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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. ·
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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. ·
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MEIGS tHEATRE
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(T....,I-1
LMMarvln
Clint Easlwood
Colorclrtoon:
Ad=~:":lll=,' Adults.'60c
Children
SHOW 5TARTS7 P.M.
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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 ¥"'·
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.t, S~VJCI!S liEG,IN " 'The ·P~ &gt;Lqw'r ~·
MIUion J'lll )lava sei'VIeea at ' ' .

ea~h ~venlrl&amp;

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

.

cCull

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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~
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JEE THE MANY NEW

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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

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

~

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·

, '" ot.
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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

w._.,.., •

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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.
.•
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.'
·
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
,; .. · ; ' •
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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• amdayguealaofhis~,..

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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

•'Y.., ,

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

I

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

&gt; ., •.

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

f 1

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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Youl'aow
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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.

'..

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

i

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

..,._,....

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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'h
.IY-,~··

/

ted

Frldoyfhru TuoadoY
Sop..mbor 25-lf

vou~":ZGON

I

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~
.
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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;

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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.

·

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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

·

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~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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. we graytna folks of the ..Above Thif!Y" popul,atioo. who are
bearin8 that we lllould feel guilty for the sorry condition of
liumaniQ&gt; today may relurbiJh our aell esteem in the June
eommenccment address of Eric A. Walker, prelklent of llle
Pennsylvania State Uni..rsity, since rem~.
JliJ address has been quoted frequently because o(. the dif.
ferent view he took of the so""" lied "generation gap!' ketuUng
lllecrltkilm of so many of today'• collegrgeneration, he &lt;!ted llle
'""'"""llsbmenta of their predecessors.
", .
Reprinted from 111e Meadville ( Pa.) Tribune, Dr. Walliier's
iddreaa contains so much common aenae we wuote it herein part:
"If you ... will look o..r into llJe bleachers to your left« right,
l will reintroduce you to representatives of some of the moe!
r..n.rtable pe&lt;~ple ever to walk on earth - people you migbl
want to thank on IIIIa graduati!'ll day.
"Tbeae -yourparentaandgrandparents-~~relile people wbo,
willlln just five decades, 19111-1969, have by their wcm&lt; lncreaiOd
your ~ expectancy by 50 per cent; wbo, whlle cutting the
worling day by a tblnl, ha.. doubled the per capita oulplll.
''Tbeoe are llle pe&lt;Jple who have given you a beallhler WCll'ld
than they found. Becauae of th!.&gt; you no longer have to lear
epidemlcs of nu, typhus, dipblherta, srnallpor, acarlet fever,
or mumps that they knew In llleir youth. The dreaded
!l"lioll no lmger a factor; TB!salmool unheard of.
"Let me remind you that theae remarkable people have lived
lbrwlb lUiu'y's greatest deprwlm. Many know what it.lslo be
JIIICll', to be hungry and cold. And becauae of IIIIa, they determined
tiW II would not happen to fOU, that you would have a beUer llle,
food to eat, milk to ddnk, vllamlna to nourllh you, a warm hmle, .
better achoo!.&gt;and greater oppcrtunlti"' to aucceed than they had.
"Jiecauae they gave you the best, you are the talleat, healthiest,
briPtat and probably best.looldng generation to inhabit llle
land.
"And because they were materialistic, you will work fewer
bour1,learn more, have more leisure time, tra ..l to more dlltant
placnandhave more chance to follow your llfe's ambition.
'"nneae are till! people who have foushl man's grlslieat war.
WNie IIIey have dlllle theae things, IIIey have had some fallurea.
Tiley have not yet found an altematl.. fCll' war, DCll' Ill' racial
illfred.
''But tbey -llloae generations- have made more progreu
by ille IWIII of their broWll than In any previous era - and don~
11JUforgat lllf your ganeratl(ll can make as much progress in as
'tMII$ areae 11 theae two generations have, you should be able to
aolvea&amp;oodlllllll' olthe Wll'ld's remaining Ills.
, ''It II my hGpe, and lllnow the bope of theae two generations
that you !llld the amwer to many of lheae things that plagued
mankind But it W(ll~ be easy. You won't do It by negatl..
llloughts, nor by tearing down or belittling. You may and can do It
by liard wort, hunolllty, hope and failil In mankind. Try ll"
Dr. Walker has put the generation gap In proper perspective.
Fai' from being tile failures Iiiey sometimes are characterized by
today's youths, member&amp; of till! older generation have set a record
tllalatands as a challenge for young people to surpass.
In reality that well may be wha Ipartly is bugging them.

J

le&lt;ieral

\";.~ge: speaking' in

Cleveland

·~~~-~~

a

up of, lnfluential business lilld professional men, gave

own "balance sheet of American society" In 1970.
Those who can find nothing right or nothing wrong with
America today would feel uncomfortable reading it. Those
who think it is too much trouble to question some aspeets
of American life would find equally irksome the balance
sheet drawn up by Judge George Edwards of the Sixth
District Appellate Court, based in Detroit, which lists the
following "assets" and "liabilities" of America:
Asaeta
a Freedom of dissent.
• Freednm of speech, press and religion.
a Free elections and the right of all citizens to vote.
• The closet approach to universal education in the his·
tory of the world.
•
before the law and an incre,asing equality
protected mechanism for peaceful
from want for 85 per cent of Its people.
Uablllllel
• The perolrtence of racism.
• Poverty for 15 per cent of our people.
• An undeclared war in Vietnam.
·• Juvenile delinquency, crime and mental Illness among
5 to 10 per cent of Americana.
· · • Environmental waste and pollution.
• A legal system of pollee, courts and correction which
has not been able to mareh the theory .of equality with
ita practice.
a An ineUnatlon to cherlah lhinJB above human life.
a Jrrelevanc:les and inadequacies in much of education.
a '{:~ucllce• and fruatratloils arising from the Puritan
e '
· Just to list these asseta and liabilities does not explain
bQw they have come about, of course. And probably there
arl! more ~ms that could be listed In both categories.
The balance sheet is much more meaningful to the aver.
age American, however, than the generallzatlona which
c:ome from the far1'ight or extreme left. And because most
~ricans see their nation in the balance, It would be
helpful if they would speak up, more ofte!l-and act where
fl"J.•ible-to add to ~ "pro' list and reduce the "con"

,

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BY1~d . o'lliUAN

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aboul/ llte'

r.

Ironton-~arauder

....

jnli,MI ~p!IIY '!'Uil_,d,

~~~~

· ftOd&amp;en' '*"ll)lba'Uioncea,._Jn,o....,.. "'LOQ
mulieal •"'iwo : ~ ~· ':II' '1t needs il91' ~~ ... """' Ar.'!'f .

;;~~r_gh

•ua~ry: - Varlelf•• _, aiWIJI 've.n totes ilona J!O~ble
~
IOIIId8il Ub .,..... .... ~ . !fmn·
· ~: will we~~:omt' in~ bli Jien!inC!c' met: Lea!l8 .UIIP,!llll "''-'""
hit ... "The ~·· al!lo andptedberl!i!h "Uggamsf
IOIIIIda lllie t..d;t 1111111tJ SIJI 'Ni!orididyOIIStta·irah'\f:~
the Sbu~Alley;llllilelJiqund, lib thaiT''; .S !¥hen. ~ ·
HeJenlfa7e!ibalher'ntetlil· ~f prioln~ ~ .U. S.
and mOll ·ll)llllllaanl.l8f .abotll Tennil Olfen '- PJ;l&amp;e u . Ken .
"Hair" In Liloll:."AU ille 'lllllfll · t~o~e~rall;tMre _,. 'bool and
wereao..U'flltylliJ.anddreary, "We Willi APW~ ~ .... ,
'1-"'
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and tho .,.;. yo1in.r --•·

•-te

lootedao.:d.: .. l~ru;;
people 1oobd a Uftlt \llllleffed

'

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1

By Helen Bottel

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
their grandchildren, they'd
This column Is for young have to explllln to tlJem what
people, their problems and the sun Is, because they'd never
pleasures, their troubles and have aeen it lor smoke.
fun. Aa with the rest of Helen · Who wants to wear gas masks
Help USI,It welcomes laughs aUIIIeirlives'lsn1ilworthltto
but woo 't dodge a aerlous gotoali!Uemoretrouble-tlke
question with a Ifuab-&lt;~!1. Send plowing under weeds lnatead &lt;if
your teenage questions to burning them, and turning th~'::o~tw':g ;~~.:
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care leaves into compost, and re·
.
of Helen Help US' this
s~m~IDlt 9f Mt. · Washlne·
·
new... ualng botUes - if we can Hve ton, N.H. The World Alma·
paper.
longer and happier Uvea?
nac recalla that the first
YOUTH GROUPS
Oh, Helen, why are people so public demonstration was
START CAMPAIGN
close-minded? ,_ W. B. of given on Aug. 29, 1886. The
AGAINST POLLUTJON
S-A.F.E.
fggJulyr~wf""·S:t"ao~~~tedof
Dear Helen:
Dear W:
$1.39,500.
, ~
Last spring our school started People are getting less closea group called S.A.F.E. !Save minded every day, and it 1s
Air For Everybody). A few organizations such 88 yours QUICK QUIZ
weeks later we lll'med two which ljelp shine the light Into
.
more groaps· m - Help to dark places Keep promoting
Q-What u ·the Bntuh
..._: term /Of' a tnu:k?
....._..
( · ,_ 1 aild S".S b !'I · 1
"''""'on" wa-,
· ..., "" ut1
c ~ . Jilll ~IIJI ·i•"" A-LOn'y .,.
-•
o\1SlftVOtir Soft~--· "'- ~. . ~·- tory. our mother's attitude lB ,
· . .
•-~---''The object Is to open peoplf's Uke that of many individuals - Q-How 111e , • ...,.. "' ...tor·
eyestopoUuUonandstartthem and Industries who lhink anU- state hlghW(IJ/11I!mlbtred1
working to eliminate it. Our .pollutionisjuatgreat-untllit A-Highways wblch run
.
east ancl west are aasiiJMd
projects Include awarding makes them work harder, or even 0 umbers; hlghwaya
plaques to companies who do spend more money. - H.
running north and south ue
something to clean .up the atr or P.s. Congratulations on your assigned odd numbero.

:!~~a:'ln~=o:u:.': :!~:u~a=n~:r:.~:
make will
money we
go toward
obtalnlngmovtMonpollution to
show publicly; and for clean-up
projects.
Atflntpeopleklndol,laughed
at
but now tlley're ~
our bottons. We try to explain as
we aeU, and II gels eaaler
"seUing".Utlletime.
lwasveryproudofthewayso
many ldds volunteered to help.
'lben II happened! I brought
homeafewoftheanti~Uution
-.pampbletnnadprlntedand
mymotherflipped. 'lboughabe
is .uaually uniierataildini, she
uid she was tired of this
pollution bit, and if we had to
watch every Hille thing,' stop
burning leaves and agriculture
Landa, buy glaas bolties and go
to the trouble ot returning them,
ele. weD, II was just too much of
ahaule.lhadansweraforher,

us,

!..~
g~-...

=:.-•. ~u::

madder .. 1decided to wrtte to
you, Heleil. Here goes;
I read about • woman
celebnlting ber IOO!h birthday.

~'~llratehalfwetha'refo~nolnonthee

Q-What type of 14iliiiQ
'
boot hal 011111 Ollfl man?
are on your side, too. - H.
A-A catboat has one mut
Dear Helen:
far forward In the be!r and
I opened a box of crackero only one ian. ~ ·
.
today. First there was the
.
canlboardlm,thenabigbeavy -.,when you mulllpl;y it by a
plastic bag, and Inside of thai niii\Jon packages - wow!
were four lndlvldu,ally wrawecl Pollu!lon time!
·
packages of cracllers. II hap- Why doean'nndustrj; C&lt;liDI
penswithcerealsiQo-allu- off llle !ancy. jllickaging ldck.
separate wrappings lnillde Burned paper ·; ..· -"'·••
.,..
.,....,...
wrappings. They're a big IIIIIOg, but burning putiC liN
nuisance, they don't keep foOd offll"'-""caaes,too.-~WAIIE.
~·use up fast that m"•h Dear Aware·
.
'··
·
fresher, and lhink of all the Whydon'tyou (and •Oihen)
extra ''waste" to bum, plua wrlte .to u making the product a ·Utile ping" oom))imtfla 8bii.Jtln.
more expenaive. Maybe people direct? You'd ba llill'prlle\t bow
Wak that Hille bit of extra faat public 6'plnloli' 'cJianje
paper~ no difference, but pollclea.- H.
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Ways to Lose

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bd;:,
~ t:!~ J~e1i· ~ ..... t.J.~~:!!··tit'~~ .
ll'lctlliil ~ cause .~ ob- and run ther~. ·'Of" 12
ltloucH:Ol! •01 tlie lilte~ea. tricks
· .·• "'• .;t

r.,.

~

can be freed
auri!I~Ij but ll!l!0-1 pre.
caullons · ~ neeeuary , to

pr,eve,m ...ncurre..ee.
Q4

,'

- ,,,

~: lhtl··~tier prOipect • d- iN1''~e ,~~, ·, . .,.
tupy: One·~ ~ tbli race u · "Mt·Who'•· f.Oinl 'to "- , '
CJe!t 11 hearl'to~tbe~. wfn,~iliwlio'••loliiCtoiOH." .
· · '; I _ ·
'

abd.

Such

lfn..

,,·~~;i
.;,.,.•.hll
ll&amp;d """'"""''t~
dll"lOiii' 1llo1illl

prelf'ur..t::.ta'"'~~~...dtai~~y·

ma~t

''tlirft.

.ar:la ultl!n~'"~Jb·
~itlr· _J!HtO::~~!II}l-'!:1'&lt;
ta,~
u~lvP!avo-.clecldeneltbetmu.ll'•ljltabl.l·cm

:\IWD ,to ··

11

.

·

· • !~~P..!~
· :.:

., ·

·

·

.. 'I •
, ,: •. :~'' .

c":~:.' ,U,'Jlh. I'
.. · ~

OiCk Sebna

Apo ogue's
For Remark
}

PHIUDELPHIA (UPI) _

able

·'"-l ·
' .,

''fix."

ALL GAMES

TEAM

.
lJII8
With hi&amp; late-hour aatur•lion ol teleYIIlon
u. we. ap- In
, tf.e Nolin.., a•.wt Casey, 11 pla•ing lt. tn..kay .thla
prove of -tbe Noith;Sauth tilDe ~•..,._, •
.'
·~
.
blddin&amp;. SomehoW or otbet,
vei De~noer~ta themlelv.. l'tl!9ft.lie ~
.. "'.~ ~
· ':
·
llx clubl Js a ..fenO)IIract
•
•.:..
""
"iinar tU IDiot1 ~ .
tbanslupacllilblltthepme =-~ ,~ar'• ~am ae . . ; m.
"':'.'r'\{ '.. · .
: : : JDO::~I.~a~
Sbapp'• telr/VIIIOn lidVertialaJ 11111 tlmeils belilg h\lld !If( ,
the major·oult 1~ • .'."
until around Oct. 5, and Ill• radio presentatiillil lllo ~ve
TbeJ did well 10' avoid s1x been 'd~r,; ~ Pl'llodalnce hll Mart vletory.IIU ~'':'
.. ,
no-tru!Dp where -only 11 an adv
I voll ·
'
· •
i''; '• '" ''! ,·.
trlc:kl are avilla""'. ·
'pll,~ , ..... cail coa1•..,. ~ he_~.l1 !hat~. rel»f!i-.,:1, . '"
.,.
tlliit'fiiCicir, clft·hll 1.8(16 ~ .,.. IUS
liillllY 'i!llbllc-,..,_,~
.:·
South · 'won tbe diamond tlvltlea bi U. ~rV~ JOil'lblils ,quite .hl~dlilt
·the u~ " ield Wlth 'dlii!IID1'1 ~ .and
~!lao ' ". .., nea~-;tll .- A•••-. 1;.
, . v.'""".
_ , "·
looked aroupd ·fot'&amp;W!Iy to
""'
"'"
•• w•
"""'"'.,.
.. • ·""'· . ...
mate 12 trW A · tiD! le
ot tbe cam
jper.dM:
•
Ia w ' lei.;. ti."'!fw ~~',llill•"";~; m""1..ut"'si!Jter•~· lbweti.'' '1 ;, ,. 1:·· I
~ ·~ aw •·.\li'~'~'!:.;. IJIII!hed::-J.:;;:.~&gt;,.Wti'~ - i:uwell.tilownt!Wll-": ~ , 1
'hll 1f."1Di -at.m=:ii:f;; Sbrl .~- In, we.ttem Pilliilylv,l!lla,' ~j.&lt;il -•
.
of hlo heW on ·dlililiqy'•
~ ·~ ·-tinUOUiiY for' ·bJontlir..llflit · • .,
cjuba,ll!,d eo~~cell•. 11 UICt; to 1111. ~tiiJ,,fill!Or, , ,," • ·
:"• ,' • :-· &lt;:r. • &gt;1:
tbe ·!'C" llf, ~lirtl, TbiMr~.•• ·)lb anti~ ~ -llxlllicl be popUlar, lnit.'hl. oila•.111"'"' '
a .llinple, way !nit It: ••UJ~ ~
Jlie .fact ·of. Pcnnsylvlnla'• ·"!"9" reven•~ ,,
li*h lla'lif(l-out· 10 11!1 l'"lot- ~)IOili;.~'ldl ~ oilllliJ,Il!)ore .( 1•1't•' · ·:
DDCTDFI BAY~* 'r 1113 0111 · With
llrW· _·- ' ·fi~lv~·· ~teged,m~ ¢
~~
·
_' ;~ ~ . ~ ~~. tc~~
:'~ ~~ ~ii1~~~!f! lia!'llitci :0~ :J~'i lt,llcl; 1'&gt;~1~'1
1 •edl~~"Jt'l1
lnv•~iTtor"ta~ ..
4._.. ~pi, eot~oilld .. _-

:IL t:

Anderson at center.
Bruney has a large covey of
backs witll some experience
besides Boykln. They Include
slotbacks Doug Henry, 5-10, Ill;
Larry Holt, 5-10, 169; and wide
receiv.ers Payne, Malley and
Smith noted above .
Ironton the past three years
defeated llle Marauders~ In a
no..:ount conlelt when Melga
woo the championship, Ued
them 14-14 In 1968, and feU last
year 21-13 when the Marauders
played a brliliant seCOnd haU to
pull away from a 13-13 Ue In the
third period.

Dick Selma, the PhtiadeiPtla
"'"'"'"''
relief •"'""•';"'
has
nuw
·
...-~··
pitched ·hlmsell out of some
tight situations In taU games
but ha lllD has not been
to
talk himself out of hot water
~~four umpires.
wuu
Selmawasflned-Wedne""
day by National League J'res.
!dent !ltub Feeney aild apolode,._
glzetl Ill' remaru be ms "'"
nlghtbeforeabouttheumplrlng
crew when three of his team·
" •0 l.!i!itJl,\{.eeJ&lt;,,.,,,ii,;:~J a,;,f"i 1 fll.,.tes were ejec~a:'Jljm the

Det it New York, 2, lwl-nlle

W L P OP,

l

o

~ ~ 2~

North Galila
Of all the planets of the Hannon Trace
10J4r IYiteDI, Mercury has Southern
tb8 SQUiileat orbit.
Southwestern

2 6 AO
o 2 o .a
0 2 6 98
o 2 8 120

·Mayo Smith

Out

Ma
D..-~JT UPI)
yo Campbell reiterated his aee·
Smllll apparenlly Is on his way ming)yrecorded comment, "I'D

.,.1"1 (

-

He isaued a statement
Wedne8day In which be said, "I
know I was wrong In making
accusationl about the Integrity
ol the umpirel.
"I atr,...ly
que••and stW
-..
Dloi.Uia
do,tlll!judgmentoftheumplres
lntllepme,"Selmasaltl. "Ina
Bt ol ancer, I made charges for
which t bed no basis. I will
......,.-~-fer' this."
..............
Aullle Donatelli, seni« mem·
her and captain ol till! four·
th
member umpire crew a1
included Stan '·'"'- "'""
..,...., ...,...
Ste1kt and Saleh Davison~ was
"':!' aatialted with 1111! line cd

out as m••••er of the Detroit have no"'·g to say about _ 1
""''
·' ,Tigen. .._...,
aeaaon until this aeason Is
"I have no"'•• to say"
"
Smitll saltl wildne8day rugbt WU
o.'trwt finished secOJUI.flrst.
• •' contacfid by United second uncler ' lhe aaay
· g·'··
, ftie~atelllgyto.ldSelma-"-lhe
~...
......
.......
~.. )nte,..UM&amp;I at the Smill) untilllle .dlsaatrous 1970 pitcher came to the umpires'
1., BlltlJ!lli'e , Holi!l where the , campaign. . It wal the beat 11relllilw room and apoloiiUd
Tls""11 were •,laying.
showing llle Tlsera had ever · ·that, "We don't lhlnk !be
The Tigera scheduled game had under one mana;er since pmlsJ!mW 11 nearly enoQilh
with 'tile Orioles, one · of the the Z.1·Z.2 finishes under Steve We I'4COIDIIIanded that you ~
prime ressona Smith reported1J O'Neill from 19t4-47.
Is loini to 'ba Apiacetl by BWy T1te pitching faltered after
MarUn the day after till! ......, Detroit aneaitecl to wllllln three
enda, was pcletponed Wednesday games ol Eut Dlvlllon leader
night ' and reset for this Balllmore on Jul7. 1$. But
afietllom.
in~ to IIUQins l#l fielder
uA.\Ythlng you ,get will have WUile H«ton and pow~ hiller
to cqme out ol your end," Jim Nll'thrup started a lkld
Smilb, salcl, marring QII!'StiOIUI lhl•t likely won't .end unW tha
to Detroit Gtneral Manager aeason .does. The 'l'ljltr11 are
~ Jim Campbell.
currenlly fourlh, I8IDel out
rltt "BM&gt;m" y111 HH
of first.
~'11/lh ...
"I'd lakl1 It In a illlnule "
THE DAILY SOOINEL
Martin aald It lllil lalill' ;,
.ilfAY .. :jiR FREE
IDII'II_II~ .the 'fipn. ''I'd ·klvll
. IIATTE~

~w~

u

,,..,

...

,, •,,Iff

. '•t

~team lbal wins wW make
.fewer mistakes. .
.
Thai's how ·l !ldi• Marauder
Foottiall Coach Charles
Chancey alted up hiJ ~quad's
chances when It meets the
lro~ton
Tigers at Tank
Memorial Stadium Friday
l!llening. Kickoff time iJ at 8
o'clock.
Coach Chancey confirmed
Tburadly that phyoi&lt;:&amp;llY his
boys are In good shape. One
stroke of W fortune, however,
occurred Tuesday night. liolil
Marauder No. 2defensive ends,
Larry Harmon, a junior, and
Rendy Williams, a aenior, were

lost lor lhe game when lnj\lfed
in an automobile accident In
Rutland. Harmon will llliss at
least the Ironton gam~ .
WiiUams may be out for llle
season.
Chancey said Jon Kloes,
veteran offensive ftnnker who
hasn't operated at defensive
end since his Jr. High days, will
back up first string defensive
ends Wayne Well and Jeff
Morris.

"This makes us pretty thin at
those posts," said Chancey.
The Marauder

coach is

convinced Ironton probably is

the beat club, taient.wlse, Meigs Grate, who lllled In fi&gt;r Williams
will run Into all season_ The at fullback last week, returns to
Tiger 1068 to Pll'tamouth (21-15, the~lot and positioo he manned
last Friday) w.,. to a strong against St. Joe.
!elm_
There will be one Important

change In the starUng offensive
lineup tomorrow night fr0111 the
II boys who opened against
Belpre. This wUI be at follback .
Tiny Wllllams, 175 lb. juni... ,
who opened at fullback against
Ironton St. Joe In llJe first game
of the season, but who "was
rested" last week against
Belpre - playing only on
defense at linebacker - gets the
slarting call Friday night. Mike

5f€~:r;r;.:~§ Rhinelanders

lieima

We aren't oura

ttumJ:a

This year he tllrows to wide
receivers Jim Payne aod Steve
Massey and back,a Bobby Smith
and Boyldn.
The Marauder aecondary lfill
have a buay evening II the
Tigers are forced Into the atr.
lroolol\ offensive ends have
Uned up as 5-10, 183 lb. Eagle
Murnahan and ~. lfB lb. Jeff
Crabtree; tackles as 6-0, 1991b.
Dick FIJher and the veteran 11-4,

Mlnn at Kiln attr.
t !l• " 1 "!, mJDi.lt!~~ 1" , -,~ ''/'~' ''l "''Pilnu.es-New York ..PiA, game.
Mllw AI Ch~p,, ~lg t ·: · . ·NOi'ln•O.(tla ,_ ... 0 ' '•1 · 'O' 116
Q,i4 the li\IIWea were
Bell ,~! CltY!I, ntghl -.•.Hannan Trace " o 2 "'t " o1f I ·
·the
aOemecla
Boa till\ ot Wash, n ghl
. Tlfolt ,
l&amp;me
1 . 3 58 58 10 wr01W ,

e;a~~y~chargtohetrleda"~cm.yW~':Iii ~· •

llliliJ;

::

0aklln4 ~~~~~, I

·rer-

OponJna--=tiO! '

'

came

••n

2•

'

Ironton head foolball coach
~" Ylll;l&lt; .
74 :523 2· Bob Bruney, w:1oae Tlge~;~
1.11t~o
74 .519 2v, clipped New Booton 35-0 IIi their
Sl. LOUis ' 7A 11 .m 9 opener, fig\lfed his club allowed
Pllllodelbhlo 70 IS .452 13 lnexperle.,ceandpoor offeiiaiva
¥ontr,ai
69 16 .445 lA
Wnt
blocking.
' .,, " W. L. Pet. GB He was more convllu:ed of
jt.CJnclnnatl " 58 .631 ... how right be was after Porfa.
~~~~co ~
:~~
mouth ~~ 'his boys a 21-15
Affilht,; ·
75 81 .484 23'h lickiilg last Friday night as
l'tOUiltift '•
72 13 .~ 26 . Ironton tuned up 'for the tn.
Gill Dlttlo ·. 60 95 .383 38
asl of the M . ..•. ud
..CII~· IIIvioton lttlt
v on
e1g1 .......-a era
wt&lt;~nridor,'• Rnuits
tomorrow n~hl.
St. L.outs 2 Ch ~o 1. 1st
The affair of tomorrow looms
1
~L~!V5 'il::~:U: ' 2nd
es an .early weathervane
Mon~l3 Pittsburgh 2
pointlogtoa favorlteamoog the
San
Diogo
2 Aflonta 0
top three con1endera for
Cinctnnall 6 Houoton 2
San~r14l.Go Ang 10. 10 inno Southeastern Ohio League
, Pnbablt PHct10ra
honors who are Ironton,
T
All Ttmas EDT)
Jackson, · and Melp, In that
Montreal IRenko 12·10) ot
Pltitburgh !Walker \4·6), 1:05 order,
p.m.
·
While Coach
Charley
Chlcogo !Holtzman 16.11) al Chancey's Marauders are at
St. Louis (Torrez 1-P), 9 p.m. Ironton, Athens takes on highly·
San Oteao !Roberts 7-13) ot
Allonta (McQuen 0.4), 8:05 touted Jackson.
p.m.
The Marauders came out of
Friday•, O.m..
th
lth Bel
Ia
St. Loulo at Montreat, ntght
e warm-up w
pre at
Chlc:.ea&lt;! of Philo, night
Friday night In good shape
Now Vcirk ot Pitts, nigh I
physically. With the acore 36-0
Houstoo at Aflonta, night
at halltlme, Coach Chancey
Los Anoolft at Cine. nlghl
used the opportunity to put m-t
San Delao at San Fran, nlah1
of his bench under fire for much
Amertcon LHgue
needed esperlence. It just
Eosl
might be the last time IIIIa Is
W. L. Pet. GB possible In 1970.
X·Boltlmore 100 54 .649 "'
89 67 .571 12
Ironton's offense features the
New York
Boston
82 74 .529 19
hard ·running of Rick Boykln,
Detroit
76 78 .49 4 24 188lb. taUback who goes outside
75 81 481 26
Cleveland
mll'e than Inside. Aa a fresh70 ••
Woahlngt~
- '.455 30
Wtll
man. be led llJe league Iii acorlng
w. L. Pet. GB but has slacked off since as
~·AIInnesoto 9A
61 .606 .. delenses •-•·"-·ed for
Olkllnd.
85 11 .545 91f2
uccame WWUlC.illornlo
81 73 .526 12V. him.
Konsao City 62
.... 32
Bruney's4&amp;-man
!quad at the
Milwaukee
60 93
94 .390 33'11
.
Chicago
55 "
.357 :JIIV. beginning of the 9086011 n~·
•·Ciilldlld division IIIIo
. be red 48 actives, Including
Wtdneldly's Resulfl
seven seniors, '17 jupiora, 29
Chicago 6 Kan.., City 0
sophomores and two freshmen
Ct•velond
5
Booton
2
. to waleh will be 5-·
Det ot Bolt ppd.• pwr failure
Topjunmr
Wo
New York 6 oshlngtoo '
11, 166 lb. quarterback Hal
~~~.::.,:n;v~~:3'~
Spears who
late Into the
Todoy'o Probablt Pitchers
lronton·Metga gama last year
tAU Tlmoo EDT)
and looked aharp.
Booton !Moret 0·0) at Wesh·
lng_ton (Hannan 9·91, 7:30 r·m.
·Cettfornlo (Bradley H ot SVAC Stan.l:w-8
Mtt,.aukee IMorrls 2·3), 2:30
....."8.
p.m.
~TANDINGS
Detroit IC.In 12-ll ot Bolli·
SVAC ONLY
mor:e,(Cuellor 23.,8),1:30, p.m. TEAM
W L pOP
IOnly 'ames,sc~uhld)
E01tern
2 o 50 o
OB

UQ

2w

lion, high blood
tremon, Fe&amp;tinllnd 'litliek .ol"lla~'i:J'~ytlm to
cancer, brOQChltia and other
up
ofthed ra eedy ache. When lakin dally ll·!ifa-.lwld 1o pun all \\'111'1
use
ruas n
may be hablt4~$1 Ill ~pt."
,
bad air and wateHaued
sensitive to the which ~ae wllbdrqa~,., if .- -· ·. ..._ diet So th ale
dlleases. If people Uved to see
"Drug Abuse the drug may r,equlre,; IIIGrt ,,!'""'t
u m e
·•
by Allee . perioll ill hospltanzatJ+ji; .• .,-: 11 ~
·'
' ·
new Public AUalra ·
•
, · IIIID rru.eott .point&amp; out
'
-·f.'lmplhlet, diacusses some of
Q-1 ud an
·pp. that he made it by IDe&amp;nJ. ot I'~ •
reasona
young Pe~ eratlo!l eight yean ·lllo iPd ait '·Uilusual play: ,u lik:lt
tum to
afer\8 my dOcrtot says 1 htvt !14· ,two, be played dummy' a
Every Time ' I ! )
to
of drua , hesi!W. What ire thf)l·! Ctil q~ · of hearts. Thll Jllay
baJIC In· they be removed?
·
left Weat with., no wlniilnc
marijuana . A'- Wllea tile ..nG. aut· de!eJIIe. If Weot took th~
nar· 1 ae U II! u.~,~n
triCk and led a dlamobd,
an d plsural cavity ~OIIii ~ ~ut~ would
In dum:'ii
tall!l( -ihe)r'' ma ., lUck to- ca•b dummy • ~ .. _
• ~ 1 ~
thll queen of trumpl, co!M ,UJ

;;,~v:e..useofJunsil-oubleo,

. ;. ,

nude - ille only dlfftrente nor's unpopular personal Income tax proposalr.
,
,
today, they _,~ permitted
The judgment today 11 that Shapp aWl has tlie lead Ill
to move, just alood then! In the 1970 race, but hal some fairly severe handicaps of .bli
atatuoaque pooea .... So then!'• own, which make the race In fact a very tight one that
might go either waJI. . .
·.
Candid DemocratiC appraisals start with the cbil~esSlo'n
that Shipp, a wealthy businessman, to not a popWar IIeure.
He 1s neither commanding nor charlSJDatkl, and the 111110
GOP charges that he tried to buy that prior election with
lavllll personal outlays have not lost all thelr steam. '- ·:;,
abo has some serious organlzatlo~ proble~,ith
thele have elll4id some and might lmprove · a~~~~...
more In the remainlng w~ks.
. . ',,,
br
For the second Ume hi a row, he ocored a hard primary
By Oswald &amp; Ja~~ts Jaco
victory over thu'regular party organltation ei!Oid, -A,.m~
General Robert Ctiaey,. This spring the marc!D waa just
NO&amp;TH (D)
J&amp;
32,000 vo.tea, 1111d tbe encounter bas ~It CaseY, &amp;UlkW · ~
bitter. l{e ·waa eonapleuous by hi&amp; abaence wbfn .BeD. ~· _
: ~ ~3'
mund Muskle appe&amp;red for Shapp hi this populol!ll are,a, '
• A
which Js Cuej'a home territory. phapp lost It by ·~.000 Ill
.AitQJU
May.
WIST
UST
Some RepubiiiCan expertl do uot ~however, tiJAI
•10112
.. .,
Casey and hla foUowers are all that cr1
a factor. They
• A106
• J 15
are more hlterested In the party al!ambles _Democratli: ··
t QJ!Of
tltBU2
Mayor James Tate prisldea over In Phtiade!phla, Where
•108
Shlw· mqatdo~l)yweUtowlntbe'·state.
·
SOU'DI
Four year.• IJIO Sbapp'~ ·Pitnadel~ Ill'~ 112,odll
• AJ15
wallnlulfl~t. and Silafel' took hbi(~_l!!l,IJ!I('I'Otes. A
.. ,, ~t.~"R-'2 .• ,,.,•. ,.,, ,., ~tk ·.n~.ft~,'JIII!di a l'~ &gt; ai-.•..
t' '1~4
.· ·'tJ'MwllnioofWIII- ~~hels~
, ,.,,••,,~'~~
1 '. u.Ool."tt.
1' 1t • -&lt;11!
1,
• 1• :sa '
~"!'r.1r .....7"'~ w' ·
tel
;·"./'
1.,. ~
'
.,
oeraac
......
ya .. _.
ay
n.. --..a
..... ·,
, Bolli 'Wlnmlb!O
pJilladelpbJl. but aboll! the •Pittaburgh a . , ':J1)11'1!!8HY"; ;·
Woot !Iordi 1..c ...,.. tlleJra by marclnl up __ to cl8CI,OOO. ~ublkall' IJiWJiY~··
!'.vlewthertglon .._,fUlly,
'
·
Pou 3 •
.._ a•
""'
,.....
•
~...,.
rdlibllfllll'•
mayor, Peter Flaherty., endoj:Hd
!'.- 4 li.T. ~ ~
Sluipp ovii (',aaey but..Jia1 done nothing Yillble for .him
:;:: 6 •
.P,iu
olnce.of~e sources .., .'he II deeply lrillneraed In· pro!)!
1

•·-. ·wr.p.

THE

,

~-~.;-remai;;_ =J=.~~:~~~~c~=~~~~a::~~v,:.::

1
1

1

i.,, ,,;'~,

. .

Clash Early,Key

·

,"'{

nudlljr In thahi!CIII',·~
· .:;,,.. , :. ·i ·
waa bithed hi '·Madam•
· •.~ IR)IC:E, II~• ~ •, &lt;'';· .
n..a.- pink *"!ell and
, NEA Washinvhin Col'l'ftpGndor.!. Y..,
'
............. ~
..,..,.. .,..
'
:1"
'I
they W«e IDIICie gp, and thelr
,
. . , • •r ;
nipplenmllka I'VIIbudl, and
•
SCRANTON, Pa. (NEA) '
they wart the 111011 exqulate
The Democrats: steady claim .that two..t1111e cball~.:
things In . the world" (Why, · Milton Sllapp· will lake the ·Pennsylvania 'gov~on!iiP olit. ;
Heleni) .... Sbe'artpt:40yeara ofurfaRepubllc1111 hands is a lot ahakler.Jhail. 4Jlpeara 'on:.\he
u 0, Sllubert produced the s ce.
· :" ·
.r....~, ..~.b" - - In ShipP's GOP oppotjent, Lt. Gov. Ray Brodeiick, has been

.' ·.: ~--~:.: ·:.~ .... ~ ' • "'""' Dfll

rH---e--1--e-n____H_e_l_p
____
:

'\J.,~

...,..

Shapp· ·Is Leading
··" ,.
,
· ..
In ·Pa; BLit1Just ) ·:I·:

::;:u:=;:~""!:.

...

,·,.&gt; •• ·-

'

very yq, IDd "' ha'd. &amp;lbrloua

}2 P~

?:

iiRUQE
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and peculiar 1bey -dlltuftlecl
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... Alit•~· Nudity,
ho11'ever, doean't di'Jtresa

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·-·--·wi;ner Wilt Make Fewer ErrorS·

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f!Jiiloll}ll .... ,The~ newa

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U.S. Society: Its
Good, Bad Points

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CqJ&lt; J. surp.,';_~•~d
StarT ~ 'il_ due MD ~'1'/l~Y II La i'~u., .~1100 ~!~
' P)Oflth ...":' ti•a JNjw ian "~
1)0 menllroiid lUI .,tctal
''' TOwerS lind Cli'ol~~ (Or \D.~;, SeJiu¥ttll'l!, ~llct•.
; ~KIU,Fnll*!l,tfllei;D "~' ~tb~oJ&gt;flOif,,,j&gt;_Ha~cl,l~ilfjt,
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RefurbW&amp;ing Self Esteem

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CINCINNATI (UP!) -Even
if he weren't an honor student
at Stanf«d University Frank
Duffy wouldn't hsve to he told
that he doesn't hsve much of a
future as a regular with the
Clnclnnntl Reds neil year.
And that's why the rookie
Reds shortstop Is hoping he wiD
be traded during the off season.
"I don't want to sit on the
bench here next year and 1
don't want to go down to the
minors again," said Duffy Wednesday night after turning in a
sparkling game in the field as

the Reds llnocked off the
Houston Astros &amp;.2.
Ask Sparky Anderson about
Duffy's chances of gettlog his
wish granted and the Reds
manager tactlolly replies :

"Duffy, Darrel Chaney and
Dave Concepcion are three," he
continued. "And you can't call
Tonuny Helms and Woody
Woodward old."
"I won't say I can field as
Duffy, "hecauae I haven't seen
all the shortstops in llJe league,
but I am confident I can do llJe
Job."
Duffy already has conducted

"In fact," said Anderson, his own survey on hitting

"the Reds probably hove more
"Denis Menke Is the only
good young infielders than any shortstop hitting around .300,"
other club in the league .
he pointed out. "Most of them
hit between .210 and .250."
And whst does Duffy think he
would hit playing regularly in
the major leagues?
''Adequately," was the rookie
1be New York Mell are lookinl to plek up additional
shortst~'s smiUng answer.
1f01111d today In Ill• Naliooal League East tiUe chaae. And,
Duffy offered a host of 50
wby not? 'llle defending world lilamplons have the day off.
scouts
a sample of what he can
1be Meta, wbo sem~ed to have blown all cbiance at
do
in
the
field when he teamed
aueee~oh1117 delentllnl tbelr erown wben IIIOJI loll three of
up with Woodward to rob
IMir pmes last weekead to fln11Jlace PIU.burgh, fought
Menke
of a hit in the first
tlelr way back lnlo cuatentioa W~y Bigllt wltiJ a H
inning.
vletory over PblladelpbiJ.
Backbando for Out
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Racing
behind secood, Duffy
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HRs-Htsle !lOth), Clendenon ftngged down Menke's ground
(2151).
ball with one hand and backhanded a toss to Woodward for
Houston
000 100 OlD- 2 12 1 a rorce out on Bob Watson at
By United Press International Cincl
131 001 OOx- 6 11 0
Nationll Leagu~r
Billingham, Harris (2), Cook second.
1111 gamo)
I7),Giaddlng 18) and Hhoward ; "Woody's the guy who made
Chlcago 000 100 ooo- 1 2 4 Cloninger, carroll (Bl and a hell of a play," said Duffy.
St.Louis 020 000 OOx- 2 7 o Corrales, WP-Cionlnger (9-6).
Jenkins (20-16) and Hundley; LP-BIIIIngham (12-9) . HRs- modes~y shrugging off his role.
Gibson (23-6) and Simmons
Perez (40th), Cloninger (2nd),
With Watson, a burly 201&gt;
(2nd game I
Watson (loth).
pounder, bearing down on him,
Chlcaoo
000 000 001- l 7 n
St. Louis 010 ooo 10x- 2 5 o 110 Innings)
Woody stretched his long legs
Hands, Wilhelm 181 and S.F.
000 000 901 4-\A !S 4 as far a! possible, reached out
,Hundley
: LP·Hands
Re.Ys~ 17-Bl
,121 011
11 ~ '"(n:d:sna;red=~~·=l~ob~"~on~ille
&gt;Simmons.
(17-UI.and L.A..
Plilry, ,031
'l'lllili:k
ISl.,-t:;l~
C'umfler.
I
land (6), Johnson (7), McMahon

short hop with one hand.
''There were a lot of good
plays made out there tonight,"
said appreciative Tony
Cloninger, who would up with
his nintll victory of the season
agalnat six loues.
The Reds picked up one run
in the first Inning and then
routed Aatro starter Jack Bill·
ingham with a tllree - run
spurt In the second. Homers by
Tooy Per02, his 40th, and Cion.

17),

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casual
Sl1\CKS

Hart

18th),

Dietz

Henderson (16th).

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Mens Flue 8lue

DENIM.JEiiP4f"',u l~

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,,.,.,, 1 - 0 1 Oolloon In l'IMo•

VAliD WMBER
&amp;·suPPLY 00.
992-2709

lrd Ave.

loy Sizes In
Flare Brulh DENIM

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Middleport

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New Yen Cothing House
Your SPORTSM INDED Store
PomiRIJ, Ohio

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Selma replied, "You fellows
know 1 never give you troulie
oil! 111ore and thai wasn't the
real me aa,mg t11ose things. I
was just bot and I'm genuinely
lll1'I'Y."

$7 ·'! $}}·•

Sizes
27 to 36

San Diego 000 100 010- 2 7 0 Washngtn 001 000 Olo- 4 10 2
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- 0 7 2
300 002 \Ox- 6 10 0
Arlin (1~) and Borton; N.Y.
Jarvls, stone t9) an d Tlllman. Coleman, Grzenda (7J. Rld{8) and BliHngs ,
LP-Jarvls 116·14). HRs.Goston dleberger
Gardner, Aker (8) and Munson
(28th). Compbeilll2thl .
WP-Gardner 0 -0l . LP-Coleman
18-11). HRo·BIIIIngs llstl. EpNew York tttlt 002 020- s 7 1 sfern
(20th).
Philo
100 210 ooo- 4 11 o
Sadeckl, Ryan (5), Herbel Mlnnesota :.103 000 200- 7 12 o

•

and Aare Brush Denim Jeans in Green and Brown ·"

(22nd).

(51, Gentry 16), McGraw l7l ~-kr d 000 000 1~ ' 2 o
and Grote: Short, Wilson 16), ~ •n
Selma 181 and Mccarver. WP· Hall, Zepp (8) and MitterMcGraw IA-6) . LP-Selma IMI. wold; Hunter. Fingers 17).
Lochemann 18) and Duncan .
- - - - - - - - - WP-Hail (10-6). LP.Hunter 117M
d
hl
1111Spe11ded lllld we shall Wll'k c"l. HRs: rttter22wdall Dll5t ,
r~....
&amp;r
after 11 t lOth I.

dl

Both Flare and
1ight Leg Styles
Sizes 27 to 42

;•

Bateman ; Brunet, Lamb (6), Haller, lorborg 16), Shnson
Grant {8) and Sangulllen . WP (91. Ferguson (10). WP-Robert Morton (17-11) . LP-Brunet (0 son (8-9} . LP-lamb (6-1} . HRs1).

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Plain Colors
Stripes and Plaids

IJIIO lo 1300

Lomb 191 Strahler flO) and

,.
T

linesMres

MorTon, Marshall 19) and

r«•

Inger, his second, accounted
the final two Reds runs.
"
Even though rapped lor t&lt;fl
hits, one a homer by w~~ ..
Cloninger restricted the Al1l'Gif"
to two runs before living wai!
In the eightll Inning to Cla)l~
Carroll, who picked ap his IIIII'!
save.
;l
The Redo, idle today, resume
play Friday at Riverfront Slalf.l'!
lwn against the Los Anpleif;
Oodgera.

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Mens

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:~s~~~ J~: :i ~ 1 ~ : ~~~c!."'m~r./..~ 1 1ttds~~~

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On defenae, Abbott repJeM ·
big Mark Werry at l.tldllll, ldt
Morris and Wayne WeD ~,
over at llle ends, Lehew ffiiNfl
to linebecker, John Thtllllll,
wll'ks at middle guard, '1114
Chip Haggerty camp In at'
safety.
H

Post 99th Win

''Tradingisn'tmydepartment.'"' well as anyone around,' ' said

However, Sparky does admit
that good young Infielders are
very much in demand and he 'll
admit too that Duffy is a good
one.

Ron Smith and Mark
WWiama, in a neck-ancl-neck
hattie for the opening call at ooe
of the cornerback joba on
defense, conUnued this week
j'very close to each Other'' said
Chancey. Last week Smith
opened. This week It may be
Williams. Tom Hoffner
operates out of the other cornerback [IOIIiUon.
Otherwise, the opening of.
fensive unit wW have Kloes

FOR LOW COST, AUTOMATIC WARM
,FLOOR HEATING

._/IMming
VENTED

.0GAS HEATERS

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. we graytna folks of the ..Above Thif!Y" popul,atioo. who are
bearin8 that we lllould feel guilty for the sorry condition of
liumaniQ&gt; today may relurbiJh our aell esteem in the June
eommenccment address of Eric A. Walker, prelklent of llle
Pennsylvania State Uni..rsity, since rem~.
JliJ address has been quoted frequently because o(. the dif.
ferent view he took of the so""" lied "generation gap!' ketuUng
lllecrltkilm of so many of today'• collegrgeneration, he &lt;!ted llle
'""'"""llsbmenta of their predecessors.
", .
Reprinted from 111e Meadville ( Pa.) Tribune, Dr. Walliier's
iddreaa contains so much common aenae we wuote it herein part:
"If you ... will look o..r into llJe bleachers to your left« right,
l will reintroduce you to representatives of some of the moe!
r..n.rtable pe&lt;~ple ever to walk on earth - people you migbl
want to thank on IIIIa graduati!'ll day.
"Tbeae -yourparentaandgrandparents-~~relile people wbo,
willlln just five decades, 19111-1969, have by their wcm&lt; lncreaiOd
your ~ expectancy by 50 per cent; wbo, whlle cutting the
worling day by a tblnl, ha.. doubled the per capita oulplll.
''Tbeoe are llle pe&lt;Jple who have given you a beallhler WCll'ld
than they found. Becauae of th!.&gt; you no longer have to lear
epidemlcs of nu, typhus, dipblherta, srnallpor, acarlet fever,
or mumps that they knew In llleir youth. The dreaded
!l"lioll no lmger a factor; TB!salmool unheard of.
"Let me remind you that theae remarkable people have lived
lbrwlb lUiu'y's greatest deprwlm. Many know what it.lslo be
JIIICll', to be hungry and cold. And becauae of IIIIa, they determined
tiW II would not happen to fOU, that you would have a beUer llle,
food to eat, milk to ddnk, vllamlna to nourllh you, a warm hmle, .
better achoo!.&gt;and greater oppcrtunlti"' to aucceed than they had.
"Jiecauae they gave you the best, you are the talleat, healthiest,
briPtat and probably best.looldng generation to inhabit llle
land.
"And because they were materialistic, you will work fewer
bour1,learn more, have more leisure time, tra ..l to more dlltant
placnandhave more chance to follow your llfe's ambition.
'"nneae are till! people who have foushl man's grlslieat war.
WNie IIIey have dlllle theae things, IIIey have had some fallurea.
Tiley have not yet found an altematl.. fCll' war, DCll' Ill' racial
illfred.
''But tbey -llloae generations- have made more progreu
by ille IWIII of their broWll than In any previous era - and don~
11JUforgat lllf your ganeratl(ll can make as much progress in as
'tMII$ areae 11 theae two generations have, you should be able to
aolvea&amp;oodlllllll' olthe Wll'ld's remaining Ills.
, ''It II my hGpe, and lllnow the bope of theae two generations
that you !llld the amwer to many of lheae things that plagued
mankind But it W(ll~ be easy. You won't do It by negatl..
llloughts, nor by tearing down or belittling. You may and can do It
by liard wort, hunolllty, hope and failil In mankind. Try ll"
Dr. Walker has put the generation gap In proper perspective.
Fai' from being tile failures Iiiey sometimes are characterized by
today's youths, member&amp; of till! older generation have set a record
tllalatands as a challenge for young people to surpass.
In reality that well may be wha Ipartly is bugging them.

J

le&lt;ieral

\";.~ge: speaking' in

Cleveland

·~~~-~~

a

up of, lnfluential business lilld professional men, gave

own "balance sheet of American society" In 1970.
Those who can find nothing right or nothing wrong with
America today would feel uncomfortable reading it. Those
who think it is too much trouble to question some aspeets
of American life would find equally irksome the balance
sheet drawn up by Judge George Edwards of the Sixth
District Appellate Court, based in Detroit, which lists the
following "assets" and "liabilities" of America:
Asaeta
a Freedom of dissent.
• Freednm of speech, press and religion.
a Free elections and the right of all citizens to vote.
• The closet approach to universal education in the his·
tory of the world.
•
before the law and an incre,asing equality
protected mechanism for peaceful
from want for 85 per cent of Its people.
Uablllllel
• The perolrtence of racism.
• Poverty for 15 per cent of our people.
• An undeclared war in Vietnam.
·• Juvenile delinquency, crime and mental Illness among
5 to 10 per cent of Americana.
· · • Environmental waste and pollution.
• A legal system of pollee, courts and correction which
has not been able to mareh the theory .of equality with
ita practice.
a An ineUnatlon to cherlah lhinJB above human life.
a Jrrelevanc:les and inadequacies in much of education.
a '{:~ucllce• and fruatratloils arising from the Puritan
e '
· Just to list these asseta and liabilities does not explain
bQw they have come about, of course. And probably there
arl! more ~ms that could be listed In both categories.
The balance sheet is much more meaningful to the aver.
age American, however, than the generallzatlona which
c:ome from the far1'ight or extreme left. And because most
~ricans see their nation in the balance, It would be
helpful if they would speak up, more ofte!l-and act where
fl"J.•ible-to add to ~ "pro' list and reduce the "con"

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mulieal •"'iwo : ~ ~· ':II' '1t needs il91' ~~ ... """' Ar.'!'f .

;;~~r_gh

•ua~ry: - Varlelf•• _, aiWIJI 've.n totes ilona J!O~ble
~
IOIIId8il Ub .,..... .... ~ . !fmn·
· ~: will we~~:omt' in~ bli Jien!inC!c' met: Lea!l8 .UIIP,!llll "''-'""
hit ... "The ~·· al!lo andptedberl!i!h "Uggamsf
IOIIIIda lllie t..d;t 1111111tJ SIJI 'Ni!orididyOIIStta·irah'\f:~
the Sbu~Alley;llllilelJiqund, lib thaiT''; .S !¥hen. ~ ·
HeJenlfa7e!ibalher'ntetlil· ~f prioln~ ~ .U. S.
and mOll ·ll)llllllaanl.l8f .abotll Tennil Olfen '- PJ;l&amp;e u . Ken .
"Hair" In Liloll:."AU ille 'lllllfll · t~o~e~rall;tMre _,. 'bool and
wereao..U'flltylliJ.anddreary, "We Willi APW~ ~ .... ,
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lootedao.:d.: .. l~ru;;
people 1oobd a Uftlt \llllleffed

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1

By Helen Bottel

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
their grandchildren, they'd
This column Is for young have to explllln to tlJem what
people, their problems and the sun Is, because they'd never
pleasures, their troubles and have aeen it lor smoke.
fun. Aa with the rest of Helen · Who wants to wear gas masks
Help USI,It welcomes laughs aUIIIeirlives'lsn1ilworthltto
but woo 't dodge a aerlous gotoali!Uemoretrouble-tlke
question with a Ifuab-&lt;~!1. Send plowing under weeds lnatead &lt;if
your teenage questions to burning them, and turning th~'::o~tw':g ;~~.:
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care leaves into compost, and re·
.
of Helen Help US' this
s~m~IDlt 9f Mt. · Washlne·
·
new... ualng botUes - if we can Hve ton, N.H. The World Alma·
paper.
longer and happier Uvea?
nac recalla that the first
YOUTH GROUPS
Oh, Helen, why are people so public demonstration was
START CAMPAIGN
close-minded? ,_ W. B. of given on Aug. 29, 1886. The
AGAINST POLLUTJON
S-A.F.E.
fggJulyr~wf""·S:t"ao~~~tedof
Dear Helen:
Dear W:
$1.39,500.
, ~
Last spring our school started People are getting less closea group called S.A.F.E. !Save minded every day, and it 1s
Air For Everybody). A few organizations such 88 yours QUICK QUIZ
weeks later we lll'med two which ljelp shine the light Into
.
more groaps· m - Help to dark places Keep promoting
Q-What u ·the Bntuh
..._: term /Of' a tnu:k?
....._..
( · ,_ 1 aild S".S b !'I · 1
"''""'on" wa-,
· ..., "" ut1
c ~ . Jilll ~IIJI ·i•"" A-LOn'y .,.
-•
o\1SlftVOtir Soft~--· "'- ~. . ~·- tory. our mother's attitude lB ,
· . .
•-~---''The object Is to open peoplf's Uke that of many individuals - Q-How 111e , • ...,.. "' ...tor·
eyestopoUuUonandstartthem and Industries who lhink anU- state hlghW(IJ/11I!mlbtred1
working to eliminate it. Our .pollutionisjuatgreat-untllit A-Highways wblch run
.
east ancl west are aasiiJMd
projects Include awarding makes them work harder, or even 0 umbers; hlghwaya
plaques to companies who do spend more money. - H.
running north and south ue
something to clean .up the atr or P.s. Congratulations on your assigned odd numbero.

:!~~a:'ln~=o:u:.': :!~:u~a=n~:r:.~:
make will
money we
go toward
obtalnlngmovtMonpollution to
show publicly; and for clean-up
projects.
Atflntpeopleklndol,laughed
at
but now tlley're ~
our bottons. We try to explain as
we aeU, and II gels eaaler
"seUing".Utlletime.
lwasveryproudofthewayso
many ldds volunteered to help.
'lben II happened! I brought
homeafewoftheanti~Uution
-.pampbletnnadprlntedand
mymotherflipped. 'lboughabe
is .uaually uniierataildini, she
uid she was tired of this
pollution bit, and if we had to
watch every Hille thing,' stop
burning leaves and agriculture
Landa, buy glaas bolties and go
to the trouble ot returning them,
ele. weD, II was just too much of
ahaule.lhadansweraforher,

us,

!..~
g~-...

=:.-•. ~u::

madder .. 1decided to wrtte to
you, Heleil. Here goes;
I read about • woman
celebnlting ber IOO!h birthday.

~'~llratehalfwetha'refo~nolnonthee

Q-What type of 14iliiiQ
'
boot hal 011111 Ollfl man?
are on your side, too. - H.
A-A catboat has one mut
Dear Helen:
far forward In the be!r and
I opened a box of crackero only one ian. ~ ·
.
today. First there was the
.
canlboardlm,thenabigbeavy -.,when you mulllpl;y it by a
plastic bag, and Inside of thai niii\Jon packages - wow!
were four lndlvldu,ally wrawecl Pollu!lon time!
·
packages of cracllers. II hap- Why doean'nndustrj; C&lt;liDI
penswithcerealsiQo-allu- off llle !ancy. jllickaging ldck.
separate wrappings lnillde Burned paper ·; ..· -"'·••
.,..
.,....,...
wrappings. They're a big IIIIIOg, but burning putiC liN
nuisance, they don't keep foOd offll"'-""caaes,too.-~WAIIE.
~·use up fast that m"•h Dear Aware·
.
'··
·
fresher, and lhink of all the Whydon'tyou (and •Oihen)
extra ''waste" to bum, plua wrlte .to u making the product a ·Utile ping" oom))imtfla 8bii.Jtln.
more expenaive. Maybe people direct? You'd ba llill'prlle\t bow
Wak that Hille bit of extra faat public 6'plnloli' 'cJianje
paper~ no difference, but pollclea.- H.
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Ways to Lose

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ll'lctlliil ~ cause .~ ob- and run ther~. ·'Of" 12
ltloucH:Ol! •01 tlie lilte~ea. tricks
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auri!I~Ij but ll!l!0-1 pre.
caullons · ~ neeeuary , to

pr,eve,m ...ncurre..ee.
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tupy: One·~ ~ tbli race u · "Mt·Who'•· f.Oinl 'to "- , '
CJe!t 11 hearl'to~tbe~. wfn,~iliwlio'••loliiCtoiOH." .
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dll"lOiii' 1llo1illl

prelf'ur..t::.ta'"'~~~...dtai~~y·

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''tlirft.

.ar:la ultl!n~'"~Jb·
~itlr· _J!HtO::~~!II}l-'!:1'&lt;
ta,~
u~lvP!avo-.clecldeneltbetmu.ll'•ljltabl.l·cm

:\IWD ,to ··

11

.

·

· • !~~P..!~
· :.:

., ·

·

·

.. 'I •
, ,: •. :~'' .

c":~:.' ,U,'Jlh. I'
.. · ~

OiCk Sebna

Apo ogue's
For Remark
}

PHIUDELPHIA (UPI) _

able

·'"-l ·
' .,

''fix."

ALL GAMES

TEAM

.
lJII8
With hi&amp; late-hour aatur•lion ol teleYIIlon
u. we. ap- In
, tf.e Nolin.., a•.wt Casey, 11 pla•ing lt. tn..kay .thla
prove of -tbe Noith;Sauth tilDe ~•..,._, •
.'
·~
.
blddin&amp;. SomehoW or otbet,
vei De~noer~ta themlelv.. l'tl!9ft.lie ~
.. "'.~ ~
· ':
·
llx clubl Js a ..fenO)IIract
•
•.:..
""
"iinar tU IDiot1 ~ .
tbanslupacllilblltthepme =-~ ,~ar'• ~am ae . . ; m.
"':'.'r'\{ '.. · .
: : : JDO::~I.~a~
Sbapp'• telr/VIIIOn lidVertialaJ 11111 tlmeils belilg h\lld !If( ,
the major·oult 1~ • .'."
until around Oct. 5, and Ill• radio presentatiillil lllo ~ve
TbeJ did well 10' avoid s1x been 'd~r,; ~ Pl'llodalnce hll Mart vletory.IIU ~'':'
.. ,
no-tru!Dp where -only 11 an adv
I voll ·
'
· •
i''; '• '" ''! ,·.
trlc:kl are avilla""'. ·
'pll,~ , ..... cail coa1•..,. ~ he_~.l1 !hat~. rel»f!i-.,:1, . '"
.,.
tlliit'fiiCicir, clft·hll 1.8(16 ~ .,.. IUS
liillllY 'i!llbllc-,..,_,~
.:·
South · 'won tbe diamond tlvltlea bi U. ~rV~ JOil'lblils ,quite .hl~dlilt
·the u~ " ield Wlth 'dlii!IID1'1 ~ .and
~!lao ' ". .., nea~-;tll .- A•••-. 1;.
, . v.'""".
_ , "·
looked aroupd ·fot'&amp;W!Iy to
""'
"'"
•• w•
"""'"'.,.
.. • ·""'· . ...
mate 12 trW A · tiD! le
ot tbe cam
jper.dM:
•
Ia w ' lei.;. ti."'!fw ~~',llill•"";~; m""1..ut"'si!Jter•~· lbweti.'' '1 ;, ,. 1:·· I
~ ·~ aw •·.\li'~'~'!:.;. IJIII!hed::-J.:;;:.~&gt;,.Wti'~ - i:uwell.tilownt!Wll-": ~ , 1
'hll 1f."1Di -at.m=:ii:f;; Sbrl .~- In, we.ttem Pilliilylv,l!lla,' ~j.&lt;il -•
.
of hlo heW on ·dlililiqy'•
~ ·~ ·-tinUOUiiY for' ·bJontlir..llflit · • .,
cjuba,ll!,d eo~~cell•. 11 UICt; to 1111. ~tiiJ,,fill!Or, , ,," • ·
:"• ,' • :-· &lt;:r. • &gt;1:
tbe ·!'C" llf, ~lirtl, TbiMr~.•• ·)lb anti~ ~ -llxlllicl be popUlar, lnit.'hl. oila•.111"'"' '
a .llinple, way !nit It: ••UJ~ ~
Jlie .fact ·of. Pcnnsylvlnla'• ·"!"9" reven•~ ,,
li*h lla'lif(l-out· 10 11!1 l'"lot- ~)IOili;.~'ldl ~ oilllliJ,Il!)ore .( 1•1't•' · ·:
DDCTDFI BAY~* 'r 1113 0111 · With
llrW· _·- ' ·fi~lv~·· ~teged,m~ ¢
~~
·
_' ;~ ~ . ~ ~~. tc~~
:'~ ~~ ~ii1~~~!f! lia!'llitci :0~ :J~'i lt,llcl; 1'&gt;~1~'1
1 •edl~~"Jt'l1
lnv•~iTtor"ta~ ..
4._.. ~pi, eot~oilld .. _-

:IL t:

Anderson at center.
Bruney has a large covey of
backs witll some experience
besides Boykln. They Include
slotbacks Doug Henry, 5-10, Ill;
Larry Holt, 5-10, 169; and wide
receiv.ers Payne, Malley and
Smith noted above .
Ironton the past three years
defeated llle Marauders~ In a
no..:ount conlelt when Melga
woo the championship, Ued
them 14-14 In 1968, and feU last
year 21-13 when the Marauders
played a brliliant seCOnd haU to
pull away from a 13-13 Ue In the
third period.

Dick Selma, the PhtiadeiPtla
"'"'"'"''
relief •"'""•';"'
has
nuw
·
...-~··
pitched ·hlmsell out of some
tight situations In taU games
but ha lllD has not been
to
talk himself out of hot water
~~four umpires.
wuu
Selmawasflned-Wedne""
day by National League J'res.
!dent !ltub Feeney aild apolode,._
glzetl Ill' remaru be ms "'"
nlghtbeforeabouttheumplrlng
crew when three of his team·
" •0 l.!i!itJl,\{.eeJ&lt;,,.,,,ii,;:~J a,;,f"i 1 fll.,.tes were ejec~a:'Jljm the

Det it New York, 2, lwl-nlle

W L P OP,

l

o

~ ~ 2~

North Galila
Of all the planets of the Hannon Trace
10J4r IYiteDI, Mercury has Southern
tb8 SQUiileat orbit.
Southwestern

2 6 AO
o 2 o .a
0 2 6 98
o 2 8 120

·Mayo Smith

Out

Ma
D..-~JT UPI)
yo Campbell reiterated his aee·
Smllll apparenlly Is on his way ming)yrecorded comment, "I'D

.,.1"1 (

-

He isaued a statement
Wedne8day In which be said, "I
know I was wrong In making
accusationl about the Integrity
ol the umpirel.
"I atr,...ly
que••and stW
-..
Dloi.Uia
do,tlll!judgmentoftheumplres
lntllepme,"Selmasaltl. "Ina
Bt ol ancer, I made charges for
which t bed no basis. I will
......,.-~-fer' this."
..............
Aullle Donatelli, seni« mem·
her and captain ol till! four·
th
member umpire crew a1
included Stan '·'"'- "'""
..,...., ...,...
Ste1kt and Saleh Davison~ was
"':!' aatialted with 1111! line cd

out as m••••er of the Detroit have no"'·g to say about _ 1
""''
·' ,Tigen. .._...,
aeaaon until this aeason Is
"I have no"'•• to say"
"
Smitll saltl wildne8day rugbt WU
o.'trwt finished secOJUI.flrst.
• •' contacfid by United second uncler ' lhe aaay
· g·'··
, ftie~atelllgyto.ldSelma-"-lhe
~...
......
.......
~.. )nte,..UM&amp;I at the Smill) untilllle .dlsaatrous 1970 pitcher came to the umpires'
1., BlltlJ!lli'e , Holi!l where the , campaign. . It wal the beat 11relllilw room and apoloiiUd
Tls""11 were •,laying.
showing llle Tlsera had ever · ·that, "We don't lhlnk !be
The Tigera scheduled game had under one mana;er since pmlsJ!mW 11 nearly enoQilh
with 'tile Orioles, one · of the the Z.1·Z.2 finishes under Steve We I'4COIDIIIanded that you ~
prime ressona Smith reported1J O'Neill from 19t4-47.
Is loini to 'ba Apiacetl by BWy T1te pitching faltered after
MarUn the day after till! ......, Detroit aneaitecl to wllllln three
enda, was pcletponed Wednesday games ol Eut Dlvlllon leader
night ' and reset for this Balllmore on Jul7. 1$. But
afietllom.
in~ to IIUQins l#l fielder
uA.\Ythlng you ,get will have WUile H«ton and pow~ hiller
to cqme out ol your end," Jim Nll'thrup started a lkld
Smilb, salcl, marring QII!'StiOIUI lhl•t likely won't .end unW tha
to Detroit Gtneral Manager aeason .does. The 'l'ljltr11 are
~ Jim Campbell.
currenlly fourlh, I8IDel out
rltt "BM&gt;m" y111 HH
of first.
~'11/lh ...
"I'd lakl1 It In a illlnule "
THE DAILY SOOINEL
Martin aald It lllil lalill' ;,
.ilfAY .. :jiR FREE
IDII'II_II~ .the 'fipn. ''I'd ·klvll
. IIATTE~

~w~

u

,,..,

...

,, •,,Iff

. '•t

~team lbal wins wW make
.fewer mistakes. .
.
Thai's how ·l !ldi• Marauder
Foottiall Coach Charles
Chancey alted up hiJ ~quad's
chances when It meets the
lro~ton
Tigers at Tank
Memorial Stadium Friday
l!llening. Kickoff time iJ at 8
o'clock.
Coach Chancey confirmed
Tburadly that phyoi&lt;:&amp;llY his
boys are In good shape. One
stroke of W fortune, however,
occurred Tuesday night. liolil
Marauder No. 2defensive ends,
Larry Harmon, a junior, and
Rendy Williams, a aenior, were

lost lor lhe game when lnj\lfed
in an automobile accident In
Rutland. Harmon will llliss at
least the Ironton gam~ .
WiiUams may be out for llle
season.
Chancey said Jon Kloes,
veteran offensive ftnnker who
hasn't operated at defensive
end since his Jr. High days, will
back up first string defensive
ends Wayne Well and Jeff
Morris.

"This makes us pretty thin at
those posts," said Chancey.
The Marauder

coach is

convinced Ironton probably is

the beat club, taient.wlse, Meigs Grate, who lllled In fi&gt;r Williams
will run Into all season_ The at fullback last week, returns to
Tiger 1068 to Pll'tamouth (21-15, the~lot and positioo he manned
last Friday) w.,. to a strong against St. Joe.
!elm_
There will be one Important

change In the starUng offensive
lineup tomorrow night fr0111 the
II boys who opened against
Belpre. This wUI be at follback .
Tiny Wllllams, 175 lb. juni... ,
who opened at fullback against
Ironton St. Joe In llJe first game
of the season, but who "was
rested" last week against
Belpre - playing only on
defense at linebacker - gets the
slarting call Friday night. Mike

5f€~:r;r;.:~§ Rhinelanders

lieima

We aren't oura

ttumJ:a

This year he tllrows to wide
receivers Jim Payne aod Steve
Massey and back,a Bobby Smith
and Boyldn.
The Marauder aecondary lfill
have a buay evening II the
Tigers are forced Into the atr.
lroolol\ offensive ends have
Uned up as 5-10, 183 lb. Eagle
Murnahan and ~. lfB lb. Jeff
Crabtree; tackles as 6-0, 1991b.
Dick FIJher and the veteran 11-4,

Mlnn at Kiln attr.
t !l• " 1 "!, mJDi.lt!~~ 1" , -,~ ''/'~' ''l "''Pilnu.es-New York ..PiA, game.
Mllw AI Ch~p,, ~lg t ·: · . ·NOi'ln•O.(tla ,_ ... 0 ' '•1 · 'O' 116
Q,i4 the li\IIWea were
Bell ,~! CltY!I, ntghl -.•.Hannan Trace " o 2 "'t " o1f I ·
·the
aOemecla
Boa till\ ot Wash, n ghl
. Tlfolt ,
l&amp;me
1 . 3 58 58 10 wr01W ,

e;a~~y~chargtohetrleda"~cm.yW~':Iii ~· •

llliliJ;

::

0aklln4 ~~~~~, I

·rer-

OponJna--=tiO! '

'

came

••n

2•

'

Ironton head foolball coach
~" Ylll;l&lt; .
74 :523 2· Bob Bruney, w:1oae Tlge~;~
1.11t~o
74 .519 2v, clipped New Booton 35-0 IIi their
Sl. LOUis ' 7A 11 .m 9 opener, fig\lfed his club allowed
Pllllodelbhlo 70 IS .452 13 lnexperle.,ceandpoor offeiiaiva
¥ontr,ai
69 16 .445 lA
Wnt
blocking.
' .,, " W. L. Pet. GB He was more convllu:ed of
jt.CJnclnnatl " 58 .631 ... how right be was after Porfa.
~~~~co ~
:~~
mouth ~~ 'his boys a 21-15
Affilht,; ·
75 81 .484 23'h lickiilg last Friday night as
l'tOUiltift '•
72 13 .~ 26 . Ironton tuned up 'for the tn.
Gill Dlttlo ·. 60 95 .383 38
asl of the M . ..•. ud
..CII~· IIIvioton lttlt
v on
e1g1 .......-a era
wt&lt;~nridor,'• Rnuits
tomorrow n~hl.
St. L.outs 2 Ch ~o 1. 1st
The affair of tomorrow looms
1
~L~!V5 'il::~:U: ' 2nd
es an .early weathervane
Mon~l3 Pittsburgh 2
pointlogtoa favorlteamoog the
San
Diogo
2 Aflonta 0
top three con1endera for
Cinctnnall 6 Houoton 2
San~r14l.Go Ang 10. 10 inno Southeastern Ohio League
, Pnbablt PHct10ra
honors who are Ironton,
T
All Ttmas EDT)
Jackson, · and Melp, In that
Montreal IRenko 12·10) ot
Pltitburgh !Walker \4·6), 1:05 order,
p.m.
·
While Coach
Charley
Chlcogo !Holtzman 16.11) al Chancey's Marauders are at
St. Louis (Torrez 1-P), 9 p.m. Ironton, Athens takes on highly·
San Oteao !Roberts 7-13) ot
Allonta (McQuen 0.4), 8:05 touted Jackson.
p.m.
The Marauders came out of
Friday•, O.m..
th
lth Bel
Ia
St. Loulo at Montreat, ntght
e warm-up w
pre at
Chlc:.ea&lt;! of Philo, night
Friday night In good shape
Now Vcirk ot Pitts, nigh I
physically. With the acore 36-0
Houstoo at Aflonta, night
at halltlme, Coach Chancey
Los Anoolft at Cine. nlghl
used the opportunity to put m-t
San Delao at San Fran, nlah1
of his bench under fire for much
Amertcon LHgue
needed esperlence. It just
Eosl
might be the last time IIIIa Is
W. L. Pet. GB possible In 1970.
X·Boltlmore 100 54 .649 "'
89 67 .571 12
Ironton's offense features the
New York
Boston
82 74 .529 19
hard ·running of Rick Boykln,
Detroit
76 78 .49 4 24 188lb. taUback who goes outside
75 81 481 26
Cleveland
mll'e than Inside. Aa a fresh70 ••
Woahlngt~
- '.455 30
Wtll
man. be led llJe league Iii acorlng
w. L. Pet. GB but has slacked off since as
~·AIInnesoto 9A
61 .606 .. delenses •-•·"-·ed for
Olkllnd.
85 11 .545 91f2
uccame WWUlC.illornlo
81 73 .526 12V. him.
Konsao City 62
.... 32
Bruney's4&amp;-man
!quad at the
Milwaukee
60 93
94 .390 33'11
.
Chicago
55 "
.357 :JIIV. beginning of the 9086011 n~·
•·Ciilldlld division IIIIo
. be red 48 actives, Including
Wtdneldly's Resulfl
seven seniors, '17 jupiora, 29
Chicago 6 Kan.., City 0
sophomores and two freshmen
Ct•velond
5
Booton
2
. to waleh will be 5-·
Det ot Bolt ppd.• pwr failure
Topjunmr
Wo
New York 6 oshlngtoo '
11, 166 lb. quarterback Hal
~~~.::.,:n;v~~:3'~
Spears who
late Into the
Todoy'o Probablt Pitchers
lronton·Metga gama last year
tAU Tlmoo EDT)
and looked aharp.
Booton !Moret 0·0) at Wesh·
lng_ton (Hannan 9·91, 7:30 r·m.
·Cettfornlo (Bradley H ot SVAC Stan.l:w-8
Mtt,.aukee IMorrls 2·3), 2:30
....."8.
p.m.
~TANDINGS
Detroit IC.In 12-ll ot Bolli·
SVAC ONLY
mor:e,(Cuellor 23.,8),1:30, p.m. TEAM
W L pOP
IOnly 'ames,sc~uhld)
E01tern
2 o 50 o
OB

UQ

2w

lion, high blood
tremon, Fe&amp;tinllnd 'litliek .ol"lla~'i:J'~ytlm to
cancer, brOQChltia and other
up
ofthed ra eedy ache. When lakin dally ll·!ifa-.lwld 1o pun all \\'111'1
use
ruas n
may be hablt4~$1 Ill ~pt."
,
bad air and wateHaued
sensitive to the which ~ae wllbdrqa~,., if .- -· ·. ..._ diet So th ale
dlleases. If people Uved to see
"Drug Abuse the drug may r,equlre,; IIIGrt ,,!'""'t
u m e
·•
by Allee . perioll ill hospltanzatJ+ji; .• .,-: 11 ~
·'
' ·
new Public AUalra ·
•
, · IIIID rru.eott .point&amp; out
'
-·f.'lmplhlet, diacusses some of
Q-1 ud an
·pp. that he made it by IDe&amp;nJ. ot I'~ •
reasona
young Pe~ eratlo!l eight yean ·lllo iPd ait '·Uilusual play: ,u lik:lt
tum to
afer\8 my dOcrtot says 1 htvt !14· ,two, be played dummy' a
Every Time ' I ! )
to
of drua , hesi!W. What ire thf)l·! Ctil q~ · of hearts. Thll Jllay
baJIC In· they be removed?
·
left Weat with., no wlniilnc
marijuana . A'- Wllea tile ..nG. aut· de!eJIIe. If Weot took th~
nar· 1 ae U II! u.~,~n
triCk and led a dlamobd,
an d plsural cavity ~OIIii ~ ~ut~ would
In dum:'ii
tall!l( -ihe)r'' ma ., lUck to- ca•b dummy • ~ .. _
• ~ 1 ~
thll queen of trumpl, co!M ,UJ

;;,~v:e..useofJunsil-oubleo,

. ;. ,

nude - ille only dlfftrente nor's unpopular personal Income tax proposalr.
,
,
today, they _,~ permitted
The judgment today 11 that Shapp aWl has tlie lead Ill
to move, just alood then! In the 1970 race, but hal some fairly severe handicaps of .bli
atatuoaque pooea .... So then!'• own, which make the race In fact a very tight one that
might go either waJI. . .
·.
Candid DemocratiC appraisals start with the cbil~esSlo'n
that Shipp, a wealthy businessman, to not a popWar IIeure.
He 1s neither commanding nor charlSJDatkl, and the 111110
GOP charges that he tried to buy that prior election with
lavllll personal outlays have not lost all thelr steam. '- ·:;,
abo has some serious organlzatlo~ proble~,ith
thele have elll4id some and might lmprove · a~~~~...
more In the remainlng w~ks.
. . ',,,
br
For the second Ume hi a row, he ocored a hard primary
By Oswald &amp; Ja~~ts Jaco
victory over thu'regular party organltation ei!Oid, -A,.m~
General Robert Ctiaey,. This spring the marc!D waa just
NO&amp;TH (D)
J&amp;
32,000 vo.tea, 1111d tbe encounter bas ~It CaseY, &amp;UlkW · ~
bitter. l{e ·waa eonapleuous by hi&amp; abaence wbfn .BeD. ~· _
: ~ ~3'
mund Muskle appe&amp;red for Shapp hi this populol!ll are,a, '
• A
which Js Cuej'a home territory. phapp lost It by ·~.000 Ill
.AitQJU
May.
WIST
UST
Some RepubiiiCan expertl do uot ~however, tiJAI
•10112
.. .,
Casey and hla foUowers are all that cr1
a factor. They
• A106
• J 15
are more hlterested In the party al!ambles _Democratli: ··
t QJ!Of
tltBU2
Mayor James Tate prisldea over In Phtiade!phla, Where
•108
Shlw· mqatdo~l)yweUtowlntbe'·state.
·
SOU'DI
Four year.• IJIO Sbapp'~ ·Pitnadel~ Ill'~ 112,odll
• AJ15
wallnlulfl~t. and Silafel' took hbi(~_l!!l,IJ!I('I'Otes. A
.. ,, ~t.~"R-'2 .• ,,.,•. ,.,, ,., ~tk ·.n~.ft~,'JIII!di a l'~ &gt; ai-.•..
t' '1~4
.· ·'tJ'MwllnioofWIII- ~~hels~
, ,.,,••,,~'~~
1 '. u.Ool."tt.
1' 1t • -&lt;11!
1,
• 1• :sa '
~"!'r.1r .....7"'~ w' ·
tel
;·"./'
1.,. ~
'
.,
oeraac
......
ya .. _.
ay
n.. --..a
..... ·,
, Bolli 'Wlnmlb!O
pJilladelpbJl. but aboll! the •Pittaburgh a . , ':J1)11'1!!8HY"; ;·
Woot !Iordi 1..c ...,.. tlleJra by marclnl up __ to cl8CI,OOO. ~ublkall' IJiWJiY~··
!'.vlewthertglon .._,fUlly,
'
·
Pou 3 •
.._ a•
""'
,.....
•
~...,.
rdlibllfllll'•
mayor, Peter Flaherty., endoj:Hd
!'.- 4 li.T. ~ ~
Sluipp ovii (',aaey but..Jia1 done nothing Yillble for .him
:;:: 6 •
.P,iu
olnce.of~e sources .., .'he II deeply lrillneraed In· pro!)!
1

•·-. ·wr.p.

THE

,

~-~.;-remai;;_ =J=.~~:~~~~c~=~~~~a::~~v,:.::

1
1

1

i.,, ,,;'~,

. .

Clash Early,Key

·

,"'{

nudlljr In thahi!CIII',·~
· .:;,,.. , :. ·i ·
waa bithed hi '·Madam•
· •.~ IR)IC:E, II~• ~ •, &lt;'';· .
n..a.- pink *"!ell and
, NEA Washinvhin Col'l'ftpGndor.!. Y..,
'
............. ~
..,..,.. .,..
'
:1"
'I
they W«e IDIICie gp, and thelr
,
. . , • •r ;
nipplenmllka I'VIIbudl, and
•
SCRANTON, Pa. (NEA) '
they wart the 111011 exqulate
The Democrats: steady claim .that two..t1111e cball~.:
things In . the world" (Why, · Milton Sllapp· will lake the ·Pennsylvania 'gov~on!iiP olit. ;
Heleni) .... Sbe'artpt:40yeara ofurfaRepubllc1111 hands is a lot ahakler.Jhail. 4Jlpeara 'on:.\he
u 0, Sllubert produced the s ce.
· :" ·
.r....~, ..~.b" - - In ShipP's GOP oppotjent, Lt. Gov. Ray Brodeiick, has been

.' ·.: ~--~:.: ·:.~ .... ~ ' • "'""' Dfll

rH---e--1--e-n____H_e_l_p
____
:

'\J.,~

...,..

Shapp· ·Is Leading
··" ,.
,
· ..
In ·Pa; BLit1Just ) ·:I·:

::;:u:=;:~""!:.

...

,·,.&gt; •• ·-

'

very yq, IDd "' ha'd. &amp;lbrloua

}2 P~

?:

iiRUQE
BICIBSAT
:
·
: •' , ·
,
.

and peculiar 1bey -dlltuftlecl
Ill•·"
... Alit•~· Nudity,
ho11'ever, doean't di'Jtresa

'

.

·-·--·wi;ner Wilt Make Fewer ErrorS·

\

w• ·r.·nw ...

f!Jiiloll}ll .... ,The~ newa

.

Do It

'

!I'""'

meem

U.S. Society: Its
Good, Bad Points

~

""

{,

' .
· ·n~lblrnlnewi,UI&lt;Fthe~~ ,•::'':i~c"'
' NEW JYOB!t - ~ ~· ., ~ally
CqJ&lt; J. surp.,';_~•~d
StarT ~ 'il_ due MD ~'1'/l~Y II La i'~u., .~1100 ~!~
' P)Oflth ...":' ti•a JNjw ian "~
1)0 menllroiid lUI .,tctal
''' TOwerS lind Cli'ol~~ (Or \D.~;, SeJiu¥ttll'l!, ~llct•.
; ~KIU,Fnll*!l,tfllei;D "~' ~tb~oJ&gt;flOif,,,j&gt;_Ha~cl,l~ilfjt,
!!l~t ~00 01 I&amp; miMe ' ~~~~·rtf~~~
. "~w· ~~ ,~. Saini
~.':'
1

'

RefurbW&amp;ing Self Esteem

;,1 •

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........,

-.~
E-'Y~!'fret"l~oiiiiiiH
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'

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Even
if he weren't an honor student
at Stanf«d University Frank
Duffy wouldn't hsve to he told
that he doesn't hsve much of a
future as a regular with the
Clnclnnntl Reds neil year.
And that's why the rookie
Reds shortstop Is hoping he wiD
be traded during the off season.
"I don't want to sit on the
bench here next year and 1
don't want to go down to the
minors again," said Duffy Wednesday night after turning in a
sparkling game in the field as

the Reds llnocked off the
Houston Astros &amp;.2.
Ask Sparky Anderson about
Duffy's chances of gettlog his
wish granted and the Reds
manager tactlolly replies :

"Duffy, Darrel Chaney and
Dave Concepcion are three," he
continued. "And you can't call
Tonuny Helms and Woody
Woodward old."
"I won't say I can field as
Duffy, "hecauae I haven't seen
all the shortstops in llJe league,
but I am confident I can do llJe
Job."
Duffy already has conducted

"In fact," said Anderson, his own survey on hitting

"the Reds probably hove more
"Denis Menke Is the only
good young infielders than any shortstop hitting around .300,"
other club in the league .
he pointed out. "Most of them
hit between .210 and .250."
And whst does Duffy think he
would hit playing regularly in
the major leagues?
''Adequately," was the rookie
1be New York Mell are lookinl to plek up additional
shortst~'s smiUng answer.
1f01111d today In Ill• Naliooal League East tiUe chaae. And,
Duffy offered a host of 50
wby not? 'llle defending world lilamplons have the day off.
scouts
a sample of what he can
1be Meta, wbo sem~ed to have blown all cbiance at
do
in
the
field when he teamed
aueee~oh1117 delentllnl tbelr erown wben IIIOJI loll three of
up with Woodward to rob
IMir pmes last weekead to fln11Jlace PIU.burgh, fought
Menke
of a hit in the first
tlelr way back lnlo cuatentioa W~y Bigllt wltiJ a H
inning.
vletory over PblladelpbiJ.
Backbando for Out
x·;,;,.v(u,&amp;•0v'm1m''•!Wj'
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Racing
behind secood, Duffy
ml
• 0:
• • -;;o;
• :·••••••••,.,.,
••••••.•:•»".0:•»:;:.;:;;-n,o!'"H.•.•
......»
._.. . -_..
HRs-Htsle !lOth), Clendenon ftngged down Menke's ground
(2151).
ball with one hand and backhanded a toss to Woodward for
Houston
000 100 OlD- 2 12 1 a rorce out on Bob Watson at
By United Press International Cincl
131 001 OOx- 6 11 0
Nationll Leagu~r
Billingham, Harris (2), Cook second.
1111 gamo)
I7),Giaddlng 18) and Hhoward ; "Woody's the guy who made
Chlcago 000 100 ooo- 1 2 4 Cloninger, carroll (Bl and a hell of a play," said Duffy.
St.Louis 020 000 OOx- 2 7 o Corrales, WP-Cionlnger (9-6).
Jenkins (20-16) and Hundley; LP-BIIIIngham (12-9) . HRs- modes~y shrugging off his role.
Gibson (23-6) and Simmons
Perez (40th), Cloninger (2nd),
With Watson, a burly 201&gt;
(2nd game I
Watson (loth).
pounder, bearing down on him,
Chlcaoo
000 000 001- l 7 n
St. Louis 010 ooo 10x- 2 5 o 110 Innings)
Woody stretched his long legs
Hands, Wilhelm 181 and S.F.
000 000 901 4-\A !S 4 as far a! possible, reached out
,Hundley
: LP·Hands
Re.Ys~ 17-Bl
,121 011
11 ~ '"(n:d:sna;red=~~·=l~ob~"~on~ille
&gt;Simmons.
(17-UI.and L.A..
Plilry, ,031
'l'lllili:k
ISl.,-t:;l~
C'umfler.
I
land (6), Johnson (7), McMahon

short hop with one hand.
''There were a lot of good
plays made out there tonight,"
said appreciative Tony
Cloninger, who would up with
his nintll victory of the season
agalnat six loues.
The Reds picked up one run
in the first Inning and then
routed Aatro starter Jack Bill·
ingham with a tllree - run
spurt In the second. Homers by
Tooy Per02, his 40th, and Cion.

17),

.,

.'

casual
Sl1\CKS

Hart

18th),

Dietz

Henderson (16th).

-;:::--(11
•·~~~

Mens Flue 8lue

DENIM.JEiiP4f"',u l~

......~)ofof&lt;Mt,

_..,,.,_

O.~No• "-"'11

,,.,.,, 1 - 0 1 Oolloon In l'IMo•

VAliD WMBER
&amp;·suPPLY 00.
992-2709

lrd Ave.

loy Sizes In
Flare Brulh DENIM

__ ,_

. . ................ UDt lt

Middleport

ss·•

J

:

to

'9·•
SS·•

New Yen Cothing House
Your SPORTSM INDED Store
PomiRIJ, Ohio

~· a~~~~n:•:n:s~;n~.~~un;c:a~n;;;:;::;:;:;:;:;~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Selma replied, "You fellows
know 1 never give you troulie
oil! 111ore and thai wasn't the
real me aa,mg t11ose things. I
was just bot and I'm genuinely
lll1'I'Y."

$7 ·'! $}}·•

Sizes
27 to 36

San Diego 000 100 010- 2 7 0 Washngtn 001 000 Olo- 4 10 2
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- 0 7 2
300 002 \Ox- 6 10 0
Arlin (1~) and Borton; N.Y.
Jarvls, stone t9) an d Tlllman. Coleman, Grzenda (7J. Rld{8) and BliHngs ,
LP-Jarvls 116·14). HRs.Goston dleberger
Gardner, Aker (8) and Munson
(28th). Compbeilll2thl .
WP-Gardner 0 -0l . LP-Coleman
18-11). HRo·BIIIIngs llstl. EpNew York tttlt 002 020- s 7 1 sfern
(20th).
Philo
100 210 ooo- 4 11 o
Sadeckl, Ryan (5), Herbel Mlnnesota :.103 000 200- 7 12 o

•

and Aare Brush Denim Jeans in Green and Brown ·"

(22nd).

(51, Gentry 16), McGraw l7l ~-kr d 000 000 1~ ' 2 o
and Grote: Short, Wilson 16), ~ •n
Selma 181 and Mccarver. WP· Hall, Zepp (8) and MitterMcGraw IA-6) . LP-Selma IMI. wold; Hunter. Fingers 17).
Lochemann 18) and Duncan .
- - - - - - - - - WP-Hail (10-6). LP.Hunter 117M
d
hl
1111Spe11ded lllld we shall Wll'k c"l. HRs: rttter22wdall Dll5t ,
r~....
&amp;r
after 11 t lOth I.

dl

Both Flare and
1ight Leg Styles
Sizes 27 to 42

;•

Bateman ; Brunet, Lamb (6), Haller, lorborg 16), Shnson
Grant {8) and Sangulllen . WP (91. Ferguson (10). WP-Robert Morton (17-11) . LP-Brunet (0 son (8-9} . LP-lamb (6-1} . HRs1).

'"'

Plain Colors
Stripes and Plaids

IJIIO lo 1300

Lomb 191 Strahler flO) and

,.
T

linesMres

MorTon, Marshall 19) and

r«•

Inger, his second, accounted
the final two Reds runs.
"
Even though rapped lor t&lt;fl
hits, one a homer by w~~ ..
Cloninger restricted the Al1l'Gif"
to two runs before living wai!
In the eightll Inning to Cla)l~
Carroll, who picked ap his IIIII'!
save.
;l
The Redo, idle today, resume
play Friday at Riverfront Slalf.l'!
lwn against the Los Anpleif;
Oodgera.

r------------------'W'!
Mens

&gt;«mw·w.;w.x ...

:~s~~~ J~: :i ~ 1 ~ : ~~~c!."'m~r./..~ 1 1ttds~~~

.I

On defenae, Abbott repJeM ·
big Mark Werry at l.tldllll, ldt
Morris and Wayne WeD ~,
over at llle ends, Lehew ffiiNfl
to linebecker, John Thtllllll,
wll'ks at middle guard, '1114
Chip Haggerty camp In at'
safety.
H

Post 99th Win

''Tradingisn'tmydepartment.'"' well as anyone around,' ' said

However, Sparky does admit
that good young Infielders are
very much in demand and he 'll
admit too that Duffy is a good
one.

Ron Smith and Mark
WWiama, in a neck-ancl-neck
hattie for the opening call at ooe
of the cornerback joba on
defense, conUnued this week
j'very close to each Other'' said
Chancey. Last week Smith
opened. This week It may be
Williams. Tom Hoffner
operates out of the other cornerback [IOIIiUon.
Otherwise, the opening of.
fensive unit wW have Kloes

FOR LOW COST, AUTOMATIC WARM
,FLOOR HEATING

._/IMming
VENTED

.0GAS HEATERS

�I

• .:..,. ~· ....;i,.IMieporW'GoniloJ,O.,fepi.JI, ll'/0

•

Rio·Grande~ ;'Cr~s Cdun.t ry
J

1

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I

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'

l:lf~:s*iL
NEws I M()S~tllappy FellaJugFavorite ·:'i!fi:.~.l!~~=;~
Ho1Ur

I.

:the·

.t;l
I

:Team Opens Season Saturday

Medlcal Cllnter Firat'
.&lt;
,
, Pi ttsburgh
Bl 72 .535 , .
Ave. and
in.
DELAWAIU'l, OIH {VPII- Uttle Brown Juc as a priwte Dancer. 'lbl!colt will run for the ~w York
:~
~v,
•WIInS. ~• ~and 7-1 Poll!· ¥001'il.l!ari to fGoillve SCanle7 affair.
.
final llmetllllyearon tltatdate. R~~~ininggomes: ·
M!lternl1li Vlii\II!SIIourl 2:30 14 nom-and~ S.lllleu 11 Dan.cer, owner and driver of MOll Ukely lo glw the two •Pittlb\Wgt&gt;-"""'• (41 ; Mon·
.4 :" p.m. Parl!llll · onlj' M 111e7 lblllk of ~Y'· ,flllll,OOO MOll u.ppy l'ellar 8lld S.u- 11!1"" colla a ebalkinge we t?ot Soot. :u; New Yari&lt; 131

c.ur• G'en.rai

·Sports
JJ:esk

Tile Rio Gronde College
~en crou..:ountry team
will open their 19'10 b)'
compelln&amp; In the Malone
College lnvllaftonal CrouCountry Meet tn canton this .
Saturday, Sept. 26. The meet,
one of the biggest crOSMOWIIry
eventa In the state, kicks off a
13-meet schedule for the
lledJool.
Following lbe Malone In·
vilallonal, the Redmen will
compete In two other away
meeta before opening their
home seaaon against MI.
Vernon College, on October 6 at
4:30p.m. The Redmen will face
lift. Vernon on the road September 30, and wlll open theJr
1970 Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference season

J'edlalri&lt;a
Ward.
.
. BmTHS

,'

,.
ao.9rta
·

!leu, driver and tralnor of
CoiQ!IIbja George, meet bead to
bead h..., today lor the 14th
llmetllllyear, wllh Molt Happy
FeU.. haYing a namw 7-tlead.
Beca. . olldl No. 5 •tartlnc
poelllon bt lbe lint heat of the
.Jua,MootBippJ Fella hal beflll
btllalledasali-2favorlte by the

G~
NEW Y()RK (VPI) TheN

·

.

arr:

ll!fd.ie

,, ,'h£

"

Oct. 3.
nus year's Redmen CI'088 •
CO!Ditry team, according to
Coach Dean Rinehart, Is a very
yoq team, with only one
upperclassman on the eight, TilE RIO GRANDE OOLLEGE Redmen CI'Oial· country team wUI open Ita 1970 sea100
! man squad. That up. perclasaman Is Tlru Folger, a
In the MaiMe Oillege Invitatlooal Saturday, Sept. 26. RUlllen are, !trot row (1. to r.),
aophOIIIOI'&lt;! from Steubenville
Bartley Armt, Ken Sanders, and Jack Flncb. Second row; Jack Haggard, Tim Folger,
and a m-.mber of last year's
Terry Wolf, and Jim Prater. Not pictured - Doug Thompson.
team.
'
Leading this year's team will
be Ken Sanders, a frelhman
wbo hal flashed a nwnher of
Impressive limes during
pncttce, Sanders, according to
· Rinehart, has the potential to he
one ollbe premier runners In
1 the slate of Ollio, and may he
1. 1be surprise of this year's
By CoL Mol~
1
Nallonal Asaoclation of In·
tercoJJeglate Alllletlcs Dlslrlct
No. 21 meet.
A few mistakes here, a brokm play there, a combinllloo of
The eight members of the 1970 evenIa oeemingJy unimportant aometlmes spe11a the dlllerence
Redmen cross..:ountry team between winning and losing.
are: Bartley Ardnt; Jack Finch,
Tile ume could be said for the un1J1!dlctable world ol the
; Folger • Jack Haggard, Jim fearless loreciister who uses the old crystal ball, a mountain of
, :.Prater • Sanders, Doug statlallcs and one'I'Own lngODulty no! to mention old-lashloned
, :n,.mpson and Terry Wull.
""""luck In P'""'~ lbe outcome ol"•• school football ganiea.
· The 19'10 Redmen cross - •~
~..
....,..
coWl try away meets includes :
Last week was no e•cepdon for ti1JI old warrior.
Malone College Invitational,
In keeping with my hot race with Major Hoople, yours truly
~
Mt
"
eon
gained
one game to take a two.game lead on the old master ,Into
Sept. ~;
. • emon
ege,
Sept , 30; CampbeUsvllle the third week of combat.
•~ College, Oct. 3; Marietta
Tllus far, ·Col. Lee Mole has recorded a two week slate of 25
Coli
Oct 10 Cwnberlan&lt;i rlghtandlOwroug.Majorlloople'slocalrecordls24-11.
Be; CoU
Let's see what's in store ti1JI week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
College,Oel·l
ege, · 5; rea
ege,
Swauger, Albany, called on Mr.
Oct. 19; KIAC Conference Meet,
SEOAL
d Mrs La
Eblin
Oct. :K; Centre College InJackson 22 Athens 6. Coach Ben Bucl&lt;lef' Jronmen were edged an
· wrence
·
vltallonal, Oct. 30; Marshall by Jronton for the sportswrlten and broadcasters dtoice as , ~~ .=on: d :
e!~~~~!icw- 7: , Jeaaue!C\18111Ptlll~. ~. '""~"'· ba._.tt s1r0111 runners
.
~~
.
es' ~""
· 1 ; 1 ~~~.:;·
11:1"Aif~·NoHO!ltuid ' to mab·'~l Thoy will work toward - ·llool ; ;Jf},~-;d' Mi,j
!
·
)lis
No. 22 Meet, Friday,
1.\lfi '. . ~~ent . the ~~ekendon ~lth. ; :
Nov. 14.
Meigs 32 Ironton 26. Uplet special of the week. Tiger fans relatives In Greenfield
·
At home, the Redmen will p-obably wm't agree.
Mr.andMri. Dlck~spenl
face MI. Vernon College, OeL&lt;lgan 40 Wellston 0. Powerful Clieftalns unload on Rockets. an evening with Margaret Karr
Iober I atf p.m., and Urbana
Galllpolla11Waoeri)'I.I8Waverlyuweakasltappeara?
Syr
'
Colle&amp;e, Oct. 17 at 11 a.m.
SVAC
~~d Mrs. Gene Alldre,
North GaUia Zll Southweatern 8. Plrateo' offense ~- Klmberlee
and
Kevin,
Hannan Trace 12 Symmes VaDey 6. WUdcall ClllllO close last Co1umbUI, apenl lbe weekend
week. Win could give team real lift.
wlthBerlhaParllerandMr. and
Kyg,.. !Zeek 12 Southern O.lt altould he more. However, we'U Mrs. Thomas Gene Parker.
walt and see.
,
Eallem 22 Warren Local ae.....es o. Eagles lhouldn' Itave
any trouble lleepin&amp; lhutout rec:ord Intact.
OTIIERII
Wahama II Duvall. White Falcol!s bounce hack after ~ lie
witbFederal-Hoeklng. .
Pt. Pleuant II Barboursvllle 12. Bib BJaclui .,.p Joolng
llrealt.
Federal-Hocking Zl Miller 12.
Req~)
Fairland 24 Cbaupeake 8
Ironton St. Joe If Oak HID 12.
Nellonvllle-Y.rt 16 Glouster 0
RoemUn • Aluander •.
I
,.
Coal Grove 32 Rock HID I.
South Point II HunUngton VbtiOD 13.
216

i!.
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"•

News Notes

•Jfarin .'

,.,._,,;

2-HOUR
. CLEANING

. '·
'

'

.•v :.,.•

W L T POP

Meigs

2 o o 78 18

Jacl&lt;son

••""m

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Headt

SHAMPOO

FandJ .LOIIOn Yellr
'

Rea,
'8.95

QIGice

L•.. . !'I~ f·,
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ilcmf r. P

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~ •.,. •f.

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~ ·J.~·;;~at&lt;~

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22
8
6
0

14
25
JO
57

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Attlens 111t ,Jackson
S.outh Point at Huntington
VInson

\

AMIENS.
MEDICATED
POWbER
614 oz.

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Reg. 99'

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With
lmeglnatlve
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Contemporary o.;~~t~'l
Experienced r
manshlp

105,000
011, Ga$,

J.J.U,

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Ell!tllrlc :He-' Pump
Available.
}

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FALL PANELING· SALE
PLUS
, ¥ca.
nr .M. ore:·.
V· ,

·•1'1'+

. ~~•claJI,
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·.-·'· urolriMv, SEPT. 26
',

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SS·• .·
DIAL
SOAP

SJ.49

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REG.

PEPfO.
BISMO

Polideht
ftowder

Reg. '1··
16 oz.

Jhl.'l.l9

YERASPIRIN
1.89

$1.33

10 oz.
'IG.ll Vllue

MYADEC
VITAM 1M
sz.as

130 CAPSULES

CR~ST
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Toothpaste
Rea.
'1.05
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Gel-1
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·· The Furnace

ON YOUR DRUG STORE
NEEDS AT NELSON~S
.
..

Hair Spray

'· ' .. •
j,',/'tr.

NOW IN PRoGRESs!

Mlkt -roy Your

MISS BRECK

Pd. Fbi. Adv.

Roclc Hill at Coal Grove

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nlgnts Until 9:00

Pals' Vl,tlirun
Plalll 60'1
Pals' Vitamins with Iron' 60's

The people of Ohio and Meigs County can't
affOrd the hanky panky of handling state funds
by anotl\l!r Republican Administration . The
state, we are all aware, is already a billion and
one-half dollars ln debt. A continuation of
these Republican procedures can r~sult In
only one thing · · · BANKRUPTCY!
Vote Democratic On Nov. 3
D. A. Canll!lay

50 22

992-3491

Your
Qlaice
~ - ',., . "' '

5Fresh Fruit •
flavqQ. '
, · Fun,foo children
to~M. , ,

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HYACINTHS, e.tc

BEN,FRANKUN•
PHONE
202 EAST MAIN ST.

In

r--------.!:========~

:u 12

Fall Bulbs

TULIPS

Playtex
Baby Nurser

2 o o 86 20

Gallipolis
2 o o
Ironton
I 1 0
Wellston
1 1 o
South Point
I I 0
Athens
I I 0
Coal Grove
0 2 0
Waverly
o 2 0
FRIDAY'S GAMES:
MeiQI at lror1ton
Waverly at Gallipolis.
Logan at Wellston

JUST ARRIVED

'12·•

HI-THERM
by Soltlce

ROBINSON'S

Logon (ALLGAMESl
200806

MOIORIZED FOlDING GRill

IOeal ~, bitting the sireN of !hot lunda of 1111181llownl
~ ~ !aixl once I weefi:, had llpi!CO, and UJDe, to relate the

..,.li'baU.

96'

Reg. 16.99

'

(Upon

TEAM

'!·33'

.; ~ oblttllrlea In these da)'l of 1n1rr1 bi!!TY mort an~
~ IIPIOi't the JMli'IOb tltat- There Ill no &amp;olnl ~. I ~
~~ lotjllmore ~.,. Wlton 1!111 fimerallio!ne director
· 'I!Jllktbellme lo pull togetltir lbe~lnd recordl of a man
. ~ !lf)bofed and wu mom! amonr hla C:Gitemporartes, And lha

m:an~wu.
·
111•·there was the recent obituary of Georp B. Lerner of
Bartfdrd. It bad • onHlne mention of bill fllwrite hobby ~ 9J!ii atlhmslt could be
1n1o maw papa.
Mr .Lemerwaianavldand rabid bueblllde9otee.
· I lifhla )'OUtlier 1eera be played on a Hartford team. 'ile later .
.,QIIIIMed local teaml, He was Vice president of tlla Ohio Vallef
·AUoelatloo for lbe eilllre 11 years of lll ealatence. ~e waa Vflt'J
)iatlallecl with lbe
ID8tl"
of vice prealdent; lblll
left !!IJjl free to
lalt

&amp;.Gal
TRASH

IIRD•IATH

McCLURES DAIRY ISLE

Laurel Qiff

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PWnc

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One.....

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~Uut~be~illeOill~e

lll1iiiJtd lJeCDid to , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " " " " '
MOll HIIJpy Folia In the Cline,
drlvtn by Herve Flllllt, Md
Leander Lobell, uador thuetna
,Beige Steel Case
,
of Wayne "CUrl)'" Snul'l wbo
also has won two Jup. '
Por1~Btt :ZO.In, fan with
Emllt, atartlng In the No. 2
easy. swlfch 3 speed $
,.• - ,
poll polillon, Ia Uated at 5-l by
dial
.
Circulates
5000
·
oddamakers and Leander
' CFM.
·
Lobell, In the third spot, 1.11-1.
Reg.
14.88
Thereat of the Held ll made
"'ofJudge(J$.1),wllohaathe
Reg. 2.98
rail, Keyatone Pat (III-I),
Reg . 1.49 ·
Kmtucq (1M), Race Time
Boy (J$.1), Steady Star (JJ-1),
Ak.el Hanover (U-1) and
Ferric Hanover (11-1).
lllnll;, who

Mr. and 51Jrs. Paul Lee
CbiiUn, Leon, a daughter; Mr.
ew
and Mrls. Paul Neilan /lllQnlo Yor• •. Glanta iWednellday
.»eJter: a Puill~\ ~
~==-~
~nd Mrl. En!eil ~ 4'..,., picked. up defeimlve ~ 0110
!V01t Columbia, a dllighter,
B
~ ... ~. ba"" Los
· DliiCJWUlES ·
.~ownfr . ~:.':::-.: "~boy
Jeae Beckett,' I'll~ BoOih, . "''' thom , ......... """ •· oddlmakers.
""
hill
,
Mlsa "Peggy 1Brlght, E. L. .. Bo Shy and Brown, wUI be Dancer announced Wed' . '. · · bY Ch et ~•n~e
i
Cot~ell, '(ta. ' Alvo,n Baell placW onlbe tuiiCJuad. . l)l!odaybebad.OtdMoiiiBippy
t •
~~
~hal been -llid cootlnut1 .., lqljl'talltln . Davia, Mrf, W:l!ter. R. Fraley, ~ 81JRGERY
FeU. for f1 mllllcln to Blue Olip
~H.iPSdiOolallllttlcl...,.,..alJtin!Gotblli.htbaplthe · .~R. J~. Denlel Lee
ATLANTA ' (VPI) -AUanta Fiii'IIUI,Wallkll,N.Y.
lm9fLmyRitcbleto'thetieadrootb111oD.••dniJob-tllll Jot~~~~, .· Mrs. Walter P. Vak&lt;ll!lolhlillntaddeGetqe ThellleofMOIIHappyFeDa
·;··~ll'a!lliiD&amp;nc!aD!Ib.pobtltolbe!ljn~~~~~· I(IIIII~;:JMri. , Timotby c. K~ a former ~qtre ~ lteffectiveJIBI.l,l9'11,willlaU
, · 'Mt:"~ll,un. 'l'ben!fore, 1am~tb'Gtduiy'OI!ft , ~.iitd bpnlllll, •MI'I. All:'America, ~~ tRee earlllngaupto Nov. :lllgolntl to
. • .,,Jiliil:,lri')''•IVWOIIMrfrlei!dawlllleltllatgood~.-to• .P!?~·~·Simuelp.stout, lllll"Y Wedneaday for dl·•.•· lliiltbt '~dtbewUic-.
. ·'
....... JIDIOI A. 'l'homu; Mrl, magadcartUaseandwUiheout
. t, , 'l1le lQNI -tcbleto put hlalllineln beMiln•Ut Eutem will UWan E. 'l'bclt!as. Mrl. Orville of ~Uon lndeflnllaJ)i.
·.·.\·~·a~ C1f CGicb t.arry•a. Bob gredulllad. ,_after 8 fl. Wicker, Ml11 Emmo. ..KJn, a lof~Wi., 2110-pounder,
. IJ'IIIIant add.tjc ~- 1M lint llUdlle (RGcer, 1111 l'l'l. Wolltql,8 Mra'. Evi.wooda, Mrl. InJured 1111 knee In Sundly'al~
• ~~ o~ tile foothal1 rollfr of old Cbe.ller lll8b Sc11ooJ Wllloh, Jlarry ·\'!00ftleJ_, Rob,r Allen, S Atlanta win over .New
. ·. ..."_ It · ... ~....... ......_ •-._, ~-• ....:;;:- Mrl. Ethel GNene, Jack Riley, Or'"•••.
.' •" ~!· ,
nil' •• ...... ,_, 011
ancl.lalilel Smith.
,-.
•\· I ,lllhoucb hampered by • mllll 81udtut body and llndtod liP"
. .... , .
VEU,ONE OPERATED
· ; porltiiilty·!oraebedule ~""II of C~~Dp~r'able clasl.
DAQ (Dum
MINNEAPOJ..IS81'. PAVL
,~ -~ot • Ritchie -produced In tbe Jaler years of a.ter
'USTON,.lA. (VPI)-Rannle (VPI) . - Minnesota V1kiJ!P
. AT
' 1 · , lll&amp;b (Ill ulltence ended fol!owlnl tbe 111'1-) was Georp Dull, II, 1 Loulalana Tech slarUng guard Jim VeDone
~Butb wboftltCII Ioiiar In football and~ for the ~,player, IOU ldlled by I underwent an appendectomy
' ' UniVerslly of ClnCiniiatl, and bad a fling &amp;1-profeulonll 1Miaetw11. fnlcltt train while he and twn Wednellday and wiD he hoeplla·a.qe, named altar 7011 know wbo ~ had IJiMd. and wu frie!IIIIIN!'t JOQIDc.
Uzed Wllil the end of the week .
Every School Day - So~telltillfl Spedal •
, llllillg; ·
''
Atltborltla ~ Derk ap- Ed Wllite, the Vlklnp, No. 2
Caadl Larry Rltcble'a OIID career overlaJIIIII!I &amp;ger'•, pareOily did not ... or bear the draft choice In 11169, wiD •move
Foorth &amp; Locos! - Mloldl~
'
bt~ In liN and ending In lw.
'
CIIK&gt;IIilni train.
Into lbe slarllng )oh.
11Mil there waa COUIIn EltM llltdlle wbo .waa 1 rootblll
~yer for ·tbe !IIJI:J enolldated Eastern HJcli Scboolllr • .
: Pia~ Ito~ Elton and Bob, the lalt Rlteble, .... lto.nlld,
..llilotber eoualn. He tpo waa a good one.
' .( · IAII&amp; llvt tbe·Rlfcltles,
·

rr· .

·ffl

t\

;~:rrablets
I

'

.

'

.49

'4··

SJ.59

Plebp of

E•wdt Man

Transistor Battery
..... 69'
No. 21&amp;

394

20

�I

• .:..,. ~· ....;i,.IMieporW'GoniloJ,O.,fepi.JI, ll'/0

•

Rio·Grande~ ;'Cr~s Cdun.t ry
J

1

I

I

~.

.. ,

~

I

•

'

l:lf~:s*iL
NEws I M()S~tllappy FellaJugFavorite ·:'i!fi:.~.l!~~=;~
Ho1Ur

I.

:the·

.t;l
I

:Team Opens Season Saturday

Medlcal Cllnter Firat'
.&lt;
,
, Pi ttsburgh
Bl 72 .535 , .
Ave. and
in.
DELAWAIU'l, OIH {VPII- Uttle Brown Juc as a priwte Dancer. 'lbl!colt will run for the ~w York
:~
~v,
•WIInS. ~• ~and 7-1 Poll!· ¥001'il.l!ari to fGoillve SCanle7 affair.
.
final llmetllllyearon tltatdate. R~~~ininggomes: ·
M!lternl1li Vlii\II!SIIourl 2:30 14 nom-and~ S.lllleu 11 Dan.cer, owner and driver of MOll Ukely lo glw the two •Pittlb\Wgt&gt;-"""'• (41 ; Mon·
.4 :" p.m. Parl!llll · onlj' M 111e7 lblllk of ~Y'· ,flllll,OOO MOll u.ppy l'ellar 8lld S.u- 11!1"" colla a ebalkinge we t?ot Soot. :u; New Yari&lt; 131

c.ur• G'en.rai

·Sports
JJ:esk

Tile Rio Gronde College
~en crou..:ountry team
will open their 19'10 b)'
compelln&amp; In the Malone
College lnvllaftonal CrouCountry Meet tn canton this .
Saturday, Sept. 26. The meet,
one of the biggest crOSMOWIIry
eventa In the state, kicks off a
13-meet schedule for the
lledJool.
Following lbe Malone In·
vilallonal, the Redmen will
compete In two other away
meeta before opening their
home seaaon against MI.
Vernon College, on October 6 at
4:30p.m. The Redmen will face
lift. Vernon on the road September 30, and wlll open theJr
1970 Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference season

J'edlalri&lt;a
Ward.
.
. BmTHS

,'

,.
ao.9rta
·

!leu, driver and tralnor of
CoiQ!IIbja George, meet bead to
bead h..., today lor the 14th
llmetllllyear, wllh Molt Happy
FeU.. haYing a namw 7-tlead.
Beca. . olldl No. 5 •tartlnc
poelllon bt lbe lint heat of the
.Jua,MootBippJ Fella hal beflll
btllalledasali-2favorlte by the

G~
NEW Y()RK (VPI) TheN

·

.

arr:

ll!fd.ie

,, ,'h£

"

Oct. 3.
nus year's Redmen CI'088 •
CO!Ditry team, according to
Coach Dean Rinehart, Is a very
yoq team, with only one
upperclassman on the eight, TilE RIO GRANDE OOLLEGE Redmen CI'Oial· country team wUI open Ita 1970 sea100
! man squad. That up. perclasaman Is Tlru Folger, a
In the MaiMe Oillege Invitatlooal Saturday, Sept. 26. RUlllen are, !trot row (1. to r.),
aophOIIIOI'&lt;! from Steubenville
Bartley Armt, Ken Sanders, and Jack Flncb. Second row; Jack Haggard, Tim Folger,
and a m-.mber of last year's
Terry Wolf, and Jim Prater. Not pictured - Doug Thompson.
team.
'
Leading this year's team will
be Ken Sanders, a frelhman
wbo hal flashed a nwnher of
Impressive limes during
pncttce, Sanders, according to
· Rinehart, has the potential to he
one ollbe premier runners In
1 the slate of Ollio, and may he
1. 1be surprise of this year's
By CoL Mol~
1
Nallonal Asaoclation of In·
tercoJJeglate Alllletlcs Dlslrlct
No. 21 meet.
A few mistakes here, a brokm play there, a combinllloo of
The eight members of the 1970 evenIa oeemingJy unimportant aometlmes spe11a the dlllerence
Redmen cross..:ountry team between winning and losing.
are: Bartley Ardnt; Jack Finch,
Tile ume could be said for the un1J1!dlctable world ol the
; Folger • Jack Haggard, Jim fearless loreciister who uses the old crystal ball, a mountain of
, :.Prater • Sanders, Doug statlallcs and one'I'Own lngODulty no! to mention old-lashloned
, :n,.mpson and Terry Wull.
""""luck In P'""'~ lbe outcome ol"•• school football ganiea.
· The 19'10 Redmen cross - •~
~..
....,..
coWl try away meets includes :
Last week was no e•cepdon for ti1JI old warrior.
Malone College Invitational,
In keeping with my hot race with Major Hoople, yours truly
~
Mt
"
eon
gained
one game to take a two.game lead on the old master ,Into
Sept. ~;
. • emon
ege,
Sept , 30; CampbeUsvllle the third week of combat.
•~ College, Oct. 3; Marietta
Tllus far, ·Col. Lee Mole has recorded a two week slate of 25
Coli
Oct 10 Cwnberlan&lt;i rlghtandlOwroug.Majorlloople'slocalrecordls24-11.
Be; CoU
Let's see what's in store ti1JI week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
College,Oel·l
ege, · 5; rea
ege,
Swauger, Albany, called on Mr.
Oct. 19; KIAC Conference Meet,
SEOAL
d Mrs La
Eblin
Oct. :K; Centre College InJackson 22 Athens 6. Coach Ben Bucl&lt;lef' Jronmen were edged an
· wrence
·
vltallonal, Oct. 30; Marshall by Jronton for the sportswrlten and broadcasters dtoice as , ~~ .=on: d :
e!~~~~!icw- 7: , Jeaaue!C\18111Ptlll~. ~. '""~"'· ba._.tt s1r0111 runners
.
~~
.
es' ~""
· 1 ; 1 ~~~.:;·
11:1"Aif~·NoHO!ltuid ' to mab·'~l Thoy will work toward - ·llool ; ;Jf},~-;d' Mi,j
!
·
)lis
No. 22 Meet, Friday,
1.\lfi '. . ~~ent . the ~~ekendon ~lth. ; :
Nov. 14.
Meigs 32 Ironton 26. Uplet special of the week. Tiger fans relatives In Greenfield
·
At home, the Redmen will p-obably wm't agree.
Mr.andMri. Dlck~spenl
face MI. Vernon College, OeL&lt;lgan 40 Wellston 0. Powerful Clieftalns unload on Rockets. an evening with Margaret Karr
Iober I atf p.m., and Urbana
Galllpolla11Waoeri)'I.I8Waverlyuweakasltappeara?
Syr
'
Colle&amp;e, Oct. 17 at 11 a.m.
SVAC
~~d Mrs. Gene Alldre,
North GaUia Zll Southweatern 8. Plrateo' offense ~- Klmberlee
and
Kevin,
Hannan Trace 12 Symmes VaDey 6. WUdcall ClllllO close last Co1umbUI, apenl lbe weekend
week. Win could give team real lift.
wlthBerlhaParllerandMr. and
Kyg,.. !Zeek 12 Southern O.lt altould he more. However, we'U Mrs. Thomas Gene Parker.
walt and see.
,
Eallem 22 Warren Local ae.....es o. Eagles lhouldn' Itave
any trouble lleepin&amp; lhutout rec:ord Intact.
OTIIERII
Wahama II Duvall. White Falcol!s bounce hack after ~ lie
witbFederal-Hoeklng. .
Pt. Pleuant II Barboursvllle 12. Bib BJaclui .,.p Joolng
llrealt.
Federal-Hocking Zl Miller 12.
Req~)
Fairland 24 Cbaupeake 8
Ironton St. Joe If Oak HID 12.
Nellonvllle-Y.rt 16 Glouster 0
RoemUn • Aluander •.
I
,.
Coal Grove 32 Rock HID I.
South Point II HunUngton VbtiOD 13.
216

i!.
. i'

',

·'

'
"•

News Notes

•Jfarin .'

,.,._,,;

2-HOUR
. CLEANING

. '·
'

'

.•v :.,.•

W L T POP

Meigs

2 o o 78 18

Jacl&lt;son

••""m

r'

•

'

..

1 .,

Headt

SHAMPOO

FandJ .LOIIOn Yellr
'

Rea,
'8.95

QIGice

L•.. . !'I~ f·,
.,.

.\

ilcmf r. P

...........~. ,·. '!t't~r!l·;,,.
~ •.,. •f.

. ''it\ fl

~ '!fi}ln•i•~" ~

~ ·J.~·;;~at&lt;~

.. '~ ,., ~·t

'

.

.

.
'

'

•

;u 22

22
8
6
0

14
25
JO
57

,

Attlens 111t ,Jackson
S.outh Point at Huntington
VInson

\

AMIENS.
MEDICATED
POWbER
614 oz.

&amp;&amp;·

Reg. 99'

13 ..

With
lmeglnatlve
'•
Engineering , '
Contemporary o.;~~t~'l
Experienced r
manshlp

105,000
011, Ga$,

J.J.U,

Er~trlc and

Ell!tllrlc :He-' Pump
Available.
}

'

FALL PANELING· SALE
PLUS
, ¥ca.
nr .M. ore:·.
V· ,

·•1'1'+

. ~~•claJI,
,•, , ..$a&lt;ENDS

·.-·'· urolriMv, SEPT. 26
',

~--~

SS·• .·
DIAL
SOAP

SJ.49

&amp;&amp;·

REG.

PEPfO.
BISMO

Polideht
ftowder

Reg. '1··
16 oz.

Jhl.'l.l9

YERASPIRIN
1.89

$1.33

10 oz.
'IG.ll Vllue

MYADEC
VITAM 1M
sz.as

130 CAPSULES

CR~ST
.

Toothpaste
Rea.
'1.05
'
-~~
Gel-1
'~---· ~ ~ · '-i:l

·· The Furnace

ON YOUR DRUG STORE
NEEDS AT NELSON~S
.
..

Hair Spray

'· ' .. •
j,',/'tr.

NOW IN PRoGRESs!

Mlkt -roy Your

MISS BRECK

Pd. Fbi. Adv.

Roclc Hill at Coal Grove

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nlgnts Until 9:00

Pals' Vl,tlirun
Plalll 60'1
Pals' Vitamins with Iron' 60's

The people of Ohio and Meigs County can't
affOrd the hanky panky of handling state funds
by anotl\l!r Republican Administration . The
state, we are all aware, is already a billion and
one-half dollars ln debt. A continuation of
these Republican procedures can r~sult In
only one thing · · · BANKRUPTCY!
Vote Democratic On Nov. 3
D. A. Canll!lay

50 22

992-3491

Your
Qlaice
~ - ',., . "' '

5Fresh Fruit •
flavqQ. '
, · Fun,foo children
to~M. , ,

\ ... ;
'L

HYACINTHS, e.tc

BEN,FRANKUN•
PHONE
202 EAST MAIN ST.

In

r--------.!:========~

:u 12

Fall Bulbs

TULIPS

Playtex
Baby Nurser

2 o o 86 20

Gallipolis
2 o o
Ironton
I 1 0
Wellston
1 1 o
South Point
I I 0
Athens
I I 0
Coal Grove
0 2 0
Waverly
o 2 0
FRIDAY'S GAMES:
MeiQI at lror1ton
Waverly at Gallipolis.
Logan at Wellston

JUST ARRIVED

'12·•

HI-THERM
by Soltlce

ROBINSON'S

Logon (ALLGAMESl
200806

MOIORIZED FOlDING GRill

IOeal ~, bitting the sireN of !hot lunda of 1111181llownl
~ ~ !aixl once I weefi:, had llpi!CO, and UJDe, to relate the

..,.li'baU.

96'

Reg. 16.99

'

(Upon

TEAM

'!·33'

.; ~ oblttllrlea In these da)'l of 1n1rr1 bi!!TY mort an~
~ IIPIOi't the JMli'IOb tltat- There Ill no &amp;olnl ~. I ~
~~ lotjllmore ~.,. Wlton 1!111 fimerallio!ne director
· 'I!Jllktbellme lo pull togetltir lbe~lnd recordl of a man
. ~ !lf)bofed and wu mom! amonr hla C:Gitemporartes, And lha

m:an~wu.
·
111•·there was the recent obituary of Georp B. Lerner of
Bartfdrd. It bad • onHlne mention of bill fllwrite hobby ~ 9J!ii atlhmslt could be
1n1o maw papa.
Mr .Lemerwaianavldand rabid bueblllde9otee.
· I lifhla )'OUtlier 1eera be played on a Hartford team. 'ile later .
.,QIIIIMed local teaml, He was Vice president of tlla Ohio Vallef
·AUoelatloo for lbe eilllre 11 years of lll ealatence. ~e waa Vflt'J
)iatlallecl with lbe
ID8tl"
of vice prealdent; lblll
left !!IJjl free to
lalt

&amp;.Gal
TRASH

IIRD•IATH

McCLURES DAIRY ISLE

Laurel Qiff

W:•. ·...

PWnc

~SPECIALS~

One.....

t·

•
11

liREEZE BOX FAN

SCIOOL LUICI

or.....,.....,... ·- ·.. _,..,

,,,.

CWSEOUTI .

WOW LOOK

"

~Uut~be~illeOill~e

lll1iiiJtd lJeCDid to , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " " " " '
MOll HIIJpy Folia In the Cline,
drlvtn by Herve Flllllt, Md
Leander Lobell, uador thuetna
,Beige Steel Case
,
of Wayne "CUrl)'" Snul'l wbo
also has won two Jup. '
Por1~Btt :ZO.In, fan with
Emllt, atartlng In the No. 2
easy. swlfch 3 speed $
,.• - ,
poll polillon, Ia Uated at 5-l by
dial
.
Circulates
5000
·
oddamakers and Leander
' CFM.
·
Lobell, In the third spot, 1.11-1.
Reg.
14.88
Thereat of the Held ll made
"'ofJudge(J$.1),wllohaathe
Reg. 2.98
rail, Keyatone Pat (III-I),
Reg . 1.49 ·
Kmtucq (1M), Race Time
Boy (J$.1), Steady Star (JJ-1),
Ak.el Hanover (U-1) and
Ferric Hanover (11-1).
lllnll;, who

Mr. and 51Jrs. Paul Lee
CbiiUn, Leon, a daughter; Mr.
ew
and Mrls. Paul Neilan /lllQnlo Yor• •. Glanta iWednellday
.»eJter: a Puill~\ ~
~==-~
~nd Mrl. En!eil ~ 4'..,., picked. up defeimlve ~ 0110
!V01t Columbia, a dllighter,
B
~ ... ~. ba"" Los
· DliiCJWUlES ·
.~ownfr . ~:.':::-.: "~boy
Jeae Beckett,' I'll~ BoOih, . "''' thom , ......... """ •· oddlmakers.
""
hill
,
Mlsa "Peggy 1Brlght, E. L. .. Bo Shy and Brown, wUI be Dancer announced Wed' . '. · · bY Ch et ~•n~e
i
Cot~ell, '(ta. ' Alvo,n Baell placW onlbe tuiiCJuad. . l)l!odaybebad.OtdMoiiiBippy
t •
~~
~hal been -llid cootlnut1 .., lqljl'talltln . Davia, Mrf, W:l!ter. R. Fraley, ~ 81JRGERY
FeU. for f1 mllllcln to Blue Olip
~H.iPSdiOolallllttlcl...,.,..alJtin!Gotblli.htbaplthe · .~R. J~. Denlel Lee
ATLANTA ' (VPI) -AUanta Fiii'IIUI,Wallkll,N.Y.
lm9fLmyRitcbleto'thetieadrootb111oD.••dniJob-tllll Jot~~~~, .· Mrs. Walter P. Vak&lt;ll!lolhlillntaddeGetqe ThellleofMOIIHappyFeDa
·;··~ll'a!lliiD&amp;nc!aD!Ib.pobtltolbe!ljn~~~~~· I(IIIII~;:JMri. , Timotby c. K~ a former ~qtre ~ lteffectiveJIBI.l,l9'11,willlaU
, · 'Mt:"~ll,un. 'l'ben!fore, 1am~tb'Gtduiy'OI!ft , ~.iitd bpnlllll, •MI'I. All:'America, ~~ tRee earlllngaupto Nov. :lllgolntl to
. • .,,Jiliil:,lri')''•IVWOIIMrfrlei!dawlllleltllatgood~.-to• .P!?~·~·Simuelp.stout, lllll"Y Wedneaday for dl·•.•· lliiltbt '~dtbewUic-.
. ·'
....... JIDIOI A. 'l'homu; Mrl, magadcartUaseandwUiheout
. t, , 'l1le lQNI -tcbleto put hlalllineln beMiln•Ut Eutem will UWan E. 'l'bclt!as. Mrl. Orville of ~Uon lndeflnllaJ)i.
·.·.\·~·a~ C1f CGicb t.arry•a. Bob gredulllad. ,_after 8 fl. Wicker, Ml11 Emmo. ..KJn, a lof~Wi., 2110-pounder,
. IJ'IIIIant add.tjc ~- 1M lint llUdlle (RGcer, 1111 l'l'l. Wolltql,8 Mra'. Evi.wooda, Mrl. InJured 1111 knee In Sundly'al~
• ~~ o~ tile foothal1 rollfr of old Cbe.ller lll8b Sc11ooJ Wllloh, Jlarry ·\'!00ftleJ_, Rob,r Allen, S Atlanta win over .New
. ·. ..."_ It · ... ~....... ......_ •-._, ~-• ....:;;:- Mrl. Ethel GNene, Jack Riley, Or'"•••.
.' •" ~!· ,
nil' •• ...... ,_, 011
ancl.lalilel Smith.
,-.
•\· I ,lllhoucb hampered by • mllll 81udtut body and llndtod liP"
. .... , .
VEU,ONE OPERATED
· ; porltiiilty·!oraebedule ~""II of C~~Dp~r'able clasl.
DAQ (Dum
MINNEAPOJ..IS81'. PAVL
,~ -~ot • Ritchie -produced In tbe Jaler years of a.ter
'USTON,.lA. (VPI)-Rannle (VPI) . - Minnesota V1kiJ!P
. AT
' 1 · , lll&amp;b (Ill ulltence ended fol!owlnl tbe 111'1-) was Georp Dull, II, 1 Loulalana Tech slarUng guard Jim VeDone
~Butb wboftltCII Ioiiar In football and~ for the ~,player, IOU ldlled by I underwent an appendectomy
' ' UniVerslly of ClnCiniiatl, and bad a fling &amp;1-profeulonll 1Miaetw11. fnlcltt train while he and twn Wednellday and wiD he hoeplla·a.qe, named altar 7011 know wbo ~ had IJiMd. and wu frie!IIIIIN!'t JOQIDc.
Uzed Wllil the end of the week .
Every School Day - So~telltillfl Spedal •
, llllillg; ·
''
Atltborltla ~ Derk ap- Ed Wllite, the Vlklnp, No. 2
Caadl Larry Rltcble'a OIID career overlaJIIIII!I &amp;ger'•, pareOily did not ... or bear the draft choice In 11169, wiD •move
Foorth &amp; Locos! - Mloldl~
'
bt~ In liN and ending In lw.
'
CIIK&gt;IIilni train.
Into lbe slarllng )oh.
11Mil there waa COUIIn EltM llltdlle wbo .waa 1 rootblll
~yer for ·tbe !IIJI:J enolldated Eastern HJcli Scboolllr • .
: Pia~ Ito~ Elton and Bob, the lalt Rlteble, .... lto.nlld,
..llilotber eoualn. He tpo waa a good one.
' .( · IAII&amp; llvt tbe·Rlfcltles,
·

rr· .

·ffl

t\

;~:rrablets
I

'

.

'

.49

'4··

SJ.59

Plebp of

E•wdt Man

Transistor Battery
..... 69'
No. 21&amp;

394

20

�.

~

"

.

'

'· ~' t.~Pl

!Oil '

''

'

'

;E';:~g;c;.;p"'; ·~""i~;;
'
es~er
.
CarniVai··:
C
(mlmitfeeS
"
N:
"
It:ul
* ~fl:
~&gt;
a~
'

Recommended

,

,

.•
,

1

.

,,
,
.,

"

ByUIIltedl'nAJateruUoaal
Howard Mellenbaum, DemocraUc candidate lor the u.s.
Senate, proposeo that a Nation·
a1 Ecology Corps be crested to
mobilize youths "to clean up
111e world theY will inherit."
"·Earth Day last spring show·
ed that students care greatly
abou t their lulure environ.
meqt," Metzenbaum said .
"America muat capit.alize on
that concern and the education
that students receive in coUege
by putUng qualllied volunteers
to work."
.
The corpe would be similar m
structure ro the Peace corps
•and VISTA and voIun=rs
would work with local leaders
ro attack poUutlon.
He proposed the program be
funded by paring $35 million
from the Pentagon's ~D mil-

1

dor!fi!Y
mJufll.¥/ /

.

1

.

A K!Hajoll Bear bpi by
Robert Leal u • pel dlaapo
peaAd lntm hlo bac:k pot'.b
1
late Wtdlleiday.
Alfhou&amp;h die bear rep:.,..
tediy bao abarp Ieeth 1111 wW
bn., poU.e wore aol overly
worried. Tile Klakaioa
wel&amp;ha ealy U fiDUIIIIa,

" It is therefore the opinion
of WLW that. under the l!ircum·

stances there is no reasonable
basts upon which to refuse the
broadcasting of· the political ad
announcement."
Cloud, in a speech Weflnes.. ·.""-''"-'·:::;x::::::::::,.~,;,~:,,&amp;,.,,,,,,"'"*'''""-'
day to the Ohio Munlcip81
.
League in Columbtia, proposed .t. _
lechnical and admini.otratlve n.l"IIJ,y '
a1d to cities and vlllages
·
through a program of local fie.
.
veiopment centers,
He said the centers would
provide local and regional pro- wASHINGTQN {UP!) _ u.s.
granuning . for blghwaya and Rep. Chllmori Wylie, R.Qhio,
lranaporlalion, law enforce· said a recent order by the Army
ment, watersuppliesandpoUu- to prohibit the flying of the
tion con trol , an d ho-~
""'"" an d Am~rlcan
flag
du,ring
zoning.
demonstrationl'was' "an act of
U.S. Rep. Robert Taft Jr., surrender to hoodlums and
GOP nominee for the U.S. Sen· subversives."
ale, praised President Nixon's The order
U to all Arm
propooal to give tho FBI power installations ap~~dlng RoJ

LOWers
,'

The wlors

". nouncement by the Roger Cloud
(' l?r Governor orgamzallon. SlaUon WLW the day before had
· the
agreed to stop broa dcasting
commer.clal un
. ,til it could be
d t
eermmed 1! it misquoted
Cloud's DemocraUc upponent,
John J . Gilh&amp;an.
Gillig.·an's headquarters said
Clouds announcemenl quoted
him as advocaUng violence by
college students In a speech m
196! at XAvier \lniversity.
No Specific Evldeace
''Thedocumentssubmi~ledby
the Democratic candldate's,pr.
,sanizat1011, however, do not of, fer lpOCific evidence refuting
, !be quote attributed lo him,"
said WLW vice presidenl and
~ general manager Charles K.
i Murdock.

1

DANCE SCHEDULED
The Junior Cisss of Eastern
High School wW sponsor a

dance folfowing the Eastern.
Warren Local game from 10 to
II :30 Saturday nJsht In the high
achoolaudltorium.

"Jus!Wed Response"
"President Nixon's propoeal
is a justified response to the
ac ts of 1e rror wh'1c h are sweeping our campuses," said T•U,
ki ·
spea ngm 0 ayton.
Gilligan and Cloud assured
the Ohio Municipal League con·
vention in Columbus that local
revenue sources would be pro·
tected under any new tax pro·
gram initialed by the stale.
Cloud said under any new

unthinkabl~ to. me that

llllleDtF, ··Mn.

D

Jl.T -

··

•

lllrip o1 vegetable jlroducta Including soy and
.llbell protein and corn oil.
' "Solar, the bacon analog bas been retailed
on a marbllellllng basis. But the teet ...,..

limltedu they are, iadicate a good chance
.\ '. · &lt;IIDl118l'daJIIUCCOa,"thegoveJwll0111report
,,-.. , iJald.
.
• j · The teet waa condueted lor lix months In Fort
•'lrllJII, llld. The bacon IIUblllltute waa sold ln 32!'Mrlp (eJabt Ollllce) packages lor 89 centa in
Cmlpellllon with regular bacon whlcb ranged
f11r&lt;m ~ cenls lor a -.Jp (one pound)
•

per centrA the total market. .
Advrialng during the lll8l'ket teet uaeried
theiiUbslllutewouldeostbaUaamucbaareguJar
becon 411 an "aaaerved" basis, would 110t ahrlnJ&lt;
during cooking, baSJIO cholelllerol, and hal Clllelbird the nlWiber rA calDrlee found In regular
. bacon.
Reaearebera found in IIUI'Voys during the teat
that the bell Cllll&lt;lnerllor the mblllltule were
generaUy people who used regular baCOII. Some
buyers of the "analog," bowever, were welgbtwatchers who normally avoided regular becon.

:~ JV8 IJo
. DOhUe Die8 Today
l

r ivaM. Donohue,67, Pomeroy,
fRt. 4, dted lbiJ morning at

!

SUndaConunyunlatty2pmChur.aththe~thullandthe
. c "'
Rev. Amos TUUa and the Rev.
Okey Carl offlciaUng. Burial
will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may can at
the Marlin Funeral Home alter
noon Saturday.

:: Pomeroy,
three
aona,
Raymond,
Rt. 4; Lawrence,
in
· Kansaa, and Ray, at hoinO;' ller
· mother, Mra. Hath PariOIIS,
·:Racine; two statera, Mra.
; Jooephine l'llriOIIS, Delaware,
;.Ohio, and Mn: MyrUe Mat~-ftaon, Poland, Ohio; lour
f~~· Eimer, Doraey and

.11Jyerponl.
r;.;;;!:'""~"' ~
.
r Funeral aervicea will be
..'
''

8ALI!:8 NOTED
, Ohio lales of Series E and Fl.
(United Slates sa\rinp bonds and
Augualwere
. T.Reed,
volunteer
JIONI)

e~•trman,

aaloa of
lllil freedom

'. 1

-

IN·l£l\ STUT£"r1
V

fOR LITTLE
PEOPLE
Boys and Girts
Infant

Size. 1 &amp; 2 Pc.

Snow Suits·,

' '

•

'
'
. . :
. ·~ ~: .' '
W•'"" ·ceme 0 long W~J from the d~ya ' wi!M'I ~ ,7,•
'

•

'

·,

· ·

-'·fl.

i!'w.,r."

" "!!'

fl . 'fl.'
_____

.

--.,------~~a.i~~
"
'

the sound!
THEPRIOS~
"()" i,..,,
. . ·... :.·'
,.

Beaver
Dorthy Chaney of Darwin
called on Enna llieiman one
day last week
Freda
ailed
Cor ...,:::::::" c
on )(rl.
a~~ ...,er and Mrs. Helen
Nelson Thuraday afternoon.

More than 70 per ceDI-

...,

139,705,000 square mllei-Ol

Ute earth'a aurface II COY· Co!ll'tSt.

um..:.

ered by the ....

Pomeroy

Ql,!ITTING
,

Accuracy

.

You can rely 011 o11r ·
moderl\
mtttfdr '

txfr• cart for

perfectly·
CIHftld

dry

Clothe~.

HOME

Of SPORTS WEAR ·BY

"DE·VON','

100 Percenl Anytron Nylon Knit
Machine Washable. ·

•SIURTS
•SHEUS

•• •

By' AILEEN

. ·RUSS TOGS
.

'

. '

•ToP$:•.

•VESTS
ALSO

Filled badly

L3:2!1N:·~~·::~·:;..;::=:=:t~,J·

SHIPM~l
' ' -

*·,

~crfptlons

As Ordered

r-·--------·--·--illlilia;i
BRAND NEW

through0ct. 4. Evangelist is the date.
Rev. 0. G. McKinney of
Charleston, W. Va. There wW
be apecial singing each evening.
The Rev. ManhaJl Larimore
an invitation to the
public. Services each evening
wW start at 7:30 pm.

:t"''

'.

·. ·

to

of the Nazarene and continue been poetponed unlil a later

••lends

to ·INSIGHT ·, . .:.
•

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

Mrs, Roger Heins and family of
Gallipolis and Mr. Ray Heins of
Belpre, Ohio.
EU!s Partlow of Jamestown,
Ohio caUed on Richard Barton
and family Monday.
Mr. andMrs. GlenThomaand
daughters, Gail and Linda. and
Mrs. weber Thoma "pent
Sunojay with Mr. and )(rl.
Harold Burnsides of Kingsbury
and celebrated some of the
granddaughtera' blrlhdaya.
ErmaHieimanapentTuesday
with Mrs. Weber Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Zenith Price
and his mother apent two days
mst week in West Vir1¥Ua

amount loaned
lnaUtullons MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI), partiCipating m the program In Ray and Wanda .Phllllpa,
tha previous year·
.operalfi-s of the I~ .o: hua
company, have informed city
IN PROGRESS
olficiaia they will eeaae
Revival services are being operations on Dec. :11.·
conducied at7:30eache\lenlng .--~'!'!"~~~-""
aCth the Middleport Pentacostal
urch In Middleport with the .
CLIANiiS. , .
Rev· Randal Flake of Walnut,
Mw., as apeaker. The Rev. B.
L. Barrell, paator, extends an By ttndln8 your · · ·
dry cl..fllnt fo Yl.
'
lnviiat!Qll to the public.

SALE POSTPONED
REVIVAL BEGINS
The hake sale which waa to
A revival aarvice will begin have been held Salllrday by the
tonight at the Syracuae Cburch Twin City Shrinella Club baa

;Holzer
Medical
Center
:foUowtng a long Wnees.
• Mrs. Dooohue waa preceded
l·ln death by her husband, Ellis,
~in 1962.
1· Surviving ore lour daughtera,
, Mrs. RuUt GWUan and Mrs. t-~-------.......................
; ouve Stobarl, ln norlda; Mrs.
: Mildred Lee, Albany, and Mra.
: Kathleen McMurray, Kansas;
.if,!ii

.

n:;

lltd

~

v

m~~~n~•"«~:~:.
siudent loan prognJI! for l'tscai painting roofs for~H::,~~ ·J ·:~

:d

~~ lllripl&lt;'irealbacon. llis,bowever,alabricated :=::::d~a:'!t!lf~:m':'= ~

,'

·

year 1971.
. ,
pa~ concluded alter the test It waa highly m::r Ilia!d~ f~=~:
lBIIikely that COllSUillerS would ever oat as much
provi · pe
of the national defenSe student
''b&amp;con analog" as regular bacon. But even a Joan lunda of the partiClpaUng
smaU share of the 1.5 bilUon pound.a.year bacon schools Each inslituti Win
market would be subetanlial, they pointed out.
. ·
on
1n the Fort w - teet "bacon ana'-'" aa1es proVIde lOper cent of the money
ov•....
t
aua
for the program.
reached a 4 per cml abare of the tolal becon · The allocations represent an
market during tine IIICIIIba of intensive increase of $22 758 over the

on the Farm Front

I'

Rep. Cisrence Miller has an·
nounced the approval of federal
loans totalling $432,716 to four
southeastern Ohio institutions.
The four schools, designs \cod
by the Deparlrnent of Health,
Education and Welfare, Office
of Education, to be provided
with financial assistance as
authorized under the National
Defense Education Act of 18511
are Marietta ~liege, $lii,H9;
Muskingum Area Technical
School, Zanesv!Ue, ta.~ i Ohio
University, Athens, $272,Z49,
and Rio Grande College,
$41,283.
The allocat~ons :were. ap-

Gaul; Mrs. ·

·. 'fro"' IGNORANCE

· Roy Pvter, )(rl, Qannc:e'
R4!PII! hvng oilions around their nee••·.te cuNt ;· 16W
Attendance at the Nazarene ' Wolle;
MrJ. iUehard Fick,
t· '.
'·
.
• .
ChurchSunday, Sept. 20was40, and Mrs &amp;---' ~- _,.,
~·. today "'"'"'" ,_rch hcio foulll!,:.":
. """'
......,.~
ww
coUection $16.24, which went to have cllarge
of IIHI
··OOuDir)l
the missionory fund.
• -.
. . ' aft!~ centln.u11 to -k onowen to the '~au~ · ,f i.
-·
,
,.
·
.
"•·
Mr . and Mra. George
Mrs ~Gaulreportedon
· 'ofdleealll,oi~l.u.·.· ·.
· · ·
····· '·'
Genheimer attended the Moore plans ior the carnlval.
reunion held at the SUtton Arr••-ta _
·made to
..--~- · to 01 R · 1 0 p ,
Church Sunday.
hoB! th-e...-u...
-•• Counl•-·y P.~
•. A.
• . '.''" "'~qr"
r
rug '1&lt;.1!'' '"' :~ · · '
Mrs. Stella Adkins of Councllon'iki.I.Analt,.ulance
4parnttttt_t
· :·&gt;·,~ '::'
Lickskillet spent SUnday with award wW go wthe UQ!t with
,.._.DnD~i'. ,. ·' ,, .
Freda Miller and Lenore the larseal percentage of l.:~;:.;.
~~~l;!:l:;l~u~··~
Betzing.
,
mem~ there. Tbe Rev.
of

· nBCORr. ·L·, .:e . ··~

,.

~Mr~:

Social Notes

Mrs.
were Mr. and Mrs. WU!srd
WASHINGTON, D. C.- U.S. Hein• of Athens Rd., Mr. and

·

IIEHNARD BRENNER
wASW:droN (UP!) - Market tesllng In·
dlcatee there's a good chance consumers would
•
,
buy enoogh of ailOW aynthetic "bacon analog to
· make it a COIIllllercisl success, Agriculture
: Department economisll report.
Tbe bacon ana1-loolra coolra and tastes llke
..
,
'
..

:rEi!"~ : I t :
Mrs. au;:"~ '::i

Loan FundS
Secretary of the Army to have Are F
afternoon guesl•
~--··
"this disgraceful order"
Ufided Mr.Sunday
and
Charley Wonde

AWARD GIVEN DEVINE
wASHINGTON (UP! ) _ The
annual "Watchdog of the Tress·
ury Award" was given to u.s.
Rep. Samuel L. Devine, R.Ohio,
by the NaUonal Aseoclation of
Bas!nessmen, Inc.
DeVine was presented the
award for a 1110 per cent voting
record against . excesSive governmenl spendir\g.

a ••

w,..

he might propose, municipali·
ties would be guaranteed an revoked.

amount equal to their yield un.
der current local Income taxes .
Gilligan said a corporate net
income tax will be studied U
he is elected. He also said a
stat.wide graduated income lox
may be needed, accompanied
by a rollback or freeze on
property taxes.
In other political develop·
menls, the National Committee
for an Effective Congress listed
Howard Mellenbaum on a list
of 14 Senate nominees to whom
it wW allot lunda.

.

=··•

-::-i!Jtf:

4 SchoolS '

mandatory cobnty income tax

'·

'

:Bihr..

Robinson, Mrs. Ruasell Spon·
the Army would strike 1ts colora cerContests : Miss Carolyn
because of threats by mWiary
dissidents," WyUe said Wed- Parker, Miss Diane McClure.
Pocket ladies: Mra. Virgil
nesday.
"It Is smaU wonder that the Windon, Mrs. Bill Windon.
Milk can toss: Mrs. Hayward
Army has carefully refrained
from making the order publlc
because to have done so would
have e~·••ted 8 storm of protest
_ righllul protest _ from
decent, patriotic citizens
everywhere ..."
Wylie said he would ask the
"It 1s

•

'

tiDe ·

~; :Se~nual puhiic relations ~:,~7~:'!a:1!;:~~;~~ ~!".!:.~.:':~..!":~ ~::ieGer:~~=;, Dick Eastern Local
; ..~ ==~Y ri~dl~d·~: :·aeb~~:~!::~~si:~t= :~:.orwhentheflagmaybe 81:!~~ ticket soles : Mrs.
1 the suspension of a spot an· political activities.

- · · I ·•:.;..

AfaUwnivaltobe'lllaacllt Blsaeu,Mrs. TODaWhlte.
~d i DOall'l$:ht and Mr. .. ~.llliiMtl'. ~
the Qlester Elementary Sdlool Ollie lose: Mr. ..d Mrs. and Mrs. tl@le Kjlull.
'
Bar!Oft wW be . In char&amp;• ol
atlpm.onOct. l7wasplaMed Dlr)rl Will.
.
·
Beau~_,l!alcln: 1tfla Cathy .
·· ·, ·
·
during Monday !llght'a meo11n1 Clown Toos: Mr. AA4I Mr8. Davlo, MilS IJIUIIUI NnreU,. , .
of the Chester P.T.A; Com- MarvlnWhite,•Mr. andMrs. BW MbeJan'AnnBIII!r,MlsiSbeiiAI waa
miltees were appointed ...,_ Pooler.
N~ell: 1 •.
foDows '
To8ll the hal: Mr. ·.and )(rl: llasketbaJ! loU• David Holler ·,
SOliciting: Mrs. Horry Theocb'e Plllli.ns, JI!r. and Mrs: ind .U\'111 'l'r!PR·· ·
the
Brown, Mrs. BID Windon, Reger Riebel.
'
'
·Gam~: ·Mr. and ·Mrl. Bruce
Mra.
Middleport· Mrs •. Cbarlea Fish Poncls: Mr•. Waid ;M;,n, Mr. , ilpll Mp. James
~ein, ~. Demlree Semi, · $pencer, Mrs. . George' IU~bt, Mr:· aM •alta.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Harold Nnren, Morrison, Mrs. Henry TbcJolaa,, Ml)bO-., ~· ,and Mrif I~
Cbolller; Mra. James s...m, Mrs. Donald Mora, Mra; ,
;o~:_; , '.,.
·: ..
Mrs. !llortiWI McCain, Tuppers Woodrow Mora, Mrs. Iv~n
AjilneY. . . ifllll!ial!lat 4
PlalnlandConlv!Ue; Mn. Alvin Wlliker.
pm. !1\III~, Hilbf,k Newe)l,
Tripp, Belpre; and Mra. a.Ipb Darta : Mr . · and Mra: , Mra,...jlq!leri~·.B,ur-e, . ~· · ..'
Trusaell, Racbie.
Raymond Ginther, Mr. and Cbatle• f~Uo ~· .IAII'ry·
Door ticketa: Mr. and Mra. Mrs. Roy GIUUan.
.
Rlr&lt;:.hi.e, . ~· , ~vkiJ,ilolter,
John Lambert.
·'
BaD tosa: Mr · P Mrs. ~ MrL ·, ~· ifi.ia@H•nd .,Mri.
Table ticte!s: )(rl, Delma• ~u!i Mr. and Mra. ._.. ~~~~~·
Baum, Mrs. Paul lkr, Mrs.
·
ClOUI!~ · '· : wtD ":!!..· \j!¥1~
•.
VirgU&amp;uah,andMbeCarolyn Duckpmd:Mr. andMr~.Nal fkl'"!l"aboP
~beOJ!OIIfor/
&amp;nlth ·
·
Carpollter, Mr. and Mrs. Glem buiiJieu,al
,
Th
•••in ....4. p.at, ·~~u~ Cboole ·
Sound system . Horold
oma. .
.,..
ru' ,
r
NeweU. · .
Ring Toss. Mr~,:-a;.~ ~.~~~ ~'ftebanale ihe
Raffle committee : )(rl, John Bentz, and Mr ·
· •...,.. Mr er:~- lfi'l., id ..Volllg,
·Rose, Mrs. Goegiein, Mrs. Trussell.
a. Ojlal Elebiqer, Mrs.
Roger Keller, Mrs. Larry Wallt the pl!lnk: Mr. and Mn. GordoD
Gary
) I
:~~
.
'&gt;:

••

'

tour ..ptand pharmacist !ills evuy ptoatription .-dy u che doctor orders. Com·
pme. Hlecd011 of sickroom supplies, he~ltb
lll4 beolltJ lids. Jwt &lt;all.

�.

~

"

.

'

'· ~' t.~Pl

!Oil '

''

'

'

;E';:~g;c;.;p"'; ·~""i~;;
'
es~er
.
CarniVai··:
C
(mlmitfeeS
"
N:
"
It:ul
* ~fl:
~&gt;
a~
'

Recommended

,

,

.•
,

1

.

,,
,
.,

"

ByUIIltedl'nAJateruUoaal
Howard Mellenbaum, DemocraUc candidate lor the u.s.
Senate, proposeo that a Nation·
a1 Ecology Corps be crested to
mobilize youths "to clean up
111e world theY will inherit."
"·Earth Day last spring show·
ed that students care greatly
abou t their lulure environ.
meqt," Metzenbaum said .
"America muat capit.alize on
that concern and the education
that students receive in coUege
by putUng qualllied volunteers
to work."
.
The corpe would be similar m
structure ro the Peace corps
•and VISTA and voIun=rs
would work with local leaders
ro attack poUutlon.
He proposed the program be
funded by paring $35 million
from the Pentagon's ~D mil-

1

dor!fi!Y
mJufll.¥/ /

.

1

.

A K!Hajoll Bear bpi by
Robert Leal u • pel dlaapo
peaAd lntm hlo bac:k pot'.b
1
late Wtdlleiday.
Alfhou&amp;h die bear rep:.,..
tediy bao abarp Ieeth 1111 wW
bn., poU.e wore aol overly
worried. Tile Klakaioa
wel&amp;ha ealy U fiDUIIIIa,

" It is therefore the opinion
of WLW that. under the l!ircum·

stances there is no reasonable
basts upon which to refuse the
broadcasting of· the political ad
announcement."
Cloud, in a speech Weflnes.. ·.""-''"-'·:::;x::::::::::,.~,;,~:,,&amp;,.,,,,,,"'"*'''""-'
day to the Ohio Munlcip81
.
League in Columbtia, proposed .t. _
lechnical and admini.otratlve n.l"IIJ,y '
a1d to cities and vlllages
·
through a program of local fie.
.
veiopment centers,
He said the centers would
provide local and regional pro- wASHINGTQN {UP!) _ u.s.
granuning . for blghwaya and Rep. Chllmori Wylie, R.Qhio,
lranaporlalion, law enforce· said a recent order by the Army
ment, watersuppliesandpoUu- to prohibit the flying of the
tion con trol , an d ho-~
""'"" an d Am~rlcan
flag
du,ring
zoning.
demonstrationl'was' "an act of
U.S. Rep. Robert Taft Jr., surrender to hoodlums and
GOP nominee for the U.S. Sen· subversives."
ale, praised President Nixon's The order
U to all Arm
propooal to give tho FBI power installations ap~~dlng RoJ

LOWers
,'

The wlors

". nouncement by the Roger Cloud
(' l?r Governor orgamzallon. SlaUon WLW the day before had
· the
agreed to stop broa dcasting
commer.clal un
. ,til it could be
d t
eermmed 1! it misquoted
Cloud's DemocraUc upponent,
John J . Gilh&amp;an.
Gillig.·an's headquarters said
Clouds announcemenl quoted
him as advocaUng violence by
college students In a speech m
196! at XAvier \lniversity.
No Specific Evldeace
''Thedocumentssubmi~ledby
the Democratic candldate's,pr.
,sanizat1011, however, do not of, fer lpOCific evidence refuting
, !be quote attributed lo him,"
said WLW vice presidenl and
~ general manager Charles K.
i Murdock.

1

DANCE SCHEDULED
The Junior Cisss of Eastern
High School wW sponsor a

dance folfowing the Eastern.
Warren Local game from 10 to
II :30 Saturday nJsht In the high
achoolaudltorium.

"Jus!Wed Response"
"President Nixon's propoeal
is a justified response to the
ac ts of 1e rror wh'1c h are sweeping our campuses," said T•U,
ki ·
spea ngm 0 ayton.
Gilligan and Cloud assured
the Ohio Municipal League con·
vention in Columbus that local
revenue sources would be pro·
tected under any new tax pro·
gram initialed by the stale.
Cloud said under any new

unthinkabl~ to. me that

llllleDtF, ··Mn.

D

Jl.T -

··

•

lllrip o1 vegetable jlroducta Including soy and
.llbell protein and corn oil.
' "Solar, the bacon analog bas been retailed
on a marbllellllng basis. But the teet ...,..

limltedu they are, iadicate a good chance
.\ '. · &lt;IIDl118l'daJIIUCCOa,"thegoveJwll0111report
,,-.. , iJald.
.
• j · The teet waa condueted lor lix months In Fort
•'lrllJII, llld. The bacon IIUblllltute waa sold ln 32!'Mrlp (eJabt Ollllce) packages lor 89 centa in
Cmlpellllon with regular bacon whlcb ranged
f11r&lt;m ~ cenls lor a -.Jp (one pound)
•

per centrA the total market. .
Advrialng during the lll8l'ket teet uaeried
theiiUbslllutewouldeostbaUaamucbaareguJar
becon 411 an "aaaerved" basis, would 110t ahrlnJ&lt;
during cooking, baSJIO cholelllerol, and hal Clllelbird the nlWiber rA calDrlee found In regular
. bacon.
Reaearebera found in IIUI'Voys during the teat
that the bell Cllll&lt;lnerllor the mblllltule were
generaUy people who used regular baCOII. Some
buyers of the "analog," bowever, were welgbtwatchers who normally avoided regular becon.

:~ JV8 IJo
. DOhUe Die8 Today
l

r ivaM. Donohue,67, Pomeroy,
fRt. 4, dted lbiJ morning at

!

SUndaConunyunlatty2pmChur.aththe~thullandthe
. c "'
Rev. Amos TUUa and the Rev.
Okey Carl offlciaUng. Burial
will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may can at
the Marlin Funeral Home alter
noon Saturday.

:: Pomeroy,
three
aona,
Raymond,
Rt. 4; Lawrence,
in
· Kansaa, and Ray, at hoinO;' ller
· mother, Mra. Hath PariOIIS,
·:Racine; two statera, Mra.
; Jooephine l'llriOIIS, Delaware,
;.Ohio, and Mn: MyrUe Mat~-ftaon, Poland, Ohio; lour
f~~· Eimer, Doraey and

.11Jyerponl.
r;.;;;!:'""~"' ~
.
r Funeral aervicea will be
..'
''

8ALI!:8 NOTED
, Ohio lales of Series E and Fl.
(United Slates sa\rinp bonds and
Augualwere
. T.Reed,
volunteer
JIONI)

e~•trman,

aaloa of
lllil freedom

'. 1

-

IN·l£l\ STUT£"r1
V

fOR LITTLE
PEOPLE
Boys and Girts
Infant

Size. 1 &amp; 2 Pc.

Snow Suits·,

' '

•

'
'
. . :
. ·~ ~: .' '
W•'"" ·ceme 0 long W~J from the d~ya ' wi!M'I ~ ,7,•
'

•

'

·,

· ·

-'·fl.

i!'w.,r."

" "!!'

fl . 'fl.'
_____

.

--.,------~~a.i~~
"
'

the sound!
THEPRIOS~
"()" i,..,,
. . ·... :.·'
,.

Beaver
Dorthy Chaney of Darwin
called on Enna llieiman one
day last week
Freda
ailed
Cor ...,:::::::" c
on )(rl.
a~~ ...,er and Mrs. Helen
Nelson Thuraday afternoon.

More than 70 per ceDI-

...,

139,705,000 square mllei-Ol

Ute earth'a aurface II COY· Co!ll'tSt.

um..:.

ered by the ....

Pomeroy

Ql,!ITTING
,

Accuracy

.

You can rely 011 o11r ·
moderl\
mtttfdr '

txfr• cart for

perfectly·
CIHftld

dry

Clothe~.

HOME

Of SPORTS WEAR ·BY

"DE·VON','

100 Percenl Anytron Nylon Knit
Machine Washable. ·

•SIURTS
•SHEUS

•• •

By' AILEEN

. ·RUSS TOGS
.

'

. '

•ToP$:•.

•VESTS
ALSO

Filled badly

L3:2!1N:·~~·::~·:;..;::=:=:t~,J·

SHIPM~l
' ' -

*·,

~crfptlons

As Ordered

r-·--------·--·--illlilia;i
BRAND NEW

through0ct. 4. Evangelist is the date.
Rev. 0. G. McKinney of
Charleston, W. Va. There wW
be apecial singing each evening.
The Rev. ManhaJl Larimore
an invitation to the
public. Services each evening
wW start at 7:30 pm.

:t"''

'.

·. ·

to

of the Nazarene and continue been poetponed unlil a later

••lends

to ·INSIGHT ·, . .:.
•

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

Mrs, Roger Heins and family of
Gallipolis and Mr. Ray Heins of
Belpre, Ohio.
EU!s Partlow of Jamestown,
Ohio caUed on Richard Barton
and family Monday.
Mr. andMrs. GlenThomaand
daughters, Gail and Linda. and
Mrs. weber Thoma "pent
Sunojay with Mr. and )(rl.
Harold Burnsides of Kingsbury
and celebrated some of the
granddaughtera' blrlhdaya.
ErmaHieimanapentTuesday
with Mrs. Weber Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Zenith Price
and his mother apent two days
mst week in West Vir1¥Ua

amount loaned
lnaUtullons MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI), partiCipating m the program In Ray and Wanda .Phllllpa,
tha previous year·
.operalfi-s of the I~ .o: hua
company, have informed city
IN PROGRESS
olficiaia they will eeaae
Revival services are being operations on Dec. :11.·
conducied at7:30eache\lenlng .--~'!'!"~~~-""
aCth the Middleport Pentacostal
urch In Middleport with the .
CLIANiiS. , .
Rev· Randal Flake of Walnut,
Mw., as apeaker. The Rev. B.
L. Barrell, paator, extends an By ttndln8 your · · ·
dry cl..fllnt fo Yl.
'
lnviiat!Qll to the public.

SALE POSTPONED
REVIVAL BEGINS
The hake sale which waa to
A revival aarvice will begin have been held Salllrday by the
tonight at the Syracuae Cburch Twin City Shrinella Club baa

;Holzer
Medical
Center
:foUowtng a long Wnees.
• Mrs. Dooohue waa preceded
l·ln death by her husband, Ellis,
~in 1962.
1· Surviving ore lour daughtera,
, Mrs. RuUt GWUan and Mrs. t-~-------.......................
; ouve Stobarl, ln norlda; Mrs.
: Mildred Lee, Albany, and Mra.
: Kathleen McMurray, Kansas;
.if,!ii

.

n:;

lltd

~

v

m~~~n~•"«~:~:.
siudent loan prognJI! for l'tscai painting roofs for~H::,~~ ·J ·:~

:d

~~ lllripl&lt;'irealbacon. llis,bowever,alabricated :=::::d~a:'!t!lf~:m':'= ~

,'

·

year 1971.
. ,
pa~ concluded alter the test It waa highly m::r Ilia!d~ f~=~:
lBIIikely that COllSUillerS would ever oat as much
provi · pe
of the national defenSe student
''b&amp;con analog" as regular bacon. But even a Joan lunda of the partiClpaUng
smaU share of the 1.5 bilUon pound.a.year bacon schools Each inslituti Win
market would be subetanlial, they pointed out.
. ·
on
1n the Fort w - teet "bacon ana'-'" aa1es proVIde lOper cent of the money
ov•....
t
aua
for the program.
reached a 4 per cml abare of the tolal becon · The allocations represent an
market during tine IIICIIIba of intensive increase of $22 758 over the

on the Farm Front

I'

Rep. Cisrence Miller has an·
nounced the approval of federal
loans totalling $432,716 to four
southeastern Ohio institutions.
The four schools, designs \cod
by the Deparlrnent of Health,
Education and Welfare, Office
of Education, to be provided
with financial assistance as
authorized under the National
Defense Education Act of 18511
are Marietta ~liege, $lii,H9;
Muskingum Area Technical
School, Zanesv!Ue, ta.~ i Ohio
University, Athens, $272,Z49,
and Rio Grande College,
$41,283.
The allocat~ons :were. ap-

Gaul; Mrs. ·

·. 'fro"' IGNORANCE

· Roy Pvter, )(rl, Qannc:e'
R4!PII! hvng oilions around their nee••·.te cuNt ;· 16W
Attendance at the Nazarene ' Wolle;
MrJ. iUehard Fick,
t· '.
'·
.
• .
ChurchSunday, Sept. 20was40, and Mrs &amp;---' ~- _,.,
~·. today "'"'"'" ,_rch hcio foulll!,:.":
. """'
......,.~
ww
coUection $16.24, which went to have cllarge
of IIHI
··OOuDir)l
the missionory fund.
• -.
. . ' aft!~ centln.u11 to -k onowen to the '~au~ · ,f i.
-·
,
,.
·
.
"•·
Mr . and Mra. George
Mrs ~Gaulreportedon
· 'ofdleealll,oi~l.u.·.· ·.
· · ·
····· '·'
Genheimer attended the Moore plans ior the carnlval.
reunion held at the SUtton Arr••-ta _
·made to
..--~- · to 01 R · 1 0 p ,
Church Sunday.
hoB! th-e...-u...
-•• Counl•-·y P.~
•. A.
• . '.''" "'~qr"
r
rug '1&lt;.1!'' '"' :~ · · '
Mrs. Stella Adkins of Councllon'iki.I.Analt,.ulance
4parnttttt_t
· :·&gt;·,~ '::'
Lickskillet spent SUnday with award wW go wthe UQ!t with
,.._.DnD~i'. ,. ·' ,, .
Freda Miller and Lenore the larseal percentage of l.:~;:.;.
~~~l;!:l:;l~u~··~
Betzing.
,
mem~ there. Tbe Rev.
of

· nBCORr. ·L·, .:e . ··~

,.

~Mr~:

Social Notes

Mrs.
were Mr. and Mrs. WU!srd
WASHINGTON, D. C.- U.S. Hein• of Athens Rd., Mr. and

·

IIEHNARD BRENNER
wASW:droN (UP!) - Market tesllng In·
dlcatee there's a good chance consumers would
•
,
buy enoogh of ailOW aynthetic "bacon analog to
· make it a COIIllllercisl success, Agriculture
: Department economisll report.
Tbe bacon ana1-loolra coolra and tastes llke
..
,
'
..

:rEi!"~ : I t :
Mrs. au;:"~ '::i

Loan FundS
Secretary of the Army to have Are F
afternoon guesl•
~--··
"this disgraceful order"
Ufided Mr.Sunday
and
Charley Wonde

AWARD GIVEN DEVINE
wASHINGTON (UP! ) _ The
annual "Watchdog of the Tress·
ury Award" was given to u.s.
Rep. Samuel L. Devine, R.Ohio,
by the NaUonal Aseoclation of
Bas!nessmen, Inc.
DeVine was presented the
award for a 1110 per cent voting
record against . excesSive governmenl spendir\g.

a ••

w,..

he might propose, municipali·
ties would be guaranteed an revoked.

amount equal to their yield un.
der current local Income taxes .
Gilligan said a corporate net
income tax will be studied U
he is elected. He also said a
stat.wide graduated income lox
may be needed, accompanied
by a rollback or freeze on
property taxes.
In other political develop·
menls, the National Committee
for an Effective Congress listed
Howard Mellenbaum on a list
of 14 Senate nominees to whom
it wW allot lunda.

.

=··•

-::-i!Jtf:

4 SchoolS '

mandatory cobnty income tax

'·

'

:Bihr..

Robinson, Mrs. Ruasell Spon·
the Army would strike 1ts colora cerContests : Miss Carolyn
because of threats by mWiary
dissidents," WyUe said Wed- Parker, Miss Diane McClure.
Pocket ladies: Mra. Virgil
nesday.
"It Is smaU wonder that the Windon, Mrs. Bill Windon.
Milk can toss: Mrs. Hayward
Army has carefully refrained
from making the order publlc
because to have done so would
have e~·••ted 8 storm of protest
_ righllul protest _ from
decent, patriotic citizens
everywhere ..."
Wylie said he would ask the
"It 1s

•

'

tiDe ·

~; :Se~nual puhiic relations ~:,~7~:'!a:1!;:~~;~~ ~!".!:.~.:':~..!":~ ~::ieGer:~~=;, Dick Eastern Local
; ..~ ==~Y ri~dl~d·~: :·aeb~~:~!::~~si:~t= :~:.orwhentheflagmaybe 81:!~~ ticket soles : Mrs.
1 the suspension of a spot an· political activities.

- · · I ·•:.;..

AfaUwnivaltobe'lllaacllt Blsaeu,Mrs. TODaWhlte.
~d i DOall'l$:ht and Mr. .. ~.llliiMtl'. ~
the Qlester Elementary Sdlool Ollie lose: Mr. ..d Mrs. and Mrs. tl@le Kjlull.
'
Bar!Oft wW be . In char&amp;• ol
atlpm.onOct. l7wasplaMed Dlr)rl Will.
.
·
Beau~_,l!alcln: 1tfla Cathy .
·· ·, ·
·
during Monday !llght'a meo11n1 Clown Toos: Mr. AA4I Mr8. Davlo, MilS IJIUIIUI NnreU,. , .
of the Chester P.T.A; Com- MarvlnWhite,•Mr. andMrs. BW MbeJan'AnnBIII!r,MlsiSbeiiAI waa
miltees were appointed ...,_ Pooler.
N~ell: 1 •.
foDows '
To8ll the hal: Mr. ·.and )(rl: llasketbaJ! loU• David Holler ·,
SOliciting: Mrs. Horry Theocb'e Plllli.ns, JI!r. and Mrs: ind .U\'111 'l'r!PR·· ·
the
Brown, Mrs. BID Windon, Reger Riebel.
'
'
·Gam~: ·Mr. and ·Mrl. Bruce
Mra.
Middleport· Mrs •. Cbarlea Fish Poncls: Mr•. Waid ;M;,n, Mr. , ilpll Mp. James
~ein, ~. Demlree Semi, · $pencer, Mrs. . George' IU~bt, Mr:· aM •alta.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Harold Nnren, Morrison, Mrs. Henry TbcJolaa,, Ml)bO-., ~· ,and Mrif I~
Cbolller; Mra. James s...m, Mrs. Donald Mora, Mra; ,
;o~:_; , '.,.
·: ..
Mrs. !llortiWI McCain, Tuppers Woodrow Mora, Mrs. Iv~n
AjilneY. . . ifllll!ial!lat 4
PlalnlandConlv!Ue; Mn. Alvin Wlliker.
pm. !1\III~, Hilbf,k Newe)l,
Tripp, Belpre; and Mra. a.Ipb Darta : Mr . · and Mra: , Mra,...jlq!leri~·.B,ur-e, . ~· · ..'
Trusaell, Racbie.
Raymond Ginther, Mr. and Cbatle• f~Uo ~· .IAII'ry·
Door ticketa: Mr. and Mra. Mrs. Roy GIUUan.
.
Rlr&lt;:.hi.e, . ~· , ~vkiJ,ilolter,
John Lambert.
·'
BaD tosa: Mr · P Mrs. ~ MrL ·, ~· ifi.ia@H•nd .,Mri.
Table ticte!s: )(rl, Delma• ~u!i Mr. and Mra. ._.. ~~~~~·
Baum, Mrs. Paul lkr, Mrs.
·
ClOUI!~ · '· : wtD ":!!..· \j!¥1~
•.
VirgU&amp;uah,andMbeCarolyn Duckpmd:Mr. andMr~.Nal fkl'"!l"aboP
~beOJ!OIIfor/
&amp;nlth ·
·
Carpollter, Mr. and Mrs. Glem buiiJieu,al
,
Th
•••in ....4. p.at, ·~~u~ Cboole ·
Sound system . Horold
oma. .
.,..
ru' ,
r
NeweU. · .
Ring Toss. Mr~,:-a;.~ ~.~~~ ~'ftebanale ihe
Raffle committee : )(rl, John Bentz, and Mr ·
· •...,.. Mr er:~- lfi'l., id ..Volllg,
·Rose, Mrs. Goegiein, Mrs. Trussell.
a. Ojlal Elebiqer, Mrs.
Roger Keller, Mrs. Larry Wallt the pl!lnk: Mr. and Mn. GordoD
Gary
) I
:~~
.
'&gt;:

••

'

tour ..ptand pharmacist !ills evuy ptoatription .-dy u che doctor orders. Com·
pme. Hlecd011 of sickroom supplies, he~ltb
lll4 beolltJ lids. Jwt &lt;all.

�i

·-,

'

~ SeniiJ!i!l, Mutc..;rt-Piioti ~;. o.. Se~~ 24, 19m

.

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Bargains.,In Sentinei&lt;Ciasstfleds
WANTED-Men ond
womtn, young or -okl, from
•ny pillet In Meigs County,
to work 11 unp~~ld volunteers
for the Republican cause
preparatory
to
the
November Gnel'al Election.
Your duties will consist
tssontlattr In helping to get
out the vote. Onl~ • few
houn of your time will be
required. If you 11r1 willing
to http. lust phone Ln Futtz,
Ch1lrm1n, Mtlgs County
Rtpubllun Extcutlve
Committee at m-5100 from
1:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.!o\. or
drop him a card •t P. 0. Box
517, Pomeroy. Dwight
Eisenhower once uid that
everyone shouki be a Plrf
ttme potttlclon. How obout
YOU?

deemed
objectional. The
publ iSher will not be respons ible

tor more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Ser11ice
5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per w Jrd three

consecutive i n~*"rtiM,.,
18 cents per word Sill. con ·

secutive inse• •ions .
25 P.er cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CA.R:D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S1 .SO tor 50 word minimum .

Each add itional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Add itional '2Sc Charge

For Sate

Wanted

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
s P .M. Day Befor e PubliUlt ion
Monday Deadline9a .m .
can cellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a .m . tor
Day of Publica lion
REGULATIONS
The Publ isher reser11es tne
riohl to edit or reiect anY ads

For Sale

bed,

BABY furniture , baby
stroller, high chair, dressing
!ablt&lt;. Phone 992·39.52.

Advertisement
OFFICE HOUR S
8 JO a .m . to s 00 p .m. Doity ,
8 JO a . m
to 12 :00 ~oon
Saturday

Notice
Columbia. Noon until 5 p.m.

Sunday, September 27.

9-24-Jtc

_H_A_Y"'M"A-,.N"':-S-A:-:U:cC::T::Io=N::-t-;-louse.
Laurel Cliff. now open each
Friday to receive con signments at 10 a .m. Aucllon
starting at 1 p.m. let us sell
your merchandise.

3-21-tfc

WILL give piano lessons in my
home . Phone 992.:1666.

8-16-lfc

VFW GUN shoot, Salley Run
road, junction 124-143. Sunday, Sept. 27 at noon .
9·23-Jfp

9-6-tfc

GUN SHOOT. Forked Run

. s·ALE

WI~

11164 -

6 CYLINDER Ford,

50,000 actual miles , no rust.
Phone 992-6412 evenings.

Save
Dollars

9·20-6tp

Now!
TRUCKLOAD
TIRE SALE
Bur 1 Tire at Rot. Price. Get
2nd ol Hotf.Prlce While tllis
Supply Lastst
SUper Servlct Stotton
J. w. Corser. Mgr.
Pit. 992-9932
Open 24 Hours

1964 4-000R Chevrolet, 283,
standard with oV"erdrlve.
PrJced reasonabl v. Phone
Chester 985-3361 . Pete
Elberfeld.
9·1U!p

Real Estate for Sale
LOTS

WITH

all

utilities.

Restricted sub division. 1h to
2·acre lots. Phone Chester

-IRISH-cobblers
- -and Kennebec

B-25-tfn

CHEVROLET -·

,

•..

Model CEJ1.t03, 1 Ton Cab &amp; Chassis. V·8 n)otor; dull

"y

We5tcoast mirrors, heavy duty auxiliary sprlf'li•• boQsttr
brakes, wheel carrier, 7S;Ox16-6
1ront tires, 7)0)(.16•1
Ply dual rear tlrK, radio, heovr duty r~dlal'?'• oil
pressure gauge, CUStom comfort &amp; COftV. equ.lpment,
. block finish.
'

Retail Price $3,815.25
Delivered l'i-ice
'

CHEVROLET

. .,ly..
Suggested Retail Price Sl,382.U '2 767 71
Our Delivered Price
I
•
1970 CHEVROLET . , .
I

Model CE20'&gt;34, 'l&lt;o Ton ~IMislde; ¥·8 mofor, hea.v~
rear springs, 750x16-6 Pty front ttros. 750X16-8 Pty rear
tires, radio. rear 1tep bumper~ Airfoem seat, green 11nlah,

.,,,

Model C£10934, '" Ton Fleetslde. V-8 motor, dual West·

coast mirrors, stabilizer ber, H7bl5 Tires, wh~l covers,
radio, chrome front bumper, rear step bumper, bla~
finish.

Suggested Retail Price $3,369.10
Our Delivered Price

.

1966DODGE · rJIARGEl.·":·}41~fr:·~

'2,779~85

1970 CHEVROLET

'·

Model CE10934, 1'2 Ton Fleetslde, Y·8 motor, lower body
side Mldgs .• Trl Tone paint, dual Westcoatt mirrors,
heavy duty rear springs, ·H78x15 tlros, rear step bumper,
cus1dm comfort &amp; conv. equipment. &amp;.autlful white &amp; red
finish.

Suggested Retail Price $3,236.60
Our Delivered Price

'2,673.75

M.JO&lt;KeD A&amp; HARP
~llllfOFU&amp;

ASIIIN&amp;T
l'OLLUTION •

'1295

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
_
\ Catt Nt. 20257

\

Good selection of 70's left. l.dwer
priced, longer warranty. (warranty
coming down on 1971 mOIIel$). Hurry .
In • · · ·
· "

~,

COAL, limestone. Excelsior POMEROY
Estate of JamiJ Cecil Circle;
Mulberry
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Dece..ed.
Avenue - 2 story brick, 3
8-25-tfc
bedroOms, bath, beautiful
·Notice Is nereby alven that
Pomeroy . Phone 991-3891.
KOmer M. Circle, ~f R. F .
_.-9-tfc
kitchen, J car garage,
RAcine, Ohla, has been duly NEWLY decorated, J 1oom
COMPLETELY.
REMOD·
ilppolnted Executor of the
furnished apartment, adults MATCHED Avocado no-frost
E
L
E
D,
E
X
C
E
LL E NT
Ettlte of James Cetil Circle,
only. 126 Mulbtrry Ave.
CONDITION. S\9,200.
d,.ceesed, late of Meigs Couhtv,
17-cu.
ft.
Kelvlnator
Phone 992-6691.
tt
O~lo
refrigerator and 30 ln. gas
9-6- c
'Cr~dltors are required to file
range.
used
4
mo.s .
their claims with said fiduciary
Refrigerator $225, range $125. POMEROY - CLOSE IN FOR
within tour months.
'MOBILE home spaces or lots . If
SHOPPING - 1°12 story
Also, 19-'6 Ford coupe, good
De ted this 1Sfh day of Sept.
Interested, contact J. M:
frame. 3 bedrooms, bath, full
condition,
$425.
Call
992-3121
1910.
Gaul, Co. Rd. J6, 11f:J miles
basement, A STEAL AT
or
992-59.41.
J . H. O'Brien
north of Chester, Ohio. Phone
Probate Judge of said
9·13-6tp 16.500.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
. "·-.:ce
.lelll

(9-1 17,

985-3832.

2~

(10) 1, :Jfc

,-------------Classified Ads I
1
I
I
1

I
I
I

I
I

I
I
1

brina you

utra cash
for
shopping sprees

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

Tom
Hill

'
You,
~

and

.

v'

"\\

l

Musie!

I
I
I

1
I

9-20-6tp

For Rent or Sale

GET YOUR t~avel trailer ready

tor winter with winter-maQIC,
$4.98 per gallon, Men, wanl to
go hunting this fall? Rent a
trailer ar buy any rental_ at
reduced cost. Gaul's Trailer

Sales. Co. Rd. 36, l'h miles
north of Chester, Ohio. Rt . 3
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 91S3631.
9-20-6tp

Wanted To Buy

2 MARE ponies. Call Bill
Harden. Phone 949·U45.
9·22-6tc

SMALL business. going conh1•
con~ . Right price to rig
per son OUr books open lor

POMEROY .:_ NEXT TO THE
NEW GRADE SCHOOL,
Mulberry Avenue - 2 story
frame, J bedrooms, bath, gas
forced
air
heat,
full
basement, EXTRA LAIIGE
GARAGE and IN EXCELLENT CONDITION.
513,300.

Irick·, 81ocit, Ston•• ' :·

l:ree Estimatit,jJim ·Larry ·
From the Largest Truck• or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallftf Hei!lter Core.

r.

tS SELLING
FAST, LET US SELL YOURS
you ccmplete Information.
TOOA y
9
·l2-6tc
HENRY CLELAND
- - - - - - - --::REALTOR
"SPECiAL SALE.'' Early OHice 99'1·2211 Res. ff2·2561

BlAETTNARS
••• 992-2143

American

Stereo

radio

4 -ller sound IYIItm, 4
1peect chonger. Balance

9-20-6tc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

!ti

Adminiatrator

1'22-3tc

1IIIG llfWG. ~ ~ Willi

ROOFING,
. BY mrrucr.'
.
.
.J .
lloof

Repair,

Pflpllllli .· J
~pou~nll ·

Clfllllnttr Work-. ·

,.

Contad:

ORVIIU JOHRmN,
- • 741-- , · · '

Rt.1

l»liltr,o.

bAIL Y CROSSWORD
5. Faile
IWI\8

I.Hup
7.-

........
'·-

of Supplle•

&amp;eiJn McDaniel

~-~;~~:~:·:-::l~l:'J:;:·:J=-~
'"":!!.·- ·-~

ft!nNliD'il
~\!II~~®

lt. Tomple

(11om.)

u........blethele GJurJumbleo,

20.Cbekoo

one letter to •h eqiW'e, to
lor111 four ord.ina17 wonl1.

a .. - .

JPeUe'•

Anne·
D. Before
ft.Pa.ck

··-- -·
··"""'
&amp;ftnp

.......
outdid

18.Ho-

And COmplete Une

..

~

11. PIDior

I!Oir:

Pets For Sale

· Phone
992'·7044 or 992.5632
·.
.

Ill~ 1? Jfi.ATQJ,lll.lll~

11.

------

- - - -- - -

. •• '

1tl. Cnlo

OLO UPRIGHT planoo, ""Y
condition, es long •• hove not 171.15. UN ""' budget terms.
Moton, w..Ya.
boef1 wet. Poylng $10 OICh. can m -3352.
"3-5675 ' 'j •
First rtoor Ortly. Mondo yo wltl
9·12_.tc
Open
Dotty
11114 p.m.
be plck.up doy . wrtto. giving
6:30tlllp.m.
Qood directions, WIHen .PIIIlo WALNUT Stereo. f9U1' tpeed
company. Box 181. S.rdls,
Intermixed cha'ngtr, 4
GEO. HDISTETTER,
Ohio A39Aol.
speaker sound 1ystem. 5omt
BROKER
SEPTIC. tank• ~IHfled. ' lt\flltr
B-20-tfc
scrstche~, will dl~t tor ROCK'
SPRINGS
SUB·
·s.nttatlon, Stew,rt, OhiO. ~;.
cash and for scr1tchtl. U..
D!YtStON- New all electric
062·3035.
. ..
•
OLD furniture. dishes. brast
our budget term1. Call 991·
3 bedrooms, full basement,
,- rJ2'11t
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
3352. Regular prlt» 11-1\1.95,
g 0 roge, Little up·ktlp. ,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
now S70.19.
·
· .
·
_ .
Thermo-pane windows. Lot
991-6271.
9-12-6tc
tOO• us. Between schools. ATI!E.RTON:f.V~t'!!!. El~onlc
9-1 -tfr. ----~Asking $24,500.
.
. · ~~~·,=.~
FOR SALE
. USED steel traps. will poy cash, OFFERS wilt be rocolved ot 'lho I'OMEIIOY-3rooms, bath, all 985·-·
1
any make, any size. Phone
otflce of Webster and Fultz,
e.»lfc
ulltltiH. Only 11,650.00
'
m.J656.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
to eleven
?-24·31p
A.M., an Frlday, Oetobtr 2,
NEIG~ER Contlructl!)n. For
1970, for tile rot ntate ot
building or remodeling your
Laur1 R. Wflls, deceaoed.
~qn,,, , call Guy NelgtM,
consisting of 13 Acres, more
R8clr., Ohio.
,
PARKVIEW Kennels, Pooilles,
or less, and located In
7·31·tfc
.'
and bird dogs. AKC . Pet and
Lebanon• Township, Molal
show puppies. Grooming,
County, Ohio. Sold root "tilt
Phone 992·5443.
' wilt bl sold subject to real
3.17-Hc
ntlite tax" for the yeor 1970.
Tho' oil~ r..l ntate was
lppr.l ..d at $8SUO, and
ll be iollt for nat ttss than
apprilloed value. All offers
, ·•~ jtct to Court approval.
.
JOHN M. WELLS,

u,

,,

IJliiB!I

(lwk)

,_oy, Ohio, and well gove

combinollon, AM. FM recti&gt;

Kenny-Jake
'

·inspection. Central
ocation. Write Box 729-V,
care of Dally Se~tlnel, PROPERTY
011 r

JOHNSON MASOiRY
..,•.,~
Cam111II'Cial; Gr'· ..;.
.
Cisterns, Chlm., ..,. ~.
Remodeling, Cement· 'Work,
Garages.
.

- - -----

County

1'IIE

..

..

~
Se. rv·Ices
.· \H~~~~~~~E~IG~lj~~.
BUSIDeSS
.
.•
m·2522..
.·. -:of ' · '~ ~··.
, ,. ,.,,tfe. ~ ,
~:dr~~-.~·~cl~~g r\f~v€ ~=====·~==·=-=·=·=·:;-;====··=·:::·===:;' ---;
··:·,, · ;:,
ee ;:,-:; :-"';-;;,-~-i-:t~
~u~~~~~.w~:~.~uar.

trances. Phone9tl-2780or 992:Kl!.

'

We're getting our Showroom ready for
the 70s.
.

Cleland Realty

VACUUM Oeoner brand new POMEROY - l mite out - 1 111
1970 model. Complete with all acres. lots of timber. 2 s ory
cleaning tools. Small point frame home. new kitchen.
9-22-Jtc
damego In shipping. Will teko
'27 ctlh or terms If desired.
FOUR, large barn, outFURNISHED apertment, 217
Pltone 992-248.5.
3rd Ave.. Middleport. Nice
9·11-6tc
yard. porch, private enpond.

(10) 1, 2tc

'

EveS"Til l8 .Pit\

~

2~

~I

Your Chevy Dealer
.PO{t'~'QY.Jl~JO

8

(9)

• ·.~-

Y.~Mi_e&amp; WINKLE:

Pomeroy Motor Co.

allowed by aw.
Passed: Sept. 21, 1970
Ctlarles w. Leger, Mayor
Attest; Jane W•lton, Clerk

'

1970 CHEVROLET

LEGAL NOTICE

9·11-6tc

'

'1595

1970 CHEVROLET

APARTMENT. AIR CON·
DITIONEO. REASONABLE.
CAN BE SEEN BY APPOINTMENT.
iF
IN·
TERESTED CALL 992-2053.

,-,

2 Dr. hardtop, automatic, p. steEtrln.l
console, 383 V.a, gold In color. ·

Sportsman Club, Sunday, --,--,-~==--=
DRIVERS NEEDED. Train
potatoes, Charles Hilton, POMEROY- 1 story frame, 7
Model CE1093•. '" Ton Fteetslde. Y·8 motor, body side
now to drive semi - truck,
Sept. 27.
Portland, Qt,lo. Phone 643rooms
(J bedrooms), gara9e,
molding, rear step bumper, alrfoam seetst heavy duty
9-13-Jtc
local and over the road, diesel
1168.
all utilities . lincoln Hill,
rear springs, two tone paint, . beautiful olive &amp; yellow
or ga'S. Experience helpful but
9-24-l&amp;tc
16.000.
finish.
Wlll.t GIVE away part rat
not necessary. You can earn
- 1 story frame. 5 rooms {2
terrier mille dog, gentle
over S4 per hour after short ALL registered Hereford&amp;. 4
Suggested Retail Price $3,166.45
bedrooms),
bath,
full
around children . Edward
training. For application and
cows with bull calves at side
basement,
S
Oak
St.,
15,000.
Our
Delivered Price
Ball, 992-6519.
personal Interview, call 513and re-bred . 2 open heifers, 2
- 2 story frame, B rooms {~
9-23-Jtp
241 -1572, or write Safety
service bulls. 4-H club heifers .
bedrooms), full basement, all
Ckpt., United Systems, Inc .,
Brucellosis and T. B. ac utilities,
lot 100xl06, Wehe
WILL pick up merchandise and
Room 426, 301 E. 4th St.,
credited
herd.
Roush
Terrace,
$12,000.
take to auction on a perTransportation. Bldg., Cin ·
Hereford Farm, New Haven, MIDDLEPORT -2 story trame
Model CS109J,,Ii, ton Fleefslde. 6 cyl., motor. heavy duty
Centage basts. Call Jim
cinnatl, Ohio.
W. Va . Phone 882-2255.
double. ail u111itles, double
springs, rear step bumper, oil pres!urt9'1U9f, dark blue
Adams, auctlonH!r, Rutland.
9-24-2tc
9-24-4tc
garage. Good investment
finish.
Phone 7.42-.w61 .
property. South Second,
9-2J.Ifc
SET of twin beds complete.
Suggested Retail Price $2,908.00
For Rent
$11 ,000.
·- - - -Phone 992-3646.
1
story
frame,
5
rooms
(J
Our Delivered Price
J ROOM unturr~lshtd apart.
9-2-4-Jtc
bedrooms), all utilities, lot
ment. Phone 99:.:·.i'288.
,I
100x120, out of high water,
ORDINANCE -105
new house. Gravel HilL
Whereas, there are, within
AWNINGS. storm doors and
the corporate limits of the
$17,000 .
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
windows, carports,
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio,
- 2 story frame, double, out
marquees, blown and batt
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
certain ereas known as lhe
of high water, Walnut St.,
insulation.
Elmer
White,
3324.
parking lafs and whereas there
$5,000.
9-9·ffC
sales rer,resenlative. For free
is lOitering and vandalism
- 2 star'';' brick, 9 rooms (4
estlma es, phone Charles
accruing in these areas:
bedrooms),
J
baths,
lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
Now therefore be It ordained FURNISHED and unfurnished
basement,
laundry,
doubte
bv the council ot the Village ot
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
apartments. Close to schcbl.
Pomerov, Ohio, two -thirds of all
arage, 75-100 acre, S«l,OOO.
8-30-tfc
Phone 992-5434.
members elected thereto
L
NG
BOTTOM - 1 stor~og
10-18-tfc
concurring.
.
.&gt;i~lru..near
Lq
. .I
SECT'IO.t&amp; 1. T~et no pe'rson or
3· COONHOUNDS. Al&amp;o -oul.o
!ill~· Or. Me
.
.
person • .:Niall b't permitted to FURNI§i!.IOD 'itJOi, floor of.
·bales of hay . Phone 992-62U .
HOfne, 1J acre~ l GMO~: ·~,_'(' ;
toner on thtse parking lots a tier
ficiency., apartment, utilities
9-23-Jtc RACINE
- , 72 acri!(..farm, 2
10:00 p.m. In the e11enlng to 6:00
furn1sh~. Phone 992-3874 .
a.m . In the morning .
houses,
tree gas, about 5
8·12-tfc
Section 2. Exceptions shall be
miles from R"lne, 115,750.
1970 SEWING Machine used
made to Section 1 in case of any
Rodnoy Downing
just a few times . .Full
organization sponsored e~ents. TRAILER space, one mile from
Reol Estote Broker
equipped
to
zig-zag,
makes
Section J. Any person or
new Meigs High School on old
buttonholes. overcast, appersons foUnd guilty of violating
I'll. fft-3731 or991·2342
SPECIAL 1959 Ford Galaxle, 1%9 FORO Econollne Van.3.600
Rl. 33. Phone 992-1941.
pliques and many embroidery
Section 1 of this ordinance shall
------9-·IA-_3tc
\1.8, automatic, perfect Inside
mltet, must sell. See at
9·20-JOtc
be tined not more than $50.00 for
designs. Will sacrifice for and out. No rus~ood tires.
Newell's Sunoco. Phone
each offense .
only
$34 . .0 Cash or terms may
.ROOM
FURNISHED
Section 4. This ordinance 3
be arranged. PhOI)&lt;I 991·248.5.
sm. Phone 742· . 9·14-ltp ct.!ster 985·3350.
9-1:1-«c

shall take effect and be In force
trom and aljer the earliest date

.

, HillE IS A \N!RMINT
THAT QUITs

Auto Sales

Bob Hunnel
saYs:

Help

V.F.W. GUN shoot at Cedar
Hollow Gun Club, Rt. 62
between Clifton and West

Efllt\IVTHtf\16 I
\

9·11.3tc

FOUR-YEAR-OLD reglatored 985·3301, night 985-3301.
.
Block Angus Bull. L. D. Bird, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1·6-tfc
Pd. Pol . Adv.
phone Chester 985-~IOI.
GOOD Investment properTy.
9·)-4-3tc
House with three furnished
wanted
apartments, ~sement, fwo
AUCTION,
Saturday,
SOP·
COUNTRY and western band,
tember 26, Hartford, W. Va. t garages. Monthly income,
some rock. Friday and
will
offer for sale my entire S190. Priced reasonably for
Saturday nights. Write Box
antique collection. Collector$ quick sale. Phone 992;3035.
719-A, C-0 The Dally Sentinel,
1·19.tfc
be here. carnival glas!l, old
Pomeroy, Ohio.
sewing
machines, cast iron
9-22-6tc
ket11es, copper kettles, old HOUSE in · Tuppers Plains, 4
rooms, bath and utility room,
lamps, silverware, old stoves,
WOMAN or girl. Apply In
city
water, also well.
old
bottlet.
oldJars
and
stone
person. Call 992-2565 for
aluminum
siding, block
jugs.
Househol
furnltur~
and
appointment. Midway
garage, on 2 levet lots. See E.
other
Items
too
numerous
to
Market.
R. (alaway, Tuppers Plains,
mention . Time 11 a.m.
9'·24-ltc
Ohio.
Auctioneer J. L. "Jay" Casto.
9-ll-6tp
Ovvner, James Fields. Lunch
HOUSEWIVES and mothers!
served.
Pay lor your Christmas with
9-24-ltp 3 AOJOINING LOTS. 50.100
Beeline's profit check from
each, Syracuse, Ohio. Phone
showing Beeline fashions in
991-5888.
II ~
your free time . Use of car BEAGLES, full blooded. 4
9- ·••P
months old from top dogs. 515
necessary. Call ..'an Robinson,
each . Phone 7-42-3656.
446-4146 or Jan Knapp, 9929 24-3tp 7 ROOM modern home with
6371.
9-20-6tc
basement, garage, two
1960 CHEVROLET. 4 door.
porches, shade trees, Hl:l acre
T. V. technician for bench and
excellent condition. S250. W-C oround located on Rt. 1 ~'·
service calls. Must be ex Allis Chalmers. Tractor and
~yracuse, Ohio, by owner·
perienced. Phone Long
Equipment . Phone 742-3656.
Phone Gallipolis 446-9539 tor
9·24-3tp appointment.
Bottom 985-Jtl49.

per

END,OF MOD.Et

lt.Wotp
II.Onet.

aL~

81.~

··-·
•• Palo

A. PblllppiDo

S'l.-

at.--

tO.OpmiDp

BALEF

(J

,.~~

I [)

'I () I t J
tCWPEM1

�i

·-,

'

~ SeniiJ!i!l, Mutc..;rt-Piioti ~;. o.. Se~~ 24, 19m

.

'

.

. •

•

.

Bargains.,In Sentinei&lt;Ciasstfleds
WANTED-Men ond
womtn, young or -okl, from
•ny pillet In Meigs County,
to work 11 unp~~ld volunteers
for the Republican cause
preparatory
to
the
November Gnel'al Election.
Your duties will consist
tssontlattr In helping to get
out the vote. Onl~ • few
houn of your time will be
required. If you 11r1 willing
to http. lust phone Ln Futtz,
Ch1lrm1n, Mtlgs County
Rtpubllun Extcutlve
Committee at m-5100 from
1:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.!o\. or
drop him a card •t P. 0. Box
517, Pomeroy. Dwight
Eisenhower once uid that
everyone shouki be a Plrf
ttme potttlclon. How obout
YOU?

deemed
objectional. The
publ iSher will not be respons ible

tor more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Ser11ice
5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per w Jrd three

consecutive i n~*"rtiM,.,
18 cents per word Sill. con ·

secutive inse• •ions .
25 P.er cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CA.R:D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S1 .SO tor 50 word minimum .

Each add itional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Add itional '2Sc Charge

For Sate

Wanted

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
s P .M. Day Befor e PubliUlt ion
Monday Deadline9a .m .
can cellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a .m . tor
Day of Publica lion
REGULATIONS
The Publ isher reser11es tne
riohl to edit or reiect anY ads

For Sale

bed,

BABY furniture , baby
stroller, high chair, dressing
!ablt&lt;. Phone 992·39.52.

Advertisement
OFFICE HOUR S
8 JO a .m . to s 00 p .m. Doity ,
8 JO a . m
to 12 :00 ~oon
Saturday

Notice
Columbia. Noon until 5 p.m.

Sunday, September 27.

9-24-Jtc

_H_A_Y"'M"A-,.N"':-S-A:-:U:cC::T::Io=N::-t-;-louse.
Laurel Cliff. now open each
Friday to receive con signments at 10 a .m. Aucllon
starting at 1 p.m. let us sell
your merchandise.

3-21-tfc

WILL give piano lessons in my
home . Phone 992.:1666.

8-16-lfc

VFW GUN shoot, Salley Run
road, junction 124-143. Sunday, Sept. 27 at noon .
9·23-Jfp

9-6-tfc

GUN SHOOT. Forked Run

. s·ALE

WI~

11164 -

6 CYLINDER Ford,

50,000 actual miles , no rust.
Phone 992-6412 evenings.

Save
Dollars

9·20-6tp

Now!
TRUCKLOAD
TIRE SALE
Bur 1 Tire at Rot. Price. Get
2nd ol Hotf.Prlce While tllis
Supply Lastst
SUper Servlct Stotton
J. w. Corser. Mgr.
Pit. 992-9932
Open 24 Hours

1964 4-000R Chevrolet, 283,
standard with oV"erdrlve.
PrJced reasonabl v. Phone
Chester 985-3361 . Pete
Elberfeld.
9·1U!p

Real Estate for Sale
LOTS

WITH

all

utilities.

Restricted sub division. 1h to
2·acre lots. Phone Chester

-IRISH-cobblers
- -and Kennebec

B-25-tfn

CHEVROLET -·

,

•..

Model CEJ1.t03, 1 Ton Cab &amp; Chassis. V·8 n)otor; dull

"y

We5tcoast mirrors, heavy duty auxiliary sprlf'li•• boQsttr
brakes, wheel carrier, 7S;Ox16-6
1ront tires, 7)0)(.16•1
Ply dual rear tlrK, radio, heovr duty r~dlal'?'• oil
pressure gauge, CUStom comfort &amp; COftV. equ.lpment,
. block finish.
'

Retail Price $3,815.25
Delivered l'i-ice
'

CHEVROLET

. .,ly..
Suggested Retail Price Sl,382.U '2 767 71
Our Delivered Price
I
•
1970 CHEVROLET . , .
I

Model CE20'&gt;34, 'l&lt;o Ton ~IMislde; ¥·8 mofor, hea.v~
rear springs, 750x16-6 Pty front ttros. 750X16-8 Pty rear
tires, radio. rear 1tep bumper~ Airfoem seat, green 11nlah,

.,,,

Model C£10934, '" Ton Fleetslde. V-8 motor, dual West·

coast mirrors, stabilizer ber, H7bl5 Tires, wh~l covers,
radio, chrome front bumper, rear step bumper, bla~
finish.

Suggested Retail Price $3,369.10
Our Delivered Price

.

1966DODGE · rJIARGEl.·":·}41~fr:·~

'2,779~85

1970 CHEVROLET

'·

Model CE10934, 1'2 Ton Fleetslde, Y·8 motor, lower body
side Mldgs .• Trl Tone paint, dual Westcoatt mirrors,
heavy duty rear springs, ·H78x15 tlros, rear step bumper,
cus1dm comfort &amp; conv. equipment. &amp;.autlful white &amp; red
finish.

Suggested Retail Price $3,236.60
Our Delivered Price

'2,673.75

M.JO&lt;KeD A&amp; HARP
~llllfOFU&amp;

ASIIIN&amp;T
l'OLLUTION •

'1295

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
_
\ Catt Nt. 20257

\

Good selection of 70's left. l.dwer
priced, longer warranty. (warranty
coming down on 1971 mOIIel$). Hurry .
In • · · ·
· "

~,

COAL, limestone. Excelsior POMEROY
Estate of JamiJ Cecil Circle;
Mulberry
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Dece..ed.
Avenue - 2 story brick, 3
8-25-tfc
bedroOms, bath, beautiful
·Notice Is nereby alven that
Pomeroy . Phone 991-3891.
KOmer M. Circle, ~f R. F .
_.-9-tfc
kitchen, J car garage,
RAcine, Ohla, has been duly NEWLY decorated, J 1oom
COMPLETELY.
REMOD·
ilppolnted Executor of the
furnished apartment, adults MATCHED Avocado no-frost
E
L
E
D,
E
X
C
E
LL E NT
Ettlte of James Cetil Circle,
only. 126 Mulbtrry Ave.
CONDITION. S\9,200.
d,.ceesed, late of Meigs Couhtv,
17-cu.
ft.
Kelvlnator
Phone 992-6691.
tt
O~lo
refrigerator and 30 ln. gas
9-6- c
'Cr~dltors are required to file
range.
used
4
mo.s .
their claims with said fiduciary
Refrigerator $225, range $125. POMEROY - CLOSE IN FOR
within tour months.
'MOBILE home spaces or lots . If
SHOPPING - 1°12 story
Also, 19-'6 Ford coupe, good
De ted this 1Sfh day of Sept.
Interested, contact J. M:
frame. 3 bedrooms, bath, full
condition,
$425.
Call
992-3121
1910.
Gaul, Co. Rd. J6, 11f:J miles
basement, A STEAL AT
or
992-59.41.
J . H. O'Brien
north of Chester, Ohio. Phone
Probate Judge of said
9·13-6tp 16.500.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
. "·-.:ce
.lelll

(9-1 17,

985-3832.

2~

(10) 1, :Jfc

,-------------Classified Ads I
1
I
I
1

I
I
I

I
I

I
I
1

brina you

utra cash
for
shopping sprees

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

Tom
Hill

'
You,
~

and

.

v'

"\\

l

Musie!

I
I
I

1
I

9-20-6tp

For Rent or Sale

GET YOUR t~avel trailer ready

tor winter with winter-maQIC,
$4.98 per gallon, Men, wanl to
go hunting this fall? Rent a
trailer ar buy any rental_ at
reduced cost. Gaul's Trailer

Sales. Co. Rd. 36, l'h miles
north of Chester, Ohio. Rt . 3
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 91S3631.
9-20-6tp

Wanted To Buy

2 MARE ponies. Call Bill
Harden. Phone 949·U45.
9·22-6tc

SMALL business. going conh1•
con~ . Right price to rig
per son OUr books open lor

POMEROY .:_ NEXT TO THE
NEW GRADE SCHOOL,
Mulberry Avenue - 2 story
frame, J bedrooms, bath, gas
forced
air
heat,
full
basement, EXTRA LAIIGE
GARAGE and IN EXCELLENT CONDITION.
513,300.

Irick·, 81ocit, Ston•• ' :·

l:ree Estimatit,jJim ·Larry ·
From the Largest Truck• or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallftf Hei!lter Core.

r.

tS SELLING
FAST, LET US SELL YOURS
you ccmplete Information.
TOOA y
9
·l2-6tc
HENRY CLELAND
- - - - - - - --::REALTOR
"SPECiAL SALE.'' Early OHice 99'1·2211 Res. ff2·2561

BlAETTNARS
••• 992-2143

American

Stereo

radio

4 -ller sound IYIItm, 4
1peect chonger. Balance

9-20-6tc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

!ti

Adminiatrator

1'22-3tc

1IIIG llfWG. ~ ~ Willi

ROOFING,
. BY mrrucr.'
.
.
.J .
lloof

Repair,

Pflpllllli .· J
~pou~nll ·

Clfllllnttr Work-. ·

,.

Contad:

ORVIIU JOHRmN,
- • 741-- , · · '

Rt.1

l»liltr,o.

bAIL Y CROSSWORD
5. Faile
IWI\8

I.Hup
7.-

........
'·-

of Supplle•

&amp;eiJn McDaniel

~-~;~~:~:·:-::l~l:'J:;:·:J=-~
'"":!!.·- ·-~

ft!nNliD'il
~\!II~~®

lt. Tomple

(11om.)

u........blethele GJurJumbleo,

20.Cbekoo

one letter to •h eqiW'e, to
lor111 four ord.ina17 wonl1.

a .. - .

JPeUe'•

Anne·
D. Before
ft.Pa.ck

··-- -·
··"""'
&amp;ftnp

.......
outdid

18.Ho-

And COmplete Une

..

~

11. PIDior

I!Oir:

Pets For Sale

· Phone
992'·7044 or 992.5632
·.
.

Ill~ 1? Jfi.ATQJ,lll.lll~

11.

------

- - - -- - -

. •• '

1tl. Cnlo

OLO UPRIGHT planoo, ""Y
condition, es long •• hove not 171.15. UN ""' budget terms.
Moton, w..Ya.
boef1 wet. Poylng $10 OICh. can m -3352.
"3-5675 ' 'j •
First rtoor Ortly. Mondo yo wltl
9·12_.tc
Open
Dotty
11114 p.m.
be plck.up doy . wrtto. giving
6:30tlllp.m.
Qood directions, WIHen .PIIIlo WALNUT Stereo. f9U1' tpeed
company. Box 181. S.rdls,
Intermixed cha'ngtr, 4
GEO. HDISTETTER,
Ohio A39Aol.
speaker sound 1ystem. 5omt
BROKER
SEPTIC. tank• ~IHfled. ' lt\flltr
B-20-tfc
scrstche~, will dl~t tor ROCK'
SPRINGS
SUB·
·s.nttatlon, Stew,rt, OhiO. ~;.
cash and for scr1tchtl. U..
D!YtStON- New all electric
062·3035.
. ..
•
OLD furniture. dishes. brast
our budget term1. Call 991·
3 bedrooms, full basement,
,- rJ2'11t
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
3352. Regular prlt» 11-1\1.95,
g 0 roge, Little up·ktlp. ,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
now S70.19.
·
· .
·
_ .
Thermo-pane windows. Lot
991-6271.
9-12-6tc
tOO• us. Between schools. ATI!E.RTON:f.V~t'!!!. El~onlc
9-1 -tfr. ----~Asking $24,500.
.
. · ~~~·,=.~
FOR SALE
. USED steel traps. will poy cash, OFFERS wilt be rocolved ot 'lho I'OMEIIOY-3rooms, bath, all 985·-·
1
any make, any size. Phone
otflce of Webster and Fultz,
e.»lfc
ulltltiH. Only 11,650.00
'
m.J656.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
to eleven
?-24·31p
A.M., an Frlday, Oetobtr 2,
NEIG~ER Contlructl!)n. For
1970, for tile rot ntate ot
building or remodeling your
Laur1 R. Wflls, deceaoed.
~qn,,, , call Guy NelgtM,
consisting of 13 Acres, more
R8clr., Ohio.
,
PARKVIEW Kennels, Pooilles,
or less, and located In
7·31·tfc
.'
and bird dogs. AKC . Pet and
Lebanon• Township, Molal
show puppies. Grooming,
County, Ohio. Sold root "tilt
Phone 992·5443.
' wilt bl sold subject to real
3.17-Hc
ntlite tax" for the yeor 1970.
Tho' oil~ r..l ntate was
lppr.l ..d at $8SUO, and
ll be iollt for nat ttss than
apprilloed value. All offers
, ·•~ jtct to Court approval.
.
JOHN M. WELLS,

u,

,,

IJliiB!I

(lwk)

,_oy, Ohio, and well gove

combinollon, AM. FM recti&gt;

Kenny-Jake
'

·inspection. Central
ocation. Write Box 729-V,
care of Dally Se~tlnel, PROPERTY
011 r

JOHNSON MASOiRY
..,•.,~
Cam111II'Cial; Gr'· ..;.
.
Cisterns, Chlm., ..,. ~.
Remodeling, Cement· 'Work,
Garages.
.

- - -----

County

1'IIE

..

..

~
Se. rv·Ices
.· \H~~~~~~~E~IG~lj~~.
BUSIDeSS
.
.•
m·2522..
.·. -:of ' · '~ ~··.
, ,. ,.,,tfe. ~ ,
~:dr~~-.~·~cl~~g r\f~v€ ~=====·~==·=-=·=·=·:;-;====··=·:::·===:;' ---;
··:·,, · ;:,
ee ;:,-:; :-"';-;;,-~-i-:t~
~u~~~~~.w~:~.~uar.

trances. Phone9tl-2780or 992:Kl!.

'

We're getting our Showroom ready for
the 70s.
.

Cleland Realty

VACUUM Oeoner brand new POMEROY - l mite out - 1 111
1970 model. Complete with all acres. lots of timber. 2 s ory
cleaning tools. Small point frame home. new kitchen.
9-22-Jtc
damego In shipping. Will teko
'27 ctlh or terms If desired.
FOUR, large barn, outFURNISHED apertment, 217
Pltone 992-248.5.
3rd Ave.. Middleport. Nice
9·11-6tc
yard. porch, private enpond.

(10) 1, 2tc

'

EveS"Til l8 .Pit\

~

2~

~I

Your Chevy Dealer
.PO{t'~'QY.Jl~JO

8

(9)

• ·.~-

Y.~Mi_e&amp; WINKLE:

Pomeroy Motor Co.

allowed by aw.
Passed: Sept. 21, 1970
Ctlarles w. Leger, Mayor
Attest; Jane W•lton, Clerk

'

1970 CHEVROLET

LEGAL NOTICE

9·11-6tc

'

'1595

1970 CHEVROLET

APARTMENT. AIR CON·
DITIONEO. REASONABLE.
CAN BE SEEN BY APPOINTMENT.
iF
IN·
TERESTED CALL 992-2053.

,-,

2 Dr. hardtop, automatic, p. steEtrln.l
console, 383 V.a, gold In color. ·

Sportsman Club, Sunday, --,--,-~==--=
DRIVERS NEEDED. Train
potatoes, Charles Hilton, POMEROY- 1 story frame, 7
Model CE1093•. '" Ton Fteetslde. Y·8 motor, body side
now to drive semi - truck,
Sept. 27.
Portland, Qt,lo. Phone 643rooms
(J bedrooms), gara9e,
molding, rear step bumper, alrfoam seetst heavy duty
9-13-Jtc
local and over the road, diesel
1168.
all utilities . lincoln Hill,
rear springs, two tone paint, . beautiful olive &amp; yellow
or ga'S. Experience helpful but
9-24-l&amp;tc
16.000.
finish.
Wlll.t GIVE away part rat
not necessary. You can earn
- 1 story frame. 5 rooms {2
terrier mille dog, gentle
over S4 per hour after short ALL registered Hereford&amp;. 4
Suggested Retail Price $3,166.45
bedrooms),
bath,
full
around children . Edward
training. For application and
cows with bull calves at side
basement,
S
Oak
St.,
15,000.
Our
Delivered Price
Ball, 992-6519.
personal Interview, call 513and re-bred . 2 open heifers, 2
- 2 story frame, B rooms {~
9-23-Jtp
241 -1572, or write Safety
service bulls. 4-H club heifers .
bedrooms), full basement, all
Ckpt., United Systems, Inc .,
Brucellosis and T. B. ac utilities,
lot 100xl06, Wehe
WILL pick up merchandise and
Room 426, 301 E. 4th St.,
credited
herd.
Roush
Terrace,
$12,000.
take to auction on a perTransportation. Bldg., Cin ·
Hereford Farm, New Haven, MIDDLEPORT -2 story trame
Model CS109J,,Ii, ton Fleefslde. 6 cyl., motor. heavy duty
Centage basts. Call Jim
cinnatl, Ohio.
W. Va . Phone 882-2255.
double. ail u111itles, double
springs, rear step bumper, oil pres!urt9'1U9f, dark blue
Adams, auctlonH!r, Rutland.
9-24-2tc
9-24-4tc
garage. Good investment
finish.
Phone 7.42-.w61 .
property. South Second,
9-2J.Ifc
SET of twin beds complete.
Suggested Retail Price $2,908.00
For Rent
$11 ,000.
·- - - -Phone 992-3646.
1
story
frame,
5
rooms
(J
Our Delivered Price
J ROOM unturr~lshtd apart.
9-2-4-Jtc
bedrooms), all utilities, lot
ment. Phone 99:.:·.i'288.
,I
100x120, out of high water,
ORDINANCE -105
new house. Gravel HilL
Whereas, there are, within
AWNINGS. storm doors and
the corporate limits of the
$17,000 .
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
windows, carports,
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio,
- 2 story frame, double, out
marquees, blown and batt
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
certain ereas known as lhe
of high water, Walnut St.,
insulation.
Elmer
White,
3324.
parking lafs and whereas there
$5,000.
9-9·ffC
sales rer,resenlative. For free
is lOitering and vandalism
- 2 star'';' brick, 9 rooms (4
estlma es, phone Charles
accruing in these areas:
bedrooms),
J
baths,
lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
Now therefore be It ordained FURNISHED and unfurnished
basement,
laundry,
doubte
bv the council ot the Village ot
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
apartments. Close to schcbl.
Pomerov, Ohio, two -thirds of all
arage, 75-100 acre, S«l,OOO.
8-30-tfc
Phone 992-5434.
members elected thereto
L
NG
BOTTOM - 1 stor~og
10-18-tfc
concurring.
.
.&gt;i~lru..near
Lq
. .I
SECT'IO.t&amp; 1. T~et no pe'rson or
3· COONHOUNDS. Al&amp;o -oul.o
!ill~· Or. Me
.
.
person • .:Niall b't permitted to FURNI§i!.IOD 'itJOi, floor of.
·bales of hay . Phone 992-62U .
HOfne, 1J acre~ l GMO~: ·~,_'(' ;
toner on thtse parking lots a tier
ficiency., apartment, utilities
9-23-Jtc RACINE
- , 72 acri!(..farm, 2
10:00 p.m. In the e11enlng to 6:00
furn1sh~. Phone 992-3874 .
a.m . In the morning .
houses,
tree gas, about 5
8·12-tfc
Section 2. Exceptions shall be
miles from R"lne, 115,750.
1970 SEWING Machine used
made to Section 1 in case of any
Rodnoy Downing
just a few times . .Full
organization sponsored e~ents. TRAILER space, one mile from
Reol Estote Broker
equipped
to
zig-zag,
makes
Section J. Any person or
new Meigs High School on old
buttonholes. overcast, appersons foUnd guilty of violating
I'll. fft-3731 or991·2342
SPECIAL 1959 Ford Galaxle, 1%9 FORO Econollne Van.3.600
Rl. 33. Phone 992-1941.
pliques and many embroidery
Section 1 of this ordinance shall
------9-·IA-_3tc
\1.8, automatic, perfect Inside
mltet, must sell. See at
9·20-JOtc
be tined not more than $50.00 for
designs. Will sacrifice for and out. No rus~ood tires.
Newell's Sunoco. Phone
each offense .
only
$34 . .0 Cash or terms may
.ROOM
FURNISHED
Section 4. This ordinance 3
be arranged. PhOI)&lt;I 991·248.5.
sm. Phone 742· . 9·14-ltp ct.!ster 985·3350.
9-1:1-«c

shall take effect and be In force
trom and aljer the earliest date

.

, HillE IS A \N!RMINT
THAT QUITs

Auto Sales

Bob Hunnel
saYs:

Help

V.F.W. GUN shoot at Cedar
Hollow Gun Club, Rt. 62
between Clifton and West

Efllt\IVTHtf\16 I
\

9·11.3tc

FOUR-YEAR-OLD reglatored 985·3301, night 985-3301.
.
Block Angus Bull. L. D. Bird, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1·6-tfc
Pd. Pol . Adv.
phone Chester 985-~IOI.
GOOD Investment properTy.
9·)-4-3tc
House with three furnished
wanted
apartments, ~sement, fwo
AUCTION,
Saturday,
SOP·
COUNTRY and western band,
tember 26, Hartford, W. Va. t garages. Monthly income,
some rock. Friday and
will
offer for sale my entire S190. Priced reasonably for
Saturday nights. Write Box
antique collection. Collector$ quick sale. Phone 992;3035.
719-A, C-0 The Dally Sentinel,
1·19.tfc
be here. carnival glas!l, old
Pomeroy, Ohio.
sewing
machines, cast iron
9-22-6tc
ket11es, copper kettles, old HOUSE in · Tuppers Plains, 4
rooms, bath and utility room,
lamps, silverware, old stoves,
WOMAN or girl. Apply In
city
water, also well.
old
bottlet.
oldJars
and
stone
person. Call 992-2565 for
aluminum
siding, block
jugs.
Househol
furnltur~
and
appointment. Midway
garage, on 2 levet lots. See E.
other
Items
too
numerous
to
Market.
R. (alaway, Tuppers Plains,
mention . Time 11 a.m.
9'·24-ltc
Ohio.
Auctioneer J. L. "Jay" Casto.
9-ll-6tp
Ovvner, James Fields. Lunch
HOUSEWIVES and mothers!
served.
Pay lor your Christmas with
9-24-ltp 3 AOJOINING LOTS. 50.100
Beeline's profit check from
each, Syracuse, Ohio. Phone
showing Beeline fashions in
991-5888.
II ~
your free time . Use of car BEAGLES, full blooded. 4
9- ·••P
months old from top dogs. 515
necessary. Call ..'an Robinson,
each . Phone 7-42-3656.
446-4146 or Jan Knapp, 9929 24-3tp 7 ROOM modern home with
6371.
9-20-6tc
basement, garage, two
1960 CHEVROLET. 4 door.
porches, shade trees, Hl:l acre
T. V. technician for bench and
excellent condition. S250. W-C oround located on Rt. 1 ~'·
service calls. Must be ex Allis Chalmers. Tractor and
~yracuse, Ohio, by owner·
perienced. Phone Long
Equipment . Phone 742-3656.
Phone Gallipolis 446-9539 tor
9·24-3tp appointment.
Bottom 985-Jtl49.

per

END,OF MOD.Et

lt.Wotp
II.Onet.

aL~

81.~

··-·
•• Palo

A. PblllppiDo

S'l.-

at.--

tO.OpmiDp

BALEF

(J

,.~~

I [)

'I () I t J
tCWPEM1

�· Sat~rdaJ

NEW YOR~ &lt;UPil -Mayor Joli!f V. Lln4·

say.lnng conllidered presilleqtlal timber, aaya at
present he plans to retire from polltlcs at tile end
of his· current term. Dec. 31, 1973.
"That's my present in&amp;enlion," the mayor
told newsmen after !l series of queslions be set
off by saying be had no Intention of mooing for
President.
·
Undsay, a !tepubllcan now In second term,
told newsmen there was "no possibility" of his
becoming a Democratic presidential candillate
and said, "same answer," when asked about the
GOP side.
· "I've run six times," said the former
congressman, "eight If you Include primaries.
That's enough running."

Sale! Friday and
Saturday
' '
.'

·

Ky Bad Symbol
WASIDNGTON (UP!) - A
leading llo118e Republican said
today VIce President Nguyen
cao Ky ts a "symbol ol
everything wrong" in South
Vietnam and will spark certain
violence if he appears at a
Washington raUy next weet.
Rep. William S. Broomfield,
R-Mlch., ranking Republican of
the House foreign affairs Far
East subcommittee, made avai·
lshle Ill UPI a letter to
Secretary of State WUl1am P.
Rog..-s, in which he urged
Rogers Ill tell Ky " in the
strongest possible ~rms" Ill
stay in Paris.
Ky ts scheduled Ill auend a
''march for vicl&lt;&gt;ry" rally here
Oct. 3 sponsored by flev. Carl
Mcintire, a radio evarwelist. AI
a news cmference Wednesday,
Mcintire said he expected
500,000 or more people at lbo
event on the Wasblngton
Monmnent grounds.
Several antiwar grotiJl6 already have announced plans Ill 1180
Ky's visit as an occasion Ill
demand more money for
domestic programs and lesa
mooey for South VIetnam. Some
protest leaders, jncluding
Rennie Davis of lbo ''Ollcago
NEW YORI[ IUPI) - The
Seven," plan Ill attempt a lloct mubt _.. IIIPer
citizens arrest m Ky at lbo
In llltdentol)' - · lr1ld1a!l
rally.
today.
Broomlleld'aletter said, "In a
capll!lle, VUiol Ptealdent Ky w1ll
lland there as a symbol of

'

Friday and Saturday
Save 011

,

WOMENS SWEATERS

Sale I
Friday and Saturday

Whether you want a cardigan, a long sleeve
slliMJver, V neck, poncho, vest or sleeveless sheJI
- al! Included In this sale- regular ahd extra
sizes.
12.95 Womens
10.95 Womens
8.95 Womens
7.95 Womens
5.95 Womens
4.95 Womens
3.95 Womens

Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular

Sweaters · - - •
Sweaters • - - ·
Sweaters· - -·
Sweaters ---Sweaters - - - Sweaters - - - Sweaters -- - -

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

10.00
1.00
7.00
6.00
4.50
3.50
3.00

Friday and Saturday

Regular 3.95 girls 2
pc. slack sets. Solid
pants with contrasting striped or
printed knll tops .
Sizes 3 to 6x.

$3.00

lee Riders

6.98

Mens

Oloose several blouses and save in this two-day
sale. All new fall styles, fabrics and colors solids, stripes. polka dots and prints.
Sizes 30 to 38 and 40 to 44.
Sale
8_.00 Womens Blouses
Womens Blouses - - - - - - Sale
Womens Blouses - - - - - - Sale
Womens Blouses - - - - - - Sale

&amp;

WESTERN JEANS
The slim Lee Riders ond lht
regular Riders In 21 lo .12
waist sl •es. Alllenglhl. Abig
selection. Extra heavy blue

6.00
4.50
3.50
3.00

denim.

styling.

True

Western

Sale price

I
I

._,.

' '.t
•;

••

Union Supported
Ualted Pmalnlenlallonal
Mol&lt;&gt;rs, which Is probably the
The
150,000
member weallblest and moot Jll'OIPOI'OUS
Cleveland Federation of Labor corporation in the country,
has announced its support of the
should, In the splrlt of human
Unl~ Auto Workers anion in
decency, negolia~ In good faith
the strike against General and make a fair settlement
Motors while two locals said without delay," O'Malley said.
they would disclose "the serl0118 The federatlm said the UAW
ramifications" of strike related was striking f&lt;r ''recot!llitlon ol
layoffs at a news conference

Friday.
The Clevelaljd Federation Ill
Labor accu.oec{ General Moton
ol failing to bargain Ia good
faith in a statement lsaued by
the federation's president,
Patrick J. O'Malley.
"We be11eve that .the
management of General

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Sop!. 24
NOT OPEN

Friday lhru Tuosday
5optombor2.1-2t

PAINT
YOUR WAGON

1Technicolor l
Lee Marvin

Cllnl Eastwood
Co~rCirtOOn :

Gontrol Helper

Actml1slon : $1 .00 Adults, .OC

Children

SHOW STARTS! P.M.

.•

.

..

-------- -.
MAlO
NDRIVE·
IN
'
.

PLEASANT VAlLEY

HOSPITAL
Admitted - Hamer Ranq,.
Ricky Morgan, Bnu:e Forshee,

James L. Carpenter, Pl.
Pleasant; DorreU Wallace, Jr.,
New Haven; JIUIIell Tiippelt,
Gal11polia Ferry; Timothy
Brumfield, Glenwood; Vornon
D. Humphrey, New Ba•en;
Mrs. Roland Smith, f.oaiiCavllle.
Dlscblrgos - Mrs. Jameo
Kinder, Paul ·Newsome, Betty
Shield, Vlckle Raynolds, Mrs.
Finley Shrewburg, Ronald
l.ooog, Mra. Lee Burman and
son, Mrs. Emll Gray, WIUiam
Smith, Guy Finley, Norma
MarUn, Mrs. Bernard Wallace.
Blrtha - Sept. 22 a son Ill Mr.
and Mrs. Gregory Hoffman,
New Haven. Sept. 23 a daucllter Ill Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lee
Chattin, Leon. Sept. 24 a
daughter Ill Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald La they, Leon.

Stpl. 2.1-26-27

Qouble F."ture Proer•m
BUTCH '-'SSIDY
AND THE

SUNDANCE KID
IColor

Paul Newm""
Rolierl Redford
Katharine Ro"
-Ptut-

Jti~ KREMLIN

GP

:10 lbrough Allll· 12 were dOII'II

over II per cent in Melga Coun»r
compared to the 88IM period
last year. CollecU0111 thla yeit
were $11,368.i7, .00 $13,181.i$
for the Period (encllng BepL 13)
last year.

Popvlar orion 1ock1in whi'-•

colors In light 4nd dark ,
colors.

Stock up Friday and
Saturday al lhe sale price.

Baer has
store now

'

.
BY KATIE CROW
SYIIt\OilSE - U bard work leads to succou In buslnesa,

'

Boys Leather Belts
'

- ' mlas.
ln.u.e' Melp area a. an efficient, clean and honest
Helen bija been cllllgenl111d tlreleu for ber em·
ellllonleJ't are vary Important people. She serves

Sizes 22 to 28 In black or brown: ··

rclunl

Be sure tq see all the othlr .Boyi and.
Mens belts on salt. Alllithlr shl!illltllt of thil
popular wide widths and. reverslblts. ·

...

'

'

~=~f=~
gpduated
Pomeroy
High School.
upon
~
we1111o
lfGI'k1rom
for the
8petlett-Wehrung
Grocery

Mens 1nd· YoUI'Ig

u• pair

Jt~cob and. Lima u'aer at
f.fijierSI'IUe, RD. In addition to

·DR~' SUCKs

. her employment, Helen and her
father have operated a 40 • aqe
f!orm. The livestock 11 m_vellleu
than It was, w[lh only 15
. !If ~ cattle .00 75

Qmservatlve sttles that are fUller cut 'end
rbomler - Flares and· straight legs, too. ,
~ , all~~ff,il!"m~n!f_nt' preta-: Solid ·.· ~lors
pJilifs.,..,frlpe~oo-, , ~v"" h· ,-~ ·· "'0' , .• !,; .• .
Save Friday and Siturdiy
·
SoloPrlctd
Fridaif.alld S.lunloy

6;tS..7.9H.95

• • • • • • • •

9.511-t.9$.-·10.50

• • •.• • • • •
has

as~~s... .

. rilotbet
Who has&lt;baen -'.u,.vn
lt~r ' sitter, Mary K•
Roush, .~0 assllls with
i:aie of Ulelr mother;
Helen Is .gr•teNI to · Eddie
Hubbard, Mary. IJ.t!e, Morris
.Harden, Faye 'Hamilton,
· Everett Bachner, Manning
Jloulli, ·Alex Ricll8rdaon, and
Mary an4 Jeat. fl- for their
h81 · In · helping' .'1\er gel

ReaCly tor vo,.r NltctiOn.
Two wtll-i.no_
wn rrtlkll
" L"" and "'Slut Bell" In
rttular, thort tnd long
mOdtlt .

ExDtrl~~ .. modo. Com fortoblo to w••r. 1Eeoy to

wash a d cart to ,

belt. Buy .what
you 11 •• nHdlnii tor toll

50.

Sizes 6 to 16. wlrm. ser·
vlceable flannel . Nokhed

collar coat style top. San-

Department
• Big Selections - DepenDellvery to your home

forited shrunk . Beautiful
patterns
and
colors .

2 pailS 15.00
8oyl2."
LONG SLEEVE

SPORr SHIRTS
Sizes 6 to 20. A flnt group of
Shirts. All ptrn1enentfcrai

· wldtsprtad collar
In
ttrlpes that are cO Ortul

•••Y to weer. Light and
dlnd
Irk solid colors also
Pllldt. Save now during

this sale.
friday &amp; la1urdey

2 ••

&amp;....

11:.
. M

...W

and Sensible
,
Uving Room • Bed Rliom • Dining Room • Kitchen Furniture and Carpets lor your floors on Jhe
3rd Floor.
Moraon. J Drum Spun lnsuioi,. (coot
In summer - warin In wintort.
72x90 ,,.. Twin or Double
Bods.

100 Percent collon, all nylon
binding . Beaulllul colors.

Prtlhrunk
. machine
waaheble • tumble dry .

t--------1

100 Percent Rayon Permanently pressed
fabric need no Ironing
- machine washable tumble dry. White.
Each strlo 42" wide,
81" or 90" length . ·

'4.95 pair
Matchlngyird
Materlal-79c yet..

·

. '·

.; -..:...;;..:.;:;:---"''-··-·--,-~·-·.;- ......;......--.--.

'•.'tin
' ., B•·
•
'
,' m,.·' ' e .:s.-, '

Select.Y•r

~·

lluttll Fllirt; . .

'

••

.,

BED RESIS
Bright color corduroy
covering · - Kapak
Filling. Ideal for
Invalids or reading In

sg.95
PR!rntD.

Priscilla

Patch Quilt

SlieelinJ
Excellent qualitysnow white . Ideal
backing for quilts.

81" width $L09
90" width SJ.19
Star Quilting
Thread
1" yd.'

19'

-

FABRICS
45;, widePermanent Press

s.

;...., •nd

sm...,

.gr

yd.

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d. ...
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PO:_M_ER~O~Y-M_:I~DD.:::LE::..PO:..:.R~
T _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _F:..:.:R.:::
IDA~Y.:...,S:..:.EP~
Tl

',-..~"({'
=' "'

'C ~ .'~

By Ualted Prosalnlenlatloul
Roger CI!&gt;Wi said in a cam·
patgn stop Thursday that aU-out
action Is needed to atop allackl
on law ~ and llle violence
of "Irrational zealots."
'l1ie ROpubllcan nominee for
governor, . Jp a slop at
Painesvllle Called f!&gt;r sjlflmed
penalties for the COIDJIIIJ81bn of
crimes with guns or other
deadly weapons, lightened
controli on the avaDabiUty of
dynamite and Isolation ol thOle
persons who destroy lives and
property.
"Irrational zealots who 1180
violence to a~at. violence to
protest, violence to condemn
our society and violence tO call
f&lt;r change must feel the full

weight of just Jaw en·
lorcement," Cloud said.
He also advocated raising the
pay of law 'olflcers.
"Their salaries must be
commen.iurate With the
dangers Involved In theJr jobs of
proteeUng society from the
lawless," he said.
Cloud's Democratic opponenl, John J. GIDlgan, l&lt;&gt;ld a
Toledo fund..-alsing dinner the
people of Ohio "aren't being
fooled by the Republlcan attempts to cover up their
ata~ho!lae lo!m scandal."
"Need BeUer Alllwera"
''Our opponents are .trying Ill
turn altontlm away from theJr
scandal by characlurfllng me
as 'J)er!llls$ve' In the """' of

,

, ..

. ·'
~

.

·

{~,.Jitf.~'Jril'lj·.• -e. &gt;;JPW·If
~.";...'':~.1.-JV~

'·

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.

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1.:..:70_L...:.-__f_:_..::.·~~;:;=•p· ":

0

.

sludentdlsorder and violence,"
GDUgan said.
"They have pictured me as
soft on law and order, but if law
and order Is truly the issue In
this campaign, then the
Republicans had be tier come Qll
with better answers to the
questions Ohioans are asking
than they have l&lt;&gt;da~ , " he said.
"And llle people of Ohio want
to know why Roger Cloud slated
on May 14 that he had neither
received nor solicited sopporl
from
the
prominent
Republicans who placed the
Ulegal loans and then admit
later that he had, Indeed,
received $1,1100 from these men
and SOU&amp;ht their support before
the primary election," he ad-

dad.

Gilligan was referring to
contributions made Ill several
GOP candidates by officers of
Crof~rs, Inc., a firm whlch
arranged several questionable
sta~ loans to out-of-state
companies. Those loans are now
under lnv~tlgatlon by a grand
jury In Columbus. Cloud said he
received $1,000 but returned it
when he discovered Its aource.
Hi!WJU'd Melzenbaum and U.
S. iWI!. Robert Taft Jr.,
Democr. tic and Republican
nomlneelllor the U. S. Senate
respectively, appeared at the
Ohio Municipal League convention Thuroday In Columbus.
Metzenbaum said the federal
government had the finances to

help solve urban problems right
now If it would coocentrate on
them.
He cmc:oded federal • state •
local revenue-sharing would
require time to Implement.
"The federal '-·•-t
of pro
fo1UU611i0
billion coolains $1,000 a year for
every man, wonian and child Ia
the country," 111e Cleveland
buslnesslqan said. "Whether
you Uke ii or not, that's where
the money Is. Your city cannot
provide that kind of money."
Tall blamed congreaslonal
Democrala for staDing a GOP
revenue-sharing meoaure
which would provide Ohio clUes
with $22 million the first year
and mlh than $100 mllUon
annually by 19'16.

.it~ . ..·•.'"r
~·•.

..''
-~'

t\,

''

'

'

Taft said be flrll propotied
revenue-aharlns five yean q~
and "alnee lllen prea8IU'eJ Ill)'
local govenunents have 8f01I!I'
iteadlly."
•
''Tupayars' rebell1onl ~ :
mounting agalnat tradltlonlil'
' .·
........ -' ~
local revenue sonrceJ w-.' .
deteriorating problema o,f} : ·
crime, pollution and lr~~· : ·,
sportatloo remaiD lllftlfllvtd,!f

he said.
Metzenbaum said
revenuwharing plans
send 5G per cent ol the
mmey to ala~

·' ,

·

~

"The concept of
sharing Is rlgbt," be aald,

we ought!&lt;&gt; worli: ~~ II. 1M
money should 10 to
governments on • need -•:

•

:::;:-;:;;:;!;.!:::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::=:;:::;;::::::::::::~::::::::::.

Welker
Unl,
l
"":~!'~~~
_.,.,~~ca.
• '5f.~Jl .:~~-~ .::jt:.:::!:=
Exteaded Oblo weather

'l

'

The

.
~::~~_,.:;,:,:,:,'*:::-.:::::;:&lt;::: Association, TD1!ffllay·n'llbt
Ill.*,;:~·~~~
~~·~IY .~ , lilbnlbn Mid' 11pever knew ,-.~l~•:
endorsed Ralph Welkar, letter lri the Qell'
1
·
·
jury whiCk• ira .,apaneled 'to there was a time liplitaUon.
Ull , _ ~,.~,
llepubUcan
of
Pomeroy,
for
In
another
aetloo:=lhe
.
i 'Ri: f ·a/eahlre 'man lfl- lnvutfga'te -· allesed "laasumedwhenlwastold
representative to the Ohio went on rec&lt;rd Ill
.
·. j
• 'par:enll)&gt; ,Was robbed .of aj&gt;- lrregijlaritfos Ill ~ alate loan thet a specla1 grand jury had
General Assembly.
support any Ohio
..
·
bytelyan ~den~manat5.· program has been legally
wu
.......
power1esuinteSept.14&amp;'ldwlll
The Meigs COunty Sheriff's be dlamllsed, officlal3 said
Oep•rtll)enl sllld Leland !&lt;&gt;day.
Leml", 71i, a reUred railroad
Prosecutor C. Howard
employe, was at ho!ne .when a Johnson· and John Peck, his
man, whl~. silt foot tall,. bet- chief aide, said they learned
ween 25 and 30 yean ol age, late Thursday thatllle power of
came Ill the door. l.emlay said ibe spee1a1 panel was taken
the man stated be was· a away with the etart of the fall
.
o1 the Railroad
represen1811ve
term.
lleu.,mtnt Board.
.
The grand jllry was im·
The unidentified man stated . paneled July lll and llle journal
lhat·the ra1ln&gt;ad compan~ was entry ... n, •• for the panel was
~UgauDg persons· reCeiving only f.;q;;"July term of court
perislons.lle also stated that the which officially ended Sept. 4.11
ri!Urement boar'! was livjnJ a was then extended l&lt;r 10 days.
~d bonusved
.
to penal~ -~
"It Is our unclerstandlni the
,.. .. money. · ·
conalderaUons of tills special
·lf!Diey went!&lt;&gt; u.e·liedrooln grand Jury have no ~
of his heme and Pul.led wl his I alnee Sept. 14," Peel said.
wallet ·frllm ilrO!Iier drawer. ·, "'i'hl.iJ is so beeal!ll of the
·ThO man ·grabbed the wallet. journal entr7 WhiCh this office

. pproxlma.m
·
• • •

.

*

~·--~=~;~~~·· .!filii
~
~door,ln,ll,llalilil
and
Out .Ithe
!W front

did no! said
see iUlt
wq' consulted
abqut."
Peeli,
1'1! ·~d ItO' lii!Ck 11l1 ten, "We did not prjlpare II," be
llilnutea.
said, ''We do 1101 p!ow who
• · ~ man, .pld l,.emley, _.-edlL"
~ ,luto • "Willie .C;ar !'!"' - ,;•l .irUI not pursue \YhO
droYit south on Stale Routl 7·· ~ 11," said Peck. "11.11

.._••ergs'

been called, that was it,"
Johnson said.
Peck. Indicated that the In·
vestlgation would be taken up
by the faD term but did not say
so lipeclflcally.
"I will devo~ all my lime to
continue the Investigation,"
Peck said. "There Is no change
in my plaRJ." .
The invealiga!lon was
launched at the ~uest of Slate
Audltor IIDger Cloud Ill check
IntO loans made lbrough the
State Treasurer's office and llle
School Employes Retirement
System. The jury returned no
Indictments.
8ERVICD SET
Funltal serVIces for George
Mowrey, Jr., 48, who died

tu.layln
California,
w111Ewing
be at
11 un. SaturdaY
at the
rwleral Hllmt willl tbe Rev.
Rai\IIID Moyer offletatlnl'
Burial 'IIIJI.bo In Beeeb Groft
Cemetery. Mr. Mowrey is a
1onner Pcrneroy resident.

.

.

.

·~;

!

I

Veterans Total
Set at 5,437

There are 2,150 veterans In
GaUJaCounlyand2,58'11nMelp
County, according Ill Mlchael
llalloran, direcl&lt;&gt;r of lbe VA 1n
-000
Cleveland. ..._
...ere are 1,...,,
..,~ in Ohio.
1n MelgaCounty there are 110
World War 1 veterans, 1,1110
World Warn, 730 of the K«ean
Cmlllct, 500 ollbe Post K«ean
Era, and 9211 of the Vietnam
War.
In Gallla World War 1
vl!terans n.:Ober 210, W&lt;rld
War 11, 1,250; Korean Conflict,
500; Post Korea, 280, and
Vietnam Era, 580.
n Is estimated that there are
fewer than 200 Spanllh
American War veterans still
Uvlng Ia Ohio. Statistics are not
avaUable to Indica~ whore
within 'the state thele ..,terans
m1gbl be Uving at the
Ume. The l&lt;&gt;lal veteran c;untln
IM U. S. Is over 71 milllm.

,_nt

The unanimous resolullon ol Assn. erecutiYil coqunltt¥ ''

the groQIJ cited Welker's past
"vigorouo
support
of
educational bllls" as 1 primary
reason lor the endorsement.
The groQIJ also noted Rep.
Welker's recognition ollbo need
for tax reform and additional
funds for Ohio achools. The
members of the legislative
committee represent educal&lt;&gt;rs
~-&lt;w:::&gt;.l!X

WASB1NGTON iUPI) Bllamlu• coal prodaa!tloD
Ia the Ulllled Slates for the

weekead Sept. If woo
eollmated at 1%,725,• by tile Natteaal Coal
Aaaoetatlaa. Tie eattmate

was made tr. lll&lt;olaplete
car-leallbtl ft!JIOlls f1lndlbed
by 111e rallrolldll.

PNdaettoa
111
uie
correapoadill period laal
year·was li,MII,IM IUid
prddaettoa from Jaa. I
111~1•
Dept. u wao
.........,. at Cli,llt,• toas.
, ,~._.._,...,~~N o'o'~W&lt;.Wo'W~ "'

.,.;y,o.-.v.-.v

;?RN'"NO·~,...,........,'V',.,..-.-....,..

;Cards
Must
be
Communicators
...

.

.:j

Irrationa.!~~ealots

I

.

U.39 and $1.19

, .. •

rrw ..

tto-lloplrtmont
lit FloOr

bed.

•.

..
By ~

' 'l

Sen-0¥•
TAl.
atRTAINS.

P '· • .
-·
,O!IIa~ II!.he!'
sl&lt;&gt;re.

*Dd winter ,WNr •• 51111 36 .fi:l

PAJAMAS

Regularly 2.95.

•.!•

Stop In now Whllt HIIC ·

tlon~

ll}

..
.,...!

OOLIJM!l~ .(i!Pll - :tJle aoqr l!illodo!le-" ,

. I ·""'
. I!O"''',~InnOII'tlie
care

Soltl
Friday ond Solurdoy
Boys Flannel

-:.

0

Cloud ·T8rgets

Our entire stock of won:tens slacki on sale
days Including WOOl flllnriel • polyeiter
tw~e4s • slacks from coordinate groups
bonded knits.
·
'
Sizes I to 20 and 32 to 38
Rlllular 1D.95 Womens Sl1cks • •• •• Sale •·ot w,·,l
Regular •• 95 Womtns Slicks • • • • • Sale
Regular us Womtns Slaclis •• • • • SaN·
Regular 5.95 Womens Slads · : • • • Sale ·.... . ,, ._

SOCKS
One silt nts ellslzet 10 to 13.

.

at y

~

WOMEN$ SlACKS

Sale!
Well known Brand
Mens SI.OO

black end meny, many

'

.:.:;VO.::.:L...:.:
XX:.:.:.II:.:.:.
I ..:.:
N.::.:
O·...:.l::..:.
15_ _ _ _~_

Selel Frldav. al:ld S.t11r""y ;':

A complete selection of aJ~es from 29 to:so w11ist
and In all the popular .ltllaths. Tritt) fit Styles • '

COILECTIONi DOWN

Retail sales Ia. collectima for
the two -k period from Aua·

Fri., S.t. &amp; Sun.

. LETTER
(,COlor I

the skyrockaUng coets of living

Friday and Saturday

ss.oo

Friday and Saturday Sale

/·'

1

COATS
Sale $10.00

•

r

''

,_

. QMTS

Regular 16.50 to lt.50
AU Weather

'

.

AU. WfA'IMER

Regular 25.00 to 39.50
AUWealber

,

'

.

Womens

Agroup of rain or shlna coals
in knits and polyester
washoble fobrlcs . Ptlile
sizes end misses sizes.

.1 1

. ' 1'

f'rl•t:.u anci ' Satui'cllv

COATS
Sale •It.OO

Sale I
Friday - Saturday

WOMENS BLOUSES

7. 95
5.95
4.95
3.95

Girls
. SlACK sm

Friday and Saturday

Sale! Friday and Saturday

Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg.

.... .e··
,

in our Two Day Sale

iD Geieva said Mil' Thursdfy
atteqltq to ,...acJa

ooly 500 78ldl fRm the building.
,
Amman ridio said UJe Ooasol1re ~by Majllll._. ·
Into effect at 7 am. (I a.m. EM').

. Friday and Saturday

The New England eleclrlc syl!em began reducing voltage!&lt;&gt;
its cll8tomers by five percent, something that power componlos
elsewhere began doing o0 Tuesday. The New England ayl!em
channeled power to Pennaylvanla, New Jersey and Maryland
where the shorlnge Is crltlcal.

I

A.,._

ol leftn

R-IM' 12.95 Gilts .llltiiPIIS.-----Sile' 'Z.OO

AN0'111ER CRITICAL DAY WAS ezpecled today for the .
eastern seaboard where a power shortage, now el!ending Ill New
England, began Tuesday. A plea came !rom Washington for
residents Ill use electricity oparlngly.

i

)

Reaullr '1.95 Gilt JumpiiS ___ _; __Silf Uil .
Rlllllar 15.95 Gills JumptiS ,_,__.:,_ S.-Jf;50
Rtllllar '4.-15 Gills·JllmPIJS __ _:_ .... _~ W
Rtfullr '3.95 Girls JUmpen·-----~-~ '100

(ConUnued from Page I)

I'

• '

Choose from solids and plaids In sizes 3 to 6x
and 7 to 14.
·

111e la8t to die In 111e bloody foray at her 1ume becouae her ldllerll
wanted her to witnou the other v1ct1ma slain !IrS, a wllneu at
llle Cbarlt-o Manson murder trial testified Wednesday. Barbara
Hoyt, II, a bu%om brunette willl thick hon&gt;rimmed glasles, In·
troduc:od one of tile nwst damaging sta~mento of lllelrlalqalnll
the defendants by repeaUng a conversation abe said llbe

overheard about a mmth after the olaylngs.

'

.A beautlf\11
GIRLS
JUMPERS
gtoup of girls rfew fall jumpers.

News... in Briefs

I

!

t.JJ .

, OPEN 1JJH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

(

To be of val~~e a
itbared lll8iltJDi1 for o1U•"""
1'he IM&amp;er must know
must laP IIi value and
know "!*J:ana·

action concerninl

poulbl~ ...

gubernatorial endonemen~:': ..
Howard Nolan, Melp County.!···'.

tescher and chairman of ~1·
committee, staled that C81l; .
didate endorsement Is 011!1 a ;
pari of the massive OEA' :,,,
sponoored TRlE - Tu Reform
for Improved Education program. Future 8lpOCIB ol UJe
program will Include oelf
evaluation of local achools,
citizens, lnformat.ional projects
and increasing polltlcal activity
by teachers on the sta~ and
local levels .

Americans
Are Missina
.·
-,

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