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ii-'n.6tiib'Simlinei.Mifl ,o.t~y.O.,!opt.~III'll ,.

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(Contlllued from page I)
ID 1Ift .., a Vl&gt;lce for god and ~." a mlnlllter and 111r&lt;o
membeuolhls congregation Monday aiDod in a downpour olllllde
amovie theatre to prvteslthe showing of ''Bob and carol and Ted
.,d Allee."
·
The Rev. Richard Heatherly of tile Calvary Baptist &lt;llurch
aald the R-coted film ''portroyo wife swapping and free love and
makes fun of decency," He aald he feared theatres h...., might
!Wenlwllly turn "ID that Swedish stuff."
TOLI!IJO, OHIO- DIBSIDENT PIJBUC schoolteachers and
the board of educalim receesed their aalary lallra Indefinitely
Monday night and the Toledo Teacllera Federation urged its
members today ID man a picket line.
The 2,500 teachers, who went back to work laat Friday after
striking for 10 days, are under a court order not to walk out. The
otate Ferguson Act prohibits strikes by publlc employes under
threat of dlamissal. There was no Indication when negotlatloos
would resume.
OOUJMBUS - THE &lt;BAIRMAN of the Ohio Interstate

Coordlnatnrs Conference said Mnnday th' federal decision not to
build a portion of lllterotate 7lln Cincinnati was ''dlaalltrous."
James W. Sbockneasy told a meeting of tho cooferenee that the
dedBion announced by Transportation Secretary John Volpe
should be foiJ8hl. The decision was made to call off plans for
Victory Parkway because it would violate federal restrictloos on
freeway right-of-way through park prvperty.
"It's a disastrous declslon,''liloclmessy said. "Even If we get
over this hurdle, we may have ID redesign the whole deal. anclnnati wlli suffer lntermlnalie delays and Inconveniences."

Mrs. Howard B. Pilchard, 86, are two daugh~rs, Mrs. R. M.
the fonner Della Lowery of 1Mildred) Daugherty of Tijeras
Pomeroy, died Sept. 6 In New and Mrs. Val (MOline) of

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Mexico where she had resided
for the past few months after
moving there from Florida.
Her husband, who is among
the survivors, resides st
Tijeras, New Mexico, and some
years ago served the Methodist
Churches In Letart, Racine,
Syracuse and Minersvllie In
Meigs County. Other survivors

Townships Have
32 at Convention
Thirty-two

township

delegates were present for the
Meigs County

Agriculture

Stabilization and Conservation
Convention held at the Masonic

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(9"1'~~ J!lille •I)

Toledo,twograndsonsandelght
great-grandchildren .

violence. And there's one small
falling left out here. And this is
the distinction between your
being a political joke and your
being a very serious man.
"And that is thai you

yourself, singularly, are perhaps the grealest precursor of

D

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MASH

AKRON (UP)) - Three
major banks here have lowered
Donald Sutherland
the 8 per cent prime interest
Ell toll Gould
rate
to 71&gt; per cent because of
Rated "R" under 17 not
easing
of the light money
admitted without parent.
situation.
'
ColorCirtooRI:
Fnlghl Fright
The American Bank of
Don't Spill the Boons
Commerce, the Goodyear Bank
an..tt....... t
and the Firestone Bank h....,
Admllsl..,: $1.00 Adults, 60c
followed similar action by East
Chlldl'on
Coast banks during the
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
weekend.
,
Two Cleveland Banks, the
-ntldty &amp; Thursctay
Society National and ConSept. 2:1-24
Unental Bank, also lowered
NOT OPEN
.__ _
_ _ _ __, · their rates Moodoy.
(Tochnlcolor)

In Ohio

COLUMBUS (UP)) - Chan-

cellor John Millett of the Board
of ~gents said today he ...
peeled the openings ol Ohio's
colleges and universities to be
"peacelul, but subdued."
Miami University, ooe of
four state supported universities sbut t1own last spring becsuse of student disturbances,
was scheduled ID become the
first to reopen today.
"We haven1 received any Indication of trouble,'' said MilleU. "We upecl the openings
to be peaceful, but subdued."
.Mlllett aald a new campus
disruption law passed by the
last session of the general assembly is ellpeCied to help keep
things under control.
"The law lll8koa It clear that
there is a new criminal offense
-cunpus disturbance-in the
otate," he aald. "The law ...
provides for an lmmedl,ate
hearing of perSOill involved In
an outbreak and f,.. dlsmlaaal
of those convictad of disrup-

tion."

Millett also said IOCIIrity at

the lnslltullons have been llghl.ened.

"Many of the lna!ltullona

han lncreued the lliJe o1 th.!lr

Check ·and Double 'Check
Isn't It about time you up·dated your method
of bill pay1ug and record keeping with a
Olecklng Account? To assure your money Is
protected yet readily available, see us.

clpen Your Checking Account Today .

DESPOSITS INSURED TO '20,000.00

IIOCIIrity forces,'' he said: "ID
addition, IIOCIIrlt)' arrangemenll, such u ldentlfleallon
cards and control of ID
campus, will be ln. effect when
ltudenll report·for claaes."
Mlllell aald many 0( the Wllversitlel and
.
campus
trajnlnc
the Ohio

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atlmprovinc
ll&lt;e capacity

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ble on the CID'lpU8U,"

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Pleasant Valley lloapllal
ADMITTED - Kimberly
Klnnlard, Apple Grove; Herbert McDonald, Mro. Era ·
Wallace, Rei Veazy, Charles
Rainey, Pl. Pleasant; Charles
Atkjnson, Henderson; Mrs.
Teddy lllckman, Leon; Mrs.
Dewitt Browning, Pl. Pleasant;
Ralph Elias, Clifton; William
Powell, New Haven; Mrs.
Harold Young, Clifton; Norma
Harrison, Leon; Richard
Wallace, Jr., Pl. Pleasant.
DISCHARGES - Vivian
Pifer, J. Kathleen UtUe, Mrs.
Eugene Spaats, Barbara
Oldaker, Mrs. Richard Shirley,
Mrs. Charles Burrows, Mrs.
Larry Leiving, and Mrs. Rusaell

Ust _the free parking loJ on 2nd Street white '·

Charged

shopping~ Fumiture-Roor Coverings..;.a~d·l

~IAIMBVII (UPI) - State
Democratic Party Chief
Eu(lene P. O'Grady today ac£9'e4 Franklin County
~tor. C. l!oward Jolmaon
~. a'!IIS.UI proaecuiDr John
~II'
with
"ev•slon,
milclre!.11on and tilDe wasting
p'~ures" In tbe special
rtrabd Jm'l' Investigation of the
alate.ljlpn program.
, O'Grlilll appeared Tueaday
liefOre 'dit Franklin County
Gtanci o!Ury ' which Ia ln.' ...u,.... Joena llllde UroiJ8h
tht' ollll!e of llate Trelllllrer
.Tobn D. Herbert and through
·tiiol llebool Employea .

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·Furnishings for your home and'
Wearing Apparel for your family.

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Be Thrifty! Save all of your Nleslipl from

Elberfehls in Pomeroy

Cundiff.

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lletlremoftt System.
·~Jom 1/tck and C. lfDward
ttllould on with the

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are w1s1ng up

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to the low cost of electric heat
More homeowners than ever before switched to electric heat last year.
switched because they found out. through an estimate,,. how .!!!!!! the differenCe i~.
between electrtc heat and other forms of heating. Do they: think they made e w,ise'
decision? Ask some people who have electric ·lieat. TheY:re ou~ mo5t convincing :
salesmen. Call us or your Reddy Kilowatt
~
. .
Recommended Dealer lor an estimate.. It's
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free. It's accurate. And a real eye-opener.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23;

POME~OY·'MIDDLEPORT, 0~10

eace

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over AJpman
Radio, Marshal Habes AI·
Majaii, the Jordanian Chief ol
Stall, said his force.B had beaten
back the Syrian invading f....es
from Jordonlan territory· lniD
Syria.
Ills statement broacl&lt;;ast by
Amman radio followed King
Husaeln's assertion that his
army and air force had
bloodied the nose of the
Invading Syrian lonk force In a
tank batUe thls morning.
lsraell sources had re)l9rted
the an- ear!let the Middle East allua-

Evasion

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Shor Uy before

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ByUoltedPreuiDternaltoial
King HUIBOin sald today the
. •Jordanian government and
Paltsllnlan guerrillas had
' ' agreed ID end theli' civll war
alter a decisive tan)t batUe in
:1!blcll Invading Syrlsn forces
_ , driven back lniD Syria.
c b j H~11eln made the annooneemenlln a Jolnlstaiement
:itt!) Sudanese Premier G;aafar
EINumeiry, one of a fourofllBil
.., · mediating team sent ID Amman
by an An!b sUllllfltlileellng in

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'l , •;•, vi)( ·XXII NO. 113 •

Coroner Rules

Banks Drop Rates

JJ101118t!• ·

· ff'Oill Wellfleet: Mus., Jan. II,
)...,, and contalne&lt;l a greeting
,.,. !. Jl:om ' frul~~nt Theodore
~,.-'liOOoeveltto King Edward VII
' ' . ol)!:~!and. :

GriiJder .Death

...

tlrst wb:eleu

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;·,.rver ,10111 over~•• (~l the
. 'urijted Sta~ , w~s ·.transmitted

John W. Dowler,
violence
In
this
country.
You
Division
10 Highway
1 lO rlltfem
have done more to build an Director, Marietta,
aura of violence, to build a revealed this morning
mllteu In which violence is that a ~onsulting
accepted, than anyone I !mow." engineering firm has
"U.t me Just point out one been Invited to submit
thing," Agnew replied. "Long
CLEVELAND (UPI) - before 1 became a household o proposal to the Ohio
Cuyahoga County Coroner word, violence was rampant in Department of HighSamuel Gerber ruled today the this country. The Berkeley . ways for the Rt. 35 Bydeath of a high school football campus el!Pioded when 1 was Pass project from
player here last Aug. 'll was due still back In county govern- Thurman to Gallipolis.
to heart !allure brought on by ment."
..ertion and ..treme heat.
"Now to use me 88 some
Dowler did not reveal
Gerber aald Michael Root, 18, convenient bete noire for the
the name of the firm,
a senior at John Hay Righ violf!lee that's a1sled In this but said a final
Sch"?l, dropped dead during a country because of the disgusl- decision should be
runrung drill.
ing permlsslve attitudes of the
forth~omiog within the
Gerber said his office devoted people In command of college
ned two weeks.
many hours studying the case campuses is one of the moat ;:;:::;&gt;;~:::::::::::::::::~::::&gt;::::::&gt;;~::::::;::::::::::,:::::·:·:
and similar cases around the ridiculous chargeo I've ·ever
country attempting to find a beard."
pattern.
usut our efforts proved
fruiUess," sald Gerber. "We
found no pattern that could be
used as a caulton Ughl.
"HR.\\ ""' ~"""'~""" In a ·
- ~ ..~
J\.T

Colieges

Tonight, Soptamber 22

The

in tile fteld fit l1l'bllt vi~ .
Ciodllited ..b Good 5pjrlb ·
The ptececliJll SIICiiOIIB ollhe
sbow, while ·olton eriUcaJ on
both sides, was condilcted with
generally good spirits. Student
unrest and Agnew's recent
addresses got a going over·
DiscWISion of lhe Kent State
University campus slayingsled
to the healed final five mlnules.
Agnew said "the evidence
seems to Indicate the National
Guard overreacted"ln the Kent
shootings that kllled four
students,
"! doo't e•cuse what they
did," Agnew said of the guard,
but he added It w.. amazing
how the American people had
"forgotten the precurs0l'S 11 of
the shooting-the two nights of
rioting, the burning Df the
ROTC Building and the cutting
of hoses of firemen trying to
fight the blaze.
Silverman aald Agnew had "a
strange sense about what
happened" at Kent Stale in
suggesting the cause was rock
throwing and protests.
One Fallliag Left Oot
"You talk about an aura of

Temple building in Pomeroy on
Monday.
The group elected Orion W.
Rousll to a three year term on
the county committee with
Clarence Price named first
alternate and VirgU C. King
second altemate. Wayne H.
Chase was named chairman of
the COU!!ty committee and Earl
H~ ''D611~ li'aa named vl'ce rlm'nJngitrtll~~ ·. Ciill.&amp;~~i(jj'tid~~
chairman.
pra;frS," said Gerber.
~uvu ~u
"Yet he was the lone one
affected. It's puzzling."

MEIGS THEATRE

..Now You i(JaOw ·

violence, about precW'sors of

Mrs. Pilchard Dies in New Mexico

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mored,
artillery
and
engineering corps acted In close
cooperation, with the support of
the Jordanian Royal Air Force.
"Those operations were In
lrbid and Ramlha In the
northern sector against the
Invading Syrian troopo which
occupied that sector.
"Since early today, our forces
have launched fierce counteraltacks and putsued the Syrians
until they began to retreat In
~~Our annored forces have disorder and confusion.
"At · 2:~ p.m. (8:15 a.m.
launched large scale military
EDT)
the Invaders aompletely
operations In which the ar-

Uon was easing and there were
lridicaUons the Syrians .might
be preparing to withdraw. '
Tbe S)'t'lans were bit by the
Jordanian army and air. force
bill they also were under
pressure from the Soviet Union
ID withdraw to their borders.
The United Stales and Brllaln
had asked the Kremlin to try to
bring about a withdrawal.
Matall's statement, broadcast
by Amman radio, said:

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withdrew acrll68 the Syru10- ·
Jor~ian border into Syrian ·
territory in the direction of
lleraa."
The announcement said "they
suffered heavy losses In vehicles and equipment."
"The planning of the Syrian
rulel" and their aides was a
complete failure," Majatl sald.
"Their treacherous conspiracy
was defeated and they have
been disgraced and caused
large losses to the brotherly
Syrian Army for which they
(Continued oo page 3)

33 Begin
Nursing

Training
)Jlauguratlng the 50th year ol
the School of Nursing of Holzer
Medical Center, .33 freshmen
will enter the school on Sep.
tcmher 28.
The school was opened In 1920
by the late Mrs. Charles Holzer,
who was then director of nursing in the hospital. Four

students comprised the first
class.
. In. 19:11), students learned by
working with patienis almost
from their first day, supplemenUng the care given by
graduates and carrying the
' burden of patient care in the
hospitaL
Today, students take courses
in sciences and academic
subjects through the Off
Campus Program of Ohio
University wlllch carry coUege
credit. In tllelr nursing courses
actentlflc prlndples

FIVE-YEAR-OW SIIERRI MARSHAlL, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ollrles M lid,
Jlemlock Grove, a vicllm of cystic Dbrosls, pre1011ls Pomeroy Mayor &lt;llarles Lepr an information sheet on the disease as the annual fund drive opened in Meigs Olunty 'I.'Uooday.
Volunteers are needed ID assist with the drive and those Interested In helping are aaked 1D Clll
Mrs. Marie Boyd,II49-ZI!Il; Mrs. Marshallai99U974 or Mrs. Mary Marlin 993-7022. Olllaticlll
may he sent to the Meigs County Cystic Fibrosis Drive, P. 0. Bo• tot Pomeroy. This Is thefiNl
annual drive for tbe disease sponsored by Meigs Sslon 710, 8 and 40. Slerri Is the teCODd
member of her family ,ID have cystic Dbrosia. ·

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IFeudm'

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: News •.• in Briefs

:

BJ u.ited Prta

l!ltena~

.

IEn d.1n .'o': ,.. .

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:w.AiinNG'l'Oih.........,. ~ .....If,.. .. . .. . ~ ' ..
air ~all In the ,q to thwart bljacters appe&amp;rl llelded for
AfJANtA (lli'l) - W~ 1

peanut ,(anner ~IIJ!1D1 ~ "
soushl 1D ""l~ 011e IIi
biggest ups~ts In mOdem
Georgia politics today In •
runoff Bl!ainst former Gov. pat!, ·
E. Sand~s for the DemocratiC ·
nomination for governor.
The campaign got 10 bll!tl'ilt
cslled to appear today·
its finalllages that Rept'Mil"'!
gubernatorial candidate Hill
MEMPIDS, TENN.- VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Agnew &amp;Ill had "People are (• )fed up
aald Tueaday nighiCIIOofthe major questions of this election year with aU this feuding and fwllnl
Is whetlier the President or "radlcal.Uberals" will make (thai) we stand to win no matter
America's foreign policy. ''Tills Is the year whf!l Republlcans who loses."
must seek out the millioos of aolid Democrats In this country wbo
Gov. Lester G. Maddol, wilD
do not shari&gt; the radlcal.Uberal philoaophy and work together for won the Democratic nii'Dinatilll
the defeat ol the racial left ... " Agnew said.
lor Ueutenanl governor wilholll
Speaking at a GOP fund-calslng dinner fur candy mllllonalre a runoff (be is prohibited by
WUllsrn Brocll, who is seeking ID unseal veteran Sen. Atherl Gore, from succeeding hlmaeU),
D-Tenn., Agnew aald Gore "Ia for an Intents and ~ the remained neutral. Black leaclSouthern ~lcml chalnnan ol the Eastern llberaJ establish- en appeared divided. llolll
ment." Earlier Tueaday at GOP luncheon In Louisville, Ky., Carter and Sallden are COIIIIAgnew had attacked a federal conununicaliorul commissioner as dered moderates.
There were two DemotnliC
an eumple of the ''pOOdlHolnded, super.permlsalve" llberal
congressional
runoffs, the IIIOiit .. ,
wbo hu encouraged the naUoo's youth to use drugs. He did not
interest
centering
oo the 1111 · ,:
Identify the ofDciaJ.
lllsirlct were Andrew Ytlllll,,~ · ·
WASHINGTON - A FEDERAL MEDIATOR predicted former aide to the late ))ai.
agreement would be reached today to avoid a nationwide rail Marlin Luther King Jr., facoil
white attorney Wyman C. lDI!ii
strike thai could he called at midnight. Negoll'itcrs In an 11-year
for the right to challe¥ ~
dispute over whether firemen sbould be used oo diesel freight
Rep. Fletcher 'lbcmpoon af :.
locomotives scheduled a sessloo for 10:30 a.m. ID dlseuss a aeries
AUanla. GOP runoffs ••~\~jlJ
of federal proposals glvf!l to both sides Tllesday. o.talls of the local.
ll'OP&gt;sals were not announced.
Fewer than1 hallt.theatale'i
New York attorney Fred Uvlngstoo, head of an emergency mllUon registered voters
mediation board, aald Tueadoy be wu confident a setU~~~~tnt apected to decide the
would he reached today. Ills coofidence was echoed by Asslatant about the same num~
Labor Secretary W. J. Usery, who aald, "We are very opllmlalic portlcipaltd In the
that II can be -ked out."
)l'lmary that gave
llulllllng tlO,GOO-vote
' LAYOFn IN RELATED INDVSTIUES Sanders.
ADDMONAL
caused by the United AulD WorkII'S union strike against Gf!leral The boyish, 1011111~
Motora hav. inereued the coat of tha waltout to Oillo'BI!CCIIOIIIf Carter. 45, C8l't'tad all
to f2.$ mllUon I day In payrolls alone.
Georgia's 159 ·~:~~~
Fo!l' planla, not llnlcll by the UAW, announced the layo(la 111'-1 by only tO
'l'lleadl)' of 16,200 worker~ becanae ola euthltct.tn the demand for lflllng • rnajli'IIJ In,
llliD parla. The Jnlttalloal to the ecoDODlY W88 t1.7 tDilllon a day mao race .
sanders, alao
In payrolls when 40,500 111:da8 ill'udt II Gil ladlitles In Ohio
Sept. 15 as part ol a na~wjde~~Ul .by tbe UAW aga!Mt the lgnand Carter Ill
auto 'mlnufllCiurill&amp; 81anl·
'·
· Some of btl
CCII&lt;eded lolevi~ '
"'
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Dlllllil of lhe
certain ~nal appnwal before Congress lldjourns.
Equally sure of f!lactmeal is the tai on airline piUIIIellgers to pay
for 11.
The House Fore~&amp;n Affairs Committee, however, still was
wrestling with a variety of congressiooal resolutions aimed at
nther measures to loll the growing number of hijacklnp. Witnesses from the Departments of Transportatioo and State were

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of the

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Need for
In Our· Utterances

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Ramsey Clark. former U.S. aUOmey general. IK:&lt;'USed
the Nixon administration of the "repression" of college
students in a newspaper interview in Cleveland the other'
day.
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" It's evident." he said, "that !be administration · has
made a conscious political decillion not to. peacemake but
to stir .up. This administration wants to 1&gt;91arize. It is divisive ln th~ extreme . Either they don't see our terrible
pro~lems, or they don't care. They are frigl!tened.
"Their answer to college protest is force. There is no real
effort at communication and understandinll\ no -effort at
dialogue."
.
We live In a time when there is not unly tepresslon of
the college_student b~t repression of the blaciE m..,, said
Clark, adding that th1s summer, in the wake &gt;Of the Kent
State tragedy, should hav.e heen a time "to seek each other
out. There is a terrible need for immediacy of commurilcia· ·

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THE DCCTDA SAYS

Breast Examination
Is Important Procedure
ly WAYNE G.

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HIGH RISE
High Seat
High Bars
ONLY (36)
95
Reg. s39·

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THE GlOBAL VIEW

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Lenin PreGched Mendacity

Lies, Deceit Still Soviet Way
right. .But the President and his advisers surely remember
that It was during the Geneva summit conference of 1'56
that the Russtsns ·began their penetration of the Ml~
East. Even as former Premier Kbrusi!Cliev w•s olfeting·
P~sldent Eisenhower eternal "mir i dt""""a" (peace and·
fnendship) , Moscow was sending In anna and agents.
SiJme 15 years-later, Communist ~usala. without !lrlitg
a sliot, emtfged as a dominant power in 'the Mldclle East
and the Mediterranean, thus reallzlne lht old lmperlallat
dreams of the Czars.
'' .,
And was it not the same
minioter who is now ,jrylni
in the Suel area~wilo toRI
in

UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. !NEAl
Ha~ing mis.used _the M,ldeast ceasefire agreement for a
mass1ve mtSslle build-up m the Suez area, the Russians are
now making a bald-faced attempt to justify their perfidy.
Soviet leaders~from Lenin to the Kremlin's current boss
Brezhnev~have always regarded negotiations with the
West as another tool to implement their revolutionary go!ll.
What is disturbing is the fact that even a student of
Soviet strategy like President Nixon gave the Kremlin
leaders an opportunity to outwit him by putting too much
faith in their word.
There is nothing wrong with Nixon's policy of "negotia·
!ion ins~ad of confrontation." But an awareness of the
Russla~s techmque and an alertness toward their ultimate
revolutionrn:y goal cannot he replaced by hopes of detente.
Good intentions are usually counterproductive In any deal·

8RANDST1T~~ ·~ t' ,~ ~~ l"W',~~~~\1.\rv.i. d\ d::i~

'

3 FOR

NESTLES

~~!:~~~~d~~!~l~~:~~

tali~,"
Lenin taught the faithful.
H~ n:tade ~ science. of mendacity. In order to .ieB!roy

,.

for an adult? What causes a
low blood sugar? What is the
best treaiment?
A-la normal newborn In!ants, the fasting level may
be as low. as 20 mllllgrams
per 100 mliiJlltera. After the
first few days, the normal
range ts 50 to 100 and for an
adult, eo to 100. But lower
levels are not s~ficant un·
less accompanied by such
strymbP tomsdas ~atlng,
em 11ng an wea.neu.

such.ell'orts as
Arms Umltatlon Talks (SALT).
cap1tahst soc1ety, Lenm said, Communists are justi6ed in
Are the Russians negotia!iJtg ~~:~
resorting to "any ruse, cunning, evasion and concealment -them ,nerely another scheme to di
of the t~uth. :·
while retaining their own nuclear arsenal?
By npw this is old stuft. But American policymakers, It . As yet,,there is no lndieaUpn !bat Mlilciow Is prepared to ·
seems, must be coostantl~ reminded that Lenin's turgid a~c.epl a SALT Inspection system
. . . In 11'1 abseJice w,M ·
volumes are still the "Bible" of the Kremlin leaders--de· c~uld say ·:tiow many ~ar.heads the Rdsaians hUT 'Even ·
spite the periodic twls!s and turns of thel~ foreign policy. ·spies in the okies ~ n?~ Infallible cotil)len._ ,, . , .. , :.
Even according to the Guardian, Britain's sedate and . It Is t~me for U.S! JIC!Ilcyina~ to rtaUU t.bal Sovi~ ·
very llheral newspal"'!'1 the Russlanli, by their flagrant . as~~~es cannot ,blf ~e~ at'fac,e value
flllir ·
abuse of the cease.fire, stand coodemned as cynical !iahi." ~eryavceean be; elfe.ctlviiy a~ cOritlnuolisly verilled1·. '· '
ltwouldbeblgblyundiplomatlcforNixontosaythiao•"i ·.';-;,:V·h'i..~: • . ,, .. ·' ·
.'
.' ,.
· f'. .
.•r :·'"' .. ·
1.
.
• ·
,, ,. ~-'·

of aurvlvblg more than five
·. rem.
lf must bf concluded,

sontngs and a reboUnd reac·
lion to Insulin In persona
with ml_ld ,diabetes. In clill·
dren, hypoglycemia may be
hereditary. The treatl_!lent
would depend on the cause.

I

~

..

i" ' ,. ~ ·:

. · th rrt're that

.n women

; tlflce a yel!f-o ft en e r if
tbere II any reason to sus·
pec:t that a carieer may · be
ileveloping. This checkup
sbould Include an X ray
(mammography) of the
· llreuts.
, ~My - bad a diabetes
"'· teat which showed that be
had llypoglycemla. What
kllld of diet should be follow?

~Why would 0111!

I
1

Helen Help Us

1

1

By Helen Bottel

1

A~Youth and hope

1·

Q-Who"""' tht olilr Eng·

1

·· •

'

·

Ush lll07llll'ch to abdicate

LOVE IS BLIND,
doctor

P~l~ ::r
)ASfOIE'IF'
., . .
···•
. .,
Bone-dry fried r~ten to
our trlti:!i 1o the packace
store u ·50ln8 to, lile ~upor·
mm:tet. . · . ·~' ,
.

h
. htraldl'l/. what' does .
1·' ·; Q-/n

· 1 lhecolor vrem Sf/111bollte?

through bslllng my wife out of VOIIfnlarlly?
the trouble she brings 00 herA;-Edward VIIJ, who abseH.Sheknowllt-lhusthego- dlc•ted the Britlsh tltrOne\ln
between
Dccembllr, 1938.
I've u;ld tlits woman 10 but .. ~Whot flowering tre~ .
she conUnuea to call. IIO\l' ~ 1 . produc,. , the ramt lion&lt;y? '
stop this harraaameniT. ;...
A~The native sourwood .
BAFFLED EXECUTIVE
' . the target of thouaaodJ .o!
beea wben it Is In full bloom,
Dear Ex·
From ·Its n~1 they ·m at,
·
a. blmey that epiCure• ctaV.
Tell the WOIII8It you will no and wbich Ia rare or wantlns
looger accept • •calla. Your In the usual shops. ·
aecrelary can mter them out
~Which 11 the
with "Mr. E. is in conference." seueh railroad tu:cflfe1~
U she sU1I won't quit, perhaps record?
,
your laW)'tt llll&amp;hl upllln to
A~The train
her the ulieleasDeas ol her er, Modane, F u
forls. _ ,H. ·
· whlch li:IUed

tell me to take four .\trom!d· CONTINUED ...
S capsulel and another tell Dear Helen:
me to take two a day to My sister, a divorcee with two
1::~ ~~b~ d":u~·~=~ children, bin love with a cruel
the hair to fall out?
person. He loses his temper
.\-11te IIIDal .. .....e of constanUy and tskes it out on
this drug Is four ·capsules a her • throws things, breaks
day but, if your cboleaterol windows, and mesaes up the
level has relllrMd to Dot· house which she then has to
mal, a smaller dosaf:
clean up. He is mean to her
A.-fte •flavored for an be given to m&amp;in 1
cltlldren too
.
abn«mally low blood sugar lowered level. L4u of 11a1r He is .,erj jealous of her He
II blp ill protein, moderate has been r3J10rted In several accuses her ol da"•• ber. •
ill rat llld low in carbohy- persons wfio were ~g husband
~..
ex
dralef,
thi~ ~ but a causaUve te- give ~d he has;se her
~--&amp;II •L- normal lationed P has not yet been He~es toherwomenand ends.
,.....,..
'""
prov ·
'
acreams a
blood sugar for a cblld and
(Hnspopor lottt,;. Atoo.l
lot. He also looks old enough to
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~bet IaUter. My sister even
llelpil Clire for 1111 fOilr cltlldren. Dear

BERRfS WORLD

BICYCLE

•

WHILE THEY
LAST

.-00

EVEREADY

. .~F,LASHLIGHT -

FOR

......
""
VJt:•
·r ·! I.

11

.oo
BATTERIES '1

lUIIe•"

REST

.=-·itf:~:f¥n1: ~.~~~irJ~?t' ~~ r------.-----------------~~.~f.' 'duiPK .. qu'IZ ", •. ·A'ft.• ~·~:·'.
&lt;~ •O....Ji aiiouJ4 baVI! a care.' :· ~·&lt;Pl~YIIcal namlnatlon of
..; . , bUasla by a physician

s

•

'

By LEON DENNEN, NEA Foreign News Analyst

In recent years women
have been urged to examine
. tlieir breasts periodically for
' evidence of cancer, rlace
llreut cancer II a leading
cause of-death in women who
We over 35. As a result, 95
per cent of the new cases of
breast cancer reported last
w1: ~overed by the
m rse ·
It 11 dlacourag!Dg, how·
ever, that til) per cent of
these self-dlagnOHd cancers

=

........

.... ,..,
... ,

'• .,.

On the other hand, commenting on President Njxon's appel!fance at the University of Kansas a few days previoutly, during which the President was heckled by students.
Clark said, "It ill not enough to go to a studenl group an:!
talk about respect when you yourself are the very symbol
of repression.'
.
Clark was in Cleveland to support the Democratic candidate in Ohio's senatorial contest, so perhaps this should be
taken Into account when considering his words.
It is regrettable, however, that a man of Clark's stature
..,.he ill being boomed In some Quarters as a candidate for
president in urn-should allow himself to Indulge In the
same kind o! emotion-charged rhetoric so many college
students have adopted in place of rational discourse.
II, as he says, there is "a terrible need for immediacy of
communication," there ill an even greater need for precision and restraint ln the language which Is the only means
we have to communicate with each other. ,
To indict the Nixon administration for lack of sympathy
or understanding for college students or for failure to communicate with them or to seek reconclliation wlth them or
for attempting to polarize young America and "hard-hat"
Amertca. ts one thing.
To charge lt with repression and Ute use of force to answer college protest is quite another matter.
If Clark knows of any instance in which the President
ever authorized or even advocated the use of force to put
down peaceful dissent, on a college campus or anywhere
else, he should be challenged to reveal it.
· . The fact is, there is no legal machinery by which a Prest.
debt _can in~ene in a civil disturbance, unless a federal
law IS being VIolated or federal property is being endangered or unless he IS requested to intervene by the governor of a state.
Interestingly enough, the last time this happened was in
July,1967,_when President Johnson sent 4,700 paratroopers
into Detroit to put down the ghetto riot in which 40 people
died. The attorney general at that time was one Ramsey ·
Clark.
Would it be fair to say that Ute only answer Clark had to
black protest, when he was the nation's chief Jaw enforcemont officer, was force?

.-

i', 'i"n! J ''•I ' , ,

* ..,

tlon."

;

:'t&amp;';

Jieien;.

·

.~~~~~ES~~~

She Eachhas been
him two
Wby Yis,
or COIIIJIOIIC
yean.
lime wtth
she decldes
to SUJ14!I'
..,plasuc
Upenalv!?
Even a
qultshegoesbacltiMcause "abe complete face nn is not .;;.;_
loves him." ·
·
~....-, ·
sldered "dangerous" .mi...~, ~ .
On top of all this, his mother II
- a-• ~ n
Wll'4l of f1 ,ooo. Tile • ia~~~t · ,'lbe
close by·
•"~~leal operation is ~ ~ q~ift!ft
~can I tD!Ike my~ see lban half that much -anii~W~J ·
what s In store for ller _If ·abe much more Unle wilb • , lol .
marries biQl? Or even. If a · mol-t liter care. '
. ' 'til
doe'ln't? 7- CON~
, Wooten are be!rlnit•IA.•
:P. S, Wby _lo love 10 blind! ,. " NEI!:D .U Ute help

Delr .COO:
I" ··
' now ~ !he7 are
. Yo(ir liater knows
Jli,, ~world and

""!!'•

store for her, ~~d evldenliY ill! , both' ~
.Wll\11 II that way. So all fOU'(!in
·
~ li sre,er her toward a. better
mlil .., and hope. - H .
·,,
· P.S. ~e. II blind ~­
lone!b-, lor .....,, is wprae
lllliri quelty. Your sister may
¥~~~id 1o let go, for ev,'n a
"mDIIII
.
" II better Uta nno,.,
...
..IU•·
~~;
·.
· . '1'1111 W011)811 calls me at my
·~ Ill !'tf~ me of wltllt'l ,
8~ on '!ttl) my ••.-will!. It's l O*ii
, not. .illy .concern any milre ...
. ' who ldte ls seeing or how drur·k

. . ' shf'*Ot Saturday, liJght~.
· Jt lroofd,~: 1\li.i 'lliJ e1 to [lUI
"'" 1lp to l!i\-:· Before the
'!II~ • J' ~ucted rescue

-:-~~~--~--~,;4-?-..,:.;_,.._;...,.:._ .1~. n!glllltlr; .but 1 am

..;

•

·

·.., l·,_
•

e
'

PI l4"x60 Yd.

TOOTHPASTE
FAMILY SIZE

TROUBLE LIGHT
25ft.
ONLY

�-~\
) ,.

•
,.I,

.. .

Need for
In Our· Utterances

··~' "

.
·w
,J, ,
'"'"

Ramsey Clark. former U.S. aUOmey general. IK:&lt;'USed
the Nixon administration of the "repression" of college
students in a newspaper interview in Cleveland the other'
day.
.
.
" It's evident." he said, "that !be administration · has
made a conscious political decillion not to. peacemake but
to stir .up. This administration wants to 1&gt;91arize. It is divisive ln th~ extreme . Either they don't see our terrible
pro~lems, or they don't care. They are frigl!tened.
"Their answer to college protest is force. There is no real
effort at communication and understandinll\ no -effort at
dialogue."
.
We live In a time when there is not unly tepresslon of
the college_student b~t repression of the blaciE m..,, said
Clark, adding that th1s summer, in the wake &gt;Of the Kent
State tragedy, should hav.e heen a time "to seek each other
out. There is a terrible need for immediacy of commurilcia· ·

'.!'~ h

..;,. ;,· ~ '
~,.'rtt·

q •.

.•

'

i

,
'
::
'

'

~(;;

I

THE DCCTDA SAYS

Breast Examination
Is Important Procedure
ly WAYNE G.

. . . :::. r"

.:t-... .

..··

.' .

•{ I

• ··:•

'

'• ~:

l

•

ve you see sue savi

'"

...,. .

•

Llll t

I

•,'

.:it" .

....--.

\

HIGH RISE
High Seat
High Bars
ONLY (36)
95
Reg. s39·

:;- it

.

' •..
d

•.·

,

,.•.

,.
•

'

'
',.

THE GlOBAL VIEW

' ..
'

.,'
'•

.

Lenin PreGched Mendacity

Lies, Deceit Still Soviet Way
right. .But the President and his advisers surely remember
that It was during the Geneva summit conference of 1'56
that the Russtsns ·began their penetration of the Ml~
East. Even as former Premier Kbrusi!Cliev w•s olfeting·
P~sldent Eisenhower eternal "mir i dt""""a" (peace and·
fnendship) , Moscow was sending In anna and agents.
SiJme 15 years-later, Communist ~usala. without !lrlitg
a sliot, emtfged as a dominant power in 'the Mldclle East
and the Mediterranean, thus reallzlne lht old lmperlallat
dreams of the Czars.
'' .,
And was it not the same
minioter who is now ,jrylni
in the Suel area~wilo toRI
in

UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. !NEAl
Ha~ing mis.used _the M,ldeast ceasefire agreement for a
mass1ve mtSslle build-up m the Suez area, the Russians are
now making a bald-faced attempt to justify their perfidy.
Soviet leaders~from Lenin to the Kremlin's current boss
Brezhnev~have always regarded negotiations with the
West as another tool to implement their revolutionary go!ll.
What is disturbing is the fact that even a student of
Soviet strategy like President Nixon gave the Kremlin
leaders an opportunity to outwit him by putting too much
faith in their word.
There is nothing wrong with Nixon's policy of "negotia·
!ion ins~ad of confrontation." But an awareness of the
Russla~s techmque and an alertness toward their ultimate
revolutionrn:y goal cannot he replaced by hopes of detente.
Good intentions are usually counterproductive In any deal·

8RANDST1T~~ ·~ t' ,~ ~~ l"W',~~~~\1.\rv.i. d\ d::i~

'

3 FOR

NESTLES

~~!:~~~~d~~!~l~~:~~

tali~,"
Lenin taught the faithful.
H~ n:tade ~ science. of mendacity. In order to .ieB!roy

,.

for an adult? What causes a
low blood sugar? What is the
best treaiment?
A-la normal newborn In!ants, the fasting level may
be as low. as 20 mllllgrams
per 100 mliiJlltera. After the
first few days, the normal
range ts 50 to 100 and for an
adult, eo to 100. But lower
levels are not s~ficant un·
less accompanied by such
strymbP tomsdas ~atlng,
em 11ng an wea.neu.

such.ell'orts as
Arms Umltatlon Talks (SALT).
cap1tahst soc1ety, Lenm said, Communists are justi6ed in
Are the Russians negotia!iJtg ~~:~
resorting to "any ruse, cunning, evasion and concealment -them ,nerely another scheme to di
of the t~uth. :·
while retaining their own nuclear arsenal?
By npw this is old stuft. But American policymakers, It . As yet,,there is no lndieaUpn !bat Mlilciow Is prepared to ·
seems, must be coostantl~ reminded that Lenin's turgid a~c.epl a SALT Inspection system
. . . In 11'1 abseJice w,M ·
volumes are still the "Bible" of the Kremlin leaders--de· c~uld say ·:tiow many ~ar.heads the Rdsaians hUT 'Even ·
spite the periodic twls!s and turns of thel~ foreign policy. ·spies in the okies ~ n?~ Infallible cotil)len._ ,, . , .. , :.
Even according to the Guardian, Britain's sedate and . It Is t~me for U.S! JIC!Ilcyina~ to rtaUU t.bal Sovi~ ·
very llheral newspal"'!'1 the Russlanli, by their flagrant . as~~~es cannot ,blf ~e~ at'fac,e value
flllir ·
abuse of the cease.fire, stand coodemned as cynical !iahi." ~eryavceean be; elfe.ctlviiy a~ cOritlnuolisly verilled1·. '· '
ltwouldbeblgblyundiplomatlcforNixontosaythiao•"i ·.';-;,:V·h'i..~: • . ,, .. ·' ·
.'
.' ,.
· f'. .
.•r :·'"' .. ·
1.
.
• ·
,, ,. ~-'·

of aurvlvblg more than five
·. rem.
lf must bf concluded,

sontngs and a reboUnd reac·
lion to Insulin In persona
with ml_ld ,diabetes. In clill·
dren, hypoglycemia may be
hereditary. The treatl_!lent
would depend on the cause.

I

~

..

i" ' ,. ~ ·:

. · th rrt're that

.n women

; tlflce a yel!f-o ft en e r if
tbere II any reason to sus·
pec:t that a carieer may · be
ileveloping. This checkup
sbould Include an X ray
(mammography) of the
· llreuts.
, ~My - bad a diabetes
"'· teat which showed that be
had llypoglycemla. What
kllld of diet should be follow?

~Why would 0111!

I
1

Helen Help Us

1

1

By Helen Bottel

1

A~Youth and hope

1·

Q-Who"""' tht olilr Eng·

1

·· •

'

·

Ush lll07llll'ch to abdicate

LOVE IS BLIND,
doctor

P~l~ ::r
)ASfOIE'IF'
., . .
···•
. .,
Bone-dry fried r~ten to
our trlti:!i 1o the packace
store u ·50ln8 to, lile ~upor·
mm:tet. . · . ·~' ,
.

h
. htraldl'l/. what' does .
1·' ·; Q-/n

· 1 lhecolor vrem Sf/111bollte?

through bslllng my wife out of VOIIfnlarlly?
the trouble she brings 00 herA;-Edward VIIJ, who abseH.Sheknowllt-lhusthego- dlc•ted the Britlsh tltrOne\ln
between
Dccembllr, 1938.
I've u;ld tlits woman 10 but .. ~Whot flowering tre~ .
she conUnuea to call. IIO\l' ~ 1 . produc,. , the ramt lion&lt;y? '
stop this harraaameniT. ;...
A~The native sourwood .
BAFFLED EXECUTIVE
' . the target of thouaaodJ .o!
beea wben it Is In full bloom,
Dear Ex·
From ·Its n~1 they ·m at,
·
a. blmey that epiCure• ctaV.
Tell the WOIII8It you will no and wbich Ia rare or wantlns
looger accept • •calla. Your In the usual shops. ·
aecrelary can mter them out
~Which 11 the
with "Mr. E. is in conference." seueh railroad tu:cflfe1~
U she sU1I won't quit, perhaps record?
,
your laW)'tt llll&amp;hl upllln to
A~The train
her the ulieleasDeas ol her er, Modane, F u
forls. _ ,H. ·
· whlch li:IUed

tell me to take four .\trom!d· CONTINUED ...
S capsulel and another tell Dear Helen:
me to take two a day to My sister, a divorcee with two
1::~ ~~b~ d":u~·~=~ children, bin love with a cruel
the hair to fall out?
person. He loses his temper
.\-11te IIIDal .. .....e of constanUy and tskes it out on
this drug Is four ·capsules a her • throws things, breaks
day but, if your cboleaterol windows, and mesaes up the
level has relllrMd to Dot· house which she then has to
mal, a smaller dosaf:
clean up. He is mean to her
A.-fte •flavored for an be given to m&amp;in 1
cltlldren too
.
abn«mally low blood sugar lowered level. L4u of 11a1r He is .,erj jealous of her He
II blp ill protein, moderate has been r3J10rted In several accuses her ol da"•• ber. •
ill rat llld low in carbohy- persons wfio were ~g husband
~..
ex
dralef,
thi~ ~ but a causaUve te- give ~d he has;se her
~--&amp;II •L- normal lationed P has not yet been He~es toherwomenand ends.
,.....,..
'""
prov ·
'
acreams a
blood sugar for a cblld and
(Hnspopor lottt,;. Atoo.l
lot. He also looks old enough to
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~bet IaUter. My sister even
llelpil Clire for 1111 fOilr cltlldren. Dear

BERRfS WORLD

BICYCLE

•

WHILE THEY
LAST

.-00

EVEREADY

. .~F,LASHLIGHT -

FOR

......
""
VJt:•
·r ·! I.

11

.oo
BATTERIES '1

lUIIe•"

REST

.=-·itf:~:f¥n1: ~.~~~irJ~?t' ~~ r------.-----------------~~.~f.' 'duiPK .. qu'IZ ", •. ·A'ft.• ~·~:·'.
&lt;~ •O....Ji aiiouJ4 baVI! a care.' :· ~·&lt;Pl~YIIcal namlnatlon of
..; . , bUasla by a physician

s

•

'

By LEON DENNEN, NEA Foreign News Analyst

In recent years women
have been urged to examine
. tlieir breasts periodically for
' evidence of cancer, rlace
llreut cancer II a leading
cause of-death in women who
We over 35. As a result, 95
per cent of the new cases of
breast cancer reported last
w1: ~overed by the
m rse ·
It 11 dlacourag!Dg, how·
ever, that til) per cent of
these self-dlagnOHd cancers

=

........

.... ,..,
... ,

'• .,.

On the other hand, commenting on President Njxon's appel!fance at the University of Kansas a few days previoutly, during which the President was heckled by students.
Clark said, "It ill not enough to go to a studenl group an:!
talk about respect when you yourself are the very symbol
of repression.'
.
Clark was in Cleveland to support the Democratic candidate in Ohio's senatorial contest, so perhaps this should be
taken Into account when considering his words.
It is regrettable, however, that a man of Clark's stature
..,.he ill being boomed In some Quarters as a candidate for
president in urn-should allow himself to Indulge In the
same kind o! emotion-charged rhetoric so many college
students have adopted in place of rational discourse.
II, as he says, there is "a terrible need for immediacy of
communication," there ill an even greater need for precision and restraint ln the language which Is the only means
we have to communicate with each other. ,
To indict the Nixon administration for lack of sympathy
or understanding for college students or for failure to communicate with them or to seek reconclliation wlth them or
for attempting to polarize young America and "hard-hat"
Amertca. ts one thing.
To charge lt with repression and Ute use of force to answer college protest is quite another matter.
If Clark knows of any instance in which the President
ever authorized or even advocated the use of force to put
down peaceful dissent, on a college campus or anywhere
else, he should be challenged to reveal it.
· . The fact is, there is no legal machinery by which a Prest.
debt _can in~ene in a civil disturbance, unless a federal
law IS being VIolated or federal property is being endangered or unless he IS requested to intervene by the governor of a state.
Interestingly enough, the last time this happened was in
July,1967,_when President Johnson sent 4,700 paratroopers
into Detroit to put down the ghetto riot in which 40 people
died. The attorney general at that time was one Ramsey ·
Clark.
Would it be fair to say that Ute only answer Clark had to
black protest, when he was the nation's chief Jaw enforcemont officer, was force?

.-

i', 'i"n! J ''•I ' , ,

* ..,

tlon."

;

:'t&amp;';

Jieien;.

·

.~~~~~ES~~~

She Eachhas been
him two
Wby Yis,
or COIIIJIOIIC
yean.
lime wtth
she decldes
to SUJ14!I'
..,plasuc
Upenalv!?
Even a
qultshegoesbacltiMcause "abe complete face nn is not .;;.;_
loves him." ·
·
~....-, ·
sldered "dangerous" .mi...~, ~ .
On top of all this, his mother II
- a-• ~ n
Wll'4l of f1 ,ooo. Tile • ia~~~t · ,'lbe
close by·
•"~~leal operation is ~ ~ q~ift!ft
~can I tD!Ike my~ see lban half that much -anii~W~J ·
what s In store for ller _If ·abe much more Unle wilb • , lol .
marries biQl? Or even. If a · mol-t liter care. '
. ' 'til
doe'ln't? 7- CON~
, Wooten are be!rlnit•IA.•
:P. S, Wby _lo love 10 blind! ,. " NEI!:D .U Ute help

Delr .COO:
I" ··
' now ~ !he7 are
. Yo(ir liater knows
Jli,, ~world and

""!!'•

store for her, ~~d evldenliY ill! , both' ~
.Wll\11 II that way. So all fOU'(!in
·
~ li sre,er her toward a. better
mlil .., and hope. - H .
·,,
· P.S. ~e. II blind ~­
lone!b-, lor .....,, is wprae
lllliri quelty. Your sister may
¥~~~id 1o let go, for ev,'n a
"mDIIII
.
" II better Uta nno,.,
...
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· . '1'1111 W011)811 calls me at my
·~ Ill !'tf~ me of wltllt'l ,
8~ on '!ttl) my ••.-will!. It's l O*ii
, not. .illy .concern any milre ...
. ' who ldte ls seeing or how drur·k

. . ' shf'*Ot Saturday, liJght~.
· Jt lroofd,~: 1\li.i 'lliJ e1 to [lUI
"'" 1lp to l!i\-:· Before the
'!II~ • J' ~ucted rescue

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PI l4"x60 Yd.

TOOTHPASTE
FAMILY SIZE

TROUBLE LIGHT
25ft.
ONLY

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Cukes
Carrots
G. Onions

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CHOCOLATE·
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HINES

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MIXES
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BEEF, TURK£Y, CHICKEN ,

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Jumbo' Towels

.

Mrs. Tucker
'

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.

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Cukes
Carrots
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'

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DUNCAN
HINES

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MIXES
YEU.OW, WHITE

CHOCOLAft

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SIRLOIN
STEAK

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EA.
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&gt;

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BEEF, TURK£Y, CHICKEN ,

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FOR

or Golden·.
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I. G. A.

Jumbo' Towels

.

Mrs. Tucker
'

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BlaSt
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: · ·ByFRANKDEGEORGES

~~dW:::ated,

the umpires wm wrong oo theWesttltlfwllha5-.'lwinover andeabouncedJimBimrilng.ln guys,'' he said.

~~~

·

-tlie . ·

6-0iead.

,

~~·::;,=o~~::"'~:: :::~ 1":8% :~: ~~~y:'a r.,~:: ' Mll&lt;eLumbltaninl~e

·

Diego, 3-2, CinclnnaU trimmed
HoUston, ili· and Los Angeles
blanked san Franciscv, 1~.
Chicago at St. Louis was
postponed because of rain.
In the AL, Minnesota clinched

in infield after the PlliJa had
gone ahead &amp;&lt;; with a four-run,
eighth-inning rally, Tony Toy·
lor's three.run triple was the
key hit of the inning.
Home plate umpire ~tan

Slello, who made a "bad" call
on a nintiHnning double ~y
and Augie DooateW. The only
kind words Selma had were for
DonateW. "f !eel IIIIITY for
Augle W«'ldn.ll with those othet

TOI1UIIJ'.IIelms' basesbded
single Cllmued a six-run eighth
inning ·lhit carried the Reds to
victcry. ')be A,slrol, helpad by
home nma by Joe MGrgan .,d
Bob Watson, had buBt an early

·

.

.

· '

.

.
1

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CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Spar·
ky Anderson can sympsthize
with Houston Astro manager
Harry Walker. '
"I'm not sayt'ng I don't al-

ning 20 . year · old righthand·
er, now sporting a 3-1 win-loss
record.
''I a--·~ him they won't always ..
bew u~ t easy," said An-

.=•.

•I ways want to win," said the derson.

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inning to fcree Ill the pme'a
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Chet
mly rup ID Loll ~elu' vic;·
.
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tory. Fosler held the Glints to . (\ ~l.ns~o!ferech ' ·
·
thN!e hits.
01
leacbllt
condlli.'led

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•·:. Reds Raily·.
W.m 6 T' o 5

,

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~ ~~~:ai~~~ §;?~E~E =~~~:~~~= :??;~t~1~~ , ir~r.~~!:~::: ri:'"val:pl;~;~;:;:;
ao ~-

.· National League East and one
behind alicago.
·, Dick Selma, whO gave up the
.; M•ts' game-winning hit to
, Tommie ,Agee in the ninth, was
:. the most 'outspokm.lle charged

. .

8 '•,' : ' t.. '

;,
the
.. that the game ...med a
, Philadelphia Phillies hurled In other National League Milwaukee beat Cantornia, t-2, against a fourth IBU, and added inning that gave Pittsburgh Its wtlh the basea li!lded:,:tn lbe ' ·
" cbargea o! favoritlsn at the games, Pittsburgh split a Baltimore smashed Detroit, 10. Manager Frank Lui:mesl later triurnpb In the nightcap. BID · nbith lnnbll ~drive llio
.'fellx
ampirea Tuesday In the wake of doubleheader with Montreal, 2; New York trimmed in the Inning.
SIOill!lllllll pltclled a six~tterlil Millan with lhe.winnbW t\m for

.

\

7 -TheOuUy. ~J!Iol.~t'Gm~.o.,~JII."' 23, 1rlo

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Tahiiehill ''

Pennant At A Glance

JustFor.one wtek,
sport
Chicago - Away (10)' Si.
Nlllonal LNguo Eest
Louis (31 Sapl. 23 (2), 2.4; Ia.
· ·
·
.
· h
· "
' · · '
. w. L. Pet. OB Phlladalphla 13); Sept. 25, 26,
It's~ fair, whlls oo the su~, to warillhe,feal laii;'Jrltll
ChPittsburgh
83 11 .539 ... · 27; ~w York «J Sept. 11, 2'1, cert~ll((an&lt;hlnlorl~te)COII(Iitlolia .alatlilcinlbe. home,lhat(L
80 72 ·526 2 JO, "' 1 · 1
lcago
•·· ···••- hi! may.have atll~,; .·.
New York
80 7&lt; .519 3
hi!lnalalahlson l,aldDI In
. the whOle~
ddODI.
Remalnlnggomes'
aull 011
hindi
lllOtnitJI nut. ,.. : ',, .-. ., . ' ·
It Wll ~·s eUeaalve llae thai
tile moll
Pittsburgh-Home (5) , Mon·
8QD
.
lie that 1111 may,'lolnorioW eqnlng SoUthern Valley~~ .
77
: ' . : '~: ~.,:.:,c::'~ :l~y : ti~
~i~~\.s;f,\!~· 2~' A~:Y ~";.~
~eren&lt;er.naget on early peet*t.the appolitlqn when Norlb Gallla
•...,
St. Louis (3), Sept. 29, 30, Oct.
·
laltlel nellbbor. OOIII!IJ ;a~ ~weatem.
·' ·
• .. ;. '·
0
Herd bu drilled lhil"""k'"' ...,..ling m"11w beeanae
1.
FrldayntptMaraucllir'fard...W be ~:anQiher iafAr! Iii; •
Tolley oald he fl&amp;lftllbey wiD Deed all tile points IIIey can
. New York-Home 1&lt;1,~1 1 &lt;a·
. Iron'- ~ere~ "-le .o~-.~........... will hli"e '' """""
.''""' ~ ...gel • t Toled • ....
~~- .,_.1
go
(&lt;)' Sept. 28, 29, JO, "' . I;
~•
•...,. ... -~ "'"""'
, ..""'"""''
Awa (4); Philadelphia Sept.
,
ho .,.,for,._.,..._......
•·-•
do
_.ou.,
'Yit~• h (3) Se 1 25 26 So
'
rsea w,. .,..••. '"'" 011eta;., ear"' ...ow Wll W"''
iiH ' ;.
@'f.l*1!t''iF~l'f."¥?:mwqrjt~mi?
~r
p ·~urg
p
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to
finding,
out
wila_
tlle
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.
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.
evl!llln&amp;, Our Soll\hern Hl8b gool ~ ltYIJI!r Creek', wilh. ' ' .'' • ' •
ly Unlltd Prou tnltmiiiOtlol

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ea-

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Sweep
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uthwe·st

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Upse t M'In ded

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:: Cincinnali Reds manager. "Bul Gary Nolan can tell WllMlddtepcrt's John Tannehill cbanee Gf p1i1llng out an IQltlet, and Wahema !sat Duv,aJ. AWi'/, ·, ,
:: I know how Harry feels because cox the same thing.
was a triple winner In the three- downrl..,.ln GaDia County, RaMan Trace, with aomet~Jliis of. ~ · .:
' ,.
:: I've been there."
Nolan slarted lor lhe Reds
star Southwest Open Table J)Owerhoule thil. Y,.,, taU, oil1rad1Uona!IIOOI'IIl81 s;IDmiJ ' ·.
'(t
q
;: The Reds look advanlage of and departed for a pinch hitler
·
._,
Tennis
Tournament . at Valley.
.
· -•. ,. ...
·
five walks and a hit batsmao in the sixth inning aller being
·
.
Oklahoma City last weekend, · Then Blltl&amp;'day ni&amp;bt Coac,h IMry Rltdlie's 11111~1
. I&lt;&gt; rally forsix runs in the eighth nicked for three runs, two of
caplul'lng men's singles, m!J&lt;ed Eastern Easle• holt !he Warren~ re~fil·k.' a nm~4p \, . ·
inning Tuesday night to nose them unearned.
doubles and men '8 doubles matdl. Thla lllrlctly fa1IJ In the category of_the warm-up~~~~~. • !,"
j.~
'~ ,f'
out the AslrO&amp; 6-5 in the series "I just hope we've been sav·
lilies.
Alter tile Eaglea' 81lck ~ recu'd· to dale, Rildlle'l ldJedule
which winds up tonight. Tony ing runs for Nolan until the
Tannehill, 18, whD Ia enrolled maker has tile pght thing going, llhlnil. ·Ritdlle surely ~.a
Cloninger will oppose Jack Bil- playoff,'' said Anderson. "MayColgate 33, Cornell 3
in the.Unlveraily of Cincinnati, perfect breather, oUerblgllme to rear IIJ, regroup, ....~ ·
lingham.
be then we 'll get a ton for By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE
Colorado 17, Penn Stale II Is the natloo's No. 2 ranted polntedalralgbldOIIIIIthebacblretcbheadiDC.forlllllflile~ ·
Tommy Helms, who led off him. The guy deserves II. You
Upset Chompion
Columbia It, Lafayette 7
player. He deleited Suruak K. lhat Eutem ...........v may buildthia .....;
" ': '
Dartmouth ZO, Massaehu·
....--·"&lt;
,_
the eighth inning by drawing a couldn't ask for anyone to pitch Egad, friends , your favor !letta 10
of Boston, Mall., former
, ·.~ ·..$i
walk from George Culver, sen! be Iter than he has this season." ite correspondent has spenl
Duke n, Vlrglola 8
Thailand champioq, In the
A CX&gt;UPLEMORE PRO foothaU fans bave wwe&lt;1
te
home the tieing and winning Untiltheeighth,WadeBlasing- several sleepless nights on
Florida st. 30, Wake Forest linalsofthemen'sOI)ellsingles, ntdlanotherl(lllleinlle"landSIIIdlum. n.; Bola.,O'olf.and ·_
run with a two . out bases load· arne and Culver blanked the your account, doping out the
21 (NI ,
in three straight games. WIDget~ made lhe 1rlp there MGnday 'nlaht to 118 ,Joe 1'1.111 ,
ed single olf Fred Gladding. Reds on seven hits.
winners of this Saturday' s
Clemson %7, Georgia 1Z
Suruak, 20, attend.s Boston penonanclwatcbahl&amp;bl1·bllled11Nwtlhlltmlz.IIwasiJDiid .
Helms' game . winning blow Twoofthehitswereoffthelat collegiate classtcs.
Georgia Tech 27, Miami
Univeralty.
pme,onthelube,bulnotmucbtolheBohelntbsatandt• .,
was only the second hit of the of Rille, who reached the ~ After sifting the pertinent
(Fla.) 16
Playing with Jean Yorker of
''lberelllth-tlnlballladiiDD (70,000pl,.) trcrlh
. ~ illi!liel
inning as the Reds paraded 11 mark for the fifth lime in his dala avatlable on the major
Harvard 33, Northwestern 0 St. Louis, Tannehlll won on lhe
•-tie t lhe I le
contestants, The Hoople Sys·
Holy Cross fl, Temple 7
ml' ed dou••- and the men's f&lt;l' wetcblnC !oolbaD,"Ihe)' iarted.
.
I • ,:',',,
~. rs .o
Pa . .
seven . year career.
tern confidently forecasts
Pacific 21, Idaho 14 .
•
""'"•
. The)''remuchtoo~toro. .· lllellideiiDtl~t.Oiir
All I ve got to say IS that
HOUSTON
three astonishing upsetsSoulhera Cal.' CG&gt;Iowa 12
doubles with Churck Michelle of llf&amp;lucbool pmtll, riCbt 011 top of e!ICII plaj, Ill: to beJnc llutd to
it sure took us a long lime lo
ab r h bi um·kumph '
Iowa State S7, Colo. St. :.J. If .OaUu.
lbeeleclronlcmaUtertoappredaletbelllletliiDpotr,.._t ~ ',llilil
score those six runs,'' said Cedeno. cf
s o o o Would you believe Colora·
IUinols ZO, Tulane 17
This weekend at the
Tommy : '
Morgan. 2b
5 1 I
do over Penn State? Or AlaLSU 40, Rlee !0
Columbus Table Tennis Courts Jq elly.
'
. .
. . H' '·:
• The n••ht s second delay by wW.yn,snon,lf, 1b
3' 21 21 2 bama over Fiort'da ? Or AuThe Old Bo• Ht'm~elf
No. Carolina If, Maryland R the 20 top Ohio pia"""" wiD
.
,
Miami
:rain, this~ one for ten minutes, Rader,Jb
4 o 1 1 burn over Tennessee? Well.
Mlch (0
-13I ~' Western
compete for · places •-·
on !Our "'*':w:&gt;.::w::,~·:,~:&lt;-'··x••f:'l:&gt;.ie®-'=&gt;'&lt;''''r,..,.,......,w•&lt;;:n-·&amp;m
· ..w; . . .. · ·
~" - '"' ·'='''"' · ·" "l ' """"' ·
• . Tommy Helms, who led off Miller. rt
3 1 0 0 that's the way it's going lo ented Buckeyes of Ohio State Mleh. Sblte !1, Waob. State 7 ·teams to represent' the state ID l l l .
D
: the eighth inning by drawing a tt:,"~~~~~..
3 o 2 J be on th•s wtld and woolly will make the1r 1970 bow a Mlnaeoota 33, Oblo u. 1%
the national team cham· lUOre
VI'
walk from George Culver, sent Blaslngam. p
~ ~ ~ o plgskm weekend.
~uccdessful one as they repel Mllslnlppl 24, Kentucky !I pionshlpa in · Detroit in
.
, .
· · ·
home the tieing and winning Culver, p
1 o 0 o ln a really Big One at mva. mg Texas A&amp;M. The Mts101rl U, Air Foree 18
November. '
; run with a two • out hoses load· Cook. p
o 0 0 o Boulder , host Colorado will ~~~~e~ /"'set kco"'lner~rs of Booton Col. 35, Navy 7
The Ohio , team won the
: ·
. a•••le off""'"' Gla""'"&amp;
~!!ddlng, p• .
0 00
00 brin.lo an end Penn State's
.....~ w~?..~.w.1 , ave Nebraska ft, At"!~!%
, n•lll•'"'104o
,
...
Jl
1
ur,e
K·-"1"'-· ·
~I • • --on"".,... .... "
1
'Il ! ~
--~\18 ·a:.~~. ·~lWiJUUJ{cir";,_tl\!i~ ..~IJ"'rt~~)'llliJ~t~ ,k CiWRiii.tiPPi , ~,,~,~,.,~ 141 ~:1\~-' ~
. Holnll!·game ~'llil1nin&amp; ·blow Ltm•t40n1' "' ~ , .,_,... ,
o ~s reak' I ~ r e '•q&lt;!?it' l!:lfc!l~'il,n•·•~""'Biniks" '·'!1ftftW!Vt ·N6tte"Dalil~"!li· .:za;, : 'I' I .,. ~I,. Jrben ~~~ .-~~
·I '
Totals··
35 57 s
·
..,
u
~~~e I db R
K'
•• k
,. r u
' · , · ' ~l:.) '" bei' J-:1;~; .
/(~, .
as on lyth e secondhitolthe
CINCINNATI
Crowder's rampagingii!&lt;Buf· '"" s • Y ex ern . ..,o Ohio Slate 35, Texas A&amp;M 24 ( Qllr'f'. ·!"""'
01 , ...
. ning,u the Reds paraded 1J
~
ab r h bi !aloes will out-muscle the ~or ~·::'~rkable ~x to get Oklahoma 21, OreJon St. ZO was used against a atrona,
latters to the plste.
Tolan, cf
3 o 1 1 Nittany Lions, 17-10, in a 15 c u orne in ront by a Houston 41, Olda. State r7
Wllmown team from Canfda,
·• "AD I've got to say Is that Rose. rt
3 1 2 0 thrilling c r ow d pleaser- 35-24 count.
Stanford 24, Oregon It
losing all his matches.
'i:: it sure took us 8 long lbne to Perez, 1b
: ~ ~ ~ kaff·kalf!
And at South Bend the Penuylvanla 17, Lehigh 7
Tannehill was No. z 011 the
!Con! those six runs " said Bench, c
3 o 2 1 At Tuscaloosa. Alabama, Notre Oa'!'e stalwarts will Rul_gen 18, Prlneetoa I
. first Ohio team In IINia and Its
'
~/~~yb, 3b
o 1 o 0 p au I " Bear" Bryant's de· make their home debut SMI,T 13, N. Mu. St. 3
.
'
'
Tommy.
McRae, If
·u h kl against always rugged Pur· SoUibera Mt 11 18 VT · captain last
year .(No.l).
3 0 0 0 1 . 1 .
. ~e night's second delay by Clln•. ph
·
0 0 o 1 ;,~~i~~ ... ~~~~~ ;!ss:r aJ~h~ due. In this, the 42nd grid· Arllagto1 8 (N)'
ram, thil one for ten minutes, Helms.2b
3 1 1 a Reaves as they walk off with iron meetmg o~ the~e out· Syracuoe 21; Kauu II
·came after Culver walked Concepcn. ss
3 1 1 o a 22_17 victory. :Meanwhile, standing . collegiate mst1tu·. Texao fZ, Texaa Tech 21 (till \..0
;HelmsandhitDaveConcepcitlll Nolan,p
~ ~ ~ ~ in another bruising battle, ti~ns, 1 predict a close 28~ Toledo 15, Marah1ll 7 (N)
t ·wi1119a pi"'h to put two runners g~!J~.~
1 0 0 0 the determined Auburn ~h,uem. ph forbllhe 1 "te' hb a k UCLA 35, Norlbweatera !5
20~~wallyc~!e'Yo'::J.. 1Jll~~
:on base
Wilcox.f
o O· o o Tigers wiD edge Tennessee's
r ~~m e ,quar r ac • IN)
-·
'
carbo, I
o I o o Volt 1ii-13 before a sell-out Joe l'hetsmann ·
Utah t3 New Mellco 1%
~· 101~"" by the » ·"'lll:ber
c.:"":!~·=~·':..:: Granv'I'·P
0 0 D 0 throng In Birmingham
Now goon with the fore· Va~derbUt30, Mill. Stale 15 t.~Jeo1 ~:;:~~n~
.,...~
Totols
21 ' t '
For those among you who cast :
(N)
.
place votes In parenthesOs
walkedJrinch hitler Bernie Car· Houston
gJg Jcl8 ~ would scolf at such daring Alabama 2%, Florida t7
Memr,hla Sl Zl, Va. Teeb I (first week):
bo to loR the hoses.
Cl~~~:~ch, Perez. DP- predictions, may I ·remind Ar,lzoaa 18, Saa Jose St. ! Mleh pn lit, Waablnctoa Z0 •
~ St. 121 ""'":;
. Bobby T_olan followed with a Houston 3. LOB-Houston 6, you my title as Upset
(NI .
Weal Va, 38, VMI 3
·
2·
sacrjftee fly ID SCOf" Helms for Cincinnati 5.
Champion Is not-a-hem-an Arizona St. :15, Kaoaao St. 14 TCU 18, Wlaeoul1 .t
:/:,~~!St. .(2} ~
' ' the lira! run of the Inning and, 28-May. HR-Morgon 17J, underserved hono~. just last
INJ
Utah Sta~ !1, Wyomln( !0 .... D!lloware (]}
77
: •: .; altet a walk •IO Pete Rose again Watson 191. 58-Miller. SF- week, while compiling an im- Arka-s !'1, Tulsa 1Z
Yale :U,. Coaoeetlcut IZ
~: Molltana &lt;&lt;I
75 ' liODILWW~
·
~the bases Cook was re- Tolan.
bb
_pressive 36-12-1 record for a Auburn 15, Tennnoee 13
(N) Nl&amp;llllame
6. Ttilias A&amp;i (11
19 ·
1 ~·
gtaeed by aladdin
Blasingame
ro oro 0 ~ .750 average, 1 gave r.ou llli" Pllllburgh 21, Baylor 8 (NI Athens ~~ JacksoD 14
7. .Hl:l1-:.l!n Mlcll. · ~ .
'"laddl
tiredgT011 Perez Culver
. 2 3 2 2 1 1 nois to upend heavily fav- DBaytoa 14• BowU•I Greea 7 Gallipolis 12 Waverly 8 9: eastern Mich.
..,
"
"I re ,
Y
Cook
1·3 . 0 2 2 2 o ored Oregon. The !Uini, win· rown !3, Rhode bland I
·
·
10 Dr' k
2
on a foul pop - up but Johnny Gladding L (HI
lei's in 19 of its last 20 en· Indlaaa 22, CaUforala •
Meigs 22 ·Ironton .14
n: L,tl,tona Tech
~
.. ·Bench driUed a single off
1·3 2 2 2 2 0 sagements, vindicated our East Carollaa 14, Clladel 6 Logan 30 WeUalon 8
12. Tennes- St.
21 .
1 0 0 ~ 0 0 Judgment with a 21).16 vic' ·Doug Rader's glove to score )t,:••ter
(NJ
Reemlln 18 Alexander 6 13. N.M. Hllands (1) ·
211.
Concepcion for the second run Wll~~. w (3.1) 4 3
3 I tory-har-rumph!
Nels-York 14 GloWiter 8 1&lt;. !Tiel Wittenberg (1)
16
16
o1 the In"'"".
2 3 2 2 o 2 There are two conlesls on - - ~- GU""~
Pt PI
t 22 8
(Tie)
Grambling
·w·"-· to,_..,Lee M and ch Gra~er
I o o o o I lap in the midwest which """" "v'
.......,
· easan
ar• 16 · Wofi&lt;INI 'OI
15
•·
. ....
. ay
P
Biaslngame pitched to I rate your attention In Co- . PHOENIX (UPI) -The bounvWe 14
17.
w
..
tern
Carollllli
14
18
hitler Ty Cline forced hollll' batter In 6th; Culver pitched to 2 lumbus the big ~ld tal- Plloen!K &amp;Ills cut guards Chad Kyger Creek 24 S..Uibel'll
'
~rO:~o~~: Colo. - ~~
two more 1'1111&amp; to set the stage batters In 8th.
'
'
'
. Calabria of Iowa, Joe De Pre of
20. Ea&amp;l Tet\n. St.
12
for Helms' game winning blow. HBP- By Culver Con·
St John' and Harrison.,_._ 0
.Other Mllll receiving votes:
Rookie MDI WUe01, who cepsclon. T- 2' 37· A- IUTS. TICKET PRICI!S
of. Mle"'~an Slate to
F·Adena
28
Vinton weber St. 'PI• Santo Clara Ill&gt;
'""
'"""""
Trl~lly (TtK.}; Norlhom Ai'Izo.
pi"'hed a hidass seventh .~
ATLANTA (UPI) -1lckets their Natlonal1!tl.lkelball IIJso- County 0
na, South.· O.~olo, · Btildwln·
nlnl and then departed lor a
for the 11H'&lt;lund heavyweight ctaUoo roster to 12 players.
Duval If Wahama 12
Walla"!! T~·~· Sou.t..,.n,cKlnlltl
pinch hitter after serving up a The popular UUe for Thom- bout Oct. 28 between Cassius KAISER III!8IGN8
Eastern 40 Warren Loeal ~~~v:"'.t.:~~n~:~!!c;
two - run homer to Bob l\'alaon as Gatnsboro,.tt's · famous Clay and Jerry Quarry wiD be WESTPORT Qxm (UPI)
(Res) 6 ·
St., Florldii A&amp;M, Southern
in the top ollhe eighth picked portrait, "The Blue Boy," acalad at $100, t=ID, $Z and$15.
•
·'
, . Loui! lana, · :rroy Sj., 'Wett
up the victory.
. '
comes !tom the blue silk suit Preas demands have been ,. Jamea E. Kalaer realgned Federal-Hocking 1• Cheiter (Po.}, San ·FomandO
"N~"'"" to It," nJd the grin- the boy Is wearing.
he~ that Zl ro1n of the Tueaday as,the Spor.ta Car Qub . Miller 12
Vaii.Y, California Poly, .Wii·
~~"'
--,
of Amort
director of..Iamon., North carolina AI.T,
highest priced oeats, worih
ca •
... -·• Symmes
Valley
18 l\lorlil\Yett Louisiana, Connect!·
$32,000, have been '"t aside In llooal raclag, effective Nov. IIi.
Hannan Trace 1' · ,
cut. Southorn Illinois, Eastern
the 5,000 aeat Municipal Audi· =~u:::"" wUI he North Gallla 44
~tucky, Humboldt St .• Boll

MAJOR PEGS roLORADOTOEND
PENN STATE'S 23-GAME STR.ING

~~,.

..Wlr

J

sI]JOrfs £L rage

==·==:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;

t

·I

)

I

,

•,

.TwO 'SVAC 'riltsOn Tap

BY DALE 1Wl11&lt;1E!I
batt£e _the $ym"'es Valley defense, but, have been lbotlr!s for their ltrtt vloi«Y llislenUy and lost the heU four
Two INatle ~-ter. 'lril/ ,Vildl!gs at"WWtiDIY WOOd whlle · somewhat atymled in their against the •Kyg~ Creelt Urnes 011 lwnbles and twice
• hillWilhiJI&lt;tiDIIIp !heJ!&gt;Utbern the leag~e-leading Eastern }'Wining"""~ game.
~~~..
through blocked punta.
V~ A~tlc .Colllerti'Cf, lll,ls .f:qi.i '!flU hilt! Warren·Loctll'a
North ,GiJUa's offeQM II led .. The Tornad9es have been Hannan Trace, playing in·
!!••tend; ~Wiion • i!lfgln_• ·....,...,•. .qiad Bllturdlly Jijgbt by ii!ni'l" quar~back Jaclde beaten WI a• the hands of opir-.&lt;1 l!all held lhe Bobcota to
, •. · '111ur!!dar·lllahtat &amp;lollhWes~ 011 lbil .Eagles'.grldiron.
. Smith, sen!!II' ~ Bobtiy . Ff!detai-H~ iild ~ by only one kluclldown and nine
· ;·~ Jrhere •· qoa-c~. M~} par,ter • . Eaarem. ~ llle eolifereJICO Ratllfl and Juni'!l' -d;ter A!Qier. ,llolh were IIOI&gt;Ieague ftrat downs.
· ~"~lblltlde•• , !fl ftlee&lt; &lt;hio alter two ~refS Of liCUon.
Harv.eY !k'OWD· The latter Ia loooes.
,
~ WUdcats possess a huge
former, N«lll Glllla ,Pira\01, '• £oac:hi:;IT)r1Ri"'hie's .Eaglel· ·~y danger0111 with hla jCygerCl'eek,al~dr&lt;lpplnga Uneandopeedybacblnaeniors
i-.,f)llrl p!UJfed WQ,b!o ll~,aty )"~ ,del~~ a.rtnan Trace, 0\ltlldll running ll)reat.
Jl-&amp; open,r to ·Wihama, W~yne Qlleell, David Spangler
e( ll'ad ~ ~· , •\:
34-0....., Nilflh Gallia, lt-4. ~, N«ti,Gallla O.Z.wiD be facing bounced bllek lilt·~ will!'a .and fullback ·Delbert Ciscv, a
•. · ' ThO game wiD J?l !}]jlyed While showing a alinn theil18hlallclenalao0.%onlhe liard-earned~ win over a IUpoandaophomore.
· J Thurada7j\'etotheanri\ialfall defeQM, Eaorem ·has lleen.)ed ,-on.
.
determined Hannan Trace ThOUneiaclllllpCMedofJerry
· r, ~ meeUns '" ,the. Gillla ·~I)' olfelllivel~ ~ .Jlullor lullbick
~th\lrealetn )ljll IIlii to a team.
.
Waugh, a :IIJi pounder; Steve
,TFachera
Association lll!d end Deimls Eichinger, poweriui;Alexande,' squad, 71~ The Bobeats, like other Daniela, a 210 pounder; Gary
1
IC~ Friclay .at. South- ~ p,ave Snllth, a aetjlor IIlli 10 thea.rtnan Wlldeala;4!1- leap opponeqta, havellhOima Mlchaeta, a 180 pounder; Jim
/,.,.•.1f:l;'~c L _, . .
and .~ni~~~;~ qiiiU'Ierba.,. T!)m 8... :
'
!Wd./dttln(l, stingy defenae but Lambert, a 180 pound junior;
·. : _0\l....,rp . "'!., . of :Meigs ~· '
.,
·
Thjul'w, Soutl\western:a best the offelllive'unit has not Uved and Tom Beaver, a 175 pound
. '~ ,llG!iDI\&gt; ~ llliet lhJliiefending Karr and Eichinger combined offelllive Weap&lt;lll has been the up to -tatfona.
senl«.
~lr~:Kf~?Win'the~onlcata laaf""'lt!~35 yard • play ~1118, of quarJerbaci Rlehard Last wee-. Kyger O'etk's
' • # ~~ -~ ",..y ,
Y which vii'
· "lewed-Up" the ~· to end :Mart Snlith, a UD defenae held Hannan Trace 011
· ,,OIJW ~~ague llll '"·
Nortll qlllta victory,
' powid ~omin.
slx~erenljiCtaSionawilhln Ita
· ~br.uJDUion'a. ~ed ,CoachPauiAIImlan'sPirates · Coach . Robert Aahley'a 20 yard Une. The cilfenae,
, · HaiUiaJI Trl!o:e WlldcJill wiD have . abown a hard-rocldng Soothern T0018cloes 0.2 wiD be however, lalled to move con- MFL Standings
,
._
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0

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8

game.~

lltJNTINGTON, W. Va. ilJPI) - 'I1Ie relllnl tl Marl
Aadmn 111
r1 eed affeu1
•
npo 011
ve JliU'I, br!Pielled
Mmllall UDivenlly foolball proctlee 'l'lleoday.
'Die Zllopoml Andmn, 1 '"'dnalt jaalor, ... beta
Idled olace Sept, I when bo wu IDjnnd ID 1 mot.-veJe
IC·
•••,

.

)o,,Hege Ratinp
· ·.

women 'a aollhall
lelm, witll tholr bacb to tbe
wall, wm lhnll gllilo!lm~ -tbe
tourney'a 11na1 t11,y ·to eaj1t1re

the~ rect~~tly.
The lola1Wnent ,.. lor two
weebndaandlbe~bldto
play u jp~Illef.

')bey opened by defeltlnll
11u1uJ1r1eJ Of
44.
Nut came a JU,tweoty-blt
rompoverQI)'Jee.VueloiPI.
Pleallftl. Barr's was lben
1rounced by Hartley 011 o1
RavenmiOd 14-1, gtvlntllhem
tholr only loae of the double
elimination toumameot.
But 'l!arr's fought .
Mid

Ripley

O'alg

.,.ck

Few Wllataes
Only five persons were
preaent, besides Wilbur
Wright, when hts . brother
Orville made lbe f~rsl air-

·IJelllware Braced ·For Jug Races ~~~ (ALLG~:r;T ~ ~: ~.'1r.' :r~7~~tty
•

'' &lt;

· ··, ·

,. ·, ·,
· ' · '·
·•·• =rPEJ,,.,W~, Obi!! (UPI)·
Be?J~Iep; . , . . and
. . oldie 8Nal O&gt;l1pnl)la
,\ ·i'•~illel'll1ilbi •Ofthe
,. .•,,JIIIII~ ~aw filr 'l.'bura. ·......~~GaO Utile llre1ril J1lg
··."7""~'...&gt; ....~ · .
, ,, . ,....,...,. to worn" about
It,"
iilleu· aald. "We'll jual
'bivf' to ~all IIIII lee what

the bottle at the aelectlon
cereDICilles Tueaday, plad"l
his big cdl, owned by Dr.
George&amp;mllhofllryam,Oxm.,
lnthe-drowlnlhell-llone
field,
·
.
Columbia Gecrge had been
"''l'ttldered u a c~vorlle In
the Jug along wilh S1an1ey
Dancer.'~ Most HapPJ Fella, but
" "~,lhlt!Bt~lucltofthe after lhe draw, oddsmabl'l
ch~.
~ IDClll happy !ella at W
, ~picked No. II out of Willi Columbia George second
'.t:. '

choice at 11-t.
:Moat Happy 'Fella drew tbe

NO.,~Iillhafrultrow.

'Die cc:mplete draw, In the
fruit row, Includes Judge (I~
1), Sbl'iek (~1), l.e11tder Lobell
(..1), Ke,.tone Pal {10·1),
Kentucky (10-1), MDIII RaPPJ
J'ella (W) Race Time Boy (~
I) and ~1!1 Star (1:&amp;-1). In lhe
aeeond tier wiU he Aksel '
Hanover(IJ.l),Ferrlcllanowr
(I-I) an&lt;l Columbia George (:&amp;-

f

S!!utheastem Ohio League
Bf!gins 46th ·season Friday

1).
Poll! poodUona In tbe aecond

heataredecldedbythellnishof
lbeflnt,wilhthewlnnerolthe
fintbealgeltlngtheNo.lpoll
In the aecond and 10 on.

Jackson
Gallipolis
Ironton
~ellston
::oint
CooiGrove
Waverly ,

2
2
1
1
:
o
0

IJ1"rLE BEl 1'* 1JOODY
OOLIJMBUS IIJ.I1) - plllo
State foolblll 'ooicb W*7
llayeaputhiapla)'Willlroqll&amp;

hrHiour IOIIIIlll Tlleldll1 llld

,..:Will ..... •-- ....

Hawk. jogg1IW Frlda7.

0 0 16 20 Smokey Sll)'l:
2.4 12
1 o 50 22
1 o :u 22
: ~ ~ ~;
2 o 6 JO
2 0 o 57

3 ROOMS

NEW
FURNITU'E

~=:~n!.?.!MES,

$349.95

Un.......,......,

McGinn

(7)

and

S31.10 Do--

Botonc•On
ConvHiHt

Terms.

MASON
fURNiTURE
It could. have beeD yoo!

Mason, W. Va.

Bateman;

Veale, Gibbon (71 ond Sangull·
' }
'
~
le'!. WP-Veale (!0.15). LP.
·
• the inlUal tlckofl II Ja&lt;bon's aU • time con- o1 the year ID the SOC in hil two Wegener (3·61.
the f6th _,of ierenct record II 179*18 with years at Waverly, moved to the
Fran 000 000 cioo- o 3
Oblo Athlttic Athens (J'/G.)IM-1f and nine head football position at Dover San
LosAng 010 000 IIOx- I 6
ltalsowUI titles) and Logan (171-11}11.15 1118h School and has been
Bryant, McMahon (8)
of ~ llldaeventttles)lnacloserace replaced by Mike Slloemaier. DietZ; · Foster ' ( 10·13) and
the state'• for the saCotid spot.
SIIOOI!JIIier was head football Sudakls. LP·Bryant (H).
cmifele~..,, Gallipolis (113-120·161 and and track coach at Paint Valley Houston 010 110 ~ J 7 0
000 000 0611- 6 9 2
1;200 mark . W~ti)n (123-:160-11) are the Iilgb School for three yeara. Clncl
Culver 16), Cook
lft\l.01 tbe other elarter rilembei'J stiU In Last nar he wu coach of lbe (81.Bloslngame,
Gtadctlng 181, Lemaster (81
one tl' ~ the COI!(erence wilh six footbtlb year Iii 1be Scloto'Valley Con· and Howard; Nolen •.Wilcox (7),
·
!Illes apiece. ··
·
Iorence ll1d Southeaatern Ohio Granger t9) ond Baney. WP·
Wilcox (3·10). LP-Giadctlng (5Jaclraci!l, Logaii, ~Us ~
·
let w~~~ htii , Beareils &lt;).
HRI·Morgan (7th), Watson
,J!!!I Wellsloh 1111.•• been ·ln:lbe · wed out tbe title wilh a ~ (91h}.
'
'
ldiiiMontinuO\!,IIy from the
8!Jd 1lar8 •ellhlh slaJe.
OUiiiel,
Athellfl was.out I&lt;J' rarillil 111 .Ciaas A.
attw
ll1d lronloh
At lbe
end from, the
three '
" Don

San Otego 010 000 001- 2 5 2
Atlanta
100 000·011- 3 13 o
Corkins, Rou (2}, Wilson (8),
Doyal (9) ond Cannluaro;
Nosh (13.8) and Didier, LP·

1

'lr.;l·

i:In:...

m:l

s'"

·l

m
'

m:l

::r.::

sOuth· .

((rium,

81GNS
CONTRACTftlPt},-ll!m·
•
LOS ANGELEs
n1ng baclt Elljab Pllll,. Who
played nine yean 1i!th the

.

AT

EITH GOBLE FORD
USED992-3422
CAR LOT
Locusl St.

Middleport,

"Real Sharp"
1966 PONTIAC
..

STATION WAGON
Air Condition, All Power .

.......... Beln.

SAVE
.-

$l.OO
TANK FULL

X£-110 EthJI - IJI(II' 100 octane

'Certified Gas Sta,tiOns ·
.,

SPECIAL '1395
I

Locat Owner Extra Clean.

'

o.

Green !ley Paetn,,tllil.liellad
Tuesday to a ready ieaerve
ct11!1'ael w1t11 the Loll Angelea
RaDJt~~ he1na drqJped b)'

CAIJIIB OF DEA'111
We 8 t e r n
l 2 , - - - - - - - - - -.......~'!"'"'---.~-~~~~~""
ClEVELAND &lt;VPI) -11e1r1 South Point 8 Hantlngtan
failure, caused by aertlon: and
.VInson. 6 • _ • . .... _ ·
atreme heat, was ruled Coa! Gr:ove ~ ~, JWU
Tueadayaslhecauseoldeatllcil lronloll $1.. Joe· 11' Oak
IJ;'ear-okl Mlcllael llolt, a HID Jf· . ·· ' · ·
tacldeh on the1b .1(,1hn RaJ 1118bh FiilriJ~Rd .14 P.ell\lJtelke 0
Be oo 1 1oo1 a11 1eam, w o
.
.
coUapaed whUe nmnlng a wilid
·
·
ll)l'lnl Aug. !3.

'

:

.

Glllll• :~:;~;~.~~~'

lfterwardl ''n CG&amp; a IIIIW vleiGry llld lloliiil
better~." ...,
·four Plll!lllor
"We sot ..,.. quite 1 lot ·hltlera for Bur'•
today," he uld. "I ean't tourney , . . DoWe ~=~~
cc:mplain, but we Oltliht to be 1 with II hlta, lkond!l C
~-better..,
~. Glorlaand~~~~~
•..,
,..,... ·- _... ..,.- ...,.
l t a - "'*F.II!Ia Salunlly Pam aa.-. bid::!"~~;.
agalnstTei!I* .MIM,planaeda Homeruna were~
aborter aeulon today and Olellnut, tint, Marala
TlntradiJ, IGjl!led will! 1NII and Pam Sll""'en

o 0

Wavorly at Gallipolis
Logan at Wells too
.......va.,.,
Athens at Jackson
8y Unlllll Prou lntornallenal ~f~.'!:. Point at Huntington
Chi
Na,tlonaLl LH
1 gppdue ..ron.
1 Rock Hill at Coal Grove
cagoa 51 . ous.
(lit gomo)
Montreal 000 001 001)- I 5 0
Plltsbgh 000 000 001)- 0 6 0 171; Dobson, Fingers (7),
Stoneman (6-15) and Bate. Lindblad 171 ond Duncan. WP.
man; Ellis, Grant (8) and Kaal 113-101. LP.Dobson (16Sangulllen. LP·EIIIs (12·10).
W. HR·OIIva (23rdl .
·C2nd .tlmeJ
Montreal 010 000 001)- 1 • o
Pitts
00&lt;! 120 00!&lt;- 3 5 2
Wegener, O'Donoghue 15),

·fcl'ee

UI.O.'-

Sttlk
UJ.a..r-.,
TIOJie Stuk
.... .......
SlrlolnTJ,Iout
...

....
__

SkllleuWIIIIM'I

llld Brenda a.enua--

·

�,.
'

.,

'

'

~

'

, . ~ •6- ~ OuiiFSenti.nePiit!dk&gt;J»ri·!'olitO!fOf, 0., Ill'.~·~. 11110

.

.

,

f
Phils
BlaSt
Uilaps
A
~r
Defeai
f
I

f,

~'

,.&lt;:
•·
'' .,.
'•
l·
~

''

'~ .'

: · ·ByFRANKDEGEORGES

~~dW:::ated,

the umpires wm wrong oo theWesttltlfwllha5-.'lwinover andeabouncedJimBimrilng.ln guys,'' he said.

~~~

·

-tlie . ·

6-0iead.

,

~~·::;,=o~~::"'~:: :::~ 1":8% :~: ~~~y:'a r.,~:: ' Mll&lt;eLumbltaninl~e

·

Diego, 3-2, CinclnnaU trimmed
HoUston, ili· and Los Angeles
blanked san Franciscv, 1~.
Chicago at St. Louis was
postponed because of rain.
In the AL, Minnesota clinched

in infield after the PlliJa had
gone ahead &amp;&lt;; with a four-run,
eighth-inning rally, Tony Toy·
lor's three.run triple was the
key hit of the inning.
Home plate umpire ~tan

Slello, who made a "bad" call
on a nintiHnning double ~y
and Augie DooateW. The only
kind words Selma had were for
DonateW. "f !eel IIIIITY for
Augle W«'ldn.ll with those othet

TOI1UIIJ'.IIelms' basesbded
single Cllmued a six-run eighth
inning ·lhit carried the Reds to
victcry. ')be A,slrol, helpad by
home nma by Joe MGrgan .,d
Bob Watson, had buBt an early

·

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1

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CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Spar·
ky Anderson can sympsthize
with Houston Astro manager
Harry Walker. '
"I'm not sayt'ng I don't al-

ning 20 . year · old righthand·
er, now sporting a 3-1 win-loss
record.
''I a--·~ him they won't always ..
bew u~ t easy," said An-

.=•.

•I ways want to win," said the derson.

·A
'···V&gt;:,_.·.
V •'M.·:,.' , p
"
,

.p
· · ·.

·

'-

'e.s:•'-.
i
.
{
"
'
~
'
)
:
.
K

...
.., .,..., ,.,._
the ...... 'loaded In the lecond
l
'
'1\
. ' ' :1, ••• \
inning to fcree Ill the pme'a
:' ·
Chet
mly rup ID Loll ~elu' vic;·
.
·, '
•
'
tory. Fosler held the Glints to . (\ ~l.ns~o!ferech ' ·
·
thN!e hits.
01
leacbllt
condlli.'led

;.br,

.lop

'

•·:. Reds Raily·.
W.m 6 T' o 5

,

, " ··

~ ~~~:ai~~~ §;?~E~E =~~~:~~~= :??;~t~1~~ , ir~r.~~!:~::: ri:'"val:pl;~;~;:;:;
ao ~-

.· National League East and one
behind alicago.
·, Dick Selma, whO gave up the
.; M•ts' game-winning hit to
, Tommie ,Agee in the ninth, was
:. the most 'outspokm.lle charged

. .

8 '•,' : ' t.. '

;,
the
.. that the game ...med a
, Philadelphia Phillies hurled In other National League Milwaukee beat Cantornia, t-2, against a fourth IBU, and added inning that gave Pittsburgh Its wtlh the basea li!lded:,:tn lbe ' ·
" cbargea o! favoritlsn at the games, Pittsburgh split a Baltimore smashed Detroit, 10. Manager Frank Lui:mesl later triurnpb In the nightcap. BID · nbith lnnbll ~drive llio
.'fellx
ampirea Tuesday In the wake of doubleheader with Montreal, 2; New York trimmed in the Inning.
SIOill!lllllll pltclled a six~tterlil Millan with lhe.winnbW t\m for

.

\

7 -TheOuUy. ~J!Iol.~t'Gm~.o.,~JII."' 23, 1rlo

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t···.

Tahiiehill ''

Pennant At A Glance

JustFor.one wtek,
sport
Chicago - Away (10)' Si.
Nlllonal LNguo Eest
Louis (31 Sapl. 23 (2), 2.4; Ia.
· ·
·
.
· h
· "
' · · '
. w. L. Pet. OB Phlladalphla 13); Sept. 25, 26,
It's~ fair, whlls oo the su~, to warillhe,feal laii;'Jrltll
ChPittsburgh
83 11 .539 ... · 27; ~w York «J Sept. 11, 2'1, cert~ll((an&lt;hlnlorl~te)COII(Iitlolia .alatlilcinlbe. home,lhat(L
80 72 ·526 2 JO, "' 1 · 1
lcago
•·· ···••- hi! may.have atll~,; .·.
New York
80 7&lt; .519 3
hi!lnalalahlson l,aldDI In
. the whOle~
ddODI.
Remalnlnggomes'
aull 011
hindi
lllOtnitJI nut. ,.. : ',, .-. ., . ' ·
It Wll ~·s eUeaalve llae thai
tile moll
Pittsburgh-Home (5) , Mon·
8QD
.
lie that 1111 may,'lolnorioW eqnlng SoUthern Valley~~ .
77
: ' . : '~: ~.,:.:,c::'~ :l~y : ti~
~i~~\.s;f,\!~· 2~' A~:Y ~";.~
~eren&lt;er.naget on early peet*t.the appolitlqn when Norlb Gallla
•...,
St. Louis (3), Sept. 29, 30, Oct.
·
laltlel nellbbor. OOIII!IJ ;a~ ~weatem.
·' ·
• .. ;. '·
0
Herd bu drilled lhil"""k'"' ...,..ling m"11w beeanae
1.
FrldayntptMaraucllir'fard...W be ~:anQiher iafAr! Iii; •
Tolley oald he fl&amp;lftllbey wiD Deed all tile points IIIey can
. New York-Home 1&lt;1,~1 1 &lt;a·
. Iron'- ~ere~ "-le .o~-.~........... will hli"e '' """""
.''""' ~ ...gel • t Toled • ....
~~- .,_.1
go
(&lt;)' Sept. 28, 29, JO, "' . I;
~•
•...,. ... -~ "'"""'
, ..""'"""''
Awa (4); Philadelphia Sept.
,
ho .,.,for,._.,..._......
•·-•
do
_.ou.,
'Yit~• h (3) Se 1 25 26 So
'
rsea w,. .,..••. '"'" 011eta;., ear"' ...ow Wll W"''
iiH ' ;.
@'f.l*1!t''iF~l'f."¥?:mwqrjt~mi?
~r
p ·~urg
p
.
•
'
far
to
finding,
out
wila_
tlle
~~
c~
·will)e:
.
•
•
•.
~
:
,, '' " ' ' "' ,, .;go•. =:o::..-.~~! i8!h . ·'· . .. . .
.
.
evl!llln&amp;, Our Soll\hern Hl8b gool ~ ltYIJI!r Creek', wilh. ' ' .'' • ' •
ly Unlltd Prou tnltmiiiOtlol

T

ea-

Til.,

ehill

Sweep
·. 8 JD
uthwe·st

_y....,. ·

Upse t M'In ded

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,

:: Cincinnali Reds manager. "Bul Gary Nolan can tell WllMlddtepcrt's John Tannehill cbanee Gf p1i1llng out an IQltlet, and Wahema !sat Duv,aJ. AWi'/, ·, ,
:: I know how Harry feels because cox the same thing.
was a triple winner In the three- downrl..,.ln GaDia County, RaMan Trace, with aomet~Jliis of. ~ · .:
' ,.
:: I've been there."
Nolan slarted lor lhe Reds
star Southwest Open Table J)Owerhoule thil. Y,.,, taU, oil1rad1Uona!IIOOI'IIl81 s;IDmiJ ' ·.
'(t
q
;: The Reds look advanlage of and departed for a pinch hitler
·
._,
Tennis
Tournament . at Valley.
.
· -•. ,. ...
·
five walks and a hit batsmao in the sixth inning aller being
·
.
Oklahoma City last weekend, · Then Blltl&amp;'day ni&amp;bt Coac,h IMry Rltdlie's 11111~1
. I&lt;&gt; rally forsix runs in the eighth nicked for three runs, two of
caplul'lng men's singles, m!J&lt;ed Eastern Easle• holt !he Warren~ re~fil·k.' a nm~4p \, . ·
inning Tuesday night to nose them unearned.
doubles and men '8 doubles matdl. Thla lllrlctly fa1IJ In the category of_the warm-up~~~~~. • !,"
j.~
'~ ,f'
out the AslrO&amp; 6-5 in the series "I just hope we've been sav·
lilies.
Alter tile Eaglea' 81lck ~ recu'd· to dale, Rildlle'l ldJedule
which winds up tonight. Tony ing runs for Nolan until the
Tannehill, 18, whD Ia enrolled maker has tile pght thing going, llhlnil. ·Ritdlle surely ~.a
Cloninger will oppose Jack Bil- playoff,'' said Anderson. "MayColgate 33, Cornell 3
in the.Unlveraily of Cincinnati, perfect breather, oUerblgllme to rear IIJ, regroup, ....~ ·
lingham.
be then we 'll get a ton for By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE
Colorado 17, Penn Stale II Is the natloo's No. 2 ranted polntedalralgbldOIIIIIthebacblretcbheadiDC.forlllllflile~ ·
Tommy Helms, who led off him. The guy deserves II. You
Upset Chompion
Columbia It, Lafayette 7
player. He deleited Suruak K. lhat Eutem ...........v may buildthia .....;
" ': '
Dartmouth ZO, Massaehu·
....--·"&lt;
,_
the eighth inning by drawing a couldn't ask for anyone to pitch Egad, friends , your favor !letta 10
of Boston, Mall., former
, ·.~ ·..$i
walk from George Culver, sen! be Iter than he has this season." ite correspondent has spenl
Duke n, Vlrglola 8
Thailand champioq, In the
A CX&gt;UPLEMORE PRO foothaU fans bave wwe&lt;1
te
home the tieing and winning Untiltheeighth,WadeBlasing- several sleepless nights on
Florida st. 30, Wake Forest linalsofthemen'sOI)ellsingles, ntdlanotherl(lllleinlle"landSIIIdlum. n.; Bola.,O'olf.and ·_
run with a two . out bases load· arne and Culver blanked the your account, doping out the
21 (NI ,
in three straight games. WIDget~ made lhe 1rlp there MGnday 'nlaht to 118 ,Joe 1'1.111 ,
ed single olf Fred Gladding. Reds on seven hits.
winners of this Saturday' s
Clemson %7, Georgia 1Z
Suruak, 20, attend.s Boston penonanclwatcbahl&amp;bl1·bllled11Nwtlhlltmlz.IIwasiJDiid .
Helms' game . winning blow Twoofthehitswereoffthelat collegiate classtcs.
Georgia Tech 27, Miami
Univeralty.
pme,onthelube,bulnotmucbtolheBohelntbsatandt• .,
was only the second hit of the of Rille, who reached the ~ After sifting the pertinent
(Fla.) 16
Playing with Jean Yorker of
''lberelllth-tlnlballladiiDD (70,000pl,.) trcrlh
. ~ illi!liel
inning as the Reds paraded 11 mark for the fifth lime in his dala avatlable on the major
Harvard 33, Northwestern 0 St. Louis, Tannehlll won on lhe
•-tie t lhe I le
contestants, The Hoople Sys·
Holy Cross fl, Temple 7
ml' ed dou••- and the men's f&lt;l' wetcblnC !oolbaD,"Ihe)' iarted.
.
I • ,:',',,
~. rs .o
Pa . .
seven . year career.
tern confidently forecasts
Pacific 21, Idaho 14 .
•
""'"•
. The)''remuchtoo~toro. .· lllellideiiDtl~t.Oiir
All I ve got to say IS that
HOUSTON
three astonishing upsetsSoulhera Cal.' CG&gt;Iowa 12
doubles with Churck Michelle of llf&amp;lucbool pmtll, riCbt 011 top of e!ICII plaj, Ill: to beJnc llutd to
it sure took us a long lime lo
ab r h bi um·kumph '
Iowa State S7, Colo. St. :.J. If .OaUu.
lbeeleclronlcmaUtertoappredaletbelllletliiDpotr,.._t ~ ',llilil
score those six runs,'' said Cedeno. cf
s o o o Would you believe Colora·
IUinols ZO, Tulane 17
This weekend at the
Tommy : '
Morgan. 2b
5 1 I
do over Penn State? Or AlaLSU 40, Rlee !0
Columbus Table Tennis Courts Jq elly.
'
. .
. . H' '·:
• The n••ht s second delay by wW.yn,snon,lf, 1b
3' 21 21 2 bama over Fiort'da ? Or AuThe Old Bo• Ht'm~elf
No. Carolina If, Maryland R the 20 top Ohio pia"""" wiD
.
,
Miami
:rain, this~ one for ten minutes, Rader,Jb
4 o 1 1 burn over Tennessee? Well.
Mlch (0
-13I ~' Western
compete for · places •-·
on !Our "'*':w:&gt;.::w::,~·:,~:&lt;-'··x••f:'l:&gt;.ie®-'=&gt;'&lt;''''r,..,.,......,w•&lt;;:n-·&amp;m
· ..w; . . .. · ·
~" - '"' ·'='''"' · ·" "l ' """"' ·
• . Tommy Helms, who led off Miller. rt
3 1 0 0 that's the way it's going lo ented Buckeyes of Ohio State Mleh. Sblte !1, Waob. State 7 ·teams to represent' the state ID l l l .
D
: the eighth inning by drawing a tt:,"~~~~~..
3 o 2 J be on th•s wtld and woolly will make the1r 1970 bow a Mlnaeoota 33, Oblo u. 1%
the national team cham· lUOre
VI'
walk from George Culver, sent Blaslngam. p
~ ~ ~ o plgskm weekend.
~uccdessful one as they repel Mllslnlppl 24, Kentucky !I pionshlpa in · Detroit in
.
, .
· · ·
home the tieing and winning Culver, p
1 o 0 o ln a really Big One at mva. mg Texas A&amp;M. The Mts101rl U, Air Foree 18
November. '
; run with a two • out hoses load· Cook. p
o 0 0 o Boulder , host Colorado will ~~~~e~ /"'set kco"'lner~rs of Booton Col. 35, Navy 7
The Ohio , team won the
: ·
. a•••le off""'"' Gla""'"&amp;
~!!ddlng, p• .
0 00
00 brin.lo an end Penn State's
.....~ w~?..~.w.1 , ave Nebraska ft, At"!~!%
, n•lll•'"'104o
,
...
Jl
1
ur,e
K·-"1"'-· ·
~I • • --on"".,... .... "
1
'Il ! ~
--~\18 ·a:.~~. ·~lWiJUUJ{cir";,_tl\!i~ ..~IJ"'rt~~)'llliJ~t~ ,k CiWRiii.tiPPi , ~,,~,~,.,~ 141 ~:1\~-' ~
. Holnll!·game ~'llil1nin&amp; ·blow Ltm•t40n1' "' ~ , .,_,... ,
o ~s reak' I ~ r e '•q&lt;!?it' l!:lfc!l~'il,n•·•~""'Biniks" '·'!1ftftW!Vt ·N6tte"Dalil~"!li· .:za;, : 'I' I .,. ~I,. Jrben ~~~ .-~~
·I '
Totals··
35 57 s
·
..,
u
~~~e I db R
K'
•• k
,. r u
' · , · ' ~l:.) '" bei' J-:1;~; .
/(~, .
as on lyth e secondhitolthe
CINCINNATI
Crowder's rampagingii!&lt;Buf· '"" s • Y ex ern . ..,o Ohio Slate 35, Texas A&amp;M 24 ( Qllr'f'. ·!"""'
01 , ...
. ning,u the Reds paraded 1J
~
ab r h bi !aloes will out-muscle the ~or ~·::'~rkable ~x to get Oklahoma 21, OreJon St. ZO was used against a atrona,
latters to the plste.
Tolan, cf
3 o 1 1 Nittany Lions, 17-10, in a 15 c u orne in ront by a Houston 41, Olda. State r7
Wllmown team from Canfda,
·• "AD I've got to say Is that Rose. rt
3 1 2 0 thrilling c r ow d pleaser- 35-24 count.
Stanford 24, Oregon It
losing all his matches.
'i:: it sure took us 8 long lbne to Perez, 1b
: ~ ~ ~ kaff·kalf!
And at South Bend the Penuylvanla 17, Lehigh 7
Tannehill was No. z 011 the
!Con! those six runs " said Bench, c
3 o 2 1 At Tuscaloosa. Alabama, Notre Oa'!'e stalwarts will Rul_gen 18, Prlneetoa I
. first Ohio team In IINia and Its
'
~/~~yb, 3b
o 1 o 0 p au I " Bear" Bryant's de· make their home debut SMI,T 13, N. Mu. St. 3
.
'
'
Tommy.
McRae, If
·u h kl against always rugged Pur· SoUibera Mt 11 18 VT · captain last
year .(No.l).
3 0 0 0 1 . 1 .
. ~e night's second delay by Clln•. ph
·
0 0 o 1 ;,~~i~~ ... ~~~~~ ;!ss:r aJ~h~ due. In this, the 42nd grid· Arllagto1 8 (N)'
ram, thil one for ten minutes, Helms.2b
3 1 1 a Reaves as they walk off with iron meetmg o~ the~e out· Syracuoe 21; Kauu II
·came after Culver walked Concepcn. ss
3 1 1 o a 22_17 victory. :Meanwhile, standing . collegiate mst1tu·. Texao fZ, Texaa Tech 21 (till \..0
;HelmsandhitDaveConcepcitlll Nolan,p
~ ~ ~ ~ in another bruising battle, ti~ns, 1 predict a close 28~ Toledo 15, Marah1ll 7 (N)
t ·wi1119a pi"'h to put two runners g~!J~.~
1 0 0 0 the determined Auburn ~h,uem. ph forbllhe 1 "te' hb a k UCLA 35, Norlbweatera !5
20~~wallyc~!e'Yo'::J.. 1Jll~~
:on base
Wilcox.f
o O· o o Tigers wiD edge Tennessee's
r ~~m e ,quar r ac • IN)
-·
'
carbo, I
o I o o Volt 1ii-13 before a sell-out Joe l'hetsmann ·
Utah t3 New Mellco 1%
~· 101~"" by the » ·"'lll:ber
c.:"":!~·=~·':..:: Granv'I'·P
0 0 D 0 throng In Birmingham
Now goon with the fore· Va~derbUt30, Mill. Stale 15 t.~Jeo1 ~:;:~~n~
.,...~
Totols
21 ' t '
For those among you who cast :
(N)
.
place votes In parenthesOs
walkedJrinch hitler Bernie Car· Houston
gJg Jcl8 ~ would scolf at such daring Alabama 2%, Florida t7
Memr,hla Sl Zl, Va. Teeb I (first week):
bo to loR the hoses.
Cl~~~:~ch, Perez. DP- predictions, may I ·remind Ar,lzoaa 18, Saa Jose St. ! Mleh pn lit, Waablnctoa Z0 •
~ St. 121 ""'":;
. Bobby T_olan followed with a Houston 3. LOB-Houston 6, you my title as Upset
(NI .
Weal Va, 38, VMI 3
·
2·
sacrjftee fly ID SCOf" Helms for Cincinnati 5.
Champion Is not-a-hem-an Arizona St. :15, Kaoaao St. 14 TCU 18, Wlaeoul1 .t
:/:,~~!St. .(2} ~
' ' the lira! run of the Inning and, 28-May. HR-Morgon 17J, underserved hono~. just last
INJ
Utah Sta~ !1, Wyomln( !0 .... D!lloware (]}
77
: •: .; altet a walk •IO Pete Rose again Watson 191. 58-Miller. SF- week, while compiling an im- Arka-s !'1, Tulsa 1Z
Yale :U,. Coaoeetlcut IZ
~: Molltana &lt;&lt;I
75 ' liODILWW~
·
~the bases Cook was re- Tolan.
bb
_pressive 36-12-1 record for a Auburn 15, Tennnoee 13
(N) Nl&amp;llllame
6. Ttilias A&amp;i (11
19 ·
1 ~·
gtaeed by aladdin
Blasingame
ro oro 0 ~ .750 average, 1 gave r.ou llli" Pllllburgh 21, Baylor 8 (NI Athens ~~ JacksoD 14
7. .Hl:l1-:.l!n Mlcll. · ~ .
'"laddl
tiredgT011 Perez Culver
. 2 3 2 2 1 1 nois to upend heavily fav- DBaytoa 14• BowU•I Greea 7 Gallipolis 12 Waverly 8 9: eastern Mich.
..,
"
"I re ,
Y
Cook
1·3 . 0 2 2 2 o ored Oregon. The !Uini, win· rown !3, Rhode bland I
·
·
10 Dr' k
2
on a foul pop - up but Johnny Gladding L (HI
lei's in 19 of its last 20 en· Indlaaa 22, CaUforala •
Meigs 22 ·Ironton .14
n: L,tl,tona Tech
~
.. ·Bench driUed a single off
1·3 2 2 2 2 0 sagements, vindicated our East Carollaa 14, Clladel 6 Logan 30 WeUalon 8
12. Tennes- St.
21 .
1 0 0 ~ 0 0 Judgment with a 21).16 vic' ·Doug Rader's glove to score )t,:••ter
(NJ
Reemlln 18 Alexander 6 13. N.M. Hllands (1) ·
211.
Concepcion for the second run Wll~~. w (3.1) 4 3
3 I tory-har-rumph!
Nels-York 14 GloWiter 8 1&lt;. !Tiel Wittenberg (1)
16
16
o1 the In"'"".
2 3 2 2 o 2 There are two conlesls on - - ~- GU""~
Pt PI
t 22 8
(Tie)
Grambling
·w·"-· to,_..,Lee M and ch Gra~er
I o o o o I lap in the midwest which """" "v'
.......,
· easan
ar• 16 · Wofi&lt;INI 'OI
15
•·
. ....
. ay
P
Biaslngame pitched to I rate your attention In Co- . PHOENIX (UPI) -The bounvWe 14
17.
w
..
tern
Carollllli
14
18
hitler Ty Cline forced hollll' batter In 6th; Culver pitched to 2 lumbus the big ~ld tal- Plloen!K &amp;Ills cut guards Chad Kyger Creek 24 S..Uibel'll
'
~rO:~o~~: Colo. - ~~
two more 1'1111&amp; to set the stage batters In 8th.
'
'
'
. Calabria of Iowa, Joe De Pre of
20. Ea&amp;l Tet\n. St.
12
for Helms' game winning blow. HBP- By Culver Con·
St John' and Harrison.,_._ 0
.Other Mllll receiving votes:
Rookie MDI WUe01, who cepsclon. T- 2' 37· A- IUTS. TICKET PRICI!S
of. Mle"'~an Slate to
F·Adena
28
Vinton weber St. 'PI• Santo Clara Ill&gt;
'""
'"""""
Trl~lly (TtK.}; Norlhom Ai'Izo.
pi"'hed a hidass seventh .~
ATLANTA (UPI) -1lckets their Natlonal1!tl.lkelball IIJso- County 0
na, South.· O.~olo, · Btildwln·
nlnl and then departed lor a
for the 11H'&lt;lund heavyweight ctaUoo roster to 12 players.
Duval If Wahama 12
Walla"!! T~·~· Sou.t..,.n,cKlnlltl
pinch hitter after serving up a The popular UUe for Thom- bout Oct. 28 between Cassius KAISER III!8IGN8
Eastern 40 Warren Loeal ~~~v:"'.t.:~~n~:~!!c;
two - run homer to Bob l\'alaon as Gatnsboro,.tt's · famous Clay and Jerry Quarry wiD be WESTPORT Qxm (UPI)
(Res) 6 ·
St., Florldii A&amp;M, Southern
in the top ollhe eighth picked portrait, "The Blue Boy," acalad at $100, t=ID, $Z and$15.
•
·'
, . Loui! lana, · :rroy Sj., 'Wett
up the victory.
. '
comes !tom the blue silk suit Preas demands have been ,. Jamea E. Kalaer realgned Federal-Hocking 1• Cheiter (Po.}, San ·FomandO
"N~"'"" to It," nJd the grin- the boy Is wearing.
he~ that Zl ro1n of the Tueaday as,the Spor.ta Car Qub . Miller 12
Vaii.Y, California Poly, .Wii·
~~"'
--,
of Amort
director of..Iamon., North carolina AI.T,
highest priced oeats, worih
ca •
... -·• Symmes
Valley
18 l\lorlil\Yett Louisiana, Connect!·
$32,000, have been '"t aside In llooal raclag, effective Nov. IIi.
Hannan Trace 1' · ,
cut. Southorn Illinois, Eastern
the 5,000 aeat Municipal Audi· =~u:::"" wUI he North Gallla 44
~tucky, Humboldt St .• Boll

MAJOR PEGS roLORADOTOEND
PENN STATE'S 23-GAME STR.ING

~~,.

..Wlr

J

sI]JOrfs £L rage

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t

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•,

.TwO 'SVAC 'riltsOn Tap

BY DALE 1Wl11&lt;1E!I
batt£e _the $ym"'es Valley defense, but, have been lbotlr!s for their ltrtt vloi«Y llislenUy and lost the heU four
Two INatle ~-ter. 'lril/ ,Vildl!gs at"WWtiDIY WOOd whlle · somewhat atymled in their against the •Kyg~ Creelt Urnes 011 lwnbles and twice
• hillWilhiJI&lt;tiDIIIp !heJ!&gt;Utbern the leag~e-leading Eastern }'Wining"""~ game.
~~~..
through blocked punta.
V~ A~tlc .Colllerti'Cf, lll,ls .f:qi.i '!flU hilt! Warren·Loctll'a
North ,GiJUa's offeQM II led .. The Tornad9es have been Hannan Trace, playing in·
!!••tend; ~Wiion • i!lfgln_• ·....,...,•. .qiad Bllturdlly Jijgbt by ii!ni'l" quar~back Jaclde beaten WI a• the hands of opir-.&lt;1 l!all held lhe Bobcota to
, •. · '111ur!!dar·lllahtat &amp;lollhWes~ 011 lbil .Eagles'.grldiron.
. Smith, sen!!II' ~ Bobtiy . Ff!detai-H~ iild ~ by only one kluclldown and nine
· ;·~ Jrhere •· qoa-c~. M~} par,ter • . Eaarem. ~ llle eolifereJICO Ratllfl and Juni'!l' -d;ter A!Qier. ,llolh were IIOI&gt;Ieague ftrat downs.
· ~"~lblltlde•• , !fl ftlee&lt; &lt;hio alter two ~refS Of liCUon.
Harv.eY !k'OWD· The latter Ia loooes.
,
~ WUdcats possess a huge
former, N«lll Glllla ,Pira\01, '• £oac:hi:;IT)r1Ri"'hie's .Eaglel· ·~y danger0111 with hla jCygerCl'eek,al~dr&lt;lpplnga Uneandopeedybacblnaeniors
i-.,f)llrl p!UJfed WQ,b!o ll~,aty )"~ ,del~~ a.rtnan Trace, 0\ltlldll running ll)reat.
Jl-&amp; open,r to ·Wihama, W~yne Qlleell, David Spangler
e( ll'ad ~ ~· , •\:
34-0....., Nilflh Gallia, lt-4. ~, N«ti,Gallla O.Z.wiD be facing bounced bllek lilt·~ will!'a .and fullback ·Delbert Ciscv, a
•. · ' ThO game wiD J?l !}]jlyed While showing a alinn theil18hlallclenalao0.%onlhe liard-earned~ win over a IUpoandaophomore.
· J Thurada7j\'etotheanri\ialfall defeQM, Eaorem ·has lleen.)ed ,-on.
.
determined Hannan Trace ThOUneiaclllllpCMedofJerry
· r, ~ meeUns '" ,the. Gillla ·~I)' olfelllivel~ ~ .Jlullor lullbick
~th\lrealetn )ljll IIlii to a team.
.
Waugh, a :IIJi pounder; Steve
,TFachera
Association lll!d end Deimls Eichinger, poweriui;Alexande,' squad, 71~ The Bobeats, like other Daniela, a 210 pounder; Gary
1
IC~ Friclay .at. South- ~ p,ave Snllth, a aetjlor IIlli 10 thea.rtnan Wlldeala;4!1- leap opponeqta, havellhOima Mlchaeta, a 180 pounder; Jim
/,.,.•.1f:l;'~c L _, . .
and .~ni~~~;~ qiiiU'Ierba.,. T!)m 8... :
'
!Wd./dttln(l, stingy defenae but Lambert, a 180 pound junior;
·. : _0\l....,rp . "'!., . of :Meigs ~· '
.,
·
Thjul'w, Soutl\western:a best the offelllive'unit has not Uved and Tom Beaver, a 175 pound
. '~ ,llG!iDI\&gt; ~ llliet lhJliiefending Karr and Eichinger combined offelllive Weap&lt;lll has been the up to -tatfona.
senl«.
~lr~:Kf~?Win'the~onlcata laaf""'lt!~35 yard • play ~1118, of quarJerbaci Rlehard Last wee-. Kyger O'etk's
' • # ~~ -~ ",..y ,
Y which vii'
· "lewed-Up" the ~· to end :Mart Snlith, a UD defenae held Hannan Trace 011
· ,,OIJW ~~ague llll '"·
Nortll qlllta victory,
' powid ~omin.
slx~erenljiCtaSionawilhln Ita
· ~br.uJDUion'a. ~ed ,CoachPauiAIImlan'sPirates · Coach . Robert Aahley'a 20 yard Une. The cilfenae,
, · HaiUiaJI Trl!o:e WlldcJill wiD have . abown a hard-rocldng Soothern T0018cloes 0.2 wiD be however, lalled to move con- MFL Standings
,
._
·
,
,·.

0

.

8

game.~

lltJNTINGTON, W. Va. ilJPI) - 'I1Ie relllnl tl Marl
Aadmn 111
r1 eed affeu1
•
npo 011
ve JliU'I, br!Pielled
Mmllall UDivenlly foolball proctlee 'l'lleoday.
'Die Zllopoml Andmn, 1 '"'dnalt jaalor, ... beta
Idled olace Sept, I when bo wu IDjnnd ID 1 mot.-veJe
IC·
•••,

.

)o,,Hege Ratinp
· ·.

women 'a aollhall
lelm, witll tholr bacb to tbe
wall, wm lhnll gllilo!lm~ -tbe
tourney'a 11na1 t11,y ·to eaj1t1re

the~ rect~~tly.
The lola1Wnent ,.. lor two
weebndaandlbe~bldto
play u jp~Illef.

')bey opened by defeltlnll
11u1uJ1r1eJ Of
44.
Nut came a JU,tweoty-blt
rompoverQI)'Jee.VueloiPI.
Pleallftl. Barr's was lben
1rounced by Hartley 011 o1
RavenmiOd 14-1, gtvlntllhem
tholr only loae of the double
elimination toumameot.
But 'l!arr's fought .
Mid

Ripley

O'alg

.,.ck

Few Wllataes
Only five persons were
preaent, besides Wilbur
Wright, when hts . brother
Orville made lbe f~rsl air-

·IJelllware Braced ·For Jug Races ~~~ (ALLG~:r;T ~ ~: ~.'1r.' :r~7~~tty
•

'' &lt;

· ··, ·

,. ·, ·,
· ' · '·
·•·• =rPEJ,,.,W~, Obi!! (UPI)·
Be?J~Iep; . , . . and
. . oldie 8Nal O&gt;l1pnl)la
,\ ·i'•~illel'll1ilbi •Ofthe
,. .•,,JIIIII~ ~aw filr 'l.'bura. ·......~~GaO Utile llre1ril J1lg
··."7""~'...&gt; ....~ · .
, ,, . ,....,...,. to worn" about
It,"
iilleu· aald. "We'll jual
'bivf' to ~all IIIII lee what

the bottle at the aelectlon
cereDICilles Tueaday, plad"l
his big cdl, owned by Dr.
George&amp;mllhofllryam,Oxm.,
lnthe-drowlnlhell-llone
field,
·
.
Columbia Gecrge had been
"''l'ttldered u a c~vorlle In
the Jug along wilh S1an1ey
Dancer.'~ Most HapPJ Fella, but
" "~,lhlt!Bt~lucltofthe after lhe draw, oddsmabl'l
ch~.
~ IDClll happy !ella at W
, ~picked No. II out of Willi Columbia George second
'.t:. '

choice at 11-t.
:Moat Happy 'Fella drew tbe

NO.,~Iillhafrultrow.

'Die cc:mplete draw, In the
fruit row, Includes Judge (I~
1), Sbl'iek (~1), l.e11tder Lobell
(..1), Ke,.tone Pal {10·1),
Kentucky (10-1), MDIII RaPPJ
J'ella (W) Race Time Boy (~
I) and ~1!1 Star (1:&amp;-1). In lhe
aeeond tier wiU he Aksel '
Hanover(IJ.l),Ferrlcllanowr
(I-I) an&lt;l Columbia George (:&amp;-

f

S!!utheastem Ohio League
Bf!gins 46th ·season Friday

1).
Poll! poodUona In tbe aecond

heataredecldedbythellnishof
lbeflnt,wilhthewlnnerolthe
fintbealgeltlngtheNo.lpoll
In the aecond and 10 on.

Jackson
Gallipolis
Ironton
~ellston
::oint
CooiGrove
Waverly ,

2
2
1
1
:
o
0

IJ1"rLE BEl 1'* 1JOODY
OOLIJMBUS IIJ.I1) - plllo
State foolblll 'ooicb W*7
llayeaputhiapla)'Willlroqll&amp;

hrHiour IOIIIIlll Tlleldll1 llld

,..:Will ..... •-- ....

Hawk. jogg1IW Frlda7.

0 0 16 20 Smokey Sll)'l:
2.4 12
1 o 50 22
1 o :u 22
: ~ ~ ~;
2 o 6 JO
2 0 o 57

3 ROOMS

NEW
FURNITU'E

~=:~n!.?.!MES,

$349.95

Un.......,......,

McGinn

(7)

and

S31.10 Do--

Botonc•On
ConvHiHt

Terms.

MASON
fURNiTURE
It could. have beeD yoo!

Mason, W. Va.

Bateman;

Veale, Gibbon (71 ond Sangull·
' }
'
~
le'!. WP-Veale (!0.15). LP.
·
• the inlUal tlckofl II Ja&lt;bon's aU • time con- o1 the year ID the SOC in hil two Wegener (3·61.
the f6th _,of ierenct record II 179*18 with years at Waverly, moved to the
Fran 000 000 cioo- o 3
Oblo Athlttic Athens (J'/G.)IM-1f and nine head football position at Dover San
LosAng 010 000 IIOx- I 6
ltalsowUI titles) and Logan (171-11}11.15 1118h School and has been
Bryant, McMahon (8)
of ~ llldaeventttles)lnacloserace replaced by Mike Slloemaier. DietZ; · Foster ' ( 10·13) and
the state'• for the saCotid spot.
SIIOOI!JIIier was head football Sudakls. LP·Bryant (H).
cmifele~..,, Gallipolis (113-120·161 and and track coach at Paint Valley Houston 010 110 ~ J 7 0
000 000 0611- 6 9 2
1;200 mark . W~ti)n (123-:160-11) are the Iilgb School for three yeara. Clncl
Culver 16), Cook
lft\l.01 tbe other elarter rilembei'J stiU In Last nar he wu coach of lbe (81.Bloslngame,
Gtadctlng 181, Lemaster (81
one tl' ~ the COI!(erence wilh six footbtlb year Iii 1be Scloto'Valley Con· and Howard; Nolen •.Wilcox (7),
·
!Illes apiece. ··
·
Iorence ll1d Southeaatern Ohio Granger t9) ond Baney. WP·
Wilcox (3·10). LP-Giadctlng (5Jaclraci!l, Logaii, ~Us ~
·
let w~~~ htii , Beareils &lt;).
HRI·Morgan (7th), Watson
,J!!!I Wellsloh 1111.•• been ·ln:lbe · wed out tbe title wilh a ~ (91h}.
'
'
ldiiiMontinuO\!,IIy from the
8!Jd 1lar8 •ellhlh slaJe.
OUiiiel,
Athellfl was.out I&lt;J' rarillil 111 .Ciaas A.
attw
ll1d lronloh
At lbe
end from, the
three '
" Don

San Otego 010 000 001- 2 5 2
Atlanta
100 000·011- 3 13 o
Corkins, Rou (2}, Wilson (8),
Doyal (9) ond Cannluaro;
Nosh (13.8) and Didier, LP·

1

'lr.;l·

i:In:...

m:l

s'"

·l

m
'

m:l

::r.::

sOuth· .

((rium,

81GNS
CONTRACTftlPt},-ll!m·
•
LOS ANGELEs
n1ng baclt Elljab Pllll,. Who
played nine yean 1i!th the

.

AT

EITH GOBLE FORD
USED992-3422
CAR LOT
Locusl St.

Middleport,

"Real Sharp"
1966 PONTIAC
..

STATION WAGON
Air Condition, All Power .

.......... Beln.

SAVE
.-

$l.OO
TANK FULL

X£-110 EthJI - IJI(II' 100 octane

'Certified Gas Sta,tiOns ·
.,

SPECIAL '1395
I

Locat Owner Extra Clean.

'

o.

Green !ley Paetn,,tllil.liellad
Tuesday to a ready ieaerve
ct11!1'ael w1t11 the Loll Angelea
RaDJt~~ he1na drqJped b)'

CAIJIIB OF DEA'111
We 8 t e r n
l 2 , - - - - - - - - - -.......~'!"'"'---.~-~~~~~""
ClEVELAND &lt;VPI) -11e1r1 South Point 8 Hantlngtan
failure, caused by aertlon: and
.VInson. 6 • _ • . .... _ ·
atreme heat, was ruled Coa! Gr:ove ~ ~, JWU
Tueadayaslhecauseoldeatllcil lronloll $1.. Joe· 11' Oak
IJ;'ear-okl Mlcllael llolt, a HID Jf· . ·· ' · ·
tacldeh on the1b .1(,1hn RaJ 1118bh FiilriJ~Rd .14 P.ell\lJtelke 0
Be oo 1 1oo1 a11 1eam, w o
.
.
coUapaed whUe nmnlng a wilid
·
·
ll)l'lnl Aug. !3.

'

:

.

Glllll• :~:;~;~.~~~'

lfterwardl ''n CG&amp; a IIIIW vleiGry llld lloliiil
better~." ...,
·four Plll!lllor
"We sot ..,.. quite 1 lot ·hltlera for Bur'•
today," he uld. "I ean't tourney , . . DoWe ~=~~
cc:mplain, but we Oltliht to be 1 with II hlta, lkond!l C
~-better..,
~. Glorlaand~~~~~
•..,
,..,... ·- _... ..,.- ...,.
l t a - "'*F.II!Ia Salunlly Pam aa.-. bid::!"~~;.
agalnstTei!I* .MIM,planaeda Homeruna were~
aborter aeulon today and Olellnut, tint, Marala
TlntradiJ, IGjl!led will! 1NII and Pam Sll""'en

o 0

Wavorly at Gallipolis
Logan at Wells too
.......va.,.,
Athens at Jackson
8y Unlllll Prou lntornallenal ~f~.'!:. Point at Huntington
Chi
Na,tlonaLl LH
1 gppdue ..ron.
1 Rock Hill at Coal Grove
cagoa 51 . ous.
(lit gomo)
Montreal 000 001 001)- I 5 0
Plltsbgh 000 000 001)- 0 6 0 171; Dobson, Fingers (7),
Stoneman (6-15) and Bate. Lindblad 171 ond Duncan. WP.
man; Ellis, Grant (8) and Kaal 113-101. LP.Dobson (16Sangulllen. LP·EIIIs (12·10).
W. HR·OIIva (23rdl .
·C2nd .tlmeJ
Montreal 010 000 001)- 1 • o
Pitts
00&lt;! 120 00!&lt;- 3 5 2
Wegener, O'Donoghue 15),

·fcl'ee

UI.O.'-

Sttlk
UJ.a..r-.,
TIOJie Stuk
.... .......
SlrlolnTJ,Iout
...

....
__

SkllleuWIIIIM'I

llld Brenda a.enua--

·

�' ,.

";,

.

1

.0

{

)

~

'

I

..

tl; nl. Oaib- Senli!WI, Mt&amp;le90rt-I'OOI.fu;. o.. ~ .Z!. !970
\

I

•

WLW'a.gg!'S~ and the Cloud ' statement issued by the station

'

By UlliN PnN la1tnlltioall nl!'nt was aired by radio ala·

John J. Gilligan said Tueaday
the reoponslbllity for aeUons by
the Ohio National Guard ulti·
mately rests with the gOYernor
and, ~ eltcted, he would malte
sure a tragedy like Kent State
"wiD never, never, never ~
pen again. "
The Democratic eaiulldate
pledged in a statement issued
at Columbus to bring the Guard
troopa "to a level of profession·
al competence that will enable
them to be used, when necessary, in dangerous situations
without lear lor the safety of
innocent bystanders or the
guardsmen themselves."
Gilligan said In the ease of
Kent State, where lour students
were shot and killed and nine
others wounded May 4, that no
order was given to fire.
"Because of lack of disci·
pline, someone started fll'ing
and others followed," he said.
The first requirement of any
military unit is discipline, he
id
sa.
"I was taug ht . . . th at a.
weapon should never be loaded
unless it Is to be fired, and a
weapon should never be fired
unless the Intent Is to kill, because that Is what such weap·
ons are designed to do - kill
people," he said.
"My RHpoDJibUHy"
" As governor, if a weapon
were loaded or fired by a Na·
tiona! Guardsman In this state,
It would be my responslblllty,"
he said.
A Cincinnati radio station
suspended further broadcast of
a campaign conunercial of Gil·
ligan's Republican opponent
Roger Cloud Tuesday pending
review of a complaint from
Gilligan's headquarters.
A one • minuhlspot announce•

tion WLW Monday but deferred OQ!anizatjon agreed tq the susTuefi!lay alter Gilll8an'a forces pension of the disputed political
claimed the commercial mJs.
aniWUilcement
until
sU&lt;:h time
qui&gt;ted him on the l!sue of cam· as
the ·documents
submitted
by
pus violence.
both sides have been reviewed

a new moe

style

with
. , n;~eta1

MOSOOW (~J.)-{}ne of the
designers of the Soviet Luna 16
described it to@y as the flrat
reliable space robot and pre·
dieted similar craft would be
sent to explore Mars, Venus
and other planets.
The Tass news agency

identified the scientist only as
the deputy chief designer of
Luna 16. 11esald80Yietexperts
now are designing "a radically
new' ' craft fer explorations of
planets.
His conunents were part of
an Interview with Tass as Luna

1

return apparatus was
heading badt to earth for a
scheduled parachute landing
Thursday. :
.,
Luna 16 hurUed toward the
moon Sept. 12, aoft.Janded there
Sunday, scooped up B9il and
successfully blasted off Monday
IS's

.

Three lniured
in Accid~nts
'.1

""

...

i;l~~~~~~~~

,.

,.

.

"The universlly crowd moUld Nitented. The aUegatlilil, he
start riota arid political revoiu-· said, ''lstotaliyapuriotiS,IotaDy
erroneous and tolally unfo\lfid·

HOpes Will WHlldnnr
Shielda said · he hopes wliel\
the stations ...,.d Gl!llgan's side
.....
of the storY, they wWwlthdraw ·
for earth.
the .commerclal, which Cloud
. HEAVY
"A radically new apparatus Is c8lnpaigners have been using Gohtr'!j . .hla, .
beingdealgrledatpteaent(attd) with Increasing frequelli:y . · Nli'ilt~llllt, wblle
it will be modlfltd to suit
specific taake of one or another nominee fer the U. . Senate,
A
space program," ·the deputy w;arns arbitrary pollution con·
designer said. "A flli!bt ID Mars trol decisions adversely alfi!CIwiU require a somewhat ing businesses could result In
different technological solutioo ''ullemployment of large nwn·
than a flight to the moon.
bert of Ohio werltera."
Spealdng In Lorain, the dn·
ctnnati ~SSII)all said 11 .
1o take off In the direction of a was "absol,utely ~Ual" that
desired celeabial bo&lt;ty,IJ&gt;II)ie a
aoft landing on Its slll'face, Congreaa pass, President . Nbt:·
.

mlsbap occurred on Rt. 7, one pole. Sbe ctlllplsined of minor
and sil&lt; tentha miles north of injuries but was not im·
Gallipolis 1lhere an unknown mediately trealed.
A second bijury accident

Pressure Put on Ky
WASHINGTON iUPI) - The
Nbion admlnlstraUoo Is report.
ed doing all it can lo keep
South Vietnamese Vice PresIdent Nguyen Coo Ky from
attending a rally in Washington
Oct. 3. War protesters continue
to promise they will attempt a
citizen's arrest of Ky II he
appears at the rally.
Sen. Gordon L. Allott, R·
Colo., alter Republican congressional leaden met with Pres·
ident Nlson at the White House
Tuesday, said "Everything Is
being done, every Influence
brought to bear to keep him
from attending this konky

Ky's vlait will bring a hall·
million people to cheer Ky and
urge President Nixon to do
everything necesaary to win the
war, according to Carl Mcln·
tyre, the rightwing radio
revivalist sponsoring the prowar rally.
Many of the war protest
organizaUons plan to use the
Oct. 3 opportunity to express
other concerns such as cuts in
the poverty programs and
racial problems.
PAPER PRICE UP
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Post &amp; Times Star boosted the
cost of a single copy of the af.
ternoon Scripps-Howard
newspaper to 15 cents as a
result of increased salaries and
higher materials cost. Weekly
deliveries went to 75 cents.

·" *•'lil'IW"aild il&gt;rbl&amp; ,,

to trtal."

Meigs Geaeral RoiiPIIal
ADMIIIED NQ!le.
DISCHA.'RGEP."~· ·Halrlll«" ..

King.

. . ,.. . w
. .,.,.... .,.."·'·rn····'"i!W.
·"·'"·'·'·*... .. ::·. ' =::
¥.i1,.,.;zo::;!M:::

;

'~

&lt;:::.-:::::~·==:•»~·
•...............:..·. ·w~ ~

.•.•,;:?»...

Yeager, 35, Jackson, collided. will remain firm." .
_
Dunlapreceivedmlnorlnjurleo. Another scientist p'redlcled
The case Is still under In· soviet men someday will foUow
vestigatlon .
machines to the moon.
Rtchard E. Carter, 16, Georgi I. PetrOY said cosmon.
G&amp;!Hpotis, was cited to juvenile aula will be sent to perfonn
court for excessive speed maintenance chores on iuture
following a colllaloo on Neigh· unmanned platforms put in
bo.rhood Rd., two tentha of a orbit around the moon.
mile west of Rt. 211.
"I think now 1s high time for
Accor,ding to officers, Carter man to work on orbital stations
lost control of his auto and and 1 think their orblta mould
struck a Gallipolis acbool bus also be around the moon,"
driven by C!arles E. Corlin, 55, Petro said In an interview with
Gallipolis. Carter sustained the government newspaper
minor Injuries which required Izvestia
treatment at lhe Holzer Medical "But
stations, I think,
Center.
should simply be vlaited occa.
A final accident oc:t:urred 1111 sJonally by men. The men wm
Uncoln Pike Rd., two and seven work there for a tln)e, changing
tenths miles aoutb of Rt. 141 and tuning lristruments and
where John W. Cox, :16, Nor· picking up materials then
thup,lesl control of his car and return to earth. The 'statioo
struck a bridge railing and . should w&lt;l(k automatically ,until
fence . No citation waa iallued. ,. • .. ._1 1ilait...

·,..

ihese

'"··I

Syrlall

irininll

+ .df .

sandy depression, once part
of the o c e a n floor. The
marsh's upper portlon, or
"swamp line," ranges In ele·
vation from 103 to 128 feet
above sea level.

Pleuaat Valley Hospital
· men !ban 1&amp;,~ D¥J!., ~ 11'
ADMITTED WUIIam
entarad ~otdan With ~t:Ii!MIIilii. '
Rickard•, Mrs. Charles Elliott,
lanki alid 100 .~ ~~~ ~,
1
nel .carrlen.
~
· iiii'..',· ·P' 1.
Ru b1. Cu11er, Pt. Peasant;
Terri Prottenglsr, Middleport;
Be aald JordanlaD
~.
Wllh.·am Willis, E\~anor;
.Btblter lin;raft' •. ·• 1 .'~l'J.'
Will
B dl
R 1
-~IJII"Y~
. .~
•am
ar n,
acne;
and arWJer7 . ~. ~ !'!!
William Jeffers, South Side;
totll .$Jr1aa ta)d! ~ ••till
Lewis Markham, Leon.
~-~ U4l ~... ..._
DISCHARGES - Kenna close to Intervention. I.stael ._....,..., . . '"-"~'' i·'~
u ... hea J
0 Cull ~--t l1ready was reported 10 baVe · beiGre tdday'l battle! J~r ·
'""' • erry '
ey• .,..,,..
· 1
· t t •• Ptitt.ln
Smith, Griff Durbin, Mrs . mobilized Its reMrvel and _ , were pu a ~ .,...
Everette Riffle and son, ,Mrs. moved tank units to the bordar and ~twlon lellkl. ·· •!t
Kenneth .Williams and son, for action.
I"
Hennan Jones, Mrs. Wlllijm Bow the withdrawal wotj)d
111.
affect
the
54
Hijack
hoa~ea
'
Job ll'l, Nancy Rebman , Mrs .
..
·~
Eldon .VSJ!IICOY, Roger TollV!ll', . held by the Paleatlnlap suarrJI,·
GRANTS ILUII!:, ,
Richard Wallace Jr., Kalhy las was not lonlwn. A gueitlllll WASHINGTON (~11. 1\- The
Gill, Roberta Blgglnbolharn. IIPokesman In Deraa, s,rta, .Department of Boualnl.' and
said today tile group had been Ufllan Development .~
The National League W!IS mOYfjllntothe "Uberatedzone~· annoanced a ~ea ~ &amp;l'lt!lll,
I~ and ., f1lnd i'eeervlitiOIIJ:
the first m a j o r baseball of Nerth Jordan. ·
Before lodars rep«ted dee!· They In~ .fl ri11Ui~~ ,tor ·1
league to be formed. Organ·
izecl on Feb. 12, 18'16, it COD· alve ba~ a Jordanlali lflil1 new raw water trealmenl P~l
slated of eight teams.
Ill llklllltlliD aa1d a nlllfGroed at Cempbell, Oblo.
· ,.
f t .. - ' - •

·,~

.

BLUE RIDGE
1:
"!

.

. 'b UiiOR OR INTERIOR

·1 2·1 ~J!Mitt: ·sT~,, . .

WASHINGTON (UPI) ....: A
Senate-House conference cornmittee Tuesday tentatively
agreed oo most key. portions of
proposed new wheat and feed
grain support programs, includ·
ing rigid support loan floors under grains from 1971 through
1973.
The support loans would be
set at a minlmwn of $1.25 per
bushel for wheat and $1 bushel
, for corn. · ·
The conferees failed, bowever, to agree on another key
grain support issue - a Senateapproved proposal, opposed by
the Nixon administration, link·
lng suppor,l l for corn and Other
feed grains to the '1alr earning
power" farm parity price.
The agreements reached
'I'Uesday were described as
highly hlntaUve and subject 1o
final committee votes Ia tar.
They were WOI'ked out as the
conference panel met for a sec·

graduaW ol Meiga lllgb School
•now enrolled at Ohio Unlverslty; Mark, a junler at Meiga
Hll!h School, Gregory, 15, and
Jerr'f, 13.
'
The Miller family returned to
Melp County In 1964 from
Pboetili, Ariz., wnere they had
resided for several years.
Miller accepted employment
with the River Coal Co. at West
Columbia. He w Uttle .,. •
perlence retailing. F(ll' a wblle
he was part owner In the Miller
Brolhers Grocery with his
brother, Bob, In Rutland, but
was too preased fer time ID take
much of a role In the bu.sinesa
and sold out to his brother.

ON THE SAME OORNER .;.my at the Qoaarooda, Don Miller has C1pOIIed I ~
grocery store and service station. The building w ulldergone Olleuive Interior and Ollertor
remodeling .

d
Truth. Prom1se r:~~
COLUMBU~

(UP!) - Assistant Franklin County Prosecutor John Peck says a special
grand jury Investigating alleged
Irregularities in the state loan
program "will reveal the lull
truth, regardless of where the
chips may fall."
Peck denied a charge by
Democraticguberuatorialnominee John J. Gilligan that the
jury's investigation had turned
into a "partisan political
farce ." P&lt;ck said the former
Cincinnati congressman "is im~
pugning our integrity''

use on feed graill'! as approved
earlier by both houses. The ac·

companying support program
would include a $1 support loan
floor for corn, which was ap.
proved by the Senate but OP·
posed by the Ho!lse and the administration.

- TheHouse-approvedadmlnistration "set aside" program
would be adopted for wheat In
1972 and 1973. But for 1971,
farmers would continue the
present sy~tem of specific acreage allotments which limit the
amount of wheat each fanner
can grow. And In a sigooicant
defeat lor the administration,
the agreement provides a $1.2:i
per bushel support loan floor
for wheat in all three years.
The "set aside" plan requires
farmers who want price SDP·
ports to idle some acreage, but
gives them more leeway In de·
ciding how to use their remain·
ing land.

OOLUMBUS (UPl) - Thou.. Agriculture, said (Jllo's largest
sanda of persona took advan· lnduatry Is agriculture.
tage of the goothreather at the "When we say agriculture Is
opening of the eighth annual big bqalneaa, we are being
IJUo state Farm Science Re· modest," he said. 11Agrieult1U"t."
view at Dcrt Scott Airport to aerves every man, woman and
look at the ublblll watdl child In tbeae United Stahla
:=rzt~~ and hear. ~every da'I of.....
w~~~;~year .
prdenltlevelo!l!: . ;;!'WbateVU
. · !Mf'ttl'l&amp;jl~=

·-·L-

~~=:~
·

::.~ 1f!,U
_...;use •·""!'- ....,;..,,..,..
·
~,._'"&amp;OJ" .

~

falling

to acknowlqe that· a
prosecutor is doJnC

Gilligan, who hlatified for ~ ·
minutes Monday, Is to relurtl; ·
ligan does not recognize the
for more testimony next Mon,
impartiality ll'ith which the day.
·
grand Jury Is conducting this
Investigation, and why the jur· I
ors may be interested In taJk. 1 Say "Get Well" PleAse
lng with him, " Peck added.
I
with
"Mr. Gilligan's inference that
we, as Republicans, caMOI
fairly conduct this investigation
Is Impugning our Integrity as
For Lasting Pleasure
lawyers, citizens and most of
$4.00 up
upholding the laws of the state
of Ohio.
"While be comments that the
59 N. 2nd Ave .
Republicans In the legislature
992-SUO
repeatedly reiDJed to authorize
Middleport, 0.
an lrnpartiallnvHtigatlon, he Is
" It Is regretful that Mr . Gil·

r""------------,
Blooming Plants

Dudley's Florist

- - -----------~

MILLER AND SONS·
God has spoken. lt is up to

Service Sta. &amp; Gtucety

the subjects to bow down to

the ground. We won 't do it.
- Leonarfl Woodcock. Un it·
ed Au to WorkeTS presi·
dent, rejecting a new con·
tract proposaL from Gen-

eral Motors prior to the
&amp;trike which began Sept.

o,..

Dally. A.M .

14.

Tilt P.M .

STORE

D•llyiA.M.
Tll5 P.M.
STATION

S:fili

cit Ohio , Department of
Insurance,
Certificate
of
Compliance- The undersigned,
Superintendent of Insurance of
the State of Ohio, hereby ctr ·
tltlts that GREAT COM ·
MONWEA.L TH
LIFE
IN ·
SURANCE COMPANY, of
Datjn, State of Te~tas , has
complied with the laws of this

.,'

.

MIDDLEPORT

ond day to reconcile differences
between farm bills passed earlier by the House and Senate.
The bills, covering 1971·73
farm s"pports, also Include a
controversial cotton support
program and a S55,000 por crop
limit on subsidy paymenta to
big farmers whicb ia not In dis·
pule.
Conference meetings were
scheduled to continue Wednesday.
The agreements reached so
far on the grain support secUons represented a blend of
provisions from the adminlsb·a·
tion-backed House bill and the
more rigid Senate version
which the administration op.
posed, but were weighted in
favor of the Senate version.
Under ·the agreements :
- An adminlstraUoo • backed
system of flexible planting con.
trois, called a "set aside pr&lt;&gt;gram," would be authorized for

.

e

Science Review Starts Well

'

·oo··e~
·,•
···:··•
....·~~-.~
• •·~

PHNOM PENH (UPI) - 'Ille Combodlaa ('.«wnmand
Ieday rnahed 1110tber baltallou of troopo to lbe llle&amp;e of 'hng
11a1t wbeft Camltodlea paratroopa were driven back In tbelr
attempl to eaplure the Commaalat •troaahold 'l'ueadey.
'11le ........llllqae also aald Cambotlan troopa bad killed
• wouadod more tllu •,111 Cemmlllllat aoldlel&lt;i Ia lbe all
-~~~~ a1n&lt;e •• ~ of Pl'lace Norttlom Slltamdl. 'Ille
addlu-1 llf -'her baU.U.n at 'hng Kalil brtlaCid lo
aNr1J 11,•111e total Cambodia troopa Involved Ia a drln
tonni lloe eaclrdtol Ina llf Xampo111 Tbom.

The "U'ol!sro~•· - located be"engagetl~y In strip
on Roote 't2t just out of Brad· . miJihtl•operat10011. He IS now
bury'-JIIII ''aln~" whatlt ~ )lballdonlng tha,t line of en·
to •b.e *'\(~ Bailey' Rt11 Road dea\&gt;IH', however, io ~
re;'ident, Don Miller, Ia with running the pery and
~eible.
IOrvice atation.
Fer years on the comet of the Anew brick veneer fnlnt Q8
section willcb has traditionally been uaed on lhe fOI'I1lll!l' eafe
been
known · ao
the building and a number of
"Croosroads" there has been a Ouoreacent , Jighta lnataUed
cafe. That "corner" now has along with a section of paneling
become a nea~ -well-lighted to provtde a neat aettlng fw tile
grocery wi!ich has been named new bualneas.
"Miller and Sons."
A, natlve of Meigs County,
Not only is Do'! Miller having been bom In ilui1IDd
responsible for the chanse .but Townllllp, Miller Is given able
MIUer, hlmaelf, Is undergoing a lltliataDCe at tile ator..-vlce
radical change in his personal llatioo by hla wife, the former
In opening the establish· Violet BaUey. ~ . a naljve
ment, Since his ·graduation Meiga &lt;Jountian, and four 10111,
from high I!Chool Miller has who Include Steve, ·a 1970

Wheat, Feed Grain Program
Near Committee·Agreement

LATEX
•

.

career

e,;:~to~::~::~~

(CooUnued frO!Jl plge I)
will be responsible ·before God,
the Arab and Islamic nation
and history whiCh · will not
forget · ••-1r
treachery _,..
., .
woe
treason."
A pull back of tha Sy~
army would greaUy ease the
tension which has brought both
the United Stites and !tra"il

i.

·.~~tros,s1ioads} (is .Modern ~e~~C;~ Center

· ~·~e~~~~!$1ii~$!

Three persons were Injured veblcle cut Into the path of an occorredat3:25p.m.oo'RI.lll!l,
Tuesday, none seriously,ln lour aulo operated by Marjorie · ooe and three tenths miles west
on's "total environmental mQa
of Gallipolis ·where velllcleo function on It then start lit the blllzaUoo legislation package"
tramc accidents Investigated French, ta, Addison.
by the Galllpolil Post State
Mrs. French lost control of driven by James E. Dunlap, 2'1, dlrecUon of earth or the planet before adjournlng.
Highway Patrol. The first her auto and struck a power Gallipolis, and Belen M. from which It started-these

·-

trim .

~ilv)er

'

19f4.
Unlyerslty
Shields,
aaya~
therpl~
qtlOta· . ·
News The
'reported· Gilligan
"'d' · l\!lll'k
Ubn was
dlst.oried

Luna 16 First of New Breed

War protesters also were
making their views on Ky's
visit evident. Rennie Davis, one
of the "Chicago Seven" and
spokesman for an antiwar
coalition, aald 'I'Uesday at a
press conference "The day Ky
Ianda In the United Stahla there
are going to be groupo doing
everything possible to plac;e this

the softness
of crinkle
patent. In

·~a ~'

'

ed.•,

rally."

Discover

C&lt;J~m&gt;erclal

Uons In ·the
lvbal'lliis ·
said.
was a quote Gilll8an allegedly country"" obviously ""·~ .
The I!O!IUnt!rCinllncludes the made at Xavier \.lnivemtr in
GIUigan'sC11111P8Jlliif11a'nagef,

soand
of a riot
serving
back·
groim.Uer
~voice
whichascbdms
Gilligan•advocates violence by
"In the Interest of fairness, by WLW management," a college sludenta.

The basis for the

'

•

Gas

Discount
To All
Trucks

DON MILLER

of our natural reeources, we State appucabte to " ond Is

f ct that ag
come up with the a
·
rlculture Is our largest Industry
tin to be · the
andwiII COO ue , SO m
foreseeable future.'

Wt do I Top. Notch Jab an 1tW TIOit Up, Lullt Jab, Oil
Ch•na•, Wheel &amp;.~ncing, Mufflers, Tirft, Batterln and
Porto. Guaranteed products plus Smiting, Fritlldly
S.tvlce.

authorized during the current

year to transact In this stole Its
oppropr late buSinen in In ·
surance. Its financ ial condition
IS shOwn bY · Its annual

MEDIUM GRADE A

statement to have been as
follows on December Jl. 1969 :
Admitte-d Assets, $A0,260,87.4.t5 :

Milk

The Farm Science show has Lloblllllo•· 536,223,815.57 ; Net
-'-M.Ie.ll.lll
-"bi'A ..., ......
cap"•"!
IAA'I5 and hundreds 0f $1,.400
, 000 37,059.38;
. 00 ;
Surplus

Gal .

iazW·ra
fruK liege~&amp;o .. -.a.•n . ~lt..&gt;ll ~&gt; ·J,ooom.it ,
. ,..,
ble' tUrf
alii herb p'lantings. S7,110,467.
514,104.630.86;
Expenditures,
13.

93' EGGS
:..,,, 35'
. .
'

.

.

;~

.'

t

cere•
tionofoui'totallaiXrfercetbat Field demonstrations ore on
·
at is enpged in some aspect of harvesting corn and soybeans,

'

WtrNESS WHEREOF . I

IN

have hereunto subscribed m v
name end c•used my seat to be

Between Pomeroy and Rutt.nd on Rt. 124 •' the Cross

the I!OkelN layout 'l'ueadey, food an~ ·fiber production haymaking drainage !natalia· affixed at Cotumous, Ohio. thiS
"'•""'- dean
' of •'---'·
.,~.b·.. ~1n' tions, crop W::futK,
~-'- p Iowmg
· and day
and date, July t, 1910, Fred
Roy M;.·~wuan,
Wlll:l JI'UL'1miWig or WBUI ..._....,or
8 , Smith, Superintendent of
O!DsteteUniversltyCollegeof manasement and conservation other land-fltUng.
Insurance of Ohio .

Roads.

PHONE 992-3213

.

Phebe
I
A.,.., Ill• lwll'd fill·
t.rowd viii:N ••with

'·

i~lck

.......,. •king .
...loll•
vah,..,

_.., ••.a."
l u•url c u•,

Jacob F. BeU Dies. Tuesday

Shoes
· Pomeroy

Mlln 5t.

Jacob F . Betz, 80, died
'I'Ueeday nltlht at hla Hysell St.
home In Middleport. The
Middleport E-R squad an·
nrered a eaD to the residence at
10:011 p.m. Mr. Betz was dead,
however, upon the squad 'a
arrlval.'Deathwasattrlbutedto
a heart coodltion.
11om Nov. 25, 111111111 Melga
County tile lOll of tile late
George andSopbla RoUer Betz,
ll&gt;e deeeaaed was a !'I'JEIDber of
the Middleport lllurcb of

••••••••••••'

'

.OPEN
~

.

. NOW . .• V"asit The

·Th• Cotton Gin
....

r---

~-------.,

..__

1 Mill
I Oultol

Milt

I

Outlet JI
___

I

Addison, o. ·

I

367-7677

Right on Route 7

WJ II!IYt~ variety of yard good$ and mill ei!Jjs.
IIOrided W•shable Wools &amp; Acr.yllcs · · $2 yd.
Zippers; 10c ea. . . . . . • Buttons. lc ea.

Antique Satin Drapery · · · • • · · 69c yd.

'

As A Mill Outlet You Can Buy
By The Pound. . .
La~, As' Low As · • • • : • · • • SUe per yd.
Sheefl
Double Knits, As Low As · · • • 1.00 per yd.
Sx6 lnd 5x8

••llroom carpet · . . . . . . . . . 4.«

't

''

Mens Winter

Quist. He

l a~1

was eDljioyed w1111

the New York O!ntrll Railroad
over 50 yean before hla
retire~~~e~~t. He waa a car In·
apector.
Besldea hla parent., Mr. llell
waa pnoecled In death by a
brother, Frank.
&amp;lrvlvlng are two daughtera,
Mrs. Jack (Eva) Robson,
l'lnnaroy. and Mrs. Genevle...
Ward of Colwnu; a Mploo,
W11aon Hoyt of New York; a
grandoon, Robert Brewer; 1
llleHranddaughter,
Mrs. Fla.,
Ira
Butcher
of Jaclllonvllle,
and a aleptrandeon, Jamea
Hoyt of Columbus.
FUnerll aervba wm be beld
at 2 p.m. Friday at tile
Rawllnga.C4ets Funeral Home
with the Rev. Raullln Moyer
of!lciaUng. Burial wm be 1n
Riverview Cemetery. Frienda
Dl8y call at the funeral h&lt;me
from 7 to 9 tonlgbt, from 10 to 12
noon Thunday and from 3:30
p.m. Thuraday t11W time of
aervk.es on Friday.

lldseye F1m~

MEATS

ORANGE PLUS

f,. '

CENtER
~'CHOPS
.
.
'

;'

'

f ' .

'''

".·

'

~.

I

[•

'. 1

Dairy Buy!

.

FAIRMONT

ORANGE JUICE
9oz.

can

BUMRMILK

49$

%Gallon

Corduroy

We GladiJ Accept Fill.
Food St.nlls

43$

Prices .Effective Se~t 17 In 22
Clptn Mon.· Set. 9 It 9

.

'-

',,

'1/if
~

...

. .••••••1~·65•
:'• 1·"
'

.

•

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

Bakery

MORTON FROZEN

Hohum Rea. 38'
Bnlwn"dServe

HONEY BUNS

ROLLS
Sale . '3FoRt1•00

3 :; '1··

00

. au··n E·R Ma Blown
'

•

21 oz. jar

······················~·
·····················
. . ·u s.A
GE
Hilmlel Hiclloly Smoked
4
5~······
. '
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,
tanS
.

'

Ol. . , •..

'

'

lit Slritry .
20 II. 1111
L············~···············~··~·······················
. .•
•.. ,4&lt;
.
.·
'14.•....., ,.................•....,,,...............
,

'

..
I

;'

, .··

'

I

~~~~----~~~

COATS ·
Lamltuted • Several COiilri

5TH and PEARL STS., ~ii.CIIII '
"Tho s.- With A H-.
Yac, WE LUI:~"
Ritht ,....,vetl to ll•f• ...lfltlea

~1·

' '!-~ ~

..; .,

lll'l&lt;lll, ·~:r ;,

�' ,.

";,

.

1

.0

{

)

~

'

I

..

tl; nl. Oaib- Senli!WI, Mt&amp;le90rt-I'OOI.fu;. o.. ~ .Z!. !970
\

I

•

WLW'a.gg!'S~ and the Cloud ' statement issued by the station

'

By UlliN PnN la1tnlltioall nl!'nt was aired by radio ala·

John J. Gilligan said Tueaday
the reoponslbllity for aeUons by
the Ohio National Guard ulti·
mately rests with the gOYernor
and, ~ eltcted, he would malte
sure a tragedy like Kent State
"wiD never, never, never ~
pen again. "
The Democratic eaiulldate
pledged in a statement issued
at Columbus to bring the Guard
troopa "to a level of profession·
al competence that will enable
them to be used, when necessary, in dangerous situations
without lear lor the safety of
innocent bystanders or the
guardsmen themselves."
Gilligan said In the ease of
Kent State, where lour students
were shot and killed and nine
others wounded May 4, that no
order was given to fire.
"Because of lack of disci·
pline, someone started fll'ing
and others followed," he said.
The first requirement of any
military unit is discipline, he
id
sa.
"I was taug ht . . . th at a.
weapon should never be loaded
unless it Is to be fired, and a
weapon should never be fired
unless the Intent Is to kill, because that Is what such weap·
ons are designed to do - kill
people," he said.
"My RHpoDJibUHy"
" As governor, if a weapon
were loaded or fired by a Na·
tiona! Guardsman In this state,
It would be my responslblllty,"
he said.
A Cincinnati radio station
suspended further broadcast of
a campaign conunercial of Gil·
ligan's Republican opponent
Roger Cloud Tuesday pending
review of a complaint from
Gilligan's headquarters.
A one • minuhlspot announce•

tion WLW Monday but deferred OQ!anizatjon agreed tq the susTuefi!lay alter Gilll8an'a forces pension of the disputed political
claimed the commercial mJs.
aniWUilcement
until
sU&lt;:h time
qui&gt;ted him on the l!sue of cam· as
the ·documents
submitted
by
pus violence.
both sides have been reviewed

a new moe

style

with
. , n;~eta1

MOSOOW (~J.)-{}ne of the
designers of the Soviet Luna 16
described it to@y as the flrat
reliable space robot and pre·
dieted similar craft would be
sent to explore Mars, Venus
and other planets.
The Tass news agency

identified the scientist only as
the deputy chief designer of
Luna 16. 11esald80Yietexperts
now are designing "a radically
new' ' craft fer explorations of
planets.
His conunents were part of
an Interview with Tass as Luna

1

return apparatus was
heading badt to earth for a
scheduled parachute landing
Thursday. :
.,
Luna 16 hurUed toward the
moon Sept. 12, aoft.Janded there
Sunday, scooped up B9il and
successfully blasted off Monday
IS's

.

Three lniured
in Accid~nts
'.1

""

...

i;l~~~~~~~~

,.

,.

.

"The universlly crowd moUld Nitented. The aUegatlilil, he
start riota arid political revoiu-· said, ''lstotaliyapuriotiS,IotaDy
erroneous and tolally unfo\lfid·

HOpes Will WHlldnnr
Shielda said · he hopes wliel\
the stations ...,.d Gl!llgan's side
.....
of the storY, they wWwlthdraw ·
for earth.
the .commerclal, which Cloud
. HEAVY
"A radically new apparatus Is c8lnpaigners have been using Gohtr'!j . .hla, .
beingdealgrledatpteaent(attd) with Increasing frequelli:y . · Nli'ilt~llllt, wblle
it will be modlfltd to suit
specific taake of one or another nominee fer the U. . Senate,
A
space program," ·the deputy w;arns arbitrary pollution con·
designer said. "A flli!bt ID Mars trol decisions adversely alfi!CIwiU require a somewhat ing businesses could result In
different technological solutioo ''ullemployment of large nwn·
than a flight to the moon.
bert of Ohio werltera."
Spealdng In Lorain, the dn·
ctnnati ~SSII)all said 11 .
1o take off In the direction of a was "absol,utely ~Ual" that
desired celeabial bo&lt;ty,IJ&gt;II)ie a
aoft landing on Its slll'face, Congreaa pass, President . Nbt:·
.

mlsbap occurred on Rt. 7, one pole. Sbe ctlllplsined of minor
and sil&lt; tentha miles north of injuries but was not im·
Gallipolis 1lhere an unknown mediately trealed.
A second bijury accident

Pressure Put on Ky
WASHINGTON iUPI) - The
Nbion admlnlstraUoo Is report.
ed doing all it can lo keep
South Vietnamese Vice PresIdent Nguyen Coo Ky from
attending a rally in Washington
Oct. 3. War protesters continue
to promise they will attempt a
citizen's arrest of Ky II he
appears at the rally.
Sen. Gordon L. Allott, R·
Colo., alter Republican congressional leaden met with Pres·
ident Nlson at the White House
Tuesday, said "Everything Is
being done, every Influence
brought to bear to keep him
from attending this konky

Ky's vlait will bring a hall·
million people to cheer Ky and
urge President Nixon to do
everything necesaary to win the
war, according to Carl Mcln·
tyre, the rightwing radio
revivalist sponsoring the prowar rally.
Many of the war protest
organizaUons plan to use the
Oct. 3 opportunity to express
other concerns such as cuts in
the poverty programs and
racial problems.
PAPER PRICE UP
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Post &amp; Times Star boosted the
cost of a single copy of the af.
ternoon Scripps-Howard
newspaper to 15 cents as a
result of increased salaries and
higher materials cost. Weekly
deliveries went to 75 cents.

·" *•'lil'IW"aild il&gt;rbl&amp; ,,

to trtal."

Meigs Geaeral RoiiPIIal
ADMIIIED NQ!le.
DISCHA.'RGEP."~· ·Halrlll«" ..

King.

. . ,.. . w
. .,.,.... .,.."·'·rn····'"i!W.
·"·'"·'·'·*... .. ::·. ' =::
¥.i1,.,.;zo::;!M:::

;

'~

&lt;:::.-:::::~·==:•»~·
•...............:..·. ·w~ ~

.•.•,;:?»...

Yeager, 35, Jackson, collided. will remain firm." .
_
Dunlapreceivedmlnorlnjurleo. Another scientist p'redlcled
The case Is still under In· soviet men someday will foUow
vestigatlon .
machines to the moon.
Rtchard E. Carter, 16, Georgi I. PetrOY said cosmon.
G&amp;!Hpotis, was cited to juvenile aula will be sent to perfonn
court for excessive speed maintenance chores on iuture
following a colllaloo on Neigh· unmanned platforms put in
bo.rhood Rd., two tentha of a orbit around the moon.
mile west of Rt. 211.
"I think now 1s high time for
Accor,ding to officers, Carter man to work on orbital stations
lost control of his auto and and 1 think their orblta mould
struck a Gallipolis acbool bus also be around the moon,"
driven by C!arles E. Corlin, 55, Petro said In an interview with
Gallipolis. Carter sustained the government newspaper
minor Injuries which required Izvestia
treatment at lhe Holzer Medical "But
stations, I think,
Center.
should simply be vlaited occa.
A final accident oc:t:urred 1111 sJonally by men. The men wm
Uncoln Pike Rd., two and seven work there for a tln)e, changing
tenths miles aoutb of Rt. 141 and tuning lristruments and
where John W. Cox, :16, Nor· picking up materials then
thup,lesl control of his car and return to earth. The 'statioo
struck a bridge railing and . should w&lt;l(k automatically ,until
fence . No citation waa iallued. ,. • .. ._1 1ilait...

·,..

ihese

'"··I

Syrlall

irininll

+ .df .

sandy depression, once part
of the o c e a n floor. The
marsh's upper portlon, or
"swamp line," ranges In ele·
vation from 103 to 128 feet
above sea level.

Pleuaat Valley Hospital
· men !ban 1&amp;,~ D¥J!., ~ 11'
ADMITTED WUIIam
entarad ~otdan With ~t:Ii!MIIilii. '
Rickard•, Mrs. Charles Elliott,
lanki alid 100 .~ ~~~ ~,
1
nel .carrlen.
~
· iiii'..',· ·P' 1.
Ru b1. Cu11er, Pt. Peasant;
Terri Prottenglsr, Middleport;
Be aald JordanlaD
~.
Wllh.·am Willis, E\~anor;
.Btblter lin;raft' •. ·• 1 .'~l'J.'
Will
B dl
R 1
-~IJII"Y~
. .~
•am
ar n,
acne;
and arWJer7 . ~. ~ !'!!
William Jeffers, South Side;
totll .$Jr1aa ta)d! ~ ••till
Lewis Markham, Leon.
~-~ U4l ~... ..._
DISCHARGES - Kenna close to Intervention. I.stael ._....,..., . . '"-"~'' i·'~
u ... hea J
0 Cull ~--t l1ready was reported 10 baVe · beiGre tdday'l battle! J~r ·
'""' • erry '
ey• .,..,,..
· 1
· t t •• Ptitt.ln
Smith, Griff Durbin, Mrs . mobilized Its reMrvel and _ , were pu a ~ .,...
Everette Riffle and son, ,Mrs. moved tank units to the bordar and ~twlon lellkl. ·· •!t
Kenneth .Williams and son, for action.
I"
Hennan Jones, Mrs. Wlllijm Bow the withdrawal wotj)d
111.
affect
the
54
Hijack
hoa~ea
'
Job ll'l, Nancy Rebman , Mrs .
..
·~
Eldon .VSJ!IICOY, Roger TollV!ll', . held by the Paleatlnlap suarrJI,·
GRANTS ILUII!:, ,
Richard Wallace Jr., Kalhy las was not lonlwn. A gueitlllll WASHINGTON (~11. 1\- The
Gill, Roberta Blgglnbolharn. IIPokesman In Deraa, s,rta, .Department of Boualnl.' and
said today tile group had been Ufllan Development .~
The National League W!IS mOYfjllntothe "Uberatedzone~· annoanced a ~ea ~ &amp;l'lt!lll,
I~ and ., f1lnd i'eeervlitiOIIJ:
the first m a j o r baseball of Nerth Jordan. ·
Before lodars rep«ted dee!· They In~ .fl ri11Ui~~ ,tor ·1
league to be formed. Organ·
izecl on Feb. 12, 18'16, it COD· alve ba~ a Jordanlali lflil1 new raw water trealmenl P~l
slated of eight teams.
Ill llklllltlliD aa1d a nlllfGroed at Cempbell, Oblo.
· ,.
f t .. - ' - •

·,~

.

BLUE RIDGE
1:
"!

.

. 'b UiiOR OR INTERIOR

·1 2·1 ~J!Mitt: ·sT~,, . .

WASHINGTON (UPI) ....: A
Senate-House conference cornmittee Tuesday tentatively
agreed oo most key. portions of
proposed new wheat and feed
grain support programs, includ·
ing rigid support loan floors under grains from 1971 through
1973.
The support loans would be
set at a minlmwn of $1.25 per
bushel for wheat and $1 bushel
, for corn. · ·
The conferees failed, bowever, to agree on another key
grain support issue - a Senateapproved proposal, opposed by
the Nixon administration, link·
lng suppor,l l for corn and Other
feed grains to the '1alr earning
power" farm parity price.
The agreements reached
'I'Uesday were described as
highly hlntaUve and subject 1o
final committee votes Ia tar.
They were WOI'ked out as the
conference panel met for a sec·

graduaW ol Meiga lllgb School
•now enrolled at Ohio Unlverslty; Mark, a junler at Meiga
Hll!h School, Gregory, 15, and
Jerr'f, 13.
'
The Miller family returned to
Melp County In 1964 from
Pboetili, Ariz., wnere they had
resided for several years.
Miller accepted employment
with the River Coal Co. at West
Columbia. He w Uttle .,. •
perlence retailing. F(ll' a wblle
he was part owner In the Miller
Brolhers Grocery with his
brother, Bob, In Rutland, but
was too preased fer time ID take
much of a role In the bu.sinesa
and sold out to his brother.

ON THE SAME OORNER .;.my at the Qoaarooda, Don Miller has C1pOIIed I ~
grocery store and service station. The building w ulldergone Olleuive Interior and Ollertor
remodeling .

d
Truth. Prom1se r:~~
COLUMBU~

(UP!) - Assistant Franklin County Prosecutor John Peck says a special
grand jury Investigating alleged
Irregularities in the state loan
program "will reveal the lull
truth, regardless of where the
chips may fall."
Peck denied a charge by
Democraticguberuatorialnominee John J. Gilligan that the
jury's investigation had turned
into a "partisan political
farce ." P&lt;ck said the former
Cincinnati congressman "is im~
pugning our integrity''

use on feed graill'! as approved
earlier by both houses. The ac·

companying support program
would include a $1 support loan
floor for corn, which was ap.
proved by the Senate but OP·
posed by the Ho!lse and the administration.

- TheHouse-approvedadmlnistration "set aside" program
would be adopted for wheat In
1972 and 1973. But for 1971,
farmers would continue the
present sy~tem of specific acreage allotments which limit the
amount of wheat each fanner
can grow. And In a sigooicant
defeat lor the administration,
the agreement provides a $1.2:i
per bushel support loan floor
for wheat in all three years.
The "set aside" plan requires
farmers who want price SDP·
ports to idle some acreage, but
gives them more leeway In de·
ciding how to use their remain·
ing land.

OOLUMBUS (UPl) - Thou.. Agriculture, said (Jllo's largest
sanda of persona took advan· lnduatry Is agriculture.
tage of the goothreather at the "When we say agriculture Is
opening of the eighth annual big bqalneaa, we are being
IJUo state Farm Science Re· modest," he said. 11Agrieult1U"t."
view at Dcrt Scott Airport to aerves every man, woman and
look at the ublblll watdl child In tbeae United Stahla
:=rzt~~ and hear. ~every da'I of.....
w~~~;~year .
prdenltlevelo!l!: . ;;!'WbateVU
. · !Mf'ttl'l&amp;jl~=

·-·L-

~~=:~
·

::.~ 1f!,U
_...;use •·""!'- ....,;..,,..,..
·
~,._'"&amp;OJ" .

~

falling

to acknowlqe that· a
prosecutor is doJnC

Gilligan, who hlatified for ~ ·
minutes Monday, Is to relurtl; ·
ligan does not recognize the
for more testimony next Mon,
impartiality ll'ith which the day.
·
grand Jury Is conducting this
Investigation, and why the jur· I
ors may be interested In taJk. 1 Say "Get Well" PleAse
lng with him, " Peck added.
I
with
"Mr. Gilligan's inference that
we, as Republicans, caMOI
fairly conduct this investigation
Is Impugning our Integrity as
For Lasting Pleasure
lawyers, citizens and most of
$4.00 up
upholding the laws of the state
of Ohio.
"While be comments that the
59 N. 2nd Ave .
Republicans In the legislature
992-SUO
repeatedly reiDJed to authorize
Middleport, 0.
an lrnpartiallnvHtigatlon, he Is
" It Is regretful that Mr . Gil·

r""------------,
Blooming Plants

Dudley's Florist

- - -----------~

MILLER AND SONS·
God has spoken. lt is up to

Service Sta. &amp; Gtucety

the subjects to bow down to

the ground. We won 't do it.
- Leonarfl Woodcock. Un it·
ed Au to WorkeTS presi·
dent, rejecting a new con·
tract proposaL from Gen-

eral Motors prior to the
&amp;trike which began Sept.

o,..

Dally. A.M .

14.

Tilt P.M .

STORE

D•llyiA.M.
Tll5 P.M.
STATION

S:fili

cit Ohio , Department of
Insurance,
Certificate
of
Compliance- The undersigned,
Superintendent of Insurance of
the State of Ohio, hereby ctr ·
tltlts that GREAT COM ·
MONWEA.L TH
LIFE
IN ·
SURANCE COMPANY, of
Datjn, State of Te~tas , has
complied with the laws of this

.,'

.

MIDDLEPORT

ond day to reconcile differences
between farm bills passed earlier by the House and Senate.
The bills, covering 1971·73
farm s"pports, also Include a
controversial cotton support
program and a S55,000 por crop
limit on subsidy paymenta to
big farmers whicb ia not In dis·
pule.
Conference meetings were
scheduled to continue Wednesday.
The agreements reached so
far on the grain support secUons represented a blend of
provisions from the adminlsb·a·
tion-backed House bill and the
more rigid Senate version
which the administration op.
posed, but were weighted in
favor of the Senate version.
Under ·the agreements :
- An adminlstraUoo • backed
system of flexible planting con.
trois, called a "set aside pr&lt;&gt;gram," would be authorized for

.

e

Science Review Starts Well

'

·oo··e~
·,•
···:··•
....·~~-.~
• •·~

PHNOM PENH (UPI) - 'Ille Combodlaa ('.«wnmand
Ieday rnahed 1110tber baltallou of troopo to lbe llle&amp;e of 'hng
11a1t wbeft Camltodlea paratroopa were driven back In tbelr
attempl to eaplure the Commaalat •troaahold 'l'ueadey.
'11le ........llllqae also aald Cambotlan troopa bad killed
• wouadod more tllu •,111 Cemmlllllat aoldlel&lt;i Ia lbe all
-~~~~ a1n&lt;e •• ~ of Pl'lace Norttlom Slltamdl. 'Ille
addlu-1 llf -'her baU.U.n at 'hng Kalil brtlaCid lo
aNr1J 11,•111e total Cambodia troopa Involved Ia a drln
tonni lloe eaclrdtol Ina llf Xampo111 Tbom.

The "U'ol!sro~•· - located be"engagetl~y In strip
on Roote 't2t just out of Brad· . miJihtl•operat10011. He IS now
bury'-JIIII ''aln~" whatlt ~ )lballdonlng tha,t line of en·
to •b.e *'\(~ Bailey' Rt11 Road dea\&gt;IH', however, io ~
re;'ident, Don Miller, Ia with running the pery and
~eible.
IOrvice atation.
Fer years on the comet of the Anew brick veneer fnlnt Q8
section willcb has traditionally been uaed on lhe fOI'I1lll!l' eafe
been
known · ao
the building and a number of
"Croosroads" there has been a Ouoreacent , Jighta lnataUed
cafe. That "corner" now has along with a section of paneling
become a nea~ -well-lighted to provtde a neat aettlng fw tile
grocery wi!ich has been named new bualneas.
"Miller and Sons."
A, natlve of Meigs County,
Not only is Do'! Miller having been bom In ilui1IDd
responsible for the chanse .but Townllllp, Miller Is given able
MIUer, hlmaelf, Is undergoing a lltliataDCe at tile ator..-vlce
radical change in his personal llatioo by hla wife, the former
In opening the establish· Violet BaUey. ~ . a naljve
ment, Since his ·graduation Meiga &lt;Jountian, and four 10111,
from high I!Chool Miller has who Include Steve, ·a 1970

Wheat, Feed Grain Program
Near Committee·Agreement

LATEX
•

.

career

e,;:~to~::~::~~

(CooUnued frO!Jl plge I)
will be responsible ·before God,
the Arab and Islamic nation
and history whiCh · will not
forget · ••-1r
treachery _,..
., .
woe
treason."
A pull back of tha Sy~
army would greaUy ease the
tension which has brought both
the United Stites and !tra"il

i.

·.~~tros,s1ioads} (is .Modern ~e~~C;~ Center

· ~·~e~~~~!$1ii~$!

Three persons were Injured veblcle cut Into the path of an occorredat3:25p.m.oo'RI.lll!l,
Tuesday, none seriously,ln lour aulo operated by Marjorie · ooe and three tenths miles west
on's "total environmental mQa
of Gallipolis ·where velllcleo function on It then start lit the blllzaUoo legislation package"
tramc accidents Investigated French, ta, Addison.
by the Galllpolil Post State
Mrs. French lost control of driven by James E. Dunlap, 2'1, dlrecUon of earth or the planet before adjournlng.
Highway Patrol. The first her auto and struck a power Gallipolis, and Belen M. from which It started-these

·-

trim .

~ilv)er

'

19f4.
Unlyerslty
Shields,
aaya~
therpl~
qtlOta· . ·
News The
'reported· Gilligan
"'d' · l\!lll'k
Ubn was
dlst.oried

Luna 16 First of New Breed

War protesters also were
making their views on Ky's
visit evident. Rennie Davis, one
of the "Chicago Seven" and
spokesman for an antiwar
coalition, aald 'I'Uesday at a
press conference "The day Ky
Ianda In the United Stahla there
are going to be groupo doing
everything possible to plac;e this

the softness
of crinkle
patent. In

·~a ~'

'

ed.•,

rally."

Discover

C&lt;J~m&gt;erclal

Uons In ·the
lvbal'lliis ·
said.
was a quote Gilll8an allegedly country"" obviously ""·~ .
The I!O!IUnt!rCinllncludes the made at Xavier \.lnivemtr in
GIUigan'sC11111P8Jlliif11a'nagef,

soand
of a riot
serving
back·
groim.Uer
~voice
whichascbdms
Gilligan•advocates violence by
"In the Interest of fairness, by WLW management," a college sludenta.

The basis for the

'

•

Gas

Discount
To All
Trucks

DON MILLER

of our natural reeources, we State appucabte to " ond Is

f ct that ag
come up with the a
·
rlculture Is our largest Industry
tin to be · the
andwiII COO ue , SO m
foreseeable future.'

Wt do I Top. Notch Jab an 1tW TIOit Up, Lullt Jab, Oil
Ch•na•, Wheel &amp;.~ncing, Mufflers, Tirft, Batterln and
Porto. Guaranteed products plus Smiting, Fritlldly
S.tvlce.

authorized during the current

year to transact In this stole Its
oppropr late buSinen in In ·
surance. Its financ ial condition
IS shOwn bY · Its annual

MEDIUM GRADE A

statement to have been as
follows on December Jl. 1969 :
Admitte-d Assets, $A0,260,87.4.t5 :

Milk

The Farm Science show has Lloblllllo•· 536,223,815.57 ; Net
-'-M.Ie.ll.lll
-"bi'A ..., ......
cap"•"!
IAA'I5 and hundreds 0f $1,.400
, 000 37,059.38;
. 00 ;
Surplus

Gal .

iazW·ra
fruK liege~&amp;o .. -.a.•n . ~lt..&gt;ll ~&gt; ·J,ooom.it ,
. ,..,
ble' tUrf
alii herb p'lantings. S7,110,467.
514,104.630.86;
Expenditures,
13.

93' EGGS
:..,,, 35'
. .
'

.

.

;~

.'

t

cere•
tionofoui'totallaiXrfercetbat Field demonstrations ore on
·
at is enpged in some aspect of harvesting corn and soybeans,

'

WtrNESS WHEREOF . I

IN

have hereunto subscribed m v
name end c•used my seat to be

Between Pomeroy and Rutt.nd on Rt. 124 •' the Cross

the I!OkelN layout 'l'ueadey, food an~ ·fiber production haymaking drainage !natalia· affixed at Cotumous, Ohio. thiS
"'•""'- dean
' of •'---'·
.,~.b·.. ~1n' tions, crop W::futK,
~-'- p Iowmg
· and day
and date, July t, 1910, Fred
Roy M;.·~wuan,
Wlll:l JI'UL'1miWig or WBUI ..._....,or
8 , Smith, Superintendent of
O!DsteteUniversltyCollegeof manasement and conservation other land-fltUng.
Insurance of Ohio .

Roads.

PHONE 992-3213

.

Phebe
I
A.,.., Ill• lwll'd fill·
t.rowd viii:N ••with

'·

i~lck

.......,. •king .
...loll•
vah,..,

_.., ••.a."
l u•url c u•,

Jacob F. BeU Dies. Tuesday

Shoes
· Pomeroy

Mlln 5t.

Jacob F . Betz, 80, died
'I'Ueeday nltlht at hla Hysell St.
home In Middleport. The
Middleport E-R squad an·
nrered a eaD to the residence at
10:011 p.m. Mr. Betz was dead,
however, upon the squad 'a
arrlval.'Deathwasattrlbutedto
a heart coodltion.
11om Nov. 25, 111111111 Melga
County tile lOll of tile late
George andSopbla RoUer Betz,
ll&gt;e deeeaaed was a !'I'JEIDber of
the Middleport lllurcb of

••••••••••••'

'

.OPEN
~

.

. NOW . .• V"asit The

·Th• Cotton Gin
....

r---

~-------.,

..__

1 Mill
I Oultol

Milt

I

Outlet JI
___

I

Addison, o. ·

I

367-7677

Right on Route 7

WJ II!IYt~ variety of yard good$ and mill ei!Jjs.
IIOrided W•shable Wools &amp; Acr.yllcs · · $2 yd.
Zippers; 10c ea. . . . . . • Buttons. lc ea.

Antique Satin Drapery · · · • • · · 69c yd.

'

As A Mill Outlet You Can Buy
By The Pound. . .
La~, As' Low As · • • • : • · • • SUe per yd.
Sheefl
Double Knits, As Low As · · • • 1.00 per yd.
Sx6 lnd 5x8

••llroom carpet · . . . . . . . . . 4.«

't

''

Mens Winter

Quist. He

l a~1

was eDljioyed w1111

the New York O!ntrll Railroad
over 50 yean before hla
retire~~~e~~t. He waa a car In·
apector.
Besldea hla parent., Mr. llell
waa pnoecled In death by a
brother, Frank.
&amp;lrvlvlng are two daughtera,
Mrs. Jack (Eva) Robson,
l'lnnaroy. and Mrs. Genevle...
Ward of Colwnu; a Mploo,
W11aon Hoyt of New York; a
grandoon, Robert Brewer; 1
llleHranddaughter,
Mrs. Fla.,
Ira
Butcher
of Jaclllonvllle,
and a aleptrandeon, Jamea
Hoyt of Columbus.
FUnerll aervba wm be beld
at 2 p.m. Friday at tile
Rawllnga.C4ets Funeral Home
with the Rev. Raullln Moyer
of!lciaUng. Burial wm be 1n
Riverview Cemetery. Frienda
Dl8y call at the funeral h&lt;me
from 7 to 9 tonlgbt, from 10 to 12
noon Thunday and from 3:30
p.m. Thuraday t11W time of
aervk.es on Friday.

lldseye F1m~

MEATS

ORANGE PLUS

f,. '

CENtER
~'CHOPS
.
.
'

;'

'

f ' .

'''

".·

'

~.

I

[•

'. 1

Dairy Buy!

.

FAIRMONT

ORANGE JUICE
9oz.

can

BUMRMILK

49$

%Gallon

Corduroy

We GladiJ Accept Fill.
Food St.nlls

43$

Prices .Effective Se~t 17 In 22
Clptn Mon.· Set. 9 It 9

.

'-

',,

'1/if
~

...

. .••••••1~·65•
:'• 1·"
'

.

•

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

Bakery

MORTON FROZEN

Hohum Rea. 38'
Bnlwn"dServe

HONEY BUNS

ROLLS
Sale . '3FoRt1•00

3 :; '1··

00

. au··n E·R Ma Blown
'

•

21 oz. jar

······················~·
·····················
. . ·u s.A
GE
Hilmlel Hiclloly Smoked
4
5~······
. '
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,
tanS
.

'

Ol. . , •..

'

'

lit Slritry .
20 II. 1111
L············~···············~··~·······················
. .•
•.. ,4&lt;
.
.·
'14.•....., ,.................•....,,,...............
,

'

..
I

;'

, .··

'

I

~~~~----~~~

COATS ·
Lamltuted • Several COiilri

5TH and PEARL STS., ~ii.CIIII '
"Tho s.- With A H-.
Yac, WE LUI:~"
Ritht ,....,vetl to ll•f• ...lfltlea

~1·

' '!-~ ~

..; .,

lll'l&lt;lll, ·~:r ;,

�_, (101'_1·111i. ',.i,.y,O. I&amp;,t. 1970
lo~'l!hrDa,UySentlnel.~
Q.:...:;..!;,.t rn•
ts
t_l .

New Haven .:M;..- D,.en

a-~-~- ""''"'

., ~.-.. . . n to' all
. ::!~~~~:- 1and

•

•

~~Mi::H..'!f;~;::;ag,.

Mason Cou_ntY .

ewS .Notes
· ·. ' -_

'

dOlpb, lieolf, W.,Va.; Jilrl. Anri
~.-~~.'If. v~.: Yri,

.

I. ,..,.
'·

'

·

-

.'

·

~per; Stupendoas,
Lavish
'

..

. I' -

~

.

.f

·e

..... eu• Steak
...
.....

Swiss Steak ~.:a=

Skipper Ha.~d:r.
In Tough

Is
'

G'-'eatest Show on Earth
.d1

•

or· ~ dJa!!ionds, a fortune
ln'IJII!I,ilid lavish c&lt;llllwnes, and
:eocllln&amp;l' · l!Jll8intt'lve re,cnaU0111 of tile &amp;feat moment.
In the Hlatory ol 'J1Io Greateit
. l!l![!ll' 01! Earth combine In
lllfts!lns llroa. and Barnum &amp;
Bailey Clrous' unprecedentedly
, Jlllgnlf~nt
super-ope&lt;tacle,
'1he ·First 100 Years," the
glorioualy glittering cen,terpiece ol the mighty lllllth
lllrjhday ·Edition ' of The
. G!:ea~ Show on Earth.
. 'l1ds fabulous Clr~us of a
j.J!Jtime 16 set to arrive In
.Jiundncton, W.Va. on Tuesday,
Del. 1~, lor performances
~ugh Wedilesdsy, Oct. 14.
.· &lt;\.,,~ and fas\-pa&lt;ed
Panorama ol the Circus' Initial
len de&lt;ades, "The First 100
Years" colorfully depicts the
fun, spirit and excitement
which has made Rlngllnc Bros.
and Barnum 6: Bailey a
malcblesa and utterly unique
Amerl&lt;an iNUiution.
Hundreds ol performers and
animals talte ~t In the fanlastlc pageant which Is staged
and dlre&lt;ted by Richard Bar·
stow, &lt;elebraUng htJ 22nd year
with 'J1Io Greatest Show on

.!"
"""na
·

1-"'.n

'

11 - The DaUy s.nliiWIIlud\lepori-Pomeroy, O.,Bepl. 23,1970

'jt
" ·. •f];S·

Fey, Sandra mrril, fthonda
MemberS oi _the el&gt;mmiu..e
•
'!
'pjeuant, •
. -~ •
Wood, Iva Roush, Klithk!en orgilll\slng·!h&lt; ~ are: Mr., N-'
lr
.
I
Heaaon, Jane RIHJ9h, Marjorie ponatd F011Ie0oog, JleV. fl. C. .
MASON,ORADE SCha!!1 P'l'~ . .
Copehart, Sharon Vtctora, Ken Billups,~ James M,oy, .J~ev.
•
. •
·•
.held· ~~ - f!r•l mHIInc .. on
..
Tpesday ani! e1ecte4 qlob
awnce o1 the preoicjenl, James Vic~s. Alice Miller. ll&lt;Wne "'l)llam ' .... Mrs, HavaUne By Ahp~ ~ars~an
· Qllver; Prelldent; ~ ~.
'lilft. They voted to pur&lt;'- Bill, David Ban, Mn. Mary Jllesher, Mrs.,. Eleanor Glbbul,
· ·· ~
_VI¢ ~1; . JoaJiii 'byki':' _
red bow ties Jllllchlng the Aumlller, Fran••• Stewart, 'Rev. A&lt;hsOh Miner, .Mr. Pa
M
rs.
HeleriKnaw.
Icy
Rickard,
Thomas,
lind
Mril.·
Franoes
..ctetarJ.~ and'Eve~ ~lien,
1UlifOI'IIIII_oi the band memberi
1
Mlldrtd
Riley,
Margie
Rickard,
Goodi)lte,,
j;AP
Aide.
.
.
,
_
,
~.....
.
..
,
1i'18111Af.'
,
. .
to be worn with the rtd b1azors
Helen
Footer,
~.!'red
Rouah,
_
PARTY
G~i::N
MASON
·~
'.!
have
atte......
·
_
.
.
\
,..
'
'
'
-~\
,
.•
,
,._,_,
, ," .
ond red panll for ...,...-r..
VIcki
Roush,
Lind•
Roush,
Mr.,•nd
~
·MarVin
Roush,
many
fairs
tllli,suDilllet
reslilratlon
Of
~~~
•
at
•
ON)\1
J
iufibRED
fiDd
·eo
'Jbey aJao voted to purchase
1
Kathleen
Ro-.J~•;
Jfbelma
New·
Haven,
enlertab\l!d
with
a
an4
·mel
Diiiny
lnteresliilg
list
adream·
to~
pOrions
--~·
at
Mal®
new hat boxes for the ~dhatB.
·
Mr · ~ gave my .hdba . a ~ty .o\1'1 Elhlbll which wu
After a diacuulon membors Copehart, Mrs. John Fey, and birthday jwty · on. Si!ndaY for person~. "
their dallC~Ier, LU Aim's 7th One such was Johnny HlR of ~Uca of an 'Indian P!t]! ~~lade ·heW ~pi 13 \Iirougb-11 in the
-~ to purehaoe three new Mulne Fields.
ENTERTAINS
·
birthday.
Ice .cream. and cake Po&lt;ahonlas Cdulit,y.
from ~ clay from ""'. fann. a,qdilol!~ Ill the c-tllO\ile
t1re1 for the trailer used to haul
Mrs.
Kenneth
Thompson
were
served.
_
In
11163
8fter
he'flllllid
~
barik
The pipe "'¢ii-for _1114 PI!* ~-· !Pt. pleasaJii. ~
band inll1rUIIIenll to and from
entertained
with
a
Wig
·
and
Garnes
were
played
and
the
of
clay
In
a
deep
~alleyon
htJ
wereg?l~~aiPi~~i!&gt; ~~ eo.in~ .Ai-llaiB and t!'elr _,
away football games, etc.
_ Ji&gt;lllnllngs,
The meellng was disml9SOII CosmeUc Pm'ty at her home prize awarded to Usa Brown. farm,beloundthatltwaseasUy The IniljiDi ~ 1 l!!!t' featured
recently.
Mrs.
Harold
Role
was
Attending
were
the
honoree
and
shaped.
•
It
&lt;:OntalMd
'!lllf.
a
·~
,
191'
t!1eU'
~n~a"""'.i..
~a
_.
,ec:ufptute,
cer~IJ!Ics,
~ members helped clean
the
demonstrator.
Attending
Usa,
CoMle
and
Terry
Brown;
small
amOWII
of
lmJlolrllie&lt;
..
place.
West
Vlrg
.
c
~
!ll'olta
and
otherl
•• Mra. Aaroil
ooneeuton stands.
were Mrs. Robert Gurtls, Mrs. April ond Anna Parsons, Mary After'learnlng that It would fire State ~k il8illel! ~leiJi
Fowler was chalrlllan . and .
HOMEMAKERS MEET
Charles Dodd, Mrs. Dwight Jane Lewis, Denise Rillle, wen, he storied a small shop Summe1'S County, ~ f·
others 00 the commlUA!e _.
The Rho d ode ndr on Sayre, Mrs. B. V. White; Mrs. Larry Gibbs, Bobby and Keith wiUtonelllln Ina building oohll
·Mr; Oils Randolph and Ml!i
HCIDeiiiAI&lt;ers Club met al the Jack Hess, Mrs. B. R. Vance, Roush, Mrs. Russell, Mason: farm. Since then poople from ~R. ANI) _ M~ . . JACK HaiUe J&lt;lfdan.
&lt;lab house with Mrs. Charles Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. Mrs. Leslie Roush, David and many states and some foreign Caldwell d ;Tileson, ~··­
Jewell, and Mrs: G. B. Hazlett Kenneth Vi&lt;kers, Mrs. carroll Nancy:. and r.tlss Kinzel courttl'ies have visited the shop vli!Ung recentl)' 11'1111 -Mr. and
uco-OO&amp;teases.DovoUonswere Adams,Jr.,Mrs.RoseandMrs. Becloter, Pt. Pleasant.
and bought Items made frOm Mrs. S.y Fax at Cllftoo ;Bod
led by Mrs. Albert Roush. -A Thompson.
PERSONALS
this clay.
searcllbig the l!'ea for anti~
......., "Wash Day" was read by
NEHACLIMA CLUB
Mrs. Vena Preece, dspghter Recently he had the honor ol - can you 'guess whal'i ;d
....--•-The NehacUma Garden Club and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. bestowing Pearf sydenstrlcker bopght - a lard press
Mrs. Charles F. y,...., ,
Dale All
f Inez Ky
and
tuffer· betlerholdoo
.._._ the business meeUng met on Monday evening at the Jimmie
en o
• · BuCk (renowned author
sausages
·
•
AI
"-·"'••'
M
orial
Bulldlng
ttended
Mrs
Preece's
grandNobel
Prize
Winner)
....
th
a
to
these
unUSI!'lltems
.- could
who_
Achievement Day was an- ex.,.~· em
a
·
.
nounc:ed for October 13.
with Mrs. James N. Roush, son's, Paul Ma)'lllll'd, wedding hurricane lamp 1111de from clay knows, if Y9" need &lt;ash The Home Demonstration Mrs. B. J. Howard and Mrs. recently. Mr. Maynard and from the lllll farm and a bol of be you can sen them.
Agen~ VIckie Keefer, presented Carroll Adams, Jr. as Miss carol Jacqueline McNeely Pocahontas Good Earth.
~ ,
the lesson "Accent with Ar!- hootesses. DevoUons were led of Park Drive, Point Pleasant, Thepreoentationwasmadeat SEVERAL . DIES frqm
. ceu&lt;ries."
by Mrs. James Roush, using the were married at The United the p~~bUc meeting when the Mason County len on Monday
Those attending were Miss theme "Wl'trels Your Faith?" Trinity Methodist Church In restoration of the famous boose lor Jactyon's MUI, Westoo, W.
Bert
Members of the club were Point Pleasant. She Is the of Pearl Buck had begun. The Va. where they will attend the
Mary Phillips, Mrs. T.
InVIted ,.., The Fa&lt;ully Club of dspghter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack home is located at Hillsboro, W. Fall meeting of Stale
Roush,
~.Mrs.
Kliy
"'
•·· been Homemakers. Attending
Roush,Mrs.
LisaVebna
Thomas,
Rio Grande
College to a style MeNee Iey aIso of Point Va. This restoration ,,..
Clarence Thomas, Mrs. Charles show on September 23. The Pleasant.
supported OnandaUy by _the Monday through Frldsy are
"""
to
be
held
at
New Haven Woman's Club, Mrs. Harry Slasta. • Letart. W.
M
F.Yonker,Mrs.M.L.OhUnger, Dlstrict ee-..,
M
Mra. Albert Roush and Mrs. wnnamson, W.Va. on October
Oldest title of nobility In alongwiUtmanyotherwomen's Va.; Mrs. VIcki Kee!~Ri:.;,
n...._t y..u......
13 was announced. A Jetter Of the British peerage is that clubs. For -the people of Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
•
....,_
"'"'-·
...
of
earl.
GA!UlEN CLUB MEETS
thanks was read frOm ,,.e
'J1Io New Haven Garden Club Mason County Retarded
met at the home o1 Mrs. Uoyd Children's Foundation, for the
Housh with Mrs. Donald F. contribution made to the camp.
RouiJi and Mrs. Jack Frey as The club voted to plant one
co-llostoaseo
Rhododendron each year at a
Devotions· were led by Mrs. pubU. place in town. Mrs.
Uoyd Roush. The roll ..n waa Robert Layne, Mrs. John
answered with "Name a Oower Thorne and Mrs. David Fields,
named In the Bible."
Jr. were appointed In charge of
Paslilr James Moy, of Sl. this project.
Paul Lutheran Church, Mrs. Robert Layne read The
presented a very Interesting By-Laws of Ute club.
program 00 Leadership.
Attending were Mrs. _ PhU
During the business meet.tng Uetey, Mrs. Donald Bumgardreporta were given by various ner, Mrs. David Fields, Jr.,
&lt;ommittees. Tbe District Mrs. WUilanl Gibbs, Mrs. Tom
meeting will be held at Hoffman, Mrs. Roy Jones, Mra.
Willlamaon on October 13. The Louis Karschnllt, Mrs. Robert
club received an lnvltaUon from Layne, Mrs. Harry Miner, Mrs.
the Fa&lt;ulty Club at Rio Grande John Thorne and the hooteaoes,
College to a style show on Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Howard.
September 23.
FORUMS PLANNED
Those In attendance were The Mason County Action
Mn. F. A. Baley, Mrs. Howard Group, Inc. announces that The
~ Mra. WIUiam Chlaler, Older Americans Whlto House
Clyde Foley, Mil- .·~· ~-F..-....... to be
illbf, ' Mrs. Harold Johilson, held in Mason County the week
Harry Layne, Mrs. Her- of SePtember 20 as follows:
manLayne,Mrs.J.V. McGrew, September 21, 10 a.m. Broad
Mrs. M. L. Oblinger, Mrs. Rsy Run Lutheran Church, Rev.
Pickens, Miss Lelah ~ane James Moy and Rev. Achaah
Powell, Mrs. Patrick Riley, Miller; I p.m., Letart, Asbury
Mrs. Vebna Roush, Mrs. Ollie Methodist Church, Rev. Achaah
ftaulh, Mrs. B. R. Vance, Mra. MIDer, Rev. WUbur Buter:
Howard Wagenhals, a guest ond September 22, 10 a.m., New
hoatales, Mrs. Donald Roush Haven United Melhodlst
IDil Mra. U07d Roush.
Chprch, Rev. James..Moy, Rev.
JOUNDATION MEETS
WUUam DeMoss; I p.m., Camp
....1..
Tlli New Haven Recreation Conley Baptist Church, Rev. H.
1::0 S1
~tlon mel at tho Qty ~- BWups; 7:30p.m., ~ord
wllb Doc Ohllriger Baptist Church, :Rev. H. C.
.lw d'lng Tiley voted-. to bire Blllupo. September 23, ~o a.m.
MJ'. Pd. Mn. Joe YOUIII lo Mason United Melhodlst
11i11it .wllb !tie tunnlng ol the j;barcb, Mr. Donald Fogleoong;
·- . . .1iUK: Mrs. Young will I p.m., Cllftoo United M~l
.:~ be''-" ' ' tm~-..• ... andMr. Church. Mrs. Ecllth Fox. Sep~
tember 24, 7 p.m. 'Point
I
:- ~ :KIIapp wal hirecl t• Pleasant, , Fl. Randolph
pr,. ...., ~ rink lor opening Terrace, •Mr. Paul Thomaa;
'
. 1l:il iliOillll.
7:30 p.m., Henderson, Com!IIJ FIIIIIWilllll • • • • • •
. lib.U.. will be held each munlty ToWn Hoose, Mrs&gt;Mary
_ .z~qu
TtleldaJ·andSatordaynighiBas McCoy, Mlnteter Epgene Zopp;
has bien the cuatom. 'J1Iore wiU September 25, 10 a.m., South
be lbllng for begjnnen each Side-Harmony Baptist Church,
fEIGII
Saturday from 1 p.m. unlll 3 Mrs. Edith Somtnerll, Mra. Ann
p.m • .After September 22 y6u Erwin; lp.m.,GalllpollaFerry,
111111 cell tho) rink to IIChellule Bruce Chapel Parish Room;
private parties o~ either 7:30 p.m., Aslttoo, MI. Ollve
Wedneaday or Thursday Community Center.
tveillnll. Members of lhe The FOI'um Is oponaored by
ReereiiiCII Board wiU lake the W. Va. Cornmilslon on
lunll.um&amp; llckell to-the rlnlt. Aging. The purpose ol the
14-oz•.·,
A~
_ II~ meet1ni1 were: Forum Is to give the elderly of
Donali ·•1tloe" Ollllnglr, BUI the area the opp&lt;l'lllnlty to
Kimel; &gt;liooort Gurlis, Mra. voice their needs u oenlor
J.
Jock Ji1llho;r, Mta. EUBODI' citizens.
llealet, 111'8. A. Idlprouse, BID The forum Is part ol the
Ruaw", ~!blr Smith ond Tom preparaltoo lor the White House
Browlj.
'
Conference on Aging, which wiU .
~ CIRCLE
be held the week of November
The Re1iecea Clule ol S\. 28, 19'/lln Washington, D.C.
Paul Lull!oraD Church mel for Forums will be held
their real~Jar monthly meeting throPghout West Virginia and
at lbe dwrcll wllb· Mrs. Edna the rest of the nation the week ol
Jlurrll. hoMe~~. Mra. Donald September 20, 19'10. 'Areas ol
Blllll&amp;atdnel' pruented the discUSSion will include Income.
propalll on The Methodist housing, transportation, health,
Charcll, a ehaplef In ~ study nutrttton, employment and
bOok "Lulhel'ans and Other retirement, education, roles.
ben~mlnatlonl." . A short and activities and spiritual well
. . . . meetlns was con- being.
llfc!ail by Mn. B. R. Van&lt;e. "Older Amerl&lt;ans Speak to
. _i\I~~Mn- Annie P. the Nation" Is the theme ol ~
Roney, Mrl. John Fry, Mro. li'IOprejlarations. TheeventB!ll
CorroU !t71, the Conference Year,
.-j~==!~P~-:e~U~,-~Mra.
L. Sprou.ee, lndude community While Otto Grimm, Mrs. House Conferene~, where__ ,
~~~and:: Mrs. Barril. poUcy re&lt;LIIIIDOI)IIaU.,_ wiD_be ·
c_
Iii~
~de, ;neil the, State Wiil!t
~lll:ET
'J1Io Walwna Band Boosters
~~ 1n muJar session with
.101!1) l!ofiDUin presldin&amp; In ~

.

Earth.

The super-opec:tacle Is Introduced by an old-fashioned
-rlngmaater who present.. in
soaring vO&lt;al imagery the story
of the beglnnlnp ol Ute Circus.
Clowns mean Circus and
Circus means clowns and,
foUowlng the Introduction, a
~ whole bombastic battalion of
~ '·labl!l!llla fwlnymen take over
~ 'tlW ,,ai'ena With their world- :fafniol&lt;loollahnesa.
··~
.

,

Nest comes a b·lbute to the
Circus' own "beloved terror,"
the immortal Gargantua tl&gt;o
Great. The celebrated gorilla Is
prese~ted In a Ughl-hearted
mood, accompanied by a &amp;&lt;ore
of simian playmatet:.
The wUd, wild west lives
again in all it. blazing glory In
Ute nest soper....,u"'' of the
spectacle. Re-creating the
famous Cluus wild-west attractions M the past, The
Greatest Bilow on Earth reIntroduces Buftalo BUI, Annie
Oakley and Chief SitUng Bull,
leading a wild and wooly
proce1111ion of rough cowboys,
dan&lt;lng &lt;owgirla and Indian
broves.
·
Throughout the last ten
decades, Rlngitng Bros. and
Barnum 6: Balley has presented
great atlrac:tlons from every
&lt;orner of the globe. In tribute to
the hundreds of International
stars who have appeared In ita
magical three-rings, the Circus
present. a parading panoply of
unique and memorable attractions. Dancers brilliantly
perform their native steps white
camels and zebras herald a
nootalgic return of the unforgettable Giraffe-Neck
Women, a startling Circus
feature of yesterday.
Following immediately is a
lavish look at a Circus superspectacle of the dlstant past.
Regal retainers and a herd of
blazingly bejeweled elephants
bring on a handsome
Maharajah and htJ beautiful
Maharani.
The world-celebrated
"human oddities" of The

By GARY.KALE

Greatest Sbow on Earth's
history are •ecalled in the next
memorable portion of the
pageant. Entitled "Barnwn 6:
BaUey Bsnyhoo," the feature Is
Introduced by the strains of an
authentic steam-&lt;alliope and
present. such attractions as the
sword-swallower, fireleater,
Siamese twins, Dog Face Boy
and tattooed lady. And yoo'U
meet the · famo·ua elephant,
Jumbo, and Col. Tom Thumb,
the smallest man in an the
world.
As "The First 100 Years"
builds to a brilliant conclusion,
a handsome carriage arrives
bearing none other than
Phineas Taylor Barnum
himself! Accompanying the
Immortal showman Is Je11111
Lind,

his

most

famous

discovery. T011ether the pair
review the events of Ute proud ·
past and see the future dreams
of The Greatest Show on Earth
become realiUy before their
eyes.
And what dreams they are!
The enUre area exploded with
excitement
as
"Circus

Sydney.

Tomorrows," the most lavish

troduced by a glittering
ringmaster of tomorrow.
AI last, the resounding birthday bells rinR oot as The
Greatest Show on Earth's
celebrated Carlllon Chariot
soars Into sight as dazzling_

MEMORIES OF CIRCUS PASr - The most famous Cluus personalities of all time re!Ul'n
lo the spotlight In the IIJOih AMiversary Edition of Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey
Circus. Surrounding the "fabulous showman" P. T. Barnum and htJ beautiful discovery, Jenny
Und are (from lop left): the immortal Buffalo BiU; Gen Tom Thumb, a young man from
CoMecticut ':'ho was proclaimed "the smaUest man In the world;" the terrifying gorilla
Gargantua Uie Great; "Little Mi1111 Sure Shot," the lovely marksman Annie Oakley; the
startling TaUooed Lady: and one of the most exotic features of Circus past, a Royal Burmese
Giraffe-Neck Woman.
diamonds des&lt;end from the
heavens to cast their sparkling
brilliance on the delightful
dreams of beautiful Circus
tomorrows!
Unprecedented In its vast
magnitude, "The First 100
Years" is, indeed, an ap·

foday's FUNNY
'

~

.~

.. -.. ,_.:·.·:·'·

MIDGET
60)(ER
I~

GRAY NAMED CHAIRMAN
COLUMBUS iUPI) - State
Sen. Theodore M. Gray, RPiqua, Will be temporary chairman of the Republican party's
2Hnember Committee on Resolutions.
The committee is to hold

A

c:arried over with ' Pin
that c:oot her about 30 - ·
· It.};\!'
and added 200 yjirda IIi ...!,_,,:,
lead."

Each skiP~""' had llil 01111
reasoo for requesting t.adV'I ·
lay day .
"As you know , we !lilt
overwhell)llng odda," ~-,
Gretel's navlptor Bill -J's. :
"We aren't giving up, but we :·
weren't overjoyed at lbe
~eather ftrecast, Bes'dn,_, we
figure time hao to be oo our lkle
and we'll utilize it to JlfiC!Ice."
Ficker said the serillwutA»
Important to race &lt;11 live days aod called fJr the laJ
dsy so the crew could COOl'·
dlnate their efforts.
The Aussies plan to pl•k!Gathelr helmsmen again 'lbii1'11111
with Hardy, Martin VI..- ...
David Forbes sharlnc lbe
wheel. The Intrepid wiU lllliCI
pat.

State of Ohio, Department of
Insurance,
Certlficlte
of
Compl ianc e
The un dersigned , Superintendent of
IMuran ce of the State of Ohio,
hereby certifies that GAMBLE
ALDEN LIFE INSURAN(E
COMPANY, at Chic ego, State of
Illin ois, has compiled With the
laws ot this Stele applicable to It
and is authoriz'd during the
current year to trensect In the
state its appropriate business of
insurance. Its financial condition is s·nown by its annual
statement to ha11e been 11
fOllows on December 31, 1P69:
Adm i tted ass.ets, $28,236,796.93 ;
liabilities. S24,160,769.27; Net
Assets, 14,076,027.66; Ceplfll,
Sl, 100 , 000 . 00;
Surplus,
$2.976,027 . 66;
lncomt.

142,&lt;1~,708 . 99;
Expenctlturn.
$20.003.32&lt;1 .25.
WITNESS WHEREOF, I hlvt
hereunto subscribed my nemt
and caused mv seal to be If·
fixed at Columbus. Ohio, this
day and date, July 1, 1970, Fred
B. Sm fth, Superlntendtftt of
Insurance of Ohio .

SHOES FOR GIRLS

The Jack Pot
Black or

public hearings here Oct. 6 before drafllng the party's 1970
state platform.

TEENY

60PP E.R ~ ,...---- Brown

''!!"'~"'''·~ iV·.~ ~'l.'~/~'!t,
.,

..

··+':' :::')...''''·''; :: ·•

propriate and unforgettable
tribute to the wondrous world of
RlngUng Bros. and Barnum &amp;
Baney Circus - truly, The
Greatest Show on Earth.

l;t ....
. "·' !l•''

Intrepid skipper BUI Ficker
was quicker oo five of the six
legs In Tuesday's race. He
gained a slight lead at the slarl
and was never headed as the
defender made the first turn in
46 seconds, maintained that
margin thropgb the second
reach leg and raised it lo 56
seconds m Ute third turn. The
fourth leg to windward cut
Intrepid's lead to 53 seconds,
but she gained ground on
Gretel's tactical error on the
fifth leg to lead by I: 16.
"That filth turn was the key
point In the race," Ficker said.
"We jibed over to starboard al
just the right lime and Gretel

and spectacular Ringling Bros.
and Barnum 6: Bailey extravaganza of ali time, unfolds
in all its glory.
Scores of people and anlmals
blend In a magntllcant montage
of futuristic fantasies, in-

,, 1

UPI Sports Writer
NEWPORT. R.I. fUPI )Gretel skipper Jim Hardy w'l:'
-laced with the almoot impossible task today ol .wlming four
straight Amerl&lt;a's Olp races.
Defending Intrepid gained a
~ lead in the best-of ... ven
series for the coveted bottomless cup with a minute and 18
second victory Tuesday, but the
margln isn't a clear~ut indication of the commanding lead
since Gr.,tel's second race
vlclilry was reversed In favor of
the u.s. boat.
Intrepid's latest triumph was
accunpllshed In heavier winds
and the forecast for Thursday's
fourth race indi&lt;alea the same
weather condltioos.
- Hardy's inatch race dilemma
Is one that few skippers,
managers and coaches have
surmounted In sports .. A lo1111
Thursday also sends iJUng Sir
Frank Packer, the financial
backer of Gretel, ba&lt;k to

~ 1..::-·•.

ANlHONY

'H'

. '" '

'Pium.ing-Heatfng

lb.

Size ·Bfh-ll''''·

Your Dependable

. ·'1

n': · 1910

~

W2-4

Dealer For
HEA, 1...:.

PlUMBING

Today's. fUNNY ...-ill por $1.00 for
toch ~Jftginal"funn( u1rd. Stnd ll"fl
to. Todor'• fUNNY, 1200 W•ll Tfl,.d

THE
SHOE
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Where Shoes Are
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.

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Cop' n John Fall Secrlocxl ·Solei/
•
FRIEl

...

flEIIIH·_ •••

IIIIWIIH

u

~~ ;~; lllcbrd was Hllule Co!lferen&lt;e'
ttork shower by In 19'12, the goalies,:!:~:::
_' VICki• Jt~aoh, the White Hquse n
-·and Je~nlfer Ailnc wlU be cttrled

11

·

""i:;'j!t.;

ond •tjoilal, 'tate, and
&lt;'l'llo •ut .White E
--·•. -r.·
fer•- on Acing, )leld
to reeulted In q,e pasaage
Me41"-""e ACt and the
.~~ whhicllicll,c;~
-~~'~ ·rfK"aa -·of pr08J
ly.
'it
, The · · r America,. _,,.'11IN~·T;~
~-

:0: ..

..h1hlI I•I; I="'
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u. s. No. 1

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•K-··················· . ·····lb.
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ATTUPPERS PLAINS

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PIG. OF 6

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i
. ....

AT RUTLAND

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RUTLAND
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DEPT. STORE .~
i,:::- r-: : .~:~,:~: &gt;.·:::~:;:::·:::·:~:::::·::::=:&lt;::;::::;:::::.;::¥~::::::;::-?..;;::;::::x::~:~::::J

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-

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�_, (101'_1·111i. ',.i,.y,O. I&amp;,t. 1970
lo~'l!hrDa,UySentlnel.~
Q.:...:;..!;,.t rn•
ts
t_l .

New Haven .:M;..- D,.en

a-~-~- ""''"'

., ~.-.. . . n to' all
. ::!~~~~:- 1and

•

•

~~Mi::H..'!f;~;::;ag,.

Mason Cou_ntY .

ewS .Notes
· ·. ' -_

'

dOlpb, lieolf, W.,Va.; Jilrl. Anri
~.-~~.'If. v~.: Yri,

.

I. ,..,.
'·

'

·

-

.'

·

~per; Stupendoas,
Lavish
'

..

. I' -

~

.

.f

·e

..... eu• Steak
...
.....

Swiss Steak ~.:a=

Skipper Ha.~d:r.
In Tough

Is
'

G'-'eatest Show on Earth
.d1

•

or· ~ dJa!!ionds, a fortune
ln'IJII!I,ilid lavish c&lt;llllwnes, and
:eocllln&amp;l' · l!Jll8intt'lve re,cnaU0111 of tile &amp;feat moment.
In the Hlatory ol 'J1Io Greateit
. l!l![!ll' 01! Earth combine In
lllfts!lns llroa. and Barnum &amp;
Bailey Clrous' unprecedentedly
, Jlllgnlf~nt
super-ope&lt;tacle,
'1he ·First 100 Years," the
glorioualy glittering cen,terpiece ol the mighty lllllth
lllrjhday ·Edition ' of The
. G!:ea~ Show on Earth.
. 'l1ds fabulous Clr~us of a
j.J!Jtime 16 set to arrive In
.Jiundncton, W.Va. on Tuesday,
Del. 1~, lor performances
~ugh Wedilesdsy, Oct. 14.
.· &lt;\.,,~ and fas\-pa&lt;ed
Panorama ol the Circus' Initial
len de&lt;ades, "The First 100
Years" colorfully depicts the
fun, spirit and excitement
which has made Rlngllnc Bros.
and Barnum 6: Bailey a
malcblesa and utterly unique
Amerl&lt;an iNUiution.
Hundreds ol performers and
animals talte ~t In the fanlastlc pageant which Is staged
and dlre&lt;ted by Richard Bar·
stow, &lt;elebraUng htJ 22nd year
with 'J1Io Greatest Show on

.!"
"""na
·

1-"'.n

'

11 - The DaUy s.nliiWIIlud\lepori-Pomeroy, O.,Bepl. 23,1970

'jt
" ·. •f];S·

Fey, Sandra mrril, fthonda
MemberS oi _the el&gt;mmiu..e
•
'!
'pjeuant, •
. -~ •
Wood, Iva Roush, Klithk!en orgilll\slng·!h&lt; ~ are: Mr., N-'
lr
.
I
Heaaon, Jane RIHJ9h, Marjorie ponatd F011Ie0oog, JleV. fl. C. .
MASON,ORADE SCha!!1 P'l'~ . .
Copehart, Sharon Vtctora, Ken Billups,~ James M,oy, .J~ev.
•
. •
·•
.held· ~~ - f!r•l mHIInc .. on
..
Tpesday ani! e1ecte4 qlob
awnce o1 the preoicjenl, James Vic~s. Alice Miller. ll&lt;Wne "'l)llam ' .... Mrs, HavaUne By Ahp~ ~ars~an
· Qllver; Prelldent; ~ ~.
'lilft. They voted to pur&lt;'- Bill, David Ban, Mn. Mary Jllesher, Mrs.,. Eleanor Glbbul,
· ·· ~
_VI¢ ~1; . JoaJiii 'byki':' _
red bow ties Jllllchlng the Aumlller, Fran••• Stewart, 'Rev. A&lt;hsOh Miner, .Mr. Pa
M
rs.
HeleriKnaw.
Icy
Rickard,
Thomas,
lind
Mril.·
Franoes
..ctetarJ.~ and'Eve~ ~lien,
1UlifOI'IIIII_oi the band memberi
1
Mlldrtd
Riley,
Margie
Rickard,
Goodi)lte,,
j;AP
Aide.
.
.
,
_
,
~.....
.
..
,
1i'18111Af.'
,
. .
to be worn with the rtd b1azors
Helen
Footer,
~.!'red
Rouah,
_
PARTY
G~i::N
MASON
·~
'.!
have
atte......
·
_
.
.
\
,..
'
'
'
-~\
,
.•
,
,._,_,
, ," .
ond red panll for ...,...-r..
VIcki
Roush,
Lind•
Roush,
Mr.,•nd
~
·MarVin
Roush,
many
fairs
tllli,suDilllet
reslilratlon
Of
~~~
•
at
•
ON)\1
J
iufibRED
fiDd
·eo
'Jbey aJao voted to purchase
1
Kathleen
Ro-.J~•;
Jfbelma
New·
Haven,
enlertab\l!d
with
a
an4
·mel
Diiiny
lnteresliilg
list
adream·
to~
pOrions
--~·
at
Mal®
new hat boxes for the ~dhatB.
·
Mr · ~ gave my .hdba . a ~ty .o\1'1 Elhlbll which wu
After a diacuulon membors Copehart, Mrs. John Fey, and birthday jwty · on. Si!ndaY for person~. "
their dallC~Ier, LU Aim's 7th One such was Johnny HlR of ~Uca of an 'Indian P!t]! ~~lade ·heW ~pi 13 \Iirougb-11 in the
-~ to purehaoe three new Mulne Fields.
ENTERTAINS
·
birthday.
Ice .cream. and cake Po&lt;ahonlas Cdulit,y.
from ~ clay from ""'. fann. a,qdilol!~ Ill the c-tllO\ile
t1re1 for the trailer used to haul
Mrs.
Kenneth
Thompson
were
served.
_
In
11163
8fter
he'flllllid
~
barik
The pipe "'¢ii-for _1114 PI!* ~-· !Pt. pleasaJii. ~
band inll1rUIIIenll to and from
entertained
with
a
Wig
·
and
Garnes
were
played
and
the
of
clay
In
a
deep
~alleyon
htJ
wereg?l~~aiPi~~i!&gt; ~~ eo.in~ .Ai-llaiB and t!'elr _,
away football games, etc.
_ Ji&gt;lllnllngs,
The meellng was disml9SOII CosmeUc Pm'ty at her home prize awarded to Usa Brown. farm,beloundthatltwaseasUy The IniljiDi ~ 1 l!!!t' featured
recently.
Mrs.
Harold
Role
was
Attending
were
the
honoree
and
shaped.
•
It
&lt;:OntalMd
'!lllf.
a
·~
,
191'
t!1eU'
~n~a"""'.i..
~a
_.
,ec:ufptute,
cer~IJ!Ics,
~ members helped clean
the
demonstrator.
Attending
Usa,
CoMle
and
Terry
Brown;
small
amOWII
of
lmJlolrllie&lt;
..
place.
West
Vlrg
.
c
~
!ll'olta
and
otherl
•• Mra. Aaroil
ooneeuton stands.
were Mrs. Robert Gurtls, Mrs. April ond Anna Parsons, Mary After'learnlng that It would fire State ~k il8illel! ~leiJi
Fowler was chalrlllan . and .
HOMEMAKERS MEET
Charles Dodd, Mrs. Dwight Jane Lewis, Denise Rillle, wen, he storied a small shop Summe1'S County, ~ f·
others 00 the commlUA!e _.
The Rho d ode ndr on Sayre, Mrs. B. V. White; Mrs. Larry Gibbs, Bobby and Keith wiUtonelllln Ina building oohll
·Mr; Oils Randolph and Ml!i
HCIDeiiiAI&lt;ers Club met al the Jack Hess, Mrs. B. R. Vance, Roush, Mrs. Russell, Mason: farm. Since then poople from ~R. ANI) _ M~ . . JACK HaiUe J&lt;lfdan.
&lt;lab house with Mrs. Charles Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. Mrs. Leslie Roush, David and many states and some foreign Caldwell d ;Tileson, ~··­
Jewell, and Mrs: G. B. Hazlett Kenneth Vi&lt;kers, Mrs. carroll Nancy:. and r.tlss Kinzel courttl'ies have visited the shop vli!Ung recentl)' 11'1111 -Mr. and
uco-OO&amp;teases.DovoUonswere Adams,Jr.,Mrs.RoseandMrs. Becloter, Pt. Pleasant.
and bought Items made frOm Mrs. S.y Fax at Cllftoo ;Bod
led by Mrs. Albert Roush. -A Thompson.
PERSONALS
this clay.
searcllbig the l!'ea for anti~
......., "Wash Day" was read by
NEHACLIMA CLUB
Mrs. Vena Preece, dspghter Recently he had the honor ol - can you 'guess whal'i ;d
....--•-The NehacUma Garden Club and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. bestowing Pearf sydenstrlcker bopght - a lard press
Mrs. Charles F. y,...., ,
Dale All
f Inez Ky
and
tuffer· betlerholdoo
.._._ the business meeUng met on Monday evening at the Jimmie
en o
• · BuCk (renowned author
sausages
·
•
AI
"-·"'••'
M
orial
Bulldlng
ttended
Mrs
Preece's
grandNobel
Prize
Winner)
....
th
a
to
these
unUSI!'lltems
.- could
who_
Achievement Day was an- ex.,.~· em
a
·
.
nounc:ed for October 13.
with Mrs. James N. Roush, son's, Paul Ma)'lllll'd, wedding hurricane lamp 1111de from clay knows, if Y9" need &lt;ash The Home Demonstration Mrs. B. J. Howard and Mrs. recently. Mr. Maynard and from the lllll farm and a bol of be you can sen them.
Agen~ VIckie Keefer, presented Carroll Adams, Jr. as Miss carol Jacqueline McNeely Pocahontas Good Earth.
~ ,
the lesson "Accent with Ar!- hootesses. DevoUons were led of Park Drive, Point Pleasant, Thepreoentationwasmadeat SEVERAL . DIES frqm
. ceu&lt;ries."
by Mrs. James Roush, using the were married at The United the p~~bUc meeting when the Mason County len on Monday
Those attending were Miss theme "Wl'trels Your Faith?" Trinity Methodist Church In restoration of the famous boose lor Jactyon's MUI, Westoo, W.
Bert
Members of the club were Point Pleasant. She Is the of Pearl Buck had begun. The Va. where they will attend the
Mary Phillips, Mrs. T.
InVIted ,.., The Fa&lt;ully Club of dspghter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack home is located at Hillsboro, W. Fall meeting of Stale
Roush,
~.Mrs.
Kliy
"'
•·· been Homemakers. Attending
Roush,Mrs.
LisaVebna
Thomas,
Rio Grande
College to a style MeNee Iey aIso of Point Va. This restoration ,,..
Clarence Thomas, Mrs. Charles show on September 23. The Pleasant.
supported OnandaUy by _the Monday through Frldsy are
"""
to
be
held
at
New Haven Woman's Club, Mrs. Harry Slasta. • Letart. W.
M
F.Yonker,Mrs.M.L.OhUnger, Dlstrict ee-..,
M
Mra. Albert Roush and Mrs. wnnamson, W.Va. on October
Oldest title of nobility In alongwiUtmanyotherwomen's Va.; Mrs. VIcki Kee!~Ri:.;,
n...._t y..u......
13 was announced. A Jetter Of the British peerage is that clubs. For -the people of Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
•
....,_
"'"'-·
...
of
earl.
GA!UlEN CLUB MEETS
thanks was read frOm ,,.e
'J1Io New Haven Garden Club Mason County Retarded
met at the home o1 Mrs. Uoyd Children's Foundation, for the
Housh with Mrs. Donald F. contribution made to the camp.
RouiJi and Mrs. Jack Frey as The club voted to plant one
co-llostoaseo
Rhododendron each year at a
Devotions· were led by Mrs. pubU. place in town. Mrs.
Uoyd Roush. The roll ..n waa Robert Layne, Mrs. John
answered with "Name a Oower Thorne and Mrs. David Fields,
named In the Bible."
Jr. were appointed In charge of
Paslilr James Moy, of Sl. this project.
Paul Lutheran Church, Mrs. Robert Layne read The
presented a very Interesting By-Laws of Ute club.
program 00 Leadership.
Attending were Mrs. _ PhU
During the business meet.tng Uetey, Mrs. Donald Bumgardreporta were given by various ner, Mrs. David Fields, Jr.,
&lt;ommittees. Tbe District Mrs. WUilanl Gibbs, Mrs. Tom
meeting will be held at Hoffman, Mrs. Roy Jones, Mra.
Willlamaon on October 13. The Louis Karschnllt, Mrs. Robert
club received an lnvltaUon from Layne, Mrs. Harry Miner, Mrs.
the Fa&lt;ulty Club at Rio Grande John Thorne and the hooteaoes,
College to a style show on Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Howard.
September 23.
FORUMS PLANNED
Those In attendance were The Mason County Action
Mn. F. A. Baley, Mrs. Howard Group, Inc. announces that The
~ Mra. WIUiam Chlaler, Older Americans Whlto House
Clyde Foley, Mil- .·~· ~-F..-....... to be
illbf, ' Mrs. Harold Johilson, held in Mason County the week
Harry Layne, Mrs. Her- of SePtember 20 as follows:
manLayne,Mrs.J.V. McGrew, September 21, 10 a.m. Broad
Mrs. M. L. Oblinger, Mrs. Rsy Run Lutheran Church, Rev.
Pickens, Miss Lelah ~ane James Moy and Rev. Achaah
Powell, Mrs. Patrick Riley, Miller; I p.m., Letart, Asbury
Mrs. Vebna Roush, Mrs. Ollie Methodist Church, Rev. Achaah
ftaulh, Mrs. B. R. Vance, Mra. MIDer, Rev. WUbur Buter:
Howard Wagenhals, a guest ond September 22, 10 a.m., New
hoatales, Mrs. Donald Roush Haven United Melhodlst
IDil Mra. U07d Roush.
Chprch, Rev. James..Moy, Rev.
JOUNDATION MEETS
WUUam DeMoss; I p.m., Camp
....1..
Tlli New Haven Recreation Conley Baptist Church, Rev. H.
1::0 S1
~tlon mel at tho Qty ~- BWups; 7:30p.m., ~ord
wllb Doc Ohllriger Baptist Church, :Rev. H. C.
.lw d'lng Tiley voted-. to bire Blllupo. September 23, ~o a.m.
MJ'. Pd. Mn. Joe YOUIII lo Mason United Melhodlst
11i11it .wllb !tie tunnlng ol the j;barcb, Mr. Donald Fogleoong;
·- . . .1iUK: Mrs. Young will I p.m., Cllftoo United M~l
.:~ be''-" ' ' tm~-..• ... andMr. Church. Mrs. Ecllth Fox. Sep~
tember 24, 7 p.m. 'Point
I
:- ~ :KIIapp wal hirecl t• Pleasant, , Fl. Randolph
pr,. ...., ~ rink lor opening Terrace, •Mr. Paul Thomaa;
'
. 1l:il iliOillll.
7:30 p.m., Henderson, Com!IIJ FIIIIIWilllll • • • • • •
. lib.U.. will be held each munlty ToWn Hoose, Mrs&gt;Mary
_ .z~qu
TtleldaJ·andSatordaynighiBas McCoy, Mlnteter Epgene Zopp;
has bien the cuatom. 'J1Iore wiU September 25, 10 a.m., South
be lbllng for begjnnen each Side-Harmony Baptist Church,
fEIGII
Saturday from 1 p.m. unlll 3 Mrs. Edith Somtnerll, Mra. Ann
p.m • .After September 22 y6u Erwin; lp.m.,GalllpollaFerry,
111111 cell tho) rink to IIChellule Bruce Chapel Parish Room;
private parties o~ either 7:30 p.m., Aslttoo, MI. Ollve
Wedneaday or Thursday Community Center.
tveillnll. Members of lhe The FOI'um Is oponaored by
ReereiiiCII Board wiU lake the W. Va. Cornmilslon on
lunll.um&amp; llckell to-the rlnlt. Aging. The purpose ol the
14-oz•.·,
A~
_ II~ meet1ni1 were: Forum Is to give the elderly of
Donali ·•1tloe" Ollllnglr, BUI the area the opp&lt;l'lllnlty to
Kimel; &gt;liooort Gurlis, Mra. voice their needs u oenlor
J.
Jock Ji1llho;r, Mta. EUBODI' citizens.
llealet, 111'8. A. Idlprouse, BID The forum Is part ol the
Ruaw", ~!blr Smith ond Tom preparaltoo lor the White House
Browlj.
'
Conference on Aging, which wiU .
~ CIRCLE
be held the week of November
The Re1iecea Clule ol S\. 28, 19'/lln Washington, D.C.
Paul Lull!oraD Church mel for Forums will be held
their real~Jar monthly meeting throPghout West Virginia and
at lbe dwrcll wllb· Mrs. Edna the rest of the nation the week ol
Jlurrll. hoMe~~. Mra. Donald September 20, 19'10. 'Areas ol
Blllll&amp;atdnel' pruented the discUSSion will include Income.
propalll on The Methodist housing, transportation, health,
Charcll, a ehaplef In ~ study nutrttton, employment and
bOok "Lulhel'ans and Other retirement, education, roles.
ben~mlnatlonl." . A short and activities and spiritual well
. . . . meetlns was con- being.
llfc!ail by Mn. B. R. Van&lt;e. "Older Amerl&lt;ans Speak to
. _i\I~~Mn- Annie P. the Nation" Is the theme ol ~
Roney, Mrl. John Fry, Mro. li'IOprejlarations. TheeventB!ll
CorroU !t71, the Conference Year,
.-j~==!~P~-:e~U~,-~Mra.
L. Sprou.ee, lndude community While Otto Grimm, Mrs. House Conferene~, where__ ,
~~~and:: Mrs. Barril. poUcy re&lt;LIIIIDOI)IIaU.,_ wiD_be ·
c_
Iii~
~de, ;neil the, State Wiil!t
~lll:ET
'J1Io Walwna Band Boosters
~~ 1n muJar session with
.101!1) l!ofiDUin presldin&amp; In ~

.

Earth.

The super-opec:tacle Is Introduced by an old-fashioned
-rlngmaater who present.. in
soaring vO&lt;al imagery the story
of the beglnnlnp ol Ute Circus.
Clowns mean Circus and
Circus means clowns and,
foUowlng the Introduction, a
~ whole bombastic battalion of
~ '·labl!l!llla fwlnymen take over
~ 'tlW ,,ai'ena With their world- :fafniol&lt;loollahnesa.
··~
.

,

Nest comes a b·lbute to the
Circus' own "beloved terror,"
the immortal Gargantua tl&gt;o
Great. The celebrated gorilla Is
prese~ted In a Ughl-hearted
mood, accompanied by a &amp;&lt;ore
of simian playmatet:.
The wUd, wild west lives
again in all it. blazing glory In
Ute nest soper....,u"'' of the
spectacle. Re-creating the
famous Cluus wild-west attractions M the past, The
Greatest Bilow on Earth reIntroduces Buftalo BUI, Annie
Oakley and Chief SitUng Bull,
leading a wild and wooly
proce1111ion of rough cowboys,
dan&lt;lng &lt;owgirla and Indian
broves.
·
Throughout the last ten
decades, Rlngitng Bros. and
Barnum 6: Balley has presented
great atlrac:tlons from every
&lt;orner of the globe. In tribute to
the hundreds of International
stars who have appeared In ita
magical three-rings, the Circus
present. a parading panoply of
unique and memorable attractions. Dancers brilliantly
perform their native steps white
camels and zebras herald a
nootalgic return of the unforgettable Giraffe-Neck
Women, a startling Circus
feature of yesterday.
Following immediately is a
lavish look at a Circus superspectacle of the dlstant past.
Regal retainers and a herd of
blazingly bejeweled elephants
bring on a handsome
Maharajah and htJ beautiful
Maharani.
The world-celebrated
"human oddities" of The

By GARY.KALE

Greatest Sbow on Earth's
history are •ecalled in the next
memorable portion of the
pageant. Entitled "Barnwn 6:
BaUey Bsnyhoo," the feature Is
Introduced by the strains of an
authentic steam-&lt;alliope and
present. such attractions as the
sword-swallower, fireleater,
Siamese twins, Dog Face Boy
and tattooed lady. And yoo'U
meet the · famo·ua elephant,
Jumbo, and Col. Tom Thumb,
the smallest man in an the
world.
As "The First 100 Years"
builds to a brilliant conclusion,
a handsome carriage arrives
bearing none other than
Phineas Taylor Barnum
himself! Accompanying the
Immortal showman Is Je11111
Lind,

his

most

famous

discovery. T011ether the pair
review the events of Ute proud ·
past and see the future dreams
of The Greatest Show on Earth
become realiUy before their
eyes.
And what dreams they are!
The enUre area exploded with
excitement
as
"Circus

Sydney.

Tomorrows," the most lavish

troduced by a glittering
ringmaster of tomorrow.
AI last, the resounding birthday bells rinR oot as The
Greatest Show on Earth's
celebrated Carlllon Chariot
soars Into sight as dazzling_

MEMORIES OF CIRCUS PASr - The most famous Cluus personalities of all time re!Ul'n
lo the spotlight In the IIJOih AMiversary Edition of Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey
Circus. Surrounding the "fabulous showman" P. T. Barnum and htJ beautiful discovery, Jenny
Und are (from lop left): the immortal Buffalo BiU; Gen Tom Thumb, a young man from
CoMecticut ':'ho was proclaimed "the smaUest man In the world;" the terrifying gorilla
Gargantua Uie Great; "Little Mi1111 Sure Shot," the lovely marksman Annie Oakley; the
startling TaUooed Lady: and one of the most exotic features of Circus past, a Royal Burmese
Giraffe-Neck Woman.
diamonds des&lt;end from the
heavens to cast their sparkling
brilliance on the delightful
dreams of beautiful Circus
tomorrows!
Unprecedented In its vast
magnitude, "The First 100
Years" is, indeed, an ap·

foday's FUNNY
'

~

.~

.. -.. ,_.:·.·:·'·

MIDGET
60)(ER
I~

GRAY NAMED CHAIRMAN
COLUMBUS iUPI) - State
Sen. Theodore M. Gray, RPiqua, Will be temporary chairman of the Republican party's
2Hnember Committee on Resolutions.
The committee is to hold

A

c:arried over with ' Pin
that c:oot her about 30 - ·
· It.};\!'
and added 200 yjirda IIi ...!,_,,:,
lead."

Each skiP~""' had llil 01111
reasoo for requesting t.adV'I ·
lay day .
"As you know , we !lilt
overwhell)llng odda," ~-,
Gretel's navlptor Bill -J's. :
"We aren't giving up, but we :·
weren't overjoyed at lbe
~eather ftrecast, Bes'dn,_, we
figure time hao to be oo our lkle
and we'll utilize it to JlfiC!Ice."
Ficker said the serillwutA»
Important to race &lt;11 live days aod called fJr the laJ
dsy so the crew could COOl'·
dlnate their efforts.
The Aussies plan to pl•k!Gathelr helmsmen again 'lbii1'11111
with Hardy, Martin VI..- ...
David Forbes sharlnc lbe
wheel. The Intrepid wiU lllliCI
pat.

State of Ohio, Department of
Insurance,
Certlficlte
of
Compl ianc e
The un dersigned , Superintendent of
IMuran ce of the State of Ohio,
hereby certifies that GAMBLE
ALDEN LIFE INSURAN(E
COMPANY, at Chic ego, State of
Illin ois, has compiled With the
laws ot this Stele applicable to It
and is authoriz'd during the
current year to trensect In the
state its appropriate business of
insurance. Its financial condition is s·nown by its annual
statement to ha11e been 11
fOllows on December 31, 1P69:
Adm i tted ass.ets, $28,236,796.93 ;
liabilities. S24,160,769.27; Net
Assets, 14,076,027.66; Ceplfll,
Sl, 100 , 000 . 00;
Surplus,
$2.976,027 . 66;
lncomt.

142,&lt;1~,708 . 99;
Expenctlturn.
$20.003.32&lt;1 .25.
WITNESS WHEREOF, I hlvt
hereunto subscribed my nemt
and caused mv seal to be If·
fixed at Columbus. Ohio, this
day and date, July 1, 1970, Fred
B. Sm fth, Superlntendtftt of
Insurance of Ohio .

SHOES FOR GIRLS

The Jack Pot
Black or

public hearings here Oct. 6 before drafllng the party's 1970
state platform.

TEENY

60PP E.R ~ ,...---- Brown

''!!"'~"'''·~ iV·.~ ~'l.'~/~'!t,
.,

..

··+':' :::')...''''·''; :: ·•

propriate and unforgettable
tribute to the wondrous world of
RlngUng Bros. and Barnum &amp;
Baney Circus - truly, The
Greatest Show on Earth.

l;t ....
. "·' !l•''

Intrepid skipper BUI Ficker
was quicker oo five of the six
legs In Tuesday's race. He
gained a slight lead at the slarl
and was never headed as the
defender made the first turn in
46 seconds, maintained that
margin thropgb the second
reach leg and raised it lo 56
seconds m Ute third turn. The
fourth leg to windward cut
Intrepid's lead to 53 seconds,
but she gained ground on
Gretel's tactical error on the
fifth leg to lead by I: 16.
"That filth turn was the key
point In the race," Ficker said.
"We jibed over to starboard al
just the right lime and Gretel

and spectacular Ringling Bros.
and Barnum 6: Bailey extravaganza of ali time, unfolds
in all its glory.
Scores of people and anlmals
blend In a magntllcant montage
of futuristic fantasies, in-

,, 1

UPI Sports Writer
NEWPORT. R.I. fUPI )Gretel skipper Jim Hardy w'l:'
-laced with the almoot impossible task today ol .wlming four
straight Amerl&lt;a's Olp races.
Defending Intrepid gained a
~ lead in the best-of ... ven
series for the coveted bottomless cup with a minute and 18
second victory Tuesday, but the
margln isn't a clear~ut indication of the commanding lead
since Gr.,tel's second race
vlclilry was reversed In favor of
the u.s. boat.
Intrepid's latest triumph was
accunpllshed In heavier winds
and the forecast for Thursday's
fourth race indi&lt;alea the same
weather condltioos.
- Hardy's inatch race dilemma
Is one that few skippers,
managers and coaches have
surmounted In sports .. A lo1111
Thursday also sends iJUng Sir
Frank Packer, the financial
backer of Gretel, ba&lt;k to

~ 1..::-·•.

ANlHONY

'H'

. '" '

'Pium.ing-Heatfng

lb.

Size ·Bfh-ll''''·

Your Dependable

. ·'1

n': · 1910

~

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Dealer For
HEA, 1...:.

PlUMBING

Today's. fUNNY ...-ill por $1.00 for
toch ~Jftginal"funn( u1rd. Stnd ll"fl
to. Todor'• fUNNY, 1200 W•ll Tfl,.d

THE
SHOE
BOX
Where Shoes Are
Priced

AND

HEATING

St., Clenlend, Oilio -14111

Phone WY 2-2550

.

Sensibly
MIDDLEPORT,O.

lluildtnc

.': ''Y..::C

BIS

.;;..-:;:

Cop' n John Fall Secrlocxl ·Solei/
•
FRIEl

...

flEIIIH·_ •••

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~~ ;~; lllcbrd was Hllule Co!lferen&lt;e'
ttork shower by In 19'12, the goalies,:!:~:::
_' VICki• Jt~aoh, the White Hquse n
-·and Je~nlfer Ailnc wlU be cttrled

11

·

""i:;'j!t.;

ond •tjoilal, 'tate, and
&lt;'l'llo •ut .White E
--·•. -r.·
fer•- on Acing, )leld
to reeulted In q,e pasaage
Me41"-""e ACt and the
.~~ whhicllicll,c;~
-~~'~ ·rfK"aa -·of pr08J
ly.
'it
, The · · r America,. _,,.'11IN~·T;~
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u. s. No. 1

Round;. USJ)A.Choice

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ATTUPPERS PLAINS

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Dairy Buys

DRUMSTICKS
PIG. OF 6

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AT RUTLAND

RED
RADISHES

RUTLAND
t
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fi

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To
Limit

Quantittos

15$
BANQUET
ASSORTED

CRISCO
POT PIES
5 :$} i: 89°

BUnERMILk

Pure Vegetable Shortening

*gat 43~

MRS. FILBERTS
SOFT OLEO

-

'M
.
; . ~.RGARINE
. 1

2"tt

Clorox Jl
DRY BLEACH

�__
.

!,

..

.

To Offer Rare Concert.:· Events

~

,... .

I

.~·.

l

• ! ~.•

'·

nwnber of outstanding and
varied concerts, both in
Gallipolis and In cities in the
surrounding area.
Last season, for the price of
an individual membership In
tile local asoocial1on, Tri·
County membero could enjoy 27

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&lt;X&gt;MMUNITY &lt;X&gt;NCERT MEMBERSHIP DRIVE TIME AGAIN- Mrs. Ted Reed Jr.,
left, Melgs County Area c:hairmPn, attended a coffee Tuesday morning at the borne of Mrs.
Eldon Wuerch, 5 Glendale Dr., In GalJtpolls when plans were completed for tile annual membership drive which begins Sept. 21. Mrs. Lewis Sclmlidt i's general chairman. Also in the
picture are Mrs.lDuls Ford, Jr. and Mrs. RusseiiBibbeO,Pl. Pleasant.

selected.
The Waverly series is also

incomplete at this time, but
already includes "Three on
Broadway" and the First

appear on the Ashland, Ky .,
sertea this coming season, along
with Longstretll and Escosa,
duo harpists, and the Colwnbia
Operatic Trio, witll more to be

The Zanesville association
wtU present, in three Sunday

afternoon concerts, Fred
Waring and the Pennsylvanians, Jose Greco, and I

/

b:lJ.miBilS

(IJPJ) - The
MlQrJpal lap said
, ' lltanlaJ the lillie. Is '1tleed
'111111 amo• llniiiCial pres_
.. bat lbe Gelwal Asaem·
lily llbould taR Into amlderaIIGn ~impact on the future of
IPII!Idpal llnance1 before tak·
lng MY action on tax re!onn.
'"lhon can be 110 question

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-1 ,;\NCASI'ER - Final plaqs Hlj:ll ~"'1 . oo -~. ·
are now being made f..- the IAUICiSIB, ott.. CQIII ~ b!ltll
I
I Doug Arnett for CnngJ'OllS FU!)t.l· dinner and recepli&lt;oJ li JIG .....
' BfAJI!IlOuiii~ RAW~K business, .lowers tile quaUiy of expel]llve C~~®nullng, Be!ot_i
Raising Dinner and Reception. perJOO.
may bl •
WASHIN9'fON &lt;Ufil - 'lbo- life and tllreatellS the stablllly
rile of the ~bl, DWit
By Clarence
The event will feature former talned by
Doug Anl&gt;AI
mas Hobtiea 'wrote: '"''he of society In both auburhe and uilskUled workers cOuld get to
Ambassador
to
France,
f..Cofll!"'ll·
. privilege of alisurlllty, to whlql) · cities.
· •
their Jobs in the cftlea on toot
I
Miller
!016, Athens, Ohio, Q1.
' no living ereature Is su)llect ~~
. Houoing l'pt i!flnorlllet •· or by. pUb&amp; tranaportation,
I
1 Sargeant Shriver.
The
dinner
iil
acheduiOd
to
be
man • on!)&lt;." .. ~ore recenUy, It even offends histoey: E:rber Sllya, _but tllcley the
I
I
hel!l 'lbur.llcley ,. !)clober I, at
·3oaeph Iff~ 'IIUIIUtled II up as, ""'erjcana are the people who dialances are longer and the
..catcb ~.'.' l'j~ c?!l'e• Emesl .l!'aV'tted ~ of inlles transit se~Jces are poorer'.
At a time when this nation's shuldowna. Studente abound but 7:30 p.m. at F81rfleld Union
"'' .• Erber safirlil ."Tiie, Job$ go over· dangerllil8 oceans 8llli llut can t these people find
values are under attack and an tile quality of education ~
w~tero ,Utl. jio.oN:an'l."
' hoatUelllnd to find WW~· Now houaln• in tl\1! aubttrhe? Er&amp;er
datl~·n,tsloof-nctonprevtemapllsl amonandg flahlelen. Mpoorepullhanatt'on22 pt!rrecenmatlnofs n.JJ '11'-ll--- : ..
Erber, r.• arth director ·of they can't ride a fe\y iilllea o11 · aaya Ute process of housing left
_., _____ · vua .1' ~ •.,.
Ute National Conuntttee Against the world's .bell roads to get to bel!ln4 by,suburiJan.bound t;itiz.
those wlio decry our system, I Ullterate. Castro has said the
· [)1sertmtriation 111 Housing ls !obs.
·
c
0!11 "filtering down" to the poor
think It Is Important to offer a nation clesperalely needs 7,000
talking about !he following Now, ErJ,er ·otmouslr 11 operated In the c!U~, but
contrast to Ibis negativism and teschero. Witll a military man
tldlculoua situation; Hundreds.. trying to sell 'some~Jttn#. ~ shOWJ Utile atgn of working In
atack America's state ol affairs as the Minister o! Education,
eRnetltlee r
of tho~ of poor people In w81lte housing In the IUburhe even the older suburbs of New
tiJI against tllat of another plans are underway to in·
'·
- the l!illtl can't ·find ~. for poor blacks and other ;York. . wblcb ' ~J~Jy not be
nation- which 12 yeara ago corporate the school syatem
•
.Titouslnds of bualnessmen In minorities. So he can be asked ' laahlonable but are cottventent
ushered In Conununilt tloclrlne under the military.
· the 'iUburiNt C8}1't lind workers, to back up hl.t claims ~ he to the cl!)o • There are Ill*'
ROBERT MURPHY
and hustles out America ' 1 UnempiO)'BIODt II higher thtm
~en for unskilled and Semi· saya (in the Labor Deitarlmenl boullng laws deatgned to help
friendship.
ever and the Gl'Oitl National
PT. I'IEASANT- Local Odd
akUJed Jobs.
·
~J~Jgazlne Manpower) thai the mlnorltlea, of course, but even
u ..
Cuba, 90 miles from our Product - the yardaUck of a Feilowt will be watching for
TbJt Is an aheurdlty for a weiJ.Imown trend lolianl'black wbere theY are enforced the
u
lr.l- .t'.. coastline has now known 12 nation's economic health - is news l'l!porta of the annual
•I1WIIberofec9d0mtc,soclaland cities. ' enctrcled by white poor set lillie benefit because I' n.:....
years of'Red rule under lbetr dropping. Proper medical. care sesslona of the International
fOlltlcal reasona. It hurls suburba '"creates ~Uy
the ~ use zonJilg laws .Ill rnJTIIO
dictator, Fidel Castro. And lor Is also feeling the pinch. There Order of Odd Fellows meeting
'" ; . ·
clallabcir shortages."
· and other polltlcal mean.a to
all hla glamCX' atop a tank back are 180 Inhabitants per hospital Ibis w'eek in GaUinburg, Tenn.
Erbernotesihatbetween195t bloet conalrucllon of new low·
RoberlM.Murphy,sonofMr. whenlnllavana,andhisrabble- bed and Infant mortality~ 40 Sept.19-25.
and 1967, New York City lost 0011, aparlment-type housing and Mr~- Mavin E. Murphy of rousing words, his Jedcer of deafllS per 1,000 births. An
New1!J18per publisher Donald
'.
DRIVE~N
factory
Jobs
whtle
111
that
the.poor
can
afford.
Reedsville,
has
~·
promoted
promises
lor
joba,
equality,
additional
tragedy
now
R.
Smltll of Unden, Calif., will
47110
suburbs gained 138,440. lit says Erber's proposed solution Is to Specialist. S ill tile 1·73rd progress and power is now a prevailing is tllat the highly be completing hla year as
this Just represente the Up of to stop building moat of the Armor DIVISion of tile U. S. record of failure and excuses. skilled segment of the Sovereign Grand Master .
an Iceberg: The sulntrbs gained public and otheuubsldi...J """ Army.
Castro's experiment In population is leaving the island SUcceedtng htm to this office
. far more Jobs In 'letalllng, lt!lOt•ns In the ghettos: "Much
Spectslist Murphy _compte~ Marxism has very nearly in search of a system free of wiU be Samuel J. Patterson of
service establishmente, aiiUUes of !be elfort should go Into the hl.t basic and advanced training brought Cuba to the brink of increasing governmen l Philadelphia, who is a service
and lhellke In the same pertnd. 111lturba, where tile new joba at Fort Gordon, Ga., and was ruin, and this, in IIJllle of f1.5 repression. Techniciana and the slaUon owner In that city.
But can't blacks, Puerto are."
tllen stationed at Fort Hood, billion dollars Jzi aid from the well-educated are migrating to The annual sessions of the
••
Ricans and olhers commute to piO...~~~-----• TelOS, lor f&gt;Ye monfllS. He 18 Soviet Union. Moat of Castro's the U. S. by greater nwnbero Grand Lodge of West VIrginia
•
jobs
In
the
suburbs?
Erber
HOSPITAL
NEWS
presenUy
a
morning
report
problema
are
based
on
the
every
year.
wiD
be
held
October
s-3
In
: eQufck
studied the Ford Motor Co.
Hotrer Medical Center, First clerk wtth Headquarters Co. at economy. Sugar has been, and
We 're more fortunate in Parkersburg. Harry G. Jobnson
•
• Convenient
plant at Mahwah, N.J., where Ave. and Cedar St. General Fort Beavers, Korea, ~nd is remains, tile main export.
America. We are the best In· of Nitro will be presiding.
•Courteous 2,000 blacks work. Most must visiting hours 2-4 and HI p.m, scheduled to complete his tour Cuba is foreed to take drastic formed people on earth. More Pnlnt Pleallllnl Odd Fellows
travel 20 to 40 mites a dey by Maternity •·tlin h
2·30' to of duly tn M~y, 1971. His ~e, new steps It) an atU!mpl to head than Bmillion Cubans, however, have been reminded that the
v.. g ours ·
the former Stna Summerfteld
"•h
car to and from wort because 4:30 p.m. Parents only on esides .lh h
,_ , • off further economic diaasters are subjected to ....,.t govern- starling time for the fraternal
public transportation Js d&amp;- Pedlalrlca Ward.
r
WI
er paren.. m in the wake of Castro's vain mont-controlled media. There group's weekly meettngs will be
· Fridays Only
signed to move people into tile
Blrlltl
Reedsville.
effort to produce 10 million tona are 33 government • owned changed to 7:30p.m. effective
The Drive· hi Window
city and back to tile suburhe at
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil R. son, Mrs. GeCX'ge Freeland, of sugar this year.
radio stations with but 166 · October I. The Lodge meetS at8 116 E. lnd
Is Open
PomtfOY
PlloneH2-5421
9 A.M. to7 P.M.
tile very limes when the Ford Wallon, Gallipolis, a cleughter; Frank T. Johnaon, Mrs. Melvin The effects of the faltering recelvero per 1,000 persons. o'clock In the swnmer monfllS.
' I ContinuousJyJ
workers are going In tile Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Park, E. Johnson and Infant son, Cuban economy reach Into tile There are 13 goverrunenl •
opposite direction. Absenleeiim Ra?J'SWood, a son; Mr. and Wilda c. Mannon, Lawrence homes and pocielbool&lt;a of tile owned TV stations and 10 daily
1JiNf lonldng ""'n t 10 ! at the plant Is exceptionally Mn. Lowell Swann, Oak Iltll, a Milhoan, Margaret A. Persons, islanders. There are honslng newspapers, all published
IfNI J. 'ta 7 II Ullf.ll on
htsher, ~ especially In bad daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald · Wayne Phtlllpa, Forrest R. shortages, Inadequate farm and under the eye of Costro's watch·
Frldiys.
driving weatller, and car D. GllltDil, Jackson, a son; Mr. Ruosell, Mro. Floyd E. Industrial equipment, and men. Only 88 copies of those
ownership, maintenance and ltlld l\lra. Gregory T. Hollman, Stapleton, Mrs. Albert J. frequent power and water papers reach every 1,000 peroperation is prohibitive for New Haven, a son; Mr. and Thlvener, Mrs. Delphia N.
sons.
I
many city residents, Erber Mrs . John F. Wamsley, Wllson, WUJiamL. WIIson,Mrs.
Thoogh America, for all its
says.
Cheahtre, a cleughter; and Mr. Lewill Bowen, Mrs. Charles ai~L-Jillts
wonder, has giant slep!t yet to
•.
ExpeulveCommatlng
and Mrs. James R. FIIUnger, Jenkins and Infant son, Mrs. lF~eu&amp;UU
be taken In housing; education,
Pomeroy, Ohio
But
retail
and
service
Johe
Crown
City,
a
daughter.
Earl
Hunt,
Mrs.
Cells
Martin,
civil
rights, and employrnen~
'll'lember FDIC
generally pay quite a btl less
Dllebar&amp;es
Mrs. . Dennis McKinney' Ln~ _J +~
we nevertheless know that ours
Member Federol
than manufacturing, and such
Mrs. Darv1n L. Bloomer, Mrs. Douglas Merrill, and Russell
vueu ...,
is a Relible system and one
· Re!erve Svstem
workers
usually
cannot
afford
Howard
J.
BOQS
and
Infant
Sheets.
which
abaorhe tragedy and
'
thrives on progreso and In·
dividual freedom. Our system is
responsive to change and not
one which tllreatens to bury the
PT. PLEASANT - United first sign of public dissent or
Methodist men and women In disgust. The democratic system
tile Tri-County area of Mason, allows Americans to work
Gallla and Meigs counties are together lor tne eradication of
Invited to a Sptrttual Llle Wee~ .tile cominon enemies of man '" *'~tWd'JN 'DDMD~~tw , • .
of l!evlvll itnd·RefiOWlil•ln -llie war. 1HlferiJ.- and l!lseaae":..:·'·
1•Urtrm · r.n~~g 'JriJ
Johnson Memorial United r.U.er thtm becoming slaves to
Methodist church In Huntington them. The glory of America is
Sept. 'rl through October 2.
that we care about this nation
Dr. L. Bevel (Bev) Jones, one not only because uf what abe
of the Soutll's oulllanding pre- was, but what she will be.
achers, who serves a church In
Atlanta, Ga., will be tile
speaker. In addition to tile 7: 30
p.m. services, Bible study
groups will be directed in
morning services at 10:30 a.m.
'l1te boat church has planned a
dialrlct laymen's night Sept. 21;
lamliy night Sept. 29; a special
CHROMACOLOR
100
youth nlghl Sept. 30, and
'
..
Thursday night, October 2,
members
of Women's Society of
Featuring a new, more powerful Handcra!ted Chassis .. .
A,..~mpletely new Chromacolor Tv ay•te;., that btlngs you
Christian
Services as well as a
and a naw, more brilliant color picture tube. With a sharper
a colo' picture tar bfightar with. truer color.s, sharper detail
of Men's Bowling
number
electron
beam
that
P.inj)ol~ts and tully Illuminates ... every
· and gniiter contrast ttHin. e"'er before in TV of th(l tc;reen
color dot on a Jel black background . .. to bring you a new
League
groups
wiU attend In
~ ·, 'eize categolyl · · l
·
•
Chromacolar p10fure . , . 10 much brighter, so much sharper
special groups .
. . : with so much g_reater contrast and delail. You really
· Nliw lronJ. 'zenith! C&lt;&gt;lor rv~·:Biggest Picl~rtl ~
·· . .
have 1o .,. ·h . '. . 10 . •
it1 New Chromacotor 100. On.
25~ dlag~~·l SUPEA·SCA&amp; 1'1 Color lV PI&lt;·
,

I R eport

I
I

jo

Other associations who offer

reciprocity to Tri-Counly
me.'tlbers, but who have not yet
announced
their series
schedules are Portsmoutll and
Marietta
TCCCA members will receive
a complete calendar of all area
concerts when membership
cards are mailed to them at the
dose of the drive.

Kent's

.~te

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Kent
Slate University President Rpberll. While is trying not to be·
oome overly alarmed by
rwnors tllat the campus will
be btl by violence this faD.
"ll il&lt; Impossible to mamtaln
a perpetual feeUng "f crisis,"
White told faculty and staff
membero ,Tuesday in a meetmg to diSCUSS the opening of
tile school next Mbnda~. "The
rumor mill ~or~ overt~ and
IS ,:"'If-fulfilling.
No one mlends to d~sard
alal'lllll, but as far as I m concerned, we ''&lt; going to face
them one by one," he said.
Kent State was sllut down
after tile May 4 k!l~g of four
studente and woundilis, uf nine
othen; In a confrontation with
National Guard troops on U10
campus. It reopened for awnmer quarter and no tncldente
occurred.
While warned tllat the uni·
versity was more ready this
fall to counter student diarup·
Uons. He aaid highway patrolmen, if needed, ''would be here
much more quickly and In
greater nwnbers

...,..J.y
ted

BANKING

'

I '

'·

Keeps ;His.Cool . .

RQ1'Cbulldingdurlngonen!ghl been received at buildings on clasaeastart theQIIIIPIII!pollce
of trooble.
thecampus.,.ecent.ty. The latest force will ~ lar.er and new
"ROTC I• Sla)'IJII"
clune 'l'ue.lday and olllcW. ssld · dtsclpllne procedi!IU will be·In
But While reaffirmed his In· flte NJDe male voice who tela· effect
,
..
tenllon to keep .tile military pbailed the olbet tllre,all made
·
'
training program. ''ROTC II tl. 1. building was evacuated,
staymg with us, and we ure but DO bClmb wu lourul
not planning ~bandon it," ~ KentStateolflclalaann~
said.
clelllls of an instant communi·
. ~.university, he ssld, will eations sy•fem whtcli wiU be
g1ve attention to orderly oper•. in effect itartlng 11801 t week.
allons. and to expanded ctm- Under Ill+ Operation of a ~Pemuntcatlons, participation and claJ uslstant to the l!fOIIdent
Involvement in tile means of . lor crisis operations, John .
deve~:'f'lng a campus commu- llugginan, lbe system tncluclel
nlty.
a rlcllo ~!work whtcll would
"I do appeal to people ,to 11sue bullellna to sludenll, par·
take a look at the entire pack· enll and othera.
age ollhe s~s we have tallen Cttdcai telepbolle lines would
before nne/ applauds or con· be kept open by Pt:ior arrqedemns any one acUon .and I mont with Ohio Bell. '
think they'D see a rationale
In add!Uon security In dorml·
which would provide lor tllat t«leeJ wlll ·be tighl2ned when
one issue being In there even
·
tllough it might be an unhappy
one," White said.
A "vast amount" · of work·
was d"!"' during the swnmer,
Cr.ebl&amp; Ia CODCftll .
he said, and ·''we are moving
Croekett, the fa·
down two' rQalls." ·
dI
seoul, was
''One. Is a motion toward orto
derly ,;
" . he ,...W.

2-HOUR

CLEANING :

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

BAKER September

. .1HE

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS 00.

..

..

Huntington

...

1198

against campus diarupUQnS if it
was warranted.
The de111011StraUons that led
to the diaastrouo confrontation
May 4 were In pari to protest
the movem:.nt 'of
'tiwps
Into Cambodia Rampaelng students burned down' the campus

u.s.

dJsalter'' the
university Ia forced to ahul
·clown lhJa faU '
· .
"Keeping
lbe univetalty '
Ia the prime ~onsi~aUon," he
said
·
·
.
~eral bGmb lbreall
·a '1eelin&amp; of

oPen

h.ve

-

L~ution

:l

Pomeriggi Musicali di Milano.
Appearing on the Charleston,
W.Va., series will be the Royal
Uppsala University Chorus;
UlU• Angels of Korea; David
Bsr-Dlan, pianist; the Pilla·
burgh Symphony Orchestra,
and Mildred Miller, mezzosoprano.

Mrs. Bray has a list of things a shotgun ."'
upsets them," abe said,
a woman can do when she re- "Needless to say, the woman
Mrs. Bray believes that H a
ceives one or the calls.
did not have a visitor," she woman lives alone, she should
"About 98 per cent of the added.
use good judgment In having
lime after a woman does one Another tip she gives is that her phone number listed in tile
or two of the tricks on a per· the woman, especially il she directory.
sistenl caller, he will quit," she lives alone and receives the
"II tile woman insists on hav·
said.
call, can Interrupt the caller b)' ing her nun1ber listed and she
Mrs. Bray tells about the jiggling the button and saying: lives alone, I suggest she have
man who calls with the tine : ''Operator, thu is the phone tile number listed through her
"Mrs. So-and-So, I knQ)V yow: call I w.~ telling you about.'J., itli,lial.l, rather .l!Jan.her
~li - a t hOlM, so d&lt;&gt; . ·.-Tile ·JlOIIe&lt;~'NIW' .~~lair ..,.~, or·ll!ilh -Mil!l !Jr',t.ri; \ n
you-mind If l come over."
the woman could ask.AN caller of the name/ ' slle. said,
'!"'' advice is usually to hang to hold on for a minute unUJ
The veteran policewoman,
"!'on tile caller and not talk to abe gels her husband to listen who serves on the force's pubhun, but she said one woman on the extension.
lie affairs staff, advises a worn·
told her:
She warns women not to slam an that ~ she receiv!!S obscene
"I just told Ibis caller : the receiver down on a caller, calls she sbould notify the po'Please do, my husband is not but to push tile button on the lice and even the telephone
at h~n~e, but my brotller-in.Jaw phnne .
company who can work toIs, and he will be waiting wtlh
"Hanging up on them, really getller to apprehend lhe caller.

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lelh•rsy

IIIII'IJuana I

Chamber Dance Company .

a&gt;LUMBUS (UP!)- Women
can play an important role in
putting a halt to and even preventing obscene and harassing
telephone calls.
This is the advice given by
nationally known policewoman
Jeanne Bray of the Colwnbus
Pollee Department.
Mrs~ Bra~,a1Dp pistol shooter wltJ:l; '11'~ trlll#'!f-.' "'Jil
the -..an,'by-lier aeUons and
response on the phone, C311 annor, the caller.
A man who calls a w?man
really gets a tick out of listening to a woman's voice," she
OIP~- "Mally times he
doesn l even know the woman
he Is calling."

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a • vicious

ntaHJuana · lnd1ieea ~thar4

Ferrante and Teicher, will

By SANDI GOUW

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Right Answers Halt Callers

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R""bert

sasoclalions have already

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1970 Sesswns

preaented in 32 concerts
tllroughout the arn.
Several neighboring

extended reciprocity to TCCCi.
members for the coming
season. A concert by Victor
Borge and Company witl
hi8hlight the Parkersburg, W.
Va., series, which will also
present the Paris Chamber
Orcbestra and Louis Quilico,
who sang the baritone lead In
"Otello" in Cincinnati this
swnmer.
t:..ncaster has scheduled a
series which will Include Virgil
F~n, organi5ti the Canadian
Opera Company's presentation
of "Orpheus tn the underworld ;" the Johann Strauss
Ensemble of tile Vienna
Symphony Orchestra and Addia
and Croful, popular folk
singers.
The c'Jiebrated duo pianists,

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different ffil'!ical attractions

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unique opporJ11nity to attend a

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Job$~ Where

1l1e Tri-Counly Conm&gt;unily
Concert AssociaUon 's annual
series offersresidents of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason Counties the

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13 -'J'!teDaUysentlnel,Mitki~-Pomoroy,O.,Sept.23,,!170

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before Tax Reform Urg~

disputes.
'"!be Ferpson Act must be
diacll'ded In favor of cKiu!r Ul(l'O
meaningful !Mid realleuc sane·
tiona against striking em·
ployees and 111lions," the policy
statement IIIli!. "!be aancttons

provided should be strong
enough to enforce the 110 slriire
rule."
.,
Slllte To Share
'"!be evidence Ia clear and
mdisputed that state legtslation
llhould be enacted to -JI'Ovide a

~t!:.t ~ !~

Mason Area New'"-.., No. tes

how the stale Cl!" meet its
mpmllltiHNn lnevltablfleads
to- ~11 thai lbe liate
lll!»uld, In 11100 W&amp;J, mter lbe
lnelllll IU field," the League
said.
UilncomunJclpalgoftl1liDOIIt
In tliiG illlnanced to a large
exteO\ bJ municipal lncmle
Iaiii, JII'OPOII8ls calling lor
state ~ in lbe Income tax
..0 are of:·great concern to

MASON - Mlsle1 lltlen,
Ruth and Mae Bletner of
Malo
n, W. Va. eutertalned wlllt
a famlly l'l!lllion 111 &amp;lnday at
their home.l.ttendlng won Mr.
Clarmce Jlletner m of Muon,
&lt;llio; Mr. and Mrs. Oarence
Blelner II, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Blebler I of Belle, W.
va.
Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Bletner,

..ui Robert

turn made theJr Identity lmown

to the •-'•.

.--~· Marie RIIWib, principal
al Muon Grade School, annomced that the parenti were
Invited to the chDdren's
daBoom to m&lt;iet w111t lbe
child's or cblldrm'a teachers.
11 was annOWICed that 1"1'~
membership cards are
available for 75 cents .

Bar:

fair and lmparliaJ ~ lpr
tile l'l!80111lim of labor cllsPules
between public employers ,llld
employeo," II ssld. "It Is Jllo
ev;ldent tllat·a'ltate labor boN-d
Ia the belt forum In which \o
vest tllis reaponsibUity ."
'lbe •cftlllllittee al8o aaid ·that
munlc\pal govenunenta are In
need ''substanttsllncreases"

of

f1mdo fot matcbliw ~ pro-

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by

gral)lll.
·
lllr
It alio recollllll!iUied that the
state no!' lnipoae new slandarda ,
and
regulat10111
.U)!91i ·
lll!lliciPIIIII Unleu the ate .
)t'Ovlclet lundli to llnpi&amp;nent l08IOii to
them.
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Other recOIIllllOlld8tloria IJi. and

cl~:

tnsta"BnanclalassJa~~~oceond -'lbestateasawnet~~ecoa~ot

'tuN 1~8 you .,e more of l picture beqaus1 , .
It's fl rectangular as a· ~rv sCreen can be, ' ·
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·Compact·s'iza'ca'tJin$1 it~' ·.
ora!n~ Ama'l'lc)n '(f:AJnut
1 t:Oia~- Tit•n Hendcmifiect c- ·•

m..

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' 19" diagonal SUI!E~·SCAE~N Color TV pic·

ture leiS you -.it more Of thlif Pictu're because
11'!1 ilr reetan'gi.tlar'· ~· • ..
·ar;;reeri can be.
,.

C:ha11ia. Chrom.cOJo-r Picture
Tube. Solld·Sttte SuP!Pr
•
Vidt01~hSJI TuninG Sylftnl•· ' ' .
'• ;en. llh
5"'JC 3• Tw,in·Co{l., ;:t ~ ,l
. ~llf•~er..
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"'C·

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ry.
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Meigs

Property
Transfers

ROUND

BEEF

e·w t;l-·ven

Social

~~~~:~~~~~~:~!$!;!&amp;

lb.- who mua1the
provide
Lowell
thewas
business
me..... . Mr.
weekend
Villllng
\belrMcDaniel.
parents, Mr., .and. MrHIIIIR
. " Ma)'lllll'tl. . .Mi:;,an!l
. . Mrs.
. .' Ja~t
. , Frey
. !,lave
_ . , ,. .
ciplllei'VIcel,"
~aguemunl Mr andandMra
~.
all ofKlein Following
the meeting
adjourned~"'
~I.Mn.
Curtis
In a ll.llcleat outllnlna its of. berlon,Ohlo; Mr. and Mrs. Bert
OOVPLE ~
,, Mfl, HMold Schwan:, Mlaon, entertall)ed W:llll a llitthclel' Jl!ll returned after ll!irlni' are~.
ftclalleJioJallw policy.
Bletner, Sarah, SUaaMe !Mid
WEST a&gt;LUMBIA _Miss vlsltedTuesdayandW~y dinner and' party lb· llon4r of visited lflth lbelo son ~)~t .tlii.$''Jegllllil\)ll:
~'.egl•l•tlvecom- John of Colwnbua, Ohio; Mr. Kalhj Boe&amp;U, west· Coiumbla, with her .daughter and ~arut.. their son, Pau) lfa~nard, leJilil)',, Mr. ,and Mn. WJulanl ·~ ~.
mltlee noi!lll that ov« 280 mun- and Mrs. Herman Blelller !Mid and Mr. Manllall Blimd, son, Mrs._Mirtlyn Heller and recenUy at ~ Jicia!t· ~ Frey ·lind dauchter, Joanil ~t
tclpallllee ~ 1ev,y1ng an daushters, Sue, · Becky and Leta1, w. va. were Wured In Ted in Plirkershurg, W. Va.
al!endlng were ~~ lrioll\ira. Salida, Co)o. , They wen ac• ·,. ,,
JneomelaJ:JIId 11 hal become a Carolyn of Lem, w. Va.
marriage 111 ~ 1t a1
Mrs. lAurene Lewis, yistted Russell May,nard of Point companied b)'
io1J ~ '· '
' very ~ lilurce o1 rev6:30p.m. at the west Cbliimbla laat .wetk ·With her siste!-, Mrs. Pleaunt; Mr. ah!l IIIJ, David of Mi.tltueo,
'to' ,B'U: '
•-lor the commtmttlea.
PTA MEETS
'United Methodist Olureb.
Ann l!:rwlaat SoulhJide, W:.v,, -~llle. Terri and Debbie t1- lllljjton, ~re
""
•Toe~
Mra. Rllsemary Samsel,
'!be Revert!lid Mrs.• llerntce QaW!t Blake, seven montb oil! MiddlepOI'I, .o.; ·TI)e honqree Plllsburgh
"lllale legtslatlm affectlnl Mason, presided at the firll IVinldft' jierformed lite double cleughter ol Mr. and Mrs. andr.lrs.J'Ilu!Ma)'lli!i'dandthe
lncaiDe t.ratlon lhould qol be Mason Grade School PTA rtnr~Y· ,
· Denver Blake, has • lleen hoal and!!t~l.ea,_.,, and Mrs,.·
. )lrOIIOied without careful and meeting of tllis school year m
Qle Is the daughter of Mr. l'l!turned to her home from the J - Ma~ ••:,
.
~
*'-llttdras toils impact m Tuesday. Officers for tbe year ·ErlcBoe&amp;llandtllegroom Is the ~&amp;ant Va¥ey Hospllll ~ ' Mt, and Mni, J~~ Mllynard
.'lbe futtn of muntelpal fin. were elected as foUowa: 100oiMr.andMro.Marvbt a, ilie, wa.hoaplltalizedwlth~t:·. rJI!~ In lne,z: . ~. •teeenUy
111cea," the League said. "Res- )ll'esident, Bnh OUwr; vice Jlalld, letart, W.Va.
.lnfepllon anti fever.
with Mrs. :·1\faY!Jai'd'• mo.ther,
;Jlllllllble mon can diaagree, but president,. Mar7 Roush;
The tr1de given 1n marriage
Mr. andMts. Lester Johnibn, Mrs. v...., Preece, and ¥r
·niiPtiltJible 111011 llhould under· secretary, Joann Taylor and
her father, wore a blue ID!lt Mr:· and Mrs. Harold Rickard sister, Afn'l Allen. The:y also
.-and lhillbe p-obleml of local treasurer, EwJyn Rotlgen.
A-&amp;e dresa with a ~J~Jtchlng visited over \ the weekend wl~ visited with Mr.. Maynard's
.,Yeftlllenlcatlnotbe.,lvedby Dta-inglbemeetlngthegroup Jlejjciplece wJtb ~il. Her cor· Mr.andMrll, JackJoltnsonand sl.tl&lt;ta
,famllielj, Mr.
--~ !run one and giving to wted to retain Mrs. aata uce •as wh~ carnations.
!anillP.I Glendale, W. Va'. "
Cline, Mr. and
_.."
lmlth as babysitter for parents Jllrl. David Hall, slater of the
La wren.~ McDermitt
and !anti)y
~ llcfslative JII'O«l'am wiU thalallend PTA meetings. They grOCllll, wu matron of honor. Nitro, W. v~. visited on ~Y.·
· Manyal'd
bi Jll'1iaented 1D lbe IM!nual 01tW Jllo decided ID apon10r the .Mt. David Hall, brothet'-in~aw .evenir1g With his sister ana
all
M1lftlclpal Conference which Brownie Scout Troop and of lite ~. I&lt;!I'Ved as belt fa~~;,IMr ·· and Mra, Uoyd
1riii bf,held het'f! Sept. 23-25. con!tnue the usual procedure' of man·. • ·
•"
Tile. ~ttee, if!. l!.t far giving a book ill the room that . . jlllembW4 of lhe . jlmnediate ' . •
~jql ~ ~~ has the greatest representation •lainllleal!ltended the 'iiedding.
~fat II* liliolltiM) of. the lit PTA meeting.
' . 11BOth the •lrld&lt; and groom
F~ I.e!
II uy.~ to
Mrs. Flasale Allenawor,th'~ !lllend~ \Yitltama Hl!h School.
m.UIIIeandfeplace It :111111 room won tile book award tor· Mr. 111~nd retu~ned from
er."ih•hi'olll4,~Unuetoban .Septanber. ·
. Vll'-inam in F~,
.!ltikflf 'ti)' piltiilt employe. but .Parehts Introduced thtm· . follol\'l.ng the wedding • ~~:::r~:~~.~~:~~;
whiclt, ~Ia set up, ~ stllte llel~ at the get actpUilzited ' rl'J'OIIIiail1yaihel~ ~~ tile home and
I.a~ ' Jl9ll•d fO· mediate ~eet""'· a•~ ~~; teache~s , In of lhr . grwdt' 't;ller• Mrs.
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selected ntw ~inch di!ID·' giant-screen consoles. And only
Zenith has
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recoJIIIIIended that the stale aid niatnialnlil• Interstate hl•lh.· ... ~
munh:.lpa!ltlea In provldln&amp;· W!'YIIvitbtn mUnldnal
.
,y • ·____
• _ _ _ lion .llmtts.
.; , ·
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-'lbePennlsll!~localmotor
~·~ 1111 •be ~. .
Wayne ZUrlher at letart, Rl. -1. _ _ _ _:...,._....,_ _
Mr. .00 Mrs. 1!1811d are
th.e
resldlnll al . .weat Coltanbla.
N'·
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Mra. Stanley Saunders and
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three- cl)lldren and Mrs. James
.·
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Loyd ·and two children• of ,
Columl:lus, Ohio, spent tile
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To Offer Rare Concert.:· Events

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nwnber of outstanding and
varied concerts, both in
Gallipolis and In cities in the
surrounding area.
Last season, for the price of
an individual membership In
tile local asoocial1on, Tri·
County membero could enjoy 27

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&lt;X&gt;MMUNITY &lt;X&gt;NCERT MEMBERSHIP DRIVE TIME AGAIN- Mrs. Ted Reed Jr.,
left, Melgs County Area c:hairmPn, attended a coffee Tuesday morning at the borne of Mrs.
Eldon Wuerch, 5 Glendale Dr., In GalJtpolls when plans were completed for tile annual membership drive which begins Sept. 21. Mrs. Lewis Sclmlidt i's general chairman. Also in the
picture are Mrs.lDuls Ford, Jr. and Mrs. RusseiiBibbeO,Pl. Pleasant.

selected.
The Waverly series is also

incomplete at this time, but
already includes "Three on
Broadway" and the First

appear on the Ashland, Ky .,
sertea this coming season, along
with Longstretll and Escosa,
duo harpists, and the Colwnbia
Operatic Trio, witll more to be

The Zanesville association
wtU present, in three Sunday

afternoon concerts, Fred
Waring and the Pennsylvanians, Jose Greco, and I

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(IJPJ) - The
MlQrJpal lap said
, ' lltanlaJ the lillie. Is '1tleed
'111111 amo• llniiiCial pres_
.. bat lbe Gelwal Asaem·
lily llbould taR Into amlderaIIGn ~impact on the future of
IPII!Idpal llnance1 before tak·
lng MY action on tax re!onn.
'"lhon can be 110 question

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1ngton

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-1 ,;\NCASI'ER - Final plaqs Hlj:ll ~"'1 . oo -~. ·
are now being made f..- the IAUICiSIB, ott.. CQIII ~ b!ltll
I
I Doug Arnett for CnngJ'OllS FU!)t.l· dinner and recepli&lt;oJ li JIG .....
' BfAJI!IlOuiii~ RAW~K business, .lowers tile quaUiy of expel]llve C~~®nullng, Be!ot_i
Raising Dinner and Reception. perJOO.
may bl •
WASHIN9'fON &lt;Ufil - 'lbo- life and tllreatellS the stablllly
rile of the ~bl, DWit
By Clarence
The event will feature former talned by
Doug Anl&gt;AI
mas Hobtiea 'wrote: '"''he of society In both auburhe and uilskUled workers cOuld get to
Ambassador
to
France,
f..Cofll!"'ll·
. privilege of alisurlllty, to whlql) · cities.
· •
their Jobs in the cftlea on toot
I
Miller
!016, Athens, Ohio, Q1.
' no living ereature Is su)llect ~~
. Houoing l'pt i!flnorlllet •· or by. pUb&amp; tranaportation,
I
1 Sargeant Shriver.
The
dinner
iil
acheduiOd
to
be
man • on!)&lt;." .. ~ore recenUy, It even offends histoey: E:rber Sllya, _but tllcley the
I
I
hel!l 'lbur.llcley ,. !)clober I, at
·3oaeph Iff~ 'IIUIIUtled II up as, ""'erjcana are the people who dialances are longer and the
..catcb ~.'.' l'j~ c?!l'e• Emesl .l!'aV'tted ~ of inlles transit se~Jces are poorer'.
At a time when this nation's shuldowna. Studente abound but 7:30 p.m. at F81rfleld Union
"'' .• Erber safirlil ."Tiie, Job$ go over· dangerllil8 oceans 8llli llut can t these people find
values are under attack and an tile quality of education ~
w~tero ,Utl. jio.oN:an'l."
' hoatUelllnd to find WW~· Now houaln• in tl\1! aubttrhe? Er&amp;er
datl~·n,tsloof-nctonprevtemapllsl amonandg flahlelen. Mpoorepullhanatt'on22 pt!rrecenmatlnofs n.JJ '11'-ll--- : ..
Erber, r.• arth director ·of they can't ride a fe\y iilllea o11 · aaya Ute process of housing left
_., _____ · vua .1' ~ •.,.
Ute National Conuntttee Against the world's .bell roads to get to bel!ln4 by,suburiJan.bound t;itiz.
those wlio decry our system, I Ullterate. Castro has said the
· [)1sertmtriation 111 Housing ls !obs.
·
c
0!11 "filtering down" to the poor
think It Is Important to offer a nation clesperalely needs 7,000
talking about !he following Now, ErJ,er ·otmouslr 11 operated In the c!U~, but
contrast to Ibis negativism and teschero. Witll a military man
tldlculoua situation; Hundreds.. trying to sell 'some~Jttn#. ~ shOWJ Utile atgn of working In
atack America's state ol affairs as the Minister o! Education,
eRnetltlee r
of tho~ of poor people In w81lte housing In the IUburhe even the older suburbs of New
tiJI against tllat of another plans are underway to in·
'·
- the l!illtl can't ·find ~. for poor blacks and other ;York. . wblcb ' ~J~Jy not be
nation- which 12 yeara ago corporate the school syatem
•
.Titouslnds of bualnessmen In minorities. So he can be asked ' laahlonable but are cottventent
ushered In Conununilt tloclrlne under the military.
· the 'iUburiNt C8}1't lind workers, to back up hl.t claims ~ he to the cl!)o • There are Ill*'
ROBERT MURPHY
and hustles out America ' 1 UnempiO)'BIODt II higher thtm
~en for unskilled and Semi· saya (in the Labor Deitarlmenl boullng laws deatgned to help
friendship.
ever and the Gl'Oitl National
PT. I'IEASANT- Local Odd
akUJed Jobs.
·
~J~Jgazlne Manpower) thai the mlnorltlea, of course, but even
u ..
Cuba, 90 miles from our Product - the yardaUck of a Feilowt will be watching for
TbJt Is an aheurdlty for a weiJ.Imown trend lolianl'black wbere theY are enforced the
u
lr.l- .t'.. coastline has now known 12 nation's economic health - is news l'l!porta of the annual
•I1WIIberofec9d0mtc,soclaland cities. ' enctrcled by white poor set lillie benefit because I' n.:....
years of'Red rule under lbetr dropping. Proper medical. care sesslona of the International
fOlltlcal reasona. It hurls suburba '"creates ~Uy
the ~ use zonJilg laws .Ill rnJTIIO
dictator, Fidel Castro. And lor Is also feeling the pinch. There Order of Odd Fellows meeting
'" ; . ·
clallabcir shortages."
· and other polltlcal mean.a to
all hla glamCX' atop a tank back are 180 Inhabitants per hospital Ibis w'eek in GaUinburg, Tenn.
Erbernotesihatbetween195t bloet conalrucllon of new low·
RoberlM.Murphy,sonofMr. whenlnllavana,andhisrabble- bed and Infant mortality~ 40 Sept.19-25.
and 1967, New York City lost 0011, aparlment-type housing and Mr~- Mavin E. Murphy of rousing words, his Jedcer of deafllS per 1,000 births. An
New1!J18per publisher Donald
'.
DRIVE~N
factory
Jobs
whtle
111
that
the.poor
can
afford.
Reedsville,
has
~·
promoted
promises
lor
joba,
equality,
additional
tragedy
now
R.
Smltll of Unden, Calif., will
47110
suburbs gained 138,440. lit says Erber's proposed solution Is to Specialist. S ill tile 1·73rd progress and power is now a prevailing is tllat the highly be completing hla year as
this Just represente the Up of to stop building moat of the Armor DIVISion of tile U. S. record of failure and excuses. skilled segment of the Sovereign Grand Master .
an Iceberg: The sulntrbs gained public and otheuubsldi...J """ Army.
Castro's experiment In population is leaving the island SUcceedtng htm to this office
. far more Jobs In 'letalllng, lt!lOt•ns In the ghettos: "Much
Spectslist Murphy _compte~ Marxism has very nearly in search of a system free of wiU be Samuel J. Patterson of
service establishmente, aiiUUes of !be elfort should go Into the hl.t basic and advanced training brought Cuba to the brink of increasing governmen l Philadelphia, who is a service
and lhellke In the same pertnd. 111lturba, where tile new joba at Fort Gordon, Ga., and was ruin, and this, in IIJllle of f1.5 repression. Techniciana and the slaUon owner In that city.
But can't blacks, Puerto are."
tllen stationed at Fort Hood, billion dollars Jzi aid from the well-educated are migrating to The annual sessions of the
••
Ricans and olhers commute to piO...~~~-----• TelOS, lor f&gt;Ye monfllS. He 18 Soviet Union. Moat of Castro's the U. S. by greater nwnbero Grand Lodge of West VIrginia
•
jobs
In
the
suburbs?
Erber
HOSPITAL
NEWS
presenUy
a
morning
report
problema
are
based
on
the
every
year.
wiD
be
held
October
s-3
In
: eQufck
studied the Ford Motor Co.
Hotrer Medical Center, First clerk wtth Headquarters Co. at economy. Sugar has been, and
We 're more fortunate in Parkersburg. Harry G. Jobnson
•
• Convenient
plant at Mahwah, N.J., where Ave. and Cedar St. General Fort Beavers, Korea, ~nd is remains, tile main export.
America. We are the best In· of Nitro will be presiding.
•Courteous 2,000 blacks work. Most must visiting hours 2-4 and HI p.m, scheduled to complete his tour Cuba is foreed to take drastic formed people on earth. More Pnlnt Pleallllnl Odd Fellows
travel 20 to 40 mites a dey by Maternity •·tlin h
2·30' to of duly tn M~y, 1971. His ~e, new steps It) an atU!mpl to head than Bmillion Cubans, however, have been reminded that the
v.. g ours ·
the former Stna Summerfteld
"•h
car to and from wort because 4:30 p.m. Parents only on esides .lh h
,_ , • off further economic diaasters are subjected to ....,.t govern- starling time for the fraternal
public transportation Js d&amp;- Pedlalrlca Ward.
r
WI
er paren.. m in the wake of Castro's vain mont-controlled media. There group's weekly meettngs will be
· Fridays Only
signed to move people into tile
Blrlltl
Reedsville.
effort to produce 10 million tona are 33 government • owned changed to 7:30p.m. effective
The Drive· hi Window
city and back to tile suburhe at
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil R. son, Mrs. GeCX'ge Freeland, of sugar this year.
radio stations with but 166 · October I. The Lodge meetS at8 116 E. lnd
Is Open
PomtfOY
PlloneH2-5421
9 A.M. to7 P.M.
tile very limes when the Ford Wallon, Gallipolis, a cleughter; Frank T. Johnaon, Mrs. Melvin The effects of the faltering recelvero per 1,000 persons. o'clock In the swnmer monfllS.
' I ContinuousJyJ
workers are going In tile Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Park, E. Johnson and Infant son, Cuban economy reach Into tile There are 13 goverrunenl •
opposite direction. Absenleeiim Ra?J'SWood, a son; Mr. and Wilda c. Mannon, Lawrence homes and pocielbool&lt;a of tile owned TV stations and 10 daily
1JiNf lonldng ""'n t 10 ! at the plant Is exceptionally Mn. Lowell Swann, Oak Iltll, a Milhoan, Margaret A. Persons, islanders. There are honslng newspapers, all published
IfNI J. 'ta 7 II Ullf.ll on
htsher, ~ especially In bad daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald · Wayne Phtlllpa, Forrest R. shortages, Inadequate farm and under the eye of Costro's watch·
Frldiys.
driving weatller, and car D. GllltDil, Jackson, a son; Mr. Ruosell, Mro. Floyd E. Industrial equipment, and men. Only 88 copies of those
ownership, maintenance and ltlld l\lra. Gregory T. Hollman, Stapleton, Mrs. Albert J. frequent power and water papers reach every 1,000 peroperation is prohibitive for New Haven, a son; Mr. and Thlvener, Mrs. Delphia N.
sons.
I
many city residents, Erber Mrs . John F. Wamsley, Wllson, WUJiamL. WIIson,Mrs.
Thoogh America, for all its
says.
Cheahtre, a cleughter; and Mr. Lewill Bowen, Mrs. Charles ai~L-Jillts
wonder, has giant slep!t yet to
•.
ExpeulveCommatlng
and Mrs. James R. FIIUnger, Jenkins and Infant son, Mrs. lF~eu&amp;UU
be taken In housing; education,
Pomeroy, Ohio
But
retail
and
service
Johe
Crown
City,
a
daughter.
Earl
Hunt,
Mrs.
Cells
Martin,
civil
rights, and employrnen~
'll'lember FDIC
generally pay quite a btl less
Dllebar&amp;es
Mrs. . Dennis McKinney' Ln~ _J +~
we nevertheless know that ours
Member Federol
than manufacturing, and such
Mrs. Darv1n L. Bloomer, Mrs. Douglas Merrill, and Russell
vueu ...,
is a Relible system and one
· Re!erve Svstem
workers
usually
cannot
afford
Howard
J.
BOQS
and
Infant
Sheets.
which
abaorhe tragedy and
'
thrives on progreso and In·
dividual freedom. Our system is
responsive to change and not
one which tllreatens to bury the
PT. PLEASANT - United first sign of public dissent or
Methodist men and women In disgust. The democratic system
tile Tri-County area of Mason, allows Americans to work
Gallla and Meigs counties are together lor tne eradication of
Invited to a Sptrttual Llle Wee~ .tile cominon enemies of man '" *'~tWd'JN 'DDMD~~tw , • .
of l!evlvll itnd·RefiOWlil•ln -llie war. 1HlferiJ.- and l!lseaae":..:·'·
1•Urtrm · r.n~~g 'JriJ
Johnson Memorial United r.U.er thtm becoming slaves to
Methodist church In Huntington them. The glory of America is
Sept. 'rl through October 2.
that we care about this nation
Dr. L. Bevel (Bev) Jones, one not only because uf what abe
of the Soutll's oulllanding pre- was, but what she will be.
achers, who serves a church In
Atlanta, Ga., will be tile
speaker. In addition to tile 7: 30
p.m. services, Bible study
groups will be directed in
morning services at 10:30 a.m.
'l1te boat church has planned a
dialrlct laymen's night Sept. 21;
lamliy night Sept. 29; a special
CHROMACOLOR
100
youth nlghl Sept. 30, and
'
..
Thursday night, October 2,
members
of Women's Society of
Featuring a new, more powerful Handcra!ted Chassis .. .
A,..~mpletely new Chromacolor Tv ay•te;., that btlngs you
Christian
Services as well as a
and a naw, more brilliant color picture tube. With a sharper
a colo' picture tar bfightar with. truer color.s, sharper detail
of Men's Bowling
number
electron
beam
that
P.inj)ol~ts and tully Illuminates ... every
· and gniiter contrast ttHin. e"'er before in TV of th(l tc;reen
color dot on a Jel black background . .. to bring you a new
League
groups
wiU attend In
~ ·, 'eize categolyl · · l
·
•
Chromacolar p10fure . , . 10 much brighter, so much sharper
special groups .
. . : with so much g_reater contrast and delail. You really
· Nliw lronJ. 'zenith! C&lt;&gt;lor rv~·:Biggest Picl~rtl ~
·· . .
have 1o .,. ·h . '. . 10 . •
it1 New Chromacotor 100. On.
25~ dlag~~·l SUPEA·SCA&amp; 1'1 Color lV PI&lt;·
,

I R eport

I
I

jo

Other associations who offer

reciprocity to Tri-Counly
me.'tlbers, but who have not yet
announced
their series
schedules are Portsmoutll and
Marietta
TCCCA members will receive
a complete calendar of all area
concerts when membership
cards are mailed to them at the
dose of the drive.

Kent's

.~te

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Kent
Slate University President Rpberll. While is trying not to be·
oome overly alarmed by
rwnors tllat the campus will
be btl by violence this faD.
"ll il&lt; Impossible to mamtaln
a perpetual feeUng "f crisis,"
White told faculty and staff
membero ,Tuesday in a meetmg to diSCUSS the opening of
tile school next Mbnda~. "The
rumor mill ~or~ overt~ and
IS ,:"'If-fulfilling.
No one mlends to d~sard
alal'lllll, but as far as I m concerned, we ''&lt; going to face
them one by one," he said.
Kent State was sllut down
after tile May 4 k!l~g of four
studente and woundilis, uf nine
othen; In a confrontation with
National Guard troops on U10
campus. It reopened for awnmer quarter and no tncldente
occurred.
While warned tllat the uni·
versity was more ready this
fall to counter student diarup·
Uons. He aaid highway patrolmen, if needed, ''would be here
much more quickly and In
greater nwnbers

...,..J.y
ted

BANKING

'

I '

'·

Keeps ;His.Cool . .

RQ1'Cbulldingdurlngonen!ghl been received at buildings on clasaeastart theQIIIIPIII!pollce
of trooble.
thecampus.,.ecent.ty. The latest force will ~ lar.er and new
"ROTC I• Sla)'IJII"
clune 'l'ue.lday and olllcW. ssld · dtsclpllne procedi!IU will be·In
But While reaffirmed his In· flte NJDe male voice who tela· effect
,
..
tenllon to keep .tile military pbailed the olbet tllre,all made
·
'
training program. ''ROTC II tl. 1. building was evacuated,
staymg with us, and we ure but DO bClmb wu lourul
not planning ~bandon it," ~ KentStateolflclalaann~
said.
clelllls of an instant communi·
. ~.university, he ssld, will eations sy•fem whtcli wiU be
g1ve attention to orderly oper•. in effect itartlng 11801 t week.
allons. and to expanded ctm- Under Ill+ Operation of a ~Pemuntcatlons, participation and claJ uslstant to the l!fOIIdent
Involvement in tile means of . lor crisis operations, John .
deve~:'f'lng a campus commu- llugginan, lbe system tncluclel
nlty.
a rlcllo ~!work whtcll would
"I do appeal to people ,to 11sue bullellna to sludenll, par·
take a look at the entire pack· enll and othera.
age ollhe s~s we have tallen Cttdcai telepbolle lines would
before nne/ applauds or con· be kept open by Pt:ior arrqedemns any one acUon .and I mont with Ohio Bell. '
think they'D see a rationale
In add!Uon security In dorml·
which would provide lor tllat t«leeJ wlll ·be tighl2ned when
one issue being In there even
·
tllough it might be an unhappy
one," White said.
A "vast amount" · of work·
was d"!"' during the swnmer,
Cr.ebl&amp; Ia CODCftll .
he said, and ·''we are moving
Croekett, the fa·
down two' rQalls." ·
dI
seoul, was
''One. Is a motion toward orto
derly ,;
" . he ,...W.

2-HOUR

CLEANING :

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

BAKER September

. .1HE

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS 00.

..

..

Huntington

...

1198

against campus diarupUQnS if it
was warranted.
The de111011StraUons that led
to the diaastrouo confrontation
May 4 were In pari to protest
the movem:.nt 'of
'tiwps
Into Cambodia Rampaelng students burned down' the campus

u.s.

dJsalter'' the
university Ia forced to ahul
·clown lhJa faU '
· .
"Keeping
lbe univetalty '
Ia the prime ~onsi~aUon," he
said
·
·
.
~eral bGmb lbreall
·a '1eelin&amp; of

oPen

h.ve

-

L~ution

:l

Pomeriggi Musicali di Milano.
Appearing on the Charleston,
W.Va., series will be the Royal
Uppsala University Chorus;
UlU• Angels of Korea; David
Bsr-Dlan, pianist; the Pilla·
burgh Symphony Orchestra,
and Mildred Miller, mezzosoprano.

Mrs. Bray has a list of things a shotgun ."'
upsets them," abe said,
a woman can do when she re- "Needless to say, the woman
Mrs. Bray believes that H a
ceives one or the calls.
did not have a visitor," she woman lives alone, she should
"About 98 per cent of the added.
use good judgment In having
lime after a woman does one Another tip she gives is that her phone number listed in tile
or two of the tricks on a per· the woman, especially il she directory.
sistenl caller, he will quit," she lives alone and receives the
"II tile woman insists on hav·
said.
call, can Interrupt the caller b)' ing her nun1ber listed and she
Mrs. Bray tells about the jiggling the button and saying: lives alone, I suggest she have
man who calls with the tine : ''Operator, thu is the phone tile number listed through her
"Mrs. So-and-So, I knQ)V yow: call I w.~ telling you about.'J., itli,lial.l, rather .l!Jan.her
~li - a t hOlM, so d&lt;&gt; . ·.-Tile ·JlOIIe&lt;~'NIW' .~~lair ..,.~, or·ll!ilh -Mil!l !Jr',t.ri; \ n
you-mind If l come over."
the woman could ask.AN caller of the name/ ' slle. said,
'!"'' advice is usually to hang to hold on for a minute unUJ
The veteran policewoman,
"!'on tile caller and not talk to abe gels her husband to listen who serves on the force's pubhun, but she said one woman on the extension.
lie affairs staff, advises a worn·
told her:
She warns women not to slam an that ~ she receiv!!S obscene
"I just told Ibis caller : the receiver down on a caller, calls she sbould notify the po'Please do, my husband is not but to push tile button on the lice and even the telephone
at h~n~e, but my brotller-in.Jaw phnne .
company who can work toIs, and he will be waiting wtlh
"Hanging up on them, really getller to apprehend lhe caller.

~·
.••..

~
~
~

lelh•rsy

IIIII'IJuana I

Chamber Dance Company .

a&gt;LUMBUS (UP!)- Women
can play an important role in
putting a halt to and even preventing obscene and harassing
telephone calls.
This is the advice given by
nationally known policewoman
Jeanne Bray of the Colwnbus
Pollee Department.
Mrs~ Bra~,a1Dp pistol shooter wltJ:l; '11'~ trlll#'!f-.' "'Jil
the -..an,'by-lier aeUons and
response on the phone, C311 annor, the caller.
A man who calls a w?man
really gets a tick out of listening to a woman's voice," she
OIP~- "Mally times he
doesn l even know the woman
he Is calling."

'.

;,

a • vicious

ntaHJuana · lnd1ieea ~thar4

Ferrante and Teicher, will

By SANDI GOUW

i

..-Ufl.

Right Answers Halt Callers

•. .
...•. ·..
•. .

•

R""bert

sasoclalions have already

'·

I

'

1970 Sesswns

preaented in 32 concerts
tllroughout the arn.
Several neighboring

extended reciprocity to TCCCi.
members for the coming
season. A concert by Victor
Borge and Company witl
hi8hlight the Parkersburg, W.
Va., series, which will also
present the Paris Chamber
Orcbestra and Louis Quilico,
who sang the baritone lead In
"Otello" in Cincinnati this
swnmer.
t:..ncaster has scheduled a
series which will Include Virgil
F~n, organi5ti the Canadian
Opera Company's presentation
of "Orpheus tn the underworld ;" the Johann Strauss
Ensemble of tile Vienna
Symphony Orchestra and Addia
and Croful, popular folk
singers.
The c'Jiebrated duo pianists,

'

._~-----------·~----------

1i

different ffil'!ical attractions

·•'·'

.

··.~·

t¥

unique opporJ11nity to attend a

•

•J

Job$~ Where

1l1e Tri-Counly Conm&gt;unily
Concert AssociaUon 's annual
series offersresidents of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason Counties the

l'u'
' ,1;
r

'

13 -'J'!teDaUysentlnel,Mitki~-Pomoroy,O.,Sept.23,,!170

~'··

'

'

.'

'.'

·:~:
\

.

~~a8··

.\'•.

•
•

.

;

before Tax Reform Urg~

disputes.
'"!be Ferpson Act must be
diacll'ded In favor of cKiu!r Ul(l'O
meaningful !Mid realleuc sane·
tiona against striking em·
ployees and 111lions," the policy
statement IIIli!. "!be aancttons

provided should be strong
enough to enforce the 110 slriire
rule."
.,
Slllte To Share
'"!be evidence Ia clear and
mdisputed that state legtslation
llhould be enacted to -JI'Ovide a

~t!:.t ~ !~

Mason Area New'"-.., No. tes

how the stale Cl!" meet its
mpmllltiHNn lnevltablfleads
to- ~11 thai lbe liate
lll!»uld, In 11100 W&amp;J, mter lbe
lnelllll IU field," the League
said.
UilncomunJclpalgoftl1liDOIIt
In tliiG illlnanced to a large
exteO\ bJ municipal lncmle
Iaiii, JII'OPOII8ls calling lor
state ~ in lbe Income tax
..0 are of:·great concern to

MASON - Mlsle1 lltlen,
Ruth and Mae Bletner of
Malo
n, W. Va. eutertalned wlllt
a famlly l'l!lllion 111 &amp;lnday at
their home.l.ttendlng won Mr.
Clarmce Jlletner m of Muon,
&lt;llio; Mr. and Mrs. Oarence
Blelner II, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Blebler I of Belle, W.
va.
Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Bletner,

..ui Robert

turn made theJr Identity lmown

to the •-'•.

.--~· Marie RIIWib, principal
al Muon Grade School, annomced that the parenti were
Invited to the chDdren's
daBoom to m&lt;iet w111t lbe
child's or cblldrm'a teachers.
11 was annOWICed that 1"1'~
membership cards are
available for 75 cents .

Bar:

fair and lmparliaJ ~ lpr
tile l'l!80111lim of labor cllsPules
between public employers ,llld
employeo," II ssld. "It Is Jllo
ev;ldent tllat·a'ltate labor boN-d
Ia the belt forum In which \o
vest tllis reaponsibUity ."
'lbe •cftlllllittee al8o aaid ·that
munlc\pal govenunenta are In
need ''substanttsllncreases"

of

f1mdo fot matcbliw ~ pro-

'

ts::.• PHit·KitHHI

.

....

by

gral)lll.
·
lllr
It alio recollllll!iUied that the
state no!' lnipoae new slandarda ,
and
regulat10111
.U)!91i ·
lll!lliciPIIIII Unleu the ate .
)t'Ovlclet lundli to llnpi&amp;nent l08IOii to
them.
. •· , .,
-A
Other recOIIllllOlld8tloria IJi. and

cl~:

tnsta"BnanclalassJa~~~oceond -'lbestateasawnet~~ecoa~ot

'tuN 1~8 you .,e more of l picture beqaus1 , .
It's fl rectangular as a· ~rv sCreen can be, ' ·
'

.

all~~~~

"*"

'

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"~.

'

.:.

' Thw 'E!iOtN~lO~:' il~ ·

·Compact·s'iza'ca'tJin$1 it~' ·.
ora!n~ Ama'l'lc)n '(f:AJnut
1 t:Oia~- Tit•n Hendcmifiect c- ·•

m..

.

' 19" diagonal SUI!E~·SCAE~N Color TV pic·

ture leiS you -.it more Of thlif Pictu're because
11'!1 ilr reetan'gi.tlar'· ~· • ..
·ar;;reeri can be.
,.

C:ha11ia. Chrom.cOJo-r Picture
Tube. Solld·Sttte SuP!Pr
•
Vidt01~hSJI TuninG Sylftnl•· ' ' .
'• ;en. llh
5"'JC 3• Tw,in·Co{l., ;:t ~ ,l
. ~llf•~er..
,_
•
· ~ o.

"'C·

., ,J,· .

1,.

ry.
•

Meigs

Property
Transfers

ROUND

BEEF

e·w t;l-·ven

Social

~~~~:~~~~~~:~!$!;!&amp;

lb.- who mua1the
provide
Lowell
thewas
business
me..... . Mr.
weekend
Villllng
\belrMcDaniel.
parents, Mr., .and. MrHIIIIR
. " Ma)'lllll'tl. . .Mi:;,an!l
. . Mrs.
. .' Ja~t
. , Frey
. !,lave
_ . , ,. .
ciplllei'VIcel,"
~aguemunl Mr andandMra
~.
all ofKlein Following
the meeting
adjourned~"'
~I.Mn.
Curtis
In a ll.llcleat outllnlna its of. berlon,Ohlo; Mr. and Mrs. Bert
OOVPLE ~
,, Mfl, HMold Schwan:, Mlaon, entertall)ed W:llll a llitthclel' Jl!ll returned after ll!irlni' are~.
ftclalleJioJallw policy.
Bletner, Sarah, SUaaMe !Mid
WEST a&gt;LUMBIA _Miss vlsltedTuesdayandW~y dinner and' party lb· llon4r of visited lflth lbelo son ~)~t .tlii.$''Jegllllil\)ll:
~'.egl•l•tlvecom- John of Colwnbua, Ohio; Mr. Kalhj Boe&amp;U, west· Coiumbla, with her .daughter and ~arut.. their son, Pau) lfa~nard, leJilil)',, Mr. ,and Mn. WJulanl ·~ ~.
mltlee noi!lll that ov« 280 mun- and Mrs. Herman Blelller !Mid and Mr. Manllall Blimd, son, Mrs._Mirtlyn Heller and recenUy at ~ Jicia!t· ~ Frey ·lind dauchter, Joanil ~t
tclpallllee ~ 1ev,y1ng an daushters, Sue, · Becky and Leta1, w. va. were Wured In Ted in Plirkershurg, W. Va.
al!endlng were ~~ lrioll\ira. Salida, Co)o. , They wen ac• ·,. ,,
JneomelaJ:JIId 11 hal become a Carolyn of Lem, w. Va.
marriage 111 ~ 1t a1
Mrs. lAurene Lewis, yistted Russell May,nard of Point companied b)'
io1J ~ '· '
' very ~ lilurce o1 rev6:30p.m. at the west Cbliimbla laat .wetk ·With her siste!-, Mrs. Pleaunt; Mr. ah!l IIIJ, David of Mi.tltueo,
'to' ,B'U: '
•-lor the commtmttlea.
PTA MEETS
'United Methodist Olureb.
Ann l!:rwlaat SoulhJide, W:.v,, -~llle. Terri and Debbie t1- lllljjton, ~re
""
•Toe~
Mra. Rllsemary Samsel,
'!be Revert!lid Mrs.• llerntce QaW!t Blake, seven montb oil! MiddlepOI'I, .o.; ·TI)e honqree Plllsburgh
"lllale legtslatlm affectlnl Mason, presided at the firll IVinldft' jierformed lite double cleughter ol Mr. and Mrs. andr.lrs.J'Ilu!Ma)'lli!i'dandthe
lncaiDe t.ratlon lhould qol be Mason Grade School PTA rtnr~Y· ,
· Denver Blake, has • lleen hoal and!!t~l.ea,_.,, and Mrs,.·
. )lrOIIOied without careful and meeting of tllis school year m
Qle Is the daughter of Mr. l'l!turned to her home from the J - Ma~ ••:,
.
~
*'-llttdras toils impact m Tuesday. Officers for tbe year ·ErlcBoe&amp;llandtllegroom Is the ~&amp;ant Va¥ey Hospllll ~ ' Mt, and Mni, J~~ Mllynard
.'lbe futtn of muntelpal fin. were elected as foUowa: 100oiMr.andMro.Marvbt a, ilie, wa.hoaplltalizedwlth~t:·. rJI!~ In lne,z: . ~. •teeenUy
111cea," the League said. "Res- )ll'esident, Bnh OUwr; vice Jlalld, letart, W.Va.
.lnfepllon anti fever.
with Mrs. :·1\faY!Jai'd'• mo.ther,
;Jlllllllble mon can diaagree, but president,. Mar7 Roush;
The tr1de given 1n marriage
Mr. andMts. Lester Johnibn, Mrs. v...., Preece, and ¥r
·niiPtiltJible 111011 llhould under· secretary, Joann Taylor and
her father, wore a blue ID!lt Mr:· and Mrs. Harold Rickard sister, Afn'l Allen. The:y also
.-and lhillbe p-obleml of local treasurer, EwJyn Rotlgen.
A-&amp;e dresa with a ~J~Jtchlng visited over \ the weekend wl~ visited with Mr.. Maynard's
.,Yeftlllenlcatlnotbe.,lvedby Dta-inglbemeetlngthegroup Jlejjciplece wJtb ~il. Her cor· Mr.andMrll, JackJoltnsonand sl.tl&lt;ta
,famllielj, Mr.
--~ !run one and giving to wted to retain Mrs. aata uce •as wh~ carnations.
!anillP.I Glendale, W. Va'. "
Cline, Mr. and
_.."
lmlth as babysitter for parents Jllrl. David Hall, slater of the
La wren.~ McDermitt
and !anti)y
~ llcfslative JII'O«l'am wiU thalallend PTA meetings. They grOCllll, wu matron of honor. Nitro, W. v~. visited on ~Y.·
· Manyal'd
bi Jll'1iaented 1D lbe IM!nual 01tW Jllo decided ID apon10r the .Mt. David Hall, brothet'-in~aw .evenir1g With his sister ana
all
M1lftlclpal Conference which Brownie Scout Troop and of lite ~. I&lt;!I'Ved as belt fa~~;,IMr ·· and Mra, Uoyd
1riii bf,held het'f! Sept. 23-25. con!tnue the usual procedure' of man·. • ·
•"
Tile. ~ttee, if!. l!.t far giving a book ill the room that . . jlllembW4 of lhe . jlmnediate ' . •
~jql ~ ~~ has the greatest representation •lainllleal!ltended the 'iiedding.
~fat II* liliolltiM) of. the lit PTA meeting.
' . 11BOth the •lrld&lt; and groom
F~ I.e!
II uy.~ to
Mrs. Flasale Allenawor,th'~ !lllend~ \Yitltama Hl!h School.
m.UIIIeandfeplace It :111111 room won tile book award tor· Mr. 111~nd retu~ned from
er."ih•hi'olll4,~Unuetoban .Septanber. ·
. Vll'-inam in F~,
.!ltikflf 'ti)' piltiilt employe. but .Parehts Introduced thtm· . follol\'l.ng the wedding • ~~:::r~:~~.~~:~~;
whiclt, ~Ia set up, ~ stllte llel~ at the get actpUilzited ' rl'J'OIIIiail1yaihel~ ~~ tile home and
I.a~ ' Jl9ll•d fO· mediate ~eet""'· a•~ ~~; teache~s , In of lhr . grwdt' 't;ller• Mrs.
.
)
"
'
'

w

\·!;'} ., '..

selected ntw ~inch di!ID·' giant-screen consoles. And only
Zenith has
'~I

I

,

recoJIIIIIended that the stale aid niatnialnlil• Interstate hl•lh.· ... ~
munh:.lpa!ltlea In provldln&amp;· W!'YIIvitbtn mUnldnal
.
,y • ·____
• _ _ _ lion .llmtts.
.; , ·
:
-'lbePennlsll!~localmotor
~·~ 1111 •be ~. .
Wayne ZUrlher at letart, Rl. -1. _ _ _ _:...,._....,_ _
Mr. .00 Mrs. 1!1811d are
th.e
resldlnll al . .weat Coltanbla.
N'·
• :•
Mra. Stanley Saunders and
'
·· •
'
three- cl)lldren and Mrs. James
.·
·
Loyd ·and two children• of ,
Columl:lus, Ohio, spent tile
•

-~·\

·

.

�..

~~~~~~~~:~:·~;;~~~~;:;~~~~~:.~:z~~==~~==::~:~~~:--·~·~~~".~~~~-~~.~"~~.~~·~~~~~~~,j"c~~~~E:!::t:::t~Er~::;i::::J8:t~_----------·· ·..·-~.~-~..~~-·~-~.~..-_-.::~::::~~
~~.~..~---~,~-~--.~. ----~..~
&lt;
v

\

·~

J

14-Tbt Dilly Selll""l· MiddleJIIrt-Pumervy, 0, ~' ... 1170

.

,Bargains, Bargains;·
Obituary

2 5181$
Of
QUALITY

THE LORD glvelh and lilt Lord

taketh away. Blessed be' the
· name of the LOrd. Jerry
Robert Graham, son of
George and Betty Ellzab&amp;th
Clark Graham, was bom
March 9, 1188, at· Letart,· W.

1~9CHEVROLET

Va. He deported lhls life Sepl.

DO-IT-YOURSELF
LET'S KEEP THINGS
ON THE LEVEL, O.K.?
By Ml. FIX
Very few things around
you are level-and this has
nothing to do with the moral
climate. We are talking
about walls. floors and ceil·
ings. They may look level,
but your eye can be fooled.
When you put up shelves
or install cupboards, l a y
floor tile or hang slriped
wallpaper you will discover
the true s t a I e of things :
Walls are not truly vertical,
floors slope and c e i I i n g
height varies.
Your inclination will be to
line up your work with exi5LM
ing horizontal and vertical
lines. Don't do it. You will
have nolhing but trouble.
Create true vertical and
horizontal lines from which
you can work, using a level,
an inexpensive tool that will
do what your eyes cannot.
A level is made of wood
or metal and has liquid·filled
tubes with bubbles. One tube

in the middle determines if
a surface is horizontal. ·An·
other, near the end of the
level al right angles to the
surface, determines a true
vertical (plumb) line. There
are marks on the tube to tell
you if the bubble is right in
the middle.
Keep in m i n d that the
bubble moves to the higher
side.
Since Jeve1s, like o t h e r
tools, are subject to damage,
check yours occasionally to

see that it is giving a true
reading. Place it on a surface and note w h e r e the
bubble comes to rest. Turn
the I e v e l around and the
bubble should stop in the
same relative position.

9, 1970, at the age of 82 years
and six months at Veterans
Memorial
Ho$pital
of
Pomeroy, Ohio. He wat
married In 1915, to Clare
Snyder. To this union seven
children were born. He was
preceded In death by his wife,
Clara,.f.\ and three children,
Oanier Raymond, Florence
Ellzabelh, and Kenneth Udel.
Surviving children are Robert
Graham, Mrs. Ore Mae
Bacon, both of Rt. 2, Racine,
Ohio; John Graham of
Atlanta, Georgia and Jerry
Graham, Jr. of VIenna, W.
Va. He was married on
January 8, 1938, to Beulah
Roush who also preceded him
in death January 19, 1969. To
this union were born two sons.
Douglas
Graham
of
Letokalchee, Alabama, and
Allen Graham of Racine,
Ohio, who survive. He Is also
survived by two stepchildren, /Ws. Mary Barnett
of Steubenville, Ohio, and
Mrs. Charlotte DeJoseph of
Fort Lauderdale. Fla.; 29
grandchildren, 15 great grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews. He was
preceded in death by his
parents, five sisters, Ora
England, Nora Canter, Lilly
Mae Sharpless, Essie Cottrill
and Anna 0. Rouke, and lhree
brothers. Freel, Wesley and
Howard
Graham.
Mr.
Graham was a retired Iock man of the former locks and
dam 23 at Apple Grove, Ohio.
He had made his home with
his children since the death of
his wife and was presently
Uvlng with his daughter, Mrs.
John Bacon, at the lime of his
death. He was a de\t'oted and
loving father and was always
willing to help those In need.
He will be sadly missed by his
l~ved ones and all who knew
him.

A plumb bob is a heavy,
pointed piece of metal with
a place to fasten a line at the
top. Use it to delerminc a
true vertical line by allowM
ing it to hang free. Use one
when constructing a masonry wall or framework.
For a horizontal line on a
masonry wall, rtm a line
from one end to the other
and hang a line level on it.
This is a tiny level equipped
with hooks. Use a line level
when installing fence rails.
A precious one from us is gone,
Use a level to check ap- A \t'oice we loved is stllt.
pliances. They will work bet· A place Is vacant In our h~me
ter when droperly leveled. Which never can be filled.
923-ltc
Floors ten to sag in time,
especially under a heavy ap·
pliance.
LEGAL NOTICE
Being out-of-level puts a
A:~ci11~~M~.Ftn
strain on washing machine
case No. 20369
and r.efr.igerator motors. An Estate of Bertie
N. watts.
out-of-level stove results in Deceased
a lopsided cake. Most appli·
Notice is herebv given that
ances are equipped with ad· Wendell C. Gerlach, 10 Edward
Court, Chlllicothe, Ohio, has
justing screws at each cor· been
duty appointed Executor
ner.
offhe Estateo• Berlle N. Wetts,

s24ts

,

Townsman Station Wagon, V-8
automatic transmission.
, '

mot!n',

1969 FORD

$2Q95

Mustang 2 Or. hardtop, 6 cyl., standard shift.
Real Nice.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN
$1895
2 Or. Sedan, radio, cusiom equipment, white

From lhe urgnf Trucko ol ·
~ulldozer Radlotor · fo fr.
Smcolleof Holler Cort.

tires.

Pomeroy Motor eo.

•

BI.AETTNARS
. lt.'.fn.-2143
Pomtr.r

~PERT

OPaN !VIS. I:GO I'.ltL

I'OIIIIOY, OHIO

INFORMATION

DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publicati&lt;-••
Monday Oeadlineh.m .

Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
of Publication
REGULATIONS

Oa~

The

reser11es the
r ight to edit or reject &lt;lny ads
deemed
objectional .
The
publisher wdt not be responsible
lor more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Service
SCents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc

per

w )rd

NEWLY decoroled, 3 room
furnished apartment; adults

three

consecutive ln!&gt;Prlinn&lt;.
18 cents per word six con
secutive inse•'io'lS .
15 Per cent Discount on paid -

J26

only.

Mul~erry

Phone 992·6698.

AdditiOnal

25c

Advertisement

985-3831.

Charge

•

' 0 1' -00

and kindness during the
recent illness and death of our

father, Jerry R. Graham, who
is sadly missed by his family
and friends.
Mrs. Ora Bacon.
9-23-ltc

NOII"te

care. of Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio, end we'll giVe
yOu complete Information.

FIELD
grown
chrysanthemums
and
mums.

SEPTIC Janko -cleened. Mlllir
Reynolds' Flower Shop,
"Sanlf4tlon, Stewart, Ohio. f.'j,,
Meson. W. Vo.
662·3035.
9·22-21&lt;
2·12;!1,
·-.....,..-~--

SALE.''

.Air.Qxlditifllii ,
Inspection And .

Re-Oiarp . :
6.98 Plus
Parts

Blaetfliar's ·
Pltont 992·214)

of SUpplies

-------9~·22-'tc

"SPECIAL

''!!

',T: t

.

EWIIJII ,McDrill ;
Miso11; W. V1. ·
7n-l67S
Open l;lollr 1!114 '·~!'·.
1:30tl"p.m.

·

Early AtHERTON TV end l:ledroole
American
Stereo radio
Servlq. Ntw Otannol Master WHEEL . Hprse Sales and
comblnallon, AM &amp; FM radio
Phone Long Bottom . Serv·rce. · Baum ~umb~tr
4 speaker sound system. 4
915-31.f/ • .
Company, Chest•rJ-_, OJtlo..,
speed changer. Balance
~tfc
Phone 91111·3301.
~·
$78.15. Use our l&gt;udgef !erms.
.
. 5:,1!!-tf~
Clll 992·3352.
.
NEIG"L!iR Consliudlon. For
9·22-6lc
building or '""odeii"V your AIR
CONDITIONitlG,
home, call Guy Nolglor,
Refrlgeratloo ierYI~. J•ck'o
WALNUT
Stereo,
lour
speed
3832.
Recine, Ohio.
Refrigeration, New · Hallen;,
9-20-6tp
Intermixed
changer, 4
7·31·tfC
Phor&gt;e
882·2079.
•
- - -- - - - - speaker sound system. Some
4-6-tfc'
scrofc...,, will discount for
Wanted To Buy
. C. BRADFORD, Aucfi..cash and for scratches. Use
Compl0!e Service
oor budgd terms. Clll 992·
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
Phone U9·3121
3352.
Regulor
prlct
Sl.f/.95,
beds. etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Racine, Ohio
now $70.19.
Rf • Pomeroy Ohio ~-11
Crill Brodfofd
·
"•
'
'
9·22·6fc
992-'271.
5-1-tfc
•.J.tfc
.,.
---------

Noon GET YOUR travel trailer ready
tor winter with winter-magic,
$.11.98 per gallon, Men, wanl to
go hunting this f!ll? Rent •
fral1er or buy any rental at
WE WISH to express our thanks
reduced c05t. Gaul's Trailer
and appreciation to all our
Sales, Co. Rd. 36, 1'12: miles
friends,
neighbors
and
north of Chester. Ohio, Rt. 3
relatives lor your sympathy
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 985-

Card c' Thanks

.Inspection. Central
localloo. Wrl!e Bo• 729·V.

your

FOr Rent Or Sale

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 •.m to l ' OO p m. Dally,

t~~rd:ym

9·20-cltp

per

.

!OUIH
TROPICAL
fiSH .· .
And Complete u.l~

person. OUr books open for

9-4-Hc

north of Ches1er, '*'lo. Phone

word '2c.

BLIND ADS

Auto

SMALL business. going con.
cern. Right price to right

Ave.

-------ads and ads paid wtlhm 10 days _ 'MOBILE home spaces or lo1s. If
CARD OF THANKS
Interested, contact J. M.
&amp; OBITUARY
G
Co· Rd · 36, 1112 m IIes
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
aul,
Each additional

$5.55

' POIIIero,

Pt~blisher

12 cents

Wheel ·Aiilnment

For Sale

MATCHED Avococlo no.frosf •
17-cu.
ft.
Kelvlnator ,
For Rent
refrigerator
ond
30 ln. gas .
3 ROOM unfur!'lishE.d OP"rf·
r•nge,
used 4 mos. · -GUARANTEEDment. Phone 99'..1:-1218.
Phone 992-2094
Refrlgerolor $225, ronge $125.
7.1.tfc
Also, 19.tol Ford coupe, good
'
condlflon, 1425. Coli 992·3221
Home &amp;
FURNISHED oporfmenl, 217
or f92. .!9~1.
3rd Ave., MiddlePort. Nice
f.23-flp
'606 E. M8in, Pointroy, 0.
tard. porch, Jjrlvate enp•
2
MARE
ponies.
Clll
Bill
ances. none
·2780or mHarden. Phone 9.fl·«45. ,
:u:J2.
8-2S.tfc
9·22-'fc

WANT AD

.

•

~ave Yo~r Y~~ly

T.v.s.

'I

---=----

HAYMAN'S AUCTION tlouse,
Laurel Cliff, now open each
deceased, late of Middleport.
Friday lo receive con- OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
Meig'l County, Ohio.
signments at 10 a.m. Auction
condition, as long as have not
. C_redltors are required to file
star11ng at 1 p.m. Let us sell
been wet. Paying $10 each.
th_e1r_ claims wlth said fiduciary
your merchMdlse.
First floor only. Mondaitwlll
w1th1n tour months.
"-~ tf
h-. I k
Ootod thlo nth. ••• of ·~•···
·
, &lt;'"t ·, .&lt; ' · c 1; ~
~. &lt;., t~P •,J, • r ! Ing
· 1'ember · \910 ..•·
.tw , C"''"'l'
-~-- o ,
o. 1 I.,.... " c ·
1
"rec _.s,
IJ"O "
F. H. O'Br1en
WILL .
. ri I ~&lt; t
om~ny, Box I , .,;, rdls,
Probate Judge -oksaid
QIVe pta 0 essons n my
Ohio 43946.
'*
county
home. Phone 992-3666.
1-20-tfc
(9J 16, 23, 30, ltc
8-16-ffc - - - - ' - - - - - -

1 1

For

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No. 2036:1

Estate of
Oeceend.

Bertha

W.

w

Sayre

VFW GUN shoot, Bailey Run Pets
Sale
road. junction !24·1.0, Sun· PARKVIEW Kennels, Poodles,
dav. Sepl. 27 at noon.
and bird dogs. AKC •. Pel end
9·23·Jip show
Grooming.
Phone 991.
GUN SHO 0 T, Forked Run
3·17·tfC
Sportsman Club, Sunday, - - - - - - - - Sept. 27.
------'---'...:..:·23·lf&lt; • For Sale

pupfl:t

1-25-tfn

I
Notice 11 hereby given that
Charles E. Sayre of Melas
C~unty,
Pomeroy, OhiO, hat
been duly appointed Executor
.
.
'
Of ••• Estole of Berlhl w.
Sayre, decea1ed, late of VIllage P~EROY -s ril)lt oul-112 .
~hi:omtroy, Meigs County, WILL GIVE eway par:t rat NEW 8 foot ' truck camper. LOTS- Buildltti_ loll or mqbllt
acres, lots olllmlitf, %sfory
home space. ·on new wafer'
terrier
male
dog.
sentle
SI-s
sl•.
p•-e
-·39"'.
frottlo !tome, new kllcltet),
77
Credltors are required to file
ld
E
d
......,.
"'
"""
~
Une. Also school bul rQUfe. On
new bafh; new llvlng.r.oom, 2
their claims with said lldU(\arv
around chi ren.
war
9-18-6tc
Counly Rd. 25, 1 nille _ , af .btd,ooms, COUCD NAVE
- - - . within tour months.
Ball. 992-6529.
9·23-Jfp MOBILE Home, 12 K 51, Solem
Chesler, Ohio. If In!oresled
FOUR, lilrgt barn, outDated thiS 5th day of Sep .

MONEY CLIPS

J-....l

tember 1970
F. H. O'Brien
WILL pick Up merchandise and
Probate Judge ot said
take to auction on a perCounty
centage
basis. Call Jim
(9) 9, 16, 23, 3tc
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
Phone 742·-"61.

by Mort Reed

Thnely Quotes
Since I've been managing
the Yankees, little Luis
Aparicio has beaten me
more times than any other
·f::"r in the American

gue.

-Ralph Houk, maMger of
the New York Yanlcees for
eight years.

9-2J.tfc

Help Wanted
COUNTRY and weJtern band,
some rock. Friday and
Saturday nights. ' Write Box

Cleland ·R.ealty:
.

cell 985-4197.
bulldlh!l wlfh cellar, PQ11d,
St. In Rutland. large lot, new
ALL FOil 110.900.
·
garage, out ot high water.
Inquire any time except
Mulbtr(y
Sunday. C. J. Wise, Phone 742· BABY furnllllre, balw bod, POMEROY · Avenue ~ 2 otory brlek, B
stroller, high chair, dressing
5911.
bedrooms, bafh, baouflful
. 9-2J.Jfp
tabl•. Pltone 992·3952 .
klh;:htri, · 3 c1r gar1ge,
9·22·lfC
,.; . 1
C:OMPI.i!TEL Y. REMOI)..
1968 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2·
door. hordtov. AI.O. 1970, 12- MAPL~ brookfosf . sol ond ELED_, EXCELLENT
horsepower wheel· horse
plostlc living riiOfiiiUife. llqth CONDITION. $19.200.
riding tractor and mower.
In good con(tllloo. Inquire If
Phone Coolville 985--4176.
111 l.ocuaf ,St., Pomeroy. ·
.
9-21·31c
9·20-cllp

729·A, c.o The Dally Senflnel,
Pomeroy. Olio_.
BEANS, Kentucky Wonders.
Pld&lt; ypur own. S2 bushel.

WOMAN or girl. Apply In
person. Call 992-2565 for
appointment.

9·22·lfC

Sweet

and Irish
potatoes. Br'ing Container.
Andrew Cross, letart Falls,

;~~ 1~~'ieec~i!ti,·:.·-":!:\:'.~ ~

nJ gold .,., ·

M1ny Styles
Models • • •

and

,_

·.....
- - aa.=:.....
...
=.
tJ
I
,_ ....
...
::=r
I
I
)
··-·
-.....~.u_.

KVoa

'·.. ,_,._
IO. BGp

f. KoldiiiOW
tLBtMII

11.IO.Biek

2l.lbnb

lf.JJCIOW

5

'

II.Lompny

H. J'rlllllllll
10. DlllrJ'

. . lllenoe
JIL Ram·

(tllltr.)

!I.-

PH.-.

~&amp;100m11al1~~:.:::!t! ...J r=
u_....-...,.........,
....
........
..
form four...onlinar1
•onls.

DAILY ctOSSWORO

l f . - ' J ltLftm
Olk

i
TRUCKLOAO
TIRE SALE .
Buy 1 Tint AI RIO.
Gfl'
2nd If HIH-Prlet Wlllle·llllt
Supplr ustsl
·, · ,·

b

(Jtp.)

:U.IIalooo

ttjold
St. a....

mnt

!G.qotn·

IIWid

... t . . . . . . . . .

M.Appt0u4
I'I.NimbuJ

4t.r 1M n

atLWlclcod

fO.-

(Ilk.)

lf.lloJ

11164 , 6-[)9,P.R Chevrolif, 283,
· standard wlfh ovordtlvo.
Prl_s:td reosonablv. Phone
· ¢ht.ftr 985·136 1. Pille

' Elbti"feld.
'•
' '

.

·

9·1Wfp

Rul Estate For Sale
2 BEDROOM home .In ·goOd
nolgltbprhoo~.
r•cenfly
romoijfled. · lmtnodlafo .
.,..,..., ... , Inquire ot 181
LOCUli ~t ., Pomeroy.
: . 9·21·31&lt; ·,.

Rt. 33. Phoo• 992·2941.
.
9·20-301c

1 HornoDH"'

tltllf
11.-·

Snll
Dolats
Now!

TRAIL~R s,.ct, ooo milt from
new. Molg~ High ;School on old

"f'I'--

U.llock

Ohio.

J.

'

Oitlo'l Lf~llillollllo

u.Jirlaloa

potatoes

s.,

. MOBILE· IIJM~

l.llollotn

saY.:

Raymond N. Merena, wellknown numismatist wilh
P a r am ou n t International
Coin Corp. in Englewood,
Ohio, conducted an unusual
one-man survey at the St.
Louis convention of the
American Numismatic Asso-ciation.
Morena posed two questions to leading dealers and
num·tsmatists in a room
ftlled with the flnest coin
specimens in the world. His
6r~ •tuestlon was. "II 1
cOUld give you any United
~ S&amp;ates coin /ever issued, with
1M proviso that you or your
' lieirs could never sell, just
!i'hlch coin would you pick?"
" ~ l{is second question: "If I
¢ould give you any United
Sta~s coin without the ••·
iltriclion of s e IIi ng, what
!woUld you" choose?"
: Of th•· dealers surveyed,
David Q. Bowers and James
F. Ruddy responded with
the ume a n • "'• r to both
quesll~Jns . withOut knowing
whal coin, the . o t he r had

~!

e.-

·Bob Honnel

A Most Desirable Coin

.DANNIE'S ;

\OJ't&lt;E A lli6T'I' I'OllE~.
Ct&lt;EI&gt;Pt'
LITTLE

()

WH.IiT ~E ~IN'TEJt: ,
:!!All:&gt; 10 HIS
\SIR'"- FRIEND.

&amp;nutlnfl&amp;

M.Of--'
II."""' '

-y

·I ..

..
dMIZI · - •••4•
, .-.,.., Tltlo ...,., .. liUGANJ'

(-'"-!'~
r

DINOII

~NUT

L1G

�..

~~~~~~~~:~:·~;;~~~~;:;~~~~~:.~:z~~==~~==::~:~~~:--·~·~~~".~~~~-~~.~"~~.~~·~~~~~~~,j"c~~~~E:!::t:::t~Er~::;i::::J8:t~_----------·· ·..·-~.~-~..~~-·~-~.~..-_-.::~::::~~
~~.~..~---~,~-~--.~. ----~..~
&lt;
v

\

·~

J

14-Tbt Dilly Selll""l· MiddleJIIrt-Pumervy, 0, ~' ... 1170

.

,Bargains, Bargains;·
Obituary

2 5181$
Of
QUALITY

THE LORD glvelh and lilt Lord

taketh away. Blessed be' the
· name of the LOrd. Jerry
Robert Graham, son of
George and Betty Ellzab&amp;th
Clark Graham, was bom
March 9, 1188, at· Letart,· W.

1~9CHEVROLET

Va. He deported lhls life Sepl.

DO-IT-YOURSELF
LET'S KEEP THINGS
ON THE LEVEL, O.K.?
By Ml. FIX
Very few things around
you are level-and this has
nothing to do with the moral
climate. We are talking
about walls. floors and ceil·
ings. They may look level,
but your eye can be fooled.
When you put up shelves
or install cupboards, l a y
floor tile or hang slriped
wallpaper you will discover
the true s t a I e of things :
Walls are not truly vertical,
floors slope and c e i I i n g
height varies.
Your inclination will be to
line up your work with exi5LM
ing horizontal and vertical
lines. Don't do it. You will
have nolhing but trouble.
Create true vertical and
horizontal lines from which
you can work, using a level,
an inexpensive tool that will
do what your eyes cannot.
A level is made of wood
or metal and has liquid·filled
tubes with bubbles. One tube

in the middle determines if
a surface is horizontal. ·An·
other, near the end of the
level al right angles to the
surface, determines a true
vertical (plumb) line. There
are marks on the tube to tell
you if the bubble is right in
the middle.
Keep in m i n d that the
bubble moves to the higher
side.
Since Jeve1s, like o t h e r
tools, are subject to damage,
check yours occasionally to

see that it is giving a true
reading. Place it on a surface and note w h e r e the
bubble comes to rest. Turn
the I e v e l around and the
bubble should stop in the
same relative position.

9, 1970, at the age of 82 years
and six months at Veterans
Memorial
Ho$pital
of
Pomeroy, Ohio. He wat
married In 1915, to Clare
Snyder. To this union seven
children were born. He was
preceded In death by his wife,
Clara,.f.\ and three children,
Oanier Raymond, Florence
Ellzabelh, and Kenneth Udel.
Surviving children are Robert
Graham, Mrs. Ore Mae
Bacon, both of Rt. 2, Racine,
Ohio; John Graham of
Atlanta, Georgia and Jerry
Graham, Jr. of VIenna, W.
Va. He was married on
January 8, 1938, to Beulah
Roush who also preceded him
in death January 19, 1969. To
this union were born two sons.
Douglas
Graham
of
Letokalchee, Alabama, and
Allen Graham of Racine,
Ohio, who survive. He Is also
survived by two stepchildren, /Ws. Mary Barnett
of Steubenville, Ohio, and
Mrs. Charlotte DeJoseph of
Fort Lauderdale. Fla.; 29
grandchildren, 15 great grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews. He was
preceded in death by his
parents, five sisters, Ora
England, Nora Canter, Lilly
Mae Sharpless, Essie Cottrill
and Anna 0. Rouke, and lhree
brothers. Freel, Wesley and
Howard
Graham.
Mr.
Graham was a retired Iock man of the former locks and
dam 23 at Apple Grove, Ohio.
He had made his home with
his children since the death of
his wife and was presently
Uvlng with his daughter, Mrs.
John Bacon, at the lime of his
death. He was a de\t'oted and
loving father and was always
willing to help those In need.
He will be sadly missed by his
l~ved ones and all who knew
him.

A plumb bob is a heavy,
pointed piece of metal with
a place to fasten a line at the
top. Use it to delerminc a
true vertical line by allowM
ing it to hang free. Use one
when constructing a masonry wall or framework.
For a horizontal line on a
masonry wall, rtm a line
from one end to the other
and hang a line level on it.
This is a tiny level equipped
with hooks. Use a line level
when installing fence rails.
A precious one from us is gone,
Use a level to check ap- A \t'oice we loved is stllt.
pliances. They will work bet· A place Is vacant In our h~me
ter when droperly leveled. Which never can be filled.
923-ltc
Floors ten to sag in time,
especially under a heavy ap·
pliance.
LEGAL NOTICE
Being out-of-level puts a
A:~ci11~~M~.Ftn
strain on washing machine
case No. 20369
and r.efr.igerator motors. An Estate of Bertie
N. watts.
out-of-level stove results in Deceased
a lopsided cake. Most appli·
Notice is herebv given that
ances are equipped with ad· Wendell C. Gerlach, 10 Edward
Court, Chlllicothe, Ohio, has
justing screws at each cor· been
duty appointed Executor
ner.
offhe Estateo• Berlle N. Wetts,

s24ts

,

Townsman Station Wagon, V-8
automatic transmission.
, '

mot!n',

1969 FORD

$2Q95

Mustang 2 Or. hardtop, 6 cyl., standard shift.
Real Nice.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN
$1895
2 Or. Sedan, radio, cusiom equipment, white

From lhe urgnf Trucko ol ·
~ulldozer Radlotor · fo fr.
Smcolleof Holler Cort.

tires.

Pomeroy Motor eo.

•

BI.AETTNARS
. lt.'.fn.-2143
Pomtr.r

~PERT

OPaN !VIS. I:GO I'.ltL

I'OIIIIOY, OHIO

INFORMATION

DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publicati&lt;-••
Monday Oeadlineh.m .

Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
of Publication
REGULATIONS

Oa~

The

reser11es the
r ight to edit or reject &lt;lny ads
deemed
objectional .
The
publisher wdt not be responsible
lor more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Service
SCents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc

per

w )rd

NEWLY decoroled, 3 room
furnished apartment; adults

three

consecutive ln!&gt;Prlinn&lt;.
18 cents per word six con
secutive inse•'io'lS .
15 Per cent Discount on paid -

J26

only.

Mul~erry

Phone 992·6698.

AdditiOnal

25c

Advertisement

985-3831.

Charge

•

' 0 1' -00

and kindness during the
recent illness and death of our

father, Jerry R. Graham, who
is sadly missed by his family
and friends.
Mrs. Ora Bacon.
9-23-ltc

NOII"te

care. of Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio, end we'll giVe
yOu complete Information.

FIELD
grown
chrysanthemums
and
mums.

SEPTIC Janko -cleened. Mlllir
Reynolds' Flower Shop,
"Sanlf4tlon, Stewart, Ohio. f.'j,,
Meson. W. Vo.
662·3035.
9·22-21&lt;
2·12;!1,
·-.....,..-~--

SALE.''

.Air.Qxlditifllii ,
Inspection And .

Re-Oiarp . :
6.98 Plus
Parts

Blaetfliar's ·
Pltont 992·214)

of SUpplies

-------9~·22-'tc

"SPECIAL

''!!

',T: t

.

EWIIJII ,McDrill ;
Miso11; W. V1. ·
7n-l67S
Open l;lollr 1!114 '·~!'·.
1:30tl"p.m.

·

Early AtHERTON TV end l:ledroole
American
Stereo radio
Servlq. Ntw Otannol Master WHEEL . Hprse Sales and
comblnallon, AM &amp; FM radio
Phone Long Bottom . Serv·rce. · Baum ~umb~tr
4 speaker sound system. 4
915-31.f/ • .
Company, Chest•rJ-_, OJtlo..,
speed changer. Balance
~tfc
Phone 91111·3301.
~·
$78.15. Use our l&gt;udgef !erms.
.
. 5:,1!!-tf~
Clll 992·3352.
.
NEIG"L!iR Consliudlon. For
9·22-6lc
building or '""odeii"V your AIR
CONDITIONitlG,
home, call Guy Nolglor,
Refrlgeratloo ierYI~. J•ck'o
WALNUT
Stereo,
lour
speed
3832.
Recine, Ohio.
Refrigeration, New · Hallen;,
9-20-6tp
Intermixed
changer, 4
7·31·tfC
Phor&gt;e
882·2079.
•
- - -- - - - - speaker sound system. Some
4-6-tfc'
scrofc...,, will discount for
Wanted To Buy
. C. BRADFORD, Aucfi..cash and for scratches. Use
Compl0!e Service
oor budgd terms. Clll 992·
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
Phone U9·3121
3352.
Regulor
prlct
Sl.f/.95,
beds. etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Racine, Ohio
now $70.19.
Rf • Pomeroy Ohio ~-11
Crill Brodfofd
·
"•
'
'
9·22·6fc
992-'271.
5-1-tfc
•.J.tfc
.,.
---------

Noon GET YOUR travel trailer ready
tor winter with winter-magic,
$.11.98 per gallon, Men, wanl to
go hunting this f!ll? Rent •
fral1er or buy any rental at
WE WISH to express our thanks
reduced c05t. Gaul's Trailer
and appreciation to all our
Sales, Co. Rd. 36, 1'12: miles
friends,
neighbors
and
north of Chester. Ohio, Rt. 3
relatives lor your sympathy
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 985-

Card c' Thanks

.Inspection. Central
localloo. Wrl!e Bo• 729·V.

your

FOr Rent Or Sale

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 •.m to l ' OO p m. Dally,

t~~rd:ym

9·20-cltp

per

.

!OUIH
TROPICAL
fiSH .· .
And Complete u.l~

person. OUr books open for

9-4-Hc

north of Ches1er, '*'lo. Phone

word '2c.

BLIND ADS

Auto

SMALL business. going con.
cern. Right price to right

Ave.

-------ads and ads paid wtlhm 10 days _ 'MOBILE home spaces or lo1s. If
CARD OF THANKS
Interested, contact J. M.
&amp; OBITUARY
G
Co· Rd · 36, 1112 m IIes
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
aul,
Each additional

$5.55

' POIIIero,

Pt~blisher

12 cents

Wheel ·Aiilnment

For Sale

MATCHED Avococlo no.frosf •
17-cu.
ft.
Kelvlnator ,
For Rent
refrigerator
ond
30 ln. gas .
3 ROOM unfur!'lishE.d OP"rf·
r•nge,
used 4 mos. · -GUARANTEEDment. Phone 99'..1:-1218.
Phone 992-2094
Refrlgerolor $225, ronge $125.
7.1.tfc
Also, 19.tol Ford coupe, good
'
condlflon, 1425. Coli 992·3221
Home &amp;
FURNISHED oporfmenl, 217
or f92. .!9~1.
3rd Ave., MiddlePort. Nice
f.23-flp
'606 E. M8in, Pointroy, 0.
tard. porch, Jjrlvate enp•
2
MARE
ponies.
Clll
Bill
ances. none
·2780or mHarden. Phone 9.fl·«45. ,
:u:J2.
8-2S.tfc
9·22-'fc

WANT AD

.

•

~ave Yo~r Y~~ly

T.v.s.

'I

---=----

HAYMAN'S AUCTION tlouse,
Laurel Cliff, now open each
deceased, late of Middleport.
Friday lo receive con- OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
Meig'l County, Ohio.
signments at 10 a.m. Auction
condition, as long as have not
. C_redltors are required to file
star11ng at 1 p.m. Let us sell
been wet. Paying $10 each.
th_e1r_ claims wlth said fiduciary
your merchMdlse.
First floor only. Mondaitwlll
w1th1n tour months.
"-~ tf
h-. I k
Ootod thlo nth. ••• of ·~•···
·
, &lt;'"t ·, .&lt; ' · c 1; ~
~. &lt;., t~P •,J, • r ! Ing
· 1'ember · \910 ..•·
.tw , C"''"'l'
-~-- o ,
o. 1 I.,.... " c ·
1
"rec _.s,
IJ"O "
F. H. O'Br1en
WILL .
. ri I ~&lt; t
om~ny, Box I , .,;, rdls,
Probate Judge -oksaid
QIVe pta 0 essons n my
Ohio 43946.
'*
county
home. Phone 992-3666.
1-20-tfc
(9J 16, 23, 30, ltc
8-16-ffc - - - - ' - - - - - -

1 1

For

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No. 2036:1

Estate of
Oeceend.

Bertha

W.

w

Sayre

VFW GUN shoot, Bailey Run Pets
Sale
road. junction !24·1.0, Sun· PARKVIEW Kennels, Poodles,
dav. Sepl. 27 at noon.
and bird dogs. AKC •. Pel end
9·23·Jip show
Grooming.
Phone 991.
GUN SHO 0 T, Forked Run
3·17·tfC
Sportsman Club, Sunday, - - - - - - - - Sept. 27.
------'---'...:..:·23·lf&lt; • For Sale

pupfl:t

1-25-tfn

I
Notice 11 hereby given that
Charles E. Sayre of Melas
C~unty,
Pomeroy, OhiO, hat
been duly appointed Executor
.
.
'
Of ••• Estole of Berlhl w.
Sayre, decea1ed, late of VIllage P~EROY -s ril)lt oul-112 .
~hi:omtroy, Meigs County, WILL GIVE eway par:t rat NEW 8 foot ' truck camper. LOTS- Buildltti_ loll or mqbllt
acres, lots olllmlitf, %sfory
home space. ·on new wafer'
terrier
male
dog.
sentle
SI-s
sl•.
p•-e
-·39"'.
frottlo !tome, new kllcltet),
77
Credltors are required to file
ld
E
d
......,.
"'
"""
~
Une. Also school bul rQUfe. On
new bafh; new llvlng.r.oom, 2
their claims with said lldU(\arv
around chi ren.
war
9-18-6tc
Counly Rd. 25, 1 nille _ , af .btd,ooms, COUCD NAVE
- - - . within tour months.
Ball. 992-6529.
9·23-Jfp MOBILE Home, 12 K 51, Solem
Chesler, Ohio. If In!oresled
FOUR, lilrgt barn, outDated thiS 5th day of Sep .

MONEY CLIPS

J-....l

tember 1970
F. H. O'Brien
WILL pick Up merchandise and
Probate Judge ot said
take to auction on a perCounty
centage
basis. Call Jim
(9) 9, 16, 23, 3tc
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
Phone 742·-"61.

by Mort Reed

Thnely Quotes
Since I've been managing
the Yankees, little Luis
Aparicio has beaten me
more times than any other
·f::"r in the American

gue.

-Ralph Houk, maMger of
the New York Yanlcees for
eight years.

9-2J.tfc

Help Wanted
COUNTRY and weJtern band,
some rock. Friday and
Saturday nights. ' Write Box

Cleland ·R.ealty:
.

cell 985-4197.
bulldlh!l wlfh cellar, PQ11d,
St. In Rutland. large lot, new
ALL FOil 110.900.
·
garage, out ot high water.
Inquire any time except
Mulbtr(y
Sunday. C. J. Wise, Phone 742· BABY furnllllre, balw bod, POMEROY · Avenue ~ 2 otory brlek, B
stroller, high chair, dressing
5911.
bedrooms, bafh, baouflful
. 9-2J.Jfp
tabl•. Pltone 992·3952 .
klh;:htri, · 3 c1r gar1ge,
9·22·lfC
,.; . 1
C:OMPI.i!TEL Y. REMOI)..
1968 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2·
door. hordtov. AI.O. 1970, 12- MAPL~ brookfosf . sol ond ELED_, EXCELLENT
horsepower wheel· horse
plostlc living riiOfiiiUife. llqth CONDITION. $19.200.
riding tractor and mower.
In good con(tllloo. Inquire If
Phone Coolville 985--4176.
111 l.ocuaf ,St., Pomeroy. ·
.
9-21·31c
9·20-cllp

729·A, c.o The Dally Senflnel,
Pomeroy. Olio_.
BEANS, Kentucky Wonders.
Pld&lt; ypur own. S2 bushel.

WOMAN or girl. Apply In
person. Call 992-2565 for
appointment.

9·22·lfC

Sweet

and Irish
potatoes. Br'ing Container.
Andrew Cross, letart Falls,

;~~ 1~~'ieec~i!ti,·:.·-":!:\:'.~ ~

nJ gold .,., ·

M1ny Styles
Models • • •

and

,_

·.....
- - aa.=:.....
...
=.
tJ
I
,_ ....
...
::=r
I
I
)
··-·
-.....~.u_.

KVoa

'·.. ,_,._
IO. BGp

f. KoldiiiOW
tLBtMII

11.IO.Biek

2l.lbnb

lf.JJCIOW

5

'

II.Lompny

H. J'rlllllllll
10. DlllrJ'

. . lllenoe
JIL Ram·

(tllltr.)

!I.-

PH.-.

~&amp;100m11al1~~:.:::!t! ...J r=
u_....-...,.........,
....
........
..
form four...onlinar1
•onls.

DAILY ctOSSWORO

l f . - ' J ltLftm
Olk

i
TRUCKLOAO
TIRE SALE .
Buy 1 Tint AI RIO.
Gfl'
2nd If HIH-Prlet Wlllle·llllt
Supplr ustsl
·, · ,·

b

(Jtp.)

:U.IIalooo

ttjold
St. a....

mnt

!G.qotn·

IIWid

... t . . . . . . . . .

M.Appt0u4
I'I.NimbuJ

4t.r 1M n

atLWlclcod

fO.-

(Ilk.)

lf.lloJ

11164 , 6-[)9,P.R Chevrolif, 283,
· standard wlfh ovordtlvo.
Prl_s:td reosonablv. Phone
· ¢ht.ftr 985·136 1. Pille

' Elbti"feld.
'•
' '

.

·

9·1Wfp

Rul Estate For Sale
2 BEDROOM home .In ·goOd
nolgltbprhoo~.
r•cenfly
romoijfled. · lmtnodlafo .
.,..,..., ... , Inquire ot 181
LOCUli ~t ., Pomeroy.
: . 9·21·31&lt; ·,.

Rt. 33. Phoo• 992·2941.
.
9·20-301c

1 HornoDH"'

tltllf
11.-·

Snll
Dolats
Now!

TRAIL~R s,.ct, ooo milt from
new. Molg~ High ;School on old

"f'I'--

U.llock

Ohio.

J.

'

Oitlo'l Lf~llillollllo

u.Jirlaloa

potatoes

s.,

. MOBILE· IIJM~

l.llollotn

saY.:

Raymond N. Merena, wellknown numismatist wilh
P a r am ou n t International
Coin Corp. in Englewood,
Ohio, conducted an unusual
one-man survey at the St.
Louis convention of the
American Numismatic Asso-ciation.
Morena posed two questions to leading dealers and
num·tsmatists in a room
ftlled with the flnest coin
specimens in the world. His
6r~ •tuestlon was. "II 1
cOUld give you any United
~ S&amp;ates coin /ever issued, with
1M proviso that you or your
' lieirs could never sell, just
!i'hlch coin would you pick?"
" ~ l{is second question: "If I
¢ould give you any United
Sta~s coin without the ••·
iltriclion of s e IIi ng, what
!woUld you" choose?"
: Of th•· dealers surveyed,
David Q. Bowers and James
F. Ruddy responded with
the ume a n • "'• r to both
quesll~Jns . withOut knowing
whal coin, the . o t he r had

~!

e.-

·Bob Honnel

A Most Desirable Coin

.DANNIE'S ;

\OJ't&lt;E A lli6T'I' I'OllE~.
Ct&lt;EI&gt;Pt'
LITTLE

()

WH.IiT ~E ~IN'TEJt: ,
:!!All:&gt; 10 HIS
\SIR'"- FRIEND.

&amp;nutlnfl&amp;

M.Of--'
II."""' '

-y

·I ..

..
dMIZI · - •••4•
, .-.,.., Tltlo ...,., .. liUGANJ'

(-'"-!'~
r

DINOII

~NUT

L1G

�..
'

,.r

To Provide Bulbs
Bulbi ID be sold at the
"dluntry Fair" each !aU at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health lloopltal as a apoclal
project wU1 be provided by the
Twilight Garden Club.
Meeting 1buraday night at
lbe United Methodist Olurch,
Mrs. Robert Roberts shewed
.Udas wblch she had taken thla
past swmner whlle on a three
week IDII' of the British Isles.
Empbasll of the slldol was on
lbe hlstorlcal and acenlc points
in England, ScoUand and
Ireland. Agilt wu Jli'OIO!Itecllo
Mrs. Roberta by Mrs. Gerald
WUdermuth, pl'lllldent.
Read at the meeting woa a
letter from Mrs. Gilbert Qillen,

·

ames.....

Visit Planned

·To Glass Firm
Avisit to 1110 Fenton Glass Co.
t WIUtamtow w va was

i:~~n °~o:~a~~r:~c~~~

recently at tho home of Mrs. Jo
Ann Smith.
A housewares party was held
with Mrs. A••ls Edgell of
Parkersburg, w. va. as the
demonstrator. Gifts f.., the
most sales went ID Mrs. Chloris
Gaul and Mrs. Carolyn Tripp.
Mrs. Janice Young and Mrs.
Smith received gifts from their
secretpalsandMrs.Youngalso
won tho door pri!e. Guests were
Mrs. Barbara Hensley, Miss
Jennie Dean, Mrs. Barbara
TrillO. Kila YOUIII!. Roger and
Lea Ann Gaul, Rob and Ray
Smith, and Lori and Amy

Louks.

Other members attending
were Mrs. Nan White, Mrs.
Alma ·pooler, Mrs. Judy
Starche:·, Mrs. Sharon Louks.
\llfrtlb!MIIII wtrt aerved. ·
·
··
DAVIS CONFINED
Mark E. Davis rA Mldd!'POrt
Ia confined to the Holzer
Medical Center, His room
number Is 3'16.

GUUJl TO MEET
Tbo Women's Gutid will meet
at 7, 30 tonlgbt 11 the Trinity
Chureh social room. ·
--------•

MEIGS tHEATRE
·'

(T....,I-1
LMMarvln
Clint Easlwood
Colorclrtoon:
Ad=~:":lll=,' Adults.'60c
Children
SHOW 5TARTS7 P.M.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _..

Ill ·tiiO 6\lmii'J of 1M, ,,VPWIC.
Leona~:~~ . ~. !Jequlem
tw a YelloW ~ BNw.y,
Explore Yaut PaydUb "wid,
Wlidl!!l, ~ Jteju\edy Womon, '
••• A.....,.., Ill UMwol-, .,
OO!cers In !iddlllt~~ !II ¥"'·
:

.

•

·

,.
f •

· · .,,,

,.
.
. • • •. • ·
.t, S~VJCI!S liEG,IN " 'The ·P~ &gt;Lqw'r ~·
MIUion J'lll )lava sei'VIeea at ' ' .

ea~h ~venlrl&amp;

,'iand:"~~.~~~~=~~.: ~;

.

cCull

.

..

Women's Society of Olristlan
Service.
1be hunger problem In the
gheiiD and Btllong the migrant
workersandtheachoolchlldrm
WBS discussed alMg with lbe
role of the governmeJ&gt;t flnancecl scltoolluncb ptOIIl'IDI
and VIS!' A workers.
Mrs. Herbert Pugh pl'llll.:ecl
al the meeting during wblch

~ c !iiiil' 1g~:

Emma

i·.· .· , •

.frGIII
·

~:K=~~r~~
Mrs. Chambers ID have

Karr.
lho book study, Mrs. Eddie
Burkett, devotions.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 1
p.m., Thursday, at grange hall.
FRIDAY
HIGH SCHOOL teen dance
sponsored by the Wahama
Student Council Friday, 1 p.m.
to II p.m. at Wahams Hlgh
School auditorium The Jivs
will emcee,
'
SATURDAY
MEIGS ii!GH School Band
Boosters to sponsor dance
Saturday old Pomeroy Junior
High auditorium lrQID 8 pm. ID
11 pm. The Jays wUJ emcee.
ICE CREAM Social, Racine
Firemen's Auxiliary, Sl!turday,
beginnlngat5p.m.bythedipor
quart; also ca•• and pi~.
' ·

Francia ~ Iaiii weiek and See America 'a B~ut~" ,
1\waavole:dto~a~eof' !IYMn.Oemedtoiuli;•,VGitl. '
•100 the district WSCI ftlld: to Live B1," bY:: ;.Sri.• .
A communication Will read DonleyFo:rat; ."Au~/'.~ · ,:
regarding renewals of aub· Mr1. SleDa Gi'uea'; IJid
scription ID tbe ·ehurcb by Ytar" by Mr1. Sa'".~··
magulne.
. ,
~an Hlnell, a I*; ~f
Mrs. Stella Grueaer was lt~Farewe=a:D~to~~~=~~-::
·
Jli'Ogrllll chairman. R opened
and
with ~ lllnglns of "In the
Garden, p_rayer. by ~··

to

. ,AU AT PRICIS
''·ntA.T WILL a.EAR OUR
·. ~;. . l SHELVESI . . ·

··.,·Gross;·, Inc~
'

~,. ,;),

•: !

" .

,,.

, ,•

I

JEE THE MANY NEW

\

ARRIVAL~

ALL .OVER Ttt(i
STORE. ANOTHER BIG • SfiiPME.Jn OF ,'•KI~B~I;.L'
PIANOS - RCA TEI,.EVISION• S!T.S,. RA~IO$ ., ~~.Q' .
STEREOS- WHIRLPOOl WAS~ERS AND
·WHIRLPOOLREFRIGERATORS.:..KNITTI
YARNS - WEM8LEY TIES FOR ;MEN HALF SIZ!t DRESSES - - 17;85 CORNING
COOK AHEAD SETS SALE ·12 ...' ; ·

the

. . lb
.t:

foth.r for Lowell

........ '

...........
· newa~am
'·" .I ' . ~&gt;•· ;.'~&lt;'' • :~e logcul contl!tuoualy
, · . '· IICheduled
. radio
. prosram,
'

~·~·

VOL XXII NO. 114

POMEROY·MIDDU:PORT, OHIO

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Smith of Wlliblre, for'm~r
~ Of '1111' Ent«pNe and
Texas commun)ty cbureheo, ,
viallecl Monday and Tuesdi\y
with lrlenda bere. '!bey olayed
wilh their daughters, ·!kJulle, a
leedter In Parkl!l'ibW'8, llld
employed al ; Oblo
,Unlvenlty, who tb•t.• ~n

-·mlffifll
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I News •.• in Briefs l
111 Urilled Pnlllalenlatllul

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llf!l!P'W - THE 80VJET VNJON'S IJina 18, loaded with
""*"from the 111000, lauded todsJln Soviet Central Alia, COlD•
plelllic lire lint round trip between earth and the surface of A
llplllll bod7 1J.r an unmanned craft, tlrenewa agency Tw laid.
Tululil the l'llurnlniiWIII' llhlp lauded nactly oo targel48
mllelooUJinnlli fl. Dllrellkalpn In lhe Republic of Kazaldlstan.
1be-.111;'100 mllea 10111hout of Marcow. 1be return markecl
ompliltlm of 1 apeelacular comeback for the Soviet lmar ea~ JIIOJIIItll and also nsthellrst lime an lllllli&amp;Med ~pace
1aaded 111 a boc1J In lp8C8,1aunced again and returnee!

cnfl.._
to.-111.

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'!'he court aet
County In

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with

Your Personalized . . .
MEIGS HIGH stltOOt' c..pi.d by
CLASS RING Jo,hn •Roberti

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Four-w,.~. Shlprn411J1 .

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proposal from the Viet Cong on
Sept. 17 offering a coase.flre if
American and allied troops
were pulled out of Vietnam by
next June, said:
"Whlle you have rearranged
some of tho elements of yOW'
earlier pl'0p08111s and added
certain detail ID them, it would
appear that your fundamental
demands remain unchanged
however If you Intended In yOW'
latest statements to convey new
positions, we would welcome
fur Iller clarification from you."
Bruce said American goals
conllnue to he tho withdrawal

of aU "outside forces" from
South Vietnam, although he did
not mention North Vietnamese
troops specifically , He .also said
tho Communist demand f&lt;l' the
overthrow of tho Saigon govern·
ment rA President Nguyen Van
Tbleu and their refusal ID
negoUate with that government
"is unrealistic , .. "
South VIetnamese Vice f&gt;res.
!dent Nguyen Clo Ky, Thieu's
official representative at the
talks, arrived in Paris two
hours before today's session but
refused ID talk to newsmen and
did not sit in on the session.
Aides said they did not know
how long he would stay or any
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details of his program.
'Bruce devotecl almoat hall of
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' hiS 5541-word statement ID
Wli'BI' PALHJIEACII, l'la. (UP!)- AWeot Palm Beach
demands 1110 Communists beaiiDraey II JlftPIIl'IIC 1D - the
1clrool s)'llem for gin lmm~U! talks on better
lllfll'dlll• """"
be o~. lllrW'• a ''In lillt" f_lll' lnatment for AnlerlciiD war
11!\11. '.ill Uf..,ll• IJedltt·'tlluled W~~ 11e"- l"'lsoners.
lll!ittt....,eodaii,•J!I!:II~tlrt......Ued''brlfelll,"
In their lalelt paclcage the
Conununlsls had offered U: hold
1we ~ ·JiiWoroa fl.lldhidaal pm.,cy.
~ ilrliliet1111 the "bra lelt"wrko IIIli...,.: a 8frhrba Ia
talks on the release of tho
o.,eeled olaot _ , . , a In Is labJl before the sclrool'o American )llisooers in return
de• Ill lkll ud IDid ID jump ap and don. B tbe deaa
for a troop withdrawal within a
deddel tllere llloo madl ~,"the cJrl II ...t bOille ud nine-month deadline.
teld ID-a In toseltoollatheflltare.
A ..,.._.,. for seltool SUperiDieadeil Alhelllan
CORRECTION MADE
l,llpll'"'l deaJed tlreN Mil any IIICh lldil8 81 a "bra test." Dr.
Among the survivors of Jacob
Bdlrard l!luey, prlllclpal of Palm Bead! Gardea~ Hqb,
F. Betz, 80, who dlecl Tueaday
illlmflled HWrol Cfrla ..d beea 10111 home by bls dean of
llrl• for aot -.tq hru. Bill Elney llfd no "bra tnt" wa• night at his home on Hysell St.
in Middleport, is his wife, Nellie
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R. Betz.

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THIS BEAUTIFUL !&amp;-inch salln clad, with I!Did acceJU, doD and attractln bamW
painting 111 velvet were glfll from VIetnam ID Betty Howell, INted, lnlll Durell
I'VmeroyRoute t Napper wboserwd 13monlhlu a laneecor)lOI'II-=the ll. S.llliboilln
Vletnam,IOllt the oouwnlrs ID Betty In appreciation lor her ldndll- ID bbn llld ber l\l)thfvl
.Jetter writing. She bas been a nelchbor lw a n~ !If yean. Nappor has returned·bllme

Nll\lia-,

WRONG PASSER
A U.)'U'd Jill' play from

selilor ' halfback"!uarterhacl
Dave Smith ID julilor erul •
lliHhack Deanls Eichinger
vlrl1lllly sewecJ.up Eulere'•
SVAC vldory over North
Gailla lalt Friday.
The accOillll of the game,
IDcorroctly Bald Tom Karr
threw lire IDudrdown pall.

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you can espoct ID see a
refurbished Image of your
senior senator. The man who
makel bla television commerclala wU1 try ID sell you 'Hartke
tho cop.' He won't bo a1pne In
tllllliltie charade."

autumn. s;ptembet . and ,

October are the months to·
plant bull:ls "'though
planting Is possl'ble until
the ground freezes.

i.n Survey
develop a plait· ior servteea ID
ol(ier people; The Jrlformatlon
· ·. ., the quesUIIllirtrne wUJ be
riled for ~ ~·
- the donn peqple in·

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terviewed h~re 'll{adneaday,
most Indica~ that. they are
happy with wbaro.lhey·Dn, but
feel the need fw mtri ljw:Orne,
Mrs. Conklin said.! ~ &gt; '•-.1'

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Court&gt;Seat

Is Filled.

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u,.. .,_ ·ulectlan~ ~ tulql$;
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wu under lnveallgation.

•ounded. The d011h toU
matched that Of Aug. Z2, the
lowest of the year.lt brOuflht 1D
t3,67f the !Dial llmerleaDa
ldUed In tho war since Jan. 1,
1981.

Commwrlques In Phnom Penh
aid the VIet Con&amp; and NCI'Ih
Vletnamele defender~ Of T8118 ·
Kauk are so well dull In thai
air olrlkel have been pcnrert.
ID dlalodce them. Cambodian.·
troope failed again Wednuday
ID capture the town.

L l•ttle Guy WiIns

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· Pian I bul.bs now tor' ~eiil,lly
In the spring. -Spring ,
g~rcl,en$ ar.e created In

Ry BERT W. OIWLEY

SAIGON (UPI) - American
Tbo U.S. Qwnmand allo
mortar crews mistakenly born· repwled 52 Amerlctuur ldlled Ill
barded their ""n troopo Wed- tho war last week IIIII 113 Gil

neaday night in Central Sauth
Vietnam, killing two Gla and
wounding lOW' others, the U.S.
Command said today.
The incide11t Involved a writ
of the 2nd Brigade of the 4th
Infantry Divlsloo.. The outfit
was shelled while operating 18
miles south rA Borrg Son and 219
mllea nortbeut Of Salgt~~.
Another Army writ mistakenly
fired 38 rounds Of U Inch and
81mm mwtar at the Infantrymen.
WASHINGTON - The Office
Tbo Army said the Incident
of Economic OpportUnity has
advised lOth Dlatrict Cong.
Clarence E. Miller of an $18,133
DEO grant approval lor the
Ga11ia - Meigs Community
Action Conunission based In
Pomeroy and Galllpolll.
ATLANTA UP!
,
The grant Is spectOcally
Junmy
provide administration and Carter, a wealthy peanut
management of the c:ommunl"' Iarmer who called hlmseH ooe
aclltll agency for coordlnaU:~ Getrgla's "little people,"
Of local resources..
!IDIBiblng victory over
The OEO laid tbatthe $ll,833 former Gov. Carl E. Sanders
grant wu the federal share WedneedsynightmaDemocra·anotled fw the program and Ucprlmaryrunollforgovernor.
said that tbe local share for the "The volerl' decision proba·
prolecl was ~,834.
bly wUI go down as one of the
greatest victories that has ever
been seen In Ibis state,'' said
the 6-year-&lt;&gt;lll former state
senator.
·
Caner bad led Sanders. also
f5, In the first primary two
'Vtll!ko qo, but a nfM.min field
., kept him frGIII getting a
majority. Ha bpi~ m&lt;menCOLUMBIJS (UPI) _Judge twnln ~'I!J ~ay'o runolf and
time lllllll;i afler the polls
Robert E. Leach Of the Franldln cl~ hlo ~ Will so large
::ourlty Court rA Appeals wu illiat ~ ellliCeded.
named to the .Ohio Supteme
~ill.
vot~trfc, An\lmr J.
Courtl4da7 by Gov. James A. Young, t .'flifrnlr '•llid!l 1o lhe
Rhodes. '· .
late • . • rl&lt;u&amp;W laDe ..II'.,
Leach ,.. appointed to - · a ' '·.' ' ' ,...
beecn·
eomplell!' ille. tw'o year tenn al
~
Justiclt Jol)o M. Matthlauho lnB Ge . ,~ '¥~t blaclr:
resigned !'eeen!4' because Of ~·; '1P •1"' ,.....
~affjlfJGY.tlll'lontheblgh YOiflli,ll8,6illt,1i1Jitrt&gt;attorney
l ,.
Wyman C. ctoH \frir tbt
Democratic II&lt;UIInlfloll In tha
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Agnew said during an airport
news conference the schecluled
villi by Ky ID addre&amp;o 1 proVietnam rally "might be a
mistake.'' He added, however,
"I sleadfuUy refu!e ID take
any partln dissuading bim"
fromcommg.

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Buddies Bombed

Meigs-Gallia
OEO is Funded

Come-Lately Club Convened by Agnew
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· , INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (tiPI) ctrillenllnll $en. Vance llarlke, nllnols.
. Hart and Hartke, when the
-~~)' Pfesidellt $Pito T. D-ln\1,. for his Senale I!Ol!t. II
Kennedy, Agnew said, "Ia radical leaders were making
·.'/l&amp;frtifi ~ ~ IIUl leVin •u the iut atop In a wldrlwlnd llllddenly reversing his field. their threats of violence only a
· ~ lfDIIO!l,
campaltln tour for "BMW·
Now InStead of cal1lJ)8 . for year ... two ago?"
!Gn'and 11111111torlal '.l qlefuilu Althoush Hartke bore the comrnlsslcmera tor study
'"111oee previously Indulgent
new memberll of the "come- brunt of Agnew'• ~'i&lt;s. lire chrillcea fw .t!IU\"If for drall pollllca,na wbo are now, on
la.la]jl I' chib oo crime and yiCe pntldent •-led ·a few dndCtC'8.
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hi Ill l'ln8lnlb' den, elecllon eve, swelling lho ranks
•t dlaorder.'~.__
COIIIlllOIIta fw Democratic Sen-of llllli&lt;lt}l what he callrr 'campus Of the harclliners on violence
'~ .,.. said Wadrwdsy a!Gn EdWard M. K,etiiiOdy Commandoes.'
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and crime," Agriew aid, are
n~l a planned . ·villi 'io M+at&amp;lseltl, Gewge ~¥· "Senator McGovern, juat the "Jolnlntllhocome-latelyclubon
W~ by S!lutll Vlabra- ~ Of · South flaklq, other day,·~ cooing IU~ea c:r11ne and disCI'der ,"
.,... ,., ·- · ~ , PI IOOI~&amp;'t~ 6und $. ~Uikle Of~ dOvulll!ritarU!.droarin&amp;llba A,ne•saidHa!'lke"hubeen
'· ',, Cao It 'WI be~ · ." aqdl'ldllp A. Hart of Mlchlpn, Uon," Apw said.
,, , ' terribly out of 1tep wilh the
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t.. ~ plllf ~lorial ~ Hiihert "Wilm .,... the votC. fl. needs'and c1es1m Of the people
~In ,, · ClJ., Rep.~ ,Hurllpl(i'ey fl.~~~~ _and · MIIIIdl .and McGovern, of of lndlm. So now, like a
i'!Hll t..
!Wnd., .Wflo Is Adlal · lil. ~- ... m of SleVeniOII and llumpbrily, of ~ r1a1ng from the uhel,
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be~rllaclulrpd,!rll!llheMujMIIR.IIID!*It,•&lt;iallt. \

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1\utland ~&lt;m•rl&lt;!an Lesion
~ry Unit 40'! .\rlu hold a ,
·ru/rimaie sale and bake Nle
Friday and ~!Qf~y at the }il)lt
hom• Jn RuUand trorn 9 a.m. ID
t p.m. Ba~ epOdl·wUI be·sold
oqly on t!•tv~dey, Anyone
wbhlnC 10 dcinale any typo
ilema 1may leal'tl them at tho
home• ' of Ani! · Thomas or
Blirbaf~ereri1eJm; lq Ruiland.

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UMI.tNO~~~..a -BLONDE ACI'IUI88IIIWION TATE-

(Continued~~~ pace lo&gt;

By MICHAEL DENNIGAN
.· PARIS (UPI)-The Unltecl
Stalel today asked the Vletnameso conun~lsts for, "further
clarlflcaUon of tiw;~~' latest
peace proposals. But 11 said the
!l8ckage did not appear to offer
anything new.
AI tho. same time, Ambassador Davtd K: E. Bruce accused
the North Vretnamese and VIet
Cong of using Amerl~ prisonen and their famiUes as
''pawns to achieve your poUti·
cal objectives."
B~ce, In tho lin.t formal
U.S. response 1D an erght-polnt

ano1
ew

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la1l and siJtet, 1$'.11111 Mrl!.
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Monu:mentallssUB: the Bounce
e-,
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set October

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'WIIIIamltown, W. Va. '""'

FloydW~.

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1970

ruce e s
an

'SELECT

AT E~B~RF~~P~~ - .

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DUTCH:;~FLOWER ·BULBS
, . .: NOW . . · }'· .

Weather

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; t:lla RaiiiD NetWork wiD mark

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~t'JirtoldWI

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Your Shopping Center.
Wearing Apparel For Y~r Fami~ and
·Furnishings For YoutHoml.

Personal Notes

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Merchandise

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Pomeroy.....

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SATURDAY NIGHT
FINAL WEEK
TO SAVE ON
• Slacks • Shirts • Belts
• .Broken Sizes In All

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dlstrld meetln,i held at Camp llln. Earl R1hlabd•r ~ ·.•t.

B~

DOORS
CLOSE

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Make Elberfelds In ·PomerciJ

Boyles Family sang, Won't We
Be Happy Over There?; the
congregation sang, When We
All Get To Heaven; the quartet
sang, Oh Brother Noah!, Great
Morning, That First Day In
Heaven, Had It Not Been, I Just
came To Talk With You, Lord,
U Jesus came to Your House,
andReachOutloJesus,
The closing prayer was by
Rev. Randy Lavender.
Visiting churches and individual places represented
Surprise Birthday
were Lottridge, Tuppers Plains,
Given by Ladies Aid
Glouster, Parkersburg, Athens,
Chester, Hemlock Grove,
Asurprise birthday party was Orange, Shade, Chillicothe and
held by the Ladiea Aide of the others.
Enterprise Unltecl Methodist
Church honoring Mrs. Ben nM
. n. Chur·"- . . waddina
Bilek, '10 ytira old.
. ·' • . lf"rt
Wf I'
e
Acake was served foU!JWing a Will Be on ·friday
potluck dinner at the church. A
gift was presented ID Mrs.
The open church wedding of
Buck. Attending were Mrs. ·
· M Da · 1
MISS Joyce Louise c rue
Walter Walker' Mrs. John and Mr, David Carroll JacL..
Smith, Mrs. PhiUp Smith, Mrs. will he held at I p.m. Friday at
Carl Moore, Mrs. Fred Clsrk, the Church of Christ in
Mrs. Herbert Dixon, Mrs. Chrisuan umon
· at Hobson.
Willard WUson, Mr1. WIUtam
Alrson and Gina. and Mrs. The Rev. 0. H. cart will of- Mr and Mrs Dlllon 0'088 of
Eldon Weeks.
ficiateatthewecldlngwblchwtil Rac~were&amp;mdarvllltonol
be followed by_a r!'"""Uon at the their daughter, Mrs, Qlffonl
homeofthebrid•:spare?ts,Mr. (Pat) Roush and famlly, In
BANKS LOWER RATES
and Mrs. Paul McDaniel, Sr ·• Columbus Sgt C M Rousb Is
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Prime Foorth Ave.~ Middleport. The chief advb.c.- ~the Vietna~~~e~e
lnU!rest rates were dropped bridegroom ,. the son of Mr, 10
, Soe Trang
from 8 per cent to 71'. per cent and Mrs. Clair Jacks, Mrs. Paul· (Mary) Paynler
today by four more Ohio banks. Langsville.
was admlttecl as a medical
Tho one-llalf per cent reduc- E · Host M ti
patient Friday ID the Holzer
Uon was announced by Ohio IWIOS
ee ng
Medical Center.
~UIMelesUandp.~JveonlhoWoodeShadsanowsg,. National Bank here and the Of Tic lac Class
Mr.andMn.EidredStewart
"""
Winters, Third and First Na- Mr and Mrs Doo Erwin of Cbarlelllm, W. Va. and Mrs.
and Holding To The Master's tiona! banko in Dayton.
h
""-'fllho Ti T Ada Forget ol New Bern, N.C.
Hand; quartet sang, Power In
The rale lowering followed 08 a moe~.,.
c oc were !mnday gueata of Mr and
the Blood, Till the Storm Pssaes similar action recently by sev- ClaSI of the Middleport Church Mra.
Charles
Nue."nan,
By, Everyday WID Be Sunday, era! other Ohio and East Coast of Chl'lst reeentiy. Erwin gave Syracuse. Ccmlng IIlii weekend
Bye and Bye.
banko.
dfevolhoUonsOcantobedplans w;~ made for a villi wU1 ba Mr. and Mrs.
Solo, by Steve McCoy, A
or
r mee .....g to be Jack WbiiUe of Worthmgton
Soldier's Prayer; more
held at the home of Mrs. Kathy Bob Grueler,IOII of Mr. and
U!stimonles, quartet,! Wouldn't RUSH APPOIN'1'ED "
Hood. Membera and gueats are Mrs Karl an- Ia a ~enlor
Take Nothing for My Journey
COLUMBUS (UP!) .41 Mrs. "' attend In coatwne.
IIlii. fan at GwbviUe Stele
Now, and I Believe In the H1U Lo1B Rush, on the Ohlo OffiC6 AIU!ndlng besides those Olllege.
.
called MI. Calvary; Jean and ol Opportunity staff since 11166, namedHanl ~~~-Mr. and Mrs. Ron Mr. and Mrs. DaJt 1(eslnw

OUR

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James &amp;'lii~
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of the the liiDea bulldlllg 1n !i11Qen. l!..dlilp liicluded • •.t.1 · .· ·

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WOMEN'S ASSN., Mid·
dleporl United Presbyterian
Church, 6:30 poUuck dinner
Thursday at the church.
Hostesses, Mrs. Don Lowrey,

Kathy Flanders sang, ! Saw a
Man; Jean and Howard
Flanders sang, Had It Not Been
and He Touched Me; and all
three Flanders sang, It's Different Now.
The Coe family sang, J'rh Too
Near Home To Turn Back Now;
Rev. Randy Lavander sang,
Lord, You Know (his own
composition), and Until Then;
Vickie Wood and caryl Pooler
sang, What A Saviour; The

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=~~~da;m.;::~~~ of the viUe. A . l, wu slven ' b)&lt; ~k 'Up" by ; Mrtii i l(#t'
-""
_.,_ ........... .._ n - ' - ....
Gil .... a-·- un"'-t ,.. '''""""'''
MlDerovwe Moth..... "''w"'' I """• ' """""' .,.yro
""' . ,...,..; '"''"· "' .....,.,.,.,. . .

CUB SCOUT Pack 249,
1b ad 7-30
IOOF hall
An~ bo~'who !::'passed ~
eighth birthday or 18 In tho third
grade 18 eUglble to join.
XI GAMMA MU Thursday 8
p.m. home of Mrs. Mar~et
FoUrnd. ,

Mrs. Joan Landers, PVmeroy, Is llllllOIIIIclng the approaching marriage of her daughter, Roberle Salser, to Mr,
David Sellers, son rA Mr. and Mrs, Harold Sellers, PVrtland.
The open chlrch wedding wU1 be an evant of I :30 p.m. oo
Sept. 'l1 at the Enterprise Unltecl Methodist Cllrrdl. The
!ride-elect Is a graduaU! of MeJ8s High School, claas of 1970. ,
Her Dance Is a 11166 graduate of Raclne Hlgh School, and Is
employed at the Ohio Pallet Co. of near Pomeroy,
The doubJe.&lt;'ing eeromooy wU1 he performed by lho Rev.
William Alrson.

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kl! ~' tw'
u~=':';::'J:-.~1 bakesaloila!Urd.yat!O..ar.~

Church, 7:30 Wednelday atlho
church. Mrs. PhiUp Globokar
. and Mrs. Karl Kautz, program
leaders; Friendly Circle
members, hostesses.
AUXILIARY FeeneyBen u p t 1,j American
ne
os
•. , ults
Legion, juniors, 6·30 • ad '
7' 30 p.m.::J=~ta.

Miss Roberta Salser, above, to Wed

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the Ume -

The piJ&amp;bt of v1ct1m11 of the war H1IIMn bad seo' thl(lli a m_,. emremained frlgblful and the Inlernallonal .ph•ll!lng bllo
'lljiete and abiOiule

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Hunger ·,n U·s Under Dl·s··cu·: ss·l·on· :':"'~.·. ·

~:n~~;~p;:~e:.Y·
WOMEN'S GUU.D, Trinity

l!bellliw contll*led," but ~~ the Red cr.llllid llllllinlllllon rlthe eoalllcl
situation wuoo quiet the British Embally •aa lr8mperlna reiJof effortl. II has
staff Wll. lllllylng In Amman.
reported thouaandl of per10111 near
Ja-aeiJ mllilat7 COl lOipOirdtots 'IIIlo first otarvallon and llilllout ,..In tile &lt;*ert
reported the Jordanian !ant and air fllrce country and witbout ll'f!!llbl ald.
victory over Invading Syrhm !ant until at
With Hiiiii!ID appar:jllll)' winning, Arlb
Jrbid said they could hear lho IOUllda o{ leaderl fllrMd :their en.Uon "' lrJUIIIe
Cllllfllct again IDday, with Jordanian IInke lmpoee a ceue-llre 111. lordan.
and artillery shelling &amp;uerrllla
A 10-natlon Arab IUQD!t conference In
slroogpolntl.
Cairo reporled tb'ousfi a SPOkerman that
and

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wU1 head
the newly
crealed
ng,,.....
McKinney,
Mrs.guest~
Benol'relltlves
were
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . chUd
deYelopment
divillon
In Mr · and
Mrs.Peggy
Richard
Moyer, and
weekend
In
tho atale Urban Affairs Depart- and Mr. and Mra. Wilbur New l.elinltlla·
'
men\.
I
Theobald, IJ)OIIIOl'S.
The Re\1. and Mn. Menzll

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ted

Frldoyfhru TuoadoY
Sop..mbor 25-lf

vou~":ZGON

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and
cultural
bopko
for review
during
the ecllecluled
club yeu: '':30
t~~twgll SundaY with 'l'ln..-sdaY
~ 'l!el!··
are Huey Long, Tbo Ideal of , Ralph Spirea as ~·· · ~
Henry' IJice, Od)osaey Of · a ' publlc Is lnvltecl. .
- · tcoaomlca. ·'
·WEDNESDAY
Friend, OUr Brother's Keeper,
!
i
CUB SOO!IT Pack 250, Letar~
.
.
, . . ,

Church Homecoming is Held Sunday
ALFRED - The annual
homecoming of the Alfred
Methodist Church was held
Sunday,Sept. 20, heginnlng with
Sunday School at 9:45a.m. with
an attendance of 49.
Worship services were at II,
with Rev. Lavender speaking
from Obadiah, "Edam strong
and proud, and was brought
low , Such will he our fate If we
do not humble ourselves. We
must share God with others.
Love can change the world and
must start with the Christian,"
he said.
A basket dinner was held in
the church basement at 12:30.
The afternoon program began
at 1:30, with lloyd Dillinger,
chairman. Fl&lt;l'ence Spencer,
~ Foj!rod, and Howll'!l
Flan4ert IMI!e liP tile proghim
comnllttee.
The program was as follows:
A hymn by the audience,
Prayer by Rev, Eugene
Williams, recognition of two
ministers present, Rev.
Williams, a former pastor, and
Rev. Randy Lavender, the
Present pallor; The Golden
Stairs, a quartet from
Parkersburg, sang Ita theme
song, The Golden Stairs, and
JeBUS Is Coming Soon, After All
and Footing Fine.
Teatimoniel by Warren Bentz
and Rev. Eugene 'WUUams,
choir from Tupper• Plains and
Lottr!dge sang Surely GoodnOSI
and Mercy, and Unworthy;

. .

i

. ...... -

Social
.Calendar

Date is October 18
hold al her home at 7:30 tonight
Marilyn Swan displayed pic·
lures of the Appalachian
Heritage Camp at Camp Sandy
Bond near EIJJabeth, W.Va. in
August. The chapter sponsored
two rA lho 18 Meigs County
disadvantaged girls who at·
lended the camp,
The cultural program,
"Painting of the Person," was
presented by Miss Swan and
Donna Stewart. Hostesses were
Judy Crooks, Judy .Werry, and
Gail Hovatter. Coleen Ohlinger
presided at the meeting.

·

'
Prognmll·fll' the Middleport 'l'binOn Jaluwqn, 'immetialll
Uterary OUb'a II'IIJ.71 7ear ~ Jftsldent; and ·fdl'l. N~
•
have been compleb!d by a Moore.
Flrlt
~Of
11M! ~t!b irill
planning cii!IIIIIU.. composed
bo
held..,
Oct.
7
aUbo
bllm• of
of Mrs. Richard Owen, . J. :r .• "'~•· with
Mn '
·president, Mre. Forreat Mrs.
Baditel, vice president; Mrs. Dwight Willaee revlet!lilg lhe
book, "Greet ~ of Gocl" by
Taylor · c.~w. A taVOI'IIe
Bible /:baracter will ~ the
resp~~~se.
'
·
Arnopg tho poiiUQal; llll!lial

Marietta, regarding lhe
exhibitors and arrangers'
cllnl,. being held Ibis month
and next at the Athens County
Fairgrounds.
A thank yuu nole was read
from Mrs. Caddie Wickham for
Dowers sent at the time of her
sister's death.
'!1mely garden blnls were
given by Mrs. Eddie smith who
wU1 host the October~ meeting.
Mrs. Wildennuth gave an ar·
llcle on "Flower PV-" from
Guldepollls and a poem, ''!be
Good Ule"lo open the meeting.
Mrs. Dwight Parker, boste11,
served punch and lemGDIIIIcko.
An arrangement of roeeiJuda
centered the table.

Plans f.., tho preferential tea
ID be held at the home of Mrs.
Carol McCullough on Oct 18
were made Tuesday night by
the Oblo Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
Vikki Gloeckner, ways and
means chairman, announced a
meeting rA her committee to be

·

.

~th Dlatrict and wUI meet Rep. · .
Fletcher Thompson, R-Ga., tn ··,.· ·
November.
And In another runoff,
Dawson Malbis, 39211, a loillliJ
television newsman at
beat attorney Harry
for the 2nd
District nonlinal!on.
Republican oppooltion
succeed retiring Rep.
O'Neal, [){la.
With 1,927 of
reported, Carter clalmf&gt;ii"Mi
cent Of lho vole,
ID 333,931 for
losing In only eight
t58 counties.
Frerrb from- Of
up~els In atl.llm
polltiQ, ClrtW
attenlllll
he
tha .
er "'•
·
"llalow ba Is
TV

!*loi:UIW~,~~

afnkl fl
Ia tila own
Oarlw.
111111

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