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' '
·a- 'niiDII.JII'~r~··:~rz~rE~a~r~&amp;.P~~~.,!:·o.;..,..-.~m

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

!

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer II ¢inl IBis', First
Ave. and ~ St. G .J
Yisit!Qg '-'- u and 7-1 p.m.
Maternity visiliag ion 2:31 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only .CIG
Pediatrics W«rd.
BiiGis

,DR. LAWRENCE f.I.AMI

!

BERRfS 'WORLD

~roRDAY

Chest Pains May Not Be Heart

son.

• - wre- ..
• - m..
L , M.D •
By ..
Dear Dr. Lllm..._Is ·there
anything besides heart disease that can cause cbest
pain! I am 43, female and,
have had chest pain and a
great lightness after lifting,'
running or any real hard
work for about three years.
1 have been tested by two
doctors, had four . electrocardiograms and blood tests.
They find notlJ!ng aDd my
blood pressure IS .normal.
The pain or .tightness
comes from one to several
· hours later, I am reaDy worried not mowing lf it is my
heurt or if I should be doing
something about it. I am
about 00 poul!ds overweight
and just over the menopause. I do not get short of
breath, but have pain quite
often in my left arm and sDrl
of a prickly, electric pain up
my neck into my jaw. I also

DISCHARGES

Frank Still, Debora
Mr. and im. Ricbu'd Allm Holsinger,
CoMie Atkins,
MOQre, G•llipril_is, a . ., llr.
and Mrs. Dewey WroWI, liarlluo Searls, Wlllllie Wbite,
GallipolisFerry, a SOD; lfr.and Sarah Caogo.
Mrs. Larry E. Goodwin, Ray, SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ~
Ohio, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Paal Pamela Bowers, Racine;
B. Warren, Jadslm; a SOD; Mr. Kennelh Hoffman, Mlddlep&lt;rt;
and Mrs. Alan Lee ltillg, Onnie France, Langsville;
D, Long Bottom;
~t. a dauglller; Mr. Stanley T1
Gecqe
N"Jcinsty,
Middleport;
and Mrs. 1bcmas ~
Rayburn, Pt. Pleasant, a Grady WiDiamo, Harrisonville;
daughler, and Mr. and Mrs. Tiinmy Hammal:k, Mason.
Garland Waiter, Pt. Pleasant, a

Gas, Cramps Can le Causes

1W H l"e!
· ~riJRDAY AOIUSSIONS Sarah Brcnm, Mil!eraville;
Harrison Robinson, ~ ., Letart,
W. Va.; . Kenneth Payne,
Harrisonville.
.
Yda

0

SUNI)AY DISCHARGE
Nellie Hendricks.

DildJarles

Mrs. Lillie Alcm, Mrs. Larry
E. Arthur and S1X1, Mrs. Dua
R. Bailey, Dema Jo llakl!r,
Mrs. Richard A. llreel:e,
Stanley E. Bush, Jr., Miss 11e11J
S. Clark, Mrs. Edith L. Oneil,
Roger D. Cotlrill, Mrs. Gary
Gene Dailey and soo, Mrs. Dille
Diehl, John W. DOONns, Mrs.
John Edward Duhl,Mrs. James
"-!lag'-,
Ewing, Sr., James ...
Thomas J. Gaspin, Mrs. ADdrew B. Gilmore, Lisa Jean
llammon, Mra. Gelrge HJman.
Mrs. John I. Jq;~e5, Gelrge W.
Kearns, Mrs. N"ma M. King,
Mrs. Olarles Knotts, Pl!nny Sue
Landers, Mrs .. William H.
McGinnis and daugblft', Deuia
A. Murphy, Mrs. Webel Rllss,
Dianna L. Rossit.er, Mrs. Paul
L. Sinclair, Mrs. Terry L.
Southworth, Mrs. William E.
Stroth Robert H. Taylor Mrs.
Floyd' M. Terry, 'Mrs.
Evangeline TUcci, Mrs. W)lbnm
Glen Waller, Mr. William
Thomas Wasbam, Sr., Mrs.
Waller S. Wedemeyer, Mrs.
Nont1311 D. Ison, and Mrs.
lloyd D. Roush.
Mrs. Joseph C. Alley, Mrs.
Hurley Bordell. Mrs. hllli'S R.
Brunner., Mra. AMa M. CnUins,
Will&gt;ur A. Crace, Stanley
Harold Ferguson, Mrs. Llltber
T. Frederic, Mrs. Gcidie L.
Keathley, Mrs. Oarl: Kimle1
and daughter,. Paul Peter
Lanier, Mrs. PhiDip E. Lollg,
Mrs. Olarles Marvin Marlin,
Jr. and son, ~ W. Milchem, Mrs. MarviD Ours, Mrs.
Bernard E. Rollins, Mrs. Terry
Edward Russell~ daugbta-,
Korey Shay Skidmore, Mrs.
Richard _Denver Seyler and soo
and LoUIS Varga.
.
Mrs. Donovan Brumfteld,
Mra. Roscoe W. Callvwm, Mrs.
Elm_er L. Can~, Mrs. W.
Cec~l Cotton, Bna~ Scott
lewis, Clyde McDamiU, Mrs.
General Doug!~ Rose and
daughler,Mrs. Clin~ CCIGg ,
Homer Morgan, Edwin Ma}o,
Mrs. Asa Mootgcmery, Earl
Phelps, Lincoln Smith, Leonard Stearns.
. _
-

MEIGS mEAIR£
J.onighl and Tuesday
Sept. 21&amp;21

P'z apt Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Lira Brown,
Letart; Barley Young, Apple
Grove; Harry H. Lewis,
Gallipolis Ferry; Elvin Legg,
PIUI Pleasant; Eiza McCarty,
Apple Grove; Mrs. linda Swan,
f'-aDipolis; Mrs. Dale Jacobs,
JliJidlepCJrt. and Mra. David
Panllns, Syracuse.
D.........
.,,..,... , Carrie Smith
~
and Hallie Radcliff.

Com Lo808

. INYAHI' Dml

TlatK t.Jnn Coqll!l', ~
Sept. 17 at _lbe Holm- Medical
Ce?ler, ,died Sa~day ~~

Children s
Hospital
m
Colwnbus. She was the
~Is' of Gary Roger and
Marilyn IDgles Cooper of
~I'W_',.RoutebebeldL GratlveslO.de
sa.illteS.:':'
~ ~;m.
:~:~ at
ve
-•

THE REIVERS

IIEETING NOrED

(Toduli-1
SfeveM&lt;Ql-.
Sharon Farrell

Group Tim of lbe First United

GP

A MAN
CAlLED HORSE

!Toduli-1

Richard Harris

GP

Presbyteriu Church, Mlddlepri, wiD ~~et Tuesday at
7:31 p.m. at lbe bame of Mrs.
F.dnnl BurRU. Ill cbarge of
devotions Is Mrs. Dwight
Wallace and of lbe boot sliJdy,
Mrs. Qui llcdy.

"How 'lrOUU YOU lilr.e it. if we roideJ YOUR ol#ice and
~ YOUR recolds?"

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Don
Updegraff (Eleanor Gilkey)
and Mr. and Mrs. F. 0. Whaley
(Alice Gilkey) of Birmingham,
e ee
Ala., and Columbus, Ohio,
(CCIGiinued fnm Page 1)
respectively, with a steak
cookout at their cabin on their
IUbmltted his l'l'l'i3nalkll. 'l'be report, bowev«, could not be lake one mile west of
confirmed.
Harrisonville Wednesday
evening. Fishing was also enTens GOP Coollo Nuon
joyed.
AUSTIN, TEL - THE 'I'EXAIJ Republican Executive
Mrs. Darold Graham and two
Committee denw+W !bJday lhlt PI ¢W Nixon support a sons left on Labor Day for the
Clllllilulilml mneJMin*'ll proljbltlng 11usq of student~!. It Phillipines for two years.
strongly urged tbe PI ue11t Ill IJI)pllint a busiDg foe to the U. S. Haroid Graham, Mrs. Bessie
&amp;lpreme ODirl
Graham and Freda carsey toot
'lbeCOIIlllllUeepe llben-olntims,~withanlllllbes-of them to the airport in Columolh!n, witbau.t d" 1t 'l'be .n, resolution that failed to pass bus. The Harold Grahams will
muo~in•IUIIywu-·n"*lingNixcmflr!'Hlectim.. "lfeelit's leaveforthesamebaseSept.J&amp;.
mcrall;ywrong, nPdstvearanyolberclrtywonl you want to call . Mrs. Lovie Watson is still a
it to •JAil"! PI Ito~ NlxCil becan• of 1U Red China policy," patient at Veterans Memorial
Wd Mrs Ebner IJJ!dsbom
Hospital.
•
·
Mrs. Larry Clark, Tamra and
Penny, visited the Roy
11L
Wisemans and Robert Clarks
O.IW8C
Thursday.
It is reported that Will Clonch
WASHINGTON ( UPI) -&amp;ln. announced Aug. 15, has not willstartanantiqueshDpathis
William Proxmire, D-Wis., given an Dpinion on the newly · acquired property on
called 00 President N"lXOII today industry's price hike wbich has Second St.
to roll back recent gasoline increased conswner' prices 00 Mr. and Mrs. Don Updegraff
price increa8es that could cost gasoline about 2.3 cents a of Birmingham, Ala., spent
consumers $2.2 bUlir.G 8 y-. gallon.
several days with Ava Gilkey
''This priee increase in the
Promlire, chairman of the whn soon will be occupying a
face oflbe wage-pice mae is Senate-House Economic Com- trailer near the Robert Aikires.
clearly inDationai'y," Proxmire mittee, said in a statement that Mrs. Jane Gilkey and Mra.
said. "PI'esident !fiXllil ougbt to the oil companies were using Helen Byers of Middleport
take immediate actiCIG to nlil it " their economic power, re- visited Ava Gilkey Wednesday
back."
enfnrced by reeent decisions evening.
The Cost of Li · Council affecting lbe oil import qoota Friends will be glad to mow
established by
to JII&lt;Jgllilll, to get record high that Bertha Landaker of
policy during the &amp;eerie he prices for gasoline."
Colorado is able to be home
after spending five weeks with
J)ied OR
ber son, James and wife.
Karen Gilkey of Albany
LETART w y
,..~ Albert
--' Taft local Ray of visited the Lincoln Russells and
E. Boston," '19: ola~a:::; New H:~en, ~ ~. of
Letart, W. Va., a lieutenant with Nortoo Center, Ohio, and three
lbeAkronPoliceDepUIJeAIS sislft's, Mrs. Ida Hardy, Mrs.
verett
before his retirement, died Clara Dyer, bDtb of Slow, and
Sunday at the Holzer Medical Mrs. Gay Wertenberg, local.
Center.
Memorial services will be
·
Mr.Bostonresiclwlatlii&amp;Mt. beld at a tonight at the Funeral services for Everett
VemCIG Ave., in Akron but made Foglesong Funeral Home. The M. Bates, 70, formerly of
his sJUnrner home here. Be~ body will be talten to lbe Billow Pomeroy, who died late
a member of the Board Baptist Falls Cllapel at CUyahDga Falls Saturday night in Wayne
CllUrch at Letart, . and the where fwleral services will be Mich., will be held at 1 p.m:
Masonic Lodge 514 m Akron, held at 3 p.m. Wedn!!sday. Wednesday at the Ewing
having received. his 56-year pin Masonic riles will be conducted Funeral Home.
in May, 19'10.
at lbe B~ F~ Chapel Mr. Bates, a retired pattern
He was born here Feb. 16, Tuesday evenmg. Calling hours maker, is survived by his wife,
1892, a son of Samuel M. and there are from 7 to 9 p.m. Eleanor· six daughters Mrs.
Fannie E_. m ing Boston. Tuesday .' Calling hours at Stanley .Bandranke of Taylor,
Besides his parents, he was Foglesong sare anytime after 7 Mich.; Mrs. Denver (Florence)
)lleceded in death by a SCIG, tooigbt.
Well of Pomeroy; Mrs. Gene
Jack. . .
. .
.
Gorski of Taylor, Mich. ; Mrs.
SurviVIll(! are his wife, Juliet;
Donald Baker of Trenton,
five sons, Frank, of Ravenna;
Mich.; Mrs. James Baker, of
Albert, of Beaumont, Tel:.; G. Board Approves
POilleroy, and Mra. Harold
Verner of Olyahoga Falls, and
Young of Trenton ; four sons,
Harold R. and Donald R., both
Olarl!'5, Tayne, Mich.; Ralph
of Akron; a daughter, Mrs. May 9 Bus Drivers
and Williams, both of Taylor,
Mich., and Everett of Trenton,
B. May of Stow; 17 grandchildre~ ,
three
greatMich.; 21 grandchildren, two
grandchildren; four hrolbers, Nine bus drivers were ap- sisters, five brothers and a
proved Saturday afternoon number of nieces and nephews.
U U U U U1 U AU i\ during the monthly meeting of The Rev. Robert Card will
il
A Ta. . h
-it the Gallia County Board of officiate at Wedn!!sday's ser: · . " uoug l il F.dnmtion. They were Paul vices. Burial will be in Hemlock
For TOday : Dillon, John E. Johnson, Grove Cemtery.
• Herman Parcell and John T.
I have no seaet of sue- • I'Dpe, Hannan Trace; Arthur
MEET WEDNESDAY
cess but hard wwk.
il Johnaoo and Sara Summers
.
' SYRACUSE - The Third
-Edward Turner • Kyger D'eek; Hayes Dee! and Wedn!!sday Homemakers Club
• Mrs. Odella Taylor, North will meet Wednesday at 10 a.m.
Gallia, and J. Robert Evans, at the headquarters in
Southwestern.
Mwlicipal Park. Subject of the
In other. action, the board af~moon will be textile paints,
granted
County
School with Mrs. M~rtha Rose as
Superintendent Clarence E. demonstrator. A potluck lunch
il 'l'hcmpson permission to attend WUJ
be served at noun. l!;acn
the
Rural
Education member is asked to bring her
• Association lllld National School own table service. All
Administratorameeting Oct. Jo.. homemakers are welcome.
il 13 at Reno, Nevada.

1\.T

•

Price R

Br1e
• ifiS

k

wanted

N":::

George .Boston

Sunday

E

Bates
Died Saturday

-..u
CIS1JII
Ellrly Atnr!rican

COli$()"'
Vti=/ UHF Spotli te

$IJIOd

Dials. s· a 3 ~ Twin.
Cone- Speake,

599·95
FUllltNlTH
IWUIWTED
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• ChromKOior 'Picture Tube
• Super Video ftlnge Tuning System
• Ntw Gl1,.-81n Picture ~ace • AlrlcNutic F"~AP-Tuning Conuof
• Titln 10 Hlftdcraf'ttd Chassis • It 1 llic Tllll c..ct CGnlrol

Ingels Furniture
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
972-2635

MIDDLEPORT

\

.•
1
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f)aidd EasJ :

!
·f
t

DRIVe •N •
. BANKING

t

•
Fridays Only
•
• The Drive-In Window •
•
is..Open
~
f · 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. tJ
:;
(Continuously I
,.

•

• Other Ba r*itt9 Hours ' to 3
• •nd

s "'

• Friclars.

1 •• - · ...

• 2-HOUR
i i CLEANING

• FARMERS BANK :
and SAVINGS 00.

i

j

PO,~':ryF~~IO
Membei- Ff!defal

Reserve Syslem

(UpciiiJequ est)

S
i ROBINSON'
CLEANERS
...
:

il

lit E. 2noll

I'MIIn .
-992..1421

****•••••••****J ...............

When pride comes, then
comes disgrace; but with (he
humble is wisdom. The tn·
tegrity of the upright guides
them, but the trookedn~•~
of the treacherous destroys
them.-Proverbs 11:2, 3.

• • •

1 believe that the ultimate
object of all activities in a
republic should be the de·
velopmenl of the manhood
of its citizens.- John D.

Ava Gilkey Thursday afternoon. She is employed at
Athens Co. Savings and Loan in
Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
are having aluminum siding
installed on lbeir h«me and the
Guy Bolins are having a new
roof put on .their home.
Several persons from here
attended the Albany Fair
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hoffman (Dhe Wood) of Dlinois
visited lbe Robert Clarks and
Robert Alkires recenUy. They
also spent a week in Alabama
with the Updegralfs.
Jack Neal of Athens spent
Sunday with his parents, Mr.
and Mra. Waldo Neal.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Sheets
and Mr. and Mrs. John Musser
an&lt;! soo S(lellt a week touring
the east coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hunsicker
of Akron called on his cousin
Robert Alkire recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson,
who have been living in
Columbus moved back to their
trailer h~ on her parents'
farm, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood
Howard.
Mr. Doyle Hudson is in a
Huntington hospital and is in
serious conditioo.
Mr. and Mra. Denver Ash are
parents of a son bani at Holzer
Medical Center Sept. 11. The
new arrival weighed I lbs. and
has been named Donald
Harrison. He makes two girls
and two boys for lbe ~Grandparents are Mrs. Eliza
Powell and Mr. and Mrs. Jones
of Cheshire.
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Epple
visited Ava Gilkey Saturday
evening.
Mrs. Frances Alkire~ ""!!•
Ray, consulted an oculist m
Columbus on Monday.
Mrs. Earl Foithad as guests
over the weekend, Mrs. E. E.
Myers of Olarleston, W. Va.,
and Mrs. Harry Foil of
Portsmouth, Va.

SAIGON (UPI)-While COOlbat police occupied a student
housing compleJ: in anolber
crackdown on antigovernment
disslden~, President N~
Va~_~ ~eu told the nation
tonight 1ts only guarantee of
future freedom was to def~t
the Communists on the ba!Uefield.
Hundredsofpoliceoccupleda
sprawling university student
complex in the heart of 5ai8on
in anolber step to put down
Dp~tion to ~eu's one-man
election Clllllp8lgll. On Sunday,
they rounded up 400an~-'lbieu
demonstrators, Including 4S
Sou~ Vietnamese ~ldi~.
Tbieu spoke tonight m ~
sec~ of three speeches he IS
making to ~ natiCIG ~
government radi~ as part of~
one-man campa!gll. He said,
"The only guarantee for our
future
is _t_o deal UJ:;
CommUIIlSts a positive defeat
on the battlefield.
Ill his hard1ine anti-Communisi speech, 1bieu reiterated
his longstanding ''four noes"no territorial concessions to the
Communists; no coalition

freedom

gova JUnent, no neutrality, anc!
no CmuDWJist activity in South

Vretnam.

Britis
• b er

GAIJ.JPOLIS, 01U0
Salllnlay, Sept 11, JJ7J
SALES REPORT OF
a.lo Valley Uvest«ll Co.
HOGS-175to22lllbs.JI.JOto
18_25 ; 2m tD 250 lbs. 17.&amp;5 to 18;
Light 15 to 17.10; Fat Sows J5.50
to J&amp;.IO; Stags tOto 12.40; Boars
12.50 to 14.60·, u;n. 5 to 12.50·,
Shoats 10 to 16~~
CATTLE -Steers 24 to 24.10;
Heifera24to3UO; BabyBeef29
to 38.75; Fat Cows 00 to 23.60;
Canners 15 to 23.50; Bulls :ID to
27.80; Milk Con 145 to 2115.
VEALCALVES-Tops41.80;
Seconds 39 to 40; Medium 35.50
to~.50; Com. &amp;Hvs. 30to 33.a0;
Culls 31 Down.
BABY CALVES - :ID to 45.

BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(UPI)-A gunman shot and
seriously wounded a British
soldier in an ohlervatiCIG post
C1G lbe fringe of LoadODderry's
Bogsldedislrict today, an army

Helena, Mont., is located in
Prickly Pear Valley.

Most.ly sunny today and ·
Wednesday with highs both
days in the middle 60s to the low
70s. Clear and cool tonight with
lows in the 40s.

Devoted To The Interest&amp;.Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL.~V

•

The shooting broke lbe calm
II one lllbe quietest nigbls in
the last month in Northern
Ireland.

SON BORN
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Dencil R. Hudson are announcing the birth of a seven
and a baH pound SOD, Vlrgll
Bryant, Sept. 13 at lbe Holzer
Medical Center. Paternal
grandparents are Mrs, Myla
Hudson, Syracuae, and VIrgil
Hudson of Polneroy; maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Secoy of Syracuae, and
Mrs. AMa Hudson, SyraCWJe, is
a creat-gandmother. Mr. and
Mrs. HudJon alto have li
dalll!hlft', Becky, and two other
SCXJS, Richard lllld Dencll, J~.

Visit the 3rd Floor for ·
.
Furniture, Carpet and Applianc~
·---------··---··-..----..---------·-"···-------·
.

Refrigerators and Freezers
Washers and DryeJS

filter • no ~)~&amp;rinsing
Offers high styling and is l~ded with
features for high performance and
convenience: No need to ~
dishes, thanks to self-cleaning filter - ·
Dol!ble-wall construcUoo with P.Drcelain-enameled tub - Stabilizer front
panel - Dual-de~rgent dispenser - .
Single-cycle dial control ·- Fulfextension racks - Water · Flow - ·
Separate drain hose and electric cord
storage.
Custom model 8xF-300·

not fire any Surface-to-Air
(SAM) missiles during the raid.
The attacks began at dawn
and lasted until early afternoon.
They were the ·soth against
North Vietnam this year.
Spokesmen would not report
on how many Air Force jets
participated in the attacks but
said only more than 2110 sorties
were flown . (As or tie is one
strike by one plane). It did not
pinpoint targets but the port of
Dong Hoi, which has a major
military airfield, is within the
35 mile raid limit.
Today's raids were the
strikes over the north since last
March 2().21 when about 250
fighter-bombers and escorts hit
targets across the border.
Those raids brought charges by
Hanoi that the Americans had

1~ews

1
I
1

Hay11 Warn11 of Disa11ter
WASHINGTON - COAL STATE congressmen, including
Rep. Wayne Hays, O.Obio, Monday urged a federal crackdown on
the strip mining of coal. "A disaster of enonnous magnitude is
occurring in my home county and in many like it throughout the
lal!d," Hays said in hearings before a House subcommittee on
mines and mining.
'
Hays is author of a bill which would prohibit strip mining of
land that could not be reclaimed and to require coal operators to
restore mined land to Its original status. Hays said "other
members of this House have introduced legislaUon to abolish strip
mining entirely," but he said his measure "will penni! strip
mining under strict regulations that would meet the ever increasing demand for power while preserving our most valuable
heritage, the land."

I

··

Artillery Moving in Close
Along Sue% Canal Line

i
i

Widdoell Critically Ill

~

.

.

LAu WORTH, n.A.-CARROIL WIDDOES, fonner head

The seml-officla Cairo newspaper AI Abram said
loday Israeli troops are moving artillery up to their
front lines along the &amp;lez Canal.
With the situalion deteriorating in the Middle ~ast,
AI Abram said Egyptian forces along the canal had
been put on a maximum alert. Tliis bad been reported
Monday in other Egyptian news media.
It said front.line officers were ordered "to take the
necessary measures to prevent the enemy from accomplishing his objecllves."
In addition to moving up artillery, AI Abram said,
Israel also has increased air and ground patrols In the
Sinal Peninsula.
Israel was celebrating the Jewish New Year 5732,
which began Monday. The !().day holidays climax next
Wednesday. Observers said the holiday mood in the
nation reflected public confidence that the 13-month
Middle East cease-lire would hold despite the flare-ups
along the &amp;lez Canal over the weekend.
. Beaches, campgrounds and resorts in Israel were
jammed both with Israelis and with tourists.
Judaism's holiest shrine, the !V&amp;Ulng wall in the old
city of Jerusalem, was a central attracllon despite a
grenade attack on Sunday.

~:

report.
· uH"Jcten
· t money for the
Sowle had contended there was ms
JX'OJecl and it would not bave sufficient students. He said they
could be adequately served by thJ! Ironton academic campus and
u.edaytime branch campus at Portsmouth, 30 miles away.

i

~
foolball coach at arlo and Ohio Stale universities who retired In ::;:

1970 is in tbe intensive care wllt of Kennedy Hospital here for
treabnent ala heaart attack suffered Sunday at his home. .
Wlddoes was reported in fair condition. He had been ill Slllce
before he retired and moved. south from Athens, Ohio, where he
coached Ohio u. fir nine years and also was athletic director.

~ L----'""'~-~~~

~.
·-.

Opposition Leader Stabbed ·
TOilYO -THE READ OF 'I1IE LARGEST Dpposition party
1n JIP'D, Yoeblkalllu Takeirl, was stabbed in the stomach today
by a Jablnr all he stepped out of his car near bla party
beldqllll'len. Tile victim, 45, was rushed to a hospital, where his
docfllr llllilounced \here was no danger to his We. His assailimt
waa seised on the apol.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

(lnrk-t"ff' lle r Jr .

·:··-·......;.·. ·•·.· ··:· ~.....

"' :·..

~"&lt;8.'8'

EXTENDED WEATHER
A chance of dally showers
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday. Highs in the middle
to upper 60s Thursday
warming to the lower 70s by·
Saturday. Lows In the mlddle
50s south and the lower 50s
north.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED William
Barrett, Langsville ; Patricia
Ann Edmonds, Middleport ;
Maizi e Hannahs, Pomeroy ;
Veatrice Nice, Racine; Evelyn
Landers, Pomeroy; Bruce
Alexander, Mason; Betty Irene
Moore, Pomeroy; Monte Ray
·wolfe, Racine.
DISCHARGED Mary
Hendricks, Walter Harris,
Leola Keck,

CoLUMBUS (UP!) - A bill
increasing benefits to injured
workers under the Ohio Workmen's Compensation Act has
been signed by Gov. John J.
Gilligan, who said it "makes a
great s~p in the right direction."
The governor said it provides
"for the first time in years an
increase in benefits available to
injured Ohio workers." The
J09th General Assembly
unanimously approved the
amended measure, granting a
$30 million annual increase and
for the first time providing an
automatic increase based on
future changes in the consumer
price index.
"We owe a great deal to the
working men and women of
Ohio and I hope the legislature
sees fit to consider measures
now pending in both houses in
order to give the most complete
benefits to our injured and
disabled workers."
Tile administration has

.

• .

Vouth
-Sczence
.l ~
Sessions Held

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
was 62 degrees under sunny
skies.

Injured Workers'
Benefits Higher

•

'
\I

TOP SCIENCE STUDENTS- Harry S1awter, IIUIIlll1ei' nMIII811t with the Meigs OJ~ty
Extension Service; Edle Mees, Larry Atherton, Donna Francis, James Schmoll, Bill Hayes,
(left to right) .

ty law that would allow the Delta Queen to continue to operate.
He said he asked for an extension of the exemption from

~~~~-~-~~~~"((tome
~
~gomli!ll8!-18!.l;.;mmmmmm!llillilmn
jllljll

have
decided to go ahead with constructing a pennanent $2.2 million
branch campus at or near Ironton despite the opposition of
University President Claul)e Sowle and the board's adverse stody

•

Spokesmen said the missions
were confined to an area within
35 miles of the OMZ which
divides North and South Vietnam. The command declined to
say how exactly many American planes took part or give the
precise target areas.
The command said no Surface-To-Air (SAM) missiles
were fired at the U.S.
warplanes.

E
•t
B&amp; R0 l e

Plum for Ironton Despite Sowle
ATHENS, omo - OHIO UNIVERSITY trustees

I

U.S. Air Force tactical aircraft
today conducted pro~ctive
reaction strikes against military targets in North Vietnam
constituting a threat to the
safety of U.S. forces," the
command said.
The North Vietnamese responded with "light to moderate" anti-aircraft fire but hit no
American planes, the spokesmen said .

the Safety-At-Sea Act which
says all sh1ps must have metal
superstructures.
Hamilton 's legislation is similar to that introduced in the
Senate by Sens. Robert Taft Jr.,
and William B. Saxbe, R-Obio.
Hamilton said owners of the
dDella Queen have completed
$500,000 in restorations and repairs to make the s~rnwheeler
.
with its wooden superstructure
as fire resistant as possible."
Waid Little, 35, Pomeroy, heard glass breaking and "!tis paradoxical that foreign
being held in the Meigs County suspec ted someone . was vesselswithwoodencomponents
jail, will be charged with at...breaking into her busmess still carry U.S. passengers on
tempted breaking and entering, establishment. Mrs. Scholl hves ocean trips while the · Delta
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed in an apartment over the bar Queen, never more than rooWebster said today.
which had closed for the ments from the banks of the
Pomeroy police received a evening.
Ohio and Mississippi rivers is
call at 11:42 p.m. Monday from Officer Henry Werry, . an- doomed under the Safety-at-Sea
Mrs. Frances Scholl, owner of swering the call, fo~d Little Act," said Hamilton.
the Court Street Grill, that she coming from an alley m hack of Congress voted unanimously
the grill. The windows had been in 1006, 1968 and 1970 to exempt
'(&lt;~~"*'~~&gt;x.-'.;&gt;&gt;:':~'&gt;&gt;:::.::»;..~»&gt;.&gt;;..;:l!&lt; broken out, apparent!~ by the Delta Queen from the legOUSTER' UPHEW
Little, who had a laceration ~ islation .
PT. PLEASANT - The one of his hands. Werry said " It is my opinion that the
West Virginia State Supreme entrance was not gained into the Delta Queen can be exemptCourt has upbeld the Mason busi~ess.
.
ed permanently from the act,"
County Board of Education In
Ch1ef Webs~r sa1d that a said Hamilton.
Its ouster of former Supt. of representative from the Bureau
Scbools I. Brooks Smith, of Criminal Investigation would
sources close to the court arrive today to assist the indisclosed Ibis morning.
vestigation.

••• zn rze1 s :

.
By UDited Press IDternaUooal

nem

Delta Queen Would Be
Permanently Exempted

WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S.
Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, D·lnd.,
said
Monday he had introduced
I
a bill to extend indefinitely an
1 exemption to a federal safe-

,---------------------------.
1\.T
•
B . ..f.
I

bombed civilian targets.
Th raids were announced in a
special communique.
"In response to recently
increased evidence of North
Vietnamese anti-aircraft and
missile activity against our
unarmed reconnaissance air·
craft flying over North Vietnamese ~rritory and U.S. attack
aircraft flying in Laos near
North Vietnamese territory,

heaviest "protective reaction"

. CINCINNATI -CINCINNATI quarterback Virgil Carter, a
Chicago Bears castoff whn led the Bengals to an Impressive
season-&lt;&gt;pening win here Sunday, said Monday be is now with "a
)X'Ofessional football team instead of a circiiS. "
"I played in a circus at Olicago," Carter said, answering
Cjllestinns about what has made the difference in his playing.
"'Ibis is a different kind of team," Carter said. "CincinnaU is a
IJ"ofesaional football team - that's the difference.
"Paul Brown Bengals coach benefits a guy who plays for liim.
You must execute. That's the main thing," Carter said.

.

'

SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. Air
Force figh~r-bomhers carried
out more than 200 strikes
against North Vietnam today,
bitting military targets as far
as 35 miles above the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in one of the
heaviest air raids since the
bombing halt of Nov. I, 1968.
The U.S. command said the
strikes were carried out because recent North Vietnamese
attacks on 'unanned reconnaissance planes and U.S. aircraft
bombing the Ho Chl Minh trail
in neighboring Laos had posed
"a threat to the safety of U.S.
forces" in the war zone.
The announcement said the
planes encoun~red light to
moderate anti-aircraft fire but
that none of the American
planes was hit. The command
said the North Vietnamese did

Bengaill No Football Circw

See the New Whidpool Dishwashers,

Budget-priced model
features self-deaRing

lt

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

- NO. lll

spokesman said.

The soldier, who was not
immediately Identified, had
been wounded in the back by a
single riDe shot while on duty
in a post em Foyle Road, the
spokesman said.
He was Iaten to Altnagelvin
Hospital in Londonderry, about
90 miles from the capital,
where he was pronounced
"seriously ill" by hospital
authorities.
Twenty-two soldiers have died
in violence in lbe province this
year. All additional 126 hav~
been injured, the spokesman

regard to a no left turn off of
Butternut St. onto West Main
St., reported that he ~d contact
State officials and was infonned
that the state has no jurisdiction
over the area. Mees suggested
that council ,reconsider putting
up a no left turn sign. No actlon
was taken, however.
An invitation was read by the
mayor from the Pomeroy
Church of Christ for council to
attend open house at the Church
on Sunday, Oct. 3 from 1 to 4
p.m. The church has been
completely remodeled. Fire
destroyed the main auditorium
sometime ago.
·
Mees also reported that installation of TV cable service
will be finished in Pomeroy by
December . He said that "an·
tiquated power lines" in the
village posed a problem and
(Continued on Page 8)

Weather

•

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not approve two separate
grants.
The Leading Creek group
turned down Pomeroy 's offer
and is to submit its own ap·
plication for an EDA grant,
Council has learned.
Pomeroy offered to sell water
Lo I .eading Creek at a cost of 36
cents per 1,000 gallons.
The EDA advised Legar to
have council apply for its
proposed water system. The
new system would by-pass the
present water plant and some
new water lines would be laid,
Legar noted. Legar, noting the
announcement that the EDA
office at Huntington will be
moved to Atlanta, Ga ., asked
council members and the public
to write to their congressman
and senators urging the EDA
office remain in Huntington .
Councilman Jim Mees, in

Now You Know

.

.,

.,....,m

stooe for the department. Canaday, however, contends that
any stone reclaimed is not worth the use of the equipment at
the site. The property is the fonner home of the late Jane
Looise Smith and is now owned by Edison Hobstetter.

Huntington ° Sometime ago "
about the problem. His letter
has not been answered.
Councilman Franklin Rizer
suggested that the mayor again
ask the Corps that it assist the
village .because the matter is
urgent.
WATER PROBLEM
The mayor reported that he
had met · with the Economic
Development administration
representatives (EOA ) and
Leading Creek Watershed Assn.
olficials in · regard to a new
water system proposed by the
village of Pomeroy .
Pomeroy drilled a test well in
Syracuse which has gained
approval of EDA. The Leading
Creek Agency also has proposed
a new water system. EDA of.
ficials suggested that Pomeroy
sell water to Leading Creek
District since the EDA would

---

Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

.

II the pl.ctured state that tbe ..,di*J..,t WM beq !lied on tbe 111operty to

An air of urgency marked the
discussion and action by
Pomeroy Council Monday night
in regard to the po~ntially
critical condition of the upper
parking lot's stone wall.
Council earlier had reviewed
reports first in the Daily Sen·
tinel that erosion over almost 20
years since the wall was laid up
had caused separations, a
condilion worsening rapidly
since new Ojlio River dams at
Racine and Reedsville have
raised the river level.
Councilmen said Monday
night high water, expected each
win~r, poses a still greater
threat. How much more high
water the wall "will stand" is
unknown. They want the advice
of an engineer.
Mayor Charles
Legar
disclosed that he wrote to the U.
S. Corps of Engineers at

Danger

Wounded

said.

Market Report

111e

Highway Department equipment onE, Main St. property in
Pomeroy were lodged Monday afternoon by Delniar A.
Canaday with Division 10 Highway Department Engineer
Max Farley. Farley told Canaday and The Daily Sentinel

Dissidents' House Held

Harrisonville Society News

• •
IS ID

all

OOMPLAINTS against the

.

JlCTl.REI

It ill lesS likely for 4.
whe.re
' 1·t mates a turn UDder
woman
your aee tp be havthe diaphragm can cause ing heart pain frolll fatty de- .
. chet
h est pama
r. mand.M~ ruir a~ posits in the . arteries, but
certainly not impossible.
"-amps"
can also cause you will, however, be bavinl
~
chest pain. One of the most increased cballges now that
troublesome causes Is spasm you have finished the men~
of the esophagus wbich pause. My best suggeaUoii
causes difficulty a 1m o s t on the llmited Information
identical to beurt pain. The available would be to stop
X rays will be negative in all coffee, iea or cigarette•·
this condition, too, UDless that you may be using ~
the spasm actually occurs mediately. These all COI(while the e.Umihation is be- tribute to ~ and spasm ip
the digestive tract, aside
ing done.
their relation to the
from
Your reference to Master's
bearl
Start a reducing diet
electrocardiogram tests tells
and
stick
to it. Begin ..~
me that you have been examined with exercise, and ~.\; little at lint and grad:
increase it to one hour
the u s u a 1 criteria for
a
day
at a speed of ~
changes bec'l.llse of heart
mnes
an
hour. These meas.
disease were not found. This
ures
may
impro~ your cou;is of some importance in
ditioo
a
great
deal and ~
helping to rule out the possialso
good
in
preventing
fubility that your recurrent
chest discomfort is from ture heart disease.
IHIWVAPII ENTIII'IUSI .WH.) .
your heurt.

.

Go into '73 .1 ., ewS ' "

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Agriculturellepartmenthasannounced a program by
by wbicb as much as
1410 million bushels of
fiarm.6tora!CU'IIcanbe kept off
the IOidet lllllil May 31, 1973.
Lollis on lbe 1.9111!1 and 19'10
U'Dp com stored on farms wm!·
tD have ccme due July 31,
mz. Tbe deportment exlended
that date by 10 lllllllths to May
31, l9'13. Il .... eslimaled 75
beSJels of the 1919 CI'G(I and
about 125 millicm btJsbe1s of lbe
1!'11 crop are slllred 1111 farms
~ &amp;V&lt;ailllltillloans.
Depertmeut officials expect
lhalD millillll to 400 million
h d h fnm lbe 1!111 CI'G(I will
beput111111orfaruHltored=.
'lbe due date for these
'
31
too, were extended to May •
19'13.
•
•
All ofliri•l said ~~lansmen!~ the.._, P
bora- this cwld be 8 factor
with IIDe 11°865 when they
da ille whether to sllft or sell
duriDc lbe'wiatlharvest. ,

have a lot of stomach gas,
bowel trouble aDd I cough a
Jot. ?trays have shown _nothmg m these areas e1ther.
""'• uo:re h as ne~er bee n ~Y
heart problem m my fauuly.
I do oot mow what to do.
Can you enli~hten me? I
take no medication except
an occasional aspirin. Two
M a s t e r ' s elec~ardiograms show.ed a slight irregulari~ b~t the · ~octo! said
he still didn't think 1t was
my heart.
Dear Reader-Yes there
are a number of things that
can cause cbest pain besides
the heart. If I understand
you correctly you mean your
difficulty o c c u r s several
hours after exertion, not
during il I would be a bit
more concerned abDut your
problem if it.occurred while
you were exerting yourseH.
Gas trapped in the colon,

.
f the
recommended expansion .0
rehabTtar
t ~ . Jon Program
. . m the
Rehab1htatwn Servtc~ CornmiSSIOn and extensiOn of
· . ·
d. r
· .
wm~atwn ra Ia 100 InJUry

The best science students of
Meigs County · joined science
scholars from more than 450
high schools in Ohio at a oneday Youth and Science conference at Mershon Auditorium
on The Ohio State University
campus Sept. 18 to explore the
topic, "Youth and Science Success Scene for the 70's."
County Agent C. E. Blakeslee
said the highlight of the
program came in key speaker
Charles L. Hosler's address "Man's Impact on His Environment." Hosler is dean of
the College of Earth and
Mineral Sciences at Pennsylvania Slate University.
Repre.qenting Meigs County
were Donna Francis, daughter
of Mrs . Ruth Francis of
Pomeroy ; Edie Mees, daugh~r
of Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Mees of
Pomeroy; James Schmoll, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schmoll
of Middleport; Larry Atherton,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Atherton of Long Bottom, and
Bill Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Hayes of Chester.
Other conference speakers
included Dean Roy M. Kottman
College of Agriculture and'
Home Economics OSU and
'
'.
George D. Robey, president,
Ohio Agricultural Council, who

prOVISLOOS .

. Other provisions of the new
law
- included:
An increase in maximwn
temporary total disabili ty
benefits from $63 per week to
$84 per week during the first 12
weeks, and from $56 to $77 per
week after 12 weeks of
disability.
- An increase of minimum
~mporary benefils from $25
weekly to $35 weekly.
- Increased benefits for
permanent and total disability
from a maximum of $56 to $77
per week and a minimum from
$45.50 to $49 per week.
- increased weekly death
benefits from $56 per week to
$n per week.
- Maximum aggregate death
benefits increased frGm $20,000
1&lt;. $24,000 . .

r
L!-\..dlUIU.

gave welcoming addresses;
"Green Survival," by William
Cowen, Professor of Natural
Resources ·and Extension
Fores~r, and "Sediment Saboteur of Our Environment,"
by Bertie Sclunidt, OARDC,
Association Chairman of
Agronomy, Wooster, and
Rodney F. Plimpton, Associate
Professor, Animal Science,

osu.

Cindy J . Bright and Wayne F.
King, both of the College of
Agriculture
and
Home
Economics, introduced a multiscreen, audio-visual program
entitled "You ... Can Make A
World of Difference" which
portrayed the kind of world and
quality of environment America
would like to build in the future.
The event was represented by
the College of Agriculture and
Home Econics at The Ohio Slate
University and The Ohio
Agricultural Council. The
council, representing agencies,
associations and institutions in
Ohio, provided transportation
and the noon luncheon for the
students. Council representatives from Meigs OJunty are
the Meigs · County Soil and
Water Conservation District,
and the Meigs County ASCS
Committee.

Line Lai•d .Down

UNITED NATIONS (UPI) The United States put its
prestige on the line at the
opening today of the 26th annual
General Assembly of the United
Nations. The World organization faced some of the
most Important decisions in its
history, including the questions
of whether to admit Communist
China.
The United States advoca~s
admission for China while at the
same tinie insisting on the right
of Nationalist China to relnain
at the United Natiohs. The
session, which has a 1Q9.1tem
agenda to consider, will have to

decide which China - or
whether both - will be
represented.
The United States was
publishing
tooay
two
resolutions with the support of
barely a dozen small memhernatioos. One resolution would
seat Communist China and give
it China's Security Council seat
along with its veto power.
The other would requile a
two-thirds majority for expulsion of the Chinese
Nationalisls. Albania and 17
uther ,Pro-Peldfll natlonl
demanded the NatJO"aa'* IMt
ouated and Peld• a' filled.

•ve
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J- The llllly Sentinel, Mldd'epor~y. o., Sept. 21,1971

Contests judged

Social
Calendar

Slate and natiunal sewing and candle holders and electric cord
baking cootests were judged at bolder.
the Friday night meeting of Wwthy Muter Norman WW
Pwtona _Grange held at the presided at the meeling with aU
Ruck Springs ball.
10 granges rjOporting. The
The f'II'Sl place winnen will. national Grange mee!ing to be
compete at the stale con- held on Nov. 13 at d.arleston,
vention. Taking first in the W. Va. was announced and
national contest fOJ' crocheted several indicated that they were
doily and crocbeted baby set favwable to cllarlering a bus to
was Mrs. Emma Adams, take the. group to see the
Racine._ In the state contest seventh degree. Tbe sixth
Mrs. Alice Stocktnn &lt;i Hemlock degree will be given on Oct. 2 at
Grange too~ first in ~e the FrankfOJ'I High School near
decorated pillowcases w1th Frankfort in Ross County.
bandkerehiefs and Mrs. Adams Tickets for this can be ·secured
took second.
1rom Deputy Muter vqu
Mrs. Mary Kay Yost of Aikins.
Ra~ was 6rst, Mrs. Avanell The WOJ'thy deputy reminded
Holliday of Laurel, SI!COIMI. and all granges that resolutions for
Mrs. Neva N'ICbolsoo of Star, the state cooventlon In Toledo
thin!, in ~ cape contest
need to be sent In promptlY.
W'lllDll1g m the chocolate date
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan
cake contest which had eight lecturer used the them~
entries were Mrs. Norma Lee, "Belis" 'for the program. In
Harrisonville, first ; Mrs. response to roD caD members
Nicholson, SI!COild; and Mrs. named various kinds of bells.
He&amp;:n Qui~ey, ~- ~- The chocus sang "When They
Wmners m the Jlllllor diVISion Ring Thll!le Golden BeDs for
were Hi~ M~, Star You and Me". A history was
Grange, 8plCJ Jl'mpkin ~; given of the liberty BeD, and
Billy Oyer, Star, 6rst m the thevariousSarnabeUsoflndia.
under eight competitioo for A nwnber of readings and songs
washcloth pWow class; and about beDs were presented, and
Teresa Carr, Alfred, 6rst, and several beDs were on display.
Opal Dyer, Star, second, in the At the conclusion of the
12 year group.
program, one of the Sarna beDs
Steven Peytnn of Star took was added to the string of bells
first in ~he wooden lawn of friendship of tbe Women's
marker; WlthBevertyW'IIcm;of Activities Committee to be
Star, taking first in "something displayed at tbe annual confrom nothing" with ber nature vention In Toledo, Oct. 18-lMJ.
scene. BWy Dyer also received Refresbments were served by
a firSt m the bant category, the Harrisonville Grange.
with Patty Dyer taking 6rst in

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 38S
Tuesday 7:~ p)D. Warlt in
FeUowcraft Degree.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE,.Trlnlty
Cbureh, I p.m. Tuesday, Mrs.
Roy Mayer to . ~ve the

j,rogram; Mrs. Albel1
and Mrs.

Elza

,oodard

Gilmore,

hostesaes.

AUXILIARY of Rutland
'•
Firemen, 7:30 Tuesday night at
the fire bowie.
SHADE RIVER BeDs and
Beau square dance lesson In
Archery building at Royal Oak
Park, 7:30 tonight. ·Interested
persons invited. - - ·
PAUL BAKER, left, 1* . lent &lt;i the PamaGJ C. Olb, 1*
W tile srcmd place
. TUESDAY
lr&lt;¢1 to flo&amp;er Morgan, wbo sjlot 57 out &lt;i 15 at lbe lnp llllaat II!Jd at tile bmiJ.y Day picnic
SALISBURY PTA first
&amp;mday. On the right iS Virgil Brown, Morgan's tram!
meeling of year, 7:30 p. m.
Tuesday at school. Introduction
ct parents and leachers and a
Meigs
ftlm on last year's "Be. a
Oown" m11,91cal by John Lisle.
Refresbinents. All parents
qed to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy
United Methodist
Howard Largent, Eura
Qu-ch.
largml to Walter Floyd Roush,
OHIO VAU:EY Commandry,
Am8 L.llolab, Parcels, SUttun.
stated conclave, 7:30 Wed·
lbrtin IIGilollaD to Ray M.
aesday, Pomeroy Masonic
U.nilc IIJrlle Ranill8, Lot,
Temple.
Plai:ti: Uj MISSIONARY Program,
FI laM S. Noni.s, Lucille
Forest
Run Baptist Church, 7
NGrris "' Roger Adams, 3:i
p.m. Wednesday. Miss Peggy
Am!s, SUIIon.
lluasell, missionary to Mexico,
James R. Jeffers, dec'd., to
to show stides and speak. Public
Ethel Jeftets, Robert. F. Jef.
Invited .
fBs, Zelma Lee Jeffers, Cert. of
......_
Salich!A'y.
.. _
.
SYRACUSE THIRD Wednesday Homemakers Club, 10
a.m. Wednesday at meeting
headquarters, Municipal Park,
Syracuse. Subject, "Textile
Chatlts R. Sheets, Margaret
Paints". Potluck at noon. Take
WINNER- Paul Baliier,left, peai?lt of 1be IWi&amp;GJ
own table service. All
Gun Club, presents the winning tropby to Roger Wioebi-..(Valerie Jo Gilmore)
homemakers welcome.
at the annual Family Day picnic SUnday at the dill.
l'll,U Bass, Dec. to Lula The 64th wedding anniversary Fred, Donna, Danny, Susan and
POMEROY Shakespeare
W'melftmel-,grand cbaqlion trapsbool«, dlote.t&lt;i15.
Club, noon luncheon, WedBass, Rqlb Bass, Leonard of Mr. and Mrs. Otto lbles, Sr., Steven, Marilyn Pohlman, Mrs.
ApJii cr.timately 5I mernben and guests etfended Jlar1leale
Bass, l!omi£e Levacy, Betty J. Pomeroy was observed at a Enda Mead Mr and Mrs
nesday at the home of Mrs.
twter waa prepared by Ted Reed, and baibecue diM'"' b)' TJ-. Aff. of Trans., SUtton. f~y get-toged!er SUnday at ClaudeJewellandMr. andMrs:
Robert Warner.
Vu-gllllrown.
.
M gael B. Van· Cooney to Rising Park, Lancaster.
THURSDAY
George Green ColumbUs
Jadith Hassinger,
Paul
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
A fiv":'iered wedcting cake Mr. and Mrs: Bill W~n.
Announcement has been velvet. ribbon headpiece. She p.m. Thursday night, at the
H • g • Lot m
. Behan' s Add ., lDpped With the mmerals, "64," David, Darla, and Diana
received here of the marriage, carried a white Bible with a hall. Election of officers.
Mi'Rt•••l
was pr-eaented to the couple by Rutland; Mrs. Grace Struble:
Saturday,
Aug. 28, of MISs bouquet of pink roses and
Dan C. Gorby, dec. to Carl M. Mrs. Joe Struble. ~t centered a Mrs. Ruth Glass, Mrs. Faith
THURSDAY
tied
with
Gorby, em.. r..- Trans., Salem. table covered wtth a green Brown, Lllgan; Mr. and Mrs. Valerie JoGilmore, formerly of stephanotis
PACK 245, Middleport Cub
D- . Gorby to Carl M cloth: Mr. and Mrs. John TerreU Richard Struble, Gordon, Syracuse, to Mr. Richard H. slreamers.
Scouts,
6:30 outing for the cubs
Mrs. Sophia Stace Olsen, husband, Charles Olsen, and a Gtrily, Ul Am!s, Salem.
· provtded a corsage and Douglas, Brian and Lori, Ashley, d. Bradenton, Fla. The Miss Jackie King of
:2, formerly . of • P~m·, son, George H. Slace.
AlbortlliD,Jr-., Ora E. Hill to boutonruere tor the honored CarroU; Mrs. Marjorie Dlles ceremony was performed by Bradenton served tbe bride as and their families at Fort
the Rev. Lawrence George in maid of honor and David Meigs.
~oy, San Gabriel, Calif., Stl{viving are a son, Hauld llerscheJ Badgley, Leona couple. .
and son, Jerry, and Mr. and
the Oneco, Fla. , United Ashley, of Tampa, served his
d1ed
Monday
at
the 011f!lll'80; ~Calif., llliDbi, .25 kft, SUitoo.
. .- .I
Attending were Mr. and.Mrs. Mrs. Hubie Stage Nelsonville·
' .
.
hrotll!!r as best man. .
Montebello Convalescent and tWo daughters, Mrs. 1... E. awltS·E. i&gt;ri&lt;r:, Grace E. Robert Weedy, ChriS, Mark, Clyde Bloomfield' Van Wert: Jll!eth?dlst ~urch.
Parents of the bride ate Mr.. A reception was held for the
Home.
(Rose) ReynoldsofiMiddlqut, PrirJe to Mua&lt;mg;ibela Power Paul and Becky of Lllgan; Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. c. J: Struble, Mr:
and Mrs. John W. Gilmore, of couple in the feUowship ball of
Mrs. Olsen was born in and Mrs. G. E. (!laral c...my, Ca., Ease~ Olift.
Morton Kraft, Wooster; Charles and Mrs. Joe Struble and Mike,
Greenbner County, W. Va., the of Akroo 12 granddWdrea, H
Bright, Logan; Mrs. Jennifer Pomeroy· Mr and Mrs Dan Bradenton, former residents of the church after which they left
Syracuse and Meigs County. on a wedding trip to points of
daughter of the late William B. great-children and 1M
JeweU, David Miller, Mr. and Struble, Stev~n and D~,
an~ Elizabeth Holliday Stone. great-great . grnnddrildren.
WALIWIIN INJURED
Mrs. Eugene JeweU, Mr. and Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Prior to residency in Florida interest in Florida. They are
While a res~dent here, she was a
Harty Walbum, formerly of Mrs. Richard Wagner, linda, Cramer, Jackie Sue and Dan, they were connected with the now at home at 2003-B 46th Ave
member of the Pomeroy Baptist Funeral services will be beld V'oldlepo1, is a patient at Tom and Jun, Harry Struble, Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Shumway Greenhouses in Dr. West, in Bradenton.
Sponsorship of a local Baptist
Church and was active _in both a~ 10 a.m. lhur.iday at HOI\' Lincoln Memorial Hospital, Mrs. Carolyn lbles, Mr. and Dishon, Sue, Steve, John and Syracuse. Mr. Gilmore may be Besides many relatives in
the Daughters of America and Hills MeiiMrial .P art in WIJit. ,.,.,.... He is confined there Mrs.RayHiland,Mr.~Mrs. Mark, Bucyrus; Mr. and Mrs. remembered as a former Meigs County the new bride has radio program was approved
reporter and editor of the old a host of friends who will during a meeting of the Busy
the. Pythian Sisters Lodge. tier, Calif. Mrs. Beynolds and far lreatmeol of injuries sur- James Hiland, Jacqueline and William Ridge Dayton
Daily
Tribune in Pomeroy. The remember her from early Bee Class of tbe Middleport
Besides her parents, she was Mrs. Conroy will leave by plane fered in an acrident at his Judy, Mrs. Donald JeweU,
'
·
bridegroom IS a son of Mr. and school days here. A siSter, Mrs. First Baptist Church Thursday
preceded in ~th by her first from Col~bus W1111*9bJ to ~meut, the Duff Tructing
Mrs.
Bert Ashley of Bradenton Robert E. (Jane) Beegle, night at the home of Mrs. G. G.
husband, Philip Stace, and her attend their mother's aniias. eo. in Akron.
and will be graduated in ""Sides in Racine.
Werner.
December from the Florida
Mrs.
Leora
Sigman,
AUantic University in Boca
president, opened the meeting
Raton, Florida.
with prayer. It was decided to
The bride entered on tbe arm
have the picnic and .comONISj
of
her
father
who
gave
her
1n
you-are
party earher next
A fall carnival was planned Brooks, treasurer.
summer with one to be held in
!
for Oct. 16and committees were Teachers present were marriage. She wore a gown
•J:_
June and the other in July. A
BY JACK O'IIIUAN
named at a meeting Monday recognized and introduced. which she had hand-fashioned
of
satin
and
lace
with
an
empire
UXIRU1)'0Uif.S
card
was signed for a shut-ln. A
MOVEOVER LANCEIUI'slnij!bl~ - Adarswillllnethecbanceto mgbt d. the Tuppers Plains They were Mrs. Strausbaugh,
"bakeless" bake sale was held,
HERE OOMES QIARLIE!
get emnrilll 'Dml!s ailil: Clive P - , who'll School Boosters.
first grade; Mrs. Brannon, thin! waistline and stand-up coUar.
The
gown
featured
an
Inverted
Mrs.
EDen
Couch
was
hostess
and
an auction foUowed the
NEW YORK - Charlie O!aplin's heavily emcee lbe r t ' 'I llllm - 11lore ns all the
Named to committees were grade, Robert Sanders seventh
rumored to be knighted in the next Queen's List booplaallllllt•t~p!ll:lliel'fllll7 nnlll on TV Mrs. Twil.a Strausbaugh, Mrs. grade, and Miss Huichinson pleat in the back with a Oaired for the Wednesday night meeting.
Mrs. Lillian McGhee gave
... GOW8' Cbampion and David Merrick's lldwy. (.nan~ :111ft etc.), t.t tile T11p 20 Jast. Jane Headley, and Mrs. Sharon remedial reading.
' train trimmed with a lace meeting of the Past Presidents
ruffle.
The
bride's
shoulder·
of
Drew
Webster
Post
39,
devotions
usill8 scripture from
IDUiicai''SomeUkeltHol"maycoolit... Great
"'Il 6st &lt;i II t Ph -l:liaed all old and Boyles, purchasing; Mrs.
It was reported tbat the
playwright 'lborntm Wilder (he wrote the play •lej •daNe fmmals: IWI ...,. speci•h toot Mildred Brooks, Mrs. Nita Jean furnace thermostats have length veil of illusion feU from a American Legion Auxiliary. Matthew 17 and an article
Devotions by Mrs. Ernest "Hear, Obey and Come."
wmcb ultimately became "HeUo, Ddly") lost .0: If lbe q&gt;. p'
(il• • I' C lbe very top, Ritcbie, co-chairmen, with the arrived and will be installed
PoweU included reading of tbe
Refreshments were served by
theslil!tln one eye ... Now's the time to caleb a and&amp;lll,llll,llb, u•andiD); lllerest inclmlrd room mothers, soliciting; Mrs. before the heating season
TJT;7I
46thPsalmandprayer. A thank the hostesses, Mrs. Werner,
good Bdwy. show - ~·re ahnost all on Jadr.Bemy, "Beei...-," .JabnWa)'IIO's.patriotic Headley, Mrs. Sharon Boyles, starts.
1•
YY
you note was read from Miss Mrs. Eva Hartley, Miss
"twcters" ... "How the Other Half Loves" sporial (~). ~ Aow!allt Awards (2nd), 1be Mrs. Shirley Petersoo and Mrs. Mrs. Fultz presented a list of
Constance
Thorn of Miller Kathryn Werner, and Mrs.
Bopped miaerably on Bdwy. (with Phil Silvers" Gtanmy Aw.dl, Bill~ a.11r Yule special, Janet Fultz, sacking ; Mrs. items which have been pur.
Cottage, Dayton, for a gift sent Frances Bearhs. Others atSandy Dennis) but the London original with rerun of .............~ "'lftl of ''Oiarlie Mary
Longenette, Mrs. chased by tbe Booster Club.
•
by the group. Mrs. Ralph tending the meeting were Mrs.
FlorenceSp_encer, co-chainnen, This was given to Mr. Parker,
Rollert Morley is in its -.cJ year with a llrollll's Oailltnw " - ' liR llal
Gilmore of Colmnbus was a Charles Edwards, Mrs. Dana
""".... of' I
..,. ooo· •
tment v · "'
Plaiiti Sill.. G' ~' ~·s an KenJ1etb Mrs. ~te Welch and Mrs. principal, in ordef- to ascertain
guest at the meeting.
Hamm, Mrs. Harry Houdashelt,
_,.,.vpt I ~a-· mves
... ane._,. became
~,.....
Janet Chichester, raOie tickets; that items are either at tbe
reports Danny Kaye's '"l'Wo by Two" mnsicsJ •
a lrwaad lr ' 14 lll:ribe -· N. Y. Mrs. Mayme Headley, Mrs. school or returned to it
The WeUston Dis~ct ct the
Mrs. Coucb served refresh- Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Ruth
4k'opped .,_,,000; ~.000 of it pu-portediJ ~ l!llus all ~ IDn's ... ....., .... fonded ArveUa Frecker, Mrs. Janet The members were re~ Church of God will bold a ments to Mrs. George Hackett, Johnson, Mrs. Cora Pullin, Mrs.
Kaye's, IJICIIII ct the rest composer.producer with JK\Iillits zit Slalm "~and, virgin Connally, and Mrs. Ann CoUins, that three school board convention at the Chester Sr., Mrs. Owen Watson, Mrs. Lettie Roush, Mrs. Elizabeth
Ridlard Rodgers' ... It was Bdwy.'s worst Jast.. lenittay i•' ' - W'to4 W&gt;wdoal) del hJeJ to kitchen.
members will be elected . Church of God Wednesday and Jed Webster, Sc., Mrs. Frank Slavin, Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs.
seasoo llllllical.
"'"""ll&gt;'llle on al clel11"•1ely: he's booted
The seventh and eighth November and were urged to; Thursday . The district Is Cheesebrew, Mrs. Ben Neut- lsabeUe WinebJ'enner, and Mrs.
Lalrle Kazan'sendless TV cbaltershow sl~ s~t bwcZIIBt II:Rh.
grades will make the ad- to the poDs.
comprised of tJM: chur~ ~ zllng, Mrs. J. M. Thornton, Mrs. Beulah White.
opera ct clinical redwxlancies abwt ber unwed
LiZII Ur wlli's t.cl lad diiiJing a love vertising posters for the car- It was decided to have a Rutland, MI. Moriah, Gallipolis Olan Knapp, Mrs. George
Bearhs, and Mrs. Ray Fox.
maternity is a dreary tiving-rotllll topic .... matdl witb 1w llllliD 7 ;
ollow..Jialder, nival.
-~~ comnu'!tee plan a and
Chester.
Dr-..a..D ................ ........_
.-...-The will be three
'
London millionaire Charles Clore's da~ ,_..,.., ; ._,. .... ._the Blnn ~
Mrs. Lavina Bcannon led tbe program for each meeling of
. re
. sernc;es
Allatralian model Valli Kemp .... Valli's aJ ... irsa silly W f I - Wlat'llnewpasaycats? group in the pledge to tbe flag to tbe school year. Named to tbe dunng the two days Wlth_specutl
Some mysterious angel popped up with fZj,OIIO kns SmiJ C · bas :II cats iD ber open the mee\ng. James Stout, committee were Mrs. Bonnie ~ers for each sernce, the
GAME AlTENDED
for "The Me Nobody Knows" to reopen on midtAJwufllt_ DilablliRJ!Iirholsdi•CII . I president, Introduced tbe club Hackney, Mrs. Brann&lt;in, Mrs. f1rst at ~ p. m. W~y.
Milford HyseU of tbe MidBdwy., and we wish we knew why. Its mar- lis ''Cmal Kwwlelp!" will New: YGrk Mig's officers - Edgar Pullins, vice Florence Spencer, Mrs. Janet Thursdays services will be at
dleport Webelos and S. T.
10 a.m. and 7. p.m.
velously endearing cast of 111011Uy chillk-en smut- Mary .Ana ......., at~ Grawtirr .
president; Mrs. Janet Fultz, Fultz, and Mrs. Rose Karr.
Smith, cubmaster of Middleport
up Its dialogue with the basest four~etler CJb..
11twmEdWiltm:Jh I tbeSagram's secretary; Mrs. Mildred The banner and $3 pr12e for
Speakers will be the Rev. L.
Cub Scout Troop 245, and
Dens 2and 3 of the Middleport
acenities and acatologies.
swilcbbnard and llllltld if IIIey baft a ''house --~-~------ liaving the most parents ill H. Aultman, state director; the
sc_outs, Donald Geary, Mike
"
,_.., ~ 11
"and -"-' ~
t'--'--b aRev. WayneRossoo,stateyouth Cub Scout Pack 245 attended the
One of show "'''
... major organizatims iS organ ; apt!Q.J*R MM
ltpii&lt;U,
The lhao S .
a .~"""~" ~as won Y •...,.er director, and the Rev. HasteD carnival at RuUand Saturday Hmdy, Mark Hood, Dorset
beaded and really bcJised by an ez&lt;On .... ''No, just U "' - MlrJ Pat f:iNms, a foillf ,
__,1 :ti II
Kirkhart s su:th grade. It was Jenkins. The evening services accompanied by. their d~n Thomas, Danny Smith and
Playboy's new buge Great Gorge, N.J., resort lroth&lt;ia&amp;imll.wedllleU.BmkJtCIDi!pOI'• :
o~:~~~~l.:'J:E
noted that dues d. 50 cents are will be evangelistic, and the mo~. Mrs. France$ Whit- Gene Hood attended the Ohio
(year-t'OWid sports !rem swimming to ski sl~) boss, .IGba Sriuimeoim, aliilenw hOLE of a ,
.oi&gt;IEifiS·MASDN AREA
P~Y~ble ~~d that parents forenoon service will deal with lington and Mrs. Eula Frances. University - BowUng Green
game Saturday. Scout Day was
wiD be racially Integrated .... Here's the insole~!, lad, in St. Pafrith C..d hi; the llride iS a
CHEST~=.~-c~~=-NEHILL:'. wishing to)~ the Booster Club leaching. The public iS invited
In the group were Keith Doss,
desperateendtothe dirf'-movielrenainN. Y. Jackie()os • ..........
ROaERTHDEFLICH,
maypaythelrduestoanyoftbe
' Leslie Whillington, Jr., Paul observed at the University with
Citv Editor
officers The
1
tin
and America : 'the " f
al N.Y. Erotic
New~~ •t · C Sept. 30
Publ is hed doilf eJcept
·
nex mee g was
McElhaney,
James' Gheen those attending In uniform
.
admitted free. ' .
Film Festival" is annoc
tart here Nov . 5 at tbe N.Y. llillan's 1'&amp;111 lti, "'!'be .M.t spatbulrdah~ by Tche Ohio Volle¥ selforOct.ll at 7:30p.m. in the
Keith Black, Ray Stewart,
u tS tng
ompany, Jll .school gym Pr
b R ''" t
"in !lrsf..runmovie hOUs"-&gt; .... I'be pornograpby Greet." is beil!g lllalld asaral_..
. 1 Court St., · Pomeroy, Ohio.
· ayer Y """r
ME~ffiE. I¥ELCOIIED
Randy Batey, Max Geary,
floodispouringitsdir ty sludgenotonlyonTimes he~ in elcblhec &amp; , JIMI'*Iine ill a :W:iS:."~i;i~i!:"~~':...:":;J Sanders closed the meeting.
Mrs. Bertha Canaday was Mark Tyree, and Jamie ScaUy.
Square but out into tbe ''family" neighborhoods: Ibm d, pbJs
of · ' •• 4•, and llu m1.
welcomed as a new member Driving tbe scouts and other · GIFT OF BOOK MACE
A book, "Weathered Wood
lbe
been ..... · liis II ..
Second class postage peid et
,
.,
mtliestboot&amp; and picture smirks are being
. PU
X
¥ *I' far -lllan
Pomeroy . Ohio.
ORGANIZATION SET
when the Magnolia Club met guests to tbe carnival Were
Leslie
Wbit~··ton
Mrs
Don
with
Flowers,
hy Mary G.
forced 111 shops and newsstands far fnm the ~ wilicb llis r... lll:ft W.MoJ Ptblte
N.alional advertising
The Alpha Teens and the recenUy at the home ct Mrs.
-... '
·
na "·'·ht has bee
. n preaented to
·-.
-=- .'"
reprtsentative
Bd-.germ
Inc., 12 Bottinelli·
"'
-.""'""","'--'
.....,.. ..-ea---.
•• - ·-_,... ..... ,.... 1 Gollatber.
Eas1 •2nd Omega, two Y4!Uth groups, will Aaron Kelton. Mrs. Ethel Gheen, and Mrs. Nellle •u"" •
Canadlalirigbtsa~tooJdCharlieO!aplin r.ara,Silw»Q I -.IGCIJsswiloswarbe's Stsu'l.~~r~;";~0~' 1 Yr'o~::vc:;-:: [ be ~anized at 6:30 Sunday S~ ~ at a short McElhaney. Going with the :'rv:lgs Extension library
fllma went for $2,01111,000; Amarican rigbl!l are the ned 1 · ...- Df laU&amp;hla. Real : live_red by ca-.ier where ; evenmg at the Middleport Free busmesa meeting foUowed by a group were Mrs. Robert Gardenehy ~Rutlandbook
. rs.
eatures
50 c.-.ts per week ; Baptist Church The Alpha social hour. Games prizes went Vance, Ri~ky, David and
-led
-millllll .... Cbarll! woo 'I D"'
aot 1·t name, Aid • Ira +mas, lilt U _ , fit 011 ' lvaijable
-.-...
....., . •
. ._ • •
.
.
12 pictures In ' color of
.M
C
1 8y Motor Route where cerrier
Mike
M
,
ra.
ae
ar. arr
ts
.0-besoldallrigbtlforS6,000,01MJ,andbellu;t lbelllal'qleebelMiltiafnlltafllisbmlt!_IJad service nol available: One TeensiSforJUDICirhighstudeots to Mrs. Bertha Smil!t, Miss
roll and daughters, Ter- 11
~..2!._outatubed aJradr
bt
Utile SwiSs vaults .... a nm af a web at ... .SZ.. Lalis !Ilion,. wllldl .· and
mon!h
sus. By mail in Olllo with
lliiW"V
W. va .• One rnr $14.00.
d .Gerald Anthony to aervees Erna
. Jesse, and Mrs. Henry
esa
and
RubJ,
Teresa
and
--...
ower
- - · · It
;w111re be llletipi.Jots of his Yankee-gotten gold. nplaios wllJ lle
I' 1aed r.. IIIII c6- i Six months 17.25. !hree a v1sor. The Rev. Charles Reibel. Mrs. Canaday woo the
Lisa
Whlttlngto~.
Dehra
~lalned
the
technique
.,..__
. _,,.._=:--'13m
· NY~"m•ldthe
'l'imlsSI. eHillla'
months u .so. Scbscrtplion Simons will. be. the advisor for door prize.
Refreshments
were
10
&amp;:M~~~.:C~.._...,._.IICI
•w .,.._..
.,.
-- .. ~_..,.. 1 pr 1ce 1nc1udes ~uRd•y Times.
·
.
Mulford, Loraine McElhaney,
preparing weathered
fill dllflenl rt ''Tile Forsyle S.C." for 11 .- •1
h llfls:W I
e
Sontinel.
. Clntel!a which 1$ Gpen to aenior served to e1ght meuiGers and and Scott Glleea.
·
wood for uae in fioral
•
·
- - - c ·- ......l. l•igh m•l Ctillege ywlhs.
one "uest.
11T8118~ta .

Property

Transfers

~~~~~:=.Wedding

Anniversary
:s::F=~~: Celebrated Sunday

Mrs. Richard H. Ashley

Wed in Florida

Sophia S. Olsen Died in West

Sponsorship
Is Accepted

r-------------------------------------·-----

1Voice

along Broadway

Carnival on Oct. 16

Mr.r. Couch Hosts

A

Con _

Vt11+ton

Meet In

f _.];

Cubs at Carnival

.

•1-

-a-, _"'·-.

Friendlyf

111•-

b
, la

a

=

.!:!":'7J"

ns

7

•· ·

7

~

.

•

IDX
.

.

. . . . . . . . . . ,_ ._

z

•

Reds Take On Dodge,..

.

.

touched the ball in the game
and Detroit added another
score when quarterback Greg
Landry hit running back Mel
Farr with a three-yard touch·
down pass. This score came
after rookie Jeff Wrlght of
Minnesota had fumbled without
being hit on the Detroit kickoff
and Craig Cotton fell on the
ball on the Vikings' 21.
Dave Osborn fumbled without
any help from the other side
the next lime Minnesota got the
ball but Mann's 39-yard field
goal try hit the crossbar. Mann
also missed twice from 53
yards, being short both times,
and put one through from 36
yards away.
Cox got Minnesota some key
life when he booted a 13-yarder
with just six seconds left in the
first half to cut the gap to 13-3.
Wide receiver Bob Grim
caught seven passes for 126
yards but the most vital was
the one of 45 yards which
quarterback Gary Cuozzo threw
for a touchdown the first time

Orioles Trip NY
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Pat Dobson iS a better-than·
.500 major league pitcher for
the first time In his career
today -by one game -and
needs just "one more" to place
him in that specilil class of 20game winners.
The 29-year old right-hander,
acquired by the Baltimore
Orioles from the San · Diego
Padres last winter, started the
1971 season with a 25-35 career
record. Hili 8-4 victory over the
New York Yankees Monday
night gave him a 19-8 season
record and moved him to
within one game of a 21l-victory
season -the goal of every
major league pitcher.
The win also built the Orioles'
firsLiJlace lead In the American
League East to 610 games and
reduced to five their magic
number for cUnchlng a third
straight division title.
As the No. 4 man in the
Orioles' Big Four pitching
rotation, Dobson joined Dave
McNaUy and Mike CueUar as
19-game winners. Jim Palmer
is right behind with 18
victories, giving the Baltimore
staff a chance to become the
first one in 50 years with four
20-game winners. Dobson aJ.
lowed eight hils and four runs
in eight innings but trailed, 4-3,
going into the ninth as a result
of a homer by Roy White In tbe
eighth and needed some of that
famous Baltimore late-inning
lightning to get the victory.
He got it when Boog PoweU
led off the ninth with a double
and plnchofllllner Chico Salmon

scored the tying run on Don
Buford's infield out. Then the
Yankee bullpen feU apart and.
the Orioles scored four more
runs with the big blow a tworun single by Bobby Grieb.
The Cleveland Indians beat
the Washington Senators, 3-1,
after losing a week-old suspended game, 8-6, in the OOth inning
and the Milwaukee Brewers
defeated the Minnesota Twins,
3-0, in Monday's only other big
league action. The Philadelphia
Phillies' scheduled doublehead·
er in Montreal, the only
National League activity, was
postponed by rain.
The Senators and Indians
resumed their suspended game,
started in Cleveland a week
ago, with the score tied at ~
in the 17th inning. Denny
McLain picked up his lOth
victory of the year when the
Senators scored three runs In
the OOth inning with the help of
three walks by Sam McDoweU
and a key error by Kurt
Bevacqua on a double play
grounder.
It may have been the most
forgettable game of the season
-there were 383 fans in the
stands when it was resumed as Cleveland set a record by
issuing 19 walks and team
records for most walks -30 and most pitchers ·- 18 -were
set.
The players had mercy on the
fans with a 2:04 second game in
which McLain went eight
innings and lost his 21st game.
Alan Foster yielded three hits
in 7 1·3 innings for his eighth
win and Fred Stanley homered

By Unit.d Press tnternatlona t
AmeriQn LNgue
Ellt

W. L. Pet.GB

92 57 .617 ...
88 66 .571 6112
80 74 .519 14'12
79 75 .513 15'12
60 91 .3'17 33
58 95 .379 36
Wtst
.
W. L. Pet. GB
x-O.kld
97 55 .638 ...
Kansas City 82 71 .536 15'12
Chicago
7'f 80 .475 25
california
72 81 ..01 25 112
Mlmesola
70 82 .&lt;loll 27
Milwaukee
65 88 .425 32'12
x-CIInched Division Title
Mondly's Rosull$
Milwaukee 3 Mlnn 0
Wash 8 Cleve 6, (20 Inns,
suspended game
Cl011e 3 Wash 1, reg. g.
Baltimore 8 NY 4
(only games scheduled)

Baltimore
Detroit
Boston
New York
Washington
Cleveland

Today's Prctblble Pitchers
Kansas City (Drago 16-10) at
california (Wright 15-15), night.
Detroit (Timmer·man 7-5) at
Boston (Lonborg B-7), night.
Clevelarid (Paul 2-6) at
Washington (Bosman 16-16) ,
night.
Milwaukee (Krausse 7· t2) at
Mlmesota (Perry 1t.-16).
Baltimore (McNally 19-5) at
New York (Peterson . 14-12),
night.
Chicago (Johnson 10.10 and
Bradley 13-14) at O.kland
(Dobson 15-4 and Odom 10-11),
1, twl-nlght.

.Wldnosday's Games

Chi at O.kl, night
KC at cal, night
Milwaukee at Mlnn
Cleve at Wash, night
Bal at NY, night
Del at Bos, night
Natt-flolgue
E11t
W. L Pet, GB
Pittsburgh
93 61 .604
St. Louis
14 69 .549 1'12

New York
Chicago
Montreal
Philadelphia

79 14 .516 13'12
19 14 .516 13'12

67 84 .41 2•'12
62 91 .405 30'12
West

W. L. Pet. Gil

San Francisco BS 68 .556 ...
Los Angeles 84 70 .5-lS 1'12
Atlanta
19 76 .510 7
Houston
IS 78 .4'10 10
Cincinnati
75 80 .484 11
San Diego
58 95 .379 27
Mondly's Rosull$
Philo at Mil, w, ppd, rain
(only game scheduled)
Today's Probable·Pitchers
New York !Seaver 18-9) at
Chicago (Hands 11-18) .
Philadelphia (Reynolds 4-8
and Champion 2-3) at Montreal
(Morton 10-16 and Strohmater
7-SL 2, twl-nlght.
Pittsburgh (Ellis 19-7) at St.
Louis (Reuss 14-14), night.
San Diego (Norman 3.12) at
Atlanta (Kelley 8-S), night.
Los Angeles (Osteen 13-10) at
Cincinnati (Grimsley 10-6),
night.
San Francisco (Cumberland
9-5) at Houston (Billingham B·
15), night.
Wednosday's Games
Phlla at Mil, night
New York at Chicago
Pitt at St. L, night
San Diego at All, night
Lo• Ang at Cln, night
SF. at Hous, night

Worried About

FALSE TEETH

for the Indians.
Skip Lockwood pitched a four·
hitter and drove in a run with a
swinging bunt to win his lOth
game for the Brewers. Andy
Kosco accounted for the Brewers' third run with a homer off
Ray Corbin, who suffered his
lith loss.
The Pttsburgh Pirates, need·
ing one victory to clinch the
National League East title send
19-game winner Dock EUis
against Jerry Reuss (14-14) and
the St. Louis Cardinals tonight,
while the San Francisco Giants
and Los Angeles Dodgers
continue their run to the wire in
the West.
The Giants, with a l'h game
lead and nine games to play,
wiD be at Houston with John
Cumberland ( 9·5) going
against Jack Billingham (8-15) .
The Dodgers, with eight games
to go, will he at Cincinnati with
Claude Osteen ( 13-10) facing
Ross Grimsley (1~). The
Giants play all theii' remaining
nine games on the road while
the Dodgers play five of their
last eight away from home.

Pennant Race
At A Glance
By United Press International
Nationol LNgue West

W. L. Pet.

San Francisco
85 68 .556
Los Angeles
84 10 .54.5
Atlanta
79 76 .510
San Francisco - Away, 9, 9,
Houston (3) Sepf. 21 -22·23;
Cincinnati (31 Sef.t. 24-25-26;
San Diego (3) Sep . 28-29·30.
Los Angele• -Home. 3,
Houston t3l ser'· 28·29-30.
Away 5, Clnclnnat (2) Sept. 21·
22; Atlanta (3) Sept 24-25-26.
Atlanta -Home 7, San Diego
(2) Sept. 21·22f los Angeles (3)
Sept. 24-25·26; Cincinnati (2)
Sept. 28-30.
Amorlcan League West
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
92 57 .617
Detroit
88. 66 .571
Baltimore - Home, 2, Boston (2) Sept. 28-29. Away, 6
New York (2) Sept. 21·22;
Cleveland 14) Sept. 24 (2), 25·
26.
Detroit - Home, 3, New York
(3) Sept. 24-25-26. Away, 5,
Boston (2) Sept. 21 ·22; Cleveland (3) Sept. 28 (2), 29.

the Vikings got their coUective
hands on the football in the
second half. Grim fell on the
two but got up and stepped
hesitanUy into the end zone for
the score when defender Lem
Barney made no effort to hit
him on the ground.
"We had better field position
and we moved the ball in the
second half," Grant said .
Barry fumbled the kickoff
after Grim's touchdown and
Minnesota moved the baD into
position to set up the gamewinning kick.
Cuozzo wound up with 232
yards passing on 19 completions
in 32 attempts, without being
thrown for a loss once. His
rushers, held to nine yards in
the first half, ended with 43
yards for the game.
Landry completed a bare
seven of 25 passes for just 56
yards. The lions, with Farr out
for all of the second half except
one play, say their rushing
attack blunted after halftime
and had a game total of 160
yards.
"You don't remember the one
you make," Mann said of his
untypically miSerable night,
"and you don't forget the ones
you miss -and sometimes

OOlii"'iiiiiiiioi:::;:===::::)

(Regular Go mel
Cleve
002 000 OlD- 3 6 0
Wash
000 000 OlD- 1 3 1
Foster, Mlngorl (8) and
Fosse; McLain, Sehllenback (9)
and Billings. WP- Foster (8lll. LP...McLain (10-21). HRStanley !2nd) .
(At W.shington - suspended
game of Sept. 14-20 innings)
Washington
ooo 11 o ro ooo ooo

000 000 03- 8 14 1

Cleveland
100 000 400 000
000 000 01- 6 15 3
Broberg, Grzenda (7) , Pina
(7), Riddleberger (7), Cox {1) ,
Lindblad 19), Shellenback (11),
Thompson (16). Mclain (17),

and Billings ; Dunning, Farmer

(8) , Hennigan (9), Lamb {9),
Hargan (11), Ballinger (16) ,
Paul (16), McDowell (17) ,
Mingori 120) and Suarez, Fosse
(8). WP- McLain 110-20) . LPMcDowell 02-16). HR- Billings
(6th).
National League
Phlla at Mil, 2, ppd, rain

We Are Coming

--------there are certain nights tbat
are a nightmare.
"I've never had this happen

Sears _Catalog
Sales Merchant

to me before," he said. "I've

never missed one that cost the
ballgame.
"I'll guarantee you one
thing," Mann added. "I'll he
back. I'm just a dumb stubborn

Watch For Our
Grand

German.''

AMERICAN MOTORS 1972
BUYER PROTECTION PLAN.
For years, car buyers in this country have
been saying that instead of shiny new chrome
every year, what they really want is a good car
tht:}' can count on.
That's why American Motors and its dealers
put together their 1972 Buyer Protection Plan.
Here's how it works:

A STRONG GUARANTEE
IN PLAIN ENGLISH.

When you buy a new 1972 car from an Ammcan

Motors dealer, American Mot"on Corporation guaranttet
ro you that, except for tires, it wiU pay lor the n!pair or l'f'o
placement of any part it suppliestharisdefectivt in mattrial
or workmaOBhip.

This guaranteE- is pxxJ for 12 months from the- date
the car ill finn ~ or 12,000 mils, which~fl' C'O!MI Iint.
All wt require is that the car be _properly maintained
and cared lor under normal uar and RrVice in the fifty
Uniled Scates or Canada and th1t guaranteed repajn or
~lacemenm bt made by an American Maron dnler.

This guarantee gives you 12·month or
12,000-mile coverage on a lot of things most
car warranties don't. It covers air conditioning,
battery, radio, wiper blades, front end ·align·
ment, light bulbs-literally everything we put
on the car except tires.
In other words, if something we did goes
wrong with one of our '72's, you won't have
to pay for the parts or the labor. We will.

,-.-::.•

~lnolo

h~~.,

Ctt111lln

DowningChilds

A!r•id l•ltie teeth will drop at the
wronr Umet A denture adhesive ean

Agency,

I~
hold. Why bo emb1U'1'8111ed? Ji'or more
Heeurity anti comfort, UHe l&lt;'A:-1~
N. 2nd
Middle•
TEETH Deniun Adhallve )lowder.
Dentlln!l lh•t ftt are eeMDti!ILl to . _ _
· Pho~~34.;;2• .,.,_,..
beaJt.h. See your . dcntillt recularly.

.. ''

UUAiUU

A THOUGHT
.
.
FOR TODAY
I

· Most ,of us have mort

:

couraQ4! than even

we

ourselves think we hayt.

-Grevllle

a
*~
**
*

......

lfs Quick! Easy

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

i'

Fridays Only
It The Drive-In Window

*Jt*

isOpen

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.

.
1
8ANJ

(Continuously)

i

FARMERS

and SAVINGS m.

*
:

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reser~e System

*'*********·.+__'!".........

If anything goes wrong with one of our 7Zs
and its our fault, we'll fix it free. Anything.

' . (:-;:·

Award' In auto lnlurln or
deaths have greatly InerN~ and now fr«tuenHy
run to 150,000 or more. The
old $10,000 auto liability
Insurance Is inadequate
today, npoclally as 1100,000
liability coveraoo c01ts onty
a few dotlart More.

·**~UU

RANTEED

THE

r.;: .tP.._fil ..-.r; 1 •@ e·t

. ''Our new Cllr
. -wrecked!"

nig.ht
The Reda then entertain San
Francisco for three pDMI on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday~
The_ Giants have nine pnMS
remaming, the Dod&amp;en eight. ·
Scheduled to pitch tonJcbl for
CincinnaU was Rosa Grimlley,
1~. Claude Osteen, IS.10, wu
slated to pitch for the Dod&amp;ers.

Other Banking Hours 9 to J
•nd 5 to 7 as usuol on
' Fridays .

To Town

A MORE THOROUGHLY, CHECKED CAR.
FROM THE FACTORY AND THE DEALER.
Naturally, we wouldn't be backing our cars
like this if we weren't more sure of them than

Coming Loose?
help, lo'ASTEETH• Powder gives
denture~ a Jonpr, 6rmer, ateadier

I

Balli
000 020 015- 8 13 0
New York 100 020 OlD- 4 B t
Dobson (19·8) and Etchebar·
ren ; Ketlich, Aker (8), Closter
(.9) , Hambright (9) and Gibbs.
LP-Aker (4-4) . HR- Whlle
(17th) .

.

By RICHARD L SHOOK
this one, a 13-0 advantage
. DETROIT (UP!) - They accomplished on their accumen
planned for it, pointed for It and the rare misfortunes of
and prepared for it one whole Minnesota In the first half.
offseason. Now the Delroit Fred Cox connected on a
Lions are going to have to wait nine-year field goal with 5:18
12 more weeks for another left In the game to win it after
c~~ce to beat the Minnesota tying the coolest with 9:40 to
Viki~s.
play by putting a three.pointer
Minnesota, masters of the through the goal posts from 42
Central Division and perhaps yards out.
the entire National FootbaU Errol Mann, the second moat
League . as weD, defeated effective kicker in pro football
~tro1t m the ~llonally tele- l,ast season, suffered through a
viSed Monday rught game by a "nightmare" night In which he
15:-13 !!Core. It was their seventh missed four of six attempts WID over the lions in a row. including one of 33 yards which
The two reigning heavy. would have tied the-game with
we~gbts In tbe so-called "Black- seven seconds left.
and-Blue Division" don't meet "We dropped the footbaU a
again unUI Dec. ·u in the by· couple of times," coach Bud
then frozen territory which Grant of Minnesota said. "It
houses the VIkings.
took a quarter and a half for us
"We should have," lamented to recover from that. Last
Detroit coach Joe Schmidt, year I think we fumbled once
which iS encUy the same thing insid~ our 35 all year -and this
he said last year when his · time we do it twice and have
Lions blew a ll).point lead in one pass intercepted in the
the fourth quarter of the second firsthalf."
game between them.
Mann had kicked a 2().yard
Detroit blew another lead in field goal the first time Detroit

CINCINNATI (UPI) Cincinnati could prove to be tbe
key team in the hot pennant
race between the San Francisco
I'•'~' Giants and Los Angeles
• I
\
•
Dodgers in the National League
West.
'\'he Giants lead the Dodgers
by 110 games.
Major Lelltue Leaders
Tonight, Cincinnati entertains
By United Press International
Leading Batters
Los Angeles and hosts the
National Le~e
GAB R H Pet. Dodgers again Wednesday
Tre, SI.L
153 604 92 219 :363
C1mnt, Pit 127 508 81174 .343 Johnson. Phil 33.
Bckrt, Chi 131 530 80 181 .342
American le1gue: Melton,
Garr, Atl
148614 97207 .337 Chi,. Cash, Del and Jackson,
Arn. All
134 476 93 156 .328 Qak 30; Smith, Bos 28 ; F.
Jones, NY 128 475 611153 .322 Robinsmn. Ball and Pelrocelll,
Brck,St.L 148 601 121191 .J18 Bos 27 .
Sngln, Pit· 133 514 58 163 .311
Runs Batted 1n
DvlstlA
150 608 80 192 .316
National League: Torre, SI.L
Sib, Mil
152 558 90 115 .314 132; Stargell, Pitt 120; H.
American League
Aaron, All 115; Staub, Mont
GAB R H Pet .. and Montanez, Phil 94.
Olva, Min 126 481 73 164 .337
American League : Killebrew.
Mrcr, NY
W 509 91 168 .330 Minn 112.i F. Robinson, Bait 96 ;
Rtmd, Bal 134 460 77142 .309 Bando, Qak 91: Smith, Bos and
Tvr,Min
149 623 90 190 .305 Murcer, NY 90.
Otis, KC
143 539 77163 .302
Pitching
Crw, Min
140 553 85 166 .300
National League : Jenkins,
May, Chi
132 471 62 139 .295 Chi 22-13; Ellis. Pitt 19-7;
Hrtn, Del
115 436 62 127 .291 Downing. LA i9-B; carlton, St.L
Smith, Bos 151 592 82 i71 .289 19-9; Seaver, NY 18·9.
Uhldr, Cle 134 468 so 135 .288
American league : Lol ich,
Del 25-11 ; Blue 23-8; Hunter,
Home Runs
National league: H. Aaron. O.k 20·11 ; Wood. Chi 20-13;
All and Stargell, Pi11 45; May, McNally, Bait 19-5; Dobson.
Cln 37; Williams, Ali and Batt 19-8; Cuellar, Ball 19-9.

Lockwood (10-14) and Porter;
Coybln, Strickland (B) and
Dempsey. LP- Corbln (8.11) .
HR-Kosco (10th).

Over Detroit

m

Chester

Linesoores

By Unilfd P!'eSs lntern•tional
Amer1c1n Ltltut
Mllw
021 000 000-- 3 I 0
Minn
000 000 000-- 0 4 0

Mla&lt;lor

.

~

we've ever been before. For 1972, we've put in
more quality control steps, more tests and
more people to see that every car leaving our
factory is as perfect as man and machine can
make it.
At the dealer's, it's checked over again.

Every car (not one of SO, one of 5, every nne)
is road ·tested for starting, handling, braking
and overall performance. When the service·
man completes the test, he signs his report and
slides it over the sun visor, where you can see it.
And, when a man signs his name to something, you can be
sure he's done his
job. And done it
right.
A LOANER CAR WHEN lOU NEED IT. FREE.
Not only do we offer you a strong guarantee,
we've
set. up.a system to back it up without
.mconveruencmg
you.
If you have to leave vu•~•
guarantee repairs, over 2,000 'dealen
will loan you one of their cars.
A nice,clean, we)).
equipped car
in good condition. Free.

ADIRECT LINE TO DE IROO. TOLL~FREE.
We're making some big promises, and we
fully intend to keep them. But, just in case you
have a problem, we have a war, of
handling it. WhenJou buy a 72,
you get the name an toll-free num·
ber of a person in Detroit.
If you cal~ we promise you you'll
get results. And fast.
.
These aren't just fancy words.
We mean it.
Nobody in the business does as
much for you after you buy a car,
and it takes .a lot of time, men and
money to do all these things.
But we think it's worth it.
Since we're giving American carbuyers exactly what they say they want,
we should sell more cars than we've
ever sold before.

0

STARTING TODAY, THEil AMIIICAN MOTORS DEAURS WILL DO
MORE FOR YOU AmR YOU IUY A CAR THAN ANY OTHER DEAUR IN TO'JIN.

R. H. RAWliNGS SONS .CO.
"

88 SO. SECOND AVE.·

•

�..
J- The llllly Sentinel, Mldd'epor~y. o., Sept. 21,1971

Contests judged

Social
Calendar

Slate and natiunal sewing and candle holders and electric cord
baking cootests were judged at bolder.
the Friday night meeting of Wwthy Muter Norman WW
Pwtona _Grange held at the presided at the meeling with aU
Ruck Springs ball.
10 granges rjOporting. The
The f'II'Sl place winnen will. national Grange mee!ing to be
compete at the stale con- held on Nov. 13 at d.arleston,
vention. Taking first in the W. Va. was announced and
national contest fOJ' crocheted several indicated that they were
doily and crocbeted baby set favwable to cllarlering a bus to
was Mrs. Emma Adams, take the. group to see the
Racine._ In the state contest seventh degree. Tbe sixth
Mrs. Alice Stocktnn &lt;i Hemlock degree will be given on Oct. 2 at
Grange too~ first in ~e the FrankfOJ'I High School near
decorated pillowcases w1th Frankfort in Ross County.
bandkerehiefs and Mrs. Adams Tickets for this can be ·secured
took second.
1rom Deputy Muter vqu
Mrs. Mary Kay Yost of Aikins.
Ra~ was 6rst, Mrs. Avanell The WOJ'thy deputy reminded
Holliday of Laurel, SI!COIMI. and all granges that resolutions for
Mrs. Neva N'ICbolsoo of Star, the state cooventlon In Toledo
thin!, in ~ cape contest
need to be sent In promptlY.
W'lllDll1g m the chocolate date
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan
cake contest which had eight lecturer used the them~
entries were Mrs. Norma Lee, "Belis" 'for the program. In
Harrisonville, first ; Mrs. response to roD caD members
Nicholson, SI!COild; and Mrs. named various kinds of bells.
He&amp;:n Qui~ey, ~- ~- The chocus sang "When They
Wmners m the Jlllllor diVISion Ring Thll!le Golden BeDs for
were Hi~ M~, Star You and Me". A history was
Grange, 8plCJ Jl'mpkin ~; given of the liberty BeD, and
Billy Oyer, Star, 6rst m the thevariousSarnabeUsoflndia.
under eight competitioo for A nwnber of readings and songs
washcloth pWow class; and about beDs were presented, and
Teresa Carr, Alfred, 6rst, and several beDs were on display.
Opal Dyer, Star, second, in the At the conclusion of the
12 year group.
program, one of the Sarna beDs
Steven Peytnn of Star took was added to the string of bells
first in ~he wooden lawn of friendship of tbe Women's
marker; WlthBevertyW'IIcm;of Activities Committee to be
Star, taking first in "something displayed at tbe annual confrom nothing" with ber nature vention In Toledo, Oct. 18-lMJ.
scene. BWy Dyer also received Refresbments were served by
a firSt m the bant category, the Harrisonville Grange.
with Patty Dyer taking 6rst in

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 38S
Tuesday 7:~ p)D. Warlt in
FeUowcraft Degree.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE,.Trlnlty
Cbureh, I p.m. Tuesday, Mrs.
Roy Mayer to . ~ve the

j,rogram; Mrs. Albel1
and Mrs.

Elza

,oodard

Gilmore,

hostesaes.

AUXILIARY of Rutland
'•
Firemen, 7:30 Tuesday night at
the fire bowie.
SHADE RIVER BeDs and
Beau square dance lesson In
Archery building at Royal Oak
Park, 7:30 tonight. ·Interested
persons invited. - - ·
PAUL BAKER, left, 1* . lent &lt;i the PamaGJ C. Olb, 1*
W tile srcmd place
. TUESDAY
lr&lt;¢1 to flo&amp;er Morgan, wbo sjlot 57 out &lt;i 15 at lbe lnp llllaat II!Jd at tile bmiJ.y Day picnic
SALISBURY PTA first
&amp;mday. On the right iS Virgil Brown, Morgan's tram!
meeling of year, 7:30 p. m.
Tuesday at school. Introduction
ct parents and leachers and a
Meigs
ftlm on last year's "Be. a
Oown" m11,91cal by John Lisle.
Refresbinents. All parents
qed to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy
United Methodist
Howard Largent, Eura
Qu-ch.
largml to Walter Floyd Roush,
OHIO VAU:EY Commandry,
Am8 L.llolab, Parcels, SUttun.
stated conclave, 7:30 Wed·
lbrtin IIGilollaD to Ray M.
aesday, Pomeroy Masonic
U.nilc IIJrlle Ranill8, Lot,
Temple.
Plai:ti: Uj MISSIONARY Program,
FI laM S. Noni.s, Lucille
Forest
Run Baptist Church, 7
NGrris "' Roger Adams, 3:i
p.m. Wednesday. Miss Peggy
Am!s, SUIIon.
lluasell, missionary to Mexico,
James R. Jeffers, dec'd., to
to show stides and speak. Public
Ethel Jeftets, Robert. F. Jef.
Invited .
fBs, Zelma Lee Jeffers, Cert. of
......_
Salich!A'y.
.. _
.
SYRACUSE THIRD Wednesday Homemakers Club, 10
a.m. Wednesday at meeting
headquarters, Municipal Park,
Syracuse. Subject, "Textile
Chatlts R. Sheets, Margaret
Paints". Potluck at noon. Take
WINNER- Paul Baliier,left, peai?lt of 1be IWi&amp;GJ
own table service. All
Gun Club, presents the winning tropby to Roger Wioebi-..(Valerie Jo Gilmore)
homemakers welcome.
at the annual Family Day picnic SUnday at the dill.
l'll,U Bass, Dec. to Lula The 64th wedding anniversary Fred, Donna, Danny, Susan and
POMEROY Shakespeare
W'melftmel-,grand cbaqlion trapsbool«, dlote.t&lt;i15.
Club, noon luncheon, WedBass, Rqlb Bass, Leonard of Mr. and Mrs. Otto lbles, Sr., Steven, Marilyn Pohlman, Mrs.
ApJii cr.timately 5I mernben and guests etfended Jlar1leale
Bass, l!omi£e Levacy, Betty J. Pomeroy was observed at a Enda Mead Mr and Mrs
nesday at the home of Mrs.
twter waa prepared by Ted Reed, and baibecue diM'"' b)' TJ-. Aff. of Trans., SUtton. f~y get-toged!er SUnday at ClaudeJewellandMr. andMrs:
Robert Warner.
Vu-gllllrown.
.
M gael B. Van· Cooney to Rising Park, Lancaster.
THURSDAY
George Green ColumbUs
Jadith Hassinger,
Paul
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
A fiv":'iered wedcting cake Mr. and Mrs: Bill W~n.
Announcement has been velvet. ribbon headpiece. She p.m. Thursday night, at the
H • g • Lot m
. Behan' s Add ., lDpped With the mmerals, "64," David, Darla, and Diana
received here of the marriage, carried a white Bible with a hall. Election of officers.
Mi'Rt•••l
was pr-eaented to the couple by Rutland; Mrs. Grace Struble:
Saturday,
Aug. 28, of MISs bouquet of pink roses and
Dan C. Gorby, dec. to Carl M. Mrs. Joe Struble. ~t centered a Mrs. Ruth Glass, Mrs. Faith
THURSDAY
tied
with
Gorby, em.. r..- Trans., Salem. table covered wtth a green Brown, Lllgan; Mr. and Mrs. Valerie JoGilmore, formerly of stephanotis
PACK 245, Middleport Cub
D- . Gorby to Carl M cloth: Mr. and Mrs. John TerreU Richard Struble, Gordon, Syracuse, to Mr. Richard H. slreamers.
Scouts,
6:30 outing for the cubs
Mrs. Sophia Stace Olsen, husband, Charles Olsen, and a Gtrily, Ul Am!s, Salem.
· provtded a corsage and Douglas, Brian and Lori, Ashley, d. Bradenton, Fla. The Miss Jackie King of
:2, formerly . of • P~m·, son, George H. Slace.
AlbortlliD,Jr-., Ora E. Hill to boutonruere tor the honored CarroU; Mrs. Marjorie Dlles ceremony was performed by Bradenton served tbe bride as and their families at Fort
the Rev. Lawrence George in maid of honor and David Meigs.
~oy, San Gabriel, Calif., Stl{viving are a son, Hauld llerscheJ Badgley, Leona couple. .
and son, Jerry, and Mr. and
the Oneco, Fla. , United Ashley, of Tampa, served his
d1ed
Monday
at
the 011f!lll'80; ~Calif., llliDbi, .25 kft, SUitoo.
. .- .I
Attending were Mr. and.Mrs. Mrs. Hubie Stage Nelsonville·
' .
.
hrotll!!r as best man. .
Montebello Convalescent and tWo daughters, Mrs. 1... E. awltS·E. i&gt;ri&lt;r:, Grace E. Robert Weedy, ChriS, Mark, Clyde Bloomfield' Van Wert: Jll!eth?dlst ~urch.
Parents of the bride ate Mr.. A reception was held for the
Home.
(Rose) ReynoldsofiMiddlqut, PrirJe to Mua&lt;mg;ibela Power Paul and Becky of Lllgan; Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. c. J: Struble, Mr:
and Mrs. John W. Gilmore, of couple in the feUowship ball of
Mrs. Olsen was born in and Mrs. G. E. (!laral c...my, Ca., Ease~ Olift.
Morton Kraft, Wooster; Charles and Mrs. Joe Struble and Mike,
Greenbner County, W. Va., the of Akroo 12 granddWdrea, H
Bright, Logan; Mrs. Jennifer Pomeroy· Mr and Mrs Dan Bradenton, former residents of the church after which they left
Syracuse and Meigs County. on a wedding trip to points of
daughter of the late William B. great-children and 1M
JeweU, David Miller, Mr. and Struble, Stev~n and D~,
an~ Elizabeth Holliday Stone. great-great . grnnddrildren.
WALIWIIN INJURED
Mrs. Eugene JeweU, Mr. and Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Prior to residency in Florida interest in Florida. They are
While a res~dent here, she was a
Harty Walbum, formerly of Mrs. Richard Wagner, linda, Cramer, Jackie Sue and Dan, they were connected with the now at home at 2003-B 46th Ave
member of the Pomeroy Baptist Funeral services will be beld V'oldlepo1, is a patient at Tom and Jun, Harry Struble, Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Shumway Greenhouses in Dr. West, in Bradenton.
Sponsorship of a local Baptist
Church and was active _in both a~ 10 a.m. lhur.iday at HOI\' Lincoln Memorial Hospital, Mrs. Carolyn lbles, Mr. and Dishon, Sue, Steve, John and Syracuse. Mr. Gilmore may be Besides many relatives in
the Daughters of America and Hills MeiiMrial .P art in WIJit. ,.,.,.... He is confined there Mrs.RayHiland,Mr.~Mrs. Mark, Bucyrus; Mr. and Mrs. remembered as a former Meigs County the new bride has radio program was approved
reporter and editor of the old a host of friends who will during a meeting of the Busy
the. Pythian Sisters Lodge. tier, Calif. Mrs. Beynolds and far lreatmeol of injuries sur- James Hiland, Jacqueline and William Ridge Dayton
Daily
Tribune in Pomeroy. The remember her from early Bee Class of tbe Middleport
Besides her parents, she was Mrs. Conroy will leave by plane fered in an acrident at his Judy, Mrs. Donald JeweU,
'
·
bridegroom IS a son of Mr. and school days here. A siSter, Mrs. First Baptist Church Thursday
preceded in ~th by her first from Col~bus W1111*9bJ to ~meut, the Duff Tructing
Mrs.
Bert Ashley of Bradenton Robert E. (Jane) Beegle, night at the home of Mrs. G. G.
husband, Philip Stace, and her attend their mother's aniias. eo. in Akron.
and will be graduated in ""Sides in Racine.
Werner.
December from the Florida
Mrs.
Leora
Sigman,
AUantic University in Boca
president, opened the meeting
Raton, Florida.
with prayer. It was decided to
The bride entered on tbe arm
have the picnic and .comONISj
of
her
father
who
gave
her
1n
you-are
party earher next
A fall carnival was planned Brooks, treasurer.
summer with one to be held in
!
for Oct. 16and committees were Teachers present were marriage. She wore a gown
•J:_
June and the other in July. A
BY JACK O'IIIUAN
named at a meeting Monday recognized and introduced. which she had hand-fashioned
of
satin
and
lace
with
an
empire
UXIRU1)'0Uif.S
card
was signed for a shut-ln. A
MOVEOVER LANCEIUI'slnij!bl~ - Adarswillllnethecbanceto mgbt d. the Tuppers Plains They were Mrs. Strausbaugh,
"bakeless" bake sale was held,
HERE OOMES QIARLIE!
get emnrilll 'Dml!s ailil: Clive P - , who'll School Boosters.
first grade; Mrs. Brannon, thin! waistline and stand-up coUar.
The
gown
featured
an
Inverted
Mrs.
EDen
Couch
was
hostess
and
an auction foUowed the
NEW YORK - Charlie O!aplin's heavily emcee lbe r t ' 'I llllm - 11lore ns all the
Named to committees were grade, Robert Sanders seventh
rumored to be knighted in the next Queen's List booplaallllllt•t~p!ll:lliel'fllll7 nnlll on TV Mrs. Twil.a Strausbaugh, Mrs. grade, and Miss Huichinson pleat in the back with a Oaired for the Wednesday night meeting.
Mrs. Lillian McGhee gave
... GOW8' Cbampion and David Merrick's lldwy. (.nan~ :111ft etc.), t.t tile T11p 20 Jast. Jane Headley, and Mrs. Sharon remedial reading.
' train trimmed with a lace meeting of the Past Presidents
ruffle.
The
bride's
shoulder·
of
Drew
Webster
Post
39,
devotions
usill8 scripture from
IDUiicai''SomeUkeltHol"maycoolit... Great
"'Il 6st &lt;i II t Ph -l:liaed all old and Boyles, purchasing; Mrs.
It was reported tbat the
playwright 'lborntm Wilder (he wrote the play •lej •daNe fmmals: IWI ...,. speci•h toot Mildred Brooks, Mrs. Nita Jean furnace thermostats have length veil of illusion feU from a American Legion Auxiliary. Matthew 17 and an article
Devotions by Mrs. Ernest "Hear, Obey and Come."
wmcb ultimately became "HeUo, Ddly") lost .0: If lbe q&gt;. p'
(il• • I' C lbe very top, Ritcbie, co-chairmen, with the arrived and will be installed
PoweU included reading of tbe
Refreshments were served by
theslil!tln one eye ... Now's the time to caleb a and&amp;lll,llll,llb, u•andiD); lllerest inclmlrd room mothers, soliciting; Mrs. before the heating season
TJT;7I
46thPsalmandprayer. A thank the hostesses, Mrs. Werner,
good Bdwy. show - ~·re ahnost all on Jadr.Bemy, "Beei...-," .JabnWa)'IIO's.patriotic Headley, Mrs. Sharon Boyles, starts.
1•
YY
you note was read from Miss Mrs. Eva Hartley, Miss
"twcters" ... "How the Other Half Loves" sporial (~). ~ Aow!allt Awards (2nd), 1be Mrs. Shirley Petersoo and Mrs. Mrs. Fultz presented a list of
Constance
Thorn of Miller Kathryn Werner, and Mrs.
Bopped miaerably on Bdwy. (with Phil Silvers" Gtanmy Aw.dl, Bill~ a.11r Yule special, Janet Fultz, sacking ; Mrs. items which have been pur.
Cottage, Dayton, for a gift sent Frances Bearhs. Others atSandy Dennis) but the London original with rerun of .............~ "'lftl of ''Oiarlie Mary
Longenette, Mrs. chased by tbe Booster Club.
•
by the group. Mrs. Ralph tending the meeting were Mrs.
FlorenceSp_encer, co-chainnen, This was given to Mr. Parker,
Rollert Morley is in its -.cJ year with a llrollll's Oailltnw " - ' liR llal
Gilmore of Colmnbus was a Charles Edwards, Mrs. Dana
""".... of' I
..,. ooo· •
tment v · "'
Plaiiti Sill.. G' ~' ~·s an KenJ1etb Mrs. ~te Welch and Mrs. principal, in ordef- to ascertain
guest at the meeting.
Hamm, Mrs. Harry Houdashelt,
_,.,.vpt I ~a-· mves
... ane._,. became
~,.....
Janet Chichester, raOie tickets; that items are either at tbe
reports Danny Kaye's '"l'Wo by Two" mnsicsJ •
a lrwaad lr ' 14 lll:ribe -· N. Y. Mrs. Mayme Headley, Mrs. school or returned to it
The WeUston Dis~ct ct the
Mrs. Coucb served refresh- Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Ruth
4k'opped .,_,,000; ~.000 of it pu-portediJ ~ l!llus all ~ IDn's ... ....., .... fonded ArveUa Frecker, Mrs. Janet The members were re~ Church of God will bold a ments to Mrs. George Hackett, Johnson, Mrs. Cora Pullin, Mrs.
Kaye's, IJICIIII ct the rest composer.producer with JK\Iillits zit Slalm "~and, virgin Connally, and Mrs. Ann CoUins, that three school board convention at the Chester Sr., Mrs. Owen Watson, Mrs. Lettie Roush, Mrs. Elizabeth
Ridlard Rodgers' ... It was Bdwy.'s worst Jast.. lenittay i•' ' - W'to4 W&gt;wdoal) del hJeJ to kitchen.
members will be elected . Church of God Wednesday and Jed Webster, Sc., Mrs. Frank Slavin, Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs.
seasoo llllllical.
"'"""ll&gt;'llle on al clel11"•1ely: he's booted
The seventh and eighth November and were urged to; Thursday . The district Is Cheesebrew, Mrs. Ben Neut- lsabeUe WinebJ'enner, and Mrs.
Lalrle Kazan'sendless TV cbaltershow sl~ s~t bwcZIIBt II:Rh.
grades will make the ad- to the poDs.
comprised of tJM: chur~ ~ zllng, Mrs. J. M. Thornton, Mrs. Beulah White.
opera ct clinical redwxlancies abwt ber unwed
LiZII Ur wlli's t.cl lad diiiJing a love vertising posters for the car- It was decided to have a Rutland, MI. Moriah, Gallipolis Olan Knapp, Mrs. George
Bearhs, and Mrs. Ray Fox.
maternity is a dreary tiving-rotllll topic .... matdl witb 1w llllliD 7 ;
ollow..Jialder, nival.
-~~ comnu'!tee plan a and
Chester.
Dr-..a..D ................ ........_
.-...-The will be three
'
London millionaire Charles Clore's da~ ,_..,.., ; ._,. .... ._the Blnn ~
Mrs. Lavina Bcannon led tbe program for each meeling of
. re
. sernc;es
Allatralian model Valli Kemp .... Valli's aJ ... irsa silly W f I - Wlat'llnewpasaycats? group in the pledge to tbe flag to tbe school year. Named to tbe dunng the two days Wlth_specutl
Some mysterious angel popped up with fZj,OIIO kns SmiJ C · bas :II cats iD ber open the mee\ng. James Stout, committee were Mrs. Bonnie ~ers for each sernce, the
GAME AlTENDED
for "The Me Nobody Knows" to reopen on midtAJwufllt_ DilablliRJ!Iirholsdi•CII . I president, Introduced tbe club Hackney, Mrs. Brann&lt;in, Mrs. f1rst at ~ p. m. W~y.
Milford HyseU of tbe MidBdwy., and we wish we knew why. Its mar- lis ''Cmal Kwwlelp!" will New: YGrk Mig's officers - Edgar Pullins, vice Florence Spencer, Mrs. Janet Thursdays services will be at
dleport Webelos and S. T.
10 a.m. and 7. p.m.
velously endearing cast of 111011Uy chillk-en smut- Mary .Ana ......., at~ Grawtirr .
president; Mrs. Janet Fultz, Fultz, and Mrs. Rose Karr.
Smith, cubmaster of Middleport
up Its dialogue with the basest four~etler CJb..
11twmEdWiltm:Jh I tbeSagram's secretary; Mrs. Mildred The banner and $3 pr12e for
Speakers will be the Rev. L.
Cub Scout Troop 245, and
Dens 2and 3 of the Middleport
acenities and acatologies.
swilcbbnard and llllltld if IIIey baft a ''house --~-~------ liaving the most parents ill H. Aultman, state director; the
sc_outs, Donald Geary, Mike
"
,_.., ~ 11
"and -"-' ~
t'--'--b aRev. WayneRossoo,stateyouth Cub Scout Pack 245 attended the
One of show "'''
... major organizatims iS organ ; apt!Q.J*R MM
ltpii&lt;U,
The lhao S .
a .~"""~" ~as won Y •...,.er director, and the Rev. HasteD carnival at RuUand Saturday Hmdy, Mark Hood, Dorset
beaded and really bcJised by an ez&lt;On .... ''No, just U "' - MlrJ Pat f:iNms, a foillf ,
__,1 :ti II
Kirkhart s su:th grade. It was Jenkins. The evening services accompanied by. their d~n Thomas, Danny Smith and
Playboy's new buge Great Gorge, N.J., resort lroth&lt;ia&amp;imll.wedllleU.BmkJtCIDi!pOI'• :
o~:~~~~l.:'J:E
noted that dues d. 50 cents are will be evangelistic, and the mo~. Mrs. France$ Whit- Gene Hood attended the Ohio
(year-t'OWid sports !rem swimming to ski sl~) boss, .IGba Sriuimeoim, aliilenw hOLE of a ,
.oi&gt;IEifiS·MASDN AREA
P~Y~ble ~~d that parents forenoon service will deal with lington and Mrs. Eula Frances. University - BowUng Green
game Saturday. Scout Day was
wiD be racially Integrated .... Here's the insole~!, lad, in St. Pafrith C..d hi; the llride iS a
CHEST~=.~-c~~=-NEHILL:'. wishing to)~ the Booster Club leaching. The public iS invited
In the group were Keith Doss,
desperateendtothe dirf'-movielrenainN. Y. Jackie()os • ..........
ROaERTHDEFLICH,
maypaythelrduestoanyoftbe
' Leslie Whillington, Jr., Paul observed at the University with
Citv Editor
officers The
1
tin
and America : 'the " f
al N.Y. Erotic
New~~ •t · C Sept. 30
Publ is hed doilf eJcept
·
nex mee g was
McElhaney,
James' Gheen those attending In uniform
.
admitted free. ' .
Film Festival" is annoc
tart here Nov . 5 at tbe N.Y. llillan's 1'&amp;111 lti, "'!'be .M.t spatbulrdah~ by Tche Ohio Volle¥ selforOct.ll at 7:30p.m. in the
Keith Black, Ray Stewart,
u tS tng
ompany, Jll .school gym Pr
b R ''" t
"in !lrsf..runmovie hOUs"-&gt; .... I'be pornograpby Greet." is beil!g lllalld asaral_..
. 1 Court St., · Pomeroy, Ohio.
· ayer Y """r
ME~ffiE. I¥ELCOIIED
Randy Batey, Max Geary,
floodispouringitsdir ty sludgenotonlyonTimes he~ in elcblhec &amp; , JIMI'*Iine ill a :W:iS:."~i;i~i!:"~~':...:":;J Sanders closed the meeting.
Mrs. Bertha Canaday was Mark Tyree, and Jamie ScaUy.
Square but out into tbe ''family" neighborhoods: Ibm d, pbJs
of · ' •• 4•, and llu m1.
welcomed as a new member Driving tbe scouts and other · GIFT OF BOOK MACE
A book, "Weathered Wood
lbe
been ..... · liis II ..
Second class postage peid et
,
.,
mtliestboot&amp; and picture smirks are being
. PU
X
¥ *I' far -lllan
Pomeroy . Ohio.
ORGANIZATION SET
when the Magnolia Club met guests to tbe carnival Were
Leslie
Wbit~··ton
Mrs
Don
with
Flowers,
hy Mary G.
forced 111 shops and newsstands far fnm the ~ wilicb llis r... lll:ft W.MoJ Ptblte
N.alional advertising
The Alpha Teens and the recenUy at the home ct Mrs.
-... '
·
na "·'·ht has bee
. n preaented to
·-.
-=- .'"
reprtsentative
Bd-.germ
Inc., 12 Bottinelli·
"'
-.""'""","'--'
.....,.. ..-ea---.
•• - ·-_,... ..... ,.... 1 Gollatber.
Eas1 •2nd Omega, two Y4!Uth groups, will Aaron Kelton. Mrs. Ethel Gheen, and Mrs. Nellle •u"" •
Canadlalirigbtsa~tooJdCharlieO!aplin r.ara,Silw»Q I -.IGCIJsswiloswarbe's Stsu'l.~~r~;";~0~' 1 Yr'o~::vc:;-:: [ be ~anized at 6:30 Sunday S~ ~ at a short McElhaney. Going with the :'rv:lgs Extension library
fllma went for $2,01111,000; Amarican rigbl!l are the ned 1 · ...- Df laU&amp;hla. Real : live_red by ca-.ier where ; evenmg at the Middleport Free busmesa meeting foUowed by a group were Mrs. Robert Gardenehy ~Rutlandbook
. rs.
eatures
50 c.-.ts per week ; Baptist Church The Alpha social hour. Games prizes went Vance, Ri~ky, David and
-led
-millllll .... Cbarll! woo 'I D"'
aot 1·t name, Aid • Ira +mas, lilt U _ , fit 011 ' lvaijable
-.-...
....., . •
. ._ • •
.
.
12 pictures In ' color of
.M
C
1 8y Motor Route where cerrier
Mike
M
,
ra.
ae
ar. arr
ts
.0-besoldallrigbtlforS6,000,01MJ,andbellu;t lbelllal'qleebelMiltiafnlltafllisbmlt!_IJad service nol available: One TeensiSforJUDICirhighstudeots to Mrs. Bertha Smil!t, Miss
roll and daughters, Ter- 11
~..2!._outatubed aJradr
bt
Utile SwiSs vaults .... a nm af a web at ... .SZ.. Lalis !Ilion,. wllldl .· and
mon!h
sus. By mail in Olllo with
lliiW"V
W. va .• One rnr $14.00.
d .Gerald Anthony to aervees Erna
. Jesse, and Mrs. Henry
esa
and
RubJ,
Teresa
and
--...
ower
- - · · It
;w111re be llletipi.Jots of his Yankee-gotten gold. nplaios wllJ lle
I' 1aed r.. IIIII c6- i Six months 17.25. !hree a v1sor. The Rev. Charles Reibel. Mrs. Canaday woo the
Lisa
Whlttlngto~.
Dehra
~lalned
the
technique
.,..__
. _,,.._=:--'13m
· NY~"m•ldthe
'l'imlsSI. eHillla'
months u .so. Scbscrtplion Simons will. be. the advisor for door prize.
Refreshments
were
10
&amp;:M~~~.:C~.._...,._.IICI
•w .,.._..
.,.
-- .. ~_..,.. 1 pr 1ce 1nc1udes ~uRd•y Times.
·
.
Mulford, Loraine McElhaney,
preparing weathered
fill dllflenl rt ''Tile Forsyle S.C." for 11 .- •1
h llfls:W I
e
Sontinel.
. Clntel!a which 1$ Gpen to aenior served to e1ght meuiGers and and Scott Glleea.
·
wood for uae in fioral
•
·
- - - c ·- ......l. l•igh m•l Ctillege ywlhs.
one "uest.
11T8118~ta .

Property

Transfers

~~~~~:=.Wedding

Anniversary
:s::F=~~: Celebrated Sunday

Mrs. Richard H. Ashley

Wed in Florida

Sophia S. Olsen Died in West

Sponsorship
Is Accepted

r-------------------------------------·-----

1Voice

along Broadway

Carnival on Oct. 16

Mr.r. Couch Hosts

A

Con _

Vt11+ton

Meet In

f _.];

Cubs at Carnival

.

•1-

-a-, _"'·-.

Friendlyf

111•-

b
, la

a

=

.!:!":'7J"

ns

7

•· ·

7

~

.

•

IDX
.

.

. . . . . . . . . . ,_ ._

z

•

Reds Take On Dodge,..

.

.

touched the ball in the game
and Detroit added another
score when quarterback Greg
Landry hit running back Mel
Farr with a three-yard touch·
down pass. This score came
after rookie Jeff Wrlght of
Minnesota had fumbled without
being hit on the Detroit kickoff
and Craig Cotton fell on the
ball on the Vikings' 21.
Dave Osborn fumbled without
any help from the other side
the next lime Minnesota got the
ball but Mann's 39-yard field
goal try hit the crossbar. Mann
also missed twice from 53
yards, being short both times,
and put one through from 36
yards away.
Cox got Minnesota some key
life when he booted a 13-yarder
with just six seconds left in the
first half to cut the gap to 13-3.
Wide receiver Bob Grim
caught seven passes for 126
yards but the most vital was
the one of 45 yards which
quarterback Gary Cuozzo threw
for a touchdown the first time

Orioles Trip NY
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Pat Dobson iS a better-than·
.500 major league pitcher for
the first time In his career
today -by one game -and
needs just "one more" to place
him in that specilil class of 20game winners.
The 29-year old right-hander,
acquired by the Baltimore
Orioles from the San · Diego
Padres last winter, started the
1971 season with a 25-35 career
record. Hili 8-4 victory over the
New York Yankees Monday
night gave him a 19-8 season
record and moved him to
within one game of a 21l-victory
season -the goal of every
major league pitcher.
The win also built the Orioles'
firsLiJlace lead In the American
League East to 610 games and
reduced to five their magic
number for cUnchlng a third
straight division title.
As the No. 4 man in the
Orioles' Big Four pitching
rotation, Dobson joined Dave
McNaUy and Mike CueUar as
19-game winners. Jim Palmer
is right behind with 18
victories, giving the Baltimore
staff a chance to become the
first one in 50 years with four
20-game winners. Dobson aJ.
lowed eight hils and four runs
in eight innings but trailed, 4-3,
going into the ninth as a result
of a homer by Roy White In tbe
eighth and needed some of that
famous Baltimore late-inning
lightning to get the victory.
He got it when Boog PoweU
led off the ninth with a double
and plnchofllllner Chico Salmon

scored the tying run on Don
Buford's infield out. Then the
Yankee bullpen feU apart and.
the Orioles scored four more
runs with the big blow a tworun single by Bobby Grieb.
The Cleveland Indians beat
the Washington Senators, 3-1,
after losing a week-old suspended game, 8-6, in the OOth inning
and the Milwaukee Brewers
defeated the Minnesota Twins,
3-0, in Monday's only other big
league action. The Philadelphia
Phillies' scheduled doublehead·
er in Montreal, the only
National League activity, was
postponed by rain.
The Senators and Indians
resumed their suspended game,
started in Cleveland a week
ago, with the score tied at ~
in the 17th inning. Denny
McLain picked up his lOth
victory of the year when the
Senators scored three runs In
the OOth inning with the help of
three walks by Sam McDoweU
and a key error by Kurt
Bevacqua on a double play
grounder.
It may have been the most
forgettable game of the season
-there were 383 fans in the
stands when it was resumed as Cleveland set a record by
issuing 19 walks and team
records for most walks -30 and most pitchers ·- 18 -were
set.
The players had mercy on the
fans with a 2:04 second game in
which McLain went eight
innings and lost his 21st game.
Alan Foster yielded three hits
in 7 1·3 innings for his eighth
win and Fred Stanley homered

By Unit.d Press tnternatlona t
AmeriQn LNgue
Ellt

W. L. Pet.GB

92 57 .617 ...
88 66 .571 6112
80 74 .519 14'12
79 75 .513 15'12
60 91 .3'17 33
58 95 .379 36
Wtst
.
W. L. Pet. GB
x-O.kld
97 55 .638 ...
Kansas City 82 71 .536 15'12
Chicago
7'f 80 .475 25
california
72 81 ..01 25 112
Mlmesola
70 82 .&lt;loll 27
Milwaukee
65 88 .425 32'12
x-CIInched Division Title
Mondly's Rosull$
Milwaukee 3 Mlnn 0
Wash 8 Cleve 6, (20 Inns,
suspended game
Cl011e 3 Wash 1, reg. g.
Baltimore 8 NY 4
(only games scheduled)

Baltimore
Detroit
Boston
New York
Washington
Cleveland

Today's Prctblble Pitchers
Kansas City (Drago 16-10) at
california (Wright 15-15), night.
Detroit (Timmer·man 7-5) at
Boston (Lonborg B-7), night.
Clevelarid (Paul 2-6) at
Washington (Bosman 16-16) ,
night.
Milwaukee (Krausse 7· t2) at
Mlmesota (Perry 1t.-16).
Baltimore (McNally 19-5) at
New York (Peterson . 14-12),
night.
Chicago (Johnson 10.10 and
Bradley 13-14) at O.kland
(Dobson 15-4 and Odom 10-11),
1, twl-nlght.

.Wldnosday's Games

Chi at O.kl, night
KC at cal, night
Milwaukee at Mlnn
Cleve at Wash, night
Bal at NY, night
Del at Bos, night
Natt-flolgue
E11t
W. L Pet, GB
Pittsburgh
93 61 .604
St. Louis
14 69 .549 1'12

New York
Chicago
Montreal
Philadelphia

79 14 .516 13'12
19 14 .516 13'12

67 84 .41 2•'12
62 91 .405 30'12
West

W. L. Pet. Gil

San Francisco BS 68 .556 ...
Los Angeles 84 70 .5-lS 1'12
Atlanta
19 76 .510 7
Houston
IS 78 .4'10 10
Cincinnati
75 80 .484 11
San Diego
58 95 .379 27
Mondly's Rosull$
Philo at Mil, w, ppd, rain
(only game scheduled)
Today's Probable·Pitchers
New York !Seaver 18-9) at
Chicago (Hands 11-18) .
Philadelphia (Reynolds 4-8
and Champion 2-3) at Montreal
(Morton 10-16 and Strohmater
7-SL 2, twl-nlght.
Pittsburgh (Ellis 19-7) at St.
Louis (Reuss 14-14), night.
San Diego (Norman 3.12) at
Atlanta (Kelley 8-S), night.
Los Angeles (Osteen 13-10) at
Cincinnati (Grimsley 10-6),
night.
San Francisco (Cumberland
9-5) at Houston (Billingham B·
15), night.
Wednosday's Games
Phlla at Mil, night
New York at Chicago
Pitt at St. L, night
San Diego at All, night
Lo• Ang at Cln, night
SF. at Hous, night

Worried About

FALSE TEETH

for the Indians.
Skip Lockwood pitched a four·
hitter and drove in a run with a
swinging bunt to win his lOth
game for the Brewers. Andy
Kosco accounted for the Brewers' third run with a homer off
Ray Corbin, who suffered his
lith loss.
The Pttsburgh Pirates, need·
ing one victory to clinch the
National League East title send
19-game winner Dock EUis
against Jerry Reuss (14-14) and
the St. Louis Cardinals tonight,
while the San Francisco Giants
and Los Angeles Dodgers
continue their run to the wire in
the West.
The Giants, with a l'h game
lead and nine games to play,
wiD be at Houston with John
Cumberland ( 9·5) going
against Jack Billingham (8-15) .
The Dodgers, with eight games
to go, will he at Cincinnati with
Claude Osteen ( 13-10) facing
Ross Grimsley (1~). The
Giants play all theii' remaining
nine games on the road while
the Dodgers play five of their
last eight away from home.

Pennant Race
At A Glance
By United Press International
Nationol LNgue West

W. L. Pet.

San Francisco
85 68 .556
Los Angeles
84 10 .54.5
Atlanta
79 76 .510
San Francisco - Away, 9, 9,
Houston (3) Sepf. 21 -22·23;
Cincinnati (31 Sef.t. 24-25-26;
San Diego (3) Sep . 28-29·30.
Los Angele• -Home. 3,
Houston t3l ser'· 28·29-30.
Away 5, Clnclnnat (2) Sept. 21·
22; Atlanta (3) Sept 24-25-26.
Atlanta -Home 7, San Diego
(2) Sept. 21·22f los Angeles (3)
Sept. 24-25·26; Cincinnati (2)
Sept. 28-30.
Amorlcan League West
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
92 57 .617
Detroit
88. 66 .571
Baltimore - Home, 2, Boston (2) Sept. 28-29. Away, 6
New York (2) Sept. 21·22;
Cleveland 14) Sept. 24 (2), 25·
26.
Detroit - Home, 3, New York
(3) Sept. 24-25-26. Away, 5,
Boston (2) Sept. 21 ·22; Cleveland (3) Sept. 28 (2), 29.

the Vikings got their coUective
hands on the football in the
second half. Grim fell on the
two but got up and stepped
hesitanUy into the end zone for
the score when defender Lem
Barney made no effort to hit
him on the ground.
"We had better field position
and we moved the ball in the
second half," Grant said .
Barry fumbled the kickoff
after Grim's touchdown and
Minnesota moved the baD into
position to set up the gamewinning kick.
Cuozzo wound up with 232
yards passing on 19 completions
in 32 attempts, without being
thrown for a loss once. His
rushers, held to nine yards in
the first half, ended with 43
yards for the game.
Landry completed a bare
seven of 25 passes for just 56
yards. The lions, with Farr out
for all of the second half except
one play, say their rushing
attack blunted after halftime
and had a game total of 160
yards.
"You don't remember the one
you make," Mann said of his
untypically miSerable night,
"and you don't forget the ones
you miss -and sometimes

OOlii"'iiiiiiiioi:::;:===::::)

(Regular Go mel
Cleve
002 000 OlD- 3 6 0
Wash
000 000 OlD- 1 3 1
Foster, Mlngorl (8) and
Fosse; McLain, Sehllenback (9)
and Billings. WP- Foster (8lll. LP...McLain (10-21). HRStanley !2nd) .
(At W.shington - suspended
game of Sept. 14-20 innings)
Washington
ooo 11 o ro ooo ooo

000 000 03- 8 14 1

Cleveland
100 000 400 000
000 000 01- 6 15 3
Broberg, Grzenda (7) , Pina
(7), Riddleberger (7), Cox {1) ,
Lindblad 19), Shellenback (11),
Thompson (16). Mclain (17),

and Billings ; Dunning, Farmer

(8) , Hennigan (9), Lamb {9),
Hargan (11), Ballinger (16) ,
Paul (16), McDowell (17) ,
Mingori 120) and Suarez, Fosse
(8). WP- McLain 110-20) . LPMcDowell 02-16). HR- Billings
(6th).
National League
Phlla at Mil, 2, ppd, rain

We Are Coming

--------there are certain nights tbat
are a nightmare.
"I've never had this happen

Sears _Catalog
Sales Merchant

to me before," he said. "I've

never missed one that cost the
ballgame.
"I'll guarantee you one
thing," Mann added. "I'll he
back. I'm just a dumb stubborn

Watch For Our
Grand

German.''

AMERICAN MOTORS 1972
BUYER PROTECTION PLAN.
For years, car buyers in this country have
been saying that instead of shiny new chrome
every year, what they really want is a good car
tht:}' can count on.
That's why American Motors and its dealers
put together their 1972 Buyer Protection Plan.
Here's how it works:

A STRONG GUARANTEE
IN PLAIN ENGLISH.

When you buy a new 1972 car from an Ammcan

Motors dealer, American Mot"on Corporation guaranttet
ro you that, except for tires, it wiU pay lor the n!pair or l'f'o
placement of any part it suppliestharisdefectivt in mattrial
or workmaOBhip.

This guaranteE- is pxxJ for 12 months from the- date
the car ill finn ~ or 12,000 mils, which~fl' C'O!MI Iint.
All wt require is that the car be _properly maintained
and cared lor under normal uar and RrVice in the fifty
Uniled Scates or Canada and th1t guaranteed repajn or
~lacemenm bt made by an American Maron dnler.

This guarantee gives you 12·month or
12,000-mile coverage on a lot of things most
car warranties don't. It covers air conditioning,
battery, radio, wiper blades, front end ·align·
ment, light bulbs-literally everything we put
on the car except tires.
In other words, if something we did goes
wrong with one of our '72's, you won't have
to pay for the parts or the labor. We will.

,-.-::.•

~lnolo

h~~.,

Ctt111lln

DowningChilds

A!r•id l•ltie teeth will drop at the
wronr Umet A denture adhesive ean

Agency,

I~
hold. Why bo emb1U'1'8111ed? Ji'or more
Heeurity anti comfort, UHe l&lt;'A:-1~
N. 2nd
Middle•
TEETH Deniun Adhallve )lowder.
Dentlln!l lh•t ftt are eeMDti!ILl to . _ _
· Pho~~34.;;2• .,.,_,..
beaJt.h. See your . dcntillt recularly.

.. ''

UUAiUU

A THOUGHT
.
.
FOR TODAY
I

· Most ,of us have mort

:

couraQ4! than even

we

ourselves think we hayt.

-Grevllle

a
*~
**
*

......

lfs Quick! Easy

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

i'

Fridays Only
It The Drive-In Window

*Jt*

isOpen

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.

.
1
8ANJ

(Continuously)

i

FARMERS

and SAVINGS m.

*
:

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reser~e System

*'*********·.+__'!".........

If anything goes wrong with one of our 7Zs
and its our fault, we'll fix it free. Anything.

' . (:-;:·

Award' In auto lnlurln or
deaths have greatly InerN~ and now fr«tuenHy
run to 150,000 or more. The
old $10,000 auto liability
Insurance Is inadequate
today, npoclally as 1100,000
liability coveraoo c01ts onty
a few dotlart More.

·**~UU

RANTEED

THE

r.;: .tP.._fil ..-.r; 1 •@ e·t

. ''Our new Cllr
. -wrecked!"

nig.ht
The Reda then entertain San
Francisco for three pDMI on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday~
The_ Giants have nine pnMS
remaming, the Dod&amp;en eight. ·
Scheduled to pitch tonJcbl for
CincinnaU was Rosa Grimlley,
1~. Claude Osteen, IS.10, wu
slated to pitch for the Dod&amp;ers.

Other Banking Hours 9 to J
•nd 5 to 7 as usuol on
' Fridays .

To Town

A MORE THOROUGHLY, CHECKED CAR.
FROM THE FACTORY AND THE DEALER.
Naturally, we wouldn't be backing our cars
like this if we weren't more sure of them than

Coming Loose?
help, lo'ASTEETH• Powder gives
denture~ a Jonpr, 6rmer, ateadier

I

Balli
000 020 015- 8 13 0
New York 100 020 OlD- 4 B t
Dobson (19·8) and Etchebar·
ren ; Ketlich, Aker (8), Closter
(.9) , Hambright (9) and Gibbs.
LP-Aker (4-4) . HR- Whlle
(17th) .

.

By RICHARD L SHOOK
this one, a 13-0 advantage
. DETROIT (UP!) - They accomplished on their accumen
planned for it, pointed for It and the rare misfortunes of
and prepared for it one whole Minnesota In the first half.
offseason. Now the Delroit Fred Cox connected on a
Lions are going to have to wait nine-year field goal with 5:18
12 more weeks for another left In the game to win it after
c~~ce to beat the Minnesota tying the coolest with 9:40 to
Viki~s.
play by putting a three.pointer
Minnesota, masters of the through the goal posts from 42
Central Division and perhaps yards out.
the entire National FootbaU Errol Mann, the second moat
League . as weD, defeated effective kicker in pro football
~tro1t m the ~llonally tele- l,ast season, suffered through a
viSed Monday rught game by a "nightmare" night In which he
15:-13 !!Core. It was their seventh missed four of six attempts WID over the lions in a row. including one of 33 yards which
The two reigning heavy. would have tied the-game with
we~gbts In tbe so-called "Black- seven seconds left.
and-Blue Division" don't meet "We dropped the footbaU a
again unUI Dec. ·u in the by· couple of times," coach Bud
then frozen territory which Grant of Minnesota said. "It
houses the VIkings.
took a quarter and a half for us
"We should have," lamented to recover from that. Last
Detroit coach Joe Schmidt, year I think we fumbled once
which iS encUy the same thing insid~ our 35 all year -and this
he said last year when his · time we do it twice and have
Lions blew a ll).point lead in one pass intercepted in the
the fourth quarter of the second firsthalf."
game between them.
Mann had kicked a 2().yard
Detroit blew another lead in field goal the first time Detroit

CINCINNATI (UPI) Cincinnati could prove to be tbe
key team in the hot pennant
race between the San Francisco
I'•'~' Giants and Los Angeles
• I
\
•
Dodgers in the National League
West.
'\'he Giants lead the Dodgers
by 110 games.
Major Lelltue Leaders
Tonight, Cincinnati entertains
By United Press International
Leading Batters
Los Angeles and hosts the
National Le~e
GAB R H Pet. Dodgers again Wednesday
Tre, SI.L
153 604 92 219 :363
C1mnt, Pit 127 508 81174 .343 Johnson. Phil 33.
Bckrt, Chi 131 530 80 181 .342
American le1gue: Melton,
Garr, Atl
148614 97207 .337 Chi,. Cash, Del and Jackson,
Arn. All
134 476 93 156 .328 Qak 30; Smith, Bos 28 ; F.
Jones, NY 128 475 611153 .322 Robinsmn. Ball and Pelrocelll,
Brck,St.L 148 601 121191 .J18 Bos 27 .
Sngln, Pit· 133 514 58 163 .311
Runs Batted 1n
DvlstlA
150 608 80 192 .316
National League: Torre, SI.L
Sib, Mil
152 558 90 115 .314 132; Stargell, Pitt 120; H.
American League
Aaron, All 115; Staub, Mont
GAB R H Pet .. and Montanez, Phil 94.
Olva, Min 126 481 73 164 .337
American League : Killebrew.
Mrcr, NY
W 509 91 168 .330 Minn 112.i F. Robinson, Bait 96 ;
Rtmd, Bal 134 460 77142 .309 Bando, Qak 91: Smith, Bos and
Tvr,Min
149 623 90 190 .305 Murcer, NY 90.
Otis, KC
143 539 77163 .302
Pitching
Crw, Min
140 553 85 166 .300
National League : Jenkins,
May, Chi
132 471 62 139 .295 Chi 22-13; Ellis. Pitt 19-7;
Hrtn, Del
115 436 62 127 .291 Downing. LA i9-B; carlton, St.L
Smith, Bos 151 592 82 i71 .289 19-9; Seaver, NY 18·9.
Uhldr, Cle 134 468 so 135 .288
American league : Lol ich,
Del 25-11 ; Blue 23-8; Hunter,
Home Runs
National league: H. Aaron. O.k 20·11 ; Wood. Chi 20-13;
All and Stargell, Pi11 45; May, McNally, Bait 19-5; Dobson.
Cln 37; Williams, Ali and Batt 19-8; Cuellar, Ball 19-9.

Lockwood (10-14) and Porter;
Coybln, Strickland (B) and
Dempsey. LP- Corbln (8.11) .
HR-Kosco (10th).

Over Detroit

m

Chester

Linesoores

By Unilfd P!'eSs lntern•tional
Amer1c1n Ltltut
Mllw
021 000 000-- 3 I 0
Minn
000 000 000-- 0 4 0

Mla&lt;lor

.

~

we've ever been before. For 1972, we've put in
more quality control steps, more tests and
more people to see that every car leaving our
factory is as perfect as man and machine can
make it.
At the dealer's, it's checked over again.

Every car (not one of SO, one of 5, every nne)
is road ·tested for starting, handling, braking
and overall performance. When the service·
man completes the test, he signs his report and
slides it over the sun visor, where you can see it.
And, when a man signs his name to something, you can be
sure he's done his
job. And done it
right.
A LOANER CAR WHEN lOU NEED IT. FREE.
Not only do we offer you a strong guarantee,
we've
set. up.a system to back it up without
.mconveruencmg
you.
If you have to leave vu•~•
guarantee repairs, over 2,000 'dealen
will loan you one of their cars.
A nice,clean, we)).
equipped car
in good condition. Free.

ADIRECT LINE TO DE IROO. TOLL~FREE.
We're making some big promises, and we
fully intend to keep them. But, just in case you
have a problem, we have a war, of
handling it. WhenJou buy a 72,
you get the name an toll-free num·
ber of a person in Detroit.
If you cal~ we promise you you'll
get results. And fast.
.
These aren't just fancy words.
We mean it.
Nobody in the business does as
much for you after you buy a car,
and it takes .a lot of time, men and
money to do all these things.
But we think it's worth it.
Since we're giving American carbuyers exactly what they say they want,
we should sell more cars than we've
ever sold before.

0

STARTING TODAY, THEil AMIIICAN MOTORS DEAURS WILL DO
MORE FOR YOU AmR YOU IUY A CAR THAN ANY OTHER DEAUR IN TO'JIN.

R. H. RAWliNGS SONS .CO.
"

88 SO. SECOND AVE.·

•

�4- The Dilly $enlillti,MVA!port.-i'Gmer0)', 0., Sept. 21, It'll

OSU 5th, Colorado
lOth In UPI Poll
By BILL M.U)i)I!N
UPI Sports Writer

A three-way tie between Penn
State, Waahington and Get&gt;rgia
NEW YORK (UPI) -In a $ettled No. 13. The Nlttany
lJeell that ·saw nearly every LiOIIS opened Lheir sea$0n
team In Lhe top 20 win by a crushing Navy, 56-3, while
rout, even a (:!.point viCUp Georgia and Washington won
wun'tenough to toppleNebras- Lheir second games of the
ka from Lhe top spot in Lhe season.
United Press International rat- Ari!ona Stale, Soulhern Callfornia and Lolilsiana State
Ings.
.
THat's what happened to finished 16th, 17th and 18th, but
Notre Dalllli as the fighting the final top 20 berth resulted
Irish drubbed Northwestern 5(). in a tie between North
7, but llie Corn)luskers held on Carolina, a newcomer to the
to Lheir No. 1' ranking with a · football ratings, and Georgia
lesser rout of Miqnesota, 35-7. Tech.
With 33 of the 35 coaches in Minnesota coach Murray
UPI's ratings board participat- Warmath, a member ·of UPI's
ing, Nebraska got 25 first-place ratings board, summed up
votes and a total of 307 point.s, Nebraska's strength after Sawhile Notre Dame received Lhe turday's game. When asked
remaining eight first-place what the turning point was,
votes and a total of 292.
Warmath replied, ''When they
Texas, with 226 point.s, held blew the opening whistle to
onto the No. 3 spot, but start the game."
Michigan, which clobbered VirBut Northwestern coach Alex
ginia 56-0, sneaked pa~t idle Agase, also a member Of the
Ohio State for fourth place. ratings board, was equally
Following the Buckeyes was impressed with ·Notre Dame
Alabama, No. 6 for the second after his Northwestern team
suffered it.s worst defeat of his
straight week.
Auburn, which opened it.s tenure Lhere.
season with a 61).7 rout of
Said Agase : "Now I know
Chattanooga, leaped from No. how David would've felt if he'd
10 into seventh place while missed Goliath with that rock."
Tennessee slipped back a notch Nebraska
next
plays
into eighth despite trouncing Texas A&amp;M and will be a solid
the U. of California at Santa . favorite, but the Fighting Irish
Barbara, 43-4i. Arkansas and go up against old rival Purdue,
Colorado, which both won big which is coming off a
over the weekend, finished out heartbreaking 33-35 ·loss to
the top 10 in ninth and tenth Washington.
Ohio State will get its chance
places respectively.
Oklahoma, 12th last week, to regain ihe No. 4 spot or go
moved up one spot to No. 11 even higher this week if it can
after opening it.s 5e8$0D with a win impressively over No. 10
30-0 whitewashing of Southern Colorado. Almost certain to
Methodist while Stanford, last make waves in Lhe top 10 lhil:
week's No. 11, switched places · week will be the clash between
with the Sooners, dropping to No. 7 Auburn and No. 8
12th.
Tennessee.
Alabama, now employing the
wishbone T as part of it.s
attack, goes up against twotime loser Florida while Michigan hopes to make it even
higher with victory No. 3 over
UCLA.
Five coaches from each of
the seven geographical areas of
the country comprise the UP!
ratings board. Each week they
vote on a lo.&amp;-8-7~2-1
basis for votes from first to 10.

Philatelic Qui:: To be Conducted .

Pro Standings
N

I"""-----.
.
..
PLANTU -

·
. of the Marvin · Fletcher, 45 Avon
The October meeti~g
Place, Athens.
Athens Stamp Club wtll be held
~
· at aP-"1· on Wednesday, Oct. 6,
11
in the third floor multi-purpose
roon\ of the Alden Library on
the Ohio UniverSity Ca!"P08 •
Feature of the evening will be
a philatelic quiz using slides
with a pri2e to be given to the
person receiving the htghest
score. All area collectors a_re
invited to attend. Further mformation can be secured from
here and watch it

a t i o n a t Foo!INIU t.Mtue

Sto ndi111s
·
By United Pnn lnterno-1

cante......

American
Eosl

New Eng.
Miami
But! a lei
NY Jets

·w. 1. 1. pet.

,youR
MONEY

1 0 0 1.0110
1 0 0 1.0110

BaUimore

001 .000
010 .000
010 .000
Central

w. L.t. pet.
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
HoustM

West

1 0 0
1 0 0
010
010

1.000
1.000
.000
.000

w. Lt. pd.

San Diego
1 o 0 1.000
Denver
0 0 1 .0110,
Kansas City
o 1 o .0110
Oakland
o 1· o .000
National Conferente

East

·
w. I. t. pet.

NY Giants
1
Dallas
1
Washington
1
St. Louis
0
Philadelphia
0
Central

.

oiREC'IuRS AND BOARD CHAIRMEN of multl~y economic development districts
Kentucky, N«th Carolina, Virginia and West Vll'ginia, have just concluded a two-day
cmfeloenee at the Pipestem State Park Lodge in West Virginia. Shown above attending the

0 0 1.000
0 o 1.000
0 0 UlOO •
1 0 .000
1 0 .000

(rem

w. I. I. pet.
Chicago
Minnesota
Detroit
Green Bay

.

1 0 0 1.000
1 0 0 1.000 010 .000
010.000

coofel'lliiCe 8pODSOred by the Mideastern Regiooal Office of the Economic Development Administralicm are left to right, Pat Owate, Director, Mideastern Regional Office, Huntington,
W.Va.; Pbilip F. Lavelle, Econcmic Developnent Representative, Mideastern Region, EDA;
Joseph 'G. Hamrick, Deputy Asst. Secrelary for Economic Develo)ment Planning, EDA,
Wasbingtcm, D. C.; Carl E. Mauntel, Chairman Ohio Valley Regional Development Commission, and Dmald M. Buckley, Ex. Dir., Ohio Valley Regional Development Commission.

c
I .d
~~~~~~·sRtJ"L::: Conference omp ete
West

Atlanta
New Orleans

w. I. t. pet.

1
0 1.000
1 0
0 0
1.000

.

Mimesota 16 Detroit 13
(only game scheduled)

Sunday's Gilmes
Atlanta at Los Angeles
Chicago at Minnesota
Cincinnati at Pitts
Cleveland at Baltimore
Dallas at Phlla
Denver vs. GBay at Milw
Detroit at New England
KanCity at Houston
Miami at Buffalo
Oakland at San Diego
SF at New Orleans
Wash at NYGianls
!only games scheduled)
Monday's CO.mes
NY Jets at St. L. nile
!only game scheduled)

Donald
M.
Buckley,
Executive Dinctor, and Carl
Mauntel, Board Chairman, of
the Ohio Valley Regional
Development, located in Portsmouth, with oiher mulli-rounty
economic development
districts, attended a five-otate
conference at Lhe Pipestem
State Park Lodge in West
Virginia.
Pat Choate, Director of the
Mideastern Regional Office,

Huntington, West Virginia,
presented a program and
discussion agenda covering
techniques in total economic
development . Symposiums
featured Professor Albert
Shapero and Cary Hoffman of
the
Multi-Disciplinary
Research, Inc., Austin, Texas;
Mr. J. Bonner Manly, Stale
Committee for Technical
Education, Columbia, South
Carolina; and Mr. Herbert S.

ON

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
~
Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
&amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal Home Loan
'Bank.

~ccounts

insur~d

POMEROY BOWLING
Wedni!&gt;diy Late ML
Sept. 15, 1V71
Individual l:ilgh Game IMenl
- R. IWJore 232; W. Boyer 204;
C. Blakeslee 200.
Individual
l:i lgh
Game
!Women) - l:i. IWJore 176; Q.
Blakeslee 1S3; Virginia Hoyt

~Carved
the Love

peoiille

Pomeroy

lrom &amp;f.r'J ..
K£N)ClUN(tEIS

_·--

This Week's Specia 1

. ....

·~~~·
•
USED CARS

Tender!

77~
REG. 1.59

ADDITIONAL OR WIYHOUf COUPON

·- ·-

.

Martha White
Self-Rising

DAIRY
SPECIALS
Fainnonl
Nice 'n Live~

FLOUR

Choc. Milk

Spinach

'1795
Karr &amp; Van landt
"You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til 8:00
Til S P.M. Sal.

Industrial league
Sept. 9, 1911

Spreader

shoes. Cycoloc end
cops. UL·Approved.

DELUXE
FLAT STEP
EXTENSION
LADDER

SPECIAL

lEG.
49.95

MAX. WORKING LENGTH 25'

Al FlO-Rung joints. Center swi.,.el pulley for
foste r 8JIItenslon. Twist·
- proof, Spin-proof, 16"

/fi;;;,-.,Jf

Orange Juice

Llghtwelghl for general household use.
Fully rodded wllh 5lu rdy .sheKlotk.

o

SlUR
FINISHING

60" WIDE

Use Our Free Porlling lot

Robinson's Cleaners

REG. 198 &amp; 4.98
VALUES

CAPE ANN

APPLES

MASTEitSEl

yd.

PERFORATED
HARDBOARD

18

992-2284

I

lEG. 3.99

I
I

I

MASONITE

F'omeroy, 0 -. .

'l

8-BOTTLECARTON
16 oz. bottles
SATURDAY-ONE DAY ONLY

FAVORITE BREAD

6 1.00
loales
for

FOLGER'S
COFFEE
Reg., Drip, Elec. Pert

2

II.

can

BAGGIES
TRASH CAN
UNERS

Box of 10

bag

I

GARAGE BROOM
IUNET

·ns W. Second

The
COmer.

-

I

WRIGHT

SINGER SALES- &amp; SUI! ICE
McCAll'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERN~

with

r
SAlE PIICE

IC SHOP

POTATOES

lb.

POT PIES
5 for 1.00

49

Get

11 oz.
jar

BANQUET

alues.

THURSDAY- ONE DAY ONLY!

Golden Delicious U.S. No. 1 Grade

More

54" TO

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

REG. 4-.69

NON-DAIRY CREAMER

5 ~~ 1.00

Many

Bonded
Acrylics

l
0

Pink Detergent.~~....4 ~ 1.00
.
.
69~
Coffeemate.........................

DONALD DUCK

I

GROUP. OF FABRICS

99C

SAlE PIICE

:;&lt;;5 2711
n.
3911

wide,

ICE CREAM
gal

49$

large

SCOT PRIDE

5 FOOT WOODEN
STEPLADDER

l4 FT. MAX. WOI:l!HG
lENGTH 21 '

21

bar for

added slrenglh.
Slip·rfllltlonl steps.

pkg.

now

large

3 for 1.00

59~

Sandwiches

•
4
1
00
Hom my..s:::~................ ~'&lt;! •
•
4
1
00
Spmach..:!~................ ~~!% •
Graham Crackers:~N-~~!3 ~~ 1.00

ROLLS

gaa

59·$

lb.

Fainnonl Ice Cream

cans
for

Brown &amp;Serve

MAX. WORKING LENGTH I I'
Free .swinging t~ely

5-lb. bag

s,

FJYY.ten Food Dept. Buys!
BOSY ROSS

NOW JUST

Yz:::.L

Shellie Beans

- ·- ·

'

lb.

Real Value!

Green Peas
Green Beans

994

BACON

Fine Flavor!

SCOT LAD

68 OLDS
88 4 DOOR

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

.-

,b.s9~

DART SUCED

Ground Chuck .. !!':79e Neck Bones ...... 71b.$l
Ground Beef .. .}~· 69e Slic. Bologna .... ..'~: 39*

I
I
I

·-·:

!!

_4,.ollu,..{]ooJ &amp;,

PICNIC HAMS

4/99$

WITH COUPON

GOESSLER "
Court St.

EACH

POLISH
SAUSAGE

Whole Kernel Com

Individual High Series (Men)
- R. IWJore S81; W. Boyer 544 ;
J. Carsey 506.
Individual
High
Series
(Women) - H. Moore 457 ; S.
O.Vens 415; VIrginia Hoyt
High Team Series - MarrowMoore 1915; Blakeslee-Hoyt
1889 ; O.Ven-Holter 1819.
OwenTeam Standings • Holler 20; NwJrrow-IWJore 18;
Cassell -Carsey 12 ; Rosenbaum Meadows 10 ; Fullz-Bentley 8;
/ Blakeslee-Hoyt 4.

1
2
3

4~

39~

·.THURSDAY ONLY!

Mild Flavored Smoked

SPECIALS

.'

1

lb.

WITH COU PON

,f

JEWELRY STORE

SLAB
BACON

Mt, frlondly

151 .

Lamplighters Monday ML
-f
Sept. 6, 1971
t
Standings
~Team
Pis. W
., Meigs Mobile Homes 8 3
_., Team No. s
8 3
~Team No.1
6 2
Team No.2
2 1
Farmers Bank
o o

lb.

Center Cut Pork Chops.............1~:. 89$

REG.

79~

t

OHWI

m.

And you won't find rings
more beautiful than the
matched sets in our
ArtCarved collection.

PORK
CUTLET$

$20.000.()1'

SAVE NOW!

Wtal Bowling

We have the solution.
Give each other a new
wedding ring. There
isn't a more beautiful
way of restating your
vows of love.

up

Supericrs Bclteless

lb.

Member Federal Savings
Loan Insurance Corp. AI

solving area problems and
assist in project applications
based on priorities established
by elected and civic leadership.

Devine, Grounded, Returns

NEW- YORK (UPI) - The
United Press International lop
20 malor college football teams
with I rs( place, I{QI!l' apd won·
lost rec;qrds In porentheses.
(Second\lleek) :
Team
Points
1. Nebraska
(2S) (2·0 307
2. Notre Dame
(8) 11·01 292
3. Texas
11-0) 226
4. Michigan
12·01 214
s. Ohio Stale
11-0) 141
6. Alabama
12-0) 116
7. Auburn
11-0) 98
8. Tennessee
11-01 75
9. Arkansas
(2-0) 74
10. Colorado
12-01 69
11. Oklahoma
11-0l 61
12. Stantord
(2·01 &lt;18
13. (tiel Georgia
12-01 13
(tiel Washington 12-0l 13
(tie) P&amp;nn State
11·01 13
16. Arizona State
11·01 10
17. Southern Calif.
{1-1) 8
18. Louisiana State
(1·11 1
19. (tiel No. Carolina (2-0) 4
(tie) Georgia Tech 11-ll
4

Have you been trying
to think of sOmething
special to mark this
wonderful occasion?

FAMILY
PACK

Meigs Co. Branch

TURNER BEATS FORBFS
OYSTER BAY, N.Y. (UPI) .Ted Turner of the U.S.
successfully defended his ,Iitle
Monday when he won the
Scandinavian Gold Cup Series
for 5.5-meter yachl.s by defeating Australia's David Forbes in
the fifth and final race.

married in

anniversary.

PORK CHOPS USDA CHOICE

43~%

If you were

-

SUPERIORS FINE ·MEATS

"bloomr'! Earn at our
passbook rate of

N.J. HOSTS GOLF MATCH
'BERNARDSVILLE,
N.J.
(UP!) -The 1973 Girls' Junior
Golf Championship will be held
at Somerset Hills Country Club,
six miles from the new USGA
headquarters in Liberty Corner,
N.J.

.

.

POMEROY
CEMENT
'
.
BlOCK 00.

Free Box of 25
BAGGIES
WITH PURatASE OF ONE
(25) PlASTIC FOOD.SlORAGE
linit 1 Per Customer

.MARKET • Open

EXPIRES: 9-27-71

'

9 to 10 • Sun.

We Af!MP~ Fedeiol FOod Stampa
PHONE: 992·3480
Comer Mill and Second Sts. "We Rnerve The Right To limit 0..-.titie"'"
'

The Department Store
of Building Slt;~ce 1915

•

~

•

I

�4- The Dilly $enlillti,MVA!port.-i'Gmer0)', 0., Sept. 21, It'll

OSU 5th, Colorado
lOth In UPI Poll
By BILL M.U)i)I!N
UPI Sports Writer

A three-way tie between Penn
State, Waahington and Get&gt;rgia
NEW YORK (UPI) -In a $ettled No. 13. The Nlttany
lJeell that ·saw nearly every LiOIIS opened Lheir sea$0n
team In Lhe top 20 win by a crushing Navy, 56-3, while
rout, even a (:!.point viCUp Georgia and Washington won
wun'tenough to toppleNebras- Lheir second games of the
ka from Lhe top spot in Lhe season.
United Press International rat- Ari!ona Stale, Soulhern Callfornia and Lolilsiana State
Ings.
.
THat's what happened to finished 16th, 17th and 18th, but
Notre Dalllli as the fighting the final top 20 berth resulted
Irish drubbed Northwestern 5(). in a tie between North
7, but llie Corn)luskers held on Carolina, a newcomer to the
to Lheir No. 1' ranking with a · football ratings, and Georgia
lesser rout of Miqnesota, 35-7. Tech.
With 33 of the 35 coaches in Minnesota coach Murray
UPI's ratings board participat- Warmath, a member ·of UPI's
ing, Nebraska got 25 first-place ratings board, summed up
votes and a total of 307 point.s, Nebraska's strength after Sawhile Notre Dame received Lhe turday's game. When asked
remaining eight first-place what the turning point was,
votes and a total of 292.
Warmath replied, ''When they
Texas, with 226 point.s, held blew the opening whistle to
onto the No. 3 spot, but start the game."
Michigan, which clobbered VirBut Northwestern coach Alex
ginia 56-0, sneaked pa~t idle Agase, also a member Of the
Ohio State for fourth place. ratings board, was equally
Following the Buckeyes was impressed with ·Notre Dame
Alabama, No. 6 for the second after his Northwestern team
suffered it.s worst defeat of his
straight week.
Auburn, which opened it.s tenure Lhere.
season with a 61).7 rout of
Said Agase : "Now I know
Chattanooga, leaped from No. how David would've felt if he'd
10 into seventh place while missed Goliath with that rock."
Tennessee slipped back a notch Nebraska
next
plays
into eighth despite trouncing Texas A&amp;M and will be a solid
the U. of California at Santa . favorite, but the Fighting Irish
Barbara, 43-4i. Arkansas and go up against old rival Purdue,
Colorado, which both won big which is coming off a
over the weekend, finished out heartbreaking 33-35 ·loss to
the top 10 in ninth and tenth Washington.
Ohio State will get its chance
places respectively.
Oklahoma, 12th last week, to regain ihe No. 4 spot or go
moved up one spot to No. 11 even higher this week if it can
after opening it.s 5e8$0D with a win impressively over No. 10
30-0 whitewashing of Southern Colorado. Almost certain to
Methodist while Stanford, last make waves in Lhe top 10 lhil:
week's No. 11, switched places · week will be the clash between
with the Sooners, dropping to No. 7 Auburn and No. 8
12th.
Tennessee.
Alabama, now employing the
wishbone T as part of it.s
attack, goes up against twotime loser Florida while Michigan hopes to make it even
higher with victory No. 3 over
UCLA.
Five coaches from each of
the seven geographical areas of
the country comprise the UP!
ratings board. Each week they
vote on a lo.&amp;-8-7~2-1
basis for votes from first to 10.

Philatelic Qui:: To be Conducted .

Pro Standings
N

I"""-----.
.
..
PLANTU -

·
. of the Marvin · Fletcher, 45 Avon
The October meeti~g
Place, Athens.
Athens Stamp Club wtll be held
~
· at aP-"1· on Wednesday, Oct. 6,
11
in the third floor multi-purpose
roon\ of the Alden Library on
the Ohio UniverSity Ca!"P08 •
Feature of the evening will be
a philatelic quiz using slides
with a pri2e to be given to the
person receiving the htghest
score. All area collectors a_re
invited to attend. Further mformation can be secured from
here and watch it

a t i o n a t Foo!INIU t.Mtue

Sto ndi111s
·
By United Pnn lnterno-1

cante......

American
Eosl

New Eng.
Miami
But! a lei
NY Jets

·w. 1. 1. pet.

,youR
MONEY

1 0 0 1.0110
1 0 0 1.0110

BaUimore

001 .000
010 .000
010 .000
Central

w. L.t. pet.
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
HoustM

West

1 0 0
1 0 0
010
010

1.000
1.000
.000
.000

w. Lt. pd.

San Diego
1 o 0 1.000
Denver
0 0 1 .0110,
Kansas City
o 1 o .0110
Oakland
o 1· o .000
National Conferente

East

·
w. I. t. pet.

NY Giants
1
Dallas
1
Washington
1
St. Louis
0
Philadelphia
0
Central

.

oiREC'IuRS AND BOARD CHAIRMEN of multl~y economic development districts
Kentucky, N«th Carolina, Virginia and West Vll'ginia, have just concluded a two-day
cmfeloenee at the Pipestem State Park Lodge in West Virginia. Shown above attending the

0 0 1.000
0 o 1.000
0 0 UlOO •
1 0 .000
1 0 .000

(rem

w. I. I. pet.
Chicago
Minnesota
Detroit
Green Bay

.

1 0 0 1.000
1 0 0 1.000 010 .000
010.000

coofel'lliiCe 8pODSOred by the Mideastern Regiooal Office of the Economic Development Administralicm are left to right, Pat Owate, Director, Mideastern Regional Office, Huntington,
W.Va.; Pbilip F. Lavelle, Econcmic Developnent Representative, Mideastern Region, EDA;
Joseph 'G. Hamrick, Deputy Asst. Secrelary for Economic Develo)ment Planning, EDA,
Wasbingtcm, D. C.; Carl E. Mauntel, Chairman Ohio Valley Regional Development Commission, and Dmald M. Buckley, Ex. Dir., Ohio Valley Regional Development Commission.

c
I .d
~~~~~~·sRtJ"L::: Conference omp ete
West

Atlanta
New Orleans

w. I. t. pet.

1
0 1.000
1 0
0 0
1.000

.

Mimesota 16 Detroit 13
(only game scheduled)

Sunday's Gilmes
Atlanta at Los Angeles
Chicago at Minnesota
Cincinnati at Pitts
Cleveland at Baltimore
Dallas at Phlla
Denver vs. GBay at Milw
Detroit at New England
KanCity at Houston
Miami at Buffalo
Oakland at San Diego
SF at New Orleans
Wash at NYGianls
!only games scheduled)
Monday's CO.mes
NY Jets at St. L. nile
!only game scheduled)

Donald
M.
Buckley,
Executive Dinctor, and Carl
Mauntel, Board Chairman, of
the Ohio Valley Regional
Development, located in Portsmouth, with oiher mulli-rounty
economic development
districts, attended a five-otate
conference at Lhe Pipestem
State Park Lodge in West
Virginia.
Pat Choate, Director of the
Mideastern Regional Office,

Huntington, West Virginia,
presented a program and
discussion agenda covering
techniques in total economic
development . Symposiums
featured Professor Albert
Shapero and Cary Hoffman of
the
Multi-Disciplinary
Research, Inc., Austin, Texas;
Mr. J. Bonner Manly, Stale
Committee for Technical
Education, Columbia, South
Carolina; and Mr. Herbert S.

ON

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
~
Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
&amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal Home Loan
'Bank.

~ccounts

insur~d

POMEROY BOWLING
Wedni!&gt;diy Late ML
Sept. 15, 1V71
Individual l:ilgh Game IMenl
- R. IWJore 232; W. Boyer 204;
C. Blakeslee 200.
Individual
l:i lgh
Game
!Women) - l:i. IWJore 176; Q.
Blakeslee 1S3; Virginia Hoyt

~Carved
the Love

peoiille

Pomeroy

lrom &amp;f.r'J ..
K£N)ClUN(tEIS

_·--

This Week's Specia 1

. ....

·~~~·
•
USED CARS

Tender!

77~
REG. 1.59

ADDITIONAL OR WIYHOUf COUPON

·- ·-

.

Martha White
Self-Rising

DAIRY
SPECIALS
Fainnonl
Nice 'n Live~

FLOUR

Choc. Milk

Spinach

'1795
Karr &amp; Van landt
"You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til 8:00
Til S P.M. Sal.

Industrial league
Sept. 9, 1911

Spreader

shoes. Cycoloc end
cops. UL·Approved.

DELUXE
FLAT STEP
EXTENSION
LADDER

SPECIAL

lEG.
49.95

MAX. WORKING LENGTH 25'

Al FlO-Rung joints. Center swi.,.el pulley for
foste r 8JIItenslon. Twist·
- proof, Spin-proof, 16"

/fi;;;,-.,Jf

Orange Juice

Llghtwelghl for general household use.
Fully rodded wllh 5lu rdy .sheKlotk.

o

SlUR
FINISHING

60" WIDE

Use Our Free Porlling lot

Robinson's Cleaners

REG. 198 &amp; 4.98
VALUES

CAPE ANN

APPLES

MASTEitSEl

yd.

PERFORATED
HARDBOARD

18

992-2284

I

lEG. 3.99

I
I

I

MASONITE

F'omeroy, 0 -. .

'l

8-BOTTLECARTON
16 oz. bottles
SATURDAY-ONE DAY ONLY

FAVORITE BREAD

6 1.00
loales
for

FOLGER'S
COFFEE
Reg., Drip, Elec. Pert

2

II.

can

BAGGIES
TRASH CAN
UNERS

Box of 10

bag

I

GARAGE BROOM
IUNET

·ns W. Second

The
COmer.

-

I

WRIGHT

SINGER SALES- &amp; SUI! ICE
McCAll'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERN~

with

r
SAlE PIICE

IC SHOP

POTATOES

lb.

POT PIES
5 for 1.00

49

Get

11 oz.
jar

BANQUET

alues.

THURSDAY- ONE DAY ONLY!

Golden Delicious U.S. No. 1 Grade

More

54" TO

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

REG. 4-.69

NON-DAIRY CREAMER

5 ~~ 1.00

Many

Bonded
Acrylics

l
0

Pink Detergent.~~....4 ~ 1.00
.
.
69~
Coffeemate.........................

DONALD DUCK

I

GROUP. OF FABRICS

99C

SAlE PIICE

:;&lt;;5 2711
n.
3911

wide,

ICE CREAM
gal

49$

large

SCOT PRIDE

5 FOOT WOODEN
STEPLADDER

l4 FT. MAX. WOI:l!HG
lENGTH 21 '

21

bar for

added slrenglh.
Slip·rfllltlonl steps.

pkg.

now

large

3 for 1.00

59~

Sandwiches

•
4
1
00
Hom my..s:::~................ ~'&lt;! •
•
4
1
00
Spmach..:!~................ ~~!% •
Graham Crackers:~N-~~!3 ~~ 1.00

ROLLS

gaa

59·$

lb.

Fainnonl Ice Cream

cans
for

Brown &amp;Serve

MAX. WORKING LENGTH I I'
Free .swinging t~ely

5-lb. bag

s,

FJYY.ten Food Dept. Buys!
BOSY ROSS

NOW JUST

Yz:::.L

Shellie Beans

- ·- ·

'

lb.

Real Value!

Green Peas
Green Beans

994

BACON

Fine Flavor!

SCOT LAD

68 OLDS
88 4 DOOR

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

.-

,b.s9~

DART SUCED

Ground Chuck .. !!':79e Neck Bones ...... 71b.$l
Ground Beef .. .}~· 69e Slic. Bologna .... ..'~: 39*

I
I
I

·-·:

!!

_4,.ollu,..{]ooJ &amp;,

PICNIC HAMS

4/99$

WITH COUPON

GOESSLER "
Court St.

EACH

POLISH
SAUSAGE

Whole Kernel Com

Individual High Series (Men)
- R. IWJore S81; W. Boyer 544 ;
J. Carsey 506.
Individual
High
Series
(Women) - H. Moore 457 ; S.
O.Vens 415; VIrginia Hoyt
High Team Series - MarrowMoore 1915; Blakeslee-Hoyt
1889 ; O.Ven-Holter 1819.
OwenTeam Standings • Holler 20; NwJrrow-IWJore 18;
Cassell -Carsey 12 ; Rosenbaum Meadows 10 ; Fullz-Bentley 8;
/ Blakeslee-Hoyt 4.

1
2
3

4~

39~

·.THURSDAY ONLY!

Mild Flavored Smoked

SPECIALS

.'

1

lb.

WITH COU PON

,f

JEWELRY STORE

SLAB
BACON

Mt, frlondly

151 .

Lamplighters Monday ML
-f
Sept. 6, 1971
t
Standings
~Team
Pis. W
., Meigs Mobile Homes 8 3
_., Team No. s
8 3
~Team No.1
6 2
Team No.2
2 1
Farmers Bank
o o

lb.

Center Cut Pork Chops.............1~:. 89$

REG.

79~

t

OHWI

m.

And you won't find rings
more beautiful than the
matched sets in our
ArtCarved collection.

PORK
CUTLET$

$20.000.()1'

SAVE NOW!

Wtal Bowling

We have the solution.
Give each other a new
wedding ring. There
isn't a more beautiful
way of restating your
vows of love.

up

Supericrs Bclteless

lb.

Member Federal Savings
Loan Insurance Corp. AI

solving area problems and
assist in project applications
based on priorities established
by elected and civic leadership.

Devine, Grounded, Returns

NEW- YORK (UPI) - The
United Press International lop
20 malor college football teams
with I rs( place, I{QI!l' apd won·
lost rec;qrds In porentheses.
(Second\lleek) :
Team
Points
1. Nebraska
(2S) (2·0 307
2. Notre Dame
(8) 11·01 292
3. Texas
11-0) 226
4. Michigan
12·01 214
s. Ohio Stale
11-0) 141
6. Alabama
12-0) 116
7. Auburn
11-0) 98
8. Tennessee
11-01 75
9. Arkansas
(2-0) 74
10. Colorado
12-01 69
11. Oklahoma
11-0l 61
12. Stantord
(2·01 &lt;18
13. (tiel Georgia
12-01 13
(tiel Washington 12-0l 13
(tie) P&amp;nn State
11·01 13
16. Arizona State
11·01 10
17. Southern Calif.
{1-1) 8
18. Louisiana State
(1·11 1
19. (tiel No. Carolina (2-0) 4
(tie) Georgia Tech 11-ll
4

Have you been trying
to think of sOmething
special to mark this
wonderful occasion?

FAMILY
PACK

Meigs Co. Branch

TURNER BEATS FORBFS
OYSTER BAY, N.Y. (UPI) .Ted Turner of the U.S.
successfully defended his ,Iitle
Monday when he won the
Scandinavian Gold Cup Series
for 5.5-meter yachl.s by defeating Australia's David Forbes in
the fifth and final race.

married in

anniversary.

PORK CHOPS USDA CHOICE

43~%

If you were

-

SUPERIORS FINE ·MEATS

"bloomr'! Earn at our
passbook rate of

N.J. HOSTS GOLF MATCH
'BERNARDSVILLE,
N.J.
(UP!) -The 1973 Girls' Junior
Golf Championship will be held
at Somerset Hills Country Club,
six miles from the new USGA
headquarters in Liberty Corner,
N.J.

.

.

POMEROY
CEMENT
'
.
BlOCK 00.

Free Box of 25
BAGGIES
WITH PURatASE OF ONE
(25) PlASTIC FOOD.SlORAGE
linit 1 Per Customer

.MARKET • Open

EXPIRES: 9-27-71

'

9 to 10 • Sun.

We Af!MP~ Fedeiol FOod Stampa
PHONE: 992·3480
Comer Mill and Second Sts. "We Rnerve The Right To limit 0..-.titie"'"
'

The Department Store
of Building Slt;~ce 1915

•

~

•

I

�. I

~s;;;;n;;c;;;;if;,eds Get Action ! Sen~nel Classifieds Get Results!

.

-

'BARN&amp;\'

/""'"':- -------.....
1M CJU:l6R
~ AARFS'f !

6tp

Hive·Yoor saal

by

'

•

Helen and Sue Bottel

•

~

cGGta prGblem? Or a subject lor dlscaultm, lwOilellfratloo
1tyie? Dine&amp; .yuitr q-UOIII to eldler SUe or Helen llolteJ -or
bo.. II J• want a clllllllnaUon motber.cfaugbll!r allllwer.)

'

'

THE JO~ MAKES HER WIW
Dear Sue and Helen :
1wrote to tbls guy in Vietnam for five months, and though we
newr met (it was me of thOBe pen.pal thingies) he got pretty
IIIICII'OUS, saying we'd be together when be Willi dl.scharged in late
etc. Call me dumb, but I kind of fell for him, after we exchanged

1970 DODGE POLARA
$2495
4 Dr., V·8 engine, atltomatic trans., P.S., factory air, good
tires, radio &amp; other extras, while finish, clean Interior.

Then me day I got a letter from his "pal," saying he'd been
tilled. Being suSpicious, I e&lt;mpared handwritings, and all the
eapltallettera Wen! the same, whii1J means my "boy friend" and
WANT AD
1U
''pal"were
the
same
person,
though
he'd
tried
to
camouflage.
INFORMATION
,,
· I checked with some relatives in his home town and found out
DEADLINES
be'. anol-~.o alive but married and has a two-year-old son. 1 was 5 P.M. Day Before Publication
"""
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
just IICIII1ebody to s~ alel!g and band a bunch of bull, and now .. C!!!]g!llation _&amp; Corro:ctlons
be's caming bome, he has to lose me f1111t. I guess he was afraid Will be OJ:cepted unlll9 a.in . for '
mylettenmilbtbe f«warded to the U.s .
"&amp;UfJ'._"~~f&amp;~'f '
" lllouldlpay him back and send the letter on to his wife? Plus
The Publisher· reserves the
all !be other Iavey-dovey stuff be wrote me? - FURIOUSLy right to edit or reject any ads·
deemed objectional
The
MAD AND HURT
publisher will not be resilbnsible
Dear Mad and Hurt:
for more than one Incorrect:
Wlllltacreep! Butdon'ltakeitoutonbiswife.
insertion. RATES
· You aever really knew the joker, BO you haven't really been
For w4nt Ad Service
z.u.t. Why not send a sympathy card to him saying, "Better wed 5 cents pl!r Word one insertion
' SUE
Minimum Charge 75c
lbandead-prGbably," and forget him · 12 oents per word three.
Dear M and H.:
consecutive Insertions.
... And be glad you lost tbls "bull" game ! -HELEN
s.;,~,~~~s~~o~sord six con
Dear H and S:
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
When I wrote toHHUbeforeSue cameinandyoustartedyour ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Wftt column, I always th-·""t
of you 1111 "Dear Helen," but now I
CARD
OF THANKS
,....
""6''
&amp; OBITUARY
wCIIderHishouldwrite, "DearMrs.B.andSue," "Dear Sue and • $1.50 for so word minimum.
Her Mother," "Dear Mom and Daughter" or what?- UNSURE Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
.
Dear Unsure:
Additional 25c Charge per
Wlllltever you call us -from "Dear Botteis" to "Hi, You Advertiseml!f't.
Two," -we woo't Cllllplain, so loog as you keep calling on us. OFFICE HOURS
HELEN AND SUE
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
Pleue tell some of tbes8 males tbst they are making fools of Saturday.
Cbemlelves. They are NOT Irresistible, either in school or on the
way home. What kind of conceited dodos would honk, whistle and
Notice
pull up to the curb, insinuaUng that girls should hop right in the REVIVAL starting Sept. 22 at
ear?
7: 30 ~. m . Zion UB Church,
four miles east of Shade.
'lbese sea: fiend chauffeurs and wolf"Nhlstlers should join the
Special singing. Pastor and
drm8 wbere they could make Idiots of themselves and get paid
church welcomes all . Ap.
pearlng the 22nd, 'the
for ll - UNDIPRF.&amp;SED
Gospela
i res
Quartette .
Dear Un:
Evangelist, Rev. John
Somehow, I've always thwght tbst a wolf whistle, like the
Elswick.
9·20·31c
ltalilnplnch, was a form of compliment. You don't need to "hop
In 1be ear," naturally, but does a little gooW!atured banter among
SAVE UP to ·one half . Bring
lqb acbool students really burt? - HELEN
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Dear Ulllmpr ene ~:
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ..
Pomeroy.
'
...
Tbere are wlllstlers and WHISTLERs. (Remember, Mom?).
4·23·1fc
Some are junior ''dirty old men" who can 'I make it on their looks
II' penmalltlel, 110 they try pick-ups, U THEY notice you, It's a MEIGS SENIORS - Portraits
will be taken Saturday,
P!Jtllown, 'eauae they're alteJ: aU they~· ~~~ -:from girls who
~plem~ 18 and Saturday,
I'ltt* De they'll pe it.
~~ ·
.
September 25. Call now for
your appointment. Grover' s
· Oilier whlatlers are just friendly-type guys with an eye for
Studio, 992-2475, Middleport,
oute eblek•. It's a compliment if THEY notice you. When you
Ohio.
Je.m lbedifferenee, "Un,"you'llstop being so tough on ALLgirl9·15·91t

watcbers. -SUE

WIN AT BRIDGE

Zl

•void

.76f
t KJ654

• AQ832
WIST

EAST

.K9753

.AQI08642
•Qto
tQ

•a53
t82
• 75

.J

.964

soum &lt;D&gt;
.AK92
• o\10973

.KJlO

North-South vulnerable
West North F.lst South

e•

3t

Pus

It

3.

4N.T.

7t

Pus
Pass
Pus Pass
Pass
Opening lead-· 5
'

By O.Wald I&lt; James Jacoby
JACOBY MODERN uses
DOPI to show aces against
Blackwood interference. II
you can't remember: Double
witb zero, pass with one and
bid with two or more. Just
bear in mind that you double to say, " I don't think we
have slam." You pass to
•ay, "I think we may have
slam" and you bid to say,

"I'm sure we have slam."
II you want to use DOPE,

which is "Double odd- pass
even," DIPO, which is " Dou·
ble one - p a s s zero," or
DEPO, w h l c h is. "Double
even-pass odd," you will be
In some expert company but
we strongly favor the very
sImp I e and effective JACOBY MODERN DOPI.
Sometimes your opponenl

MAPLE,

beautiful

early

American style, stereo-radio

combination, AM-FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer .
Balance $71.59 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992·70115.
9·20-6tc

For Sale

6.9B. Plus
Part•

. : Blaettnar'~

949-4551
Rt.2

PHONE 992-2143

. 1. ... 011

Raclne,O.

"

POMEROY

HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

EXPERT

DIN IE'S
BEAlrtY SHoP

Wheel Alignment

15.55

Corner Union AvP..
and State Rt. 1
Hours-Monday, Tue5day,
Wedne5day and Friday
8:30a.m. to6p,m.
Thursday
10 a.m. to 1: 3D p.m.
Saturday
8:30a.m, to 1p.m.
PHONE 992-7474

-QUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094"

16 FT. SWISS Colony travel
And
trailer, good condition, $995. - - ' - -- - - - Phone 992-6329.
FARM and home latex house
.,
FURNITURE
·
9-20-6tc paint sale. King Builders
In and See Our
2 BLACK mlnlaI ure poodl e Supply, Middleport. 9·2-241c Stop
. I
Fl
puppies, male. Phone ' 992- P"'!"llll!lllll!~----... . oor 0 tsp ay,
6329.
~;;~;;;;.;;;;;;;.;~~:::::::.::::=:~
9-20-6tc
1
FOUR· NEW HOMES
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION
Help Wanted
ONE HOME IN RACINE
EARN AT home addressing
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
envelopes. Rush stamped
ONE
HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
self·addressed envelope. The
NO MONEY DOWN
Ambrose Co., o4J25 Lakeborn,
100
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
.
.
9-8-30tp
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
~~·~age rate.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Au~
MAINL'f e.ECUZ:

Opan BTII5
Monday thru S.turday
606 e. Moln, Pomeroy, o.

MRS. YOKUM, THEY
TELL US VOU ARE

·-

-----~

THECOMMUNIN

LEADER OF

EXPERIENCED

AX NOT WHAT A

Al-l IS TI-l '
CI-IAMPEEN
e.ARE -KNUCKLE

GOe&gt;8LmLOP ISAX ONL'f WHAT IT
KIN 00 FQ''{Q'~'

FIGHTER!.'

DOGPATCH-

Radiator Service

From the Lar&amp;eSI Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Bf.AE'i1NARS

Pomeroy ..

9·12-12tc

ROOFiNG l CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

For Rent
TRAILER space, electric and

2-12-lfc

water available, on Rt. 7, for
more informa11on call 667·

3245.

QUEEN

9·21·31p

Cons1.

remodeling,

9-19.3tc

1 BEDROOM trailer apartment. Ideal for couples.

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992·5248 or 992·3436.
9-21 -51c

9·21 ·41c

FURNISHED apartment on
Lincoln Hill, suitable for I or 2
people. Phone 992·3489.
1965 ELCAR, 2 bedroom mobile
9·21 .1fc
home, awnings , cement
porch, garage, storage
3 ROOMS and bath, furnished, building, fruit trees, garden
170'12 Mulberry, phone 992· area, on approximately 2
acres - Langsville 667-3978.
2431 alter 5 p.m .
, 9·21·61c

Roofing ,
aluminum

siding . Phone 992-7324.
8·25.1fc

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roollng I
Construdion Co. and An·,
thony .Plumbing &amp; Hoatlog.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Ajr Conditioning.
·
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
modern kitchen and bath, SEWING MACHINES. "Repair
serviCe, all makes. 992·2284,
buift. in cabinets, fuel oil
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
furnace, 1 acres just oft U. S.
Authorized Singer Sales and
33 by Enterprise United
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Methodist Church. Phone 9923·29·tfc
5679 after 5 p.m.
. ' .
.
9·21 ·31c
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, R1. 124.
Phone 992-2550
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Comptele front end service, Insured- Experienced
Call Danny Thompson, 9922196.
tune up and brake service.
Work Guaranteed
7.Ja.ttc · Wheels balanced elec·
Ironically . · All
work See us for
Fre!!
3 BE DRDOM brick home . guaranteed .
Reasonable Esfl'mate on Furnace
Choice location In Middleport.' rates. Phone 992-3213.
Seen by appointment only.'
1-21.Ifc L.:l:.:ns::;t.::a;.:la:.;:t:.:io::;n::,.,.,...---,-..,..-,,.--'
Phone 992·5523 after 4 p.m .
S-1·1fC ROSEBERRY furnace in· HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
stallation. Free estimates on
Service, Phone 992-2522.
new furnaces, oil or gas.
6-10-tfc
.
Service work. Call Cecil ---Roseberry, Racine, Ohio. TRENCHER and complete
water line lnslallatlon. Phone
Phone 614·843-2274.
985·3373
week days after 5
9-8-JOip
p.m. or weekends.
9-9-12tc
AWNINGS, storm doors and
608 East Main
windows. carpor1s,
POMEROY
C. BRADFORD. Auclloneei
marquees, aluminum siding
MIDDLEPORT - Ph story
Complete Service
and
railing.
Call
A.
Jacob,
BRICK, 2 nice bedrooms,
Phone 949·3821
sales
representative.
For
free
'
bath, nice kitchen, dining
Racine, Ohio
estimates, phone Charles
room , paneling, carpeting,
Crill Bradford
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
full width front porch, storage
Johnson and Son, Inc.
building, level lot. $6,950.00.

FURNISHED' 2 bedroom 2 GAS circulating heaters.
apartment, adults only, no Phone 992-5262 evenings.
pets, Middleport, phone 9929-21 -lfc
3874.
9-19-61c 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
left in layaway. Beautiful
APARTMENT, furnished room pastel color, full size model.
with bath, phone 992-2780 or All built-in to buttonhole,
overcast and fancy stitch.
992 .3432.
9·17-lfc Pay just S-48.75 cash or terms
- - - -- - - - avai able. Trade· Ins accepted.
Phone 992-5641.
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
9·21-6tc
Park, Minersville! phone 992-,--3324.
9-l?-6tc VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 modeL Complete with all
TRAILER space , desi rable cleaning tools. Small paint
neighborhood, phone 992·2084. damage in shipping. Will take
9.J9.tfc S27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641 .
9-21 ·61c POMEROY- I story frame, 3
3 ROOM apartmenl and balh.
Built-in electric wall oven and - - -- - - -- bedrooms, bath, basement, 2
glassed porches, front rorch,
table lop range, double bowl
garage, A STEAL AT JUST
sink, overlooking the Ohio BEAT the COLD WINTER
$5,500.00.
river, real clean and nice . and IT'S COST WITH
Phone Gallipolis 446-9539 HEATING OIL FROM
POMEROY - FAMILY HOME
alter 5 p.m.
CLOSE TO ELEMENTARY .
9-S·Ift LANDMARK.
We have the finest Budget
SCHOOL- 4large bedrooms,
closets, 11h ~~ths, large living
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile Pay Plan. Delivery Services,
Degree
Day
room with flrept/ace, hard·
Au1omatic
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
wood floors, gas forced air
Ohio. 992·2951.
Delivery and Duel Delivery
furnace.
garage
with
4-2-tfc Equipmen1.
renovated room over. ALLIN
We also have a complete line
GOOD CONDITION. GOING
FURNISHED and unfurnished of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
AT Sl8,SOD.OO.
apartments. Close to school, and Fur"'-ces.
PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
Phone 992-5434.
PROPERTY IN
·
POMEROY
10·18-lfc
I
Jacii:W.Carsey,Mgr.
CAPABLE HANDS
Phone 992-2111
HENRY E. CLELAND
For
REALTOR
Office
992·2259
1968 VW, good shape, will take APPLES - Fitzpatrick Of.
Residence 992-2568
chards, Slate Route 689,
older car or truck on trade,
9-t6-6tc
phone Wilkesville, 669·3785.
also Gravely Tractor and
equipment. McCullough 18"
9-3-lfc
Chain Saw, chain new, will
sell for sso. Phone 992-6702. GREEN BEANS, pick your
9-19·3tc own, $1.50 a bushel, Andrew
Cross, Racine, Ohio.
-::-:::c-:-:-:-::---:----:FEMALE Beeglepup - SS, also
9-3-l&amp;tc
male while toy Poodle - $55.
Phone 992·6931.
9-19·31c Auto Sales
BALDWIN Spinet piano. Ex- 1953 - v, ton Ford pickup truck
wilh dump bed - 5125. Ed·
Broker
cellent condition. Phone 949ward
Ball,
phone
992·6529.
110
Mechanic
Street
2224 alter 5 p.m .
9·21-3tc
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-J9.Jtc

Cleland
Realty

KOSCOT Kosmetics . Seplember Sales Special :
Kreamy Lip Kote S2 now
SI.SO, Frosllucenl Lip Kote
$2.50 now S2, 23 delicious
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161'12 "' .,h Ave.,
Middleport, Oh
8-29-lfc
will really jam you by jumping to the stratosphere. In
that case you may not be
Lost
able to show two or more MEDIUM sized black tom cat,
aces but you can still do while feet and whiskers,
something to help your part- white spot on nose, answers to
ner decide on the final con- the name of Joe Sox, wearing
tract. You simply double to flea collar. Anyone seeing
suggest penalizing your op- please contact Amanda
Murray 992-3406. Reward.
9·19·31c
ponents. You pass to suggest
a further bid by your part- - - - - - - - ner.
IN MIDDLEPORT, small black
N o r t h decides that his
and while female dog. If
spade void may make it pos·
found please call 992-7290.
9·21 ·31P
slble for South to score a
grand slam so he passes the i..ADY'S Black Onyx ring with
six spade interference. South
diamond selling in Farmers
Bank Parking lot. If found,
concludes that North holds
just about what be does and
call collecl 696·1183. Reward.
takes the plunge. East and
9-19-Jip
West can s a v e at seven
spades but they pass in the Employment Wanted
hope that their opponents
have gone one trick too high. WILL DO work of any sort' at
home or business . Clean
(NEW5PAPII ENTERPRISE .A55N.t
yards, wash windows or car,
paint, etc. Male, 19 years of
age. Write P.O. Box 57,
Middleport.
9-16·51c
The bidding has been:
BABYSITTING in home with
West Norlb ·l!'.ost
preschool children . Phone
992-3619.
Pass
It
Pass
9-19-3tc
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass
4 N.T.
Pass
Pass
6t
Pass
Instruction ·
You, South, hold:
SEMI·DRIVER
TRAINING.
.AK87.KZ tAK5.K832
We are currently offering
tractor trailer training
What do you do now?
A-Pass. You might bid six
through !he facilities of the -,-960
- -D-O_D_G
_E
-sc-h-ool bus,· 54 1967 PL YM
. OUTH Barracuda, SYRACUSE - 3 or 4 bedrooms,
following truck lines: Truck
no-trump in 1 match .. point
bath, gas furnace. ~rn
Line Dlslrlhulion Systems, passenger for camper , 1965 convertible, V-8, po~er
game, but in rubber bridge you
kitchen ..$12,000.00.
Inc. ,
Express
Parcel Chevrolet, 4 dr., V·8, 283. 2 · steering, stereo, ortg1nal
should stay in the suit ~ontract.
Deliveries , Inc. , Skyline axles and wheels for 10 fl. owner - $995. Phone 992-6005.
Deliveries, Inc . For ap- housetraller. Phone 94\'.2322
9·17-Stc MIDDLEPORT- 3 bedrooms,
TODAY'S QUESTION
If&gt; bath, basement. Garage. 10
plication and Interview, call or 949·3171. Bill Cozart.
What is your opening bid
acres.
512,000.00.
'66
PONTIAC
Grand
Prix,
2
dr.
30044-88o4J, or write School
9·19·31c
with:
hardtop, rebuilt engine, ex·
Safety Division, United - - - - - - - - - .J9742
tAKI087 oltAQ
Systems, Inc., C·o Terminal I:OAL, limestone . Excelsior. cellent condition, plenty of DEXTER - 6 room frame
home and 2 lots. $3,500.00 or
Bldg ., 5517 Midland Drive, &lt;atf Works, E. Main St.,i · extras - $1,295; '67 Honda 305
offer.
cc
Scrambler,
excellent
Charleston, West Virginia,
,&gt;omeroy. Phone 992-3891. 1
condition, rebuilt engine 25306.
.
•·9-lf&lt;
$495. Call 992-2392 after 5 p.m.
9·20-21c
9·19-6tc
PooDLE puppies, Silver l oy,
A thought for the day: John
Park view Kennels. Phone 992- - - -- - -- -'62 CHEVY, hardtop, tires like
_
Locke said, " It is one thing to 54o4J.
8-l5·1fc
new, 2 snow tires, good work
galleries k n o w n as the show a man that he is in error
car. Phone 992-5278.
"Press Gallery ," is set aside another to put him in posses: LARGE warm Morning coal
9·19·61c
for members of the press. . sion of the truth."
heater In good condition Q-What # the term of a
SJo. ea11 992-5105.
9. 19 _31P . Real Estate F(ll' Sale
U.S. Congress?
·'SIX ~OOM hpuse, bath, full
A- In point of time, a Con;&gt;asement •. 133 Butternut Ave.,.
gress commences Jan . 3 of
ITEM: Jack Kane:
PONY CART. Contact Jill tust walkmg distance from·
each odd-numbered year
downlown Pomeroy. Conlact
Houdashelt, Syracuse.
You somehow gel the
and continues for two years:
~d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswoo If\
.
9·21-Jtp
eeling he has tho"ghl
Llnve, Columbus, Ohio, phone
regardless of the number of
bout
what
he's HALF RUNNER beans, $2 237-4334, Columbus. ·
regular or special sessions
held.
.
bushel . Potatoes. Clarence
5·9-tlo
haring with you. Your
Pro1fill
,
Portland.
Phone
843· - -- - - - - - eeling is right.
Q- How did the rare ape
2254.
NEW, 3-bedroom home in
9-14-l fc Middlepo/'1 . Buill-in t.itchen,
of Sumatra and Borneo re.
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
c e i u e the name " orang·
U.tJtl"?
1970 KAWASAKI, soO cc, Milch heat, gooc! neighborhood. Can
Ill. S6SO . Contac• Larry Hill, arrange FHA financ ing .
A- The name comes from
Telephone 992·3600 or 992Chester, Ohio, 9b5·4105.
~ Malay word meaning
9·21-3tc 2186. .
man of the woods."
.
7·25·1fc ·

Jam-packed Slam Bidding
NOB'I'II

Special
AI

WALNUT, modern style,
stereo-radio, AM. FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
separate controls. Balance
$63.97. Use our budget terms.
Call 992·7085.
9·20.6tc

Po11eroy Motorr Co.

Residential,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hour Service

Re.(harge

speed automatic changer,

OPEN I!VES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROV. OHIO

Jictures.

Inspection and
9·21 ·301p

automatiC trans., radio, clean Interior.

Con~itioning ·

Ai

1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1595
HT Cpe., 1owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine, wide oval .tires,
P.S., P.B., factory alrcond ., radio&amp; other extras.
1968 DODGE DART4'DOOR
$1495
270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,

O'BRIEN
ElfCfRIC SERVIcE

Sale

Virgil B.

TE~ORD

GASOUNE ALLEY

C)

•

~

5·11·1fc

HACKNEY'S Electric Service,
all types of electrical work.
Phone 992·64fJ7.
9-16·61c

.

.

11IE

111£1\oWfSTER

lEFT l:llRICl

ORfJ~!:!QI
PISlUIIllfP •·

.

THE SHOP, Custom meat
cutting. Pleasant Rld!le Road,
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, 992.
3374 and Dale Little, 992·6346.
9-12·301c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, -LEGAL NOTICENOTICE OF SALE
· Gallipolis . John Russell ,
The real estate of the late Ed
O•mer &amp; Operator.
s. Grant, Deceased, whlc:h Is
5-13·11&lt; . known as Lots 166 and 167 In
,.

' BACKHOE ANb OOzE Rv,,;.i&lt;:
Septic tanks Installed. George
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2418.
4·25·1ft
'READY-MIX
CONCR ~ ~ ·
•~
de IIvered right to your
projec1. Fasl and easy. Free
esl11n'ates . Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln

'

·

Palmer's Addition to the VIllage
of Middleport, Ohio, except tor
17 feet 61nc:hes off the northerly
side ot Lot 166, will be Offered
for sate at the offices of Crow,
Crow &amp; Porter, A1torneys at

AfWliB
1.,.... fw

2966.

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

..... .......
...... --t
. ....._
e4

....,

. · and the property will be sold

lt.C&gt;tt 7 Ill

tfct· subject
to the lien for real estate
6. 30_
ta:tes for 1971 .

l&amp;. 'l'le
1f. 1

Estate of Ed s . Grant,
Deceased.

Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
,
6·1S.tfc .!Attorneys tor Admin istratrix

a

- -- -- - - - - - (9) 21 , 28, 2t

,,

JI.ZEE

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

,._

a.&amp;tt

J4..oo::".
17.11Q

""1.

H. 'Dtldt

a. cu.!

-"

'

SLI

I

u.a.-

' o4

·.

-~

II. »Heft
Ida

•

I CAW
I I

....
.__.

de;Jcea

~tot
I,

.ct

u.-.-,

nc

(,

&amp;YeO I

Mobile Homes for Sale
Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE .
No down paymenl, 12 years to
pay to qualified GI. Up to
$2,500 available for lot fm .
provements If you own a lot,
Gel your new mobile home
now. See James Simpkins,
Valley Estates Mobile Home
Sales, R't. so East Athens 593·8762.

()) I I

S'l'.-

II.(Jalt

K.l . ,

6fl(llfrt.fH, 1101 NOl KEEN
Ott FtMI'lNG A FlAW IH
REC0W EmtER- BUT, IF TI£RE
~. IT Will REFLECT OtilliE
PARlY.

P at&amp;?

11fl. [)
CREFOO

L

Q-Hw Polaris always
out recor~d hiltory?

A-No, Thuban was the
pole star at the time when
111811 began to record his obMI'Vatlon of heavenly olr
jeell, about 300 B.C. .
Q-What il the maximum

t1umlm" of golf clubs used
during a round)
A-A goUer may use a

mulmum of 14 clubs during

a round.

Q-Whal prOVISIOn is
tiiCIIlc for the pre&amp;&amp; to cover
fi'OUI!WI'f/1 i11 the II.S. Coli·
~,

A-A special space in the
'

WMP0/1390

I

(I

,_,.•.,,• 'I DN1' N''P

CIP

·Rutland,

.o.

ltV
1

A.ltR

a.,.,
a
,, ....
a ..

OB&amp;RTRI

,a

T x ,. P s

:r v

RPAPVVJtllf DB&amp; Kit
J[V

VBVI

--·----

Ill

IOU81ft - ·

-me;, N.. iof--of......1-'IIII"NAYI"

.&amp;.

Arnold Grete

,._ •• • .... t "

ftilll___ [

· CAPl'AlN EASY

/42-4211

I
I'

~=1~1~[~)~·~1~~~-~--~,...~·-~~~-~::&amp;~·~·
IIIII ]

\

QUICK QUIZ
!let11 llle pole star through-

hel .. .. 'I ••• 1-..)

,

U.Bba!JL

...,. -·
...
, -

u.r

Admf:.'l~rr~ri~~tt"t.'e

... -

SLN.....,

M

t

.

11M

•• VIet-

SR.

•z

li.Mplle:H

5.P t•ecl

Q I : .1. KING IB ONE WHO BAa
.AJU) JLUfT IRIHOI to

...... On

1&amp;W IJDNG8. TO DDllm
.aa.•-ftUJICII B'OO!f

._
Putt"
.._

4-I&amp;J' odllo

T.Dcu

Law , Pomeroy, Ohio, at 1:00
P.M. on Friday, October lsi,
1971 . This property Is eppralsed
at SIO,OOO .oo, and cannot be sold
for tess than the appraised

AUTOMOBI Li:'ln;J'rance been ·
caocelled?
Lost
your ,
Of)f!ralor's license? Call 992·

I'

DAILY CROSSWORD

Ready -Mix Co. , value. Terms of sale are cesh,

Middleport Ollio

L08ER

HPJ

TV

CB

CIP

K Qv c·

KOPJIT ,
I&amp;KVV.

ll'rlJUTBIV

---,"---~~--------b---------------------~--~~--~~---·~----·~----------------------------~----~1~--~---------------------~----------------------- ·

' .

. . .,

�. I

~s;;;;n;;c;;;;if;,eds Get Action ! Sen~nel Classifieds Get Results!

.

-

'BARN&amp;\'

/""'"':- -------.....
1M CJU:l6R
~ AARFS'f !

6tp

Hive·Yoor saal

by

'

•

Helen and Sue Bottel

•

~

cGGta prGblem? Or a subject lor dlscaultm, lwOilellfratloo
1tyie? Dine&amp; .yuitr q-UOIII to eldler SUe or Helen llolteJ -or
bo.. II J• want a clllllllnaUon motber.cfaugbll!r allllwer.)

'

'

THE JO~ MAKES HER WIW
Dear Sue and Helen :
1wrote to tbls guy in Vietnam for five months, and though we
newr met (it was me of thOBe pen.pal thingies) he got pretty
IIIICII'OUS, saying we'd be together when be Willi dl.scharged in late
etc. Call me dumb, but I kind of fell for him, after we exchanged

1970 DODGE POLARA
$2495
4 Dr., V·8 engine, atltomatic trans., P.S., factory air, good
tires, radio &amp; other extras, while finish, clean Interior.

Then me day I got a letter from his "pal," saying he'd been
tilled. Being suSpicious, I e&lt;mpared handwritings, and all the
eapltallettera Wen! the same, whii1J means my "boy friend" and
WANT AD
1U
''pal"were
the
same
person,
though
he'd
tried
to
camouflage.
INFORMATION
,,
· I checked with some relatives in his home town and found out
DEADLINES
be'. anol-~.o alive but married and has a two-year-old son. 1 was 5 P.M. Day Before Publication
"""
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
just IICIII1ebody to s~ alel!g and band a bunch of bull, and now .. C!!!]g!llation _&amp; Corro:ctlons
be's caming bome, he has to lose me f1111t. I guess he was afraid Will be OJ:cepted unlll9 a.in . for '
mylettenmilbtbe f«warded to the U.s .
"&amp;UfJ'._"~~f&amp;~'f '
" lllouldlpay him back and send the letter on to his wife? Plus
The Publisher· reserves the
all !be other Iavey-dovey stuff be wrote me? - FURIOUSLy right to edit or reject any ads·
deemed objectional
The
MAD AND HURT
publisher will not be resilbnsible
Dear Mad and Hurt:
for more than one Incorrect:
Wlllltacreep! Butdon'ltakeitoutonbiswife.
insertion. RATES
· You aever really knew the joker, BO you haven't really been
For w4nt Ad Service
z.u.t. Why not send a sympathy card to him saying, "Better wed 5 cents pl!r Word one insertion
' SUE
Minimum Charge 75c
lbandead-prGbably," and forget him · 12 oents per word three.
Dear M and H.:
consecutive Insertions.
... And be glad you lost tbls "bull" game ! -HELEN
s.;,~,~~~s~~o~sord six con
Dear H and S:
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
When I wrote toHHUbeforeSue cameinandyoustartedyour ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Wftt column, I always th-·""t
of you 1111 "Dear Helen," but now I
CARD
OF THANKS
,....
""6''
&amp; OBITUARY
wCIIderHishouldwrite, "DearMrs.B.andSue," "Dear Sue and • $1.50 for so word minimum.
Her Mother," "Dear Mom and Daughter" or what?- UNSURE Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
.
Dear Unsure:
Additional 25c Charge per
Wlllltever you call us -from "Dear Botteis" to "Hi, You Advertiseml!f't.
Two," -we woo't Cllllplain, so loog as you keep calling on us. OFFICE HOURS
HELEN AND SUE
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
Pleue tell some of tbes8 males tbst they are making fools of Saturday.
Cbemlelves. They are NOT Irresistible, either in school or on the
way home. What kind of conceited dodos would honk, whistle and
Notice
pull up to the curb, insinuaUng that girls should hop right in the REVIVAL starting Sept. 22 at
ear?
7: 30 ~. m . Zion UB Church,
four miles east of Shade.
'lbese sea: fiend chauffeurs and wolf"Nhlstlers should join the
Special singing. Pastor and
drm8 wbere they could make Idiots of themselves and get paid
church welcomes all . Ap.
pearlng the 22nd, 'the
for ll - UNDIPRF.&amp;SED
Gospela
i res
Quartette .
Dear Un:
Evangelist, Rev. John
Somehow, I've always thwght tbst a wolf whistle, like the
Elswick.
9·20·31c
ltalilnplnch, was a form of compliment. You don't need to "hop
In 1be ear," naturally, but does a little gooW!atured banter among
SAVE UP to ·one half . Bring
lqb acbool students really burt? - HELEN
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Dear Ulllmpr ene ~:
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ..
Pomeroy.
'
...
Tbere are wlllstlers and WHISTLERs. (Remember, Mom?).
4·23·1fc
Some are junior ''dirty old men" who can 'I make it on their looks
II' penmalltlel, 110 they try pick-ups, U THEY notice you, It's a MEIGS SENIORS - Portraits
will be taken Saturday,
P!Jtllown, 'eauae they're alteJ: aU they~· ~~~ -:from girls who
~plem~ 18 and Saturday,
I'ltt* De they'll pe it.
~~ ·
.
September 25. Call now for
your appointment. Grover' s
· Oilier whlatlers are just friendly-type guys with an eye for
Studio, 992-2475, Middleport,
oute eblek•. It's a compliment if THEY notice you. When you
Ohio.
Je.m lbedifferenee, "Un,"you'llstop being so tough on ALLgirl9·15·91t

watcbers. -SUE

WIN AT BRIDGE

Zl

•void

.76f
t KJ654

• AQ832
WIST

EAST

.K9753

.AQI08642
•Qto
tQ

•a53
t82
• 75

.J

.964

soum &lt;D&gt;
.AK92
• o\10973

.KJlO

North-South vulnerable
West North F.lst South

e•

3t

Pus

It

3.

4N.T.

7t

Pus
Pass
Pus Pass
Pass
Opening lead-· 5
'

By O.Wald I&lt; James Jacoby
JACOBY MODERN uses
DOPI to show aces against
Blackwood interference. II
you can't remember: Double
witb zero, pass with one and
bid with two or more. Just
bear in mind that you double to say, " I don't think we
have slam." You pass to
•ay, "I think we may have
slam" and you bid to say,

"I'm sure we have slam."
II you want to use DOPE,

which is "Double odd- pass
even," DIPO, which is " Dou·
ble one - p a s s zero," or
DEPO, w h l c h is. "Double
even-pass odd," you will be
In some expert company but
we strongly favor the very
sImp I e and effective JACOBY MODERN DOPI.
Sometimes your opponenl

MAPLE,

beautiful

early

American style, stereo-radio

combination, AM-FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer .
Balance $71.59 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992·70115.
9·20-6tc

For Sale

6.9B. Plus
Part•

. : Blaettnar'~

949-4551
Rt.2

PHONE 992-2143

. 1. ... 011

Raclne,O.

"

POMEROY

HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

EXPERT

DIN IE'S
BEAlrtY SHoP

Wheel Alignment

15.55

Corner Union AvP..
and State Rt. 1
Hours-Monday, Tue5day,
Wedne5day and Friday
8:30a.m. to6p,m.
Thursday
10 a.m. to 1: 3D p.m.
Saturday
8:30a.m, to 1p.m.
PHONE 992-7474

-QUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094"

16 FT. SWISS Colony travel
And
trailer, good condition, $995. - - ' - -- - - - Phone 992-6329.
FARM and home latex house
.,
FURNITURE
·
9-20-6tc paint sale. King Builders
In and See Our
2 BLACK mlnlaI ure poodl e Supply, Middleport. 9·2-241c Stop
. I
Fl
puppies, male. Phone ' 992- P"'!"llll!lllll!~----... . oor 0 tsp ay,
6329.
~;;~;;;;.;;;;;;;.;~~:::::::.::::=:~
9-20-6tc
1
FOUR· NEW HOMES
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION
Help Wanted
ONE HOME IN RACINE
EARN AT home addressing
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
envelopes. Rush stamped
ONE
HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
self·addressed envelope. The
NO MONEY DOWN
Ambrose Co., o4J25 Lakeborn,
100
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
.
.
9-8-30tp
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
~~·~age rate.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Au~
MAINL'f e.ECUZ:

Opan BTII5
Monday thru S.turday
606 e. Moln, Pomeroy, o.

MRS. YOKUM, THEY
TELL US VOU ARE

·-

-----~

THECOMMUNIN

LEADER OF

EXPERIENCED

AX NOT WHAT A

Al-l IS TI-l '
CI-IAMPEEN
e.ARE -KNUCKLE

GOe&gt;8LmLOP ISAX ONL'f WHAT IT
KIN 00 FQ''{Q'~'

FIGHTER!.'

DOGPATCH-

Radiator Service

From the Lar&amp;eSI Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Bf.AE'i1NARS

Pomeroy ..

9·12-12tc

ROOFiNG l CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

For Rent
TRAILER space, electric and

2-12-lfc

water available, on Rt. 7, for
more informa11on call 667·

3245.

QUEEN

9·21·31p

Cons1.

remodeling,

9-19.3tc

1 BEDROOM trailer apartment. Ideal for couples.

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992·5248 or 992·3436.
9-21 -51c

9·21 ·41c

FURNISHED apartment on
Lincoln Hill, suitable for I or 2
people. Phone 992·3489.
1965 ELCAR, 2 bedroom mobile
9·21 .1fc
home, awnings , cement
porch, garage, storage
3 ROOMS and bath, furnished, building, fruit trees, garden
170'12 Mulberry, phone 992· area, on approximately 2
acres - Langsville 667-3978.
2431 alter 5 p.m .
, 9·21·61c

Roofing ,
aluminum

siding . Phone 992-7324.
8·25.1fc

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roollng I
Construdion Co. and An·,
thony .Plumbing &amp; Hoatlog.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Ajr Conditioning.
·
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
modern kitchen and bath, SEWING MACHINES. "Repair
serviCe, all makes. 992·2284,
buift. in cabinets, fuel oil
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
furnace, 1 acres just oft U. S.
Authorized Singer Sales and
33 by Enterprise United
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Methodist Church. Phone 9923·29·tfc
5679 after 5 p.m.
. ' .
.
9·21 ·31c
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, R1. 124.
Phone 992-2550
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Comptele front end service, Insured- Experienced
Call Danny Thompson, 9922196.
tune up and brake service.
Work Guaranteed
7.Ja.ttc · Wheels balanced elec·
Ironically . · All
work See us for
Fre!!
3 BE DRDOM brick home . guaranteed .
Reasonable Esfl'mate on Furnace
Choice location In Middleport.' rates. Phone 992-3213.
Seen by appointment only.'
1-21.Ifc L.:l:.:ns::;t.::a;.:la:.;:t:.:io::;n::,.,.,...---,-..,..-,,.--'
Phone 992·5523 after 4 p.m .
S-1·1fC ROSEBERRY furnace in· HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
stallation. Free estimates on
Service, Phone 992-2522.
new furnaces, oil or gas.
6-10-tfc
.
Service work. Call Cecil ---Roseberry, Racine, Ohio. TRENCHER and complete
water line lnslallatlon. Phone
Phone 614·843-2274.
985·3373
week days after 5
9-8-JOip
p.m. or weekends.
9-9-12tc
AWNINGS, storm doors and
608 East Main
windows. carpor1s,
POMEROY
C. BRADFORD. Auclloneei
marquees, aluminum siding
MIDDLEPORT - Ph story
Complete Service
and
railing.
Call
A.
Jacob,
BRICK, 2 nice bedrooms,
Phone 949·3821
sales
representative.
For
free
'
bath, nice kitchen, dining
Racine, Ohio
estimates, phone Charles
room , paneling, carpeting,
Crill Bradford
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
full width front porch, storage
Johnson and Son, Inc.
building, level lot. $6,950.00.

FURNISHED' 2 bedroom 2 GAS circulating heaters.
apartment, adults only, no Phone 992-5262 evenings.
pets, Middleport, phone 9929-21 -lfc
3874.
9-19-61c 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
left in layaway. Beautiful
APARTMENT, furnished room pastel color, full size model.
with bath, phone 992-2780 or All built-in to buttonhole,
overcast and fancy stitch.
992 .3432.
9·17-lfc Pay just S-48.75 cash or terms
- - - -- - - - avai able. Trade· Ins accepted.
Phone 992-5641.
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
9·21-6tc
Park, Minersville! phone 992-,--3324.
9-l?-6tc VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 modeL Complete with all
TRAILER space , desi rable cleaning tools. Small paint
neighborhood, phone 992·2084. damage in shipping. Will take
9.J9.tfc S27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641 .
9-21 ·61c POMEROY- I story frame, 3
3 ROOM apartmenl and balh.
Built-in electric wall oven and - - -- - - -- bedrooms, bath, basement, 2
glassed porches, front rorch,
table lop range, double bowl
garage, A STEAL AT JUST
sink, overlooking the Ohio BEAT the COLD WINTER
$5,500.00.
river, real clean and nice . and IT'S COST WITH
Phone Gallipolis 446-9539 HEATING OIL FROM
POMEROY - FAMILY HOME
alter 5 p.m.
CLOSE TO ELEMENTARY .
9-S·Ift LANDMARK.
We have the finest Budget
SCHOOL- 4large bedrooms,
closets, 11h ~~ths, large living
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile Pay Plan. Delivery Services,
Degree
Day
room with flrept/ace, hard·
Au1omatic
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
wood floors, gas forced air
Ohio. 992·2951.
Delivery and Duel Delivery
furnace.
garage
with
4-2-tfc Equipmen1.
renovated room over. ALLIN
We also have a complete line
GOOD CONDITION. GOING
FURNISHED and unfurnished of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
AT Sl8,SOD.OO.
apartments. Close to school, and Fur"'-ces.
PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
Phone 992-5434.
PROPERTY IN
·
POMEROY
10·18-lfc
I
Jacii:W.Carsey,Mgr.
CAPABLE HANDS
Phone 992-2111
HENRY E. CLELAND
For
REALTOR
Office
992·2259
1968 VW, good shape, will take APPLES - Fitzpatrick Of.
Residence 992-2568
chards, Slate Route 689,
older car or truck on trade,
9-t6-6tc
phone Wilkesville, 669·3785.
also Gravely Tractor and
equipment. McCullough 18"
9-3-lfc
Chain Saw, chain new, will
sell for sso. Phone 992-6702. GREEN BEANS, pick your
9-19·3tc own, $1.50 a bushel, Andrew
Cross, Racine, Ohio.
-::-:::c-:-:-:-::---:----:FEMALE Beeglepup - SS, also
9-3-l&amp;tc
male while toy Poodle - $55.
Phone 992·6931.
9-19·31c Auto Sales
BALDWIN Spinet piano. Ex- 1953 - v, ton Ford pickup truck
wilh dump bed - 5125. Ed·
Broker
cellent condition. Phone 949ward
Ball,
phone
992·6529.
110
Mechanic
Street
2224 alter 5 p.m .
9·21-3tc
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-J9.Jtc

Cleland
Realty

KOSCOT Kosmetics . Seplember Sales Special :
Kreamy Lip Kote S2 now
SI.SO, Frosllucenl Lip Kote
$2.50 now S2, 23 delicious
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161'12 "' .,h Ave.,
Middleport, Oh
8-29-lfc
will really jam you by jumping to the stratosphere. In
that case you may not be
Lost
able to show two or more MEDIUM sized black tom cat,
aces but you can still do while feet and whiskers,
something to help your part- white spot on nose, answers to
ner decide on the final con- the name of Joe Sox, wearing
tract. You simply double to flea collar. Anyone seeing
suggest penalizing your op- please contact Amanda
Murray 992-3406. Reward.
9·19·31c
ponents. You pass to suggest
a further bid by your part- - - - - - - - ner.
IN MIDDLEPORT, small black
N o r t h decides that his
and while female dog. If
spade void may make it pos·
found please call 992-7290.
9·21 ·31P
slble for South to score a
grand slam so he passes the i..ADY'S Black Onyx ring with
six spade interference. South
diamond selling in Farmers
Bank Parking lot. If found,
concludes that North holds
just about what be does and
call collecl 696·1183. Reward.
takes the plunge. East and
9-19-Jip
West can s a v e at seven
spades but they pass in the Employment Wanted
hope that their opponents
have gone one trick too high. WILL DO work of any sort' at
home or business . Clean
(NEW5PAPII ENTERPRISE .A55N.t
yards, wash windows or car,
paint, etc. Male, 19 years of
age. Write P.O. Box 57,
Middleport.
9-16·51c
The bidding has been:
BABYSITTING in home with
West Norlb ·l!'.ost
preschool children . Phone
992-3619.
Pass
It
Pass
9-19-3tc
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass
4 N.T.
Pass
Pass
6t
Pass
Instruction ·
You, South, hold:
SEMI·DRIVER
TRAINING.
.AK87.KZ tAK5.K832
We are currently offering
tractor trailer training
What do you do now?
A-Pass. You might bid six
through !he facilities of the -,-960
- -D-O_D_G
_E
-sc-h-ool bus,· 54 1967 PL YM
. OUTH Barracuda, SYRACUSE - 3 or 4 bedrooms,
following truck lines: Truck
no-trump in 1 match .. point
bath, gas furnace. ~rn
Line Dlslrlhulion Systems, passenger for camper , 1965 convertible, V-8, po~er
game, but in rubber bridge you
kitchen ..$12,000.00.
Inc. ,
Express
Parcel Chevrolet, 4 dr., V·8, 283. 2 · steering, stereo, ortg1nal
should stay in the suit ~ontract.
Deliveries , Inc. , Skyline axles and wheels for 10 fl. owner - $995. Phone 992-6005.
Deliveries, Inc . For ap- housetraller. Phone 94\'.2322
9·17-Stc MIDDLEPORT- 3 bedrooms,
TODAY'S QUESTION
If&gt; bath, basement. Garage. 10
plication and Interview, call or 949·3171. Bill Cozart.
What is your opening bid
acres.
512,000.00.
'66
PONTIAC
Grand
Prix,
2
dr.
30044-88o4J, or write School
9·19·31c
with:
hardtop, rebuilt engine, ex·
Safety Division, United - - - - - - - - - .J9742
tAKI087 oltAQ
Systems, Inc., C·o Terminal I:OAL, limestone . Excelsior. cellent condition, plenty of DEXTER - 6 room frame
home and 2 lots. $3,500.00 or
Bldg ., 5517 Midland Drive, &lt;atf Works, E. Main St.,i · extras - $1,295; '67 Honda 305
offer.
cc
Scrambler,
excellent
Charleston, West Virginia,
,&gt;omeroy. Phone 992-3891. 1
condition, rebuilt engine 25306.
.
•·9-lf&lt;
$495. Call 992-2392 after 5 p.m.
9·20-21c
9·19-6tc
PooDLE puppies, Silver l oy,
A thought for the day: John
Park view Kennels. Phone 992- - - -- - -- -'62 CHEVY, hardtop, tires like
_
Locke said, " It is one thing to 54o4J.
8-l5·1fc
new, 2 snow tires, good work
galleries k n o w n as the show a man that he is in error
car. Phone 992-5278.
"Press Gallery ," is set aside another to put him in posses: LARGE warm Morning coal
9·19·61c
for members of the press. . sion of the truth."
heater In good condition Q-What # the term of a
SJo. ea11 992-5105.
9. 19 _31P . Real Estate F(ll' Sale
U.S. Congress?
·'SIX ~OOM hpuse, bath, full
A- In point of time, a Con;&gt;asement •. 133 Butternut Ave.,.
gress commences Jan . 3 of
ITEM: Jack Kane:
PONY CART. Contact Jill tust walkmg distance from·
each odd-numbered year
downlown Pomeroy. Conlact
Houdashelt, Syracuse.
You somehow gel the
and continues for two years:
~d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswoo If\
.
9·21-Jtp
eeling he has tho"ghl
Llnve, Columbus, Ohio, phone
regardless of the number of
bout
what
he's HALF RUNNER beans, $2 237-4334, Columbus. ·
regular or special sessions
held.
.
bushel . Potatoes. Clarence
5·9-tlo
haring with you. Your
Pro1fill
,
Portland.
Phone
843· - -- - - - - - eeling is right.
Q- How did the rare ape
2254.
NEW, 3-bedroom home in
9-14-l fc Middlepo/'1 . Buill-in t.itchen,
of Sumatra and Borneo re.
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
c e i u e the name " orang·
U.tJtl"?
1970 KAWASAKI, soO cc, Milch heat, gooc! neighborhood. Can
Ill. S6SO . Contac• Larry Hill, arrange FHA financ ing .
A- The name comes from
Telephone 992·3600 or 992Chester, Ohio, 9b5·4105.
~ Malay word meaning
9·21-3tc 2186. .
man of the woods."
.
7·25·1fc ·

Jam-packed Slam Bidding
NOB'I'II

Special
AI

WALNUT, modern style,
stereo-radio, AM. FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
separate controls. Balance
$63.97. Use our budget terms.
Call 992·7085.
9·20.6tc

Po11eroy Motorr Co.

Residential,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hour Service

Re.(harge

speed automatic changer,

OPEN I!VES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROV. OHIO

Jictures.

Inspection and
9·21 ·301p

automatiC trans., radio, clean Interior.

Con~itioning ·

Ai

1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1595
HT Cpe., 1owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine, wide oval .tires,
P.S., P.B., factory alrcond ., radio&amp; other extras.
1968 DODGE DART4'DOOR
$1495
270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,

O'BRIEN
ElfCfRIC SERVIcE

Sale

Virgil B.

TE~ORD

GASOUNE ALLEY

C)

•

~

5·11·1fc

HACKNEY'S Electric Service,
all types of electrical work.
Phone 992·64fJ7.
9-16·61c

.

.

11IE

111£1\oWfSTER

lEFT l:llRICl

ORfJ~!:!QI
PISlUIIllfP •·

.

THE SHOP, Custom meat
cutting. Pleasant Rld!le Road,
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, 992.
3374 and Dale Little, 992·6346.
9-12·301c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, -LEGAL NOTICENOTICE OF SALE
· Gallipolis . John Russell ,
The real estate of the late Ed
O•mer &amp; Operator.
s. Grant, Deceased, whlc:h Is
5-13·11&lt; . known as Lots 166 and 167 In
,.

' BACKHOE ANb OOzE Rv,,;.i&lt;:
Septic tanks Installed. George
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2418.
4·25·1ft
'READY-MIX
CONCR ~ ~ ·
•~
de IIvered right to your
projec1. Fasl and easy. Free
esl11n'ates . Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln

'

·

Palmer's Addition to the VIllage
of Middleport, Ohio, except tor
17 feet 61nc:hes off the northerly
side ot Lot 166, will be Offered
for sate at the offices of Crow,
Crow &amp; Porter, A1torneys at

AfWliB
1.,.... fw

2966.

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

..... .......
...... --t
. ....._
e4

....,

. · and the property will be sold

lt.C&gt;tt 7 Ill

tfct· subject
to the lien for real estate
6. 30_
ta:tes for 1971 .

l&amp;. 'l'le
1f. 1

Estate of Ed s . Grant,
Deceased.

Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
,
6·1S.tfc .!Attorneys tor Admin istratrix

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Mobile Homes for Sale
Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE .
No down paymenl, 12 years to
pay to qualified GI. Up to
$2,500 available for lot fm .
provements If you own a lot,
Gel your new mobile home
now. See James Simpkins,
Valley Estates Mobile Home
Sales, R't. so East Athens 593·8762.

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a round.

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Law , Pomeroy, Ohio, at 1:00
P.M. on Friday, October lsi,
1971 . This property Is eppralsed
at SIO,OOO .oo, and cannot be sold
for tess than the appraised

AUTOMOBI Li:'ln;J'rance been ·
caocelled?
Lost
your ,
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House ·Approves Nine Day Bill Dis~=~:J~U::"s:!J
.

COLUMBUS (UP!) -

The Committee Monday night, 15.4. lhe · vllrious austerity alterna- Istration of "stockpiling money meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
JlouseFinanceCommi~Mon- It is designed to give law. uves.
to cover deficits lbat may or highschoolinaspecialsession.
daynight~lidedforftoor makers fD at;lditional nine days
Netzley, ~htold and Rep. may not occur in February."
passage a supplemental appro- to resolve a conftict over a two- Lloyd George Kerns, R-RayNetzleycomplainedtheadminpriation of $15} miillon to fi. year budget and tax package. mond, chairman of the commit- istration closed parks during
DATE IS OCT. I
nance school, welfare and men- No solution was in sight as of tee, questioned Tepper at length September and October, w~ch The Riverview PTA carnival
•"" ~-ti·on paY· Monday.
and
I will be held
tal hygl·ene -..........
about the park closings, welfare figureS showed were the best
rmnrnage sa e
.ments through the end of the ThecommitteeactionfoDowed caseloads and revenue esli· revenue. producing months of Oct. 9 instead of Oct. 8, Mrs. L.
month.
·
a !eng.thy dt'scusst' on during males·.
the
Balderson said
year.
·
The proposal, adopted by the whiehseveraJ»-•blicanmemBechtold ccused the admin
Tepper replied •L-- f;•
,_,...
a
•
""""' ..,ures
committee on a 15-1 vote, con- bers intensely questioned slate
represented revenues received
tains $44.9 miltion for the opera- Budget Director Jay 0 . Tepper ,4 J. ,.....,
from pre-Labor Day activity.
ITEM CORRECI'ED
lion of elemeniary and second- about the administration's aus- .I'VMT:f • ·
veT
"Were it to have been a vin· Kenneth Barry Paine, 29,
ary schools, $46.4 million for terityprogrsmandrevenueesll·
dictive move on our part," Tep- Harris~nville, who accidenlally
public welf
. are programs and...
mates.
L;~~,.
per sat·d, ..we could ha ve closed shot himself
was found Iymg
••
~~
.
miltion for mental hygiene and Inserted in the bill was a $2.7
the parks before Labor Day." beside hts car by Mr. and Mrs.
correction.
million appropriation to allow 0 __ __;,
Police were caDed to ' the Doug Reeves, not Mr. arid Mn.
1
It also conlains a $2.7 miltion Ohio school districts threatened LIIVIUU
horne of Taflinger, a local store Doug Reed as was reported.
appropriation to allow Ohio with closings to borrow money
operator, and found the child. -w·lll!lll·~!lli!IIIIIIIIBIIIi8B1111811888i81111881
school districts threatened with to sustain them until after the
CINCINNATI (UPI)
"
.
,.._ 1
li
f boats The coroner was notified but
•.
1
closing to borrow money to sus- November elections.
v.,..ra· ors ill censes ulred
or 'thin has not issued a verdict. Police ~~'nduc*"~n
•
..,
0 J"~ew
1
obab
lain themuntilafterthe Novem- This amendment was adopted, pr
Yw bereq
WI
later filed the first-degree mur•
10
27
U
S
·ber elections if they wish to put 17-2, behind the quarterbacking
years, a -year ·'d · Coast
n
•~
on S un day
h
der charge against the fa !her. .rasour
operating levies oo the ballot. of House Speaker Ch3rles F. Guard v et eran sat
ere
The latter provision was in- Kurfess,R-BowlingGreen, who Monday night.
h~~~ewi=~ ~~~of
~ induc~on for the Rev.
Conunander M. John Stewart, wanted to protect le rights of Dwtgbt Zavttz, new pastor of
serted by the committee 17-2 un- made a rare committee appearder the guidance of llouse aute·to watch it pass.
who heads the Port of Cin- Taflinger to a fair trial.
the Middleport, Syracuse and
Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, R- The money would be loaned cinnati, said the prediction was - - - - - - - - - - HarrisQnville First United
Bowting Green.
to school district which are hiS personal opinion, but added ·
Presbyterian Churches, will be
The bill, which is e~peeted to certified as wtable to operate lbat he felt the official stance of Vernon Donohue.
held at 8 p.m. Sunday at the
go to the House Door Tuesday, and which have operating lev- the Coast Guard was moving in Mrs. Flossie Church of Middleport church.
also contains language notifying ies on the November ballot. The that direction.
Marion spent a weekend with
The Rev. Russell Lester will
colleges and universities they districts would have to pay the
Stewart predicted licenses Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams. conduct the services with
may make sludent loans with mooey back to the state later. would be required in order to Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien, members of the congregations
the exception IIH!y will be re- The bill also contains Jan. drive any type of boat on any Jinuny, Linda, and Carol, spent of
the
Syracuse
and
imbursed later by the state.
guage notifying colleges and inland waterway·
Sunday wilb Mr. and Mrs. Rex Harrisonville churches to join
The measure, containing $44.9 universities they may mate stu"! would favor licensing on O'Brien at Stewart, Ohio
the Middleport group. The Rev.
miltion for the operation of dent loans with the apectation the state level," he said. Mr. and Mn. Jess BeD and Zavitz and wife, Ruth, are
elementary and secondary they will be reimbursed later by "Perhaps we should have. ·~e Otho BeD of Baltimore, Md. moving to Middleport this.week
schools, ~.6 miltion for pubtic the state.
boating' classes. Education IS spent a weekend with Mr. and from Ossian, Ind. A reception
welfare,$43miltionforbigbway
This provision was inserted. the secret to boatmg safety." Mrs. Don Bell .and Lorna and will follow the induction in the
Stewart, a ll_lember of a panel they all attended the Bell social rooms of the. church. AU
projects and $7 million for men- unanimously at the request of
tal hygiene and corrections, was Rep. Robert E . Netzley, R- tha~. mvest1gated a bo~t reunion at State Park, Rt. 33, memliers of the three churches
approved by lhe House Finance Laura
collision near here on the Ohio Saturday.
are urged to attend.
· Cat From Bill
River lbat killed seven persons Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hill and
Left out of the bill were lastmonth,madethecomrnents daughter, DoDy, arrived home Clarence Story and daughter
eartier Republican proposals to on a local WCKY radio talk after a visit with the fonner's Rosatie of Darwin.
freeze fees and salaries at state program.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill Sunday guests of Mr. and
(Continued from Page I)
univ~ties and to force the
at Moore Haven, Fla. They Mrs. Owen Anderson were Mr.
..
openmg of state parks, closed
WI'~ Saturday night guests of and Mrs. Jim Bennett and
that new poles had to be erected under the Gilligan administrar'n. DoDy Wolfe.
five cbildren of Ripley, W. Va .;
m order to connect overhead. lion's austerity program.
Mr. and Mrs. John Rhodes of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Riffle of
cable.
Rep John A Bechtold R "'North Bend, Nebraska spent a Ravenswood, W. Va.; Mrs.
~'::: servi~.! ~~1 cinnaU,askedTepperifUte~:
week with Mr. and Mrs. Owen Maudie Snyder and Wilbur
.cqmp
uz
·
ernor would reopen the parks if
Anderson, and Bart and Joe Ransom of Delaware called
Mees satd.
the legislature furnished the
Rhodes and called on other Saturday evening on the AnThe mayor reported on his money and directed the DepartBy Mn. Herbert Rousb
relatives. The Rhodes were dersons. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
atte~ at the five-day Ohio ment of Natural Resources to
Tom Nice of Chester visited accompanied by their grand· Anderson and children of Keno
Stale Ftre_Scboohponsored by do so.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Loyd daughter, Chriss Miller, also of Ridge called Wednesday
the Vocational Trade and InTepper replied the funds were Nice.
North Bend.
evening.
Mn. Bert Hunt and Miss Jean Mrs. Jess BeD of Baltimore, Mrs. Herbert Roush called on
dustrial Education Service, already available and thegoverStale Department of Education, nor made an "administrative de- Ashley visited Sunday evening Md. and Mr. and Mn. Don BeD Mrs. Lettie Spencer at Syracuse
at Ohio State University.
cision" to close the parks. He withMr. andMrs. EizaBirchat called on Mn. Enna Wilson Sunday afternoon.
He noted that he would tike to said the governor woulci slick Racine.
•
Sunday afternoon. Other guests Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner,
see firemen take the Tltl to this decision on grounds it
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace of of Mrs. Wilson were her son, Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Thompson
course. "We have a good fire was "least detrimental to the Racine spent Labor Day -Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson and spent a weekend camping at
Shadyrest park at Rutland. Mr.
department, and good men, and public health and safety" amoog weekend with the former's family.
· they should bave liP to dale
brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Quillen and Mn. Dale Bachner were
methods
of
fire
figh"M··"
Legar
D•UGIITER
BORN
said.
~'6
n
Frederick ·at South Shore, Ky. left for a visit with the fonner's dinner guests of the Warners
Mr. and Mrs. Larry SeUers,
Agnes Weeks, Mabel Moore brqllter, Mr. and Mrs. Harold and Fergersons Sunday.
The mayor's report for 120 Stille St., Pomeroy, are arid Elbel Smith of Pomeroy·, -Quillen in Arizona.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor
August showing receipts in the anniiiDicing the birth of a seven and Mrs. Ann Coe of Racine
Sunday guests of Mrs. Ada returned to their home in
amount of $79UO was ap- pound, three ounce daughter, spent a day recently with Mrs. Norris and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Racine after a week's visit with
proved.
Ann Marie, Sepl 13 at the Mildred Spencer and assisted Glockner were Mr. and Mrs. their children in Columbus.
Attending were Mees, Rizer, Holzer Medical
Center, her in quilting.
·

r Dri

....,. on ·
Shirp.

f

0:

Parking wt

Apple Grove

News, Events

Lucien RusseD,
Poulin, Ralph
Werry,
Ebna
Don Collins,
council members; Legar, Jane
Walton, clerk, and Phyliss
Hennessy, treasurer.

. MEIGS lHEATR£
TONIGHT

Seplember 21

THE REIVERS
(Toc:ionicolorl
Steve McQueen
Sharon Farrell

GP

A MAN
CALLED HORSE
(Tecllnicolorl
Richard Harris

Gallipolis.
and cbildren,
Mn. Sellersa
have two Mr.
other
daughter, Cheryl, and a son,
Larry, Jr. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sellers,
Portland, and Waller While of
Pomeroy.
GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 will
hold inspection and election of
officers at an 8 p.m. meeting
Thursday at the heme of Mn.
Elizabeth Roush. Refreshments
of h&lt;memade ice cream, cake
and pie will be served.

GP
Show Starts 7 P.M.

LODGE TO MEET

Wednesday &amp; Tllursday
September 22-23

NOT OPEN

Olester Lodge 323, Daughters
of America, will meet at 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the ball. Quarterly
birthdays will be observed and
potluck refreshments served.

Bear._ . ·

· .. ~....,

--

·

Dr Lo

of x·

11 Lusb

~

· y,

'de 1 :•• By Bob Hoeflich

n
entu,~, Christian College
at GrafSOD, Ky., will be the
-~-- he lbe
addi
.,......... w n
new
'lion.
of the Middleport Church of
Christ is. dedicated
_ at 2 p.m.
Sunday m a pubti_c
house
.
F D
1 will be
0
1
prog~. owmg
a
pres!

·1

~

·

~ of the Glltlac

.

.. &lt;.w
.

.

in 1110

lJetlotal To 1lae lnmatJ Of Tlae Meig.·MtJMJn Area

'I

·

.._ 81111 Mrs Carl
QUte a lot of acilemenl at 1be home of"" ·
•
Moore In Pumel'oy recenUy and 1111811 wander.
A""igbbcr,"'~~·Mi'...:, _ __._wbellbedlacoveredl
- - - """"" ""'
.,_,...,
small 'c mrbead --Le.lle c:aJied 11 to the attentian of Mr.llld
..,.,..
""""
Mrs. Moore. 'lbe trio ended up cliacOvel'inl 15 of the eigl!t.lilcb
~~":~,...:;:- .:::!~ snakes on and near ~ Moore jJIGjldty. "Marna" ls slill em the
former members of the church loose, boweV!Or. ,The lilll"'l cmes are 110 more.
have been formaUy invited.
THE REV. AND MRS. Charles SIDMII• and children spent
Presenting an organ-piano
their
wcation this year in a slow m~ trip to Philadelphia,
prelude will be Mn. Harold
camping aloog tbe way.
Lohse and
At one point their camping took.them to a stale park near tbe
Pla'ns for ~=~!:i
forcos• over """,000 were drawn by Cannel!(II Baptist Oturcb where' the Rev- Mr. SlnMIIs "'
_,
merly
a
pastor.
Near
Pittsburgb,
they
watched
a
Bol)J1rood
film
Don Erwin of Middleport. Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds is cbainnan of being made at a beach Dear tbe Stuybook F«est with Rllbert
.
.
lhe prn&lt;lram planning com- Mitcbum the star.
...,,
The Simons, camping near Gettysbirg, toured that blstmic
mittee.
place and visited Dulcb WOIIderland, a miniature Ili!neyland, In
the Pen!Bylvania Dulcb Coonty. Tbey rode em 1be rail car which
was ~!Sed for the Bart.'a Sleisand !Ibn, ''Hello pony." AI Beubey,
BAN CHAIN GANGS
Pa., the family toured the Hershey Olocolale Co. facilities and
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) then went to Plilladelpbja to see their motliers, Mrs. Rlcbelieu
- The stale assembly voted Simons and Mn. Eva Carpel. Of course, bist«:ical points of infmal passage and sent to Gov.
terest in the Quaker Oty were also visited.
Ronald Reagan Monday
legislation to abolish prisoner
SETH NICHOL9)N, RU'l1.AND, started getting bills before
chain gangs in California.
his birth - two years before.
Be bas in his poss ioo a bill for fiUII sent in his name by
the JohnS. Davies and Scm Co., and dated Aug. 7,1111111. 'lbe billls
ELLINGTON PRAISED
forflooring,doorsandwindows
-a quantity for such a low price.
MOSCOW (UPI) - Duke
Ellington and his orchestra Seth believes that the bill should bave been made out ID his
completed their premier grandfather, Philip W. NicbOO!on,and that lbecxmpanyccmfuled
Russian performances in the name with that of a neigblvr, Seth Paine, and thus the bill was
Leningrad Monday and made out to Seth Nicholson, mere tban two years before.be was
received high praise from born.
critics for helping the Soviet
MR. AND MRS. G. E. OONROY will be relurning to Meigs
people "understand the soul of
the Negro people."
Crunty this week to make lbelr heme In lbe Cbesteo- area. The
Cooroys bave been residents of Ab'on smne 30 years wbes'e Mr.
Cooroy bas been employed by Goodrlcb Tire and Rubber Co.
IN ROOM 171
Carl Rairden, Hartford, age
36, not 21 as reported eartier, is
in room 176 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital recovering from inBOO.TJ'ERS TO MEET
PLEASANT VALLEY
The
Meigs Local Athletic
juries upon being struck by a
ADMISSIONS:
John
car driven by William R. Hayes, Browning, Point Pleasant; Boosters will meet at 7:30
Jr., Syracuse, on SR 7 near Aylon V. Curry, Wmfield; Mn. Tuesday (tonight) at the high
Eastern High School on Sept. 14. J. Lionel Greer, New Haven; school.
James Cooper, Point Pleasant;
Cynthia Smith, Henderson;
SALE PLANNED
Mn. Arnold Kingery, BidweD,
HORSE SHOW SET
Silver Memorial Free Will and Mrs. William HaU, Rutland. The Sandy Valley Trail
Baptist Church will hold a
DISCHARGES : Tammy Riders Club will hold a horse
rummage sale Thursday, Adkins, Terry Adkins, Kevin show at 7 p.m. Saturday at
Friday and Saturday in the Fry Hutson, Otho Thomas, Luther Ruby Lakes, Sandyville, W. Va.
Building, Mill Street, Mid- Greenlee, Mrs. D. T. Craig, Prizes will be money and ribdleport.
Conrad Berkeley, Shannon bons.
Norlbup, Jutia Johnson, Roger
While, Donald Nibert, Carrie
MEETING SET
BEIJ.ING PLANNED
Smith, Hattie Radcliff, Charles
The September meeting of the
A belling and shower IVill be Connally; Mrs. Mervin Roush Women's Association oc the
given for Mr. and Mr.&lt;. · John and son, Cline Erwin, Mrs. Middleport -First United
Domigan Saturday at 8 p.m. at David Parsons.
Presbyterian Church will be
Hemlock Grove Grange Hall.
BIRTH: Sept. 21, a son to Mr. held on Thursday, Sept. 30,
Everyone is welcome to attend. and Mrs: William Hall, Rutland. instead of this week.

VOL XXI~ NO. 112.

Mr. over
and Mrs.
Ralph Shain
spent
the weekend
wiUt • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Th&lt;imas Reed and farnily at
Columbus.
Mrs. Pearl Adams, Mrs.
•
Douglas Johnson, Sr., Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson of
Racine attended the WeaverW'tlbarger reunion at Ostrander
a recent Sunday.
Friends were sorry to lose a
neighbor, Robert Wood, who
passed away at Holzer Medical
Center due to a heart allack.
Mr. Wood had been an lnvatid
for several years.
Mike and Ann Swarts and
Paula Ware of Dixon, m. spent
a vacation with their grandmother and uncle, Mrs. Eula
Wolfe and son, Aaron.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue
and son, Brian, of Marion spent
a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.

SPECIAL!

Showing of Lees and Other Fine Carpets
This Week On The 2nd Floor

HERE IS WHERE IrS AT.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

open_
•

Ietnam
•

i'

\.

who voted for the declaration .
are considered pro-Thieu .
To reorganize the election,
Thieu would have w resign and
turn over the reigns of
government to lhe senale
speaker, who would set a dale
for a new campaign.
" With a war to be resolved, it
is necessary to consolidate the
legal basis and the support of
the population for the governthe nation ."
A number of the senators ment," lhe senate resolutjon

the senate by speaker Nguyen
Van Huyen. a political ally of
Tbieu after three hours of
debate.
II said the senate was calling
on Thieu and his vice presidential running mate, former
Prime Minister Tran Van
Huong. '·to respond to the right
demands of the Vietnamese
people and to respect the law of

•
1eu
said.
" ... We call on the population
to make all efforts within the
framework of the law to save
the country in these critical
hours. "
Sen. Vu Van Mao, leader of
the senate's opposition bloc,
said "No one sbould compete
"'lb himself. It's lilte competing with ones shadow. This
election is a farce and a waste
of money."

conduct a sale of advanced
tickets at a cost under those sold
at the door.
While last year's Big Bend
production was staged in October on two nights in the new
high school auditorium, thi&gt;
year's musical will be held one
night only, also in the new
school. Date for lhe production
bas been set for Nov. 19.
Rehearsals for the musical
will get underway in the near
future Wider the direction of

Bob Hoeflich. ·The cast will stage decorations.
include veteran performers and The Pomeroy Elementary
new Went.
School will be the rehearsal
location until the week
Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer, a preceding the show when the
vocal music instructor in the cast will move into the new
Meigs School Disbict, will train auditorium for !inal sessions. F.
a choral group for the 0. Day, a professional sound
presentation . The art depart- canpany of Marietta, has been
ment of the high school under employed to provide the sound
the supervision of Mrs. system. Day operates the public
Margaret EUa Lewis is again address systems used at the
invited to make posters to Meigs County Fair and at the
promote lhe show and to create Big Bend Regatta.

o:ms.

DAVID W. SIIIIH

Campaign Opens Oct. 13Smith of
Democrats of Meil!S County
will get together for a dinner ~
evening of Wednesdat, Oct. 13
to kick off the camJ!aigns of
candidates for local offices and
to hoSt the Tenth Cont:\-essional
District Democrat! Action
Club in its ftrst bijlllonthly
meeting in Meigs C&lt;ilnty of
several years.
Spokesmen for the Meigs
Democratic Executive Committee said they expeft this
November will see 1otlycontested races in Middleport
and Pomeroy.
The dinner will be in the

social rooms of the Masonic
Temple in Middleport, and will
be prepared and served by the
Evangeline Chapter of the
Eastern ·star, also of Middleport.
The Democratic Action
Committee meets in different
cities of lhe district twice
monthly . Meigs Democratic
Chairman E. A. Wingett of
Racine is immediate past
president of the DAC.
A probable topic of the
district leaders and several
county chairmen will be
reapportionment. By the time

the Democrats meet, lhe new
district tines wiD have been
announced.
The menu for the dinner of.
fers cubed steak, mashed
potatoes and gravy, green
beans and corn, slaw, roDs and
pumpkin pie with topping for
dessert. A crowd of 2IJ0.300 is
expected.
Tickets for the dinner may be
obtained from Democratic
precinct committeemen or by
calting 992-3189 or 949-2441.

(---------------------------,
1\.T
•
B . ...f.
I

1 ~ews

:

..• rn

rre1 s : Explained
1

By UDited Praa InteruUoul

Japan Supports U, S. in UN
UNil'ED NATIONS "-JAPAN'S announced support of the
United Slates' intentions ~seat both Chinas was hailed today a, a
major windfall in Presidenf Nixem's efforts to seat both countries.
'lbe first test of 1be potiqy ls ezpecled to come next 111&lt;11th,
allbougb a cballenge to Natiooallst Olina's right to sit in the
'
General A nb)y could q»me
today.

Bomben Speed Up Raiding
SAIGON-ll.S.115l'a ca:;ried out the heaviest bombing raids
north of the Demilltamed ~ (DMZ) in six months today, ac·
cording to the U. s. COJD!II"1oi. A command SJX'ke•man said the
raids were ordered becatllle North Vietnam bad increased its
allaircraft 1!J118 by 40 per 1*11 in less than two months. Hanoi
Radio claiiD"'' two
figbler.OO.Obers have been shot
downsiDceyeslerday. The U. ~.c&lt;mmanddenied the claim.

OOWMBUS -SlATE A~ITOR Joseph T. Ferguson said
today that tlree more Ohio ac
districts are in "bad financial
flhape and may bave to close
ir doors to students sometime
befcre the elld ci 1be year." F
n said CaldweD Exempted
Village SchuG District in Noble Coonty would have to close about
Oct. I; PrebJe.Sbawnee Local , hooiJ District in Preble County
about Oct. 31, and Norlbmont Local School District in Montgomery County about Nov. 19.
. Ferguson said their m1y ~ to closing Would be for
district voters to IIJIIII'OVe addlti&lt;;W operating levi"', for Ute Ohio
General.Ais mbly to approve aclditiouJ school money or for the
.(Continued on Page 8)

Three accidents were in·
vestigated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. Tueaday. No one
was injured.
At 10:55 a.m. on SR 124 in
Syracuse Belly Marie Foley,%&gt;,
Syracuse, traveling southeast,
made a left band turn in front of
a vehicle driVI!D by Barry
·Wayne Hart, 11, Racine, Rt. 1.
Mrs. Foley wu cited to court
fart.lhlretoyleldri&amp;btol-y.
1'bere .,.ligbt cJvntce to 1be
F"'- car llllldlum to llltrt't.
YWI

'

. ...

I .andfill Is

I

Driver Ci~ In Syracuse

MIDDlEPORt. OHIO
her Jl'elllenl Dlp. .l ...,.__ Ctrper•IIUIIi

s at

The Meigs Local School
District Athletic Boosters
Tuesday night voted to sponsor
the annual "Fall Follies" of the
Big Bend Minstrel Association .
Kermit Walton, president,
said committees will be announced soon to assist with the
annual production. Last year's
spoosoring organization was the
Meigs High School Alblelic
Board. The boosters will sell an
advertising program in connection with the show and will

lflE:sE AJq: THE WINNERS fur best oosl!nn"!! at the annual rush party of Obio Eta Phi
Oaapw ol Be~ Sigma l'lli Sorority beld Tuesday night at the Middleport First United
Pre!bjlerim~.An "Around the World" theme was carried out for the annual event. Cocbalrmen were Mrs, Judy Werry and Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield. The winners from the left are
Mrs. Cllrd ~ougb, the windmill for Bolland; Mn. Carolyn Satterfield, Spain; Mrs.
Martha McPbai13 ~a, and Miss Elaine
Morocco. Judges were Mn. Evelyn Knight,
adviP'; Mrs. GIOI1a Qooss and Bob Hoeflich.

More Schools in &amp;d Shape

.ELBERFELD$
IN
PO.
M
EROY
Don t Forget! Now Is The Time To Buy

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Booster Group to Stage
Minstrels' Fall Follies

BELFAST, NOR111ERN IRELAND - Several buildings,
including the U. S. cansulate, were damaged in bomb blasts
'fuesdly nigbl. &amp;llplng attacks Clllltinued, wounding two British
..Idirn and two policemen. 'J1ie wounds were not serious, British
~m~y !pOlremteD said.

The modern way to pay bills
and keep records. Now, in
bright colors and designs
they also make nice gifts.
Come in today and choose a
color.

nate
SAIGON (UPI )-The South Nguyen Cao Ky and Gen.
VieiNm Senate today urged Duong Van " Big" Minh dropped
President Ngu)1!D Van Tbieu to out, would heed the plea.
call lfi the Ocl 3 presidential Thieu has said he would
election and let the speaker of resign from office if he did not
the senate ' ~" the receive at least 50 per cent of
voting.
· the vole from the estimated
'lbe senate, in a special seven million eligible voters,
session, pa I a resolution but similar requests by Ky for
making the request. It aJ&gt;- a postponement and reorganiza.
peared unlike!)• that Thieu, the lion of the election were turned
only candidate left on the down .
election after VICe President The declaration was read to

BWr. Damage B~ildings

CHECKING
ACCOUNTS

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1971

•

Americ+n

Your Dutch Flower Bulb.
In The Hous~res Department Oil Main Floor

Mostly SIIIUl)l and mild ~Alday
with highs in the IIPP'!I' • and
low 70s. Inct"eaSing C)noK!h s
and not so coolllllligbt filb lows.
in the upper 40s and lfiW' 50s.
~ostly cloudy with little tempera lute change Tbutsdliy.

. . slar1lid in 1248 and COin·
pleted, ~to the orlgliw

"~

·

W~thet

~lbedud. ID Calogne, Germany

I

·Of
the
Bend
For .IJedieation :~
:
·
·1
·
.

Now You Know

At3:30 a.m. on County Road

35 Roy Edwards Sears, 24,
Charleston, W. Va., drove his
truck of! the edge of the highr ay and over an embankment,
~Lopping upside down.
A14:10 p.m. on SR 124, three
rfllles northeast of Kerrs Run,
Jimmie Darrell Dyer, 33,
Eacuse, was traveling
theast when gravel from a
headed northeast bit the
f I of the car causing damage
to the IJrill and hood.
I

.

Representatives of all
township trustees met with the
county cornmissiooers Tuesday
to sludy the proposed county
landfill.
Explaining the proposed
landfill were Jack CUmmins of
the Ohio Valley Health Ser·
vices, Pete Shields of the
Agricultural Stabilization
Conservation Service and
Bernard Fultz, prosecuting
attorney.
The trustees will be
responsible for fmding suitable
locations for placing containers
for pickups in each township, it
was reporte•l.
The resignation of Barbara
Shuler as a member of the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation was accepted.
Named to replace Mn. Shuler
was Mrs. Jean Morgan.
In other business, the commissioners approved a spot
repair project for County Road
I and 10 at a total cost of $6,741,
submitted by County Engineer
Theodore Beegle.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Bob Clark and Warden
Ours, Commissioners, and Mn.
Martha Chambers, cler~.
...·• •,. ,•,.. '•..,.,. .. . .· .·, ·.·.•.· ,• :-:· ·!-. -:·. ··:,v-:·.·., •.•,·
BARD LINER WINS
BREMERTON , Wash.
(UPI)- An 18-year-eld yoaa
who c.olt a liard IIDe aa
disclplille beat lbe scboel
board cbalrmau in aa eiecUo.
bere Tuelday.
WUllam H. L)'llclt, a m1
graduate of West Beremerloll
Hlf!b School gel Z3 per ceat ef
lite vote, wblle lneumbelll
Eldoa Matlock garared ..ty
21 per cent iD lbe primary.
L)'llch campalped fer dercover narcotics acula
and more discipline I•
schools.
. . .-:•.•,•,••,•, •.•.•,•.•.•,•,•,• ,·.· ·.····.·.•.••.·..·
MARRIAGE UCENSE
Clinton Wayne Klein, 19,
Pomeroy, and Kathy Looise
Wehrung, IS, Pomeroy.

Committee Unimpressed

WASHINGTON (UP! )- Rep. to appropriate the necessary Ohio, who also testified before
Clarence MiUer, R.Qhio, Tues- money."
the committee, urged a total
day testified hugestrip nurung Aspinall !hen asked Miller ban on strip mining or at least
ma_cbines have "come to sym. how much it would cost to re- a five-year moratorium along
bolize the means by which man claim the stripped land, but with a program of federal recausethemostdra~tiCdisruJ&gt;- Miller could give no precise search and development into
UonofhisnaturalenvLronment." figures.
all aspects of strip mining and
but it apparently made tittle im- Rep, Ed Edmondson, ().()kla., reclamation.
press1on on a House Interior subconunittee chainnan, said Edmondson noted that a resubconumttee.
lhe bill would lead to more un- cent study showed automobile
MASON - Wabama High
Miller testified before the sub- derground mining and the "hu- tires were a great source of
School Principal Cbarles conuruttee m regards to a bill man costs" had to be consid· pollution and asked whether
!here should not be a ftve year
Chambers bas announced he_ mtroduced calling for stiip ered.
Wahama High School's David Dllne legtSlati?n lbat would re- Edmondson said deep mines m..-atorium on tires. Seiberling
W. Smith has been named a ~e that mined land be re- produce only one and one third is a member of an Akron tire
Semifinalist in the 1971·7% claimed "to the extent that the times as much coal as strip- manufacturing family.
National Merit Scholarship land may be used for at least ping with four times as many
Program.
lhe same purposes it coul~ have workers, seven times as many
Rep. Craig Hosmer, R-Catif.,
~~
~-and been .but pnor to the begmmng deaths and eight times as many said Seiberling's proposal was
of Dllnmg.
injuries.
an "extremist position" and
~~~,!i;!~o~=~~ 1:,;: " Our part of the stale has Miller claimed the land could asked whether there should not
.....--·
' ~nationalatlentionforhav- be reclaimed without driving be a five year ban on people
•·until we decide what to do
are among the nation's most mg some of the world's largest mining underground.
intellectually talented high earth-moving eqwpment," Mil·
Rep. John F . Seiberling, !). about them."
school seniors. Tbe)' will Jer said. "These gigantic maccompete for SliDe J.lm Merit hines-capable of moving up to
Scholarships to be awarded in 325 tons of overburden in one
1972.
gulp - are a testament to the
They were highest Sltaas in great technological progress we
U...O: states oo _lbe Na~onal have made in lhe last 25 years,"
Ment Scbolarship Qualifying he said.
Test (NMSQT ) given last "But they also have come to
Febnwy to more than &amp;55,000 symbolize the means which Michael Struble, son of Mr.
Struble explained how the
students in abooll6,~ schools. man can cause the most dra- and Mrs. Joe Struble, a senior Boys' State representatives are
'"lbese students briDg bon« malic disruption of his natural at Meigs High School, gave a trained in the pl'oc
s of
not only to '!~"Plv~ hut also environment," Miller added. comprehensive report of his election~. He described the visit
tothell'~~~· Rep. Wayne N. Aspinall, !). attendance at Boys' State in by Astronaut Neil Armstrong
and !hell' canmumlies. The Colo., committee chairman, Ashland last summer to Drew who commented on movies
future success II tbl!se young said, " It's fine to set all these Webster Post 39, American shown of his Oight and landing
(Continued oo Page I)
idealistic goals but its difficult Legion, Tuesday nigbl
on the moon. Also visiting Boys'
State was William O'Neil, a
former governor of Ohio, now
the Supreme Court's Chief
Justice in Ohio.

Wahama
In Semis

::nO(

Struble Reports
On Boys ' State

MAYO QJIUC GIWlUADS Pat Edailt~ IIIli J)ml Gntbne are the new Pbysital
1Laij 1 h at~ 1 w " r• ill Bolpital. 'lbe Physical 'Iberapy lleparlmel!t wbicb they
beatlllllltiAer *Pfawadin medicu aenices offered at the hospital. Pat Is the !OF of Mr.

llldlln. .Clllrl"'l Ed-ds. Vololrport. lle attended Kent Stale Univer&amp;ty three )'!81'S. Miss
Grima il fnm W, ID.,
Na tba o IlliJiois University. Eadt spent two yean
at iiiiiJII Cliltil:, Hi'C
edrmir wan and one , _ o1 intemsbip. Edwanis and
MiiiGr,._DIIIIltaratlbelleipCollltyCiildnn'IHome.tlfteeveRligsaweei.
·

••ill .., "'
-,_or ..

'
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..

Struble termed his attendance at BoYs' State as " the
greatest elperience of my life"
and thanked the post for
selecting him .
Coaches night was observed
with Russell Moore introducing
Head FootbaD Coach Charles
Chancey and Head Basketball
Coach Carl Wolfe, who in turn
introduced their assistants.
Also present for the observance
were Meigs Local Superin. tendent George Hargraves,
Meigs High School Principal
James Diehl, and William
Porter, president of the school
board.
A dance for members of the
Legion, the AuDiiary and their
guests was announced far Oct. 2
with music by Armand and his
organ. The dance is free.
During the meeling PI ided·
over by ~ Leonard
Jewell, it was announced tbat a
special dinner and IGciai hour
will be held Sunday at the ball
beginning at 1 p.m. for tboae
who worked with the county fair
potice detail and lliso for opeciwl
guests who provided help for lbe
Meigs Legion bueball team
this summer.
George Ne1Stlroad was
reported a Jllltiatl at Vet...
Memorial llalpltal. A luaU,
dinner ~ - ied bJ IIAIJ
Bnter~--

WASHINGTON (UPII llllssdl E. Tnill, 'lrbe advises
Presideut Nu.. •• eaviroamat.J i*wl+ ms, opposes Jll 1 trllqisiiU. Ia

·•ID&amp;
" FereclooiR&amp; nrbce oeai

preWblt strip

miwial• woUl ....

-.e

ftliuce .. elller · - ,
mm1111 tltat ban Ml aD lies
pnved g be less . . . . ., g
lnnDu oat-." Trabo laid
Coqress

TDtsday.

Mel•as Is
--e

Awarded
$44,400
WASHINGTON (UPl)- 'lbe

u. s. Deparbnent of Labor bas
allocated$U4millian to Ohio to
...,..isl in creating public sorvice
jobs in cities and l:WIIIies in lbe
state which siXM a persistent 6
pel unemploymlill rate. Included was Meigs COIIDIJ,
$44,400.
The largest allocatioo went to
Cleveland, .o JIIZ,DID gnml
Dayton received $331,G and
Cincinnati was awarded
$355,310.
Other cities and counties
receiving funds included :
Akron, $95,700; canton
$102,1Dl; Columbus, $146,'11111;
Lorain, $$7 ,600; Springfield,
$55,100; Toledo, $132,300; Allen
County, $277,200; BuUer
County, $317,000; Clermont,
$376,600; · Greene County
$11,200; Miami County, 111.-;
Scioto County, $111,300; Wllftll
County, $%91,400; Fostoria,
$26,000; Crawford County,
$47,100.
Fayette County, $34,4GO;
Geauga, f4',2101 Hocking,
$45,000; Jackson, $47 ,Ill;
Ljtwrence County, $i1,9111;
Preble C..ty,$41.-a; Pvl•m
County, $31,.; and Van Wll't
County, . .,lGII.

Veteraa U •W 3 I 7 7
ADMII lED
Fr1t1* Still.
Middleport; buc Taylor, Lone
Botlun.
DISCHARGED - Gilltert
Spe11cer, Va · PI!Uit, " "rii'ID, 8arweJ Ollis, KJie

Barnett,
nmothy

Elmer

lleftard,

Hmmerlr.

J'IREMDI IIBID

l'wti OJ Iii
a drill .. 7:0 T

0 ' I
0 ; 1111t1.

IJ'illltont.rll. .........

~,.....,·-·-:
by Arhw . . . .; - •Jn a

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