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st - T1w Sunday Tinol'S. Sentinel, Sunday. Sept. 2:1. 1973
miXERS VOTE .
CLEVELAND tUPI) llrlldnc uUUty worker• were to
\'Gte S.tW'dly by teeret ballot
an a controversial tenlatlve
CGIIIracl with the Cleveland
Bleclrlc: Illuminating Co. The
•trike agalnal CEI entered Its
lUnd dly today. Key local 270
union offtcers were urging llle
Z,ll3 1trlkera to reject llle
propo1ed contract, reached
with the help of a federal
medt.tor, sa)'lng tt is not that
different from the company's
preview offer.

Stage set for new Wl1eat game
By

!-!· E.

•

Blakeslee

Ext . Agt•nt, A~rku1ture
.
POMEROY - One or the approved practices in Ml'i~tS
County for the last 30 years has been acceptanee of the Hessian
~·ly-freedale which has varied from Oct. 3to 5 for our area. Thls
simply means that wheat planted after that date has almost a 100
pet. chance of having no injury from this insect,
This year we haVe another wheal game, Wlrelated to insect
damage. This is, "will it pay to plant more wheat ?"
We're seeing high wheal and flour prices, even though the
recent 1973 harvest brought in a rec-ord crop of 1,717 million
bushels, fully II pet. l~rger than the 1972 crups. Why have farm

tht• s tu~ll&lt;•s tllkt• lyearry&lt;&gt;ver from this year's crop - Zll million
b.tslwls. ll is also "ssutnt'&lt;l that farmers' responses to ltiglt~r
prl~es, t•liminallon of acrea~e controls, and other producllon·
imlucin~ incentives Is limited, thus cauSi"!i only about 63 million
acres to be seeded to wheat. Tllis ucreage would likely
mnlcrializc if fet&gt;d grain and oilseed crop prices remain strong
and thus cause some producers to expand acreage or those crops
rather than wheal. Yields are estimated at 31 bushels per acre, at
the low end or the normal annual deviation about the trend line.
This low-&amp;upply assumption puLs the total supply at about 1,952
million bushels for next year, 9 pel. below this year.
THE HIGH-SUPPLY ASSUMPl'ION puis planted acreage at
68 million, about 'he same level as the recent high in 1967, and
would mean expanding production to both set aside and conserving base acreage . This would be an expected response if
fa rm prkes continue strong throughout the current year. Yields
are put at 34 bushels per acre, Ill~ upper boWld to the normal
deviation from trend .
Under these conditions total production would be a record
2,040 million bushels, almost 19 pet . above the previous high of .
1973. This production, cou pled to the larger, 501 million bushel
carry over, would give a total supply available for the 1974-75
marketing year of 2,542 million bushels, 18 pet. above 1973-74.
THE HIGH-DEMAND ASSUMPTION puLs total disappearanc't! at 1,935 rniliio n bushels. lt has domestic use at its upper
bound and exports at 1,100 million bushels, nea r the record level
of last year and likely only if world-wide weather conditions are
unfavorable f()r crop production during 1974.
The 1974-75 low-demand alternative aligns domestic
disappearance more closely with past trends and reduces ex·
. ports to about 800 million bushels, still a sizeable level but one
that reflects improvements in crop conditions in the Soviet
Union, Mainland China and India. Demand under these con·
• ditions would total arouod 1,565 million bushels.
IN SUMMARY UNDER the low su(lply-high demand
projections, carry out stocks would be reduced and a very tight
supply situation could develop. High prices could be expected
throughout the 1974·75 season with bidding for year-&lt;Jnd supplies
pushing prices to record levels late in the year. However, if

the NEW i.n FARMING
POLICIES FAILED
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Arthur wheal prices been at record levels, even at harvest ? Strong
Phillips, secretary of the demand and low stocks of wheat carried over from last year's
!'lallonal Farm ers supply are key factors, according to Denni$ Henderson; Ex•
· Organization, said Friday he tension economist at The Ohio State Unlverstty.
believes the Nixon ad·
The demand for wheat In the U. S. is fairly stable. About 525mtnhtrallon 's economic 530 million bushels for milling into bread and pastry flour and
policies have failed to help 15G-200 million bushels for animal feed are typically used eacll,
farmers . "The policies have year, domestically. That leaves exporLs as the main variable in
got farmers so discouraged," the tote I demand for U'. S. wheat, HenderSOn points out.
Pbllllpa said here. "With prices
Export sales remained in the 5lJO.aOOmilllon bushels per year
going up like ayo-yo, they don't range until 1972, when they leaped to 1,185 million bushels. Last
know whether to stay In or get year, crop conditions in much of East~rn Europe, Asia,
Australia, Northern Africa and South America were poor,
out."
resulting in a food. and feed shortage in many places. Many
In 177p, the USS Bonhomme countries substantially Increased their purchases of U..S. wheat,
Richard , commanded by most noti~ably the U.S.S.R. which alone bought some 400
American naVlll hero John Paul million bushels in the year begipning July I , 1972.
Jones, defeated the British
Even though Soviet crop conditions are m11ch improved this
frigate Serapls in a battle off year and their purchases are expected, to be down sharply, sales
the cno•t of Scotland.
.elsewhere may increase significanUy, particularly to the
People's Republic of China and India. Exports are likely to exceed 900 million bushels but fall short of the 1972·73 record of
almost 1,200 million.
THERE WAS A MAJOR EFFORT by exporters this year to
secure early.,o;eason cq,mmilments. This. strong early season
demand for .Xport commitments, coupled with larger-than-usual
on.farm storage of the 1973 crop, helped hold farm prices at
record levels lllroughout this year's harvest.
Whether the recent price strength will continue depends
upon how much of the current supply is sold during the .
remainder of 1973-74, how much farmers produce in 1974, and th.e
demand for U.S. wheat during the 1974-75 marketing period. To
r1 gain some Insight into the supply, demand and price possibilities,
Henderson explores a range of alternatives.
The total supply available for 1973-74 year, at 2,146 million
bushels, is almost II pet. below last year, despite this year's
record production. The reduced supply is due ·entirely to the
drawdown In carryover from last year. However, even under a
high-demand assumption, this supply is adequate to meet all
requirements, and under a low-demand assumption would result
in some build-up of stocks.
.
With the high-demand alternative, exports would be at 1,100
million bushels, very close to the 1972 level and tbe maximum
that C!)n likely be expected, given the current world crop conditions. Also, domestic disappearance is at its upper boun\1,
For help with.all your
given the current outlook for a sizeable feed grain harvest. This
family insurance needs, demand level would result in a 231 million bushel year-&lt;Jnd carry.
out. This is small in comparison to recent years and would in·
see:
dicate that farm prices are likely to remain very strong.
THE LOW-DEMAND ASSUMPTION for the current year
.
would have exporLs at about 900 million bushels, a level that
Park Cenlral
would likely result if Canada has large exportable supplies and if
Hotel Bldg.
Second Ave . . China turns there for most of her imports rather than to the U.S.
Galli poll,, Ohio That is not unlikely, given China's past trading patterns. AdPhone 446 ·4UO
Home 446-4511 . ditionally, domestic demand is cut back to be more in line with
past experience.
This demand alternative results in a year-&lt;Jnd carry-out of
':.:-,-::---...,.1 501 mi!Jion bushels, somewhat greater than tbe year-begihning
Stolt F~rm
carry-in but still well below the average carry-over throughout
lnourmo Companill recent history. This would result in some price weakness vis.aHotno Olflcts:
vis the high demand alternative, but prices should none the less
Bloomitttton, Illinois average well above the $2.05 target level throughout the 1973-74
marketing year.
THE LOW-SUPPLY ALTERNATIVE for 1974·75 assumes

~I

· Forfeit court bonds
POMLROY
Fourteen and cos ts, S36 •uspe nded ,
&lt;1 tendan lt were lined. " overload: Donald E. Collins.
others forfeited bonds 8nd ont Pomeroy , SSB ond costs. 538
over l ood .
wt~s assessed costs only, In suspended,
Meig s County Court Friday. Raymond ~I Iti e, Crystal Lo~e.
FlntXI by Judge Frank W. 111.. MsentXI costs only , placed
Porter were Ma• P. Kacks on probat ion lor one year,
tetter, Tallmadge and DOfothy larttf'IY·
ForfelllrtiJ bonds were Willis
E. Nibert, Gaiilpotl•. 110 and
costs eoch. spetXIIng ; FrtXio P. Joseph, Racine, Rt. L 527 .50,
Patrick. Gallipolis. ss. parking Jntoxlcaflon ; Charles J .
In no parking zone : Charles F: Ebersbach, Pomeroy and John
AlthOuse, Albany, Rt. 1, 15 and ,A. Sml1h, Racine, Rt. I, 5357 ,50
costs. Illegal parking ; William each . driving whi le ln .
R. Black. Middleport. Ill ond toxlcaled ;
Ma rian
M e·
costs, speedln9 1' John Miller,
Alliance, $130 l'nd costs, five
days confi nem ent.

license

suspendtXI. restricted driving

Manaway , Wlnckester , Ky .•
Charles J. Dye, Akron, Paul
Blevin s, Lou isvi lle. James
McAlli ster,
Parkersburg ,

privileges tor sl)( months, Oliver E. Smith, Clnclnnafl,
driving while lntoxlco ted ; and Phyllss J . Ellis, Hen·
Vernon Lillie, Middleport. S5 derson. W. Va .. 121 .50 each,
and costs, parking in no speeding ; Ger.ald Dill, Duncan,
parking zone ; James L. S. C., $21 .50, no valid operators
Chadwell , Reedsville, Rl. 1.$ 13 lice nse ; John Daugherty ,
and cosfs, speeding ; Cha rles Ca.otvilte, $32 .50, speeding ;
E. Brown. Columbus. 5150 and Richard Fetty, Rutland , $27.50.
Improper registration ; Ronald
co~ t s, three days con finement,
license suspended , restri cted E. Grate, Rutland . 121 .50.
driv ing priv ileges for six failure to dis play· reglstraflon ;
months , dr i ving while 1.1 · Earl Arl•. Pomeroy. Rt. 4, $25,
toxlcaled ; Carl E. Nester, dis1urbtng the peace.
Reedsvi lle Rf. 1. 5150 &amp; costs,
NOW YOU KNOW
no deer license for 1973-74,
spotlight ing deer ; Emm a
The first modern crossword
Moodispaugh, Middleport. 510
and costs, failure to yield at p1121le appeared Dec. 21, 1913,

slop sign ; Florence M. Si dder s,
Shade. $10 and costs.,explred
opera-t ors license ; W. Thomas
Eva ns, LQng Bottom , Rt . 1, $66

in "Fun," a Sunday sup-

plement to the New York
World.

farmers unleash su))stantial additional acreage for wheat
production this fall and next spring, supplies would increase
significantly, as indicated by the high supply alternative,
resulting in stock build-up and downward price pressure .
If the low-demand aliernatlve Is approached during 1974-75 ·
and if the high supply situation materializes, year-&lt;Jnd carry over
stocks could rebound to near the 1,000 million bushellevef of the
early 1960s. The net effect would be substantial downward price
movement, with average prices at or below the $2.05 target level.

COAD names
head trustee
ATHENS Keith F.
Mollhan, Executive Director ol
the lr~mton . L!lwrence County
Area Community Action
Organization, was elected •
chairman of the board of
truatees or the Corporation ror
Ohio Appalachian Develop·
ment (COAD) at their annual
meeting held here recently.
COAD, a cQUIIUon of Com·
munity Action Agencies
representing the 23 counties
included In the Appalachian
Region of Ohio, was formed 214
years ago to provide rural
areas · of southern ·and .
soptheastern Ohio a stronger
voice in competition, with
melrolpltan areas of the State
for Federal and State funded
progrllms.
Committees appointed by the
newly elected chairman to
serve for the coming year
were, legislative, Johp Tingle,
chairman, (Guernsey · Noble •
Monroe ), Robert Walton
(Scioto), ;\nthony Mele
(Washington • Morgan), John
Graham (Knox • Holmes. •
Coshocton), and· Marvin
Huston (Program Director
COAD), and technical assistance, Roger McCauley (Athe!lB
• Hocking · · Perry), Marge
Distelhorst (Ross), Tingle,
Walton and Huston.

' tt''

State Farm
is there . --.....,

•

TAKE A NAP ... THERE IS NOTHING

Snowden
.

LIKE OUR RELAX 'N' ACTION CHAIRS
FOR DOWN RIGHT LAZY COMFORT •••
TRY

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YOU'LL LOVE IT!

. WASlliNGTON - VICE PRESIDENT· Spiro T. Agnew's
lawyer says he will file suit this week tq stop the federal in·
vestigation of Agnew's alleged involvement in a Maryland kick·
back scheme because of the flood of news leaks about tbe case.
The apparent hardening of Agnew's strategy, including
formation of a defense lund, came as attention re-focused on the
Senate lnvesligation of the Watergate scandal after a seven-week
recess. Agnew attorney Judah Best told liPl, ',' There have beeti
an inordinate nwnber of disclosures that would preclude the ·
right to a fair trl.1 :. " He did not say exactly what the legal
arguments would be, but Indicated that llle leaks violated
Agnew's constitutional rights.
,.

You owe it to yourself to own end enjoy the unsurpassed
luxury of one . of these fabulous choirs. Each is designed
to completely relox you whether lounging, rocking or re·
clining. Sumptuous pillow-soft cushioning and high-backs
literally cradle you in wonderful comfort while handsome
styling adds a beautiful touch toyour decor.
Roloxi~g Recliner! Fosh·
ioned with high, dfamond

Did
You Know?

tufted pillow·back,rolled
arms and soft vinyl fob·
ric. On boll· casters.

BUENOS AIRES - JUAN DOMINGO PERON, the aging
symbol of strongman rule In South America, piled up.more than
60 pet. of the vote Sunday to regain Argentina's presidency 18
years after he was ousted in a military coup.
The 77-year-&lt;Jld Peron, who served as president from 1946 to
1955, acored a landslide victory over a four·man field, wiMing
more than twice the voles of his closest rival.

b, · .tit kc

. OOLUMBUS - CORWIN SMITH, PRESIDENT of Local 487
of the Textile Workers of America said abilut 20 more employes
at the t:;olumbua Coated Fabrics plant here have been stricken .
with an illness which affects the nerves and muscles.
Smith said this brings the total number stricken to 73. The
state Heillth Department has refused to say how many employes
had contacted the illness - peripheral neuropathy. Donald
Billmaier, a physician ivlth the department's occupational health
division, claimed there Is "no reason to give any nwnbers."

i( all Banb wen: aiih .

But They are Not
Th~ "'~ DlFFI'RE;\JCL i~ in thl' w.tl' a bank

handll's Y''Ltf J&gt;u,i n• ·''·
l)tif dl '-l t l lll l ' l ~ ·I)' J'It 'l o,f!t

•'I

M'f\

•U! r :fl ,i t &gt;', ( , l! •t ''ld,

New gas ready.
'l oJ I\d

111~' 1h t•Jt,

Rockttl Colonial des ign
features high wing·hack,

t'v1.Jke The First ,\ 'atio n.JI

Lawson arms , reversible
T-cushion ·seat and ta i-

VOl/R K\ .\K unJ ro11 u·i/1

iorad box pleat skirt.

.

Rocker! Solid mople wings
and arm posts accent th is
cozy chair. Designed with
a button tufted pillow-bock
dnd box pleat skirt.

Rochr·Rtcllnorl Goner·
ously proportioned with
a biscuit tuhed pillow ·
bock , welted seams, re·

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

I

I

I ,I
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•

I

At .Eiberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street- Just
a
shipment of o.val Braided Rugs. Excellent paHerns. A truly fine
new selection ready for you to buy. Sizes 22" by 42"; 30" by 54", 42"
by 66", 66" by 103", 102" by 138". ~olors are rust, gold, avocado,
blue and a red multicolor.
•

'

t

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Army plans to produce a new
kind of nerve gas, composed of
two relatively harmless chemi·
cats which become leihal only
after they are fired In an ar·
tillery shell and mix together
on their way to a target.
The United States has re·
noWlced the use of nerve SM
and other chemical weapons,
but maintains a "deterrent
stockpile" in case another
country u$es them first .
First word of the Army ·
decision came Sunday from
Rep. Les Aspln, D-Wis., a
frequent criUc of the Pentagon.
He accused the Army of
"quietly" going ahead with
what' he call~d "a major
escalation of the balance or

terror."

ELBERFELD$ IN PO.MERO

"110 YEARS OF SERVICE"
'

•

Use Our Own
Sensible Credit Seroice

versible seat c ush ion.

I

PRESENTED UNUSUAL AND EXPENSIVE GIFT Gerald Simmons, band director at Wahama High School, was
presented a Video Tape Recorder from Mrs. Don Bumgard·
ner, New Haven, on behalf of the Wahama Band Boosters
Saturday. Mrs. Bumgardner Is president of the association.
The $2000 piece of equipment will enable Simmons and
Charles Yeago, co-director of the band, to film the band at
festivals, during competition and at practice. The film is then
inserted Into a TV for band members to watch and listen.
Very few high schools have this equipment. The equipment
will be very advantageous to llle directors and band mem·
bers.
·

DETROIT - THE ASSEMBLY LINES at Chrysler Corp.
. began to roll again today as the shortest naiional strike in the
history of the United AUto Workers came to an end. The nine-day
strike·against the smallest of the "Big Three" automakers of.
ficially ended SWJday when the UAW aMounced that its rank·
and.file membership overwhelmingly 'pproved a new three··
. year contract.
With 38 out of 42 Chrysler production and maintenance locals
counted, the vote was 103,907 in favor of the new pact and 16,260
opposed. The new contract, which the UAW hopes will set th'e
pattern for negotiations with Ford and General Motors, limits
mandatory overtime and off.ets a company-paid dental plan
beglnnillg in the second year;
· ' It also provides for lull retirement benefits after 30 years on
the job and salary boosts offi ve per cent in th'e first year and
three per cent in ~e second and third years.

READ YOUR PAPER, WATCH TV OR

I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24,

19~3

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS:

CIA status

By United Press International
HOUSTON - THE SKYLAB 2 ASTRONAUTS stuffed the
accumulated booty of two months of orbital research Into the
close quarters of their ferri spacecraft today and made final
preparations for a Tuesday afternoon splashdown off the coast of
California.
Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma also
fiddled for the final iime - they hoped - with a space station
systemS problem prior to unhooking the Apollo ferry ship for the
short trip home. The three astronauts were expected to land at
6:20p.m. EDT Tuesday In the Pacific Ocean 224 miles southwest
of San Diego .

r----.Furniture Department, 3rd Floor

NO. 113

Hunt ·pleads

ews•• in Briefsllr

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

good

wt 'ulJ

VOL. XXV

~~&gt;Sl:~:~
-;~:;::::::::~::::::;::~::;.;:::::::::::::g-:::::::::;::::-::;;:::;::::::::=-.::::::~~:::::x:::~::::::::-;~::::::::::?-.

Like a

.~II Bapk 'l'rv in•.,

entin.e

factured and loaded Into ar·
tillery shells at its Pine Blu(f,
Ark., arsenaL
The second, purchased from
commercial manufacturers,
would be stored separately
until It Is loaded Into the
projectile near the firing site.
When the shell is fired, a
membrane separating. the
chemicals breaks, and they are
swirled together as the shell
spins to 1Jf target.
The Army says the system
will be safer than existing
nerve gasses, which have
occasionally caused public
scares, for example when
sheepherders in the western
United States blamed the giiJI .
ror deaths of thousapds of
sheep.
Rep. F. Edward Hebert, 1).
La., chairman of the House
t\rmed Services Committee,
ca lled Aspin's .rFmarki .
"dem~goguery" and 1111_id that
If Mr. Aspln has any evidence ··
or can · document ·any
wrongdoing In thls Pllrtlcular
instance, then again I say 'put
up or shut up.'''

The Army denied both
charges, saying It had
prevto11.11ly told Congreaa a
JIWilch to sO.Called "binary"
nerve gas had been envi:tJioned
"In the next five years" and
that the new gas Ia "no moce
powerful nor less powerful"
than exilting lloCks which It
will replace. Production Is to
beJin In 11177.
LOCAL TEMPS
'Mie binary gas conalata ol
two chemicala Which ue aald The teinpeuturt In down1o be relatively harmletl until town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
rnl~ed tot~ether. The Army said Monday was Bl degrees under .,
one chemical would he monu· cloudy skiea.
·~
,. .

at hearings
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) ~ Convicted Watergate
conspirator E. Howard Hunt said today he believed
he was acting as a secret government agent when
he participated in the bugging of Democratic
headquarters and the burglary of the office of
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist.
Testifying at the opening of a new round of
hearings by the Senate Watergate Committee, Hunt
said he "was crushed by the failure of my govern·
ment to protect me and my family, as in the past it
has always done for clandestine agents."
Hunt read a prepared statement as the Sena.te
Watergate committee resumed · its televised
hearings after a five-week recess. He said he was
told by fellow Watergate conspirator G. Gordon
Liddy in November, 1971 - three months after the
Ellsberg break-in - that former Attorney General
Johri N. Mitchell had proposed a large scale .in·
telligente and counterintelligence program to be
directed by Liddy.

DAVE CLARK, Tornado halfback, (22) Is trying to cut
back through Eastern defender Randy Blake (10 ) in the

"Mr. Liddy and I designed a that my participation was not
budget for c~tegorles of ac· unlawful ... "
tlvities to be carried out in this
He said he thoUght par·
program which came' to be tlclpation in the Watergate
known as · Gemstone," Hunt operation WIIJI "a duty to my
said. Gemstone was the code country. I thought it was an
name for a program to gather unwise operation, but I viewed
political lnteiJigence which it as lawful. I hope the· court
ultimately led to the Watergate will sustain my view, but
break-in, he added.
whatever the outcome, I deeply
Hunt said Gemstone carried
(Continued onPage 6)
the approval of Jeb Stuart
Magruder, a former White
House aide and Nixon's deputy
MITCH NEASE (24) , the Tornadoes' 167·lb. yard-&lt;Jating
campaign director; John W.
running back, is off on a sweep to his right against Eastern
Dean Ill. ousted presidential
Saturday night at Racine. Stiulllern High won the contest 7.0
counsel, and Charles W:
·colson, former special counsel
to the President.
Hunt.testified that Liddy told
him in April, 1972, that the
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
Watergate operation was part - City School Supt. Robert
of the Gemstone project and Pegues today officially closed
that be had information _ all of the city's 44 schools and .. Flowers, flowers pedestal arrangement for the
apparently from a government cancelled all school activities, Here, there and everywhere, front porch, while Mrs. Earl
agency _ that the Cuban including football games, until Upslail'll, downstairs, .
Ingels will decorate the patio
government was supplying a strike 1ly teachers is ended. · In my lady's ehamherl"
steps .. Mrs. Woodrow Mora's
funds to the Democratic
The 1,100 teachers in the
assignment has been the picnic
presidential campaign.
school system, which has an
Thai verse is the theme of a table, and Mrs. Reid Young's,
Mter his Indictment for the enroliment of 23,000 students, home flower show staged by a doorway swag.
Watergate burglary, Hunt struck Sept. 4, the first day of llle Chester Garden ·. Club on
In the living room , Mrs. Guy
said, he decided to plead guilty · school.
Oct. 3 at the home of Mrs.
because he . was deeply
The schools have not Horace Karr , Route 3,
depressed by the death of his operated since that . time Pomeroy, at 8:30p.m.
wife and also because the because of the IVOrk stoppage
Members of the dub have
government had withheld and today's action by Pegues been
assigned specific
evidence that would have merely made the cl6sing of· locations in the rooms of the
WASHIN GTON (UPI) helped him in preparing his ficiaL
spacious Karr home to display
House
Speaker Carl Albert
defense.
Pegues said he took the llleir arrangements. Entries
' 'Accordingly, I had no action until"teachers obey the will be judged by Mrs. Robert ca lls President Nixon's
alternative but to concede 1 order of llle court or come to a Thompson and Mrs. Robert J. criticisms of Congress "feeble
was equally wrong arid so I · .settlement."
Lewis, members of the Win· attempts to disguise the ad·
The , Mahoning · County ding Trail Garden Club of ministration 's own glaring
pleaded guilty hoping for
failures."
merciful treatment by the Common Pleas Court early In Pomeroy.
Albert went on tiationwide
court," Htint told the Senate the strike ordered both sides to
The schedule provides for
radio Sunday to answer the
committee. He was sentenced reach a setUmenl.
Mrs. Roy Holter to feature
Sept. tO State of llle
President's
provisionally on March 23 to a
About 500 teachers aides and flowers in a wheelbarrow or
30-year prison sentence.
other non-Certified personnel wagon to mark the entrance to Union message, which accused
Hunt said that he has asked have reached a tentative llle driveway. Mrs. Homer th e Democratic·controlled
the court to permit him to agreement on a new pact but it Holter will do a fioo• or
change hls guilty plea because has not been ratified.
·"baaed on revelations made
The teachers are asking for
MEDICOPTER CALLED
ptibllc since my pleas, eviden more pay for beginning
Five-year-old Harold
Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs.
ce Is now available to prove teachers.
I,
jlay lloush, was removed
I
from Veterans Memorial
Hospital to Children's
Hospital, Columbus, by
The Meigs High School Band medlcoptcr Saturday af·
directed by Dwight Goins won lernoon alter being bitten
. third place honors iri parade twice on a leg by a copcompetition of its class at the perhead snake.
The youngster was taken
band fe stival Saturday in
to the municipal building In
Marietta .
The Meigs Band received a Syracuse by members of his
large trophy during the awards family after he was attacked
,ceremonies following the by the snake at his home
competition. There were J2 neur Syrocuse. The Syracuse
.bands · with . over 3,600 E·R unit transported the
muaiclans in the festival.
child to Veterans Memorial
Placing first In the parade Hospital.
event was . the Shenandoah
High School band of Sarah.~­
vtlle and second place went to
OXYGEN GIVEN
Logan High School.
The Pomeroy E·R squad W.!l,S
Three bands lied for first
called
Sunday at 4:58 p.m. to
pla ce honors in the field
competition event. They were Chesler to Jua nita Lod ·
wick lo whom the squad
Ridge wood, Logan and
Fairfield, Jr ., at Lancaster. administered oxygen while
· PRESENTED ,100 SCHOLARSHIP - Dianna Harris,
Fourth place wont . to enroutc til Holzer Medical
Center In a car driven by her
right, a Mason ~nty Junior Miss of 1972-'73 was presented a
Shenandonh.
hu~bond, iL was reported.
check In the amount of tiOO from Wahama High School Ba.nd
Boosters Saturday. Making the llfeltentatlonls Martha Hart,
TIME CHANGED
left, co-chairman of the event. Sponaors were Citizens
A finance committee to plan
National Bank and Peoples Blnk of Pl. Pleasant and Mason
UNIT CALLED
rai•lng campaign funds for the
County Bank, New Haven .ln ocder to receive the scholarship
The Middleport E·R squad
one-half mill bond Issue for a
the glris must attend college. Ml111 Harris, dlul!hter ol Mr.
was
ca lled to the home of Mr.
retarded school and worship
aod Mra. Cardell Harrla, New Haven, Is a freshman at
ror children and adults will be and Mrs . Ed win Cleland ,
Marahall University. Asimilar i!Ch~larshlp w111 be presented
held at 8: I~ p. m. Tuesday at Danville, att2 :05 p.m. Sunday
to Pam Sommer of Sou!ltslde, w. Va ., daughter or Mr. and
the l'omeroy First Baptist for their five-month old son,
Mrs. G. C.Sommor. Mllll Sommer Is attending West Virginia
Church rather than at 7:30 p. Jerry . The infant was dead· on
Unlvor~lly,
·
m. a• announced.
'
the squo9~• arrivaL
,.
.
. · ·

Schools
closed

close.fought 7.0 victo v of Southern High School over Eastern
High School Saturday nil!ht at Racine, Trailing the play, at
right, is. Dave Huddleston, (64) Tornado center.

to remain undefeated. No. 12 Is Eastern's sophomore
. tailback and linebacker, 150 lb. Don F..lchlnger . .,At right,
Eastern's 180 lb. Mike Larki!lB (81) tight end and middle
guard, is coming on to help.

Club flower show at Karr home
Summerfield will exhibit on the
entry table; Mrs. Buel
Ridenour on the desk; Mrs.
Robert Wood, a shadow box;
Mrs . Leonard Erwin, the
mantel ; Mrs. I. B. Walker, the
coffee table ; Mrs . Gordon
Anderson, the television; Mrs :

Albert counters

Band wins
3rd place

.

.

.

..

Congress of foot-dragging on
key programs.
Albert spoke on behalf of his
fellow DemocraLs as the Senate
])egan a second week of ctebate
on the Pentagon's $21.9 billion
procurement request and as
the Senate. Watergate com·
mtttee resumed televised
hearings.
"The President's message
reached Congress two-thirds of
the way through the year and
contained an embarrassing
lack of new initiative," llle Ok·
lahoma Democrat said.
He said that of 50 priority
bills requested by Nixon, 40
were already in the legislative
process when rn! delivered
messages.
"Overall, the President's
attacks on Congress were little
more than feeble attempts to
disguise the administraUon's
own glaring lailurcs,'' Albert
said.
He criti cized Nixon for
impounding congressionally
appropriated funds and for his
veto or three bills providing aid
to lhc handicapped, expanded
emergency medical services
and an increased minbnum
wage.
Albert said Congress'
achievements have included a
5.9 per cent boost in Social
Security benefits, a farm bill
that encourag es production,
crime control assistance to
local communities, a highway
construction bill that also
allocated fund s ror mass
trn!l81t, extension of 12 major
health programs and an Older
. Americans Ac! expanding scr·
vices to the elderly ·

Weatht&gt;r
Cloudy tonight and Tuesday,
chance of showers over the
,•nttre s)ate Tuesday. Lows in
the 60s south. Hlgha Tuesday In
the 60il south . '&gt;I

Karl Krautter, the piano or
organ.
Mrs. Roy Miller wUl feature
flowers in favoril and Mrs. Earl
Dean has been assigned the ·
chandelier In the dining room.
For the kitchen, Mrs. Purley
Karr has the table, Mrs. Pearl
Mora, the window, and Mrs.
Oris Ginther the serving cart.
Den arrangements will be by
Mrs. Howard Knight, stereo;
Mrs. Dale Kautz, fireplace;
Mrs. Paul Baer, manUe, and
Mrs. J. M. Gaul, game table.
Arrangements for 'the
bedrooms will be made by Mrs .
Wyatt Chadwell, the master
bedroom ; Miss Lucille Smith,
the night s.tand in the master
bedroom; Mrs.. Richard
Barton, the girls' bedroom ;
Mrs. Roger Gual, the boys'
bedroom, and Mrs. Donald
Mora, the bath.

Standard tunes
featured show
by Eagle band
"Something Old " pointing up
music which has stOod the test
of Ume to become marching
band standard numbers was
the theme of llle Eastern High
School marching band at the
Eastern-Southern game
Saturday night.
Directed by Charles Wills,
the Eagle Band halftime show
opened with "1812", a mar.
thing arrangement based upon
the famous 1812 Overture. the
band started lilt show willl two
company fronts performing
step fours by squads to move
downlleld, then formed two
lines on the 45 yard line before
dropping off Into concert
formation . Playing the · pop
song of tbe Roarlna 20's,
" Varsity Drag" , the band
provided ba cner
"" 0 Wld music for
· the .
majorettes
and
cheerleaders who pruented a
well exec~ted pom.pom
routine.
Bill Amberger, David Weber
and Joe Buohanan were
featUI'ed on "Them Ba-," a
JWpular march In which the low
br.-. ~lion hal tht melody
thr01J8hout. A precl.tlon drill
followed lncludinl flllhbiCU,
kickback• and diiiOnal
ilr
marchllf .

�'·-~

'..

Z- Tht O.ily Sentinel. Middleport -Poml'fDY. 0 .. &amp;.·pt. tl. :!li.l

Christian college is described
The Rev. Gordon Danielaon,
area director of Judson
Colltge, located on the out·
lllllrll of Chlcago, was guest
apuker at a congregational
meeting of the Pomeroy First
BapUat Church Wednesday
nilht.
Hif program of slides and
Information on the 10 year old
college which he noted was

•·rounded on faith" was
presented following .a potluck
supper and 'a devotional ser·
vice In the church sanctuary.
Mrs, Robert Kuhn was at the
plano for group singing of
"How Great Thou Art" with
the Rev . Robert · Kuhn giving
scriptUre from St. Mark.
.Introduced by the pastor, the
Rev . Mr. Danielson reported

that the college which started
with 75 students and has ·In·
creased to 350, has been called
"the miracle campll!". He
said It is a four yeartiberalarts
college with full accreditation .
The liCience buildings, the
library, and the administrative
facilities wre shown In the
slides by the Rev . Danielson.
Judson, he said, is a college
lor Christian youth, although

William Hurlow, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Nora Hurlow, Addison;
Mrs. Betty Hannon and son,
Gallipolis ; John Hurl ow,
Addison; Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Saunders, Mrs. Faith Brad·
bury, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
Geilher MiUer, Gallipolis, and
Mr . and Mrs. Luther Amos and
family.
The couple resides In New
York.

·croup enjoys picnic
APPLE GROVE, Ohio - The
youtlll of the Apple Grove
United Methodist Sunday
School were entertained
Saturday night at the PorUand
Park for their annual picnic
and wiener roasl.
Russell Roush was In charge
of recreation lor the group.
Attending were Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe, Superintendent, Mr.
and Mrs. Alden Thaxton, Mr.

and Mrs. Scott Shank, Chriss
and Stacey, Mrs. Dallas Hill,
Joey Roush, Mrs. Darrell
Norris and Tracy, Mrs. Bob
Rhodes, Karen and Mike, Mrs.
Dorsey ParsoruJ, Dale, Steve,
Johnnie, Kathy and Tony
Riffle, Sharon, Cindy, David
and Eddie Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Mrs. Jack Ables
and Vicki, Dolly Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush.

Celebrate anniversary
LONG BO'M'OM - Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson, Long
Bottom RD, celebrated their
56th wedding anniversary on
Sonday with ~ picnic at the
Syracuse Park. They were
married in 1917 at Pomeroy,
Ohio. They ' have seven
children, 18 grandchildren and
19 great-grandchildren.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Brewer, Portland; Mrs.
Elva Dailey and grand·
daughter Kristen Pape,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Ackley, Tla and Rodney,
Lancaster;. Mrs. Helen Of.
fenberger, Tammy and Pam,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Bill

Roe, Kenny and Keith. Me·
ConnelsviUe; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart and grand·
daughter, Bobbi Price, Port·
land; Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Keyse, Pataskala; Mt. and
Mrs . Thomas . Autherson,
Beverly; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Roush
and
daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and M... Henry
Autherson, Mrs. Lucille Allen,
Ray Autherson and daughter,
Renea, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Dailey, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Bryson and son, Newark.
The anniversary cake was
baked and decorated by Joan
Tuttle, Racine . .

I

Mrs. Nease hosts WSCS

'

Mrs. Fred Nease conducted a
Members elected to the
Service of Celebration when nominating committee are·
the WSCS of the Forest Run Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. Alfred
United Methodist Church met Yeauger and Mrs. Henry
at the home of Mrs. Vernon Salaer. Forty-sevencatlsonthe
Nease Tuesday eve!ftg. Mrs. sick and shut-ina were made
Denver Holter was c&lt;rhostess. the past month.
Mrs. Fred Nease used the
AdeSIIert course was served
program "Rejoice" in the by the hostesses to Mrs. Kerns
Service of Celebration. The Roush, Mrs. Edison Hollon,
service was to, lntroduce the Mrs, Fred Nease, Mrs. Oian
cbang,e from the Women's Genheimer, Mrs. Uswln Nease,
Society of Christian Service to Mrs . .Lawrence Napper, Mrs.
The United Methodist Women. Richard Jarvts, Mrs. Harry
Mrs. Richard Jarvis and Mrs. · Wyatt, Mrs. Henry Salser,
, Uswin Nease read the liCrlp- Mrs. Edith Sisson and Mrs.
! 1 lure from Romans 12. "Sing a Russ Watson.
New Sung" was sung by the
group. After a responsive Cburch class meets
reading by the leader and
"Thank You, God " was the
group, membership cards were devotional meditation read by
distributed and the purpose Mrs. Fielding Hawkins at the
, . read. A litany and prayer for Thursday night meeting of the
women was conducted. ·
Busy Bee Class of the Mid·
Readings pertaining to. the dleport First Baptist Church.
service were by Mrs . . Russ
Mrs . Hawkins took the
Watson, Mrs. Edith Sisson, meditation from the Decision
Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mrs. magazine. Mrs. Beulah Whjte,
Vernon Nease • Mrs. Henry president, had prayer, and the
Salser and Mrs. Alfred group sang "For God So Loved
Yeauger . Special readings the World". Members anwere by Mrs. Olan Genhelmer, swered roll call with a Bible
Mrs. Lawrence Napper and verse . An auction was held
Mrs. Edison Hollon. The with Mrs. John Lyons as .the
program• closed with a auctioneer. Mrs. Eva Hartley,
benediction In unison.
Mrs. Nelle Werner ' Mrs .
The service of celebration Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs. Fern
held Sunday afternoon at Bradbury and Mrs. Ethel
Marietta, attended by Mrs. Hughes were the hostes8es.
Edith Sisson, Mrs. J,illian
Henderson, Mrs . Harry Wyatt,
VISIT CONCLUDED
Mrs.
Olan
Genheimer,
Mrs.
, Fred Nease and Mrs. Russ Mrs. Ellen .Ebersbach and
'
daughter, Joyce, Middleport,
Watson, was discussed. The and Mrs . Juanita Might,
banner carried in the banner Baltimore, have returned from
parade at the Marietta meeting a visit In Shalimar, Fla., with
was made by Mrs. Edith Sisson Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fry and
. •' and her daughter, Jane, and children.
lfas carrl~ by the president ol
the ttOC!ety.
VISITING HERE
"'•
Mrs. Stewart Burdette of
·''
Point
Pleasant is the guest of
.'
Mr. and Mrs . John Lyons,
DIYOTID TO THI
..'.
Middleport.
INTIRIST OP

..
'

Eddy on Tuesday
Sept. 25 Chester, 9-10 ;
Success Road. 10 :'30-11 : 30 ;
Tu ppe r s Plains,
12 : 30 ·1;
Elmwood, 1:1 5-1: 45 ; Allred, 22: 30; Mulberry Heights; 3: 30·
4: 30; Bradbury, WMPO, 5·
5;30 ; Bradbury Village. 5: J5.6;
Hiland Church, 6:15-6 : 45 ; Old
. Rt. 7, 7-7: 30 ; Chester, 8-8:30 .

'
A thought for , Jlle
day :
President Eisenhower said, "In
the final choice , a soldier's
pack is not so heavy a burden
as a prisoner's chains."

ROll IT HOI,LICH,

cuv ltlltor

PUDIIIhtd dilly UCI"I
!.tlurdiY by Tflt Oh iO Vtllty

PubliShinG Company , Ill
Court St ., Pomtro)' . Otllo,
•57.., tualnta Office Phon.e
ft2 2156. E!ciltorlel P~ont 9P2·
.
2151.
· 5econlf clnl p.ost•Qt oa ra
11

tto"'"oy, Ohio .

NIIIOnll edurtlllng
rtprtstnltllvt loltlnell/ .
Oell .. htr, Inc .• 12 Eut •2rlc:t
II ., Ntw ''t'Dr k,, Ntw York.

JuluC:rlptltn rtltl i
Dtllvtrta ltV urrltr whtrl
vtlllblt U
Ptr w"~ 1
y Molor Routt where
ctrrltr
urv lot
not
'
tvoltaot'
'
Ono
"'"''"'
12.
ly
111011 In 01110 leld w. Yo .. Ono
Yell', 1161 IIJC m•ttts. ·1.101
ltrtt
monttte.
IJ .tl .
ltiWitrl I 11 rur I IIIII

,.,t,

_ .......... ltorH ...........
N
11rlct In·
' . lv•~ert,.ren
CIV4tl
hrUity Tlmll ·
lin IIIIII'

,_'

'

I Calendar

DOWN
UPI Sp&lt;~rl&amp; Writer
Watching the New York
Mcts
' rclentle!! drive toward
MONDAY
BEND 0' the River Garden the National League's Eastern
Oub, 7:30p.m. at home of Mrs. Division Ulle rec~lis words
Bert Grimm. lnstaUaUon of written 2,000 years ago.
officers by Mrs. Robert Lewis
and Mrs. Robert Thompson.
The fifth annl versary ol the
club's organization will be
observed.
KEN AMSBARY Chapter, By Un iteG Pres,slnttrnatlanll
Conference
iza'ak Wallon I,eague of Amerl_can Football
Ent
w. I. t , pet.
America, wtU hold dinner a! 7
I 1 0 .500
NY Jets
p.m. at !arm near Chester. M lafn l
1 1 0 .500
110 .500
Regular meeting to follow Buffalo
0 2 0 .000
New Eng
dinner.
0 2 0 .000
Balt imore
Central
POMEROY Chamber of
w. I. t. pet.
2 D 0 1.000
Commerce Monday at noon at Pittsburgh
1 1 0 .500
Ci nc innati
Meigs Inn.
1 1 0 .500
Cle¥etand
0 I 0 .000
Houston
TUESDAY
Wut
w. t. t. pet.
PLANNING Meeting at Denv er
1 1 0 .500
Racine Fire Station for Oakland
1 I 0 ,500
Kan City
1 I 0 .500
mothers who wish to help with San
Dleoo
1 l 0 .500
a community Halloween party Natio.n ll Footbl!ll Conference
E1st
for children 7:30p.m: headed
w. I. t . pet.
by firemen's auxiliary.
2 0 0 1.000
Sl. Louis
1 0 0 1.000
Dallas
1 0 1
.750
MEIGS COUNTY Garden NY Gi ants
1 1 0
.500
Wash ington
Oub Association, 7:30 p.m. at Ph ila
0 1 1
.250
Central
the Pomeroy First Baptist
w. I. t . pet.
Church. County contact Minnesota
2 0 0 1.000
1 0 1
.750
chairwoman to be elected and Green Ba y
0 1 1
.250
Detroit
installed.
0 2 0
.000
Ch ic.,go
FINANCE committee for
campaign funds for the onehalf mill bond issue for construction of school and
workshop for retarded children
and adults, 7:30 p.m. at the A j!istrict meeting was anPomeroy First Baptist Church. nounced when the Women's
of
Veterans
JUNIOR American Legion Auxiliary
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett Memorial ·Hospital met in the
Post 128, Middleport, at the cafeteria Tuesday evening,
Sept. 18 conducted by
hall.
Mrs:
Eslle
AMERICAN
Legion president,
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post Mossman, and opened with
39, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the Mrs . Robert McElhinney
hall. Program on music by giving the Auxiliary prayer.
Mrs. Ben Neutzllng, music Mrs. George White gave the
treasurer's report and Mrs.
chairwoman.
James
Daniela reported that
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
meet at 7:30p.m. at Columbus , Kin Club meets
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room, Middleport.
Mrs. Garnet Harbrecht was
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club hostess Wednesday night for a
wiD meet at 7:30p.m. at home meeting of the Kin Club with
of Mrs. Leon McKnight.
· Mrs. Judy Pockllngton
POMEROY Past Matrons ,presiding.
'
Picnic, 6:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Donations to the birthday
Nolan Swackhamer, Mason. fund were given by Mrs. Grace
Meat to be furnished. Bring Pratt, Mrs. Veda Davis, MisS
own tab)e service.
Joyce Ebersbach, and Mrs;
Ellen Elbersbach. Members
signed a gel-l)lell card f\lr Mr.
an'tl Mrs. Walter Boyer of
Baltimore. Games were played
at the business meeting during with prizes going to, : Miss
whlch a report on visits and Eberbach and Mrs. Eber~bach
cards was made by Mrs . who also won the door P..ize.
The traveling prize donated
Thomas Young. Cards were
signed for several members of by Mrs. Florence Windon was
the church who are Ill or won 'by Mrs. Davis, ·.Mrs.
bereaved. A thank-you note Windon will host the next
and gift of appreciation was meeting. Sandwiches, : .salad
received from Mrs. Clarence and coffee were served by the
hostess to those named and
Stewart.
Mrs. Ethel Clifford and a
guest,
Debbie liarbrectit.
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.
'
served a dessert course from a
table decorated in blue and Officers elected ' · ·
green. Mrs. Albert Woodard
was a contributing hostess.· Mrs . Pearl Reynolds of
Mrs. David Russell was a Middleport is the new senior
guest.
vice president of District 3 of
the Daughters of Union
Veterans, Civil War. '
Mrs. Reynold&amp; received the
appointment at the recent
district meeting held at
Johnnie and Gary, Terri Cambridge. Mrs. Hertha
Findley, Mr. and Mrs. Roger DOuglas of AtheruJ was elected
Manuel and, Angie, Mrs. Jim the juniot.vice president. Alao
Connolly, Brian and Shelly, attending were Mrs. Caddie
Mr. and Mrs . Dana Lewis, Mr. Wickham of Galllpolls, a
and Mrs. Russell Roush, member of Jane Howell Tent,
Sharon, Cindy, David and Meigs County, Mrs . Rose
Edward, Mrs. Erma Wilson, Hooper, and Mrs. Mattie
Mrs. Ruth Parsons, Mrs. Dorsa ·James, AtheruJ . Mrs. Wickham
Parsons. Sending a gHI was was the retiring secretary of
Mr. and Mrs. !Iober! Hill.
the district.
Hy t' KEO

The chlld, the home and the
school was the program theme
presented by Mrs. Pearl Mora
Tuesday evening when
Friendly Circle met at Trinity
Church.
Scripture from Deuteronomy
and Matthew regarding the
Importance of children in
God's sight was followed by a .
meditation titled "Three C's
!or the · SchooL" Mrs. James
Fugate received the offering
and the program concluded
with a · reading, "Doh Interrupt Me," poems and
thoughts on the program study.
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided

ments of ice cream, cake,

coffee and Kool-Aid were
served to Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Roberts , Todd, Leslie and
Chad, Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Roush, Joann, Vicki, Mike,

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER CHEF!
INCREDIBURG/BLE!

A'M'END MEETING
APPLE GROVE - Mrs.
Dallas Hili,Mrs. Robert Smith,
Mrs . Dorsey Parsons, Mrs.
Bob Rhodes and Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe attended the United
Methodist Women ' s
celebration In Marietta Sun·
day .
.

DALE C. WARNER

INSURANCE AGENCY
Now Located At

Special Family Meal Prices
4 p.m. lo cloelng
FOR ADULTS
Big She!•
Only
French Fries,
Turnover &amp;
large Drink

$1

1108 K!DI
FunburgerTMI Only
French Fries,
· Small Drink
&amp; Lollipop

102 W. MAIN POMEROY
PH. 992-2143 -992-7421
Representing:
STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUALS INS.
OHIO FARMERS INSURANCE CO.
AUTO-OWNE.RS MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.

W11t

singing the praises of Meta like
Wayne Garrett, Tag McGraw
and Harry Parker,. The Meta'
drive to llrst place l/1 the NL
East has turned the Big City
Into a nut factory, jus\ like
1969, and the question no longer
is whether the Mets will win the
division Utle bul how ma.ny
games it will take them to beat
the
Ameri can
League
representative In the World
Series.
Garrett, McGraw and
Pa.rker played key roles
SUnday as the Mets defeated
the St. Louis Cardinala, 5-2, and
went Into the final week of the
season with a half.game lead
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The Pirates gained a half game
on the Mets -does it matter
whenNewYorkhas a !Othman
watching over it up there In the
sky?- when they swept the
Montreal EI()OS, 6.J and 7-4.
~arrett, batting .394 In
September, hit a two-run, tie·
breaking triple In the seventh
Inning. Parker pitched one-hit
ball in middle inning relief to
pick up his eighth victory
against three losses. And then
McGraw came on to shut out
the Cardinala for the last three
Innings for his 23rd save.
McGraw, ineffective in the
early season going, has record·
ed four victorjes and 10 saves
in his last 14 appearances, a
perfect perfomumce.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
postponed the Ctn.dnnati Reds'
Western Division clinching
with a 11-4 victory over them,
the Philadelphia Phillles beat

'·m

pet.
o o
1 l 0
:500
1 1 o
0 1 0
000
·
S11nd1V'I Results
Pittsburgh 33 Cltveta nd 6 ·
Cincinnat i 24 Houston 10
Kansas City 10 New England 7
N.Y. Giants 23 Ph lla delph Ia 23
N.V. Jets 3A .Balt lmore 10
M inn esota 22 Chicago l3
St . Louts 34 Washington 21
Green Bay 13 Detro it 13
San Diego 34 Buffalo 1
Oakland l2 M iami 7
San Frl!n-clsco 3~ Denver 3A
Los Angeles 31 Atlanta 0
·
Mond•v Gwmes
New Orleans at Dallas , night
(Only game ,cheduled)
Sund•y's G•mu
Chicago at Denver
Clnclnnatf at San Diego
Green Bay at Minnesota
Los Angeles at San Francisco
New England at M iam i
New Orleans at Beltlmore
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland
N.Y . Jets at Buffalo
Oekland et Kansas City
Pittsburgh at Houston
St . Louis at Dallas
Washington at PhiladelPh ia
Lo~

Angeles
Atlanta
San Fran
New Orleans

w. I. t.

~

District meeting planned

Observe, 87th birthday
RACINE - Asurprise party
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush
Wednesday evening In honor of
Mrs. Edna Roush, Racine, who
was celebrating her 87th birthday. Mrs. Roush was presented
a cake with "Happy Birthday
Grandma,'' decorated in pink
and white icing by her ~rand-'
daughter, Mrs . Randall
Roberts.
After Mrs. Roush opened her
many lovely gifts, refresh·

"There were many brave
111en beFore Agamemnon/'
wrote l.atln poet Horace. "But
none had a poet to sing their
pral$es."
But this Is two centuries later
and the city of New Y&lt;rk Is

rNFL st~=di~;; 1

Friendly Circle ·has rneet

hte. ld.

'
1·

' '

any faith.
.
In ketping with the $J&gt;irit of
the Christian school, the
speaker said that Judson encourages its students to give
volunteer service to the church
and the COI11JIIunlty.
Speaking on the program
offered there, he said Judson·
students receive a bachelor of
arts degree, and that Judson's
degrees are acceptable for
graduate study at leading
universities. The tri-mester
program enables students to
earn the degree in less than
three years, he noted.
"Christ, the Ugh! of the
World" is the liChool motto. It
was described by the Rev . Mr.
Danielson as "large enough to
develop the mind and small
enough to cultivate the spirit".
It Is a memorial to America 's
first foreign missionary,
Adoniram Judson.
The school is supported .60
percent thro ugh students'
tuition, 40 percent through
endowment, with $120,000
being given each year by
Baptist churches. Following a
question and answer period,
the Rev . Mr . Kuhn had prayer.

MIIOS· MAION Aft lA
CHIITIIt L. TANNIHILL r

•

- ......,

1i Social Mets draw poets'-praise

• A
b hd
M
. tss · mos etrot e :"~\:a~ ~:~o :~~ p~~~~
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Amoa, Rl. I, Cheshire,
are announcing the rn8rrlage
Of their daughter, Hope Marie,
to Samuel Hurl ow, son Of Mrs.
N&lt;ra Hurlow, Addison.
The couple exchanged vows
Aug. 5at !he bride's home. The
7 p.m. ceremony was per.
formed by the Rev. Bud Darst,
Cheshire.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.

,;o:!

..

SOc

Mrs. Mossman, president;
Mrs. Danhiis, vice-president,
and Mrs. White, tresaurer,
were retained for another year.
Elec~ was Clara Burris, as
recording_ secretary. Fifteen
members were present.
Buying new chairs for the
lounge was discusaed.
To attend the district
meeting at the Riverside
Methodist
Hospital
In
Columbus are Mrs. Mossman,
Mrs. Mildre&lt;\ Mitch, Mrs.
Mildred Fry, Mrs. Nettle ·
Hayes and Mrs. Burris.
Dues are to be paid and new
memi&gt;Ors will be welcomed.
A letter was read from Mra.
Arthur (Corrine) Comba, a
former member who has
moved to Grove City.
October hostesses will be
Mts. Homer Baxter, Mrs.
Mitch, Mrs. Lucille Leifheit,
and Mrs . .Helen Williams.
Mrs.. White was program
leader for games and prizes

I

the (JhiCllgO Cubs, t,7, the
Atlanta Braves downed the
Houston Astros, lG-2, and the
San Diego Padres outacor~
the San Franclaco Olanta, ll.f,
In other Nl. gamel.
American League 1corea
were Qakland 10 Chicago ~
New York over Clevelland, &amp;-1
and 2·1, Detroit 3 B01ton 0,
Kansas City 7 Tens ~t
Baltimore 2 Milwaukee 1 aM
Calllornla 15 Minnesota 7. :
Willie Slargell, leadlna
candidate tor the NL't MVl'
award, hit a three-run homer 1t1
win the first. game lor !he
Pirates and roolde Riehle Ztak
slammed a grand slammer In a
six-run rally In the fifth lnntrig
of.the nlghtCllp aa the pltchfl:·
poor Pirates hung In ther!.
Stargell's 87th extra-base hit fl
the seaiJOn In the first g~e •
a new club record. Relief sWI
Ramon Hernan&amp;lz and Dav,j!
Giusti closed out the games f&lt;J
the Pirates.
•
Tw&lt;rrun homera by Steve
Garvey .and Tom Paclorel:
paced the Dodgers to thett
victory over the Reds a!]11
enabled Tommy John to win
his 15th game; pitcher Ken
Brett, delivered a two-run
eighth Inning single In a fiverun eighth inning whlcp
carried the PhUlies to their win
over the Cubs; Rorie Harrllon ·
won his lith game for the
Braves In a route over Hou8tdit
and Fred Kendall's two-nill ~
single with two out and tllt :
bases filled In the ninth lnnlnJ .
enabled the Padres to beat the
Giants.
•
•

•

Scrib.es like Ironton for No. 1

heritage house

Reds trY

agazn . or
tt'tle

GALLIPOLIS; OHIO

..

....•

••
••
•

,."
••
•

•

The MEIGS INN

and snaps Miami win streak
llY JOE CARNICEUJ
UPI S(IGI'II Writer
&amp;lhday marked the end ol
the' line lor the Miami
Dolphins' winning streak and
wllibly for Joe Namath's

-·

BAKER FURNITURE

· The Oaklanl Raiders ended
the World Champion Dolphin&amp;'
dre81118 for another perfect
seuon and a National Football
League record for consecutive
victories when 48-year-old
George Blanda kicked four
field goala to spark a 1~7
victory.
And unheralded linebacker
Stan While of Baltimore,
crutslnll In untoliched, may
have ended Namath's aeaiort
when he alammed the New
York Jell' star quarterback to
the turf and Inflicted .11
separated right shoulder. AI
Woodall came on In reUef of
Namalb to 11ft the Jell to a 3+
10 romp over the Colli.
Blanda, a pro lfhen some of
lU teammates were born and
playq In hla 300th game,
..,mtd hiJ field goala over all
fllllr parlodl, kicking a 12yarder In !he first, a 48-yarder
In thelecOIIcl,aJ~yarder in the
third and a IO.yarder In the

MIDDLEPORT, 0~

Wastlnahoose
30·1nch Electrk: RanKe with
ContloolliS Cleanlni Oven

l -·
Mpdol

.....

KF332R

SPECIAL
SALE PRICE

•209'

~~-••r••

)1111111,.

5

fourth. The Oakland defense
completely blunted Miami's
offense, the best In the NFL .
laat season, and didn't aDow"a
score until Bob Griese threw a
27-yard touchdown pass to Jim
Mandich with 67 second&amp; left.
"It's been a long time since I
talked. to a l01tng team," said
Miami Coach Don Shula, whose
club did not lose a regulation
game since the 19'12 Super BO...l
loss to Dallas. "They blew us
out. They really took It to us.
Whatever breaks they got, they
forced themselves. Their linebackers were exceptional and
they mixed their defenses
well."
The defeat left the Dolphins
tied with the Chtc11110 Bear&amp; of
1933-34 aoo 1941-42 . for moat
consecutlvewins(18) tncl~g
playoff games. The loss also
ended the Dolphin&amp;' chance to
tie the Bears' record ol 17
straight regular season vic·
tortes. Miami won 18 consecu·
tlve games before Sunday.
The Jets, meanwhile, were
awaiting word today on the
extent of Namath't Injury. If
surgery Is neceBSS8ry, Namath
wW miJI the entire aeason. If
not, he will be out six to eight
wetkl.
W!¢111 threw TO paases of
12 yards to Eddie Bell and one
yard to Emerson Booler and
· the Jell' defenae Intercepted a
club record eight pa111e1, four
off rookie Bert Jones and fOur
off Marty Domna. Reaarve
cartlll'back Rich Smtelil had
three lnllretptlona, returning
ooe 2t yn for a acore, and

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
PHONE 675-1160

Ralph Baker also bad a 23-yard
retilrn for a TD.
In other NFL action Sunday,
St. Louis 81onned Washington,
3+27, the New York Giants tied
PbUadelphla, 23-23, Pittsburgh
crushed Clevelaoo, 33-6, Green
Bay tied Detroit, 13-13, Minnesota downed Chicago, 22-13,
Los Angeles shut out Atlanta,
31.0, San Diego whipped Buf.
falo, 34·7, San Francisco
outlasted Denver, 36-34, Cincinnati defeated Houston, 24-10
and Kansas City edged New
Englaoo, 10.7. New Orleans is
at Dallas tonight.
Donny Anderson scored
three TDs and Jim Hart
shredded Washington's
heralded defense for 286 yards
passing as the Cardinals
stuMed the Redsksins. An4erson had two oneyard
plunges and caught a 12-yard
jill!! from Hart.
St. Louts ted 24-17 when Don
Shy ran a kickoff back !¥1 yards
for a 31·17 lead. Washington's
Herb Mul·Key returned the
ensuing kickoff !¥1 yards to cut
the lead to 31·24 and the teamS
traded field goals In the final
minutes.
Pete Gogolak's 14-yard field
goal as the gun sounded
preserved a tie with Phlla·
delphia for the heavlly.favored
Giants.
Frank Lewis caught two TD
paues ani Roy Gerela had
four field goala u the Steelers
overwhelmed Cleveland.
Chester Marcol's 24-yard
field goal with It ae«~~da left
llfled Green Bay tnlo a lie lflth

10 lb. COin.()p
CLEANING

WHITE OR AVOCADO
Ap~alachian Power Joins In Bringing
·
You This Message.

312 6TH ST.

NUW

~

•3.50 '

•

1503 IASTIIN AYE.

IAconverse!

DINING

ever made

The executive committee
served delicious refreshments
to the above and Mrs. Ethel
Grueser, Ada Slack, ·Myla
Hudson, Mrs. Hugh Bearhs.

Model KF332A
0 Continuous Cleaning OVen
0 Automatic timing center
with 60-mlnute timer
0 "Timed" appliance outlet
(fuse protected)
0 Three 6" Plug-&lt;lut Corox"
surface units
DOne 8" Plug-&lt;lut Corox
surface unit
0 Two surface unit algnal
lights
d Infinite Heat Control
between "011" and "High"
0 Porcelain enameled nodrip top ·
0 Lilt-off oven door with seal
D Look·ln oven window
0 Interior oven light with
"peek"swltch on door
0 Oven algnalllght
0 TIII·UP bake, tilt-down
broil elementa
0 Broiler pan with grid
0 Full-width atorage drawer
0 Frpnt leveling Iega
0 0 pttonal accnaory nonelectric griddle (KAGR40)

how it went, on paper

came with time runnlnK cJUlln
uw llut hall. Y,utern puntt'f
Mlkr l.arklns boomed a 48
yardlll' to the Southern 18,
wheru the Tornadoes im·
mediately be11an to put
together an 82 yard acortng
march In just 10 plays.
Senior quarterbllck Vern Ord
started the drive with an 8 yard
run, followed by halfback Dave
Clark who went!or 41md a first
down at the 30. Nease then
dashed for 6 bifore Ord wos
stopped for no g~ln . The
Tornadoes then ran 3 straight
13 yard gainers, with Buddy
Ervin, Nease aoo Ord sharing
the honors.
Nease then went for 10 more

BUFFET

mabsit

were won.

INFANT DIES
DANVILLE - Jertamie
Cleland, age 5 months, was
found dead yesterday morn!1lg
at home here, He Is survived by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Cleland; paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Cleland, RD I,
Langsville, and his maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Bubby Herdnian, RD I, Mid·
dleport. Funeral services will
be Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Martjn Funeral Home In
Rutlahd with the Rev. Donald
Combs officiating. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery. Friend&amp;
may call anytime at the
funeral home.

nnd ()rd for 4, bringing up a a fourth and 2 at the B. The waa having Ill troublH also, fought C(l!llelt, with only 6 nale '
lint dvwn •I the Eastern 11, handof! went to Sheets, but he with Eichinger's 28 yards and Infractions marked off.
wu caught 4 tlmel
'11wn, with )WI! 29 seconds hit nothinK but his own line Blake's 16 the only com· Southern
for
a
IOtal
of 40 yttdl, while ·
plementa
to
Sheets'
40
yards.
remaining on the clock, Nease which wos puShed back by a
only 1 ·
Eastern
committed
There was one bright spot In
strong Southern charge.
"untlnt
sprinted
arouoo
right
end
aoo
IIUtl\trtt·l ltftrfl ltltl
,11nt1 Ydl.
•uhtne. louthtrn
'E'!"tern gol the ball one the Eagle attack,that being the vlolltlon, 1 1rabblng the '
&lt;'ul past several Eastern
;
IJ5
c.
Y-•· TJ&gt; Soutnern- NtiM
facemalk char&amp;e late In !he '
NOIH
6
170
defenders to score. John Salser more time, but couldn't move punt and kickoff returns of
21 113 1 l!"torn - ~orklnl
Ord
11
10
'"".' Retur n• All.
- Y-s.
it, with a third and 4 pass sophomore Eichinger. He fourth period.
added the ellra point.
Olftlnlna
~ u
Southern bobbled the ball •
1 12
FSouthtrn- Ntltt
It wa• a deferuJive battle all falling Incomplete in the returned 2 kickoffs fiX- 62 twice,
· Clor~
• 30
1
13
lollng It once, while
Entern- Eichloatr
Irvin
2 It
vicinity of eoo Mike Larkin&amp; yards, nearly breaking one all
the
way,
with
the
outcome
in
1
7
P1rktr
a astern
the way, while he almost went EBS\ern didn't fumble at all. ,
Klctll'off Return•
doubt right up until the next·lo- around midfield.
Shtttl
IS 41
Att.
Ydl
.
')'he Tomlldoel will put their
the distance on his lone punt
l!lchlngor
13 u
laat time the Eagles had the
1
8
SOuthtrn- WIIII•mt
lllkt
6 16
perfect, 3-0 record up against '
I
62
The Eagles had also return'.
Eattern - E lchlnger
ball. With time ticking away,
llerktr
• I I
T•l"' St•t•
On the other side, Nes!!O. non.league Wabama White
·
E3$lern began a march toward threatened earlier, when
. Plnln•, SauthRrn
I! - J
A C Ydl .1.~~
'7
14
the southern goal line, defensl ve end Tim Bawn In- with an amazing 422 rushing Falcons Friday nlaht at
Ord
5 I 16 1 F·rrat Down a
0
2
whihi the Eagles holt
Fumbles
·l11tern
beginning from the Tornadoes' tercepted a deflected Ord paso yards in just 2games going Into Racine,
0
1
ltoU
5 0 0 0 FumbltJ. LOti
13 214
47 yard line . Quarterback ami ran It to the Southern 17, the battle, was zigging and Federal Hocking at Tupper~
Shotta ·
I D D 0 Yarda Ruohlng
.
0
16
Verdi
Pilling
Hotter
1 o o o
Randy Blake, who ran the with a Tornado aavlng a touch· zagging past Eastern defen- Plains.
13 2.1
Tol•t Yards
IIIIU Aecelvln•. Seutlt•r"
Scoria&amp;
1
0
Cit. Y41 Pantl Int. By
option well all night, scooted down by Just managing to Rrab ders all night, although he was
1 · 1~ .. ... o
Southern
- Neue, II yard
Penettles
held
uooer
200
yards
for
!he
Clork
1 11
lor 9 to the Southern 38. the back of Baum'a jer::ey
6·110 •·135
1 . 5 Punts
Maurer
run
(Salser,
kick)
Eichinger carried twice for 6 and bring him down . A run by first time this year. Ord aoo
0 7 0 ~7
yards and Blake added another Lester Parker lost 2 yards, Clark added 30 yards each to Southern
Eastern
o o o ~
6. Southern was then penalized however, and 3 Blake aerials the Southern total, while Ervin
s yarda for having too many went for naught, to ldll the contributed 19, one a sparkling
13 yarder. Sophomore fullback
men on the field and Eichinger threat.
Greg
Dunning , who was Inresponded with 2 Cllrrles fer 8 The Eastern offense was
jured
In the second quarter,
hampered throughout the
· lrontQn and the Seven President Earl James of hls prevloua post as vice· somewhere In the top 3, whlch' more yard&amp;, bringing up a third game by Its Inability tO com- added 14 yards.
and 4 on the Southern 10.
drew laughter.
president.
Dwar!a.
Waverly.
Whlle the Eagles couldn't
Colors : Blacfc, White,
One of the most pessimistic · From there, fullback John plete a pau in 8 attempts, with
"nlat'a the way the SEOAL
Elections were also held, ' Harold Roach of the Logan
complete
a
pass,
the
Tor·
R~d.
Blue,
Gold,
presented was that of Sheets, the Eagles' leading Southern's tight pau defense
Spottawrltera and Broad· . with James' 2 year stint as DalJy News was elected the reports
nadoes'
Ord
hit
21n
5
attempts,
doing
a
good
job
of
sticking
Dally Sentinel reporter DeMy ground gainer of the night with
Green. Purple.
C.atera AISociiUon sees the president coming to an end. It new .VIce-President.
with I interception. Ord hit
with
the
Eagle
receivers.
Fobes
who
covers
the
Meigs
41
yarda,
plowed
for
2,
bringing
Metiers, who perfol'lllll aU
was moved and approved that
1t73 SEOAL football race.
Marauders. Fobes, noting the up the biggest play of the night, Meanwhile, the ground attack Clark with a 21 yarder during
The a,.octatlon members, AI EIJnaugle of Jacklon would the statistical work for the
Southern's first series, and
Marauders' first 2 losses,
meeting Sunday afternoon at move up to the top spot from association and couldn't attend
connected with end Tim
apparent
lack
of
spirit
and
the
metting
because
of
injuries
Your THOM MeAN Stort
the Jolly Lanea BowllnC Center
Maurerfor ~yards, just 2plays
Injuries to several key players,
suffered
In
a
minor
traffic
MlcldltiiOt'l, 0.
•'
In JaCU., unanbnOUIIy voted
before
Bawn's
lnter~tion.
accident last ·week, was stated that he figured the
the ondeteated Tigers the top
The game was a cleanly
granted a S50 raise fOr the Maroon and Gold for 7th or Bth
spot, with Jacbon and AtheruJ
extra time and work he puts in place.
cloae behind.
Meanwhile, O'DoMell and
for the aSIIoclltlon. He wtU now
Amerlcin League
Irooton garnered l12 poln18
·
•
.f.
TWO EVENINGS .
Major League St•ndlngs
Bill
Gray
of
radio
station
East.
receive •150 Iter year.
By Unitect Press International .
out of a (iQIIIlble 112, while .
J
w. 1. pet. , g.b.
N•Uonal LeltUt
Moat of the talk at · the WJEH, Gallipolis, said !hey
EACH WEEK
93
62 .600
X·
BIIIImol'e
Jlckaon received 93 and
Ea•t
felt the Blue DevUa should end
83
72
.535
10
Boston
.
·
meeting
centered
on
Ironton
w . I. pet. g.b.
Athens got rr. The votes, cast
83 72 .535 10
Detroit
up somewhere around the ~th New York
79 17 .506
and
ita
display
of
raw
power
In
71 79 .A9.4 l(l'h
New
York
by 14 a•oclatlon members, W.leSt
.
Pittsburgh
71 16 .503' 1112
spot.
Gray
stated
that
the
72 8i . ~65 21
M·uwa
ukee
wina
over
HuntlDgton
High,
St . Louis
76 80 .• 87 3
• then look a drastic dip, with W j
6S 88 .• 33 25'h
Clev&amp;land
Gallians
suffer
from
a
lack
of
Montreal
75
80
.AU
3112
Huntington East and Ports·
West
GaUtpoUa' 84 holding down the
75 80 .AU 3112
offensive punch, wliile Ch lcago
w. I. pc:t. t.b.
fourth. apot. Logan waa next at LOS ANGELES (UP!)- The mouth. Ron Crump of Ironton O'Donnell praised the work of Philadelph ia 69 87 . ~•1 10 x-Oaktond
91 u .590
West
85 71 .545 1
81, with Meigs' 32 points )uat 2 Los Angele$ Dodgers kept the presented a "somewhat
w. I. pet. g.b. Kansascrtv
the Big Blue defense.
Minnesota
11 78 .-497 U 1h
pessimistic"
report
of
the
Ctn~tl
Reda
·from
doing
Cincinnati
96
60
.615
above Waverly'a30. Wellston Is
75 81 .•81 17
The association's next
Angeles
91 66 .580 51h C:hlcago
Cal
ifornia
7-4 81 .1.77 17 111
once 1111aln tabbed to hold down their celebrating at Dodger Tigers' ch!lnces In '73. After meeting will be Nov. 11, at Los
San Francisco 86 10 .551 10
Texas
5A
102 .346 38
pointing
out
the
many
talents
Houston
78 19 .~97 lllf2
the cellar spot, getting 25 Stadium Sunday 81)\1 Tommy
X·cllnchtd dlv . title
Jolly
Lanes,
at
which
time
the
Atlanta
75
82
.418
21112
S.turd•v 's Results
polilts.
•.
. John, the 1J1811 ~Dodgers got of quarterback Rick Massey
58 9S .372 38
All..SEOAL grid team will be San Diego
Detro\1 4 Boston 3
and
fullback
Terry
Mowery,
he
for
Dlcl
Allen,
posted
a
career
Sa,urd•y's
Rt~ults
The total points wer~
Baltimore 7 Milwaukee 1
New York 2 St. Louis o
said the Tigers should finish selected .
'
Minnesota
6 c;:allfornla 3
dj!termlneil on a system of 8 higli 15th victory .
Pltts~urgh at Montreal, ppd ..
Cleveland
5
New
York
1
WM.~3Jt···p
in·
··~~
~
rain
.
points for a !!rat place vote, 7 "We dldn 't want them
'•
Kansas City 5 Texas 3, u Inn
San Francisco 5 San Diego 2
MONDAY EVENING
popping
their
champagn~
here,
•
Both teams seem to agree Cinc·lnnatlll ~os Angeles 9
Oakland 9 Chlctgo 3
for aecond·place, etc.
Sund•v's
Results
OHIO
HIGH
SCHOOL
that pitching will decide the Chicago 5 Philadelph ia 2
' The prognostication voting no way," said Walter Alaton
AND TUESDAY EVENING
Detroit 3 Boston 0
FOOTBALL RESU~ TS
•
A Houston 2
·
after
hla
club
beat
the
Big
Red
Baltimore
2
Milwaukee
l
Am'erican League playoff Atlanta Sundly's
By United Press lnternatlon•l
followed preaentatlona by the
Resulh
California 15 Mlnnnota 1
•
s.turdiY
.
5to9:31f-.AII voue~~n Mt. lor AI a CArte)
series between Oakland and Pittsburgh 6 Montreal 3, 1st
various lportawrlters and ~htne.
New York 9 Cleveland 1, 1st ·
Cots . st . Charles 34 Bellefon·
Pittsburgh
7
Montreal
.C:,
2nd
"Nal.tu-ally, I would Uke to 1eln• 0
New York 2 Cleveland 1. 2nd
Baltimore, and according to New York 5 St . Louis 2
broadcasters
on
their
Kansas City 1 Tens A
Newark
Catholic
21
Untlca
0
•••
rupectlve teams' season have gotten it oyer today," aaid Cols . Watterson 16 Lancaster 0 one of the key pitchers an even Philadelphia 9 Chicago 7
Oakland
10
Chicago
5
'O Houston 2
Cincinnati Manager Sparky Cots . DeSales 18 wooster 7
Today's Prab•ble Pitchers
more Important !actor could be Atlanta
outlook.
Los
An'
g
elts
6 Cincinnati A
.•
18
tAU
Times
EDT!
Lancaster
Fisher
San Diego 11 San Francisco 9
the money.
In .other usoctatton action, a Anderson. "But, belleve me, Pickerington 6
Minnesota. (Hands 6-lOl at
Today 1 s Prob•ble Pitchers
nothing
Is
going
to
happen,
Whatever
the
outcome,
about
Oakland !Odom 5·12).11 p .m .
Cleve . Gilmour U Cots .
QIOtiiJII by Willard Fitzpatrick
(All Times EDT)
Texal
( Brobtr9
4-tl at
Academy 12
Pittsburgh (Briles 13 -13 and Colilornla
·
the only certain thing is that
of radio atatloo WLMJ In nothing."
••
(Wright 11 .19) , 11
Canton McKinley 43 Cols .
Moose
1
1·
11
J
at
Montreal
The Reds have six games left Lirlden 8
both clubs will have two weeks (Moore 7·161nd .McAnall,y 1·11, p.m.
Jacbiln, to limit the All·
.
I
Boston
(Pattin ]3·15l ot
Valley 7 Nor · in which to think aboutit before I , 5 :30p.m .
SEOAL c1111e te81118 to 2 teaJJill - aU ct home - to wrap up Tuscarawas
Detroit (Fryman 6-12'L 8 p.m .
thwitst 6
San
Dlago
&lt;Troedson
7·8l
at
Games
and li(lllorable mentions was their aecond str~ht National Akron Kenmore 8 Attroo op~ning their playoff at Cincinnat i (Grlmslev ll ·9L 8 Boston Tuesday's
at
Clevelend,
twilight
Firestone
7
Baltimore on Oct. 6. · The p .m .
aPI!rov~. Prevtoualy, the AiJ.. League West title and third Akron East 8· Akron South 0
Detroit at Baltimore, night
.'
San
Francisco
(Bryant
23·111
28 Akron North def~nding world champion A's at Houston (Reuss 15-12 ), 8:30 New York at Milwaukee, night
SEOAL plckl consisted of 3 dlvtston crown In four years . · 6Akron Garfield
•
.
Kansas City at Chicago, night
The
Reds
beat
the
Dodgers
clihched
the
Western
Division
p.m
.
teams and one honorable
Texas at California , night .
Akron St. VIncent 22
Tuesd•y's Games
Drinks end
Minnesota at Oakland. night
Akron Centrai ·Hower 0 title Sunday by whippilig the Montreal at New York, night
rilenuon per team. The change 11-9 Saturday. '11ley can clinch
Wide Menu
.
Desaert
Extra.
Youngs.
Mooney
13
Youngs
.
•
Oli~go White Sox 1~. one Philadelphia at . Pittsburgh ,
waa recommended by a It tonight against San Diego In Ursuline 0
Choice
'
Ccmmlttee consllting of Odie the opener of a three-came Cltve . c .c. 10 Cteve . Rhodes 15 day after the Orioles had night
In 1971, retired U.S. Supreme
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
McKinley 13 Cleve. East certified their Eastern Division San Diego at Cincinnati , night
Order our regutar menu every nlghtHo 10.
Q'Donnell of the Gallipolis series. Ross Grlm.sley, 111-9, Niles
CoW'\ Justice Hugo Black died
•
6
San Francisco at Houston, night
goes
againat
the
Padres'
Rich
warren Kennedy u Clevt . crown ;
Dilly Tribune, Tom Metiers of
at the age of 85.
Chlcaoo at St . Louis , ni;ht
Hotv N~me 12·
~'SllliSd:IIS:;IIS·r.~mliSmliS&lt;oliS'IiS::~\'8
. . ;:~:~:~
•
D. Athens Meesenger and Troedson, 7-8.
&lt;

By II&lt;!J!IIY l(ubea
The SOuthern Tornadoes,
dl1playlng a atlcky delen~tt
that held arch-rival (l',l!ltern to
just 83 total yardl, remained
undefeated Saturday night,
edging out the Eaglel, 7.0 In a
thril~r before a packed house
at Racine. The victory kept
Southern in a tie with Kyger
creek In the Southern Valley
Cortference, both 2-0.
While the Big Purple defense
was holding the Eagles at bay,
the Southern otfenae was
rolling up 242 yards, 216 on the
ground, with junior halfback
Mitch Nease again leading the
way, rushing for )23 ylllis.
The lone score of the game

CO. ~

. POINT ' '

NT

Detroit and Minnesota, with
Fred Cox kicking five field
goala, stormed from a J().O
deficit to beat the Bears.
John Had\ threlf touchdown
passes to Harold Jackson and
Jack Snow aoo Jim Bertelaen
and Larry Smith plunged for
two other scores as the Rams
ripped Atlanta.

OHIO COLLEGE

FOOTIAL~SCORES
U~lttd Press International

By
Kent State 35 Ohio University 7
Bowling Grten 31 Deyton 16
Toledo 23 Centre! Michigan 21
VIllanova 1A Cincinnati 7
Mloml 24 Purdue 19
Ashland 37 Edlhboro State
!Pa . ) o
Mou"t Union 35 Grove City
I Pa . ) 12
Kenyon 21 W
J 12
.Capitol 13 Morlelto 7
Depauw
l,lnd . l
21 Ohio

e.

Wtlleyan 14

·

'battance 21 Adrian (Mich . 1 0
John Corrolt 7 A\leghtnY I Po .)
7 (tiel
Witflnberg 31 Valparaiso
!Ind . ) 1
Theil (Pa.) 54 Cell Western u
Oonlson 29 Albion (Mich . l 16
Hiram 40 Ob•rlln 14
Hanover lind.) l.tl Flndt•y 12
Woostu 23 Ohio Northern 6
Heldelborg 11 Otterbein to
Temple ~7 Akron 33
Mulklngum
21
Baldwin ·
Wallec:e 21
Bluffton liMtncheattr (lnd .),6
Control Stott 32 F.orrla Sllto
(Mich . ) 15
south Dakota State 21 Youngs .
town State 6

..,I

-;;.;;;-;;-1
[·TO. See for • .. I

E. Second

POMEROY

American
~*'·

42
USED
CARS
FOR ·SALE

v.w.

l
BEST l
tHE

1~11l

VALUES

I

I

1
L--.-- ----

Also 20 Cars From 1968 Models Down Including a 1966 Datsun
Pickup with 48,000 miles - Real Nice Condition.

PEPSI NIGHT

This Is the biggest and best selection of Used Cars.that we have ever had.
l have lowered the price on all of these cars around$200.00 Per tar. .
Owlght N. Stevers

UP TO 4· PEPSIS AT

10C EA. WITH

.•

PUR~HASE
•

OF PIZZA OR SUBS
CALL AHEAD "2-3914

Monday, Sepl 24 &amp;TuesdaJ, Sept 25
216

POM£ROY-

PH. 992-3629
. ' .
John Unitas threw two TD City beat stubborn New Enpasses and Ron Smith returned gland.
a punt 72 yards for another
!!Core as the Chargers beat San
Diego and Bruce Gossett's 39yard field goal, his fifth off the
game, with 26 seconds left
lifted San Francisco over
•ufKOIIIUO
Denver.
1)1,11~·- ·'
Ken Anderson's 35-yard
scoring pass to Bob Trump)'
and a three-yard run by rookie
Charles Clatk In the fourth
period enabled Clnciru\ati to
defeat the Oilers and Willie
Sllison plunged one-yard f&lt;r a
score and Jan Stenerud kicked
a 33-yard field goal as Kansas
1973 LTD Ford 2 dr. H.T •• yellow. brown vinyltop, V-8, auto., air cond.
1973 AMX, red· white vinyl top. v.a, auto .. P. S., air con d.
1973 V. W. Bug, beige, 4 speed. lots of extras. 17,000 miles.
1972 Mach I Mustang, sliver with black Interior, Avery sharp car.
1972 Nova 2 Dr. Coupe. green with white top. 6 cyl .• auto.
1972
Buq, red. 4-sDeed, radio. leatherette.
1
1971 Chevrolet Carry-AU, automatic. P. S., , v.a, 3 seats;
1971 Chevelle 55 2 dr. H.T., black. V-8, auto., P.S., tape player, AM-FM.
I
1971 Nova 2 dr. Coupe. light green, green vinyl top, 6 cyl., auto.
1971 V.W. Bug •. dark green, 4-~peed. radio, leathereHe.
1971 Buick Riviera 2 dr. H. T., bronze with vinyl top. Loaded with extr~s.
1970 El Camino Pickup; gold, auto., P.S., air.
1970 Plymouth Duster, 2 dr. Coupe, beige. 6 cyl., 3 speed.
1970 V.W. Bug, 4 speed. radio, yellow.
Lou Osborne
1970 Pontiac Le~ns. 2 dr. H. T., green, with vinyl top. v.a, P. 5, air.
1970 Maverick 2 dr. Sed., yellow with black vinyl top, 6 cyi .. auto.
1969 Firebird 2 dr. H. T., silver) 6 cyl., auto •• P. S.
SEARS
I
2- 1969 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr. Seds .• 1 white· 1 blue.
2- 1969 Chev. Sta. Wagons, 1 gold · l white.
1 Cataloo Merch1nt .
i969 T~ Bird, white with black vinyl top. Loaded wtth extras •
J22D E. M&lt;ltn .
P&lt;&gt;moroy
I
PH. 992-2178

LUIGI'S PIZZA
10~

'

OPEN AT 5 ~.M.

.-

DON·. WAnS V-W, INC.
RIVERSIDE AMC-JEIP
·Across from Airport-Upper River Rd.
· ·
PHONE 446-9800

Gllllpolls, Ohio

"'

�'·-~

'..

Z- Tht O.ily Sentinel. Middleport -Poml'fDY. 0 .. &amp;.·pt. tl. :!li.l

Christian college is described
The Rev. Gordon Danielaon,
area director of Judson
Colltge, located on the out·
lllllrll of Chlcago, was guest
apuker at a congregational
meeting of the Pomeroy First
BapUat Church Wednesday
nilht.
Hif program of slides and
Information on the 10 year old
college which he noted was

•·rounded on faith" was
presented following .a potluck
supper and 'a devotional ser·
vice In the church sanctuary.
Mrs, Robert Kuhn was at the
plano for group singing of
"How Great Thou Art" with
the Rev . Robert · Kuhn giving
scriptUre from St. Mark.
.Introduced by the pastor, the
Rev . Mr. Danielson reported

that the college which started
with 75 students and has ·In·
creased to 350, has been called
"the miracle campll!". He
said It is a four yeartiberalarts
college with full accreditation .
The liCience buildings, the
library, and the administrative
facilities wre shown In the
slides by the Rev . Danielson.
Judson, he said, is a college
lor Christian youth, although

William Hurlow, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Nora Hurlow, Addison;
Mrs. Betty Hannon and son,
Gallipolis ; John Hurl ow,
Addison; Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Saunders, Mrs. Faith Brad·
bury, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
Geilher MiUer, Gallipolis, and
Mr . and Mrs. Luther Amos and
family.
The couple resides In New
York.

·croup enjoys picnic
APPLE GROVE, Ohio - The
youtlll of the Apple Grove
United Methodist Sunday
School were entertained
Saturday night at the PorUand
Park for their annual picnic
and wiener roasl.
Russell Roush was In charge
of recreation lor the group.
Attending were Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe, Superintendent, Mr.
and Mrs. Alden Thaxton, Mr.

and Mrs. Scott Shank, Chriss
and Stacey, Mrs. Dallas Hill,
Joey Roush, Mrs. Darrell
Norris and Tracy, Mrs. Bob
Rhodes, Karen and Mike, Mrs.
Dorsey ParsoruJ, Dale, Steve,
Johnnie, Kathy and Tony
Riffle, Sharon, Cindy, David
and Eddie Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Mrs. Jack Ables
and Vicki, Dolly Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush.

Celebrate anniversary
LONG BO'M'OM - Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson, Long
Bottom RD, celebrated their
56th wedding anniversary on
Sonday with ~ picnic at the
Syracuse Park. They were
married in 1917 at Pomeroy,
Ohio. They ' have seven
children, 18 grandchildren and
19 great-grandchildren.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Brewer, Portland; Mrs.
Elva Dailey and grand·
daughter Kristen Pape,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Ackley, Tla and Rodney,
Lancaster;. Mrs. Helen Of.
fenberger, Tammy and Pam,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Bill

Roe, Kenny and Keith. Me·
ConnelsviUe; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart and grand·
daughter, Bobbi Price, Port·
land; Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Keyse, Pataskala; Mt. and
Mrs . Thomas . Autherson,
Beverly; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Roush
and
daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and M... Henry
Autherson, Mrs. Lucille Allen,
Ray Autherson and daughter,
Renea, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Dailey, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Bryson and son, Newark.
The anniversary cake was
baked and decorated by Joan
Tuttle, Racine . .

I

Mrs. Nease hosts WSCS

'

Mrs. Fred Nease conducted a
Members elected to the
Service of Celebration when nominating committee are·
the WSCS of the Forest Run Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. Alfred
United Methodist Church met Yeauger and Mrs. Henry
at the home of Mrs. Vernon Salaer. Forty-sevencatlsonthe
Nease Tuesday eve!ftg. Mrs. sick and shut-ina were made
Denver Holter was c&lt;rhostess. the past month.
Mrs. Fred Nease used the
AdeSIIert course was served
program "Rejoice" in the by the hostesses to Mrs. Kerns
Service of Celebration. The Roush, Mrs. Edison Hollon,
service was to, lntroduce the Mrs, Fred Nease, Mrs. Oian
cbang,e from the Women's Genheimer, Mrs. Uswln Nease,
Society of Christian Service to Mrs . .Lawrence Napper, Mrs.
The United Methodist Women. Richard Jarvts, Mrs. Harry
Mrs. Richard Jarvis and Mrs. · Wyatt, Mrs. Henry Salser,
, Uswin Nease read the liCrlp- Mrs. Edith Sisson and Mrs.
! 1 lure from Romans 12. "Sing a Russ Watson.
New Sung" was sung by the
group. After a responsive Cburch class meets
reading by the leader and
"Thank You, God " was the
group, membership cards were devotional meditation read by
distributed and the purpose Mrs. Fielding Hawkins at the
, . read. A litany and prayer for Thursday night meeting of the
women was conducted. ·
Busy Bee Class of the Mid·
Readings pertaining to. the dleport First Baptist Church.
service were by Mrs . . Russ
Mrs . Hawkins took the
Watson, Mrs. Edith Sisson, meditation from the Decision
Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mrs. magazine. Mrs. Beulah Whjte,
Vernon Nease • Mrs. Henry president, had prayer, and the
Salser and Mrs. Alfred group sang "For God So Loved
Yeauger . Special readings the World". Members anwere by Mrs. Olan Genhelmer, swered roll call with a Bible
Mrs. Lawrence Napper and verse . An auction was held
Mrs. Edison Hollon. The with Mrs. John Lyons as .the
program• closed with a auctioneer. Mrs. Eva Hartley,
benediction In unison.
Mrs. Nelle Werner ' Mrs .
The service of celebration Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs. Fern
held Sunday afternoon at Bradbury and Mrs. Ethel
Marietta, attended by Mrs. Hughes were the hostes8es.
Edith Sisson, Mrs. J,illian
Henderson, Mrs . Harry Wyatt,
VISIT CONCLUDED
Mrs.
Olan
Genheimer,
Mrs.
, Fred Nease and Mrs. Russ Mrs. Ellen .Ebersbach and
'
daughter, Joyce, Middleport,
Watson, was discussed. The and Mrs . Juanita Might,
banner carried in the banner Baltimore, have returned from
parade at the Marietta meeting a visit In Shalimar, Fla., with
was made by Mrs. Edith Sisson Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fry and
. •' and her daughter, Jane, and children.
lfas carrl~ by the president ol
the ttOC!ety.
VISITING HERE
"'•
Mrs. Stewart Burdette of
·''
Point
Pleasant is the guest of
.'
Mr. and Mrs . John Lyons,
DIYOTID TO THI
..'.
Middleport.
INTIRIST OP

..
'

Eddy on Tuesday
Sept. 25 Chester, 9-10 ;
Success Road. 10 :'30-11 : 30 ;
Tu ppe r s Plains,
12 : 30 ·1;
Elmwood, 1:1 5-1: 45 ; Allred, 22: 30; Mulberry Heights; 3: 30·
4: 30; Bradbury, WMPO, 5·
5;30 ; Bradbury Village. 5: J5.6;
Hiland Church, 6:15-6 : 45 ; Old
. Rt. 7, 7-7: 30 ; Chester, 8-8:30 .

'
A thought for , Jlle
day :
President Eisenhower said, "In
the final choice , a soldier's
pack is not so heavy a burden
as a prisoner's chains."

ROll IT HOI,LICH,

cuv ltlltor

PUDIIIhtd dilly UCI"I
!.tlurdiY by Tflt Oh iO Vtllty

PubliShinG Company , Ill
Court St ., Pomtro)' . Otllo,
•57.., tualnta Office Phon.e
ft2 2156. E!ciltorlel P~ont 9P2·
.
2151.
· 5econlf clnl p.ost•Qt oa ra
11

tto"'"oy, Ohio .

NIIIOnll edurtlllng
rtprtstnltllvt loltlnell/ .
Oell .. htr, Inc .• 12 Eut •2rlc:t
II ., Ntw ''t'Dr k,, Ntw York.

JuluC:rlptltn rtltl i
Dtllvtrta ltV urrltr whtrl
vtlllblt U
Ptr w"~ 1
y Molor Routt where
ctrrltr
urv lot
not
'
tvoltaot'
'
Ono
"'"''"'
12.
ly
111011 In 01110 leld w. Yo .. Ono
Yell', 1161 IIJC m•ttts. ·1.101
ltrtt
monttte.
IJ .tl .
ltiWitrl I 11 rur I IIIII

,.,t,

_ .......... ltorH ...........
N
11rlct In·
' . lv•~ert,.ren
CIV4tl
hrUity Tlmll ·
lin IIIIII'

,_'

'

I Calendar

DOWN
UPI Sp&lt;~rl&amp; Writer
Watching the New York
Mcts
' rclentle!! drive toward
MONDAY
BEND 0' the River Garden the National League's Eastern
Oub, 7:30p.m. at home of Mrs. Division Ulle rec~lis words
Bert Grimm. lnstaUaUon of written 2,000 years ago.
officers by Mrs. Robert Lewis
and Mrs. Robert Thompson.
The fifth annl versary ol the
club's organization will be
observed.
KEN AMSBARY Chapter, By Un iteG Pres,slnttrnatlanll
Conference
iza'ak Wallon I,eague of Amerl_can Football
Ent
w. I. t , pet.
America, wtU hold dinner a! 7
I 1 0 .500
NY Jets
p.m. at !arm near Chester. M lafn l
1 1 0 .500
110 .500
Regular meeting to follow Buffalo
0 2 0 .000
New Eng
dinner.
0 2 0 .000
Balt imore
Central
POMEROY Chamber of
w. I. t. pet.
2 D 0 1.000
Commerce Monday at noon at Pittsburgh
1 1 0 .500
Ci nc innati
Meigs Inn.
1 1 0 .500
Cle¥etand
0 I 0 .000
Houston
TUESDAY
Wut
w. t. t. pet.
PLANNING Meeting at Denv er
1 1 0 .500
Racine Fire Station for Oakland
1 I 0 ,500
Kan City
1 I 0 .500
mothers who wish to help with San
Dleoo
1 l 0 .500
a community Halloween party Natio.n ll Footbl!ll Conference
E1st
for children 7:30p.m: headed
w. I. t . pet.
by firemen's auxiliary.
2 0 0 1.000
Sl. Louis
1 0 0 1.000
Dallas
1 0 1
.750
MEIGS COUNTY Garden NY Gi ants
1 1 0
.500
Wash ington
Oub Association, 7:30 p.m. at Ph ila
0 1 1
.250
Central
the Pomeroy First Baptist
w. I. t . pet.
Church. County contact Minnesota
2 0 0 1.000
1 0 1
.750
chairwoman to be elected and Green Ba y
0 1 1
.250
Detroit
installed.
0 2 0
.000
Ch ic.,go
FINANCE committee for
campaign funds for the onehalf mill bond issue for construction of school and
workshop for retarded children
and adults, 7:30 p.m. at the A j!istrict meeting was anPomeroy First Baptist Church. nounced when the Women's
of
Veterans
JUNIOR American Legion Auxiliary
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett Memorial ·Hospital met in the
Post 128, Middleport, at the cafeteria Tuesday evening,
Sept. 18 conducted by
hall.
Mrs:
Eslle
AMERICAN
Legion president,
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post Mossman, and opened with
39, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the Mrs . Robert McElhinney
hall. Program on music by giving the Auxiliary prayer.
Mrs. Ben Neutzllng, music Mrs. George White gave the
treasurer's report and Mrs.
chairwoman.
James
Daniela reported that
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
meet at 7:30p.m. at Columbus , Kin Club meets
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room, Middleport.
Mrs. Garnet Harbrecht was
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club hostess Wednesday night for a
wiD meet at 7:30p.m. at home meeting of the Kin Club with
of Mrs. Leon McKnight.
· Mrs. Judy Pockllngton
POMEROY Past Matrons ,presiding.
'
Picnic, 6:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Donations to the birthday
Nolan Swackhamer, Mason. fund were given by Mrs. Grace
Meat to be furnished. Bring Pratt, Mrs. Veda Davis, MisS
own tab)e service.
Joyce Ebersbach, and Mrs;
Ellen Elbersbach. Members
signed a gel-l)lell card f\lr Mr.
an'tl Mrs. Walter Boyer of
Baltimore. Games were played
at the business meeting during with prizes going to, : Miss
whlch a report on visits and Eberbach and Mrs. Eber~bach
cards was made by Mrs . who also won the door P..ize.
The traveling prize donated
Thomas Young. Cards were
signed for several members of by Mrs. Florence Windon was
the church who are Ill or won 'by Mrs. Davis, ·.Mrs.
bereaved. A thank-you note Windon will host the next
and gift of appreciation was meeting. Sandwiches, : .salad
received from Mrs. Clarence and coffee were served by the
hostess to those named and
Stewart.
Mrs. Ethel Clifford and a
guest,
Debbie liarbrectit.
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.
'
served a dessert course from a
table decorated in blue and Officers elected ' · ·
green. Mrs. Albert Woodard
was a contributing hostess.· Mrs . Pearl Reynolds of
Mrs. David Russell was a Middleport is the new senior
guest.
vice president of District 3 of
the Daughters of Union
Veterans, Civil War. '
Mrs. Reynold&amp; received the
appointment at the recent
district meeting held at
Johnnie and Gary, Terri Cambridge. Mrs. Hertha
Findley, Mr. and Mrs. Roger DOuglas of AtheruJ was elected
Manuel and, Angie, Mrs. Jim the juniot.vice president. Alao
Connolly, Brian and Shelly, attending were Mrs. Caddie
Mr. and Mrs . Dana Lewis, Mr. Wickham of Galllpolls, a
and Mrs. Russell Roush, member of Jane Howell Tent,
Sharon, Cindy, David and Meigs County, Mrs . Rose
Edward, Mrs. Erma Wilson, Hooper, and Mrs. Mattie
Mrs. Ruth Parsons, Mrs. Dorsa ·James, AtheruJ . Mrs. Wickham
Parsons. Sending a gHI was was the retiring secretary of
Mr. and Mrs. !Iober! Hill.
the district.
Hy t' KEO

The chlld, the home and the
school was the program theme
presented by Mrs. Pearl Mora
Tuesday evening when
Friendly Circle met at Trinity
Church.
Scripture from Deuteronomy
and Matthew regarding the
Importance of children in
God's sight was followed by a .
meditation titled "Three C's
!or the · SchooL" Mrs. James
Fugate received the offering
and the program concluded
with a · reading, "Doh Interrupt Me," poems and
thoughts on the program study.
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided

ments of ice cream, cake,

coffee and Kool-Aid were
served to Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Roberts , Todd, Leslie and
Chad, Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Roush, Joann, Vicki, Mike,

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER CHEF!
INCREDIBURG/BLE!

A'M'END MEETING
APPLE GROVE - Mrs.
Dallas Hili,Mrs. Robert Smith,
Mrs . Dorsey Parsons, Mrs.
Bob Rhodes and Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe attended the United
Methodist Women ' s
celebration In Marietta Sun·
day .
.

DALE C. WARNER

INSURANCE AGENCY
Now Located At

Special Family Meal Prices
4 p.m. lo cloelng
FOR ADULTS
Big She!•
Only
French Fries,
Turnover &amp;
large Drink

$1

1108 K!DI
FunburgerTMI Only
French Fries,
· Small Drink
&amp; Lollipop

102 W. MAIN POMEROY
PH. 992-2143 -992-7421
Representing:
STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUALS INS.
OHIO FARMERS INSURANCE CO.
AUTO-OWNE.RS MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.

W11t

singing the praises of Meta like
Wayne Garrett, Tag McGraw
and Harry Parker,. The Meta'
drive to llrst place l/1 the NL
East has turned the Big City
Into a nut factory, jus\ like
1969, and the question no longer
is whether the Mets will win the
division Utle bul how ma.ny
games it will take them to beat
the
Ameri can
League
representative In the World
Series.
Garrett, McGraw and
Pa.rker played key roles
SUnday as the Mets defeated
the St. Louis Cardinala, 5-2, and
went Into the final week of the
season with a half.game lead
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The Pirates gained a half game
on the Mets -does it matter
whenNewYorkhas a !Othman
watching over it up there In the
sky?- when they swept the
Montreal EI()OS, 6.J and 7-4.
~arrett, batting .394 In
September, hit a two-run, tie·
breaking triple In the seventh
Inning. Parker pitched one-hit
ball in middle inning relief to
pick up his eighth victory
against three losses. And then
McGraw came on to shut out
the Cardinala for the last three
Innings for his 23rd save.
McGraw, ineffective in the
early season going, has record·
ed four victorjes and 10 saves
in his last 14 appearances, a
perfect perfomumce.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
postponed the Ctn.dnnati Reds'
Western Division clinching
with a 11-4 victory over them,
the Philadelphia Phillles beat

'·m

pet.
o o
1 l 0
:500
1 1 o
0 1 0
000
·
S11nd1V'I Results
Pittsburgh 33 Cltveta nd 6 ·
Cincinnat i 24 Houston 10
Kansas City 10 New England 7
N.Y. Giants 23 Ph lla delph Ia 23
N.V. Jets 3A .Balt lmore 10
M inn esota 22 Chicago l3
St . Louts 34 Washington 21
Green Bay 13 Detro it 13
San Diego 34 Buffalo 1
Oakland l2 M iami 7
San Frl!n-clsco 3~ Denver 3A
Los Angeles 31 Atlanta 0
·
Mond•v Gwmes
New Orleans at Dallas , night
(Only game ,cheduled)
Sund•y's G•mu
Chicago at Denver
Clnclnnatf at San Diego
Green Bay at Minnesota
Los Angeles at San Francisco
New England at M iam i
New Orleans at Beltlmore
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland
N.Y . Jets at Buffalo
Oekland et Kansas City
Pittsburgh at Houston
St . Louis at Dallas
Washington at PhiladelPh ia
Lo~

Angeles
Atlanta
San Fran
New Orleans

w. I. t.

~

District meeting planned

Observe, 87th birthday
RACINE - Asurprise party
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush
Wednesday evening In honor of
Mrs. Edna Roush, Racine, who
was celebrating her 87th birthday. Mrs. Roush was presented
a cake with "Happy Birthday
Grandma,'' decorated in pink
and white icing by her ~rand-'
daughter, Mrs . Randall
Roberts.
After Mrs. Roush opened her
many lovely gifts, refresh·

"There were many brave
111en beFore Agamemnon/'
wrote l.atln poet Horace. "But
none had a poet to sing their
pral$es."
But this Is two centuries later
and the city of New Y&lt;rk Is

rNFL st~=di~;; 1

Friendly Circle ·has rneet

hte. ld.

'
1·

' '

any faith.
.
In ketping with the $J&gt;irit of
the Christian school, the
speaker said that Judson encourages its students to give
volunteer service to the church
and the COI11JIIunlty.
Speaking on the program
offered there, he said Judson·
students receive a bachelor of
arts degree, and that Judson's
degrees are acceptable for
graduate study at leading
universities. The tri-mester
program enables students to
earn the degree in less than
three years, he noted.
"Christ, the Ugh! of the
World" is the liChool motto. It
was described by the Rev . Mr.
Danielson as "large enough to
develop the mind and small
enough to cultivate the spirit".
It Is a memorial to America 's
first foreign missionary,
Adoniram Judson.
The school is supported .60
percent thro ugh students'
tuition, 40 percent through
endowment, with $120,000
being given each year by
Baptist churches. Following a
question and answer period,
the Rev . Mr . Kuhn had prayer.

MIIOS· MAION Aft lA
CHIITIIt L. TANNIHILL r

•

- ......,

1i Social Mets draw poets'-praise

• A
b hd
M
. tss · mos etrot e :"~\:a~ ~:~o :~~ p~~~~
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Amoa, Rl. I, Cheshire,
are announcing the rn8rrlage
Of their daughter, Hope Marie,
to Samuel Hurl ow, son Of Mrs.
N&lt;ra Hurlow, Addison.
The couple exchanged vows
Aug. 5at !he bride's home. The
7 p.m. ceremony was per.
formed by the Rev. Bud Darst,
Cheshire.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.

,;o:!

..

SOc

Mrs. Mossman, president;
Mrs. Danhiis, vice-president,
and Mrs. White, tresaurer,
were retained for another year.
Elec~ was Clara Burris, as
recording_ secretary. Fifteen
members were present.
Buying new chairs for the
lounge was discusaed.
To attend the district
meeting at the Riverside
Methodist
Hospital
In
Columbus are Mrs. Mossman,
Mrs. Mildre&lt;\ Mitch, Mrs.
Mildred Fry, Mrs. Nettle ·
Hayes and Mrs. Burris.
Dues are to be paid and new
memi&gt;Ors will be welcomed.
A letter was read from Mra.
Arthur (Corrine) Comba, a
former member who has
moved to Grove City.
October hostesses will be
Mts. Homer Baxter, Mrs.
Mitch, Mrs. Lucille Leifheit,
and Mrs . .Helen Williams.
Mrs.. White was program
leader for games and prizes

I

the (JhiCllgO Cubs, t,7, the
Atlanta Braves downed the
Houston Astros, lG-2, and the
San Diego Padres outacor~
the San Franclaco Olanta, ll.f,
In other Nl. gamel.
American League 1corea
were Qakland 10 Chicago ~
New York over Clevelland, &amp;-1
and 2·1, Detroit 3 B01ton 0,
Kansas City 7 Tens ~t
Baltimore 2 Milwaukee 1 aM
Calllornla 15 Minnesota 7. :
Willie Slargell, leadlna
candidate tor the NL't MVl'
award, hit a three-run homer 1t1
win the first. game lor !he
Pirates and roolde Riehle Ztak
slammed a grand slammer In a
six-run rally In the fifth lnntrig
of.the nlghtCllp aa the pltchfl:·
poor Pirates hung In ther!.
Stargell's 87th extra-base hit fl
the seaiJOn In the first g~e •
a new club record. Relief sWI
Ramon Hernan&amp;lz and Dav,j!
Giusti closed out the games f&lt;J
the Pirates.
•
Tw&lt;rrun homera by Steve
Garvey .and Tom Paclorel:
paced the Dodgers to thett
victory over the Reds a!]11
enabled Tommy John to win
his 15th game; pitcher Ken
Brett, delivered a two-run
eighth Inning single In a fiverun eighth inning whlcp
carried the PhUlies to their win
over the Cubs; Rorie Harrllon ·
won his lith game for the
Braves In a route over Hou8tdit
and Fred Kendall's two-nill ~
single with two out and tllt :
bases filled In the ninth lnnlnJ .
enabled the Padres to beat the
Giants.
•
•

•

Scrib.es like Ironton for No. 1

heritage house

Reds trY

agazn . or
tt'tle

GALLIPOLIS; OHIO

..

....•

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••
•

,."
••
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The MEIGS INN

and snaps Miami win streak
llY JOE CARNICEUJ
UPI S(IGI'II Writer
&amp;lhday marked the end ol
the' line lor the Miami
Dolphins' winning streak and
wllibly for Joe Namath's

-·

BAKER FURNITURE

· The Oaklanl Raiders ended
the World Champion Dolphin&amp;'
dre81118 for another perfect
seuon and a National Football
League record for consecutive
victories when 48-year-old
George Blanda kicked four
field goala to spark a 1~7
victory.
And unheralded linebacker
Stan While of Baltimore,
crutslnll In untoliched, may
have ended Namath's aeaiort
when he alammed the New
York Jell' star quarterback to
the turf and Inflicted .11
separated right shoulder. AI
Woodall came on In reUef of
Namalb to 11ft the Jell to a 3+
10 romp over the Colli.
Blanda, a pro lfhen some of
lU teammates were born and
playq In hla 300th game,
..,mtd hiJ field goala over all
fllllr parlodl, kicking a 12yarder In !he first, a 48-yarder
In thelecOIIcl,aJ~yarder in the
third and a IO.yarder In the

MIDDLEPORT, 0~

Wastlnahoose
30·1nch Electrk: RanKe with
ContloolliS Cleanlni Oven

l -·
Mpdol

.....

KF332R

SPECIAL
SALE PRICE

•209'

~~-••r••

)1111111,.

5

fourth. The Oakland defense
completely blunted Miami's
offense, the best In the NFL .
laat season, and didn't aDow"a
score until Bob Griese threw a
27-yard touchdown pass to Jim
Mandich with 67 second&amp; left.
"It's been a long time since I
talked. to a l01tng team," said
Miami Coach Don Shula, whose
club did not lose a regulation
game since the 19'12 Super BO...l
loss to Dallas. "They blew us
out. They really took It to us.
Whatever breaks they got, they
forced themselves. Their linebackers were exceptional and
they mixed their defenses
well."
The defeat left the Dolphins
tied with the Chtc11110 Bear&amp; of
1933-34 aoo 1941-42 . for moat
consecutlvewins(18) tncl~g
playoff games. The loss also
ended the Dolphin&amp;' chance to
tie the Bears' record ol 17
straight regular season vic·
tortes. Miami won 18 consecu·
tlve games before Sunday.
The Jets, meanwhile, were
awaiting word today on the
extent of Namath't Injury. If
surgery Is neceBSS8ry, Namath
wW miJI the entire aeason. If
not, he will be out six to eight
wetkl.
W!¢111 threw TO paases of
12 yards to Eddie Bell and one
yard to Emerson Booler and
· the Jell' defenae Intercepted a
club record eight pa111e1, four
off rookie Bert Jones and fOur
off Marty Domna. Reaarve
cartlll'back Rich Smtelil had
three lnllretptlona, returning
ooe 2t yn for a acore, and

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
PHONE 675-1160

Ralph Baker also bad a 23-yard
retilrn for a TD.
In other NFL action Sunday,
St. Louis 81onned Washington,
3+27, the New York Giants tied
PbUadelphla, 23-23, Pittsburgh
crushed Clevelaoo, 33-6, Green
Bay tied Detroit, 13-13, Minnesota downed Chicago, 22-13,
Los Angeles shut out Atlanta,
31.0, San Diego whipped Buf.
falo, 34·7, San Francisco
outlasted Denver, 36-34, Cincinnati defeated Houston, 24-10
and Kansas City edged New
Englaoo, 10.7. New Orleans is
at Dallas tonight.
Donny Anderson scored
three TDs and Jim Hart
shredded Washington's
heralded defense for 286 yards
passing as the Cardinals
stuMed the Redsksins. An4erson had two oneyard
plunges and caught a 12-yard
jill!! from Hart.
St. Louts ted 24-17 when Don
Shy ran a kickoff back !¥1 yards
for a 31·17 lead. Washington's
Herb Mul·Key returned the
ensuing kickoff !¥1 yards to cut
the lead to 31·24 and the teamS
traded field goals In the final
minutes.
Pete Gogolak's 14-yard field
goal as the gun sounded
preserved a tie with Phlla·
delphia for the heavlly.favored
Giants.
Frank Lewis caught two TD
paues ani Roy Gerela had
four field goala u the Steelers
overwhelmed Cleveland.
Chester Marcol's 24-yard
field goal with It ae«~~da left
llfled Green Bay tnlo a lie lflth

10 lb. COin.()p
CLEANING

WHITE OR AVOCADO
Ap~alachian Power Joins In Bringing
·
You This Message.

312 6TH ST.

NUW

~

•3.50 '

•

1503 IASTIIN AYE.

IAconverse!

DINING

ever made

The executive committee
served delicious refreshments
to the above and Mrs. Ethel
Grueser, Ada Slack, ·Myla
Hudson, Mrs. Hugh Bearhs.

Model KF332A
0 Continuous Cleaning OVen
0 Automatic timing center
with 60-mlnute timer
0 "Timed" appliance outlet
(fuse protected)
0 Three 6" Plug-&lt;lut Corox"
surface units
DOne 8" Plug-&lt;lut Corox
surface unit
0 Two surface unit algnal
lights
d Infinite Heat Control
between "011" and "High"
0 Porcelain enameled nodrip top ·
0 Lilt-off oven door with seal
D Look·ln oven window
0 Interior oven light with
"peek"swltch on door
0 Oven algnalllght
0 TIII·UP bake, tilt-down
broil elementa
0 Broiler pan with grid
0 Full-width atorage drawer
0 Frpnt leveling Iega
0 0 pttonal accnaory nonelectric griddle (KAGR40)

how it went, on paper

came with time runnlnK cJUlln
uw llut hall. Y,utern puntt'f
Mlkr l.arklns boomed a 48
yardlll' to the Southern 18,
wheru the Tornadoes im·
mediately be11an to put
together an 82 yard acortng
march In just 10 plays.
Senior quarterbllck Vern Ord
started the drive with an 8 yard
run, followed by halfback Dave
Clark who went!or 41md a first
down at the 30. Nease then
dashed for 6 bifore Ord wos
stopped for no g~ln . The
Tornadoes then ran 3 straight
13 yard gainers, with Buddy
Ervin, Nease aoo Ord sharing
the honors.
Nease then went for 10 more

BUFFET

mabsit

were won.

INFANT DIES
DANVILLE - Jertamie
Cleland, age 5 months, was
found dead yesterday morn!1lg
at home here, He Is survived by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Cleland; paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Cleland, RD I,
Langsville, and his maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Bubby Herdnian, RD I, Mid·
dleport. Funeral services will
be Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
Martjn Funeral Home In
Rutlahd with the Rev. Donald
Combs officiating. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery. Friend&amp;
may call anytime at the
funeral home.

nnd ()rd for 4, bringing up a a fourth and 2 at the B. The waa having Ill troublH also, fought C(l!llelt, with only 6 nale '
lint dvwn •I the Eastern 11, handof! went to Sheets, but he with Eichinger's 28 yards and Infractions marked off.
wu caught 4 tlmel
'11wn, with )WI! 29 seconds hit nothinK but his own line Blake's 16 the only com· Southern
for
a
IOtal
of 40 yttdl, while ·
plementa
to
Sheets'
40
yards.
remaining on the clock, Nease which wos puShed back by a
only 1 ·
Eastern
committed
There was one bright spot In
strong Southern charge.
"untlnt
sprinted
arouoo
right
end
aoo
IIUtl\trtt·l ltftrfl ltltl
,11nt1 Ydl.
•uhtne. louthtrn
'E'!"tern gol the ball one the Eagle attack,that being the vlolltlon, 1 1rabblng the '
&lt;'ul past several Eastern
;
IJ5
c.
Y-•· TJ&gt; Soutnern- NtiM
facemalk char&amp;e late In !he '
NOIH
6
170
defenders to score. John Salser more time, but couldn't move punt and kickoff returns of
21 113 1 l!"torn - ~orklnl
Ord
11
10
'"".' Retur n• All.
- Y-s.
it, with a third and 4 pass sophomore Eichinger. He fourth period.
added the ellra point.
Olftlnlna
~ u
Southern bobbled the ball •
1 12
FSouthtrn- Ntltt
It wa• a deferuJive battle all falling Incomplete in the returned 2 kickoffs fiX- 62 twice,
· Clor~
• 30
1
13
lollng It once, while
Entern- Eichloatr
Irvin
2 It
vicinity of eoo Mike Larkin&amp; yards, nearly breaking one all
the
way,
with
the
outcome
in
1
7
P1rktr
a astern
the way, while he almost went EBS\ern didn't fumble at all. ,
Klctll'off Return•
doubt right up until the next·lo- around midfield.
Shtttl
IS 41
Att.
Ydl
.
')'he Tomlldoel will put their
the distance on his lone punt
l!lchlngor
13 u
laat time the Eagles had the
1
8
SOuthtrn- WIIII•mt
lllkt
6 16
perfect, 3-0 record up against '
I
62
The Eagles had also return'.
Eattern - E lchlnger
ball. With time ticking away,
llerktr
• I I
T•l"' St•t•
On the other side, Nes!!O. non.league Wabama White
·
E3$lern began a march toward threatened earlier, when
. Plnln•, SauthRrn
I! - J
A C Ydl .1.~~
'7
14
the southern goal line, defensl ve end Tim Bawn In- with an amazing 422 rushing Falcons Friday nlaht at
Ord
5 I 16 1 F·rrat Down a
0
2
whihi the Eagles holt
Fumbles
·l11tern
beginning from the Tornadoes' tercepted a deflected Ord paso yards in just 2games going Into Racine,
0
1
ltoU
5 0 0 0 FumbltJ. LOti
13 214
47 yard line . Quarterback ami ran It to the Southern 17, the battle, was zigging and Federal Hocking at Tupper~
Shotta ·
I D D 0 Yarda Ruohlng
.
0
16
Verdi
Pilling
Hotter
1 o o o
Randy Blake, who ran the with a Tornado aavlng a touch· zagging past Eastern defen- Plains.
13 2.1
Tol•t Yards
IIIIU Aecelvln•. Seutlt•r"
Scoria&amp;
1
0
Cit. Y41 Pantl Int. By
option well all night, scooted down by Just managing to Rrab ders all night, although he was
1 · 1~ .. ... o
Southern
- Neue, II yard
Penettles
held
uooer
200
yards
for
!he
Clork
1 11
lor 9 to the Southern 38. the back of Baum'a jer::ey
6·110 •·135
1 . 5 Punts
Maurer
run
(Salser,
kick)
Eichinger carried twice for 6 and bring him down . A run by first time this year. Ord aoo
0 7 0 ~7
yards and Blake added another Lester Parker lost 2 yards, Clark added 30 yards each to Southern
Eastern
o o o ~
6. Southern was then penalized however, and 3 Blake aerials the Southern total, while Ervin
s yarda for having too many went for naught, to ldll the contributed 19, one a sparkling
13 yarder. Sophomore fullback
men on the field and Eichinger threat.
Greg
Dunning , who was Inresponded with 2 Cllrrles fer 8 The Eastern offense was
jured
In the second quarter,
hampered throughout the
· lrontQn and the Seven President Earl James of hls prevloua post as vice· somewhere In the top 3, whlch' more yard&amp;, bringing up a third game by Its Inability tO com- added 14 yards.
and 4 on the Southern 10.
drew laughter.
president.
Dwar!a.
Waverly.
Whlle the Eagles couldn't
Colors : Blacfc, White,
One of the most pessimistic · From there, fullback John plete a pau in 8 attempts, with
"nlat'a the way the SEOAL
Elections were also held, ' Harold Roach of the Logan
complete
a
pass,
the
Tor·
R~d.
Blue,
Gold,
presented was that of Sheets, the Eagles' leading Southern's tight pau defense
Spottawrltera and Broad· . with James' 2 year stint as DalJy News was elected the reports
nadoes'
Ord
hit
21n
5
attempts,
doing
a
good
job
of
sticking
Dally Sentinel reporter DeMy ground gainer of the night with
Green. Purple.
C.atera AISociiUon sees the president coming to an end. It new .VIce-President.
with I interception. Ord hit
with
the
Eagle
receivers.
Fobes
who
covers
the
Meigs
41
yarda,
plowed
for
2,
bringing
Metiers, who perfol'lllll aU
was moved and approved that
1t73 SEOAL football race.
Marauders. Fobes, noting the up the biggest play of the night, Meanwhile, the ground attack Clark with a 21 yarder during
The a,.octatlon members, AI EIJnaugle of Jacklon would the statistical work for the
Southern's first series, and
Marauders' first 2 losses,
meeting Sunday afternoon at move up to the top spot from association and couldn't attend
connected with end Tim
apparent
lack
of
spirit
and
the
metting
because
of
injuries
Your THOM MeAN Stort
the Jolly Lanea BowllnC Center
Maurerfor ~yards, just 2plays
Injuries to several key players,
suffered
In
a
minor
traffic
MlcldltiiOt'l, 0.
•'
In JaCU., unanbnOUIIy voted
before
Bawn's
lnter~tion.
accident last ·week, was stated that he figured the
the ondeteated Tigers the top
The game was a cleanly
granted a S50 raise fOr the Maroon and Gold for 7th or Bth
spot, with Jacbon and AtheruJ
extra time and work he puts in place.
cloae behind.
Meanwhile, O'DoMell and
for the aSIIoclltlon. He wtU now
Amerlcin League
Irooton garnered l12 poln18
·
•
.f.
TWO EVENINGS .
Major League St•ndlngs
Bill
Gray
of
radio
station
East.
receive •150 Iter year.
By Unitect Press International .
out of a (iQIIIlble 112, while .
J
w. 1. pet. , g.b.
N•Uonal LeltUt
Moat of the talk at · the WJEH, Gallipolis, said !hey
EACH WEEK
93
62 .600
X·
BIIIImol'e
Jlckaon received 93 and
Ea•t
felt the Blue DevUa should end
83
72
.535
10
Boston
.
·
meeting
centered
on
Ironton
w . I. pet. g.b.
Athens got rr. The votes, cast
83 72 .535 10
Detroit
up somewhere around the ~th New York
79 17 .506
and
ita
display
of
raw
power
In
71 79 .A9.4 l(l'h
New
York
by 14 a•oclatlon members, W.leSt
.
Pittsburgh
71 16 .503' 1112
spot.
Gray
stated
that
the
72 8i . ~65 21
M·uwa
ukee
wina
over
HuntlDgton
High,
St . Louis
76 80 .• 87 3
• then look a drastic dip, with W j
6S 88 .• 33 25'h
Clev&amp;land
Gallians
suffer
from
a
lack
of
Montreal
75
80
.AU
3112
Huntington East and Ports·
West
GaUtpoUa' 84 holding down the
75 80 .AU 3112
offensive punch, wliile Ch lcago
w. I. pc:t. t.b.
fourth. apot. Logan waa next at LOS ANGELES (UP!)- The mouth. Ron Crump of Ironton O'Donnell praised the work of Philadelph ia 69 87 . ~•1 10 x-Oaktond
91 u .590
West
85 71 .545 1
81, with Meigs' 32 points )uat 2 Los Angele$ Dodgers kept the presented a "somewhat
w. I. pet. g.b. Kansascrtv
the Big Blue defense.
Minnesota
11 78 .-497 U 1h
pessimistic"
report
of
the
Ctn~tl
Reda
·from
doing
Cincinnati
96
60
.615
above Waverly'a30. Wellston Is
75 81 .•81 17
The association's next
Angeles
91 66 .580 51h C:hlcago
Cal
ifornia
7-4 81 .1.77 17 111
once 1111aln tabbed to hold down their celebrating at Dodger Tigers' ch!lnces In '73. After meeting will be Nov. 11, at Los
San Francisco 86 10 .551 10
Texas
5A
102 .346 38
pointing
out
the
many
talents
Houston
78 19 .~97 lllf2
the cellar spot, getting 25 Stadium Sunday 81)\1 Tommy
X·cllnchtd dlv . title
Jolly
Lanes,
at
which
time
the
Atlanta
75
82
.418
21112
S.turd•v 's Results
polilts.
•.
. John, the 1J1811 ~Dodgers got of quarterback Rick Massey
58 9S .372 38
All..SEOAL grid team will be San Diego
Detro\1 4 Boston 3
and
fullback
Terry
Mowery,
he
for
Dlcl
Allen,
posted
a
career
Sa,urd•y's
Rt~ults
The total points wer~
Baltimore 7 Milwaukee 1
New York 2 St. Louis o
said the Tigers should finish selected .
'
Minnesota
6 c;:allfornla 3
dj!termlneil on a system of 8 higli 15th victory .
Pltts~urgh at Montreal, ppd ..
Cleveland
5
New
York
1
WM.~3Jt···p
in·
··~~
~
rain
.
points for a !!rat place vote, 7 "We dldn 't want them
'•
Kansas City 5 Texas 3, u Inn
San Francisco 5 San Diego 2
MONDAY EVENING
popping
their
champagn~
here,
•
Both teams seem to agree Cinc·lnnatlll ~os Angeles 9
Oakland 9 Chlctgo 3
for aecond·place, etc.
Sund•v's
Results
OHIO
HIGH
SCHOOL
that pitching will decide the Chicago 5 Philadelph ia 2
' The prognostication voting no way," said Walter Alaton
AND TUESDAY EVENING
Detroit 3 Boston 0
FOOTBALL RESU~ TS
•
A Houston 2
·
after
hla
club
beat
the
Big
Red
Baltimore
2
Milwaukee
l
Am'erican League playoff Atlanta Sundly's
By United Press lnternatlon•l
followed preaentatlona by the
Resulh
California 15 Mlnnnota 1
•
s.turdiY
.
5to9:31f-.AII voue~~n Mt. lor AI a CArte)
series between Oakland and Pittsburgh 6 Montreal 3, 1st
various lportawrlters and ~htne.
New York 9 Cleveland 1, 1st ·
Cots . st . Charles 34 Bellefon·
Pittsburgh
7
Montreal
.C:,
2nd
"Nal.tu-ally, I would Uke to 1eln• 0
New York 2 Cleveland 1. 2nd
Baltimore, and according to New York 5 St . Louis 2
broadcasters
on
their
Kansas City 1 Tens A
Newark
Catholic
21
Untlca
0
•••
rupectlve teams' season have gotten it oyer today," aaid Cols . Watterson 16 Lancaster 0 one of the key pitchers an even Philadelphia 9 Chicago 7
Oakland
10
Chicago
5
'O Houston 2
Cincinnati Manager Sparky Cots . DeSales 18 wooster 7
Today's Prab•ble Pitchers
more Important !actor could be Atlanta
outlook.
Los
An'
g
elts
6 Cincinnati A
.•
18
tAU
Times
EDT!
Lancaster
Fisher
San Diego 11 San Francisco 9
the money.
In .other usoctatton action, a Anderson. "But, belleve me, Pickerington 6
Minnesota. (Hands 6-lOl at
Today 1 s Prob•ble Pitchers
nothing
Is
going
to
happen,
Whatever
the
outcome,
about
Oakland !Odom 5·12).11 p .m .
Cleve . Gilmour U Cots .
QIOtiiJII by Willard Fitzpatrick
(All Times EDT)
Texal
( Brobtr9
4-tl at
Academy 12
Pittsburgh (Briles 13 -13 and Colilornla
·
the only certain thing is that
of radio atatloo WLMJ In nothing."
••
(Wright 11 .19) , 11
Canton McKinley 43 Cols .
Moose
1
1·
11
J
at
Montreal
The Reds have six games left Lirlden 8
both clubs will have two weeks (Moore 7·161nd .McAnall,y 1·11, p.m.
Jacbiln, to limit the All·
.
I
Boston
(Pattin ]3·15l ot
Valley 7 Nor · in which to think aboutit before I , 5 :30p.m .
SEOAL c1111e te81118 to 2 teaJJill - aU ct home - to wrap up Tuscarawas
Detroit (Fryman 6-12'L 8 p.m .
thwitst 6
San
Dlago
&lt;Troedson
7·8l
at
Games
and li(lllorable mentions was their aecond str~ht National Akron Kenmore 8 Attroo op~ning their playoff at Cincinnat i (Grlmslev ll ·9L 8 Boston Tuesday's
at
Clevelend,
twilight
Firestone
7
Baltimore on Oct. 6. · The p .m .
aPI!rov~. Prevtoualy, the AiJ.. League West title and third Akron East 8· Akron South 0
Detroit at Baltimore, night
.'
San
Francisco
(Bryant
23·111
28 Akron North def~nding world champion A's at Houston (Reuss 15-12 ), 8:30 New York at Milwaukee, night
SEOAL plckl consisted of 3 dlvtston crown In four years . · 6Akron Garfield
•
.
Kansas City at Chicago, night
The
Reds
beat
the
Dodgers
clihched
the
Western
Division
p.m
.
teams and one honorable
Texas at California , night .
Akron St. VIncent 22
Tuesd•y's Games
Drinks end
Minnesota at Oakland. night
Akron Centrai ·Hower 0 title Sunday by whippilig the Montreal at New York, night
rilenuon per team. The change 11-9 Saturday. '11ley can clinch
Wide Menu
.
Desaert
Extra.
Youngs.
Mooney
13
Youngs
.
•
Oli~go White Sox 1~. one Philadelphia at . Pittsburgh ,
waa recommended by a It tonight against San Diego In Ursuline 0
Choice
'
Ccmmlttee consllting of Odie the opener of a three-came Cltve . c .c. 10 Cteve . Rhodes 15 day after the Orioles had night
In 1971, retired U.S. Supreme
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
McKinley 13 Cleve. East certified their Eastern Division San Diego at Cincinnati , night
Order our regutar menu every nlghtHo 10.
Q'Donnell of the Gallipolis series. Ross Grlm.sley, 111-9, Niles
CoW'\ Justice Hugo Black died
•
6
San Francisco at Houston, night
goes
againat
the
Padres'
Rich
warren Kennedy u Clevt . crown ;
Dilly Tribune, Tom Metiers of
at the age of 85.
Chlcaoo at St . Louis , ni;ht
Hotv N~me 12·
~'SllliSd:IIS:;IIS·r.~mliSmliS&lt;oliS'IiS::~\'8
. . ;:~:~:~
•
D. Athens Meesenger and Troedson, 7-8.
&lt;

By II&lt;!J!IIY l(ubea
The SOuthern Tornadoes,
dl1playlng a atlcky delen~tt
that held arch-rival (l',l!ltern to
just 83 total yardl, remained
undefeated Saturday night,
edging out the Eaglel, 7.0 In a
thril~r before a packed house
at Racine. The victory kept
Southern in a tie with Kyger
creek In the Southern Valley
Cortference, both 2-0.
While the Big Purple defense
was holding the Eagles at bay,
the Southern otfenae was
rolling up 242 yards, 216 on the
ground, with junior halfback
Mitch Nease again leading the
way, rushing for )23 ylllis.
The lone score of the game

CO. ~

. POINT ' '

NT

Detroit and Minnesota, with
Fred Cox kicking five field
goala, stormed from a J().O
deficit to beat the Bears.
John Had\ threlf touchdown
passes to Harold Jackson and
Jack Snow aoo Jim Bertelaen
and Larry Smith plunged for
two other scores as the Rams
ripped Atlanta.

OHIO COLLEGE

FOOTIAL~SCORES
U~lttd Press International

By
Kent State 35 Ohio University 7
Bowling Grten 31 Deyton 16
Toledo 23 Centre! Michigan 21
VIllanova 1A Cincinnati 7
Mloml 24 Purdue 19
Ashland 37 Edlhboro State
!Pa . ) o
Mou"t Union 35 Grove City
I Pa . ) 12
Kenyon 21 W
J 12
.Capitol 13 Morlelto 7
Depauw
l,lnd . l
21 Ohio

e.

Wtlleyan 14

·

'battance 21 Adrian (Mich . 1 0
John Corrolt 7 A\leghtnY I Po .)
7 (tiel
Witflnberg 31 Valparaiso
!Ind . ) 1
Theil (Pa.) 54 Cell Western u
Oonlson 29 Albion (Mich . l 16
Hiram 40 Ob•rlln 14
Hanover lind.) l.tl Flndt•y 12
Woostu 23 Ohio Northern 6
Heldelborg 11 Otterbein to
Temple ~7 Akron 33
Mulklngum
21
Baldwin ·
Wallec:e 21
Bluffton liMtncheattr (lnd .),6
Control Stott 32 F.orrla Sllto
(Mich . ) 15
south Dakota State 21 Youngs .
town State 6

..,I

-;;.;;;-;;-1
[·TO. See for • .. I

E. Second

POMEROY

American
~*'·

42
USED
CARS
FOR ·SALE

v.w.

l
BEST l
tHE

1~11l

VALUES

I

I

1
L--.-- ----

Also 20 Cars From 1968 Models Down Including a 1966 Datsun
Pickup with 48,000 miles - Real Nice Condition.

PEPSI NIGHT

This Is the biggest and best selection of Used Cars.that we have ever had.
l have lowered the price on all of these cars around$200.00 Per tar. .
Owlght N. Stevers

UP TO 4· PEPSIS AT

10C EA. WITH

.•

PUR~HASE
•

OF PIZZA OR SUBS
CALL AHEAD "2-3914

Monday, Sepl 24 &amp;TuesdaJ, Sept 25
216

POM£ROY-

PH. 992-3629
. ' .
John Unitas threw two TD City beat stubborn New Enpasses and Ron Smith returned gland.
a punt 72 yards for another
!!Core as the Chargers beat San
Diego and Bruce Gossett's 39yard field goal, his fifth off the
game, with 26 seconds left
lifted San Francisco over
•ufKOIIIUO
Denver.
1)1,11~·- ·'
Ken Anderson's 35-yard
scoring pass to Bob Trump)'
and a three-yard run by rookie
Charles Clatk In the fourth
period enabled Clnciru\ati to
defeat the Oilers and Willie
Sllison plunged one-yard f&lt;r a
score and Jan Stenerud kicked
a 33-yard field goal as Kansas
1973 LTD Ford 2 dr. H.T •• yellow. brown vinyltop, V-8, auto., air cond.
1973 AMX, red· white vinyl top. v.a, auto .. P. S., air con d.
1973 V. W. Bug, beige, 4 speed. lots of extras. 17,000 miles.
1972 Mach I Mustang, sliver with black Interior, Avery sharp car.
1972 Nova 2 Dr. Coupe. green with white top. 6 cyl .• auto.
1972
Buq, red. 4-sDeed, radio. leatherette.
1
1971 Chevrolet Carry-AU, automatic. P. S., , v.a, 3 seats;
1971 Chevelle 55 2 dr. H.T., black. V-8, auto., P.S., tape player, AM-FM.
I
1971 Nova 2 dr. Coupe. light green, green vinyl top, 6 cyl., auto.
1971 V.W. Bug •. dark green, 4-~peed. radio, leathereHe.
1971 Buick Riviera 2 dr. H. T., bronze with vinyl top. Loaded with extr~s.
1970 El Camino Pickup; gold, auto., P.S., air.
1970 Plymouth Duster, 2 dr. Coupe, beige. 6 cyl., 3 speed.
1970 V.W. Bug, 4 speed. radio, yellow.
Lou Osborne
1970 Pontiac Le~ns. 2 dr. H. T., green, with vinyl top. v.a, P. 5, air.
1970 Maverick 2 dr. Sed., yellow with black vinyl top, 6 cyi .. auto.
1969 Firebird 2 dr. H. T., silver) 6 cyl., auto •• P. S.
SEARS
I
2- 1969 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr. Seds .• 1 white· 1 blue.
2- 1969 Chev. Sta. Wagons, 1 gold · l white.
1 Cataloo Merch1nt .
i969 T~ Bird, white with black vinyl top. Loaded wtth extras •
J22D E. M&lt;ltn .
P&lt;&gt;moroy
I
PH. 992-2178

LUIGI'S PIZZA
10~

'

OPEN AT 5 ~.M.

.-

DON·. WAnS V-W, INC.
RIVERSIDE AMC-JEIP
·Across from Airport-Upper River Rd.
· ·
PHONE 446-9800

Gllllpolls, Ohio

"'

�-·

$entinel Classifieds Get Results!
APPOINTMENT
Case No liOU
Ettl1t ol MirY In Mabrt HUct iOft

®

Otceued .

Not ice •• herebv g l'r'tn that
Fred W Cr'OW , Ill of Pomeroy ,
Ohio , hn been duly appo lnltd
AncUiarv Adf'11tnlstrator of the

Estate or Marv in M~"'re
Hudson , deceased, late of Lake

are

r~q ul red

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIIS
OF

QUALITY
-

l•mber 1913

1970 V W. 2 DOOR
Dark lreen finish. good t ires,
speed nns Save money now

Mann in g 0 Webster
P r o ~ ate J udge

otsa ld County

3tc

(101 I , 8,

'

$139S

vi nyl roof, rad10. heavy duty suspension

2~

9 II 121C

·:

With in four months
Dated th i s 19th da. v of Sep

clean lntenOt', radio, 4

clean Interior, beige ftntsh . rad •o &amp; .heater, r eal economy
&amp; a popu lar model

Transfers

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

.

Elenore Carroll Howell, dec.,
to Robert Howell Dalley,
Martha Carolyn Howell, Anna
Margaret Howell Blackwood,
Mf for Trans.
Martha Carolyn Howell,
Anna Margaret Howell Blackwood, Uoyd Blackwood to
Roberta Howell Dailey,
Howard Allen Dalley, Lots,
Middleport.
Howard A. Dailey, Roberta
Howell Dailey to Anna
Margaret Howell Blackwood,
Parcels, Middleport
Clara E. Howery, Extrx.,
Eddie Lou Howery, dec., to
Bennie Workman, Mont Vance,
Parcels, Scipio.
Beulah Blanche Smith to
Enuna Jean Dabo, Lot, Mld·
dleport.
Clell B. Wood, Dora B. Wood
to Wilbur H Leifheit, Julia
Leifheit, 7 06 A., Sutton.
Forrest A. Ward( Eula I.
Ward to Joseph B. Hoskins,
Theda Hoskins, 4.8~ A., Olive.
Harry Yjll'brough to Andrew
D. Decoy, 14.90 A., Rutland.
Joseph F1elds, Pauline V.
Fields to James N. Smith,
Constance C. Smith.
Raymond H. Landers,
Ellennora J. Landers to
Wlliiarn Baumgardner, Shelda
Baumgardner, lot, Pomeroy.
Paul Simon, Gmdo J.
Girolmm, Allie Simon, Vidia
Girolami, to Rhonda Kay
Barnhart, lot, Pomeroy.
Mane Leifheit, Edythe
Welch, Ruth YIJ!lllll, Wilbur
Young, Jaines A. Hazelton,
Vada Hazelton, Thebna Gibbs,
Joseph Gibbs, Harry E.
Hazelton, Flornell Hazelton,
Charles
Cremeans,
Jo
Cremeans to James F. Arnold,
lot, Pomeroy.
Homer C. Wlllllrd, Belva H.
Wlllllrd to David F. Reed,
Nancy L. Reed, 3.98 acres,
Bedford.
Leroy RUJchel, Frankie
Ra•l•ltoJact Carsey, Neacil
~• .22 a=, Pomeroy.
..... L. &amp;!We, ancy SUttle,
.lome! ... Salllr, Greta M.
lit

v. Jmes,

R«w~

_211

Le!loaoo..
Din. c_ lucil!r'. doc_, aka
Illllil!l c. Dbcber, dee to
Poarl JordE Fiscller, rert. fvr
trans., Pomeroy.
Mildred ){_ Arnold, Robert
Arnold to Fred W. Crow ill,
Earl F Ingels, Jr , lot,
Pomeroy.
Worley Howell, dec., to
Elenore Carroll Howell,
Robe rta Howell Dailey,
Martha Carolyn Howell, Anna
11\argaret Howell Blackwood,
aflld. fur trans., Middleport.

LOS T In small paper box

Sli ver Dollar

reasons

1922

Sen t •me11ta l

Reward

3381 or 992 3A53

Call 99.2

9 18 6tp

Wanted To Buy
USE D coal stoker Call247 -2623

9

23

~tc

NO 1 Copper , 60c , rad1ators
JOe , brass 20c , batter leJ 90c.
clean , dry , Ginseng roots , S60
lb , yellow root S4 so, May
apple 60c M A Hall, Reeds
ville Phone 378 6249
9 23 tfc
TOPPER for tong Wide bed
pickup Moore , 992 ~675

9·23 3tp

CORNER: cupboards, well
cupboards, chests, old guns ,
any condition Also blue
decorated stoneware Write
P 0 Box 44, Martinsburg ,
Ohio, -43935 or call 1 .AU 4440
after 7 p m
8 8·90tt

-------------WANTED
tor
auction ,
household g9ods Tools, most
anyth ing of value Will buy or
sell on commission Will haul
, Call 99 2 3354 or 992 2792
Hayman's
7 2S tfc

--------- --...--OLD furnltuu, oak tables,

clocks, 1ce boxes , brns beds,
d i shes
or
complete
househOlds Write M
0
M H1er, Rt 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
call 992 6271
5 13 ttc

Pets For Sale
PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles ,
1 loy male and 1 female
Phone 992 5U3
7 15 tfc

For Sale
telev1S1on
Works 1n
be seen at
Pomeroy
9·20 6tc

PU B(IC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Cue No. 21019
Estate ol Wtlllam M Harden,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that
Dorothy E Harden of R 0 1,
Racme. Oh10 , has been duly
appointed Administr1tnx of the
Estate of W1Jtlam M Harden ,
deceased, late of R o 1.
Racine, Meigs County , Oh10
Credi tors are required to file
the ir claJms with sa1d fiduc iary
wlthln four months
Dated th 1S Sth ~ay of Sep
tember 1973
Mann•ng D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate Oivts1on
(91 10, 17, 24. ltc

lin,

'

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. James Ingram
Sr., of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs
Dwight Swepston of Columbus
YISIUld With Ralph Lee and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lee and
family during the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
of Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
Pickens and family of
Syracuoe spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Alllln Taylor.
Mrs. Doris Wilson and children
of Columbus vis1Uld at the
'.raylor home recently.
Mary Circle spent two weeks
visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Wilham Perry and famlly in
Hollon, Ohio and Mr . and Mra.
~lvin Circle and family m
Columb111. The Circle family
b\'Ought her home on Saturday
llld spent the weekend here.
Mr. and Mrs. Jamu Circle of
!lew Haven, W. Va., were at
tile Circle home on Sunday.
ThaN! calllng at the hollle of
Mrt. Delli llrlnlcer recently
were William and Cathy
Carleton, Dlljpl Shults,
Raclne: Myrtle Walkei', RD
&amp;cine: Mary Circle an~
ll!eryl l..eann Jcn.i, local.
There were 27 ~nt for
~dly Scjlool on Sapte~bel",.

I

GRI LL COOK -

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

PUILIC NOTICE

and Wlilnss.
Blue &amp; Grey

Apply ot

Restaurant , Pomero y

- --- -- -

9 23 3tc

DEADLINES
Day Befor e PubliCat ion
Mond&amp;y Deadline 9 a m
Can ce llat1on Correct1ons
Immed iate
Will be accepted until 9 am for OFFICE GIRL opening
In
loca
l
business
Day of Publication
KnoV~~Iedge of
booltkeeplng
REGULATIONS
helpful , but not essential
'(he Publ isher reserves the
Typing , shorthand helpful ,
ng hl lo edit or relec t any ads
but
not requ1red
Paid
deemed
obtectlonel
The
vacation and other fringe
publ isher w1ll not be respons1bt e
benefits
Interv ie ws
lor more than one 1ncorrect
arranged
Wr1te
P 0 Box
msertlon
406, Pomeroy, 0
RATES
9 23 3tc
For Want Ad Service
S cents per Word one msert lon
LADY to tlve In or stay n1ghts
Mln1mum Ctlarge 75c
with another lsdy, ltght
12 cents p~r word three
housekeeping Call949-2532 or
consecutive Insertions
wr1te Bok 37, Racine, Ohio
18 cents per word stx con .
45771
secutlve lnsert1ons
9 19 6tc
25 Per Cent 01scount on paid
&amp;ds end ad1. pa id w•thln 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
A LOCAL company has lm
&amp; OBITUARY•
med1ate openings for the
St 5Q for 50 word mln•mum
followmg pos itions
Each addtt1ona1 word 2c
1
Accounting Clerk BLIND ADS
Knowledge and experien ce 1n
Add•tlonal 25c Charge per
cost accounllng or payroll
Ad\lertlsemtnl
essent1a1 Openmgs on th e
OFFICE HOURS
following shifts, B a m till 4
8 30 a m to S 00 p m Dady
p m , 4 p m till 12 m1dn1ght,
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
1201ttl1Bam
Saturday
2 Office secre-taries - Duties
tnclude typing , d1ctation.
filing Open ing on same shifts
listed above
J Personnel ASSI$tant To G1ve Away
Responsible for recruiting
USED coal furnace, free for
and screenmg of employees
removal. Phone 992 2444
Destre
mter\lfew1n0
or
Georoe Hackett
coun sellng e~tpenence.
9 23 Jtp
Excellent salaries and fr!nge
benefits Send brief resume of
work h1storY and educat1on
PORCH Sale, Sept 26, 27, _2 8,
Send all repl1es to Box 729 S 10
and 29 63 Rutland Street
care of The Dati '( Sentinel,
behind Gulf Station In Mtd
Pomeroy, Oh10
dleport
9 2 tfc
9 23 3tc

sPM

"

NOTICE

CENTRAL DIVISION CON
SOLIDATION CDAL COM

SWEEPER Repa1rs . Parts ,
Supplies Discount prices on
General merchandise thru
our catalog department
Phone
367 7736 .
Dav 1s
Vacuum Cleaner Store, 10
am
5 p m Addison, Ohio
UNDER new management the
Chester Fabric Shop across
from Chester grade school
We have sales on polyester
double knll - Jersey, sport
cord, drapery material,
others, zipper and thread,
other notions {We tto sewing )
Hours (10 am t ill 5 p m ) 6
days a week Mr and Mrs
Hobart Newell ,

9·23·31p

FOAM to fill your old couch and
chaJr cushions Standard size,
only
$9 95
Pomeroy
Recovery , 622 E Matn Street

EMPLOYER

992 755&lt;

for Sale

Ph~n 2114

UPHOl., STER your own tur .
n1tur&amp; We have all the sup
pll&amp;s
yo u
w i ll
r1eed
Upholstery Flbrlcs. a very
large selection of nylons .
ve lvets, Herculon. viny ls - In
cotton pr ints, also remnants
Foam for c ush ions and
padding eurt1p , dtnlms .
cambric, foam glue , zippers .
springs and clips, ch ipboards.
legs, sewmg thread , dacron.
ta cks webblnv . well cord .
cotton , SWI\IE'I bases, and all
other supplieS you will need
New furniture at low , low
pr~ces
Pomeroy Recovery ,
8 ]1 lOtc

BRU SH HOG S, .. 5 ft , phOne
992 S858

7-15 ti C

CLOSE OUT on New Zig Zag
Sewing machines For sewing
stretch fabrics, buttonholes,
fan cy des 1ons , etc Pa int
slightly blemtshed Choice of
carrvmg c as e or sewing
stand $49 BO cash or terms
a\lallabte Phone 992 2984
9 2~ 6tc
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model Complete w ith all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new
Will sell tor '537 25 cash or
terms available Phone 992

2984

9 23 6tc

L!V.A beans

Phone 949 280]
9 21 4tC

STOCK Z 28 Cam, Crane SS 330
Cam Deepened oil pan and
pump to match , balanced
Harmon1c
Balancor.
Balanced set of Recon
d1t1oned rods and p1stons,
duel mlet, Holly 780 C F M
Can call 992 7295 for In
formation

9 21 3tc

Phone 992

1972 HONDA Slll5. excellenl
cond1tlon Only S395, re ady tor
trail and hunting seasons
Coolvil le U7 6214

9 2112tp

9 23 3tp

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Mond•'f' , 0~1ob4r l, 1973, 1t
l O 00 o'clock A M for the s.ale of
th ' L ou tw Brun rul e-state.
S1tuetect at 160 - 7th A~enue 1n
the Vll ltge of Middleport. Ohio
ThiS II • n i ce two stor.,
res, 1dence In en excelle-nt

locat iOn Living room , dlnong

room , kitchen and enclosed
porch
down1ta l rs ,
three
bedrooms and bath upsta irs
Wall to wall carpeting dOwn
stairs Central gas heating ,
basement , detached garage
be seen by appointment
Ca t M !ldred lhle, tete phone 949
4153 The aale Is sub(ect to

M•r

Yn

9 23 6tc EXCELSIOR Solt Worko, E

2BEoROOMniOhue home

ror
rent by the month or by the
week
Everything's fur ·
nlshed Call 7A2 5980.
9-18 6tc

10" 011n

END

800 Per Ton

$

TRAILER- ..ts;;ac~l:-adults

I

BUN Dl£0
·u.00

~

~liDS

Per "on

DELIVERED

TO

OHIO

co

1

approval by the Meigl County
On Old Rt. 33
Common Pleas Courl, Probate
Phone ...,_
77 £ 2689
D •v l sl on
The
Guardian
reserves the nght to relect any
Pomeroy, Ohio
or all bids
,____ _ _.,:_;_=:.._--'

MJ~:;:,!~ 1~i

-----------Call 99z.sm
9 2J.3tc
------------9· 18·tfc

MOBILE nome,

.xiW
1
1

PALLET

only Call 992 3S25

For Rent or Sale

Louise Bryon
19 1 24. 2s, 26, 27, 21, Sic
s ROOMS and both, ReCine
area Call Sam Yates, 992 7139
before noon .
9 21 61C

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

•dutta only

Main St, Pomeroy All klnd1
of salt water pellets , water
nuggets, block salt and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 992

3891

6·s.IIC

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

CLU B

Ohio

Restaurant.

Rac ine ,

Sale by the tlro t ot
October Phone 949 437•
9 19 6tp

1970 MOBILE Home, 12 X ...

U,S89 Phond

77J.S~29

9 " 12tp
NI CE
SLEEPtNG
room
pr i vati entnnct , privati
bath ar un havt kitchen No WtLKtN$0N sma)len g l ne aal.s
one tiM In the up1ta tr1
and aendce, 820 3rd Stret,
Gtl'\fltmtn plta\t Corntr' of
Mlddltporl Llwn mower, ond
lincoln end Sttond Ave
chain IIW rtp.tlr Fret p ck up
M tddltport Phont 992 s.soi
ond dtllvtry Phont 992·3CW2.
9 21 31C
AIIO 6rlggl •nd Stratton and
Ttcumtth parts
H1:10tc
MOBILE home spa ce Beer ' •
,Market, Svnc~o~n .
..,),:._._
a 26 tf c 1913 1"10 MOBIL! honu ,
Wlllher ar,d dryer 1 dllh •
wuhtr, ste lniHs stttl t lnk,
varbage diiPOUI, eya lt'¥11
ovtn, rtnge, dacron .I)OlyHfer
ca rpet, lar;t lot Phone '4'1·

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

__________

--------------1.

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

Mobile Homes fcJr S.

,.-

A1r Condihoners
Awmngs
Underpinning

Complete

'"obll e home

servlct -

plus

gigantic:

display of mobile homes
alwa ys available at

MILLER
' MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wuhlngton Blvd
&lt;23·7521
BELPRE, 0.
C:ASH Plld for all mlk" an~
moatlt of mobile homu

Phont aroo coclt

tSll
• \3.ftc
I&lt; X 6$ TRAILER, 2 bedroom ,
vtry good conditio Phon• 773
5105.
...,.,
I 22·1tC
•~&lt;·~23

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

__ ___________

II Must

Be Righi
or we will

II Right.

All work guaranteed

,9921101

~~

Roofing,
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Com plete
Home
Remodeling .

Built to Your•Specs
Delivered to Job Silt

.

All WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

I

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

For Free Estimate

MATERIALS CO.
Mason, W. V1.
773·SSS4

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Phone 992-2550

O'DELL WHEEL Allgn(llenl

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Ph. 742-6271

located at Crossroads , Rt •124,
now back to work Complete
front end service, tune up and
brake
service
Wheels
ba la nced electronically All
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
2 18 tfc

9 1 tfc

tiME to check that oil or gas
furnace for wmter
D~rty
furna ces cost fuel and could
cost a life Call P &amp; ~ Home
Mamtenance 992 3509, 215 N
Second , M 1ddfeport

Moddleport, 0 .

FURROOFING,
CLEANING
NACE
AND REPAIR AND
1
PLUMBING.

MJOD ~USSES

CONSTRUCTION

H Rawlings SOns

BIHidlnlj

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

PRICE

30 Daoly, 8·12 Sat.

S4

I , HIC q

JOHN TUCKER
Rt 4, Pomeroy, 0
992·3954 or 992-7349

•5.55
On Most American Cars
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

RON SHEPARD , Floor, Wall

Remodeling , Ceram1c tile
baths Box 28D , Rutland 7.4'2

3664

6 26

8·23 30tc

ttc

WILL TRIM or c ut trees and
HARRISON 'S TV serv1ce and
shr ubbery, also, clean out
serv ice calls Phone 992 2522
basements, attics, and etc
2 9 ttc Call 949 3221 or 742 444 1

MOBILE home repelr , Elec DEAD 51 OCK - Will remnv~
trlcal plumbing and heat1ng
at a reasonable ch arqe Call
Phone 992 5858
245 5514
7 15 lfc
8 23 9otc

--------------AUTOMOBILE ins urance been

•

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
I·

0pen8TII5
Monday thru Salurday
606 E. Matn, Pomeroy, 0.

:1013.

ll·tf

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

8L.ACK luftltr recl lnJn9 ~l l r ,

llkt ntw . Phont ••:1·21'6.

' " 61p

6$,ooo·- iru-c-;c';;j;ii;,-;- Gai

service, all makes 992·2284
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales •nO
Service We Sharpen Scissors

, 912tfc

HOUSE 3 years old , 3
bedroom , wall to wall car
petmg , refrt~erator and stove
Included, llvmg r oom , kif ·
chen, ut1l1ty room, bath ,
outstde
utility
storage,
Middleport Phone 992 5064
affer6pm
9 21 12tp

3:29·1fc

-FOR
------------FREE n11matn on
33 ACRES
About 10 lor cultovatlon, lhe
balance pasture, Home has

TV R, 3 bedrooms Bath
New kotchen Some paneling
&amp; tile
Porches . Cellar
$15,000 00
POMEROY
W Maon Sf Large home with
rtver frontage 6 bedrooms
with walk-m closets, 4112

balhs Utility R Dlnmg R
TV room L R 3\x\5 with
fireplace Hardwood lloors
Full basement. Hot water
heat 2 car garage w1th work

shop Ask1ng $37,000 00
96 ACRES
Route 325 Land lays nice.
House

FURNISHED HOME
2 bedrooms, bath, gas furnace,
mce kitchen Large lront and
side porch Want 515,000 00
NEW LISTING
Bl Level 2 bedroom home with
bath, gas forced air lurnace
Ni ce shade trees on one acre

plus. All ulllllles.
HOME AND RENTAL
On one acre All utilities . House
has 9 rooms, bath. gaJ heat
Town location for only
"7,500 00
. 38ACRE FARM
Large gambrel root barn with
shed ahd concrete floor. 3 bay
Implement shed and others 7
room home, with balh on
black lop road Only $16,500 00
LOTS
2 tots IOOxiOO with T P water
available
COUNTRY HOME
2 bedrooms 1 bath,

Line Is buned for new water

system ASKING $17,500 00
BELOW MIDDLEPORT
Just off Rt 7, 3 bedrooms,
bath , new F A furnace
Utility room Recreallon
room New cellar &amp; storage
room Porches You must

see this 58.500 00
GOOD BUSINESS
Showing a nice profit Good
clean stock
Excellent
loca tion A great future for
someone Selling due to Ill
health
YOUR HOME CAN BE A
TAX SAVER WHEN YOU
OWN OR WHEN YOU SELL
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992·22S9
It no answer 992-2568

5501

9 19 9tc
196~ I TON Chtvroltl wllh
service bod 5500 Ph 7•2
SSOI
' 1991C

---"'1""----v-----..

Sales Representative V
Johnson and Son, Inc

V.

6 22·1fC

READY MIX
CONCRETE
dellvtred rtght to your

prolect Fast and easy Fret
estimates Phone 992 3284

Goegleln Reody .Mix Co ,
Mlddleporl, Ohio
6·30.tfc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Ph 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.

REASONABLE rates

~ Owner and Operator

s 12 tfc

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

•·30 - I Love Lucy 6, Green Acres 3, Jeopardy 4, Ha zel 8;
Gilligan's Island 13; Bonanza 15

WIN AT BRIDGE

Blackwood the Jacoby way-

Phone 9~9 ·3821

safety "

To Elizabeth Taylor and Rlchllrd Burton "Where there's
marriage without love, th&lt;re will be love without marriage."
To John Ehrhchman · "We must all hang together, or
assuredly we shall ali hang SCil&amp;ralely."
Posthumous note to the late Chilean President Sa lvador
Allende · "No nal1on was ever ruined by lrade "
To lhc Washington Post and New York T1mes " Utile
strokes fell great oaks,"
To teievisJOn adverlisu\g agencies · "Remember that time 1s

money ."
To Maurice Stans, John Mitchell and Robert Vesco · "Three
may keep a secret, if two of them are dead."
To Howard Cosell. "None but the well-bred man knows how
to confess a fault, or acknowledge himself In an error."
To Aristotle and Jacquelme Onass1s "A little house well
fiiied, a little f1eld well tilled, a little Wife well w11led, are grea t
riches "

To Sen. J. William Fulbright: "There never was a good war,
nor a bad peace."
To John B Connally: "Never ask, never refuse, nor ever
resign an office."
To all fans of Johnny Carson: "He that nseth late must trot
ail day "
To Sen. Teddy Kennedy : "Don't throw stones at your neighbors, if your own wmdows are glass." ' •
To both management and labor at the Philip Sporn plant m
New Haven, the General T,elephone Co. m Pomeroy, the Stauffer
Chemical Plant near Pl . Pleasant, the Gallipolis C1ty School
system, and the Me1gs No I and 2 mines at Cheshire· "When
men are employed, they are best contented "
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20, 33 ; Bonanra 3, Merv Griffin ~. IV!dy
Grlffolh 8; I Dream of Jean nle \3, Moss ton Impossible 6

5 30 -

Beverly Hillbillies 8, Elec Co 33, Gomer Pyle 13.
Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Tra ils West 15
5 55 - Earl Nlght~ngale 15
6 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8. 10. 15, ABC News 13 , Sesame Sfreet 20,
Sporlscope 33
6. 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6 , CBS News 8, 10.
Hog~n·s Heroes 13 , Human Dimension 33.
7 00 - What's My Line 8, Elec Co. 20, Beat The Clock 4, News
10 , Lee Trevino's Golf 15, Truth or Consequences 3, 6,
Dusty's Trail 13 , Env1ronment Today &amp; Tomorrow JJ

7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6, RFD 20, Cancer Lofe or Death 33.

Beat The Clock 13, Charles Blair's Better World 15; New
Price Is Right 8, 10 , New Datong Game 3. World of Survlval4
8 00 - Maude 8, 10. Even ing af Pops 33 , Chase 3, 4, 15. Tem·
peratures Ros1ng 6, 13, Oh1o This Week 20, Movie "Smil e
When You Say I Do" 6, 13
9 00 - Mov10 "Police Story" 3, 4, 15; Portland Junior Symphony
20. 33 9 30 - Movie "She Cned Murder" 8, 10.
10 00 - Marcus Welby, MD 6, 13 , News 20, Black Dragon
Residence 33
11 OO - News3,4, 8, 13, 15,10,6
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Miss World· USA F~nals 6, 13,
Movies " Torpedo Run" 8; "The Marnage Go Round" 10
1·00 - News 13 . Your Health 4
130 - News4

5 1 lie

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work , aeptlc
tanks Installed, dump trucks
end to boys for hire , will haul

fill dirt. lop soli. llmtstono
and gravel , Call Bob or Rogtr
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089 ;

night phone 992 3S25 or 992·
S232
2 1\.lfc

OPEN Roger Hysell'S
Garage near Crossroads on
Sf Rl 124 , all mechlnlcll
work Including automatic
transmIssions
Mond$y
Fr iday, 8 30 a m till 5 p m
Slturday - 8 30 to 12 noon
Unless by appt Phone 992

5682 or 992 7121.

9 16·301c

--=----------ELNA and While Sowing

Ma(hlnes
Service on all
maku Reasonable r•te1
The Sewing Ctnttr1 Mid ·
dleporl , Ohio

11 ·16·1fc

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

~9PTOMETRIST

I

BlgCopoc ly
Maytot
A llfDm I tiCS

2 IPttQ optrti/On
O'lolct of wattt
t'lrnpa ,
Auto
wettr
ltv•

control .

~

Us.

I TANCCl

or

Lint

Power

t

-------------7 ROOM
With bllh In ,
Rutltnd , air condltlonod.

~tat

No htt opoto ,

no

Ovlrdr,tng .

Fino Mooh Llnl
Filter
Wt htclollteln

hOUit

Clrptttd, 011 turnac•, dlth ·
w•sher, doubla oven, rlr,gt,

Mtylot
Hila of Hoot
Dryer&amp;

S rround c:lolht•
with oentlt, even

Brodbury , Coli 992·1363 ott or
f.5 .iGtc

, MAYUO

RUTlAND FURNITURE ~~~~~r~

doublt gort~t. ltrlt corporJ,
4 teres cft1rtd end ftnetd ,
amall
bern
anct other
bulldlnu. Phone 61&lt; ·7&lt;2-613~
I 30·t1C , 741-4211

Arnold Grill.
w.._:..,:-_:.;___;..::_;:;:.::...;:;,::_::::_..,.
__•Rutl1nd

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

v

l:ll!a r Helen ·
Please tell the crippled lady whose pastor lrowns on her
pants suits in church lhat he's probably frown on .Jesus If He
WMiked through Ute doors In his long hair, flowing robes, 6nd
beprd YllU're rlghl, she should change churches , - TRUE
CHRISTIAN

Hy llt·lt•n Uolld

••

&lt;l!Jr,OIM 1C' r ,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Acaoss

4. Glacial

rld&amp;e
5. Craving
6. Give the
cold
ahoulder
to
1, Holy man
t. Mixolo-

1. Finery;

rleh
raiment
I. Slant
ll.J!qulllbrlum
lZ. Oflhlp1
11. SorOJan
novel,
with

pl'a

ABHOR1
l . V'h

I

ph rae
(2 wd1 )
•- CUahion
11. District of
Enaland
14. Wrlnkllna
11. Exptriment
20. German
article
U . Written
letter
211. Barbara
- Scott

Ye&amp;terday's Answer
Zl. Likely
33. Ham it up
:14. Kodota or
34. Allude
Smyrna
36. Langulah
za. SWill
31, Work
canton
with
26. Denoting
hamo
certain
38. Monk's
tlrel
abode
Z7. Succor
(abbr )
31, Ship
39. Girl'I
32. French
name
40. Craze
painter

I

covered

II

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wotk it:

rooMANI
J I I I I

WHATiiMEl

AAl7

~ME

t:lO.

Now........,. the ciiClod~.ttero
to form tho IIUI'IIriM INWtr, u
aupttlM bylhe abo'tt cartoon.

\ I
. .

:=1::=:::Piilt::::..::::.~.~~~~~~~~:_::...~l ( I I I l )

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A is
u~ed for Ute three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
HFTLU
TUS

MX

IJ

LFTS

FEFLXInUQ

XJKL
FHWF

ZIWFHB -OTKH

JNU

czus

NZHH

AJCF

1

ETHFLX

(hnen to.onew)

J•mble" HONIY 001101 nun DIIMAY
S•1urd•f•

'

\ Antwert The flnh

cot~ld

lte t:ornd-"IIOttf''

Yeaterday'a Cryploqtaole: DO NOT SHOW 'YOUR
WOUNDED FINGER, FOR EVERYTHING WILL KNOCK UP
AGAINST IT.-BALTASAR GRACIAN
(0 1171 Klns rt~tut'ft 8Jnollcalt, Inc.)

NORTH tDt
Zl
+A 54
.A7S
t A64
+ AK32
EAST
WEST
+108763
+92
.109164
tl073
t952
+
1097
+J64
SOUTH
+KQJ
.KQJ
tKQJ8
+Q85
North.South vulnerable
Wetl North East S.olh
1+
Paos 4N.T • JIS9LINE ALLEY
Pass S+
PaiS 5N T
Pa" 6t
Pass 7N T

•n

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead- •10

Jim "Is it true that the
Eastern bridge establishment
didn't get around to usin&amp;
Blackwood unUI several ye•rs
after it had swept the Weat?"
Oswald: "I was an Eutemer then and we didn't take kindly to the Idea that someone
from Indiana would develop a
better convention than we had.
I am probably the first Euterner to start using It and I
know I am the first oldtlme
expert to admit the existence
ofEasley Blackwood and hi•
excellent convention "
Jim "Knowing you, I also
assume that you were the first
man to start modifying It "
Oswald "It may be so. The
lirat Blackwood modification
was to use lhe five -club response to show no aces or four
aces It seemed lhat anyone
could tell which holdlnl wu
bemg shown It also seemed
that when five clubs ahowed
four aces there was room lo
ask lor kings "
Jim. "Today's hand which I
made up lllustralel how lhil
works . Seuth checka lor acu
and linda that North hoidull
four He check• for klnl•· flnd1
North hu the miulnl one and
bid1 seven no-trump with 1ure·
ty oflucceu."
Oswald : " They mlfhtltt
there without thia modi ic~llon
but It wae a cinch wilh il.''

THE BORN LOSER

'&lt;q

I'M~ m

lET ME'
I&lt;HIXlRD
~AT...

I
'
l

'

I

~~~"~

Tho biddlnt hu been '
It
Wesl
North
!lou
loulh
It
Pill
1•
Dbl•
2.
2+
••
l
Vou ,Soulh,hold l
'
•Q I I I I .I .A I +A K J IT
Whot do you dO now!
A- lltlloor apadtl. You or•
dlor to lllakt.
TOD.4 Y'I QV !tiT ION
Wm1nd Norlh pau , ~UI bid a
llvt htorta. Who I do you du nu\'1 !
.4oaiOtrlaiiiOirtW
'I

1
1
r

??- wAA'I' DO

0

I.

•••tNCI

'filt..-11

I

...

INIW IP ~P ·A IINTI"IIflllll AIIN ~

•t•·

I

ALLEY OOP

',l't. ABNER

Ptr'MI· ,rtlt

6 p m.

I ·H

Dear TOB ·
"The..
If parents don 'l act "adult," bow can they expect much of the
(2 wda.)
k1ds ? For Pete's sake, start talking again! Life's too short f:JI' II. Czech
feudmg . - H
river
1&amp;.Bollow
+++
n.Bul(Lat )
Dear Helen
Come
What do you do about a noisy mother-in~aw• Not only noiay 11. DOW!
but nosey. AI the top of her voice, she asks the most intimate 1e. Chemical
questiOns - about our finances, sex life, (you can't believe the
oulllx
details she wants'), plall$ for a family; every little thing we do, 2Z. Inlet of
Ute ~eo
she has lo know about. And bosa about,
ZI.Some
We go over to their place about twice a week and I'm worn
pUoll
out from third degrees. Once I told her this was none of her U . Comico
(2 wda)
busmess, and she cried, just as noisily. My husband saya it's his
U
.
Inftexible
mother's way of being friendly, and she still thinks of us as just
U.!Uumi·
little kids to watch over.
nated
We're almost 20 and have been married a year. Any 30. Kind of
of mill
solution' - BOSSED, BOTHERED AND BURNED ABOUT IT
31, Cover
32. Debuaay',
Dear B and BAI:
"La-"
Yes: your husband.
31. Gyrate
H he can't qu1et hia mother, then he should arrange to move 1'. Arrived
out of earshot . When you'refar enough away so that viaits can be 31. Rldicullna
(3 wdo )
41. Sheepbke
42. Mountain
opur
Unocramble theH four Jumbl01,
43.
Conaumer
one letter to each equare, to
cru1ader
form four ordlnarJ wordo.
.C. Inhibit
DOWN
1. Plant
lYERME
inaect
Z. Exche
3. Frost·

Fin Agitator.

In

hrnllc;l, llhc Ml\ V stop t'lliiSiderlng you "jill! little \Ids" &lt;Al
l•:»~tyou'll stop hc•rlog•boulit so often. J- H

By 01wald &amp; Jameo Jacoby

Racine, Ohio
Crlff Bradford

F liter

for ule, tocettd

••• •.......:-: :· ·&gt;Y. .•.&lt;- , ... " ...

Benjamin Franklin , perhaps the nenresl Uunv. lo • complete ~
nmn ever produced by Anwrlca and our only rival to lh&lt;· In· ~
&lt;'Omparable IA'Oilllrdo Da Vim!. did a ~real deal of writing In lu~
flic Slow ul the Parenti ...
lime, and I hllvc jusl &lt;·ome nt'I'Oiill some of his memorable ut.
tcrances, but in this case, lhey were addressed lQ our c~n- Do:nr Helen ·
Wt• hud word' wllh our neighbors a year ago an(! hllven•t
tcmporary public fib'Uretl .
'
spoke
to them since They still burn trash in their back yard and
Some examples .
To Murtha Mitchell· "Keep your eyt'l! wide open before OIC ashes get into our fish pond, plu• several other irritating
things.
marriage, half shut afterward "
l'he problem is that their children treat our children like d1rt.
To IUchm d M. N1xon and John Dean Ill "You and I were
Defore
the falhng-&lt;.~ut, we were all pretty good friends, but now
long friends ; you arc now my enemy and lam yours ."
To Joe Namnlh · "Eat no\ to dullness, nor drmk to the neighbor kids make life miserable for my Tommy and
Janice. Tllcre's always some kind of fight going and since the
eleva lion."
To L Patrick Gray · "They that can g1Ve up essential liberty aduitll don't talk, we can't setUe lt
What wllllld you do' - TIRED OF BRATS
to obtain a little temporary •afely deserve neither liberty nor

TUESDAY, Sept. 25, t?73
6 00 Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6 15 - Concern &amp; Comment 10
6 20 - Form Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bibl e Answers 8. Faith For Toda v
13 , News 6
'
6 45 - Corncob Report 3, Farmllme 10
7 OOR - Today 3, ~. IS, CBS News 8. 10. Fllntstones 13, Romper
oom 6.
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwlnklel3, New Zoo Revue6.
8 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33
Timmy and Lassie 6
'
8 30-HuckandYogi6;DickVanDyke1J
8 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon &lt;; Friendly Junction 10, AM 3, Phil
Donahue IS; Brody Bunch 6; Abbott and Cosello 8, Movie
"The Young Mr. Pill" 13.
9· 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, Elec Co. 33, Wild, Wold Wesl 6
Secret Storm 8.
'
9 S5 - Chuck White RePOrts 10.
10· 00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS, Joker' s Wild 8, 10
10 30 - Bailie 3, 4, 15, $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10, Mike Douglass 6
11 · 00 - GambitS, 10, Password 13, Wizard of Odds 3, 4, 15
11 . 30- Hollywood Squares 3. 4, 15, Love of Life 8, 10; Brady
Bunch 13; Bowling 6.
11: SS - CBS News 81 Don Imel's World 10
12· 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50· 50 Club 4; Password 6 ,
News 10, B, 13
12· JO - 3 W's 3, 151 Split Second 6, Search For Tomorrow 8, 10
12: SS - News 3, 15.
1. 00- News 3, All My Children 6, t3, Not For Women Only IS ,
Concentration 8, What's My Line 10.
,
1: 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, IS ; The World Turns 8, 10. Let's Make
A Deal 6, 13
·
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, IS ; Newlywed Game 6. 13:
Guiding Light 8, 10
2:30 - Edge of Nlghl8, 10, Girl In My Life 6, 13; Doctors 3, 4, 15.
3:00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13 , Proce Is
Right 8, 10; Erica 20
3· 15 - Theanle 20
3· 30 - Return to Peyton Placa 3, 15, One Lole to LlveiJ ; Match
Game '73 8; Secret Storm 10. Makln&lt;J Th1ngs Grow 33 , Phol
Donahue 4, Fllntslones 6; Book Beu. 20
•:00- Mr. Cartoon 3, Love, American Style 13. Somerset \5,
Sesame St 33, 10, Speed Racer 6, I Love Lucy 8, Movoe "The
Trap 11 10

. . ...

Helen Help

MONDAY, SEPT. 24, lf7l

BY PAUL CRABTREE

,.l.l
:\:;)

'

Complete Service

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.! - EAST COURT ~T., ·

W
HAVE OVER
~
PROP RT IES TO OFFER
YOU FOR SALE , SOME
WE'LL TRADE .

HOUSE

6 c ~lln ·
dtr, 1t1nd1rd trtnsm lnlon .
needs rep1lr $700 Ph 1•2

Syracuse, Ohio Carl Jacob

Dining room
Porches
Several small buildings

furna ce,

enclosed porch, garage on
large lot on Route 33. Need
\16,000.00.
OVER3 ACRES
• bedrooms, bath, laundry
room~ clllrport, garage and
.-vera! buildings 515,000 00.
TR AILER LOCATION
IV!d &amp; room house. with garage
on I ocr• MIJy trade lor mobile
homt

aluminum siding
Storm
Doors and Windows, Car ports, Marquees and Railing,
Phone
Charles
Lisle,

has 3 bedrooms

--------------1910 FORD Movtrlck

and small , BackhMS and
loaders on track and tires.
Dump truck - Lo ·bov ser.
vice . Septic tanks installed
George {Bill&gt; Pullins, phone

For

Heotor Albtrl Hill, 9&lt;9 2261.
9·11-61C
GR9CERY buotn111 tor lilt
8UIIdli"'O for •111 or IIIII
Phont77!.S6tl from 1•30 p.m
to 10 p m for tppolntmtnt.
3·20 ttc

( ~·Sales
1

EXCAVATING Dozars, large

NEIGLERS FO R HOUSE992 2478 or 992 7&lt;02.
BUILDERS CALL GUY
M.lfc
NEI GL ER RACINE OHIO
7428
9
11 301p
6 151fc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
----- ---~----=-SEWAGE SYSTEMS
Real Estate Sale
CLEANED. REPAIRED
Real Estate For Sale
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHIO PH 662
2 BEDROOM house, 3 years old 1
3035
carpet1ng , big kitchen w ith
10·4·tfc
tots of ca bmets, 1h acre ot
ground, Ra c1 ne, Ohio Ca ll
SEWING MACHINES Repair
949 4998
cancelled,
Lost
vour
operator's l1cense Ca ll 992

Just Arrived 1 Only

apartments .

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

BUil ding. Pom•roy, Ohlo, unt&lt;l

Area 's Most
Reasonible Prices

9 23 &lt;tc

w~

Specialist
Wheel
Ahgnment

MODERN
SANITATION

Painting ASpecialty

923 tfc

unfurn ished

Wanted

Stop in and See Our
Floor Di~!a'l' .

SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVICE

Lmcoln Htll· Pomerov, 0.

JAND:0 RODM-fu',;;;i;h;d and , - - - - - - - - - ---.

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

~

Ph. 992-5271

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

9 11 tfc

FURNITURE

8 31 301c

8 21 lfc

3432

and

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK

Gene's
Body Shop

ONErowN I cornptcker ,$195 ,
two row mounted A c , $100 ,
three elevators
G
A NEW BRICK. 3 bedroom home
In Long Bot
Radekln, Rt 3, Albany, Oh10 ,
tom Call915·3310 after .4 p m
on 1 acre of land
Large
9 23 31p 698 88S2
modern kitchen, full car
9·23·3tc peted , located close to the
1 HOUSE. unfurnished, 4
high and elementary schools
bedrooms, nice yard, wall to 98 OLDSMOBILE, 4 dr hard
Call 992 7686
top
,
vinyl
top,
full
power
and
wall carpeting, 11r con
9 24 12tc
a~r conditioned, 7 way ad
d1tlon1ng 1 furnished apart
lustabte steering wheel , low
ment with 3 rooms . bath , 1
mileage Call 992 5510.
duplex Phone 992 2780 or 992

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS
Se ptember Spectals are
Lemon Fac 1al Bath , Bath &amp;
Sh ower Gel, Jr Facial Mask ,
Kover Kotes, Liquid RouQe,
Ha~r Sprays, Shampoos, "K"
Beauty Bars , Suntan Spray
and others Phone Helen Jane
Brown , 992 5113 Many thanks
to ou r new and regular
customer s

LARGE~T

Pomero~

992 3861

OFfiCE SUPPLIES

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
: 2~ Hour Service
All work guaranteed.

I

REDUCE safe and fast W1th
GoBese Tablets &amp; E Vap DOZER and ba ck hoe work ,
ponds and septic fanks, dlt
" water pills" at Nelson Drug
.
92~1tp
chlng service. top soli, fill
dirt.
l i mes tone ,
B&amp;K
Escavat lng Phone 992 5367 or

Suled b1dS will be rece1ved
&lt; 12 ttc
NEW UN ICO
by lht Trustees of Letart SUITABLE level lot for a
ROOMS
by
themek,
sfi
up
.
mobile
home
court
w
1
th
c
ity
UPRIGHT
FREEZER
TownShiP until 7 p m Oct 1,
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy
water Suitable tot for two to
12
cu.
ll
only 203.95
1973and opened at that t im e tor
7 12 ttc
three mobile homes Will also
the turn 1Shmg and erection of a
be considered Call 992 3429
tool house at Letart Cemetery
9 21 61c PRIVATE meeting room for l - ~lso 1 Refl()Ssessed Fuel 011
Building to bet 20 x 20ft metal
;~Is orgonlzallon. phone 992· Fur~ace, 11 5,ooo BTU .
and or aluminum . pamted . W1th
foundat1on
3·11-ffc
Heres your chance for a
For lurther Information
good btJy Used less than 1
contact Don R Hill, RO 2.
vEA
icefou7i=00tTi'andbBih
season
Ra cme, OhiO 45771
apartment located at l27
Llncolr') Hill Road , Pomeroy ,
Herbert L Sayre.
POMEROY
Ohio Gu heat, very low gas
Clerk
9. ~ Jaek w. Carsey, Mgr .
bill
Garagt underneath
RD 2,
Ail Phone 992~2111
Formerly the Weed apart
Rac1nt, Oh10 45171
ments Call Pomeroy , 99'2
(9 ) 10 11 2• , 3tc
3054. Tracy Whaley

NOTICE OF SALE
BldJ w ilt be rece ived at the
lt w oOIIUI of Bernard V F ull~ ,
Pomer&amp;:~y
Nation al
Bank

Electrical Appllonces · Auto
Aor Cond. Residential or
Commerc1a l

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

622 E Mam , 992 7554

Refrtgeralion • Plumbing •

Nalhan Boggs
Rodlalor Speclollst

For Rent
APARfMENTS

B·31 30tc

POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER

S•rvlc•

&amp; THINGS

1 Love Lun 6, Hmt 8,
5. 00 - I Oroam of Jeannie 1J1 Mt•ter Rogers 20. 33 . ANdy
Grlfll t~ I. Bonanz• 3; ""'rv Griffin~ . Million lmPQUible 6.
5 JO - Beverly Hlllbllllts 8; Elee. Co 3J, Gomer Pyle IJ,
Hodgepodge Lodge201 Trails West 15
5 IS - Earl Nightingale IS
6 00 - News 3, ~. 6, 8, 10. \S r ABC News 13, Sesame St 20,
Personality &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 J0 - ABC News 6, CBS News 8, 10; NBC News J 4 15
Hooan's Her001 13
' '
• 7 00- Beat the C l ock~ . Newa 10 , Circus IJ 1 What's My Line 8.
Elec. 20 , People, Places &amp; Thlnga 5 , Truth or Consequences
3,6, Bobby Bowsen 1S r How Do Your Children Grow' 33
7 JO - To Tell the Tr uth 6 . Beat the Clock \3 , Bobby Goldsboro
3, Hollywood Squo rea 4; Buck Owens 8, Erica 20 , Episode
Action 33 , Wacky World of Jonathon Winters lS r Municipal
Court tO
7:45 - Thean te 20
1:00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10. Lotaa Luck 3, 4, 15; Rookies 13 .
National Geoorophlc 6; Two Arctic Toles 20, 33
1: 30 - Olano 3, ~. 15
9:00 - Here's Luch s, 10; Pro Football 6, 13; Movie "The
Groundstor Conspiracy" 6, 13
9 30 - Dick Van Dyke 8, 10, Book Bea t 20, 33
tO 00 - MIJdlcal Center8,10, News20 , Paul Nuchlns 33
10•15 - The Silent Years 20
11 00 - News 3, ~. 8, 10, 15
11 30- Johnny Caroon 3, &lt;, 15, Movies "Bonnie and Clyde" 8,
" Jane Eyre" 10
12 00 - News 6, 13
12 30 - Movie "Three Faces West" 13
1. 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
2· 00 - News 4, 13

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

Healing . Air Cond

:,manest Heater &lt;..orf!.

PANY , lmmedtate openings
are avarlable rn the following 3
YEAR
old
Kelvinator
posttions
Maintenance
automatic washer, good
Foreman Cunderoroundl,
condit ion Call after 5 30 p m
Assistant Mine Foreman
992 2967
( underground), Section
9 21 3tc
Foreman , Surfa c e Mme
Foreman,
Reclamation
Foreman Persons applying AM FM stereo radio , 8 track
tape comb1natlon , 4 speaker
should hold valid foreman
sound system Balance S98 52,
certlf,catlon papers (Ohio) or
or use our budget terms Call
have sufficient expenence to
992 7085
apply for State exammat1on
9-23 6tc
Salary Commensurate w1th
Experience
E&gt;Ccellent
Benefits TO APPLY Write BENNETT breath ing machine
or
Phone
Personnel
Call Mane Roy, 9"'9 5821
Department,
Central
9 23 6tc
Dtvfsion, Consolidation Coal
Company , Cadiz, Ohio .43907 ONE 1967 Cub Cadet 102, 10 h p ,
Telephone 614 942 -4512 AN
42 In , mower excellent
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
cond1flon Phone 9.f9 2119

9 23 30tc

MOTOROLA colored
set 1.23 Inch console
good condit1on Can
238 Second Street,

Sentinel

BABYSITTER to sit In my
home Muat be 1t least 20
years of age Ca ll 992 3580
after s p m
9 23 lie

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

LOst

Dai~

PHONE 992-2156

@

Pomeroy Motor Co.
..

The

Racllato
Bulldozer Radlalor lo the

ON YOUR DIAL

SYRACUSE ~

"9S

Television Log
~ 38 1 iii9~~~7.~c."~'1 :; ~~~~~v 1 ::

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

~ From the laroest Trttrk or

PAPER CARRIERS
IN
POMEROY AND

S139S

1967 CHEVELLE

Property

WMP0/1390

WANTED

4 door, 6 c ylinder automatic transmission good t ires,

Meigs

rn~

Ron . An iiQuttv .

hOnle E dltll
Oh io

p AND J HOME

EXPERIENCED

. .. . ,.

The D11Uy li&lt;'ntllll'l , Mid&lt;lltporl•I'OOIHOy , 0 ., Se)l( . 24 lfl'l l

.

like a perm

BABY SITTIN G anv tlm t u'l

1

4 door. factory a1r. automati c transm ission , ~wer
steenng &amp; brakes. good wh•te wall tires, white lm sh,

to f li P

their cla ims w1th saud f tduc •ar y

(91

Business Services

Help Wanted

1970 DODGE POLARA

County . Indiana
Cr~llors

------~r------------------------------,·
We talk,to you

Empkwmllflt Wanted

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF '

..

LOWIUY II
~Oitii i'I\AN

TSLL
SNUFFY

1'fi'liAWMILL'S

HIRIN' e~TRV
HANPC

I'M AFEERED
PAW WOUlON 'T
BE INNERESTED,
LWKEV--·

HE;'S SElDOM GOT ENNV
E'lC.TRV HANDS

r
i
n
b
~

I.
e
e
d
~

.n
0

u
k

�-·

$entinel Classifieds Get Results!
APPOINTMENT
Case No liOU
Ettl1t ol MirY In Mabrt HUct iOft

®

Otceued .

Not ice •• herebv g l'r'tn that
Fred W Cr'OW , Ill of Pomeroy ,
Ohio , hn been duly appo lnltd
AncUiarv Adf'11tnlstrator of the

Estate or Marv in M~"'re
Hudson , deceased, late of Lake

are

r~q ul red

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIIS
OF

QUALITY
-

l•mber 1913

1970 V W. 2 DOOR
Dark lreen finish. good t ires,
speed nns Save money now

Mann in g 0 Webster
P r o ~ ate J udge

otsa ld County

3tc

(101 I , 8,

'

$139S

vi nyl roof, rad10. heavy duty suspension

2~

9 II 121C

·:

With in four months
Dated th i s 19th da. v of Sep

clean lntenOt', radio, 4

clean Interior, beige ftntsh . rad •o &amp; .heater, r eal economy
&amp; a popu lar model

Transfers

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

.

Elenore Carroll Howell, dec.,
to Robert Howell Dalley,
Martha Carolyn Howell, Anna
Margaret Howell Blackwood,
Mf for Trans.
Martha Carolyn Howell,
Anna Margaret Howell Blackwood, Uoyd Blackwood to
Roberta Howell Dailey,
Howard Allen Dalley, Lots,
Middleport.
Howard A. Dailey, Roberta
Howell Dailey to Anna
Margaret Howell Blackwood,
Parcels, Middleport
Clara E. Howery, Extrx.,
Eddie Lou Howery, dec., to
Bennie Workman, Mont Vance,
Parcels, Scipio.
Beulah Blanche Smith to
Enuna Jean Dabo, Lot, Mld·
dleport.
Clell B. Wood, Dora B. Wood
to Wilbur H Leifheit, Julia
Leifheit, 7 06 A., Sutton.
Forrest A. Ward( Eula I.
Ward to Joseph B. Hoskins,
Theda Hoskins, 4.8~ A., Olive.
Harry Yjll'brough to Andrew
D. Decoy, 14.90 A., Rutland.
Joseph F1elds, Pauline V.
Fields to James N. Smith,
Constance C. Smith.
Raymond H. Landers,
Ellennora J. Landers to
Wlliiarn Baumgardner, Shelda
Baumgardner, lot, Pomeroy.
Paul Simon, Gmdo J.
Girolmm, Allie Simon, Vidia
Girolami, to Rhonda Kay
Barnhart, lot, Pomeroy.
Mane Leifheit, Edythe
Welch, Ruth YIJ!lllll, Wilbur
Young, Jaines A. Hazelton,
Vada Hazelton, Thebna Gibbs,
Joseph Gibbs, Harry E.
Hazelton, Flornell Hazelton,
Charles
Cremeans,
Jo
Cremeans to James F. Arnold,
lot, Pomeroy.
Homer C. Wlllllrd, Belva H.
Wlllllrd to David F. Reed,
Nancy L. Reed, 3.98 acres,
Bedford.
Leroy RUJchel, Frankie
Ra•l•ltoJact Carsey, Neacil
~• .22 a=, Pomeroy.
..... L. &amp;!We, ancy SUttle,
.lome! ... Salllr, Greta M.
lit

v. Jmes,

R«w~

_211

Le!loaoo..
Din. c_ lucil!r'. doc_, aka
Illllil!l c. Dbcber, dee to
Poarl JordE Fiscller, rert. fvr
trans., Pomeroy.
Mildred ){_ Arnold, Robert
Arnold to Fred W. Crow ill,
Earl F Ingels, Jr , lot,
Pomeroy.
Worley Howell, dec., to
Elenore Carroll Howell,
Robe rta Howell Dailey,
Martha Carolyn Howell, Anna
11\argaret Howell Blackwood,
aflld. fur trans., Middleport.

LOS T In small paper box

Sli ver Dollar

reasons

1922

Sen t •me11ta l

Reward

3381 or 992 3A53

Call 99.2

9 18 6tp

Wanted To Buy
USE D coal stoker Call247 -2623

9

23

~tc

NO 1 Copper , 60c , rad1ators
JOe , brass 20c , batter leJ 90c.
clean , dry , Ginseng roots , S60
lb , yellow root S4 so, May
apple 60c M A Hall, Reeds
ville Phone 378 6249
9 23 tfc
TOPPER for tong Wide bed
pickup Moore , 992 ~675

9·23 3tp

CORNER: cupboards, well
cupboards, chests, old guns ,
any condition Also blue
decorated stoneware Write
P 0 Box 44, Martinsburg ,
Ohio, -43935 or call 1 .AU 4440
after 7 p m
8 8·90tt

-------------WANTED
tor
auction ,
household g9ods Tools, most
anyth ing of value Will buy or
sell on commission Will haul
, Call 99 2 3354 or 992 2792
Hayman's
7 2S tfc

--------- --...--OLD furnltuu, oak tables,

clocks, 1ce boxes , brns beds,
d i shes
or
complete
househOlds Write M
0
M H1er, Rt 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
call 992 6271
5 13 ttc

Pets For Sale
PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles ,
1 loy male and 1 female
Phone 992 5U3
7 15 tfc

For Sale
telev1S1on
Works 1n
be seen at
Pomeroy
9·20 6tc

PU B(IC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Cue No. 21019
Estate ol Wtlllam M Harden,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that
Dorothy E Harden of R 0 1,
Racme. Oh10 , has been duly
appointed Administr1tnx of the
Estate of W1Jtlam M Harden ,
deceased, late of R o 1.
Racine, Meigs County , Oh10
Credi tors are required to file
the ir claJms with sa1d fiduc iary
wlthln four months
Dated th 1S Sth ~ay of Sep
tember 1973
Mann•ng D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate Oivts1on
(91 10, 17, 24. ltc

lin,

'

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. James Ingram
Sr., of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs
Dwight Swepston of Columbus
YISIUld With Ralph Lee and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lee and
family during the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
of Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
Pickens and family of
Syracuoe spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Alllln Taylor.
Mrs. Doris Wilson and children
of Columbus vis1Uld at the
'.raylor home recently.
Mary Circle spent two weeks
visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Wilham Perry and famlly in
Hollon, Ohio and Mr . and Mra.
~lvin Circle and family m
Columb111. The Circle family
b\'Ought her home on Saturday
llld spent the weekend here.
Mr. and Mrs. Jamu Circle of
!lew Haven, W. Va., were at
tile Circle home on Sunday.
ThaN! calllng at the hollle of
Mrt. Delli llrlnlcer recently
were William and Cathy
Carleton, Dlljpl Shults,
Raclne: Myrtle Walkei', RD
&amp;cine: Mary Circle an~
ll!eryl l..eann Jcn.i, local.
There were 27 ~nt for
~dly Scjlool on Sapte~bel",.

I

GRI LL COOK -

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

PUILIC NOTICE

and Wlilnss.
Blue &amp; Grey

Apply ot

Restaurant , Pomero y

- --- -- -

9 23 3tc

DEADLINES
Day Befor e PubliCat ion
Mond&amp;y Deadline 9 a m
Can ce llat1on Correct1ons
Immed iate
Will be accepted until 9 am for OFFICE GIRL opening
In
loca
l
business
Day of Publication
KnoV~~Iedge of
booltkeeplng
REGULATIONS
helpful , but not essential
'(he Publ isher reserves the
Typing , shorthand helpful ,
ng hl lo edit or relec t any ads
but
not requ1red
Paid
deemed
obtectlonel
The
vacation and other fringe
publ isher w1ll not be respons1bt e
benefits
Interv ie ws
lor more than one 1ncorrect
arranged
Wr1te
P 0 Box
msertlon
406, Pomeroy, 0
RATES
9 23 3tc
For Want Ad Service
S cents per Word one msert lon
LADY to tlve In or stay n1ghts
Mln1mum Ctlarge 75c
with another lsdy, ltght
12 cents p~r word three
housekeeping Call949-2532 or
consecutive Insertions
wr1te Bok 37, Racine, Ohio
18 cents per word stx con .
45771
secutlve lnsert1ons
9 19 6tc
25 Per Cent 01scount on paid
&amp;ds end ad1. pa id w•thln 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
A LOCAL company has lm
&amp; OBITUARY•
med1ate openings for the
St 5Q for 50 word mln•mum
followmg pos itions
Each addtt1ona1 word 2c
1
Accounting Clerk BLIND ADS
Knowledge and experien ce 1n
Add•tlonal 25c Charge per
cost accounllng or payroll
Ad\lertlsemtnl
essent1a1 Openmgs on th e
OFFICE HOURS
following shifts, B a m till 4
8 30 a m to S 00 p m Dady
p m , 4 p m till 12 m1dn1ght,
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
1201ttl1Bam
Saturday
2 Office secre-taries - Duties
tnclude typing , d1ctation.
filing Open ing on same shifts
listed above
J Personnel ASSI$tant To G1ve Away
Responsible for recruiting
USED coal furnace, free for
and screenmg of employees
removal. Phone 992 2444
Destre
mter\lfew1n0
or
Georoe Hackett
coun sellng e~tpenence.
9 23 Jtp
Excellent salaries and fr!nge
benefits Send brief resume of
work h1storY and educat1on
PORCH Sale, Sept 26, 27, _2 8,
Send all repl1es to Box 729 S 10
and 29 63 Rutland Street
care of The Dati '( Sentinel,
behind Gulf Station In Mtd
Pomeroy, Oh10
dleport
9 2 tfc
9 23 3tc

sPM

"

NOTICE

CENTRAL DIVISION CON
SOLIDATION CDAL COM

SWEEPER Repa1rs . Parts ,
Supplies Discount prices on
General merchandise thru
our catalog department
Phone
367 7736 .
Dav 1s
Vacuum Cleaner Store, 10
am
5 p m Addison, Ohio
UNDER new management the
Chester Fabric Shop across
from Chester grade school
We have sales on polyester
double knll - Jersey, sport
cord, drapery material,
others, zipper and thread,
other notions {We tto sewing )
Hours (10 am t ill 5 p m ) 6
days a week Mr and Mrs
Hobart Newell ,

9·23·31p

FOAM to fill your old couch and
chaJr cushions Standard size,
only
$9 95
Pomeroy
Recovery , 622 E Matn Street

EMPLOYER

992 755&lt;

for Sale

Ph~n 2114

UPHOl., STER your own tur .
n1tur&amp; We have all the sup
pll&amp;s
yo u
w i ll
r1eed
Upholstery Flbrlcs. a very
large selection of nylons .
ve lvets, Herculon. viny ls - In
cotton pr ints, also remnants
Foam for c ush ions and
padding eurt1p , dtnlms .
cambric, foam glue , zippers .
springs and clips, ch ipboards.
legs, sewmg thread , dacron.
ta cks webblnv . well cord .
cotton , SWI\IE'I bases, and all
other supplieS you will need
New furniture at low , low
pr~ces
Pomeroy Recovery ,
8 ]1 lOtc

BRU SH HOG S, .. 5 ft , phOne
992 S858

7-15 ti C

CLOSE OUT on New Zig Zag
Sewing machines For sewing
stretch fabrics, buttonholes,
fan cy des 1ons , etc Pa int
slightly blemtshed Choice of
carrvmg c as e or sewing
stand $49 BO cash or terms
a\lallabte Phone 992 2984
9 2~ 6tc
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model Complete w ith all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new
Will sell tor '537 25 cash or
terms available Phone 992

2984

9 23 6tc

L!V.A beans

Phone 949 280]
9 21 4tC

STOCK Z 28 Cam, Crane SS 330
Cam Deepened oil pan and
pump to match , balanced
Harmon1c
Balancor.
Balanced set of Recon
d1t1oned rods and p1stons,
duel mlet, Holly 780 C F M
Can call 992 7295 for In
formation

9 21 3tc

Phone 992

1972 HONDA Slll5. excellenl
cond1tlon Only S395, re ady tor
trail and hunting seasons
Coolvil le U7 6214

9 2112tp

9 23 3tp

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Mond•'f' , 0~1ob4r l, 1973, 1t
l O 00 o'clock A M for the s.ale of
th ' L ou tw Brun rul e-state.
S1tuetect at 160 - 7th A~enue 1n
the Vll ltge of Middleport. Ohio
ThiS II • n i ce two stor.,
res, 1dence In en excelle-nt

locat iOn Living room , dlnong

room , kitchen and enclosed
porch
down1ta l rs ,
three
bedrooms and bath upsta irs
Wall to wall carpeting dOwn
stairs Central gas heating ,
basement , detached garage
be seen by appointment
Ca t M !ldred lhle, tete phone 949
4153 The aale Is sub(ect to

M•r

Yn

9 23 6tc EXCELSIOR Solt Worko, E

2BEoROOMniOhue home

ror
rent by the month or by the
week
Everything's fur ·
nlshed Call 7A2 5980.
9-18 6tc

10" 011n

END

800 Per Ton

$

TRAILER- ..ts;;ac~l:-adults

I

BUN Dl£0
·u.00

~

~liDS

Per "on

DELIVERED

TO

OHIO

co

1

approval by the Meigl County
On Old Rt. 33
Common Pleas Courl, Probate
Phone ...,_
77 £ 2689
D •v l sl on
The
Guardian
reserves the nght to relect any
Pomeroy, Ohio
or all bids
,____ _ _.,:_;_=:.._--'

MJ~:;:,!~ 1~i

-----------Call 99z.sm
9 2J.3tc
------------9· 18·tfc

MOBILE nome,

.xiW
1
1

PALLET

only Call 992 3S25

For Rent or Sale

Louise Bryon
19 1 24. 2s, 26, 27, 21, Sic
s ROOMS and both, ReCine
area Call Sam Yates, 992 7139
before noon .
9 21 61C

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

•dutta only

Main St, Pomeroy All klnd1
of salt water pellets , water
nuggets, block salt and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 992

3891

6·s.IIC

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

CLU B

Ohio

Restaurant.

Rac ine ,

Sale by the tlro t ot
October Phone 949 437•
9 19 6tp

1970 MOBILE Home, 12 X ...

U,S89 Phond

77J.S~29

9 " 12tp
NI CE
SLEEPtNG
room
pr i vati entnnct , privati
bath ar un havt kitchen No WtLKtN$0N sma)len g l ne aal.s
one tiM In the up1ta tr1
and aendce, 820 3rd Stret,
Gtl'\fltmtn plta\t Corntr' of
Mlddltporl Llwn mower, ond
lincoln end Sttond Ave
chain IIW rtp.tlr Fret p ck up
M tddltport Phont 992 s.soi
ond dtllvtry Phont 992·3CW2.
9 21 31C
AIIO 6rlggl •nd Stratton and
Ttcumtth parts
H1:10tc
MOBILE home spa ce Beer ' •
,Market, Svnc~o~n .
..,),:._._
a 26 tf c 1913 1"10 MOBIL! honu ,
Wlllher ar,d dryer 1 dllh •
wuhtr, ste lniHs stttl t lnk,
varbage diiPOUI, eya lt'¥11
ovtn, rtnge, dacron .I)OlyHfer
ca rpet, lar;t lot Phone '4'1·

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

__________

--------------1.

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

Mobile Homes fcJr S.

,.-

A1r Condihoners
Awmngs
Underpinning

Complete

'"obll e home

servlct -

plus

gigantic:

display of mobile homes
alwa ys available at

MILLER
' MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wuhlngton Blvd
&lt;23·7521
BELPRE, 0.
C:ASH Plld for all mlk" an~
moatlt of mobile homu

Phont aroo coclt

tSll
• \3.ftc
I&lt; X 6$ TRAILER, 2 bedroom ,
vtry good conditio Phon• 773
5105.
...,.,
I 22·1tC
•~&lt;·~23

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

__ ___________

II Must

Be Righi
or we will

II Right.

All work guaranteed

,9921101

~~

Roofing,
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Com plete
Home
Remodeling .

Built to Your•Specs
Delivered to Job Silt

.

All WEATHER
ROOFING CO.

I

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

For Free Estimate

MATERIALS CO.
Mason, W. V1.
773·SSS4

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Phone 992-2550

O'DELL WHEEL Allgn(llenl

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Ph. 742-6271

located at Crossroads , Rt •124,
now back to work Complete
front end service, tune up and
brake
service
Wheels
ba la nced electronically All
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
2 18 tfc

9 1 tfc

tiME to check that oil or gas
furnace for wmter
D~rty
furna ces cost fuel and could
cost a life Call P &amp; ~ Home
Mamtenance 992 3509, 215 N
Second , M 1ddfeport

Moddleport, 0 .

FURROOFING,
CLEANING
NACE
AND REPAIR AND
1
PLUMBING.

MJOD ~USSES

CONSTRUCTION

H Rawlings SOns

BIHidlnlj

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

PRICE

30 Daoly, 8·12 Sat.

S4

I , HIC q

JOHN TUCKER
Rt 4, Pomeroy, 0
992·3954 or 992-7349

•5.55
On Most American Cars
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

RON SHEPARD , Floor, Wall

Remodeling , Ceram1c tile
baths Box 28D , Rutland 7.4'2

3664

6 26

8·23 30tc

ttc

WILL TRIM or c ut trees and
HARRISON 'S TV serv1ce and
shr ubbery, also, clean out
serv ice calls Phone 992 2522
basements, attics, and etc
2 9 ttc Call 949 3221 or 742 444 1

MOBILE home repelr , Elec DEAD 51 OCK - Will remnv~
trlcal plumbing and heat1ng
at a reasonable ch arqe Call
Phone 992 5858
245 5514
7 15 lfc
8 23 9otc

--------------AUTOMOBILE ins urance been

•

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
I·

0pen8TII5
Monday thru Salurday
606 E. Matn, Pomeroy, 0.

:1013.

ll·tf

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

8L.ACK luftltr recl lnJn9 ~l l r ,

llkt ntw . Phont ••:1·21'6.

' " 61p

6$,ooo·- iru-c-;c';;j;ii;,-;- Gai

service, all makes 992·2284
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales •nO
Service We Sharpen Scissors

, 912tfc

HOUSE 3 years old , 3
bedroom , wall to wall car
petmg , refrt~erator and stove
Included, llvmg r oom , kif ·
chen, ut1l1ty room, bath ,
outstde
utility
storage,
Middleport Phone 992 5064
affer6pm
9 21 12tp

3:29·1fc

-FOR
------------FREE n11matn on
33 ACRES
About 10 lor cultovatlon, lhe
balance pasture, Home has

TV R, 3 bedrooms Bath
New kotchen Some paneling
&amp; tile
Porches . Cellar
$15,000 00
POMEROY
W Maon Sf Large home with
rtver frontage 6 bedrooms
with walk-m closets, 4112

balhs Utility R Dlnmg R
TV room L R 3\x\5 with
fireplace Hardwood lloors
Full basement. Hot water
heat 2 car garage w1th work

shop Ask1ng $37,000 00
96 ACRES
Route 325 Land lays nice.
House

FURNISHED HOME
2 bedrooms, bath, gas furnace,
mce kitchen Large lront and
side porch Want 515,000 00
NEW LISTING
Bl Level 2 bedroom home with
bath, gas forced air lurnace
Ni ce shade trees on one acre

plus. All ulllllles.
HOME AND RENTAL
On one acre All utilities . House
has 9 rooms, bath. gaJ heat
Town location for only
"7,500 00
. 38ACRE FARM
Large gambrel root barn with
shed ahd concrete floor. 3 bay
Implement shed and others 7
room home, with balh on
black lop road Only $16,500 00
LOTS
2 tots IOOxiOO with T P water
available
COUNTRY HOME
2 bedrooms 1 bath,

Line Is buned for new water

system ASKING $17,500 00
BELOW MIDDLEPORT
Just off Rt 7, 3 bedrooms,
bath , new F A furnace
Utility room Recreallon
room New cellar &amp; storage
room Porches You must

see this 58.500 00
GOOD BUSINESS
Showing a nice profit Good
clean stock
Excellent
loca tion A great future for
someone Selling due to Ill
health
YOUR HOME CAN BE A
TAX SAVER WHEN YOU
OWN OR WHEN YOU SELL
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992·22S9
It no answer 992-2568

5501

9 19 9tc
196~ I TON Chtvroltl wllh
service bod 5500 Ph 7•2
SSOI
' 1991C

---"'1""----v-----..

Sales Representative V
Johnson and Son, Inc

V.

6 22·1fC

READY MIX
CONCRETE
dellvtred rtght to your

prolect Fast and easy Fret
estimates Phone 992 3284

Goegleln Reody .Mix Co ,
Mlddleporl, Ohio
6·30.tfc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Ph 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.

REASONABLE rates

~ Owner and Operator

s 12 tfc

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

•·30 - I Love Lucy 6, Green Acres 3, Jeopardy 4, Ha zel 8;
Gilligan's Island 13; Bonanza 15

WIN AT BRIDGE

Blackwood the Jacoby way-

Phone 9~9 ·3821

safety "

To Elizabeth Taylor and Rlchllrd Burton "Where there's
marriage without love, th&lt;re will be love without marriage."
To John Ehrhchman · "We must all hang together, or
assuredly we shall ali hang SCil&amp;ralely."
Posthumous note to the late Chilean President Sa lvador
Allende · "No nal1on was ever ruined by lrade "
To lhc Washington Post and New York T1mes " Utile
strokes fell great oaks,"
To teievisJOn adverlisu\g agencies · "Remember that time 1s

money ."
To Maurice Stans, John Mitchell and Robert Vesco · "Three
may keep a secret, if two of them are dead."
To Howard Cosell. "None but the well-bred man knows how
to confess a fault, or acknowledge himself In an error."
To Aristotle and Jacquelme Onass1s "A little house well
fiiied, a little f1eld well tilled, a little Wife well w11led, are grea t
riches "

To Sen. J. William Fulbright: "There never was a good war,
nor a bad peace."
To John B Connally: "Never ask, never refuse, nor ever
resign an office."
To all fans of Johnny Carson: "He that nseth late must trot
ail day "
To Sen. Teddy Kennedy : "Don't throw stones at your neighbors, if your own wmdows are glass." ' •
To both management and labor at the Philip Sporn plant m
New Haven, the General T,elephone Co. m Pomeroy, the Stauffer
Chemical Plant near Pl . Pleasant, the Gallipolis C1ty School
system, and the Me1gs No I and 2 mines at Cheshire· "When
men are employed, they are best contented "
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20, 33 ; Bonanra 3, Merv Griffin ~. IV!dy
Grlffolh 8; I Dream of Jean nle \3, Moss ton Impossible 6

5 30 -

Beverly Hillbillies 8, Elec Co 33, Gomer Pyle 13.
Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Tra ils West 15
5 55 - Earl Nlght~ngale 15
6 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8. 10. 15, ABC News 13 , Sesame Sfreet 20,
Sporlscope 33
6. 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6 , CBS News 8, 10.
Hog~n·s Heroes 13 , Human Dimension 33.
7 00 - What's My Line 8, Elec Co. 20, Beat The Clock 4, News
10 , Lee Trevino's Golf 15, Truth or Consequences 3, 6,
Dusty's Trail 13 , Env1ronment Today &amp; Tomorrow JJ

7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6, RFD 20, Cancer Lofe or Death 33.

Beat The Clock 13, Charles Blair's Better World 15; New
Price Is Right 8, 10 , New Datong Game 3. World of Survlval4
8 00 - Maude 8, 10. Even ing af Pops 33 , Chase 3, 4, 15. Tem·
peratures Ros1ng 6, 13, Oh1o This Week 20, Movie "Smil e
When You Say I Do" 6, 13
9 00 - Mov10 "Police Story" 3, 4, 15; Portland Junior Symphony
20. 33 9 30 - Movie "She Cned Murder" 8, 10.
10 00 - Marcus Welby, MD 6, 13 , News 20, Black Dragon
Residence 33
11 OO - News3,4, 8, 13, 15,10,6
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Miss World· USA F~nals 6, 13,
Movies " Torpedo Run" 8; "The Marnage Go Round" 10
1·00 - News 13 . Your Health 4
130 - News4

5 1 lie

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work , aeptlc
tanks Installed, dump trucks
end to boys for hire , will haul

fill dirt. lop soli. llmtstono
and gravel , Call Bob or Rogtr
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089 ;

night phone 992 3S25 or 992·
S232
2 1\.lfc

OPEN Roger Hysell'S
Garage near Crossroads on
Sf Rl 124 , all mechlnlcll
work Including automatic
transmIssions
Mond$y
Fr iday, 8 30 a m till 5 p m
Slturday - 8 30 to 12 noon
Unless by appt Phone 992

5682 or 992 7121.

9 16·301c

--=----------ELNA and While Sowing

Ma(hlnes
Service on all
maku Reasonable r•te1
The Sewing Ctnttr1 Mid ·
dleporl , Ohio

11 ·16·1fc

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

~9PTOMETRIST

I

BlgCopoc ly
Maytot
A llfDm I tiCS

2 IPttQ optrti/On
O'lolct of wattt
t'lrnpa ,
Auto
wettr
ltv•

control .

~

Us.

I TANCCl

or

Lint

Power

t

-------------7 ROOM
With bllh In ,
Rutltnd , air condltlonod.

~tat

No htt opoto ,

no

Ovlrdr,tng .

Fino Mooh Llnl
Filter
Wt htclollteln

hOUit

Clrptttd, 011 turnac•, dlth ·
w•sher, doubla oven, rlr,gt,

Mtylot
Hila of Hoot
Dryer&amp;

S rround c:lolht•
with oentlt, even

Brodbury , Coli 992·1363 ott or
f.5 .iGtc

, MAYUO

RUTlAND FURNITURE ~~~~~r~

doublt gort~t. ltrlt corporJ,
4 teres cft1rtd end ftnetd ,
amall
bern
anct other
bulldlnu. Phone 61&lt; ·7&lt;2-613~
I 30·t1C , 741-4211

Arnold Grill.
w.._:..,:-_:.;___;..::_;:;:.::...;:;,::_::::_..,.
__•Rutl1nd

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

v

l:ll!a r Helen ·
Please tell the crippled lady whose pastor lrowns on her
pants suits in church lhat he's probably frown on .Jesus If He
WMiked through Ute doors In his long hair, flowing robes, 6nd
beprd YllU're rlghl, she should change churches , - TRUE
CHRISTIAN

Hy llt·lt•n Uolld

••

&lt;l!Jr,OIM 1C' r ,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Acaoss

4. Glacial

rld&amp;e
5. Craving
6. Give the
cold
ahoulder
to
1, Holy man
t. Mixolo-

1. Finery;

rleh
raiment
I. Slant
ll.J!qulllbrlum
lZ. Oflhlp1
11. SorOJan
novel,
with

pl'a

ABHOR1
l . V'h

I

ph rae
(2 wd1 )
•- CUahion
11. District of
Enaland
14. Wrlnkllna
11. Exptriment
20. German
article
U . Written
letter
211. Barbara
- Scott

Ye&amp;terday's Answer
Zl. Likely
33. Ham it up
:14. Kodota or
34. Allude
Smyrna
36. Langulah
za. SWill
31, Work
canton
with
26. Denoting
hamo
certain
38. Monk's
tlrel
abode
Z7. Succor
(abbr )
31, Ship
39. Girl'I
32. French
name
40. Craze
painter

I

covered

II

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wotk it:

rooMANI
J I I I I

WHATiiMEl

AAl7

~ME

t:lO.

Now........,. the ciiClod~.ttero
to form tho IIUI'IIriM INWtr, u
aupttlM bylhe abo'tt cartoon.

\ I
. .

:=1::=:::Piilt::::..::::.~.~~~~~~~~:_::...~l ( I I I l )

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A is
u~ed for Ute three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
HFTLU
TUS

MX

IJ

LFTS

FEFLXInUQ

XJKL
FHWF

ZIWFHB -OTKH

JNU

czus

NZHH

AJCF

1

ETHFLX

(hnen to.onew)

J•mble" HONIY 001101 nun DIIMAY
S•1urd•f•

'

\ Antwert The flnh

cot~ld

lte t:ornd-"IIOttf''

Yeaterday'a Cryploqtaole: DO NOT SHOW 'YOUR
WOUNDED FINGER, FOR EVERYTHING WILL KNOCK UP
AGAINST IT.-BALTASAR GRACIAN
(0 1171 Klns rt~tut'ft 8Jnollcalt, Inc.)

NORTH tDt
Zl
+A 54
.A7S
t A64
+ AK32
EAST
WEST
+108763
+92
.109164
tl073
t952
+
1097
+J64
SOUTH
+KQJ
.KQJ
tKQJ8
+Q85
North.South vulnerable
Wetl North East S.olh
1+
Paos 4N.T • JIS9LINE ALLEY
Pass S+
PaiS 5N T
Pa" 6t
Pass 7N T

•n

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead- •10

Jim "Is it true that the
Eastern bridge establishment
didn't get around to usin&amp;
Blackwood unUI several ye•rs
after it had swept the Weat?"
Oswald: "I was an Eutemer then and we didn't take kindly to the Idea that someone
from Indiana would develop a
better convention than we had.
I am probably the first Euterner to start using It and I
know I am the first oldtlme
expert to admit the existence
ofEasley Blackwood and hi•
excellent convention "
Jim "Knowing you, I also
assume that you were the first
man to start modifying It "
Oswald "It may be so. The
lirat Blackwood modification
was to use lhe five -club response to show no aces or four
aces It seemed lhat anyone
could tell which holdlnl wu
bemg shown It also seemed
that when five clubs ahowed
four aces there was room lo
ask lor kings "
Jim. "Today's hand which I
made up lllustralel how lhil
works . Seuth checka lor acu
and linda that North hoidull
four He check• for klnl•· flnd1
North hu the miulnl one and
bid1 seven no-trump with 1ure·
ty oflucceu."
Oswald : " They mlfhtltt
there without thia modi ic~llon
but It wae a cinch wilh il.''

THE BORN LOSER

'&lt;q

I'M~ m

lET ME'
I&lt;HIXlRD
~AT...

I
'
l

'

I

~~~"~

Tho biddlnt hu been '
It
Wesl
North
!lou
loulh
It
Pill
1•
Dbl•
2.
2+
••
l
Vou ,Soulh,hold l
'
•Q I I I I .I .A I +A K J IT
Whot do you dO now!
A- lltlloor apadtl. You or•
dlor to lllakt.
TOD.4 Y'I QV !tiT ION
Wm1nd Norlh pau , ~UI bid a
llvt htorta. Who I do you du nu\'1 !
.4oaiOtrlaiiiOirtW
'I

1
1
r

??- wAA'I' DO

0

I.

•••tNCI

'filt..-11

I

...

INIW IP ~P ·A IINTI"IIflllll AIIN ~

•t•·

I

ALLEY OOP

',l't. ABNER

Ptr'MI· ,rtlt

6 p m.

I ·H

Dear TOB ·
"The..
If parents don 'l act "adult," bow can they expect much of the
(2 wda.)
k1ds ? For Pete's sake, start talking again! Life's too short f:JI' II. Czech
feudmg . - H
river
1&amp;.Bollow
+++
n.Bul(Lat )
Dear Helen
Come
What do you do about a noisy mother-in~aw• Not only noiay 11. DOW!
but nosey. AI the top of her voice, she asks the most intimate 1e. Chemical
questiOns - about our finances, sex life, (you can't believe the
oulllx
details she wants'), plall$ for a family; every little thing we do, 2Z. Inlet of
Ute ~eo
she has lo know about. And bosa about,
ZI.Some
We go over to their place about twice a week and I'm worn
pUoll
out from third degrees. Once I told her this was none of her U . Comico
(2 wda)
busmess, and she cried, just as noisily. My husband saya it's his
U
.
Inftexible
mother's way of being friendly, and she still thinks of us as just
U.!Uumi·
little kids to watch over.
nated
We're almost 20 and have been married a year. Any 30. Kind of
of mill
solution' - BOSSED, BOTHERED AND BURNED ABOUT IT
31, Cover
32. Debuaay',
Dear B and BAI:
"La-"
Yes: your husband.
31. Gyrate
H he can't qu1et hia mother, then he should arrange to move 1'. Arrived
out of earshot . When you'refar enough away so that viaits can be 31. Rldicullna
(3 wdo )
41. Sheepbke
42. Mountain
opur
Unocramble theH four Jumbl01,
43.
Conaumer
one letter to each equare, to
cru1ader
form four ordlnarJ wordo.
.C. Inhibit
DOWN
1. Plant
lYERME
inaect
Z. Exche
3. Frost·

Fin Agitator.

In

hrnllc;l, llhc Ml\ V stop t'lliiSiderlng you "jill! little \Ids" &lt;Al
l•:»~tyou'll stop hc•rlog•boulit so often. J- H

By 01wald &amp; Jameo Jacoby

Racine, Ohio
Crlff Bradford

F liter

for ule, tocettd

••• •.......:-: :· ·&gt;Y. .•.&lt;- , ... " ...

Benjamin Franklin , perhaps the nenresl Uunv. lo • complete ~
nmn ever produced by Anwrlca and our only rival to lh&lt;· In· ~
&lt;'Omparable IA'Oilllrdo Da Vim!. did a ~real deal of writing In lu~
flic Slow ul the Parenti ...
lime, and I hllvc jusl &lt;·ome nt'I'Oiill some of his memorable ut.
tcrances, but in this case, lhey were addressed lQ our c~n- Do:nr Helen ·
Wt• hud word' wllh our neighbors a year ago an(! hllven•t
tcmporary public fib'Uretl .
'
spoke
to them since They still burn trash in their back yard and
Some examples .
To Murtha Mitchell· "Keep your eyt'l! wide open before OIC ashes get into our fish pond, plu• several other irritating
things.
marriage, half shut afterward "
l'he problem is that their children treat our children like d1rt.
To IUchm d M. N1xon and John Dean Ill "You and I were
Defore
the falhng-&lt;.~ut, we were all pretty good friends, but now
long friends ; you arc now my enemy and lam yours ."
To Joe Namnlh · "Eat no\ to dullness, nor drmk to the neighbor kids make life miserable for my Tommy and
Janice. Tllcre's always some kind of fight going and since the
eleva lion."
To L Patrick Gray · "They that can g1Ve up essential liberty aduitll don't talk, we can't setUe lt
What wllllld you do' - TIRED OF BRATS
to obtain a little temporary •afely deserve neither liberty nor

TUESDAY, Sept. 25, t?73
6 00 Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6 15 - Concern &amp; Comment 10
6 20 - Form Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bibl e Answers 8. Faith For Toda v
13 , News 6
'
6 45 - Corncob Report 3, Farmllme 10
7 OOR - Today 3, ~. IS, CBS News 8. 10. Fllntstones 13, Romper
oom 6.
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwlnklel3, New Zoo Revue6.
8 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33
Timmy and Lassie 6
'
8 30-HuckandYogi6;DickVanDyke1J
8 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon &lt;; Friendly Junction 10, AM 3, Phil
Donahue IS; Brody Bunch 6; Abbott and Cosello 8, Movie
"The Young Mr. Pill" 13.
9· 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, Elec Co. 33, Wild, Wold Wesl 6
Secret Storm 8.
'
9 S5 - Chuck White RePOrts 10.
10· 00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS, Joker' s Wild 8, 10
10 30 - Bailie 3, 4, 15, $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10, Mike Douglass 6
11 · 00 - GambitS, 10, Password 13, Wizard of Odds 3, 4, 15
11 . 30- Hollywood Squares 3. 4, 15, Love of Life 8, 10; Brady
Bunch 13; Bowling 6.
11: SS - CBS News 81 Don Imel's World 10
12· 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50· 50 Club 4; Password 6 ,
News 10, B, 13
12· JO - 3 W's 3, 151 Split Second 6, Search For Tomorrow 8, 10
12: SS - News 3, 15.
1. 00- News 3, All My Children 6, t3, Not For Women Only IS ,
Concentration 8, What's My Line 10.
,
1: 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, IS ; The World Turns 8, 10. Let's Make
A Deal 6, 13
·
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, IS ; Newlywed Game 6. 13:
Guiding Light 8, 10
2:30 - Edge of Nlghl8, 10, Girl In My Life 6, 13; Doctors 3, 4, 15.
3:00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13 , Proce Is
Right 8, 10; Erica 20
3· 15 - Theanle 20
3· 30 - Return to Peyton Placa 3, 15, One Lole to LlveiJ ; Match
Game '73 8; Secret Storm 10. Makln&lt;J Th1ngs Grow 33 , Phol
Donahue 4, Fllntslones 6; Book Beu. 20
•:00- Mr. Cartoon 3, Love, American Style 13. Somerset \5,
Sesame St 33, 10, Speed Racer 6, I Love Lucy 8, Movoe "The
Trap 11 10

. . ...

Helen Help

MONDAY, SEPT. 24, lf7l

BY PAUL CRABTREE

,.l.l
:\:;)

'

Complete Service

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.! - EAST COURT ~T., ·

W
HAVE OVER
~
PROP RT IES TO OFFER
YOU FOR SALE , SOME
WE'LL TRADE .

HOUSE

6 c ~lln ·
dtr, 1t1nd1rd trtnsm lnlon .
needs rep1lr $700 Ph 1•2

Syracuse, Ohio Carl Jacob

Dining room
Porches
Several small buildings

furna ce,

enclosed porch, garage on
large lot on Route 33. Need
\16,000.00.
OVER3 ACRES
• bedrooms, bath, laundry
room~ clllrport, garage and
.-vera! buildings 515,000 00.
TR AILER LOCATION
IV!d &amp; room house. with garage
on I ocr• MIJy trade lor mobile
homt

aluminum siding
Storm
Doors and Windows, Car ports, Marquees and Railing,
Phone
Charles
Lisle,

has 3 bedrooms

--------------1910 FORD Movtrlck

and small , BackhMS and
loaders on track and tires.
Dump truck - Lo ·bov ser.
vice . Septic tanks installed
George {Bill&gt; Pullins, phone

For

Heotor Albtrl Hill, 9&lt;9 2261.
9·11-61C
GR9CERY buotn111 tor lilt
8UIIdli"'O for •111 or IIIII
Phont77!.S6tl from 1•30 p.m
to 10 p m for tppolntmtnt.
3·20 ttc

( ~·Sales
1

EXCAVATING Dozars, large

NEIGLERS FO R HOUSE992 2478 or 992 7&lt;02.
BUILDERS CALL GUY
M.lfc
NEI GL ER RACINE OHIO
7428
9
11 301p
6 151fc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
----- ---~----=-SEWAGE SYSTEMS
Real Estate Sale
CLEANED. REPAIRED
Real Estate For Sale
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHIO PH 662
2 BEDROOM house, 3 years old 1
3035
carpet1ng , big kitchen w ith
10·4·tfc
tots of ca bmets, 1h acre ot
ground, Ra c1 ne, Ohio Ca ll
SEWING MACHINES Repair
949 4998
cancelled,
Lost
vour
operator's l1cense Ca ll 992

Just Arrived 1 Only

apartments .

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

BUil ding. Pom•roy, Ohlo, unt&lt;l

Area 's Most
Reasonible Prices

9 23 &lt;tc

w~

Specialist
Wheel
Ahgnment

MODERN
SANITATION

Painting ASpecialty

923 tfc

unfurn ished

Wanted

Stop in and See Our
Floor Di~!a'l' .

SERVICE
24 HOUR SERVICE

Lmcoln Htll· Pomerov, 0.

JAND:0 RODM-fu',;;;i;h;d and , - - - - - - - - - ---.

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

~

Ph. 992-5271

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

9 11 tfc

FURNITURE

8 31 301c

8 21 lfc

3432

and

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK

Gene's
Body Shop

ONErowN I cornptcker ,$195 ,
two row mounted A c , $100 ,
three elevators
G
A NEW BRICK. 3 bedroom home
In Long Bot
Radekln, Rt 3, Albany, Oh10 ,
tom Call915·3310 after .4 p m
on 1 acre of land
Large
9 23 31p 698 88S2
modern kitchen, full car
9·23·3tc peted , located close to the
1 HOUSE. unfurnished, 4
high and elementary schools
bedrooms, nice yard, wall to 98 OLDSMOBILE, 4 dr hard
Call 992 7686
top
,
vinyl
top,
full
power
and
wall carpeting, 11r con
9 24 12tc
a~r conditioned, 7 way ad
d1tlon1ng 1 furnished apart
lustabte steering wheel , low
ment with 3 rooms . bath , 1
mileage Call 992 5510.
duplex Phone 992 2780 or 992

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS
Se ptember Spectals are
Lemon Fac 1al Bath , Bath &amp;
Sh ower Gel, Jr Facial Mask ,
Kover Kotes, Liquid RouQe,
Ha~r Sprays, Shampoos, "K"
Beauty Bars , Suntan Spray
and others Phone Helen Jane
Brown , 992 5113 Many thanks
to ou r new and regular
customer s

LARGE~T

Pomero~

992 3861

OFfiCE SUPPLIES

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
: 2~ Hour Service
All work guaranteed.

I

REDUCE safe and fast W1th
GoBese Tablets &amp; E Vap DOZER and ba ck hoe work ,
ponds and septic fanks, dlt
" water pills" at Nelson Drug
.
92~1tp
chlng service. top soli, fill
dirt.
l i mes tone ,
B&amp;K
Escavat lng Phone 992 5367 or

Suled b1dS will be rece1ved
&lt; 12 ttc
NEW UN ICO
by lht Trustees of Letart SUITABLE level lot for a
ROOMS
by
themek,
sfi
up
.
mobile
home
court
w
1
th
c
ity
UPRIGHT
FREEZER
TownShiP until 7 p m Oct 1,
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy
water Suitable tot for two to
12
cu.
ll
only 203.95
1973and opened at that t im e tor
7 12 ttc
three mobile homes Will also
the turn 1Shmg and erection of a
be considered Call 992 3429
tool house at Letart Cemetery
9 21 61c PRIVATE meeting room for l - ~lso 1 Refl()Ssessed Fuel 011
Building to bet 20 x 20ft metal
;~Is orgonlzallon. phone 992· Fur~ace, 11 5,ooo BTU .
and or aluminum . pamted . W1th
foundat1on
3·11-ffc
Heres your chance for a
For lurther Information
good btJy Used less than 1
contact Don R Hill, RO 2.
vEA
icefou7i=00tTi'andbBih
season
Ra cme, OhiO 45771
apartment located at l27
Llncolr') Hill Road , Pomeroy ,
Herbert L Sayre.
POMEROY
Ohio Gu heat, very low gas
Clerk
9. ~ Jaek w. Carsey, Mgr .
bill
Garagt underneath
RD 2,
Ail Phone 992~2111
Formerly the Weed apart
Rac1nt, Oh10 45171
ments Call Pomeroy , 99'2
(9 ) 10 11 2• , 3tc
3054. Tracy Whaley

NOTICE OF SALE
BldJ w ilt be rece ived at the
lt w oOIIUI of Bernard V F ull~ ,
Pomer&amp;:~y
Nation al
Bank

Electrical Appllonces · Auto
Aor Cond. Residential or
Commerc1a l

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

622 E Mam , 992 7554

Refrtgeralion • Plumbing •

Nalhan Boggs
Rodlalor Speclollst

For Rent
APARfMENTS

B·31 30tc

POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER

S•rvlc•

&amp; THINGS

1 Love Lun 6, Hmt 8,
5. 00 - I Oroam of Jeannie 1J1 Mt•ter Rogers 20. 33 . ANdy
Grlfll t~ I. Bonanz• 3; ""'rv Griffin~ . Million lmPQUible 6.
5 JO - Beverly Hlllbllllts 8; Elee. Co 3J, Gomer Pyle IJ,
Hodgepodge Lodge201 Trails West 15
5 IS - Earl Nightingale IS
6 00 - News 3, ~. 6, 8, 10. \S r ABC News 13, Sesame St 20,
Personality &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 J0 - ABC News 6, CBS News 8, 10; NBC News J 4 15
Hooan's Her001 13
' '
• 7 00- Beat the C l ock~ . Newa 10 , Circus IJ 1 What's My Line 8.
Elec. 20 , People, Places &amp; Thlnga 5 , Truth or Consequences
3,6, Bobby Bowsen 1S r How Do Your Children Grow' 33
7 JO - To Tell the Tr uth 6 . Beat the Clock \3 , Bobby Goldsboro
3, Hollywood Squo rea 4; Buck Owens 8, Erica 20 , Episode
Action 33 , Wacky World of Jonathon Winters lS r Municipal
Court tO
7:45 - Thean te 20
1:00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10. Lotaa Luck 3, 4, 15; Rookies 13 .
National Geoorophlc 6; Two Arctic Toles 20, 33
1: 30 - Olano 3, ~. 15
9:00 - Here's Luch s, 10; Pro Football 6, 13; Movie "The
Groundstor Conspiracy" 6, 13
9 30 - Dick Van Dyke 8, 10, Book Bea t 20, 33
tO 00 - MIJdlcal Center8,10, News20 , Paul Nuchlns 33
10•15 - The Silent Years 20
11 00 - News 3, ~. 8, 10, 15
11 30- Johnny Caroon 3, &lt;, 15, Movies "Bonnie and Clyde" 8,
" Jane Eyre" 10
12 00 - News 6, 13
12 30 - Movie "Three Faces West" 13
1. 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
2· 00 - News 4, 13

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

Healing . Air Cond

:,manest Heater &lt;..orf!.

PANY , lmmedtate openings
are avarlable rn the following 3
YEAR
old
Kelvinator
posttions
Maintenance
automatic washer, good
Foreman Cunderoroundl,
condit ion Call after 5 30 p m
Assistant Mine Foreman
992 2967
( underground), Section
9 21 3tc
Foreman , Surfa c e Mme
Foreman,
Reclamation
Foreman Persons applying AM FM stereo radio , 8 track
tape comb1natlon , 4 speaker
should hold valid foreman
sound system Balance S98 52,
certlf,catlon papers (Ohio) or
or use our budget terms Call
have sufficient expenence to
992 7085
apply for State exammat1on
9-23 6tc
Salary Commensurate w1th
Experience
E&gt;Ccellent
Benefits TO APPLY Write BENNETT breath ing machine
or
Phone
Personnel
Call Mane Roy, 9"'9 5821
Department,
Central
9 23 6tc
Dtvfsion, Consolidation Coal
Company , Cadiz, Ohio .43907 ONE 1967 Cub Cadet 102, 10 h p ,
Telephone 614 942 -4512 AN
42 In , mower excellent
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
cond1flon Phone 9.f9 2119

9 23 30tc

MOTOROLA colored
set 1.23 Inch console
good condit1on Can
238 Second Street,

Sentinel

BABYSITTER to sit In my
home Muat be 1t least 20
years of age Ca ll 992 3580
after s p m
9 23 lie

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

LOst

Dai~

PHONE 992-2156

@

Pomeroy Motor Co.
..

The

Racllato
Bulldozer Radlalor lo the

ON YOUR DIAL

SYRACUSE ~

"9S

Television Log
~ 38 1 iii9~~~7.~c."~'1 :; ~~~~~v 1 ::

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

~ From the laroest Trttrk or

PAPER CARRIERS
IN
POMEROY AND

S139S

1967 CHEVELLE

Property

WMP0/1390

WANTED

4 door, 6 c ylinder automatic transmission good t ires,

Meigs

rn~

Ron . An iiQuttv .

hOnle E dltll
Oh io

p AND J HOME

EXPERIENCED

. .. . ,.

The D11Uy li&lt;'ntllll'l , Mid&lt;lltporl•I'OOIHOy , 0 ., Se)l( . 24 lfl'l l

.

like a perm

BABY SITTIN G anv tlm t u'l

1

4 door. factory a1r. automati c transm ission , ~wer
steenng &amp; brakes. good wh•te wall tires, white lm sh,

to f li P

their cla ims w1th saud f tduc •ar y

(91

Business Services

Help Wanted

1970 DODGE POLARA

County . Indiana
Cr~llors

------~r------------------------------,·
We talk,to you

Empkwmllflt Wanted

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF '

..

LOWIUY II
~Oitii i'I\AN

TSLL
SNUFFY

1'fi'liAWMILL'S

HIRIN' e~TRV
HANPC

I'M AFEERED
PAW WOUlON 'T
BE INNERESTED,
LWKEV--·

HE;'S SElDOM GOT ENNV
E'lC.TRV HANDS

r
i
n
b
~

I.
e
e
d
~

.n
0

u
k

�110"1 ' 11 \ I. '1·,\\!-i

f ' ' '.

Velerau Memorial Ho•pllal
SATt:llDAY ADMISSIONS·
- Gary Erlewlne, Dexter ;
Charles Hamm, Indianapolis,
Ind.; Marie Dudding, Middleport; Ada eramlet, Racine ;
Howlll'd !.argent, Syracuse.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Glen Jewell, Philip
Donovan, Ira Roach, Walter
Wears, Carol L.uns(ord,
Emogene Simms, Charlea
Beller, Avis Bissell, Paul
Sigman, Raymond Russell.
SuNDAY ADMISSIONS '
Louise
Matlack, Reedsville ;
A
Mildred Dill, Long Bottom;
0 c) , - Helen Jackson, Middleport ;
LoucllleGarten, Ashland, Ky.;
I. Ray finch, Coolville; Melanie
Grueser, Pomeroy ; Emma
I Hayman, Syracuse.
DISCHARGES SUNDAY William Hobstetter, Jackie
Smith.

-

t

-

•

J~~

GEORGE INGELS, OWNER OF Ingels f~niture Store,
106 N. Second Ave., Middleport, shows some of the stoves orr
the noor of his new appliance store located across the street
• which will have Its grand opening next Friday. Once hoUsing
the Smith Clothing Store operated by the late Charley Me-

Owen named treasurer

Ohio .Realtors for 1974
Realtor E. J. "Jim" Owen,
Columbus, was elected
trea8\lfe~ Of the 36,000-i&gt;lus
member Ohio Association Of
~!tors (OAR), during that
organization's 64th annual
State Convention In Cincinnati.
He was the 1972 ~dent of
the Columbus Board of
Realtors and will assume his
alate duties January I, 1974.
Other alate Association
Officers elected with Owen
were. Realtors Robert H. Ar·
nold, Cleveland, President;
William J. Keller, Akron,
Ptetklent-Elec~ and District
Vlce-Presldenlil VIncent T.
·Aveni, Cleveland, H. J. "Jack"
Boeech, Dayton, and- Doriald
Cook, Mal'yaville.
Realtor Owen owns the
Columbua based Jim Owen
Realtor finn which bas three
offleet and employs over 40
fulltlme sales persons. He bas
operated tlda finn as a RealtorBroker for 17 of the 19 years
that he bas been In real estate.
He Is .• nus~~~e of both the
Columbus Board and the

MARTA D

and
E 'n CORIGINALS

Long Dresses
Plain col~rs. prints.

lOlA'S

Association and is currently
General Chairman responsible
for five of the Association's
Committees: Membership
Services, Conventions,
Executive Officers, Insurance
and Realtor's Pride. A Trustee
for the Association's Real
f;state Polltrcal Education
Committee (REPEC), he was
Columbus' Chairman for
"Realtors to Re-Elect the
President" in 1972.
He Is a brother of Richard
Owen of Middleport, president
of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

JOE COULD RETURN
NEW YORK (UPI) - Dr.
Jamet. A. Nicholas, team
phyllclall of the New York
Jell, said lodey that Injured
quarterback Joe Namalb
may not have to uudergo
ourgery for separated right
&amp;boulder and could return~
the lineup lor the final lour
game• of the aea&amp;iln.
"We do not plan to operate
now," Dr. Nichola&amp; Bald
early Monday morning alter
observing ·bow the &amp;tar
quarterback's shoulder
reaponded to overnight
treatment. "The swelling In
. the aboulder baa reduced.
We will make a final decision
ou whether to operate In the
next two or three days."

.

Main at Sycamore
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

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

Master, and later by Cash Bahr, Ingels' new appliance outlet
bas been remodeled, including wall-to-wall carpeting and
paneled walls. "We just had to have more space," said
Ingels, who opened his furiliture store in 1959, and has enjoyed increasing business since.

r-------~----~-------~~---~

GUY WATSON
SAMUEL EBLIN
Guy Watson, 67, Baltimore,
Samuel Allen Eblin, 60, of 210
Md., died Saturday night In a Condor St., Pomeroy, was dead
hospital there. Mr. Watson, on arrival of the Pomeroy E-R
foo-merly of Meigs County, was squad Sunday at 8: 36 a.m .
preceded In death bb his
Mr . Eblin wa$ preceded in
parents, Mr . and Mts. avid death by his parents, Mahlon
Watson .
.
and Virginia Hinkle Eblin.
Mr, Watson Is survived by
Mr , Eblin Is survived by a
h)s wife, Lucille ; seveh sister,
Elva
Grueser.
children, two brothers, Owen of Pomeroy, and four brothers,
Racine, and William&lt;. of · Donald, Claude, Nw!.hlon and
Pomeroy; four sisters, Mrs. Clay, all of Pomeroy.
~lien Couch and Mrs. Burton
Funeral services will be held
Smith, both of Pomeroy; Mrs. Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Irene Kelly. Newport, Ky., and Chapel with the Rev. Wilbur
Mrs. Wilma Morton, Sidney, Perrin officiating. Burial will
Ohio, and .one nephew, Harry be in Gilmore Cemetery.
Watson, Pomeroy. Funeral Friends 111ay call at the funeral
services will be held Tuesday _home alter 7 p.m. today.
In Baltimore.
EFFIE STARCHER
PORTLAND - Elfie Jane
Starcner, 79, Portland, Rt. 1.
died Saturda·y, She was
preceded In death by her
parents, David and Harriett
Baumgardner, Conger. ner
first husband, Jud Davis, and
two children.
Mrs. Starcher Is survived bv
her husband, Hollie Starcher;
three sons, Cornelius Conger,
Portland; George Starcher.
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, and Kenneth
Davis, Long Bottom; three
daughters, Edna Blumenauer,
Harrisonville ; Nw!.ry Sellars,
Industry, Pa .• and Beulah Hall,
of West Virginia ; two sisters,
Martha Rose, Portland, and
Hazel somerville, Winter
Garden, Fla., and several
and
greatgrand
grandchildren.
Funeral services were held

today at 10 a.m. at Ewing
Chapel with Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating, Burial was
In Moo-rls Chapel Cemetery.

You can

our
by noting how many
wise people stli .
"that's my bank"
(when tht)1e
tJ1IIdng about us)
And we measure our success
and progress by the number
and kind of folks who feel at
home with us.

"Pulling on a new roof Is

The Farmers Bank

buying Insurance: If you

ut,....ll Mlxlmum 1nsur11nco ""'
llcll Dlf 11Hw

Top prize

to Houck
poem

Funeral services for Ricllard
Dewey Noonan, 31, Chicago,
Ill., who drowned In the Ohio
River at Middleport Wed·
nesday evenlns when his car
went oot of control, were held
at 10 a. m. today at the
!UwUngs.(:oats Funeral Home
with the Rev . Robert
Bumgardner officiating.
After extended Inquiries ,
three slstel'l of Mr. Noonan
were located in llllnoiB. They
are Janet Ann Noonan and
Patricia Ann Noonan, both of
Chicago and Mrs. Hazel Cozza,
· Niles, nt.
Mr. Noonan was born In
Maywood, Ill., on July 21, 1935.
He hadbeen In Middleport only
since Sept. I, living at the Ohio
Hotel. The hoteiiB located near

Pleasaol V.Uey Hospital
DiScharges - Mrs. Evelyn
Gallipolis' Pat Houck was
Rawson, Southside; Mrs. awarded first plllce In the
Willi"" Flora, Apple Grove ; poetry contest during the 12th
Daniel King, Point Pl~asant; annual conference of the
Eddie Durst, Cottageville; Columbus Writers Club at the
John Cheesebrew, . Point .Sheraton Hotel In Columbus
Pleasant; Douglas Jordan, Saturday.
Mrs. Grover Neville, Point
Approximately 150 entries
Pleasant; Mrs. Max Graham, were judged. Membership In
Arbuckle; William Kimes, the club Is limited to published
Hartford; Robert Chattin, and active writers, but the
West Columbia; Mrs. R?Y contest was open to everyone.
Bush, Mason; KeMeth Bll'· Entries were· received from
chfleld, Gallipolis; Sarah many of the 50 slates.
Ta!lor, Mrs. Stephen Bush,
Last year, Mrs. Houck won
Pomt Pleasant; Lester Dtdf, second place in the fiction
Mason; Worthy Leach, Pomt category and the y~r before
Ple~sant; Kenneth Lewis, first place In ficUon.
Lak1n; Mrs. Benny Lee
Judges were Ohio Stale and
Brannam, son, Pomeroy; Ohio University faculty
Mrs. William Utchfleld, Point . members.
Pleasa~t; James Henson,
Tbe winning poem was a
Ga!llpohs; Thomas Wllllama, multiple level comparison of
Pomt Plea:'""!; Mrs. Weldon separateness In nature and in
We~rs, Phny; Mrs. Ernest man. The judges called it a '
Ramey, Walter Rice, Mrs. poem of "pllwer and force" and
Thomas Gor.rell, Kenneth ''most outstanding."
Patrick, Pomt Pleasant;
Approximately 75 persons
Harold Whittington, Leon; attended the Columbus
Mrs. James Smith, son, VInton, meeting. Mrs. Houck Is a
and Mrs. ~tlbur Jordan, senior at Rio Grande College
daughter, Pomt Pleasant.
where she IB majoring In
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER education, She Is former
( Dlschirgesl
women's editor and feature
Iter f th S da Tim
(Friday I
WallerAbblett, Sheryl Abies, wr
.or e WI Y
esMildred .Alkire, Carl Askew, Sentinel and Dally TrlbWie.
Margaret Stckle, Clara M .
Brown, Thornton Burgess ,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
. R~atha Bush , Joy Esque, Reno
The SEOEMS squad transFtfe, Roger Grtndley, Stephen
Hakes, Thelma Jordan , ported Frank Fugate to Holzer
Saundra Korn , Mrs. Charles
Lambert and Infant son ; Hospital Saturday at 12:50 p.m.
Georgia Marklns. Richard Mr. Fugate was reported to
Meadows. PollY Montgomery, have fallen at home.
Brenda· Osborne, Charles
Parks, Mabel Ramsey, Ora
Roberts, Richard Rowe, Nellie
Six, Gladys Sparkman, Beulah
Strauss, Mary Troul , Thomas
NOW YOU KNOW
Wilhelm,
Clarice
Williams.
TheSWllilburnlngupatthe
Henry vernon Williams .
(saturday!
rate 9f 4.2 million tons per
Herman
Abrams.
Nancy
second.
Ba1sden , Karen Bear(:!, Paul

Mar:._et Heport
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
· Saturday,Sepi.2Z,1'73
SALESREPORTOF
ObloValleyUveslockCo.
HOGS- 175 to 220 lbs 42 50
· ·
to 43.25; 220 to 250 lbs. 43 to
43.35· Light 35 to 39· Fat Sows
'
'
32.50 to 39,75; Slags 34 Down;
Boars 32 to 36· Pigs 10 to 23 50·
'
• '
Shoals 25 to 40.
CATTLE - Steers 37 to
.
45,50; Heifers 35.50 to 44; Baby
Beef45to5850·FatCows3150
. ·
. · ,
·
to 36.25; Canners 26.50 to 34.50;
Bulls 35 to 41.10; Milk Cows 280
to 510 .
VEAL CALVES-Tops 62.50
to66; Seconds 55 to 60; Medium
50 to 58· Com &amp; Hvs 49 50 to
'
·
• ·
60; Culls 55 Down.
BABY CALVES- 25 to 90

like buying insurance, the

job is not completed 'Ill

e\lerythlng Is covered."

Buying roofing Is like

SEE THE FINE
SELECTION OF UTILE
BOYS CLOTHES

.·

don' t know rooting, know
the company you buY It

from . We'd like to suggest
FRY ROOFING from the
" FRIENDLY ONES" .
When It's FRY you buy you'll never cry.

~~~~;:• 11 R~~~~ DaG~'e. He_ur.vs .
Thomas Hardman and . tnfonl
daughter' c. Howard Hawley,
Char les Joseph , Mrs. Donald
Keeton and Infant son, Marlha
Kelly, Mary Kiser, Perry
Lambert, Dorothy Lauer ,
Barbara Mannon, Ida Merlin,
Jesse May, Sheila McCoy,
Clara Mossbarger, David
Plymale, Levere Sayre, John

BIRTHS
Friday)

I

Mrs . LOUIS
Colton .

HugginS,

real

sa~lngs .

Long

s l eeve

shirts, sweaters,

b(l!th sllpovers .
coat styles and
. sleeveltss style.

·Pants In regular
and slim sizes .
Corduroy,
denims, twills .
Jackets In sires 2
to
12.
Hanes
underwear, socks
and sweatshirts .
Stop In on the 1st
floor,look around.
let us help. you
with
your
selections.

GAME CANCELLED
The scheduled reserve
football game between Meigs
and Pl. Pleasant AT PT.
PLEASANT Saturda·y night
was .cancelled when the Big
. Blacks failed to show,

dealers."

The California State Automobile Association said 75 pet. of

1111111••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·

•
.
D81 rym en :~~;;:::;:::~~:::;~~;::?
(Contin~ed

-----

Spotlighting A New ·Store
IN MIDDLEPORT

Tonight thru Thursday
.Sept.l4·11·26-27
NOT OPEN

Dr. T. J.. Bradshaw
Dr. Milton Mascin

Fri., Sit., Sun.

OPTOMETRISTS

•

mcrease

••
•'

Watch For

GRAND
OPENING

•

(INGELS NO. 2 STORE)

Ingels' Appliances
175 N. SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992·2635

COMiNG
THIS WEEKI

•

.

•
••••
•

181 N. Second Ave.

MIDDLEPORT
. PH. 992-3279

on Page 10)

will get

All New Store
. To Serve You Better

••
•..
•

··~·············~··········~···········~·· ~·

Milk prices at the dairy will
go up Oct. I.
The production of milk over
the United Slates has declined
at an increasing rate these past
few months. Ohio is down 7 pel.
In milk and 7.2 pet. in producer
members since August last
year. Michigan has declined 6
pet. and many of the southern
states
are
down , a
corresponding amount. The U.
S. figure showed a 4 pel. drop
from August last year to
August this year.
'
In recognition of the need for
dollars to meet the ever
tightening cost-price squeeze
to the 'dairy farmer, and to try
'and stem the tide of dairymen
getting out of the business the
Central Ohio Co-operative Milk
Producers and other Great
Lakes-Southern Milk
cooperative areas will Increase
the prl~e ol milk to its company .
buyers 60 centa per c\vt., effective Oct. I. The new price
will be t9.21 per cwl. for 3.5 pet.
milk used for botllng. The price
IS 6 cents per cwt. higher for
southeastern Ohio companies.
According to Donald E. Zehr,
general manager, Central Ohio
Co-operative Milk Producers,
thla ln.c reue Is to update the
prices to farmers and to better
assure the conaumer that milk
and dairy products will . continue to be available to therri.

enttne

-;-V;:O:-L.-::X-:::XV-:-~N:;:::O. l;-;l-;-4----;P;;;O~M;:;:E;:;:RO;;-;-Y;-;·M:;I;:;:DD:;..L-;,EP;;;O::::R:-T,-;:O::-;H-:IO:-----:::---::-:-----:-::_,.----....,-------;-~-.H-0-N-E-9-92.,..·2-l-56-------..­
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1973
.r
TEN GENTS:

MANY GAS STATION OPERATORS IN CALlFORNIA and
New York stayed closed Monday to protest the government's
Phase N price freeze . In Washington, President Nixon asked
the Cost of Living Council to deliver a quick decision on whether
to lift the freeze.
"Both (the President and Cost of Living Council Director
John Dunlop) want to clear up this situation as soon as possible,"
said White House spokesman Gerald Warren. "They want to
clear up any confusion that might exist in the minds of the

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy

•

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meig~·MfUOn Area

'

Be Thrifty, aave aU your Saletllps

old class at the State Fair.
Finally, Carl Gheen, 13, demonstrates his electrical
display to interested onlookers. Gheen, the son of Mr, and
Mrs. C. Vincent Gheen, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was hono~ed with an
"Outstanding of Day" award at the State Fair.

"Oul•tandlng of Drzy" at the State Fair. Her presentation
· was entitled, "How to Plan Your Hike." In the ·next picture,
Patty Kell y, 4-H program assistant, presents a Bicycle
award, sponsored by the Goodyear Tire and Hubbcr Co., to
Teresa Van Meter . She was a state wi nner in the 13-14 year

•

By United Presslnlernatlonal
WASHINGTON - FORMER UNITED MINE WORKERS
President W. A. "Tony" Boyle was ·hospitalized with a possible
stroke late Monday, on the eve of a scheduled extradition hearing
in the murder of his former rival Joseph 'A. "Jock" Yablonski.
George Washington University Hospital said the 71-year-&lt;~ld
Boyle was "in serious condition in a coma" and was under in·
tensive care. He .was taken to the hospital by ambulance abool
11 :30 p.m. EDT.
Boyle faced a hearing today on a government attempt to
extradite him to Pittsburgh on a federal charge of conspiring to
murder Yablonski. He has been free on $50,000 ·bail since his
arrest here Sept, 6 after a federa~ grand jury in Pittsburgh indicted him.
,, ·
·

{saturday)

r--------..
Mr . Mou&gt;e Takes A Trip ·
Show Starts 7 p.m .

Meigs County 's rural • eluded Sharon Karr 's outoriented young people - an standing-&lt;~f-the.&lt;Jay slate fair
estimated 250, including demonstratiOII ; a safety talk,
Pmnts and families - firstrunnerupin area , by Pam
gathered
at
Pomeroy Holcomb, and the Silver
Elementary Sc~ool Monday Citation Award to The Farevening to witness the aMual . mers Bank and Savings Co.,
4-H Awards Program.
Pomeroy.
Steven Stanley, former
Presentation of 4-H awards
achievement award winner, was performed by Patty Kelly,
welcomed
the
gue sts. Patsy Jordan, Jeanne Braun,
t~e Marta Guilkey and C. E.
Highlights
before
(Continued on Page 2)
presentation of awards in-

son.

THREE RUNS MADE
RACINE - The Racine E-R
aquad answered three calls
Saturday: at 2 p.m. to the
Albert Hill residence, Racine,
for Ada Cramlet, 82, who was
having difficulty breathing; at
5:45 p.m. for Howard Largent,
. 71, Syracuse, was also having
difficulty breathing, and at
8:30p.m. for Lester Parker, of
~tern's foolball IIQUIId, with
a ' possible fractured right
ankle, all to Veterans
TINY WILLIAMS
Marietta College Memorial Hospital.
1ophomore tackle Tiny
William• of Pomeroy tMelga
AWARDS TONIGHT
High Sebool) won the pralae
Four-H awards will be
of Marietta football Coach presented lhls evening at 7:30
Joe McDaniel for hla role In at Pomeroy Elementary
Marieita's 23-22 win over School.
Allegheny a week ago.
Williams, nld McDnlel,
DfVQRCE FILED
"Did a fiDe job al both
Pearl A. Scott, 1514 Nye
middle guard aod defensive Ave., Pomeroy, bas filed for
Iackie." Wlllllm1 II the aon divorce In Meigs County
of Mr. and Mn. Floyd Common' Pleaa Court from
Williams of Mulberry Fred Scott, same addreu, on
Helgbl&amp;.
'
grounda of gross neglect of
duly and extreme cruelty. ·

C1rloon :

~1)91er
famous brands at

Saunders, daughter, Jackson .

Disney Featurello:
Bur Country

1st Floor

Little bq_ys SIZIS 3

( Sundty)
. Mrs .
Arnold
Weaver,
daughter, VInton ; Mrs. David

!GI

250 take part
in 4-H awards

to 7 . .. futurlng ·

None.

Sept. ll-l9-30
SOUNDER
ITechnicolorl

ur

of Alumni Recognition awards sponsored by the Olin· Corporation to Mrs. Butcher and Mrs. Sheets, and Mr. Blakeslee
honored his wife for 25 years service to 4-H organizations.
Next, Sharon Karr of the Busy Beavers 4-H Club
discusses her display, which was selected as one of the

YOUTH WAS FRONT AND CENTER Monday evening at
Pomeroy Elementary School when the aimual Meigs CoWJty
4-H Awards were presented . From left to right in the pictures
above, C. E. Blakeslee, Mrs. Blakeslee, Jennifer Blakeslee
Butcher, aod Jennifer Lohse Sheets lake part in presentation

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Mrs. Bobby Roble and Infant
son , Thomas Ruth , Jr., Cynthia
Sexton, Mrs. Willard Sprrouse
and Infant son, Patsy Warner 1
Mrs. Jack Wlcal and Infant
daughter .

MEIGS THEATRE

where N0011.1n 'a car went out ol
control and plWlBed Into lbe
Ohio River lsat Wednelday
evening. Area emeraency Willi
and pollee officer• were on the
scene three .hours recovering
the car and body.
Burial wa• In the Riverview
Cemetery, Middleport.
JAYCEES TO MEET
The Meigs Collnty Jayceet
will meet at I p. m. Wednelday
at the Meigs IM when new
members will be sworn In and
an orientation prosnm
presented. A.ll Jayceet and
guesta are urged to attend,
Membership
In
the
organization Is open to ·any
yoWlg man between 18 and 35
Interested In commWllty lm·
provement and programa.

Black, Ray Blakeman. Julla

ESTHER PIPER
RACINE - Esther Bur~
Piper, 95, Racine, died Sunday
·
at Holzer Medical Center. Mrs.
Piper was preceded In death by
her parents, Lewis Madison
and Nannle Roberts Conrad
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Scan, Mrs. ·Donald Sizemore
Mitchell; her husband, AdRACINE - An Important and infant son, Fred Staub,
dison S. Piper, four brothers,
Pauline
Wayne,
Keltha
session of the Southern Local Whitlatch
and two sisters.
.
Mrs. Piper Is survived by a Band Boosters will be held at
(sunday)
sister, Mrs. A. C. 1Be~~lahl 7:30 p, m. Tue&amp;day at the high
Tammie Clerk, Celestine
Faudree, Eulah Godfrey, John
Bradford, Racine; one sisterIn-law, Mrs . C. R. Mitchell, school here. All interested N . Hill, Willard Houser ,
Saundra
Loomis,
sfeven
Atlanta, Ga'/ and several school patrons are invited,
McGuffin , Mary Ridgeway ,
She was a member of the
Winnett Chapel Methodist
Church, Marianna, Pa.
Funeral services will be
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Howard
Shiveley officiating. Following
services here, the body will be
taken to Shrontz Nichol
Funeral Home at Marianna.
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home after 7 p.m.
today.
Services will be held at
Marianna Wednesday at 1 p.m.
with burlaf In Green County
Cemetery at Waynesburg, Pa.

POMIROY, OHK.I

tCQriUnued from Page I)
r~gret that I had any part In
this affair.
"I think It was an WI·
fortunate use of executive
power and I'm sorry thai l dld
not have the wlldom to withdraw. At the lllllle time, I
cannot escape feeling that the
COWltrY I have served for my
enUre life and which directed
me to carry out the Watergate
entry Is pWiishing me for doing
the very things it trained and
directed me to do."

l Area Deaths !

nieces and nephews.

and Savings Co.

Service for Noonan held

Hunt

Surcharge
proposed on

water bil'ls
These Meigs High School band members proudly display
a trophy which the band received for being named to third
place honors in the parade division at the Band-&lt;J-rama

staged Saturday in Marietta. From the left are Cherie
Reuter, Barb Fultz, Jenny Chapman, Melanie Burt, Diana
Carsey, Angie Sisson and Mary Rusche!.

Cow struck· twice in dense fog
Two freak accidents were
investigated by the Meigs
County sieriff's department
early Monday morning.
At 5:50 a.m. Monday, the
department investigated an
accident in Sutton township on
SR 338 near its jWJction with
.SR 124, where a pickup truck
driven by Harold L. Patterson,
Syracuse, apparently hit .a cow
as Patterson drove through

I

dense fog.
Meanwhile, at 7 : 30 p.m.
The cow, which had wan- Monday, the department indered onto the roadway, did vestigated a two-car mishap at
minor damage to the truck.
the junction of SR 7 and
Leading Creek Rd . in Salisbury
Butjustfiveminuteslaler, at township.
·
5:55 a.m., an auto driven by
An auto driv.en by Donald L. ·
David W. Fox, Rt. 2, Racine, Swearinger, 16, of Rutland,
hit the same cow at the same was turning left onto Leading
place. The cow was killed this Creek Rd., when an auto driven
time, Fox's .car also had minor by Frank V. Musser,. 34, Rt. 2,
damage. ,
Pomeroy, attempted to pass.

Swearinge•·'s auto was hit in
the side.
A passe nger in with
Swearinger, Dixie R. Snyder,
19, of 176 Beech St., Middleport, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport E-R squad where
he was treated and released.
Heavy damage was incurrea
to both vehicles and Musser
was cited for passing a car

One of . the Rutland St.
At that time, the board In·
residents,
Roger Manley, was
dicated that the cost would be
excessive for the amoWlt of asked If he would subscribe to
revenue· to be derived from water service from Midproviding service'to the four or dleport. He answered in the
five customers on Middleport negative, commenting that he
attempting tO Hill. The board and coUncil wOuld have if Middleport had
indicated they had no objection acted two years ago on the
to service being provided these matter. It was reported that
people by the district at last Pomeroy Village does not wish
Monday's meeting and the
(Continued on Page 10)
lower 60s. Chance of showers board indicated that it frowned
or thWJdershowers Wednesday on increasing water rates for
present customers.
However, at last night's
meeting Mrs. Helen Shuler,
'r
1
clerk
of
the
board
of
public
"Y ALL COME NOW"
MASON - The blood· affai~s. on behalf of the board,
trailers were told, by Kerr to Attending were Ingels, Crl)w ,
mobile will be al the Mason presented the recommendation
contact Horace Karr for Hichard Chamber s, John
City Fire Stallon Monday,
to council asking that it appossible parking of the yehicles Koebel, Wendell Hoover, Virgil
Oct. 1, from 12-8 p.m. An prove the plan.
for the three-day event. Kerr Teaford, Ralph Werry, Bob
urgcnl request "to please
Th e assessment would
said owners were told they Jacobs, Grueser, C. E. Blakescome" Is made by lhe provide flUids to lake service to
could park at the fair grounds lee , Kerr, Jack Carsey ,
American Red Cross.
the customers on Middleport
M~RIETTA The Conn
but did not know if water and Carolyn Thomas, Beulah Jones
Hill in addition to providing Welding &amp; Machine Co. of New
electric facilities would be and Katie Crow.
funds for several other im· Castle, Pa., was the low bidder
available.
provements planned for the for repair of the Langsville
community's water system, it bridge on Slate Route 124 In
Ingels said that the Christwas reported.
Meigs CoWJty, Ohio · Departmas promotion IB ala standstill
The proposal, if approved, ment. of Transportation
but plaMing will be compleU:d
would provide an Income of District 10 Deputy Director
in two weeks.
some $20,1100 over the one year Max R. Farley announced.
The Ciu·IBtmas budget last
period . The Middleport HID
The ODOT rejected a lone
year was $2,100. The Christmas
residents, it was explained, bid on Sept. 14 by ·Civil Conpromotion this yeur will be
receiving the new water...ser- struction Co. of Plain Clty
limited to chamber members
vlce from the town would pay whose $58,381.72 bid was
only, Ingels said.
$5 a month for a minimum of $18,381.72 over the state
Fred Crow indicated he will
2,000 gallons of water, plus the estimate of $40,000.00.
try to secure films and a
$1.50 assessment. They also
Resubmitting the emergency
speaker from the Cleveland
would pay a proposed lap fee of project ' for bids on Sept. 21
Browns' and also to secure Joe
resulted In a substantial
$75.
Nuxhall, former pitcher for the
Mayor John Zerkle, after the savings to the state, Director
Cincinnati Reds, as guest
proposal . had been presented, Farley declared. The Conn bid
speakers for the chamber,
commented, "'!'his is the best of $33,792.10 wail $6,207 .90
Nuxl1all pitched in more games
thing the Middleport Board of below the slate esUmate. Civil ·
Umn any Otllllr Reds ' pitcher
Construction Company 's
PubliC Affairs ever did."
since 1900.
However, several questions second bid was $56,481.72.
District 10 Bridge Englnellr
were raised by council
Larry Coler aald work should
members.
On the lighter side, Crow said
Council
President
David
begin at the bridge site as soon
he was nlso going to lry and
Ohlinger and Councilman as the s.tructuralsteel Wllflaro
have Willie Sutton at the
Lawrence Stewart asked If the ·fabricated. A completion date
Rcgattu. Sutton Is a notorious
hill residents would subscribe has been set for November 15.
bank robber now on parole.
During the bridge repalr the
to service from Midaleport.
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CITIZENS ore busy these The question of providing co~ tractor will tll!t up a'Route
Bill Gruescr disclosed he hud
detour which will lead
sewage, which would .be '
days with many activities plunned by Ctllllloyes of tha Meigs
I'CCeived a letter in regard to
Middleport's duty later, was traffic to Route 160 to Rout. &amp;H
County Council on AginH. Friday, 12 of the senior cl(izens,
Miss Brenda Taylor ; Regatta
discussed.
CoWlcllman Fred then north to Route 7 bac~ 10
S&lt;!mc or whom had never been in a howling alley before
Queen, attending the ' pWllpkin
Hoffman said he did not like Route 124. The brldil II'U
began learning the art M the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
show at Circleville.
the circumstances since tl damaged la1t Auguat 18, when
Among them were octogenarian Ernest F . Weber, Pomeroy
appeared thai the village Is a truck carrylnc a rock drill
Route 2, and Mrs. Margaret Sincla ir . Advisor of the group of
The next meeting ot' the
taking action on providing the with an ex\lllded boom elrWk
n• rn and women Is senior citize n Victor Wippel of nea r
chamber will be Monday, Oct.
water service only after being the top of the brldie lUperPomeroy who has a bowling recorQwhich puts tnany younger
'u; with o guest speaker ft·om
. structure .
forced Into it.
howlct·s lo shume.
thr Community School.
'

~~~~~ ~\;~,S

i[;EE~~ PomeroyChamber -~:!:;:: ....
;:~u~:;~
sh0 w s exp ansi.0 n : :~:,~:::,:::,;:, ,:,~:,:,:~::: : :,:
lower 60s on Thursday
lowering to highs In the 70s
In the 50s by

:~:;~~~*3:"#~~- d.:.£ W:!8~~~:~:!:::

Demolay to

bring bo~l
tickets here

The second annual All Ohio
Shrine Bowl is slated Soturday,
Dec. I, in Ohio Stadium, and
area residents will soon be able
to obtain tickets for the battle
from the Meigs Chapter, Order
of Demolay .
Proceeds from the bowl,
which
have participants
from 31 Ohio Colleges, will go
to the Cincinnati Burns Institute . Unreserved general
admission is $3 per ticket.
The Order of Demolay ,
besides annoWlcing that II will
be selling tickets, also reports
that II Is beginning a membership drive.
The organization Is offering a referral service by
which any one can submit the
.name of a friend or relative for
membership. Requirement for
joining Demolay are, 13-14
years· of age, ·B belief In God,
good ~huracter and good
reputation, petition a Demolay
chapter and have o Masonic
sponsor.
.
Anyone wishing to r.efer
someone for membership
should send a Demolay
referral service ·form to
LOCAL TEMPS
Derriolay International, 201
The temperature In down- E:ast Armour Blvd., Kansas
town Pomeroy at II a.m. was City, Mo., or to R. V. King ,
78 degrees Wider sunny skies. Middleport.

will

There are 41 paid memberships in the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, Earl
Ingels, president, told mem·
bers at a meeting of the
chamber Monday at noon at
the Meigs Inn.
Ingels reported that 10 additional members will be added
soon , 'i'he chamber has nine
new members over the last
year.
A lettercwas read by Ingels
from Dr. Marcus Bloch ,
president of Eastern School of
Hypnotism, New York City,
regarding a convention of 300
medical hypnotists in Pomeroy
on June I, 2, 3 of next year . A
request for a list of liotels and
motels available in the area
was made by Dr. Bloch.
Mrs , Carolyn Thomas ,
secretary, Will direct a le.tter to
Dr . Bloch at 920 E, Sixth St. ,
New York, Informing him of
whalls available.
Ingels said a committee
appointed at the last meeting is
to Inquire Into who owns
downtown local business.
places.
The Inquiry Is the result of
the surve~ made for the VIllage
of 'Pomeroy by Pal Meeker of
Surveys Unlimited which was
presented to the chambor two
weeks ago . Its main point was
do vclopmont of u downtown

''mull .11
Named to serve on the
committee were Bill Grueser,
Ted Reed and Ralph Graves.
Jack Kerr reported that between 80 and 100 Airstream
li'Oilers will arrive for next
ycur's R l· ~alllt. Owners of the

A proposal to assess the-approximately 1,200
customers of the Middleport water system $1.50
each month for one year to provide mo·ney for
improvements was subniitted to Middleport Village
Council by the community's board of public affairs
Monday night.
.
Only four council members were present for the
meeting, so . council was unable to take official
actio!). The proposal. fqllow.ed recent attempts of
Middleport Hill residents to receive water service
from the Leading Creek Conservancy District. Hill
residents as well as residents of a section of Rutland
St., who actually live within the Pomeroy corporation limits, met with the council and board of
public affairs last Monday to see what could be
worked out for· them to receive water service from
the conservancy district.

B1•d Iet
to fix
bridge

12•

~-

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