ve mvitations are All·
·Giants. Feeney said the penai- American Bob Mabry and
ties imposed would be rescind- former Captain Jun Marshall.
ed pending the outcome of the Marshall an&lt;! Mabry led Rio

SHERBET

NAJA District 22 Play.()ffjl
during the 1969-70 season. :
Inductees to the Hall cil
Fame are Lester Berridge,
Lloyd Saunders, Newt Oliver.,
Jack
Duncan,
George
Stevenson, Paul Dillon, and
seven members of the legendary basketball team of 1952-53.
Inductees from the undefeated
1952-53 squad that WOII 39
games include coach Newt
Oilver, Ail-American Clarence
" Bevo" Francis, Wayne
Wiseman, Roy Moses, Richard
Barr, Jim McKenzie, and Bill
Ripperger.

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that Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew will resign, the Washington Post reported today .
The unidentified "senior
Republican figure," who said
he spent four hours with Agnew
late last week attempting to
talk him out of the decision,
predicted the resignation may
come this week, according to
the newspaper. ·
. The Post, however, said
Agnew staff members and
political supporters were way/'
bighly skeptical that the vice He said they expected a
'
multiple
birlh
because
of
the
president would step down.
One unnamed associate of fertility drug, which Mrs.
Agnew's said the resignation Stanek took before she got
would be ''unthinkable. I would pregnant. The couple has one
OPTOMETRISTS
be shocked ... flabbergasted." other child, a 4-year-old boy.
"When
you're
talking
about
Agnew was notified Aug. I by
181 N, Second Ave.
U.S. Attorney George Beall numbers like that, what's
another
one
or
two?"
he
said.
that he was under investigation
MIDDLEPORT
· as part of an inquiry into "We live in a three bedroom
, PH. 992-3279
alleged kickbacks by Maryland ho\Uie now, so I guess we'll go,
contractors to state political house hunting shortly."
Office hours by appointment: Mon .. Fri. 9. tit 4,
officials. Agnew said he was Odds 496,980,451 to ] •
Saturday
9 until noon. ·
Engel
said
the
odds
for
birth
innocent.
of six babies at ~· same time
Agnew Refuses Requests
were
496,980,451 to 1:Engel, the
The Post said Agnew repeathearing. .
. . - - - -···
edly refused requests from the
~----------------------newspaper for either an· interview or a direct comment on do·"
panel wlil specifically conhis reported discussions of "I don't regard this current . sider.
resignation. Agnew, according story as'having any more to It
According to the GOP
to the Post, said he would not than the many others that have source-, his conversations with
respond to stories !rom un; been coming and ar~ getting Agnew convinced him that the
named sources.
undue attention due to the vice president w88 "deterJ. Marsh Thomson, the vice 'current a trnosphere," mined to prove his innocence"
WEDNESDA -Y ONL
president's press secretary, Thomson said.
. of the charges of alleged
told UPI that he believed the GOP National Chairman bribery, extortion and tax law
story to be "very far off the George Bush, in Cincinnati for violations."
.
mark."
a convention, said the report
But, the source told the Post
"I did consult closely with "comes as a surprise to me." that Agnew gave two reasons
the vice president when 1 first He added that he had heard fo.r believing he should step
heard about this," Thomson nothing of it prior to leaving down before getting involved in
said, "and I am quite sure that Washington Monday evening. a full-scale legal defense.
this is not ali what he pla:ns to Attorney General Elliot L.
The source said that Agnew
:On Sale In Dish Barn
Richardson has according to · cited the "terrific tension and
several news reports decided pressure" placed upon his
Sweet Treat Crushed
and three extra b~e hits to to allow a federal grand Jury in family and indications that the
pace the Pirates to the victory Baltimore to l)egin looking into White House wants the vice
,over New York. Tom Seaver, allegations that Agnew W88 president to resign.
v2 case
17-10, was belted for five runs involved in political kickback
in three innings. Stargell broke schemes while serving as
the National League record by Baltimore County, Md., execuDUU
12 cans
14 oz. cans
collecting four .extra hits for ·tiveand governor of Maryland.
the fourth time in one game.
No Decision Yet
SAFETY TOE
Richie Hebner, Richie Zisk and
Richardson, however, has
Milt May also homered for the reportedly not decided whether
· SLIP~RS, SHOES
Pirates.
to seek indictment of the vice
Cesar Cedeno and Bob president. The Justi~e DepartAND BOOTS.
Watson homered to pace ment has so far neither conHouston over Cincinnati. Dave . firmed nor derued the reports.
Roberts picked up his 15th
The grand Jury will begin
&amp;
victory with a seven-bitter ' meeting Thursday. Those close
Your T!iOM MeAN Store
· while Jack Blilingham 111-9 to the investigation have been
Middleport, o.
took the loss.

.9
Pohsh Sausage..

•

RIO GRANDE - One •
hundred and · thirty-three
former Rio Grande. College
basketball players have been
·invited to play in the Red an.d
White Game prior to the Rio
Grande - Cedarville basketball
game on Dec. 8 at Lyne Center.
The Red and White Game will
be one of many features during
Homecoming Weekend and the
- -- - -- -- -

lb.

SUPERI?RS .

1fz gallon

13.3 ex-R_zo R·..ed men zn Vl_ted :·
to 1973 Homecoming Dec. ~
o

PORK STEAK

Scot Lad Ice Milk

••

SUPERIORS
BONELESS ·

USDA
CHOICE·

To Umit Quantities"

"'

qts.

\

$lor

__D!e.!U.!.I*-PI!f!llY•.!fl!llf!'..: 10.1$-73 ....- • •
'

.I

'

�·
f
Sentinel Classifieds Ge~ R es u l ts

7- The Dally ~ntinel, MlddlePQrl

1- :t'he Deily Sent)i\el, Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0., Sepl. 18, 1973

e

'

'WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLIIIES

Notice

2 SIGNS
OF
'
QUAliTY.

5 P' M . Oay Before Publlq•tlon .

Mone1av Dead lint 9 a . m .

Cancellation Corrtctlon5
Wlll be accept~d untO 9 am . tor
De 'II of Publicat ion

REGULATIONS

The Publisher ritnrves the
r ight to edit or relect any ads
deemed
obfettlonal.
The
PUblisher w ill not be rtspons lble
for more than one Incorrect
Insertion ,
RATES
For Wan1 Ad Service
.Scents per Word one Insert ion
Min imum Charge 7Sc
12 c•nts per word tl'lree
r::onsecu t lve lnsert lon:s .
18 cen ts per ward six con secu tive Insertion s
~s Per Cent Discount on pll ld
.&amp;d$ an d ad.s paid w ith in 10 davs

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY'!'
.

S1 SQ for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word :2c .

BLIND AD$

Additional 25c
Adver t isement

Cha rge per

OFFICE HOURS

8' 30 a , m. to 5 .00 p.m . Da ll y ,
8 .30 a.· m to 12 :00 Noon

t971 FORO TORIN0500

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

&gt;209S'

hOn'l t

~ny

llmt In my

eng ine. standard transmission. power steering, and
brakes . radio, reall v sharp .

9· t6-61p

~~

Sl iver Dollar . Sen timental
reasons Rewatd . Call 992·
3381 or 992 3-453.
....... 9-18-6tp

__________ __

----------

9 11 12tc

__ ___________ _

WILL PAt "''T houses and rooft,
Frte...,...estlmt!fs. Cal! 99 2 ·3~74 .

'5-12tp

Auto Sales

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

v .a. 4·door . power s teer ing ,

power brakes . good cond ition
exc.
pl body . BAILEY '$
STORe , MIDDLEPORT .
9-16-31p
and GOld
or nrtu 62
DODGe Potara , 383

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
$tl95 ;
LOST , one- black onyx
4-door, V-8 automallc, power sleerlhg. radio, good tires,
clip ear r ing , In
blue tlnish, spotl ..s lnlerlor.
Craw 's
or
Krooers

In
Pomeroy, If found , call 992 .
5830 Reward

-------------Automaflc . oood
Phone 992 -7605

cond ition

9·t6-31p
9·t7-61p --------------

Motor Co.

1970 MAVERI CK , Auto,;,atlc

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

Help Wanted

OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.
POMEROY, OHIO

t20 Horse Power , not taney
but nice Ct~lt 949·:27199·14-Jtc

Eo

10 MEN WANT
Earn while
vou learn , Car necessary . -~---- ---- --- ­
Interviews can be arranoed

.

by catt ing 446 om lrom 1 a m
rrn 6 p.m Mondsy or

ACT Assessment
tests scheduled

For Sale

Tuesday . Ask for
Mr . GROCERY buslnes.t for sate.
Gilmore S140 a week to start
Building for sale or lease .
9-16-ltc Phone 773-5618from a 30 p.m .
- - -----------to 10 p.m . for appointment
A LOCAL company has l rt~ ·
3·20-tfc
mediate openings for the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - follow ing pos itions :
AM .fM Stereo -radio 8-track
I
AccounllfiO Clerk
t1pe player , 4 spe-aker sound
Knowledge and experience In
system . Balance S109 44 or
cost accounting or payroll
use our budget terms .· Call
essenfiat. Openings on the
992 -3965 .
following ShiftS, 8 am . till -4
9·14·6tc
p.m ., 4 m , tfll I::Z midnight, - - -- ......----------

KOS CDT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S.
Se plember Spec1a ls are
Lemon Facial Bath , Bath &amp;
Sh ow er GeL Jr Facial Mask ,
Kover Kofes, Ltquld Roug e,
Ha 1r Sprays, Sham poos, " K"
Beauty Bars , Suntan Spra y
and others . Phone Helen Jane
Brown 1 992 .5113 Many thanks
to our new and regular
customers

r

Students at lhe high schools
In Meigs and Gailia Counties in
Ohio and Wahama in , Mason
COilllly who are pianrung to
attend college or some other
lype of school after graduation,
Will have five opportunities to
------------~:!_t -ttc lake the ACT Assessment
YARD
sate al th• Rober! during the 1973-74 year,
Jeffers residence on H1ghland
Rd . In Pomeroy . Tues .. Wed , The schools are Meigs High,
and
, tO a.m . tttt 4 Eastern and Southern in Meigs
p .m . Thursday
each day.
o-18-3tc County and Kyger Creek,
-------------North Gallia, Hannan Trace
YARD Seie at West Columbia .
Wedhesday, Thursday and and Southwestern in Gallia
Friday . Ctotnlng- a dulls and Counly.
chlldren, several gallons of
paint, mise items. Foll~w the
The first of five national test
signs at Kapp's Grocery.
dates on which the ACT
9-18-2tp
-------------Assessment will he offered is
FLEA Market, Sunday, Ad .
d1son , Ohio . 9 a.m till ? Saturday at 7:45a.m., Oct. 20.
Tables ava ilable P &amp; J OddS Stude~ts planning to take it on
and Ends
9· t8-Ste that date must have registered
----- -~-----by no later than Oct. I, accordNOmyhunting
or
trespassing
on
mg
to Alfred SCarberry, Gallia
farm In Nease Settlement ,
vernon Nease.
Counly guidance supervisor ;
------------~2_11 ·31p Harold Sauer, Meigs High
guidance counselor; Tom
For Sale .
Kelly, Eastern High guidance
60,ooo
BTU
c.rculating
oos
counselor;
James Adams,
heater. Albert Hill , 949·2261
9 t8 61c principal at ~uthernHlgh, and
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - John Zell, principal of Wahama
High.
When application is made by
NEW YORK (U PI ) - The registenng, an admission slip
Un1ted Press International's will be issued designating the
Board of Coaches major college
football ratings w•th number of building and the hour to take
first place votes in paren . the test. The tests will he given
theses (First Week)
·
Team
Points on five success1ve Saturdays
1 Southern Cal O·Ol (2ll
325 for Ohio students as indicated
2 N•braska (1 .01 (9 )
30t below.
3 Ohio Sf (l .OJ r.t)
281
4 Alabama 1 " ..,1 1)
232
They may be taken at Ohio
S. Texas zo u:
' 203 University, Gallia Academy,
6 Michigan (1 .0)
181
7 Penn State (1 -0)
,119 or Hio Grande College, except
B. Oklahoma (1 0)
77
9 LSU Cl -01
60 that Ohio University will give
10. Tennessee (1 0)
38 the test on all the Saturdays
11. NOtre Dam e (0-0J
31
12. Auburn lt -01
22 except the last Saturday and
13. An zona St . (1-0J
9 Rio Grande all but on the
I( Florida 11-01
7 second Saturday. Gallia
t5. Oklahoma Sl. 11 -01
6
16. {Tle) Houston 11 OJ
S Academy gives the test on all
t6. (Tiel N C St. (2-01
5 five Saturdays . ~

Business

'

LOsT i n- s-;;i!Pi per bo,.~ 1922 1960 PON:TIA C for uteor trade ,

1910 CHEVELLE MALl BU
51695
4-door gold fini sh. spotless clean Inferior, V-8 engine
automatic, power s teering. r adiQ, A honey of a buy

--------------~--~--~·

Edith Ron, Antlqultyo.

-----.----------

------.---------Lost

with matching vinyl rool. and viny l lnlerlor, 302 v.s

Pom~roy

BABYSITTING

19 70 JSEP CJ 5, ~) c ab , other
FOAM to fill vour old couch end
e~~:trn John Beaver , Lincoln
cha ir cush ions . Standard stzt,
Hgts 992·1881.
onlv
59 95 .
Pomeroy
9-t6-6tp
R•covery , 412 E M• ln Street
192-ISS&lt;.
l ·ll ·l.Otc CITIZEN 'S National Bank Will
otter for sale at fhtir otrice in
M iddleport. star t ing 10 a.m ..
1
Sept. 28, a 1971 Gre 0\t1n 2·
MAL e . red Ttoer cat In Sunk.er
dr • 4 Pau Serllll A 15465E ,
714105
~Ill vicinity Call 992-1300.

Coupe. 1 owner car, less than JJ,OOO miles. brawn fin ish

~aturday

PARASOL Boutique Beau ty
Salon near S kafe ·A·Way
Roller
Rmk
announ ces
frost ing specials . September
11 tnrough September 12.
Short h!llr, regular $tS now
Sl3 . Long hair. regular $1 7,50
now $15 .SO . Cell ~85 - 4141 for
appotn tm ent Sa nd ra Kern s,
Operator .

Po11eroy
Motor Co.

WILL DO BOOKKEEPING IN
MV HOME . WRITE BOX 793.
MIDDLE,PORT. OHIO
1·13-6tp

Employmllfll Wanted

Servic~~

Ph. 992-5271
Lincoln Hill-Pomeroy, 0 .

All WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

Painting ASpecialty
Area's Most

AeasoMble Prices

MIDDLEPQRT, OHIO
Phone 992-2550

All work guar01nteed

r----------,

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

PRICE

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

coNsTRUcTioN

On Most American Cars
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

MODERN
SANITATION

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

JOHN TUCKER

OpenBTII5

Rt . 4,. Pomeroy, 0 .

Monda)' thru Saturday

~:::::::=:===:
··r
ASK us ABOUT

'
Sat.
Rlwllnas Sons
Middltport, .

EXPERT

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
14 HOUR SERVICE

992-3954 or 992-7349

A. H.

Roof ing,
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Con'l;
p i e t e
H0 m~
Remodeling.

:II..

1;,

•

•

l==6=06=E=·=M=a=i=n,:P::o:m:•:ro:y:·:O:.

WOOD TRUSSES

E ,

p AND •J HOM
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

:
:

__ __________

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

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

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

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

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

-------------1

1

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

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

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

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

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

----------.------

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_____________

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_______ ______ _ ____ ________ _
-------------

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
'kElLY's?' -SOUNDS LIKE
ANmiSHPUB
NEWYORK(KFS) -Gene Kelly's about to
buy a uafe in Ireland ... Nat King Cole's lovely
daughter Natalie opens next week at
Shepheard's in the' Drake Hotel on Park Ave ...
Diana Riggs's new "Diana" TV series had a
witless, listless premiere; nowhere to go now
but up ... Dom de Luise 's "Lot.sa Luck" series
premiere was set in the bathroom, and that's
where it belonged ... Pearl Bailey, who really
chefs up a tasty storm, has a new cookbook out,
"Pearl's Kitchen." It's full of recipes for
simple, subs\antial, plentiful meals, no gourmet-frosting on her plain cake, no candles (I
want to see what I'm eating), 118ing economical
ingredients - and all the warmth, candor,
humor and Joy of life of the Public Pe.arlie Mae,
which Is her private !He, too ... No politics,
religion or race in this tasty tome.
Barbra Strelsapd snooted a $250,000 oneshow concert at HalVaH 'a Diamond He.ad Crater
... George P~te is a ~uth African golf pro. His
most famous pupil was champ Gary Player.
Unleas you count his daughter, Juliet Prowse.
The sad lad who directed "Myra Breckinridge,"
Britlaher Michael Sarne, chucked showbiz since
that ridiculous disaster and formed a London
rock group.
Avery rich-rich gent named Charles Brady
filled a 707 jet with pais and flew them to Spain
for an all-paid bash. Guests discovered even In
retlatranlll they wandered Into that this new
Diamond Jim Brady had' anticipated tllelr ev~ bill, Anolller Irisher named Jack Mulcahy
111nua14' Illes a jeUoad of pals to Ireland - but
he goes Brady one be tier- his chartered Jet is a

747,

The fOotuh Foreman-Roman championship
aoflchl wu pnllllOted by Japanese National
ldueJiklnll Nelwork; Educational? Ita lesson
wu - lliVII' buy a pug in a pokf ... The gang
biiCII from tile Brad7-pal-llft report Faye
f
f
I

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

t

Tecumseh parts .

11 2 30
12 X 55 M OBILE home With ____________.:_: - tc
pal1o , in Rac1ne , Albert Hill . EXCEL !) IlJR. Salt Works, E '
Phone 9&lt;19 ~2 61.
Main St.', Ponuro)l . All kinds
9-) 6-7te of salt water pellels, water
nuootts1 block salt and own

-------------MOBILE home apace . Baer•s

Emerson's alive and weU in Spain and there's
about another 50 lbs. of her to love.

Mark•!, Syracuse.

Ohio R1vor Satt . Phone 992·
3891.

8·26-tfc

6·5·tfc

For 70 years the "Won't You Come Hill Bill ~-----------r5;;.~;;;;,;;,~~;;:~
' has been a hit with everyone·•
7 ROOM house In Pomeroy :
Ba'•;
1ey " song
f"eplace, some wall to-wall
except Mrs. Bill Batley, still alive and
earpellng , 3 bodrooms, full
celeb ratin g her tOOth birthday, Mrs. Sarah
basement , 2 car gara;e, S125
• month . Ca ll (30&lt;1 7&lt;3-6326.
Bailey Williams, who inlptred the song with her
9-IJ-12tp
all too realistic plaint e.arly in this century - - --------- --blames it for her marital bustup with the very Business Opportunities
real late Bill Bailey, The song originated at the
Whistler Bar in Jackson, Mich., where Bill
DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
dawdled nightly over his grog despite the lyrical
Be 1" F~~j 1::•p.~t0 f,lm~unelt
wifely summo1111 which tnsptred its pianist
To ~~~~ 8.~T~~~~~~e8.~P.,.

Hughie
Cannon to fashion the now venerable
1
'Standard .., ... The weird aftermath of the Bill
Bailey plaint is - ASCAP U.ta 40 versions' of
that nifty oldie:
The reason, or purpose, moving so many to
latch onto Bill Ba'lley simply Is that the original
now iB safely beyond thll first copyright (S2
ye.ars from its registration) whereupon it's In
the public domain to anyone anxious to reach
Into a songsmith's creation and adjust it suf
ficlentlytomakeanotllercopyrlght; this is done
with new "arrangement&amp;,'' such as Louis Arm·
slrong's, Jackie Gleuon's, Mort I.Jndaey's,
Vincent ~·. Mercer Ellington's, Mitchell
Ayres', Lester Lanln's, Jimmy Durante's, Ray
Bloch's, Rosario Bourdon's, Lawrence Welk's
- and four publishers in Alaska ; and we'll bet 11
was a cold day before Bill's wldo- got a slice of
"
Bill's royalties-invasion.
The "New York Experience" multi-sensory
film's premiere is off until late this month :
some Insensitive soul delayed delivery of its fog
machine. Why not lief Mayor I.Jnd.!ay and
boITO\!' a cup of 111101 ... "Tomorrow Entertatnment" clalma that Ita ''Queen of !he
Stardusl Ballroom" II the •\first original movie
mualcal made exclusively lor tv." Nonaenae.
What about Hodgen II Hammerstein's "CindereUa," the ireeldy musicals Gleason infilcted,
the High T()f-flick by SChwartz &amp; Dietz starring
Bing Crosby, dozen• of early-TV specials.
A,

•

No

e~p. nee. £(onomy doea 1101 arrect

bu•lnm. Protll potential II unllmlled , .t90 for each day '*Otlcd 11 a
" ""'"""
A $!,495 In·
veltment Pull you In bu1meu.

POMEROY

"tl"'"'

Jack W. C~ruy, Mgr.
Phone f92·2111

WIIITI TODif

·

Wanted To

Buy

coRNER cupboards , wall
cupboards, che&amp;la, otd guns
any condlflon . Also btui
decorated atontware , Write
6;, 1 ~ 3j ~:· c~rr~~~:f.mo
aflor 1 p.m.
8·8·90tc
;~-----------WANT Eo
for
ouctton,
. housohotd goods . Toots, moll
anything of value. Will buy or
cstll on commlulon . Will haul.
, •II 992 . J3S~ or 992 -1792
1·15 Itt
Heyman 's.
OL0-fu-;;;~;;;~-:-~;.-~'bi;..
ctocks, Ice box .. , brus bodo,
dishes
houuholds .or Writ•compltt•
M D.
Miller,
Rl
.
4,
Pomaroy,
Ohio,
cell 992·6271.
5·13-lfc

,f:

1

·~?$g,AaL ~U~~~~d c~:~~~ ~m
motor , 2·dr , Standard trans.
9')~·~~~~ . Good condition . Call
9 t6-31e

;;;-;w-:-;ii;ih"ti'Y"d;;;.~;d~h'a trs
and sofa beds, Some as low u

120 while they last. P:omerov
Re,overv , 622 e . Main,

Pomeroy, Oh io Call 9;~i~~:ic
------- ------t969 !KAMPER com per sloepo
8, tully equl_pped . Will un or
trade . Call 991·7013.
· 9-t6-3tQ
,--- - - -------- -

Pets fOr Sale

PAR Kill EW Konnels . Poodt 01 ,
~h~';,Y, rm~4:.nd t femtle.
7-15-ttc

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

Mobile Homes for I!.J.
J11t

CASH paid for Ill m•~·· lnd
models of mob/It homt1 .
Phona arot coda 614-42H531 .
r•
tau
,
4·13·11c
1965 CHEVY - 2 door ht . New
paint , rtbulll 327 Engine . •
x 65 TRAILER, 2 bedroom,
spetd, m1g whtell . M\111 &amp;1111. 14 very
good conditio . Phont 773.
Call 992-2391
·
5105.
9·12-61p
....,
1-22-lft

ror_Sa_le_or T-..,-----

-----·--.,-------

In
Rutland , air conditi oned,
carpeted, gas furnace, dlsn.
washer, double oven, range,
double garage, large carport,
4 acrts cleared and . fenced,
small
barn
and
other

build ings. Phone 6tH41·6834

5-30-tfc

--------------___ ____ _____
......

\

"weekdays after 5 p.m ., 992·

3247.

8 l -Ife
-------------

now back to work . Complet&amp;
front end service, tune up and
brake
ser\!ice.
Wheels
balanced electronically All
work guaranteed . Reaaonable
rates. Phone 1·.:2·3232.

2-18.1fc
RONSHE PA R"o.-F!.;;;;::--W.II
Remodeling, Ceremlc tile
baths. Box 28D, Rulland 142·
• 3664.
6-26-tlc
'NelGL:Us-f'oR- -HOUsE
BUILDERS . CALL GUY
NEIGLER, RACINE, OHIO .
9-11 ·301p
;o;;~e
, c.
trlcal plumbing and heating
NEW LISTING
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - 2 Phone 991·5858.
1·15-tfc
bedrooms, bath, large living,
compact kitchen, front porch, oPfif""=-R'oger-Hy~lh
Garage near Crossroads on
and sma ll basemen!. Block
garage, one acre lor only • St. Rt , 124 ; 1!111 mechanlcel
work Including automatic
$8500.00.
trensmluiona . Monday .
LOVELY BRICK
Friday, 8:30am . till 5 p.m
MULBERRY AVE . - 3 Saturday - 8 :30 to 12 noon ·
Unless by appt. Phone 992 :
bedrooms, large living, large
or 192-7121
modern kitchen, dining room -= 5682
. . . . ___________
__
9·16.30tc
with gu fireplace. Nice front
porch, 2 car garage. Excellenl ELNA lnd Wh 'llo~Siw!ii­
location tor only $25,000.00.
Michlnea ... serv ice 00 1 ft
NEW HOME
mektt . Reuonable rattt
The Stwlng Cantar Mid '
ROCK SPRINGS - 3 btdrooma
diiPOfl, O~lo .
'
.
with largo· closet, muler with
lt
-t6-lfc
hall bath, modern kitchen wllh
atove . Nice bath . FuJI W ltL'tRIM o,-~uil";;;.":'": d
bailment with family room ahrubbtry, allo. clean out
and double garage. Asking bu,ments, lttlcl t and tf
Call '"·3221 or 742-4441 . c.
$29,500.00.
NEW HOME
- - -- - --8-3t.30tc
FIVE POINTS - Nice large DEAD 51 0 , ~ =-Wiiiriiliov•
at I re11oneblt t harqt. Call
kitchen, washer snd dryer
24S·ll14,
·
hookupa, 3 lovely bedrooma
with large clolth, 1'1• batho --------...... 1·23.90tc
with venl fano . All Insulated
and electrically healed. Only

horne-;;;;;:--;1

MIDDLEPORT

,

2 story frame home. :.r... 4

OUt

(lncl•do phone "'"ber)'
~UTOMOTIVE MARKETINII, INC.
1100 "'· Moon.,,.,.,
M&lt;dlo, "' 19063
-

7 - ROOM - hous;--;;;-;ath

bedrooms , bath1 garage .

Several lois a"d parts of lois
go with this property. Asking
$9,5()(). 00.
EXCELLENT
APARTMENT
and business room . Apart.
menl hao 3 bedroomo with
large closeto, Modern bath.
Very nice kitchen. Dining
room . Large living room.
Hardwood floors and carpeted. Hot water heal. 2
garag... Not very old .
SlO,OOO.OO.

RUTLAND
tNewly
renovalod.
2
bedrooms. Bath. Gas wall
furnace hut. Almost new
block building with garage In
the rear 25x291t. Large level
lot. $8,500.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS
3 years old and iualllke new.
3 nice bedrooms with closelo.
Very modern bath and
kitchen, table top range and
oven. Carpeted. All altctrlc.
Carport. In , new addition.
Sl1 .000.00.
FOR SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY LIST WITH U$
TODAY.
HENRY E, CLELAND,
IROICER
992-22.!9
If no •n•wtr ff2·2161

--:n....

m.ooo.oo,

GOODOLDHR HOME
SYRACUSE - 5 room•, nice
bath and kllchon. Full
blloomonl, large b1ck and front
porchtl. 2 OOod lot•. Wonl
$9,000,00.

We talk to )1011
like a pnn

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

'

Social

;, ;

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS. INC.

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

Officen were elected at the
'"1'hurlday night meetln~ or
; ):lock Spring• Grange, held at
: 1he hall,
, :.. Elected were Fred Goegleln,
: muter: William Grueser,
ov~rll'!er ; Mn. W. A. Morgan,
lecturer : Amo1 Leonard,
,J lew~rd ; Jamn Conkle,
aulstant steward ; Mrs.
William Grueser, chapla in;
Mrs .
Lucille
Leifheit,
treaaurer ; Mrs. Fred Goegleln,
'lecretary; Homer Radford,
jl&amp;tekeeper; Mrs. Ethel
Gruelli!r, Ceres; Mrs. Homer
Radford, Pomona ; Mrs. ),eigh
Ann Cline, Flora; Mrs. James
, Conkle,
lady
assistant
~ steward; William Grueser,
executive committee; Mrs.
Amos
Leonard,
home
·~anomies chelrperson; Mrs.
_Lucille Leifheit, youth com·
1nlttee; Mrs. Conkle, Juvenile;
Amos Leonard, legislative ;
and Mrs . Robert Loucks,

26271"
74
~~=:.t-1:;·:;~=.~~;::~=1
·

PRE-.F_ABRICAT,ED

-;--------------- --------------

l

For FrP.P. li1Atlmate

Feb. 23, 1974 (Nov. 5-Jan 28);
Healing . Air Cond. •
April27, 1974 (Jan. 21-Aprill);
t2, 0tt ll 8 am .
8LAC. . .
Retngeratlon Plumbing .
ldroest
2. Office secretaries- Duties
K leather reclining chair,
June IS, 1974 (March 25-Max
BulldoU!r Radiator to the · Electrical Appliances . Auto
tnclude t yp i ng , dictation ,
like new . Phone 843-2846 .
20) .
Heater Cor~.
Air Cond. . Residential or
fil ing Opening on same Shifts
9·1B -6tp
Bullllo Your•Specs
1 ~ mauestNathan
Biggs
Commercial.
Ai!hough
the
ACT
Delivered
to
Job
Slit
~ist~de~~~~el Ass i stant - ;;;9;].:-XL.7 0- HoNDA- Tral/
Radiator Specialist
Assessment Program has been
Respons i ble for re c ruiting
Bike In good condlt lon Pr ice
215 N. Second
S17S. Can be seen at Royal
expanded this year to provide
an d screening of emp Ioyees
Oak Park - Lot No . 21-4 after
HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
Phone 992-3509
•·
Desire
Interviewing
or
s p.m . Also, 1971 Coachmen
'
students with additional incounseling experience
c
MATERIALS
CO.
~4 Hour Serylce
Excellent salar ies and fringe
amc.er. 24 ft. Cruuder,
1
formation, the student fee
773-5554
Muon, W.Va.
benefits Se nd brief resume of, ' 3•50 ·
Ph"i92-2114
Pomeroy
All
work guaranteed.
remains $6.50. Also as the past,
work
l'l lstorv and education .
9-18-3tp
Send
all
replies
to
Bo•
729.
5
In
VI-SI_
T
__________
_
11 will take students about 31&gt;
our store at Add1son ,
and back hoe work,
care of T he Dally Sentinel ,
Ohio . Open dally
Flea
Mobile Homes For Sale DOZER
hours to complete the
ponds and septic tanks , dlt ·
Pomeroy , Ohio
Market on !lunday. p &amp; J
!lJtl!lllination and questionnaire _ ____________9· 2_!_fc Odds -And Ends Shop .
Ching service ; top soil, fill
Dick's
•
d irt,
li mestone.
B&amp;K
,.....
that makes up the ACT
9 t8 Sic
Escavallng Phone 992 -5367 or
Air Conditioners
DIVIS ION CON .
Hoard House
Assessment . Resulting m- CENTRAL
992-3861
SOLIDATION COAL COM - 21 FT . CABIN cr uise r , in ·board
Awnings
·
9·1-tfc
PANY , Immediate openings
formation reports are of
"STRIPPERS"
and outboard engine Contact
Underpinning
are available in the following
We
Strip
Paint, Varnishes,
valuable use to students and
VIrgil
Walker
,
Recine
,
Ohio
.
READY
.MIX
CONCRETE
pos i t io ns : Maintenance
1
·
·
Etc.
from
Furniture.
delivered
right
to
your
9·16
6tc
Foreman (underground) ;
counse ors tn planmng for
Complete mobile home·
project
.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Antiques-Modern-Metals
,
Assistant Mine Foreman G R E eNbeans~ pitl.Y ou-;;w--n service - plus gigantic
postsecondary educalion.
estimates . Phone 992 .3284 .
No
ruinous
lyes
or
causlles
(underground), Section
$2 a bushel. Bring contamers
Goeg leln Ready -Mix Co .,
display of mobile homes
used .
'
Foreman ; Su rface Mine
Last year nearly one million
Andrew Gross, Letart Fa lls,
Middleport,
Ohio .
always
available
at
.
.
.
I
·
Foreman,
Reclamation
Pick-Up
Service
Ohio
1
persons in the U. S. and
6-30-ttc
Foreman . Persons applying
Available
9-16 6tc
.
shoUld hold valid foreman
overseas · took the ACT
We
Buy
&amp;
Sell A~tiques. ·
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
.
MILLER.
certification papers (Ohio) or MAYTAG dryer
Assessment, which• is required
tn good
Dick
Sayler-OWner
ReASONAB~E
rates
.
Ph
.
446·
have sufficient txperience to
working condition Call 992
47821 Gallipolis, John Russell,
Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0.
apply for State examlne~tlon.
or recommended for ap·
MOBILE
HOMES
5321.
Owner
and Operator .
Phone
992-~798
·
Salary Commensurate with
9 16 Jtc
pllcanls at more than 2,000
5-12·tfc
Experience .
Excellent
1220 Washington Blvd,
Benefits . TO APPLY : Write 1970 MOBILE Home , 12 x 44
colleges and other postsecond413-1521
BELPRE, 0.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
or
Phone
Personnel
$3,589. Phond 713-5429
ary education instituations, as
Complete Service
Department ,
Central
9-14 ptp
Phone 949·381t
well as numerous scholarship
POMEROY
Division , Conso lidation Coal
..
Racine, Oh io
Company,
Cadiz , Ohio 43907. DRIVE A LITTLE - SA VE A BERRY MILLER Mobile Hom e
agencies.
Crttt Bradford
Tetepnone 614·942 451 2. AN
Sa les hes a lot to offer when
LOT Good se lection used ,
HOME &amp; AUTO
5-1-ttc
The
ACT
examEQUAL OPPORTUNITY
you start shopping for your
guaranteed appliances. new
EMPLQYER
992-2094 .
Mobile Horr,e . You can beat EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and used furniture at real
questionnaire that is ad8 21-lfc
the high depreciation you'll
savings 50 gal. oak whiskey
and backhoe work ; septic
ministered 'to students on the
606 E. Main PomeroY.
barrels for cider, homebrew , . have on your home the first
tanks Installed; dump trucks
two
years
by
shopping
for
a
even furniture. Come out and
national test dates features a
and lo -boy1 for hire ; will haul
late model used MoUIIe "tome.
see us Tuesday thru Sunday
fiJI dirt. top soli , limestone
series ·of four standardized
OffiCE SUPPLIES
H~re are some every day low
'tll7 p m KU HL'S BARGAIN
and gravel; Call Bob or Roger
pnces .
CENTER, Rt 7 " at caut1on
tests (English, math, social
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
and
l1ght," TUPPERS PLAINS , 55x 10 Detro1ter with 3 Ex .
nigh! phone 992 3525 or 991·
studies, natural sciences) For Rent
Oh io
pandos, $3,495
5232
FURNITURE
designed to assess general
9-16-6tc 50x10 Richardson, $2,695
2-11 -tfc
60x12
Champion Deluxe , $4,495
J
AN
0
4
ROOM
furnished
and
educational development.
unfurnished
apartments. BRUSH HOGS, ~x5 ft , phone 50x 10 Ritz Craft , 52,995, extra -rIME-;;;- checklh'&amp;t "on-;;-gas
Stop In and See Our
sharp
Phone 992·5434 ,
Another part is a student
992-5858.
furnace for ·winter
Dirty
Floor Disolav .
60xl2 Champion, $4,495
_
4· 12-tfc
furnaces cost fuel and could
questionnaire that collects
7·15-tfc 60X12 PMC, $4 995
cost-a life. Call P . &amp; J . Home
EXCAVA~ I N.c.:; . Doieh, ta•'wrrr
such Information as academic HOUSE FOR Rent . S rooms arid 1973 t&lt;x70 MOBILE home , 52x12 Buddy Custom, $&lt;4,295
Maintenance 992 .3509, 215 N
44x12 Regent. S3,79S
and small; Backhoes lnd
bath , Racine area Call 992 ·
Second,
Middleport.
washer a ... d dryer. diSh · 60)1.12
and nOII!Icademic background,
Buddy, $3,995
5858 .
loaders on track and tins;
washer, stainless steel sink .
8·23-30tc
60x
12
New
Moon
,
$4,495
immediate plans for college,
Dump
truck - LO ·boy ser 8-29-tfc garbage d isposal. eve level 48x 10 Valiant. $2,795
vice Septic tanks Installed.
and career aspirations. Added ROOMS by the week, $19 Up. oven, range, dacron .polyester THESE
HARRISON
'
S
TV
serv1ce
and
are mostly all late
George C&amp;lttl Pullins, phone ,
carpe t, large lot . Phone 74:2 ·
service cells Phone 992 ·2,522 .
model homes and the prices
new this year is a student in992-2478
or 992-7~02.
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy .
3083.
·
2-9-ttc
Include your delivery and
1-9,tfc
7-12-tfc
teres! Inventory.
1-tB tf
.
'
complete set -up . So for an
It is recommended that PRIVATE meeting room for UPHOLSTER your own fur honest to goodness good deal. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
cancelled?
Lost
)'our
stop In todav at Berry .MIIIer
SEWAGE SYSTE~S
any organiutlon ; phone 992 ·
niture . We have all the sup students take the ACT
operator's license. Call 992 Mobile Home sa•es, 70S
3975.
CLEANED, REPAIRED .
plies
you
wilt
need
7428.
Assessment in their junior year
Farson Street, Belpre, Ohio,
MILL~R
SANITATIO.N,
18 Missouri ( 1 0)
4
3-11 -tfc Upholstery Fabrics, a very
6-IS-Ifc
Phone 423 9531 , clos ed sun
STEWART, OHIO PH . 662·
19. (Tie l Tulane (O·Ol
2
Wahama students, Principal or early in the senior year of 2 BEDROOM mob ile home tor large selection of nylons,
davs P S Due to the Road
3035.
19. (Tie) North Car . (1 .0)
2
velvets , HercuJon , vlnvls - in
Zell said, are advised to take high school in order that the
Construct ion on
Farson
rent bv the month or by the cotton prints. also remnants .
IO·•·ttc
Street, please enter our lot Real Estate For Scile '
week . Evervthlns's fur .
Foam for cushi ons and
the test at Gallia Academy resulting information can be of
beside
the
Kentu
cky
Fried
niShed . C!ill 742 -5980.
SEWI NG MACHINES . Repair
padd1ng Burlap , denims.
High SChool, because it is the maximum value and assistCh 1c ken
Restaurant
on 3 BEDROOM house 1'12 baths, 1
9 18-6tc cambric , foam glue, zippers,
service, all makes. 992-2284.
Washington Blvd .
Tht Fabric Shop, Pomerqv .
formal dining room , 1 liv ing
closest. However, they may ance in educational planning. FIRST floor. 2 room turn /shed springs and clips, chipboards.
Authorized Singer Sales a'nd
room, kitchen, family room , 2
legs, sewing thread, dacron.
take it in Huntington, ParkersThe ACT Assessment
apt In Pomeroy Ca ll 992Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
car garage, full basement , on
tacks, webbing , welt cord ,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
_,_
3028
acre lot Located In Riggs
3·294fc
bur~, Charleston, or Ripley, he Program is one of numerous
cotton . swivel bases, and all
CHESTER - The Eastern
9·
18·31c
other supplies you will need
Real Estate For Sale
Crest Manor . Phone· 992 3863
guidance • oriented services
before 3 p.m. and ask for Mr . FOR FREE estimates on
New furniture at low , low
Athletics Boosters Club will said.
aluminum siding . Sto~m
The
complete
ACT provided for students and TRAILER at Syracuse, adults prices . Pomeroy Recovery . HOUSE for sale, located in
Ingels or call Gene Riggs at
meet Thursday night at the
Bradbury , Ca ll 99 2·7363 alter
Doors and Windows, car .
612
E.
Main,
992·155~
985
·3595
or
99:2
5869.
only , Call 992-3525
6 p m.
ports, Marquees and Railing,
_...
high school. Ali fans interested Assessment schedule (with educational institutions by The
8-3t
-30tc
8-26-tfc
9-18-lfc
......._
Phone
Ch~rlts
Lisle,
9-5-30ic
in the athletic program are regislration dates in paren- American College Testing
Syracuse, Ohio . Cllrl Jacob
thesis) are :
Program (ACf). The Acr
WILKINSON small enulne seles 2 BEDROOM house, 3 years old, 3 BEDROOM house on Lincoln
Sales Representative. v. v.
urged to attend.
and service, 820 lrd Stret ,
r;uRNISHEO office tor rent by
Johnson and Son , Inc .
Hill, living room, kitchen,
Oct. 20,1973 (Aug. 20-0ct.l); Natlof111l Office is located in
Middleport. Lawn mower lind
carpeting, big kitchen with
the day, week. or month Call
bath and utility room , extra
6-22-lfc
cha
in
saw
repair
.
Fret
pickup
lots
of
cabinets,
'Ia
acre
of
992
·5120
between
9
a
.m
and
4
Dec. 8. 1973 ISent. 24-Nov. 12); Iowa City, Iowa.
large lot over 1 acre. Has
and delivery , Phone 992·3092. ground , Racine, Ohio Ca ll
p m or 992 -3558 after 5 p m .
driveway .
$13,000 .
Call cYDELL- WHEEL-Aiionm;;.t
w:~;:;:::::::::::::::=:--:::w...;X'.::::::~::::~::::::::::::::::::::~:::-J;x:::t.::m·:::::::(.::::::~~~*~wm.:::::.-:.-::::::;;:::::wn.:-;:~:;ox-:o:;1
9-t5 3to Also 8r1g_gs end Stratton and 949 -•998
located at Crossroads, At . 124,
Sunday after 12 noon; on
9-12 ·tfC

College Ratings

i Grange elects- ., fleers
J

Gene's
Body Shop

ROOFING,
FUR CLEANING
NACE
AND REPAIR AND
1
PLUMBING.

eroy, 0 ., SCpl. 18, 197:1

Calendar ~
,.
TUESDAY
: : : SALISBURY PTA, 7:30·p.m.
1 •at the school.
' JUNIOR AMERICAN legion
Auslllary, Drew Webster Post
29, 7:30 p. m. at the home of
Mrs. Harry Davis, Jr., advisor .
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
-Cohunbus and Southern Ohio
, Electric Co., 7:30 p. m.
Cultural program, "On Any
Day", by Mrs . Karen
, McGraw; Susan Baer and
: ,_,Edwina SCott , hostesses.
• POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
: Uon's Club directors' meeting,
: ' ?:30 p. m., Meigs Inn.
: CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
1 Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
at the hall. Quarterly birthdays
will he observed.
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE Third Wednesday Homemakers Club
beginning at 10 a.m. at new
Municipal Building. Projecls
for year to be discussed. All
homemakers invited, Covered
dish to he served at noon.
PAST Presidents, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Allll:iilary will meet at
the home of Mrs. Ellen Couch
at 7:30p.m.
'H·BOSWORTH' ' COUNCIL,
Royal and Select Masters,
"]ltated assembly, 7:30 p. m. at
~,;the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
·:;
'THURSDAY
:~~ MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Aaron
"'~Kelton, Minersville.
• • SENIOR CITIZENS, birth, -day party, Harrisonville
, ;.school, 7 p.m. Everyone
"'welcome.
" MEIGS Democratic party,
J:piscopal Parish House, 8 p.m.
·:. MIDDLEPORT Child
"'conservation League, 7:30
·:·p.m., home of Mrs. John
"lllaker, Rustic Hills, Syracuse.
• • EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
,.,bES , mother - daughter
o•banquet, 6:15p.m. Ticket from
": King Builders or Columbia
·.' Gas, North Second. Reservations to be telephoned to 992'"5681 or 992-SJB7 by Monday
' "evening,
;.';
FRIDAY
7: THE YOUNG Adult Class of
" the Middleport Church of the
"'Nazarene will meet at 7:30
' 'P.m. at the home of Mr. and
.. Mrs. Alfred Rusche! in
• •pomeroy.

IT'S OUR

pianist
ll'h charter was draped in
memory of three churter
members of the grange, l.cwi~
~erson , J~ Weyersmillel' 110d
t rank Grueser.
It was voted U&gt; purchase a
!Ire e~tlngulsher for the hall,
and lhe meeting time was
changedfrom8to 7:30 p.m. lor
the winter months. Thank-you
notes were read from lhe
Person, Weyersmiller and
Grueser families . A sympathy
card was sent to Mrs. Darwyn
Enevoidsen and get-well cards
to C. H. McElhinny and Mrs.
Morgan ,
Refreshments were served
following the meellng.

. . " . . ..

This Is An INVITATION To All of Oilr Many Friends &amp; Customers
·To See
All New 1974 Buick, Pontiac, &amp; G.M.C. Tru~ks
DATE: SEPT. -20, 21 &amp; 22

The

Mrs. Craigo
is honored
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- A birthday party was held
Sunday, Sept. 16, here honoring
Mrs. Goldie M. Craigo on her
73rd birthday . Among those
attending were her daughters,
Mrs . Pauline Miller and Mary
F. Painter.
Others were Mr . and Mrs.
leroy Simpkins, Mr. and Mrs .
Clovis Doerfer, Mr. and Mrs .
Donny McCarty, Mr. and Mrs .
Jay Marshall, Don Kapp, Billy
Ray Ohlinger, Misses Lorena
and VIcky Doerfer, Diane
Camp, Belle Camp, Mrs.
Brenda Haley, Sharon Murray,
Diane Boyd, Ronny Albright,
Mrs . Phyllis Bumgardner,
'Ronnie Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs ..
John Bush, Mrs . Sandra
Russell, Sonia Bush, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray VanMeter, Buddy
Narvellos, Dude Vanmeter,
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell and
brother; Mr. and Mrs. Carse!
Stone, Bulky Slone, Phillip
Hall, George Payne, Mrs.
Lillian Reiimire, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Sayre, Harold Rickard,
Robert Rickard, Billy Doerfer,
Frank Untlan, Loulu Miller,
Melody and Denise Russell.
Mrs. Craigo's table was
decorated with the traditional
birthday table cover, a large
birthday cake with red roses,
and a vase of red roses. She
received many lovely gifts,
several gifts from out of town
folks who could not attend.
Music was furnished by the
Sammy Bennett Band.

...

·t,
_,

.•

I'
~--------------------------------.

IFree Door Prizes-·Balloons For The Kiddies, I

r---------100 GAL.

--,

I

:
I

I

WILL BE GIVEN AWAY TO SOME WCKY PERSON. NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY TO WIN JUST SIGN UP. DRAWING WILL BE AT 4 PM

I
I

1I Flv Swatters, Combs, To Be G'1ven Away 1I
l-----~1~~11~!~~!~J~r~~~1~!~~-----J
~-------------------------------~

..

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED

SMITH NELSON MOTO.RS, INC.
MAIN ST.

Church enjoys picnic
Members of the United Faith
Church, Roule 7 by-pass,
Pomeroy, and their famihes
enjoyed a picnic recently at the
Route 33 roadside park .
Grace was by the Rev.
Roher! Smith, Sr . Attendmg
were Mr . and Mrs . Fred

POMEROY, 0.

992-2174

Samsel and fam1 iy, Keith
Sayre, J~anie Engles, Cindy
Cook, Mrs. Melvin Drake and
fam1ly, Terry Reiber, the Rev.
and Mrs. Robert E. Smith, Sr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith and
sons, Maude Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith, Jr., Mr.

and Mrs. Luke McDaniel, Mr.
and Mrs. David Drake and
fam1iy, Clarice Longstreth,
Virginia Darst, Mr. and , Mrs.
Ronald H11l, and Mr. and Mrs.
Leo C. Htil, and family.
PLAN HAYRIDE
Trmily Church School,
Pomeroy, will have a hayride
Sepr 30 at Royal Oak Park
beginning at 5:30 p.m. All
members are invited.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L.
Wagner, Rt. I, Racine, nee
Betty Shaffer, are announcing
the birth of their first child, a
son, named Ronald Stephen.
The infant was born August 26
al the Holzer Medical Center
weighing B'h lbs. Maternal
grandparents are Fred E. and
Ruth A. Smith, Racine, and the
paternal grandparents ar"

..

Edward J. and Gloria Wagner,
Racine . Maternal greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Ruby
Meadows, Crown City, and
Mrs . Georgia Markins,
Eureka . Maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. l.iz
.Boster, Culloden, W. Va. The
paternal great-grandparents
are Charles and Leopha
Waner, Racine, and Mrs.
Rhoda Worthington, Ravens....,.~ - · ·:· Va.

; CLUBS TO MEET
·The Meigs County Garden
Club Association will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Afeature of the meeting will be
the election and Installation of
a new Meigs County contact
chatrperson. Mrs. Janet Bolin, ·
Region 11 O.A.G.C. director, ,
will be the !nstallin~ officer.
•

.

1l!E BORN LOSER

WINNIE M:lNT HEAR
01' t:tj ~ANte . SHE MID
&amp;H• 1VANTED 10 ~E
l-EFT ALONE .

DAUGHTER BORN

~'

u.s.Navy 3-C and Mrs. Dan

'Mitchell (Jane Wells) are
~ :announcing the birth of a
' daughter, Cara Jean, August 30
' at the Portsmouth Naval
•• Hospital, Portsmouth, Va . the
, infant weighed 7 Ilia., 12 ou.
"'Maternal grandparents are
'· Mr and Mrs. Edward WeU.,
~ un.coln Heights, Pomeroy, and
~the paternal grandparenta are
• Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mitchell, .
_, Mason, w, Va . Mrs. Lena
Wells Coolville, and Mr. and
:;:Mrs. Hnrvey Hickman, Dixie,
--w. va . are great,,"~randparenta.

.. ,. IF "'''U CAN
(""'-"H I FINO

ANY ! (COOGII)

"

"

P!.AN SALfll
• RACINE - A rwmnage sale
" and bake aale will be held
'"Friday and Saturday, at the
" Joe Stobart bulld!nw beside the
.. Club Reataurinl ·from 10 a.m.
unUI 2 p.m. ,pon1ored by the
1 Racine Chiipwr 1M, o.m.s. All
1 member~ ,,. alkod to help.

HE WUZ.
TARNIN'
CARTWHEELS

i

AN' SPRA INT
ONE OF HI ?
SPOKES

I/!6TIDDY··

H!s wife had always

hated his work.

She creamed him with
"You'll never make any ,. "On the contrary" he
money qrowlng toadstools, declared."Mv t.Od(istool the electric toaster.
she cotllplained .
business is mushrooming!"

.,

I

•

!1

I

HOSTOURITII
CHI\181'11111 Mr, und Mu .
Jlobll'l TrOIJII.tll't. Wayna, Ind.,
, were 111111 11 11111 paat week of
; Mr. and Mrl, Ptlrley Karr,
1'11• Ot'l!UP' are winter
I Clletler,
ntllhbon Ill U\41 lhrrt In
l Bradtnlli11 1111~.

II

i

rl

••
I'

'
I

'

'I

.

'•I

'

\

\

'I

'I

'I

�·
f
Sentinel Classifieds Ge~ R es u l ts

7- The Dally ~ntinel, MlddlePQrl

1- :t'he Deily Sent)i\el, Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0., Sepl. 18, 1973

e

'

'WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLIIIES

Notice

2 SIGNS
OF
'
QUAliTY.

5 P' M . Oay Before Publlq•tlon .

Mone1av Dead lint 9 a . m .

Cancellation Corrtctlon5
Wlll be accept~d untO 9 am . tor
De 'II of Publicat ion

REGULATIONS

The Publisher ritnrves the
r ight to edit or relect any ads
deemed
obfettlonal.
The
PUblisher w ill not be rtspons lble
for more than one Incorrect
Insertion ,
RATES
For Wan1 Ad Service
.Scents per Word one Insert ion
Min imum Charge 7Sc
12 c•nts per word tl'lree
r::onsecu t lve lnsert lon:s .
18 cen ts per ward six con secu tive Insertion s
~s Per Cent Discount on pll ld
.&amp;d$ an d ad.s paid w ith in 10 davs

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY'!'
.

S1 SQ for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word :2c .

BLIND AD$

Additional 25c
Adver t isement

Cha rge per

OFFICE HOURS

8' 30 a , m. to 5 .00 p.m . Da ll y ,
8 .30 a.· m to 12 :00 Noon

t971 FORO TORIN0500

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

&gt;209S'

hOn'l t

~ny

llmt In my

eng ine. standard transmission. power steering, and
brakes . radio, reall v sharp .

9· t6-61p

~~

Sl iver Dollar . Sen timental
reasons Rewatd . Call 992·
3381 or 992 3-453.
....... 9-18-6tp

__________ __

----------

9 11 12tc

__ ___________ _

WILL PAt "''T houses and rooft,
Frte...,...estlmt!fs. Cal! 99 2 ·3~74 .

'5-12tp

Auto Sales

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

v .a. 4·door . power s teer ing ,

power brakes . good cond ition
exc.
pl body . BAILEY '$
STORe , MIDDLEPORT .
9-16-31p
and GOld
or nrtu 62
DODGe Potara , 383

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
$tl95 ;
LOST , one- black onyx
4-door, V-8 automallc, power sleerlhg. radio, good tires,
clip ear r ing , In
blue tlnish, spotl ..s lnlerlor.
Craw 's
or
Krooers

In
Pomeroy, If found , call 992 .
5830 Reward

-------------Automaflc . oood
Phone 992 -7605

cond ition

9·t6-31p
9·t7-61p --------------

Motor Co.

1970 MAVERI CK , Auto,;,atlc

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

Help Wanted

OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.
POMEROY, OHIO

t20 Horse Power , not taney
but nice Ct~lt 949·:27199·14-Jtc

Eo

10 MEN WANT
Earn while
vou learn , Car necessary . -~---- ---- --- ­
Interviews can be arranoed

.

by catt ing 446 om lrom 1 a m
rrn 6 p.m Mondsy or

ACT Assessment
tests scheduled

For Sale

Tuesday . Ask for
Mr . GROCERY buslnes.t for sate.
Gilmore S140 a week to start
Building for sale or lease .
9-16-ltc Phone 773-5618from a 30 p.m .
- - -----------to 10 p.m . for appointment
A LOCAL company has l rt~ ·
3·20-tfc
mediate openings for the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - follow ing pos itions :
AM .fM Stereo -radio 8-track
I
AccounllfiO Clerk
t1pe player , 4 spe-aker sound
Knowledge and experience In
system . Balance S109 44 or
cost accounting or payroll
use our budget terms .· Call
essenfiat. Openings on the
992 -3965 .
following ShiftS, 8 am . till -4
9·14·6tc
p.m ., 4 m , tfll I::Z midnight, - - -- ......----------

KOS CDT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S.
Se plember Spec1a ls are
Lemon Facial Bath , Bath &amp;
Sh ow er GeL Jr Facial Mask ,
Kover Kofes, Ltquld Roug e,
Ha 1r Sprays, Sham poos, " K"
Beauty Bars , Suntan Spra y
and others . Phone Helen Jane
Brown 1 992 .5113 Many thanks
to our new and regular
customers

r

Students at lhe high schools
In Meigs and Gailia Counties in
Ohio and Wahama in , Mason
COilllly who are pianrung to
attend college or some other
lype of school after graduation,
Will have five opportunities to
------------~:!_t -ttc lake the ACT Assessment
YARD
sate al th• Rober! during the 1973-74 year,
Jeffers residence on H1ghland
Rd . In Pomeroy . Tues .. Wed , The schools are Meigs High,
and
, tO a.m . tttt 4 Eastern and Southern in Meigs
p .m . Thursday
each day.
o-18-3tc County and Kyger Creek,
-------------North Gallia, Hannan Trace
YARD Seie at West Columbia .
Wedhesday, Thursday and and Southwestern in Gallia
Friday . Ctotnlng- a dulls and Counly.
chlldren, several gallons of
paint, mise items. Foll~w the
The first of five national test
signs at Kapp's Grocery.
dates on which the ACT
9-18-2tp
-------------Assessment will he offered is
FLEA Market, Sunday, Ad .
d1son , Ohio . 9 a.m till ? Saturday at 7:45a.m., Oct. 20.
Tables ava ilable P &amp; J OddS Stude~ts planning to take it on
and Ends
9· t8-Ste that date must have registered
----- -~-----by no later than Oct. I, accordNOmyhunting
or
trespassing
on
mg
to Alfred SCarberry, Gallia
farm In Nease Settlement ,
vernon Nease.
Counly guidance supervisor ;
------------~2_11 ·31p Harold Sauer, Meigs High
guidance counselor; Tom
For Sale .
Kelly, Eastern High guidance
60,ooo
BTU
c.rculating
oos
counselor;
James Adams,
heater. Albert Hill , 949·2261
9 t8 61c principal at ~uthernHlgh, and
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - John Zell, principal of Wahama
High.
When application is made by
NEW YORK (U PI ) - The registenng, an admission slip
Un1ted Press International's will be issued designating the
Board of Coaches major college
football ratings w•th number of building and the hour to take
first place votes in paren . the test. The tests will he given
theses (First Week)
·
Team
Points on five success1ve Saturdays
1 Southern Cal O·Ol (2ll
325 for Ohio students as indicated
2 N•braska (1 .01 (9 )
30t below.
3 Ohio Sf (l .OJ r.t)
281
4 Alabama 1 " ..,1 1)
232
They may be taken at Ohio
S. Texas zo u:
' 203 University, Gallia Academy,
6 Michigan (1 .0)
181
7 Penn State (1 -0)
,119 or Hio Grande College, except
B. Oklahoma (1 0)
77
9 LSU Cl -01
60 that Ohio University will give
10. Tennessee (1 0)
38 the test on all the Saturdays
11. NOtre Dam e (0-0J
31
12. Auburn lt -01
22 except the last Saturday and
13. An zona St . (1-0J
9 Rio Grande all but on the
I( Florida 11-01
7 second Saturday. Gallia
t5. Oklahoma Sl. 11 -01
6
16. {Tle) Houston 11 OJ
S Academy gives the test on all
t6. (Tiel N C St. (2-01
5 five Saturdays . ~

Business

'

LOsT i n- s-;;i!Pi per bo,.~ 1922 1960 PON:TIA C for uteor trade ,

1910 CHEVELLE MALl BU
51695
4-door gold fini sh. spotless clean Inferior, V-8 engine
automatic, power s teering. r adiQ, A honey of a buy

--------------~--~--~·

Edith Ron, Antlqultyo.

-----.----------

------.---------Lost

with matching vinyl rool. and viny l lnlerlor, 302 v.s

Pom~roy

BABYSITTING

19 70 JSEP CJ 5, ~) c ab , other
FOAM to fill vour old couch end
e~~:trn John Beaver , Lincoln
cha ir cush ions . Standard stzt,
Hgts 992·1881.
onlv
59 95 .
Pomeroy
9-t6-6tp
R•covery , 412 E M• ln Street
192-ISS&lt;.
l ·ll ·l.Otc CITIZEN 'S National Bank Will
otter for sale at fhtir otrice in
M iddleport. star t ing 10 a.m ..
1
Sept. 28, a 1971 Gre 0\t1n 2·
MAL e . red Ttoer cat In Sunk.er
dr • 4 Pau Serllll A 15465E ,
714105
~Ill vicinity Call 992-1300.

Coupe. 1 owner car, less than JJ,OOO miles. brawn fin ish

~aturday

PARASOL Boutique Beau ty
Salon near S kafe ·A·Way
Roller
Rmk
announ ces
frost ing specials . September
11 tnrough September 12.
Short h!llr, regular $tS now
Sl3 . Long hair. regular $1 7,50
now $15 .SO . Cell ~85 - 4141 for
appotn tm ent Sa nd ra Kern s,
Operator .

Po11eroy
Motor Co.

WILL DO BOOKKEEPING IN
MV HOME . WRITE BOX 793.
MIDDLE,PORT. OHIO
1·13-6tp

Employmllfll Wanted

Servic~~

Ph. 992-5271
Lincoln Hill-Pomeroy, 0 .

All WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

Painting ASpecialty
Area's Most

AeasoMble Prices

MIDDLEPQRT, OHIO
Phone 992-2550

All work guar01nteed

r----------,

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

PRICE

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

coNsTRUcTioN

On Most American Cars
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

MODERN
SANITATION

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

JOHN TUCKER

OpenBTII5

Rt . 4,. Pomeroy, 0 .

Monda)' thru Saturday

~:::::::=:===:
··r
ASK us ABOUT

'
Sat.
Rlwllnas Sons
Middltport, .

EXPERT

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
14 HOUR SERVICE

992-3954 or 992-7349

A. H.

Roof ing,
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Con'l;
p i e t e
H0 m~
Remodeling.

:II..

1;,

•

•

l==6=06=E=·=M=a=i=n,:P::o:m:•:ro:y:·:O:.

WOOD TRUSSES

E ,

p AND •J HOM
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

:
:

__ __________

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

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

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

-------------..-

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

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

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

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

-------------1

1

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

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

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

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

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

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

----------.------

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

_____________

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

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

_______ ______ _ ____ ________ _
-------------

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
'kElLY's?' -SOUNDS LIKE
ANmiSHPUB
NEWYORK(KFS) -Gene Kelly's about to
buy a uafe in Ireland ... Nat King Cole's lovely
daughter Natalie opens next week at
Shepheard's in the' Drake Hotel on Park Ave ...
Diana Riggs's new "Diana" TV series had a
witless, listless premiere; nowhere to go now
but up ... Dom de Luise 's "Lot.sa Luck" series
premiere was set in the bathroom, and that's
where it belonged ... Pearl Bailey, who really
chefs up a tasty storm, has a new cookbook out,
"Pearl's Kitchen." It's full of recipes for
simple, subs\antial, plentiful meals, no gourmet-frosting on her plain cake, no candles (I
want to see what I'm eating), 118ing economical
ingredients - and all the warmth, candor,
humor and Joy of life of the Public Pe.arlie Mae,
which Is her private !He, too ... No politics,
religion or race in this tasty tome.
Barbra Strelsapd snooted a $250,000 oneshow concert at HalVaH 'a Diamond He.ad Crater
... George P~te is a ~uth African golf pro. His
most famous pupil was champ Gary Player.
Unleas you count his daughter, Juliet Prowse.
The sad lad who directed "Myra Breckinridge,"
Britlaher Michael Sarne, chucked showbiz since
that ridiculous disaster and formed a London
rock group.
Avery rich-rich gent named Charles Brady
filled a 707 jet with pais and flew them to Spain
for an all-paid bash. Guests discovered even In
retlatranlll they wandered Into that this new
Diamond Jim Brady had' anticipated tllelr ev~ bill, Anolller Irisher named Jack Mulcahy
111nua14' Illes a jeUoad of pals to Ireland - but
he goes Brady one be tier- his chartered Jet is a

747,

The fOotuh Foreman-Roman championship
aoflchl wu pnllllOted by Japanese National
ldueJiklnll Nelwork; Educational? Ita lesson
wu - lliVII' buy a pug in a pokf ... The gang
biiCII from tile Brad7-pal-llft report Faye
f
f
I

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

t

Tecumseh parts .

11 2 30
12 X 55 M OBILE home With ____________.:_: - tc
pal1o , in Rac1ne , Albert Hill . EXCEL !) IlJR. Salt Works, E '
Phone 9&lt;19 ~2 61.
Main St.', Ponuro)l . All kinds
9-) 6-7te of salt water pellels, water
nuootts1 block salt and own

-------------MOBILE home apace . Baer•s

Emerson's alive and weU in Spain and there's
about another 50 lbs. of her to love.

Mark•!, Syracuse.

Ohio R1vor Satt . Phone 992·
3891.

8·26-tfc

6·5·tfc

For 70 years the "Won't You Come Hill Bill ~-----------r5;;.~;;;;,;;,~~;;:~
' has been a hit with everyone·•
7 ROOM house In Pomeroy :
Ba'•;
1ey " song
f"eplace, some wall to-wall
except Mrs. Bill Batley, still alive and
earpellng , 3 bodrooms, full
celeb ratin g her tOOth birthday, Mrs. Sarah
basement , 2 car gara;e, S125
• month . Ca ll (30&lt;1 7&lt;3-6326.
Bailey Williams, who inlptred the song with her
9-IJ-12tp
all too realistic plaint e.arly in this century - - --------- --blames it for her marital bustup with the very Business Opportunities
real late Bill Bailey, The song originated at the
Whistler Bar in Jackson, Mich., where Bill
DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
dawdled nightly over his grog despite the lyrical
Be 1" F~~j 1::•p.~t0 f,lm~unelt
wifely summo1111 which tnsptred its pianist
To ~~~~ 8.~T~~~~~~e8.~P.,.

Hughie
Cannon to fashion the now venerable
1
'Standard .., ... The weird aftermath of the Bill
Bailey plaint is - ASCAP U.ta 40 versions' of
that nifty oldie:
The reason, or purpose, moving so many to
latch onto Bill Ba'lley simply Is that the original
now iB safely beyond thll first copyright (S2
ye.ars from its registration) whereupon it's In
the public domain to anyone anxious to reach
Into a songsmith's creation and adjust it suf
ficlentlytomakeanotllercopyrlght; this is done
with new "arrangement&amp;,'' such as Louis Arm·
slrong's, Jackie Gleuon's, Mort I.Jndaey's,
Vincent ~·. Mercer Ellington's, Mitchell
Ayres', Lester Lanln's, Jimmy Durante's, Ray
Bloch's, Rosario Bourdon's, Lawrence Welk's
- and four publishers in Alaska ; and we'll bet 11
was a cold day before Bill's wldo- got a slice of
"
Bill's royalties-invasion.
The "New York Experience" multi-sensory
film's premiere is off until late this month :
some Insensitive soul delayed delivery of its fog
machine. Why not lief Mayor I.Jnd.!ay and
boITO\!' a cup of 111101 ... "Tomorrow Entertatnment" clalma that Ita ''Queen of !he
Stardusl Ballroom" II the •\first original movie
mualcal made exclusively lor tv." Nonaenae.
What about Hodgen II Hammerstein's "CindereUa," the ireeldy musicals Gleason infilcted,
the High T()f-flick by SChwartz &amp; Dietz starring
Bing Crosby, dozen• of early-TV specials.
A,

•

No

e~p. nee. £(onomy doea 1101 arrect

bu•lnm. Protll potential II unllmlled , .t90 for each day '*Otlcd 11 a
" ""'"""
A $!,495 In·
veltment Pull you In bu1meu.

POMEROY

"tl"'"'

Jack W. C~ruy, Mgr.
Phone f92·2111

WIIITI TODif

·

Wanted To

Buy

coRNER cupboards , wall
cupboards, che&amp;la, otd guns
any condlflon . Also btui
decorated atontware , Write
6;, 1 ~ 3j ~:· c~rr~~~:f.mo
aflor 1 p.m.
8·8·90tc
;~-----------WANT Eo
for
ouctton,
. housohotd goods . Toots, moll
anything of value. Will buy or
cstll on commlulon . Will haul.
, •II 992 . J3S~ or 992 -1792
1·15 Itt
Heyman 's.
OL0-fu-;;;~;;;~-:-~;.-~'bi;..
ctocks, Ice box .. , brus bodo,
dishes
houuholds .or Writ•compltt•
M D.
Miller,
Rl
.
4,
Pomaroy,
Ohio,
cell 992·6271.
5·13-lfc

,f:

1

·~?$g,AaL ~U~~~~d c~:~~~ ~m
motor , 2·dr , Standard trans.
9')~·~~~~ . Good condition . Call
9 t6-31e

;;;-;w-:-;ii;ih"ti'Y"d;;;.~;d~h'a trs
and sofa beds, Some as low u

120 while they last. P:omerov
Re,overv , 622 e . Main,

Pomeroy, Oh io Call 9;~i~~:ic
------- ------t969 !KAMPER com per sloepo
8, tully equl_pped . Will un or
trade . Call 991·7013.
· 9-t6-3tQ
,--- - - -------- -

Pets fOr Sale

PAR Kill EW Konnels . Poodt 01 ,
~h~';,Y, rm~4:.nd t femtle.
7-15-ttc

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

Mobile Homes for I!.J.
J11t

CASH paid for Ill m•~·· lnd
models of mob/It homt1 .
Phona arot coda 614-42H531 .
r•
tau
,
4·13·11c
1965 CHEVY - 2 door ht . New
paint , rtbulll 327 Engine . •
x 65 TRAILER, 2 bedroom,
spetd, m1g whtell . M\111 &amp;1111. 14 very
good conditio . Phont 773.
Call 992-2391
·
5105.
9·12-61p
....,
1-22-lft

ror_Sa_le_or T-..,-----

-----·--.,-------

In
Rutland , air conditi oned,
carpeted, gas furnace, dlsn.
washer, double oven, range,
double garage, large carport,
4 acrts cleared and . fenced,
small
barn
and
other

build ings. Phone 6tH41·6834

5-30-tfc

--------------___ ____ _____
......

\

"weekdays after 5 p.m ., 992·

3247.

8 l -Ife
-------------

now back to work . Complet&amp;
front end service, tune up and
brake
ser\!ice.
Wheels
balanced electronically All
work guaranteed . Reaaonable
rates. Phone 1·.:2·3232.

2-18.1fc
RONSHE PA R"o.-F!.;;;;::--W.II
Remodeling, Ceremlc tile
baths. Box 28D, Rulland 142·
• 3664.
6-26-tlc
'NelGL:Us-f'oR- -HOUsE
BUILDERS . CALL GUY
NEIGLER, RACINE, OHIO .
9-11 ·301p
;o;;~e
, c.
trlcal plumbing and heating
NEW LISTING
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - 2 Phone 991·5858.
1·15-tfc
bedrooms, bath, large living,
compact kitchen, front porch, oPfif""=-R'oger-Hy~lh
Garage near Crossroads on
and sma ll basemen!. Block
garage, one acre lor only • St. Rt , 124 ; 1!111 mechanlcel
work Including automatic
$8500.00.
trensmluiona . Monday .
LOVELY BRICK
Friday, 8:30am . till 5 p.m
MULBERRY AVE . - 3 Saturday - 8 :30 to 12 noon ·
Unless by appt. Phone 992 :
bedrooms, large living, large
or 192-7121
modern kitchen, dining room -= 5682
. . . . ___________
__
9·16.30tc
with gu fireplace. Nice front
porch, 2 car garage. Excellenl ELNA lnd Wh 'llo~Siw!ii­
location tor only $25,000.00.
Michlnea ... serv ice 00 1 ft
NEW HOME
mektt . Reuonable rattt
The Stwlng Cantar Mid '
ROCK SPRINGS - 3 btdrooma
diiPOfl, O~lo .
'
.
with largo· closet, muler with
lt
-t6-lfc
hall bath, modern kitchen wllh
atove . Nice bath . FuJI W ltL'tRIM o,-~uil";;;.":'": d
bailment with family room ahrubbtry, allo. clean out
and double garage. Asking bu,ments, lttlcl t and tf
Call '"·3221 or 742-4441 . c.
$29,500.00.
NEW HOME
- - -- - --8-3t.30tc
FIVE POINTS - Nice large DEAD 51 0 , ~ =-Wiiiriiliov•
at I re11oneblt t harqt. Call
kitchen, washer snd dryer
24S·ll14,
·
hookupa, 3 lovely bedrooma
with large clolth, 1'1• batho --------...... 1·23.90tc
with venl fano . All Insulated
and electrically healed. Only

horne-;;;;;:--;1

MIDDLEPORT

,

2 story frame home. :.r... 4

OUt

(lncl•do phone "'"ber)'
~UTOMOTIVE MARKETINII, INC.
1100 "'· Moon.,,.,.,
M&lt;dlo, "' 19063
-

7 - ROOM - hous;--;;;-;ath

bedrooms , bath1 garage .

Several lois a"d parts of lois
go with this property. Asking
$9,5()(). 00.
EXCELLENT
APARTMENT
and business room . Apart.
menl hao 3 bedroomo with
large closeto, Modern bath.
Very nice kitchen. Dining
room . Large living room.
Hardwood floors and carpeted. Hot water heal. 2
garag... Not very old .
SlO,OOO.OO.

RUTLAND
tNewly
renovalod.
2
bedrooms. Bath. Gas wall
furnace hut. Almost new
block building with garage In
the rear 25x291t. Large level
lot. $8,500.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS
3 years old and iualllke new.
3 nice bedrooms with closelo.
Very modern bath and
kitchen, table top range and
oven. Carpeted. All altctrlc.
Carport. In , new addition.
Sl1 .000.00.
FOR SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY LIST WITH U$
TODAY.
HENRY E, CLELAND,
IROICER
992-22.!9
If no •n•wtr ff2·2161

--:n....

m.ooo.oo,

GOODOLDHR HOME
SYRACUSE - 5 room•, nice
bath and kllchon. Full
blloomonl, large b1ck and front
porchtl. 2 OOod lot•. Wonl
$9,000,00.

We talk to )1011
like a pnn

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

'

Social

;, ;

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS. INC.

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

Officen were elected at the
'"1'hurlday night meetln~ or
; ):lock Spring• Grange, held at
: 1he hall,
, :.. Elected were Fred Goegleln,
: muter: William Grueser,
ov~rll'!er ; Mn. W. A. Morgan,
lecturer : Amo1 Leonard,
,J lew~rd ; Jamn Conkle,
aulstant steward ; Mrs.
William Grueser, chapla in;
Mrs .
Lucille
Leifheit,
treaaurer ; Mrs. Fred Goegleln,
'lecretary; Homer Radford,
jl&amp;tekeeper; Mrs. Ethel
Gruelli!r, Ceres; Mrs. Homer
Radford, Pomona ; Mrs. ),eigh
Ann Cline, Flora; Mrs. James
, Conkle,
lady
assistant
~ steward; William Grueser,
executive committee; Mrs.
Amos
Leonard,
home
·~anomies chelrperson; Mrs.
_Lucille Leifheit, youth com·
1nlttee; Mrs. Conkle, Juvenile;
Amos Leonard, legislative ;
and Mrs . Robert Loucks,

26271"
74
~~=:.t-1:;·:;~=.~~;::~=1
·

PRE-.F_ABRICAT,ED

-;--------------- --------------

l

For FrP.P. li1Atlmate

Feb. 23, 1974 (Nov. 5-Jan 28);
Healing . Air Cond. •
April27, 1974 (Jan. 21-Aprill);
t2, 0tt ll 8 am .
8LAC. . .
Retngeratlon Plumbing .
ldroest
2. Office secretaries- Duties
K leather reclining chair,
June IS, 1974 (March 25-Max
BulldoU!r Radiator to the · Electrical Appliances . Auto
tnclude t yp i ng , dictation ,
like new . Phone 843-2846 .
20) .
Heater Cor~.
Air Cond. . Residential or
fil ing Opening on same Shifts
9·1B -6tp
Bullllo Your•Specs
1 ~ mauestNathan
Biggs
Commercial.
Ai!hough
the
ACT
Delivered
to
Job
Slit
~ist~de~~~~el Ass i stant - ;;;9;].:-XL.7 0- HoNDA- Tral/
Radiator Specialist
Assessment Program has been
Respons i ble for re c ruiting
Bike In good condlt lon Pr ice
215 N. Second
S17S. Can be seen at Royal
expanded this year to provide
an d screening of emp Ioyees
Oak Park - Lot No . 21-4 after
HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
Phone 992-3509
•·
Desire
Interviewing
or
s p.m . Also, 1971 Coachmen
'
students with additional incounseling experience
c
MATERIALS
CO.
~4 Hour Serylce
Excellent salar ies and fringe
amc.er. 24 ft. Cruuder,
1
formation, the student fee
773-5554
Muon, W.Va.
benefits Se nd brief resume of, ' 3•50 ·
Ph"i92-2114
Pomeroy
All
work guaranteed.
remains $6.50. Also as the past,
work
l'l lstorv and education .
9-18-3tp
Send
all
replies
to
Bo•
729.
5
In
VI-SI_
T
__________
_
11 will take students about 31&gt;
our store at Add1son ,
and back hoe work,
care of T he Dally Sentinel ,
Ohio . Open dally
Flea
Mobile Homes For Sale DOZER
hours to complete the
ponds and septic tanks , dlt ·
Pomeroy , Ohio
Market on !lunday. p &amp; J
!lJtl!lllination and questionnaire _ ____________9· 2_!_fc Odds -And Ends Shop .
Ching service ; top soil, fill
Dick's
•
d irt,
li mestone.
B&amp;K
,.....
that makes up the ACT
9 t8 Sic
Escavallng Phone 992 -5367 or
Air Conditioners
DIVIS ION CON .
Hoard House
Assessment . Resulting m- CENTRAL
992-3861
SOLIDATION COAL COM - 21 FT . CABIN cr uise r , in ·board
Awnings
·
9·1-tfc
PANY , Immediate openings
formation reports are of
"STRIPPERS"
and outboard engine Contact
Underpinning
are available in the following
We
Strip
Paint, Varnishes,
valuable use to students and
VIrgil
Walker
,
Recine
,
Ohio
.
READY
.MIX
CONCRETE
pos i t io ns : Maintenance
1
·
·
Etc.
from
Furniture.
delivered
right
to
your
9·16
6tc
Foreman (underground) ;
counse ors tn planmng for
Complete mobile home·
project
.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Antiques-Modern-Metals
,
Assistant Mine Foreman G R E eNbeans~ pitl.Y ou-;;w--n service - plus gigantic
postsecondary educalion.
estimates . Phone 992 .3284 .
No
ruinous
lyes
or
causlles
(underground), Section
$2 a bushel. Bring contamers
Goeg leln Ready -Mix Co .,
display of mobile homes
used .
'
Foreman ; Su rface Mine
Last year nearly one million
Andrew Gross, Letart Fa lls,
Middleport,
Ohio .
always
available
at
.
.
.
I
·
Foreman,
Reclamation
Pick-Up
Service
Ohio
1
persons in the U. S. and
6-30-ttc
Foreman . Persons applying
Available
9-16 6tc
.
shoUld hold valid foreman
overseas · took the ACT
We
Buy
&amp;
Sell A~tiques. ·
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
.
MILLER.
certification papers (Ohio) or MAYTAG dryer
Assessment, which• is required
tn good
Dick
Sayler-OWner
ReASONAB~E
rates
.
Ph
.
446·
have sufficient txperience to
working condition Call 992
47821 Gallipolis, John Russell,
Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0.
apply for State examlne~tlon.
or recommended for ap·
MOBILE
HOMES
5321.
Owner
and Operator .
Phone
992-~798
·
Salary Commensurate with
9 16 Jtc
pllcanls at more than 2,000
5-12·tfc
Experience .
Excellent
1220 Washington Blvd,
Benefits . TO APPLY : Write 1970 MOBILE Home , 12 x 44
colleges and other postsecond413-1521
BELPRE, 0.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
or
Phone
Personnel
$3,589. Phond 713-5429
ary education instituations, as
Complete Service
Department ,
Central
9-14 ptp
Phone 949·381t
well as numerous scholarship
POMEROY
Division , Conso lidation Coal
..
Racine, Oh io
Company,
Cadiz , Ohio 43907. DRIVE A LITTLE - SA VE A BERRY MILLER Mobile Hom e
agencies.
Crttt Bradford
Tetepnone 614·942 451 2. AN
Sa les hes a lot to offer when
LOT Good se lection used ,
HOME &amp; AUTO
5-1-ttc
The
ACT
examEQUAL OPPORTUNITY
you start shopping for your
guaranteed appliances. new
EMPLQYER
992-2094 .
Mobile Horr,e . You can beat EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and used furniture at real
questionnaire that is ad8 21-lfc
the high depreciation you'll
savings 50 gal. oak whiskey
and backhoe work ; septic
ministered 'to students on the
606 E. Main PomeroY.
barrels for cider, homebrew , . have on your home the first
tanks Installed; dump trucks
two
years
by
shopping
for
a
even furniture. Come out and
national test dates features a
and lo -boy1 for hire ; will haul
late model used MoUIIe "tome.
see us Tuesday thru Sunday
fiJI dirt. top soli , limestone
series ·of four standardized
OffiCE SUPPLIES
H~re are some every day low
'tll7 p m KU HL'S BARGAIN
and gravel; Call Bob or Roger
pnces .
CENTER, Rt 7 " at caut1on
tests (English, math, social
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
and
l1ght," TUPPERS PLAINS , 55x 10 Detro1ter with 3 Ex .
nigh! phone 992 3525 or 991·
studies, natural sciences) For Rent
Oh io
pandos, $3,495
5232
FURNITURE
designed to assess general
9-16-6tc 50x10 Richardson, $2,695
2-11 -tfc
60x12
Champion Deluxe , $4,495
J
AN
0
4
ROOM
furnished
and
educational development.
unfurnished
apartments. BRUSH HOGS, ~x5 ft , phone 50x 10 Ritz Craft , 52,995, extra -rIME-;;;- checklh'&amp;t "on-;;-gas
Stop In and See Our
sharp
Phone 992·5434 ,
Another part is a student
992-5858.
furnace for ·winter
Dirty
Floor Disolav .
60xl2 Champion, $4,495
_
4· 12-tfc
furnaces cost fuel and could
questionnaire that collects
7·15-tfc 60X12 PMC, $4 995
cost-a life. Call P . &amp; J . Home
EXCAVA~ I N.c.:; . Doieh, ta•'wrrr
such Information as academic HOUSE FOR Rent . S rooms arid 1973 t&lt;x70 MOBILE home , 52x12 Buddy Custom, $&lt;4,295
Maintenance 992 .3509, 215 N
44x12 Regent. S3,79S
and small; Backhoes lnd
bath , Racine area Call 992 ·
Second,
Middleport.
washer a ... d dryer. diSh · 60)1.12
and nOII!Icademic background,
Buddy, $3,995
5858 .
loaders on track and tins;
washer, stainless steel sink .
8·23-30tc
60x
12
New
Moon
,
$4,495
immediate plans for college,
Dump
truck - LO ·boy ser 8-29-tfc garbage d isposal. eve level 48x 10 Valiant. $2,795
vice Septic tanks Installed.
and career aspirations. Added ROOMS by the week, $19 Up. oven, range, dacron .polyester THESE
HARRISON
'
S
TV
serv1ce
and
are mostly all late
George C&amp;lttl Pullins, phone ,
carpe t, large lot . Phone 74:2 ·
service cells Phone 992 ·2,522 .
model homes and the prices
new this year is a student in992-2478
or 992-7~02.
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy .
3083.
·
2-9-ttc
Include your delivery and
1-9,tfc
7-12-tfc
teres! Inventory.
1-tB tf
.
'
complete set -up . So for an
It is recommended that PRIVATE meeting room for UPHOLSTER your own fur honest to goodness good deal. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
cancelled?
Lost
)'our
stop In todav at Berry .MIIIer
SEWAGE SYSTE~S
any organiutlon ; phone 992 ·
niture . We have all the sup students take the ACT
operator's license. Call 992 Mobile Home sa•es, 70S
3975.
CLEANED, REPAIRED .
plies
you
wilt
need
7428.
Assessment in their junior year
Farson Street, Belpre, Ohio,
MILL~R
SANITATIO.N,
18 Missouri ( 1 0)
4
3-11 -tfc Upholstery Fabrics, a very
6-IS-Ifc
Phone 423 9531 , clos ed sun
STEWART, OHIO PH . 662·
19. (Tie l Tulane (O·Ol
2
Wahama students, Principal or early in the senior year of 2 BEDROOM mob ile home tor large selection of nylons,
davs P S Due to the Road
3035.
19. (Tie) North Car . (1 .0)
2
velvets , HercuJon , vlnvls - in
Zell said, are advised to take high school in order that the
Construct ion on
Farson
rent bv the month or by the cotton prints. also remnants .
IO·•·ttc
Street, please enter our lot Real Estate For Scile '
week . Evervthlns's fur .
Foam for cushi ons and
the test at Gallia Academy resulting information can be of
beside
the
Kentu
cky
Fried
niShed . C!ill 742 -5980.
SEWI NG MACHINES . Repair
padd1ng Burlap , denims.
High SChool, because it is the maximum value and assistCh 1c ken
Restaurant
on 3 BEDROOM house 1'12 baths, 1
9 18-6tc cambric , foam glue, zippers,
service, all makes. 992-2284.
Washington Blvd .
Tht Fabric Shop, Pomerqv .
formal dining room , 1 liv ing
closest. However, they may ance in educational planning. FIRST floor. 2 room turn /shed springs and clips, chipboards.
Authorized Singer Sales a'nd
room, kitchen, family room , 2
legs, sewing thread, dacron.
take it in Huntington, ParkersThe ACT Assessment
apt In Pomeroy Ca ll 992Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
car garage, full basement , on
tacks, webbing , welt cord ,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
_,_
3028
acre lot Located In Riggs
3·294fc
bur~, Charleston, or Ripley, he Program is one of numerous
cotton . swivel bases, and all
CHESTER - The Eastern
9·
18·31c
other supplies you will need
Real Estate For Sale
Crest Manor . Phone· 992 3863
guidance • oriented services
before 3 p.m. and ask for Mr . FOR FREE estimates on
New furniture at low , low
Athletics Boosters Club will said.
aluminum siding . Sto~m
The
complete
ACT provided for students and TRAILER at Syracuse, adults prices . Pomeroy Recovery . HOUSE for sale, located in
Ingels or call Gene Riggs at
meet Thursday night at the
Bradbury , Ca ll 99 2·7363 alter
Doors and Windows, car .
612
E.
Main,
992·155~
985
·3595
or
99:2
5869.
only , Call 992-3525
6 p m.
ports, Marquees and Railing,
_...
high school. Ali fans interested Assessment schedule (with educational institutions by The
8-3t
-30tc
8-26-tfc
9-18-lfc
......._
Phone
Ch~rlts
Lisle,
9-5-30ic
in the athletic program are regislration dates in paren- American College Testing
Syracuse, Ohio . Cllrl Jacob
thesis) are :
Program (ACf). The Acr
WILKINSON small enulne seles 2 BEDROOM house, 3 years old, 3 BEDROOM house on Lincoln
Sales Representative. v. v.
urged to attend.
and service, 820 lrd Stret ,
r;uRNISHEO office tor rent by
Johnson and Son , Inc .
Hill, living room, kitchen,
Oct. 20,1973 (Aug. 20-0ct.l); Natlof111l Office is located in
Middleport. Lawn mower lind
carpeting, big kitchen with
the day, week. or month Call
bath and utility room , extra
6-22-lfc
cha
in
saw
repair
.
Fret
pickup
lots
of
cabinets,
'Ia
acre
of
992
·5120
between
9
a
.m
and
4
Dec. 8. 1973 ISent. 24-Nov. 12); Iowa City, Iowa.
large lot over 1 acre. Has
and delivery , Phone 992·3092. ground , Racine, Ohio Ca ll
p m or 992 -3558 after 5 p m .
driveway .
$13,000 .
Call cYDELL- WHEEL-Aiionm;;.t
w:~;:;:::::::::::::::=:--:::w...;X'.::::::~::::~::::::::::::::::::::~:::-J;x:::t.::m·:::::::(.::::::~~~*~wm.:::::.-:.-::::::;;:::::wn.:-;:~:;ox-:o:;1
9-t5 3to Also 8r1g_gs end Stratton and 949 -•998
located at Crossroads, At . 124,
Sunday after 12 noon; on
9-12 ·tfC

College Ratings

i Grange elects- ., fleers
J

Gene's
Body Shop

ROOFING,
FUR CLEANING
NACE
AND REPAIR AND
1
PLUMBING.

eroy, 0 ., SCpl. 18, 197:1

Calendar ~
,.
TUESDAY
: : : SALISBURY PTA, 7:30·p.m.
1 •at the school.
' JUNIOR AMERICAN legion
Auslllary, Drew Webster Post
29, 7:30 p. m. at the home of
Mrs. Harry Davis, Jr., advisor .
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
-Cohunbus and Southern Ohio
, Electric Co., 7:30 p. m.
Cultural program, "On Any
Day", by Mrs . Karen
, McGraw; Susan Baer and
: ,_,Edwina SCott , hostesses.
• POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
: Uon's Club directors' meeting,
: ' ?:30 p. m., Meigs Inn.
: CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
1 Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
at the hall. Quarterly birthdays
will he observed.
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE Third Wednesday Homemakers Club
beginning at 10 a.m. at new
Municipal Building. Projecls
for year to be discussed. All
homemakers invited, Covered
dish to he served at noon.
PAST Presidents, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Allll:iilary will meet at
the home of Mrs. Ellen Couch
at 7:30p.m.
'H·BOSWORTH' ' COUNCIL,
Royal and Select Masters,
"]ltated assembly, 7:30 p. m. at
~,;the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
·:;
'THURSDAY
:~~ MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Aaron
"'~Kelton, Minersville.
• • SENIOR CITIZENS, birth, -day party, Harrisonville
, ;.school, 7 p.m. Everyone
"'welcome.
" MEIGS Democratic party,
J:piscopal Parish House, 8 p.m.
·:. MIDDLEPORT Child
"'conservation League, 7:30
·:·p.m., home of Mrs. John
"lllaker, Rustic Hills, Syracuse.
• • EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
,.,bES , mother - daughter
o•banquet, 6:15p.m. Ticket from
": King Builders or Columbia
·.' Gas, North Second. Reservations to be telephoned to 992'"5681 or 992-SJB7 by Monday
' "evening,
;.';
FRIDAY
7: THE YOUNG Adult Class of
" the Middleport Church of the
"'Nazarene will meet at 7:30
' 'P.m. at the home of Mr. and
.. Mrs. Alfred Rusche! in
• •pomeroy.

IT'S OUR

pianist
ll'h charter was draped in
memory of three churter
members of the grange, l.cwi~
~erson , J~ Weyersmillel' 110d
t rank Grueser.
It was voted U&gt; purchase a
!Ire e~tlngulsher for the hall,
and lhe meeting time was
changedfrom8to 7:30 p.m. lor
the winter months. Thank-you
notes were read from lhe
Person, Weyersmiller and
Grueser families . A sympathy
card was sent to Mrs. Darwyn
Enevoidsen and get-well cards
to C. H. McElhinny and Mrs.
Morgan ,
Refreshments were served
following the meellng.

. . " . . ..

This Is An INVITATION To All of Oilr Many Friends &amp; Customers
·To See
All New 1974 Buick, Pontiac, &amp; G.M.C. Tru~ks
DATE: SEPT. -20, 21 &amp; 22

The

Mrs. Craigo
is honored
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- A birthday party was held
Sunday, Sept. 16, here honoring
Mrs. Goldie M. Craigo on her
73rd birthday . Among those
attending were her daughters,
Mrs . Pauline Miller and Mary
F. Painter.
Others were Mr . and Mrs.
leroy Simpkins, Mr. and Mrs .
Clovis Doerfer, Mr. and Mrs .
Donny McCarty, Mr. and Mrs .
Jay Marshall, Don Kapp, Billy
Ray Ohlinger, Misses Lorena
and VIcky Doerfer, Diane
Camp, Belle Camp, Mrs.
Brenda Haley, Sharon Murray,
Diane Boyd, Ronny Albright,
Mrs . Phyllis Bumgardner,
'Ronnie Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs ..
John Bush, Mrs . Sandra
Russell, Sonia Bush, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray VanMeter, Buddy
Narvellos, Dude Vanmeter,
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell and
brother; Mr. and Mrs. Carse!
Stone, Bulky Slone, Phillip
Hall, George Payne, Mrs.
Lillian Reiimire, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Sayre, Harold Rickard,
Robert Rickard, Billy Doerfer,
Frank Untlan, Loulu Miller,
Melody and Denise Russell.
Mrs. Craigo's table was
decorated with the traditional
birthday table cover, a large
birthday cake with red roses,
and a vase of red roses. She
received many lovely gifts,
several gifts from out of town
folks who could not attend.
Music was furnished by the
Sammy Bennett Band.

...

·t,
_,

.•

I'
~--------------------------------.

IFree Door Prizes-·Balloons For The Kiddies, I

r---------100 GAL.

--,

I

:
I

I

WILL BE GIVEN AWAY TO SOME WCKY PERSON. NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY TO WIN JUST SIGN UP. DRAWING WILL BE AT 4 PM

I
I

1I Flv Swatters, Combs, To Be G'1ven Away 1I
l-----~1~~11~!~~!~J~r~~~1~!~~-----J
~-------------------------------~

..

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED

SMITH NELSON MOTO.RS, INC.
MAIN ST.

Church enjoys picnic
Members of the United Faith
Church, Roule 7 by-pass,
Pomeroy, and their famihes
enjoyed a picnic recently at the
Route 33 roadside park .
Grace was by the Rev.
Roher! Smith, Sr . Attendmg
were Mr . and Mrs . Fred

POMEROY, 0.

992-2174

Samsel and fam1 iy, Keith
Sayre, J~anie Engles, Cindy
Cook, Mrs. Melvin Drake and
fam1ly, Terry Reiber, the Rev.
and Mrs. Robert E. Smith, Sr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith and
sons, Maude Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith, Jr., Mr.

and Mrs. Luke McDaniel, Mr.
and Mrs. David Drake and
fam1iy, Clarice Longstreth,
Virginia Darst, Mr. and , Mrs.
Ronald H11l, and Mr. and Mrs.
Leo C. Htil, and family.
PLAN HAYRIDE
Trmily Church School,
Pomeroy, will have a hayride
Sepr 30 at Royal Oak Park
beginning at 5:30 p.m. All
members are invited.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L.
Wagner, Rt. I, Racine, nee
Betty Shaffer, are announcing
the birth of their first child, a
son, named Ronald Stephen.
The infant was born August 26
al the Holzer Medical Center
weighing B'h lbs. Maternal
grandparents are Fred E. and
Ruth A. Smith, Racine, and the
paternal grandparents ar"

..

Edward J. and Gloria Wagner,
Racine . Maternal greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Ruby
Meadows, Crown City, and
Mrs . Georgia Markins,
Eureka . Maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. l.iz
.Boster, Culloden, W. Va. The
paternal great-grandparents
are Charles and Leopha
Waner, Racine, and Mrs.
Rhoda Worthington, Ravens....,.~ - · ·:· Va.

; CLUBS TO MEET
·The Meigs County Garden
Club Association will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Afeature of the meeting will be
the election and Installation of
a new Meigs County contact
chatrperson. Mrs. Janet Bolin, ·
Region 11 O.A.G.C. director, ,
will be the !nstallin~ officer.
•

.

1l!E BORN LOSER

WINNIE M:lNT HEAR
01' t:tj ~ANte . SHE MID
&amp;H• 1VANTED 10 ~E
l-EFT ALONE .

DAUGHTER BORN

~'

u.s.Navy 3-C and Mrs. Dan

'Mitchell (Jane Wells) are
~ :announcing the birth of a
' daughter, Cara Jean, August 30
' at the Portsmouth Naval
•• Hospital, Portsmouth, Va . the
, infant weighed 7 Ilia., 12 ou.
"'Maternal grandparents are
'· Mr and Mrs. Edward WeU.,
~ un.coln Heights, Pomeroy, and
~the paternal grandparenta are
• Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mitchell, .
_, Mason, w, Va . Mrs. Lena
Wells Coolville, and Mr. and
:;:Mrs. Hnrvey Hickman, Dixie,
--w. va . are great,,"~randparenta.

.. ,. IF "'''U CAN
(""'-"H I FINO

ANY ! (COOGII)

"

"

P!.AN SALfll
• RACINE - A rwmnage sale
" and bake aale will be held
'"Friday and Saturday, at the
" Joe Stobart bulld!nw beside the
.. Club Reataurinl ·from 10 a.m.
unUI 2 p.m. ,pon1ored by the
1 Racine Chiipwr 1M, o.m.s. All
1 member~ ,,. alkod to help.

HE WUZ.
TARNIN'
CARTWHEELS

i

AN' SPRA INT
ONE OF HI ?
SPOKES

I/!6TIDDY··

H!s wife had always

hated his work.

She creamed him with
"You'll never make any ,. "On the contrary" he
money qrowlng toadstools, declared."Mv t.Od(istool the electric toaster.
she cotllplained .
business is mushrooming!"

.,

I

•

!1

I

HOSTOURITII
CHI\181'11111 Mr, und Mu .
Jlobll'l TrOIJII.tll't. Wayna, Ind.,
, were 111111 11 11111 paat week of
; Mr. and Mrl, Ptlrley Karr,
1'11• Ot'l!UP' are winter
I Clletler,
ntllhbon Ill U\41 lhrrt In
l Bradtnlli11 1111~.

II

i

rl

••
I'

'
I

'

'I

.

'•I

'

\

\

'I

'I

'I

�(ConUnued from Page I)
that 1 special meellng be
called · when Jack Cnsp ,
ptQidenl of the Conservancy
Dtalrict, could request the
dlttrlcl be allowed w provtde
the service for the htll
re1iden18 Council Prestdent
David Ohlinger urged that
" something be done" that
night to help UM! peQPie secure
service.
It was then dectded to ca ll
Crisp by phone and ask hun to
come to Middleport VIllage
Hall last mght to work out the
details of the request For
approxnnately one-half hour ,
counctl, vtllage officials and
the bOard of public affairs met
In private sesswn to diScuss the
matter Cnsp was reached by
phone, but was unable to ge t to
the meeting.
Roger Manley, a restdent of
the hill wishmg water servtce,
reported following a telephone
conversatwn wtth Crtsp , that
the prestdent of the Con·
servancy Dtstrtct would have a
request toservtce hill restdents
prepared and revtewed by hts
attorney tlus mormng Manley
said also thai Crtsp had asked
the board of pubhc affairs to
act on a motion that tt wtll
approve the dtstrtct servmg
hill restdents when the request
is recetved
. However, Hawley sa1d that
the board would take no action
on thai request and would
review wtth attorneys the
request, once 11 1s recetved
from Crisp
Manley agam asked for
council memt&gt;ers and board
members to repeat objections
they had against the Conservancy Distrtct servmg the
hill restdents. No comment of
disapproval by any offtctal was
made . However, Counctl
Prestdent Ohhnger commented that, although he will
be gowg off counctl 10
December, Mtddleport Htll
, residents are gomg to have

Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich
Mr and Mrs. Paul Galloway of Jaci&lt;llonvllte, Fla., have
arrived m MJddlepQrt to be with his stster, Mrs Don 1Ruth)
Gosney, while her husband 1s a patient at the Veterans Hospital
m Uuongton, Ky
Ruth lS spending a great deal of time at the hospttal these
days due to Don's Illness F'rlends may send eards to him at the
Veterans Adnunistrahon Hospital, Room 4ii6, Cooper Road,
u xmb'ion, Ky. Ruth, by the way, asks for the prayers of Metgs
res1dents
THE POMEROY FIRE DEPARTMENT and Emergency
Squad are reall) m there p1tchmg to ra1se funds for the new f1re
station which ISprogressmg beautifully. The ftremen will stage a
ftshfry at the Pomeroy Village Hall, tentatively set for Oct. 6, In
order to try wraise a fe wbucks on their project
MR AND MRS DON COVERT are domg thetr part m
helpmg Pomeroy took attracllve They've completed the elrtenor
redecorallon of the1r East Main St home Their place 1s the one
with the.colorful sun moss m the yard
MRS LAURA MAE NICE, Pomeroy Route 3, recently
VISited m Dayton wtth her son and daughter·m~law , Mr and Mrs
Kenneth L Hartung and daughter, Heather. Wbtle m Dayton,
Mrs. Ntce VISited the Dayron Airplane Museum. Kenneth, by the
way 1s an execullve for the Mead Corp Mrs Nice followmg her
Dayton trtp left vta plane for Bryan, Tex , where she visited
another son,Mr and Mrs Edgar Hartung and son, Jed. Edgar lS
an FBI agent. Whtle m Texas, Mrs Nice was at the Astrodome m
Houston w watch the Cincmnati Reds
F'OREST KILE , COLUMBUS, has from tune to t1me submitted letters and poems to our columns H1s mother dted over
the weekend and Forest penned these lmes

The meeting adjourned wtth
the apparent understandmg
that the hill residents wtll be
served by the Conservancy
District, providing that the
offlctals of the town and the
district can agree on a suitable
arrangement.
Counctl members present for
the special sessiOn were
Oblinger, Fred Hoffman,
Lawrence Stewart and William
Walters. Other ofhctals
present were Mayor John
Zerkle,
Chase,
Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate, Pohce
Chief J. J. Cremeans, and Mrs
Helen Shuler, clerk of the
board of public affall's

REGISTRATIONS FOR the teen dance lmes of the fall
mustcal of the Btg Bend Mlnstrel Assoctalton are moving right
along At the current rate, the reg1strat10ns will have to be closed
by Sunday or before Only so many can be used Suste Soulsby,
Debbt Buck or Charlene Hoefltch will regtster participants vta
telephone

r-------------------------,

! Area Deaths \
DANA EPPLE
Butler, of Orlando, Fla Born 1n
Dana Q Epple, 74, RD I. Middleport , she was the
Rutland, passed away Monday daughter ot the late Mr and
mornmg at Holzer Med•cal Mrs W C Russell Her
Centef Mr Epple, a rehred husband , Cecil, and three
Meigs County, was born Sept
30, 1898, to Leonard and Sarah
Epple

Tonight, Sept. 11
CHARLOTTE'S

He ts sukPitved by hts wife
Alice , a daughter, 'Mrs Hazel

Oliver, Byesville , a son ,

Voices of
Paul Lynde,
Rex Allen,
Agne•

Kermit, of Nelsonvlll, and four

grandch•ldren
Funeral services wtll be held
Thursday at 2 p m at fhe Mrttn

Funeral Home with the Rev

The Horse Man
Disney Cartoons:
Bee on Guard

Cecll Cox of1ic:tatmg

w1ll

Cemetery

Plu1o's Hausewarmmg

1n

the

Bunal

Carlton

F nends may call

any t' me after 4 p m

Admission S1 50 and 7Sc

nesday

Show Start~ 7 p.m

Wednesday i. Thursday
Sept. 19-20
NOT OPEN

be

,

Wed

MARGARET BUTLER
Mrs H 0 Ewing has
received word of the death of
her sister, Margaret Russell

surv i ve

Funeral

services will be 1n Orlando

Weather
Clear and qutle chiUy tomght
wtth lows m the upper 30s and
lower 40s north and m the lower
w nud 40s south Sunny and
cool Wednesday wtth htghs m
the mtd 60s wlow 70s
COMMITTEES MEET
RACINE - Corruruttees for
the Seven Ntghts for Christ met

• - - - - - - - - - • Monday
the Methodtst
Wesleyan atChurch
here to
further plans for a crusade w
be held Oct 15-21. Co-chall'll\an
of the crusade after Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Roush. The Rev
Demoss of New Haven Will be
the guest speaker while the
Angelatres will be featured as
smgers DevotiOns were g1ven
Monday night by the Rev
Frank Cheesebrew

•• ltillltirilf Till

Ill

,,.,
'

~

seem like everybody's got a new car
th edays - except you? Then If's about t1me
t check our Auto Loans. Low bank rates, fast
loan service and convenient repayment plans
can get you behind the wheel of a new car
now!

Loans for Ivery Need
Here at Your fuii·Servlce lank

AutO Teller Window ana Walk-up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

litbens ,atioNJI
-c.~INICINNA Tl

I

,

Oscar N. Smith

still closed

PLEASANT NELLIE VALE returned Monday to her duttes
as a Metgs County schOol supervtsor after bemg off several
weeks due to her second major operation Mrs. Vale loves
anythmg that has to do wtth schools and educatton, so undoubtedly IS glad to be back at her post. Incidentally, did you
know that Mrs Vale, for many years a restdent of the Carpenter
area, has purchased the home of Mr and Mrs. Harold Wolfe m
Rutland and is residmg ln that commumty now?

SISters ,

Stations in hard times

Youngstown
schools are

"Across the last nver that leads to God's throne,
Tell the children I'll watt there wwelcome them home ,
Just tell them that Mother ts not far away,
Across the last r1ver, I'll meet them some day "
We all stopped to think how we'd dnfted away,
How long smce we knelt wtth Mother to pray ;
Wtth heads bowed m sorrow as tears ftlled our eyes,
We vowed that we'd meet her up there 1n the sktes.

farmer and lifelong restdent of

DETROIT IUPll - Desptte ployes to retire on a pension bard gal nlnw, interrupted only
tentJltive agreement Monday after 30 years' work reKardless once for thrll&lt;l hours when
nesollators said they showed
to end 1ts strike against ol their a~1· .
signs
of weartneu
Chrysler Corp., the United
Pl!nd i n~ raltflcallon of the
Besules lhe :JO.ando(l ut re tire·
Mlo Workers said today set\)ement, nbqut m,ooo blue
ment
plan, the majoc oon·
assembly lines probably will collar workers remain away
economic
feature of the con·
not rcll agam unttl next week. lron1 work
ThiS, said UAW President
Sti ll work ing, although tract concerned tbe rnandarory
Leonard Woodcock, is because negottat1ons continue on a overtime that automakers can
It wtll take the rest of this week contract covering them, were demand of workers
Under the new contract,
for national and local officers about 15,000 wh ite collar
workers can refuse to work
to 1111tify the settlement
workers
more
than rune hours a day or
Under the contract, the UAW
The announcement Monday
more
than ~4 hours a Wll&lt;lk or
won a breakthrou•(h 30-a nd&lt;Jut or lhe th ree-yea r contract
retirement plan and obtained came just 63 hours after the more than two consecutive
relief from mandarory over. UAW called the strike In 22 Saturdays. But the company
states and Canada. It was the retains certam lunited rlghiB to
time rules.
In turn, workers wtll recetve fastest settlement m UAW Impose mandatory overtime.
Pay wtlllncrease 3 per cent
tess money than they wanted history The previous record
yearly
m each of the three
Woodcock called the non- lor brevity was nine days In
years
or
the pact, less than the
money tssues In the contract a 19~ agamst For.d Motor Co
"tremendous breakthroughn"
Agreement came after UAW sought. Woodcock aald
espectally the introduction of a nearly 30 hours of marathon the cost or the package was
"very, very high" for the UAW
system that w1ll allow •mbecause of the non-money
concesstons Chrysler made.
The UAW, which will take
essenllally
the
same
agre ement to Ford and
WASHINGTON (UP!) - service station operarors would General Motors Corp for
Many of the nation's servtce be out of busmess by the end of contract talks with them,
stattons will be closed by the 1973, unless they can recover gamed Increased frmge
end of 'hlS year unless gasoline the cost increase. "They are beneftts m hohdays, insurance
retatlers are allowed w pass losmg a rntlhon dollars a day, and medical benefits and
along cost hikes to customers, as a class," he said.
tmproved health and safety
The retatlers argued in favor checks m plants
an appeals court was · rold
of an earher U. S. Dtstrict
Monday.
ruling thai would enable
court
Jerry Cohen, an attorney for
the Na tiona I Congress of them to recover the cost hikes.
Petroleum Retailers, sa.td at The lower court had agreed
least 40 pet of the current that pncmg regulations by the
Cost of Livmg Counctl treated
gasohne dealers differently
Oscar N Smtih, 63, formerly
from other small busmesses.
The court ordered the counCil of Metgs County, dted Saturday
wlet the retatlers pass through evenmg in Columbus
Mr Smtih, preceded In death
thetr cost mcreases
The government, however, by hlS pareniB, Harry and
appealed the dectston, arguing Emma Tobin Smtih, is surthat gasohne prices had riSen VIVed by hiS wtfe, Dora C. ,
faster than other retatl prices Columbus, two brothers, Dale
YOUNGST?WN , Ohio (UP!) Government attorneys, m and Glenn, both of Pomeroy;
- The ctty s 44 schools re- arguments Monday asked the two ststers, Mrs. Wllbam
mained closed roday, but neg&lt;r appeals court w o;ert\U'n the Grueser and Mrs. Amos
hators appeared to be makmg •ct 1strJCt court ruhng
uonard, both of Rock Sprmgs,
at least some progress toward
a son, l£o K. Smtih, Barnn·
a strike by teachers and other
springs, Mtch.; four grand·
school workers now In 1ta lith
children,
three
step·
day
grandchildren, three great .
Secret negottations between
step-grandchildren, and a step·
ctty officlBis and tbe Youngsson, Martin Woodard.
rown Education AssOCiation
Funeral servtces were to be
and two smaller untons started
held at 3 p m Tuesday at the
day The meetings continued
Ewmg Funeral Home wtth the
until 5 am Monday and reRev Robert Smtih offtctatmg,
sumed later m the day
wtth
burtal m the Bradford
Emma Pulhns, dec to
School Superintendent
Cemetery
Robert Pl!gues swd he would Hubert Pullins, Paul Russell
oot seek legal actton against Pulhns, Charles Ray Stohart,
the teachers, even though they Rossland E Stobart, William
have tgnored two court orders, M. Sta.bart, Helen Loutse
as long as the talks continued Mossman, Janet Ruth Jordan,
Cert. for trans., Middleport
at the "present pace "
Jultous C. Adkins, Chrtstme
Mahonmg County Common
Pleas Judge Clyde W. OsbOrne M. Adkins to Gary T Terry,
ordered teachers back to work Nancy S Terry, Lot 4, Fair·
Monday, but only about 70 of vtew Hgts , Chesler.
OtiS F Knopp, Edna L.
the 1,100 reported., Some 15
schools were open for a while, Knopp w Janet Manuel, 13.5
but Pegues later closed all Acres, 72 Acres, Sutton.
Green Htll Homes, Inc. to
schools and ordered football
Mtchael
R. Ryan, Linda Ryan,
games canceled until the strike
.234 Acre, Sutron
ends.
Lucille Hendricks to George
There are some 23,000 stu·
W
Knapp, Bertha H Knapp,
dents In Youngstown's schools
The teachers struck Sept. 4 Lot, Middleport.
Sharon Duncan, Extrx.,
over salartes and other ISSUes,
mcluding a demand for spe- Elbert Taylor, dec. to Wayne
ctahzed mstructors m the 0 Cobb, Donna J Cobb, 70 63
Acres, Bedford.
lower grades.
Wayne 0 Cobb, Donna J
l.
Cobb to Roscoe Prater, Betty
Prater, 13 64 Acres, Bedford.
DIVORCES ASKED
Eleanor L Miller wLetta A.
Two actions for dtvorce were
Spencer,
Lots, Mtddleport
filed m Meigs County Common
l£tta A Spencer to Eleanor
Pleas Court Monday. One was
L
Mtller, Mary Carolyn Wiley,
by Wilda I. Brogan, Rt I
Rutland, from John W Lots, Middleport
Rossland E. Srobart, dec. to
Brogan: the other by RusseU L.
Jackson, Syracuse, from Anna Emma Mane Stobart, Charles
CHAIN BIBS
I. Jackson, South Pomt, both on Ray Srobart, Rossland Edward
CHAIN ROPES
grounds of gross neglect of Stobart, Jr., Helen Loutse
CHAIN SOUTAUS
duty and extreme cruelty. Mrs. Srobart, Janet Ruth Srobart,
William
Mllron
Srobart,
Cert.
Jackson asks ownership of the
for trans , Mtddleport.
couple's 1973 Oldsmobile .
•

died Sahm:lay

The children were called wthe old home one day ,
They told us our Mother was JUSt called away ;
We stood by her casket, her spll'it had fled,
While Dad softly told us the last words she'd said

water, "one way or another"

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Otrysler lines still quiet

Beat .••

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES . Bessie
Craddock, West Columbia;
Overt Pullins, Evans; Mrs
Roland Morris, Pomeroy, Mrs
Robert
Chattm,
West
Columbia ; Edward Stone,
Galltpohs Ferry; Arthur
McCoy, Henderson, and Mrs.
Charles McComas, Point
Pleasant

Meigs

Property

Transfers

Nixon proposes to loosen

Music Department, 2nd Floor

home mortgage market
with tax credits for lenders

Kissinger confirmation
I passes committee vote
~

~

---

....

.. ..

..

•.." .. -..... -1 .

'

WASHINGTON IUPI) - Pretldent Nixon Olked
Cungreu today to enact • ••riel of meaoareo to pump more
money Into the lllht home-mortgage marllel. He PrQPOied
eventually tu replace lbe current federal hou1!ng IUb&amp;ldlea
lor !he poor with ca•h paymeull. Among recommendations
lellorth In hll lont...walted hollllng meuage to the Houoe
and Senile Wll a 3\1 per cent tu credit lor lenders Ill the
hllme mortgage lllllrket .
"Credit lithe lifeblood of hOUIIng," NIXoRiald. "Without
Ill ade~~qate supply ol credit repayable over an extended
period of time at rea•onable lntereat ratea, very few famlllcti ~
could alford to parchaae their own homea." NoUng that
eredlt lor home purche•e• frequently fluctuates wildly, the
President proposed that the Federal Home IJlan Bank Board ,
be allow"?, to aulhorlre up to ~.5 blllloo In "forward com·~
m1tment• to savings llld loan asooclatlona to usure them :q.
sufficient lunda lor houalng loans during periods of high :x
Interest rates.
•
·~:
He aloo urged that $3 billion In mortgage money be i~i
provided for new hollllng allnlerett ratcti slightly below the ;,;:
market level, under the auspices of the Fede111l National~
Mortgage Asooclatlon.
~:
Another proposal would authorize the Federal Housing~
Administration to Insure multifamily dwellings. The ~:
President recommended thai both the FHA and VA be~;
authorized w Insure mortgages carrying current, market~
rates ollnterett, thereby eliminating the need.for charging a ~
premium for receipt of auclt loall8 ,
1

I
i

RCA

'
·
',

FM-AM clock radio
in Early American
cabinet design

'

ii

'64.50

~

·~

• Warm Coton1al Mapl e-grain hardwoOd
veneers and solids, fashioned Into
an FM·AM Clock radio that's nghl at
home m the finest Early Amencan
furniture surroundings
• Sleep switch turns rad1o oil any time
up lo 60 mmutes afler setllng
• Automatic wake-to-mus1c or buzzer
alarm
• Drowse alarm leis you catch an extra
40 winks
• Clock face and radiO dials are
lighted.
• Automatic trequency control for
drift-free FM
• Prec1se slide-rule vernter tuning and
log scale.
• Convenient slide controls for lone
and volume.
• BUilt- In FM and AM antennas

.i~

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

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called Monday at 12 '1:1
BUCKS DRAW BEST
p.m w829 High St , for E H.
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Ohio French who was taken to
Stale, perenmally among the Holzer Medical Center.
rop draws m the country, at..
tracted 86,005 fans for its home
' opener against Mmnesota at
MEETING P(ISTPONI!D
Columbus last Saturday to
A meeting or the Rock
eastly rank No I for the
Springs
Better Health Club
weekend Adistant second was
the crowd of 73,231 whtch scheduled for this week has
turned out at Los Angeles for been postponed until Thursday,
the game between rop-ranked Sept, 'l/ ,
Southern Cahfornia and
LOCAL TEMPS
Arkansas.
The temperature In down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a m
NOW YOU KNOW
Tuesday was: 60 degrees under
At the end of the 19th century cloudy skies.
the f 1stesl vehicle known to
man was the tceboat, which
exceeded 100 miles an hour.
•
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The
Pomeroy E·R squad rook
CLUB TO MEET
The Young Wives' Club will Clarence Spurrier, Union Ave.,
meet Wednesday at 7.30 p.m wVelera1111 Memorial Hospital
at the home of Kathy Spencer. Monday at 8:03pm.

the cxcc ut1 vo· hllll Ht1 t'an IJc
r~pulrod. II•• s11ld Uill ro111 mi l·
tee took on fa ith Kissim\er's
lh t It Ill b r II
ussuronces 8 w c u y
~cr~~~~·s JU:e~:~~ t&gt;~c~~:~~; ~~~·~~~~~;~mula)or '"'clsJons uf
them
Kissinge r
was
the
'Ow committee, by a vote ol !'resident's k&lt;·y adviser on the
16 to 1, Tuesday endorsed the
H8 r v a r d ~::0'//,WP..W..W.&lt;Wi'/.W£&lt;1'8'.&lt;!!1//Q.&lt;
50• ye 0 1 •0 1d
professor'• nomination, with
DENVER (UP! ) - .Iulie
only Sen George MeGovern, Stanek, a 2-pound , l5·ounce
D~~ D ' dissenting.
Infant oextuplet who vainly
Sena te conflrma\lon by an
battled blood and breathing
equally overwhelming margin problems, died TueNduy
lS expel1ed later this week, In night or a disease common to
tJme for Klssmger wbe sworn
premature babies . The
In and begin hts new dulles condition of her only sister
a nd a brother worsened
~~~o~s :~tc~:k the Umted roday but the heQith or the
Chairman J Wtlliam ~'ul· three other boy• appeared
bright, D·Ark ., sa id the com· Improved.
ltc ,
Dr. Tlbol Engel, the famil y
1 fK 1
~~s ~ s n':i~~on~~ ~n :~~~~s~ obstetrician , sa id the
ment of the admtmstralton's parents were "saddened but
past or present pohctes, but an very calm. Both have taken
expresswn of hope that the the news with calm and
breaoh between Congress anti dignity."

:·Z~·:·:·:~·:·:.:·:~~·:-:·:·:-;·:·:·:·~:-.:::::::::~:.:::-.=:::::::

~.-

Will und hi s cnJINSd l y to the

VIetnam ueaec talks 1n the
ta&lt;!flllY four-ycor period or
c'llll " " "Cm~ nt with Con"r•••
over 1; dochina
~
Fulbright warned that there
were still many outstanding
differences with the administration, prmctpally U1c
ltght over the need for new
strategic weapons m a penod
or rlswg detente With the Soviet
Union Beyond Ktsslngcr's
promJHe for fu ll eort'lultalton,
he noted there was 110 structure
for resolving fundamental
differences with the ad10101811 auon

\lj/ t'ather
Partly cloudy romght and
Thursday wtth a chance of a
fe w showers Thursday Lows
tonight in the up!Jilr lOs and low
50s. Highs Thursday m the 70s

~

•

-~.-

Crisp makes
it official

Be sure to see all the other RCA
radios, stereos, color TV sets, tape
products in the Music Department,
2nd floor.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
NEW FALL

costumemakers

A formal request for permission to provtde
water for Middleport Hill residents has been forwarded to Richard Gress, chatrman of the Mld·
dleP?rt Board of Public Affairs, by Jack Crisp,
prestdent of the Leading Creek Conservancy
D1strict
The request followed a
spectal meeting pf the Board of
Public Affairs and Mtddleport
Village Council Monday night
when the board told residents
of the hill that it would be
unable to provide the water
service because of the expense
- an esllmated $15,000 - mvolved. At thai tll1le It was
Indicated that no one objected
to the conservancy district
providing the service If the
"paper work" Involved could
1\e worked out. The sroup were
rold that Crtsp shodta Initiate
the request w provide the
service.
Middleport HID residents,

livmg in the Middleport corporahon hmtls, who have
asked the setvlce, according to
the reQuest forwarded wGress
by Crisp, are Clara France,
l£ona K Roach, James F
Russell, Edgar Reynolds and
Clifford Kauff Four others
listed in the request are
residents of Rutland St but
thell' homes are aclualiy m
Pomeroy corporation limits, so
Middleport would have no
control over whtether they
would receive water. These
four are Harold Smtth, Jack
Clark, Roger Manley and
William B Henry.

KIS&lt;I ngcrt,,,s llr1111y opposed
wur pow•n leKJSiatJon now
.~wnltln~ final a&lt; liOn In Con·
grcss and" veto hy !'residen t
N1xo n to bar comnulment or
II S. troops wJthout dtrcc t
&lt;~uthorily from Con l(l'es.~
On several out•tandmg lo·
1 ctgn
pohcy qu esllons,
K1 ss1n ge r and Fu lbnght
llire.,dy hll vc !Ound UtcmS&lt;Ivcs
m a lltance These wdude the
questiOn of trade With the
Sovi et Union, whi ch both
believe should not be dependent on mte rnal reforms In t,1at
country, and US pohclcS of
even-ha ndedness m the Middle
" ast
But on such quest 10 n as the
mamtenance of u s troops 1n
Europe , the level or us
1mhta ry assistance overseas
and the contm ued Investment
m overllCas bases, the prospect
ISfo1· eontmued differences be·
tween Ktsswge r and the cummJttee

HENRY KISSINGER - Prestdenl Nixon 's new
Secrel~ry of State destgnate won approval Tuesday of the
Fore~gn Relatwns Commlt\ee on a vote of 1()..1, With only
defeated 1972 Ocmocr~t1 c Prestdentlal Candidate George
Mc{loll~rn voting nay Senate approval is expected to follow
shortly Above, Mr Kissinger reflects on the answer w a
question asked htm In his recent conflrma hon hearings

•

enttrte

Devoted To The lnternll Of The Meig3·Mawn Area

VOL XXV NO. 110

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDN ESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1973

PHONE 992 2156

TEN CENTS

party trickery
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John
Glenn, who had sa1d earher he
mtended to announce this fall
that he would run for the Democrat1c nomination for the U S.
Senate , Tuesday mght made a
surprtse vtstl to a meetmg of
the Democratic executtve
committee and swd he was a
VICtim of "boss1sm, blackmatl
and ngged endorsement pro·
cedures."
Glenn's stQrmy st~tement,
which he read from a handwnlten page, came in the
mtdsl of reports of a secret
meetmg by 11 big county
Democrattc chatrmen and

Gov JohnJ GtlhganAug 28m
whtch tl was agreed to secure
the party 's endorsement of
Howard Metzenbaum for the
U S Senate pnmary race
The former astronaut, who
lost to Metzenbaum, a Cleve·
land mdustr1ahst, m the 1970
Dem oc r a ti C se nat onal
primary by 13,442 votes,
Tuesday revealed an underthe-table deal offered by
Gtlllgan wpressure him out of
the 1974 congressiOnal race.
Durmg a ser1es of recent
meetmgs wtth Gtlhgan , Glenn
datmed he tr1ed "to box me m
for a heutenant governor

candidacy," described the Sen·
ate seatas a "bauble" that was
secondary to the campa1gn for
lieutenant governor
"The proposal was made
thaL I run lor lieutenant
governor , wtlh the provtswn
that 1f 1 ran ," Glenn said,
"Gtlhganpledgednottorunfor
the Senate m 1976 and (he)
b'Uaranteed full party support
for me.
"And (GIIhgan) staled that
the very day 1 was elected llcutenant governor , I could start
usmg that offtce to campa1gn
fot the Senate or to even restgn
If I preferred, which would

penmt the governor to apPl'ml
a successor."
Glenn sa id Gllhgan made It
clea r h1s chotce for the 1974
congressJOnat race was Metzenbaum and md1cated to hun
If he persisted m hts btd for the
Democrattc nommatwn, "the
allernattve for the party would
be to w~rk £or my pohbcal
obhvJOn
Glenn ernphabcall y stated he
ts not interested m the heuten·
ant governor's off1ce
,
"l feel tt 1s not nghl to rUn for
off1ce wt th no mtentlon of
workmg at the JOb I would
neve r go before the voters of

OhiO With thai false-type cam- been "ngged" and "stacked''
patgn," he said w the stunned m advance by Gtlhgan, Demo~
commtttee members "This cr- tic Chatrman William A
would be a hoax, a sham and a Lavelle, and would surely refraud on the voters because suit m the selectton of MetzenI'm not mterested m U!at of· baum for the Senate seat .
flee
However, committee mem"Thts IS pure pohtieal black- bers tgnored Glenn's plea 10 a
mail and a stab in the back 37-18 vote. Some members, mafter all my support for the eluding a few of Glenn's past
party and the governor " political alltea, considered hts
Glenn contmued
'
attack on Gilligan Lavelle and
Glenn appealed to the mlliii· other party leade;s a mistake.
bers of the ex~cutjve commit- One predlcted a ~ulck end to
tee to l bandon plans 00 creattlta Glenn's political career.
candtdateselectlon committee
Lavelle said following
which would recommend ~ Glenn's speech that ''I am
slate of candidates w be en- aware of the realities of life m
3:!:K-:o:~·:X·:X·:·:-:&lt;·:&lt;·:·:·.·:·:·:Y'&lt;·:·::::::~::::.·: dorsed for statewide offtces
pohllcs - that you conduct
WATER OFF
He charged that members on your affairs on two levels."
Lavelle aatd the fli'St level
Pomeroy 11ater sub· the selection commtltee bad
was
the public level with "pre·
scrtbers are advised that
pared
wntten speeches" while
service will be orr Thursday
- the second Is the "mformal po·
are, transporta tiOn nee ds, p m at the Metgs County
afternoon on Peacock, Brick,
hllcal talk level where we must
locatiOn , how heavily traveled, ExtensiOn Office to elect of.
Wetzgall, and Lasley Sis.,
all
have frank dtscusstons
destgn phases, alterna te fleers of the Actwn Plan
and on parts of Butternut
"
Prospecttve candidates
destgns, spectfJC tmpact each Members of the committee
and Osborne.
come to us and have private
design has, and to work dosely are Roush, C E Blakeslee,
The water is being shut orr
meetings,''
he said . "These
wtth the public m regard to Wesley Buehl, OriOn Roush and
to permit water department
Perrntssion to purchase conversallons on the mforrnal
construcllon phases
Robert Bowen.
workers to Install a nell tap
The Ohto Depariment of
Robert Clark, president of
near the new fire depart· turtle neck sweaters and berets level are gtven with the best
Transportatton has destgnated the commtsston, read a report
menl headqu arters on for vanous secUons of the band mtentions."
was given Dwtghl Goins, Metgs
"This 1s etther the dusk or
new tmpact area and con- from the o!ftce of Congressman
Butternut Ave.
dawn
of my pohttcal career,"
Htgh
Sehool
band
dll'ector,
tmually updates road pr10r1hes 6\arence Mtller showmg that
Monday mght when the Metgs satd the embtttered Glenn
based on Industrial develop· there ts $14.4 m1lhon avallable
Band Boosters mel at the htgh :'I've been thmkmg about lhts
ments, Roush explamed
at the present ttme for htghway
for most of my waking hours.
school
The road reported to have Improvement
I've never been treated more
Mrs
Vivian
Pterce,
vice
rop priOrity at the present llme
Attendmg In add1hon to those
shabb1iy
or unfairly than m the
prestdent, prestded The group
m Metgs County IS SR 124 to SR named were Henr) Wells, and
dtscussed lncreasmg the dry last three weeks."
160, Pomeroy to Wilkesville Warden Ours, commtss10ners,
cleaning or umforms fee
An orgamzational meetmg and Martha Chambers, clerk
because the present fee does
wtll be held next Tuesday at I
Four Pomeroy men have not cover any cost of main·
purchased the 23-acre Metgs tenance and repa1r of the
Motorcycle Club grounds at uniforms
Peach Fork and wtlllaunch a
It was announced that the .
program of racmg thts Sunday Metgs Band w11l be In com·
The purchasers are Jack petitton at Manetta Saturday.
Welker, James Frecker , Bus pJckup for band members
Charles Johnston and Bruce will be at 10 a.m It was
Heavy proJ)Ilrly damage wa~
teachers to start workmg with
Mrs Helen Hayes, Lot eat Zerkle Welker and Johnston reported that the paraae is at I reported m two single car
p m and wtll be televtsed while accldeniB Monday.
the bookmoblle, outhned early Bend , joined the group for race motorcycles
The motorcycle club has the field competitiOn will be at
efforts to get the bookmobile m lun ch and afterwards acShenff Robert C. Harconducted
a
racmg
pt
ogram
at
6 p.m . on Hart Field on Fifth tenbach's Dept said MiChael
Metgs County and the progress companted 1\ on a tour g1vmg
of the unit Tuppers !'lams an mtroducllon to Metgs the grounds the past 10 years St Chaperones for thts trip and A Bolin, Middleport, WR$
The new owners plan to the West Jefferson competition driving a City Ice and Fuel Co
School was the onglna: target County htstory .
group for creating a mock
The rotJll service met with QPeratc a full race program trip on Sept 29 were named truck on a private driveway on
bookmobile and servtce befOI e the 11pproval of U1e viSitors and next season but wtll hold only The West Jefferson com· the Alfred White property,
the existence of the real umt. Mt s. P1kko1a has been lour races on Sundays from pet111on wtll take place al 3 15 near county road 2~ In
Mrs Grace Weber, pr~ncJpu l requested to gtve a wrttten now un ttl Nov 1 These wtll be prn
Sallsbury Township Tuesday al
Supplles and workers for the 4:45 p.m Due to the narrow
of th e R1ver v1ew School ,. report w1th photographs to prtmarll y moto-cross events
outlined the ftrst meeting m provide more mslght mto the Sunday's pracllee w1ll begm at food booths at home gomes and roadway, the truck went off the
1964 at the courthouse among loca l program, mcludmg 10 a m wtth the racmg to start a money-making project to be road and rolled over an em·
citizens and commissioners to aspects of the needs for the at I p m Refreshments will be cametl out at the homecoming bankment.
ga me closed the meebng
~ e t the unit started ,.
cmmty and how they are met available on the grounds
Bolin was reported to have
been
taken to Veterans
~:.O::=!~!;~.;::=.,..!•:O!•!N•!•:::..:•:~•=•~:•:•!•!•:•:•:•:•:•:•!'l !;~:;~0:;!•!;'•';~0:0:•!:;;!•~!:!:!::::;~!;';!;!;:;;:::•:•:~•:•::::~:::~!;!:!•~~-:;;;:=:.;~o;.;~•:•!•!•!• •!•~!·!•::!•!!!•, !•;:,•,•!•.,::•!•:•, o!0•,•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!+!•~!;!;!;!•!:!:;:::!•!•!X!'::=:~:.o::"-:::;t
Memorial• Hospital , treated
and released No citation was
issued.
AI 7.45 p m. Tuesday on the
Bradbury Road, Harold L.
Dwm
,
young
farme
r,
Stanley
A pt tee h1ke 111 hot lunches 1n tnx
Lttlle , Middleport, was
Pleasan t H1gh to re pla ce
Mason County schools w11l go iiiCJcases of hvc cenL~ were H o w~~rd Lee Miller , and Hopkms, young farmer , traveling north when he
into effect soon and several mode Ill the lunches for Pamclu Wlutc, Sarah Wmters, Rodney Wallbrown , young crosaed over the center line
pe1sons wet e employed Ill students, while adults will puy Slurtey Smith , Lynn Burnette Iarmer, Clarence Eber t, and struck and broke orr a
actions by th e Board of 10 cents more Supt Charles and M.~r v m Goodm were all ca rp entry , Homer Preece, power pole belonging to Ute
8du ~a tl oll a t Its regular WllhCI'S,
m mak ing his employ ed as subslltutc typing
Columbus and Southern Ohio
lllCCtlng Tucsduy evening
Also m non-teaching em· Electric Co.
reco mmcndntlon, cxplumed teachers.
Complaints were l o d~ c d thnl llwrc hns been no mcensc
Little was taken to Vetarans
Arlull Educal19n teachers ploymertls Included Sylvia
agl\lnst the lh ess code ut Point In the cost to students for man y employed wer e Leona rd Rolhns, cook at Arbuckle, Memorial Hospital by lhH
Pleasunt High School, as were Yct~rs, but the Increase m labOI' BJ·amcr. welding , E u ~e n e Johnetta Oldaker, Title I aide Pomeroy E·Rsqued. Little was
others J)llrlmning to u bus route as well ns tho cost of food has Layton , auto mechnni c, on as needed basis at Ord· cite~ to court on charges Ollelt
und salaries lor cooks
necessitated the change
Huhcrt
McClure,
au to naoce, Delores Davis, regular of center.
The now pt tce or school
Rogct Samples was em- lll £'rhMlic, 1 : 1 ~n sc n.ouse , bus driver , Madahne Roush,
hmches will become effective ployed as a teacher at West sho1thu nd, R1chm d Ch ne, subslllutc cuslodtan at Broad
LOCAL: TEMPS
Sept , 24 when the cost fm Cohnubla lo replace Demus drive r training, Maxlno Run , Sylvta Hussell as subThe lallll'fi'Billft In do\Vll·
hmchcs In olomentnry schools Gnrrett. Olhl'l' tcachcrs Will be Lathey, clothing construction, stitute coqk; Dottle Keyser,
town
Pomeroy at II a.m.
substitute
cook
,
Beulah
will raise to 35 cent s, secon- Vtrgillta Ga rbe!, at Leon , Ru th Rum garner, c l ot hln ~
dary schools ttf 45 cents uno q(f r('\ IVC ' NOVCillbCr 26 : con structio n; !Well Ri ff le, Pickens, substitute cook i Bill Wedne~ay was ~7 c~ettea
under cloudy tklea.
nolultlunches to r.o c~nts , phiS Wllllmn Buchn11un, at P01nt clol loi n~ C OII ~ lru cllon , Ch[forol
(Continued on Page 16)

Road program explained

UP
Cameos, Stone
Flower Pins
Abalone Rings, Mexican
Sterling S1lver ...................
Large Lockets
Large Crosses ............

3.95

JOO to 7.00

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Court St.

Pomeroy

BAKER'S
ENi~

By United Press International
DETROIT - UNITED AUTO WORKERS offtctals ~atd they
hoped for a qutck ratification by tts members of a contract
agreement reached Monday with Chrysler Corp., enabling the
workers to be back in the auto plants by next Monday
Rallflcalton votes wlll come at the end of the week at the UAW's
69Chrysler bargaining units In the United States and Canada
The union's 210 member Chrysler councd wtll meet in Detr01t
today for a ratification vote Umon officials said once the
Chrysler workers ratify, they would ask the other two maJor
auromakers, Ford and .General Motors, for stmilar contract
agreements.
COLUMBUS - ASPECIAL JOINT leg1slahve commttlee on
campaign flnancmg was roorganlze at a 2 30 p m meetmg today
and begm public hearings the first week m October
The chall'll\an, Sen. Stanley J Aronoff, R.Clnctnnall, sa1d a
variety of proposals would be considered, !ncludmg one from the
office of Gov. John J. Gtlllgan The governor's office has not yet
submitted to the Committee hts tdeas on legislation to tighten
requirements for disclosmg receipts and expenditures m
political campaig~
!n'OCKHOLM- KING CARL XVI Gustaf, Sweden's new 'll·
be forced wdissolve parliament and call
new elections, political sources said roday. It could be the f1rst
and perhaps last political act of Carl Gustaf before the
legislature stripe hun of Ws remamm~ Dowers and establishes a
rotally symbolic mon•rchy .
Carl Gustaf, who ascended to the monarchy on the death last
Saturday of his grandfather King,Gustaf VI Adolf was scheduled
w be olftctaliy Installed on the throne today. The Installation
comes at the entl of five extraordinary days In whtch the country
lost a popular monarch and held the closest electiOn In SWeden's
modern history. Premier Olof Palme's Social Democratic party
and the allied Communists emerged from Sunday's deadlocked
elections holding 175 seaiB in the 35~at Rtksdag, the same
number as a coalition of non-Socialists.
UNITED NATIONS - IS~AEL recalled the "grim
memories" of the Nazi era, but In the end Ambassador Joseph
Tekoah went along with the rest of the U N General Assembly
and voted for the resolution The assembly admitted East and
West Germany at the opening of 118 28th annual session Tuesday
as well as the newly independent Bahamas, raising to 135 the
number of U. N. member nations
West German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and East
German Foreign Minister Otto Winzer were scheduled to address
the asaembly today, along with a score ol other speakers
welcoming the new members. Tuesday's adrnlsaion came by
acclamation after Israel and Guinea, the only voices of objection,
expressed reservations.

HELP US CELEB.RATE

SPECIAL SAVINGS
ON FINE FURNITURE!

BAKER FURNITURE
••

WASHI NGTON (UP I I
Henry Kl~slngcr has won tho
Sennte F'oreign Helatwns Commltlce's Dpprova t aB secretary
f
t
f
11

7 IJnJ : 0b• o ~;;;.:.(~o&amp;;.:~}&gt;.::~~::::.:o_:,o
..
. _,y_.:...:--o;-:ol'o»:o;.:o:o,o;.o..o~QY.."-«~•Y..o.:.Q.
'
......"....................

year~ld monarch, may

WOMEN TO MEET
Church Women Umted of the
Grace EplSCQPal Church wlll
hold a fall dtstrlct workshop
from 10 a.m. w2 p.m. TI)Jil'S·
day at the church In PcmeYoy.
Aluncheon wtll be held at 12 30
p.m. Price for the luncheon t..
$2

.

l

BUENOS AIRES - JUAN PERON'S own opinion poll
predict.! the former Argentine leader will get nearly two-thirds or
the vote next SUnday In special elections lor the prealdency The
poll published Tuesday said votera would give Peron 64.&amp;per cent
of the vote and 39 per cent wpuld go wthree other candidates It
said 2 ~per cent or thoae asked had not made up their mind.
The poll wu conducted by the Justlclallat Dot1rlne Institute,
a branch of Peroo's pollllcal movement, and was based on Interviews with 427,7119 people One of Peron's prealdenllal opponenla, hOwever, said Monday he expected the election to end
wllhoull declalve rnajolly, forcing a runoff. "I believe there Is a
notable crou-over of vo!era which will mean the need lor a
aecond round," aald RICJJrdo Bllbln, hea~ of lhe Radical party

BY KATIE CROW
The ftve members o! the
Meigs County Achon Plan
Commtttee explamed to the
County Cornmtsswn thetr
program Tuesday
Jtm Roush, spokesman, satd
the purpose of the Action Plan
lS w outhne the htghways In
Metgs County that, m the
commtttee 's optmon, have
prwnty over others, and
submtl recommendations to
the Ohio Deparimenl of Transportallon
Roush explamed that there
are several phases to be
constdered In the plan Goals
and objecllves to be considered

Band to show
sweaters and
berets in '73

'

Moto-cross
progr&lt;'lm set at
Peach Fork

Vehicles
damaged

Bookmobile services shown
to federal investigators
The Metgs • Jackson . VInton
Counties bookmobile operallon
was "on display" last week
represenllng southern Ohio m a
survey w determine serv1ces
provided the public as a result
of federal funding to support
rural pubhc librartes
Mlchtgan and Ohio were the
two states selected for the
survey. Visiting the book·
mobile operation headquartered m Pomeroy Thursday to
conduct the study were Jerome
Sldloskl and Michael T Hosler,
auditors from the United States
General Accountmg Department, Cleveland
To help them see the effort
being made at the locallevelln
assuring Improved library
servlc&amp; In rural areas, Mrs
VIlma PlkkOja , bookmobile
supervisor , took the two
representatives on a tour of
some of tile towns visited by
Mr Eddy, Jr Stops Included
Middleport , Wolfpen ,
Pagetown ,
Horrisonvlilc ,
Snowville, Darwin , Allred ,
Tuppers Plains and vicinity
and the lllvervl~w Elementary
School.
At the Tuppers Plains
Sehool, Mrs. Beatrice Douglas
Introduced thil visitors to the
school operations carried out In
conjunction with the bookmobile visits Mrs , Viol et
Millhonc, one of ,the ortglnul

•
" -r

l~

I

Lunch
prices
increased
.

I

'

,

'

•

•

,

•~

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