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,I

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On Fann Front

~LETESCOURSE

Lacking Support, Koch
Is Calling It Quits
I

,

.

By BERNARD BRENNER
!JPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) -One
of the !ann world's most persistent and active lobby groups
has thrown up its hands In despair and retired from its annual
campaign to fight off cuts in a
federal conservation subsidy
program.
Robert M. Koch, president of
theNationalLimestone 1nstitute,
Inc., announced the policy
change in letters sent last week
to farmer-members of aU 3,000
county Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation (ASC) committees.
Koch's group, which incl'l'ies
many firms selling agricultural
lime, has·for years been pressing congress and the administration to maintain or boost
spending on the Agriculture Department's cost-6haring conservation payments to farmers.
But Koch says he's quitting
now because there has been liiUe or no support for his efforts
from grass-roots farm groups.
"Inasmuch as the farmers of
the nation, through their elected representatives at the county level, have taken practically
no interest in maintaining the
reap, I shall discontinue our
activities in this area," Koch
wrote. (REAP is the Rural En-

Market Repon
SCIOTO LIVES'roCK
Hogs - 200-230, 11.25; No. 1,
17.50; ~280. 17; ·100.200, 18.50;
l!M-240, 18; 240-250, 18; llll-190,
17.50.
Sows - 300-400, 15 to 15.60;
~. 15.70 to 16.30.
Boars -15.
Pigs - BH, ·7.50 to 17.
Cattle - Otoice steers, 33 to
33.70; good, 31 to 32.90; Standard, 27.40 to 29.50; Otoice hfrs,
30.30 to 32; good, 28.50 to 29.75;
good cows, 22 to 23.50; utility, 19
to 21.50; canner and cutter, 17
down; bulls, 25.75 to 27.50;
heavy feeder steers, 25.50 to
31.75; feeder calves steers, 30 to
36.25; Holstein feeders, 25.90 to
31.60.
Veal calves - Otoice, 47;
good, 44.50; Med., 36.75; Baby
calves BH 1S to 75.
OHIO VALLEY
UVESTOCK CO.
GaiUpol&amp;, AIIPit Zl, 1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs - 17 to
17.75; 220 to 250 lbs. 16.50 to
16.75; Fat Sows 13.50 to 14.25;
Boars 10 to 13.90: Pii!s 1 to 10:
Shoats 6.50 to 14.
CATTLE- Steers 24 to 32.25;
Heifers20to27.50; BabyBeef28
to 36.50; Fat Cows 18 to 21.50;
Canners 14 to 23.10; Bulls 22.50
to 26.10; Milk Cows 145 to 285.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 41.80;
Seconds 38 to 40; M"edium 35 to
37.85; Com. - Hvs. 30 to 37;
Culls 33 down.
BABY CALVES - 20 to 69.

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
Admissions : Mrs. Charles
Bledsoe, Mrs. Emil Martin,
Mrs. Donald Workman, Point
Pleasant ; Leo Light, Point
Pleasant; Thryan B. Wallace,
Pomeroy, and Ruth Moore,
Middleport.
Discharges: Cecil Hall, Mrs.
Riley Swartz, Theresa Walker,
Eric DeVault, Mrs. Deford
Jividen, Mrs. V. Patterson and
59n, Luther Price, Chad Moore,
Flossie Bowen, Mrs. Harry
Searls, Mrs. James Kinder,
Roger Blake, Phyllis Milford,
Densil Barnett and Robert
Holley.

.MEIGS lHEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
August 30-31
A NEW LEA'F
(Technicolorl
Walter Matlhau
Elaine May

"G"

Colorurtoons:
Give Me Liberty
How to Rel~x
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

:========:
Ton•gnt &amp; Tuesdoy
August!D-31
Daub~ F~ture Progr•m
THE WILD
BUNCH
(Color)·
William Holden
Ernest Borg nine
- PlusTHE SWEET BODY
OF DEBORAH

R

Carroll Baker

Jean Sorel

·--· --··

•

called ACP) payments had never before gone below $150 million. That level was :reached in
1941 and will be reached again
in the 1971 program despite a
cmgressional authorization for
$196.5 million. In most of the
past 35 years, the conservation
subsidies have been held
around or above $200 million.
One agriculture official hinted
privately be considered Koch's
letter may have been a ploy to
spul- ASC committee members
and their fanner associates to
greater efforts on behalf of the
program. The letter was blunt
011 that point.
It said: "Congressman after
congressman told me they had
not had a single letter or caU
about REAP. One congressman
told me that in aU the years
he spent in Congress, no one
ever asked him to support (the
program) except me, and he
comes from one of our largest
agricultural sta~s."
Koch said the impression has
spread that only the limestone
industry cares about continuing
the program. The industry, he
said, seUs only 4 per cent of its
total production for agricultural
lime use.

Overnight Wire
committee for Ohio educators
has been proposed by the newly
elected president of the Ohio
Education Association, (OEA).
W"tlliam C. McDonald, addressing more than 500
educators Satarday night at the
OEA's annual local leaders
conference at Kent State
University, said the need for
political involvement at the
local level "is becoming increasingly more important."
The Jackson principal did not
announce details of the new
plan but did appoint former
OEA president J. AUan Auf·
derheide, formerly of Toledo, to
head the committee.
The guidelines for the
!ditical action group were
expected to be revealed in
December at the OEA conBEDFORD- The bargaining vention.
conunittee of local 420, United
COLUMBUS - State HighAuto Workers Unioo, at the
Walton Hills Ford Motor Co. way Patrol Superintendent
plant Sunday was given Robert M. Chiaramonte
authorizatioo to strike if talks predicts 38 persons will die on
with the management and union Ohio highways during the Labor
do not settle local grievances. Day weekend and 1,800 others
The 4,000 plus member mion will be injured.
Chiarmonte predicts some 2.3
voted 98.6 per eent to strike.
Since last J...e. the UAW has million drivers will travel on
been
negotiating
with Ohio roads during the holiday
management in .an effort to period, and some 5,500 persons
resolve health, safety and work will receive traffic violations.
"We believe that none of those
standards~violators we arrest will subLORAIN - Ifom Elrod, ~. sequenUy be kiUed or injured
was injured Sunday, wlt&lt;n the during the weekend," he said.
"Hopefully being arrested
singu.-gined c-ma 150 be
will
call the attention of the
was piloting crubed in a field
driver to his poor driving
here.
Elrod, the only person aboard habits, make him more awa're
the aircraft, was listed in good of his actions and perhaps save
condition at Elyria Memorial a life."
Hospital.
ClRCLEVILLE - Showman
Elrod was enroute to Lorain
Ted
Lewis, whose stage career
City airport when he crashed
apparently during a practice spread over five decades, was
·.to be buried in his native town
maneuver, police said.
today after brief graveside
CINCINNATI - A fire services.
believed to have been set swept
Lewis, who died last Wedthrough a second floor nesday in New York City of a
anesthesia research laboratory heart attack at 80, lay in state at
on the General Hospital grounds the Mader Funeral Home here
here, causing about $80,000 during the weekend. The
damage.
fwteral home is only two doors
More than 30 firemen fought from where he was born.
the Sunday fire for three hours
Hundreds of persons filed by
before ellinguishing it. No the casket to take a last look at
Lewis, dressed in a tuxedo with
injuries were reported.
a
white handkerchief in the
District Fire Marshal Normal
WeUs said while firemen battled breast pockel.
The stages tar of the 1920s and
the blaze, they noticed two other
fU'eS had been set in other 1930s who went on to television
rooms on the same Door, but was born Theodore Leopold
Friedman.
they caused no damage.

By Ualtedl'ftu llltauliellal
A Boy Scout fnm Cincinnati
drowned dtring a weekend
troop outing alq the Little
Miami River near Mii!Grd.
Divers recovet"ed the body of
Jamie Setty, 1$, Sunday from
the river, one day after be
drowned while swimming with
several other scouts lDlbelmown
to adult leaders.
The victim was the son of
Mrs. Edgar Stout, Cincinnati.
At least one other drowning
occurred in Ohio during the
weekend.
Martin Jandls, 22, Oeveland,
drowned Sunday while fishing
in the Perkins Beech area of
Lake Erie.
1
Police said J&amp;ndis feU oft a
pier.

KENT - A political action

NAME OMlTl'ED
Unlntentiooally omitted from
the
guest listf1r a picnic held by
EDWARDSTOGRADIJATE ·
Patrick S. Edwards, 800 of Mr. and Mrs. Max Eichinger
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Ed- recenUy were Mr. and Mrs.
James Fry and daughters, Ruth
:..ards,
Middleport,
will
graduate Friday fr001 the Mayo Ann and &amp;le Ellen of P001eroy.
Foundatim School of physical
therapy in Rochester, MinD.
Edwards ccmpleted a twe&gt;COMPLETES BASIC
year program at Mayo, wbicb
Army Private Stephen R.
prepared him fol" a career as a Brogan, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs.
registered pbysical thl!npist. John W. Brogan, Route 1,
lll!flre entering the Mayo RuUand, recenUy completed
physical therapy program, eight weeks of basic training at
Edwards attended Kent State the U. S. Army Training Center,
University.
Ft. CampbeU, Ky.

PROMOTED
Glenna J. w;•al, daughter of
"""
Chester G.. Wigal, 187 Ash St.,
Middleport, recently was
promoted to WAC Private First
Class while serving with the
military personnel and accounting at Ft. George G.
Meade, Md. She is a key punch
operator with the company.

LOCAL TE&amp;JPS
The temperatures ·in downlown PtXDeroy at 11 a. m.
Mooday was 70 degrees under
sunny skies.
TRAN8-PACIFIC ROWING
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI)
Adventurer John Fairfax and

N. W.

COMPTON~

0.
D.
OPTOIImiST .

.,

'OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,210 S (CLOSE"
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.; · .

uav~---------~·

War veterans returning to
America. And TuesdaY night,
CBS-TV has an hour entiUed
"Reston On China," in which
New York Times colwnnist
James Reston, ,yia satellite
TV In Review from Tokyo, discusses his
·
bee recent six-week visit to Comheart. The networks have
n
Is Ch"
Eri Se
"d
1
t the" usual wonder mwt I
ma.
c
varet
po,ur ng ou
II'
· .
: will be the interviewer.
ful announceme~ts With lheit
us_ual thera~ultc _hints th~t
thmgs are_gomg to l!Dprove m
On Friday, foothall fans will
JUSt _a ffi;l"Ute. Constder the see, on CBS-TV, an exhibition
po.s. stb_th_ttes:
.
,, rematch ,,f last season's Super
A VISit With the_Fll'st Lady, Bowl foes, the Baltimore Colts
an hour poru:a•t of . Mrs. and the Dallas Cowboys
Richard M. NIXon, will be Th sday night ABC-TV offer~
presented by ABC-TV Sept. 12. . an ~our prime tune preview of
On Wednesday, the same
h aided new Saturday
a
er
network will offer another morning children's series,
66-minute documentary, "When "Qrriosity Shop." which bows
Johnny Comes Marching in Sept. 11 a.itd is one of
Home," ·concerning unemploy- commercial television's obvious
ment problems facing Vietnam respon.ses to the success of

"Se&amp;ame Street." ABC;TV, by
the way, also announces that
next season it plans to present
a weekly hour anthology of
original films just for children,
"Saturday Morning at the
Movies."
ABC-TV, in fact, is just,
burstin" g wt
. 'th wond-"ul an~
.,.,
nouncements. On Oct. 12, for
instance, Dick Cavett will.begin
t
.two weeks of ~tri~~y onfi:Ues

~::o~un~!;i':o C:~ ~:Miller

of the way across the Pacific in
their orange :!Moot rowboat.
The couple left San Francisco
April 26 for a nine-month trip
across the ocean to Sydney,
Australia. Fairfax radioed San
Francisco late last week that
he was 480 miles southeast of
Hawail and making good
progress with favorable winds.
ROCKSLIDE KILLS 5
MEIRING EN, . Swtlz~r~and
(UPI) -Ftve Swtss ~pmlSts,
mcludmg three members of one
fanuly, were k!Ued when ~ey
we~e c~ught ~ a rockslide
whtle climbmg m the Bernese
Mountams Sunday.

Announces OEP
Loca [
Services Offices
The Office of Emergency
Preparedness (OEP) today
informed
lOth
District
Congressman Clarence E.
Miller of a variety of services
available to citizens with
inquiries relating to the current
wage-price-rent policies.
The OEP, which is responsible for overall operation of the
90-day freeze, has arranged for
taxpayer assistance experts at
Internal Revenue Service offiees to receive, analyze and

Arson Blamed In
Destruction Case
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Arson grass fire, c;illing it the work of
was suspected by Ohio Bell vandals. T\)day the FBI was
Telephone Co. in the destruction investigating the possibility of
of 21 telephone cables which "sabotage."
knocked out service to an esti- An Ohio BeU worker demonmated 100,000 customers over strated Sunday that the cables
could withstand the heat of a
the weekend.
A spokesman for the com- blowtorch. It was believed the
pany said the remains of flares flares found in the trench were
were found in a trench housing of a type used to produce inthe cables under the Brooklyn tense heat.
Bridge on the city's west side
following a fire Saturday night. Aside from regular commerTwo 12-man crews were work- cia! and residential customers,
ing around the clock to splice two television stations, two fire
more than 25,000 paira of Wires and police stations, thr~e hospicarried by the ruined cables. tals and two radio stations were
Normal service was not expect- affected by the cable damage.
ed before Wednesday·
Ohio Bell moved in mobile telThe ~etal- sheathed cab~es ephone units on an emergency
were lymg m ~ trench whtch basis and regular service was
was to be filled m three weeks. restored to one of the hospitals
The trenth is to house the 21 Sunday.
cables and 15 whtch are now
suspended under the floor of The Ohio BeU spokesman
the bridge.
called the outage the largest
Originally, the fire depart-loss of communications in the
ment blamed the dama~e _on a company's history.

investigate complaints, and
answer- ·questions from the ·
public
regarding
the
President 's new economic
policy.
Miller has urged citizens in
Southeastern Ohio to utilize the
services of three nearby IRS
offices , IRS Offiee, 2615 Third
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215 (614)
469-7422; IRS Office Federal
Bldg., Rm. 1001, 550 Main St.,
Cincinnati, Ohio, 45202 (513) 621·
6281 or IRS Office, 630 Markel
St., Steubenville, Ohio 43952
(614) 283-3374.
The regional office of the OEP
is located in Chicago. OEP
Regional Office, 33 East
Congress Parkway, Rm. 204A,
Chicago, ID., 60604 (312) 5195111.
In addition, OEP officials
have said that booklets with
frequently asked questions and
answers will soon be available
at local federal offices. Copies
of the hooklet can now be obtained
by
writing :
COngressman Clarence MiUer;
128 Cannon Bldg., Washington,
W. D. 20515.

Velerans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSJudith Bacon, Middleport;
Robert Cooke, New Haven.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Minnie HaU, Robert Whaley,
Clara Friend,_ Sheila Roush,
Winton Chadwell.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Jess Morris, Pomeroy; Lelah
Mora, Pomeroy; Olin Knapp,
Gallipolis; Claude Roy, Racine;
Harrison Robil\'lon, Sr., Letart,
W. Va.; Layman Dotson,
Viema, W. Va.; Geoge Green,
Albapy ; Charles Randolph,
Poin~ Pleasant.
SUNDAY D~GES Mafireen Hennessy, Viola
..:J- Moon, Nellie Eblin, Cuma
Elkins, Marvin Darst, Veatrice
Nice and Mary Marcinko.

. .n·lt J.'vzonua
.
Wi. n ds .R 8ln
1

~owFrs,edwtthAshlaire~VISGetto~~ ~~~dy-

mog
W U Pe'•• U tin" '
rson e es,
jr k s
Charlton Heston, ac
•
mon, Woody Allen and Anlhon_y
Quinn . Cavett; as _it happens, IS
gomg on vacation for two
ks tart" g this week and
wee s m
·
' .
WeUes,_ wh_o has a~~ed With
h~ twtce m solo-vlSltor shows,
wtU be hts guest host aU next
week .

U:'

'

Another cavett guest host,
Steve ADen, is scheduled this
Wednesday to present a broad. cast that should stir feelings of
nostalgia in video viewers with
good memories -for his
planned guest lineup includes
some of the great character
comedians on his mlieh-admired old aerjes: LoUis Nye,
Tom Poston, Bill Dana and
Dayton ADen.
over at CBS-TV, television's
hottest new aeries, "AU in the
Family;'; about a blatant bigot
named Archie Bunker, has been
switched from its scheduled
late Monday night slot to an
early evening time period on
Saturdays for the new season.
It displaces a milk-anckrackers
series, Fred MacMurray's ''My
Three Sons," which moves to
late ~onday nights. l

VOL. XXIV . NO. 97

Cleland
Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY
I I&gt; story

:~:i~;· r~o~~~:· r~~:

~

•

Losses were conservatively
set at $40,000 as the result of a
major fire whicli struck the
Excelsior Salt Co. on Pomeroy's
East Main St. about 3:30 p.m.
Monday afternoon .
The fire was discovered by a

-11

'i ;~;;~RS BAN( ~
: an~ ~~~N_Gs g&gt;~:-tc

basement, porch, large lot. -II
Storm doors, windows. ALL -II
IN GOOD CONDITION.
BARGAIN AT JUST $7,900.

t

:fi

POME·RoY, OHIO
Member FDIC
MemberF.ederal
Reserve System

-

-II
t l

""

worker at the company in what
is known as the salt bouse of the
operation. None of the workers
were in the building al the time
the blaze broke out and cause
has not been determined,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Henry

,,

• Dishwasher-safe
• Never needs polishing

POMEROY'S Excelsior Salt Co., on East Main St., was struck by fire Monday aftemoor
Billowing smoke Ia pictured here before firemen brought the blaze under control.

55-Piece Service for.a

Your entertaining p,roblem•

dining In carelrtt1 tong-we.rlrag
etalnleu by Onelaa.
11rrfc. cont11n1: 18 Taaspoan11,
1 ·Soup Spoons, 1 Dinner Forb,
II Salad Forb, I Hollow Hudle
Dlnrwr Kn lw1, 2 Table1poon1,
1 Butter Knife, 1 Sugar Spoon,
1 Cold Meat Fork, 1 Gra~ ladle,
1 Pcd. Tableapoon, ·

__

Elberfelds ln Pomeroy

Art Program

Middleport .

A 13-week art program at the
D' Artiste Gallery in Middleport
will begin Sept. 6, Mrs. Ruth
Gosney, instructor, annoWlces.
The evening classes to be held
from 7 to 10 p.m. will be as
foUows : 'Mondays, graphic and
watercolor painting for adults;
Tuesdays, graphic and oil
paintings for teenagers, 13
through 19; Wednesdays,
graphics and oil painting from
life ; Thursdays, graphic and oil
pain ling for men only.
. Afternoon classes will be held
on Tuesdays, graphic and oil, 1
to 4 p.m. for adults ; Wednesday, children's class, 7
through 12, 4:30 to 6 p.m.
Adult tuition for the 13 week
course is $39, and tuition for the
children 's class is $19 .50 .
Tuition is payable upon
registration which is scheduled
for Sept. 4, 6 to 9 p.m. Mrs.
Gosney advises that all
materials are available for
purchase at the gallery.
GRANTED DIVORCE
. Wayne Cleland was granted a
divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas court from Anna
Mae Cleland on charges of gross
neglect of c\uty and extreme
cruelty.

ficlancy on any rug or carpel In your home.
Plu1 • ji()Wer-drfven "Dfalurbulalor'' that ol·
fer• triple care cleaning ae1ion: 1. BealS!

WITH I-PC. TOOL SET

- 5 DAYS ONI.'i"HURRYI

COIIIf IN fOR A FREE EUREKA DEIIIONSTIIATIOII

'
L - - - - - - - - - - ' " " · · · · · · · · · · ·.....:

.

..-·.

FIGtmNG BLAZE - Unidentified fireman Is shown hen! fighUng Monday's fire which
struck the Excelsior Salt Co., firm on East Main St., in Pomeroy.

For any type of carpetlnfl-patlo, normal, high
pile or hard·to-crea~ lhag rvgs--tllla power·
fu r r.ew Eureka upright with tJiclullve Dial+
Nap• 4·posillon control does !he Irick I You get
4 "par ale seating, lor mallimum cleaning el·

, Shakes! 2. Soqeps! Combtl3. Suction claanal
Other feature s -inClude: adjustable 3-posltlan
handle ; tiptoe switch for hand)' on-orr control ;
a rugged a11·meta l construction end lilelime

.

-~

CREVICE TOOl

. CALL 992-2635

Jim Soulsby of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
reported that Charles Wolfe,
Racine, Rt. 2, was struck over
the head with a lug wrench
around II p.m. Monday when he
discovered four subjects ransacking his car.
Wolfe's car was parked in the
parking area at Five Points
Grill. When he came out of the
grill he noticed four persons
around his car, two of which
were inside his car. Wolfe said
something to the unidentified
persons and one of them struck
him in the head, then jumped in
their car and left the scene.
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called and transported Wolfe to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated for a wound on the
left side of his the head and
released.
The incident is still under
investigation .

Big selections of cooking utensils, electrical
appliances,
cutlery, · Rubbermaid
Housewares, Glassware and Gift wares.

Adjusta to faur Thicknesses of CII'JIIIIIIII

,.,.

own .

-~~~-··~~ · ·----

on the losses in th e Monday fire.
However , one fir eman said that
the loss conserva tively wou ld
amount to $40,000. The company
was not able to operate today as
a result of the fir e.

Enrollment Down

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeruy at 11 a.m. Tuesday
under sunny . skies was 70
de~rt•cs .

In Meigs

Sch~ols
i

First day enrollment figures
for schools which opened in
Meigs County Monday for the
1971-72 year revealed ·a slight
decline over last year's total
figures.
The Meigs Local District
enroltment was down according
to open day figures while the
Eastern District enrollment had
increased 43 over last year's
fi gures. Southern was down 22
pupils. In 1970, 5,064 attended on
opening day. Monday's figure
was 5,024.
Enrollment by schools in the

Blaettnar
Is Honored

RUTLAND'S FlRST s.treet fair - to be held on the former high school football field- will
be held Sepl15 through Sept. 18 under the sponsorship of the Rutland Fire Department. The
Steinmetz Amusement Co . .rirlhe operating in the community during the fair. Monday night an
advance sale on ride tickets opened, at the rate of six for $1, and purchasing the first tickets
were Conunander Eugene Fink, left, of RuUand American Legion Post467 and Rutland Mayor
Eugene Thompson. Standing on the right is Robert Musser who was later present-ed the $10
worth of tickets bought by Mayor Thompson and the $25 worth of tickets bought by Fink. The
tickets will be used by young people at the Meigs County Children's Home. Dale Wright also .
purchased some tickets for children at the home. Making the sale last night was Mrs. Virginia
Michael, a member of the fire department's auxiliary. AdY1lnce ride ticl\etsal the reduced rate
can be purchased through Sept. 14 at Miller's Grocery and at Archie's Recreation Center.
President of the fire department is Archie McKinney.

Ohio Extended Weather
Outlook - Thursday through
Saturday:
Warm through the period
with a chance of showers
Saturday. Highs In the 80s
and lows mostly In the 60s.

Lawson's Resignation
Accepted By Council
Meeting in special session
Monday night, Middleport
Village Council unanimously
voted to accept the rebgnation
of Charles (Chuck ) Lawson as
an officer with the Middleport

•

district for the 'opening day this
year and last follow:
Eastern Local : 1970-71 1911-12
Chesler
321
314
Riverview
173
178
Tuppers Plains
208
229
Eastern High
263
287
Totals
965 1008
Meigs Loca I
1970-71 1911-72
Bradbury
149
138
Harrisonville
132
12~
Middleport Ele.
279
279
Pomeroy Ele.
41~
377
Rutland
238
222
Salem Center
132
t35
Salisbury
179
186
Meigs Junior High 555
532
Meigs Senior High 944
968
Totals
3022 2961

Southern
1970-71 1911-72
Letart
178
180
Racine Ele.
206
211
Syracuse
159
149
Sou!hern Junior High
John W. 'Blaeltnar of (Inc. Kindergarten) 213
203
312
Pomeroy was honored recently Souihern High School 321
1077 lOSS
by being one of 45 persons Totals
selected from approximately
Veterans Memorial Hospital
500 applicants lo participate in a
ADMITTED
Marvin
National Consumer Economics
Satterfield,
Racine;
Woodrow
Institute held this SIUjlmer at
Hall, Jr., Racine; Carol Haning,
Ohio University in Athens .
The institute was funded by Pomeroy; Sheridan Russell ,
the National Science Foun- Sr., Mason; Atnanda Stover,
dation and conducted by the Leon, W. Va.; Frances Yeager,
Department of Economic Pomeroy; Helen Powell,
Education located in the college Pomeroy; Walter Burns Harris,
of Business Administration at Mason; Martha Searls, Middleport.
Ohio University.
DISCHARGED
Jess
Blaettnar will serve , as a
resource person in the area of Morris, Robert Forrest, Ethel
cunsurner economics at Belling, Roy Russell, Norma
Alexander High School where Goodwin, Charles Randolph,
he is employed in the Busin&lt;!ss George Nicinsky, Norman
Lc:1cw .
Education Depat·tmcnt.

qu antity and will require
chlorination only; that EDA
grant, eq ual to 60 per cent of the
tota l project cosls, will be made
to cover the increased project
costs necessa r y to provide

water to the Leading Creek
Wate r District and the oth er
improvemenlS contemplated in
a report of April, 1970, with the
updated cost fi gures ; the
Leading Creek Water District
will enter into a con trac t for a
minimwn period of 30 years, a
minimun1 monthly charge, an
agreed rate per 1000 gallons,
and provisions to provide for
increased rales to cover increased operation costs the
/ total additional project costs for
serving the Mulberry Heights, a
point of service for the Leading
Creek Water District, is
$22!i,OOO, the tota l addi tional
project costs fo r serving the
Flood Road point is $326,000.
The total cost to Pomeroy, after
deducting a 60 per cent EDA
grant is $90,000 for Mulberry
Heights and $130,400 for the
Flood Road point.
A billing approach is to have a
minimwn monthly charge of
'$1,070 for the Mulberry Heights
Point and $1 ,420 for the Flood
Point and then bill at a
minimum of 7.5 cents 1,000
gallons for the power costS up to
a maximum of 5 million gallons
per month .
Council discussed at len~lh
(Continued on Page 2)
1

House Votes On
Interim Budget
'
COLUMBUS
(UPI) - The ging endorsement.
The House must act on the
Ohio House today passed and
sent to Gov. Joho J. G!Uigan interim budget before the midan interim budget to keep night tonight expiration of the
temporary
apstate government operating .c urrent
for the first 1D days of Sep- propriation measure . House
tember wbUe senators at· passage will continue interim
tempt to break a deadlock appropriations in effeol since
over a twe&gt;-year tax. and July 1.
budget plan.
The Republican income tax
Representatives voted 60-10
bill,
containing a I to 3 per
In favor of the $57.5 million
cent graduated personal income
b!U.
tax an d a 3 to 6 per cent lax
.
.
on corporate net mcome IS con-.
sidered to have the endge on
B KIRK OBERFELD
.
.d
Y
1 measures bemg
COLUMBUS(UPI)- TheOhio otter
const erHouse was to vote today on a ed to come to a vole on the
. . .
.
. .
$57.5 mtlhon mtertm budget to Senate floor wnhm two weeks.
.
But Ma1oney. a1so unvct.1ed an
keepstategovernmentoperatmg
.
. tax pan
I me
. Iud.mg a
for the hrstlO
days of' Se ptem- a Iternauve
.
. .
.
ber whtle senators alt~mpt to 1.5 per cent luke tn the curren t
break the deadlock over a two- 4 pet· cent state sales tax and
year tax and b_udget package. ihe same corporation tax as in
The Sen:lle passed the interim the income .tax plan.
measure, 19-9,Mondayas Major- Slate Tax Commissioner Robi-.\" Whip Michael J. Maloney, R- en Kosyd8r. speaking for .the
Cinc innati, unveiled a shaved- mlminis1 rmiun, tuld MHlone)·'s
dDwn persOnal and corporate ln· Ways.m•d Means CommiUct' lhr
l'lllllC laX bill and received the 1 ~~ ~ :1 pei· Celli Jkf1'1111t l! inl'nllle
Gi11iJ!W1 adminislralinn 's grml· 1ax is in sufri&lt;"il~m 1u llll't'l Ohiu·~"

/,

I

One proposal made was for Pomeroy t&lt;&gt; supply water to the
Pomeroy to purchase water " Leading Creek Water Distrit l.
from the Leading Creek Under the second proposal
Distric t. However , Legar noted water lines would be laid on the
that it would cost the village flood road. where water is not
more money to purchase water available at the present time .
from Leading Creek than they Some of th e proposals made
are presently paying to operate were: That the water obtained
the present pun1ping station . from the well field in Syracuse
The second proposal was for will be of suitable quality and

Incident

.......

lubricaled motor.

tatntng federal funds through
the EDA for its proposed water
program.
According to Lcgar the EOA
would not approve two separate
water systems in Meigs County
and Leading Creek does not
have enoti~h customers for a
separate water system of its

Probing

UPRIGHT WITH DIAL·A·NAP•

\

'

during the fire . Clo uds of black One fireman. Thomas Werry,
smoke rolled rrom the buil ding s received a foot laceri:llion while
and flames shot hig h in the sky fi ~fnlng the blaze . He w&lt;.~s
as the fire reached a peak lreated aud released at
before being brought unde r Vete rans Menwrial Hospital.
~o officii! I f i ~ure has been sel
control by firemen .

Sheriff

are ovarwllh lhe ' BIQ 55."
You'll gtl all th1 pllcea you'll
ever need for kill aervlce

Is Announced

(

Meeting with Pomeroy
Council Monday night was
Frederic Boger of Burgess and
Niple, Consulting Engineers of
Columbus to discuss two
methods proposed by the firm to
establish a new water system
that would enable Pomeroy
Village to secure a federal grant
through
the
Economic
Development As sociation
(EDA) .
Pomeroy Village earlier
drilled a test well in the village
of Syracuse, Pomeroy's plans
were to obtain a new water
supply, bypassing the present
pumping station, add additional
water storage, and lay new and
additional water lines.
According to Mayor Charles
Legar, who along with Fred
Crow, village solicitor, and
member of the Board of Public
Affairs, have mel with the
Economic Development
Association (EDA) to discuss
federal financing , of the
proposed system.
Leading Creek Water Distric t
also is in the process of ob-

~\~\\

992-2635

STRAIGHT WAND

the site .
Starting in tile sail house, tile
fire qui ckly s pread to the
storage building - a large,
relatively new frame structure.
Sections of both roofs collapsed
aL

Council Study Water System Proposals

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

~ADA~OA

in many monlhs in Pomeroy
and was out of control when
firemen arrived on the scene.
Firemen were commended for
their work at the scene since it
appeared lhal the fire would
completely level the structures

TEN CENTS

Consulting Engineer, Pomeroy Village

Ingels
Furniture

FLEXIBLE HOSE
FOR ABOVE·
FLOOR ClEANING

Luws lonighL mid 50s lo low 60s.

PHONE 992-2156

ota

Werry said.
Pomeroy firemen - called to
the scene at 3:32 p.m. - were
still at the company's location
until about 7 p.m. to insure that
the fire did not break out again.
The fire was one of the worst

~

F~idays Only
t
The Drive-In Window li
is Open
-tc
~9 A:M. to 7 P.M.
-..
(Continuously)
~

UpfK:r 70s 11rirthCii SI ~ nd cxi I'CJIIC I H~r ltJ
liJ 80s SUUl hWC:il.

Vitri•hle cloudiness Wc'llnesday
cm t.l w.armer north and eCist

TUESDAY, AUGUST 31 , 1971

am a

Ire

:

-II
-11
-f:
-II
-II
-II Other Banking Hours 9 to -tc
: 3. and 5 to 1 as usual on -II

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO•

.'

DRIVE•IN ' .
~ BANKING
~-II
-II
.
-II

l'•rlly Cloudy tonight and •
little cooler. Highs mid •nd

l1ighs in the 80s .

lfS Quickl Easy

CORRECTION

Weather ·

Devoled To 'l7w lnlere&amp;~ Of The Meigs-Mmon Area

"fere·s BIG VALUE in Stainless by Um'JidtJifl

-~

'

enttne

George Washington wore size
13 hoots.

A Th ..

t For .Today
·
* * *

•

Now You Know

Visit the Housewares
on the Main

'
By United Press International Central Plains and Valentine,
Gusty winds and locally Neb., reported 3.23 inches of
' continued over rain in a six-hour period.
heavy rains
southern Florida early today as
a tropical depression edged its. The tropical depression that
way across the peninsula lumbered over Florida was not
toward the Gulf of Mexico . well organized, according to the
Elsewhere, typical late summer National Weather Service. The
weather gripped most of the highest winds wrought by the
nation.
depression were about 35 miles
Stiff, 35 mile-an-hour winds an hour in passing squalls.
menaced boaters and swim- Some locally heavy rains were
mers who flocked to Los reported as a result of the
Angeles County beaches in depression .
california Sunday.
At least 15 sailors capsized in
Marina Del Ray and dozens of Early morning temperatures
others were toppled by winds ranged from a chilly 5J at both
outside the marina. Lifeguards Rock springs, Wyo., and
Crescent City, Calif., to a hot 91
reported more than 250 rescues at Yuma, Ariz.
in the wind-blown surf.
ntr stnes and warmth
prevailed over much of the
East, with . early morning .Jf'flf-Jf'f'f.Jf.Jf.Jf-Jf-Jf-Jf.Jf.lf-Jff'
temperatures m the &amp;5 and 70s i&lt;
,..l.
-II
-well above the norm.
-11
Oue;oal -11
In the intermountain regions -II
· ... -11
of the West, the heat refused to :
relent, leaving morning temper-II
atures still in the litE and 90s.
&lt;Nr though!s 'mold our -tc
Showers and thunderstorms
lite.
-tc·
that developed Sunday conti- ~
-Goethe ~
nued over the extreme South- -tc
,-tc
east and through the Western ~
-II
mountains while another storm -II
.
~
front touched off storms from -11
-tc
Minnesota to Colorado. Heavy -II
.. .. ..
.
-tc
rains , were reported in the ~
~

POMEROY -

R
Color!

C

vironmental Assistance Program under which the govemmen! pays fanners part of the
cast of carrying out ~ed
conservation and pollutioncontrol practices.)
Administraijon sources,
said they b~d no worcl
from the White House Office of
ManagementandBudget(OMB)
yet on how much the Agriculture Department would be permitted to spend 00 the 1972
REAP program. But there was
a possibility that spending could
sink to the lowest level since
1941, and the second lowest ftgure in the history of the program which dates back to 1!136.
Earlier this month, Coogress
completed action oo legiBiation
authori!ingthc.administrationto
spend $195.5 millioo on 19'12
REAP payments although President Wu:on had asked for only
$140 million. With the lHfminiotration currenUy in a belt.ligbtening mood, there was speculation among some officials here
that the OMB might order
spending held to $140 million despite congressional autbority to
go hiJ!her.
Agriculture· Dept. officials said their "obligational authority" nor REAP (formerly

Networks Say Sh.ows Will Improve

Army Private Terry L.
Glanernann.• 20, son of Mr. liiill
Mrs. Ernest N. Glanemann,
By RICK Dl,l BROW
Hemlock, recenUy completed
an eight-week Army Air HOLbYWOOD (UPI) -If you
Defense operations and in- have survived , August televitelligence assistant course at sion, thanks to CBS-TV's "The
Six Wives of Henry VIII," take
Ft. BUss, Tex.

'

'

long-range financial needs.
Close As Possible
But Kosydar said the income
tax plan "is a great step in the
ri ght direction - perhaps as
close as feasibly possible at this
time to meet the objections of
the general public and the com.
.,
mneee .
.
Ksuy dar agreed wl"th Maloneytl'
that President Nixon 's wage.
pr1ce
freeze has rna de more d"1f•
f. 1 1 . 1 .
•·males of 1-n
1cu t eg 1s auvees 1
•
t
1
come or sa.cs
ax revenues.
M1
.d lh GOP .
a oney sat e
mcome
tax proposal , reduced from the
tH
passed
1 10 ~
. per celnd
ousef - Sl 06
verswn wou ra1se rom .
$ .; b.11 . .
mone'·
10 1·" '
1 wn m
new
.,
Tile,
11
1
2
over lle next • mon MIS.lone&lt;·
sa 1es tax approa~ 11. a
i
S&gt;Jid. would raise $732 _8 10 $744 _8
billi oli.

lns lcadoftheacross-the-bom·d
. f
10 per eent property tax re 11e
ind u&lt;bl in tile tax bill passrd
Se
by t!Je Houst'. the
n~ue \ 'Cr ·
si• '"

t'IIIJ .;,ins

.-m ··cxl:CSS lax"
[1•1'111111;1 £111' I..:UIIlng. prupcr ly
i( 'untimll'd

on l!~gt· 8)

Police Department.
All cou ncilmen - Dick
Vaughan , Clifford Stumbo, John
Zerkl e, David Ohlinger ,
Lawrence Stewart and coWlci~
woman, Mrs. Roger Morgan were present, along with Mayor
C. 0 . Fisher, solicitor Bernard
Fultz , Chief of Police J .
Cremeans, clerk- treas urer
Gene Grate and maintenance
supervisor, Harold Chase.
Approximately 10 residents,
including Lawson, attended.
Mayor Fisher prese nted
Lawson's letter of resignation
- Dated Aug. 4, - which read :
"I, Chuck Lawson, hereby
litis date give notice that at
midnight on the 14th day of
August, 1971, 1 will resign my
duties as a patrolman for the
village of Middleport.
·' Due to the high cost of living,
it is necessary for me lo lake
other employment.
" Thanking you for your
.d
· · h
11
const
erat10n
m t e past eave
. .
,
•
llns JOb wtshmg .~ou all well and
wnh no regrets .
..
None of the vtstlors made any
f
•
h
comments lo coun ctl on l e
.
maHer and counctl accepted the
. l .o
restgna 1 n.
Following th e official adjournment
with the
resignation acceptance the only
actiun being taken - Chief
Cremeans d"tscussed l he ne ed of
the formation of an auxiliary
i~&gt;liC( f&lt;~rt-e which would be
specially trained through
federa l programs to cope with
l""ublems being encnuntcred by
pul1&lt;·e , ffirt•rs ttHiay .
ruuul'ii agrrt-cllu l'U P•"·· ratc ir
1'"1'
sud 1an anxili;u·y rmTt' mad(• up
uf tl• . lt•a~ l 12 l'l'Sidt•II1S Slllluhl
11111 l'riali1.1' .

Ohio Fair
At Halfway

Mark Today
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
millionth visitor to the 1971
Ohio State Fair was expected
sometime today as the 12-&lt;lay
festival here reached the halfway mark.
Auendance Monday was 153,636 for a five-day total of 974,309 fairgoers since it opened
last Thursday.
Today at the fair, singer Tom
Jones highlights grandstand entertainment, with performances
at 4:30 and 6:30 p.m.
Also on lap are a ·horse
show, junior fair dairy cattle
shows, harness racing and senior sheep shearing champion of
cltampions contest.
Monday Cynthia Reese,
19, Warren, was crowned the
Ohio County and Independent
Fair Queen .
The pretty blonde Kent Stale
University sophomore will compete in the Miss Ohio Slate
Fair Pageant Sunday.
William Ford of Bryan successfully defended his title in
the auctioneers contest. Herb
Bambeck of Dover W8S second
and F. S. Brown of Canton was
third .
Record Sale Prices
New records were set for the
sale of the grand champion and
reserve grand champion lambs
and the reserve grand champion bat·row .
Stephen Radin of Executive
caterers bought the grand
champion lamb, a suffolk
named " Big Tom," paying
$16.52 a pound for a total sale
price of $1,617.20 . The lamb was
shown by Eddie Thompson Jr.
of Ostrander, peiaware County.
The reserve' l~mb, shown by
Michael Squires, 9, Chesterland,
was purchased by Tex International Farms, of Texas · for
$5.05 per pound, for a total
price of $489.65.
.
Bob Evans Farms bought
iJulll the ~rand L'ftampion and
, l'l'~l'n't' ~rami d'L.unpion bRrru\\·, paying il n•cord hi,.:h uf
l (',)lllilltll'd un Page 2l

�j

. 2- Tbe D&amp;ily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleporl, Ohiu, August 31,1971

•

.;.,~,

I '

I
I

'

Eaton won the heavyweight division by pulling toad.of 1,500
pounds 26 feel. Alvin Clllllnings
of Dover, Ky. won the lightweight division, pulling 7,000
pounds a distance of 25 feel, 5
inches.
In the daily senior citizens
activities, Mr. and Mrs. George
Kallal of Blacklick won lhe
dance contest. Cookie !laking
contest winners were Mrs. Bertha Tolbert, BetheSda; Mrs.
Barbara Lustic, Akron; Mrs.
E:dith Rice, Bellefontaine and
Mrs. Lucy Colaprete, Columbus.

a

HEl[N H[lP US!
.J---I~YHELEN AND SUE JIOTI'EL
WIIJ~T'S NEW? SUE'S VIEWS

Dear Readers:
Guess who's co~ to HHU? - Daughter Sue.
SUe Is pure Bottel, vintage 1954, a high school senior. For
some time now, she has been reading my mail and unofficially
getting into the action With cohnnn quips and comments (plus a
national magazine article). Readers have asked for more, so
three times a week SUe will join me for "Generation Rap"
columns. We'll argue, agree, answer your questions singly or in
tandem, tresenting the views of the fore and aft side of 30.
For starters, here's a question that comes awfully close to
home:
Dear Helen:
"Do it, dolt, do it!" That's Mom.lwalk in the door and see a
note pinned oo the fridge, "Do your ironing," or like that, before I
get my breath.
.
On Saturday morning, she wakes me With, "There's a lot of
w&lt;l'k today," and strings off a mile-long list when, if I could j(ISt
sleep a llWe Jooger, and weren't told, told, TOLD, I'd think of
thOle things by myaelf, mostly. And get them done, too, because
I'm not a goo!.off, mainly.
Please ten parents again that nagging is not "communicating." - REMINDED OUT OF MY SKULL

SUE'S VIEWS:
Dear ROOMS:
Be glad to, because even great parents (are you listening,
Mtm?) scmetimes forget that kids can get the beat Without
drumming it in.
It's a bummer, coming in starved to find a big old hangin'
note on the refrigerator, Usling jobs you already know about and
plan to do- alter you eat. Makes you feel like it's 'I1IEIR house
and you're a live-In maid, rather ·than "OUR HOME" that you
help clean because you take pride in it.
Teens are told all day, "Do "this, do that" by teachers and
employers; when they get home. they'd like a few minutes lo
rein, just as adults like their coffee lreaks. I think housewock is
\.JIID.J~!~R,¥,anyway) if you do ~cled (and unexpected)
-·-~ on your own, on a flexible schedule. When parents push,
push, PUSH, you feel cheated.
Why not ask your mother how she'd like a . ''boss" who
repeated every little job detall over and over as if she were so
dumb she couldn't remember anything by herself? Pretty soon
she'd start depending on those reminders and stop THINKING for
henelf, right? •
Maybe you can get her in the mood by what we call "The
SUrprise Snydrcme" at our houae. Every time any of tbe Bottels
go away, we,make sure there's a "surprise" waiting their return.
If YOUR surprlle is a clean-111&gt; job or a llpeCially-cooked dinner
when ywr folks come back from a .lrlp - well, they may realize
you doo't need reminders anymore.- SUE
REI EN'S ANSWER:
Dear !lOOMS:
Not much "arguin" oo this one. (I KNOW what I should do,
but I doo't always do it.)
·
Only two points In defense of Mothers: During the early
years, constant repetitioo is the only way we get action (as in
"Brush your Ieeth, Junier" every morning for !Oyears - until he
dlscoven girls). So It bectmes a habit hard to lreak. Also, that
"flexible sclledule" can drive parents up the wall.
And here's a bit of advice to parenis: Offspring work better
when YOU are busy too ..Jolmny woo't mind pulling weeds so
much if Pop Is out there pnmlng roses, but if he's in watching TV,
wen, It's not "our yard" any mere.
Now, while Sue scrubs the tub (no reminders, Helen, but can
you help it If your writing partner looks over your shoulder?), I'll
add :
Send your "Generation Rap" questions and comments lo Sue
and Helen Bolte I, (one or both), care of tbls new~per. They will
appear each Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday (or Sunday), as
~ce allows.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Roy
Domigan, Pomeroy; Mrs. Fred
Roach, Gallipolis; Rita Roush,
West Columbia; Mrs. Donald
Martin , Sr., Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES:
Robert
Spradley, Mrs. Robert Rhodes,
Paul Allinder, Mrs. Charles
Oliver, Mrs. William Woomer
and Sylvia Mullins.

EDWARDS GRADUATES
Patrick S. Edwards, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Edwards of Middleport, graduated
Friday from Mayo Foundation
School of Physical Therapy in
Rochester , Minnesota.
Graduation ceremonies were
held at 8 p.m. at St . Marys
Auditorium, Marion Hall, in
Rochester.

PLAN BAKE SALE
'fhe W.S.C.S. of the Forest
Run United Methodist Church
will sponsor a bake sale Friday
at 9:30 a.m. at the Davis
Warner Insurance office, Court
Street, Pomeroy.

PLAN WEEKEND SALE
The Pomeroy Little League
Association will hold a rummage sale Friday and Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. at Dr.
Brown 's office building on West
Main Street.

Mrs. Maude Case: Medina ;
Mrs. Gladys Davis, Caldwell,
and Em Delbrugge, Marlins
Ferry. were . presented with
pruminenL senior citizen
awards.
Martins Ferry Mayor John

Cousin Gap won the $1,500 2.-

I.aslo was given a certific-dte Medina.
by his city's senior citizens-del- Killbl!Ck Mary won the$27,400

year~•ld lrol.

elegation. Senior volunteer
awards were presented to Mrs.
MatTy Ellen !frown. Martins
Ferry; Miss Mildred Oakes,
Caldwell , and Mrs. Flo Saas,

Kil1buek Mary trotted to a
1:00 Z4 win in the ra4mr beat
in the contesl, fastest ·mile in
North •America thiS year by a
tilly on a half-mile ~- ·

Ohio State ·Trot "for twl&gt;-yearoids and Rosalie won the champioo $6,55o 2.-)'ear-&lt;Jld filly stake.
Botlt horses are owned by
Henry and Robert Qitchlield.

Ohio Crime Rate
Exceeds Average
COLUMBUS (UPI )-One out of every 40
Ohio reslden)s was either. ,murdered,
raped, beaten, burglarized, robbed or had
their car stolen in 1970as0hio's crime rate
jumped ahead of the national average.
The Uniform Crime report released
today by the U.S. Justice Department and .
compiled by the FBI shows an increase of
II per cent between 1969 and 1970 on the
national level. Tbe increase in Ohio was
13.4 per cent.
"While we can find encouragement in
the fact that crime increased in 1970 at a
slower rate than in 1969, the important fact
is that the total number of serious crimes
continued to increase," said U.S. Attorney
General John Mitchell.
''This must be a matter of continuing
concern to the Department of Justice. and
to law enforcement agencies at all levels of
federal, state and local government," said
Mitchell.
Ohio· recorded 253,158 crimes in 1970
COIJlpared to 223,223 in 1969 with the largest
increase in crimes to property such as burglary or larceny With 196,575 recorded in
1969 compared With 222,879 in 1970.
A further breakdown shows Ohio
recorded an ilicrease of 14 to 699 in murders and nomegligent manslaughter while
the number of forcible rapes went from
1,645 to 1,700; robbery from 13,604 lo
15,539; assault from IQ,714 to 12,341; burglary 79,489 to 90,963; grand larceny 65,310
to 79,438 and auto theft 51,7'16 to 52,488.
A breakdown of the majoc metropolitan
areas. shows only the number of crimes
committed in 1970 and not those committed in 1969.
They include:
Akron: SUmmit and Portage countiesMurders of llOIHlegligent maDslaughter
~- Forcible rape 172. Robbery 1,,830. Ag"
gravated assault 934. Burglary 6,513.
Grand Larceny 7,324. Auto Theft 4,206.
canton: Satark County -Murder or nonnegligent manslaughter II. Forcible rape

49. Robbery 459_ Aggravated assault :m.
BUrglary 2,300. Grand larceny 3,M4 and
auto theft 941.
Cincinnati: Trl~te Area - Murder er
non-negligent manslaughter 17. Forrible
Rape 230. Robbery 1,648. A8Bravated assault 1,462- Burglary 12,61. Grand Larceny 11,656 and auto theft 4,712.
Cleveland: Olyahoga, Lake, Geauga
and Medina counties- Murder ..- omnegligent manslaughter 2911. FGn:ible rape
380. Rol)bery ·5,913. A8gravated assault
2,672. Burglary 12,61. Grand Larceny
11,822. Auto theft 24,7011.
Columbus: Ftanklin, Delaware and
Pickaway counties - Murder or nonnegligent mansla•Jgbter 55. Forcible rape
315. Robbery 1,1134. Aggravated assanlts
1,130. Burglary ll,SIZ. Grand LarceDy
11,039. Auto theft 5,8911.
Dayton: Green, Miami, Montgcmery
and Preble COUDties - Murder or ntllnegligent manslaughter 7'1. Forcible tape
147. Robbery 2,035_ Aggravated assault
1,296. Burglary 10,817. Grand 1areeny
7,T/9. Auto theft 3,310_
Uma: Allen, Putnam and Van Wert
counties - Murder er noo-negligellt
manslall8hter 5_ Forcible rape a. Robley
166. Aggravated assault 167_ Burglary
1,435. Grand larceny 1,4'15. Auto theft 230.
Mansfield: Richland County- Murder
or non-negligent manslaughter 9. Forcible
rape 16. Robbery 79_ Aggravated assault
349. Burglary 1,183. Grand lara!ny 1,1m
and auto theft 300.
Youngstown-Warren : Mahoning and
Trumbull cOunties - Murder or Dtllnegligent manslaughter '11. Forcible rape
53. Robbery 698_ Aggnlvated assault liO'l.
Burglary 4,440. Grand lan.tuy 3,3911. Auto
, !bert 2,21i8.
The report also revealed that members
of the Ohio lligbway Patrol ba.., more
highway miles per man - 86.5 - to cover
than any other state.
Wyoming is second in this category with
68.7 miles.

'

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'

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Co~nlting

(Cedlatol Ira Pa«t I)
Ole~ and agreed to turn
the matter over to the Boa1'd of
Public Affairs for its study 3nd
approval.
.
E. F. Robinson, a member of
the Board of Publje .. Affairs,
· noted that the present pumpin'g
station in a few years will bave
to be replaced. ·A new plant
would cost approximately
$500,000 and we would still bave
the apense of the operation,
Robinson noted.
Robinson also said that the

.

.

1

.
. ByUnild,Presslnlmlltti.al . . ..
PONTIAC, MICH. -TEN SCHOOL buseswhicln~.ereto~ve
been used .in a court.&lt;ll"«red school du IP ega~ busing
)rOill"8lll were destroyed by fireb&lt;mbs ~onday
at ~n
unguarded parking tot. f'l!lice said !hey ~vered . 'some mcenciiary devices" at · the lot, adjacent_to_ the Pon~c school ,
district garage. Investigation into the mcident continued, but
police said they had no leads and no suspects. · .
·

Dll!bt

.

•••

'

. frcm. the station.

m
e

On Stripmine Bill

Final Hearing

Set Wednesday

of Monday night'.s second game

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

lVoice along Broadway

j

si-

'THE SHOE BOX

::g :=

'

at

'

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--·-· -

--··- - ---

I"" yea r the Padre cenlerfield-

tu bri ng up Johnny Bench with er !iii 29 homers and batted

SENIOR IE'I"l'ERMEN - Eastern's sen!..- football lettermen are 1-r,
.frclllt, Marvin Tayloc, Warren Calaway, John Cline, Rlck Hauber, Rick
Biake, TimGumpf, Rick Sanden; back row, Bill Pbillips, as,!!lstant coach,

Roger Kirkhart, head football coach, Bob Caldwell, Rick Williams, Roger
Kart, Alan Holter, Dennis Eichinger, Randy Young, Doug Carr, Jim Arns001-y, Mike Morgan, Carl Dodrill, assistant coaches.

a!llllllll'IIIIIIIIIIMIIMII!IIlftll!lllftiWII~~O:W~
· : ··~::;?.;::::s:;~::::.-:r.::::::.o::;:::::::~X:~~~·~·'l$: e""

.8

Chiefs Triumph Fights Mar NL Action

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP! )- pass two possessions later and
Ed Podolak's one-yard touch- ran it back 35 yards to the
down plunge With 6:36 remain- Chiefs' 21. Four plays later,
ing enabled the Kansas City Bobby Howfield booted his third
Chiefs, plagued by penalties field g.oal of the game, a 34and five pass interceptions, to yarder, to give the Jets a 16-4
pull a nationally~levised 21-16 lead.
AI Woodall quarterbacked
exhibition footbaU victory over
the New York Jets Monday the Jets in the first half, With
night.
Bob Davis, fifth-year pro from
The win kept the Chiefs' Virginia, going the route for
preseason rec..-d perfect at ~­ New York in the final two
quarters.
The Jets dropped to I.J.
Len Dawson, who .suffered
four interceptions, hit wide
receiver Otis Taylor on a 51yard bomb to the Jets' 12,
setting up Kansas City's
decisive touchdown. Podolak
carried lhree straight times•
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Cincinbefore driving over left tacklej
nati Reds Manager Sparky Anlor the winning touchdown.
Dawson's 20-yard scoring derson has been rehired for the
strike to Taylor in the ftrst 1972 season, jus! as he had exthree minutes of the game and pected despite the club's second
Podolak's one-yard scoring dive division status this year after
in the second quarter staked winning the 1970 National
Ute Oliefs to a 14-6 halftime League pennant.
Anderson, who took over in
edge.
Lineback Larry Grantham October 1969 from the fired
intercepted a Mike Livingston Dave BrisLOJ, said ·"I never
pass less than three minutes really thought I'd be fired "
into the third period and dashed and predicted the team will be
eight yards lor the Jets' only a contender next year.
" This club is goma come
touchdown. Colllerback Steve
back
and be on top," Anderson
Tannen picked off a Dawson
said Monday night.
"Let me put il this way.
•
We've got a better chance of
being on top than the other
clubs have of protecting it," he
said.
Reds General Manager Bob
Howsam, who also renewed the
contracts of the entire coaching
staff, said "it was an easy de-

Sparky
Rehired

cision to make. ''
By United Press lnlenlalional
Ameriun

Le~gue

East

W. L. Pel. GB

Baltimore
Detroit
Boston
New York
Washinglon
Cleveland

we

WATai THIS·PAPER FOR OUR SALE AD

' ....

There 's a lways lhC upp11rluni 1y in the first inning to give Lhe
for tile seco nd gasp.''
Pmlrcs a 2-0 lead.
Tl te burner we:ts unly the 16th
Gomez was LC~ ikin g (lhlliH or(
Jf
the sc&lt;~son for Gaslon, who
·9ering a n intenLio nol P'-'SS t~J
Ton y Perez in the eighth inn in~ wem into the ·~arne balling .232.

patroDed all city stations and other police ~tions today in
tbe wake of the shotgun attack that killed a desk ~eant ":"d
wounded a woman dispa~ SUnday nigbtat the lllgleside.~lice
statim. Ten inspecllrs have been ~ ~ time to tracking
down tbe killer. Authcrities said all signs indicate that mere than
two persons were involved in the crime. It's believed they may
have been part of a cmspiracy to steal an arsenat of weapons

Kanauga Man
·
1
F
•
h
JU
t
H Urt n

STARTING SATURDAY, SEPt 4

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CIN CIN NA THUI'l !- Presion has 11 and Benl'h , cxpcriuncint.;
( ;IIII ICZ admits ii. W:JS &lt;:1 gam- ;.1 vl..!ry P'~&lt;'r ~a;o;IJn (jl the plate,
h&lt;.~ s seven .
ble.
' ' ) l"OUid hCI VC W(JUOd Up i:1
COi SltJn , w! H1 dtJubled home
goa t," sait..l the San Di ego P~ ­ IX,n M.:tson in the ninth to hand
drc m;m(IJ4Cr. ''But that ':-; what W ~ync (;ran)!,er the loss, also
me:~kcs b&lt;.~scball ~'' gr~.;&lt;JL. iJ,,mc n:d with &lt;:~ runner rtboard

SAN FRANCilK:O - EXTRA . GUARDS with shotguits

Local·
Represented

FIRE SALE

,•

...

vretn;ml"se troops ambushed an American _unit near Da N~~~~g.
They blew up two armcred personnel earners a~ ·8 Sbendan
tar*, tilling three Gls and w(Jin•ling four, All tole!, Vtel Cong and
Nertb Viebll!rnese forces delivered 14 attaCks across South
Vietnam in the 24 hours ending at6 p,m. EDT yesterday·

WE ARE HAVING A

•

....

SAIGON ...:.. THE U.S.~ reported today that North

State Health Depar1ment is
RADIO BAGHDAD SAID today that Egypt has seized about
constanlly requesting new and
part 10
·
trike t the
improved regulations. Also II persons on charges of baving taken
a 5
a
llehraD indiDtrial c110plex scme 15 miles below Cairo. The
Robinson noled that a licensed __ _._. men
lulled members of the Arab Socialist Union,
man to make water tests Is "" ""'"""
needed, the State requires that Egypt's oo1y legal political party. Amoog them, the broadcast
a licensed man supervise the said, were trade unioo leaders and wlllken.
operation of the plant.
Legar observed that whal is
best for the village is what
should be~ above an
else. Leading Creek also has to
accept the proposal Legar
noted.
In other busmess council
approved the placement of two•
penny meters in fl'ont of the
Atheits County Savings &amp; Loan
Company_
Legar also directed a com- COLUMBUS (UP!) - A sub- the Natural Resources Departplaint from Dick Syler to the committee of the Ohio House ment registry.
A strip mining license fee
Street Department. Water Environment and Natural Recoming off Kerr Street is going sources Committee made a was set at $150 plus $30 per
number of revisions in the com- acre, but a proposal by, Rep ..
into Syler's building.
Council also approved the preheru;;ve strip mining control Sam Speck, R-New Concord, for
purchase of a coin comter and legislation it was working on an additional fee for a fond to
sorter at a cost of 1&amp;33- The Monday night and scheduled a reclaim "orphaned lands" was
request for the equipment was final hearing on the bill lor rejected.
Rep. John M. Scott, R-Fairmade by Pumeroy Police Olief Wednesday.
Rep. Kenneth Creasy, R-Dela- born, argued that such a fee
Jed Webster who stated that the
present equipment wltich is ware, said the Wednesday hear- could result in an increase in
approximately 15 years old Is ing would allow final testimony the price of coal.
"It's going to increase the
on the measure, a combination
worn out.
cost
of strip mining - that's
In emergency measure of several bills, before it is
council
approved
three given back to the full commit- going to increase the cost of
readings of an ordinance that tee. He said be hopes to take coal," Scott said. "I question
will reimburse I* Ojlb1Y owners full coo:unittee action on the whether we should try to place
this additional burden on opera65 per cent they paid to repair bill Friday.
damages caused when the The legislation would toughen tors until they get used lo the
sanitary sewer lines were laid. strip mine license applications costs included in the bill."
Legar noted that it was and require complete land rec- Speck said ~lvania and
West Virg~ have au~ fonds . .
necessary to raise the sewer lamation.
lines in downtown Pomeroy and The subcommittee attached
CONCERT FRIDAY
move some water lines when an "emergency clause" to the
Chapter
The Duncan Family, singing the sewer lines were laid bill thai would put it in force
group of Tampa, Fla., will be resulting in damages and l!lllra upon passage and signing by
featured in a concert at the cost to property owners.
Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Bethany United Methodist Mrs. Robert Motter who Without it the bill would not
At the annual conclave of the·
lllurch Friday at 8 p.m. The resides at the Welker Trailer become law for 90 days and
DeMolay
held in Cleveland
group will make an appearance ' Court on Mulben-y Ave., asked Creasy said he feared strip
I
at the Stale Fair before comin_g council to do something about miners would auempt to obtain recenUy, the Meigs Olapter
was represented by Bill
Billy Roush, 50, Kanauga, is assault and battery in con- to Metgs County· The public ts an open sewer on the lot as rats licenses wtder current law durQuickel, Master cowtcilor, Paul
are posing a problem. Council ing the lapse.
listed in good condition at the neclion with the incident was mvtted.
agreed to take care of the
Holzer Medical Center where he Andy Sayre, 62, Kanauga.
Changes made in the bill at Darnell, Jr ., past master
was admitted late Monday night Deputies said the two men had
PLAN BAKE SALE
request.
the latest hearing included re- councilor, Herman Carson,
lin 018 ter N 172 · Otief of Police "Jed Webster laxing the regulation on how scribe, Timothy King, senior
following a fight behind the Hi- been drinking together prior to E
the light.
vange e . P
o. . announced that lw&lt;Hray radios, clO&amp;e 1o adjacent land or waters deacon, and Mr. and Mrs.
Way Inn in Kanauga.
·
Robert King.
Also
ted
M
da
.
ht
O.E.S.
of
Middleport
wtll rebuilt .ts
be-.....,·-'
Accordittg to Gallia County
arres
on Y mg sponsor a bake sale Saturday
mt 'may ,....~ strip mine operators could
Mr. King is chapter advisor
sheriff's deputies, Roush was were Daniel E. Knotts, 25, Rt. 2, be . .
t9
t llud1 at a cost of $180 eacb through a work.
and
deputy of the 11th DeMolay
. ,.ts; Irma J ean McNei1, F1 gmnmg
a.m. a Baked
ey liquidating finn out of Athens. Rep_ Don S. Maddux, 0-Lanstruck in the head by a wine Ga II 1po
. t . a. Middleport
hotUe. He suffered a large 33, Pt. Pleasant and James .:;: 10 to be deli ~ by The m,its may be purchased caster, argued that other laws district. During the conclave
v
only by persons affiliated with prohibit conslnJction or similar Quickel and DameU received
laceration of the forehead which Toles, 30, Pt. Pleasant. They :. 45 are
the village_
bled profusely. It was first were booked following a · a.m.
activity any closer than 1,5011 the order of Knighthood degree .
The Mayor's report for the feet of property boundaries, but Mrs. King attended the 25th
reported that Roush had been disturbance at the Captain's
Lounge.
month of July showing receipls the subcommittee made the re- annual Ohio State Federation
stabbed.
DeMolay Mothers Club and was
in the lllllOWit of $803.20 was qllirement 5011 feet.
Arrested on charges of Deputies charged Knotts with AGNEW TO IRAN
resisting arrest, disturbing the SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. accepted.
Creasy said he feared power- appointed state representative
peace and assault and battery. (UP!) -Presidente Nixon will AttendingwereLegar,Lucien ful opposition to 1,5011 feet and of the lith district which inSERVICES WEDNESDAY
Knotts reportedly struck Sgt. send Vice President Spiro T. Poulin, Ralph Werry, E1ma ·~t's not import..-: enough to cludes Athens and Otillicothe.
There will be missionary Jack Owens.
Agnew to represent the United Ru!lsell, TllD Mees and Doo get this bill sen• • Jc\ 1o this Mrs. King 's mailing address is
290 North Second Ave., Midservices held at the Laurel Cliff Mrs. McNeil was charged States at ceremonies in Iran Collins, comcil members, Jane subcommittee."
Free Methodist Church at 7:30 with assaulting an officer and next October marking the 2,500 Walton, clerk, and Pbyliss "I personally have no quarrel dleport, 0., 45760.
Meigs chapter recenUy had a
p.m. Wednesday with Peggy disturbing the peace. She at- anniversary of lite fuunding of Hennessy, treasurer.
With the thought," Creasy said.
Russell, missionary on furlough tempted to spray Deputy lite Persian Empire.
"I just don't think we could class of live initiates from
Harrisonville, Pomeroy ,
from Mexico, speaking. She will Charles Sanders with chemical More than 55 beads of state
ever make it stick."
show slides of her work. Miss mace.
are scheduled to attend the
The panel members also Gallipolis and New Haven.
Saturday the DeMolay of
Russell is the daughter of Mr. Toles was cited for disorderly celebration in Tehran and
voted to give the Division of
Southeastern
Ohio participated
and Mrs. Guy Russell of conduct. They will appear in Persepolis, the ancient capital Israel has two official lan- F..-estry and Reclamation pow. mmmg
. . "near in the Parade of lli1Is at
Bradbury. The public is invited . . Municipal Court Wedne.'&lt;day. of the Persian Empire.
guages-Hebrew and Arabic. er 1o prevent strip
''wlique or Wlusual" areas of Nelsonville. Attending from the
SQUAD CALLED
natural beauty, scenic rivers, Meigs chapter were Bill
The Middleport emergency
public parks or areas listed in Quickel, Duane Will, Paul
squad answered a call at 3:12
Darnell, John Kauff, Jon Bunce,
a.m. Tuesday to the C. A.
Gene Davis, Bert Moshier and
Lawson home on Zuspan Hollow
Tom Cassell, Robert King, and
I
,
Road. Mr. Lawson was taken to
Mljor League ReSults
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Quickel of
Br Uniltd Press International Cheshire. Mrs . Quickel is
the Holzer Medical Center.
Notional League
the (jont111 d was cute Diane Keaton ---- 1be
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Monlreal 000 ~ 020- 6 14 1 president of the Meigs Mothers
erstwhile k~ Warbol supersbtrlJer, tntra Chicago 000 000 020- 2 8 1 club.
Violet, caught the establisbment bug: Wants to
Renko. Marshall (8) and
FRANCO
NERO
KEEPS
ADMmED MONDAY
For information concerning
Bateman;
Hands, Booham (8) ,
IT AFAMILY AFFAIR
get wed and kick her weird world --- Candy
The Pomeroy emergency
DeMolay
residents may call
Newman 181 and Cannizzaro.
squad answered a call to the
NEW YORK-Tbe pop of Vanessa Redgrave's Bergen's been beckling Women's Ub: "'l'llere WP-Renko 03-19) . LP-Hands 367-7514 in Gallipolis-Point
Albert Scholl residence on Coal wedless motherhood, Franco Nero, gets sister are !DUll! import.int issues" ... Cmdy says Kate 110-171. HRs-Bai1ey (13th I, Pleasant area, 667-3029 , in
St. at 5:12p.m. Monday. Mrs. Lyrm Redgrave as his co-t~tar in a Spanish Millett's a bore, too --- Sean Otway's "'!'be Renko (2nd) , Beckert (2nd).
Coolville area, or 992-3747 or
Frances Yeager was taken to Western; guess their relationship must be AndersGn Tapes" Is his first n only non-.James Us! Game)
992-3743 in Meigs and New
Veterans Memorial Hospital lovers-in-law ... Pat O'Brien's soldier-eoo "!:lean's Bolil flick to 1ilake m&lt;mey ... Obio GoY. Rhodes, San Diego 000 000 1QO- 1 6 1 Haven areas.
where she was admitted as a on his fifth Vietnam tour ... What's tbls about who 8llllOUDeed Life DJag had wltbdraWG its Oncinnali 100 000 Olx- 2 1 0
Acosfa. Severinsen (7) and
medical patient.
Debbie &amp; Harry? ... Doris .Day's thinking of a starUing charges (in the uticle '"llte Go;wn Kendall ; McGlothlin, Gibbon
'
The OUy S.ilicl
1972 or '73 Bdwy. musical ... ilia Miruielli's and the Mobster"), got t1is t€tcill brifwnd (8), Granger (9) and Bench.
DEVOTED TO THE
WP-Gibbon (-t-Sl. LP- Severdating a civlllaafor a change: Businessman Oiff frOiD Life: ''Life lt.s not witbdlawn any einsen 12-41. HR- May (37th) .
INTEREST OF ·
,MEIGS-Mjl.SON
jl.REji.
Lambert ... Jane Fonda's recycling her career: statement made in theartide. 'lbenlt.sbeeono
CHESTER
L.
Tjl.NNEHILL
,
CZnd Gamel
· Ex•c. Ed. ,
New Agent, lllsiness manager and press agent, settlemmt, no apoiOI!J md no retnclion_"
San Diego 200 OIQ 001- 4 1I 2
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
y~ bearded ambitious type, III1HWDed ancinnali OOJ 000 000- 3 s 1
all in a couple of months ... Mlllt dislike her
City Editor
Publ ished daily ucept
''Milo", on the Menleu Grillin TV shaw lbe Kirby (t:J-101 and Barton ·
image; Jane, loo?
Grimsley, Granger (6) and
by The Ohio Velley
other mQitgbt had the misfortune lobe given his Corrales. LP- Granger IS-6). saturdav
Publishing Company , J 11 ·
Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio
Caesars Palace has bei'" trying to team up the laltative bn with Sieve Alleu
lllere HR- Gaston (16th).
\
"5769. Business Office Phone
campiest cafe act ever: Libeface and Mae West taking t"'!"J plnse Ill" two IIIII jJ1niDg it with
- .
Phita
000 004 000- 4 11 1 992-7156, Editorial 'Phone 992
.
·
... We commend seeing herseH on the Mike japes ADeu plainly thought were sign~ of Bib Piltsbrgh 000 123 OOx- 6 14 2 21S7.
Second class postag'e pa id at 1
Douglas Show to convince Pearl Bailey never to etmic genius : They '""" cheap, witless in- Short, Selma (SJ, Wilson (6), Pomeroy, _Ohio.
Hoerner 161, Reynolds Ill and
N_afional adYerti·sing wear that overwhelming wig again .... The N. Y. teri-uptions of an eager yOWigster eames!ly and McCarver,
Ryan 16); Briles, representative Bottinelti - •
cops know- there are some 275 cockfi8hting ultimately pathetically telling his story ... Miller 161. Walker (6), Kison Gallagher. Inc., 12 East C:lnd '
Ne~ York City, New- York . '
arenas in N: Y. City for some 50,0110 Latin fans of Allen's insolent ltWIPicion that he ns "really (7), GuiSII 18) and Sall\lulllen. St.,
.
Subsc[iption
r•tes : De · I
16-81. LP- Wilson ••ve_red by carrier
where
that ugly illegality.
rolling" was ruining an wtderdog's rare nelwtlrit WP-Walker
13-Sl, avaulabte SO cents per week , ·
Perry Como tapes · his rec;ording ac- . chance."
By Motor Route where urrier 1
I'
service
availabfe: One ·
companiments in advance, plays the tapes
The Black Panthers reportedly solicited a :-:,:-~·~ :
~ ~ ~ month n not
.7S. By malt in Ohio
constanUy in car, fishing skiff or at home, and $6,000 dooation from Richard Burton; it's a Downing. Brewer 181 and a~d w. \l'a .• One vear st4.00.
thus knows every grace note of the charts before 1113 ,ter u[ guY'• record ... Huey Newton had 140 Halter ; Fc.-sch, Lemaster (7], Soc months S1 . 25 . Tl'lree
S4 .50. Subscrir,tion
' Iller
AI
· da
· ""' f
1o .. ....
- Gladding l91and Hiatt, Howard m~nt~s
he records his sol ..-.ea
Includes Sunday T mH tones. A Love - speaking tes m •• er up .,.,_ per ao- Ill. WP--Downill!: 1t6 Bl. LP- · pnce
Ser ·=,..et .
Uterative: Woody Allen's
C!~m!ly companion
IIICIIitiGn.
ForY:II 17 71.
.
I

Padres, .Reds Divide
Monday Doubleheader

.

·.~--Ne~s...in Briefs · !

Ohio"Fair Reaches Halfway Mark
(Ceatlnutd from Page I)
t5.5S per pound for Ute reserve
winner, a 205-pound Hampshire
~hown by Tami Jackson, 12,
Powell.
·
Grand~hantpion steer, a 1,071
pound charolais-angus cross
shown by Julie Townsley, 17, Of
Cedarvilltj in Greene County,
brought J4.27 per pound. Burger
King Co. paid a .total $4,568.90
'for the steer and $2,945 for the
·reserve steer, a 1,155 pound angus shown by Joy Eversole of
Baltimore in Fairfield County.
Ealon Team Wins
ln horse pull competition,
Earl Ruby and his sons of

.•

11 41

.633

69

.519 14112

6-C

66 67 .496 17'/:o
ss n .411 28

52 80 .394
West
W. L. Pel.
Oakland
86 41 .641
Kansas City 69 62 .527
Chicago
63 69 .~n
California
6J 71 .470
Mimesota
S'l 71 .454
Milwaukee
S6 75 .427
Monday's Results
(No games scheduled)

""
·...
'

~

·

...

11 60 .542 11'12

31

GB
...
16
22'1&gt;

23'12

25'12

29

Tollay's Proboble Pitchers
Oakland !Odom 9.9) at
California !Murphy 6-13) . night .
Chicago (Horten 7-91 at
Minnesota IKaat t0-11], night.
Kansas City (Fitzmorris J.2l
at Milwaukee !Lockwood 8-10),
night.
Cleveland I Farmer S-1 and
Colbert 3-2) at Detroit (Coleman 14-8 and Niekro 6-Sl (2) ,
twi-nighl.
Washington (Bosman 10-13)
at New York (Kline t0-12) ,
night.
Baltimore (Palmer 16-61 at
Boston (Peters 12-10). night.

W~oy'sG.ames
Oakland at California. night
Chicago at Minnesota, night
Kan City at Milwaukee, night
Cleveland at Detroit. night
Washington at New Y..-k
Baltimore at Boston, nig!'t
National League
East
W. L. Pd.
8056 .588
Pittsburgh
74 60 .SS2
Sl. Louis
.530
Chicago
.504
New York
Philadelphia S1 15 .432
S6 14 .431
Monlreal

~:i

"Now all of us are concel-ned
with bouncing back, " Howsam
said.
Coaches given new contracts
were Alex Grammas, former
Red slugger Ted KluSiewski,
George Scherger and Larry
Shepard.
Terms of the one-year contract signed by Anderson were
not revealed.

GB
2

Q-Who was the only Englishman to. become a Pope?
A-Adrian I IV in 1154.
Adrian was I born Nicholas
B ~eakspear.

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Tempers were flarin ' and
fists were flyin ' in the National
League Monday night as the
pressures and frustrations of
the pennant race began to
surface .
There were two major
skirmishes on the field -One in
Houston in a game between the
Astros and the Los Angeles
Dodgers and another in Philadelphia in a contest between
the Phillies and lhe Pittsburgh
Pirates -which resulted in the
ejection of three players and
the possible suspension of

another .
Fans at the Astrodome were
trea ted to a real old-fashioned
donnybrook between the Aslros
and the Dodgers. The incident,
which occurred in the first
inning, was touched off by a
fist-fight between Willie Crawford of the Dodgers and catcher
Jack Hiatt of lhe Astros, and
ended up with both benches
emptying onto the field .
Crawford and Hiatt exchanged words at home plate
after Crawford had warned Ken
Forsch about throwing too close
Lo his head, and the two men
then begann swinging at each

mher.

Umpire Paul Pryor stepped
between the two men to try and
stop them, but by the lime he
in tervened both benches had
emptied and other players were
involved in the fracas. Among
them were slrongboys Richie
Allen of the Dodgers and Doug
Rader of the Astros, who flailed
al random during the melee.
When the fighting subsidied,
both Crawford and Hiall were
ejec ted from the game and
both had sustained minor
injuries.

Perez.

" I would like to kn ow how
many more game-winning hits
Perez has than Bench this season," continued Gomez. "I bel
it's quiLe a few. "
The Wildcats open their 1971
Actually, it's not quite as
campaign Sept. 10 against the man y as Gomez thinks . Perez
SV AC defending cham pion
Eastern Eagles . Here's the 1971
schedule :
Sept. IO
Eastern
Sept. 17
at Kyger Creek Now ••• Give Your
Sept. 24
Symmes Valley
Oct.!
Green Local
More Biting Power
Oct. 8
at Hannan, W.Va. A denture adhesive can help .
Oct. l5
at Southern FASTEETH' Powder does all of
this: 1) Helps hold uppen and lowOct. 22
Nort h G a11·ta erslon&amp;er,
firmer, steadier. 2) Holds
Oct. 29
Fort Gay them more comfortably. 3l Helps
more naturally. Why worry?
Nov. 5
at Southwestern you
Use eat
FASTEETH
Dentu" Adhesive
Powder. Dentu res t hat fit are

Wildcats Have Good Size
By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Lack of overall good size and
inexperience are the major
problems facing Tom Belville,
newly appointed head football
coach at Hannan Trace High
SchooL
Belville,
a
Marsha11
University graduate, is in his
first head coaching assignment.
He was assistant football coach
at Hannan Trace two years ago .
Belville played high school
football under Coach Danny
Clark at Huntington East High
School.
He is
assisted
by Danny
Cornell.alsb
a Marshall
graduate.
'
·
Gone from last year's squad
which compiled a 2-2-1 record in
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference and 3-5-1 record
overall are Steve Daniels, 210
pound center ; Jerry Waugh, 210
pound end ; Tom Beaver, 175
pound guard-tackle; Wayne
Queen, 160 pound halfback ;
David Spangler , 160 pound
halfback; Larry Cremeans, 155
pound quarterback ; Gary
Michael, 180 pound guard and
Rick Bickle, 205 pound tackle.
Returning lettermen include
two seniurs, three juniors and
lour sophomores. They are:
seniors, Delbert Cisco, 150 !h.
halfback and Bennie Clary, 210

21
21

West
W. L. Pel. GB
Sa n Francisoo 78 S6 .582 ···
Los Angeles 70 64 .522 8 ·
·- Atlanta
70 67 .511 9'h
.' Cincinnati
67 70 .489 12'h
· Houston
6A 10 .478 14
San Dil!90
51 84 .378 27'1&gt;
Monday's Results
Cincinnati 2 San Diego 1 (lstl
San Diego 4 Cincinnati 3 (2nd)
St. Louis 3 New York 2
Los Angeles 3 Houston 2
Pittsburgh 6 Philadelphia 4
Montreal6 Chicago 2
(Only games schtduled)
Today's Proboble Pitchers
Philadelphia (Lersch -t-121 at
Pittsburgh (Moose 9-71, night.
·Montreal (Morloo 9-14 and
Strohmayer S-SI at Chicago
(Pappas 16-11 and Holtzman 9121 21.
New York (McAndrew 0-S or
Ryan 9-111 at St. Louis (Reuss
12-121. night.
San Diego I Roberts 11-IA) at
Cincinnati (Simpson 3-SJ, night.
Los Angeles IAtuander S-41
at Hovslon !Cook 0-31, night.
Atlanta !Stooe 6-41 at San
FranCisco (.Perry 13,\0). night.

Attenta
11 SanatFrancisco
IJJS Angeles
Houllln night

losses.

Kirby has never had a bad
season - against the Reds.
The hard throwing righthander's victory Monday night was
his third in a row over the
Reds this season and boosted
ill
his lifetime record to 9-4 .
"Labor Day!
But , as Sparky Anderson
pmn ted out, the Reds have one
Where~ my
consolation Lhis season.
hammock!"
"We"re not the only Learn
Kirby's beating litis year," said We doubt if there is any
greater satisfaction in life
the Reds manager.
than that from r~gular
One Shy of Mark
creafive
work
which
Th e Reds bunched lour of provides necessary goods
their five hits off Kirby in the and services for our
th ird inning to score all three fellowmen . This Is why we
of their runs and wipe out the honor all workers of mind
2-0 lead taken by the Padres on and muscle on our national
LABOR DAY holiday.
Gaston 's first inning homer .
Through the last six innings
Kirby didn '1 yield a hit.
Padre relief pitcher AI Severinsen was the victim of May's
37th homer of the season in the
first game. The homer left the
Red first baseman one shy of . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

DowningChilds

Agency. Inc.

,-------------------~

An unexpected expense?

FALSE TEETH

'IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
TO
OHIO POWER CUSTOMERS!

• I

•

A Planfted Service Interruption Will Be
Your present car will never again
bring so much in trade. And your
Ford Team has the year's biggest
savings on all '71 Fords. Hurry
for best selection of the year's
best-sellers-now at the
year's best deals.

Necessary on Thursday, September 2,
'

'

1971 From 5 .AM until 6 AM •
Weather Permitting

Sporty Mulling ...
America's No . ~ fun·drlving car .
Now clearance-priced!

The Areas Affected Are As Follows:

Ford LTD .. . for qu iet-riding

Pomeroy • Minersville • Syracuse • Racine

lu~eury.

Best- seller in its class.

This Planned Interruption Is Necessary to

Ford Country Clearance en_
ds soon! ,.

·Improve Service In Thesa ·Areas I

Wt:dnesdty's Games

Manlreal ot Chicago
Philadelphia at Pitts. ~ighl_
York at St. Louos, ntght
San DiegO ol CinciMali. night

.318.
"That 's hts history, .even
when he W/:1 ~ ifl the minors,"
said Gomez . '' He seems Lo have
a good season every other
year .
Then, there 's Clay Kirby, the
Padres n ghthandcr who beat
the Reds in the second game to
gai n his 13th victory against 10

lb. tackle ; juniors, Paul Montgomery, 140 lb . cornerback:
Don Lambert, 1351b. cer.ter and
Dean Barry, 180 lb. tackle;
sophomores, Garland Montgomery , 145 lb . ha lfback; John
Montgomery , 145 lb. guard ;
Don Wells, 1751b. end and Rick
Saunders, 150 lb. defensive end.
Mike Caldwell, a 6-5, 175
pound junior, is expected to be
·
Llle sLarttng
quart er b ac k ·
Olher prospects fighting lor
· hts an d postttons
··
jobs,their we1g
. 992-2171
125 E. Main
are:
POMEROY, 0.
170
easential to. health. See your dentist
Rs M'k w·
SENIO
t
e
tse,
,
___
__
_
_
_
_
_
_:re~r:ul:•r~ty~.
-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
guard; J oe Johnson , 145, ..... ,
halfback ; Jim Roach, 175,
•
fullback and Bruce Dray, 150, '
guard.
JUNIORS - Kenny Williams,
140, end; Julius Koehler, 130,
end; and Mike Trout, 225,
tackle .
SOPHOMORES ·_ Steve
Wal ters, 150, fullback; John
Cardwell, 205, lacl&lt;le ; Randy
Halley, 135, halfback and
Robert Saunders, 135, halfback .
FRESHMEN - Mark Swain,
125, quarterback; Paul Barry,
150, tackle; Billy Hale, 150,
Lackie; Wayne Hesson, 160,
tackle ; D. J . McGuire, 130, end ;
Johnny Queen, 125, halfback;
Kevin Swain, 120, halfback and
Cltris Waugh, 130, ~uard .

8
ll'h

tile scut'e tied 3-all and Pete
Rose on second.
" Like I said ," repealed Gomez, " I could have wound up a
goal beca use Bench almost beat
me."
Gomez was rememberin g
Bench's hard liner winch Padre leftfielder Ivan Murrell
hauled down for the thi rd out
of the inning .
The Padres ·then went on Lo
gain a split of the doubleheader by winning 4-3 on Clarence
Gaslon's ron -producing double
in the ninth inning afler Lee
May 's eighth inning homer
gave the Cincinnati Reds a 21v.ictory in the first game .
"I look upon Perez as one of
the best clutch hitters in baseball ," said Gomez . "I know
that when I was coaching with
the Los Angeles Dodgers they
looked upon him the same
way."
Already Decided
Even before May went down
swinging for the sec.ond out in
the eighth inning Gomez had
made up his mind to walk

lois care-er high set in 1969 .
" lL-e hit that ball S&lt;t hard it
almost went . through the concretc,11 sald Perez.
May's homer, after hitting the
concrete facing, ahnost bounced
back tu the infield.
" I couldn't say whether it did
or not, " said Lee . "I quit
watching after I see the ball
clear the fence. 11
ll will be Wayne Simpson
against Fred Norman when the
two teams reswne their series
tonight.
...- - - - - - - - - .

L

Thank You

.

.·
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KE'TH GOBLE FORD INC.
•

461 SOUTH THI~D ST., MIDIWOIT,...,

�j

. 2- Tbe D&amp;ily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleporl, Ohiu, August 31,1971

•

.;.,~,

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Eaton won the heavyweight division by pulling toad.of 1,500
pounds 26 feel. Alvin Clllllnings
of Dover, Ky. won the lightweight division, pulling 7,000
pounds a distance of 25 feel, 5
inches.
In the daily senior citizens
activities, Mr. and Mrs. George
Kallal of Blacklick won lhe
dance contest. Cookie !laking
contest winners were Mrs. Bertha Tolbert, BetheSda; Mrs.
Barbara Lustic, Akron; Mrs.
E:dith Rice, Bellefontaine and
Mrs. Lucy Colaprete, Columbus.

a

HEl[N H[lP US!
.J---I~YHELEN AND SUE JIOTI'EL
WIIJ~T'S NEW? SUE'S VIEWS

Dear Readers:
Guess who's co~ to HHU? - Daughter Sue.
SUe Is pure Bottel, vintage 1954, a high school senior. For
some time now, she has been reading my mail and unofficially
getting into the action With cohnnn quips and comments (plus a
national magazine article). Readers have asked for more, so
three times a week SUe will join me for "Generation Rap"
columns. We'll argue, agree, answer your questions singly or in
tandem, tresenting the views of the fore and aft side of 30.
For starters, here's a question that comes awfully close to
home:
Dear Helen:
"Do it, dolt, do it!" That's Mom.lwalk in the door and see a
note pinned oo the fridge, "Do your ironing," or like that, before I
get my breath.
.
On Saturday morning, she wakes me With, "There's a lot of
w&lt;l'k today," and strings off a mile-long list when, if I could j(ISt
sleep a llWe Jooger, and weren't told, told, TOLD, I'd think of
thOle things by myaelf, mostly. And get them done, too, because
I'm not a goo!.off, mainly.
Please ten parents again that nagging is not "communicating." - REMINDED OUT OF MY SKULL

SUE'S VIEWS:
Dear ROOMS:
Be glad to, because even great parents (are you listening,
Mtm?) scmetimes forget that kids can get the beat Without
drumming it in.
It's a bummer, coming in starved to find a big old hangin'
note on the refrigerator, Usling jobs you already know about and
plan to do- alter you eat. Makes you feel like it's 'I1IEIR house
and you're a live-In maid, rather ·than "OUR HOME" that you
help clean because you take pride in it.
Teens are told all day, "Do "this, do that" by teachers and
employers; when they get home. they'd like a few minutes lo
rein, just as adults like their coffee lreaks. I think housewock is
\.JIID.J~!~R,¥,anyway) if you do ~cled (and unexpected)
-·-~ on your own, on a flexible schedule. When parents push,
push, PUSH, you feel cheated.
Why not ask your mother how she'd like a . ''boss" who
repeated every little job detall over and over as if she were so
dumb she couldn't remember anything by herself? Pretty soon
she'd start depending on those reminders and stop THINKING for
henelf, right? •
Maybe you can get her in the mood by what we call "The
SUrprise Snydrcme" at our houae. Every time any of tbe Bottels
go away, we,make sure there's a "surprise" waiting their return.
If YOUR surprlle is a clean-111&gt; job or a llpeCially-cooked dinner
when ywr folks come back from a .lrlp - well, they may realize
you doo't need reminders anymore.- SUE
REI EN'S ANSWER:
Dear !lOOMS:
Not much "arguin" oo this one. (I KNOW what I should do,
but I doo't always do it.)
·
Only two points In defense of Mothers: During the early
years, constant repetitioo is the only way we get action (as in
"Brush your Ieeth, Junier" every morning for !Oyears - until he
dlscoven girls). So It bectmes a habit hard to lreak. Also, that
"flexible sclledule" can drive parents up the wall.
And here's a bit of advice to parenis: Offspring work better
when YOU are busy too ..Jolmny woo't mind pulling weeds so
much if Pop Is out there pnmlng roses, but if he's in watching TV,
wen, It's not "our yard" any mere.
Now, while Sue scrubs the tub (no reminders, Helen, but can
you help it If your writing partner looks over your shoulder?), I'll
add :
Send your "Generation Rap" questions and comments lo Sue
and Helen Bolte I, (one or both), care of tbls new~per. They will
appear each Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday (or Sunday), as
~ce allows.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Roy
Domigan, Pomeroy; Mrs. Fred
Roach, Gallipolis; Rita Roush,
West Columbia; Mrs. Donald
Martin , Sr., Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES:
Robert
Spradley, Mrs. Robert Rhodes,
Paul Allinder, Mrs. Charles
Oliver, Mrs. William Woomer
and Sylvia Mullins.

EDWARDS GRADUATES
Patrick S. Edwards, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Edwards of Middleport, graduated
Friday from Mayo Foundation
School of Physical Therapy in
Rochester , Minnesota.
Graduation ceremonies were
held at 8 p.m. at St . Marys
Auditorium, Marion Hall, in
Rochester.

PLAN BAKE SALE
'fhe W.S.C.S. of the Forest
Run United Methodist Church
will sponsor a bake sale Friday
at 9:30 a.m. at the Davis
Warner Insurance office, Court
Street, Pomeroy.

PLAN WEEKEND SALE
The Pomeroy Little League
Association will hold a rummage sale Friday and Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. at Dr.
Brown 's office building on West
Main Street.

Mrs. Maude Case: Medina ;
Mrs. Gladys Davis, Caldwell,
and Em Delbrugge, Marlins
Ferry. were . presented with
pruminenL senior citizen
awards.
Martins Ferry Mayor John

Cousin Gap won the $1,500 2.-

I.aslo was given a certific-dte Medina.
by his city's senior citizens-del- Killbl!Ck Mary won the$27,400

year~•ld lrol.

elegation. Senior volunteer
awards were presented to Mrs.
MatTy Ellen !frown. Martins
Ferry; Miss Mildred Oakes,
Caldwell , and Mrs. Flo Saas,

Kil1buek Mary trotted to a
1:00 Z4 win in the ra4mr beat
in the contesl, fastest ·mile in
North •America thiS year by a
tilly on a half-mile ~- ·

Ohio State ·Trot "for twl&gt;-yearoids and Rosalie won the champioo $6,55o 2.-)'ear-&lt;Jld filly stake.
Botlt horses are owned by
Henry and Robert Qitchlield.

Ohio Crime Rate
Exceeds Average
COLUMBUS (UPI )-One out of every 40
Ohio reslden)s was either. ,murdered,
raped, beaten, burglarized, robbed or had
their car stolen in 1970as0hio's crime rate
jumped ahead of the national average.
The Uniform Crime report released
today by the U.S. Justice Department and .
compiled by the FBI shows an increase of
II per cent between 1969 and 1970 on the
national level. Tbe increase in Ohio was
13.4 per cent.
"While we can find encouragement in
the fact that crime increased in 1970 at a
slower rate than in 1969, the important fact
is that the total number of serious crimes
continued to increase," said U.S. Attorney
General John Mitchell.
''This must be a matter of continuing
concern to the Department of Justice. and
to law enforcement agencies at all levels of
federal, state and local government," said
Mitchell.
Ohio· recorded 253,158 crimes in 1970
COIJlpared to 223,223 in 1969 with the largest
increase in crimes to property such as burglary or larceny With 196,575 recorded in
1969 compared With 222,879 in 1970.
A further breakdown shows Ohio
recorded an ilicrease of 14 to 699 in murders and nomegligent manslaughter while
the number of forcible rapes went from
1,645 to 1,700; robbery from 13,604 lo
15,539; assault from IQ,714 to 12,341; burglary 79,489 to 90,963; grand larceny 65,310
to 79,438 and auto theft 51,7'16 to 52,488.
A breakdown of the majoc metropolitan
areas. shows only the number of crimes
committed in 1970 and not those committed in 1969.
They include:
Akron: SUmmit and Portage countiesMurders of llOIHlegligent maDslaughter
~- Forcible rape 172. Robbery 1,,830. Ag"
gravated assault 934. Burglary 6,513.
Grand Larceny 7,324. Auto Theft 4,206.
canton: Satark County -Murder or nonnegligent manslaughter II. Forcible rape

49. Robbery 459_ Aggravated assault :m.
BUrglary 2,300. Grand larceny 3,M4 and
auto theft 941.
Cincinnati: Trl~te Area - Murder er
non-negligent manslaughter 17. Forrible
Rape 230. Robbery 1,648. A8Bravated assault 1,462- Burglary 12,61. Grand Larceny 11,656 and auto theft 4,712.
Cleveland: Olyahoga, Lake, Geauga
and Medina counties- Murder ..- omnegligent manslaughter 2911. FGn:ible rape
380. Rol)bery ·5,913. A8gravated assault
2,672. Burglary 12,61. Grand Larceny
11,822. Auto theft 24,7011.
Columbus: Ftanklin, Delaware and
Pickaway counties - Murder or nonnegligent mansla•Jgbter 55. Forcible rape
315. Robbery 1,1134. Aggravated assanlts
1,130. Burglary ll,SIZ. Grand LarceDy
11,039. Auto theft 5,8911.
Dayton: Green, Miami, Montgcmery
and Preble COUDties - Murder or ntllnegligent manslaughter 7'1. Forcible tape
147. Robbery 2,035_ Aggravated assault
1,296. Burglary 10,817. Grand 1areeny
7,T/9. Auto theft 3,310_
Uma: Allen, Putnam and Van Wert
counties - Murder er noo-negligellt
manslall8hter 5_ Forcible rape a. Robley
166. Aggravated assault 167_ Burglary
1,435. Grand larceny 1,4'15. Auto theft 230.
Mansfield: Richland County- Murder
or non-negligent manslaughter 9. Forcible
rape 16. Robbery 79_ Aggravated assault
349. Burglary 1,183. Grand lara!ny 1,1m
and auto theft 300.
Youngstown-Warren : Mahoning and
Trumbull cOunties - Murder or Dtllnegligent manslaughter '11. Forcible rape
53. Robbery 698_ Aggnlvated assault liO'l.
Burglary 4,440. Grand lan.tuy 3,3911. Auto
, !bert 2,21i8.
The report also revealed that members
of the Ohio lligbway Patrol ba.., more
highway miles per man - 86.5 - to cover
than any other state.
Wyoming is second in this category with
68.7 miles.

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Co~nlting

(Cedlatol Ira Pa«t I)
Ole~ and agreed to turn
the matter over to the Boa1'd of
Public Affairs for its study 3nd
approval.
.
E. F. Robinson, a member of
the Board of Publje .. Affairs,
· noted that the present pumpin'g
station in a few years will bave
to be replaced. ·A new plant
would cost approximately
$500,000 and we would still bave
the apense of the operation,
Robinson noted.
Robinson also said that the

.

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1

.
. ByUnild,Presslnlmlltti.al . . ..
PONTIAC, MICH. -TEN SCHOOL buseswhicln~.ereto~ve
been used .in a court.&lt;ll"«red school du IP ega~ busing
)rOill"8lll were destroyed by fireb&lt;mbs ~onday
at ~n
unguarded parking tot. f'l!lice said !hey ~vered . 'some mcenciiary devices" at · the lot, adjacent_to_ the Pon~c school ,
district garage. Investigation into the mcident continued, but
police said they had no leads and no suspects. · .
·

Dll!bt

.

•••

'

. frcm. the station.

m
e

On Stripmine Bill

Final Hearing

Set Wednesday

of Monday night'.s second game

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

lVoice along Broadway

j

si-

'THE SHOE BOX

::g :=

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--··- - ---

I"" yea r the Padre cenlerfield-

tu bri ng up Johnny Bench with er !iii 29 homers and batted

SENIOR IE'I"l'ERMEN - Eastern's sen!..- football lettermen are 1-r,
.frclllt, Marvin Tayloc, Warren Calaway, John Cline, Rlck Hauber, Rick
Biake, TimGumpf, Rick Sanden; back row, Bill Pbillips, as,!!lstant coach,

Roger Kirkhart, head football coach, Bob Caldwell, Rick Williams, Roger
Kart, Alan Holter, Dennis Eichinger, Randy Young, Doug Carr, Jim Arns001-y, Mike Morgan, Carl Dodrill, assistant coaches.

a!llllllll'IIIIIIIIIIMIIMII!IIlftll!lllftiWII~~O:W~
· : ··~::;?.;::::s:;~::::.-:r.::::::.o::;:::::::~X:~~~·~·'l$: e""

.8

Chiefs Triumph Fights Mar NL Action

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP! )- pass two possessions later and
Ed Podolak's one-yard touch- ran it back 35 yards to the
down plunge With 6:36 remain- Chiefs' 21. Four plays later,
ing enabled the Kansas City Bobby Howfield booted his third
Chiefs, plagued by penalties field g.oal of the game, a 34and five pass interceptions, to yarder, to give the Jets a 16-4
pull a nationally~levised 21-16 lead.
AI Woodall quarterbacked
exhibition footbaU victory over
the New York Jets Monday the Jets in the first half, With
night.
Bob Davis, fifth-year pro from
The win kept the Chiefs' Virginia, going the route for
preseason rec..-d perfect at ~­ New York in the final two
quarters.
The Jets dropped to I.J.
Len Dawson, who .suffered
four interceptions, hit wide
receiver Otis Taylor on a 51yard bomb to the Jets' 12,
setting up Kansas City's
decisive touchdown. Podolak
carried lhree straight times•
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Cincinbefore driving over left tacklej
nati Reds Manager Sparky Anlor the winning touchdown.
Dawson's 20-yard scoring derson has been rehired for the
strike to Taylor in the ftrst 1972 season, jus! as he had exthree minutes of the game and pected despite the club's second
Podolak's one-yard scoring dive division status this year after
in the second quarter staked winning the 1970 National
Ute Oliefs to a 14-6 halftime League pennant.
Anderson, who took over in
edge.
Lineback Larry Grantham October 1969 from the fired
intercepted a Mike Livingston Dave BrisLOJ, said ·"I never
pass less than three minutes really thought I'd be fired "
into the third period and dashed and predicted the team will be
eight yards lor the Jets' only a contender next year.
" This club is goma come
touchdown. Colllerback Steve
back
and be on top," Anderson
Tannen picked off a Dawson
said Monday night.
"Let me put il this way.
•
We've got a better chance of
being on top than the other
clubs have of protecting it," he
said.
Reds General Manager Bob
Howsam, who also renewed the
contracts of the entire coaching
staff, said "it was an easy de-

Sparky
Rehired

cision to make. ''
By United Press lnlenlalional
Ameriun

Le~gue

East

W. L. Pel. GB

Baltimore
Detroit
Boston
New York
Washinglon
Cleveland

we

WATai THIS·PAPER FOR OUR SALE AD

' ....

There 's a lways lhC upp11rluni 1y in the first inning to give Lhe
for tile seco nd gasp.''
Pmlrcs a 2-0 lead.
Tl te burner we:ts unly the 16th
Gomez was LC~ ikin g (lhlliH or(
Jf
the sc&lt;~son for Gaslon, who
·9ering a n intenLio nol P'-'SS t~J
Ton y Perez in the eighth inn in~ wem into the ·~arne balling .232.

patroDed all city stations and other police ~tions today in
tbe wake of the shotgun attack that killed a desk ~eant ":"d
wounded a woman dispa~ SUnday nigbtat the lllgleside.~lice
statim. Ten inspecllrs have been ~ ~ time to tracking
down tbe killer. Authcrities said all signs indicate that mere than
two persons were involved in the crime. It's believed they may
have been part of a cmspiracy to steal an arsenat of weapons

Kanauga Man
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F
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JU
t
H Urt n

STARTING SATURDAY, SEPt 4

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CIN CIN NA THUI'l !- Presion has 11 and Benl'h , cxpcriuncint.;
( ;IIII ICZ admits ii. W:JS &lt;:1 gam- ;.1 vl..!ry P'~&lt;'r ~a;o;IJn (jl the plate,
h&lt;.~ s seven .
ble.
' ' ) l"OUid hCI VC W(JUOd Up i:1
COi SltJn , w! H1 dtJubled home
goa t," sait..l the San Di ego P~ ­ IX,n M.:tson in the ninth to hand
drc m;m(IJ4Cr. ''But that ':-; what W ~ync (;ran)!,er the loss, also
me:~kcs b&lt;.~scball ~'' gr~.;&lt;JL. iJ,,mc n:d with &lt;:~ runner rtboard

SAN FRANCilK:O - EXTRA . GUARDS with shotguits

Local·
Represented

FIRE SALE

,•

...

vretn;ml"se troops ambushed an American _unit near Da N~~~~g.
They blew up two armcred personnel earners a~ ·8 Sbendan
tar*, tilling three Gls and w(Jin•ling four, All tole!, Vtel Cong and
Nertb Viebll!rnese forces delivered 14 attaCks across South
Vietnam in the 24 hours ending at6 p,m. EDT yesterday·

WE ARE HAVING A

•

....

SAIGON ...:.. THE U.S.~ reported today that North

State Health Depar1ment is
RADIO BAGHDAD SAID today that Egypt has seized about
constanlly requesting new and
part 10
·
trike t the
improved regulations. Also II persons on charges of baving taken
a 5
a
llehraD indiDtrial c110plex scme 15 miles below Cairo. The
Robinson noled that a licensed __ _._. men
lulled members of the Arab Socialist Union,
man to make water tests Is "" ""'"""
needed, the State requires that Egypt's oo1y legal political party. Amoog them, the broadcast
a licensed man supervise the said, were trade unioo leaders and wlllken.
operation of the plant.
Legar observed that whal is
best for the village is what
should be~ above an
else. Leading Creek also has to
accept the proposal Legar
noted.
In other busmess council
approved the placement of two•
penny meters in fl'ont of the
Atheits County Savings &amp; Loan
Company_
Legar also directed a com- COLUMBUS (UP!) - A sub- the Natural Resources Departplaint from Dick Syler to the committee of the Ohio House ment registry.
A strip mining license fee
Street Department. Water Environment and Natural Recoming off Kerr Street is going sources Committee made a was set at $150 plus $30 per
number of revisions in the com- acre, but a proposal by, Rep ..
into Syler's building.
Council also approved the preheru;;ve strip mining control Sam Speck, R-New Concord, for
purchase of a coin comter and legislation it was working on an additional fee for a fond to
sorter at a cost of 1&amp;33- The Monday night and scheduled a reclaim "orphaned lands" was
request for the equipment was final hearing on the bill lor rejected.
Rep. John M. Scott, R-Fairmade by Pumeroy Police Olief Wednesday.
Rep. Kenneth Creasy, R-Dela- born, argued that such a fee
Jed Webster who stated that the
present equipment wltich is ware, said the Wednesday hear- could result in an increase in
approximately 15 years old Is ing would allow final testimony the price of coal.
"It's going to increase the
on the measure, a combination
worn out.
cost
of strip mining - that's
In emergency measure of several bills, before it is
council
approved
three given back to the full commit- going to increase the cost of
readings of an ordinance that tee. He said be hopes to take coal," Scott said. "I question
will reimburse I* Ojlb1Y owners full coo:unittee action on the whether we should try to place
this additional burden on opera65 per cent they paid to repair bill Friday.
damages caused when the The legislation would toughen tors until they get used lo the
sanitary sewer lines were laid. strip mine license applications costs included in the bill."
Legar noted that it was and require complete land rec- Speck said ~lvania and
West Virg~ have au~ fonds . .
necessary to raise the sewer lamation.
lines in downtown Pomeroy and The subcommittee attached
CONCERT FRIDAY
move some water lines when an "emergency clause" to the
Chapter
The Duncan Family, singing the sewer lines were laid bill thai would put it in force
group of Tampa, Fla., will be resulting in damages and l!lllra upon passage and signing by
featured in a concert at the cost to property owners.
Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Bethany United Methodist Mrs. Robert Motter who Without it the bill would not
At the annual conclave of the·
lllurch Friday at 8 p.m. The resides at the Welker Trailer become law for 90 days and
DeMolay
held in Cleveland
group will make an appearance ' Court on Mulben-y Ave., asked Creasy said he feared strip
I
at the Stale Fair before comin_g council to do something about miners would auempt to obtain recenUy, the Meigs Olapter
was represented by Bill
Billy Roush, 50, Kanauga, is assault and battery in con- to Metgs County· The public ts an open sewer on the lot as rats licenses wtder current law durQuickel, Master cowtcilor, Paul
are posing a problem. Council ing the lapse.
listed in good condition at the neclion with the incident was mvtted.
agreed to take care of the
Holzer Medical Center where he Andy Sayre, 62, Kanauga.
Changes made in the bill at Darnell, Jr ., past master
was admitted late Monday night Deputies said the two men had
PLAN BAKE SALE
request.
the latest hearing included re- councilor, Herman Carson,
lin 018 ter N 172 · Otief of Police "Jed Webster laxing the regulation on how scribe, Timothy King, senior
following a fight behind the Hi- been drinking together prior to E
the light.
vange e . P
o. . announced that lw&lt;Hray radios, clO&amp;e 1o adjacent land or waters deacon, and Mr. and Mrs.
Way Inn in Kanauga.
·
Robert King.
Also
ted
M
da
.
ht
O.E.S.
of
Middleport
wtll rebuilt .ts
be-.....,·-'
Accordittg to Gallia County
arres
on Y mg sponsor a bake sale Saturday
mt 'may ,....~ strip mine operators could
Mr. King is chapter advisor
sheriff's deputies, Roush was were Daniel E. Knotts, 25, Rt. 2, be . .
t9
t llud1 at a cost of $180 eacb through a work.
and
deputy of the 11th DeMolay
. ,.ts; Irma J ean McNei1, F1 gmnmg
a.m. a Baked
ey liquidating finn out of Athens. Rep_ Don S. Maddux, 0-Lanstruck in the head by a wine Ga II 1po
. t . a. Middleport
hotUe. He suffered a large 33, Pt. Pleasant and James .:;: 10 to be deli ~ by The m,its may be purchased caster, argued that other laws district. During the conclave
v
only by persons affiliated with prohibit conslnJction or similar Quickel and DameU received
laceration of the forehead which Toles, 30, Pt. Pleasant. They :. 45 are
the village_
bled profusely. It was first were booked following a · a.m.
activity any closer than 1,5011 the order of Knighthood degree .
The Mayor's report for the feet of property boundaries, but Mrs. King attended the 25th
reported that Roush had been disturbance at the Captain's
Lounge.
month of July showing receipls the subcommittee made the re- annual Ohio State Federation
stabbed.
DeMolay Mothers Club and was
in the lllllOWit of $803.20 was qllirement 5011 feet.
Arrested on charges of Deputies charged Knotts with AGNEW TO IRAN
resisting arrest, disturbing the SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. accepted.
Creasy said he feared power- appointed state representative
peace and assault and battery. (UP!) -Presidente Nixon will AttendingwereLegar,Lucien ful opposition to 1,5011 feet and of the lith district which inSERVICES WEDNESDAY
Knotts reportedly struck Sgt. send Vice President Spiro T. Poulin, Ralph Werry, E1ma ·~t's not import..-: enough to cludes Athens and Otillicothe.
There will be missionary Jack Owens.
Agnew to represent the United Ru!lsell, TllD Mees and Doo get this bill sen• • Jc\ 1o this Mrs. King 's mailing address is
290 North Second Ave., Midservices held at the Laurel Cliff Mrs. McNeil was charged States at ceremonies in Iran Collins, comcil members, Jane subcommittee."
Free Methodist Church at 7:30 with assaulting an officer and next October marking the 2,500 Walton, clerk, and Pbyliss "I personally have no quarrel dleport, 0., 45760.
Meigs chapter recenUy had a
p.m. Wednesday with Peggy disturbing the peace. She at- anniversary of lite fuunding of Hennessy, treasurer.
With the thought," Creasy said.
Russell, missionary on furlough tempted to spray Deputy lite Persian Empire.
"I just don't think we could class of live initiates from
Harrisonville, Pomeroy ,
from Mexico, speaking. She will Charles Sanders with chemical More than 55 beads of state
ever make it stick."
show slides of her work. Miss mace.
are scheduled to attend the
The panel members also Gallipolis and New Haven.
Saturday the DeMolay of
Russell is the daughter of Mr. Toles was cited for disorderly celebration in Tehran and
voted to give the Division of
Southeastern
Ohio participated
and Mrs. Guy Russell of conduct. They will appear in Persepolis, the ancient capital Israel has two official lan- F..-estry and Reclamation pow. mmmg
. . "near in the Parade of lli1Is at
Bradbury. The public is invited . . Municipal Court Wedne.'&lt;day. of the Persian Empire.
guages-Hebrew and Arabic. er 1o prevent strip
''wlique or Wlusual" areas of Nelsonville. Attending from the
SQUAD CALLED
natural beauty, scenic rivers, Meigs chapter were Bill
The Middleport emergency
public parks or areas listed in Quickel, Duane Will, Paul
squad answered a call at 3:12
Darnell, John Kauff, Jon Bunce,
a.m. Tuesday to the C. A.
Gene Davis, Bert Moshier and
Lawson home on Zuspan Hollow
Tom Cassell, Robert King, and
I
,
Road. Mr. Lawson was taken to
Mljor League ReSults
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Quickel of
Br Uniltd Press International Cheshire. Mrs . Quickel is
the Holzer Medical Center.
Notional League
the (jont111 d was cute Diane Keaton ---- 1be
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Monlreal 000 ~ 020- 6 14 1 president of the Meigs Mothers
erstwhile k~ Warbol supersbtrlJer, tntra Chicago 000 000 020- 2 8 1 club.
Violet, caught the establisbment bug: Wants to
Renko. Marshall (8) and
FRANCO
NERO
KEEPS
ADMmED MONDAY
For information concerning
Bateman;
Hands, Booham (8) ,
IT AFAMILY AFFAIR
get wed and kick her weird world --- Candy
The Pomeroy emergency
DeMolay
residents may call
Newman 181 and Cannizzaro.
squad answered a call to the
NEW YORK-Tbe pop of Vanessa Redgrave's Bergen's been beckling Women's Ub: "'l'llere WP-Renko 03-19) . LP-Hands 367-7514 in Gallipolis-Point
Albert Scholl residence on Coal wedless motherhood, Franco Nero, gets sister are !DUll! import.int issues" ... Cmdy says Kate 110-171. HRs-Bai1ey (13th I, Pleasant area, 667-3029 , in
St. at 5:12p.m. Monday. Mrs. Lyrm Redgrave as his co-t~tar in a Spanish Millett's a bore, too --- Sean Otway's "'!'be Renko (2nd) , Beckert (2nd).
Coolville area, or 992-3747 or
Frances Yeager was taken to Western; guess their relationship must be AndersGn Tapes" Is his first n only non-.James Us! Game)
992-3743 in Meigs and New
Veterans Memorial Hospital lovers-in-law ... Pat O'Brien's soldier-eoo "!:lean's Bolil flick to 1ilake m&lt;mey ... Obio GoY. Rhodes, San Diego 000 000 1QO- 1 6 1 Haven areas.
where she was admitted as a on his fifth Vietnam tour ... What's tbls about who 8llllOUDeed Life DJag had wltbdraWG its Oncinnali 100 000 Olx- 2 1 0
Acosfa. Severinsen (7) and
medical patient.
Debbie &amp; Harry? ... Doris .Day's thinking of a starUing charges (in the uticle '"llte Go;wn Kendall ; McGlothlin, Gibbon
'
The OUy S.ilicl
1972 or '73 Bdwy. musical ... ilia Miruielli's and the Mobster"), got t1is t€tcill brifwnd (8), Granger (9) and Bench.
DEVOTED TO THE
WP-Gibbon (-t-Sl. LP- Severdating a civlllaafor a change: Businessman Oiff frOiD Life: ''Life lt.s not witbdlawn any einsen 12-41. HR- May (37th) .
INTEREST OF ·
,MEIGS-Mjl.SON
jl.REji.
Lambert ... Jane Fonda's recycling her career: statement made in theartide. 'lbenlt.sbeeono
CHESTER
L.
Tjl.NNEHILL
,
CZnd Gamel
· Ex•c. Ed. ,
New Agent, lllsiness manager and press agent, settlemmt, no apoiOI!J md no retnclion_"
San Diego 200 OIQ 001- 4 1I 2
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
y~ bearded ambitious type, III1HWDed ancinnali OOJ 000 000- 3 s 1
all in a couple of months ... Mlllt dislike her
City Editor
Publ ished daily ucept
''Milo", on the Menleu Grillin TV shaw lbe Kirby (t:J-101 and Barton ·
image; Jane, loo?
Grimsley, Granger (6) and
by The Ohio Velley
other mQitgbt had the misfortune lobe given his Corrales. LP- Granger IS-6). saturdav
Publishing Company , J 11 ·
Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio
Caesars Palace has bei'" trying to team up the laltative bn with Sieve Alleu
lllere HR- Gaston (16th).
\
"5769. Business Office Phone
campiest cafe act ever: Libeface and Mae West taking t"'!"J plnse Ill" two IIIII jJ1niDg it with
- .
Phita
000 004 000- 4 11 1 992-7156, Editorial 'Phone 992
.
·
... We commend seeing herseH on the Mike japes ADeu plainly thought were sign~ of Bib Piltsbrgh 000 123 OOx- 6 14 2 21S7.
Second class postag'e pa id at 1
Douglas Show to convince Pearl Bailey never to etmic genius : They '""" cheap, witless in- Short, Selma (SJ, Wilson (6), Pomeroy, _Ohio.
Hoerner 161, Reynolds Ill and
N_afional adYerti·sing wear that overwhelming wig again .... The N. Y. teri-uptions of an eager yOWigster eames!ly and McCarver,
Ryan 16); Briles, representative Bottinelti - •
cops know- there are some 275 cockfi8hting ultimately pathetically telling his story ... Miller 161. Walker (6), Kison Gallagher. Inc., 12 East C:lnd '
Ne~ York City, New- York . '
arenas in N: Y. City for some 50,0110 Latin fans of Allen's insolent ltWIPicion that he ns "really (7), GuiSII 18) and Sall\lulllen. St.,
.
Subsc[iption
r•tes : De · I
16-81. LP- Wilson ••ve_red by carrier
where
that ugly illegality.
rolling" was ruining an wtderdog's rare nelwtlrit WP-Walker
13-Sl, avaulabte SO cents per week , ·
Perry Como tapes · his rec;ording ac- . chance."
By Motor Route where urrier 1
I'
service
availabfe: One ·
companiments in advance, plays the tapes
The Black Panthers reportedly solicited a :-:,:-~·~ :
~ ~ ~ month n not
.7S. By malt in Ohio
constanUy in car, fishing skiff or at home, and $6,000 dooation from Richard Burton; it's a Downing. Brewer 181 and a~d w. \l'a .• One vear st4.00.
thus knows every grace note of the charts before 1113 ,ter u[ guY'• record ... Huey Newton had 140 Halter ; Fc.-sch, Lemaster (7], Soc months S1 . 25 . Tl'lree
S4 .50. Subscrir,tion
' Iller
AI
· da
· ""' f
1o .. ....
- Gladding l91and Hiatt, Howard m~nt~s
he records his sol ..-.ea
Includes Sunday T mH tones. A Love - speaking tes m •• er up .,.,_ per ao- Ill. WP--Downill!: 1t6 Bl. LP- · pnce
Ser ·=,..et .
Uterative: Woody Allen's
C!~m!ly companion
IIICIIitiGn.
ForY:II 17 71.
.
I

Padres, .Reds Divide
Monday Doubleheader

.

·.~--Ne~s...in Briefs · !

Ohio"Fair Reaches Halfway Mark
(Ceatlnutd from Page I)
t5.5S per pound for Ute reserve
winner, a 205-pound Hampshire
~hown by Tami Jackson, 12,
Powell.
·
Grand~hantpion steer, a 1,071
pound charolais-angus cross
shown by Julie Townsley, 17, Of
Cedarvilltj in Greene County,
brought J4.27 per pound. Burger
King Co. paid a .total $4,568.90
'for the steer and $2,945 for the
·reserve steer, a 1,155 pound angus shown by Joy Eversole of
Baltimore in Fairfield County.
Ealon Team Wins
ln horse pull competition,
Earl Ruby and his sons of

.•

11 41

.633

69

.519 14112

6-C

66 67 .496 17'/:o
ss n .411 28

52 80 .394
West
W. L. Pel.
Oakland
86 41 .641
Kansas City 69 62 .527
Chicago
63 69 .~n
California
6J 71 .470
Mimesota
S'l 71 .454
Milwaukee
S6 75 .427
Monday's Results
(No games scheduled)

""
·...
'

~

·

...

11 60 .542 11'12

31

GB
...
16
22'1&gt;

23'12

25'12

29

Tollay's Proboble Pitchers
Oakland !Odom 9.9) at
California !Murphy 6-13) . night .
Chicago (Horten 7-91 at
Minnesota IKaat t0-11], night.
Kansas City (Fitzmorris J.2l
at Milwaukee !Lockwood 8-10),
night.
Cleveland I Farmer S-1 and
Colbert 3-2) at Detroit (Coleman 14-8 and Niekro 6-Sl (2) ,
twi-nighl.
Washington (Bosman 10-13)
at New York (Kline t0-12) ,
night.
Baltimore (Palmer 16-61 at
Boston (Peters 12-10). night.

W~oy'sG.ames
Oakland at California. night
Chicago at Minnesota, night
Kan City at Milwaukee, night
Cleveland at Detroit. night
Washington at New Y..-k
Baltimore at Boston, nig!'t
National League
East
W. L. Pd.
8056 .588
Pittsburgh
74 60 .SS2
Sl. Louis
.530
Chicago
.504
New York
Philadelphia S1 15 .432
S6 14 .431
Monlreal

~:i

"Now all of us are concel-ned
with bouncing back, " Howsam
said.
Coaches given new contracts
were Alex Grammas, former
Red slugger Ted KluSiewski,
George Scherger and Larry
Shepard.
Terms of the one-year contract signed by Anderson were
not revealed.

GB
2

Q-Who was the only Englishman to. become a Pope?
A-Adrian I IV in 1154.
Adrian was I born Nicholas
B ~eakspear.

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Tempers were flarin ' and
fists were flyin ' in the National
League Monday night as the
pressures and frustrations of
the pennant race began to
surface .
There were two major
skirmishes on the field -One in
Houston in a game between the
Astros and the Los Angeles
Dodgers and another in Philadelphia in a contest between
the Phillies and lhe Pittsburgh
Pirates -which resulted in the
ejection of three players and
the possible suspension of

another .
Fans at the Astrodome were
trea ted to a real old-fashioned
donnybrook between the Aslros
and the Dodgers. The incident,
which occurred in the first
inning, was touched off by a
fist-fight between Willie Crawford of the Dodgers and catcher
Jack Hiatt of lhe Astros, and
ended up with both benches
emptying onto the field .
Crawford and Hiatt exchanged words at home plate
after Crawford had warned Ken
Forsch about throwing too close
Lo his head, and the two men
then begann swinging at each

mher.

Umpire Paul Pryor stepped
between the two men to try and
stop them, but by the lime he
in tervened both benches had
emptied and other players were
involved in the fracas. Among
them were slrongboys Richie
Allen of the Dodgers and Doug
Rader of the Astros, who flailed
al random during the melee.
When the fighting subsidied,
both Crawford and Hiall were
ejec ted from the game and
both had sustained minor
injuries.

Perez.

" I would like to kn ow how
many more game-winning hits
Perez has than Bench this season," continued Gomez. "I bel
it's quiLe a few. "
The Wildcats open their 1971
Actually, it's not quite as
campaign Sept. 10 against the man y as Gomez thinks . Perez
SV AC defending cham pion
Eastern Eagles . Here's the 1971
schedule :
Sept. IO
Eastern
Sept. 17
at Kyger Creek Now ••• Give Your
Sept. 24
Symmes Valley
Oct.!
Green Local
More Biting Power
Oct. 8
at Hannan, W.Va. A denture adhesive can help .
Oct. l5
at Southern FASTEETH' Powder does all of
this: 1) Helps hold uppen and lowOct. 22
Nort h G a11·ta erslon&amp;er,
firmer, steadier. 2) Holds
Oct. 29
Fort Gay them more comfortably. 3l Helps
more naturally. Why worry?
Nov. 5
at Southwestern you
Use eat
FASTEETH
Dentu" Adhesive
Powder. Dentu res t hat fit are

Wildcats Have Good Size
By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Lack of overall good size and
inexperience are the major
problems facing Tom Belville,
newly appointed head football
coach at Hannan Trace High
SchooL
Belville,
a
Marsha11
University graduate, is in his
first head coaching assignment.
He was assistant football coach
at Hannan Trace two years ago .
Belville played high school
football under Coach Danny
Clark at Huntington East High
School.
He is
assisted
by Danny
Cornell.alsb
a Marshall
graduate.
'
·
Gone from last year's squad
which compiled a 2-2-1 record in
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference and 3-5-1 record
overall are Steve Daniels, 210
pound center ; Jerry Waugh, 210
pound end ; Tom Beaver, 175
pound guard-tackle; Wayne
Queen, 160 pound halfback ;
David Spangler , 160 pound
halfback; Larry Cremeans, 155
pound quarterback ; Gary
Michael, 180 pound guard and
Rick Bickle, 205 pound tackle.
Returning lettermen include
two seniurs, three juniors and
lour sophomores. They are:
seniors, Delbert Cisco, 150 !h.
halfback and Bennie Clary, 210

21
21

West
W. L. Pel. GB
Sa n Francisoo 78 S6 .582 ···
Los Angeles 70 64 .522 8 ·
·- Atlanta
70 67 .511 9'h
.' Cincinnati
67 70 .489 12'h
· Houston
6A 10 .478 14
San Dil!90
51 84 .378 27'1&gt;
Monday's Results
Cincinnati 2 San Diego 1 (lstl
San Diego 4 Cincinnati 3 (2nd)
St. Louis 3 New York 2
Los Angeles 3 Houston 2
Pittsburgh 6 Philadelphia 4
Montreal6 Chicago 2
(Only games schtduled)
Today's Proboble Pitchers
Philadelphia (Lersch -t-121 at
Pittsburgh (Moose 9-71, night.
·Montreal (Morloo 9-14 and
Strohmayer S-SI at Chicago
(Pappas 16-11 and Holtzman 9121 21.
New York (McAndrew 0-S or
Ryan 9-111 at St. Louis (Reuss
12-121. night.
San Diego I Roberts 11-IA) at
Cincinnati (Simpson 3-SJ, night.
Los Angeles IAtuander S-41
at Hovslon !Cook 0-31, night.
Atlanta !Stooe 6-41 at San
FranCisco (.Perry 13,\0). night.

Attenta
11 SanatFrancisco
IJJS Angeles
Houllln night

losses.

Kirby has never had a bad
season - against the Reds.
The hard throwing righthander's victory Monday night was
his third in a row over the
Reds this season and boosted
ill
his lifetime record to 9-4 .
"Labor Day!
But , as Sparky Anderson
pmn ted out, the Reds have one
Where~ my
consolation Lhis season.
hammock!"
"We"re not the only Learn
Kirby's beating litis year," said We doubt if there is any
greater satisfaction in life
the Reds manager.
than that from r~gular
One Shy of Mark
creafive
work
which
Th e Reds bunched lour of provides necessary goods
their five hits off Kirby in the and services for our
th ird inning to score all three fellowmen . This Is why we
of their runs and wipe out the honor all workers of mind
2-0 lead taken by the Padres on and muscle on our national
LABOR DAY holiday.
Gaston 's first inning homer .
Through the last six innings
Kirby didn '1 yield a hit.
Padre relief pitcher AI Severinsen was the victim of May's
37th homer of the season in the
first game. The homer left the
Red first baseman one shy of . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

DowningChilds

Agency. Inc.

,-------------------~

An unexpected expense?

FALSE TEETH

'IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
TO
OHIO POWER CUSTOMERS!

• I

•

A Planfted Service Interruption Will Be
Your present car will never again
bring so much in trade. And your
Ford Team has the year's biggest
savings on all '71 Fords. Hurry
for best selection of the year's
best-sellers-now at the
year's best deals.

Necessary on Thursday, September 2,
'

'

1971 From 5 .AM until 6 AM •
Weather Permitting

Sporty Mulling ...
America's No . ~ fun·drlving car .
Now clearance-priced!

The Areas Affected Are As Follows:

Ford LTD .. . for qu iet-riding

Pomeroy • Minersville • Syracuse • Racine

lu~eury.

Best- seller in its class.

This Planned Interruption Is Necessary to

Ford Country Clearance en_
ds soon! ,.

·Improve Service In Thesa ·Areas I

Wt:dnesdty's Games

Manlreal ot Chicago
Philadelphia at Pitts. ~ighl_
York at St. Louos, ntght
San DiegO ol CinciMali. night

.318.
"That 's hts history, .even
when he W/:1 ~ ifl the minors,"
said Gomez . '' He seems Lo have
a good season every other
year .
Then, there 's Clay Kirby, the
Padres n ghthandcr who beat
the Reds in the second game to
gai n his 13th victory against 10

lb. tackle ; juniors, Paul Montgomery, 140 lb . cornerback:
Don Lambert, 1351b. cer.ter and
Dean Barry, 180 lb. tackle;
sophomores, Garland Montgomery , 145 lb . ha lfback; John
Montgomery , 145 lb. guard ;
Don Wells, 1751b. end and Rick
Saunders, 150 lb. defensive end.
Mike Caldwell, a 6-5, 175
pound junior, is expected to be
·
Llle sLarttng
quart er b ac k ·
Olher prospects fighting lor
· hts an d postttons
··
jobs,their we1g
. 992-2171
125 E. Main
are:
POMEROY, 0.
170
easential to. health. See your dentist
Rs M'k w·
SENIO
t
e
tse,
,
___
__
_
_
_
_
_
_:re~r:ul:•r~ty~.
-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
guard; J oe Johnson , 145, ..... ,
halfback ; Jim Roach, 175,
•
fullback and Bruce Dray, 150, '
guard.
JUNIORS - Kenny Williams,
140, end; Julius Koehler, 130,
end; and Mike Trout, 225,
tackle .
SOPHOMORES ·_ Steve
Wal ters, 150, fullback; John
Cardwell, 205, lacl&lt;le ; Randy
Halley, 135, halfback and
Robert Saunders, 135, halfback .
FRESHMEN - Mark Swain,
125, quarterback; Paul Barry,
150, tackle; Billy Hale, 150,
Lackie; Wayne Hesson, 160,
tackle ; D. J . McGuire, 130, end ;
Johnny Queen, 125, halfback;
Kevin Swain, 120, halfback and
Cltris Waugh, 130, ~uard .

8
ll'h

tile scut'e tied 3-all and Pete
Rose on second.
" Like I said ," repealed Gomez, " I could have wound up a
goal beca use Bench almost beat
me."
Gomez was rememberin g
Bench's hard liner winch Padre leftfielder Ivan Murrell
hauled down for the thi rd out
of the inning .
The Padres ·then went on Lo
gain a split of the doubleheader by winning 4-3 on Clarence
Gaslon's ron -producing double
in the ninth inning afler Lee
May 's eighth inning homer
gave the Cincinnati Reds a 21v.ictory in the first game .
"I look upon Perez as one of
the best clutch hitters in baseball ," said Gomez . "I know
that when I was coaching with
the Los Angeles Dodgers they
looked upon him the same
way."
Already Decided
Even before May went down
swinging for the sec.ond out in
the eighth inning Gomez had
made up his mind to walk

lois care-er high set in 1969 .
" lL-e hit that ball S&lt;t hard it
almost went . through the concretc,11 sald Perez.
May's homer, after hitting the
concrete facing, ahnost bounced
back tu the infield.
" I couldn't say whether it did
or not, " said Lee . "I quit
watching after I see the ball
clear the fence. 11
ll will be Wayne Simpson
against Fred Norman when the
two teams reswne their series
tonight.
...- - - - - - - - - .

L

Thank You

.

.·
·--------~--~-~~~~-~~------"!'"'----

KE'TH GOBLE FORD INC.
•

461 SOUTH THI~D ST., MIDIWOIT,...,

�•

• - , . Dlil)' St

a:,..,,l'w&gt;t&lt;OJ'_..~ alia. Augu.t ll. 1!171

.

••

,

'fbi! Daily Sentinel,l'mleroy-Middlepoct, Ohio, Allgustll, 1!171 '

Win or Lose State Fair Participants Never Forget
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Everybody can't be a wiimer,
and winners Mrs. Ralph
Mc~Wtzie of Racine and I
-•-eren't at
semi-finals of tbe
All Ohio Bake-A-Rama Staged
Sanrday at the Obio State Fair.
But - we came home rich in
eqterience, some good, some
bad, and scads of advice for

try to be original sure doe one in wltidt }'011 bat;e tunpctiti•"'· l'lte rules specify pic tlivisinr~, a black raspberry
l illY recipe was) . Stick to a ,1., &lt;-.....ly c..., lest product is thai tloe ""''estant must fo,Uow wun. TIJC wmners eat·h recetved

next year's Meigs County
champion pie and cake balers.
Mrs. Mc.Kenzie made a honey
apple pie, and I bated a Toasted
Pe.:an Delight.
My "Delight" was a disaster
- and all because I failed to
have my oven calibrated during
llte practice bakes.
I learned many things. First,

ure

lle\'t"f' , nt'Vl'l"

perfected recipe where the
in~redienl me~menLs ' and
oven temperature are specified.
Ori~inality counts for nothing in
the ll'tlring of the judges.
The cOntesl ranges are
c-dlibrated every morning and
are completely accurate. Being

is a ua: 'ty.
After omting my rmpe, I
bakedlloecaleinanO¥eRaiJZ'i
~ r..- 2S.J11 minutes. This
i.&lt; """•Iindir:atedm the recipe
submiUed at the iime 1 enleftd
the prodnc ~ in the county

"'-'-'UI'ale

Birthday Celebrated _.
The birthday anniversary of
Mr~ .
Alma Johnson. of
Springfield was observed
during a recent meeting of !he
Kill Club at the home of Mrs.
Veda Davis.
A decorated cake, ice cream
and coffee were served with tbe
napkins carrying out the birthday lheme. Contributing Ill tbe
bir!JtdaY fund besides Mrs.
Johnson were Mrs. Davis and
Miss Joyce Ebersbach.
Mrs. Garnet Harbrecht
conducted tbe meeting during
which time it wa5 noted that a
Dower has been sent Ill Mrs.
Annjce Oblinger, a patient at
the Medical Center, Gallipolis.
The hospitalization of Mrs.
Ellen Ebersbach at Hol!er was

reported and a flower will be
sentiD her. Get-well cards ,.....,
signed for both.
Mrs. F1orence W'mdon will
host the next meeting. Games
were played with prizes going ~
Mrs. Lucille Vaughan, Mrs.
Harbrecht and Mrs. Wlndon.
TILe Lraveling prize contributed
by Mrs. Ebersbach w~ W&lt;lll by
Mrs. Johnson.
Others at tbe meeting were
Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs. Etbel

Clifford, Mrs. Feme Ranis,
Lancaster, and Clleryl Lehew.
Mrs. Sylvia Byer of Middlep(wt
called during the evening. Mrs.
Johnson and Mrs. flarri&lt;l were
weekend guests at tbe Davis ·
home.

_ _.,jlr

Watson Farm Scene
Of Hustlers Picnic
The Ohio River camp sile of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
toea~ on tbe Watsm farm was
lhe setting for a potluck dinner
of tbe ~PPY Hustlers Class of
• tbe Wesleyan United Methodist
Church, Racine, Friday night.
The Rev. Dale Mc&lt;lurg gave
grace. Mrs. Owen Watson

presided at

•

MRS. RALPH McKENZIE d. Racine, Meigs Olunty
champion pie bater, participated Salmday in the semi-final
All Ohio Bak~-Rama at the Ohio Slate Fair_ Here sbe
worts on her "MilD's Apple Honey Pie".

~

meeting which opened with tbe
Lord's Pr~yer ~unison. A getwell card was signed for Mrs.
Ora Hill's mother, Mrs.
Cramlet, who has been released
~:ital:eterans Memorial

A social evening was spent by
the members and guests, Miss
Alicia Knightstep of Columbus,
granddaughler of Mrs. Lavinia
Simpson, Mrs. Dennis Palmer,
Radne, Mr. and Mrs. Roush
1nd daughter, Nancy of
Columbus.
Members attending besides
Judge and Mrs. John C. those named were Mrs. Dale
Bacon attended a reunion of the McOurg, Mrs. Lillian lee, Mrs.
dellcendents of Jaalab Custer, Grace Krider, Mrs. Grace

.
.
Silver In vets were presented
to five members of tbe Pas!
MalnlnsofEvangeline atapter,
Order of lhe Eastern Star, m
recognition of membership of
over 50 years.
Receiving tbe trivets were
Mrs. Evelyn Lewis, 57 years;
Mrs. Grace French, Mrs. Helen
Reynolds and Mrs. Beul~h

Custer Reunion
Held Sunday

Filling:

3 cups diced apples
2 tablespoons lelllOn juice
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
~. teaspoon nutmeg
•. teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons Tapioca or I
Lablespuon flour
2 Lablespuons of honey
2 tablespoons butter or
margeriqe
'

Vaughan, a patient at the Sl.
Joseph Hospital in ParllErsbw-g. A Dower was also sml to
Mrs. Pullen.
The SepL 30 meeling wiD be
held at tbe home of Mrs.
Hughes. Mrs. King and Mrs.
Rosemary · Lyons se.-ved
homemade ~ cream and cate
during a social boor.

Mix inJ7edienls for ftlling and
puur inlo pie crus!. Dot with

oleo. Mmsten edge _of lower
crust. Ease on top. Trim 'rZ inch
larger than p.e plate and Dule
lhe edge. ·
.
.
. .
Wrap edge wtth foil !" keep
~.., edge from browmng too
much wttil tbe apples are
.
cooked. Bake 5:i mmutes.
As for tbe Toasted Pecan
Delight redpe.• I. am c~tly
in tbe process of havmg my
oven c~brated. As soon as I
determn~e tbe ccrrect ~g
temper-ature,,I11 be putting~
rectpe m tbe 'Fun wtth Foods
column for those of you who
have requested 11.

2 one-.hird cups presifted aUpurpose nour
I teaspoon salt
I cup plus three tablespoons of
vegetable shorlening
6 tablespoons water.
Using a pastry cutter, cut in
the vegetable shorlening -into
the flour until mixture is about
the size of peas. Add 2
Lablespuons water at a time.
Toss with a fork. Do not 'stir.
Work dough to form a smooth
ball .

Divide in hall. Roll lightly on
floured board II&gt; inch larger
than inverted nine inch pie pan.

A R'tlmtiJ R'(Jrty

.
.

PORK LOIN

USED CARS
~l)RI)

FAIRIME 500

Social
Calendar
1UESDAY
ANNUAL meeting of the
Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society
Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. at
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company meeting

room. -

Hugbes. _
_
Mrs. King gave a reading on
friendship to open the meeting
held at tbe MaS&lt;HUC Temple.
Canis were sent to Mrs. Cora

Pullen and

"

GMAC FINANCING
tn-5342 .
PrtrMn&gt;y
Open E-ngs 'Til I :M
TitS P.M. Sal.

BONELESS

GROUND GROUND STEW MEAT
BEEF _ CHUCK

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Neutzling of Syracuse are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Cynthia Renee, born
Aug. 24 at .tbe Holzer Medical
Center. The baby weighed
seven powtds, eight ounces.
Grandparenls are Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence King of Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Neutzling, Mason, W.
Va. Mrs. Elwood Pbillips of
Middleport is a greatgrandmother.

Middleport

~********•···~

t

i
t

•

Mr. and Mrs. Earl ){night
returned Friday from New
Philadelphia wbere they attended the "Trumpet in lhe
.
ot
Land" and visi ted pomls
interest m the vicinity. Earlier
in Ute month the couple went to
Bardstown; Ky. for a perfurmance of "The Stephen
·- .s•nrv"
FusKr
-·• .
Mrs. Katie Gordon · of
Columbus has been the guest of
Mrs. James Murray. Sbe was
among the out4-IOWD guests at
tber
tlteu.dtett-Fry weddmg. 0
~nt ~uesls of Mrs. Murray
~
.

:
it
:
...
::
..,
•
:
il
it
..
it
il
it
it
it
it
it
it

* * *:
- Anonymous •

il

lfS Quid!! r
- !
....., .,.
DRIVI!!~•_
N

BANKING

.
=:.::-:::~:h:~:. t:
Ralph Carson d. Ravenswood. -fC
Mrs. Elaine Knight and Mr.
and Mrs. James Knight and -fC
family (If Covinl!ton, Ky. were -fC
re&lt;-ent vlllillli'S fl_Mrs_. M.abe
. _.1.
Peuil. It was Ute~r f:rst VISit ~

!

'

!..,

t.,

Fridays Only
il
The Drive- In Window il
. . .ts Open
..
it
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
it
( ContinuOl!Siy)
il
it
Other Banking Hours f 1o it .
l and 5 lo 7 as usual on it
Fridays.
it
•it

.

FARMERS
BANK :
and
~•'VINGS .l"ft it
_..
""- il
POMEROY. OHIO
Member FOtC
Member Federal
- Reserve System

·:

il
il

:

-r*****"********~

1.
Admiral announces
the Ice 'n' Easy
doar - a new door
to profit with' a new
way to store and
se.r ve ice .
The
separate dour lets
the ice out. keeps
lite cold in.
Inside, there's an
· Automatic
Ice
Milker (optional on
20.3-cu. fl. model!.
plus plenty of nJOm
for juice. soup. ice
cream and frozen
desserts. :

it The ingredients to heallh il
it and long life are: Good il
il temper, open air; en- il
joyable labor. little care. :

Personal Notes

ht:rc in 19 years.

A Thought t
For Today :

l,

.

..' '
-·
f

: '

2 •.

FuRN ITU RE

JEWELRY SJORE .

M
' IDDLEPORT
•
.
,

.Pomeroy

OHIO

DURKEE "Refrigerated"

STUFFED OLIVES

28 Ol BTLS.

COCA-COLA

I

•

BISCUITS
TOPP POP

12 OZ. BTlS.

•

FAVORITE BREAD

5

CUBE BEEF
STEAKEnES
16 OZ. PKG.
C

c

I

FLORIDA CIIRUS lUND

s

CONCENTRATED LIME, ORANGE, TANGERINE

Reg. 7fJ

LOAVES

$ 00

49~

59~

I

16

•oz. •
BTLS.

FAVORITE lARGE SIZE

2 PAK
.'

ICE M K

FAIRMONT
SALADS

4

~gal

MACARONI, POTATO,
CoLE SlAW, FRUIT JELLO

c

...

~---

· SEALTEST

MILK - ~gal 53~

PARFAITS

12 oz. '
CONTAINER

300Z

CRT.

LOAVES ' '

FOR

•

59'

99C

. gat

EGGS

BREAD

=

~ Ga Jug

SCOT LAD

GRADE
MEDIUM

AT MARK V

•

-------•

c

15 Ol PKG.

WATERMELONS

6 FlAVORS

AT MARK V

'--------..---~--------------------------.;,;;;.,;;;;,;;;..;,;;;;;;...il-_
•

PEACHES

_MUMDS

Real proof of famous
Admiral quality

""-I
I
r.:U"'r r:r:: ;'~,Ak':'~~~!~~~~l ~~J~~~b~~.:/Refrigernlor ,..,....,. in

BEEF STEAKETTES_

FRESH RIPE

3 lb. BASKET

SPECIAL

•

WAFFLE

lHROW AWAY BOTTUS
•

1-LB. PKG.

lb.

s

c

'

I~

7 oz.
. JAR

Reg, 59'

~-

GOESSLER

29f;

I

OCEAN PERCH .

BANANAS

4 BARs49~

----

A separ.a te section ,
holds all the other
frozen foods. stays
cold when lop door
is ollen. New Admiral solid freezer
shelves
mtrumtZe
cold air loss when
this door is open.
These full width
aluminum shelves
clean up with one
quick wjpe and lift
out for storing
larger items.
Admiral Automatic
Door Oosers on a II
three doors.

GOLDEN RIPE

SOAP

• ..
~

CAPE ANN

WOODBURY

lHRO\lAWAY

BA K-E •
Courl St.

Reg. 3r

'

CANS

FROZEN

·pEANUTS

YOUR CHOICE

•'

c

FRA K_~l~
MARSHMALLOW

WHOLE KERNEL YELLOW CORN,
PEAS, GREEN PEANS,
SPINACH, APPLE SAUCE

IENE

-ROLL SAUSAGE

BOLOGNA
lb.
9~

We have sliced to order L~&amp;nch
"Me.ts ai ourcMeat Counlel'

SUPERIOR
ALL MEAT

SUPERIOR NO. 1

SUPERIOR

~ ·

3.

$
7 lb.

7

lb.

~

lb.

ANY AMOUNT
lb.

MY AMOUNT
lb.

J

Inside this door is a
whole new system
for storing foods.
There's a place for
everything, from
butter to zuc:dlini.
The Frigid Meat
Keeper and glideout egg basket are
centered easy
in,
easy
out'.
Crisper and Fruit
baskets are both
gleaming
porcelain.
New
tempered
glass
cantilever
shelves are a
breeze to adjust
and even easier to
keep
sparkling
dean.

LUNCH
MEATS
ASSORTED

Superiols .USDA Choice Beef

x.

Rowena

Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Phelps
of Rutland are announcing tbe
birth of their first cbiJd, a son,
on Aug. 21, at tbe Hol!er
Medical Cenler, Gallij)olis.
TILe seven pound, four ounce
infant has been named Earl
Eugene Phelps, Jr. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Priddy, Rutland, and tbe
paternal grandparents are
Annis Phelps of Pomeroy and
Mrs. Ethel Phelps of Garden
Grove, Calif.

-PORK
NECK BONES

SUPERIOR

··you'll like ~r Quality
Way of Doing Business."

· SCOT LAD

First Child

fl(eutzling Welcome
New Daughter

SUPERIOR

'1495
Karr &amp; Viii landt

Phelps Welcome

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge No. 164
F&amp;AM Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
All Master Masons invited.
THURSDAY
LABOR DAY
EV ANGEIJNE Chapler 172
Due
to
the Labor Day holiday
O.E.S. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Party follow ing meeting in there will be no garbage pickup
honor of Mrs. Edith Bowman. on Monday in Rutland. 1be
RED CROSs Tiluraday, Sept. regular Monday pickup will be
2at 7:30p.m. in the cafeleria of made on Tuesday.

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Alfred Justus, Red Cross
representative from Colwnbus,
wiU be present.

Mrs .

c

h

H. T. Coupe, gold lin ish.
matching interior. ladory

Swimming instruction, a-ails • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
from closs-a~-hand materials,
boaung, smgmg, follt dancmg,
first aid, hiking, and tips on
good g~ w"':" among the
daily actiVIties enJOyed by tbe
girls.
Thirty-five _volun~ from
tbe ~our Rivers Gtrl Scout
Council had charge of tbe
camping program.
TILe 12 Meigs County girls
attended under sponsorship of
Meigs County organizations.
1beir camping equipment and
necessary clothing were•
provided by IJ'oqls of tbe Big
Bend Neighborhood.

•
m1ra • u

~

'

THE N EW 3 DOOR

each one with a memory folder
in addition to tbe trivet.
Highlighls of lheir year ~
worthy matron were related by
each one. A hwnorous reading
.
b M
Mary
was gtven y
rs.

PICNIC
HAM

.WHOLE

11153 from Johnstown, Pa., beld Mrs. ....
Mattie
Circle.
Bowman, 52 years, Mrs. Bessie
·~~~~-~in~
~~~~.~~~~;~~~.---------------------~~--~~-~~--~~-~~-~~----~
al
the
Denver
Hotel,
King, read a poen wn.tten by
w-:~~!:e- ROlland Cub Scouts Have :S·~or!ar:din ::~~
•
•
.•

and Mona Thompson, Cable,
~l
Ohio; Ted and Dorothy
Dowling, Otalmers and Sue
Members of Middleport Cub
Newman, Nevin and Veda Scout Pack :i45 and several of
Barnes, Dayton, Ohio; Nelle h .
. ed
Murphy • Cinclnnati; Ola t etr parents enJOY
a
swimming party and wiener
Custer, Selma, Ohio; Aubry and roast Sunday evening at tbe
Bea Pyles, Troy, Ohio; Harry Middl port Comm .ty Part
and Eula Wamsley, Clara
Lea:ne Sebo ":'nd Do~
:=:..~_George Bacon, Vaughan were lifeguards for
the pool party atlended by
Jllllge Bacm'smolher, Clara,
. tel .., cub
Is
81, a grancldaughler, was oldest approxuna Y ""
scou
lineal descendant in at- and Mr ·and Mrs. Selwyn Smith,
Mrs. Leslie Whitlington, and
tendance.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Francis.

CHOICE

SUPERIOR

FREEZER SALE

do
Roll top the same way only
cut venls for steam to escape. . ._ _ _.,._ _ _..

A birthday party, a swim
meet, a Sandy Bend show-&lt;&gt;ff
were highlights of tbe week at
the Camp Sandy Bend Appalachian Heritage Camp attended by 12 Meigs County
disadvantaged girls.
An exchan.ge of handmade
gifts among the 81 girls attending the camp and a special
gift for eaclt girl from donors to
the program were features of
Ute birthday party.
1be show-off was a tour of
each camp unit to view art and
craft displays followed by a
prGgi""' of songs and skits
around a tamp fu-e.

USDR

ICES!

This Weell's Special

air.

BACON
'I

••

67

All Meats Are

31b.s oo

••·.IVER MARK v

Crust:

·Sandr.11
Bend Vjc'ho·w-o)n
'J'
'JJ :t~Lr~:h ~::.::. and

50 ear Memvers
L
Recezve
• Trivets

the buslness

,..n

Ote redpe as submiu.ed. No $100 and
COillpete tn the
cltanKes are permitted.
finals oo Saturday. ·
Saturday when I bated in Contestants are ~ not
curnpetition at .lhe Slate Fair it on ly on prepar~lio_n, the
soon became apparent that tbe finished produ~ l. tls at325degree oven in an absolutely u-activeness, RIO!stness, lexaccurate elecLric range was not wre, flavor, J'lc. bul on the
hot enough for tbe cake to bate actual presentation to lhe
properly.
judges. Many of the presenMy specified 30 minutes .lations were elaborate. Moot all
baking tinne extended to 43 of tbe cakeS -..ere displayed on
resuhing in 13 minutes of tot.al pedistaled plates, many with
frustration as not only three matching candlebolders. Some
judges looked on, but as hun- did tabl&lt;1 seUings in colors to
dreds of fair speclatlll'S pas ei harmonize with their product.
ooo-by-me not five feet from One featured glass grapes in
wbere I was.baking. By now you color similar to her cake plate.
blow that contest baking is just A cherry tree replica was used
nol my cup of tea.
wiLh one of lhe· pies. Silver
I somehow had the feeling Serving pieces were displayed
that I was a lonely amateur by several, and fresh fruits and
among 18 profession$. But it fresh Dowers were attractively
wasn't aU bad. 1be J;:lecLric arranged to COillpliment the
Company home economists who cake or pie.
...-ved as hostesses for tbe
Tile Lawrence County woman
conteslants were gracious and who won with tbe Christmas
extremely helpful.
cake used a pedistai cake plale
Working at a table next to in milk glass with red velvet
mine malting an oatmeal cake ribbon laced, through the open
Cdre same recipe which took - work edging. She placed this on
Addalou Lewis Ill the semi- a green mat and at tbe side
6nals last year) was a com- displayed a deep green large
pletely unperturbed 16 year old candle with green and red
boy.
velvet braid encircling lhe base.
On tbe other side was a
A highlight of tbe afternoon
woman from Lawrence County awards presentation was the
who w~ the winner with a introduction of Miss Ohio Danish Chrisunas Cake. In the Lauri Lee Schaefer, who will

appear in 1110 Mis; Amerita
l'aAcantllll Sept. 11. Laune won
her first title in preliminary
pa~enlc-ompetition in Pomeroy.
TIIC recipe for Mom's Apple
Honey Pie which wlill $50 and a
blue ribbon for Mrs. McKenzie
in the Meigs County competition
·
f ll s .
~~·~- .
MOM'S APPLE
HONEY PIE
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

I

SUPERIOR
.BUDGET NO. 1

s

SUPER MARKET· Open-Dai~ 9-to -~0 · Sun. 10 to 10
We AN:epl Federal food S1um1).~

Corner Mill atlll Sec:ooo Sts.

..

PHmlE: 992-3480

.

" We Reserve 1he Righl1 0 Limit Ouonlltie s''

.

MIDDLEPORT, Q."

, \ "f

�•

• - , . Dlil)' St

a:,..,,l'w&gt;t&lt;OJ'_..~ alia. Augu.t ll. 1!171

.

••

,

'fbi! Daily Sentinel,l'mleroy-Middlepoct, Ohio, Allgustll, 1!171 '

Win or Lose State Fair Participants Never Forget
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Everybody can't be a wiimer,
and winners Mrs. Ralph
Mc~Wtzie of Racine and I
-•-eren't at
semi-finals of tbe
All Ohio Bake-A-Rama Staged
Sanrday at the Obio State Fair.
But - we came home rich in
eqterience, some good, some
bad, and scads of advice for

try to be original sure doe one in wltidt }'011 bat;e tunpctiti•"'· l'lte rules specify pic tlivisinr~, a black raspberry
l illY recipe was) . Stick to a ,1., &lt;-.....ly c..., lest product is thai tloe ""''estant must fo,Uow wun. TIJC wmners eat·h recetved

next year's Meigs County
champion pie and cake balers.
Mrs. Mc.Kenzie made a honey
apple pie, and I bated a Toasted
Pe.:an Delight.
My "Delight" was a disaster
- and all because I failed to
have my oven calibrated during
llte practice bakes.
I learned many things. First,

ure

lle\'t"f' , nt'Vl'l"

perfected recipe where the
in~redienl me~menLs ' and
oven temperature are specified.
Ori~inality counts for nothing in
the ll'tlring of the judges.
The cOntesl ranges are
c-dlibrated every morning and
are completely accurate. Being

is a ua: 'ty.
After omting my rmpe, I
bakedlloecaleinanO¥eRaiJZ'i
~ r..- 2S.J11 minutes. This
i.&lt; """•Iindir:atedm the recipe
submiUed at the iime 1 enleftd
the prodnc ~ in the county

"'-'-'UI'ale

Birthday Celebrated _.
The birthday anniversary of
Mr~ .
Alma Johnson. of
Springfield was observed
during a recent meeting of !he
Kill Club at the home of Mrs.
Veda Davis.
A decorated cake, ice cream
and coffee were served with tbe
napkins carrying out the birthday lheme. Contributing Ill tbe
bir!JtdaY fund besides Mrs.
Johnson were Mrs. Davis and
Miss Joyce Ebersbach.
Mrs. Garnet Harbrecht
conducted tbe meeting during
which time it wa5 noted that a
Dower has been sent Ill Mrs.
Annjce Oblinger, a patient at
the Medical Center, Gallipolis.
The hospitalization of Mrs.
Ellen Ebersbach at Hol!er was

reported and a flower will be
sentiD her. Get-well cards ,.....,
signed for both.
Mrs. F1orence W'mdon will
host the next meeting. Games
were played with prizes going ~
Mrs. Lucille Vaughan, Mrs.
Harbrecht and Mrs. Wlndon.
TILe Lraveling prize contributed
by Mrs. Ebersbach w~ W&lt;lll by
Mrs. Johnson.
Others at tbe meeting were
Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs. Etbel

Clifford, Mrs. Feme Ranis,
Lancaster, and Clleryl Lehew.
Mrs. Sylvia Byer of Middlep(wt
called during the evening. Mrs.
Johnson and Mrs. flarri&lt;l were
weekend guests at tbe Davis ·
home.

_ _.,jlr

Watson Farm Scene
Of Hustlers Picnic
The Ohio River camp sile of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
toea~ on tbe Watsm farm was
lhe setting for a potluck dinner
of tbe ~PPY Hustlers Class of
• tbe Wesleyan United Methodist
Church, Racine, Friday night.
The Rev. Dale Mc&lt;lurg gave
grace. Mrs. Owen Watson

presided at

•

MRS. RALPH McKENZIE d. Racine, Meigs Olunty
champion pie bater, participated Salmday in the semi-final
All Ohio Bak~-Rama at the Ohio Slate Fair_ Here sbe
worts on her "MilD's Apple Honey Pie".

~

meeting which opened with tbe
Lord's Pr~yer ~unison. A getwell card was signed for Mrs.
Ora Hill's mother, Mrs.
Cramlet, who has been released
~:ital:eterans Memorial

A social evening was spent by
the members and guests, Miss
Alicia Knightstep of Columbus,
granddaughler of Mrs. Lavinia
Simpson, Mrs. Dennis Palmer,
Radne, Mr. and Mrs. Roush
1nd daughter, Nancy of
Columbus.
Members attending besides
Judge and Mrs. John C. those named were Mrs. Dale
Bacon attended a reunion of the McOurg, Mrs. Lillian lee, Mrs.
dellcendents of Jaalab Custer, Grace Krider, Mrs. Grace

.
.
Silver In vets were presented
to five members of tbe Pas!
MalnlnsofEvangeline atapter,
Order of lhe Eastern Star, m
recognition of membership of
over 50 years.
Receiving tbe trivets were
Mrs. Evelyn Lewis, 57 years;
Mrs. Grace French, Mrs. Helen
Reynolds and Mrs. Beul~h

Custer Reunion
Held Sunday

Filling:

3 cups diced apples
2 tablespoons lelllOn juice
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
~. teaspoon nutmeg
•. teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons Tapioca or I
Lablespuon flour
2 Lablespuons of honey
2 tablespoons butter or
margeriqe
'

Vaughan, a patient at the Sl.
Joseph Hospital in ParllErsbw-g. A Dower was also sml to
Mrs. Pullen.
The SepL 30 meeling wiD be
held at tbe home of Mrs.
Hughes. Mrs. King and Mrs.
Rosemary · Lyons se.-ved
homemade ~ cream and cate
during a social boor.

Mix inJ7edienls for ftlling and
puur inlo pie crus!. Dot with

oleo. Mmsten edge _of lower
crust. Ease on top. Trim 'rZ inch
larger than p.e plate and Dule
lhe edge. ·
.
.
. .
Wrap edge wtth foil !" keep
~.., edge from browmng too
much wttil tbe apples are
.
cooked. Bake 5:i mmutes.
As for tbe Toasted Pecan
Delight redpe.• I. am c~tly
in tbe process of havmg my
oven c~brated. As soon as I
determn~e tbe ccrrect ~g
temper-ature,,I11 be putting~
rectpe m tbe 'Fun wtth Foods
column for those of you who
have requested 11.

2 one-.hird cups presifted aUpurpose nour
I teaspoon salt
I cup plus three tablespoons of
vegetable shorlening
6 tablespoons water.
Using a pastry cutter, cut in
the vegetable shorlening -into
the flour until mixture is about
the size of peas. Add 2
Lablespuons water at a time.
Toss with a fork. Do not 'stir.
Work dough to form a smooth
ball .

Divide in hall. Roll lightly on
floured board II&gt; inch larger
than inverted nine inch pie pan.

A R'tlmtiJ R'(Jrty

.
.

PORK LOIN

USED CARS
~l)RI)

FAIRIME 500

Social
Calendar
1UESDAY
ANNUAL meeting of the
Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society
Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. at
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company meeting

room. -

Hugbes. _
_
Mrs. King gave a reading on
friendship to open the meeting
held at tbe MaS&lt;HUC Temple.
Canis were sent to Mrs. Cora

Pullen and

"

GMAC FINANCING
tn-5342 .
PrtrMn&gt;y
Open E-ngs 'Til I :M
TitS P.M. Sal.

BONELESS

GROUND GROUND STEW MEAT
BEEF _ CHUCK

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Neutzling of Syracuse are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Cynthia Renee, born
Aug. 24 at .tbe Holzer Medical
Center. The baby weighed
seven powtds, eight ounces.
Grandparenls are Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence King of Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Neutzling, Mason, W.
Va. Mrs. Elwood Pbillips of
Middleport is a greatgrandmother.

Middleport

~********•···~

t

i
t

•

Mr. and Mrs. Earl ){night
returned Friday from New
Philadelphia wbere they attended the "Trumpet in lhe
.
ot
Land" and visi ted pomls
interest m the vicinity. Earlier
in Ute month the couple went to
Bardstown; Ky. for a perfurmance of "The Stephen
·- .s•nrv"
FusKr
-·• .
Mrs. Katie Gordon · of
Columbus has been the guest of
Mrs. James Murray. Sbe was
among the out4-IOWD guests at
tber
tlteu.dtett-Fry weddmg. 0
~nt ~uesls of Mrs. Murray
~
.

:
it
:
...
::
..,
•
:
il
it
..
it
il
it
it
it
it
it
it

* * *:
- Anonymous •

il

lfS Quid!! r
- !
....., .,.
DRIVI!!~•_
N

BANKING

.
=:.::-:::~:h:~:. t:
Ralph Carson d. Ravenswood. -fC
Mrs. Elaine Knight and Mr.
and Mrs. James Knight and -fC
family (If Covinl!ton, Ky. were -fC
re&lt;-ent vlllillli'S fl_Mrs_. M.abe
. _.1.
Peuil. It was Ute~r f:rst VISit ~

!

'

!..,

t.,

Fridays Only
il
The Drive- In Window il
. . .ts Open
..
it
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
it
( ContinuOl!Siy)
il
it
Other Banking Hours f 1o it .
l and 5 lo 7 as usual on it
Fridays.
it
•it

.

FARMERS
BANK :
and
~•'VINGS .l"ft it
_..
""- il
POMEROY. OHIO
Member FOtC
Member Federal
- Reserve System

·:

il
il

:

-r*****"********~

1.
Admiral announces
the Ice 'n' Easy
doar - a new door
to profit with' a new
way to store and
se.r ve ice .
The
separate dour lets
the ice out. keeps
lite cold in.
Inside, there's an
· Automatic
Ice
Milker (optional on
20.3-cu. fl. model!.
plus plenty of nJOm
for juice. soup. ice
cream and frozen
desserts. :

it The ingredients to heallh il
it and long life are: Good il
il temper, open air; en- il
joyable labor. little care. :

Personal Notes

ht:rc in 19 years.

A Thought t
For Today :

l,

.

..' '
-·
f

: '

2 •.

FuRN ITU RE

JEWELRY SJORE .

M
' IDDLEPORT
•
.
,

.Pomeroy

OHIO

DURKEE "Refrigerated"

STUFFED OLIVES

28 Ol BTLS.

COCA-COLA

I

•

BISCUITS
TOPP POP

12 OZ. BTlS.

•

FAVORITE BREAD

5

CUBE BEEF
STEAKEnES
16 OZ. PKG.
C

c

I

FLORIDA CIIRUS lUND

s

CONCENTRATED LIME, ORANGE, TANGERINE

Reg. 7fJ

LOAVES

$ 00

49~

59~

I

16

•oz. •
BTLS.

FAVORITE lARGE SIZE

2 PAK
.'

ICE M K

FAIRMONT
SALADS

4

~gal

MACARONI, POTATO,
CoLE SlAW, FRUIT JELLO

c

...

~---

· SEALTEST

MILK - ~gal 53~

PARFAITS

12 oz. '
CONTAINER

300Z

CRT.

LOAVES ' '

FOR

•

59'

99C

. gat

EGGS

BREAD

=

~ Ga Jug

SCOT LAD

GRADE
MEDIUM

AT MARK V

•

-------•

c

15 Ol PKG.

WATERMELONS

6 FlAVORS

AT MARK V

'--------..---~--------------------------.;,;;;.,;;;;,;;;..;,;;;;;;...il-_
•

PEACHES

_MUMDS

Real proof of famous
Admiral quality

""-I
I
r.:U"'r r:r:: ;'~,Ak':'~~~!~~~~l ~~J~~~b~~.:/Refrigernlor ,..,....,. in

BEEF STEAKETTES_

FRESH RIPE

3 lb. BASKET

SPECIAL

•

WAFFLE

lHROW AWAY BOTTUS
•

1-LB. PKG.

lb.

s

c

'

I~

7 oz.
. JAR

Reg, 59'

~-

GOESSLER

29f;

I

OCEAN PERCH .

BANANAS

4 BARs49~

----

A separ.a te section ,
holds all the other
frozen foods. stays
cold when lop door
is ollen. New Admiral solid freezer
shelves
mtrumtZe
cold air loss when
this door is open.
These full width
aluminum shelves
clean up with one
quick wjpe and lift
out for storing
larger items.
Admiral Automatic
Door Oosers on a II
three doors.

GOLDEN RIPE

SOAP

• ..
~

CAPE ANN

WOODBURY

lHRO\lAWAY

BA K-E •
Courl St.

Reg. 3r

'

CANS

FROZEN

·pEANUTS

YOUR CHOICE

•'

c

FRA K_~l~
MARSHMALLOW

WHOLE KERNEL YELLOW CORN,
PEAS, GREEN PEANS,
SPINACH, APPLE SAUCE

IENE

-ROLL SAUSAGE

BOLOGNA
lb.
9~

We have sliced to order L~&amp;nch
"Me.ts ai ourcMeat Counlel'

SUPERIOR
ALL MEAT

SUPERIOR NO. 1

SUPERIOR

~ ·

3.

$
7 lb.

7

lb.

~

lb.

ANY AMOUNT
lb.

MY AMOUNT
lb.

J

Inside this door is a
whole new system
for storing foods.
There's a place for
everything, from
butter to zuc:dlini.
The Frigid Meat
Keeper and glideout egg basket are
centered easy
in,
easy
out'.
Crisper and Fruit
baskets are both
gleaming
porcelain.
New
tempered
glass
cantilever
shelves are a
breeze to adjust
and even easier to
keep
sparkling
dean.

LUNCH
MEATS
ASSORTED

Superiols .USDA Choice Beef

x.

Rowena

Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Phelps
of Rutland are announcing tbe
birth of their first cbiJd, a son,
on Aug. 21, at tbe Hol!er
Medical Cenler, Gallij)olis.
TILe seven pound, four ounce
infant has been named Earl
Eugene Phelps, Jr. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Priddy, Rutland, and tbe
paternal grandparents are
Annis Phelps of Pomeroy and
Mrs. Ethel Phelps of Garden
Grove, Calif.

-PORK
NECK BONES

SUPERIOR

··you'll like ~r Quality
Way of Doing Business."

· SCOT LAD

First Child

fl(eutzling Welcome
New Daughter

SUPERIOR

'1495
Karr &amp; Viii landt

Phelps Welcome

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge No. 164
F&amp;AM Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
All Master Masons invited.
THURSDAY
LABOR DAY
EV ANGEIJNE Chapler 172
Due
to
the Labor Day holiday
O.E.S. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Party follow ing meeting in there will be no garbage pickup
honor of Mrs. Edith Bowman. on Monday in Rutland. 1be
RED CROSs Tiluraday, Sept. regular Monday pickup will be
2at 7:30p.m. in the cafeleria of made on Tuesday.

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Alfred Justus, Red Cross
representative from Colwnbus,
wiU be present.

Mrs .

c

h

H. T. Coupe, gold lin ish.
matching interior. ladory

Swimming instruction, a-ails • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
from closs-a~-hand materials,
boaung, smgmg, follt dancmg,
first aid, hiking, and tips on
good g~ w"':" among the
daily actiVIties enJOyed by tbe
girls.
Thirty-five _volun~ from
tbe ~our Rivers Gtrl Scout
Council had charge of tbe
camping program.
TILe 12 Meigs County girls
attended under sponsorship of
Meigs County organizations.
1beir camping equipment and
necessary clothing were•
provided by IJ'oqls of tbe Big
Bend Neighborhood.

•
m1ra • u

~

'

THE N EW 3 DOOR

each one with a memory folder
in addition to tbe trivet.
Highlighls of lheir year ~
worthy matron were related by
each one. A hwnorous reading
.
b M
Mary
was gtven y
rs.

PICNIC
HAM

.WHOLE

11153 from Johnstown, Pa., beld Mrs. ....
Mattie
Circle.
Bowman, 52 years, Mrs. Bessie
·~~~~-~in~
~~~~.~~~~;~~~.---------------------~~--~~-~~--~~-~~-~~----~
al
the
Denver
Hotel,
King, read a poen wn.tten by
w-:~~!:e- ROlland Cub Scouts Have :S·~or!ar:din ::~~
•
•
.•

and Mona Thompson, Cable,
~l
Ohio; Ted and Dorothy
Dowling, Otalmers and Sue
Members of Middleport Cub
Newman, Nevin and Veda Scout Pack :i45 and several of
Barnes, Dayton, Ohio; Nelle h .
. ed
Murphy • Cinclnnati; Ola t etr parents enJOY
a
swimming party and wiener
Custer, Selma, Ohio; Aubry and roast Sunday evening at tbe
Bea Pyles, Troy, Ohio; Harry Middl port Comm .ty Part
and Eula Wamsley, Clara
Lea:ne Sebo ":'nd Do~
:=:..~_George Bacon, Vaughan were lifeguards for
the pool party atlended by
Jllllge Bacm'smolher, Clara,
. tel .., cub
Is
81, a grancldaughler, was oldest approxuna Y ""
scou
lineal descendant in at- and Mr ·and Mrs. Selwyn Smith,
Mrs. Leslie Whitlington, and
tendance.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Francis.

CHOICE

SUPERIOR

FREEZER SALE

do
Roll top the same way only
cut venls for steam to escape. . ._ _ _.,._ _ _..

A birthday party, a swim
meet, a Sandy Bend show-&lt;&gt;ff
were highlights of tbe week at
the Camp Sandy Bend Appalachian Heritage Camp attended by 12 Meigs County
disadvantaged girls.
An exchan.ge of handmade
gifts among the 81 girls attending the camp and a special
gift for eaclt girl from donors to
the program were features of
Ute birthday party.
1be show-off was a tour of
each camp unit to view art and
craft displays followed by a
prGgi""' of songs and skits
around a tamp fu-e.

USDR

ICES!

This Weell's Special

air.

BACON
'I

••

67

All Meats Are

31b.s oo

••·.IVER MARK v

Crust:

·Sandr.11
Bend Vjc'ho·w-o)n
'J'
'JJ :t~Lr~:h ~::.::. and

50 ear Memvers
L
Recezve
• Trivets

the buslness

,..n

Ote redpe as submiu.ed. No $100 and
COillpete tn the
cltanKes are permitted.
finals oo Saturday. ·
Saturday when I bated in Contestants are ~ not
curnpetition at .lhe Slate Fair it on ly on prepar~lio_n, the
soon became apparent that tbe finished produ~ l. tls at325degree oven in an absolutely u-activeness, RIO!stness, lexaccurate elecLric range was not wre, flavor, J'lc. bul on the
hot enough for tbe cake to bate actual presentation to lhe
properly.
judges. Many of the presenMy specified 30 minutes .lations were elaborate. Moot all
baking tinne extended to 43 of tbe cakeS -..ere displayed on
resuhing in 13 minutes of tot.al pedistaled plates, many with
frustration as not only three matching candlebolders. Some
judges looked on, but as hun- did tabl&lt;1 seUings in colors to
dreds of fair speclatlll'S pas ei harmonize with their product.
ooo-by-me not five feet from One featured glass grapes in
wbere I was.baking. By now you color similar to her cake plate.
blow that contest baking is just A cherry tree replica was used
nol my cup of tea.
wiLh one of lhe· pies. Silver
I somehow had the feeling Serving pieces were displayed
that I was a lonely amateur by several, and fresh fruits and
among 18 profession$. But it fresh Dowers were attractively
wasn't aU bad. 1be J;:lecLric arranged to COillpliment the
Company home economists who cake or pie.
...-ved as hostesses for tbe
Tile Lawrence County woman
conteslants were gracious and who won with tbe Christmas
extremely helpful.
cake used a pedistai cake plale
Working at a table next to in milk glass with red velvet
mine malting an oatmeal cake ribbon laced, through the open
Cdre same recipe which took - work edging. She placed this on
Addalou Lewis Ill the semi- a green mat and at tbe side
6nals last year) was a com- displayed a deep green large
pletely unperturbed 16 year old candle with green and red
boy.
velvet braid encircling lhe base.
On tbe other side was a
A highlight of tbe afternoon
woman from Lawrence County awards presentation was the
who w~ the winner with a introduction of Miss Ohio Danish Chrisunas Cake. In the Lauri Lee Schaefer, who will

appear in 1110 Mis; Amerita
l'aAcantllll Sept. 11. Laune won
her first title in preliminary
pa~enlc-ompetition in Pomeroy.
TIIC recipe for Mom's Apple
Honey Pie which wlill $50 and a
blue ribbon for Mrs. McKenzie
in the Meigs County competition
·
f ll s .
~~·~- .
MOM'S APPLE
HONEY PIE
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

I

SUPERIOR
.BUDGET NO. 1

s

SUPER MARKET· Open-Dai~ 9-to -~0 · Sun. 10 to 10
We AN:epl Federal food S1um1).~

Corner Mill atlll Sec:ooo Sts.

..

PHmlE: 992-3480

.

" We Reserve 1he Righl1 0 Limit Ouonlltie s''

.

MIDDLEPORT, Q."

, \ "f

�I '

, •~ The O.Uy StnliMI, Pmll'roy-Middlepi!rt, Ohio, August 3l,lm

.

Sentinel Classifieds Gei ~ction ! Sentinel ~lassifieds Get Results~
r
2 SIGNS
Pom,eroy
Business Services
OF
-Motor Co.
WANT AO
INFORMIIot.ION

Lilli Notlc1

. Publi( ftOikt i&amp; htrdt)' arh·C'n.that The
DEADLI-S
.Ohio kU Tclf11ft,w C\,mr~:any hat likd
pM D B
•· ·
• ·illl Tht Publl~ UtilitiH Commiui..,n of S • · ay efor&amp; Pubhcat•on

:a• A~h:;~tiOn -.tatin1 that !he Corn-

For Sale

HALF RUNNER beans. $2 , .

Mondav Deadline 9 a.m .
Corrections
. . fonhlnui~Applif.'"ution .lon:aton:~blc- W"ll·b·
· 1 d t•t•
f
aad 1t11ultab&amp;e ini.· ru•n arW adjusur'ltnt 1
'
eaccep e un • .... a .m. or
Ia its ntn .andl."h::lrJH foe- exth:tftt!t ttleDay of Publication
pboar 1fh'~'t'. !ntra&amp;latC' ~~e toU ttlt·
REGULATIONS
Ollto

pbonr ~n'l...'f'. •n.tra~;tate ~le te-le-phone-

The Publisher reserves
the
,
_

ll'f¥kt&gt;. 1Nra1tate- pmatc- 111'\C' $C'rYicC'S and
hnru:ate- wide arc-a tc-le.;-llt11mun.iculion 1 nght to edit or retect any ads
.nlc-t, and to .chan~ the rqulation1 and dee med
objectional. ~The
Pl'lk"tktt aftm•nv: lh~ same. and to rC"VI~ publisher will not be respo
' nslble
ltl E.-han,:e Rate T:mft P.U.C.O. No.l, rl ~
.
Gnrral £xc:l'l;~•p Tnritr r .u.c.o. No. 4. for more than one mcorrect

k1 Mcaia~ Toll Telephone ~rvice Tariff inserfion .
P.U.C.O. No. 1, ill Mobile Telephone
RATES
t.nlce Tariff P.u.c.o. No. 2, itt Privule
Fo Wa tAd s ,
UDII Stnice Tariff · P.U .C.O. No. 2. and
r
n
ervrce
111 "'ide Area Tcln:ommun ications SerYice 5 cents per Word one insertion
Tanrr P. U.C.O. No. I. lo etrec:t sw:h InMinimum Charge 75c
crt"un. adjwtments and chan,a. all as l2 - t
more fully ~e~ forth in the Application on
~en S per word three
ftlc wirh the Conuniuion and in 1he e1· consec Jli ve insertio;,s.
.
hiblra rheret o anached and made a pan
18 cents per word six con
thereof.
seculive insert'
111c propoeed revllloM will effect in·
IOns .
.
crusa and adJusrments in ratea and 25 Per Cent ~isc.ou!lt on pa1d
c:batJ;H and ~halll;tl tn the rqulalions and ads and ads pa1d wtfh1n 10 days.
practlm almlq the same throur.houc1be
CARD OF THANKS
tmitory Ia which the Company operales.
&amp; OBITUARY
1be prayer 1he Application .re-quescs Sl 50 for
word minimum
tbe Commission co do the followula :
E ·
. .
·
(a) Applove the prOJK*d rates and ach adch11onal . word 2c.
&lt;h~ and cbanaes applied for In said
BLIND ADS
.
A acatloa;
.
Additional 2Sc Charge per
(I ) ApPfOTe- lhe fihna of the prupOted Advertisem~nt
·
kbtdulc 1hcc~1 in lhc .form auack~d
OFFICE. HOURS
to the ApD1kat1on. mod1fied to refl«t
such revla[ons thereof as may ~orne 8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m . Daily,
efffC!lvc, pu':luam1~ ord~u of the Com- 8:30 a .m . to 12· 00 Noon

so

or

mluaon duruta the an1enm between the Sa
fiUna: Oi Ute Application and the dale turday ·
upon wbichaakl proposed schedule sheets
·
become ellcc:Uvc;
(c) ~abUih an effective date for said

·

QUALITY

ra~ro, clean mtenor. radro, good tires, red over white

fin1sh.
1?61 OOOGE D"ART4 DOOR

a CO(»' o&lt; the ,...... and proposed Idled· th I ·
I
ofhe r an d
llle sbeeU,.utacement showhll the amouat
e oss o our m
of propoled. itlcreatc or d.ec:reaae In each grandmother. The Mollie
ehanaed nee or chlrJC, and a statl!menl Talbott Family.
daa1bi111 the JHOposed c:hanaes in rcau8 31 lt
latlo111 and pracdces aftectlna rates and - - - - - - -- -·- · c

Not·Jce

$1495

270 Senes, vmyl roof, _whlte finish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,
{ty_fomattc trans .• rad1o, clean interior.

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3395
Less than II ,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 model R 11
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood i~ter~:.
hnfed glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatic power steering
brakes, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine. Rea tty' Sharp.

&amp;

Pommeroy 'llotor Co.
Notice'
8-W - "The

Glory of The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A,
published by Souvenir Songs
(ASCAP), free recording to
DJs. Address, John Mohler,
Rl. 1, Box 210, Middleport,
Ohio ~5760, phone 992·6903.
'
8·25-12tp
'

Ohio, to sell for · cash the
following collateral, to wit : 1968
Oldsmobile 2 Dr . Cpe .. Serial

No .

said

Property

Wanted To Buy

For Sale or Lease

Transfers

Lead Tips Diamond Mine
WEST

.A

14' • 24' - WIDE

EAST

.QI043
.J852
tJS
.QBS

.J6
• Q73
tAU
.J9762

soum &lt;Dl
.KB
• AKI09
• 763
.Kl043

Both vulnerable

West
Pass
p...

North

Eul

It

Pass

1.

Pus

3N.T.

Pus

,

Pass

LADY to do housework, I day a
week, 152 Butternut, Phone
had to decide whether to 992-5080.
8·26-6tc
play the queen or to finesse
a~ainst the jack. He solved
h1s problem by playing the For Rent
queen. East's jack fell and
it was a simple matter for 2 BEDROOM house on Lincoln
12' •
South to knock out the ace Heights. Phone 992-5127 alter
4 p.m .
and make 10 tricks.
8·31-tfc
Why did South make that -__- ,.: - - - - - - diamond play? II was 12x60 TRAILER. 2 bedroom.
chiefly due to inferences ob- nicely furnished , all new, 5
1220 Washington Blvd.
tained from analysis of the miles above Pomeroy, own
BeiPfe, Ohio
opening lead , West had led lot, city water, electric range.
into South's first bid suit. Good location for school
West was trying to set up a teachers. Call 985·4143.
VACUUM CLEANER brand
suit in his hand. West would
· B-26·6lc new 1971 model. Complete
with all cleaning tools. Small
Send Sl lor JACOBY MODERN 600l S ROOMS, furnished. Phone paint damage In shipping.
Will take S27 cash or budget
to: "Win of lridgt," (c/o lhis llewsMrs. A. R. Knight, 992-2433 or
•
,
.
c
·
992·2883
.
.
plan available. Phone 992·
9
pGPft ), P.0 . 01 ,f , ~au10
1ty
8·26-6tp 5641.
'
'
Stotio11, New York, N.Y. 10019.
8·25-6tc
need a sure re·entry and the TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile VOLKSWAGEN camper. good
only one would be the ace Court, Rl . 124, Syracuse, condition , Less than 20,000
Ohio. 992-2951.
of diamonds.
miles. 439 Lincoln St., Mid·
~-2-tfc
dleport,
Paul Scott.
This wasn 't a sure-thing - - - - - - - - 8·25-tlc
play. but it worked this time FURNISHED and unfurnished
and w o u I d tend to work apartments. Close to school. HI. NEIGHBOR! Tried Blue
more often than it would Phone 992-543~.
Lustre .for cleaning carpets?
10-18·11C
fail.
It's super . Rent electric
(NfWSPitPEI ENTUPRI5E ASSH. )
shampooer, $1, Baker Fur.
3 ROOM unfurnished apart. niture Company .
8·25-6tc
menl. Phone 992·2288.
B-29.1fc

I.

Snu.t h

IN.T.
Pass Pass

Opening l•ad- • 6
By O.wald &amp; James Jacoby
North's selection of a diamond response, rather than
a spade, was somewhat irregular. Hi~ reason was
that,' if they got into slam
action, he considered his
diamond suit far better than
his spades. When South
looked at dummy. he wasn't
·too happy about game. He
didn't like the club lead .
since he analyzed it as
fourth-best of five.
He had to win in dummy
and proceeded to play dummy's king of diamonds at
trick two. This hel&lt;l the
trick. His next play w~s to
l'Ome to his hand with a
heart in order to lead a &lt;lia·
mond towurd dummy.
West playL'Illow ar•J St·•,ll•

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

Wafer

Softef)er,

breakfast set, table and 4
chairs. catt 985-3536 or contact Bill Allen, Chester.
8·29·31p

SA. VE UP

r.

31

Miracle

Help Wanted

HOSPITAL
·NEWS

NOKm
.A9752
.64
t KQI092

Balance $80.99. Use our
budget terms. (all 992-7085.
8·29·61c

couple TREE RIPENED white and
yellow peaches at Mason
Would like house or aparl - Peach Orchard. Priced from
menf in Pomeroy or Mld - $2 to $4.50. One mile above
dter,ort. No children . Ex. Mason Br-idge; turn right and
eel ent reference. Phone Vera follow signs.
Eblen at 593-77113 or 593·3710.
8·2S.6ft
8·29.6tc
2 DOOR G. E. Refrigerator,
Magic Chef Gas range.
~le or Female.

GINSENG. Clean bone dry. $38
collateral being held to secure
lb. Snake Root, $S lb. Bill GENERAL STORE and service
an obligation lrlsil"tll under a
Bailey, Reedsville, Ohio, station across from Portland
retail Installment security
Park. Phone 843·2491.
Charles
L.
Wyalt,
Margaret
Second St. Phone 378-6208.
ag:reement executed by Ronald
B-27-6tc
8-31·
IOtc
Lesle Carr and held by General A. Wyatt to Jed Junior Webster,
Motors Acceptence Corporation Beny Jane Webster, Lots,
ONE BOTILE gas heater with
11 secured party . Said public
ule Is to be conducted ac · Pomeroy. ,
blower and thermostat, 50,000 For Sale
cording to the laws of the State
to
60,000 BTU. Phone 992-6147
Wilbur D. Young, Ruth A.
PERMANENT registered
Of Ohio. General Motors At ·
after 5:30 p. m.
ceptance Corporatl.on reServes Young to Charles Corder, Joan
Appaloosa mare. Phone 9928-31 ·3tp 3118.
the right to bid at thIs sale .
The collateral IS presently Corder, Parcels, Pomeroy.
8-26·6tp
stored and may be seen at
Charles E. Riffle, Bernice E. OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks.
Gallipolis Motor Co., Gallipolis, Riffle to Anthony Nardei,
and-or complete households. COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Ohio.
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy, •att Works. E. Main St .•
GENERAL MOTORS !,lorinda Nardei, Lot, Pomeroy.
Ohio. Coli 992·6271.
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
ACCEPTANCE
Mrs. Harry Marsh , Faye
8·25-tfc
PORATIONI81
31; (9) 1 COR·
A.9.tft
Marsh to Ohio Power Co.,
100 TO 300 AtRES, old farm,
Ease., Lebanon.
abandoned farm or vacant POODLE puppies. Silver roy,
Park view Kennels. Phone 992Nora Jordan, Adlnn:., Katie land with all rights. Will pay to
5443.
Wilson, dec., lo John W. ss.OOO cash . .Write to John
8-15-lfc
Huffman, 1500 Seminola.
Brogan, Jr., Cletith E. Brogan, Akron, Ohio 44305.
Lot, Harrisonville.
8-27·61p CANNING tomatoes, already
.;
. ..,
.
Jack A. GorreU, Joyce Ann
picked, $1.25 bu ., bring
IQ.
fNCH
bench
saw.
Phone
992containers.
Geraldine
Gorrell lo Lyle D. Showalter,
6675, Don.
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
1.34 A., 9.80 A., Orange.
8-29-3tp
7-7B·Ifr
- - -c=c--Holzer Medical Center First Orlyn FeUure to Jack Spires,
NICE 8 week old pigs - sro to
Ave. and Cedar st. ~neral Carolyn Spires, 79.11 A., Salem. Help Wanted
$12. County Road 30. Phone
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. Morris Harden, Dorothy CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
949-2115.
in person . Crdw's Steak
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Harden to Helen Baek, Lots,
8·31 -31p
House.
t:30 p.m. Parents only on Syracuse. .
8-31 -6tc 10x25 HOUSE TRAILER, set up
Pediatrics Ward.
Roman F . Warmke, Dorothy
on large lot in Harrisonville.
IIJrllls
E. Wannke to Franklin Real STANLEY Home Products
Will sell trailer or both. Phone
needs 5 fall and Christmas
742·4781.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Ihle, Eslate Co., 390 A., Colwnbia.
representatives .
Car
8·31-3tc
Racine, a daughter; Mr. and John Reed, Belly Mae Reed to
necessary. Write Mrs. Lib·
Mrs. H. Donald Peck, Leon, a Charles Kenneth Reed, Susre man, 34 W. carpenter St., USED SINGER portable sewing
machine with zig.zagger~
son; Mr. and MrS. William E. Elizabeth Reed, 5 A., Salem.
Athens or call 593-8854.
blind hem . Fashion designed,
B-31-6tc
Morris, Pomeroy, a son; Mr. - - - - - - - - - - etc. $31.75. Phone 992-7085.
and Mrs. Gecrge A. ,speakman, son.
SOMEONE needed to slay with
8·31-6tc
Ewington, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Discharges
Invalid 5 days a week, some
La
nights. Phone 992-7155.
.
L
R.C.A. COLOR T.V.,· console
Jerry R. Brammer. Bldweu. a
Mrs. Dtana
. Ang1es, rry
8 29 6t
model. Phone 742-5042.
- · c
daughter ·, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dean Beaver, Mrs. Richard
8·29·3tC
L. Rayburn, Henderson, a son; Dow
Mrs. Evelyn M. GIRL NEEDED five days a
. •
.
week and slay nights
Mr· andMrs. Richard A• Unroe, N1cholson,
James H. Reily, Asel Evenings and weekends free: 40" HOT POINT range, white, 2
years old, excellent condition
Crown City, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Searls, Mrs. Charles_vanMeter No work. Good h_ome and
• $150.00. Can be seen alter 5
Timothy L. Lawhon, Gallipolis, and daughter, Jackson
wages. Phone 992·5207 after 3
p.m. at 105 Union Avenue.
a daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Walker, Jerry Wayne McOung, p.m.
Phone 992-3293.
8·29·3tp
8-31 ·3tc
David D. Lambert, Wellston, a and Harry Baldwin.
EARN AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush stamped 22" LENNOX forced air coal
furnace,
complete.
self.addressed envelope. The
reasonable. Wm. H. Cleland,
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn,
Racine, phone 949-2963.
Davisburg, Mich . ol8019.
WIN AT BRIDGE
8-25-6tc
8-1-JOip
336171M30S~Z4

BEAUTIFUL colonial maple

business

Meigs

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

Automotlc Degree Day
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Equipment.

BILL NELSON ·

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and
ditioning.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2111 ,

West

Nurth

foAst

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

985·4106.

8-27·61c

You , South, hold :

.A KKT.K Q 'U tfi.KIIT ii
Wh .. t du you do'.' '
. I BEDROOM trailer apartA-Bid unc club. Yuu shuuld
men t. ideal for couples .
11tart with ,. rluh with this '·'"fM'
Contact McClure' s Dairy Isle,

or hand.
TIIJ)A n; I!Ut~'il'IO~

Yuu ;lu hid urn · dub turd yntrr
pm·lncr ldds 11111• 1limuwrrl Wlr;rl
du ,\' U\1 flu /lOW'.'

\

l&lt;~~~uiHER A MESS
FER SUPPER

.r

SR.

basement, 133 Butternut Ave .,
just walking distance from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
~d

Hedrick, 2137 Wadswot th

Orive, Columbus, Oh io, phone

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

LAt.JE

NOW, DEAR, DON'T

BOR!' I.Q. WiTII
PilOTOS OF YOU It

IXXJLrrTLE COLLE6E

Z TfN.ll NEll _ , C«&lt;UWT
WIM 1NAT' OIITFIT
Nl'lltl ,.,..,,_,.,.

OF COURSE NOT J DIDN'T
VOU SAV YOU'RE tf\ITERESTEI&gt;
IN HiSTORY, I.Q. 'i _____--...._

~YS

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

Complete

R e.modeling
Kitchens, Baths
Rbom Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work
Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

0C&gt;tr DOAN'ITI-IIIJG

NO CJt.lE

or
the

From the Largest
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Heater Core.

-,!"R- HAST'I.

IS OUR.

MAS"rER!!

BlArnNARS
Ph. 992-2143

CHAIR!!- I'LL

REASQI.l WITH

TI-IEM -

OF COUt«;e, 1'/ITH CI.Jil. CAI&lt;:-11'9 ~~IKe" A '1RIIN$FII$I(JNf

~- I:IUT

A.K., DEAR--WE GAVE 'IOU
'11-lAT .4-5 10
mot:ECT '{()UR5ELF
AGAINST TR!ACH£ROUS

RATS!!

Pomeroy

Have Your Seasonal
POMEROY

Air Conditioning

HOME &amp; AUTO

Inspection and

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE

Re-Charge
Special
At

6.98

BUGS

Plus
Parts

Sl£EP~
I DON'T BELIEVE ~
CLOSED MY EYE5
ALL NIGHT

Blaettnar's

Stop In and See Our
·Floor Display.

PHONE 992-2143

BUNNY
VIT6t:ZMtNE PI~~,;,
B.o.LL..POINT PIONS,

KOW ABOUT SOME!.
5KOECACES ... t;;ttSPr•.

OH, rr WAI!J DEFINITElY BUT WHAT ON
IIO'lNAZ, MOM! l'vf GOr EARTH FOR, DEAR ?
TO GET ON 1HE. PHONE
IHERE:'S NOTHINGAND OiECJ&lt; OUT
YOU CAN DO
1H05E: RUMORS
ri80UT IT1 16
IHAT 11"!'&gt; UP
11-IE'RE: ?'
FOR &amp;ALE!

~F'ETV

SAAVI NG SQO.P, f'l'oPEIZ.

1"1 NS •••

CL..IPS ••• PGIF"P•• ~
R/.t:P

'!

wnt., OPEN lHE

AND LET'S
HA.VE A LOOK!

O()()R

Mind it I check 40ur
can collection?

1-'l'!P.a, have i.JOU done
60methinq bad aqain?

....'

Realty

608 East Main
POMEROY

- - -- - -

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992·2418.
4·25.1fc

I

2 speed operation.
Cholet of water
temps.
Auto .
water
level
control.
L inf
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator .

heat. No hot spots,

no overdrylng .
Fine Mesh Lint

Filler.

·s the !ipice of our music.

We Specialize In

MAYTAG

Red Carpet _

Arnold Grate

;:

I

~

J

.0
~
' - - - - - ; __ _...;__,_J

,.Popular
otnglng
trt.ar

ACROSS
1."At the

summit
5. Provlde
with a
spigot

DICK TRACY

TH! N!UTRON
ACTIVATION
ANALYSIS
SHIRT CUFF

1~. Pboto
15. Svetlana's

IS POSITIVE!

father

18. -llke
a bird
21. Pinched
22. Italian
river

symbol
9. Summer
(Fr.)
13. Try to

'1011 POH'T·,SW.I.WIC!i
I.FTri&gt;.FIIEf 01'
TilE llDCI(5 Ff TilE
ttUGe WPNe, ne

CONCfRNfD TIW TilE
IWI5 ARE I&gt;IOIJT

.Tohrul

20. Soviet
newa
agency Ye.terbJ''• Almrer
21. Cicatrix
30. Adage
22.Italtan
city
31. Mexl24-Pftcan

Robert

29. See6

32. Teamster's
command
33.Mar,
Calif.
3,, ActreBs
Joanne
35. -

Down

Kippur

Beach
sights
27.0ld-Ume
auto
28.Bayor

theM

oqtllft,

form four ordinary wordo.

I CHEEN
SUROC

~

tJIITHERl

II
III

1JotE'f SUI' FURl' ~E
KINe ANI' QEEN.

I

of-

(At

.30. Gold

"'

i¥4)

Jo..w- IOGUS WAOU TYl'INO fii!MhO

digger's

YHterdaJ"'•

COJ'tlpaulon
(2wdL)

M.Watchful

n.actavta'•

An.wen lf'lty the proltlr.• of,.... Acir t\r zf•'a
-,.y.. -IT GOD AWAY

PI \'t 1._.

l!pOIIIO

--

38. PluUlke

at. Urban

eyeoono

G" - ..;;&gt;

DOWN

l.Dolt
:Ll'laylD(
marble
s. Lyric
poem ._......._....___._.__
'

Yx.

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE- Here's how to -rk It:

All tuition except children's are $39.00 for the 13 week
course, payable on registration.
T"illon for Children's classes are $19.50 for the 13 week
course, payable on registration.
All necessory materials may be purchased at the galle&lt;y
. lor awrox. $20.00 for the 13 weeks.

·A X Y D L B A A X R
18 LOMGI'J:LLOW
Olle letter lllmply ataad8 tor onother. In lh1l Ample A Ia
UMd for the throe L'o, X for the two 0'1, ete. BIJtlle. tetterw,
&amp;jiCI8taoplleo, the lenfth utd ftllmatton ot the are all
111111:.1. l!:ach day the code 1etm11 .:no cllfterent..

HJKVJHI!:O HK N-ATALBJDVTO : OWG

Rulland,O.

'

BVJ

CA:lt

HI!:

LTAJ. - JtVU

Rl'WU

OWOT

DAXAJKWJ

- --::""

~ - &lt;=- ·=-)

A &lt;Jr:nltopull q I II t a

Registration will be acceptid on Seturday, Sep.. mber 4,
6-9 p.m. at tilt Gatr.ry.
•

'

$e:

~WJd~®~llw-=s
UIIIIDIIIble
four Jumbleo,
:::::=
one letter to each
to

N---1M""'
...
Mtl
v
1
1
1
tofont
....
-.....
•
I~]~"~~~~~=nj" ••Jrrtlle...,.ca11•••
L ~ .. , =-• It I I I I I I ]

28.8t.
Nlcholaa

CAPl'AIN EASY

Joe.)

PLINCE ~
I

hemp

lll.I56IAN 5U8
dEHD.V IN
1l&lt;EMCTIG
OCEAN SWELL$.

MILL~

llrtto'lrol•

tree

blatorlc

Greeks
28. Borgnine's
15. Be curious
16.Lone
oscarwinRanger's
nlng
sidekick
17. Actor,
role
recall
(2wds.)

the sweet .
(2 wds.)
25. Greek river
26.Mlaml
.
1/.Y PfAR .W~

St.
!

chievous
child
8. Hawalla.n
we1come

22. Sweets for

10 Ulllllltc -

Rogers

7. MlB-

ment
(2Wds.)

J'ords
19. -

6. Odlst

endear·

ON
IMtJ!I.~~R TWO'S '

otthe

dant

i)

· -...

Y_...,.. Cl)flltwllll: DON'T STAND lN TOUR 0WK
SHADoW: GIC'l' YOUR LITrLE SELF OUT OJ' 'I'BII: W..A.T
80 YOUR BIG 8I:LJ' CAN B'nUDI!: FORWARD.-WILI'JCII.D A. PI!:'I'I!:R80N

18. 0ne

5. Descen-

NUMBER TWO, VOU ASKED THE COURT FOR PER· 10.Startn
MI!;StclN TO BE YOUR OWN ATTORNEY. DO YOU
Cyguus
+~~-=S~:rAND
ON THAI? ;:::::::i::::i:===~:::::J 11. Sp"""
l
tr&amp;veler
12.Tennof

Strvic:e

RUTlAND
FURNITURE
742-4211

1

I

•

HIIDOf Hilt

Dryers
Surround clothes
With gentle, even

II

DAILY CROSSWORD

Monday-Graphics and w1ter color painting.
Tuesday-Oil pointing and graphics for teenagers - 13
· lhru 19 years.
Wedntsd.ly-Oit painting and graphics from life-all
ages.
Thursday-Oil painting and graphics-men only.
Afternoon Cluses
Tuesday- Oil painting end graphics-I - 4 p.m.-all ages.
Wednesday- Children ctasses-4:30 to 6 p.m.

•J

I

•

'SUCKER'S GOOD
FER AT tfA&amp;T OIIE
IIROI&lt;Etl LtM&amp;r

NOTICE

Big Capacity
Maytat
Automatics

"

I AGGER THAT

4~%
PASSIOOI RATE

In-

•i

.
\ ,.-§)

..

237-4334. Columbus.
_ __ _ _ _ _ _::_:
5·9-tfc MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
.MEIGS CO. BRANCH
BUY FOR YOU - 1'12 story
brick, living room, dining
3 BEDROOM home. Electric
room
, CARPETED, nice Real Estate For-Sale
heal. remodeled recently
kitchen, bath, 2 bedrooms, LARGE 2 apartment home.
inside, 7th street, New Haven.
building. JUST $6,950.
storage
Furnished, beautiful river
Owner transferred . Phone
882-2263;
view. Rental trailer on
RACINE - 1 story frame, 3
premises. Inquire at . Dairy
8·29·61c
Meigs County lrench el Tilt
large bedrooms with closets,
Corner, Letart, W. Va . Phon&lt;
bath,
nice
kitchen,
large
Atlltns County savings 1
895-3357.
HOUSE, 16-42 Lincoln Heights.
living room, CARPETED.
l.oen Co.
(alf Danny Thompson, 992·
8·31
-6tc
large
garage
with
shop,
.75
2N Second 51.
2196. '
acre, liKE NEW. $20,500.
Pomeroy, Ohio
1970 RICHARDSON mobile
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_:.:_·
18-tfc
. home with washer and dryer,
POMEROY- l'h story frame,
fully carpeted, also 5 room
Mtmber Federal Home Loan
11 .16 ACRES located T·79 at
3 bedrooms, bath, living
Bank
house
l"lth
basement,
both
Rock Springs, close to Meigs
room ,
dining
room,
Member
Federal Savings "
located on two lots In
High School. Contact Bill
Loan Insurance Corpontlon .
basement, porch, large lot.
Syracuse.
Phone
992·7019.
Wille - for L. Fields- alter 5
All accounts Insured up to
Storm doors, windows. ALL
8·3J.6tc
$20,000.00.
p.m. or on week•nds 992·6887.
IN GOOD CONDITION •
8·27-!Ole
BARGAIN AT JUST$7,900
3 BEDROOM brick home .
PLACE THE SALE OF
Choice location In Middleport.
YOUR PROPERTY IN
Seen by appointment only.
CAPABLE HANDS
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m.
HENRY E. CLELAND
5-7·tfc
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
CONVENIENT but secluded
Residence m -151t8
building lots on T7V at Rock
Art Classes for O'Artiste Gallery, 525 N- 2nd
8-29·61c
Springs . Within walking
St., Middleport. Ohio, Ruth Gosney,
distance of Meigs High NEW, 3-bedroom home In
structor. Beginning September 6 - December
School, a S minute drive from
Middleport. Built-In kitchen,
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
2,
1971. 13 week coursesceramic tile bath, all.electrlc
Wille weekends or after 5
heal, good neighborhood. can
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992·
arrange
FHA fihan&lt;lng.
6887. .
Telephone 992·3600 or 992·
Evening Classes-7-10 p.m.
7-11-tfc
2186.
----;----7?5-tfc

ITEM : Tom Hill. He ploy
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears an
ma Cass. B.ut he · pta·1
oon light Serenade u
ndy Williams too. Varie

" --

LAt.J£

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

Cleland

M•ytog

l

LOV£R.S

15.55

MORE NOW

Perma· Prtss ·

WMP0/1390

LOVERS

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

•

?

MV 0~ WOMAN I'D

PROMISEO ME'IE'D
PlAV CHeCKeRS
WIF METODAV

EARN

· 992·5248 or 992-3436.

8·29-61c
4 ROOM •partment, all otilities
·$80 .00
p•id . furnish ed
month , Phone 992 3975.
8-31 . ttc

AN' J: JEST PROMISED

' - - - - - - -- - - - - ' SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
delivered right to your
662·3035.
Broker
2·12-lfc
prQjecl. Fast and easy. Free
no Mechanic Street
esl•mates . Phone 992·3284.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co., HARRISON'S TV AND AN
1971 DIAL 'N SEW zig-zag SYRACUSE- 4 rooms, nice lot.
Middleport, Ohio.
Tr'"'NA SERVICE . Phono
sewing machine left in . $1,800.00.
6-30-lfc
992-2522.
layaway. Beautiful pastel
• ·10-lf·
· color, tull size model. All
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
buill-in to buttonhole, over- RUTLAND - 6 rooms, bath, Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, SEWING MACHINE service In
basement, nice lot. $3,500.00.
cast and fancy stitch. Pay just
Gallipolis. John Russell,
your home. Clean, ott and
$48 .75 cash
or
terms
Owner &amp; Operator.
$4. Phone 992·7085.
adjust,
CHESTER
AREA
2
available. Trade-ins ac 5-13-lfc
Twin
City
Sewing Machine
bedrooms,
nice
kitchen
and
cepted. Phone 992-5641.
Company
.
living
.
Only
$7,600.00.
8-25-6tc
B-31·6tc
NEIGLER Construction. For
MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms, building or remodeling your
bath. large Iivlng, garage. home. Call Guy Nelgler , O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Auto Sales
Racine, Ohio.
Only $7 .500.00.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12~.
1965 MUSTANG, 289, 3 speed.
7-3t .tfc
Complete front end service,
Contact Butch Grover, Bailey COUNTRY LIVING - new 4 - - - - - - - - tune up and brake service.
Run Rd.
bedroom, 2 bath, double
Wheels
b~lanced
elec8·29·31p
garage, 15 , acres. $37,500.00. AWNINGS, storm doors and .
tronically.
·
All
work
windows, carports.
guaranteed .
Reasonable
'51 FORD 112-ton pickup truck, RT. 7 BYPASS - new 5 marquees, aluminum siding
rates. Phone 992-3213.
and
ratting
.
Gall
A.
Jacob.
1' 64 Corvair Monza, 4 speed
bedroom home, llh baths, 4
7-27-lfc
sales representative. For free
transmission. Phone 742·5042. - acres.
estimates, phone Charles A:-:U-::T::OM=o::B:-:1-:-L-::E:-:i:-ns_u_ra:-:ii:-c..,.
8·29-3tc
e -:-been
Syracuse.
V.
V.
Lisle,
NEW HOME - 3 spacious
cancelled?
Lost
your
Johnson and Son, Inc.
1959 FORD 11&gt; ton pickup, very
bedrooms, gas heat. large
operator's license? Call 9925-27-tfc
good cond1tlon. $500. Phone
living and kitchen. $19,500.00.
2966.
992-7378.
6-15·1fc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
8·31 ·31c INVESTMENT - your own
Complete Service
.
home and business with
Phone
949-3821
1970 VOLKSWAGEN .
rental. Store with stock and
Racine, Ohio
automatic stick shift, radio.
fixtures .
Crllt
Bradford
eietfric defroster, dark blue
and Whife interior. Phone 675· INVESTMENT - 2 stories - :-::-,-;;---,,--,,--,s,.,-t==-lfc
5203.
large rental on first floor - 2 SEWING MACHINES. liepalr
8-31-6tc
on second. 218 E. Main.
service, all makes. 992-2284,
3
Helen~: ¥:aford
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1970 DATSUN pick-up, good
Authorized Singer Seles and
Your regular payday·
condlflon , new ti;es. never
Associate
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
wrecked. $1.575. Phone 992B·29·61c
3·29·1fc
savings
plus . our high
5153.
rate of return will
8·18· 12tc
QUEEN AND Shamblin Cons!.
oll:lake your s1vings
Roofing.
remodeling,
'
grow quickly ,_,
aluminum siding. Phone 992Real Estate For Sale
7324 or 742·4979.
8·25-lfc
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
APPLES· Peaches. Fitzpatrick
Orchards, State Route 689,
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
8·15-tfc

PRIVATE trailer lot In Chester

Suuth with utility building . Phone
.,

Con-

Real Estate For Sale

and Furnaces.
I

Air

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

We also have a complete line

LUKEV? 'IE

IOHNSI)N MASONRY

240 Linc~ln St., Middleport

ot Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
POMEROY

HILTON WOLFE
949-3211

992-365~

- - - -- - -

Tht• biddinA hu!' been:

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY OOWN
tOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A_,l bedroom .t16,900.00 hOme can be [iurchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 tor a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
.per·c_01lla!l" rate.

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
speakers, -4 speed automatic
changer. separate controls.

WHAR 'IE GOIN~

MEF.K

·- ·- - - .

$67.40. Use our budget terms.
cau 992·7085.
8·29-6tc

transferring to Pomeroy .

WILL PAY well for your spare
to one half. Bring KOSCOT Kosmetlcs . Sep· time working at home for us.
Anyone who can read and
tember Sales Special :
The form of t.hi1 notice hu been apyour sick TV to Chuck's TV
prmed b)' Tbc Public Utilities Commiulon
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
write can qualify. Weekly
Kreaml Lip Kole $2 now
$1.50, Frosllucenl Lip Kote salary. For details write,
of Ohio.
THE OHIO BELL
Pomeroy.
'
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box
$2.50 now $2, 23 delicious
TELEPHONE COMPANY
~·23·tfc
colors. Call 992-5113 or cqme 32~. Dept. K 479, Levittown,
By: C. K. Eller,
Pa .• 19053.
at 161'12 N &lt;th Ave.,
"'" '"'14'"' I WOULD like to do typing in see
Middleport. Qh, ,
8·27-61c
(8J 21,31 (9J 7. lie my home. Reasonable rates.
8-29-lfc
Phone 992-3497.
8-29·6tc
For Sale or Trade
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Wanted
TO WHOM IT MAY CON FOR SMALLER house, a large
CERN :
EXPERIENCED timber cutter. house (2 apts.) corner of
Notice is hereby given that on
Phone 992-5644.
Pearl &amp; Park Sts.. MidSrptember 10, 1971, at 10 : 00
8·31·5tp
dleport.
A.Nt . l!l public sale will be held at
8·29-6tc
~-----·Gallipolis Motor Co ., Gallipolis ,
at an)' public bu1inen othce of the

Compaoy.

WALNUT stereo-radio com·
bination . Four speed in ·
termixed changer . Fou.r
speaker sound system, dual
volume· control. ' a.alance

Wanted To Rent
ATHENS

8-i7-ttc

BEAGLE, 5 months old, A.K.C.
tegistered. Has had all shots
$40. Phone 992 - 3~94 alter 5
p.m.
8-29-61c

OPEN EVES. a:CJO P.M.
POMEROV, OHIO

"God and I" -

lid as Appllc•nt is reuonably entitled WE WOULD like to thank all the
•• In &lt;he "''"""'·
people In the county for their
A copy or 1he Applicadon, includlna expressions of sympathy In

!'hone 843-2254.

1964 FORO GALAX I ~00 .
$79S
4 ~oor. V8 ~gln_e, aut~atlc trans ., power steering,

PLEASE REQUEST your
favorite disc jockey to play -

Card 0f Th an kS
p r o - Khedule oheOIS: and
{il) Grant IUCh. other and lurthu re·

charau, may bl! insPk(ed by •111 interested
,...,. at the olli"' or the commission, 111
North HiP Strtel, Columbus Ohio, aDd

busheL pi ck your own . '
Cucum'bers. and tomafo~s . . ,
Watermelons. cantaloupes. , .
sweet
corn,
potafoes .
Clarence Proffitt, Portland.

Can~ellatfon &amp;

pony lt. nhlkd. bh:ausc- ur the rc-aS\ml

:::'
'::';:::=;:::=:::::-? BALLS 0~_=---=---,
r:-------~---'----.-------~EEK ~ND
L.
FIRE!!

..I"L-'-'1. /
.., •. _-.:_;_ - ... rt

SNHD·~~~~-'---~""
- ~,_. __
~-Jf

.l'
----~---~--------~--------------~------~~~------~--------~~~~~~~--~--~------~

.!'?I

I

�I '

, •~ The O.Uy StnliMI, Pmll'roy-Middlepi!rt, Ohio, August 3l,lm

.

Sentinel Classifieds Gei ~ction ! Sentinel ~lassifieds Get Results~
r
2 SIGNS
Pom,eroy
Business Services
OF
-Motor Co.
WANT AO
INFORMIIot.ION

Lilli Notlc1

. Publi( ftOikt i&amp; htrdt)' arh·C'n.that The
DEADLI-S
.Ohio kU Tclf11ft,w C\,mr~:any hat likd
pM D B
•· ·
• ·illl Tht Publl~ UtilitiH Commiui..,n of S • · ay efor&amp; Pubhcat•on

:a• A~h:;~tiOn -.tatin1 that !he Corn-

For Sale

HALF RUNNER beans. $2 , .

Mondav Deadline 9 a.m .
Corrections
. . fonhlnui~Applif.'"ution .lon:aton:~blc- W"ll·b·
· 1 d t•t•
f
aad 1t11ultab&amp;e ini.· ru•n arW adjusur'ltnt 1
'
eaccep e un • .... a .m. or
Ia its ntn .andl."h::lrJH foe- exth:tftt!t ttleDay of Publication
pboar 1fh'~'t'. !ntra&amp;latC' ~~e toU ttlt·
REGULATIONS
Ollto

pbonr ~n'l...'f'. •n.tra~;tate ~le te-le-phone-

The Publisher reserves
the
,
_

ll'f¥kt&gt;. 1Nra1tate- pmatc- 111'\C' $C'rYicC'S and
hnru:ate- wide arc-a tc-le.;-llt11mun.iculion 1 nght to edit or retect any ads
.nlc-t, and to .chan~ the rqulation1 and dee med
objectional. ~The
Pl'lk"tktt aftm•nv: lh~ same. and to rC"VI~ publisher will not be respo
' nslble
ltl E.-han,:e Rate T:mft P.U.C.O. No.l, rl ~
.
Gnrral £xc:l'l;~•p Tnritr r .u.c.o. No. 4. for more than one mcorrect

k1 Mcaia~ Toll Telephone ~rvice Tariff inserfion .
P.U.C.O. No. 1, ill Mobile Telephone
RATES
t.nlce Tariff P.u.c.o. No. 2, itt Privule
Fo Wa tAd s ,
UDII Stnice Tariff · P.U .C.O. No. 2. and
r
n
ervrce
111 "'ide Area Tcln:ommun ications SerYice 5 cents per Word one insertion
Tanrr P. U.C.O. No. I. lo etrec:t sw:h InMinimum Charge 75c
crt"un. adjwtments and chan,a. all as l2 - t
more fully ~e~ forth in the Application on
~en S per word three
ftlc wirh the Conuniuion and in 1he e1· consec Jli ve insertio;,s.
.
hiblra rheret o anached and made a pan
18 cents per word six con
thereof.
seculive insert'
111c propoeed revllloM will effect in·
IOns .
.
crusa and adJusrments in ratea and 25 Per Cent ~isc.ou!lt on pa1d
c:batJ;H and ~halll;tl tn the rqulalions and ads and ads pa1d wtfh1n 10 days.
practlm almlq the same throur.houc1be
CARD OF THANKS
tmitory Ia which the Company operales.
&amp; OBITUARY
1be prayer 1he Application .re-quescs Sl 50 for
word minimum
tbe Commission co do the followula :
E ·
. .
·
(a) Applove the prOJK*d rates and ach adch11onal . word 2c.
&lt;h~ and cbanaes applied for In said
BLIND ADS
.
A acatloa;
.
Additional 2Sc Charge per
(I ) ApPfOTe- lhe fihna of the prupOted Advertisem~nt
·
kbtdulc 1hcc~1 in lhc .form auack~d
OFFICE. HOURS
to the ApD1kat1on. mod1fied to refl«t
such revla[ons thereof as may ~orne 8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m . Daily,
efffC!lvc, pu':luam1~ ord~u of the Com- 8:30 a .m . to 12· 00 Noon

so

or

mluaon duruta the an1enm between the Sa
fiUna: Oi Ute Application and the dale turday ·
upon wbichaakl proposed schedule sheets
·
become ellcc:Uvc;
(c) ~abUih an effective date for said

·

QUALITY

ra~ro, clean mtenor. radro, good tires, red over white

fin1sh.
1?61 OOOGE D"ART4 DOOR

a CO(»' o&lt; the ,...... and proposed Idled· th I ·
I
ofhe r an d
llle sbeeU,.utacement showhll the amouat
e oss o our m
of propoled. itlcreatc or d.ec:reaae In each grandmother. The Mollie
ehanaed nee or chlrJC, and a statl!menl Talbott Family.
daa1bi111 the JHOposed c:hanaes in rcau8 31 lt
latlo111 and pracdces aftectlna rates and - - - - - - -- -·- · c

Not·Jce

$1495

270 Senes, vmyl roof, _whlte finish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,
{ty_fomattc trans .• rad1o, clean interior.

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3395
Less than II ,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 model R 11
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood i~ter~:.
hnfed glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatic power steering
brakes, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine. Rea tty' Sharp.

&amp;

Pommeroy 'llotor Co.
Notice'
8-W - "The

Glory of The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A,
published by Souvenir Songs
(ASCAP), free recording to
DJs. Address, John Mohler,
Rl. 1, Box 210, Middleport,
Ohio ~5760, phone 992·6903.
'
8·25-12tp
'

Ohio, to sell for · cash the
following collateral, to wit : 1968
Oldsmobile 2 Dr . Cpe .. Serial

No .

said

Property

Wanted To Buy

For Sale or Lease

Transfers

Lead Tips Diamond Mine
WEST

.A

14' • 24' - WIDE

EAST

.QI043
.J852
tJS
.QBS

.J6
• Q73
tAU
.J9762

soum &lt;Dl
.KB
• AKI09
• 763
.Kl043

Both vulnerable

West
Pass
p...

North

Eul

It

Pass

1.

Pus

3N.T.

Pus

,

Pass

LADY to do housework, I day a
week, 152 Butternut, Phone
had to decide whether to 992-5080.
8·26-6tc
play the queen or to finesse
a~ainst the jack. He solved
h1s problem by playing the For Rent
queen. East's jack fell and
it was a simple matter for 2 BEDROOM house on Lincoln
12' •
South to knock out the ace Heights. Phone 992-5127 alter
4 p.m .
and make 10 tricks.
8·31-tfc
Why did South make that -__- ,.: - - - - - - diamond play? II was 12x60 TRAILER. 2 bedroom.
chiefly due to inferences ob- nicely furnished , all new, 5
1220 Washington Blvd.
tained from analysis of the miles above Pomeroy, own
BeiPfe, Ohio
opening lead , West had led lot, city water, electric range.
into South's first bid suit. Good location for school
West was trying to set up a teachers. Call 985·4143.
VACUUM CLEANER brand
suit in his hand. West would
· B-26·6lc new 1971 model. Complete
with all cleaning tools. Small
Send Sl lor JACOBY MODERN 600l S ROOMS, furnished. Phone paint damage In shipping.
Will take S27 cash or budget
to: "Win of lridgt," (c/o lhis llewsMrs. A. R. Knight, 992-2433 or
•
,
.
c
·
992·2883
.
.
plan available. Phone 992·
9
pGPft ), P.0 . 01 ,f , ~au10
1ty
8·26-6tp 5641.
'
'
Stotio11, New York, N.Y. 10019.
8·25-6tc
need a sure re·entry and the TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile VOLKSWAGEN camper. good
only one would be the ace Court, Rl . 124, Syracuse, condition , Less than 20,000
Ohio. 992-2951.
of diamonds.
miles. 439 Lincoln St., Mid·
~-2-tfc
dleport,
Paul Scott.
This wasn 't a sure-thing - - - - - - - - 8·25-tlc
play. but it worked this time FURNISHED and unfurnished
and w o u I d tend to work apartments. Close to school. HI. NEIGHBOR! Tried Blue
more often than it would Phone 992-543~.
Lustre .for cleaning carpets?
10-18·11C
fail.
It's super . Rent electric
(NfWSPitPEI ENTUPRI5E ASSH. )
shampooer, $1, Baker Fur.
3 ROOM unfurnished apart. niture Company .
8·25-6tc
menl. Phone 992·2288.
B-29.1fc

I.

Snu.t h

IN.T.
Pass Pass

Opening l•ad- • 6
By O.wald &amp; James Jacoby
North's selection of a diamond response, rather than
a spade, was somewhat irregular. Hi~ reason was
that,' if they got into slam
action, he considered his
diamond suit far better than
his spades. When South
looked at dummy. he wasn't
·too happy about game. He
didn't like the club lead .
since he analyzed it as
fourth-best of five.
He had to win in dummy
and proceeded to play dummy's king of diamonds at
trick two. This hel&lt;l the
trick. His next play w~s to
l'Ome to his hand with a
heart in order to lead a &lt;lia·
mond towurd dummy.
West playL'Illow ar•J St·•,ll•

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

Wafer

Softef)er,

breakfast set, table and 4
chairs. catt 985-3536 or contact Bill Allen, Chester.
8·29·31p

SA. VE UP

r.

31

Miracle

Help Wanted

HOSPITAL
·NEWS

NOKm
.A9752
.64
t KQI092

Balance $80.99. Use our
budget terms. (all 992-7085.
8·29·61c

couple TREE RIPENED white and
yellow peaches at Mason
Would like house or aparl - Peach Orchard. Priced from
menf in Pomeroy or Mld - $2 to $4.50. One mile above
dter,ort. No children . Ex. Mason Br-idge; turn right and
eel ent reference. Phone Vera follow signs.
Eblen at 593-77113 or 593·3710.
8·2S.6ft
8·29.6tc
2 DOOR G. E. Refrigerator,
Magic Chef Gas range.
~le or Female.

GINSENG. Clean bone dry. $38
collateral being held to secure
lb. Snake Root, $S lb. Bill GENERAL STORE and service
an obligation lrlsil"tll under a
Bailey, Reedsville, Ohio, station across from Portland
retail Installment security
Park. Phone 843·2491.
Charles
L.
Wyalt,
Margaret
Second St. Phone 378-6208.
ag:reement executed by Ronald
B-27-6tc
8-31·
IOtc
Lesle Carr and held by General A. Wyatt to Jed Junior Webster,
Motors Acceptence Corporation Beny Jane Webster, Lots,
ONE BOTILE gas heater with
11 secured party . Said public
ule Is to be conducted ac · Pomeroy. ,
blower and thermostat, 50,000 For Sale
cording to the laws of the State
to
60,000 BTU. Phone 992-6147
Wilbur D. Young, Ruth A.
PERMANENT registered
Of Ohio. General Motors At ·
after 5:30 p. m.
ceptance Corporatl.on reServes Young to Charles Corder, Joan
Appaloosa mare. Phone 9928-31 ·3tp 3118.
the right to bid at thIs sale .
The collateral IS presently Corder, Parcels, Pomeroy.
8-26·6tp
stored and may be seen at
Charles E. Riffle, Bernice E. OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks.
Gallipolis Motor Co., Gallipolis, Riffle to Anthony Nardei,
and-or complete households. COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Ohio.
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy, •att Works. E. Main St .•
GENERAL MOTORS !,lorinda Nardei, Lot, Pomeroy.
Ohio. Coli 992·6271.
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
ACCEPTANCE
Mrs. Harry Marsh , Faye
8·25-tfc
PORATIONI81
31; (9) 1 COR·
A.9.tft
Marsh to Ohio Power Co.,
100 TO 300 AtRES, old farm,
Ease., Lebanon.
abandoned farm or vacant POODLE puppies. Silver roy,
Park view Kennels. Phone 992Nora Jordan, Adlnn:., Katie land with all rights. Will pay to
5443.
Wilson, dec., lo John W. ss.OOO cash . .Write to John
8-15-lfc
Huffman, 1500 Seminola.
Brogan, Jr., Cletith E. Brogan, Akron, Ohio 44305.
Lot, Harrisonville.
8-27·61p CANNING tomatoes, already
.;
. ..,
.
Jack A. GorreU, Joyce Ann
picked, $1.25 bu ., bring
IQ.
fNCH
bench
saw.
Phone
992containers.
Geraldine
Gorrell lo Lyle D. Showalter,
6675, Don.
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
1.34 A., 9.80 A., Orange.
8-29-3tp
7-7B·Ifr
- - -c=c--Holzer Medical Center First Orlyn FeUure to Jack Spires,
NICE 8 week old pigs - sro to
Ave. and Cedar st. ~neral Carolyn Spires, 79.11 A., Salem. Help Wanted
$12. County Road 30. Phone
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. Morris Harden, Dorothy CAR HOP and waitress. Apply
949-2115.
in person . Crdw's Steak
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Harden to Helen Baek, Lots,
8·31 -31p
House.
t:30 p.m. Parents only on Syracuse. .
8-31 -6tc 10x25 HOUSE TRAILER, set up
Pediatrics Ward.
Roman F . Warmke, Dorothy
on large lot in Harrisonville.
IIJrllls
E. Wannke to Franklin Real STANLEY Home Products
Will sell trailer or both. Phone
needs 5 fall and Christmas
742·4781.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Ihle, Eslate Co., 390 A., Colwnbia.
representatives .
Car
8·31-3tc
Racine, a daughter; Mr. and John Reed, Belly Mae Reed to
necessary. Write Mrs. Lib·
Mrs. H. Donald Peck, Leon, a Charles Kenneth Reed, Susre man, 34 W. carpenter St., USED SINGER portable sewing
machine with zig.zagger~
son; Mr. and MrS. William E. Elizabeth Reed, 5 A., Salem.
Athens or call 593-8854.
blind hem . Fashion designed,
B-31-6tc
Morris, Pomeroy, a son; Mr. - - - - - - - - - - etc. $31.75. Phone 992-7085.
and Mrs. Gecrge A. ,speakman, son.
SOMEONE needed to slay with
8·31-6tc
Ewington, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Discharges
Invalid 5 days a week, some
La
nights. Phone 992-7155.
.
L
R.C.A. COLOR T.V.,· console
Jerry R. Brammer. Bldweu. a
Mrs. Dtana
. Ang1es, rry
8 29 6t
model. Phone 742-5042.
- · c
daughter ·, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dean Beaver, Mrs. Richard
8·29·3tC
L. Rayburn, Henderson, a son; Dow
Mrs. Evelyn M. GIRL NEEDED five days a
. •
.
week and slay nights
Mr· andMrs. Richard A• Unroe, N1cholson,
James H. Reily, Asel Evenings and weekends free: 40" HOT POINT range, white, 2
years old, excellent condition
Crown City, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Searls, Mrs. Charles_vanMeter No work. Good h_ome and
• $150.00. Can be seen alter 5
Timothy L. Lawhon, Gallipolis, and daughter, Jackson
wages. Phone 992·5207 after 3
p.m. at 105 Union Avenue.
a daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Walker, Jerry Wayne McOung, p.m.
Phone 992-3293.
8·29·3tp
8-31 ·3tc
David D. Lambert, Wellston, a and Harry Baldwin.
EARN AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush stamped 22" LENNOX forced air coal
furnace,
complete.
self.addressed envelope. The
reasonable. Wm. H. Cleland,
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn,
Racine, phone 949-2963.
Davisburg, Mich . ol8019.
WIN AT BRIDGE
8-25-6tc
8-1-JOip
336171M30S~Z4

BEAUTIFUL colonial maple

business

Meigs

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

Automotlc Degree Day
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Equipment.

BILL NELSON ·

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and
ditioning.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2111 ,

West

Nurth

foAst

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

985·4106.

8-27·61c

You , South, hold :

.A KKT.K Q 'U tfi.KIIT ii
Wh .. t du you do'.' '
. I BEDROOM trailer apartA-Bid unc club. Yuu shuuld
men t. ideal for couples .
11tart with ,. rluh with this '·'"fM'
Contact McClure' s Dairy Isle,

or hand.
TIIJ)A n; I!Ut~'il'IO~

Yuu ;lu hid urn · dub turd yntrr
pm·lncr ldds 11111• 1limuwrrl Wlr;rl
du ,\' U\1 flu /lOW'.'

\

l&lt;~~~uiHER A MESS
FER SUPPER

.r

SR.

basement, 133 Butternut Ave .,
just walking distance from
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
~d

Hedrick, 2137 Wadswot th

Orive, Columbus, Oh io, phone

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

LAt.JE

NOW, DEAR, DON'T

BOR!' I.Q. WiTII
PilOTOS OF YOU It

IXXJLrrTLE COLLE6E

Z TfN.ll NEll _ , C«&lt;UWT
WIM 1NAT' OIITFIT
Nl'lltl ,.,..,,_,.,.

OF COURSE NOT J DIDN'T
VOU SAV YOU'RE tf\ITERESTEI&gt;
IN HiSTORY, I.Q. 'i _____--...._

~YS

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

Complete

R e.modeling
Kitchens, Baths
Rbom Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
End loader Work
Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

0C&gt;tr DOAN'ITI-IIIJG

NO CJt.lE

or
the

From the Largest
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Heater Core.

-,!"R- HAST'I.

IS OUR.

MAS"rER!!

BlArnNARS
Ph. 992-2143

CHAIR!!- I'LL

REASQI.l WITH

TI-IEM -

OF COUt«;e, 1'/ITH CI.Jil. CAI&lt;:-11'9 ~~IKe" A '1RIIN$FII$I(JNf

~- I:IUT

A.K., DEAR--WE GAVE 'IOU
'11-lAT .4-5 10
mot:ECT '{()UR5ELF
AGAINST TR!ACH£ROUS

RATS!!

Pomeroy

Have Your Seasonal
POMEROY

Air Conditioning

HOME &amp; AUTO

Inspection and

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE

Re-Charge
Special
At

6.98

BUGS

Plus
Parts

Sl£EP~
I DON'T BELIEVE ~
CLOSED MY EYE5
ALL NIGHT

Blaettnar's

Stop In and See Our
·Floor Display.

PHONE 992-2143

BUNNY
VIT6t:ZMtNE PI~~,;,
B.o.LL..POINT PIONS,

KOW ABOUT SOME!.
5KOECACES ... t;;ttSPr•.

OH, rr WAI!J DEFINITElY BUT WHAT ON
IIO'lNAZ, MOM! l'vf GOr EARTH FOR, DEAR ?
TO GET ON 1HE. PHONE
IHERE:'S NOTHINGAND OiECJ&lt; OUT
YOU CAN DO
1H05E: RUMORS
ri80UT IT1 16
IHAT 11"!'&gt; UP
11-IE'RE: ?'
FOR &amp;ALE!

~F'ETV

SAAVI NG SQO.P, f'l'oPEIZ.

1"1 NS •••

CL..IPS ••• PGIF"P•• ~
R/.t:P

'!

wnt., OPEN lHE

AND LET'S
HA.VE A LOOK!

O()()R

Mind it I check 40ur
can collection?

1-'l'!P.a, have i.JOU done
60methinq bad aqain?

....'

Realty

608 East Main
POMEROY

- - -- - -

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992·2418.
4·25.1fc

I

2 speed operation.
Cholet of water
temps.
Auto .
water
level
control.
L inf
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator .

heat. No hot spots,

no overdrylng .
Fine Mesh Lint

Filler.

·s the !ipice of our music.

We Specialize In

MAYTAG

Red Carpet _

Arnold Grate

;:

I

~

J

.0
~
' - - - - - ; __ _...;__,_J

,.Popular
otnglng
trt.ar

ACROSS
1."At the

summit
5. Provlde
with a
spigot

DICK TRACY

TH! N!UTRON
ACTIVATION
ANALYSIS
SHIRT CUFF

1~. Pboto
15. Svetlana's

IS POSITIVE!

father

18. -llke
a bird
21. Pinched
22. Italian
river

symbol
9. Summer
(Fr.)
13. Try to

'1011 POH'T·,SW.I.WIC!i
I.FTri&gt;.FIIEf 01'
TilE llDCI(5 Ff TilE
ttUGe WPNe, ne

CONCfRNfD TIW TilE
IWI5 ARE I&gt;IOIJT

.Tohrul

20. Soviet
newa
agency Ye.terbJ''• Almrer
21. Cicatrix
30. Adage
22.Italtan
city
31. Mexl24-Pftcan

Robert

29. See6

32. Teamster's
command
33.Mar,
Calif.
3,, ActreBs
Joanne
35. -

Down

Kippur

Beach
sights
27.0ld-Ume
auto
28.Bayor

theM

oqtllft,

form four ordinary wordo.

I CHEEN
SUROC

~

tJIITHERl

II
III

1JotE'f SUI' FURl' ~E
KINe ANI' QEEN.

I

of-

(At

.30. Gold

"'

i¥4)

Jo..w- IOGUS WAOU TYl'INO fii!MhO

digger's

YHterdaJ"'•

COJ'tlpaulon
(2wdL)

M.Watchful

n.actavta'•

An.wen lf'lty the proltlr.• of,.... Acir t\r zf•'a
-,.y.. -IT GOD AWAY

PI \'t 1._.

l!pOIIIO

--

38. PluUlke

at. Urban

eyeoono

G" - ..;;&gt;

DOWN

l.Dolt
:Ll'laylD(
marble
s. Lyric
poem ._......._....___._.__
'

Yx.

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE- Here's how to -rk It:

All tuition except children's are $39.00 for the 13 week
course, payable on registration.
T"illon for Children's classes are $19.50 for the 13 week
course, payable on registration.
All necessory materials may be purchased at the galle&lt;y
. lor awrox. $20.00 for the 13 weeks.

·A X Y D L B A A X R
18 LOMGI'J:LLOW
Olle letter lllmply ataad8 tor onother. In lh1l Ample A Ia
UMd for the throe L'o, X for the two 0'1, ete. BIJtlle. tetterw,
&amp;jiCI8taoplleo, the lenfth utd ftllmatton ot the are all
111111:.1. l!:ach day the code 1etm11 .:no cllfterent..

HJKVJHI!:O HK N-ATALBJDVTO : OWG

Rulland,O.

'

BVJ

CA:lt

HI!:

LTAJ. - JtVU

Rl'WU

OWOT

DAXAJKWJ

- --::""

~ - &lt;=- ·=-)

A &lt;Jr:nltopull q I II t a

Registration will be acceptid on Seturday, Sep.. mber 4,
6-9 p.m. at tilt Gatr.ry.
•

'

$e:

~WJd~®~llw-=s
UIIIIDIIIble
four Jumbleo,
:::::=
one letter to each
to

N---1M""'
...
Mtl
v
1
1
1
tofont
....
-.....
•
I~]~"~~~~~=nj" ••Jrrtlle...,.ca11•••
L ~ .. , =-• It I I I I I I ]

28.8t.
Nlcholaa

CAPl'AIN EASY

Joe.)

PLINCE ~
I

hemp

lll.I56IAN 5U8
dEHD.V IN
1l&lt;EMCTIG
OCEAN SWELL$.

MILL~

llrtto'lrol•

tree

blatorlc

Greeks
28. Borgnine's
15. Be curious
16.Lone
oscarwinRanger's
nlng
sidekick
17. Actor,
role
recall
(2wds.)

the sweet .
(2 wds.)
25. Greek river
26.Mlaml
.
1/.Y PfAR .W~

St.
!

chievous
child
8. Hawalla.n
we1come

22. Sweets for

10 Ulllllltc -

Rogers

7. MlB-

ment
(2Wds.)

J'ords
19. -

6. Odlst

endear·

ON
IMtJ!I.~~R TWO'S '

otthe

dant

i)

· -...

Y_...,.. Cl)flltwllll: DON'T STAND lN TOUR 0WK
SHADoW: GIC'l' YOUR LITrLE SELF OUT OJ' 'I'BII: W..A.T
80 YOUR BIG 8I:LJ' CAN B'nUDI!: FORWARD.-WILI'JCII.D A. PI!:'I'I!:R80N

18. 0ne

5. Descen-

NUMBER TWO, VOU ASKED THE COURT FOR PER· 10.Startn
MI!;StclN TO BE YOUR OWN ATTORNEY. DO YOU
Cyguus
+~~-=S~:rAND
ON THAI? ;:::::::i::::i:===~:::::J 11. Sp"""
l
tr&amp;veler
12.Tennof

Strvic:e

RUTlAND
FURNITURE
742-4211

1

I

•

HIIDOf Hilt

Dryers
Surround clothes
With gentle, even

II

DAILY CROSSWORD

Monday-Graphics and w1ter color painting.
Tuesday-Oil pointing and graphics for teenagers - 13
· lhru 19 years.
Wedntsd.ly-Oit painting and graphics from life-all
ages.
Thursday-Oil painting and graphics-men only.
Afternoon Cluses
Tuesday- Oil painting end graphics-I - 4 p.m.-all ages.
Wednesday- Children ctasses-4:30 to 6 p.m.

•J

I

•

'SUCKER'S GOOD
FER AT tfA&amp;T OIIE
IIROI&lt;Etl LtM&amp;r

NOTICE

Big Capacity
Maytat
Automatics

"

I AGGER THAT

4~%
PASSIOOI RATE

In-

•i

.
\ ,.-§)

..

237-4334. Columbus.
_ __ _ _ _ _ _::_:
5·9-tfc MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
.MEIGS CO. BRANCH
BUY FOR YOU - 1'12 story
brick, living room, dining
3 BEDROOM home. Electric
room
, CARPETED, nice Real Estate For-Sale
heal. remodeled recently
kitchen, bath, 2 bedrooms, LARGE 2 apartment home.
inside, 7th street, New Haven.
building. JUST $6,950.
storage
Furnished, beautiful river
Owner transferred . Phone
882-2263;
view. Rental trailer on
RACINE - 1 story frame, 3
premises. Inquire at . Dairy
8·29·61c
Meigs County lrench el Tilt
large bedrooms with closets,
Corner, Letart, W. Va . Phon&lt;
bath,
nice
kitchen,
large
Atlltns County savings 1
895-3357.
HOUSE, 16-42 Lincoln Heights.
living room, CARPETED.
l.oen Co.
(alf Danny Thompson, 992·
8·31
-6tc
large
garage
with
shop,
.75
2N Second 51.
2196. '
acre, liKE NEW. $20,500.
Pomeroy, Ohio
1970 RICHARDSON mobile
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _7_:.:_·
18-tfc
. home with washer and dryer,
POMEROY- l'h story frame,
fully carpeted, also 5 room
Mtmber Federal Home Loan
11 .16 ACRES located T·79 at
3 bedrooms, bath, living
Bank
house
l"lth
basement,
both
Rock Springs, close to Meigs
room ,
dining
room,
Member
Federal Savings "
located on two lots In
High School. Contact Bill
Loan Insurance Corpontlon .
basement, porch, large lot.
Syracuse.
Phone
992·7019.
Wille - for L. Fields- alter 5
All accounts Insured up to
Storm doors, windows. ALL
8·3J.6tc
$20,000.00.
p.m. or on week•nds 992·6887.
IN GOOD CONDITION •
8·27-!Ole
BARGAIN AT JUST$7,900
3 BEDROOM brick home .
PLACE THE SALE OF
Choice location In Middleport.
YOUR PROPERTY IN
Seen by appointment only.
CAPABLE HANDS
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m.
HENRY E. CLELAND
5-7·tfc
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
CONVENIENT but secluded
Residence m -151t8
building lots on T7V at Rock
Art Classes for O'Artiste Gallery, 525 N- 2nd
8-29·61c
Springs . Within walking
St., Middleport. Ohio, Ruth Gosney,
distance of Meigs High NEW, 3-bedroom home In
structor. Beginning September 6 - December
School, a S minute drive from
Middleport. Built-In kitchen,
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
2,
1971. 13 week coursesceramic tile bath, all.electrlc
Wille weekends or after 5
heal, good neighborhood. can
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992·
arrange
FHA fihan&lt;lng.
6887. .
Telephone 992·3600 or 992·
Evening Classes-7-10 p.m.
7-11-tfc
2186.
----;----7?5-tfc

ITEM : Tom Hill. He ploy
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears an
ma Cass. B.ut he · pta·1
oon light Serenade u
ndy Williams too. Varie

" --

LAt.J£

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

Cleland

M•ytog

l

LOV£R.S

15.55

MORE NOW

Perma· Prtss ·

WMP0/1390

LOVERS

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

•

?

MV 0~ WOMAN I'D

PROMISEO ME'IE'D
PlAV CHeCKeRS
WIF METODAV

EARN

· 992·5248 or 992-3436.

8·29-61c
4 ROOM •partment, all otilities
·$80 .00
p•id . furnish ed
month , Phone 992 3975.
8-31 . ttc

AN' J: JEST PROMISED

' - - - - - - -- - - - - ' SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
delivered right to your
662·3035.
Broker
2·12-lfc
prQjecl. Fast and easy. Free
no Mechanic Street
esl•mates . Phone 992·3284.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co., HARRISON'S TV AND AN
1971 DIAL 'N SEW zig-zag SYRACUSE- 4 rooms, nice lot.
Middleport, Ohio.
Tr'"'NA SERVICE . Phono
sewing machine left in . $1,800.00.
6-30-lfc
992-2522.
layaway. Beautiful pastel
• ·10-lf·
· color, tull size model. All
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
buill-in to buttonhole, over- RUTLAND - 6 rooms, bath, Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, SEWING MACHINE service In
basement, nice lot. $3,500.00.
cast and fancy stitch. Pay just
Gallipolis. John Russell,
your home. Clean, ott and
$48 .75 cash
or
terms
Owner &amp; Operator.
$4. Phone 992·7085.
adjust,
CHESTER
AREA
2
available. Trade-ins ac 5-13-lfc
Twin
City
Sewing Machine
bedrooms,
nice
kitchen
and
cepted. Phone 992-5641.
Company
.
living
.
Only
$7,600.00.
8-25-6tc
B-31·6tc
NEIGLER Construction. For
MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms, building or remodeling your
bath. large Iivlng, garage. home. Call Guy Nelgler , O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Auto Sales
Racine, Ohio.
Only $7 .500.00.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12~.
1965 MUSTANG, 289, 3 speed.
7-3t .tfc
Complete front end service,
Contact Butch Grover, Bailey COUNTRY LIVING - new 4 - - - - - - - - tune up and brake service.
Run Rd.
bedroom, 2 bath, double
Wheels
b~lanced
elec8·29·31p
garage, 15 , acres. $37,500.00. AWNINGS, storm doors and .
tronically.
·
All
work
windows, carports.
guaranteed .
Reasonable
'51 FORD 112-ton pickup truck, RT. 7 BYPASS - new 5 marquees, aluminum siding
rates. Phone 992-3213.
and
ratting
.
Gall
A.
Jacob.
1' 64 Corvair Monza, 4 speed
bedroom home, llh baths, 4
7-27-lfc
sales representative. For free
transmission. Phone 742·5042. - acres.
estimates, phone Charles A:-:U-::T::OM=o::B:-:1-:-L-::E:-:i:-ns_u_ra:-:ii:-c..,.
8·29-3tc
e -:-been
Syracuse.
V.
V.
Lisle,
NEW HOME - 3 spacious
cancelled?
Lost
your
Johnson and Son, Inc.
1959 FORD 11&gt; ton pickup, very
bedrooms, gas heat. large
operator's license? Call 9925-27-tfc
good cond1tlon. $500. Phone
living and kitchen. $19,500.00.
2966.
992-7378.
6-15·1fc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
8·31 ·31c INVESTMENT - your own
Complete Service
.
home and business with
Phone
949-3821
1970 VOLKSWAGEN .
rental. Store with stock and
Racine, Ohio
automatic stick shift, radio.
fixtures .
Crllt
Bradford
eietfric defroster, dark blue
and Whife interior. Phone 675· INVESTMENT - 2 stories - :-::-,-;;---,,--,,--,s,.,-t==-lfc
5203.
large rental on first floor - 2 SEWING MACHINES. liepalr
8-31-6tc
on second. 218 E. Main.
service, all makes. 992-2284,
3
Helen~: ¥:aford
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1970 DATSUN pick-up, good
Authorized Singer Seles and
Your regular payday·
condlflon , new ti;es. never
Associate
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
wrecked. $1.575. Phone 992B·29·61c
3·29·1fc
savings
plus . our high
5153.
rate of return will
8·18· 12tc
QUEEN AND Shamblin Cons!.
oll:lake your s1vings
Roofing.
remodeling,
'
grow quickly ,_,
aluminum siding. Phone 992Real Estate For Sale
7324 or 742·4979.
8·25-lfc
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
APPLES· Peaches. Fitzpatrick
Orchards, State Route 689,
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
8·15-tfc

PRIVATE trailer lot In Chester

Suuth with utility building . Phone
.,

Con-

Real Estate For Sale

and Furnaces.
I

Air

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

We also have a complete line

LUKEV? 'IE

IOHNSI)N MASONRY

240 Linc~ln St., Middleport

ot Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
POMEROY

HILTON WOLFE
949-3211

992-365~

- - - -- - -

Tht• biddinA hu!' been:

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY OOWN
tOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A_,l bedroom .t16,900.00 hOme can be [iurchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 tor a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
.per·c_01lla!l" rate.

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
speakers, -4 speed automatic
changer. separate controls.

WHAR 'IE GOIN~

MEF.K

·- ·- - - .

$67.40. Use our budget terms.
cau 992·7085.
8·29-6tc

transferring to Pomeroy .

WILL PAY well for your spare
to one half. Bring KOSCOT Kosmetlcs . Sep· time working at home for us.
Anyone who can read and
tember Sales Special :
The form of t.hi1 notice hu been apyour sick TV to Chuck's TV
prmed b)' Tbc Public Utilities Commiulon
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
write can qualify. Weekly
Kreaml Lip Kole $2 now
$1.50, Frosllucenl Lip Kote salary. For details write,
of Ohio.
THE OHIO BELL
Pomeroy.
'
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box
$2.50 now $2, 23 delicious
TELEPHONE COMPANY
~·23·tfc
colors. Call 992-5113 or cqme 32~. Dept. K 479, Levittown,
By: C. K. Eller,
Pa .• 19053.
at 161'12 N &lt;th Ave.,
"'" '"'14'"' I WOULD like to do typing in see
Middleport. Qh, ,
8·27-61c
(8J 21,31 (9J 7. lie my home. Reasonable rates.
8-29-lfc
Phone 992-3497.
8-29·6tc
For Sale or Trade
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Wanted
TO WHOM IT MAY CON FOR SMALLER house, a large
CERN :
EXPERIENCED timber cutter. house (2 apts.) corner of
Notice is hereby given that on
Phone 992-5644.
Pearl &amp; Park Sts.. MidSrptember 10, 1971, at 10 : 00
8·31·5tp
dleport.
A.Nt . l!l public sale will be held at
8·29-6tc
~-----·Gallipolis Motor Co ., Gallipolis ,
at an)' public bu1inen othce of the

Compaoy.

WALNUT stereo-radio com·
bination . Four speed in ·
termixed changer . Fou.r
speaker sound system, dual
volume· control. ' a.alance

Wanted To Rent
ATHENS

8-i7-ttc

BEAGLE, 5 months old, A.K.C.
tegistered. Has had all shots
$40. Phone 992 - 3~94 alter 5
p.m.
8-29-61c

OPEN EVES. a:CJO P.M.
POMEROV, OHIO

"God and I" -

lid as Appllc•nt is reuonably entitled WE WOULD like to thank all the
•• In &lt;he "''"""'·
people In the county for their
A copy or 1he Applicadon, includlna expressions of sympathy In

!'hone 843-2254.

1964 FORO GALAX I ~00 .
$79S
4 ~oor. V8 ~gln_e, aut~atlc trans ., power steering,

PLEASE REQUEST your
favorite disc jockey to play -

Card 0f Th an kS
p r o - Khedule oheOIS: and
{il) Grant IUCh. other and lurthu re·

charau, may bl! insPk(ed by •111 interested
,...,. at the olli"' or the commission, 111
North HiP Strtel, Columbus Ohio, aDd

busheL pi ck your own . '
Cucum'bers. and tomafo~s . . ,
Watermelons. cantaloupes. , .
sweet
corn,
potafoes .
Clarence Proffitt, Portland.

Can~ellatfon &amp;

pony lt. nhlkd. bh:ausc- ur the rc-aS\ml

:::'
'::';:::=;:::=:::::-? BALLS 0~_=---=---,
r:-------~---'----.-------~EEK ~ND
L.
FIRE!!

..I"L-'-'1. /
.., •. _-.:_;_ - ... rt

SNHD·~~~~-'---~""
- ~,_. __
~-Jf

.l'
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a- The Daily Sent::-el, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, August 31,1971

One-Won-One Club
Plans Family .Affair
A fellowship dinner to be held
on Sept. 22 at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church was planned
during Thursday night's
m""ting of the One-Won.()ne
Class. The dinner will be a
church-wide family affair.
Mrs . Audrey Young conoducted the meeting using as
scripture for devotions Matthew
4 with a commentary on the
scripture - "Man shall not live
by bread alone" . She concluded
with a prayer poem. The class
sang "He Keeps Me Singing"
and gave the Lord's Prayer in
unison.
The teacher's thought was
given by Mrs. Caryl Cook who
used scripture from John 16, 32·
33, and a meditation on com·
mWtication with God. The Sept.
14 meeting will be hosted by the

The Pratts Return
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Pratt
have returned following funeral
services for her father . T. N.
Sallee, 69, at Richmond, Ky.
Mr. Sallee died on Aug. 24 at
the Pattie A. Clay Hospital at
Richmond and funeral services
were conducted Thursday .
Besides .Mrs. Pratt, he is survived by his wife, two sons and
another daughter. Burial was in
the Richmond Cemetery .

MEIGS tHEATRE
,,
Tonight, Aug. 31
A NEW LEAF
(Technicolor)
Walter Matthau
Elaine May

" G"

Colorcortoon•: ·
Give Me Liberty
H- to Relax
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

WednesdaY &amp; TbursdaY

September 1-2
NOT OPEN

. M~\
. .0 ~

DRIVE· IN
.

'

Tonight, Aug. 3t
Double Feoture Program
THE WILD
BUNCH

R

(Color&gt;
William Holden
Ernest Borgn ine

-PiuoTHE SWEET BODY
OF DEBORAH
R

(Color I
Carroll Baker
Jean Sorel

Wed . Thu. &amp; Fri.
September 1-2-3
Double Feature Program
"BULLITT"

(Color)
Steve McQueen
-PtuoBONNIE&amp; CLYDE
(Color I
Warren Beatty
Faye Dunaway

II

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VOL XXIV

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK

IS A PLEASURE TO HANDLE
BUT
IT'S SAFER IN
THE BANK···

dangerous to carry around than
a checkbook."

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.llibens ~alional
_.t.,.f!NCIJo!i~All

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WINNERs OF THE annual hole4n-me contest held la8t week by the ~meroy-Middleport
Lions Club were presented their awards Moilday afternoon by Tom Cassell, left, contest
chaitman. First place winners Included from the left, Robert Sawyer, Mason, who received a
trophy and a set of golf clubs as men's champion, eight and one-quarter inches from the hole;
Miss Marlon Eberabach, Pomeroy, women's champion, a trophy, nine inches from the hole,
and David Reed, Mason, a trophy. winner of tile junior division being three feet and two inches
from the hole.

Eastern Announces
Free Lunch Policy

Golf Contest Winners Announced
Plans already are underway
for the annual golf hole-in~me
contest of the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club next
summer, Tom Cassell, who
headed last week's successful
event at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds said today.
Next year the event will be
held in July rather than in
August and according to plans
already made the green and t""
will be lighted.
Daily winners were announced today by Cassell who
also awarded contest first place
winners their awards Monday

afternoon. They included men's
champion, Robert Sawyer.
Mason, who won a trophy and a
set of golf clubs; women's
champion, Miss Marion Ebersbach of Pomeroy, who received
a trophy award, and David
Reed, Mason, winner of the
junior division, 16 and under,
who won a trophy.
Daily winners follow. The
first place received a dozen golf
balls while second and third
place winners each received
golf caps. Daily winners and the
distance from the hole include:
August 23 - l. Ron Toler

lO'h", 2. Dennis Tulloh 2'-2", 3.
David Reed 9' -2".
August 24 -1. John Riebel 3',
2. David Reed 3'·2", 3. Earl
Johnson 5'-11".
August 26 - l. Bill Persinger
3'-lh", 2. Andy Persinger 3'-6".
August 26- I. Robert Sawyer
8¥4'', 2. Ron Toler I' -9'h' ', 3. Bill
Persinger 3'.
August 27 - I. Bill Persinger
1'-11%", 2. Harold Foul 3'-3\'.o'',
3. Robert Sawyer 3'-3'1&lt;".
August28 - 1. Max Folmer I'·
53/.,", 2. Robert Sawyer 2'-Ph 11 ,
3. U!ster Gibbs 2'-51'.".

MISS DEBRA ANN FITCH, center, a graduate of Eastern High School this spring, was
' Memorial Hospital. At the
IX"esenled a $500 nursing scholarship Monday afternoon at Veterans
left making the presentation is Mrs. Alex Wheeler, APPle Grove, president of the hospital's
Women's AUiillary which awards the scholarship. looking on is Donald Diener, administrator
of the hospital.

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, 0~10

NO. 98

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER I, 1971

Miss Debra Ann Fitch, the past are U!nora Mitchell
daughter of Mrs. WUma Tillis of who is receiving her third
near POOteroy and a spring payment this faD and Rhonda
graduate of Eastern High Ervin who is to receive her
School, Monday was presented
a $500 'nursing scholarship byM
the Women's Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Fitch will leave Wed·
nesday (()begin her training as
a registered nurse at the Good
Samar~lan
Hospital
in
MASSILLON, Ohio (UPI) ZanesvtDe.
.
.
Educators should give top pri·
At Eastern High School, Miss orily in their jobs to restoring
Fitch was a. member of the the nation's confidence in
student council for two years as schooling, state Schools Supt.
well as a staff member of .the Martin Essex said here Mannewspaper for the same penod. day.
She was~ member of the LaUn
"The first and foremost goal
Club, Science Club, and of the of our time in education Is the
scholarship team. She took part
.
.
.
. tr 1 nd Ia
. th
restorauon of conftdence tn ed1
m eaooua mtnS e a tc. ss ucauon
. ,.. Essex 1old th e Mas,
pia y~. Sh e was a Cand
. ys rt~r sillon Teachers' Convocation.
~t v:rans Memortal Hosptlal
He blamed loss of confidence
or
ee years. . .
. on overselling education\ caOther scholarshtp wmners tn pacity to correct social ills.

(Continued from Page I)
taxes.
Maloney said the proposal provides for real properlY tax relief
The Eastern Local Board of may make a request either in the form of an income tax
Education today annoWtced a orally or in writing for a hearing credit if property tax paid exceeds I~ per cent of the homefree lunch policy for the to appeal the decision.
district's school children unable Robert Bowen, Meigs CoWtty owner's adjusted gross income.
There is no general real esto pay the full price of a meal. Superintendent of Schools,
Local ·school officials have Pomeroy, has been designated tate tax relief in the smaller
adopted the following family as hearing official. Hearing sales and ~orporate tax mea·
size and income scale to assist procedures are oullined in the sure, but both measures contain
them in determining eligibility policy. The policy also provides homesteadexemptionsfor homefor free lunches.
that there will be no iden· owners over 65 years old.
Family Size
Inc. Scale Ann. tification of or discrimination
Cigarette Tax Hike
1
$2670 against any student unable to
And
Maloney's plan would roll
2
$3310 pay the full cost of a lunch.
3
$3940 A complete copy of the policy back the tangible personal prop4
$4530 is on file in each school and in erty tax for business and indus5
$IiilO the office of the local try to 45 per cent instead of 40
$5640 superintendent where it rnay be per cent as In the version pass6 ·
7
$6170 reviewed by any interested ed by the House.
The income lax bill also in8
$6650 person.
cludes
a hike In the state ciga9
$7120
rette tax from 10 10 I~ cents per
pack. But since the legislation
::: 2 Take Part In
would exempt cigarettes from
12
$8560
sales, tax the net increase per
Families falling within this
Ohio S~te Fair
~ack would l&gt;e three cents.
scale or those suffering from
Lynn Baker, daughte· nf M1 .
unusual circumstances or
and Mrs. Paul Baker, Syracll!•
Included In both GOP lax
hardships may apply for free
and Edwin Cross, son of Mr. ana plans is an amendment providIWtches for their children. They
Mrs. Andrew Cross of Racine, ing indirect aid to non • public
may do so by filling in the apparticipated in activities at the schools. To skirt recent U. S.
plication forms sent home in a
Ohio State Fair last week.
Supreme Court ruling prohibitletter to parents. Additional
Lynn , a member of Meigs ing direct state aid 10 private
copies are available at th~
County pleasure riders 4-H club and parochial schools, the proprincipal's office in each school.
represented Meigs County in posal provides for a voWtcher
Applications may be submitted
the Junior Fair horse show and system, whereby parents of nonany time during the school year.
Edwin, a member of the U!tart public school children may apThe form itself is simple to
Farm Boys 4-H club _par· ply for an annual grant from
complete and ·requests in·
ticipated in the state tractor public school districts.
formation needed to determine
operalors contest.
The Income tax bill Includes
economic need based on the
Both did an outstanding job of a $100 per pupil grant each year.
income of persons in the family,
representing Meigs County.
Maloney estimated the cost of
number of children in school
this version at $65 million for
and any unusual circumstances
1971-73.
or hardships which affect the
REUNION SUNDAY
The sales and corporation tax
family 's ability to pay for school The annual Swartz family
lunches . The information reunion will be held Sunday in measure included a $90 per puprovided on the application will the Woode Grove at Alfred with pil per year grant at an estibe confidential and will be used a basket dinner at noon. En- mated two-year cost of $61 milonly for the purpose of deter· tertainment and games will be lion .
Maloney plans further hear·
mining eligibility.
held in the afternoon.
ings on the tax bills today, while
Under the provisions of the
the Senate Finance and Educapolicy the local superintendent
PLAN REUNION
will review applications and! The Ours family reunion will tion Committees prepare alterdetermine eligibility. If a be held Sunday at the Rock nate versions of general and edparent is dissatisfied with the Springs Fairgrounds. A basket ucation spending measures tailruling of the local official he dinner will be served at 1 p.m. ored to Maloney's tax proposals.

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second payment. The recipients
receive $200 for the first year
and $150 fer the. ~nd and
third years of therr training.

•

1ile Lexington, Ky. Veterans
Administration Hospital for the
past several weeks, underwent
surgery Wednesday. Spending
~evera l days there with him
were his wife and his mother,
Mrs. Hubert Pullins, Middleport.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE

Robinson's Cleaners ·

.._________,
216 e. 2nd, Pomeroy

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COLUMBUS (UPI)- A gla~ce
at acttvtly Monday m the 0 to
General ~mbl~

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11 dtnt, · .Jenw Blewbcbi, 111'1. Jcim Redovlan,
treasurer and Mrs.
Bailey, secretary. Absent was
George Mcrris, vice preSident.

Joe

Brewington
Heads
September
-.
Has Anived
Meigs Cancer Unit
••

James Brewington was receipts topped last year 's
elected president of the Meigs donations by $972.26.
CoWtty Unit of the American
Mrs. Theodore Reed, public
Cancer Society at its annual educ_ation chairman, gave a
m..,dng Tuesday night.
report on the activities of the
Brewington replaces Uoyd education program. Mrs. Reed
Blackwood who held the post observed that films on cancer
the past six years.
reached every elementary
Other officers elected were classroom in the county. The
George Morris, vice president, "Send a Mouse to College" was
Mrs. Joe Bailey, secretary, and also very successful Mrs. Reed
Mrs. John Redovian, treasurer. reported, as was the "Save a
. Also elected were 22 po;rsons Life Party." Cancer phamplets
to the board of directors for the will be distributed to doctors
1971-72 year. Named 10 the and dentists waiting rooms in
board were : Mrs. James the near future, Mrs. Reed said.
Brewington, · Mrs. George Mrs. Corrine Lund, executive
Morris, Ed King, Wendell secretary, gave a report on
Hoover, Uoyd Blackwood, Mrs. public information, service, and
Lloyd Blackwood, 111rs. Pat . the youth against cancer.
Lochary, Eldon Weeks, Paul . Mrs. Lund noted that the
Casci, ·Nan Moore, Kathtyn youth against cancer, (YACS )
Shavorinsky, Helen Hayes, Nell has made tremendous strides in
ierkle, Mrs. Ferman Moore, the fight against cancer. Mrs.
Mrs. Theodore Reed, Jr., Mrs. Lund reported that Mr. and
Eugene Harris, Nina Russell, Mrs. Bill Baer, teachers at
Mrs. Sibley Slack, Bernice Southern Local High sChool,
U!dley. Mrs. William Pullins, will assist with the YACS
Dr. Lewis Telle and Dr . Roger program.
Djmiels.
Mrs. Lund annOWtced that the
'!'he directors were elected district m""ting in Waverly will
following the recommendation be held on Sept. 16 at 6:30 p. m.
of the nominating committee and the annual m""ting, Ohio
with Mrs. Nan Moore making Division, will be held in
the report. Others on the Columbus on Oct. 9. Delegates
nominating committee were to the two meetings will be
Paul Casci and Mrs . Pat named at a later date.
Lochary.
Larry Miller, director of Field
In the absence of Wendall Service, Ohio Division, was the
Hoover, crusade chairman, guest speaker.
Mrs. Redovian reported that Miller in his remarks noted
$1;126.87 was received in the that the cancer society was
cancer fund drive. This year's originated in 1913. At that lime

l

Legislature
At A Glance

42 4

NEW \NICERS OF 1RE Melp Oarty Unit ct the
American Cancer Society were elected during the annual
meellllg of the society Tuesday night. Uoyd Blackwood, left,
president fer the past siJ: · years congratulates the new

: · 1 ~ews

He said the current genera·
lion of youths is the first in
history to be an economic lia·
bility to its parent• rather than
an asset. Because of this, he
said, they rarely have a chance
to be a part of the real work
world.

Bill ~::oduced
S B 424 Sh · ••7 5 .11 .
. . , aw,.., . mt ton
. . b d f Se 1 I-IO
mtenm u get or P ·
·
Bills Passed .
.
S. B. 3~2, Me~hel, Ex~ands tn·
sta~ces m .whtch a wtfe may
lesltfy agatnsl her husband to
mclude when he ts .betng prosecuted for cruelty to her. Vole:
21 -0.
All
S. B. 268, App 1ega1e, . ows
the seal of a notary pubh~ to
be constructed etther . to mkstamp or emboss document.
._. b d •
VosteB: 2~ 1 · Sh
. . , aw, 1n1enm u g
f
Se
$S? ~
1 10 f
"'. .""
pt. •
or
·
mtllwn . Vote: I~.
MEET THt:RSDAY
Bricklayers Local Union 32
will nleet Thursday evening at
1hc American Legion home in
l'nmcruy . Refreshments will be

In Damage
Suit Trial

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Restore Confidence
Ln ducation Essex Say.
·s

" In the half-dozen preceeding
years, we developed a severe
,
,
f'd
case oflh e gaps -con 1 ence,
credibility and generation," he
said.
These gaps, he said, could be
bridged if educators recognized
"that children have varying tal·
ents and interests."
"We should move promptly to
the custom tailoring of educa·
tion to the learning rate of each
pupil," he said. "Education
should be individualized, hu·
manized and personalized...
Essex also advocated re. ed
k
.
qutr wor expenence 1o supplement classwork.
"Our society must include
w11rk-learning experience as an
educmional requirement," he
sHid. '''l'his expel'ience should
be indudedf as a requirement
frw ""' aw;mling of a high

Jury Seated

House .••

Miss Fitch Receives Scholarship

UseOur Free Parking Lot
·
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Membes' Federal Dep•lt Insurance CorporaUoq

'

Hospital on behalf of her group Monday afternoon presented Donald Diener, hospital admlnlstra~, with an ~examination table for the emergency room. In addition, this year the.
auxlllary hu piO'chased a projector and record player for the hospital at a cost of $1.00 and has
paid $150 on new draperies for the hospital.
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By Ualted Prea llllenutUcul
• WASHINPTON - THE ADMINISTRATION, respondiDg to
lfie first suit filed against tile wage freeze, said the workers will
tint have to prove damage, 111en sue their employer before attacking the government. Thefiratsuitwasfiledbyfour J&amp;oftSIIors
at Catholic University in Waahqton who contend lbe freeze is
unconstitutional. The Justice Department filed the govenment's
answer Tuesday.
FEW JNSTANCES OF MAJOR protest have been reported in
lbe Swlb since tile new scboo\, terms began Monday, and the
ND:on administration has commended Dixie for a "remmable
~gree" ol underslanding and leadership in carrying out new
school desegregation programs, many requiring forced btming.
• • SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. -A NATIONWIDEseach, aided by
FBI agents, iB underway f~ Stephen MitcheD Bingham, 1be
young radical attorney, grandson of a former Comlecllcut
governor, was charged Tueaday with five counts of murder
stemming fr(IJI hia visit to "Sciedad Brother" George Jackson in
$an QJenlll1 Prison 10 days ago. Jackson ,ck'ew a gun soon after
the visit, lrilll!ering an escape attempt in which he and five other
~1"8008 were kiUed. Authorities say Bingham smuggled the piStol
·
,.~Jackson.
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Airport Included In Ohio Projects
I

See Elbe~felds n~w Fall group of "Dotty Mann" sportswear
- beauttful bon~ed wool and rayon plaid groups . tricot
bonded doublekntt orion · washable polyester knits. A wide
selection of slacks, skirts, vests, sweaters, and pants suits.
·
Beautiful colors · sizes 8 to 20.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'------------------~--------------,1

·".An improvement project for Meigs Regional Airport in
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Gallipolis Twp. The project is

Airport was included in 24
pfojects opened for bids
·'l'tiesday by the Ohio Highway
Oeparlment.
·
: :York · Construction Inc.,
.thaWtcey. was tue low bidder
'for an improved access road,
tlxmty Rd. 60 for the Gallia-

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Partly cloudy through
Thursday with a ~hance of a few
showers or thundershowers
mainly in !he afternoons or in
evenings. Highs today in the low
and mid 80s. Lows tonight in the
low and mid 60s.

To 1J.ae lntereaiA Q( 17u? Meigs· MalOn Area

MRS. ALEX WHEELER, president llf tile Wunen's Auzlliary of Veterans Memarlal

In At 9-0ut At 5

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

enttne
with caution Pomeroy Police

. ...

,•; H f N Y 0 U VI&lt;, 1T f' ARK FREE

~oted

at

Chief Jed Webster aonouaced
today. Webster also asks that
youagsters riding bicycles to
and from school to stay off the
sidewalks as much as
possible.

WHILE YOU PAY BY CHE~K.
"Cash is comforting but more

.

With the starting of school
motorists are asked 10 drive

t

THE LONG GREEN • • •

'

') Weather

PHONE 992-2156

.·.·.·•·....... ·•·.·•·•·• ·•·•·. ·.·.•..·.·.·:·:·:·· :-:.:·· :···:···:

Pomeroy....
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Mora and ·
grandchildren, Mark and Mary,
and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Wlldermuth have returned from
Myr~e Beach where they were
the guests last week of !'dr: and
Mrs. George Crary, Atlanta,
Ga. Also visiting at the beach
home of the Crarys were Dr.
and Mrs. Fred Reeser, Rick and
Rebecca of Potomic, Md. and
Patrick Dickson, Pala Alta,
Calif.
Mrs . Bertha Canaday
returned Saturday night from
Columbus where she spent
several days visiting Mrs .
Mildred Gamblin.
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Russell
joined their son and daughterin-law, Mr .. and Mrs. J. C.
Russell of Columbus, at Canton
for the Saturday wedding of
Miss Sharon Randels and Mr.
Steve Toomey at the First ·
Christian Church there.
Mr. and Mrs. William Scott of
Cheshire and their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Scott, Pomeroy, have
returned from a vacation at
Camp Boulder on Lake . Erie.
The couples spent a week
fishing and sightseeing.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and daughter, Jayne, returned
Saturday from Columbus after
a several days' visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Hammer and
daughters, Kim and Lou Ann.
Also visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Hammer was Miss Mary
Dennis of East Liverpool,
formerly of Middleport.
Twila Clatworthy. Nancy
Thompson, Jeff Tyo and Mike
Custer, 1971 graduates of Meigs
High School, and Art Hill, 1971
graduate of Southern High
School, entered Rio Grande
College Monday.
Thomas Omar Russell of
Columbus, a former Middleport
area resident, is a patient at the
Doctors
Hospital
West,
Columbus, for treatment of a
heart condition. Visiting there
with him Sunday were his
sister, Mrs. Hubert Pullins,
Middleport, and Mrs. Edward
Stobart.
Edward Stobart, patient at

•

'

'::September was the seventh
oionth In the ancient Roman
~endar which began With
'March.

East Main St. members. Mrs.
Robert Kuhn gave prayer wiUt
potluck refreshments being
served to those named and Mrs.
J . Edward Foster, the Rev.
Robert Kuhn, Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Mrs. Burton Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Watson, Mrs. Hariell
Sterrett, Mrs. Margaret Bailey,
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner, and Mrs.
Mary Shelton.
Thank-you cards for flowers
were read from Mrs. U!wis
Stanley and Mrs. Oliver
Michael, both hospitalized
recently.

Personal Notes

•

Now
.. You Know

•

.

.263 miles. The low bid was
f'-4,900.50 compared to the state
estimate of $26,500.
.
The latgest contract was $1.3
million for resurfacing of 12.67
mile section of Interstate 70 in
Clark and Montgomery COtl11·
lies . .

it was called the American
Society for Control of Cancer.
In 1956 eight million dollars
was donated for cancer
research, and in 1971 24 million
dollars was contribu~ed to
research Miller said.
One out of every three lives
are cured of cancer ! Miller
stated, and it could be orie out of
every two Miller said.
Miller presented Blackwood
who presided at the meeting, a
small plaque for the local
cancer office which l"as inscribed "We Bettered Our
Best." Blackwood w~s also
presented a past president pin
from Miller.
Blackwood was given a
standing ovation for his years of
service to the cancer society.
Framed citations fo~ helping
to strengthen the fight against
cancer were presenled to The
Daily Sentinel, the; Athens
Messenger and WMPO Radio
by Blackwood.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting. The
meeting was held in th~ meeting
room of the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Company.

Men Ordered
To Report
For Physicals
•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Men
selected last month jor possible
induction into the armed forces
next year must begin reporting
today for their physical examin·
ations even though no authority
now exists to draft them.
A Selective SerVice spokes·
man said these men, whose
lottery numbers were drawn
Aug. 5 for next ·year's draft
calls, are ·being Dfllered to take
their physicals lr! anticipation
of the resumptiOI\ of the draft.
He said " not :very many,

perhaps hundreds" in this
category would report today to
the 70 armed forces entrance
and examining stations around
the nation.
Since JWte 30, when the old
draft law expired, only those
whose lottery qumbers were
drawn last year and those just
emerging from 5tudent deferments had been caUed for
physicals in preparation for the
tiJile when Congress may pass
a two-year extension of the
draft law.
;
But the spokElSffi8n said the
law authorized, the Selective
Service to begin . ordering
physicals Sept. ;I for men who
may be drafted during the
coming year.
Both houses · of Congress
agreed to exte~d the draft law
for two years. !lut the measure
has been stallf'd by disagreement over an l'Jlti-war amendment and draf,t opponents said
Utey would lajmch a filibuster
when Congress returns next
week.

i

Jurors were seated today in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for a trial evolving from a
sui l for money.
Plaintiffs in the action are
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Bailey
•.who have filed suit in the
amount of $20,000 against Harry
G. Brown, Minersville .
Brown was the driver of a car
in which their daughter, Barbara, was killed on May 26, 1970.
The accident occurred o'l Rt. 7
following the de ceased's
graduation from Eastern High
School.

By United Press International
Violent change characterited
the passing of August in
portions of the Northwest and
the Gulf Coast while typical ,
late summer weather patterns
prevailed over most of the
remamder of the natton .
Cool air drifted over the
Northwest tod.ay on the h""ls of
Tuesdaymght sThunderstorms,
whtch brought htgh wmds and
locally heavy rams to much of
the area. No damage or
tn)urtes were attrtbuted to the
storms.
.
ThWtderstorms resulted. m
V:trnado l hreats as htg~ winds
and hatl lashed portions of
South Texas Tuesday. A lOrnado touched down near Port
Mansfteld, Tex .• but there were
no reports of damage or
injuries.
Hail and heavy rains pelted
portions of Houston and a
waterspout appeared over the
Gulf near Galveston, but
dissipated.
Showers and thunderstorms
were scattered over much of
the nation early today, through
the heaviest concentrations
were in the Gulf Coast Slates.
Cool weather was also
prevalent from the Dakolas 10
the Northern Atlantic States,
while warmer temperatures
reigned over much of the nation
~arly
today, through the
'heaviest concentrations were in
the Gulf Coast States.
Early morning temperatures
ranged from 94 at Phoenix,
Ariz., to 41 at Houlton, Maine.

f.

Saigon

.

TEN CENTS
.

'

it By

Demonstrators
SAIGON (UP!) - The government announced today that
presidential elections will be
held as scheduled Oct. 3 with
President Nguyen Van Thieu as
the sole candidate. Reversing
itself again, the Supreme Court
ruled Vice President Nguyen
Cao Ky off the ballot.
The announcement came as
combat police battled two
separate groups of students
taking to the streets in Saigon
in demonstrations against the
government, the war and
Americans. An American soldier was be a len and kicked by
the demonstrators.
Retired Gen . Duong Van
"Big" Minh already had
removed himself from the·
presidential race on the
grounds that Thieu had rigged
it. Minh issued a statement
today obviously aimed at u.s.
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker

accusing him of slanderous and back in the race. Today it ruled

insolent colonialism in his
efforts to persuade Minh to
remain in the campaign.
A communique from the
prime minister's office said
that Thieu and his running
male, Sen . Tran Van Huang,
are now " the only ticket
running for the presidency and
vice presidency of the Republic
of Vietnam in the next Oct. 3,
1971, elections."
The communique said that
government agencies have been
ordered to make preparations
to carry out the elections on
schedule.
The Supreme Court ruling on
Ky was its second reversal. He
was first ruled off the ballot on
grounds that he did not have
enough valid nominating signa·
Lures under a new election law
pushed through by Thieu. Then
it reversed itself and put him

him off again.
Mtnh's office issued a statement blasting U.S. officials meaning Bunker --as slanderous, insolent colonialists. Minh
was angered by a slatement
attributed to U.S. diplomatic
sources that he had asked the
Americans to run the Oct. -3
elections.
The war action was quieter
after a series of w""kend
Communist attacks aimed at
disrupting the Sunday elections
but U.S. B~2.s and fighter·
bombers aided by ships of the
U.S. 7th Fleet bombarded
targets inside and just below
the Demilitarized Zope (DMZ)
today in the lOth day of the
airwar there . The Communists
attacked an ARVN armored
unit just below the DMZ but
inflicted little or no damage.

Darbydale Girl Is One Millionth
Ohio State Fair Visitor Tuesday

·3

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - When
Judy Francis 18 Darbydale
passed through th~ gates of th~
Ohio State Fair Tuesday, she
was handed a large stuffed animal and free ride tickets.
The reason was a milestone
in the 12-&lt;lay festival -arrival
of the one millionth visitor.
A total of 154,263 was drawn
to the fairgroWtds during its
sixth day tor a total thus far
of 1,128,552. Fair officials are
estimating close to the 2.2 million of last year will come to
Expohio •71 .
Today singer Tom Jones continued in the grandstand, with
4:30 and 8:30 p.m. perf ormances, while the Senior Fair
Dairy· cattle Show also was
held, along with the Senior Fair
Swine Show, Senior Fair Sheep
Show and auto thriU show.
The annual car drop demonstration for traffic safety was
scheduled at noon in front of
the grandstand.
An auto suspended from a
height of 125 feet is dropped on

Leo Childs,

Succumbs

Leo D. Childs, 72, Headley St.,
Middleport, a retired New York
Central railroad conductor,
died Tuesday at the Holzer
Medical Center_
• Mr. Childs was a member of
the Middleport Church of
Christ. He was a veteran of
COLUMBUS (UP)) - Cool WWI haying served in the
weather has delayed the spread Army and was a member of
of corn blight disease in Ohio Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
and significant damage to the American Legion. He was
crop will be limited, according employed by the New York
to an Ohio State University of- Central Railroad for 49 years
before his retirement and was a
ficial.
of the Brotherhood of
member
Dr. C. Wayne Ellett, director
of the OSU plant disease clinic, Railroad Trainmen .
said today the infecUcus disease Surviving Mr. Childs are hia
hasn't spread as rapidly during wife, Ida Bodkin Childs, a
uie past six weeks because the daughter, Mrs . 'Paul (Virginia)
dry, cool weather hasn't been Scott of Middleport, a foster
brother, Harry McGuffin of
favorable to the blight.
Middleport,
two grandEllett, however, said the
blight has been confirmed in 80 daughters, Mrs. Kenneth
( Barbara) Scites, Jr. , ot
of Ohio's 88 counties.
Dan C. Tucker, statistician of Pomeroy and Mrs. Forrest
the Ohio Agricultural Extension (Carol) Bachtel of Middleport,
Service, said two-thirds of the two great-grandsons, Timmy
corn crop was dented, but not and Eric Scites, and several
nieces and nephews. He was
hard.
·
This year's corn maturity is preceded in death by his
equal to last year, be said, but parents, the late Robert and
above the 1961&gt;-1969 average ma- Lillie McGuffin Childs and five
turity of 35 per cent corn dent- brothers. Mr. Childs was hom
ed, but not hard, on August 30. Jan. 21, 1899 at Ambrosia, W.
Fifteen percent of the 1971 corn Va .
crop in Ohio is mature and safe Funeral services will be held
at 3 p. m. Friday at the
from frost , he said.
Tucker also reported corn si· Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
!age .is 15 per cent harvesled. with the Rev. Eugene UnNinely.five per cent of Ohio's derwood officiating. jlurial will
soybean crop has pods set with be in Gravel Hill Cemtery at
green leaves, Tucker said. Pods Cheshire. Friends may call at
are still forming on the other 5 the funeral home at anytime
after 10 a. m. on Thursday.
per cent.
Of the total soybean acreage, Graveside military rites will be
25 per cent has leaves turning conducted by F""ney-Bennett
yellow"'" the same as last year. ~osl 128, American U!gion.

another car to simulate a headon collision at an esti.mated
speed of 62 miles per hour.
"The demonstration is designed to bring into sharp, dramatic focus the potential, yet real,
dangers that result from reckless driving," said state Highway Safety Director Eugene P.
O'Grady.
· Tuesday at the fair, an Adams CoWtty family swpt bon--~-------­

FORFEIT BONDS
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and a third was fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor
C. 0. Fisher Tuesday night.
Forfeiting $30 bonds were C.
A. Lawson, 41, Middleport
Route I, charged with fighting,
and William Reeves , 45,
Pomeroy. charged with into~icalion. Fined $li and costs on
a charge of fighting was
Sterling Neville, 30, Middleport.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gregory
Satterfield , Racine; Linda
Baer, Minersville; William
· Connolly, Reedsville.
DISCHARGED Larry
Dugan.

ors in the Ayrshire dairy cattle
show.
Ronald, Rick and JoAnn Fenton of Winchester showed the
grand champion Ayrshire female, the reserve grand champion, senior champion, first and
second in cow classes, first and
second in junior yearling classes. first in heifer calf and won
both the senior and jUnior Ayrshire showmanship classea.
Also JoAnn won the junior
showmanship for exhibitors Wl·
der 15 and Rick, 16, won the
senior showmanship in the Ayrshire classes.
lit other judging:
-James Jagger, Mt. Gilead,
a 4-H member who has el&lt;hibited sheep for the past seven
years at the slate fair, closed
his 4-H career by showing the
champion ewe and ram of the
Corriedale breed, junior division.
- Pamela Rinehart,l8, Wapa,
koneta, won her third grand
championship in the junior division of the Brown Swiss dairy
caule show.
- Angela Blessing, Pleasantville, showed the grand champion and reserve champion in
the Toggenburg breed division
of the jWtior dairy goat show
and the grand champion in the
Saanen breed division.

-Cheryl Fielitz, West Unity,
showed the grand champion
barrow, a Hampshire.
- David Plummer, Carroll,
was named winner of the National Junior Horticulture As·
sociation show for his demonstration on "How to Grow
Beautiful Gladiolus in Your
Garden."
;
- Kathy Sherman, MI. Glle.ld,
was junior winner and Jim
Wolf, Carey, was senior. ~(1ft•·•
in sheep blocking and ll1llllljl"g
contest.
.:
-'A tolal of $131,247.82 was paid
for the 361 catUe sold in fhe
beef cattle roundup sale at !he
fair, averaging $36.35 per hundredweight;
In the junior division sale,
117 head sold for an average
of $35.07 per hundredweight,
and 244 cattle sold in the commercial cattle sale averaged
$37.30 per hundredweight.
In the daily senior citizens
activities, Mrs. Peg Ruffing and
Marlin Smith, both of Columbus, won the dance contest.
Cookie contest winners were
Mrs. Mason Jones of Bain·
bridge, Mrs. Grace RWtyan,
Mrs. Daisie Wilson and Mrs.
Erma Paul, all of Columbus.
Prominent senior citizen award
went 10 Mrs. George Dysart of
Columbus.

Blight Slowed
Down By Cool

Ohio Weather

r

I '

CO-CAPI'AINS- Chester Roush, left and Mike White, rlgltt have been named co-eapta1D1 of
the Wahama White Falcons football squad. center is head coach Don VanMeter. The Wabllul
squad will open their season on Fri~&lt;BY going &amp;gllinat Wirt County flt!!h pt Ellubeth.
'
'

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