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'

'

Hard-Luck Outfit
...'· ,

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'

SAIGON (UPI)-The America!
stars representing the Southern Cross.
Division, the hard-luck unit that has
the command announced the stand·
embodied America's frustrations with
down earlier in October of two of the
· ' the Vietnam War, is going home to the
division's three brigades. The thirdpeace and quiet of a Pentagon filing
the !96th Ught Infantry Brigade with
cabinet.
about 5,000 men-will remain in
It wW be a long time, however, before
Vietnam as an independent force.
the division recovers from America's
The America! seemed to attract
most Ullp{)Jlular war or before Vietnam
trouble during its four years in Vietgets over the mishaps of the America!.
nam.
The U.S. command announced
Nine of its men won Medals of Honor,
Sunday that 2,980 men of the Americal's
but the Americal's m061 famous soldier
Headquarters Company and other 23rd
was undoubtedly a short platoon leader
Division combat and support units have
with a baby face-U. William Calley.
started standing down, Army jargon for
Calley's Charlie Company platoon
lrealdng up and turning into a paper ' · wils blamed for the wholesale maS88cre
unit to be re-activated if needed.
of the civilian population of My Lai 4
The announcement was the final step hamlet on March 16, 1968. The balding
in the piecemeal disintegration of the lleutenanl-whose case still is under
review-was convicted by an Army
23rd Infantry Division-America! is
short for its World War n name,
court martial of kllllng 22 civilians at
American Forces in New Caldonia. It My Lai. Charlie Company stood down a
marked the retirement of the month ago.
The Americal-since niclmamed the
Americal•s blue arm patch-four white

',.

AHOY TH~ ~CHOON~~ ! "'OU
1-IV5r? THROUGH A 100·
M1~5 Sl-OW/
A~E

"'OU

New Caldonia,

Americal Unit
Drew Trouble in

Into Paper Status

..

A~I-

~IGHT~

Halloween
Nightmare

Fame Eamed in

Vietnam's War
"Atroclcal" and "Ameicalley" by SOJIIe
of its punsters-wound up in more hot
water than any other unit In the war
zone. Annother incident involved the
controversial defoliant, agent orange,
which temporarily was b8nned by the
U.S. Army in April, 1970, after
govennnent tests showed the plant
killer caused birth defects In rats.
Despite the ban, America) soldiers
dumped a hundred 55-gallon drums of
the defoliant over the jungles of Quang
Tin and Quant Ngai Provinces the
following siDJUDer. It wasn't stopped
until press reports revealed the
unauthorized use of the plant killer.
There also was the case of Brig. Gen.
John W. Donaldson, who commanded
the Amerlcal's lith Brigade when he
was a colonel. A group of helicopter
crewmen accused him last sununer of
taking pot shots at Vietnamese civilians
from his America! command helicopter
in 1968 and 1969.

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By Uulted Press IDiernational
The traditional Halloween hollday-&amp;though a pleasure for
most children-proved a nightmare for many parents who
searched bags of plunder for treats spiked with such items as
razor blades, pins and drugs.
At least three Halloween connected munlers were also reported
to police.
Nancy Mlmna, 13, Oakwood, Ohio, could hardly keep her voice
under control as she told of her Halloween nightmare. Nancy's 13year-old trick.or-treating companion, Marian Honaker, was dead,
stabbed 15times, and Nancy had barely escaped from a man who
she said attempted to strangle her.
Dale Barney, 24, who Nancy identified as the alleged murderer,
was in custody today. He was BITested after the Friday killing by
his brother, Dan, acting pollee chief of Oakwood, a Cleveland
suburb.
In nearby Newburgh, Ohio, volunteer firemen and policemen
used their own cars for special patrols to protect their trick-ortreaters because of the Honaker murder,
In Atlanta, Chris Harvey, 50, answered a knock at his door
Saturday night to find a darkbaired youth with a pistol. The youth
fired once through the door, hitting Harvey in the arm, then
stepped inside and fired again, striking Harvey in the chest.
Harvey's wife, Mary, 46• rushed in from the kitchen and the
gunman shouted, '"frick or treat," then shot her in the cheat,
(Continued on page 8)

Devoted To The lntere~~ta Of The Meigi-MtUOn Area

NO. XXIV NO. 140

POMEROY-MIDDLEPil~T OHIO

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1971

Rotten Ralphie-A
'.

J EST TH INKIN''(-ONLY FOLKS 'N/.IUT

13£LIEV£5 IN GHOSTS

SE.E.S 'EM -

'NHIUI

(-AN'

FOLKS
WIF

BRAINS

RI6HT.'!-WHAT AH
IS INT'RESTED lt-.1 15
, WHY WOULD A GAI.
AH HA I,jT INT'RESTED
IN WEAR A 1/EI L?

r\OR.ES '10' HAD A
NICE L:I'L O&lt;AT 1/oiiF

TAKE IT OFF!!

THENE'IJ'OAY-

MArl SON, RIP £::--~

pssr!- DON'T!!£ IKJ

SHE WON'T TAKE.
OFF HER. VEIL -

Garden Club Activities
Of Region 11 R ewar,ded
_

.

/0·31

CAPTAIN EASY

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence
I'M BEitJ' PAID 'T' ?OAK

LUI..U f!.~LLE SLIGGS&lt;! ... I THOU6Hr

OFFICERS at the Region II Garden Club meeting on Saturday were left to right, Mrs. John
H. Reese, retiring district director, Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mrs. William Willford, and Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter.

FOOL AN' FOU..Y
HE.R. NO MORt=. ,
ROTTEN RALPH/10.!.'

AH'M TAKIN' TH'
l-ATE Rl P'S ADV ICE!!
AH HAINT 60NNA
e.ENO FOOL AN'
FOI-l.'/ HER- .:.·/ ,..--..

LIKE

6 1GH!!- IF SOMECNE
GAVE ME. THAT
A DI/1CE, W HEN AH
WAS 'lORE AG E, AH
WOULDN'T BE IN
TH' PICKl-E AH
IS If.) NOW-

BUT TH' JOKE'S ON
Mli!R!! AU- AH IS
INT'RESTED IN 15
WH'I Sf-IE DON'T"

Ml? FACIS AN' FI66E:R DAIJ..Y Jr-l

''MAG/QUE MUP PE MOPL McKtt"
5E:AUT'l' 5ATH!

6LAZEG! - I DIDN'T K"--OW Mci&lt;EE-'7 CO$M5TICS
WHAT Ato.l DIVI710N HAD eVEtJ I..AUI'JCHED THAI
ODD CHOICE
PRODUCT tJATIONAI..t..'i!
FO~ A
GLJII\JEA
PIG~

Numerous awards were
presented, new officers were
inslalled and a demonstration
. on design with emphasis on
creativity in floral arranging
was given at the Region 11, Ohio
Association &amp;hool in Gallipolis.
The French City Garden Club
with Mrs . Nelle Franklin as
chairman prepared and served
the luncheon , The . table
arrangements were made by
members of the French City

Garden Club. The flowers were
donated by Mrs. Wyman Sheets.
Mrs . Joe Bolin of Rutland was
installed as new regional
director, with Mrs. William
Willford of Middleport, Route I,
secretary and Mrs . Wilson
Carpenter, Pomeroy, treasurer .
Mrs. John Reese, retiring
regional director, inslalled the
new officers with Mrs. Harold
Wolfe, president of the Rulland
Friendly Gardeners, presenting
each a corsage. Mrs. Bolin also

received a gift from the Rulland
Friendly Gardeners.
Receiving the Outslanding
Gardeners Award for Region 11
was the Mrs. Allan Bosch of the
Hill and Dale Garden Club of
Marietla. Awards for single
. club Christmas shows went to
the Gallipolis Garden Club,
third in slate and first in region;
Oak Grove Garden Club,
honorable mention in slate and
second in region ; Rutland
Garden Club, third in region.
(Continued on page 2)

OU Survived, Barely
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio
University President Claude R.
Sowle, in a report today re·
viewing his two years in office,
said perhaps his adminlstralion's biggest accomplishment
''was just managfug to survive
as an institution."
Sowle set forth an agenda for

1971·73 he described as · "vast
hope and part firm expeclalion."
Accomplishments Sowle
listed included more flexible
curriculum, new policies
governing selection of deaps
and department chairmen,
expantled conununication linlls

B
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1 ,ews••• rn
rze s

(----------------------------,
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TEN CENTS

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

· · 2 Join Pageant

0 wn

ount

fw. ® Man ofFew Words._;·
NATCHERI.'/. AN '
GALS 15 W HY '10'
IS HERE -R IGHT?

PHONE 992-2156

1

I

I

Seven Guerillas. Caught
By Ualled Prets Internatlooal
SAIGON -THE SAIGON MILITARY conunand said that a
unit of local militiamen, backed by American helicopter gun.
19
shlpa' killed seven enemy guerrillas today in an enaagement
•.,.
miles southwest of the South Vietnamese capital. It added that 19
Communist guerrlllas were killed and 15 seized Sunday in a battle
near Due Due, where a guerrllla massacre of Buddhist nuns and
monks too~ place earlier this year. South Vietnam iS obserVIng .
today its National Day, anniversary of the Nov. I, 1963 coup
against President Ngo Dinh Diem.

. Manpower .Down another 5,300
·
erican Expeditionary Force in Vietn•m reduced Its manAm
.,..
power by 5•300 troopa last week. That is the .largest weeki&gt;; cbibackinbalfayear. The American force in Vietnam now hurribers
1!)6,700, .the smallest figUre since Jan_ljary • 1966,.
SAIGON - THE U. S. COMMAND said today !hat the

'

By United Press International
Voters go to the polls
Tuesday in eight major cities
and three slates in the last
major elections before the 1972
presidential campaign hegins.
There are races for governor
in Kentucky and Mississippi
and for lieutenant governor in
Virginia . Ballots will also be
cast for a successor to the late
Rep. Robert Corbett, R-Pa., in
greater Pittsbw-gh and for
mayor in Baltimore, Boston,
Cleveland, Gary, Indianapolis,
Philadelphls and· San Francis·
co.
Several contests have racial
overtones and the depth of "law
and order" sentiment, first
assayed by President Nixon in
1968, will be tested in Philadelphis and Boston.
Charles Evers, black mayor
of Fayette, Miss., and brother
of a slain civil rights leader, is
running as an indendent in a
three-way race for governor of
Mississippi.
There are races involving
black candidates in Cleveland
where Mayor Carl B. Stokes is
relirmg and throwmg hiS
support behind Arnold R.
Pmclmey and m Gary, Ind.,

idenl William Schaefer is likely
to use the &gt;-1 edge In
Democratic voter registration
for victory,
Democrat John Connelly was
given a slight lead over
Republican John Heinz III,
scion of the famed soup family ,
.to succeed Corbett from the
Pittsburgh district.
In the Kentucky race, Thomas D. Emberton, 39, has the
blessing of outgoing Gov. Louie
B. Nwm in his campaign to be
the second consecutive Republi·
can to be elected governor.
Emberton's opponents are Lt.
Gov. Wendell H. Ford and A. B.
"Happy" Chandler, former
governor and baseball commissioner.
In Virginia, Slate Sen. Henry
Howell, an independent with
consumer, liberal and labor
backing is a slight favorite for
lieutenant governor against
Democrat George Kastel and
Republican George Shafran ,

where Richard G. Hatcher-the
first Negro elected mayor in
any major city-is seeking
another term.
"Law and order" campaigns
have been waged in Boston
where Rep. Louise Day Hh;ks,
D-Mass ., is not expected to
defeat Mayor Kevin H. White
and in Philadelphia where
former Police Commissioner
Frank Rizzo is slighUy favored
over Republican Tatcher Long·
streth, who is also getting
support from liberal Democrats. ·
In other mayoralty races, San
Francisco incumbent Joseph L.
Alioto is the favorite to defeat
two opponents, Indianapolis
Mayor Richard G. Lugar is
expected to parlay his leadership of a drive for county-dty
merger into another term and
·Baltimore City Council Pres-

Weather

. Mostly cloudy tonight with a
LOCAL TEMPS
chance of showers and lows in
Temperature in downtown
the upper 40s and 50s. Moslly
cloudy with a chance of showers Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
Tuesday with highs in the 60s. was 64 degrees, under cloudy
skies.

Fall Festival in Rutland
A fall festival will be. staged Tackett, sixth grade, queen;
by the RuUsnd PTA at the Tinuny Frye, fifth grade and
Rutland gymnasium Saturday Mike Wayland, sixth grade for
night from 5:30 to 9:30p.m. king.
Ahighlight of the evening wW The selection is made on the
be the coronation of royalty to basis of a penny a vote. Another
he selected from . these can- feature rA the festival will be an
didates, Darla Williamson,- auction of new itema.
third grade, and · Lynette Darts, bowling, golf, football
Whittington, fourth grade, for throw, fish pond, will be among
princess; Bryan Wilcox third the games offered and short
grade, and Doug Starcher, movieswWbeshownduringthe
fourth grade, for prince; Rita evening. A spook house is also
Hayman fifth grade, and Sherr! planned along with a gypsy

WASHINGTON, D. c. Results Of a !&gt;-month study of
conditions in the Ohio River
show IJO evidence of harmful
effects of aquatic life due to
healed water discharges from
four of the largest electric
power stations utilizing river
water for cooling purposes.
The findings were contained
in a report released today
covering In-stream analyses
from July, 1970 through Sep!ember, 1971. The research,
conducted for 10 utility comCr~es:u::=~ati~ ~s panies in Ohio, Kentucky and
~~he er
the c ~ ~ West Virginia, was prompted by
~ · cam= moo ear
public concern that thermal
dlayrdel970 ndus:.lkof campUus discharges from power plants
so .rs a .a s de reel en Y have a detrimenlal effect on
Invo1vmg non-aca em c em." 1ar 1y f'ISh .
aqua t'1c l'f
1 e ... part1cu
1
P oyes.
The research was conducted
by WAPORA, Inc ., a
NOW YOU KNO.W
Washington r research and
In Hebrew, the numbers fronl consulting firm specializing in
3 to 10 are the opposite gender environmental studies. The
from the nouns that they WAPORA researct. project is
1 une uf a few of ' ils kind conqualify ,

J:

Two more conteslants In the
1972 Meigs County Junior Miss
Pageant announced today are
Cathy Yates, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Groves, Front
St., Middleport, and Karen
Enlow, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Enlow, Albany.
Miss Yates, a senior at Meigs
High School, is a member of the
Meigs Marching Bsnd, Future
Business Leaders, Nature Club,
Pep Club and Is a Candystriper
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Yates is sponsored by
the Village Pharmacy of
Middleport. She will do a baton
routine as her talent ~resen­
tation.
Miss Enlow is a senior at
Alexander High School. She is a
member of the Varsity
Cheerleaders Corps, a member
of the student council, on the
trampoline team, F.H.A., Pep
Club, Drama Club , had a
leading role in the junior class
play, played on the district
championship volleyball team,
a Candystriper at O'BieneSB
Memorial Hospital, . and
represented Athens County at
the Ohio Quarter Horse
Congress in Columbus. .
Miss Enlow is being sponsored by Virgil B. Teaford, a
real estate broker at Pomeroy.
Miss Enlow will present a
vocal solo for her tslent In the
competition.
The pagent wW be an event of
Nov. 20 at Eastern High School
beginning at a p.m. The local
winner will represent the
county at the Ohio Junior Miss
Pageant at East Liverpool on
Jan. 21 and 22.

fortune teller. Food booths will
he in operation.
Tickets on the large ceramic
Christmas tree and a table lamp
may be secured at Miller's
Grocery. Door prizes will also
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
he awarded.
Ohio Extended Outlook
Following the festival the Wednesday Through Friday:
Rutland Fire Department will
Showers Wednesday and In
hold the weekly square dance. east portions Thursday. Mild
Serv .~ on the festival com· ·Wednesday and Thursday,
·mitte&lt; are Mrs. Marylyn turning cooler Friday. Highs
Wilcox, ·'Irs. Ann Thomas, and
in upper 50s and 60s Wed·
Mrs. Ba. ara Van Meter.
nesdny and Thursday falling
to the upper 40s and 50s
Friday. Lows in the mid 40s to
low SOs Wednesday and
Thursday and In the 30s
Friday.

Aquatic Life Unharmed
~~?,~:a::~~:~t=n~~~ By Thermal Discharges

to students establishment of an
ombudsman.
"Perhaps'our biggest accom·

Priority items on the agenda
for the next two years, he said,
include continued advances toward .a more flexible curriculwn,, unproved meth~ of as·
sessmg
teachers
per·
formances, further develop·
ment of five ~xlst~ branch
campuses .~d an extended
univer~!ty·
.
. ,
The exten~d ;"iverst
a new concep or non 8 tional=intr~~ educational
oppor to tresdit' alosehi wlhethoedut
access
a 1011
g r
t·
h
.d
•
uca 1on e sa1
'
·

RONNIE HOFFMAN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hoff.
man, Locust St., Middleport, Meigs High School art student,
is making properties to be used by cast members of the Big
Bend Minstrel Association's "Fall Follies" to be held at the
school on Nov. 13. In the background are flourescent letters
which Hoffman has created for use by a sixth grade chorus
from the Pomeroy Elemenlary &amp;hool which will present
three numbers during the annual show.

dueled to date and believed to
be the first of its kind on the
Ohio under field conditions. It
investigated the entire "food
chain" required to sustain
aquallclifeatcarefullyselected
sites over a length of 562 river
miles.
While the study results may
not be directly projected to
other water bodies, the
research approach is serving as
the basis for similar studies In
other areas oflhe country. ·
The Consulting firm is headed
by Dr. J. I. Bregman, former
Deputy Assislatll Secretary of
the Interior for Wal~r Quality
and Research. The WAPORA
. 1 · researc
· h tearn
eco 1og1ca
conducting the study was under
the technical direction of Dr.
Gerald Lauer, Assistant
Direclor of the Institute of
Environmenlal Medicine, New'
York Medical Center and a
'"'ted authority on · aqua tic

.
ecology. Dr. Lauer served as a
consullant to WAPORA on the
project.
"Three main concerns are
generally expressed in complaints dealing with thermal
discharges," the report said.
"One concern is that game and
food fish populations are being
threatened either directly or
indirectly by heated elfluents.
Another concern deals with the
entrainment of plankton in
power plant condensers and its
possible destruction during
passage. The third concern
deals with the possibility that
heated effluents may change
algae populations enough to
limit the abundance and
· food cham
·
ava1.1a b'l'
11ty of bas1c
organisms.
"The results of this study by
WAPORA have yielded no
evidence that any of the above
slaled concerns have occcrred
in I he Ohio~ River ••ear the
.. 1Continued' on page 2)
'

~:,:~:;!~~~~;~~-:~·'
Cremeans and Pomeroy Police
Chief Jed Webster today extended congratulations to young
people of both .towns for th.eir
excellent behavior d).ll'mg l!ick
or .treat night Saturday. The
officers said ~ere were fe~er
pubhc complamts than any t1me
over the past few years.
BAND APPLAUDED
The high stepping Southern
High School marching band was
well received during half-time
activities Saturday at the
South ern-Symmes Valley

CATHY YATES

Frost,Weher
And Nease,

Right On
Willis Frost, Chester, was
unintentionally omitted from a
list of Chester township can·
didates in Tuesday's election.
Frost is a candidate for
reelection as township clerk.
Also, it was reported earlier
that none of the four candidates
for election to the Southern
Local School District, board of
education, Is presently on the
board. 'l1lls is in error. One of
th~ four , David U. Nease, has
been on the board two years.
In Orange Township, Norman
Weber, rather than Oscar
Weber, is an announced write-in
candidate for trustee. He is
opposed by Edgar Pullins and
Roland Torrence. Nina R.
Robinson Is unoppoSed for clerk
in that township,

game.
TWO DAMAGED

Two,carshadllghtdamag~ in
an accident on the rtver parkmg
Jot at 1·50
· p·m· Saturday ·
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Homer Goeglein,
p
b kd f
omeroy, ac e
rom a
parking space into the side of a
car driven by Rodney Gibeau!,
Point Pleasant. There were no
injuries, No charges were fUed.

68 MISHAPS PROBED
The Gallla-:Meigs Post Slate
Illghway Patrol inves.tigated 68
traffic accidents during the
month of October.
There were no fatalities but 43
persons were injured in 23 in·
jury mishaps. Officers arrested
22S . persons, issued 308 war·
nings, made 102 assistS and
inspected 412 motor vehicles.

�..........,_, .................... .........,.... _...... ........,......._._
~

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J-'l'beDaiiJflentlne!,'.'lllol t W'wlaoy,O.,Nov. l,ll'/1

•

Teenage Girl IS
Bandit's Hostage

.

.
(Continued from page I) .. tending were Mrs. Delale Reibel
The Meigs county · garden from Morristown Region 12.
club's Chrislmaa show received Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, Mrs.
im honorable mention in the 'James Titus, Mrs. James
state~
Richards and Mrs. James
Single club show awards went Jackson.
to the Chester Garden Club, Mrs. Harley George of the
first in the region; the French host club welcomed those .atMANILA (UPI)-A guitar- Charles R. Butler. He stabbed a dy, hut were unable to get a
City Garden Club, second, and tending. A money corsage
strummingkiller took a !._year- maid to death, shot and clear shot at him.
the Rutland Friendly Garden containing $83 was presen~ to
The gunman took Susan, her
old American girl hostage seriously wounded Mrs. BuUer,
Club third.
Mrs. Reese, retiring regional
today, held her for nine hours in and took Butler's youngest uncle, Stewart Raab, and a
Regional Sears Civic Im- director, gift from Region II
a bedroom of her father's house, daughter, Susan, hostage. He Manila Daily Star crime
provement Program awards Gard.en Clubs. Mrs. Melvin
then walked out with a shotgun held her in an air conditioned reporter, Ruther Batuigas, with
went
to the Rutland Friendly Smeltzer gave the devotions
in her ribs to escape by bedroom of the house for nine him aboard the helicopter.
Gardeners, who received $66.36, and there were reports by Mrs.
hours while he negotiated his Batuigas had been negotiating
heliCQPter.
first, and the Rutland Garden Paul Shoemaker, secretary;
The girl and two other release. During · that time he with the bandit.
Club, second, ' received $13.18. and Mrs. Karl Gr11eser,
The helicopter pilot, Alvaro
hostages forced to board the drank whisky, ate pork and
Terry Miller of the Frontier ·treasurer.
.
hellCQPter with the Filipino beans, whisUed and occasional- Aspillero, radioed that he had
Garden
Club
received
third
in
Giving
reports
were
Mrs.
let the man off in the Zambales
gunman later were released ly strurruned a guitar.
the · boys' state award for Cullen who announced the next
Some 200 pollee under the province about 6 p.m.- 11 hours
un~. The helicopter pilot
Typical Junior Gardener.
judges school for July 25 and 26;
said the killer was dropped off direction of Manila Mayor -after the nightmare began with
Publicity
book
awards
Mrs. Earl Bender, show
somewhere in the Zambales Antonio Villegas, who lives next the discovery of the thief in the
presented by Mrs. Earl Neff awards chairman, encourProvince 45 miles northwest of door, stood helplessly by during Butler home. A second robber
went to the Rutland Friendly aged
clubs
to
buy
the long siege. When the man escaped over a back wall when
Manila.
Gardeners: honorable mention the new judges and exnie man was discovered this left the house for a short auto discovered and was not inIn the state and . first hibltors handbook and exmorning · while robbing the drive to the nearby Manila Polo volved in the ltidnsping .
in
the
region;
Rut- plained
flower
show
The heliCQPter was supplied
home of American businessman Club, sharpshooters were realand Garden Club, second in procedures; Miss Ruby Delhi,
by the Manila Daily Times.
the
region; Gallipolis Garden state and county fair shows;
Boarded Helicopter
Club, third in the region. Mrs. Charles Caldwell, horWhen he left the house, the
Program book awards went to Uculture, who displayed dried
gunman wore a hat and coat
the Rutland Garden Club, materials; Mrs. C. E. Stout,
Pic. Joseph V. Reichman, son address where frienda may and Susan, lin eighth grade
second in the state and first in nature and conservation
of Mr. and Mrs. Manning write to him: Pic. Joseph V. student, had on a black and ·
NEAL
GETS
F!Rsr
DOWN
Blue
Devil
tailback
Pete
Neal
picked
up
a
first
down
on
this
the region; W'mding Trall of chairman, who reported on the
Webster, Pomeroy, has been Reichman, 268 48 6869, Hqs. white polka dot shirt. Along
play during Friday's GAII&amp;Meigs football game. Braced for a hit Is Meigs' Ted Lehew (68).
Meigs County and Oak Grove of advancement against strip
seleeted for a journey to Crete, Btry, 2nd Bn., 56th ADA, APO with. Raab and Batuigas, they
That's Gallia's Jim Miller behind Lehew.
Washington County, tied for mining and announced a spring
Greece to witness firing of an 09189, N.Y., N.Y.
drove in a small auto to the
army missile. Reichman is with Reichman is the nephew of nearby Manila Polo Club, where - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - second in the region; Rullsnd nature tour to be held at Burr
Friendly Gardeners were third Oak Lake. Mrs. Kenneth
HQ Battery, 56th Air Defense, Margaret Coughenour, the flvweater helicopter was
in the region, and the French Frazer, Sears Civic 1mAPO 09189. He was one of a Cheshire, and the brother of waiUng for them.
City
Club received an honorable provement Projects chairman,
They climbed in and took off
select few so chosen for the trip . Mrs. Lyle Meyer, Moorehead,
· · mention.
reminded that the intent to
Following is his military Minn.
for an unknown destination with
Awards in the slide contest enter should be In by May I and
a police helicopter keeping a
presented
by Mrs . Edward the project book by June l.
safe distance away. The gun- ·
WIN AT BRIDGE
Mizicko went to Mrs. Mizicko,
Mrs. Bolin reported on radio
man was given the $2,500
Athens, honorable mention in participation by the clubs, and
dollars in "getaway" money he
Class 4; Mrs. Carl Helmick, Mrs. Charles Lewis gave a
had demanded prior to takeoff.
Athens, first, second and third report on the regional publicity
In
Class 5; Mrs. James Car- book. County contact chairman
up with much and decided
on desperate measures."
NORm (D)
penter of the Rutland Friendly giving reports were Mrs. EdI
Jim:
"The
desperate
mea.KJ3
Gardeners, second in Class I; ward Mizicko, Athens, with 7
sures s ucceeded. Sims
Mrs. Harry Williamson, first in clubs and 52 members; Mrs.
elected to try dummy's jack
+AQ74
Class 8.
Charles Shaver, Gallia Coqnty;
of spades at trick one. Ely
4KQ943
Following their report on Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Meigs
·T
produced the queen and reA Halloween party for the
EAST
therapy
work, Mrs. Gomer County; Mrs. John Broughton,
turned a trump. Sims drew
4
.Q10 76
trumps
and
decided
to
knock
young
people
was
staged
at
the
Phillips and Mrs. Edward Washington County with nine
'11'105
~: 't'd432
out
the
ace
of
clubs.
Jo
went
Laurel
Cliff
Free
Methodist
+K96
+JI0532
Mizicko presented an award of clubs and 193 members.
up with the ace and underled Church· last week.
••• oltA107
...62
first in the state to the Rutland
Christmas shows announced
Mrs. Lawrence Eblin had
ner ace of spades a second
sourn
~!
Friendly Gardeners.
were "There's No Place Like
• 982
time . No one can blame charge of the event with Sherri
•••
A
highlight
of
the
meeting
Home
for the Holidays" on Nov.
........
.AKQJ96
Sims for going wrong and Clark giving the scripture from
was the guest speaker, Mrs. 27-26 by the Meigs County
+8
playing low from dummy." John 3:16 and the young people
oltJ85
Oswald : "Hal could also
Jack Anewalt, a teacher of clubs; and "Holiday Potpurri"
•••••
East-West vulnerable
have made the hand by tak- moving into a friendship circle
Japanese Dower arranging and by the Oak Grove Garden Club,
:;.
West North East South ing a diamond finesse and for prayer sentences. Games
, • 1 student of Bob Thomas, an Nov. 21. Mrs. Bolin urged
•. ·
1"'
Pass 1 •
discarding a spade but that were played with prizes going to
..
ICCredited judge, from Ket- members to use the new hand:; : Pass 2 +
Pass 4 •
play would be bad percent- Belinda Friend, Diana Lewis,
lering. Mrs . Jack Anewalt book, and reminded that that
;:; Pass Pass
Pass
age. He was sure of his con- Barbara Klein, Tom Soulsby,
made 17 arrangements, program books are no longer
•:,'Opening lead-• 4
tract if East held the ace of Jayne Hutchison, Patty Eblin,
•
collages, and assemblages . called yearbooks. She also
clubs and still had a chance
EASTERN LOCAL ffiGH SCHOOL was presented a new drivers education car recenUy by
:: .___________ i in spade s after Jo won the Ricky Clark, and Marvin
Styles used were free form, free announced the nature camp,
R. H. Rawlings Sons, Middleport, L-r are John Riebel, superintendent, receiving the keys
·~·; j,_ ~y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby club trick ."
Friend. Refreshments were
style, modern, abstract, con- Jline 12-16, at !Urkmont.
from Wally Ambur.ser of R. H. Rawlings, Robert Ord, principal, Mike Mor~an and Bill
' ··
served to those named and
~ : o:, Oswald: "Ely Culbertson
t••wsP•PE•
Ass•.J
struction and stabiles.
Clubs were aSked to send a
Phillips, instructors.
'' ·
:t· was a great showman and
Penny Eblin, Nancy Gill, Darla
The demonstrator explained donation of at least $1 to the
,;: publicity genius . Back in
Gill, Kathy Gill, Delores Klein,
that floral art is an ever- state chairman of roadside and
Brian Friend, Becky Wright,
:;: 1935 he persuaded Hal and
changing medium and stated civic beautification and to
;;' Doroth~ Sims to play a rub- The bidding has been:
Barbara and Keith Klein,
that although we feel more continue contributions to
;-: ber bnd,ge match against West North
East South Charles Diehl , Don Hayes,
comfortable with things Wahkeena. Mrs. Reed, state
;:: htm and Jo Culbertson. The
I+
Dennis Gilmore, Fred Eblin,
familiar, we are more president, announced the 1972
..;. match was a natural from a Pass
2•
Pass
"
and Vicki Clark.
:;: publicity standpoint and also
You. South, hold:
dul
(Continued from page 1)
passing the coolinu water were similar in quantity and stimulated by change. She said convention for Aug. 8-10 at
• · a ctnch f El J c b
A ts assisting were Mrs.
o
•'·
or Y- o ul ert- •AQ4 •K6 +A Q t085 "'KI09
power plants investigated. "
through the power plant con- quality above and below we need to welcome new ideas Denison University, Granville.
;;, son was a great player :
Eugene Gill, Mrs. Richard
She urged that clubs support
,; Do~othy Sims a poor one."
What do you do now?
Friend, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Research involved detailed· densers and discharge struc- discharge points. Occasional or and expand upon the things we
in
the
have
learned,
remembering
the
state wild flower book and
seasonal
changes
;
Jtm : "Here is a hand
A-This is a very tough bid. Wrigh t, and Mrs . Ernest sampling and an alysis at lures to a point in the river
2
3
:.-: which shows Jo Culbertson NT and NT are inadequate; Haggy .
various areas above and below where any heat added to the proportions of algae types is always not to "be down on that juniors enter the Reed
h
3 diamonds indicates a longer
;•: at er best It also indicates diamond suit. u your partner
intake and discharge points at discharge water was dissipated most likely the result of river something until we are up on Memorial contest on the
preservation of birds and
;:; why the Sims e s had no won't pass three clubs make
rl
four of the largest power plants by 50 pet. is no longer than 12 conditions, chemical and it."
;: : chance. Three no-trump was that bid.
'(J
(including one of the largest in minutes at the most for all four organic pollutants.
A total of 116 garden club wildlife. She also asked that
unbeatable but Hal wanted
7. The WAPORA studies in- members and 17 members of clubs write to their state
.•: to score his honors and also
TODAY'S QUESTION
BI1J
c·~--s
the country) along the Ohio plants studied. This explosure
.•. to play the hand ."
You do bid three clubs. Your 'J
fJU v
Ia:).
River . The area of the river time of plant and animal dicated a very low count of the Nature Garden Club representatives urging support
..Oswald: "Jo opened the partner bids three no-trump.
studies, from 54 miles below organisms to the elevated bottom (benthic) organisms, registered for the meeting of Senate Bill 361 to control
·, four of spades . She could What do ,you do now?
The Willing Workers Class of Pittsburgh to Louisville. is temperatures involved is ap- high turbidity, and few suitable hosted by the French City billboards on interstate and
, see that Ely would not show
Answer Tomorrow
the
Enterprise
United utilized by 25 utilities with a parently insufficient to produce nesting areas for fish spawning. Garden Club of Gallipolis. State primary roads.
This is most likely the result of officers Introduced were Mrs.
II was noted that the Victor
~- . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • Methodist Church staged a total generating capacity of detrimental effects.
~:
Halloween party Thursday more than 14.9 million 3. There was no evidenCe of such man-made factors such as Paul Wendell Reed, state Reis Outstanding Garden Club
::
As A Former Councilman of Middleport
night at the home of Mrs. kil owatts . Study results , "thermal blockage " as the channelization of the river, president;
Mrs . Dwight award will cover a two year
~:
Beulah Utterbach and Miss therefore ,
reflect
the result of heated water increased run.off and barge DeVoss, ~ond vice president period now instead of the
Frieda Leiving.
cumulative effects of heated discharges which could in- traffic. Spawning of game fish and regional advisor; Mrs. previous three.
?.
Mrs . Marjorie Bowen discharges into the river.
terfere with the migration of such as black hass was not Dorsey Bumgarner, state
Winnine door prizes were
presided at the meeting with
The specific power plants fish in the water. The heat from noted to occur in the main- secretary; Mrs. Albert Pool, Mrs. Earl Deem, Mrs. Jola
1
~
Mrs . Utterbach giving the studied were : W. H. Sammis dis charges was
rapiply stream of the Ohio River during past state president. Also in- Walcott,
Mrs.
Dorsey
~
scripture. There was group Station of Ohio Edison Co., at dissipated downstream.
1971 in the study areas. Based troduced was Mrs. Gilbert Bumgarner, Mrs . Grace
singing of "What A Friend We Str a tt on, Oh'to ; W. C. Beckjord 4. There was evidence that on the research, thermal · Cullen, state chairman of Vaughan, Mrs. Phillip Ramsey,
•~.
:.
Have in Jesus," and a prayer by Station of The Cincinnati Gas certain species of game as well discharges apparently exert judges and exhibitors schools Mrs. William Wllllord, Mrs.
Tom Hunte, Mrs. Owen Can~(
Mrs . Cordelia Bentz. Mrs . and Electric Co., near New as rough fish prefer the warmer little, if any, Influence on and clinics.
•
Bernice Evans was welcomed R'tc hmon d, Ohio; Kyger Creek water · temperatures in the spawning of game fish.
Past regional directors at- Uell, Mrs. Luther Tracy, Mrs.
,
as a new member. The wonder Station of The Ohio Valley immediate vicinity of the utility
IN GENERAL, the research
Paul Shumaker, Mrs. Charles
~
hox was won by Mrs. Beatrice Electric Corp. , near Gallipolis, discharges during the relatively results and conclusions give a
Shaver and Mrs. Susan Clarke.
•
Buck. Refreshments were Ohio; and Cane Run Station of cool spring season.
picture of a river, which
" 'J
fJUrv,
Door prizes were donated by
~;i
served
to
those
named
and
Mrs.
th Lo · 'II
GEORGE BAKER
e utsvt e Gas and Electric 5. Dissolved oxygen, an im- although subjected to manRuth Florist, Dudley's Florist,
Agnes Weeks, Mrs . Ethel Co., Inc ., near Louisville, portant factor in sustaining the made changes, is essentially SYRACUSE - The Junior Farmers Hardware, McKnight
!~
~
Smith, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, and Kentucky.
health of the river, was nor- unaffected from an aquatic, Class of the Asbury United &amp; Davies Hwd ., Smeltzer's
~
PAID FOR BY GEORGE BAKER
Mrs. Nancy Smith and two
Some of the conclusions of the mally slightiy higher below biological standpoint by heated Methodist Church enjoyed a Garden Center and Central
~ • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " ' guests, Mrs. Mary Bowen and WAPORA research are:
discharges from the plants .effluents from the power plants party at the church social room Supply Hardware all of
~
Miss Patty Edwards.
1. The studies yielded no during the months of June under study.
·
Octo~ 24. Games 1fere played Gallipolis, and Valley Bell Co.
and
prtzes were given to Lori of Pt. Pleasant, w. Va.
~
evidence that operation of the through September.
And
as
for
t/i.at
in
the
~
four largest power plants on the 6. There was no apparent shift
Guinther and Sandy Hamilton.
Favors lor the table were
:-:
river c a ·~sed maasurable from the desirable type of algae good soil, they are those
Members present were Lori given by The Voto Manufacwho, hearing the word, hold
Gulnther,
c.onnie Patterson, turersSale Co., M. T. Epling Co.
~
ct anges L1 either the abundance to the less desirable green or it fast in an honest and
~
or variet:• of aquatic life during blue-green groups which could good heart, and bring forth Jean Ann Rilchhart, and Jay of Gallipolis; Waterloo Coal Co.,
the ~eri6l of the study.
be directly attributable to fruit .with patience.-Luke Ord. Also present were th~ Inc., Oak Hill; Cecil Walker
2. rhe time involved in heated effluents since counts 8:15.
teachers, Dorothy Winebrenner Machinery Co., Belle, w. va.
and Helen Teaford. Cindy and Valley Bell of Pt.
Patlerson and Sandy Hamilton Ple~sant, W. Va. The spring
were visitors. Refreshments regtonal meeting will be held
were served.
April 22 at Logan, Ohio.
.

Reichman to See Firing

Bold Lead Sinks Sims

Young People
Attend Party ·

.1

..
..,.

, •

I ,:;

'·.

......

'}

'·.
~

••n""''

R

E ' ed

:J' njOJ

C'l-•.1i,.h

'

I URGE JHE VOTERS JO
VOTE fOR

.

JOHN ZERKLE

fOR MAYOR Of MIDDLEPORT

Pf1rt1J at C'l-.....rh

!!!JI81!1!111&amp;m!!lll8~.8i8i-rum&gt;.&amp;;8;z;::~:;:;:&gt;.;:;s;:;m&gt;.::;::~,~~:$&gt;,:(«&lt;:&gt;.&gt;;:!':o::t,;~

Blanda Does It

NFL Standings

Again For Oakland

GOING AFTER BALL -Melg!' Jeff Morrta goes after tbe baD on thiJ play as he tackles
GARS wingback John Davis during first half action of Friday's GARS-Meigs football game.
Meigs won, 1._12.

Foster Posts 37th Win
SCRANTON, Pa. (t;PI ) Lightheavywelght Bob Foster
left this Pennsylvania town
Sunday for his New MeKico
home with a victory and a
promise.
The victory came Sabrday
night with an 8th round TKO
win over Tommy Hicks of
lthiaca, N.Y.
The promise came when
Foster declared he was ready
to "clean up this mess about
anyone else being the champion ."

The "anyone else" is Vicente
Rondon of Venevuela, the man
recognized as the light heavyweight champion by the World
Boxing Association.
It's a titie Foster thinks he
himself deserves. His win over

•

the weekend was his 37th
knockout in 50 fights, but only
New York and Pennsylvania
recognize him as champ.
Asked about a possible match
with Rondon to settle the
dispute, Foster said, "I don't
think you could get him into the
ring with me if you gave him a
million bucks. This boy Hicks I
fought here would run him out
of the ring ."
Hicks, a college graduate who
works with retarded children,
was stopped only by a severe
cut on his right eye that
worsened until Referee Manny
Gelb halted the IS-rounder at
I :04 of the eighth round .
Until that call, Hicks, a
blonde southpaw, had troubled
Foster repeatedly and done

JACK ·L. BOSTICK
CANDIDATE FOR

SOUTHERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated.

PAID FOR BY THE CANDIDATE

AMOMENT TO REMEMBER

Re'!lember. when 30~ residents turned out to voice
complam!s aga1~st the h1gh sewage fee in Pomeroy.
Now 1s the t1me. for you 300 to really voice your disap.
proval. .
Go to· the polls Tuesday, Nov. 2, and give me your vote.
r~meroy needs a salesman to sell the community and
that s JUSt what I am. I can do the job.

Let's Go Here and N'ow!

DELMAR A. CANADAY
FOR MAYOR OF POMEROY

..

~~----••••••••iiii
••••-~P~d~-~Po;l~-~A~d~v-~~
~

Reedsville
The Daily
By MRS. L. BALDERSON
DEVOTED TO THE
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
spent Veteran's Day week..,nd
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
with their son Sgt. and jlfrs.
~•tc. Ed.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH, 1
Gray Barnhart and family at
City Editor
-'
Fort Shaw, South Carolina.
Published dally ex'c~pt
Satur_da~ by The Ohio Valley
Carroll Randolph Is a patient Publ•shmg
Company, 1l1
at the St. Joseph's Hospital, Court St., Pomeroy Ohio
4 57~9. Bu~lness Offlc~ Phone
Parkersburg, W. Va.
992.2156,
Editorial Phone 992 .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson 2151.
S&amp;cond class postage paid at
attended the Pumpltln Show at ,Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Circleville, SaY!I'day.
National advertising
repre-sentative ·eottlnelll ·
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose Gallagher
, Inc., 12 East Ond ,
spent the week..,nd tn Akron St., New Yortc. City, New Yor.k
Subscr iption rates: De:
with Mr. and Mr8. Thomas J. livered
by carrier where
Rose and family, to help available 50 cents per week .
By Motor Route where carrie;
celebrate their grandson's 17th service
not available · One
birthday.
month $1.75 . By mall In Ohio
W. :Va., One veer Slof oo
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Dry of , •5 ~d
l)t
months S7 . 2S . Thret
Athens visited with Mr. and months~ S• .so. Subscrlotlon

Sentin81

prlc~ Includes Sunday Ti mes .

Mrs.
Dale Smith and family,
Wednesday.

Senl•nel. ·

some of his best work in the
seventh round.
Even in defeat the young
boKer still kept his reputation
of never being floored. It was
his 25th fight and his fifth loss
with three draws.
Foster now prepares for
another defense of his crown
with two more fights set for
this year.
Lou Viscusi, the fighter's
manager , said one of those
battles could be against Mike
Quarry, the brother of heavyweight Jerry Quarry, in Los
Angeles.

Warriors
Topple

Oilers Pick Up
Lakers
First Win, 10-6
HOUSTON (UPI )-Ken Hous'ton of the Houston Oilers is one
of those rare players in the
r ~ged world of pr.o football
wuo doesn't drink, smoke or
cuss.
He sings in the choir of his
Baptist Church on Sundays seven months a year, but don't get
the Idea he's a softie. The other five months he spends his
Sundays as strong safety for
the Oilers and he's one of the
roughest In the game.
Houston, who has made the
AFL all-star team twice and
was a starter in the pro-bowl
game once in his four pro sea·
sons, intercepted a pass and
ra11 it back 48 yards Sunday to
give the previously winless
Oilers a 11).6 victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Houston, a 6-foot-3, 195-pounder from Lufkin, Tex., always
has wanted to carry the hall,
but they wouldn't let him.
"1 was a center in high
school and a center and linehacker in college at Prairie

when I wanted to come out for
track and run the 100-yard
dash, the coach said linebackers are shotputters so they
wouldn 't even let me run in
track.
"One day I was messing
around with the sprinters and
I ran the 220 in 23 seconds,"
Houston said . "Since I've been
timed in the 40 here , the coaches say I would've run the 100
in 9.6."
Every time Houston gets to
run with the ball he has to
steal it. He· had only one inter. ception in college, but the one
against the Bengals was his
21st in less than five seasons in
the pros and the sixth he has
returned for a touchdown, a
team record.
The interception Sunday was
off Bengal rookie Ken Anderson, who had a disastrous day.
He completed only 4-&lt;&gt;f-13 passes for II yards and was dumoed six times for 49 yards before leaving with a hip injury
with 13: 15 remaining in the

View / ' Houston said. "Then ' game.
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

Please Vote For

JAMES ''Jim" EADS
a.ERK Rutland Township
Member of Rutland Fire Department
Tuesday, Nov. 2

Thank You!
. Pd. Pol. Ad.
Your Vote Appreciated

Grover Salser, Jr.
Candidate for Member of

Southern Local Board of Education
Election- Nov. 2, 1971

Pd. Poi. Adv.
VOTE IIOR AND SUPPORT

FRED HOFFMAN
Republican Candidate For

MIDDLEPORT-VILLAGE

COUNC-IL
Your Vote and Support Greatly Appredated
Pd. P r1l. Adv .

By United Press International
Joe Ellis Is one of the few
players in the National Basketball Association who would
rather come in off the bench
than starr. ·He showed whr
Sunday nlgtit'.
···
Ellis, a stringbean &amp;-foot-0,
190-pounder, came off the bench
to score 12 points in the last
quarter and spark the Gblden
State Warriors to a 109-105
victory over the Los Angeles
Lakers.
Ellis entered the game late in
the third period after Clyde Lee
picked up his third personal
foul ·and broke the game open
with his torrid shooting in the
last ,eriod. He finished with 20
points as he led the Warriors to
their fifth victory in their last
six games and a second place
tie with the !.akers in· the
NBA's Pacific Division.
Cazzie Russell was high
scorer for Golden State with 32
points and Fritz Williams had
23. Gall Goodrich of the Lakers
was the game 's high scorer
with 38.
In other NBA action Sunday,
the Milwaukee Bucks ripped the
Cleveland Cavaliers 118-102 and
the Houston Rockets routed the
Buffalo Braves 102-87.
Kareem Jabhar hit 14-&lt;&gt;f-19
field goal attempts and finished
with 35 points as the Bucks
romped past Cleveland. He hit
on a pair of three-point plays
early in the game to give
Milwaukee a lead it never
relinquished. John Johnson was
high man for Cleveland with 19
points.
Rookie Cliff Meely scored 19
points and Calvin Murphy
added 16 as the Rockets beat
Buffalo. Dick Cunningham
scored siK of his 10 points
during a 32-point second quater
that put the game out of reach
for Houston. Bob Kauffman led
Buffalo with 15.

This Week's
Ohio College
Footba II Schedule
By United Press International
Michigan Stale at Ohio Slate
Bowling Green a! Texas
Arlington (n)
Marshall al Kent stale
Miami at Western Michigan
Ohio Unlverslly at Tulane (nl
Toledo at Northern Illinois
North Texas State at Cincinnali
Dayton at Xavier
· Baldwin-Wallace at Capital
Otterbein at Denison
Musklngum a! Heidelberg
Marlella at West Virginia
Wesleyan
Mount Union at DePauw
Ohio Wesleyan at Oberlin
WIHenberg at Ball State
Wooster at Centre I Ky.)
Akron .a! Indlana S.tate
Waynesburg at Ashland
. Northwood at Bluffton
Case Western Reserve at Coast

Guard

Defiance at Anderson

John Carroll at Findlay (n)
Edinboro State at Ohio Northern
Wilmington at Taylor (Ind.)
N - night game

By GREG GALLO
After the Chiefs were unable
UP! Sports Writer
. to move the ball, the old grey
While men of his own fox marched the Raiders from
generation were slumped back the Kansas City 45-yard line to
in their living room easy the goalline -siK inches away
chairs, sipping beer and play- from a touchdown.
ing Sunday afternoon quarter- Madden made the decision to
back, 44-year-old George go for the tying field goal and
Blanda was on the football Blanda calmly booted the ball
field, leading the Oakland through the uprights. The tie
Raiders to a 2{).20 tie with the left the Raiders and the Chiefs
Kansas City Chiefs.
deadlocked for first place in the
"George did it again," said Western Division of the AmeriRaiders' coach John Madden of can Football Conference with 5the man who has bailed out ·his 1-1 records.
team many times with last San Francisco took the lead
minute heroics. Blanda came in the National Football conoff the bench Sunday with 8:50 ference's Western division as
remaining and proceeded to put quarterback John Brodie hit
10 points on the scoreboard, Gene Washington with a 71salvaging the tie and boosting yard touchdown pass and
himself ahead of Lou Groza as center Forest Blue ran 2li yards
the all.tiine National Football for a touchdown with a
League scoring "leader with recovered fumble in the final
1,609 career points.
period; the Rams, who dropped
"No, Lamonica (Daryle) a half game behind the Forty
wasn't hurt," Madden ex- Niners, were beaten by two
plained after the game. "! just touchdown passes by the
had a feeling about substituting Dolphins' Bob Griese and two
Blanda. We needed new life." Garo Yepremian field goals;
Blanda is no old Iuddy-duddy. and Earl Morrall's three
He may look like one but once touchdown passes sparked the
he's on the field he generates Colts to victory, their fifth in
that spark. He moves the seven games.
Bill Kilmer gained revenge
ballclub.
"George is a helluva com- against his old teammates
petitor," said Chiefs• coach when he ran for one TO and
Hank Stram, after his team passed for another to lead the
held Oakland on the one-yard Redskins over the Saints; Norm
line and forced Blanda to kick Snead came off the bench and
an eight-yard field goal with found Bob Grim with a 55-yard
just 2:31 left to tie the game. touchdown pass with only 1:04
"He keeps you off balance and remaining to lift 'the Vikings·
gave the team a lift. Our pass over the Giants; and Bobby
pressure against him wasn't Douglas accounted for two
any different than it was touchdowns and Mac Percival
against Lamonica . But George kicked three field goals to pace
goes off on a quicker count and the Bears over the Cowboys.
gets the ball away faster than
Dick Shiner passed for two
Lamonica."
touchdowns to lead the Falcons
In other games Sunday, San over the Browns; the Eagles,
Francisco defeated New Eng- sparked by an aroused defense
land 27-10, Miami edged Los that led to two touchdowns,
Angeles 2.0-14, Baltimore held off the Broncos; and Jim
heat Pittsburgh 34-21, Wash- Hart threw two TD passes in
ington bested New Orleans 24- the second half to pace the
14, Chicago upset Dallas 23-19, Cardinals to victory.
Minnesota edged the New York
John Hadl fired four touchGiants 17-10, AUanta bombed down passes and ran for
Cleveland 31-14, Philadelphia another to lead San Diego over
stunned Denver 17-16, St. Louis the Jets and Ken Houston's 48edged Buffalo 28-23, San Diego yard TD return on an intercepcrushed the New York Jets 49- lion helped the Oilers to their
21, and Houston defeated first victory of the season .
Cincinnati 11).6. Detroit plays
Green Bay at Milwaukee
tonight,
PARSONS' 1ST TITLE
Kansas City led 20-10 when
Blanda relieved Lamonica in NEW BREMEN, Ohio (UP!)
- Johnny Parsons, whose father
the final period . The 23-year
won the Indianapolis 500 in
veteran of NFL wars hit tight
1950, captured his first career
end Ray Chester with a 38-yard
sprint title when he won the 40pass and then found Fred
lap feature event at the New
Biletnikoff in the end zone with
Bremen Speedway.
a 24-yard scoring strike.

Pittman Was
Of Select Group
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP!)
- The coaching fraternity to
which Jim Pittman belonged
spans from one generation to
the next like an immense
classroom .
Men like Pittman not only
teach how to make a trap block
but have side courses on
discipline, sacrifice and total
effort.
And from the ranks of the
taught comes a select group of
teachers.
Jim Pittman, ·who died
Saturday night during the
Texas Christian UniversityBaylor football game, was one
of that select group. And he
remained a member of the
group despite knowing his
emotional profession wasprohably no place for a man with
heart trouble.
During Pittman's 46 years he
learned a lot of what he taught
from the man he had served
for more than a decade as chief
assistant -Texas Coach Darrell
Royal. And he passed a lot of
what he knew to the man who
served as his own chief
assistant - Billy Tohill.
Tohill, 32, was named Sunday
to succeed Pittman as head
coach of TCU.

Pittman had suffered a heart
attack in 1964 in the dressing
room following Texas' final
regular season game against
Texas A&amp;M. That seizure
caused him to miss the
Longhorns' trip to the Orange
Bowl that season . Pittman
suffered a second, less severe,
heart attack before he left
Texas to take over as Tulane's
head coach in 1966.
The announcement of Tohill
as the Interim head coach was
tnade Sunday by TCU Athletic
Director Abe Martin, who was
forced to step down as TCU's
head coach when he suffered a
heart attack in 1965.
"I don't think Jim would
want anything else done with
this team," lllartin said. Jim
Pittman was a fine football
coach and a great man . As is
willed or happened, many boys
will miss his fine teaching."
"It's hard to predict whether
we will win or lose the rest of
the season," Tohill said Sunday.
"All you can do Is hope and
wish. The opportunity is there
if our players give it their
best. "

Jim Pittman would have
rxnr&lt;'l ed nothing less.

To The VoteiS of Sutton Township
R. .lect William S. (8111) Crou

For
Clerk of Sutton Township
-SECOND TERMPd. Pol . Adv .

~ High School

Pro Standings
By United Press International

p••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

VOTE FOR

hiefs · Tie

Rai ers,

Fall Meeting ·

American Conference

East

W. l . T. Pel.

NY Jets
New England
Buffalo

2 5 0 .286 New York
2 5 0

.286

0 7 0 .000

Central

4
3
I
1

Houston
Cincinnati

3 0 .571
4 0 .429
5 1 .167
6 0 .143

West
W. l . T.
Oakland
5 I I
Kansas City
5 I 1
San Diego ·
3 4 0
Denver
2 4 I

Pel.
.833
.833
.429
.333

Nationa I Conference
W. L T. Pel.

Washington
6
Dallas
4
St. louis
3
NY Giants
2
Philadelphia
2
Central

1 0 .857
3 0 .571
4 o .429
5 0 .286
5 0 .286

W. L. , T . Pel.
6 1 0 .857
5 2 0 .714

4 2 0 .667
.333

2 4 0

West
W. l . T. Pet .

San Francisco

5 2 0 .714

Los Angeles
4 2 1 .667
Atlanta
3 3 1 .500
New Orleans
2 4 1 .333
Sunday's Results
Atlanta 31 Cleveland 14
Philadelphia 17 Denver 16

Washington 24 New Orleans 1.4

Minnesota l7 NY Giants 10
St. Louis 28 Buffalo 23

7 2 .777
6 2 .750

5 5 .500
Buffalo
3 7 .300
Central Divi5ion

•;,
21/:l
4lf:l

W. L Pet. GB
3 6 .333

W. L T. Pel. Atlanta

Cleveland
Pittsburgh

Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
Green Bay

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel. GB

5 I 1 .833 Philadelphia
5 2 0 .714 Boston

Miami
Baltimore

Baltimore
3 6 .333
Cleveland
2 8 .200 11h
Cin cinnati
1 6 .143 1
Western Conference

Chicago 23 Dallas 19
Baltimore 34 Pittsburgh 21
Oakland 20 Kansas City 20

By United Press International
Dayton Alter 41 Lima Catholic
14
Dayton Patterson 46 Dayton
White 12

Cincinnati Country Day 14 Ross

2
Barberton

42 Lora i'n Southview

6

Akron Kenmore 36 Akron Sooth
20

Canton Lincoln 20 Canton C. C.
14
Midwest Division
Sanduskv St. Marv 20
W. L. Pet. GB
Fostoria St. Wendelln 14
Milwaukee
8 I .888
Norwalk St. Paul 55 South
Chicago
5 2 .714 2
Central 0
Detroit
6 4 .600 21!1 Zanesville
Rosecrans
15
Phoenix
3 4 .429 4
Shenandoah 12
Pacific Division
Beallsville 26 Caldwell 0
W. L. Pel. GB Newcomerst.own 21 Garaway 0
Seattle
I 2 .777
Indian Valley North 35 Malvern
Los Ang Angels 6 3, .6U
8
GoldenState
6 3 .667
Tuscarawas C.C. 20 Indian
Houston
2 8 .200 51h
Valley South 12
Portland
'1 5 .167 4111 Steubenville C. C. 40
Sunday's Results
Canton Sf. Thomas Aqu inas o
Milwaukee 118 Cleveland 102
Youngstown
South
8
Houston 102 Butfalo 87
Younastown Chanev 6
Golden State 109 Los Angeles Poland 21 East Palestine 0
105
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney
IOnly games scheduled)
16
Monday's Games
Campbell Memorial IS
I No games scheduled)
Ursuline 33 Hubbard 0
Tuesday's Games
Jackson Milton 10 Lowellville 0
Phoenix at Chicago
McDonald 28 SOuth Range 14
Baltimore vs. Warriors
LeBrae 12 Canfield 6
at Oakland Warren J FK 58 Liberty 8
!Only games scheduled)
Niles McKinley 19 Alliance 0

Grid Standings
Ohio College
Footba It Records

Houston 10 Cincinnati 6

Scores

NBA Standings
By United Press International

By ,U nited Press lnternationa I
Mid-American Conference

Warren Western Reserve 7
Akron Hoban 3
Beaver Local2 Southern Local 0
Weirton (W. Va.) Madonna 20

Wellsville 17
St . Francis 51 Steubenville 12
Tol Devilbiss 14 Bowsher 8

Tol Woodward 28 Ma comber 6
league All Games Tol St. John 34 Libbey 16
Miami 20 Los Angeles 14
W l T WLT Tol Cardinal S!rllch 8 Start 7
San Fran 27 New England 10
4 0 0 8 0 0 Farrell (Pa.) 42 Brooktield 6
Toledo
San Diego 49 NY Jets 21
Bowling Green
Carlisle 21 National Trait 0
(Only games scheduled)
4 1 0 5 2 0 Graham Local 14 Miami East 6
Monday's Games
Western Michigan
Cleveland Benedictine 9
Detroit vs. Green Bay
2
0 6 2 0
Cleveland East Tech 6
2
•
at Milwaukee 1night) Ohio University
28
Shaker Heights 16
Parma
(Only game scheduled)
0 3 4 0 Cleveland Cathedral Latin 13
3
2
Sunday's Games
Miami
0 3 0 4 3 0
Cleveland Byzantine 12
Atlanta at Cincinnati
Kent State
0 3 0 2 6 0 Cardinal 30 Beachwood 20
Buftalo at Miami
Ohio Conference
Berksh ier 28 Richmond Heights
Cleveland at Pittsburgh
league All Games
21
Dallas at St. louis
WLT WLT
Detroit at Denver
Baldwin-Wallace
Green Bay at Chicago
4 0 0
7 0 0
Houst at New England
Ohio Wesleyan
Kansas City at New York Jets
4 0 0 6 1 0
Oak land at New Orleans
Mount Union 3 I 0 5 2 0
Philadelphia at Washington
Marietta
3 2 0 4 3 0
San Diego at New York Giant s
Denison
3 2 0 4 3 0
San Francisco at Minnesota
Wittenberg 2 2 0 4 3 0
IOnly games scheduled)
Heidelberg 2 2 0 4 3 0
Monday's Games
2 2 0 4 2 0
Vloosler
Los Angeles at Baltimore Otterbein
2 2 0 3 4 0
(night)
Muskingum
I 4 0 1 6 0
!Only game schedu led )
I 4 0 2 5 0
Kenyon
0 2 0 0 6 0
Oberlin
Capital
0 4 0 I 5 0
Big Ten
AHL Standings ,
League All Games
By United Press International
WLT W. LT
East
Michigan
5 0 0 6 0 0
W. L. T. Pis.
5 0 0 6 I 0
Boston
7 1 1 IS Ollio Stale
Springfield
6 2 2 14 Michigan State
3 2 0 4 4 0
Nova Scot1a
5 3 2 12
Insurance
3 2 0 3 4 0
Purdue
4 4 2 10
Rochester
Aotnt
Providence
2 6 4 8 Northwestern 3 3 0 4 4 0
2
0
3
5
0
3
M
i
nnesota
'Dele .W1rner
West
2 3 0 3 4 1
W. L. T. Pis. Wisconsin
2 3 0 2 6 0
Hershey
8 I I l7 Illinois
1 5 0 I 7 0
Cincinnati
4 2 4 t 2 Iowa
0 5 0 I 7 0
Baltimore
3 5 3 9 Indiana
Others
Cleveland
3 5 3 9
For low-cost car,
W
LT
Richmond
2 5 1 5
I
6
0
Akron
Tidewater
1 ll I 3
boat, plane and
5 I 0
Wil mln9'on
Sunday's Results
2
0
Ashtan
5
Boston 4 Providence 1
mortgage insurance
4 3 0
Cincinnati
Springtietd 5 Rochester 4
4 3 0
Findlay
see us. Easy terms •.
Nova Scotia 4 Tidewater 2
4 3 0
John Carroll
!Only games scheduled)
3 4 0
Dellance
Monday's Games
Dayton
3 5 0
(No games scheduled)
3 5 0
Bluffton
Central
State
2 4 0
.
.... '
Phonort2-lfM ·
Case W , Reser ve
2 5 0
114
Court
St.
l'llmoroy
NHL Standings
I 5 0
Ohio Northern
By United Press International Hiram
I 5 0
Easl
Youngstown Slate
I 5 0
W. L. T. Pis. Xavier
0 7 0
6 I 4 16
New York
6 2 2 14
Montreal
6 3 I 13
Boston
4 7 2 10
Vancouver

DIMs Wana Ins.

.

Toronto

2 3 5
3 7 2
3 8 0

Buffalo
Del roil

9

8
6

"IT'S TRUE"---

Wesl
W. L. T. Pis.
Chicago
9 3 0 18
Minnesota
7 2 2 16
Pittsburgh
5 5 2 12
Philadelphia
5 4 I ll
California
3 5 3 9
St. Louis
3 6 I I
Los Angeles
2 8 1 5
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia 5 Montreal 3
New York 3 Toronto 3 (tiel
Boston 5 Minnesota 2

VALUES

Detroit 3 PiHsburgh 1
Vancouver 6 Chicago 2

Catitornia 2 Buffalo 2 (tiel
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Game
Detrol t at Toronto
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
(No games scheduled!
Wednesday's Games
St. Louis at Montreal
Toronto at Minnesota
New York at Los Anget2s
Philadelphia at Chicago
Pittsburgh at California
(Only games scheduled)

BAKER

FURNITU._
MIDOl.EPORT, 0.

Reduce
your monthly payments'
with.:.
Action
Loans up to

-$3500

125 E. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

9¥2-217\t

- - - - • Other C.L. Co. loans of $5QQO and more - - •

�..........,_, .................... .........,.... _...... ........,......._._
~

~

J-'l'beDaiiJflentlne!,'.'lllol t W'wlaoy,O.,Nov. l,ll'/1

•

Teenage Girl IS
Bandit's Hostage

.

.
(Continued from page I) .. tending were Mrs. Delale Reibel
The Meigs county · garden from Morristown Region 12.
club's Chrislmaa show received Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, Mrs.
im honorable mention in the 'James Titus, Mrs. James
state~
Richards and Mrs. James
Single club show awards went Jackson.
to the Chester Garden Club, Mrs. Harley George of the
first in the region; the French host club welcomed those .atMANILA (UPI)-A guitar- Charles R. Butler. He stabbed a dy, hut were unable to get a
City Garden Club, second, and tending. A money corsage
strummingkiller took a !._year- maid to death, shot and clear shot at him.
the Rutland Friendly Garden containing $83 was presen~ to
The gunman took Susan, her
old American girl hostage seriously wounded Mrs. BuUer,
Club third.
Mrs. Reese, retiring regional
today, held her for nine hours in and took Butler's youngest uncle, Stewart Raab, and a
Regional Sears Civic Im- director, gift from Region II
a bedroom of her father's house, daughter, Susan, hostage. He Manila Daily Star crime
provement Program awards Gard.en Clubs. Mrs. Melvin
then walked out with a shotgun held her in an air conditioned reporter, Ruther Batuigas, with
went
to the Rutland Friendly Smeltzer gave the devotions
in her ribs to escape by bedroom of the house for nine him aboard the helicopter.
Gardeners, who received $66.36, and there were reports by Mrs.
hours while he negotiated his Batuigas had been negotiating
heliCQPter.
first, and the Rutland Garden Paul Shoemaker, secretary;
The girl and two other release. During · that time he with the bandit.
Club, second, ' received $13.18. and Mrs. Karl Gr11eser,
The helicopter pilot, Alvaro
hostages forced to board the drank whisky, ate pork and
Terry Miller of the Frontier ·treasurer.
.
hellCQPter with the Filipino beans, whisUed and occasional- Aspillero, radioed that he had
Garden
Club
received
third
in
Giving
reports
were
Mrs.
let the man off in the Zambales
gunman later were released ly strurruned a guitar.
the · boys' state award for Cullen who announced the next
Some 200 pollee under the province about 6 p.m.- 11 hours
un~. The helicopter pilot
Typical Junior Gardener.
judges school for July 25 and 26;
said the killer was dropped off direction of Manila Mayor -after the nightmare began with
Publicity
book
awards
Mrs. Earl Bender, show
somewhere in the Zambales Antonio Villegas, who lives next the discovery of the thief in the
presented by Mrs. Earl Neff awards chairman, encourProvince 45 miles northwest of door, stood helplessly by during Butler home. A second robber
went to the Rutland Friendly aged
clubs
to
buy
the long siege. When the man escaped over a back wall when
Manila.
Gardeners: honorable mention the new judges and exnie man was discovered this left the house for a short auto discovered and was not inIn the state and . first hibltors handbook and exmorning · while robbing the drive to the nearby Manila Polo volved in the ltidnsping .
in
the
region;
Rut- plained
flower
show
The heliCQPter was supplied
home of American businessman Club, sharpshooters were realand Garden Club, second in procedures; Miss Ruby Delhi,
by the Manila Daily Times.
the
region; Gallipolis Garden state and county fair shows;
Boarded Helicopter
Club, third in the region. Mrs. Charles Caldwell, horWhen he left the house, the
Program book awards went to Uculture, who displayed dried
gunman wore a hat and coat
the Rutland Garden Club, materials; Mrs. C. E. Stout,
Pic. Joseph V. Reichman, son address where frienda may and Susan, lin eighth grade
second in the state and first in nature and conservation
of Mr. and Mrs. Manning write to him: Pic. Joseph V. student, had on a black and ·
NEAL
GETS
F!Rsr
DOWN
Blue
Devil
tailback
Pete
Neal
picked
up
a
first
down
on
this
the region; W'mding Trall of chairman, who reported on the
Webster, Pomeroy, has been Reichman, 268 48 6869, Hqs. white polka dot shirt. Along
play during Friday's GAII&amp;Meigs football game. Braced for a hit Is Meigs' Ted Lehew (68).
Meigs County and Oak Grove of advancement against strip
seleeted for a journey to Crete, Btry, 2nd Bn., 56th ADA, APO with. Raab and Batuigas, they
That's Gallia's Jim Miller behind Lehew.
Washington County, tied for mining and announced a spring
Greece to witness firing of an 09189, N.Y., N.Y.
drove in a small auto to the
army missile. Reichman is with Reichman is the nephew of nearby Manila Polo Club, where - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - second in the region; Rullsnd nature tour to be held at Burr
Friendly Gardeners were third Oak Lake. Mrs. Kenneth
HQ Battery, 56th Air Defense, Margaret Coughenour, the flvweater helicopter was
in the region, and the French Frazer, Sears Civic 1mAPO 09189. He was one of a Cheshire, and the brother of waiUng for them.
City
Club received an honorable provement Projects chairman,
They climbed in and took off
select few so chosen for the trip . Mrs. Lyle Meyer, Moorehead,
· · mention.
reminded that the intent to
Following is his military Minn.
for an unknown destination with
Awards in the slide contest enter should be In by May I and
a police helicopter keeping a
presented
by Mrs . Edward the project book by June l.
safe distance away. The gun- ·
WIN AT BRIDGE
Mizicko went to Mrs. Mizicko,
Mrs. Bolin reported on radio
man was given the $2,500
Athens, honorable mention in participation by the clubs, and
dollars in "getaway" money he
Class 4; Mrs. Carl Helmick, Mrs. Charles Lewis gave a
had demanded prior to takeoff.
Athens, first, second and third report on the regional publicity
In
Class 5; Mrs. James Car- book. County contact chairman
up with much and decided
on desperate measures."
NORm (D)
penter of the Rutland Friendly giving reports were Mrs. EdI
Jim:
"The
desperate
mea.KJ3
Gardeners, second in Class I; ward Mizicko, Athens, with 7
sures s ucceeded. Sims
Mrs. Harry Williamson, first in clubs and 52 members; Mrs.
elected to try dummy's jack
+AQ74
Class 8.
Charles Shaver, Gallia Coqnty;
of spades at trick one. Ely
4KQ943
Following their report on Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Meigs
·T
produced the queen and reA Halloween party for the
EAST
therapy
work, Mrs. Gomer County; Mrs. John Broughton,
turned a trump. Sims drew
4
.Q10 76
trumps
and
decided
to
knock
young
people
was
staged
at
the
Phillips and Mrs. Edward Washington County with nine
'11'105
~: 't'd432
out
the
ace
of
clubs.
Jo
went
Laurel
Cliff
Free
Methodist
+K96
+JI0532
Mizicko presented an award of clubs and 193 members.
up with the ace and underled Church· last week.
••• oltA107
...62
first in the state to the Rutland
Christmas shows announced
Mrs. Lawrence Eblin had
ner ace of spades a second
sourn
~!
Friendly Gardeners.
were "There's No Place Like
• 982
time . No one can blame charge of the event with Sherri
•••
A
highlight
of
the
meeting
Home
for the Holidays" on Nov.
........
.AKQJ96
Sims for going wrong and Clark giving the scripture from
was the guest speaker, Mrs. 27-26 by the Meigs County
+8
playing low from dummy." John 3:16 and the young people
oltJ85
Oswald : "Hal could also
Jack Anewalt, a teacher of clubs; and "Holiday Potpurri"
•••••
East-West vulnerable
have made the hand by tak- moving into a friendship circle
Japanese Dower arranging and by the Oak Grove Garden Club,
:;.
West North East South ing a diamond finesse and for prayer sentences. Games
, • 1 student of Bob Thomas, an Nov. 21. Mrs. Bolin urged
•. ·
1"'
Pass 1 •
discarding a spade but that were played with prizes going to
..
ICCredited judge, from Ket- members to use the new hand:; : Pass 2 +
Pass 4 •
play would be bad percent- Belinda Friend, Diana Lewis,
lering. Mrs . Jack Anewalt book, and reminded that that
;:; Pass Pass
Pass
age. He was sure of his con- Barbara Klein, Tom Soulsby,
made 17 arrangements, program books are no longer
•:,'Opening lead-• 4
tract if East held the ace of Jayne Hutchison, Patty Eblin,
•
collages, and assemblages . called yearbooks. She also
clubs and still had a chance
EASTERN LOCAL ffiGH SCHOOL was presented a new drivers education car recenUy by
:: .___________ i in spade s after Jo won the Ricky Clark, and Marvin
Styles used were free form, free announced the nature camp,
R. H. Rawlings Sons, Middleport, L-r are John Riebel, superintendent, receiving the keys
·~·; j,_ ~y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby club trick ."
Friend. Refreshments were
style, modern, abstract, con- Jline 12-16, at !Urkmont.
from Wally Ambur.ser of R. H. Rawlings, Robert Ord, principal, Mike Mor~an and Bill
' ··
served to those named and
~ : o:, Oswald: "Ely Culbertson
t••wsP•PE•
Ass•.J
struction and stabiles.
Clubs were aSked to send a
Phillips, instructors.
'' ·
:t· was a great showman and
Penny Eblin, Nancy Gill, Darla
The demonstrator explained donation of at least $1 to the
,;: publicity genius . Back in
Gill, Kathy Gill, Delores Klein,
that floral art is an ever- state chairman of roadside and
Brian Friend, Becky Wright,
:;: 1935 he persuaded Hal and
changing medium and stated civic beautification and to
;;' Doroth~ Sims to play a rub- The bidding has been:
Barbara and Keith Klein,
that although we feel more continue contributions to
;-: ber bnd,ge match against West North
East South Charles Diehl , Don Hayes,
comfortable with things Wahkeena. Mrs. Reed, state
;:: htm and Jo Culbertson. The
I+
Dennis Gilmore, Fred Eblin,
familiar, we are more president, announced the 1972
..;. match was a natural from a Pass
2•
Pass
"
and Vicki Clark.
:;: publicity standpoint and also
You. South, hold:
dul
(Continued from page 1)
passing the coolinu water were similar in quantity and stimulated by change. She said convention for Aug. 8-10 at
• · a ctnch f El J c b
A ts assisting were Mrs.
o
•'·
or Y- o ul ert- •AQ4 •K6 +A Q t085 "'KI09
power plants investigated. "
through the power plant con- quality above and below we need to welcome new ideas Denison University, Granville.
;;, son was a great player :
Eugene Gill, Mrs. Richard
She urged that clubs support
,; Do~othy Sims a poor one."
What do you do now?
Friend, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Research involved detailed· densers and discharge struc- discharge points. Occasional or and expand upon the things we
in
the
have
learned,
remembering
the
state wild flower book and
seasonal
changes
;
Jtm : "Here is a hand
A-This is a very tough bid. Wrigh t, and Mrs . Ernest sampling and an alysis at lures to a point in the river
2
3
:.-: which shows Jo Culbertson NT and NT are inadequate; Haggy .
various areas above and below where any heat added to the proportions of algae types is always not to "be down on that juniors enter the Reed
h
3 diamonds indicates a longer
;•: at er best It also indicates diamond suit. u your partner
intake and discharge points at discharge water was dissipated most likely the result of river something until we are up on Memorial contest on the
preservation of birds and
;:; why the Sims e s had no won't pass three clubs make
rl
four of the largest power plants by 50 pet. is no longer than 12 conditions, chemical and it."
;: : chance. Three no-trump was that bid.
'(J
(including one of the largest in minutes at the most for all four organic pollutants.
A total of 116 garden club wildlife. She also asked that
unbeatable but Hal wanted
7. The WAPORA studies in- members and 17 members of clubs write to their state
.•: to score his honors and also
TODAY'S QUESTION
BI1J
c·~--s
the country) along the Ohio plants studied. This explosure
.•. to play the hand ."
You do bid three clubs. Your 'J
fJU v
Ia:).
River . The area of the river time of plant and animal dicated a very low count of the Nature Garden Club representatives urging support
..Oswald: "Jo opened the partner bids three no-trump.
studies, from 54 miles below organisms to the elevated bottom (benthic) organisms, registered for the meeting of Senate Bill 361 to control
·, four of spades . She could What do ,you do now?
The Willing Workers Class of Pittsburgh to Louisville. is temperatures involved is ap- high turbidity, and few suitable hosted by the French City billboards on interstate and
, see that Ely would not show
Answer Tomorrow
the
Enterprise
United utilized by 25 utilities with a parently insufficient to produce nesting areas for fish spawning. Garden Club of Gallipolis. State primary roads.
This is most likely the result of officers Introduced were Mrs.
II was noted that the Victor
~- . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • Methodist Church staged a total generating capacity of detrimental effects.
~:
Halloween party Thursday more than 14.9 million 3. There was no evidenCe of such man-made factors such as Paul Wendell Reed, state Reis Outstanding Garden Club
::
As A Former Councilman of Middleport
night at the home of Mrs. kil owatts . Study results , "thermal blockage " as the channelization of the river, president;
Mrs . Dwight award will cover a two year
~:
Beulah Utterbach and Miss therefore ,
reflect
the result of heated water increased run.off and barge DeVoss, ~ond vice president period now instead of the
Frieda Leiving.
cumulative effects of heated discharges which could in- traffic. Spawning of game fish and regional advisor; Mrs. previous three.
?.
Mrs . Marjorie Bowen discharges into the river.
terfere with the migration of such as black hass was not Dorsey Bumgarner, state
Winnine door prizes were
presided at the meeting with
The specific power plants fish in the water. The heat from noted to occur in the main- secretary; Mrs. Albert Pool, Mrs. Earl Deem, Mrs. Jola
1
~
Mrs . Utterbach giving the studied were : W. H. Sammis dis charges was
rapiply stream of the Ohio River during past state president. Also in- Walcott,
Mrs.
Dorsey
~
scripture. There was group Station of Ohio Edison Co., at dissipated downstream.
1971 in the study areas. Based troduced was Mrs. Gilbert Bumgarner, Mrs . Grace
singing of "What A Friend We Str a tt on, Oh'to ; W. C. Beckjord 4. There was evidence that on the research, thermal · Cullen, state chairman of Vaughan, Mrs. Phillip Ramsey,
•~.
:.
Have in Jesus," and a prayer by Station of The Cincinnati Gas certain species of game as well discharges apparently exert judges and exhibitors schools Mrs. William Wllllord, Mrs.
Tom Hunte, Mrs. Owen Can~(
Mrs . Cordelia Bentz. Mrs . and Electric Co., near New as rough fish prefer the warmer little, if any, Influence on and clinics.
•
Bernice Evans was welcomed R'tc hmon d, Ohio; Kyger Creek water · temperatures in the spawning of game fish.
Past regional directors at- Uell, Mrs. Luther Tracy, Mrs.
,
as a new member. The wonder Station of The Ohio Valley immediate vicinity of the utility
IN GENERAL, the research
Paul Shumaker, Mrs. Charles
~
hox was won by Mrs. Beatrice Electric Corp. , near Gallipolis, discharges during the relatively results and conclusions give a
Shaver and Mrs. Susan Clarke.
•
Buck. Refreshments were Ohio; and Cane Run Station of cool spring season.
picture of a river, which
" 'J
fJUrv,
Door prizes were donated by
~;i
served
to
those
named
and
Mrs.
th Lo · 'II
GEORGE BAKER
e utsvt e Gas and Electric 5. Dissolved oxygen, an im- although subjected to manRuth Florist, Dudley's Florist,
Agnes Weeks, Mrs . Ethel Co., Inc ., near Louisville, portant factor in sustaining the made changes, is essentially SYRACUSE - The Junior Farmers Hardware, McKnight
!~
~
Smith, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, and Kentucky.
health of the river, was nor- unaffected from an aquatic, Class of the Asbury United &amp; Davies Hwd ., Smeltzer's
~
PAID FOR BY GEORGE BAKER
Mrs. Nancy Smith and two
Some of the conclusions of the mally slightiy higher below biological standpoint by heated Methodist Church enjoyed a Garden Center and Central
~ • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " ' guests, Mrs. Mary Bowen and WAPORA research are:
discharges from the plants .effluents from the power plants party at the church social room Supply Hardware all of
~
Miss Patty Edwards.
1. The studies yielded no during the months of June under study.
·
Octo~ 24. Games 1fere played Gallipolis, and Valley Bell Co.
and
prtzes were given to Lori of Pt. Pleasant, w. Va.
~
evidence that operation of the through September.
And
as
for
t/i.at
in
the
~
four largest power plants on the 6. There was no apparent shift
Guinther and Sandy Hamilton.
Favors lor the table were
:-:
river c a ·~sed maasurable from the desirable type of algae good soil, they are those
Members present were Lori given by The Voto Manufacwho, hearing the word, hold
Gulnther,
c.onnie Patterson, turersSale Co., M. T. Epling Co.
~
ct anges L1 either the abundance to the less desirable green or it fast in an honest and
~
or variet:• of aquatic life during blue-green groups which could good heart, and bring forth Jean Ann Rilchhart, and Jay of Gallipolis; Waterloo Coal Co.,
the ~eri6l of the study.
be directly attributable to fruit .with patience.-Luke Ord. Also present were th~ Inc., Oak Hill; Cecil Walker
2. rhe time involved in heated effluents since counts 8:15.
teachers, Dorothy Winebrenner Machinery Co., Belle, w. va.
and Helen Teaford. Cindy and Valley Bell of Pt.
Patlerson and Sandy Hamilton Ple~sant, W. Va. The spring
were visitors. Refreshments regtonal meeting will be held
were served.
April 22 at Logan, Ohio.
.

Reichman to See Firing

Bold Lead Sinks Sims

Young People
Attend Party ·

.1

..
..,.

, •

I ,:;

'·.

......

'}

'·.
~

••n""''

R

E ' ed

:J' njOJ

C'l-•.1i,.h

'

I URGE JHE VOTERS JO
VOTE fOR

.

JOHN ZERKLE

fOR MAYOR Of MIDDLEPORT

Pf1rt1J at C'l-.....rh

!!!JI81!1!111&amp;m!!lll8~.8i8i-rum&gt;.&amp;;8;z;::~:;:;:&gt;.;:;s;:;m&gt;.::;::~,~~:$&gt;,:(«&lt;:&gt;.&gt;;:!':o::t,;~

Blanda Does It

NFL Standings

Again For Oakland

GOING AFTER BALL -Melg!' Jeff Morrta goes after tbe baD on thiJ play as he tackles
GARS wingback John Davis during first half action of Friday's GARS-Meigs football game.
Meigs won, 1._12.

Foster Posts 37th Win
SCRANTON, Pa. (t;PI ) Lightheavywelght Bob Foster
left this Pennsylvania town
Sunday for his New MeKico
home with a victory and a
promise.
The victory came Sabrday
night with an 8th round TKO
win over Tommy Hicks of
lthiaca, N.Y.
The promise came when
Foster declared he was ready
to "clean up this mess about
anyone else being the champion ."

The "anyone else" is Vicente
Rondon of Venevuela, the man
recognized as the light heavyweight champion by the World
Boxing Association.
It's a titie Foster thinks he
himself deserves. His win over

•

the weekend was his 37th
knockout in 50 fights, but only
New York and Pennsylvania
recognize him as champ.
Asked about a possible match
with Rondon to settle the
dispute, Foster said, "I don't
think you could get him into the
ring with me if you gave him a
million bucks. This boy Hicks I
fought here would run him out
of the ring ."
Hicks, a college graduate who
works with retarded children,
was stopped only by a severe
cut on his right eye that
worsened until Referee Manny
Gelb halted the IS-rounder at
I :04 of the eighth round .
Until that call, Hicks, a
blonde southpaw, had troubled
Foster repeatedly and done

JACK ·L. BOSTICK
CANDIDATE FOR

SOUTHERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated.

PAID FOR BY THE CANDIDATE

AMOMENT TO REMEMBER

Re'!lember. when 30~ residents turned out to voice
complam!s aga1~st the h1gh sewage fee in Pomeroy.
Now 1s the t1me. for you 300 to really voice your disap.
proval. .
Go to· the polls Tuesday, Nov. 2, and give me your vote.
r~meroy needs a salesman to sell the community and
that s JUSt what I am. I can do the job.

Let's Go Here and N'ow!

DELMAR A. CANADAY
FOR MAYOR OF POMEROY

..

~~----••••••••iiii
••••-~P~d~-~Po;l~-~A~d~v-~~
~

Reedsville
The Daily
By MRS. L. BALDERSON
DEVOTED TO THE
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
spent Veteran's Day week..,nd
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
with their son Sgt. and jlfrs.
~•tc. Ed.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH, 1
Gray Barnhart and family at
City Editor
-'
Fort Shaw, South Carolina.
Published dally ex'c~pt
Satur_da~ by The Ohio Valley
Carroll Randolph Is a patient Publ•shmg
Company, 1l1
at the St. Joseph's Hospital, Court St., Pomeroy Ohio
4 57~9. Bu~lness Offlc~ Phone
Parkersburg, W. Va.
992.2156,
Editorial Phone 992 .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson 2151.
S&amp;cond class postage paid at
attended the Pumpltln Show at ,Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Circleville, SaY!I'day.
National advertising
repre-sentative ·eottlnelll ·
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose Gallagher
, Inc., 12 East Ond ,
spent the week..,nd tn Akron St., New Yortc. City, New Yor.k
Subscr iption rates: De:
with Mr. and Mr8. Thomas J. livered
by carrier where
Rose and family, to help available 50 cents per week .
By Motor Route where carrie;
celebrate their grandson's 17th service
not available · One
birthday.
month $1.75 . By mall In Ohio
W. :Va., One veer Slof oo
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Dry of , •5 ~d
l)t
months S7 . 2S . Thret
Athens visited with Mr. and months~ S• .so. Subscrlotlon

Sentin81

prlc~ Includes Sunday Ti mes .

Mrs.
Dale Smith and family,
Wednesday.

Senl•nel. ·

some of his best work in the
seventh round.
Even in defeat the young
boKer still kept his reputation
of never being floored. It was
his 25th fight and his fifth loss
with three draws.
Foster now prepares for
another defense of his crown
with two more fights set for
this year.
Lou Viscusi, the fighter's
manager , said one of those
battles could be against Mike
Quarry, the brother of heavyweight Jerry Quarry, in Los
Angeles.

Warriors
Topple

Oilers Pick Up
Lakers
First Win, 10-6
HOUSTON (UPI )-Ken Hous'ton of the Houston Oilers is one
of those rare players in the
r ~ged world of pr.o football
wuo doesn't drink, smoke or
cuss.
He sings in the choir of his
Baptist Church on Sundays seven months a year, but don't get
the Idea he's a softie. The other five months he spends his
Sundays as strong safety for
the Oilers and he's one of the
roughest In the game.
Houston, who has made the
AFL all-star team twice and
was a starter in the pro-bowl
game once in his four pro sea·
sons, intercepted a pass and
ra11 it back 48 yards Sunday to
give the previously winless
Oilers a 11).6 victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Houston, a 6-foot-3, 195-pounder from Lufkin, Tex., always
has wanted to carry the hall,
but they wouldn't let him.
"1 was a center in high
school and a center and linehacker in college at Prairie

when I wanted to come out for
track and run the 100-yard
dash, the coach said linebackers are shotputters so they
wouldn 't even let me run in
track.
"One day I was messing
around with the sprinters and
I ran the 220 in 23 seconds,"
Houston said . "Since I've been
timed in the 40 here , the coaches say I would've run the 100
in 9.6."
Every time Houston gets to
run with the ball he has to
steal it. He· had only one inter. ception in college, but the one
against the Bengals was his
21st in less than five seasons in
the pros and the sixth he has
returned for a touchdown, a
team record.
The interception Sunday was
off Bengal rookie Ken Anderson, who had a disastrous day.
He completed only 4-&lt;&gt;f-13 passes for II yards and was dumoed six times for 49 yards before leaving with a hip injury
with 13: 15 remaining in the

View / ' Houston said. "Then ' game.
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

Please Vote For

JAMES ''Jim" EADS
a.ERK Rutland Township
Member of Rutland Fire Department
Tuesday, Nov. 2

Thank You!
. Pd. Pol. Ad.
Your Vote Appreciated

Grover Salser, Jr.
Candidate for Member of

Southern Local Board of Education
Election- Nov. 2, 1971

Pd. Poi. Adv.
VOTE IIOR AND SUPPORT

FRED HOFFMAN
Republican Candidate For

MIDDLEPORT-VILLAGE

COUNC-IL
Your Vote and Support Greatly Appredated
Pd. P r1l. Adv .

By United Press International
Joe Ellis Is one of the few
players in the National Basketball Association who would
rather come in off the bench
than starr. ·He showed whr
Sunday nlgtit'.
···
Ellis, a stringbean &amp;-foot-0,
190-pounder, came off the bench
to score 12 points in the last
quarter and spark the Gblden
State Warriors to a 109-105
victory over the Los Angeles
Lakers.
Ellis entered the game late in
the third period after Clyde Lee
picked up his third personal
foul ·and broke the game open
with his torrid shooting in the
last ,eriod. He finished with 20
points as he led the Warriors to
their fifth victory in their last
six games and a second place
tie with the !.akers in· the
NBA's Pacific Division.
Cazzie Russell was high
scorer for Golden State with 32
points and Fritz Williams had
23. Gall Goodrich of the Lakers
was the game 's high scorer
with 38.
In other NBA action Sunday,
the Milwaukee Bucks ripped the
Cleveland Cavaliers 118-102 and
the Houston Rockets routed the
Buffalo Braves 102-87.
Kareem Jabhar hit 14-&lt;&gt;f-19
field goal attempts and finished
with 35 points as the Bucks
romped past Cleveland. He hit
on a pair of three-point plays
early in the game to give
Milwaukee a lead it never
relinquished. John Johnson was
high man for Cleveland with 19
points.
Rookie Cliff Meely scored 19
points and Calvin Murphy
added 16 as the Rockets beat
Buffalo. Dick Cunningham
scored siK of his 10 points
during a 32-point second quater
that put the game out of reach
for Houston. Bob Kauffman led
Buffalo with 15.

This Week's
Ohio College
Footba II Schedule
By United Press International
Michigan Stale at Ohio Slate
Bowling Green a! Texas
Arlington (n)
Marshall al Kent stale
Miami at Western Michigan
Ohio Unlverslly at Tulane (nl
Toledo at Northern Illinois
North Texas State at Cincinnali
Dayton at Xavier
· Baldwin-Wallace at Capital
Otterbein at Denison
Musklngum a! Heidelberg
Marlella at West Virginia
Wesleyan
Mount Union at DePauw
Ohio Wesleyan at Oberlin
WIHenberg at Ball State
Wooster at Centre I Ky.)
Akron .a! Indlana S.tate
Waynesburg at Ashland
. Northwood at Bluffton
Case Western Reserve at Coast

Guard

Defiance at Anderson

John Carroll at Findlay (n)
Edinboro State at Ohio Northern
Wilmington at Taylor (Ind.)
N - night game

By GREG GALLO
After the Chiefs were unable
UP! Sports Writer
. to move the ball, the old grey
While men of his own fox marched the Raiders from
generation were slumped back the Kansas City 45-yard line to
in their living room easy the goalline -siK inches away
chairs, sipping beer and play- from a touchdown.
ing Sunday afternoon quarter- Madden made the decision to
back, 44-year-old George go for the tying field goal and
Blanda was on the football Blanda calmly booted the ball
field, leading the Oakland through the uprights. The tie
Raiders to a 2{).20 tie with the left the Raiders and the Chiefs
Kansas City Chiefs.
deadlocked for first place in the
"George did it again," said Western Division of the AmeriRaiders' coach John Madden of can Football Conference with 5the man who has bailed out ·his 1-1 records.
team many times with last San Francisco took the lead
minute heroics. Blanda came in the National Football conoff the bench Sunday with 8:50 ference's Western division as
remaining and proceeded to put quarterback John Brodie hit
10 points on the scoreboard, Gene Washington with a 71salvaging the tie and boosting yard touchdown pass and
himself ahead of Lou Groza as center Forest Blue ran 2li yards
the all.tiine National Football for a touchdown with a
League scoring "leader with recovered fumble in the final
1,609 career points.
period; the Rams, who dropped
"No, Lamonica (Daryle) a half game behind the Forty
wasn't hurt," Madden ex- Niners, were beaten by two
plained after the game. "! just touchdown passes by the
had a feeling about substituting Dolphins' Bob Griese and two
Blanda. We needed new life." Garo Yepremian field goals;
Blanda is no old Iuddy-duddy. and Earl Morrall's three
He may look like one but once touchdown passes sparked the
he's on the field he generates Colts to victory, their fifth in
that spark. He moves the seven games.
Bill Kilmer gained revenge
ballclub.
"George is a helluva com- against his old teammates
petitor," said Chiefs• coach when he ran for one TO and
Hank Stram, after his team passed for another to lead the
held Oakland on the one-yard Redskins over the Saints; Norm
line and forced Blanda to kick Snead came off the bench and
an eight-yard field goal with found Bob Grim with a 55-yard
just 2:31 left to tie the game. touchdown pass with only 1:04
"He keeps you off balance and remaining to lift 'the Vikings·
gave the team a lift. Our pass over the Giants; and Bobby
pressure against him wasn't Douglas accounted for two
any different than it was touchdowns and Mac Percival
against Lamonica . But George kicked three field goals to pace
goes off on a quicker count and the Bears over the Cowboys.
gets the ball away faster than
Dick Shiner passed for two
Lamonica."
touchdowns to lead the Falcons
In other games Sunday, San over the Browns; the Eagles,
Francisco defeated New Eng- sparked by an aroused defense
land 27-10, Miami edged Los that led to two touchdowns,
Angeles 2.0-14, Baltimore held off the Broncos; and Jim
heat Pittsburgh 34-21, Wash- Hart threw two TD passes in
ington bested New Orleans 24- the second half to pace the
14, Chicago upset Dallas 23-19, Cardinals to victory.
Minnesota edged the New York
John Hadl fired four touchGiants 17-10, AUanta bombed down passes and ran for
Cleveland 31-14, Philadelphia another to lead San Diego over
stunned Denver 17-16, St. Louis the Jets and Ken Houston's 48edged Buffalo 28-23, San Diego yard TD return on an intercepcrushed the New York Jets 49- lion helped the Oilers to their
21, and Houston defeated first victory of the season .
Cincinnati 11).6. Detroit plays
Green Bay at Milwaukee
tonight,
PARSONS' 1ST TITLE
Kansas City led 20-10 when
Blanda relieved Lamonica in NEW BREMEN, Ohio (UP!)
- Johnny Parsons, whose father
the final period . The 23-year
won the Indianapolis 500 in
veteran of NFL wars hit tight
1950, captured his first career
end Ray Chester with a 38-yard
sprint title when he won the 40pass and then found Fred
lap feature event at the New
Biletnikoff in the end zone with
Bremen Speedway.
a 24-yard scoring strike.

Pittman Was
Of Select Group
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP!)
- The coaching fraternity to
which Jim Pittman belonged
spans from one generation to
the next like an immense
classroom .
Men like Pittman not only
teach how to make a trap block
but have side courses on
discipline, sacrifice and total
effort.
And from the ranks of the
taught comes a select group of
teachers.
Jim Pittman, ·who died
Saturday night during the
Texas Christian UniversityBaylor football game, was one
of that select group. And he
remained a member of the
group despite knowing his
emotional profession wasprohably no place for a man with
heart trouble.
During Pittman's 46 years he
learned a lot of what he taught
from the man he had served
for more than a decade as chief
assistant -Texas Coach Darrell
Royal. And he passed a lot of
what he knew to the man who
served as his own chief
assistant - Billy Tohill.
Tohill, 32, was named Sunday
to succeed Pittman as head
coach of TCU.

Pittman had suffered a heart
attack in 1964 in the dressing
room following Texas' final
regular season game against
Texas A&amp;M. That seizure
caused him to miss the
Longhorns' trip to the Orange
Bowl that season . Pittman
suffered a second, less severe,
heart attack before he left
Texas to take over as Tulane's
head coach in 1966.
The announcement of Tohill
as the Interim head coach was
tnade Sunday by TCU Athletic
Director Abe Martin, who was
forced to step down as TCU's
head coach when he suffered a
heart attack in 1965.
"I don't think Jim would
want anything else done with
this team," lllartin said. Jim
Pittman was a fine football
coach and a great man . As is
willed or happened, many boys
will miss his fine teaching."
"It's hard to predict whether
we will win or lose the rest of
the season," Tohill said Sunday.
"All you can do Is hope and
wish. The opportunity is there
if our players give it their
best. "

Jim Pittman would have
rxnr&lt;'l ed nothing less.

To The VoteiS of Sutton Township
R. .lect William S. (8111) Crou

For
Clerk of Sutton Township
-SECOND TERMPd. Pol . Adv .

~ High School

Pro Standings
By United Press International

p••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

VOTE FOR

hiefs · Tie

Rai ers,

Fall Meeting ·

American Conference

East

W. l . T. Pel.

NY Jets
New England
Buffalo

2 5 0 .286 New York
2 5 0

.286

0 7 0 .000

Central

4
3
I
1

Houston
Cincinnati

3 0 .571
4 0 .429
5 1 .167
6 0 .143

West
W. l . T.
Oakland
5 I I
Kansas City
5 I 1
San Diego ·
3 4 0
Denver
2 4 I

Pel.
.833
.833
.429
.333

Nationa I Conference
W. L T. Pel.

Washington
6
Dallas
4
St. louis
3
NY Giants
2
Philadelphia
2
Central

1 0 .857
3 0 .571
4 o .429
5 0 .286
5 0 .286

W. L. , T . Pel.
6 1 0 .857
5 2 0 .714

4 2 0 .667
.333

2 4 0

West
W. l . T. Pet .

San Francisco

5 2 0 .714

Los Angeles
4 2 1 .667
Atlanta
3 3 1 .500
New Orleans
2 4 1 .333
Sunday's Results
Atlanta 31 Cleveland 14
Philadelphia 17 Denver 16

Washington 24 New Orleans 1.4

Minnesota l7 NY Giants 10
St. Louis 28 Buffalo 23

7 2 .777
6 2 .750

5 5 .500
Buffalo
3 7 .300
Central Divi5ion

•;,
21/:l
4lf:l

W. L Pet. GB
3 6 .333

W. L T. Pel. Atlanta

Cleveland
Pittsburgh

Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
Green Bay

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel. GB

5 I 1 .833 Philadelphia
5 2 0 .714 Boston

Miami
Baltimore

Baltimore
3 6 .333
Cleveland
2 8 .200 11h
Cin cinnati
1 6 .143 1
Western Conference

Chicago 23 Dallas 19
Baltimore 34 Pittsburgh 21
Oakland 20 Kansas City 20

By United Press International
Dayton Alter 41 Lima Catholic
14
Dayton Patterson 46 Dayton
White 12

Cincinnati Country Day 14 Ross

2
Barberton

42 Lora i'n Southview

6

Akron Kenmore 36 Akron Sooth
20

Canton Lincoln 20 Canton C. C.
14
Midwest Division
Sanduskv St. Marv 20
W. L. Pet. GB
Fostoria St. Wendelln 14
Milwaukee
8 I .888
Norwalk St. Paul 55 South
Chicago
5 2 .714 2
Central 0
Detroit
6 4 .600 21!1 Zanesville
Rosecrans
15
Phoenix
3 4 .429 4
Shenandoah 12
Pacific Division
Beallsville 26 Caldwell 0
W. L. Pel. GB Newcomerst.own 21 Garaway 0
Seattle
I 2 .777
Indian Valley North 35 Malvern
Los Ang Angels 6 3, .6U
8
GoldenState
6 3 .667
Tuscarawas C.C. 20 Indian
Houston
2 8 .200 51h
Valley South 12
Portland
'1 5 .167 4111 Steubenville C. C. 40
Sunday's Results
Canton Sf. Thomas Aqu inas o
Milwaukee 118 Cleveland 102
Youngstown
South
8
Houston 102 Butfalo 87
Younastown Chanev 6
Golden State 109 Los Angeles Poland 21 East Palestine 0
105
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney
IOnly games scheduled)
16
Monday's Games
Campbell Memorial IS
I No games scheduled)
Ursuline 33 Hubbard 0
Tuesday's Games
Jackson Milton 10 Lowellville 0
Phoenix at Chicago
McDonald 28 SOuth Range 14
Baltimore vs. Warriors
LeBrae 12 Canfield 6
at Oakland Warren J FK 58 Liberty 8
!Only games scheduled)
Niles McKinley 19 Alliance 0

Grid Standings
Ohio College
Footba It Records

Houston 10 Cincinnati 6

Scores

NBA Standings
By United Press International

By ,U nited Press lnternationa I
Mid-American Conference

Warren Western Reserve 7
Akron Hoban 3
Beaver Local2 Southern Local 0
Weirton (W. Va.) Madonna 20

Wellsville 17
St . Francis 51 Steubenville 12
Tol Devilbiss 14 Bowsher 8

Tol Woodward 28 Ma comber 6
league All Games Tol St. John 34 Libbey 16
Miami 20 Los Angeles 14
W l T WLT Tol Cardinal S!rllch 8 Start 7
San Fran 27 New England 10
4 0 0 8 0 0 Farrell (Pa.) 42 Brooktield 6
Toledo
San Diego 49 NY Jets 21
Bowling Green
Carlisle 21 National Trait 0
(Only games scheduled)
4 1 0 5 2 0 Graham Local 14 Miami East 6
Monday's Games
Western Michigan
Cleveland Benedictine 9
Detroit vs. Green Bay
2
0 6 2 0
Cleveland East Tech 6
2
•
at Milwaukee 1night) Ohio University
28
Shaker Heights 16
Parma
(Only game scheduled)
0 3 4 0 Cleveland Cathedral Latin 13
3
2
Sunday's Games
Miami
0 3 0 4 3 0
Cleveland Byzantine 12
Atlanta at Cincinnati
Kent State
0 3 0 2 6 0 Cardinal 30 Beachwood 20
Buftalo at Miami
Ohio Conference
Berksh ier 28 Richmond Heights
Cleveland at Pittsburgh
league All Games
21
Dallas at St. louis
WLT WLT
Detroit at Denver
Baldwin-Wallace
Green Bay at Chicago
4 0 0
7 0 0
Houst at New England
Ohio Wesleyan
Kansas City at New York Jets
4 0 0 6 1 0
Oak land at New Orleans
Mount Union 3 I 0 5 2 0
Philadelphia at Washington
Marietta
3 2 0 4 3 0
San Diego at New York Giant s
Denison
3 2 0 4 3 0
San Francisco at Minnesota
Wittenberg 2 2 0 4 3 0
IOnly games scheduled)
Heidelberg 2 2 0 4 3 0
Monday's Games
2 2 0 4 2 0
Vloosler
Los Angeles at Baltimore Otterbein
2 2 0 3 4 0
(night)
Muskingum
I 4 0 1 6 0
!Only game schedu led )
I 4 0 2 5 0
Kenyon
0 2 0 0 6 0
Oberlin
Capital
0 4 0 I 5 0
Big Ten
AHL Standings ,
League All Games
By United Press International
WLT W. LT
East
Michigan
5 0 0 6 0 0
W. L. T. Pis.
5 0 0 6 I 0
Boston
7 1 1 IS Ollio Stale
Springfield
6 2 2 14 Michigan State
3 2 0 4 4 0
Nova Scot1a
5 3 2 12
Insurance
3 2 0 3 4 0
Purdue
4 4 2 10
Rochester
Aotnt
Providence
2 6 4 8 Northwestern 3 3 0 4 4 0
2
0
3
5
0
3
M
i
nnesota
'Dele .W1rner
West
2 3 0 3 4 1
W. L. T. Pis. Wisconsin
2 3 0 2 6 0
Hershey
8 I I l7 Illinois
1 5 0 I 7 0
Cincinnati
4 2 4 t 2 Iowa
0 5 0 I 7 0
Baltimore
3 5 3 9 Indiana
Others
Cleveland
3 5 3 9
For low-cost car,
W
LT
Richmond
2 5 1 5
I
6
0
Akron
Tidewater
1 ll I 3
boat, plane and
5 I 0
Wil mln9'on
Sunday's Results
2
0
Ashtan
5
Boston 4 Providence 1
mortgage insurance
4 3 0
Cincinnati
Springtietd 5 Rochester 4
4 3 0
Findlay
see us. Easy terms •.
Nova Scotia 4 Tidewater 2
4 3 0
John Carroll
!Only games scheduled)
3 4 0
Dellance
Monday's Games
Dayton
3 5 0
(No games scheduled)
3 5 0
Bluffton
Central
State
2 4 0
.
.... '
Phonort2-lfM ·
Case W , Reser ve
2 5 0
114
Court
St.
l'llmoroy
NHL Standings
I 5 0
Ohio Northern
By United Press International Hiram
I 5 0
Easl
Youngstown Slate
I 5 0
W. L. T. Pis. Xavier
0 7 0
6 I 4 16
New York
6 2 2 14
Montreal
6 3 I 13
Boston
4 7 2 10
Vancouver

DIMs Wana Ins.

.

Toronto

2 3 5
3 7 2
3 8 0

Buffalo
Del roil

9

8
6

"IT'S TRUE"---

Wesl
W. L. T. Pis.
Chicago
9 3 0 18
Minnesota
7 2 2 16
Pittsburgh
5 5 2 12
Philadelphia
5 4 I ll
California
3 5 3 9
St. Louis
3 6 I I
Los Angeles
2 8 1 5
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia 5 Montreal 3
New York 3 Toronto 3 (tiel
Boston 5 Minnesota 2

VALUES

Detroit 3 PiHsburgh 1
Vancouver 6 Chicago 2

Catitornia 2 Buffalo 2 (tiel
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Game
Detrol t at Toronto
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
(No games scheduled!
Wednesday's Games
St. Louis at Montreal
Toronto at Minnesota
New York at Los Anget2s
Philadelphia at Chicago
Pittsburgh at California
(Only games scheduled)

BAKER

FURNITU._
MIDOl.EPORT, 0.

Reduce
your monthly payments'
with.:.
Action
Loans up to

-$3500

125 E. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

9¥2-217\t

- - - - • Other C.L. Co. loans of $5QQO and more - - •

�. I-'1'11'Dilly8et£hwl,~y,().,Nov.1, 1971

Trevino

RE-ELECT
DENVER G. HYSELL

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI )- and he'llprobably be the first
Lee Trevino, a precedent- to make tt.
·
Th tr di ·
shattering pro, has invented a
e. a tiona 1grand slam is
·•four-way grand slam" ln golf to Wtn the U.S. Open, the

CANDIDATE FOR

LISBURY TOWNSH
TRUSTEE
Your Vote and Influence Will Be Greatly Appreciated.

....__ _..._..;..::,;Pd....:.,:Poi..:;:Adv;...J
.

DAVID U. NEASE
FOR

SOUTHERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION
"1 YEAR EXPERIENCE"
Pd . Pol. Adv.

VOTE FOR

CLYDE KUHN
Candidate for Member of

EASTERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION

the air.

ved."

"We haven't pia·""' well of~ games
fensively the last three
and we're not getting the bsll on
the breaks," Skorich added. "If
they don' t give the ball away
and you continue to give up the

Witnesses called included
Edward Garvey, director of the
National Foothall Players Association; Gus Holloman of the
New y ork J ets; tight end Jerry
Smith of the Washington

ball,
Y,OU're in sprinted
trouble."out· "to a
The'Falcons
211-0 lead ln the third quarter
when Bill BuUer went over from
the one-yard llne to cap a «
,.,.
yard drive .
The Browns' defense set up
the first Cleveland score m
· the
third quarter. After Doug Dieken blocked a Bill Lothridge
punt and Bo Cornell recovered
on the Atlanta 12, Scott skirted
left end for the touchdown.
BiU Bell's 27-yard field goal
gave Atlanta three polnts in the
f'mal quarte r and Nelsen hit
Gary Collins with a 24-yard
touchdown pass with 6:58left ln
the game.

Redsltins;
Dr.the
James
Garrick,
physician to
University
of
Washington team; and Dr .
Donald Cooper, team physician
for Oklahoma Stale University.
The subcommittee has already requested reports on
safety tests by three manufacturers - Monsanto (Astroturf) ;
3MCompany(Tartanturf); and
American Biltrite Rubber
Company (Polyturf).
Moss said that if the subcommmee aetermines the turf
needs higher safety standards,
Congress cou ld direct existing
· ·
federal agencies to promulgate
new rules.
The congressman said he was
gravely concerned by a study
Garrick made lndicating synthetic turf may cause up to 50
per cent more lnjuries than do
grass fields
Moss est'. ted that
million athU::.s "at ;:.erhlgo~
school college and
1 1
he'
pro. _eve
may
exposed tc additional
· of ·
.
.
risk . mjuryiftheUruversltyof
Washmgton study Is correct."
The congressman said that
under the administration's

College Results

Your Vote &amp; Influence Appreciated. Thanks.

=~

:

VOTE
NOVEMBER 2nd

HOward Ca IdWe II Jr.
;:'

Vir 14 No Car St. 10

Louisville 21 Tampa 10
Georgia
21 Duke 0
La . TechTech
24 S.E . La . 9
Citadel 28 Illinois St. o
Tennessee 38 Tulsa 3
Alabama
Mississippi41 24Miss
LSUSt.22 tO
Tenn St. 27 Southern u. 16

CLEVELAND (UPI) _ The
Cleveland Browns had been
held scoreless for sii straight
quarters when, in the third
quarter Sunday against the
Atlanta Falcons, they managed
a touchdown. But the effort
came a little late.
With a solid 211-0 lead when the
Browns' Bo Scott went over for
the score, the Falcons had an
easy time of it, wlnnlng 31-14.
The Browns were beaten the
weekend before by .the Denver
Broncos 'll~.
''I have no predictions on any
changes until we evaluate the
game after seelng the films, "
said Nick Skorich, coach of the
Browns.
"We're at the midway polnt of
the season and we've got to
start turning thlngs around," he
added, however.
Atlanta quarterback Dick
Shiner, who connected on two of
his first four passes for touchdowns, hit Ken Burrow on a 39-

NOVEMBER 2ND

"

By United Press lnlernational
Ea.:
Thiel 20 Allegheny i5
Mass
24 Ve rmonl1
5 21
Pittsburgh
Jl Syracuse
Temple 32 Delaware 27
Har
28 Wesl
Penn Vir
27
Pennvard
Sl . 35
7
Princeton 49 Brown 21
PMC Coli 40 Drexel t9
Cornell24 Columbia 21
Dartmouth 17 Yale 15
Juniata 16 wash &amp; Jeff 7
Slippery Rock 47 Waynesbg o
Sa Iem 27 Concord 14
Clemson 10 wS:~:hForest 9

BriUsh Open, the. Masters and
the National PGA but Tr evmo
·
has three legs on his own- the
canadian Open, the U.S. Open
and the British Open. The
fourth for him this week .will
be th~ Mexican Opeil'at Mexico
City.
Trevino, 31, won his sixth
tournament of the year when he
collected first prire in the
SaharalnvltattonalSunday. The
$27,000 put hun at an. all-time
h1gh m U.S. golf earnmgs with
a total of $227,242.
·
He passed Jack ~icklaus who
yard reception early ln the first had been No. 1 With $207,080,
qu:U:lert Atlanta defense, the old htgh mark. Ntcklaus
which picked off four of Cleve- Artt~.t;C;
land quarterback Bill Nelsen's
&amp;. 50
passes, held the Browns to only
nine yards total offense ln the
second quarter.
'T'
•
Unebacker Don Hansen gave
U
~ 0plc
the Falcons a 14-0 lead less than
a minute after Burrow's score
by lntercepting a Nelsen pass
and sprlnting 33 yards.
Shlner, who also tossed a 23yard scoring pass to Jim Mit- WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
chellln the second quarter, hit House subcommittee today
on six of nine passes for 115 opened hearings into comyards and w'as never dropped plalnts that professiooal and
by the Browns' defense.
college foothall players suffer
"Atlanta ran on the quick more lnjuries on artificial turf
count," Skorich said. "This than on grass fields.
caught our defensive line off Jut estimated 113 synethetic
guard. They were worried too football fields are ln use at high
much about the Falcons' rush- schools, colleges and profesing game and they were not sional foothaU stadiums across
gettingpressureonthepasser." the nation, and an increasing
Opponents are findlng that ?~ber of knee and ankle lnthe Browns' defense is vulnera- )Urtes have 9een,blamed on the
ble to the run. In the last two artificial tu(f.
games, Cleveland has had m "We certainly have had
rushing plays run agalnst it by allegations from professional
the opposition for 455 yards and players that they regard it as an
a 4.1 yard average galn.
accidenf prone envirorunent,"
"We were not getting good sa•
tnnan John E. Moss, D'dCha'whose commerce and
blocklng on our running plays calif.,
and we are not gettlng the op- f_ma. nc_e. subcommittee has
portunities to run the football " )Urisdicti on over product safety
Skorich said.
, legislation.
The Browns have run the hall "I don 't at this moment say it
only 35 times in the last two is more or less dangerous than
games for a total of 89 yards of grass turf," said Moss. "All we
2.5 yards per carry . Agalnst are attempting to do is galn a
Atlanta, they gained only 65 better understanding of the
yards on the ground, and 88 ln hazards that might be invol-

Falcons In
31-14 ROmp

VOTE

Pd P I Ad
::::::::::::::
· : o: ·: :v:.

FOR
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATI0N

i~=:::::::::::::P:d:·:::P:o:I.:Ad:v:·~ Western
Auburn 40Ky.
Florida
7
34 Morehead
1'

HAVE A VOICE IN YOUR
GOVERNMENT
11

VOTE"

ELEO WILLIAM (Bill) HARRIS
FOR CLERK
OF SUnON TOWNSHIP
Pd . Pol. Adv.

lr------------;;;;:;:;:;:;::;;;:;;;:;;;==..

PUT THE
MOTHER'S

Georg ia 24 South Car 0
Jackson St. 48 Tex Lulhrn 20
Midwest
Nebraska 31 Colorado 7
Cent. Mich . 10 Akron 7
Memphis St. 45 Ci nci 21
Nolre Dame 21 Na vy o
Mich igan6t Indiana 7
Ohio St. 14 Minnesota 12
Ill inois 24 Norlhwslrn 7
Ok la St. 17 Kansas 10
St . Jno IMinn l 10 Cncrdia o
Kansas St. 2e Mi ssouri 12
Mi
chigan St. 43 Purdue IO
Iowa 20 Wisconsin 16
Toledo 45 Miami 101 6
East Mich 31 No Mich 3
Central
Akron
NorthernMich
Ill 2610Kent
St. 77
Kenyon 35 Oberlin 14
St . Otat 51 Grinnell?
North Oak 13 No Iowa 10
ffuth Dak St. 20 North Oak St.
.
Southwest
Gramblin 21 Tex Southern 7
Oklahoma
43 Tech
Iowa 7St. 12
Rich 9 Texas
Texas 22 SMU 18
No Tex Sl. 21 Drake 12
E. Tex . St . 29 s.w. Tex . Sl. 13
Colo Coli. 56 Tabor 18
No Colo 2? East New Mex 10
Texas A&amp;M 17 Arkansas 9
Houston 14 Florida St. 7
McNeese St. 17 Troy st. 7
New Mex 34 Arizona 28
Ariz St. 44 Air Force 28
Trinity 28 Tex Ar lington 7
TCU 34 Baylor 27
Idaho 19 New Mex St. 14
Lamar 30 Ab Chris 28
West
Wyoming 29 Utah 16
Utah St. 18 Colo St. 17
Montana 14 Weber st. 13
Wash St. 31 Oregon 21
Stanford 31 Ore Sf . 24
Washington 23 UCLA , 2
Southern Cal28 Cal it o
San Jose St. 28 Pacific 18
Boise St. 52 Mont St. 24
Puget S 26 Portland St. 7
Southern Ore. 9 Ore Tech o
Brigham Young 16 Tex-El Paso
o
West Wash 21 Easl Ore 8
Simon Frazier 40 Whitman 14

J

TIGER-CATS WIN
TORONTO (Up! )-The
milton Tiger-Cats led Hab
G
H
'
Y
arney
enley's two pass
interceptions, clinched second
place and a playoff spot Sunday
With a Canadtan Football
League 23-15 victory over the
Toronto Argonauts
·
D S
RY DALE BEATS STONE
STOCKHOLM (UPI ) - Cliff
Drysdale of South Africa the
fifth seed, defeated Allan Stone
f
o Australia,~. 6-3, 6-4 Sunday
to advance to the second round
1 the $45•000 Stockholm Open
tennis tournament.

proposed Product Safety Bill,
synthetic turf would probably
escape federal juriadlcUon beit .
cause lS not sold direcUy to
the consumer.
Moss said a bill reconunended b heN
Yt
ational Commission
NICKLAUS WINS MATCH
on Product Safety which he has
lntroduced would make synHOBART, Australia (UPI)- th ti turf
Jack Nicklaus shot a 70 Sunday edthc
bajconsumer product
to
an us su eel to federal stan·
9
go 1 -under-par and win the dards.
Quanta.~ Open golf championship by tight shots over Bruce
Saturday's
Crttmpton of Auslra lt'a.
Ohio College
Football
Scores
Br Uni1ed
ln1ernation
I#1---:;;~----~~~~:;~~=:-:'~1
fo'r r · '•
·
011io
State 14Press
Minnesota
12
J
;, , , r.
- · 1' ou·c
hi
Toledo 45 Miami 6
l' ou.r Uity (,'ut trn nH'lll
Western Mi chigan 28 Ohio

°

VOfE FOR --

JOE DENISON
Write In Candidate

Fo•· IliA YOR
RELIABLE and CAPABLE
Vtltl'llll Korean Confilct

IN

THANK YOU

2nd.
Ji._n.uzana
.J'
J' .....
JAJSS
125-1()8

1

tor Member of Board of Education

Re-elect William S. (Bill) Crou
For
Clerk of Sutton Township

SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

-SECOND TERMPd . Pol. Adv ..

Three Ohio Veterans Administration hospilals will be
formally linked into a
regionalized sel-&lt;IP beginning
today. Chillicothe, Dayton and
Cincinnati VA hospilals with a
comblned space of over 4,100
operating beds will begin
functioning as one large expanded hospital on that date.
Announcement of the new
medical complex was made
today by Dr. Ben WeiiB, director
of the Chillicothe hospital,
acting as a spokesman for the
three hospital directors. ')'he
other -directors are L. H.

Whatever the Indiana Pacers
are dolng wrong, the Dallas
Chaparrals are the only ones
who know about it.
Indiana suffered only its
second loss in eight game,!l this
season Sunday night when the
Chaps stopped them 12&gt;106.
Both losses have come at the
hands of Dallas.
Rich Jones and Johnny'
Beasley scored 22 points each
and l!ight ChapB' 1\lt for double
figUres to defelit' lhe American
Basketball Association Western
Division leaders. Steve Jones,
Joe Hamilton and Lenny
&lt;lhappell had 13 each, Rich
Niemann and Donnie Freeman
hit for 12 apiece and Gene
Moore added 10 to boost Dallas
to victory.
The Chaps outscored the cold·
shooting Pacers 46-18 in the
second period and were never in
trouble thereafter. Mel Daniels
led Indiana with 23 polnts.
In other ABA acUon, the
Memphis Pros stopped the
Denver Rockets 117-1116, the
New York Nets defeated the
Kentucky Colonels 107·103 and
the Virginia Squires outlasted
the Pittsburgh Condors 134-124.
Bobby Warren scored 28
points-nine ln the first three
minutes-as the Pros beat
Denver. Wilburg Jones added 21
for Memphis while Larry
cannon and Wendell Ladner
chiwed ln with 19 each. Ralph
Simpson and Art Becker were
the high scorers for the Rockers
with 23 each.
Rick Barry's 10 points ln the
last period helped the Nets beat
Kentucky. The Nets trailed 8476 after three quarters when
Barry took over and boosted
them to victory. He finished
with 25 points to lead the Nets
while Bill Melchionni added 24
and Jim Ard 15.

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
7 J .700 ...
VIrginia
6 4 .600 I
. Floridians
5 4 .555 Ph
New York
4 4 .500 7.

~~~b~~~h

Carolina

THE HIGH
COST OF
BUYING A

NEW CAR
Fin1nct yot.tr new ur with

2

7 .222 41h

West

W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
6 2 .750 ...
Utah
6 4 .600 2
Dallas
4 5 .444 21/1
Denver
3 6 .333 3112
Memphis
3 6 .333 Jlh
Sunday's Results
New York 107 Kentucky 103
Memphia 117 Denver 106
Virginia 134 Pittsburgh 124
Dallas 1251ndiana 108
!Only Rames scheduled)

the Mtlgl Co.
Branch ol tho Athtns Co.
Sovtnga end L011n.

IICh WHk II

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
Save by the lOth. earn
from the 1st.

..,..
-

~)

2-HOUR
CLEANING

The Athens County
Savings &amp; t.o.n Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy. Ohto

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2nd
Pomeroy

Member Fed~r111l Home L«n
Bank.
Member Federal S.vl"!)s &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. 1.11
accounts Insured up to
120,000.00.

2ft E.

...., ···--··············
?hone m -5421

~·

bubble gwn and orange drink of Letart Falls and Mrs. Grella
were served.
Simpson of Racine. Mr. Shuler
The NRV&amp;l"ben .... therapy is stationed at the Lowry Air
session will; die conduclg~ by Force Base in Colorado.
Mrs.JamescarpenterandMrs. ~--------­
Joe Bolin with refreshments to
To The Voters of
be provided by Mrs. Robert
Snowden. Bulbs will be potted
for forcing into bloom and
something
using
the
Thanksgiving theme, will
complete the program.
Mrs. Willford is garden
therapy chairman, assisted by .
Mrs . Carpenter and Mrs.
Richard Fetty, Jr. Mrs. carpenter also serves as the Meigs For Sutton Township
County Garden Therapy
Pd. Pol. Adv.

SYRACUSE - The regular
meeting of Guiding Star
Council, Daught.e{s of America
was held ln their lodge hall
Thursday night, October 28,
·conducted in rltualisUc form by
the vice-eouncilor Wilma Jean
Davidson . Routine business was
transacted .
Brother William Theuner
~epo rted improving slowly.

$21JI90

*
~VALUE

STEREO RECORD

LIBRARY

with purchase of any

•Manufacturer's

~

STEREO

Sugges ted Retail PI ICC

1

NAtiONWIO.f UrE

IN~UIIANI':£ C~~.·~~J

Sirtton Township
ElECT
DELBERT A. SMITH
TRUSTEE

~h:a:ir:m:a:n~.

____

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club
Monday, 7:30 p. m. at Columbu~
and Southern Ohio Electric co.
social rooms, Mrs. David En tsminger, Mrs. M. c. Wilson and
Mrs. James Arnold, hostesses.
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p.m. Monday at school. Health
and safety program.
TUESDAy
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. Officers to be elected.
Robert King W.M.
SOUP DINNER, election day,
10 a.m. at Racine American
Legion Hall by auxiliary. Public
invited.
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Sy·racuse , United Presbyterian
Church annex, beglnning 11
a.m. Tuesday through supper
hour. Complete chi~ken dinner,
$1.25.
POMEROY EASTERN Stars
186 Tuesday 7:45p.m ..
SOUP, sandwiches, p1e, cake,
coffee, homemade 1ce cream to
be served at Forest Run United
Method1st Church Tuesday all
day.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER . GARDEN Club
ext~nds an mvttallon to all
Me1gs County Garden Club
members to attend an open
meetmg Wednesday at home of
Mrs. Roy Holter at 8 p.m.
THURSDAY

Costume prizes were awarded
at a Halloween party of the
Buzzy Bees staged [&gt;riday night
at the Middleport Church of
Christ. Approximately 40
children of kindergarten, first
and second grades attended.
Winning the costume prizes
were Brenda Fry and Tina
Miller, the prettiest; Melissa
Spencer, the ugliest; David
Meadows, the funniest; Timmy
Frazier, the most original.
Judging the costumes were
Lucretia Stobart and Mrs. Judy
Fraser. Mystery guests for the

party were Andrea Johnson and
Scottie F'raser.
Games were played with
prizes going to Tina Miller ,
Sharon Johnson, and Cheryl
Riffle. Favors were given and
refreshmen ts served by the
leaders, Ida Mae Martin, Jane
Hess, Ellen Johnson, Martha
Fry, Mary Frazier , Maxine
Dorst, Kim Mowery, and Dolly
Mowery .
Earlier . in the week, Wednesday evening, nThe Smilies,"
a junior high youth group of the
church had a Halloween party

at the church.
Thirty-two young people
attended the party with game
prizes going to Kathy Meadows,
Pam North, David Cole, and
Scott May. Refreshments were
served. Assisting with the party
were Dolly Mowery, Don Erwin , Mack Stewart, and Patty
Glaze .
·

RE~ELECT

·

JOE SAYRE

Charter Draped For Homer Rice
The charter was draped in
memory of Homer Rice when
the Rock Springs Grange met
Thursday night at the hall.
Master Fred Goeglein presided
at the session during which time
a communication was -· read
from the stale master and thank
you notes from the Homer Rice
family and Mr . and Mrs .
William Grueser.
Mrs. W. A. Morgan presented
the program on autumn with
readings includlng "Autumn
Turns the Page" by Mrs.
Robert Louks ; "Common

Things, " Mrs. Fred Leifheit;
"Jack-o-lanlern," Mrs. Ethel
Grueser ;

Making

VIRGIL KING

'

to the Meigs · Local
Board of Education on
Nov. 2.

Pd. Pol. Adv ..

NOVEMBER 2

VOTE FOR
DAVID 0.
JENKINS, SR.

Old amulets and charms
containing my ste rious potiOns that .dangle from the
neck are being worn even
tn this scientific age. But
fear not, we aren't reverting
to former superstitions-only
updating an old jewel. Now
the am u 1e t is minus the
mysterious potion and plus
exciting new p e r f u m e s.
Small absorbent rocks are
inside and they're saturated
with pleasant scents that
float around with you.
Cross Chapter meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, cafeteria,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

''Cider

Time ," William Grueser;
"Tribute to Atwnn " by Mrs.
Fred Goeglein; "How Father
Carves the Du~k" by Mrs.
William Grueser; "Knees u by
Mrs . Morgan ; and "Bittersweet" by Mrs. Amos
Leonard. Refreshments were
served by the home economics
chairman .

AND

MEMBER OF MEIGS LOCAL
.BOARD OF EDUCATION.
Pd. Pol. Adv.
Give local government back to the people

Elect

Your Vote Appreciated

GEORGE A.
"Alfred" WOLFE

HERB
WHITE

Candidate For

CHESTER
TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

MAYOR

Election- November 2, .1971

,:M~E~IG:S..:AM:E:R~IC:A~N:..· :R:ed:...!:::::P:d:.:Po:I.:A:d:.~

of
Racine

'To The Voters Of
Chester Township

•.

VIllage

RE-ELECT
WILLIS R. FROST

TUES.,

FOR
CLERK O'F CHESTER TO ·
WNSHIP

NOV. 2

YOUR VOTE &amp; INFLUENCE APPRECIATED

P0I

Vote (Yes) For Your Fire Department

A

•

FOR lESS THAN
'1.60 MORE
PER YEAR

Vote
Yes!

NOVEMBER 2ND

CHARLES .HAUBER

MajeStiC M" lool&lt;"'' '""'"'
styled ca b1net 1

MONDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Monday 7:30 p. m. at
high school. All interested
persons are urged to attend.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30 p. m. Monday at the home
of Mrs. J. 0. Roedel with Mrs.
Irving Karr, Jr., as co-hostess.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America,. 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF Hall.
Initiatory work will be given
and plans will be completed for
the 59th anniversary ob'servance on Nov. 15.
MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Officers to be elected.
SOUTHERN · At hl etic
Boosters Monday, 7:30p.m. at
the high school. All interested
persons urged to attend.

Buzzy Bees, Smilies at Parties

'.

VOTE

A911i
The GRANADA

Social
Calendar

.,;._~~========~~:::::::::::::::Pd:-:Po:L:A:d:v:.~~==:::::::::::::::::· :d:•·~

Lawson, Eileen· Clark:
Pierce, Mabel Pickens,
~~Je~,~et Cottrill, Esther\
H
and Councilor Wilma
Davidson.

$2490

PRESENT STATION

ol Pe can or
and se l cc1 harorlwnorl

:~~1,::J~~~~:~
t

peak mUSIC
slate
h

an tl

AM /Stere o

1ild1o

THE MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT IS ASKING FOR A BOND ISSUE
NOVEMBER 2ND TO BUILD AND EQUIP A NEW FIRE STATION.

WRITE-IN CANDIDATE.

OI&lt;JI1ve
SO I1 dS, I

Zemt11 QU&lt;IIity spcilkms

THE SEVEN-TENTHS OF A MILL YOU HAVE BEEN PAYING HAS BEEN PAID OUT.

FOR

FOR THE AVERAGE PROPERTY OWNER IT WILL COST A TOTAL OF $3.90 PER YEAR OR $1.60

MEMBER OF BOARD OF

AIOIW I The BELLWOOD

quality goes in
befc&gt;re the name goes

on ~

COntemnor,11y slyhno,n gcnllme 011l m1shed
Wal nu 1 ~tJnce rs &lt;1nd sctec t h&lt;lrdwooo solods
l·ealu,es 32 wil tl pc ok rnus1c powe • sohd ·
!.ilat c ilmphiiCI With f M /AM /Stereo FM

~~,t~r.
~~~~·,"~ ;~;~o;~;
(lnt,l four Zcn1 1h Quill1ly

$19995

EDUCATION

~oea kcr s

EASTERN LOCAL

USE .INGELS LAY-AWAY PLAN!

H%-!311

0 ~A~~~~~~~~

RUTLAND - Seventy-five
tulip bulbs ' and 12 King Alfred
daffodil bulbs were planted
around the flag pole at the
Rutland Elementary School
Thursday, Oct. 28 by the special
education class of Mrs. Thelma
Campbell. This is the second
garden therapy session of the
year conducted with the
youngsters by members of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
Club with Mrs. William Willford
as chairman.
Mrs. Howard Birchlield and
Mrs . Homer Parker assisted
with the therapy. The entire
class first pulled up the petunias
and pansy plants, which had
already bloomed out. These had
been planted last year ln April
and May by the students. The
boys of the class then took
shovels and picks and dug out
and removed the dirt to a depth
of 6 inches.
Next the daffodil bulbs and 25
each of red, yellow and purple
tulips were placed in position
for planting with clumps of 12-13
to a group for a more brilliant
show of color when they bloom
in the spring . Then the dirt was
filled back in over the entire
bed. A mulch of hay or straw
will be added and a protective
fence put around it. The flower
bulbs were provided by the

• E'··
Hr.ymn Stng
R · / Se •

JM:or~:a~r;irlty, Margaret Eichinger

f'¥JWAND

P.J. PAUUY
PHONE

8 7 Bulbs Planted

M1

BUY

CALL

307 Spring Ave .• t'Omtror

gift for lnstalllng the officers
and Mrs. Snowden thanked the
retiring officers and gave each
an appreciation gift.
The county Christmas show to
be slaged on Nov. 'l/ and 28 at
Meigs High School was
' discussed and arrangements
were made for members to
enter classes and to provide
sandwiches and pie for the sales
table.
Mrs.
Charles
Lewis,
educational chainnan for the
county show, reported that
Chrisimas customs in other
lands will be tbe educational
theme. She and Mrs. Kale
Jarrell were appointed to

Council 323 recently, when
Mabel Pickens, a candidate of .
the local council, was initiated
by the Chesler learn.
Jewelry being sold for the
Sll!le Councilor project was
displayed.
The hall was very attractively
de&lt;:or~oted with the Halloween
theme during the social hour
the close of the
Refreshments of
sar•dw·ich,es, pickles, chips,
car1dy and pop were served.
Members present were Ethel
of Pt. Pleasant, MyrUe
Durst of Pomeroy, Deputy Jean
Hall, Past Deputy Florence
Potts, Edith Hood, Pauline

LIMITED
OFFER!

.LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

Hillsdale IMich .) 24 Central
State 6
Villanova 33 Xavler 7
Baldw in-Wallace 47 Heidelberg
14
Defiance 21 Otterbein 14

Installed

Sister Edith Hood's arm is
much improved. The death of
Sisler Mary M. Diddle was
noted. Memorial services were
held on Sunday evening at ·the
Ewing Funeral home with
several members present. ·
Past Council Deputy Florence
Potts and present Council
Deputy Jean Hall were escorted
to the altar by the flagbearers,
and presented gifts on behalf of
the Council. Mrs. Potts thanks
· all members for their
assistance and wonderful
cooperation during her term as
deputy . Several members attended the inspec!ion of Chesler

Mrs. canaday installed the
1971-72 officers using an appropriate flower theme. Installed were Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine, president ; Miss
Diehl, vice president; Mrs.
Anna Turner, secretary; and
Mrs. Nelson, treasurer. Gifts of
flower bulbs were presented to
the new officers by Mrs .
canaday.
It was noted that the club's
yearbook has been entered in
competition . A report was given
on the recent meeting of all
county clubs with Mrs .
Snowden, Mrs. Virgil Atklns,
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman, Mrs.
Erlewine and Mrs . James
Nicholson representing the
Rutland Club.
Mrs. Edith Williamson on
behalf of the past officers and
members, presented Mrs.
Snowden with a gift of appreciation for her services as
president to the club. Mrs.
Eriewine gave Mrs. canaday a

Meip Co. Branch.·

~cers

Council Met Oct. 28

erywhere" theme.

N•tlonwldo.

Bluffton 14 Ohio Northern 13
Mount Un ion 29 Marietta 18
Wooster 17 Hiram 10
Bethany 15 Case Western
Reserve 6
. Westminister 45 John Carroll 13

Ameril'Htl &lt;·oun lry . .

5 .444 2112

as you odd to your uvings

BEAT

University 14

.S~&gt;u ' !1

4

Watch Your
$$Grow

1

represent the Rutland Club in man, Mrs. Vernon Weber, Mrs.
securing related international Erlewine, Mrs. Snowden and
materials to be used,
Mrs. Turner were provided for
In JainJary the WMPO radio local churches, the post office,
program will be presepted by and schools;
the club. Mrs. Oleva Cotterill The regional meeting held in
and Mrs. Will will be in charge. Gallipolis Saturday was ndted.
Eight members &lt;eported on Several awards were received
their tour of Wahkeena near · by the club. Miss Diehl gave
devotions and members
Lancaster on Oct. 5.
Thank you notes for flower responded to roll call by giving
arrangements which the club a Bible quotation.
furnished for the Rutland Mrs. Clarence Murray conChurch of Christ homecoming due ted the traveling prize
and for a reception honoring drawing with Mrs. C. E. Bishop
Mrs. Joe Bolln, District 25, OES receiving the gift. Mrs. Atkins
president,
were
read. conducted a workshop on
N u m e r o us
f I ower makmg
velvet
roses.
arrangements by Mrs. Chap- Suggestions on things to do in
November were given by Mrs.
Bishop. Members exchanged
bulbs and refreshments were
served.
J
Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
TJUS
The students returned to the
classroom wljere each was
given a pumpkin to fashion a
eVtVO
neS
Jack.Q-Lanlern from, of their
own design to take home and A hymn sing was held
use for Halloween. Mrs. Parker recently at the Laurel Cliff Free
had prepared a Jack-0-Lantern Methodist Church to mark the
for the classroom and she ex- conclusion of revival services.
plained to the students that she Miss Julia Hutchison and
and her husband had raised the Miss Patty Eblin were pianists
pumpkins from seeds discarded for singing by the choir and the
from therapy last year.
congregation. Several readlngs
A total of 39 pumpkins had were given by Waid Hayman
been harvested from plants and presenting vocal numbers
grown from the seeds of last were the Rev. Eugene Gill, the
year's pumpkin . Mr. and Mrs. Rev. Uoyd Shook of Newark,
Parker donated the pumpkins to Nancy Gill, Becky Wright, Mrs.
the children for use in therapy. Betty Will , Diana Lewis,
They also donated a large Barbara Kelin, Duane Wolfe,
pumpkin and candy for Dennis Manual, Sonnie Eblin,
Halloween to each of the Dwight Spencer, Mrs. George
classrooms of the Meigs Folmer, Mrs. Gerald Pullins ,
Community classes housed in Penny and Patty Eblin, Julia
the Rutland School.
and Jayne Hutchison, and Mrs.
Mrs. Willford discussed with Harry Clark.
the children the care of the
SON lS ·BORN
apple seed plantings they had
SYRACUSE _ Mr. and Mrs.
made at the September Stephen Shuler of Aurora,
therapy . They are keeping them Colorado, are announcing the
watered and watching for signs birth of their first child Stephen
of germination. Picture Brent, Jr., Oct. 22 . The infant
calendars from the Ohio weighed 8 lbs. and 4 ounces.
Association of Garden Clubs Maternal grandparents are Mr.
were given to each child for use and Mrs. Phillip Donovan
in therapy . Pictures were taken local; paternal grandparen~
during the work session.
are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Shuler
Refreshments and napkins of Letart !'ails. Maternal greatkeeping with the Halloween grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
theme were provided by Mrs. George Grueser of Minersville.
Birchlield and Mrs. Parker. paternal grea t-grandparen~
Donuts, cups of candy corn and are Mr. and Mrs. Coulter Shuler

RUTLAND - A therapy
session at the Southeastern Ohio
.. Mental H~lth Center, Athens,
was planned for Nov. 9 and new
officers were lnstalled recently
by the Rutland Garden Club at
the home of Miss Ruby Diehl
and Mrs. Stella Atkins with
Mrs. Maurice Thompson cohostess.
At the therapy session, Mrs.
V. E. Nelson, Mrs. Paul Winn
and Miss Diehl will serve as
lnstructors for the patients who
will be making dish gardens
from_materials furniShed by the
Rutland Club. Mrs. Wlnn and
Mrs. Clarence Murray will
provide favors and Mrs. Robert
canaday a velvet rose floral
decoration.
Pumpkin pie, candy and a
beverage will be served. Each
member contributed a giit for
the patients in addition to a $5
gift allowed by the club for the
Chrislmas party at the Health
Center.
Mrs. Roy Snowden, chairman
of the flower show on Nov. 13
and 14, explained the schedule
for the "Christmas Ev-

SAVE

Marshall 12 Bowlin~ Green 10
Memphis State 45 Ctncinnati 21
Dayton 35 Youngstown State 24
Northern Illinois 26 Kent Stale 7
Cent,al Michigan 10 Akron 7
'Western Illinois 21 Ashland 20
0111o Wesleyan 21 Wittenberg 14
Kenyon 35 Oberlin .14

FfiTIPALDI WINS RACE
SAO PAULO iUPI):_Bra zil's
Emerson Filtipaldi edged Sweden,s: Ronnie Peterson to win
1he first International Formula
Two aulo race ever held in this

G\llller,Cinctnnati.hClllpilal, and .
w. G. Hitchings, Dayton VA
center.
The regionalizatlon of the
three hospitals . foUowa closely
on the regionallzation of ~
Cleveland and Brecksvll[e
hospilals about two months ago.
The objective, according to Dr.
WeiiB, Is to "develop fully each
hospllal's special potential so
that patients will have available
to them the complete range of
medical and health serVices
availsble In the VA no llllitter
which hospilal they enter as a
patient.
·

By UnUed Press International

~:::::::::::::::::::::~ Wilmington
Ferris (Mich.)
17 28
Centre
Findlay
I Ky.l
13 6

To The Voters of Sutton Township

Pd. Pol. AtJv .

Chaps Hand

Denison 28 Muskingum 0

SCHOOL

Pat White

won the .Quantas Open in
Australia Sunday and it was
worth a paltry $4,176. He will
be hack no doubt to try to _top
Trevino in the last three major
tournaments of the year on the
PGA 'trail-'-Hilton Head, . the
Disney World, and the Bahamas. The Aussie money doesn't
count in his U.S. total.
The money Trevlno may
make in Mexico won't count in
his PGA total either but he
indicated _he was motivated by
pnde m his ancestry in entering
the event.
·
Trevino was four strokes off
the lead lM!day golng lnto the
!mal round of the Sahara. He
shot a 66, six under par on the
Paradise Valley Country Club
course, to go with his earlier
rounds of 611-72-73. His 72-hole
total was 280, eight under par .
He had seven birdies and one
bogey and his iron play was
what did it for him, he said.
One of his birdie putts was a
4Mooler but he was close to
the pln on the others,
:·on the first nlne holes," he
satd, "every time I got on the
green I had a makeable putt. "
He said he would have been
content with third place money
of $9,570 which would have put
him over Nicklaus.
Trevino hadn't won a tournament since he was operated
on for appendicitis Aug. ll. He
missed the cut in two
tournaments and was 15th in
the Kaiser International.

1

VOICE

ELECT

o/

Ti rf
At Hearing.s

-

AFFAIRS

ops Title

·Club 0

· VA Hospitals· Linked

Ingels Furniture.
992.2635

OPE~

FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

ATAXPAYER CAN. FIGURE HIS ACTUAL COST BY REFERRING TO HIS INDIVIDUAL TAX DUPLICATE.
VOTE FOR' YOURSELF. VOTE • • ~
•

SCHOOL DISTRICT

MIDDLEPORT

·~-~-~-·-···~------~-·
•

MORE THAN WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN PAYING.
THE NEW BOND ISSUE AMOUNTS TO A TOTAL OF .12' PER HUNDRED OR $1.20 PER THOUSAND DOLLAR EVALUATION.

1

•

~-

I!

·'

Pd; Pol. AdY.

I XI·

I

FOR THE FIRE DEPT. BOHD ·ISSUE

Pa:dfor by the Members of Middleport Fire Dept.

••

�. I-'1'11'Dilly8et£hwl,~y,().,Nov.1, 1971

Trevino

RE-ELECT
DENVER G. HYSELL

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI )- and he'llprobably be the first
Lee Trevino, a precedent- to make tt.
·
Th tr di ·
shattering pro, has invented a
e. a tiona 1grand slam is
·•four-way grand slam" ln golf to Wtn the U.S. Open, the

CANDIDATE FOR

LISBURY TOWNSH
TRUSTEE
Your Vote and Influence Will Be Greatly Appreciated.

....__ _..._..;..::,;Pd....:.,:Poi..:;:Adv;...J
.

DAVID U. NEASE
FOR

SOUTHERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION
"1 YEAR EXPERIENCE"
Pd . Pol. Adv.

VOTE FOR

CLYDE KUHN
Candidate for Member of

EASTERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION

the air.

ved."

"We haven't pia·""' well of~ games
fensively the last three
and we're not getting the bsll on
the breaks," Skorich added. "If
they don' t give the ball away
and you continue to give up the

Witnesses called included
Edward Garvey, director of the
National Foothall Players Association; Gus Holloman of the
New y ork J ets; tight end Jerry
Smith of the Washington

ball,
Y,OU're in sprinted
trouble."out· "to a
The'Falcons
211-0 lead ln the third quarter
when Bill BuUer went over from
the one-yard llne to cap a «
,.,.
yard drive .
The Browns' defense set up
the first Cleveland score m
· the
third quarter. After Doug Dieken blocked a Bill Lothridge
punt and Bo Cornell recovered
on the Atlanta 12, Scott skirted
left end for the touchdown.
BiU Bell's 27-yard field goal
gave Atlanta three polnts in the
f'mal quarte r and Nelsen hit
Gary Collins with a 24-yard
touchdown pass with 6:58left ln
the game.

Redsltins;
Dr.the
James
Garrick,
physician to
University
of
Washington team; and Dr .
Donald Cooper, team physician
for Oklahoma Stale University.
The subcommittee has already requested reports on
safety tests by three manufacturers - Monsanto (Astroturf) ;
3MCompany(Tartanturf); and
American Biltrite Rubber
Company (Polyturf).
Moss said that if the subcommmee aetermines the turf
needs higher safety standards,
Congress cou ld direct existing
· ·
federal agencies to promulgate
new rules.
The congressman said he was
gravely concerned by a study
Garrick made lndicating synthetic turf may cause up to 50
per cent more lnjuries than do
grass fields
Moss est'. ted that
million athU::.s "at ;:.erhlgo~
school college and
1 1
he'
pro. _eve
may
exposed tc additional
· of ·
.
.
risk . mjuryiftheUruversltyof
Washmgton study Is correct."
The congressman said that
under the administration's

College Results

Your Vote &amp; Influence Appreciated. Thanks.

=~

:

VOTE
NOVEMBER 2nd

HOward Ca IdWe II Jr.
;:'

Vir 14 No Car St. 10

Louisville 21 Tampa 10
Georgia
21 Duke 0
La . TechTech
24 S.E . La . 9
Citadel 28 Illinois St. o
Tennessee 38 Tulsa 3
Alabama
Mississippi41 24Miss
LSUSt.22 tO
Tenn St. 27 Southern u. 16

CLEVELAND (UPI) _ The
Cleveland Browns had been
held scoreless for sii straight
quarters when, in the third
quarter Sunday against the
Atlanta Falcons, they managed
a touchdown. But the effort
came a little late.
With a solid 211-0 lead when the
Browns' Bo Scott went over for
the score, the Falcons had an
easy time of it, wlnnlng 31-14.
The Browns were beaten the
weekend before by .the Denver
Broncos 'll~.
''I have no predictions on any
changes until we evaluate the
game after seelng the films, "
said Nick Skorich, coach of the
Browns.
"We're at the midway polnt of
the season and we've got to
start turning thlngs around," he
added, however.
Atlanta quarterback Dick
Shiner, who connected on two of
his first four passes for touchdowns, hit Ken Burrow on a 39-

NOVEMBER 2ND

"

By United Press lnlernational
Ea.:
Thiel 20 Allegheny i5
Mass
24 Ve rmonl1
5 21
Pittsburgh
Jl Syracuse
Temple 32 Delaware 27
Har
28 Wesl
Penn Vir
27
Pennvard
Sl . 35
7
Princeton 49 Brown 21
PMC Coli 40 Drexel t9
Cornell24 Columbia 21
Dartmouth 17 Yale 15
Juniata 16 wash &amp; Jeff 7
Slippery Rock 47 Waynesbg o
Sa Iem 27 Concord 14
Clemson 10 wS:~:hForest 9

BriUsh Open, the. Masters and
the National PGA but Tr evmo
·
has three legs on his own- the
canadian Open, the U.S. Open
and the British Open. The
fourth for him this week .will
be th~ Mexican Opeil'at Mexico
City.
Trevino, 31, won his sixth
tournament of the year when he
collected first prire in the
SaharalnvltattonalSunday. The
$27,000 put hun at an. all-time
h1gh m U.S. golf earnmgs with
a total of $227,242.
·
He passed Jack ~icklaus who
yard reception early ln the first had been No. 1 With $207,080,
qu:U:lert Atlanta defense, the old htgh mark. Ntcklaus
which picked off four of Cleve- Artt~.t;C;
land quarterback Bill Nelsen's
&amp;. 50
passes, held the Browns to only
nine yards total offense ln the
second quarter.
'T'
•
Unebacker Don Hansen gave
U
~ 0plc
the Falcons a 14-0 lead less than
a minute after Burrow's score
by lntercepting a Nelsen pass
and sprlnting 33 yards.
Shlner, who also tossed a 23yard scoring pass to Jim Mit- WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
chellln the second quarter, hit House subcommittee today
on six of nine passes for 115 opened hearings into comyards and w'as never dropped plalnts that professiooal and
by the Browns' defense.
college foothall players suffer
"Atlanta ran on the quick more lnjuries on artificial turf
count," Skorich said. "This than on grass fields.
caught our defensive line off Jut estimated 113 synethetic
guard. They were worried too football fields are ln use at high
much about the Falcons' rush- schools, colleges and profesing game and they were not sional foothaU stadiums across
gettingpressureonthepasser." the nation, and an increasing
Opponents are findlng that ?~ber of knee and ankle lnthe Browns' defense is vulnera- )Urtes have 9een,blamed on the
ble to the run. In the last two artificial tu(f.
games, Cleveland has had m "We certainly have had
rushing plays run agalnst it by allegations from professional
the opposition for 455 yards and players that they regard it as an
a 4.1 yard average galn.
accidenf prone envirorunent,"
"We were not getting good sa•
tnnan John E. Moss, D'dCha'whose commerce and
blocklng on our running plays calif.,
and we are not gettlng the op- f_ma. nc_e. subcommittee has
portunities to run the football " )Urisdicti on over product safety
Skorich said.
, legislation.
The Browns have run the hall "I don 't at this moment say it
only 35 times in the last two is more or less dangerous than
games for a total of 89 yards of grass turf," said Moss. "All we
2.5 yards per carry . Agalnst are attempting to do is galn a
Atlanta, they gained only 65 better understanding of the
yards on the ground, and 88 ln hazards that might be invol-

Falcons In
31-14 ROmp

VOTE

Pd P I Ad
::::::::::::::
· : o: ·: :v:.

FOR
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATI0N

i~=:::::::::::::P:d:·:::P:o:I.:Ad:v:·~ Western
Auburn 40Ky.
Florida
7
34 Morehead
1'

HAVE A VOICE IN YOUR
GOVERNMENT
11

VOTE"

ELEO WILLIAM (Bill) HARRIS
FOR CLERK
OF SUnON TOWNSHIP
Pd . Pol. Adv.

lr------------;;;;:;:;:;:;::;;;:;;;:;;;==..

PUT THE
MOTHER'S

Georg ia 24 South Car 0
Jackson St. 48 Tex Lulhrn 20
Midwest
Nebraska 31 Colorado 7
Cent. Mich . 10 Akron 7
Memphis St. 45 Ci nci 21
Nolre Dame 21 Na vy o
Mich igan6t Indiana 7
Ohio St. 14 Minnesota 12
Ill inois 24 Norlhwslrn 7
Ok la St. 17 Kansas 10
St . Jno IMinn l 10 Cncrdia o
Kansas St. 2e Mi ssouri 12
Mi
chigan St. 43 Purdue IO
Iowa 20 Wisconsin 16
Toledo 45 Miami 101 6
East Mich 31 No Mich 3
Central
Akron
NorthernMich
Ill 2610Kent
St. 77
Kenyon 35 Oberlin 14
St . Otat 51 Grinnell?
North Oak 13 No Iowa 10
ffuth Dak St. 20 North Oak St.
.
Southwest
Gramblin 21 Tex Southern 7
Oklahoma
43 Tech
Iowa 7St. 12
Rich 9 Texas
Texas 22 SMU 18
No Tex Sl. 21 Drake 12
E. Tex . St . 29 s.w. Tex . Sl. 13
Colo Coli. 56 Tabor 18
No Colo 2? East New Mex 10
Texas A&amp;M 17 Arkansas 9
Houston 14 Florida St. 7
McNeese St. 17 Troy st. 7
New Mex 34 Arizona 28
Ariz St. 44 Air Force 28
Trinity 28 Tex Ar lington 7
TCU 34 Baylor 27
Idaho 19 New Mex St. 14
Lamar 30 Ab Chris 28
West
Wyoming 29 Utah 16
Utah St. 18 Colo St. 17
Montana 14 Weber st. 13
Wash St. 31 Oregon 21
Stanford 31 Ore Sf . 24
Washington 23 UCLA , 2
Southern Cal28 Cal it o
San Jose St. 28 Pacific 18
Boise St. 52 Mont St. 24
Puget S 26 Portland St. 7
Southern Ore. 9 Ore Tech o
Brigham Young 16 Tex-El Paso
o
West Wash 21 Easl Ore 8
Simon Frazier 40 Whitman 14

J

TIGER-CATS WIN
TORONTO (Up! )-The
milton Tiger-Cats led Hab
G
H
'
Y
arney
enley's two pass
interceptions, clinched second
place and a playoff spot Sunday
With a Canadtan Football
League 23-15 victory over the
Toronto Argonauts
·
D S
RY DALE BEATS STONE
STOCKHOLM (UPI ) - Cliff
Drysdale of South Africa the
fifth seed, defeated Allan Stone
f
o Australia,~. 6-3, 6-4 Sunday
to advance to the second round
1 the $45•000 Stockholm Open
tennis tournament.

proposed Product Safety Bill,
synthetic turf would probably
escape federal juriadlcUon beit .
cause lS not sold direcUy to
the consumer.
Moss said a bill reconunended b heN
Yt
ational Commission
NICKLAUS WINS MATCH
on Product Safety which he has
lntroduced would make synHOBART, Australia (UPI)- th ti turf
Jack Nicklaus shot a 70 Sunday edthc
bajconsumer product
to
an us su eel to federal stan·
9
go 1 -under-par and win the dards.
Quanta.~ Open golf championship by tight shots over Bruce
Saturday's
Crttmpton of Auslra lt'a.
Ohio College
Football
Scores
Br Uni1ed
ln1ernation
I#1---:;;~----~~~~:;~~=:-:'~1
fo'r r · '•
·
011io
State 14Press
Minnesota
12
J
;, , , r.
- · 1' ou·c
hi
Toledo 45 Miami 6
l' ou.r Uity (,'ut trn nH'lll
Western Mi chigan 28 Ohio

°

VOfE FOR --

JOE DENISON
Write In Candidate

Fo•· IliA YOR
RELIABLE and CAPABLE
Vtltl'llll Korean Confilct

IN

THANK YOU

2nd.
Ji._n.uzana
.J'
J' .....
JAJSS
125-1()8

1

tor Member of Board of Education

Re-elect William S. (Bill) Crou
For
Clerk of Sutton Township

SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

-SECOND TERMPd . Pol. Adv ..

Three Ohio Veterans Administration hospilals will be
formally linked into a
regionalized sel-&lt;IP beginning
today. Chillicothe, Dayton and
Cincinnati VA hospilals with a
comblned space of over 4,100
operating beds will begin
functioning as one large expanded hospital on that date.
Announcement of the new
medical complex was made
today by Dr. Ben WeiiB, director
of the Chillicothe hospital,
acting as a spokesman for the
three hospital directors. ')'he
other -directors are L. H.

Whatever the Indiana Pacers
are dolng wrong, the Dallas
Chaparrals are the only ones
who know about it.
Indiana suffered only its
second loss in eight game,!l this
season Sunday night when the
Chaps stopped them 12&gt;106.
Both losses have come at the
hands of Dallas.
Rich Jones and Johnny'
Beasley scored 22 points each
and l!ight ChapB' 1\lt for double
figUres to defelit' lhe American
Basketball Association Western
Division leaders. Steve Jones,
Joe Hamilton and Lenny
&lt;lhappell had 13 each, Rich
Niemann and Donnie Freeman
hit for 12 apiece and Gene
Moore added 10 to boost Dallas
to victory.
The Chaps outscored the cold·
shooting Pacers 46-18 in the
second period and were never in
trouble thereafter. Mel Daniels
led Indiana with 23 polnts.
In other ABA acUon, the
Memphis Pros stopped the
Denver Rockets 117-1116, the
New York Nets defeated the
Kentucky Colonels 107·103 and
the Virginia Squires outlasted
the Pittsburgh Condors 134-124.
Bobby Warren scored 28
points-nine ln the first three
minutes-as the Pros beat
Denver. Wilburg Jones added 21
for Memphis while Larry
cannon and Wendell Ladner
chiwed ln with 19 each. Ralph
Simpson and Art Becker were
the high scorers for the Rockers
with 23 each.
Rick Barry's 10 points ln the
last period helped the Nets beat
Kentucky. The Nets trailed 8476 after three quarters when
Barry took over and boosted
them to victory. He finished
with 25 points to lead the Nets
while Bill Melchionni added 24
and Jim Ard 15.

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
7 J .700 ...
VIrginia
6 4 .600 I
. Floridians
5 4 .555 Ph
New York
4 4 .500 7.

~~~b~~~h

Carolina

THE HIGH
COST OF
BUYING A

NEW CAR
Fin1nct yot.tr new ur with

2

7 .222 41h

West

W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
6 2 .750 ...
Utah
6 4 .600 2
Dallas
4 5 .444 21/1
Denver
3 6 .333 3112
Memphis
3 6 .333 Jlh
Sunday's Results
New York 107 Kentucky 103
Memphia 117 Denver 106
Virginia 134 Pittsburgh 124
Dallas 1251ndiana 108
!Only Rames scheduled)

the Mtlgl Co.
Branch ol tho Athtns Co.
Sovtnga end L011n.

IICh WHk II

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
Save by the lOth. earn
from the 1st.

..,..
-

~)

2-HOUR
CLEANING

The Athens County
Savings &amp; t.o.n Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy. Ohto

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2nd
Pomeroy

Member Fed~r111l Home L«n
Bank.
Member Federal S.vl"!)s &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. 1.11
accounts Insured up to
120,000.00.

2ft E.

...., ···--··············
?hone m -5421

~·

bubble gwn and orange drink of Letart Falls and Mrs. Grella
were served.
Simpson of Racine. Mr. Shuler
The NRV&amp;l"ben .... therapy is stationed at the Lowry Air
session will; die conduclg~ by Force Base in Colorado.
Mrs.JamescarpenterandMrs. ~--------­
Joe Bolin with refreshments to
To The Voters of
be provided by Mrs. Robert
Snowden. Bulbs will be potted
for forcing into bloom and
something
using
the
Thanksgiving theme, will
complete the program.
Mrs. Willford is garden
therapy chairman, assisted by .
Mrs . Carpenter and Mrs.
Richard Fetty, Jr. Mrs. carpenter also serves as the Meigs For Sutton Township
County Garden Therapy
Pd. Pol. Adv.

SYRACUSE - The regular
meeting of Guiding Star
Council, Daught.e{s of America
was held ln their lodge hall
Thursday night, October 28,
·conducted in rltualisUc form by
the vice-eouncilor Wilma Jean
Davidson . Routine business was
transacted .
Brother William Theuner
~epo rted improving slowly.

$21JI90

*
~VALUE

STEREO RECORD

LIBRARY

with purchase of any

•Manufacturer's

~

STEREO

Sugges ted Retail PI ICC

1

NAtiONWIO.f UrE

IN~UIIANI':£ C~~.·~~J

Sirtton Township
ElECT
DELBERT A. SMITH
TRUSTEE

~h:a:ir:m:a:n~.

____

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club
Monday, 7:30 p. m. at Columbu~
and Southern Ohio Electric co.
social rooms, Mrs. David En tsminger, Mrs. M. c. Wilson and
Mrs. James Arnold, hostesses.
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p.m. Monday at school. Health
and safety program.
TUESDAy
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. Officers to be elected.
Robert King W.M.
SOUP DINNER, election day,
10 a.m. at Racine American
Legion Hall by auxiliary. Public
invited.
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Sy·racuse , United Presbyterian
Church annex, beglnning 11
a.m. Tuesday through supper
hour. Complete chi~ken dinner,
$1.25.
POMEROY EASTERN Stars
186 Tuesday 7:45p.m ..
SOUP, sandwiches, p1e, cake,
coffee, homemade 1ce cream to
be served at Forest Run United
Method1st Church Tuesday all
day.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER . GARDEN Club
ext~nds an mvttallon to all
Me1gs County Garden Club
members to attend an open
meetmg Wednesday at home of
Mrs. Roy Holter at 8 p.m.
THURSDAY

Costume prizes were awarded
at a Halloween party of the
Buzzy Bees staged [&gt;riday night
at the Middleport Church of
Christ. Approximately 40
children of kindergarten, first
and second grades attended.
Winning the costume prizes
were Brenda Fry and Tina
Miller, the prettiest; Melissa
Spencer, the ugliest; David
Meadows, the funniest; Timmy
Frazier, the most original.
Judging the costumes were
Lucretia Stobart and Mrs. Judy
Fraser. Mystery guests for the

party were Andrea Johnson and
Scottie F'raser.
Games were played with
prizes going to Tina Miller ,
Sharon Johnson, and Cheryl
Riffle. Favors were given and
refreshmen ts served by the
leaders, Ida Mae Martin, Jane
Hess, Ellen Johnson, Martha
Fry, Mary Frazier , Maxine
Dorst, Kim Mowery, and Dolly
Mowery .
Earlier . in the week, Wednesday evening, nThe Smilies,"
a junior high youth group of the
church had a Halloween party

at the church.
Thirty-two young people
attended the party with game
prizes going to Kathy Meadows,
Pam North, David Cole, and
Scott May. Refreshments were
served. Assisting with the party
were Dolly Mowery, Don Erwin , Mack Stewart, and Patty
Glaze .
·

RE~ELECT

·

JOE SAYRE

Charter Draped For Homer Rice
The charter was draped in
memory of Homer Rice when
the Rock Springs Grange met
Thursday night at the hall.
Master Fred Goeglein presided
at the session during which time
a communication was -· read
from the stale master and thank
you notes from the Homer Rice
family and Mr . and Mrs .
William Grueser.
Mrs. W. A. Morgan presented
the program on autumn with
readings includlng "Autumn
Turns the Page" by Mrs.
Robert Louks ; "Common

Things, " Mrs. Fred Leifheit;
"Jack-o-lanlern," Mrs. Ethel
Grueser ;

Making

VIRGIL KING

'

to the Meigs · Local
Board of Education on
Nov. 2.

Pd. Pol. Adv ..

NOVEMBER 2

VOTE FOR
DAVID 0.
JENKINS, SR.

Old amulets and charms
containing my ste rious potiOns that .dangle from the
neck are being worn even
tn this scientific age. But
fear not, we aren't reverting
to former superstitions-only
updating an old jewel. Now
the am u 1e t is minus the
mysterious potion and plus
exciting new p e r f u m e s.
Small absorbent rocks are
inside and they're saturated
with pleasant scents that
float around with you.
Cross Chapter meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, cafeteria,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

''Cider

Time ," William Grueser;
"Tribute to Atwnn " by Mrs.
Fred Goeglein; "How Father
Carves the Du~k" by Mrs.
William Grueser; "Knees u by
Mrs . Morgan ; and "Bittersweet" by Mrs. Amos
Leonard. Refreshments were
served by the home economics
chairman .

AND

MEMBER OF MEIGS LOCAL
.BOARD OF EDUCATION.
Pd. Pol. Adv.
Give local government back to the people

Elect

Your Vote Appreciated

GEORGE A.
"Alfred" WOLFE

HERB
WHITE

Candidate For

CHESTER
TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

MAYOR

Election- November 2, .1971

,:M~E~IG:S..:AM:E:R~IC:A~N:..· :R:ed:...!:::::P:d:.:Po:I.:A:d:.~

of
Racine

'To The Voters Of
Chester Township

•.

VIllage

RE-ELECT
WILLIS R. FROST

TUES.,

FOR
CLERK O'F CHESTER TO ·
WNSHIP

NOV. 2

YOUR VOTE &amp; INFLUENCE APPRECIATED

P0I

Vote (Yes) For Your Fire Department

A

•

FOR lESS THAN
'1.60 MORE
PER YEAR

Vote
Yes!

NOVEMBER 2ND

CHARLES .HAUBER

MajeStiC M" lool&lt;"'' '""'"'
styled ca b1net 1

MONDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Monday 7:30 p. m. at
high school. All interested
persons are urged to attend.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30 p. m. Monday at the home
of Mrs. J. 0. Roedel with Mrs.
Irving Karr, Jr., as co-hostess.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America,. 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF Hall.
Initiatory work will be given
and plans will be completed for
the 59th anniversary ob'servance on Nov. 15.
MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Officers to be elected.
SOUTHERN · At hl etic
Boosters Monday, 7:30p.m. at
the high school. All interested
persons urged to attend.

Buzzy Bees, Smilies at Parties

'.

VOTE

A911i
The GRANADA

Social
Calendar

.,;._~~========~~:::::::::::::::Pd:-:Po:L:A:d:v:.~~==:::::::::::::::::· :d:•·~

Lawson, Eileen· Clark:
Pierce, Mabel Pickens,
~~Je~,~et Cottrill, Esther\
H
and Councilor Wilma
Davidson.

$2490

PRESENT STATION

ol Pe can or
and se l cc1 harorlwnorl

:~~1,::J~~~~:~
t

peak mUSIC
slate
h

an tl

AM /Stere o

1ild1o

THE MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT IS ASKING FOR A BOND ISSUE
NOVEMBER 2ND TO BUILD AND EQUIP A NEW FIRE STATION.

WRITE-IN CANDIDATE.

OI&lt;JI1ve
SO I1 dS, I

Zemt11 QU&lt;IIity spcilkms

THE SEVEN-TENTHS OF A MILL YOU HAVE BEEN PAYING HAS BEEN PAID OUT.

FOR

FOR THE AVERAGE PROPERTY OWNER IT WILL COST A TOTAL OF $3.90 PER YEAR OR $1.60

MEMBER OF BOARD OF

AIOIW I The BELLWOOD

quality goes in
befc&gt;re the name goes

on ~

COntemnor,11y slyhno,n gcnllme 011l m1shed
Wal nu 1 ~tJnce rs &lt;1nd sctec t h&lt;lrdwooo solods
l·ealu,es 32 wil tl pc ok rnus1c powe • sohd ·
!.ilat c ilmphiiCI With f M /AM /Stereo FM

~~,t~r.
~~~~·,"~ ;~;~o;~;
(lnt,l four Zcn1 1h Quill1ly

$19995

EDUCATION

~oea kcr s

EASTERN LOCAL

USE .INGELS LAY-AWAY PLAN!

H%-!311

0 ~A~~~~~~~~

RUTLAND - Seventy-five
tulip bulbs ' and 12 King Alfred
daffodil bulbs were planted
around the flag pole at the
Rutland Elementary School
Thursday, Oct. 28 by the special
education class of Mrs. Thelma
Campbell. This is the second
garden therapy session of the
year conducted with the
youngsters by members of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
Club with Mrs. William Willford
as chairman.
Mrs. Howard Birchlield and
Mrs . Homer Parker assisted
with the therapy. The entire
class first pulled up the petunias
and pansy plants, which had
already bloomed out. These had
been planted last year ln April
and May by the students. The
boys of the class then took
shovels and picks and dug out
and removed the dirt to a depth
of 6 inches.
Next the daffodil bulbs and 25
each of red, yellow and purple
tulips were placed in position
for planting with clumps of 12-13
to a group for a more brilliant
show of color when they bloom
in the spring . Then the dirt was
filled back in over the entire
bed. A mulch of hay or straw
will be added and a protective
fence put around it. The flower
bulbs were provided by the

• E'··
Hr.ymn Stng
R · / Se •

JM:or~:a~r;irlty, Margaret Eichinger

f'¥JWAND

P.J. PAUUY
PHONE

8 7 Bulbs Planted

M1

BUY

CALL

307 Spring Ave .• t'Omtror

gift for lnstalllng the officers
and Mrs. Snowden thanked the
retiring officers and gave each
an appreciation gift.
The county Christmas show to
be slaged on Nov. 'l/ and 28 at
Meigs High School was
' discussed and arrangements
were made for members to
enter classes and to provide
sandwiches and pie for the sales
table.
Mrs.
Charles
Lewis,
educational chainnan for the
county show, reported that
Chrisimas customs in other
lands will be tbe educational
theme. She and Mrs. Kale
Jarrell were appointed to

Council 323 recently, when
Mabel Pickens, a candidate of .
the local council, was initiated
by the Chesler learn.
Jewelry being sold for the
Sll!le Councilor project was
displayed.
The hall was very attractively
de&lt;:or~oted with the Halloween
theme during the social hour
the close of the
Refreshments of
sar•dw·ich,es, pickles, chips,
car1dy and pop were served.
Members present were Ethel
of Pt. Pleasant, MyrUe
Durst of Pomeroy, Deputy Jean
Hall, Past Deputy Florence
Potts, Edith Hood, Pauline

LIMITED
OFFER!

.LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

Hillsdale IMich .) 24 Central
State 6
Villanova 33 Xavler 7
Baldw in-Wallace 47 Heidelberg
14
Defiance 21 Otterbein 14

Installed

Sister Edith Hood's arm is
much improved. The death of
Sisler Mary M. Diddle was
noted. Memorial services were
held on Sunday evening at ·the
Ewing Funeral home with
several members present. ·
Past Council Deputy Florence
Potts and present Council
Deputy Jean Hall were escorted
to the altar by the flagbearers,
and presented gifts on behalf of
the Council. Mrs. Potts thanks
· all members for their
assistance and wonderful
cooperation during her term as
deputy . Several members attended the inspec!ion of Chesler

Mrs. canaday installed the
1971-72 officers using an appropriate flower theme. Installed were Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine, president ; Miss
Diehl, vice president; Mrs.
Anna Turner, secretary; and
Mrs. Nelson, treasurer. Gifts of
flower bulbs were presented to
the new officers by Mrs .
canaday.
It was noted that the club's
yearbook has been entered in
competition . A report was given
on the recent meeting of all
county clubs with Mrs .
Snowden, Mrs. Virgil Atklns,
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman, Mrs.
Erlewine and Mrs . James
Nicholson representing the
Rutland Club.
Mrs. Edith Williamson on
behalf of the past officers and
members, presented Mrs.
Snowden with a gift of appreciation for her services as
president to the club. Mrs.
Eriewine gave Mrs. canaday a

Meip Co. Branch.·

~cers

Council Met Oct. 28

erywhere" theme.

N•tlonwldo.

Bluffton 14 Ohio Northern 13
Mount Un ion 29 Marietta 18
Wooster 17 Hiram 10
Bethany 15 Case Western
Reserve 6
. Westminister 45 John Carroll 13

Ameril'Htl &lt;·oun lry . .

5 .444 2112

as you odd to your uvings

BEAT

University 14

.S~&gt;u ' !1

4

Watch Your
$$Grow

1

represent the Rutland Club in man, Mrs. Vernon Weber, Mrs.
securing related international Erlewine, Mrs. Snowden and
materials to be used,
Mrs. Turner were provided for
In JainJary the WMPO radio local churches, the post office,
program will be presepted by and schools;
the club. Mrs. Oleva Cotterill The regional meeting held in
and Mrs. Will will be in charge. Gallipolis Saturday was ndted.
Eight members &lt;eported on Several awards were received
their tour of Wahkeena near · by the club. Miss Diehl gave
devotions and members
Lancaster on Oct. 5.
Thank you notes for flower responded to roll call by giving
arrangements which the club a Bible quotation.
furnished for the Rutland Mrs. Clarence Murray conChurch of Christ homecoming due ted the traveling prize
and for a reception honoring drawing with Mrs. C. E. Bishop
Mrs. Joe Bolln, District 25, OES receiving the gift. Mrs. Atkins
president,
were
read. conducted a workshop on
N u m e r o us
f I ower makmg
velvet
roses.
arrangements by Mrs. Chap- Suggestions on things to do in
November were given by Mrs.
Bishop. Members exchanged
bulbs and refreshments were
served.
J
Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
TJUS
The students returned to the
classroom wljere each was
given a pumpkin to fashion a
eVtVO
neS
Jack.Q-Lanlern from, of their
own design to take home and A hymn sing was held
use for Halloween. Mrs. Parker recently at the Laurel Cliff Free
had prepared a Jack-0-Lantern Methodist Church to mark the
for the classroom and she ex- conclusion of revival services.
plained to the students that she Miss Julia Hutchison and
and her husband had raised the Miss Patty Eblin were pianists
pumpkins from seeds discarded for singing by the choir and the
from therapy last year.
congregation. Several readlngs
A total of 39 pumpkins had were given by Waid Hayman
been harvested from plants and presenting vocal numbers
grown from the seeds of last were the Rev. Eugene Gill, the
year's pumpkin . Mr. and Mrs. Rev. Uoyd Shook of Newark,
Parker donated the pumpkins to Nancy Gill, Becky Wright, Mrs.
the children for use in therapy. Betty Will , Diana Lewis,
They also donated a large Barbara Kelin, Duane Wolfe,
pumpkin and candy for Dennis Manual, Sonnie Eblin,
Halloween to each of the Dwight Spencer, Mrs. George
classrooms of the Meigs Folmer, Mrs. Gerald Pullins ,
Community classes housed in Penny and Patty Eblin, Julia
the Rutland School.
and Jayne Hutchison, and Mrs.
Mrs. Willford discussed with Harry Clark.
the children the care of the
SON lS ·BORN
apple seed plantings they had
SYRACUSE _ Mr. and Mrs.
made at the September Stephen Shuler of Aurora,
therapy . They are keeping them Colorado, are announcing the
watered and watching for signs birth of their first child Stephen
of germination. Picture Brent, Jr., Oct. 22 . The infant
calendars from the Ohio weighed 8 lbs. and 4 ounces.
Association of Garden Clubs Maternal grandparents are Mr.
were given to each child for use and Mrs. Phillip Donovan
in therapy . Pictures were taken local; paternal grandparen~
during the work session.
are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Shuler
Refreshments and napkins of Letart !'ails. Maternal greatkeeping with the Halloween grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
theme were provided by Mrs. George Grueser of Minersville.
Birchlield and Mrs. Parker. paternal grea t-grandparen~
Donuts, cups of candy corn and are Mr. and Mrs. Coulter Shuler

RUTLAND - A therapy
session at the Southeastern Ohio
.. Mental H~lth Center, Athens,
was planned for Nov. 9 and new
officers were lnstalled recently
by the Rutland Garden Club at
the home of Miss Ruby Diehl
and Mrs. Stella Atkins with
Mrs. Maurice Thompson cohostess.
At the therapy session, Mrs.
V. E. Nelson, Mrs. Paul Winn
and Miss Diehl will serve as
lnstructors for the patients who
will be making dish gardens
from_materials furniShed by the
Rutland Club. Mrs. Wlnn and
Mrs. Clarence Murray will
provide favors and Mrs. Robert
canaday a velvet rose floral
decoration.
Pumpkin pie, candy and a
beverage will be served. Each
member contributed a giit for
the patients in addition to a $5
gift allowed by the club for the
Chrislmas party at the Health
Center.
Mrs. Roy Snowden, chairman
of the flower show on Nov. 13
and 14, explained the schedule
for the "Christmas Ev-

SAVE

Marshall 12 Bowlin~ Green 10
Memphis State 45 Ctncinnati 21
Dayton 35 Youngstown State 24
Northern Illinois 26 Kent Stale 7
Cent,al Michigan 10 Akron 7
'Western Illinois 21 Ashland 20
0111o Wesleyan 21 Wittenberg 14
Kenyon 35 Oberlin .14

FfiTIPALDI WINS RACE
SAO PAULO iUPI):_Bra zil's
Emerson Filtipaldi edged Sweden,s: Ronnie Peterson to win
1he first International Formula
Two aulo race ever held in this

G\llller,Cinctnnati.hClllpilal, and .
w. G. Hitchings, Dayton VA
center.
The regionalizatlon of the
three hospitals . foUowa closely
on the regionallzation of ~
Cleveland and Brecksvll[e
hospilals about two months ago.
The objective, according to Dr.
WeiiB, Is to "develop fully each
hospllal's special potential so
that patients will have available
to them the complete range of
medical and health serVices
availsble In the VA no llllitter
which hospilal they enter as a
patient.
·

By UnUed Press International

~:::::::::::::::::::::~ Wilmington
Ferris (Mich.)
17 28
Centre
Findlay
I Ky.l
13 6

To The Voters of Sutton Township

Pd. Pol. AtJv .

Chaps Hand

Denison 28 Muskingum 0

SCHOOL

Pat White

won the .Quantas Open in
Australia Sunday and it was
worth a paltry $4,176. He will
be hack no doubt to try to _top
Trevino in the last three major
tournaments of the year on the
PGA 'trail-'-Hilton Head, . the
Disney World, and the Bahamas. The Aussie money doesn't
count in his U.S. total.
The money Trevlno may
make in Mexico won't count in
his PGA total either but he
indicated _he was motivated by
pnde m his ancestry in entering
the event.
·
Trevino was four strokes off
the lead lM!day golng lnto the
!mal round of the Sahara. He
shot a 66, six under par on the
Paradise Valley Country Club
course, to go with his earlier
rounds of 611-72-73. His 72-hole
total was 280, eight under par .
He had seven birdies and one
bogey and his iron play was
what did it for him, he said.
One of his birdie putts was a
4Mooler but he was close to
the pln on the others,
:·on the first nlne holes," he
satd, "every time I got on the
green I had a makeable putt. "
He said he would have been
content with third place money
of $9,570 which would have put
him over Nicklaus.
Trevino hadn't won a tournament since he was operated
on for appendicitis Aug. ll. He
missed the cut in two
tournaments and was 15th in
the Kaiser International.

1

VOICE

ELECT

o/

Ti rf
At Hearing.s

-

AFFAIRS

ops Title

·Club 0

· VA Hospitals· Linked

Ingels Furniture.
992.2635

OPE~

FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

ATAXPAYER CAN. FIGURE HIS ACTUAL COST BY REFERRING TO HIS INDIVIDUAL TAX DUPLICATE.
VOTE FOR' YOURSELF. VOTE • • ~
•

SCHOOL DISTRICT

MIDDLEPORT

·~-~-~-·-···~------~-·
•

MORE THAN WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN PAYING.
THE NEW BOND ISSUE AMOUNTS TO A TOTAL OF .12' PER HUNDRED OR $1.20 PER THOUSAND DOLLAR EVALUATION.

1

•

~-

I!

·'

Pd; Pol. AdY.

I XI·

I

FOR THE FIRE DEPT. BOHD ·ISSUE

Pa:dfor by the Members of Middleport Fire Dept.

••

�"

"

'

· -'l'IIIDII)Jilelltlnel,M! u I &amp;.Pwiao,,O.,IIDY. l, lr/1

Sentinel Classifieds · Get A~tion! ·Sentinel Classifieds Get Results/
2 SIGIIS
Po~n~roy
!Helen Help Us!
Business
Services
OF
Motor Co.
r---------~-----------------1

I

l

By Helen Bottel

I
I
1
I

THOROUGHLY MODERN MAID
DOESN'T WANT MARRIAGE
Dear Helen:
What's with women these days?
They'll love you, even live with you. But, when you ask the
perfect one to marry you, that's the end of the affair.
My old pappy always warned me how girls trap men into
marriage - how they size up eligible bachelors and hot-tie them
as husbands. That was Texas. This is New York, and no female I'd
consider Is "trapping" this season.
I just lost another great girl because I got too pushy about the
future. She loves me, but she wants "no strings." Last night, she
accused me of being a "middle·dass reactionary with a suburban
mentality."
All I want Is a wile and family- and I can afford both. Is that
a crime? Am I doomed to a single life because I can't find a
woman with staying power (brains, personality, chemistry, plus
adequate looks ) who will commit herself to stay with me? As my
latest lost love said, "I want to be free for whatever comes along,
and my career comes first. " - BACHElDR IN SEARCH OF A
LEGAL MATE
Dear Batch :
What you want Is a ' 'new woman;• superimposed on the basic
"traditional female" model, and that's a little hard to find these
days .... but not impossible.
Though many career girls consider marriage secondary "Maybe when I'm over 35 and ready to settle down," says one the right man can often reshuffle priorities - especially If he
aoesn 't act too anxious.
And though I ~pathize with you, Batch, I can't suppress a
chuckle: Ten years ago that phrase, "Maybe when I'm over 35
"""",was used exclusively by eligible bachelors as "anxious" girls
·
mourned,
How does the shoe feel on the other foot, men? - H.
Dear Helen :
I can't understand WhY mind-bending drugs are so popular
with the young when it's the older people who need their minds
pulled away from worry, misery and other forms of depression.
The kids have so much to look forward to. Many of us elders can
only look back with regret.
You'd think WE would be the main users. - HOW COME?
Dear How Come :
Wake up, man! Elders ARE the main users of drugs which
affect the mind. Consider alcohol, tranquilizers, diet pills,
"psychic energizers" prescribed by doctors, and a host of other
legal turn-oos and turn~ffs, not to speak of heavy adult traffic in
marijuana and illegal pills anq injections.
The number of young people on hannful drugs is scarcely
more than a handful compared to the vast amount of adults who
are messing up their lives.
Remember that booze, when overused, is still the nation's
number one,problem. And you seldom see a teenage alcoholic. H.
NOTICE

Notice is hereby given th at
the undersigned i ntends to
make app lic at ion to the Probate
Court of Meigs County , Ohio , for
an order to change his name to
Brownie Vulakli ia.
Sa id applica ti on will be by
pet ition to be f iled in said
Probate Court, on or after th e
2nd day of December 1971.
Oeted th ls 27th day of October
1971 '
aka

I 1l 1, 11

ar uke Vuj okli ia.
Brown ie vu jakli ;a

For Sale

On this day in history :
In 1864 the Post Office
Department introduced the
money order as a safety
convenience for sending financial payments through the maiL
In 1918 the Hapsburg monarchy of Austria·Hungary was
dissolved. Budapest became the
capital of the Hungarian
Republic and Vienna the capital
of Austria.

QUALITY--

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3095
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 modeL Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, !ports mirrors,
console. air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;

brakes, 350 cu. ln. V.8 engine. Really sharp.

I

Irvin Miller.

1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR
$2595
Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish , 350 V·8 engine, power
steering, radio, white·walls, wh. covers.

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.

f'PMEROY, OHIO

992-2'\.7 4--

@)

10·31-3fp

-------

I

NEW WARM Morn ing circulating heater. Phone 7423298.
10·31-6tp

'
and she just wed (this year ) a gent more than
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK (KFS) - Madison Square twice her age.
Michael caine busted Minda Feliciano's
Garden finally caved in and now lets newsgals in
the press box .. .. The new 3rd Ave , Chinese heart and plans - explained he got to feeling too
restaurant "No. I Son" is getting a lot of at- domesticated with the longplay arrangement ....
tention : it's actually owned by a pair of pure, no- Gifted writer-clown Dudley Moore's new gal is
·- doubt Oriental gents named Joel Levinson and Australian journalisl Lindy Hobbs, 21 ( who
Jerome Alexander .... They 're mostly in the wig looks amazingly like Dud's estranged Suzy ) ....
business but fell in love with Chinese food in Don Ameche settled in Phoenix; can't imagine
Hong Kong .... Phyllis Diller's stepson, ,Shane why the Phone Co. hasn't )lired Don as its TVDonovan, wed Shelby Margaret Anderson .... La radio spokesman - after all, he invented the
Diller's 3rd Ave. (at 74th St.) flower shop folded . telephone in movies .... The enchanting "ButThe new Mrs. John D. Rockefeller Jr. ternies Are Free" started its 3rd Bdwy. year.
Radio City Music Hall's so delighted with
(stepmother of Nelson, David, Winthrop etc. )
estat...ale of antiques at Parke-Bernet broke a Peter Gennaro's savvy, he'll get top billing over
record: $437,000 (including almost $40,000 in city· the ne)V stage shows there ("Peter Gennaro
state sales taxes) for one French table (once Presents .. .'') ... Linda Hopkins, who's been
owned by Mme , Pompadour ) - biggest price starred in "Purlie" since it premiered seasons
ever paid for a table in the USA .... Paris dealer ago, will sing the Blues in Peter's show starting
Oct. 28 .... Incidentally, Denise, daughter of
Claude Sere bought it and we know whom for tbe Jack Linsky's, fabulous Palm Beach Music Hall veep John Jackson, is one of the
collectors .... Without tax it was $400,000 and that delights of the marvelous Joffrey Ballet,
Connie Towers, maybe the most beautiful
was table-topped only once, by an Iranian who
paid $413,000 for a table in London, but no tax actress on Bdwy ., or off, at Christo's mentioned
there .... The Linskys recently bid $380,000 for a her imminent show biz schedule which no truckDegas bronze because they needed a little fan· driver would accept: a regular in the soap opera
tastic knicknack for a table in their Palm Beach "Love Is a Many Splendored Thing," which she
tapes "live" daily, Connie all summer traipsed
digs.
In "21," the pre.Jet game dinner crowd in every morning from far~ut Long Island,
included Gen. Lucius Clay, Miami Dolphins' where she starred in Guy Lombardo's producowners Earle Smalley and Jim Davis .... Keep tion of "Sound of Music" and managed never to
your eye out and ears cocked, but hands off, miss either the :soaper · or the show, betimes
pretty Eva Adamamtidou, new singing smash at raising her two children """" Now's she's exDionysos, most entertaining uproar house inN. tendi ng the commute - she opens Nov, 9 in
Y.... carol Bruce sat on Wayne&amp;nders' piano Framingham, Mass., with John Raitt in "I Do, I
at Johnny Angels and sang "My Bill," and the Do," and again won't miss the daytime serial crowd just cried and cried; carol had good while commuting by bus! .... Her reply to our
rehearsal for it - she sang it in the 1945 revival query as to why : "When you have two children in
private schools .. .''
of "Show Boat."
Ex-heavyweight contender, Mickey Shaw,
Just drop in at Max Kase's nifty little bar in
tbe We~t Side Bus Terminal, and you pick up all who almost lost his legs recently in the hospital,
sorts of sports gossip from the erstwhile Pulitzer keeps punching : Mick will take a variety show to
Prizewinning sports editor : such as Walt Alston Greenhaven Prison in Stormville, N. Y., for
probably won't manage ·the Dodgers next season chaplain Father Donovan in memory of Horace
"""" Umpire Bill Valentine, dropped from job McMahon, who brought several such shows to
after he tried to organize the umps, now is a top · the prisoners .. .. The Big Band renaissance
GOP exec in Arkansas .... Knute Rockne 's brought a flock of offers to semi-retired Frankie
grandson is a flip off the old pigskin : quar- Carle, who can 't swing with that trend because
he donated all his band arrangements to the U.S.
terback at Northeastern Jr. College, Okla .
_
Dan Stewart of the daytime soap opera Army,
Lee Roy Reams, who got his first Bdwy.
"Guiding Light" will double as a singer at the
Living Room """" First N. Y. motel, the Skyline break playing the hairdresser in "Applause,"
Motor Inn, added a rooftop indoor swimming has so much faith in that show's director, Ron
pool; once a motel only needed beds and a high Field, that he's invested his life savings in Ron 's
next, "On the Town," now tryout-touring before
IOI~rance ..
Bdwy .... Well, he's young.
NBC wants s• ~'l'art Granger for a spy series
Jody McCrea produced and stars in "Cry
.... Chicago hockey star Bobby Hull admitted Blood, Apache!" and cast his pop Joel in a
sheepishly at Mike Manuche's he's been cameo role as "an older Jody," in a flash·
reaiOiing his darUng go~d~n , locks - via hair forward .... The Copacabana lloor shows
tran~Piant .... Art Ona~15 bJg buzz now .'st" the spawned a !lock of H'wood stars and another is
f70,000,000 trust fund h~ daughter, ChriS ~na , · up for fame : ex.Copa production singer Anthony
lnherlll in Dec.; a cahf. re.sident, she might M~ss~na just finished co-starring in "The Love
comeWidertbe50-Wcommumtyproperty lBij' Gap" flick, his film debut. ·

ott I
1

I

SIEGLER

HEATERS

I

Employment Wanted

Voice along Broadway !

Good

references . Ca II 992·2820 from
q a.m to 4 p.m weekdays .

10·29·61p

I
I
I

I b•
I

POMI!IIOY
JtckW.CitiiY,Mir.
Phone tn-2111

I
1
I
I

II

J

·----------

HOUSECLEANING in Racine, COAL , limestone Excelsior
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Phone 992·2876.
10·24·1fc Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
H ·tfC

Help Wanted

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels , Phone 992 -

WORK !rom home for Christ .
mas. Phone 949-4111 . Part or
ful l time . Good earnings.

5443

8·15·tfC

Fitzpatrick Or10-31·3tc APPLES
chards, State Route 689 ,
EARN at home addressing phone Wilesvllle. 669·3785.
envelopes. Rush stamped - - - - - - - - - 9 -·3·lfc
self.addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn, M"obile Homes for Sale
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
10-2001p

·-anted To Buy
OLD Furniture, dishes, clock ,
and-or complete households .

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8-25·tfC

For Rent
MIDDLEPORT,

close

THE BAQGE GUYS

CHAUVINIST

PIGSl

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

-MINO tF r
PtCKUPVOUR

in ,

spa cious, comfortable fur nished bachelor apartment.

.12: · 14' - 24' · WIDE
MILLER
MOBil£ HOMES .

Cleland
Realty

Original Cabinet

•

I&gt;ISCARI&gt;Sl

Company

NO /toONE'(,
IT WAf&gt;

Now Offering A

-SPECIALsNovember 1 lhru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. $6.50
Now $5 ,00
November 8 lhru 13
PERMANENT
R119 . $12.50
Now 18.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone m.7474
; orner Union Avo. &amp; St. Rt. 7

New Selvice
We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in

roofing to our staff.

Ph. 992-7796

EXPERT
·Wheel Alignment

'5.5!;
-G UARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

I·

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
· Open 8Ti1"5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

East Main
POMEROY

.,,

----

11-1

Kitchens, Baths
Room AddltlonJ
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloador Work

, .. BUT IHE STEAK I
ORDE~Et&gt; WAS SO
it1U&amp;H

,

Septic Tanks
And Leach Bed!."

.!LI

- -- - - -

SEW ING MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes . 992·2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

Service. We Sharpen Scisso rs .

3·29-tfc

-----P!Jone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

sa les representative, For free

estimates . phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5·27·tfC
AUTOMOBILE

Insurance

been c~ncelled? Lost yoor
opera1or' s license? Call 99'2·
2966 .

You mean
40u'll qive
onl4 f ifteen
dOl Ia' fo'

6-15-lfc

- -- - - - -

3 BEAUTIFUL
NEIGLER Building Supply.
EXCELLENT
5-1·1fC Free estimate on building
- YOU MUST - - - - - your new home. Will draw
ONE - 4 large RUBBER stamps made to
prints lo suit the lay of yoor
bedrooms ot".,bath. storage
order, 24-hour service. Owain
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
space, full .basement, por- or Wilma Casta, Portla~d.
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
ches, storag~ building, some
10·200tc
aluminum siding, sotfet and
storm doors and windows,
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
ALMOST NEW furnace and HARRISON' S TV an~ Antenna
Racine, Ohio.
hof.water tank , Ref. and
Service. Phone 992 ·2522 .
10·7·1fC
Range, floor covering, MANY
6· 10-lfc
OTHER FEATURES, JUST
HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc.
$12,900.
raised, moved, underpinned,
Real Estate For Sale
remodeled. Esllmates free,
POMEROY - HERE'S OP·
anywhere . Nati onal House
PORTUNITY- 2 lots part of
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston,
another, room for 2 trailers,
w. Va. 25311 , or phone 304·925·
GOOD NEIGHBORHOOD, 2
3179. "
bedrooms , full basement,
9·30·601p
porch, other features , JUST
$3,375.00.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
POMEROY - DESIGNED
662-3035 .
FOR GRACIOUS LIVING - I
2-12.1fc
story BRICK, 3 beautiful
Jllw!ker
bedrooms with dooble closets,
110 Me&lt;hanic Street
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
light kitchen Is a housewife's
Pbmeroy, Ohio
delivered right to ~our
dream , 11h baths, carpeted ,
pro/"ect. Fast and easy . Free
central alr·cond. and heat , MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
est mates . Phone 992-3284 ,
full basement with recreation
home, bath, large living.
Goegleln Ready .Mi x Ca.,
room , utility room. I ACRE of Garage, corner lot. 510,000.00.
Middleport, Ohio.
groond, $28,500.
6·30·1fc
ROUTE 33 - 2 acres with all
WHAT IS YOUR PROPERTY utilities.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
WORTH? COME TO OUR
Reasonable rates. P!J . 446-4782,
OFFICE AND SEE WHAT MIDDLE PORT- 10 acres with
Gallipol is. John Russell;
PROPERTIES SIMILAR TO J bedroom home.
O.Vner &amp; Operator.
YOURS HAVE SOLO FOR 5-12·1fc
THEN LIST WITH US.
DOUBLE -10 rooms. $3,500.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
REALTOR
REDUCED- warm 3 bedroom
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Office 992·2259
large home with bath, fur·
Complete front end service,
Residence 992·2568
nace, basement, garage. Nice
tune up and broke service .
I0-31 -61c lot. Only $10,500.00.
Wheels balanced elec·
All
work
Ironically.
HOUSE, 1642 Lfncoln Helghrs. FARM- over 100 acres of nice
guaranteed .
ReasonablE
laying fertile land . All clean
Call Canny Thompson, 992.
rates. Phone 992·3213.
2196, "
pastures , limber , and
7·27-tfc
meadows, plenty of buildings.
7.18·1fc

Virgil B.
TEAPORD

this fine
machine?

THE
G:o!MME; ,I. DIME:,

, PALL¥"!'

R:R HIM Ll 1&lt;8

.IJTll.E ORPHAN ANNID.

J:

co~

•;
'

~
1(-1

- - - - --

drlvew"{' large yard with

jus I wal~ing distance' from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
;: ~ Hedrick, 2137 Wadswoo th
urlve, ~olum bus , Ohio, phone
237·4334, Columbus.
,
S·9· 1f&lt;·

liE SHOULD \IIOfll(.

C€1&lt;1"/&gt;.\J.ILV, IT'S
PRECISELY 8:45!

SR.

plenty o shade trees, located
on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on
SR 124 In Syracuse, Ohio.
Available for Immediate
occupancy. To see,

phone

Gallipolis 446·9539 after s p.m.
~eek days for appointment.
10·3·11

~lgMffiUJE;IkJ lclawH..I..-1 ,_;
5. "Barber
of Seville"
heroine
Unscramble these foor Jumbles,
&amp;.Made a
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wordo.
choice
7, Imitate
10, TimeLI1'UIJ
honored
11. Jacket
Ye.terdar'• h1wer
~- "]lart
27. Moving
IZ. Merited
round
16. Diversify
29. Supply
19. Stringed
what's
instruneeded
ment
30. Caught
22. Bridge
sight of
word
31.-bear
23. Light
THt:. V.ORD 'CHA51E"
color
36. Old Siam·
24. Not at sea
ese coin
e&gt;IYES 'IOU WHAT
31. - lamb
25. Curse
HE DOES,

I

ITJ I I

THE SOUND
OF 1'HE
GOOD
LIFE

GermAn

I I

article
ll'- Albion
20. Marsh
21. Distlnc.;\-•
tlve air
i2. Prepare
a path

WMP0/1390

lMAl'S~'tJRE!

ON YOUR DIAL

RE~FULTYPE

U'f A MACHINE WITti

11ffY WRITE AtiOUT

HE I~ THI:;
COUNTRY'S MOST
REVERfl7 ELI7ER
5TA1f5MAN 1

JJ"!ORIJAC

~3.ADuke

)'OfJ MJ6HT TRY A &amp;IT
Ml~.

21.

[

"'

Now orranre the elreled lelten
tofona the 1urpriae INWtr, u
surrooted by the .._. eartoon.

L___:..:::
Pritd=-=~=-=SIIPIIISl=IIGWII==-~1

25. Founded
28. Arthur of

Of THAT YOURSflF,

(]

~n~:~ic
condition

rn rxI I )
(Aa.we" t..orrow)

Juonbl•., WRATH CRAZY

28. Any
woman

S•turd•, '•

ASTHMA

DOUILI

A.n•w~r : t:hansf'• in lrrM'• might be boring tit~ -AWLS

29. Embody,
with "of"
' 32. Generous

1

I USED 10 THINK TAA1" THERE '
5f'IDER5 ON TilE MOON AND
THAT ONE OF THEM M16HT FALL
WE~t;

fault
33.Gnawed
at
3t. Unclose,
poetically
35. Printing
goofs
37. City in
Oklahoma
JU5T c~05E TilE

llCTO~ QUtlfT~V- •

.'349.95

paint spray. Used but In like ·
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget pl..n available,
Phone 992·5641 ,
10·26-6tc

:r COULl'

IIARDI-Y EAT

FURNITURE

basement, 133 Butterr:.p Ave.,

TO THE A FL .

' BOUT !.V!P."ff'HINCS-

NEW'

vacuum 'S IX RUOM house, bath, ,lull

AND NON
MOVING 0/f'R

BACKHOE AND DOZER work . AWN INGS, storm doors and
windows, c arports,
Septic tanks Installed. George
marquees, aluminum siding
I Bllll Pullins, Phone 992·2478.
4·25-lfc and railing. Call A. Jacob,

Complete Service

RACINE LOTS ,
LOCATION
SEE THIS

IT'S A NATCHERAL-BORfJ

RIGHT FO' I.VUt:'/
AMERICAN 10 COMPLAIN

.. ....... __

Complete
Remodeling

c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

~oe

....

3 ROOMS

cleaner complete with attachments, cordwlnder and

11E Gar AlL 1liE GIFT6
WE GIVE FOR NEW
,O,CCOUNTS !

JOHNIES
•
BEAUTY SHOP

Fireplace, carpeting,
1220 Washington ilivd.
upholstered furniture, dish·
Belpre, Ohio
washer, tub, stall shower, off
5 bedroom house, bath, fur street parking, SIOO a month
NEW
HAVEN
12
x
50
mobile
nace.
with utilities paid . Phone 992· Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE.
home on an 80 x 235 level lat.
3074.
No down payment, 12 years to
Block utlllly building, washer
BUY BEFORE WINTER .
10·31-31c pay to qualified GI. Up to
and dryer, on Mill St., Phone
Helen L. Teaford,
$2,500 available for lot lm·
882·2717,
Associate
TRAILER , Brown"s Trailer provements If you own a lot.
10· 11 -tfc
992·3325 992-2378
Park , Minersville. Ohio . Get your new mobile home
10·3J.6tc.
now. See James Simpkins. 3 ACRES land, 3 bedroom
Phone ~2· 3324 .
I0-27-6tc
Valley Estates Mobile Home
hcwse, near Chester. Phone
Sales, Rt. 50 East Athens CONVE NIENT but secluded
985·3395,
FURNISHED
2-bedroom 593-8762.
10.29·31c building lots on T79 at Rock
9-19·37tc
Springs . Within walking
apar . :r~en t.
Adults on ly .
of Meigs High
d1stance
1\\lddleport. Phone 992·3874.
HOUSETRAILER, 45 x 10 and
School.
a
5
minute
drive from
ADD·A·
ROOMS
.
Beautiful
10·31·3fc
14 acres land, $5,000. Contact
Pomeroy . Call or see Bill
Venco Roomettes . Many floor
James Rucker , Rt. 2,
Witte weekends, or after ~
plans, or customize . Add " Coolville .
FU"'IISHED and unfurnished · extra
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
bedr:ooms, separate
10·29-!lp
aparimen1s. CLose to school .
6887.
10·31 ·61c
family rooms. ba1hs. Young ' s
Phone 992·5434.
Mobile
Home
Sales,
St.
Rt.
7
&amp;
10·18·1fC 35 (below Sliver Memorial 7 ROOMS and oa1n on Union
Ave., Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone
Bridge), Gallipolis.
992·5641.
I KAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
10·31 .lie
10-22·121p
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Jhlo. 992·2951 .
4-2-tfc Real Estate For Sale
Ni\:E 2-STORY home wllh full· NEW, 3-bedroom home rn
Middleport . . Built-In kitchen,
basement, 2 lots, new forced
For Sale
ceramic
tile bath, all·electrlc
air furnace, near elementary
good
neighborhood. Coil
heat,
LIKE NEW aluminum square school. Phone 992·7384 to see.
arrange FHA financing .
tub washer. S50. Phone 992·
10-31 ·61c
Telephon• 992-3600 or 992
5960
2186.
10-29·31c
LOT on St. Rt. 143, 6 tenths of
7-25·1fC"
mile from Rt. 7 Bypass.
NEW 1971 zig-zag sewing
Phone 992-6329.
machine In original factory _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I0·31 -61p
7· ROOM block hou.se, 4
carton. Zlg.zag to make
bedrooms, living room, dining
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
house In Burlingham.
room, bath with shower, large
monograms, and make fancy 4 ROOM
Phone 992-6948 or 698·3719.
kitchen with lots of bulit·ln
designs with justthe )wist of a
10·29-31c
birch cabinets . Hardwood
single dial. Left In lay-away
floors, Natural gas furnace, SJS.Oci ""Down-·
and never been used. Will sell
50-gallon eleclrlc water
for only $47 cash, or credit RACINE - 10 room house and
bath. Two lots, basement,
Salanc;e On
heater, 2 large recreation
terms available. Phone 99~Phone
949-4313.
garage.
paneled
In
basement,,
rooms,
Convenient
5641 "
10-20· 12tc
2 porches, garage, concrete '
10·26-61c
ELECTROL UX

IT W/16 "lllE WOR!il'
BANK ROBBERY "
we've HAD.

BILL NELSON
992·3657

1

Is

fil ing.

--JL

MUCft
WORSE ,

numerous other Items.

Save 10.00 Now!
men interested in a Weight
defend ant i n the Court of
Watchers
IRI
·
Class
in
Common Pleas, Meigs County ,
this ad and get $10
Oh io, Case No , 14,935, praying
Pomeroy wr ite: Weight 1onring
your
purchase of a new
for divorce from sa1d Charles F .
Watchers I RI, 1863 Section Siegler heater.
Powell on the grounds of gross
Rd .. Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
neglect of duty and extreme
10· 3 · 11~
cruel ty , support and alimony
and divis ion of property , and
other proper rel1ef ; sa1d cause
will be for hear ing on or after
the 11th day of December , 1971 . GIRL , 20 , desires parttlm e
FUEL OIL
Lela A. Powell, plaint iff
~II sizes In st9ck . We install,
clerical
employment.
Ex
·
J . B O' Brien , attorney
fmance , serv1ce .
perienced in shorthand,
for plaint iff .
typing,

ABOUT ' LiiT LIVIl'l

II - I

FbR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

1r---------..
s
I

15, 22, 29 112) 6, 61

11-IE'r' BELI£VE IIJ 'LIVIi'

BVT THeY "RE. IJOT TOO Cf'R"r'

,;)

l SAV We MUST
l&gt;iSCAitl&gt; MA~E

NEW &amp; OLD WORK"
POTATOES , Charles Hilton,
THERE will be a reviva l at the
Por tland, Ohio. Phone 843· All Weather ~oofing &amp;
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Construction Co, arid An2268.
Church . Started Monday,
_&lt;;angf.l~tlon &amp; Corrections
10-28·1fc
October 18, 7:30 p.m. with
thony flumbing &amp; Heating." •
Sister Dorothy Overton as . Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Complete Plumbing,
• Day of Publication
TWO regis lered Hereford
evange l ist.
Everyone
Heating and AJr ConREGULATIONS
yearling heifers . Both have
welcome to come and worship
'
ditioning
.
The Publisher reserves the
been shown at fairs. Would
with us .
24~
Lincoln
St.,,Middlepol't
10·24·tfc right to edit or reject any ads
make good 4· H or FFA
deemed objectional. The
projects. Phone 949·38« after
publisher
will
not
be
responsible
4 p.m. Also, 1964 Ford lh ton
Phone 992-2550
WILL GIVE a&gt;l(ay three kittens
to good homes. Two males, for more than one Incorrect. pickup, custom cab and long
bed, 6 cylinder, 3 speed . Insured · Experienced
green tiger al"d a blue tiger. insertion .
RATES
Work Guaranteed
Phone 949·38« after 4 p.m.
Female is a tiger with some
For
Want
Ad
Service
10·31-3tc
white, a real fuzzy one! All
.see . us for
Free
per Word one insertion
will soon be beautiful cats . scents
Minimum Charge75c
2 BED housetrailer . Phone 992- Estimate on Furnace
Phone 992-3911.
12 cents per word thref
lnstalation.
10·31 ·31c consecutive insertions.
5989.
10·29-61p
18 cents per word six con ·
I WILL NOT be responsible for ;ecutive
irisertlons.
debts contracted by any one
25
Per
Cent Discount on pa id POLLED Hereford cattle .
POMEROY
other than myself. Signed: 1ds and ads
paid within 10 days.
Phone 742·3435.
Lou Roseberry.
CARD OF THANKS
10·22·12tc
10·31 ·31p
HOME &amp; AUTO
&amp; OBITUARY
$1
.50
for
SO
word
min
imum
.
SK AT ·A· WAY announces Each additional word 2c .
992-2094
IRON kettle with stand. En·
Halloween Party , Friday,
BLIND
AOS
606
E.
Mclin
Pomeroy
terprise
lard
press.
Phone
October 29. Races, prizes,
Additional
25c Charge per
949·3718.
balloons. Open Wednesday, Advertlsem~nt .
11 -1·3tp
OFFICE SUPPL~ES
Friday and Saturday nights
OFFICE
HOURS
from 7: 30p. m to 10:30 p. m.
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily, COLONIAL style stereo, AM·
And
Available forparties Monday, 8:30
am
.
to
12:00
Noon
FM
radi
o,
4
speakers,
4
speed
Tuesday and Thursday
FURNITURE
record changer . Balance
nights, Saturday and Sunday Saturday .
S79.19. Use our budget terms. Stop, In and See
afternoons. Schedule parties
Our
Call 992·7085.
early, dates going fast. Phone Notice
11·1·6fc Floor Display,
985·3929 or 985·3585.
' - - - - - - - - -----'-'
1Q.2J.121c KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
MODERN
Walnut
Stereo,
AM·
delivered to your door. New
FM radio features 4 speed
products
coming
out
LEGAL NOTICE
record changer, 4 speakers. Real Estate For Sale
regularl
y.
Would
you
like
to
Ch ar les F PowelL whose last
separate controls. Balance
fry them ' Ca ll 992-5113.
known place of res idence is
S67.89.
can 992-7085.
10·5·lfc
Route 1, Middleport. Ohio, 1S
11 · 1·61c
hereby notified that on the 21st
day of September , 197 1 Lela A ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
PowelL being pla intiff filed her
overweigh t ladles, teens and
petition aga inst him
as

( 11 I I, 8,

-- PURTV SOON
THAR WON'T BE
NO OADBURN
MOON LEFT

Conn coronet, good condition.
Men and boy's clothing and

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

Notice

PHONE NUMBER

Household furniture, and
goods, antiques, hallseat,

fires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MOTOR, INC.

10-31·31p

'1E KNOW WHAT,
JAME"' -- - IF THEM
ASTERNOTS DON'T
STOP BRIN61N' BACK
ALL THEM THAR
ROCKS --

FOUR NE\'i HOMES .
OPEN FOR tNSPECTIQN
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
m011lhly payment as law as S65.00 for a family with a base
sallrry of $5,000.00 and'three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

SMITH NELSON

YARD SALE starts Monday,
Nov. I thru Friday, Nov. 5 8
a.m. to~ p.m . tn case of rain
will be held in basement. Ella
Osborne, 6 mites east of
Chester on St. Rt. 248.

1970 DODGE POLARA
$2495
4 Dr., V·8 engine, automatic trans., P.S., factory air, good

r------------------------------------------

1

1947 CADILLAC pick up - SilO;
1959 Ford, 4 dr. - $75 ; 1959
Chevrolet, 2 dr. - $75; 1959
Renault 4 dr .• extra rear end
and other parts, only $3,995,
come see; divided top gas
range - $25, small home
made tractor
$50 ;
wheelbarrow with Model T
Ford wheel - $20; West from
Pomeroy old Rt. 33 to County
Road 163, second lane on left.

,.

IINP t.JO I'AL-!-e
1,10\'8~~ t HAVe

'IOU COVEQOl

Terms.

MASON

ON ME (IIHIL£ 1 ~S 5LEEPIN6 ...

-~..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:

AXYDX,BAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is .---~------'--;
.11sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc different.

A Cryptogram Quotation
N UWFFUC AXAHCAHC AXP

FURNITURE
Va. ·
Mason,

FPCA
PWHCHF

'f

WH

K CU WUDCE

T C A. - XUE

LZ

NAE
FDC

VKXSCKL

Saturday's Cryptoquolr: ASK THYSELF DAlLY. TO HOW
MAN):' 1Ll.·MINDJ;:Il l'F:~SONS TIIOtl liAS SHOW"! A
K !ND 1&gt;'!'"0SITII"" - MAlt &lt;''" ~ 'l"ltP.LHI~

.

--'--

�"

"

'

· -'l'IIIDII)Jilelltlnel,M! u I &amp;.Pwiao,,O.,IIDY. l, lr/1

Sentinel Classifieds · Get A~tion! ·Sentinel Classifieds Get Results/
2 SIGIIS
Po~n~roy
!Helen Help Us!
Business
Services
OF
Motor Co.
r---------~-----------------1

I

l

By Helen Bottel

I
I
1
I

THOROUGHLY MODERN MAID
DOESN'T WANT MARRIAGE
Dear Helen:
What's with women these days?
They'll love you, even live with you. But, when you ask the
perfect one to marry you, that's the end of the affair.
My old pappy always warned me how girls trap men into
marriage - how they size up eligible bachelors and hot-tie them
as husbands. That was Texas. This is New York, and no female I'd
consider Is "trapping" this season.
I just lost another great girl because I got too pushy about the
future. She loves me, but she wants "no strings." Last night, she
accused me of being a "middle·dass reactionary with a suburban
mentality."
All I want Is a wile and family- and I can afford both. Is that
a crime? Am I doomed to a single life because I can't find a
woman with staying power (brains, personality, chemistry, plus
adequate looks ) who will commit herself to stay with me? As my
latest lost love said, "I want to be free for whatever comes along,
and my career comes first. " - BACHElDR IN SEARCH OF A
LEGAL MATE
Dear Batch :
What you want Is a ' 'new woman;• superimposed on the basic
"traditional female" model, and that's a little hard to find these
days .... but not impossible.
Though many career girls consider marriage secondary "Maybe when I'm over 35 and ready to settle down," says one the right man can often reshuffle priorities - especially If he
aoesn 't act too anxious.
And though I ~pathize with you, Batch, I can't suppress a
chuckle: Ten years ago that phrase, "Maybe when I'm over 35
"""",was used exclusively by eligible bachelors as "anxious" girls
·
mourned,
How does the shoe feel on the other foot, men? - H.
Dear Helen :
I can't understand WhY mind-bending drugs are so popular
with the young when it's the older people who need their minds
pulled away from worry, misery and other forms of depression.
The kids have so much to look forward to. Many of us elders can
only look back with regret.
You'd think WE would be the main users. - HOW COME?
Dear How Come :
Wake up, man! Elders ARE the main users of drugs which
affect the mind. Consider alcohol, tranquilizers, diet pills,
"psychic energizers" prescribed by doctors, and a host of other
legal turn-oos and turn~ffs, not to speak of heavy adult traffic in
marijuana and illegal pills anq injections.
The number of young people on hannful drugs is scarcely
more than a handful compared to the vast amount of adults who
are messing up their lives.
Remember that booze, when overused, is still the nation's
number one,problem. And you seldom see a teenage alcoholic. H.
NOTICE

Notice is hereby given th at
the undersigned i ntends to
make app lic at ion to the Probate
Court of Meigs County , Ohio , for
an order to change his name to
Brownie Vulakli ia.
Sa id applica ti on will be by
pet ition to be f iled in said
Probate Court, on or after th e
2nd day of December 1971.
Oeted th ls 27th day of October
1971 '
aka

I 1l 1, 11

ar uke Vuj okli ia.
Brown ie vu jakli ;a

For Sale

On this day in history :
In 1864 the Post Office
Department introduced the
money order as a safety
convenience for sending financial payments through the maiL
In 1918 the Hapsburg monarchy of Austria·Hungary was
dissolved. Budapest became the
capital of the Hungarian
Republic and Vienna the capital
of Austria.

QUALITY--

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3095
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 modeL Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, !ports mirrors,
console. air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;

brakes, 350 cu. ln. V.8 engine. Really sharp.

I

Irvin Miller.

1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR
$2595
Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish , 350 V·8 engine, power
steering, radio, white·walls, wh. covers.

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.

f'PMEROY, OHIO

992-2'\.7 4--

@)

10·31-3fp

-------

I

NEW WARM Morn ing circulating heater. Phone 7423298.
10·31-6tp

'
and she just wed (this year ) a gent more than
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK (KFS) - Madison Square twice her age.
Michael caine busted Minda Feliciano's
Garden finally caved in and now lets newsgals in
the press box .. .. The new 3rd Ave , Chinese heart and plans - explained he got to feeling too
restaurant "No. I Son" is getting a lot of at- domesticated with the longplay arrangement ....
tention : it's actually owned by a pair of pure, no- Gifted writer-clown Dudley Moore's new gal is
·- doubt Oriental gents named Joel Levinson and Australian journalisl Lindy Hobbs, 21 ( who
Jerome Alexander .... They 're mostly in the wig looks amazingly like Dud's estranged Suzy ) ....
business but fell in love with Chinese food in Don Ameche settled in Phoenix; can't imagine
Hong Kong .... Phyllis Diller's stepson, ,Shane why the Phone Co. hasn't )lired Don as its TVDonovan, wed Shelby Margaret Anderson .... La radio spokesman - after all, he invented the
Diller's 3rd Ave. (at 74th St.) flower shop folded . telephone in movies .... The enchanting "ButThe new Mrs. John D. Rockefeller Jr. ternies Are Free" started its 3rd Bdwy. year.
Radio City Music Hall's so delighted with
(stepmother of Nelson, David, Winthrop etc. )
estat...ale of antiques at Parke-Bernet broke a Peter Gennaro's savvy, he'll get top billing over
record: $437,000 (including almost $40,000 in city· the ne)V stage shows there ("Peter Gennaro
state sales taxes) for one French table (once Presents .. .'') ... Linda Hopkins, who's been
owned by Mme , Pompadour ) - biggest price starred in "Purlie" since it premiered seasons
ever paid for a table in the USA .... Paris dealer ago, will sing the Blues in Peter's show starting
Oct. 28 .... Incidentally, Denise, daughter of
Claude Sere bought it and we know whom for tbe Jack Linsky's, fabulous Palm Beach Music Hall veep John Jackson, is one of the
collectors .... Without tax it was $400,000 and that delights of the marvelous Joffrey Ballet,
Connie Towers, maybe the most beautiful
was table-topped only once, by an Iranian who
paid $413,000 for a table in London, but no tax actress on Bdwy ., or off, at Christo's mentioned
there .... The Linskys recently bid $380,000 for a her imminent show biz schedule which no truckDegas bronze because they needed a little fan· driver would accept: a regular in the soap opera
tastic knicknack for a table in their Palm Beach "Love Is a Many Splendored Thing," which she
tapes "live" daily, Connie all summer traipsed
digs.
In "21," the pre.Jet game dinner crowd in every morning from far~ut Long Island,
included Gen. Lucius Clay, Miami Dolphins' where she starred in Guy Lombardo's producowners Earle Smalley and Jim Davis .... Keep tion of "Sound of Music" and managed never to
your eye out and ears cocked, but hands off, miss either the :soaper · or the show, betimes
pretty Eva Adamamtidou, new singing smash at raising her two children """" Now's she's exDionysos, most entertaining uproar house inN. tendi ng the commute - she opens Nov, 9 in
Y.... carol Bruce sat on Wayne&amp;nders' piano Framingham, Mass., with John Raitt in "I Do, I
at Johnny Angels and sang "My Bill," and the Do," and again won't miss the daytime serial crowd just cried and cried; carol had good while commuting by bus! .... Her reply to our
rehearsal for it - she sang it in the 1945 revival query as to why : "When you have two children in
private schools .. .''
of "Show Boat."
Ex-heavyweight contender, Mickey Shaw,
Just drop in at Max Kase's nifty little bar in
tbe We~t Side Bus Terminal, and you pick up all who almost lost his legs recently in the hospital,
sorts of sports gossip from the erstwhile Pulitzer keeps punching : Mick will take a variety show to
Prizewinning sports editor : such as Walt Alston Greenhaven Prison in Stormville, N. Y., for
probably won't manage ·the Dodgers next season chaplain Father Donovan in memory of Horace
"""" Umpire Bill Valentine, dropped from job McMahon, who brought several such shows to
after he tried to organize the umps, now is a top · the prisoners .. .. The Big Band renaissance
GOP exec in Arkansas .... Knute Rockne 's brought a flock of offers to semi-retired Frankie
grandson is a flip off the old pigskin : quar- Carle, who can 't swing with that trend because
he donated all his band arrangements to the U.S.
terback at Northeastern Jr. College, Okla .
_
Dan Stewart of the daytime soap opera Army,
Lee Roy Reams, who got his first Bdwy.
"Guiding Light" will double as a singer at the
Living Room """" First N. Y. motel, the Skyline break playing the hairdresser in "Applause,"
Motor Inn, added a rooftop indoor swimming has so much faith in that show's director, Ron
pool; once a motel only needed beds and a high Field, that he's invested his life savings in Ron 's
next, "On the Town," now tryout-touring before
IOI~rance ..
Bdwy .... Well, he's young.
NBC wants s• ~'l'art Granger for a spy series
Jody McCrea produced and stars in "Cry
.... Chicago hockey star Bobby Hull admitted Blood, Apache!" and cast his pop Joel in a
sheepishly at Mike Manuche's he's been cameo role as "an older Jody," in a flash·
reaiOiing his darUng go~d~n , locks - via hair forward .... The Copacabana lloor shows
tran~Piant .... Art Ona~15 bJg buzz now .'st" the spawned a !lock of H'wood stars and another is
f70,000,000 trust fund h~ daughter, ChriS ~na , · up for fame : ex.Copa production singer Anthony
lnherlll in Dec.; a cahf. re.sident, she might M~ss~na just finished co-starring in "The Love
comeWidertbe50-Wcommumtyproperty lBij' Gap" flick, his film debut. ·

ott I
1

I

SIEGLER

HEATERS

I

Employment Wanted

Voice along Broadway !

Good

references . Ca II 992·2820 from
q a.m to 4 p.m weekdays .

10·29·61p

I
I
I

I b•
I

POMI!IIOY
JtckW.CitiiY,Mir.
Phone tn-2111

I
1
I
I

II

J

·----------

HOUSECLEANING in Racine, COAL , limestone Excelsior
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Phone 992·2876.
10·24·1fc Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
H ·tfC

Help Wanted

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels , Phone 992 -

WORK !rom home for Christ .
mas. Phone 949-4111 . Part or
ful l time . Good earnings.

5443

8·15·tfC

Fitzpatrick Or10-31·3tc APPLES
chards, State Route 689 ,
EARN at home addressing phone Wilesvllle. 669·3785.
envelopes. Rush stamped - - - - - - - - - 9 -·3·lfc
self.addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn, M"obile Homes for Sale
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
10-2001p

·-anted To Buy
OLD Furniture, dishes, clock ,
and-or complete households .

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8-25·tfC

For Rent
MIDDLEPORT,

close

THE BAQGE GUYS

CHAUVINIST

PIGSl

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

-MINO tF r
PtCKUPVOUR

in ,

spa cious, comfortable fur nished bachelor apartment.

.12: · 14' - 24' · WIDE
MILLER
MOBil£ HOMES .

Cleland
Realty

Original Cabinet

•

I&gt;ISCARI&gt;Sl

Company

NO /toONE'(,
IT WAf&gt;

Now Offering A

-SPECIALsNovember 1 lhru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. $6.50
Now $5 ,00
November 8 lhru 13
PERMANENT
R119 . $12.50
Now 18.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone m.7474
; orner Union Avo. &amp; St. Rt. 7

New Selvice
We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in

roofing to our staff.

Ph. 992-7796

EXPERT
·Wheel Alignment

'5.5!;
-G UARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

I·

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
· Open 8Ti1"5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

East Main
POMEROY

.,,

----

11-1

Kitchens, Baths
Room AddltlonJ
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloador Work

, .. BUT IHE STEAK I
ORDE~Et&gt; WAS SO
it1U&amp;H

,

Septic Tanks
And Leach Bed!."

.!LI

- -- - - -

SEW ING MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes . 992·2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

Service. We Sharpen Scisso rs .

3·29-tfc

-----P!Jone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

sa les representative, For free

estimates . phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5·27·tfC
AUTOMOBILE

Insurance

been c~ncelled? Lost yoor
opera1or' s license? Call 99'2·
2966 .

You mean
40u'll qive
onl4 f ifteen
dOl Ia' fo'

6-15-lfc

- -- - - - -

3 BEAUTIFUL
NEIGLER Building Supply.
EXCELLENT
5-1·1fC Free estimate on building
- YOU MUST - - - - - your new home. Will draw
ONE - 4 large RUBBER stamps made to
prints lo suit the lay of yoor
bedrooms ot".,bath. storage
order, 24-hour service. Owain
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
space, full .basement, por- or Wilma Casta, Portla~d.
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
ches, storag~ building, some
10·200tc
aluminum siding, sotfet and
storm doors and windows,
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
ALMOST NEW furnace and HARRISON' S TV an~ Antenna
Racine, Ohio.
hof.water tank , Ref. and
Service. Phone 992 ·2522 .
10·7·1fC
Range, floor covering, MANY
6· 10-lfc
OTHER FEATURES, JUST
HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc.
$12,900.
raised, moved, underpinned,
Real Estate For Sale
remodeled. Esllmates free,
POMEROY - HERE'S OP·
anywhere . Nati onal House
PORTUNITY- 2 lots part of
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston,
another, room for 2 trailers,
w. Va. 25311 , or phone 304·925·
GOOD NEIGHBORHOOD, 2
3179. "
bedrooms , full basement,
9·30·601p
porch, other features , JUST
$3,375.00.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
POMEROY - DESIGNED
662-3035 .
FOR GRACIOUS LIVING - I
2-12.1fc
story BRICK, 3 beautiful
Jllw!ker
bedrooms with dooble closets,
110 Me&lt;hanic Street
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
light kitchen Is a housewife's
Pbmeroy, Ohio
delivered right to ~our
dream , 11h baths, carpeted ,
pro/"ect. Fast and easy . Free
central alr·cond. and heat , MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
est mates . Phone 992-3284 ,
full basement with recreation
home, bath, large living.
Goegleln Ready .Mi x Ca.,
room , utility room. I ACRE of Garage, corner lot. 510,000.00.
Middleport, Ohio.
groond, $28,500.
6·30·1fc
ROUTE 33 - 2 acres with all
WHAT IS YOUR PROPERTY utilities.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
WORTH? COME TO OUR
Reasonable rates. P!J . 446-4782,
OFFICE AND SEE WHAT MIDDLE PORT- 10 acres with
Gallipol is. John Russell;
PROPERTIES SIMILAR TO J bedroom home.
O.Vner &amp; Operator.
YOURS HAVE SOLO FOR 5-12·1fc
THEN LIST WITH US.
DOUBLE -10 rooms. $3,500.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
REALTOR
REDUCED- warm 3 bedroom
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Office 992·2259
large home with bath, fur·
Complete front end service,
Residence 992·2568
nace, basement, garage. Nice
tune up and broke service .
I0-31 -61c lot. Only $10,500.00.
Wheels balanced elec·
All
work
Ironically.
HOUSE, 1642 Lfncoln Helghrs. FARM- over 100 acres of nice
guaranteed .
ReasonablE
laying fertile land . All clean
Call Canny Thompson, 992.
rates. Phone 992·3213.
2196, "
pastures , limber , and
7·27-tfc
meadows, plenty of buildings.
7.18·1fc

Virgil B.
TEAPORD

this fine
machine?

THE
G:o!MME; ,I. DIME:,

, PALL¥"!'

R:R HIM Ll 1&lt;8

.IJTll.E ORPHAN ANNID.

J:

co~

•;
'

~
1(-1

- - - - --

drlvew"{' large yard with

jus I wal~ing distance' from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
;: ~ Hedrick, 2137 Wadswoo th
urlve, ~olum bus , Ohio, phone
237·4334, Columbus.
,
S·9· 1f&lt;·

liE SHOULD \IIOfll(.

C€1&lt;1"/&gt;.\J.ILV, IT'S
PRECISELY 8:45!

SR.

plenty o shade trees, located
on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on
SR 124 In Syracuse, Ohio.
Available for Immediate
occupancy. To see,

phone

Gallipolis 446·9539 after s p.m.
~eek days for appointment.
10·3·11

~lgMffiUJE;IkJ lclawH..I..-1 ,_;
5. "Barber
of Seville"
heroine
Unscramble these foor Jumbles,
&amp;.Made a
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wordo.
choice
7, Imitate
10, TimeLI1'UIJ
honored
11. Jacket
Ye.terdar'• h1wer
~- "]lart
27. Moving
IZ. Merited
round
16. Diversify
29. Supply
19. Stringed
what's
instruneeded
ment
30. Caught
22. Bridge
sight of
word
31.-bear
23. Light
THt:. V.ORD 'CHA51E"
color
36. Old Siam·
24. Not at sea
ese coin
e&gt;IYES 'IOU WHAT
31. - lamb
25. Curse
HE DOES,

I

ITJ I I

THE SOUND
OF 1'HE
GOOD
LIFE

GermAn

I I

article
ll'- Albion
20. Marsh
21. Distlnc.;\-•
tlve air
i2. Prepare
a path

WMP0/1390

lMAl'S~'tJRE!

ON YOUR DIAL

RE~FULTYPE

U'f A MACHINE WITti

11ffY WRITE AtiOUT

HE I~ THI:;
COUNTRY'S MOST
REVERfl7 ELI7ER
5TA1f5MAN 1

JJ"!ORIJAC

~3.ADuke

)'OfJ MJ6HT TRY A &amp;IT
Ml~.

21.

[

"'

Now orranre the elreled lelten
tofona the 1urpriae INWtr, u
surrooted by the .._. eartoon.

L___:..:::
Pritd=-=~=-=SIIPIIISl=IIGWII==-~1

25. Founded
28. Arthur of

Of THAT YOURSflF,

(]

~n~:~ic
condition

rn rxI I )
(Aa.we" t..orrow)

Juonbl•., WRATH CRAZY

28. Any
woman

S•turd•, '•

ASTHMA

DOUILI

A.n•w~r : t:hansf'• in lrrM'• might be boring tit~ -AWLS

29. Embody,
with "of"
' 32. Generous

1

I USED 10 THINK TAA1" THERE '
5f'IDER5 ON TilE MOON AND
THAT ONE OF THEM M16HT FALL
WE~t;

fault
33.Gnawed
at
3t. Unclose,
poetically
35. Printing
goofs
37. City in
Oklahoma
JU5T c~05E TilE

llCTO~ QUtlfT~V- •

.'349.95

paint spray. Used but In like ·
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget pl..n available,
Phone 992·5641 ,
10·26-6tc

:r COULl'

IIARDI-Y EAT

FURNITURE

basement, 133 Butterr:.p Ave.,

TO THE A FL .

' BOUT !.V!P."ff'HINCS-

NEW'

vacuum 'S IX RUOM house, bath, ,lull

AND NON
MOVING 0/f'R

BACKHOE AND DOZER work . AWN INGS, storm doors and
windows, c arports,
Septic tanks Installed. George
marquees, aluminum siding
I Bllll Pullins, Phone 992·2478.
4·25-lfc and railing. Call A. Jacob,

Complete Service

RACINE LOTS ,
LOCATION
SEE THIS

IT'S A NATCHERAL-BORfJ

RIGHT FO' I.VUt:'/
AMERICAN 10 COMPLAIN

.. ....... __

Complete
Remodeling

c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

~oe

....

3 ROOMS

cleaner complete with attachments, cordwlnder and

11E Gar AlL 1liE GIFT6
WE GIVE FOR NEW
,O,CCOUNTS !

JOHNIES
•
BEAUTY SHOP

Fireplace, carpeting,
1220 Washington ilivd.
upholstered furniture, dish·
Belpre, Ohio
washer, tub, stall shower, off
5 bedroom house, bath, fur street parking, SIOO a month
NEW
HAVEN
12
x
50
mobile
nace.
with utilities paid . Phone 992· Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE.
home on an 80 x 235 level lat.
3074.
No down payment, 12 years to
Block utlllly building, washer
BUY BEFORE WINTER .
10·31-31c pay to qualified GI. Up to
and dryer, on Mill St., Phone
Helen L. Teaford,
$2,500 available for lot lm·
882·2717,
Associate
TRAILER , Brown"s Trailer provements If you own a lot.
10· 11 -tfc
992·3325 992-2378
Park , Minersville. Ohio . Get your new mobile home
10·3J.6tc.
now. See James Simpkins. 3 ACRES land, 3 bedroom
Phone ~2· 3324 .
I0-27-6tc
Valley Estates Mobile Home
hcwse, near Chester. Phone
Sales, Rt. 50 East Athens CONVE NIENT but secluded
985·3395,
FURNISHED
2-bedroom 593-8762.
10.29·31c building lots on T79 at Rock
9-19·37tc
Springs . Within walking
apar . :r~en t.
Adults on ly .
of Meigs High
d1stance
1\\lddleport. Phone 992·3874.
HOUSETRAILER, 45 x 10 and
School.
a
5
minute
drive from
ADD·A·
ROOMS
.
Beautiful
10·31·3fc
14 acres land, $5,000. Contact
Pomeroy . Call or see Bill
Venco Roomettes . Many floor
James Rucker , Rt. 2,
Witte weekends, or after ~
plans, or customize . Add " Coolville .
FU"'IISHED and unfurnished · extra
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
bedr:ooms, separate
10·29-!lp
aparimen1s. CLose to school .
6887.
10·31 ·61c
family rooms. ba1hs. Young ' s
Phone 992·5434.
Mobile
Home
Sales,
St.
Rt.
7
&amp;
10·18·1fC 35 (below Sliver Memorial 7 ROOMS and oa1n on Union
Ave., Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone
Bridge), Gallipolis.
992·5641.
I KAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
10·31 .lie
10-22·121p
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Jhlo. 992·2951 .
4-2-tfc Real Estate For Sale
Ni\:E 2-STORY home wllh full· NEW, 3-bedroom home rn
Middleport . . Built-In kitchen,
basement, 2 lots, new forced
For Sale
ceramic
tile bath, all·electrlc
air furnace, near elementary
good
neighborhood. Coil
heat,
LIKE NEW aluminum square school. Phone 992·7384 to see.
arrange FHA financing .
tub washer. S50. Phone 992·
10-31 ·61c
Telephon• 992-3600 or 992
5960
2186.
10-29·31c
LOT on St. Rt. 143, 6 tenths of
7-25·1fC"
mile from Rt. 7 Bypass.
NEW 1971 zig-zag sewing
Phone 992-6329.
machine In original factory _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I0·31 -61p
7· ROOM block hou.se, 4
carton. Zlg.zag to make
bedrooms, living room, dining
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
house In Burlingham.
room, bath with shower, large
monograms, and make fancy 4 ROOM
Phone 992-6948 or 698·3719.
kitchen with lots of bulit·ln
designs with justthe )wist of a
10·29-31c
birch cabinets . Hardwood
single dial. Left In lay-away
floors, Natural gas furnace, SJS.Oci ""Down-·
and never been used. Will sell
50-gallon eleclrlc water
for only $47 cash, or credit RACINE - 10 room house and
bath. Two lots, basement,
Salanc;e On
heater, 2 large recreation
terms available. Phone 99~Phone
949-4313.
garage.
paneled
In
basement,,
rooms,
Convenient
5641 "
10-20· 12tc
2 porches, garage, concrete '
10·26-61c
ELECTROL UX

IT W/16 "lllE WOR!il'
BANK ROBBERY "
we've HAD.

BILL NELSON
992·3657

1

Is

fil ing.

--JL

MUCft
WORSE ,

numerous other Items.

Save 10.00 Now!
men interested in a Weight
defend ant i n the Court of
Watchers
IRI
·
Class
in
Common Pleas, Meigs County ,
this ad and get $10
Oh io, Case No , 14,935, praying
Pomeroy wr ite: Weight 1onring
your
purchase of a new
for divorce from sa1d Charles F .
Watchers I RI, 1863 Section Siegler heater.
Powell on the grounds of gross
Rd .. Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
neglect of duty and extreme
10· 3 · 11~
cruel ty , support and alimony
and divis ion of property , and
other proper rel1ef ; sa1d cause
will be for hear ing on or after
the 11th day of December , 1971 . GIRL , 20 , desires parttlm e
FUEL OIL
Lela A. Powell, plaint iff
~II sizes In st9ck . We install,
clerical
employment.
Ex
·
J . B O' Brien , attorney
fmance , serv1ce .
perienced in shorthand,
for plaint iff .
typing,

ABOUT ' LiiT LIVIl'l

II - I

FbR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

1r---------..
s
I

15, 22, 29 112) 6, 61

11-IE'r' BELI£VE IIJ 'LIVIi'

BVT THeY "RE. IJOT TOO Cf'R"r'

,;)

l SAV We MUST
l&gt;iSCAitl&gt; MA~E

NEW &amp; OLD WORK"
POTATOES , Charles Hilton,
THERE will be a reviva l at the
Por tland, Ohio. Phone 843· All Weather ~oofing &amp;
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Construction Co, arid An2268.
Church . Started Monday,
_&lt;;angf.l~tlon &amp; Corrections
10-28·1fc
October 18, 7:30 p.m. with
thony flumbing &amp; Heating." •
Sister Dorothy Overton as . Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Complete Plumbing,
• Day of Publication
TWO regis lered Hereford
evange l ist.
Everyone
Heating and AJr ConREGULATIONS
yearling heifers . Both have
welcome to come and worship
'
ditioning
.
The Publisher reserves the
been shown at fairs. Would
with us .
24~
Lincoln
St.,,Middlepol't
10·24·tfc right to edit or reject any ads
make good 4· H or FFA
deemed objectional. The
projects. Phone 949·38« after
publisher
will
not
be
responsible
4 p.m. Also, 1964 Ford lh ton
Phone 992-2550
WILL GIVE a&gt;l(ay three kittens
to good homes. Two males, for more than one Incorrect. pickup, custom cab and long
bed, 6 cylinder, 3 speed . Insured · Experienced
green tiger al"d a blue tiger. insertion .
RATES
Work Guaranteed
Phone 949·38« after 4 p.m.
Female is a tiger with some
For
Want
Ad
Service
10·31-3tc
white, a real fuzzy one! All
.see . us for
Free
per Word one insertion
will soon be beautiful cats . scents
Minimum Charge75c
2 BED housetrailer . Phone 992- Estimate on Furnace
Phone 992-3911.
12 cents per word thref
lnstalation.
10·31 ·31c consecutive insertions.
5989.
10·29-61p
18 cents per word six con ·
I WILL NOT be responsible for ;ecutive
irisertlons.
debts contracted by any one
25
Per
Cent Discount on pa id POLLED Hereford cattle .
POMEROY
other than myself. Signed: 1ds and ads
paid within 10 days.
Phone 742·3435.
Lou Roseberry.
CARD OF THANKS
10·22·12tc
10·31 ·31p
HOME &amp; AUTO
&amp; OBITUARY
$1
.50
for
SO
word
min
imum
.
SK AT ·A· WAY announces Each additional word 2c .
992-2094
IRON kettle with stand. En·
Halloween Party , Friday,
BLIND
AOS
606
E.
Mclin
Pomeroy
terprise
lard
press.
Phone
October 29. Races, prizes,
Additional
25c Charge per
949·3718.
balloons. Open Wednesday, Advertlsem~nt .
11 -1·3tp
OFFICE SUPPL~ES
Friday and Saturday nights
OFFICE
HOURS
from 7: 30p. m to 10:30 p. m.
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily, COLONIAL style stereo, AM·
And
Available forparties Monday, 8:30
am
.
to
12:00
Noon
FM
radi
o,
4
speakers,
4
speed
Tuesday and Thursday
FURNITURE
record changer . Balance
nights, Saturday and Sunday Saturday .
S79.19. Use our budget terms. Stop, In and See
afternoons. Schedule parties
Our
Call 992·7085.
early, dates going fast. Phone Notice
11·1·6fc Floor Display,
985·3929 or 985·3585.
' - - - - - - - - -----'-'
1Q.2J.121c KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
MODERN
Walnut
Stereo,
AM·
delivered to your door. New
FM radio features 4 speed
products
coming
out
LEGAL NOTICE
record changer, 4 speakers. Real Estate For Sale
regularl
y.
Would
you
like
to
Ch ar les F PowelL whose last
separate controls. Balance
fry them ' Ca ll 992-5113.
known place of res idence is
S67.89.
can 992-7085.
10·5·lfc
Route 1, Middleport. Ohio, 1S
11 · 1·61c
hereby notified that on the 21st
day of September , 197 1 Lela A ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
PowelL being pla intiff filed her
overweigh t ladles, teens and
petition aga inst him
as

( 11 I I, 8,

-- PURTV SOON
THAR WON'T BE
NO OADBURN
MOON LEFT

Conn coronet, good condition.
Men and boy's clothing and

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

Notice

PHONE NUMBER

Household furniture, and
goods, antiques, hallseat,

fires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MOTOR, INC.

10-31·31p

'1E KNOW WHAT,
JAME"' -- - IF THEM
ASTERNOTS DON'T
STOP BRIN61N' BACK
ALL THEM THAR
ROCKS --

FOUR NE\'i HOMES .
OPEN FOR tNSPECTIQN
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
m011lhly payment as law as S65.00 for a family with a base
sallrry of $5,000.00 and'three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

SMITH NELSON

YARD SALE starts Monday,
Nov. I thru Friday, Nov. 5 8
a.m. to~ p.m . tn case of rain
will be held in basement. Ella
Osborne, 6 mites east of
Chester on St. Rt. 248.

1970 DODGE POLARA
$2495
4 Dr., V·8 engine, automatic trans., P.S., factory air, good

r------------------------------------------

1

1947 CADILLAC pick up - SilO;
1959 Ford, 4 dr. - $75 ; 1959
Chevrolet, 2 dr. - $75; 1959
Renault 4 dr .• extra rear end
and other parts, only $3,995,
come see; divided top gas
range - $25, small home
made tractor
$50 ;
wheelbarrow with Model T
Ford wheel - $20; West from
Pomeroy old Rt. 33 to County
Road 163, second lane on left.

,.

IINP t.JO I'AL-!-e
1,10\'8~~ t HAVe

'IOU COVEQOl

Terms.

MASON

ON ME (IIHIL£ 1 ~S 5LEEPIN6 ...

-~..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:

AXYDX,BAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is .---~------'--;
.11sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc different.

A Cryptogram Quotation
N UWFFUC AXAHCAHC AXP

FURNITURE
Va. ·
Mason,

FPCA
PWHCHF

'f

WH

K CU WUDCE

T C A. - XUE

LZ

NAE
FDC

VKXSCKL

Saturday's Cryptoquolr: ASK THYSELF DAlLY. TO HOW
MAN):' 1Ll.·MINDJ;:Il l'F:~SONS TIIOtl liAS SHOW"! A
K !ND 1&gt;'!'"0SITII"" - MAlt &lt;''" ~ 'l"ltP.LHI~

.

--'--

�\

•

•·

.

Overnight Wire
By UPI
WILBERFORCE, OHIO - A
student was shot and killed
early today at predominantly
black Wilberforce University
and students were reported
meeting on the campus hours
later.
Three
Greene County
sheriff 's ofricers at nearby
Xenia said little was yet known
about the circumstances
sun·ounding the shooting. A
·deputy said it was believed
another student was involved,
but to his knowledge no arrests
had been made.
"There were a couple of fights
and one boy was shot and
ktlled." he said. The identity of
the victim was withheld as
relatives were being notified.
THREE MOTORCYCLE
riders and one bicyclist were
among the 18 persons killed in
traffic-related accidents in Ohio
dw·ing the summer-like last
weekend of October. Four
accidents took more than one
life . In one accident Sunday five
miles west of Piqua three
persons, including an infant,
were killed.
Victims of that accident at the
intersection of Ohio 165 and
Ohio 48 were Mrs. Phyllis
Hoying, 25, Tipp City; her fiv emonth-old son, Chip, and Eva G.
Gard, 66, Newark. Also Sunday,
two North Canton men were
killed in a one-car crash near
Massillon. They were Terry
Slaats and Theodor Zweifel,
both 22.
TOLEDO, OHIO - After

33; Allen Morris, 29, and Harold
McSpadden, 24. They were held
today under $100,000 bond each.
COLUMBUS
NEW
minimum school bus standards,
designed to make riding safer
for Ohio's 1.2 million pupils
transported to classes, went
into effect throughout the slate
today.
All school buses purchased
from now on must have extra
padding of passenger seats,
standard location for the
emergency brake control,
larger brake linings and improved seat retention systems
under standards adopted by the
Ohio Board of Education July
12. Slate School Superintendent
Martin W. Essex said the new
requirements are the highest of
any slate in the nation, and Ohio
is the first to have the same
construction ·standards for all
sizes of school buses.
AKRON - MORE than 30
reports were made to police
here of pins and razor blades
being found in Halloween treats
given to children. Police said
most of the reports were accurate, including two involving
children who suffered cut
mouths from biting into the
treats.
'~It

was nothing serious," a

police spokesman said. "The
children were treated at a
hospilal and released." Objects
found in candy bars and apples
included pins, razor blades and
in one instance, ground glass.
Police said there were · also
reports of a white powder on
s taking out a "suspic ious" some treats. The powder was
sui lease at a downtown railroad being analyzed.
terminal office for the last 10
days, city police hi t the jackpot
Boosters Back
Sunday when three Detroit men
showed up to claim the luggage,
New Tax Levy
found-1&lt;&gt;-Contain 12.1 pounds of
; · ·pure heroin and 2.2 pounds of A new three mill tax levy for
' cocaine.
the Southern Local School
Police said the lola! street District has been endorsed by
value of the narcotics, the most . Southern Local Athletic
ever seized in one operation in Boosters.

Ohio, was over $10 million. The issue will he voted on at
Arrested on charges of con- the Nov. 2 election. The
sptracy to violate slate narcotic Boosters will meet this evening
laws were Willie Middlebrook, at 7,30 p.m. at the high school.

Students Asked
To Aid Refugees
Southern High School
students will participate in a
nation-wide effort named at
helping nine million East
Pakislan refugees in India by
contributing 25 cents. Students
will be asked for donations
Wednesday as they leave the
lunch room .

The st"dent council is the
sponsoring group . John
Eichinger is the president.
._.. ..............

LEON, W. Va. - Rudy
Stewart, 36, Rt. I, Letart, died
this morning in Pleasant
Valley Hospital after undergoing surgery for a
gunshot wound of the chest.
Stewart was accidentally
shot at the residence of his
'&gt;rother, Billy Stewart. According to the West Virginia
State Pollee, Douglas Stewart
was holding a 12-gauge
shotgun when it discharged,
striking his uncle in the chest.
The death has been ruled
accidental.

·Social 1

Halloween Nightmare
(Continued from page I)
killing her instantly.
Harvey was hospitalized in satisfactory CC!ndltlon.
·
Melvin Moore, 18, Chicago, was beaten to death in his home
Saturday night during a Halloween party. Police said Moore was
apparently killed by anotheJ: youth during an argument over a 25cent admission charge for the party.
Dana Gregory, 17, Northbrook, ru., was rushed to a hospital
Saturday
after eating some of her 6-year-old brother's Halloween
,
candy. Pollee said the candy had been laced with mescaline a
hallucinogenic drug.
'
In. Greenville, S.C., police were investigating three CC!mplaints
of razor blades found in apples.
"The kids split the apples open first. The kida are getting smart,
I guess," a dispatcher said.
Pollee in Milwaukee, Wis., Detroit, Mich., and Des Moines,
Iowa, also received reports of booby-trapped candy and treats.
Fear spawned by several incidents in which children almost
swallowed dangerous objects found in candy, kept many trick-or·
treaters hO!ne during the weekend in Michigan, authorities
said.

Syracuse News, Society
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. George
Schneider and Mr . and Mrs.
Marvin McKelvey. The birthday of Mrs. Roush was observed.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie were weekend
guests of their son and
daughter-in.Iaw, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Harden and son, Eric, in
Marion.
Mr . and Mrs. Keith Kirby of
Van, W. Va., visited recently
with Miss Glenna Soulsby.

By Ada Slack
Mr. and Mrs. Nial Salser were
in Clevelsnd where they attended the meeting of the Grand
Masonic Lodge of Ohio. They
were houseguests of Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Calfee.
Mr. and Mrs. Damon Ferrell
spent a week visiting her sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Lonnie Tackett and family
in Olive Hill, Ky.
Recent Guests of Mr. and
Mrs. C. H. Williams were their
son and daughter·in-law, Mr .
and Mrs. T. M. Williams of
Columbus.
Melody and Vickie Cundiff
spent the weekend with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Cundiff in Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. John Crooks and
daughters, Barbara and
Patricia, visited hts parents,
Mr . and Mrs . Orville Crooks
and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. ~ohn Burnell of
Charleston, W. Va., spent a
week with her sister, Mrs.
Freda Duffy and family.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Duckworth, Mrs. Ladonna Lewis and
Roberta of Rittman were
weekend guests of Mrs. Richard

COLUMBUS - Lt. Col.
Harley Leroy (Brownie)
Brown, 56, Columbus, died
Saturday
afternoon
at
University Hospital here.
Mr. Brown, born Oct. 23, 1915
at Piketon, Ohio, was the son of
the late Floyd and Elizabeth..
Allman Brown. He was also
preceded in death by a sister.
Mr . Brown is survived by his
wife, Catherine Roush Brown ;
one son, Robert Leroy Brown ,
San Rafael, Calif.; two
brothers, Cecil and Everett,
both of Columbus; a sister, Mrs.
.- -.
Ronald 1Arlene) Marohl,
Johnstown, Ohio, and a grandson, Tory James Brown, in
California.
Mr. Brown was a member ot
the Middleport Presbyterian

Church and Middleport Masonic
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM. He was a
salesman for the Pomeroy
Motor Company, had worked at
the TNT plant in West Virginia,
and served in U. S. Army 23
years before his retirement in
1967. He was employed by the
Bureau of Employment Services in Columbus the past four
years.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. at the
Rawlings Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Very I Jenkins of
Springfield officiating. Burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Masonic services will be held
this evening at the funeral home
al7 :30p. m. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

Panasonlc
.

FILM SHOWING
Films of the Eastern - Southwestern game will be shown
when the Eastern High School
Athletic Boosters meet Tuesday
night at 8 p.m. lor their
"Tuesday Night at the Movies."
Refreshments will be served.
Everyone is welcome.

CHRISTMAS BEGINS AT

3t

. GUARANTEED MARKET

203 West Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
No Charge for .!:lulling

jFFARMERS BANK i
j and SAVINGS OOJt

Middleport Firemen .,.....
vour help. Vole Yes for the
F1re Station Bond hsue.
Pd ..

. ,Arlv

.

~

-je

.-!C

POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve.System
•

ij

•

POMEROY- MIDDLE~ORT. OHlO

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1971

Council Approves
Free Park Meters
Pomeroy Council Monday
night gave the Pomeroy Retail
Merchants Association the "go
ahead" for free parking on the
t.vo village parking lots two
weeks prior to, Christmas.
Kermit Walton, spokesman,
told council local merchants
had been contacted in regard to
free parking, as council had
requested earlier, and that 33
voted yes and four no.
The merchants, according to
Wal ton , will pay council $500 for
loss of revenue from the

A SMALL
DEPOSIT HOLDS

$HOP EARLY AND
$AVE. AU THE
....... -FAVORITES ARE HERE.

EMENEE
"Duette'·

Eieetri&lt;
PiaooOrpn
....S' fer

James H. Leckrone, assistant
to slate Finance Director Har·
old Hovey, said when it was
first decided to close the parks
the administration had two
choices - they could ~e closed
under administrative
procedures or the public
hearings could have been held
which would have taken
probably a minimum of 30 days.
"Frankly, we didn't think the
budget slalemate would go this

Near Belpre
The American Electric Power
System today announced plans
'for the constructi on and
operation of a major coal-trans·
fer point un the Ohio River near
Belpre.
Donald C. Cook, president and
chairman of AEP, said that
work will begin immediately on
a floating dock, a coal receiving
area, and a conveyor system
linking the two. The terminal is
schedul ed for opera tion in
December.
"This is another step in the
Amel'ican Electric Power
System's continuing program to
maximize the utilization of our

He explained that coal will be
delivered from the AEP

PHONE 992·2156

T

,ews... zn rze1 s

2349
Quarterback Computer

~t':':b:ll·
de~!~lse~ ~~~:
pYier makes the play.
Uses t "D" batl., not
-~...- " Incl. ECJ627

a Soft
~nd

$8 99'
.

•

Cuddly

MUSICAL
Teddy Bear

Dra Given
Revisions

...,.

.' 11'"' :·&lt;· _...;,.. ~~

!

WASHINGTON - BACKERS OF A $1.5 billion bill that would
help schools pay the costs of desegregation were reworking the
measure today ·to include a provision against racial busing and to
meet other objections voiced by House members who voted the
legislation doWn Monday.
The administration-BOught measure, brought to the floor
under a procedure requiring a tw~hirds vote of approval, was
rejected on a 222 to 135 roll call vote, failing to get even a
majority. Rep. Roman C. Pucinski, D-Ill., manager of the
measure, said in view of the decisive_ vole, he would revise the bill
and offer it as an amendment when a higher education bill is
returned to Ule House floor Wednesday for final action.

'6.66

EC2518

Reg. 5.79 _ _ _ _ _ _...;;;.;,;;:;.;;;.._ _..

BASKETBALL &amp; GOAL SET
G4135

•4.44
Regular

Football
Officia l size

&amp;

Ride the Pony Express
with W.A. Holster Set!
Matched stag-handled repeaters
in co lorful holster! You get
Express Rider record and
bandana!

EC131l

G5028

weight.

'2"

Clean Water Goall4 Years Off
WASHINGTON -111~ SENATE set its sights today on what
some thirlk is an impossible goal- making every stream and lake
in the country clean enough to swim in by .1985. A bill designed to
(Continued on page 10\

YOUR
FRIENDLY

Democrats Win Mock Election

GIANT WESTERN AUTO LONG
HAUL tRAILEI TRUCK
a...,OK
_.,._,_ ....

Over 2 Feel Long! Swing-Open
Doors! All Stronq Steel I
EC3313

Power8RaceSet •-~II!'

Bold l/32ocole ean nash
arou•d the 9-ft.traek ot
ocole opeedo up to 160 mph!

Today
Can Be a Baby
at w. A.
Doll's Cloud Nine . EC 1442
Complete with shopping bag for
li'l mom's errands.

'

The team of Senators Edward Eugene McCarthy and John
Kennedy and Edwarll Muskie Lindsaf'were given 78 voles.
captured the mock p~esidential The team of George Wallace
election Monday on the campus and Curtis Lemay had 19
at Rio Grande College.
• voles. Other write-in cand"d
t
The Democratic ticket polled
. 1 a es
·130 voles. The Republican were Dick Gregory, Spi~o
candidates· President Richard Angew and Lester Mattox. The
M. Nixon and his running mate, mock elections were under .the
Ronald Reagan, received 95 direction of J . Sherman Porter,
votes.
Assistant Professor of Political
A third ticket c~mposed of Science .

•

~

ATI'RACTIVE LINEN CAlENDARS are being sold by the Junior Class at Wahama High
School. The CC!Iorful calendars come in 12 different designs. Several of the designs are shown in
the background. The calendars will be on sale until Thanksgiving. A canvass of homes in the
area will be made later this week. Heading the project are the junior class officers, 1-r, front,
John Burris, president ; Dianna Harris, vice president; back row, Frances Wristen, treasurer
and Marilyn Goodnite, secretary. Mr. McWhorter is the advisor.

Martin Honored by OU

NOW YOU KNOW
The first n&amp;tural gas well in
the United Stales was drilled in
1921 to a depth of 27 feel near a
''burning spring'' ·a t ·Fredonia,
N. Y.

OAPSE TO MEET
The Ohio Association of
Public School Employes at
Eastern High School will meet
this evening at 8 p.m. at the
school. All membeu are urged
to attend.

Is Injured

Desegregation Bill Reworked

·"

Thomas Henry Sarver, Sr.,
45, Pomeroy, was hospilalized
following a single car accident
Monday at 4 p.m. on SR 124 onehalf mile north of the Racine
corporation limit.
Sheriff Robert D. Hartenbach's department sa id
Sarver was a passenger in a car
driven southwest by Thomas H.
Sarver Jr., 20, when the car
went off the highway on the left
out of control and broke off a
power pole .
The senior Sarver was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Racine E-R squad where
he was admitted for injuries to
.his head, face and neck. There
was heavy damage to the car.
l'io citation was issued .
At 6:30 a.m. today on SR 7
north of Chesler, a deer was
killed V(hen it ran into the path
of a car driven southwest by
Charlie M. Nelson, 40, Athens.
There was medium damage to
the car, no injuries, or arrest.

Passenger

ALLSOLID STATE
If's Ready to Play!
Daisy Radio for Kids!

)

BY BOB HOEFLICH
A former Rock Springs
resident, now of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., was honored
Saturday night at Ohio
University with a special
alumni award. He is Granville
Harold Martin, a Fort
Lauderdale attorney.
Martin was one of 11 Ohio
University alumni honored for
having achieved distinction in
their chosen fields or having
demonstrated a loyal and active
interest in their alma mater.
The award to Martin was in
recognition of his civic ac·
complishments.
A former state governor of
Kiwanis International in
Florida , Martin was active in
the establishment of the "key
club" for high school boys. The
"key club" was at first a social
organization designed to
combat the high school
fraternity problems. It nearly
failed, but was revamped and
today, when it is international i.a·
scope with 3,600 clubs, provides
a leadership training program
for high school boys. It has been
successful through Kiwanis
leadership. '
Another reason for the
recognition of Martin was his

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

~

~

.**************-kjl

(
'·

role in establishing Fnrt
Lauderdale a ~ a recreational
center. About 40 years ago, Fort
Lauderdale having only 3,000
residents, Marlin felt this was
because the recreation assets
available were underdeveloped
and underpromoted .
He drew up a contract
through which Fort Lauderdale
was able to purchase 65 acres of
land from the state to be used
"only for a park and
recreation ." Later, attempts
were made to establish a high
school on a part of the reserved
park spot and Martin entered
into a taxpayer's court action to
prevent the land for use by the
school, a controversial act at
the time. The case went to the
Florida Supreme Court. Martin
won, and the land was reserved
for a park which was developed
into today's modern "Holiday
Park," a widely used facility. In
the process of the legal entanglement, a Fort Lauderdale
park and rec~eation commission evolved to provide
(Continued on page 2)
[II
Granville Harold Martin, a
native of Rock Springs, now a
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. attorney, was given a special
Ohio University alumni
award at homecoml~g activities over the weekend. Mr.
and Mrs. Martin visited In
Meigs County Sunday before
starting on t¥1r return trip to
Florida.

system 's Muskingum mine , 25
miles away, to the new terminal
to be loaded on river barges.
The Belpre facility will initially
handle some 40,000 tons of coal
monthly, increasing to 100,000
tons by spring of 1972.
The 178 acre site fronts 8,400
'feet on the Ohio River. Cook put
the lola! cost of the project at
$800,000.
He said the company had
given to the Little Hocking
Water and Sewer Assn. cerlain
lands upstream from th e
proposed terminal in exchange
for the lands in the new ler·
minal site now occupied by the
association. Cook added that the
power company will replace at
no cost to the association its
wells and re lated equipment.
Cook pointed out that the AEP
system has 16 large coal-fired
ge nera ting plants in operation
or under construction in the
Ohio Valley, including eight on
the Ohio River itself.

TEN CENTS

r---------------------------,
B ,+,

P..... f!'liM

Ovor
lO-P&lt;•·
•

announcemenl.''

parking meters over the two·
week period . All council
members voted yes on the issue
except Lucien Poulin who voted
no.
In other business council gave
three required readings, under
emergency rUles, on an ordinance authorizing the sale to
the highest bidder of a lot owned
located next to the bookmoJile
on East Main St.
Mayor Charles Legar announced that a new discount
store is coming to Pomeroy that

will employ approximately 40
people . The new store will be
located where Davis Ice and
Produce now stands, Legar
said.
Legar said council will
cooperate with the new business
firm to the fullest extent.
Legar also announced that
council's application for federal
assislance to establish a new
water supply for Pomeroy
Village had been approved by
the Ohio Department of
Devel&lt;ipment. Approval from
the Economic Development
Agency is expected by Dec. 1,
Legar staled.
The mayor extended his
l
7\T
0
0
I
"sincere thanks" to the young
: 1
people of Pomeroy for their
By United Press International
excellent behavior during the
Halloween season. He observed
Britisher Wins Physics Award
tha t in the 14 years he has been
STOCKHOLM - PROF. DENNIS GABOR, 71, a British mayor he has never had to use a
scientist working in the United Slates, today won the 1971 Nobel curfew to control vandalism.
Prize for physics. The prize for chemistry was given to Canadian
John Reese, Lincoln Hill
Dr. Gerhard Herzberg . Gabor was honored for devising a methnd Drive, asked council for a street
of producing a third dimension in projected Images by means of light at the bottom of Lincoln
manipulation of light waves. Herzberg received his award "for Hill. Council agreed to consider
his contributions to the knowledge of electronic structure and the request. Attending were
Legar , Franklin Rizer, Poulin,
geometry of molecules, particularly, free radicals."
Ralph Werry, Elma Russell,
Beneficence Must Continue
Jim Mees, and Don Collins,
SAIGON - TWO U. S. OFFICIALS warned today that a Council members; Jane
stoppage of American funds from Vietnam would injure the Walton, clerk, and Phyliss
Vietnamese ecoriomy, and also damage the Saigon government's. Hennessy, treasurer.
powers to CC!pe with the war after the withdrawal of U.S. forces.
Willard sharpe, chief of the Joint U. S. ECC!nomic Office, and
Jerome Jacobson, legal adviser to the U. S. Agency for In·
ternational Development, took this position in CC!mmenting on the
U.S. Senate's rejection of foreign aid legislation last Friday.

FROM THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF
WESTERN AUTO · · •

i
i

Other Banking Hours 9 to
and S to 7 as usual on-t~

knew executive orders like this
one would expire in 60 days,"
Tenenbaum said. "Nobody
asked us so we didn't make any

Devoted To '/'he lntere3t&amp; Of The Meiga-Mason Area

t

The 100% PROFIT CROP
PAYING $J50 per cwt.

cause we assumed everybody

procedures."

~

BLACK WALNUTS

"We didn't announce it be·

Coal Transfer

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
NO. XXIV NO. 141

Fridays Only . .~
The Dr!Ve·ln Window~
-!C
ts Open ·
-tc
9 A.M. lo 7·P.M.
~
(Continuously J

Tenenbaum was asked why
there hadn 1t been an announce.
ment that the order closing the
parks was good for onl y 60
days.

for AEP coal to be delivered to
AEP plants on the Ohio River
and its tributaries, and will add
a new and high degree of
flexibility in our coal delivery

DRIVE-IN
.,. BANKING ~~

MONEY "DOES" GROW ON TREES

Davis Ice and Produce, owned
by Crow's Steak House, was
purchased by Merrill Evans of
Gallipolis.
· Legar observed that the new
business would cost ap·
proximately $600,000 and would
employ approximately 40
people.

open immMiately because of a
lack ·of personnel and the need
for cleanup work to restore sanilary conditions.

AEP Building

cual resources," Cook said. nn
will be a major transfer point

*** ·

lfS Quick! Easy

A new discount store is
coming to Pomeroy, Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar announced to Pomeroy Council
Monday night.
The new store will be located
where Davis Ice and Produce
now stands and where Dannie's
Trailer Sales is now located.

slate from going into the red long ," said Leckrone .
by as much as $40 million by
Leckrone said although the
January .
order to close the parks expires
The austeri ty program had on Saturday, some may notrebeen denounce&lt;!As a political
move to push the General As·
sembly into enacting Gilligan's
buagel which included a personal income tax and corporation
lax.

Stop in the Music Department on the 2nd Floor. Ask for a Demonstration.

-

Complete Line
Fisher-Price Toys

do that," Tenenbawn said.
Gilligan closed the parks,
dismissed hundreds of slate
workers, closed slate museums
and cut school foundation
payments by 3 pet. a month as
part of an auslerity program
instituted
because
the
legislature had failed to pass
the budget-lax package.
. "This affects only the parks,"
Tenebaum said. Gilligan also
ordered a cutback in welfare
payments and payments to
nursing homes but this order
was rescinded by the courts.
Gilligan, when he announced
the budget cuts and park closings, strongly indicated they
would stand until the legislature passed the approprialions measure and said such
cuts were needed to prevent the

New Store To Pomeroy

ADVANCE TICKETS for the annual "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association to
be slagedat8:10p.m. on Saturday, Nov, 13, went on sale Monday ala price of 25 cents each less
than tickets purchased atthe door on show night. Here, the Rev. Bill Perrin, left, vice president
of the Meigs Local Athletic Boosters and ticket chairman, places tickets with Kermit Walton at
the New York Clothing House in Pomeroy. Other locations at which the reduced advance
tickets can he purchased include Swisher-Lohse Drugs and Nelson's Drugs, both in Pomeroy;
the Village Pharmacy and Dutton 's Drugs in Middleport,and the Rutland Furniture Store. The
advance sale will close on Friday, Nov. 12.

_~

ote Yes !t

MIDWAY MARKET

i

TREATS BANNED
SOLON,Ohio (UP!) - Mayor
William E. Price has banned
future door.to-door trick-or.
treating in this Cleveland
suburb becausse of complaints
that needles were found in
candy bars and a screw, a golf
tee and part of a bobby pin were
found in an apple.

t

t

,.
.\ \

f

Uyde Lawrence Died Saturday

i~

COLUMBUS .(UP!) - Ohio's
stale parks, 'closed under Gov.
John J. Gilligan's austerity
program, will probably reopen
on Saturday, it was learned
today.
Gilligan's news secretary,
Robert Tenenbawn, said the
parks were closed under a little
known law that says ·park
operations can be suspended for
60 days without going through
formal procedures.
These formal procedures
include public hearings and if
the governor wants to keep the
parks .closed he would have to
hold the hearings, Tenenbaum
said.
"We could initiate procedures
and go through the hearings and
get them closed again but there
has been no decision whether to

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Colonel Brown Died Saturday

MEIGS lHf.mf.·

'

King, Carroll Dodderer,
Jeanette Carter, Margar~
Donahue,~ J~ks.
•
SUNDAY ADM!lmON -Roy
RuaaeU, Middleport.
.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
ThOinas Sarver, Pamela Price.

RUTLAND - Hollis Baker Miles CemeterY. Friends may
• Searles, 83, Rutland, died · call at the Martin Funeral
Saturday evening at the Holzer Home until 9 a.m. Tuesday
Medical center. Mr. Searles when the body will be taken to
was born Sept. 8, 1888 in GaUls the chw-ch to lie in state.
County, the son of the late
Daniel and Uzea Searles. He
was a retired CQal miner and
farmer in this area most of his
life.
Surviving are his wife, Stella;
four daughters, Mrs. Katie
Robinson, Findlay; Mrs. Ma
Taylor, Price, Utah; Mrs. Hazel
.
Taylor, Rutland, and Mrs.
Black and White or Color T.V. -- Record Players - Transistor Radios ·
Isabelle Bradbury, Findlay;
Tape Players and Recorders · Table Radios.
five sons, Baker, John and
Robert,. all of Fostoria; Dennis
(Chub), and Rolland, both of
Rutland; 28 grandchildren, snd
27 great.grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
with the Rev. Uoyd Grinun
officiating. Burial will be in

Mr. and Mrs. Damon Ferrell
have returned home after
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Nichols in Cleveland and Mr.
and Mrs . Gerald Manning and
family in Mansfield. They were
overnight guests of their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. - - •
and Mrs . Tim Cozart of
Columbus.
Mrs. Phillip Donov.an, ac·
companied by Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Shuler and sons of •
Letart Falls, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen Shuler and new ·
son in Aurora, Colo. They went
especially to see their new
grandson, born October 22.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R unit
answered a call to near Hill's
Grocery at Addison at 10:33 a.
m. Sunday for June Quillen, LONG BOTTOM - Clyde E.
He is survived by a son, Paul
who was ill. She was taken to Lawrence, 71, Long Bottom,
TUESDAY
R.
Lawrence, Racine ; a
SOUP DINNER - United )lulzer Medical Center.
was found dead at his residence daughter, Mrs. Fred E.
Methodist Church, Pomeroy,
here Saturday evening. Dr. (Phylis) Ritchie, Portland ; two
Election Day. Serving to begin
John Ridgway, acting coroner, grandchildren, SP-4 Gene Roy
BOND GIVEN UP
at 10:30. Soup, sandwiches and
ruled Mr. Lawrence died of Lawrence in Vietnam, and Miss
Dwayne
Sidders,
24,
Ashley.
pie . Soup also available by the
natural causes apparently last Joyce Ann .Ritchie, Ohio
Ohio, forfeited a $23.70 bond in
quart.
Tuesday.
Pomeroy Mayor Charles Mr. Lawrence was born at University, Athens; iwo
WEDNESDAY
brothers, Kenneth, of Chesler,
LADIES AUX ILIARY , Legar's court Saturday when he Sherman, W.Va ., the son of the W. Va., and Gordon, of Warren,
Middleport Fire Department, failed to appear on a speeding late Charles H. and Eva Bigley Ohio, and a sisler, Mrs, Herbert
7:30 Wednesday night at the fire charge.
Lawrence . He was also (Marie) Swan, Long Bottom.
hall . Mrs. Russell Mills and
preceded in death by his wife, Services will be held WedMrs. Howard Dailey to be
Juanita, in 1965i an infant son, nesday at 2 p.m. at the White
hostesses . Members are to lake
one sister, Mrs. Edith Kelly, Funeral Home in Coolville with
Pleasant Valley Hospital
a guest. Aproducts party will be
and
a brother, Charles Hubert the Rev. Freeland Norris of·
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. David
held .
ficiating . Buri~l will be in Sand
Sayre, Leon; Mrs . James N. Lawrence.
THURSDAY
Mr . Lawrence, a retail Hill Cemetery at Long Bottom.
Wilson, Point Pleasant; Jacob
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club, Garrison, Mason ; Charles merchant, owned and operated Friends may call after 7 p.m.
7:30 p.m. Thursday, Columbus Powell, Gallipolis Ferry; Roy a general store here manv today, and at 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. Woomer, Jr., Cathey Little, years. He was a member of the p.m. Tuesday.
Demonstration by Miss Joanna Ronald Birchfield, Point Long Bottom United Methodist
Distler, home economist, on Pleasant; Lucy Hardaway , Church.
Christmas.
Middleport; Mrs. Jerry Hick- --------------- ~**************l
man , Evans; Wayno Capehart,
souP FOR SALE
A Thought
New Haven ; Richard Sullivan,
RUTLAND - Women of the
~
Leon; Nlrs. Teddy Hickman, Rutland United Methodist
J:.'or
Today ~
Tonight and Tuesdav
Evans; James Richard White, Church will serve a dinner .
W • th
h h ~
Nov. 1-2
,o e man w o as iC
Southside; Billy Jo Harrington, to.morrow a1 th e churc.h. Soup, ~ notoel.•arned
to hope ... to~ .
ESCAPE FROM
Gallipolis; Clinton Craig, Ple, coffee and sloppy Joes will ~ iov• .. and to put trust In ~
THE PLANET OF
Robertsburg ; Wayne Capehart, he served at the election day ·~ life.
~
THE APES
New
Haven.
&lt;Technicolor)
event. Orders for soup to be tic
- Joseph Conrad
Roddy McDowatt
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ashley taken out may he phoned to
~
Kim Hunter
Bishop, Roy Bush, Mrs. Ethel Mrs . C. 0. Chapman, Mrs.
~
"G"
Altise, Robert McNeil, Harriett Harley Erlewine or Mrs. Robert
~
BROTHER JOHN
Hannan, Mrs. Matilda Butcher,
(Technicolorl
:
Sidney Poitier
Charles Reitmire, Mrs. Delphia Bumgarner.
WIIIGeer
Noble, Patricia Shiflet, Mrs.
..
"GP"
Lewis Young and Larry Martin.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Calendar

'\
.
VeleraDI Memorial Uolpltal ·
SATURDAY ADMISSION .:..·
Darryl Swartz, P(lllleroy.
SATURDAY DISCH~RGES
- Wlhna Rizer, LoweD Collina,
William Morris, Robert
Perkins, linda Brogan; Waller

Hollis Searles Died Saturday

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
Selective Serice System today
created several new draft
classifications and abolished
some old ones; gave 16-yearolds 60 days, instead of five, to
register for the draft; and told
every man over the age of 35
he can now throw away his old
draft card.
Those were some of the
changes in a long list of
regulations issued by the
Selective Service to conform
with the new draft law signed
by President Nixon Sept. 28.
The new rules will become
effective in the more than 4,000
local draft boards in early
December.
Here are some of the major
changes:
-A new classification, 2-D,
will be eslabli,o;hed for divinity
students who are making
satisfactory progress in their
studies. Those who do not enter
the ministry will he liable to
the draft until age 35.
-A new classification, Hi,
will be eslablished for sole
surviving sons and for young
men in families where a father,
brother or a sister was killed in
the line of duty after Dec. 31,
1959, or is captured or missing
in action.
-Classification 1-Y, which
covered people medically, men ·
tally or monilly unqualified to
serve except in a national
emergency, will be abolished.
Those subject to re-examination
will be classified 1-A until their
status is resolved; those with
disqualifications will be classi.fied 4-F-the category previously reserved for those with
major disabilities.
- Classification 5-A, for those
over age 26 would had never
been deferred and for those
over the age of 35 who ha~

been, will be abolished. The
Selective Service will no longer
keep active files for registrants
beyond the age of 26, except for
doctors, allied medical personnel and cerlain other unspecified registrants.
- The old rule which said
every registrant born after
Aug. 30, 1922, had to carry his
draft card and classification on
his person regardless of his age
is abolished. Now registrants
will be required to carry their
cards only until the end of their
liability to draft-age 26 fur
those who were never deferred, .
age 35 for all others.
- A new classification, 1-H,
will be established. This will be
for men turning 18 during 1972
and each year thereafter. All
registrants will go into this
administrative holding category
- instead of immediately to 1-A
as in the past-and will remain
there until 1973 when their
lottery is held. Mler the lottery
the Selective Service director
will announce a ceiling above
which registrants will not be
called, and everyone with
numbers above that ceiling will
remain 1-H during the following
year, 1974, when those below
the ceiling will be subject to
draft. Those below the ceiling
will be removed from 1-H and
made 1-A or whatever classifi.
cation applies.
-The 1-H category will also
be assigned to men who turned
18 this year and who, after
their lottery is held next year,
draw numbers above the
ceiling. A 1-H cutoff number
also will he set for those young
men turning 20 next year and
subject to draft then.
- Young men will he allowed
to register for the draft any
time from 30 days before their
(Continued on page 10)

OVEC in Suit
f

/

/

/

I

The Security Sewer Equipment Company, Crestline, Ohio,
and Ray C. Blackburn ,
Cleveland: are plaintiffs in a
damage suit filed today in
Gal!ia .County Common Pleas
Court against Ohio Valley
Electric Co., Cheshire, Huntington Piping Inc ., Ironton,
Ohio Power Co., Canton and
· American Electric Co., Canton.
Plaintiffs say on May '2, 1969,

Weather

HAROLD MARTIN

Highs in the 60s and low 70s.
Partial clearing and much
cooler tonight. Lows in the
upper 30s and 40s. Wednesday
considerable cloudiness north,
partly cloudy south and cooler.
Highs in the 50s.

defendant Huntington Piping
Inc., contracted with hts
company, Security Sewer
Equipment Compan y, to deliver
two sewage treatment plants to
Ohio Valley Electric's Kyger
Creek Power Plantallhe cost of
$11.920.
Blackburn co ntends that ·
since that time on numerous
occasions his representatives
were called to the plant to
repair the system damaged due
to errors in the owner 's
engineering drawings.
Plaintiffs further state
American Electric agreed to
pay for the time, material and
costs involved but failed to do
so. Security Sewer Equipment
Company seeks a judgement of
$20,683.95 plus foreclosure of the
liens on the sewer system.

,I
·t

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