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•

•

•
18 - The Dally S.ntilll'l. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. &amp;·pl . 1!1, t!ti:t

}'our bondt~ nrt' giwn tu
, _ defendants have forfilled bonda, one was fined and
IIIOiher • tmd Cillls only by
~Mayor John ·Zerkle,
'l'llelclay nljhl.
Forfeiting $30 bonds, all
pallid for intoxicallon, were
Richard Noonan, 38, Middllpctrt; Orvllle Satterfield, 53,
Belmont, W. Va. ; William E.
Mulllna, 36, Gallipolis, and
Helen Birchfield, no address
recorded ,
Everett A. Slephena, 56, Mt.
Alto, W.Va., wasfined '100 and
COllis and was given a three day
jaU sentence on a charge of
driving while into'lic~ted ,

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday

. NuT
.~.!~'· 19·20

n.- -..

""'· &gt;II., ;.

. s,pr. n -22-23

SLEUTH
ITechnicolor J

Band presented half-time show

('mtrt

Assessed costs only on a
~lng charge was Frank J.
Eberabach, 29, Pomeroy.

'

The high stepping Southern
High School Band, directed by
Joy Bigler, presented a halfUme show at the Southern·
Hannan Trace game Friday
night.
The band marched acr&lt;I,IS
the field playing "Stand Up and
Cheer" and then did a 1
precision drill to "Vanguard of

CONTRACTS PENDING
Fire protection contracts
with Sutton, . Letart and
Lebanon Township have been
renewed, Racine Chief Dave
Cleland said today. The
present contracts will expire
on Oct, 5. The Racine Village ·
UNI'l' GALU:;O
council is con&lt;lllsting the
RACINE - The Racine E-R
negotiations on the""'"-con- squad answered two calls
tra cts with hjgher rates Tuesday, The (irst call was at 2
proposed.
p,m. at the Paul Marks
residence for May Van lp- ·
wagen, 79, of Pomeroy. who
DANCE IS SET
A dance will follow the was take~ to Holzer Medical
Southern-Eastern game Center. At 10:30 p.m. it went to
George
Cummins
Saturday night at Southern the
High School under the spon- residence, Letart Falls, for
sorship of the Band Boosters. Opal Cummins, 37, Racine,
Boot Jack will provide the who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
music.

Special-Ed progtam is

Laurence Olivier

Michael Caine
PG

Sleuth Starts: 7:4o p.rn.

outlined by Mrs.' Bacon

Colorcartoons :

Kisser Pion!
Search Misery

Show Slarts7 p.m.

Mrs .. Mary Bacon, work
study coordinator-consultant of
Occupational Education for
Meigs and Gallia County High

Ill
THURSDAY ONLY!

Norwich
ASPIRIN
500 TABLETS
CROWN

SWEET
PICKLES

32 oz. jar

Victory " feat~rin~ Della
Lross, piccolo: Jim Holman,
tuba, and Jeannie Sellers,
O..vid Smith and Sharon Hill on
drwns. The band danced as
they played "Windy," and "I'd
IJke to Teach the World to
Sing." Various percussion
instrwnents were featured hi
both nunrbers.
Majorettes are Instructed by
Mrs. Connie Andrews. Keith
Circle Is drum major, head
majorette is Valerie Johnson,
and Bobbi. Chpman and
Brenda
Lawrence
are
majorettes.
Holzer Medical Center
tl&gt;ischarged Sept. 18)
Ester Altieri, Lal)ra Anderson, D9rothy Clonch, ·Bus
Daniels, Leona Dayton,
Rebecca Dillon, Clifford Edward Grady, Ca therine
Haggerty , Sarah Hosack,
Larry Jay john, Steven Jeffers,
Richard Kelly, Mrs . Gary
Edison Knisley and daughter,
Eutha McDaniel, William
Nance, Elvin Neal, Charles
Parks, Kiltheryn Popldn•.
Darlene Price, Carol Risse,
Gwendolyn Robinson, Emil
Romans, Robert Roush,
Timothy Roush, Agee Rowley,
Dow Saunders, . Kennison
Saunders, Tameron Smith,
Wayne Swann, Ada Welch,
Coell Wetherholt, Timothy
Wilso11.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Henry C.
Roney, a son, New Haven; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald R Sizemore,
a son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Jack
Wical,
daughter.
Jackson .

S.hools, speaking at a recent
bi-monthly meeting of the
Meigs County Jaycees, said
young people in her special
education program are
educable.
She pointed out that each
student takes eight academic
and nine vocational subjects
while in school. All students in
the work-study program are
juniors and seniors.
A question and answers
period followed her talk.
· Ralph Werry reported that
the village of Pomeroy will
accept the Jaycees' help to
WORKSHOP OFF
patrol during trick or treat
A district PTA worksho~
night on Oct. 30. Werry a·lso scheduled for tomorrow invited the Jaycees to help Thursday - at Athens on the
patrol during the Meigs County topic "How to ~~ and Keep
Heart Association's Halloween People Involved in PTA" has
Festival Oct. 31 at the Pomeroy been cancelled, Mrs. Richard
Junior High SchOll! a11ditorium. Vaughan, Middleport, Districi
The festival will be preceded 16 director1 announ.ced today.
by a parade through downtown The workshop which had been
Pomeroy beginning at 6:30 set for Irwine Hall on the OU
p.m.
campus will be rescheduled in
It was decided that the . Niwember, Mrs. Vaughan said.
Jaycees will conduct a project
involving.the children of the
local children's home.
Plans were made for an
(Continued from Page 1)
· orientation meeting for all new Campbell' regular bus driver;
members at the next regular Nancy Newma~~ , secretary to
meeting.
Adult Education program.
Two new members accepted
s11 bstitute bus drivers _
into membership of the local Vivian Boston, Hugh Burris,
chapter were Bruce Teaford, Denver Casto, J.ames Green,
employee of Teaford Realty, Willie Grinstead , Charlotte
Mechanic St., Poml!roy, and Long , Betty Lynch, Gail
Don Nelson of the Pomeroy Stephens, Okey Tribble,
National Bank,
Patricia Whitlock, Franklin
Bonecutter. .
Worthy Jeffers and Howard
Weigandasteachersaideonan
as needed basis for the
disadvantaged program
Maintenance and Repair,
Discussion, at length ensued,

Lunch

On Display
Friday, Sept. 21
Newest Car
•
m

concerning the position of Tom
Roach. Roach recently was
advanced by the board to a
supervisory position at the bus
garage, without the superintendent's recommendation .
Due to this there has been some
controversy over whether or
not Roach held employment.
At last night's meeting Roach
was employed as a mechanic
at the bus garage at a salary of
$626.34 per month .
Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Melvin
Riffle, Columbus; Mrs. Roy
Weaver, Mrs. Arnold Lans,
Mrs. Herbert Perry, Frank
WIHong, all Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Dwight Grow, Jackson,
Ohio; Orville Casto, Leon;
Michael Pratt, Gallipolis;
West
Sylvia
Ohlinger,
Columbia, and William Flora,
Apple Grove.
BIRTHS - Sept. 19, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Belcher,
Letart, and a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Jordan,
Gallipolis Ferry.
· ·
No games, No gimmi cks

Just Highest
Interest Rates

Past 10 Years

Rutland, flied lor divorce
agatnat John W. Brogan, aame
.address, and jleule L.oulte
Paraons, Cole St., Pomeroy,
against Dorsa Eugene Parsons, ·Radne Rt. I, each
charging groas neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.

Congratulation.~ to Mr. and Mrs , l'. H. Randolph, K~ct:bvitlc,

who will be observing U1clr 61st w&lt;'lidln~ anniversary - u long,
Ion~. time - at Utcir home Sunctly.
Mr. Ratxtolph Is a retirc'li employe of the locks and dams and
Mrs. Randolph is an avid collector of pitchers. What a collection
she llas!
Visiting recentiy with Mr. and Mrs. Randolph and their
daughter, Clarestinc, at their Reedsville residence were Lewis
Clark a nd Horace Kibble of Reedsville: Mr. and M,rs. Erwin
Cane (another daughter of the Randolphs of Orient; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Congrove, Fla.; Mrs. t.innie Miller and daughter,
Kay , of UtUe Hocking : Mrs. Edward Walker of McDonaldsville,
Pa :: Mrs. Betty Farrar, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald .Bower
of Findlay; Mrs. Flossie Barcils, a sister of M,rs. Randolph,
Akron, along with Mr. and Mrs . Bowman of Akron, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Buck and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Keebaugh, all of
Pomeroy,
Cards may be sent to the celebrating couple at Reedsville.

FORD

Cars &amp; Trucks

KEITH GOBLE FORD

lnl AVL

'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

La dle , Sugar Spoon, Pierced
Tab lespoon, In Qllt Box

18 TeaspoonS, 8 Knlv&amp;a , 8 Forka, '
8 Salad fQrka , 8 Soup Spoona,
2 Tabteapo"or~a .
Stow-,\way Tray In cluded .

.

3 ER squads, wreckers,

Phoe nix'

Werry ,
Pomeroy;
four
brothers, Harold, of Gallipolis;
Walter, of Mason, .W. Va.;
John, Hemlock Grove, and
Paul, of Dayton ; one siSter,
Mrs. Forest Phelps of Dayton,
and several nieces and
nephews . .
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at· Ewing
FWJeral Home with 'the Rev,
Wilbur Perrin officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 7 p.m.

scuba divers in search
'•·

Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Saleslips From

Elberfelds In Pome

1974
CHEVROLETS
ARE HERE!

(Piclure~ : and

,.,

Story by Bob

Richjtrd D. Noonan, 38, a
resident of. Middleport only
since Sept, I, drowned Wednesday night when the car he
· was driving went Into the Ohio
River out of control near the
Ohlo Hotel where he lived.
The Middleport E-R unit was
called at 6:38 p.m. It was
joined soon by squads from
Mason and Pomeroy who
as51sted throughout the search
and final recovery of the car.
Four boats of the squads and
· three scuba divers were employed In the recovery.
Had It not been for Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Hysell, Grant St.,
Middleport, and Mrs. Lena
McKinley who resides near the
·scene on Middleport's Froni
St.;ilie vehicle may have gone
In the river unnoticed,
Mr. and Mrs. Hysell were
driving upriver on .Front when
Mrs. Hysell saw the car's back
end sticking up out of the
water. Mr. Hysell said at first

Hoefllc~)

he thought hiS wife meant there
was a car partially in the river
near the levee. However, he
said he realized · that he was
considerably above the levee,
so stopped his vehicle to look.
,He, too, saw a vehicle in the
water, which turned over in the
water and sank as they wat- .
ched.
·
Mrs, McKinley came onto
her porch and talked to the
Hysel!s who told her of the car
in the river. She saw large
bubbles rising to the surface as
the car sank in some 12 to 15
feet of water,
They called \he emergency
squad from Mrs. McKinley's
home.
The tragedy drew a ttentlon ·
to the excellent cooperation
among the bePd's emergency
units as the Middleport unit
was soon joined by Pomeroy's
and Mai!On's. Boats were put
into the water at once and laree
(Continued on page 41

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - HOUSING EXPERTS and congressional
leaders say President Nixon's new housing program will do little
to ease problems of the poor or proSP!!ctive home owners In many
credit starved states. "On first reaction it would seem that the
proposals, many of which are not yet worked out, do not fully
respond to either the current emergency or the long-range
housing problems," said George C. Martin, president of the.
National AsSdciation of Home Builders.
Sen. John Sparkman, D-Ala., said he was disappointed that
Nixon did not release more impounded funds for housing
programs frozen since Jan. 5. Sparkman, chairman of the Senate
Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, also said the
President's cash allowance proposal might be no more effective
in curing housing Ills for the poor than the frozen programs.

,,

M11ibu Classic Coupe

J

of wilhdrawal . Interest
compounded quartel'ly .

Visit Our Showroom Thursday, Friday and Saturday

d )MEIGS
-f!!!'/ BRANCH

See Our Outstanding Line of '74 Otevrolet Cars and
Trucks On.Display .
.
Refreshments, Door Prizes, Fawrs

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

.I

'I

•

.............,
to see the U.s.A.

oJ

WASH1NG1'0N - AFTER LOSING his bid for immunity,
former White House aide Charles W. Colson turned silent before
the Senate Watergate committee Wednesday .
Chairman Sam J 1 Ervin Jr., D-N .C., told reporters after the
2'h -llour closed sessioil that· because of Colson's refusal to talk
about the bugging scandal be had been eliminated as a witness
when the committee resumes publlc hearings next Monday.
Colson declined to answer any questions about Watergate after
his request for a grant of immunity from prosecullon in exchange
for his cooperation was unanimously rejected .
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON 'S lowyets and
Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox report to aU. S. appeals couft
· today whether they have come to any agreement on turning ovor
the President's Watergate tapos. 'l'here were slgtis the two sides
were far apart.
·
Just a week ago, seven judges of the U.S. Court of Appeals
lor the District of Columbia proposed that the parties to the
histOr'ic dispute seek a compromise. Tbey urged that the
President "or his delegate " meet with Cox, hear the tapes and
decide whether portions might be turned over voluntarily to a
wand jury, th~s avoiding a teat of c,onstitulionai Issues In the
!Continued on page 41

.Besides Kenosha,lhree other
Wisconsin cities had teachers
strikes. At Beloit, the school
board voted to cut the
Christmas holidays to four
days in an effort to keep the
academic year long enough to
obtain state aid.
Teachers strikes continued
in nine Pennsylvania schQOi
districts today. affecting 35,800

Michigan communities, including Detroit, the nation's fourth
largest school district, but
teachers at the Detroit s11burbll
of Birmiugham and St. Clair
Shores went back to work
Wednesday . Birmingham
teachers also ret11rned to work,
but only under a court order,
which they were appealing.
Classes at eight Catholic high

'

from dale of deposit to daie

!

enttne

· .n· s I·n ·' Oh·I·o RI·v··e·r· ~~~~~ir,:::d::::in1l::~~:d::
Drl·v·er· drow

IJm:o~t~h!er~·.L~u:c~r~et~la!_!W~o~o!dr~u~m~~tod~a~y;..- -·· iii-iii····----~==========::::::::::

196 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

schools in New York were
canceled by vrincipais· as lay
teachers struck for the third .
day . The principals predicted ·
"abbreviated c.lasses" would
be . provided for all 12,000
students today , Community
volunteers a'nd supervisory .
personnel joined religious
teachers and some lay in;
structors to provide makeshift
classes.
Three public school districts
in Westchester County and one
in r•ewburgh,. N.Y., also held
makeshift classes.

111
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
THURSDAY , SEPTEMBER .20, 1973
.PHONE 992·2156
TEN CENTS• Assocation, teachers again
VOL. XXV _NO.
c.:_::::..:..::_:.:._
_...,...______________:_~.....:----.......--~:.._~---;:-_:_~---------------:..::_.:..:._::_::.:..:._::__ _ _-,-_:_::.;.:.....:.:::.:..:.::· defied a judge's order to return
' ·
to work Wednesday. Oniy 2,225
.
.
J..
of Kenosha 's 22,000 public

Pure of ll ~e . .. grace ful ly symme trical
a tribute to the craftsmen·
ol ou r Co lon ial Era .

Albert Werry died Wednesday

hvlflqt 6 L.Nn Ca .

,.

By Unl!ed Press International
Hundreds of thousands of
' children-almost half a million ·
in Michigan ~lone-remained
on extended smnmer vacations
today while school boards and
teachers union negotiators
sought to write new contracts ..
Despite a $7 ,500-a-&lt;lay fine
issued against the striking
Kenosha, Wis., Education

nl n or11on cc.

New/ PLYMOUTH ROCK "

Tho Atllon• County

Court order
defied again
by teachers

Devoted To '1'he Inter.uu Of The Meig!·Mawn Area

~ONEIDA
T h~ liiHrc~ftt . Ounil&gt;~runirh1' m ao ~

and the Meigll Mining Complex. John Sayl&lt;:S, Stanley Con·
sultants, points to the needed improvements in the tri.county
area. Other speakers at Wednesday's session were, left to
right, John Beasley and Jim Peterson .

at

e

OHorando
September 30, 1973
HURRV:

THE AUXJUARY OF THE Racine Fire Department, which
last year headed a successful Halloween party .f or Racine
children in lieu of trick or treat night, will again try the party
route. Ali mothers who would like to help in any way are asked to
attend a planning session at the fire department headquarters at
7:30p.m. on Tuesday .

lnteres1

.~

•

· 5ii-Piece S~rvlca lor 8 con tain• :

POINTING UP THE ACTIVITIES of the various Sunday
schools is the Trinty Church in Pomeroy, That Sunday school will
have a hayride for members_ at Royal oak Park beginning at 5:30
p.m. on Sept. 30.
.. ,.,/
.

S1'•
Regular Passbook Stlvings.

•

IMPROVEI)IENT OF ROUTES 124 and 160 was the top
.Priority recommended in Wednesday's public meeting held
by members of the federal and ·state !ask force on the
economic impact of the Hames M. Gavin Plant at Cheshire

5-PI&amp;ce Hoateh Set contelna :
Serving Fork , Butler Knill , Gravy

ON PASSBOOK
. SAVINGS
per cent vear paid on

S20.ooo by F5L IC .

'

now . , . during lhla apeclal oHrn

'

All Accounts In sured To

..

Choate from lou r outatendlng
deslona In "Sol id Stalnte n bv
Ona lda , and get yOvr bOnul piiCII

THE MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of .the Nazarene Sunday
school is sponsoring a Columbus trip for children of the community, four thro11gh 11, who do not attend Sunday school at other
churches. Details of the·trip will be ouUlned Sunday morning at
9:30 when the school is held . A visit to the zoo is included in the
plans for the trip. The church is located at 560 Beech St.
Youngsters needing transportation may call 992-5269.

1

Clearance on all '73 Modei.-

-

For a limited ti me only . , . purchase a 50-Piece Set
at the regular price and roce lve a matching
· S·Piece Hostess Set (reg . $6.95) at no extra cost.

51f4%
No Minimum .

t• "•···

BONUS!

In The Area

'-',:: CLOSER
YOU LOOK, THE BETTER
WE LOOK

1t

.
Shop Thursday 9:30 to Sp.m.
Open Both"Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m ·

MRS. ELEANOR THOMAS, e~ecutive director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, is urging Meigs senior citizens to tune
in the new WMPO-FMstation, 92.1 on your dial, at 6:10 a.m:each
Thursday: Aten minute senior citizen service oriented program
is being presented at that time each week. The council's staff is
conducting the program and is open to suggestion on any subject
matter or information that senior citizens would like to learn
more about. Just call Eleanor with your suggestions.

'

Acollecllon and treatment system for Albitny Is critical. !be
(;J IJ•;Hill!(lo;
hnprovc'll jJigilways, wal&lt;'l" UrHl S!'WU~C estimated cost is $2.1 million,
Rxpansion of the Jackson sewage treatment pl•nt
f;U'ill\h:s "''rJ•lho•lllgh&lt;•st priorities rcl'OHJJilcntled Wt'!inesday in
n "ftnal analysis report" on tile Impact of the Alnericun r:lectric
co l!ec~lon system was all!O recommended. 'fhe consultants also
l'ow&lt;·J' Company 's $t)!:lml!iion lnvc.~tmc nt In the Oallia-M·oigs- recommended that additional water supplies arc need()(! lor
Gallipolis, JackllOn, Athens, Albany and Mlddlei&gt;ort-Pomeroy.
Vinton County areo ~.
Completion of the Leading Creek Water Di.~trict hn'11Jc report '"" been pending since the ~'ederal Regional
Council fornwd 11 special task force last October to study the provemcnl!! is scheduled in 1974. The project will provide wa.tet
to high impact areas at Salem Center, Wilkesville, and northern
economic development in Southeastern Ohio. The study was
tot!lfolel()(t by consultanL• Hammer, Siler, George Associat.s of
Mei~s County.
Anticipated growth centers are Albany-Athens, PomeroY·
Washington D, C. and Stanley Associates of J11uscatine, lowa .
Middleport, Gallipolis, Salem Center-WIIke$ville and McArthurWednesday's hearing conducted at tll\l Gallia County
Courthouse, reviewed the lindin~• and made recommendations
Hamden·Wetlston ,
Vernon George, senior vice1Jresldent of Hammer, Siler,
better to meet the human ne-eds of Gallia , Meigs and Vinton
George
Asl!OC. said 6,000 new jobs sho11ld be created by !980, 2,600
Counties.
in the Meigs Mining Complex and 300-400 at the James M. Gavin
Top Priority
.
'n1e highe~t priority Is reconstruction of Routes 124 and 100 Plant. Area population is expected to· be Increased by 18,000
!roll) Pomeroy to Appalachian Hl~hway IRt. 346) . Estimated persons with 3,500 new households and the average Income in(,'Qs( is $JQ,460,001l financed through a 70-30 federa f,qtate grani.: creasing doublefold.
Studies indicate the Gavin Plant .along will generate, a
The improwmcntls needed by !916, butthe State has scheduled •
demand for 3,457 housing units during 111'76-80. An addltlooal 50
oompletion of the improvement in 1960.
units per year will be required io accommodate household
'111e second most important improvement is reconstruction
of llt. 160 from Gallipoli;l to Wilkesville. Estimated cost is $tl
growlh not directly generated by lh~ Gavin Plant.
million . That improvement is also needed by 1976 .
George, liarry Ros~nberg, deputy director in charge of the
The project is to be carried out by the State of Ohio in the Ohio Department of Economic and Community Development's
(Cotttlnued on page 51
•
poriod between 19711-1982.
The study emphasized that McArthur and other communities
in Vinton County will only achieve an optimum impact from the
new ~rowth pressures i!Routes324, 160and 93 are improved ,
In the absence of highway improvements sufficiept (o meet
accessibility requirements, the feasibility of bus service linking
principal population centers and the AEP em ployment concentrations should be considered.
·,
Critical sewage recommendations included a treatment
plan t and collection system to serve the American Electric
Power residential developmept at Salem Cente r and the Village
of Wilkesville, The estimated cost would be $6.2 million.
The first power prodacing unit lor the AEP development
should be ready the fall of 1974. All improvements are needed by
the fall of 1976. A management agency is needed to implement
the ~rogram.
1\y llal&lt;·ltulh~&lt;·ll Jr.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

AN AMBITIOUS PROJECT is coming 11p at the Meigs High
School in the spring.
A group has high hopes of coming up with a stage version of
"Ul Abner" and already townspeople are being recruited to
pitch in here and there with ihe production which will be a real
chore. Dwight Goins, Meigs band director, is heading the action.
f'erhaps. "Ul Abner" will mark the beginning of along run of
Broadway type prnd11ctions. Meigs certainly should have the
talent to do these things.

Albert L. Werry, ~4, of 109
Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial HospitaL He was
preceded in death by his
father, Charles John Werry.
He was. an engineer on the
Penn Central Railway • a
veteran of WW 2, a member of
Drew Webster Post 39,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, the
Br.otherhood of Locomotive
Engineers, and of Trinity
Chtirch.
Mr. Werry is survived by his

Housing, sewers, water cr~tical in Gavin impact

-·

'l

'

student~.
'

Post 39 would restore
Veterans Day as it was

-

side), examined the body when the car was pulled from about
12 feet of water by a wrecker from the Pomeroy Motor Co.
'l'he two tone tan Dodge which went out of control about 6:30
p, m. carrying Noonan to his death was not extensively
damaged.

.THE BODY OF RICHARD D. NOONAN, 38, Middleport,
was in the back seat of his vehicle when .it reached the top of
the bank along the Ohio River in Middlepottj11st after 9 p. m.
Wednesday . Dr. R. R. Pickens, Meigll County Coroner (in-

Pomeroy Drew Webster Post
No. ·39, American Legion,
favors restoring the observance of VeU!rans' Day to
Nov. 11.
A resolution supporting H.B.
407 was approved by the post
Monday night. H.B. 407 would
undo the Veterans' Day
change.
Letters of the post's stand on
the Issue w!ll be sent to Ohio
representatives, Paul Case!
said.
In other business two
representatives to Boys' State
at Ashland College this summer reviewed their experience, Ronald Couch was
spOnsored by Drew Webster
Post and Joe Rosenbaum by

Beta Beia Preceptors of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Sam Hysell, a new ·member,
and William Ratliff, a transfer,
.were accepted, Rod Kart, Ed
Whaley, M. Swisher and F.
Wolfe were named on . a
committee to stimulate in- ·
teres! in and promote the bonus :
for Vietnam VeU!rans and to
plan an open house with
Vietnam veterans as special
guests.
It was recommended that all
discharged veierans have their
separation papers recorded.
Wednesday, Sept. 26 was set
aside as Past Commander's
night, Refreshments were
served by Fred Wolfe.

'J; I

j

I

I

I

IF IT HADN'T BEEN for these three people, a car whicll went Into the Ohio River near the
Ohio Hotel in MidcUeport Wednesday night might have goito unnoticed. They arc Mr. and Mrs .
Dale Hyse ll, Grant St., and Mrs. Lon a McKinley, right , who lives near the scene on Fron\ St.
The Hysells were traveling upriver on Front St. when Mrs . Hysell noticed a car disappearing
into the river. She culled attention to the sinklntl vehicle to het' husbanrl, About the same time,
Mrs. McKinley observed bubbles rising as the death car sa nk. They s nm m o~e d the Middleport
emergency squad.

Area grants top $226,000
WASHINGTON - l'l•e Appalachian Reg ional Com·
mission ~nd llep, Clarence E.
Miller have announced the
approval of two grants
totalling more than $226,000,
The first, , lor $260,346,
provides lor tho thtrd-year
funding or a family planningmaternal care pr ogram

originally coordinated br the
.Ohio · Valley Health Services
Foundation of Athens hnd now
operated by Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Ohio.
The !Wtdlng will enable the
organization to conduct over
300 planned parenthood •nd
maternal care clinics In ten
loca tion s throughout

$outheastern Ohio. State and
local sources will provide
$88,392 for the program.
ARC and Rep. Miller also
announced approval of a $6,000
grant ror third-year funding o!
the home health-care program
affiliated with Veterans
Momorl•l Hospital, located In
(Continued on page &lt;I

•
'

.

THE TlfREE DIVERS above had Important roles In recovering a car which went into the
Ohio !liver at Middleport at6:38 p, m. Wednesday. They . are, 1 tor, Roger Hyse ll and Jim
Lavendar, both of the Mason Rescue Squad, and Wayne Davts of tho Midi)Jeport squad . 1'he
divers were able to locate the vehicle and hook a cable toli.
·
·

Phone cables cut in Meigs

124.

Pen0111 UvlnJ out U, 8,
Route 33, •t DerwJn,
customer today telephone cables were Burlingham and lhadlwW l!t

Don Pearch,
service supervisor for General cut on Wiliow Creek Road, . without pta. lln'lot 1111111
Telephone Company, reported which 18 located off old route rtpalrl ....... be Mid.

....

(
'
y

�1m. .

, ~, ~, , , ,

•

l'Mets crush Pirates 7-3; .Dodgers wzn
ny sn:vF: wu.sn:tN
UPI Sp~~ns Wrilt&gt;r
Yogi Ht·n·u is lu&lt;)kin!!

By Col. Mole

&lt;T ush Ill&lt;· l'u·ali'"· 7-:1, fur lh&lt;·

allowed
uml make n 11\ad thn.~ · ruus till ll solo hun1cr by
~&lt;'nnnbll• urthc divisiou I'IH'l" . 11\-"ni•• Stt•IHldt in the firsl, a
" t finally hav&lt;• my wholt• rm ~o-."t'orin~ single by Dave
('ash 11fh-r Stennett triplQ in the
!t' :ill l Ui l(' k ," Yogi said. " I 'Vl'
bt.•cu :-;aying si n('t' lht· lwgin· third nml Willie Stlii'KCll's 11sl
nin~ of the seuson we t'Ould win homer in Ltll' sixlh. And 'llt~-t
the divisiml if we i&lt;lny henlthy Me(; raw pitched three ilmin~
... Pl'f,pil\ l'an ''r:ticize nil they of two·hit, scoreless o·clief to
W~Ult. They ('fill IJhunc Ill(' ror earn his 2'2nd save. ·
In othrr NL gu mes, Chicago
our losing if th-.y wnnt but
wh('n wt• got back together, Wl' beat . Montreal,
8·6,
Philade lphia trippod St, Louis,
~ t~ulcd winnirtH."
:!·2, San Diego whipped
,Junes is 'fup Gun
Cleon .Jones was Bena 's top Houston, 6-3, a(ter the Astros
b'llll last nig ht w1th five runs beat the Padres, ~. in the
batted in on two long homers. opener of the twin bill, Los
The Mets now «re tied wiU1 St. Angeles downed Atla nta, 1·1,
Louis fm· t11 ird, only a half. and Cincinnati defeated San
gnme bllck of Montreal and!' , ~·rancisco ·, 5-l.
[n the American League,
behind Pittsburgh - after
. spe nding most of the season in Detroit drubbed Baltimore, tOlllh tilm· in Iii nu•din gs lhis

Ull)l'i'

l.&gt;l·illiunt £•wry niuhl.
Br.rra, whos4:• Mt.•L'\ lmvr
suHt•n•d 'many injmics this

ocason, wus lhl' object or
r ritkism iur.sday night when
!w bruughl in n I'Ookit• wilh no
major ·league expcrienn• lo

pitch to Pittsburgh in a rru&lt;'ial
spot in the ninth inning of a dl)o
or~lie game. The rookie, !Job
Apodaca , wlllked two but the
Mcts held on to squeeze out a!),
~ vic:tory and Berra 's neck was
saved.
He fo und only admirers
surrounding him Wedncsdny

night as the Mets played
·beautiful baseball, fla shing
power, pitching and defense to

Houston In th ' s&lt;•C&lt;)n&lt;l ;:ami!.
Mllwuuk&lt;'&lt; clipped Cleveland, Cliff Johnson's lwo•·un double
7-1, Ouklun(l shut out Min- in lh • scv&lt;•nlh Inning provid •d
ltcSOlH1 !\-0, Chicago edged Houston with tho decisive run
Knnsns City, 1·3, ln 12 iomln!JS, In lhc first gume.
lion Coy's boscs-londed
mal Califotnia defeated Texas
sln~
le drove In two runs lo
twiL1l, 6-2 and U-4 .
Two-run homers by Rl k climax u four-run rally In the
Monday, Ron Santo and Billy eighth Inning that gave Los
Willimns currit'li the Cubs over Angeles its triumph over
Montre;1l after the E;xpos had Allantu, which played without
jumped out to a :;.1 lead in the Hank Aa1'Qn .
The Braves had taken a I ~
fi rst Inning.
lead
in the fourt h inning on
Denny Doy le doubled to
hig hlight a two-rur1 fif th inning Dave Johni!Qn's 43rd home run,
and help Philadelphia's Steve a major league record for
Carlton wi n his . 12th game second basemen. He broke the
against 19losses at the expense mark set by Rogers Hornsby ·in
of St. Louis.
1922.
Fred Norman, a mid-season
Duublcs l.£ad San Diego
Fred Kendall and ! von
Mur rell punched two-run douGET DOWN TO
bles to lead San Diego over
I, llt"l'"' bent New York, 3·1,

l lw t·dtur ,
Ceor~t· Stunt• , 12~S.

\'t': ll·

:t , Tt ~· nail""
· I " I Mil I
' '" '""'' , Ill •'\kll'l·P01111'rO)', 0 ,

,.,fmuling."i
1

~~~ ~l:.d~~~~~t:~H:~~~~~.

acquisition, won hls lllh game
fllr Cinrlnnutl on a lwO·hitlcr
as the Hll\lo rcdu •ed their NL
West title clincloln~ magic
number to llv with lhelr
victory over San FranciiiCO.
Joe Morgu n opened the
fourth wi th his 24th homer &amp;nd
sin~ les by Dl•n Driessen and
Tony Pere:~, a double by Cesar
Geronimo • nd a single by
Norman addL'&lt;l three ru ns.

~daire

Skinny

Lo' A n ge l &amp;~" A tlanta 1
Cl nclnne,tls san Fran 1

nmost
~here.

Today ' s ProbJblt Plfcher s

!All Tlm oo E OTI

Mon treal (Renko 14-IOJ at
Chicago ~ Jtn k l n gs 12. JSJ, 2: 30

p.m.

Cinci nnati (Gri m sle y JJ .9) at
San Fran c isco ( Br yant 22 -11 )

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
8:05 p.m .
Nolan Ryan holds .the AmeriSt . L ou i s (Fost er IJ .8 ) at can League's season strikeout
Ph iladelph ia {Ruthven 6·9)
7:l5 p.m.
' record today and a 27-year old
Alfan ta I Schu eler $·1l at Los controve rsy has been laid to
Ang eles ( Down ing 9-9), 11 p . m .
rest.
(Only game s sch eduled )
Friday' s G•mes
Ryan wrote a record into the
Montreat at Chi cago
record
books Wednesday night
St. Lou is at Phil a, nlghl
Pittsburgh at New York , night
when he struck out seven
Ci ncinnat i at L os A ng, night
San Diego at San Fran , 2. tw l· batters in the California
n lte
Angels' 6-2 first-game victory
· ' (On tv gam es sc heduled )
over the Texas Rangers and
raised his season total w ~5 .
American L.eaaue
Eut
Whose record dld he surpass?
w. I. pet . g.b.
89 62 ..589
83 69 .546 (1 1/,

Boston

Detroit
New York

ao
11 .530 9
IS 78 ,,90 15
72 80 .474 171f2
67 86 .• 38 23

M l ~aukee

Cleveland

, •
•·
:.

NL fails to act on request

another to Texas.
And there remain problems
to be ironed out in San Diego,
where the Padres have leases
and agreements. A $12-million
damage suit against the
· Padres and the National
League stemming from the
planned move will be in court
for trial Friday.

·;~:=::::~::::::::::::::::::::;::;:;:::::::;;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:~:~:!:~:~8::~::::~::::::::::::::::~;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:::~:·

CHICAGO (UP!) - ,Joseph There certainly wasn't a
Danzansky, who hopes· to 'give turndown . I don't want to read
major
league baseball a third anything into it other than wha t
•• e,:,
,- ~
~ chance to catch on in the
ha ppened.''
:: @~~
J! na tion 's capital , displayed The league meeting was
little concern over the National ca ll e~ solely. to discuss and,
:![\ League's failure to act on his perhaps, act on a bid by
N
proposal to buy the San Diego .D an za ns~y ~ nd two associate.s
~
By Milton Rlchma~
\\\\ Padres and move them to to purchase the Padres for·$12
UPI Sports Editor
:;:; Washington D.C.
millibn and move them to the
l . &lt;;•.
•
"I would have preferred it if nation's capital.
,. NEW YORK (UP!) - This could turn out to be the most dif· we'd walked out with a fran!lut the fiv~·h our meeting •
;: ficult day of Willie Mays' entire life.
·
chise," Danzansky said after produced no action by the
;: It could be the day he tells the world he 's all through.
the 12 club owne.rs failed to act owners. r
;; The Mets are calllng a news conference and if it's for the on the proposal in a meeting in
"The Na tional League re·
• • purpose everyone suspects, then 42-year-old Willie Mays will Chicago Wednesday. " But I
cessed and will hold another
: : announce he will hang up his glove in 10more days.
dmi' t reel there was a decision. · meeting at the call of the
! ; He may smile and even kid around a little when he does say
president,'' League President
: ' that because the trauma that comes with such a decision already
Chub Feeney announced after
passed to some degree, but one thing you can be absolutely
the session ended. ~~our mem• sure of is that Willie Mays never will really do anything harder in
bers wanted more time to think
'
The
•• his life.
about the situation and decided
:: Baseball IS his life, and generally when it comes to this stage of
DE\IOTEDTOTH E
not to take a vote today."
INTEREST O F
. :; their careers, most players are like Willie. They find it tough to
MEIGS -M ASON AREA
"! would say the next
CHESTER L. . TANNEHill,
: ; ' say good-bye.
Exec . Ed .
meeting
would be within a
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
•• Some find it almost impossible.
City Edit or
month," Feeney added.
,' .
Run into Super Problems
Published daily e&gt;ecept
It was understood \nat
S,uurd!!l'f by T he Ohio V!!i i iey
'
SUperstars particularly seem to run into super problems
P ub ii ~hlng Company , 111
Danzansky had met all stipulaCourt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio,
, quitting the game. Most of them put one hand on the Bible and
4576!1. B u, i ne~ Ort ice Phone
tions for acceptance of his bid
!192-215(). Editor ial Pnone 992.
:: say - "I'll never keep sitting here on the bench and be one of
2157 .
for the Padres and that the
,. Ulose hangers.on no sir ' not me" - but when the time comes no
Secon d class postage paid
league was attempting to add a
a t Pomer oy , Ohio .
•· one wants to go.
l'htional
advert i sing
that, in leasing a
stipulation
r epr esentat i ve Bol tine lll ·
:: Look at some ol!\he Hall of Famers.
Gallagher , tnc ., 12 East 42nd
stadium, attendance must
St., New Yo r k., New York
:: Bob Fellervowedbe'd never hang around once he was past his
SubHr i p llon
rates :
• average over 900,000 annually
De livered or carri er where
: · peak, but he did.
ava il ab le 55 cent!. per week. ;
for three yea rs or the lease
:: So did Carl Hubbell, AI Simmons and Paul Waner as well as
By Motor Route where
would be canceled.
carr ier
service
not
·; Lefty Grove and Early Wynn. Each of them didn't want to quit
avalla bt e : One month . S2. By
.Should Danza nsky's pur.
ma i l in OhiO and W . Ya , One
, • until he recorded his 300th win. Jimmie Foxx was so reluctant to
Vea r . S\6 ; SIK monll'lt;, .a.so.
chase sucoeed, it would be the
Three
months.
\5 .50 .
,: tal\e off his uniform, he even tried his hand at pitching for the
Elsewh er e $18 year ; siK
third ·major . league baseball
:: wartime Phillies when he was 37.
mon th1 $P ,50 ; th r ee months .
team to play in Washington.
\ 6. Subscr iption price In ·
' · Willie Mays, five years older now than Foxx was when he
el udes
Sundar
T i mes ·
Two previous teams, both in
Sentinel.
: retired, also has found it extremly difficult to say goodbye.
the Ameri can League, were
:: He knows he'll miss the camaraderie, the feeling of being "one
:; of the guys" in the clubhouse as·well as the competition .
: • "The competition, I suppose, is what I missed most right after
:; I retired," confesses Sandy Koufax, who had to leave the game
•' prematurely at 30 because of arm trouble.
:; Babe Ruth also did plenty of agonizing before he finally packed
: : it iri at the age of 40 in 1~3 :;,
''
With the Braves
1'·
the Yankees had let him go during the winter and now he was
' with the bedraggled lastplace Boston Braves.
::
, · Hal Lee was the regular left fielder for the Braves, but on this
:: day, Ruth's last active,one in baseball, Manager Bill McKechnie
· FRWAY ONLY
;; decided to start the Babe in left field in Cincinnati.
·
• Hundreds of thousands of persons, who really weren't there,
••. later went around telling everybody they saw Babe Ruth play his
ALCOA 18'
',, laB\ big league game.
: · But one man who WAS there and remembers the event vividly
: · is Milwaukee's Frank Lane, then assistant general manager,
:: farm director, road secretary, publicity man - ·everything but
ROLL
;: No. 1 electrician - for the Reds.
,
"It was a hot Sunday afternoon late in May, and ooly the da y
:. before Ruth had hit three homers in Pittsburgh,:' says J,.ane. .
:: "We, by 'we' ·r mean the Cincinnati Reds, 'played our horpe
:; games In Redland Field then and there was this hank, or incline,
•· in left field. As I say it was a blistering day and you could see
•
:. · Babe was feeling the heal, especially since we were hitting the
: · Boston pitcher pretty good and keeping their outfielders busy.
::
.
Looked Uke a Hound Dog
lfz GAL LIQUID
l' · "From the start of the game, Babe had to chase a lot of balls up
• and down that left field incline and after awhile he gol so weary
! pursuing all those base hits he looked like a hound dog with his
tongue hanging oot.
"In the seventh lonlng, l belive it was, he chased another ball
: which ricocheted off the leftfield fence and when he relayed the
t; bllllnyou could see he had had it.
.
,. "A CGUple of minutes later, wit~ the inning still in progress and
.
• without evtn calling 1ime,' Ruth
made a gesture toward the
:. Br1vt1' dugout, lnlonnlng them he was leaving. He then wal~ed
:: In thlt majestic way of his to the clubho.use located in back of left
:• fteld. He loolred llkehewauaying 'Who the hell needs this?'

: ~~

:; ~
~

.

Today's

,t~.,.

Sport Parade

N

i:

MARTA D

moved, on{! to Minnesota and

;: t:

::lias

Daily sentinel

and
E 'n CORIGIN .~LS

Long Dresses
Plain colors, prints.

Let's face it. When you're
looking for a shoe, you
want a finely -c rafted
product that offers qualIty, style and comfort.
Thom MeAn knows this
so they make their shoes.
with you in mind. Their
time · prove styles are
made by skilled crafts·
men who use quality
leathers and longwear- ·
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pair.
And Thorn MeAn does all
of this at a price that's
right. Because they know
that selling their shoes at
a reasonable price is another important basic in,
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for In a shoe. Th is style
is only "16.99,

heritage
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Main at Sycamore
Pomeroy, Ohio

Your Thom MeAn Store

FOIL

LIQUID
PLUMR

$.

19

90 61 .596

Ch icago
Minnesota
~aiiforn l a

74 18 .487 161h
73 77 .487 J6l/ 2

82 10 .ll9

a•;,

11 79 .• 73 18'1•
53 98 .35 1 37

Texas

Kansas City (Splltlorff 17. \2 ),
8: 30p .m .

"

!Only games scheduled )
Friday's Games
Cal if at Texas, twilight
Chicago atKan City , night
Oakland at Minnesota
Baltimore at Milw, n ight
Boston at Detroit , n ight
~Only games scheduled)
Major League Rt!sults
By United Preu tn1trnatlonalq
National League

BAKER
FURNITURE

11st gamol
San Diego ·
Houston
Kirby.,
Corrales;

003 100 001 - 5 9 2

j0Q 010 30x- 8 11

0
and
and

(7)
Griffin 13·61
Edwards , Jutze (8 ). LP- Kirby
(8 -17). ~iRs - Locklear ( 2nd),

Middleport, 0.

Cal~well

Gallagher 12nd l.
!2nd game I

san Diego
201 003 ooo- 6 9 1
Hou5ton
100 100 001 - 3 B o
Troedson (7 -8) an·d Kendall ,
Corrales (7 ); .Konieczny, York
( 8) and Jutze. LP - Konleczny
(0·11 . HR - Johnson (lstJ .

Montreal
Chicago

500 000 DOl 001 050 20x -

611 0
8 11 1

Torrez , Marshall (Sl , McA·

nolly

171. Caskey 181 end

Stinson ;
Locker

Paul (6 ) ,
and
Hundley ,
Rudolph (9) . WP- Reuschel (14 ·
15 ). LP- Marshell (12 · 111. HRs
- Monday (25th )', Santo (20th ),
Wilt lams (20th J, Alou ( 1st) .
Reusche l,
(9)

St. Louis
Phlla

100 000 001- 2 10 0
ooo 120 oox- l 10 1

Murphy , Andrews ( 5) , Fist'!er
(51 , Nagy (7) and Simmons ;

carlton ( 12··19) and Boone: LP -

Murphy IJ.I I.
Pit!Sbgh
101 001 000- 3 10 0

N.V .
021 010 03x- 7 10 0
· Briles , Walker 16) , G iust i (7)
and Sangulllen ; Stone , McGraw

'·'

(7)

and Grote. LP - Brlles (Jl .

13 l. HRs - Staro·erl (-41st) , Jones
2 (6th &amp; !th I. Stennetl ClOth ).

c

Atlanla

NW s t o~g

000 100 000- 1

6

ll Chl o

Ford Mustang n. A new class of.small car: First Class.

HR - Johnson (4Jrdl .
Cincinnat i
San F ran

you o luxunous leve l of standa rd equi pmen t
you p roba bl y never expected to find a o sma ll
ca r . Ye t M us tong ll stil l ca rries on economical

000 -401 000- 5

e1

010 000 000- 1 ' 2 I
Norman (12 -12) and Bench ,

' I B dl

C

llh ·

K Ing I.,. '
ra ev , arr ers
(-41 , Willoughby &lt;91 end Sadek .
LP - Bradley (13 · 121· HR - MOr ·
gan (24th l ·

sma ll-cor pr ice . Mustong.ll comes in two
d 1fferent body styles, four differe nt mode ls.

See them soon.

American Leagut
(1st Game)

California

expected
to re,.., ...e
•

11-1

1

42,

The announcement had been
expected for several days ever
since the Mets announced that
they will hold Willie Mays·
Appreciation Night next Tues· ·
day night .
Mays was one of the most
electrifying ~nd exciting play.
ers ever to play the game since
Alexander Cartwright first set
the bases 90 feet apart a century or so ago. .
But his skills have been
tarnished by age and injury
and he is hitting only .211 this
season in · 66 games. He has
been hobbled with swollen
knees, an inflamed · shoulder
and bruised ribs this year.
Mays has no worry a bout his
security . He's been making
$165,1100 a year as a player and
under the terms of his contract,
he'll still receivz $50,000 a year
un\11 age 50 even though he's
not playing.
Mays now has 660 homers In
his career, including six ·this
season, and only Babe Ruth
and Henry Aaron are ahead of
him . If he hadn't lost almost
two full seasons in the majors,
he probably would have chal·
lenged Ruth's career record of
714 homers. Mays was the NL
homer champion three
times.

HOUSTON
(UP! )
Tonight:s ." Battle of the
Sel(es.1'chapter 2," between
Billie Jean King and Bob.by
Riggs has been phiyed for a lot
of laughs.
·
"Both of us are making
money,'' says Billie Jean. "So
this is a kind of marriage
between us." The audience
laughs. ·Riggs' eyes bulge.
Stuff like that.
But there should be no
mistake about it. When the two
of them get together tonight for
their $100,000, winner-take-all,
best-of-five set, nationally televised tennis extravaganza between first and third bases in
the Astrodome, Billie Jean
King would truly love to bas~
Bobby Riggs to the point of
embarrassment.
' It all starts at 8 p.m. EDT
with an estimated 35,00&lt;HO,IIOO
expected. Riggs was the choice
of 20 of 27 writers who will be
covering the match.
World heavyweight cham·
pion George Foreman, who
doesn '\ play much tennis but
who will present the $10\l,IIOO
check to the winrier, believes
Billie Jean will win.
Las Vegas oddsmakers have
set the oddS at 2\'l-1 in favor of .
Riggs.

-

Major League Leaders
Bv United Press tnternetlonal
Lndlng B11tters
Nation•! Lugue
g . ilb r . .h. pet .
Rose, Cln 151 638 108 221 .3-46
Wtsn , HOU 152 55-4 93 175 .316
Cdeno, Hou 13 2 502 e1 158 .315
Hunt, Mtl 111 401 61 124 .309
Crdnl , Ch i 1J5 487 76 149 .306
Madox , SF lJl 541 73 165 .305
. Perez, Cin 144 SJ7 68 164 .305
St rgel : Plt

Gaor. All
Smns. St.L

(2nd Gamel

Callfqrnla

Texas

lot ~ of solid co r to go w ith them .
A new young look, o smoo th and
steody ride. That's Torino '74 .

Otis, KC
scon. Mil
Dvls , Bol
230 102 010- 9 15 1 Y.az , Bos
JOO 001 ooo- 4 a o Cpedo, ~os

Wr l g~t (11 -19 ) and Sands ;
Hudson , Brown (2), Henninger

151, Foucaull 161. Allen 18 1 ond

Suarez . LP - Hud&amp;on {-4 -2). HR s
' Rob Jnson I 27th) , Fregos l

16th) .
Mllw

Grun Torino Brough om 2·Door Hardtop
!.hown with optiono l deluxe bumpe r group.

Clev il land

Slaton

1974 Ford LTD. The quiet full-size.

110 100 l iD- 7 U 1

000 010 012- 4 9 1
Sprague (9) and

· Porler J Tidrow , Kekl ch (7) and

Dun can ,

WP- Siaton

(1 3·131.

Holf, Min

145
t•a
131
142
Ill

thot's l TO lor '7 4, A high level of

See all the 74's from Ford on September 21.
The closer you look, the better we look.

GAS FLOOR
1FURNACES

FORD

10,000 ATO,OOO

FORD DIVISION

BTU

'

.....

Amerlun League : Jackaon ,
J1 ; Burroughs , Te x 28 1
Robin son , Cel 121 F lak , Bos ,
Oti s. I( ~ and Ban do , Oak 26.
Run1 Batted trl

N1tlo011

League : . Stargel l,

GAS &amp; OIL
CIRCULATING
HEATERS
Up to 70,000 BTU

'

'

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AmerlciJn LeC~gue: Jackson ,
Oak 11J ; Mayberry, KC 99 ;
Scott , Mil 98 ; May, Mil 92 ;
OtiS , KC 9 1..

DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) Melvin's Woe and Ricci Reenie
Time share the favorite's role
ip today's 28th running of the
Little Brown Jug at the
Delaware County Fairgrounds.
Arecord field of 17 3-year-old
pacers will compete for part of
the record purse of $120,000 in
the third leg of pacing's Triple
Crown.
Joe O'Brien, who will drive
Melvin's Woe, says the horse
has had "bad legs all season,''
but he is not too concerned.
"He raced very well in the Jug
Trial in Detroit and is training
weB," O'Brien said. Melvin's
Woe won the trial, his fifth
victory ·of the year;
The other favorite, Rieci
Reenie Time , opened the
season rather poorly but has
come on strong since early
August , winning the Tom
Gaines Memorial at Vernon
Downs, the Adios Stakes at The
Meadows, and the Jug Preview
at Scioto Downs.
"I didn't try to get him really
sharp early because they only
have so many good races,''
said driver Harold 'Sonny"
Dancer. "! wanted him to be
ready for th e big money

\

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second division, listed at 7·2
even though the colt has drawn
the outside No. 8 post position.
The biggest challenge to
Melvin's Woe probably will
come from Rob Ron Ritzer,
driven ~y last year's winning
driver, Keith Waples, and
listed af7-2, and Valiant Brei, a
9-2 pick driven by Lucien
Fontaine.
With Armbro Nesbit as Ricci
Reenie Time's top competition,
Jr . R. Skipper was given the
third nod in the·second division
lisfed at 9-2 odds.

WHITE AND COLORS
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LUNCHES AT • ••

Oak

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC., 461 S. THI .. D ST., MIDDLEPORT, 0.

I

TIME, AND DELICIOUS

SF lB .

'.

.,..

Singielon , Mil 99.

Baltimore, 10-1, Oakland shut
out Minnesota , ~. Boston ·
topped New York, 3-1, and
Milw a uk ee out sco r e d
Cleveland, 7-4, in other AL
ga mes .
National Lea~ ue scores were
Cincinnati 5 San Francisco I,
New York 7 Pitlsburgh 3,
Chicago 8 Montrea l 6, San
Diego over Houston, 6-3, afl.('r
an 8-5 loss, Philadelphia 3 St.
Louis 2 and l.ps Angelo~ 4
Atlanta I. '
The Angels staked Ryan to a
3-0 lead in the first Inning on
run-scoring singles by Frank
Robinson, Lee Stanton and
Billy Parker. Ryan, who raised
his record to 19-16, allowed five
hits, including a homer by· Jeff
Burroughs. Robinson hit a tworun homer and knocked in four
runs to lead the Angels' 15-hit
attack in the second game.
Carlos .May doubled and
scored on Buddy Bradford's
single in the 12th inning to give
Jhe White Sox their victory
after John Mayberry tied the
score at 3-3 for Kansas City
with a two-out, two-run homer
in the ninth . That blow
prevented Cy Acosta from
preserving Wilbur Wood's 25th
win with the reliever eventually gelling credit for the
victory .
Culeman Makes It 21
Joe Coleman pitched seven.
hit shutout hall for eight in-

ro SQiOOL

122 -i03 50 119 .295

trunk to th e Impressive li st of l TO·
features Stee l bolt ed rod +o l t+res .
Automa t+c tronsmiu+on·. f'ower
steering, Power brakes, ond more.

Ford LTD f'roug hori1 2·door Hordtop shown wi lh
optlono l deluxe wheel covers, white sidewall
!Ire' and delu;&lt;e bumper group .
·

IrS BACK

Home Runs
NJtiOnll Lea gut: . Johnson,
All43 ; Staroell , Pitt 41 ; Evans ,
All 39 ,· Aaron . Atf and Bonds,

Ct(Jftsmcnsh+p wherever you look,
from the fd of tho doors, hood ond

All slondo•d on lTD foo'7 4,·

HEY KIDS!

570 87 172 .302
567 91 m .302
529 52 159 .l0.1
512 79 153 .299
526 50 156 .m

LP- Tidrow (lJ.I l l. HR s- Scolt Pill tl l 1 Bench , Cln IOl ; Mov ,
Hov 100 ; E vans, Atl , ana
121sll , Pull 'I l71h 1.

Qu10t, luxur+OU5, beoullful ly bui lt:

"Wt· wen,• lucky, really."'
»&lt;•id 1\nll&lt;,rson, "to, get M p\t.
r•hf'r with his •bility .
The Ht-ds complete their
Cand lestick Park tKJhedule for
the year today by sending RfllliJ
Normun
used
his
screwball
Nnrrnun swd Huzzy Uavmd,
in hi" rnond- pick in~ up Nor- Grimsley (13-~1 againt1t Ron
lilt' P;ulJ't•S w·ner.a I IIIUIIttJ.w r . d!cf'l lvt• ly· in IH'all n ~ the man lurocd thing.&gt; around.
Bryant 122-11 )
(;iunt..o,
;
r,,,,
llw
sccund
thnc
~hir
h·rt ill" him w pkk 111M dub
""' ltcds or ltuyals aold ycil r . The (Jlht·r· tlu1c he
Norman IJll id he didn't lwsitolr stopped then, on a three.hil
shuUoul.
ll scconfL
The Giants' only run ca me
"1 l&lt;ild Bu'·'Y make it the
when
G~ry Matthews opened
1\t'&lt;ls," said Norman . "Ten
minutes lal.('r he told me the the second with • single, wenl
deal was ccrnplell.-d. ff we go to second on a wild pitch, to
on ~· w in now, I 'll always be third on a ion~ fly and scored
thankful wBw.zy for giving me on Mike Sadek's sacrifice fly .
The only other hit orr him was a
a chance to pick my club."
In Wednesday night's game, two-&lt;&gt;ul eighth Inning s in~le by
Tito ~'ucntes .Tile Red s, meanwhile,
chased Tom Bradley, now J:~
12, in the fourth on .Joe
Morga n's bases-empty homer,
Cesar
Geronim o's two-run
nlngs to win hls 21st game for
the Tigers. John Hiller worked s ingle and Norman's rtB I
4th &amp; Locust
Mldd 1111011 I Q,
the ninth against the Orioles Single.
Reds Manager Sparky Anand received creditfor hls 37th
derson
said there is no question
save - equalling the major
league mark set last •eason by
Clay Carroll of the Reds.
Aurelio Rodri guez' three-run
triple was the big blow of a
seven·run fifth inning which
clinched the game for the
Tigers. TI1e Orioles' lead was
reduced to a still healthy 61/,
ga mes in the AL East and their
magic number remained at
five.
·
Vida Blue pitched a three·
hitter and struck out 10 to win
his 19th game for the A's. Ray
Fosse drove in one run with a
double in the second. iMing,
Bert Campaneris homered.· in
the third and Reggie JackSon
drove in a run with a sacrifice
fly in the eighth. Joe Decker
was the loser for Minnesota.
Tommy Harper hit two
doubles, scored two runs and
stole two bases to lead the Red
Sox over the Yankees behind
Luis Tiant's four-hit, 10-strike7
oul pitching. 'fiant raised his
record to 19-12 while Mel
Stottlemyre's dropped to 14-16.
George Scott drove in four
runs with a single and his 21st
homer bringing Jim Slaton's
record to 13-13 for the Brewers.
Dick Tidrow was routed in 61-3
innings and suffered his 15\h
lass fo_r Cleveland.

Melvin's Woe, who will race
Pitching
in the first division, and Ricci
National League : Bryant , SF
22·11 ; Gullelt. Cln 18·8: Billing. Reenie Time, a second division
ham , Cin 18·9: Sutlon , LA IH ; runner, are both listed at 3-1.
Se aver, NY 17 -10.
O'Brien will have two top
Amerlnn League : Wood , Chi
24 - 19 ;
Palmer ,
Bait
21·8; cracks at the Jug tiUe. He will
135 480 9-4 146 .304 Coleman , Del 21-15 ; Hunter,
drive Armbro Nesbit in the
1&lt;5 6ll ~3 198 .302 Oak 20 -4; Holtzman , Oak 20 ·12,
151 582 56 Ill .301

Amtrlctn LtltUt

301 001 001 -

( 4-9). H R s- Burroughs )21th&gt;.. .

Torino's got a new young look this
year. Exci ting ly res tyled outside ...
eMcitlng new features in side. And

That's where the controversy
Is involved.
For years "official" baseball
record books listed anAL mark
·or 343 strikeouts by Rube
Waddell of the Philadelphia
Athletics in !904.' Bob Feller of
the Cleveland Indians came
along in 1946 to strike out 348
hatters and lay claim to a
record.
Some statisticians, however,
pored through the box scores or
Waddell's games in 1904 and
announced that the old leftbander actually had struck out
349 batters. All records of those
very old days are suspect in
part, so some modern record
books have carried Feller's 348
as the mark and others have
listed Waddell's 349.
The Only Question
Now the only question is
whether Ryan can surpass the
major league mark of 382 set
by Sandy Koufax of the Los
Angeles Dodgers in 1965.
.,
The Angels downed Texas, 94, in the second game of their
doubleheader, Chicago scored
a 4-3, 12-inning triumph over
Kansas City, Detroit defeated

Battle of Sexes
set tonight

6 12 1
.342
Te~eas
010 ooo 010- 2 5 1 Cl!lrw , M i ri 139g, 538
ab 86184
r . .h. pet.
Ryan (19- 16) lind Stinson ; May , Mil 148 601 9; 185 .308
Broberg , Brown (3 }, Durham M1.1rcr , NY 151 582 80 177 .304
{5 ) and Billings . LP - Brobero Munsn , NY 1-42 499 79 15t .30J

1974 Ford Torino. The solid mid-aize.

Di··~o rvr $llii,OIKI and [ I noU(11C redu ced t.:lnc uuu.ttl 's magu·
ur rl'ingc pluycrfi.
nllfllht'l' Lu (1\11' .
The Hc&lt;lll wrr&lt;• only three
A JIUIHh4'r or dubs Wt·r· · lu
}UIIllt'S over .500 H»•l day iind
ljlt' hlddlng fo l' Non11U11 niH'i:
luul a l&gt;lt,.h in~ staff that looked Ill&lt;' Padres dechtcrl to mak •
like a rli!lllstcr ureu. The day IJi111 avro llt~bl e . Out ll1c l~e d~
lifter they 11il'ked UP Norman offen'&lt;l, in addition ~~ money ,
th~: Reds g~ve lhim hls first
outfielder Gene 1.ol'klcar and a
slarl and he pitched a G-1l mln r league r•ltchcr.
shutout a~a l nsl Pittsburgh .
While mrul! clubs, including
Sim" then he hlls won ll or 16 Ute Giants, oflered n1oney only,
decisions, including a 5-l two- the Kansas City Roya ls mathitter over the San Francisco ched the Reds· offer as to
Giants Wednesday nioht lhat

0

Los Ang
000 000 04x- 4 7 1
P . Nlekro , Closter 18 ), J .
Nlekro (e) and Casanova ;
Messersm ith, Brewer (9 ) and
Ferguson . WP - Messersm ith
(14 .10) . LP - P. Nlekro (1 3-9).

[

Mustang . .. even a bit shorter thon the orig ina l
one. It's more th an a new Mus tang . It's o whole
new class of smal l cor : Firs t Closs. In every way .
From its 1ew el-l+ke exterior to its ha ndsomely
appo inted Interior, the new Mu stan g Ugives

.:7

NEW YORK (UP!) - Willie
Mays
is apparently ready to
Detroit 10 Baltimore 1
Cal ifornia 6 Tel(as , 2. 1st
· ring down the curtain on one of
Californ ia 9 Texas 4, 2nd
the most illustrious careers in
Ol!lkland 3 Minnesota 0
Today•s Probable Pllchers
baseball history.
tAll Times EDT)
· ·
k
California (S inger 18·13 and .-: The New Yor Mets have
~and l·61 at Texas iGogolewskl'.· called a . news conference at
3·6and Dunning 0·81, 2. 7 p.m. 11 ·30 a m EDT today at Shea
Oakland
( Abbott 1-0 and
·
• •
·
Odom l ·ll l at Mlnnesola IGollz Stadium for Mays to make his
6 10 2 6 30 official announcement that
•·•
p.m.and Hands · 1. • '
Boltlmore (Palmer 21·81 ··1 he's retiring from the game to
Detroit
(Frym on 6·11 I. a p.m .
wind up a 22-year career at age
Ctllcago (Forster 6·8) . at

Ford inlroduces the 74's.
n.e news is big, medium and small.
.
·At your Ford Dealer's.

Mustang TI is 19 inches shorter th an los t yea r,. s

May·.... rs
..

Wednesd•v's Results
Milwaukee 7 Cleveland 4
Boston 3 New York 1
Ch l 4 Kan City 3, 12 Inns

MIDDLEPORT

.

AWMINUM

w. I. pet. ·g.b.

Oakland

Kansas Clly

.

..

west

,

Ryan owns new strikeout mark

l : 15 p.m.
'
Plltsburoh 1R: ooker 9-5) at ·
New York ( Koosman 12· 151 ,

Baltimore

Guinther, Debbie Roush, Rhonda West, Pat Vaughan, Nancy
Crow, Pam Vaughan and Autumn Sayre; back row, Kathy
Francis, coach; Lee Ord, Trina Ferrell, Carole Michael, Jill
Warner, Demaris Ash, Lisa Allen and Debbie West. Kenny
Wiggins is the manager.

v.b.

I. pet.
$QJ
!5
"
·
15 77 ~"
93
75 17
93
12 79 ·477
6! 15 ,44
' 1

75 1 ~

.

Norman
.
G•
·t
'
.
h•tt
stops 1ants on wo- .1 er

ll

~""~

CHAMPIONS - The Hit 'N Misses softball team made
up of members from Syracuse, Minersville, Racine and
Pomeroy, won the Pt. Pleasant· league ·senior girls' championship . Team members were presented trophies at Pt.
Pleasant Tuesday night. Shown 1-r front row are Karen

1117:1

II~ Jo~; SARGIS
1 Ul'l 8(1&lt;•rlo Wrl&lt;er
I•'AAN CISCO I UP!)Ne w York
·J ~"'11 ForSAN
Chl,ago
.t.'vcry winning team lllt're
Phlla di!l phla
9' ' ts a turning point in the sca60n,
... Wu t
g.b
. the day when lhlnr,:s sl.lirl lo Cll
w. L pet.
Cl nc Inna11
94 .n 618 :
tog•ther.
LOI Angtles
89 u .
~an F1r anclsco 83. 68 :~:~ 1 ~: ; ~ For lllC 1973 Cinrlnn ntl Ae(L!!,
OUI On
7B 71 ,SOJ 17'' ? now only a few games away ~
Atlant a
7J 81 ,414
San Diego
56 96 .368
from c llnchln ~ the National
Wt dnud1 y'' R••utt s
l.eugue
West Iitle, the fateful
ChlcliljiO 8 Mont rea t 6
day was June 13.
Houston 8 San D l!go s, h:t
Sin Diego 6 Hou l ton l , 2n d
That's the day they picked up
Phi l adelph ia 3 S t. LOU IS' 2
'little Fred Norman from san
New Yor k 7 Pl ttsburvh 3

w.

Plthburvh

Montreal
S' · l QUII

BASICS
with

. OTHERS .
Akroo Manchester 20 Woodridge 0
Miller 24 .federal Hoc~ing 14
Nelson ville-York 26 Alexander 20
Barboursville 26 Point Pleasant 13
Wahama 22 Duval 8
Chesapeake 20 Fair land 14
Ironton St. Joe 18 Oak Hill 14 .
Coal Grove 28 Rock. Hill 12
Walton 30 Hannan 6

n. l

&amp;• ]ll , ~~1.

.-

..

Malibu Classic Coupe

· visit Our Showroom .Thursday; Friday and Saturday .·

See Our Outstanding Line ·of '74 Chevrolet Cars and
Trucks On Display
.Refreshments, Door Prizes, Favors

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00
• I

I

. .

�1m. .

, ~, ~, , , ,

•

l'Mets crush Pirates 7-3; .Dodgers wzn
ny sn:vF: wu.sn:tN
UPI Sp~~ns Wrilt&gt;r
Yogi Ht·n·u is lu&lt;)kin!!

By Col. Mole

&lt;T ush Ill&lt;· l'u·ali'"· 7-:1, fur lh&lt;·

allowed
uml make n 11\ad thn.~ · ruus till ll solo hun1cr by
~&lt;'nnnbll• urthc divisiou I'IH'l" . 11\-"ni•• Stt•IHldt in the firsl, a
" t finally hav&lt;• my wholt• rm ~o-."t'orin~ single by Dave
('ash 11fh-r Stennett triplQ in the
!t' :ill l Ui l(' k ," Yogi said. " I 'Vl'
bt.•cu :-;aying si n('t' lht· lwgin· third nml Willie Stlii'KCll's 11sl
nin~ of the seuson we t'Ould win homer in Ltll' sixlh. And 'llt~-t
the divisiml if we i&lt;lny henlthy Me(; raw pitched three ilmin~
... Pl'f,pil\ l'an ''r:ticize nil they of two·hit, scoreless o·clief to
W~Ult. They ('fill IJhunc Ill(' ror earn his 2'2nd save. ·
In othrr NL gu mes, Chicago
our losing if th-.y wnnt but
wh('n wt• got back together, Wl' beat . Montreal,
8·6,
Philade lphia trippod St, Louis,
~ t~ulcd winnirtH."
:!·2, San Diego whipped
,Junes is 'fup Gun
Cleon .Jones was Bena 's top Houston, 6-3, a(ter the Astros
b'llll last nig ht w1th five runs beat the Padres, ~. in the
batted in on two long homers. opener of the twin bill, Los
The Mets now «re tied wiU1 St. Angeles downed Atla nta, 1·1,
Louis fm· t11 ird, only a half. and Cincinnati defeated San
gnme bllck of Montreal and!' , ~·rancisco ·, 5-l.
[n the American League,
behind Pittsburgh - after
. spe nding most of the season in Detroit drubbed Baltimore, tOlllh tilm· in Iii nu•din gs lhis

Ull)l'i'

l.&gt;l·illiunt £•wry niuhl.
Br.rra, whos4:• Mt.•L'\ lmvr
suHt•n•d 'many injmics this

ocason, wus lhl' object or
r ritkism iur.sday night when
!w bruughl in n I'Ookit• wilh no
major ·league expcrienn• lo

pitch to Pittsburgh in a rru&lt;'ial
spot in the ninth inning of a dl)o
or~lie game. The rookie, !Job
Apodaca , wlllked two but the
Mcts held on to squeeze out a!),
~ vic:tory and Berra 's neck was
saved.
He fo und only admirers
surrounding him Wedncsdny

night as the Mets played
·beautiful baseball, fla shing
power, pitching and defense to

Houston In th ' s&lt;•C&lt;)n&lt;l ;:ami!.
Mllwuuk&lt;'&lt; clipped Cleveland, Cliff Johnson's lwo•·un double
7-1, Ouklun(l shut out Min- in lh • scv&lt;•nlh Inning provid •d
ltcSOlH1 !\-0, Chicago edged Houston with tho decisive run
Knnsns City, 1·3, ln 12 iomln!JS, In lhc first gume.
lion Coy's boscs-londed
mal Califotnia defeated Texas
sln~
le drove In two runs lo
twiL1l, 6-2 and U-4 .
Two-run homers by Rl k climax u four-run rally In the
Monday, Ron Santo and Billy eighth Inning that gave Los
Willimns currit'li the Cubs over Angeles its triumph over
Montre;1l after the E;xpos had Allantu, which played without
jumped out to a :;.1 lead in the Hank Aa1'Qn .
The Braves had taken a I ~
fi rst Inning.
lead
in the fourt h inning on
Denny Doy le doubled to
hig hlight a two-rur1 fif th inning Dave Johni!Qn's 43rd home run,
and help Philadelphia's Steve a major league record for
Carlton wi n his . 12th game second basemen. He broke the
against 19losses at the expense mark set by Rogers Hornsby ·in
of St. Louis.
1922.
Fred Norman, a mid-season
Duublcs l.£ad San Diego
Fred Kendall and ! von
Mur rell punched two-run douGET DOWN TO
bles to lead San Diego over
I, llt"l'"' bent New York, 3·1,

l lw t·dtur ,
Ceor~t· Stunt• , 12~S.

\'t': ll·

:t , Tt ~· nail""
· I " I Mil I
' '" '""'' , Ill •'\kll'l·P01111'rO)', 0 ,

,.,fmuling."i
1

~~~ ~l:.d~~~~~t:~H:~~~~~.

acquisition, won hls lllh game
fllr Cinrlnnutl on a lwO·hitlcr
as the Hll\lo rcdu •ed their NL
West title clincloln~ magic
number to llv with lhelr
victory over San FranciiiCO.
Joe Morgu n opened the
fourth wi th his 24th homer &amp;nd
sin~ les by Dl•n Driessen and
Tony Pere:~, a double by Cesar
Geronimo • nd a single by
Norman addL'&lt;l three ru ns.

~daire

Skinny

Lo' A n ge l &amp;~" A tlanta 1
Cl nclnne,tls san Fran 1

nmost
~here.

Today ' s ProbJblt Plfcher s

!All Tlm oo E OTI

Mon treal (Renko 14-IOJ at
Chicago ~ Jtn k l n gs 12. JSJ, 2: 30

p.m.

Cinci nnati (Gri m sle y JJ .9) at
San Fran c isco ( Br yant 22 -11 )

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
8:05 p.m .
Nolan Ryan holds .the AmeriSt . L ou i s (Fost er IJ .8 ) at can League's season strikeout
Ph iladelph ia {Ruthven 6·9)
7:l5 p.m.
' record today and a 27-year old
Alfan ta I Schu eler $·1l at Los controve rsy has been laid to
Ang eles ( Down ing 9-9), 11 p . m .
rest.
(Only game s sch eduled )
Friday' s G•mes
Ryan wrote a record into the
Montreat at Chi cago
record
books Wednesday night
St. Lou is at Phil a, nlghl
Pittsburgh at New York , night
when he struck out seven
Ci ncinnat i at L os A ng, night
San Diego at San Fran , 2. tw l· batters in the California
n lte
Angels' 6-2 first-game victory
· ' (On tv gam es sc heduled )
over the Texas Rangers and
raised his season total w ~5 .
American L.eaaue
Eut
Whose record dld he surpass?
w. I. pet . g.b.
89 62 ..589
83 69 .546 (1 1/,

Boston

Detroit
New York

ao
11 .530 9
IS 78 ,,90 15
72 80 .474 171f2
67 86 .• 38 23

M l ~aukee

Cleveland

, •
•·
:.

NL fails to act on request

another to Texas.
And there remain problems
to be ironed out in San Diego,
where the Padres have leases
and agreements. A $12-million
damage suit against the
· Padres and the National
League stemming from the
planned move will be in court
for trial Friday.

·;~:=::::~::::::::::::::::::::;::;:;:::::::;;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:~:~:!:~:~8::~::::~::::::::::::::::~;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:::~:·

CHICAGO (UP!) - ,Joseph There certainly wasn't a
Danzansky, who hopes· to 'give turndown . I don't want to read
major
league baseball a third anything into it other than wha t
•• e,:,
,- ~
~ chance to catch on in the
ha ppened.''
:: @~~
J! na tion 's capital , displayed The league meeting was
little concern over the National ca ll e~ solely. to discuss and,
:![\ League's failure to act on his perhaps, act on a bid by
N
proposal to buy the San Diego .D an za ns~y ~ nd two associate.s
~
By Milton Rlchma~
\\\\ Padres and move them to to purchase the Padres for·$12
UPI Sports Editor
:;:; Washington D.C.
millibn and move them to the
l . &lt;;•.
•
"I would have preferred it if nation's capital.
,. NEW YORK (UP!) - This could turn out to be the most dif· we'd walked out with a fran!lut the fiv~·h our meeting •
;: ficult day of Willie Mays' entire life.
·
chise," Danzansky said after produced no action by the
;: It could be the day he tells the world he 's all through.
the 12 club owne.rs failed to act owners. r
;; The Mets are calllng a news conference and if it's for the on the proposal in a meeting in
"The Na tional League re·
• • purpose everyone suspects, then 42-year-old Willie Mays will Chicago Wednesday. " But I
cessed and will hold another
: : announce he will hang up his glove in 10more days.
dmi' t reel there was a decision. · meeting at the call of the
! ; He may smile and even kid around a little when he does say
president,'' League President
: ' that because the trauma that comes with such a decision already
Chub Feeney announced after
passed to some degree, but one thing you can be absolutely
the session ended. ~~our mem• sure of is that Willie Mays never will really do anything harder in
bers wanted more time to think
'
The
•• his life.
about the situation and decided
:: Baseball IS his life, and generally when it comes to this stage of
DE\IOTEDTOTH E
not to take a vote today."
INTEREST O F
. :; their careers, most players are like Willie. They find it tough to
MEIGS -M ASON AREA
"! would say the next
CHESTER L. . TANNEHill,
: ; ' say good-bye.
Exec . Ed .
meeting
would be within a
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
•• Some find it almost impossible.
City Edit or
month," Feeney added.
,' .
Run into Super Problems
Published daily e&gt;ecept
It was understood \nat
S,uurd!!l'f by T he Ohio V!!i i iey
'
SUperstars particularly seem to run into super problems
P ub ii ~hlng Company , 111
Danzansky had met all stipulaCourt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio,
, quitting the game. Most of them put one hand on the Bible and
4576!1. B u, i ne~ Ort ice Phone
tions for acceptance of his bid
!192-215(). Editor ial Pnone 992.
:: say - "I'll never keep sitting here on the bench and be one of
2157 .
for the Padres and that the
,. Ulose hangers.on no sir ' not me" - but when the time comes no
Secon d class postage paid
league was attempting to add a
a t Pomer oy , Ohio .
•· one wants to go.
l'htional
advert i sing
that, in leasing a
stipulation
r epr esentat i ve Bol tine lll ·
:: Look at some ol!\he Hall of Famers.
Gallagher , tnc ., 12 East 42nd
stadium, attendance must
St., New Yo r k., New York
:: Bob Fellervowedbe'd never hang around once he was past his
SubHr i p llon
rates :
• average over 900,000 annually
De livered or carri er where
: · peak, but he did.
ava il ab le 55 cent!. per week. ;
for three yea rs or the lease
:: So did Carl Hubbell, AI Simmons and Paul Waner as well as
By Motor Route where
would be canceled.
carr ier
service
not
·; Lefty Grove and Early Wynn. Each of them didn't want to quit
avalla bt e : One month . S2. By
.Should Danza nsky's pur.
ma i l in OhiO and W . Ya , One
, • until he recorded his 300th win. Jimmie Foxx was so reluctant to
Vea r . S\6 ; SIK monll'lt;, .a.so.
chase sucoeed, it would be the
Three
months.
\5 .50 .
,: tal\e off his uniform, he even tried his hand at pitching for the
Elsewh er e $18 year ; siK
third ·major . league baseball
:: wartime Phillies when he was 37.
mon th1 $P ,50 ; th r ee months .
team to play in Washington.
\ 6. Subscr iption price In ·
' · Willie Mays, five years older now than Foxx was when he
el udes
Sundar
T i mes ·
Two previous teams, both in
Sentinel.
: retired, also has found it extremly difficult to say goodbye.
the Ameri can League, were
:: He knows he'll miss the camaraderie, the feeling of being "one
:; of the guys" in the clubhouse as·well as the competition .
: • "The competition, I suppose, is what I missed most right after
:; I retired," confesses Sandy Koufax, who had to leave the game
•' prematurely at 30 because of arm trouble.
:; Babe Ruth also did plenty of agonizing before he finally packed
: : it iri at the age of 40 in 1~3 :;,
''
With the Braves
1'·
the Yankees had let him go during the winter and now he was
' with the bedraggled lastplace Boston Braves.
::
, · Hal Lee was the regular left fielder for the Braves, but on this
:: day, Ruth's last active,one in baseball, Manager Bill McKechnie
· FRWAY ONLY
;; decided to start the Babe in left field in Cincinnati.
·
• Hundreds of thousands of persons, who really weren't there,
••. later went around telling everybody they saw Babe Ruth play his
ALCOA 18'
',, laB\ big league game.
: · But one man who WAS there and remembers the event vividly
: · is Milwaukee's Frank Lane, then assistant general manager,
:: farm director, road secretary, publicity man - ·everything but
ROLL
;: No. 1 electrician - for the Reds.
,
"It was a hot Sunday afternoon late in May, and ooly the da y
:. before Ruth had hit three homers in Pittsburgh,:' says J,.ane. .
:: "We, by 'we' ·r mean the Cincinnati Reds, 'played our horpe
:; games In Redland Field then and there was this hank, or incline,
•· in left field. As I say it was a blistering day and you could see
•
:. · Babe was feeling the heal, especially since we were hitting the
: · Boston pitcher pretty good and keeping their outfielders busy.
::
.
Looked Uke a Hound Dog
lfz GAL LIQUID
l' · "From the start of the game, Babe had to chase a lot of balls up
• and down that left field incline and after awhile he gol so weary
! pursuing all those base hits he looked like a hound dog with his
tongue hanging oot.
"In the seventh lonlng, l belive it was, he chased another ball
: which ricocheted off the leftfield fence and when he relayed the
t; bllllnyou could see he had had it.
.
,. "A CGUple of minutes later, wit~ the inning still in progress and
.
• without evtn calling 1ime,' Ruth
made a gesture toward the
:. Br1vt1' dugout, lnlonnlng them he was leaving. He then wal~ed
:: In thlt majestic way of his to the clubho.use located in back of left
:• fteld. He loolred llkehewauaying 'Who the hell needs this?'

: ~~

:; ~
~

.

Today's

,t~.,.

Sport Parade

N

i:

MARTA D

moved, on{! to Minnesota and

;: t:

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11 79 .• 73 18'1•
53 98 .35 1 37

Texas

Kansas City (Splltlorff 17. \2 ),
8: 30p .m .

"

!Only games scheduled )
Friday's Games
Cal if at Texas, twilight
Chicago atKan City , night
Oakland at Minnesota
Baltimore at Milw, n ight
Boston at Detroit , n ight
~Only games scheduled)
Major League Rt!sults
By United Preu tn1trnatlonalq
National League

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San Diego ·
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See them soon.

American Leagut
(1st Game)

California

expected
to re,.., ...e
•

11-1

1

42,

The announcement had been
expected for several days ever
since the Mets announced that
they will hold Willie Mays·
Appreciation Night next Tues· ·
day night .
Mays was one of the most
electrifying ~nd exciting play.
ers ever to play the game since
Alexander Cartwright first set
the bases 90 feet apart a century or so ago. .
But his skills have been
tarnished by age and injury
and he is hitting only .211 this
season in · 66 games. He has
been hobbled with swollen
knees, an inflamed · shoulder
and bruised ribs this year.
Mays has no worry a bout his
security . He's been making
$165,1100 a year as a player and
under the terms of his contract,
he'll still receivz $50,000 a year
un\11 age 50 even though he's
not playing.
Mays now has 660 homers In
his career, including six ·this
season, and only Babe Ruth
and Henry Aaron are ahead of
him . If he hadn't lost almost
two full seasons in the majors,
he probably would have chal·
lenged Ruth's career record of
714 homers. Mays was the NL
homer champion three
times.

HOUSTON
(UP! )
Tonight:s ." Battle of the
Sel(es.1'chapter 2," between
Billie Jean King and Bob.by
Riggs has been phiyed for a lot
of laughs.
·
"Both of us are making
money,'' says Billie Jean. "So
this is a kind of marriage
between us." The audience
laughs. ·Riggs' eyes bulge.
Stuff like that.
But there should be no
mistake about it. When the two
of them get together tonight for
their $100,000, winner-take-all,
best-of-five set, nationally televised tennis extravaganza between first and third bases in
the Astrodome, Billie Jean
King would truly love to bas~
Bobby Riggs to the point of
embarrassment.
' It all starts at 8 p.m. EDT
with an estimated 35,00&lt;HO,IIOO
expected. Riggs was the choice
of 20 of 27 writers who will be
covering the match.
World heavyweight cham·
pion George Foreman, who
doesn '\ play much tennis but
who will present the $10\l,IIOO
check to the winrier, believes
Billie Jean will win.
Las Vegas oddsmakers have
set the oddS at 2\'l-1 in favor of .
Riggs.

-

Major League Leaders
Bv United Press tnternetlonal
Lndlng B11tters
Nation•! Lugue
g . ilb r . .h. pet .
Rose, Cln 151 638 108 221 .3-46
Wtsn , HOU 152 55-4 93 175 .316
Cdeno, Hou 13 2 502 e1 158 .315
Hunt, Mtl 111 401 61 124 .309
Crdnl , Ch i 1J5 487 76 149 .306
Madox , SF lJl 541 73 165 .305
. Perez, Cin 144 SJ7 68 164 .305
St rgel : Plt

Gaor. All
Smns. St.L

(2nd Gamel

Callfqrnla

Texas

lot ~ of solid co r to go w ith them .
A new young look, o smoo th and
steody ride. That's Torino '74 .

Otis, KC
scon. Mil
Dvls , Bol
230 102 010- 9 15 1 Y.az , Bos
JOO 001 ooo- 4 a o Cpedo, ~os

Wr l g~t (11 -19 ) and Sands ;
Hudson , Brown (2), Henninger

151, Foucaull 161. Allen 18 1 ond

Suarez . LP - Hud&amp;on {-4 -2). HR s
' Rob Jnson I 27th) , Fregos l

16th) .
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(1 3·131.

Holf, Min

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t•a
131
142
Ill

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See all the 74's from Ford on September 21.
The closer you look, the better we look.

GAS FLOOR
1FURNACES

FORD

10,000 ATO,OOO

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'

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Amerlun League : Jackaon ,
J1 ; Burroughs , Te x 28 1
Robin son , Cel 121 F lak , Bos ,
Oti s. I( ~ and Ban do , Oak 26.
Run1 Batted trl

N1tlo011

League : . Stargel l,

GAS &amp; OIL
CIRCULATING
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Up to 70,000 BTU

'

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AmerlciJn LeC~gue: Jackson ,
Oak 11J ; Mayberry, KC 99 ;
Scott , Mil 98 ; May, Mil 92 ;
OtiS , KC 9 1..

DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) Melvin's Woe and Ricci Reenie
Time share the favorite's role
ip today's 28th running of the
Little Brown Jug at the
Delaware County Fairgrounds.
Arecord field of 17 3-year-old
pacers will compete for part of
the record purse of $120,000 in
the third leg of pacing's Triple
Crown.
Joe O'Brien, who will drive
Melvin's Woe, says the horse
has had "bad legs all season,''
but he is not too concerned.
"He raced very well in the Jug
Trial in Detroit and is training
weB," O'Brien said. Melvin's
Woe won the trial, his fifth
victory ·of the year;
The other favorite, Rieci
Reenie Time , opened the
season rather poorly but has
come on strong since early
August , winning the Tom
Gaines Memorial at Vernon
Downs, the Adios Stakes at The
Meadows, and the Jug Preview
at Scioto Downs.
"I didn't try to get him really
sharp early because they only
have so many good races,''
said driver Harold 'Sonny"
Dancer. "! wanted him to be
ready for th e big money

\

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second division, listed at 7·2
even though the colt has drawn
the outside No. 8 post position.
The biggest challenge to
Melvin's Woe probably will
come from Rob Ron Ritzer,
driven ~y last year's winning
driver, Keith Waples, and
listed af7-2, and Valiant Brei, a
9-2 pick driven by Lucien
Fontaine.
With Armbro Nesbit as Ricci
Reenie Time's top competition,
Jr . R. Skipper was given the
third nod in the·second division
lisfed at 9-2 odds.

WHITE AND COLORS
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Singielon , Mil 99.

Baltimore, 10-1, Oakland shut
out Minnesota , ~. Boston ·
topped New York, 3-1, and
Milw a uk ee out sco r e d
Cleveland, 7-4, in other AL
ga mes .
National Lea~ ue scores were
Cincinnati 5 San Francisco I,
New York 7 Pitlsburgh 3,
Chicago 8 Montrea l 6, San
Diego over Houston, 6-3, afl.('r
an 8-5 loss, Philadelphia 3 St.
Louis 2 and l.ps Angelo~ 4
Atlanta I. '
The Angels staked Ryan to a
3-0 lead in the first Inning on
run-scoring singles by Frank
Robinson, Lee Stanton and
Billy Parker. Ryan, who raised
his record to 19-16, allowed five
hits, including a homer by· Jeff
Burroughs. Robinson hit a tworun homer and knocked in four
runs to lead the Angels' 15-hit
attack in the second game.
Carlos .May doubled and
scored on Buddy Bradford's
single in the 12th inning to give
Jhe White Sox their victory
after John Mayberry tied the
score at 3-3 for Kansas City
with a two-out, two-run homer
in the ninth . That blow
prevented Cy Acosta from
preserving Wilbur Wood's 25th
win with the reliever eventually gelling credit for the
victory .
Culeman Makes It 21
Joe Coleman pitched seven.
hit shutout hall for eight in-

ro SQiOOL

122 -i03 50 119 .295

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features Stee l bolt ed rod +o l t+res .
Automa t+c tronsmiu+on·. f'ower
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Ford LTD f'roug hori1 2·door Hordtop shown wi lh
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·

IrS BACK

Home Runs
NJtiOnll Lea gut: . Johnson,
All43 ; Staroell , Pitt 41 ; Evans ,
All 39 ,· Aaron . Atf and Bonds,

Ct(Jftsmcnsh+p wherever you look,
from the fd of tho doors, hood ond

All slondo•d on lTD foo'7 4,·

HEY KIDS!

570 87 172 .302
567 91 m .302
529 52 159 .l0.1
512 79 153 .299
526 50 156 .m

LP- Tidrow (lJ.I l l. HR s- Scolt Pill tl l 1 Bench , Cln IOl ; Mov ,
Hov 100 ; E vans, Atl , ana
121sll , Pull 'I l71h 1.

Qu10t, luxur+OU5, beoullful ly bui lt:

"Wt· wen,• lucky, really."'
»&lt;•id 1\nll&lt;,rson, "to, get M p\t.
r•hf'r with his •bility .
The Ht-ds complete their
Cand lestick Park tKJhedule for
the year today by sending RfllliJ
Normun
used
his
screwball
Nnrrnun swd Huzzy Uavmd,
in hi" rnond- pick in~ up Nor- Grimsley (13-~1 againt1t Ron
lilt' P;ulJ't•S w·ner.a I IIIUIIttJ.w r . d!cf'l lvt• ly· in IH'all n ~ the man lurocd thing.&gt; around.
Bryant 122-11 )
(;iunt..o,
;
r,,,,
llw
sccund
thnc
~hir
h·rt ill" him w pkk 111M dub
""' ltcds or ltuyals aold ycil r . The (Jlht·r· tlu1c he
Norman IJll id he didn't lwsitolr stopped then, on a three.hil
shuUoul.
ll scconfL
The Giants' only run ca me
"1 l&lt;ild Bu'·'Y make it the
when
G~ry Matthews opened
1\t'&lt;ls," said Norman . "Ten
minutes lal.('r he told me the the second with • single, wenl
deal was ccrnplell.-d. ff we go to second on a wild pitch, to
on ~· w in now, I 'll always be third on a ion~ fly and scored
thankful wBw.zy for giving me on Mike Sadek's sacrifice fly .
The only other hit orr him was a
a chance to pick my club."
In Wednesday night's game, two-&lt;&gt;ul eighth Inning s in~le by
Tito ~'ucntes .Tile Red s, meanwhile,
chased Tom Bradley, now J:~
12, in the fourth on .Joe
Morga n's bases-empty homer,
Cesar
Geronim o's two-run
nlngs to win hls 21st game for
the Tigers. John Hiller worked s ingle and Norman's rtB I
4th &amp; Locust
Mldd 1111011 I Q,
the ninth against the Orioles Single.
Reds Manager Sparky Anand received creditfor hls 37th
derson
said there is no question
save - equalling the major
league mark set last •eason by
Clay Carroll of the Reds.
Aurelio Rodri guez' three-run
triple was the big blow of a
seven·run fifth inning which
clinched the game for the
Tigers. TI1e Orioles' lead was
reduced to a still healthy 61/,
ga mes in the AL East and their
magic number remained at
five.
·
Vida Blue pitched a three·
hitter and struck out 10 to win
his 19th game for the A's. Ray
Fosse drove in one run with a
double in the second. iMing,
Bert Campaneris homered.· in
the third and Reggie JackSon
drove in a run with a sacrifice
fly in the eighth. Joe Decker
was the loser for Minnesota.
Tommy Harper hit two
doubles, scored two runs and
stole two bases to lead the Red
Sox over the Yankees behind
Luis Tiant's four-hit, 10-strike7
oul pitching. 'fiant raised his
record to 19-12 while Mel
Stottlemyre's dropped to 14-16.
George Scott drove in four
runs with a single and his 21st
homer bringing Jim Slaton's
record to 13-13 for the Brewers.
Dick Tidrow was routed in 61-3
innings and suffered his 15\h
lass fo_r Cleveland.

Melvin's Woe, who will race
Pitching
in the first division, and Ricci
National League : Bryant , SF
22·11 ; Gullelt. Cln 18·8: Billing. Reenie Time, a second division
ham , Cin 18·9: Sutlon , LA IH ; runner, are both listed at 3-1.
Se aver, NY 17 -10.
O'Brien will have two top
Amerlnn League : Wood , Chi
24 - 19 ;
Palmer ,
Bait
21·8; cracks at the Jug tiUe. He will
135 480 9-4 146 .304 Coleman , Del 21-15 ; Hunter,
drive Armbro Nesbit in the
1&lt;5 6ll ~3 198 .302 Oak 20 -4; Holtzman , Oak 20 ·12,
151 582 56 Ill .301

Amtrlctn LtltUt

301 001 001 -

( 4-9). H R s- Burroughs )21th&gt;.. .

Torino's got a new young look this
year. Exci ting ly res tyled outside ...
eMcitlng new features in side. And

That's where the controversy
Is involved.
For years "official" baseball
record books listed anAL mark
·or 343 strikeouts by Rube
Waddell of the Philadelphia
Athletics in !904.' Bob Feller of
the Cleveland Indians came
along in 1946 to strike out 348
hatters and lay claim to a
record.
Some statisticians, however,
pored through the box scores or
Waddell's games in 1904 and
announced that the old leftbander actually had struck out
349 batters. All records of those
very old days are suspect in
part, so some modern record
books have carried Feller's 348
as the mark and others have
listed Waddell's 349.
The Only Question
Now the only question is
whether Ryan can surpass the
major league mark of 382 set
by Sandy Koufax of the Los
Angeles Dodgers in 1965.
.,
The Angels downed Texas, 94, in the second game of their
doubleheader, Chicago scored
a 4-3, 12-inning triumph over
Kansas City, Detroit defeated

Battle of Sexes
set tonight

6 12 1
.342
Te~eas
010 ooo 010- 2 5 1 Cl!lrw , M i ri 139g, 538
ab 86184
r . .h. pet.
Ryan (19- 16) lind Stinson ; May , Mil 148 601 9; 185 .308
Broberg , Brown (3 }, Durham M1.1rcr , NY 151 582 80 177 .304
{5 ) and Billings . LP - Brobero Munsn , NY 1-42 499 79 15t .30J

1974 Ford Torino. The solid mid-aize.

Di··~o rvr $llii,OIKI and [ I noU(11C redu ced t.:lnc uuu.ttl 's magu·
ur rl'ingc pluycrfi.
nllfllht'l' Lu (1\11' .
The Hc&lt;lll wrr&lt;• only three
A JIUIHh4'r or dubs Wt·r· · lu
}UIIllt'S over .500 H»•l day iind
ljlt' hlddlng fo l' Non11U11 niH'i:
luul a l&gt;lt,.h in~ staff that looked Ill&lt;' Padres dechtcrl to mak •
like a rli!lllstcr ureu. The day IJi111 avro llt~bl e . Out ll1c l~e d~
lifter they 11il'ked UP Norman offen'&lt;l, in addition ~~ money ,
th~: Reds g~ve lhim hls first
outfielder Gene 1.ol'klcar and a
slarl and he pitched a G-1l mln r league r•ltchcr.
shutout a~a l nsl Pittsburgh .
While mrul! clubs, including
Sim" then he hlls won ll or 16 Ute Giants, oflered n1oney only,
decisions, including a 5-l two- the Kansas City Roya ls mathitter over the San Francisco ched the Reds· offer as to
Giants Wednesday nioht lhat

0

Los Ang
000 000 04x- 4 7 1
P . Nlekro , Closter 18 ), J .
Nlekro (e) and Casanova ;
Messersm ith, Brewer (9 ) and
Ferguson . WP - Messersm ith
(14 .10) . LP - P. Nlekro (1 3-9).

[

Mustang . .. even a bit shorter thon the orig ina l
one. It's more th an a new Mus tang . It's o whole
new class of smal l cor : Firs t Closs. In every way .
From its 1ew el-l+ke exterior to its ha ndsomely
appo inted Interior, the new Mu stan g Ugives

.:7

NEW YORK (UP!) - Willie
Mays
is apparently ready to
Detroit 10 Baltimore 1
Cal ifornia 6 Tel(as , 2. 1st
· ring down the curtain on one of
Californ ia 9 Texas 4, 2nd
the most illustrious careers in
Ol!lkland 3 Minnesota 0
Today•s Probable Pllchers
baseball history.
tAll Times EDT)
· ·
k
California (S inger 18·13 and .-: The New Yor Mets have
~and l·61 at Texas iGogolewskl'.· called a . news conference at
3·6and Dunning 0·81, 2. 7 p.m. 11 ·30 a m EDT today at Shea
Oakland
( Abbott 1-0 and
·
• •
·
Odom l ·ll l at Mlnnesola IGollz Stadium for Mays to make his
6 10 2 6 30 official announcement that
•·•
p.m.and Hands · 1. • '
Boltlmore (Palmer 21·81 ··1 he's retiring from the game to
Detroit
(Frym on 6·11 I. a p.m .
wind up a 22-year career at age
Ctllcago (Forster 6·8) . at

Ford inlroduces the 74's.
n.e news is big, medium and small.
.
·At your Ford Dealer's.

Mustang TI is 19 inches shorter th an los t yea r,. s

May·.... rs
..

Wednesd•v's Results
Milwaukee 7 Cleveland 4
Boston 3 New York 1
Ch l 4 Kan City 3, 12 Inns

MIDDLEPORT

.

AWMINUM

w. I. pet. ·g.b.

Oakland

Kansas Clly

.

..

west

,

Ryan owns new strikeout mark

l : 15 p.m.
'
Plltsburoh 1R: ooker 9-5) at ·
New York ( Koosman 12· 151 ,

Baltimore

Guinther, Debbie Roush, Rhonda West, Pat Vaughan, Nancy
Crow, Pam Vaughan and Autumn Sayre; back row, Kathy
Francis, coach; Lee Ord, Trina Ferrell, Carole Michael, Jill
Warner, Demaris Ash, Lisa Allen and Debbie West. Kenny
Wiggins is the manager.

v.b.

I. pet.
$QJ
!5
"
·
15 77 ~"
93
75 17
93
12 79 ·477
6! 15 ,44
' 1

75 1 ~

.

Norman
.
G•
·t
'
.
h•tt
stops 1ants on wo- .1 er

ll

~""~

CHAMPIONS - The Hit 'N Misses softball team made
up of members from Syracuse, Minersville, Racine and
Pomeroy, won the Pt. Pleasant· league ·senior girls' championship . Team members were presented trophies at Pt.
Pleasant Tuesday night. Shown 1-r front row are Karen

1117:1

II~ Jo~; SARGIS
1 Ul'l 8(1&lt;•rlo Wrl&lt;er
I•'AAN CISCO I UP!)Ne w York
·J ~"'11 ForSAN
Chl,ago
.t.'vcry winning team lllt're
Phlla di!l phla
9' ' ts a turning point in the sca60n,
... Wu t
g.b
. the day when lhlnr,:s sl.lirl lo Cll
w. L pet.
Cl nc Inna11
94 .n 618 :
tog•ther.
LOI Angtles
89 u .
~an F1r anclsco 83. 68 :~:~ 1 ~: ; ~ For lllC 1973 Cinrlnn ntl Ae(L!!,
OUI On
7B 71 ,SOJ 17'' ? now only a few games away ~
Atlant a
7J 81 ,414
San Diego
56 96 .368
from c llnchln ~ the National
Wt dnud1 y'' R••utt s
l.eugue
West Iitle, the fateful
ChlcliljiO 8 Mont rea t 6
day was June 13.
Houston 8 San D l!go s, h:t
Sin Diego 6 Hou l ton l , 2n d
That's the day they picked up
Phi l adelph ia 3 S t. LOU IS' 2
'little Fred Norman from san
New Yor k 7 Pl ttsburvh 3

w.

Plthburvh

Montreal
S' · l QUII

BASICS
with

. OTHERS .
Akroo Manchester 20 Woodridge 0
Miller 24 .federal Hoc~ing 14
Nelson ville-York 26 Alexander 20
Barboursville 26 Point Pleasant 13
Wahama 22 Duval 8
Chesapeake 20 Fair land 14
Ironton St. Joe 18 Oak Hill 14 .
Coal Grove 28 Rock. Hill 12
Walton 30 Hannan 6

n. l

&amp;• ]ll , ~~1.

.-

..

Malibu Classic Coupe

· visit Our Showroom .Thursday; Friday and Saturday .·

See Our Outstanding Line ·of '74 Chevrolet Cars and
Trucks On Display
.Refreshments, Door Prizes, Favors

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00
• I

I

. .

�Gavin impact in area critical

4

News. • • in Briefs Driver drowns

Area·grant

1Continue-d from Page II
\ ConUnued from Page ll
, . Pomeroy. The program I OUI'tS.
provides nursing care to
patients of Veterans Memorial
GAS STATION OPERATOHS in Massad1t1setts said ltKiay
who reside within a 25 mi e litO)' would end IIJeit' proiL'Sl shutdo•·n. but lhey vowt'&lt;i l)k'Y
radius of the hospital. Total would d(l it agnin if lhc Nbwn ~HI ministration refuses to thnn~~·
cost or the program is set at its mind on prh.'t:' ronLI'Ols.
$29,758.
\Ye'l•e proven our point and we don't W&lt;tnlthc publk lo suf(er
any more," said John Hell, a Mobil station operator in the !loston
•
suburb of Lexington. Hundreds of stations ac-ross the stalt•
•
remained dosed Wednesday for a second day despite a t-ourt
•
. . order to stay open. The gasoline dealers were protesting aCost of
Living Council ruling that bars stations from passing on to their
•
customers a penny-a-gallon increase charged by the oil l'mnA panies.

(Continued from Pn~c 1J
flood li~hls weN &lt;•mployed.
Ro~er Hysell un~ Jim
IJJvendur of the Mason unit
and Wayne Davis of the
Middlepol'l unit, all trained
scuba divers, located the
sunken vehicle. Acoble from a

MISS AMERICA"

"'"f'cker was hOQked to the car

SHOES

GOLDEN
OLDIE

DENVER - THREE OF THE ~' IVE remaining Stanek
sextuplets
are battling the lung disease that killed Uwir it~ant
WITH
1r. sister and doctors said today two of them are in poor condition.
"The prognosis hiJS to be guarded," a hospital spokesman
BRAND said: "But the longer they survive the .better off they are. Each
EW BEAT extra hour is encouraging." T\VD of the other children born
S1inday night to the 34-year~ld wife of a junior accountant were
$
Brack &amp; Wh ite I in fair condition and the filth child is in good condition.
Blue &amp; White
Edna Stanek' 34 saw her children for the first time
Wed.
rtesday.

.

"

WASHINGTON - THE FORD MOTOR CO . has made
overpayments in its insurance premiums and plact:d the money
into tax-free accounts in Bermuda for use by Ford executives, a
Senate subcommittee has been to ld. Philip M. Wilson, 36, once a
kingpin in a worldwide insurance and securities fraud , told the
permanent investigations subcommittee Wednesday that F.ord
overpiiid a 1;\Qston brokerage firm for insurance and that the
excess was funneled into the Trails Global Insurance .Co., Ltd., a
Ford~wned company in Hamilton, Bermuda.
"It's my understanding that the money is made available to
Ford exeucitives when they come to Bermuda," Wilson testified.
The Ford Motor Co. said in Detroit: "There is no truth whatever
to any suggestions that Ford did or could overpay its premiums
or set up funds for executive personal use. Any such charges are
absurd and rediculous." It said Trans-Global later became
Transcon Insurance Ltd., a wholly owned Ford subsidiary and
that all premiums to the firm "were and are at competitive
market rates.n
DivORCE ASKJ!;D
M~ry K. Bar~hart, Tuppers
Plams, has filed sUit for .
.
divorce from Charles A.
Barnhart in Meigs County
Common Pleas. Court. In her
suit for money, Marjorie M. · Miss Barbara Werner, 34,
Wyatt, Rutland, was granted formerly of Middleport, died
the nght to recover $1,333 from Wednesday evening at the
Dale Lawson, Portland. Jerry - Pineview Manor Nursing
Tlllts, Pomeroy Route 4, was Home in Beaver, Ohio. Miss
Whore Shoos art Senolbly
awa~ded ~Judgment of $555.81 Werner was born in Middleport
_Pr..-:lcod..:.::;._ _ _ _ _-:-_-1 m his sUit for money against June 22, 1889, the daughter of

Barbara wemer
died Wednesda.Y

which II&gt;HI gone over the steep
hank about 6:3ll p.m. The
''''hide was pulled to the top of
U1e bank ubout 9:05 p.m. where
Meigs coroner ::&gt;r . 1\. R.
Pickens oxamined Noonan's
body ruling death by accidental drowning.
Rumor at the scene where
hundreds of residents lined the
river bank watching the rescue
said there were two bodies in
the vehicle.
However, when it was p~lled
up, it was found that Noonan
was in the back seat of the tw&lt;&gt;tone brown and beige dodge.
One leg was extended between
the twa seats in the front.
Death was attributed to
drowning. An ambulance from
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home took the body -to the
funeral horne aild attempts
were being made this morning
to notify next of kin: Noonan is
believed to have relatives possibly a sister - living in
Maywood , Ul. His car,
however, had license plates
!rom the state of New Mexic.o.
Ralph Pratt, owner of the
Ohio Hotel where Noonan had
registered on Sept. I, said
Noonan had checked in there
without any clothing. There
were no clothes, to speak of,In
his room, and Noonan went to
Middleport stores and bought
new .clothes whenever he
wanted a change, Pratt said.
He apparently left his old
clothing at the stores or

SHOE BOX

.•,...

•-'"".!!"!!!"'!!!~!"!!!-~!!""~~Cha~~rl•es-H•a•tf•te•ld•,•D\!•.•x.te•r•....

.. You CAN 'T BUY
A
PAINT

•
•

the late John and Kathryn
Gloeckner Werner. She was
preceded in death by four
brothers and a sister in addition to her parents.
Surviving are two nephews,
John L. Werner and · Earl
Werner, · both of Middleport,
and two nieces, Miss Kathryn
Werner of Middleport, and
Mrs. Leo (Minnie) Russell of
Denver, Colo .
Funera~ services will 'be at
Ir:30 a. rn. Saturday at tile
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Father Bernard
Kracjovic officiilting. Rosary
.services Will be at 8 p. m.
Friday at the funeral home.
Burial will be in Sacred Heart
Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
Friday evening.

.

.•

·· ·

....
,..
•

~RESIDENT

HOUSE

'

PAINT

.••
•

•

Reg. 17.00 gal.
I -

I'

~

Sale

$590

Gallon

·~ .

J,

£..;

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
, S. Jrd Ave.

992-2709

MiddleJI:Orl, 0_•.

Dr. Reid C. Brubaker has
joined the Holzer Medical
Center Clinic stafi as a
speciali,st In the de~rtrnent of
Internal medicine.
This was announced today by
HMC Clinic Administrator
Robert E. Daniel.
Anative of West Alexandria,
Ohio, Dr. B,rubaker comes to
Holzer Medical center Clinic

• •

•
•

•

.

~:

.

•.

•'

\\\

•

'

&amp;SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 20 · 21 · 22

CHILDERS
The Most Modern &amp; larges&gt; Mus~ Slore In
Southeaslem Ohio

A class for young people of
four counties with hearing
difficulties is being organized
at Harrisonville Elementary
School.
Taking part in the class at
which specialized instrucilon
will be provided are Meigs,
Gallia, Jackson and Vinton
counties. At least six pupils will
'be required for the class to
flinction, although there may
be more than that number.
Children so enrolled will spend
a part ol their day in the
specialized training class and
then will be with regular
classes on their grade level the
remainder of the day.
Efforts presently are being
made to work out such
problems as transportation,

•
from Ohio State University
Hospitals in Colwnbus. He had
been the senior admitting
resident and clinical instructor
at the Ohio State University
Hospitals before coming to the
clinic.
Dr . Brubaker graduated
· Magna Cum Laude from
Miatni University at Oxford,
Ohio, in 1967, and Swnma Cwn
Laude from the Ohio State
University College ol Medicine
in 1970.
He completed his internship
at Hurley Hospital in Flint,
Michigan , and his residency in
internal medicine at Ohio State
· University Hospitals. He and
his wife, Nancy, reside at 559
Lincoln Pike .
In making this announcement, Daniel said, "We
are extremely pleased to have
Dr. Brubaker join our staff. His
arrival enhances the c~verage
of the department of internal
medicine and also further
establishes the close relations
between the Medical Center
and Ohio State University."
With the arrival .of Dr.
Brubaker, the clinic staff is
now comprised of 33 speclaltst.
In various fields of medicine.

THREE FINED
Three defendants were fined
and another forfeited two
bonds in Pomeroy Mayor
Donald Collins' court 'Wednesday night. Fined were
Donald Lovett, $20 and costs,
intoxication; Michael Neutzling, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
speeding, and John Moon,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, improper turn. Richard !lloonan,
Middleport, forfeited a $50
bond for no operator's license
and $200 bond on driving while
intoxicated.

i

·hanl·to·fill
shoes

"M CIIIATOI Of
. IIAIONAIII OfU(I PltCII'

- . . blg rosponolblllllu now ihd
big Pions lor the futuro noods 1

'P~Ial kind of !lie insurance.

PHON! 992"'759

Ho nltdo a plan thai moke1
ootobillhlng on estate and re.tlro~lnt lunda worry-free. It
you r• thlo kind ot man
Slot• Farm hu tnt pr&lt;&gt;Oram
· lor YOU. A• loon •• you begin

271 H. lu d A.,._

'
Mlddhp art, Ohio

for Your Dmg NHtll

fOUr flmlly 'tj fUture II protoclid

1 \ Contact

your State Farm Agent '

lor detail• on this Peroon-to-

Penon Life lnaurance program.
Sttphtft C. Sn•wdcn
.

Village Pharmacy continues to provide
complete and accurate records of your ex·
pense on prescription medicine as we have the
past five years.

~

S.SJ Rvnel St . ·
(Grtvel Hill )

\1ldclleaort, Ohlo

Pit. "2-IUS

-

~· _

1

·· ~·..

.

"'"

STATE FARM LIFE

INSURANCE COMPA NY
Hom1 (llllte : Bioomlogton , llllnoll

'

'A

.,

"" "''" ' '!

Jewelry
All tho new pieces for fa ll '73 and
wi nl cr '74 Fi15hionnble jewelry· 1
such 11 5
pie r ce d earri ngs,
bangle -,.,
chain
necklac es,
p i~ r C:e d look ea r ri ngs, copper

bracele ts, fa shion ri ngs, l4K .
gol d s 11 pie rc ing earring s,
IOckcl s and pins, modern and

cameo.

at Salem Center could be expanded.
1~~~:~~----~;~:~M;;--,
ECIAL
OFFER
. A shortage of six elementary clasSrooms is projected at
SP

BIG MAMA

PANTY HOSE
$1 •99 pr.

w•••~·~
m•ro•
I{ s 1-.1·:. 11 1

INSURED 30 DAY S WEAR
new

Free
Pair

*COMPARE AND SAVE
Ctpacl ty

17
17

"

19

Pllllco-ford
PeiCIInl
Savings

""
....

Slvlrljjjl va. Major

ComPttitol'l. Averaga

32% '

""
"'

""

"'

"gpro•.

Phi Ito-ford

Sl.vlnga VI . MljOI'

Capac tty

Percent

Savings

Comp.tilo", "WIIIjll

A FREE pair of Knee· Highs, (79c
value), when vou purchase Big
Mama .Penty Hose at SL99 pr . .

""

""
""

-

Lllellml S.vlnga

"'

·697 .

Table Dosed on tests ln l~~ded to tlmulate home usage u r~ der lrequer'lt!y enco;~u nte red ~on dlll ol\s
and at V1 eledrh: rill ol 3 cen ts P'6r kllow au ~our . Tl!sl prcudur~u were sdePted t ram •NSt
Standard 8&lt;11. Section ~.1 , with rontr&lt;JI Sllltlr&gt;Q to eppr~ch 01 (11)1' ''" ' er) and 37• (rtlrlue ratot),

Just Arrived Flower Bulbs for Fall Planting

Actuataayin11s rna~ vzu ~ brued UtiOfl IO(:al e lec tr ic rates, cl imatic conditions and lndl•ldual us.~~ga .

Comp l~tle

'-""""-,
!Ill

.

Phllco Side-b~-silde

"
"
"

273

rn .one,

Refrigerator COst Savlngi
~ .ft .

Lllttlime S.vlngs

or a

pair . For the Larger
Woman .. . fits 5' to 5' 9", 165 to 230
lbs .
At last a lar ger , more com fortable , better flttlng pantyhose
combination for more gracious
women ! Sheer stretc h Captlva(r )
stockings and stretch panty, all -

Get

enrollment of the eligible
students, an agreement wltjl
the Meigs Local School District
on remuneration for use of the
Harrisonville facility .
The Meigs Colinty Board of
Education is fiscal agent for
the new program which is a
part of an overall plan to
provide the best possible
education for handicappe'd
children.

A

IMI da ta lmulablt upon request.

a

a • .....

• •

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
18.5 cu.ft. capacity Side-by-Side

BEN,FRANKLII)I

ONLY 30" WIDE

PHONE

Model RT19BIM
HugolrHJer lloNO 2591111.

POMEROY, OHIO
m'IN ..JDA\Y .a'Lio'nJIIDAY NIGH11 m. I

I

Budget

Priced At
'1.00
to
'3.00

Kenneth

McC ullough, R.· Ph.

Charles Riffle. R. Ph.

Daily 8:00a .m. 1o to ,oo p m
Sunday 10 : JO - 12' 30 and.s to 9 p.m-. ·

Open

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992 -2 955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN
'POMEROY, 0.

Celebrating 23 Years of Service

SECOND BIG WEEK!

"2-3491

'

ol-loodo

200-202 East Main 51.

The shot put ball is m~d e or
Wellston, the Meigs Local District will ha ve to add six Iron and weighs 16 pounds.
classrooms and three will be needed at Alexander High School.
Local property . taxes have traditionally been the major
source of funds for new school facility construction.
LOSE UGLY FAT
The Gallia District will be relying almost totally on local Start losi ng we ight today OR
property taxes for a building program. The remaining districts MONEY BACK . MONADEX is
tiny tablet that will help cur b
with facility problems will have to rely on the tax duplicate for ayour
desi r e for ex cess food . Ea1
f~nding. The Appalachian Regional Commission and Depart- te ss - w ~1g h l ess . Contains no
t:! rou s drugs and will not
ment of Health, Education and Welfare are possible sources of dang
ma,._e
you
nervou s .
No
str e-nuous exe r cise . Change
supplementary school funding.
your life ... st art toda y .
According to the study, by Jan. I, 1974, (he four rural Gallia MONA DEX co st s SJ .OO f or a 20
·s upply . and S5 .00 for t w ice
County School Districts will form the Gallia District. The GaUia day
lh e amount. Lo se ugly fat or
District intends to build one or more high schools, convert the vour mon ey will be refunded
wi th no question's ask!;!d by :
four existing high schools to jnnior highs, possibly build three or Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug , 112 E.
i n, Pomeroy &amp; Dut1on Drug
four new elementary schools, retain two elementary schools in Ma
Store, Middleport . Ma'il Ord en
their present .condition, and remodel one elementary facility.
Filled .
- Adv .
The Gallipolis City School District will continue to operate as
a separate unit. . No major expansion, construction or consolidation has been projected in the ·remaining school districts
within the direct or lndirect impact areas .
In another phase of the report, it was pointed out that grpwth
will more than double the property tax base in eight years. 01 the
$8,541,000 in revenue growth, $6,570,000 comes directly from the
new plant and mines. The generating station is in Gallia County
which will benefit much more than the other two impact areas.
The $5,500,000 from ihe plant will go to Gallia COunty, while
Vinton and Meigs must share $1,070,000 from the coal mines.
Gallia already.has two-thirds of its tax duplicate in public utility
property . For this reason, Gallia has greater per capita assessed
value and correspondingly lower property taxes.
Both the federal and state officials indicated that some of the
major improvements recommended could come from an annual
debt service. •
· _ .. •I
According to the s\udy, even if an amount equal to another 10

• No Frost system eliminates dehoatlng
• Automatic Ice Maker ·
• New See-Thru can dlspen&amp;er, utility bin,
2 Plck..Qff adjustable shelves In

SPECIAL SAVINGS
IS YOURS RIGHT NOW!

freezer door
Big ~ICily No

Froot ..rng.-4 8Cfjulllbte ••W.m gt• ohelv•

• New Quick Cold control ror faster
reftlgarat&lt;Jr cool·down
·
• See-Thru bUtler keeper, Plck.QH
egg triv,t
• 2 adjustable Plc:k-OH sl'lelvea In

Central Operating Company's

refrigerator door

-.

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

.

.

·Philip Sporn Plant

Sale! Bedroom Suites
i

'. I'

New Haven, W.Va•

I .
.II

Warehousemen
When. -cooki ng \legetables, use as little
water as possible and cover the pan to
speed cooking.
·

~~~*

"conservation Is Important today, as
the nation faces an energy crisis. Help
fight waste of our'vltol resources right
in your own kitchen .PY using these
gas-saving cooking lips ... and save
money, too. I encourage you to start
now lo do your share.•

\

Electricians
Lab Technicians

almosl any type
pan or pot on a gas
range, those with

flat, smoolh bottoms cook ft~osler
with less chance of
burning the food

Inside.

Good maintenance, includi ng periodic
cleani ng, assures more economical and
efficient operation. Proper adjustmen t of
burners to a bl1,.1e flame Is an important
· ·maintenance check. Clean burner ports 'ls
another. Your gas ra nge manual has complete Ins tructions.

I

New Gas Range

Pre·hea l your oven only·

when It's necessa ry. And
when you do, fiVe or ten

Yil(j7!~

Welders .
Machinists

Mechanics

While yo!J can use

minutes Is ell It lakes. Setling the temperature higher

than you want won't pre·
heat the oven any faster.

tl you're thinking or replacing your old
gao range now, remember that you
needn't worry about your horne g..
1uppty. Anew, '"oderngeo range htlpo
conoerve g.. bocault it'o '"ore till·
ctant. it olleio automatic controto, btl·
tar lnoulatlon 1nd other giJ-IIVIng
featuret.
\ I
" I
I ill I II I
I

1, (!1

Instrument Repaimhh1.
Crane Operators
Bulldoar Ope1ators

l.abcm
()petators

Boat Operator Ucense
We Will Train UnsldUed Applicants.

, .
. n. jobs Provide excellent wages and a benefits·prupn which includes
life insu11nce, tnedical insurance, disability insurance, sick ltM, vacations, holidaJs,
and 'rltirement.
Mhouah a strike is in prog~ess, the company continues to ope11te
the plant.
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APPLICANTS MAY CALL 675-2913 TO

ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW.
The Instant-on, inatant• ~
olf conlrol ot your gao

SPECIAL
STOREWIDE
VALUES
ALL THIS WEEK I

range me ana len .
wasted heat btlore and

alter cooking, and just
naturally saves ga1 and

money. Cooking .ttl·
dom requlreo a high
flame lor very tong. UN
a low one whtn It will
do jut! ae well.

PHILIP SPORN PLANT

Post Olfu:• lla• 311, New Ht••n, Wtlt Vkel~ll '212•
Tillflhan• : •r•• cod• 304- 112..:.3111

-·
•

An Equal OpportunltJ Empqw

. '!f

Openlf!G tht oven door IOMI neat olld watttt
g111nd money. Moko good uH of )'OUr timer
or oven window to 1vold opening the oven
door too frequently.

a6wM~IACIA•

,au ,It prll!lout ... pure tlllrgy .. . UMI\.w1Miy.

"'

I

&gt;

(:

has job openinp for permanent employment in the followini'Skills:

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"YOUR
GAS RANGE
HELPS YOU
CONSERVE
ENERGY
AND SAVE
MONEY.'

''I I

I

Cerical

181 N. Second Ave.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3279

•

UNIT CAlLED
The Pomeroy ER squad was
called at3 :13 p. m. Wednesday
to the Roy Smith home on old
route 33 for Amanda Casper
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. '

offered special class

OPTOMETRISTS

Located In The New Spring Valley Plaza. ~allipolis, Ohio

liumeroom rcprtsentatives
to the studen t council were
elected at Meigs High WL'd nesday _They are :
Freshmen : Mary Bogss.
Ronnie Coats, Mary Durst,
Becky Fultz, Cindy Hlnay,
Vicky Might,- Faith Perrin,
Susie Samuels, Rose Snowden
and Beverly Wilcox.
Sophomores : Bruce
Blackston; Beth Burns, Crystal
Glaze, Pam Holcomb, Mona
King, Bruce Reed, Tamara
Stanley, Cathy Werry.
Juniors : Debbie Blackston,
Lonnie . Coats,
Regina
Harrison, Joyce Hutchison,
Debbie
Diane
Lewis,
McLaughlin , Jeff Ridgwa;•,
Sharon Walker ..
Seniors: Mick Ash, Susie
Jeffers, Melanie Cremeans,
Cindy Craig, Tina Nieri and
Brenda Van Meter.

Cu.Fl.

Dr. T. t Bradshaw
·Dr. Milton Mason

MUSIC CENTER

name reps

Appro~ .

Marriage LJcenses
Michael Stanley Layne, 24,
New Haven, laborer, and
Debra · Ann Gillenwater, 16,
Gallipolis: William Robin
O!sborne, 18, Long Bottom;
laborer, and Kathy Diane Dill,
19, Long Bottom, secretary.

THURSDAY~FRIDAY

Homerooms

Pupils with bad hearing

Dr. Brubaker joins HMC

•
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dispooed of II. Pr"tt said
NIHJmm wu,:; n pipcfiller by
trade and had been looking for
employment in the Middleport
urea. He was scheduled to talk
1o the owner ol a Middleport
establis hment toda y In
reference to a job.
Noonan was quiet and was
popular with other residents or
the hotel, Pratt said. He apparently had money to live
welL At one point in his stay at
t!le hotel, it wa• known that he
had several thousand dollars.
However, when the body was
recovered last night he had a
little over $400 in his wallet.
According to the story pieced
together today, Noonan had
been at the Gull Service Station
on North Second St. a · few
minutes before the accident
and had gassed his car. He
made a right turn onto
Rutland, then a right turn to
take him down Front St. to the
hotel where he was staying.
Tir~ tracks across a lot
above the home of Mrs.
McKinley indicated that
Noonan's vehicle was out of
control at that point. It then
crossed the railroad tracks on
Front, went over the ·steep
embankment, and into the
river.
'
Apparently Noonan had been
driving without a license. He
had been scheduled to appear
in the Pomeroy Mayor's Court
Wednesday night on the
charge, but met his death
before the case came up for
hearing, Pratt reported
Noonan.had apparently been in
California for a time, and then
went to New Mexico before
corning to Ohio. ·
No arrangements had been
made at the funeral home this
morning as to the disposal of
the body.

(Continued from Pa~e J)
•
·
humon rctwurc•l-s tllviMlou. tmd Jirn Jlt'h.'l'liOn , vl)uir 111 un uf the pll'l . uf til l' 1\I':P J-:PtWrHL•l(} tnx r.·WnlH·Is n·&lt;lliii'••Uto pmy ad1 · 11w
n•gir•llll office of t!J&lt;• f:&lt;'OIIOJlli,• ll&gt;·V~Iopnwnl Admlnlslrtitlun, full rauw· uf m•rvirr• to (!., pilonl itself, UV(•r 1111 rK'l. uf lito 11 1111[1[1)
told tho resldcntll from tho lmpa •i urc 11 allendln~ yesterday's t11x t'o·vt·tiiH' (loilll!ost $5,:1tltl,IJ(Ki l in nddltlunul l:lx l'!' vmu • wtllll{·
Hession lo "sUirl workln~ together " to ucl•lcv(• 110111 e 0 ~ LhL· ~o:-J!."' ot v;ulnhh; ''Ht'h y•·ur to ;uuortiZ\' tJI(t locttl shan• ur S&lt;lWt.lr , road
set fm·tlt In th e sludy ,
un&lt;J . ulh •r uwjor flfX1U-1«'· rvlng lntt&gt;~' fiVtmc uts . Aonu;tl ~ rht
" Co-opel'llllou, locltl inlti11t lvc m-KI ri;fl eral l't'Riloww urc tlt(l t«•rvk t•on R&lt;lllll' tnorc n!t't•nt !Jond iss ues 111 Ohio llH s avt1rl..t J4l•d I0
ingr !client. needed to tnuko the plun ~u . Unplanned · uruwth JX't. of !he owlulnnlly borrowed m11ount.
preRenlll more problem• than economic ii11J)Ucl haK provided,"
l~t&lt;cd on this borruwiug c·Mt, the annuul AI•:!' pl;mtPetcrS&lt;nl •ahl, 1'111• dircdor rontinucd, "Private developers will ~c nct·at cd tu&gt; revenue potc•nUal could SUJ)pOrt $5:1 mllliun in
respond to provide adequate housing, but Jlewcr und water ou·r &lt;'HJ•Ital impt•ovcmcnt:J. 'l'l"' need for the new suppttrtin~ facilities
Pto~lems. Planned development will provide additional fu"nding and J"'llgrmns exL~ts at euch of the growth centers proposed lor
for more services, and jf more service• cannot be provided tltls tile lmpuct urea, however, tile lncrcuscd tax revenllll will he
Way , local resident~ will b given an udditional tax burden ,
IMg~ly concentrated in ()ulli/1 county.
.
"Our aim today, Is to discuss Lhe reporl and whut dircctivn
Discussions with State of tlhio agcn&lt;·ies lndicute that !cderal
we should take toward growth In thu area . If we move tKJw, we funds are )ikely to g{J unused in road programs and others
can chimncl the growth, Sitve_money In the Ion" run and improve becuusc of UJc lat·k or slate tnutcillng fun&lt;is.
the quality of life for everyone In the impact areu " Peterson
In the Immediate future, Jl series or meetings ul tl"' highest
concluded.
'
·
levels will be hchl with the ~·edcral Regional Council and with
John Sayles, head of tho urban planning department, Stanley Guv~r~or John Gi lligan's staff to IX! gin spL'cific negotiation.• for
COnsultants, reviewed the impact of the power complex on the obuumngsupplemental and Pl'iority Iundin~ for the highway and
school districts throughout the study area.
water and sewer itnprovemenls recommended by the study.
Growth In the impact area, according to Sayles Is expected P The Impact analysis was funded through a $50,000 grant from
to reach 13,500 by 1980 which would increuse school enrollment the U. S. Economic Development Administration und $W,C.67 in
by 3,015 students. .
funds and Jlervices rroiJl the state development department.
Future pupil loads were determined by allocating students to
Tho state is working closely with the Buckeye Hills-llock ing
school districts loeated In the various growth centers according Valley Regional Development District headed by executive
to the revised residential growth pattern. High school director , John H. Beasley, who is primarily responsible for
enrollments in Meigs Local, the consolidatt'!l Gailia County carrymg out the economic impact stud y.
Dislrict, Wellston City and Athens Local Districts will likely
The state development department JS working with the Ohio
exceed capacity.
Environmental Protection Agency ·in order to fi nd 11 way or
Construction of the vocational-technical center In Rio amending the U. S. EPA's criteria for installing new water and
Grande should permit shifting of the lith and 12th graders, sewer facilities and has aided in proVidht!l adequa te schools to
allowing the Oallia and Wellston City Districts to accommodate train residents for work in the deep.plt coal mines.
future enrollments. The Meigs Local District and Alexander
Grants have bc&gt;en approved for the 'l'ri County Vocational
School District will be overloaded. Sayles also said it might be School al Nelsooville and .the Meigs Local School District.
advisable to shift individual school service boundaries to ac· Other speakers were Frank C. Balniert, executive director or
commodate anticipated pupil loads.
lhe Ohio Valley R~g ion al Development commission and Lester
A new elementary school should be considered in the AEP Stone of the Sta te Farmer's Home Admioistration Office.
development, or as an alternative, the present elementary school

I
' a rie Caldwf
Jtoffman , Middleport; M
tl , Ar ~ h1 e [)onohu ,
Adnois.~hms W"lter (!, Hn:c r , !iyr.acuse; r;tulda ce Patty Searl!'ll, 'llfKII Hud•on,
W (! t-~r s,
l•omcroy; Pearl Conms, Middleport.
Hazel Curti s, Rosemary
Discharges
Croston.

Vclcntns Mt•m(lrlallf•»jpftul

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�Gavin impact in area critical

4

News. • • in Briefs Driver drowns

Area·grant

1Continue-d from Page II
\ ConUnued from Page ll
, . Pomeroy. The program I OUI'tS.
provides nursing care to
patients of Veterans Memorial
GAS STATION OPERATOHS in Massad1t1setts said ltKiay
who reside within a 25 mi e litO)' would end IIJeit' proiL'Sl shutdo•·n. but lhey vowt'&lt;i l)k'Y
radius of the hospital. Total would d(l it agnin if lhc Nbwn ~HI ministration refuses to thnn~~·
cost or the program is set at its mind on prh.'t:' ronLI'Ols.
$29,758.
\Ye'l•e proven our point and we don't W&lt;tnlthc publk lo suf(er
any more," said John Hell, a Mobil station operator in the !loston
•
suburb of Lexington. Hundreds of stations ac-ross the stalt•
•
remained dosed Wednesday for a second day despite a t-ourt
•
. . order to stay open. The gasoline dealers were protesting aCost of
Living Council ruling that bars stations from passing on to their
•
customers a penny-a-gallon increase charged by the oil l'mnA panies.

(Continued from Pn~c 1J
flood li~hls weN &lt;•mployed.
Ro~er Hysell un~ Jim
IJJvendur of the Mason unit
and Wayne Davis of the
Middlepol'l unit, all trained
scuba divers, located the
sunken vehicle. Acoble from a

MISS AMERICA"

"'"f'cker was hOQked to the car

SHOES

GOLDEN
OLDIE

DENVER - THREE OF THE ~' IVE remaining Stanek
sextuplets
are battling the lung disease that killed Uwir it~ant
WITH
1r. sister and doctors said today two of them are in poor condition.
"The prognosis hiJS to be guarded," a hospital spokesman
BRAND said: "But the longer they survive the .better off they are. Each
EW BEAT extra hour is encouraging." T\VD of the other children born
S1inday night to the 34-year~ld wife of a junior accountant were
$
Brack &amp; Wh ite I in fair condition and the filth child is in good condition.
Blue &amp; White
Edna Stanek' 34 saw her children for the first time
Wed.
rtesday.

.

"

WASHINGTON - THE FORD MOTOR CO . has made
overpayments in its insurance premiums and plact:d the money
into tax-free accounts in Bermuda for use by Ford executives, a
Senate subcommittee has been to ld. Philip M. Wilson, 36, once a
kingpin in a worldwide insurance and securities fraud , told the
permanent investigations subcommittee Wednesday that F.ord
overpiiid a 1;\Qston brokerage firm for insurance and that the
excess was funneled into the Trails Global Insurance .Co., Ltd., a
Ford~wned company in Hamilton, Bermuda.
"It's my understanding that the money is made available to
Ford exeucitives when they come to Bermuda," Wilson testified.
The Ford Motor Co. said in Detroit: "There is no truth whatever
to any suggestions that Ford did or could overpay its premiums
or set up funds for executive personal use. Any such charges are
absurd and rediculous." It said Trans-Global later became
Transcon Insurance Ltd., a wholly owned Ford subsidiary and
that all premiums to the firm "were and are at competitive
market rates.n
DivORCE ASKJ!;D
M~ry K. Bar~hart, Tuppers
Plams, has filed sUit for .
.
divorce from Charles A.
Barnhart in Meigs County
Common Pleas. Court. In her
suit for money, Marjorie M. · Miss Barbara Werner, 34,
Wyatt, Rutland, was granted formerly of Middleport, died
the nght to recover $1,333 from Wednesday evening at the
Dale Lawson, Portland. Jerry - Pineview Manor Nursing
Tlllts, Pomeroy Route 4, was Home in Beaver, Ohio. Miss
Whore Shoos art Senolbly
awa~ded ~Judgment of $555.81 Werner was born in Middleport
_Pr..-:lcod..:.::;._ _ _ _ _-:-_-1 m his sUit for money against June 22, 1889, the daughter of

Barbara wemer
died Wednesda.Y

which II&gt;HI gone over the steep
hank about 6:3ll p.m. The
''''hide was pulled to the top of
U1e bank ubout 9:05 p.m. where
Meigs coroner ::&gt;r . 1\. R.
Pickens oxamined Noonan's
body ruling death by accidental drowning.
Rumor at the scene where
hundreds of residents lined the
river bank watching the rescue
said there were two bodies in
the vehicle.
However, when it was p~lled
up, it was found that Noonan
was in the back seat of the tw&lt;&gt;tone brown and beige dodge.
One leg was extended between
the twa seats in the front.
Death was attributed to
drowning. An ambulance from
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home took the body -to the
funeral horne aild attempts
were being made this morning
to notify next of kin: Noonan is
believed to have relatives possibly a sister - living in
Maywood , Ul. His car,
however, had license plates
!rom the state of New Mexic.o.
Ralph Pratt, owner of the
Ohio Hotel where Noonan had
registered on Sept. I, said
Noonan had checked in there
without any clothing. There
were no clothes, to speak of,In
his room, and Noonan went to
Middleport stores and bought
new .clothes whenever he
wanted a change, Pratt said.
He apparently left his old
clothing at the stores or

SHOE BOX

.•,...

•-'"".!!"!!!"'!!!~!"!!!-~!!""~~Cha~~rl•es-H•a•tf•te•ld•,•D\!•.•x.te•r•....

.. You CAN 'T BUY
A
PAINT

•
•

the late John and Kathryn
Gloeckner Werner. She was
preceded in death by four
brothers and a sister in addition to her parents.
Surviving are two nephews,
John L. Werner and · Earl
Werner, · both of Middleport,
and two nieces, Miss Kathryn
Werner of Middleport, and
Mrs. Leo (Minnie) Russell of
Denver, Colo .
Funera~ services will 'be at
Ir:30 a. rn. Saturday at tile
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Father Bernard
Kracjovic officiilting. Rosary
.services Will be at 8 p. m.
Friday at the funeral home.
Burial will be in Sacred Heart
Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
Friday evening.

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~RESIDENT

HOUSE

'

PAINT

.••
•

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Reg. 17.00 gal.
I -

I'

~

Sale

$590

Gallon

·~ .

J,

£..;

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
, S. Jrd Ave.

992-2709

MiddleJI:Orl, 0_•.

Dr. Reid C. Brubaker has
joined the Holzer Medical
Center Clinic stafi as a
speciali,st In the de~rtrnent of
Internal medicine.
This was announced today by
HMC Clinic Administrator
Robert E. Daniel.
Anative of West Alexandria,
Ohio, Dr. B,rubaker comes to
Holzer Medical center Clinic

• •

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&amp;SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 20 · 21 · 22

CHILDERS
The Most Modern &amp; larges&gt; Mus~ Slore In
Southeaslem Ohio

A class for young people of
four counties with hearing
difficulties is being organized
at Harrisonville Elementary
School.
Taking part in the class at
which specialized instrucilon
will be provided are Meigs,
Gallia, Jackson and Vinton
counties. At least six pupils will
'be required for the class to
flinction, although there may
be more than that number.
Children so enrolled will spend
a part ol their day in the
specialized training class and
then will be with regular
classes on their grade level the
remainder of the day.
Efforts presently are being
made to work out such
problems as transportation,

•
from Ohio State University
Hospitals in Colwnbus. He had
been the senior admitting
resident and clinical instructor
at the Ohio State University
Hospitals before coming to the
clinic.
Dr . Brubaker graduated
· Magna Cum Laude from
Miatni University at Oxford,
Ohio, in 1967, and Swnma Cwn
Laude from the Ohio State
University College ol Medicine
in 1970.
He completed his internship
at Hurley Hospital in Flint,
Michigan , and his residency in
internal medicine at Ohio State
· University Hospitals. He and
his wife, Nancy, reside at 559
Lincoln Pike .
In making this announcement, Daniel said, "We
are extremely pleased to have
Dr. Brubaker join our staff. His
arrival enhances the c~verage
of the department of internal
medicine and also further
establishes the close relations
between the Medical Center
and Ohio State University."
With the arrival .of Dr.
Brubaker, the clinic staff is
now comprised of 33 speclaltst.
In various fields of medicine.

THREE FINED
Three defendants were fined
and another forfeited two
bonds in Pomeroy Mayor
Donald Collins' court 'Wednesday night. Fined were
Donald Lovett, $20 and costs,
intoxication; Michael Neutzling, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
speeding, and John Moon,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, improper turn. Richard !lloonan,
Middleport, forfeited a $50
bond for no operator's license
and $200 bond on driving while
intoxicated.

i

·hanl·to·fill
shoes

"M CIIIATOI Of
. IIAIONAIII OfU(I PltCII'

- . . blg rosponolblllllu now ihd
big Pions lor the futuro noods 1

'P~Ial kind of !lie insurance.

PHON! 992"'759

Ho nltdo a plan thai moke1
ootobillhlng on estate and re.tlro~lnt lunda worry-free. It
you r• thlo kind ot man
Slot• Farm hu tnt pr&lt;&gt;Oram
· lor YOU. A• loon •• you begin

271 H. lu d A.,._

'
Mlddhp art, Ohio

for Your Dmg NHtll

fOUr flmlly 'tj fUture II protoclid

1 \ Contact

your State Farm Agent '

lor detail• on this Peroon-to-

Penon Life lnaurance program.
Sttphtft C. Sn•wdcn
.

Village Pharmacy continues to provide
complete and accurate records of your ex·
pense on prescription medicine as we have the
past five years.

~

S.SJ Rvnel St . ·
(Grtvel Hill )

\1ldclleaort, Ohlo

Pit. "2-IUS

-

~· _

1

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.

"'"

STATE FARM LIFE

INSURANCE COMPA NY
Hom1 (llllte : Bioomlogton , llllnoll

'

'A

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Jewelry
All tho new pieces for fa ll '73 and
wi nl cr '74 Fi15hionnble jewelry· 1
such 11 5
pie r ce d earri ngs,
bangle -,.,
chain
necklac es,
p i~ r C:e d look ea r ri ngs, copper

bracele ts, fa shion ri ngs, l4K .
gol d s 11 pie rc ing earring s,
IOckcl s and pins, modern and

cameo.

at Salem Center could be expanded.
1~~~:~~----~;~:~M;;--,
ECIAL
OFFER
. A shortage of six elementary clasSrooms is projected at
SP

BIG MAMA

PANTY HOSE
$1 •99 pr.

w•••~·~
m•ro•
I{ s 1-.1·:. 11 1

INSURED 30 DAY S WEAR
new

Free
Pair

*COMPARE AND SAVE
Ctpacl ty

17
17

"

19

Pllllco-ford
PeiCIInl
Savings

""
....

Slvlrljjjl va. Major

ComPttitol'l. Averaga

32% '

""
"'

""

"'

"gpro•.

Phi Ito-ford

Sl.vlnga VI . MljOI'

Capac tty

Percent

Savings

Comp.tilo", "WIIIjll

A FREE pair of Knee· Highs, (79c
value), when vou purchase Big
Mama .Penty Hose at SL99 pr . .

""

""
""

-

Lllellml S.vlnga

"'

·697 .

Table Dosed on tests ln l~~ded to tlmulate home usage u r~ der lrequer'lt!y enco;~u nte red ~on dlll ol\s
and at V1 eledrh: rill ol 3 cen ts P'6r kllow au ~our . Tl!sl prcudur~u were sdePted t ram •NSt
Standard 8&lt;11. Section ~.1 , with rontr&lt;JI Sllltlr&gt;Q to eppr~ch 01 (11)1' ''" ' er) and 37• (rtlrlue ratot),

Just Arrived Flower Bulbs for Fall Planting

Actuataayin11s rna~ vzu ~ brued UtiOfl IO(:al e lec tr ic rates, cl imatic conditions and lndl•ldual us.~~ga .

Comp l~tle

'-""""-,
!Ill

.

Phllco Side-b~-silde

"
"
"

273

rn .one,

Refrigerator COst Savlngi
~ .ft .

Lllttlime S.vlngs

or a

pair . For the Larger
Woman .. . fits 5' to 5' 9", 165 to 230
lbs .
At last a lar ger , more com fortable , better flttlng pantyhose
combination for more gracious
women ! Sheer stretc h Captlva(r )
stockings and stretch panty, all -

Get

enrollment of the eligible
students, an agreement wltjl
the Meigs Local School District
on remuneration for use of the
Harrisonville facility .
The Meigs Colinty Board of
Education is fiscal agent for
the new program which is a
part of an overall plan to
provide the best possible
education for handicappe'd
children.

A

IMI da ta lmulablt upon request.

a

a • .....

• •

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
18.5 cu.ft. capacity Side-by-Side

BEN,FRANKLII)I

ONLY 30" WIDE

PHONE

Model RT19BIM
HugolrHJer lloNO 2591111.

POMEROY, OHIO
m'IN ..JDA\Y .a'Lio'nJIIDAY NIGH11 m. I

I

Budget

Priced At
'1.00
to
'3.00

Kenneth

McC ullough, R.· Ph.

Charles Riffle. R. Ph.

Daily 8:00a .m. 1o to ,oo p m
Sunday 10 : JO - 12' 30 and.s to 9 p.m-. ·

Open

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992 -2 955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN
'POMEROY, 0.

Celebrating 23 Years of Service

SECOND BIG WEEK!

"2-3491

'

ol-loodo

200-202 East Main 51.

The shot put ball is m~d e or
Wellston, the Meigs Local District will ha ve to add six Iron and weighs 16 pounds.
classrooms and three will be needed at Alexander High School.
Local property . taxes have traditionally been the major
source of funds for new school facility construction.
LOSE UGLY FAT
The Gallia District will be relying almost totally on local Start losi ng we ight today OR
property taxes for a building program. The remaining districts MONEY BACK . MONADEX is
tiny tablet that will help cur b
with facility problems will have to rely on the tax duplicate for ayour
desi r e for ex cess food . Ea1
f~nding. The Appalachian Regional Commission and Depart- te ss - w ~1g h l ess . Contains no
t:! rou s drugs and will not
ment of Health, Education and Welfare are possible sources of dang
ma,._e
you
nervou s .
No
str e-nuous exe r cise . Change
supplementary school funding.
your life ... st art toda y .
According to the study, by Jan. I, 1974, (he four rural Gallia MONA DEX co st s SJ .OO f or a 20
·s upply . and S5 .00 for t w ice
County School Districts will form the Gallia District. The GaUia day
lh e amount. Lo se ugly fat or
District intends to build one or more high schools, convert the vour mon ey will be refunded
wi th no question's ask!;!d by :
four existing high schools to jnnior highs, possibly build three or Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug , 112 E.
i n, Pomeroy &amp; Dut1on Drug
four new elementary schools, retain two elementary schools in Ma
Store, Middleport . Ma'il Ord en
their present .condition, and remodel one elementary facility.
Filled .
- Adv .
The Gallipolis City School District will continue to operate as
a separate unit. . No major expansion, construction or consolidation has been projected in the ·remaining school districts
within the direct or lndirect impact areas .
In another phase of the report, it was pointed out that grpwth
will more than double the property tax base in eight years. 01 the
$8,541,000 in revenue growth, $6,570,000 comes directly from the
new plant and mines. The generating station is in Gallia County
which will benefit much more than the other two impact areas.
The $5,500,000 from ihe plant will go to Gallia COunty, while
Vinton and Meigs must share $1,070,000 from the coal mines.
Gallia already.has two-thirds of its tax duplicate in public utility
property . For this reason, Gallia has greater per capita assessed
value and correspondingly lower property taxes.
Both the federal and state officials indicated that some of the
major improvements recommended could come from an annual
debt service. •
· _ .. •I
According to the s\udy, even if an amount equal to another 10

• No Frost system eliminates dehoatlng
• Automatic Ice Maker ·
• New See-Thru can dlspen&amp;er, utility bin,
2 Plck..Qff adjustable shelves In

SPECIAL SAVINGS
IS YOURS RIGHT NOW!

freezer door
Big ~ICily No

Froot ..rng.-4 8Cfjulllbte ••W.m gt• ohelv•

• New Quick Cold control ror faster
reftlgarat&lt;Jr cool·down
·
• See-Thru bUtler keeper, Plck.QH
egg triv,t
• 2 adjustable Plc:k-OH sl'lelvea In

Central Operating Company's

refrigerator door

-.

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

.

.

·Philip Sporn Plant

Sale! Bedroom Suites
i

'. I'

New Haven, W.Va•

I .
.II

Warehousemen
When. -cooki ng \legetables, use as little
water as possible and cover the pan to
speed cooking.
·

~~~*

"conservation Is Important today, as
the nation faces an energy crisis. Help
fight waste of our'vltol resources right
in your own kitchen .PY using these
gas-saving cooking lips ... and save
money, too. I encourage you to start
now lo do your share.•

\

Electricians
Lab Technicians

almosl any type
pan or pot on a gas
range, those with

flat, smoolh bottoms cook ft~osler
with less chance of
burning the food

Inside.

Good maintenance, includi ng periodic
cleani ng, assures more economical and
efficient operation. Proper adjustmen t of
burners to a bl1,.1e flame Is an important
· ·maintenance check. Clean burner ports 'ls
another. Your gas ra nge manual has complete Ins tructions.

I

New Gas Range

Pre·hea l your oven only·

when It's necessa ry. And
when you do, fiVe or ten

Yil(j7!~

Welders .
Machinists

Mechanics

While yo!J can use

minutes Is ell It lakes. Setling the temperature higher

than you want won't pre·
heat the oven any faster.

tl you're thinking or replacing your old
gao range now, remember that you
needn't worry about your horne g..
1uppty. Anew, '"oderngeo range htlpo
conoerve g.. bocault it'o '"ore till·
ctant. it olleio automatic controto, btl·
tar lnoulatlon 1nd other giJ-IIVIng
featuret.
\ I
" I
I ill I II I
I

1, (!1

Instrument Repaimhh1.
Crane Operators
Bulldoar Ope1ators

l.abcm
()petators

Boat Operator Ucense
We Will Train UnsldUed Applicants.

, .
. n. jobs Provide excellent wages and a benefits·prupn which includes
life insu11nce, tnedical insurance, disability insurance, sick ltM, vacations, holidaJs,
and 'rltirement.
Mhouah a strike is in prog~ess, the company continues to ope11te
the plant.
.
.
I

'

APPLICANTS MAY CALL 675-2913 TO

ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW.
The Instant-on, inatant• ~
olf conlrol ot your gao

SPECIAL
STOREWIDE
VALUES
ALL THIS WEEK I

range me ana len .
wasted heat btlore and

alter cooking, and just
naturally saves ga1 and

money. Cooking .ttl·
dom requlreo a high
flame lor very tong. UN
a low one whtn It will
do jut! ae well.

PHILIP SPORN PLANT

Post Olfu:• lla• 311, New Ht••n, Wtlt Vkel~ll '212•
Tillflhan• : •r•• cod• 304- 112..:.3111

-·
•

An Equal OpportunltJ Empqw

. '!f

Openlf!G tht oven door IOMI neat olld watttt
g111nd money. Moko good uH of )'OUr timer
or oven window to 1vold opening the oven
door too frequently.

a6wM~IACIA•

,au ,It prll!lout ... pure tlllrgy .. . UMI\.w1Miy.

"'

I

&gt;

(:

has job openinp for permanent employment in the followini'Skills:

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"YOUR
GAS RANGE
HELPS YOU
CONSERVE
ENERGY
AND SAVE
MONEY.'

''I I

I

Cerical

181 N. Second Ave.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3279

•

UNIT CAlLED
The Pomeroy ER squad was
called at3 :13 p. m. Wednesday
to the Roy Smith home on old
route 33 for Amanda Casper
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. '

offered special class

OPTOMETRISTS

Located In The New Spring Valley Plaza. ~allipolis, Ohio

liumeroom rcprtsentatives
to the studen t council were
elected at Meigs High WL'd nesday _They are :
Freshmen : Mary Bogss.
Ronnie Coats, Mary Durst,
Becky Fultz, Cindy Hlnay,
Vicky Might,- Faith Perrin,
Susie Samuels, Rose Snowden
and Beverly Wilcox.
Sophomores : Bruce
Blackston; Beth Burns, Crystal
Glaze, Pam Holcomb, Mona
King, Bruce Reed, Tamara
Stanley, Cathy Werry.
Juniors : Debbie Blackston,
Lonnie . Coats,
Regina
Harrison, Joyce Hutchison,
Debbie
Diane
Lewis,
McLaughlin , Jeff Ridgwa;•,
Sharon Walker ..
Seniors: Mick Ash, Susie
Jeffers, Melanie Cremeans,
Cindy Craig, Tina Nieri and
Brenda Van Meter.

Cu.Fl.

Dr. T. t Bradshaw
·Dr. Milton Mason

MUSIC CENTER

name reps

Appro~ .

Marriage LJcenses
Michael Stanley Layne, 24,
New Haven, laborer, and
Debra · Ann Gillenwater, 16,
Gallipolis: William Robin
O!sborne, 18, Long Bottom;
laborer, and Kathy Diane Dill,
19, Long Bottom, secretary.

THURSDAY~FRIDAY

Homerooms

Pupils with bad hearing

Dr. Brubaker joins HMC

•
•
•

dispooed of II. Pr"tt said
NIHJmm wu,:; n pipcfiller by
trade and had been looking for
employment in the Middleport
urea. He was scheduled to talk
1o the owner ol a Middleport
establis hment toda y In
reference to a job.
Noonan was quiet and was
popular with other residents or
the hotel, Pratt said. He apparently had money to live
welL At one point in his stay at
t!le hotel, it wa• known that he
had several thousand dollars.
However, when the body was
recovered last night he had a
little over $400 in his wallet.
According to the story pieced
together today, Noonan had
been at the Gull Service Station
on North Second St. a · few
minutes before the accident
and had gassed his car. He
made a right turn onto
Rutland, then a right turn to
take him down Front St. to the
hotel where he was staying.
Tir~ tracks across a lot
above the home of Mrs.
McKinley indicated that
Noonan's vehicle was out of
control at that point. It then
crossed the railroad tracks on
Front, went over the ·steep
embankment, and into the
river.
'
Apparently Noonan had been
driving without a license. He
had been scheduled to appear
in the Pomeroy Mayor's Court
Wednesday night on the
charge, but met his death
before the case came up for
hearing, Pratt reported
Noonan.had apparently been in
California for a time, and then
went to New Mexico before
corning to Ohio. ·
No arrangements had been
made at the funeral home this
morning as to the disposal of
the body.

(Continued from Pa~e J)
•
·
humon rctwurc•l-s tllviMlou. tmd Jirn Jlt'h.'l'liOn , vl)uir 111 un uf the pll'l . uf til l' 1\I':P J-:PtWrHL•l(} tnx r.·WnlH·Is n·&lt;lliii'••Uto pmy ad1 · 11w
n•gir•llll office of t!J&lt;• f:&lt;'OIIOJlli,• ll&gt;·V~Iopnwnl Admlnlslrtitlun, full rauw· uf m•rvirr• to (!., pilonl itself, UV(•r 1111 rK'l. uf lito 11 1111[1[1)
told tho resldcntll from tho lmpa •i urc 11 allendln~ yesterday's t11x t'o·vt·tiiH' (loilll!ost $5,:1tltl,IJ(Ki l in nddltlunul l:lx l'!' vmu • wtllll{·
Hession lo "sUirl workln~ together " to ucl•lcv(• 110111 e 0 ~ LhL· ~o:-J!."' ot v;ulnhh; ''Ht'h y•·ur to ;uuortiZ\' tJI(t locttl shan• ur S&lt;lWt.lr , road
set fm·tlt In th e sludy ,
un&lt;J . ulh •r uwjor flfX1U-1«'· rvlng lntt&gt;~' fiVtmc uts . Aonu;tl ~ rht
" Co-opel'llllou, locltl inlti11t lvc m-KI ri;fl eral l't'Riloww urc tlt(l t«•rvk t•on R&lt;lllll' tnorc n!t't•nt !Jond iss ues 111 Ohio llH s avt1rl..t J4l•d I0
ingr !client. needed to tnuko the plun ~u . Unplanned · uruwth JX't. of !he owlulnnlly borrowed m11ount.
preRenlll more problem• than economic ii11J)Ucl haK provided,"
l~t&lt;cd on this borruwiug c·Mt, the annuul AI•:!' pl;mtPetcrS&lt;nl •ahl, 1'111• dircdor rontinucd, "Private developers will ~c nct·at cd tu&gt; revenue potc•nUal could SUJ)pOrt $5:1 mllliun in
respond to provide adequate housing, but Jlewcr und water ou·r &lt;'HJ•Ital impt•ovcmcnt:J. 'l'l"' need for the new suppttrtin~ facilities
Pto~lems. Planned development will provide additional fu"nding and J"'llgrmns exL~ts at euch of the growth centers proposed lor
for more services, and jf more service• cannot be provided tltls tile lmpuct urea, however, tile lncrcuscd tax revenllll will he
Way , local resident~ will b given an udditional tax burden ,
IMg~ly concentrated in ()ulli/1 county.
.
"Our aim today, Is to discuss Lhe reporl and whut dircctivn
Discussions with State of tlhio agcn&lt;·ies lndicute that !cderal
we should take toward growth In thu area . If we move tKJw, we funds are )ikely to g{J unused in road programs and others
can chimncl the growth, Sitve_money In the Ion" run and improve becuusc of UJc lat·k or slate tnutcillng fun&lt;is.
the quality of life for everyone In the impact areu " Peterson
In the Immediate future, Jl series or meetings ul tl"' highest
concluded.
'
·
levels will be hchl with the ~·edcral Regional Council and with
John Sayles, head of tho urban planning department, Stanley Guv~r~or John Gi lligan's staff to IX! gin spL'cific negotiation.• for
COnsultants, reviewed the impact of the power complex on the obuumngsupplemental and Pl'iority Iundin~ for the highway and
school districts throughout the study area.
water and sewer itnprovemenls recommended by the study.
Growth In the impact area, according to Sayles Is expected P The Impact analysis was funded through a $50,000 grant from
to reach 13,500 by 1980 which would increuse school enrollment the U. S. Economic Development Administration und $W,C.67 in
by 3,015 students. .
funds and Jlervices rroiJl the state development department.
Future pupil loads were determined by allocating students to
Tho state is working closely with the Buckeye Hills-llock ing
school districts loeated In the various growth centers according Valley Regional Development District headed by executive
to the revised residential growth pattern. High school director , John H. Beasley, who is primarily responsible for
enrollments in Meigs Local, the consolidatt'!l Gailia County carrymg out the economic impact stud y.
Dislrict, Wellston City and Athens Local Districts will likely
The state development department JS working with the Ohio
exceed capacity.
Environmental Protection Agency ·in order to fi nd 11 way or
Construction of the vocational-technical center In Rio amending the U. S. EPA's criteria for installing new water and
Grande should permit shifting of the lith and 12th graders, sewer facilities and has aided in proVidht!l adequa te schools to
allowing the Oallia and Wellston City Districts to accommodate train residents for work in the deep.plt coal mines.
future enrollments. The Meigs Local District and Alexander
Grants have bc&gt;en approved for the 'l'ri County Vocational
School District will be overloaded. Sayles also said it might be School al Nelsooville and .the Meigs Local School District.
advisable to shift individual school service boundaries to ac· Other speakers were Frank C. Balniert, executive director or
commodate anticipated pupil loads.
lhe Ohio Valley R~g ion al Development commission and Lester
A new elementary school should be considered in the AEP Stone of the Sta te Farmer's Home Admioistration Office.
development, or as an alternative, the present elementary school

I
' a rie Caldwf
Jtoffman , Middleport; M
tl , Ar ~ h1 e [)onohu ,
Adnois.~hms W"lter (!, Hn:c r , !iyr.acuse; r;tulda ce Patty Searl!'ll, 'llfKII Hud•on,
W (! t-~r s,
l•omcroy; Pearl Conms, Middleport.
Hazel Curti s, Rosemary
Discharges
Croston.

Vclcntns Mt•m(lrlallf•»jpftul

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�8

~Daily St.•ntin&lt;•l, Middlcpurt-l'omcroy, ll., &amp;pL -..'IJ.

Jr.

l!li:\

Auxiliary meets 'A Trip to Toyland 'is show theme -.PTA hears.therapist

·Projects , Including
ualatance with the Eight and
Forty cystic fibrosis drive and
promotion of the one-half 11'111
bond tuue for construction ur a
tchool building ror the retarded
of the county, were taken on at
the Tuesday night meeting of
the Junior American Legion
AuxiUary of Drew Webs~r
Post 39.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis, advisor, the girls
made plans to distribute flyers
promoting the bond issue .
Posters which they had made
were on display at the meeting
and wlll we exhibited in
Pomeroy sometime next
month.
The girls will work with the
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, in the house-tohouse and street sollcataUon in
the cystic fibrosis fund drive
lhls fall.
It was voted during the
meeting to again this yea r
"adopt" Sherrie Marshall as
the handicapped child to he
remembered on her birthday
and holidays. The unit also
"adopted" Bill Robnak," a
patient at the. Areadia Nursing
Home, Coolville, as the ve~ran

'

!o be rememberc'd and will

RUTLAND - "A Trip to
select a senior clliten for a Toyland'' will be the theme of
special Christmas project.
lhe Christmas flower shOw of
Plans were made to make the Rutland Garden Club
candles for. the past president's Saturday and .Sunday, Nov. 17
parley to be used at Christmas and 18 at the Rutland
time at Millers Cottage in MethOdist Church.
Dayton. A party will also be
Mrs. Charles Lewis is
staged by the girls in general chairwoman for the
December at the Athens show, wh.lch ·will feature six
Mental Health Cen~r.
classes in the horticulture
It was reported that Lori diVision, nine in the arUsUc
WOOd took second place in the arrangements, three in the
Junior Miss Pappy competition· educational division, and a
at the Department convention special display of books and
and that the scrapbook of the magazines from the Meigs
junior unit placed third in the
state.
Mrs. Davis installed the new
officers · inc l~ding , Faye
Reibel, president; Tina voss,
vice president; Cheryl Lehew,
Several projects, including a
secretar y- tr easurer ; Ida visit to the Meigs County InCasci, sergeant at arms. Apast firmary, were planned during
president's pin was presen~d a meeting of the circles of the
to Cherie Reuter by Mrs . B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Davis. The next meeting will Society Tuesday night.
be held Oct. 24 at the Legion
DORCAS CIRCLE
Hall.
Meeting at the home ol Mrs.
Paula Kloes was welcomed John Fultz, the .Dorcas Circle
into membership. Jill Barker, arranged to visit the Infirmary
Cohnpbus, was a guest: A pizza and to send gifts to the
. party was held following the scholarship stud~nt and. to
meeting.
shut-ins. The whi~ cross quota
was discussed and plans were
made to serve refreshments al
the October 1 meeting of the
Sanborn Society.
For the program, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt outlined
the responsibilities of the of.
ficers of the society. Devotions
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph P. Ke.rn, prepared by Mrs. Elizabeth
Rt. I, Shade, are announcmg . Slaven were given by Mrs.
the marriage of their son, Charles Edwards. Mrs . Leora
Samuel Lee, to Miss Peggy Sigman, chairwoman; had the
•
Chambers, daughter of Mrs. prayer.
Refreshments
were
Served
Mary Chambers,. Tripelo,
by the hostess to those named
Miss.
and
Mrs . Eloise Wilson, Mrs.
The couple was married in
Washington, D. C. Sept. 14. Manning Kloes , Mrs . Iva
Mrs .
Isabelle
They reside at 4554 MacArthur .Turner,
Winebrenner
and
Mrs.
Harry
Blvd., Washingto~ , D. C: Kern
works m the roofmg busmess.

Sanborn society meets.

·-·s:·-,~~i Announce
I_~ Soc1al ~~· marrzage
..
~ Ca Iend ar ~
THURSDAY
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
Mas~r Masons are invited and
refreshments will be served.
MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Aaron
Kelton, Minersville.
SENIOR CITIZENS, birthday party , Harrisonville
School; 7 p.m, Everyone
welcome.
MEIGS Democratic party,
Episcopal Parish House, 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League , 7:30
p.m., home of Mrs. John
Blaker, Rustic Hills, Syracuse.
EVANGEUNE Chapter 172,
OES, mother • daughter
banquet, 6:15p.m. Tlcketrrom
King Builders or Columbia
Gas, North Second. Reservations to be ~lephoned to. 992Ssal or 992-5187 by Monday

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Laudermill, Mason, W. Va., are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Sept. 2, named
Sherry Ann. The Laudermilts
have three sons, Jeffrey Allen,
six, Andrew, five, and Delwon,
18 months. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Laudermilt, Mason, W.
Va., and the maternal grand·
parents are Mrs. D. Marshall
and Delwon Roberts, Mason.
~vening.
Great-grandparents are Mrs.
AnEA H Church Women
United, !Oa.m. to 2p.m. Thurs- Helen Wilson, Mason, and Mrs.
Esta Roberts, Pomeroy.
day at· the Grace EpiscOpal
Church. Workshop to be conducted by state . officers.
VISIT AREA
Women of Grace Church will
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert PDI"el"'
host the luncheon to be served
of Montana were recent
at 12:30 p.m.
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. J. S
FRIDAY
Michael, Minersville . Mr .
TilE YOUNG Adult Class of Powers Is the nephew of Mrs.
the Middleport Church of the Michael. The couple also
Nazarene will meet at 7:30 visited at !he Samuel Michael
p;m. at the home of Mr. and home, with the Wilber Parkers
Mrs. Alfred Rusche! in and the Gary Michael family.
Pomeroy.
This was their first visit to
THIRD
Friday
Club Meigs County, They returned
meeting, 7:30p.m. at home of home Friday.
Mrs. James Clatworthy,
Middleport, with Mrs. Bertha
Ebersbach as hostess.
SATURDAY
DANCE following Southern • for children four through II, to
Eutem game Saturday at be presented at 9:30~a .m . at
Southern High with " Boot Middleport Nazarene Chutch
Jack" providing music for Sunday school. For transdancing. ·Sponsored by band portation call 99~289.
POMEROY First Baptist
boosftra.
·Church,
service of dedication
SUNDAY
CHURCH service at St. Paul for the new communion table
Lutheran Church 10:45 a.m. and chairs, 10:30 a.m. worship
service. Open to the public.
ina~d of usual 10:30 beginWESLEY
Chapel
ning Sunday until further
notice with the Rev. Joseph Homecoming, basket dinner at
Will, GallipoUa, serving as 12:30 p.m. Services begin at
111pply pastor. Sunday school, 1:30 p.m. with music by the
Lemleys .
Everyone
is
1:15 a.m. to 10:15 a.m.
DETAILS on Columbus trip welcome .

The Perfect
Gifts
For Baby
·wHEEL THE BABY BUGGY
·voWNFOR

SWEATER SETS
BUNTINGS - COMFORTER
AND Pll.LOW SETSDIAPER BAGS .MOBILES, ETC.
. "FREE GIFT WRAPPING"

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT
1., _______
.__ _••ON-TH•E•T-~~
,.

,...

County Bookmobile.
In the show there will also be
a nun-competitive class for
evergreen specimens and one
for exhibits relating to methOds
of preserving flowers and
foliage.
Collages and picture plaques
are the classes In the
educational division. In both
lhe horti cullur~ classes and
thooe for arrangemenl.s there
are classes tor junior
exhibitors.
The show committees . are
Mrs. Harvey Erlwelne, Mrs.

Houdashelt.
ELECTA CIRCLE
At the EJecta Circle meeting,
held at the home of Miss Rhoda
Hall, a resume or the whi~
cross quota was given by Mrs.
Fred
Lewis.
Foreign
RA CINE - Twenty-one
missionaries assigned to Ule SOuthern High School studenl.s
circle will be sent birthday at~nded the weekly prayer
gifts.
breakfast Wednesday ai the
· "HoN to Have a Perfect Racine Wesleyan United
Day" was read by Mrs. Beull!h Methodist Church.
Whi~ to open the meeting and
Roms Nease played for
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins had the group singing with the Rev.
devoUons·using excerpl.s from Howard Shively as host pastor.
a sermon titled "The Value of . The Rev. Robert Bumgardner
the Soul".
gave a prayer with the Rev.
For the love gift meditation, James Burge, Jackson, . conMrs. Lewis used "What is the dueling . the
morning
Church Supposed to Do?" Mrs. meditation. The Rev. Frank
Richard Owen ·gave the Cheesebrew also gave a
program on the tapic, "The
.Interim Minister".

th:~~~~:~::~~~~~~ About
MChrs ..l DaWvihdit .OaMrst, JMrhs.
ares
e, rs. 0 n
Werner Mrs Pearl Hoffman
Mrs. George. Freeland Mrs'
· White, Mrs. ' Bert·
Agnes
.
. d Mrs W'lli A
BodIDleran
. 1 s nthony.

RACINE - A party. in ob- served to the guests, Mrs.
servance of the fourth birthday Wllllalll Harris, Becky and
of Crage William Brown, son of Billy, Mrs... Delton Fowle~,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Brown Miss Mindy Custer, Miss
was held Wednesday at the Esther Joseph, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Cusftr and David, Mrs.
Racine home of the family.
Gifts and cards were Flo Custer, Miss Jean Cus~r
presented to the youngs~r and and Barbara, Jody Cus ~r and
cake and Ice cream were Michelle Brown.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Van Tassel,
Torrance, Calif. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd
Joseph,
South
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Smith, Racine,
preside~t
Marion Easterday, Racine,
and Bub Joseph; Racine.

Hayrrwker is
of
.senior class

MASON - Jeff Haymaker
been elected president of
U1. :enior class at Wahama
~:. ~h '5choo.

named in the recent
c L~s elections were, senior
da:;J , Bruce Bussell, vice
1J ll ll.!t'S

will havectmrge of the ribbons.
Mr~ . I.cwls and Mrs. Jack
llobson have prepared the
liehildule for the shvw, with
Mrs. Halph Turner to handle
tho publicity.
Named to the registration
and hospitality commlt~e for
the show ha.ve been Mrs. C. 0.
Chllpman, Mrs. Jonah Colterlll, Mrs. Everett Colwell,
Mrs. Chris Diehl and Mrs.
Harry Williamson.
Other committees for the
show are Mrs. Jarrell, Mrs.
Robson, and Mrs . Lewis,
scrapbook; Miss Ruby Diehl
and Mrs. Slella Atkins, special
displays., and .Mrs. Erlewlne
with the entire membership,
cleanup.

f3reakfast held

Master Brown honored

h.~s

An appeal for a..lstance In
getting the Meigs County
commissioners to fund
Pediatric
Octological
Diagnostic Clinics (P.O.D.)
was made by Mrs . Judy
Br011trom, Meigs l.,ocal SCbool
District 5peech and hearing
therapist, at a meeting
Tuesday night of the Salisbury
PTA.
Mrs. BrOlltrom said that in
order tor the clinics to be
continued the County Commissioners will have to ap·
prapriate $8,000. If the county
provides that amount, she said,
then $11,500 will be available
from state funds .
She asked the PTA to wri~
the commissioners, send let~rs to the editor, and make
personal contacts urging the
appropriation.
Plans were discussed for the
annual fall festival · Nov. 17.
Instead of soliciting merchanl.s
for donations, the PTA Is
prayer.
asking that each ·parent
Serving breakfast were Mrs. provide a trading stamp book.
Robert Hill, Mrs. Bllly Hill and The trading . stamps will be
Mrs . Howard Shively. At· u.sed to get the door prltes and
tending were Bill ' and Gene other IU!ms needed for the
Shively, Buddy l!;rvin, Tim .. festival. Par~nl.s were asked to
Hill, Steven and Roma Nease, turn the books in at the school
· Randy Warner, Connie Roush, before Oct 16 and to be sure to
Pat Woods, Becky Kouns, mark their names on the front.
Molly Fisher, Helen Wilcoxen,
Melissa McMt·Ua n, s•·
ocpha nie
Ord, Rhonda West, Vicky
Wolfe, David Theiss, Mary
Walker and Beverly Hart.

O.tytou Parsons, Mrs. v. ll.
Nelson, Mrs. C'hurlcs t:oley,
staglnR; Mt·s. Jume• Titus,
Mrs. Huy Snowden, Mrs. C. E.
lli~hop, Mrs. Cush Johnston,
acceptance and placement; ·
Mrs. Pearl Canaday, Mrs. '
Vernon Weber, Mrs. James
Titus, educational; MrS. Pearl
Uttle, Mrs. Dayton Parsons
and Miss Edna Mae Swick,
juniors.
Mrs . Gilbert Cullen, an
OAGC accredited judge, will
judge the show, with Mrs. Tltu•
as hos~ss for her. Mrs. w. P.
Jarrell will serve as the judge's
clerk, with Mrs. Virgil Atkins
and Mrs. Ann Webs~r to be the
awards clerks. Mrs. Paul Wlnn
and Mra. Maurice Thomson

Favorite text
program is set
Bible-carrying Christians
are not uncommon when
they're.on their way to church,
but Saturday there will be
more than usual.
Superintendent Rita White of
the Pomeroy Seventh-day
Adventist Church, said the
Bible-carriers will be Sabbath
&amp;hool members, and each one
will be prepared to read his or
her own privately selec~d
~xt. "We want to hear as
many of these favorite rexts as
time will permit," slle said.
The favori~-text program is
part of Bible Emphasis Day
scheduled this weekend.
Services at the Adventist
.Church, Mulberry Heights, are
at 2 p.m. each Saturday.

president; Shelby Hoffman,
secretary, and Tin) .Roush,
treasurer.
Juniors ....: Melanie Barton,
president; S~ve Young, vice
president, and Gene Nelson,
secretary-treasurer,
Marty
Sophomores
Holdbrook, president ; Ray
Tucker, vice president; Joe
Parsons, secretary-treasurer.
Freshman - Jim Oliver,
president; Tim Davis, vice
pres.ldent.; Scott Roush,
secretary-treasurer.
Eighth Grade - Ricky
Buzzard, president; Mary
McFarland, vice president;
Diane Abel, secretary; Belinda
Zerkle, treasurer.
Seventh Grade - Craig
Sayre, president; Ernie
Bumgardner, vice president;
IS HOSPITALIZED
Brenda Love, secretaryMrs. tl!Uan Triplett, Midtreasurer.
dleport, is confined to the South
Browlad Hospital in Hollywood
Pleasant Valley HO.pltal
Fla ., according to word
Discharges - Dickson received here Wednesday by
Blevins, New Haven; Mrs. her daugh~r . Mrs. Jo Ann
Douglas Beam, son, Gallipolis; · Wbi~ . Mrs. Triplett has spent
William Plumley, Glenwood; the past few weeks at Dania,
John B. Cochran, Red House · Fla., visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Nelson McCa llis~r. Point' Chet Haddox and Mr. and Mrs.
Pleasant. · ·
Franklin Triplett and family.
Births - Sept. 19, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith,
Vinton, Ohio.
A'l\END DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn
and daugh~r. Jill, Middleport,
Holzer Medical Center
were In Beverly Sunday for the
Discharges- Delma Arnold, birthday dinner honoring their
Mary Baker, Lewis Blake, nieces, Sherrie, 11, and
Crystal Bmyer, Ruth Brooks, Tammy, 3; children of Mr. and
Ruby Chapman, Harry ·Click, Mrs. Dennis Walburn. Also
Cynthia Coon, M.rs . Roy attending were the other
Grimm and son, Samuel Walburn children, Kristin and
Hals~ad, Robert Henry, Mary Tracy.
Hughes, Troy Jeffers, Lola
Kldd, Gene King, Janet Mayes,
Por~r McKean, Mrs. Norman
. IN HOSPITAL
Humphreys and daughter ,
Mrs. Margaret. Stark, LinClare Mullins, George Oliver, coln Hill, Pomeroy, Is a patient
George P~tty , Ralph Poppins, •t the Holzer Medical Center,
Mrs. MiChael Rutherford and Room 225.
daughter, Darlene Shavor,
Robert Warren, Eldon Weeks, .
Alpha Wheeler, Floyd Whlie, UNUSUAL AID
PARIS (UP! ) - The annual
Hattie Williams, WilU.rd
report
of the.. Paris Fire
Woodruff, William Wyant,
Department today said that
Edward Zor,pes.
during
1972 fire fighters were
Blrtha - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. clark, a daughttr, called out five times ' to aid
Jackson; ,Mr . and Mrs. Dwight persons who got their feet
~tUck in tolleli :
RatcUfl, a son, Vinton.

ALFRED - The annual
.
hom. ecommg of the Alfred
United Methodist Church
Sunday, Sept. 16, began with
the usual forenoon services
followed by a basket dinner on
the church lawn at noon and 8
program. The Rev. Robert
Meece asked the blessing.
The af~rnoon program was
furnished by "J. B. and the
Tiny Trio", the "BrotherhOOd
Quartet" ·
and
· "The
Gospelet~s" from Vienna, w.
Va The program chairman
·
CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. David H~ys,
661 North Second Ave., Middleport, are announcing the
birth of a 91bs. 1 oz. daugh~r.
Jacqueline Lynn, Sept. 10 at
the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The baby was born on Mrs.
Hays' 21st birthday. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. John
A. Smith, Racine; Mrs. Stella
L. Hays, Middleport, and the
late Frank W. Hays . The greatgrandparents are E. R. Yost,
Middleport, and Louie Smith,
Morristown, Tenn.

TO Q()LD SALE
RACINE - The St. Paul
Uni~ MethOdist Church at
Tuppers Plains wiU hold a
rummage sale Saturday from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Coates
building, Second Ave., Mid·
dleport.

was ~loyd Dillinger.
Rev Stutler sang· "Nailed to
.
f
I
the Cro~'n' and a ew pe0p e
spoke brte y·
About 200 people were
f
th
ft
pres~nt or
e a ernoon
service, Offermg for the
. singing groups was $111.
Rev. Meece conduc~d an
altar. service to close the
me~ting .
.
The followmg places and
churches were represen~d: .
Joppa, North Bethel, S~uth
Bethel, Tuppers Plams,
Reedsville, Long Bottom,
Chester, Athens, Syracuse,
Hemlock Grove, Shade,
Orange, Vienna, W. Va., Sugar
Grove, Columbus, Lawrence
Chapel, Zion, (,!ouster,
Bearwallow and Keno. ·
The homecoming is held
annually on the thlrd Slillday in
September.

Great Steamboai Race set on Sunday afternoon

It was dedded 1\l oell dJih.
clolhli again thla year with
Mr1 . Walter Morrla to ordtr
them . Teachers' were In·
traduced and the attendlnet
award went to Mrs. Wendell
Hoover's first grade. Refrullmenla were .-rved.
Committees for the year IN
aa follows:
Publicity : Mrs . Dale
Harrison . '
Membership : Mrs . Lloyd
King, Mrs. Walter Morrll.
Program : Mrs. Shirley
ji'riend, Mrs. Ed KeMedy and
John Lillie,
. Waya and Means: Mr1. Jack
Welker, .Mrs. Walter MorriJ,
Mrs. WI!Uam . Ohlinger, ldf•.
Rodney Qulvey, Mrs. John
Teaford, Mrs. Dale Harrllon,
Mrs. Donald Dorst, Mn .
Wlllial!l l'ltlllns, Mrs, Marlene
Wilson, R. J . Browning.
Health : Mrs. Ned Swindell.
Safety:
Ed Kennedy,
William Ohlinger and John
Arnott.
Spiritual: Mrs. James Will,
Mrs. Wendell Hoover and Mill
Rosalie Story.
Hospitality: John Lillie, Mrl.
Marlene Wilson, Mrs. Kenneth
Chaney, Mrs. Rowland o.la,
Ed Bartels, and Mrs. Ned
Swindell.

CINCINNA'l'l tU Pi l With 111111W :JO tninub'• lnll•r .
'l'lw st('&lt;tn wrs, whkh •••uk.
•team ~plllppes pinyin~ Old
tunes and ~~~unth• pt~dlll•· · m~morl~s uf uw "111v••l'llttat
wheels c humln~ liU'OII~h ihe Gambler" •·ru of Amerirnn
Ohio IUvcl', the Dcltn ~c •n his tory, )I' ill "l" '"''lt•" upond the Belle of Louisvi lle will stn•1m1 ubm1t ciMitl milt·~ 1..
compete In the "Greul Steam. t 'CIIW)' lsi!Htd. 111e boo~• will
boat RPCO" here Sunduy uflcr- turn around to shut lht• t·ucc
noon .
an eiKht mile trip to u...
Not slnc'C tile Tom Greene Suspension Rridgc .
defeated the Betsy Ann 4:1
With top S!lt'eds of about 12
years ugo has there been a miles [Jer hour, the t·nce Is ex.
steamboat race In this Ohio peeled to lake about 45
River city , The Campbell minutes. '!'he river will be
County (Kentucky ) Jaycl&gt;es, •
sponsor of Sumlay's race. for
charity, hop ~ to make thO
~een-Belle battle an annual
event.
With proceeds going to help
needy children, the Jaycees
are booking about 600
passengers on the ~een at $25
per person .
The activities will get underway at Public Landing adjacent to Riverfront Stadium
just as the Cincinnati Bengais'
home opener against the
Houston Oilers is ending .
A duel between the calliope
players · of both boats begins
about 3:30 p.m., with passengers to board at4 p.m. and the
boats to depart Public Landing
Reg. 75c
SENIOR AMATEURS
LAKE FOREST, IlL (UP!)
- Co-medalist$ Bill Hyndman
and Sam Friedman led a field
of 33 golfers into match play
competition today in the U.S.
Senior · Amateur Championships.
Hyndman , of Huntington
Valley, Pa ., a former U.S.
Amateur Champion and
Walker Cup team member, and
Friedman, of Fort Walton
Bea~h, Fla ., both shot 73-74
over the Onwentsia Club
course to finish with 36-hole
totals of .147, five over par
beforeWednes&lt;lay's cut, which
was set al'l58.
· The match play is scheduled
to run through Saturday.

Pass witn Hotlors
A GREAT TIME FOR THE GOOD

Caravelle·by Balova
Give the gift he or she will appreciate most. Keep
lhem on lime in the finest fashion with a preclalon
jeweled, q·uallty-made Caravella watch.
See our great selection of gift watches. We have the
newest styles, the latest featur'es. Caravella by
Bulova. Expensive watches at inexpensive prlcea.
From $10.95.

.''•

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hill,
Racine, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a boy,
Andrew Tracy Hill, at the
Holzer Medical Center,.
Gallipolis, Sept. 6. The
maternar grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
Racine, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Hill, Moore Haven, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Carnahan , Racine , are the
maternal g•eat-grandparents,
and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Apple
Grove, is the parernal greatgrandmother.

25.50
D£LEilATE '.'C"
Bltcll m1t1en

on em dl•l.

SICIPHR CAUNDIAL "M"
11 tow.•~

Autolnltlc.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

HE'S SURPRISED TOO ,
ARLINGTON , Tex. (UPI) .Nolan Ryan was just as surprised as a ny one else Wednesday night when he moyed
past Bob Feller on the list of
all·time rna jor league strikeout
~ttists.
"In the first place," said the
Qltljfprnl!t .Ang~ls: 2t&gt;-year. old ,
righthander, "I never even
thmlghll would be pitching in ·
the Amedcan League."
Ryan, who pitched for the
National League's New York
Mets !tom 19611-71, now has 355
strikeouts this season, bettering Feller's record by one, ·
and only 27 away from the
record held by. Los Angeles'
Sandy Koufax who posted 382
in 1965.

tlw Sliullulll , w1JI lw dos.&gt;tl tn

'l'llt•f'L' huvt · ht•('n 10 prcvhaL'l

\ l'llldt 'tl nNll' til•' l'rUI of !lw

nWl'S

i'CJil! t•s l

U11: ilellc all '" IA~u lsvlilc In

·uu•p •lal htmtHlluruw. tilt' rat'l'.
'l'ht • S(I SJWIISI!IIl

urHl

Brldgt•, IH •XI

IH'Ih'Niri,UII'i

alh1WL'&lt;l (Jil tbl' hnJgt•
llw nmsh .

t11

Vi('W

"Sh!amboat rarlnJ{ lSi as
Dl'lla Qw•cn ~pokt•:; uHtl l. '' /\
t' Hl'L' nt 12 miles per hour t.:ou ld

il

·only be t(•rnwd a •low. relaxin~
sp01t, hnt it's also a piece of

Uw

Pumti"C!Y

1/w

IHI

slight

~-5 .

"You 'n.: damclll'lght I _wunt

tl l( ~l'

give a

to llw (jucou

ill

The Qu•·cn haH attracted national
attention ilc&lt;·aulro it is
ErrwtS I W :~ gncr, 62, vcttrnn
cn pLHin of lll(~ Queen . ''I'll be tlw only slcamhoat booking
out there to win and I'm pre· ov •rnighl pm.;scngers In tht:

lu

1-(011111'

up on tltt'

1 ~11·, ''

' "~• UJ11ry

BABY.

.•wid

l~ ·rntli

H.1vl! coo!

lonighl

Mason Furniture

QUARTS

...

Reg. $1.59

Reg. $2.49

'

r--------- COUPON·--------,,
.
II IJ.
- PUFFS

COUPON---------·
.
I

.WHITE CLOUD

I I

TISSUES

t; ~

· R~. 36'

3/79¢

Good Only a! Nelson's
Drug Store
Coupon Expires &amp;pt. 24, 1973

200's

• •
llZ
0 .

"'= ;;;;I
~?

Regular &amp; Prints
Mix or Match
31lc Value

Good Only al Nelson's

Drug

S!or~

I I Coupon Expires Sept. 24, 1973
j I
I I
.

With Coupon ·

79¢
31
With Coupon

1
1
I

l'ON.-'T~·--·--- -·' L--------COUPON ·--------..t.

TABU

BRUT
7 oz.

7 oz.
SPLASH-ON
LOTION
Reg. $2.50

,.

AEROSOL
SPRAY
Reg. $1.50

.,
WHITE
PRO·PLASTIC LATEX .
HOUSE PAINT

SPRAY COLOGNE
3 oz.

99¢

$1.77
DESERT
.FLOWER

Helena' Rubinstein

COLOGNE MIST

~\l\\S~.O~
PEEL-OFF

Reg. $1.50

FACIAL MASK

$3.75
HARRY STAASSEL, JR.

2.3''

S2966W5
Smart Modern styled
lowboy 25" diagonal
Chromacolor console.
Genuine oil finished
Walnut veneers top
and ends. Front and
legs of richly-grained
simulated wood
material. Over 90%
Solld,State Titan 101
Chassis. Solld·State
' Super Video Range
Tuning System.
Chromallc One-button
Tuning. AFC.

VICE PRE S . • TECHNICAL. OIJ\

SOUNDESIGN

SCHICK

AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK R.ADIO

FLEXAMATIC "400"
SHAVER

Soolld State wilh Built·

"This is our fln111 Loll•
houll point. ·I dtwolop~d
~ 16 veort ogo and todov,
through rtllnomtntl, It Is
lht bni produot of lu typt
onillblt. Our dttltrl now
·htvt It on ult - takt ad·
vtlltlgt of tht oJvtn~• ·"

DIAGONAL

CONSOLE
.

*BIIlLIAIT
CHROMACOLOR
PICTURE
*DEPENDABLE
ZENITH PEIFOII-

' j-?~ '

· In Antennas

Slide Controls-Wake up
To Music
$44.00 VALUE

No. 34SO

AM-FM Antennas.

Slhlc !lulc Tuning
Cun1plcto with Buttery,
Earphone, llandi trup

IIIU&amp;AaLI Z QAL . ~AIL

ACTUAL 20% 8/IVINOII
I

'

STOP IN TODAY ... CHOOSE TliE SCREEN SIZE.THAT'S RIGHT FOR YOUI

Ph.
Ingels Furniture, Middleport 992-2635

.

IAYRI
HAROWARI
m -2525
NEW HAV li N

I

i

CASSETTE
RECORDER

'

DEcOIATIVE
ITYLIIII

•

SOUNDESIGN

AM/FM POCKET RADIO

*DIITIICTIVE

'll

Reg. $34.9S

SOUNDESIGN

'

~

I

'

-

SHOP YOUR D PEN11ML
0A.4V•II AL 0 AI ~

·-

'

Nn. 2208

$16.95
Vuluc

.

'

$12.77

'

cl('rlO

arr

Tolal ve n

liiDiion,

LISTERINE

n eg. $1.89

!leg. $1.89

6,000 to
24,000 BTU

SO's

12 "'·

1211t oz.

AIR
CONDITIONERS

re~

POLl DENT
TABLETS

NO" MORE
TANGLES

SHAMPOO

'l'hl' (.luct·n will bt

rrorn :1 19-.d:Jy New Or('fuitw just in lime to

"'Hkc the race.
Tlte Qu••cn, t&gt;twercd IJy" 30·
t&lt;on , 24-foot high red paddlewh••cl is lavishly d&lt;:l'OI'Ioted
with carpeted nO()rs and rich
wood puoollng . C&lt;Jn~ r css
recently graTIIlod the ~l&gt;en a
five yc1tr reprieve from a
federal law l'l'luiring com·
tnetclal ovcrn i~ ht passenger
hoals to be construc1ed of steel.

Johnson &amp; JolutSflll

Jnlmson &amp; ,Johnson

Kelvin.at:or

l lll'rllng

Sufll l.ay'H f'flt·t• , uwlnly b.·l'ausc
tllcl'(' an• no lur·m,rvuQtl~. Tl1t
:-.nwllt•r, ruurc tnancuvcrable
Ht•lh• lw~ wun rnoxt of It'\ races
whl.'n then· WH S n turnaround
in liP &lt;:o urkc.

IH lit•cl

Sl·rit'H

Vlt' lUI')

Stl·mu ltllll hufrl;

1'1•11111'1'1 iw1 With Uu• Kt·nlw ·ky
111HI

II

t)m·~· •1 . ··

IJCLwccn the Qut!Cil iuld

I )(•rhy

lllllt'h I!Wttltlg la :IS SilW'I/' ~i t y~

tlu-11111 ~

The Sea of Galilee is a
freshwater lake. 14 miles long
and eight miles at its widest.

•

•

lu

lu, tuJ ~ :·
S1 ~11 Is Ill' Juxtm•y, lilt' l't'llllfa.
tluu of t·al'lr boHI rs Ht Htl1kt• .

du~t·tllu hiJ\IJ [tf iV.:Jli.' lllillt'UIH

CEPACOL LOZENGES

back to school
'

200 at homecoming

Tl•• llu tly So·tollnd. Mt&lt;ldll'l"l'l· t'o' "' .,.,,Y. o., Sqll 211. 111, ,I

7

PH . 173. SS91
MASON , W. VA .

CONTAC
CAPSULES
LO's
·· Reg. $1.79

�8

~Daily St.•ntin&lt;•l, Middlcpurt-l'omcroy, ll., &amp;pL -..'IJ.

Jr.

l!li:\

Auxiliary meets 'A Trip to Toyland 'is show theme -.PTA hears.therapist

·Projects , Including
ualatance with the Eight and
Forty cystic fibrosis drive and
promotion of the one-half 11'111
bond tuue for construction ur a
tchool building ror the retarded
of the county, were taken on at
the Tuesday night meeting of
the Junior American Legion
AuxiUary of Drew Webs~r
Post 39.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis, advisor, the girls
made plans to distribute flyers
promoting the bond issue .
Posters which they had made
were on display at the meeting
and wlll we exhibited in
Pomeroy sometime next
month.
The girls will work with the
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, in the house-tohouse and street sollcataUon in
the cystic fibrosis fund drive
lhls fall.
It was voted during the
meeting to again this yea r
"adopt" Sherrie Marshall as
the handicapped child to he
remembered on her birthday
and holidays. The unit also
"adopted" Bill Robnak," a
patient at the. Areadia Nursing
Home, Coolville, as the ve~ran

'

!o be rememberc'd and will

RUTLAND - "A Trip to
select a senior clliten for a Toyland'' will be the theme of
special Christmas project.
lhe Christmas flower shOw of
Plans were made to make the Rutland Garden Club
candles for. the past president's Saturday and .Sunday, Nov. 17
parley to be used at Christmas and 18 at the Rutland
time at Millers Cottage in MethOdist Church.
Dayton. A party will also be
Mrs. Charles Lewis is
staged by the girls in general chairwoman for the
December at the Athens show, wh.lch ·will feature six
Mental Health Cen~r.
classes in the horticulture
It was reported that Lori diVision, nine in the arUsUc
WOOd took second place in the arrangements, three in the
Junior Miss Pappy competition· educational division, and a
at the Department convention special display of books and
and that the scrapbook of the magazines from the Meigs
junior unit placed third in the
state.
Mrs. Davis installed the new
officers · inc l~ding , Faye
Reibel, president; Tina voss,
vice president; Cheryl Lehew,
Several projects, including a
secretar y- tr easurer ; Ida visit to the Meigs County InCasci, sergeant at arms. Apast firmary, were planned during
president's pin was presen~d a meeting of the circles of the
to Cherie Reuter by Mrs . B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Davis. The next meeting will Society Tuesday night.
be held Oct. 24 at the Legion
DORCAS CIRCLE
Hall.
Meeting at the home ol Mrs.
Paula Kloes was welcomed John Fultz, the .Dorcas Circle
into membership. Jill Barker, arranged to visit the Infirmary
Cohnpbus, was a guest: A pizza and to send gifts to the
. party was held following the scholarship stud~nt and. to
meeting.
shut-ins. The whi~ cross quota
was discussed and plans were
made to serve refreshments al
the October 1 meeting of the
Sanborn Society.
For the program, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt outlined
the responsibilities of the of.
ficers of the society. Devotions
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph P. Ke.rn, prepared by Mrs. Elizabeth
Rt. I, Shade, are announcmg . Slaven were given by Mrs.
the marriage of their son, Charles Edwards. Mrs . Leora
Samuel Lee, to Miss Peggy Sigman, chairwoman; had the
•
Chambers, daughter of Mrs. prayer.
Refreshments
were
Served
Mary Chambers,. Tripelo,
by the hostess to those named
Miss.
and
Mrs . Eloise Wilson, Mrs.
The couple was married in
Washington, D. C. Sept. 14. Manning Kloes , Mrs . Iva
Mrs .
Isabelle
They reside at 4554 MacArthur .Turner,
Winebrenner
and
Mrs.
Harry
Blvd., Washingto~ , D. C: Kern
works m the roofmg busmess.

Sanborn society meets.

·-·s:·-,~~i Announce
I_~ Soc1al ~~· marrzage
..
~ Ca Iend ar ~
THURSDAY
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
Mas~r Masons are invited and
refreshments will be served.
MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Aaron
Kelton, Minersville.
SENIOR CITIZENS, birthday party , Harrisonville
School; 7 p.m, Everyone
welcome.
MEIGS Democratic party,
Episcopal Parish House, 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League , 7:30
p.m., home of Mrs. John
Blaker, Rustic Hills, Syracuse.
EVANGEUNE Chapter 172,
OES, mother • daughter
banquet, 6:15p.m. Tlcketrrom
King Builders or Columbia
Gas, North Second. Reservations to be ~lephoned to. 992Ssal or 992-5187 by Monday

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Laudermill, Mason, W. Va., are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Sept. 2, named
Sherry Ann. The Laudermilts
have three sons, Jeffrey Allen,
six, Andrew, five, and Delwon,
18 months. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Laudermilt, Mason, W.
Va., and the maternal grand·
parents are Mrs. D. Marshall
and Delwon Roberts, Mason.
~vening.
Great-grandparents are Mrs.
AnEA H Church Women
United, !Oa.m. to 2p.m. Thurs- Helen Wilson, Mason, and Mrs.
Esta Roberts, Pomeroy.
day at· the Grace EpiscOpal
Church. Workshop to be conducted by state . officers.
VISIT AREA
Women of Grace Church will
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert PDI"el"'
host the luncheon to be served
of Montana were recent
at 12:30 p.m.
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. J. S
FRIDAY
Michael, Minersville . Mr .
TilE YOUNG Adult Class of Powers Is the nephew of Mrs.
the Middleport Church of the Michael. The couple also
Nazarene will meet at 7:30 visited at !he Samuel Michael
p;m. at the home of Mr. and home, with the Wilber Parkers
Mrs. Alfred Rusche! in and the Gary Michael family.
Pomeroy.
This was their first visit to
THIRD
Friday
Club Meigs County, They returned
meeting, 7:30p.m. at home of home Friday.
Mrs. James Clatworthy,
Middleport, with Mrs. Bertha
Ebersbach as hostess.
SATURDAY
DANCE following Southern • for children four through II, to
Eutem game Saturday at be presented at 9:30~a .m . at
Southern High with " Boot Middleport Nazarene Chutch
Jack" providing music for Sunday school. For transdancing. ·Sponsored by band portation call 99~289.
POMEROY First Baptist
boosftra.
·Church,
service of dedication
SUNDAY
CHURCH service at St. Paul for the new communion table
Lutheran Church 10:45 a.m. and chairs, 10:30 a.m. worship
service. Open to the public.
ina~d of usual 10:30 beginWESLEY
Chapel
ning Sunday until further
notice with the Rev. Joseph Homecoming, basket dinner at
Will, GallipoUa, serving as 12:30 p.m. Services begin at
111pply pastor. Sunday school, 1:30 p.m. with music by the
Lemleys .
Everyone
is
1:15 a.m. to 10:15 a.m.
DETAILS on Columbus trip welcome .

The Perfect
Gifts
For Baby
·wHEEL THE BABY BUGGY
·voWNFOR

SWEATER SETS
BUNTINGS - COMFORTER
AND Pll.LOW SETSDIAPER BAGS .MOBILES, ETC.
. "FREE GIFT WRAPPING"

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT
1., _______
.__ _••ON-TH•E•T-~~
,.

,...

County Bookmobile.
In the show there will also be
a nun-competitive class for
evergreen specimens and one
for exhibits relating to methOds
of preserving flowers and
foliage.
Collages and picture plaques
are the classes In the
educational division. In both
lhe horti cullur~ classes and
thooe for arrangemenl.s there
are classes tor junior
exhibitors.
The show committees . are
Mrs. Harvey Erlwelne, Mrs.

Houdashelt.
ELECTA CIRCLE
At the EJecta Circle meeting,
held at the home of Miss Rhoda
Hall, a resume or the whi~
cross quota was given by Mrs.
Fred
Lewis.
Foreign
RA CINE - Twenty-one
missionaries assigned to Ule SOuthern High School studenl.s
circle will be sent birthday at~nded the weekly prayer
gifts.
breakfast Wednesday ai the
· "HoN to Have a Perfect Racine Wesleyan United
Day" was read by Mrs. Beull!h Methodist Church.
Whi~ to open the meeting and
Roms Nease played for
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins had the group singing with the Rev.
devoUons·using excerpl.s from Howard Shively as host pastor.
a sermon titled "The Value of . The Rev. Robert Bumgardner
the Soul".
gave a prayer with the Rev.
For the love gift meditation, James Burge, Jackson, . conMrs. Lewis used "What is the dueling . the
morning
Church Supposed to Do?" Mrs. meditation. The Rev. Frank
Richard Owen ·gave the Cheesebrew also gave a
program on the tapic, "The
.Interim Minister".

th:~~~~:~::~~~~~~ About
MChrs ..l DaWvihdit .OaMrst, JMrhs.
ares
e, rs. 0 n
Werner Mrs Pearl Hoffman
Mrs. George. Freeland Mrs'
· White, Mrs. ' Bert·
Agnes
.
. d Mrs W'lli A
BodIDleran
. 1 s nthony.

RACINE - A party. in ob- served to the guests, Mrs.
servance of the fourth birthday Wllllalll Harris, Becky and
of Crage William Brown, son of Billy, Mrs... Delton Fowle~,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Brown Miss Mindy Custer, Miss
was held Wednesday at the Esther Joseph, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Cusftr and David, Mrs.
Racine home of the family.
Gifts and cards were Flo Custer, Miss Jean Cus~r
presented to the youngs~r and and Barbara, Jody Cus ~r and
cake and Ice cream were Michelle Brown.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Van Tassel,
Torrance, Calif. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd
Joseph,
South
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Smith, Racine,
preside~t
Marion Easterday, Racine,
and Bub Joseph; Racine.

Hayrrwker is
of
.senior class

MASON - Jeff Haymaker
been elected president of
U1. :enior class at Wahama
~:. ~h '5choo.

named in the recent
c L~s elections were, senior
da:;J , Bruce Bussell, vice
1J ll ll.!t'S

will havectmrge of the ribbons.
Mr~ . I.cwls and Mrs. Jack
llobson have prepared the
liehildule for the shvw, with
Mrs. Halph Turner to handle
tho publicity.
Named to the registration
and hospitality commlt~e for
the show ha.ve been Mrs. C. 0.
Chllpman, Mrs. Jonah Colterlll, Mrs. Everett Colwell,
Mrs. Chris Diehl and Mrs.
Harry Williamson.
Other committees for the
show are Mrs. Jarrell, Mrs.
Robson, and Mrs . Lewis,
scrapbook; Miss Ruby Diehl
and Mrs. Slella Atkins, special
displays., and .Mrs. Erlewlne
with the entire membership,
cleanup.

f3reakfast held

Master Brown honored

h.~s

An appeal for a..lstance In
getting the Meigs County
commissioners to fund
Pediatric
Octological
Diagnostic Clinics (P.O.D.)
was made by Mrs . Judy
Br011trom, Meigs l.,ocal SCbool
District 5peech and hearing
therapist, at a meeting
Tuesday night of the Salisbury
PTA.
Mrs. BrOlltrom said that in
order tor the clinics to be
continued the County Commissioners will have to ap·
prapriate $8,000. If the county
provides that amount, she said,
then $11,500 will be available
from state funds .
She asked the PTA to wri~
the commissioners, send let~rs to the editor, and make
personal contacts urging the
appropriation.
Plans were discussed for the
annual fall festival · Nov. 17.
Instead of soliciting merchanl.s
for donations, the PTA Is
prayer.
asking that each ·parent
Serving breakfast were Mrs. provide a trading stamp book.
Robert Hill, Mrs. Bllly Hill and The trading . stamps will be
Mrs . Howard Shively. At· u.sed to get the door prltes and
tending were Bill ' and Gene other IU!ms needed for the
Shively, Buddy l!;rvin, Tim .. festival. Par~nl.s were asked to
Hill, Steven and Roma Nease, turn the books in at the school
· Randy Warner, Connie Roush, before Oct 16 and to be sure to
Pat Woods, Becky Kouns, mark their names on the front.
Molly Fisher, Helen Wilcoxen,
Melissa McMt·Ua n, s•·
ocpha nie
Ord, Rhonda West, Vicky
Wolfe, David Theiss, Mary
Walker and Beverly Hart.

O.tytou Parsons, Mrs. v. ll.
Nelson, Mrs. C'hurlcs t:oley,
staglnR; Mt·s. Jume• Titus,
Mrs. Huy Snowden, Mrs. C. E.
lli~hop, Mrs. Cush Johnston,
acceptance and placement; ·
Mrs. Pearl Canaday, Mrs. '
Vernon Weber, Mrs. James
Titus, educational; MrS. Pearl
Uttle, Mrs. Dayton Parsons
and Miss Edna Mae Swick,
juniors.
Mrs . Gilbert Cullen, an
OAGC accredited judge, will
judge the show, with Mrs. Tltu•
as hos~ss for her. Mrs. w. P.
Jarrell will serve as the judge's
clerk, with Mrs. Virgil Atkins
and Mrs. Ann Webs~r to be the
awards clerks. Mrs. Paul Wlnn
and Mra. Maurice Thomson

Favorite text
program is set
Bible-carrying Christians
are not uncommon when
they're.on their way to church,
but Saturday there will be
more than usual.
Superintendent Rita White of
the Pomeroy Seventh-day
Adventist Church, said the
Bible-carriers will be Sabbath
&amp;hool members, and each one
will be prepared to read his or
her own privately selec~d
~xt. "We want to hear as
many of these favorite rexts as
time will permit," slle said.
The favori~-text program is
part of Bible Emphasis Day
scheduled this weekend.
Services at the Adventist
.Church, Mulberry Heights, are
at 2 p.m. each Saturday.

president; Shelby Hoffman,
secretary, and Tin) .Roush,
treasurer.
Juniors ....: Melanie Barton,
president; S~ve Young, vice
president, and Gene Nelson,
secretary-treasurer,
Marty
Sophomores
Holdbrook, president ; Ray
Tucker, vice president; Joe
Parsons, secretary-treasurer.
Freshman - Jim Oliver,
president; Tim Davis, vice
pres.ldent.; Scott Roush,
secretary-treasurer.
Eighth Grade - Ricky
Buzzard, president; Mary
McFarland, vice president;
Diane Abel, secretary; Belinda
Zerkle, treasurer.
Seventh Grade - Craig
Sayre, president; Ernie
Bumgardner, vice president;
IS HOSPITALIZED
Brenda Love, secretaryMrs. tl!Uan Triplett, Midtreasurer.
dleport, is confined to the South
Browlad Hospital in Hollywood
Pleasant Valley HO.pltal
Fla ., according to word
Discharges - Dickson received here Wednesday by
Blevins, New Haven; Mrs. her daugh~r . Mrs. Jo Ann
Douglas Beam, son, Gallipolis; · Wbi~ . Mrs. Triplett has spent
William Plumley, Glenwood; the past few weeks at Dania,
John B. Cochran, Red House · Fla., visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Nelson McCa llis~r. Point' Chet Haddox and Mr. and Mrs.
Pleasant. · ·
Franklin Triplett and family.
Births - Sept. 19, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith,
Vinton, Ohio.
A'l\END DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn
and daugh~r. Jill, Middleport,
Holzer Medical Center
were In Beverly Sunday for the
Discharges- Delma Arnold, birthday dinner honoring their
Mary Baker, Lewis Blake, nieces, Sherrie, 11, and
Crystal Bmyer, Ruth Brooks, Tammy, 3; children of Mr. and
Ruby Chapman, Harry ·Click, Mrs. Dennis Walburn. Also
Cynthia Coon, M.rs . Roy attending were the other
Grimm and son, Samuel Walburn children, Kristin and
Hals~ad, Robert Henry, Mary Tracy.
Hughes, Troy Jeffers, Lola
Kldd, Gene King, Janet Mayes,
Por~r McKean, Mrs. Norman
. IN HOSPITAL
Humphreys and daughter ,
Mrs. Margaret. Stark, LinClare Mullins, George Oliver, coln Hill, Pomeroy, Is a patient
George P~tty , Ralph Poppins, •t the Holzer Medical Center,
Mrs. MiChael Rutherford and Room 225.
daughter, Darlene Shavor,
Robert Warren, Eldon Weeks, .
Alpha Wheeler, Floyd Whlie, UNUSUAL AID
PARIS (UP! ) - The annual
Hattie Williams, WilU.rd
report
of the.. Paris Fire
Woodruff, William Wyant,
Department today said that
Edward Zor,pes.
during
1972 fire fighters were
Blrtha - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. clark, a daughttr, called out five times ' to aid
Jackson; ,Mr . and Mrs. Dwight persons who got their feet
~tUck in tolleli :
RatcUfl, a son, Vinton.

ALFRED - The annual
.
hom. ecommg of the Alfred
United Methodist Church
Sunday, Sept. 16, began with
the usual forenoon services
followed by a basket dinner on
the church lawn at noon and 8
program. The Rev. Robert
Meece asked the blessing.
The af~rnoon program was
furnished by "J. B. and the
Tiny Trio", the "BrotherhOOd
Quartet" ·
and
· "The
Gospelet~s" from Vienna, w.
Va The program chairman
·
CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. David H~ys,
661 North Second Ave., Middleport, are announcing the
birth of a 91bs. 1 oz. daugh~r.
Jacqueline Lynn, Sept. 10 at
the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The baby was born on Mrs.
Hays' 21st birthday. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. John
A. Smith, Racine; Mrs. Stella
L. Hays, Middleport, and the
late Frank W. Hays . The greatgrandparents are E. R. Yost,
Middleport, and Louie Smith,
Morristown, Tenn.

TO Q()LD SALE
RACINE - The St. Paul
Uni~ MethOdist Church at
Tuppers Plains wiU hold a
rummage sale Saturday from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Coates
building, Second Ave., Mid·
dleport.

was ~loyd Dillinger.
Rev Stutler sang· "Nailed to
.
f
I
the Cro~'n' and a ew pe0p e
spoke brte y·
About 200 people were
f
th
ft
pres~nt or
e a ernoon
service, Offermg for the
. singing groups was $111.
Rev. Meece conduc~d an
altar. service to close the
me~ting .
.
The followmg places and
churches were represen~d: .
Joppa, North Bethel, S~uth
Bethel, Tuppers Plams,
Reedsville, Long Bottom,
Chester, Athens, Syracuse,
Hemlock Grove, Shade,
Orange, Vienna, W. Va., Sugar
Grove, Columbus, Lawrence
Chapel, Zion, (,!ouster,
Bearwallow and Keno. ·
The homecoming is held
annually on the thlrd Slillday in
September.

Great Steamboai Race set on Sunday afternoon

It was dedded 1\l oell dJih.
clolhli again thla year with
Mr1 . Walter Morrla to ordtr
them . Teachers' were In·
traduced and the attendlnet
award went to Mrs. Wendell
Hoover's first grade. Refrullmenla were .-rved.
Committees for the year IN
aa follows:
Publicity : Mrs . Dale
Harrison . '
Membership : Mrs . Lloyd
King, Mrs. Walter Morrll.
Program : Mrs. Shirley
ji'riend, Mrs. Ed KeMedy and
John Lillie,
. Waya and Means: Mr1. Jack
Welker, .Mrs. Walter MorriJ,
Mrs. WI!Uam . Ohlinger, ldf•.
Rodney Qulvey, Mrs. John
Teaford, Mrs. Dale Harrllon,
Mrs. Donald Dorst, Mn .
Wlllial!l l'ltlllns, Mrs, Marlene
Wilson, R. J . Browning.
Health : Mrs. Ned Swindell.
Safety:
Ed Kennedy,
William Ohlinger and John
Arnott.
Spiritual: Mrs. James Will,
Mrs. Wendell Hoover and Mill
Rosalie Story.
Hospitality: John Lillie, Mrl.
Marlene Wilson, Mrs. Kenneth
Chaney, Mrs. Rowland o.la,
Ed Bartels, and Mrs. Ned
Swindell.

CINCINNA'l'l tU Pi l With 111111W :JO tninub'• lnll•r .
'l'lw st('&lt;tn wrs, whkh •••uk.
•team ~plllppes pinyin~ Old
tunes and ~~~unth• pt~dlll•· · m~morl~s uf uw "111v••l'llttat
wheels c humln~ liU'OII~h ihe Gambler" •·ru of Amerirnn
Ohio IUvcl', the Dcltn ~c •n his tory, )I' ill "l" '"''lt•" upond the Belle of Louisvi lle will stn•1m1 ubm1t ciMitl milt·~ 1..
compete In the "Greul Steam. t 'CIIW)' lsi!Htd. 111e boo~• will
boat RPCO" here Sunduy uflcr- turn around to shut lht• t·ucc
noon .
an eiKht mile trip to u...
Not slnc'C tile Tom Greene Suspension Rridgc .
defeated the Betsy Ann 4:1
With top S!lt'eds of about 12
years ugo has there been a miles [Jer hour, the t·nce Is ex.
steamboat race In this Ohio peeled to lake about 45
River city , The Campbell minutes. '!'he river will be
County (Kentucky ) Jaycl&gt;es, •
sponsor of Sumlay's race. for
charity, hop ~ to make thO
~een-Belle battle an annual
event.
With proceeds going to help
needy children, the Jaycees
are booking about 600
passengers on the ~een at $25
per person .
The activities will get underway at Public Landing adjacent to Riverfront Stadium
just as the Cincinnati Bengais'
home opener against the
Houston Oilers is ending .
A duel between the calliope
players · of both boats begins
about 3:30 p.m., with passengers to board at4 p.m. and the
boats to depart Public Landing
Reg. 75c
SENIOR AMATEURS
LAKE FOREST, IlL (UP!)
- Co-medalist$ Bill Hyndman
and Sam Friedman led a field
of 33 golfers into match play
competition today in the U.S.
Senior · Amateur Championships.
Hyndman , of Huntington
Valley, Pa ., a former U.S.
Amateur Champion and
Walker Cup team member, and
Friedman, of Fort Walton
Bea~h, Fla ., both shot 73-74
over the Onwentsia Club
course to finish with 36-hole
totals of .147, five over par
beforeWednes&lt;lay's cut, which
was set al'l58.
· The match play is scheduled
to run through Saturday.

Pass witn Hotlors
A GREAT TIME FOR THE GOOD

Caravelle·by Balova
Give the gift he or she will appreciate most. Keep
lhem on lime in the finest fashion with a preclalon
jeweled, q·uallty-made Caravella watch.
See our great selection of gift watches. We have the
newest styles, the latest featur'es. Caravella by
Bulova. Expensive watches at inexpensive prlcea.
From $10.95.

.''•

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hill,
Racine, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a boy,
Andrew Tracy Hill, at the
Holzer Medical Center,.
Gallipolis, Sept. 6. The
maternar grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
Racine, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Hill, Moore Haven, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Carnahan , Racine , are the
maternal g•eat-grandparents,
and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Apple
Grove, is the parernal greatgrandmother.

25.50
D£LEilATE '.'C"
Bltcll m1t1en

on em dl•l.

SICIPHR CAUNDIAL "M"
11 tow.•~

Autolnltlc.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

HE'S SURPRISED TOO ,
ARLINGTON , Tex. (UPI) .Nolan Ryan was just as surprised as a ny one else Wednesday night when he moyed
past Bob Feller on the list of
all·time rna jor league strikeout
~ttists.
"In the first place," said the
Qltljfprnl!t .Ang~ls: 2t&gt;-year. old ,
righthander, "I never even
thmlghll would be pitching in ·
the Amedcan League."
Ryan, who pitched for the
National League's New York
Mets !tom 19611-71, now has 355
strikeouts this season, bettering Feller's record by one, ·
and only 27 away from the
record held by. Los Angeles'
Sandy Koufax who posted 382
in 1965.

tlw Sliullulll , w1JI lw dos.&gt;tl tn

'l'llt•f'L' huvt · ht•('n 10 prcvhaL'l

\ l'llldt 'tl nNll' til•' l'rUI of !lw

nWl'S

i'CJil! t•s l

U11: ilellc all '" IA~u lsvlilc In

·uu•p •lal htmtHlluruw. tilt' rat'l'.
'l'ht • S(I SJWIISI!IIl

urHl

Brldgt•, IH •XI

IH'Ih'Niri,UII'i

alh1WL'&lt;l (Jil tbl' hnJgt•
llw nmsh .

t11

Vi('W

"Sh!amboat rarlnJ{ lSi as
Dl'lla Qw•cn ~pokt•:; uHtl l. '' /\
t' Hl'L' nt 12 miles per hour t.:ou ld

il

·only be t(•rnwd a •low. relaxin~
sp01t, hnt it's also a piece of

Uw

Pumti"C!Y

1/w

IHI

slight

~-5 .

"You 'n.: damclll'lght I _wunt

tl l( ~l'

give a

to llw (jucou

ill

The Qu•·cn haH attracted national
attention ilc&lt;·aulro it is
ErrwtS I W :~ gncr, 62, vcttrnn
cn pLHin of lll(~ Queen . ''I'll be tlw only slcamhoat booking
out there to win and I'm pre· ov •rnighl pm.;scngers In tht:

lu

1-(011111'

up on tltt'

1 ~11·, ''

' "~• UJ11ry

BABY.

.•wid

l~ ·rntli

H.1vl! coo!

lonighl

Mason Furniture

QUARTS

...

Reg. $1.59

Reg. $2.49

'

r--------- COUPON·--------,,
.
II IJ.
- PUFFS

COUPON---------·
.
I

.WHITE CLOUD

I I

TISSUES

t; ~

· R~. 36'

3/79¢

Good Only a! Nelson's
Drug Store
Coupon Expires &amp;pt. 24, 1973

200's

• •
llZ
0 .

"'= ;;;;I
~?

Regular &amp; Prints
Mix or Match
31lc Value

Good Only al Nelson's

Drug

S!or~

I I Coupon Expires Sept. 24, 1973
j I
I I
.

With Coupon ·

79¢
31
With Coupon

1
1
I

l'ON.-'T~·--·--- -·' L--------COUPON ·--------..t.

TABU

BRUT
7 oz.

7 oz.
SPLASH-ON
LOTION
Reg. $2.50

,.

AEROSOL
SPRAY
Reg. $1.50

.,
WHITE
PRO·PLASTIC LATEX .
HOUSE PAINT

SPRAY COLOGNE
3 oz.

99¢

$1.77
DESERT
.FLOWER

Helena' Rubinstein

COLOGNE MIST

~\l\\S~.O~
PEEL-OFF

Reg. $1.50

FACIAL MASK

$3.75
HARRY STAASSEL, JR.

2.3''

S2966W5
Smart Modern styled
lowboy 25" diagonal
Chromacolor console.
Genuine oil finished
Walnut veneers top
and ends. Front and
legs of richly-grained
simulated wood
material. Over 90%
Solld,State Titan 101
Chassis. Solld·State
' Super Video Range
Tuning System.
Chromallc One-button
Tuning. AFC.

VICE PRE S . • TECHNICAL. OIJ\

SOUNDESIGN

SCHICK

AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK R.ADIO

FLEXAMATIC "400"
SHAVER

Soolld State wilh Built·

"This is our fln111 Loll•
houll point. ·I dtwolop~d
~ 16 veort ogo and todov,
through rtllnomtntl, It Is
lht bni produot of lu typt
onillblt. Our dttltrl now
·htvt It on ult - takt ad·
vtlltlgt of tht oJvtn~• ·"

DIAGONAL

CONSOLE
.

*BIIlLIAIT
CHROMACOLOR
PICTURE
*DEPENDABLE
ZENITH PEIFOII-

' j-?~ '

· In Antennas

Slide Controls-Wake up
To Music
$44.00 VALUE

No. 34SO

AM-FM Antennas.

Slhlc !lulc Tuning
Cun1plcto with Buttery,
Earphone, llandi trup

IIIU&amp;AaLI Z QAL . ~AIL

ACTUAL 20% 8/IVINOII
I

'

STOP IN TODAY ... CHOOSE TliE SCREEN SIZE.THAT'S RIGHT FOR YOUI

Ph.
Ingels Furniture, Middleport 992-2635

.

IAYRI
HAROWARI
m -2525
NEW HAV li N

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i

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RECORDER

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DEcOIATIVE
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Reg. $34.9S

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SHOP YOUR D PEN11ML
0A.4V•II AL 0 AI ~

·-

'

Nn. 2208

$16.95
Vuluc

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'

$12.77

'

cl('rlO

arr

Tolal ve n

liiDiion,

LISTERINE

n eg. $1.89

!leg. $1.89

6,000 to
24,000 BTU

SO's

12 "'·

1211t oz.

AIR
CONDITIONERS

re~

POLl DENT
TABLETS

NO" MORE
TANGLES

SHAMPOO

'l'hl' (.luct·n will bt

rrorn :1 19-.d:Jy New Or('fuitw just in lime to

"'Hkc the race.
Tlte Qu••cn, t&gt;twercd IJy" 30·
t&lt;on , 24-foot high red paddlewh••cl is lavishly d&lt;:l'OI'Ioted
with carpeted nO()rs and rich
wood puoollng . C&lt;Jn~ r css
recently graTIIlod the ~l&gt;en a
five yc1tr reprieve from a
federal law l'l'luiring com·
tnetclal ovcrn i~ ht passenger
hoals to be construc1ed of steel.

Johnson &amp; JolutSflll

Jnlmson &amp; ,Johnson

Kelvin.at:or

l lll'rllng

Sufll l.ay'H f'flt·t• , uwlnly b.·l'ausc
tllcl'(' an• no lur·m,rvuQtl~. Tl1t
:-.nwllt•r, ruurc tnancuvcrable
Ht•lh• lw~ wun rnoxt of It'\ races
whl.'n then· WH S n turnaround
in liP &lt;:o urkc.

IH lit•cl

Sl·rit'H

Vlt' lUI')

Stl·mu ltllll hufrl;

1'1•11111'1'1 iw1 With Uu• Kt·nlw ·ky
111HI

II

t)m·~· •1 . ··

IJCLwccn the Qut!Cil iuld

I )(•rhy

lllllt'h I!Wttltlg la :IS SilW'I/' ~i t y~

tlu-11111 ~

The Sea of Galilee is a
freshwater lake. 14 miles long
and eight miles at its widest.

•

•

lu

lu, tuJ ~ :·
S1 ~11 Is Ill' Juxtm•y, lilt' l't'llllfa.
tluu of t·al'lr boHI rs Ht Htl1kt• .

du~t·tllu hiJ\IJ [tf iV.:Jli.' lllillt'UIH

CEPACOL LOZENGES

back to school
'

200 at homecoming

Tl•• llu tly So·tollnd. Mt&lt;ldll'l"l'l· t'o' "' .,.,,Y. o., Sqll 211. 111, ,I

7

PH . 173. SS91
MASON , W. VA .

CONTAC
CAPSULES
LO's
·· Reg. $1.79

�The DAlly &amp;nth~ I Mld11l 1 porll'mlocrtlY 11 lici!l 20,1071

9

« Tl• null\ S&lt;'ntn•l

Middk pori

r'"'" rm 0

Tel~!!~~~~ ,~og

lost

Sept ~ '""'

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! "~:,~.·,·:.v·c~~·99;r~·i2:~:
WANTAP~

INFO~MATION

De~ 8tHor• PubUcatio l
Monda )I Dead! ne 9 1 m
Cllnctll allon Carre tJOn$
Will be accepted unlit 9 ~ m for
Day of Publication

SP M

OF

QUALITY

REGULATIONS
Publisher rtoservu

Th•
lhSt
rlqtlt to ltdlt or re f•ct IM)I ads
deem ed
obtecttonal
The
publlshtr w 11 not be re-sponsible

for more than one

Insertion

ncorre-ct

1970 DODGE POLARA
4 door factory air au tomatic fransmlss lon

Minimum Chan~e 7Sc
word

ctnts per wOT'"d s x con
secutlve- lnstrttons

1970 V W 2 DOOR
Dark green finish good tires clean l nt~nor

speed t.rans Save money now

THANKS

CA~DOF
&amp; OBITUA~ Y"

Sll95
radio 4

3 20 lfc

Sl SQ tor 50 word mlntmum

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

Each eddlt anal word 2c

BLIND ADS

A.ddltlonal

25c

Ad~e rtlse ment

OFFICE

HOU~S

m

12

e 30 a m to

8 30

a

Saturdl'V

s 00 p

to

m

AM F M Stereo radio 8 track
tape player 4 speaker sou nd
system Balan ce S\09 44 or
use our budget terms Call

Pomeroy Motor Co. t::1\

Charge per

~

OPEN EVES 8 OOPM
POMEROY OHIO

Dally

oo Noon

992 3965

9 14 61C

----,......----------

21FT CABIN cruiser In board

-

Card of Thanks

Jn the area Guaranteed all 1st
qual ty pol y ester double
kniiS no seconds
Wide
selection of coordinated
colors for fall and w nter We
keep over 1 500 yds In stock
and get new cloth every 3
weeks u 98 to $7 98 values
priced at S2 9&amp; to S3 98
noth ing h i gher
10 pet
discount to home econom cs
students carol na Fabrics
Route 7 one half m le north of
Chester
Oh o at Henry
Hunter res1dence Dr ve a
little - Save a lot

son and brother
Wi lli am
(8111) Harden to our many
friends
ne !ohbors
and
re1at1ves the Western and
Southern Insurance Com
pany
the Ew ing Funeral
Home Homer Baxter Gerald

the Rev

a

________ _____
Mobile Homes For Sale

Morr s

Wolfe the pallbearers for all
the beautiful flowers those
who brought food and to all
who helped with the r prayers
and
thoughtful
con
siderat1ons
Your kindness
will never be forgotten The
William Harden Fam lly

9 20 31p

9 20 31p

----------

SHOOTING MATCH
Corn
Hollow Gun Club turn first
r ght after M les Cemetery
Rutland
Factory choked

TbeAimanac
ByUnlledl'reos lnlernallonal
guns only Sunday Sepl 23 I
Today Is Thursday, Sept 20
P m
9 20 3rc
the 263rd day of 1973 with 102 to - - - - - - - - - - - - folluw
YARD SALE Froday and
Saturday on Lark n Street
The moon IS between 1ts last small kerosene heater
WeSIInghouse RecorQ Player
quarter and new phase
Th e mormng stars are Mars albums and two davenports
9 20 21c
and~turn
--------------The evemng stars are Mer YARD SALE AT 882 LOGAN
STREET
MIDDLEPORT
cury, Venus and Juptler
ACROSS FROM OLD IM
PERIAL
ELECTRIC
Those bo rn On thJs d a te are THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY
undertheslgnofVll'gO
CLOTHING
IN
GOOD
AT CHEAP
George BtrdG rmneU• Amer.i CONDITION
PRICES OLD FURNITURE
can wnler and explorer Of the AND SOME MODERN USED
West was born Sept 20, 1849
~L~tN~JsT ueMKs tu~
On thiS day lD hrstory
TAINS ANO BEDSPREADS
In 1519, Portuguese navigator ~ ~ ~ s~ A~T C s TARTs
Ferdinand Magellan began a
9 19 31c
voyage to fmd a western -----------.,---pasage to the East Indies
WILL DO BOO KK EEPING IN
Jn1873,fmanCialchaosforced MY HOME WRITE BOX 293
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
the New York Stock Exchange
• 13 61p
to close It rell1llllled closed for - - - - - - - - - - - - - FOAM to f II your old couch and
10 days
chair: cushions Standard size
In 1881 V1ce President only
S? 95
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Ma n Street
Chester A Arthur became the 992 7554
21st American president follow ___________ _a~~~"
ang the gW!shot death of James KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S
September
Spec als are
Garfaeld
Lemon Facnsl Bath Bath &amp;
In 1972 a ri!Sh of letter ShOwer Gel Jr Fac al Mask
bombs
hit several world Kover Kates L qu d Rouge
r Sprays Shampoos
K
capitals Explosive devices Ha
Beauty Bars Suntan Spr:ay
were foWld m New York and and others Phone Helen Jane
Brown 992 5113 Many thanks
sax foreign caties an letters to
our new and regular
customers
addressed to laraeli offacials

g

9 11 t1c

-------------British YARD Sale ar lhe Roberl

A thoughtfor the day
phllosopher Jolui Locke said,
'It ls one thing to show a man
that he IS in error, another to
put him m possession of the
truth "

Jeffers rnidence on Highland
Rd in Pomeroy Tues Wed
and Thursday 10 a m till 4
p m each day
9 18 3tc

FLEA Market Sunday Ad
dl!!ion Ohio 9 am till ?
Tables available P &amp; J Odds
and Ends
9 18 Stc

-------------NO hunting or trespass ng on

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

my farm In Nease Seftlement
Vernon Nease

9 18 31p

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

Help Wanted

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

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

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

Your R1ght to Know
and be ntormed of the fUnc
tlons of your government are
em bod1ed n pub I c not ces tn
that se ll government charges
all c t12ens to be nformed
this newspaper urg es every
C1f1Zen to reed and study these
notices We strongly adv se
those cll1fens seeking further
Inform at on to exer c1se their
r ght of afcess to pubI c
records and publ c meetings

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

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

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

______ _______ _
3 11 lfc

CHOCOLA 'rE
Colored organ
lcatly orown peppers Sweet
as an apple
many v1t
am ins too JOe each $1 00
per dozen B Qu sen berry
old P o Bu il ding Syracuse
Ohio Phone 992 2954
9 20 ltp

2 BEDROOM home in Mason
Phone 173 5554 or 773 5468
9 19 3tc

5 ROOM fuel oll c•rculatmg
heater&lt; Call 992 7165
9 20 31c

712tfc

--------------PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization

3975

phone 992

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

-------------4 ROOM house for rent bath
utility room

Call

m

Racine

3905 or

m 5630

Oh o

9 19 4tc
-------------APARTMENT n M ddleport 4
rooms and bath References
requ r ed Call 992 5293
9 19 tfc

-------------- PUBLIC NOTICE-

2 BEDROOM mobile- home for
rent by the month or by the
week
Everything s fur
ntshed Call 742 5980.
9 18 6t c

MOTOROLA co lored
se t 23 nch console
good con dit ion Ca n
238 Second St reet

telev isi on
Works In
be seen at
Pomeroy

920 6fc

1220 Wa s.hmgton Blvd

3891

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spe~iallst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
Mason W Vo

Ph~92 2174

773 5554

I

992 2094
606 E Marn Pomeroy

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

OffiCE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE
0 DELL

Real Estate For 5ale
--

--------------2 bedroom

WHEEL Allgnmenl

Gene's
Body Shop

located at Crossroads Rt 12.4
now back to work Complete
front end service tune up and
brake
service
Whuls
balanced electron ically All
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
2 18 tfc

HOUSE for sa le locate d m
Bradbury Ca 1 992 7363 after
6 P

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Phone 992 2550

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dasplay

All work guaranteed

CASH paid for all mekes and
models of mobile homes
Phone aree code 61 4 ~23 9531
4 13 lfc

m

9 5 30tc

-----------

Ph 992 5271
Loncoln H1ll Pomeroy 0

FRAME house on large level lot
RON SHEPARD Floor Wall
n Middl ep or t 2 bedrooms Remodeling Ceram i c tile
eac h With bu It n clothes
baths Box 280 Rutla nd 742
close l s new mode r n kitchen
3664
w th bu It 1n ra nge and
6 26 lfc
e)(haust
blow er
d uple)(
re fr gerator wa sher and
dryer New Amana FA Gas WILL TRIM or cut trees and
sh ru bbery also clean ou t
furnace n ew water heater
basements attics and etc
c arpeted
and
paneled
Call 949 3221 or 742 444 1
throughout
New w ndows
8 31 30lc
doors and storm w.ndows
f ne conc r ete por ches front ---~-------- --DEAD Sl OCK - Will remnw•
and rea r newly panted house
at a reasonable clfarqe Call
and roof vacant - move n
245 551 4
Call 992 5J10 after 6 p m or
8 23 901c
anytime on w eeken ds
9 19 4tc
ELNA and White Sewtng
Mach nes
Service on all
makes Reasonable rates
The Sewing Center Mid
dleport Oh lo
1116 tfc

1.d X 65 TRAILER

very good cond t o Phone 773

5805
_________
___ _

8 22 tfC

ifeal Estate For Sale
7 ROOM house with bath n
Rutland a1r condll oned
carpe ted gas furna ce d Sh
washer double oven range
double garage large carport
4 acres cleared and fenced
small
barn
and
other
bu i ldings Phone 614 742 6834

5 30 ltc

Pa1nt1ng ASpecialty
Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

All work guaranteed
EXCAVATING Dozers large
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on frack anti tires
Oum p truck - Lo bOY ser
v ice Septic tanks Installed
George (9111) Pullins phone

--------------2 BEDROOM house J years old -------------carpet ng b g k1tchen w th
Jots of cab nets
2 acre of
ground Ra e ne Ohio Call
949 4998
9 12 tfc

Pomeroy

ROOFING,
FUR
NACE
CLEANING
AND REPAIR AND
PLUMBING

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

215 N Second
Phone 992 3509
24 Hour Serv1ce

Gravwood 50x12 1 Skyline
52x12 both 1973 models
EKtra c lean Can be seen at
Goeble Mobile Homes Lot or
call Cap1tal Sav ngs and Loan
Company 992 2111
9 20 3tc

_,_

~ma 11es' Heater &lt;.:or~

Built to Your $poet
Othvored 1o Job Silo

and

BELPRE 0
HOMES

Bulldozer Radlalor lo

Heattng
Atr Cond
Refrtgeratton
Plumbmg
Electncal Appliances Auto
Atr Cond
Restdenttal or
Commerctal

MOBILE HOMES

MOBILE

From the laroest

992 W8 or 992 7402

2 9 ltc

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SANITATION
MOBILE home repair Elec
STEWART OHIO PH 662
trlcal plumbing and heating
303S
Phone 992 5858
10 • lfc
7 15 ltc
MACHINES Repair
NEI GLER S FOR HOUSE SEWING
service all makes 992 2284
BU ILDERS CALL GUY
The Fabr.lc Shpp Pomerqy
NEIGLER RACINE OHIO
Authorized Singer Sales ahd

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

lAND

9 11 30tp

~08 MAIN.~REAL_TY_,

NEW LISTING
TUPPERS PLAINS 2
bedrooms bath large I vlng

POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
2 story frame

and small basement

bedrooms balh

garage

.4

go woth lh ls property Ask ng
S9 500 00
EXCELLI'NT
APARTMENT

garages

Not

very

for

Block
only

porch 2 car garage Excellent
local1on for only $25 000 00
NEW HOME
ROCK SPRINGS - 3 bedrooms
w 1th large closet master with

half balh modern kitchen with
stove
Noce bath
Full

2

basement with family

old

530 000 00
RUTLAND
bedrooms Balh Gas wall
furnace heat

k1tchen

Newly

renovated

2

Almost new

washer

and

kitchen table top range and

oven Carpeted I All electric

basement large back and front

3 nice bedrooms w1th closets

Very modern bath and
Carport

In new addlt1on

517 000 00
FOR SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY LIST WITH US
TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no ao•wer 992 2568

furnace for winter
Dirty
furna ces cost fuel and could
cost a life Call P 8. J Home
Ma nlenance 992 3509 215 N
Second Middleport
8 23 30tc

porches 2 good lots
S9 000 00

Comp lete Service
Phone 949 38'21
Racine Ohio
Cri1t Bradford

1 ric
--------------EXCAVATING dozer
5

load~r

1,

and backhoe work
septic
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for hire will haul
fill dirt top soil limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers doy phone 992 7089

nigh! Phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 lfc

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

OPEN Hoger Hysell s
Garage near Crossroads on
St Rt 12• all me chan ic al
work ncludlng automatic
tra nsmissions
Monday
Friday 8 30 a m lUI 5 p m
Sa turday - 8 30 to 12 noon
Unless by appt Phone 992

5682 or 992 7121

9 16 301c

I lui p •• i.....n

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

I

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

BARBS

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

+ + +

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

fNIW . .A'III IH'fl!fiPII/11 AISN 1

(9)

13

Syrocuu on1o
27 {10 1 j

20
I

___
Clll

___________
_
5 13 lfc

992 6271

...._

9 16 6t c

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

Wt 1

sp&lt;Hts&lt;;astt~rs or at lenst l'X&lt; r( lsc veto flc,w~r ove r Ill&lt; n1
Some of Lhcse annut.lflt:crs tt IS rl 11 ~t Ll un n~1thtng Jtul t'
than huuse shills ignorin~ rlcfiCiel! CI( 8 or the home lc "" I&lt; lion~
rans lo con oe out roo a lx,.utiful cvcn h gat the''·'" Jldl k when It IS
obviously gmng to p&lt;iur c 1ts 1nd do~:s 111d eve n buolduog Up U r
SJlUI se t"l enls of pluyc1 s the llldMgr noeutls w uohn ~ to uniloa~
In short lhesc SfJOrls aster" " ' c homer' r JVOIIII~ the
local team m ways !hal go beyond the p;olc or uthk ol hoo "'
caslmg lhc I CC 111 cffc'Ct suyH lhc pui.Yoc IS entitled to an oiJ..
ject1vc job of •trarght rcportmg Without undue !JVOII!Isrn lor It c
home tcwu
Good 1dea FCC lml No.d and I can tell you 1t sa lot ca"cr
sllld than done
Ole Nml has been anchor man for the B1g Ill Jcks telecasts for
three seasons now and I ve usually been there to stick 111 my two
cents worth on m1ke and camera Although ~c get no strpend1
ki ckba cks or lhrcatemng lcllcrs from Pt Pleasant m rn Jgcone nt
or !ans we usually are unabashedly pro PPIJS for lhc
elementary reason that we 11ant to sec them wm
A week or so back however Pt Pleasunt was to JOur my to
Pomeroy to engage the Me1gs Mar audc" m an annual
tracti!lonal and usually-ci 0se contest
Sonce we have cable rv subscrobers in both commumlles we
!ell that oQiy the most obJeCtive and unpartoal Job of • eportmg
was called for
All week long before the bog game v.hen N1&lt;1l and I would sec
each other we would remmd one anoti!Cl to thmk fwr
On the way to th e game Nwl rernmdcd me that we must not
- repeat must not - show any par t1ahty to th e B1g Blacks I
responded w1th a bnef se rmon on the me11ls o! aloof obJeCtive
and factual reportmg We were dele! mmed to show no boas at all
And then came the opemng koekoff
It was a whale o! an excotmg ga me and v. c had hardly gotten
past the l!rst quarter when one ol us referred to Pl Pleasant as
we mea mng that the Marauders had to be they' {We
repeated thiS blunder at least a half-&lt;iozen tunes )
When an o!hcml made a spur1ous c.oH neither Ole Nm l nor I
could conta m our disdam And when Pt Pleasa nt scored the
ga me wmnmg toouchdown N1al whooped for roy and recrted half
the young players fam1ly tree notmg then moment of trmmph

yuu my story

wh• n I w'" 15 my rJ[h r dcud •Ill WoOS llul( I left
hiiHI&lt; II&lt; w ' " 1otng to s.mJ 111 u!Jout 11)(10 1flll s ow oy ' ~'
"I oliVI s 1 iJul I u ulolu t st&lt;o11d \hut su 1 11111 fiW oy
and Af•l
111 1n "'' fh1 ~uy d1dn t stay n uunli
1kn&lt; w 111 y o1 ul wuuld sny abUilion so I waited untll rl w11s
lou I ol&lt; fur that and then l told him 11''" l May&lt; d wrlll lru:n&lt;l'
llcl• 11 "'"' ~uc , very nurse und doclor I talked tv. asked me
wl y 1 dldu t ~~ i m uborl!on Why IS rt the flrsl thing everyone
thrnk s of I aon land was ) hua ltloy and •I ron~ and purfc-ttly
Caf~lhlc uf ca ~r yrr11, a llaby I was dctcrmm II to let 1l live su
som&lt;hody who wanted 11 cvuld have achlld And I ncvc 1 realized
how rn 111y PWI•Ic there were who were just achmg fo r a b;•iJY
11 ey co uldn t h Jvc ttwmsclvcs She s got • wonder fui horne
'" 'now engaged to a great ~uy who know$ almut my post
ruct hun when 1 was a few montho along and he stood hy rnc
Uu ough, vc oything My dad hasnothin~ to do w1th me now I hvc
on my own ,ond p •Y my own hills
Abor [lOll' 1'd hke 1o tell every young gorl who IS lhmk ~g
about 1t that they 1e gmng to havcto li ve With the fact that they
killed a hvmg bcong someone d se wa11ted every had M01 HEll OF A IJAPPY Cllll 0

l.ost yc

II

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Arnuss

llflW:If

I HJ 'il r
lj A ld1 r
Inc

I ApJ!H~rl
2 Sp rt s

{Srot

:J N1 11"&gt;( 1 ~(
o1 N ti!NI m

o.;cttmg

I
IJ Harren

I I ol kr t

rttv

slyI&lt;

lj liltllmn

l l l r m•ns

f

&lt;In( I ~-. [or

m&lt;~n ll

14 B~r II (
I'J Adjourn
lf1 I ndurt:ll

1 d like to tell you my s1tle of ahort ron I was fa ced w1th a
ehor cc 1 could have my baby (who was wanted by me and my
boyfnend hut what would a lo year-old grrl do with ll 'l or I

y,

mrr r
II

,.. { J ('I

(2 wds l

21 ihhrrna

J.\r 1pl c
20 All cv'"tr
21 Actre ss
I an

12

(II\ ph

O&lt;ltnf
~

tl lll

lhrc d

28 French

play
wtoght

t qu t uc

rcan
2H Kongly
ll Wondy
da\ sky

ur )
12 '"'' l
24 Rl c1pe
f r

IG I akc
tho
t

18 ! a)lhagc
( lal I

24 N11 rorl s
h::,sket

( olo rado
rnts

• II
23 ( ct -

Hhr ry

22 I h stery

dl
Crrsto

f&lt;'nt1r'"

llC,u l -;

s und

2G -

lnl~ nn

I eld
Ill Sor l
Dov. 11

17 111 cc~s
111 I ilc

sh 1 (lays \n11wer

22 fl o I 1

S/1 W

t;hcsll.! r

l(,op

\111cvttl

soght

tran c

3a Afford

Fttn

35 Tr('C

2'i Bc 1ng
(Sp)

and JOY In lhc post 41ll11e wrap up IllY ela tiOn ;J t a J&gt;t Pleasant
vrctory was convey ed by the lone of my vo1cc 1f not my words
Alte r Ihat there 1sn t much to he sard except to apologiZe to
the I me Mergs fan s and to Me1gs Coach Char lie Chancey one of
the !mest peop le anywhere We tncd honest we dod to he farr
! hat and maybe let the FCC know tl at ol s da r ned hard to
keep your co mrn cnls bland when your heart Is n ght m the mrddlc
of your fa vonte teams huddle

JJ&amp;~IDLbl£ ; /kJ ~-~~..~ .-~

.,_.

U nscrambl e these four Jumbl es
one letter to each squ are to
form four ordanary words

26 Afore
menltonc&lt;l
27 Arahlan
No~ h ts

b-+-1-+--

character
2R f rrol or
Pe ~-;gv

30

Ann
(rocket
on the
nearth
author

32 Moray
34 Car

toon1st s
task

3&gt; llnnk
36 Tlom c
sleatlcr

37 Raw
hrned
3R Summer
10 1 oulon
39 Grn
rumm\

term
Ihe Clock 4 Sa nl 1S

III

7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Beat Ihe Clock 13 Porter Wagoner J

Wor ld Press 33 20 Hollywood Squar es 4 Conc enlra l on 8
New Treas ure H unt 10

6

oo - Washi ngton Week In Rev ew 20 33 Caluccos Depl 8 10

Sanfo rd and Son 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 6 13
6 30 - Odd Couple 13 Black Perspect ve on lhe Ne ws 33 20
Ou e s G rl s 6 Gorl W lh Someth ng Extra 3 4 15 Movies
Tara Tora Tora 8
The Pnze
0
9 00 - Ma sterp ece Theatre 33 Room 22 6 13 Homewood 20

t CIWI 01

2

(t"\)

Needl es and Pons 3 4 15
9 30- Adam sR ob 6 13 BranK el h3 415
10 00 - Love Amer can Sly le 6 13 News 20 Handlu l ol Ashes
33

11 30 -

15

J o h nn~ Carson

3 4 15 J ack Paar Ton te 6 New s 8 •
Adventur es of Sher ock Holmes
10
Dev1 ! s

Mo,n es

Angels 13
12 00
Movie For Smgles On ly 8
1 OO - Mdngh! Specal 3 4 JackPaarTonlel3
1 15- Movo e The Fly 10
2 30 - News 4 13

I

!

If-1

,A R1\ j

Dean Mart n 3 4 15

10 30 - Woman 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13

II

OF'TEN PRODUCES
RE.L160US HARMONY

CRYPTOQUOTES

~

: I

Now arrange the corded letters
to form the surprite &amp;newer u

~:A:::::::~:;=~b,~~d~:;=·~'::".:.n;ested by the above cartoon
~Prill
~
lhe~suR~
PRI:-:.:
SE lNSW=HI:.:::h!l::,._l

__,1o rxxr IJ

L
l

{A.n•wen 1omorrow)

)umbl" AGLOW PLUME EASILY FAMILY
Ye11erd•y •

\ Aluwer

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to 11ork tt
AXY DLBAAXR
Is LONGFEL LOW
One letter Simply slands for another ln th tS sample A 1s
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes the len gth and form ton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dof! ere nt

Or1 fi('Cflr n/ aflllls II lrn fi liAl IW8 frml
FOUL PLAY

fo,.ltu lif*'' -

NU
U MI

ZMD

AV NWG

AMYBMEB

QNRR

UNE H

XBOH

DL

QXM
ZMD

ZMD I

EBWG

EBBHA
WOE

MDV
ZMD

NV

XMR H

ZMDI

XNPXB! - OEME

Yesterdays Cryptoquote THE WISE ONLY POSSESS
IDEAS THE GREATER PART OF MANKIND ARE POS
SESSED BY THEM -SAMUEL COLERIDGE
(0 1973 Kme Features. Syntllclt.e Inc:)

SOUTH

Pass
Pass

+K t07
'AK
• 96
+QJ 1086 2
Both vu lnerab le
North East
It
Pass
3+
Pass
4+
Pass

Pass

Pass

Wesl

South
2+
3N T
5+

Pass

Opemng lead- t 2
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
North should probably have
passed when hiS partner bid
three no trump If he had
South would have made exactly
three no trump agamst a spade
.opemng and e1lhcr !lve or SIX
'llo trump agamst any other
"lead dependmg on whether or
11ot East got to cash h1s ace of
spades
West opened h1 s smgleton
diamond East d1dn t have
much hope of defeating five
clubs bul he d1d note one
chance 11 West held ace and
another club and would lead a
spade then West wo•1ld get to
rul! a d1amond I herelore
East played his lO under dum
my s rack
Thmgs work ed out JUSt as
East had hoped Wes t did win
..the first trump tn ck did lead a
•spade tn response to the su1t
: preference srgnal and d1d ruff
: the second diamond
.. Th!s hand Illustrates some "IL ABNER
: thmg we have pointed out m the
"; la st co uple of articl es It is
:easy to recogmze a suit preler
• ence s1gn al when the s1gnal is
: given with a high card to call
.. for a lead of the higher olf suit
:; It is downright difficult to be
" sure that a low card call s !~r
: the play of ~ low side suit

~IU

I ~£SS f\1&gt; Fl~f'.ES
IF WHI\l.l Wt\T&lt;::i-l HIM, H6
WATCH usl

'OIHO CA"ES 11
I DONTWANT
f.IUTTI N TO DO

W TH 'lA" WI;.
NUTTi f.l

GQ\

IN COM MON -

1NtW 9PAPIR ENTERP~ 1!1! A.99,..

3+

"""
Pm

~•

20
South
I.
4

~

IT WUZ.

•

MY

OADBU~N
S AVIN$
ACCOUNT

•z

'" You South hold
: +Q l 6 4 I
t~ 4 +A K J I 7
Whatdn youdonow "

LET'S LEARN
THOSE CAPITALS1!
y

H60PENED

:' ,1. - Sptdeo ore tho •&amp;reed ouil
• You ca n bid tlv e no trump fill the
• arand 111 m ft~ree l'artur II

NEW HAVEN

Po meroy Ohio Coli 992 755 4

wltnrsscs so

d ltk~,: lO l~JJ

'Q8
tAKQJ 75
+K 953
EAS1
WEST
• Q 9652
+AJ 83
'JI06 43
'9 752
• !0843
" • 2
• +A 7
+4

:a
.,p.,.

UP

;:opppoled to bid nvon jpOde• II he

POMEROY
LANDMARK
JACK W, CARIIY, Mgr.

+ + +

. ,...

•

The blddlnR h" been
"' W"'
North
Ell\
:
,.
Pm

Dlsa&gt;UNT TIRE

"'

lilt\ HI

II II II llld Slit'

f1u fl S SO IIIU( f di St USH IIJII 1hOUL •lhtJrlJ(J0 lh ill

+4

•:

-

w.ueu

m h:ll till.' Ill llltl fuu
11 li~ lil l Y t uh. Ihe mull! hut nul m 1t m.;mlly tlr tom~ ut1
And ,osl xlnbll A w&lt; 'd h ovr tu "" tin I t 1'1&lt; us 1111 M11g•
foulball game fis 1 horrlhle CXIoii iJIIo
lo the unlnlatcd lhl Icc iij lakin, ,, "'" ' vio w I r till rum
mon JUachc:c or lcltmg flro spm tH lcum ownus tunlrul tlu

Nlul Mtntun (tml

II

itz:e:i:H!M4U1

-------------Wanted To Buy

H tht ~( ( J,:Ot li ullf nl ,wll hvl(lot ht. uwpt cn us.lnj hu th(
nl!n 118 pl,ly by pluy Sflllii H HIIIIJIJIII I I H lihll k tf11 Y; fllluhf I Ill

Ill

"m• Bull• I

20

NORTH illl

:

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

+ + +

BY PAUL CRABTREE

II .11111

Rap

s 12 ltc

6 s lfc

----------------vour
tuf

Preference not always easy

-------------C BRADFORD AucUoneer

We talk to you

'

,' ·. ~W!l!.!!IN~AT.!...!!:B~R~ID~G=E

4782 Gallipolis John Russett
Owner and Operator

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

ON YOUR DIAL

·

REASONABLE roles Ph 446

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

WMP0/1390

.~

6 30 lfc

cance lled ?
Lost
your
operators li cense Call 992
74'28
6 15 ftc

'

NBC News l 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10
HO&lt;Jan s Heroes 13 Making Things Grow 33
7 00 - What s My Lone 8 Truth or Conseq 3 8 News 10 elec
Co 20 Wold Kingdom 13 Audubon Wildlife Thea Ire 33 Bea l

--------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

--------------AUTOMOB ILE Insurance been

Want

6 30 -

dellvereQ right to your
pro[ect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 J28•
Goegleln Ready Mix Co
M lddleport Oh to

HARRISON S TV service and
serv ce ca lls Phone 992 2522
2 9 ltc

hke a pnm

News 13

6 22 ltc
READY- MIX- -CONCRETE

dryer

hookups 3 lovely bedrooms
wl!h large closels m balhs
w th vent fans All Insulated
and eleclroca lly healed Only
$22 000 00
GOOD OLDER HOME
SYRACUSE - 5 rooms nice
bath and kllche n
Full

blo&lt;k building with garage on
!he rear 25x29 It Large le ve l
lo! $8 500 00
TUPPERS PLAINS
3 years old and just like new

9 life

room

and double garage Asking
$29 500 00
NEW HOME
FIVE POINTS - N ce large

aluminum si(flng
Storm
Doors ar:~d W1ndows
Car
ports Marquees and Rafting
Phone
Charles
Lisle
Syracuse Ohio carl Jacob
Sates Representative v v
Johnson and Son Inc

--------------fiME to check that oil or gas

modern k1tchen dlntng room
w th gas ftrep!ace Ntce front

and busmes ~ room Apart
ment ha s 3 bedrooms w1th
large closets Modern bath
Very nt ce k1tchen Dining
room Large living room
Hardwood floors and car

Hoi water heat

acre

$8500 00
LOVELY BRICK
MULBERRY AVE 3
bedrooms large llv ng large

garage

Several lots and parts of lots

peled

one

-------------FOR FREE estiR)ates on

ponds and septic tanks , dlt
ch ng service top soil till
dirt
limestone
B&amp;K
Escavattng Phone 992 5367 or
992 J861

compact k tchen front porch

home

Serv ice We Sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

-------------DOZER: and back hoe work

EXCELS IOR Salt Works E
Mam Sl Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohio River Sa lt Phone 992

UPHOLSTER
own
Sealed b1ds will be rece ived at
nlture We have all lhe su p
the
off
ic
e
of
the
Clerk
of
the
N...IM" EnM pr M lttln
PIes
YOU
Will
nHd
VIllage of S';'racuse Syracuse FIRSr-fk.;-;-;:;;o,; fu;;,i;hed
apt in Pomeroy Call 992
Upholstery F sbrl cs a ver y
Oh o unht 12 00 Noon on the
3028
large selection of nylons
I lth day Of Oc tober 1973 for the
velvets Hercutpn vinyls - In
9 18 3tc
purchue of the fo llowing
conon pr nts also emnanu
descr ibed real estate
Foa m for cu shio ns and
The following descr1bed real T RA ILER at Syrac use adutt.s
padding Burlap denims
Only Call 992 3525
estate situated m th e VIllage of
cambr c foem glue z ppers
Syracuse Townsh p of Sutton
9 18 ttc
spr ings and cUps chipboards
and County of Meigs and Stat e
legs sewing fhreao dacron
of Oh io and bounded and
By PHIL PASTORET
12 X 55 MOBILE I'Jome w th
ta ckfl webb n(,l welt cor d
described as tot rows
patio In Racine Albert H H
cotton swivel bales and all
L ots No Se venty Three
You can teach a parrot lo
Phone 949 2261
olher svppiles you w 11 nee d
Seventy
Four
Se
venty
F
lve
and
uy most anythmg but we can fifteen feet oft the east s de of
9 16 7tc
New fur niture at row low
thlnlt or lots more mtereshng Lot No 77 as per deeds on
prices Pomero y Recover~
622 E Ma in 992 7554
things to teach it
record n the Recorders Office MOBILE home space Baer s
Market Syracuse
found In Volume 30 Page 221
831 30ic
8 26 lfc
Volume 38
Page 399". and
September lo the mouth Volume 39 Page 197 Me igs
••e• tbe aunoblae people County Deed Records
For the Lowest
Referen ce Deed
Vol
2S4
eload tbln&amp;• up wllh those
Page
413
Deed
Records
Me
igs
lfii'Waled po bUJs
Countv Ohio
Tare Pncea
CORNER cupboards woll
Said property s robe sold and
cupboards chests old guns
conveyed to the highe st bidder
any condition Also blue
upon the following terms Cash
1n the Are;~
decorated stoneware Write
In hand an~ltl,ibject to all real
P 0 BoK 44 Martinsburg
••tate taxes becoming due on
Ohio 43935 or coli 1 &lt;84 4440
II s
afhr 1 p m
and affer the date of the sale
The successful bidder must
8 8 ?Ole
e1ther renovate the bu J/ dlng qr
raze lf and remove the debr is
WANTED
for
auction
tither action to commence
housthold fooos Tools most
Today to be a miser you Within three months from the
tnyth ng o velut Will buy or
lint have to become a maga date of dtllverv ot the deed and
~111 on com minion W!ll haul
complete the work within II)(
elan
all 99 2 n5• or 992 2792
months from the dale the work
Hayma.n •
1 25 " '
Js commenced lhe r ght Is
T•u• ••o •Ide-out from reserved to reject any and all 0 lo-fu-;;;j~~--;, k-~bi;.
~;locks Ice boxes br111 beds NEW slightly damaged chairs
Yillllal relative• over th bids
dlshu
or
complete
and sofe beds Some as low a$
•••aid eell t•e day
KATHRYN CROW
hOUithOida
Write M
0
120 whllt they lasf Pomeroy
Clerk of the Vlllegtof
Miller Rr 4 Pomeroy Ohio
Recovery
622 E
Ma i n
Copyr ght • 1873

MILLER

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

Me igs Inn Pomeroy

PUBLIC NOT1CES

a lways avatlable at

2

V.OOD TRUSSES

p AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

mobile home
plus gtganflc

423 7521

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Ph. 742,6271

d"pla y ol mobile homes

9 18 31p

AUCTIO N Sale Saturday Sept
VISIT our store at Add son
2~ 1973 Bashan Keno Rd Co
Oh o
Open da11y
Flea
Rd 28 Old flour b n old baby
Mark et on Sunday P &amp; J
bed old day bed old youth
Odds And Ends Shop
bed 1ce box ch a rs tab les 2
9 18 5tc
old w cker do ll strollers old
dolt bed 13 Scotty Camper
m n1mum bid $600 cut glass LOSE we ght with New Shape
5 pc berry set other old
Tablets and Hydrex Water
d1Shes and toads of other
P l!s
m1sc
too numerous
to
9 19 3fp
ment ion Signs posted day of
sale auctioneer RQger ~------------TWIN NEEDLE SEWI NG
Ha yman Owner Sam Cozart
MACHINE S 1973 Model n
Not respons ble for ace dents
walnut stand All features
9 19 31p
bu It In to make fan cy des1gns
and do stretch sew ng Also
butlonhol es blind hems etc
543 lS cash pr ce or terms
av a ta ble Phone 992 2984
LADY to l1ve m or stay n ghts
9 19 tfc
w th another lady
l1gh1
housekeeping Call 949 2532 or VACUUM CLEANERS E lect ro
write Box 37 Ra~me Oh o
Hyg1ene New Demon-stra tors
45771
has all clean ng atta ch ments
9 19 6tc
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampoo ng carpet
Only
A LOCAL company has •m
S27 50 cash pri ce of terms
mediate open ngs for the
ava l a,le PhOne 992 2984
followmg pas t ons
9 19 tfc
1
Account1ng Clerk
Know ledge and experience n 1972 HONDA 100 Low m l eage
cost accountmg or payroll
L1ke new Ca ll 992 ll16
essential Open ngs on the
9 19 Jlc
follow ing ShiftS 8 a m t II 4
p m .4 p m t II 12m dn1ght B FLAT Bundy clar net n verv
l2011118am
good con d1t on Call 992 5090
2 Office secretar ies - Dut1es
9 19 Jlp
nclude typ ng d1ctat1on
f I tno Openmg on same Sh 1ffS THRUSH s de p pes only used 2
I sted above
weeks on ca r Call 992 7294
3 Personnel Ass stant 9 19 4fc
R:espons1ble for recru1t1ng
and screen ng of employees CLUB Restauran t
Ra ci ne
Oes.re
nterv eWmg
or
Oh o Sa le by th e f1rst of
counsel ng experience
October Phone 949 437 4
Excellent sa lar es and fr nge
9 19 61p
benef ts Send brief resume of
work h1story and educat on
Send all replies to Box 729 S n BRU SH HOGS 4)(5 It phone
992 5858
care of The Dally Sent.nel
7 IS tiC
P!? meroy Oh10
9 2 ttc
1973 H~~:70 MOBILE home
washer a .. d dryer
d1Sh
CENTRAL DIVISION CON
washer sta in less steel s nk
SOLIDATION COAL COM
garbage d isposal eye level
PANY Immediate openmgs
oven range dacron polyester
are ava i lable n the follow ng
carpet large tot Phone 742
POS11lons
Maintenance
lOU
Foreman
(underground)
1 18 If
Ass1stant M i ne Foreman
(Underground)
Sect on
Foreman
Surface M ne WILKINSON small eng ne sales
Md serv c e 820 Jrd Stre t
Foreman
Reclamat on
Middleport Lawn mower and
Foreman Persons apply ng
chain saw repa.r F ree p ckup
should hold valid foreman
and delivery Phone 992 3092
certification papers (Oh iO) or
Also Briggs and Stratton an.d
have sufficient uperlence to
Tecumseh parts
apply for State exammatlon
1 22 301c
Salary Commensurate w1th
Expef' ence
Excellent
Benefits TO APPLY Wr te 1970 MOBI LE Home 12 )( 44
or
Phone
Personnel
SJ 589 Phond 773 5429
Department
Ce ntral
9 14 121p
Div is on Consolldat on Coal
com pan~ Cadiz Oh o 43907 DRIVE A L1TTLE - SAVE A
Telephone 614 942 4512 AN
LOT Good select on used
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
guaranteed appl ances new
EMPLOYER
and used furn1ture at rea l
8 21 He
savings 50 ga l oak wh iskey
barrels tor c der homebr ew
even furn1ture Come out and
see us Tuesday thru Sunday
tl7pm KUHL S BARGA I N
CENTER Rf 7 at caut on
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
I ghl TUPPERS PL AIN S
unfurn shed
apartments
Oh lo
Phone 992 5434
9 16 6tc
__..
"12 tfc

ROOMS by lhe week 518 up

Books are bemg recorded
on microfilm not only to
ave space but also to pres
erve them Many books are
deteriorating in American
libraries ~ause publishers
ofler 1870 began using paper
made from wood pulp m
atead of from rag The
World Almanac notes The
paper becomes bnttle with
ace beca~~~e the wood pulp is
treated wath an acul

53 500.

-------------For Rent
JACK LEE WARD and the
Moonshlners will play at
Jacks Club Fr day and
Saturday n1ghts
9 19 3tc

Comple t e
se 1 v1ce -

1971
XL 70 HONDA Tra I
B llte In good con dition Price
S175 Can be seen at Royal
Oak Park - Lot No 2l4 after
5 p m Al so 1971 Coact1men
Camper 24 ft Crusader

OpenrTII l
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Main Pomeroy 0

992 3954 or 991 7349

For Free Est1mate

Awntngs
Underp1nnmg

__ ___________ _

0

Roof ing
Spoutmg
Porch Repair
Com
plet e
Home
Remodelrng

________ __ __

PARASOL Bou t qve Beau ty
Sa lon near Ska te A Way
Roller
RInk
announces
fros t ng spec als. September
11 1hrough Sep tember 22
Short t1a r regular $15 now
SlJ Long ha.r regular $17 50
now SIS 50 Call 985 4141 for
appointment San dra Kerns
Operator
9 16 Me

Middl eport

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

&gt;

JOHN TUCKER
Rl 4 Pomeroy 0

CONSTRUCTION

9 19 Jtc
- - - - - - - - -- - - -1970 JEEp CJ 5 , cab other
e1oras John Beaver L ncoln
Hgt s 992 7811!2
9 16 6tp
....

BLA CK leather reel nlng cha r
like new Phone 84J 2846
,__,_
9 18 6tp

12 Sat

PRICE

stee n ng Ca ll 997 7084

On Mo•t American Cars
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

MODERN
SANITATION

H Rawlings Sons

99' 1101

and outboard engine Con tact •• - - - - - - - . . , . - - - . . . . : ; : ;
Ra cme Oh1o r
......_
..,.... • 16 61 c
A1r Cond1honers

Not1ce

NOTICE

cere appreciat ion during the FA BRIC S - 8 ggest little shop
death of our husband father

1 q
Jd•ng

1

Vlrg I Walker

WE WISH to express our sin

Powell

8 4 JO Dally 8

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

18

2S Per Cent 0 scount on Pll d
ads and acts pad wtth tn 10 days

ol Right

Auto Sales

•5.55

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVICE

or we w111

19 /0 f'ORO Mavenrk 6 cvlln
d er standard tran smlssinn
65 000 BTU C rculat ng Gas
needs repa ir 5700
Heeter Alber H1tl 9•9 216 1
9 19 61C
9 16 .,~
1964 1 TON Cheyrolet Wllh
serv c e bed $500
GR:OCERY buS iness for sale
Building tor sale or lea'\e
_.. __ ,!_~ Me
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 P m 1972 o1 DOOR b ue Nova Small
to 10 P m for appollllmenl
v8
aulom a 1 c
power

Sl395
power

vl nvt roof rad o heavy duty suspension

consecutive msertlons

II Mu•l
Bo Roghl

9 17 61p

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

Ahgnmenf

LOST one bl~t-k 00'{1'1 and gold
cl! p ear ring In or near
Crow s or
Krogers
In
Pomerov If toond t all 992
.SilO Reward

--------------For Sale

steenng &amp; brakes good white w"ll tires white fin•$h

three

II 171 C

PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles
1 toy mate and 1 female
Phooe 992 5••3
1 15tfc

SIJ95 .

Spett!lll\ t
Wheel

9 18 61p

Pets For Sale

blue f nlsh spotless Interior

1

S c~t n ts per Word one lnserrlon

cents per

~

.4 door V 8 automatic power steering radio good f1res

RATES

LOST n SYia I ]JI.Iper box 19:n
S lver Ooii&lt;H St"l)limellf;u
rea~ons
H eWArd
Call 9~1.
lJ81 or 99 1 34 ~3

BABY SITTING any 11-ne nnw
h01ne Edllh Rose A \I qu ty
OhiO

..

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

For Want Ad Service

12

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

DEADLINES

Employment Wanted

lh Ill I•

• OOP

,

Business Services

'

Nowo l 4 I 10 6 IS 1 Setftme Sl 20 Mlluolono• ol
rovroto JJ ABC Newt 13
0
6 JOY - NBC Newt J • ll ABC Newo 6 CUS News 8 10 Lilla'
:._
"'I• ond """ 33 , Hov n 1 Heroes 13
1 00 - Trulh or Con1eq . l 6 Beallho CI&lt;Kk 4 Course ol Our
,
Timet JJ Whel t My ~lne 8 Slec; Co 20 1 Leis Mak e A DMI
IJ New&amp; 10 1 C~ll ollhe West 15
1 30 • Hollywood Squoru 3 Wild Kingdom 10 Zoom 10 Ueal
Ihe Clock 131 ~ooklnp Ahead n s.c. ol the Cenlury 4 To full
lhe Trulh 6 011le 1 Gir l&amp;81 Johnny Mann s Sland Up 11nd
Chlll!r 15
8 00 - Ployhouoe New York Blogrophy 10 33 Billie Jean King
vo 8obbyR1ggso131FIIpW11oon341S Wallons8 10
9 ~ - lron&amp;lde 4 3 15 Mov lea The Jayhawkers 8 Bonnie
and Clyde 10
9 30 - Jan Sel 20 33
10 00 - An American Family 33 New&amp; 70 NBC Follies 3 4 IS
Slreels ol San Francisco 6 13
11 00 - News J 4 6 13 15 TBA 8
11 15 - News 8
11 3&lt;1-Johnny Carson 3 • ll Jock Paer Toolle 6 Movies The
Besl ol Everr,thlng 10 Revoltollhe Mer~enorles 13
11 45 - Movi e Jack of Diamonds 8
100 - News4
1 IS - Jack PMr Tonlle ll
2 45 - News 13
FRIDAY SEPT 21 1973
6 QO - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
• 6 15 - Rlghl on 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bib le Answers 8 Blue Ridge Quarlel
13 NOW$ 6
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Farm time 10
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 News 4 8 10 Ftlntstones 13 Romper
Room6
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bull winkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
8 00 - Cap I Kangaroo 10 8 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame Sl 33
Lassie 6
8 lO - Huck &amp; Yogl6 Dick Von Dyke 13
8 SS - News ll
• 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Oonahue15 AM 3 Friendly Jun ction
•
10 Br&amp;dy Bunch 13 Abbolt and Cosleflo 8 Movie Seven
Cllles of Gold 10
9 30 - To Tell the Trulh 3 Wild Wild Wes! 6 Secret Slorrn 8
9 55 - Chuck White Reporls 3
10 OO - DinahShore3 IS Joker sWlldlO 8
10 30 - Baffle 3 4 15 S10 000 Pyramid 10 Spill Second 8 M ke
Doug Ia• 6
11 OO - Gambll8 10 Wlza rdot0dd s3 4 15 Password13
II 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Lofe 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Bowling 6 Sesame Slreel 33
ll 55 -C BS News 8 Dan Imel s Wor ld 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Brauns SO50 Club 4 Password 6
Local News 8 10 13
12 30 - 3 W s Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Spl l
Second 6
12 ss - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Nol lor Women Only 15
Concentration 8 What s My Line 10
1 31)-3 On A Malch 3 4 15 Lei s Make A Dea l 6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 6 13
Guiding Llgh! 8 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 IS Girl In My Lte 6 13 Edge of Noghl8 10
3 00 - Anolher World 3 4 15 General Hospolal6 13 Price Is
Rig hi 8 10 Maslerplece Thealre 20
3 30 - Return to Peytoo Place 3 15 One Lofe lo Love 13 Secrel
Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Malch Game 73 8 Flo ntslones 6
Film 33
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 20 Love
American Style 13 Movie The Magic Carpel 10 I Love
Lucy 8
4 30- My Little Marge 15 I Love Lucy 6 Hazel 8 Golllgan s
Island 13 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4
5 00 - Mister Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Western Star Theater
15 Big Valley 6 Merv Grltfln 4 Andy Grlltolh 8 I Dream of
Jeannie 13
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Beverly Hlllblllle! 8 Trails Wesl 15
5 55 - Earl Nlghhngale 15
• " 6 00 - News 6 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame Sl 20 Ins ghl 33 ABC

(~c·n• · •·ntion

&amp; THINGS

( fiUitl IllS( I(
Jlu "''"" was hurd IJC( ausc W£ luve k1ds but I want my
, hrldrcn proud of me What would they StJY 1! their mother was'
rlmp&lt;llll Also my Mom wuuld havo been l!rokenhoart•'ll She
IIC'i(f found out anu I"' Klad
So you sec ull.-.rl1on can he a good thing l1n not sorry though
we rcwct how loohsh we weo e not bcln~ careful By the way I m
not a tnm p My hoyfncnd and I plan lu marry when I ~et out of
"' hr!OI and havu a &lt;h1ld right away - ¥ Ofl ltiE BE:ST

YOU CAN IUY AT LANOMUM -

EV8fy0n8 Can/

Serving Meigs, Oallla, Mason Counties
Open Mon.·Sat.1'116100 P.M.

PHONI 992·2 111

l

; hold• two of the lhree top honorI

., Wllhoul lhlt bid II your dlopoool
: I• iftiO 81o&lt;kwood
:
TODAY SQUfSnON
: You hold lhi!IH OO Ollund WU I
"' bids one diamond ~"'tone haorl
)o Who I do you do

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�The DAlly &amp;nth~ I Mld11l 1 porll'mlocrtlY 11 lici!l 20,1071

9

« Tl• null\ S&lt;'ntn•l

Middk pori

r'"'" rm 0

Tel~!!~~~~ ,~og

lost

Sept ~ '""'

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! "~:,~.·,·:.v·c~~·99;r~·i2:~:
WANTAP~

INFO~MATION

De~ 8tHor• PubUcatio l
Monda )I Dead! ne 9 1 m
Cllnctll allon Carre tJOn$
Will be accepted unlit 9 ~ m for
Day of Publication

SP M

OF

QUALITY

REGULATIONS
Publisher rtoservu

Th•
lhSt
rlqtlt to ltdlt or re f•ct IM)I ads
deem ed
obtecttonal
The
publlshtr w 11 not be re-sponsible

for more than one

Insertion

ncorre-ct

1970 DODGE POLARA
4 door factory air au tomatic fransmlss lon

Minimum Chan~e 7Sc
word

ctnts per wOT'"d s x con
secutlve- lnstrttons

1970 V W 2 DOOR
Dark green finish good tires clean l nt~nor

speed t.rans Save money now

THANKS

CA~DOF
&amp; OBITUA~ Y"

Sll95
radio 4

3 20 lfc

Sl SQ tor 50 word mlntmum

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

Each eddlt anal word 2c

BLIND ADS

A.ddltlonal

25c

Ad~e rtlse ment

OFFICE

HOU~S

m

12

e 30 a m to

8 30

a

Saturdl'V

s 00 p

to

m

AM F M Stereo radio 8 track
tape player 4 speaker sou nd
system Balan ce S\09 44 or
use our budget terms Call

Pomeroy Motor Co. t::1\

Charge per

~

OPEN EVES 8 OOPM
POMEROY OHIO

Dally

oo Noon

992 3965

9 14 61C

----,......----------

21FT CABIN cruiser In board

-

Card of Thanks

Jn the area Guaranteed all 1st
qual ty pol y ester double
kniiS no seconds
Wide
selection of coordinated
colors for fall and w nter We
keep over 1 500 yds In stock
and get new cloth every 3
weeks u 98 to $7 98 values
priced at S2 9&amp; to S3 98
noth ing h i gher
10 pet
discount to home econom cs
students carol na Fabrics
Route 7 one half m le north of
Chester
Oh o at Henry
Hunter res1dence Dr ve a
little - Save a lot

son and brother
Wi lli am
(8111) Harden to our many
friends
ne !ohbors
and
re1at1ves the Western and
Southern Insurance Com
pany
the Ew ing Funeral
Home Homer Baxter Gerald

the Rev

a

________ _____
Mobile Homes For Sale

Morr s

Wolfe the pallbearers for all
the beautiful flowers those
who brought food and to all
who helped with the r prayers
and
thoughtful
con
siderat1ons
Your kindness
will never be forgotten The
William Harden Fam lly

9 20 31p

9 20 31p

----------

SHOOTING MATCH
Corn
Hollow Gun Club turn first
r ght after M les Cemetery
Rutland
Factory choked

TbeAimanac
ByUnlledl'reos lnlernallonal
guns only Sunday Sepl 23 I
Today Is Thursday, Sept 20
P m
9 20 3rc
the 263rd day of 1973 with 102 to - - - - - - - - - - - - folluw
YARD SALE Froday and
Saturday on Lark n Street
The moon IS between 1ts last small kerosene heater
WeSIInghouse RecorQ Player
quarter and new phase
Th e mormng stars are Mars albums and two davenports
9 20 21c
and~turn
--------------The evemng stars are Mer YARD SALE AT 882 LOGAN
STREET
MIDDLEPORT
cury, Venus and Juptler
ACROSS FROM OLD IM
PERIAL
ELECTRIC
Those bo rn On thJs d a te are THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY
undertheslgnofVll'gO
CLOTHING
IN
GOOD
AT CHEAP
George BtrdG rmneU• Amer.i CONDITION
PRICES OLD FURNITURE
can wnler and explorer Of the AND SOME MODERN USED
West was born Sept 20, 1849
~L~tN~JsT ueMKs tu~
On thiS day lD hrstory
TAINS ANO BEDSPREADS
In 1519, Portuguese navigator ~ ~ ~ s~ A~T C s TARTs
Ferdinand Magellan began a
9 19 31c
voyage to fmd a western -----------.,---pasage to the East Indies
WILL DO BOO KK EEPING IN
Jn1873,fmanCialchaosforced MY HOME WRITE BOX 293
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
the New York Stock Exchange
• 13 61p
to close It rell1llllled closed for - - - - - - - - - - - - - FOAM to f II your old couch and
10 days
chair: cushions Standard size
In 1881 V1ce President only
S? 95
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Ma n Street
Chester A Arthur became the 992 7554
21st American president follow ___________ _a~~~"
ang the gW!shot death of James KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S
September
Spec als are
Garfaeld
Lemon Facnsl Bath Bath &amp;
In 1972 a ri!Sh of letter ShOwer Gel Jr Fac al Mask
bombs
hit several world Kover Kates L qu d Rouge
r Sprays Shampoos
K
capitals Explosive devices Ha
Beauty Bars Suntan Spr:ay
were foWld m New York and and others Phone Helen Jane
Brown 992 5113 Many thanks
sax foreign caties an letters to
our new and regular
customers
addressed to laraeli offacials

g

9 11 t1c

-------------British YARD Sale ar lhe Roberl

A thoughtfor the day
phllosopher Jolui Locke said,
'It ls one thing to show a man
that he IS in error, another to
put him m possession of the
truth "

Jeffers rnidence on Highland
Rd in Pomeroy Tues Wed
and Thursday 10 a m till 4
p m each day
9 18 3tc

FLEA Market Sunday Ad
dl!!ion Ohio 9 am till ?
Tables available P &amp; J Odds
and Ends
9 18 Stc

-------------NO hunting or trespass ng on

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

my farm In Nease Seftlement
Vernon Nease

9 18 31p

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

Help Wanted

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

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

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

Your R1ght to Know
and be ntormed of the fUnc
tlons of your government are
em bod1ed n pub I c not ces tn
that se ll government charges
all c t12ens to be nformed
this newspaper urg es every
C1f1Zen to reed and study these
notices We strongly adv se
those cll1fens seeking further
Inform at on to exer c1se their
r ght of afcess to pubI c
records and publ c meetings

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

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

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

______ _______ _
3 11 lfc

CHOCOLA 'rE
Colored organ
lcatly orown peppers Sweet
as an apple
many v1t
am ins too JOe each $1 00
per dozen B Qu sen berry
old P o Bu il ding Syracuse
Ohio Phone 992 2954
9 20 ltp

2 BEDROOM home in Mason
Phone 173 5554 or 773 5468
9 19 3tc

5 ROOM fuel oll c•rculatmg
heater&lt; Call 992 7165
9 20 31c

712tfc

--------------PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization

3975

phone 992

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

-------------4 ROOM house for rent bath
utility room

Call

m

Racine

3905 or

m 5630

Oh o

9 19 4tc
-------------APARTMENT n M ddleport 4
rooms and bath References
requ r ed Call 992 5293
9 19 tfc

-------------- PUBLIC NOTICE-

2 BEDROOM mobile- home for
rent by the month or by the
week
Everything s fur
ntshed Call 742 5980.
9 18 6t c

MOTOROLA co lored
se t 23 nch console
good con dit ion Ca n
238 Second St reet

telev isi on
Works In
be seen at
Pomeroy

920 6fc

1220 Wa s.hmgton Blvd

3891

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spe~iallst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
Mason W Vo

Ph~92 2174

773 5554

I

992 2094
606 E Marn Pomeroy

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

OffiCE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE
0 DELL

Real Estate For 5ale
--

--------------2 bedroom

WHEEL Allgnmenl

Gene's
Body Shop

located at Crossroads Rt 12.4
now back to work Complete
front end service tune up and
brake
service
Whuls
balanced electron ically All
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
2 18 tfc

HOUSE for sa le locate d m
Bradbury Ca 1 992 7363 after
6 P

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Phone 992 2550

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dasplay

All work guaranteed

CASH paid for all mekes and
models of mobile homes
Phone aree code 61 4 ~23 9531
4 13 lfc

m

9 5 30tc

-----------

Ph 992 5271
Loncoln H1ll Pomeroy 0

FRAME house on large level lot
RON SHEPARD Floor Wall
n Middl ep or t 2 bedrooms Remodeling Ceram i c tile
eac h With bu It n clothes
baths Box 280 Rutla nd 742
close l s new mode r n kitchen
3664
w th bu It 1n ra nge and
6 26 lfc
e)(haust
blow er
d uple)(
re fr gerator wa sher and
dryer New Amana FA Gas WILL TRIM or cut trees and
sh ru bbery also clean ou t
furnace n ew water heater
basements attics and etc
c arpeted
and
paneled
Call 949 3221 or 742 444 1
throughout
New w ndows
8 31 30lc
doors and storm w.ndows
f ne conc r ete por ches front ---~-------- --DEAD Sl OCK - Will remnw•
and rea r newly panted house
at a reasonable clfarqe Call
and roof vacant - move n
245 551 4
Call 992 5J10 after 6 p m or
8 23 901c
anytime on w eeken ds
9 19 4tc
ELNA and White Sewtng
Mach nes
Service on all
makes Reasonable rates
The Sewing Center Mid
dleport Oh lo
1116 tfc

1.d X 65 TRAILER

very good cond t o Phone 773

5805
_________
___ _

8 22 tfC

ifeal Estate For Sale
7 ROOM house with bath n
Rutland a1r condll oned
carpe ted gas furna ce d Sh
washer double oven range
double garage large carport
4 acres cleared and fenced
small
barn
and
other
bu i ldings Phone 614 742 6834

5 30 ltc

Pa1nt1ng ASpecialty
Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

All work guaranteed
EXCAVATING Dozers large
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on frack anti tires
Oum p truck - Lo bOY ser
v ice Septic tanks Installed
George (9111) Pullins phone

--------------2 BEDROOM house J years old -------------carpet ng b g k1tchen w th
Jots of cab nets
2 acre of
ground Ra e ne Ohio Call
949 4998
9 12 tfc

Pomeroy

ROOFING,
FUR
NACE
CLEANING
AND REPAIR AND
PLUMBING

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

215 N Second
Phone 992 3509
24 Hour Serv1ce

Gravwood 50x12 1 Skyline
52x12 both 1973 models
EKtra c lean Can be seen at
Goeble Mobile Homes Lot or
call Cap1tal Sav ngs and Loan
Company 992 2111
9 20 3tc

_,_

~ma 11es' Heater &lt;.:or~

Built to Your $poet
Othvored 1o Job Silo

and

BELPRE 0
HOMES

Bulldozer Radlalor lo

Heattng
Atr Cond
Refrtgeratton
Plumbmg
Electncal Appliances Auto
Atr Cond
Restdenttal or
Commerctal

MOBILE HOMES

MOBILE

From the laroest

992 W8 or 992 7402

2 9 ltc

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SANITATION
MOBILE home repair Elec
STEWART OHIO PH 662
trlcal plumbing and heating
303S
Phone 992 5858
10 • lfc
7 15 ltc
MACHINES Repair
NEI GLER S FOR HOUSE SEWING
service all makes 992 2284
BU ILDERS CALL GUY
The Fabr.lc Shpp Pomerqy
NEIGLER RACINE OHIO
Authorized Singer Sales ahd

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

lAND

9 11 30tp

~08 MAIN.~REAL_TY_,

NEW LISTING
TUPPERS PLAINS 2
bedrooms bath large I vlng

POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
2 story frame

and small basement

bedrooms balh

garage

.4

go woth lh ls property Ask ng
S9 500 00
EXCELLI'NT
APARTMENT

garages

Not

very

for

Block
only

porch 2 car garage Excellent
local1on for only $25 000 00
NEW HOME
ROCK SPRINGS - 3 bedrooms
w 1th large closet master with

half balh modern kitchen with
stove
Noce bath
Full

2

basement with family

old

530 000 00
RUTLAND
bedrooms Balh Gas wall
furnace heat

k1tchen

Newly

renovated

2

Almost new

washer

and

kitchen table top range and

oven Carpeted I All electric

basement large back and front

3 nice bedrooms w1th closets

Very modern bath and
Carport

In new addlt1on

517 000 00
FOR SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY LIST WITH US
TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no ao•wer 992 2568

furnace for winter
Dirty
furna ces cost fuel and could
cost a life Call P 8. J Home
Ma nlenance 992 3509 215 N
Second Middleport
8 23 30tc

porches 2 good lots
S9 000 00

Comp lete Service
Phone 949 38'21
Racine Ohio
Cri1t Bradford

1 ric
--------------EXCAVATING dozer
5

load~r

1,

and backhoe work
septic
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for hire will haul
fill dirt top soil limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers doy phone 992 7089

nigh! Phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 lfc

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

OPEN Hoger Hysell s
Garage near Crossroads on
St Rt 12• all me chan ic al
work ncludlng automatic
tra nsmissions
Monday
Friday 8 30 a m lUI 5 p m
Sa turday - 8 30 to 12 noon
Unless by appt Phone 992

5682 or 992 7121

9 16 301c

I lui p •• i.....n

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

I

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

BARBS

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

+ + +

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

fNIW . .A'III IH'fl!fiPII/11 AISN 1

(9)

13

Syrocuu on1o
27 {10 1 j

20
I

___
Clll

___________
_
5 13 lfc

992 6271

...._

9 16 6t c

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

Wt 1

sp&lt;Hts&lt;;astt~rs or at lenst l'X&lt; r( lsc veto flc,w~r ove r Ill&lt; n1
Some of Lhcse annut.lflt:crs tt IS rl 11 ~t Ll un n~1thtng Jtul t'
than huuse shills ignorin~ rlcfiCiel! CI( 8 or the home lc "" I&lt; lion~
rans lo con oe out roo a lx,.utiful cvcn h gat the''·'" Jldl k when It IS
obviously gmng to p&lt;iur c 1ts 1nd do~:s 111d eve n buolduog Up U r
SJlUI se t"l enls of pluyc1 s the llldMgr noeutls w uohn ~ to uniloa~
In short lhesc SfJOrls aster" " ' c homer' r JVOIIII~ the
local team m ways !hal go beyond the p;olc or uthk ol hoo "'
caslmg lhc I CC 111 cffc'Ct suyH lhc pui.Yoc IS entitled to an oiJ..
ject1vc job of •trarght rcportmg Without undue !JVOII!Isrn lor It c
home tcwu
Good 1dea FCC lml No.d and I can tell you 1t sa lot ca"cr
sllld than done
Ole Nml has been anchor man for the B1g Ill Jcks telecasts for
three seasons now and I ve usually been there to stick 111 my two
cents worth on m1ke and camera Although ~c get no strpend1
ki ckba cks or lhrcatemng lcllcrs from Pt Pleasant m rn Jgcone nt
or !ans we usually are unabashedly pro PPIJS for lhc
elementary reason that we 11ant to sec them wm
A week or so back however Pt Pleasunt was to JOur my to
Pomeroy to engage the Me1gs Mar audc" m an annual
tracti!lonal and usually-ci 0se contest
Sonce we have cable rv subscrobers in both commumlles we
!ell that oQiy the most obJeCtive and unpartoal Job of • eportmg
was called for
All week long before the bog game v.hen N1&lt;1l and I would sec
each other we would remmd one anoti!Cl to thmk fwr
On the way to th e game Nwl rernmdcd me that we must not
- repeat must not - show any par t1ahty to th e B1g Blacks I
responded w1th a bnef se rmon on the me11ls o! aloof obJeCtive
and factual reportmg We were dele! mmed to show no boas at all
And then came the opemng koekoff
It was a whale o! an excotmg ga me and v. c had hardly gotten
past the l!rst quarter when one ol us referred to Pl Pleasant as
we mea mng that the Marauders had to be they' {We
repeated thiS blunder at least a half-&lt;iozen tunes )
When an o!hcml made a spur1ous c.oH neither Ole Nm l nor I
could conta m our disdam And when Pt Pleasa nt scored the
ga me wmnmg toouchdown N1al whooped for roy and recrted half
the young players fam1ly tree notmg then moment of trmmph

yuu my story

wh• n I w'" 15 my rJ[h r dcud •Ill WoOS llul( I left
hiiHI&lt; II&lt; w ' " 1otng to s.mJ 111 u!Jout 11)(10 1flll s ow oy ' ~'
"I oliVI s 1 iJul I u ulolu t st&lt;o11d \hut su 1 11111 fiW oy
and Af•l
111 1n "'' fh1 ~uy d1dn t stay n uunli
1kn&lt; w 111 y o1 ul wuuld sny abUilion so I waited untll rl w11s
lou I ol&lt; fur that and then l told him 11''" l May&lt; d wrlll lru:n&lt;l'
llcl• 11 "'"' ~uc , very nurse und doclor I talked tv. asked me
wl y 1 dldu t ~~ i m uborl!on Why IS rt the flrsl thing everyone
thrnk s of I aon land was ) hua ltloy and •I ron~ and purfc-ttly
Caf~lhlc uf ca ~r yrr11, a llaby I was dctcrmm II to let 1l live su
som&lt;hody who wanted 11 cvuld have achlld And I ncvc 1 realized
how rn 111y PWI•Ic there were who were just achmg fo r a b;•iJY
11 ey co uldn t h Jvc ttwmsclvcs She s got • wonder fui horne
'" 'now engaged to a great ~uy who know$ almut my post
ruct hun when 1 was a few montho along and he stood hy rnc
Uu ough, vc oything My dad hasnothin~ to do w1th me now I hvc
on my own ,ond p •Y my own hills
Abor [lOll' 1'd hke 1o tell every young gorl who IS lhmk ~g
about 1t that they 1e gmng to havcto li ve With the fact that they
killed a hvmg bcong someone d se wa11ted every had M01 HEll OF A IJAPPY Cllll 0

l.ost yc

II

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Arnuss

llflW:If

I HJ 'il r
lj A ld1 r
Inc

I ApJ!H~rl
2 Sp rt s

{Srot

:J N1 11"&gt;( 1 ~(
o1 N ti!NI m

o.;cttmg

I
IJ Harren

I I ol kr t

rttv

slyI&lt;

lj liltllmn

l l l r m•ns

f

&lt;In( I ~-. [or

m&lt;~n ll

14 B~r II (
I'J Adjourn
lf1 I ndurt:ll

1 d like to tell you my s1tle of ahort ron I was fa ced w1th a
ehor cc 1 could have my baby (who was wanted by me and my
boyfnend hut what would a lo year-old grrl do with ll 'l or I

y,

mrr r
II

,.. { J ('I

(2 wds l

21 ihhrrna

J.\r 1pl c
20 All cv'"tr
21 Actre ss
I an

12

(II\ ph

O&lt;ltnf
~

tl lll

lhrc d

28 French

play
wtoght

t qu t uc

rcan
2H Kongly
ll Wondy
da\ sky

ur )
12 '"'' l
24 Rl c1pe
f r

IG I akc
tho
t

18 ! a)lhagc
( lal I

24 N11 rorl s
h::,sket

( olo rado
rnts

• II
23 ( ct -

Hhr ry

22 I h stery

dl
Crrsto

f&lt;'nt1r'"

llC,u l -;

s und

2G -

lnl~ nn

I eld
Ill Sor l
Dov. 11

17 111 cc~s
111 I ilc

sh 1 (lays \n11wer

22 fl o I 1

S/1 W

t;hcsll.! r

l(,op

\111cvttl

soght

tran c

3a Afford

Fttn

35 Tr('C

2'i Bc 1ng
(Sp)

and JOY In lhc post 41ll11e wrap up IllY ela tiOn ;J t a J&gt;t Pleasant
vrctory was convey ed by the lone of my vo1cc 1f not my words
Alte r Ihat there 1sn t much to he sard except to apologiZe to
the I me Mergs fan s and to Me1gs Coach Char lie Chancey one of
the !mest peop le anywhere We tncd honest we dod to he farr
! hat and maybe let the FCC know tl at ol s da r ned hard to
keep your co mrn cnls bland when your heart Is n ght m the mrddlc
of your fa vonte teams huddle

JJ&amp;~IDLbl£ ; /kJ ~-~~..~ .-~

.,_.

U nscrambl e these four Jumbl es
one letter to each squ are to
form four ordanary words

26 Afore
menltonc&lt;l
27 Arahlan
No~ h ts

b-+-1-+--

character
2R f rrol or
Pe ~-;gv

30

Ann
(rocket
on the
nearth
author

32 Moray
34 Car

toon1st s
task

3&gt; llnnk
36 Tlom c
sleatlcr

37 Raw
hrned
3R Summer
10 1 oulon
39 Grn
rumm\

term
Ihe Clock 4 Sa nl 1S

III

7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Beat Ihe Clock 13 Porter Wagoner J

Wor ld Press 33 20 Hollywood Squar es 4 Conc enlra l on 8
New Treas ure H unt 10

6

oo - Washi ngton Week In Rev ew 20 33 Caluccos Depl 8 10

Sanfo rd and Son 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 6 13
6 30 - Odd Couple 13 Black Perspect ve on lhe Ne ws 33 20
Ou e s G rl s 6 Gorl W lh Someth ng Extra 3 4 15 Movies
Tara Tora Tora 8
The Pnze
0
9 00 - Ma sterp ece Theatre 33 Room 22 6 13 Homewood 20

t CIWI 01

2

(t"\)

Needl es and Pons 3 4 15
9 30- Adam sR ob 6 13 BranK el h3 415
10 00 - Love Amer can Sly le 6 13 News 20 Handlu l ol Ashes
33

11 30 -

15

J o h nn~ Carson

3 4 15 J ack Paar Ton te 6 New s 8 •
Adventur es of Sher ock Holmes
10
Dev1 ! s

Mo,n es

Angels 13
12 00
Movie For Smgles On ly 8
1 OO - Mdngh! Specal 3 4 JackPaarTonlel3
1 15- Movo e The Fly 10
2 30 - News 4 13

I

!

If-1

,A R1\ j

Dean Mart n 3 4 15

10 30 - Woman 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13

II

OF'TEN PRODUCES
RE.L160US HARMONY

CRYPTOQUOTES

~

: I

Now arrange the corded letters
to form the surprite &amp;newer u

~:A:::::::~:;=~b,~~d~:;=·~'::".:.n;ested by the above cartoon
~Prill
~
lhe~suR~
PRI:-:.:
SE lNSW=HI:.:::h!l::,._l

__,1o rxxr IJ

L
l

{A.n•wen 1omorrow)

)umbl" AGLOW PLUME EASILY FAMILY
Ye11erd•y •

\ Aluwer

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to 11ork tt
AXY DLBAAXR
Is LONGFEL LOW
One letter Simply slands for another ln th tS sample A 1s
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes the len gth and form ton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dof! ere nt

Or1 fi('Cflr n/ aflllls II lrn fi liAl IW8 frml
FOUL PLAY

fo,.ltu lif*'' -

NU
U MI

ZMD

AV NWG

AMYBMEB

QNRR

UNE H

XBOH

DL

QXM
ZMD

ZMD I

EBWG

EBBHA
WOE

MDV
ZMD

NV

XMR H

ZMDI

XNPXB! - OEME

Yesterdays Cryptoquote THE WISE ONLY POSSESS
IDEAS THE GREATER PART OF MANKIND ARE POS
SESSED BY THEM -SAMUEL COLERIDGE
(0 1973 Kme Features. Syntllclt.e Inc:)

SOUTH

Pass
Pass

+K t07
'AK
• 96
+QJ 1086 2
Both vu lnerab le
North East
It
Pass
3+
Pass
4+
Pass

Pass

Pass

Wesl

South
2+
3N T
5+

Pass

Opemng lead- t 2
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
North should probably have
passed when hiS partner bid
three no trump If he had
South would have made exactly
three no trump agamst a spade
.opemng and e1lhcr !lve or SIX
'llo trump agamst any other
"lead dependmg on whether or
11ot East got to cash h1s ace of
spades
West opened h1 s smgleton
diamond East d1dn t have
much hope of defeating five
clubs bul he d1d note one
chance 11 West held ace and
another club and would lead a
spade then West wo•1ld get to
rul! a d1amond I herelore
East played his lO under dum
my s rack
Thmgs work ed out JUSt as
East had hoped Wes t did win
..the first trump tn ck did lead a
•spade tn response to the su1t
: preference srgnal and d1d ruff
: the second diamond
.. Th!s hand Illustrates some "IL ABNER
: thmg we have pointed out m the
"; la st co uple of articl es It is
:easy to recogmze a suit preler
• ence s1gn al when the s1gnal is
: given with a high card to call
.. for a lead of the higher olf suit
:; It is downright difficult to be
" sure that a low card call s !~r
: the play of ~ low side suit

~IU

I ~£SS f\1&gt; Fl~f'.ES
IF WHI\l.l Wt\T&lt;::i-l HIM, H6
WATCH usl

'OIHO CA"ES 11
I DONTWANT
f.IUTTI N TO DO

W TH 'lA" WI;.
NUTTi f.l

GQ\

IN COM MON -

1NtW 9PAPIR ENTERP~ 1!1! A.99,..

3+

"""
Pm

~•

20
South
I.
4

~

IT WUZ.

•

MY

OADBU~N
S AVIN$
ACCOUNT

•z

'" You South hold
: +Q l 6 4 I
t~ 4 +A K J I 7
Whatdn youdonow "

LET'S LEARN
THOSE CAPITALS1!
y

H60PENED

:' ,1. - Sptdeo ore tho •&amp;reed ouil
• You ca n bid tlv e no trump fill the
• arand 111 m ft~ree l'artur II

NEW HAVEN

Po meroy Ohio Coli 992 755 4

wltnrsscs so

d ltk~,: lO l~JJ

'Q8
tAKQJ 75
+K 953
EAS1
WEST
• Q 9652
+AJ 83
'JI06 43
'9 752
• !0843
" • 2
• +A 7
+4

:a
.,p.,.

UP

;:opppoled to bid nvon jpOde• II he

POMEROY
LANDMARK
JACK W, CARIIY, Mgr.

+ + +

. ,...

•

The blddlnR h" been
"' W"'
North
Ell\
:
,.
Pm

Dlsa&gt;UNT TIRE

"'

lilt\ HI

II II II llld Slit'

f1u fl S SO IIIU( f di St USH IIJII 1hOUL •lhtJrlJ(J0 lh ill

+4

•:

-

w.ueu

m h:ll till.' Ill llltl fuu
11 li~ lil l Y t uh. Ihe mull! hut nul m 1t m.;mlly tlr tom~ ut1
And ,osl xlnbll A w&lt; 'd h ovr tu "" tin I t 1'1&lt; us 1111 M11g•
foulball game fis 1 horrlhle CXIoii iJIIo
lo the unlnlatcd lhl Icc iij lakin, ,, "'" ' vio w I r till rum
mon JUachc:c or lcltmg flro spm tH lcum ownus tunlrul tlu

Nlul Mtntun (tml

II

itz:e:i:H!M4U1

-------------Wanted To Buy

H tht ~( ( J,:Ot li ullf nl ,wll hvl(lot ht. uwpt cn us.lnj hu th(
nl!n 118 pl,ly by pluy Sflllii H HIIIIJIJIII I I H lihll k tf11 Y; fllluhf I Ill

Ill

"m• Bull• I

20

NORTH illl

:

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

+ + +

BY PAUL CRABTREE

II .11111

Rap

s 12 ltc

6 s lfc

----------------vour
tuf

Preference not always easy

-------------C BRADFORD AucUoneer

We talk to you

'

,' ·. ~W!l!.!!IN~AT.!...!!:B~R~ID~G=E

4782 Gallipolis John Russett
Owner and Operator

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

ON YOUR DIAL

·

REASONABLE roles Ph 446

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

WMP0/1390

.~

6 30 lfc

cance lled ?
Lost
your
operators li cense Call 992
74'28
6 15 ftc

'

NBC News l 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10
HO&lt;Jan s Heroes 13 Making Things Grow 33
7 00 - What s My Lone 8 Truth or Conseq 3 8 News 10 elec
Co 20 Wold Kingdom 13 Audubon Wildlife Thea Ire 33 Bea l

--------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

--------------AUTOMOB ILE Insurance been

Want

6 30 -

dellvereQ right to your
pro[ect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 J28•
Goegleln Ready Mix Co
M lddleport Oh to

HARRISON S TV service and
serv ce ca lls Phone 992 2522
2 9 ltc

hke a pnm

News 13

6 22 ltc
READY- MIX- -CONCRETE

dryer

hookups 3 lovely bedrooms
wl!h large closels m balhs
w th vent fans All Insulated
and eleclroca lly healed Only
$22 000 00
GOOD OLDER HOME
SYRACUSE - 5 rooms nice
bath and kllche n
Full

blo&lt;k building with garage on
!he rear 25x29 It Large le ve l
lo! $8 500 00
TUPPERS PLAINS
3 years old and just like new

9 life

room

and double garage Asking
$29 500 00
NEW HOME
FIVE POINTS - N ce large

aluminum si(flng
Storm
Doors ar:~d W1ndows
Car
ports Marquees and Rafting
Phone
Charles
Lisle
Syracuse Ohio carl Jacob
Sates Representative v v
Johnson and Son Inc

--------------fiME to check that oil or gas

modern k1tchen dlntng room
w th gas ftrep!ace Ntce front

and busmes ~ room Apart
ment ha s 3 bedrooms w1th
large closets Modern bath
Very nt ce k1tchen Dining
room Large living room
Hardwood floors and car

Hoi water heat

acre

$8500 00
LOVELY BRICK
MULBERRY AVE 3
bedrooms large llv ng large

garage

Several lots and parts of lots

peled

one

-------------FOR FREE estiR)ates on

ponds and septic tanks , dlt
ch ng service top soil till
dirt
limestone
B&amp;K
Escavattng Phone 992 5367 or
992 J861

compact k tchen front porch

home

Serv ice We Sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

-------------DOZER: and back hoe work

EXCELS IOR Salt Works E
Mam Sl Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohio River Sa lt Phone 992

UPHOLSTER
own
Sealed b1ds will be rece ived at
nlture We have all lhe su p
the
off
ic
e
of
the
Clerk
of
the
N...IM" EnM pr M lttln
PIes
YOU
Will
nHd
VIllage of S';'racuse Syracuse FIRSr-fk.;-;-;:;;o,; fu;;,i;hed
apt in Pomeroy Call 992
Upholstery F sbrl cs a ver y
Oh o unht 12 00 Noon on the
3028
large selection of nylons
I lth day Of Oc tober 1973 for the
velvets Hercutpn vinyls - In
9 18 3tc
purchue of the fo llowing
conon pr nts also emnanu
descr ibed real estate
Foa m for cu shio ns and
The following descr1bed real T RA ILER at Syrac use adutt.s
padding Burlap denims
Only Call 992 3525
estate situated m th e VIllage of
cambr c foem glue z ppers
Syracuse Townsh p of Sutton
9 18 ttc
spr ings and cUps chipboards
and County of Meigs and Stat e
legs sewing fhreao dacron
of Oh io and bounded and
By PHIL PASTORET
12 X 55 MOBILE I'Jome w th
ta ckfl webb n(,l welt cor d
described as tot rows
patio In Racine Albert H H
cotton swivel bales and all
L ots No Se venty Three
You can teach a parrot lo
Phone 949 2261
olher svppiles you w 11 nee d
Seventy
Four
Se
venty
F
lve
and
uy most anythmg but we can fifteen feet oft the east s de of
9 16 7tc
New fur niture at row low
thlnlt or lots more mtereshng Lot No 77 as per deeds on
prices Pomero y Recover~
622 E Ma in 992 7554
things to teach it
record n the Recorders Office MOBILE home space Baer s
Market Syracuse
found In Volume 30 Page 221
831 30ic
8 26 lfc
Volume 38
Page 399". and
September lo the mouth Volume 39 Page 197 Me igs
••e• tbe aunoblae people County Deed Records
For the Lowest
Referen ce Deed
Vol
2S4
eload tbln&amp;• up wllh those
Page
413
Deed
Records
Me
igs
lfii'Waled po bUJs
Countv Ohio
Tare Pncea
CORNER cupboards woll
Said property s robe sold and
cupboards chests old guns
conveyed to the highe st bidder
any condition Also blue
upon the following terms Cash
1n the Are;~
decorated stoneware Write
In hand an~ltl,ibject to all real
P 0 BoK 44 Martinsburg
••tate taxes becoming due on
Ohio 43935 or coli 1 &lt;84 4440
II s
afhr 1 p m
and affer the date of the sale
The successful bidder must
8 8 ?Ole
e1ther renovate the bu J/ dlng qr
raze lf and remove the debr is
WANTED
for
auction
tither action to commence
housthold fooos Tools most
Today to be a miser you Within three months from the
tnyth ng o velut Will buy or
lint have to become a maga date of dtllverv ot the deed and
~111 on com minion W!ll haul
complete the work within II)(
elan
all 99 2 n5• or 992 2792
months from the dale the work
Hayma.n •
1 25 " '
Js commenced lhe r ght Is
T•u• ••o •Ide-out from reserved to reject any and all 0 lo-fu-;;;j~~--;, k-~bi;.
~;locks Ice boxes br111 beds NEW slightly damaged chairs
Yillllal relative• over th bids
dlshu
or
complete
and sofe beds Some as low a$
•••aid eell t•e day
KATHRYN CROW
hOUithOida
Write M
0
120 whllt they lasf Pomeroy
Clerk of the Vlllegtof
Miller Rr 4 Pomeroy Ohio
Recovery
622 E
Ma i n
Copyr ght • 1873

MILLER

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

Me igs Inn Pomeroy

PUBLIC NOT1CES

a lways avatlable at

2

V.OOD TRUSSES

p AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

mobile home
plus gtganflc

423 7521

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Ph. 742,6271

d"pla y ol mobile homes

9 18 31p

AUCTIO N Sale Saturday Sept
VISIT our store at Add son
2~ 1973 Bashan Keno Rd Co
Oh o
Open da11y
Flea
Rd 28 Old flour b n old baby
Mark et on Sunday P &amp; J
bed old day bed old youth
Odds And Ends Shop
bed 1ce box ch a rs tab les 2
9 18 5tc
old w cker do ll strollers old
dolt bed 13 Scotty Camper
m n1mum bid $600 cut glass LOSE we ght with New Shape
5 pc berry set other old
Tablets and Hydrex Water
d1Shes and toads of other
P l!s
m1sc
too numerous
to
9 19 3fp
ment ion Signs posted day of
sale auctioneer RQger ~------------TWIN NEEDLE SEWI NG
Ha yman Owner Sam Cozart
MACHINE S 1973 Model n
Not respons ble for ace dents
walnut stand All features
9 19 31p
bu It In to make fan cy des1gns
and do stretch sew ng Also
butlonhol es blind hems etc
543 lS cash pr ce or terms
av a ta ble Phone 992 2984
LADY to l1ve m or stay n ghts
9 19 tfc
w th another lady
l1gh1
housekeeping Call 949 2532 or VACUUM CLEANERS E lect ro
write Box 37 Ra~me Oh o
Hyg1ene New Demon-stra tors
45771
has all clean ng atta ch ments
9 19 6tc
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampoo ng carpet
Only
A LOCAL company has •m
S27 50 cash pri ce of terms
mediate open ngs for the
ava l a,le PhOne 992 2984
followmg pas t ons
9 19 tfc
1
Account1ng Clerk
Know ledge and experience n 1972 HONDA 100 Low m l eage
cost accountmg or payroll
L1ke new Ca ll 992 ll16
essential Open ngs on the
9 19 Jlc
follow ing ShiftS 8 a m t II 4
p m .4 p m t II 12m dn1ght B FLAT Bundy clar net n verv
l2011118am
good con d1t on Call 992 5090
2 Office secretar ies - Dut1es
9 19 Jlp
nclude typ ng d1ctat1on
f I tno Openmg on same Sh 1ffS THRUSH s de p pes only used 2
I sted above
weeks on ca r Call 992 7294
3 Personnel Ass stant 9 19 4fc
R:espons1ble for recru1t1ng
and screen ng of employees CLUB Restauran t
Ra ci ne
Oes.re
nterv eWmg
or
Oh o Sa le by th e f1rst of
counsel ng experience
October Phone 949 437 4
Excellent sa lar es and fr nge
9 19 61p
benef ts Send brief resume of
work h1story and educat on
Send all replies to Box 729 S n BRU SH HOGS 4)(5 It phone
992 5858
care of The Dally Sent.nel
7 IS tiC
P!? meroy Oh10
9 2 ttc
1973 H~~:70 MOBILE home
washer a .. d dryer
d1Sh
CENTRAL DIVISION CON
washer sta in less steel s nk
SOLIDATION COAL COM
garbage d isposal eye level
PANY Immediate openmgs
oven range dacron polyester
are ava i lable n the follow ng
carpet large tot Phone 742
POS11lons
Maintenance
lOU
Foreman
(underground)
1 18 If
Ass1stant M i ne Foreman
(Underground)
Sect on
Foreman
Surface M ne WILKINSON small eng ne sales
Md serv c e 820 Jrd Stre t
Foreman
Reclamat on
Middleport Lawn mower and
Foreman Persons apply ng
chain saw repa.r F ree p ckup
should hold valid foreman
and delivery Phone 992 3092
certification papers (Oh iO) or
Also Briggs and Stratton an.d
have sufficient uperlence to
Tecumseh parts
apply for State exammatlon
1 22 301c
Salary Commensurate w1th
Expef' ence
Excellent
Benefits TO APPLY Wr te 1970 MOBI LE Home 12 )( 44
or
Phone
Personnel
SJ 589 Phond 773 5429
Department
Ce ntral
9 14 121p
Div is on Consolldat on Coal
com pan~ Cadiz Oh o 43907 DRIVE A L1TTLE - SAVE A
Telephone 614 942 4512 AN
LOT Good select on used
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
guaranteed appl ances new
EMPLOYER
and used furn1ture at rea l
8 21 He
savings 50 ga l oak wh iskey
barrels tor c der homebr ew
even furn1ture Come out and
see us Tuesday thru Sunday
tl7pm KUHL S BARGA I N
CENTER Rf 7 at caut on
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
I ghl TUPPERS PL AIN S
unfurn shed
apartments
Oh lo
Phone 992 5434
9 16 6tc
__..
"12 tfc

ROOMS by lhe week 518 up

Books are bemg recorded
on microfilm not only to
ave space but also to pres
erve them Many books are
deteriorating in American
libraries ~ause publishers
ofler 1870 began using paper
made from wood pulp m
atead of from rag The
World Almanac notes The
paper becomes bnttle with
ace beca~~~e the wood pulp is
treated wath an acul

53 500.

-------------For Rent
JACK LEE WARD and the
Moonshlners will play at
Jacks Club Fr day and
Saturday n1ghts
9 19 3tc

Comple t e
se 1 v1ce -

1971
XL 70 HONDA Tra I
B llte In good con dition Price
S175 Can be seen at Royal
Oak Park - Lot No 2l4 after
5 p m Al so 1971 Coact1men
Camper 24 ft Crusader

OpenrTII l
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Main Pomeroy 0

992 3954 or 991 7349

For Free Est1mate

Awntngs
Underp1nnmg

__ ___________ _

0

Roof ing
Spoutmg
Porch Repair
Com
plet e
Home
Remodelrng

________ __ __

PARASOL Bou t qve Beau ty
Sa lon near Ska te A Way
Roller
RInk
announces
fros t ng spec als. September
11 1hrough Sep tember 22
Short t1a r regular $15 now
SlJ Long ha.r regular $17 50
now SIS 50 Call 985 4141 for
appointment San dra Kerns
Operator
9 16 Me

Middl eport

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

&gt;

JOHN TUCKER
Rl 4 Pomeroy 0

CONSTRUCTION

9 19 Jtc
- - - - - - - - -- - - -1970 JEEp CJ 5 , cab other
e1oras John Beaver L ncoln
Hgt s 992 7811!2
9 16 6tp
....

BLA CK leather reel nlng cha r
like new Phone 84J 2846
,__,_
9 18 6tp

12 Sat

PRICE

stee n ng Ca ll 997 7084

On Mo•t American Cars
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

MODERN
SANITATION

H Rawlings Sons

99' 1101

and outboard engine Con tact •• - - - - - - - . . , . - - - . . . . : ; : ;
Ra cme Oh1o r
......_
..,.... • 16 61 c
A1r Cond1honers

Not1ce

NOTICE

cere appreciat ion during the FA BRIC S - 8 ggest little shop
death of our husband father

1 q
Jd•ng

1

Vlrg I Walker

WE WISH to express our sin

Powell

8 4 JO Dally 8

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

18

2S Per Cent 0 scount on Pll d
ads and acts pad wtth tn 10 days

ol Right

Auto Sales

•5.55

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVICE

or we w111

19 /0 f'ORO Mavenrk 6 cvlln
d er standard tran smlssinn
65 000 BTU C rculat ng Gas
needs repa ir 5700
Heeter Alber H1tl 9•9 216 1
9 19 61C
9 16 .,~
1964 1 TON Cheyrolet Wllh
serv c e bed $500
GR:OCERY buS iness for sale
Building tor sale or lea'\e
_.. __ ,!_~ Me
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 P m 1972 o1 DOOR b ue Nova Small
to 10 P m for appollllmenl
v8
aulom a 1 c
power

Sl395
power

vl nvt roof rad o heavy duty suspension

consecutive msertlons

II Mu•l
Bo Roghl

9 17 61p

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

Ahgnmenf

LOST one bl~t-k 00'{1'1 and gold
cl! p ear ring In or near
Crow s or
Krogers
In
Pomerov If toond t all 992
.SilO Reward

--------------For Sale

steenng &amp; brakes good white w"ll tires white fin•$h

three

II 171 C

PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles
1 toy mate and 1 female
Phooe 992 5••3
1 15tfc

SIJ95 .

Spett!lll\ t
Wheel

9 18 61p

Pets For Sale

blue f nlsh spotless Interior

1

S c~t n ts per Word one lnserrlon

cents per

~

.4 door V 8 automatic power steering radio good f1res

RATES

LOST n SYia I ]JI.Iper box 19:n
S lver Ooii&lt;H St"l)limellf;u
rea~ons
H eWArd
Call 9~1.
lJ81 or 99 1 34 ~3

BABY SITTING any 11-ne nnw
h01ne Edllh Rose A \I qu ty
OhiO

..

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

For Want Ad Service

12

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

DEADLINES

Employment Wanted

lh Ill I•

• OOP

,

Business Services

'

Nowo l 4 I 10 6 IS 1 Setftme Sl 20 Mlluolono• ol
rovroto JJ ABC Newt 13
0
6 JOY - NBC Newt J • ll ABC Newo 6 CUS News 8 10 Lilla'
:._
"'I• ond """ 33 , Hov n 1 Heroes 13
1 00 - Trulh or Con1eq . l 6 Beallho CI&lt;Kk 4 Course ol Our
,
Timet JJ Whel t My ~lne 8 Slec; Co 20 1 Leis Mak e A DMI
IJ New&amp; 10 1 C~ll ollhe West 15
1 30 • Hollywood Squoru 3 Wild Kingdom 10 Zoom 10 Ueal
Ihe Clock 131 ~ooklnp Ahead n s.c. ol the Cenlury 4 To full
lhe Trulh 6 011le 1 Gir l&amp;81 Johnny Mann s Sland Up 11nd
Chlll!r 15
8 00 - Ployhouoe New York Blogrophy 10 33 Billie Jean King
vo 8obbyR1ggso131FIIpW11oon341S Wallons8 10
9 ~ - lron&amp;lde 4 3 15 Mov lea The Jayhawkers 8 Bonnie
and Clyde 10
9 30 - Jan Sel 20 33
10 00 - An American Family 33 New&amp; 70 NBC Follies 3 4 IS
Slreels ol San Francisco 6 13
11 00 - News J 4 6 13 15 TBA 8
11 15 - News 8
11 3&lt;1-Johnny Carson 3 • ll Jock Paer Toolle 6 Movies The
Besl ol Everr,thlng 10 Revoltollhe Mer~enorles 13
11 45 - Movi e Jack of Diamonds 8
100 - News4
1 IS - Jack PMr Tonlle ll
2 45 - News 13
FRIDAY SEPT 21 1973
6 QO - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
• 6 15 - Rlghl on 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bib le Answers 8 Blue Ridge Quarlel
13 NOW$ 6
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Farm time 10
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 News 4 8 10 Ftlntstones 13 Romper
Room6
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bull winkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
8 00 - Cap I Kangaroo 10 8 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame Sl 33
Lassie 6
8 lO - Huck &amp; Yogl6 Dick Von Dyke 13
8 SS - News ll
• 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Oonahue15 AM 3 Friendly Jun ction
•
10 Br&amp;dy Bunch 13 Abbolt and Cosleflo 8 Movie Seven
Cllles of Gold 10
9 30 - To Tell the Trulh 3 Wild Wild Wes! 6 Secret Slorrn 8
9 55 - Chuck White Reporls 3
10 OO - DinahShore3 IS Joker sWlldlO 8
10 30 - Baffle 3 4 15 S10 000 Pyramid 10 Spill Second 8 M ke
Doug Ia• 6
11 OO - Gambll8 10 Wlza rdot0dd s3 4 15 Password13
II 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Lofe 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Bowling 6 Sesame Slreel 33
ll 55 -C BS News 8 Dan Imel s Wor ld 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Brauns SO50 Club 4 Password 6
Local News 8 10 13
12 30 - 3 W s Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Spl l
Second 6
12 ss - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Nol lor Women Only 15
Concentration 8 What s My Line 10
1 31)-3 On A Malch 3 4 15 Lei s Make A Dea l 6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 6 13
Guiding Llgh! 8 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 IS Girl In My Lte 6 13 Edge of Noghl8 10
3 00 - Anolher World 3 4 15 General Hospolal6 13 Price Is
Rig hi 8 10 Maslerplece Thealre 20
3 30 - Return to Peytoo Place 3 15 One Lofe lo Love 13 Secrel
Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Malch Game 73 8 Flo ntslones 6
Film 33
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 20 Love
American Style 13 Movie The Magic Carpel 10 I Love
Lucy 8
4 30- My Little Marge 15 I Love Lucy 6 Hazel 8 Golllgan s
Island 13 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4
5 00 - Mister Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Western Star Theater
15 Big Valley 6 Merv Grltfln 4 Andy Grlltolh 8 I Dream of
Jeannie 13
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Beverly Hlllblllle! 8 Trails Wesl 15
5 55 - Earl Nlghhngale 15
• " 6 00 - News 6 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame Sl 20 Ins ghl 33 ABC

(~c·n• · •·ntion

&amp; THINGS

( fiUitl IllS( I(
Jlu "''"" was hurd IJC( ausc W£ luve k1ds but I want my
, hrldrcn proud of me What would they StJY 1! their mother was'
rlmp&lt;llll Also my Mom wuuld havo been l!rokenhoart•'ll She
IIC'i(f found out anu I"' Klad
So you sec ull.-.rl1on can he a good thing l1n not sorry though
we rcwct how loohsh we weo e not bcln~ careful By the way I m
not a tnm p My hoyfncnd and I plan lu marry when I ~et out of
"' hr!OI and havu a &lt;h1ld right away - ¥ Ofl ltiE BE:ST

YOU CAN IUY AT LANOMUM -

EV8fy0n8 Can/

Serving Meigs, Oallla, Mason Counties
Open Mon.·Sat.1'116100 P.M.

PHONI 992·2 111

l

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Agnew controversy spreads.
lly JAMES HILDRETH
WASHINGTON t UP I\ - TI1e
controversy surrounding VIet&gt;
President Spiro T. Agne•v'a
!~lure has spread to Capi1ol
Hill.
Agroup of House Democrats.
led by Rep. John Conyers of
Michigan, met Wednesday to
discuss lhe Agnew situation bnt
refused to reveal the substance
of the closed-door talks .
Earlier this yea'r, the same
group explored the possibility
of impeachment proceedings
against President Nixon.
Following the meeting in
Conyers' office, Rep. Bella
Abzug, D·N.Y., said ··something will Corne out of this
. tmeeting) . We're going to do
something and you'll know
abo ut it when the times

comes."
Earlier Wednesday, a
spokesman for the House
Judiciary Committee said,
some panel members had
discussed the Agnew case
among themselves, but denied
a report that Justice Depart·
ment . officials were present
during the discussions. The
. committee has jurisdiction
over
impeachment
in·
vestigations.
The activity· on Capitol Hill
followed a White House denial
of a charge from a source close
to Agnew, reported by UPJ
earlier Wednesday, that the
White House was behind
reports of an impending Agnew
resignation.
Deputy Press Secretljl'y Ge.
rald L. Warrtin also told
·reporters: 11 There is' no
disposition on the part of the
White House or people in the
. White House to force the vice
president to resign."
A federal grand jury in
Baltimore was scheduled to
meet today under tight
security to begin investigating
alleged corruption in Maryland
politics. Agnew was told by
U.s. Attorney 'George Beall
Aug. I that he was under in·
vestigation , as· part of this ·
inquiry into alleged kickbacks
from contractors.
There has been no official
confirmation of reports that

MEIGS THEATRE

,\um·n('y f.l·fl('ral Elliot L.
liithm'di!On has ~lven a go.

ahead for any presentation to
the ~rand jury of information
frnn1 th~ A~new investi~ation .
Rep. Edward Mezvlnsky of
Iowa, one of about 20 Demo·
crats who met in Conyers'
office, 'sa1d " All the issues
&lt;'O min~ out of Walergate as
well as lhl' rontroversy oVer
Agnew were explored in a
general way . There was no
consensus of what action, if
any,should be taken. And none
was sought, It was just a
general discussion of all the

HI.,

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»t., sun.

Sept. 21-22·23
SLEUTH

(_Technicolor)

, Laurence Ol ivie r
M ichael Ca ine

PG
· Sleuth Starts: 7:40p.m.

ColorcartOons:

Kisser Plant .
Search Misery
Show Starts 1 p.m.

Warren said, "We feel

House to comment or accept
questions - the answers to
which would pass judgment on
the situation- while it is still
being considered by the altor·
ney general." •

·wm. Ward Jr.
died on Monday
Wllllam A. (Billy) Ward, Jr.,
49, Charlotwsvitle, Va., died
Monday at the Virginia
University Medical Hospital in
Charlottesville. Mr. Ward was
the son of the late William A.
and Norma E. Ward of
Middleport. He attended
Middleport schOols.
Surviving are hls wife,
Ethel;· three swpsons; three
brothers , Randolph, of
Ravenswood, W. Va. ; Cecil of
Pomeroy, and James of South
Charleston, and a sisrer, Mrs.
Melvin (Edith) Devol of Bell,
W. Va. Graveside services will
be held at 2 p. m. Sunday at the
Middleport Hill Cemetery wlth
the Rev. Edward Fischer of·
ficiating. The Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home is in char~e.

Pl. Pleasant Uvestock
Sales Company
September 15, 1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 39 to 40;
Lighls 44 to 45 ; Fat Sows 40 to
43; Boars 37.50 to 39; Pigs 29 to
CAITLE - Steers 38 to 48;
Heifers 34 to 46; Fat Cows 35.50
to 39.20; canners 30 to 35; Bul~
39 to44; Stock Cows and Calves
335 to615; StockSteers 42 to 57 ; ·
Stock Heifers 50 to 54; Stock
Steer calves 50 to 65; Stock
Helfer Calves 50 to 56. ·
VEAL CALVES - Tops
65.25; Second 64.7&gt;; Medium
62.50 to 64 .50; Common and
Ilea vies $8 to 62; Culls 50 to 80.

·Trust Is a Must
When You Need
A Prescription/

DUnON'S
'

Prescriptions Are Our Main Bu sin~ss

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

4

buy no1·

on of sizes,

80 Per cent potyesler . 20 per cen t eery lie wllh tOO percent
nylon binding. Washable. Lighted control ad justs lo room
temperatvre chang es . Twl rt Bed ~ize . single con trol , Full
Bed size wllh si ngle or dual control.

$PECIAL SALE PRICES
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

.111/:z, 12· 12112.
Regular' price 3 pair 52 .15

Selected from stock - well known make
at sale prices - in the busy .Ready To
Wear Department on the second floor.

COUNTESS BED PILLOWS

Friday-Saturday Sate

3 pair 1.69
1

Imported White Down and While Feathers. Exira large sl1e .
Fine qual ity linen fi nish cotton cover. Machine washable and
dryabl e.

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

lr1cludes our: entire stock. Sizes 30 to 38
and extra large sizes 40 through 46.
Laura Mae and Miss Fashionabillty.
Solid colors and prints .
I
Friday and
Saturda

SALE PRICES

STOUT SIZES
WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR

•1295

"Schick"
HOT LATHER MACHINES
The Ideal way io shave. Set
include s the Schick
Electric Hol Lather Maker

·RED HEART .
•wiNTUK CLANSMAN SPORT YARN

plus t wo regular · r e fi ll

cartridges.
Excellent gift llem .

100 per cent Orton Acrylic Fiber. Machi ne Washable and
Dryable. 18 beautifu l colors 1(12 ply yarn . l J,'.I. oz. ske in.

SHEET
BLANKETS

A com pleteSe lecfion incl uding vests . blouses . tops. jacketsskirt s · slacks . Famous makes such as Patridn . Lady Jane -

Lady Queen and Lady Devon . Berkshire Gq· Between.

Stop in now while selections are best and
·
select what you need.

!IrregularI
While - 66x90 or 80x90.

. DECORATIVE .PILLOWS
Toss cushions -I n crushed velvet, velveteen, antique satin, ,.
mult ( toned upholstery, c;::ut pile ve lvet. cordurOy, fur s,
Fuzzy.Wuzzy fur.s,
- ovals -

Friday- Saturday Sale!

..,

POLAROID CAMERAS
And

A fine selection of womens robes in fl eece - quilted , 100 per
cent pol yesters - long or short length . -sleepwear by Katz and

Dacron Mt. Mist

Phil .Maid styles a' plenty Including short or lo~g gowns-long
pajamas . Complete size selection. Womens Foundation
Garments . "All famous brands such as Playtex - Bestform •

'"

Slips · Half Slips · Mini Slips - Panties and Body Shirts. :
. Ta ke time to look around "at all the fine merchandise In the
lingerie department. You'll enjoy it. Let our sa lespeople
hel p you with your shopping .
' '
r•

BUSTER BROWN
FOR BOYS AND GIRLS

.

•

J

Ideal Filling
for Quilts

SALE PRICES

81x96

$395

90x108

$495

You ' ll like lhe line selection of Buster Brown childrens and
infants wear. You can mi x It or match i1. It's easy to wash
1
wears wo nderfully well and is known eVerywhere for flne
quality and excellent styl ing .

18" wide . exce llent pett er ns .
Decorate.s
everything .

FLANNEl SHIRTS

3 Yd. SJOO

Sizes Small (14-141!2 neck), medium (1515112 neck), large ( 16· 161M and extra
.large ( 17-17'12). Colorful plaid patterns ..
two button throuqh pockets . lonq shirt
tails. Stock up now on what you need.

$1.95

SHOWER
-CURTAINS

'3 69

Including Steam and Dry ·trons .' Toasters · Automatic Grill
arid Wattle Bakers · Heating Pads · Automatic Coffee Makers
. Electric Can Openers. Blenders ' Buffet Electric Skillets ·
Lighted Make-Up Mirrors · Mixers . Hair Dryers.
Stop in - See·thls fine line of electrical appliances. All fhe
new models.

FURNITURE POLISH AND REFINISHERS
See this new line
Housewares
department 1st floor, including Fur- :
niture Cleaner • Formby's Tung Oil,
Formby's Lemon Oil Furniture
Treatment and Formby's Fine Old
Furniture Refinisher.

6X6

Good quality vinyl. Pat. t~rr~ in Flora Is and
Checks.
Friday and Saturday

SALE PRICES I

BICYCLES

Permanent press · full length fa )Is . lined dress shirt collar two button through ·pockets.
Sizes smalL lriedium, large and exira large. 'Made by

Wrang ler.

'

Vinyl
UPHOLSTERY

$349

.54" Wide

9

9-20,21t

Good colo'r s - Heavy weigh t

DRESS SLACKS

· Cloth back .
S~le

99, Yd.

An excellent new selection. Sizes 29 to 42 . extra
large sizes 44 through 50.
Solid. colors · smart plaids · stripes.
·Regular cuts · flare leg styles and baggies . Wide
,cvffed flare leg.
Includes our entir.e stock .'

9,95 Mens Dress Slacks
10.95 Mens Dress Slacks
11.95 Mens Dress Slacks
12.95 Mens Dress Slacks
13.95 Mens Dress Slacks
14.95 .Mens Dress SlaGks
15.95 Mens Dress Slacks
16.95 Mens Dress Slacks
17.95 Mens Dress Slatks
18.95 Mens Dress Slacks
19.50 &amp; 19.95 Mens Dress

. . •. · .. . .
· . · · · ·
· · · ·· ·
· · · · ··
· · · · · ·
· - ··· · .
• · · · • •
· • • ·•
• · · · · •
· · • · • ·
Slacks .. · •

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
,Sale
Sale

7.78
8.38
9.28
9.78
10.58
11.38
12.38
12.78
13.78
14.38
15.38

PARK RESERVED
Special Two Day Sale

. SATURDAY · SEPTEMBER 22nd
UNTIL 4 P.M. ·

Terrariums
Includes rigid viny l
planting box, polling sort
and chipped limestone.
S4.9B Terrarium Sets
1

Sale 52 .00
U .98 Terrarium

Includes our entire stock of fBmous make neckties for men .
Four·ln-hands that you tieyoutsel land ready fled lies.

3.50
4.00
4.50
5.50

·

MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS

NECKTIES . .
NECKTIES
NECKTIES
NECKtiES
·I

·

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

2.49

2.99
3.39
4.29

no ~ .

VISIT ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
ON MlCHANIC STREET
There's always plen!y of iree parking and the Warehouse Is
open same hours as the main store - Monday through ThLJr&lt;. 1
day open 9:30a.m. lo5 p.m.- On Friday and Saturday open
9.: 30 a.m. 'til 9 at night.
AI the Warehouse ~ be suce to see Whirlpool A~pllances .
Perfection Oil and Gas Healers . Linoleum by the yard .
Carpel by the yard · Magic Chef Gas and Electric Ranges .
. Steel Cabinets and Wardrobes . Hot Water Heaters.

Use our own sensible credit service to
ma.ke your P,Urchase. Be sure to ask any
of the salesmen how it works.

Sets

Just Received
Another Blg.Shlpmenf

BED SHEETS

Solid colors . stripes . neat patterns. White . Includes a!i bow
ties.

You can save right now on 10 speed bikes . boys and girls 26
Inch st_andard bicycles . 3 speed bicycles in 24 and 26 Inch
size~ · 20 Inch bicycles with banana seal'and high rise handle ,
bars · Beginners bicycles with training wheels . even Tandem
bikes.Slop In - See lhls fine selection. Buy the ones you need

Salt 53.00

CANNON
ROYAL FAMILY

MEN'S NECKTIES

"FAMILY .OUTING"

SALE

King size · Queen •lze . full
bed size and twtn bod size·
with pillow cues to match . ·
Solid color• . while . 1trlpes
· the denim look ... floral
patterns · checks In an
• excellent color set&amp;&lt;:tton .

VOL. XXV NO. 112

l}ptJ(Ited To The lntereaiJ Of The Meig•·MaMJn Area
IRIUAY, SI:.P II:.Mlli:.H 21, J973 -·

"POMf:.ROY-MIOOLEPO fll , 01\11)

Parents in
high temper--..
By U1rlted Press International
Some 500,000 children re •
mained out of school today
. because of teacher-school
board standoffs, but parents in
Highland Park, Mich., con·
. tlnued their blockade of the
Board of Education office In an
effort to force a settlement.
taxpayers and we're tired of
\his strike," ssld Mrs. Robert ·
Jones, 43, the mother of a gtrl
attending Highland Park High
!lchool.
Mrs. Jones was one of about
60 parents who blocked off'the
entrance and exits to the
building, forcing Board of
Education officials and teachers' negotiators to remain in
the building.
·
· ~other mother said she was·
"not budging until those people
in there come out with a con•
tract settlement."
Elsewhere· today, fines piled
up against teachers at
Kenosha, Wis., who continued
to defy ~'court order directing
them to return to work. The
teachers union was being fined
$7,500 a day for not returning to
work.
Teachers in the upstate New
York city of Newburgh also
vowed to defy a !court in·
junction and continue their
strike today. School officials
have consolidated classes and

brought
In
substitute .
teachers to conUnue classes
for Newburgh's 13,000 school
children.
Elsewhere in New York,
face-to-face bargaining be.
tween sltiklng lay teachers and
the Brooklyn Di9cese was
scheduled to resume today in
hopes of ending a walkout that
began Monday at .eight ·
llrooklyn and Queens Catholic
high schools.
Other strikes continue at
Greenburgh, Harrison and
Yorktown Heights, N.Y.

4

.........

l

n---~

In Youngstown, Ohio, one of
several school employe unions
striking the school system,
reached a tentative settlement
Thursday. However, the settle·
ment covered only 315 non·
teaching workers. Negotiations
were continuing between the
Youngstown
Tea che r s
Asi!Ociation and local school
officials to end the strike that
hils kept 23,000 children out of
school.
. There were no reports of
pr'ogress in teachers strikes in
nine Pennsylvania districts,
affecting about 2,000 teachers
and more than 35,000 student..
Michigan remained the
hardest hit of states, with the
Detroit school system and 18
other school districts out on
strike. ·

VISIT ELBERFELDS FURNITURE
DEPARTMENT ON THE 3rd FLOOR
See the excellent sel.e ctions of furniture for every
room In your home .
Just received many new styles in desks, student
desks and revulilr desks • K'lee hole desks •
Record storave racks · Beds . Chests of Drawers
· Desk Chairs -~II open stock.
Kroehler Chairs · Davenports . new style$ . new
coverings.
··
Big selection of Serta and Simmons manresses
- Kln9, quHn, full or twln siu.
·

By United Press International
LOS ANGELES - JOHN EHRUCHMAN and three other
former White Houae aide&amp; accused In the break-in of the office of
Daniel EllsbelJII'' psychiatrist
-attempting to have' uie case
thrown out of,oourt on grounds there is no evidence a burglary
was committed. Attorney Joseph Ball introduced a motion to .
dismiss the indictment against Ehrlichman, joined quickly by
laWyers for E:gil Krogh, David Young and G. Gordon Liddy
Thursday at a hearing before Superior Court Judge James G.
Kolts.
Kolts set Oct . 3 for arguments on the matter. Ball told news·
men there was "a serious legal question whether a crime was ·
committed - I know of no burglary. " Ball was referring to lack
of evidenCe that the ransacking of the office of Dr. Lewis
Fielding, psychiatrist for the Pentagon Papers defendant,
produced any information and statements by the "pll~mbers
squad" that nothing was removed from the files.

WASHINGTON- THE: COST OF LIVING Council (CLC) has
told Congress that the·nation'S retail gasoline dealers, who have
threatened a wide«:ale shutdown of service stations, will
probably be allowed to increase their prices by Oct. I.
CLC Director John T. Dunlop testified Thursday before a
joint House-Senate economic subcommittee on consumer
economics that the administration's retail ceiling price on
gasoline will be increased by an amount still to be determined .
The effect would be to allow gas station operators to pass along
recent wholesale price hikes to their customers, but not future
increases unlesa CLC again acts.
LONDON - MRS. SALVADOR ALLENDE said In an in·
(Continued qn page 10)

Speaking of Schools-No. 287
amount of review takes place In many subject areas. This review
is extremely Important for students who have not had the
strongest background in basic skills. This Is another reason for a
student to do the work of the first report period with a maximum
of effort. It provides a real chance to "catch up'' if the student
need.uuch a boollt - and m08t oo need it.
In those subject areas where a lltudent Ia starting a whole
new area oflearnlng It IUIIO vital that a yood start be made. A
· poor beginning In a foreign language, In mathematics, or auto
mechanlcl Cln lead only to a reduced pollltlblllty of success.
There Is nothing Utit succeedallke success. There is nothing lhat
ad~ more tO flnllauccess than a succeSSful beginning, Now Is
the,time for lt.ll cornea Just once each year. ·
·
ONE WOULD HAVE TO BE DEAF AND B!JND not to
. realize thll IChoOis and their problema 1re very much ln the
nt!WI todaY , IIi todlly'a world being "In the news'' means thai you
are experiencing troubles. Strikes, oourt ca~e~, and violence
have become very much a part of the education world today. We
all have our tthare of theee dlfficulllea.
When acboOl people gather they U.Uc 111\op and consequently
talk about their problema. One ol the blg ones that sctJool people
,-j

J•

!;A lii .~ON

WASH INGTON (UPI )
Consumer food price~ rose
faster in tlugust than in any
month since 1917 while the
over-all monthly increase ·in
the cost of li ving hit a 211-year
high, the government reported
today.
In a price explosion that
following the lifting of . the
Plase 2 freeze In mldswnmer,
the cost or food bqught at the
supermarket and restaurant
meals soared last month by 8
per cent, surpassing even the
inflationary records set just
after World War JL
Over-all consWT1er priCes,
which include non-food items
and services , climbed 1.8 per
cent in August, the steepest
one~nonth surge since Septem.
ber, 1947, the Labor Depart·

$186,927 in
subsidy aid

TOWER E:RE:CTE:D - The Hager Tower Construction
Co., Ashland, Ky., completed erection Thursday of a JOQ.foot
high micro wave tower at the Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Service headquarters building across the highway
from Holzer Medical Center off Rt. 160. It is the first of six
such towers to be erected by EMS for the service's com·
municalions. Others will go up in Ironton, Pomeroy, Oak Hill
and McArthur, while existing towers will be used in Logan
and Athens. Radio equipment is currently being installed In
five area hospitals, including Holzer Medical 'Center. Work is
aiso underway for a 360-foot tower at HMC. The tower above
weighs appi'Oximately 2,1100 pounds.

Six youths in
• •
•
crisis meeting
Six Meigs County youths and
their teachers will }1artlcipate
in the Youth and Science-Key
to the Energy Crisis Con·
ference Saturday in Mershon
Auditorium at Ohio State
University.
Sponsored by the College of
Agriculture and
Home
Economics of the Ohio State
University and th e Ohio

Agricultural Council , 1,500
outstanding high school
students from all parts of Ohio
are expected.
Among the topics to be
discussed will be "The Energy
Crisis:
Problems
and
Solutions," Roy M. Kollman ,
Dean, College of Agriculture
and Home Economics, Ohio
(Continued on page 10)

First grading period critical
By George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
This date finds us completing the fourth ·week of the first
Jll'ading period. In the next two weeks grades for this first period
will be completed and the reports on It prepared for parents.
The flrll grading period and the first Jll'ades are extremely
_Important. They set the tone lor the remainder of the school year.
For this reason, among others, parents should encourage
students to do their very best during this crucial initial report
period. Agood start Is vital to the succesaof the entire year.
In the elementary grades particularly a considerable

lly t:ENF:

Schools get

are

CLEVELAND - THE: PRICE OF GASOLINE at dealer and
company owned and operated Standard Oil Co. of Ohio (Sohlo)
stations Increased today by one .cent a gallon. C.harles Part~idge,
a Sohio spokesman, said the finn also raised the wholesale price
of gasoline by one-cent. All price increases were effective at
12:01 a.m. today.

f'110Nf:. 99£·2156

SclenUsta estimate IIIII In
the known unlverM there are 1
billion trillion stars.

TEN CENTS

'Cost of living increase
in August up 6 per cent

General Electric Appliances

Ne~ Formby's ...

Mens Permanent Press

enttne

THE NEW MODELS

READY FOR SALE • HOUSEWARES
DEPARTMENT • 1st FLOOR

All VINYL
STICK ON P-LASTIC

I

,

.

QUill
BATTING

CLING

Pants in cord uroy. Polyeste·t:' and cotton blends · brushed
denims. Long s le~ ve shi rts In solids and ~tterns . knee socks
. ankle socks . Girls underwear - c'o rduroy and cotton ~·nit

CAMERA OUTFIT

. Includes Polaroid Square Shooter 2 Land Camero, ~ol.ar~W
Model 420 · Land Camera, Model 430, 440,
Polaroid Minute Maker Kit (Square Shooter 2. case, film and
·sylvania flash cubes for 8 pictures!. Buy during thissa le and
rea lly save ~ for yourself or for gifts later .

The n'ew Fa II select ion ready fo r you to buy .

creepers.. .·

Skein

\ isit the Drapery Dept. and see the new
shipment.

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT, 1 S't FLOOR

Form Fit Rogers.

Each

•

RAin likely tonl~ht, not al
cool. Lowa In the low 608 .
9'-nce ol thundershower1 In
cenltal 1111&lt;1 aouth and warmer
Saturday, Hlshs In the 70s and
low 1101.

uwe're mothers and we're

79c

BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS

NOTICE
.
YAR D SALE. 894 Pearl Street

Co,nden Park Is now operating on weekends only. Following Is the
schedule lor each day :
.
.
&gt;.~turday, Sept. 22-0pon to public alter 4 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 23--apen lull day, II a.m. until tO p.m.
S.turday, Sept. 29- 0pen lo public altar 5 p.m.
SUndoy, Sept. lG-NOT open to public.
Saturday, Oct. 6- ()pen to public alter 5 p.m .
~undoy , Oct. 7- ()ptn lull d1y · Last Oay of197l StiSon.

Fully Automatic Electric Blankets

Cushion sole . no bind slay
up top . while or solid cole"
grey In sizes 10-lOih, n ."

colors.

VISIT THE WOMEN'S

NEW SHIPMENT CASCADE

tsl Floor

3~00

Pair

Sleeve

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature In beautiful
downtown Pomeroy at II a. m.
was 6(j degrees under gorgeous
sunny skies.

CHARLESTON

'10"

All a rranged for your easy
select!on - ready for you to

Fall safe continues on these very popular .
womens Panty Hose.
·
Regular Price $1.00 pair

Friday . Saturday Sale

Cloudy south party cloudy
north tonight lows in the 40s
and low 50s , Considerable
cloudiness with a chance of
showers west partly cloudy
east Friday, highs in the 60s
and low 70s.

LABORERS UN,ON
LOCAL NO. 1353

Full size. White and colors. ·
Friday and Saturday

th e new leathers. .

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT

Frtday and Sa rurday tram
a. m. fill 4 p , m.

TERRAZZO-MIRAMAR

plaids for the younger set ·

SALE! HAPPIES PANTY HOSE

Women's Coordinate Sportswear

NO CONTRACTS
Fire protection contracts
with Sutton, Letart and
Lebanon Townsblps have not
been renewed, Racine Fire
Chief Dave Cleland said
today. The present contracts
will expire on Oct. 5. The
Racine Village Council Is
negotiating to. renew the
contracts, which will have a
rate Increase for the new
coverage period.

12.98 MORGAN·JONES BEDSPREADS .

1

fashion color$ · the new

B

ans into buying $1,000 "water
conditioners" that are useless .
Some two dozen complaints
have been· received by the
Commerce Department in the
past 10 dayS from persons in
·the Clncirulati, Columbus an.d
Akron areas, Shaul said at a
news conference here Wednesday.
.
''These comp~nies are operating today and could be doing
business anywhere in the
state," Shaul said, adding that
some of the cases may be
handed over to the state Attar·
ney General for legal action.
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Otto of
Oxford, Ohio appeared at the
news conference and described
a swindle attempt.
"We received a phone call
from a girl and were told we
were to receive a free gift.''
they said. "A couple of days
later a man came with a small
plastic bottle of shampoo. He
insisted he was not a salesman,
but after two hours of insistent
talking, he wanted us to sign a
contract to ·buy a water con.
ditioner for $1,078.
· "He said with this water
conditioner we'd never h;lve to
use soap again and that washing our clothes would not wear
them out. He made us a "spe·
cia! offer" which he said we
would have to decide upon that
liight. He got real mad when we
tried to figure out the cost. We
didn't buy' it, but we had ·
friends who did and the next
day they tried to get out of the
contract. They couldn 'I," the
Ottos said.
Shaul said many of the ecol·
ogy clalms made by the sales·
men were untrue and added
that some oi the "water condi·
tioners" didn't even work when
installed.
He urged conswners who
suspect they are being tricked
to report it to the Commerce
Department on a toll free telephone line, 1-li00-282·1960.

COMPLf TE
SELECTION

OUR

WOMEN'S
HANDBAGS
The latest slyles · the new.

Garmenls' 1st Floor . Sheets, Towels~ Domestics lsi Floor.
Hos1ery , Jewelry, Gloves., Handbags. 1st Floor . Statlontry
OepMI ""('t"t C"o ~ m etic 0ef1:tr'I'T'r.nt 1st FIOQ ...

Weather
You can trust
your regist'!red
pharmacist always t~ follow
your docto r's .p~escription with care and
·'1ccurocy. Your confidence is our proud
boast.
·

~EE

F" 111iturc .;u1d carpel 011 the 3rd FJoor . Women's, girls, in·
tanh Ro~dy to Wear 2nd Floor . Music OtPtrtment 1nd
Floo( Drapery Depatlment · Fabric DeP~~rtment · Notions
Depart·ment l nd Floor. Mens and Boys wear 15t Floor · Home
Furntshmg s Hou sewares 1st Floo( • lingerie, Found1tlon

Sale Price

Phony pitches
are pinpointed
CINCINNATI (UP I) - State
Commerce Director Dennis
Shaul said some door-to-door
salesmen are using a phony .
ecology pitcb to swindle Ohio-

OPEN UNTIL 9 AT NIGHT

A good time for family 'shopping all over
the store.
·

II is inappropriate for the While

issues.''

30.

Tonight, Sept. 20
NOT OPEN

AI II&gt;~ Whit~ Hnus.·, Wllrrt'n
iSSl1l1d u dllltial of n-si~nl\liun
pressure· un
th\'
vice
presi&lt;knl - bul repeatedly
de&lt;'lint•d
to
cxpr.•ss
presidential confidence in
Agnew.
"fleeause the molter of tho
'""' president is under investi·
~a lion/'

Weal her

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ELBERFELD$ IN ,POMEROY

see today is that of having a growing number of lJ&lt;il'cm:s wioo l•ck
a real interest In their children and what they are doing. Many
parents eX]lect the school to do everything for the child, b~t we
just can't do that . We cannot substitute anyU1ing that will take
the place of an interested parent.
The interest of the parent is vital to the child. If a parent
doesn't care what happens to the child, why should he or she 'I
When that attitude becomes part of a young person's philosophy,
there are a lot of rough days ahead for him or her and for all
concerned. Unfortunately, this seems to be on the increase.
It is ju:it a short step from "not caring" to alcohol or drugS o~
both . Ayoungster has to feel part ol something, to feel needed, to
feel some.lmportance . lf thls doesn't come thri&gt;ugh the parents
and .the family, a substitute wlll bo round. ·1llls is not idle
speculation on my port, It Is lite wny ills, unfortunate as lt muy
be ,
The years move past ver·y quickly and you, as 11 parent, may ·
see your opportunities to communicate with your children vanish
wllh the torn calendar pages. Don't mlss the chance that you
may still have. Get to knowyour kid whllo he or she wilt welcome
you. Get to know your kid before he or she doesn't care whether
yo u do or not. The choice ls yours. The opportunity Is yours.
NEWS &amp; NOTES ~ Unfortunately, as we e~pec ted , the in·
crease In the cost of the school lunch has caused a decrease In the
number of students who are buying school lunches - The cost of
'rorkboo\ls hilS Increased allliiH wllh everything ei$C - 1'he grade
report for Jll'ades 7·12 is not to be returned to school- There wlll
not be a grade report In grade one until twelve weeks 'have
passed - Our football team has on open date tonight due to the
.drapplng uf fO&lt;•t 1'1111 by Recmelin - Tite klnd~rgarten classes at
J'Qmeroy al'&lt;' 1 •11te large - We have some student aides working
there - The o!liclal enrolbnent of th Aschool district Is compiled
during the first week in OCtober - Do you have 11 question about
your ehlld 'sschool?
,Call the principal bt school and set up 11 con ference 1100n.

ment's Bureau of Labor
Statistics ( Bl.~ ) said,
Government economists had
predicted that August would be
• bad month for retail prices
since it followed a record
wholesale price surge in July.
But the magnitude or the
retail price report was unex.
pected and appeared to be a
setback
for . t he , adminlsh·atlon's anti-inflation
program.
Higher prices for meats,
poultry and eggs accounted lor
about 80 per cent of the August
retail price explosion , the BLS
said.
Grocery prices usually drop

In August when supplies are
plentiful. Instead, meat,
poultry and fish prices jumped
16,4 per cent arter declining
slightly in July during the
freeze. '
Beef and veal prices also
rose sharply and consumers
paid more for bread and milk.
Fr~sh fruit and vegetable
prices were down .
There also was bad news on
the non-food side. Clothing
prices, which generally drop in
late sumnuir, went up instead.
The cost or homes, home
repairs and fuel oil at retail
also increased although prices
for new and used cars declined.

The aver•~e cost of servicea,
which includes what people
.pay lor such things as haircuts,
theater Uckets, automobile
parking and borne telephone
service, jumped 0.7 per cent.
That was the biggest one·
month Increase since Sep·
tember, 1970.
Escalating mortgage In·
tercst rates were responsible
for more than half of the rise lrt
the services lndex.The Consumer Price Index
stood at !35.1ln August , based'
on a 1967 average of 100,
meaning that the same retail
goods and services that cost $10
in 1967 cost $13.5! last month.

Karen Griffith· first
woman in OSU's band
Ohio State University's 95- four are only alternates. As member of the Ohio State
year-old tradition of an all- alternates they have the right University Brass Choir.
male marching band has been to challenge regulars begin·
She took part ln the 1970 Ohio
broken by Pomeroy's Karen ning next week, but Miss State Honors Recital. Miss
Lynn Griffith, daughter of Mr. Griffith was the only girl Griffith was a member o( the
and Mrs. Charles Griffith.
namedasafullmember. There All.Qhio Youth Choir while in
Miss Griffith, 21, a senior at are 150 regulars in the band Meigs High School ( 1969-70)
the university, Is the only girl and JO alternates.
and toured Europe with that
selec~d to take part ·in the
Karen and her trwnpet have group. Sometimes during her
marphlng band· which · was been ,featured annually in the many appearances with the•
opened to female students who musical productions of the Big choir Karen was called on io:
qualified in a decision of the Bend Minstrel Association pro\ ide special musical e!fec!S· •
university's last spring. Miss several years and has par. · on he~ golden trumpet.
Griffith will be surrounded by tidpated In the minstrel since
149 male band members when 1961. A member of local ~igh
What with her high level of
she makes her first ap· school bands for seven years muskal achievement, Miss
pearance with the sharp and a 1970 graduare of Meigs Grifftth would be expected to
university marching band on High School, Karen was guest be a music major. However,
Sept29atthe Ohio State-Texas soloist with the Colum)lus she expects to · be a
Christian game.
Youth Symphony two years vererinarlan.
Four other female students · ago. She has been a member of
Her parents reside ai
were selecwd to be a part of the the Ohio State University Pomeroy Route 3, Mrs. Anna
marching band this fall after Buckeye Scarlet Band f.or.three Ogdin of Langsville Route I, Is ·
. tryouts and inwrvlews, but all years and is a two · year Mias Griffith's grandmother,

Meigs County schools and the
county board of educa tion
received a net total payment of
$186,926.o7 from $43,094,~1.1&gt;
allQCated fn Ohio in September
for state school foundation
subsidy payments.
Amounts received following
deducations according to State
Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson
included:
Eastern Local, $46 ,253.49 ,
l~ss
$788 for employes '
retirements ; $4,330.00, state
. teachers reUrement; $! ,065.28,
allotment to the county. board,
for ~ total p ~yme·nt of
'
$40,070.16.
Meigs Local, $128,603.28, less
$2,282 in school employes
retirement; .$12,o83, state
wachers retirement; $2,860.61,
WASHINGTON (UP! ) allotment to the ·county board, Af\er a series of court·
for a total payment of suggested negotiating sessions,
$110,877.67.
White House lawyers and
Southern Loca, $43,24a.97, Special Prosecutor Archibald
less $897 in school employes Cox have failed to reach a
retirement; $5,402.92 in state settlement ln the historic
teachers retirement, and
$967.31 for the county board of
educatio n leaving a total
payment of $35,978.74. A direct
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ A
allotment to the county board Navy engineer today an·
totaled $3,854.43.
nounced the discovery of a
"revolutionary but amazingly
simple" way to overcome
friction and power a bulldozer
Teachers strike
with an engine the size of those
McARTHUR, Ohio (UPJ) used in lour-cylinder small
The VInton Local cars.
Teachers Association today
Dr. Howard A. Gaber:ion of
struck the VInton School the Naval Civil Engineering
district here in a dls~ute Laboratory at Port Hueneme,
over a fair dismissal policy calif., said his new invention
for teachers and a grievance called the "Vibra-Lo" moves
procedure.
because of rapid vibration
The strike by the 113 rather than rolling on wheels or
teachers closed the six tracks.
schools In the district which
"It is a board set on the
has 2,200 students. The gro und and Shaken by a weight
assodation said negotiations to go forward," Gaberson said.
were broken off Thursday
"'l'he new land locomotion
night by tile VInton County invention certainly won't . re·
Board of Education.
place the bulldozer, but It will
~»
· :: ?K ;.
- · ~n;,~. do some things the 'dozer can't.
. ..

Lawyers fail to agree
Watergate tapes battle.
The collapse of the
negotiations, announced by
both sides late Thursday,
means that the two-month
constitutional dispute over

Frictionless 'dozer.here

. :··· ...

I.ADY ETHEL DeVore, high prleatess of Thea Court of
the Orienta Shrine of North America·, seated second row,
third from left, was guest of honor at a dinner given by the
Twin City Shrlnettcs Thursday night at the Meigs Inn , At·
tending wc1·c, l1·ont row, f1·om left, E:mma Kny Clutworthy,
t':rma Yot10, Evelyn Napper, Dixie Dugan, Barbara Dugan,
Judy Miller, Neacll carsey, Jane Walton, Mary Kautz
Stewart ; second row, Gertrude Mitchell, Be ula~ E:wln~,
secrelury and treasurer, respectively of the local group;

Although most bulldozers
move faster, our devices will
outperform any locomotive
method in jobs calling for Sheer
weight-pull."
Gaberson's device works for
much tbe same reason that a
was~iflg machine will "Walk"
across the floor during Its spin
cycle if Its load of clothes is not
evenly dlstrlbuted. lt moves in
small, rapid hops.
Pentagon spokesman
called
the
discovery
"revolutionary but amazingly
simple" and said the Defense
Department is looking at it as a
potential way to back amphibious craft off a beach and
to move heavy loads across
terrain where wheeled or
tracked vehicles would bog
down.
A

J)Qsseaslon of President
Nixon's tape recordings will
almOst certainly have to be
decided by the Supreme Court.
Cox and President Nlllon's
chief laWyer, Prof. Charlea
Alan Wright, advised the U. S.
Circuit Court of Appea!JIIor the
District of Colwnbla that after
lengthy meetings - on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday no compromise could be
reached on the. impasse. The
appeals panel had suggested
that the two sides attempt to
reach an out-of-eourt set·
tlement.
"I regret to advlae tl ~ourt
that the ..sincere etfor . . were
not fruitful," Cox anrl Wright
each wrote In separate letters
addreSsed to the court clerk.
"All participant. in these
conversations have agreed that
we shall say nothing about
them except to make lhls
report to the court."
The dispute now reverts back
to the appeals court, which will
make a decision. Whichever
way the court rules, the
decision is certain to be appealed immediately to the
Supreme Court.

Mrs. DeVore, Joan ,\anew, prlncea: VIolet rolnMr,
associate princess; Patty Buel, flrll. c:eremonlalllciJ": \11nt1
Ziegler, second ceremonial lady ; Rhoda Hale, Inner Jllll'd:
all of Thea Court ; third row, Rosalie McAfee, Fr•nce.
Conner, Lee Kinney, B. Ann Connor, all of Thea Court; (',ora
Beegle, president ul the Twin City group; Shirley lleeala,
Marie Hawkins, C-1ara Adams, Jean Moore, llctnnlt Miller
and Vera VanMeter.
·

I

'

'

'

i

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