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1-'ftle DlilySeuiiMl,MiillloJMI-f'WEU),O.,~.
IJ, W/1
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(

Pageant
IContin·.le&lt;l from Page I)
conteslanls, from every stale in
the unioo, deserved any more to
win the Miss AmeriCII crown

Saturday night than Laurie
Schaefer. Those in the Big Bend
area wbo have bad the pi~
of linowing her are aware of the
hard wort that bas gofue into
the victor)'.
She is modest, kind, considerate and dediealed in addition to being talented and
most pleasant oo the eyes. It's
encouraging to know that
people of her caliber do mate
ohe grade whether it be in the
·Miss America coolest or in any
other pursuit.
As a student at Ohio
University - she bas since
graduated- Miss Schaefer was
eligible for the Miss Southern
Ohio Pageant which started her
oo her way back in 1968.
· Sponsoring the pageant that
year were the Pomeroy
&lt;llamber of Commerce and
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. Jack
Carsey was president of the
chamber at the time and Lila
Milch headed the sorority.
Laurie was crowned oo the
evening of her first ·victory in
Pomeroy by Gloria Bock, Miss
Southern Ohio of 1967 and
Mayor Charles Legar. The new
Miss America bas mainlained·
through the several years that
have passed since her first
victorJ, contact with Mrs.
Richard (Betty) Rawlings, who
bas always taken an active role

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HONORED .C. Republican National Olainnan Bob Dole, left, praised Cong.
Clarence Miller, loth Ilislrict, Obio, Friday night at a special dinner in Lancaster honoring
Miller as "one ri the most conscienoious Members oo Capitol Hill," noting Miller has a perfect
record in answering roll call votes (l,OOOtb in June). Miller, fmner mayor of Lancaster, is in
his tbird term. Martin Hecht, Ohio University's vice president of development, cooferred a
special award ri appreciation on Miller in behalf of the University. John Gushman, a
(rominent community leader in Lancaster, praised Miller in behalf of the civic leaders of
Southeastern Ohio. Special messages of aweciatioo were also received from Secretary of
Agriculture aifford Hardin and from President Richard Nixon.
MillER

Kremlin Sent a Wreath
MOSCOW (UPI)-Former family friends and a small crowd
of unknown Russian admirers
today buried Nikita S. Khrushchev in a remote and liUiehooored corner of Moscow's
second best cemetery. The
Kremlin sent a wreath. It
rained.
The eulogy for Khrushchev's
non-political burial at Novodevichy Cemetery was spoken
over his body by his blonde,
bespectacled son, Sergei. He
stood in the light mist,
occasionally glancing down at
the open coffin and Khrushchev's bare head and said:
"There were many who loved
him, many who haled him, but
few could pass him by."
Khrushchev's wife of 48
years, Nina Petrovna, stood by
in a black lace mantilla and a
dark black coat.
She fought back tears

in the Miss Southern Ohio
Pageants.
A lot of people have been in
touch with Laurie since her
initial win and no doubt these
people and Meigs County can
feel some llegree of reflected
glory.
Many. too, will remember
Laurie's mother, Mrs. Eleanor
Schaefer, who also visited
Pome1 OJ when Laurie first woo
her title and when she returned
the following year as reigning
queen.
And do the new Miss AmeriCII
and her mother remember
Pomeroy? Let me assure you
that they do and quite affectionately . We bad the
pleasure of chatting with them
at the Ohio state Fair just a
week before they left for
Atlantic City and they have the
highest praise for tbe comm..Uty where Laurie started oo SAN JUAN (UP!) - Gov.
her almost unbelievable suc- John J. Gilligan said Sunday
revenue sharing program would
cess slol)'.
face
"severe implementation
As Miss America for 1972,
Laurie is coounitted to many problems'' without a "clear, cotravels and appearances. She's herent and vigorous federal polin for a busy year as will be her icy designed to stimulate modmother. However ,I do hope that ernization of state governsomewhere along the way they menl.n
find lime for a return to GiUigan, in a statement presented to the Committee on RuPomeroy - don't you?
ral and Urban Development at
the National Governors Conference, said Nixon administration
proposals for helping states
meet urban and rural developBy Ulliled Pial llltenau.a.J ment crises "have focused exAt least 24 persons were killed clusively on funding."
in Ohio weeteod traffic ac- He said they have ignored
cidents, making it one of the the need for a co'"l'pre~ellliive
worst non-holiday weekend overhaul of state government's
periods of the year. Six persoos
were killed Friday night, 12 oo
Saturday and six Sooday. Four
were double fatality accidents,
SCIOTO I.JVm'OCK
two oo Friday night and two
SEPTEMBER 10, 1971
Saturday.
Hogs : 200-230, 18.35; No. I,
Six of the 24 ltilled were 18.60; 2211-240, 18.10; 246-260,
teenagers and 12-year-old 17.60; 2litl-280, 17.10; 190-200,
Karen Simon of Ashland was 18.10; Sows: J00.500,1~16-95;
killed when struck by a car on 400-550, 17.30-18.20; Boars, I3.60an Ashland street.
15; Stock Hogs,lt-16.30; Pigs by
the Head, 7.5!)-13.
.
Cattle : Choice Steers, 33.1().
34; Good Steers, 26.7532. ~; Holstein Steers 26.7&gt;-10;
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Choice Heifers, 28.60-32.25;
5epl. ll - 14
Good Cows, 23.~24.10; Utility
Walt Disney's
Cows, 26-22.6:i; Canner and
AU Car1oon-Feature
-INOCCHIO"
Cutter, 18 down; Bulls, 24.50(TechnicDior)
27.50; Heav Stock Cattle ~
It's Pure Enchantment!
33.50;
Heavy Stock Calves ,
G
26.50-38.25; Holstein feeders,
FLAP

throughout tbe 30 minute least prestigious corner of
preliminaries. But when the Novodevichy Cemetery.
final moment came, at 12:23 It was as far as one could gel
p.m. (6:23 a.m. EDT) she from the inner sanctum area
caressed his forehead, lifted· where other honored political
her hands for one second in the figures such as the wife of
prayer symbol and burst into Premier Alexei N. Kosygin are
sobs.
buried, diagonally across the
sprawling cemetery and within
No one of note attended the sight of elevated railway trains
funeral outside Khrushchev's that pass outside the cemetery
family. The Kremlin shed one walls.
terse public tear for him in a There were about 250 to 300
seven-line death notice in persons gathered around his
Pravda, referring to him as grave. Khrushchev was laid out
"merit pellliioner Nikita Ser- under a red satin coverlet done
up to his chin in the open
geyevich."
coffin.
A man stood holding a
The Communist Party and
government leadership also black umbrella over Khrushsent one of tbe seven-foot high chev's head to shield him from
pine bough wreaths tha! were the light rain.
slacked on Khrushchev's grave. His medals, including three
The former Communist Party stars of the hero ol the Soviet
leader and premier was buried Union- the nation's highest
in a red and black crepe draped honor~were strewn across his
collin in tbe most remote and feet.

\'eterallli Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Elmer Medford, Ewington;
Harry Hall, Hartford; Lola
Southern, Middleport; Everett
Hutton, Albany; Kyle Barnett,
Syracuse; Margaret Randolph,
Athens; Joseph Dunfee,
Pomeroy; Richard Salser,
Middleport; Eddie King,
Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Dorothy Greathouse, Mary
Ford, Eugene Jacks, Ray
Wayn e Shrimplin, William
Haley, Phil Baldwin, Charles
Radford Ill.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS James Harmon, Rutland;
Marie Ray, Racine; Wilbur
Imboden, Rutland; Nellie
Hendrix, Syracuse; Ina Mae
Howard, Hartford; Mary Ellen
Hendricks, Syracuse; Clara
Garland, Minersville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Lelah Mora, Eddie King.
Pleasant \'alley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Arthur MeCoy, Henderson; Thomas
Russell, Guysville, 0.; Sharon
Long, Point Pleasant; Charles
Conley, Leon; Mrs. Ona Dyer,
New Haven; Mrs. Homer Hill,
New Haven.
DISCHARGEs: Mrs. John
Brunicardi and daughter ; Mrs .
Shirley Chapman; infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Martin·, Charles VanMeter, Weldon Jorgenson,
Charles Humphries and Alfred
Stover.
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-B "p." m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and~- Denver W. Ash,
Jr., Cheshire, a son; Mr. and
Mrs. John James Fry, Middleport, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert D. Wtcker,
Jackson, a 500 •
· Discharges
Harlin M. Amos, Mrs. Larry
E . Bailey, Mrs. Leo C. Bea n,
Mrs. Robert G. Brmnfield and
soo, Vi1rgil S. Car ter, Mrs.

Trouble Forecast In Sharing Plans

24 Killed on
Ohio HighiiJIIys

MEIGS lHEATRE

I tolar

Anthony Quinn
Claude Akins
GP

SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.

Douglas R. Childers, Mrs.
Charles E. Dempoey and soo,
Mrs. John A. Epling, Edward J,
Frey, Fred H. George, Christine
L. Gillespie, James C. Graham,
Robert A. Grube, Mrs. Cleo V.
Holley, Michelle L.. Holley,
David York Ingels, Gary Neal
Kent, Wm. A. Marcwn, Nathan
Hale McDonald, Mrs. Larcy P.
McPherson and daughter ,
Albert L. Neal, Jay Anthony
Neutzling, Henry S. Nut!, Mrs.
Donald Price and infant son,
Hollis Baker Searles, Mrs. Ezra
J. Sheetsandson,Mrs.Eidon E.
Sowers, Miss Helen J. Spears,
Quentin J. Stapleton, Doona J .
SleraPl, Mrs. Flora Williams,
Mrs. Raymond R. Williams and
son, Mrs. Rodney G. Wmters
and daughter, Ellen C. Jeffers.
Robert Hazell, Mrs. David
Caldwell, Mrs. Robert Chesser,
Mrs. Chalmer Dailey and son,
John Gillespie, Mrs. Lowell
Hughes and son, Mrs. Donald
Leedy, Mrs. Edith Mitchell,
Miss Florence Palrick, Mrs.
Phillip Reed, Eadker Russell,
Verlin Stevens, Mrs. James
Thompsoo, Louis Varga, Mrs.
Arthur Wolfe and daughter,
Mrs. Cecil Matheny, Clarence
Roach, Mrs. Clark Kinzel.
Mrs. Clarence E. Anderson,
Mrs. Gregory Bonecuiler and
daughter, Roger E. carpente~.
Jr., Mrs. James Leo Collins,
1r·IS eoX, Mr S. Rick B• Dun •
t d son Mrs Ernest
navan
· Mr
·
EdwardsanJ r. and' son,
s. Ora
H h A Boyd Legg Mrs
osc ar, ·
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Lesl~r M. Lewis, Mrs. John
McGmrus, Mrs. Charles Allen
Mulholland, Roger Plybon,
Mrs. Ella Rostover, Mrs. John
Sexton, Mrs. Herbert Simpson
and daughter , Joe Smith,
Charles M. Starkley, Mrs .
Ronnie C. Waugh, Thorton R.
Wilson and Harry Baldwin.

R 0 bert EdWBI"IUJ
_..J _

Died Saturda

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Robert Roscoe Edwards, 67,
Langsville, died Saturday a!ternoon at his residence. A
il
pipefitter most of his li 1e unt
his retirement, he was a
member of Eastern Star Lodge
207 of Wilkesville, Star Grange
No. 776, Orphans Field Lodge
No. 275 at Wilkesville, and of the
Langsville Church of Christ.
Surviving are five daughters,
Karen May Lee King in
Nevada; Carol Millcoff, Indiana; Jean Kennedy, Rutland
Route I; Pauline Lambert,
Scotts AFB, Illinois, and Bertie
Parker, Marion; four sons,
WiUiam and James, both in
California; Chesler in West
Virginia, and Robert, of
Reedsville; a sister, Mrs. Edith
Bornam, Gallipolis; two half
sisters, Mrs. Katherine Long,
Henderson, W. Va., and Mrs.
Mace! Dunlavy, Chauncey; four
half brothers, Chester Hudson,
Addison; Lester Hudson, Point
Pleasant; George and Paul of
Southside, W. Va.; 31 grandchildren, and seven greatgrandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his wife.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Langsville Christian Church
with the Rev. Gene Musser
officiating. Burial will be in
Salem Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Martin Funeral
Home Tuesday and until noon
Wednesday when the body will
be taken to the church. Orphans
Friend Lodge 275 will hold
services at the fun eral home at
7:30p.m. Tuesday.

ability to effectively manage Gilligan ·said "apparently the wagfiJrice freeze.
added funds.
revolution has lasted only eight The Ohio governor said he
Governors are currently months" in a reference to the was "deeply disturbed" that
\vithout the management power
Nixon could espouse programs
and capability needed to deliver
and eight months later ''turn
quality state services, quickly
his hack, walk away from
and economically, to those citithem.
zens who need them," said Gil(Continued !roll\ Page 1)
" I am disturbed by the 'obligan.
more than 50 shots were fired. vious change in philosophy, I
Gilligan asked the Nixon ad- As heavily armed officers am very deeply disturbed, "
ministration to:
entered the prison Army said Gilligan .
- Help states and major met- helicopters flew o~erhead Gilligan also reiterated his
ropolitan areas improve their pumping tear gas into cellblock previous position that he favcapabilities to manage develop- "D" where the prisoners held ored a complete federalization
ment.
their hoslages since last of the welfare system.
- Launch a nationwide cam- Thursday when the riot erupted. Gilligan has been selected by
paign to educate the penple re- Abwl ~ minutes after the fellow Democratic governors to
garding the need for stronger police stormed the high gray head a committee that will outstate and metropolitan area walls of the 46-year-old prison, a line party alternatives to Nixgovernments.
National Guard artillery unit on 's wage price freeze.
- Narrow federal require- moved in with several hundred The position paper, which is
ments for state planning to a more men.
expected to be presented to the
relatively few broad programs "Surrender peacefully, you 29 Democratic governors today,
coordinated through the gover- will not be harmed," a loud apparently will denounce the
nors and their central planning speaker blared . "Surrender the wage-price freeze as a bonanza
staff.
hostages. Surrender the for business.
- Re - establish and improve hostages. Lie down on the Door It is expected to also call for
state technical services pro- and put your hands on your tax reductions for lower income
gram to smooth technology head."
groups as part of the economic
transfer to the private sector The move on the prison came package.
and state government.
nearly two hours after Slate
- Establisbment of a White Correction Commissioner
House office to implement fed- Russell G. Oswald issued an
eral programs involved in in- ultimatwn to the prisoners to
PLAYBOY BUNNY RAPED
creasing management capabili- surrender the hoolages.
ties of state and local governShoctly after Oswald issued READING,England (UPI) - ·
ments.
what he called his "final Agang of youths raped and beat
VISIT IN POMEROY
GiUigan earlier Sunday said request" on behalf of the a Londoo Playboy Club Bunny
Mr.
and Mrs. Bentley Peeples
he was "deeply disturbed" by hostages, Gov . Nelson A. and left her lying injured,
an apparent shift in tbe econo- Rockefeller- who put off a trip behind a railroad station, police of Mansfield and Miss Linda
mic policies of President Nixon . to the National Governors' said. Officers said A.ntonia Peeples of Missouri, visited
GiUigan, one of six governors Conference in Puerto Rico - Draboczyk, 21, was found un- recently with Mr. and Mrs. Otto
who appeared oo "Meet the placed the National Guard on cooscious in a pool of blood by Lohn of Pomeroy.
an unidentified man on his way
Press" here during the National alert
29.6:i.
Governor's Conference, noted About 500 inmates were to work.
CLUB TO MEET
Veal Calves: Choice, 43.50; that Nixon had called revenue reportedly taking an active part "The hooligans pounced on
The
Third
Friday Club will
Good, 40.25; Mediwn, 36; Baby sharing and welfare reform in the disturbance while another her like a pack of wolves," said
Calves by the Head, 25-ii2; part of the "new American rev- 500 were reported not under a police spokesman. ''The poor meet at 7:30p.m. Friday at the
borne of Marie Dailey.
Choice Lambs, 26.90.
girl did not have a chance."
prison controL
olution" last January.
41

Hostages

Market Report

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·Now You Know
Cartoonist Charles Schulz
earned $90 the first mouth hiS

Brakes Failed
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GUNNISON; Colo. (UPI)The school bus transporting the
Gunnison High Sc.hool junior
varsity to a football game was
coming down the east side of
the 11,312-fool Monarch Pass
when the odor of smoke drifted
back to the players.
"One of the boys noticed the
brakes smelled," said Bob
Ragatz, a It-year-old junior
.varsity football player at
Gunnison High SchooL "Not bad
at first, but it got worse-the
smell of smoke."
The bus slowly gathered
momentum. The bus driver,
Royce Mustain, 23, pushed on
the brake pedal, and then
pushed harder. The force of his
efforts brought him boll upright
out of his seat, his fool
pumping the pedaL
"One of the coaches got up to
try and help the driver put the

I

bus in first gear," Ragatz said.
"But then the brakes SE1lllled to
go, and then tbe transln,ission."
Down the winding mountain
road the bus sped out of
control, --50, 60, 70 miles per
hour.
"A couple of the kids began
to scream," Ragatz said.
The bus careened out of
control for 21,2 miles before the
driver swerved to miss two
cars and crashed into a parking
lot at Garfield. The bus rolled
over and split open.
Eight piayers and a coach
were killed and 39 others "'ere
injured in the accident Saturday. Nineteen persons were still
hospitalized today-three in
critical condition, including
Mustain. Mustain was among 15
ol the injured who were
airlifted to Denver for medical
treatment.

$600,000 Damage
Acti•On 1•S Filed
According to the petitioo,
Mrs. con entered the hospital
Aug. 5, 1970, for a vaginal
hysterectomy. Following
surgery, she was treated by all
physicians named in the fcrm of
general treatment of her ·condition. Plaintiffs charge the
defendant, Holzer Hospital,
through its agents, was
negligent in that it failed to
provide proper care and
treatment at various times
from her admission on Aug. 5
through ber discharge on Sept.
16. They claim that as a direct
and proximate result of the joint
and concurrent negligence,
Mrs. Coil sustained permanent
damages to her abdtmen and
vaginal area.
Mrs. Coli seeks damages
totaling $500,000 while her
husband seeks $100,000 for
lll
additional expenses incurred
On lUO
andlossofhiswife'sservicestn
the future. They demand a jury
Marion (Hood ) Nicholson , 77, trial.
Route I, Rutland, who died
early today at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, was a
retired bridge carpenter for the
New York Central Railroad, a
member of tbe Mt. Union
Baptist Church, and of Star
Grange No. 778.
He is survivecj by a daughter,
Mrs . • Evelyn Schilling, Vermilion, Ohio; four sons, Waid,
Rt. I, Dexter; Dale, Middleport ; Ernest, Rutland, and
Marion, of Columbus; 13
grandchildren, six great- SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Half the city's 47,000 elementagrandchildren.
He was preceded in death by ry school pupils were being
bused today to new assignhis wife, Bernice.
ments
to achieve racial balance
Services will be held Thursday at 2 p m. at the Martin in the classroom. Thousands of
Funeral Home, Rutland, with parents were expected to
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating. protest by keeping their childBurial will be in the While Oak ren home from school.
Cemetery, Harrisonville. The Board of Educa!ion hired
Friends may call at the funeral a private firm to provide 130
new yellow buses to carry out
home any time Wednesday.
the court-ordered integration
program for the city's 97
grammar schools. The city's
jynior and senior high schools
were not involved.
U.S. District Judge Stanley A.
Plsns are being made to Weigel in July ordered the
expand the handicraft and schools integrated as a result of
business book services of the a suit by the NAACP. The
Meigs, Jackson, Vintoo Book- school board adopted a plan
mobile, Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, dividing the city into seven
supervisor, said today.
busing zones.
Numerous books on hanPolice dispatched patrohnen
dicraft and business are to possible trouble spots as the
available through the book- new school year opened. City
mobile which has access to oflicials urged antibusing
many volumes through the state parents to refrain from vilibrary service. Residents olence.
·
wishing material oo handicraft ~ All children were given name
or business are invited to e•- tags to be worn un their outer
pre~ their Interests at book- clothing. The ta11 listed the
mobile stops or telephone lbe child's name, the nwnber of hts
bookmobile service office in bus, his classroom and school.
Pomeroy.

A Jackson, Ohio, couple has
filed a $600,li00 damage suit in
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court against the Holzer
Hospilal Foundation, First Ave.
and Cedar St., Gallipolis, five of
its physicians and other employee as the result of an
operation performed ·Aug. 5,
1970_
Mary Jo and Daniel E Coil
221 David Ave., Jackson;
the action against the foundation, Dr. Thm~~~s P. Price,
Dr. Charles E. Holzer, Dr.
Donald E. O'Rourk, Dr .
Richard G. Patterson, Dr .
Lewis A. Schmidt Ill and Catby
Pickens, another hospital
employee.

1

filed

Mr. Nreholson
ruJa
Died
Y

Pupils
Take
to Bus

More Seroices
Are Available

enttne

comic strip, "~uts" was
syndicated, $500 the secood
mootb, $1,0110 the tbird month;
in 1966 $300,li00 plus income
from boots, toys, sweatshirts,
and occasional TV shows.

~

Elberfelds Warehouse on
Sale at •
_ pomeroy
MechaniC Street Terrific vaaues_
Myton Rugs cle
12 foOt Vlf1
- b 12 up to site \2 bV \6.

•88

00

S1teS \'1 V
$88 00
All on sale tor
.

Covering in all
, new Vinyl Floor s ·g Sale of Armstrong s "de or 4 yards w•de.
Also I
ds wide, 3 yards WI
widthS -2 yar

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Continued cloudy and eool
tonighl Clearing Wedr ky.
Highs lir&gt;-~.

Devoted To The Interesl$ OJ The Meigs·MO$On Area

VOL XXIV NO. Hl6

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEN. CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1971

2 GM Plants
Closed in Bus

THE SlliOOL SAFETY PATROL bu hem arp!Ued far the new year
at the Ptmeroy Elementary School wxler the direction of Pomeroy Chief ol
Police Jed Webster. Making up the group, composed of sixth graders, are,
front row, I tor, Mark Mitch, Randy Roach, Randy Phillips, Timmy Hood,
Jimmer Soulsby, Buddy McAngus, Jeff English, Ricky Glaze, Todd
Rawlings, lieutenant, and Jim Rosenbawt, captain; second row, from the

left, Peggy Glrolaml, 1te11y Smith, Kim Itrau~~n. Cbief wa.w. Mrs.
Marlene Fisher, teacher and advisor; Cathy Baleltnar, Jane Sisson, Paige
&amp;nith; third row, from left, Randy Hoodashelt, Dwayne Qualls, Susan
~ns, Vicky Hysell, Rhonda Hudson, Rema Chafin, Kim Williams, Marcia
Dillard, Chuck Follrod and Davis Harris.

Abandoned Dump Will Be Sold
Middleport Village Council
voted Monday night to advertise
for sale a 27-4lcre plot which
until a few months ago was used
as a sanitary landfill.
Council voted unanimously to
advertise tbe land upon the
suggestion of Councilman John
Zerkle who pointed out that the
Meigs County Commissiooers
have received about $123,000 in
Appalachia funds to establish a
countywide landfill and apparently will proceed with the
project.
· Middleport opened the landfill
on the 27-4tcre plot off the Rt. 7
bypass several years ago when
the stale ordered that open
dumps be discontinued. An old
rat-infested dwtp on the Oood
road was cJOIII!d and the village
attempted ' to operate Its own
landfill on the 27 acres located
In the Leading Creek area of
Salisbury Township off the bypass.
However, the landfill was the
subject of many complaints by
residents of the sector and as a
result was closed several

months ago.
Council heard Chief of Police
J. J. Cremeans list complaints
of play activities after school
hours on the playground of the
Middleport Elemenlary SchooL
A petition asking that the
basketball court there be
removed from tbe playground
was reported being circulated.
The chief asked council to
authorize him to close a section
of a street at various times
during the week so that cllildren
could play under pollee
supervision. However, council
took no action on the request.
Councilman Dick Vaughan
was named to attend a meeling
of the Meigs Local School
Dislricl Board of Educallon
tonight to express the desire of
village officials that the
playground be Jell open each
evening if requests to the
contrary are lodged.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher reported
that he has recetved several
complaints of a well on the hack
porch ofaband?ned property on
Third Ave. whtch IS dangerous

lor children to be around. He
asked Mrs. Roger Morgan,
councilwoman, to ask the
property owner to take immediate action to fill the well.
Council approved the report
of Mayor C. 0. Fisher for tbe
month of August showing
receipts of $723 of which $547
was collected in fines and fees.
Council also approved the
report of Fire Chief Thomas
Darst. Firemen answered three
calls in August, two in town and
one in Cheshire and two calls in
July, one in town and one in
Cheshire, the report showed.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
read a letter from the Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehicles in-

dicating that the village in the
future can expect a faster
distribution of license tax fees.
Duplications in the system are
being eliminated and computers are being put into use.
Councihnan David Ohlinger
asked that the intersection of
Palmer and Fifth Ave. be investigated for safety hazards.
At one point, due to parking and
trees, visibility of drivers is
greatly handicapped, Ohlinger
said. The matter will be investigated.
Others attending the meeting
were Councilman Lawrence
Stewart and Harold Chase,
maintenance supervisor.

Dea th so Close
.

B LYNN JOHNSON
y A 1 ld to
United Pr:s: IDternatlonal
ATIICA N.Y. (UPI)- We
' near dea th .
were a1ways
I knew they would kill us
r---------------------------~ when the attack began. I was
I
7\T
•
1 so scared. I was ready to die. I
just hoped and prayed.
: 1
Each of us bad an execulionBy Ualted Prell IDimlallonal
eer assigned to us. My
executioner was shot just
Rocky IV Sued by Stripper
before he could get to me.
The stale police sharpshoot1IARLESTON, w. VA. -A ~.•surrincoMection with
ters saved a lot of lives. Just
termination of a strip mine Job in Braxton County bas been filed
before they started to go for us,
against Secretary of Slate JOOil D. Rockefeller IV, the Ap- a slug would hit one of them
palachian Research and Development Fund and several others.
The suit was filed In Kanawha County Circuit Court oo behalf of
land owner Peal Dennia and Tri-state Mines -Minerals Co.
The Eastern Local Athletic
The suit staled Tri-State moved In mining machinery shprtly
Boosters
Assn. will meet this
after the state Department of Natural Resources granted a
evening at tbe high school at 8
pennlt Jan. 18. But because of acts by the defendants, the suit
p.m.
claimed, the mining operation was terminated and tbe plaintiffs
Tbe film ol last week's
were unable to sell coal. The suit described the defendants as game will be shown and a
being cmcerned with tbe ''purported social progress and anti- "sideline quarterback club"
pollution matters in Bruton County."
will be organized. All alumni
and
Interested persons are
Somebody May Get Socked
Invited to attend. The
BRUSSEIJJI - THE SIX EUROPEAN Cornmoo Markel association plans to meet
nations will urge the United States Wednesday to devalue tbe every Tuesday of each week.
dollar, abollsb its 10 pet. SJrcharge on imports, and join other
counlries In restoring woi-14 monetary order. "We are really
going to sock it to them," one Common Markel official said.
The Common Market's tough stand emerged from a sevenhour meeting Mooday of tbe finance and economics ministers of
West Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, l.m:embourg and The
Netberlands. The crisis was triggered by ~linn's Aug. 15decision
to free tbe dollar frcm 1111 fixed exchange value and allow it to
"fioat" and find its own level with other currencies. The
!'resident also imposed a 10 pet. s..-cbarge on all imports.

B
.
..f.
,ews••• rn r1e1 s :

and they !ell. Tbe knives were
still in their hands.
Just before tbe assault
started they took eight hostages
into a cellblock. There was no
way for the sharpshooters to
get in there. They slit their
throats.
They put some other guys in
trenches and poured gasoline
over them. But they apparently
chickened out and didn't light
it.
The remaining hoslages were
blindfloded and lied-up- hands
and fe~t.-iust like pigs.
They didn't move toward us
when the assault started. The
guy in charge of the executioners told the others to keep cooL
They were not going to ltill us
unless one of them was hurt.
When the shooting and
gassing began, my executioner
knocked me to the ground,
pulled me up, knocked me down
again and at that point I
blacked out.
'
When I came to-! wasn't out
more than a minute or two-the
guy was there beside me. Dead.
(Continued oo Page 8)

Meters Collect
Over $1,527

In Middleport

arrests by his department
durmg the month mcluding
seven for intoxication, four,
assault · and battery; two. for
mvestigat10n ; two for ftghting ;
two, drivin~ while intoxicated;
two, squealing tires, and one
each for running a red light,
~allur~ to y:eld ~ r;ght: :a~
o owmg oo c ose y, c .
assured clear distance, lin·
proper turn, reckless operation
and distur_bing the
_ peace. .
Th
li
dr
e ~ ce crrnser was tven
3,695 miles durmg the month.

Office

·

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Monday voted to

c!:

=~~:;e.;t~bein

afternoons Monday through
Friday. A parltime secretary

SAIGON (UPI ) - AntiAmerican violence broke out
today in Saigon where terrorists
fire-bombed an American
truck, badly wounding a U. S.
sailoc The old imperial capital
ofH~.;..declaredofflimitsto
American troops following antiAmerican rioting there.
The Saigon outbreaks
stemmed in part from past
American support of Ptesident
Nguyen Van . 'l'bieu and his
decision to run unoppooed in tile
Oct. 3 presidential electioos.
Disabled war veterans have
demonstrated against 'l'bieu,
the United Stales and the war
itself.

will be employed in the office.
Jack Kerr, now C of C
president, will ask the county
commission for courthouse
space. Members agreed tbe
office should be oriented toward
service to the county as well as
to Pomeroy. The secretary will
. t the chamber in local
assiS
promotions.
The chamber will send a
letter of congratulations to Miss
Laurel Lea (Lauri~) Schaefer
,
whowascrownedMissAmerica
1972 Saturday night.
Miss Schaefer was crowned
Miss Southern Ohio at the~ No injuries were re~ in
Southern Ohio Pageant ' 10 two smgle-car acctdents
Pomeroy in 1968 which was Monday.
sponsored by the Chamber of The Meigs County Sheriffs
Commerce and Ohio Ela Phi Dept. said that Joseph T.
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Vosick, 23, Uhrichsville,
Sorority. Flowers will also be traveling on SR 7 at t p.m.
sent to Miss Schaefer when she passing a line of cars wentlo the
returllli to Ohio.
left into the yard of the James
Kerr reported that 25 Grueser borne when a car in
memberships have been front of him also pulled out to
received, making the total dues pass.
paid $650.
Vosick, whose car went ~
Kerr also said the Regatta yards before stopping nff tile
fund has a balllnce of $333.02, highway, was arrested on
with notes at the Pume!oy charges of passing without
National Bank and The Far- assured clear distance.
mers Bank and Savings Co., Monday at 6 p.m. on Collaty
paid.
Road 3, Robert E. Hawkins, Zl,
Attending the noon lundteon Rutland,lraveling nartb anDid
at Bower's Drive-In were Bob a curve, got in wet grass
Jacobs Earl Ingels, Jack causingbimtoklle&lt;:~~~lrol Tbe
Carsey,' Bill Grueser, Walter car skidded across tbe biglnray
Grueser, Tom Cascell, Richard and...,... an -•nktnrnt backChambers and Dean Lutz, wards. There was Jicbt"';m•ge
advertising salesnlan for to the car. No citlr. WMPO Radio.
issued.

The Hue violence came after
an American SGidier sbot and
killed a youth who bad s1olen a
waleb from anolbel' Gl. A mob
of Yielnamese youths hurled
firebombs into American
vehicles befcre they were dispersed by po[i&lt;.oe. The city was
declared off limits and U. S.
vehicles forbidden to enter it.
Little figbting was reporied
em '"" war fruits but tn Laos
'""&lt;
government lroops entered the
town of Patsontodayin a major
victmy ...,... North VieiN:m s
and Patbet Lao lroops wbo
overran tile Bolovens Plateau
last May. Tile plateau controls
large parts Ill tile Ho Chi Minb
Trail infillratim routes to South

T wo Autos
Jn Mishaps Fl•eJd Tour
On Sepl. }5·

SOt.miERN IUGH SCHOOL varsity cheerleaders who will work overtime this faD to help
rebuild school spirit and support for their football team are, liD r, front, Nancy Ours; second
row, Jean Sloter; third row, Teresa Gooch, Judy Roberts and Lee Ann
Pam Hill was

absent.

Platt said Fisher Body
remains only four hours ahead
of the Pontiac assembly line in
its output of auto bodies.
"Why us?" asked a dismayed
(Continued on Page 8)

FIFTEEN WAS'l'OOMANY - .A - (.tlDve) owned by

Mr. and Mrs. 1'cm Jones, crown City RD, ~ ll8bn Ibis
month with a double blrlllfll 2t pigs five dl;ya apart, then
righted tbiDgll by beuelf. 011 SepU slle bad nine pip aDd on
the 8th, five days later, U llllft. 'l'lr odds of Ibis hot,...ing
no one learned in animal husbandry was willing to guess. One
local veterinarian l8l'eed wilb the J-•
II is ''very rare,"
occurring only when there is emceplinD in ucb Ill the two
horns ri the ulerua. Unable to feed wbllt slle prlldliced, tbe
sow by last weekend hid killed an but of 11er double
Iiller, of wJjcb one re:nainr.t weak &amp;mdly. Jcmes said an
infant pig will oot lbrive m food fnm any !lliRf! other tban
its mother.

L"'fLamb
\.,dl
er
~fd::::t ~~~:~:da~ To Open Truck Bombed

.

SAIGON - MILITARY IIOURCI!S repocted today that the
South Viellllmv· IK1IlY is setting up ila first new division since
111115 to take tbt place of American forces scheduled to be withcnwnllong lbe allied defatle net....n llong the Demilitarized
. Z!JDe, Meantime, In Stqon, a U. S. sailor was iDjured wben VIet
OtlllC guerrillaa firebcmbed IR Amaicu truck. And In the DDrtbJn city o1 Hue, Vietnem esi youtha IIII'Jed Molotov cocktails at
-~~u.s. veblcleufter aGifltllly 8hot a VIetnamese boy as
(CGDtllltletl• Pile I)

tions."

Parking meter collections in
Middleport for U1e month of
August were $1,527.50, Police
Chief J. J. Cremeans reported

LONDON- ROBERT ROWLANDS turned on his silprt-wave
radio hoping to pick up 8011leme In Aulllralia. Jnatead be tuned in
on a gang ri thieves tunneling into a central I.Alndon bank vault
only bl1f a mile away. POllee lllid tbe haul in the robbery could be
u hl8b as $U million. It also loucbed nff a massive investigation
u to why pollee failed to acton Rowlands'llpllld, when they did,
how tbe)o DWlllled to visit the bMk being robbed without noticing
llll)'lbiDg , . going on.
RowJands said pollee an but ignored blm and it was more than
IJboun law tllat radio detection trucb were t.ougbt to the area
-jUitulraJII!Dissiooulopped.Itwasnot until Monday morning
- M hourailfter Rowllnda f1nt ltmed lnlo lbe bank robbers lbatlbecrlmewu dilcovered. The lloyd's Bant liranch involved
Wll at 115 Balrer Street, one block !rem Sherlock Holmes' flcUonal 22 Baker Street reiideoce and not farm from Madame
n.&amp;ud'a wu muaeum.

First-NeUJ Outfit Since 1965

Object,
Pressure
On Court

By RICHARD HUGHES
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI )Picketing opponents of school
0',. busing succeeded today in
forcing giant General Motors
Mrs. Meadows in Corp. to close two of its plants,
hoping that the world's largest
would use its
Leaders' Volume corporation
poli.tical clout against courtMrs. Dan Meadows ol ordered integration.
Middleport, a teacher at the
Approximately 500 pickets
Pomeroy Elementary School, massed in front of the gales of
bas been selected for listing a Fisher Body plant before the
in "Leaders of American start of the ftrSt day shift,
Elementary Education for jeering workers who went in
1971," according to Robert and arguing with UAW repreMorris, principal of the sentatives who lried to urge
Pomeroy scbool. She was employes into the plant.
nominated earlier this year
A sborlage of auto bodies
by the school administrators. forced GM to shut down the
Leaders of American companioo Pontiac Motor DiviElementary Education Is an sion assembly line, wllich
annual program honoring the employs 14,000 hourly workers.
men and women who have The only GM complex in
distinguished themselves by Pontiac not llit by the boycott
their service and leadership was the GMC plant wllich
in the field of elementary makes school buses.
education. Each year, tile
APontiac spokesman said the
biographies ol those honored assembly line which produces
are featured in the awards 70 cars per hour, would be
volume, Leaders ol American halted, forcing 1,Zll workers Ill
Elementary Education.
be sent home early.
a.u:m:cc : ~u ~ "We experienced more tban
60 per cent absenteeism," said
Albert F. Platt, Fisher Body
plant manager. ''We cannot
operate under these coodi-

Story the Yard Didn't Believe

I

Wmthe,·_

Nease.
'

V"1etnam.

Meigs Area farmers are inviled to a On Oboervation
Field Day at tile farm Ill Dale
K&amp;lll&amp;, near Chester Wednesday, Sepl 1~ at I p.m.
Agroncmy !p"Cialists I*
11
will be John U..... wuod, EJ;.
tension Ara Agronomist at the
Jarbm Center; Sam Bolle,
Extension Soil Scientist at Ohio
State UniYtrsity, and pc Ny
Larry Shepherd, &amp;zteasioo
Agron&lt;mist in Corn at OhiD
State Univasity.
Some corn hybrids still
growing will be - . The an
!elf blight I* I'
will Ill
evalaatal, -.1 idMI fw -..
meW. tm I* .,, n Ill'
acre will be llll&amp;al
Eva)- illla 'tl ill an
pc-.ctNo is latM I lUI C.£..
Blakeslee, COIIDlJ ad rt•
agenl

�•

Rogers, .MeArt Star in First Concert ·

~ FOR

IIOMFXX&gt;JONG - Tbe New W"me Sngers of the Sugar Grove United
MelbodistClacllaeari.anraster, willpr se •I special musicfoc the MI. Hennm homecoming
lobe beldai1:30Sunc!ay. Tbe Rev. Bertie IJoosehnlder &lt;i the Avalon lllurcb will deliver the
aflemooa m age. Abastetdimter will bebeld atnooo. Tbe public is invited.

3- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Milldlepon.Pome,
0 ., Sept. tt, 1m
.
.

" Three on Broadway," the
first presentation scheltuled by
!he Tri.Colinly Com~unity
Concert Association to open ita
1971-72 concert \l&lt;!OSOO on Oct
16, stars Ronald Rogers and Jan
•
McArt.
ll is a program as scintillating as the best Broadway
shows, for it is a revue &lt;i the
greatest hits ever to "knock 'em
dead" on the Great While Way.
From Herbert Friml, Rom1JerB
and Cohan .111 Berlin, Rogers,
Bernstein and Jerry Herman - '
the evenirig is a veritable ftlasl l
Of the finest Broadway fare.
Ronald Rogers is no str.mger
to local audiences, as be bas
appeared in' the area as guest
soloist with the American W"md
Symphony. His very special
talents as a singer and aciDr in operatta, musical comedy
and on the concert stage - have
been acclaimed by press aDd
public alike across the cqunlry.
A native of Wisconsin, he bas
sung in Carnegie Hall and
toured the u. s. with Paul
Lavalle and The Band of
America, as well as in his own
]an McArt
RoiUlld Rogers
show, "A Cavalcade &lt;i Musical
Comedy." He bas also been
.
.
week, and afll!r Sept. 18, no
guest artist with many of her ,te.~hng pe'!orma~ce 1~ card only :No single admissions Concert Association is con- more members will be acducting its 25th annual camAmerica's leading symphony NBC s Cavallena Rusticana. are ever sold at the door.
The
Tri-County
Community
paign for new members Ibis cepted.
orchestras including tbe In complete contrast to her
Cleveland ' Orchestra the many operatic credits, Miss
Cincinnati Symphony
many McArl bas awo:ared on many
more. He bas also appeared in nationally televised shows as
no fewer than 2t starring roles guest artist. Her supper club act
in musical comedy productions has taken her around ttw: world
in scores of cities from BosiDn to sucb distinguished bmles as
to Sacramento. Among these the Hotel Pierre in New York,
are Fred Grabam-Pelrucbio in the famed St. Regts, the
•'Kiss Me Kale; " Billy Bigelow Cocoanut Grove .in Los Angeles,
in " Carousel ·" Haaj in the Blackstone m Chicago and
"Kismet;" Sky' Masterson in the Society and ~ Colony in
"Guys and Dolls;" and Captain Loodon, where she IS freque~Uy
von Trapp in "The Sound nf a guest on spectacular vanety
Music."
shows. Her frrst appearance in
In addition to his Carnegie the Hollywood Bowl saw a
Hall appearances, New York crowd nf 20,~ people, and
audiences have beard Mr. thereafter, S1dney Sokolsky
Rogers ' rich baritone voice at dec~ ."Jan McAr.t ~ a
Radio City Music Hall, at the brilliant hit m Glittervme.
Hotel Pierre Cotillion Room and When she appeared m the
at the famous Phoenix Tbealre. acclaimed revival of "Any thing .
Also a favorite with audiences Goes,:· Earl Wilson told the
in England he was featured in United States in his gyndicated
'
. born 1• "
Jack Hylton's
London revue coIumn: "A s tar IS
"Off the Record " and was ~ Jan McArl made Broadway
I
frequent perf~er on British history in 196t .b~. ta~ over
radio and television and in for Jams Paige m Here s Love
concerts with Ted Heath and his on a Wednesday afternoon orchestra. One of his only three days after she was
Parlophone recordings earned hired; For Ibis amazing f~l,
him a national citation as she was accorcted a standing
"Voice of the Year" from the ovation by both cast and
I
Gramophone Record Review. audi ence .
.
MissJanMcArt,whoiscalled On the summer stock circuit,
"one of the most beautiful and Miss McArt has starred in "The
talented women in the world" Unsinkable Molly Brown,"
by the London Star made her "Carousel," "My Fair Lady,"
symphony orchesira debut " The Pajama Game" and
under the balAin Of Arthur " Camelot," among many
Fiedler and was a leading others. She bas also toured the
soprano of the San Francisco country With Jack Jones m his
Opera. On NBC-TV, she starred show.
as Musetta in the celebrated Admission to Ibis opening
television production of "La concert and others on the Tri
Boheme " for which she was County series, as well as
nomina~ to receive an emmy. community coocerts throughout
she likewise won high priase for the area, will be by membership
. ..

SAN FRANCISCO (\IPI)-If
you want to see all there is
~ible 1D see in a baseball
game, and then some, lake in
the next game the Giants and
Dodgers play.
Monday night the two old
antagonists squared off at
Candlestick Park and when
their bsUe was over, 2 hours
and t2 minutes after it bad
started, the
b;ld won,
&gt;4, and stood poised today only
twogamesbehindSanFrancisco
in the red-hot National Iague
West race.
Winning the game was a big
thing, but there was enough
sideline play in Ibis struggle to
fill a book.
Four players-Juan Maricbal
~Jerry Jobnson &lt;i the
Giants and Bill Buckner and
Maury Wills of the Dodgerswere tossed out for various
sins, at least a couple Of d02en
fans from among the near
capacity crowd of 31,081 spent
the night in jail for fighting, on
the field and off, and at least a
dozen players were about as
mad as they could be.

Dodgers

~

All Funds at $149,821
Tbe total of all Middleport
Vlllage funds as of_Aug. 31 was
f149,112UI accmling 1D the
mmthlyrepcrtC!ert-Treasurer
Gene Grate submitted to
~d~eporl Council Monday
nigh

.

.

Receipts and disbursements
from eacb flmd m August and
the ~ as &lt;i Aug . . 31,
respectively, follow:
General, $t,02&amp;.29, $3,406.19,
$20,715.61; cemeleJy, $2t3.26.
$771:50, $223.119 overdra_wn;
parting meter, no recel{lts,
I&amp;U6, t57.t3 overdrawn; fire
equipment, $50, $m.79, $275.15;
swimming pool, $1,152 ..t5,
$976.32, $3,198.01; plannmg
commiuion, $300, $1&amp;t.st,
$1,31U2.

Slreet maintenance $172,0.1
S2,029.7ll, $7,7Z1.33; s~te ~
way, no receipts, no disbursements, $309.U; sanitary
sewer $3 857 98 $4 295 86
$19,t99.27; 'waie;, $6:121."21:
$1,765.6!, $21,296.611; water
meter deposit trusts, $2311,
$67.76, $5,m.at; sanitary sewer
escrow, no receipts, no
disbursements, $55,587.9t ;
water improvement,
no
receipts, no disbursements
$1,37UI;
general bond
retirement, $440.25, $26.43,
$13.137.66.
Receipts for the month
~taled $1&amp;,61J1,5t cootpared to
disbursements totaling
$20,190.2t.
IIAR1LEITNAMED

Mason AreJt

News, Notes

. -·

· Mrs. Lee Ricbardsoo

Ma...,

WASHINGTON (UPI)- PresidentNiion bas named Reed E.
Bartlett oc Cincinnati, manager
&lt;i field advertising for Procter
&amp; Gamble, to a two-year term
on the l'll6tal Service Advisory
Council.

is visiting hl!r daughter and
family, Mrs. Leroy Metcalf in
Columbus. Mrs. Richardson
will CBn! for hl!r grandaoo, Jeff,
Seiiliiel
while anotber grandson is
DEV9TEDTqTNE
:
boapilali'U'd Mrs. IUdiardsoo
I NTEREST OJ; •
"'-·to
'""'t
a--'.
•
JOIEIGS-MASON
AREA , .
_.,
·wa:a..
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL'
Ea«.Ed.
·
RecentguestsocMr. andMrs.
ROBERT HOEFLICH . '
Reuben Stewart, Mason, and _
Cily Edilor
Mrs. Mary A1miller, Hartford,
Published da ily excepl
Saturda y b y The Oh io Valle.,were Mrs. Moine Arnold, Mrs. Publish ing Company . Jll
Suun.,. Fitzgerald and Jason Courl Sl., Pomeroy. Ohio,
1
.e5769. Business Office Phone
of Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and 992.21S6. Editorial Phone 9112 .
_
:
Mrs. Johnny Aumiller and 21 57.
family of Sanduaty, Obio.
p;::,:~.c~~~.,""51 age paod at ·
Mrs. Rosa Fink, formerly of
Naliona t advertis ing
. . .
.
representat ive aott inelli .
Ma-,a VISiting Mrs, lllarles ' Gallagher, Inc., 12 Easl 12nd ·
BariDn Mrs. Rhoda Yeager and Sl .. New York City , New York .
.
•.
.
Sub$tr.pt.on rates : De other friends m tbe area.
livered by c a rrier where .
Mrs Fink -...:..1- ....:.a.. her 1 avaitable SO cents per week ·
•
l~ wlW
By Motor Route where carrie; ·
daughter, Mrs. Esther Bull at service nol avoilable o One
Mclean 1 Va. and lives part f month Sl.15 . By mail In Ohio
•
•
0
and W. Va .• One year SlA.OO.
thelimeWithanotherdaugbter, 1Six months S7 .2S. Three
Mrs • DorothyW"illatRicbmond I ' pr
monlhs
U .50. Subscription
ice includes Sunday Times .
Va.
Sentinel.

Tile DiiiJ

&gt;

Come for
Funeral
Numerous friends and
relatives came for the funeral
services of 22-year-old Sam
Hood who was killed in an
automobile accident on the
West Virginia Turnpike.
Here from out-of-town were
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Durst
and Mrs. Hilda Roettinger,
Cincinnati; Mrs. Imogene
Hanson, SIDckport, Miss Karen
McElhinny, Nelsonville; Mr.
and Mrs. William Turner and
Robert Priddy, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Turner of
Bucyrus; Mrs. C. M. Turner,
Freda and Chuck Graves, Jr.,
Mrs. Beulah Burge, William
Ochier, Kathy Morgan, Nancy
Harris and Mr. and Mrs. David
Casci, Columbus; Miss Sandy
Zirkle, Ohio Stale student, and
Dennis Carol, Detroit, Micb.;
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Allensworth and Mrs. Becky
Allensworth Clark, St. Albans,
W. Va.
Kent Stale University friends
&lt;i Sam here for the funeral were
Jamie Maullar, Thomas
Wright, Jack Young, and
Douglas Hershberger, Loring
Vaughan of Pomeroy, a student
at Bowling Green University,
andGaryMurphyofMarielta,a
student of Ohio Stall!, also attended
·
Pallbearers were Bill Swan,
M'k W · hi
d B
l e
ng , an
enny
Wright, cousins of the deceased,
George Sauer, John Blake and
Keith Morgan.
PARTMENTSHOOTING
YOUNGSTOWN (UPI )-Jobn
Franklin 21 Youngstown was
fa !all sho'1 d• ·
'
1
Y
unng an argwnen
at a northside aparbnent late
Monda
Y·
Police took into cusiDdy the
1m t
'd t and a gun,
apar en resJ. en
believed to have been used in
'"" shooting.

r-----------------------------------------1
I

Voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
·- INTO THE WD.D BLUE YONDER
NEW YORK- Tbe newspaper tales &lt;i the
pair m a BOAC jet wbo made love wlile crew
and pld! ~1!1'5 leered (the Lmdon papers
bewUinal it ''Fasten Your Olastily Belts") bad
ill match ma TWA plane - wbale crew told us
lhe same happened involving a pie wee! H'wood
star and a ('til then)slranger .... We asked what
Is sllnda'd procedure in handling such orgiastic
emergencies and the very s1raighlfaced reply:
"Just throw a blanket over them."
Two oldiine cafe cbaraclers are trying to
bring the Stock (]ub bad: from the dead : Ed
WynDe and Tony Butrico, who say they haw the
oby &lt;i Sherman Billingsley's widow, Haul ....
!!!Dingsley stopped spealring to Wynne wben he
left as the Stock's day manager to start the
Hlrw)'n Club; and Tony Bulrico was barred
from Billingsley's funeral by Sherman's
daughters .... Much-liked Peter Pesci. of the
trmcwn spot will host the town's sole new
glanw bangwl to be started in years: it'll be
called Tbe Dallas Cowbo)-s, on E. 49th St.,
ftnamo&lt;l (a millim or more) by 'I'eus' oilman
Oint Murcblsm Jr. ... Its gen'l mgr. will be
Fl'allkle Clrro, Italian.bom Slid Club busboy
cmlnlillflnalfling; lispqnrasaSIDrlnraiter.
Jil'II'D Ilnduy dubbed N.Y. ''FUn City" and
-~~ to n,.ncr the Yankees' ballpart with a
-~.lllltpurcbase plus millions to mdernize it
•••• But lhe Yadtee team is a straight h•siness
(owned by CBS) and hasn't provided the town
wltb Fill In years .... Now if Jlizr.ooel- wants to
J!llbltuul Fml City and llislei Ill warm over
lnle fi•MjPlla : pay somemeiD revive the
aid JIOuboo Dlc!Sl ; infacl, mlve all of 5aJI
Slll!ld Ill wild eafes, from Joe Helboct's jag
jlmlllolecia6Eddie's .... Bowaboutreopeo~i~
._ 1111 Ba Cab, Cotton am, Ccla!ir's ln!i,
J:iktie Wella, the HoUywood Restaurant,
IVA , PinunanniGrill; get Prohibition bact
md apen ali tbe old !lpe&amp;PP'ies; now tkJ aU

l
I

than SOOleWhat ...• Film direciDr Norman
Jewisoo bought Sean Connery's Loodm mansim
foc Sll,tm; Ncrm started in showbiz living in a
noninghouse .... You need a shillelagh to get
through the colleen-crowd cbeering Brian MeCollum, Irish folk singer at Desmond's.
Jobn Barrymore Jr.'s being divocced by his
Italian wife, Gaby; she'll nut wed singer Fred
Bongu.sto in Rome .... Metopera star Jerome
Hines ezplained why be sang ''The Impossible
Dream" so often at the 37th Sl Hideaway: be'll
star in the Dm Quiiole tole foc nine weeks at the
Paper Mill Playhouse in ''La Mancha" ....
' 'Promises, Pr""ises" remaim Jr"'Dising: two
touring lr~ hit the road this month in
Bwston and Scranton, Pa . .... 9natra's dating
Pamela Hayward coostanUy; she's Lelam
Hayward's widow and ex cl Randolph Cburcbill.
Gloria Swanson dined at the VIP restaurant
- m her own organic foods (herb, tea, natural
tread, goat's cheese etc.) .... Producer Ross
Bunter esccrted Nancy Sinatra Sr. to the Mitzi
Gaynor Vegas Riviera opening .... David Frost
and Diabann Carroll jetted to Hawaii frooJ his
Las Vegas engagement Where they didn't stay
at a hotel - IDok a house .... Trombone virtuoso
J. C. Higginbotham is out of Harlem Hospital
after surgery.
MarceDo Mastroianni and his signora made
"' but be'li make another ruct (' 'Malenpo") in
Paris with his interim love, catberl'ne Deneuve
.... Divcrced top dance team Tybee &amp; Brascia
reunited - but just for a dozen dance
engagements at the Cooconl .... Tybee's lig
nmancr DOW is Dm Vadis.
Tbe Ray Millands will be grandparents for
the first lime in March via daughter Vielma
(Mrs. Lowell ) Graham .... Duke Ellington's
Rainbow Grill date was so huge he'll be bact
there foc Clristma.HIIew Year's .... Mia Farrow
gels !Opel. &lt;i the gross of ' 'See No Evil" (doing
weU despill! SO«! reviews ) .... Papa Doc
_.. fan.
. lluvalier's No. 3 Man whO Red Haiti leliving
We IIDtlld 6lrlnc ''Galloping Gourmet" millions,anewspaper, holel,artgalleryetc.just
GI • =Ken-'sTVcoo+o!-lhattheoncecbic- split foc Spain moments ahead of the U. S.
..._ "-L.·- '
. I. . '
. ,.
I I X "' ....u I Wl'isllll" S h)'"'nllll l!llll'e O!sllms.
I -'

Rose Hero
In 2-1 Win

and

CALL 286-5678
STARTING SEPTEMBER 16th

60

just about the way you would
expect Pete Rose to win a game.
Pete does everylbing with a
flair. It's been that way e'IEf
since he jumped from the Sally
Iague to the majors bact in
1963 to beccme ibe National
Iague's rookie of the year.
Mmday night though, Rose
added a new wrinkle to his
spectacular.
"I've got to admit," said
Pete, "that I've never woo a
game tbat way befoce."
Tbe count was 3-2 m Tony
Perez witb one out in the hotlmn
&lt;i the 131b inning when Rose, 011
secood base, broke foc third.
As Perez went down swining
al the third strike, Earl Williams, the Atlanta Braves'
rookie catcber, fired a l1l'ow to
third base.

INSTANT RGURE
INSTANT SHAPE

EUROPEAN

BODY WRAP
NEVER BEFORE
IN lHIS AREA

4 TO 15 INCHES
IN JUST 1HOUR

By Helen Bottel

. .

"WHO AM I?" DOES ANYONE KNOW?
Dear Sue and Helen:
Maybe tbe two of you can giw me a new look at myself -sort
&lt;i from both sides fi the fence.
My problem is I've been a. bi8 put.oo all my life. I try to be
friends wi!h everyone, and itlooks ( ID others) that I'm Sl.ccessful,
rut instead, I'm getlinglooelierandfarlher away every day.
Last year I wanted ID be a long-bait, so I smoked grass, but
didn'llike il,andquilTb&lt;Be guysstillcmsidermeafriend.
Nex~ I went to the straight 'kids, ran for student council
Jresident and won. 'lbal's because people llink I'm "popular."
You see, I'm into sports and was foothall caplaiD last year.
I finally woke up to find I baw no true friends and am not as
great as I thougbt.I just go from me group to another, "bulllng"
it through like a con artist. Life baS always COOle too easy for me.
I gelwhatlwantbulitisn'tbooest, and someday I'll be found out.
For the first lime I'm realizing whalaphony Iamandl'msickfi
myself.
I'd like ID start over again, but bow can you when you've
acted so long youdm'tknowif there is a real person under all thai
''scenery"? - DON
Dear Don:
Welcome ID the group! Yw aren'lasunusualasyw think.
It's bard not to try making a different impression on diffelent
kinds !X people because mostlnnnansarepartclunneleon too: We
cbange the " coloc" of wr personalities ID suit the penms we're
with at !he lime. So you're ·~ongbair" wilb the longhairs, and
"straight" with the straights because yon wanted ·w be liked and wbo doesn't?
How ID start over? Figure out where you really stand and
don' t be afraid to speak ywr mind. &amp;Ire, you'll lose a few
acquaintances, but you'll gain truefrieods-kids who bave their
beads alraight (both t~m~bair and not) - and they'll help you
away froo~ being a politician. -SUE
HEI.EN SAYS:
Dearllm :
Perhaps you're pulling JO!nelf down IDo I!IIICb: Wben tbings
have always COOle to easily, we lend to feel guilty.
As Sue says, "We're all pert cbamelem." But the wlae ones
recognize this weakness early. Now that yoo've asked, "Wbo am
I?" I think you 'II soon IIIICOVI!l" the basic Don - the boy wbo'd
rather stand up foc what be believes·than be "everybody's pal,"
rut nobody's friend.
.
Tbe longhairs made ynu probe JIICI'e deeply than usual, right?
So you swung over to the safa slralgbls, and eome of111EIR
standan:B cMI't jibe either. Pllosibty ynu !bought thai maldng
coundlpresidentwouldputynu rightwitb bolllgroups, rut it only
cmfused you more, fer a leader isjlflen tmelftt ~all .... People
don't get clCIIe because they're either 8CII'ed oc envious. He IIIUII
wock doubly bard ID show he's lnrman : truly interested in otbel'!
and not just in pushing limoelf out front.
'
I drubI you 'II ._ve mucb trouble finding ''the real perion
behind aU that scenery." You've hit the honest button early.
CoogratulaliOI!S! - HELEN ,

)

0
G

WITHOUT
EXERCISE I
WITHOUT

tr"\ WITHOUT

\:;2 DRUGSI

(j) WITHouT
Relax, Nap, Read ABook .

· ..-While Excess Inches ·
!Disappear Durin11te

..SPA MAGIC

•

WatCh Your

' Till 111-MIIUTE IIIIIQ E•

$$Grow

,-: ':i ~~'!Jii~~JJVW:Rii

•• you add to your yvings
HCII -'&lt; ot tho Milt• eo.
lronch of tho Alhons Co.
S.vlngs ond Loin.

RESULTS
&amp;UARAIIT££0 l
101 .UST LDSl4llCIIlS

tiUIIiliSI .

BEFORE THIS DAY ODS
BE IICHES SHAPELH

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE

BODY WIA.P .

•tiiiTIUUliTISfiEB

Save by the loth, earn
from the 1st.

WE HONOR lASTER CHARGE
.
WATCH THIS IEWSPAPER FOR TELEPHOIE LISTING AID TillES TO ~

• SUANA BATH

•SUN ROOM
.

Meigs Co. Bnlndl

• GROUP EX£RCISES

I

CEITU.RY HEALTH CEITER

. n• 'I II PIIZI

Momber Federal Home Loon

MI. . IT.

Bank.
Monlber Federal Savings &amp;
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'

•

accountS Insured up 1G

ao.OIID.OO.
'

wnpire."
Afler Crawford IDld Johnson
to take off for his choke
geslure, Jerry charged the
wnpire but was restrained by
half a dozen of his ll!ammates.
" I'd have broken him in
half,'" said Crawford lall!r.
Wills was tossed out for
arguing over a call at first by
Stan Landes. With Tito Fuentes
on second and Jim Howarth on
first and two out, Bobby Bonds
struck out on a low pitch that
got away from Haller for a
passed ball. When Haller threw
wild to first, Fuentes scored.
Wills charged that Bonds, in
running to first, inll!rfered with
first baseman Wes Parker.
Landes got off the funniest
line of a not too funny evening.

"He (Wills ) didn't have good
view of the game," said the
umpire "so I gave him a
chance to watch the end of it
on television."
Singer was still working in
lhe seventh when the Giants cut
the Dodger lead to ~ne with
· three runs and bad the tieing
run on third and the lead run
on secood. Brewer came on to
get AI Gallaher and then
slopped the Giants the rest of
lhe way withoul a hit.
While all the fighting was
going on in the fifth, Brewer
was the only man tell in the
Dodger bullpen.
" I'm too much of a coward
for lbal kind of sluff," he said.
Smarl man that Brewer. A
pretty good pitcher, too.
1

By Chet Tannehill

FootbaU is back : our schoolboys bave their second round
Friday night, colleges tauncbed their 103rd season, and the pros
begin earning their bread this weekend. Hopefully, lbere will be '
grist enough for a regular Sports Desk in the weeks to cOllie.
Col. Lee Mole, who persists in believing that the QUtcomes of
football games should be predicted in advance (discreeUy tipping
off lhe local mafia no doubt as to how ID lay their betting line) did
Jrelty well in his opening round. He blew only three of 20, couilling
a lie as a miss (the Kyger Creek - Wahama six.Qxer). Tbe Mole
was in hot water for awhile . He picked the Blue Devils in a
squeaker (22-12) over South Point whicb inspired cbarges by fans
be was laeking not only in hometown loyaity but also in love fi
Uncle Sam and of motherhood.
He was vindicated when after a few minutes at South Point
the 'Devils were down (j.(), then 12-ll, winning only after a determined·struggle; that's right, in a squeaker, 211-20.
And what &lt;i the Marauders ? The Eagles? The Tornadoes?
Today, the Marauders :
coach Cbarley Chancey, not kidding a bit, said after the tract
meet in Marauder Stadium over Reemelin (46-lt ): "I'd rather
they'd been stronger." Reemelin, that is.
Reemelin Coach Karl Justus obviwsly has several naturally
inslalled handicaps at Lancaster (BIS). His recruiting is nil (or it
better he ), be bas few if any long enough tenners to have any
NEW YORK (UPI)-Ken But !he cut only seemed ID reluming "lettermen," and even his traveling squad is curtailed
Bucbanan's left eyelid is slit- infuriate the champion. To the in numbers (19 Friday night ) for reasons that surely are perfectly
obvious.
Here and there Justus bad fine talent in his squad. But fana
fa looks like
thing fr
!rand of the ropes With a could see plainly what "organization, training and cohesion"
Pice , bl somode B the~ ~rrage of puncbes in the ltth means to foo1bsll success. Justus just didn't have it. Tbe
Casso s ue pen . u
s
.
.
not CWJplaining.
round. While Referee Junmy Marauders did.
The difference was 26 points, a gap that perhaps could haw
Tbe26-year:-otdla~basreJll;'id Debimsevlinlfwbacalcbk~'toLagunath hoisf:edth
been 96 had Mr. Chancey cbosen to play his experienced hands the
a debt, and With typical Scottish
m
e ng WI
guile, came up f]OO,tm richer !he help of the top strand and whole game. As it was , his No. I reserves took over near midway
and still clinging to his World right bsck into the barrage.
in the second quarter, and younger boys at the tail of the roster
Lightweight TiUe by taking a "Ifeelmyagg~onwonit," worked the enlire second half.
unanimous lkound decision Bucbanan ezplained. "After the
To top it off, Tiny Williams, the Marauders' quality fullbact
over Jsmael Laguna Mmday ninth round, I knew I had more and linebacker, was cav&lt;rting around the sidelines in the male
night in Madison Square energy than he did and I went verslm of hotpants helping keep dry footballs in play. Tiny (175
Garden.
more on the attack. In the Jttb, I lbs. tiny ) has a knee tllal is mending . II is OOped he can get in
When Laguna lost the tiUe to thought I would stop him. It some line backing lime against Belpre this Friday and be in shape
Bucbanan last year the Pana- seemed to me the referee did
for full go the following week in the SEOAL opener at Wellston.
.
. '
.
.
maman thought 11 was only a start countmg hliD out m the
Some fans wore frowns after the game at the frequency
loan. For the past year the 211- ropes, but be recovered and got
Reemelin defenders sprang through to stop Marauder olfensiw
year-old Laguna has' railed away"
thrusts. 'lbat didn't concern me, because a play or so later Mr.
.
.
Ad · ·11·
tb
11·
agamst what he COilSldered the
m1 ~ng
e . swe mg Chancey sent sub fullbsek Keith Vanlnwagen, &lt;r tailbact Mark
injustice of the decision and around ha left eye mlerfered
demanded a rematch so be with his vision, Buchanan ad- Williams through the exact place a stunting defender should be
could reclaim the tiUe.
ded, " But I wasn't worried for 10 to 15 yards.
The defensive smarties tried by Reemelin recalled a remark
Obviously, he hadn't heard about the fight being stopped.
about Scottish tenacity when it Americanrefereesareveryfair by me-lime Logan Coacb Mel Adams, to whit, that if be bad his
COillestorepaym
· g ,1oans".
andsowastheringsldedoctor." druthers he'd run his offense against a defense that knew what it
. His left eye blinded and his It was Bucbanan's 41st vic- was doing, lhalwas playing where it was supposed to play, rather
body covered with his own tory in t2 bouts, and Laguna, than against me that bopscotched around between the sidelines in
ucbanandefla d Lag
kin to · · Ji
Carter
blood, B
te
u- see g )Dm unmy
as quest of a spectacular tackle .
More tomorrow.
na like a )XIIlCtured bagpipe the only men to hold the liUe
with a withering attack in the three limes, bad his record, to
last three rounds to retain the 64-!1-1. Buchanan weighed 133~

Buchanan Retains

Lightweight Title

··

.~

By United ~sslnternational
Amerocan League
East
~ ~i ~~~ GB
Baltimore
82 65 .5SB 10
Detroit
76 72 .514 16'12
Boston
73 73 .500 18'12
New York
Washington ~ ~ :: ~,
12
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pel. GB
Ookland
93 53 .637 .. .
Kansas City 78 68 .534 15
Chicago
69 77 .473 24
California
69 79 .466 25
M!nnesota
67 78 .462 25'1&gt;
Mt!waukee
63 83 .432 30
Monday's Results
Baltimore 9 Detroit 1 (1st)
Detroit10 Ba!timore5 t2ndl
New York 4 Boston 0
Wash at Cleveland tppd, rain)
Ook!and 2 Kan City 1 111 innsl
California 3 Minnesota 2 (lsi)
Minnesota 1 Callfornoa 0 (2nd I
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oakland &lt;Odom 10-101 at
Kansas City tSplittortf 8-7) ,
night.
Chicago t Bradley 13-13) at
Milwaukee (Lockwood 9-13),
night.
Washington (Gogolewski 4-4
and Broberg 5-7) at Cleveland
!Colbert 5-4 and Dunning 8-131.
2, twini~ht.
Detrott ( Lo!ich 23·111 at
Baltimore !Palmer \'·71 . night.
New York tS10ttlemyre 13·111
at Boston (~t 2·2) , night.
t01Jy games scheduled)
.
Wednesday's Games
California at Kansas City night
Minnesota at Milwaukee night
Ookland at Chicago twinight
Washington at Detroit night
Boston at Cleveland night
New York at Baltimore night

..• •:

Na~onal
League
East

rtt~~~h
New York
Chicago
M"f'lreal .
Philadelphia

--

W. L. Pet. GB

~ ~ :~

76 69 .52~
74 n .51J7
6J· 81 .4311
w:t 87 .«18

6,h

ll'h

14
24

2'1'h

w. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 83 64 .S6S ...
los Angeles 81 66 .551 2
Atlanta
74 74 .500 9'h
Houston
73 74 .497 10
Cincin.nati
72 77 .ollll 12
San D1ego
54 93 .367 2'1 ·
Monday's Results
Pittsburgh 5 Chicago 1
N.Y. 4 Mntl 2 Jist, 5 inns, rain)
Mntl at N.Y. (2nd, ppd, rain)
Cincinnati 2 Atlanta I I 13 innsl
Houston 3 San Diego 2
Phila 6 St. Louis 5 110 innsl
los Angeles S San Francisco 4
Today's Probable Pitchers
Montreal tTrohmayer 7-S and
Stoneman 14· 1~1 at New York
tMcAndrewl -5andRyan9.121.
Pittsburgh (Johnson9·9 or
Moose 9·71 at Chicago (Jenkins
21 -111.
Philadelphia !Wise 14-t31 at
St. Louis !Zachary 3-91. night.
Atlanta (Reed 12-12) at
Cincinnati !Gullett 15-51. night.
San Diego !Acosta J . l) at
Houston t Blasingame 9-10),
night.
Los Angeles !Downing 18-81
at San Francisco (Perry 14-11),
night.
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at New York 2 twinight
Montreal at Philadelphia night
St. Louis at Pittsburgh night
Atlanta at Housh•• night
San Diego at Los Angeles night
Cincinnati at San Fran night

Lam ka llBmed

compared to 135 for lbe
1\.T
UP''~'
,,!
challenger.
.
~ S
But With the fight m the past,
the best part comes today when
Bucbanan picks up a cbeck for
$100,tm, surpassing the previous record of $87,500 for a
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ohio &lt;llarlie Davis &lt;i Colorado l!1d
lightweight tiUe defense set by
Carlos Ortiz for a victory over Slate's Don Iamks, shifted to quarterback Larry llulaell Ill
Laguna back in 1968.
quarterback after playing with Wake Fer-est.
.the defensive squad the past two
season, was named Monday a
member of the United Press 2 SKATERS CHOSEN
TROY, Mich. (UPI)-Ronald
International ''Backfield of the
and
Gail Rovovistty of Troy,
Week."
Lamka, a native &lt;i aeveland, the defending world ~i01111
Early Bird league
scored four touclxlowns and in the mixed pairs, were named
Week of Sept. 1
Standings
gained 100 yards rushing Monday to the United States
Team
Wl
Saturday in leading the Buck- ll!am competing in the Wocld
Team No.3
8 0
eyes to a 52-21 romp over Big RoUer skating Champiousbl(•.
TeamNo. 6
6 2
6 2
Oct. 6-9, in Barcelona, Spain.
Ten foe Iowa.
United Press International's by rolling up 329 points, TeamNo. 2
Meigs Mobile Homes
2 6
u.s. George wemer of
When
Ohio
Slate
lost
starting
including 26 first-place voles in Larry's Ashland
National Crown.
2 6
0 8 CLEVELAND (UPI) -l1eve- quarterback Rex Kern and Albertson, N.Y., said tbe
Tbe Cornbuskers r""ffirmed ouuldistancing idle Notre Dame TeamNo.4
land Browns CJl!'Ch Nick Skor- backup Ron Maclejowski brother and sister combination
First high Team Game
their pre.oeason top ranking which bad 309. The Fighting
Meigs Mobile Homes 752 ; ich said Monday his team was through graduatimlasl year, it wiD compete against an interfrom UPI's Board of Coaches Irish collected the remaining second High Team Game, Team
eight firsli)tace votes as 3t &lt;i No. 6 751J ; third High Team ready for the regular season appeared coacb Woody Hayes national field which will inchtde
and he was "not concerned at would have trouble filling the skall!rs from West Germany,
the 35 coaches participated in Game, Team No. 2, 748.
First High, Team Series - all" with the club's 1-5 exhibi- signal-ailllng slot.
Spain, canada, England and
the balloting.
Team No. 6 2157 ; second High lion record.
Italy .
But
Woody
knew
that
Lamka
California 000 000 ooo- 0 , 9 0 Texas, last year's national Team Series, Team No. 2 2128;
"We wanted to win more, of had been an outstanding quarKaat (12-12l and Roof ; champion, was third with 20t third High Team Series, Meigs
Mobile
Homes
2126.
course,
abd really should have lerbact at aeveland South
Murphy 16-151 and Kusnyer. HR voles, but right behind the
First High Ind. Game - Jean been 3-3,'' the Browns' new High, and gave I.amka the
- Braun 15th).
Longhorns with 201 was Ohio Warner 192; second High Ind.
ABA CHOOSES BAILEY
coach
said.
"I'D
take
the
recbance
when
be
asked
foc
it.
Game
Maxine
Dugan
181;
NEW YORK (UPI)-Jobn
New York 100 101 1oo- 4 12 o State which was rated only lOth
third
High
Ind.
Game
Brenda
for
the
losses
to
"I
think
I
can
do
the
job,"
sponsibility
Bailey, a 6-J guard from
Boston
000 ooo ooo- o 3 1 in the pre sea SOli selections.
176.
Dallas
and
Chicago,
but
we
Lamka
said
at
the
time.
"If
I
Bahnsen l1J.101 and Munson;
Mi b.
·th I"'
fiifth Cumingham
Wagner College, was added
First High Ind. Series - Mary
BreH 171 , Tatum 18) and Fisk
C tgan, WI
"'• was
wanted to see certain people didn'llhink I could handle it, I Monday to the list Of eli3ibles
Voss
488;
second
High
Ind.
LP- Siehert (16-101 .
while Alabama vaulted into the
- Jean Warner 465; third play and we did.
wouldn' t have asked coach for Tuesday's American Jlas.
sixth spot with ICI!I and Series
High
Ind.
Series
Maxine
"We
wanted
to
be
in
a
posiHayes for tbe opportunity.
Chicago 020 003 IOif- 6 7 3 Tennessee was seventh with 77. Dugan .!56.
ketbsll Association suppleme..Milwakee 200 000 lOif- 3 6 0
lion to put fllgether out best Joining the 5-foot-11, 190- Lary draft of hardship cases.
Johnson, Kealey 171 and The remaining three top 10
team and I think we have.
pound senior on UPI's out.. AI the ssme lime, the ABA
Herrmam ; Slaton, Krausse (7) , spots were filled by Colorado
Week ol Sept. 8
"The men worked very hard standing backfield unit this dropped the names of Joby
Bell 181 and Porter. WP- (75)
d Arkansas (62)
·
Standings
Johnson (10.101 . LP-Staton (9an
• a pall"
W l and are as well prepared phys- week were running back Pete Wright of Indiana and Curlla
7) . HRs-Reichardl, 2, 1!5th &amp; &lt;i winners over the weekend, Team
Team
No.6
12
~ ically as they've ever been," Wood &lt;i West VIrginia, tailbact Pritchett Of St. Augustine's.
16th), Ml!rales (2nd) .
and Auburn ( 56 ) whicb was Team No. 3
12 ~ he said. "They're pretty well
idle.
Team No.2
10 6
~tiona! League
.
6 10 prepared mentally, IDo."
(lot, 5 innings, rain)
Five ccaches from eacb &lt;i Meigs Mobile Homes
Five players were hurt in CARL DEHOSPITAIJZED
Larry's Ashland
~ 12
Montreal
001 01- 2 6 o the seven geographical areas &lt;i Team
No. ~
~ 12 Oeveland's final pre -season
BOSTON (UPI)-Siugger Carl
New York
300 01- ~ 7 1 ·the nation comprise the UPI
First High Team Game - game last Friday night against Yastrzemski of the Boston Red ·
Moo !001 (10.15) and Bateman; ratings board. Each w--L they Team No. 2 1104; second High
Sadecki
(7-6) and Grote. HR"""
Sox was released from HahnneUowl Gamel
Team Game - Team No. 6 801 ; St. Louis Cardinals.
vole on the top 10 teams and third
Detroit
303 020 020-10 16 0 Jorgens t~th) .
High .Team Game " Fortunall!ly the injury situa· mann Hospital Mo.nday after
points are awarded on a IQ.N. Larry's Ashland 776.
Baltimore 1101 000 013- 5 10 I
Montreal at New York, 2nd, 7~2-l basis for votes from
Niekro, Sdlerman (II and
First High Team Series - lion looks much brighter now," les~ .for appendiCitis proved
Freehan ; Dobson. Jackson (3), ppd, rain.
Team No. 6 2283; second High Skorich said. "Joe Jones (de- negative.
first to 10.
Dukes (5), Boswell (S) and
Team Series - Team No. 2 fensive end) seems to be the Yastrzemski was hospitalized
Hendridls. Etchebarren 161. San Diego 101 tDI ooo- 2 9 2 NEW YORK 1UPI)-Tbe 2271 ; third High Team Series only possible question mark be- Sunda~ afll!r. c~ptaini~g of
WP-Scherman (1tHI). LP- Houston · 000 000 0'11- 3 3 1
No. 3 2227 .
Kirby IJJ.13) and Kendall ; Uni led Press Intemati·ooa1 top Team
Dobson &lt;(17.8). HRs-G. Brown
First High Ind. Game - cause of his knee, but he can't abdominal pams m Detrmt.
Forsch. Ray (9) and Edwards. 20 major college football teams Charlotte Willford, Neacil
(loth ), F. Robinson (25th) .
be ruled out."
WP-Ray (10.~) .
.
witb first place voles and w:on- Carsey 187; second High Ind.
This Week's Speci•l
Running back Leroy Kelly,
(lsi Gamel
m
·
·
1
1 t ---'· ·
theses
Game - Maxine Dugan !80;
Minnesota 000 101 ooo- 2 7 I
lnntngs
·
OS '""'""" m paren
·
third High Ind. Game - Mary who led the NFL in punt re( Flnt Week·) ·
Voss 175.
Calilorni&lt;l 10'1 ooo oox- J 8 1 Atlanli!
turns in 1965, is to be used in
000 100 tDI 000 D-1 7 1
.
Hamm. Luebber (5), Haydel Cincinnati
.. .Team
Poillls
Firsl High Ind. Series- Ma1, that position again Ibis season,
171 and Millerwald ; May, Allen
010 tm 000 000 1-2 8 1 I. Nebraska (26) (1.0) . 329 ~~"' 51J9.; N~ Ca~~~ ~'h; Skorich said. He also said the
11e111 t:B
and Stephenson. Teo bug
Neibauer, Nash 18), Jarvis 2 Notre Dame (II) (0.0) 3119, third H"'h Ind. Series- ··•·xine recent acquisition of Frank
. 16 . WP-May (10.11) . lP(13) and Williams; Nolan,
·
·~
""'
Hamm (2-3). HR- KII!ebrew Merritt
-wrecked!"
llll.
Carroll
Ill),
3.
Texas
( 0-0)
20t
Dugan~.
USED CARS
Pitts wiD help the team in punt
(24111) .
Gibbon (13) and Bench. WPt . Ohio Stale (1.0)
201
•
and kick off returns.
Awards In ,auto Injuries
Gibbon (5-6) . LP-Jarvis (5-13). 5 Michigan (1.0)
1M
hne oreaHy In·
deeth•
opens
regular
play
aeveland
HR-Will!ams (32ndl.
ICI!I
6: Alabama (1.0)
creeMCI
end
now h q · •ttr
at home Sunday against the
1. Tennessee (0.0)
77 GONZALEZ HONORED
run
to
S511.000
or --. Thl
Houston Oilel'll.
old Sl0,0410 oulo liability
8. Colorado (1.0)
75 . NEW YORK (UPI)- Pancho
W~ Are Coming
lnsuronce Is lnadaq..-te
With Air Conditioning
9. Arkansas (1.0)
62 Gonzalez, C.year old former
todly, •paclelly n • 10. Auburn (0-0)
56 U.S. aDd W"liDbledon champion, 2 ENGLISH PLAYERS
!18b1Hiy ._.... caoll ...,.
To Town
II. Stanfonl (1.0)
50 was honored Monday for his
NEW YORK (UP!)- Tony
• few dollors - - .
12. Oklah0018 (0.0)
44 work with young players and Jacklin, winner of the 1969
13. Geocgia ( 1.0)
37 underi)rivileged children.
Britjsh Open and the 1970 U.S.
14. WashingiDn ( 1.0)
25 Gonzalez was given a $1,000 Open and feUow Ryder Cupper
15. Arizona St. (0.0 )
24 check by the American Express Pell!r Ooslerbuis will represent "You'll like Our Quality
16. Penn State (0.0) ,
16 Card Division ' 1D present to a England in the 19th World Cup, Way of Doing BusiMSs."
17: Southern Calt&amp;-1)
15 young player Of his choice to . Il-14, in Palm Beach Gardens,
GMAC FINANCING
W•tch
2
la. Loolsi!na St P·l)
9 further his education . . Jim Fla., it was annow\ced Mot'lda~
'TI~::'
19. Syt!ICuse 1~1
7 ThJiilpSDII, a c!onipatly official, by Inll!tnational Golf Associa·
r·11S P. s.t.
20. HUUiloo t 1.0)
4 ma•!t· •he praentalion.
tl&lt;m l'resldtnl Jams A. Unen. 1.---~-----· l••ii

Iitle in convincing fashion.

Buchanan's left eye was
clamped sbul alter the third
round, and even the ringside
pbysician, Dr. Edwin Campbell,
admitted that a blood-6)lurting
cut over the eye in the l21h
round would have caused the
bout to be stopped ''if the Iitle
wasn't at slake."

Player Of The Week

Local Bowling Skorich

Says Team

Is Ready

Line.srores

DIETl. I

., .

little after the game.
'"!bat's the toughest lime to
steal," .said Pete. ''On that play,
you're outnine out fi 10 limes."
Harris offa ed a cocreclim.
"I would say the guy is out 99
of 100 limes," said the Braves
manager.
Rase set the stage for his mad
dash bcme by opening the inningwithasingletorightforhis
oolybilinsiiiripstotheplate.
b
A sacrifice Y Woody Woodward moved Pete to second.
!'era then s'---' to the ..J.te
...,.,....
tafter lee May WliS isBued an
intentional pass.
'"'bal was a game in whlch
f!'letyODe pt.Idled well," said

"Their guy (Singer) hits two
of our guys and nothing
happens," said F()l[. "My man
(Marichal) hits one of their
guys and he's out right now.
That's hard to undersiand."
. Singer said the pitch that hit
Mays simply got away from his
and insisted that he never hit
Speier.
The baD was barely inside on
Speier," said Singer, "and it bit
his bat. He made a big thing of
it and I think he swayed the

OSU Moves To Fourth In
UPI Ratings; Nebraska 1st

~

' ' . '"'- .7

!

signaled Pete safe.
'lbougbts &lt;i being thrown out
at third made Rose slmdder a

vat:ious players shoved eacb
other around, Johnson made a
choke gesture at Crawford and
Shag told him to take a shower.
"I didn'Ldo anything anyone
else was domg," said Jobnson
in his own way, meaning he
didn 'I think he should have
been thrown out, while Buckner
said he bad no intention of
bitting Maricbal with his bsl
and that be was holding it in
self defense.
Manager Charlie Fox of the
Giants said that the umpire
seemed to be leaning in one
direction.

wi~J;~, ,l)~~j,,),J,l~bi::'e!:!::ryn:d~~~ ~~~~~:;c:s~~~~~

·· ·

Reds manag..- Sparky Ander' -xbe throw was perfect;'' son. Witb this, Harris readily
said Braves manager Lum Har- agreed.
ris, later. "Gil Garrido was just Gary Neibauer went the first
seven inni..:s for the Braves,
late in covering."
before a
'"Ibe throw hit on the froot allowing ooly one run "••er
of
edge of the bag," said Ileds' blister on the middle .....,
third base coach Alex Gram- lis pitcmng band forced bim
frcm the game.
mas.
"I thought sure I was go~ ID
be out because I di&lt;bl 'I get a
good jump &lt;if second base,"
said Rose.
'!ben Rase saw wuuarns~
throw bounce of! the bag.
"I dm't even remember if I
slid cr not infll third," said Pete.
''If I did, I know I got bact on
my feel awfully quick."
Rose bumped Garrido one di- NEW YORK (UPI)-Nebrasrection and the ball bounced tbe ka is No. 1, but in the weeks to
qiJ)Osite way.
e&lt;me it may be a couple &lt;i prePete saw bow far the ball was season darkhnrses - Alabama
away from Braves pitcher Pat and Ohio State-sparring for
Jarvis,
"So," be said. ''I took off for
horne. I DeW it was going ID be
a fool race with Jarvis."
By Uniied PreS. Jnle&lt;Miioul
Bead Flnl Slide
AmericanLRose went into the plate with 111 innings)
000 100 000 01- 2 7 0
a bead first slide to give the Ook
K
C
000 1110 000 oo- 1 • 1
Reds a 2-1 victory in the opene~
Hunter, Fingers (11) and
&lt;i a two-pme series that ends Tenace; Fitzmonis, 8urg111eier
tonight wben Cineimali's Dm tIll and Kirkpatrick. WPHunter (20-J1l . LP-Fitzmorris
Gullett faces Roo Reed.
(6·~1. HR- Va!despino l2ndl .
" Tbe way Willialll" was
Washington at Cle..,land.
reaching I knew Jarvis throw
night.
postponed. rain.
was high," said Pete.
Tbe Braves calcber dropped llsl Gamel
the throrr but it bad no bearing Detroit
000 000 1101- 1 50
Batllmore
3112
012 lOx- 9 9 o
m the outcome because plate
Kilkenny, Seelbach (3), Deno&gt;hy (61. Gilbreth (6), Perranaski
(71 and Freehan. Hosley (6);
McNally (1 9-~1 and Elchebarren. LP-Kilkenny (4-5). HRsF. Robii1Silll (241111. B. Robinson
(16th), Stanley (5th) .

LOSE

ll Helen· Help Us l

big lift from Kingman and
some help by Allen and Tom
Haller, whose loose play helped
San Francisco to a pair of
unearned runs in the seventh
and almost sent manager
Walll!r
Alston
to
a
psychiatric ward.
Marichal was behind 3-1 in
the fifth when be sent two
fastballs at Singer's head
leading off ' the inning . Plate
umpire Shag Crawford warned
Juan and two outs · taler
Marichal, smarting because
Singer had bit WiUie Mays and
Chris Speier with pitches and
apparenUy had gotten away
with it, clipped Buckner.
According to · the rules,
Marichal was automatically
out. But Buckner wanted ID
makea fight of it and took off
after Juan with bst in hand.
Giants catcher Russ Gibson
restrained him but he, too, was
automatically out of the game.
But a big fight ensued in the
middle of the diamond with
players from both benches and
bullpens in the action.
While some fists flew and

MAJOH

CINCINNATI (UPI)- 11 was IDI(Iire NicS Ollosi bad already

FIGU'REI

r---------------------------1

All .that doesn't lake in the
fact Dave Kingman, who only
12 days ago bad his appendiJ:
removed, played first base for
San Francisco aDd had a tiple
and double; Witwie McCovey
pinch-hit (WISilCCeSSfully) a
week after taking eight stitches
in his left band; the Dodgers
erll!nded their latest winning
sli'eak to seven with their
seventh consecutive victory
over the Giants; Jim Brewer
gained his 20th save of the
year, and Bill Snger was
splashed in the face with a can
of beer and needed an escort to
the clubhouse when be was
removed in favor Of Brewer.
The Dodgers, bottesl team in
baseball at the moment, meet
theGiantsagaintonighlwithAI
Downing, the little lefthander
pieked off a garbage heap last
spring, pi Ieber for Los Angeles
and Gaylord Perry hurling for
the Giants.
·
Home runs by Richie Allen,
W"tllie Crawfon:l and Willie
Davis accounted for all the
Dodger scoring in Monday
night's batUe. Tbe Giants got a

the Sports
Desk

'.

·'

'

~
~

(7j

"Our

'68 CADillAC
OOUPE DeVIUf

Sears Catalog
Sales Merchant
For Our

------Grand=

KaT &amp; VanW

DotJIII. .

Chi. ..

1;: E"tt

A. .ncy. . .

�•

Rogers, .MeArt Star in First Concert ·

~ FOR

IIOMFXX&gt;JONG - Tbe New W"me Sngers of the Sugar Grove United
MelbodistClacllaeari.anraster, willpr se •I special musicfoc the MI. Hennm homecoming
lobe beldai1:30Sunc!ay. Tbe Rev. Bertie IJoosehnlder &lt;i the Avalon lllurcb will deliver the
aflemooa m age. Abastetdimter will bebeld atnooo. Tbe public is invited.

3- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Milldlepon.Pome,
0 ., Sept. tt, 1m
.
.

" Three on Broadway," the
first presentation scheltuled by
!he Tri.Colinly Com~unity
Concert Association to open ita
1971-72 concert \l&lt;!OSOO on Oct
16, stars Ronald Rogers and Jan
•
McArt.
ll is a program as scintillating as the best Broadway
shows, for it is a revue &lt;i the
greatest hits ever to "knock 'em
dead" on the Great While Way.
From Herbert Friml, Rom1JerB
and Cohan .111 Berlin, Rogers,
Bernstein and Jerry Herman - '
the evenirig is a veritable ftlasl l
Of the finest Broadway fare.
Ronald Rogers is no str.mger
to local audiences, as be bas
appeared in' the area as guest
soloist with the American W"md
Symphony. His very special
talents as a singer and aciDr in operatta, musical comedy
and on the concert stage - have
been acclaimed by press aDd
public alike across the cqunlry.
A native of Wisconsin, he bas
sung in Carnegie Hall and
toured the u. s. with Paul
Lavalle and The Band of
America, as well as in his own
]an McArt
RoiUlld Rogers
show, "A Cavalcade &lt;i Musical
Comedy." He bas also been
.
.
week, and afll!r Sept. 18, no
guest artist with many of her ,te.~hng pe'!orma~ce 1~ card only :No single admissions Concert Association is con- more members will be acducting its 25th annual camAmerica's leading symphony NBC s Cavallena Rusticana. are ever sold at the door.
The
Tri-County
Community
paign for new members Ibis cepted.
orchestras including tbe In complete contrast to her
Cleveland ' Orchestra the many operatic credits, Miss
Cincinnati Symphony
many McArl bas awo:ared on many
more. He bas also appeared in nationally televised shows as
no fewer than 2t starring roles guest artist. Her supper club act
in musical comedy productions has taken her around ttw: world
in scores of cities from BosiDn to sucb distinguished bmles as
to Sacramento. Among these the Hotel Pierre in New York,
are Fred Grabam-Pelrucbio in the famed St. Regts, the
•'Kiss Me Kale; " Billy Bigelow Cocoanut Grove .in Los Angeles,
in " Carousel ·" Haaj in the Blackstone m Chicago and
"Kismet;" Sky' Masterson in the Society and ~ Colony in
"Guys and Dolls;" and Captain Loodon, where she IS freque~Uy
von Trapp in "The Sound nf a guest on spectacular vanety
Music."
shows. Her frrst appearance in
In addition to his Carnegie the Hollywood Bowl saw a
Hall appearances, New York crowd nf 20,~ people, and
audiences have beard Mr. thereafter, S1dney Sokolsky
Rogers ' rich baritone voice at dec~ ."Jan McAr.t ~ a
Radio City Music Hall, at the brilliant hit m Glittervme.
Hotel Pierre Cotillion Room and When she appeared m the
at the famous Phoenix Tbealre. acclaimed revival of "Any thing .
Also a favorite with audiences Goes,:· Earl Wilson told the
in England he was featured in United States in his gyndicated
'
. born 1• "
Jack Hylton's
London revue coIumn: "A s tar IS
"Off the Record " and was ~ Jan McArl made Broadway
I
frequent perf~er on British history in 196t .b~. ta~ over
radio and television and in for Jams Paige m Here s Love
concerts with Ted Heath and his on a Wednesday afternoon orchestra. One of his only three days after she was
Parlophone recordings earned hired; For Ibis amazing f~l,
him a national citation as she was accorcted a standing
"Voice of the Year" from the ovation by both cast and
I
Gramophone Record Review. audi ence .
.
MissJanMcArt,whoiscalled On the summer stock circuit,
"one of the most beautiful and Miss McArt has starred in "The
talented women in the world" Unsinkable Molly Brown,"
by the London Star made her "Carousel," "My Fair Lady,"
symphony orchesira debut " The Pajama Game" and
under the balAin Of Arthur " Camelot," among many
Fiedler and was a leading others. She bas also toured the
soprano of the San Francisco country With Jack Jones m his
Opera. On NBC-TV, she starred show.
as Musetta in the celebrated Admission to Ibis opening
television production of "La concert and others on the Tri
Boheme " for which she was County series, as well as
nomina~ to receive an emmy. community coocerts throughout
she likewise won high priase for the area, will be by membership
. ..

SAN FRANCISCO (\IPI)-If
you want to see all there is
~ible 1D see in a baseball
game, and then some, lake in
the next game the Giants and
Dodgers play.
Monday night the two old
antagonists squared off at
Candlestick Park and when
their bsUe was over, 2 hours
and t2 minutes after it bad
started, the
b;ld won,
&gt;4, and stood poised today only
twogamesbehindSanFrancisco
in the red-hot National Iague
West race.
Winning the game was a big
thing, but there was enough
sideline play in Ibis struggle to
fill a book.
Four players-Juan Maricbal
~Jerry Jobnson &lt;i the
Giants and Bill Buckner and
Maury Wills of the Dodgerswere tossed out for various
sins, at least a couple Of d02en
fans from among the near
capacity crowd of 31,081 spent
the night in jail for fighting, on
the field and off, and at least a
dozen players were about as
mad as they could be.

Dodgers

~

All Funds at $149,821
Tbe total of all Middleport
Vlllage funds as of_Aug. 31 was
f149,112UI accmling 1D the
mmthlyrepcrtC!ert-Treasurer
Gene Grate submitted to
~d~eporl Council Monday
nigh

.

.

Receipts and disbursements
from eacb flmd m August and
the ~ as &lt;i Aug . . 31,
respectively, follow:
General, $t,02&amp;.29, $3,406.19,
$20,715.61; cemeleJy, $2t3.26.
$771:50, $223.119 overdra_wn;
parting meter, no recel{lts,
I&amp;U6, t57.t3 overdrawn; fire
equipment, $50, $m.79, $275.15;
swimming pool, $1,152 ..t5,
$976.32, $3,198.01; plannmg
commiuion, $300, $1&amp;t.st,
$1,31U2.

Slreet maintenance $172,0.1
S2,029.7ll, $7,7Z1.33; s~te ~
way, no receipts, no disbursements, $309.U; sanitary
sewer $3 857 98 $4 295 86
$19,t99.27; 'waie;, $6:121."21:
$1,765.6!, $21,296.611; water
meter deposit trusts, $2311,
$67.76, $5,m.at; sanitary sewer
escrow, no receipts, no
disbursements, $55,587.9t ;
water improvement,
no
receipts, no disbursements
$1,37UI;
general bond
retirement, $440.25, $26.43,
$13.137.66.
Receipts for the month
~taled $1&amp;,61J1,5t cootpared to
disbursements totaling
$20,190.2t.
IIAR1LEITNAMED

Mason AreJt

News, Notes

. -·

· Mrs. Lee Ricbardsoo

Ma...,

WASHINGTON (UPI)- PresidentNiion bas named Reed E.
Bartlett oc Cincinnati, manager
&lt;i field advertising for Procter
&amp; Gamble, to a two-year term
on the l'll6tal Service Advisory
Council.

is visiting hl!r daughter and
family, Mrs. Leroy Metcalf in
Columbus. Mrs. Richardson
will CBn! for hl!r grandaoo, Jeff,
Seiiliiel
while anotber grandson is
DEV9TEDTqTNE
:
boapilali'U'd Mrs. IUdiardsoo
I NTEREST OJ; •
"'-·to
'""'t
a--'.
•
JOIEIGS-MASON
AREA , .
_.,
·wa:a..
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL'
Ea«.Ed.
·
RecentguestsocMr. andMrs.
ROBERT HOEFLICH . '
Reuben Stewart, Mason, and _
Cily Edilor
Mrs. Mary A1miller, Hartford,
Published da ily excepl
Saturda y b y The Oh io Valle.,were Mrs. Moine Arnold, Mrs. Publish ing Company . Jll
Suun.,. Fitzgerald and Jason Courl Sl., Pomeroy. Ohio,
1
.e5769. Business Office Phone
of Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and 992.21S6. Editorial Phone 9112 .
_
:
Mrs. Johnny Aumiller and 21 57.
family of Sanduaty, Obio.
p;::,:~.c~~~.,""51 age paod at ·
Mrs. Rosa Fink, formerly of
Naliona t advertis ing
. . .
.
representat ive aott inelli .
Ma-,a VISiting Mrs, lllarles ' Gallagher, Inc., 12 Easl 12nd ·
BariDn Mrs. Rhoda Yeager and Sl .. New York City , New York .
.
•.
.
Sub$tr.pt.on rates : De other friends m tbe area.
livered by c a rrier where .
Mrs Fink -...:..1- ....:.a.. her 1 avaitable SO cents per week ·
•
l~ wlW
By Motor Route where carrie; ·
daughter, Mrs. Esther Bull at service nol avoilable o One
Mclean 1 Va. and lives part f month Sl.15 . By mail In Ohio
•
•
0
and W. Va .• One year SlA.OO.
thelimeWithanotherdaugbter, 1Six months S7 .2S. Three
Mrs • DorothyW"illatRicbmond I ' pr
monlhs
U .50. Subscription
ice includes Sunday Times .
Va.
Sentinel.

Tile DiiiJ

&gt;

Come for
Funeral
Numerous friends and
relatives came for the funeral
services of 22-year-old Sam
Hood who was killed in an
automobile accident on the
West Virginia Turnpike.
Here from out-of-town were
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Durst
and Mrs. Hilda Roettinger,
Cincinnati; Mrs. Imogene
Hanson, SIDckport, Miss Karen
McElhinny, Nelsonville; Mr.
and Mrs. William Turner and
Robert Priddy, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Turner of
Bucyrus; Mrs. C. M. Turner,
Freda and Chuck Graves, Jr.,
Mrs. Beulah Burge, William
Ochier, Kathy Morgan, Nancy
Harris and Mr. and Mrs. David
Casci, Columbus; Miss Sandy
Zirkle, Ohio Stale student, and
Dennis Carol, Detroit, Micb.;
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Allensworth and Mrs. Becky
Allensworth Clark, St. Albans,
W. Va.
Kent Stale University friends
&lt;i Sam here for the funeral were
Jamie Maullar, Thomas
Wright, Jack Young, and
Douglas Hershberger, Loring
Vaughan of Pomeroy, a student
at Bowling Green University,
andGaryMurphyofMarielta,a
student of Ohio Stall!, also attended
·
Pallbearers were Bill Swan,
M'k W · hi
d B
l e
ng , an
enny
Wright, cousins of the deceased,
George Sauer, John Blake and
Keith Morgan.
PARTMENTSHOOTING
YOUNGSTOWN (UPI )-Jobn
Franklin 21 Youngstown was
fa !all sho'1 d• ·
'
1
Y
unng an argwnen
at a northside aparbnent late
Monda
Y·
Police took into cusiDdy the
1m t
'd t and a gun,
apar en resJ. en
believed to have been used in
'"" shooting.

r-----------------------------------------1
I

Voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
·- INTO THE WD.D BLUE YONDER
NEW YORK- Tbe newspaper tales &lt;i the
pair m a BOAC jet wbo made love wlile crew
and pld! ~1!1'5 leered (the Lmdon papers
bewUinal it ''Fasten Your Olastily Belts") bad
ill match ma TWA plane - wbale crew told us
lhe same happened involving a pie wee! H'wood
star and a ('til then)slranger .... We asked what
Is sllnda'd procedure in handling such orgiastic
emergencies and the very s1raighlfaced reply:
"Just throw a blanket over them."
Two oldiine cafe cbaraclers are trying to
bring the Stock (]ub bad: from the dead : Ed
WynDe and Tony Butrico, who say they haw the
oby &lt;i Sherman Billingsley's widow, Haul ....
!!!Dingsley stopped spealring to Wynne wben he
left as the Stock's day manager to start the
Hlrw)'n Club; and Tony Bulrico was barred
from Billingsley's funeral by Sherman's
daughters .... Much-liked Peter Pesci. of the
trmcwn spot will host the town's sole new
glanw bangwl to be started in years: it'll be
called Tbe Dallas Cowbo)-s, on E. 49th St.,
ftnamo&lt;l (a millim or more) by 'I'eus' oilman
Oint Murcblsm Jr. ... Its gen'l mgr. will be
Fl'allkle Clrro, Italian.bom Slid Club busboy
cmlnlillflnalfling; lispqnrasaSIDrlnraiter.
Jil'II'D Ilnduy dubbed N.Y. ''FUn City" and
-~~ to n,.ncr the Yankees' ballpart with a
-~.lllltpurcbase plus millions to mdernize it
•••• But lhe Yadtee team is a straight h•siness
(owned by CBS) and hasn't provided the town
wltb Fill In years .... Now if Jlizr.ooel- wants to
J!llbltuul Fml City and llislei Ill warm over
lnle fi•MjPlla : pay somemeiD revive the
aid JIOuboo Dlc!Sl ; infacl, mlve all of 5aJI
Slll!ld Ill wild eafes, from Joe Helboct's jag
jlmlllolecia6Eddie's .... Bowaboutreopeo~i~
._ 1111 Ba Cab, Cotton am, Ccla!ir's ln!i,
J:iktie Wella, the HoUywood Restaurant,
IVA , PinunanniGrill; get Prohibition bact
md apen ali tbe old !lpe&amp;PP'ies; now tkJ aU

l
I

than SOOleWhat ...• Film direciDr Norman
Jewisoo bought Sean Connery's Loodm mansim
foc Sll,tm; Ncrm started in showbiz living in a
noninghouse .... You need a shillelagh to get
through the colleen-crowd cbeering Brian MeCollum, Irish folk singer at Desmond's.
Jobn Barrymore Jr.'s being divocced by his
Italian wife, Gaby; she'll nut wed singer Fred
Bongu.sto in Rome .... Metopera star Jerome
Hines ezplained why be sang ''The Impossible
Dream" so often at the 37th Sl Hideaway: be'll
star in the Dm Quiiole tole foc nine weeks at the
Paper Mill Playhouse in ''La Mancha" ....
' 'Promises, Pr""ises" remaim Jr"'Dising: two
touring lr~ hit the road this month in
Bwston and Scranton, Pa . .... 9natra's dating
Pamela Hayward coostanUy; she's Lelam
Hayward's widow and ex cl Randolph Cburcbill.
Gloria Swanson dined at the VIP restaurant
- m her own organic foods (herb, tea, natural
tread, goat's cheese etc.) .... Producer Ross
Bunter esccrted Nancy Sinatra Sr. to the Mitzi
Gaynor Vegas Riviera opening .... David Frost
and Diabann Carroll jetted to Hawaii frooJ his
Las Vegas engagement Where they didn't stay
at a hotel - IDok a house .... Trombone virtuoso
J. C. Higginbotham is out of Harlem Hospital
after surgery.
MarceDo Mastroianni and his signora made
"' but be'li make another ruct (' 'Malenpo") in
Paris with his interim love, catberl'ne Deneuve
.... Divcrced top dance team Tybee &amp; Brascia
reunited - but just for a dozen dance
engagements at the Cooconl .... Tybee's lig
nmancr DOW is Dm Vadis.
Tbe Ray Millands will be grandparents for
the first lime in March via daughter Vielma
(Mrs. Lowell ) Graham .... Duke Ellington's
Rainbow Grill date was so huge he'll be bact
there foc Clristma.HIIew Year's .... Mia Farrow
gels !Opel. &lt;i the gross of ' 'See No Evil" (doing
weU despill! SO«! reviews ) .... Papa Doc
_.. fan.
. lluvalier's No. 3 Man whO Red Haiti leliving
We IIDtlld 6lrlnc ''Galloping Gourmet" millions,anewspaper, holel,artgalleryetc.just
GI • =Ken-'sTVcoo+o!-lhattheoncecbic- split foc Spain moments ahead of the U. S.
..._ "-L.·- '
. I. . '
. ,.
I I X "' ....u I Wl'isllll" S h)'"'nllll l!llll'e O!sllms.
I -'

Rose Hero
In 2-1 Win

and

CALL 286-5678
STARTING SEPTEMBER 16th

60

just about the way you would
expect Pete Rose to win a game.
Pete does everylbing with a
flair. It's been that way e'IEf
since he jumped from the Sally
Iague to the majors bact in
1963 to beccme ibe National
Iague's rookie of the year.
Mmday night though, Rose
added a new wrinkle to his
spectacular.
"I've got to admit," said
Pete, "that I've never woo a
game tbat way befoce."
Tbe count was 3-2 m Tony
Perez witb one out in the hotlmn
&lt;i the 131b inning when Rose, 011
secood base, broke foc third.
As Perez went down swining
al the third strike, Earl Williams, the Atlanta Braves'
rookie catcber, fired a l1l'ow to
third base.

INSTANT RGURE
INSTANT SHAPE

EUROPEAN

BODY WRAP
NEVER BEFORE
IN lHIS AREA

4 TO 15 INCHES
IN JUST 1HOUR

By Helen Bottel

. .

"WHO AM I?" DOES ANYONE KNOW?
Dear Sue and Helen:
Maybe tbe two of you can giw me a new look at myself -sort
&lt;i from both sides fi the fence.
My problem is I've been a. bi8 put.oo all my life. I try to be
friends wi!h everyone, and itlooks ( ID others) that I'm Sl.ccessful,
rut instead, I'm getlinglooelierandfarlher away every day.
Last year I wanted ID be a long-bait, so I smoked grass, but
didn'llike il,andquilTb&lt;Be guysstillcmsidermeafriend.
Nex~ I went to the straight 'kids, ran for student council
Jresident and won. 'lbal's because people llink I'm "popular."
You see, I'm into sports and was foothall caplaiD last year.
I finally woke up to find I baw no true friends and am not as
great as I thougbt.I just go from me group to another, "bulllng"
it through like a con artist. Life baS always COOle too easy for me.
I gelwhatlwantbulitisn'tbooest, and someday I'll be found out.
For the first lime I'm realizing whalaphony Iamandl'msickfi
myself.
I'd like ID start over again, but bow can you when you've
acted so long youdm'tknowif there is a real person under all thai
''scenery"? - DON
Dear Don:
Welcome ID the group! Yw aren'lasunusualasyw think.
It's bard not to try making a different impression on diffelent
kinds !X people because mostlnnnansarepartclunneleon too: We
cbange the " coloc" of wr personalities ID suit the penms we're
with at !he lime. So you're ·~ongbair" wilb the longhairs, and
"straight" with the straights because yon wanted ·w be liked and wbo doesn't?
How ID start over? Figure out where you really stand and
don' t be afraid to speak ywr mind. &amp;Ire, you'll lose a few
acquaintances, but you'll gain truefrieods-kids who bave their
beads alraight (both t~m~bair and not) - and they'll help you
away froo~ being a politician. -SUE
HEI.EN SAYS:
Dearllm :
Perhaps you're pulling JO!nelf down IDo I!IIICb: Wben tbings
have always COOle to easily, we lend to feel guilty.
As Sue says, "We're all pert cbamelem." But the wlae ones
recognize this weakness early. Now that yoo've asked, "Wbo am
I?" I think you 'II soon IIIICOVI!l" the basic Don - the boy wbo'd
rather stand up foc what be believes·than be "everybody's pal,"
rut nobody's friend.
.
Tbe longhairs made ynu probe JIICI'e deeply than usual, right?
So you swung over to the safa slralgbls, and eome of111EIR
standan:B cMI't jibe either. Pllosibty ynu !bought thai maldng
coundlpresidentwouldputynu rightwitb bolllgroups, rut it only
cmfused you more, fer a leader isjlflen tmelftt ~all .... People
don't get clCIIe because they're either 8CII'ed oc envious. He IIIUII
wock doubly bard ID show he's lnrman : truly interested in otbel'!
and not just in pushing limoelf out front.
'
I drubI you 'II ._ve mucb trouble finding ''the real perion
behind aU that scenery." You've hit the honest button early.
CoogratulaliOI!S! - HELEN ,

)

0
G

WITHOUT
EXERCISE I
WITHOUT

tr"\ WITHOUT

\:;2 DRUGSI

(j) WITHouT
Relax, Nap, Read ABook .

· ..-While Excess Inches ·
!Disappear Durin11te

..SPA MAGIC

•

WatCh Your

' Till 111-MIIUTE IIIIIQ E•

$$Grow

,-: ':i ~~'!Jii~~JJVW:Rii

•• you add to your yvings
HCII -'&lt; ot tho Milt• eo.
lronch of tho Alhons Co.
S.vlngs ond Loin.

RESULTS
&amp;UARAIIT££0 l
101 .UST LDSl4llCIIlS

tiUIIiliSI .

BEFORE THIS DAY ODS
BE IICHES SHAPELH

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE

BODY WIA.P .

•tiiiTIUUliTISfiEB

Save by the loth, earn
from the 1st.

WE HONOR lASTER CHARGE
.
WATCH THIS IEWSPAPER FOR TELEPHOIE LISTING AID TillES TO ~

• SUANA BATH

•SUN ROOM
.

Meigs Co. Bnlndl

• GROUP EX£RCISES

I

CEITU.RY HEALTH CEITER

. n• 'I II PIIZI

Momber Federal Home Loon

MI. . IT.

Bank.
Monlber Federal Savings &amp;
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'

•

accountS Insured up 1G

ao.OIID.OO.
'

wnpire."
Afler Crawford IDld Johnson
to take off for his choke
geslure, Jerry charged the
wnpire but was restrained by
half a dozen of his ll!ammates.
" I'd have broken him in
half,'" said Crawford lall!r.
Wills was tossed out for
arguing over a call at first by
Stan Landes. With Tito Fuentes
on second and Jim Howarth on
first and two out, Bobby Bonds
struck out on a low pitch that
got away from Haller for a
passed ball. When Haller threw
wild to first, Fuentes scored.
Wills charged that Bonds, in
running to first, inll!rfered with
first baseman Wes Parker.
Landes got off the funniest
line of a not too funny evening.

"He (Wills ) didn't have good
view of the game," said the
umpire "so I gave him a
chance to watch the end of it
on television."
Singer was still working in
lhe seventh when the Giants cut
the Dodger lead to ~ne with
· three runs and bad the tieing
run on third and the lead run
on secood. Brewer came on to
get AI Gallaher and then
slopped the Giants the rest of
lhe way withoul a hit.
While all the fighting was
going on in the fifth, Brewer
was the only man tell in the
Dodger bullpen.
" I'm too much of a coward
for lbal kind of sluff," he said.
Smarl man that Brewer. A
pretty good pitcher, too.
1

By Chet Tannehill

FootbaU is back : our schoolboys bave their second round
Friday night, colleges tauncbed their 103rd season, and the pros
begin earning their bread this weekend. Hopefully, lbere will be '
grist enough for a regular Sports Desk in the weeks to cOllie.
Col. Lee Mole, who persists in believing that the QUtcomes of
football games should be predicted in advance (discreeUy tipping
off lhe local mafia no doubt as to how ID lay their betting line) did
Jrelty well in his opening round. He blew only three of 20, couilling
a lie as a miss (the Kyger Creek - Wahama six.Qxer). Tbe Mole
was in hot water for awhile . He picked the Blue Devils in a
squeaker (22-12) over South Point whicb inspired cbarges by fans
be was laeking not only in hometown loyaity but also in love fi
Uncle Sam and of motherhood.
He was vindicated when after a few minutes at South Point
the 'Devils were down (j.(), then 12-ll, winning only after a determined·struggle; that's right, in a squeaker, 211-20.
And what &lt;i the Marauders ? The Eagles? The Tornadoes?
Today, the Marauders :
coach Cbarley Chancey, not kidding a bit, said after the tract
meet in Marauder Stadium over Reemelin (46-lt ): "I'd rather
they'd been stronger." Reemelin, that is.
Reemelin Coach Karl Justus obviwsly has several naturally
inslalled handicaps at Lancaster (BIS). His recruiting is nil (or it
better he ), be bas few if any long enough tenners to have any
NEW YORK (UPI)-Ken But !he cut only seemed ID reluming "lettermen," and even his traveling squad is curtailed
Bucbanan's left eyelid is slit- infuriate the champion. To the in numbers (19 Friday night ) for reasons that surely are perfectly
obvious.
Here and there Justus bad fine talent in his squad. But fana
fa looks like
thing fr
!rand of the ropes With a could see plainly what "organization, training and cohesion"
Pice , bl somode B the~ ~rrage of puncbes in the ltth means to foo1bsll success. Justus just didn't have it. Tbe
Casso s ue pen . u
s
.
.
not CWJplaining.
round. While Referee Junmy Marauders did.
The difference was 26 points, a gap that perhaps could haw
Tbe26-year:-otdla~basreJll;'id Debimsevlinlfwbacalcbk~'toLagunath hoisf:edth
been 96 had Mr. Chancey cbosen to play his experienced hands the
a debt, and With typical Scottish
m
e ng WI
guile, came up f]OO,tm richer !he help of the top strand and whole game. As it was , his No. I reserves took over near midway
and still clinging to his World right bsck into the barrage.
in the second quarter, and younger boys at the tail of the roster
Lightweight TiUe by taking a "Ifeelmyagg~onwonit," worked the enlire second half.
unanimous lkound decision Bucbanan ezplained. "After the
To top it off, Tiny Williams, the Marauders' quality fullbact
over Jsmael Laguna Mmday ninth round, I knew I had more and linebacker, was cav&lt;rting around the sidelines in the male
night in Madison Square energy than he did and I went verslm of hotpants helping keep dry footballs in play. Tiny (175
Garden.
more on the attack. In the Jttb, I lbs. tiny ) has a knee tllal is mending . II is OOped he can get in
When Laguna lost the tiUe to thought I would stop him. It some line backing lime against Belpre this Friday and be in shape
Bucbanan last year the Pana- seemed to me the referee did
for full go the following week in the SEOAL opener at Wellston.
.
. '
.
.
maman thought 11 was only a start countmg hliD out m the
Some fans wore frowns after the game at the frequency
loan. For the past year the 211- ropes, but be recovered and got
Reemelin defenders sprang through to stop Marauder olfensiw
year-old Laguna has' railed away"
thrusts. 'lbat didn't concern me, because a play or so later Mr.
.
.
Ad · ·11·
tb
11·
agamst what he COilSldered the
m1 ~ng
e . swe mg Chancey sent sub fullbsek Keith Vanlnwagen, &lt;r tailbact Mark
injustice of the decision and around ha left eye mlerfered
demanded a rematch so be with his vision, Buchanan ad- Williams through the exact place a stunting defender should be
could reclaim the tiUe.
ded, " But I wasn't worried for 10 to 15 yards.
The defensive smarties tried by Reemelin recalled a remark
Obviously, he hadn't heard about the fight being stopped.
about Scottish tenacity when it Americanrefereesareveryfair by me-lime Logan Coacb Mel Adams, to whit, that if be bad his
COillestorepaym
· g ,1oans".
andsowastheringsldedoctor." druthers he'd run his offense against a defense that knew what it
. His left eye blinded and his It was Bucbanan's 41st vic- was doing, lhalwas playing where it was supposed to play, rather
body covered with his own tory in t2 bouts, and Laguna, than against me that bopscotched around between the sidelines in
ucbanandefla d Lag
kin to · · Ji
Carter
blood, B
te
u- see g )Dm unmy
as quest of a spectacular tackle .
More tomorrow.
na like a )XIIlCtured bagpipe the only men to hold the liUe
with a withering attack in the three limes, bad his record, to
last three rounds to retain the 64-!1-1. Buchanan weighed 133~

Buchanan Retains

Lightweight Title

··

.~

By United ~sslnternational
Amerocan League
East
~ ~i ~~~ GB
Baltimore
82 65 .5SB 10
Detroit
76 72 .514 16'12
Boston
73 73 .500 18'12
New York
Washington ~ ~ :: ~,
12
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pel. GB
Ookland
93 53 .637 .. .
Kansas City 78 68 .534 15
Chicago
69 77 .473 24
California
69 79 .466 25
M!nnesota
67 78 .462 25'1&gt;
Mt!waukee
63 83 .432 30
Monday's Results
Baltimore 9 Detroit 1 (1st)
Detroit10 Ba!timore5 t2ndl
New York 4 Boston 0
Wash at Cleveland tppd, rain)
Ook!and 2 Kan City 1 111 innsl
California 3 Minnesota 2 (lsi)
Minnesota 1 Callfornoa 0 (2nd I
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oakland &lt;Odom 10-101 at
Kansas City tSplittortf 8-7) ,
night.
Chicago t Bradley 13-13) at
Milwaukee (Lockwood 9-13),
night.
Washington (Gogolewski 4-4
and Broberg 5-7) at Cleveland
!Colbert 5-4 and Dunning 8-131.
2, twini~ht.
Detrott ( Lo!ich 23·111 at
Baltimore !Palmer \'·71 . night.
New York tS10ttlemyre 13·111
at Boston (~t 2·2) , night.
t01Jy games scheduled)
.
Wednesday's Games
California at Kansas City night
Minnesota at Milwaukee night
Ookland at Chicago twinight
Washington at Detroit night
Boston at Cleveland night
New York at Baltimore night

..• •:

Na~onal
League
East

rtt~~~h
New York
Chicago
M"f'lreal .
Philadelphia

--

W. L. Pet. GB

~ ~ :~

76 69 .52~
74 n .51J7
6J· 81 .4311
w:t 87 .«18

6,h

ll'h

14
24

2'1'h

w. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 83 64 .S6S ...
los Angeles 81 66 .551 2
Atlanta
74 74 .500 9'h
Houston
73 74 .497 10
Cincin.nati
72 77 .ollll 12
San D1ego
54 93 .367 2'1 ·
Monday's Results
Pittsburgh 5 Chicago 1
N.Y. 4 Mntl 2 Jist, 5 inns, rain)
Mntl at N.Y. (2nd, ppd, rain)
Cincinnati 2 Atlanta I I 13 innsl
Houston 3 San Diego 2
Phila 6 St. Louis 5 110 innsl
los Angeles S San Francisco 4
Today's Probable Pitchers
Montreal tTrohmayer 7-S and
Stoneman 14· 1~1 at New York
tMcAndrewl -5andRyan9.121.
Pittsburgh (Johnson9·9 or
Moose 9·71 at Chicago (Jenkins
21 -111.
Philadelphia !Wise 14-t31 at
St. Louis !Zachary 3-91. night.
Atlanta (Reed 12-12) at
Cincinnati !Gullett 15-51. night.
San Diego !Acosta J . l) at
Houston t Blasingame 9-10),
night.
Los Angeles !Downing 18-81
at San Francisco (Perry 14-11),
night.
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at New York 2 twinight
Montreal at Philadelphia night
St. Louis at Pittsburgh night
Atlanta at Housh•• night
San Diego at Los Angeles night
Cincinnati at San Fran night

Lam ka llBmed

compared to 135 for lbe
1\.T
UP''~'
,,!
challenger.
.
~ S
But With the fight m the past,
the best part comes today when
Bucbanan picks up a cbeck for
$100,tm, surpassing the previous record of $87,500 for a
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ohio &lt;llarlie Davis &lt;i Colorado l!1d
lightweight tiUe defense set by
Carlos Ortiz for a victory over Slate's Don Iamks, shifted to quarterback Larry llulaell Ill
Laguna back in 1968.
quarterback after playing with Wake Fer-est.
.the defensive squad the past two
season, was named Monday a
member of the United Press 2 SKATERS CHOSEN
TROY, Mich. (UPI)-Ronald
International ''Backfield of the
and
Gail Rovovistty of Troy,
Week."
Lamka, a native &lt;i aeveland, the defending world ~i01111
Early Bird league
scored four touclxlowns and in the mixed pairs, were named
Week of Sept. 1
Standings
gained 100 yards rushing Monday to the United States
Team
Wl
Saturday in leading the Buck- ll!am competing in the Wocld
Team No.3
8 0
eyes to a 52-21 romp over Big RoUer skating Champiousbl(•.
TeamNo. 6
6 2
6 2
Oct. 6-9, in Barcelona, Spain.
Ten foe Iowa.
United Press International's by rolling up 329 points, TeamNo. 2
Meigs Mobile Homes
2 6
u.s. George wemer of
When
Ohio
Slate
lost
starting
including 26 first-place voles in Larry's Ashland
National Crown.
2 6
0 8 CLEVELAND (UPI) -l1eve- quarterback Rex Kern and Albertson, N.Y., said tbe
Tbe Cornbuskers r""ffirmed ouuldistancing idle Notre Dame TeamNo.4
land Browns CJl!'Ch Nick Skor- backup Ron Maclejowski brother and sister combination
First high Team Game
their pre.oeason top ranking which bad 309. The Fighting
Meigs Mobile Homes 752 ; ich said Monday his team was through graduatimlasl year, it wiD compete against an interfrom UPI's Board of Coaches Irish collected the remaining second High Team Game, Team
eight firsli)tace votes as 3t &lt;i No. 6 751J ; third High Team ready for the regular season appeared coacb Woody Hayes national field which will inchtde
and he was "not concerned at would have trouble filling the skall!rs from West Germany,
the 35 coaches participated in Game, Team No. 2, 748.
First High, Team Series - all" with the club's 1-5 exhibi- signal-ailllng slot.
Spain, canada, England and
the balloting.
Team No. 6 2157 ; second High lion record.
Italy .
But
Woody
knew
that
Lamka
California 000 000 ooo- 0 , 9 0 Texas, last year's national Team Series, Team No. 2 2128;
"We wanted to win more, of had been an outstanding quarKaat (12-12l and Roof ; champion, was third with 20t third High Team Series, Meigs
Mobile
Homes
2126.
course,
abd really should have lerbact at aeveland South
Murphy 16-151 and Kusnyer. HR voles, but right behind the
First High Ind. Game - Jean been 3-3,'' the Browns' new High, and gave I.amka the
- Braun 15th).
Longhorns with 201 was Ohio Warner 192; second High Ind.
ABA CHOOSES BAILEY
coach
said.
"I'D
take
the
recbance
when
be
asked
foc
it.
Game
Maxine
Dugan
181;
NEW YORK (UPI)-Jobn
New York 100 101 1oo- 4 12 o State which was rated only lOth
third
High
Ind.
Game
Brenda
for
the
losses
to
"I
think
I
can
do
the
job,"
sponsibility
Bailey, a 6-J guard from
Boston
000 ooo ooo- o 3 1 in the pre sea SOli selections.
176.
Dallas
and
Chicago,
but
we
Lamka
said
at
the
time.
"If
I
Bahnsen l1J.101 and Munson;
Mi b.
·th I"'
fiifth Cumingham
Wagner College, was added
First High Ind. Series - Mary
BreH 171 , Tatum 18) and Fisk
C tgan, WI
"'• was
wanted to see certain people didn'llhink I could handle it, I Monday to the list Of eli3ibles
Voss
488;
second
High
Ind.
LP- Siehert (16-101 .
while Alabama vaulted into the
- Jean Warner 465; third play and we did.
wouldn' t have asked coach for Tuesday's American Jlas.
sixth spot with ICI!I and Series
High
Ind.
Series
Maxine
"We
wanted
to
be
in
a
posiHayes for tbe opportunity.
Chicago 020 003 IOif- 6 7 3 Tennessee was seventh with 77. Dugan .!56.
ketbsll Association suppleme..Milwakee 200 000 lOif- 3 6 0
lion to put fllgether out best Joining the 5-foot-11, 190- Lary draft of hardship cases.
Johnson, Kealey 171 and The remaining three top 10
team and I think we have.
pound senior on UPI's out.. AI the ssme lime, the ABA
Herrmam ; Slaton, Krausse (7) , spots were filled by Colorado
Week ol Sept. 8
"The men worked very hard standing backfield unit this dropped the names of Joby
Bell 181 and Porter. WP- (75)
d Arkansas (62)
·
Standings
Johnson (10.101 . LP-Staton (9an
• a pall"
W l and are as well prepared phys- week were running back Pete Wright of Indiana and Curlla
7) . HRs-Reichardl, 2, 1!5th &amp; &lt;i winners over the weekend, Team
Team
No.6
12
~ ically as they've ever been," Wood &lt;i West VIrginia, tailbact Pritchett Of St. Augustine's.
16th), Ml!rales (2nd) .
and Auburn ( 56 ) whicb was Team No. 3
12 ~ he said. "They're pretty well
idle.
Team No.2
10 6
~tiona! League
.
6 10 prepared mentally, IDo."
(lot, 5 innings, rain)
Five ccaches from eacb &lt;i Meigs Mobile Homes
Five players were hurt in CARL DEHOSPITAIJZED
Larry's Ashland
~ 12
Montreal
001 01- 2 6 o the seven geographical areas &lt;i Team
No. ~
~ 12 Oeveland's final pre -season
BOSTON (UPI)-Siugger Carl
New York
300 01- ~ 7 1 ·the nation comprise the UPI
First High Team Game - game last Friday night against Yastrzemski of the Boston Red ·
Moo !001 (10.15) and Bateman; ratings board. Each w--L they Team No. 2 1104; second High
Sadecki
(7-6) and Grote. HR"""
Sox was released from HahnneUowl Gamel
Team Game - Team No. 6 801 ; St. Louis Cardinals.
vole on the top 10 teams and third
Detroit
303 020 020-10 16 0 Jorgens t~th) .
High .Team Game " Fortunall!ly the injury situa· mann Hospital Mo.nday after
points are awarded on a IQ.N. Larry's Ashland 776.
Baltimore 1101 000 013- 5 10 I
Montreal at New York, 2nd, 7~2-l basis for votes from
Niekro, Sdlerman (II and
First High Team Series - lion looks much brighter now," les~ .for appendiCitis proved
Freehan ; Dobson. Jackson (3), ppd, rain.
Team No. 6 2283; second High Skorich said. "Joe Jones (de- negative.
first to 10.
Dukes (5), Boswell (S) and
Team Series - Team No. 2 fensive end) seems to be the Yastrzemski was hospitalized
Hendridls. Etchebarren 161. San Diego 101 tDI ooo- 2 9 2 NEW YORK 1UPI)-Tbe 2271 ; third High Team Series only possible question mark be- Sunda~ afll!r. c~ptaini~g of
WP-Scherman (1tHI). LP- Houston · 000 000 0'11- 3 3 1
No. 3 2227 .
Kirby IJJ.13) and Kendall ; Uni led Press Intemati·ooa1 top Team
Dobson &lt;(17.8). HRs-G. Brown
First High Ind. Game - cause of his knee, but he can't abdominal pams m Detrmt.
Forsch. Ray (9) and Edwards. 20 major college football teams Charlotte Willford, Neacil
(loth ), F. Robinson (25th) .
be ruled out."
WP-Ray (10.~) .
.
witb first place voles and w:on- Carsey 187; second High Ind.
This Week's Speci•l
Running back Leroy Kelly,
(lsi Gamel
m
·
·
1
1 t ---'· ·
theses
Game - Maxine Dugan !80;
Minnesota 000 101 ooo- 2 7 I
lnntngs
·
OS '""'""" m paren
·
third High Ind. Game - Mary who led the NFL in punt re( Flnt Week·) ·
Voss 175.
Calilorni&lt;l 10'1 ooo oox- J 8 1 Atlanli!
turns in 1965, is to be used in
000 100 tDI 000 D-1 7 1
.
Hamm. Luebber (5), Haydel Cincinnati
.. .Team
Poillls
Firsl High Ind. Series- Ma1, that position again Ibis season,
171 and Millerwald ; May, Allen
010 tm 000 000 1-2 8 1 I. Nebraska (26) (1.0) . 329 ~~"' 51J9.; N~ Ca~~~ ~'h; Skorich said. He also said the
11e111 t:B
and Stephenson. Teo bug
Neibauer, Nash 18), Jarvis 2 Notre Dame (II) (0.0) 3119, third H"'h Ind. Series- ··•·xine recent acquisition of Frank
. 16 . WP-May (10.11) . lP(13) and Williams; Nolan,
·
·~
""'
Hamm (2-3). HR- KII!ebrew Merritt
-wrecked!"
llll.
Carroll
Ill),
3.
Texas
( 0-0)
20t
Dugan~.
USED CARS
Pitts wiD help the team in punt
(24111) .
Gibbon (13) and Bench. WPt . Ohio Stale (1.0)
201
•
and kick off returns.
Awards In ,auto Injuries
Gibbon (5-6) . LP-Jarvis (5-13). 5 Michigan (1.0)
1M
hne oreaHy In·
deeth•
opens
regular
play
aeveland
HR-Will!ams (32ndl.
ICI!I
6: Alabama (1.0)
creeMCI
end
now h q · •ttr
at home Sunday against the
1. Tennessee (0.0)
77 GONZALEZ HONORED
run
to
S511.000
or --. Thl
Houston Oilel'll.
old Sl0,0410 oulo liability
8. Colorado (1.0)
75 . NEW YORK (UPI)- Pancho
W~ Are Coming
lnsuronce Is lnadaq..-te
With Air Conditioning
9. Arkansas (1.0)
62 Gonzalez, C.year old former
todly, •paclelly n • 10. Auburn (0-0)
56 U.S. aDd W"liDbledon champion, 2 ENGLISH PLAYERS
!18b1Hiy ._.... caoll ...,.
To Town
II. Stanfonl (1.0)
50 was honored Monday for his
NEW YORK (UP!)- Tony
• few dollors - - .
12. Oklah0018 (0.0)
44 work with young players and Jacklin, winner of the 1969
13. Geocgia ( 1.0)
37 underi)rivileged children.
Britjsh Open and the 1970 U.S.
14. WashingiDn ( 1.0)
25 Gonzalez was given a $1,000 Open and feUow Ryder Cupper
15. Arizona St. (0.0 )
24 check by the American Express Pell!r Ooslerbuis will represent "You'll like Our Quality
16. Penn State (0.0) ,
16 Card Division ' 1D present to a England in the 19th World Cup, Way of Doing BusiMSs."
17: Southern Calt&amp;-1)
15 young player Of his choice to . Il-14, in Palm Beach Gardens,
GMAC FINANCING
W•tch
2
la. Loolsi!na St P·l)
9 further his education . . Jim Fla., it was annow\ced Mot'lda~
'TI~::'
19. Syt!ICuse 1~1
7 ThJiilpSDII, a c!onipatly official, by Inll!tnational Golf Associa·
r·11S P. s.t.
20. HUUiloo t 1.0)
4 ma•!t· •he praentalion.
tl&lt;m l'resldtnl Jams A. Unen. 1.---~-----· l••ii

Iitle in convincing fashion.

Buchanan's left eye was
clamped sbul alter the third
round, and even the ringside
pbysician, Dr. Edwin Campbell,
admitted that a blood-6)lurting
cut over the eye in the l21h
round would have caused the
bout to be stopped ''if the Iitle
wasn't at slake."

Player Of The Week

Local Bowling Skorich

Says Team

Is Ready

Line.srores

DIETl. I

., .

little after the game.
'"!bat's the toughest lime to
steal," .said Pete. ''On that play,
you're outnine out fi 10 limes."
Harris offa ed a cocreclim.
"I would say the guy is out 99
of 100 limes," said the Braves
manager.
Rase set the stage for his mad
dash bcme by opening the inningwithasingletorightforhis
oolybilinsiiiripstotheplate.
b
A sacrifice Y Woody Woodward moved Pete to second.
!'era then s'---' to the ..J.te
...,.,....
tafter lee May WliS isBued an
intentional pass.
'"'bal was a game in whlch
f!'letyODe pt.Idled well," said

"Their guy (Singer) hits two
of our guys and nothing
happens," said F()l[. "My man
(Marichal) hits one of their
guys and he's out right now.
That's hard to undersiand."
. Singer said the pitch that hit
Mays simply got away from his
and insisted that he never hit
Speier.
The baD was barely inside on
Speier," said Singer, "and it bit
his bat. He made a big thing of
it and I think he swayed the

OSU Moves To Fourth In
UPI Ratings; Nebraska 1st

~

' ' . '"'- .7

!

signaled Pete safe.
'lbougbts &lt;i being thrown out
at third made Rose slmdder a

vat:ious players shoved eacb
other around, Johnson made a
choke gesture at Crawford and
Shag told him to take a shower.
"I didn'Ldo anything anyone
else was domg," said Jobnson
in his own way, meaning he
didn 'I think he should have
been thrown out, while Buckner
said he bad no intention of
bitting Maricbal with his bsl
and that be was holding it in
self defense.
Manager Charlie Fox of the
Giants said that the umpire
seemed to be leaning in one
direction.

wi~J;~, ,l)~~j,,),J,l~bi::'e!:!::ryn:d~~~ ~~~~~:;c:s~~~~~

·· ·

Reds manag..- Sparky Ander' -xbe throw was perfect;'' son. Witb this, Harris readily
said Braves manager Lum Har- agreed.
ris, later. "Gil Garrido was just Gary Neibauer went the first
seven inni..:s for the Braves,
late in covering."
before a
'"Ibe throw hit on the froot allowing ooly one run "••er
of
edge of the bag," said Ileds' blister on the middle .....,
third base coach Alex Gram- lis pitcmng band forced bim
frcm the game.
mas.
"I thought sure I was go~ ID
be out because I di&lt;bl 'I get a
good jump &lt;if second base,"
said Rose.
'!ben Rase saw wuuarns~
throw bounce of! the bag.
"I dm't even remember if I
slid cr not infll third," said Pete.
''If I did, I know I got bact on
my feel awfully quick."
Rose bumped Garrido one di- NEW YORK (UPI)-Nebrasrection and the ball bounced tbe ka is No. 1, but in the weeks to
qiJ)Osite way.
e&lt;me it may be a couple &lt;i prePete saw bow far the ball was season darkhnrses - Alabama
away from Braves pitcher Pat and Ohio State-sparring for
Jarvis,
"So," be said. ''I took off for
horne. I DeW it was going ID be
a fool race with Jarvis."
By Uniied PreS. Jnle&lt;Miioul
Bead Flnl Slide
AmericanLRose went into the plate with 111 innings)
000 100 000 01- 2 7 0
a bead first slide to give the Ook
K
C
000 1110 000 oo- 1 • 1
Reds a 2-1 victory in the opene~
Hunter, Fingers (11) and
&lt;i a two-pme series that ends Tenace; Fitzmonis, 8urg111eier
tonight wben Cineimali's Dm tIll and Kirkpatrick. WPHunter (20-J1l . LP-Fitzmorris
Gullett faces Roo Reed.
(6·~1. HR- Va!despino l2ndl .
" Tbe way Willialll" was
Washington at Cle..,land.
reaching I knew Jarvis throw
night.
postponed. rain.
was high," said Pete.
Tbe Braves calcber dropped llsl Gamel
the throrr but it bad no bearing Detroit
000 000 1101- 1 50
Batllmore
3112
012 lOx- 9 9 o
m the outcome because plate
Kilkenny, Seelbach (3), Deno&gt;hy (61. Gilbreth (6), Perranaski
(71 and Freehan. Hosley (6);
McNally (1 9-~1 and Elchebarren. LP-Kilkenny (4-5). HRsF. Robii1Silll (241111. B. Robinson
(16th), Stanley (5th) .

LOSE

ll Helen· Help Us l

big lift from Kingman and
some help by Allen and Tom
Haller, whose loose play helped
San Francisco to a pair of
unearned runs in the seventh
and almost sent manager
Walll!r
Alston
to
a
psychiatric ward.
Marichal was behind 3-1 in
the fifth when be sent two
fastballs at Singer's head
leading off ' the inning . Plate
umpire Shag Crawford warned
Juan and two outs · taler
Marichal, smarting because
Singer had bit WiUie Mays and
Chris Speier with pitches and
apparenUy had gotten away
with it, clipped Buckner.
According to · the rules,
Marichal was automatically
out. But Buckner wanted ID
makea fight of it and took off
after Juan with bst in hand.
Giants catcher Russ Gibson
restrained him but he, too, was
automatically out of the game.
But a big fight ensued in the
middle of the diamond with
players from both benches and
bullpens in the action.
While some fists flew and

MAJOH

CINCINNATI (UPI)- 11 was IDI(Iire NicS Ollosi bad already

FIGU'REI

r---------------------------1

All .that doesn't lake in the
fact Dave Kingman, who only
12 days ago bad his appendiJ:
removed, played first base for
San Francisco aDd had a tiple
and double; Witwie McCovey
pinch-hit (WISilCCeSSfully) a
week after taking eight stitches
in his left band; the Dodgers
erll!nded their latest winning
sli'eak to seven with their
seventh consecutive victory
over the Giants; Jim Brewer
gained his 20th save of the
year, and Bill Snger was
splashed in the face with a can
of beer and needed an escort to
the clubhouse when be was
removed in favor Of Brewer.
The Dodgers, bottesl team in
baseball at the moment, meet
theGiantsagaintonighlwithAI
Downing, the little lefthander
pieked off a garbage heap last
spring, pi Ieber for Los Angeles
and Gaylord Perry hurling for
the Giants.
·
Home runs by Richie Allen,
W"tllie Crawfon:l and Willie
Davis accounted for all the
Dodger scoring in Monday
night's batUe. Tbe Giants got a

the Sports
Desk

'.

·'

'

~
~

(7j

"Our

'68 CADillAC
OOUPE DeVIUf

Sears Catalog
Sales Merchant
For Our

------Grand=

KaT &amp; VanW

DotJIII. .

Chi. ..

1;: E"tt

A. .ncy. . .

�.

'

1

t-1'-DidlJSentinel,lli+leii•\.Pwiaot,O.,Sept. l4,1m

New Reading Project Explained
Pomeroy Elementary School, Association meeting.
Robert Morris, principal, said Morris said that the program,
in speaking to parents Monday which now included only the
night at the Parents-Teacheni fourth, fifth and sixth grades,
may be extended to include the
second and third next year.'
CurrenUy the three grades are
being taught rn
· siX· levels ·or
reading. Standardized testing
was utilized to determine what
level was righlfor each child.
In three months, the testing
By Charlene Hoeflich
will be repeated and a reevaluation of each child's
Ben LeMaster, wbo became a soldier in the Revolutionary
progress will be made available
War at 1be age of 16, ~ as General Washington's personal to parents. During this period,
m1 ~ger, marlled the beginning of a family insliiJed with a Morris said, no grade will be
JIIS!Iioo fer patriotism.
given in reading. Morris also
Amember of that family. Anna Laura Huddleston Boyd, oow proposed - perhaps for next
of Ca"!!!pp)is, Mich. came last week fer~ Ctll'eiiiOnies of ye;~r - similar "level work"
tbe grave ol her mother, Mri.' W. G. Huddleston at the Lone Oak rather than "grade work" in
Cemetery in PW!t Pleasant. Mrs. Huddlestoo, as well as Mrs. math.
Boyd, formerly resided In Middleport; both once were members
The principal noted adof tbe Relml Jonalban Meip Olapter of the Daughters of the vantages of new school class
American Revolution. It was the local chapter of the D.A.R. that schedules in which_ school in
bad the rites at the cemetery.
Pomeroy begins at 8:30 a.m.
Mn. Boyd, a 49-¥ear member of the D.A.R., is a past regent and concludes at 2:ts p.m. with
of the chapter at O'own Point, rm. Her son Is a member of the all bus students departing at
Sons of the American Revalution, ber daughter is a D.A.R. thattime.Laslyearatleastone
!De!!lber,and tbe clildren of both are all members of the Children group did not leave on buses
until 4:20 p.m. New 45-minute
of the American Revolutim.
Mn. Boyd's sister, the late Jennie Huddlestm Gallroner, noon hours are working oot well
was also active in tile D.A.R. and ber granddaughter, Mrs. Joan too, be said, because the shorter
Galbrmer Bri'*wm, is the inccming bead of the Florida period eliminates some
playground problems.
OIM'en of the American Revdulim.
Wlile in tlis area, Mn. Boyd and ber busband, Lee, visited · Morris said there are 400
the grave of Ben LeMaster at &amp;munenville, W.Va. and in the studentsenroUedandtheremay
mUIII!UID there saw the gun which he carried during the be more as the year moves on.
He ouUined problenis that may
Revolutionary War.
have to be faced due to overcrowded classrooms. He also
AS AFINAL WRAP-upon the 1971AU.Qbio Bake·A-Rama, we
!!O!.IllJlep~_ on the _failure to
bave tbe llfcrmatiCII oo the grai¥1 champions.
date of the Ohio LegiSlillllie to
WoaldD'tyoublow -It was a chocolate cake and a cherry pe provide more money.
that '11'011 in tile state finals!
Tbe principal introduced the
Mn. Richard Swabby of Columbus, the Franklin County teachers including Mrs. Par, ....,. •llltive, won tile $1,000 plus a blue ribbon and an electric sons substituting for Mrs. Larry
rqe fnm Wes 11
for her lrnperial crown Chocolate Wiley; Mrs. Paul Kuhn and
CUe.ln the pie cootesl Mrs. OCIIa Tullis of West Liberty was the Mrs. Albert Woodard, first
wlmer wllb ber Best-Ever Olerry Pie.
AI as tbe8e recipes are made avallable to us, we'll be
pa•na tbem along to you.
More individualized in·
muction in reading is the
emphasis of a new reading
proj~t this year at the

Community
Corner

.-we

Re re-'ntz'o'"S
vu
'"
'A _.Jl
Se
lUlU/tine
t
D
.J• 1

ERIC CHAMBERS, A YOUNG MAN of many talents, will be
flll8ll apee!reratayoutbmeeting to beheld at the Calvary Baptist
Quc:b in Rio Grande Saturday at 2 p.m. Eric will be speaking,
li,.U.C IIIII plaJID(IIU guitar for the y~ people of tbe Rio
GriDde Bapllat AsaoclatiOD.

Pastor,Wije Honored
A reception honoring the Rev.
and MrS. Stanton Smith was
beld ,sunday night at tbe Enterppsf ~ qniteii Methodist
Clurlh.
Ralph Spencer presided at the
reception which opened with
group singing of "Blest Be the
Tie" and prayer by the Rev. Mr.
Smith. Selections by the choir
..ere followed by an informal
get..cquainted sessiori which
each person introduced himself
and spoke briefly. Mrs. Spencer
presented the couple with gifts
from the congregation. Cake,
punch and coffee were served.

Attendin

bes'd the Re
1 es
g
v·
Mr. and Mrs. Smith were their ,
daughter Jane Mr and Mrs
•.• ..._ • .• : ..
·
Warth
Spencer • mrs ' Jeruut
.- : ·
•
Mrs.DoriHunnel,DaVleWarlh,
Becky Will Beverly Will Ann
.
•
•
Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs. Carl

J~es

M?Gre,. Mr. and Mrs. .
W1ll, MISS Helen M. DaVIS, Miss
Joyce A: Davis, Miss Emma
:;:' _Dav~ ~~- ~e
Smith Mrs 'Addi ·
B
Mrs
tha. Br e
Hro:J M ·
B"';;'
us • rs. .
ce . uc •
Mrs. Ruby Frick, P_atty Ed-

•

. lhed dlinef
Saturday IS
ea
or
reservations for the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
Annual Gardeners Day Out to
be held at the Ohio Historical
Center on Sept. 23.
Reservations are to be sent to
Mrs. John M. Scott at2513 Cross
Country Road, Fairborn, Ohio.
Tbe program will start at 10
a.tn. and will include a complete tour of the Center, lunch,
and a talk by Mrs. Marilyn G.
Hood, author and lecturer. Mrs.
Hood will comment on her latest
book, "First Ladies of Ohio."
In conjunction with ber talk,
the OAGC flower show judges,
Mrs. Earl Bender, Mrs. Frank
Christy, Mrs. Gilbert Cullen,
Mrs . Dwight DeVoss, Mrs.
Quentin Elder, Mrs. Allan
Grossman; Mrs. Vance Hendricks, Mrs. Fred Molitor, Mrs.
Floyd Rub_le, Mrs. Robert
Scherer, will fashion flower
arrangements ·in keeping with
the style and tradition of the
.
.
Fll'BI Ladies.
M_rs. W. A. Wake, therapy
chairman of the Four Seaso~
Garden Club of Mason, Ohio,
will display and sell the craft
articles
.
rnade bY handicap ped
children.

grade ; MissMaryV.Riebeland
Mrs. James Diehl, second
grades; Mrs. Earl Young and
Mrs. Robert Roberts, third
. grades; Mrs. Dan Meadows and
Mrs. Preston Gibbs, fourth
grades; Mrs. Victor Hysell and
Don Stivers, fifth gra des; Mrs.
Pearl Willilllllll and Mrs. John
Fisher, sixth grades; Mrs. Kate
Jarrell, Miss Wendy Schmidt,
special education classes, and
Mrs. Robert Jacobs, remedial
reading. Mrs. Ll!rry Heines i.s
speech therapist and Mrs.
Nolan. Swackhammer music
instructor.
Plans for the art program to
be offered . to Pomeroy
Elementary School students,
first through sixth grades, were
e:xplainedbyMrs.BobHoeflich,
cultural arts chairman.
The art course, which will
include sketching, water colors,
oils, charcoal, and ceramics,
will begin on Thursday, Sept. 23
with weekly sessions from 7 to
8:30_p.m: Mrs. Margaret Ella
LewiS will teach the course
which will carry a participation
fee of between 10 and 20 cents.
Serving on the cultural arts
committee with Mrs. Hoeflich
are Mrs. Robert Roberts, Mrs.
Victor Hysell, teachers, Mrs.
Kenneth McCullough, Mrs.
Keith Riggs, Mrs. W. H. Perrin,
and Mrs. Richard Rosenbaum.
Playground improvements
were discussed by Mrs. Gene
Mitch, president, who announced a meeting to be held at
7 p.m. Thursday at the school.
The unit voted to sponsor any
members who desire to attend
the parent education workshop
which ' will be held at Ohio

Social Calendar

~,

University this month. The
worksh~ is sponsored by the
Ohio P.T.A. at a cost of $5 per
person to be paid by the p T A
•
.
· · ·
Mrs. M1tch ~ead correspondence relating to the
conventionoftheOhioCongress
of p
arents and Teachers to be
held in Cincinnati , Oct . 1a-20 at
the Nethetland-Hilton Hotel.
Executive committee
meetings were 8et for the
Thursday befJlre each P.T.A.
meeting at 1 p.m. at the sdlool.
A question box will again be
used and parents are asked to
use this method of briDging
problems ~ore the unit.
The Meigs County COuncil of
Parents and Teachers meetings
were announced for Middleport
in October, and Pomeroy in
Nove'l'ber. Mrs. Mitch also
announced the cub scout
roundup to be held at 7:30 on
Sept. 30 at the IOOF hall.
Committee chairmen intraduced were Mrs. Earl
Thomas,program;!lfrs.James
Soulsby, Mrs. Troy Ohlinger,
co-chairmen of ·ways and
means; Mrs. Bruce Zirkle,
health; Mrs. Franklin Casto,
magazine; Mrs. April Smith,
membership; Mrs. Richard
Rosenbaum, safety; Mrs.
Frank Seth, publicity; Mrs.
Hoeflich, cultural arts; Mrs.
William McDaniels historian.
Mrs.
Richard ' Follrod'
legislative.
'
The Pomeroy 4-11 Club of Mrs.
James Wamsley and Mrs.
George Wright led in the pledge
to open the meeting. Devotions
were by the Rev. w. H. Perrin.
Cake, punch and coffee were
served.

Ma

S.:trt

TEETH

0

Mr
Mr ·

Be

NEW HAVEN -1be .regular
__,.,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _N _ _ _,..._ _ _ _IM .heeling of the Graham United

ruESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI Sorority
Tuesday 8,j5 p.m. at Columbus
and So the Ohi0 El tr' Co
u m
ec lC ·
SYRACUSE _P.T.A. .Tuesday
7,30 p.m., David Nease, school
board
be will beth
t
mem
r,
e
gues
speaker. Baton class members
will also be fealured .
.
- EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters, 8 tonight at Eastern
High SchOOl to complete plans
for horse show.

THURSDAY
MID_DLEPORT Child Coo·
servation League, Thursday•
7:30 .p.m. Colwnbus and Southem Oliio Electric Co. social
. be Mr
5
room. Speaker Will
·
Carolyn Heines
using
"Want
to
y
Child en'
1
mprove
our
r s
Speech•"
· ·
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal · and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 7:30 Wednesday, Pomeroy Masomc
T!'ffiple.
WEDNESDAY
MOTHER • DAUGHTER
_PAST
PRESIDENTS, banquet of Evangeline Chapter
American Legion Auxiliary, 172 O.E.S. Middleport, ThursDrew Webster Post 39, 7:30 p. day at 6:30 p.m. at Masonic
m. Wednesday, home of Mrs. Temple.
Ellen Couch:
FRIDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden TIIIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30
Club, 8)1. m. Wednesday, home p.m. Friday, home of Marie
of Mrs.' Allard Prait.
Dailey.

ct
.z.
c'h
G
.
.
Ui orK. Ui ower
tven
.

.

Coelle Hudson, Elizabeth
Murray, Karen Murray, and
Sue Gibson entertained with a
stork shower in the social room
oftheCarletonChurchhonoring
Yvonne Young. A stork motif
was carried out with blue and
pink streamers.
Games were played with
prizes going to Marlene
Harrison, Sadie Carl, and Janel
Pickens.
The hostesses served ice

TtJdpe Honored

J'

;o'

With Luncheon

.

.
cream, cake, punch, coffee,
nuts and candies. Favors were
baby nut cups.
·
Guests not mentioned
previously were Maryln
Conaway of Glouster, Helen
Dais, Mary Lou Hoodahselt,
Nancy Way and Sybil Puckett of
Nelsonville; Ola St. Clair, Alpha
Bailey, Lynn Keys of Chauncey; Mrs. Mae Damron, Louise
Harrison, Amanda Mortis, LeU!
Hall, Deloris King, Neva King,
Lavey Stanley, Sanra Perdas of
Cleveland, Karla, Linda,
Denise, and Janeth Beal.
Sending gifts were Virginia
Dean, Virginia Smith, Pahna
Goodwin, Marlyn Brown, Golda

Methodist Woman's Society of
Christian Service was held In
the church sanctuary with Mrs.
Woodrow Brown presenting the
be
program. Each mem r
assisted in reading Bible
scriptures pertaining to
"Beauty."
Mrs.. . Brown
discussed trails found in a
"Beautiful" person.
Mrs.BrendaMerrittpresiiled
over the business meeting with
Mrs. Inna Roach giving the
treasurer's report.
Refreshments were setved in
th~ basement.
Attending were Rev. Mrs.
Miller, Anna Allen, Mrs. Hsrry
C1arke, Mrs. Albert Roush,
Mrs. Jack Pickens, Mrs.
Michael Merritt and Mrs.
Woodrow Brown.

Purchase of four f•'lm
proJ· ectors was approved at a
recent meeting of the Bradbury
P.T.A.
MTbeunitalsovotedtosponsor
rs.
William
Swisher,
president, at a leadership
workshrn
-... to be held at Ohio
University on Sept. 22.
Conunittee chairmen were
named and include Fred Lewis,
membership· Mrs Delma Carr
and Mrs. M~ry Hoover, way~
and means; Mrs. WUliam King,
•
Mrs.
Jeanette
Carter,
hospitality· Mrs Paul Casci
'
.
'

publi c1'ty ; Mrs. Be n Philson,

1 · lati
egiS on; an d the Rev. Bill
Carter,
magazines
and
publications.
Prayer by the Rev. Mr.
Car'-r
"' opened the meeting w1'th
the group giving the pledge tO
the fla•• · Offi cers repor ts were
given· gpeaker at the meeting
was the Rev. Mr . Carter.
Meigs County Council. of
Parents and Teachers meetings
dates were announced as Oct 7
·
at Middleport·· Nov
t'
'
·
Pomeroy· Feb 3 at Racine·

April6at'ruve~iew · andMay~

at Rutland

'

•

C''-ss
to D·;ne Oct. 1.
«J.,
·

judge of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners' flower show, was
given Saturday noon at the
Rutland Elementary School.
Among the guests ' attending
Rethesh.owwere. Mrs.JohnReese_,
g100. 11
. director of the Ohio
AssoclallOn of Garden Clubs,
an d Mrs. Fred . Blaettnar,
coun ty conIact cha
n.
AU four generations of the
Roy Snowden family exhibiting
in the flower show were ribbon
·
Th
wmners.
ey are Mrs.
Sn d Mrs H
p k
ow en,
· omer ar er,
Mrs J
r .. rnonter d h
.JamesR -::Sn"'T'
· de ,an ther
son, ay. oy ow n was e
only 1 xh'b'to
. the 3 dull
rna e e 1 1 r m
ll'ma.

classes.

Apotluck dinner was planned
for 6 p.m. on Oct. 1 at Trinity
Church when the Happy Harvesters Class met Friday night
at the church.
Mrs. Louis Reibel will present
the program following the
dinner, and Mrs. Phil Meinhart
will have the devotions.
Welcomed into the class
membership was Mrs. Eulah
swan f Tuppers Pia'lllS. A
rummagesalewassetforOct. 7
and 8, and arrangements were
made to serve a rehearsal
dinner Thursday evening.
Members signed a birthday
· card for Fred
round-robm
Dessauer who iS hospilalized,

°

''Did you know
that Debbie only
cleans her house
once a month~"

Daughter Bom

Snoux/ens Give
f

USDA
CHOICE

SUPERIORS USDA DIOICE

CUBE STEAK

•

FRESH

Ground Beef ..~~~~-~.~.~~ ..~-~-. 69~

Dinner Party
Mr. and Mrs. Caron Sliowden,
Gallipolis, hosted a family
dinner party Sunday in observance of the birthday of his
mother, Mrs. Roy Snowden, and
his niece, Mrs. James Carpenter, Ohio's Homemaker of
the Year.
A decorated and inscribed
cake was served following the
dinner. Tbe birthday of Mrs.
Sharon Snowden was also noted
although she was not present.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Carpenter and son, Jay,
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
May, Debra and Mite, all of
Rutland; Miss Jody Black,
Gallipolis, and the hosts'
children, Larry, Gary and
Annette.

SUPERIORS
SEMI-BONELESS

In Saudi Arabia, skinb
swim through sand. These
tiny lizards use flippers to
travel below the desert surface.

Mi. and Mrs. Charles w. t********U*U**
Holc~b, Lith~lis, are an- f A fhought
f

Now that you've
made that
big decision,
let us help you
make the
next
one.

TOday

'

Mr.andMrs. PauiChadwell
of M1'ddleport are announcm
· •
the b'll'th of a daugh'-r Kim~
berly Elise, born Aug."'22' at the
Pleasant Valley Hosp1'lal. Tbe
infantweighedeightpoundsand
e•· ht ounces
g
·
Mr. and Mrs. Chadwell have a
da h
IIi
.
three
ug ter, Po e Anna,
·
G d
ts
Mr nd Mr
ran paren are ·a
s.
Wyatt F. Chadwell, Pomeroy,
R te 3 M
p I'
ou
,
rs.
au me
Greathouse of Middleport and

uofcourse,
because she
has Electric
Heatin "

SHIRT
FINISHING
'
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9-0ut At 5

UHOur Fr" Parfclng Lot

Robinson's Cleaners

f

Other Banlting Hou" 9 to 3
and S to 7 as usual 011
Fridays.

i!~~::"rA

..

ICE CREAM .

MILK

Maple Nul And
Cherry Nul

lh GALLON, 53'
gal on~

gge

lh gaL
carton

lh gal crt

SOOT LAD
KRINKLE .CUT •""·.,-. .,
POTATOES

69~

5 lb.
bag

69~

A!! Carved

5 lb.
bag

69~

SPREADABLES

A - AUARANTH
8 - PRECIOSA SET

BY CARNAnON

GOESSLER
JEWELRY
STORE

THURSDAY ONLY!

NABISCO POP-UP

RC
8 PAK
·COLA 1 ~QL

Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

TOASTETTES
6 Fruit

SPECIAL

Fled Pa:dlies

U.S. GRADE A
SMALL

EGGS

crt

3

6 $
loaues

3

PURPOSE

VALUES
.

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE!

.

AVORITE
BREAD

BANANAS

In plain colors and plaids.
ldeol for fall sewing. Now

THE FABRIC SHOP ....,..;

l-Ib. bl1

5... $}

lb.

4'01.
jar

Taster's
Coupon Choice ®
FREEZE·DRIED COFFEE

1.00

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE!

u.s.

GRADE ASMAll

EGGS
3 :79~
~

9 to 10 • Sun.

We Accept Federal FOOd Skunp8
PHONE: 992·3480

v

•

'

'

89~
.

With

· .

992-2284

INSTAN T CO FFEE

MARK V STORE

MARKET • Open

'

~ESCAFE

1.00

Graham Crackers

U. S. NO. l
ALL

REG. 198 &amp;4.98

....

~

SUNSHINE BRAND

POTATOES

54"10
60'' WIDE

qlthr

$}19

Ol.
jar

EASY MONDAY

FAVORITE
BREAD

Bonded
Acrylics·

1~

Pink Liquid Detergent

3doz.

SATURDAY ONLY!

GROUP OF FABRICS

SAVE

Corner Mill anil Second Sis.
•

Chocolate.
Vanilla.
and
Fudge
Neopolitan
Royale.

SOOT LAD
. fRENCH
FRIES

FAIRMONT
TOP GRADE

Come decide for
yourself.

SINGER SALES .. &amp; SUIIItE
M~CALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERN'

lb.

At Mark V
Fro:en Prices!

SEALTEST

00

Selecting
right
diamond ring can be
a difficult thing to do.
ArtCarved makes It
easy. The Art Carved
name stands tor
quality and
individuality.
th~

FRIDAY ONLY!

115 W. Secona

~

POP

PORK NECK BONES

If Quickl Easy

The Drive-In Window il
is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
I Continuously)

lb

SEALTEST
ICE CREAM

MANY FlAVORS

*** '

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

SUPERIORS

TOPPS

lb.

f

..

~

Polish
Sausage

lb.

BOSTON BUnS

!

f

lb.

SUPERIORS SMOKED

SUPERIORS FRESH PORK

i

nouncmg the bll'th of a six •
pound, seven ounce daughter,
For
Sharyl Irene, on Sept. 7.
·
Paternal grandparents are
Cheerfulness Is ·health ;
Mr. and Mrs. C. Wesley the opposite, melancholy, i(
Holcomb, Warwood, w. Va.,
Is dlseose.
•
and great-grandmother, Mrs.
-=-Haliburton
Myrtle Holcomb of Galllpolis.
Maternal grandparent&amp; include
Virgil Hayes, Columbus, and
Mrs. MUdred Haye8, Pomeroy,
and great-grandparents, Mr.
S
•
and Mrs. Carson Hayes, ·•
Syracuse and Russell Rouah of
New Haven. Mrs. Fred Wheeler
of Gallipolis i.s a great-greatgrandmother. Sharyl Irene has
_ Fridays Only
il
a brother, Tracy William, 2.

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

Daughter ts Bom

MEETING POSTPONED
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday's Homemakers'
Club meeting bas been
postponed from tbls Wednesday to September 2% for
this month only.

lb. 79~

Ground Chuck ..~.~.~~.~........
e
W1eners...!.~?.:~ .......................... 69
Bologna ... ~~-~-~-~~!.................... :.59
Stew Meat... ~?.~.~~~.~~............ 89~
LEAN

L
R berts Le G'hso
UCl e o
' na 1 n,
and Mary Guess.
·
,

COMING TO DINNER
Lady Kay Hornberger, high
priestess of Tbea Court 5,
Colwnbus, and her court will be
guests at a dinner at the Twin
City Club House at Racine at
6:30p.m. Wednesday. The Twin
City Shrinettes are hosting the
dinner which will be served by
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star.

•

FRIDAY- ONE DAY ONLY!

IN HOSPITAL
Harold E. (Baldy) Hysen,
formerly of Pomeroy, is a '
patient at the Jane Case
Hospital at Delaware, Ohio. The
room number is 321.

Cecil Huddleston, Point
Pleasant. U. M. Chadwell of
Duncan Falls is a greatgrandfather .

11

'.

5- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P«meroy, O.,Sept.14, 1971

Projectors Purchased F~n~~~:t/:~or~:ri~;:: =~~:=~tEE
·n

and a get-well card for Arthur
Smith, brother of Mrs. Meinhart
and Miss Erma Smith, a patient
at St. Mary's Hospital,
Nelsonville.
Mrs. Dale Smith presided at
:.~:· :nes~u:o'j ~·
the meeting which opened with
.
·
• · BlDle
prayerfrom the yearbook. Mrs.
: ! rMrBri:d = · M =
Roy Seyfried gave devotions
Mo.. Security With
.
•
.
•
using "God's Power" as ber
=abethPhil D avhlingl~, RodBrian~ey
theme. Members sang Happy
ns,
er,
Birthday to Mrs.' Seyfried.
While Eallng, Talklnt Will Laura Ohlinger Brenda
d M;
Ph'l
The program consisted of
Alrold !aloe toeth will drop at the wni Mr
an d ~- Eldo~
readings by Mrs. Dessauer.
wroar time? A denture adheaive can Owfuger
belp. FASTEETH• Powder Jives Weeks
~Mrs E:d ard
They were "Lucifer Had a
deatuno ........ linnor, • Mr. and Mrs. Th w
Letter for Absentees " "A
hold. Why be em~! For more B
security •nd comfort, u1e FASow~n,
M'
·
anFrieda
.
Le'omas
Birthday Wish" "A G;...ting
TEETH Denture Adhesive Powder.
n..
lSS
1vmg
'
'
Card" and "The
Parents'
Deu\uree that fit are eeeential to Mrs Beulah Utte back
health. See your dentiat ft(Ularly.
·
r
·
Creed." Miss Sybil Ebersbach
&amp;.
r' " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - , - -- -- - -- - - - - . gave a questionnaire on the Ten
Commandments, and Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, "Beatitudes, for the
Aged."
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carrie
Meinhart, Mrs. Clarence
Massar, Mrs. Oris Ginther, and
Miss Ebersbach. Asalad course
was served by Mrs. Reibel,
Mrs. Seyfried, Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler. Flowers from the
garden of Mrs. Homer Holter
centered the table.

0.:::1.:

7 Atte1ui Graham
WSCS' Meeting

.

.,

" We Reserve The Right To

.

MARK Y
STORE

�.

'

1

t-1'-DidlJSentinel,lli+leii•\.Pwiaot,O.,Sept. l4,1m

New Reading Project Explained
Pomeroy Elementary School, Association meeting.
Robert Morris, principal, said Morris said that the program,
in speaking to parents Monday which now included only the
night at the Parents-Teacheni fourth, fifth and sixth grades,
may be extended to include the
second and third next year.'
CurrenUy the three grades are
being taught rn
· siX· levels ·or
reading. Standardized testing
was utilized to determine what
level was righlfor each child.
In three months, the testing
By Charlene Hoeflich
will be repeated and a reevaluation of each child's
Ben LeMaster, wbo became a soldier in the Revolutionary
progress will be made available
War at 1be age of 16, ~ as General Washington's personal to parents. During this period,
m1 ~ger, marlled the beginning of a family insliiJed with a Morris said, no grade will be
JIIS!Iioo fer patriotism.
given in reading. Morris also
Amember of that family. Anna Laura Huddleston Boyd, oow proposed - perhaps for next
of Ca"!!!pp)is, Mich. came last week fer~ Ctll'eiiiOnies of ye;~r - similar "level work"
tbe grave ol her mother, Mri.' W. G. Huddleston at the Lone Oak rather than "grade work" in
Cemetery in PW!t Pleasant. Mrs. Huddlestoo, as well as Mrs. math.
Boyd, formerly resided In Middleport; both once were members
The principal noted adof tbe Relml Jonalban Meip Olapter of the Daughters of the vantages of new school class
American Revolution. It was the local chapter of the D.A.R. that schedules in which_ school in
bad the rites at the cemetery.
Pomeroy begins at 8:30 a.m.
Mn. Boyd, a 49-¥ear member of the D.A.R., is a past regent and concludes at 2:ts p.m. with
of the chapter at O'own Point, rm. Her son Is a member of the all bus students departing at
Sons of the American Revalution, ber daughter is a D.A.R. thattime.Laslyearatleastone
!De!!lber,and tbe clildren of both are all members of the Children group did not leave on buses
until 4:20 p.m. New 45-minute
of the American Revolutim.
Mn. Boyd's sister, the late Jennie Huddlestm Gallroner, noon hours are working oot well
was also active in tile D.A.R. and ber granddaughter, Mrs. Joan too, be said, because the shorter
Galbrmer Bri'*wm, is the inccming bead of the Florida period eliminates some
playground problems.
OIM'en of the American Revdulim.
Wlile in tlis area, Mn. Boyd and ber busband, Lee, visited · Morris said there are 400
the grave of Ben LeMaster at &amp;munenville, W.Va. and in the studentsenroUedandtheremay
mUIII!UID there saw the gun which he carried during the be more as the year moves on.
He ouUined problenis that may
Revolutionary War.
have to be faced due to overcrowded classrooms. He also
AS AFINAL WRAP-upon the 1971AU.Qbio Bake·A-Rama, we
!!O!.IllJlep~_ on the _failure to
bave tbe llfcrmatiCII oo the grai¥1 champions.
date of the Ohio LegiSlillllie to
WoaldD'tyoublow -It was a chocolate cake and a cherry pe provide more money.
that '11'011 in tile state finals!
Tbe principal introduced the
Mn. Richard Swabby of Columbus, the Franklin County teachers including Mrs. Par, ....,. •llltive, won tile $1,000 plus a blue ribbon and an electric sons substituting for Mrs. Larry
rqe fnm Wes 11
for her lrnperial crown Chocolate Wiley; Mrs. Paul Kuhn and
CUe.ln the pie cootesl Mrs. OCIIa Tullis of West Liberty was the Mrs. Albert Woodard, first
wlmer wllb ber Best-Ever Olerry Pie.
AI as tbe8e recipes are made avallable to us, we'll be
pa•na tbem along to you.
More individualized in·
muction in reading is the
emphasis of a new reading
proj~t this year at the

Community
Corner

.-we

Re re-'ntz'o'"S
vu
'"
'A _.Jl
Se
lUlU/tine
t
D
.J• 1

ERIC CHAMBERS, A YOUNG MAN of many talents, will be
flll8ll apee!reratayoutbmeeting to beheld at the Calvary Baptist
Quc:b in Rio Grande Saturday at 2 p.m. Eric will be speaking,
li,.U.C IIIII plaJID(IIU guitar for the y~ people of tbe Rio
GriDde Bapllat AsaoclatiOD.

Pastor,Wije Honored
A reception honoring the Rev.
and MrS. Stanton Smith was
beld ,sunday night at tbe Enterppsf ~ qniteii Methodist
Clurlh.
Ralph Spencer presided at the
reception which opened with
group singing of "Blest Be the
Tie" and prayer by the Rev. Mr.
Smith. Selections by the choir
..ere followed by an informal
get..cquainted sessiori which
each person introduced himself
and spoke briefly. Mrs. Spencer
presented the couple with gifts
from the congregation. Cake,
punch and coffee were served.

Attendin

bes'd the Re
1 es
g
v·
Mr. and Mrs. Smith were their ,
daughter Jane Mr and Mrs
•.• ..._ • .• : ..
·
Warth
Spencer • mrs ' Jeruut
.- : ·
•
Mrs.DoriHunnel,DaVleWarlh,
Becky Will Beverly Will Ann
.
•
•
Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs. Carl

J~es

M?Gre,. Mr. and Mrs. .
W1ll, MISS Helen M. DaVIS, Miss
Joyce A: Davis, Miss Emma
:;:' _Dav~ ~~- ~e
Smith Mrs 'Addi ·
B
Mrs
tha. Br e
Hro:J M ·
B"';;'
us • rs. .
ce . uc •
Mrs. Ruby Frick, P_atty Ed-

•

. lhed dlinef
Saturday IS
ea
or
reservations for the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
Annual Gardeners Day Out to
be held at the Ohio Historical
Center on Sept. 23.
Reservations are to be sent to
Mrs. John M. Scott at2513 Cross
Country Road, Fairborn, Ohio.
Tbe program will start at 10
a.tn. and will include a complete tour of the Center, lunch,
and a talk by Mrs. Marilyn G.
Hood, author and lecturer. Mrs.
Hood will comment on her latest
book, "First Ladies of Ohio."
In conjunction with ber talk,
the OAGC flower show judges,
Mrs. Earl Bender, Mrs. Frank
Christy, Mrs. Gilbert Cullen,
Mrs . Dwight DeVoss, Mrs.
Quentin Elder, Mrs. Allan
Grossman; Mrs. Vance Hendricks, Mrs. Fred Molitor, Mrs.
Floyd Rub_le, Mrs. Robert
Scherer, will fashion flower
arrangements ·in keeping with
the style and tradition of the
.
.
Fll'BI Ladies.
M_rs. W. A. Wake, therapy
chairman of the Four Seaso~
Garden Club of Mason, Ohio,
will display and sell the craft
articles
.
rnade bY handicap ped
children.

grade ; MissMaryV.Riebeland
Mrs. James Diehl, second
grades; Mrs. Earl Young and
Mrs. Robert Roberts, third
. grades; Mrs. Dan Meadows and
Mrs. Preston Gibbs, fourth
grades; Mrs. Victor Hysell and
Don Stivers, fifth gra des; Mrs.
Pearl Willilllllll and Mrs. John
Fisher, sixth grades; Mrs. Kate
Jarrell, Miss Wendy Schmidt,
special education classes, and
Mrs. Robert Jacobs, remedial
reading. Mrs. Ll!rry Heines i.s
speech therapist and Mrs.
Nolan. Swackhammer music
instructor.
Plans for the art program to
be offered . to Pomeroy
Elementary School students,
first through sixth grades, were
e:xplainedbyMrs.BobHoeflich,
cultural arts chairman.
The art course, which will
include sketching, water colors,
oils, charcoal, and ceramics,
will begin on Thursday, Sept. 23
with weekly sessions from 7 to
8:30_p.m: Mrs. Margaret Ella
LewiS will teach the course
which will carry a participation
fee of between 10 and 20 cents.
Serving on the cultural arts
committee with Mrs. Hoeflich
are Mrs. Robert Roberts, Mrs.
Victor Hysell, teachers, Mrs.
Kenneth McCullough, Mrs.
Keith Riggs, Mrs. W. H. Perrin,
and Mrs. Richard Rosenbaum.
Playground improvements
were discussed by Mrs. Gene
Mitch, president, who announced a meeting to be held at
7 p.m. Thursday at the school.
The unit voted to sponsor any
members who desire to attend
the parent education workshop
which ' will be held at Ohio

Social Calendar

~,

University this month. The
worksh~ is sponsored by the
Ohio P.T.A. at a cost of $5 per
person to be paid by the p T A
•
.
· · ·
Mrs. M1tch ~ead correspondence relating to the
conventionoftheOhioCongress
of p
arents and Teachers to be
held in Cincinnati , Oct . 1a-20 at
the Nethetland-Hilton Hotel.
Executive committee
meetings were 8et for the
Thursday befJlre each P.T.A.
meeting at 1 p.m. at the sdlool.
A question box will again be
used and parents are asked to
use this method of briDging
problems ~ore the unit.
The Meigs County COuncil of
Parents and Teachers meetings
were announced for Middleport
in October, and Pomeroy in
Nove'l'ber. Mrs. Mitch also
announced the cub scout
roundup to be held at 7:30 on
Sept. 30 at the IOOF hall.
Committee chairmen intraduced were Mrs. Earl
Thomas,program;!lfrs.James
Soulsby, Mrs. Troy Ohlinger,
co-chairmen of ·ways and
means; Mrs. Bruce Zirkle,
health; Mrs. Franklin Casto,
magazine; Mrs. April Smith,
membership; Mrs. Richard
Rosenbaum, safety; Mrs.
Frank Seth, publicity; Mrs.
Hoeflich, cultural arts; Mrs.
William McDaniels historian.
Mrs.
Richard ' Follrod'
legislative.
'
The Pomeroy 4-11 Club of Mrs.
James Wamsley and Mrs.
George Wright led in the pledge
to open the meeting. Devotions
were by the Rev. w. H. Perrin.
Cake, punch and coffee were
served.

Ma

S.:trt

TEETH

0

Mr
Mr ·

Be

NEW HAVEN -1be .regular
__,.,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _N _ _ _,..._ _ _ _IM .heeling of the Graham United

ruESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI Sorority
Tuesday 8,j5 p.m. at Columbus
and So the Ohi0 El tr' Co
u m
ec lC ·
SYRACUSE _P.T.A. .Tuesday
7,30 p.m., David Nease, school
board
be will beth
t
mem
r,
e
gues
speaker. Baton class members
will also be fealured .
.
- EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters, 8 tonight at Eastern
High SchOOl to complete plans
for horse show.

THURSDAY
MID_DLEPORT Child Coo·
servation League, Thursday•
7:30 .p.m. Colwnbus and Southem Oliio Electric Co. social
. be Mr
5
room. Speaker Will
·
Carolyn Heines
using
"Want
to
y
Child en'
1
mprove
our
r s
Speech•"
· ·
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal · and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 7:30 Wednesday, Pomeroy Masomc
T!'ffiple.
WEDNESDAY
MOTHER • DAUGHTER
_PAST
PRESIDENTS, banquet of Evangeline Chapter
American Legion Auxiliary, 172 O.E.S. Middleport, ThursDrew Webster Post 39, 7:30 p. day at 6:30 p.m. at Masonic
m. Wednesday, home of Mrs. Temple.
Ellen Couch:
FRIDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden TIIIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30
Club, 8)1. m. Wednesday, home p.m. Friday, home of Marie
of Mrs.' Allard Prait.
Dailey.

ct
.z.
c'h
G
.
.
Ui orK. Ui ower
tven
.

.

Coelle Hudson, Elizabeth
Murray, Karen Murray, and
Sue Gibson entertained with a
stork shower in the social room
oftheCarletonChurchhonoring
Yvonne Young. A stork motif
was carried out with blue and
pink streamers.
Games were played with
prizes going to Marlene
Harrison, Sadie Carl, and Janel
Pickens.
The hostesses served ice

TtJdpe Honored

J'

;o'

With Luncheon

.

.
cream, cake, punch, coffee,
nuts and candies. Favors were
baby nut cups.
·
Guests not mentioned
previously were Maryln
Conaway of Glouster, Helen
Dais, Mary Lou Hoodahselt,
Nancy Way and Sybil Puckett of
Nelsonville; Ola St. Clair, Alpha
Bailey, Lynn Keys of Chauncey; Mrs. Mae Damron, Louise
Harrison, Amanda Mortis, LeU!
Hall, Deloris King, Neva King,
Lavey Stanley, Sanra Perdas of
Cleveland, Karla, Linda,
Denise, and Janeth Beal.
Sending gifts were Virginia
Dean, Virginia Smith, Pahna
Goodwin, Marlyn Brown, Golda

Methodist Woman's Society of
Christian Service was held In
the church sanctuary with Mrs.
Woodrow Brown presenting the
be
program. Each mem r
assisted in reading Bible
scriptures pertaining to
"Beauty."
Mrs.. . Brown
discussed trails found in a
"Beautiful" person.
Mrs.BrendaMerrittpresiiled
over the business meeting with
Mrs. Inna Roach giving the
treasurer's report.
Refreshments were setved in
th~ basement.
Attending were Rev. Mrs.
Miller, Anna Allen, Mrs. Hsrry
C1arke, Mrs. Albert Roush,
Mrs. Jack Pickens, Mrs.
Michael Merritt and Mrs.
Woodrow Brown.

Purchase of four f•'lm
proJ· ectors was approved at a
recent meeting of the Bradbury
P.T.A.
MTbeunitalsovotedtosponsor
rs.
William
Swisher,
president, at a leadership
workshrn
-... to be held at Ohio
University on Sept. 22.
Conunittee chairmen were
named and include Fred Lewis,
membership· Mrs Delma Carr
and Mrs. M~ry Hoover, way~
and means; Mrs. WUliam King,
•
Mrs.
Jeanette
Carter,
hospitality· Mrs Paul Casci
'
.
'

publi c1'ty ; Mrs. Be n Philson,

1 · lati
egiS on; an d the Rev. Bill
Carter,
magazines
and
publications.
Prayer by the Rev. Mr.
Car'-r
"' opened the meeting w1'th
the group giving the pledge tO
the fla•• · Offi cers repor ts were
given· gpeaker at the meeting
was the Rev. Mr . Carter.
Meigs County Council. of
Parents and Teachers meetings
dates were announced as Oct 7
·
at Middleport·· Nov
t'
'
·
Pomeroy· Feb 3 at Racine·

April6at'ruve~iew · andMay~

at Rutland

'

•

C''-ss
to D·;ne Oct. 1.
«J.,
·

judge of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners' flower show, was
given Saturday noon at the
Rutland Elementary School.
Among the guests ' attending
Rethesh.owwere. Mrs.JohnReese_,
g100. 11
. director of the Ohio
AssoclallOn of Garden Clubs,
an d Mrs. Fred . Blaettnar,
coun ty conIact cha
n.
AU four generations of the
Roy Snowden family exhibiting
in the flower show were ribbon
·
Th
wmners.
ey are Mrs.
Sn d Mrs H
p k
ow en,
· omer ar er,
Mrs J
r .. rnonter d h
.JamesR -::Sn"'T'
· de ,an ther
son, ay. oy ow n was e
only 1 xh'b'to
. the 3 dull
rna e e 1 1 r m
ll'ma.

classes.

Apotluck dinner was planned
for 6 p.m. on Oct. 1 at Trinity
Church when the Happy Harvesters Class met Friday night
at the church.
Mrs. Louis Reibel will present
the program following the
dinner, and Mrs. Phil Meinhart
will have the devotions.
Welcomed into the class
membership was Mrs. Eulah
swan f Tuppers Pia'lllS. A
rummagesalewassetforOct. 7
and 8, and arrangements were
made to serve a rehearsal
dinner Thursday evening.
Members signed a birthday
· card for Fred
round-robm
Dessauer who iS hospilalized,

°

''Did you know
that Debbie only
cleans her house
once a month~"

Daughter Bom

Snoux/ens Give
f

USDA
CHOICE

SUPERIORS USDA DIOICE

CUBE STEAK

•

FRESH

Ground Beef ..~~~~-~.~.~~ ..~-~-. 69~

Dinner Party
Mr. and Mrs. Caron Sliowden,
Gallipolis, hosted a family
dinner party Sunday in observance of the birthday of his
mother, Mrs. Roy Snowden, and
his niece, Mrs. James Carpenter, Ohio's Homemaker of
the Year.
A decorated and inscribed
cake was served following the
dinner. Tbe birthday of Mrs.
Sharon Snowden was also noted
although she was not present.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Carpenter and son, Jay,
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
May, Debra and Mite, all of
Rutland; Miss Jody Black,
Gallipolis, and the hosts'
children, Larry, Gary and
Annette.

SUPERIORS
SEMI-BONELESS

In Saudi Arabia, skinb
swim through sand. These
tiny lizards use flippers to
travel below the desert surface.

Mi. and Mrs. Charles w. t********U*U**
Holc~b, Lith~lis, are an- f A fhought
f

Now that you've
made that
big decision,
let us help you
make the
next
one.

TOday

'

Mr.andMrs. PauiChadwell
of M1'ddleport are announcm
· •
the b'll'th of a daugh'-r Kim~
berly Elise, born Aug."'22' at the
Pleasant Valley Hosp1'lal. Tbe
infantweighedeightpoundsand
e•· ht ounces
g
·
Mr. and Mrs. Chadwell have a
da h
IIi
.
three
ug ter, Po e Anna,
·
G d
ts
Mr nd Mr
ran paren are ·a
s.
Wyatt F. Chadwell, Pomeroy,
R te 3 M
p I'
ou
,
rs.
au me
Greathouse of Middleport and

uofcourse,
because she
has Electric
Heatin "

SHIRT
FINISHING
'
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9-0ut At 5

UHOur Fr" Parfclng Lot

Robinson's Cleaners

f

Other Banlting Hou" 9 to 3
and S to 7 as usual 011
Fridays.

i!~~::"rA

..

ICE CREAM .

MILK

Maple Nul And
Cherry Nul

lh GALLON, 53'
gal on~

gge

lh gaL
carton

lh gal crt

SOOT LAD
KRINKLE .CUT •""·.,-. .,
POTATOES

69~

5 lb.
bag

69~

A!! Carved

5 lb.
bag

69~

SPREADABLES

A - AUARANTH
8 - PRECIOSA SET

BY CARNAnON

GOESSLER
JEWELRY
STORE

THURSDAY ONLY!

NABISCO POP-UP

RC
8 PAK
·COLA 1 ~QL

Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

TOASTETTES
6 Fruit

SPECIAL

Fled Pa:dlies

U.S. GRADE A
SMALL

EGGS

crt

3

6 $
loaues

3

PURPOSE

VALUES
.

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE!

.

AVORITE
BREAD

BANANAS

In plain colors and plaids.
ldeol for fall sewing. Now

THE FABRIC SHOP ....,..;

l-Ib. bl1

5... $}

lb.

4'01.
jar

Taster's
Coupon Choice ®
FREEZE·DRIED COFFEE

1.00

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE!

u.s.

GRADE ASMAll

EGGS
3 :79~
~

9 to 10 • Sun.

We Accept Federal FOOd Skunp8
PHONE: 992·3480

v

•

'

'

89~
.

With

· .

992-2284

INSTAN T CO FFEE

MARK V STORE

MARKET • Open

'

~ESCAFE

1.00

Graham Crackers

U. S. NO. l
ALL

REG. 198 &amp;4.98

....

~

SUNSHINE BRAND

POTATOES

54"10
60'' WIDE

qlthr

$}19

Ol.
jar

EASY MONDAY

FAVORITE
BREAD

Bonded
Acrylics·

1~

Pink Liquid Detergent

3doz.

SATURDAY ONLY!

GROUP OF FABRICS

SAVE

Corner Mill anil Second Sis.
•

Chocolate.
Vanilla.
and
Fudge
Neopolitan
Royale.

SOOT LAD
. fRENCH
FRIES

FAIRMONT
TOP GRADE

Come decide for
yourself.

SINGER SALES .. &amp; SUIIItE
M~CALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERN'

lb.

At Mark V
Fro:en Prices!

SEALTEST

00

Selecting
right
diamond ring can be
a difficult thing to do.
ArtCarved makes It
easy. The Art Carved
name stands tor
quality and
individuality.
th~

FRIDAY ONLY!

115 W. Secona

~

POP

PORK NECK BONES

If Quickl Easy

The Drive-In Window il
is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
I Continuously)

lb

SEALTEST
ICE CREAM

MANY FlAVORS

*** '

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

SUPERIORS

TOPPS

lb.

f

..

~

Polish
Sausage

lb.

BOSTON BUnS

!

f

lb.

SUPERIORS SMOKED

SUPERIORS FRESH PORK

i

nouncmg the bll'th of a six •
pound, seven ounce daughter,
For
Sharyl Irene, on Sept. 7.
·
Paternal grandparents are
Cheerfulness Is ·health ;
Mr. and Mrs. C. Wesley the opposite, melancholy, i(
Holcomb, Warwood, w. Va.,
Is dlseose.
•
and great-grandmother, Mrs.
-=-Haliburton
Myrtle Holcomb of Galllpolis.
Maternal grandparent&amp; include
Virgil Hayes, Columbus, and
Mrs. MUdred Haye8, Pomeroy,
and great-grandparents, Mr.
S
•
and Mrs. Carson Hayes, ·•
Syracuse and Russell Rouah of
New Haven. Mrs. Fred Wheeler
of Gallipolis i.s a great-greatgrandmother. Sharyl Irene has
_ Fridays Only
il
a brother, Tracy William, 2.

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

Daughter ts Bom

MEETING POSTPONED
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday's Homemakers'
Club meeting bas been
postponed from tbls Wednesday to September 2% for
this month only.

lb. 79~

Ground Chuck ..~.~.~~.~........
e
W1eners...!.~?.:~ .......................... 69
Bologna ... ~~-~-~-~~!.................... :.59
Stew Meat... ~?.~.~~~.~~............ 89~
LEAN

L
R berts Le G'hso
UCl e o
' na 1 n,
and Mary Guess.
·
,

COMING TO DINNER
Lady Kay Hornberger, high
priestess of Tbea Court 5,
Colwnbus, and her court will be
guests at a dinner at the Twin
City Club House at Racine at
6:30p.m. Wednesday. The Twin
City Shrinettes are hosting the
dinner which will be served by
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star.

•

FRIDAY- ONE DAY ONLY!

IN HOSPITAL
Harold E. (Baldy) Hysen,
formerly of Pomeroy, is a '
patient at the Jane Case
Hospital at Delaware, Ohio. The
room number is 321.

Cecil Huddleston, Point
Pleasant. U. M. Chadwell of
Duncan Falls is a greatgrandfather .

11

'.

5- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P«meroy, O.,Sept.14, 1971

Projectors Purchased F~n~~~:t/:~or~:ri~;:: =~~:=~tEE
·n

and a get-well card for Arthur
Smith, brother of Mrs. Meinhart
and Miss Erma Smith, a patient
at St. Mary's Hospital,
Nelsonville.
Mrs. Dale Smith presided at
:.~:· :nes~u:o'j ~·
the meeting which opened with
.
·
• · BlDle
prayerfrom the yearbook. Mrs.
: ! rMrBri:d = · M =
Roy Seyfried gave devotions
Mo.. Security With
.
•
.
•
using "God's Power" as ber
=abethPhil D avhlingl~, RodBrian~ey
theme. Members sang Happy
ns,
er,
Birthday to Mrs.' Seyfried.
While Eallng, Talklnt Will Laura Ohlinger Brenda
d M;
Ph'l
The program consisted of
Alrold !aloe toeth will drop at the wni Mr
an d ~- Eldo~
readings by Mrs. Dessauer.
wroar time? A denture adheaive can Owfuger
belp. FASTEETH• Powder Jives Weeks
~Mrs E:d ard
They were "Lucifer Had a
deatuno ........ linnor, • Mr. and Mrs. Th w
Letter for Absentees " "A
hold. Why be em~! For more B
security •nd comfort, u1e FASow~n,
M'
·
anFrieda
.
Le'omas
Birthday Wish" "A G;...ting
TEETH Denture Adhesive Powder.
n..
lSS
1vmg
'
'
Card" and "The
Parents'
Deu\uree that fit are eeeential to Mrs Beulah Utte back
health. See your dentiat ft(Ularly.
·
r
·
Creed." Miss Sybil Ebersbach
&amp;.
r' " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - , - -- -- - -- - - - - . gave a questionnaire on the Ten
Commandments, and Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, "Beatitudes, for the
Aged."
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carrie
Meinhart, Mrs. Clarence
Massar, Mrs. Oris Ginther, and
Miss Ebersbach. Asalad course
was served by Mrs. Reibel,
Mrs. Seyfried, Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler. Flowers from the
garden of Mrs. Homer Holter
centered the table.

0.:::1.:

7 Atte1ui Graham
WSCS' Meeting

.

.,

" We Reserve The Right To

.

MARK Y
STORE

�•
· 1-fttDIIIJI ,

.,,o.,lllpl.lt,lt'll

',M!t!cl!eport-1'

'BARNEY

\

Sentinel ·Classifieds Get Actio~ ! Sentinel ~lassifieds Get Results!
Card of Thanks •

OUR , HEARTFELT th~nks to
· the many people who helped
ua In any way through our
!}ad des t

hour .

We

were

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a :m.

overwhelmed by the many

Will be a~cepted until9 a.m . fo"
Da\' of Publication

those who were friends of our

REGULAJIONS

·

beloved son , Sam . We are
The Publisher reserves the
grateful to our· ~wn pastor, right to edit or reject any ads
Rev . Charles Simons for his deemed objectional.
The

help all through our ordeal publisher will not be resJlbnsible
andhlsmessageofhopeat the for more than one incorrect,
funeral and .to Rev. and Mrs, insertion,
Raullin Moyer and Rev . and
RATES

Mrs. Eugene Gill for their
For Want Ad Service
visits and prayers; The 5 cents per Word one insertion .
Minimum Charge75c
,
Ie 0 f th e M1'ddl epor t F " st
peop
tf oents per word three;
Baotlsl Church, the HearthstOne
Class, Rawlings- consec•Jtive insertions .

Coats Funeral Home. Maxine
18 cents per word six conGaski 11. the pall bearers, secutive inserti~ns .
.

Feeney

Bennett

Post

25 Per Cent Doscount on pa1d

American Legion , friends, ads and ads pa1d w1fh1n 10 days.

neighbors, relatives and those
CARD OF THANKS
who sent flowers, cards and •
&amp; OBITUARY ..
food. The list Is long and $1.50 fo~ _SO word m101mum.
words are inadequale. Our Each ad&lt;M1onal word 2c .

sincere thanks to you all. The
family of Sam Hood. Milton
and Freda (father and
mother) Jim and Rosalie
(brother and sister-In-law)
John and Kathy (brother and
sister-in -law) .
9-14-ltp
.:.__

__

___

WE WISH to thank friends,
neighbors, and especially the
doctors. nurses and orderlies
al
Veterans
Memorial

Hospital, the Pomeroy E-R
squad, Ewing Funeral Home
and Rev . Donley lor all their
kindness and help during the
illness and death of our stepfather

and

uncle,

I Dutch) Bartels.

Conrad

The Walker and Bartels
Families.
9·14·11P

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20,549
Eatate of Charles H. Jones,

Dtc .. ttd.

Notice Is hereby given that

Hllah A. Jones of 109 South
Third St., Middleport, Ohio, has

been duly appointed Ad mlnistntrlk of the Estate of
Charles H. Jones, deceased ,
l1t1 ot Village of Middleport ,
Meigs County , Ohio.
Creditors are required to tile
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.

Dated this 2nd day of sep.

ttmber 1971 .

F . H. O'BRIEN

Probate Judge of said County

191 7, 14, 21

WIN AT BRIDGE

Notice

GOSPEL MEETING
SUCCESS
Sept.13-19 .
7:30p.m.
Clifford S~ver,
. Evangelist

,

S1S9S

STEREO-Radio

4 Door Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk.

·

'iJ.' ,

Pomer~J..~1.1: Co•.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMERO"',
.. ·.
. OHIO

~

:

REWARD FOR return or in- CLEAN RUGS like new, so easy
formation concerning a 6to do with Blue Lustre. Rent
month old Siamese cat. Write
electric shampooer, Sl. Baker
Box 2'13, Middleport, Ohio.
Furniture Company .
9-14-61c
9-8-6tc
NEW breaktasl se1. 1h price.

debts contracted by anyone

other than myself . Signed:
Marton R. Hawk .
9-11-3tp
TRYING ·ro locate. first name

phone 992-2580.
9·14-Jtc
NEW IDEA corn picker, phone
742-4731.
9-14-31p

unknown, last name, Morris,

EVERYONE WELCOME

MAPLE Stereo-radio com bination, AM-FM radio, ..
speaker sound system, --4
speed automa1ic changer,
separate controls. Balance

2nd Lt., H Co., 1091h Infantry, HALF RUNNER beans, $2
28th Keystone Dlv. Contact
bushel. Potatoes. Clarence
Warren Lynd, 1717 7th St.,
Proffitt, Portland . Phone 843·
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662.
2254.
9-11-3tc

Auto Sales
1964 CORVAIR, 3 speed stan"
dard transmission, runs good
-$100. 1961 Otds 4 dr . Hardtop
automatic
transmission.
power steering and brakes -

$100. Phone 992-2444 after S: 30
p.m., George Hacket1, Jr., 93
7th Ave., Middleport, Ohio.
. 9-14-3tp

or

take

payments. Phone 992-3663 or
see at 448 S. Second St.,
Middleport.
9-12-3tc
'67 MERCURY Colony Park
Wagon, V-8, power steering,
power brakes, automatic.
many ektras. 10 passenger.

Sa e

MIDDLEPORT

CAB CO.

new condition. Pay $37.45
cash
or
credit
terms

24 Hr. Service~ Same Prices

ava ilable. Phone 992-5641.
9-14-6tc

As Always.

9fl.J657

Have Your Seasowl
Air Con~itioning .

6887.

~OffiBADGEGUYS----------~----~

Special
AI

6,98

Plus

Parts

'BlaeHnar's

O'BRIEN

Ell:CJRIC SERVICE
Residential,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wtring
24 Hour Service
Racine.(!.

All work guaran teed. Phone

992-1343.

~.

Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Opera!CM'.
5-13-lfc

~

HlA, l.oo. .

MEREL'I A ®

LET ME BRING
1-\IM IN,CHIEI".':'

CLEVER

DISGUISE-

I'LL MAKE
1-\IM TALK-

.JH

EAST

652

.1063

.107,4 .~

.J653

+J93 '•

. +Q4

.AK108'5

.Q96 3

SOUTH (D)

.AQ98

• Q2
t AKB763

.2

Both vulnerable
West North East

Send SJ for JACOBY MODERN book
to: "Win at Bridge," (c/o this news·
poP&lt;rJ, P.O. Box 49, Rod;o c;tr
Station, New York, N.Y. POOJ9.

colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161112 "''
'h Ave., HE NS- Aiba

Yost. Miners ville. Phone 949-4980 .

Middleport, Ot.

8-2'1-tfc

Instruct ion
SEMI DRIVER TRAINING.We

7-18-tlt
NEW, 3-bedroom home in
Middleport. Built-in kitchen,

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home. Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.

7-31-tfc

heal, good neighborhood. Can
arrange

FHA financing .
Telephone 992 -3600 or 992·
2186.

TRENCHER and complete
water line installation. Phone
985-3373 week days after 5
p.m. or weekends.
9-9-12tc

were necessary as was the are currently offering tractor
king of spades, The ·two trailer training through the
Pass 1•
Pass
7-25-lfc
jacks
were extras.
facilities of the following
Pass 3 •
Pass
South ruffed the second t ruck · I ines . Truck Lin e
PU! 5 +
Pass
3 BEDROOM brick home . ROSEBERRY furnace inPass Pass
Pass
club; drew trumps and went Distribution Systems, Inc.,
Choice location In Middleport.
Automatic
Degree
Day
stallation . Free estimates on
Express
Parcel
Deliveries,
after diamonds.
Opening lead-· K
Seen by appointment only.
new
furnaces, oil or .gas.
Inc
.•
Skyline
Deliveries,
Inc.
Delivery
and
Duel
Delivery
Even with perfect cards For application and in Phone 992-5513 alter 4 p.m.
Service work . Call Ceci I
Equipment.
slam depended on good terview, call 304-344-8843, or
5-7-tfc
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby the
breaks. South had to find write School Safety Division, We also have a complete line
Phone 614-843-2174.
The first rule for proper both trumps and diamonds United Systems, Inc., c-o of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters SIX ROOM house, bath, full
9-11-JO!p
~asement , 133 Butternut Ave.,
use of Blackwood is that you divided 3-2. Otherwise the Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland and Furnaces.
. . ..
just walking distance from -BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
·
POMEROY
don't bid BlackwoO&lt;A unless hand would collapse on the Dr ive, Charleston , West
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact
/
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Virginia , 15306.
Septic tanks installed. George
you know what to do when rocks of distribution.
:d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswodh
Phone 992 -2181
(Bill) Pull ins , Phone 992-2478.
your partner responds.
!NEWSPAPER EHTUPRISE ASSN.)
Urive, Columbus, Ohio, phone.
..25-tlc
237-4334, Columbus .
·
This first rule expands to
COAL,
limestone.
Excelsior
Female Help Wanted
5-9-llci
the following: 0 n 1y use
&lt;att Works, E. Main St.,
Real Estate FOr Sale
Blackwood when you intend
i'omeroy . Phone 992-3891.
HEY MRS . HOUSEWIVE!
,
Bored of the same old job.
A-9-tfc
to bid six If your partner's
The bidding has been:
response shows that your West North East South Join Beeline Fashions. Call APPLES
Fitzpatrick Qr.
~- 4146 or 949-3703.
side holds three aces.
chards, State Route 689,
•
Further expansion points Pass
1 N.T.
Pass
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
out the inadvisability of
9-3-tfc
You, South, hold:
Help Wanted
using Blackwood when you
· 608 East Main
have a worthless doubleton .A K 8 7 ¥K Z tA K 5 .K B3 z EARN AT home addressing GREEN BEANS, pick your
What
do
.you
do
now
?
envelopes.
Rush
stamped
POMEROY
own,
$1.50
a
bushel.
Andrew
in an unbid suit.
FARM
61.37 ACRES
Cross,
Racine,
Ohio.
A-Bid
three
no
trump.
sell-addressed
envelope.
The
Another good Blackwood What else?
Broker ·
Rutland Township, nice 5
Ambrose
Co.,
4325 Lakeborn,
9-3-18tc
rule is not to use it too often.
110 Mechanic Street
room home, out cellar, barn,
TODAY'S QUESTION
Davisburg, Mich .. 48019.
Pomeroy, Ohio
South's four no-trump call is
shop, fruit trees, berries, A
9-8-JO!p HALF ARABIAN mare colt, 6an example of this. He did
Instead of bidding one no- - - - - - - - - STEAL AT JUST SS,SOO.OO.
months, halter broke, very NEW LISTING- Kanauga- 3
LESS THAN S100.GO AN
have the right type of hand trump North hes bid one dia- Employment Wanted
gentle. Not registered, 5175.
bedrooms, · bath. gas forced
ACRE.
mond.
What
do
you
do
now?
to try Blackwood except that
Coolville 667-6114.
air furnace. Modern kitchen,
19- YEAR -OLD girl wants
it wasn't quite strong
9·8·12tp
Full basement.
babysitting ,. ob Monday lhr,u
POMEROY - 1 story frame,
Riggs, Ease., Orange.
Friday. Wll live ln. Phone
bath, 3 bedrooms, basement,
NEW
LISTING
De~ter
6
POODLE
puppies,
Silver
Toy,
992-5709
,
porches,
gas forced air heat.
Ida
M.
Christie
to
Cecil
C.
Meigs
Park view Kennels. Phone 992- rooms, bath, gas furnace.
SS,OOO.OO.
Heilman, Allen C. Heilman,
Business building, 30&gt;«&lt;.
5443.
8-15-tlc
one-sixth Acre, Bedford.
POMEROY - Nice 3 bedrooms, POMEROY - 2 story frame, 6
Richard W. Rawlings, Betty Wanted
rooms, J bedrooms, utility
l'h baths, large living and
room
, bath, ALMOST NEW
WOMAN
needs
someone
to
stay
Rawlings to Jack Carsey,
dining. Double garage.
GAS FORCED AIR HEAT,
5 days a week, some nights.
Neacil Carsey, Lots, D. H.
some hardwood floors. JUST
Phone 992-5586.
2 ACRES -On Rl. 33 North.
Lasley's Sub-Div ., Pomeroy.
$3,800.00 WORTH MUCH
MORE.
CHESHIRE - Fast lunch tot.
Arihur Atherton, Ollie John Williams, Sandra
•anted
To
Buy
Atherton to Eastates Gas Williams to John W. Arbaugh,
POMEROY - RenOvated 3 RUTLAND-Ph story frame. 3
Producing Co., Right of Way, Ethel M. Arbaugh, Lot No. 32, OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks,
bedrooms, bath, storm doors
bedrooms, bath, furnace, nice
and-or complete households.
and windows, nice porch;
Arbaugh's 2nd, Olive.
kitchen.
Orange.
1
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
1.2 • 14' • 24' • WIDE
large tot, GOOD FOR A
Genevieve Guthrie to
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
FAMILY. $6,900.00 TAKES
MINERSVILLE - Good 3
Wanted
Eastates Gas Producing Co.,
THIS PLACE.
8·25-tlc
bedrooms, bath, furnace .
Right of Way, Orange.
Garage.
;LO
;;:C;:A
:-;L- M
::-:-A-:-N;--w-,is-:h-e-s- t:o- buy
PLACE THE SALE OF
Arvel M. Swartz, Juanita
acreage close to Pomeroy ..•:
YOUR PROPERTY IN
30 ACRES - on Rl. 1.13 North.
Phone 992-3374.
Swartz to Easla tes Gas
CAPABLE HANOS
1220 Washington Blvd.
HENRY
E. CLELAND
US
BEFORE
YOU
BUY
SEE
Producing Co., Right of Way,
ll&lt;!lpre, Ohio
R-EALTOR
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
Orange.
Office 992-22St
ASSOCIATE
For Rent
Carrie E. Swartz to Easlates
Residence 992-3568
992-3325
NEW
DELUXE
sewing
Poles
Gas Producing Co., Right of
machine, Zig-Zag, heavy
9·12-61c
9-ll-6tc
3 ROOM unfurnished apar tduty
,
built-in
motor
and
light,
Maximum
Way, Orange.
ment. Ph one 992-2288.
does everything. Only $64.88.
9-14-lfc
Shirley R. · Findling, Edna
Diameter
Twin City Sewing Machine.
- -- - - Findling to Eastates Gas
Phone 992-7085.
10" on
NICE trailer, 1 bedroom , ideal
f~~~-operetion.
Producing CO., Right of Way,
of water
for couple, 10 miles north of
Largest End
Auto .
Orange.
Pomeroy , Phone 992-6452.
PORTABLE Singer sewing ,
r
leVel
9-14"1fc
Harold L. Henderson, Wilma
machine, wilt se ll lor repair ·
controL
LiiiY
bill,
519.22.
Twin
City
Sewing
.
F!lter
or
Power
A. Henderson to Easlates Gas
Fm Agitator .
Machine. Phone 992-7085.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Producmg Co., Right of Way.
Ptrrna· Prtss - ·
Court , Rt. 124, Syracuse,
9-10-6tc
M1ytag
'
Orange.
Ohio. 992-1951.
Haloaf Hut
i
4-2-tfc 1954 DODGE truck, 2 ton S400,
Glen E. Robinson, Dorothy
Drrers
~
1962 Chrysler 300 - S200. Wilt
Surround clothes Robinson to Eastates Gas
with gentle, tvet'l f
trade for pickup, phone 949·
FURNISHED and untu;n'W,ed
Proddcing Co., Right of Way,
heat. No hot lpolS, 1
3915 ,
apartments. Close to school.
no overdrying.
Orange.
·
9- 12-61c
Phone 992·5434.
Fine Mesh Lint
10-18-tfc
Fred .Birlcher, Catherine
F nter.
'66
OLDSMOBILE
Vista
W• Specl•llu in
Blrtcher to Edgar D. Birtcher,
Cruiser Wagon - $650, '64
3 ROOM apartment and bath~
MAYTAO
Lot, Pomeroy.
Bu ill -In electric wall oven and
Buick Wildcat - S4SO, 3 mim's
Red C•rpe1
Service
table lop range, double bQwl
rings - I diamond , 1 black
Kenneth H. Vining to Minnie
smk , overlooking the Ohio
1
blue
sapllndle
sapphire,
On Old Rt. 33
M. Vining, Parcels, Salisbury.
phire, near Coopers' sto:re,
river, real clean and nice.
Phone 992-2689
Harley Koenig, Louise
Rt. 124, Portland Phone 843Phone Gallipolis 446-9539
after
5
p,m,
'
2608.
Pomeroy,
Ohlo
Chaffee, Kellb Chaffee to
Arnold Gratl!
Rutland,O.
9-12·31t
9-S·I!G
'
.
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith A.
-- -~ - ~ - ~.·.!..· -----,.

I.

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Deland·
Realty

FuRNRURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

~

Phone 992-2550
lnsur~- Experienced
Work
Guaranteed
. -See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation:

KJHN.SON MASOrtRY

BUGS BUNNY

r.mnplete
Re~o~l~

NC»Jf?ol &lt;.JtJSr .5EEM5
TO~EANDG0 1

® 190U.Y, PA , 1. 11-iCOSHT

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

NEEDrr!

'lARRlSON'S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE . Phon&lt;
992-2522.

OHIO

PAWJ oo.·

itUTlAND FURNITURE

.

( '~

- - --- - -·-

.

r 5LI&lt;E oo
API'REClAlE
'IWR 14El..P,

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

m4 qrandson is
qoinq to live in a
hole ... it's qoinqto

O' DELL WHEEL ahgnmen t

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 9.6-3821

lD PRC6RAM ..

'lHINIONG' ~
WJI&lt;S .JUST 100

DR. FRm!

P-t..0-4 ' MAN!

be a clean hole!

,. I

and railing. Call A. JacOb,
sales representati'lle. For free
estimates, phone Charles.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
S-27-llc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

lost

your

operator's license? Call !1922966.
6-IS.IIc

Racine, Ohio

Crltf Bradford
5-1-tfc

NOW ~ HOT THE 11ME,
CHILD •• I WilL TELL YOU
WHEN~

LfAPirt'
Ll1ARDS!!

THE SHOP, Custom meat . .- - - - - - - - - ·
culling, Pleasant Rid!le Road,
Pomeroy. Dick Vaugnan, 992·
3374 and Dale Little, 992-6346. .ITEM: Morning·. A
9-12-JOtc 'zestful time for some
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
. Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tlc

people. Double dismal
for others. Jim Mees
somellow gets' ·us all
toglfther every day,

DAllY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

WMP0!-1390

ROOF PAINT and minor
repair. FCM' estimate, call 992.
2139.
'
_ __ _ __ __ 9·8-6lp

38. - - nowo

THOSE BAGS ON '1\lE
GROUNO-SEE

RIPCORD

TillS MAN WAS IN
TROUBLE.

· WI-I AT'S 1N
THEM.

11.
~~~~:~~~~l
r
ladl.,..

l.Imbue

man

2. Railroad
car

mese

( i wds.)

New Year
15.Sback
fate
tmfalrly

of Idaho
11. Purple;
ti.1a&lt;

25. Fri&amp;r;

15. Rear
18. Fty

27. Thither

4. Nigerian
city

2l.Temple
(poet)
22. Make

lightly

k!"''l

l

monk

28. Undergo
29. Step
In
M.Major
( mus.)

23. Inheritor
2i. Spotless

letter

-SPECIAL-

~TATIVI'

10 INVE'STfGATE, rouJR'£5_ CRAHK

l'lll.OI!fS PWSIX

011 fiOl; IT lll:l!I'T 110!«( IIAI1AI10 CH!Ct&lt;)
ON HOW llllllLY'S &lt;ONG HIS JOIJ,

MEETS WITH THE

. '69 Ford Falcon ~----- ~1395

CHAIIIAIAH OF A
COI6Jif55tONAL,

alN.I\ITTff ON
TilE I'OS5tlllf

2 Or., stand. trans. , low mileage.

'69 PL Roadrunner ................... '1795

SliOilTCOIIINGS
OF A FEIIETIAL

2 Dr .• 4 speed, radio:

AI'MIHISTtrA!ORIIfR Al'ftltlf1R.

.

'68 Plymouth Fury lll ......·.~··· ... '1395
l.

Auto. trans., radio, air condition.

.

I UQtE

I I

~~~ :::.-:::=:.:-

I

I [)

lK ( j

1'01'1/'E

deity
ASAOME-MfMefR ~
'IOU'lliiA'II' aJIISIVE~A!ItE tiiTITUIIE

.

I

21.Fiefd

TERRY

I'EEC.4.

35. GrMI&lt;

ally

real deal at their new
Chester.

I

iT'S 6f{AND WHEN

I

NOTHIN!:&gt;

23. CODrled

24. Sonny'a
mu.sloal
partner
25. Wan! off
28. Chance
27. Italian

fA..wen t•......,.w)

port
30. Nigerian
trlbeamB.Il
31 . "- C&amp;rd- .....

-

Jun•hl•" APPLY MINCE TREMOR BUSHil
y ......n~ ...·•
- \ An,."n: -tr fl r~oi•y I'"''~· ·
mi,drr he

,,,.,p

+-+-

;,.ril,.tl- COMPLAtNTS

L over''
32. Pallid
33. Parlor

36.Timeln
office
37. French

66 Pontiac Le Mans Tempest

-port

· 2 dr. convertible .. Auto., radio'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

TRUCKS

It LONGFELLOW
One Jetter simply stands for anOther. In this sample A i.s

'61 Ford PiclwP Trudl ................
.
~

used for the three

L'~

X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

apostrophes. the length and formation of the worda are nll
htntl!. Each day the code letters are different.

-~

'h Ton.

'57
Ford Pickup Trudl.•. :............. '}9S
1! Ton.

TillS ISN'T '1'0011. HOIISE ...
THIS IS /IN HOO§E!

A C:.,'Pl!'(ram Quot:allon

1

ORL

5Pe Rav Riggs or AI Zeigler

RUSLr.AUUS

IFFC

RIGGS BROS., INC.

UMLZ

OU
7,

nOTKFL

r· n ·

i

~

HSOTF

TD
BL

U HZ DTERD

DOTKFL

O!ester,o.

IJHZ

SUO

INOH·

NLIDL
ISV

OU

YLETS.

CIBSD . ·- RLJ;'L~

1

'

•

IT!

22. Food !lob

35.Nu~ce

2 Dr. H.T.

IS

SPOKEN IN

owner

'&amp;8 Cmtlet ••••••.••..•.... .. •••.. •.•• .•.. '1395

Located on s. Rt. 1

Uns&lt;nmbleth ... four Jumbles;
one letter to oath squllft, to
form four ordinary worda.

matter
9.Nelgh·
bor

19. AddiUon·

WE CREAtE
Stop in and see Ray

985-4100

ing

6.Rowan
. tree

l1.Caustlc

~tgMIDM;-IJ.J=!!:!.wc

laugh.

s. sew

l6.llanlpu-

~-

(3
8. No

joy

3. Stop
mincing
words

ce 1971 Kin&amp;' J"eaturu Syndicate,-Inc.)

brief

with

12. Price paid
13. Off the
ship
Vietna-

ON GOOD USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

anUy

DOWN

Unwelcome
artsong

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SOME PEOPLE THINK THAT
DOCTORS AND NURSES CAN PUT SCJI.AMBLED EGGS
BACK INTO THE SHELL.-DOROTHY CANFIELD

7.Pleas-

1. AdVIUltage 39. Htghway
5. Kipnis or
ot ancient
Rome
Plnza
lO. German

DICK TRACY

•

'
~

.

.. . I

marquees, aluminum siding

estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middlef)orl, Oh io. ·
6-30-lfC'

'6.00 Per Ton
.DELIVERED
TO

ANP

992-7608

0pen1Til5
Monday thru Saturday

.

~

VIOLIN ON

FLOOR

Septic Tanks
And Le;rch Beds.

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Transfers

MILLER
MOBiL£. HOMES

PROFESSOI'! SKARPSNFLAT

TH~EW ~

DOESN'T IT ? 'IOU
NEVER HAVE Ef\OUGH
WHEN )!JtJ REAltY

WE HAD MORE iHAN
THIS IN iHE BANK .

Kitchetis, Bollrs
Room Additions
And Patios
lllckhoe And
EndtoMier Wort

Wheel Alifiment

Property

'

G€1' THAT Fi-'1'
FOR lriE '?-

And

ceramic tile bath, all-electric

BEAT the COLD WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
HEATING OIL FROM
LANDMARK.
We have the finest Budget
Pay Plan, Delivery Services,

VOU'LL MAKE A WHEEL~
CHAIR TALK?- THAT
WE'vr;. GOTTA SEE,
"""-""'" HUH, B0'/5? ..:----'

LANCE LOT
LANCE, WI"L '1tJU

OFFICE SUPPUES

•
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
enough. North had limited
Cons!.
Roofing , SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Complete front end ser.vice.
LIVING ROOM suite, solid 3 BEDROOM home, with bath, QUEEN
his hand when he jumped to
112 acre lot, on new public
remodeling,
aluminum
tune up and brake service.
cherry corner shelf, metal
service, all makes, 992-22S..,
three spades and unless
water
system,
located
just
off
siding.
Phone
992-7324.
·
Wheels b~lanced elec wardrobe
,
small
electric
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy.
North held perfect cards for
tronically. ' All
work
Rt . 7 on County Rd. 25 a1
8-25-tfc
healer, old solid oak dresser.
AulhCM'iZed Singer Sales and
him, South wasn't going to
DRIVERS: Eli &amp; James
Chester, Ohio. If interested - - - - - - - - guaranteed .
Reasonable
swivel back chair . small
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
be able to bring home a
call 985-4262.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
metal wall cabinet, wooden
SEWING machine service in
3-2'1-tfc
KOSCOT Kosmetics
Sepslam confract.
9-5-12tc your home. Clean, oil and
7-27-lfc
desk, shadow box wall clock,
tember
Sa
les
Special:
baby
walker,
2
odd
stands.
adjust,
only
«.
Call
992-7085.
North• was kind enough to Kreamy Up Kate $2 now
Ph one 991-7442.
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
CONCRETE AWNINGS, storm doors and.
'
9-10.61c READY -MIX
show pp with · perfect cards. Sl.SO,
Frostlucent Lip Kale
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
del
ivered
right
to· your
windows. carports,
The ace and king of hearls S2.50 now S2, 23 delicious
2196.
prqjecl. Fast and easy. Fr-ee
7-11 -tfc

U1 r.t. OH.

U'LABNER

992-2094
i
606 E:. Main Pomeroy

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All We;rlher Roofing &amp;
construction Co. and AnlhiMiy Plumbing &amp; He;rting.'
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Ajr ConditiiMiing.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport •

Pome!OJ Home &amp; Auto
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

CAR RADIO
AGAIN,
FRISK !

~ 52

.

15.55
PLUMB! NG, new or repairs.

11-lEF'OLICE

SCIENCE

PcJMEROY
.
HOME&amp; AUTO

EXPERT

949-4551
Rt. 2

&amp;CARPENTER

·WORK

"

' NEYER LET MY
ILL
'TEEN-A6ER TOUCI+

Ph.992-2143

SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

Inspection and
Re4targe

Witte weekends or after 5. Reasonable rates. Ph.

p.m. weekdays . Phone 992·

L-------------J_----------~-J~~~~---~0 ---------~~~-··~

191 1

RQ(NlNG

WmL~'W.s~eoj

BfAEhWAI!S

HILTON WOLFE
949-3211

over

SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV ANNUAL Eblin Reunion will be PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zig -zag
sewing machines, still in
Phone 367-7554.
held on Sunday, September
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.
original cartons . No at 19th, at the west side state
9- 12-21t
Pomeroy.
•·
tachments needed as our
park on Rt. 33. All descen·
4-23-tfc
controls are built -in . Sews
dants of Allen and Mary Ann
I
with 1 or 2 needles, makes Rea I Estate For
Eblin,
friends
and
relatives
~-------------1
buttonholes.
sew
on
buttons,
RACINE - Lot lor sale, 108' x
12: 30.
1• .. ,.our phon• wi 11 j in1h 1 are welcome. Dinner at9-12-6tc
monograms, and blind hem
2&lt;10' - $2,000. Nice location .
... e••h ruult••, too; trhen1
stitch. Full cash price. $38.50
Phone 949-4703.
phce •n Action W1nt I
or
budget
plan
available.
9-9-6tc
I J'OU
Ad. You c1n .. 11 fumiture,
Phone
992-5641.
leppllance•• cloth•••••do•l
9-14-6tc 'CONVENIENT but secluded
l••n• of other unvted but 1building lots on T79 at Rock
IUteful it•••!
I
ELECTROLUX vacuum
Springs. Within walking
cleaner complete with at.
distance of Meigs High
tachmenls, cordwinder and
School, a S minute drive from
paint spray . Used. but in like
BACK IN BUS!N ESS
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill

L.-------------1

BILL NELSON

good condition, one owner, · - - - - - - - - - - .

sell

.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

PHONE m -2143
1970 GREMLIN , automatic. '---.,, - - - ----.J1CI
will

;

BASIC
MILITARY

finish. Balance 566.34. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
9·13-61&lt;

$78.2'1. Use our lime payment
plan. Call 992-7085.
9-13-6tt

For Sale

Notice

4

.'
•'•

; .. ~

DPERIENCED
RadiatOr Senice

speed intermixed changer,
dual volume control, --4
speaker sound sys_t~m, ·
beauliful hand rubber Walnut

vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w tires, v.s with
automatic . trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,

Special.

console,

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
1DO PCT. fiNANCING AVAILABLE
.
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 ICM' a !amity with a base
salary of ss,ooo.oo and three children. 714 Pet. annual

·~

992-7338

• 105

W1ST

1968 RIVERSIDE Motorcycle,
650 cc, good condition - S290.
Call after 5 p.m. 773-5474.
9-13-Jic

51495

'

I WILL not be respOnsible for

OIURCH OF CHRIST

FARM and home latex house
paint sa.le. King Builders
Supply, Middleport.
9-2-Wc

270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish , all good tires, 6 cyl.,
automatic trans., radio, clean interior.

1967 FORD LTD

·B usiiless Servic_
es

•"'IHIRLPOOL washer and
dryer. like new . Phone 992·
2555 or 992 72'16.

51~95

1968 DODGE DART 4 DOOR

Advert1sem~nf.

OFfiCE HOURS
.
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Da1ly,
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday .
.

?or Sale

HT Cpe .• 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine, wide oval tires,
P.S., P.B., factory air cond ., radio &amp; o1her extras.

.. BLIND ADS
.
Add1honal 25c Charge per

Blackwood Used Too Often
NORTH
.KJH
.AK9B

1967 FORD MUSTANG

..

TR'IW' ~·

· .·· '

,.-omeroy·.,.
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

...~!JI~IIatlon ~Carr~ ions ~

kindnesses of our friends and

·a

LET'S J~T CH~ mAT 1
IIJ l'l1€ a.D ~ HER£ .

'IOUlL FIND A HUSBAND
ONE OF THESE DA'IS,
20NtE MAE -·DON'T FERGIT-I SPENT FIVE 'IEAR5

�•
· 1-fttDIIIJI ,

.,,o.,lllpl.lt,lt'll

',M!t!cl!eport-1'

'BARNEY

\

Sentinel ·Classifieds Get Actio~ ! Sentinel ~lassifieds Get Results!
Card of Thanks •

OUR , HEARTFELT th~nks to
· the many people who helped
ua In any way through our
!}ad des t

hour .

We

were

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a :m.

overwhelmed by the many

Will be a~cepted until9 a.m . fo"
Da\' of Publication

those who were friends of our

REGULAJIONS

·

beloved son , Sam . We are
The Publisher reserves the
grateful to our· ~wn pastor, right to edit or reject any ads
Rev . Charles Simons for his deemed objectional.
The

help all through our ordeal publisher will not be resJlbnsible
andhlsmessageofhopeat the for more than one incorrect,
funeral and .to Rev. and Mrs, insertion,
Raullin Moyer and Rev . and
RATES

Mrs. Eugene Gill for their
For Want Ad Service
visits and prayers; The 5 cents per Word one insertion .
Minimum Charge75c
,
Ie 0 f th e M1'ddl epor t F " st
peop
tf oents per word three;
Baotlsl Church, the HearthstOne
Class, Rawlings- consec•Jtive insertions .

Coats Funeral Home. Maxine
18 cents per word six conGaski 11. the pall bearers, secutive inserti~ns .
.

Feeney

Bennett

Post

25 Per Cent Doscount on pa1d

American Legion , friends, ads and ads pa1d w1fh1n 10 days.

neighbors, relatives and those
CARD OF THANKS
who sent flowers, cards and •
&amp; OBITUARY ..
food. The list Is long and $1.50 fo~ _SO word m101mum.
words are inadequale. Our Each ad&lt;M1onal word 2c .

sincere thanks to you all. The
family of Sam Hood. Milton
and Freda (father and
mother) Jim and Rosalie
(brother and sister-In-law)
John and Kathy (brother and
sister-in -law) .
9-14-ltp
.:.__

__

___

WE WISH to thank friends,
neighbors, and especially the
doctors. nurses and orderlies
al
Veterans
Memorial

Hospital, the Pomeroy E-R
squad, Ewing Funeral Home
and Rev . Donley lor all their
kindness and help during the
illness and death of our stepfather

and

uncle,

I Dutch) Bartels.

Conrad

The Walker and Bartels
Families.
9·14·11P

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20,549
Eatate of Charles H. Jones,

Dtc .. ttd.

Notice Is hereby given that

Hllah A. Jones of 109 South
Third St., Middleport, Ohio, has

been duly appointed Ad mlnistntrlk of the Estate of
Charles H. Jones, deceased ,
l1t1 ot Village of Middleport ,
Meigs County , Ohio.
Creditors are required to tile
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.

Dated this 2nd day of sep.

ttmber 1971 .

F . H. O'BRIEN

Probate Judge of said County

191 7, 14, 21

WIN AT BRIDGE

Notice

GOSPEL MEETING
SUCCESS
Sept.13-19 .
7:30p.m.
Clifford S~ver,
. Evangelist

,

S1S9S

STEREO-Radio

4 Door Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk.

·

'iJ.' ,

Pomer~J..~1.1: Co•.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMERO"',
.. ·.
. OHIO

~

:

REWARD FOR return or in- CLEAN RUGS like new, so easy
formation concerning a 6to do with Blue Lustre. Rent
month old Siamese cat. Write
electric shampooer, Sl. Baker
Box 2'13, Middleport, Ohio.
Furniture Company .
9-14-61c
9-8-6tc
NEW breaktasl se1. 1h price.

debts contracted by anyone

other than myself . Signed:
Marton R. Hawk .
9-11-3tp
TRYING ·ro locate. first name

phone 992-2580.
9·14-Jtc
NEW IDEA corn picker, phone
742-4731.
9-14-31p

unknown, last name, Morris,

EVERYONE WELCOME

MAPLE Stereo-radio com bination, AM-FM radio, ..
speaker sound system, --4
speed automa1ic changer,
separate controls. Balance

2nd Lt., H Co., 1091h Infantry, HALF RUNNER beans, $2
28th Keystone Dlv. Contact
bushel. Potatoes. Clarence
Warren Lynd, 1717 7th St.,
Proffitt, Portland . Phone 843·
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662.
2254.
9-11-3tc

Auto Sales
1964 CORVAIR, 3 speed stan"
dard transmission, runs good
-$100. 1961 Otds 4 dr . Hardtop
automatic
transmission.
power steering and brakes -

$100. Phone 992-2444 after S: 30
p.m., George Hacket1, Jr., 93
7th Ave., Middleport, Ohio.
. 9-14-3tp

or

take

payments. Phone 992-3663 or
see at 448 S. Second St.,
Middleport.
9-12-3tc
'67 MERCURY Colony Park
Wagon, V-8, power steering,
power brakes, automatic.
many ektras. 10 passenger.

Sa e

MIDDLEPORT

CAB CO.

new condition. Pay $37.45
cash
or
credit
terms

24 Hr. Service~ Same Prices

ava ilable. Phone 992-5641.
9-14-6tc

As Always.

9fl.J657

Have Your Seasowl
Air Con~itioning .

6887.

~OffiBADGEGUYS----------~----~

Special
AI

6,98

Plus

Parts

'BlaeHnar's

O'BRIEN

Ell:CJRIC SERVICE
Residential,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wtring
24 Hour Service
Racine.(!.

All work guaran teed. Phone

992-1343.

~.

Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Opera!CM'.
5-13-lfc

~

HlA, l.oo. .

MEREL'I A ®

LET ME BRING
1-\IM IN,CHIEI".':'

CLEVER

DISGUISE-

I'LL MAKE
1-\IM TALK-

.JH

EAST

652

.1063

.107,4 .~

.J653

+J93 '•

. +Q4

.AK108'5

.Q96 3

SOUTH (D)

.AQ98

• Q2
t AKB763

.2

Both vulnerable
West North East

Send SJ for JACOBY MODERN book
to: "Win at Bridge," (c/o this news·
poP&lt;rJ, P.O. Box 49, Rod;o c;tr
Station, New York, N.Y. POOJ9.

colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161112 "''
'h Ave., HE NS- Aiba

Yost. Miners ville. Phone 949-4980 .

Middleport, Ot.

8-2'1-tfc

Instruct ion
SEMI DRIVER TRAINING.We

7-18-tlt
NEW, 3-bedroom home in
Middleport. Built-in kitchen,

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home. Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.

7-31-tfc

heal, good neighborhood. Can
arrange

FHA financing .
Telephone 992 -3600 or 992·
2186.

TRENCHER and complete
water line installation. Phone
985-3373 week days after 5
p.m. or weekends.
9-9-12tc

were necessary as was the are currently offering tractor
king of spades, The ·two trailer training through the
Pass 1•
Pass
7-25-lfc
jacks
were extras.
facilities of the following
Pass 3 •
Pass
South ruffed the second t ruck · I ines . Truck Lin e
PU! 5 +
Pass
3 BEDROOM brick home . ROSEBERRY furnace inPass Pass
Pass
club; drew trumps and went Distribution Systems, Inc.,
Choice location In Middleport.
Automatic
Degree
Day
stallation . Free estimates on
Express
Parcel
Deliveries,
after diamonds.
Opening lead-· K
Seen by appointment only.
new
furnaces, oil or .gas.
Inc
.•
Skyline
Deliveries,
Inc.
Delivery
and
Duel
Delivery
Even with perfect cards For application and in Phone 992-5513 alter 4 p.m.
Service work . Call Ceci I
Equipment.
slam depended on good terview, call 304-344-8843, or
5-7-tfc
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby the
breaks. South had to find write School Safety Division, We also have a complete line
Phone 614-843-2174.
The first rule for proper both trumps and diamonds United Systems, Inc., c-o of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters SIX ROOM house, bath, full
9-11-JO!p
~asement , 133 Butternut Ave.,
use of Blackwood is that you divided 3-2. Otherwise the Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland and Furnaces.
. . ..
just walking distance from -BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
·
POMEROY
don't bid BlackwoO&lt;A unless hand would collapse on the Dr ive, Charleston , West
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact
/
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Virginia , 15306.
Septic tanks installed. George
you know what to do when rocks of distribution.
:d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswodh
Phone 992 -2181
(Bill) Pull ins , Phone 992-2478.
your partner responds.
!NEWSPAPER EHTUPRISE ASSN.)
Urive, Columbus, Ohio, phone.
..25-tlc
237-4334, Columbus .
·
This first rule expands to
COAL,
limestone.
Excelsior
Female Help Wanted
5-9-llci
the following: 0 n 1y use
&lt;att Works, E. Main St.,
Real Estate FOr Sale
Blackwood when you intend
i'omeroy . Phone 992-3891.
HEY MRS . HOUSEWIVE!
,
Bored of the same old job.
A-9-tfc
to bid six If your partner's
The bidding has been:
response shows that your West North East South Join Beeline Fashions. Call APPLES
Fitzpatrick Qr.
~- 4146 or 949-3703.
side holds three aces.
chards, State Route 689,
•
Further expansion points Pass
1 N.T.
Pass
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
out the inadvisability of
9-3-tfc
You, South, hold:
Help Wanted
using Blackwood when you
· 608 East Main
have a worthless doubleton .A K 8 7 ¥K Z tA K 5 .K B3 z EARN AT home addressing GREEN BEANS, pick your
What
do
.you
do
now
?
envelopes.
Rush
stamped
POMEROY
own,
$1.50
a
bushel.
Andrew
in an unbid suit.
FARM
61.37 ACRES
Cross,
Racine,
Ohio.
A-Bid
three
no
trump.
sell-addressed
envelope.
The
Another good Blackwood What else?
Broker ·
Rutland Township, nice 5
Ambrose
Co.,
4325 Lakeborn,
9-3-18tc
rule is not to use it too often.
110 Mechanic Street
room home, out cellar, barn,
TODAY'S QUESTION
Davisburg, Mich .. 48019.
Pomeroy, Ohio
South's four no-trump call is
shop, fruit trees, berries, A
9-8-JO!p HALF ARABIAN mare colt, 6an example of this. He did
Instead of bidding one no- - - - - - - - - STEAL AT JUST SS,SOO.OO.
months, halter broke, very NEW LISTING- Kanauga- 3
LESS THAN S100.GO AN
have the right type of hand trump North hes bid one dia- Employment Wanted
gentle. Not registered, 5175.
bedrooms, · bath. gas forced
ACRE.
mond.
What
do
you
do
now?
to try Blackwood except that
Coolville 667-6114.
air furnace. Modern kitchen,
19- YEAR -OLD girl wants
it wasn't quite strong
9·8·12tp
Full basement.
babysitting ,. ob Monday lhr,u
POMEROY - 1 story frame,
Riggs, Ease., Orange.
Friday. Wll live ln. Phone
bath, 3 bedrooms, basement,
NEW
LISTING
De~ter
6
POODLE
puppies,
Silver
Toy,
992-5709
,
porches,
gas forced air heat.
Ida
M.
Christie
to
Cecil
C.
Meigs
Park view Kennels. Phone 992- rooms, bath, gas furnace.
SS,OOO.OO.
Heilman, Allen C. Heilman,
Business building, 30&gt;«&lt;.
5443.
8-15-tlc
one-sixth Acre, Bedford.
POMEROY - Nice 3 bedrooms, POMEROY - 2 story frame, 6
Richard W. Rawlings, Betty Wanted
rooms, J bedrooms, utility
l'h baths, large living and
room
, bath, ALMOST NEW
WOMAN
needs
someone
to
stay
Rawlings to Jack Carsey,
dining. Double garage.
GAS FORCED AIR HEAT,
5 days a week, some nights.
Neacil Carsey, Lots, D. H.
some hardwood floors. JUST
Phone 992-5586.
2 ACRES -On Rl. 33 North.
Lasley's Sub-Div ., Pomeroy.
$3,800.00 WORTH MUCH
MORE.
CHESHIRE - Fast lunch tot.
Arihur Atherton, Ollie John Williams, Sandra
•anted
To
Buy
Atherton to Eastates Gas Williams to John W. Arbaugh,
POMEROY - RenOvated 3 RUTLAND-Ph story frame. 3
Producing Co., Right of Way, Ethel M. Arbaugh, Lot No. 32, OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks,
bedrooms, bath, storm doors
bedrooms, bath, furnace, nice
and-or complete households.
and windows, nice porch;
Arbaugh's 2nd, Olive.
kitchen.
Orange.
1
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
1.2 • 14' • 24' • WIDE
large tot, GOOD FOR A
Genevieve Guthrie to
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
FAMILY. $6,900.00 TAKES
MINERSVILLE - Good 3
Wanted
Eastates Gas Producing Co.,
THIS PLACE.
8·25-tlc
bedrooms, bath, furnace .
Right of Way, Orange.
Garage.
;LO
;;:C;:A
:-;L- M
::-:-A-:-N;--w-,is-:h-e-s- t:o- buy
PLACE THE SALE OF
Arvel M. Swartz, Juanita
acreage close to Pomeroy ..•:
YOUR PROPERTY IN
30 ACRES - on Rl. 1.13 North.
Phone 992-3374.
Swartz to Easla tes Gas
CAPABLE HANOS
1220 Washington Blvd.
HENRY
E. CLELAND
US
BEFORE
YOU
BUY
SEE
Producing Co., Right of Way,
ll&lt;!lpre, Ohio
R-EALTOR
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
Orange.
Office 992-22St
ASSOCIATE
For Rent
Carrie E. Swartz to Easlates
Residence 992-3568
992-3325
NEW
DELUXE
sewing
Poles
Gas Producing Co., Right of
machine, Zig-Zag, heavy
9·12-61c
9-ll-6tc
3 ROOM unfurnished apar tduty
,
built-in
motor
and
light,
Maximum
Way, Orange.
ment. Ph one 992-2288.
does everything. Only $64.88.
9-14-lfc
Shirley R. · Findling, Edna
Diameter
Twin City Sewing Machine.
- -- - - Findling to Eastates Gas
Phone 992-7085.
10" on
NICE trailer, 1 bedroom , ideal
f~~~-operetion.
Producing CO., Right of Way,
of water
for couple, 10 miles north of
Largest End
Auto .
Orange.
Pomeroy , Phone 992-6452.
PORTABLE Singer sewing ,
r
leVel
9-14"1fc
Harold L. Henderson, Wilma
machine, wilt se ll lor repair ·
controL
LiiiY
bill,
519.22.
Twin
City
Sewing
.
F!lter
or
Power
A. Henderson to Easlates Gas
Fm Agitator .
Machine. Phone 992-7085.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Producmg Co., Right of Way.
Ptrrna· Prtss - ·
Court , Rt. 124, Syracuse,
9-10-6tc
M1ytag
'
Orange.
Ohio. 992-1951.
Haloaf Hut
i
4-2-tfc 1954 DODGE truck, 2 ton S400,
Glen E. Robinson, Dorothy
Drrers
~
1962 Chrysler 300 - S200. Wilt
Surround clothes Robinson to Eastates Gas
with gentle, tvet'l f
trade for pickup, phone 949·
FURNISHED and untu;n'W,ed
Proddcing Co., Right of Way,
heat. No hot lpolS, 1
3915 ,
apartments. Close to school.
no overdrying.
Orange.
·
9- 12-61c
Phone 992·5434.
Fine Mesh Lint
10-18-tfc
Fred .Birlcher, Catherine
F nter.
'66
OLDSMOBILE
Vista
W• Specl•llu in
Blrtcher to Edgar D. Birtcher,
Cruiser Wagon - $650, '64
3 ROOM apartment and bath~
MAYTAO
Lot, Pomeroy.
Bu ill -In electric wall oven and
Buick Wildcat - S4SO, 3 mim's
Red C•rpe1
Service
table lop range, double bQwl
rings - I diamond , 1 black
Kenneth H. Vining to Minnie
smk , overlooking the Ohio
1
blue
sapllndle
sapphire,
On Old Rt. 33
M. Vining, Parcels, Salisbury.
phire, near Coopers' sto:re,
river, real clean and nice.
Phone 992-2689
Harley Koenig, Louise
Rt. 124, Portland Phone 843Phone Gallipolis 446-9539
after
5
p,m,
'
2608.
Pomeroy,
Ohlo
Chaffee, Kellb Chaffee to
Arnold Gratl!
Rutland,O.
9-12·31t
9-S·I!G
'
.
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith A.
-- -~ - ~ - ~.·.!..· -----,.

I.

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Deland·
Realty

FuRNRURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

~

Phone 992-2550
lnsur~- Experienced
Work
Guaranteed
. -See us for Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation:

KJHN.SON MASOrtRY

BUGS BUNNY

r.mnplete
Re~o~l~

NC»Jf?ol &lt;.JtJSr .5EEM5
TO~EANDG0 1

® 190U.Y, PA , 1. 11-iCOSHT

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

NEEDrr!

'lARRlSON'S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE . Phon&lt;
992-2522.

OHIO

PAWJ oo.·

itUTlAND FURNITURE

.

( '~

- - --- - -·-

.

r 5LI&lt;E oo
API'REClAlE
'IWR 14El..P,

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

m4 qrandson is
qoinq to live in a
hole ... it's qoinqto

O' DELL WHEEL ahgnmen t

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 9.6-3821

lD PRC6RAM ..

'lHINIONG' ~
WJI&lt;S .JUST 100

DR. FRm!

P-t..0-4 ' MAN!

be a clean hole!

,. I

and railing. Call A. JacOb,
sales representati'lle. For free
estimates, phone Charles.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
S-27-llc
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

lost

your

operator's license? Call !1922966.
6-IS.IIc

Racine, Ohio

Crltf Bradford
5-1-tfc

NOW ~ HOT THE 11ME,
CHILD •• I WilL TELL YOU
WHEN~

LfAPirt'
Ll1ARDS!!

THE SHOP, Custom meat . .- - - - - - - - - ·
culling, Pleasant Rid!le Road,
Pomeroy. Dick Vaugnan, 992·
3374 and Dale Little, 992-6346. .ITEM: Morning·. A
9-12-JOtc 'zestful time for some
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
. Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tlc

people. Double dismal
for others. Jim Mees
somellow gets' ·us all
toglfther every day,

DAllY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

WMP0!-1390

ROOF PAINT and minor
repair. FCM' estimate, call 992.
2139.
'
_ __ _ __ __ 9·8-6lp

38. - - nowo

THOSE BAGS ON '1\lE
GROUNO-SEE

RIPCORD

TillS MAN WAS IN
TROUBLE.

· WI-I AT'S 1N
THEM.

11.
~~~~:~~~~l
r
ladl.,..

l.Imbue

man

2. Railroad
car

mese

( i wds.)

New Year
15.Sback
fate
tmfalrly

of Idaho
11. Purple;
ti.1a&lt;

25. Fri&amp;r;

15. Rear
18. Fty

27. Thither

4. Nigerian
city

2l.Temple
(poet)
22. Make

lightly

k!"''l

l

monk

28. Undergo
29. Step
In
M.Major
( mus.)

23. Inheritor
2i. Spotless

letter

-SPECIAL-

~TATIVI'

10 INVE'STfGATE, rouJR'£5_ CRAHK

l'lll.OI!fS PWSIX

011 fiOl; IT lll:l!I'T 110!«( IIAI1AI10 CH!Ct&lt;)
ON HOW llllllLY'S &lt;ONG HIS JOIJ,

MEETS WITH THE

. '69 Ford Falcon ~----- ~1395

CHAIIIAIAH OF A
COI6Jif55tONAL,

alN.I\ITTff ON
TilE I'OS5tlllf

2 Or., stand. trans. , low mileage.

'69 PL Roadrunner ................... '1795

SliOilTCOIIINGS
OF A FEIIETIAL

2 Dr .• 4 speed, radio:

AI'MIHISTtrA!ORIIfR Al'ftltlf1R.

.

'68 Plymouth Fury lll ......·.~··· ... '1395
l.

Auto. trans., radio, air condition.

.

I UQtE

I I

~~~ :::.-:::=:.:-

I

I [)

lK ( j

1'01'1/'E

deity
ASAOME-MfMefR ~
'IOU'lliiA'II' aJIISIVE~A!ItE tiiTITUIIE

.

I

21.Fiefd

TERRY

I'EEC.4.

35. GrMI&lt;

ally

real deal at their new
Chester.

I

iT'S 6f{AND WHEN

I

NOTHIN!:&gt;

23. CODrled

24. Sonny'a
mu.sloal
partner
25. Wan! off
28. Chance
27. Italian

fA..wen t•......,.w)

port
30. Nigerian
trlbeamB.Il
31 . "- C&amp;rd- .....

-

Jun•hl•" APPLY MINCE TREMOR BUSHil
y ......n~ ...·•
- \ An,."n: -tr fl r~oi•y I'"''~· ·
mi,drr he

,,,.,p

+-+-

;,.ril,.tl- COMPLAtNTS

L over''
32. Pallid
33. Parlor

36.Timeln
office
37. French

66 Pontiac Le Mans Tempest

-port

· 2 dr. convertible .. Auto., radio'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

TRUCKS

It LONGFELLOW
One Jetter simply stands for anOther. In this sample A i.s

'61 Ford PiclwP Trudl ................
.
~

used for the three

L'~

X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

apostrophes. the length and formation of the worda are nll
htntl!. Each day the code letters are different.

-~

'h Ton.

'57
Ford Pickup Trudl.•. :............. '}9S
1! Ton.

TillS ISN'T '1'0011. HOIISE ...
THIS IS /IN HOO§E!

A C:.,'Pl!'(ram Quot:allon

1

ORL

5Pe Rav Riggs or AI Zeigler

RUSLr.AUUS

IFFC

RIGGS BROS., INC.

UMLZ

OU
7,

nOTKFL

r· n ·

i

~

HSOTF

TD
BL

U HZ DTERD

DOTKFL

O!ester,o.

IJHZ

SUO

INOH·

NLIDL
ISV

OU

YLETS.

CIBSD . ·- RLJ;'L~

1

'

•

IT!

22. Food !lob

35.Nu~ce

2 Dr. H.T.

IS

SPOKEN IN

owner

'&amp;8 Cmtlet ••••••.••..•.... .. •••.. •.•• .•.. '1395

Located on s. Rt. 1

Uns&lt;nmbleth ... four Jumbles;
one letter to oath squllft, to
form four ordinary worda.

matter
9.Nelgh·
bor

19. AddiUon·

WE CREAtE
Stop in and see Ray

985-4100

ing

6.Rowan
. tree

l1.Caustlc

~tgMIDM;-IJ.J=!!:!.wc

laugh.

s. sew

l6.llanlpu-

~-

(3
8. No

joy

3. Stop
mincing
words

ce 1971 Kin&amp;' J"eaturu Syndicate,-Inc.)

brief

with

12. Price paid
13. Off the
ship
Vietna-

ON GOOD USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

anUy

DOWN

Unwelcome
artsong

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SOME PEOPLE THINK THAT
DOCTORS AND NURSES CAN PUT SCJI.AMBLED EGGS
BACK INTO THE SHELL.-DOROTHY CANFIELD

7.Pleas-

1. AdVIUltage 39. Htghway
5. Kipnis or
ot ancient
Rome
Plnza
lO. German

DICK TRACY

•

'
~

.

.. . I

marquees, aluminum siding

estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middlef)orl, Oh io. ·
6-30-lfC'

'6.00 Per Ton
.DELIVERED
TO

ANP

992-7608

0pen1Til5
Monday thru Saturday

.

~

VIOLIN ON

FLOOR

Septic Tanks
And Le;rch Beds.

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Transfers

MILLER
MOBiL£. HOMES

PROFESSOI'! SKARPSNFLAT

TH~EW ~

DOESN'T IT ? 'IOU
NEVER HAVE Ef\OUGH
WHEN )!JtJ REAltY

WE HAD MORE iHAN
THIS IN iHE BANK .

Kitchetis, Bollrs
Room Additions
And Patios
lllckhoe And
EndtoMier Wort

Wheel Alifiment

Property

'

G€1' THAT Fi-'1'
FOR lriE '?-

And

ceramic tile bath, all-electric

BEAT the COLD WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
HEATING OIL FROM
LANDMARK.
We have the finest Budget
Pay Plan, Delivery Services,

VOU'LL MAKE A WHEEL~
CHAIR TALK?- THAT
WE'vr;. GOTTA SEE,
"""-""'" HUH, B0'/5? ..:----'

LANCE LOT
LANCE, WI"L '1tJU

OFFICE SUPPUES

•
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
enough. North had limited
Cons!.
Roofing , SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Complete front end ser.vice.
LIVING ROOM suite, solid 3 BEDROOM home, with bath, QUEEN
his hand when he jumped to
112 acre lot, on new public
remodeling,
aluminum
tune up and brake service.
cherry corner shelf, metal
service, all makes, 992-22S..,
three spades and unless
water
system,
located
just
off
siding.
Phone
992-7324.
·
Wheels b~lanced elec wardrobe
,
small
electric
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy.
North held perfect cards for
tronically. ' All
work
Rt . 7 on County Rd. 25 a1
8-25-tfc
healer, old solid oak dresser.
AulhCM'iZed Singer Sales and
him, South wasn't going to
DRIVERS: Eli &amp; James
Chester, Ohio. If interested - - - - - - - - guaranteed .
Reasonable
swivel back chair . small
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
be able to bring home a
call 985-4262.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
metal wall cabinet, wooden
SEWING machine service in
3-2'1-tfc
KOSCOT Kosmetics
Sepslam confract.
9-5-12tc your home. Clean, oil and
7-27-lfc
desk, shadow box wall clock,
tember
Sa
les
Special:
baby
walker,
2
odd
stands.
adjust,
only
«.
Call
992-7085.
North• was kind enough to Kreamy Up Kate $2 now
Ph one 991-7442.
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
CONCRETE AWNINGS, storm doors and.
'
9-10.61c READY -MIX
show pp with · perfect cards. Sl.SO,
Frostlucent Lip Kale
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
del
ivered
right
to· your
windows. carports,
The ace and king of hearls S2.50 now S2, 23 delicious
2196.
prqjecl. Fast and easy. Fr-ee
7-11 -tfc

U1 r.t. OH.

U'LABNER

992-2094
i
606 E:. Main Pomeroy

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All We;rlher Roofing &amp;
construction Co. and AnlhiMiy Plumbing &amp; He;rting.'
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Ajr ConditiiMiing.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport •

Pome!OJ Home &amp; Auto
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

CAR RADIO
AGAIN,
FRISK !

~ 52

.

15.55
PLUMB! NG, new or repairs.

11-lEF'OLICE

SCIENCE

PcJMEROY
.
HOME&amp; AUTO

EXPERT

949-4551
Rt. 2

&amp;CARPENTER

·WORK

"

' NEYER LET MY
ILL
'TEEN-A6ER TOUCI+

Ph.992-2143

SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

Inspection and
Re4targe

Witte weekends or after 5. Reasonable rates. Ph.

p.m. weekdays . Phone 992·

L-------------J_----------~-J~~~~---~0 ---------~~~-··~

191 1

RQ(NlNG

WmL~'W.s~eoj

BfAEhWAI!S

HILTON WOLFE
949-3211

over

SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV ANNUAL Eblin Reunion will be PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zig -zag
sewing machines, still in
Phone 367-7554.
held on Sunday, September
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.
original cartons . No at 19th, at the west side state
9- 12-21t
Pomeroy.
•·
tachments needed as our
park on Rt. 33. All descen·
4-23-tfc
controls are built -in . Sews
dants of Allen and Mary Ann
I
with 1 or 2 needles, makes Rea I Estate For
Eblin,
friends
and
relatives
~-------------1
buttonholes.
sew
on
buttons,
RACINE - Lot lor sale, 108' x
12: 30.
1• .. ,.our phon• wi 11 j in1h 1 are welcome. Dinner at9-12-6tc
monograms, and blind hem
2&lt;10' - $2,000. Nice location .
... e••h ruult••, too; trhen1
stitch. Full cash price. $38.50
Phone 949-4703.
phce •n Action W1nt I
or
budget
plan
available.
9-9-6tc
I J'OU
Ad. You c1n .. 11 fumiture,
Phone
992-5641.
leppllance•• cloth•••••do•l
9-14-6tc 'CONVENIENT but secluded
l••n• of other unvted but 1building lots on T79 at Rock
IUteful it•••!
I
ELECTROLUX vacuum
Springs. Within walking
cleaner complete with at.
distance of Meigs High
tachmenls, cordwinder and
School, a S minute drive from
paint spray . Used. but in like
BACK IN BUS!N ESS
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill

L.-------------1

BILL NELSON

good condition, one owner, · - - - - - - - - - - .

sell

.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

PHONE m -2143
1970 GREMLIN , automatic. '---.,, - - - ----.J1CI
will

;

BASIC
MILITARY

finish. Balance 566.34. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
9·13-61&lt;

$78.2'1. Use our lime payment
plan. Call 992-7085.
9-13-6tt

For Sale

Notice

4

.'
•'•

; .. ~

DPERIENCED
RadiatOr Senice

speed intermixed changer,
dual volume control, --4
speaker sound sys_t~m, ·
beauliful hand rubber Walnut

vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w tires, v.s with
automatic . trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,

Special.

console,

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
1DO PCT. fiNANCING AVAILABLE
.
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 ICM' a !amity with a base
salary of ss,ooo.oo and three children. 714 Pet. annual

·~

992-7338

• 105

W1ST

1968 RIVERSIDE Motorcycle,
650 cc, good condition - S290.
Call after 5 p.m. 773-5474.
9-13-Jic

51495

'

I WILL not be respOnsible for

OIURCH OF CHRIST

FARM and home latex house
paint sa.le. King Builders
Supply, Middleport.
9-2-Wc

270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish , all good tires, 6 cyl.,
automatic trans., radio, clean interior.

1967 FORD LTD

·B usiiless Servic_
es

•"'IHIRLPOOL washer and
dryer. like new . Phone 992·
2555 or 992 72'16.

51~95

1968 DODGE DART 4 DOOR

Advert1sem~nf.

OFfiCE HOURS
.
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Da1ly,
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday .
.

?or Sale

HT Cpe .• 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine, wide oval tires,
P.S., P.B., factory air cond ., radio &amp; o1her extras.

.. BLIND ADS
.
Add1honal 25c Charge per

Blackwood Used Too Often
NORTH
.KJH
.AK9B

1967 FORD MUSTANG

..

TR'IW' ~·

· .·· '

,.-omeroy·.,.
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

...~!JI~IIatlon ~Carr~ ions ~

kindnesses of our friends and

·a

LET'S J~T CH~ mAT 1
IIJ l'l1€ a.D ~ HER£ .

'IOUlL FIND A HUSBAND
ONE OF THESE DA'IS,
20NtE MAE -·DON'T FERGIT-I SPENT FIVE 'IEAR5

�'

'

i ' ..

~

.

I'
... ~'I

•

1-Tlr Dd)'SrntiJPI,Middleport·Pometoy, 0., Sepl. l4, 1971

·.:..·: .... ,·: .· .. ·=·· . .. :·. ' . ·.

Sharpshooters Saved Hostages
ByJ~J. PEPPARD

AmCA, N.Y. tUPH--State
police sharpshoolers pee~ing
thntugh pci1fi!f{ul lelescopic

AuiraMove
Only Jf'llj· Says
Gov. Gilligan
SAN JUAN , Pue~lo Rico
(UPU - Ohio GiN. John J .
Gilligan said Mooday that state
officials cannot negotiate wiUt
prisoners holding ho~tages
beca..., it woold encourage
other imnalfs to lake hostages.
Gilligan, attending the
National G&lt;Nemors Conlerence
here, ~ !he remarks in
reference to !he killings at
.~ttica Slate Prisol1 in New
Y&lt;rk.
To negotiate with prisoners
holding hoslages ·-.rould be an
open in•&gt;itatioo to grab a guard
and put a knife in his throat,"
Gilligan said. ··u guards are
taken
hoslage,
prison
autlurities must 100\·e in early
and with 0\-entbehning force."
The gO\-emor said however
there ,.as a feeling of
·· hopelessness "' among
prisoners, and be advocated
better job training to prepare
them foc posi1Jrism life.

Death
(Continued from Page I)
The knife .... in his hand.
Looking hack at it-it seems
like last Thursday when I was
captured was an a&gt;rlul long
time ago. I ..as in the metal
shop.
This other gur came running
hack into the slq&gt; and be

started

~-

I

couldn't

understand him, so like a damn
fool I walked up there and I
could ha•-e gotten out of there.
One of the metal scrnp trucks
was right outside and that's
bow one of the foremen got out.
The riot must have been
planned a loug time. It went off
so smooth.
f dOn't tmow if I'm going to go
back there Ill W1rl. omnot. I've
just been through bell lor five
days. I'm not going hack for a
couple of days at least. U they
don't like it they can have my
resignatioo.
-

MEIGS lHEATRE
TCH!igld. Sept. 14

WaH Disney's
All Car'-&gt;-Feat..-e
""''INOCCHIO"
ITodlnico.,rl
Irs Pin Endlan11n&lt;!nl!

sights were perched atop the
thick ~oncrete walls of Attica
State Prison.
When police began firing
Monday morning at rebellious
inmates who had threatened to
kill 3S hostages, the bullets
ripped into some prisoners even
as the knives they wielded
flashed up toward their captives' throats.
"The knife was pressed
against my neck," said Capt.
Frank Wald. "And he said
'when the first shot is fired I'm
going to cut you throat.' But I
was lucky. Someone picked llff
the man apparently just as he
was about to do it."
The assault by 1,700 police,
sheriff's deputies and National

FLAP
(Calor
Anthony Quinn

Claude Akins

GP

SHOW START57 P.M.

Wednesdoy &amp; Thursdoy

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
Penitentiary Warden Harold J.
Cardwell said today he sees no
signs ot tension among the
inmates here because of the
violence at Attica Stale Prison
in New York.
"Maybe I'm, feeling oversecure, but I see no signs that
Attica has caused unrest among

Busing
(Continued from Page I l
GM spokesman.
II was the first time that
pickets other than those of the
United Auto Workers or other
striking unions had succeeded
in closing a GM operation.
Asked at a news conference if
the closing would establish a
precedent for oUter community
protest against GM in the
future, Platt said, "perhaps it
does. "

"But I don't see how this will
help resolve the tssues .at
hand," he said. "I don't see
how shutting us down and
depriving our workers of their
jobs here and at Pontiac Motor
will help."
The National Action Group
(NAG), which has led opposition to the court-ordered
busing, decided to try to close
the Fisher Body plant to show
"we haven't lost our political
clout" and to get GM to lobby
for legislation which would ban
court-ordered busing.
"I've always had faith in our
people," Mrs. Irene McCabe,
NAG president, told her followers.

F~yttn

victory t II they

yelled hack. "right on Irene."
The plant employs 2,000
persons on the day shill and
another 2,000 on the night shill
which was scheduled to start at
4 p.m.

Moto Cross Set
Sunday at 1:30

S.,.runber lS-16

A Sportsman Moto Cross will

NOT OPEN

Tuesdioy

Seprunber 11-2•
THE RElVERS
( Todlnicvlorl
Sieve McQueen
Sharon Farrell

GP
A MAN

CALLED HORSE
( Todlnico1orl
Richard Harris

GP

•

••

A1T1CA, N. Y. (UPI) The dealh loll ill the Atlia
Corn&lt;:lioaal FacWty riot 'the aatloa's bloodiest JirlsGa
revolt ia modern limes · rose to 41 today wileD gurds
fouad the bodies of twa mwe
prisoners. Tho toll may rise
evea higher.
Pri1oD officials said six
other mlsslag OODYicts may
be dead Ia lite"""" ef tuaael5
beaeallt the 54-acre prisoJL

22 Schools in Trouble

black militants, who made up
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
much of the leadership of .the
slate Board of Education has
rebellious irunates. The prison
been warned that financtal trouhas a total of 2,200 inmates,
bles .in at least 22 Ohio school
about 5li per cent black. They
districl$ having 139 000 elemenestimated about 65 per cent of
tary and secondary 'pupils could
the rebels were black.
close classrooms "in the coming
" The tragedy was brought on
weeks."
by the highly organized, revoluState Superintendent of Pubtionary tactics of militanls who
lie Instruction Martin W. Essex
rejected all efforts at a
saidthedislricts,includingeight
.;·.·••,·,•,·v.•,.,.,•,•,·,-.·., ··:.·-. ":·:-··.··:·:-··:-·-:.:-_-.
peaceful setUement," said Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller.
The attack started when a
sharpshooter looking through
the telescopic sight of his highpowered .270 magnum rifle saw
a convict slash the throat of a
hostage, officials said. A
National Guard helicopter hovered over one corner of the
WASIUNGTON (UP()- Rep. ment on Carl Stakes or any
courtyard to divert the priso- Shirley Chishohn, D-N.Y., said possible campaign for him,"
ners while two other ·choppers today she will continue to nm said Mrs. Cbisholm. "But I am
dumped lear gas into the midst for the Democratic presidential telling you that my campaign is
of the convicts.
nomination despite the en- goingfullsleamaheadandalol
Then the attack force surged dorsement of Cleveland Mayor of people are going to be sur. Ea Ch "uOStage had been Carl B. stokes by a senior prised."
•·~·tes here," said Cardwell. tn.
···· ned an "execu tioner
· " to member of the House black Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D"l know they have heard asstg
. when the a ttack came, caucus. Rep. John Conyers, D- S.C., chairman of the Senate
about it over their radios but I kill hiin
detect no ,.._,;nhtness over it," said the hostages who escaped. Mich.! who said he was not Democratic Campaign Com...-....
The convicts ttad issued 30 speaking for the caucus, called mitlee, said Monday that
said Cardwell.
demands duru;g the siege. Slate a news conference Monday to Muskie made a "mistake."
Cardwell, a former officer in Corrections Commissioner Rus- announce he would work for . ''Certainly' as a presidential
the Ohio Highway Patrol, took sel G. Oswald had acceded to Stokes' candidacy. Conyers also candidste I wouldn't go around
over as warden here in 1968 all but two of them: Amnesty denounced Sen. Edmll!'d S. saying you couldn't have a
loll~ two prison rikilledots. . for acts committed during the Muskie, 0-Maine, for rejecting person on the ticket becuase of
Five mmates were
tn
·
"d tial his race, reJig"ton or "'"""•
-""' "
1968 hen N tiona! rioting and passage to a " non- a Negro as a vtce prest en
August,
w
a . . imperialist country."
candidate.
Hollings told reporters. " I
Guard troops blasted a ~
Oswald gave the convicts an Mrs. Chisholm, the only black would think that certainly
the P~ wall to 11!SCUedin
urgent ultimatum Monday woman to serve in Congress, would be not only the most
the pnsoners were hoi g as morning telling them to free brushed aside Conyers' support unpolitic but the most un~":'lage. None of the guards was the hos~ges and restore order of Stokes in an interview with American of candidacies."
InJured.
or he would use force. The UPI. "I'm not going to comconvicts asked to see Oswald.
" After we sent in the
ultimatum, they said if we
came in, all the hostages would
be killed and it would be our
fault, " he said. "They wanted
to meet with me. We felt
frankly that it would not be
safe for the commissioner to go
into the prison and said we A U. S. District Court jury charged with causing false
would meet in neutral territory. Monday llijlhl conVIcted ftve votes to be cast at Logan 's
•
"They responded by bringing htgh-ranktng Logan County Mount Gay precinct during the
. ht h tag
to the Democrats of vote fraud con- primary.
the etg
os es
.
.
ti
·th the
.
g
knives
to sptracy m connec on wt
U. S. Sttorney W. Warren
Forty-nine workers attended ca twalk and h ldtn
·
1
ti
1970 prtmary e ec on.
Upton and defense allorneys
Monday night's 25Ut annual th . thr ts ,
~waldoaordered the attack Stale Sen. W. Berna_rd Smith, William Beckett and Philip A.
kickoff banquet launching the
after
consulting with Rockefel- County Clerk Wtlltam An- Baer offered no comments for
1971-72 Tri-County Community
ho had rejected the derson, Circwt Clerk John R. reporters.
Concert membership drive at 1
wty
er'
Grace United Methodist Church amnes deman ds an d ordered Browning, Sheriff.Earl Tomblin Their trial, which began Aug.
lig r
The White and deputy sheriff Ernest L. 23, went to the jury late Monday
full ·
in Gallipolis. ,
aH
mv~d
a
.'ton.
had
been "Red" Hager now each face afternoon after a total of 145
Dr. Lewis Schmidt, president,
ouse sat
t
.
I" of J().
• trod ced
u
reviewed the hislary of the consulted and fully approved maxtmum pena ues a . . year witnesses were tn
,
land
sentence
and
a
$10,000
fme.
108
by
the
governorship
and
'!7
association covering the past Roc kefe Uerss
·t was over
Frien ds and re latives of the by thedefense.
Aile th
ul
two and one-half decades.
r e assa
· s tood and talked De livenng
· the government's
the area ' f.tve pol"ti
t ctans
re
shown
Mrs . James
Beverly , newsmen we
•.
h ked h.
Smith
M d
w tSpers.
, closing argument
on ay,
chairman ol the 1971-72 with the homemade spears and m . s oc
membership campaign, gave k · s and zipguns and the vtstbly shaken, strode to the Assistant U. S. Attorney Robert
instructions and directions on 9~~~ blood, where seven back of the courtroom where he .King said the case :•inv~lves the
the drive. She is being assisted h ta es had been killed on a stood s1lently by hts wife. _The right of suffrage m this counother defendan.ts rem8l~ed try," the right to have one's
by Mrs. Donald M. lbaler, co- c:Va~k over the courtyard.
"If
I
had
the
choice,
I
would
seated,
exchangwg surprised vole count.
chainnan.
"There we~,phony votes_ cast
Heading the drive in Meigs undoubtedly have to do the glances. .
County are Mr. and Mrs. Harold same thing again-regretla- The fiVe specifically were atMountG~y, heloldtheJury.
:·The q~estion for_ you to ~~de
Sauer. Mrs. Ralph Crwnp is bly," Oswald said. "It was a
ts who ':1 responsible for 11.
Mason County chairman. decision agonizingly made and
Teams are also working in Rio now I have to live with it.
Hunttngton Atto~~eys
William
Beckett and Philip A.
Grande, Oak Hill, Jackson and
Baer
shared
the defense's
Ravenswood, W. Va.
to
closing arguments.
Mrs. Betsy Koonce, New York
HOMECOMING SET
Beckett devoted much lime to
comm un ity concert The annual homecoming of
attacking
the credibility of
representative, told of the Ute Alfred Methodist Church
government witnesses, once
coming attractions for the 1971- will be held Sunday beginning
- "e
claiming
prosecution attorneys
72 campaign.
with Sunday School at 9:45a.m.,
Beginning September 1 all had " turned over every rock in
A new membership feature worship services at 11 with the
veterans
who apply for a Logan County" to produce their
was introduced during last Rev. Mr . Lelunan speaking. A
night's session. Family basket dinner will be held at Veterans Administration evidence.
memberships are being offered 12 :30 p.m. The afternoon guaranteed home loan must Beckett claimed government
at $25 a fantily, for parents and program at 2 p.m. will feature subscribe to a lair housing witnesses Cecil Ellswick and
Elwood Sloan were the men who
all children under the age of 18. the Bissell Brothers of Chester agreement.
Donald
E.
Johnson
,
Adshould
have been prosecuted.
Individual memberships are and other local singing and
priced at $10 for an adult and $5 speaking talent. The public is ministrator of Veterans Mfairs, He called the tesllmony of
said all applicants for a VA Ellswick and other key
for a student (full-lime through invited.
home loan guaranty and all government wibtesses "laincollege age.
pe~sons submitting offers to ted,"warningthejurytoregard
Campaign headquarters are
SING AT SPD.LER
located at 11 Court St., phone A hymn sing will he held at purchase VA owned properties, their tesllmonles "with great
must complete the required care and caution."
446-1364.
the Morse Chapel United statement in order to be con1be 1971-72membership drive Methodist Church at Spiller at 2
sidered .
will run through Saturday.
p.m. Sunday. There will be
The applicant must agree that
Entertainment was furnished special musical numbers. The
he will not discriminate for any
RETURNED HOME
by Tom Brandeberry and Jim public is invited.
reason
of
race,
color,
religion,
Mrs. gybU Dice has been
Mullins, finalists in the recent
or
national
origin,
in
any
future
returned
home here from
WHTN-TV talent show in
sale
or
rental
of
the
property
Charleston, W. Va., where she
LOCAL TEMPS
Huntington .
being
acquired.
has been at the home of her
Temperature in downtown
Last night's dinner was
Johnson
said
the
new
daughter,
Mrs. Bob Martin,
Tuesday
at
11
a.m.
Pomeroy
prepared by Circle One at
requirement
was
being
initialed
following surgery at an eye,
Grace United Methodist was 66 degrees, under sunny
as
anoUter
step
toward
assuring
skies.
ears and nose hospital in
Church.
that the federal housing laws Charleslon.
are obeyed.

Guardsmen liberated the Western New Yor~ prison seized
Thursday by 1,200 rioting
inmates·.
At least nine hostages and 28
inmates died in the bloodiest
rioting at a prison in the
nation's history. Eight prisoners
still were missing today and
police believed they either were
dead or hiding in the maze of
btnnels beneath the 41-year-old
bastion.
The death loll was expected
to rise. Prison doctors said 100
prisoners had been wOunded
and 24 of the 29 liberated
hostages were hospitalized,
three in critical condition.
Corrections officials believe
the takeover was planned by

Rep. Orlsholm to
Provide .Surprise

No Tension Backlash

nvictory t

G

{&gt;,' •• ••

be held Sunday at Ute Meigs
Motorcycle Club grounds on U.
S. 33, five miles north ol
Pomeroy.
Trophies will be presented
with a special junior class for 0125 CC motorcycles with an age
limit of 15. Practice will be from
11 a.m. to I p.m. with races to
start at 1:30 p.m. Refreshments
will be available at the club

house.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
Protect your
valuables now.
Why take chances?
A safe deposit box
will protect all of
your important pa-

Guilt Pinned
on 5 Democrats

49at
Tri-Co
Kzck 0 ff

°

Veterans Wdl

Fair
Housinu Clause
Agree

Chester

News Notes

Where do you keep your insurance policies,
your stocks or contracts? Inside a safe deposit box is the best place for your valuables. Costs pennies per week!

._.

DRtvf ·IN WINDOWS

·, \ Hf N 'lOU VISIT PARK fREE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
lliembet: Fedtnl Deptlll las~DJKe Corporatloo

·aAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDUPORT, O.

'

Landmark Buys
Packing Firm
In Columbus
COLUMBUS- Kenneth N.
Probasco, executive vice
president of Landmark, Inc.,
and Carl V. Teeters, president
and general manager of Teeters
Packing Company, disclosed
Mondsy that all the stock of the
Teeters Packing Company,
along with real estate holdings,
is being acquired by Landmark,
Inc.
The Teeters Packing Plant,
independently-owned
an
operation located at 2320 South
7th St., Colwnbus, Ohio, is a
modern, government - inspected facility specializing in
the dressing and processing of
pork.
The company employs 10
people, processes over 50,000
hogs annually, and distributes
its line of fresh pork, hams,
bacon, sausage, and lard
throughout Central Ohio with its
own fleet of refrigerated trucks.
Landmark, Inc., is a
manufacturer and distributor of
a complete line of livestock
feeds,
seed,
fertilizer,
petroleum products and related
fann supplies, as well as a
marketer of grain, poultry and
eggs. Landmark's volume last
year exceeded $13.3 million .
Probasco said Teeters
Packing ,Company will be
operated as a wbolly-owned
subsidiary of Landmark with
Carl Teeters continuing as
manager. No changes is anticipated in personnel, products
manufactured or customers
served.
SALE ON FRIDAY

The Rose Garden Club will
hold a rummage sale Friday in
the Fry Bldg. on Mill St.,
Middleport, from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. Proceeds will be used for
Christmas decocatipns for the
Tuppers Plains Community.

to the state scbool superintendent, who then may authorize
clOfiings or changes of the
school calendar. ·
. . Among distrlclll asking audits .
so far are the Dayton school
system with about 56,000 ·
pupils; Northwest Locill School
District
In
Ha.mllton
County, 13,700; Findlay
City Schools, 9,100; Bowling Green city schools, 3,1100; Fostoria City schools, 3,- ·
600; Galion City scbools, 4,100; ··
Sidney city schools, 4,100; Wll- ·
mington city schools, f,!OO.
Clyde exempted, 3,000; Cald- · ·
well, 1,500; Ansonia Local ·
(Darke County) 1,000; Beaver-·
creek (Greene County, 8,400; Arlington Local (HancGck County)
600; Eastwood (Wood County)
2,100; Otsego (Wood County) 2.·
000; Northmont (Montgomery
County) · 6,200; South Central
(Huron County) 1,200; PrebleSitawnee(PrebleCounty) 2,100;
Northmor (Morrow County)
1,400.
One Already Closed
Grand Valley Local Schools in
Ashtabula County, bsving 1,600
enrollment, are closed&amp;J the district was unable to open for the
fall term.
At its regular monthly meeting Monday, the state board
voted to enlarge the boards of
education of five joint vocational school districts, and approved appointments of Hilliard J.
Fjord to the slate Library
Boatd and R. R. NQI'IIl8lldin to
the Vocational Education Advisory Council.
Two more board members
were authlrized for Ashland,
Portage, Colwnbiana, Eastern
Stark and South Sununit County joint vocational school districts.
'

Veterau Memorial HOI)lital
ADMITTED
John
Harrison, Pomeroy; Floyd
Holliday, Dexter; Creston
Newland, Reedsville; David
Darst, Middleport; Mary
Nelson, Rutland; Edith Leach,
Pomeroy; Gilbert Spencer, ·
Amesville; Ann Stevens,
Vinton ;
Roger
VIning,
Pomeroy; Becky Seelig,
Pomeroy;
Etta
Custer,
Minersville; Debora Rice,
Byesville; Bertha Nichols,
Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Richard,
Salser, BariGil P~S911. Jlil!!!~
Cundiff, Hale! Ruasell, &amp;rid
Harris, Michael Harris, Roy
Sears.

News•.. in BriefS
(Continued frlllll Page 1)
he fled sfter slesling aJlC!ther American soldier's watdl.

Six Cities to Fight BeU

to discuss Ute problem. Board
member-. Don Mullen observed
that ·playground facilities in
Middleport are limited, addilig
that he is against removing the
basketball court as requested in
the peti~on .
Board President Frank W.
Porter said he had reeeived
numerous complaints of noise
and profanity by adults using
the playground. He said the
residents who signed the
petition "do have rights," and
that Ute board will have to lake
action unless the town can see
that it js policed properly.
Board member Joe Sayre also
indicated that he believes in the
rights of residents living near

the playground . Mullen . rule that the facility would be
suggested offenders be arrested only for uS¢ of students of the
and taken to co.urt. However, he Meigs Local School District,
questioned why all persons have thereby making it off limits for
to be penalized by not being able adults. However, the board
to use Ute facility because of a agreed to leave the matter up to
few offenders.
the village for the lime being
· One person attending the and then will take action if th~
meeting pointed out that the situation does not improve.
REQUEST DENIED
haskets on the court are entirely
too high for young children The Meigs Board also denied
anyway and suggested that the request of Mrs. David Ross
lowering the baskets so that to •release her son, David, to
they would be of benefit to continue attending school at
children rather than adults Kyger Creek. Discussion
would solve the problem . brought out that the family had
However, no action was taken in recently moved to the Meigs
that direction.
Local District and that faunPorter suggested that, dation funds would not be given
perhaps, the board would like to Ute Meigs Local District if

CLEVElAND - aEVEIAND MAYOR Carl Stokes aald
Mooday he Is not a candidate for President of the United Slates
but would consider a cbfl If that 1.!1 the only way for minority
gro. ." lohaveanimpactCIIIhe natiGD's political procea. Rep.
John Conyers, Jr., 0-Micb., at a Wlllhlnston newa confennce
Monday urged Stokes to run as a blact Democratic candidate.
"U !bat ~ the ooly way for mlnmty group~- the biltck, the
elderly, tile YOUIIfl peqlie, the Puerto RIC11111; the MezlcanAmericans to have an impact," Stokes said he would consider a
draft. ''The political process cl America would have to
deteriorate very far befare I WOuld n11 and I don't believe the
United Slates is that bad," Stokes said.

..
'I

a solution to the county's problems on the disposal of solid waste. The commissioners and Fultz
inspect a check for $123,538 in Appalachia money through the efforts of the Ohlo Valley Health
Services to establish the county facility.

Joy can be real only if
people look upon their life
as a service, and have a definite object in life outside
themselves and their per·
sonal happiness.

In creasing cloudiness and
mild today, highs from the mid
70s to the lower 80s. Variable
cloudiness and cooler tonight
and Thursday with chance of
showers north Thursday. Lows
tonight in the 50s and the highs
Thursday !rom the mid 60s to
the mid 70s.

Devoted To The Interest&amp; OJ The Mejg!-Mawn Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 107

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1971

eat
•
ematn

NEW OFFICERS - Olflcen of tile Middleport Mlnllterlal
AssoclaUoo were elected Tuesday during the noon-luncheon
r~ Ill tqe • nlellaut&lt;zow•a Sieak ltouse are, front,
1-f', the' Rev. Audry Mlller, President, pastor of the Middleport &lt;llurch of the Nazarene; the Rev. Rsullin Moyer,
vice president, pastor of the Middleport "Church of &lt;llrist;
bsck row, the Rev. Robert Bumgarner, secretary, pastor of
the Middleport Heath United Methodist Church, and the Rev.
Charles Simons, treasurer, pastor of the Middleport First
Baptist Church. Plans f&lt;r a Middleport Evangelist Crusade
Feb. 27 through March 5 next year were discussed. Speaker
at the Crusade will be Dr. James DeWeerd, conference
evangelist of the West Ohio area United Methodist Church.
Place of services and oUter details will be announced later.

.=

Expects Truth to Come

Living Room Tables

PROSEClTI'ING "-TroRNEY BERNARD FULTZ, right, and Meigs County ~
Warden Ours and Robert Clark are optimistic about establishment of a county-wide landfill as

Weather

TUesday proposed tuition and fee Increases by Ohio's colleges and
universitit!s are ''illegal and immoral" Turner offered an
amendment in the Senate Finsnce Committee which would freeze
fees at last year's level. Turner insisted university trustees have
acted illegally in Imposing higher fees llecause the 1969 law setling maximum tuition remslns in effect.
Turner questioned Regents O.ailcellor John Mille.ti extensively when Millett appeared Tuesday before the Finance
Conunittee. Millett conceded the House-passed higher education
appropriations lifting msximwn underitraduate tuillon from $170
to $200 per quarter bas not gained fins! apJI"OVal of the Ohio
Legislature. "But trustees made their decision in good faith that
the maximum would be raised," he said.
Turner contended if the fee increases are not illegal then Utey
are immoral because they violate a moral obligation to hold Ute
line during the wage-price freeze.

Stoke. Showing Reluctance

yttung Ross, a ninth grader,
were released so the request
was refused.
Three requests for early
graduation were also reviewed,
tl1e board granting the requests
of two seni9rs who will have the
proper credits by the end of the
first semester and who have
indicated in letters that they
will go on to higher education.
The Utird request, however,
was made by a junior who
would like to change . her
schedule to complete work for
her diploma by the end of the
school year.
The latter request was tabled
for further study since it will
(Continued on Page 16)

Now You Know

ATI'ICA, N.Y. (UPI)-Authorities concede nine hostages
were shot to death as Attica
State Prison was retaken from
rebel prisoners, who had no
guns. But they decline to say
who fired the shots.
Russell G. Oswald, state
commissioner of correctional
services, reversed himseH late
Tuesday and confirmed the
hostages died of gunshot sounds
instead of having their throats
slashed by inmate. The commissioner said the hostages had
been dressed like convicts and
in _some instances were used as
shte!ds.
. .
The COIIliiUSiloner has lenlalively scheduled a ~ews conference at the sprawling 4().yearold prtson later today to answer
further questions. He left the
news conference Tuesday night
without answering any queries

the uprising by about 1,200 of
Attica's 2,200 convicts. Nine
hostages were slain Monday
during the barrage of bullets
and tear gas and another guard
died Saturday of injuries
received when he was beaten
by prisoners when the riot
began Thursday.
The 29 other hostages were
rescued, although most had
suffered injuries of varying
severity , as did scores of
inmates, authorities said.
A department spokesman
said today all convicts were
accounted for after the bodies
of three inrnates reported
missing were recovered Tuesday. There was some confusion
· pver another report that five
others were still missing, but
·

because, an aide said, he was

NEW YORK - A- NEW YORK INSURANCE broker who
investigated the shootings of four students at Kent State
University said Tuesday he welcomed a $1.5milllon libel suit filed
by an Ohio National Guardsman because "the truth" about the
shootings would be revealed in court.
Peter Davies, who wrote a 227 puge report on the shootings at
Kent, said ''The many questions raised by the Justice ~part­
men! will be answered and the truth about May 4, 1970, which has
been suppressed in the stale of Ohio will be revealed in the stale of
New York." ·

No ·Budging on Bu~et
COLUMBUS- THE 46SlATE PARKS closed as part of Gov.
Johll J. Gilligan's austerity program will not be reopened until the
ta:t-budget bill is passed, Ohio Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye said TUesday.
.
''There is no way we have the money to operate these parks
without a budget," Nye said. "None of the stale parks which is
closed begins to pay for itself. General fund monies are needed in
every case to fina(lce the operation of the facilities," he said.

Rebuilding Job Monumental
. CINCINNATI - U. S. SEN. fU;NRY Jackson, D-Wash., a

. · posslhle candida! for ·the Democra~c Presidential nomln~tion,
said here Tuesday America would "literally have to be rebutlt by
the year 2000." Jackson, speaking to the convention ?f the
National Assoeiatioo of Tire Dealers, said a change m the
nation's economy was the topprioclty f&lt;r a better country.
''The nation needs better health care, better education, more
and chl!aper housing, more jobs and a cleaner environment,"
Jackson said. "Unless we have a growing economy we can't do
any of these.''

'

Britain Lines Up with Europe
LONDON --' BRRAIN !)NED UP with the Common Market
(Continued on Page 16)

•

,.648'

Concern Felt

PHONE 992·2 156

TEN CENTS

•

1ne
ster
U1e spokesman said all prisoners now had been counted.
In explaining how the hoslages might have been shot,
Oswald said, "The most imporlant and obvious answer is that
inmates dressed all the hostages in prison garb. Also, the
hostages could have been used
as shields and forced forward."
Oswald said an "executioner"
had been assigned each hoslages.
Tuesday night Oswald said he
never had said the hostages'
throats were stashed, but
newsmen who toured the prison
with him Monday insisted he
made the comment on at leasl
two occasions.
·
The theory that the hostages'
throats had been slashed was

contradicted Tuesday when Dr.
James F. Edland, Monroe
County medica l examiner,
claimed his autopsies showed
eight hostages had died of
bullet wounds---not slit throats.
In the afternoon the Genesee
County Laboratory said its
autopsy on the ninth hostage
showed he also had died of
gunshot wounds.
Finally, shortly afte r 10 p.m.,
Oswald confirmed to the news
conference that the hostages
had died ol bullet wounds. But
he gave no indication who fired
the shots.
Guard AI Robbins, who had
been a hostage, said Ute
inmates assigned as executioners dived behind their hostages
(Continued on Page 16)

gs Expose Wrong

"exhausted."
AnoUter prisoner died today,
raising Ute death toll to 32
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI)-Sen. the front runner for the 1972
inmates and 10 hosta~es from · Edmund S. Muskie scored the Democratic Presidential nominkillings at New York State's nation.
Attica prison as evidence " that "The system has not failed
something is terribly wrong in but some of us bave failed the
America." He called on the system," he said. "And both
u
nation's leadership Tuesday political parties and most
lC
night to ensure that similar recent administrations can
events will not occur again.
claim some share of the
The Maine Democrat discard- blame."
ed his prepared speech on In conference activity at
revenue sharing and school today 's final session, DemocraJ. Phillip Richley, Ohio husing and instead told the 63rd tic governors lined up for a
Director of Highways , will National GoVernors Conference hopeless battle to get the
speak to the Southeastern Ohio in a keynote address at its conference to support a set of
Regional Council Wednesday, state dinner that " We cannot basic changes in President
Sept. 22, at the Fairgreens join ·the half of our fellow Nixon 's new economic policy.
Country Club in Jackson citizens who already believe The Republicans had enough
County, following dinner
that this nation is headed for a voles to block the Democratic
scheduled at 6:30 p.m.
final breakdown.
resolution, which is based on
The Council has been active in
" We are literally saturated recommendations to cllange
highway development with the assorted tragedies of Nixon's policy, from coming up
throughout southeastern Ohio this time, but we cannot give under a procedure requiring a
and was instrumental in up our best chance- to care three-fourths margin for
planning Ute Appalachian Highand to change Ute way we approval.
way, E. E. Davis, SEORC live," said Muskie, considered Republican governors consipresident, said.
Richley is a graduate of
Youngstown University and
holds a degree in Engineering.
He did graduate work at the
University of Pittsburgh and
Malcolm )rebaugh , chair- Gallipolis Chamber of Comwas given an honorary degree,
of Ute 648 Mental Health merce home on State St.
man
Doctor of Engineering, by
Youngstown Slate. The meeting and Retardation Board, a Ia. The Community Service Act,
is one of four held annually by member board of Galli a, passed in 1965, provides for
Jackson and Meigs Counties, comprehensive care and
the SEORC.
hasannounced the appointment treatment for the mentally ill,
~~ill88llillll!li&amp;l~!il;;;8!8!~!m!ffl:w; 0 ,.,~ of Mrs. Maxine S. Plummer, Rt. emotionally disturbed and
I, Wellston, as executive mentally retarded through the
director.
alliance
ol . communi ty
Mrs. Plummer, a nati\e of resourceswiththoseoftheSlate
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Jackson. County, formerly Department of Mental Hygiene.
Leaders of five aatlonal farm served as director of the It empowers local communities
organizations told President regional office of the Depart- to evaluate, formulate and
Nixon Tuesday they were men! of Urban Affairs in operate such local services.
concerned that if the new 10 Jackson . Prior to that The funding of the 648 Board
per cent Import surcharge assignment, she was on the is provided by the State
was not removed, forelgu faculty of Ohio University as a Department
of
Mental
nations would retaliate to field representative for the Ohio Hygiene and Correction and by
reduce
shlpmeats
of Institute
for
Regional the counties. The three counties
American agricultural Development.
have No. 1 priority in receiving
products.
.
For six years, Mrs. Plummer .funds from the state hased on
Gerald Warren, deputy was with the Ohio Mental
I
. Wblte Ho.use press secretary, Health Assn ., traveling exsald the farm leaders offered tensively in Ohio to build health
general support for Nlxoa's programs. She has also worked
new economic policy but with educational programs ,
expressed Cl!DCera about the held key assignments in Ohio's The Meigs County compossible effect of the sur· mental health and mental missioners Tuesday directed
charge. Warren said the retardation educational Martha Chambers, clerk, to
President assured them the programs and with the State notify all township trustees to
tax on Imports would be Medical Board of Ohio. She have a representative at the
temporary but gave no in- graduated from Coalton High commissioners !lle&lt;ting next
dication when j t would be school and holds a BS degree in Tuesd;,y when the proposed
removed . .
Sociology.
federally funded landfill dump
Her new .office is Ipea ted on and pickup • service wiU be
··.··.·.·.·.·•·.· . ·, ·,•, ...·.· .. ·. ·:·.· .. the second floor of the new diS&lt;"ll'"'t

SEORC Will
1
News
•••
zn
Brze-ts
:
R' hley
1
Joi
.
near
By Ualted Press Internatiooal
GOP's Turner Attacks Fees Hike
Se
be 22
COLUMBUS - SEN. ROBIN TURNER, R-Marion, said
ptem r

Elberfelds In Pomii'OJ

.

Middleport Village officials
that
playground privileges at Ute
Middleport Elementary School
are not abused.
This was the decision of the
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education whic"h
Tuesday night received a
·petition bearing 25 names of
residents near the school
playground. The gist of the
complaints of the residents, it
was reported, deals with
alleged noise and profane
language used by some adults
on the playground, especially on
Sundays.
Councilman Dick Vaughan
met with the board of education
~ve another chance to $ee

f-------------~'"------;------1

COWMBUS-OmCIALSftWMSIXmajorcltiesmelhere
MCIIdsy and decided to pool their legal resolll'ces to fisbt a 38.2
pel. rate in&lt;nalle by the Ohio Bell Telepbone Co. Ohio Bell fUed
Its rate Increase request with the Public UtiJIUes Commlsalon of
Ohio on Aug. 9 and requested an additiCIIal hM million annual
revenue that will be met by Increasing aenrlce charlles for more
than 4 millioo sublcribers ln 470 Oblo cwnmunlties.
ColnmlMis Mayor M. E. Sensenlftmer told the ofllcials that
every corporation has tile right to e:q~ecl a reaaonable return on
its investment. " But we have to tate care cl our citlzells," said
Sensenbrenner. He said thoee on flad lncCIIIes would be hit the
hardest.

MILK STOLEN
Under investigation by the
· Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. is
the theft of approximately 100
lbs. of milk from the James
By Clarice Allen
Parsons property, Rscine, RD.
Weekend guests of Mr. and some lime Monday night or
Mrs. Howard Knight were Mr. Tuesday morning.
and Mrs. Ralph Knight of
Buffalo, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs.
OES TO MEET
Charles Knight and Miss Janet
Harrisonville Chapter, Order
Knight, Columbus.
of Eastern Star, will meet in
Mr. and Mrs. John Newell, regular session at B tonight.
Jeff and Scotty of Colwnbus and
Elmer Newell of Philadelphia
were weekend guests of Mr. and W"tllis Frost and Billie Jean .
Mrs. Hobart Newell and Sheila.
Mrs. Mabel VanMeter and
Jeff Newell became ill and was Mrs •.Tom Nice were hostesses
admitted to the Veterans for lhe September meeting of
Memorial Hospital on Monday. the Past Councilors Club at the
Robert Wilson, Rochester, N. lodge hall. Plans were made to
Y., spent the weekend with his visit the Fenton Glass Company
grandmother.. Mrs. Thomas in October. Refreshments were
Weber.
served to 22 members.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Van- Mrs. Dan Toban and children,
See the big selection on sale on the 3rd Floor.
Meter, Gary, Ind., spent a few Robyn and Todd, of Goldsboro,
days with Mrs. Mabel Van- N. C., are spending some time
Meter and other relatives.
with her mother, Mrs. Cleo
Furniture and Carpet for every room In your
Miss Amber McCain ol Smith.
home- Prompt delivery - Sensible credit.
Eastern spent Saturday night Billy Robert Allen left
with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland. Wednesd.ay for Bethlehem, Pa.,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Myers and wher~ he will attend college
family of Colwnbus spent ·the at Lehigh University and study
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~!
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. for his master's degree.

pers.

DEPOSilS INSURED
10 '20,000

cities, two exempted villages
and 12 locals, bsd wed for a
state ·fl11811Cial audit, which is
required before a school district
is allowed to change II.$ normal
school calendar. Essex said he
expected other school dislricls
would send requests to the stale
auditor.
Ohio law requires the state
auditor to report his findings

dered the Democratic draft at
their own session Tuesday and
rejected it. Gov. Louie B. Nunn
of Kentucky, Chairman of the
GOP group, said it had been
drawn hastily and showed the
Democratic governors were
"out of step" with Democrats
in Congress, labor and business.
The tall, craggy Maine
senator said nothing has
troubled him more recently
than the prison uprisings at San
Quentin and Attica and said,
"We need not, indeed we cannot
pass final judgment on Ute
events at Attica.
" But in our sorrow we can
ponder how and why we have
reached the point where men
would rather die than live
another day in America. The
Attica tragedy is more stark
proof that something is terribly

,...&lt;¥

' ..
,,

.' ...t ,. .~. ,.
.~

'

•~
'

TillS CAKE MADE in the replica of a $1,000 silver certificate was p~esented Pomeroy National Bank President
Edison Hobstetter Tuesday in observance of his birthday on
Monday. The cake, done in green and white and centered
with a photograph of Hobsletter, was designed by Mrs. Joan
Harrison. Mr. Hobsletter was honored at a birthday party
Monday evening at the Hobsteller cottage in Nease S!!ttlement given by officers and employes of the bank. Attending the poUuck dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Hobsteller,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Chamber, Mr. andMrs. Dennis Keney,
Mr. and Mrs. William Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. George
· Hobsletler, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce May, Mrs. Edith W"tlllamson, Mr. and Mrs. David Grate, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Wolfe,"
Jr., Mr.and Mrs. Charles Griffith, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nelson,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sylvester, Mrs. Joan Harrison, Thomas
Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Anderson, Mrs. CecU Midkiff and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Poulin .

Repairs Approved
The Karr Construction Co.,
Pomeroy Route 3, was awarded
the contract to repair a chimney
damaged by lightning at
Eastern High school Tuesday
nig ht by the Eastern Local
Board of Education in regular
session. Chimney bricks hurled
through a nearby window of Ute
high school auditoriwn, also
incurr•d some damage to the
floor.
The board appointed biology
teacher Michael Morgan
assistant football coach and
named the Pome~oy National
Bank depository for board and
activity funds of the school. Two
minor bus changes were approved.
John Riebel, superintendent
of the district, was authorized to
sign checks during the illness

and hospitalization of Creston
Newland, clerk. The board
voted to permit baton classes to
he held in school facilities of the
district. Supt . Riebel was
named to work out the details
with
the
sponsoring
organization, which will be the
Chesler PTA.
The board extended its deep
appreciation to the district's
athletic boosters and band
boosters for successfully
\Hong in America, " Muskie
completing a number of
said.
projects benefiting the district.
The band boosters paid the
whole bill for new band
uniforms, and the athletic grOUp
d
paid $800 for insurance on
football players and is purthe lack of mental health and
chasing some $500 worth of
mental retardation services.
junior high school football
Priorities for programs and
equipment. Both groups have
services will be decided by the ~-t.:x~:..~X.:&gt;m~m~::x~,&lt;..% accomplished other helpful
projects, Riebel said.
board based on services and
E~ENDED
WEATHER
A list ol substitute teachers,
needs of the counties. One
Ohio Edeaded Outlook bus drivers and cooks was
priority under consideration is a
approved and bills were apSatelite Mobil Professional Friday through Sunday.
Partly
cloudy
and
cool.
proved for payment. Attending
Team working in the three
Hlgbs 65 to 70 north and 70 to were Riebel, Principal Bob Ord,
counties.
75
south. Lows at night from and board members Roger
The 648 Board was first
eslablished through a steering the middle 40s to the lower Epple, l. 0 . McCoy, Oris Smith,
conunitteein the three counties. 50s.
Ernest Whitehead and Don.~ld
Officers
a re Malcolm · m-='&lt;':wst!S&gt;--.&lt;&gt;.~'I:~':':'»'&gt;."W: Mora.
Orebaugh , Gallipolis ,
president; Mrs. Hamlin King,
Gallipolis, secretary and Mrs.
Earl
Levine,
Wellston ,
treasurer. · Gallia Coun ty
Auditor Morton L. Dickey is Carl Rairden, 21, Hartford, The incident is still under inftseal officer.
was struck by a car and pain- vestigation.
fully injured near Tuppers
A two-car accident was
Plai ns Tuesday at i0:30 p.m. on reported Tuesday at 8:13 a.m.
SR 7 the Meigs County sheriff's on SR 124 in Racine.
department reported.
Alice M. Wolfe, 36, was
Driver of the car was William stopped on SR 124 waiting to
In o.ther business the com- R. Hayes, Jr., 21, Syracuse, who make a left turn wheel a car
mtsstoners approved the was aM"ested for not having an U"aveling west driven by BeUy
resurfacing of County Road 32, operator's Jicense.
L. Theiss, 41, Racine, came
a distance of seven miles, at a Rairden suffered a broken leg over a rlotse in the I"OI1Ciway.
total cost of $10,962.00 submitted and possible other injuries. He Mrs. Theiss tried to avtld
by County Engineer Theodore was taken to Ewing's Funeral hitting the Wolle car but did.
Beegle.
Home in Pomeroy by the
There was light dm p to
Attending were Bo!J Clark and Coolville E-R squad and Mrs. Wolfe's car and heavy lo
\Varden OUrs~ comnussiuners, transferred to Pleasant Valley the Theiss vehicle. TIMire and Mrs. Chambers.
Hospital by Ewing ambulance. no Injuries or IIITellt, '

•
t
Director APpom e

Leg is Fractured

Trustees Asked to Meet

•

\j

'

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