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1i.

Tanaka to Offer $1.1 Billion
Deal to Ease U.S. Trade Gap
'

We attended the West Virginia State Fair where we chanced
to meet Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson,
all of Mason, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Garland of Gallipolis
Ferry; also saw the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Weaver of

!Aart.

HARRISONVILLE SCHOOL IN 1900 and its students·has
been submitted' by Tom Wells, Condor street, Pomeroy,
Wells has identified those he remembers : front row, 1-r,
Ethel We~, Mary Dye, Tom Dye, Harry Peyton, Guy Pettit,
Frank White, deceased, Carl Chase, Grace Derry, Blanche
stiles, Goldie Turner, unidentified, Glen Haning, Muri Dye,
Clarence La they, Delia Lathey, Rattle Forest, Charity Wells,
Hurb Clark and Frank Turner ; next three rows, not all

Damron New
Prosecutor
Candidate
Former Supreme Court
Candidate Charles H. Damron
has been named by the Mason
County Democratic -Executive
Committee as the Democratic
ca ndidate for Prosecuting
Attorney in Mason County.
Damron replaces William
Akers who withdrew earlier
this past week for personal
reason.
'
Daml·on, a former Mason
County teacher who lives on an
63-acre farm at Fraziers
CHARLES H. DAMRON
Bottom, is Administrative
Assistant and Coordinator of
School Law to Dr. Daniel B.
Taylor, State Superintendent of Damron was a "very good
Schools.
person" and would make a
A graduate of Marshall , strong addition to the ticket.
Western Maryland, and West George McCarty, whose wife
Virginia University, Damron Phyllis is a Committeewoman,
has resigned his post to enter said Damron would he very
private law practice in Point strong in the Beech Hill and
Pleasant later this year. He Southside area where he also
holds various posts with the once taught school.
Democratic Party in West
Damron receiv"li over thirty
Virginia ·and is a member of
thousand
votes iii the May
the
State
Democra ~ ic
primary for State Supreme
Executive Committee.
Court and was well received
The vote tc place Damron on throughout the state.
the November ballot was
During the same meeting the
unamimous. In brief remarks
commi
tt ee elected two
after his selection by the
persons,
Barbara Ann Roberts
Committee, Damron pledged
to "carry out the most and Charles Lingerfelt, to
aggressive campaign for serve on the 4th District
Prosecutor in Mason County Sena_torial Execu tiv e
history." He also pledged to Committee and the 3rd District
"touch every household in Co ngressional Exec utiv e
Mason County" and thanked Committee.
Chairman J. Gory Kapp and
Plans were discussed for the
the Committee for their opening of Democratic
Headquarters, the upcoming
confidence in him.
Committeeman Charles election and a dinner dance to
Williams said Damron's be held in Octo her.
It was announced the next
selection would "make a lot of
kids in the New Haven area meeting will he held Saturday
very very happy. ' Damron is a at 11 a.m. in the jury room in
former New Haven teacher . the courthouse. All committee
Ruth Johnson, wife of George members are urged to he
Johnson, Democratic nominee present. Afilm will be shown at
for Sheriff, said she thought this time.

Air Tour Planned
The Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District is
sponsoring a Conservation Air
Tour on Sunday, Sept. 3, from
10 a. m. to 7p. m. at the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport. The
price is $4 for a 25-minute tour.
There will be tours going
North and South in the county.
The north route will show the
Gavin Plant, strip mined land,
Tycoon Lake, Rio Grande
College, Holzer Hospital,
fairgrounds, and conservation
practices on the farms of
Denver Walker , Howard
Childers, Hayes Dee!, John
Payne, Paul Wagner an d
Wayne Russell.
The south route shows the
Roller Dam, Hanna Coal

MASON DRIVE-IN
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operation , Holzer Hospital,
fairg rounds and the !arms of
Jim Saunders, Merrill Carter,
Ralph Davis, Merrill Rose,
Harry Rutherford, amf David
Altizer.
The District's Ladies
Auxiliary will have a refreshment stand with coffee,
doughnuts, pop, candy and
potato chips.
This conservation Air Tour is
being sponsored in the interest
of Soil Conservation and is
presented as a public service to
the residents of this area so
they might gain an awareness
of the land use problems that
exist in this part of Ohio.
With all the changes in the
county , and the way it's
growing, it should prove a very
interesting tour.

Cars Collide

&gt; ' " I I 'I,

At Hill Top

TONIGHT
THURS.-FRI.
Aug, 30-SEPT. I

Double Feature
"FRIE NDS"

( Technlcotor J
R

PLUS
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS

(Color )

( RI

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT &amp; THURSDAY
AUGUSTJ0-31
NOT OPEN

Friay and Saturday
September 1·2
CATO'NlNE TAILS
(Tec~nicolorl

Jas Ftanclscus
Karl Malden
Catherine Spaak
WELCOME HOME,
SOLDIER BOYS

(Technlcqlorl

SHOWSTARTS7P.M.

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The Meigs County Sheriff 's
Dept. investigated a two car
accident Tuesday at 5:48 ·p.m.
in which no one was injured .
Ruby F. Nelson, Dexter, Rt.
I , was traveling west on county
road 4and James L. McHaffie,
East Main Sl., Pomeroy, was
traveling east when the ca rs
collided at the crest of a hill.
There was slight damage to
both vehicles. No citation was
issued .
The deparlrnent' returned to
Meigs County from Circleville
Tuesday with Wayne Pauley,
Jr ., 18, Middleport, Rt: I, and
John Blackburn, 19, Inez, Ky.,
to face chsrges of auto larceny.
The pair is alleged to have
stolen a car parked at the
King's Arms parking lot
Sunday night. They are in jail
and will appear in county court
Friday morning.

NEW YORK (UPI)-Sen.
George McGovern, striving to
woo the political center away
from President Nixon, has
sacrificed bis controversial
plan to give every citizen $1,000
a year.
Instead, the Democratic
presidential nominee ch011e an
appearance before the New
York Society of Security
Analysts Tuesday to unveil a
new welfare reform plan only
slighUy more ambitious than
President Nixon's own Family
Assistance Plan now before
Congress.
·
The move capped a week of
open efforts to ''regularize"
McGovern's flagging campaign and repel Republican
charges that he Is a radical
seeking fundamental transforma lion of American
economic life and foreign
pol!cy.
While standing firm behind
his plan to eliminate $22 mill)on
in tax loopholes and shelters,
McGovern courted the investors by :
-Announcing that he wanted
Rep. Wilbur B. Mills, D-Ark., a
fiscal conservative who has
championed Wall Street Inter·
ests as chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee,
to be his Treasury secretary,

(Mllis first denied he had
discussed the position with
McGOvern, then said, "U Sen.
McGovern were .elected I
would certainly bave to give it
my greatest consideration.")
-Discloaing that he would
ask Congreas, if elected, to
lower the maximum Individual
income tax rate from 70 per
cent to 48 per cent.
Today, in a speech prepared
for dellvery to the Ne\V York
Board of Rabbis, McGovern
said his new economic plan
"offers a job for every worker,
without discrimination and
without quotas and without
recessions which force citizens
to fight with one another for
jobs."
Nixon has denounced quotas
and ordered an end to their use
In federal employment.
McGovern's plan to create as
many as 1 mllllon publlc
service jobs with a t6 bllllon
federal outlay was the
keystone of his welfare plan.
The second part cl McGovern's plan calls for an
expansion of Socl.lll Security
benefits to more than 3 million
aged, blind and disabled
who would
Americans
otherwise he on welfare, at a
net cost of $3 billion from
general revenues.

Met some very VlPs while there : shook hands with Gov.
Arch Moore, who really stood out in the crowd with his bright
green sport jacket. Mrs. Moore always remains in the
identified, Include Earl McKinley, Harvey French and Mat
background, but I will always remember what a good job she did
Stiles, all deceased; Marty Lyle, Mabel Chase, Truman Bell,
of addressin~ the Homemaker Clubs members at an area
meeting in Hurricane, and I didn't forget to tell her.
Grace Lee, Homer Welch, all deceased, Nel Rowley Dave
Clark, Margaret Rowley and May Lee, all deceased: Clary
Also met Secretary of State John D. Rockefeller IV. He
Hull. Charles Turner, Howard Turner, Teachers Harley
towers far above the crowd. He's easy to spot.
Musser, Hattie Ball and Ully French. Mr. Wells would apSenator Robert Byrd took me completely by surprise. Even
preciate hearing !ram those who might know the identity of
with his dark glasses, I knew he was a politician by his forward
those not named in the picture.
approach and guessed he was a candidate biddinl! for office. He
I
is a distinguished looking politician and I am for him 100 pel.
As one listens to the politicians on TV it isn't hard to' tell in a
matter of time those that are sincere.
RECEIVED ACARD from Golda W, Lerner who reports that
she is enjoying herself touring Canada. Some of the places she
visited were Calgary, Alberta, Canada, Sault Ste Marie and
Banff National Park at A)ta, Canada,
MR. AND MRS. WAWEN ROUSH, Pl. Pleasant, have
returned from a 4~ay vacation which took them to Alaska. They
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drove as far as Circle, Alaska which was as far as they could go
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-Re- live aJrltne serv~ce. Last Jan· on a comected highway. They went by plane to Fort Yukon. They
tired Air Force Gen. Olhert F. ua~ ;e ;a~ ~barged f along visited the University at Fairbanks. They went by bus to visit Mt
Lassiter of Beverly Hills, Calif., Whal avJ f th. epvan, Cormtrerl McKinley which was 130 miles round trip and to Anchorag~
was free on $50,000 bond today c 1rman o e enn en a
.
. .
pending trial on charges he ffnance committee and Cha 1 where they are still rebwldmg from the 1964 earthquake, The city
conspired to bilk the bankrupt J. Hodge, former iinancial ra~~ of Valdez, totally des_troyed, is being rebuiltfarther west.
. They had their first taste of salmon and viewed the Indians
Penn Central Railroad out of viser to the railroad.
District
Attorney
Arlen
Specusmg
a fJsh wheel, which is their way of catching fish. They
$21 mi!lion in a scheme involving Executive Jet Aviation ter charged the trio conspired returned tc_Seattle by ferry. They traveled this way from Haines,
to defraud Penn central of $21 Alaska, ThiS IS called the Marine Highway and was 2300 miles to
Inc., Columbus, Ohio.
Lassiter surrendered Tuesday million, which went to Execu- Seattle, Wash.
This I imagine, was an excellent. way to travel since the
and was allowed to sign for tive Jet tc get the project into
his bond. A hearing was set operation. The Interstate Com- Alaskan roads are all gravel. And traveling a great distance on a
for Nov . 13, when Lassiter will merce Commission later ruled gravel road, I presume would be very tiring.
be represented by Boston attor- the railroad's major interest in
Anyhow, the Roushes traveled by water four days before
ney F. Lee Bailey .
the airline was illegal and or- arriving at Seattle.
At an arraignment hearing, dered it to dispose of its hold- The scenery was breathtaking. At Sitka they took a tour of the
a district attorney told Judge ings.
town during the 2'h hour delay. Along with fine scenery they alBa
Ethan Allan Doty the former
Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex., saw killer whales.
general had been ·"fighting ex- in his Banking Committee's re- The Roushes are home now with several rocks they collected
tradition for some months." pori on the ratlroad's collapse, enroute. In Seattle they visited Mrs. Roush's aunt and uncle Mr
Lassiter said nothing during was highly critical of Lassiter and Mrs. Harry Anger.
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the hearing.
for his alleged high living, In·
AT TilE W.VA. STATE FAIR I visited with Mrs. Emmett
Lassiter used his Air Force cludmg escortmg beauiJ!ul Simpson and Mr. and Mrs Henry Schwarz· M s·
·
. rs. unpson
experie~ce to build the execu- women at raJ·1roa d expense.
(Debbie), with her parents, visited often in Mason with Mr. Sch·
warz's mother, Mrs. Nellie Schwarz and with other relatives.
Debbie had her children to the fair and with all those stuffed
toys, which they were carrying around, they must have been real
lucky . It seems they were always lost from one another con·
.
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TAKE UP TO $1 OFF THE PRICE
tinually searching each other out. Believe me, it was an
exhausting evening trying to find one another in that crowd.
AND YEARS OFF YOUR LEGS
Mrs . Schwarz brought me a large jar of sauerkraut salad. It
If you haven 't worn Supp-hose yet, now's the time to try. And
.
was delicious. Hope she will sendmetbe recipe.lmagine it is low ·
NEW YORK (UP!) - TRW, and pulvenzers .
1f yo_u are an active, alive. always-on-the-go Supp -hose girl,
in calories too. If she dors and if it is I will share it with you
Inc. said Tuesday it has de- . The process. invol~es "leach~ow s the !1rnc to stock up on yOL,Jr favorite styles at · substan~
MR. AND MRS. EBER ROUsH of Mason entertained with
veloped a chemical process for mg coal chemically m a heated a dinner honoring the birthdays of their two daughters, Mrs.
t1_al savi ngs. You 'll lmd &lt;hcerer· than-sheer pantyhose that
removing sulphur from coal be- aqueoussoluiJo~, whtchremoves Edward (Ruth) Ryan and Mrs. Marl n (M · ) Ri
g1ve_)'Our leg mu scle~ a new lease on life. In all yo ur favori te
both f
.
o
mme
zer,
o
fore it is burned which will pure sulphur, tron OXIde and
fas h1on color&lt;. And )'ou 'll iind them all generously reduced,
meet government standards set iron sulfate in a salable and Maso~. Attendmg we~e Mr. and Mrs. Terry Deem and son,
Only to September 9th. Not again till next year.
storable form," TRW said
Coolville,Oh10; Mr. Mike Ryan and daughter of Syrac111e, Ohio;
for utility plants.
TRW will construct a pilot Mr. _and Mrs. Jack Grueser and son, Scott; Mr. Everett Roush,
The announcement made at
$4.95 Supp•hose
$5.95 Supp•hose
plant
in California tc begin test- Racme: 0 .; ~s . Emma Ryan, Eddie, Rita and James Ryan.
the national meeting of the
P,1ntyhose
&amp;
Stockings
ing
next
January.
VisJt~g
m
the
afternoon
were
Mrs.
Coral
Walker,
son
and
Pantyhose &amp; Stockings
American Chemical Society,
The
process
differs
from
the
daughteNn~aw,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Walker
and
son,
Heath,
of
said the technique will be
applicable to coal of the type gas scrubbing technique now McComeUsville, 0.
mined in Pennsylvania, West used in controlling sulphur
Virginia and Kentucky. The emissions by removing the sulprocess will use standard in- phur prior to burning, rather
dustrial equipment already than from the waste gases in
available, such as cement kilns the stack.
August25-27
Larry McKenzie, dau ghter,
DISCHARGES : Michael Oak Hill.
Snowden, Charles Bechtle,
Barbara McDaniel, Avanelle
August29
Channell, Grace Boster, Mrs.
BIRTHS - Mrs. James Ray,
Roger Puckett and daughter, son, Coalton and Mrs. Edward
,. · .
Daniel Ewing, Edna McManis,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep . and now , Jt will be very easy Lillian Rotzenberg , James Finlay, son, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Nancy
John M. Ashbrook, R.Ohio, said for bureaucrats to promote Camp, 'peggy Sue Camp,
Woods,
Sadie Vititoe, Emma
today he voted against the more busmg tha~. we have ever Virginia Perry , Beulah
Perry, Naomi Coleman
Equal Education Opportunities se~n up to now.
Cremeans, Ernest Weber, Harriet Thomas, Ruby Pierce:
Act, the so-called anti-busing
The bureaucrats can shape Helen Smith , Kathleen
bill, because it will "encourage the 1fs, buts and wherefores to Patrick Anna Morris Alia Arlen Owens, Hilda Meeks,
Eula Hale, David Gar her, Mrs,
rather than discourage forced f1t," he said. "The important Maddo~,
Keith
Lewis, Peter Elicker and son, Infant
busing in our schools."
fact Js that the Congre';S ap- Christopher Kimmel, Darrell
Ashbrook said the bill places prove~ of forced busmg 1f the Jones Mrs. Reid Johnson and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Boyer, Shirley Boster
some limitations on busing, but condttlons ment "
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son, Homer
Johnson, Melissa
and Phyliss Baird.
"the !basic shortcoming of this
Ashbrook saJd he}s a~ain~t lhle, Doris Hively, Frederick
legislation is that it does cate- forced busmg, and 1! th1s bJII Fellure, Mrs. Ralph Elliott and
gorically endorse forced bus- m fact would curb forced bus- son William Brown Mark
ing.''
'"~: 1 w~ul~ have voted for it. " Cle;..ente, Lora Dunn, 'Rueben
This is something the ConIt Will mstead encourage Higginbotham , Mrs. Eldon
gress had not done until pass- rather than diScourage forced Dowers &amp; daughter Pamela Vderans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Connie
age of that bill, Ashbrook said, busmg JD our schools," he said. Mcpee, Alfred Cupp, Roger
Manley , Middleport; Judy
Canter, Mrs. William Sowers Laudermill, Middleport;
and daughter, Mrs. Max Thomas Bowen, Pomeroy; Ira
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Huston and son, Mary Pope, Roach, Long Bottom; Dorothy
Frances Taylor, Frances Wills, Greathouse, Racine; Emory
Shop Weekdays 9: 30 to 5 P. M.
Brenda Johnson, Infant Haggy, Pomeroy, and Cynthia
. Open Friday and Saturday 9:30
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lane, Middleport.
to 9 P.M.
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Taylor, Okey Longfellow, Nora
DISCHARGED - Dennis
Jones, Betty Duncan, Michael Wolfe, Tammy Landers, Floyd
Swisher, Rebecca Myers, Brewer, William Jones,
William Kihn , Mrs . Fred George Cundiff, Mary Grady,
Stokes
and
daughter, Floyd Cummins and Genevieve
Genevieve Starcher, Lela Guthrie.
Sprague, Wendy Seaver, Clara
Sanders, Clara Riley, Lewis
Phillips, Nora Jordan, Sharon
Sue Jarrell, Robert Hood,
Lennie Hill, Thelma Garlic,
Faye Cotterill, Mrs. Glen
Chapman and daughter,
Flossie Brickles, York Black·
burn, Grace Ambrose, Betty
Tredway, Mrs. Danny Thaxton
and son, Sidney Reynolds,
James Gray , Mrs. James
Bush &amp; son, Shirley Starkey,
Bonnie Melller, Kathy Henderson, infant son of Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Hall, Ivan Shaw,
ENTER
NAME '
Mrs. Eddie McGrath and son,
Tommy Lock, Dallas Kinnard,
ADDRESS
TODAY
Young Sook Kim, Owen
CITY
Henderson, Steven Hill,
STATE
..1
Florence Bunch and Mrs. Kel th
ALL .PERSONS MUST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
Brannen and son.
ENTER . NO EMPLOYE OR MEMBER OF
BIRTHS: Aug. 25, Mrs.
FAMILY MAY ENTER .
DEPOSIT
Ronald Johnson, son, Wellston ;
ONE PRlZETOA FAMILY
Mrs. Peter Elicker , son,
DRAWtt.~;o SAT. NIGtiT SEPT. 2 AT8 P.M.
Ravenswood ; Mrs. Herbert
"Martha, why don't you just coli ME, inJtead of those
You Do Not Have to be Presenllu Win
Cordell, son, Bidwell and Mrs.
OUR
newspaper people?"
M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER·
Ronald Aldrich, soh, Jackson.
.STORE
Aug. 26 ·Mrs. Ronald Nicholas,
son, Scottown. Aug. 27 • Mra.

.Gen. Lassiter
Free on Bond

Sulphur Extraction Now
Improved for Utilities

HOSPITAL NEWS

Vote .Explained

BfAAr~ WORlD

ELBERFELDS
EROY

...
FOODLINER, Middleport, Ohio

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Register for Free Gifts

DURING OUR 9TH ANNIVERSARY SALEI ·

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HONOLULU (UP!)- PresIdent Nixon and Japanese
Premier Kakuei Tanaka open
11l1111111it talks today' with the
Japanese prepared to offer a
fl.l-billion purchase to ease
the trade gap, which has
strained relations with the
United States.
White House sources said
that Tanaka was ready to
agree to a multi-million dollar
purchase of wide-bodied air-

)

April!, 1973 and would cut into
the multi·billion-dollar U.S.
trade deficit.
The trade imbalance has
been the cause of growing
friction between the two
countries. Nixon warned in
advance of two days. of
meetings with Tanaka that
failure to improve the situation
would cause a clamor on the
part of American protectionists to impose quotas and

•

HERBERT F. MOORE, Middleport, has bought a llblne
from Michael Gravely at a "shoe shine stand" near the
romer of North Second and Race Sis. in Middleport.

By United Preulateraational
CINCINNATI - THE BR0111ER OF PRF.'iiDENT Nixon

said here Wednesday the Preaident ''vei-y poas!bly" rould take
the majority of the Ill-year-old vote In the November election.
"Certainly the opposition forces this year don't bave a
monoply on the yoWig vote or any other block," said Ed Nixon,
42, here to open Republican campaign headquarters. "We have a
good share of It and very possibly wW take the majority of young
people this year," said Nixon. "The new 1!1-year-old vote should
be jnst as much in favor of the Pruldent as anyone else, he
!lgned tbe law that gave them the rlghtto vote."
WASHINGTON - SEN. GEORGE S. McGoVERN has
decided against OJI"IIing his campaign in Detroit on Labor Day,
trealting a tradition of Democratic presldenUal candidates including John F. Kennedy aad Lyndon B. Johnaon. McGovern wW
turn illstead to the Southern Governors Conference .
He wW address the governors Sunday at Hilton Head, S. C.,
and spend much of Labor Day travelling between rallles In
Barberton and Olippewa Lake, Ohio, and Alameda, Calif.
Observers ooted !bat McGovern bad nm poorly in the May 15
Democratic primary 27 per cent to 5I per cent for Alabama Gov.
George C. .Wallace and that be bad been reluctant to discuss
busing, the cllief Issue in Michigan. Michigan polltlcal and labor
leaders are saying that President Nboo wW win the state for the
first time after losing 19 Kennedy In 1960 and to Hubert H.
Humphrey In 1968.

enttne

Devoted To 17te lnh?rt!$11 Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO. 97

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSpAY, AUGUST 31 , 1972

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Millionaire
To be Tried
CLEARWATER,

Fla.

(UP!)- Millionaire Glem W.

the headquart..-s is by the X-L Corp. of Columbus. Middleport voters approved a $60,000 hond issue some months
ago to provide a major portion of the funds needed for the
steel and block building . Groundbreaking lor the
headquarters was held July 5.

EXCElLENT PROGRESS IS being made on the con·
structlon of the new headquarters of the Middleport Fire
Department. This jlortion of the L-shaped building faces
Race St. Another fronts on North Fourth Ave. Construction of

Deeter
Proposes
Protest
A public meeting to unite
Meigs Countians in a protest
against the Ohio Water
Pollution Control Board 's
proposed ban on the use of
septic tanks at homes was
urged today by Ernest Deeter,
Long Bottom Route I.
Deeter said he has encountered his own problems in
attempting to get approval for
the construction of a septic
tank at an existing home. Other
resident.s will encounter the
same problems and the ban on
the septic tanks will go into
effect on Sept, 11 thereby
making it impossible for
anyone to heat the deadline,
Deeter said.
"Septic tanks might not he
the best solution but they
certainly are more satisfactory
and sanitary that outside
backhouses", Deeter commented.
Deeter suggests that
residents will have to unite and
make their protests heard in
Washington if they are to make
any progress against the ban.
He invites all residents interested in the protest
movement to contact him by
letter at his Long Bottom Route
1 address. The public meeting
to plan action wm be set after
Deeter has received the
responses from the public, ·
Tuesday, the Meigs County
Commissioners voted to
request a hearing before the
Ohio Water Pollution Control
Board on the ban .

Opening Expected
Late Next Month
A coffee house serving
Meigs Coun~ young people
to be in the Stark Building on
Pomeroy's East Second St.
will not be opened uatll about
the end of September, Rolf
Stangel, adull coordllujlqr,
said today.
There Is a lot of cleaniag
aad painting to he done
before the coffee bouse eaa
he opened, Staugel said.
Meantime, contributions
of furniture, cleaning supplies and recreational
materials are needed.
Residents having items to
contribute are Invited to call
Stangel at 992-5355 or the
Rev. Miss Martha Malloer
at 949-2902.

Margie Jeffers
One of 50 to
Win Honors

5 Gls Killed,
Three Wounded
SAIGON (UP!) - Five
Americans were killed and
three wounded in Indochina
war action last week, the
lowest casualty toll since U. S.
troops were ordered into
combat in 1965, military
spokesmen sai&lt;! today.
The U. S. command said the
five deaths were two higher
than the previous week. But the
total of three wounded was the
lowest since the command
began keeping weekly casualty
statistics Jan. I, 1965.
Another three Americans
were added to the rolls of those
"missing, captured or ln. terned" in Indochina last week,
spokesmen said, bringing that
total for the war lo 1,662.

Margie Jeffers of Meigs
County was among over 50
individuals honored at this
year's 4-H Recognition Day
breakfast in the Rhodes Center
at the Ohio State Fair August
2ll.

Margie was cited as winner
of the Home Improvement
award, given by s&amp;H Foundation, Inc. In addition to the
honorary breakfast for the
winners and their parents, this
award includes a trip to ·
National 4-H Congress.
Margie has been a member
of the Columbia Superstars 4-H
Club in Carpenter for ten
years. She has carried projects

a jazz group, will present a
exciting evening of popular
music on Wednesday, Oct. 25. ·
Probably the most outstanding
boys choir In the world, the ·
Texas Boys Choir, will he at
Gallia Academy on Tuesday,
March 13.
Chairman of this year's
membership drive is Mrs .
Donald Thjller, GalllpoU.. She
will be assisted by Mra, Jame1

Turner, founder of the controversial Dare To Be Great
Inc. self improvement course,
wW he tried Oct. 4 on 66
cllarges of violating Florida's
unlforfll sale and security
law.
Turner, 37, pleaded inoocent
to the charges Wednesday
when he appeared voluntarily
before Circuit Court Judge B.J.
Driver to ask that he he
arraigned on the charges.
Dare To Be Great is the
subject of legal action in
several states for its alleged
resemblance to illegal pyramid
sales schemes.
Turner was arrested and
freed on $211,000 bond early
Wednesday when be stepped
off an airpl111e In Sanford after
a flight from New York.
Two other offlcals of Dare To
Be Great also were arrested on
the same charge. William F.
Htunphries, 29, or Tampa, was
cllarged with 50 rounts and
David Baumann, 25, or St.
Petersburg, was charged with
311 counts.
Driver also denied a motion
to return the business records
eelzed in an Aug. 22 raid on
Turner's Orlando headquarters.

MARGIE JEFFERS

In State Revue

in clothing, foods, improve
your home with a redecorated
room, and conservation.
Six Meigs County 4-Hers are
Margie's parents are Mr. and
today in the 4-H
participating
Mrs. Gene Lowell Jeffers of
Style. Revue at the Ohio State
Carpenter.
Fair . Selected as county
winners, these girls are
representing Meigs County in
this state competition.
They are Tammy Fitch,
daughter of Mrs. Wilma Tillis,
The Yank relay team in· a member of the Pine Grove
eluded only one man, John Pals, School Dress ; Kim
Kinsella of Indiana University, Krautter, daughter of Mr. and
who was expected to be on the Mrs. Karl Krautter, a member
team in the Thursday night of the Five Point Star Stitfinal. The other three In the chers, Sports Clothes; Marcia
trial were Gary ConeUy of Carr, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Indiana University, Tom Charles Carr, a member of the
McBreen
of
Southern Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls,
California, and Mike Burton of Dress Up Outfit; Jane Jordan,
Sacramento, Calif.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
In track, the U. S. suffered a Lavern Jordan, a member of
quick disa ppointme nt when the Columbia Make It 4-H Club,
Dick Bruggeman of Marion, Formal Dress; Marylu Mills,
Ohio, ran six S.conds worse daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
than his best time and was only Robert Mills, a member of the
sixth in his trial heat of the Five Point Star Stitchers, in
men's 401).meter hurdles.
Lounging Clothes, and · Jan
The opening day of com- Holter, daughter of Mr. and
petition in track also saw U.S. Mrs. Roy Holter, a member of
sprinters advance in trial heats
the Five Point Star Stitchers,
of the men's too-meter dash,
but Russia's Valeri Brozov was In Tailoring.
The girls were judged by
especially impressive as he
won easily.

U. S. Grapplers Taking
Record Haul of Medals
MUNICH (UP! ) - The
United States assured itself of
its biggest haul of wrestling
medals in the Olympics in 48
years today and a Yank
swimming relay . set an
Olympic record, but the touted
U. S. track and field team got
off to a ragged start,
American grapplers did so
well in competition through
Thursday morning that six of
them were assured of medals,
the most by the United States
since 1924.
Ben Peterson of Comstock,
Wis., was assured of the gold
medal in the 90-kilo class.
In swimmmg, the U.S. men's
800-meter freestyle relay was
clocked in seven minutes, 46.4
seconds, to set an Olympic
record in qualifying, breaking
a mark of 7:49.0 set only a few
"minutes earlier by Australla.

Mills, Galllpolls, Captains and
workers will he picking up
renewals during the week of
September 4. The drive for new
members w!ll begin Sept. 11
with a kickoff dinner for all
workers at the Grace United
Methodist Church. The drive
ends on September 16,
All indlviduala not contacted
may obtain a memher!!hlp by
stopping at headquartel'l at 11

In another legBI action tlus
week against Turner, state
attorneys in Oklahoma Wed an
ouster request against Turner
Enterprises Inc., the parent
company of Dare To llP Great.
Oklahoma Securities
Commission attorney Mike
Mallomee said that in addition
to ihose two firms operating In
that state, sl~ more almllar
firms, all sut.Jidiarles of Glenn
W. Turner Enterprises Inc.,
had moved Into Oklahoma in
the past three weeks without
filing for a certificate of
domestication as required by
state law.
A federal judge in Portland,
Ore ., ordered the firm Wednesday to slop selling eome of the
self-bppr0vement courses l!Dtll
the company registers with the
security 111d ezchange commisalon. The judge iasued a
tempilrary Injunction against
further sales, effective Sept. 8.
In New Jer~y, where a state
court b&amp;Med the Dare To Be
Great courses, attorneys for
Turner said they would go to
the U.S. Collfl of Appeals in
PbiladelliJia to obtain a show
cause order so that sales can he
resumed while the state
decision is appealed. An earner
request was denied Tuesday by
a U.S. district court judge.

6 Meigs Girls

Community Concert Drive Set

·DETROrr -THE DETROrr TJGERI!, looking for needed
bome-run hitting j,ower to propel Ibn Into the World Series,
lodaypurcllased Frank Howard from the Teus Rangen. But the
nsera said the lliuggfnll firlt biii!ID"'"'utflelder 1111 acquired
Tbe Trl-County Community
too late to be eligible for the Am«&lt;cu Leasue playoffs or the
Concert Association this
World Series should the 1'l&amp;ln mile thOle finals .
morning planned its 26th anThe Tigers said Howard. wilD att.foot-7aDd 285 pounds !i me
nual membership drive when
.of the biggest men In balllblll, WID report to the club In Oakland captains and workers 'met at
Friday. He was purcbllld • watvn from the Hangen. The Riverby, home of the French
purcllase price was not dllc 'a d bat It waa believed to be far In . Art Colony. Coffee and sweet
.sceu of the nonnal waiver price of ••ooo.
· rolls were served to approximately 35 workers.
MILWAUUE, WIS. - AN EXTORTIONJS'i' demanded
Two attractions already
$~00,000 !tom United Alrllntl Wedltetldl7 by playtnc a tape of bll have been reserved for this
(Contlnied
on Pill I)
seuon. The Ronnie Kole Trio,
'•
~

Japanese Prime Minister in
Hawaii.
They arrived in the island
state only a few hours apart
Wednesday night.
Nixon said he hoped the twoday summit would "build a
structure of peace in the
Pacific." The Japanese leader
said he wanted the sessions to
"mark the hegiMing of a new
era of constant dialogue between our two countries~ '

•

'Wanta Shine,
Mister' Asks
Mike Gravely
By BOB HOEFLICH
In this Space Age era,
Shining shoes requires some
Michael Gravely, 21, is jogging know how. Gravely COIII8I
a lot of memories of the nld equipped with that through
days with his shoe shine stand helping an uncle who operated
on a street In Middleport.
a !&amp;-chair stand in a Columbwl
llhasbeenmany-a-day since depot until just recently.
the shoe shine stand - once a Gravely began helping hill
common sight, particularly In uncle at the age of 12. '
the barbershops of Meigs
So far, Gravely reports that
County communities-made business is good. He's glad,
it.s exit. Gravely is bringing since he's hoping to help raiae
it all back. Not only that, but some $3,000 for hospital billll
apparently his business is Incurred in the trealrnent of hill
profitable .
17-months-old son.
Gravely first conceived his
Customers at the stand find a
idea of opening a shoe shine three-structure price for a
stand last Friday when he "got shine. For a quarter, one
all dressed up " and inquired as receives a routine "regular"
lo wl)ere he might Hciiro a ll!l!!.e- For a half dollar, lha
sboe shine. Told that shoe shine customer receives what is
stands just don't exist in known as the "spit" shine, and
Middleport where be has for 60 cents Gravely gives a
resided for some three months, wn shine!
Gravely decided to give a stand
Customers can also leave .
a try ,
shoes for polishing for pick up
He rigged up the makeshift later.
stand and secured the perGravely plans to stay outside
mission of Mayor John Zerkle on the streets as long as
to operate It at the corner of possible. However, winter is
Race and North Second Ave.('1iiiPi'buchftlg, and the day will
near the Citizens National come when the weather won't
Bank .
permit the outdoor operation.
Monday morning he was in Looking ahead, Gravely
business.
already
has
made
Holding a job on a garbage arrangements to move Into the
collection tru ck, however, Ossie's Recreation Room,
created a problem. Gravely operated by Osby Martin.
couldn't give up the job, so he
Meantime, Gravely is at his
secured a helper, Ronnie Race St. location. While he
Williams, who normally may not have tha boogie
operates the stand !rom 9 a.m. woogle heat of the "Chat·
to 2 p. m. when Gravely takes tanooga Shoe Shine Boy", he is
over. He remains at his post helping make the whole world
shine.
un til .II p. m.

topic on the minds of Americans, Nixon also mf it clear
that he intended to he mformed
of Japan's recent overtures
toward Cbina and the prospect
that the Japanese will soon
establish diplomatic relations
with the Communist mainland.
Both the Japanese leader
and Nixon were expected tc
take each other's measure at
the first meeting of an
American President with a

restrictions upon Japanese
exports.
Nixon and Tanaka were
sCheduled to meet at the new,
plush Kuilima Hotel after both
leaders kept the morning free
for their own official busine:;s.
The trade concessions were
expected to be outlined in a
joint statement issued at the
conclusion of the swrunit talks
on Friday.
While trade was the main

at y

~

Q

craft- including air b11ses,
helicopters
for
rescue
as
operations- as well
enriched uranium, forestry
anct agriculture products.
The agreement was worked
out between Kiyohiko Tsurumi,
deputy vice foreign minister of
foreign affairs for Japan, and
U.S. Ambassador Robert
Ingersoll, the sources said.
The emergency purchase
package would be effective by

'

Court St. or by calling 446-1364
or 446-4425, or other numbers
which apply. locally.
Captains and workers lor
this year are :
GAlliPOLI S TE AMS

Sarah Sheets.
ca ptain,
Sally Orebaugh, Sue Pal-

terson, Jane Yocum. Norma

Dellinger end linda Fanning,
Addie Wuerch, captain, Mrs .
John Silvey, Judy tsaccs,
(l:ontinued on page ll

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Exleaded Outlook Saturday threugb Moaday:
Chuce of
showers
Saturday aad Suaday,
becoming parlly cloudy
Monday. Te!1Jperaturea
tunlag cooler durl!l&amp; lbe
period. Hlglil Saturday ill
the low to mid 801, droppiD&amp;
Into the mid lo upper 'lei by
Monday. Lows at llllbiiD the
in!d to apper ... DteppiDc
lo Iipper lila ud lonr • by
Moaday.
~\\\"iillliE!l llliili
I !

professional home economists
in the morning and were to
model their garments in the
Style Revue at 3:30p.m. The
Style Revue is open to the
public , The "Outatandlng" of
each class wiU he announced at
that time.
In addition to the selection of
"Outstanding," 10 girls from
Ohio will be chosen as members of the Ohio 4-H Fashion
Board and one girl wiU he
selected to attend Nationalof.H
Club Congress as the state
clothing winner during the four
days of clothing judging at the
state fair. Marylu Millll is
Meigs County's nominee lor 4H Fashion Board and Jane
Jordan is the nominee lor the
National Dress Revue, lha top
state award In clothing.

BONDS FORFEITED
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and a third was fined
Wednesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor William Baronick.
Forfeiting bonds of $25 each
were Terry Phalln, 32,
Pomeroy, squealing tires,
and Okey Kiser, ,Letart,
intoxication. Fined $5 and coats
for running a red light was
William Fry, 18, Mason.
CLEAN-UP NIGJI'II
'!'he Melga Band Boosters
wiU observe clean-up night at 7
p. m. Tuesday at the food booth
at the Meigs Stadium In
Pomeroy. Members are to take
rags and buckets.
COFCMEET

The Middleport Chamber of
Coounerce wW meet at 7:30 p. '
m. Friday at the IOCiall'OCI of
the Colllmbua and Soulbem

Olllo Electric CO.

�~

! ;

"

•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Aug. 31,1972
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31, 1972

IIQwe
. k, Henery---Fiit!"

By JACK O'BRIAN
Students Relate to ~1uslc
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Edward Ellington II,
grandson of Tbe Duke (and a graduate of
Howard U.), IS m the '72 freshman class at
Berklee College of Music, Boston .. Also Sam
Goldwyn's grandchildren Catherine "Cricket"
Goldwyn, who wants of course to compose for
movies .. The Berklee student body th1s year
sports a block of second generation celebs·
FranciS Senghor, son of the pres. of Senegal,
planJSt Eddie Heywood's son, Edward, critic
Judith Crist's son Sleven, Boston Pops conductor Arthur Fiedler's son Peter, and Dustin
Hoffman's brother-In-law, Fred Byrne III .
Berklee features a big jazz-emphasis
Hermione Gingold, who won't be going to
Berklee (too young at 75), will star with Glyms
Johns m Hal Prince's new Steven Sondheun
muSical based on lngmar Bergman's "Smiles of
a Summer Night" flick . Junmy the Greek
trumpets the election odds from Las Vegas but It's lllegal to make book on election results
m Nev . Miranda and Peter Sellers are denymg
the strong rumors
The new London "Hamlet" has its Opheha,
Carolyn Seymour suffers through the role m a
totally see-through costume ... Aristotle Onass1s
can 'I buy her the world but he 's JUst bought
Jackie a shce of it, a big property m a sunshine
bay m Sardinia _ Sweden's Pnnce Berti!
swanks it at the Munich Olympics m an
Olymptcs blazer and the decoration on his arm ,
pubhcly, IS his gal pal for 30 years, Mrs. Lillian
Cr3lg Commoner, y'know; marriage would be
Impropah .. There's talk of a Bdwy. musical
based on Hepburn-Tracy's "Woman of the
Year", and Eleanor Parker sa1d at Top. of the

''

We re Improving
Till It Hurts
1

Dear Rap ·
An 16, an A and B student, and I drmk - w1th my parents'
pennlsslon. All the guys I know drmk, but hide 11 from their folks
To me, a guy ISn't really a guy unless he's tried booze - every
redblooded American male does
My parents recogmze thiS, so I'm allowed to serve hard stuff
As a result, my friends aren't out on the street, but at our house,
where we drink, shoot pool, talk , listen to records , etc
l think my mother and father are great for allowmg this, and
they are very popular with my friends They rea lize that if they
reiused toletme drink I'd do it anyway, away from home, where
I'd maybe get in a lot of trouble.
Don't you think other parents should be that way too ? -A
GffiL WITH UNDERSTANDING PARENTS
Dear Girl:
Your parents must be pretty dumb ' You, too, in sp1te of your
A-B average They've let you talk them mto allowmg somethmg
that could get them In a heap of trouble, and you think they 're
really neat for it'
They give you and your friends free use of the liquor cabinet,
so naturally your house is a gathering place, but do they think
what might happen If a 16-year-{)ld got too much, had a wreck on
the way home, and the booze was traced to them?
I hope you're careful how you ab use your parents' lemency

-Sue
Dear Girl:
"Understanding" parents sometimes allow mealtime wine
or beer as a way of casually Introducing social drmks. But when
they pass around the booze as a way of makmg pmnts with their
teenagers and friends, they make no pomts wtth me'
Granted, we adults can't keep aU liquor away from underlegal-.agers, but if we help them get 11, m unlilmted amounts,
we're not only br~ k1ng the law but saymg m effect, "It's okay
ldds - get squiffed. We approve " - Helen

WIN AT BRIDGE

Finesse Refusal Wins Game
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44

Opcnmg leod-• J
By Oawald &amp; James Jacoby
Julius Caesar went right
up with dummy 's kmg of
clubs and led a low heart
East ducked and Caesar's
queen won that tnck. A secoM heart was played and
Brutus, sittmg East, was m
with the ace
He led a low trump Cea••r looked over at Cassius
1ittlng West, and noted his
Jean and hunl(ry look. Cae-

sar also reflected that It was
the Ides of March and that
a soothsayer had warned
hun that fmesses were not
gmng to work for hun on
that fat eful day
Wi th ever]thmg be havmg
mcely. Caesar cou ld wm the
1 est of the t11c ks
He deCided to see what he could
do about makmg IllS coutl act wtth all !messes wrong
He rose w1th his ace of
trumps , led a club to dum
my's ace , diScarded his last
club on dummy's high hearl
and proceeded to take and
lose the diamond fmesse
Cassms was on lead but
could fmd nothmg better
than a diamond return Caesat won, ruffed hiS low diamond. fma lly tned and lost
the trump fmesse but was
still home with hiS contract.
Had Caesar truid a first
round fmesse m trumps, Cassius would have taken his
queen and led a trump back,
later on CassiUS would get 111
w1th the kmg of diamonds
and lead a third trump
_
After th1s. Caesar wou)d
be unable to ruff h1s last
diamond because dummy
would be out of trumps.

Park she may do 11 ... Dionne Warwlcke's
havmg a $75,000 mobile dressmg room built for
her concert-tour
N. Y. City IS like thiS : the lobby drugstore in
the Biltmore Hotel has a locked-door,
scrutinize-the-customer poUcy _ That esteemed
nearby strip of Madison Ave. needs a tidying
up, prosties chased from Times Square now
parade the old Ad Alley ... Hugh Griffith just
hmshed ''Dr' Phibes Rises Agam" in time broke h1s hip.
The German-soldier role in Britain's
Cirencester College Company · of "Journey's
End" strikes a blow for verisimilitude. Prince
Ernest of Hanover, the grandson of the last
Kaiser, hams the role. He's 18 ... Harold
Stemman, who owns all the famed "Dancing
Waters" novelty displays, was held up in hls W.
57th St office by a guy, a gal and a gun ... Wlth
so many Manhattan cafes vacatwnmg, Chateau
Madrtd boasts lis btggest summer m a decade
. The Bdwy theatre IS waaaaay off ; only 11
shows, none selling out ... Alfred H1tchock on
actors· "Walt Disney had the right Idea. If he
didn't like the stars, he tbre them up "

Worth of Work
As Self Expression

The engmeers call it "channehzatmn," and the word
IS self-descnpllve Channehzatwn IS the deepenmg,
stra1gh temn g and clearing of natural watercourses so that
heavy rams Will dram off rapidly mstead of ovelflowmg
banks
"Guttenzation" IS what cnllcs of the practice call It,
howeve1, and that word, too , IS desctlpiive A c hannelized
IIVei' or stream IS nothmg but a b1g gutter designed to
transpo1 t water m the most efficient manner from pmnt
A to pomt B
'Guttenza\lon' ts also the direct oppoSite of all that
makes a stJ eam bwlog1cally healthy for fish a nd Wildhie wntes conse1 va tJomst John Madson m a slashmg
attack on the ' 11ver w1eckers " m the September ISSue
of Audubon magazme
When the engmeers remove the bends, pools, nffles.
snags and sandba1 s of a stream, along with the trees
that shade the streambank. all that's left, says Madson,
•s a ban en d1tch
To date, he r eports , more than 8,000 miles of liVIng
streambeds 111 mme th an 40 states have been "gutterJzed," 13 000 more have been scheduled for "Improvement," and the US Soli Conservation ServiCe estimates
that 175,000 miles of streams " need channelization "
The NatiOnal Audubon Soc1ety ha s undertaken a maJor
effort to pubhcize whut It considered to be the excesses
of the Sml ConseiVatwn Service and the Army Corps of
Engmeers ,
Among other thmgs, 1! challenges the alleged flood
control benefits of channehzahon Why, it asks, spend
money on costly proJects to protect fields from bemg
flooded when the nation already has a surplus crop problem?
And anyway, •t cla1ms, the projects often fall to control flood s but JU st transfe r the flo od threat to the next
commun1ty down stream
The troubl e With such arguments 1s that they amount
to acceptmg battle with engmeers on the1r own terms
A conv1ncmg case can always be mad e for the channelizatiOn of thiS or that nver or the dramage of thiS or
that " useless" marsh land The engmeers cannot be
faulted fm knowmg their JOb and domg 11 well
What IS sad IS that there should be any need at all
to defend the n ght of a nver, and Its ammal dependents,
to exiSt
If, as Robert Frost said, "there's somethmg that
doesn't llke a wall," surely there should be something
1ns1de a man that despises a gutter Even an engm eer
should be able to concede the esthetic superiOrity of a
natural, tree- hned , meandermg strea m to a concretehned, arrow-straight ditch, especially 1f he reme mbers
what It was hke m Its an ginal state
But that, precisely, 1s t~e danger: Each generation
of Ame11cans has fewer pe1sonal memones of what the
land was like before It was "Improved" or " developed "
As James Audubon himself wrote, the Wilderness who se
birds and other wi ldlife he observed and catalogued and
pamted disappeared man astomslung short space of time,
almost before his eyes-m only about 20 years , he reckoned, m less than the lifetime of the settlers who followed on hiS heels
Today , nobody remembers the wilderness as Audubon
knew It, which may be an acceptable pnce to pay for
the good hie bemg li ved ily ten s of millions of people
on that sa me land
Tomorrow, the de scendants of those millions may have
to go to a natiOnal pa1k to know what an " unguttenzed"
nver looks like , and conSider that acceptable
it all depends on what people want, and what they
value

By REV. DAVID POUNG
Bowed by the we&lt;ght of centurtes he leans
Upon hiS hoe and gazes on the ground
Tl1e emptmess of ages m hiS face,
'
And on h1s back the burden of the world
Author Unknown

• •

•

A fnend returned from NavaJo tradmg posts m Amana
and was stunn ed by the pnces that craftsmen were getlmg fo r their wares. Pottery, blankets, silver and turqumse Jewelry were bringmg Fifth Avenue pnces A
blanket he could have purchased SIX years ago had risen
tenfold m..pnce Y e~ he was not really unhappy , com mentmg, These craftsmen are fmally getting paid for
wha t they are worth " Th1s century has come to recogmze
the skills and talent of hand work But more than this,
m1ihons are gammg a fresh perspectlve on life as they
appreciate the meanmg of lab~r-others as well as thm
own
For too long, hand labor wa s the crusher that bowed
every worker in the world, descnbed m the poem above
But today a lot of people are lookmg for the hoe, the
hammer and the weldmg torch to g!Ve balance to their
hves and expressiOn to their feelin gs of art and handi craft.
One needs to look only at the catalog of a local commumty college or technical school to see the dozens of
classes and co urses offered m the mechamcal arts and
trades Busmess and professiOnal people, housewives
and llbranans, students and babySitters, all want to enlarge their personal world by learmng a skiU or developmg a handtcraft I suspect it IS much more than a diverSion or hobby, rather a broademng of one 's life and world
The Chnsllan community owes much of 1ts influence
and growth to the natlve understandmg II always has had
toward labor and work The first followers of Jesus were
farmers, laborers, craftsmen, people famihar with nets
and sails, at home With sawdust and nails God was a
Creator and through H1s Son they were called to be coworkers And the term "co worker" appears again and
agam m the letters of Paul (who could cut and trtm
canvas With the best of them )
Being an mtellectual, as well as a spiritual adventure
Chnstlamty does often get locked up m libranes and
lecture halls. Yet 1ts brightest scholars have always
known the nearness of work and pursued it w1th joy and
anticipatiOn.
Labor Day, 1972, ought to be a time to reflect on one's
work, hobby or handicraft. Fortunately, many of the
younger generation are seeking the balance of work and
study and worship that builds for a full personal existence. The young man down the street combmes European
history and weldmg. The gal next door does Enghsh
honors at the University on Tuesday and leather design
on Wednesday It is that kind of world and Labor Day
1972 can happily salute the expansiOn of the trades and
arts and working man. They are members of the same
great 1umon.

BEHAr'S WORlD
'

another uncle and aunt, Mr
VACATION EN DED
Danny Bryan. Jr., has and Mrs. Ronald RusseU.
returned to Sprmgfield after
spendmg the summer here
with hiS grandp are nts in
Middleport, Mr and Mrs John
The Dai~ Sentinel
B1 yan, and an un cle and aunt,
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
Mr. and Mrs Michael DaviS .
MEIGS MASON AREA
He also spen t two weeks with
CHESTH l TANNEHILL ,
E 11ec Ed
ROBE P HOEFLICH ,
Ctty Ef!tlor

PubliShed dally ucept
Saturday by The OhiO Valley

PubhSh•no

I.

Court St

Company,

Pomeroy

111

OF'I!O,

•5 769 e vsmess Off•c t Phon e
992 2156 · Ed.tortal Phon e 992
1157
Second class postage paid at

The b1ddmg has been
West North
East South
Pomeroy , Ohto
1t
Dble
Pass
Nat• onal adverUs t ng
Pass
2+
Pass
2N T. repreunrar,ve
Bott.nelll
Pass 4 •
Pass
?
Gallagher , Inc '; 12 East .t 2nCI
You, South, hold
Sf. New York C1ty, New York
Subscrtpt•on ra tes De
.8 743 ¥2 tAK943 ... 762 lfvered
by carrter where
What do you do now~
A-Pass or bid five diamonds,

depending on how conservative

your partner is.

TODAY'S QUESTION
You do btd f1ve d1amonds
and your p u r t n e r bids five
hearts What do you do now?

available 50 cents pl!r wetk ,

Bv Motor Route where ca rr ier
servtce not available One
month $1 7S By mall tn Ohio
and w Va , One yrar 114 00
SDc month~ 11 25
Three
months 14 50 Subscr~ptlon
pnce 1ncludts Sunday T1mes
Senttnel

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Old movies on TV have thiS effect on the
Post Office's dead letter office· II gets bundles
of ma1i for mov1e stars long dead ... Alex1s
Smith may take the lead m the all-star revival of
"The Women " . X. Cugat's fm!Shmg hiS
memmrs . The Carl Belzes (he's star of TV's
"Judd for the Defense") reconciled ... We
foreca st CBS folding its Cinema Center f1hn
fa ctory; this week's Variety conflnlled the
phasmg-out .. Dong Kmgman 's analyS18 of why.
Natalie Wood and Bob Wagner remarried : "The
dtvorce didn't work out"

DAVID POLING, D.D.

EDITORIAL

Dear Boy-Girl : (Or 1s it Girl-Boy?)
... And If you're just playmg the good ol' game of Hoax the
Columnists, take your business elsewhere Too many stones with
the same plot don 't sell! (We couldn't belleve you now , even if
you swore that this time II was·"no he ."):-: Sue

&amp; THIN68

Voice along Br'Way

.

Another One of Those!
Dear Helen and Sue :
My sisters are blackmailing me mto dressmg up like a gJI'l
They per,suaded me to doll up m the1r clothes once, then put
makeup on me and f1Xed my long ha1r llke theirs I didn 't know
they look a picture of me lllllater, and now they say they 'll show
ltto Mom and Dad if I don't play the1r "sister" whenever they get
bored. Our folks would k1ll me, so what am I to do ? - BOY
FORCED TO BE A GIRL
Dear Boy :
Try telling the truth' Th1s IS the fourth letter we've receiVed
from you, aU concernmg sex changes of one kmd or another
Since you've evidently got a problem, or anyway a fixallon , take
It to a therapiSt - and don 't b01ld up your story to get attentfon! - Helen

Track and Field Today

a an tun m , bbmm:

'' That smile bugs me. You don't suppose she was
'liberated,' do you?"

Wby ls television advertising cDIIIIistenUy the most dece~
live, misleading and downright crooked adverliBing In the
world ? It outrages me. After all, I make my living by ae111ng
television (in one of its forms) to people - but I have no control
over tbe content of the stuff that comes over the airwaves.
What's got me irritated as a barber at a hippie love-in Is an
absolutely devastating report in the most recent Issue of Consumers Unl011 about aspirin - of all things.
This certainly lsn 't the first time studies have been made to
prove that plain old ordinary acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) from
the cut...ate shell at the drug store or supermarket Is just as good
as the many products that promise fast, fast, fast relief, and all
that other garbage.
'
What I find so offensive about the new report Is tbe fact that
one company, making the world's beat-known brand of aspirin,
also markets two other products that promise they are - in effect -better than aspirin.
Naming names, Consumer Union reports lhat the sterling
Drug Co. makes Bayer aspirin. Tbe company claims that there Is
nothing better that plain Bayer aspirin for relief of pam, in Its TV
spots.
True, as far as the report can determine. But the aame
company also makes Vanquish and Cope- both of which, tbey
contend in separate collUilerclals - are far better than shnple
aspirm in reUeving pam.
Now, this ls more than hucksterism gone hog-wild. This Is
sunple, flat-{)ut, rot ton deception of the consumer (who spends 80
cents of every paln.,.eUever dollar on somethmg he thinks will
really-be better than plain aspirin).
If these were different companies pushing the merits of their
own products, 11 wouldn't be so unbearable - but It Is incredible
that a single company should be allowed to make absolutely
contradictory clauns for its var1ous wares.
The Federal Trade CommiSSion can, and should, put a stop to
such blatant dishonesty on your TV screen .
I don't believe every advertising claim I see m newspaper,
magazllle, billboard or d1rect-mailads, by any mea1111. But I'm
about to the pomt that I don't believe ANYTHING I see on
television. Look at these tbree quick examples
When the best-known fluoride toothpaste hit the market, 11
reaUy was a breakthrough in preventing tooth decay. With such
credentials, 11 should have become the best~Uer overmght. It
didn't. Why. Because other toothpastes were making such extravagant clauns that few people believed the real thing, wben 1t
arnved.
That steel-belted tire you see running over spikes and axe
blades really CAN take that kind of punislunent, but the n'C was
skeptical, and asked for proof Wbere were the tests run• On
parkmg lots and shoppmg centers, because TV lent Itself too
readily to deception.
Alka..S.ltzer was about the only product that got even a halfkind word from Consumers Umon (It does relieve pain, and can
help prevent stomach distress from people who are upset by
asp1rm .) Yet most people buy Alka..S.Itzer because Its
commercials are cute- not because they are credible.
ON THE TV DIAL. Dr. Seuss' special, "Horton Hears a
WhO,"IS worthrepeating,and reruns at 8 30, WCHS-TV ... Bobby
Darm and Pat Paulsen ham 11 up on Bobby's show 10 on WSAZTV
'

Television Log
Programs for Tonight and Tomorrow
DO-News 3, 4, 8. 10. 15. Truth or Conseq 6 , I Dr~m of
Jeannie 13; Hathayogo 3J
6 3D-NBC News 3, 4, IS , ABC New s 6, 13 , CBS News 8, tO. Folk
Gu itar 33
7 DO-Course of Our Times 33 , Lets Make A Deal 3, Magic
Circus 13, Dick Van Dyke 4. What's My Line? 8, Big Red
Jubilee 15, News 6
7 »-I'll See You In Court 4; Dragnet a. Chapter 33, Hollywood
Squares 3; To Tell the Truth 6, Wild Kingdom 10
a DO-NBC Adventure Theatre J, 15, 4, My World and Welcome
To 118, 10 ; Jean Shepherd's America 33, Summer Olympics
6, 13
8 »-Jazz Set 33 , Horton Huro A Who 8, 10.
9 DO-Longstreet 6, 13. Ironside J. 4, 15, Hollywood Television
Theatre 33; Mov ie. " Prom ise Her Anything" 8, 10
10 DO-Owen Marsna\16, 13, Bobby Dorin 3, 4, 15, Paul Nuchlms
33.
11 DO-News 3, 4, 6, 10, 13, 15.
11 3D-Johnny Corson 3, 4, 15 , Dick Cavett 6. Movies "Sole
Survivor" 8, "Underworld US A." 10. "The Counterfeit
Plan" 13
1 DO-News 4
t 3D-News 13
6

By JOHN G. GRIFFIN
Amencan pnde m the Games
MUNICH (UP!) - The would be to lose the sprmts to a
United States swunmers have Russian It's never happened
won six gold medals, the U S. m Olympic hiStory
But Borzov has run the 100 m
basketball team 1s 4-0, the
boxers 7-1 and the wresllers 27- 10-flut He' s beaten the
~ . but the 20th Olympic
Ameri~ans m the Umted States
and
there's money around
Games didn't start until today
for many persons
Muni ch' that says he'll do 1t
That's when the track and here
Tup Amerat·an Sprmlers
fteld compelttion hegan
The top Amencan sprtnters
Right out of the startmg
blocks come the 1110-meter are Eddie Hart of Pittsburgh,
runners, the most glor1f1ed Cahf , and Reynaud Robmson
men of games The big of Lakeland, Fla, and Flonda
question this year IS whether A&amp;M, both of whom have run
the U. S sprmters - without 9 98, U1e best Umes m the world
guys hke Jim Hines, Bob thiS year Robert Taylor of
Texas Southern, the other U S
Hayes and Bobby Morrow still ca n ma1ntam their spnnter, has a 10-flat
The answer to the questiOn of
mastery ove r the Europeans,
especially Russtan Val ery who IS the world 's fastest
human \\oon 't come un ti l
Borzov
The most severe blov. to Fnday m the fmals Other

CINCINNATI ( UPI ) - Joe
Hague's game-wm mng double
JOgged Sparky Anderson 's
memory
''I watched that ball shoot
down that third-base hne and
thought right away aboul the
double Elhe Hendricks hit
against us In the 1970 World
Ser1es," sa1d the Cmcmnatl
Reds manager
Hague's double, chmax1ng a
three-run seventh mmng rally
wh1ch earned the Reds to a 4-2
vtctury over the New York
Mets Wednesday mghl, put a
smile on Anderson's face
''Hendri cks' double," he
recalled, "had me cussmg
Remember, 11 put Baltimore
ahead m that second game of
the ser1es "
Abase hJt to left field Is about
as much of a rari ty for the
lefthanded hittmg Hague as the
1970 Wolrd Senes hlt was for
Hendricks, who IS also a lefthanded swmger
"In fact, " said Joe, · I cant
reca ll getting a hit down the
hne hke that s1nce I've been m
the major leagues "
Wipe Out Lead
Gary Gentry was the victim
of Hague's pmch double. which
gave Red lefty Don Gullett hiS
seventh victory agamst a hke
number of losses
The Met ri ghthander had
taken over afle.li.Tony Perez,
Dent• l'lfenk' ."liP plt(cr~ltter
llal McRae routed starter Jon
Matlack with smg les m the
seventh 1nmng McRae's smgle
scored Perez and Wiped out a 2l lead the Mets had taken m the
top of the seventh on Dave
Marshall's home run
"I'm Just glad that Hal and I
could get mto a game once m a
while and do the JOb," sa1d
Hague "You sure want lo do a

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1

2D-Farm Report 13

6 25- Pau\ Harvey 13
6 »-Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, Public Affair 10

6 45-Corncob Report 3.

6 55-Rocky and Bullwlnkle 13.
7
Today, 3. 4, 15. CBS News 8, 10

oo-

3D-Romper Room 6, Underdog 13, Sleepy Jeffers 8
8 DO-Ca pt Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revue 13, 6, Sesame
Street 33 , Friendly Junction 10
8 »-Tennessee Tuxedo 6; Jack LaLanne 13
9 DO-Paul Di xon 4; Peyton Place 13, Romper Room 8; Phil
Donahue 15, What Every Woman Wants to Know J, Timmy
and Lassie 6, Mr. Rogers33 , Capt Kangaroo to.
9 3D-Truth or Conseq 3, Mike Douglas 6; ()le Life to Live 13 ,
Electric Co. 33, My Three Sons 8
10.DO-Dlnan Snore 3, 15, Lucille Bali 10; Ph il Donahue 8; Dick
Van Dyke 13, Halhayoga 33
10 3D-Concentration 3, t5 ; Phil Donohue 4, Beverly Hillbillies 8.
In-School lnslructlon 33, Spill Second 13, My Three Sons 10
10·45-Lucll\e Rivers 6.
ll :OD-Faml\y Affair 8, 10, Lov e American Style 13 ; Com
munlque6, Saleofthe Centurr3, 15. Etec. Co 20.
11 : »-Hollywood Squares 4, 15 . ove of Life 8, Bewitched 6, 13 ,
Sesame St 20
12 DO - Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4; Password 6;
Local New• 10. News 13, Contact a.
12 JD-JW'• Game J. 15, Search for Tomorrows. 10. Split Second
6. Electric Co 33.
1' DO-News 3, All My Children 6, 13 . Divorce Court 8; Flippo at
lne Fair 10, To Be AnnotJnced IS
1 JD-3 On a Match 3, 4, 15, Lefs Make A Deal 6, 13, As the
World Turn• 8. 10, Designing Women 33.
2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13 , Virginia
Graham 6, Love Is Spiendored Thing 8, 10; Societies In
Tran•ttlon 33
2 3D-Doctors 3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13 , Guiding Light 8 10·
Even ing at Pops 33
f
'
'
3:DO-Another World 3, 4, 15; General HQSpltal 6, 13, Secret
Storm 8, 10; Tennis Anyone? 33
3· 3D-Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, Edge of Night 8, 10; Jeff's
Collie 13 , ()le Life to Live 6; Book Beat 33.
4:DO-Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Sesame St 20, 33; Flintstones 13; Batman a. Huckleberry Hound 6, Movie "Once
More, My Darling /' tO.
4 JQ-Green Acres 3. I Love Lucy 6 ; Merv Griffin 4; Andy
Griffith 15; Death Valley Days 8; Former's Dauqhter 13
5·QO-Wagon Train 3; Etec. Co. 33. Mister Rogers 20; Dick Van
Dyke 15, Big Valley 6; Tarzan 13
5. 30-Marsho\ Dillon 15; Eledrlc Co. 33.
6·00-News3, 4, 8, 10, 15; NBC News a, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; I
Dr~m of J~nn1e13 , Sesame 51 20; Hathayoge 33.
6 »-News, 3. 4,6,8, 10,13, 15; French Chef33.
r .oo-Porter Wagoner 3; Oleic Van Dyke 4; News, Weather,
Sports 6, 10; Doddtelown Pipers 8; Magic Circus 13;
Saint 15; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
7 »-Adam 12, 3; I Droam of Jeannie 4; To Tell the Trulti 6;
Parent Game 10.
~: oo-Dr. Simon Locke 3; Summer Olympia 6, 13; O'Hara, u.
S. Treasury a, 10; To Be Announced 15
8:30-Pro Foolbal\3, 4,15, Youth Drug Ward33.
9:DO-Mov\e, "Operation Solo" 8; "Diamond Head" 10.
9: JO-Se \lola 33.
IO.OD-Mlltsfones of Progress 33.
10.30-Washlnaton Week In Review 33.
11 .00-News, WNthor, Sports, 6, 8, 10, 13.
11 : 30-Dick Cavett 6; Movie, "The Comedy of Terrors" I ;
"Flight of the Lost Balloon" 10.
12· 00-./0hnn Carson 3, 4, 15.
I: 30-Rotler Dlrby 4; Loa I News lG.

Addresses Team
&lt;:OLUMJIUS tUI'li - Dr.
Harold Enar~ou, in&lt;. ommg
preSident of Ohto Slate
Umverslly, told the loulball

team Wcdnesda}', ··rn be
nne of the loudest fa ns you
ha\rc.• '
' I have one \\ish for you

all, thai you have fun and
don't get hurt, " Enarson told
them m a surpnsr VISit to
thcar prac ti ce. Enarson
takt•s over as prcs Jdt• nt lrnm
rctmng NOVI Ct' FU\HCU

Fnday
Cua&lt;·h Wood) Hayes put
the team through two drill s.
Today they don pads for the
fmt lime thiS fall
Tht• Bucks w11l open the
seaso n aga mst B1g Ten

upponl'nt lo""a here Sept Hi

Hague's Wrongfield Double DumpsMets

6 DO-Sunrise Se minar 4; Sacred Hearl 10
6 15-Farmhme 16.
6

events openmg day mrlurle Cahf , Jen ny Kemp of Cmheats m the 400-meler hurdles, uritlala md Ja ne Barkmann uf
800 meters and the 10,000 Wayne, Pa
meters
Wnter, 28, broke lhe wolld
The only fmal was the 20- record w1th a score ut 1,166, one
kilometer walk
more than the mark he ld by a
The U. S won two gold Russaan, afld teamma te Lanny
medals and a tota l of seven Bassham, 25, of Fort Worth,
Wednesday to push Its total for Tex , won the stlver medal w1lh
the first four days of the Games 1,157. The women's relay also
lo 22 East Germany 1s second set a world record of 3 55 2
v.tth 15 and the Sovtel Umon 1s
The other silver medals wont
tlurd with 11 The U S has lo Tim McKee of Newton
seven golds and East Germans Squre, Pa , m the 400-meter
and RusSians have five eac h mdtvidual medley and Tom
Latest G~tlds Wun
Bruce of Sunnyvale, Calif . m
The latest golds were won by the 100-meter breastroke
John Wn ter of Clarendon H1lls, McKee was second to Gwmar
m, and by the women 's 400- Larsson of Sweden by 2-l,OOths
meter It ees\yle relay team of a second and Bruce was
The sWimmers on the relay second to Japan's Nobuta ka
team were Shir ley Babashoff Taguchi, who set a wor ld
of Fountam Valley, Calif , record of I 04 94
Sandra Neilson of El Monte,

OSU President-

7

hlllc mm e than JUst pat othc1 the '.\a\' It ~HI S tht!IC
guys on the back '
Prelly Pooped
Don l get the Idea, th ough,
Without so much as a blush.
tl1al Hague's b1lter about Ius Hague adm itted he was p~ett y
bench wat mmg role
pooped when he "ound up on
•If we can score 10 runs a lllll'd after takmg an extra base
game. I d be happy Just s1ltmg on the throw to the plate
' H has been so long smce
on the bench the remamder of
l'\e
g:otten on base I'm :;UI ·
the season," said Ha gue
· When Sparky pu ts guys m p11sed I found the bag, ' he
the lmeup II means he thmks sa 1d 'In the last three month s
the) ca n do the JOb 1hope they I '" sta1ted only fo u1 ~ames
do Wmmng 's the mo~t unpm tan t thmg I'm fi om the
Unl\eiSity of Texas and that's
HUGHES TAKES A TRIP
MANAGUA I UPl i- Howard
Hughes took a one-&lt;la) tnp to
Nwaragua '1 uesda)
P1 es1dent AnastasiO

former
Somoza

sa1d
· He arriVed toda y and he lcll
today · a spokesnwn added
Somoz,, s sec1 elm y wo uld not
Sdy whet e Hughes ca me f1om
01 v.hei e he went when he left
Nil'CI I agurl

WOMEN REt:RUITED
CULDESAC, Idaho 1UPltThe Culdesac Fire Departmenl
ts acl1vely recrmtmg women
for any JOb they are capable of
handling
F1re Ch1ef Jerrv Hewett sa1d
the move IS from necessity He
sa•d the men a1 e usually away
logging during the day and
women ofttn end up dmng the
firef1ghtJng·

,md I'111 0 14 1n those "
Pedro Borbon took over for
Gu ll ett 111 the eighth and
blanked the Mets w1th a
harmless double by Tommie
Agee
Howeve1 Anderson ca lled
upon Tommy Hall m the mn lh

gam

hiS e1ghth save of th e

seosun

One of the Reds Juts was the
I 18Jst of Pete Roses ca1eot ,

'' He set up

well, used

audibles and picked up hiS
pnmary
and
alternate
receivers,11 Skonch satd. "We
allowed h1m to dtrect the attack qmte a bll "
Kingrea
"
Phipps w1ll start the game
A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE .
WF.NATCHEE. Wa sh 1 UPI )
The Browns wtll gel the1r agamstthe Bengals Cmcmnah
- Mayor Walter B Young was f1rst look at the Bengals'
practicing to lead Thursdav's
three-m1le commumty bi C)~le
NE WCON1 RAC1
ride-designed to call attentiOn CONTRACT SIGNED
PHILADELPHIA
(UPl)
PITTSBURGH
1UPI I
to cycling safely- when he fell
Tom
Underwood,
an
IS-yearTlurly -n1ne year-o ld Ken
hom his bike and broke three
old left-hand ed stnkeout artist Schmkel the all-lime sconng
nbs
m h1gh school and Amencan leader of the expansiOniSt
LegiOn ba II, Signed a contract Pittsburgh Pengums, Wedfor the 1973 season Tuesday nesda) s1gned a contract w1lh
with the Philadelphia Ph1lhes the club fm· \he 1972-73 season
Underwood, of Kokomo, lnd ,
Schmkel, who scored 15 goals
the club 's No 2 selection m this and 30 ass1s1s last season. has
year's free agent draft, will colle cted 215 pomts as a
pttch for the Phillies' Auburn, Pengum smce JOining them m
N Y farm club m the New the 1967 expansiOn draft.
York-Penn League
SAINTS TRIM ROSTER
END CUT
NEW ORLEANS iUPI)
GREEN BAY (UPI)- The
The New Orlea ns Sa tnt s
Green Bay Packers Tuesday
tnmmed dov.n to the reqUired
cu t defe nsi ve end BtU
49 playe1 s Wednesday by
Johanmgme1er of Co lorado
culling veteran safe ty John
State from the squad
Mallory and transferring
The 6-foot-4 , 240 pound
rookie runmn g back Frank
Johamngmeter , 24, JOmed
McGuigan to the taxi squad.
Green Bay as a free agent.

P!ll sburgh
Ch1cago
New York
51 Lout s
Mo11treal
Pht ladelphta

1s 2-2 In extubiiJOn play and the
Browns are wmless m four
tnes

Brov. n came out agamst the
111Jured waiver rule of pro
foo tball Wednesday He sa id 11
tsn't domg what 11's deSigned
to do "
Brown satd many teams put
players on the InJUred waiver
hsl even though they are not
111Jured, 111 order to stoc kpile
for the future The waived
player 1s not counted m th e
team's player limit and most
other clubs are scared off from
daunmg htm because of the
" mJured " labe l

Brown sa 1d many coaches
even agree among themselves
not to clallll players from, the
lnJW'ed waiver list Brown sa1d
he 1sn 'I among th em
He sa1d he recently tned to
cla im two good rookie
rece1vers who were on the hst,
but ne1ther team wanted to lose
the players so they were taken
off the hst
Both coaches called Brown
and asked h1m to withdraw his
clatm
" I told them that they have
better personnel than we do
anyway and that th ey were JUSt
trymg to perpetua te themselves by hangmg onto th e
players mvolved," Brown said.
"The waiver rule ISn't domg
what It's deoigned to do. The
'haves ' are able lo hang onto
players and the 'have nots'
aren't gettmg many of the
players put on waivers ''

77 46
67 57
63 58
60 63

626

57 65

46 7 19 1"1
361 321 2

540 101 "1

521 13
488 17

Ncw York was ca lied to
pruv1de a ruhng on whtch score
was to be accepted The USGA
sa1d the second one
Wynn got $1,150 for the&gt; mat
lhe Candywood Country ~lub
course east of here, Lewts
pocketed $1,100and thtrd-place
Chuck Rotar of Canlon, wtth a
282. got $900

one hole

Wynn hmshed the 72-hole
tourney w1tll

(:1

10-untl~r-par

278, mcludmg a 68-70-!38 '"
44 78
Wednesday's 36-hole &gt;&lt;mdup
West
W L Pet GB Lcw 1s f1m shed three strokes
C1nc1nnat1
78 46 629
back Jn second place
Houston
71 54 568 7 1 ~
l.ev.IS' luck turned sour v. hen
Los Angeles
65 57 533 12
he drove a ball mto the woods
Allanla
57 69 452 22
~&gt;&lt;1n Franc 1sco 56 70
444 23
DeclaJmg 1t an unplayable
San D1ego
&lt;16 78 371 32
he dropped another ball
he,
Wednesday 's Res ults
But he decided 1t also was
Ch1 9 Los Ang 8, 11 mns
C1ncmna l1 4 New York 2
unpla)able
Montreal 3 Atlanta 2
The PGA lour regula! then
Houston 5 Phtladelphta 3
played a proviSional ball and
San Fran 3 St LOUIS 2
Prlt sburQh 11 San Otego 0
also hJl a second ball The first
Today's Probable Pttchers
dropped ln on five stl okes , the
All T1mes EDT
Los ~nge l es (Osteen 14 9)
Cht cago (Reuschel 6 6) , 2
pm
Philade lphta (Fnt chell3 6)
H ouslon (Oterker 13 7). 8
p rn

at
30

FATALINJURY
MASSILLON, Oh10 (UP!) Brwn Coleman, a 16-year-{)ld
S,mdusky H1gh School football
pla)er who suffered a severe
head InJUry dunng a scrtmmage agamst Masslilon High
School on Aug 26, died Wedne sday at Massillon City
Hospital

second one m seven

at
30

IOllly ~ames scheduled )
Fnday's Games

San Fran at Ptttsburgh , n1ght
S~n D1 ego at Ch tcago
Los Ang at St Louts 2, twtl tght
Pl1 1la at Allan ta 2 lwt mgh t
New York at Houston ntght
Monlreal at Ctnct ntght
Amertcan League

VC:Jda Pmson, who's now wtlh

the Cahforma Ange ls
The Reds,1dle today, wmd up
mmn g aflm une·out smgles by their twmestand w1th a th rceMarshall and Bud Ha11 elson gt:~ me senes agamst the
Hall ret11 ed p1nch-lutteJ Munt1 ca l Expos beg1nmng
Willie M,JV s and Jun FregoSI to Fr ul(• v mght

Tommy Casanova Sunday
Casanova, a free safety, ran
a punt return back 52 yards for
a \ouchdown against Green
Bay thiS summe r and a 58-yard
run by him set up a touchdown
agamsl Detroit
"He's got the sptrit ," satd
Bengals Coach Paul Brown
'' He tnmks he will go all the
wa1 every t•me The sp1nt
spreads to the blockers. ·
Skorich sa1d Iu s quarterback, Mike Phipps, "loo ked
every bit as good m the film as
he did m the ga me, ' agamst
Minnesota

Bob Wynn of Kettenng won hiS
th1rd straigh t OhiO Open golf
By Umted Press International
tournament t1tte Wednesday
Nat1onal League
afte1
challenger Bob Lewis Jr
East
W L Pet GB of Warren scored a seven on

lymg the club record set b}

Willis Sidelined

WILMINGTON , Oh10 (UP!)
- Cmcmnat1 Bengals runnm g
back Fred W1ll1s v.1ll be
Sidelined fur abou\ two 11eeks
because of a knee InJury suffered In Monday mght's wm
over Pluladelphia
The Bengals put m a onehour, 10-minute practice
Wednesday without Willis m
preparatiO n for thetr next
exlubltwn game agamst the
Cleveland Browns at OJlumbu s
At the Browns' tram1ng
camp at H1arm, C.,ach Ntc k
Skonch said he would start
R1 ck Kmgrea at m1ddle
linebacker
" Our rotatiOn IS g!Vlng
every body a shot," Skonch
sa1d "This will be an Important week of evaluation for

~BASEBAU Wynn Takes Ohio Open
STANDINGS WARREN, OhiO (UPi i - The U S. Golf Assoc1alton 1n

Detro1l
Balltmore
Bos ton
New York
Cleve land
M1lwaukee

East
W L Pet GB
67 57 540
67 57 540

64 58
65 59

525 2
524 2

58 66
48 IS

468 9
39018 1 1

We st

W L Pel GB
51 589
71 52 577 J112

Oakland

73

Ch 1cago
M1nnesola
61 60 504 1Qih
Kansas C1ty
60 62 492 12
Calt l orn ta
56 67 455 161, 2
Te&gt;&lt;as
49 75 395 24
Wednesday's Result s
Bost on 4 Ch1cago 2
New York 3 Te)(as I
Kan Ctly 6 Mtlwaukee 2
M111n 7 Ba l hmore 1
Oak land 2 Cleveland 0
Ca ltforn ta 4 Detrotl 1
Today's Probable Ptl chers

SQUIRREL
SEASON
OPENS
SEPT. 8
Our_ complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment '' here ready for selection. Made
by world -known manufacturers and in a large
range of prices .

All T1mes EDT

Detrorl ( Fryman 3 1) at
Ca l1forn1a (Ryan 141 2) 11 p m
Kansas (tty (Jackson 1 0) at
Milwaukee (Lockwood 6 10).
830prn
Texas {H and 109) at New
York ( Peterson 13 13) 2 p m
(On ly games schedul ed)
Fnday 's Ganes
Ch1cago at New Yor k , n tght
Kan City at Bos ton, ntghf
Mtlwaukee at Texas, ntght
Cleveland at M1nn, ntght
Balt1more at Caltf ntght
Detro 1f at Oakland, n1ght

lnternattonalleagu e Stand1ng s
By Umted Press lnternattona I

W
Charleston
Loulsvdle
Ttdewater

Toledo
Rochester
Syracuse

R1chmond
Pentnsula

L Pel

80 59
78 6J
74 64

561

536

73 66 525
518

72 67
63 76
60 78
55 84

Gil

476 -

2
5t12
7
8

AMMUNITION OF ALL KINDS
WESTERN · REMINGTON

SHOTGUNS &amp;RIFLES
Remington - Winchester - Ithaca Harrison &amp; Richardson- MossbergBrowning Gun Cleaning Kits - Gun
Oil - Recoil Pads - Game Bags Shell Vests - Gun Cases - Hunting
Accessories - Hunters Jackets &amp;
Caps - Hunting Pants &amp; Caps - Rifle
Sling Straps - Steel Traps.

453 17
435 l9 t;.,

396 25

Wedne•day's Results

LICENSED GUN DEALER

Toledo 2 Syracuse 1

Rochester 6 Loutsvtlle 'l
Pen1nsu la 4 Rtchmond 3
Ttdewater 3 Charle ston 1

F11 st public rec it atiOn of
th e famous poem. 'Casey at
the Bat. · was gJVen by De
Wolf Hopper al Wallack s
J'heat e1 New York Ctty May

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
llOW. MAIN ·
POMEROY
We Issue Hunting License

I 1888

Add t e Luxury
Real
Hardwood Paneling
To Your Home Today

RUTLAND METAL PAINT
\)
Rutland metal pamt gives that needed
e~~.tra protection agatnst severe ex
posure to the elem en ts It adheres
perfectly to any c lea n surf ace wtl h the
exceptron of new galvamzed 1ron

GOOD GROOMING has Its place In at hletics but East
Germany's Jurgen Geschke would appear to be going
to extremes for the Olympics Actuull)•, Geschke and
his partner, Werner Otw, \\Orld tandem blcvcling
champions, apply a shaver as prcrace precaution, to
facilitate first-aid treatment In case of an ucddeul

,

'"

-

Uncle

Dries to a nexible

Nashville's Newest Up-Coming Star

See how
little it
costs to
panel a
12' x 8' wall

See

fil m

that will

not

..

crack or peel Apply
wlth brush or spray

HELD OVER ANOTHER WEEK
BY POPULAR DEMAND

Whate ver success we
e nJO Y at R1 zer Oil Co
come s because we
work at the JOb of
carefully sat1sfymg
each
and
every
customer-give us a
try

-

Rutland metal Paints are also excellent on wood, brick &amp; masonry.

Frank
or Uncle
John Now

LYN CAMPBELL
Also Starring The Popular

GEO. HALL
Tonight Thru Sept. 2nd

THE KINGS ARMS NITE CWB
On Rt. 7 Below Middleport, 0.
51 00 Cov&amp;r Ch3rge Sat. Night, Sept 2

Hours · 7 a.m. loS :IO p.m. Dolly ,
773-SSII

MASON , W. VA.
• 7 o.m

1o9 p.m. Friday &amp; Saturday

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

�~

! ;

"

•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Aug. 31,1972
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31, 1972

IIQwe
. k, Henery---Fiit!"

By JACK O'BRIAN
Students Relate to ~1uslc
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Edward Ellington II,
grandson of Tbe Duke (and a graduate of
Howard U.), IS m the '72 freshman class at
Berklee College of Music, Boston .. Also Sam
Goldwyn's grandchildren Catherine "Cricket"
Goldwyn, who wants of course to compose for
movies .. The Berklee student body th1s year
sports a block of second generation celebs·
FranciS Senghor, son of the pres. of Senegal,
planJSt Eddie Heywood's son, Edward, critic
Judith Crist's son Sleven, Boston Pops conductor Arthur Fiedler's son Peter, and Dustin
Hoffman's brother-In-law, Fred Byrne III .
Berklee features a big jazz-emphasis
Hermione Gingold, who won't be going to
Berklee (too young at 75), will star with Glyms
Johns m Hal Prince's new Steven Sondheun
muSical based on lngmar Bergman's "Smiles of
a Summer Night" flick . Junmy the Greek
trumpets the election odds from Las Vegas but It's lllegal to make book on election results
m Nev . Miranda and Peter Sellers are denymg
the strong rumors
The new London "Hamlet" has its Opheha,
Carolyn Seymour suffers through the role m a
totally see-through costume ... Aristotle Onass1s
can 'I buy her the world but he 's JUst bought
Jackie a shce of it, a big property m a sunshine
bay m Sardinia _ Sweden's Pnnce Berti!
swanks it at the Munich Olympics m an
Olymptcs blazer and the decoration on his arm ,
pubhcly, IS his gal pal for 30 years, Mrs. Lillian
Cr3lg Commoner, y'know; marriage would be
Impropah .. There's talk of a Bdwy. musical
based on Hepburn-Tracy's "Woman of the
Year", and Eleanor Parker sa1d at Top. of the

''

We re Improving
Till It Hurts
1

Dear Rap ·
An 16, an A and B student, and I drmk - w1th my parents'
pennlsslon. All the guys I know drmk, but hide 11 from their folks
To me, a guy ISn't really a guy unless he's tried booze - every
redblooded American male does
My parents recogmze thiS, so I'm allowed to serve hard stuff
As a result, my friends aren't out on the street, but at our house,
where we drink, shoot pool, talk , listen to records , etc
l think my mother and father are great for allowmg this, and
they are very popular with my friends They rea lize that if they
reiused toletme drink I'd do it anyway, away from home, where
I'd maybe get in a lot of trouble.
Don't you think other parents should be that way too ? -A
GffiL WITH UNDERSTANDING PARENTS
Dear Girl:
Your parents must be pretty dumb ' You, too, in sp1te of your
A-B average They've let you talk them mto allowmg somethmg
that could get them In a heap of trouble, and you think they 're
really neat for it'
They give you and your friends free use of the liquor cabinet,
so naturally your house is a gathering place, but do they think
what might happen If a 16-year-{)ld got too much, had a wreck on
the way home, and the booze was traced to them?
I hope you're careful how you ab use your parents' lemency

-Sue
Dear Girl:
"Understanding" parents sometimes allow mealtime wine
or beer as a way of casually Introducing social drmks. But when
they pass around the booze as a way of makmg pmnts with their
teenagers and friends, they make no pomts wtth me'
Granted, we adults can't keep aU liquor away from underlegal-.agers, but if we help them get 11, m unlilmted amounts,
we're not only br~ k1ng the law but saymg m effect, "It's okay
ldds - get squiffed. We approve " - Helen

WIN AT BRIDGE

Finesse Refusal Wins Game
NORTII

31

• 1093

Y KJ64
+8 3

. AK82
WEST

EAST

.Q 52
Y108 73
tKJ 72

. 64
YA 92
f 10965

•no

• Q973
SOUTH (D)

.AKJ8 7
¥ Q5

f AQ4

• 654
None vu lnerable

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

2A
3•
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Soulh

1+
2+
44

Opcnmg leod-• J
By Oawald &amp; James Jacoby
Julius Caesar went right
up with dummy 's kmg of
clubs and led a low heart
East ducked and Caesar's
queen won that tnck. A secoM heart was played and
Brutus, sittmg East, was m
with the ace
He led a low trump Cea••r looked over at Cassius
1ittlng West, and noted his
Jean and hunl(ry look. Cae-

sar also reflected that It was
the Ides of March and that
a soothsayer had warned
hun that fmesses were not
gmng to work for hun on
that fat eful day
Wi th ever]thmg be havmg
mcely. Caesar cou ld wm the
1 est of the t11c ks
He deCided to see what he could
do about makmg IllS coutl act wtth all !messes wrong
He rose w1th his ace of
trumps , led a club to dum
my's ace , diScarded his last
club on dummy's high hearl
and proceeded to take and
lose the diamond fmesse
Cassms was on lead but
could fmd nothmg better
than a diamond return Caesat won, ruffed hiS low diamond. fma lly tned and lost
the trump fmesse but was
still home with hiS contract.
Had Caesar truid a first
round fmesse m trumps, Cassius would have taken his
queen and led a trump back,
later on CassiUS would get 111
w1th the kmg of diamonds
and lead a third trump
_
After th1s. Caesar wou)d
be unable to ruff h1s last
diamond because dummy
would be out of trumps.

Park she may do 11 ... Dionne Warwlcke's
havmg a $75,000 mobile dressmg room built for
her concert-tour
N. Y. City IS like thiS : the lobby drugstore in
the Biltmore Hotel has a locked-door,
scrutinize-the-customer poUcy _ That esteemed
nearby strip of Madison Ave. needs a tidying
up, prosties chased from Times Square now
parade the old Ad Alley ... Hugh Griffith just
hmshed ''Dr' Phibes Rises Agam" in time broke h1s hip.
The German-soldier role in Britain's
Cirencester College Company · of "Journey's
End" strikes a blow for verisimilitude. Prince
Ernest of Hanover, the grandson of the last
Kaiser, hams the role. He's 18 ... Harold
Stemman, who owns all the famed "Dancing
Waters" novelty displays, was held up in hls W.
57th St office by a guy, a gal and a gun ... Wlth
so many Manhattan cafes vacatwnmg, Chateau
Madrtd boasts lis btggest summer m a decade
. The Bdwy theatre IS waaaaay off ; only 11
shows, none selling out ... Alfred H1tchock on
actors· "Walt Disney had the right Idea. If he
didn't like the stars, he tbre them up "

Worth of Work
As Self Expression

The engmeers call it "channehzatmn," and the word
IS self-descnpllve Channehzatwn IS the deepenmg,
stra1gh temn g and clearing of natural watercourses so that
heavy rams Will dram off rapidly mstead of ovelflowmg
banks
"Guttenzation" IS what cnllcs of the practice call It,
howeve1, and that word, too , IS desctlpiive A c hannelized
IIVei' or stream IS nothmg but a b1g gutter designed to
transpo1 t water m the most efficient manner from pmnt
A to pomt B
'Guttenza\lon' ts also the direct oppoSite of all that
makes a stJ eam bwlog1cally healthy for fish a nd Wildhie wntes conse1 va tJomst John Madson m a slashmg
attack on the ' 11ver w1eckers " m the September ISSue
of Audubon magazme
When the engmeers remove the bends, pools, nffles.
snags and sandba1 s of a stream, along with the trees
that shade the streambank. all that's left, says Madson,
•s a ban en d1tch
To date, he r eports , more than 8,000 miles of liVIng
streambeds 111 mme th an 40 states have been "gutterJzed," 13 000 more have been scheduled for "Improvement," and the US Soli Conservation ServiCe estimates
that 175,000 miles of streams " need channelization "
The NatiOnal Audubon Soc1ety ha s undertaken a maJor
effort to pubhcize whut It considered to be the excesses
of the Sml ConseiVatwn Service and the Army Corps of
Engmeers ,
Among other thmgs, 1! challenges the alleged flood
control benefits of channehzahon Why, it asks, spend
money on costly proJects to protect fields from bemg
flooded when the nation already has a surplus crop problem?
And anyway, •t cla1ms, the projects often fall to control flood s but JU st transfe r the flo od threat to the next
commun1ty down stream
The troubl e With such arguments 1s that they amount
to acceptmg battle with engmeers on the1r own terms
A conv1ncmg case can always be mad e for the channelizatiOn of thiS or that nver or the dramage of thiS or
that " useless" marsh land The engmeers cannot be
faulted fm knowmg their JOb and domg 11 well
What IS sad IS that there should be any need at all
to defend the n ght of a nver, and Its ammal dependents,
to exiSt
If, as Robert Frost said, "there's somethmg that
doesn't llke a wall," surely there should be something
1ns1de a man that despises a gutter Even an engm eer
should be able to concede the esthetic superiOrity of a
natural, tree- hned , meandermg strea m to a concretehned, arrow-straight ditch, especially 1f he reme mbers
what It was hke m Its an ginal state
But that, precisely, 1s t~e danger: Each generation
of Ame11cans has fewer pe1sonal memones of what the
land was like before It was "Improved" or " developed "
As James Audubon himself wrote, the Wilderness who se
birds and other wi ldlife he observed and catalogued and
pamted disappeared man astomslung short space of time,
almost before his eyes-m only about 20 years , he reckoned, m less than the lifetime of the settlers who followed on hiS heels
Today , nobody remembers the wilderness as Audubon
knew It, which may be an acceptable pnce to pay for
the good hie bemg li ved ily ten s of millions of people
on that sa me land
Tomorrow, the de scendants of those millions may have
to go to a natiOnal pa1k to know what an " unguttenzed"
nver looks like , and conSider that acceptable
it all depends on what people want, and what they
value

By REV. DAVID POUNG
Bowed by the we&lt;ght of centurtes he leans
Upon hiS hoe and gazes on the ground
Tl1e emptmess of ages m hiS face,
'
And on h1s back the burden of the world
Author Unknown

• •

•

A fnend returned from NavaJo tradmg posts m Amana
and was stunn ed by the pnces that craftsmen were getlmg fo r their wares. Pottery, blankets, silver and turqumse Jewelry were bringmg Fifth Avenue pnces A
blanket he could have purchased SIX years ago had risen
tenfold m..pnce Y e~ he was not really unhappy , com mentmg, These craftsmen are fmally getting paid for
wha t they are worth " Th1s century has come to recogmze
the skills and talent of hand work But more than this,
m1ihons are gammg a fresh perspectlve on life as they
appreciate the meanmg of lab~r-others as well as thm
own
For too long, hand labor wa s the crusher that bowed
every worker in the world, descnbed m the poem above
But today a lot of people are lookmg for the hoe, the
hammer and the weldmg torch to g!Ve balance to their
hves and expressiOn to their feelin gs of art and handi craft.
One needs to look only at the catalog of a local commumty college or technical school to see the dozens of
classes and co urses offered m the mechamcal arts and
trades Busmess and professiOnal people, housewives
and llbranans, students and babySitters, all want to enlarge their personal world by learmng a skiU or developmg a handtcraft I suspect it IS much more than a diverSion or hobby, rather a broademng of one 's life and world
The Chnsllan community owes much of 1ts influence
and growth to the natlve understandmg II always has had
toward labor and work The first followers of Jesus were
farmers, laborers, craftsmen, people famihar with nets
and sails, at home With sawdust and nails God was a
Creator and through H1s Son they were called to be coworkers And the term "co worker" appears again and
agam m the letters of Paul (who could cut and trtm
canvas With the best of them )
Being an mtellectual, as well as a spiritual adventure
Chnstlamty does often get locked up m libranes and
lecture halls. Yet 1ts brightest scholars have always
known the nearness of work and pursued it w1th joy and
anticipatiOn.
Labor Day, 1972, ought to be a time to reflect on one's
work, hobby or handicraft. Fortunately, many of the
younger generation are seeking the balance of work and
study and worship that builds for a full personal existence. The young man down the street combmes European
history and weldmg. The gal next door does Enghsh
honors at the University on Tuesday and leather design
on Wednesday It is that kind of world and Labor Day
1972 can happily salute the expansiOn of the trades and
arts and working man. They are members of the same
great 1umon.

BEHAr'S WORlD
'

another uncle and aunt, Mr
VACATION EN DED
Danny Bryan. Jr., has and Mrs. Ronald RusseU.
returned to Sprmgfield after
spendmg the summer here
with hiS grandp are nts in
Middleport, Mr and Mrs John
The Dai~ Sentinel
B1 yan, and an un cle and aunt,
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
Mr. and Mrs Michael DaviS .
MEIGS MASON AREA
He also spen t two weeks with
CHESTH l TANNEHILL ,
E 11ec Ed
ROBE P HOEFLICH ,
Ctty Ef!tlor

PubliShed dally ucept
Saturday by The OhiO Valley

PubhSh•no

I.

Court St

Company,

Pomeroy

111

OF'I!O,

•5 769 e vsmess Off•c t Phon e
992 2156 · Ed.tortal Phon e 992
1157
Second class postage paid at

The b1ddmg has been
West North
East South
Pomeroy , Ohto
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Nat• onal adverUs t ng
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2+
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2N T. repreunrar,ve
Bott.nelll
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?
Gallagher , Inc '; 12 East .t 2nCI
You, South, hold
Sf. New York C1ty, New York
Subscrtpt•on ra tes De
.8 743 ¥2 tAK943 ... 762 lfvered
by carrter where
What do you do now~
A-Pass or bid five diamonds,

depending on how conservative

your partner is.

TODAY'S QUESTION
You do btd f1ve d1amonds
and your p u r t n e r bids five
hearts What do you do now?

available 50 cents pl!r wetk ,

Bv Motor Route where ca rr ier
servtce not available One
month $1 7S By mall tn Ohio
and w Va , One yrar 114 00
SDc month~ 11 25
Three
months 14 50 Subscr~ptlon
pnce 1ncludts Sunday T1mes
Senttnel

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Old movies on TV have thiS effect on the
Post Office's dead letter office· II gets bundles
of ma1i for mov1e stars long dead ... Alex1s
Smith may take the lead m the all-star revival of
"The Women " . X. Cugat's fm!Shmg hiS
memmrs . The Carl Belzes (he's star of TV's
"Judd for the Defense") reconciled ... We
foreca st CBS folding its Cinema Center f1hn
fa ctory; this week's Variety conflnlled the
phasmg-out .. Dong Kmgman 's analyS18 of why.
Natalie Wood and Bob Wagner remarried : "The
dtvorce didn't work out"

DAVID POLING, D.D.

EDITORIAL

Dear Boy-Girl : (Or 1s it Girl-Boy?)
... And If you're just playmg the good ol' game of Hoax the
Columnists, take your business elsewhere Too many stones with
the same plot don 't sell! (We couldn't belleve you now , even if
you swore that this time II was·"no he ."):-: Sue

&amp; THIN68

Voice along Br'Way

.

Another One of Those!
Dear Helen and Sue :
My sisters are blackmailing me mto dressmg up like a gJI'l
They per,suaded me to doll up m the1r clothes once, then put
makeup on me and f1Xed my long ha1r llke theirs I didn 't know
they look a picture of me lllllater, and now they say they 'll show
ltto Mom and Dad if I don't play the1r "sister" whenever they get
bored. Our folks would k1ll me, so what am I to do ? - BOY
FORCED TO BE A GIRL
Dear Boy :
Try telling the truth' Th1s IS the fourth letter we've receiVed
from you, aU concernmg sex changes of one kmd or another
Since you've evidently got a problem, or anyway a fixallon , take
It to a therapiSt - and don 't b01ld up your story to get attentfon! - Helen

Track and Field Today

a an tun m , bbmm:

'' That smile bugs me. You don't suppose she was
'liberated,' do you?"

Wby ls television advertising cDIIIIistenUy the most dece~
live, misleading and downright crooked adverliBing In the
world ? It outrages me. After all, I make my living by ae111ng
television (in one of its forms) to people - but I have no control
over tbe content of the stuff that comes over the airwaves.
What's got me irritated as a barber at a hippie love-in Is an
absolutely devastating report in the most recent Issue of Consumers Unl011 about aspirin - of all things.
This certainly lsn 't the first time studies have been made to
prove that plain old ordinary acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) from
the cut...ate shell at the drug store or supermarket Is just as good
as the many products that promise fast, fast, fast relief, and all
that other garbage.
'
What I find so offensive about the new report Is tbe fact that
one company, making the world's beat-known brand of aspirin,
also markets two other products that promise they are - in effect -better than aspirin.
Naming names, Consumer Union reports lhat the sterling
Drug Co. makes Bayer aspirin. Tbe company claims that there Is
nothing better that plain Bayer aspirin for relief of pam, in Its TV
spots.
True, as far as the report can determine. But the aame
company also makes Vanquish and Cope- both of which, tbey
contend in separate collUilerclals - are far better than shnple
aspirm in reUeving pam.
Now, this ls more than hucksterism gone hog-wild. This Is
sunple, flat-{)ut, rot ton deception of the consumer (who spends 80
cents of every paln.,.eUever dollar on somethmg he thinks will
really-be better than plain aspirin).
If these were different companies pushing the merits of their
own products, 11 wouldn't be so unbearable - but It Is incredible
that a single company should be allowed to make absolutely
contradictory clauns for its var1ous wares.
The Federal Trade CommiSSion can, and should, put a stop to
such blatant dishonesty on your TV screen .
I don't believe every advertising claim I see m newspaper,
magazllle, billboard or d1rect-mailads, by any mea1111. But I'm
about to the pomt that I don't believe ANYTHING I see on
television. Look at these tbree quick examples
When the best-known fluoride toothpaste hit the market, 11
reaUy was a breakthrough in preventing tooth decay. With such
credentials, 11 should have become the best~Uer overmght. It
didn't. Why. Because other toothpastes were making such extravagant clauns that few people believed the real thing, wben 1t
arnved.
That steel-belted tire you see running over spikes and axe
blades really CAN take that kind of punislunent, but the n'C was
skeptical, and asked for proof Wbere were the tests run• On
parkmg lots and shoppmg centers, because TV lent Itself too
readily to deception.
Alka..S.ltzer was about the only product that got even a halfkind word from Consumers Umon (It does relieve pain, and can
help prevent stomach distress from people who are upset by
asp1rm .) Yet most people buy Alka..S.Itzer because Its
commercials are cute- not because they are credible.
ON THE TV DIAL. Dr. Seuss' special, "Horton Hears a
WhO,"IS worthrepeating,and reruns at 8 30, WCHS-TV ... Bobby
Darm and Pat Paulsen ham 11 up on Bobby's show 10 on WSAZTV
'

Television Log
Programs for Tonight and Tomorrow
DO-News 3, 4, 8. 10. 15. Truth or Conseq 6 , I Dr~m of
Jeannie 13; Hathayogo 3J
6 3D-NBC News 3, 4, IS , ABC New s 6, 13 , CBS News 8, tO. Folk
Gu itar 33
7 DO-Course of Our Times 33 , Lets Make A Deal 3, Magic
Circus 13, Dick Van Dyke 4. What's My Line? 8, Big Red
Jubilee 15, News 6
7 »-I'll See You In Court 4; Dragnet a. Chapter 33, Hollywood
Squares 3; To Tell the Truth 6, Wild Kingdom 10
a DO-NBC Adventure Theatre J, 15, 4, My World and Welcome
To 118, 10 ; Jean Shepherd's America 33, Summer Olympics
6, 13
8 »-Jazz Set 33 , Horton Huro A Who 8, 10.
9 DO-Longstreet 6, 13. Ironside J. 4, 15, Hollywood Television
Theatre 33; Mov ie. " Prom ise Her Anything" 8, 10
10 DO-Owen Marsna\16, 13, Bobby Dorin 3, 4, 15, Paul Nuchlms
33.
11 DO-News 3, 4, 6, 10, 13, 15.
11 3D-Johnny Corson 3, 4, 15 , Dick Cavett 6. Movies "Sole
Survivor" 8, "Underworld US A." 10. "The Counterfeit
Plan" 13
1 DO-News 4
t 3D-News 13
6

By JOHN G. GRIFFIN
Amencan pnde m the Games
MUNICH (UP!) - The would be to lose the sprmts to a
United States swunmers have Russian It's never happened
won six gold medals, the U S. m Olympic hiStory
But Borzov has run the 100 m
basketball team 1s 4-0, the
boxers 7-1 and the wresllers 27- 10-flut He' s beaten the
~ . but the 20th Olympic
Ameri~ans m the Umted States
and
there's money around
Games didn't start until today
for many persons
Muni ch' that says he'll do 1t
That's when the track and here
Tup Amerat·an Sprmlers
fteld compelttion hegan
The top Amencan sprtnters
Right out of the startmg
blocks come the 1110-meter are Eddie Hart of Pittsburgh,
runners, the most glor1f1ed Cahf , and Reynaud Robmson
men of games The big of Lakeland, Fla, and Flonda
question this year IS whether A&amp;M, both of whom have run
the U. S sprmters - without 9 98, U1e best Umes m the world
guys hke Jim Hines, Bob thiS year Robert Taylor of
Texas Southern, the other U S
Hayes and Bobby Morrow still ca n ma1ntam their spnnter, has a 10-flat
The answer to the questiOn of
mastery ove r the Europeans,
especially Russtan Val ery who IS the world 's fastest
human \\oon 't come un ti l
Borzov
The most severe blov. to Fnday m the fmals Other

CINCINNATI ( UPI ) - Joe
Hague's game-wm mng double
JOgged Sparky Anderson 's
memory
''I watched that ball shoot
down that third-base hne and
thought right away aboul the
double Elhe Hendricks hit
against us In the 1970 World
Ser1es," sa1d the Cmcmnatl
Reds manager
Hague's double, chmax1ng a
three-run seventh mmng rally
wh1ch earned the Reds to a 4-2
vtctury over the New York
Mets Wednesday mghl, put a
smile on Anderson's face
''Hendri cks' double," he
recalled, "had me cussmg
Remember, 11 put Baltimore
ahead m that second game of
the ser1es "
Abase hJt to left field Is about
as much of a rari ty for the
lefthanded hittmg Hague as the
1970 Wolrd Senes hlt was for
Hendricks, who IS also a lefthanded swmger
"In fact, " said Joe, · I cant
reca ll getting a hit down the
hne hke that s1nce I've been m
the major leagues "
Wipe Out Lead
Gary Gentry was the victim
of Hague's pmch double. which
gave Red lefty Don Gullett hiS
seventh victory agamst a hke
number of losses
The Met ri ghthander had
taken over afle.li.Tony Perez,
Dent• l'lfenk' ."liP plt(cr~ltter
llal McRae routed starter Jon
Matlack with smg les m the
seventh 1nmng McRae's smgle
scored Perez and Wiped out a 2l lead the Mets had taken m the
top of the seventh on Dave
Marshall's home run
"I'm Just glad that Hal and I
could get mto a game once m a
while and do the JOb," sa1d
Hague "You sure want lo do a

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1

2D-Farm Report 13

6 25- Pau\ Harvey 13
6 »-Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, Public Affair 10

6 45-Corncob Report 3.

6 55-Rocky and Bullwlnkle 13.
7
Today, 3. 4, 15. CBS News 8, 10

oo-

3D-Romper Room 6, Underdog 13, Sleepy Jeffers 8
8 DO-Ca pt Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revue 13, 6, Sesame
Street 33 , Friendly Junction 10
8 »-Tennessee Tuxedo 6; Jack LaLanne 13
9 DO-Paul Di xon 4; Peyton Place 13, Romper Room 8; Phil
Donahue 15, What Every Woman Wants to Know J, Timmy
and Lassie 6, Mr. Rogers33 , Capt Kangaroo to.
9 3D-Truth or Conseq 3, Mike Douglas 6; ()le Life to Live 13 ,
Electric Co. 33, My Three Sons 8
10.DO-Dlnan Snore 3, 15, Lucille Bali 10; Ph il Donahue 8; Dick
Van Dyke 13, Halhayoga 33
10 3D-Concentration 3, t5 ; Phil Donohue 4, Beverly Hillbillies 8.
In-School lnslructlon 33, Spill Second 13, My Three Sons 10
10·45-Lucll\e Rivers 6.
ll :OD-Faml\y Affair 8, 10, Lov e American Style 13 ; Com
munlque6, Saleofthe Centurr3, 15. Etec. Co 20.
11 : »-Hollywood Squares 4, 15 . ove of Life 8, Bewitched 6, 13 ,
Sesame St 20
12 DO - Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4; Password 6;
Local New• 10. News 13, Contact a.
12 JD-JW'• Game J. 15, Search for Tomorrows. 10. Split Second
6. Electric Co 33.
1' DO-News 3, All My Children 6, 13 . Divorce Court 8; Flippo at
lne Fair 10, To Be AnnotJnced IS
1 JD-3 On a Match 3, 4, 15, Lefs Make A Deal 6, 13, As the
World Turn• 8. 10, Designing Women 33.
2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13 , Virginia
Graham 6, Love Is Spiendored Thing 8, 10; Societies In
Tran•ttlon 33
2 3D-Doctors 3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13 , Guiding Light 8 10·
Even ing at Pops 33
f
'
'
3:DO-Another World 3, 4, 15; General HQSpltal 6, 13, Secret
Storm 8, 10; Tennis Anyone? 33
3· 3D-Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, Edge of Night 8, 10; Jeff's
Collie 13 , ()le Life to Live 6; Book Beat 33.
4:DO-Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Sesame St 20, 33; Flintstones 13; Batman a. Huckleberry Hound 6, Movie "Once
More, My Darling /' tO.
4 JQ-Green Acres 3. I Love Lucy 6 ; Merv Griffin 4; Andy
Griffith 15; Death Valley Days 8; Former's Dauqhter 13
5·QO-Wagon Train 3; Etec. Co. 33. Mister Rogers 20; Dick Van
Dyke 15, Big Valley 6; Tarzan 13
5. 30-Marsho\ Dillon 15; Eledrlc Co. 33.
6·00-News3, 4, 8, 10, 15; NBC News a, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; I
Dr~m of J~nn1e13 , Sesame 51 20; Hathayoge 33.
6 »-News, 3. 4,6,8, 10,13, 15; French Chef33.
r .oo-Porter Wagoner 3; Oleic Van Dyke 4; News, Weather,
Sports 6, 10; Doddtelown Pipers 8; Magic Circus 13;
Saint 15; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
7 »-Adam 12, 3; I Droam of Jeannie 4; To Tell the Trulti 6;
Parent Game 10.
~: oo-Dr. Simon Locke 3; Summer Olympia 6, 13; O'Hara, u.
S. Treasury a, 10; To Be Announced 15
8:30-Pro Foolbal\3, 4,15, Youth Drug Ward33.
9:DO-Mov\e, "Operation Solo" 8; "Diamond Head" 10.
9: JO-Se \lola 33.
IO.OD-Mlltsfones of Progress 33.
10.30-Washlnaton Week In Review 33.
11 .00-News, WNthor, Sports, 6, 8, 10, 13.
11 : 30-Dick Cavett 6; Movie, "The Comedy of Terrors" I ;
"Flight of the Lost Balloon" 10.
12· 00-./0hnn Carson 3, 4, 15.
I: 30-Rotler Dlrby 4; Loa I News lG.

Addresses Team
&lt;:OLUMJIUS tUI'li - Dr.
Harold Enar~ou, in&lt;. ommg
preSident of Ohto Slate
Umverslly, told the loulball

team Wcdnesda}', ··rn be
nne of the loudest fa ns you
ha\rc.• '
' I have one \\ish for you

all, thai you have fun and
don't get hurt, " Enarson told
them m a surpnsr VISit to
thcar prac ti ce. Enarson
takt•s over as prcs Jdt• nt lrnm
rctmng NOVI Ct' FU\HCU

Fnday
Cua&lt;·h Wood) Hayes put
the team through two drill s.
Today they don pads for the
fmt lime thiS fall
Tht• Bucks w11l open the
seaso n aga mst B1g Ten

upponl'nt lo""a here Sept Hi

Hague's Wrongfield Double DumpsMets

6 DO-Sunrise Se minar 4; Sacred Hearl 10
6 15-Farmhme 16.
6

events openmg day mrlurle Cahf , Jen ny Kemp of Cmheats m the 400-meler hurdles, uritlala md Ja ne Barkmann uf
800 meters and the 10,000 Wayne, Pa
meters
Wnter, 28, broke lhe wolld
The only fmal was the 20- record w1th a score ut 1,166, one
kilometer walk
more than the mark he ld by a
The U. S won two gold Russaan, afld teamma te Lanny
medals and a tota l of seven Bassham, 25, of Fort Worth,
Wednesday to push Its total for Tex , won the stlver medal w1lh
the first four days of the Games 1,157. The women's relay also
lo 22 East Germany 1s second set a world record of 3 55 2
v.tth 15 and the Sovtel Umon 1s
The other silver medals wont
tlurd with 11 The U S has lo Tim McKee of Newton
seven golds and East Germans Squre, Pa , m the 400-meter
and RusSians have five eac h mdtvidual medley and Tom
Latest G~tlds Wun
Bruce of Sunnyvale, Calif . m
The latest golds were won by the 100-meter breastroke
John Wn ter of Clarendon H1lls, McKee was second to Gwmar
m, and by the women 's 400- Larsson of Sweden by 2-l,OOths
meter It ees\yle relay team of a second and Bruce was
The sWimmers on the relay second to Japan's Nobuta ka
team were Shir ley Babashoff Taguchi, who set a wor ld
of Fountam Valley, Calif , record of I 04 94
Sandra Neilson of El Monte,

OSU President-

7

hlllc mm e than JUst pat othc1 the '.\a\' It ~HI S tht!IC
guys on the back '
Prelly Pooped
Don l get the Idea, th ough,
Without so much as a blush.
tl1al Hague's b1lter about Ius Hague adm itted he was p~ett y
bench wat mmg role
pooped when he "ound up on
•If we can score 10 runs a lllll'd after takmg an extra base
game. I d be happy Just s1ltmg on the throw to the plate
' H has been so long smce
on the bench the remamder of
l'\e
g:otten on base I'm :;UI ·
the season," said Ha gue
· When Sparky pu ts guys m p11sed I found the bag, ' he
the lmeup II means he thmks sa 1d 'In the last three month s
the) ca n do the JOb 1hope they I '" sta1ted only fo u1 ~ames
do Wmmng 's the mo~t unpm tan t thmg I'm fi om the
Unl\eiSity of Texas and that's
HUGHES TAKES A TRIP
MANAGUA I UPl i- Howard
Hughes took a one-&lt;la) tnp to
Nwaragua '1 uesda)
P1 es1dent AnastasiO

former
Somoza

sa1d
· He arriVed toda y and he lcll
today · a spokesnwn added
Somoz,, s sec1 elm y wo uld not
Sdy whet e Hughes ca me f1om
01 v.hei e he went when he left
Nil'CI I agurl

WOMEN REt:RUITED
CULDESAC, Idaho 1UPltThe Culdesac Fire Departmenl
ts acl1vely recrmtmg women
for any JOb they are capable of
handling
F1re Ch1ef Jerrv Hewett sa1d
the move IS from necessity He
sa•d the men a1 e usually away
logging during the day and
women ofttn end up dmng the
firef1ghtJng·

,md I'111 0 14 1n those "
Pedro Borbon took over for
Gu ll ett 111 the eighth and
blanked the Mets w1th a
harmless double by Tommie
Agee
Howeve1 Anderson ca lled
upon Tommy Hall m the mn lh

gam

hiS e1ghth save of th e

seosun

One of the Reds Juts was the
I 18Jst of Pete Roses ca1eot ,

'' He set up

well, used

audibles and picked up hiS
pnmary
and
alternate
receivers,11 Skonch satd. "We
allowed h1m to dtrect the attack qmte a bll "
Kingrea
"
Phipps w1ll start the game
A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE .
WF.NATCHEE. Wa sh 1 UPI )
The Browns wtll gel the1r agamstthe Bengals Cmcmnah
- Mayor Walter B Young was f1rst look at the Bengals'
practicing to lead Thursdav's
three-m1le commumty bi C)~le
NE WCON1 RAC1
ride-designed to call attentiOn CONTRACT SIGNED
PHILADELPHIA
(UPl)
PITTSBURGH
1UPI I
to cycling safely- when he fell
Tom
Underwood,
an
IS-yearTlurly -n1ne year-o ld Ken
hom his bike and broke three
old left-hand ed stnkeout artist Schmkel the all-lime sconng
nbs
m h1gh school and Amencan leader of the expansiOniSt
LegiOn ba II, Signed a contract Pittsburgh Pengums, Wedfor the 1973 season Tuesday nesda) s1gned a contract w1lh
with the Philadelphia Ph1lhes the club fm· \he 1972-73 season
Underwood, of Kokomo, lnd ,
Schmkel, who scored 15 goals
the club 's No 2 selection m this and 30 ass1s1s last season. has
year's free agent draft, will colle cted 215 pomts as a
pttch for the Phillies' Auburn, Pengum smce JOining them m
N Y farm club m the New the 1967 expansiOn draft.
York-Penn League
SAINTS TRIM ROSTER
END CUT
NEW ORLEANS iUPI)
GREEN BAY (UPI)- The
The New Orlea ns Sa tnt s
Green Bay Packers Tuesday
tnmmed dov.n to the reqUired
cu t defe nsi ve end BtU
49 playe1 s Wednesday by
Johanmgme1er of Co lorado
culling veteran safe ty John
State from the squad
Mallory and transferring
The 6-foot-4 , 240 pound
rookie runmn g back Frank
Johamngmeter , 24, JOmed
McGuigan to the taxi squad.
Green Bay as a free agent.

P!ll sburgh
Ch1cago
New York
51 Lout s
Mo11treal
Pht ladelphta

1s 2-2 In extubiiJOn play and the
Browns are wmless m four
tnes

Brov. n came out agamst the
111Jured waiver rule of pro
foo tball Wednesday He sa id 11
tsn't domg what 11's deSigned
to do "
Brown satd many teams put
players on the InJUred waiver
hsl even though they are not
111Jured, 111 order to stoc kpile
for the future The waived
player 1s not counted m th e
team's player limit and most
other clubs are scared off from
daunmg htm because of the
" mJured " labe l

Brown sa 1d many coaches
even agree among themselves
not to clallll players from, the
lnJW'ed waiver list Brown sa1d
he 1sn 'I among th em
He sa1d he recently tned to
cla im two good rookie
rece1vers who were on the hst,
but ne1ther team wanted to lose
the players so they were taken
off the hst
Both coaches called Brown
and asked h1m to withdraw his
clatm
" I told them that they have
better personnel than we do
anyway and that th ey were JUSt
trymg to perpetua te themselves by hangmg onto th e
players mvolved," Brown said.
"The waiver rule ISn't domg
what It's deoigned to do. The
'haves ' are able lo hang onto
players and the 'have nots'
aren't gettmg many of the
players put on waivers ''

77 46
67 57
63 58
60 63

626

57 65

46 7 19 1"1
361 321 2

540 101 "1

521 13
488 17

Ncw York was ca lied to
pruv1de a ruhng on whtch score
was to be accepted The USGA
sa1d the second one
Wynn got $1,150 for the&gt; mat
lhe Candywood Country ~lub
course east of here, Lewts
pocketed $1,100and thtrd-place
Chuck Rotar of Canlon, wtth a
282. got $900

one hole

Wynn hmshed the 72-hole
tourney w1tll

(:1

10-untl~r-par

278, mcludmg a 68-70-!38 '"
44 78
Wednesday's 36-hole &gt;&lt;mdup
West
W L Pet GB Lcw 1s f1m shed three strokes
C1nc1nnat1
78 46 629
back Jn second place
Houston
71 54 568 7 1 ~
l.ev.IS' luck turned sour v. hen
Los Angeles
65 57 533 12
he drove a ball mto the woods
Allanla
57 69 452 22
~&gt;&lt;1n Franc 1sco 56 70
444 23
DeclaJmg 1t an unplayable
San D1ego
&lt;16 78 371 32
he dropped another ball
he,
Wednesday 's Res ults
But he decided 1t also was
Ch1 9 Los Ang 8, 11 mns
C1ncmna l1 4 New York 2
unpla)able
Montreal 3 Atlanta 2
The PGA lour regula! then
Houston 5 Phtladelphta 3
played a proviSional ball and
San Fran 3 St LOUIS 2
Prlt sburQh 11 San Otego 0
also hJl a second ball The first
Today's Probable Pttchers
dropped ln on five stl okes , the
All T1mes EDT
Los ~nge l es (Osteen 14 9)
Cht cago (Reuschel 6 6) , 2
pm
Philade lphta (Fnt chell3 6)
H ouslon (Oterker 13 7). 8
p rn

at
30

FATALINJURY
MASSILLON, Oh10 (UP!) Brwn Coleman, a 16-year-{)ld
S,mdusky H1gh School football
pla)er who suffered a severe
head InJUry dunng a scrtmmage agamst Masslilon High
School on Aug 26, died Wedne sday at Massillon City
Hospital

second one m seven

at
30

IOllly ~ames scheduled )
Fnday's Games

San Fran at Ptttsburgh , n1ght
S~n D1 ego at Ch tcago
Los Ang at St Louts 2, twtl tght
Pl1 1la at Allan ta 2 lwt mgh t
New York at Houston ntght
Monlreal at Ctnct ntght
Amertcan League

VC:Jda Pmson, who's now wtlh

the Cahforma Ange ls
The Reds,1dle today, wmd up
mmn g aflm une·out smgles by their twmestand w1th a th rceMarshall and Bud Ha11 elson gt:~ me senes agamst the
Hall ret11 ed p1nch-lutteJ Munt1 ca l Expos beg1nmng
Willie M,JV s and Jun FregoSI to Fr ul(• v mght

Tommy Casanova Sunday
Casanova, a free safety, ran
a punt return back 52 yards for
a \ouchdown against Green
Bay thiS summe r and a 58-yard
run by him set up a touchdown
agamsl Detroit
"He's got the sptrit ," satd
Bengals Coach Paul Brown
'' He tnmks he will go all the
wa1 every t•me The sp1nt
spreads to the blockers. ·
Skorich sa1d Iu s quarterback, Mike Phipps, "loo ked
every bit as good m the film as
he did m the ga me, ' agamst
Minnesota

Bob Wynn of Kettenng won hiS
th1rd straigh t OhiO Open golf
By Umted Press International
tournament t1tte Wednesday
Nat1onal League
afte1
challenger Bob Lewis Jr
East
W L Pet GB of Warren scored a seven on

lymg the club record set b}

Willis Sidelined

WILMINGTON , Oh10 (UP!)
- Cmcmnat1 Bengals runnm g
back Fred W1ll1s v.1ll be
Sidelined fur abou\ two 11eeks
because of a knee InJury suffered In Monday mght's wm
over Pluladelphia
The Bengals put m a onehour, 10-minute practice
Wednesday without Willis m
preparatiO n for thetr next
exlubltwn game agamst the
Cleveland Browns at OJlumbu s
At the Browns' tram1ng
camp at H1arm, C.,ach Ntc k
Skonch said he would start
R1 ck Kmgrea at m1ddle
linebacker
" Our rotatiOn IS g!Vlng
every body a shot," Skonch
sa1d "This will be an Important week of evaluation for

~BASEBAU Wynn Takes Ohio Open
STANDINGS WARREN, OhiO (UPi i - The U S. Golf Assoc1alton 1n

Detro1l
Balltmore
Bos ton
New York
Cleve land
M1lwaukee

East
W L Pet GB
67 57 540
67 57 540

64 58
65 59

525 2
524 2

58 66
48 IS

468 9
39018 1 1

We st

W L Pel GB
51 589
71 52 577 J112

Oakland

73

Ch 1cago
M1nnesola
61 60 504 1Qih
Kansas C1ty
60 62 492 12
Calt l orn ta
56 67 455 161, 2
Te&gt;&lt;as
49 75 395 24
Wednesday's Result s
Bost on 4 Ch1cago 2
New York 3 Te)(as I
Kan Ctly 6 Mtlwaukee 2
M111n 7 Ba l hmore 1
Oak land 2 Cleveland 0
Ca ltforn ta 4 Detrotl 1
Today's Probable Ptl chers

SQUIRREL
SEASON
OPENS
SEPT. 8
Our_ complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment '' here ready for selection. Made
by world -known manufacturers and in a large
range of prices .

All T1mes EDT

Detrorl ( Fryman 3 1) at
Ca l1forn1a (Ryan 141 2) 11 p m
Kansas (tty (Jackson 1 0) at
Milwaukee (Lockwood 6 10).
830prn
Texas {H and 109) at New
York ( Peterson 13 13) 2 p m
(On ly games schedul ed)
Fnday 's Ganes
Ch1cago at New Yor k , n tght
Kan City at Bos ton, ntghf
Mtlwaukee at Texas, ntght
Cleveland at M1nn, ntght
Balt1more at Caltf ntght
Detro 1f at Oakland, n1ght

lnternattonalleagu e Stand1ng s
By Umted Press lnternattona I

W
Charleston
Loulsvdle
Ttdewater

Toledo
Rochester
Syracuse

R1chmond
Pentnsula

L Pel

80 59
78 6J
74 64

561

536

73 66 525
518

72 67
63 76
60 78
55 84

Gil

476 -

2
5t12
7
8

AMMUNITION OF ALL KINDS
WESTERN · REMINGTON

SHOTGUNS &amp;RIFLES
Remington - Winchester - Ithaca Harrison &amp; Richardson- MossbergBrowning Gun Cleaning Kits - Gun
Oil - Recoil Pads - Game Bags Shell Vests - Gun Cases - Hunting
Accessories - Hunters Jackets &amp;
Caps - Hunting Pants &amp; Caps - Rifle
Sling Straps - Steel Traps.

453 17
435 l9 t;.,

396 25

Wedne•day's Results

LICENSED GUN DEALER

Toledo 2 Syracuse 1

Rochester 6 Loutsvtlle 'l
Pen1nsu la 4 Rtchmond 3
Ttdewater 3 Charle ston 1

F11 st public rec it atiOn of
th e famous poem. 'Casey at
the Bat. · was gJVen by De
Wolf Hopper al Wallack s
J'heat e1 New York Ctty May

EBERSBACH
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llOW. MAIN ·
POMEROY
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e~~.tra protection agatnst severe ex
posure to the elem en ts It adheres
perfectly to any c lea n surf ace wtl h the
exceptron of new galvamzed 1ron

GOOD GROOMING has Its place In at hletics but East
Germany's Jurgen Geschke would appear to be going
to extremes for the Olympics Actuull)•, Geschke and
his partner, Werner Otw, \\Orld tandem blcvcling
champions, apply a shaver as prcrace precaution, to
facilitate first-aid treatment In case of an ucddeul

,

'"

-

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Dries to a nexible

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little it
costs to
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fil m

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51 00 Cov&amp;r Ch3rge Sat. Night, Sept 2

Hours · 7 a.m. loS :IO p.m. Dolly ,
773-SSII

MASON , W. VA.
• 7 o.m

1o9 p.m. Friday &amp; Saturday

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

�f &gt; r "

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31,1972
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Powerhouses In Big·B Football Begins Tonight

By United PI'I!Ss Internalional
The . National Football
Conference
powerhous.s
have
Sooners.
By CHARLIE SMITII
League
opens another long
But then Ne.braska arid
KANSASCITY,Mo. (UP!) - the material; the tradition and
::~
By MILTON RICHMAN
~ll Given the proper chain of everything else necessary. Oklahoma in 1971 may have "weekend" or exhibition
UPI Sports Editor
Last season Colorado was fielded the best two teams In games tonight when Coach
events, Nebraska, Oklahoma
By MILTON RICHMAN
and Colorado could field the beaten soundly by Oklahoma, the history of college footbalL George Allen and his
MUNICH (UPI)- She's a small, gray-haired old lady, 75 bes I three college football 45-17, and Nebraska, 31·7. The That's a mouthful and will Washingto~ Redskin "Over the
years old if she's a day.
learns in the nation this falL Buffaloes, though a very good draw cries of rage from Bir- Hill Gang" host the Miami
Thai good color which comes from being outdoors is in her The odds against such a team, were a distant third mingham, Austin ana ~oum Dolphins.
The NFL is Ita luring another
cheeks and all it takes is one look to know the spirit of reckless · happenstance are phenomenal, behind the Comhuskers and Bend, but ,those who watched
five~ay weekend which won 't
both
lesms
all
season
and
the
but those three Big Eight
young adventure still is deep inside her bones.
slam-bang- collision at Norman end until Labor Day night when
Every day she U!kes up her same position allhe gale outside
on Thanksgiving Day had no Houston is at Minnesota.
the Olympic Village.
On Friday night , the
doubts.
Nebraska was 35-31
QuieUy, patiently, without really disturbing anyone, she
victor and spectators thought Baltimore Colts - minus indutifully puis in her 6or 8 hours getting what she's after from the
their $6 tickets were vastly jured Bubba Smiih- will meet
athletes and she has this same one word for all those good enough
the Detroit Uons at Tampa,
By JOE FROHLINGEK
with a seventh-inning single, underpriced.
to oblige her.
A
Look
at
the
Pretenders
Fla.
in a nationally televised
UPI Sports Writer
said "records don't mean
"Danke... "
Bullet's take a quick look at conlest.
San Diego's ace Sieve Arlin much. Winning the division is
She thanks each athlete for his or her autograph, and by this
There will be seven games on
the
Big Eight's three national
time she must have more autographs lhan anybody else in the was pitching against Pitts· what counts. I go out every day championship pretenders in
burgh Wednesday night while and try to do the best I can and
city of Munich.
grandfather Harold, who did it's nice when the records 1972:
It lsn 't That Easy
NEBRASKA - Nebraska
the play-by-play on the first come."
Her work isn't that easy. She's so small, she frequently goes major league game broadcast
probably
will rise or fall with
In other National League
unnoticed ind pccaslona!ly gets, buffeted about by the athletes ~on Aug . 5, 1921 returned again action, Cincinnati edged New sophomore red-shirt quar·
hurrying In and out of the Village. She's from tough stock, to the Piraii'S' radio network. York, 4·2, Montreal nipped terback David Humm, a classy
though, and keeps coming back for more. There are no favorites,
Arlin jokingly told his Atlanta, 3-2, Houston downed signal-caller from Las Vegas,
with her. She goes after male and female athletes alike and it grandfather before the game Philadelphia, 5-3, San Fran- Nev. The schedule is in the
doesn't matter what country they come from ... Norway .. . thaI he "better do the first cisco eked past St: Louis, 3-2, Cornhuskers' favor . They
Mongolia ... Japan ... Yugoslavia ... Cuba ... East Germany .. . couple of innings because I and Chicago topped Los could cruise past UCLA, Texas
A&amp;M, Army and Minnesota
West Gennany ... Italy ... Australia ... Russia ... or the U. S. A. might not be around long after Angeles, 9-8, in 11 innings.
before entering conference
She geis them all.
thai." Grandpa Arlin was on
Most of their
warfare.
I asked her why she was doing it, and she smiled and said in the mike for the first three
problems may he ironed out by
German:
innings and saw his grandson's
then.
'I may never get another chance, and then when I have these prophecy come true a little
The word from Lincoln is
signatures, I can perhaps make one of my grandchildren happy later.
that coach Bob Devaney's last
YoungSievewasraked for 11
by giving them to him."
By Vito Slellino
team may be his best defenOutside I!Je fact she's collecting autographs for her grand- hits in a six-inning stint as the
UPI
Sports Writer
I sively. Devaney has announced
son, this particular gray-haired, little old lady isn't that much Pirates, boasting six .300
The Oakland A's first unFOREST HILLS, N. Y. his retirement from coaching
hillers in their lineup, turned in
different than so many other people here in Munich.
(UP! ) - Stan Smith had his after this season. What effect dressed Gaylord Perry
For them, the Olympics are the World Series, the Super Bowl an old-fashioned rtisplay of hands full in his first round this might have on the Corn- Wednesday night and then they
brute stre ngth in an 11-0 match on Wednesday when 15and the World Cup all rolled into one.
beat him.
huskers is debatable.
So they copgregate in front of any public TV set, of which slaughter.
Perry was ordered to change
year-old Billy Marlin had the
OKLAHOMA - The first
Dave Cash had a big night,
his
shirt in the sixth inning by
there are plenty all over Munich, and they watch the various
audacity to take the first set thing to consider about the
belting
a
double,
single
and
Olympic events, the same way people in the U. S. used to gather
from the defending U.S. Open Sooners is they have one senior umpitt Nestor Chylak
home run for four runs and
in front of radio store!! lo listen to an account of the World Series
and Wimbledon champion, and problem and one problem only. after A's manager Dick
Willie Slargell, the major
years ago.
Billie Jean King, launching the That is at quarterback where Williams made the familiar
league's most productive
women's division today, had slow-footed senior Dave complaint that Jerry was
People Keep Enthusiasm
hitler, increased his RBI total
Naturally, the localites enjoy seeing their own West Germsn to 103 with a single and home better keep alert against Patti Robertson will attempt to throwing a greaseball.
In the seventh inning, Mike
Hogan.
athletes pile up the points, but the fact the East Germans have run .
replace Jack Mildren. The
"I had her at set point once," other 21 positions are manned Epstein slarnllitd a homer off
been doing better up to now hasn't put any crimp in their enClemente Ties Wagner
Perry and Oakland was on its
Patti
grinned through her by superb athletes.
thusiasni. The people still keep watching on TV, and the sharpies
Roberto Clemente, who lied
way to a 2-0 victory over the
scalping Olympic tickets along the Marienplatz, yes, they have Honus Wagner at 2,970 for the freckles. "I've losllo her seven
One of the Finest
Cleveland
Indians that boosted
times
and
never
look
even
a
The Sooners are expected to
them here, too, have been doing nicely, they tell me, since the atl·time Pirate hit leadership
the
A's
W
eslel'll
Division lead
set,
but
·
there's
always
this
throw more off the Wishbone
games .began.
time , isn 't there?"
with Robertson than they did in the American League to 11'.
The people here in Munich don't know all the athletes and
The
West
Side
Tennis
Club
with Mildren. Wide receiver games.
don't care. All they know is they're competing here and that's
Several learns have comwas treated to an endless John Carroll is considered one
enough. The athlete here is king. For now, anyway. Perhaps
THE HORSES
series of matches Wednesday of the finest It's difficult to plained about Perry's alleged
never before in the history of sports have so many athletes been
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Dusty but even the glorious weather anticipate the Sooners being greasebatl to the umpires this
made so much of a fuss over, but there is evidence that at least H. Forbes moved up from third could not speed up play. Of.
year but most of the lime the
one of them realizes all this sudden adulation is a temporary on the outside at the stretch ficiais wistfully scheduled 74 anything but good, but much of umpires simpl y check his
their success will depend on
thing.
and won the featured $1,700 ' matches to slice the men's field Robertson . He is surrounded, uniform or glove and then the
Micki King of Hermosa Beach, Calif., was delighted with the pace al Scioto Downs Wed- of 148 in half, but only 56 were
however, by classy per- game continues.
gold medal she won in the women's three-meter springboard nesday night by one and one- finished.
JohnOdom went 7 1-3 innings
formers.
diving competition, but reality promptly overtook her.
and
Darold Knowles and Hollie
quarter lengths over Avanti.
COLORADO - The Buf"It was sort of a sad moment," she said, reflecting on the Tiogas Gaye was third.
Fingers
finished up as the A's
faloes have lost two starters
presentation ceremony. "! mean you've done it. What is there
Forbes covered the mile in
since spring training. Tight end blanked Cleveland. Knowles
afterward?"
the eighth race in 2:04 4-5, for
J. V. Cain was ruled ineligible singled in an Insurance run in
BOUT
SCHEDULED
Not that much really.
the \4-year-old gelding's 7Jst
for the f~ll semest,er /bx, . ~ the eighth inning to score Ted
1
PHILADELPHIA
(UPI)
' vic!Ory.
'
·
i . The only ones wi\ll:f!t\' c\Ulnce pi ~gin on their Olympic' 1'~~time
NCAA
and
sopMlliote ·Kubiak, whll 'tripled'. · •" ·
1
The Otlter Games
, VICtories substantially are the heavyweight fighters, as Joe · Fo~bes 'returned $:l:iJo,' S2.40, Bennie Briscoe, a tough left defensive tackle Bubba
hooker
in
the
Philadelphia
ln
the
other games, MinFrazier, Muhammad Ali and Floyd Patterson have done in the $2.40. Avanli paid $3.80, $3.00
Bridges was a summer-school
tradition,
and
the
secondneoota routed Baltimore, 7-1,
past. What possible demand is there for the winner of the men's and Tiogas Ga)'e $4.80.
ranked middleweight in the casualty. Bridges, a 6-3, 200- California dowlled Detroit, 4-1,
The
7-8
quin
etla
was
worth
modern pentathlon or the single sculls•
world , signed a contract pounder, figured to be out- Boston edged Chicago, 4-2,
$14.40.
Wbat 's the Reason?
Wednesday wchallenge world standing ,
The
2nightly
double
of
Eds
For that matter, what makes anybody want to compete in the
Colorado's potential is in- New York beat Texas, 3-1, and
champion Carlos Monzon of
City
topped
Buddy
and
Simplicity
returned
dicated by the fact that Folsom Kansas
Olympics in the first place? Is it solely an ego trip, a private
Argentina
in
Buenos
Aires
on
Field has been sold out for aU Milwaukee, 6-2.
desire to be acknowledged the best in the world in one particular $180.00.
Oct. 7.
The
4,327
harness
racing
fans
specialty?
Monzon and Briscoe fought home games for the first time
wagered
$199,967.
Curiously, many Olympic competitors can offer no one
to a draw in Buenos Aires five in htstory.
Equatoria l diameter of the
The Buffs have the
overriding reason for wishing to compete other than the general
yea rs ago in a bout that
earth is almost 7,927 miles;
one that most people enjoy winning anything.
Monzon described as "one of capabilities, plus a schedule the polar diameter is 7.900
that permits them to meet both miles.
Some of the athletes here,llke Jack Bacheler, the skinny 28the toughest" of his career.
Oklahoma and Nebraska in
year-old Ph.D. from Birmingham, Mich., even vowed they had
PACERS SIGN THREE
Boulder. Should they jet! early,
enough at one point. Bacheler, a marathon runner, remembers
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP! )
ON WAIVER
as
they did last year before
how rotten he felt coming across the finish line in New Orleans - The American Basketball
NEW YORK (UP)) - The injuries depleted the learn,
not thai long ago.
Association champion Indiana New York Jets put tight end they could be as good or better
"The temperature was about 80 degrees and the relative Pacers signed three players Gary Arthur, a third-year than anyone .
humidity aboul90," he says . "I was dead tired after the first five Wednesday, including free player out of Miami of Ohio, on
The rest of the Big Eight
miles, but kepi on going anyway. When I got across the finish line agents John Sutler and Bill the injured waiver list Wed- Confere nce - Kansas, Kansas
I never wanted to run again in my life. I knew I would, though." Debeer, both 6-feel-9.
nesday. The Jets pared down to State, Missouri, Iowa State and
Maybe that's why the people of Munich keep gathering
Also signed to a contract was 49 players after culling seven Oklahoma Stale - will be
6-foot·3 Wally Rice of Penn men from the squad.
around the TV sets.
playing for fourth place.
Maybe, too, that's why the little gray-haired old lady keeps Military, the club's 121h·round
draft choice.
coming out to the Olympic Village every day.

Saturday
including
a
6ationally televised night
game in Klmsas City where the
Chiefs will host the Super Bowl
champion Dallas Cowboys.
The New York Giants face
lhe Philadelphia Eagles at
Princeton, N. J., and the New
YorkJelswillmeettheAUanta
Falcons at Georgia Tech's
home _ Grant Field _ in
Atlanta . In Saturday night
games besides the Kansas City

·Dallas game, .SI. Louis .·ls .rt.,
Green Bay, Los Angeles is at
San Diego, New England is at
Denver and New OrleanS faces
Pittsburgh at Memphis.
On Sunday afternoon, Buffalo is at Chicago, Cincinnati .
faces Cleveland at Columbus
· and Oakland is at San Francisco. Then the HoustonMinnesota battle on Monday
night will wrap up th~ fourth
weekend of exhibition action.

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Pomeroy, recognized as judge of the tellers for the whO made her appointments of
nationally for outstanding election . Mrs. Melvin Good was chairmen. Mrs. Darlene
work with cystic fibrosis and elected the new Central Collins, "Hatbox" editor.; Mrs.
tubercular children, has been Division chapeau and all of the Ilene Cox, National Jewish
appointed by the Eight and new officers were installed at a Hospital ; Mrs. Barbara
Burditt, constitution and byForty Nationale as the children banquet.
and youth chairman for the 1(). At Friday's session of the Ia laws; Elsie Gleason, national
~"'litate Central Division.
marche presided over by Miss finance; Helen Menendez,
"' Mrs. Martin's appointment Dorothy M. Dolle, chapeau nurses scholarship; Evelyn
:, was announced at the 51st nationale , of Kentucky, a Gill, partnership; l.elia Hunt,
:::. Annual La Marche of the processional of the national ritual and emblems; Jane
' ' national organization Aug. 24- officers
and
chapeaux Grahlamn, national trophies
' 25 in Chicago. For the past year nationales was held . Greetings and awards; Mrs. Wanda
she has served as the Depar- were brought by Mrs . Clyde Henderson, publicity scraptemental d'Ohio chapeau. Finley, general chairman, with book, and Eunice Dailey,
: During that lime a total of Mrs. Suvak giving the in- handbook.
"'' S9,25S.20 was used for children vocation. Mrs. Lois Lansdale
The national convention
] and youth work.
led in the pledge to the flag, concludedwithabanquelinthe
:t• A meeting U1 outline the Mrs. Helen Meyer gave ballroom on Saturday night
Central Division programs for "Fiander's Field," and Mrs. attended by over 300 persons. A
Tl' children and youth will be Wilmer McComas le demi hors~shoe motif was carried
·• •conducted by Mrs. Marlin at chapeau of the Western out m the decoratwns wtth
~: Canton, Nov. 1&amp;.18. The major Division, gave "America's miniature horses, shoes and
1:parl of her promotion of Answer."
gold rose pins being given as
~ : · children and youth work in the
Distinguished guests favors.
~: 10 states will be through presented included John
The 1973 conve ntion will be
:;. bulletins and communications, Geiger, outgoing national held in Hawaii.
··• she reports.
commander of the American
Attending the Nationale La
·:: ln.Chicago with Mrs. Martin Legion; Harold A. Cummings, Marche from Ohio besides
·:::ror the.national convention was chairman of the national Mrs . Marlin and Mrs. Walker,
·~· Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine, convention; Mrs. Charles C. both members of Meigs County
:;: the immediate past Depar- Shaw, national convention Salon 710, were Mrs. Hazel
:~. Iemen tal d'Ohio le secretaire- chairman for the American Elliott, second member of
: cassiare.
Legion Auxiliary; Mrs. trophies and awards; Mrs.
·• · Awards received by Ohio at Maurice Kubby, national Violet Aichholz, second
· the convention were second children and youth chairman of
,. place In both division and the Auxiliary, Mrs. Ferdman
~· national on scrapbook; first Hendricks, Illinois, president
' place in the Central Division on of the Auxiliary, and Edward
history, and a certificate of A. Schalk, department com•· reoognition for membership. A mander of the American
· trophy was presented to Mrs. Legion in Illinois. Reports of all
: Martin In recognition of national officers and comMr . and Mrs. Melvin Circle
: organizing two of the five new millee chairmen
were and Mr. and Mrs. James
&gt;salons in the United Stales presented.
Butcher entertained with a
· during ber term as Ohio's
Speaker at the Friday ligh t buffet honoring' Mrs .
~ • chapeau. ·
eve ning session was Dr. Freda Circle and Mrs . Butcher's
At the pre.marche meeting Kehn who was the national parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
~ attended by Mrs. Martin on chapeau of Eight and Forty, E.
Blakeslee Saturday
.: constitution and by-laws, a 1926-27. Her topic was "As It evening . The event held at the
~ 'proposal to change partnership Was in the Beginning" and she Blakeslee home was in honor of
; age from 21 to 18 was defeated. gave a .fuJI resume of the their 35th wedding an• National dues were increased organization of Eight and niversary .
: 10 cents bringing the total to $1. Forty.
Hostesses se rving at the
• Mrs. Walker attended a
It was reported by Mrs. buffet were Mrs. Vincent Dabo,
.: seminar on resolutions.
Marguerite Hess of West Mrs. Ira Butcher, Mrs. Gerald
• Mrs. Helen Menendez of Virginia, national partnership Shuster, and Mrs. Howard
• Illinois, co-chairman of the Ia chairman, that total pari- Nolan . Serving lhe three tiered
~ marc he, presided at the nership iri the nation is 24,292. wedding anniversary cake
• Central Division breakfast held A memorial service was held were Mrs. Melvin Circle, Mrs.
: in the Chicago room. Mrs. at the Saturday morning James Butcher, Mrs. Harold
; Marlin was the l'aumonier for session. Mrs. Suvak had Lohse, and Mrs. Ted Downie.
:. the breakfast attended by 91 charge of the service with Miss
The guest list included Mr ·
"'•h
d
F~
11
1
·
ib
1e
to
d
and
Mrs . Edson Roush, Mr.
'11 ,..,. t an
!JI· .• po e ~ vmg tr u
eDistinguished guee presen'!ed ceased members. Soloist was and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mr. and
~ included Mrs. Helen Meyer, St. Mrs. Thomas Leervig. White Mrs. Hayman Barnitz, Rev .
.:: Louis, Mo.; Mrs. Darlene chrysanthemums and candles and Mrs. Robert Card, Mr. and
':. Collins and Mrs. Sally Finley, in a horseshoe formation were Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, Mr. and
~ past natlonale chapeaux, used in the service. Dr. Kehn Mrs. John Werner, Mr. and
.:, Marguerite Hess of West gave a tribute to Mrs. Hugh Mrs . James Hanson, Mrs.
: virginia, national partnership McClung of Virginia, a past Helen Handley, Mr. and Mrs.
~ chairman. Each stale gave national chapeau. Speaker was Patrick Lochary, Mr. and Mrs .
: favors at the breakfast with Frank Karel!, director of Howard Nolan, Mr. and Mrs.
::: ohio contributing red felt planning at the National Gerald Shuster. Mr . and Mrs.
~ cardinals .
Jewish Hospital in Denver~ an
New officers elected for the institution supported by Etght
organization were and Fortv.
": Mrs. Hazel Landry of New
On Saturday night Mrs .
Orleans, La., chapeau; Mrs . Marlin attended the national
A bo• social was the feature
·.;;-Mary Russell, New Mexico, post
marche
pouvior. of the annual get-acquainted
~ l'aumonir ; Mrs. Marie Smith, "Gateway to Service" was party of the Ohio Eta Phi
.. Pennsylvania, la concierge; announced as the theme for the Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
; Mrs. Ann Suvak, New York, Ia 1972-73 year by Mrs. Landry Sorority sll!ged Tuesday night
at Royal Oak Park.
Given prizes for the most
attractively decorated boxes

Blakeslees
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DU QUOIN, Ill. (UPI) Super Bowl has super speed,
and he didn't need all of il to
win harness racing's prized
stake for 3-year.old !rollers,
the Hambletonian.
That was the story from
driver Stanley Dancer, who
piloted the sturdy bay who
likes chewing tobacco and fried
chicken to a stake record and a
world record in seizing the lop
prize of $59,545 from the gross
purse of $119,090.
Super Bowl, racking up his
eighth and ninth straight wins,
turned in his sixth and seventh
miles under two minutes this
year. In the first heat, he won
by almost four lengths with a
clocking of 1:57 2-5, equalling
the second fastest time ever in
the stake, and he led from wire
to wire in the second heat to
win in I :56 2-5, a record for the
stake .
The combined time of 3:53 45 set a world record for two
heats for 3-year.old trollers,
eclipsing the 3:54 hung up in
1967 by Nevele Pride when he
was driven by Dancer, too, as
the pride of the stable. The
previous Hambletonian heat
record was I :56 4-5 by Ayres in
1964.
"Super Bowl still had a lot
left, even in that second heat,"
Dancer said. "Earlier I didn 't
think too much of this colt, but
he kept getUng better and
better and in this race he
shOI)ed he is somethinR extra

special."

The victory boosted Super
Bowl 's career earnings to
$384,222, and Dancer said he
probably would have about 12
more races before he retires,
scheduled Jan. 1, to stud.
Mrs. Stanley Dancer, who
with Mrs. Hilda Silverstein

owns the coli, has granted an
option to Hanover Shoe Farm
to purchase the coli at that '
time for $1 million providing he
passes fertility tests and a
physical examination. Then he
will stand at the farm as the
replacement for his father,
Stars Pride, now 26 years old .

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departemenla l; Mrs . Doris
Stanrif( second demi chapeau
premiere departemental;
Reva Cihla, I~ concierge, and
Audrey Glaub, l'archivisle .

!

Harold Lohse, Mr. and Mrs.
James Sheets, Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Dabo, Mr. and Mrs.
Ira Butcher, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
A. Downie, Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, Miss Marianne Circle .
Mr. and Mrs . Dana Hoffman,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hoff-

were Carol McCullough, a doll
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flower basket.
· Members attending were Sue
Zirkle , Char lotte Taunton,
Mrs . McCullough, Vicki
Gloeckner, Ruth Riffle, Linda

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TRAVEL IN WEST
Mrs . J . Edward Fosler accompaned her son-in-law and
daughter, the Rev . and Mrs.
Carver Williams and children,
on a trip to tlie west coast. They
spent a week at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Fosler of
Oroville, Calif. Highlights of
their trip included a visit to San
Francisco with a ferry boat
trip into the Bay under the
Golden Gale and the Bay
Bridges . They took in
Disneyland at Anaheim and the
Ringling Bros. Circus at Long
Beach. They also visited Mrs.
Ira Foster of Seal Beach,
sister-in-law of Mrs. Foster.

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fOODLINER, MiddlepOrt, OhiO
Reuister for Free GiftS

eDURING OUR 9 TH ANNIVERSARY SALEI

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NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE--- ALL PERSONS MUST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
ENTER . NO EMPLOYE OR MEMBER OF
FAMILY MAY ENTER .
ONE PRIZETOAFAMILY

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DEPOSIT
AT
OUR
STORE

0RAWINGSAT.NIGHTSEPT.2AT8P.M.
You Oo Not Have .to be Present to Win
M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER ·

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WHERE CAN YOU FIND THE TOP NOTCH LINES?

All.EEN

Girls

DRESSES
By Cinderelkl and
Tiny Town
Size
4 thru 14

Oven Ware
1 &amp; 1~ Quarts

Permanent Press
Easy Care · Easy Wear

$100

Assorted Styles, Colors and Fabrics.

...•

$400

DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

to $1200

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

Open 9 Til6 Mon. thru Sat.
In The Heart of Down Town Middleport.

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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_J

DEVON

Anchor Hocking
Fire King

FOR

REGISTER FOR
FREE BICYCLE
Nothing to buy,
just register.
, To be given

WHISTI..ER

GLASSWARE
BLANKETS
PICTURES
RUGS

2

In Jeanials ... the jeans shoe

RED EYE

WEEK END SPECIALS

DRAPES

fioonoon

SYRACUSE - A yard ssle
with proceeds to go towards
helping to pay for the new
village hat! has been scheduled
for Sept. 9 by the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Syracuse Fire
Department.
Auxiliary members are
seeking all types of contributions for the sale which
will begin al 10 a.m. near the
head quarters of the unit.
Clothing for rummage sale will
also be accepted and a bake
sale will be staged in conjunction with. the day's ac- .
tivities.
Residents wishing to contribute items to the yard sale
may contact the committee for
pickup service. The committee
includes Mrs. Ada Slack, 9922801 ; Mila Hudson, 992-li373;
Thelma Grueser, 992-5380;
Mildred Pierce, 992-291&gt;; Edra
Dailey, 992-2613, and Charles
Nease, 992-5734.

sOCta' /II

Riffle, Phyllis Bennett, Lynn
Daniels, Sarah Bechtle, Carol
Jean Adams, Debbie Finlaw,
Doris Ewing , Susan Baer,
Karen Stanley, Janel Pickens,
BeckL_Anderson, Carolyn
Satterfield, Connie Bailey,
Ka thy King, Linda Sauvage,
Jennifer Anrlerson, Mrs.
Nease, Martha McPhail and
Mrs.EvelynKnighl,sponsor.
GueslswereBarbaraLogan,
Hawley,
Karen
honor was Mrs. Dottie Davis, Darla
McGraw,
Karen
Goins,
Bessie
Middleport, sister of the
Sylvester,
Sandy
Sargent,
groom.
Mrs. Bryan entertained with Debbie Buck and Edith Zirkle.
a wedding dinner and reception
honor'ng t e couple. Guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Albert
and
daughters ,
Bryan
Reynoldsburg ; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Davis and son,
Mickey, and Miss Janet Davis,
Middleport.

Mr. and Mrs . John Bryan of
Middleport are announcing the
marriage of their son, Danny,
to Mrs. Mary Massie of
Springfield.
The wedding was an event of
June 20 at 3 p.m. at the Bryan
home. The Rev. Noel Hermann
officiated at the ceremony. Mr.
Albert Bryan of Reynoldsburg,
brother of the groom, served as
best man and the matron of

Everything You Need For Your Home .

PlASTIC

Giving demonstrations at the
Ohio State Fair Tuesday were
Rachel Hunter, Pine Grove
Pals; Stephanie Radford, Five
Point Star Stitchers; Debbie
Windon , Pine Grove Pals, and
Lola Walker, Five Point Star
Stitchers.
Taking part today in the
State Fair style revue are
Tammy Filch, Pine Grove
Pals, school dress; Kim

There's more than

DELL'S
FURNITURE
TOWELS
SHEETS
LAMPS

meals.

Krautter, Five Point Star
Stitchers, sports clothes;
Marcia Carr, Tuppers Plains
Girls, dress-up dress; Jane
Jordan, Columbia Make-It,
formal ; Marylu Mills, Fi\ e
Point Star Stitchers, loungin@
and Jan Holler, Five Point Star
Stitchers, tailoring.
Jane Jordan is the Meigs
County nominee for the
national 4-H dress revue .
Marylu Mills is the nominee for
the Ohio 4·H Fashion Board
with 10 to he selected in the
State.
Last Thursday Mandie Rose
of Bashan participated In the
decorama competition.

away Sept. 16.

SAVE ·DOLLARS AT

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MASON; W. VA.

member national finance
committee ; Mrs. Eva lina
Berkley, newly elec ted
chapeau of Ohio; Mrs. Irene
Mier, first demi chapeau

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$6 ~1.

No Age Limit Limit 1 Per Subject
2 Special Per Fami~. Groups Taken
At The Low Price of 9~ Per Subject

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2

Plus 50' Handling

Shoppers Mart

MRS. MARY MARTIN, newly appointed Central
Division children and youth chairman, displays the scrap- ·
books which won second place division and national awards
for the Departemental d'Ohio Eight and Forty. The trophy
she shows was presented to Mrs. Marlin, top organizer of
new salons in the na tion during the 51st Annual La Marche
Nationale held in Chicago last week.

G A
• dR
D
B
et- cquatnte art11
reatures OX
',}'

~
~ national

· Meigs County winners, were
Juli Whitehead , Riverview
Club, breads; Mary Mora, Five
Point Star Stitchers, outdoor
cookery; and Barbara Andrews, Riverview, cooked

Yard Sale Set
For September 9

Bryan 's Wedding Announced

PHOTO SPECIAL

Photo Hours
11 A.M. to 7 P.M.

Three Meigs County 4-H Club
members participating in he
nutrition show at the Ohio State
Fair 'I'uesday were selected 8l!
outstanding in their demonstrations and displays and will
be eligible to compete for
trophy awards.
The winners were Jane
Whiteh ead, Riverview 4-H
Club, for her project, "Tasty
Meals"; Neacil Duvall ,
Riverview 4-H Club, in breads;
and Barbara Jordan, Columbia
Make-!1, in food preservation .
Others participating, all

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Super Bowl Wins Big ·R ace

3 Rated 'Outstanding' .at Fair

t

PROMPT

Shirt

M;;··
M
~;t;;
Leads
.
:JQ~~~tf~£!..!1E!ivity

~ + ..

RUSS TOG
STAGE 7
ALICE KAY

BOBBIBROOKS
LAURA MAE
LADY WRANGLER

�f &gt; r "

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31,1972
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Hmays

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ISport Parade

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Powerhouses In Big·B Football Begins Tonight

By United PI'I!Ss Internalional
The . National Football
Conference
powerhous.s
have
Sooners.
By CHARLIE SMITII
League
opens another long
But then Ne.braska arid
KANSASCITY,Mo. (UP!) - the material; the tradition and
::~
By MILTON RICHMAN
~ll Given the proper chain of everything else necessary. Oklahoma in 1971 may have "weekend" or exhibition
UPI Sports Editor
Last season Colorado was fielded the best two teams In games tonight when Coach
events, Nebraska, Oklahoma
By MILTON RICHMAN
and Colorado could field the beaten soundly by Oklahoma, the history of college footbalL George Allen and his
MUNICH (UPI)- She's a small, gray-haired old lady, 75 bes I three college football 45-17, and Nebraska, 31·7. The That's a mouthful and will Washingto~ Redskin "Over the
years old if she's a day.
learns in the nation this falL Buffaloes, though a very good draw cries of rage from Bir- Hill Gang" host the Miami
Thai good color which comes from being outdoors is in her The odds against such a team, were a distant third mingham, Austin ana ~oum Dolphins.
The NFL is Ita luring another
cheeks and all it takes is one look to know the spirit of reckless · happenstance are phenomenal, behind the Comhuskers and Bend, but ,those who watched
five~ay weekend which won 't
both
lesms
all
season
and
the
but those three Big Eight
young adventure still is deep inside her bones.
slam-bang- collision at Norman end until Labor Day night when
Every day she U!kes up her same position allhe gale outside
on Thanksgiving Day had no Houston is at Minnesota.
the Olympic Village.
On Friday night , the
doubts.
Nebraska was 35-31
QuieUy, patiently, without really disturbing anyone, she
victor and spectators thought Baltimore Colts - minus indutifully puis in her 6or 8 hours getting what she's after from the
their $6 tickets were vastly jured Bubba Smiih- will meet
athletes and she has this same one word for all those good enough
the Detroit Uons at Tampa,
By JOE FROHLINGEK
with a seventh-inning single, underpriced.
to oblige her.
A
Look
at
the
Pretenders
Fla.
in a nationally televised
UPI Sports Writer
said "records don't mean
"Danke... "
Bullet's take a quick look at conlest.
San Diego's ace Sieve Arlin much. Winning the division is
She thanks each athlete for his or her autograph, and by this
There will be seven games on
the
Big Eight's three national
time she must have more autographs lhan anybody else in the was pitching against Pitts· what counts. I go out every day championship pretenders in
burgh Wednesday night while and try to do the best I can and
city of Munich.
grandfather Harold, who did it's nice when the records 1972:
It lsn 't That Easy
NEBRASKA - Nebraska
the play-by-play on the first come."
Her work isn't that easy. She's so small, she frequently goes major league game broadcast
probably
will rise or fall with
In other National League
unnoticed ind pccaslona!ly gets, buffeted about by the athletes ~on Aug . 5, 1921 returned again action, Cincinnati edged New sophomore red-shirt quar·
hurrying In and out of the Village. She's from tough stock, to the Piraii'S' radio network. York, 4·2, Montreal nipped terback David Humm, a classy
though, and keeps coming back for more. There are no favorites,
Arlin jokingly told his Atlanta, 3-2, Houston downed signal-caller from Las Vegas,
with her. She goes after male and female athletes alike and it grandfather before the game Philadelphia, 5-3, San Fran- Nev. The schedule is in the
doesn't matter what country they come from ... Norway .. . thaI he "better do the first cisco eked past St: Louis, 3-2, Cornhuskers' favor . They
Mongolia ... Japan ... Yugoslavia ... Cuba ... East Germany .. . couple of innings because I and Chicago topped Los could cruise past UCLA, Texas
A&amp;M, Army and Minnesota
West Gennany ... Italy ... Australia ... Russia ... or the U. S. A. might not be around long after Angeles, 9-8, in 11 innings.
before entering conference
She geis them all.
thai." Grandpa Arlin was on
Most of their
warfare.
I asked her why she was doing it, and she smiled and said in the mike for the first three
problems may he ironed out by
German:
innings and saw his grandson's
then.
'I may never get another chance, and then when I have these prophecy come true a little
The word from Lincoln is
signatures, I can perhaps make one of my grandchildren happy later.
that coach Bob Devaney's last
YoungSievewasraked for 11
by giving them to him."
By Vito Slellino
team may be his best defenOutside I!Je fact she's collecting autographs for her grand- hits in a six-inning stint as the
UPI
Sports Writer
I sively. Devaney has announced
son, this particular gray-haired, little old lady isn't that much Pirates, boasting six .300
The Oakland A's first unFOREST HILLS, N. Y. his retirement from coaching
hillers in their lineup, turned in
different than so many other people here in Munich.
(UP! ) - Stan Smith had his after this season. What effect dressed Gaylord Perry
For them, the Olympics are the World Series, the Super Bowl an old-fashioned rtisplay of hands full in his first round this might have on the Corn- Wednesday night and then they
brute stre ngth in an 11-0 match on Wednesday when 15and the World Cup all rolled into one.
beat him.
huskers is debatable.
So they copgregate in front of any public TV set, of which slaughter.
Perry was ordered to change
year-old Billy Marlin had the
OKLAHOMA - The first
Dave Cash had a big night,
his
shirt in the sixth inning by
there are plenty all over Munich, and they watch the various
audacity to take the first set thing to consider about the
belting
a
double,
single
and
Olympic events, the same way people in the U. S. used to gather
from the defending U.S. Open Sooners is they have one senior umpitt Nestor Chylak
home run for four runs and
in front of radio store!! lo listen to an account of the World Series
and Wimbledon champion, and problem and one problem only. after A's manager Dick
Willie Slargell, the major
years ago.
Billie Jean King, launching the That is at quarterback where Williams made the familiar
league's most productive
women's division today, had slow-footed senior Dave complaint that Jerry was
People Keep Enthusiasm
hitler, increased his RBI total
Naturally, the localites enjoy seeing their own West Germsn to 103 with a single and home better keep alert against Patti Robertson will attempt to throwing a greaseball.
In the seventh inning, Mike
Hogan.
athletes pile up the points, but the fact the East Germans have run .
replace Jack Mildren. The
"I had her at set point once," other 21 positions are manned Epstein slarnllitd a homer off
been doing better up to now hasn't put any crimp in their enClemente Ties Wagner
Perry and Oakland was on its
Patti
grinned through her by superb athletes.
thusiasni. The people still keep watching on TV, and the sharpies
Roberto Clemente, who lied
way to a 2-0 victory over the
scalping Olympic tickets along the Marienplatz, yes, they have Honus Wagner at 2,970 for the freckles. "I've losllo her seven
One of the Finest
Cleveland
Indians that boosted
times
and
never
look
even
a
The Sooners are expected to
them here, too, have been doing nicely, they tell me, since the atl·time Pirate hit leadership
the
A's
W
eslel'll
Division lead
set,
but
·
there's
always
this
throw more off the Wishbone
games .began.
time , isn 't there?"
with Robertson than they did in the American League to 11'.
The people here in Munich don't know all the athletes and
The
West
Side
Tennis
Club
with Mildren. Wide receiver games.
don't care. All they know is they're competing here and that's
Several learns have comwas treated to an endless John Carroll is considered one
enough. The athlete here is king. For now, anyway. Perhaps
THE HORSES
series of matches Wednesday of the finest It's difficult to plained about Perry's alleged
never before in the history of sports have so many athletes been
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Dusty but even the glorious weather anticipate the Sooners being greasebatl to the umpires this
made so much of a fuss over, but there is evidence that at least H. Forbes moved up from third could not speed up play. Of.
year but most of the lime the
one of them realizes all this sudden adulation is a temporary on the outside at the stretch ficiais wistfully scheduled 74 anything but good, but much of umpires simpl y check his
their success will depend on
thing.
and won the featured $1,700 ' matches to slice the men's field Robertson . He is surrounded, uniform or glove and then the
Micki King of Hermosa Beach, Calif., was delighted with the pace al Scioto Downs Wed- of 148 in half, but only 56 were
however, by classy per- game continues.
gold medal she won in the women's three-meter springboard nesday night by one and one- finished.
JohnOdom went 7 1-3 innings
formers.
diving competition, but reality promptly overtook her.
and
Darold Knowles and Hollie
quarter lengths over Avanti.
COLORADO - The Buf"It was sort of a sad moment," she said, reflecting on the Tiogas Gaye was third.
Fingers
finished up as the A's
faloes have lost two starters
presentation ceremony. "! mean you've done it. What is there
Forbes covered the mile in
since spring training. Tight end blanked Cleveland. Knowles
afterward?"
the eighth race in 2:04 4-5, for
J. V. Cain was ruled ineligible singled in an Insurance run in
BOUT
SCHEDULED
Not that much really.
the \4-year-old gelding's 7Jst
for the f~ll semest,er /bx, . ~ the eighth inning to score Ted
1
PHILADELPHIA
(UPI)
' vic!Ory.
'
·
i . The only ones wi\ll:f!t\' c\Ulnce pi ~gin on their Olympic' 1'~~time
NCAA
and
sopMlliote ·Kubiak, whll 'tripled'. · •" ·
1
The Otlter Games
, VICtories substantially are the heavyweight fighters, as Joe · Fo~bes 'returned $:l:iJo,' S2.40, Bennie Briscoe, a tough left defensive tackle Bubba
hooker
in
the
Philadelphia
ln
the
other games, MinFrazier, Muhammad Ali and Floyd Patterson have done in the $2.40. Avanli paid $3.80, $3.00
Bridges was a summer-school
tradition,
and
the
secondneoota routed Baltimore, 7-1,
past. What possible demand is there for the winner of the men's and Tiogas Ga)'e $4.80.
ranked middleweight in the casualty. Bridges, a 6-3, 200- California dowlled Detroit, 4-1,
The
7-8
quin
etla
was
worth
modern pentathlon or the single sculls•
world , signed a contract pounder, figured to be out- Boston edged Chicago, 4-2,
$14.40.
Wbat 's the Reason?
Wednesday wchallenge world standing ,
The
2nightly
double
of
Eds
For that matter, what makes anybody want to compete in the
Colorado's potential is in- New York beat Texas, 3-1, and
champion Carlos Monzon of
City
topped
Buddy
and
Simplicity
returned
dicated by the fact that Folsom Kansas
Olympics in the first place? Is it solely an ego trip, a private
Argentina
in
Buenos
Aires
on
Field has been sold out for aU Milwaukee, 6-2.
desire to be acknowledged the best in the world in one particular $180.00.
Oct. 7.
The
4,327
harness
racing
fans
specialty?
Monzon and Briscoe fought home games for the first time
wagered
$199,967.
Curiously, many Olympic competitors can offer no one
to a draw in Buenos Aires five in htstory.
Equatoria l diameter of the
The Buffs have the
overriding reason for wishing to compete other than the general
yea rs ago in a bout that
earth is almost 7,927 miles;
one that most people enjoy winning anything.
Monzon described as "one of capabilities, plus a schedule the polar diameter is 7.900
that permits them to meet both miles.
Some of the athletes here,llke Jack Bacheler, the skinny 28the toughest" of his career.
Oklahoma and Nebraska in
year-old Ph.D. from Birmingham, Mich., even vowed they had
PACERS SIGN THREE
Boulder. Should they jet! early,
enough at one point. Bacheler, a marathon runner, remembers
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP! )
ON WAIVER
as
they did last year before
how rotten he felt coming across the finish line in New Orleans - The American Basketball
NEW YORK (UP)) - The injuries depleted the learn,
not thai long ago.
Association champion Indiana New York Jets put tight end they could be as good or better
"The temperature was about 80 degrees and the relative Pacers signed three players Gary Arthur, a third-year than anyone .
humidity aboul90," he says . "I was dead tired after the first five Wednesday, including free player out of Miami of Ohio, on
The rest of the Big Eight
miles, but kepi on going anyway. When I got across the finish line agents John Sutler and Bill the injured waiver list Wed- Confere nce - Kansas, Kansas
I never wanted to run again in my life. I knew I would, though." Debeer, both 6-feel-9.
nesday. The Jets pared down to State, Missouri, Iowa State and
Maybe that's why the people of Munich keep gathering
Also signed to a contract was 49 players after culling seven Oklahoma Stale - will be
6-foot·3 Wally Rice of Penn men from the squad.
around the TV sets.
playing for fourth place.
Maybe, too, that's why the little gray-haired old lady keeps Military, the club's 121h·round
draft choice.
coming out to the Olympic Village every day.

Saturday
including
a
6ationally televised night
game in Klmsas City where the
Chiefs will host the Super Bowl
champion Dallas Cowboys.
The New York Giants face
lhe Philadelphia Eagles at
Princeton, N. J., and the New
YorkJelswillmeettheAUanta
Falcons at Georgia Tech's
home _ Grant Field _ in
Atlanta . In Saturday night
games besides the Kansas City

·Dallas game, .SI. Louis .·ls .rt.,
Green Bay, Los Angeles is at
San Diego, New England is at
Denver and New OrleanS faces
Pittsburgh at Memphis.
On Sunday afternoon, Buffalo is at Chicago, Cincinnati .
faces Cleveland at Columbus
· and Oakland is at San Francisco. Then the HoustonMinnesota battle on Monday
night will wrap up th~ fourth
weekend of exhibition action.

Padre Ace .Right

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Pomeroy, recognized as judge of the tellers for the whO made her appointments of
nationally for outstanding election . Mrs. Melvin Good was chairmen. Mrs. Darlene
work with cystic fibrosis and elected the new Central Collins, "Hatbox" editor.; Mrs.
tubercular children, has been Division chapeau and all of the Ilene Cox, National Jewish
appointed by the Eight and new officers were installed at a Hospital ; Mrs. Barbara
Burditt, constitution and byForty Nationale as the children banquet.
and youth chairman for the 1(). At Friday's session of the Ia laws; Elsie Gleason, national
~"'litate Central Division.
marche presided over by Miss finance; Helen Menendez,
"' Mrs. Martin's appointment Dorothy M. Dolle, chapeau nurses scholarship; Evelyn
:, was announced at the 51st nationale , of Kentucky, a Gill, partnership; l.elia Hunt,
:::. Annual La Marche of the processional of the national ritual and emblems; Jane
' ' national organization Aug. 24- officers
and
chapeaux Grahlamn, national trophies
' 25 in Chicago. For the past year nationales was held . Greetings and awards; Mrs. Wanda
she has served as the Depar- were brought by Mrs . Clyde Henderson, publicity scraptemental d'Ohio chapeau. Finley, general chairman, with book, and Eunice Dailey,
: During that lime a total of Mrs. Suvak giving the in- handbook.
"'' S9,25S.20 was used for children vocation. Mrs. Lois Lansdale
The national convention
] and youth work.
led in the pledge to the flag, concludedwithabanquelinthe
:t• A meeting U1 outline the Mrs. Helen Meyer gave ballroom on Saturday night
Central Division programs for "Fiander's Field," and Mrs. attended by over 300 persons. A
Tl' children and youth will be Wilmer McComas le demi hors~shoe motif was carried
·• •conducted by Mrs. Marlin at chapeau of the Western out m the decoratwns wtth
~: Canton, Nov. 1&amp;.18. The major Division, gave "America's miniature horses, shoes and
1:parl of her promotion of Answer."
gold rose pins being given as
~ : · children and youth work in the
Distinguished guests favors.
~: 10 states will be through presented included John
The 1973 conve ntion will be
:;. bulletins and communications, Geiger, outgoing national held in Hawaii.
··• she reports.
commander of the American
Attending the Nationale La
·:: ln.Chicago with Mrs. Martin Legion; Harold A. Cummings, Marche from Ohio besides
·:::ror the.national convention was chairman of the national Mrs . Marlin and Mrs. Walker,
·~· Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine, convention; Mrs. Charles C. both members of Meigs County
:;: the immediate past Depar- Shaw, national convention Salon 710, were Mrs. Hazel
:~. Iemen tal d'Ohio le secretaire- chairman for the American Elliott, second member of
: cassiare.
Legion Auxiliary; Mrs. trophies and awards; Mrs.
·• · Awards received by Ohio at Maurice Kubby, national Violet Aichholz, second
· the convention were second children and youth chairman of
,. place In both division and the Auxiliary, Mrs. Ferdman
~· national on scrapbook; first Hendricks, Illinois, president
' place in the Central Division on of the Auxiliary, and Edward
history, and a certificate of A. Schalk, department com•· reoognition for membership. A mander of the American
· trophy was presented to Mrs. Legion in Illinois. Reports of all
: Martin In recognition of national officers and comMr . and Mrs. Melvin Circle
: organizing two of the five new millee chairmen
were and Mr. and Mrs. James
&gt;salons in the United Stales presented.
Butcher entertained with a
· during ber term as Ohio's
Speaker at the Friday ligh t buffet honoring' Mrs .
~ • chapeau. ·
eve ning session was Dr. Freda Circle and Mrs . Butcher's
At the pre.marche meeting Kehn who was the national parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
~ attended by Mrs. Martin on chapeau of Eight and Forty, E.
Blakeslee Saturday
.: constitution and by-laws, a 1926-27. Her topic was "As It evening . The event held at the
~ 'proposal to change partnership Was in the Beginning" and she Blakeslee home was in honor of
; age from 21 to 18 was defeated. gave a .fuJI resume of the their 35th wedding an• National dues were increased organization of Eight and niversary .
: 10 cents bringing the total to $1. Forty.
Hostesses se rving at the
• Mrs. Walker attended a
It was reported by Mrs. buffet were Mrs. Vincent Dabo,
.: seminar on resolutions.
Marguerite Hess of West Mrs. Ira Butcher, Mrs. Gerald
• Mrs. Helen Menendez of Virginia, national partnership Shuster, and Mrs. Howard
• Illinois, co-chairman of the Ia chairman, that total pari- Nolan . Serving lhe three tiered
~ marc he, presided at the nership iri the nation is 24,292. wedding anniversary cake
• Central Division breakfast held A memorial service was held were Mrs. Melvin Circle, Mrs.
: in the Chicago room. Mrs. at the Saturday morning James Butcher, Mrs. Harold
; Marlin was the l'aumonier for session. Mrs. Suvak had Lohse, and Mrs. Ted Downie.
:. the breakfast attended by 91 charge of the service with Miss
The guest list included Mr ·
"'•h
d
F~
11
1
·
ib
1e
to
d
and
Mrs . Edson Roush, Mr.
'11 ,..,. t an
!JI· .• po e ~ vmg tr u
eDistinguished guee presen'!ed ceased members. Soloist was and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mr. and
~ included Mrs. Helen Meyer, St. Mrs. Thomas Leervig. White Mrs. Hayman Barnitz, Rev .
.:: Louis, Mo.; Mrs. Darlene chrysanthemums and candles and Mrs. Robert Card, Mr. and
':. Collins and Mrs. Sally Finley, in a horseshoe formation were Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, Mr. and
~ past natlonale chapeaux, used in the service. Dr. Kehn Mrs. John Werner, Mr. and
.:, Marguerite Hess of West gave a tribute to Mrs. Hugh Mrs . James Hanson, Mrs.
: virginia, national partnership McClung of Virginia, a past Helen Handley, Mr. and Mrs.
~ chairman. Each stale gave national chapeau. Speaker was Patrick Lochary, Mr. and Mrs .
: favors at the breakfast with Frank Karel!, director of Howard Nolan, Mr. and Mrs.
::: ohio contributing red felt planning at the National Gerald Shuster. Mr . and Mrs.
~ cardinals .
Jewish Hospital in Denver~ an
New officers elected for the institution supported by Etght
organization were and Fortv.
": Mrs. Hazel Landry of New
On Saturday night Mrs .
Orleans, La., chapeau; Mrs . Marlin attended the national
A bo• social was the feature
·.;;-Mary Russell, New Mexico, post
marche
pouvior. of the annual get-acquainted
~ l'aumonir ; Mrs. Marie Smith, "Gateway to Service" was party of the Ohio Eta Phi
.. Pennsylvania, la concierge; announced as the theme for the Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
; Mrs. Ann Suvak, New York, Ia 1972-73 year by Mrs. Landry Sorority sll!ged Tuesday night
at Royal Oak Park.
Given prizes for the most
attractively decorated boxes

Blakeslees
Honored

of the finest pharmaceuticals
enables us to serve all your drug
needs right away!

OUR NEW

GIFT SECfiON · • GIF1S
FOR 1HE ENTffiE FAMll. Y

.d

"'

,,

DU QUOIN, Ill. (UPI) Super Bowl has super speed,
and he didn't need all of il to
win harness racing's prized
stake for 3-year.old !rollers,
the Hambletonian.
That was the story from
driver Stanley Dancer, who
piloted the sturdy bay who
likes chewing tobacco and fried
chicken to a stake record and a
world record in seizing the lop
prize of $59,545 from the gross
purse of $119,090.
Super Bowl, racking up his
eighth and ninth straight wins,
turned in his sixth and seventh
miles under two minutes this
year. In the first heat, he won
by almost four lengths with a
clocking of 1:57 2-5, equalling
the second fastest time ever in
the stake, and he led from wire
to wire in the second heat to
win in I :56 2-5, a record for the
stake .
The combined time of 3:53 45 set a world record for two
heats for 3-year.old trollers,
eclipsing the 3:54 hung up in
1967 by Nevele Pride when he
was driven by Dancer, too, as
the pride of the stable. The
previous Hambletonian heat
record was I :56 4-5 by Ayres in
1964.
"Super Bowl still had a lot
left, even in that second heat,"
Dancer said. "Earlier I didn 't
think too much of this colt, but
he kept getUng better and
better and in this race he
shOI)ed he is somethinR extra

special."

The victory boosted Super
Bowl 's career earnings to
$384,222, and Dancer said he
probably would have about 12
more races before he retires,
scheduled Jan. 1, to stud.
Mrs. Stanley Dancer, who
with Mrs. Hilda Silverstein

owns the coli, has granted an
option to Hanover Shoe Farm
to purchase the coli at that '
time for $1 million providing he
passes fertility tests and a
physical examination. Then he
will stand at the farm as the
replacement for his father,
Stars Pride, now 26 years old .

"THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"
271 'North Second
Middleport, Ohio

..•
••

~

Colors so ·a live ·
- so distinctive!
And 4 fabulous whites
for that touch of ·
sheer elegance.

8xl0
In Living Color

Reg. '7.75 pl.

ONLY

BUT YOU PAY ONLY

aae

1
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.-.
I

•

.;

•
••
•
•

SAVE
'1'.50

''

On EvelJ
Gallon

.••'
•..•
•
~

••''

•
•

.

~

FRI., SEPT. 1

Photos By .

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport,

o.

Honey Portraits

""'•
.•
••

PRESIDENT
LATEX
Reg. '5.85

Qn~

•
"
'

S450 ·
gal

SAVE 11.35 on every gallon

.VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
992·2709

departemenla l; Mrs . Doris
Stanrif( second demi chapeau
premiere departemental;
Reva Cihla, I~ concierge, and
Audrey Glaub, l'archivisle .

!

Harold Lohse, Mr. and Mrs.
James Sheets, Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Dabo, Mr. and Mrs.
Ira Butcher, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
A. Downie, Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, Miss Marianne Circle .
Mr. and Mrs . Dana Hoffman,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hoff-

were Carol McCullough, a doll
replica , and Donna Nease, a
flower basket.
· Members attending were Sue
Zirkle , Char lotte Taunton,
Mrs . McCullough, Vicki
Gloeckner, Ruth Riffle, Linda

•

.....•

ner, Mr. and Mrs. Orion
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Spencer, Mr, and Mrs. Herbert
E. Shields, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Carsey, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Hoeflich. Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Struble, and Mr . and
Mrs. Floyd Weber.

Fully Uned

2

36)(87

PR.

$100

TRAVEL IN WEST
Mrs . J . Edward Fosler accompaned her son-in-law and
daughter, the Rev . and Mrs.
Carver Williams and children,
on a trip to tlie west coast. They
spent a week at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Fosler of
Oroville, Calif. Highlights of
their trip included a visit to San
Francisco with a ferry boat
trip into the Bay under the
Golden Gale and the Bay
Bridges . They took in
Disneyland at Anaheim and the
Ringling Bros. Circus at Long
Beach. They also visited Mrs.
Ira Foster of Seal Beach,
sister-in-law of Mrs. Foster.

·r ••-•
I

I

1

one way to en1ov life
Tak e Thom MeAn 's new
Jean1al s. lor in stance - shoes jusl lor
the tun ot1t. Jean1als are l1ght on your feet and all
done up m the latest lace-up styles. shapes and colors. And li ke
the Jeans you wear them w1th . they're rugged and funky and
incredibly comfortable
And tust one more th1ng: when you 11e one on w1th Thom MeAn,
you won 'tregret 1\10 I he morn1ng The only m1ng about Jeamals
that m1ght make you a lillie 11ghtheaded 15 the pnce

heritage house.
Your

-u;_,~ Shoe Stale
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'.

•• -

1

I
1
I

ENTER
TODAY

I

I'
1

l

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fOODLINER, MiddlepOrt, OhiO
Reuister for Free GiftS

eDURING OUR 9 TH ANNIVERSARY SALEI

1
I
1

W

1
I

1
I
I
1
1

NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE--- ALL PERSONS MUST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
ENTER . NO EMPLOYE OR MEMBER OF
FAMILY MAY ENTER .
ONE PRIZETOAFAMILY

b
P

DEPOSIT
AT
OUR
STORE

0RAWINGSAT.NIGHTSEPT.2AT8P.M.
You Oo Not Have .to be Present to Win
M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER ·

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

WHERE CAN YOU FIND THE TOP NOTCH LINES?

All.EEN

Girls

DRESSES
By Cinderelkl and
Tiny Town
Size
4 thru 14

Oven Ware
1 &amp; 1~ Quarts

Permanent Press
Easy Care · Easy Wear

$100

Assorted Styles, Colors and Fabrics.

...•

$400

DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

to $1200

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

Open 9 Til6 Mon. thru Sat.
In The Heart of Down Town Middleport.

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

•'

I
II
I
I
I
I
I

_J

DEVON

Anchor Hocking
Fire King

FOR

REGISTER FOR
FREE BICYCLE
Nothing to buy,
just register.
, To be given

WHISTI..ER

GLASSWARE
BLANKETS
PICTURES
RUGS

2

In Jeanials ... the jeans shoe

RED EYE

WEEK END SPECIALS

DRAPES

fioonoon

SYRACUSE - A yard ssle
with proceeds to go towards
helping to pay for the new
village hat! has been scheduled
for Sept. 9 by the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Syracuse Fire
Department.
Auxiliary members are
seeking all types of contributions for the sale which
will begin al 10 a.m. near the
head quarters of the unit.
Clothing for rummage sale will
also be accepted and a bake
sale will be staged in conjunction with. the day's ac- .
tivities.
Residents wishing to contribute items to the yard sale
may contact the committee for
pickup service. The committee
includes Mrs. Ada Slack, 9922801 ; Mila Hudson, 992-li373;
Thelma Grueser, 992-5380;
Mildred Pierce, 992-291&gt;; Edra
Dailey, 992-2613, and Charles
Nease, 992-5734.

sOCta' /II

Riffle, Phyllis Bennett, Lynn
Daniels, Sarah Bechtle, Carol
Jean Adams, Debbie Finlaw,
Doris Ewing , Susan Baer,
Karen Stanley, Janel Pickens,
BeckL_Anderson, Carolyn
Satterfield, Connie Bailey,
Ka thy King, Linda Sauvage,
Jennifer Anrlerson, Mrs.
Nease, Martha McPhail and
Mrs.EvelynKnighl,sponsor.
GueslswereBarbaraLogan,
Hawley,
Karen
honor was Mrs. Dottie Davis, Darla
McGraw,
Karen
Goins,
Bessie
Middleport, sister of the
Sylvester,
Sandy
Sargent,
groom.
Mrs. Bryan entertained with Debbie Buck and Edith Zirkle.
a wedding dinner and reception
honor'ng t e couple. Guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Albert
and
daughters ,
Bryan
Reynoldsburg ; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Davis and son,
Mickey, and Miss Janet Davis,
Middleport.

Mr. and Mrs . John Bryan of
Middleport are announcing the
marriage of their son, Danny,
to Mrs. Mary Massie of
Springfield.
The wedding was an event of
June 20 at 3 p.m. at the Bryan
home. The Rev. Noel Hermann
officiated at the ceremony. Mr.
Albert Bryan of Reynoldsburg,
brother of the groom, served as
best man and the matron of

Everything You Need For Your Home .

PlASTIC

Giving demonstrations at the
Ohio State Fair Tuesday were
Rachel Hunter, Pine Grove
Pals; Stephanie Radford, Five
Point Star Stitchers; Debbie
Windon , Pine Grove Pals, and
Lola Walker, Five Point Star
Stitchers.
Taking part today in the
State Fair style revue are
Tammy Filch, Pine Grove
Pals, school dress; Kim

There's more than

DELL'S
FURNITURE
TOWELS
SHEETS
LAMPS

meals.

Krautter, Five Point Star
Stitchers, sports clothes;
Marcia Carr, Tuppers Plains
Girls, dress-up dress; Jane
Jordan, Columbia Make-It,
formal ; Marylu Mills, Fi\ e
Point Star Stitchers, loungin@
and Jan Holler, Five Point Star
Stitchers, tailoring.
Jane Jordan is the Meigs
County nominee for the
national 4-H dress revue .
Marylu Mills is the nominee for
the Ohio 4·H Fashion Board
with 10 to he selected in the
State.
Last Thursday Mandie Rose
of Bashan participated In the
decorama competition.

away Sept. 16.

SAVE ·DOLLARS AT

~

~

MASON; W. VA.

member national finance
committee ; Mrs. Eva lina
Berkley, newly elec ted
chapeau of Ohio; Mrs. Irene
Mier, first demi chapeau

••
....

$6 ~1.

No Age Limit Limit 1 Per Subject
2 Special Per Fami~. Groups Taken
At The Low Price of 9~ Per Subject

''
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•

..
••
.

2

Plus 50' Handling

Shoppers Mart

MRS. MARY MARTIN, newly appointed Central
Division children and youth chairman, displays the scrap- ·
books which won second place division and national awards
for the Departemental d'Ohio Eight and Forty. The trophy
she shows was presented to Mrs. Marlin, top organizer of
new salons in the na tion during the 51st Annual La Marche
Nationale held in Chicago last week.

G A
• dR
D
B
et- cquatnte art11
reatures OX
',}'

~
~ national

· Meigs County winners, were
Juli Whitehead , Riverview
Club, breads; Mary Mora, Five
Point Star Stitchers, outdoor
cookery; and Barbara Andrews, Riverview, cooked

Yard Sale Set
For September 9

Bryan 's Wedding Announced

PHOTO SPECIAL

Photo Hours
11 A.M. to 7 P.M.

Three Meigs County 4-H Club
members participating in he
nutrition show at the Ohio State
Fair 'I'uesday were selected 8l!
outstanding in their demonstrations and displays and will
be eligible to compete for
trophy awards.
The winners were Jane
Whiteh ead, Riverview 4-H
Club, for her project, "Tasty
Meals"; Neacil Duvall ,
Riverview 4-H Club, in breads;
and Barbara Jordan, Columbia
Make-!1, in food preservation .
Others participating, all

7

~

Super Bowl Wins Big ·R ace

3 Rated 'Outstanding' .at Fair

t

PROMPT

Shirt

M;;··
M
~;t;;
Leads
.
:JQ~~~tf~£!..!1E!ivity

~ + ..

RUSS TOG
STAGE 7
ALICE KAY

BOBBIBROOKS
LAURA MAE
LADY WRANGLER

�..

.

..--.

f•

..

Uplt!nd, W. Va. Site of
Cart~Cartmill Reunion

....,p

The 24th annual Cart and
Cartmill reunion was held Alii!.
'r/ at a roadside park near
Upland, W.Va. Abasket dinner
was enjoyed at the noon hour.
Mamie Cartmill, 94-year-{)ld
!rom Milton, W. Va., ~as the
oldest relailve attending and
Wayne Allen Wilt, seven-week· old from Canfield, Ohio, was
the youngest.
Others attending were Mrs.
RooertGrogan and Mrs. Frank
Hall, Cheverly, Md.; Mrs.
Mary Richards, Washington
D.C.; Mr. and Mrs. Harold ·E.
Cart, Mitchell and Stephen,
Alameda, Calif.; Mr. &amp; Mrs.
William Raymond Cartmill,
Aogela, Buddy and Bryce, St.
Albans, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Emery Cart, Kathy and Kevin
and Eleanor Cart, Jackson ;
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Morrison
and Harvey Jr., ProctorviUe;
Rev. and Mrs. Okey Cart and
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Halfhill,
Libby, Joe, Willie and Aody,
Middleport; Mrs. Joseph
Perkins and Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Wilt, Canfield; Mr. and

•('

......'!""" ', :;...

.. I

WINNERS OF THE DAILY SENTINEL'S carrier contest enjoyed their
p-lze Sunday, a dlly at ICings l'aland In Cincinnati. Left to right are Evelyn

Florida's Lake Okeechobee is 700 miles square and
second only to Lake Michi•
gan as the largest body of
fresh water in the U n i t e d
States.

Russell, Jack Duffy, Jeff Warner, Fred Flintstone, Randy Houdashelt,
Denny Smith and Patty Hoffman. Accompanying the group were Richard
Owen, publlsher; Robert Wingett, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Manley.

WEE AU'roS, pre-World War I style, carried Bend area
carriers for '!be Daily Sentinel around Kings Island Sunday
In Cincinnati.

WSCS Met Aug. 20
MINERSVILLE - The
WSCS of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church met Wed·
nesday evening, Aug. 23, at the
church with Mrs. John Scott
and Mrs. Lawrence Napper
serving as hostesses.
The meeting opened with the
song Faith of Our Fathers"
followed with prayer by Mrs.
Napper. Mrs. Fred Nease was
devotional leader and her topic
was "Discipline in Life". The
scripture was taken from the
book of Hebrews.
11

Pomeroy ..
Personal Notes

month.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to Mrs .
Denver Holter, Mrs. Vernon
Nease, Mrs. Olan Genheimer,
Mrs. Uswin Nease, Mrs. Harry
Wyatt, Mrs. Alfred Yeaguer,
Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mrs. Fred
Nease and Mrs. Russ Watson.

LOSE UGLY FAT

~

THURSDAY
FREE CLOTHING day 10
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis a.m. to 2 noon Thursday at
have returned from a weekend
Salvation Army, 115 Butternut
In Pennsylvania. They at- Ave., Pomeroy. Anyone in need
tended a ball game in Pitts- of clothing may attend.
burgh, and visited Mr. and
· FRIDAY
Mrs. Robert Seburn at
WEEKEND Revival Friday
Wampum, Pa,. and Mr.' and through Sunday, at Graham's
Mrs. Roy Beegle at Beaver Chapel Church, three miles
Falls.
northeast of Shade, 7:30 each
Weekend guests of Mrs. J. evening with Rev . Jesse Fyffe,
Edward Foster were the Rev. Webbville , Ky., evangelist.
and Mrs. Carver Williams and Homecoming Sunday, basket
children of Kenton and Mrs. dinner 12 noon; afternoon
Thorne
Cotterill
and service, 1:30 p.m. Special
da1111hters, Jennifer, Joan and singing by Bissell Brothers and
JUI and Mary Jane Orth of George Lewis.
Carroll. ·
SATURDAY
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert
ALL NIGHT hymn si ng,
Kuhn, Janel! and Robin, ac· Mason First Baptist Church,
companied their daughter beginning 7:30p.m. Saturday.
Karla to Morehead, Ky. where
DWlcan Family, Tampa, Fla.,
llhe Is enrolled at Morehead
Dan Hayman and Country
State College.
Hymn
Timers and Joint Heirs
Mrs. Nellie Eblin, ac·
to sing. Public invited.
c&lt;!mpanied by her daughter,
Mrs. Larry Dugan, LOri and
SUNDAY
EVENING services, 7:30
RObin, visited recenUy with
Mrs. Eblin's daughter, Mrs. p.m. Sunday at Syracuse
Elizabeth Osburn of Newell, W. United Methodist Church by
Va. They also called on Mrs. the Rev. Murrel Floyd.
ANNUAL Swartz Family
Eblin's brother and sister-in·
Reunion,
Sunday, Woode
law, Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Williams, Chester, W. Va. Grove at Alfred. Family and
Before returning home they friends in vi ted.
MONDAY
took a tour of Pennsylvania .
RACINE Chapter 134 , OES,
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Gilbert
of Springfield were recent stated meeting, 8 p:m: Monday
vlallors of Mr. and . Mrs. at Masonic Temple. Worthy
Wendell Eblin, Union Ave., Matron asks as many officers
and members possible be
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Osburn of present because of important
Newe,ll, W. Va. are the guests business to be discussed.
this week af Mrs. Nellie Eblin,
CHESTER FIRE Department annual Labor Day
Mulberry Ave.

::;;

celebration, Monday . Barhecued chicken and spareribs,
homemade ice cream. Parade
starting, 1:36 p.m. Parade
participants be at fire house by
1:30 p.m.

LEHEW HONORED
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, entertained with a dinner party
honoring their grandson, Ted
Lehew, who is a student at
Heide lberg College, Tiffin.
Guests for the dinner were
Miss Jyl Beaver, Mrs. William
Theiner, Mr. and Mrs. William ·
Lehew, Cheryl, John and Bill.
Mr. and Mrs . Lehew accompanied their son to Tiffin
on Thursday.

seven days of the week. She
read scripture pertaining to
each day and the members
read a meditation applying to
scripture.
Everyone present also was
given an interesting article to
read.
Mrs. John Scott had the
special feature for the program
which was taken from the
booklet, " ! Have to Talk to
Someone, God," entitled "A
Mother's Prayer."
A tribute in memory of the
late Mrs. Amanda Baer who
was a charter member of the
society, was presented by Mrs.
Russ Watson.
It was voted by the society to
retain the incumbent officers
for the coming year.
The district annual meeting

*

TO

COI.I.EGE CAMPUS

..... .Shon .... Sensibly
PrtcW. .

"

*

Adv .

STENOGRAPHER
NO. W-180

•

NOTE
BOOK

500

*'
.

**

COUNT

.';:

'

*
**

FOR ONLY

*
*
VALUE $13.67
* TOTAL
YOU SAVE L
** '4•98 •

MULTIVITAMINS

VITAMINS
SAVE NOW ON
UNICAP WITH IRON

29
.29
.10

8WE CMYAS BINDER SJ
WRH a.JP
•
FIU:fR PAPER

ORGANiliR

30 Free

CRAYONS '
Reg. 35'

Plus Iron

'2.95
121-JD.l

tJIIBr claoice

SUPER

SCOPE

!
I

I

REG. 1.40

99~

f .

THREE THEME BOOKS

BOX 94
RACINE, OH 10 45771

P.

oNLY

.

8e

11.89

% fARMERS BANK

"""

vital is·~
For Men's Hair.

C1psule Gives 12-Hour Relief
Over Hnd cold Con1estion

REG.
'1.67

4 oz.

C

Re~ ..11.59

Its

W~h

Re~

3 oz. Free

Values
to

$

4.98

Reg. ~1.35

ll..n..

Atka Seltzer

Just Received

NEW SHIPMENT

Meigs Marauder Jackets
Size 6 in boys to 46 in mens

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see one
of the Friend l.y Tellers . . .
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO .

On Fridays Our Dr~vt-ln Window li
Open u.m. to 7p.l!l •• (Continuously I.
120,001 Mlkltnum IMuruce
For Eocil O.,O.IIor

Re~

S's
REG.
89'

79'

49~

26$
Wtlma.ouo

nssuE

ONLY

27' 1011

Excedrin

ISN'T IT TIME YOU
TRIED EXCEDRIN7

25's

FOR CHILDREN
REG. 4r

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS 00.
Member Federal RtHrve Syslem

.New York Clothing House

. Reg. · lOO's
'1.17
73~

oz.

P/4 oz.
1.09

1

LISTERINE
32 oz.

U.&lt;tmllln "'" fllill lor 1111 ummon IIIII.

don't, come in and open one with the "Wide·Awake Bank"
FREE.

DISPOSABLE BOTILES
11.19

If you have a Checking Account with us, come in or il you

12

Soltice
Hi-Therm
66~

REG. $2.49
Re~

5 OZ. SIZE t711Uf

Regular 11.68

ANTISEPTIC

-PERSPIRANT

FIIO.CCm

a, Upjohn

Re~

5000

Just retu~rn unused portion to Bristol-Myers Co.

9e

Kaopectate

'1.00

!'1[111 0 - - - - - - - - -

GUARANTEED TO KEEP YOU
DRIER THAN ANY LEADING SPRAY . · •
OR YOUR MONEY BACK

Reg. 29~
only

bottle

• • • s~·
Gillette

TANK TOPS

PINS

99~

Dry Control

lOO's

- - - - - - - -- -

sge

Re~

AN

JENNY PROFFITT

AV
TO Til E
ORDER OF

vALUE

BOBBIE

MOUTHWASH &amp;GARGLE
SUPER SIZE
REG. $2.05

1

I

. ~~19

]oz.

r

'

..~ 99~

REG.
1
2.45

LOT10N

r

Soft Magic

TUBE OR BOTTLE

SHAMPOO
Reg. 51.13

of the Loom

PANTY HOSE

Head&amp;
8/wulders

REG.
15.69

19e 99¢

:

2.49

Fru~

1

POLAROID COLORPAC"
TYPE 108 LAND FILM

•, .

Picture here

$ 29

Reg.

REG. 2.38

* *************

REG.
51.49

BACK TO SCHOOL
SPECIAL

VITAMINS

REG.

thermos '
BOTTLES
1

16's

11'

.

)

Oily Hair

60's

PT.

86"'

t\.

Lemon for

Reg. 13.38

A/stld/n

CRAYOLA ,

Regular,
-;,ora Hold .

Unscent ed,

When You Buy 90

..,W ONLY_88'

*
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60's

SJ.68

lOTM.

~:XfM~c'L . *

THE CLEAN
HAIR SPRAY
THAT HOLDS.
GIVES YOU
PURE HOLD,
CLEAR HOLD
THAT DRIES
CLEAN.

REG. 11.08

CHOCKS

School Starter SJ)I!CUl

THE YITAIII IIUC1III .

- -(7\\""i""

170 SWABS 59~ ~.!@

mm•

69~

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Baby soft ... baby safe...
For the whole family

'1.29 VALUE

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\flUnJ SWABS

24 FREE
when you
BUY 100

24 FREE
when. you
BUY100

-~ •

f\Jl11M•coTTON

Unicap Chewable'

PAPER

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Unicap®

29~

NOTEBOOK

Save now on

Save now on

·REG.

•

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Ill REUSABLE APOTHECARY ~IR

Summer Closeout
MEN'S

KERM'S KORNER

lOX

&lt;.,

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and 200 Foto Accent Checks will be yours

KINDERGARTEN

Go To The Head Of The Class
With ·Our Discount Prices

. 'If

*

SPECTACULAR

STRIPES
PLAINS

FROM

Gibson, Hurricane, W, Va .;

Oneda Ward, Regina Qualls,
Mike Atkinson, John Freeman
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wallace,
Culloden, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Burger and Mr. and
Mrs. Clint Cartmill, Barbours·
ville, W. Va., and Larry Cartmill, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Morrison, · Mrs.
Louise
Chapman,. and Mr. and !'h's. ,
Lon Hutchinson and Clanssa,
HWltlngton, W. Va.

72
* TABLETS
*
**

Effective
Thru Sept 4

Va.; ·Mr. and ·Mrs. Oney

*

*
*

•'

SUPER PLENAMINS *

*
*
*
*
*

Prices

to · be held at the United Slorl los tng weloht lodov or
Amtrlcl'lllrgHI 11111n1 multl·vtltlllll, mulll·lillllral,l'ldlal
Methodist Church in Nelson·
llny table
t and
easy to tu:e
back.
MONADEX
Is a.
·--------------ville on Wednesday, Sept. 20, ,,oney
MONADEX wilt help curb your
was announced. A "Thank desire for excess food . Ea t less
we igh less . Contains no
You" letter from the Heart and dangerous drugs and will not
Hand House in PhiUippl, W. make you nervous . No
st renuous exercise . Change
Va., for a contribution sent to your l i fe .. . start today .
them for a child to go to church MONAOEX costs $3.00 for a 20
day supply . Large economy size
ca mp · was read by the is $5 .00 . Lose ugly fat or your
treasurer,
Mrs . Alfred money w ill be refunded with no
questions asked . MONA DEX is
• t'
Se 1
R
Yeauger.
~old with this guarantee by:
Pre~crtp ton • rv ce---4 e9istered Pharmacisls to Serve
•
Thirty-nine sick calls were Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs, 112 e. *You . Open Oaoly8 :00a.m.lo 10 p.m . - Sunday 10: 30 a.m.
Main and Dutton Drug Store,
lo 12:3:0 p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.
made by the members the past Middleport . Mail Orders Filled.

i l!l: : : ::::::::,so'c"''a''f''''''''c'a'le''n''d''a'r''''''''''''' ' ' '.,!li r~~~;~ ~~~~fi~~~~·~~l~

*:::

Mrs. W. Bee Halfhill, Douglas,
Joe and Tom &amp; Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Halfhill ·and Christy,
Cheshire; Mr . and Mrs.
Garland K. Kemper and Gary,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Cartmill, Roger and Shawn
Beckett and Laura Ellen
Kirby, Center Line, Mich.; Mr.
and Mrs . Thalr Gottshall.
Alma Wallace, Mr. and Mrs.
David Wallace and Laura and
· Mr. and Mrs. Keith Glenn
(Kathy Quails), Milton, W.

7- ~Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomero~. 0., Aug. 31,1972

REG.

11.26

60's

TEK

.JOOTK:

BRUSHES
. REG. 69'

KING SIZE

.BrOmoSIItzer
·Reg. 11.29

'129

SPRAY DEODORANT
Reg.
1
1.59

7at89~

�..

.

..--.

f•

..

Uplt!nd, W. Va. Site of
Cart~Cartmill Reunion

....,p

The 24th annual Cart and
Cartmill reunion was held Alii!.
'r/ at a roadside park near
Upland, W.Va. Abasket dinner
was enjoyed at the noon hour.
Mamie Cartmill, 94-year-{)ld
!rom Milton, W. Va., ~as the
oldest relailve attending and
Wayne Allen Wilt, seven-week· old from Canfield, Ohio, was
the youngest.
Others attending were Mrs.
RooertGrogan and Mrs. Frank
Hall, Cheverly, Md.; Mrs.
Mary Richards, Washington
D.C.; Mr. and Mrs. Harold ·E.
Cart, Mitchell and Stephen,
Alameda, Calif.; Mr. &amp; Mrs.
William Raymond Cartmill,
Aogela, Buddy and Bryce, St.
Albans, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Emery Cart, Kathy and Kevin
and Eleanor Cart, Jackson ;
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Morrison
and Harvey Jr., ProctorviUe;
Rev. and Mrs. Okey Cart and
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Halfhill,
Libby, Joe, Willie and Aody,
Middleport; Mrs. Joseph
Perkins and Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Wilt, Canfield; Mr. and

•('

......'!""" ', :;...

.. I

WINNERS OF THE DAILY SENTINEL'S carrier contest enjoyed their
p-lze Sunday, a dlly at ICings l'aland In Cincinnati. Left to right are Evelyn

Florida's Lake Okeechobee is 700 miles square and
second only to Lake Michi•
gan as the largest body of
fresh water in the U n i t e d
States.

Russell, Jack Duffy, Jeff Warner, Fred Flintstone, Randy Houdashelt,
Denny Smith and Patty Hoffman. Accompanying the group were Richard
Owen, publlsher; Robert Wingett, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Manley.

WEE AU'roS, pre-World War I style, carried Bend area
carriers for '!be Daily Sentinel around Kings Island Sunday
In Cincinnati.

WSCS Met Aug. 20
MINERSVILLE - The
WSCS of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church met Wed·
nesday evening, Aug. 23, at the
church with Mrs. John Scott
and Mrs. Lawrence Napper
serving as hostesses.
The meeting opened with the
song Faith of Our Fathers"
followed with prayer by Mrs.
Napper. Mrs. Fred Nease was
devotional leader and her topic
was "Discipline in Life". The
scripture was taken from the
book of Hebrews.
11

Pomeroy ..
Personal Notes

month.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to Mrs .
Denver Holter, Mrs. Vernon
Nease, Mrs. Olan Genheimer,
Mrs. Uswin Nease, Mrs. Harry
Wyatt, Mrs. Alfred Yeaguer,
Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mrs. Fred
Nease and Mrs. Russ Watson.

LOSE UGLY FAT

~

THURSDAY
FREE CLOTHING day 10
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis a.m. to 2 noon Thursday at
have returned from a weekend
Salvation Army, 115 Butternut
In Pennsylvania. They at- Ave., Pomeroy. Anyone in need
tended a ball game in Pitts- of clothing may attend.
burgh, and visited Mr. and
· FRIDAY
Mrs. Robert Seburn at
WEEKEND Revival Friday
Wampum, Pa,. and Mr.' and through Sunday, at Graham's
Mrs. Roy Beegle at Beaver Chapel Church, three miles
Falls.
northeast of Shade, 7:30 each
Weekend guests of Mrs. J. evening with Rev . Jesse Fyffe,
Edward Foster were the Rev. Webbville , Ky., evangelist.
and Mrs. Carver Williams and Homecoming Sunday, basket
children of Kenton and Mrs. dinner 12 noon; afternoon
Thorne
Cotterill
and service, 1:30 p.m. Special
da1111hters, Jennifer, Joan and singing by Bissell Brothers and
JUI and Mary Jane Orth of George Lewis.
Carroll. ·
SATURDAY
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert
ALL NIGHT hymn si ng,
Kuhn, Janel! and Robin, ac· Mason First Baptist Church,
companied their daughter beginning 7:30p.m. Saturday.
Karla to Morehead, Ky. where
DWlcan Family, Tampa, Fla.,
llhe Is enrolled at Morehead
Dan Hayman and Country
State College.
Hymn
Timers and Joint Heirs
Mrs. Nellie Eblin, ac·
to sing. Public invited.
c&lt;!mpanied by her daughter,
Mrs. Larry Dugan, LOri and
SUNDAY
EVENING services, 7:30
RObin, visited recenUy with
Mrs. Eblin's daughter, Mrs. p.m. Sunday at Syracuse
Elizabeth Osburn of Newell, W. United Methodist Church by
Va. They also called on Mrs. the Rev. Murrel Floyd.
ANNUAL Swartz Family
Eblin's brother and sister-in·
Reunion,
Sunday, Woode
law, Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Williams, Chester, W. Va. Grove at Alfred. Family and
Before returning home they friends in vi ted.
MONDAY
took a tour of Pennsylvania .
RACINE Chapter 134 , OES,
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Gilbert
of Springfield were recent stated meeting, 8 p:m: Monday
vlallors of Mr. and . Mrs. at Masonic Temple. Worthy
Wendell Eblin, Union Ave., Matron asks as many officers
and members possible be
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Osburn of present because of important
Newe,ll, W. Va. are the guests business to be discussed.
this week af Mrs. Nellie Eblin,
CHESTER FIRE Department annual Labor Day
Mulberry Ave.

::;;

celebration, Monday . Barhecued chicken and spareribs,
homemade ice cream. Parade
starting, 1:36 p.m. Parade
participants be at fire house by
1:30 p.m.

LEHEW HONORED
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, entertained with a dinner party
honoring their grandson, Ted
Lehew, who is a student at
Heide lberg College, Tiffin.
Guests for the dinner were
Miss Jyl Beaver, Mrs. William
Theiner, Mr. and Mrs. William ·
Lehew, Cheryl, John and Bill.
Mr. and Mrs . Lehew accompanied their son to Tiffin
on Thursday.

seven days of the week. She
read scripture pertaining to
each day and the members
read a meditation applying to
scripture.
Everyone present also was
given an interesting article to
read.
Mrs. John Scott had the
special feature for the program
which was taken from the
booklet, " ! Have to Talk to
Someone, God," entitled "A
Mother's Prayer."
A tribute in memory of the
late Mrs. Amanda Baer who
was a charter member of the
society, was presented by Mrs.
Russ Watson.
It was voted by the society to
retain the incumbent officers
for the coming year.
The district annual meeting

*

TO

COI.I.EGE CAMPUS

..... .Shon .... Sensibly
PrtcW. .

"

*

Adv .

STENOGRAPHER
NO. W-180

•

NOTE
BOOK

500

*'
.

**

COUNT

.';:

'

*
**

FOR ONLY

*
*
VALUE $13.67
* TOTAL
YOU SAVE L
** '4•98 •

MULTIVITAMINS

VITAMINS
SAVE NOW ON
UNICAP WITH IRON

29
.29
.10

8WE CMYAS BINDER SJ
WRH a.JP
•
FIU:fR PAPER

ORGANiliR

30 Free

CRAYONS '
Reg. 35'

Plus Iron

'2.95
121-JD.l

tJIIBr claoice

SUPER

SCOPE

!
I

I

REG. 1.40

99~

f .

THREE THEME BOOKS

BOX 94
RACINE, OH 10 45771

P.

oNLY

.

8e

11.89

% fARMERS BANK

"""

vital is·~
For Men's Hair.

C1psule Gives 12-Hour Relief
Over Hnd cold Con1estion

REG.
'1.67

4 oz.

C

Re~ ..11.59

Its

W~h

Re~

3 oz. Free

Values
to

$

4.98

Reg. ~1.35

ll..n..

Atka Seltzer

Just Received

NEW SHIPMENT

Meigs Marauder Jackets
Size 6 in boys to 46 in mens

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see one
of the Friend l.y Tellers . . .
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO .

On Fridays Our Dr~vt-ln Window li
Open u.m. to 7p.l!l •• (Continuously I.
120,001 Mlkltnum IMuruce
For Eocil O.,O.IIor

Re~

S's
REG.
89'

79'

49~

26$
Wtlma.ouo

nssuE

ONLY

27' 1011

Excedrin

ISN'T IT TIME YOU
TRIED EXCEDRIN7

25's

FOR CHILDREN
REG. 4r

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS 00.
Member Federal RtHrve Syslem

.New York Clothing House

. Reg. · lOO's
'1.17
73~

oz.

P/4 oz.
1.09

1

LISTERINE
32 oz.

U.&lt;tmllln "'" fllill lor 1111 ummon IIIII.

don't, come in and open one with the "Wide·Awake Bank"
FREE.

DISPOSABLE BOTILES
11.19

If you have a Checking Account with us, come in or il you

12

Soltice
Hi-Therm
66~

REG. $2.49
Re~

5 OZ. SIZE t711Uf

Regular 11.68

ANTISEPTIC

-PERSPIRANT

FIIO.CCm

a, Upjohn

Re~

5000

Just retu~rn unused portion to Bristol-Myers Co.

9e

Kaopectate

'1.00

!'1[111 0 - - - - - - - - -

GUARANTEED TO KEEP YOU
DRIER THAN ANY LEADING SPRAY . · •
OR YOUR MONEY BACK

Reg. 29~
only

bottle

• • • s~·
Gillette

TANK TOPS

PINS

99~

Dry Control

lOO's

- - - - - - - -- -

sge

Re~

AN

JENNY PROFFITT

AV
TO Til E
ORDER OF

vALUE

BOBBIE

MOUTHWASH &amp;GARGLE
SUPER SIZE
REG. $2.05

1

I

. ~~19

]oz.

r

'

..~ 99~

REG.
1
2.45

LOT10N

r

Soft Magic

TUBE OR BOTTLE

SHAMPOO
Reg. 51.13

of the Loom

PANTY HOSE

Head&amp;
8/wulders

REG.
15.69

19e 99¢

:

2.49

Fru~

1

POLAROID COLORPAC"
TYPE 108 LAND FILM

•, .

Picture here

$ 29

Reg.

REG. 2.38

* *************

REG.
51.49

BACK TO SCHOOL
SPECIAL

VITAMINS

REG.

thermos '
BOTTLES
1

16's

11'

.

)

Oily Hair

60's

PT.

86"'

t\.

Lemon for

Reg. 13.38

A/stld/n

CRAYOLA ,

Regular,
-;,ora Hold .

Unscent ed,

When You Buy 90

..,W ONLY_88'

*
*

60's

SJ.68

lOTM.

~:XfM~c'L . *

THE CLEAN
HAIR SPRAY
THAT HOLDS.
GIVES YOU
PURE HOLD,
CLEAR HOLD
THAT DRIES
CLEAN.

REG. 11.08

CHOCKS

School Starter SJ)I!CUl

THE YITAIII IIUC1III .

- -(7\\""i""

170 SWABS 59~ ~.!@

mm•

69~

ONLY

*
*
*
*

Be the first to have your

Baby soft ... baby safe...
For the whole family

'1.29 VALUE

**

STUDENTS!

\flUnJ SWABS

24 FREE
when you
BUY 100

24 FREE
when. you
BUY100

-~ •

f\Jl11M•coTTON

Unicap Chewable'

PAPER

*'
*

SUPER PLENAMINS

Unicap®

29~

NOTEBOOK

Save now on

Save now on

·REG.

•

'

Ill REUSABLE APOTHECARY ~IR

Summer Closeout
MEN'S

KERM'S KORNER

lOX

&lt;.,

•'

and 200 Foto Accent Checks will be yours

KINDERGARTEN

Go To The Head Of The Class
With ·Our Discount Prices

. 'If

*

SPECTACULAR

STRIPES
PLAINS

FROM

Gibson, Hurricane, W, Va .;

Oneda Ward, Regina Qualls,
Mike Atkinson, John Freeman
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wallace,
Culloden, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Burger and Mr. and
Mrs. Clint Cartmill, Barbours·
ville, W. Va., and Larry Cartmill, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Morrison, · Mrs.
Louise
Chapman,. and Mr. and !'h's. ,
Lon Hutchinson and Clanssa,
HWltlngton, W. Va.

72
* TABLETS
*
**

Effective
Thru Sept 4

Va.; ·Mr. and ·Mrs. Oney

*

*
*

•'

SUPER PLENAMINS *

*
*
*
*
*

Prices

to · be held at the United Slorl los tng weloht lodov or
Amtrlcl'lllrgHI 11111n1 multl·vtltlllll, mulll·lillllral,l'ldlal
Methodist Church in Nelson·
llny table
t and
easy to tu:e
back.
MONADEX
Is a.
·--------------ville on Wednesday, Sept. 20, ,,oney
MONADEX wilt help curb your
was announced. A "Thank desire for excess food . Ea t less
we igh less . Contains no
You" letter from the Heart and dangerous drugs and will not
Hand House in PhiUippl, W. make you nervous . No
st renuous exercise . Change
Va., for a contribution sent to your l i fe .. . start today .
them for a child to go to church MONAOEX costs $3.00 for a 20
day supply . Large economy size
ca mp · was read by the is $5 .00 . Lose ugly fat or your
treasurer,
Mrs . Alfred money w ill be refunded with no
questions asked . MONA DEX is
• t'
Se 1
R
Yeauger.
~old with this guarantee by:
Pre~crtp ton • rv ce---4 e9istered Pharmacisls to Serve
•
Thirty-nine sick calls were Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs, 112 e. *You . Open Oaoly8 :00a.m.lo 10 p.m . - Sunday 10: 30 a.m.
Main and Dutton Drug Store,
lo 12:3:0 p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.
made by the members the past Middleport . Mail Orders Filled.

i l!l: : : ::::::::,so'c"''a''f''''''''c'a'le''n''d''a'r''''''''''''' ' ' '.,!li r~~~;~ ~~~~fi~~~~·~~l~

*:::

Mrs. W. Bee Halfhill, Douglas,
Joe and Tom &amp; Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Halfhill ·and Christy,
Cheshire; Mr . and Mrs.
Garland K. Kemper and Gary,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Cartmill, Roger and Shawn
Beckett and Laura Ellen
Kirby, Center Line, Mich.; Mr.
and Mrs . Thalr Gottshall.
Alma Wallace, Mr. and Mrs.
David Wallace and Laura and
· Mr. and Mrs. Keith Glenn
(Kathy Quails), Milton, W.

7- ~Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomero~. 0., Aug. 31,1972

REG.

11.26

60's

TEK

.JOOTK:

BRUSHES
. REG. 69'

KING SIZE

.BrOmoSIItzer
·Reg. 11.29

'129

SPRAY DEODORANT
Reg.
1
1.59

7at89~

�.. #

'.

.

,.

9~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31, 1972

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31, 19'12

State Fair Food Stands Reflect Decade of the 70s
00!-UMBUS (UPI)- There
Is a variety of food stands on
the State FairgroWlds that are
portentsofthefutureand of the
Decade of the 7&lt;8 :
Sign on a snow cone stand:
"Both regular and low calorie
syrup available. "

AffiMAN MITCHELL
WEST COLUMBIA Airman John T. Mllcheli, son
ol Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Mitchell ol Rt. I, West
Columbia, W. Va., has been
assigned to .Keesler AFB,
Miss., after completing Air
Foree haslc lralnlug. The
airman has been assigned to
the Tecbillcal Training
Center al Keesler lor
speclalhed trallllng In the
armamenj systems field.
Airman Mitchell Is a 1972
graduate of Wahama High
School.

Former
Ohio
State
University and Boston Celtic
basketball star John ':Hondo"
Havlicek set up a food stand on
the midway : "John Havlicek's
Seafood Basket," complete
with Celtic kelly green signs
and attendants wearing
Havlicek T-6hirts.
"This is the first restaurant

There was no noticeable
generation gap in the songs,
readings and prayers or the
fellowship . Small children
were caring for ~ maller
brothers, sisters and neighbors. Little Mark Russell, son
or Wayne and Sharon, had a
nap in his play pen against the
hillside.
Groups of all ages walked
about the grounds, back on the
hills, over the hill Ill go
swimming and boating. II
wasn't easy to get some started
for home, even to see the plains
across the beautiful Ohio at
Ravenswood.
On Aug. 20 speakers were
Brenda and Kelley Weller,
daughter and son-in-law of the
Clarence Bradfords. They
were married at Chrislmas by
Pastor Ralph Johnson, uncle ol
the bride.
Their home is in Independence, Mo.
Both are still at church
college, " Graceland" at
Lamoni, Ia. They spoke of the
college being not only a place
of learning, but how it has
grown from a two year college
in several years to the fuJi four
years now providing not only
religious education for
members but for students from
all walks of life, denominations
and coWltries.
Brenda is majoring in

WEDDING NOTED
LETART FALLS - Mr. and
Mrs. Fred MHier are an. noWJcing the marriage of their
daughter, Debbie Miller, to
Charles Hill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Hill, also of Letart
Falls, at the home of the Rev.
Freeland Norris in Racine on
Sunday, August 20.
Mr. and Mrs. Hill have
purchased a mobile home and
are residing in Racine .
ENJOY HAYRIDE
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls Boys 4-H Club
enjoyed a hayride and wiener
roast at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hupp recently. Attending were Randall Roberts
and sons, Todd and Chad ; Don
Hupp and sons, Larry, Chris
and Brian; James and David
Foreman, Richard Furbee and
Chris Wolfe.

been OK I guess."
Any personal· appearances
by the boss• "Yeah, Hondo's
been out to the lair about every
day."

"Don't
tell
anybody
anything," a midway food
stand op~rator advised .
"That's the first rule of carny
life. Competition is cut-throat.
You don 't even say casual
thing like, 'Slow day isn't it.'
They'll know how you are

doing."

Sign or the times in sports :
Some of the b~sketball
shooting stands on the midway
have been replaced by an
"NFL Pro Football . Throw."
You can win a prize by
chucking a pass through a hole
In a board about 15 yards
downfield . . . or down the
midway.
Midway freak shows took a
turn toward magnitude. For a

drinks gallons of water daily."
"It's the thril!.of a lifetime,"
the announcer promised.
Also, for only 25 cents you
could gaze at " Black Jack, one
of the world's largest steers."
Eleven feet long, six feet high,
with an almost 12-foot girth,
weighing 3,300 pounds. ,
"Ten thousand hamburgers
on the hoof," the barker
figured.
And, "deadly snakes, long
enough and strong enough to
crush yoo to death. But, the

quarter , "giant killer rats" carny assured, "encaged for
were on view. "Full grown and your protection."
over 40 poWlds," the signs

The fair moved Colwnbus
enthused.
"World's largest rat alive, native Jack Nicklaus beyond
super-&lt;rtar status. The datry

barn gave him "super bUtter"
acclaim as a sculplllr captured
his life.&amp;ze likeness In butter.
Jack teed off ·tn tfie
refrigerated display case while
all-butter cows stared In
amazement.
The state Departrnenl of
Natural Resources, content in
IJ'evious yearS to show off
snakes and fish, took a serious,
ecological editorial stand this
year.
A question board asked
visitors : "Since 1914, more
than 280,000 acres of land have
been strip mined in Ohio and it
is estimated that 100,000 of
those acres have not been
satisfac!Drily reclaimed. Do

Balloon Race Friday
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The 7up International Hot Air Balloon Race will be held at the
Ohio State Fair Friday, featuring the world's largest hot
air balloon.

AT FQ&gt;RJ(Ef) RU'N £N)·TQ YED

boxes and freezers of ice
cream.

chain ."
How's business? "Oh, it's

Hondo's set up / ' an attendant

SUNDAYSCHOOL PICNIC
By GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - On Aug . 13,
the Church of the Reorganized
Latter Da, Saints held a
Sunday School picnic at Forked
Run Lake State Park with a
large attendance or church
folk, friends and neighbors.
Some were vacationing ,
others ill at horne or in
hospitals, and were missed
very much. It was a beautiful,
cool morning, turning Into a
warm Sabbath Day enjoyed by
those who partook or a bounbll!l noon meal froin baskets,

said. "It's sort of a prototype.
If it's sucCessful he may start a
regular restaurant or maybe a

medicine; Kelley is from
California, but they may make
their home at Independence .
We're very proud of our young
folk who are lilting themselves
lor life and service.
On Wednesday evening our
prayer and youth meeting were
combined, followed by a
wiener roast and singing .
Camp songs round the campfire. Dr. Ronald Gillilan spoke
or his work in churches and as
a doctor and participated in the
recreation.
Community Notes: The
doctor and two sons are
visiting his mother, Golda
Gillilan and grandmother, Lois
McKenzie · also his uncle and
aun t, the ' Edgar Taylors, on
McKenzie Ridge.
Lucy Taylor will return to
Baltimore with Ronnie for a
checkup at the hospital there .
Myrtle Proffitt remains a
patient at Holzer Hospital and
Edgar Taylor isn't feeling so
well this summer. Jane
Johnson is at Charleston this
week attending a funeral.
Louise (Deem) Barnes,
Colwnbiana attended church
services W~dnesday evening.
She's visiting her parents, the
Geo. Deems and friends and
neighbors . Everyone was
happy to see her. She is a
graduate of Racine High
School
·
CONTESTS SET
The state cupcake and
national
crochet
and
needlework contests will be at
the 8 p.m. Friday meeting or
the Meigs County Pomona
Grange at the Rock Sprigs
Grange Hall. Racine Grange
will be host. The junior grange
contest will be judged at the
meeting and all granges are
reminded to submit the names
lor prince and princess. Mrs.
Elizabeth Jordan, lecturer ,
will present the program.
DINE AT PARK
The Salisbury Brownie Troop
hosted a mother-daughter
wiener roast Tuesday evening
at the Route 33 roadside park.
Attending were Mts. Waiter
Morris and Carol, Mrs. Jack
Welker, Jena and Jackie, Mrs.
Ned Swindell, Paula and
Camille , Mrs . Charles
Williams , Linda Williams,
Mrs. Donald Dorst, Becky,
Teresa, Donald and Delores
Dorst, Mrs . Oscar Smith ,
Laura, Gail, and Anita, Mrs.
Donald Sheets and Kathy .

CHAPTER TO MEET
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will meet
Sept. 8 at the Episcopal Parish
House, 2 p.m. A program on
Constitution Week will be
presented by Mrs. Nan Moore.
Mrs. J. Edward Foster, Mrs.
Lucille Smith and Mrs. Nancy
Reed will be the hostesses.

The 84,000 cubic foot Omego
balloon will be piloted by Julian R.P. Nott of Great Britain.
Nott set a new absolute hoi air
balloon world altitude record of
36,200 feet last month at Hereford, Englaud .
U.S. champion balloonist
Bruce Comstock of Ann Arbor,
Mich ., will fly the Piccard
Gypsy .
Other entries will be Dr.
William Grabb, a plastic surgeon from Arm Arbor, Mich.
who won the 1970 race; Deke
Sonnichsen of Menlo Park,
Calif.; Dennis Flnden of F1int,
Mich .; Tom Oerman of Muscatine, Iowa ; and Reber Chamhers of Statesville, N.C.
. A lead balloon will lilt off at
noon Friday, chased by the
seven entries. The ~inner of
the 6().mmute race w1ll be the
halloonist who lands closest to
the lead balloon.
Attendance Off
The balloons, blown by prevaillng winds, will travel an
estimated 20 miles. This is the
firth consecutive year the race
has been held here.
.
Attendance fell off at th.e frur
Wednesday as 163,854 pa1d admissions wer~ .recorded. Last
year 172,878v1Sited the grounds
on the seventh day of the
festival. With five days left in
the fair , a total of 1,285,737
lairgoers have come and gone,
about 13,000 fewer than last
year at this time..
.
A tractor pull Will be held m
the east grandstands Friday
and Saturday with winners ·
sharing in a ~13,500 purse.
Ike and Tma Turne~ take
over the grandstand entertainment today with afternoon and
evenmg performances.
Roberta F1ack and AI Green
perf~rm Friday ..
Fal!'goers strollmg about the
grounds can be entertained by
a group of minstrel singers and
dancers who perform on a
moving Oat bed truck. The
"Chuck Sheik Singers and

you know how large an area
Utat is?"
A butllln was pushed Ill get
the answer : "An area slightly
larger than Columbus; Ohio's
largest city ·In area.''
~estion : "How can I help Ill
IJ'Oieet endangered anil)lals?"
Answer ; "Support conservatioll activities, including
the passage and enforcement

ofllrOIW ....... ..
Editorial sipbolrdl In tile
department's building took
Ohio indualrY Ill task: "In 1171,
73 companies were charged
with polluting our water under
the stream Utter . law. 'l'hat
year only two cases were lost In
cow1."
And, "It Is estimated thatIndustry contributes 10 per
cent of all water pollution ;
municipal se\j'age treatment 25
per cent, and poor f!U1Jling
ll'actices 15 per ceot."

front of the Arts and Crafts
Building at the fair. The cooking of soul food - shrimp
gumbo, sweet and white pototo
pie - is exhibited dally In the
folk festival area.
Dances And Cookies
Thirty busloads of senior
citizens from Cincinnati ·were
fair visitors today.
On Wednesday, Gerald Lincoln and Mrs. Norma Cisco of
Uma won the senior citizens
dance contest. Mrs. Opal Sparrowe of Findlay, Mrs. Christine
Harris qf Bluffton, Mrs. Winifred Cussac of Troy, Mrs. Mabel Haney of Paulding and
Mrs. Irene Smith of Norwalk
won the cookie bakeoff.

McClrJre's ForA Dairy Tre~~t

11uJt .Can. 't Be Beat.

'

McCLURE'S

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I
Middtepor1. o;

992-5248

700 W. Main • Pomeroy
1-~

9 to 9 Daily-Sunday

AVE

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Republican National Chairman
Robert Dole said today he
would make additional charges
of campaign fund viola,tions by
Sen. George S. Me?&lt;&gt; vern's
backers. He fUed seven Wednesday which government
auditors are investigating.
He said he would be citing
this week two or three more
allegations. At the same time,
Dole said that in this first year
of operation of the new
disclosure
law,
both
Democrats and Republicans
would commit "unintentional

The General Accounting Of·
lice (GAO) , which last
weekend reported · possible
violations by fWld·dasers for
President Nixon, moved
quickly to investigate Dole's
initial charges.
The Democrats have contended that some funds for' the
Nixon rt!1!lection effort, though
possibly collected before the
new law requiring disclosure of
contributions went into effect
April 7, should be looked Into
because they were not reported
until after the deadline .
Dole said today the GOP was
not trying to hide anything and

10.00

ON THE BIG

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI )
-Chess genius Bobby Fischer
is a win away from the world
title he dreamed of for 20
years.
The American challenger,
29, wbo started playing chess
before his teens and dropped
out "of high school at 16 to
devote all his time to it, got a
draw in the 20th game against
Russian world champion Boris
Spassky Wednesday and
moved within one point of the
magic figure-the 12.5 points
necessary to win the title.
Relaxed and smiling ,
Fischer called over referee
LA&gt;thar S~ hmid after the
R11SSian played his :Wth move
and offered a draw. Alter a
sljght hesitation Spassky accepted and put out his hand for
the traditional handshake.
The 21st game begins at 1
p.m. EIYI today with Spassky
playing white and moving first .
The 33-year-old Leningrad
journaHst must win at least
three and draw the fourth of
the remaining games to retain
the title he won in 1969 and
which has been in Russian
hands lor 3S years.
The 800 fans on hand for the
20th game, which had been
started Tuesday and adjourned
in the 41st move until Wednesday, could hardly believe

Services Held At Graveside
Gr aves ide services were
held today at 10 a. m. at
Gilmore Cemetery in Forest
Run for the stillborn daughter
ol Mr . and Mrs. James Werry,
Rac ine, born at Pleasant

HAS SURGERY
Mrs. William Matlack,
Pomeroy Route 3, is·a patient
at the Hol~er Medical Center
wh ere she has undergone
minor surgery and is receiving
medical treatment lor an inner
ear disorder. Her room
number is 302.

CARPET-LAND, INC.
Wall To Wall Carpet Specinlists

116 W. MAIN
Free
Estimates

PH.

POMEROY
992~7590

Open Monday lhru Saturday 9 to 5
Friday Night r~1 s:oo
8udgtt Terms Of' BankAmericard

Pomeroy ;

great-

grandparents, Martha Rose,
Portland , RD .; Herman
Werry, Pomeroy, and Ralph
Gibbs, Sr., New Haven. Ewing
Funeral Home was in charge.

Wagner ,

Mickie

Coo kie Johnson .
Ber ni ce Bu cc i ,

FROM

Kat ie Sprow. Virgin ia Blowers ,
Wil ee n

Edward s,

CABLE TV

POMEROY

Nancy Reed , captain. Mrs.

Patri ck Lochary. Mr s. John
Reece, Mrs. Ja mes O'Brian.
Mar i anne Campbell , captain, Ann Wi ckl ine, Jean Neal,
June Lewi s, Stev e Elbe'rfeld,

Margie Adkins.

Mar i on
Ford ,
captain ,
Max ine Carm an, Lfdia Groth,
June Ada ms, Ida haler , and

Mikell Hand.

Ma r tha Roderick , capta in,

Dora Jo Griffin, J udy Pa rso ns,
Gill ia n Moor e, Kathy An derson, Vickie Mitchel l.

Florence Lintala , capta in,
Bev Ge ttl es, Je an Co ope r,
Peggy Evans, J an Thaler and
Dianna Halley.
Sue Beverly , captain, El sie

Neal , Ca th erine

Hayw a rd ,
Ca rol Polen, Bobby Holzer and

Gladys Grant.
MIDDLEPORT

John Ha rr ison, Rutland ; Mrs .
Sibl ey Sla ck, Mi ss .Jea n

Wh itehead, Reedsv ille.

Syracuse, Mrs. John Ri chard

Lee , cap tain, Mrs. Bob J . Ord;
Jackson , At Evans ; Mason ,
West
Va ..
Mrs . Nolan

S wa c kh a mme r ;
Area
Businesses , Jack Gr iffin.

POINT PLEASANT

Bi ll Brady. captain,

Marriage Lieenses
Jordan. Mrs. Russel Bibbee.
John Vincent Goodwin , 22,
RIO GRANDE

SERVICE

observed their 781h birthdays
today.

__..Panls ,

shorts

summer suits.

~

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Linda Sue
. Allen, Cheryl All en; Mrs .
Raymond · Haga, all ol Point
Pleasant ; Edith Sommer ,
Southside ; Mrs . Michae I

Forks, Spoons , Ice Chests,

Girls' and women's hat

-·

Wafer Jugs. OUtdoor Toys
ilnd Games . Swim, Beach

and I 1nd Sand Toys.

3 Speed
20" FANS........

.

l

Brewer, Mason; Mrs. Ernest

Coop, Apple Grove.

388

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

NOW LET

OLD MAN KILLED
CANTON (UPI ) - Arnold
Crist, 72, Canton was struck
and killed as he walked on a
road near his home here
Wednesday night. No charges
have been filed against the
driver or the car .

~~~~F~2~~~i~~~~

l

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

992-3498.
POMEROY,
OHIO
.
OPEN FRIDAY. SA'IlJRDAY NIGHTS TILt

HAR E!

CUT YOUR

SEPT· l thru )
( SEPT. 30 only ,

COSTS UP TO

~·

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMIT'J'ED
Larr y
Thoma s. Pomeroy ; Bessie
Hudson , Mason; Kathryn
Miller, Middleport ; Harrison
Robinson , Letart, W. Va .;
Lucille Bearhs, Middleport;
Mildred Johnson , Middleport.
and Diana Pope. Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Emory
Haggy, Virginia Hoy, Clarence
McDaniel, Franklin Lemley
and Harriett Hyatt.

Bruce Stalnaker, vocalist

ACTION FILED
A suit lor money in the
amount of $4,528.47 plus interest has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
MASSILLON, Ohi o (UP! )- by AVCO Financial Services,
Bria n Coleman , 16, ol San- Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa., against
dusky, di ed Wednesday at Alvin L. Barnett and Mildred
Massillon City Hospital from a Barnett, Pomeroy, Rt. 4. The
severe head injury suffered case of USS Agri-Chemicals vs
Aug. 26 during a football James Goodrich has been
scrimmage against Massillon dismissed .
High School.
Coleman, a sophomore at BEARS TRIM ROSTER
Sandusky High, had been
CHICAGO ( UPI )- The
hospitalized since the injury. Chicago Bears trimmed their
His was the first football- roster to 31 men Tuesday with
attributed death of the 1972-73 the release of five experienced
season in the state.
players and two rookies.
Those released were : end
Ray Ogden, center Gene
Hamlin, wide receiver John
Embree, running back Bill
Tucker, safety Reynaud Moore
and rookies Grant CVItanich
from San Francisco State and
Paul McPipkin of Georgia .
was 76 degrees under sunny
skies.

SAME DAY
SERVttE
In At 9:-0ut At 5
·Use Our Free Parking Lot.

Robi~
9-23

aeaners

216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

LA-Z-BOV
'

CALL FOR YOUR FREE HOOKUP TODAY!

FOR fREE ESTIMATE

OR IN

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTr
W.•

~A._6_7_5_-3_3_._9_8_~-~j_:~E-L_9_9_2_-_2_505
..

THE WORLD
ROVER

1

Truck Ditched
The Meigs County Sheriff 's
Dept. investiga ted a minor
accide nt Wednesday at 2:30
p.m. on SR 7, one mile north of
Pomeroy .
David Nelson Slater , 24,
Sisso nville, W. Va., was
traveling south on 7 when, due
to mechanical failure, his truck
pulled off the road on the ri ght
toofar and skidded into a ditc h.
There was no dama ge to the
tr uck, no injuries, and no
ci tation iss ued.

CARAVELLE
by

8ULOVA

In sta nt accurate answers for th e
ma n wl1o needs to k now the r1gh t

t11ne here, and tn Bagh dad or
Lo ndon. Rotating outer ri ng
shows all im porta nt Cl i tes 'J f th e
globe, tel ls thetr t 1111e at a glance.

News.

•

• • ln

Briefs

(Continued from page I )
voice and leaving a bomb-like device in a locker along with a note
which said "pay up or blow up."
Authorities said the money was not dropped off as ordered
because the extortionist who called Gen . Mitchell Airport either
was playing a hoax or was frightened away.

~:.',~yh
i ~~~ ~·:.
c:ause· Ca ravelle ·

wen t way out ol
its way.

$1995
:

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

Kenmore Automatics
Our Lowest Prices
in 2 Years
For A4-tycle
Washer

and
Matching
Dryer

SHIRt
FINISHING

"THEY PLAY IT AU"

Local ,Foothall, Local News,
Local Weather, Local Events

than triple since the beginning
of the year."
Nixon said at his San
Clemente, Calif. , news conference his latest troop reduction
will cut the number of U.S.
for ces in South Vietnam to
27,000 men.
There are ,about 80,000 to
83,000 American servicemen in
Thailand and . in ships off the
Vietmanese coast engaged in
the air war against the north.

the world
over!

Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m.

FEATURING

be fully insulated to cut
your cooling costs . Our
trained crew blows supP.·
rlor Hagan Insulation in
attic and wails' withoul
muss or fuss . .. wilhoul
disturbing your household
routine. The fuel savings
pay f01Ihe job.
PHONE 992-5321

Vy, standing in for vacationing chief negotiator Xuan Thuy
said, "What Nixon is doing is
not reducing troops but committing massively into the war
the two most powerful services
of the U.S. armed for ces- the
Navy and Air .Force- and
maintaining hundreds of thousands of ground troops in
Vietnam. " .
Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, chief
negotiator for the Viet Cong,
told journalists before she
entered the conference hall
that the United States has
increased its naval and air

in every
important
city

Jewel ·levered. wate r rests tant
with lum1nous dial. guarante ed
by Bul ova, tt's th e su ave new

FORECAST
Mostly sunny and wann
toda y with highs in the 80s.
Suiter, captain, Bill Rai ney,
Fair
and cool tonight with lows
David Kayser, Kim Dunsmoor,
Karen Long, Belinda Litch- in
the 60s. Increasing
ti eld .
cloudiness
and
warm
Rio Grande Student Team
tomorrow
with
a
chance
or
(College), Merlyn Ross,
showers except in th e
capta in.
southeast. Highs tomorrow in
the mid 80s to low 80s.
LOCAL TEMPS

The Aristocrats

All The Shows Coming
In The New Fall Season

bombs. ''

glance ...

farm prices was another new

captain,

This Week

0

up .''

campaign of propaganda on a
new withdrawal of 12,000 men
(whi ch) cannot drown the
explos ion o£ American

the time

Now!
At a

lodays FUNNY

Again

More Channels, Clearer
TV Pictures To See

AIR CONDITIONING

Mrs .

Gordon McMillan, Miss Hatt ie
Huber,

CLEVF.LAND ( UPI) Voter registra tion in Cuyahoga
Coun ty is at an all-time high or
852,000, although only 52,000
voters registered in Tuesday's
special proceedings.
William Kubes , assistant
director of the county elections
board confirmed Wednesday
some persons were turned
away from the pr ecincts
durin g the special registration
because all precincts did not
open. "In all of the cases we
were not permitted to use the
location s.'' Kubes said .
·'Either they didn 't have space
or they just wouldn't let us set

Aug. 29 news conference on
troops reductions was "a noisy

one-month rise recorded since

record, leaving the average 6.7
per cent above April and 13per
cent above a year earlier.
Hog prices set a record for
the second consecutive month .
The report noted that arrivals
of hogs at sales yards during
the four weeks ending Aug. 19
were down 7 per cent from the
previous month.
Cattlemen, upset over the
de cline in cattle pri ces,
char ged Wednesda y that
consumers have benefitted
little il any from the price drop.
Cattle prices feUfrom a record $34.60 per hundredweight
July 15 to $33.50 in mid-August.
Bert Eason Jr., chairman of
the Iowa Beef Industry Council
and general spokesman for the
beef industry, told a Washing-

forces to 200,000 men , "more

Fay e Sauer , capta in, Mrs.

Will iam Rardin , Jr ., Mrs.

twin sisters of Minersville,

Shop Now For
Hot Weather Wear
1 Check us for best items al
Infants' and children's the besl prices. Plates,
play shor1s and sun- I Napkins , Cups. Knives .
suits.

Jan

Weth erholt . Martha McKenzie,
Dr . and Mrs. Ca rl Woods .

Mrs.

Few Sign Ups

capta in ,

Mrs. Joseph Antal.

OBSERVING 78ths
MINERSVILLE - Clara
Grueser and Fannie Phillips,

PLENTY OF HOT
WEATHER AHEAD
PICNIC TIME
THRU LABOR DAY

All Prices
Reduced For
Clearance I

Calhoun ,

ton news conference that the
average drop of $60 to $70 p&lt;r.
head for live cattle should ;-e
reflected In prices to th e co swner.
The average decline of $65
for saleable meat from a 1,100
pound steer co uld rest in a rice
drop of 12.9cents in the price of
bee f to the Amer ican
ho usewife, Eason said. However, he added, th ere has been
no indication this is happening.

October 1947.
The level reached by overall

Cuyahoga Has

Hackett, 20, Middleport ; Northcutt, June Lee &lt;Mrs.
Michael Dean Borgan 22 Archie I. Saundra Koby. Carrie
' ., '- Oale J ,
CoIumbus, an d Rosema.rJL'o... lil'POINT PLEASANT
Reed. 2i, Pomeroy, RD.
Student Team , Mr . A. K.

Specials Throughout The Store!

shorts.

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Werry,

SAL£ NOW IN PROGRESS

ANY HOME, new or old, can

Before Y~ Buy You Should Try

Valley Hospital Tuesday night.
In addition to the parents the
infant is survived by three
brothers, Jimmy, Randy and
Ricky, all at home ; the
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Holter, Racine, RD,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles

Community

WASHINGTON (UPI )- The
Ag ric ulture Departmen t 's
monthly farm price report
sho ws wheat prices staged the
greatest one-month rally in 25
years during th e month ending
Aug. 15.
The wheat increase, fueled
by news or massive export
sales to the Soviet Union, and a
jwnp in hog prices contributed
to a I per cent average price
in cre ase of all raw farm
products, despite a slump in
beer cattle prices.
The report showed ,;,heat
prices rose fr om a national
average or $1.32 a bushel to
$1.51 a bushel between midJuly and mid-August. The 19
cent increase was the grea les t

Pomeroy, and Linda Sue Caroline Roder ick , Zelma

. l~~ ·

Boys' and men's walking

CI!LLULOSI!
INSULATION

pened, and I still can't believe
it happened, but it did," he
said.

their eyes at the sight of the number or positions.
"No," he finally told Schmid,
gay and smiling Fischer, a far
cry from the temperamental "I cannot find a win anyand eternally protesting player where."
Then he picked up his
of previous games.
" Yes it was very pleasant, " thermos of coffee and walked
said Schmid. "Bobby asked me slowly off the' stage.
Mosl grandmasters agreed
if I could point out the position
for a repeated move because with the world champion that
he could not remember. I had there was no alternative to a
to get my own scoresheet as his draw .
But U.S. grandmaster Larry
was unreadable."
Mter the challenger left the Evans wasn't quite so sure.
stage Spassky remained "I'm not convinced Spassky
seated. Suddenly he picked up exhausted all possibilities, but
Fischer's king and started it will take days of careful
moving it round on the wooden analyzing to see what he could
squares, going through a have done."

BENlFRANKLIIW

ning .
The evolution of Afro-American music - traditional Dixieland jazz, gospel and blues - is
featured through Friday in

HAGAN

bizarre incident."
" It never should have hap-

O.arges Price of Wheat
·l d
Leve e Jumps Sky-High
Again

MEMPHIS, Tenn. IUPI)"lorlh Haven. Conn., was the
early fa vorite as e i~ ht teams
As President Nixon and from the United Sla tes and
Attorney General Richard G. Puerto Rico opened play today
Kleindienst did earlier, Dole in the annual American Legion
said he could see no reason to baseball world series.
have a special prosecutor
Thursday's opening schedule: PARIS (UP! )- The Communamed to investigate tbe case. Norfolk. Va., vs. El Cerrito, nist Vietnamese said today
Democratic spokesmen have Cali I. ; Puerto Rico vs. North President Nixon's latest troops
questioned having the Nixon Haven; Findlay, Ohio. vs . withdrawal is "a noisy propaadministrati on itself, through Ballwin, Mo.; and Lewiston, ga nda campaign" to cover the
tiie Justice Department, con- Idaho, vs. Memphis.
United States' tripling of its air
duct the investigation. Dole
North Haven had the best and naval for ces In South East
said he was confident the record of the eight teams with Asia.
department would full y only two losses in 29 games and The United States reply to
prosecute those responsible for on that strength is favored to this charge at the !57th session
th e incident.
become champion or the double- of the deadlocked Paris peace
elimination tournament which talks was that if th e other side
ends next Monday or Tuesday. only would accept President
Puerto Rico's representative Nixon 's peace plan, "th e
has lost only three games while shooting and fighting through(Continued from page 1)
winning 33 and Norfolk had a out Indochina could end this
Penny Moore and · Pat Mills 19-3 record.
morning."
Joan Sc hm idt, ca ptain, Betty
North Vietnamese negotiator
and Mac McGuinness. Edith
Ng uyen Minh Vy, in his
Ross, Mr. and Mrs. H. 0 .
Francis, Dortha Suiter , Eldon
prepared speech at the nearly
Wuer ch.
four-year-old session at the
Mary Ellen lingo, capta in.
conference hall, said Nixon's
Mi ldr ed Lee. Liz Cornell , Dene

Laurence

Dancers' ' perform every eve-

BY INSULATING
YOUR HOME WITH

said it would be simple to
amend the law to make it efreciive earlier. He said he was
thinking about introducing
such an amendment himself
and noted McGovern had the
same opportWlity when the
Senate reconvenes next week.
Dole was interviewed on the
NBC-TV Today show.
The senator descri~ed the
break-in of Democratic headquarters on June 17 as "a

Genius Fischer Win Away

To···

4111 &amp; Locust

Charges FaceDems

violations."

Hurry

New Englanders
Favored to Win

The Mew

MEIGS
-uu~ .
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Saturday
Night

CHAIRS

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Monday, Sept. · 4,
Labor Day. ·

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ud a lpOCiol ,._....., lor ......,. oaiJod cjnthe
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Tt'" wull/riMe waler ~ Apator-..ted fahrit . . , _ I~
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AUTHORIZED
~----~=-CATALOG
MERCHANT
220 E. MAIN .
992-2178
POMEROY
.

LOU&amp;THELMAOSBORNE
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 9 to s,
Thu·~. 9 to Noon. Friday 9:00to 9:00

.•

�.. #

'.

.

,.

9~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31, 1972

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 31, 19'12

State Fair Food Stands Reflect Decade of the 70s
00!-UMBUS (UPI)- There
Is a variety of food stands on
the State FairgroWlds that are
portentsofthefutureand of the
Decade of the 7&lt;8 :
Sign on a snow cone stand:
"Both regular and low calorie
syrup available. "

AffiMAN MITCHELL
WEST COLUMBIA Airman John T. Mllcheli, son
ol Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Mitchell ol Rt. I, West
Columbia, W. Va., has been
assigned to .Keesler AFB,
Miss., after completing Air
Foree haslc lralnlug. The
airman has been assigned to
the Tecbillcal Training
Center al Keesler lor
speclalhed trallllng In the
armamenj systems field.
Airman Mitchell Is a 1972
graduate of Wahama High
School.

Former
Ohio
State
University and Boston Celtic
basketball star John ':Hondo"
Havlicek set up a food stand on
the midway : "John Havlicek's
Seafood Basket," complete
with Celtic kelly green signs
and attendants wearing
Havlicek T-6hirts.
"This is the first restaurant

There was no noticeable
generation gap in the songs,
readings and prayers or the
fellowship . Small children
were caring for ~ maller
brothers, sisters and neighbors. Little Mark Russell, son
or Wayne and Sharon, had a
nap in his play pen against the
hillside.
Groups of all ages walked
about the grounds, back on the
hills, over the hill Ill go
swimming and boating. II
wasn't easy to get some started
for home, even to see the plains
across the beautiful Ohio at
Ravenswood.
On Aug. 20 speakers were
Brenda and Kelley Weller,
daughter and son-in-law of the
Clarence Bradfords. They
were married at Chrislmas by
Pastor Ralph Johnson, uncle ol
the bride.
Their home is in Independence, Mo.
Both are still at church
college, " Graceland" at
Lamoni, Ia. They spoke of the
college being not only a place
of learning, but how it has
grown from a two year college
in several years to the fuJi four
years now providing not only
religious education for
members but for students from
all walks of life, denominations
and coWltries.
Brenda is majoring in

WEDDING NOTED
LETART FALLS - Mr. and
Mrs. Fred MHier are an. noWJcing the marriage of their
daughter, Debbie Miller, to
Charles Hill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Hill, also of Letart
Falls, at the home of the Rev.
Freeland Norris in Racine on
Sunday, August 20.
Mr. and Mrs. Hill have
purchased a mobile home and
are residing in Racine .
ENJOY HAYRIDE
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls Boys 4-H Club
enjoyed a hayride and wiener
roast at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hupp recently. Attending were Randall Roberts
and sons, Todd and Chad ; Don
Hupp and sons, Larry, Chris
and Brian; James and David
Foreman, Richard Furbee and
Chris Wolfe.

been OK I guess."
Any personal· appearances
by the boss• "Yeah, Hondo's
been out to the lair about every
day."

"Don't
tell
anybody
anything," a midway food
stand op~rator advised .
"That's the first rule of carny
life. Competition is cut-throat.
You don 't even say casual
thing like, 'Slow day isn't it.'
They'll know how you are

doing."

Sign or the times in sports :
Some of the b~sketball
shooting stands on the midway
have been replaced by an
"NFL Pro Football . Throw."
You can win a prize by
chucking a pass through a hole
In a board about 15 yards
downfield . . . or down the
midway.
Midway freak shows took a
turn toward magnitude. For a

drinks gallons of water daily."
"It's the thril!.of a lifetime,"
the announcer promised.
Also, for only 25 cents you
could gaze at " Black Jack, one
of the world's largest steers."
Eleven feet long, six feet high,
with an almost 12-foot girth,
weighing 3,300 pounds. ,
"Ten thousand hamburgers
on the hoof," the barker
figured.
And, "deadly snakes, long
enough and strong enough to
crush yoo to death. But, the

quarter , "giant killer rats" carny assured, "encaged for
were on view. "Full grown and your protection."
over 40 poWlds," the signs

The fair moved Colwnbus
enthused.
"World's largest rat alive, native Jack Nicklaus beyond
super-&lt;rtar status. The datry

barn gave him "super bUtter"
acclaim as a sculplllr captured
his life.&amp;ze likeness In butter.
Jack teed off ·tn tfie
refrigerated display case while
all-butter cows stared In
amazement.
The state Departrnenl of
Natural Resources, content in
IJ'evious yearS to show off
snakes and fish, took a serious,
ecological editorial stand this
year.
A question board asked
visitors : "Since 1914, more
than 280,000 acres of land have
been strip mined in Ohio and it
is estimated that 100,000 of
those acres have not been
satisfac!Drily reclaimed. Do

Balloon Race Friday
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The 7up International Hot Air Balloon Race will be held at the
Ohio State Fair Friday, featuring the world's largest hot
air balloon.

AT FQ&gt;RJ(Ef) RU'N £N)·TQ YED

boxes and freezers of ice
cream.

chain ."
How's business? "Oh, it's

Hondo's set up / ' an attendant

SUNDAYSCHOOL PICNIC
By GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - On Aug . 13,
the Church of the Reorganized
Latter Da, Saints held a
Sunday School picnic at Forked
Run Lake State Park with a
large attendance or church
folk, friends and neighbors.
Some were vacationing ,
others ill at horne or in
hospitals, and were missed
very much. It was a beautiful,
cool morning, turning Into a
warm Sabbath Day enjoyed by
those who partook or a bounbll!l noon meal froin baskets,

said. "It's sort of a prototype.
If it's sucCessful he may start a
regular restaurant or maybe a

medicine; Kelley is from
California, but they may make
their home at Independence .
We're very proud of our young
folk who are lilting themselves
lor life and service.
On Wednesday evening our
prayer and youth meeting were
combined, followed by a
wiener roast and singing .
Camp songs round the campfire. Dr. Ronald Gillilan spoke
or his work in churches and as
a doctor and participated in the
recreation.
Community Notes: The
doctor and two sons are
visiting his mother, Golda
Gillilan and grandmother, Lois
McKenzie · also his uncle and
aun t, the ' Edgar Taylors, on
McKenzie Ridge.
Lucy Taylor will return to
Baltimore with Ronnie for a
checkup at the hospital there .
Myrtle Proffitt remains a
patient at Holzer Hospital and
Edgar Taylor isn't feeling so
well this summer. Jane
Johnson is at Charleston this
week attending a funeral.
Louise (Deem) Barnes,
Colwnbiana attended church
services W~dnesday evening.
She's visiting her parents, the
Geo. Deems and friends and
neighbors . Everyone was
happy to see her. She is a
graduate of Racine High
School
·
CONTESTS SET
The state cupcake and
national
crochet
and
needlework contests will be at
the 8 p.m. Friday meeting or
the Meigs County Pomona
Grange at the Rock Sprigs
Grange Hall. Racine Grange
will be host. The junior grange
contest will be judged at the
meeting and all granges are
reminded to submit the names
lor prince and princess. Mrs.
Elizabeth Jordan, lecturer ,
will present the program.
DINE AT PARK
The Salisbury Brownie Troop
hosted a mother-daughter
wiener roast Tuesday evening
at the Route 33 roadside park.
Attending were Mts. Waiter
Morris and Carol, Mrs. Jack
Welker, Jena and Jackie, Mrs.
Ned Swindell, Paula and
Camille , Mrs . Charles
Williams , Linda Williams,
Mrs. Donald Dorst, Becky,
Teresa, Donald and Delores
Dorst, Mrs . Oscar Smith ,
Laura, Gail, and Anita, Mrs.
Donald Sheets and Kathy .

CHAPTER TO MEET
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will meet
Sept. 8 at the Episcopal Parish
House, 2 p.m. A program on
Constitution Week will be
presented by Mrs. Nan Moore.
Mrs. J. Edward Foster, Mrs.
Lucille Smith and Mrs. Nancy
Reed will be the hostesses.

The 84,000 cubic foot Omego
balloon will be piloted by Julian R.P. Nott of Great Britain.
Nott set a new absolute hoi air
balloon world altitude record of
36,200 feet last month at Hereford, Englaud .
U.S. champion balloonist
Bruce Comstock of Ann Arbor,
Mich ., will fly the Piccard
Gypsy .
Other entries will be Dr.
William Grabb, a plastic surgeon from Arm Arbor, Mich.
who won the 1970 race; Deke
Sonnichsen of Menlo Park,
Calif.; Dennis Flnden of F1int,
Mich .; Tom Oerman of Muscatine, Iowa ; and Reber Chamhers of Statesville, N.C.
. A lead balloon will lilt off at
noon Friday, chased by the
seven entries. The ~inner of
the 6().mmute race w1ll be the
halloonist who lands closest to
the lead balloon.
Attendance Off
The balloons, blown by prevaillng winds, will travel an
estimated 20 miles. This is the
firth consecutive year the race
has been held here.
.
Attendance fell off at th.e frur
Wednesday as 163,854 pa1d admissions wer~ .recorded. Last
year 172,878v1Sited the grounds
on the seventh day of the
festival. With five days left in
the fair , a total of 1,285,737
lairgoers have come and gone,
about 13,000 fewer than last
year at this time..
.
A tractor pull Will be held m
the east grandstands Friday
and Saturday with winners ·
sharing in a ~13,500 purse.
Ike and Tma Turne~ take
over the grandstand entertainment today with afternoon and
evenmg performances.
Roberta F1ack and AI Green
perf~rm Friday ..
Fal!'goers strollmg about the
grounds can be entertained by
a group of minstrel singers and
dancers who perform on a
moving Oat bed truck. The
"Chuck Sheik Singers and

you know how large an area
Utat is?"
A butllln was pushed Ill get
the answer : "An area slightly
larger than Columbus; Ohio's
largest city ·In area.''
~estion : "How can I help Ill
IJ'Oieet endangered anil)lals?"
Answer ; "Support conservatioll activities, including
the passage and enforcement

ofllrOIW ....... ..
Editorial sipbolrdl In tile
department's building took
Ohio indualrY Ill task: "In 1171,
73 companies were charged
with polluting our water under
the stream Utter . law. 'l'hat
year only two cases were lost In
cow1."
And, "It Is estimated thatIndustry contributes 10 per
cent of all water pollution ;
municipal se\j'age treatment 25
per cent, and poor f!U1Jling
ll'actices 15 per ceot."

front of the Arts and Crafts
Building at the fair. The cooking of soul food - shrimp
gumbo, sweet and white pototo
pie - is exhibited dally In the
folk festival area.
Dances And Cookies
Thirty busloads of senior
citizens from Cincinnati ·were
fair visitors today.
On Wednesday, Gerald Lincoln and Mrs. Norma Cisco of
Uma won the senior citizens
dance contest. Mrs. Opal Sparrowe of Findlay, Mrs. Christine
Harris qf Bluffton, Mrs. Winifred Cussac of Troy, Mrs. Mabel Haney of Paulding and
Mrs. Irene Smith of Norwalk
won the cookie bakeoff.

McClrJre's ForA Dairy Tre~~t

11uJt .Can. 't Be Beat.

'

McCLURE'S

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I
Middtepor1. o;

992-5248

700 W. Main • Pomeroy
1-~

9 to 9 Daily-Sunday

AVE

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Republican National Chairman
Robert Dole said today he
would make additional charges
of campaign fund viola,tions by
Sen. George S. Me?&lt;&gt; vern's
backers. He fUed seven Wednesday which government
auditors are investigating.
He said he would be citing
this week two or three more
allegations. At the same time,
Dole said that in this first year
of operation of the new
disclosure
law,
both
Democrats and Republicans
would commit "unintentional

The General Accounting Of·
lice (GAO) , which last
weekend reported · possible
violations by fWld·dasers for
President Nixon, moved
quickly to investigate Dole's
initial charges.
The Democrats have contended that some funds for' the
Nixon rt!1!lection effort, though
possibly collected before the
new law requiring disclosure of
contributions went into effect
April 7, should be looked Into
because they were not reported
until after the deadline .
Dole said today the GOP was
not trying to hide anything and

10.00

ON THE BIG

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI )
-Chess genius Bobby Fischer
is a win away from the world
title he dreamed of for 20
years.
The American challenger,
29, wbo started playing chess
before his teens and dropped
out "of high school at 16 to
devote all his time to it, got a
draw in the 20th game against
Russian world champion Boris
Spassky Wednesday and
moved within one point of the
magic figure-the 12.5 points
necessary to win the title.
Relaxed and smiling ,
Fischer called over referee
LA&gt;thar S~ hmid after the
R11SSian played his :Wth move
and offered a draw. Alter a
sljght hesitation Spassky accepted and put out his hand for
the traditional handshake.
The 21st game begins at 1
p.m. EIYI today with Spassky
playing white and moving first .
The 33-year-old Leningrad
journaHst must win at least
three and draw the fourth of
the remaining games to retain
the title he won in 1969 and
which has been in Russian
hands lor 3S years.
The 800 fans on hand for the
20th game, which had been
started Tuesday and adjourned
in the 41st move until Wednesday, could hardly believe

Services Held At Graveside
Gr aves ide services were
held today at 10 a. m. at
Gilmore Cemetery in Forest
Run for the stillborn daughter
ol Mr . and Mrs. James Werry,
Rac ine, born at Pleasant

HAS SURGERY
Mrs. William Matlack,
Pomeroy Route 3, is·a patient
at the Hol~er Medical Center
wh ere she has undergone
minor surgery and is receiving
medical treatment lor an inner
ear disorder. Her room
number is 302.

CARPET-LAND, INC.
Wall To Wall Carpet Specinlists

116 W. MAIN
Free
Estimates

PH.

POMEROY
992~7590

Open Monday lhru Saturday 9 to 5
Friday Night r~1 s:oo
8udgtt Terms Of' BankAmericard

Pomeroy ;

great-

grandparents, Martha Rose,
Portland , RD .; Herman
Werry, Pomeroy, and Ralph
Gibbs, Sr., New Haven. Ewing
Funeral Home was in charge.

Wagner ,

Mickie

Coo kie Johnson .
Ber ni ce Bu cc i ,

FROM

Kat ie Sprow. Virgin ia Blowers ,
Wil ee n

Edward s,

CABLE TV

POMEROY

Nancy Reed , captain. Mrs.

Patri ck Lochary. Mr s. John
Reece, Mrs. Ja mes O'Brian.
Mar i anne Campbell , captain, Ann Wi ckl ine, Jean Neal,
June Lewi s, Stev e Elbe'rfeld,

Margie Adkins.

Mar i on
Ford ,
captain ,
Max ine Carm an, Lfdia Groth,
June Ada ms, Ida haler , and

Mikell Hand.

Ma r tha Roderick , capta in,

Dora Jo Griffin, J udy Pa rso ns,
Gill ia n Moor e, Kathy An derson, Vickie Mitchel l.

Florence Lintala , capta in,
Bev Ge ttl es, Je an Co ope r,
Peggy Evans, J an Thaler and
Dianna Halley.
Sue Beverly , captain, El sie

Neal , Ca th erine

Hayw a rd ,
Ca rol Polen, Bobby Holzer and

Gladys Grant.
MIDDLEPORT

John Ha rr ison, Rutland ; Mrs .
Sibl ey Sla ck, Mi ss .Jea n

Wh itehead, Reedsv ille.

Syracuse, Mrs. John Ri chard

Lee , cap tain, Mrs. Bob J . Ord;
Jackson , At Evans ; Mason ,
West
Va ..
Mrs . Nolan

S wa c kh a mme r ;
Area
Businesses , Jack Gr iffin.

POINT PLEASANT

Bi ll Brady. captain,

Marriage Lieenses
Jordan. Mrs. Russel Bibbee.
John Vincent Goodwin , 22,
RIO GRANDE

SERVICE

observed their 781h birthdays
today.

__..Panls ,

shorts

summer suits.

~

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Linda Sue
. Allen, Cheryl All en; Mrs .
Raymond · Haga, all ol Point
Pleasant ; Edith Sommer ,
Southside ; Mrs . Michae I

Forks, Spoons , Ice Chests,

Girls' and women's hat

-·

Wafer Jugs. OUtdoor Toys
ilnd Games . Swim, Beach

and I 1nd Sand Toys.

3 Speed
20" FANS........

.

l

Brewer, Mason; Mrs. Ernest

Coop, Apple Grove.

388

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

NOW LET

OLD MAN KILLED
CANTON (UPI ) - Arnold
Crist, 72, Canton was struck
and killed as he walked on a
road near his home here
Wednesday night. No charges
have been filed against the
driver or the car .

~~~~F~2~~~i~~~~

l

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

992-3498.
POMEROY,
OHIO
.
OPEN FRIDAY. SA'IlJRDAY NIGHTS TILt

HAR E!

CUT YOUR

SEPT· l thru )
( SEPT. 30 only ,

COSTS UP TO

~·

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMIT'J'ED
Larr y
Thoma s. Pomeroy ; Bessie
Hudson , Mason; Kathryn
Miller, Middleport ; Harrison
Robinson , Letart, W. Va .;
Lucille Bearhs, Middleport;
Mildred Johnson , Middleport.
and Diana Pope. Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Emory
Haggy, Virginia Hoy, Clarence
McDaniel, Franklin Lemley
and Harriett Hyatt.

Bruce Stalnaker, vocalist

ACTION FILED
A suit lor money in the
amount of $4,528.47 plus interest has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
MASSILLON, Ohi o (UP! )- by AVCO Financial Services,
Bria n Coleman , 16, ol San- Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa., against
dusky, di ed Wednesday at Alvin L. Barnett and Mildred
Massillon City Hospital from a Barnett, Pomeroy, Rt. 4. The
severe head injury suffered case of USS Agri-Chemicals vs
Aug. 26 during a football James Goodrich has been
scrimmage against Massillon dismissed .
High School.
Coleman, a sophomore at BEARS TRIM ROSTER
Sandusky High, had been
CHICAGO ( UPI )- The
hospitalized since the injury. Chicago Bears trimmed their
His was the first football- roster to 31 men Tuesday with
attributed death of the 1972-73 the release of five experienced
season in the state.
players and two rookies.
Those released were : end
Ray Ogden, center Gene
Hamlin, wide receiver John
Embree, running back Bill
Tucker, safety Reynaud Moore
and rookies Grant CVItanich
from San Francisco State and
Paul McPipkin of Georgia .
was 76 degrees under sunny
skies.

SAME DAY
SERVttE
In At 9:-0ut At 5
·Use Our Free Parking Lot.

Robi~
9-23

aeaners

216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

LA-Z-BOV
'

CALL FOR YOUR FREE HOOKUP TODAY!

FOR fREE ESTIMATE

OR IN

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTr
W.•

~A._6_7_5_-3_3_._9_8_~-~j_:~E-L_9_9_2_-_2_505
..

THE WORLD
ROVER

1

Truck Ditched
The Meigs County Sheriff 's
Dept. investiga ted a minor
accide nt Wednesday at 2:30
p.m. on SR 7, one mile north of
Pomeroy .
David Nelson Slater , 24,
Sisso nville, W. Va., was
traveling south on 7 when, due
to mechanical failure, his truck
pulled off the road on the ri ght
toofar and skidded into a ditc h.
There was no dama ge to the
tr uck, no injuries, and no
ci tation iss ued.

CARAVELLE
by

8ULOVA

In sta nt accurate answers for th e
ma n wl1o needs to k now the r1gh t

t11ne here, and tn Bagh dad or
Lo ndon. Rotating outer ri ng
shows all im porta nt Cl i tes 'J f th e
globe, tel ls thetr t 1111e at a glance.

News.

•

• • ln

Briefs

(Continued from page I )
voice and leaving a bomb-like device in a locker along with a note
which said "pay up or blow up."
Authorities said the money was not dropped off as ordered
because the extortionist who called Gen . Mitchell Airport either
was playing a hoax or was frightened away.

~:.',~yh
i ~~~ ~·:.
c:ause· Ca ravelle ·

wen t way out ol
its way.

$1995
:

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

Kenmore Automatics
Our Lowest Prices
in 2 Years
For A4-tycle
Washer

and
Matching
Dryer

SHIRt
FINISHING

"THEY PLAY IT AU"

Local ,Foothall, Local News,
Local Weather, Local Events

than triple since the beginning
of the year."
Nixon said at his San
Clemente, Calif. , news conference his latest troop reduction
will cut the number of U.S.
for ces in South Vietnam to
27,000 men.
There are ,about 80,000 to
83,000 American servicemen in
Thailand and . in ships off the
Vietmanese coast engaged in
the air war against the north.

the world
over!

Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m.

FEATURING

be fully insulated to cut
your cooling costs . Our
trained crew blows supP.·
rlor Hagan Insulation in
attic and wails' withoul
muss or fuss . .. wilhoul
disturbing your household
routine. The fuel savings
pay f01Ihe job.
PHONE 992-5321

Vy, standing in for vacationing chief negotiator Xuan Thuy
said, "What Nixon is doing is
not reducing troops but committing massively into the war
the two most powerful services
of the U.S. armed for ces- the
Navy and Air .Force- and
maintaining hundreds of thousands of ground troops in
Vietnam. " .
Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, chief
negotiator for the Viet Cong,
told journalists before she
entered the conference hall
that the United States has
increased its naval and air

in every
important
city

Jewel ·levered. wate r rests tant
with lum1nous dial. guarante ed
by Bul ova, tt's th e su ave new

FORECAST
Mostly sunny and wann
toda y with highs in the 80s.
Suiter, captain, Bill Rai ney,
Fair
and cool tonight with lows
David Kayser, Kim Dunsmoor,
Karen Long, Belinda Litch- in
the 60s. Increasing
ti eld .
cloudiness
and
warm
Rio Grande Student Team
tomorrow
with
a
chance
or
(College), Merlyn Ross,
showers except in th e
capta in.
southeast. Highs tomorrow in
the mid 80s to low 80s.
LOCAL TEMPS

The Aristocrats

All The Shows Coming
In The New Fall Season

bombs. ''

glance ...

farm prices was another new

captain,

This Week

0

up .''

campaign of propaganda on a
new withdrawal of 12,000 men
(whi ch) cannot drown the
explos ion o£ American

the time

Now!
At a

lodays FUNNY

Again

More Channels, Clearer
TV Pictures To See

AIR CONDITIONING

Mrs .

Gordon McMillan, Miss Hatt ie
Huber,

CLEVF.LAND ( UPI) Voter registra tion in Cuyahoga
Coun ty is at an all-time high or
852,000, although only 52,000
voters registered in Tuesday's
special proceedings.
William Kubes , assistant
director of the county elections
board confirmed Wednesday
some persons were turned
away from the pr ecincts
durin g the special registration
because all precincts did not
open. "In all of the cases we
were not permitted to use the
location s.'' Kubes said .
·'Either they didn 't have space
or they just wouldn't let us set

Aug. 29 news conference on
troops reductions was "a noisy

one-month rise recorded since

record, leaving the average 6.7
per cent above April and 13per
cent above a year earlier.
Hog prices set a record for
the second consecutive month .
The report noted that arrivals
of hogs at sales yards during
the four weeks ending Aug. 19
were down 7 per cent from the
previous month.
Cattlemen, upset over the
de cline in cattle pri ces,
char ged Wednesda y that
consumers have benefitted
little il any from the price drop.
Cattle prices feUfrom a record $34.60 per hundredweight
July 15 to $33.50 in mid-August.
Bert Eason Jr., chairman of
the Iowa Beef Industry Council
and general spokesman for the
beef industry, told a Washing-

forces to 200,000 men , "more

Fay e Sauer , capta in, Mrs.

Will iam Rardin , Jr ., Mrs.

twin sisters of Minersville,

Shop Now For
Hot Weather Wear
1 Check us for best items al
Infants' and children's the besl prices. Plates,
play shor1s and sun- I Napkins , Cups. Knives .
suits.

Jan

Weth erholt . Martha McKenzie,
Dr . and Mrs. Ca rl Woods .

Mrs.

Few Sign Ups

capta in ,

Mrs. Joseph Antal.

OBSERVING 78ths
MINERSVILLE - Clara
Grueser and Fannie Phillips,

PLENTY OF HOT
WEATHER AHEAD
PICNIC TIME
THRU LABOR DAY

All Prices
Reduced For
Clearance I

Calhoun ,

ton news conference that the
average drop of $60 to $70 p&lt;r.
head for live cattle should ;-e
reflected In prices to th e co swner.
The average decline of $65
for saleable meat from a 1,100
pound steer co uld rest in a rice
drop of 12.9cents in the price of
bee f to the Amer ican
ho usewife, Eason said. However, he added, th ere has been
no indication this is happening.

October 1947.
The level reached by overall

Cuyahoga Has

Hackett, 20, Middleport ; Northcutt, June Lee &lt;Mrs.
Michael Dean Borgan 22 Archie I. Saundra Koby. Carrie
' ., '- Oale J ,
CoIumbus, an d Rosema.rJL'o... lil'POINT PLEASANT
Reed. 2i, Pomeroy, RD.
Student Team , Mr . A. K.

Specials Throughout The Store!

shorts.

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Werry,

SAL£ NOW IN PROGRESS

ANY HOME, new or old, can

Before Y~ Buy You Should Try

Valley Hospital Tuesday night.
In addition to the parents the
infant is survived by three
brothers, Jimmy, Randy and
Ricky, all at home ; the
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Holter, Racine, RD,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles

Community

WASHINGTON (UPI )- The
Ag ric ulture Departmen t 's
monthly farm price report
sho ws wheat prices staged the
greatest one-month rally in 25
years during th e month ending
Aug. 15.
The wheat increase, fueled
by news or massive export
sales to the Soviet Union, and a
jwnp in hog prices contributed
to a I per cent average price
in cre ase of all raw farm
products, despite a slump in
beer cattle prices.
The report showed ,;,heat
prices rose fr om a national
average or $1.32 a bushel to
$1.51 a bushel between midJuly and mid-August. The 19
cent increase was the grea les t

Pomeroy, and Linda Sue Caroline Roder ick , Zelma

. l~~ ·

Boys' and men's walking

CI!LLULOSI!
INSULATION

pened, and I still can't believe
it happened, but it did," he
said.

their eyes at the sight of the number or positions.
"No," he finally told Schmid,
gay and smiling Fischer, a far
cry from the temperamental "I cannot find a win anyand eternally protesting player where."
Then he picked up his
of previous games.
" Yes it was very pleasant, " thermos of coffee and walked
said Schmid. "Bobby asked me slowly off the' stage.
Mosl grandmasters agreed
if I could point out the position
for a repeated move because with the world champion that
he could not remember. I had there was no alternative to a
to get my own scoresheet as his draw .
But U.S. grandmaster Larry
was unreadable."
Mter the challenger left the Evans wasn't quite so sure.
stage Spassky remained "I'm not convinced Spassky
seated. Suddenly he picked up exhausted all possibilities, but
Fischer's king and started it will take days of careful
moving it round on the wooden analyzing to see what he could
squares, going through a have done."

BENlFRANKLIIW

ning .
The evolution of Afro-American music - traditional Dixieland jazz, gospel and blues - is
featured through Friday in

HAGAN

bizarre incident."
" It never should have hap-

O.arges Price of Wheat
·l d
Leve e Jumps Sky-High
Again

MEMPHIS, Tenn. IUPI)"lorlh Haven. Conn., was the
early fa vorite as e i~ ht teams
As President Nixon and from the United Sla tes and
Attorney General Richard G. Puerto Rico opened play today
Kleindienst did earlier, Dole in the annual American Legion
said he could see no reason to baseball world series.
have a special prosecutor
Thursday's opening schedule: PARIS (UP! )- The Communamed to investigate tbe case. Norfolk. Va., vs. El Cerrito, nist Vietnamese said today
Democratic spokesmen have Cali I. ; Puerto Rico vs. North President Nixon's latest troops
questioned having the Nixon Haven; Findlay, Ohio. vs . withdrawal is "a noisy propaadministrati on itself, through Ballwin, Mo.; and Lewiston, ga nda campaign" to cover the
tiie Justice Department, con- Idaho, vs. Memphis.
United States' tripling of its air
duct the investigation. Dole
North Haven had the best and naval for ces In South East
said he was confident the record of the eight teams with Asia.
department would full y only two losses in 29 games and The United States reply to
prosecute those responsible for on that strength is favored to this charge at the !57th session
th e incident.
become champion or the double- of the deadlocked Paris peace
elimination tournament which talks was that if th e other side
ends next Monday or Tuesday. only would accept President
Puerto Rico's representative Nixon 's peace plan, "th e
has lost only three games while shooting and fighting through(Continued from page 1)
winning 33 and Norfolk had a out Indochina could end this
Penny Moore and · Pat Mills 19-3 record.
morning."
Joan Sc hm idt, ca ptain, Betty
North Vietnamese negotiator
and Mac McGuinness. Edith
Ng uyen Minh Vy, in his
Ross, Mr. and Mrs. H. 0 .
Francis, Dortha Suiter , Eldon
prepared speech at the nearly
Wuer ch.
four-year-old session at the
Mary Ellen lingo, capta in.
conference hall, said Nixon's
Mi ldr ed Lee. Liz Cornell , Dene

Laurence

Dancers' ' perform every eve-

BY INSULATING
YOUR HOME WITH

said it would be simple to
amend the law to make it efreciive earlier. He said he was
thinking about introducing
such an amendment himself
and noted McGovern had the
same opportWlity when the
Senate reconvenes next week.
Dole was interviewed on the
NBC-TV Today show.
The senator descri~ed the
break-in of Democratic headquarters on June 17 as "a

Genius Fischer Win Away

To···

4111 &amp; Locust

Charges FaceDems

violations."

Hurry

New Englanders
Favored to Win

The Mew

MEIGS
-uu~ .
Ponli!OI• Ohio

""· 992-3629

Saturday
Night

CHAIRS

We will be closed
Monday, Sept. · 4,
Labor Day. ·

17988

Suds Saver
RIPt.pbd con lor all ,_. w+•Na

Authorized Dealer

MASON
FURNITURE
Hermin Uor11•

777-5591

MIIDn,W. VI .

Clio-,_

Matching Dryer

11988
White, Electric

""'lid ....

Now you can buy !hat

prices.

COLORS, 184.88

• .,...:-'lor&lt;ott-,eo•tdorlooda;pol -1
pnM wltll poduol t.lll :Iowa to kelt&gt; W1fakloo fnna
- - Ia; lllllt/delfcolj, willa • plltle """""' lldloa;
ud a lpOCiol ,._....., lor ......,. oaiJod cjnthe
Two-tpoe" llwo ,.,. oddod 8edbility. 'l1lno
- - - eet!Jnp llelp,.,. • .., .... deta..,.t.
Tt'" wull/riMe waler ~ Apator-..ted fahrit . . , _ I~
. Sell :1 •"'1 Bat
ilia'. Pon:elala-fiai+
Wet, wooci-cniaN
viaylooooole. Aaylle-6aloll&lt;&amp;b!Dot, 29 iadJeo wide, 26
lntheo deop, 4J ...,.. Web ......0.

'

I

!

comfortable
La·Z-Boy
chair you've always

dreamed of at our low

10 til 2

THE WASHER
w~:e,

r~EARS

AUTHORIZED
~----~=-CATALOG
MERCHANT
220 E. MAIN .
992-2178
POMEROY
.

LOU&amp;THELMAOSBORNE
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 9 to s,
Thu·~. 9 to Noon. Friday 9:00to 9:00

.•

�'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pom eroy, 0., Aug . 31, 19'12

.

IN~~~~:T~~N

lri Memory

.
. , DEADliNES

) p.,M. Day

Befor e Publ icati Olf. IN LO VING m em or y of Cha r les
Man day Oeadl i.ne 9 a.m.
Edwa rd Snider who passed
Cancel latio n - Correc tions
aw a y Augu st 31, 1962. In

W iltbet~~ccepted un til 9 a . m . for.
DRaEy G
ofUPLuAbTii lcOo N
t iosn
Th• Pu bliSher r eser ves the
r ight .to ed i t or re jec t any ads.
deemed
obj ection al.
Th e
pu bliShEU' w il l not be r espons ib le
for mo ~ tha n on e . incor r ec t
· insertion .

•

NoiiCe
YARD SAL E, Thursday. Fr i day
cl nd Sa tu rday on Lukt n
Stree t, Rut land .

8-JQ.Jtc

lovi ngm emoryotourFathe r.
to th e one we loved so well ; it
has bee n len years
lth since you
wen t away ; w ou1 a 1as1
goodbye. But t ime cannot
erase the mem or y of y our
gen tl e fa ce and smil e, tha t we
lov ed so well . You r memory is

F Sl
or J

!=orSalc
••
CANNING
toll'·1 i oes and
I SI E(·L ER fue l od oil h ea l i·~· m angoes . Gerald ine Cle land,
with Qluw·.&gt;r, li ke new.· I
Wor p1 M orni ng Lua l heitler ;
phone 99~ , 35 1 3.

-----·---·---

s

r esidence near F ir e tation.
Reed sville. Ohio . F r iday ,
Sat ur day and Sun day .

Help Wante

.

: ·- --DUE TO a frdc I ur c d h •P·. I am
se lli ng n new 5 h .p . WI ZZdrd
gar den ti ll er a t S50 off
Western Au to r etai l pri ce ; a
bcugain for someone for S139.
L owe ll Wi ng e t t , Rt . 4 ,

d

Rac ine. Ohi o.

•

8-16-ft c
- --

thr ough early Septembe r ;
Bob's Markel, Mason, W. Va .,
above the Pom er oy-M as9n
Bridge; phone 773-5308.
.
B-15-tf c

eROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

Lost

Wanted To Buy

CARRIERS
WANTED
Clifton and

Hartford, W. Va.

Notice

The Daily Sentinel

Rea I Estate For Sale

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

LEGAL NOTICE

PH. 992-2571
OR 992-3975

~===~::~~===1

DANCE

, .. ( l '

f

I I

llARNEY · •

IS :STMJDIIJG.

BALLS 0' FIRE!!

(

I DONE GIVE TATER

I

&amp;~IJD

HIM liKE 11-IIS

!

'&lt;:

.'

HIS MEDICINE AI\J '
I RLUMB FERGOT
TO S HAKE IT UP

·I

qual i ty, tree ripened, ca.nning
peac h es ; n oW a va• 1a bl e

Real Estate For

Thanks

e

.

R·ATES
our kee psake w ith which we
Pomer oy : phone 992-2922 .
' FOr Wa n' Ad Serv ice
wi ll never par t.
8.29-3fc
5 cents per Word on e ;nsertion Sadly m issed by his chi ld ren, AUTO BODY man. experi ence
Sale
M inim um Ch arge 75c ~
necessa ry , we wa nt a man
12 cents per word t hree
Ra y mond ,
Ruth ,
Dal e.
who ca n do qu ality wor k in a LeBLANC clar inet, B fla t, very ON E A CRE and old house 1n
con secut ive inser liotis.
Beatr ice. Ronni e &amp; Jan et 1
reason able length of . tim e.
good con dition ; phone 66 7- Pomeroy . Phone 992-6675.
18 ce nts per · ~,or d six co n
8-31-1 P
The biggest and best body
3511 or 667-3400.
8-31-3tp
secut ive inser tions. ,
1
t
8-29-6tc __ .,.
25 Per cent Disc oun t on paid
shop in the area. exce len
adsa nd ads paidw ith in 10days.
pay and fr ing e benefit s. · ---~~-_----- - - - - · - - - TWO BUILDING Lot s in
CARD OF THANKS
Contact Ji m Buchanan, Body KENNEB EC potatoes, $5 for Harri sonvill e. On e is ap&amp; OBITUARY
Shop Foreman, Ma son Coun ty . lOO i b.; see JohnPape, Raci ne pro x imately 1 acr e with
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Motor Compan y, Chevrol et
or phone 949 3025.
septi c tank and a drilled well
Each add j1ional word 2c .
and Oldsmobile Dealership,
8-29-6f c and a dug well . Doyl e Hudson,
Point
Pl easan
~ ---- - - - -- - -- Phone 992-5048.
Addit ionBLIND
al 25c ADS
Charg e R,e r LOST BE TW EE: N Pom er oy
( J0 )
_
_t, W. Va . Phone
4 675 3370
8·31 ·3tc
Adv ert is&amp;men t .
Motor and Far mer ' s Bank .
IN T ER lOR , exterior painting 1
8-JI -2tc AU CTIC&gt;N . Sa tu r da y, Se p·
OFFICE HOU'R$ ·
lad ies while gold Lad y El gi n
!ember 2nd, 1 p. m. I have
r emodeling , build ing. Contact
wa t ch an d ban d. Eve lyn G.
· B:JO a.m.. to S.OO, p.m, Uai ly,
sold my home and wi ll se ll the 1 BUILDIN G l ots, 95' x 200'
Ernest Deeter, Bashan .
8: 30 a .m . to 12: 00 No on
Kn i ght , 118 Lin col n Hi ll,
each;
phone
992-5786
.
Saturda y.
pe r sonal property loca ted just
8·31 ·6tc
8·2Htc
ph one 992·2433
ofl State Route 14J nea r the
8·30·3tp
o!
church in Harr isonvill e, Ohio.
PRICE CONSTRUCTION ,
Wat ch for sale sign s.
8 ROOM house, bath , larg e lot ,
roof ing , porch repa ir and
WE WANT t o thank every one
Warm Morn ing gas heater,
ga s and el ec tric , Rt. l,
elec tri cal ; phone 742-4286.
who helped in any way after
65,000 BTU , 2 r efrig erators,
Midd lepor t. Phone 992 ·2602 .
the death of our dea r
8-16·30tc
IN
SunRay gas rang e, Frigidaire
8·27 ·8tp
daughter . May God bless you OLD Furniture, oak tabl es ,
el ec tric range ; Maytag
DOZE~ and back hoe work.
organ s, di shes, clocks, brass
all. Her heartbroken lamily,
washer (wringer type). 5 pc.
ponds and septic tanks ; 8 &amp; K
bed s, or comp lete households .
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fox. her
CONVENIENT but secluded
dinette. 2 ufility cabinets,
Ex cavating , Phone 992-5367.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,
sisters, lola and Ruth , her
building lots at Rock Spririgs,
G.E. electric heater, treadle
Pom eroy , Ohi o. Call 992-627 1.
Dick. Karr, Jr .
husband, Earl Roush and
close fa High· School &amp; Fair
sewi.ng ma chine, 3 pc.
5-21 ·1fC
6-28· tfc
children. We loved her, yes .
Ground ; ca ll or see Bi ll Witte,
bedroom su i te , sofa bed,
.,...------,----,-we loved her, but angels loved
992 ·2789 after 5 p.m. week ·
rocker and other cha irs, hall
her more . So their gentle
days.
WI L L CUT or tr im tree s,
PHONE 992 -2156
tree,
ironing
board,
stand
s,
voi ce has called her to yonder
8-6-JOtc re asonable ; al so clean out
lamps, bedding, hand tools, - - - - - - - - - - , : , shining shores. The Golden YAR D SA L E. Wean es day.
ba se ments ,
att ics
and
whee lbarrow, lawn mower, LO TS ON wr ;g hl Str eet , ce llar s; phone 949·3221.
Th ur sday &amp; Fr iday , 10 a.m. t o
Gales were open , a gentle
ladders and ot her art icles not
8 p.m ., 894 Pear St., M idvoi ce said. " Com e", and w1 th
Pomeroy ; ph one 742-59 30.
B-29-JOt c
listed. Wi llard 0 . Faudree,
fa rewe ll s unspoken , she
dl eport .
ALL AB OARD HOUSEWIVES.
8 29· 12tc
owner . Terms : Cash . Not
8-29-31c
calmly entered home .
EN ROLL BY SE PT . 25th .
respon sible for accident s. The 3
8·31 ·11P
BEDROOM
house
in
Last chance to hop aboard the
Bradford Auction Co ., C. C.
KOSC OT KOS METI CS and
PLAYHOUS E TOY t ra in to
Harr ison._- ille ; phone 742-3386 .
Bradford, auct ioneer .
wigs, more new products
9.3o. 3tp
success. We're s~ ll i ng to ys
Employment Wanted
8·31· 1k
co m i ng soon . For tr ee
and booking parti es, hav ing
AVAILABLE
immediat ely.
dem onstrat ion , phon e 992 5. ROOMS and bath , nic e size
fun and getting pa id . As a
General Carpenter Foreman .
5113.
demo I have no delivering , no PONY, 12 quart er hor se, weir ba ckya r d . New ~lumln_um
Phone 992-6675.
8·17 .tfc
coll ecti on, and I do not need
trai ned. Mila Powel L cal l 992 - siding , r oof and 1nsulat 10n.
any ex peri ence. I get fr ee
Ov erlook i ng new Belvill e
2622.
training . Final deadl ine for
Locks and Dam in Reedsv ille ,
SPE CIAL lor the Older Gi r l 8 30.3tc
hir ing is Sept. 25, ca ll me now,
Now fhru Sep tember 15,
Ohi o. Phone 378·6365.
8 30·3tc
don't wait, Margare t Fort une, 1965 HAR L EY Dav id son 74,
eve r y thing ha l f -pri ce to
LEGAL NOTICE
949·541 4 or Bar ba r a Lam bert .
Senior Citi zens. The Bea uty
2 New Homes, all electr ic, 3
Ph one 985-4132.
Th e Meigs County Com ·
446-341 1.
Spot. Phone 992·2840 .
missioners w ill r eceive seal ed
bedroom s. ful l basement and
8·30·6tc PT PL EASAN T - 6 room
house, Jl 2 bath s. recreat ion
8·22·1fC
8·31·3tc
bid s unt il 9: JO A .M . on Tu es day,
garage . with lake frontage:
September the 12th . 197 2; at
room, new bu ilt -i n kitch en,
APP LE S, F itz p atrick Or
at
Five Po ints area .
such tim e bid s will be op ened YARD SA LE, Th ursda y, Fr ida y BAB YSI TTER in my home 5
m ust sell , leaving town. Da ys
char d s. State Ro ute 689.
and publicl y r ead in the Co_
mdays a wee k ; r eferences ;
phone
992
3502,
even
ing
s
and Sa turday , 10 a. m . ' til8 p .
Phone Wilkesvi l le 669 -3785 .
mi ss ioners room at th e Me 1gs
phone 992 ·5608.
m. Household it ems, cl ot hing
phone 67 5-2372 .
8·30.Ifc
County courthouse. Pomeroy ,
s.3o.ttc
8·29·31 p
and a little of eve rything ,
Oh io 45769 , tor a portabl e
Across
from
Happy
Hollow
on
asphalt pugm ill. with t he
TOM ATOES. Har ol d Roush.
DOME ST IC help . Se nd resume
Rt . 124 near Rut land .
B I; DFOR D Townsh i p - 32
following sp ecificat ions·
Portland . Phone 843-2865 .
to P 0 . Box 405, Pomeroy.
M ix er : twin shaft 23 in . by 60
8·31 ·21c
8·30.6tp
8.3o.Jtc
in.
limber
Rt ., 681
- $4000
ai
::: res ,ofotfland
some
good;
capa city : JJ cu . ft . at water
Racin
e
3
bedroom
house
197) CAMPER S and low prof il e
level.
and 1.4 acres , ba sem ent
Trave l Tr ai l ers in stock ,
Shear pins to pr ote ct gea r
24x38, di shwa sher and gar lowes t pr ice in Tr i -Sta te are a ;
dr i\l e
CLELAND
bage
disposal, cen tral air and
NEW M OBIL E ho m e '"
Ti ming and dr ive gear s en1972 trai lers, huge di scount ;
Sy
r
ac
use.
com
pl
e
te
l
y
fu
r
central
heat
$18,000.
Ph
one
closed in oi l bath gear box .
REALTY
Camp Conley Sta rcra ft Sales,
ni shed, air -co nd i ti oni ng in
Cont inuous in line flow o f
949 32 11. GEORGE HOB ·
608 E. Main
Rt 62 , N . of Pt. Pl easant
ma te ri al f rom loading htlpp er to
bedroom . Phone992-2441 a fter
STET TE R.
JR .•
REA L
behind
Red
Carpet
Inn
.
and throug h mixer wit h equal
5 p. m.
ESTA TE
BR O KER .
8·25 ·7tc
mi xing of ma te r ial : 48 heavy
8·31.1fc
POM EROY, OHIO.
dut y ar ms with r epl acea bl e
Music By
8·30·3tc According to i1S Old English
STEREO-r adio Console, A speed
tips.
der ivation, the word HOUSE
3 ROOM ap artment , un The Memphis Sounds
interm i xed c hanger, dual
means a place to hide.
Asphalt emu lsion system :
f urnished, 408 Spring Ave. ,
volume cont rol , 4 speaker HOUSE in Lon g Boltom , phone
As phal t pump w ith 3 in.
WHATEVER A HOU SE
3 pc . trio from
Pomeroy .
sound system, beau t iful hand
985-3529 .
var iable flow meter in g :
MEANS TO YOU, WE ' LL
New Philadelphia
8·1Q.Ifc
r ubbe d
Wal n ut
fi nish .
6.J1.tf c
Stra iner :
FIND ONE TO MEET
Ba l ance $66 .34. Us e our
3 way valv e and piping :
3
AND
4
ROUM
furn
ished
an'd
budget
terms.
Ca
ll
992·7085.
YOUR
NEED S! CALL
RACINE J w&amp;y spray Oars and nozzl es
Saturday Night
10 room house,
un furn is hed
apa r tm ents .
with in mi l( er :
8·25.6tc
TOOAY
.
bath,
basement.
ga
rage
,
two
10 li 12
2 in . totaliz ing m eter with
' hone 992·5434.
NICE LEVEL LOT
:o ts. Phone 949-431 3.
·
r eset reg iste r .
_. .12-ttc FOR YOUR hea lth 's sake ea t ....:._
1 story -.:. 3 bedrooms·. JBath .
•·&gt;·lfP
. or ga nica ll y -grown tOma toes ;
PIANO•' &amp;.-;;:gan lessons by
.Din i ng R. Utility space .
Hopper :
8 Quisenberr y has large I DEAL 5·ACRE RANCH . Lak e
F
URNI
SH
E
D
2
bedr
oom
d
uat
e
of
Cincin
na
ti
gra
Paneling. Porches. A good
Capa city 12 ton ·
on es . lOc pound at the old Pos t
apartment. adul t s only,
Conse r va tory of Music wi th 2J
Size 9ft. by 8ft . openi ng :
Concha s, New Mex ico. S2,975.
neighborhood. JUST 59.800.
M idd lepor l : phone· 992-3874 . · Office b ui l di ng , Sy r acuse ,
year s teac hi ng ex per ience ;
Ove rhead sl1i eld to prote ct
No Dow n. No In terest . $25 mo.
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
Ohi o.
eng ine·
8·29 3t p
phone 992·3825.
for 119 mos.
Va ca ti on
4
bedrooms
. Bath. Modern
Ad justa ble mater ial gate :
8·23 · 12tc
8-23-12t p
Paradi se. Fr ee Br oc hur e.
kitchen
.
Storm
Doors &amp;
Fil led .In corner s.
FI RS T F LOOR, 2 r oom fur
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box
Windows.
Storage
buildings
.
in RE DU CED to sel l, reg,.tered 200100 . Alameda. Ca liforni a
nis hed
apa rtm en t
Conv eyor :
1'!,
A
CRE
of
ground
.
CLOSE
Pomeroy : phone 992 ·3028.
Toy Fox Ter rier pupp ies . 94501.
24 in. rubber clea ted belt :
IN 516,900 .
8·29.Jt p
Healt hy, have had shots, S25
8·6-JOtp
Sea led bea r ings to r !roug hin g
POMEROY
each . Papers fur ni she d - - - - - - - - - and id ler s :
EXCEL LENT - 2 bedroom
Phone 742·5625.
v type belt clean er and ad 5 ROOM S &amp; bat h, 2 story bl ock
justab le take ups . ·
hom e with walk -in closets.
Home~
8·29.6t c
hou se; gas l or ced ai r furn ace .
Fold ing con ve yor end wi th
Large liv i ng room -,M,ith
114 acr e lot. Rl . 7 &amp; Old Chester
CASH pa id for al l mai&lt;es and ONE 6-lt . Hi ll meal case; $200 .
mixer included.
f ireplace. Modern kitchen
Rd . . $5,500 ; phone 992·3874.
m odel s of mobi l e hom es.
coole
r
,
$100
.
Dayt
on
Pop
and
dining. Ut ility . 2 car
Carr ier f ra me:
8·29·1fC
Phone ar ea code 614·423·9531.
{ •
1
scales . $35 National Cash
garage
. Porches . JU ST
Heav y dul y axle and whe els .
·
4·13·tfc
Do you havt curly or hlrd to
Re gister , used two years,
Rem ovabl e operators pl at $12 ,900 .
ID
EAL
5·
OUT
OF
STAT
E.
m1n11e halr1
$750. Add ing ma chi ne, $25 .
form ·
ACRE RAN CH. Lake Con· WE HAVE HIE CON .
Stop In lind have Mick or
FOR THE B.E ST deal In • new
Tw o 9.25 by 20, 10 ply t ires on
Doug la s Gr oce r y, Min er srelax
your
ha
ir
for
a
TA CTS, USE THEM FOR
Fred
chas.
~ ew Mexico . $2975. No
or used mobi le home, try
rea r :
ville , Oh io.
mort manageable hai r .
down . No inter est . S25 per m o. THE SALE OF YOUR
Kanauga Mobil e Home Sales,
Ki ng pin and f iflh wheel
8·29·3t p
fo r 119 mos.
Vac at ion
fr on t :
PROPERT Y .
JUST
A
Kanauga . Oh ;o .
KARR'
S
BARBER
SHOP
Fr ame to be const r uc ted of 8
Para
di
se
.
F
ree
Bro
chur
e.
PHONE
CALL
AWAY
.
7·16·30tc
Lynn St. "2·2l67 Pomtroy
in wide fl ange ! -Beams
M APLE St ereo -ra d io com Ranchos Lake Conha s: Box
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr .
Blrben ' LOCII 400-AFl -CIO
bina tion, AM -FM r adio, 4
2001 DO, Al ameda , Ca lifornia
REALTOR
Power unit :
speake r sound syste m . 4
94501.
992-2259
260 cu . in . gasoli ne or larger : YA RD SALE , T hurs day &amp;
·Air Conditioners
speed automatic ch an ger .
8·29.JOtp
P.T .D .
If
no
answer:
. 992-2568
Fr iday , 9 a.m ., 297 M ill St. ,
separ ate contr ols. Balance
• Awnings
Clutch, sta rt er, generat or :
Midd
lepor
t.
$781 29. Use our budget term s.
Heavy dul y ba tte r y, al ter • Underpinning
8·29 3tp
Call 992-7085.
nator :
Inst r ument panel
8 25-61c
SPECIAL- Th ursday, Fr iday &amp; 'c ompl el e mobil e home
Ge ner al :
Satur da y. With a fil l-up of service - plu s gigant ic
1972 ZIG-ZAG sew ing machine
M in imUm weight 11,900 lbs .:
gas. oil change and f i Iter ~ a 'display of mobile homes
lett in layaway . Beauti ful
Wi dt h 8 ft : Lengt h for trans
fr
ee
grease
job.
Free
pick
up
pastel co lor , full size model.
always
ava
i
lable
at
...
portalion max . 29 fl .; Rate d
110 Mechanic Street
and delivery . Queen's PennAl l buil l -in to buttonh ole, do
capacity 250 tons per hour .
l oil, North Seco nd Ave .,
stretch sewing and fan cy
F .O.B. Meig s
Deliver y MILLER
Mi ddleport : phone 992 9913.
County Ga r age two wee ks after
stitc hing Pa y just $45 .75 ca sh
bid Is awar ded.
8·29.dtc
or terms ava il able. Trade-ins
MOBILE HOMES
accepted
. Phone 992·5641 .
must have
Manufacinturer
machines
productive
use had
for t
1220 Washington 8 lvd.
8 25 6tc
·
THE LATEST NEW LISTING
at least two years pr ior to
423·7521
BELPRE. 0 .
RENOVATED
- Lov ely 2 bedr ooms, large living, nice
Jan uary 1. 1972 .
VACUU M Cleaner new 1972
ki tchen and gas forced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
Comm iss ioner s rese r ve the
model. Compl ete wi th all
righ t lo r ejec t an y or all bids.
to wall carpet ing. Partial ba sement on large lot. Asking
Mar tha Ch amber s
cl eani ng tools . Sm all pai nt
only $11 ,500.00 .
Cler k
damage in shipping . WHI ta ke
1971 KAWASAK I 100, l ;ke new.
$27 cash or budget plan
MIDDLEPORT
(8) 24. 31 . 21c
avai la ble. Ph one 99 2-$641.
$300. Phone 949-3915.
4 BEDROOMS - 2 baths . nice kitchen with bar and cook
8·27 5tp
'8·2s.6tc
un its. Garage and den in full basement. Covered pat io on
back of hou se. Asking 524,000 .00 .
LEGAL NOTICE
LARG E se lect ion of bea utiful
Sea led bids Will be received ·
Window
ma hogany dining sui tes;
by th e Vfllage of Middl eport.
LEVEL LOT
bedroom outfits; also, usual
Air Conditioners
Ohio, Meigs County , at th e vi CORNER - With a four room house, has gas. city waler ,
stock of oth er cl ean used
llage hal! i n Middl epor t. Ohio,
and elect ric . Asking only $2 ,500.00.
Hoi Water Healers
f~rni tur e,
.a pplian ces at
unt il 4 p. m . September 15, 1972 ,
tor the foll ow ing equ ipment :
,
J
HL
's
BA
RGA
IN
CE
N.
Plumbing
Used Pick up Tr uck , 3/~ ton
TER. " at caution l igh t," Rt.
SALE I
LOTS - LOTS - LOTS
Electrical Work
truc k , 4 speed transmission ,
7. Tu pper s Pl ains, Ohio .
1 ACRE - Nice lay ing on high ground. Chester water
s t ep bumpe r , hea vy dut y
Buy 2 Pairs and
Closed Mondav s.
available. 11 lots in all.
springs , 8 cyli nd er , 350 cu. in. or
8·27
·6tc
Get 1 PAIR FREE
mor e, wide side bed , 8 fe et or
more in length .
All kinds, all sizes for men,
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
No t1 id will be acce pted for
2 MI N IATU RE poodles, !25
equipmen t pr ior to 1970 models.
women,
young
men,
boys
5
BEDROOMS
Near downtown shopping , nice kitchen
each. Phone 992-7230.
The Vi lla ge r eserve s the right
and
girls.
Hurry
to
with
double
s;nk
.
2
porches and full basement . A good buy
8·3J.3tc
to re jec t any and all bids.
at on ly 57.500 .00 .
992 -2448
Vil lage of M iddl epo r t
POMEROY
.
Ge ne Gr ate , Clerk -Treasur er
REG ULATION size pool table,
Pomeroy , 0.
Aug ust 31
~
Jack
W. Carsey, Mgr.
LOOK FOR THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN , THEN
like new : phone 992 ·22 34 alter
Phone 992 -2181
YOU ' LL KNOW IT'S FOR SALE . BUY FROM YOUR
5 p.m .
RE WAR D, l or sh opping a l
LOCAL BROKER : IT'S GOOD BUSINESS AND FOR
8·29.4tc
NOTICE T01
Showa lter 's Wet Pet Shop,
THE
ECONOMY OF MEIGS COUNTY . WE'RE TRYING
COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
TAXPAYERS
Chester. Oh io: 10 per cent of
FOR A BIGGER AND BETTER YEAR .
Sal
t
Works.
E.
Main
St
.,
Notice is hereby given. In
2
WHE
EL
ut
ili
ty
Scout
Trai
ler.
your to ta l purchase ma y be
co mpl ian ce with sec tion 5115 ·17
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
41 ~' x6' wi th good Hres; spare
ap
pli ed to the purc hase of any
r ev ised code , that the t ax
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
4· 12·1fc
tire moun ted. 1-large stora ge
9?2-3325
cer
amic
i
tems
.
r eturn s Of Mei gs Counfy, for the
bin
with
hinged
cover
$100;
8·2·30t p
year 1972 have been r evised and
8'x 8' um brel la tent with in- POODL E puppies. Sil ver Toy ,
the valua r ions com pleted and
Par k vi ew Kennels. Phone 992·
ter ior telescoping poles ; 6 foot
ar e open for pub lic inspec tion at
AUCTION NOTICE
5443.
heigh t inside; needs m inor
the off ice of the Count y Audilbr
A·IS·tft
in the Cou r t Hou se, Pomeroy , WE wish to thank al l who at repai r s and door screening .
lended the fi r st day of t he
Ohio. Compla ints ag ainst any
Com ple tely waterpr oofedGeor ge A. Eastma n estate
\la lu at ion or assessment. excepl
$25 : ca ll 992 -58 15 after 5 p.m .
sa le, and invite ever yone to be
th e ._-a l uati on s f i xe d an d
8·29.3tc
assess men ts made by the Tu
Atthe Cross Roads on Rt. 124
wi th us on Sat .. Sept . 2. 1972.
Commissio ner of Ohio, wll l be
starling prompt ly at 10 :00
NEW
DELUXE
ZIG · ZAG
heard by the Coun ty Boa rd of
,SPECIAL CONTINUES
A.M. wit h far m too ls, shop
sewin g
m ach i ne.
Th is
Rev isi on , at its off ice in the
equipment,
etc
.
Court Ho use , Pome ro y, Oh io, on
mac hine makes butt onholes,
or aft er A ugust 'JO, 197 2. CATT L E and farm machiner y
darn s and embroideries; all
will sel l ai I p. m .. wi l h the D4
Complain ts m ust be mad e in
without attachm ents; phone
wr it ing , on bl an ks furni shed by
Cater pi ller Do zer jel ling at 2
992·5331.
tn e County Auditor and fil ed In
.
8·29·11c
8 PAK
hi s off ice on or be'fore the time I Fp.m
you need cat tle, mac hinery ,
limited for paym ent of t.:tx es for
shop equipment, f eed or farm 8
TRA CK
STER EO
16 oz. Bolls.
the fir st fli.t lf yea r , or at any
Repossessed , looks l ike new ,·
too ls, you cannel afford to
t i me dur ing wfl ic h la Kes are
Plus Ta&gt;
re cei ved by ,,..._ co unt y
miss t hi s sale .
beautif ul han d rubbed Wal nut
&amp;'
Deposit
Treasu r er, Without 1Jenalty for
lunch Serv ed
ca bine t ; ta ke ove~ payments
the fir st half year .
Mrs. John Epple. Adm .
of 51. 50 per week or pay
" · c" Mcco ,~
Gordon H. Caldwell
I . 0 . " "~
With each
Purch11o
5101.47; ph one 992·5331.
Aud itor of Meigs Coun ty
B·30·3tc
of
Ashlond
Guo
lint.
B·JO. JOtc
8·29 ifc I

Card

'
:

·

829 -:ilp SE VERAL var-ieti es of top

GARAGE Sa le at Dwain Durs t

·.

,

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results.
e
·
Busme·ss· s.ervices'
.

.. '.

For Rent

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

On Most American Cars

-GIJARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open a T115
Monday lhru Satur~y
604 E. Main, Pomeroy. 0 .
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph . «6·
4782. Gallipolis, Jolin Russell.
Owner &amp; Opera tor.
S·12·tfC
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
. Phone949-J821
Racine·, Oh io
'Critt Bradford
5·1-tfc
SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
San itation, Stewart , Ohio. Pn .
662·3035.
2-12-1rc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks installed . Georqe
(Bill ) Pullins. Phone 992 · 247~ .
4· 25-n &lt;.:
TUNE .UPS, brake jobs and
other auto work . Very
r easonable rates . Waines
Auto Service. school tralned.
Route 1. Shade, Ohio 992·6547,
next to Whaley 's Paint Shop.
8-20-12tc
---------SEWING Machine Service,
clean , oil , ad lust, 5399, in your
home ; phot'le 992·5331.
8. J1 .JOtc

''

Service

I.

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator
smallest Heater Care.
Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator $peclall•t

'
I KNOW 'IOU DIDNT

BUT WHEN 1HE
I&lt;IDNAPERS CALL

GET Ai.DN@ WITH
YOUR WIFE .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992 -2174
Pomeroy

T~ESE

AGAIN ABOUT lHE
RANGCIM, ARRMXOE
10 PA'I IT. ..

DAYS,

EVERYONE
SPECIA(.IZES

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End l01der work,
ponds , baoement. lo~d­
sca ping. We have 2 stze
dozers, 2 sire folders. Work
done by hour or contract .
Free Estimates. · We olso
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks •ncl low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alter 1 p.m . or phone 9925232.
'SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
~ervice. We Sharpen Scissors .
- . , . - - - - - ---3·_21J.tfc
·- .
SEE US FOR : Awninys, s)orm
doors and windows, cArports.
marquees, •.lumlnum '1idlng
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representative . For free,
estimates , phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V .
Johnson and Son. Inc. •
3-2-tfo

-

U'L

• :1He.Y /1m!!!

~! ..

ABNER

TH' PLAV MONEY?
DID 'YO' FIND
TH ' BUNDLE

0' lv'rONEY
AH L.EFT?

-- -. .. ------- .. _

SIJO' 'NUFF.'.'-AN'
IT COME IN

HAND'I-

NATCHE.Ri..'{
HONEST ABE.
P~AYED WI F IT
UNTil. HE GOT

AN' THEN HE
FE D IT TO TH'

GOAT-

..--..~BORED --·

.. . IT WILL TAKE

Wffi(S TO ANm!:R

READY .MIX
CONCRETE ·
delivered right to """'
projec1. Fast and easy . Fre•
estimates . Phone 992 ·3284
Gaegleln Ready .Mix Co .,
Middleport, Oh io.
6-30·tfc

ALL '!H I() WilL. !

O' OELL WHEEL alignment
localedatCromoads. Rt . 124.
Complete front end service.
tune up and brake service .
Wheels
balanced
elec·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed .
AP"c:nn;~~hl~
'
rale s. Phone 742 · 3232 .or AUTOMOBILE insurance been
992· 3213 .
1·1/·n&lt; caricelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 1'92·
WI L L DO lighi hauli ng in af ·
2966.
ternoons. Phone 992-3903.
6·15.tfc
8·27·61c

·--.---

50 l: WENT
~EAt&gt;

AN'

TOOK CA~e

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

OF IT!

-----~

_____

Mobile

For Sale

~

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

-===========

''HElL"

· For Sale

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

School Special!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

- - - - --

MILLER .&amp; SONS

We talk to JOU
like t peiSOn.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL .

·----------~--~

n.oo

'iO.R cuor::e Cf
FRESH MR'Il.AND CP.ASMtAT

~~at., 'K:x! Hf..'IE

Outstanding One-Owner Trade-Ins

RO'/AL.E, ClX\'UIL.I.E sr. JAQO!:;S,
roACHeD FILET OF SOlE WI1H
!JEW~ :S/I.U::E 1 Cf::X&gt;I AU Vl~ 1
~ CAA'T6/&gt;L! 8RI,4,!JD FOR 'JWO, ..

1972 Nova 2 Dr.......... ;........... ~2895
350 Y·8 engine, Turbo Hydramatlc, power steering . Nova
Rally equipment, interior group, bumper guard, vinyl
roof. golden brown finish.

1971 Chevrolet BelAir 4 Door ..... ~3095

AT THE MO!o1EHT HE BELIEVES HE Wli.L
DO THAT. AMMIE! il'JT THE ESSf.NTIAL
NATURE OF A MAM liKE 6 . SM IRCH
DOESWT CHAHGE IM A FlA'&gt;H ~

Beige fin ish, vinyl top, vinyl Interior, factory air Cot'l·
dltloned. W·w t ires, likP. new, 327 V-8 engine. power
steering, Turbo Hydramat lc, radio &amp; many other extras.
See th is now.

DID I SAY HALF OF EVERY DOLLAR?
WHY MOT AJ~RTER OF EVER'(
DOLLAR --.
RHAPS LEs s ....
PERHAPS'"" ?

ACROSS
1. Aforesaid
5. "Wind· .

11. Surfeit

DICK TRACY

ll!AOIM.A.LOME,

-EXWAU5ts TO VOUC.OST M! $500."

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr.• ~......... ..S1795
Local 1 owner car, green finish , clean Interior. good tires,
2000cc engine, radio, .t-speed trans.

1968 Camaro Convertible •.._.....'1795
A 1 owner sharp car, yellow finish with black accenling,
blk . lop, V·8 engine, automatic trans .. power steering ,
radio, new w-w t ires .

Dark Blue with Black v inyl Interior, roof drip mldg .. body
side mldg ., L 78x15 WW t ires. P. B.. Radio, Luggage
Carrier . 350, V·8 engine, turbo hydramalic, P. Steering
and Brakes.

Retail $4210.40- Closeout $3598.00

Chevrolet Kingswood 3 Seat Sl Wagon
Golf Gr~ finish , green viny ..int., tint. glass, 4 season air
conditioned, Front and rear mats, side midgs., power
tailgate , superlift Rear Shocks , Wh . covers, AM radio,
F&amp;R guards, luggage carrier, L7S.1S WWiires, 350 cu. ln.
engine, P. steering and brakes, turbo hydramatic.

Retail 55068.40 - Closeout S4315.00

8 Other New 1972
Chevrolet Pau. Can In Stock

pawns
16. Tsla or
cha
n.Oid
Chinese
kingdom
18. Drive
ZO.Interiec·
lion
%1. Modify
zz. Wee bit
23. Gertrude
%5. - up
(crammed
for
exams )
26. Mountain

New 1972 Closeouts!

Chevrolet Brookwood 2 Seat Sl Wagon

12. Excite
13. South
African
plant
14. Horses
15. Chess

40. Fellow "in
stitches"
41. Tolerate
DOWN
l. Rapscal·Iion
2. Gennan

song since
1935
4. Give the
double·O
5. With forti·
tude
8. Vene•ue ·
Ian COP·
per

center
7. French

coin
8. Florida's
nickname
9. Lover or
beauty

Your Chtvy O.aler

----

Open Eves •. Til 8

Yesterday'• Anower
10. Tried
25. Foreagain
shadow
16. Sea
Z7. A lion, at
gull
times
19. "Age of
31. Legumin·

Reason"

~

El,TAM

I

ous tree

tLIE'DJX
1\

author
31. Plaee of
20. Soap
worship
_
plant
33. Cotton
23. Least
fabric
original
38. Impre·
24. Mercury's
sarlo
winged
Hurok
••.,n_d•..,I_s..,.,...,37.,.·-N,e.-tw_o"'r:-k,

~

II
,1

I.

•

III

1

SLEENT

Now ......,. the cireltd lttura

V"
I V 'f to fonn tht aurprloe anawer, u
1::=~·~~;g~~·1\..:;;:.A-i•uaut.l bJ thelbooecartoon.

,.,...-+--~-t-~ 1- Prillt Sl ISUIISWII...

I [I I l I I I J

.28. Nautch

(A...we" IOBIOrrow)

girl
28. Seaport on·
the Black .
Sea
3%. Burmese

J••bleo, QUASH JUlC:I

f-4--+-i

Yatertby'•

OUniT

MILIUM

AM••" IJ'ho1 he ~olfromli&lt;•-AN ISLI

hill·
dweller

33.New

1/JEll,OL' MOUND,
THE M~EMLL
SEASON 15 OVER
,_,.,_ FOR U5...

Guinea
town
U. Distant
(prefix)
36. Steno's
need
37. Deprivation
18. - . Sig·
noret
39. Spirit
lamp

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worlllt:
Ia

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

~011

river

27. Function

CLAJM5 KELT Pill NMAI. ONTO eu YJNG UPA
JIG TRACT OF iANVON SPEC. AN Alli'C"'AFT
WAS 1ilPP05fP 10 WANT 8UT

Unatl'll'ftble thete four Jumbleo,
one letter to ...h square, to
form four ordinary words.

3•.Popular

lake

TERRY

'

(01t72 Kinr Ftaturtl Syndicate, Inc.)

bag"

1970 Camaro H.T. ................... ~2295
v.a

NIRVAL

by THOMAS JOsEPH

Local I owner with less !han 21.000 miles. factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body, blk . ~oil interior, radio, Turbo
Hydramatic power steering, &amp; disc brakes, wh ite-wall
tires, li ke new. A ni cy luKury car .

Local owned &amp; less than 24.000 miles. Green finish, green
vinyl bucket seats with console, 350
engine , 4 speed
trans .. power steering , rear air reflector, radio, like new
w -w tires, no. teenage driver . Sharp, man, sharp .

Yeolmla7'1 Cryp~laole: THE ENTHuSIASM: OF OLD MEN
IS SINGULARLY LIXE THAT OF INFANCY -GEIWID DE

~~-

1970 Monte Carto ................... ~2895

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
uatd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the lenrth and formotlon of the word• oro 111
hints. Each day the code letters ore different.
CRYPTOQUOTE8

K[. ZBYARXPR ORRO CZ YC CQUC
XZ lUX J.RCO QUKKYXROO ZGC Zll
PLYIR . -BYCCZLYZ

UTKYRLY

L--------...J

W£ MIW NO'!' KAYE WON ANI{

6AME5, 6UT WE HAO GREAT
TIME5, DIDN'T WE ?50LON6 ...
I'LL ,EE '1'0U A6AIN NEXT!(EAR ..

�'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pom eroy, 0., Aug . 31, 19'12

.

IN~~~~:T~~N

lri Memory

.
. , DEADliNES

) p.,M. Day

Befor e Publ icati Olf. IN LO VING m em or y of Cha r les
Man day Oeadl i.ne 9 a.m.
Edwa rd Snider who passed
Cancel latio n - Correc tions
aw a y Augu st 31, 1962. In

W iltbet~~ccepted un til 9 a . m . for.
DRaEy G
ofUPLuAbTii lcOo N
t iosn
Th• Pu bliSher r eser ves the
r ight .to ed i t or re jec t any ads.
deemed
obj ection al.
Th e
pu bliShEU' w il l not be r espons ib le
for mo ~ tha n on e . incor r ec t
· insertion .

•

NoiiCe
YARD SAL E, Thursday. Fr i day
cl nd Sa tu rday on Lukt n
Stree t, Rut land .

8-JQ.Jtc

lovi ngm emoryotourFathe r.
to th e one we loved so well ; it
has bee n len years
lth since you
wen t away ; w ou1 a 1as1
goodbye. But t ime cannot
erase the mem or y of y our
gen tl e fa ce and smil e, tha t we
lov ed so well . You r memory is

F Sl
or J

!=orSalc
••
CANNING
toll'·1 i oes and
I SI E(·L ER fue l od oil h ea l i·~· m angoes . Gerald ine Cle land,
with Qluw·.&gt;r, li ke new.· I
Wor p1 M orni ng Lua l heitler ;
phone 99~ , 35 1 3.

-----·---·---

s

r esidence near F ir e tation.
Reed sville. Ohio . F r iday ,
Sat ur day and Sun day .

Help Wante

.

: ·- --DUE TO a frdc I ur c d h •P·. I am
se lli ng n new 5 h .p . WI ZZdrd
gar den ti ll er a t S50 off
Western Au to r etai l pri ce ; a
bcugain for someone for S139.
L owe ll Wi ng e t t , Rt . 4 ,

d

Rac ine. Ohi o.

•

8-16-ft c
- --

thr ough early Septembe r ;
Bob's Markel, Mason, W. Va .,
above the Pom er oy-M as9n
Bridge; phone 773-5308.
.
B-15-tf c

eROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

Lost

Wanted To Buy

CARRIERS
WANTED
Clifton and

Hartford, W. Va.

Notice

The Daily Sentinel

Rea I Estate For Sale

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

LEGAL NOTICE

PH. 992-2571
OR 992-3975

~===~::~~===1

DANCE

, .. ( l '

f

I I

llARNEY · •

IS :STMJDIIJG.

BALLS 0' FIRE!!

(

I DONE GIVE TATER

I

&amp;~IJD

HIM liKE 11-IIS

!

'&lt;:

.'

HIS MEDICINE AI\J '
I RLUMB FERGOT
TO S HAKE IT UP

·I

qual i ty, tree ripened, ca.nning
peac h es ; n oW a va• 1a bl e

Real Estate For

Thanks

e

.

R·ATES
our kee psake w ith which we
Pomer oy : phone 992-2922 .
' FOr Wa n' Ad Serv ice
wi ll never par t.
8.29-3fc
5 cents per Word on e ;nsertion Sadly m issed by his chi ld ren, AUTO BODY man. experi ence
Sale
M inim um Ch arge 75c ~
necessa ry , we wa nt a man
12 cents per word t hree
Ra y mond ,
Ruth ,
Dal e.
who ca n do qu ality wor k in a LeBLANC clar inet, B fla t, very ON E A CRE and old house 1n
con secut ive inser liotis.
Beatr ice. Ronni e &amp; Jan et 1
reason able length of . tim e.
good con dition ; phone 66 7- Pomeroy . Phone 992-6675.
18 ce nts per · ~,or d six co n
8-31-1 P
The biggest and best body
3511 or 667-3400.
8-31-3tp
secut ive inser tions. ,
1
t
8-29-6tc __ .,.
25 Per cent Disc oun t on paid
shop in the area. exce len
adsa nd ads paidw ith in 10days.
pay and fr ing e benefit s. · ---~~-_----- - - - - · - - - TWO BUILDING Lot s in
CARD OF THANKS
Contact Ji m Buchanan, Body KENNEB EC potatoes, $5 for Harri sonvill e. On e is ap&amp; OBITUARY
Shop Foreman, Ma son Coun ty . lOO i b.; see JohnPape, Raci ne pro x imately 1 acr e with
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Motor Compan y, Chevrol et
or phone 949 3025.
septi c tank and a drilled well
Each add j1ional word 2c .
and Oldsmobile Dealership,
8-29-6f c and a dug well . Doyl e Hudson,
Point
Pl easan
~ ---- - - - -- - -- Phone 992-5048.
Addit ionBLIND
al 25c ADS
Charg e R,e r LOST BE TW EE: N Pom er oy
( J0 )
_
_t, W. Va . Phone
4 675 3370
8·31 ·3tc
Adv ert is&amp;men t .
Motor and Far mer ' s Bank .
IN T ER lOR , exterior painting 1
8-JI -2tc AU CTIC&gt;N . Sa tu r da y, Se p·
OFFICE HOU'R$ ·
lad ies while gold Lad y El gi n
!ember 2nd, 1 p. m. I have
r emodeling , build ing. Contact
wa t ch an d ban d. Eve lyn G.
· B:JO a.m.. to S.OO, p.m, Uai ly,
sold my home and wi ll se ll the 1 BUILDIN G l ots, 95' x 200'
Ernest Deeter, Bashan .
8: 30 a .m . to 12: 00 No on
Kn i ght , 118 Lin col n Hi ll,
each;
phone
992-5786
.
Saturda y.
pe r sonal property loca ted just
8·31 ·6tc
8·2Htc
ph one 992·2433
ofl State Route 14J nea r the
8·30·3tp
o!
church in Harr isonvill e, Ohio.
PRICE CONSTRUCTION ,
Wat ch for sale sign s.
8 ROOM house, bath , larg e lot ,
roof ing , porch repa ir and
WE WANT t o thank every one
Warm Morn ing gas heater,
ga s and el ec tric , Rt. l,
elec tri cal ; phone 742-4286.
who helped in any way after
65,000 BTU , 2 r efrig erators,
Midd lepor t. Phone 992 ·2602 .
the death of our dea r
8-16·30tc
IN
SunRay gas rang e, Frigidaire
8·27 ·8tp
daughter . May God bless you OLD Furniture, oak tabl es ,
el ec tric range ; Maytag
DOZE~ and back hoe work.
organ s, di shes, clocks, brass
all. Her heartbroken lamily,
washer (wringer type). 5 pc.
ponds and septic tanks ; 8 &amp; K
bed s, or comp lete households .
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fox. her
CONVENIENT but secluded
dinette. 2 ufility cabinets,
Ex cavating , Phone 992-5367.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,
sisters, lola and Ruth , her
building lots at Rock Spririgs,
G.E. electric heater, treadle
Pom eroy , Ohi o. Call 992-627 1.
Dick. Karr, Jr .
husband, Earl Roush and
close fa High· School &amp; Fair
sewi.ng ma chine, 3 pc.
5-21 ·1fC
6-28· tfc
children. We loved her, yes .
Ground ; ca ll or see Bi ll Witte,
bedroom su i te , sofa bed,
.,...------,----,-we loved her, but angels loved
992 ·2789 after 5 p.m. week ·
rocker and other cha irs, hall
her more . So their gentle
days.
WI L L CUT or tr im tree s,
PHONE 992 -2156
tree,
ironing
board,
stand
s,
voi ce has called her to yonder
8-6-JOtc re asonable ; al so clean out
lamps, bedding, hand tools, - - - - - - - - - - , : , shining shores. The Golden YAR D SA L E. Wean es day.
ba se ments ,
att ics
and
whee lbarrow, lawn mower, LO TS ON wr ;g hl Str eet , ce llar s; phone 949·3221.
Th ur sday &amp; Fr iday , 10 a.m. t o
Gales were open , a gentle
ladders and ot her art icles not
8 p.m ., 894 Pear St., M idvoi ce said. " Com e", and w1 th
Pomeroy ; ph one 742-59 30.
B-29-JOt c
listed. Wi llard 0 . Faudree,
fa rewe ll s unspoken , she
dl eport .
ALL AB OARD HOUSEWIVES.
8 29· 12tc
owner . Terms : Cash . Not
8-29-31c
calmly entered home .
EN ROLL BY SE PT . 25th .
respon sible for accident s. The 3
8·31 ·11P
BEDROOM
house
in
Last chance to hop aboard the
Bradford Auction Co ., C. C.
KOSC OT KOS METI CS and
PLAYHOUS E TOY t ra in to
Harr ison._- ille ; phone 742-3386 .
Bradford, auct ioneer .
wigs, more new products
9.3o. 3tp
success. We're s~ ll i ng to ys
Employment Wanted
8·31· 1k
co m i ng soon . For tr ee
and booking parti es, hav ing
AVAILABLE
immediat ely.
dem onstrat ion , phon e 992 5. ROOMS and bath , nic e size
fun and getting pa id . As a
General Carpenter Foreman .
5113.
demo I have no delivering , no PONY, 12 quart er hor se, weir ba ckya r d . New ~lumln_um
Phone 992-6675.
8·17 .tfc
coll ecti on, and I do not need
trai ned. Mila Powel L cal l 992 - siding , r oof and 1nsulat 10n.
any ex peri ence. I get fr ee
Ov erlook i ng new Belvill e
2622.
training . Final deadl ine for
Locks and Dam in Reedsv ille ,
SPE CIAL lor the Older Gi r l 8 30.3tc
hir ing is Sept. 25, ca ll me now,
Now fhru Sep tember 15,
Ohi o. Phone 378·6365.
8 30·3tc
don't wait, Margare t Fort une, 1965 HAR L EY Dav id son 74,
eve r y thing ha l f -pri ce to
LEGAL NOTICE
949·541 4 or Bar ba r a Lam bert .
Senior Citi zens. The Bea uty
2 New Homes, all electr ic, 3
Ph one 985-4132.
Th e Meigs County Com ·
446-341 1.
Spot. Phone 992·2840 .
missioners w ill r eceive seal ed
bedroom s. ful l basement and
8·30·6tc PT PL EASAN T - 6 room
house, Jl 2 bath s. recreat ion
8·22·1fC
8·31·3tc
bid s unt il 9: JO A .M . on Tu es day,
garage . with lake frontage:
September the 12th . 197 2; at
room, new bu ilt -i n kitch en,
APP LE S, F itz p atrick Or
at
Five Po ints area .
such tim e bid s will be op ened YARD SA LE, Th ursda y, Fr ida y BAB YSI TTER in my home 5
m ust sell , leaving town. Da ys
char d s. State Ro ute 689.
and publicl y r ead in the Co_
mdays a wee k ; r eferences ;
phone
992
3502,
even
ing
s
and Sa turday , 10 a. m . ' til8 p .
Phone Wilkesvi l le 669 -3785 .
mi ss ioners room at th e Me 1gs
phone 992 ·5608.
m. Household it ems, cl ot hing
phone 67 5-2372 .
8·30.Ifc
County courthouse. Pomeroy ,
s.3o.ttc
8·29·31 p
and a little of eve rything ,
Oh io 45769 , tor a portabl e
Across
from
Happy
Hollow
on
asphalt pugm ill. with t he
TOM ATOES. Har ol d Roush.
DOME ST IC help . Se nd resume
Rt . 124 near Rut land .
B I; DFOR D Townsh i p - 32
following sp ecificat ions·
Portland . Phone 843-2865 .
to P 0 . Box 405, Pomeroy.
M ix er : twin shaft 23 in . by 60
8·31 ·21c
8·30.6tp
8.3o.Jtc
in.
limber
Rt ., 681
- $4000
ai
::: res ,ofotfland
some
good;
capa city : JJ cu . ft . at water
Racin
e
3
bedroom
house
197) CAMPER S and low prof il e
level.
and 1.4 acres , ba sem ent
Trave l Tr ai l ers in stock ,
Shear pins to pr ote ct gea r
24x38, di shwa sher and gar lowes t pr ice in Tr i -Sta te are a ;
dr i\l e
CLELAND
bage
disposal, cen tral air and
NEW M OBIL E ho m e '"
Ti ming and dr ive gear s en1972 trai lers, huge di scount ;
Sy
r
ac
use.
com
pl
e
te
l
y
fu
r
central
heat
$18,000.
Ph
one
closed in oi l bath gear box .
REALTY
Camp Conley Sta rcra ft Sales,
ni shed, air -co nd i ti oni ng in
Cont inuous in line flow o f
949 32 11. GEORGE HOB ·
608 E. Main
Rt 62 , N . of Pt. Pl easant
ma te ri al f rom loading htlpp er to
bedroom . Phone992-2441 a fter
STET TE R.
JR .•
REA L
behind
Red
Carpet
Inn
.
and throug h mixer wit h equal
5 p. m.
ESTA TE
BR O KER .
8·25 ·7tc
mi xing of ma te r ial : 48 heavy
8·31.1fc
POM EROY, OHIO.
dut y ar ms with r epl acea bl e
Music By
8·30·3tc According to i1S Old English
STEREO-r adio Console, A speed
tips.
der ivation, the word HOUSE
3 ROOM ap artment , un The Memphis Sounds
interm i xed c hanger, dual
means a place to hide.
Asphalt emu lsion system :
f urnished, 408 Spring Ave. ,
volume cont rol , 4 speaker HOUSE in Lon g Boltom , phone
As phal t pump w ith 3 in.
WHATEVER A HOU SE
3 pc . trio from
Pomeroy .
sound system, beau t iful hand
985-3529 .
var iable flow meter in g :
MEANS TO YOU, WE ' LL
New Philadelphia
8·1Q.Ifc
r ubbe d
Wal n ut
fi nish .
6.J1.tf c
Stra iner :
FIND ONE TO MEET
Ba l ance $66 .34. Us e our
3 way valv e and piping :
3
AND
4
ROUM
furn
ished
an'd
budget
terms.
Ca
ll
992·7085.
YOUR
NEED S! CALL
RACINE J w&amp;y spray Oars and nozzl es
Saturday Night
10 room house,
un furn is hed
apa r tm ents .
with in mi l( er :
8·25.6tc
TOOAY
.
bath,
basement.
ga
rage
,
two
10 li 12
2 in . totaliz ing m eter with
' hone 992·5434.
NICE LEVEL LOT
:o ts. Phone 949-431 3.
·
r eset reg iste r .
_. .12-ttc FOR YOUR hea lth 's sake ea t ....:._
1 story -.:. 3 bedrooms·. JBath .
•·&gt;·lfP
. or ga nica ll y -grown tOma toes ;
PIANO•' &amp;.-;;:gan lessons by
.Din i ng R. Utility space .
Hopper :
8 Quisenberr y has large I DEAL 5·ACRE RANCH . Lak e
F
URNI
SH
E
D
2
bedr
oom
d
uat
e
of
Cincin
na
ti
gra
Paneling. Porches. A good
Capa city 12 ton ·
on es . lOc pound at the old Pos t
apartment. adul t s only,
Conse r va tory of Music wi th 2J
Size 9ft. by 8ft . openi ng :
Concha s, New Mex ico. S2,975.
neighborhood. JUST 59.800.
M idd lepor l : phone· 992-3874 . · Office b ui l di ng , Sy r acuse ,
year s teac hi ng ex per ience ;
Ove rhead sl1i eld to prote ct
No Dow n. No In terest . $25 mo.
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
Ohi o.
eng ine·
8·29 3t p
phone 992·3825.
for 119 mos.
Va ca ti on
4
bedrooms
. Bath. Modern
Ad justa ble mater ial gate :
8·23 · 12tc
8-23-12t p
Paradi se. Fr ee Br oc hur e.
kitchen
.
Storm
Doors &amp;
Fil led .In corner s.
FI RS T F LOOR, 2 r oom fur
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box
Windows.
Storage
buildings
.
in RE DU CED to sel l, reg,.tered 200100 . Alameda. Ca liforni a
nis hed
apa rtm en t
Conv eyor :
1'!,
A
CRE
of
ground
.
CLOSE
Pomeroy : phone 992 ·3028.
Toy Fox Ter rier pupp ies . 94501.
24 in. rubber clea ted belt :
IN 516,900 .
8·29.Jt p
Healt hy, have had shots, S25
8·6-JOtp
Sea led bea r ings to r !roug hin g
POMEROY
each . Papers fur ni she d - - - - - - - - - and id ler s :
EXCEL LENT - 2 bedroom
Phone 742·5625.
v type belt clean er and ad 5 ROOM S &amp; bat h, 2 story bl ock
justab le take ups . ·
hom e with walk -in closets.
Home~
8·29.6t c
hou se; gas l or ced ai r furn ace .
Fold ing con ve yor end wi th
Large liv i ng room -,M,ith
114 acr e lot. Rl . 7 &amp; Old Chester
CASH pa id for al l mai&lt;es and ONE 6-lt . Hi ll meal case; $200 .
mixer included.
f ireplace. Modern kitchen
Rd . . $5,500 ; phone 992·3874.
m odel s of mobi l e hom es.
coole
r
,
$100
.
Dayt
on
Pop
and
dining. Ut ility . 2 car
Carr ier f ra me:
8·29·1fC
Phone ar ea code 614·423·9531.
{ •
1
scales . $35 National Cash
garage
. Porches . JU ST
Heav y dul y axle and whe els .
·
4·13·tfc
Do you havt curly or hlrd to
Re gister , used two years,
Rem ovabl e operators pl at $12 ,900 .
ID
EAL
5·
OUT
OF
STAT
E.
m1n11e halr1
$750. Add ing ma chi ne, $25 .
form ·
ACRE RAN CH. Lake Con· WE HAVE HIE CON .
Stop In lind have Mick or
FOR THE B.E ST deal In • new
Tw o 9.25 by 20, 10 ply t ires on
Doug la s Gr oce r y, Min er srelax
your
ha
ir
for
a
TA CTS, USE THEM FOR
Fred
chas.
~ ew Mexico . $2975. No
or used mobi le home, try
rea r :
ville , Oh io.
mort manageable hai r .
down . No inter est . S25 per m o. THE SALE OF YOUR
Kanauga Mobil e Home Sales,
Ki ng pin and f iflh wheel
8·29·3t p
fo r 119 mos.
Vac at ion
fr on t :
PROPERT Y .
JUST
A
Kanauga . Oh ;o .
KARR'
S
BARBER
SHOP
Fr ame to be const r uc ted of 8
Para
di
se
.
F
ree
Bro
chur
e.
PHONE
CALL
AWAY
.
7·16·30tc
Lynn St. "2·2l67 Pomtroy
in wide fl ange ! -Beams
M APLE St ereo -ra d io com Ranchos Lake Conha s: Box
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr .
Blrben ' LOCII 400-AFl -CIO
bina tion, AM -FM r adio, 4
2001 DO, Al ameda , Ca lifornia
REALTOR
Power unit :
speake r sound syste m . 4
94501.
992-2259
260 cu . in . gasoli ne or larger : YA RD SALE , T hurs day &amp;
·Air Conditioners
speed automatic ch an ger .
8·29.JOtp
P.T .D .
If
no
answer:
. 992-2568
Fr iday , 9 a.m ., 297 M ill St. ,
separ ate contr ols. Balance
• Awnings
Clutch, sta rt er, generat or :
Midd
lepor
t.
$781 29. Use our budget term s.
Heavy dul y ba tte r y, al ter • Underpinning
8·29 3tp
Call 992-7085.
nator :
Inst r ument panel
8 25-61c
SPECIAL- Th ursday, Fr iday &amp; 'c ompl el e mobil e home
Ge ner al :
Satur da y. With a fil l-up of service - plu s gigant ic
1972 ZIG-ZAG sew ing machine
M in imUm weight 11,900 lbs .:
gas. oil change and f i Iter ~ a 'display of mobile homes
lett in layaway . Beauti ful
Wi dt h 8 ft : Lengt h for trans
fr
ee
grease
job.
Free
pick
up
pastel co lor , full size model.
always
ava
i
lable
at
...
portalion max . 29 fl .; Rate d
110 Mechanic Street
and delivery . Queen's PennAl l buil l -in to buttonh ole, do
capacity 250 tons per hour .
l oil, North Seco nd Ave .,
stretch sewing and fan cy
F .O.B. Meig s
Deliver y MILLER
Mi ddleport : phone 992 9913.
County Ga r age two wee ks after
stitc hing Pa y just $45 .75 ca sh
bid Is awar ded.
8·29.dtc
or terms ava il able. Trade-ins
MOBILE HOMES
accepted
. Phone 992·5641 .
must have
Manufacinturer
machines
productive
use had
for t
1220 Washington 8 lvd.
8 25 6tc
·
THE LATEST NEW LISTING
at least two years pr ior to
423·7521
BELPRE. 0 .
RENOVATED
- Lov ely 2 bedr ooms, large living, nice
Jan uary 1. 1972 .
VACUU M Cleaner new 1972
ki tchen and gas forced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
Comm iss ioner s rese r ve the
model. Compl ete wi th all
righ t lo r ejec t an y or all bids.
to wall carpet ing. Partial ba sement on large lot. Asking
Mar tha Ch amber s
cl eani ng tools . Sm all pai nt
only $11 ,500.00 .
Cler k
damage in shipping . WHI ta ke
1971 KAWASAK I 100, l ;ke new.
$27 cash or budget plan
MIDDLEPORT
(8) 24. 31 . 21c
avai la ble. Ph one 99 2-$641.
$300. Phone 949-3915.
4 BEDROOMS - 2 baths . nice kitchen with bar and cook
8·27 5tp
'8·2s.6tc
un its. Garage and den in full basement. Covered pat io on
back of hou se. Asking 524,000 .00 .
LEGAL NOTICE
LARG E se lect ion of bea utiful
Sea led bids Will be received ·
Window
ma hogany dining sui tes;
by th e Vfllage of Middl eport.
LEVEL LOT
bedroom outfits; also, usual
Air Conditioners
Ohio, Meigs County , at th e vi CORNER - With a four room house, has gas. city waler ,
stock of oth er cl ean used
llage hal! i n Middl epor t. Ohio,
and elect ric . Asking only $2 ,500.00.
Hoi Water Healers
f~rni tur e,
.a pplian ces at
unt il 4 p. m . September 15, 1972 ,
tor the foll ow ing equ ipment :
,
J
HL
's
BA
RGA
IN
CE
N.
Plumbing
Used Pick up Tr uck , 3/~ ton
TER. " at caution l igh t," Rt.
SALE I
LOTS - LOTS - LOTS
Electrical Work
truc k , 4 speed transmission ,
7. Tu pper s Pl ains, Ohio .
1 ACRE - Nice lay ing on high ground. Chester water
s t ep bumpe r , hea vy dut y
Buy 2 Pairs and
Closed Mondav s.
available. 11 lots in all.
springs , 8 cyli nd er , 350 cu. in. or
8·27
·6tc
Get 1 PAIR FREE
mor e, wide side bed , 8 fe et or
more in length .
All kinds, all sizes for men,
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
No t1 id will be acce pted for
2 MI N IATU RE poodles, !25
equipmen t pr ior to 1970 models.
women,
young
men,
boys
5
BEDROOMS
Near downtown shopping , nice kitchen
each. Phone 992-7230.
The Vi lla ge r eserve s the right
and
girls.
Hurry
to
with
double
s;nk
.
2
porches and full basement . A good buy
8·3J.3tc
to re jec t any and all bids.
at on ly 57.500 .00 .
992 -2448
Vil lage of M iddl epo r t
POMEROY
.
Ge ne Gr ate , Clerk -Treasur er
REG ULATION size pool table,
Pomeroy , 0.
Aug ust 31
~
Jack
W. Carsey, Mgr.
LOOK FOR THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN , THEN
like new : phone 992 ·22 34 alter
Phone 992 -2181
YOU ' LL KNOW IT'S FOR SALE . BUY FROM YOUR
5 p.m .
RE WAR D, l or sh opping a l
LOCAL BROKER : IT'S GOOD BUSINESS AND FOR
8·29.4tc
NOTICE T01
Showa lter 's Wet Pet Shop,
THE
ECONOMY OF MEIGS COUNTY . WE'RE TRYING
COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
TAXPAYERS
Chester. Oh io: 10 per cent of
FOR A BIGGER AND BETTER YEAR .
Sal
t
Works.
E.
Main
St
.,
Notice is hereby given. In
2
WHE
EL
ut
ili
ty
Scout
Trai
ler.
your to ta l purchase ma y be
co mpl ian ce with sec tion 5115 ·17
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
41 ~' x6' wi th good Hres; spare
ap
pli ed to the purc hase of any
r ev ised code , that the t ax
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
4· 12·1fc
tire moun ted. 1-large stora ge
9?2-3325
cer
amic
i
tems
.
r eturn s Of Mei gs Counfy, for the
bin
with
hinged
cover
$100;
8·2·30t p
year 1972 have been r evised and
8'x 8' um brel la tent with in- POODL E puppies. Sil ver Toy ,
the valua r ions com pleted and
Par k vi ew Kennels. Phone 992·
ter ior telescoping poles ; 6 foot
ar e open for pub lic inspec tion at
AUCTION NOTICE
5443.
heigh t inside; needs m inor
the off ice of the Count y Audilbr
A·IS·tft
in the Cou r t Hou se, Pomeroy , WE wish to thank al l who at repai r s and door screening .
lended the fi r st day of t he
Ohio. Compla ints ag ainst any
Com ple tely waterpr oofedGeor ge A. Eastma n estate
\la lu at ion or assessment. excepl
$25 : ca ll 992 -58 15 after 5 p.m .
sa le, and invite ever yone to be
th e ._-a l uati on s f i xe d an d
8·29.3tc
assess men ts made by the Tu
Atthe Cross Roads on Rt. 124
wi th us on Sat .. Sept . 2. 1972.
Commissio ner of Ohio, wll l be
starling prompt ly at 10 :00
NEW
DELUXE
ZIG · ZAG
heard by the Coun ty Boa rd of
,SPECIAL CONTINUES
A.M. wit h far m too ls, shop
sewin g
m ach i ne.
Th is
Rev isi on , at its off ice in the
equipment,
etc
.
Court Ho use , Pome ro y, Oh io, on
mac hine makes butt onholes,
or aft er A ugust 'JO, 197 2. CATT L E and farm machiner y
darn s and embroideries; all
will sel l ai I p. m .. wi l h the D4
Complain ts m ust be mad e in
without attachm ents; phone
wr it ing , on bl an ks furni shed by
Cater pi ller Do zer jel ling at 2
992·5331.
tn e County Auditor and fil ed In
.
8·29·11c
8 PAK
hi s off ice on or be'fore the time I Fp.m
you need cat tle, mac hinery ,
limited for paym ent of t.:tx es for
shop equipment, f eed or farm 8
TRA CK
STER EO
16 oz. Bolls.
the fir st fli.t lf yea r , or at any
Repossessed , looks l ike new ,·
too ls, you cannel afford to
t i me dur ing wfl ic h la Kes are
Plus Ta&gt;
re cei ved by ,,..._ co unt y
miss t hi s sale .
beautif ul han d rubbed Wal nut
&amp;'
Deposit
Treasu r er, Without 1Jenalty for
lunch Serv ed
ca bine t ; ta ke ove~ payments
the fir st half year .
Mrs. John Epple. Adm .
of 51. 50 per week or pay
" · c" Mcco ,~
Gordon H. Caldwell
I . 0 . " "~
With each
Purch11o
5101.47; ph one 992·5331.
Aud itor of Meigs Coun ty
B·30·3tc
of
Ashlond
Guo
lint.
B·JO. JOtc
8·29 ifc I

Card

'
:

·

829 -:ilp SE VERAL var-ieti es of top

GARAGE Sa le at Dwain Durs t

·.

,

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results.
e
·
Busme·ss· s.ervices'
.

.. '.

For Rent

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

On Most American Cars

-GIJARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open a T115
Monday lhru Satur~y
604 E. Main, Pomeroy. 0 .
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph . «6·
4782. Gallipolis, Jolin Russell.
Owner &amp; Opera tor.
S·12·tfC
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
. Phone949-J821
Racine·, Oh io
'Critt Bradford
5·1-tfc
SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
San itation, Stewart , Ohio. Pn .
662·3035.
2-12-1rc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks installed . Georqe
(Bill ) Pullins. Phone 992 · 247~ .
4· 25-n &lt;.:
TUNE .UPS, brake jobs and
other auto work . Very
r easonable rates . Waines
Auto Service. school tralned.
Route 1. Shade, Ohio 992·6547,
next to Whaley 's Paint Shop.
8-20-12tc
---------SEWING Machine Service,
clean , oil , ad lust, 5399, in your
home ; phot'le 992·5331.
8. J1 .JOtc

''

Service

I.

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator
smallest Heater Care.
Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator $peclall•t

'
I KNOW 'IOU DIDNT

BUT WHEN 1HE
I&lt;IDNAPERS CALL

GET Ai.DN@ WITH
YOUR WIFE .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992 -2174
Pomeroy

T~ESE

AGAIN ABOUT lHE
RANGCIM, ARRMXOE
10 PA'I IT. ..

DAYS,

EVERYONE
SPECIA(.IZES

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End l01der work,
ponds , baoement. lo~d­
sca ping. We have 2 stze
dozers, 2 sire folders. Work
done by hour or contract .
Free Estimates. · We olso
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks •ncl low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alter 1 p.m . or phone 9925232.
'SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
~ervice. We Sharpen Scissors .
- . , . - - - - - ---3·_21J.tfc
·- .
SEE US FOR : Awninys, s)orm
doors and windows, cArports.
marquees, •.lumlnum '1idlng
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representative . For free,
estimates , phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V .
Johnson and Son. Inc. •
3-2-tfo

-

U'L

• :1He.Y /1m!!!

~! ..

ABNER

TH' PLAV MONEY?
DID 'YO' FIND
TH ' BUNDLE

0' lv'rONEY
AH L.EFT?

-- -. .. ------- .. _

SIJO' 'NUFF.'.'-AN'
IT COME IN

HAND'I-

NATCHE.Ri..'{
HONEST ABE.
P~AYED WI F IT
UNTil. HE GOT

AN' THEN HE
FE D IT TO TH'

GOAT-

..--..~BORED --·

.. . IT WILL TAKE

Wffi(S TO ANm!:R

READY .MIX
CONCRETE ·
delivered right to """'
projec1. Fast and easy . Fre•
estimates . Phone 992 ·3284
Gaegleln Ready .Mix Co .,
Middleport, Oh io.
6-30·tfc

ALL '!H I() WilL. !

O' OELL WHEEL alignment
localedatCromoads. Rt . 124.
Complete front end service.
tune up and brake service .
Wheels
balanced
elec·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed .
AP"c:nn;~~hl~
'
rale s. Phone 742 · 3232 .or AUTOMOBILE insurance been
992· 3213 .
1·1/·n&lt; caricelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 1'92·
WI L L DO lighi hauli ng in af ·
2966.
ternoons. Phone 992-3903.
6·15.tfc
8·27·61c

·--.---

50 l: WENT
~EAt&gt;

AN'

TOOK CA~e

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

OF IT!

-----~

_____

Mobile

For Sale

~

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

-===========

''HElL"

· For Sale

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

School Special!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

- - - - --

MILLER .&amp; SONS

We talk to JOU
like t peiSOn.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL .

·----------~--~

n.oo

'iO.R cuor::e Cf
FRESH MR'Il.AND CP.ASMtAT

~~at., 'K:x! Hf..'IE

Outstanding One-Owner Trade-Ins

RO'/AL.E, ClX\'UIL.I.E sr. JAQO!:;S,
roACHeD FILET OF SOlE WI1H
!JEW~ :S/I.U::E 1 Cf::X&gt;I AU Vl~ 1
~ CAA'T6/&gt;L! 8RI,4,!JD FOR 'JWO, ..

1972 Nova 2 Dr.......... ;........... ~2895
350 Y·8 engine, Turbo Hydramatlc, power steering . Nova
Rally equipment, interior group, bumper guard, vinyl
roof. golden brown finish.

1971 Chevrolet BelAir 4 Door ..... ~3095

AT THE MO!o1EHT HE BELIEVES HE Wli.L
DO THAT. AMMIE! il'JT THE ESSf.NTIAL
NATURE OF A MAM liKE 6 . SM IRCH
DOESWT CHAHGE IM A FlA'&gt;H ~

Beige fin ish, vinyl top, vinyl Interior, factory air Cot'l·
dltloned. W·w t ires, likP. new, 327 V-8 engine. power
steering, Turbo Hydramat lc, radio &amp; many other extras.
See th is now.

DID I SAY HALF OF EVERY DOLLAR?
WHY MOT AJ~RTER OF EVER'(
DOLLAR --.
RHAPS LEs s ....
PERHAPS'"" ?

ACROSS
1. Aforesaid
5. "Wind· .

11. Surfeit

DICK TRACY

ll!AOIM.A.LOME,

-EXWAU5ts TO VOUC.OST M! $500."

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr.• ~......... ..S1795
Local 1 owner car, green finish , clean Interior. good tires,
2000cc engine, radio, .t-speed trans.

1968 Camaro Convertible •.._.....'1795
A 1 owner sharp car, yellow finish with black accenling,
blk . lop, V·8 engine, automatic trans .. power steering ,
radio, new w-w t ires .

Dark Blue with Black v inyl Interior, roof drip mldg .. body
side mldg ., L 78x15 WW t ires. P. B.. Radio, Luggage
Carrier . 350, V·8 engine, turbo hydramalic, P. Steering
and Brakes.

Retail $4210.40- Closeout $3598.00

Chevrolet Kingswood 3 Seat Sl Wagon
Golf Gr~ finish , green viny ..int., tint. glass, 4 season air
conditioned, Front and rear mats, side midgs., power
tailgate , superlift Rear Shocks , Wh . covers, AM radio,
F&amp;R guards, luggage carrier, L7S.1S WWiires, 350 cu. ln.
engine, P. steering and brakes, turbo hydramatic.

Retail 55068.40 - Closeout S4315.00

8 Other New 1972
Chevrolet Pau. Can In Stock

pawns
16. Tsla or
cha
n.Oid
Chinese
kingdom
18. Drive
ZO.Interiec·
lion
%1. Modify
zz. Wee bit
23. Gertrude
%5. - up
(crammed
for
exams )
26. Mountain

New 1972 Closeouts!

Chevrolet Brookwood 2 Seat Sl Wagon

12. Excite
13. South
African
plant
14. Horses
15. Chess

40. Fellow "in
stitches"
41. Tolerate
DOWN
l. Rapscal·Iion
2. Gennan

song since
1935
4. Give the
double·O
5. With forti·
tude
8. Vene•ue ·
Ian COP·
per

center
7. French

coin
8. Florida's
nickname
9. Lover or
beauty

Your Chtvy O.aler

----

Open Eves •. Til 8

Yesterday'• Anower
10. Tried
25. Foreagain
shadow
16. Sea
Z7. A lion, at
gull
times
19. "Age of
31. Legumin·

Reason"

~

El,TAM

I

ous tree

tLIE'DJX
1\

author
31. Plaee of
20. Soap
worship
_
plant
33. Cotton
23. Least
fabric
original
38. Impre·
24. Mercury's
sarlo
winged
Hurok
••.,n_d•..,I_s..,.,...,37.,.·-N,e.-tw_o"'r:-k,

~

II
,1

I.

•

III

1

SLEENT

Now ......,. the cireltd lttura

V"
I V 'f to fonn tht aurprloe anawer, u
1::=~·~~;g~~·1\..:;;:.A-i•uaut.l bJ thelbooecartoon.

,.,...-+--~-t-~ 1- Prillt Sl ISUIISWII...

I [I I l I I I J

.28. Nautch

(A...we" IOBIOrrow)

girl
28. Seaport on·
the Black .
Sea
3%. Burmese

J••bleo, QUASH JUlC:I

f-4--+-i

Yatertby'•

OUniT

MILIUM

AM••" IJ'ho1 he ~olfromli&lt;•-AN ISLI

hill·
dweller

33.New

1/JEll,OL' MOUND,
THE M~EMLL
SEASON 15 OVER
,_,.,_ FOR U5...

Guinea
town
U. Distant
(prefix)
36. Steno's
need
37. Deprivation
18. - . Sig·
noret
39. Spirit
lamp

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worlllt:
Ia

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

~011

river

27. Function

CLAJM5 KELT Pill NMAI. ONTO eu YJNG UPA
JIG TRACT OF iANVON SPEC. AN Alli'C"'AFT
WAS 1ilPP05fP 10 WANT 8UT

Unatl'll'ftble thete four Jumbleo,
one letter to ...h square, to
form four ordinary words.

3•.Popular

lake

TERRY

'

(01t72 Kinr Ftaturtl Syndicate, Inc.)

bag"

1970 Camaro H.T. ................... ~2295
v.a

NIRVAL

by THOMAS JOsEPH

Local I owner with less !han 21.000 miles. factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body, blk . ~oil interior, radio, Turbo
Hydramatic power steering, &amp; disc brakes, wh ite-wall
tires, li ke new. A ni cy luKury car .

Local owned &amp; less than 24.000 miles. Green finish, green
vinyl bucket seats with console, 350
engine , 4 speed
trans .. power steering , rear air reflector, radio, like new
w -w tires, no. teenage driver . Sharp, man, sharp .

Yeolmla7'1 Cryp~laole: THE ENTHuSIASM: OF OLD MEN
IS SINGULARLY LIXE THAT OF INFANCY -GEIWID DE

~~-

1970 Monte Carto ................... ~2895

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
uatd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the lenrth and formotlon of the word• oro 111
hints. Each day the code letters ore different.
CRYPTOQUOTE8

K[. ZBYARXPR ORRO CZ YC CQUC
XZ lUX J.RCO QUKKYXROO ZGC Zll
PLYIR . -BYCCZLYZ

UTKYRLY

L--------...J

W£ MIW NO'!' KAYE WON ANI{

6AME5, 6UT WE HAO GREAT
TIME5, DIDN'T WE ?50LON6 ...
I'LL ,EE '1'0U A6AIN NEXT!(EAR ..

�Eagles
Running

a

omero

.

FRIDAY AND SAT

Better

Discontinued Colors

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles defeated
the Glouster Tomcats three
touchdowns to one Wednesday
at Glouster, but dominated the
pre-season s~rimmage more
than that score indicates.
The Eagles had lour sixpointers called back, and
defensively they stopped the
Tomca Is cold .
Coach Roger Kirkhart said
alter the scrimmage :
"Again, we hit hard and we
looked better than in our first
scrimmage. 1 was fairly well
pleased with our defense, but
still not satisfied with the offense."
One sparkplug the offense
showed off was senior running
back Ralph Parker who didn't
get to see much action last year
because super backs Rick
Sanders and Randy Boring
handled the job. "He is really
shifty and made several
beautiful runs, once breaking
as many as seven tackles,"
said Kirkhart.
Glouster's offense generated
nothing in the first part of the
scrimmage. It finally scored
when Kirkhart let them have
the ball as much as they
wanted because the Eagles
needed defensive work.
The Eagles' reserves and the
Glouster seconds battled to a
scoreless tie. In an earlier
scrimmage against New
Lexington, the Eagles'
reserves were beaten, ~. as

".

Friday - Saturday Sale!

WOMENS SPORTSWEAR

Mens • Young Mens

Small group - broken sizes in this well-known
brand of coordinates. Pants - Shirts - Vests Skirts .
While they last

1f2 price

Sheets and Pillowcases
Contempo stripe pattern in several color combinations.

Reg. 5.99 Full Size - - - - - - - - Sale 3.99
Reg. 4.99 Twin Size- - - - -- - - Sale 3.39
Reg. 3.49 pr. Pillowcases - - - Sale 2.39

JEWELRY SALE

Save During Our Annual

Stretch Lace

Another
big
shipment
"Whirlpool"
Refrigerators - Washers and Dryers - On sale
on Elberfelds 3rd floor .

Sale '1 11

Visit Elberfelds 3rd Floor Furniture and Carpet
departments . Well known dependable makes of
Furniture and Carpet for every room in your
home.

WOMENS FALL DRESSES
Selected from our regular stock.

Also a big sale on all Whirlpool and Chrysler Air
Temp Air Conditioners on the Jrd floor.

Save up to 40 per cent on Juniors- Misses - Half
Sizes d.u ring our Labor Day Sale.

Womens Sleepwear Sale

KIRBURY BLANKETS

Selected from our regular stock.

Our Own Klrbury

Sale 1h Price

Floral Print Vinyl

Reg. 4.00 Play Suits
Sale 2 ·49

Mens $3.95
long Sleeve

SPORT SHIRTS

New solid colors. Nlany beautiful patterns
'
t
checks
- stripes . Small (14-14112 ). medium (15·
1
Reg . 3.So PI ay Su1 s
Sale 1.99
151!2 ), large (16-16'12 ), and extra large (17-17'12)
------~---~---:;:::::;::-~~~ sizes. Big selection of collar styles. Tapered and
fuller cut models .
Two Day Sale

Two Day Sale!

2 for '700
Now on Sale at Elberfelds Warehouse on
Mechanic Street is a fine selection of Metal ·
Cabinets . Choose from many styles including
wardrobes, wall cabinets, base cabinets and
china cabinets . These cabinets are finished in
attractive gold. green, white, brown and wood
finishes.

Sizes 6 through 18 .
Cotton anp polyester
blends. All permanent
press. An excellent
selection of solid colors stripes - patterns . Long
sleeves.
Special Sale Price

5 ROOM house. bath, front

porch, full basement, two lots,
S. D. Buskirk, Sr .. 341 Page
Sf .. Middleport, Ohio.
8-Jf .3tp

MASON DRivE-IN

for

Tonight and Friday
·Augusi31-Sept. I

I

R

PLUS
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS
(Color)
(Rl

Group 1

'1.00

TONIGHT: AUG. 31
NOT OPEN

Fits sizes 10 through 13.
White with multl.color lop.

9x12 size
9x18 size
12x18 size •

.

lOc
15c
20c

"Beautysheen"

Throw Rugs
24x48
Oriental
reproduction
made In Belgium. Ric ly
colorful. Four popular
Oriental designs on
background of Gold.
Green, Red, Blue. Ivory .

Simplicity's new sewing book for teens. 96 colorful pagn of
young fashion fun.
75c

Boys

Cotton
Crew SOCKS

Sizes 9 to 11 and 8 to 9'h.
White with multi color top
or solid color with contrast
color lop.

"Par.a gon"

.4.

Srinplicity Home Catalog, Fall-Winter

75i:

Simplicity Fashion Magazine for
Wom(!n who sew, Fall-Winter - - - - • -

75c

100 per cent Rayon and

Good Housekeeping Needlecraft Magazine Sl.OO

two lonn and solids In a

Upholstery
FABRIC
54" Width
Rayon Blends.

Jo~uard

wide ieloctlon of colors.''
Friday and Seturday

An Ideo I publication for women who knit, crochet or sew.

'·

SAIGON 1UP!) -Communist troops marked the start of the
sixth month of their current offensive in South Vietnam roday by
engaging government troops in the heaviest coastal highlands
fighting since the drive begWJ, military spokesmen said.
In addition to the highiWids batUe, intelligence reports
warned of Communist plans ro intensify already heavy lighting
around QuWJg Tri City to mark two weekend anniversaries Saturday's 27th birthday of the North Vietnamese declaration of
independence and Sunday's fourth anniversary of Ho Chi Minh's
death.
Major fighting at Quang Tri a cost of four government
today appeared to bear out the troops dead and five wounded.
In the coastal fighting, a
intelligence reports. Saigon
Saigon
command spokesman
spokesmen said Communist
gunners launched an hour- said government militiamen
long, 132-round artillery and reported killing 29 Communist
mortar attack on government . soldiers in two skirmishes
marine positions arOUnd the I around Tam Quan that left 26
besieged city, 435 miles north South Vietnamese dead and 21
wounded. The spokesman said
of Saigon .
In live skirmishes that it was the most intense fighting
followed, the marines reported in the coastal area since the
killing 36 North Vietnamese at offensive began March 30.
~=::x::o::::~«=m.:•= ·· ::~s:~&gt;&lt;~.~.::::-~'!"""'i~:l.

'1.79

By United Pres! luteroaliooal
MIAMI - TROPICAL STORM CARRIE built 55-mile-anhour winds off the North Carolina coast roday and forecasters
said the distrubance would head northward and grow stronger.
Although litUe information was received on the season's third
tropical storm during the night, forecasters estimated it was
located early today near latitude 35.3 north and longitude 69.5
west. This was about 350 miles east of Cape Hatteras.
Forecasters said gales extend 150 mlle5 outward ro the north
of Carrie's eye and 75 miles to the south. Weathermen said
Carrie, born Thursday out of a low pressure area, was .a small
storm, but could grow larger as it matures.

-

and fighting for seats in the
cafeteria when the telephone
call came. Cramer and the new
champion's second, the Rev .
William 4ombardy, told
Fischer shortly after he awoke,
ready to resume the game.
Fischer asked Schmid to get
' a statement in writing from
Spassky that he had resigned,
Cramer said.
When Fischer sat down at the
board Thursday for the
beginning of the 21st game, he
had 11.5 points - one point
away from the title. Spassky
had 8.5 points.
Five hours later Fischer
rushed off the brightly lit stage
(Continued on page 10)

THIRTY.ONE PUPil.'l at Pomeroy Elementary make up the school's
patrol. First row, 1..-, Pomeroy Police Chief Jed Webster, Sleven Little,
David Burt, Wesley Smith, Troy Griffith, Mark Casto, Todd Smith, Elaine
Barnhart, Cheryl Mowery, Peggy Johnson and Amanda Sisson; second row,
Karen Smith, Kathleen Smith, Lori Wood, Shari Mitch, Sherrie Osborne,
Anna McKinney, Judy Hall, Shari Colmer, Jamie Sisson, Cindy Richards;

•

at y
VOL. XXV

NO. 98 .

FRID~Y .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON IUPI)-The
nation's unemployment rate
edged up slightly to 5.6 per cent
in August after holding at a 20month low of 5.5 per cent for
two months, the government
said roday.
DONL.DILTS

Dilts Looking

For Support in
Meigs, GalliJJ
Don L. Dilts, Rt. !, Hopewell,
Ohio, a candidate for a seat on
the Ohio State Board of
Education, roured Gallia and
Meigs Counties Thursday.
Dilts, vice-president of the
First National Bank of
Zanesville, is married and the
fath er of lour school age
children. He served four turns
as Muskingum County auditor.
He said he feels persons other
than retired educators should
have a voice in Ohio education .
Dilts is a member of the
Lions, Elks, Eagles and
Grange. He was selected as the
Outstanding Young Man of
Zanesville in 1969 by the
Zanesville Jaycees. He is
active in all community affairs
and a member of the South
Zanesville United Methodist
Church . While visiting in
Gallipolis and Pomeroy, he
met voters and school officials.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the number of persons
with jobs increased by 290,000
to an all-lime high of 81.97
million last month. But 390,000
more workers were looking for
jobs, so unemployment went up

Driver Hurt
At 3:09a.m. today Gary Lee
Simpson, 22, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
was traveling down Rose Hill,
three-tenths of a mile north or
U.S. Rt. JJ , when his car went
off the road on the left, hit a
guardrail, then struck and
broke off a power pole.
Simpson was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R squad
where he was admitted for
lacerations . He is reported in
satisfactory condition.
The sheriff's department
filed charges of driving while
under suspension and reckless
operation.
At 8 a. m. today on SR .124,
about 50 feet west of Route 338
at Great Bend, George A.
Deem, 72, Racine, was
traveling east and Homer
Proffitt, 40, Racine, west, when
the two collided. Heavy fog was
blamed. There was heavy
damage to both vehicles, but no

HUNTERS' ALERT
'!be squirrel season In Meigs
County will open on Sept. 8,
Gary Swope, county game
protector, reports.
The season extends through
Nov_ 11 on private lands and
through De&lt;. Z3 on state public
hunting areas. HUOllog hours
wiU be daylight to dark. The
dally bag limit Is four and the
possession limit after the first
day Is eight.

injuries or arrest.

Thursday at 12:40 p. m. on
SR 124 in Salem Township , one
and five-tenths mile east of the
Vinton-Meigs Co unty Line ,
Emer~o n Reese, 51, Rt. 1,
(Continued on page 10)

Students Agree

To Rules for
Driving Cars
Meigs High School students
must sign agreements if they
are to drive their autos ro
school this year.
Students driving must sign
statements pledging to operate
their vehicles safely ro and
from school; not to move their
autos at anytime during the
day without permission; not to
sta rt their cars after school has
been dismissed until all of the
school buses have left the
groiUids, and to park their
autos only in designated
locations.
Students, particularly during
the first 10 weeks when a part
of the parking area will be used
as a practice space for the
marching band, must have
good reasons for driving,
school officials said.
·
The band will be practicing
on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings alter school under the
direction of Dwight Goins .

Start of '72-73 School Year is Smooth

staff, but It certainly makes for a much more orderly
beginning of school.
Mr. Moore's organization at the jWlior high school
enabled things to get off on a very even keel in that
buUding. Our elementary [X'Incipals had things well
organized too, especially the ccmpllcated problem of
getting the right pupilll on the right buses. I extend
my congratulations to all our administrators an~
staff for this good start.
1 want ro extend my gratitude lor the help,
cooperation and understanding of all kindergarten
pereniS as we attempt to work out the problems
. concerning the scheduling and transporting of kln'dergarten students. Our present arrangement of
alternating full day seuions of kindergarten Is being
carefullY studied.
1 WOULO LIKE TO CALL to your attention that
our football- ope111 jult cme week from Ulnlght.
Season footballlicketsareavailableln the prlncipl.l'a

•

enttne
SEPTEMBER 1. 1972

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Unemployment Rate Up

Weather

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
This evening I will try to report on a variety of
topics I hope will be of interest. The beginning of
school is a very busy ·time. There Is much ro report.
I have been in every school in the distri~t at least
once this week and I have been In several a number of
limes. -1 can report ro yo!l that we had a smooth start
this 1972-73 school year.
Schedule cards were malled ro all high school
students late In the summer and students were
directed to request changes at that time rather than
at the beginning of school. This takes a lot of additional effort in the summer by Mr. Diehl and his

third row, Tod Morrow, Keith Krautter, Jeff Grueser, Tom Hawley, Brett
Jones, Harold Pettit, Scott Williams, Pat Owens, Raymond Andrews, and
David Dillard. Advisor is Marlene Fisher . Police Chief Webster instructs
each youngster and administers the oath. Absent was Keith Landers. The
members of the patrol have several projects planned to finance another trip
tQ Washington next summer.

Devoted To The lntere&amp;u OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

COLUMBUS -THE OHIO FARM BUREAU Federation
WJnounced Friday it will defend the right of farmers ro have their
land values lor tax purposes based on farm use. Taxes are
currenUy figured on the farmland's potential value . "Farmers
have been discriminated against for years," Farm Bureau
President Leonard Schnell said In remarks prepared for a
meeting of more than 400 farmers here Friday.
"Residential, commercial Wid industrial properly has been
appraised on current use value, while appraisal of farmland has
been on a potential value basis. The result is that farmers are
caught In a severe pinch." The Farm Bureau has filed a motion
Chance of thundershowers
with the Ohio Supreme Court ro allow the organization ro become
over
slate tonight. Low tonight
a party in defending the provisions of Senate Bill 455, new
mostly in the 60s. Cooler
legislation which provides true uniformity in tax appraisal.
Saturday, chance of showers in
southern sections early in the
ORLANDO, FLA . - MULTIMIU.IONAffiE Glenn W.
day. Highs tomorrow in the 70s.
(Continued on page 101

Speaking of Schools-No. 246

$8.98

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WELCOME HOME,
SOL OlEA BOYS
1Technlcolor l
SHOW STAATS 7 P.M.

"

'2.00

All colors . Including
,seasonal and holiday
colors.

"Let Yourself Sew"

79~
GP

Group 2

It fl.

At Pattern Counter SLOO

colors for fall wear. Ideal
slacks fo school. Stop In Select what you need now.

Cushion Foot
Crew Socks

Made of lSI quollty croft

Seamless heavy gauge vinyl plastic. Standard
size 72"x72" .
Beautiful easy to clean patterns In all colors.

Sizes 6 to 18. Crushed corduroy

Mens and Young Mens

FELT
SQUARES

SHOWER CURTAINS

and corded cottons. New

MEIGS THEATRE

Excellent Quality
Ideal lor upholslerlng. Also
.used lor Tole Bags, etc.

Special Purchase!

See the New Slmpllclly Sewing Book - naw rtvlsod ond
expanded. It's got everything you need to know obout llwlng
tor today.

Aare Leg Slacks

Sale 51.19 Skein
Furniture
Webbing

New Publications
In The Sewing Dept.

Boys

Virgin Wool
Sollcb · Heathers · Multi
color Heather and shaded
and variegated colors.

'4.49

Another Shipment

Double Fealure
"FRIENDS"
(Technlcolor)

IDO Pet. Purt

Jute

Excellent patterns and colors. Pinch pleated.
Handwash- no iron. Fire and Sun safe . All first
quality .
Special sale price Friday and Saturday

have been opened when the
game resumed at 10:30 a. m.
EDT today. World chess experts said then he had no
chance ro win. They said an
" incredible blunder" by
Spassky on his 30th move
Thursday had cost him the
game and the championship.
After the telephone call
today Schmid sought a ruling
from Dr. Max Euwe, the
president of the International
Chess Federation and the last
non-Russian to hold the world
title . Euwe said a telephoned
resignation was valid and
permissable.
Fischer did not even know at
the time he was world champion.
Crowds were still buying
tickets outside the playing hall

fL 1ews.. zn Brzef~1

50x84

While you are shopping for your metal cabinets.
look over the beautiful array of vinyl floor
covering on ale . We feature the most popular
patterns in 9 and 12 foot widths .

2 $5..00

'.I ' '

45" Permanent Press
Good patterns and
colors.
For This Sale

KNiniNG
YARN

$7.95 fiberglas Draperies

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

Sport Shirts

DRESS
FABRIC

Red Heart

Special!

Sale /z Price

Boys $2.95

99'

S1.39

New patterns and colors - 72"x90"
"Juno"-100 pet. Acrylic - - - - - - - - S5.49
"Cioud"-100 pet. Polyester Thermal---. sus
"Rose Bower"-100 pet. Acrylic Screen
Print.
$6.95

Sleep 'n Play

SUITS

All At
Sale Prices!

Large Shipment Blankets

Infants

Reg. '4.98 and 15.98

NO WEDDING
The wedding of Miss Judy
Taylor and Ronnie Adrian has
been cancelled.

Fruit wood color. Flat slat
vinyl roll-up blinds. All611.
drop.~·. 7' , B' and 10' width .

Mens Leather Work Belts - - - - •• - - - 1.75

White - beige - chocolate · nav.y - lemon -plum.

1

Porch
Blinds

Boys and mens Reversible Wide Belts - - 1.75

,.

Bra and Bikini Sets

VISITS TURNERS
Mr. and Mrs. Dale K. Roush
and children, Steven and
Kathy, of Apple Creek, were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Turner, Middleport.
Stephen leaves Saturday for
New Bedford, Mass. where he
attends college.

Gibraltar

'2.50

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
- Bobby Fischer won the
world c hess championship
roday when Russian defender
Boris Spassky telephoned his
resignation in the 2;st game of
their $25Q,OOO match.
Fischer, 29, thus fulfilled his
lifelong dream of becoming the
first American world chess
champion of modern times - a
dream that had driven him for
20 years.
Fischer 's aide,
Fred
Cramer, said the Russian
champion telephoned .arbiter
Lothar Schmid to tell him he
resigned the 21st game, giving
Fischer the title.
The 21st game was adjourned Thursday and Spassky
sealed his 41st move in a brown
paper envelope that was to

North Pressing
Heaviest Force
In Six Months

Cleanup Sale!

Boys sizes 24 to 28- Mens sizes 30 to 38. White
- Brown - Black . A brand new selection.

Reg. $3.00

Diaper Bags

20% off
Elberfeld• In Pomeroy are
continuing the 20. per cent
off sole of custom-made
drapes. Bring In your
measurements.

WIDE SPORT BELTS

All styles of Supp,-Hose Pantyhose and
Stockings included in this sale.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
International vice president of
the Communications Workers
of America (CWA) called a
mee ling here today of AFLCIO union leaders who are
willing to launch a committee
supporting Sen. George
McGovern for President.
Martin J. Hughes said he rold
the Democratic presidential
condidate last week in
Washington
there
was
"widespread support among
trade unions in Ohio for the
election of a McGovern..Shriver
ticket."

Sale

Young Mens - Boys

Supp-Hose Sale

Meeting Called

Drapery

'10.95 Knit SlaCks Sale '8.25
'11.95 Knit Slacks Sale ~95
'12.95 Knit Slacks Sale '9.75
'13.95 Knit Slacks Sale '10.50
'14.95 Knit Slacks Sale '11.25
'15.95 Knit Slacks Sale '11.95
'16.95 Knit Slacks Sale '12.75
'17.95 Knit Slacks Sale '1150

- Ropes - Pins - Rings - Bracelets.
Selected from our regular stock. Values to
$4.00.

In a general wrap-up comment of the game, Kirkhart
said: ·•
''We need more power on
offense, but our defense is
getting much better."
The Eagles will scrimmage
tl1e NelllonviUe-York Buckeyes
at Nelsonville Saturday at 10 a.
m. Nelsonville-York whipped
Kyger Creek 14-8 (two rouchdowns ro one) in • scrimmage
Saturday.

Custom-Made

Comfort knit slacks. So popular for
school and dress wear. A brand new
selection of colors - patterns - styles.
All famous makes. You can really
save during this two-day sale.

No-Iron Percale

~arrings

Now Gainl On! .

Knit SICicks

Cannon Royal Family

was the varsity.

Frldly anil Saturday
September 1-2
CATO'NINE TAILS
(·TechnicolorJ
Jas Franclscus
Karl Malden
e&amp;therlne Speak

Spassky Gives up
In 21st Game

office at the high school. The phone number is 9922158.
SCHOOL INSURANCE APPLICATION forms
have been sent home with all students. I remind you
that the Insurance does not become effective until the
day the student brings the premium to the teacher in
the school. Please remember that this insurance Is a
matter between you and the insurance company. The
. school simply provides the means for the distribution
of information, the collection of premiums, and the
recording of the students Insured.
It is the policy of the school system that all
students who will be participating in any athletic
activity during the school year MUST have school
insurance, This policy includes all students in grades
7-12.
THE DAILY LUNCH menu for all the schools In
'
the dllltrlct will be announced each morning on radio.
We apologize for a couple of differences during this
past week. We will try to keep these to WI absolute
minimum.
.
THE MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL BAND spent a week
at band camp in August. This was a period of intensive training In b9th marching and music. In
addition to this, the bilnd will be practicing a couple of
nighiS each weel alter IIChool during marching
season. We will appreciate the understanding of the
parents of these youngaters In the added probl~m of
'
transportation.
OUR BUS SCHEDULES have been slowed additlooally this week by !he change in the road location
In the vicinity of the high school. If you haven't been
In tha~ area this week, you won't know what I am
referring to, but it Is more difficult to get ro the high
adi!Jol now than It was last Monday morning. We look

forward ro the completion of the road that will permit
us direct access ro the school.
IN ONE OF THE MEETINGS WE HAD last
summer, an extremely important topic was
discussed, namely, that parents with children in
grades 7-12 have no real way to have contact with the
teachers of their children. It is alllo important for us
ro have additional opportunities for parent-teacher
contacts in grades K~. even though we already have
PT As. We are going I() make an effort ro remedy this
situation this year.
This is how we plan to do it: On four days we will .
dismiss school 21&gt; hours early, right after lunch. All
teachers and students will be excused at that time.
During the evening of each of these four days, from' 7
p.m. to 9:30p.m., all teachers will be in school to
meet in conferences with parents.
The first of 'these half dty sessions will be on
Thursday, Sept. '28, On that same date all teachers
will be In the schools from 7 _9:30 p.m. for parent
conferences. The other dates on which we plan these
parent conferences are Oct. 26, March 29 and April 26.
These meetings are now possible because of recent
changes in otate legislation that permit four on~.lJalf
days of the school year to be constructe&lt;flor parent
conferences.
We will be giving you additional reminders of
these dates as the year progresses, but you might
want to circle September 28 right now, so you won't
forget ft.
I want to remind you again that this is something
that developed from dlscus'lions that we had with
citizens' groups this summer. We hope that we wlU
have the support of parents in making this effort a
success.

•

by 100,000 to 4,11l17,000.
The BLS termed the 290,000
growth in employment as
substantial, and said unemployment was "basically unchanged" despite the addition
of the 100,000 workers ro the
jobless roles and the increase
in the unemployment rate from
5.5 up to 5.6 per cent.
Average weekly earnings of
rank-and-file workers continued ro keep ahead of inflation during President
Nixon's economic controls,
now more than one year old,
the BLS said.
Average weekly earnings
last month went up $1.12 to
$137.23 -4!.4 per cent above the
previous August.

the nearly 5 million· unemployed.
At the same time, Meany
said: "Wages have been held
down, but prices and profits
have been allowed to
skyrocket, employers,
naturally, are only roo happy to
police wage controls-but no
effective machinery was ever
set up ro keep prices in check...
Prior ro release oi lliilateSt
figures, Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson contended
that American workers had
made "impressive economic

and social gains" since Labor
Day, 1971, saying the rate of
inflation was down, employment up, unemployment
down, and productivity and
Conswner prices went up purchasing power of average
about 3 per cent during the 12- wages up.
month period.
The report said virtually all
the increase in employment
occurred among _adult women
working part time . .Their
jobless rate declined from 5.7
down to 5.5 per cent.
'!'he employment statistics,
made public just before the
lon g Labor Day weekend
began, eame as George Meany,
The Meigs Marauder grid
AFL-CIO president, was again · squad may have a new l~k
attacking President Nixon's when it goes for the extra pomt
economic policies which he after touchdowns this year.
said had caused a "tragic The growing popularity of the
human waste" in the form of kick in the 1970s has arrived in
Marauderland.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said jobless rates for most
categories of workers showed
Utile or no change during
August.
The rate for adult men held
steady at 3.9 per cent,
joblessness for white workers
went up from 5 to 5.1 per cent
and Negro unemployment
dropped from 9.9 ro 9.7 per
cent. The rate for married men
edged down from 2.7 to 2.6 per
cent and unemployment
among heads of households
remained unchanged at 3.3 per
cent.
But unemployment amoog
teenagers shot up from 14.8 per
cent in July ro !6.9 per Cl!ht in
August, with most of the increase among 16 Wid 17 yearold
(Continued on page ~0)

McKinney Putting
Toe to the Ball

Labor Day Is Holiday
Meigs Co unty
school
students who began classes
Monday will get their first
" holiday" Monday (Labor
Day) .
Students in the Meigs LQcal
School District will ge t another
break in September when the
first of four parent-student
conFere nces is held. On Sept. 28
classes will be dismissed at
noon in the district. In the
eveni ng from 7 to 9:30 p. m.,
teachers will return to their
classrooms and parents are

invited to visit them to discuss
any phase of their child's work .
Similar
conferences
arranged on the same schedule
with classes being dismissed In
the afternoons will be held on
Oct. 26, March 29 and April 26.
The next holidays for
students will come on Oct. 13
when the annual Meigs County
Education Association meeting
is to be held, and on Oct. 27
when the Southeastern Ohio
Teachers Assn . meets.

Lou McKinney, 175lb. senior
guard Thursday was kicking
over a backslap (there are no
goalposts) on the Salisbury
Elementary practice field .
McKinney was making good
on some of his boots; some
sailed low. Only one was
blocked, a good sign. A little
practice and maybe the
Marauders will have a few 7s
and 2's in their final .scores
instead of 8s or other even
numbers.
Meigs will scrimmage the
Warren Local Warriors at
Middleport Saturday at 10 a.
m. The public Is invited ro
come out and see what the
Marauders have.
The test against the Warriors
will be a tough one for they are
one of the favorites in the TrtValley Conference this year
along with Belpre, the second
game on the Meigs schedule.

Teaching Aided by $20,150
A $20,150 state program will work as teacher aides in
which provides for teacher the Pomeroy Elementary and
aides, school office aides and a the Salisbury Elementary
$135 allowance lor each Schools. Their assignments as
teacher from kindergarten to grade level will be deterthrough sixth grades to be used mined by Mrs. Bailey and the
for additional teaching respective school principal. ·
materials, is being carried out
Rounding out !he program Is
this fall in the Meigs Local the
teaching
material
School District .
The allocations are based
upon the number of children in
the county whose families are
receiving aid ro dependent
Bryson R. Carter, Gallla
children. Butthemoneyisrobe - County Agriculture Agent, has
spent for general programs ro an nounced dates lor nine fall
improve
all
teaching feeder call sales.
situations.
The first, for yearling calves,
Under It, six aides have been is planned Oct. 4 at Chillicothe.
employed to help in the office
Other sales are Oct. 10 at
work at six elementary school. 8::::;:;:;:;:;:;:~::::::::::::::::::::::~::::&gt;:~::~:::::::::~:::::~:
These aides are at Bra~ury
MEETING
and Middleport where tbey
work six hours a day, and at
TONIGHT
Salem Center, Rutland ,
of
Harrisonville and Salisbury,
MIDDLEPORT
where the aides will work four
MERCHANTS
hours each dsy. The only
ASSOCIATION
elementary school not having
7:30P.M.
an aide assigned 1s th e,
Pomeroy Elementary where
Columbus &amp; Southern
there is a full time secretary.
Ohio Elec. Co.
Five Meigs High School
Social Rooms
, students under supervision of
Mrs. Joe Bailey of the faculty m;~~·EJI!EU;

allowance .
Under provisions of the
teaching materialll allowance,
57 classroom teachers will
spend •135 each on whatever
additional teacher materials
!hey feel will be most helpul
for their pupils during the 1m73 school year.

9 Sales.·on Autumn List
Athens, all beef breeds; Oct.
11, GalltpoUs. all beef breeds;
Oct . 17, Chillicothe , all
Hereford; Oct. 24, Chillicothe,
Angus ltlld Angus-Cross; Oct.
31, Chillicothe, ali beefbreeds;
Nov. 2, Gallipolis, all beef
breeds; Nov . 8, Chillicothe,
Hereford hornle~s and No¥.••ll,
Chillicothe, all beef breeds.
The first sale in Gallipolis Is
during the day. Calves should
be brought ro the Ohio Valley
Srockyards on Oct. 10.
Dairy and dairy cross calves
that meet the slandards for the
number five grade may be
consigned to the Galllpolla
sale. According to Carter, they ·
will be Penned aeparately and
sold separately from the beef
catUe,

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