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:~1~ Private Enterpriser, now Retired ~
:•:•

=~::

I

Ice Cream Firm Owner Raised at Pine Grove
BY KATIE CROW ,
Edward V. Frecker, born
and raised on a Pine Grove,
Meigs County farm, is a successful businessman . The
brother of Mrs. Eskey Hill,
Flatwoods, he is the owner and
retired board chairman of
Frecker's Ice Cream Co .,
Northwest Blvd., Colwnbus.
Frecker, son of the late
George and Lucinda Sponagel

Caroll K. Snowden
Park Central

Hotel Bu ilding
Second Avenue
Gallipolis

COOKS - Preparing chicken at a recent fimlly day
outl!lg of the Pomeroy Gun Club were, 1-r, Pllul' Balt:er,
p-esitlent; !log!!~' Morgan, Boe Brown and Don Kelly. Fiftythree persons attended the ann~U~I event.

Phone 446·4290
Home 446-4511

STAH FAIIM

HUUUNCr

STATE FARM

•

Old Sturbridge Village, in
Sturbridge, Mass., is a repIn surance Companies
lica of a New England town
! !orne Offices; Bloorni nglon, lllinoi s • of about 1800.

By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Buffet ...

AN EVENING
BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
Sto9:Jo-$2 .50all youcaneal.lor AI a Carte).

HOSPITAL DONATION - Expansion at Pleasant Valley
Hospital is being given a boost through a $500 donation
contributed by the Mason County Bank. T. R. Friar (left)
accepts a check from Charles R. (Dick ) Ord, Cashier of the
bank in this amount. Mr. Friar, manager of the local Stauffer
Chemical plant, is chairman of the Finance Committee for
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The above photo, by Sam Nichols,
III, was taken in the Coronary Intensive Care Unit of
Pleasant Valley Hospital which is set for opening later this
month. Jim Farley, Administrator, is announcing plans for
the Grand Opening to the public September 14. Hours to be
observed are from I unti l 8:30 p.m.

Three Vehicles
In Rt. 7 Wreck
Three cars were moderately
damaged in a single accident
Friday at 7: 10 p.m. on Slate
Route 7 at the junction of Route
554 the Gatli a-Meigs State
Highway Patrol investigated.
According to the Patrol
Lan tz Repp, 22: Gallipolis,
Daniel Swisher, 18, Route 1,
Cheshire, were northbound in

ami

ca rs on Route 7 when thev
Drinks and
Dessert Extra .

Wide Menu
Choice

Order our regular menu every night 5 to 10.

slowed in traffic. An aut~
following operated by Wayne
Dav is, 23, Middleport, failed to
stop in time and struck the rear
of the Swisher auto which was
forced in to the rear of the Repp
vehicle. There were no in juries. Davis was cited for

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR

124 four tenths Of a mile east of
the Rutland Corporation sign,
Paul Mitchell, 17, Langsville,
was eastbound when he
stopped to turn left and was hit
in the rear by an auto driven by
Ronnie Spencer, 23, Route 2,
Long Bottom . There was no
injuries and there was slight
damage to Mitchell's car and
mod erate damage to Spencer's
auto. Spencer was cited for
assured clear distance.
At 7:15 p.m. on the Brumfield
Rogd one and slx ten ths of a
mile north of Route 790, autos

driven by Robert McQuire, 19,
Route I, Northup, and Terry
Lloyd, 18, Gallipolis, collided
on a hillcrest. There were no
injuries and no arrests. Both
ca rs
were
moderately
damaged.
Al9:20 p.m. on Little Kyger
Creek Road five tenths miles
north of Route 7 Samuel
Nichols, 17, Pt. PleaSijnt, was
southbound when his auto hit
the wall of the underpass.
There were no injuries and
Nicholas' car was moderately
damaged.

Party Held at Portland Park

EDWARD V. FRECKER, now a retired board chairman of Frecker's Ice Cream Co.,
Columbus, was born and raised on a farm in Germany community (now Pine Grove) in Meigs
County . Above, Frecker apparently is showing off how a very young pair of "oxen" is trained to
take a yoke.

APPLE GROVE, Ohio - Rhodes, Mrs. Dallas Hill, Dean
Members of the Apple Grove Hill, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs.
United Methodist Sunday Jack Ables, Vicki ...bles, Mr.
School enjoyed a party Monday and Mrs . Russell Roush,
evening at the Portland Park. Sharon, Cindy, Davtd and
Dana Lewis was in charge of Eddie RoUJh, Unda Alley 1
the games, playing football and Jimmie, Dale, Steve, Kathy,
baseball during the evening. · Tony and Johnnie Riffle, Mrs.
!tefreshments of hot dogs, Ronnie Russell, Amanda
baked beans, potato salad, Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
potato chips and Kool-Aid were Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
served . Attending were Mrs. · Lewis, Jim Riley and Gogger
Bob Rhodes, Karen and Mike Varian, of Clifton, W. Va.

POMEROY - Eighteen recorded, who was sentenced
def endants were fined , 15 to two 30 days confinement to
others forfeited bonds, one be served concurrently and
other was assessed costs pIus assessed costs on charges of
confinement in Meigs rounty possession or marijuana and
se Uing drugs which required a
Court Friday.
prescription.
Appearing
before
Judge
POMEROY
Fined by Judge Porter were
Frank W. Porter was Dwight
Haley, Jr ., no address Robert A. Schuck, Middleport,
and John H. Rid gway,
Pomeroy , $15 and costs each,
speeding; Nellie Vale, Albany,
Rt. 3, $10 and costs, failure to
yield; James M. Ramsey,
Gallipolis, Dale M. Kautz,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, and Charles 1'.
Kim, Tuppers Plains, $10 and
costs, each speeding ; John
Smuks, Coolville, Willie Glen
Stevens, Reedsville, and
Marvin Oiler, Middleport, $150
and costs, three days confinement, license suspended
for six months with restricted
driving privileges, driving
while intoxicated; Kenneth L.
Black, Rutland, $5 and costs,
parking on roadway; Donald
Lovett, Reedsville, $10 and
costs, intoxication; Gary Lee
Simpson, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $25
and cost.-;, 10 days confinement,
license sus pended for six
months,
driving
under
suspension, $25 and costs,
reckless operation; Clarence
Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, $20 and
costs, speeding; Robert W.
Quillen, Mason, $5 and costs,
improper parking; Howard E.
Searles, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $10
and costs, stop sign violation;
Delores Justice, Pomeroy, $15
and costs, public intoxication;
Willie G. Stevens, Reedsville,
$25 and costs, no operators
We wou ld l ike to say "Yes" to your appl icat ion . You supply
license ; Casal Mason, Logan,
the_need and either Harold Tt1ompson or Lou Lutton w ill do
$60 and costs, overload.
thet_r utmost to see .that you get the funds . Wh ether you want
Forfeiting bonds were
'? f•nance a home Improvement, a trip, or have your dealer
ftnance your car with vs, you can be assured we will listen .
Wayne Chappelear, Pomeroy,
Pe rh~ps our rat~s may be the same as other bank s ... bu t
Rt. 4, $27.50, failure to register;
our tudgment tsn 't. We certain ly haven ' t become the
Larry
J .Queen , Middleport,
LEND INGEST bank in Ga llipOlis by saying " No."
loy Carl Harris, Ft. Lauderdale , Fla., Terry R.
Burli ngame, New Concord,
Kenneth Workman, Genoa, W.
Va ., Beulah R. Adkins,
Parkersburg, and Terry L.
Reiber, Racine, Rt. 1, $27.50
1111
each, speeding; Donald E.
Williams, Colwnbus, $27.50,
FIRST
failure to transfer registration;
Frank J. Ebersbach, Pomeroy,
and Harold Hysell, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, $257.50 each, driving
while intoxicated; Melvin
Roach, Jr., no address
record ed and Clarence
Pearson, Lakin, $100 each,
indecent exposure ; Ruth E.
Oliver, Pt. . Pleasant, $27.50,
failure to yield; Marjorie L.
"109 YEARS OF SERVICE"
Smith, Vinton, $27.50, passing
at intersection; John Edmund
Reese, Reolac, Pa., $25, excessive speed.

NO. 103

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 , 1972

Furniture Department On The 3rd Floor

UNITED NATIONS (UPI)The United States cast its
second veto in U.N. history
&amp;lnday, killing a resolution
calling for an end to hostilities
in the Midd'e East because it
ignored the massacre of Israeli
athletes in Munich .
The United States vetoed the
measure, a simple Somali
re110luUon that called only lor a
cessation
of
military
operations in the Middle East,

Syrian
" .....

.• •

Arab is
Arrested

USE OUR OWN
SENSIBLE
CREDIT SERVICE

MARIJUANA PLANT - Steve Harten bach, son of Meigs County Sheriff and Mrs. Robert

c. Harten bach, exhibit.-; one of the marijuana plants of a crop confiscated Saturday in Meigs
CoWlty estimated to be worth up to $70,000 on the illicit wholesale drug market. Apprehended
.
apparently harvestmg the crop were William Walter Sanson, Rl. 3, Albany, and Adam J.
Jacobson, Rt. 1, Rutland, both age 25, who are in jail pending investigation. The crop was
growing on a fann owned by Charles G. Sheets, Jr ., north of Harrisonville. It was laid out in 13
rows, each about 250ft. long, the plants one foot apart, with over 3,000 pia~ts in ali. Some of the
plants were eight feet high. The plant with Hartenbach here is approximately four feet taU. The
crop has been stored in a secret location pending completion of the investigation .

By United Press International
MI\'!COW -HENRY A. KISSINGER, PRESIDENT Nixon's
special adviser on security affairs, today starts a round of
discussions with Soviet leaders with Vietnam, trade, European
security and attempts to further limit strategic arms topping the
agenda.
Prior to Kissnger 's arrival from Munich, West Germany,
Soviet officials mel with Le Due Tho, North Vietnam's highest
ranking peace negotiator, who stopped in Moscow on his way
from Peking to Paris. And Kissinger while in West Germany took
the opportunity for talks with Chancellor Willy Brant and other
poiiUcal leaders. Kissinger apparently suffered no ill effects
from an accident while in Munich. An overloaded elevator he was
riding dropped 14feet, but only shook up the occupants .

THAT
WORD IS
"YES~'

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

llllllfm:!:

\

Arrange your bed room s to suit your family
ne eds - 4, 5, and 6 drawer Chests - Bunk Beds Bookcase Bed s , Spindle and Panel Beds Student Desks - . Single, double and triple
Dressers with Mirrors- Night Stands - Commode
Sta nds .

,

COLUMBUS - TWO REPUBUCAN STATE legislators
announced today a campaign to promote Rep. Norman Murdock
or CinclnnaU for either speaker or majority leader of tbe 100th
Ohio General Assembly, should the GOP retain power in tbe Nov.
7 election . "In due respect for the present majority leader
(Robert Levitt of Canton), something was definitely missing last
year and that luxury can't be afforded in these next two years,"
said Reps. Frank H. Mayfield Jr . and Chester T. Cruze in a
statement released today.
"We need one who can rally the troops and is also a fighter,"
they said. "No one .comes close to Norm Murdock in possessing
these qW~llUes. "

Excellent qualltr - ali pl~ces match perfectly.
Buy just what you need, add to your i-oom later
as you desire . Stop In on the 3rd floor_ See thl~
fl ne open stock selection . .

Y~u·u ·want to take the time to see all the other new furnitur~ on the 3rd f1
Dtn~tte Sets - New big selection of Chairs - Living Room Suites • Desks •

oc:;
Cabmets - ~ali-to- Wall Carpeting- Mirrors - Anew selection of Lampund Lam

Shad_es - Ptctures • Coffee and End Tables • Washers - Dryers . Dishwashers~
R!!fr•gerator,s - .Freezers. And you'll like the fine quality of furniture end
pltances you ~I fmd at. £1berfelds, Well known brands like Kroehfer • Whirl ap.
Ke")p -_Derkhne · Lloyd· Lees· Simmons- Serte end many, menyotntrs. PGOI ·
. You II fmd, t_oo, that you can r~ally save on the furniture you need- for eny and ·
every room m your home. We mvite you to stop In. look arou,1d . you'll enjoy 11.

..

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

By U.S • m

The MEIGS INN

THE OLD NATIONAL
WOULD LIKE A
WITH YOU.

and other items) for supermarkets and other customers.
Durin g World War II
Frecker served in the Army
Air Corps. Mrs. Frecker is the
former Geneva Dyer of Portsmouth. They have four
ch ildren, George , now a
machine crew coreman at the
ice cream plant; Monda, Ed
and Robert. The youngest is 11.
Mr• . Norman (Martha)
Rose, Pomeroy, RD, is another
sister.

•

Kemp Open Stock Maple Finish
Bedroom Furniture

•

EDWARD FRECKER

Second Veto Cast

PRETZELS &amp; PHNUTS ON BAR.
You' ll be happy when you come here.

PH. 992-3629

enttne

'~ one big headache'' with you 24
hours a day.
After high school, Frecker
went to Colwnbus in 1927. He
altendffi business college and
worked at a soda fountain in
Walgreen Drug Stores.
At age 22 he opened a
resU. urant in the LeVeque
Lincoln Tower. In six years he
had 16 small and large
restaurants, including one at 9
East Stale St.
It was in 1938 that Frecker
got into the ice cream business.
He bought the Tomkins Ice
Cream Co. to furnish milk
products for his restaurants.
Five others were acquired
between then and 1965. Local
ones were the Scioto Valley
Dairy Co., Columbus Ice
Cream Co. and Hi-Grade Ice
Cream Co.
A firm in Ft. Wayne, Ind.,
was added in 1965 two years
after he bought the Koolwr
Buckeye Ice Cream Co. · in
Lima. Frecker consolidated all
the operations in plant.-; at
Northwest Blvd. and Lima.
Forty employes at the local
plant produce ice cream
novelty and specialty items
(ice cream bars, drwn sticks

Devoted To The lnleresu Of The MeigJ·Mason Area

18 Persons Fined

MON.- FRI. 4 'TO 6 PM

•

at y

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.

MUNICH (UPI)- The Olympic games are in "severe" crisis, the president of the Munich
organizing committee said today, but their future will be in doubt only if the world surrenders to
terrorism.
Willi Daume, who brought the games to Germany, justified on these grounds the decision to
continue competition after the murder of members of the Israeli squad by Arab guerrillas.
"The International Olympic Commitwe cannot allow the games to be destroyed by
gangsterism," he said.
"It is too early to judge all the things which happened during the past few days but the attack was
not aimed at the Olympics. The games were just the scene. Nevertheless it was a great shock for the
committee .
"One cannot deny that the games are in a severe crisis."
Dawne said he was personally depressed at how quickly people forget.
He said that at a volleyball game which followed by only a few hours the memorial ceremonial
for the massacred Israelis "the crowd went wild with entht:siasm and joy."

•

VOL. XXV

fa iling to keep assured clear
dista nce.
In other mishaps reported by
the Patrol. at 4: 30 p.m. Friday
at the Gal lia-{;enterpoint Road
and Ce nterpoint Road intersection , James Fannin ' 49
Route 2, Pa tri ot. was traveling
west when he turned left into
the Gallia-Centerpoint Road
wh ich caused Alice Comer, 24,
Route 2, Patriot, to run olf the
right side of the roadway to
avoid a collision.
There were no injuries and
there was slight damage to the
Comer vehicle. Fannin was
ci ted for an improper turn.
At 4:35p.m. on State Route

'

he would go into business for
himself if he were beginning a
career agai n.
Frecker thinks now he would
go with a large company, earn
his salary, and be able to take
his vacations. He thinks there
are too many gover.nm ent
regulations, and that one can't
ma ke any money today
beca use of taxes. He refers to
privately owned business as

Future of Olympic Games in Doubt

' oonors at the
TAKlNG FIRST AND sE&lt;XJND place
ann~U~l trap Shoot at the family outing of the Pomeror Gun
Club (at left) were, right to left, Roger Winelntmer with the
A trophy and Tom Q-ow the B trophy, and Paul Baker,
president, who presented the trophies.

A

Frecker, was born and raised
on a farm near Five Points,
called "Germany " until the
end of the WW I when the name
of the area was changed to
Pine Grove . Few people
anywhere in the U. S. at that
time wanwd to be reminded of
the "hated Hun ."
Freck.er, according to an
article in the Columbus
Dispatch of Sept. 3, isn't sure

BRUSSELS -A MAN BEUEVED to be an Arab shot and
seriously wounded an Israeli Embassy official in an ambush
&amp;lndaY night, pollee reported today. The official was identified
as Ophir Sadok, 42, a member of the Israeli Embassy staff.
PoiiCJe said he was lured to a downtown cafe by a man who
claimed he had information on a planned terrorist attack on the
embasiY. Aa soon as they entered the cafe the other man pulled a
gun and fired four or five times, police said.
. Badok wa~ seriously Injured. Pollee said his life was not in
danger but that he was too badly hurt to be questioned.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. - BROWN·EYED Terry Anne
)heUW81!11, the new Mill America, says she is looking forward to
(CGnlinued on .-~ge ~} ·

United Press International
Arab guerrillas attacked an
Israeli patrol with bazookas
and small arms fire near
Herbon in the Israeli-occupied
West Bank of Jordan Sunday,
military sources In Tel Aviv
said today.
The assault caused no
casualties, the sources said . It
occurred little more than 48
hours after Israeli warplanes
swept into Syria and Lebanon
to attack guerrilla bases in
reprisal for the killing of 11
Olympians in MunlciJ.
Arab governments today
termed the Palestinian
guerr!Ua attack on Israel's
athletes in Munich a result of
" Israeli terrorism , and
aggression" and said the
Palestinian people were fully
entitled to struggle to regain
their rights.
"No Arab or non-Arab
govenunent has the right to
p-event the Palestinian people,
who grew up in refugee camps
and bore the marks of Israeli
terrorism, from working and
struggling to regain their
W~Urped rights,'' a statement
issued in Cairo by Arab foreign
ministers said.
In Tel Avlv, military sources
said the guerrillas attacked a
routine patrol at Adorim, about
21!! miles southwest of Hebron.
They said the bazooka firing
set a field afire . They ~id
(Continued on Page 8)

MUNICH, Germany ( UPI)Police arrested a Syrian Arab
at Munich airport &amp;mday on
suspicion he might· have been
connected with the guerrilla
attack on the Israeli Olympic
warn, a police spokesman said
tod ay.
"Border police who made the
arrest have handed the man
over to the Munich city police

link him positively with the
Munich attack."
The Syrian, whose Identity
was not disclosed, was tbe first
Arab reported arrested since
the Munich slayings. Three
were arrested after the airport
shootout last week.
The spokesman said the
Syrian was preparing to board
a plane for Damascus at
Munich airport when police
arrested him. The spokesman
said he was not able to say why
the man was taken into
custody.
Under German law, an
arrested person has to be freed
within 24 hours unless a
magistrate, on the basis of
interrogation, issues a formal
warrant for his arrest.

CONFERENCE TO SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - More
than 1,5011 science students
from across Ohio are expected
here Sept. 23 for the seventh
annual Youth and Science
Conference at Ohio State
University.
. BACK FRACI'URED
Randy Wood, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee 0. Wood, Rutland,
was admitted at Holzer
Medical Center Saturday with
a broken back.
Randy, a junior at Meigs
High School, on a squirrel
hunt, climbed a tree to reach a
squirrel nest when the limb he
was on broke, throwing him to
the gro\D'Id.

because the Security CoWlcil
refused to link recent
retaliatory Israeli attacks on
Syria and Lebanon with last
week's slaying of 11 Israelis in
Munich at the hands of
Palestinian guerrillas.
Although the resolution had
the necessary majority of votes
for passage, the U.S. veto
killed lt. Tbe vote was IS In
favor with the United Statesone of the veto-holding powers
on the council- voting against
and Panama abstaining .
U.S. Ambassador George
Bush earlier in the day had
tried and failed at getting a
U.S.-sponsored resolution to a
vote. The resolution would
have condemned the "senseless and completely unprovoked" attack by the Black
September Arab guerrilla
group on the Israeli team
members.
Before the vote on the Somali
resolution, the councilmeeting in an emergency
session called by Syria and
Lebanon to condemn Israeli
attacks into those countriesrejected a series of Western
amendment.-; that would have
broadened the Somali measure
to deplore all acts of terrorism.
The Soviet Union and China
also cast two vetoes, blocking
the acceptance of one of the
Western amendments that was
otherwise raUfied by nine votes
-the required majority for
passage . It was China's second
U.N. veto and tbe 109th for the

Soviets.
The only other time the
United States cast a veto was in
March, 1970, when it helped
Britain block an African attempt to extend the scope of the
sanctions imposed on the white
minority Rhodesian regime.
Bush said after Sunday's
Security Council vote:
"Is It not a double lltandard
to suggest that states must
control their own forces, a
point which we readily grant,
but that these states need not
control irregular forces in their
territory-forces of murder,
forces of terror?
"We have been walking a
very dangerous path by our
silence on terrorism. We invite
more terrorism by our silence
in the disaster in Munich. Are
we indeed inviting more Mu·
nichs~"

In his speech before the
council, Bush said: "Munich
was so horrible, so vicious, so
brutal, so detrimental to order
in the world and to peace in the
Middle East that we simply
must not act here as if it did not

exist."

Band Plays In Lebanon
The Meigs High School
marching band ofl31 members ·
participated in the Ohio Honey
Festival Parade at Lebanon,
Ohio, Saturday ev~ning.
' Other bands participating
were from Lebanon, Springboro, Franklin, Waynesville,
Lebanon freshman, Kings
Mills, Carlisle and Middletown .
A busload of senior citizens
' from the Otterbein Home also
participated in the parade.
Accompanying the band
were Mrs. Jean WBI'ner, Mrs.

·Conference on
R IVer Erosi·on

AUTO BURNED
A vehicle owned and driven
by Donald K. Price, Wharton,
e
w. Va., was destroyed by fire
Saturday at 10:45 p.m., the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
reported. Price was driving on
Ameeting to determine what
Olester township road 113 east corrective action may be taken
of SR 248 when an explosion set to repair eroded Ohio River
the car on fire.
stream banks, and what can be
done to prevent further erosion
along the Ohio will be held in
the new Senate Office building
in Wa shin gton Tuesday
ning in two company fronts, morning . .
moving into a floating diamond
Tenth District Ohio Cong .
drill as it played "25 or 6 to 4."
The band was joined by the
Hannan Trace musicians to
DIED TODAY
perform the Fifth Dimension
Mrs . Irene Atkinson, a
hit, "Last Night I Couldn't Get
to Sleep at All ." The former Portland resident, died
majorettes were featured in a at her home early this morning
in Millersport. She was the
flag routine.
daughter of the late Esther and
Concluding the Eastern Bryan Roush of Portland.
perfonnance was "Make Me Survivors include her husband,
Smile. " The majorettes, William, and several brothers
sisters .
Funeral.
Debbie
Jeffers,
head and
majorette ; Vicki Spencer, arrangement.-; are incomplete.
Cheryl Kuhn, Louann Newell
and Joanne Fick were featured :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
in a twirling routine to round
Oblo
Extended Outlook _
out the show.
Wednesday through Friday.
Warm Wednesday and
Thunday. A I!Hle cooler
Friday. Chance of showers in
Carol McLaughlin, Mrs .· the north Wednesday and
Carolyn Thomas, MrS. Chtll'les Thursday and over the eatlre
Werry, Mrs. Paul Taylor, Mrs. state Friobly. Highs in the IIOs
Bob Bailey, Dwight Goins, Wednesday lllld Thursday
band director; Fred Ruth, and 70s Friday. Lows 81
assistant, and bUll drivers Mrs . nlgbt in the upper 50s and .
Naomi Floyd, fi!orman Wood, lower 6011 _
Faye Manley, Bill Smith and
Leo Morris.
FORECAST
Queens from Portsmouth
River Boat Day, Circleville
Olance of thundershowers
Pumpkin Show, Jackson Apple over most of the state tonight
Festival and the Honey Queen and Tuesday. . Lows tonight
and her court also were in the generally 60 to ~and highs low
to mid 8011 south.
parade.

Eagle Band In Athens
The Eastern High School
Eagle marching band, direcwd
by Charles L. Wills, was in
Athens Saturday to participate
in band day festivities at Ohio
University.
Thirty.five bands began
rehearsals at 9:45 a.m. in
preparation for a halftime
show at the Central Michiganau game. Numbers used by
the Eastern band Included
" Brian's Song," " Day by
Day," "Last Night I Couldn't
Get to Sleep at All,'' and the
"Alma Mater."
Friday evening at the
Hannan Trace game the
Eastern band performed
downfield maneuvers begin-

BLESSED EVENT - The copperhead snake held by
Lewis Stanley, East Main St., Pomeroy, was found by
Stanley at his cabin at Forked Run . What is so unusual about
the snake is that afwr he broke its back the snake gave birth
to two babies seen near the tall, which Stanley is holding.

Clarence E. Miller will
represent th e interests ofsoutheastern Ohio.
United States Senators from
Ohio and West Virginia are
expected to attend the meeting
with the U. S. Corps of
Engineers.
· Cong. Mlller had personally
conferred
with
his
congressional colleagues
urging a meeting of this kind. ,
Last April Miller attended ·
meetings in Gallia and Meigs
counties in connection with the
problem.

Commander Will
Study at Kent U
Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth ,
commander of the Gallia·
Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol, has been granted a
three-month leave of absence
to
participate
in
a
management and motivatton ·
course at Kent State Univer- ·
sity.
Lt. Wigglesworth and 19
other Post commanders
throughout the state have
enrolled in the course which
begin&amp; Sept. 25. The program IS
funded through the Criminal
Justice Act.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperatur~ in downtown·
Pomeroy Monday a\ 11 a.m.
was 74 degrees, under cloudy
skies.

�Z- 'I't!e Dlilv Sentlnei,Middleport-PIIIlel'oy, 0:, Sepl.ll, 1972

3-TbeDailySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Sept 11,1972

WIN AT BRIDGE

RazzleDazzle
Defense

Television Log
Programs for Tonight
and Tomorrow
MONDAY SEPT 11
7 30 - To Telllhe Truth 6 Traffic Court 10 Episode Action 33

NORTH

3 15
Movie The Odd Couple 6 13 Movie The Phantom of the
Opera 4
9 30- Doris Day 8 10
10 00- Bill Cosby 8 10 Societies In Transit on 33
10 30- Human Olmens1ons 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 News 8 10 15

WEST
.74

TUESDAY SEPT 12

6 00- Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 IS - Farm Report 13 Farmt me 10
6 20 - Paul Harvey !3
6 25 - Faith For Today 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4 Btble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment lO
6 45 - Corncob Report 3

6 55 - Fllntstones 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6 55 - Fllntstones 13
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Bullw nkle 1!. Rocky
13
8 00-Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue6 13 Sesame St 33
Timmy 1!. ~a .. le 6
8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue IS Romper Room 8 Con
cenlr' tlon 6 Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 Mr Rogers
33 \\hat Every Woman Wants to Know 3
9 30- To Tell the Truth 33 Jeopardy 6 Hazel 8 Electr c Co
33
10 00- D1nah Shore 3 IS D1ck Van Dyke 13 Jokers w ld 8 10
Hathayoga 33
10 30- Concentral on 3 15 Pl111 Donahue 4 Spl1t Second 13
Pme Is R1ght 8 10
11 00 - Saleofthe Century 3 15 Love Amer can Style 6 Gamb I
B 10 Password 13
11 30- Hollywood SquaresJ 4 15 Love of Life 8 10 Bew tched
6 13 Sesame Street 33
12 00- Jeopardy 3 IS Password 6 Bob Brauns so 50 Club 4
Jackie Oblinger 8 News 13 10
12 2S - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3WsGame3 IS Spi11Second6 Search for TomorrowS
10 Electric Co 33
I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 II s Your Bel 8 Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Child 15
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 IS ~et s Make A Deal 6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10 Deslgnlnv Women 33
2 00- Days of Our lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 M ke
Dougtas6 guiding ~lghtB 10 ~oveTennls33
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Dating Game 13 Edge of N1ght 8 10
Library 3J
3 00- General Hospllal6 13 Another World 3 4 15 ~ove Is A
Manl Splendored Thing 8 10
3 30-0neL!fetoLive6; Return to Peyton Place3 4 15 Jeffs
Collie 13 Secret Storm 8 10
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset IS Sesame St 33 Love
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Fllntstones 6 G Iligan s
!stand I Movie Four Guns To The Border 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Petticoat Junction 3 Daniel Boone 13
Marv Griffin 2 Andy Griffin 15
5 00- Dick Van Dyke 15 Ponderosa 3 4 Damel Boone 6 Merv
Griffin B Mr Rogers 33 Tarzan 13
5 30- Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
13
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15
6 30-News3 4 1S 6 8 10 I Dreamo1Jeannlel3
7 00- News6 10 What s My LineS Elec Co 20 Andy Gr ffllh
15 tnslght33 BeallheCiock4 I veGotaSecretl3
7 30- Masterpiece Theatre 33 ThiS Is Your ~lfe 3 Doctors Dn
Call4 ToTelltl1eTruth6 Price Is RightS 10 Beatthe Clock
13
8 oo~ Bonanza 3 4 15 Temperatures Rlslng6 13 Maude 8 10
8 30- Hawaii Five 0 B 10 Even'"g at Pops 33 Movie The
Longest Night 6 13
9 30- Movie The Family Rico 8 10 Towers of Frustration
3J

Line JJ

6

13

F~rlng

11 00- News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Did&lt; Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 VIrginian 8
Mavin Law of War 10

¥K 3
• 97

... AJS
.KI075 2
SOUTH
.AKQ106

.2

¥QJ7 52

... 93
North-South vulnerable

1 30 - News 13

10 oo-NBCReportsl 415 MarcusWetby MD

EAST
.J9 82

¥A98
+QJ0865

Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 IS Mov1e Shock
Corridor 10 Mov10 The Little Fug1t ve 13

''
f

11

(0)

.Q64

11 30 -

1 00- Focus on Columbus 4

By RAY CROMLEY

.AKJ4 3

I 00- Gunsmoke B 10 Rowan and Martins Laugh In 3 4 15

UFO 6 ,V•olent Un verse 33

RLlG,

• 1064

13

9 00 - Heres ~uch 8 10 Mov1e The Anderson Tapes

How One City Cuts
Youth Delinquency

IN' 80T LEAVE '.()UR
SHOES IN THE
VESTIWLE MY

• 53

Parent Game 3 Hollywood Squares 4 Young Dr K1ldare 8

Movie Tarzan and the Amazons

l\ ~E~~EW' COME

W~ITE

Strangers at Sunrise 13

\\est

North

Ea~t

Pass
2+

Pass I •

Pass

Pass

2NT

Pass 2¥
Pass 3 ¥

Pass
Pass

4¥

Pass Pass

O~nmg

South

lead- • 6

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
Oswald
We watched a
rubbe1 bndge game the oth
e1 da) w1th fa1r players m
volved There were plenty of
mistakes made as you would
expect but there were a
g1eat many hand s that
should mterest our readers
J1m
What about th1s
one 1 A club lead would beat
four hearts qmckly and su re
I} What happened after
West opened a d1amond '
Oswald Declarer starled
w1th a rush He cashed dum
my s ace and kmg of d1a
moods to d1scard a club
loser Then he played ace
kmg and SIX of spades
J1m Looks like a p1 etty
good sta1 t
Oswald It was a prett\
good start but 1t wasn t qu1te
good enough West ruffed
w1th the e1ght of hearts and
declarer had to use dum
my s 10 to overruff
A trump from dummy
produced the th1 ee from
East the Jack hom South
and the ace from West West
cashed h1s ace of clubs and
led a low d1amond East
ruffed w1th the km g and led
h1s last spade whereupon
West set th e hand by ruffmg
w1th h1s nme of trumps
J1m A bnlllant senes of
defens1ve plays I can t real
ly blame South for h1s lme
of play East and West JUSt
came up w1th some 1eal
razzle dazzle defense
(t-IEWSP.t.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

tt:B;1:HWtfl!f:l!1
The b1ddmg has been

West

North

East

South

I •
You South hold

'

.AQ87 ¥KJ4 +32 ... K984

1 00 - Your Health 4
I 30- News Weather 4 Local News 13

&amp; THINGS
c

BY PAUL CRABTREE
With the dawn of a new TV season, here are some gradings

on the new shows, with two ratmgs given, both of wh1ch are
important, but not necessarily connected Wlth one another
Their JX"Qbable excellence and their chance to surv1ve the
annual ratings war, presided over by the great god Neilsen
The ratings are largely mme, but they are drawn from
comments and forecasts In three or four of lhe trade journals,
plus synopses from the networks and prev1ews by critics What I
have done here Is to present these judgments m capsule form
01 ABC
"The Rookies," Monday at 8 About a new group of cops in a
routine situation, It sounds like Mod Squad' With a shorter
haircut Excellence, C minus Survival D minus (Oppos1te
"Gunsmoke' and Laugh In ' It's sure to he wiped out, unless
Mooday nightfoolball fans tune In early and like it )
Temperatures Rising ' Tuesday at 8 The ad agenCJes,
critics and everyone else have p1cked th1s hospital-comedy hour
as a sure loser Excellence, D Survival, Dminus
• Paul Lynde ~ow," Wednesday at 8 These same criilCS
love Lynde,butsay he slike Jonathan Winters and cant make 1t
in hiB own series Excellence, C plus Survival, D
"'Ibe Julie Andrews Show, ' Wednesday at 10 Julie 1s
considered pasae by many critics, and there s not exactly a gold
rush to buy lime on this one, but Mary Poppms may have just one
more miracle waiting Excellence B minus Survival, D
"The Men," Thursday at 9 One of those three-sertes-wJthm
H!erles, this one stars Robert Conrad, Laurence Luckmblll and
James Walilwrlght as rotating heroes, and stands a good chance
of making It, since this fonnat ts proving successful (MBC
which started 1t, Is expanding the concept) J&gt;xcellence, C
&amp;irvlval, B mmus
"Kung Fu," once a month, Saturday at 8, alternating With
"Alias Smith &amp;: Jones " An Oriental detect1ve uses Far East
tmlloaotmY and an occaSlonal karate chop to solve crlffie etc
Excellence, c minus Survtval, D (Its oppos1te 'All m the
Family," but might get better play if ' Smith &amp;: Jones begm to
falter That's its only hope )
"streets of San Francisco " Saturdays at 9 This sounds
creadful - a mish-mash of • Dragnet, • The FBI,' and Me
Cloud,'' with none of the saving graces of any of the three Ex·
ceUence, D minus Survival, D mmus (Opposite Mary Tyler
Moore,lt'll be a delight toseethiBone wiped out by Mary Rhoda
et al)

What do you do?
A-Double You are well
prepared for spades and dubs
and have reasonable hearts

TODAY S QUESTION
Your p a r t n e r responds one
heart to your double What do
you do now?
Answer tomorrow

S••d $1 l0&lt; JACOBY MODERN book
to Wrn of Brrdge (c/o tlt1s news

pop&lt;r) P 0 Box 489 Rodoo C1ty
New York NY 10019

BY JACK O'BRIAN
KlSSINGER TO GO
BETWEEN COVERS
NEW YORK \ KF'S ) - Henry K1ssmger s
fate upon leavmg N1xon $3 1'. m1lllon m book
offers already - and he II take em
While
The Godfather was bemg f1lmed director
Franc1s Coppola took llme off to TV tape the
real hfe b1rth of h1s daughter Plans to g1ve her
the lape on her 16th b1rlhday luy1ck 1 The
s1mple truth m The Parent Game TV show
purportedly lettmg parents reply to prunent
quenes - 1s that professwnal gag wnters are
fabr1 catmg the cheap filthy rephes put m the
mouths of babes paren ts 1sn t that agamst
FCC law' The Mavor Lmdsay Pollee Comm
Murph) dovecote w1li become a hawkcote but
the announcement of Murph s eventual
leavetakmg w1ll try for sweetness and llght
C1ty Hall sp1es say he II be off soon
Hotels here are fmdmg 1t tough gettmg
mght pone ops
Smatra s Jet p1cked up
beaut1ful V1ctor1a Prmc1pal three bmes so far
dunn g her H wood si&lt;lr f1lmmg of The Naked
Ape to wh1sk her to Palm Spnngs
Bob
Cons1dme s toastmaster of the Nov 28 Wllham
Randolph Hearst Jr testunomal at the Waldorf
Rudy Vallee s now feudmg w1th Rolhng
Pebble MICk Jagger N1xon backslagers thmk
Sec of Slate B1ll Rogers next w11l go to the
Supreme Court
Smce Rudy had a Cahf
deadend street named for h1m Ottawa has
named a whole avenue for Paul Anka Arthur
Godfrey has a M1am1 Beach causeway named
alter h1m w1th no causes lately to aggrand1ze
Conme Stevens followed Debb1e Reynolds
mto Harrah s Reno even as she followed her mto
Edd1e FIShers hfe S1dney Pm be r gets cred1t
usually as the top black boxofhce star he s not
R1chard Rountree 1s
Management of the
C1rcle m the Square off Bdwy theater plan two
theaters m nudtown They re trymg to coax
some cash from R1chard Burton - they d name
one The Ellzabeth Taylor Burton Thea tre
Rod Ste1ger had a face lift and doesn t care who
koows 1t Now he s had to have h1s nose
broadened cosmetically for the lnd1an role m
h1s Lolly Madonna War !1Im
U S Ally Gen I Klemd1enst vowed
privately to newsmen h1s mtenllon to halt the
conglomerate n se Blames LBJ for 11
Cam1lle d1ed of consumptiOn m all stage
screen TV produchons but AlPs mod vers10n
wlll have her croakmg from somethmg
currently more relevant we trust that s not a
euphem1sm for VD Joe D1Magg10 dmed solo

at the Stage Deh on Jello and sk1m m1lk as 1f m
trammg Raquel Welch w111unve11 mdeed that
her mghtclub act at the L A H1lton at Yulehde
And she has huge offers to unvell MGM s new
Vegas hotel at the Concord m the sour cream
Alps etc Rose land s1gned Lionel Hampton for
a fall engagement the great Hamp also p1cks
up a 33rd degree Mason honor m Oct from the
Pres of L1bena h1mself
Forest Hllls tenms execs were about to
cream Paucho Gonzalez for a Pancho-ep1thet
hurled at a fan - but h1s f1rst round defeat
dec1ded tl1em not to further p1ck on the
glamorollS gentr1c tennllil
Prmcess Anne s
ne\\ bea u 1s cons1dered the current heavy
favor1te for her hand Banker Lord lrwm 28
SOli of the Earl of Hahfax
Shirley remple
Black slamped her Mary Janes because there
were no women delegates at the recent UN
Counc1l on Fam1ly Planmng
Bnllsh d1rector actor wnter Dudley
Moores spht w1th w1fe Suzy Kendall1s fmal agam U Than! swanked 11m a Cad1llac new
UN boss Waldhe1m s chmce 1s a Lincoln Con
tmental The Jory f1lm has teenager Robby
Benson playmg a 15-) ear-&lt;&gt;ld gunshngmg
orphan
Joey Heatherton prepped her 1m
mment Waldorf Astona act m Honolulu where she diSported bra less backless and
nearly frontless w1th scads of Wlld bounce-and
Jiggle front and back (Must be Jello ca use Jam
don t )ump hke that)
The Jew1sh press won t let George
McGovern forget he d1d call for complete
Israel w1thdrawal fr om a)j,, Q!l~~p1ed Arab
lands Her Dem-delegate sls\ers and brothers
went sour on Bella Abzug s four letter demands
at the convention Bella s a closet Kmg,
s1ghed one dlsliiUsJOned fern hbster
The R1ese Brothers reslaurant cartel (they
run more than 200 N Y eater1es) wh1ch last
week p1cked up a fiVe restaurant $7 000 000 deal
from Harry Helmsle's One Penn Plaza com
plex JUSt s1gned a 25-year lease to operate all
the Roosevelt Hotel s mam floor dmmg fac1ht1es
and shortly w1ll announce more slDlllar hotel
ea tery lakeovers Dodd Mead w11l publiSh a
73 p1cture and text tome about our most styhsh
gent Fred Astalfe Sh1rley Macl..ame danced
mto Roseland ballroom w1th boy fnend Pete
Ham1ll who was d1verted long enough to buy
"the obllgatory neckhe Roseland lDSlsts upon and peddles at the door The Gay 90s chef went
on vacatiOn and a banker took h1s place owner
Ob1e Bart who s v1ce-chalrman of aN J bank

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Often Hard to Find

Where Is Good Arthritis Care?
By Lawrence Lamb M D

Dear Dr Lamb- Your ar
hcles are most helpful and
mfonnatlve One m parl!c
ular stressed ge ttm g ade
quate med1cal care for ar
thntls Dr Lamb you have
no 1dea how d1ff1cult that 1s
Too many doctors fee l that 1t
1s JUSt one of those chrome
problems and you have to
make the best of 1t Even
the state mediCal school can
be a problem l was told
nothmg could be done for me
and eventually I would be
paralyzed One arm and
hand were almost paralyzed
at that t1me X rays show
that I also have arthr1hs m
the spme and neck and the
h1ps are also affected
I do spec1al typmg for a
psych1atnst and fmally told
him I would not be able to
conhnue to even at a re
duced speed because of my
arthnhs He sent me to
phys1cal therapy and 1t has
revolutiomzed my llfe Of
course I still have trouble
but 1t has helped a great
+++
deal So doctor 11 s all m
Next column The new lineup on CBS
the 'luck one has m getting
nght doctor In large
the
+++
areas
there are speclallsts
ON 11IE TV DIAL Young Dr Kildare," a brand-new
who
concern
themselves
llerlea, debuts at 7 30 on WCJIS.TV (did I say "brand new '•)
only w1th arthnt1s but m
Movlealhow up on WBNS-TV in tbe 7 30-8 time slot WBNS.TV, most of our small towns our
with ''The Palomino" tonight • Laugh-In "Is back, 8, WSAZ-TV busy doctors )ust don t have
"Sunlmoke begins its 18th season (and I'm glad), Son WCJIS. hme to devote to us ~r
TV And BW IAlrlby'a new show has Harry Belafonte and Sidney thnhcs
Dear Reader- Yes I do
fbltl.- u opening-night guests, 10 on WCJIS.TV
Lucy and
know how d1ff1cult 1t IS
Doria Day are back for amther season at 9and 9 30, WCHS-TV
There 1s a lot that can be
'"'beOdd Couple," 1110vie version, Is !be ABC Monday night flick
done for arthr1hs and much
II • oa WHTN·TV, and ''The Ander1011 Tapes" are the season· of 1t has to be directed
open.- on NBC'S "Monday Night Movte" at 9, WSAZ-TV
toward learnmg proper llv

mg habits PhysiOtherapy
wh1ch mcludes proper exer
c1ses 1s an 1mportant part
of the treatment m keepmg
full use of the body It s true
that m many small towns
doctors JUSt don t have the
hme to deal w1th suc h com
plex hme consuming prob
!ems Also a lot of eqmpment
1s expens1ve and suppo1t
treatment such as phys1
otherapy 1sn t always avail
able e1ther Some reade1 s
have told me I m unreason
able m telling them they
should go to a center or loca
lion where a rheumatologist
1s located Cons1derm~ the
Importance of arthntis I
don t thmk so The person
w1th rheumatmd arthr11ls
charactemed by swelhng
part1cularly needs help
The Arthntis Foundatwn
was formed to try to help
resolve some of the prob
lems of the type your letter
descn bes You llve near
Denver and a chapter of the
Arthr1hs Foundahon 1s lo
cated there You could ad
dress your letter to the
Hocky Mountain Chapter of
the Arthnhs Foundation
Denver Colo 80204 In large
c1tles pat1ents can some
hmes fmd the state or
reg10nal chapter of the Ar
thnlls Foundallon hsted m
the telephone book To fmd
the nearest rheumatologist
(speclahst m arthr11ls) you
can wnte to the natlonal
headquarters off1ce Arthn
lls Foundahon 1212 Avenue
of the Amer1cas New York
New York !0036 They can
d1rect you to the rheuma

\

tolog1st nearest to you
In small commumt1es a
good way to do th1s 1s to
have your famlly doctor re
fer you to the rheumatolog
1st and even though 1t may
be 40 or 50 m1les away a
tnp once or tw1ce a year de
pendmg on you r health
status 1s a good mvestment

The rheumatologist can
act as a consultant to your
fam1ly doctor and can help
you gam access to the d1f
ferent kmds of treatment
you m1ght need I don t thmk
anyone w1th rheumatoid ar
thntis should 1gnore th1s
problem To do so 1s to mk
senous llm1tat10n and d1s
ab11lty later

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Somethmg of a m1racle has ta11en place m the city of
PaclfJCa Calif these past two years
Juvemle delinquency dropped 15 per cent m 1970 and 23
per cent more In 1971
At the same time, delinquency was steadily lllCreasmg
nahonw1de-m many localities at a rate of 5 to 10 per
cent every 12 months year after year
The outlook was not always bnght m Pac1flca popula
tion 37 000 located near San Francisco In 1969 juvenile
arrests rose 35 per .cent 111 these statilitics compiled by
the Callforma Youth Author1ty
Now 1t m1ghl be argued that the 1970 and 1971 declines
were merely a return to normal from the major bulge
m 1969 when arrests JUmped from 821 to 1,130 But this
theory doesn't explam away the 1971 f1gure , down to 742
arrests almost 10 per cent below 1968
Th1s m1racle apparently came about not througb any
great new d1scovery about young people or exotic new
techmques It seemmgly resulted from the application
of some rather well known and not overly costly methods
The old practiCe, apparently followed m many clUes
was to warn an arrested youngster and send him home
or forward h1m to court Ne1ther alternative produced
sahsfactory results
What PacifiCa did then was sort out about a f1fth to a
fourth of these youngsters when arrested and transfer
them out of the pollee-court probation system
Each of these selected younrsters p1cked because they
showed prom1se and because the1r delmquenc1es were
not senous was then tlH'ned over to cooperating groups
Teachers kept a lookout m the schools for youths pos
s1bly headed for dehnquency These youngsters were
then referred through the1r patents not to the pollee
but to the ass1stmg groups A1d was confidential and free
The boy or g1rl and parents brothers and s1sters would
then s1t down and d1scuss the1r problems w1th an adv1ser
The boy would be sounded out for h1s mterests then
mv1ted mto groups or proJects that f1t h1s goals
A tutormg group was set up manned by college youths
to help those youngsters havmg study dlfCICUlty
An attempt was made to get these young people m
valved m commumty problems and youth activities They
treated blrds after an 011 sp11l They took part m commu
mty fa1rs rock concerts dances and discussiOns
Youths called streetwalkers' were hired to go out
on the streets m parks shoppmg centers the beach and
other places where young people gather 'to attempt to
help angry youth verbahze the1r feelmgs and fmd alter
nate means of express10n
' such as the group ac
tlVllles ment10ned
Pac1f1ca 1sn't the only community using these tech
mques Some c11les add a health serv1ce which may aid
m plast1c surgery removal of tattoos corrective dentist
ry or eye exammahons to remove sources of embar
rassment or handicaps wh1ch may help to dr1ve a young
pe1son mto delinquency Drug programs are a part Some
towns have teen prevocat10nal workshops
What makes the system work lsn t clear The first secret
seems to be JUSt that someone takes an Interest m the
person--other than through a court sentence or proba
\lon
The second secret seems to be the mvolvement of every
poss1ble concerned group in a commumty in a program
able to handle considerable numbers of dellnquent or
poten\lally dellnquent young people w1th problems
The th1rd secret seems to be getting these youths In
volved m commumtv problems and activities
If the system outlmed above were adopted nationwide
1t 1s esllmated 200 000 fewer young people would end up
m court each year The saving in twisted lives could be in
calculable

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

He Goes Home to Mommy
Dear Helen
Frank and I were mamed two days and a haU before he left
for 'Nam 'Ibat was f1ve months ago, and I am five months
pregnant
He came home on a 30-day leave but, aflet llpCilding two
weeks w1th me, he took off to spend the rest with hiB folks He
didn t offer to take me with him because they have done their
best to split us up They've told lies about me, 118id l stole' their
furruture (when actually the store repossessed It) and that
because of me they left town (they sneaked off to avoid bill
collectors)
1 don t koow who Frank believes but It looks like he's on
thm s1de Don I you think a man s place Is with his wife
espec1ally when he's only got a monlh in the States •
!love him, but U he's going to spend haU his lime with hiB
folks maybe it means he prefers thw shiftless ways Should I
just g1ve up' -MARRIED TO A MAMA'S BOY
DearMTMB
Don t give up until you've given marriage more than a two
and one-half days, plus two weeks trial When Frank comea
home for good you'll soon know which "mama" he prefers (men
DO grow up when they realize they are husbanc!Hnd.fathen)
Meanwhile write to him every day - and be grateful for your
•
allolment check - H

+++

BERHfS

:" ~,.e .:=.: ..:::;:;:., /n...-.-. ~:-:--..::: . .

RAY CROAtLEY

1!1

Dear Mrs B
About the "man'' who was sent to jail for draft dodging and
got gang-£aped He's now going baek to jail (crime conveniently
unmentioned by him) unless hiB lawyer can soften up the jury
w1th a big sob story
That's the trouble with our country A coward won't flcht for
11 so he gets what he deserves - but I'll bet a lot of weepm;.:
Lenas write in about how prlaon ruins ''peaceful" yoq men•
Instead of sticking to the sideline• with a neutraliJIIWel;,
Mrs B , you should have reminded him that naklng deeerlerll
have been SHOT in other wars I -NO TEARS FOR TRAITORS

Dear No
Sorry, I'm not the vindictive Nor am I that dedicated to •
war we should never have fought
What this young man's present crime ratinc III don'llmow
but of one thllig I'm sure he did not "d--.e" gang.rape
I can do wilhout your brand ol bloodthirsty "patriotism" I H

Dear Helen

+++

Please ten me the effect powdered llarch hu on a penon
who eata It by the box
My wife COI1IUIIlel a full one pound ol Wlll!lng ltarch every
day Sbe says she craves II I may be Wl'lilll but I bave noticed a
change In her skin C(llllpleiion and size ol JltoiiiiiCh -HUSBAND

' Toda;'s
'

~Sport Parade

MUNICH (UPI)- Frank won 5() a G mes record
Wash won a spill J-2 dec1s10n
The U S also rece1ved two
By MILTON RICHMAN
Shorter and Edd1e Hart a pa1r
But Shorte1 who was horn m over Anghel Anghelov of Sllvers;-{)ne tl refused to ac
UPI Sports Edltur
of Amencans who wouldn t Mun1ch 24 ¥ears ago 11 &gt;~ &lt; Hulgana to ca)!lllrc the hght cept m basketball - and a
MUNICH (UPI) -Frank Shorter looked around him and drank g1 ve up won gold medals on Sunday more pleosant uy welterweight boxmg crown bronze to 18-ycar-&lt;&gt;ld Dw1ght
the !mal day of Olymp1c track w1mmg the 26-mlle marathon
the whole thing m
Stones of UCLA w1th a leap of
and
f1eld
compel1l10n
bul1t
d1d
7 3 m the high JUmp The other
the
f1rst
Amencan
to
wm
this
ThiS moment would slay w1th h1m the rest of h1s llfe and" 1t
llttle
to
ease
the
pam
of
the
Sllverwentltl
the US women s
gruehng race m 64 years
m1ght be all that was left after the bllsters healed and the gold
overa II Russ1an trJUmpll m the
1 600 meter relay team of
Shorter of 1\anchos De Taos
medal was mounted or put away ma vault somewhere
Games
Mabel
Fergerson Madehne
N
M
took
the
lead
after
rune
Thef1na, strams of the Slar Spangled Banner had dissoved mto
The Russ1ans won the 1mles and held 1t the remamder
Manmng
Cheryl Toussamt and
the shcky late afternoon atmosphere, blending m w1th the other medals race 98-93 w1th only one
Kathy Hammond
stadium n01ses and now the llttle 13().pounder from Ranchos de event the equestnan grand of the d1slance to wm by almost
two mmutes At about 21 rrdles
Taos, N M reahzed 11 was tunc for hun to eave the v1ctory PflX remauung on today s
he knew he could wm
stand
!mal program The U S has a
And Hart depnved of a
Gmgerly although the blisters on h1s feet were killmg him chance for a medal probabl) a chance to run m th• ~n 100 by
Frank Shorter stepped down onto the f1eld the first Amencan to bronze m the grand prlX
a mlXup of startmg t1mes on a
wm the 26-mde Olymp1c marathon m 64 years
The closmg ceremony tern qualifymg heat anchored the
He headed for the ex1t and before he got there he stopped to pered to the tragedy of the 400-meter relay team ltJ v1cltlry
chat w1th a man s1ttmg m a wheel cha1r
CINCINNATI (UPI)- It was
Jsraeh massacre w111 end the m 38 2 equallmg a world
the understatement of the sea
The man he talked w1th was Etluop1a s Abebe B1kila a man 20th Games tomght The record
son
for the Atlanla Falcons
who had won the marathon m Rome m 1960 and repeated his carefree Bavarian dancers Will
The Amer1cans also won two
not
perform
as
scheduled
and
when
quarterback Bob Berry Ututed Press International
vtctory m Tokyo four years later but later was mvolved m an
gold medals m archery and one
The Umvcrs1ty of Toledo
automob1le acc1dent wh1ch left hun paralyzed from the wa1st the gay sounds of carmvaljazz m boxmg John W1lllarns 18 of commented It was our best
w111 be replaced by class1cal Cranesvdle Pa the world game by far
must have known 11 would all
down
The game was the Falcons come to an end someda) -and
champ10n won the men s
Frank Shorter gnpped Bilnla s hand and both men held on a mustc
The
somber
mood
should
flt
44
14 wm over the Cmcmnab 1t did Saturday
archery lltle eas1ly and Mrs
ilttle longer than two mdmduals normally would shaking hands
W1th 35 stra1ght football w1ns
the Amencaru. who have had Doreen W1lbur 42 of Je' Bengals Saturday mght that
That was because they had somethmg spec1alm common
the1r
worst
Olymp1cs
of
Wlder
the1r bells, the Rockets
ended
thm
exhib1tion
season
ferson Iowa came from fourth
Pam
modern tunes The US won place to wm the women s It also was Atlanla s hrst wm opened the1r season w1th a re
The acute sometimes mlndJabbmg pam which comes from
soundmg ~1 .0 loss to the Um
only 33 gold medals compared
of the summer
pushmg the human body at blt further than nature P.,rhaps ever to 45 m 1968 wh1le the Russl3ns lltle
vers1ty of 1ampa
Berry
threw
for
two
touch
Ray
Seales
20
of
Tacoma
mtended 11 ltJ be
downs and runm t, hack Joe
Tampa s fleet backs ran al
Frank Shorter, 130 pounds wrmgmg wet doesn t go for any
most
at w11l aga1nst foledo the
Profit ran for two more as the
frills when 11 comes to ruruung Nothing fancy
Bengal defense corr.pletel) nal!on s top defens1ve team the
He looks for a spot if he gets 1t he takes 1t and 1f he do•sn t he
broke down
last three seasons Toledo was
hangs back He prefers setting the pace though 1f he can He
Th1s 1s the f1rst time we held to 193 yards tolal offense
couldn t at the start of Sunday s race
slayed w1th our slarters the mcludmg 44 yards rushm g
Argentma s Fernando Molum got the Jump and left the
\\hole game Berry sa1d
In other games that opened
Earl James or Waverly, president of the SEO
sladium first Japans Ak10 Usam1 wearmg his long-peaked
A
Cmcmnatl
hneman
who
the
Oh1o colleg1ate season
Sportswnters and Broadcasters i\ssocmbon,
white camp backwards qmckly Jomed hun Shorter was among
w1shed to remam un1denllf1ed Oh10 Umvers1ty downed
announced th~t all vohng members Will meet
those m the nuddle
smd the team wasn t up for the Central M1ch1gan 26-21 Akron
Sunda) Sept 17 m Jackson to orgamze for the
game and 'we couldn t get and Kent State played to a 13-13
Let em go ' thought Shorter, rummg easlly and evenly
1172 7l school year
I
up
he Xav1er wh1pped Morehead
Its early Plenty of time but I know that ilttle Japanese guy
I
feel
hke
we
let
everyone
The mcetmg IS set for I p m at Jolly Lanes
State (Ky 1 26-7 Cmcmnah
can run so I m gonna keep an eye on hun
down, he saJd
beat lnd1ana Slate 10.7 and
Bowhng Center
There lS a bndge a few hundred yards outs1de the stadmm
Back
Paul
Robmson
also
Dayton
downed Youngstown
which traverses a s1xlane highway and Shorter had barely
The members Will elect office• s pay annual
sang
blues
for
the
Bengals
who
18 13
crossed over the br1dge when he suddenly became aware of a bus
dues get new press passes and make theu
f1mshed
exhibltlon
play
w1th
a
Ohw U quarterback R1ch
veermg precanously close to h1m Too close
annual p1gskm prognost1cahons for the 1972
3-3
mark
Bevly
capped an 82 yard dr1ve
Dammt this 1d10t 1s gonna come r1ght mto me He s gonna
SEOi\L football season
Maybe 11 s good to get this w1th a one yard plunge f01 a
hit me Hey for crym out loud look where the hell you re gomg
out of our system Robmson
What s wrong w1th you' Are you blind or somethmg '
sa1d I know we re not this
The bus was carrymg a full crew of photographers Shorter
Leadtng Batte..-s
bad
not1ced
NatiOnal League
Berry mdicated that the Fal
g ab r h pel
That would be some piCture me lymg there m the road
cons took advantage of a par Wilms Ch 133 512 82 175 342
Frank Shorter settled back mto a smooth nonlaxmg pace and
llcular weakoess by rook1e de Mol a LA 104 336 55 1II 330
Cdeno Hou 121 487 95 160 329
the f1rst thmg he koew he was thmking about thmgs which d1dn t
fens1ve end Sherman White Garr
All
ll7 480 73 155 323
have anythmg to do w1th the race He was thmkmg about the
Bengals Coach Paul Brown Olver PI 123 499 60 158 317
U S Russl8 basketball game the mght before how everythmg
stud1ed f1lms of the game Sun Baker All 110 380 53 120 316
l P t 123 439 68 138 314
went hayw1re at the end and how the Amer1cans thought they had
day at Spmney f1eld to get a Slrg
Wa son Hou
won only to d1scover they had lost
131 491 68 153 3 2
A new tootbatl powerhouse thou gh adm1 thng to some head start on practlce this
My God maybe this lS some kmd of trend here Maybe
Bckn..- LA
95 343 42 107 31 2
week
The
Bengals
open
the1r
may have been born Saturday Jl tters playmg agamst the
San
lo
Ch
117
414 57 128 309
they're gonna lake everythmg away from us Could 1t be '
season at New England Sun
and an old one was shaken as natlon s top-ranked club
Amer1can Leag ue
Shorter s nund returned to the race
day
g ab r h pet
unraoked UCLA stunned No 1
The Cornhuskers saw the1r
That was the 10-lnlometer mark we JUSt passed and 1 m m rated Nebraska 20.17 and
Berry nddled the Cmcmnall Shblm KC 116 397 55 126 317
a good shape Hey I thmk I can wm th1s thmg U I flmsh 1 m deflated the Cornhuskers 23-game w1"nmg streak and 32- secondary completmg 15 of 22 Car ew M1n 24 478 55 15 1 316
ga me undefeated streak end on
D Allen Ch
gonna wm I feel 1t
hopes for a second stra1ght a 29 yard held goal by UCLA s passes for 254 yards Art Ma
135 467 82 147 315
lone
went
over
for
the
flfSt
Three more kilometers farther on about nme m1les from the national title
Pnoela
KC
130 497 59 153 306
MeXIcan born soccer style
Rud Oak 12'1 521 82 160 307
start Shorter notlced the pace was slow Too slow
Out of the dust of Nebraska s kicker Efren Herrera w1th 22 touchdown m the ope rung quar Ot
s KC
124 476 67 143 300
ter
I m gonna go out m front I figure 1f I go out m front now defeat UCLA second year seconds rema1rung
Mybrry KC
But the Bengals evened the
they re gonna be reluctant to follow
126 434 53 130 300
coach Pepper Rodgers saw his
They ran the1r wishbone
score
that same penod when Berry Cal 104 365 38 109 299
Shorter moved out m front shortly after 15 kilometers or about newly mstalled w1shbone of pretty well sa1d Devaney,
May Ch o 133 476 77 142 298
one third of the distance
fense chck llke clockwork and whose team faces perhaps an Doug Dressler scored on a one Pns on Cal 119 424 SJ 126 297
F1rst he sprmted into a 51l-yard lead and when nobody his team play w1th the con even more potent Wishbone yard run
Home Runs
The Bengals went ahead m
challenged him he w1dened his margm to 300 yards
fldence of a w1nner
Nahonallea gue Col ber t SO
threat thiS Saturday m a home
the second per10d when Nell 37 Slargell Pil l 33 Bench C n
Ukam1 and Mamo Wolde the smooth-striding Eth10p1ans who
Rodgers
Brums hum game agamst Texas A&amp;M
Cra1g
p1cked off a Berry pass 31 W IIam s Ch1 29 Aaron All
won the gold medal four years ago m Mexico City, hung back drummed !hell way to a poor 2In other games on college
May Hou 2B
and
returned
1t 81 yards for and
They d1dn t thlok Shorter could poss1bly keep up such a pace But 7 I record last year but m footballs f1rst week of achon,
Amencan league D Alle n
another TO
Ch 33 Mur cer NY 27
he d1d and eventually he was at the 36-kilometer mark sllghtly tramlng camp th1s summer he Southern Califorma, UCLA s
But late mthe second per10d K lleb rew M nn Ep stem and
less than f1ve miles from home and leadmg by two full mmutes PfOmlsed th1ngs would un cross town nval
pulled Cmcmnat1 lost startmg Jackson Oak 23
I ve got 1t 1Tbe only way I can lose it now lS ill fall down prove w1th the help of the w1sh anot her maJor upset by quarterback Ken Anderson
Runs Balled In
Nat1onal
league
Stargell
bone
and
a
potential
star
overw
helmmg
flfth
ranked
and die What it somebody should breeze past me now Oh, no
w1th a hand mjury and the P tl 110 W IIams Ch1 102
Arkansas
31
10,
second
ranked
But c'mon now keep gomg You ve got 1t This 18 where they all quarterback lo run 1t, JUDlor
Colbert SO 101 Bench C n
squad ran out of gas
college transfer Mark Harmon Colorado had to struggle m The Falcons added two 100 S1mmons Sl l. 88
slow down and 1t s the guy who slows down the least who wms
Mark 1s the son of former beatmg Califorma 20-10 nmth touchdowns m the second
Amencan League D Allen
Shorter was runmng all alone now
Ch1 102 Murcer NY 85
M1Ch1gan
All
Amer1ca
Tom
ranked
Wash1ngton
had
trouble
Nl he sped down Potsdamstrasse m the Schwa bing Dllitrlct of
penod on rook1e ruMmg back Mayberry KC 79 Scoll MI
downtown Mumch he wasn't aware of anythmg but the stad1um Harmon but if the 6-foot 185- beatlng unraoked Pacif1c 13-6, Bill Holland s three-yard run 77 Darw n Mmn 72
youngster
who and seventhranked Alabama and tight end Jun Mltchell s 11
P1fch1ng
ahead The cobblestones underneath hlDl had blistered his feet pound
Nat1onal League
Car lt on
walloped
Duke
35-12
celebrated
h1s
2oth
b1rlhday
a
many miles ago But he was hardly aware of the pam
yard pass from Berry
Phil
23
8
Jenk
ns
Ch1
20 10
Tampa, ended Toledo s 35Prof1t scored on a one-yard Bla ss P ft 17 6 Seaver NY 17
Over on the sidewalk Alwm Ach a 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld o,xport clerk week before the b1ggest
trmmph of his career con game WlMlng streak 21.0 run m the third penod and the 11 Torrez Man I 16 9 Osteen
who was watchmg the race,sald to his fr1end
tinues to perform as he d1d 14thranked Tennesse crushed
LA 16 10
'ThiS 1s the hardest event m the Olymp1cs, much harder than aga1nst Nebraska, he wont Georg1a Tech, 34·3 20th- Falcons added 16 more pomts
Amencan League Wood Ch1
something like the IIJO.meters where the whole thing is over m 10 long have to be 1dentif1ed as the ranked West V1rglrua topped mthe fourth on Berry's 36-yard 24 13 ~ol ch Det 20 12 Perry
scoring pass to Malone a safe Clev 20 15 Hunter Qak 19 7
seconds In thiS race you have to practice much longer and then son of a football star
V1llanova ~ Syracuse beat ty and a 10.vard run by Prof1t Pal mer Ball 19 8
run more than two hours to wm a medal Ach s friend was
' I know how good we re Temple 17 10 Flor1da St
unlmprerJSed
capable of beillg and that s whipped Pittsburgh, 19 7, and
ft s s11ly to run 43 kilometers on ground like th1s he sa1d very good
Harmon sa1d, RICe edged Houston 14 13
'They could've just as easily taken a twu '
'
Shorter meanwhile sunpl;r was followmg the broken blue !me
in the street put there to gwde the marathoners
Soon lhe Olympic Stadium loomed ahead to the left
• What a s1ghll What ~ beautiful s1ght Only a hltle more
now Only a litUe more '
Shorter entered the stad1um the same way he leflll, runnmg
easily and not breathing very bard
Ma tor League ~rano'"gs
Amencan League
East
He had covered what is referred to as lhe classic diStance the By United Press tnternaltona~
National League
w I pet g b
same one Plnd1p1des, the inunortal Greek runner had m
Boston
East
73 60 549
brmging the news ol a battle v1clory from Marathon to Athens
w I pet gb Bal flm ore
73 63 537 1 v..
Delro1t
66 48 642
72 63 533 2
Phid1p1des then turned to go back to the battlefield, but suddenly P1 llsburgh
Ch1cago
75 61 551 12
New York
72
64 529 2 lf2
keeled over and died
New York
69 64 51 9 16 ;, Oeveland
62 73 459 12
Shorter ran afoul of no such tragedy Sunday
St ~ou s
64 72 47 1 23 Milwaukee 54 82 397 20 1/:z
62 72 4A1 ?4
West
He was physically spent at the end of the race But had enough Mon IreaI
Philadelphia 51 83 381 31
wlpctgb
left to jog around the mfieid Shortly afterward he mounted the
West
Oakla nd
79 SS 590 VICtory stand and got his gold medal
w I pet g b Ch•cago
76 59 563 3 •;,
Cmc
nnal
63
53
610
M
nnesota
67
66 504 11 'h
Frank Shorter looked around him and drank lhe whole thmg m
Houston
75 60 556 7 2 KansasC1ty 66 67 496 12' :z
This moment would stay w1th him the rest of h1s life
Los Ange les 73 62 541 9 ' Cal forma
63 72 467 l6 1f2
Allanla
64 73 467 19 12 Texas
51 84 37B 28'12

RIJ lcons

"I thought young polttlcal tdeologues were only supposed t&amp; be mterestecl m the ISSUES'"

The U S women d1dn t wm a
track gold for the first llme m
history and the men only won
SIX

The Russians won the most

track medals mne and East
Germany had e1ght while the
Amencans won the most track
medals 21 to 20 for East
Germany and 17 for Russ1a
rhe Sov1et Unwn won two
•

Crush
Toledo's Long
Cincy
Streak Ended

Newsmen Meet Sunday

Huskers Upset

By UCLA 20-17

San Franc1sco 60 77

438 23

"d G
San 01ego
51 63 381
This Week's Gn
ames Ch•Montreal
cago Philadelph ia 3
8
2
Sunday s Results

5

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTI REST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHUTE. L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROll RT HOEFLICH
City E~ltor
Publllhfd dally txctp
Saturaay by Tt'le Oh o Valley
Publish ing Company
)11
Court St
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99'2 2156 Ed itoria l Flt'lone 992

2157

Stconcl class postage paid tt
Pomrroy Oh o
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reprntntll•~tt
Botllntlll
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Subscr lpt.on retn

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Whtrt

so cents l)tl' wttk
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strvlu not nelleblt

One

manth Sl 75 By mall in: Or. lo

Dear Hlllband
I've heard of "pulling starch in your backbone" but 11!1111
rldlculollll Yourwlfe'sWIIIUai cravlni llhoald be cl1ecked 011t bf
adoctor Itmayeomefromanlmbllancelnher~J~iem -H. _

Russians Cop Most Olympics Medals

and w vo Ont ytor 114 00
~Iii monthl 17 25
Thru
"'onthl 14 50 Sublcrlpllon
,rico tnctuOII sunooy t ltm11
ltntlntl

!'

I

New York 3 51 Lou s 2
San Diego 1 Atlanta 0 list)
Allanla 4 San D1ego 1 (2nd)

Saturday
Iowa at Ot11o Stale

(lstl

Bowling Green at Purdue

Kent Slale at Loulsv lie n
Dayton at Miami
Oh o Unlv al Idaho
Toledo at East Michigan
Bald Wallace at Evansville n
Cap•lal at Ashland n
Akron at Butler
Bluffton at Toylor
Case West Res at Bethany
CinCinnati at Colorado
Adrian at Defiance
Earlham at Findlay n
W&amp;J at John Carroll
Mt Union at Ohio Northern n
Temple at Xavier n
DeniSon at Thiel
Heidelbe rg at Ohio Wesleyan
Kenyon al Otterbein n
Mar lelia at Allegheny
West Liberty at Musk!ngum n
Centre at Oberlin
West Kentucky at Wittenberg
Wooster at Albian

C nc nnat

The Flyers also were helped
when two Youngstown passes
by quarterback Ron Jaworski
were nulllfled by penalties
Two other Jaworski passes
however were good for scores

Cmcmnat1 safety Bill Hu nter
recovered a fumble wh1 ch the
Bearcats kicke1 Sal Casola
turned mto a 46 ya 1d f.eld goal
for th e wmrung ta ll y agm nst
lnd1ana State Hunter then
batted do\\n a pass m th e end
zone to save the ga me

Your
lnsunnet

Agent

Security Is Love

Oh1o H1gh School
Foolbal l Scor es
By Umted Press lnlernLttmonal
R chmon d He ght s 15
Hawken Sc hool 14
G I nour Aca demy 2')
Cl eveland Luthf' r n W B
Cleve a nd Rl ode;s ?1
Broo klyn 14
Cl eveland South 42
Cleveland Central Catho liC 6
Mayf eld 14 Brush 0
Card mal 70 South ing ton 0
Cleveland Cathed r al Lat n 46
Lor am South v ew 7
1-'arma By zant ne 22

Sha ke He ghl s o

St Mar ys W Va 15 Fronh er 6

If emerge ncies
anse, I S your fam·
1ly adeq uately cov·
ered I Secure their
well bcmg w1th a
rev1sed pohcy

Consult .lla Soon

Davis-Warililns.
114

Do Yourself
A Flavor!
Dnve m for a deltc1ous sundae, shake,
malt or cone Let us ftll your party
needs, too

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

992 5248

Middleport, 0.

Bos ton 5 Cleveland 1 I 1st 12

31

1nn)

Boston 2 Cleveland 0
New York S Delro1l 0
Ba1t1more 2 Milwauk ee 0

Cal•fornla 5 Ch cago 1
Oakland 1 Texas 2

8 San Fran c1sco 7 Kansas City 3 Mmnesota 1

San Franc sco

(2nd)

on two scormg passes

Sunday's Results

2

P 1 tlsbur~h

ThiS Week s
Ohio College Football Schedule
By Untied Press International

touchdown m the fmal nunute
to g1ve the Bobcats their wm
Akron ranked tenth m the
UP! pre-season poll of small
colleges had led 13.0 gomg mto
the fourth quarter but Kent
State fought back gelling
touchdowns on an e1ght yard
keeper by subst1tute quarter
back Jeff Hall and a l\\ o-yard
plunge by Renard Harmon
Xav1er took a 14 7 lead mto
halft1me and exploded for 12
pomts m the fourth quarter to
g1ve rook1e coach Tom Cecchi
m a good start on Ius career
Freshman k1cker Jeff Sch
warber booted a 45 yard he ld
goal for Dayton and quar
terback Ken Polke made good

trac•, golds the !mal day- Yun
Tarmak m the h1gh Jump With
a leap of 7-3 '10 and Fma Melnik
m the women s d1scus WI h a
throw of 218-7
Lasse V1ren a Helsmk1
pohceman brought back
memones of Paavo Nunru 50
years ago when he won the
5 000-meter run to add to his
prev10us VICtory m the 10 000 m
these Games Another Fmn
Pe kka Vasa Ia won the 1,500
meter by bea tmg defendmg
champwn Kip Kemo of Kenya
3!6!to3368
Other golds went to the
Kenya men s I 600-rneter relay
team (the US had no entry
after two of Its stars were
expelled) West Germany m
the women s 4IJO.meter relay
and East Germany m the
women s 1 60().rneter relay
But no medal lS more
deserved than the one Hart
took back to P1ttsburg Calif
He came here favored to wm
the t1tle of the world s fastest
human but his coach faded to
get h1m to the second roond of
qualifymg heats on time and
Hart was disquallf1eu m the
100-meter dash ~ventually
se , 1g the lltle go to Russ1an
Valeri Borzov

a C ncmnat1

2

Los Angeles 3 Houston 2

Saturday s Results

San Franc sco 2 Cm cmnat

New York 3 51 Lou is I
Ch cago 7 Ph•ladelph•a 4
P1ttsburgh 8 Montreal 3
Los Angeles 4 Houston 0

(Only games scheduled)
Today s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
51 Louis (Sanlonm 6 101 al
Monlreai1Moore771 B 05pm
Houston (Wilson 11 8) ot ~os
Angeles (Downing 8 7) 11 p m
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday s Games
P1ttsburgh at Ch1cago
New York of Philadelphia
(night)
St 1.ou!s at Montreal (night!
Cincinnati at Atlonta (nlgl11)
Los Angeles at San Francisco
(night)
(Orily Qames scheduled)

Saturdays Results
Cleveland 2 Boston I (10 1nn)
Bait•more 2 Mlwaukee 1 (lsi)
Balt1more 8 Milwaukee 0 I2nd!
M'"nesota 3 Kansas City 2 ( 13
nn )
Texas 3 Oakland 2
Chocago 3 Callforn•a 2
New York 3 Delro•t 1
Today s Probable Pitchers
IAll Times EDT!
Oakland I Blue 58 and Horlen
2 4) at Mlnnesoto (Perry 12 14
and Blyleven 12 16) 2 6 30
pm
Ch cago (24 12) at Kansas
City ISpllttorll II 10) B 30 p m
New York t Kline IS 6) at
Detro• I !Scherman 6 2) 8 15
pm
Boston (Siebert 12 11 I at
Cleveland (Tidrow 13 131 7 30
pm
Milwaukee (Colborn 7 5) at
Baltimore (Cuellar IS 10J 1 30
pm
tonly games !CMduledl

Don't forget to check out the finance
plan too ...
Whatever you buy It w1tl pay to
Mk your dealer lor thrllty C1ty
Loan 'Aetlon-Pian Financing

Financing Ohio People Since 1912

has one you'll like!

�Z- 'I't!e Dlilv Sentlnei,Middleport-PIIIlel'oy, 0:, Sepl.ll, 1972

3-TbeDailySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Sept 11,1972

WIN AT BRIDGE

RazzleDazzle
Defense

Television Log
Programs for Tonight
and Tomorrow
MONDAY SEPT 11
7 30 - To Telllhe Truth 6 Traffic Court 10 Episode Action 33

NORTH

3 15
Movie The Odd Couple 6 13 Movie The Phantom of the
Opera 4
9 30- Doris Day 8 10
10 00- Bill Cosby 8 10 Societies In Transit on 33
10 30- Human Olmens1ons 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 News 8 10 15

WEST
.74

TUESDAY SEPT 12

6 00- Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 IS - Farm Report 13 Farmt me 10
6 20 - Paul Harvey !3
6 25 - Faith For Today 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4 Btble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment lO
6 45 - Corncob Report 3

6 55 - Fllntstones 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6 55 - Fllntstones 13
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Bullw nkle 1!. Rocky
13
8 00-Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue6 13 Sesame St 33
Timmy 1!. ~a .. le 6
8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue IS Romper Room 8 Con
cenlr' tlon 6 Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 Mr Rogers
33 \\hat Every Woman Wants to Know 3
9 30- To Tell the Truth 33 Jeopardy 6 Hazel 8 Electr c Co
33
10 00- D1nah Shore 3 IS D1ck Van Dyke 13 Jokers w ld 8 10
Hathayoga 33
10 30- Concentral on 3 15 Pl111 Donahue 4 Spl1t Second 13
Pme Is R1ght 8 10
11 00 - Saleofthe Century 3 15 Love Amer can Style 6 Gamb I
B 10 Password 13
11 30- Hollywood SquaresJ 4 15 Love of Life 8 10 Bew tched
6 13 Sesame Street 33
12 00- Jeopardy 3 IS Password 6 Bob Brauns so 50 Club 4
Jackie Oblinger 8 News 13 10
12 2S - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3WsGame3 IS Spi11Second6 Search for TomorrowS
10 Electric Co 33
I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 II s Your Bel 8 Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Child 15
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 IS ~et s Make A Deal 6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10 Deslgnlnv Women 33
2 00- Days of Our lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 M ke
Dougtas6 guiding ~lghtB 10 ~oveTennls33
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Dating Game 13 Edge of N1ght 8 10
Library 3J
3 00- General Hospllal6 13 Another World 3 4 15 ~ove Is A
Manl Splendored Thing 8 10
3 30-0neL!fetoLive6; Return to Peyton Place3 4 15 Jeffs
Collie 13 Secret Storm 8 10
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset IS Sesame St 33 Love
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Fllntstones 6 G Iligan s
!stand I Movie Four Guns To The Border 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Petticoat Junction 3 Daniel Boone 13
Marv Griffin 2 Andy Griffin 15
5 00- Dick Van Dyke 15 Ponderosa 3 4 Damel Boone 6 Merv
Griffin B Mr Rogers 33 Tarzan 13
5 30- Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
13
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15
6 30-News3 4 1S 6 8 10 I Dreamo1Jeannlel3
7 00- News6 10 What s My LineS Elec Co 20 Andy Gr ffllh
15 tnslght33 BeallheCiock4 I veGotaSecretl3
7 30- Masterpiece Theatre 33 ThiS Is Your ~lfe 3 Doctors Dn
Call4 ToTelltl1eTruth6 Price Is RightS 10 Beatthe Clock
13
8 oo~ Bonanza 3 4 15 Temperatures Rlslng6 13 Maude 8 10
8 30- Hawaii Five 0 B 10 Even'"g at Pops 33 Movie The
Longest Night 6 13
9 30- Movie The Family Rico 8 10 Towers of Frustration
3J

Line JJ

6

13

F~rlng

11 00- News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Did&lt; Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 VIrginian 8
Mavin Law of War 10

¥K 3
• 97

... AJS
.KI075 2
SOUTH
.AKQ106

.2

¥QJ7 52

... 93
North-South vulnerable

1 30 - News 13

10 oo-NBCReportsl 415 MarcusWetby MD

EAST
.J9 82

¥A98
+QJ0865

Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 IS Mov1e Shock
Corridor 10 Mov10 The Little Fug1t ve 13

''
f

11

(0)

.Q64

11 30 -

1 00- Focus on Columbus 4

By RAY CROMLEY

.AKJ4 3

I 00- Gunsmoke B 10 Rowan and Martins Laugh In 3 4 15

UFO 6 ,V•olent Un verse 33

RLlG,

• 1064

13

9 00 - Heres ~uch 8 10 Mov1e The Anderson Tapes

How One City Cuts
Youth Delinquency

IN' 80T LEAVE '.()UR
SHOES IN THE
VESTIWLE MY

• 53

Parent Game 3 Hollywood Squares 4 Young Dr K1ldare 8

Movie Tarzan and the Amazons

l\ ~E~~EW' COME

W~ITE

Strangers at Sunrise 13

\\est

North

Ea~t

Pass
2+

Pass I •

Pass

Pass

2NT

Pass 2¥
Pass 3 ¥

Pass
Pass

4¥

Pass Pass

O~nmg

South

lead- • 6

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
Oswald
We watched a
rubbe1 bndge game the oth
e1 da) w1th fa1r players m
volved There were plenty of
mistakes made as you would
expect but there were a
g1eat many hand s that
should mterest our readers
J1m
What about th1s
one 1 A club lead would beat
four hearts qmckly and su re
I} What happened after
West opened a d1amond '
Oswald Declarer starled
w1th a rush He cashed dum
my s ace and kmg of d1a
moods to d1scard a club
loser Then he played ace
kmg and SIX of spades
J1m Looks like a p1 etty
good sta1 t
Oswald It was a prett\
good start but 1t wasn t qu1te
good enough West ruffed
w1th the e1ght of hearts and
declarer had to use dum
my s 10 to overruff
A trump from dummy
produced the th1 ee from
East the Jack hom South
and the ace from West West
cashed h1s ace of clubs and
led a low d1amond East
ruffed w1th the km g and led
h1s last spade whereupon
West set th e hand by ruffmg
w1th h1s nme of trumps
J1m A bnlllant senes of
defens1ve plays I can t real
ly blame South for h1s lme
of play East and West JUSt
came up w1th some 1eal
razzle dazzle defense
(t-IEWSP.t.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

tt:B;1:HWtfl!f:l!1
The b1ddmg has been

West

North

East

South

I •
You South hold

'

.AQ87 ¥KJ4 +32 ... K984

1 00 - Your Health 4
I 30- News Weather 4 Local News 13

&amp; THINGS
c

BY PAUL CRABTREE
With the dawn of a new TV season, here are some gradings

on the new shows, with two ratmgs given, both of wh1ch are
important, but not necessarily connected Wlth one another
Their JX"Qbable excellence and their chance to surv1ve the
annual ratings war, presided over by the great god Neilsen
The ratings are largely mme, but they are drawn from
comments and forecasts In three or four of lhe trade journals,
plus synopses from the networks and prev1ews by critics What I
have done here Is to present these judgments m capsule form
01 ABC
"The Rookies," Monday at 8 About a new group of cops in a
routine situation, It sounds like Mod Squad' With a shorter
haircut Excellence, C minus Survival D minus (Oppos1te
"Gunsmoke' and Laugh In ' It's sure to he wiped out, unless
Mooday nightfoolball fans tune In early and like it )
Temperatures Rising ' Tuesday at 8 The ad agenCJes,
critics and everyone else have p1cked th1s hospital-comedy hour
as a sure loser Excellence, D Survival, Dminus
• Paul Lynde ~ow," Wednesday at 8 These same criilCS
love Lynde,butsay he slike Jonathan Winters and cant make 1t
in hiB own series Excellence, C plus Survival, D
"'Ibe Julie Andrews Show, ' Wednesday at 10 Julie 1s
considered pasae by many critics, and there s not exactly a gold
rush to buy lime on this one, but Mary Poppms may have just one
more miracle waiting Excellence B minus Survival, D
"The Men," Thursday at 9 One of those three-sertes-wJthm
H!erles, this one stars Robert Conrad, Laurence Luckmblll and
James Walilwrlght as rotating heroes, and stands a good chance
of making It, since this fonnat ts proving successful (MBC
which started 1t, Is expanding the concept) J&gt;xcellence, C
&amp;irvlval, B mmus
"Kung Fu," once a month, Saturday at 8, alternating With
"Alias Smith &amp;: Jones " An Oriental detect1ve uses Far East
tmlloaotmY and an occaSlonal karate chop to solve crlffie etc
Excellence, c minus Survtval, D (Its oppos1te 'All m the
Family," but might get better play if ' Smith &amp;: Jones begm to
falter That's its only hope )
"streets of San Francisco " Saturdays at 9 This sounds
creadful - a mish-mash of • Dragnet, • The FBI,' and Me
Cloud,'' with none of the saving graces of any of the three Ex·
ceUence, D minus Survival, D mmus (Opposite Mary Tyler
Moore,lt'll be a delight toseethiBone wiped out by Mary Rhoda
et al)

What do you do?
A-Double You are well
prepared for spades and dubs
and have reasonable hearts

TODAY S QUESTION
Your p a r t n e r responds one
heart to your double What do
you do now?
Answer tomorrow

S••d $1 l0&lt; JACOBY MODERN book
to Wrn of Brrdge (c/o tlt1s news

pop&lt;r) P 0 Box 489 Rodoo C1ty
New York NY 10019

BY JACK O'BRIAN
KlSSINGER TO GO
BETWEEN COVERS
NEW YORK \ KF'S ) - Henry K1ssmger s
fate upon leavmg N1xon $3 1'. m1lllon m book
offers already - and he II take em
While
The Godfather was bemg f1lmed director
Franc1s Coppola took llme off to TV tape the
real hfe b1rth of h1s daughter Plans to g1ve her
the lape on her 16th b1rlhday luy1ck 1 The
s1mple truth m The Parent Game TV show
purportedly lettmg parents reply to prunent
quenes - 1s that professwnal gag wnters are
fabr1 catmg the cheap filthy rephes put m the
mouths of babes paren ts 1sn t that agamst
FCC law' The Mavor Lmdsay Pollee Comm
Murph) dovecote w1li become a hawkcote but
the announcement of Murph s eventual
leavetakmg w1ll try for sweetness and llght
C1ty Hall sp1es say he II be off soon
Hotels here are fmdmg 1t tough gettmg
mght pone ops
Smatra s Jet p1cked up
beaut1ful V1ctor1a Prmc1pal three bmes so far
dunn g her H wood si&lt;lr f1lmmg of The Naked
Ape to wh1sk her to Palm Spnngs
Bob
Cons1dme s toastmaster of the Nov 28 Wllham
Randolph Hearst Jr testunomal at the Waldorf
Rudy Vallee s now feudmg w1th Rolhng
Pebble MICk Jagger N1xon backslagers thmk
Sec of Slate B1ll Rogers next w11l go to the
Supreme Court
Smce Rudy had a Cahf
deadend street named for h1m Ottawa has
named a whole avenue for Paul Anka Arthur
Godfrey has a M1am1 Beach causeway named
alter h1m w1th no causes lately to aggrand1ze
Conme Stevens followed Debb1e Reynolds
mto Harrah s Reno even as she followed her mto
Edd1e FIShers hfe S1dney Pm be r gets cred1t
usually as the top black boxofhce star he s not
R1chard Rountree 1s
Management of the
C1rcle m the Square off Bdwy theater plan two
theaters m nudtown They re trymg to coax
some cash from R1chard Burton - they d name
one The Ellzabeth Taylor Burton Thea tre
Rod Ste1ger had a face lift and doesn t care who
koows 1t Now he s had to have h1s nose
broadened cosmetically for the lnd1an role m
h1s Lolly Madonna War !1Im
U S Ally Gen I Klemd1enst vowed
privately to newsmen h1s mtenllon to halt the
conglomerate n se Blames LBJ for 11
Cam1lle d1ed of consumptiOn m all stage
screen TV produchons but AlPs mod vers10n
wlll have her croakmg from somethmg
currently more relevant we trust that s not a
euphem1sm for VD Joe D1Magg10 dmed solo

at the Stage Deh on Jello and sk1m m1lk as 1f m
trammg Raquel Welch w111unve11 mdeed that
her mghtclub act at the L A H1lton at Yulehde
And she has huge offers to unvell MGM s new
Vegas hotel at the Concord m the sour cream
Alps etc Rose land s1gned Lionel Hampton for
a fall engagement the great Hamp also p1cks
up a 33rd degree Mason honor m Oct from the
Pres of L1bena h1mself
Forest Hllls tenms execs were about to
cream Paucho Gonzalez for a Pancho-ep1thet
hurled at a fan - but h1s f1rst round defeat
dec1ded tl1em not to further p1ck on the
glamorollS gentr1c tennllil
Prmcess Anne s
ne\\ bea u 1s cons1dered the current heavy
favor1te for her hand Banker Lord lrwm 28
SOli of the Earl of Hahfax
Shirley remple
Black slamped her Mary Janes because there
were no women delegates at the recent UN
Counc1l on Fam1ly Planmng
Bnllsh d1rector actor wnter Dudley
Moores spht w1th w1fe Suzy Kendall1s fmal agam U Than! swanked 11m a Cad1llac new
UN boss Waldhe1m s chmce 1s a Lincoln Con
tmental The Jory f1lm has teenager Robby
Benson playmg a 15-) ear-&lt;&gt;ld gunshngmg
orphan
Joey Heatherton prepped her 1m
mment Waldorf Astona act m Honolulu where she diSported bra less backless and
nearly frontless w1th scads of Wlld bounce-and
Jiggle front and back (Must be Jello ca use Jam
don t )ump hke that)
The Jew1sh press won t let George
McGovern forget he d1d call for complete
Israel w1thdrawal fr om a)j,, Q!l~~p1ed Arab
lands Her Dem-delegate sls\ers and brothers
went sour on Bella Abzug s four letter demands
at the convention Bella s a closet Kmg,
s1ghed one dlsliiUsJOned fern hbster
The R1ese Brothers reslaurant cartel (they
run more than 200 N Y eater1es) wh1ch last
week p1cked up a fiVe restaurant $7 000 000 deal
from Harry Helmsle's One Penn Plaza com
plex JUSt s1gned a 25-year lease to operate all
the Roosevelt Hotel s mam floor dmmg fac1ht1es
and shortly w1ll announce more slDlllar hotel
ea tery lakeovers Dodd Mead w11l publiSh a
73 p1cture and text tome about our most styhsh
gent Fred Astalfe Sh1rley Macl..ame danced
mto Roseland ballroom w1th boy fnend Pete
Ham1ll who was d1verted long enough to buy
"the obllgatory neckhe Roseland lDSlsts upon and peddles at the door The Gay 90s chef went
on vacatiOn and a banker took h1s place owner
Ob1e Bart who s v1ce-chalrman of aN J bank

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Often Hard to Find

Where Is Good Arthritis Care?
By Lawrence Lamb M D

Dear Dr Lamb- Your ar
hcles are most helpful and
mfonnatlve One m parl!c
ular stressed ge ttm g ade
quate med1cal care for ar
thntls Dr Lamb you have
no 1dea how d1ff1cult that 1s
Too many doctors fee l that 1t
1s JUSt one of those chrome
problems and you have to
make the best of 1t Even
the state mediCal school can
be a problem l was told
nothmg could be done for me
and eventually I would be
paralyzed One arm and
hand were almost paralyzed
at that t1me X rays show
that I also have arthr1hs m
the spme and neck and the
h1ps are also affected
I do spec1al typmg for a
psych1atnst and fmally told
him I would not be able to
conhnue to even at a re
duced speed because of my
arthnhs He sent me to
phys1cal therapy and 1t has
revolutiomzed my llfe Of
course I still have trouble
but 1t has helped a great
+++
deal So doctor 11 s all m
Next column The new lineup on CBS
the 'luck one has m getting
nght doctor In large
the
+++
areas
there are speclallsts
ON 11IE TV DIAL Young Dr Kildare," a brand-new
who
concern
themselves
llerlea, debuts at 7 30 on WCJIS.TV (did I say "brand new '•)
only w1th arthnt1s but m
Movlealhow up on WBNS-TV in tbe 7 30-8 time slot WBNS.TV, most of our small towns our
with ''The Palomino" tonight • Laugh-In "Is back, 8, WSAZ-TV busy doctors )ust don t have
"Sunlmoke begins its 18th season (and I'm glad), Son WCJIS. hme to devote to us ~r
TV And BW IAlrlby'a new show has Harry Belafonte and Sidney thnhcs
Dear Reader- Yes I do
fbltl.- u opening-night guests, 10 on WCJIS.TV
Lucy and
know how d1ff1cult 1t IS
Doria Day are back for amther season at 9and 9 30, WCHS-TV
There 1s a lot that can be
'"'beOdd Couple," 1110vie version, Is !be ABC Monday night flick
done for arthr1hs and much
II • oa WHTN·TV, and ''The Ander1011 Tapes" are the season· of 1t has to be directed
open.- on NBC'S "Monday Night Movte" at 9, WSAZ-TV
toward learnmg proper llv

mg habits PhysiOtherapy
wh1ch mcludes proper exer
c1ses 1s an 1mportant part
of the treatment m keepmg
full use of the body It s true
that m many small towns
doctors JUSt don t have the
hme to deal w1th suc h com
plex hme consuming prob
!ems Also a lot of eqmpment
1s expens1ve and suppo1t
treatment such as phys1
otherapy 1sn t always avail
able e1ther Some reade1 s
have told me I m unreason
able m telling them they
should go to a center or loca
lion where a rheumatologist
1s located Cons1derm~ the
Importance of arthntis I
don t thmk so The person
w1th rheumatmd arthr11ls
charactemed by swelhng
part1cularly needs help
The Arthntis Foundatwn
was formed to try to help
resolve some of the prob
lems of the type your letter
descn bes You llve near
Denver and a chapter of the
Arthr1hs Foundahon 1s lo
cated there You could ad
dress your letter to the
Hocky Mountain Chapter of
the Arthnhs Foundation
Denver Colo 80204 In large
c1tles pat1ents can some
hmes fmd the state or
reg10nal chapter of the Ar
thnlls Foundallon hsted m
the telephone book To fmd
the nearest rheumatologist
(speclahst m arthr11ls) you
can wnte to the natlonal
headquarters off1ce Arthn
lls Foundahon 1212 Avenue
of the Amer1cas New York
New York !0036 They can
d1rect you to the rheuma

\

tolog1st nearest to you
In small commumt1es a
good way to do th1s 1s to
have your famlly doctor re
fer you to the rheumatolog
1st and even though 1t may
be 40 or 50 m1les away a
tnp once or tw1ce a year de
pendmg on you r health
status 1s a good mvestment

The rheumatologist can
act as a consultant to your
fam1ly doctor and can help
you gam access to the d1f
ferent kmds of treatment
you m1ght need I don t thmk
anyone w1th rheumatoid ar
thntis should 1gnore th1s
problem To do so 1s to mk
senous llm1tat10n and d1s
ab11lty later

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Somethmg of a m1racle has ta11en place m the city of
PaclfJCa Calif these past two years
Juvemle delinquency dropped 15 per cent m 1970 and 23
per cent more In 1971
At the same time, delinquency was steadily lllCreasmg
nahonw1de-m many localities at a rate of 5 to 10 per
cent every 12 months year after year
The outlook was not always bnght m Pac1flca popula
tion 37 000 located near San Francisco In 1969 juvenile
arrests rose 35 per .cent 111 these statilitics compiled by
the Callforma Youth Author1ty
Now 1t m1ghl be argued that the 1970 and 1971 declines
were merely a return to normal from the major bulge
m 1969 when arrests JUmped from 821 to 1,130 But this
theory doesn't explam away the 1971 f1gure , down to 742
arrests almost 10 per cent below 1968
Th1s m1racle apparently came about not througb any
great new d1scovery about young people or exotic new
techmques It seemmgly resulted from the application
of some rather well known and not overly costly methods
The old practiCe, apparently followed m many clUes
was to warn an arrested youngster and send him home
or forward h1m to court Ne1ther alternative produced
sahsfactory results
What PacifiCa did then was sort out about a f1fth to a
fourth of these youngsters when arrested and transfer
them out of the pollee-court probation system
Each of these selected younrsters p1cked because they
showed prom1se and because the1r delmquenc1es were
not senous was then tlH'ned over to cooperating groups
Teachers kept a lookout m the schools for youths pos
s1bly headed for dehnquency These youngsters were
then referred through the1r patents not to the pollee
but to the ass1stmg groups A1d was confidential and free
The boy or g1rl and parents brothers and s1sters would
then s1t down and d1scuss the1r problems w1th an adv1ser
The boy would be sounded out for h1s mterests then
mv1ted mto groups or proJects that f1t h1s goals
A tutormg group was set up manned by college youths
to help those youngsters havmg study dlfCICUlty
An attempt was made to get these young people m
valved m commumty problems and youth activities They
treated blrds after an 011 sp11l They took part m commu
mty fa1rs rock concerts dances and discussiOns
Youths called streetwalkers' were hired to go out
on the streets m parks shoppmg centers the beach and
other places where young people gather 'to attempt to
help angry youth verbahze the1r feelmgs and fmd alter
nate means of express10n
' such as the group ac
tlVllles ment10ned
Pac1f1ca 1sn't the only community using these tech
mques Some c11les add a health serv1ce which may aid
m plast1c surgery removal of tattoos corrective dentist
ry or eye exammahons to remove sources of embar
rassment or handicaps wh1ch may help to dr1ve a young
pe1son mto delinquency Drug programs are a part Some
towns have teen prevocat10nal workshops
What makes the system work lsn t clear The first secret
seems to be JUSt that someone takes an Interest m the
person--other than through a court sentence or proba
\lon
The second secret seems to be the mvolvement of every
poss1ble concerned group in a commumty in a program
able to handle considerable numbers of dellnquent or
poten\lally dellnquent young people w1th problems
The th1rd secret seems to be getting these youths In
volved m commumtv problems and activities
If the system outlmed above were adopted nationwide
1t 1s esllmated 200 000 fewer young people would end up
m court each year The saving in twisted lives could be in
calculable

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

He Goes Home to Mommy
Dear Helen
Frank and I were mamed two days and a haU before he left
for 'Nam 'Ibat was f1ve months ago, and I am five months
pregnant
He came home on a 30-day leave but, aflet llpCilding two
weeks w1th me, he took off to spend the rest with hiB folks He
didn t offer to take me with him because they have done their
best to split us up They've told lies about me, 118id l stole' their
furruture (when actually the store repossessed It) and that
because of me they left town (they sneaked off to avoid bill
collectors)
1 don t koow who Frank believes but It looks like he's on
thm s1de Don I you think a man s place Is with his wife
espec1ally when he's only got a monlh in the States •
!love him, but U he's going to spend haU his lime with hiB
folks maybe it means he prefers thw shiftless ways Should I
just g1ve up' -MARRIED TO A MAMA'S BOY
DearMTMB
Don t give up until you've given marriage more than a two
and one-half days, plus two weeks trial When Frank comea
home for good you'll soon know which "mama" he prefers (men
DO grow up when they realize they are husbanc!Hnd.fathen)
Meanwhile write to him every day - and be grateful for your
•
allolment check - H

+++

BERHfS

:" ~,.e .:=.: ..:::;:;:., /n...-.-. ~:-:--..::: . .

RAY CROAtLEY

1!1

Dear Mrs B
About the "man'' who was sent to jail for draft dodging and
got gang-£aped He's now going baek to jail (crime conveniently
unmentioned by him) unless hiB lawyer can soften up the jury
w1th a big sob story
That's the trouble with our country A coward won't flcht for
11 so he gets what he deserves - but I'll bet a lot of weepm;.:
Lenas write in about how prlaon ruins ''peaceful" yoq men•
Instead of sticking to the sideline• with a neutraliJIIWel;,
Mrs B , you should have reminded him that naklng deeerlerll
have been SHOT in other wars I -NO TEARS FOR TRAITORS

Dear No
Sorry, I'm not the vindictive Nor am I that dedicated to •
war we should never have fought
What this young man's present crime ratinc III don'llmow
but of one thllig I'm sure he did not "d--.e" gang.rape
I can do wilhout your brand ol bloodthirsty "patriotism" I H

Dear Helen

+++

Please ten me the effect powdered llarch hu on a penon
who eata It by the box
My wife COI1IUIIlel a full one pound ol Wlll!lng ltarch every
day Sbe says she craves II I may be Wl'lilll but I bave noticed a
change In her skin C(llllpleiion and size ol JltoiiiiiCh -HUSBAND

' Toda;'s
'

~Sport Parade

MUNICH (UPI)- Frank won 5() a G mes record
Wash won a spill J-2 dec1s10n
The U S also rece1ved two
By MILTON RICHMAN
Shorter and Edd1e Hart a pa1r
But Shorte1 who was horn m over Anghel Anghelov of Sllvers;-{)ne tl refused to ac
UPI Sports Edltur
of Amencans who wouldn t Mun1ch 24 ¥ears ago 11 &gt;~ &lt; Hulgana to ca)!lllrc the hght cept m basketball - and a
MUNICH (UPI) -Frank Shorter looked around him and drank g1 ve up won gold medals on Sunday more pleosant uy welterweight boxmg crown bronze to 18-ycar-&lt;&gt;ld Dw1ght
the !mal day of Olymp1c track w1mmg the 26-mlle marathon
the whole thing m
Stones of UCLA w1th a leap of
and
f1eld
compel1l10n
bul1t
d1d
7 3 m the high JUmp The other
the
f1rst
Amencan
to
wm
this
ThiS moment would slay w1th h1m the rest of h1s llfe and" 1t
llttle
to
ease
the
pam
of
the
Sllverwentltl
the US women s
gruehng race m 64 years
m1ght be all that was left after the bllsters healed and the gold
overa II Russ1an trJUmpll m the
1 600 meter relay team of
Shorter of 1\anchos De Taos
medal was mounted or put away ma vault somewhere
Games
Mabel
Fergerson Madehne
N
M
took
the
lead
after
rune
Thef1na, strams of the Slar Spangled Banner had dissoved mto
The Russ1ans won the 1mles and held 1t the remamder
Manmng
Cheryl Toussamt and
the shcky late afternoon atmosphere, blending m w1th the other medals race 98-93 w1th only one
Kathy Hammond
stadium n01ses and now the llttle 13().pounder from Ranchos de event the equestnan grand of the d1slance to wm by almost
two mmutes At about 21 rrdles
Taos, N M reahzed 11 was tunc for hun to eave the v1ctory PflX remauung on today s
he knew he could wm
stand
!mal program The U S has a
And Hart depnved of a
Gmgerly although the blisters on h1s feet were killmg him chance for a medal probabl) a chance to run m th• ~n 100 by
Frank Shorter stepped down onto the f1eld the first Amencan to bronze m the grand prlX
a mlXup of startmg t1mes on a
wm the 26-mde Olymp1c marathon m 64 years
The closmg ceremony tern qualifymg heat anchored the
He headed for the ex1t and before he got there he stopped to pered to the tragedy of the 400-meter relay team ltJ v1cltlry
chat w1th a man s1ttmg m a wheel cha1r
CINCINNATI (UPI)- It was
Jsraeh massacre w111 end the m 38 2 equallmg a world
the understatement of the sea
The man he talked w1th was Etluop1a s Abebe B1kila a man 20th Games tomght The record
son
for the Atlanla Falcons
who had won the marathon m Rome m 1960 and repeated his carefree Bavarian dancers Will
The Amer1cans also won two
not
perform
as
scheduled
and
when
quarterback Bob Berry Ututed Press International
vtctory m Tokyo four years later but later was mvolved m an
gold medals m archery and one
The Umvcrs1ty of Toledo
automob1le acc1dent wh1ch left hun paralyzed from the wa1st the gay sounds of carmvaljazz m boxmg John W1lllarns 18 of commented It was our best
w111 be replaced by class1cal Cranesvdle Pa the world game by far
must have known 11 would all
down
The game was the Falcons come to an end someda) -and
champ10n won the men s
Frank Shorter gnpped Bilnla s hand and both men held on a mustc
The
somber
mood
should
flt
44
14 wm over the Cmcmnab 1t did Saturday
archery lltle eas1ly and Mrs
ilttle longer than two mdmduals normally would shaking hands
W1th 35 stra1ght football w1ns
the Amencaru. who have had Doreen W1lbur 42 of Je' Bengals Saturday mght that
That was because they had somethmg spec1alm common
the1r
worst
Olymp1cs
of
Wlder
the1r bells, the Rockets
ended
thm
exhib1tion
season
ferson Iowa came from fourth
Pam
modern tunes The US won place to wm the women s It also was Atlanla s hrst wm opened the1r season w1th a re
The acute sometimes mlndJabbmg pam which comes from
soundmg ~1 .0 loss to the Um
only 33 gold medals compared
of the summer
pushmg the human body at blt further than nature P.,rhaps ever to 45 m 1968 wh1le the Russl3ns lltle
vers1ty of 1ampa
Berry
threw
for
two
touch
Ray
Seales
20
of
Tacoma
mtended 11 ltJ be
downs and runm t, hack Joe
Tampa s fleet backs ran al
Frank Shorter, 130 pounds wrmgmg wet doesn t go for any
most
at w11l aga1nst foledo the
Profit ran for two more as the
frills when 11 comes to ruruung Nothing fancy
Bengal defense corr.pletel) nal!on s top defens1ve team the
He looks for a spot if he gets 1t he takes 1t and 1f he do•sn t he
broke down
last three seasons Toledo was
hangs back He prefers setting the pace though 1f he can He
Th1s 1s the f1rst time we held to 193 yards tolal offense
couldn t at the start of Sunday s race
slayed w1th our slarters the mcludmg 44 yards rushm g
Argentma s Fernando Molum got the Jump and left the
\\hole game Berry sa1d
In other games that opened
Earl James or Waverly, president of the SEO
sladium first Japans Ak10 Usam1 wearmg his long-peaked
A
Cmcmnatl
hneman
who
the
Oh1o colleg1ate season
Sportswnters and Broadcasters i\ssocmbon,
white camp backwards qmckly Jomed hun Shorter was among
w1shed to remam un1denllf1ed Oh10 Umvers1ty downed
announced th~t all vohng members Will meet
those m the nuddle
smd the team wasn t up for the Central M1ch1gan 26-21 Akron
Sunda) Sept 17 m Jackson to orgamze for the
game and 'we couldn t get and Kent State played to a 13-13
Let em go ' thought Shorter, rummg easlly and evenly
1172 7l school year
I
up
he Xav1er wh1pped Morehead
Its early Plenty of time but I know that ilttle Japanese guy
I
feel
hke
we
let
everyone
The mcetmg IS set for I p m at Jolly Lanes
State (Ky 1 26-7 Cmcmnah
can run so I m gonna keep an eye on hun
down, he saJd
beat lnd1ana Slate 10.7 and
Bowhng Center
There lS a bndge a few hundred yards outs1de the stadmm
Back
Paul
Robmson
also
Dayton
downed Youngstown
which traverses a s1xlane highway and Shorter had barely
The members Will elect office• s pay annual
sang
blues
for
the
Bengals
who
18 13
crossed over the br1dge when he suddenly became aware of a bus
dues get new press passes and make theu
f1mshed
exhibltlon
play
w1th
a
Ohw U quarterback R1ch
veermg precanously close to h1m Too close
annual p1gskm prognost1cahons for the 1972
3-3
mark
Bevly
capped an 82 yard dr1ve
Dammt this 1d10t 1s gonna come r1ght mto me He s gonna
SEOi\L football season
Maybe 11 s good to get this w1th a one yard plunge f01 a
hit me Hey for crym out loud look where the hell you re gomg
out of our system Robmson
What s wrong w1th you' Are you blind or somethmg '
sa1d I know we re not this
The bus was carrymg a full crew of photographers Shorter
Leadtng Batte..-s
bad
not1ced
NatiOnal League
Berry mdicated that the Fal
g ab r h pel
That would be some piCture me lymg there m the road
cons took advantage of a par Wilms Ch 133 512 82 175 342
Frank Shorter settled back mto a smooth nonlaxmg pace and
llcular weakoess by rook1e de Mol a LA 104 336 55 1II 330
Cdeno Hou 121 487 95 160 329
the f1rst thmg he koew he was thmking about thmgs which d1dn t
fens1ve end Sherman White Garr
All
ll7 480 73 155 323
have anythmg to do w1th the race He was thmkmg about the
Bengals Coach Paul Brown Olver PI 123 499 60 158 317
U S Russl8 basketball game the mght before how everythmg
stud1ed f1lms of the game Sun Baker All 110 380 53 120 316
l P t 123 439 68 138 314
went hayw1re at the end and how the Amer1cans thought they had
day at Spmney f1eld to get a Slrg
Wa son Hou
won only to d1scover they had lost
131 491 68 153 3 2
A new tootbatl powerhouse thou gh adm1 thng to some head start on practlce this
My God maybe this lS some kmd of trend here Maybe
Bckn..- LA
95 343 42 107 31 2
week
The
Bengals
open
the1r
may have been born Saturday Jl tters playmg agamst the
San
lo
Ch
117
414 57 128 309
they're gonna lake everythmg away from us Could 1t be '
season at New England Sun
and an old one was shaken as natlon s top-ranked club
Amer1can Leag ue
Shorter s nund returned to the race
day
g ab r h pet
unraoked UCLA stunned No 1
The Cornhuskers saw the1r
That was the 10-lnlometer mark we JUSt passed and 1 m m rated Nebraska 20.17 and
Berry nddled the Cmcmnall Shblm KC 116 397 55 126 317
a good shape Hey I thmk I can wm th1s thmg U I flmsh 1 m deflated the Cornhuskers 23-game w1"nmg streak and 32- secondary completmg 15 of 22 Car ew M1n 24 478 55 15 1 316
ga me undefeated streak end on
D Allen Ch
gonna wm I feel 1t
hopes for a second stra1ght a 29 yard held goal by UCLA s passes for 254 yards Art Ma
135 467 82 147 315
lone
went
over
for
the
flfSt
Three more kilometers farther on about nme m1les from the national title
Pnoela
KC
130 497 59 153 306
MeXIcan born soccer style
Rud Oak 12'1 521 82 160 307
start Shorter notlced the pace was slow Too slow
Out of the dust of Nebraska s kicker Efren Herrera w1th 22 touchdown m the ope rung quar Ot
s KC
124 476 67 143 300
ter
I m gonna go out m front I figure 1f I go out m front now defeat UCLA second year seconds rema1rung
Mybrry KC
But the Bengals evened the
they re gonna be reluctant to follow
126 434 53 130 300
coach Pepper Rodgers saw his
They ran the1r wishbone
score
that same penod when Berry Cal 104 365 38 109 299
Shorter moved out m front shortly after 15 kilometers or about newly mstalled w1shbone of pretty well sa1d Devaney,
May Ch o 133 476 77 142 298
one third of the distance
fense chck llke clockwork and whose team faces perhaps an Doug Dressler scored on a one Pns on Cal 119 424 SJ 126 297
F1rst he sprmted into a 51l-yard lead and when nobody his team play w1th the con even more potent Wishbone yard run
Home Runs
The Bengals went ahead m
challenged him he w1dened his margm to 300 yards
fldence of a w1nner
Nahonallea gue Col ber t SO
threat thiS Saturday m a home
the second per10d when Nell 37 Slargell Pil l 33 Bench C n
Ukam1 and Mamo Wolde the smooth-striding Eth10p1ans who
Rodgers
Brums hum game agamst Texas A&amp;M
Cra1g
p1cked off a Berry pass 31 W IIam s Ch1 29 Aaron All
won the gold medal four years ago m Mexico City, hung back drummed !hell way to a poor 2In other games on college
May Hou 2B
and
returned
1t 81 yards for and
They d1dn t thlok Shorter could poss1bly keep up such a pace But 7 I record last year but m footballs f1rst week of achon,
Amencan league D Alle n
another TO
Ch 33 Mur cer NY 27
he d1d and eventually he was at the 36-kilometer mark sllghtly tramlng camp th1s summer he Southern Califorma, UCLA s
But late mthe second per10d K lleb rew M nn Ep stem and
less than f1ve miles from home and leadmg by two full mmutes PfOmlsed th1ngs would un cross town nval
pulled Cmcmnat1 lost startmg Jackson Oak 23
I ve got 1t 1Tbe only way I can lose it now lS ill fall down prove w1th the help of the w1sh anot her maJor upset by quarterback Ken Anderson
Runs Balled In
Nat1onal
league
Stargell
bone
and
a
potential
star
overw
helmmg
flfth
ranked
and die What it somebody should breeze past me now Oh, no
w1th a hand mjury and the P tl 110 W IIams Ch1 102
Arkansas
31
10,
second
ranked
But c'mon now keep gomg You ve got 1t This 18 where they all quarterback lo run 1t, JUDlor
Colbert SO 101 Bench C n
squad ran out of gas
college transfer Mark Harmon Colorado had to struggle m The Falcons added two 100 S1mmons Sl l. 88
slow down and 1t s the guy who slows down the least who wms
Mark 1s the son of former beatmg Califorma 20-10 nmth touchdowns m the second
Amencan League D Allen
Shorter was runmng all alone now
Ch1 102 Murcer NY 85
M1Ch1gan
All
Amer1ca
Tom
ranked
Wash1ngton
had
trouble
Nl he sped down Potsdamstrasse m the Schwa bing Dllitrlct of
penod on rook1e ruMmg back Mayberry KC 79 Scoll MI
downtown Mumch he wasn't aware of anythmg but the stad1um Harmon but if the 6-foot 185- beatlng unraoked Pacif1c 13-6, Bill Holland s three-yard run 77 Darw n Mmn 72
youngster
who and seventhranked Alabama and tight end Jun Mltchell s 11
P1fch1ng
ahead The cobblestones underneath hlDl had blistered his feet pound
Nat1onal League
Car lt on
walloped
Duke
35-12
celebrated
h1s
2oth
b1rlhday
a
many miles ago But he was hardly aware of the pam
yard pass from Berry
Phil
23
8
Jenk
ns
Ch1
20 10
Tampa, ended Toledo s 35Prof1t scored on a one-yard Bla ss P ft 17 6 Seaver NY 17
Over on the sidewalk Alwm Ach a 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld o,xport clerk week before the b1ggest
trmmph of his career con game WlMlng streak 21.0 run m the third penod and the 11 Torrez Man I 16 9 Osteen
who was watchmg the race,sald to his fr1end
tinues to perform as he d1d 14thranked Tennesse crushed
LA 16 10
'ThiS 1s the hardest event m the Olymp1cs, much harder than aga1nst Nebraska, he wont Georg1a Tech, 34·3 20th- Falcons added 16 more pomts
Amencan League Wood Ch1
something like the IIJO.meters where the whole thing is over m 10 long have to be 1dentif1ed as the ranked West V1rglrua topped mthe fourth on Berry's 36-yard 24 13 ~ol ch Det 20 12 Perry
scoring pass to Malone a safe Clev 20 15 Hunter Qak 19 7
seconds In thiS race you have to practice much longer and then son of a football star
V1llanova ~ Syracuse beat ty and a 10.vard run by Prof1t Pal mer Ball 19 8
run more than two hours to wm a medal Ach s friend was
' I know how good we re Temple 17 10 Flor1da St
unlmprerJSed
capable of beillg and that s whipped Pittsburgh, 19 7, and
ft s s11ly to run 43 kilometers on ground like th1s he sa1d very good
Harmon sa1d, RICe edged Houston 14 13
'They could've just as easily taken a twu '
'
Shorter meanwhile sunpl;r was followmg the broken blue !me
in the street put there to gwde the marathoners
Soon lhe Olympic Stadium loomed ahead to the left
• What a s1ghll What ~ beautiful s1ght Only a hltle more
now Only a litUe more '
Shorter entered the stad1um the same way he leflll, runnmg
easily and not breathing very bard
Ma tor League ~rano'"gs
Amencan League
East
He had covered what is referred to as lhe classic diStance the By United Press tnternaltona~
National League
w I pet g b
same one Plnd1p1des, the inunortal Greek runner had m
Boston
East
73 60 549
brmging the news ol a battle v1clory from Marathon to Athens
w I pet gb Bal flm ore
73 63 537 1 v..
Delro1t
66 48 642
72 63 533 2
Phid1p1des then turned to go back to the battlefield, but suddenly P1 llsburgh
Ch1cago
75 61 551 12
New York
72
64 529 2 lf2
keeled over and died
New York
69 64 51 9 16 ;, Oeveland
62 73 459 12
Shorter ran afoul of no such tragedy Sunday
St ~ou s
64 72 47 1 23 Milwaukee 54 82 397 20 1/:z
62 72 4A1 ?4
West
He was physically spent at the end of the race But had enough Mon IreaI
Philadelphia 51 83 381 31
wlpctgb
left to jog around the mfieid Shortly afterward he mounted the
West
Oakla nd
79 SS 590 VICtory stand and got his gold medal
w I pet g b Ch•cago
76 59 563 3 •;,
Cmc
nnal
63
53
610
M
nnesota
67
66 504 11 'h
Frank Shorter looked around him and drank lhe whole thmg m
Houston
75 60 556 7 2 KansasC1ty 66 67 496 12' :z
This moment would stay w1th him the rest of h1s life
Los Ange les 73 62 541 9 ' Cal forma
63 72 467 l6 1f2
Allanla
64 73 467 19 12 Texas
51 84 37B 28'12

RIJ lcons

"I thought young polttlcal tdeologues were only supposed t&amp; be mterestecl m the ISSUES'"

The U S women d1dn t wm a
track gold for the first llme m
history and the men only won
SIX

The Russians won the most

track medals mne and East
Germany had e1ght while the
Amencans won the most track
medals 21 to 20 for East
Germany and 17 for Russ1a
rhe Sov1et Unwn won two
•

Crush
Toledo's Long
Cincy
Streak Ended

Newsmen Meet Sunday

Huskers Upset

By UCLA 20-17

San Franc1sco 60 77

438 23

"d G
San 01ego
51 63 381
This Week's Gn
ames Ch•Montreal
cago Philadelph ia 3
8
2
Sunday s Results

5

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTI REST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHUTE. L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROll RT HOEFLICH
City E~ltor
Publllhfd dally txctp
Saturaay by Tt'le Oh o Valley
Publish ing Company
)11
Court St
Pomeroy Ohio
~5169 Business Off•ce ~hont
99'2 2156 Ed itoria l Flt'lone 992

2157

Stconcl class postage paid tt
Pomrroy Oh o
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reprntntll•~tt
Botllntlll
Glllagher Inc 12 Ent .unci
St Ntw York City Ntw York

Subscr lpt.on retn

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b~

c~rrltr

Ot

Whtrt

so cents l)tl' wttk
ly Motor Routt wt.trt carr tr

l~tllllblt

strvlu not nelleblt

One

manth Sl 75 By mall in: Or. lo

Dear Hlllband
I've heard of "pulling starch in your backbone" but 11!1111
rldlculollll Yourwlfe'sWIIIUai cravlni llhoald be cl1ecked 011t bf
adoctor Itmayeomefromanlmbllancelnher~J~iem -H. _

Russians Cop Most Olympics Medals

and w vo Ont ytor 114 00
~Iii monthl 17 25
Thru
"'onthl 14 50 Sublcrlpllon
,rico tnctuOII sunooy t ltm11
ltntlntl

!'

I

New York 3 51 Lou s 2
San Diego 1 Atlanta 0 list)
Allanla 4 San D1ego 1 (2nd)

Saturday
Iowa at Ot11o Stale

(lstl

Bowling Green at Purdue

Kent Slale at Loulsv lie n
Dayton at Miami
Oh o Unlv al Idaho
Toledo at East Michigan
Bald Wallace at Evansville n
Cap•lal at Ashland n
Akron at Butler
Bluffton at Toylor
Case West Res at Bethany
CinCinnati at Colorado
Adrian at Defiance
Earlham at Findlay n
W&amp;J at John Carroll
Mt Union at Ohio Northern n
Temple at Xavier n
DeniSon at Thiel
Heidelbe rg at Ohio Wesleyan
Kenyon al Otterbein n
Mar lelia at Allegheny
West Liberty at Musk!ngum n
Centre at Oberlin
West Kentucky at Wittenberg
Wooster at Albian

C nc nnat

The Flyers also were helped
when two Youngstown passes
by quarterback Ron Jaworski
were nulllfled by penalties
Two other Jaworski passes
however were good for scores

Cmcmnat1 safety Bill Hu nter
recovered a fumble wh1 ch the
Bearcats kicke1 Sal Casola
turned mto a 46 ya 1d f.eld goal
for th e wmrung ta ll y agm nst
lnd1ana State Hunter then
batted do\\n a pass m th e end
zone to save the ga me

Your
lnsunnet

Agent

Security Is Love

Oh1o H1gh School
Foolbal l Scor es
By Umted Press lnlernLttmonal
R chmon d He ght s 15
Hawken Sc hool 14
G I nour Aca demy 2')
Cl eveland Luthf' r n W B
Cleve a nd Rl ode;s ?1
Broo klyn 14
Cl eveland South 42
Cleveland Central Catho liC 6
Mayf eld 14 Brush 0
Card mal 70 South ing ton 0
Cleveland Cathed r al Lat n 46
Lor am South v ew 7
1-'arma By zant ne 22

Sha ke He ghl s o

St Mar ys W Va 15 Fronh er 6

If emerge ncies
anse, I S your fam·
1ly adeq uately cov·
ered I Secure their
well bcmg w1th a
rev1sed pohcy

Consult .lla Soon

Davis-Warililns.
114

Do Yourself
A Flavor!
Dnve m for a deltc1ous sundae, shake,
malt or cone Let us ftll your party
needs, too

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

992 5248

Middleport, 0.

Bos ton 5 Cleveland 1 I 1st 12

31

1nn)

Boston 2 Cleveland 0
New York S Delro1l 0
Ba1t1more 2 Milwauk ee 0

Cal•fornla 5 Ch cago 1
Oakland 1 Texas 2

8 San Fran c1sco 7 Kansas City 3 Mmnesota 1

San Franc sco

(2nd)

on two scormg passes

Sunday's Results

2

P 1 tlsbur~h

ThiS Week s
Ohio College Football Schedule
By Untied Press International

touchdown m the fmal nunute
to g1ve the Bobcats their wm
Akron ranked tenth m the
UP! pre-season poll of small
colleges had led 13.0 gomg mto
the fourth quarter but Kent
State fought back gelling
touchdowns on an e1ght yard
keeper by subst1tute quarter
back Jeff Hall and a l\\ o-yard
plunge by Renard Harmon
Xav1er took a 14 7 lead mto
halft1me and exploded for 12
pomts m the fourth quarter to
g1ve rook1e coach Tom Cecchi
m a good start on Ius career
Freshman k1cker Jeff Sch
warber booted a 45 yard he ld
goal for Dayton and quar
terback Ken Polke made good

trac•, golds the !mal day- Yun
Tarmak m the h1gh Jump With
a leap of 7-3 '10 and Fma Melnik
m the women s d1scus WI h a
throw of 218-7
Lasse V1ren a Helsmk1
pohceman brought back
memones of Paavo Nunru 50
years ago when he won the
5 000-meter run to add to his
prev10us VICtory m the 10 000 m
these Games Another Fmn
Pe kka Vasa Ia won the 1,500
meter by bea tmg defendmg
champwn Kip Kemo of Kenya
3!6!to3368
Other golds went to the
Kenya men s I 600-rneter relay
team (the US had no entry
after two of Its stars were
expelled) West Germany m
the women s 4IJO.meter relay
and East Germany m the
women s 1 60().rneter relay
But no medal lS more
deserved than the one Hart
took back to P1ttsburg Calif
He came here favored to wm
the t1tle of the world s fastest
human but his coach faded to
get h1m to the second roond of
qualifymg heats on time and
Hart was disquallf1eu m the
100-meter dash ~ventually
se , 1g the lltle go to Russ1an
Valeri Borzov

a C ncmnat1

2

Los Angeles 3 Houston 2

Saturday s Results

San Franc sco 2 Cm cmnat

New York 3 51 Lou is I
Ch cago 7 Ph•ladelph•a 4
P1ttsburgh 8 Montreal 3
Los Angeles 4 Houston 0

(Only games scheduled)
Today s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
51 Louis (Sanlonm 6 101 al
Monlreai1Moore771 B 05pm
Houston (Wilson 11 8) ot ~os
Angeles (Downing 8 7) 11 p m
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday s Games
P1ttsburgh at Ch1cago
New York of Philadelphia
(night)
St 1.ou!s at Montreal (night!
Cincinnati at Atlonta (nlgl11)
Los Angeles at San Francisco
(night)
(Orily Qames scheduled)

Saturdays Results
Cleveland 2 Boston I (10 1nn)
Bait•more 2 Mlwaukee 1 (lsi)
Balt1more 8 Milwaukee 0 I2nd!
M'"nesota 3 Kansas City 2 ( 13
nn )
Texas 3 Oakland 2
Chocago 3 Callforn•a 2
New York 3 Delro•t 1
Today s Probable Pitchers
IAll Times EDT!
Oakland I Blue 58 and Horlen
2 4) at Mlnnesoto (Perry 12 14
and Blyleven 12 16) 2 6 30
pm
Ch cago (24 12) at Kansas
City ISpllttorll II 10) B 30 p m
New York t Kline IS 6) at
Detro• I !Scherman 6 2) 8 15
pm
Boston (Siebert 12 11 I at
Cleveland (Tidrow 13 131 7 30
pm
Milwaukee (Colborn 7 5) at
Baltimore (Cuellar IS 10J 1 30
pm
tonly games !CMduledl

Don't forget to check out the finance
plan too ...
Whatever you buy It w1tl pay to
Mk your dealer lor thrllty C1ty
Loan 'Aetlon-Pian Financing

Financing Ohio People Since 1912

has one you'll like!

�5- The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Sept. 11.1972

4 - "The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0", Sept. 11, 1972

Giants
Nudge
Browns

Pirates. Lose 8-2;
Reds· Split Pair
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Montreal Expos are still
in the building stage but M1ke
Torrez has finally come of age"
Torrez handcuffed the
National League East's
division-l eadmg Pittsburgh
Pirates on eight hits Sunday as
the Expos exploded for six runs
m the third inning to defeat the
Pirates, 8-2
The tnumph was Torrez's
16th m 25 decisions.
Torrez, who wasn 't given his
first start until a month mto the
season, now stands a good
chance of becoll]ing the first 20game wirmer mthe Expos' four
year history.
The victory was only the
fourth for the Expos this
season m 15 decisions w1th
Pittsbw·gh.
·
In other National League
games Chicago downed Philadelphia, 5-3, New York edgd
St Loms , 3-2, Cincinnati and
San Francisco split a twinbdl,
the Reds wmning the opener ,117, and the G1ants laking the
ni ghtca p, 8-2, Los Angeles
nipped Houston , 3-2, and
Atlanta and San D1ego div1ded
a pmr, the Padres taking the
first game, J.{), and the Braves
winning the nightcap, 4-1.
In the American League
Boston remained m first place
m the AL East with 5-l 12 inning and 2-0 victories over
Cleveland, Balllmore blanked
Milwaukee, 2.{), California beat
Chicago, 5·1, New York topped
DetrOit, 5.{), Oakland ripped

NEW YORK (UPI )-The
New York G1ants aren't concerned about the sorry records
of the teams they're beatmg
these days. ·
They're just happy to be
beating anybody .
The Giants wound up the
exhibition season With their
third stralghl victory Sunday,
heating the Cleveland Browns
211-21 to give them a 3-2-1 mark
going into next week's regular
season opener at Detroit.
The fact that the combined
records of the three teams
they've beaten IS 3-15 (Cleveland is~. Philadelphia 1..5 and
New England 2-4 ) doesn 'I faze
the Giants.
Coach Alex Webster,
rebuilding a team that
staggered through a sorry 4-10
mark last season, feels the
victories have proven the team
IS starting to come back,
But it won't be possible to get
a good line of the team until the
results a'' in of the first two
regular season games against
Detroit and Dallas
Taste oi Victory
Webster has a hunch the
team may surprise some
skeptics who say the Giants
have been simply beating weak
teams.
"These young kids have got
the taste of victory now and
that 's important," Webster
said. "They're getting the
feelmg they can win. It could
he a long season but they know important win for us since it
way down deep It's there. It's a moved us above .500 for the
question of not making mi- exhibition season and gave us
stakes. What we're trying to momentum for next week "
preach is that you have to force
Defensive lineman Jack Grethe other team to beat you, you gory' the Giant "rover" who
don't want to beat yourself." was playing agamst his old
A pass interception by Willie tearmnates, had a good lime
Williams set up Charlie Evans' except that he felt they ran
fourth touchdown run on a one- away from him too much, "II
ynrd plunge late in the final was hke the Super Bowl for me.
period and snapped a 21•21 tie I had dinner last night w1th
as the Giants came back from some of the guys and we were
a 14-7 halftime deficit.
talking back and forth durmg
Webster said, "one thing Is the game," he said . Gregory
that we're starting to mature Signed Wllh New York after
into a pretty good team. We're playing ou t h1s option in
Cleveland.
not getting beat physically.
F
Cl 1 d .
We've had a great lrainmg ,
or
eve a_n ' II was
camp ..
another frustratmg game and
" ·
Coach J'1i ~k. , ,Skor~ch , still ,
'fle~a~ No~ S~e!~ com- doesn't ha,ve his quarterback
pi~ 1~-27 )lasse lor 221 problem settled . He alternated
yards and all but sewed up the veteran Bill Nelsen and young
"!"rling QB job lor next week Mike Phipps again and sa1d he
S!nce Randy Johnson has been wouldn't chose between them
Sidelined three weeks with a until later thiS week . Nelson
shoulder injury.
was lklf·l3 for 161 yards and
Snead said, "we're 100 Phipps was ~f-16 for 74 yards
percent better than we were a but the difference was a
month ago. We've played lour spectacular 80-yard catch
good weeks of football and Frank Pitts made of a Nelsen
we're doing a lot of positive bomb.
things."
Nelsen's pass seemed overLike Super Bowl
thrown but Pitts deOected 1t
Ron Johnson, who ran 17 with h1s fingertips and then
limes for 45 yards to comple- caught up With it. Pitts also
ment Evans' 19 carries for 60 caught two short TD passes
yards, said, 11this was an from Plupps.

Sayers Retires From
Professional Football
One of the most Illustrious
names in the hiStory of the
game will be among the
missing next Sunday when the
National Football League 's
1,040 players start playing for
real.
The tedious seven weeks of
exhibition games ended
Sunday with f1ve games and
the 26 coaches will slice their
rosters from 44 to 40 players
today for the start of the 1972
regular season next Sunday.
But the results Sunday were
overshadowed by the announcement that Gale Sayers,
labeled by George Halas-who
has seen them all-as the
greatest ruMing back in the
history of the game, has
retired.
Sayers made his first appearance in an exhibition game
this season Saturday night and
fumbled twice while carrying
only three times in the Chicago
Bears' 33-14loss to the St. Louis
Cardinals. Both fumbles were
turned into Cardinal touchdowns.
"The leg felt fine, but just
hilling the Astroturf and
getting on the leg made it very
sore and !fell I'd better give it
up," Sayers said."! hate to
leave football, but I know I'm
finished and I llnow I cannot go
on this year ,11 he said.
In the final five practice
games Sunday, Miami surprised Mlnne110ta, 21·19, In a
nationally televised game, BaJ.
Umore topped Denver, ~13,
New England upset Detroit, 3430, the New York Giants edged
Cleveland, 28-21, and HOUllton
tied New Orleans, 14·14.
ElhJbltim ncorda 1re mJ.s.
leading but Dal.lu (6-1) ended

Texas, 7-2, and Kansas City
defeated Minnesota, 3-1.
Fred Gladding made a Wild
throw after fielding Steve
Garvey 's bunt smgle to enable
the deciding run to score as the
Dodgers erupted for three runs
in the eighth inmng to down
Houston.
Ph1l Niekro pitched the
Braves to their second game
win over the Padres after
Leron Lee's seventh inning
home run and M1ke Corkms'
first big league shu tout won the
opener for San Diego.
Relief pitching by Brent
Strom and Bob Rauch and a
sparkling defensive gem by
Cleon Jones provided Tom
Seaver w1th his 17th vicwry of
the year as the Mets defeated
the Cardinals.
Reserve catcher Ken
Rudolph drove in three runs
with a home run and a smgle to
lead Chicago to their victory
over Philadelphia.
Home runs by Bobby Bonds
and Willie McCovey gave San
Francisco a second game
VIctory and a doubleheader
split af rer Cincinna li won the
first game on Joe Morgan's
run-scoring single.
The Reds pounded out 13 hits
off five San Francisco pitchers
to win the see-saw first game.
Two runs off relicl pitcher
Randy Moffitt in the e1ghth
mmng provided the margin of
victory .

Vital Bridge Hit
Mr. aod Mrs. Otto nes, Sr., w11l be honored guests at a
rece ptwn from 2 to 4 p.m Sunday, Sept. 17, in honor of the
couple's 65th wedding aMiversary.
Their anmversary date actually is Sept 18 but the reception
will he held a day earlier so that friends and relatives, generally
free on Sunday, can attend. The event will he at the couple's
home church in Logan wherP they resided for many years.
TI1ey now make their home with thetr son-m-law and
daughter in Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs Clar•nce J . Struble. Both Mr
and Mrs, lies are 87, and generally spea~mg , are m good heath.
Our congratulahons !
ANNIE KNIGHT, POPULAR MEIGS LOCAL School District
bus driver, 1s confined to Veterans Memorial Hospital where she
was taken the other eve rung after suddenly becoming Ill
Rwnors have circulated that Annie suffered a heart attack.
Not true, at th1s lime, although the exact diagnosis has not been
na1led down. Needless to say, the kids on the bus route really
m1ss faithful Annie.
AND CONFINED TO St Joseph Hospital m Parkersburg is
Ted [)Qwme of Pomeroy's H1gh St.
Ted suffered a severe nosebleed early Saturday morning and
was taken to Veteran.-Memonal Hospital. He was treated and
released and everything seemed OK. The bleeding started again
later m the day and Ted was taken to the offiCe of a local doctor,
then removed by ambulance to Parkersburg So far, he's
progressmg rucely, but has to remain mighty qUiet for a few
days. Some surgery may be required, hot it isn't defmite at this
time .
TALK ABOUT SPECIALS ON BOOKS!
The Pomeroy Public Ubrary has a table piled high w1th
books which either haven't circulated too well or have seen
better days. The selection is wide-ranged and there are some
excellent books m the collection. The price? Just 10 cenls each.
Now you can 't beat that, can you?

Linescores

AN INTERESTING NOTE on the Indian rehc collectiOn of
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McNickel of Sutton Township : Included m
Sunday 's Baseball Resulls
the collection is a mastodon tooth which was recovered from a
By Umted Press lnternaf1ona 1
gravel
pit m Letart Township The huge tooth, well preserved, is
Nat1onal league
Chocago
202 010 ooo- 5 9 2 a gem for a private collector
Phola
102 000 DOD- 3 9 I
Pappas, Decker (6), McGonn
tal. Aker (a) and Rudolph ,
Nash, Champoon (4) , Selma (6),
Brandon Ia) and Ryan . WPPappas (13-7) . LP-Nash (17) .
HR Rudolph !2nd).

Player Captures

Pollsbgh
00000020D-2 a2
Mont
016 000 Olx- a 11 0
Ki son, Walker (3), Moiler {7)
and May , Torrez ( 16-9) and

World Series Title

Humphrey LP Ki son (8-6)
HR S Jorgensen llllh l. Robert
AKRON (UP!) - When you
son (10th)
call Gary Player a scrambler,
Sf Lou os
000 ooo 011- 2 7 0 he usually denies it emNew York 001 101 OOx- 3 9 1 phahcally .
W1 se, Durham {7) , Grzenda But the 17-year PGA lour
(8) and Srmmon s; Seaver ,
Sadecko (6 ), Strom 18). Rauch veteran sang a different tune
(9 ) and Dyer. WP- Seaver (17 Sunday after he picked up
11 1 LP- Wise (14 15) HR- $50,000 for his 71-71- 142 twoMolner (16th)
stroke victory over Jack Nick·
I 1st game )
laus and Lee Trevino . m the
Atlanta
ooo ooo ooo- o 7 1 lith aMual World Series of
San Doego 000 000 lOx- 1 4 0 Golf. It was the thtrd lime the
Reed ( 11 -14) and Casanova ,
Corkons (6-a) and Goddard HR South African has captured the
- Lee IlOthI.
36-hole event
Player, who won the PGA
1
}t~~n~;m e ) 011 002 ooo- 4 11 2 champiOnship a month
San Doege 000 ooo 001- 1 a o ago, oneputted 10 out
Noekro 113 11) and Dodoer, of the first 14holes in the final
Arion, Caldwell (6 ), Sompson round nme of which were to
(7) Ross {9) and Kendall LP'
u
Arltn 1a 19)
salvage par, the best puttmg
smce r don't remember when. "
(1s t game)
"I don 't remember putting so
Cone on
202 020 02D- 8 13 1 well from the No.1 through No.
San Fran
301 003 OOD- 7 11 1
Grimsl ey, Borbon (l) , Hal l 38 as I did here," Player said.
(4), Carroll (a) and Bench , "Yes, I d1d have a scrambling
Reberger , Slone (4). Moffolt
(7), McDowell Ia), Johnson (9) day .
"A good example of that was
and Rader, Healy (9) WPHall (a.l) . LP- Moffoll (1·4) on No. 11 when I hooked my
HR s- Bench (31st) , Fuentes drive in the left rough, couldn't
(7 th)
see the flag and had to hit a
rune iron to the green The ball
(2nd g am e}
Clnc tn
000020D00- 2 8 3 went by the hole 30 feet. My
San Fr an
000 002 42x- 8 9 0
McGi olhl on, Borbon 17) and first putt went in for a birdie."
That was only the second birBench; Mancha! , Johnson (8)
and Rader WP- Marlchal (6- die Player managed in two
15) LP- McGiofhlon 17 7) HRs days over the par 70, 7,100-yard
- McCovey (12th ). Bonds Firestone Country Club course.
122ndl
The first came m Saturday's
Houston
002 000 OOD- 2 5 2 opening round on the same par
000 000 03x- 3 9 2
Los Ang
Roberts, Gladding (a), Griffon four 365-yard hole.
When Player hit only four of
(a) , Cosgrove (a) and Edwards,
Sutton, Perranoskt (8), Brewer the first 14 greens m regulation
19) and Yeager, Cannizzaro Ia) during the final round , he came
WP- Perranoski 12-0l. LP- on strong 1n the stretch,
Giadd lno (5·6) .
parring the hnal four holes. HIS
Amer~can League
only
real difficulty came on the
Mi lw
000 000 ooo- 0 7 1
Bal tmOf"
100 001 OOx- 2 6 1 625-yard 16th hole.
Lockwood, Sanders (8) and
"Gary got11 up and down on
Rodnguez , Palmer 119-aJ and every hole-," said a dejected
Dales LP Lockwood (7 12).
Nicklaus, who along with TreCalof
200200001- 5 90 vino picked up $11,250,
Chocago
000 010 1100- 1 7 0
May (9 10) and Hiatt ; Wood
124 13) and Herrmann. HRS.
Olo ver !lath), Stanton (12th),
Parker Ilsi) .
I lsi, 12 on nongs)
Bos ton ooo 1oo 000 004- 5 a o
Cl eve 000 000 001 ooo- 1 a 1
Patl&lt;n, Veale I11 L Bolon 112)
and Fosk , Lopez, Lamb (4).
Wol cox (7) , Farmer (8 ), Hilgen·
dort (12) and Fosse. WP-Veale
(l 0) LP-Farmer 11-4). HRS
Fosk l201h), Nettles (16th )

''Nobody was puttmg any
pressure on Gary so he just
chipped up and made his par
putts.
"I never got anything going
here and when I went on the
tee, all I would think about was
gettmg par. I didn 't get it sharp
enough . I played less bad -golf
today (Sunday ) but my threeputting on the first and fourth
holes made the difference."
Trevino, who blamed his
poor performance at least
partly on new grips, said his
even par final round "felt like I
shot a 65 here because I JUSt
didn't hit II well."
"I just hit the ball terribly,"
sa1d the British Open chamwn . "There are no 'excuses but
I haven't hit a good shot since I
changed my gnps last week.
"The four of us played absolutely awful. Some folks are
either going to have to give up
golf after watching us on national television or want to go
to qualifymg school to come out
and beat us on the tour."
canadian Open winner Gay
Brewer fimshed last with a I45.
But Player, on the first leg of
h1s 20,000-mile, six-day JOurney
home, said he wasn 't womed
about the PGA tour unlil next
year when he would return to
the contmental United States.
On his agenda next are two
tournaments in Scotland and
then on to France

up with the best record and
three
other
teamsWashington , San Diego and
Pittsburgh- ended with
Idenllcal 4-1-1 marks.
Mercury Morris, playing in
place or ailing Jun Klick, ran
for two touchdowns-includmg
one in the !mal minute-to lead
Oldest Road
Miami past the Vikings.
The o I de s I road in the
Jim Plunkett fired three
Un1.ted Stat es is the El
touchdown passes to lead New
Cammo Real , w h 1c h run s
England to the surprismg
fro.m Santa Fe, N. M. , to
Chihuahua , Mexico. 11 first
vi ctory over Detroit. The
served
travelers in 1581 and
Patriots came back from a 17-7
•
~
now
U
S highway 85.
deficit to upset the Lions.
Johnny Unitas, ready for
another year at age 39,
directed Baltunore to a 20poinl first half as the Colts
downedDenver.Denver, which
scored 76 points in its last two
games, was held to one touchdown on an 89-yard punt return
by Floyd I.Jitle.
Runni11g back Charlie Evans
ran for fourto chd
t '
u owns ogive
the Giants the victory over
Cleveland. The loss left Cleve- (2nd game)
land w1th an ~ exhibition r Bos ton
010 000 001- 2 3 0
record Frank Pitts scored all Cleve
000 000 ooo- 0 5 1
Curi os (10·6) and Montgome
three
touchdowns
for ry, Dunning, Buller (9), Lamb
Cleveland, two on passes from 19) and Moses, Fosse (9). LPMike Ph1pps and one Irom Bill Dunning (4 3) HR- Aparicio
12 nd )
Nelsen.
Ward Walsh scored on an 11- New York 001 001 OJD- 5 a o
yard run with less than a Delrol t
0001100 ooo- o 3 1
minute remaimng to give
Stolllemyre (14-16) and M\Jn.
; Lollch , Zachary (9) ond
Houston the tie with New son
Freehan LP-Loloch 120·12) HR.
Orleans, Archie Manning Clarke IJrdl.
threw two touchdown passes in
the fourth quarter to account Oakland
000 001 060- 7 7 2
Texas
100 000 !DO- 2 6 2
for the Saints' scoring,
Holtzman , F&lt;ngers (6), Lock·
In the other five games er Ia) and Tenace; Hand,
Saturday besides the st. Louis Panther (8) , Lawson Ia) ,
Broberg I&amp;) and Bollings WP·
vi ctory over Chicago, Dallas Fingers
(9 6) . LP-Panther.(5·9)
topped Oakland, 16-10, Green
000 oo1 ooo- 1 4 1
Bay blanked Kansas City, 20-0, Monn
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS'·
Clly
200 000 Ol x- 3 50
Pi Its burgh tied Washington, 10. Kan
Woodson, LaRoche (a) and
10, the New York Jets tied San Borgmann ; Drago (11 ·15) and
Pomer:olv
Diego, 20.20, and Allonta Kork~atrick LP Woodson 112·
•
•
I' 1
routed Cioclnnatl, 44-!4.
14l.
RS
Mayberry
l19th)
,
Kil
·
9
to
9
Daily-sunday
1·9
lebrew (.23rd) . •
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ __;;...;;,;;;,;;;;;,.;.;;.._ _ _ _..,

the

'

700

wMal'n

targets in and around Hanoi
Sunday. Four military garri·
sons never before hit in the
five-month-old bombing resumption of North Vietnam
were hit by warplanes from
two American fighter wings.
Sunday marked the second
day of atr stril,&lt;es in the Hanoi
area by the U.S. Air Force.
Spokesmen refused to say what
targets they hit Saturday,
however, "because we had no
confirmed BDA (bomb
damage assessment) ,"
Military sources told UP!
reporter Edward Bassett
govermnenl troops pulled out
of Tien Phuoc district capital,
38 rmles south of Da Nang,
after a week of heavy fighting
for the strategic town . "The
pullout was Justified because
there are no good defensive
positions in the town," a source
told Bassett.
The source said the South
Vietnamese retreated from the
town because they thought they
could hold orr Communist
attacks more successfully
from other pos1t1ons.
Military spokesmen m
Saigon sa1d 29 Americans were
wounded m a Communist
rocket barrage on B1en Hoa
Airbase, 14 miles northeast of
the capital, in one of three
shelhng attacks Sunday on U.S.
bases . No casualties were
reported m the other two
One of the !()().pound rockets
slammed into 200 stored bomhs
and blew them up, military
sources said, destroymg four
South V1etnamese Army tanks,
killing two government troops
and wounding 10 other~ in
addition to the Americans.
Late Sunday and early today,

SAIGON (UPI) - U.S. jet
fighter-bombers Sunday
blast~d a strategic bridge m
North Vietnam and hit targets
never before attacked in the
current bombmg campaign,
U.S. spokesmen said today.
One jet war shot down and the
pilot is missing.
In South Vietnam, 45 Amerl·
cans were injured Sunday
when a stack of 200 South
VIetnamese Air Force bombs
blew up at the Bien Hoa rurbase, 14 miles northeast of
Saigon. The incident was
initially reported as a rocket
attack that wounded 29
Americans, but the U.S.
Command in an updated report
today
said
additional
Americans were wounded and
it was believed to have been an
acc1dent or the work of
Communist infiltrators.
Two South Vietnamese soldiers were killed in the explosion, spokesmen said, and
2ll wounded.Spokesmen said
some of the American casuallies were caused by Dying
bomb fragments while others
occurred during the scramble
to lind cover.
The U.S. Command sa1d
pilots flew 321l ralds into North
Vietnam Sunday, the most m
nearly a month. Spokesmen
said a Navy A7 Corsair was
shot down 14 miles southwest of
Hano1, the 1,019th U.S. plane
lost over the North since the alr
war began more than e•ghl
years ago. The pilot was listed
as missing.
Military officials said jets
armed with laser-guided
bomhs swept over Hanoi and
destroyed three spans of the
mile-long Paul Doumer
Bridge, linking the capital with
the country's maJor port city of
Haiphong. The spokesmen said
three other spans of the bridge
were damaged and that its
steel and concrete underpinnmgs were ''heavily"
damaged. Other Jets hit four
military garrisons for the first
lime since the air war over the
North was resumed April 6.

~
~

'

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$(;,, . ............... .
0&gt;0°'4d II I &lt; •00 0 01h U
""'"

" ' '" ' ' ' "

'

LODGE TO MEET
A regular meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will
be held at 8 p m. Thursday at
th e hall. All master masons are
InVlled
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Sammy Kay posted a 1:59 4-5
mile Saturday mght m wmnlng
the featured race at Scioto
Downs
Rusty Widower
fimshed a neck back and Hal
Buyler was third .
Ll l Miss Thompson and
Brenna Scott won the hrst two
races to return $207 on a 3-6
nightly double combination.

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

The U.S. command said
three other spans of the bridge
were damaged by the 2,000pound bomhs and that its steel
and concrete underpiMmgs
were "heavily" damaged.
Thailand-based F4 Phantom~· last 811 t11e "ridge over
North Vietnam's" Red River
May 10 and 11. Pilots at that
lime reported blasting it badly
enough to render it unusable.
The North VIetnamese had
s1nce repaired it, spokesmen
said.
Waves of other Jet fighterbombers attacked a se ries of

G

U.S. B52 bombers flew three
missions in the Tlen Phuoc
area, dumping about250 tons of·
explosives on suspected Com·
munlst positions. U.S. command spokesmen said results
of the raids were not known.
The Saigon command said
heavy fighting Sunday broke
out near Baslogne Base, 12
miles southwest of the old
imperial capital of Hue, where
Communist gunners hit a
government unit with 400
rocket, artillery and mortar
rounds . The Saigon troops
counterattacked and with the
aid of air strikes and artillery,
killed 38North Vietnamese ala
cost of 10 government soldiers
woun&lt;led, the command said.
In the Central Highlands
province of Pleiku near Thanh
An, a district capital 220 miles
north of Saigon, spokesmen
said renewed fighting claimed
17 North Vietnamese lives at a
cost of three government
troops dead and 19 wounded.

IS CELEBRATING
WITH A

20th
''

'

'·

ANNIVERSARY

SALE
1952-1972

. , . ,•• ,,....

O•••

' '" ' ' " ' ' ' '

o

•

•;

•"

1

'&lt;

i&amp; s'ocT~r·:·:}·:r Kole Trio Signed for Winter Season
Green Thumb
Notes . ...

;,:Calendarli

MONDAY
RIVERVJCW PTA Monday,
of Meigs
7:30 p.m. at Rive rview
County Garden Club members.
Elementary. R1verv1ew 4-H
Club in charge of program.
Flag ceremony by Boy Scouts.
Everyone welcome to attend.
Refreshments will he served .
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
No.
53 DAY Monday, 7:30p.m
BY MRS. JAMES NICHOLSON
Members and wives invited
Rutland Garden Club
Relreshments.
September and October are the best months to plant the
SALEM CENTER PTA
spring blooming Dowers.
Monday, 7:30p.m. at school. 4While the period can he extended into November and earlv H Club m charge of program.
December if the ground is still open, early planting 1s best as it Fathers especially mv1ted to
provides sufficient lime for rooting before the soil gets too cold. attend. Refreshments
Spade the locahon thoroughly, and if the soil is too poor, work m
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p m.
liberal applications of bonemeal or well-rotted manure.
Monday, get-acquamted mght
Bulbs should l!e spaced_ in accordance with the Safety patrol parents to meet
nora! e(fect that is desired. Agood plan to follow is to allow twice after regular meeting, also
the diameter of a bulb between every two, and to plant so that the ways and means committee
top of the bulb Is about3 inches below the ground when covered in meeting, to discuss proJect
the case of most of the larger bulbs, and 112 to 2inches below for plans.
smaller kinds such as Crocus, Galantus, etc.
EIGHT and Forty, Meigs
Uly bulhs should go considerably deeper
County Salon 710, home of Mrs.
Since no bulb can nouriSh if crowded by other plants, it 1s Mary Martin, 7:30 Monday
important to select a location that provides ample light and mght.
space,
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
Below are Ideas for three different effects which are very 7:30 p. m. Monday , home of
pretty : (I ) A border of Narc1ssus and Early Tuhps; (2) Tulips Mrs. Thelma McMurray,
w1th an edging of Hyacinths, and (3), a naturalized planting of Mason, W. Va .
Narcls'sus.
UNITED METHODIST
The first batch of things to plant at once mclude Colchicums. W,omen, .Heath 9hurch,
Crocuses of all types, Schillas, Puchkinias, Galanthuses, Leu- Middleport, 7:30Monday night.
rojums, Eranthises and all those other delightful little things so Mrs. Harry Chesher to have
few people ever grow. H not planted right away some of these, devotions; Mrs. Ruth 8uler to
such as Erathises and Hardy Cyclamens, may dry up and die in present the lesson "Women In
two or three weeks .
Ghana." Mrs. Elizabeth Hibbs,
The daffodils can go mto the ground as soon as they arrive, or Mrs. Geneva Yates and Mrs.
il you have your own, be transplanted any time now Plant your Onn Smith, hostesses
tuhps in cold soli, If you plant them In warm soil they may send
TUESDAY
up shoots with no supportmg roots, and that is the end of these
EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE
bulbs. They are not like the well-behaved daffodils that imof the Racme Elementary PTA
mediately form roots but no shoots.
There are many varieties of Daffodils, Tulips, Hyacinths will meet Tuesday at 7·30 p. m.
which will bloom over a long perind of time. By consulting a bulb at the grade school.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
catalogue you can select bulbs to have continuous blooms. The
Club,
7.30 Tuesday at the
cut flowers make pretty arrangements w1th just their own
Columbus
and Southern Ohio
foliage.
Electric Co. office, Mrs. Walter
Hayes, hostess cha~rman.
EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters Tuesday at high
school at 8 p.m. Movies of
Hannan Trace game will be
Followin g the dmner a shown Refreshments.
Rally Day Will he observed at
the Middleport First Baptist program w111 be presented
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday,
On Sept. 24 youth meetmgs 7:30 p m. at Syracuse
Church Sunday .
A skahng party has been will begm . The Junior B.Y.F Elementary School
planned for the afternoon at the for those in grades four ,
AMERICAN LUTHERAN
Skate-A-Way Rink. There will five ands1x will meet Church Women, St. Paul's
be a charge of 25 cents for the at the church on Sun· Lutheran Church, potluck
use of skates. The church bus day alternoons from 4:45 to dmner at 6 p m. Tuesday
will leave the church at 12:4~ to 5:45. The bus will transport the followed by a• meeting and
travel the regular route to pick children to and from the program on drugs to be
up those who want to par- church, and all children are presented by Pastor Arthur
ti clpote 1n the skalmg party. II invited to participate .
Lund.
will leave the church to go to
The Junior B.Y.F. will be
THE MEIGS Athletic
the rink at 1:30 p.m from the held for the seventh and eighth Boosters Tuesday at 7·30 p.m.
church.
graders from 6:30 to 7·30 p.m. at Meigs H1gh School. ThiS is
Youth and adults of the at the church on Sundays and the f~rst meetmg of the season.
church are being encouraged the adult leaders for this group
WEDNESDAY
to mv1te their friends to JOin in w1ll be Mr and Mrs. James
W.S.C.S. of Forest Run
the activities. A potluck dmner Crow.
Umted Met)lodist Church w1ll
will be held at the church
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Im- meet Wednesday at 7·30 p m
following return from the rink . boden will have charge of the home of Mrs. Denver Holler
Meat and beverage will be Senior High B.Y.F. wh1ch will
POMEROY • Middleport
provided and those attendmg meet every Sunday from 6:30 L10ns Club noon luncheon
are to take a covered d1sh and to 7:30p.m. at the church.
Wednesday at Meigs Inn with
their own table semce.
"Energy Crisis " topic of
program
POMEROY Chapter 80,
RAM, 7:30 p,m , Wednesday ,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Community service projects in November, and a candy sale Long form opening to he ob·
served.
were planned and committees will he held later on.
THURSDAY
The hamburger fry for
were appointed at a meeting
POMEROY
LODGE 164,
Friday night of the Middleport members and their families
F&amp;AM,
will
hold
past masters
4-H Golddiggers at the home of was set for Sept. I4 at the
Mrs Marion Francis, advisor. community pork at 6 p.m. night at 7:30p, m. Thursday at
The members made plans to Meetimg hmes were changed tl1e temple . All Master Masons
remember the children at the to Thursday nights at the are invited .
County Home for Halloween, Francis' home . A nature hike,
the patients at Veterans bird watching, star gazing, and
Memorial Hospital for Thanks· leaf gathering were among the
g1vmg; those at the Meigs program plans discussed, and
County Infirmary for Chnst- tours of the Marietta Museum,
mas and Valentme's Day, and and the Ohw Valley PubliShing
Films of the Holy Land and
the Children 's Home for Co. in Gallipolis were planned. Egypt taken by the Rev. and
Janice Harman presided at Mrs. Ira Wellman of Kanauga
Easter.
the
meeting with April King on their recent tour were
Plans were also made to
gather children's clothing for reading the minutes of the shown at the Thursday night
the Children's Home and to sell organizational meeting. Keith meeting of the Laurel Chff
toothbrushes
and
book Black, committee chairman, Better Health Club held at the
markers this month to finance appointed the following Wellman home ,
the proJects. Nuts wur be sold committees:
Joining the Health Club
April King, Debbie Taylor, members were their families
?i,:';'i:::::~;:;:::::..
&gt;mrm~~~o::ol\11~ Max Geary, Tina Miller and and several neighbors of the
~
Vicki Boyles, refreshments; Wellmans. During the brief
~
Jamce Harman and Debbie business meeting a thank you
·1.
·
Taylor, recreation; Lisa card was ·read from the Earl
Scaggs, Deanne Denny and Roush family, Mrs. Nellie
Brian Taylor, auditors; Keith Tracy and Mrs. Wellman
Black, Alan King, Janice served refreshments. AI·
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Thomas of Harman and Vicki Boyles, lending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Columbus were recent visitors community service; Don Robert Buckley and family,
of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Turner. Geary, Lydia Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
They also visited Richard Allan King, safety; Janice Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr, Mr.
Thomas of Pomeroy, and Mr. Harman and Keith Black, and Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mrs.
and Mrs. Jim Nelson, Chester Health; April Kmg, Debbie Mabel Tracy, Mrs. Bertha
Tylor, and Tina Miller, trans. Parker, Mrs. Georgia Diehl,
Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Casto porta lion; and Debbie Taylor, Mrs. [)Qnna Gilmore, Mrs.
of Ripley were Sunday guests co-treasurer.
Nellie Tracy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Refreshments were serveG Ernest Powell.
of Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mr. and Mrs. Manford Stone by Tina Miller and Mrs.
of Lookout, W. Va.andMr. and Francis after the group
Mrs. Raymond Stone of repeated the Lord's Prayer in
ATTEND MEETING
Maynower, Arkansas, were unison. Games were played.
Mrs. Caddie Wickham and
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Pearl mynolds were In
Edgar Reynolds.
Athens Saturday for an aU-day
Dr. and Mrs. Stanley E.
District
3 meeting of the
Potter and chUdren, Kyle,
Daughters
of Union Veterans
Eric, and Lynn, returned to
CIRCLE TO MEET
held at the Grange Hall. The
their home at Glendale, Calif.
A meeting of the Mtemoon two served as color bearers for
after visiting here with her Circle of Heath United
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olarlel Melhodlll Church ICheduled the ritualistic opening. Mrs.
Wickham and Mrs. Reynoldl
McElhinny. Dr. Potter and
for Thursday hal been poet. are members of Jane Howell
family just recently moved to
poned unW Sept. 21.
Tent of Melga County.
Glendale.

'
A weekly feature

Planting,and Growing Fall Bulbs

Rally Day is Pklnned

Service Projects Planned

Films Shown by
Kanauga Pastor

Middleport
Personal Notes

Eve rytim e you hold yo ur payin your hot little hand, you
promise yourself to salt something
away. But man is wea k. And what
you want toclay seems a lot more
Important than worrying abo ut
what you'll need tomorrow.
Quit kidding yourself.
Jom the Payroll Savmgs Plan
where you work. It's easy. Ju st
specify an amount you want set
aside from your paycheck. Then
that money is used to buy U.S.
Savings Bonds. You never see the
money, so the temptation to spend
1t IS removed. And with every paycheck , your money grow s. So
wh en you need it, you 'll find
~h ec k,

you've got a s izeable amount
st!lshed away. Enough to help out
w1th what tomorrow may bring.
If you can't trust yourself trust
U.S. Savings Bonds. Then 'you'll
have a fund in your future.

TakeJoinstock
in
America.
the Payroll Savings Plan.
Contributed As A Public Service by The O.tly Sentinel

In keeping w1th its 25-year
traditiOn of orrermg area
residents the w1"est vanety of
musical entertainment to suit
every taste, the Tr1-County
Commun1 t y Con c ert
AssociatiOn has scheduled a
concert by the Ronme Kole
Trio for the 19°2-73 concert
season
Their latest albwn descnbes
the Ronnie Kole Trio best ..
11

New

Or leans '

Newest

Sound " In the f1ve years smce
they left the AI flirt Club and
opened their own club. the Trio
has gained such popularity that
they are now known as one of

mired for his great talent but
f&lt;H th e many charitable
benefi ts and app earances
win ch are a daily part of his
hie,
Dickie Taylor, percussionist,
was born in Oak Park, Ill, and '
he has played with several
outstandmg groups, includmg
Jackie Deshannon, before
joimng Ronnie Kole in I962 to
form The Heavyweights.
Everett Lmk, Jr., the
talented bass player of the
Ronme Koie Trio, was born in
New Orlellns, where he began
h1s mu&gt;ICal career with the
cello. Even with the offer of
several scholarships, he jomed
the MuSicians' Union and went
to work on Bourbon Street.
After a bnef stint with Santo
Pecora and h1s Tailgate
Ramblers, he discovered the
Ronme Kole Trw and, for·
tunately for everyone, they
also discovered Everett.
A typ1c•\ concert program
presented by the Trw mcludes
such selections as "Aquarius,
"MacArthur Park," 11 Laura, "
Love Them from "Romeo and
Juliet," as well as New Orleans
s tandards hke " When the
Samts Go Marchmg In" and

the three great acts in the city,
standing shoulder-to-shoulder
w1th Pete Fountam and AI Hlft.
Ronme Kole, who put the
group together, was born in
Chicago, Ill., and began his
career at the age of 11. At 14 he
was playmg professionally and
belonged to several groups
before he formed The
Heavyweights and ulbmately
came to make New Orleans his
home. He has appeared on the
M1ke Douglas and Johnny
Carson Shows. Married and the
father of six children, he IS
deeply mvolved in CIVIC enterprises and is not only ad- "St. Lows Blues."

the Ronnie Kole Trio: New Orleans' Newest Sound

Cookout at Park

CATTLE CIJ'ITING is one of the horse training
demonstrations to be conducted as part of the animal science
exhibit at Farm Science Review.

A cookout was held Sooday
evemng at the Kyger Creek
Employes Park by members of
Group I of the Women's
Assoc1allon of the Middleport
First Umted Presbyterian
Church and their farmbes.
Attending were the Rev. and
Mrs . Dwight Zavitz, Mrs,
Karen Sprouse and Terri
Marie, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Satterfield and Amy, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, [)Qn,
Ernie, Beth and Zandra, Mrs.
Marcella Coleman, Becky and
Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Zirkle, Michelle and Pamela,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks,
PllJ!l, Cindy and Walter Ed·
ward, and Mr, and Mrs. Tom
Kelly, JaneU and Tommy.

2 Honored by Shrine

A recepllon honoring Mrs .
HomeEc Tent Important Bermce
Wmn,
district
chairman of material objectives, and Mrs . Ferne
Stop at Science Review Cheesebrew,
d•slml deputy,
highlighted a meeting of Mary
COLUMBUS - Would you
like to know ahout current
research pertammg to mfants
and children, the 'behnvwr of
materials
in
today 's
refngerators, or · what per·
manent-care labeling m ap·
pare! means to you as a consumer? Well, 1£ so, be sure and
make the home economics tent
one of your stops at the Farm
Science Rev1ew, September 1921.
The theme or this year's
exhibit is "Science Serves the
Consumer" reports Mrs . Betty
Z1mmer, assistant to the
director, OSU School of Home
Economics . Two s11 down
lectures will be offered each of
the three days
Jean Bowers, associate
professor,

management,

housing and equipment, Will
discuss "Consumer Affairs and
Economics" at 10:30 a.m.
Kent Hamdorf, Extension
family life specialist, will talk
about the consequences or the
"Changing Family Goals and
Values" in Amertca today at
1:30 p.m.
Between speakers there w1ll
be continuous showings of
audio-visual programs on
garment and textile problems
and cake preparation.
Other topics of interest to the

homemaker featured at· lhe
Home Economics exhibit will
include the placement of
drapenes in relallon to electric
baseboard heaters , conswner
education in OhiQ grades 7-12,
factors affecting soil removal
in home laundenng, and the
eatmg habits and nutritive
intake of preschoolers.
Remember, other Review
exhibits you'll want to visit
include the horticultural
gardens, the conservation and
recreation area Wllh its own
farm pon~ •nri wilriUfe plan·
lings, and
informative
presentation of all the
departments of the College of
Agriculture
and
Home
Economics.
The b1g farm show's central
exhibit area will be in a new
location this year. It will be
estal)llshed along the north
side of case Road between
Sawmill Road and the
equipment loading dock, just
west of [)Qn Scott Field, the
Umversity airport. Thanks to I·
270 you can drive interstate
from any direction, practically
to the entrance gate.

durmg the recepllon. A cake
decorated w1th replicas of star,
SAME DAY
cross and a shepherd's crook
SERVItE
was served w1th punch, coffee,
In At 9:-0ut At 5
mmts and nuts. Mrs. Pauline
1
•' (ll ~(t
t ');;i.
Atkins ·served 'the punch,' and
Use O.r Free Plrkln~ tot
Shrine 37, Order 6f the While Mrs. Joan Ka tdor presided at
Shrine of Jerusalem Friday the coffee service.
mght at the IOOF hall m
216 E. 2nd, Pomoror
Pomeroy,
The reception was held
following a school of In struction · conducted by Mrs .
Cheesebrew. Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, worthy high
pnestess, presided at the
meeting recognizmg guests
from Marietta and inlrnducing
a distingUished guest, Quenton
McPeak, deputy supreme
MATTRESS &amp; BOX SPRING
watchman of shepherds,
Manetta.
Mrs. Maxine Wmgett
presented the program which
opened with group singing of
"For the Beauty of the Earth ."
Mrs . Clieesebrew gave a
prayer concerning the world
we live in and its joys, and Mrs.
Nellie Tracy gave a reading on
blessings. "Look to This Day"
was the title of a meditation by
Mrs. Cheesebrew. The group
sang "Now the Day Is Over,"
and several other hymns and
familiar tunes.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Winn and Mrs. Cheesebrew

Robinson:s aeaners

SAVE '40.00 NOWI

Mismatch Pairs

BED DIN&amp;
SALE

Sharpen Your Mind•..
&lt;With information from the Middleport

Commission Plan
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Oh10 State Automobile
Association says · it will
"vigorously oppose" state Sen.
Robert Shaw's bill to create an
Ohio Transportation Commission by dissolving the Ohio
Turnpike, State Underground
Parking and State Bridge
Commissions,
The Ohio AAA also said it
could not endorse the
Columbus Republican's
proposal to raise the state
gasoline tax two cents a gallon
if the money is to be used for
other than highway con·
structlon and maintenance, as
"expenditures of this nature
are possible prohibited by the
Ohio Constitution."

(1) In EgypUan religion wbatlype of monument represented
the sun?
(Z) Who was the lint greatcompoaer ofplanomUBic?
(3} What famo111 American actress BDd sillger spent ber
cblldbood ill condltl0111 of estreme poverty, married at the age of
12~. and soon after found employment as a hotel domestic?
(4) Do you lmow wbal Amerlcaa aovellll aad clergymau
born ill 1801 wrote ro~~~~~~~tes of Biblical tlmea illclndillg The
Prince of David (1155) 1111111be Pillar of Fire (1851}?
(5} In Seandillavian mythology, wbo was the god of poetry?
Answen on Page 8.

LAD DROWNED
AKRON (UPI) - James
Walton, 10, of Akron, drowned
Saturday while wading with
two friends in Gorge Dam near
here, Police said the boy had
wandered out from shore,
slipped on a rock, and went
under.

OPTOM ET.RISt.

OFF 1~1: 1-IvU R~ 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 I tLO:.E
AT
ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,

LIMITED
QUANTITY

Q,UILTED TOP
REG. 1119.95 SET

Public Library)

AAA to Oppose

SHIRT
FINISHING

'

SET

MATTRESS &amp; BOX SPRING
HURR Y IN NOW!

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

992-2635

DRAW YOUR AnENTION
in the

Ml DOLE PORT

Yellow
Pages

�5- The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Sept. 11.1972

4 - "The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0", Sept. 11, 1972

Giants
Nudge
Browns

Pirates. Lose 8-2;
Reds· Split Pair
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Montreal Expos are still
in the building stage but M1ke
Torrez has finally come of age"
Torrez handcuffed the
National League East's
division-l eadmg Pittsburgh
Pirates on eight hits Sunday as
the Expos exploded for six runs
m the third inning to defeat the
Pirates, 8-2
The tnumph was Torrez's
16th m 25 decisions.
Torrez, who wasn 't given his
first start until a month mto the
season, now stands a good
chance of becoll]ing the first 20game wirmer mthe Expos' four
year history.
The victory was only the
fourth for the Expos this
season m 15 decisions w1th
Pittsbw·gh.
·
In other National League
games Chicago downed Philadelphia, 5-3, New York edgd
St Loms , 3-2, Cincinnati and
San Francisco split a twinbdl,
the Reds wmning the opener ,117, and the G1ants laking the
ni ghtca p, 8-2, Los Angeles
nipped Houston , 3-2, and
Atlanta and San D1ego div1ded
a pmr, the Padres taking the
first game, J.{), and the Braves
winning the nightcap, 4-1.
In the American League
Boston remained m first place
m the AL East with 5-l 12 inning and 2-0 victories over
Cleveland, Balllmore blanked
Milwaukee, 2.{), California beat
Chicago, 5·1, New York topped
DetrOit, 5.{), Oakland ripped

NEW YORK (UPI )-The
New York G1ants aren't concerned about the sorry records
of the teams they're beatmg
these days. ·
They're just happy to be
beating anybody .
The Giants wound up the
exhibition season With their
third stralghl victory Sunday,
heating the Cleveland Browns
211-21 to give them a 3-2-1 mark
going into next week's regular
season opener at Detroit.
The fact that the combined
records of the three teams
they've beaten IS 3-15 (Cleveland is~. Philadelphia 1..5 and
New England 2-4 ) doesn 'I faze
the Giants.
Coach Alex Webster,
rebuilding a team that
staggered through a sorry 4-10
mark last season, feels the
victories have proven the team
IS starting to come back,
But it won't be possible to get
a good line of the team until the
results a'' in of the first two
regular season games against
Detroit and Dallas
Taste oi Victory
Webster has a hunch the
team may surprise some
skeptics who say the Giants
have been simply beating weak
teams.
"These young kids have got
the taste of victory now and
that 's important," Webster
said. "They're getting the
feelmg they can win. It could
he a long season but they know important win for us since it
way down deep It's there. It's a moved us above .500 for the
question of not making mi- exhibition season and gave us
stakes. What we're trying to momentum for next week "
preach is that you have to force
Defensive lineman Jack Grethe other team to beat you, you gory' the Giant "rover" who
don't want to beat yourself." was playing agamst his old
A pass interception by Willie tearmnates, had a good lime
Williams set up Charlie Evans' except that he felt they ran
fourth touchdown run on a one- away from him too much, "II
ynrd plunge late in the final was hke the Super Bowl for me.
period and snapped a 21•21 tie I had dinner last night w1th
as the Giants came back from some of the guys and we were
a 14-7 halftime deficit.
talking back and forth durmg
Webster said, "one thing Is the game," he said . Gregory
that we're starting to mature Signed Wllh New York after
into a pretty good team. We're playing ou t h1s option in
Cleveland.
not getting beat physically.
F
Cl 1 d .
We've had a great lrainmg ,
or
eve a_n ' II was
camp ..
another frustratmg game and
" ·
Coach J'1i ~k. , ,Skor~ch , still ,
'fle~a~ No~ S~e!~ com- doesn't ha,ve his quarterback
pi~ 1~-27 )lasse lor 221 problem settled . He alternated
yards and all but sewed up the veteran Bill Nelsen and young
"!"rling QB job lor next week Mike Phipps again and sa1d he
S!nce Randy Johnson has been wouldn't chose between them
Sidelined three weeks with a until later thiS week . Nelson
shoulder injury.
was lklf·l3 for 161 yards and
Snead said, "we're 100 Phipps was ~f-16 for 74 yards
percent better than we were a but the difference was a
month ago. We've played lour spectacular 80-yard catch
good weeks of football and Frank Pitts made of a Nelsen
we're doing a lot of positive bomb.
things."
Nelsen's pass seemed overLike Super Bowl
thrown but Pitts deOected 1t
Ron Johnson, who ran 17 with h1s fingertips and then
limes for 45 yards to comple- caught up With it. Pitts also
ment Evans' 19 carries for 60 caught two short TD passes
yards, said, 11this was an from Plupps.

Sayers Retires From
Professional Football
One of the most Illustrious
names in the hiStory of the
game will be among the
missing next Sunday when the
National Football League 's
1,040 players start playing for
real.
The tedious seven weeks of
exhibition games ended
Sunday with f1ve games and
the 26 coaches will slice their
rosters from 44 to 40 players
today for the start of the 1972
regular season next Sunday.
But the results Sunday were
overshadowed by the announcement that Gale Sayers,
labeled by George Halas-who
has seen them all-as the
greatest ruMing back in the
history of the game, has
retired.
Sayers made his first appearance in an exhibition game
this season Saturday night and
fumbled twice while carrying
only three times in the Chicago
Bears' 33-14loss to the St. Louis
Cardinals. Both fumbles were
turned into Cardinal touchdowns.
"The leg felt fine, but just
hilling the Astroturf and
getting on the leg made it very
sore and !fell I'd better give it
up," Sayers said."! hate to
leave football, but I know I'm
finished and I llnow I cannot go
on this year ,11 he said.
In the final five practice
games Sunday, Miami surprised Mlnne110ta, 21·19, In a
nationally televised game, BaJ.
Umore topped Denver, ~13,
New England upset Detroit, 3430, the New York Giants edged
Cleveland, 28-21, and HOUllton
tied New Orleans, 14·14.
ElhJbltim ncorda 1re mJ.s.
leading but Dal.lu (6-1) ended

Texas, 7-2, and Kansas City
defeated Minnesota, 3-1.
Fred Gladding made a Wild
throw after fielding Steve
Garvey 's bunt smgle to enable
the deciding run to score as the
Dodgers erupted for three runs
in the eighth inmng to down
Houston.
Ph1l Niekro pitched the
Braves to their second game
win over the Padres after
Leron Lee's seventh inning
home run and M1ke Corkms'
first big league shu tout won the
opener for San Diego.
Relief pitching by Brent
Strom and Bob Rauch and a
sparkling defensive gem by
Cleon Jones provided Tom
Seaver w1th his 17th vicwry of
the year as the Mets defeated
the Cardinals.
Reserve catcher Ken
Rudolph drove in three runs
with a home run and a smgle to
lead Chicago to their victory
over Philadelphia.
Home runs by Bobby Bonds
and Willie McCovey gave San
Francisco a second game
VIctory and a doubleheader
split af rer Cincinna li won the
first game on Joe Morgan's
run-scoring single.
The Reds pounded out 13 hits
off five San Francisco pitchers
to win the see-saw first game.
Two runs off relicl pitcher
Randy Moffitt in the e1ghth
mmng provided the margin of
victory .

Vital Bridge Hit
Mr. aod Mrs. Otto nes, Sr., w11l be honored guests at a
rece ptwn from 2 to 4 p.m Sunday, Sept. 17, in honor of the
couple's 65th wedding aMiversary.
Their anmversary date actually is Sept 18 but the reception
will he held a day earlier so that friends and relatives, generally
free on Sunday, can attend. The event will he at the couple's
home church in Logan wherP they resided for many years.
TI1ey now make their home with thetr son-m-law and
daughter in Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs Clar•nce J . Struble. Both Mr
and Mrs, lies are 87, and generally spea~mg , are m good heath.
Our congratulahons !
ANNIE KNIGHT, POPULAR MEIGS LOCAL School District
bus driver, 1s confined to Veterans Memorial Hospital where she
was taken the other eve rung after suddenly becoming Ill
Rwnors have circulated that Annie suffered a heart attack.
Not true, at th1s lime, although the exact diagnosis has not been
na1led down. Needless to say, the kids on the bus route really
m1ss faithful Annie.
AND CONFINED TO St Joseph Hospital m Parkersburg is
Ted [)Qwme of Pomeroy's H1gh St.
Ted suffered a severe nosebleed early Saturday morning and
was taken to Veteran.-Memonal Hospital. He was treated and
released and everything seemed OK. The bleeding started again
later m the day and Ted was taken to the offiCe of a local doctor,
then removed by ambulance to Parkersburg So far, he's
progressmg rucely, but has to remain mighty qUiet for a few
days. Some surgery may be required, hot it isn't defmite at this
time .
TALK ABOUT SPECIALS ON BOOKS!
The Pomeroy Public Ubrary has a table piled high w1th
books which either haven't circulated too well or have seen
better days. The selection is wide-ranged and there are some
excellent books m the collection. The price? Just 10 cenls each.
Now you can 't beat that, can you?

Linescores

AN INTERESTING NOTE on the Indian rehc collectiOn of
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McNickel of Sutton Township : Included m
Sunday 's Baseball Resulls
the collection is a mastodon tooth which was recovered from a
By Umted Press lnternaf1ona 1
gravel
pit m Letart Township The huge tooth, well preserved, is
Nat1onal league
Chocago
202 010 ooo- 5 9 2 a gem for a private collector
Phola
102 000 DOD- 3 9 I
Pappas, Decker (6), McGonn
tal. Aker (a) and Rudolph ,
Nash, Champoon (4) , Selma (6),
Brandon Ia) and Ryan . WPPappas (13-7) . LP-Nash (17) .
HR Rudolph !2nd).

Player Captures

Pollsbgh
00000020D-2 a2
Mont
016 000 Olx- a 11 0
Ki son, Walker (3), Moiler {7)
and May , Torrez ( 16-9) and

World Series Title

Humphrey LP Ki son (8-6)
HR S Jorgensen llllh l. Robert
AKRON (UP!) - When you
son (10th)
call Gary Player a scrambler,
Sf Lou os
000 ooo 011- 2 7 0 he usually denies it emNew York 001 101 OOx- 3 9 1 phahcally .
W1 se, Durham {7) , Grzenda But the 17-year PGA lour
(8) and Srmmon s; Seaver ,
Sadecko (6 ), Strom 18). Rauch veteran sang a different tune
(9 ) and Dyer. WP- Seaver (17 Sunday after he picked up
11 1 LP- Wise (14 15) HR- $50,000 for his 71-71- 142 twoMolner (16th)
stroke victory over Jack Nick·
I 1st game )
laus and Lee Trevino . m the
Atlanta
ooo ooo ooo- o 7 1 lith aMual World Series of
San Doego 000 000 lOx- 1 4 0 Golf. It was the thtrd lime the
Reed ( 11 -14) and Casanova ,
Corkons (6-a) and Goddard HR South African has captured the
- Lee IlOthI.
36-hole event
Player, who won the PGA
1
}t~~n~;m e ) 011 002 ooo- 4 11 2 champiOnship a month
San Doege 000 ooo 001- 1 a o ago, oneputted 10 out
Noekro 113 11) and Dodoer, of the first 14holes in the final
Arion, Caldwell (6 ), Sompson round nme of which were to
(7) Ross {9) and Kendall LP'
u
Arltn 1a 19)
salvage par, the best puttmg
smce r don't remember when. "
(1s t game)
"I don 't remember putting so
Cone on
202 020 02D- 8 13 1 well from the No.1 through No.
San Fran
301 003 OOD- 7 11 1
Grimsl ey, Borbon (l) , Hal l 38 as I did here," Player said.
(4), Carroll (a) and Bench , "Yes, I d1d have a scrambling
Reberger , Slone (4). Moffolt
(7), McDowell Ia), Johnson (9) day .
"A good example of that was
and Rader, Healy (9) WPHall (a.l) . LP- Moffoll (1·4) on No. 11 when I hooked my
HR s- Bench (31st) , Fuentes drive in the left rough, couldn't
(7 th)
see the flag and had to hit a
rune iron to the green The ball
(2nd g am e}
Clnc tn
000020D00- 2 8 3 went by the hole 30 feet. My
San Fr an
000 002 42x- 8 9 0
McGi olhl on, Borbon 17) and first putt went in for a birdie."
That was only the second birBench; Mancha! , Johnson (8)
and Rader WP- Marlchal (6- die Player managed in two
15) LP- McGiofhlon 17 7) HRs days over the par 70, 7,100-yard
- McCovey (12th ). Bonds Firestone Country Club course.
122ndl
The first came m Saturday's
Houston
002 000 OOD- 2 5 2 opening round on the same par
000 000 03x- 3 9 2
Los Ang
Roberts, Gladding (a), Griffon four 365-yard hole.
When Player hit only four of
(a) , Cosgrove (a) and Edwards,
Sutton, Perranoskt (8), Brewer the first 14 greens m regulation
19) and Yeager, Cannizzaro Ia) during the final round , he came
WP- Perranoski 12-0l. LP- on strong 1n the stretch,
Giadd lno (5·6) .
parring the hnal four holes. HIS
Amer~can League
only
real difficulty came on the
Mi lw
000 000 ooo- 0 7 1
Bal tmOf"
100 001 OOx- 2 6 1 625-yard 16th hole.
Lockwood, Sanders (8) and
"Gary got11 up and down on
Rodnguez , Palmer 119-aJ and every hole-," said a dejected
Dales LP Lockwood (7 12).
Nicklaus, who along with TreCalof
200200001- 5 90 vino picked up $11,250,
Chocago
000 010 1100- 1 7 0
May (9 10) and Hiatt ; Wood
124 13) and Herrmann. HRS.
Olo ver !lath), Stanton (12th),
Parker Ilsi) .
I lsi, 12 on nongs)
Bos ton ooo 1oo 000 004- 5 a o
Cl eve 000 000 001 ooo- 1 a 1
Patl&lt;n, Veale I11 L Bolon 112)
and Fosk , Lopez, Lamb (4).
Wol cox (7) , Farmer (8 ), Hilgen·
dort (12) and Fosse. WP-Veale
(l 0) LP-Farmer 11-4). HRS
Fosk l201h), Nettles (16th )

''Nobody was puttmg any
pressure on Gary so he just
chipped up and made his par
putts.
"I never got anything going
here and when I went on the
tee, all I would think about was
gettmg par. I didn 't get it sharp
enough . I played less bad -golf
today (Sunday ) but my threeputting on the first and fourth
holes made the difference."
Trevino, who blamed his
poor performance at least
partly on new grips, said his
even par final round "felt like I
shot a 65 here because I JUSt
didn't hit II well."
"I just hit the ball terribly,"
sa1d the British Open chamwn . "There are no 'excuses but
I haven't hit a good shot since I
changed my gnps last week.
"The four of us played absolutely awful. Some folks are
either going to have to give up
golf after watching us on national television or want to go
to qualifymg school to come out
and beat us on the tour."
canadian Open winner Gay
Brewer fimshed last with a I45.
But Player, on the first leg of
h1s 20,000-mile, six-day JOurney
home, said he wasn 't womed
about the PGA tour unlil next
year when he would return to
the contmental United States.
On his agenda next are two
tournaments in Scotland and
then on to France

up with the best record and
three
other
teamsWashington , San Diego and
Pittsburgh- ended with
Idenllcal 4-1-1 marks.
Mercury Morris, playing in
place or ailing Jun Klick, ran
for two touchdowns-includmg
one in the !mal minute-to lead
Oldest Road
Miami past the Vikings.
The o I de s I road in the
Jim Plunkett fired three
Un1.ted Stat es is the El
touchdown passes to lead New
Cammo Real , w h 1c h run s
England to the surprismg
fro.m Santa Fe, N. M. , to
Chihuahua , Mexico. 11 first
vi ctory over Detroit. The
served
travelers in 1581 and
Patriots came back from a 17-7
•
~
now
U
S highway 85.
deficit to upset the Lions.
Johnny Unitas, ready for
another year at age 39,
directed Baltunore to a 20poinl first half as the Colts
downedDenver.Denver, which
scored 76 points in its last two
games, was held to one touchdown on an 89-yard punt return
by Floyd I.Jitle.
Runni11g back Charlie Evans
ran for fourto chd
t '
u owns ogive
the Giants the victory over
Cleveland. The loss left Cleve- (2nd game)
land w1th an ~ exhibition r Bos ton
010 000 001- 2 3 0
record Frank Pitts scored all Cleve
000 000 ooo- 0 5 1
Curi os (10·6) and Montgome
three
touchdowns
for ry, Dunning, Buller (9), Lamb
Cleveland, two on passes from 19) and Moses, Fosse (9). LPMike Ph1pps and one Irom Bill Dunning (4 3) HR- Aparicio
12 nd )
Nelsen.
Ward Walsh scored on an 11- New York 001 001 OJD- 5 a o
yard run with less than a Delrol t
0001100 ooo- o 3 1
minute remaimng to give
Stolllemyre (14-16) and M\Jn.
; Lollch , Zachary (9) ond
Houston the tie with New son
Freehan LP-Loloch 120·12) HR.
Orleans, Archie Manning Clarke IJrdl.
threw two touchdown passes in
the fourth quarter to account Oakland
000 001 060- 7 7 2
Texas
100 000 !DO- 2 6 2
for the Saints' scoring,
Holtzman , F&lt;ngers (6), Lock·
In the other five games er Ia) and Tenace; Hand,
Saturday besides the st. Louis Panther (8) , Lawson Ia) ,
Broberg I&amp;) and Bollings WP·
vi ctory over Chicago, Dallas Fingers
(9 6) . LP-Panther.(5·9)
topped Oakland, 16-10, Green
000 oo1 ooo- 1 4 1
Bay blanked Kansas City, 20-0, Monn
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS'·
Clly
200 000 Ol x- 3 50
Pi Its burgh tied Washington, 10. Kan
Woodson, LaRoche (a) and
10, the New York Jets tied San Borgmann ; Drago (11 ·15) and
Pomer:olv
Diego, 20.20, and Allonta Kork~atrick LP Woodson 112·
•
•
I' 1
routed Cioclnnatl, 44-!4.
14l.
RS
Mayberry
l19th)
,
Kil
·
9
to
9
Daily-sunday
1·9
lebrew (.23rd) . •
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ __;;...;;,;;;,;;;;;,.;.;;.._ _ _ _..,

the

'

700

wMal'n

targets in and around Hanoi
Sunday. Four military garri·
sons never before hit in the
five-month-old bombing resumption of North Vietnam
were hit by warplanes from
two American fighter wings.
Sunday marked the second
day of atr stril,&lt;es in the Hanoi
area by the U.S. Air Force.
Spokesmen refused to say what
targets they hit Saturday,
however, "because we had no
confirmed BDA (bomb
damage assessment) ,"
Military sources told UP!
reporter Edward Bassett
govermnenl troops pulled out
of Tien Phuoc district capital,
38 rmles south of Da Nang,
after a week of heavy fighting
for the strategic town . "The
pullout was Justified because
there are no good defensive
positions in the town," a source
told Bassett.
The source said the South
Vietnamese retreated from the
town because they thought they
could hold orr Communist
attacks more successfully
from other pos1t1ons.
Military spokesmen m
Saigon sa1d 29 Americans were
wounded m a Communist
rocket barrage on B1en Hoa
Airbase, 14 miles northeast of
the capital, in one of three
shelhng attacks Sunday on U.S.
bases . No casualties were
reported m the other two
One of the !()().pound rockets
slammed into 200 stored bomhs
and blew them up, military
sources said, destroymg four
South V1etnamese Army tanks,
killing two government troops
and wounding 10 other~ in
addition to the Americans.
Late Sunday and early today,

SAIGON (UPI) - U.S. jet
fighter-bombers Sunday
blast~d a strategic bridge m
North Vietnam and hit targets
never before attacked in the
current bombmg campaign,
U.S. spokesmen said today.
One jet war shot down and the
pilot is missing.
In South Vietnam, 45 Amerl·
cans were injured Sunday
when a stack of 200 South
VIetnamese Air Force bombs
blew up at the Bien Hoa rurbase, 14 miles northeast of
Saigon. The incident was
initially reported as a rocket
attack that wounded 29
Americans, but the U.S.
Command in an updated report
today
said
additional
Americans were wounded and
it was believed to have been an
acc1dent or the work of
Communist infiltrators.
Two South Vietnamese soldiers were killed in the explosion, spokesmen said, and
2ll wounded.Spokesmen said
some of the American casuallies were caused by Dying
bomb fragments while others
occurred during the scramble
to lind cover.
The U.S. Command sa1d
pilots flew 321l ralds into North
Vietnam Sunday, the most m
nearly a month. Spokesmen
said a Navy A7 Corsair was
shot down 14 miles southwest of
Hano1, the 1,019th U.S. plane
lost over the North since the alr
war began more than e•ghl
years ago. The pilot was listed
as missing.
Military officials said jets
armed with laser-guided
bomhs swept over Hanoi and
destroyed three spans of the
mile-long Paul Doumer
Bridge, linking the capital with
the country's maJor port city of
Haiphong. The spokesmen said
three other spans of the bridge
were damaged and that its
steel and concrete underpinnmgs were ''heavily"
damaged. Other Jets hit four
military garrisons for the first
lime since the air war over the
North was resumed April 6.

~
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(o!

$(;,, . ............... .
0&gt;0°'4d II I &lt; •00 0 01h U
""'"

" ' '" ' ' ' "

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LODGE TO MEET
A regular meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will
be held at 8 p m. Thursday at
th e hall. All master masons are
InVlled
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Sammy Kay posted a 1:59 4-5
mile Saturday mght m wmnlng
the featured race at Scioto
Downs
Rusty Widower
fimshed a neck back and Hal
Buyler was third .
Ll l Miss Thompson and
Brenna Scott won the hrst two
races to return $207 on a 3-6
nightly double combination.

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

The U.S. command said
three other spans of the bridge
were damaged by the 2,000pound bomhs and that its steel
and concrete underpiMmgs
were "heavily" damaged.
Thailand-based F4 Phantom~· last 811 t11e "ridge over
North Vietnam's" Red River
May 10 and 11. Pilots at that
lime reported blasting it badly
enough to render it unusable.
The North VIetnamese had
s1nce repaired it, spokesmen
said.
Waves of other Jet fighterbombers attacked a se ries of

G

U.S. B52 bombers flew three
missions in the Tlen Phuoc
area, dumping about250 tons of·
explosives on suspected Com·
munlst positions. U.S. command spokesmen said results
of the raids were not known.
The Saigon command said
heavy fighting Sunday broke
out near Baslogne Base, 12
miles southwest of the old
imperial capital of Hue, where
Communist gunners hit a
government unit with 400
rocket, artillery and mortar
rounds . The Saigon troops
counterattacked and with the
aid of air strikes and artillery,
killed 38North Vietnamese ala
cost of 10 government soldiers
woun&lt;led, the command said.
In the Central Highlands
province of Pleiku near Thanh
An, a district capital 220 miles
north of Saigon, spokesmen
said renewed fighting claimed
17 North Vietnamese lives at a
cost of three government
troops dead and 19 wounded.

IS CELEBRATING
WITH A

20th
''

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'·

ANNIVERSARY

SALE
1952-1972

. , . ,•• ,,....

O•••

' '" ' ' " ' ' ' '

o

•

•;

•"

1

'&lt;

i&amp; s'ocT~r·:·:}·:r Kole Trio Signed for Winter Season
Green Thumb
Notes . ...

;,:Calendarli

MONDAY
RIVERVJCW PTA Monday,
of Meigs
7:30 p.m. at Rive rview
County Garden Club members.
Elementary. R1verv1ew 4-H
Club in charge of program.
Flag ceremony by Boy Scouts.
Everyone welcome to attend.
Refreshments will he served .
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
No.
53 DAY Monday, 7:30p.m
BY MRS. JAMES NICHOLSON
Members and wives invited
Rutland Garden Club
Relreshments.
September and October are the best months to plant the
SALEM CENTER PTA
spring blooming Dowers.
Monday, 7:30p.m. at school. 4While the period can he extended into November and earlv H Club m charge of program.
December if the ground is still open, early planting 1s best as it Fathers especially mv1ted to
provides sufficient lime for rooting before the soil gets too cold. attend. Refreshments
Spade the locahon thoroughly, and if the soil is too poor, work m
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p m.
liberal applications of bonemeal or well-rotted manure.
Monday, get-acquamted mght
Bulbs should l!e spaced_ in accordance with the Safety patrol parents to meet
nora! e(fect that is desired. Agood plan to follow is to allow twice after regular meeting, also
the diameter of a bulb between every two, and to plant so that the ways and means committee
top of the bulb Is about3 inches below the ground when covered in meeting, to discuss proJect
the case of most of the larger bulbs, and 112 to 2inches below for plans.
smaller kinds such as Crocus, Galantus, etc.
EIGHT and Forty, Meigs
Uly bulhs should go considerably deeper
County Salon 710, home of Mrs.
Since no bulb can nouriSh if crowded by other plants, it 1s Mary Martin, 7:30 Monday
important to select a location that provides ample light and mght.
space,
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
Below are Ideas for three different effects which are very 7:30 p. m. Monday , home of
pretty : (I ) A border of Narc1ssus and Early Tuhps; (2) Tulips Mrs. Thelma McMurray,
w1th an edging of Hyacinths, and (3), a naturalized planting of Mason, W. Va .
Narcls'sus.
UNITED METHODIST
The first batch of things to plant at once mclude Colchicums. W,omen, .Heath 9hurch,
Crocuses of all types, Schillas, Puchkinias, Galanthuses, Leu- Middleport, 7:30Monday night.
rojums, Eranthises and all those other delightful little things so Mrs. Harry Chesher to have
few people ever grow. H not planted right away some of these, devotions; Mrs. Ruth 8uler to
such as Erathises and Hardy Cyclamens, may dry up and die in present the lesson "Women In
two or three weeks .
Ghana." Mrs. Elizabeth Hibbs,
The daffodils can go mto the ground as soon as they arrive, or Mrs. Geneva Yates and Mrs.
il you have your own, be transplanted any time now Plant your Onn Smith, hostesses
tuhps in cold soli, If you plant them In warm soil they may send
TUESDAY
up shoots with no supportmg roots, and that is the end of these
EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE
bulbs. They are not like the well-behaved daffodils that imof the Racme Elementary PTA
mediately form roots but no shoots.
There are many varieties of Daffodils, Tulips, Hyacinths will meet Tuesday at 7·30 p. m.
which will bloom over a long perind of time. By consulting a bulb at the grade school.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
catalogue you can select bulbs to have continuous blooms. The
Club,
7.30 Tuesday at the
cut flowers make pretty arrangements w1th just their own
Columbus
and Southern Ohio
foliage.
Electric Co. office, Mrs. Walter
Hayes, hostess cha~rman.
EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters Tuesday at high
school at 8 p.m. Movies of
Hannan Trace game will be
Followin g the dmner a shown Refreshments.
Rally Day Will he observed at
the Middleport First Baptist program w111 be presented
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday,
On Sept. 24 youth meetmgs 7:30 p m. at Syracuse
Church Sunday .
A skahng party has been will begm . The Junior B.Y.F Elementary School
planned for the afternoon at the for those in grades four ,
AMERICAN LUTHERAN
Skate-A-Way Rink. There will five ands1x will meet Church Women, St. Paul's
be a charge of 25 cents for the at the church on Sun· Lutheran Church, potluck
use of skates. The church bus day alternoons from 4:45 to dmner at 6 p m. Tuesday
will leave the church at 12:4~ to 5:45. The bus will transport the followed by a• meeting and
travel the regular route to pick children to and from the program on drugs to be
up those who want to par- church, and all children are presented by Pastor Arthur
ti clpote 1n the skalmg party. II invited to participate .
Lund.
will leave the church to go to
The Junior B.Y.F. will be
THE MEIGS Athletic
the rink at 1:30 p.m from the held for the seventh and eighth Boosters Tuesday at 7·30 p.m.
church.
graders from 6:30 to 7·30 p.m. at Meigs H1gh School. ThiS is
Youth and adults of the at the church on Sundays and the f~rst meetmg of the season.
church are being encouraged the adult leaders for this group
WEDNESDAY
to mv1te their friends to JOin in w1ll be Mr and Mrs. James
W.S.C.S. of Forest Run
the activities. A potluck dmner Crow.
Umted Met)lodist Church w1ll
will be held at the church
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Im- meet Wednesday at 7·30 p m
following return from the rink . boden will have charge of the home of Mrs. Denver Holler
Meat and beverage will be Senior High B.Y.F. wh1ch will
POMEROY • Middleport
provided and those attendmg meet every Sunday from 6:30 L10ns Club noon luncheon
are to take a covered d1sh and to 7:30p.m. at the church.
Wednesday at Meigs Inn with
their own table semce.
"Energy Crisis " topic of
program
POMEROY Chapter 80,
RAM, 7:30 p,m , Wednesday ,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Community service projects in November, and a candy sale Long form opening to he ob·
served.
were planned and committees will he held later on.
THURSDAY
The hamburger fry for
were appointed at a meeting
POMEROY
LODGE 164,
Friday night of the Middleport members and their families
F&amp;AM,
will
hold
past masters
4-H Golddiggers at the home of was set for Sept. I4 at the
Mrs Marion Francis, advisor. community pork at 6 p.m. night at 7:30p, m. Thursday at
The members made plans to Meetimg hmes were changed tl1e temple . All Master Masons
remember the children at the to Thursday nights at the are invited .
County Home for Halloween, Francis' home . A nature hike,
the patients at Veterans bird watching, star gazing, and
Memorial Hospital for Thanks· leaf gathering were among the
g1vmg; those at the Meigs program plans discussed, and
County Infirmary for Chnst- tours of the Marietta Museum,
mas and Valentme's Day, and and the Ohw Valley PubliShing
Films of the Holy Land and
the Children 's Home for Co. in Gallipolis were planned. Egypt taken by the Rev. and
Janice Harman presided at Mrs. Ira Wellman of Kanauga
Easter.
the
meeting with April King on their recent tour were
Plans were also made to
gather children's clothing for reading the minutes of the shown at the Thursday night
the Children's Home and to sell organizational meeting. Keith meeting of the Laurel Chff
toothbrushes
and
book Black, committee chairman, Better Health Club held at the
markers this month to finance appointed the following Wellman home ,
the proJects. Nuts wur be sold committees:
Joining the Health Club
April King, Debbie Taylor, members were their families
?i,:';'i:::::~;:;:::::..
&gt;mrm~~~o::ol\11~ Max Geary, Tina Miller and and several neighbors of the
~
Vicki Boyles, refreshments; Wellmans. During the brief
~
Jamce Harman and Debbie business meeting a thank you
·1.
·
Taylor, recreation; Lisa card was ·read from the Earl
Scaggs, Deanne Denny and Roush family, Mrs. Nellie
Brian Taylor, auditors; Keith Tracy and Mrs. Wellman
Black, Alan King, Janice served refreshments. AI·
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Thomas of Harman and Vicki Boyles, lending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Columbus were recent visitors community service; Don Robert Buckley and family,
of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Turner. Geary, Lydia Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
They also visited Richard Allan King, safety; Janice Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr, Mr.
Thomas of Pomeroy, and Mr. Harman and Keith Black, and Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mrs.
and Mrs. Jim Nelson, Chester Health; April Kmg, Debbie Mabel Tracy, Mrs. Bertha
Tylor, and Tina Miller, trans. Parker, Mrs. Georgia Diehl,
Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Casto porta lion; and Debbie Taylor, Mrs. [)Qnna Gilmore, Mrs.
of Ripley were Sunday guests co-treasurer.
Nellie Tracy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Refreshments were serveG Ernest Powell.
of Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mr. and Mrs. Manford Stone by Tina Miller and Mrs.
of Lookout, W. Va.andMr. and Francis after the group
Mrs. Raymond Stone of repeated the Lord's Prayer in
ATTEND MEETING
Maynower, Arkansas, were unison. Games were played.
Mrs. Caddie Wickham and
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Pearl mynolds were In
Edgar Reynolds.
Athens Saturday for an aU-day
Dr. and Mrs. Stanley E.
District
3 meeting of the
Potter and chUdren, Kyle,
Daughters
of Union Veterans
Eric, and Lynn, returned to
CIRCLE TO MEET
held at the Grange Hall. The
their home at Glendale, Calif.
A meeting of the Mtemoon two served as color bearers for
after visiting here with her Circle of Heath United
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olarlel Melhodlll Church ICheduled the ritualistic opening. Mrs.
Wickham and Mrs. Reynoldl
McElhinny. Dr. Potter and
for Thursday hal been poet. are members of Jane Howell
family just recently moved to
poned unW Sept. 21.
Tent of Melga County.
Glendale.

'
A weekly feature

Planting,and Growing Fall Bulbs

Rally Day is Pklnned

Service Projects Planned

Films Shown by
Kanauga Pastor

Middleport
Personal Notes

Eve rytim e you hold yo ur payin your hot little hand, you
promise yourself to salt something
away. But man is wea k. And what
you want toclay seems a lot more
Important than worrying abo ut
what you'll need tomorrow.
Quit kidding yourself.
Jom the Payroll Savmgs Plan
where you work. It's easy. Ju st
specify an amount you want set
aside from your paycheck. Then
that money is used to buy U.S.
Savings Bonds. You never see the
money, so the temptation to spend
1t IS removed. And with every paycheck , your money grow s. So
wh en you need it, you 'll find
~h ec k,

you've got a s izeable amount
st!lshed away. Enough to help out
w1th what tomorrow may bring.
If you can't trust yourself trust
U.S. Savings Bonds. Then 'you'll
have a fund in your future.

TakeJoinstock
in
America.
the Payroll Savings Plan.
Contributed As A Public Service by The O.tly Sentinel

In keeping w1th its 25-year
traditiOn of orrermg area
residents the w1"est vanety of
musical entertainment to suit
every taste, the Tr1-County
Commun1 t y Con c ert
AssociatiOn has scheduled a
concert by the Ronme Kole
Trio for the 19°2-73 concert
season
Their latest albwn descnbes
the Ronnie Kole Trio best ..
11

New

Or leans '

Newest

Sound " In the f1ve years smce
they left the AI flirt Club and
opened their own club. the Trio
has gained such popularity that
they are now known as one of

mired for his great talent but
f&lt;H th e many charitable
benefi ts and app earances
win ch are a daily part of his
hie,
Dickie Taylor, percussionist,
was born in Oak Park, Ill, and '
he has played with several
outstandmg groups, includmg
Jackie Deshannon, before
joimng Ronnie Kole in I962 to
form The Heavyweights.
Everett Lmk, Jr., the
talented bass player of the
Ronme Koie Trio, was born in
New Orlellns, where he began
h1s mu&gt;ICal career with the
cello. Even with the offer of
several scholarships, he jomed
the MuSicians' Union and went
to work on Bourbon Street.
After a bnef stint with Santo
Pecora and h1s Tailgate
Ramblers, he discovered the
Ronme Kole Trw and, for·
tunately for everyone, they
also discovered Everett.
A typ1c•\ concert program
presented by the Trw mcludes
such selections as "Aquarius,
"MacArthur Park," 11 Laura, "
Love Them from "Romeo and
Juliet," as well as New Orleans
s tandards hke " When the
Samts Go Marchmg In" and

the three great acts in the city,
standing shoulder-to-shoulder
w1th Pete Fountam and AI Hlft.
Ronme Kole, who put the
group together, was born in
Chicago, Ill., and began his
career at the age of 11. At 14 he
was playmg professionally and
belonged to several groups
before he formed The
Heavyweights and ulbmately
came to make New Orleans his
home. He has appeared on the
M1ke Douglas and Johnny
Carson Shows. Married and the
father of six children, he IS
deeply mvolved in CIVIC enterprises and is not only ad- "St. Lows Blues."

the Ronnie Kole Trio: New Orleans' Newest Sound

Cookout at Park

CATTLE CIJ'ITING is one of the horse training
demonstrations to be conducted as part of the animal science
exhibit at Farm Science Review.

A cookout was held Sooday
evemng at the Kyger Creek
Employes Park by members of
Group I of the Women's
Assoc1allon of the Middleport
First Umted Presbyterian
Church and their farmbes.
Attending were the Rev. and
Mrs . Dwight Zavitz, Mrs,
Karen Sprouse and Terri
Marie, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Satterfield and Amy, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, [)Qn,
Ernie, Beth and Zandra, Mrs.
Marcella Coleman, Becky and
Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Zirkle, Michelle and Pamela,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks,
PllJ!l, Cindy and Walter Ed·
ward, and Mr, and Mrs. Tom
Kelly, JaneU and Tommy.

2 Honored by Shrine

A recepllon honoring Mrs .
HomeEc Tent Important Bermce
Wmn,
district
chairman of material objectives, and Mrs . Ferne
Stop at Science Review Cheesebrew,
d•slml deputy,
highlighted a meeting of Mary
COLUMBUS - Would you
like to know ahout current
research pertammg to mfants
and children, the 'behnvwr of
materials
in
today 's
refngerators, or · what per·
manent-care labeling m ap·
pare! means to you as a consumer? Well, 1£ so, be sure and
make the home economics tent
one of your stops at the Farm
Science Rev1ew, September 1921.
The theme or this year's
exhibit is "Science Serves the
Consumer" reports Mrs . Betty
Z1mmer, assistant to the
director, OSU School of Home
Economics . Two s11 down
lectures will be offered each of
the three days
Jean Bowers, associate
professor,

management,

housing and equipment, Will
discuss "Consumer Affairs and
Economics" at 10:30 a.m.
Kent Hamdorf, Extension
family life specialist, will talk
about the consequences or the
"Changing Family Goals and
Values" in Amertca today at
1:30 p.m.
Between speakers there w1ll
be continuous showings of
audio-visual programs on
garment and textile problems
and cake preparation.
Other topics of interest to the

homemaker featured at· lhe
Home Economics exhibit will
include the placement of
drapenes in relallon to electric
baseboard heaters , conswner
education in OhiQ grades 7-12,
factors affecting soil removal
in home laundenng, and the
eatmg habits and nutritive
intake of preschoolers.
Remember, other Review
exhibits you'll want to visit
include the horticultural
gardens, the conservation and
recreation area Wllh its own
farm pon~ •nri wilriUfe plan·
lings, and
informative
presentation of all the
departments of the College of
Agriculture
and
Home
Economics.
The b1g farm show's central
exhibit area will be in a new
location this year. It will be
estal)llshed along the north
side of case Road between
Sawmill Road and the
equipment loading dock, just
west of [)Qn Scott Field, the
Umversity airport. Thanks to I·
270 you can drive interstate
from any direction, practically
to the entrance gate.

durmg the recepllon. A cake
decorated w1th replicas of star,
SAME DAY
cross and a shepherd's crook
SERVItE
was served w1th punch, coffee,
In At 9:-0ut At 5
mmts and nuts. Mrs. Pauline
1
•' (ll ~(t
t ');;i.
Atkins ·served 'the punch,' and
Use O.r Free Plrkln~ tot
Shrine 37, Order 6f the While Mrs. Joan Ka tdor presided at
Shrine of Jerusalem Friday the coffee service.
mght at the IOOF hall m
216 E. 2nd, Pomoror
Pomeroy,
The reception was held
following a school of In struction · conducted by Mrs .
Cheesebrew. Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, worthy high
pnestess, presided at the
meeting recognizmg guests
from Marietta and inlrnducing
a distingUished guest, Quenton
McPeak, deputy supreme
MATTRESS &amp; BOX SPRING
watchman of shepherds,
Manetta.
Mrs. Maxine Wmgett
presented the program which
opened with group singing of
"For the Beauty of the Earth ."
Mrs . Clieesebrew gave a
prayer concerning the world
we live in and its joys, and Mrs.
Nellie Tracy gave a reading on
blessings. "Look to This Day"
was the title of a meditation by
Mrs. Cheesebrew. The group
sang "Now the Day Is Over,"
and several other hymns and
familiar tunes.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Winn and Mrs. Cheesebrew

Robinson:s aeaners

SAVE '40.00 NOWI

Mismatch Pairs

BED DIN&amp;
SALE

Sharpen Your Mind•..
&lt;With information from the Middleport

Commission Plan
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Oh10 State Automobile
Association says · it will
"vigorously oppose" state Sen.
Robert Shaw's bill to create an
Ohio Transportation Commission by dissolving the Ohio
Turnpike, State Underground
Parking and State Bridge
Commissions,
The Ohio AAA also said it
could not endorse the
Columbus Republican's
proposal to raise the state
gasoline tax two cents a gallon
if the money is to be used for
other than highway con·
structlon and maintenance, as
"expenditures of this nature
are possible prohibited by the
Ohio Constitution."

(1) In EgypUan religion wbatlype of monument represented
the sun?
(Z) Who was the lint greatcompoaer ofplanomUBic?
(3} What famo111 American actress BDd sillger spent ber
cblldbood ill condltl0111 of estreme poverty, married at the age of
12~. and soon after found employment as a hotel domestic?
(4) Do you lmow wbal Amerlcaa aovellll aad clergymau
born ill 1801 wrote ro~~~~~~~tes of Biblical tlmea illclndillg The
Prince of David (1155) 1111111be Pillar of Fire (1851}?
(5} In Seandillavian mythology, wbo was the god of poetry?
Answen on Page 8.

LAD DROWNED
AKRON (UPI) - James
Walton, 10, of Akron, drowned
Saturday while wading with
two friends in Gorge Dam near
here, Police said the boy had
wandered out from shore,
slipped on a rock, and went
under.

OPTOM ET.RISt.

OFF 1~1: 1-IvU R~ 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 I tLO:.E
AT
ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,

LIMITED
QUANTITY

Q,UILTED TOP
REG. 1119.95 SET

Public Library)

AAA to Oppose

SHIRT
FINISHING

'

SET

MATTRESS &amp; BOX SPRING
HURR Y IN NOW!

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

992-2635

DRAW YOUR AnENTION
in the

Ml DOLE PORT

Yellow
Pages

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroz, 0 ., Sept. u. 1972

' llARNEY

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
LEGAL NOTICE

'

~··

.....
"'
...
•'

Help Wanted

NOTICE ON FILINU

OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

·.

The

state of Ohio,

County . Probate Court .

Meigs

To the Adm i nist rator ot the
es tate : to such of the l ollow i ;,g

· •·

as are residents ot the State of
Oh io , viz : the surviv ing
spouse , the next of kin , the

~·

: ·;

beneficiaries under

the will ;

and to the attorney or attorneys
representing
any
of
lhe
a for em entioned person s :
Hora ce
McE l h i nney ,
Deceased , N-o . 20581 , Mid -

h.

dleport.

Ohio ,

Salisbury

Township .
You are hereby nOtif ied that
th e
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the esta te of the

aforementioned . deceased , late
ot said County, was filed, in th is
Court. Said Invento ry and

..
,

-

\&lt;

•

Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
December with the oldest Toy
Party Plan in the ·Country .
Highest comm issions, No
Cash i Qutlay . Call or write
" Santa's Parties ", Avon Ct.

6; Coleman lamp and heater.

.,
'·
•'·

•
•r

never used ; cow milker ,
com plete , fence charger,
never used ; gas refr igera tor
for
frailer ;
Phi leo
refrig erato r
and
de humidifier .
9-II .3tc

part time office girl; typing
essential. shorthand helpful
but not required ; Write Box

'69 DODGE Coronet, ps, pb,

'
•
·~

bucket~, automatic, vin(l top,
low m1leage, excellen con dition. Leaving state, must

9·11 ·3tc
"
,. - -- - - -

:: Apple Grove
News., ·Events
~

..
:
:··
"
~ .,
~-

•
"
~

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ours of
Tanners Run visited Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohew Monday
evening. Mr. and Mrs. Emory
Ours of New Brighton, Pa.
attended the Ours Reunion
Sunday and visited with the
Donahews also Sunday.
Dale Wallace Hill and Larry
Circle of Florida visited thru
the Labor Day week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mr.

and Mrs. Mike Hill and Mr. and

Mrs. Douglas Circle at CarmeL
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill Sr.
returned to Moore Haven, Fla.
the 19th of Augu8t after a three
weeks vacation with Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe, Mr. Hills brothers and
other relatives and friends .
The local Methodist Church
held a weiner roast at Portland
, Park Monday evening for the
:. young people of the church.
Thirty people attended.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe attended the
Wolle Reunion at Union Carilp
Ground, back of New Haven
Sunday.
Aaron Wolfe spent Labor
Day week end with friends at
Middletown and attended a ball
• game at Cincinnati Saturday
•• evening.
- Mr. and Mrs. Edward Morris
. of Charleston, W. Va. spent
Labor Day week end with the
tatters mother Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Wheeler, Erin, Jason and
. RaclJael Morris returned home
: with them Monday after
spending a week with their
grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Wheeler.
Mr. ;md Mrs. Owen Anderson
spent Sunday with the latters
. brother Lester Rhodes at
: Baden, W. Va .
Labor Day week end guests
: of Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien
' were Mr . and Mrs. Mike
O'Brien and children of
· Columbus, Mr . and Mrs. Ed. ward Barnhart of Stewart, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Groggel
. and children of Columbus spent
' Labor Day week end with Mr.
. and Mrs. Marshall Adams and
Raymond.
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Roush
and son Roger spent Labor Day
week end with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDade at Troy, 0 . and
also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Alonzo Norris and family at
Casstown,
0 . Saturday
evening.

Mrs. Erma Wilson spent
Labor Day week end with Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Van Meter and
her brother, Chester Van
Meter at Morning Star. She
also attended Sunday School at
the Morning Star Church
•. Sunday.
,. Mrs . Erma Wilson and
Chester Van Meter spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
: Mrs. Ray Byers at Tanners

TRY it, you 'll like il - The Sew
&amp; Go Shop in Alfred area; a
new supply of polyester ,just
in ; owner, Mrs.
E. T.
Caloway .

-

REGULATIONS

HELP WANTED, Toy Coun ·

·

No. AC 1043A, only $2 .00.
IC&amp;W sidel
" Rainbow

years ol d, good condit ion. $75 ;
phone 949·3873.

BLIND ADS

Wolfpen

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement .

OFFICE HOURS \

8: 30a.m . 10 5: 00p .m\ Da ily ,
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

News, Notes
Karen Gilkey of Albany
visited with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr. Ronnie Russell stationed
at Norfolk with U.S. Army,
visited his wife, Mrs. Ronnie
Russell, also his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Russell, and
other relatives this weekend.
Also visiting were Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Haggy of Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy,
Jeff of Columbus, were
weekend visitors of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and also visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Bing and daughter.
Mr. John Murphy of
Columbus visied this weekend
with his parents , Mr. and Mrs.
J. R. Murphy and family.
Patricia Thoma, student at
Metridata Institute, visited her
parents, the weekend of August
27th and returned for studies at
Louisville, Ky .
Jo Smith of Concord College
was a weekend visitor of her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Charley
Smith. Charlotte Lambert was
a Sunday dinner guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith and
Jo.
SUllday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
family were Mr. and Mrs .
Harley Pauley of McConnelsville and Mrs. Lena Knapp of
Langsville.
Enjoying potluck at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly,
Stevie, Jeffery and Alesia of
Athens were Mr . and Mrs. Carl
Mourning of Elyria, Mrs.
Kenneth Grover, Joy and
Jennifer, Mrs . Joseph R.
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert, and Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Haning.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning
of Elyria were here to attend
his mother's, Mrs. Goldia
Mournin g,
wedding
on
Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Lee Roush , Rodney,
Cheryl and Joseph Allen of
Logan, were Sunday visitors of
Mrs. Helen Johnson.
The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday , Sept. II ,
the 255th day of 1972 with Ill to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
first quarter.
The

morning

M ercury ,

V enus,

Charge per

select clean used furniture,
guaranteed appliances at the
LOWEST prices in the area at

stars

Mars

are

and

Saturn.
The eveni ng star is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
Ullder the sign of Virgo.
American short story writer
0. Henry was born Sept. II,
1862.
On this day in history:
fn 1777, troops of George
Washington were badly defeated by the British in the Battle
of Brandywine~

KARR'S
BARBER SHOP
Ad is paid for by
Master Barbers Local
No. 400

apartment.

un ·

furni shed, 408 Spr ing Av e.,
Pomeroy .

8-10-tl c

phone 991-6698.

POMEROY

FURNISHED 2 bedroom
apartment. adults only , L - - - - - - - - Middleport, 992·3874.
9·101fc 1970 HONDA CL 350, low
--------~

mileage, excellent con dition,
2 helmets included . For more
information call 985·3989.
9.1() .Jtp

EXPANOO mobile home fur ·
nished , utilities paid , Mrs.
Pearl Williams , phone 992-

738&lt; or 991·7133.

- - -- - - - - 9-I0-3tc CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
:c=-=:-;-----,:-:----,--...,.---zig .zag sewing mach ine . For
8 ROOM house with 4 bedrooms ,

'

HHEIL"
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG
Window •
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992 -2448
Pomeroy,

o.

unfur,ished

our property. Jacob Holman ,
Rt . 1, Racine.

model. Complete with a ll
cleaning attachments and

and bath located on Second
St ., Pomeroy; references

but cleans and looks I ike new .

NO SQUIRREL hunling on
Starling Massar property.

-~~~~~~_:
9· 8-3tp
NO f.!U NTIN G on Mr . Roberls,
Bob Pickett property, in Long
Hollow.

uses paper bags . Slightly used

required ; phone 992-5293.
9-6·ffc

Will sell tor $37.25 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-

------

5641.

5 ROOM apartment and ut il ity
room, seco nd floor beh ind

9·10·6tc
--------~

Episcopal Church, Pomeroy, CONTEMPORARY
N.

9-8·3tc

$66.39. Use our budget plan .
Cal l 9917085 .
9·10·6lc

3 ROOM housetrailer on Lon,g
Stree t, Rutland, phone . 7424463.

9-8-31c

MAPLE st.ereo .radio com bination, AM-FM radio, 4
speed changer, 4 speaker
sound system. Balance $78.53.
Use our budget plan . Call 992-

· !=or Sale
CAMPING

TRAILER ,

7085.

Sha sta , like new . Phone 985·

3849 .

9·10·6tc
~----___:
9-7-30tc 5 GUNS and 1.72 acre lol; phone
742-3656.
IN , Singer
9·10-2tp

Sewing Machine . Will se ll for
sma ll balance of $36 .2 1 or
payments may be arranged .

Phone 992 -5331.

Console

Stereo, AM.fM radi o. 4 speed
changer, 4 speaker sound
system. Walnut fin ishe d
veneer cabinet . Balance

W.

------

9·8·3tc

------

and --~-~
. ------

8-19·30tc AUTOMOBILE Insurance be!in
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's llcense? Call 992

2966.

Real Estate For Sale

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Heater Core.
Nothan Biggs
Radiator Speciali•t

~~~~~--

1969 HONDA Scrambler, 175
c.c. phone 992-7016.
_
.1fc
_
__ _ _ ____
9-__:
I0-3tc
97

Lisle,

MUST

RL\CTlVATI!

•TH!.

SlAP!."'T.:!

Syracuse,

V.

IF WE MUST,
'W-WE

V.

M·MUST

----------

we

furnace heat, double garage .
Service .
Sharpen Scissors.
outbuilding ,
77-100 acres,
29 tt
Harrisonvill'e, Dale Williams, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_· · c
phone 742.-4837 .

6UT1
6E551.E: ....... I'M
AFAAID I DON'T

condition . Phone 949-2113 .

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

NOTICE TO

110 Mechanic Street

revised code, that the tu
returns of Melos County, lor th e
year 1972 h.eave been revised and
thf "Valuat ions comp leted and •
are open for public inspection at
the off ice of the County Auditor
in lhe Courk*uu , Pomeroy ,
Ohio . COm~liJttts· !galnst any
valultlon or~AINISment, except
the valuations fiKed and
assessmenfs made by ·the Tax
Commissi oner of Ohio, w ill be
heard by the County . Board ol
Revision, at ils office in the
Cour t House. Pomeroy . Ohio, on
or aller August 30, 1972 .
Complaints must be made In
writ ing , on blanks furn ished by
the County Auditor and f iled in.
his off ice on or before the t ime
limited for payment of taxes tor
the f irst halt year , or at any
time during wh ich 1a xes are
re cei ved
by
the
County
TreaslJrer , withOlJI penalty 'for
the firs l h"1f year .
Gordon H. Caldwell
Auditor of Meigs County

Ponieroy, Ohio 45769
doors and lNindcfwti. Aluminum siding . A neat house on a

bath. natural ga s forced air furnac e. Nice kitchen wth lots
ol cabine t space and cook units . Rec . room, carport. Only

Sl/,500.00 .
7 ACRES

NEAR LY NEW design . Cook

NEAR TOWN
4 bedrooms, 1'1&gt; balhs, split level

units ,

basement .

All

electric

home .

$30.000.00.
NICE HOME
3 BEDROOMS - Office space, gas firepla ce with book
shelves. Nice modern kitchen with disposal. re~rigerator ·
freezer and modern stove w ith oven over . 2 car garage .
Stor m doors and windows.

HOT WATER HEAT
3 BEDROOMS - Nice kitchen, bath, dining and larg e
lti.ooo.oo
IN THE COUNTRY - i'fbedrooms, larg e kitchen with

IF INTERESTED CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEE. WE'Ll LOCATE THE LINES AND SHOW YOU
THROUGH . THIS WILL SAVE YOUR TIME. AND
MONEY.

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
llnWa.hlngton Blvd.
•23-7521
BELPRE,O.
·.
·

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE In Long aoftom phcin~··
· 985-3529.
'
6- ll ·lfC
-:-::=-::::-:--~:-:--.,;,~;;_::,

LOTS ON Wright Street,
Pomeroy ; phone 742-5930. ·
8·29·121c

---~~--

evenings

WILT TllOU EAT
CORN BREAO,

CI-IILO?

.M erlin Woodruft, Urbana

Ohto

(2 wcls.)

t a,Goad

U-toa
frazzle

!2. Telegram
13. Unpa1at-

_ _ _ _ __.
able .
...
1$.-up
'

For uta log and information,
con1act :
.

'1HI! T!l.f'ti510H

5TATIOH, TERRY All~

~~
1 ~

i

mTtN PI5CO'II:R
TtiAT 5ANGeR KELT'S

\,_~~=--.J
oJ

'

I

' '• I''

I '1f •, '

1172 GrondvlewAvenut
Columbus, Ohto 43212
Phone 614-484.3243

·GUN' roES NOT

61\'e H~A
ALISO!

~mCT

rlllJ11Willl1Jl; IJu.J ~Maw Me~ -J ~

DOWN
I.-proc-

lty UE NIH AUN OL f&gt; dflfl non

essing

form four ordinary words.

Yesterday's Answer
19. Does a
30. Junipero
shoeof Call·

6. Puncture

7. Priestly
vestment
8. Sobering
up
(3 wds.)
9. Grand
Inquisi-

tor's

maker"s

specialty
11. Regjatered
16. Raison
d' -

job
20.Sudden
descent
23. Plug
24. Footwear
for
Mercury
25. Whack
27. Swiss

style

12. Court
attendant

:~~~hor

~~:~·

17. Chinese

bouse

(ato,dled)
18.Movle
shot
!7, Obstruct
za, Corrlda
shouts
2t. lod!IDS
of Arizona
S1. Face (sl.l
32.Manhandle
33, Egyptian
sollr
deity·

~~oo-

fornia

pagoda

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J

rJ

COULD SE ·
LOOSE HASIT5

IN JAPAN.

t~clrcled

to form
the aurpriH anawer,
u
Now
uranre
!etten
~~;;~~~~~;i~~~·u;orrnted by the above cartoon.
1

._I_PI'iii_III:..;;:SIIII=IISI=-

1

1

=..:.:..___j, ( I

1 IIISWII=
·

I I 1 XX)
(A.wen lo ...rnw)

lunolol.., QUILT MACAW IUIIL'f IMMUNI
Sttvrd•f'•
A..werl

"11 ee•" - bill co..W 6e ,.,.. G
Uor! .. -"AII MAIL"

M'&lt; DAD
SA'&lt;S THAT LIFE

DO '{OU THINK HE'S RI6HT?

15 LIKE A

GAME .OF GOLF

matter

st. Hairdo

Au to . ·

atyle
fl, Young
bird of
prey

water,
level
control.
Llnl
F liter or Power
Fin Agltetor . ·

. -. .

Ptrm1-Press
M1yl1g
Hila of Htat

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

Ill LONGFELLOW
·One letter simply etands for another. In this sample A Is
1IHd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formatio~ of the words are all
llln.ta. Eoch day the code !.etters are dilereat.

heat . No hot apota,
no overdrylng .
Fine Mesh L.lni

Filter.

·'

Wt lptCIIIhtln

RUTLAND
741-4211

MAYTAO

CIIYPTOQUOTES

FURNITURE . R~~~~:·'
Arnold Graft

how to work it:

AXYDLB.AAXK

Dryers
Surround· clothes
with Qtntle , even

B WK Y U Q Z

A II A

BK.SAJ.-NIYFKO

Rutland
•

l~E

Unscramble these four Jumble~
one letter to each _square, to

2. Men·
nooite
3. Disillusionment
(2 wcls.)
4. Before
5. Drawing
need

S7, Corrlda
beut
38. Quantity
of
printed

Big Copoclty
Moytog
Iem ps .

Arl'fAIIANCfOH
'V.I.P. UlftR TH~

(C 1972 King Features Syndicate, Inc .)

ll.Froma
distance

36, OrlglDal

Autom111u
2 speect operation .
Choice of wate r

Would you like to make a
change but can't do a thing
until you sell your present
property? THEN LIST
WITH US where a constant
procession of buyers will
bring action.
1
A CALL WILL BRING ALL
DETAILS.
.

U , Progress;
travel
(2 wds.)
u:curreot
If, Victoria's
consort
U . Peer
Gynt's
mother
16. Watch
u.summer
(Fr.)

18.Muat

Auctioneer :

We talk.to you

river

DICK TRACY

15 Commercial Cows
Cows and Calves
Bred Females
Open Females
Club Calf Prospects
ALL CATTLE GRADED
PRIOR TO SALE

LACK OF CASH?

.o._..;.__

L Challenge
5. Uocorrupt
11. Asian

Females.
20 1te Females
·63 JJ, Females
34 1h Females

HANDS TIED FOR ·

CLELAND REALTY
6111 E. Molin St.
Pomeroy
992·2259
..,~..~~~~.,-

ACROSS

180 - Females - 180
10- Bull• - 10
LARGEST SELECTION
EVER
.
SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE
10 Commercial Bull•
&lt;8 Purebreds and 15-16

992 -3325

Soturday's Cryptoquote: WE CANNOT BANISH DANGERS
BUT WE CAN BANISH FEABS. WE MUST NOT DEMEAN
LIFE BY STANDING IN AWE OF DEATH.- DAVID SARN·
OFF

~-";r'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

lancaster, Ohio

Auto Sales

9-8-3tc

~
9-11

ASSOCIATION
Sixth Annual
FALL
ROUND-UP SALE
Saturday, Sept. 2J, 1972
Sa leal I :00 P.M.
PRODUCERS
LIVESTOCK YARDS

mine . 3 bedroom home. 2 barns, and ~everal outbuild ings .
Minerals and nice clear farm pond on state route . 100
acres of good clean pasture . 35 acres of meadow .

992-3502 ,

·,

CHAROLAIS

$7500.00
RUTLAND---2 bedrooms. modern bath, nice kltchrn, gas
heat . Ut ility building. garage. and garden near school.
142 ACRES
SALEM TOWNSHIP - Only a few miles lo the new coal

phone

·..g

OHIO STATE

stove and refrigerator . 2 wells on good gravel road .

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

;·.

8·30 ·10tc

living . Modern gas boiler, lots of closet space . Fenced
yard and carport . Only $20,000 .00 .

------

~0 1 9 .

CON~DER MY~""'"

TAXPAYERS
Not ice Is hereby given, in
compliance w llh section 5715 . 17

WMP0/1390

'66 VOLKSWAGEN ; phone 992·

UNDERSri\ND ••..

LEGAL NOTICE

____

~-~~~~-

WINNIE,)'QI.J'DfiE SUR·
PRISED HOW
ADJUST.

~-----9-10 . 61 P Real Estate For Sale

-----,...--

'Complote mobile homo
'69 PLYMOUTH GTX 440, 4 service - plus gigantic
speed ; phone 992./624 .
of mobile home• . '
9-B·6fp 'dlspfay
always available at ...
,. 1

'THS YARPI

I'M QI.IITE RESILIENT;

9·1·tf c

fjke t

Sentinel - - - - - -

WHEiof I BOU&amp;Hl'
THAT WATCHD06
THE MAN SAlt:' HE
WOULDN'T LET'
ANYIItmY IN'TO

" ........
.. ,, ......,... ._
.......
...., ,

ching service; top soli , 1111
dirl , limestone ; B&amp;K Ex cava ting . Phone 992 ·5367,
Di ck Karr, Jr .

STEREO. freight APPLES , Fitzpatrick Orchar ds, State Route 689.
damaged, in beautiful walnut
consol e. Will sell for $101.50 or Phone Wilkesvi lle 669-3785. RACINE - 10 room house~ PT PLEASANT - 6 room
8·30·tfc
payS1 .50perweek . Ph011e992house , 11!2 baths, recreation
bath, basement, garage, two
5331.
room , new built .in kitchen,
.l
ots.
Phone
949·4313.
'
9-7-tfc BUNDY E ftat clarinet, good
4-5-tfp' must sel l, leaving town . Days

8 TRACK

o e

The

TI4EN. WE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
representative. For fre~
estimates, phone Charle~

~~~~~~-

IN

tT'SAGREED

and ra iling. ·A. Jacob, sales'

~~~~~~-

CARRIERS
WANTED

• •• Wf&lt;11111ltE1 •• -

doors and windows, carp'orts ,;
marquees. aluminum 'siding

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
7 ROOM house. bat~. hot water . Authorized Singer Sales and

9-10-3tc
phone 675·1372.
•;, TON Ford pickup ; pigs;
-~~--~~-9....:·8-31c 1950
5 ROOM house for sale, one
8-30.tfc
cows; 22 rifle; phone 247 -2161.
third acre ground , front
9-6-51c USED CHRYSLER. 125,000
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
porch, full basement . S. D.
BTU LP gas furna ce with
wigs, more new products - -- - - Busk irk . 341 Page St., Mid- OLD house &amp; ··lot, can be
duct
pipe,
Magic
Chef
used
coming soon . For free
f inanced; phone 992 .5786.
dl epor t.
BUNDY trom bone, excellent
LP gas range . See Marvin
demonstration, phone 9929-8-6tc
condition,
cal
l
949
-4951.
White, Flatwoods, or ca ll 992 · -~-~~~~.:..
9·..:..
11 - 3tp - -- - - 5113.
9-10-3tc
6780.
8·1/.tfc
-----9-11 ·3lp 5 ROOMS and bath, close to · ,-~---------"'
POODLE puppies. Sliver To~,
school in Syracuse. Phone 9925162.
Employment Wanted
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- Mb'l H
f
Sal
.
9-10·6fc
5443.
'
1
omes or e
__:
BLOCK Laying by contract .
15
8
- . -tfc l·tASfj pa id for all ma1&lt;es ana.
Phone 992.336&lt;.
_C_ _ _ _ _ _ _..:...__
models of mobile homes. :
9·7-11tc
OAL, Limes tone, Excelsior
Phqne area code 614-423-9531'.
peiSOrL
Salt Work s, E. Main St..
·41311' 1
WORK Wanted - housework or
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
-----'-.,.,.------·....:· c
babysitting, E ~ 'll &amp; Broadway
4-12-ttc
'
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
St reets •. Front apartment
downsta~rs, Racine, Oh io.
or used mobile home, fry
WHITE Quails, Phone 985- Kanauga Mobile Home Sal••·
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___9:__:·6·6fp BOB
3972, John Thomas, Rt . 2, Box
Kanauga, Ohio.
98, Leon, W. Va .
7-16-301c
9·3·6fc
For Sale or Trade
ON YOUR
DIAL
2 - 60,000 BTU gas stoves . VERY GOO
'
Phone 992·2343 or see at mj
D used trumpet,
.t!o-----,..........:..---0...!
Vine St.. Middleporl .
S&lt;5. Phone 949-2755.
' Air Conditioners
9-5·61c
•Awnings
-~-----__:_
9·_::
10-3t c
·• Underpinni~g

Help Wanted

U'LABNER

6-15-lf&lt; SEE· US FOR : Awnings, storm

ni ce lot. Only $7500.00.
' '
COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - 3 bedrooms with large closets. nice

4 ROOM furn ished apartment

16'

baSements ,
attics
cellars; phone 9~9- 322 1 .

9·10-6tc

4-12-tfc ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe

Ohio . Contact Dr .
Compton, 992 ·2920 .

SOME 'OLI&gt; MISS:!

FI'GGENGe.S.

CONSTRUCTION. SEPTIC tanks clean-ed. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn. '
porch repair and
662-3035.
eleclrical; phone 742 -4286.
2-12-llc'
8 - 16 ~30tc

NEW LISTING
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace. Storm

~~~- -~~-

1DTAKEON

DRIVERS ...

roofing,

Choice of carry ing case or
sewing stand . $49 .80 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-

56&lt;1.

~-~---

JU ST TAKEN

NO HUNTING or trespassing on

ar!~

apartments .

"hone 992-5434.

M!SSI $SIPPI,

... STOP TELLING EVERYONE
TM SPLITT! NG TO CI1E'CK OUT

J.ON:;E~

PRICE

etc. Pa int sligh tly blemished .

9-10·6fc

3 AND 4 ROVM furnished

-

606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0 .

sew ing
st ret ch
hbrics.
buttonholes. fancy designs.

2 baths, laundry room and hot
water heat, modern, phone

9-10-6tc

l'!!JJ.

.,A,~D, I
BE: VISITING
T~E UN!VERGITY 01=

SlOPPING

THEY'VE EVEN
c:ar 11-tE 6U6

For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

Open 8 Till
Monday lhru Saturday

serv ice, all makes. 992 ·2284

and girls . Hurry to

9·3·t1C

- - -- - -

9·10 3fp

~ESEARC~ TRIP TO C~ECK OUT
SC~OOI-S FOR TI-lE "'UTSIDER\&gt;
GUo()E TO CO"LE&lt;SES~..

~~~----

WILL give away kittens . Call

NO HUNTING or trespass ing on
Junior Hun t and Earl Hunt
farms, Long Bottom .

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

I AM LEAV ING ON ANOTI-IER.

------

9.6.6fp

992·2676 .
992-5247 .

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

IY~"E

Johnson and Son, Inc. •

'I'._ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
6iiol Phone 992-2181

BARBER SHOP

5232.

On Most American Cars

YEAH, BEN, I KNOw.

9·3-6tc OUT OF STATE. IDEAL 5. ~EPTIC TANKS CLEANED
3-2·11•,
ACRE RANCH . Lake Con - REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446chas, New Mexico. $2975. No
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell . O'OELL WHEEL allgnml!1
down . No interest. $25 per mo .
Owner
&amp; Operator .
localed at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Bargain For You!
for 119 mos . Vacation
Complete front end service,
S-12-tfc
Paradise . Free Brochure .
tune up and brake service.
Ranchos Lake Conhas : Box
PANTS &amp; JEANS
c.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
Wheels
balanced elec1001 DD, Alameda, California
Complete Service
ca
lly
.
All
work .
troni
94501.
ouaranteed .
R~&gt;A~Mahla
SPECIAL
Phone 949-3821
8·29 -301 P
Racine; Ohio
rates . Phone 742-3232 or
Buy 2 Pairs and
'(rift Bradford
992·3213.
J.u .nc
8 ROOM HOUSE, bath, large
tf
Get 1 PAIR FREE
lot, gas and electric, Rt . 1, .----~----5-·1 - '
DOZER and back hoe work.
All kinds , all sizes for men ,
Middleport. Phone 992·2602.
ponds and septic tanks, dlt .
women, young men, boys
9-7·61c SEWING MAtHINES. RepaL

apartment, 114 Mu l berry
Ave ., Pomeroy, r.eferences;

PATRONIZE A UNION

after 7 p. m . or phone 992-

'5.55

3858.

4 ROOMS &amp; bath furn ished

Notice

Pomeroy . Phone 992 -352S

eHEATING ·
ePLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

Wheel Alignment

5 ROOMS &amp; bath , 2 slory block
house ; gas fo r ced air furna ce, SEWING Machine Service
KUHL'S BARGAIN CEN ·
~/4 acre lot , Rl. 7 &amp; Old Chester
TE R. "at caution tight ", Rl .
dean, oil, adjust, $399, In your
Rd . - $5,500; phone 992-3874.
7, Tuppers Plains , Ohio.
home; phone 992-5331.
8·29.tf c
Closed Mondays; phone 667 ·
8-ll-30tc

For Rent
3 ROOM

haullill dirt. top soil, Dump
trucks .and low.bov for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

-~----

DO YOURSELF A FAVOR -

~-~----

Each additional word 2c .

&amp; End loader work,
ponds. basement, landsea ping. We hav-e 2 · site
doters. 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We · also

9-8-6tp

------

SI.SO tor 50 word minimum .

Do~:er

· ~~~---

6-28-tfc

388·9979.

I~OOFING

EXPERT

EARTH MOVING

BACKHOE AND DOZER work'' READY -MIX
CONCRETE :
Septic tanks installed . Georae
dellv~•ed right to )'OUr '
I.BIIIl Pullons. Phone 992 -247!.
project. Fast and easy . Free:
_ _ __ __ _ __:4·_::25-tfc. estimates . Phone 992 -328•,'
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co.,;
9·8-6tc WILL CUT or lrim trees,
Middleport. Ohio.
i
reasonable ; also clean out
6-Jo.ttc .
FRIGIDAIRE Refrig erator , 10

organs, dishes , clocks, brass
beds , or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 992-6271.

spent Labor Day week end with
- - - -- Mr. and Mrs, Gerald Hayman
1972 OLDS Cutlass. 2 dr . HT. 350
Clifton and
and Keith. They all spent the
cu. in ., V-8. 4 barrel carb.,
dual exhaust, automatrc
week end camping at the
transmission, 'power steering,
Hartford, W. Va.
Robert Lewis camp at Great
power brakes, factory tape
Bend, Mrs. Don Hayman and
deck , deluxe model Interior,
PHONE 992-2156
: Run.
forced air induction hood; A-l
children . accompanied Don
:. Mra. Zelpha Boggess spent home after spending a week
condition ; phone 992-2064.
9-10-6tc
Dai~
: Monday afternoon with Mrs. with her father Robert Lewis
, F1orence Adams.
while Mrs. Lewis underwent
SUB ·CONTRACTDR wanted for 1967 FORD Galaxle 500. 39il cu .
• Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman surgery at Veterans Memorial
in. two door hardtop, power
frammg ; phone 992-3918,
Moddleport.
steering. Phone 992-7016.
' 1111d famUy of Westerville, 0. Hospital, and is stiU a patient
9-I0-3tc
Don Hayman of Laurel, Md., there.
--:----~--...:9~
·6· 61&lt; -------~
~

Valley" and "Snowbells in the
Rockies" (Sacred) "Our Lor~
God Phy sic ian " and "God 's
Sweet Love ." Pick up your
at bum today at Bill and Lee's
Mu sic Center, 116 Main ,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Ask for a free
demonstration, try il! you'll
buy i t! Free records to DJ's,
address : John Mohler, Rt . I,
Box 210, Middleport, Ohio,
4.'i760, phone 992·39 11 .

Lost

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

9·8-6tc
--·~-·---

Four beautiful songs on
Action Records (l.p . album)

Publisher reserves the --------~
se lor s. Santa Claus just told r igThe
ht to edit or reject any ads.
me , something to tell you.
deemed
object io nal .
The
He is very busy, this Christmas publisher will not be responsible
'72;
for more than one incorrect LOST Silver toy poodle,
So joi n our Playhous~ Pody insf'rtion .
Sil ver Run area . Phone 992·
RATES
gang ,
711&lt;.
For' Wan1 Ad Serv ice
Earn money and Green Stamps,
9·10-31p
5
cents
per
Word
one
insertion
too :
Min imum Charge 7Sc '
Give Santa Claus a helping
12 cents per word three WALKER - Bluelick mixed, a !I
hand ,
,
consecutive insertioris .
while with black ti cks , black
This Christmas '72.
18 cents per word slx con .
ears and black over tail ;
CA LL Margaret Fortune, 949· secutive insertions .
reward ; if you know where it
25 Per Cent Discount on paid .
5414 or Barbara Lambert.
is or see it,· phone 992·6959 or
ads and ads paid within 10 davs.
446-3411 .

9·10·ffC

-

"SONGS by: John Mohler" -

oN ~~~~:.:'.~N
Wanted To Buy
. , DEADLINES
OLD Furnl't ure, oa k tabies,
ft P .M . Day Before Publlcatiorf.

sell . Ph one 992·7753 after 4

p.m .

8-16-tlc

OPEH EVES, 1.00 P.M.
f'I)MEROV, OHIO

9-8-6tc

and

~~~~~~-

$3095

Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation - Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . tor,
Day of Publ ication

tomaloes

mangoes . Geraldine Cleland,
Racine, Ohio.

Po111eroy Motor Co.

-~~~~~-

Auto Sales

r

CANNI NG

BelAir 4-door, local l -owner car with very low mileage.
Vinyl inlerior, beige with brown vinyl top, 35() engine,
power steering, power brakes, turbohydramati c, f a~... lory
air conditioned. radio. Like new white·wall tires, fine
condition .

HAVE immediate open ing for

Notice

$3795

1971 CHEVROLET

Any person desiring to file
ex ceptions thereto must file
9-3·tfc
them al least five days prior lo
the date set for hearing .
Given under my hand and EXPERIENCED beautifician
seal of said Court, this 31st day
in high styling needed at once,
of August, 1972.
Pratt's Beauty Salon, phone
Manning 0 . Webster
992·3151.
Judge and ex .officio
Clerk of said Court
9·8·6tc
By Ann B. Watson - -- - - - - - Deputy Clerk WAITRESS wanted day and
191 3, 11
night shif1 ; apply in person ;
Craw's Stea k House.

M en's,
women 's
and
chil dren' s. All sizes, good
condition Old bottles. electric
churn, Mo..lic chain saw , small

and afler 9 p.m .

9-3.61p

1972'CHEVELLE

9- J.tfc.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, giving
full resume w i ~h referen ces,
previous employmen t, and
training .

YARD SALE. Tuesday and
Wednesday, Sept. 12 and 13,
Fourth St., Racine. Clothing,

Phone 985.3842 before 8: 30
r1 .n1 .

·· BUT, HIS
HUM IDITY
AIN 'T WORTH
A f.!OOT

Business Services·

sleering, brak~s, air , tape,
el c ., cxceiiE!n! rondition.

Malibu 4 door, 350 V-8, factory air, turbohydramatic,
· power stee ring, power brakes, gul f green color. with
green viny l roof. vin yl interior trim, radio, white wall
tires, full wheel covers. bumper guards, and all the extras . Low mileage ,

06001 . Tel. 1 12031 673-3455.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.

hearing before th is Court on the
13th day of September , 1972,
10 :00 o 'c lock A .M .

be

..10 DELTA Royale. power

LADIES- Se ll

729 A. C·O The Daily Sentinel,

will

QUALITY

~-~---

ATTENTION

for

Appraisemen t

OF

LOWEEZV~ .

For Safe

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIS

LAD Y. to live in and c;are for
elderly lady star ling Oct. 1.
Good p.:iy, ni ce cond itions.
Phone 74 2 4681 .
9·10-Jtc

YEP--HIS
TEMPERATURE'S
FINE --

IS LEETLE
TATER FEELtN'
BETTER TODAV,

QW l

0 I U- 0 R Q QW I

AKZUON

~;~:..,.~;;·~:..·r.
· ~·.;.·~;,;..;.~ ~~~e~
~-~-~-.-;..--:.

.... _

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroz, 0 ., Sept. u. 1972

' llARNEY

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
LEGAL NOTICE

'

~··

.....
"'
...
•'

Help Wanted

NOTICE ON FILINU

OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

·.

The

state of Ohio,

County . Probate Court .

Meigs

To the Adm i nist rator ot the
es tate : to such of the l ollow i ;,g

· •·

as are residents ot the State of
Oh io , viz : the surviv ing
spouse , the next of kin , the

~·

: ·;

beneficiaries under

the will ;

and to the attorney or attorneys
representing
any
of
lhe
a for em entioned person s :
Hora ce
McE l h i nney ,
Deceased , N-o . 20581 , Mid -

h.

dleport.

Ohio ,

Salisbury

Township .
You are hereby nOtif ied that
th e
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the esta te of the

aforementioned . deceased , late
ot said County, was filed, in th is
Court. Said Invento ry and

..
,

-

\&lt;

•

Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
December with the oldest Toy
Party Plan in the ·Country .
Highest comm issions, No
Cash i Qutlay . Call or write
" Santa's Parties ", Avon Ct.

6; Coleman lamp and heater.

.,
'·
•'·

•
•r

never used ; cow milker ,
com plete , fence charger,
never used ; gas refr igera tor
for
frailer ;
Phi leo
refrig erato r
and
de humidifier .
9-II .3tc

part time office girl; typing
essential. shorthand helpful
but not required ; Write Box

'69 DODGE Coronet, ps, pb,

'
•
·~

bucket~, automatic, vin(l top,
low m1leage, excellen con dition. Leaving state, must

9·11 ·3tc
"
,. - -- - - -

:: Apple Grove
News., ·Events
~

..
:
:··
"
~ .,
~-

•
"
~

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ours of
Tanners Run visited Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohew Monday
evening. Mr. and Mrs. Emory
Ours of New Brighton, Pa.
attended the Ours Reunion
Sunday and visited with the
Donahews also Sunday.
Dale Wallace Hill and Larry
Circle of Florida visited thru
the Labor Day week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mr.

and Mrs. Mike Hill and Mr. and

Mrs. Douglas Circle at CarmeL
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill Sr.
returned to Moore Haven, Fla.
the 19th of Augu8t after a three
weeks vacation with Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe, Mr. Hills brothers and
other relatives and friends .
The local Methodist Church
held a weiner roast at Portland
, Park Monday evening for the
:. young people of the church.
Thirty people attended.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe attended the
Wolle Reunion at Union Carilp
Ground, back of New Haven
Sunday.
Aaron Wolfe spent Labor
Day week end with friends at
Middletown and attended a ball
• game at Cincinnati Saturday
•• evening.
- Mr. and Mrs. Edward Morris
. of Charleston, W. Va. spent
Labor Day week end with the
tatters mother Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Wheeler, Erin, Jason and
. RaclJael Morris returned home
: with them Monday after
spending a week with their
grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Wheeler.
Mr. ;md Mrs. Owen Anderson
spent Sunday with the latters
. brother Lester Rhodes at
: Baden, W. Va .
Labor Day week end guests
: of Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien
' were Mr . and Mrs. Mike
O'Brien and children of
· Columbus, Mr . and Mrs. Ed. ward Barnhart of Stewart, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Groggel
. and children of Columbus spent
' Labor Day week end with Mr.
. and Mrs. Marshall Adams and
Raymond.
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Roush
and son Roger spent Labor Day
week end with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDade at Troy, 0 . and
also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Alonzo Norris and family at
Casstown,
0 . Saturday
evening.

Mrs. Erma Wilson spent
Labor Day week end with Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Van Meter and
her brother, Chester Van
Meter at Morning Star. She
also attended Sunday School at
the Morning Star Church
•. Sunday.
,. Mrs . Erma Wilson and
Chester Van Meter spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
: Mrs. Ray Byers at Tanners

TRY it, you 'll like il - The Sew
&amp; Go Shop in Alfred area; a
new supply of polyester ,just
in ; owner, Mrs.
E. T.
Caloway .

-

REGULATIONS

HELP WANTED, Toy Coun ·

·

No. AC 1043A, only $2 .00.
IC&amp;W sidel
" Rainbow

years ol d, good condit ion. $75 ;
phone 949·3873.

BLIND ADS

Wolfpen

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement .

OFFICE HOURS \

8: 30a.m . 10 5: 00p .m\ Da ily ,
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

News, Notes
Karen Gilkey of Albany
visited with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr. Ronnie Russell stationed
at Norfolk with U.S. Army,
visited his wife, Mrs. Ronnie
Russell, also his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Russell, and
other relatives this weekend.
Also visiting were Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Haggy of Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy,
Jeff of Columbus, were
weekend visitors of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and also visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Bing and daughter.
Mr. John Murphy of
Columbus visied this weekend
with his parents , Mr. and Mrs.
J. R. Murphy and family.
Patricia Thoma, student at
Metridata Institute, visited her
parents, the weekend of August
27th and returned for studies at
Louisville, Ky .
Jo Smith of Concord College
was a weekend visitor of her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Charley
Smith. Charlotte Lambert was
a Sunday dinner guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith and
Jo.
SUllday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
family were Mr. and Mrs .
Harley Pauley of McConnelsville and Mrs. Lena Knapp of
Langsville.
Enjoying potluck at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly,
Stevie, Jeffery and Alesia of
Athens were Mr . and Mrs. Carl
Mourning of Elyria, Mrs.
Kenneth Grover, Joy and
Jennifer, Mrs . Joseph R.
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert, and Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Haning.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning
of Elyria were here to attend
his mother's, Mrs. Goldia
Mournin g,
wedding
on
Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Lee Roush , Rodney,
Cheryl and Joseph Allen of
Logan, were Sunday visitors of
Mrs. Helen Johnson.
The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday , Sept. II ,
the 255th day of 1972 with Ill to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
first quarter.
The

morning

M ercury ,

V enus,

Charge per

select clean used furniture,
guaranteed appliances at the
LOWEST prices in the area at

stars

Mars

are

and

Saturn.
The eveni ng star is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
Ullder the sign of Virgo.
American short story writer
0. Henry was born Sept. II,
1862.
On this day in history:
fn 1777, troops of George
Washington were badly defeated by the British in the Battle
of Brandywine~

KARR'S
BARBER SHOP
Ad is paid for by
Master Barbers Local
No. 400

apartment.

un ·

furni shed, 408 Spr ing Av e.,
Pomeroy .

8-10-tl c

phone 991-6698.

POMEROY

FURNISHED 2 bedroom
apartment. adults only , L - - - - - - - - Middleport, 992·3874.
9·101fc 1970 HONDA CL 350, low
--------~

mileage, excellent con dition,
2 helmets included . For more
information call 985·3989.
9.1() .Jtp

EXPANOO mobile home fur ·
nished , utilities paid , Mrs.
Pearl Williams , phone 992-

738&lt; or 991·7133.

- - -- - - - - 9-I0-3tc CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
:c=-=:-;-----,:-:----,--...,.---zig .zag sewing mach ine . For
8 ROOM house with 4 bedrooms ,

'

HHEIL"
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG
Window •
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992 -2448
Pomeroy,

o.

unfur,ished

our property. Jacob Holman ,
Rt . 1, Racine.

model. Complete with a ll
cleaning attachments and

and bath located on Second
St ., Pomeroy; references

but cleans and looks I ike new .

NO SQUIRREL hunling on
Starling Massar property.

-~~~~~~_:
9· 8-3tp
NO f.!U NTIN G on Mr . Roberls,
Bob Pickett property, in Long
Hollow.

uses paper bags . Slightly used

required ; phone 992-5293.
9-6·ffc

Will sell tor $37.25 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-

------

5641.

5 ROOM apartment and ut il ity
room, seco nd floor beh ind

9·10·6tc
--------~

Episcopal Church, Pomeroy, CONTEMPORARY
N.

9-8·3tc

$66.39. Use our budget plan .
Cal l 9917085 .
9·10·6lc

3 ROOM housetrailer on Lon,g
Stree t, Rutland, phone . 7424463.

9-8-31c

MAPLE st.ereo .radio com bination, AM-FM radio, 4
speed changer, 4 speaker
sound system. Balance $78.53.
Use our budget plan . Call 992-

· !=or Sale
CAMPING

TRAILER ,

7085.

Sha sta , like new . Phone 985·

3849 .

9·10·6tc
~----___:
9-7-30tc 5 GUNS and 1.72 acre lol; phone
742-3656.
IN , Singer
9·10-2tp

Sewing Machine . Will se ll for
sma ll balance of $36 .2 1 or
payments may be arranged .

Phone 992 -5331.

Console

Stereo, AM.fM radi o. 4 speed
changer, 4 speaker sound
system. Walnut fin ishe d
veneer cabinet . Balance

W.

------

9·8·3tc

------

and --~-~
. ------

8-19·30tc AUTOMOBILE Insurance be!in
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's llcense? Call 992

2966.

Real Estate For Sale

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Heater Core.
Nothan Biggs
Radiator Speciali•t

~~~~~--

1969 HONDA Scrambler, 175
c.c. phone 992-7016.
_
.1fc
_
__ _ _ ____
9-__:
I0-3tc
97

Lisle,

MUST

RL\CTlVATI!

•TH!.

SlAP!."'T.:!

Syracuse,

V.

IF WE MUST,
'W-WE

V.

M·MUST

----------

we

furnace heat, double garage .
Service .
Sharpen Scissors.
outbuilding ,
77-100 acres,
29 tt
Harrisonvill'e, Dale Williams, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_· · c
phone 742.-4837 .

6UT1
6E551.E: ....... I'M
AFAAID I DON'T

condition . Phone 949-2113 .

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

NOTICE TO

110 Mechanic Street

revised code, that the tu
returns of Melos County, lor th e
year 1972 h.eave been revised and
thf "Valuat ions comp leted and •
are open for public inspection at
the off ice of the County Auditor
in lhe Courk*uu , Pomeroy ,
Ohio . COm~liJttts· !galnst any
valultlon or~AINISment, except
the valuations fiKed and
assessmenfs made by ·the Tax
Commissi oner of Ohio, w ill be
heard by the County . Board ol
Revision, at ils office in the
Cour t House. Pomeroy . Ohio, on
or aller August 30, 1972 .
Complaints must be made In
writ ing , on blanks furn ished by
the County Auditor and f iled in.
his off ice on or before the t ime
limited for payment of taxes tor
the f irst halt year , or at any
time during wh ich 1a xes are
re cei ved
by
the
County
TreaslJrer , withOlJI penalty 'for
the firs l h"1f year .
Gordon H. Caldwell
Auditor of Meigs County

Ponieroy, Ohio 45769
doors and lNindcfwti. Aluminum siding . A neat house on a

bath. natural ga s forced air furnac e. Nice kitchen wth lots
ol cabine t space and cook units . Rec . room, carport. Only

Sl/,500.00 .
7 ACRES

NEAR LY NEW design . Cook

NEAR TOWN
4 bedrooms, 1'1&gt; balhs, split level

units ,

basement .

All

electric

home .

$30.000.00.
NICE HOME
3 BEDROOMS - Office space, gas firepla ce with book
shelves. Nice modern kitchen with disposal. re~rigerator ·
freezer and modern stove w ith oven over . 2 car garage .
Stor m doors and windows.

HOT WATER HEAT
3 BEDROOMS - Nice kitchen, bath, dining and larg e
lti.ooo.oo
IN THE COUNTRY - i'fbedrooms, larg e kitchen with

IF INTERESTED CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEE. WE'Ll LOCATE THE LINES AND SHOW YOU
THROUGH . THIS WILL SAVE YOUR TIME. AND
MONEY.

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
llnWa.hlngton Blvd.
•23-7521
BELPRE,O.
·.
·

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE In Long aoftom phcin~··
· 985-3529.
'
6- ll ·lfC
-:-::=-::::-:--~:-:--.,;,~;;_::,

LOTS ON Wright Street,
Pomeroy ; phone 742-5930. ·
8·29·121c

---~~--

evenings

WILT TllOU EAT
CORN BREAO,

CI-IILO?

.M erlin Woodruft, Urbana

Ohto

(2 wcls.)

t a,Goad

U-toa
frazzle

!2. Telegram
13. Unpa1at-

_ _ _ _ __.
able .
...
1$.-up
'

For uta log and information,
con1act :
.

'1HI! T!l.f'ti510H

5TATIOH, TERRY All~

~~
1 ~

i

mTtN PI5CO'II:R
TtiAT 5ANGeR KELT'S

\,_~~=--.J
oJ

'

I

' '• I''

I '1f •, '

1172 GrondvlewAvenut
Columbus, Ohto 43212
Phone 614-484.3243

·GUN' roES NOT

61\'e H~A
ALISO!

~mCT

rlllJ11Willl1Jl; IJu.J ~Maw Me~ -J ~

DOWN
I.-proc-

lty UE NIH AUN OL f&gt; dflfl non

essing

form four ordinary words.

Yesterday's Answer
19. Does a
30. Junipero
shoeof Call·

6. Puncture

7. Priestly
vestment
8. Sobering
up
(3 wds.)
9. Grand
Inquisi-

tor's

maker"s

specialty
11. Regjatered
16. Raison
d' -

job
20.Sudden
descent
23. Plug
24. Footwear
for
Mercury
25. Whack
27. Swiss

style

12. Court
attendant

:~~~hor

~~:~·

17. Chinese

bouse

(ato,dled)
18.Movle
shot
!7, Obstruct
za, Corrlda
shouts
2t. lod!IDS
of Arizona
S1. Face (sl.l
32.Manhandle
33, Egyptian
sollr
deity·

~~oo-

fornia

pagoda

&lt;';;=~=~==~=:=~=~

l NAGMI\'

.U"l¥'r&gt;•"'"'"'''""'
..,. ".. , ..... ,.,

~J

t

"q

IIICCK

I I _.,1
L}
[~~·J~:::::=~-L.L--LI [ ,1 I I
LIWOUE

tANZA 1'S

J

rJ

COULD SE ·
LOOSE HASIT5

IN JAPAN.

t~clrcled

to form
the aurpriH anawer,
u
Now
uranre
!etten
~~;;~~~~~;i~~~·u;orrnted by the above cartoon.
1

._I_PI'iii_III:..;;:SIIII=IISI=-

1

1

=..:.:..___j, ( I

1 IIISWII=
·

I I 1 XX)
(A.wen lo ...rnw)

lunolol.., QUILT MACAW IUIIL'f IMMUNI
Sttvrd•f'•
A..werl

"11 ee•" - bill co..W 6e ,.,.. G
Uor! .. -"AII MAIL"

M'&lt; DAD
SA'&lt;S THAT LIFE

DO '{OU THINK HE'S RI6HT?

15 LIKE A

GAME .OF GOLF

matter

st. Hairdo

Au to . ·

atyle
fl, Young
bird of
prey

water,
level
control.
Llnl
F liter or Power
Fin Agltetor . ·

. -. .

Ptrm1-Press
M1yl1g
Hila of Htat

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

Ill LONGFELLOW
·One letter simply etands for another. In this sample A Is
1IHd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formatio~ of the words are all
llln.ta. Eoch day the code !.etters are dilereat.

heat . No hot apota,
no overdrylng .
Fine Mesh L.lni

Filter.

·'

Wt lptCIIIhtln

RUTLAND
741-4211

MAYTAO

CIIYPTOQUOTES

FURNITURE . R~~~~:·'
Arnold Graft

how to work it:

AXYDLB.AAXK

Dryers
Surround· clothes
with Qtntle , even

B WK Y U Q Z

A II A

BK.SAJ.-NIYFKO

Rutland
•

l~E

Unscramble these four Jumble~
one letter to each _square, to

2. Men·
nooite
3. Disillusionment
(2 wcls.)
4. Before
5. Drawing
need

S7, Corrlda
beut
38. Quantity
of
printed

Big Copoclty
Moytog
Iem ps .

Arl'fAIIANCfOH
'V.I.P. UlftR TH~

(C 1972 King Features Syndicate, Inc .)

ll.Froma
distance

36, OrlglDal

Autom111u
2 speect operation .
Choice of wate r

Would you like to make a
change but can't do a thing
until you sell your present
property? THEN LIST
WITH US where a constant
procession of buyers will
bring action.
1
A CALL WILL BRING ALL
DETAILS.
.

U , Progress;
travel
(2 wds.)
u:curreot
If, Victoria's
consort
U . Peer
Gynt's
mother
16. Watch
u.summer
(Fr.)

18.Muat

Auctioneer :

We talk.to you

river

DICK TRACY

15 Commercial Cows
Cows and Calves
Bred Females
Open Females
Club Calf Prospects
ALL CATTLE GRADED
PRIOR TO SALE

LACK OF CASH?

.o._..;.__

L Challenge
5. Uocorrupt
11. Asian

Females.
20 1te Females
·63 JJ, Females
34 1h Females

HANDS TIED FOR ·

CLELAND REALTY
6111 E. Molin St.
Pomeroy
992·2259
..,~..~~~~.,-

ACROSS

180 - Females - 180
10- Bull• - 10
LARGEST SELECTION
EVER
.
SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE
10 Commercial Bull•
&lt;8 Purebreds and 15-16

992 -3325

Soturday's Cryptoquote: WE CANNOT BANISH DANGERS
BUT WE CAN BANISH FEABS. WE MUST NOT DEMEAN
LIFE BY STANDING IN AWE OF DEATH.- DAVID SARN·
OFF

~-";r'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

lancaster, Ohio

Auto Sales

9-8-3tc

~
9-11

ASSOCIATION
Sixth Annual
FALL
ROUND-UP SALE
Saturday, Sept. 2J, 1972
Sa leal I :00 P.M.
PRODUCERS
LIVESTOCK YARDS

mine . 3 bedroom home. 2 barns, and ~everal outbuild ings .
Minerals and nice clear farm pond on state route . 100
acres of good clean pasture . 35 acres of meadow .

992-3502 ,

·,

CHAROLAIS

$7500.00
RUTLAND---2 bedrooms. modern bath, nice kltchrn, gas
heat . Ut ility building. garage. and garden near school.
142 ACRES
SALEM TOWNSHIP - Only a few miles lo the new coal

phone

·..g

OHIO STATE

stove and refrigerator . 2 wells on good gravel road .

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

;·.

8·30 ·10tc

living . Modern gas boiler, lots of closet space . Fenced
yard and carport . Only $20,000 .00 .

------

~0 1 9 .

CON~DER MY~""'"

TAXPAYERS
Not ice Is hereby given, in
compliance w llh section 5715 . 17

WMP0/1390

'66 VOLKSWAGEN ; phone 992·

UNDERSri\ND ••..

LEGAL NOTICE

____

~-~~~~-

WINNIE,)'QI.J'DfiE SUR·
PRISED HOW
ADJUST.

~-----9-10 . 61 P Real Estate For Sale

-----,...--

'Complote mobile homo
'69 PLYMOUTH GTX 440, 4 service - plus gigantic
speed ; phone 992./624 .
of mobile home• . '
9-B·6fp 'dlspfay
always available at ...
,. 1

'THS YARPI

I'M QI.IITE RESILIENT;

9·1·tf c

fjke t

Sentinel - - - - - -

WHEiof I BOU&amp;Hl'
THAT WATCHD06
THE MAN SAlt:' HE
WOULDN'T LET'
ANYIItmY IN'TO

" ........
.. ,, ......,... ._
.......
...., ,

ching service; top soli , 1111
dirl , limestone ; B&amp;K Ex cava ting . Phone 992 ·5367,
Di ck Karr, Jr .

STEREO. freight APPLES , Fitzpatrick Orchar ds, State Route 689.
damaged, in beautiful walnut
consol e. Will sell for $101.50 or Phone Wilkesvi lle 669-3785. RACINE - 10 room house~ PT PLEASANT - 6 room
8·30·tfc
payS1 .50perweek . Ph011e992house , 11!2 baths, recreation
bath, basement, garage, two
5331.
room , new built .in kitchen,
.l
ots.
Phone
949·4313.
'
9-7-tfc BUNDY E ftat clarinet, good
4-5-tfp' must sel l, leaving town . Days

8 TRACK

o e

The

TI4EN. WE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
representative. For fre~
estimates, phone Charle~

~~~~~~-

IN

tT'SAGREED

and ra iling. ·A. Jacob, sales'

~~~~~~-

CARRIERS
WANTED

• •• Wf&lt;11111ltE1 •• -

doors and windows, carp'orts ,;
marquees. aluminum 'siding

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
7 ROOM house. bat~. hot water . Authorized Singer Sales and

9-10-3tc
phone 675·1372.
•;, TON Ford pickup ; pigs;
-~~--~~-9....:·8-31c 1950
5 ROOM house for sale, one
8-30.tfc
cows; 22 rifle; phone 247 -2161.
third acre ground , front
9-6-51c USED CHRYSLER. 125,000
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
porch, full basement . S. D.
BTU LP gas furna ce with
wigs, more new products - -- - - Busk irk . 341 Page St., Mid- OLD house &amp; ··lot, can be
duct
pipe,
Magic
Chef
used
coming soon . For free
f inanced; phone 992 .5786.
dl epor t.
BUNDY trom bone, excellent
LP gas range . See Marvin
demonstration, phone 9929-8-6tc
condition,
cal
l
949
-4951.
White, Flatwoods, or ca ll 992 · -~-~~~~.:..
9·..:..
11 - 3tp - -- - - 5113.
9-10-3tc
6780.
8·1/.tfc
-----9-11 ·3lp 5 ROOMS and bath, close to · ,-~---------"'
POODLE puppies. Sliver To~,
school in Syracuse. Phone 9925162.
Employment Wanted
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- Mb'l H
f
Sal
.
9-10·6fc
5443.
'
1
omes or e
__:
BLOCK Laying by contract .
15
8
- . -tfc l·tASfj pa id for all ma1&lt;es ana.
Phone 992.336&lt;.
_C_ _ _ _ _ _ _..:...__
models of mobile homes. :
9·7-11tc
OAL, Limes tone, Excelsior
Phqne area code 614-423-9531'.
peiSOrL
Salt Work s, E. Main St..
·41311' 1
WORK Wanted - housework or
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
-----'-.,.,.------·....:· c
babysitting, E ~ 'll &amp; Broadway
4-12-ttc
'
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
St reets •. Front apartment
downsta~rs, Racine, Oh io.
or used mobile home, fry
WHITE Quails, Phone 985- Kanauga Mobile Home Sal••·
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___9:__:·6·6fp BOB
3972, John Thomas, Rt . 2, Box
Kanauga, Ohio.
98, Leon, W. Va .
7-16-301c
9·3·6fc
For Sale or Trade
ON YOUR
DIAL
2 - 60,000 BTU gas stoves . VERY GOO
'
Phone 992·2343 or see at mj
D used trumpet,
.t!o-----,..........:..---0...!
Vine St.. Middleporl .
S&lt;5. Phone 949-2755.
' Air Conditioners
9-5·61c
•Awnings
-~-----__:_
9·_::
10-3t c
·• Underpinni~g

Help Wanted

U'LABNER

6-15-lf&lt; SEE· US FOR : Awnings, storm

ni ce lot. Only $7500.00.
' '
COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - 3 bedrooms with large closets. nice

4 ROOM furn ished apartment

16'

baSements ,
attics
cellars; phone 9~9- 322 1 .

9·10-6tc

4-12-tfc ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe

Ohio . Contact Dr .
Compton, 992 ·2920 .

SOME 'OLI&gt; MISS:!

FI'GGENGe.S.

CONSTRUCTION. SEPTIC tanks clean-ed. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn. '
porch repair and
662-3035.
eleclrical; phone 742 -4286.
2-12-llc'
8 - 16 ~30tc

NEW LISTING
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace. Storm

~~~- -~~-

1DTAKEON

DRIVERS ...

roofing,

Choice of carry ing case or
sewing stand . $49 .80 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-

56&lt;1.

~-~---

JU ST TAKEN

NO HUNTING or trespassing on

ar!~

apartments .

"hone 992-5434.

M!SSI $SIPPI,

... STOP TELLING EVERYONE
TM SPLITT! NG TO CI1E'CK OUT

J.ON:;E~

PRICE

etc. Pa int sligh tly blemished .

9-10·6fc

3 AND 4 ROVM furnished

-

606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0 .

sew ing
st ret ch
hbrics.
buttonholes. fancy designs.

2 baths, laundry room and hot
water heat, modern, phone

9-10-6tc

l'!!JJ.

.,A,~D, I
BE: VISITING
T~E UN!VERGITY 01=

SlOPPING

THEY'VE EVEN
c:ar 11-tE 6U6

For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

Open 8 Till
Monday lhru Saturday

serv ice, all makes. 992 ·2284

and girls . Hurry to

9·3·t1C

- - -- - -

9·10 3fp

~ESEARC~ TRIP TO C~ECK OUT
SC~OOI-S FOR TI-lE "'UTSIDER\&gt;
GUo()E TO CO"LE&lt;SES~..

~~~----

WILL give away kittens . Call

NO HUNTING or trespass ing on
Junior Hun t and Earl Hunt
farms, Long Bottom .

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

I AM LEAV ING ON ANOTI-IER.

------

9.6.6fp

992·2676 .
992-5247 .

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

IY~"E

Johnson and Son, Inc. •

'I'._ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
6iiol Phone 992-2181

BARBER SHOP

5232.

On Most American Cars

YEAH, BEN, I KNOw.

9·3-6tc OUT OF STATE. IDEAL 5. ~EPTIC TANKS CLEANED
3-2·11•,
ACRE RANCH . Lake Con - REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446chas, New Mexico. $2975. No
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell . O'OELL WHEEL allgnml!1
down . No interest. $25 per mo .
Owner
&amp; Operator .
localed at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Bargain For You!
for 119 mos . Vacation
Complete front end service,
S-12-tfc
Paradise . Free Brochure .
tune up and brake service.
Ranchos Lake Conhas : Box
PANTS &amp; JEANS
c.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
Wheels
balanced elec1001 DD, Alameda, California
Complete Service
ca
lly
.
All
work .
troni
94501.
ouaranteed .
R~&gt;A~Mahla
SPECIAL
Phone 949-3821
8·29 -301 P
Racine; Ohio
rates . Phone 742-3232 or
Buy 2 Pairs and
'(rift Bradford
992·3213.
J.u .nc
8 ROOM HOUSE, bath, large
tf
Get 1 PAIR FREE
lot, gas and electric, Rt . 1, .----~----5-·1 - '
DOZER and back hoe work.
All kinds , all sizes for men ,
Middleport. Phone 992·2602.
ponds and septic tanks, dlt .
women, young men, boys
9-7·61c SEWING MAtHINES. RepaL

apartment, 114 Mu l berry
Ave ., Pomeroy, r.eferences;

PATRONIZE A UNION

after 7 p. m . or phone 992-

'5.55

3858.

4 ROOMS &amp; bath furn ished

Notice

Pomeroy . Phone 992 -352S

eHEATING ·
ePLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

Wheel Alignment

5 ROOMS &amp; bath , 2 slory block
house ; gas fo r ced air furna ce, SEWING Machine Service
KUHL'S BARGAIN CEN ·
~/4 acre lot , Rl. 7 &amp; Old Chester
TE R. "at caution tight ", Rl .
dean, oil, adjust, $399, In your
Rd . - $5,500; phone 992-3874.
7, Tuppers Plains , Ohio.
home; phone 992-5331.
8·29.tf c
Closed Mondays; phone 667 ·
8-ll-30tc

For Rent
3 ROOM

haullill dirt. top soil, Dump
trucks .and low.bov for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

-~----

DO YOURSELF A FAVOR -

~-~----

Each additional word 2c .

&amp; End loader work,
ponds. basement, landsea ping. We hav-e 2 · site
doters. 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We · also

9-8-6tp

------

SI.SO tor 50 word minimum .

Do~:er

· ~~~---

6-28-tfc

388·9979.

I~OOFING

EXPERT

EARTH MOVING

BACKHOE AND DOZER work'' READY -MIX
CONCRETE :
Septic tanks installed . Georae
dellv~•ed right to )'OUr '
I.BIIIl Pullons. Phone 992 -247!.
project. Fast and easy . Free:
_ _ __ __ _ __:4·_::25-tfc. estimates . Phone 992 -328•,'
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co.,;
9·8-6tc WILL CUT or lrim trees,
Middleport. Ohio.
i
reasonable ; also clean out
6-Jo.ttc .
FRIGIDAIRE Refrig erator , 10

organs, dishes , clocks, brass
beds , or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 992-6271.

spent Labor Day week end with
- - - -- Mr. and Mrs, Gerald Hayman
1972 OLDS Cutlass. 2 dr . HT. 350
Clifton and
and Keith. They all spent the
cu. in ., V-8. 4 barrel carb.,
dual exhaust, automatrc
week end camping at the
transmission, 'power steering,
Hartford, W. Va.
Robert Lewis camp at Great
power brakes, factory tape
Bend, Mrs. Don Hayman and
deck , deluxe model Interior,
PHONE 992-2156
: Run.
forced air induction hood; A-l
children . accompanied Don
:. Mra. Zelpha Boggess spent home after spending a week
condition ; phone 992-2064.
9-10-6tc
Dai~
: Monday afternoon with Mrs. with her father Robert Lewis
, F1orence Adams.
while Mrs. Lewis underwent
SUB ·CONTRACTDR wanted for 1967 FORD Galaxle 500. 39il cu .
• Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman surgery at Veterans Memorial
in. two door hardtop, power
frammg ; phone 992-3918,
Moddleport.
steering. Phone 992-7016.
' 1111d famUy of Westerville, 0. Hospital, and is stiU a patient
9-I0-3tc
Don Hayman of Laurel, Md., there.
--:----~--...:9~
·6· 61&lt; -------~
~

Valley" and "Snowbells in the
Rockies" (Sacred) "Our Lor~
God Phy sic ian " and "God 's
Sweet Love ." Pick up your
at bum today at Bill and Lee's
Mu sic Center, 116 Main ,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Ask for a free
demonstration, try il! you'll
buy i t! Free records to DJ's,
address : John Mohler, Rt . I,
Box 210, Middleport, Ohio,
4.'i760, phone 992·39 11 .

Lost

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

9·8-6tc
--·~-·---

Four beautiful songs on
Action Records (l.p . album)

Publisher reserves the --------~
se lor s. Santa Claus just told r igThe
ht to edit or reject any ads.
me , something to tell you.
deemed
object io nal .
The
He is very busy, this Christmas publisher will not be responsible
'72;
for more than one incorrect LOST Silver toy poodle,
So joi n our Playhous~ Pody insf'rtion .
Sil ver Run area . Phone 992·
RATES
gang ,
711&lt;.
For' Wan1 Ad Serv ice
Earn money and Green Stamps,
9·10-31p
5
cents
per
Word
one
insertion
too :
Min imum Charge 7Sc '
Give Santa Claus a helping
12 cents per word three WALKER - Bluelick mixed, a !I
hand ,
,
consecutive insertioris .
while with black ti cks , black
This Christmas '72.
18 cents per word slx con .
ears and black over tail ;
CA LL Margaret Fortune, 949· secutive insertions .
reward ; if you know where it
25 Per Cent Discount on paid .
5414 or Barbara Lambert.
is or see it,· phone 992·6959 or
ads and ads paid within 10 davs.
446-3411 .

9·10·ffC

-

"SONGS by: John Mohler" -

oN ~~~~:.:'.~N
Wanted To Buy
. , DEADLINES
OLD Furnl't ure, oa k tabies,
ft P .M . Day Before Publlcatiorf.

sell . Ph one 992·7753 after 4

p.m .

8-16-tlc

OPEH EVES, 1.00 P.M.
f'I)MEROV, OHIO

9-8-6tc

and

~~~~~~-

$3095

Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation - Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . tor,
Day of Publ ication

tomaloes

mangoes . Geraldine Cleland,
Racine, Ohio.

Po111eroy Motor Co.

-~~~~~-

Auto Sales

r

CANNI NG

BelAir 4-door, local l -owner car with very low mileage.
Vinyl inlerior, beige with brown vinyl top, 35() engine,
power steering, power brakes, turbohydramati c, f a~... lory
air conditioned. radio. Like new white·wall tires, fine
condition .

HAVE immediate open ing for

Notice

$3795

1971 CHEVROLET

Any person desiring to file
ex ceptions thereto must file
9-3·tfc
them al least five days prior lo
the date set for hearing .
Given under my hand and EXPERIENCED beautifician
seal of said Court, this 31st day
in high styling needed at once,
of August, 1972.
Pratt's Beauty Salon, phone
Manning 0 . Webster
992·3151.
Judge and ex .officio
Clerk of said Court
9·8·6tc
By Ann B. Watson - -- - - - - - Deputy Clerk WAITRESS wanted day and
191 3, 11
night shif1 ; apply in person ;
Craw's Stea k House.

M en's,
women 's
and
chil dren' s. All sizes, good
condition Old bottles. electric
churn, Mo..lic chain saw , small

and afler 9 p.m .

9-3.61p

1972'CHEVELLE

9- J.tfc.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, giving
full resume w i ~h referen ces,
previous employmen t, and
training .

YARD SALE. Tuesday and
Wednesday, Sept. 12 and 13,
Fourth St., Racine. Clothing,

Phone 985.3842 before 8: 30
r1 .n1 .

·· BUT, HIS
HUM IDITY
AIN 'T WORTH
A f.!OOT

Business Services·

sleering, brak~s, air , tape,
el c ., cxceiiE!n! rondition.

Malibu 4 door, 350 V-8, factory air, turbohydramatic,
· power stee ring, power brakes, gul f green color. with
green viny l roof. vin yl interior trim, radio, white wall
tires, full wheel covers. bumper guards, and all the extras . Low mileage ,

06001 . Tel. 1 12031 673-3455.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.

hearing before th is Court on the
13th day of September , 1972,
10 :00 o 'c lock A .M .

be

..10 DELTA Royale. power

LADIES- Se ll

729 A. C·O The Daily Sentinel,

will

QUALITY

~-~---

ATTENTION

for

Appraisemen t

OF

LOWEEZV~ .

For Safe

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIS

LAD Y. to live in and c;are for
elderly lady star ling Oct. 1.
Good p.:iy, ni ce cond itions.
Phone 74 2 4681 .
9·10-Jtc

YEP--HIS
TEMPERATURE'S
FINE --

IS LEETLE
TATER FEELtN'
BETTER TODAV,

QW l

0 I U- 0 R Q QW I

AKZUON

~;~:..,.~;;·~:..·r.
· ~·.;.·~;,;..;.~ ~~~e~
~-~-~-.-;..--:.

.... _

�-The Dailv Sentinel. Mlddleoo~Pomernv. 0 .. Sent. 11..1!1'12

· Guerrillas

Centennial
of Zion Church of Christ Observed
'
THE 10«rH BffiTHDAY OF THE Zion Church of Christ on
the Pomeroy-Harrisonville Road was observed at a homecoming
on Aug. 20. Morning speaker was Mr. Ray Russell who entered
the ministry at Kentucky Christian College as a youth from the
Zioo Church in 1950, and is now pastor of a church in Lexington,
Ky.

. (Continued from page 1)
· telephone lines in the area had
been cut.
It was the first guerrilla
attack in the west bank since
Aug. 10, 1971, whe~ a grenade
was thrown at a tourist bus in
the biblical city of Hebron,
wounding two passengers and
10 pedestrians.
Most guerrilla activity In
recent years has been confined
to the Gaza Strip, formerly
administered by Egypt.
l,!rael struck back with a
vengeance Friday for the
ldlling of its top athletes, and
said Su~day the results might
have been different had its
units been at the West German
airport near Munich Tuesday
night.
"If there had been an Israeli
unit there, most probably the
result would have been different," a military spokesman
said of the unsuccessful West
German rescue attempt of nine
Israeli hostages held by
guerrillas
at
Feurstenfeldbruck Airfield. Two of
the hostages · were killed
earlier.

former pastor.
Approximately 175 persons attended the event with a basket • Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
dinner enjoyed at noon. The Pomeroy National Bank and the
Pomeroy Flower Shop provided floral arrangements for the - Clyde Roy , Racine; Dale .
Wright, Rutland; Paul Jones,
occasion.
At right, above, is Kenneth Eberts of Athens, the pastor of Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
the Zion Church of Christ which is marking a century of history in
Perry Hoffman, Flora
Afternoon speakers were Mr. Eugene Underwood, pastor of the
Meigs County this year. Mr. Eberts is a social worker at the
Williams,
Dale Connolly, Cathy
church for tO years, 195Uil, now at Tuppers Plains, and Mr. C.E.
Chillicothe Correctional Institute. Paul McElroy is Sunday
Searles, lola Howell, Barbara
Shepard, now on the staff of Winston-Salem Bible College, also a
school superintendent.
Douglas, Robert Cwtis, Cora
Christy, Delores CW1diff, Sue
Seelig
and Betty Gilkey.
AT BAND DAY
SUNDAY
ADMISSIONS Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler
Drake, Pomeroy RD. attended William Barrett, Langsville ;
Band Day at Ohio Umversity William Buchanan, Pomeroy;
SAIGON (UPI)--South Viet- replaced, probably in a matter Vietnamese withdrew earlier Saturday. Their grand- Benny Spears, Syracuse ;
nam said today it lost more of months. Mobile, helicopter- reports of a rocket attack at daughter, Pamela Higgins, Cassie Baum, Pomeroy ; Linda
than 70 helicopters Sunday in a borne task forces have been Bien Hoa and said the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roy Lute, Long Bottom ; Gene
series of explosions ·at the used particularly in the possibility of sabotage was Higgins of Westerville, was one Chaney, Minersville: Frances
sprawling Bien Hoa airbase 14 fighting to reopen Highway 13 being investigated.
of the band day participan ts. Alkire, Harrisonville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES miles northeast of Saigon. to the An Loc region 30
John
Reese, Dora Carpenter,
Sabotage was suspected.
miles north of Saigon .
The attacks on the Hanoi
BITTEN
BY
SNAKE
Hazel Russell and Mary
The U.S. command reported
The explosions at Bien Hoa region Sunday knocked out
Paul McDaniel, Middleport, Berkley.
one of the more devastating ·wounded 45 Americans. They three spans of the mile-long
attacks of the war on the Hanoi came when a stockpile of 200 Paul Doumer Bridge linking a custodian al Meigs High
School, was squirrel hunting
area.
South Vietnamese air force Hanoi and Haiphong and Satw·day when he was bitten
Sume of the helicopters were bombs blew up, killing two heavily damaged three others.
RACER KILLED
by
a
snake.
McDaniel
is
in
an
destroyed and others were South Vietnamese soldiers, In addition the raids hit anny
THOMPSON, Ohio (UPI ) hadly damaged in what milita- wounding 20 others, destroying barracks areas four and two a1·ea hospital.
William Levee ~ 30, Lakewood,
ry sources said could be the four South Vietnamese tanks miles from Hanoi, leaving
qualify ing a modified 1939
SALES ARE UP
heaviest Suuth Vietnamese air and heavily damaging a U.S. them in flames and covered
Chevrolet, was killed Saturday
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Retail night when his car crashed at .
loss of the war.
Air Force AC119. The South with smoke.
sales in Ohio during July were the finish line at the T:1ompson
Their loss could cripple
6 pet. above July, 1971, the Drag Raceway here. Track
government military
Center for Business and officials said the car, doing 147
operations in the Saigon
Econo.mic Research at Ohio m.p.h. at the time, ran off the
military district'until they are
State University report s. The course and roiled over .
(Continued from page I)
her homecoming reception in Depere, Wis., next month as one of increase was led by service
the highlights of her one-year reign. The 23-yer.()ld former Miss stations with a 2&gt; pet. jump.
Wisconsin, a political conservative and devout fundamentalist, Deparlment stores sales in·
(1) Obelisk
will return to the small town near Green Bay in mid-October, a creased 13 pet.: lumber·
(2) Frederic Chopin
public figure in her own right and a young woman guaranteed an building materials and drug
(3) Ethel Waters
stores. 12 pet., appliance stores
income exceeding $60,000 during the year.
(4) Joseph Holt Ingraham
Miss Meeuwsen told how she had distributed leaflets at and farm and garden stores. 11
(5) Brag!
peL
football games for President Nixon's campaign in 1968 and said
her Christian beliefs did not allow for approval of premarital sex,
LODGE TO MEET
at least for herself. The winner, a brunette songstress, conceded
White Rose Lodge will meet
at a Sunday morning news conference that her new title will
at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
mean separation from her steady boyfriend, 3ii-year.()ld Tom
American Legion Hall in
September 11 &amp; 12
Camburn, the divorced father of a 3-year.()ld child.
Middleport.

70 Copters Lost In Explosions

News. • • in Briefs

Answers

Walt Disney's

EATER
(lechnicolorJ
Earl Hollimon
Patricia Cro w ley

Colorcartoon :

Cured Duck

tG)

Blue Chip Number Now at II

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The Cincinnati Reds almost
IGJ · certainly will win in the
National League West. The San

1.---------rl
AdultsSl.SO

Children 75c

Show Starts 7p.m.

Francisco Giants have no

chance.
And so attention turns to

By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Buffet ...

AN EVENING
BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5 to q : JQ-$2 .50 all you can eat , (or AI a Carte)

individual goals and several
were reached as the Reds and
Giants spli t a doubleheader
Sunday at Candlestick Park.
The Reds reduced their
magic number for cllnching

the Western Division flag to 11
by winning 8·7 in the first
game. The Giants used the long
ball to win the second game 8-2.
Johnn y Bench of the Reds
had four runs batted in for the
day to lift his season total to
101. He also has 31 homers.
"I go into every season with
three goa ls," Bench said.
"First of ail is to win the
pennant. And from a personal
standpoint I want to hit 30
homers and drive in at least 100

Wide Menu
Choice

Drinks and
Dessert Extra .

&amp;der our r eg ular menu every night 51o 10.

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR
MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
PRETZELS &amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.

You'llbe happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
(

Pleasant Valley Hospiai
DISCHARGES:
Lewi s
Green, Apple Grove; Mark
Smith , Point Pleasant ; Orville
Casto, Leon : William Plants,
Point Pleasant; William
Rardin, Sr., George Wamsley,
Henderson: Alford Casto, Ray
Roush, Point Pleasant, and
John ·Doss, Cown City.

.
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 P.M.
· Open Both Friday and Saturday 9: 30

Here's Just One

Ot Many Outstanding
Values In Wearing
Apparel You'll Find
In Our
Second Floor
Ready-to-Wear
Department .

.....,

JACQUARD

DOUBLE KNIT
100% POLYESTER

JUMPERS

. POMEROY

~ame .

Marichal, wl10 had left the
game for a pinch-hitter just
before Ronds' homer, picked
up his sixth victory. He has lost
15. II assured him of not losing

1 \ lll't&lt; Rr 111111
..... . . .. ~ Cl• ..... t

•

•

at y

enttne

Devoted To The Interest&amp; OJ The Meigs-Mruon Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1972

VOL. XXIV NO. 104

Weather

PHONE 992·2156

Scattered thundershowers
throu gh Wednesday. Lows
tonight in the 60s and Wed·
nesday's highs ranging to
upper 80s south.

TEN CENTS

2 Bus Bids Accepted by Meigs Local

Sizes 12 to 20
and 14'12 to 22'12

The Meigs Equipment Sam Smith of Rio Grande
Company bids for two bus College who explained the
chassis with automatic trans· Community College pian for
mission were accepted, as the four-county area, Meigs,
were bids on tires submitted by Gallia, Ja ckson and Vinton .
Rizer Oil Company by the The four boards of county
Meigs Local Board of commissioners have approved
Education Monday night. Both the community college, a two.
firmS are located in Pomeroy. year technical college.
The bid by Meigs Equipment
Smith said since the program
was $6,134.11. Other bidders has been approved by the State
were the Pomeroy Motor Co., Board of Regents and the
Keith Goble Ford, and R. H. county commissioners, the
Rawlings Sons, the la tte r two next step is to appoint a
of Middleport.
com munity college board.
Another bidder on the tire
Smith as ked that board
contract was the Pomeroy members each submit four
Home and Auto Store .
names of persons they felt
Also accepted was the bid qualified to serve on planning
submitted by Edwin H. Davis committees, and from the 20
and Son of Danville, for a names choose four to submit at
Superior body totaling $3,590. the next mee ting. The board
There was no other bid.
agreed to do so.
Frank ·w. Porter, president,
Smith explained that one
presided W1til he left to attend third of the cost per student at
a Pomeroy PTA meeting. the Com munity College is to be
Donald Mullen took the chair. paid locally, one third by the
Meeting with the board was state, and the balance b~

ONLY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JENNY PROFFITT
80)(. 94

RACINE, OHIO 45771

P.ORDEROF_
tJTHE , ----------------------------------

Resurface Bids Invited
Middleport Village Council
voted unanimously Monday
night to advertise for bids to
resurface Park St. from Custer
to Broadway.
The action followed Coun.
cilman Fred Hoffman's
pointing out that $16,000 has
been appropriated for street
resurfacing by contract. He
recommended that some
resurfacing be done each year.
Council decided Park St. is
most in need of resurfacing of
all streets in the town. It had
been dropped from a list of
streets to be resurfaced when
work was done the .last time
due to. lack of funds.
.. .

Hoffman emphasized that
the public should be well·
informed on how the money
raised from a proposed $5
increase in auto license fees
would be spent. The levy will
be voted upon in the community in the November
election.
It was pointed out that the
entire proceeds from ths auto
license tax - under law would be earmarked exclusively for street main·
tenance and repair . There are
about 2,200 vehicles in the
community, so the tax would
prOduce about Sll,OOO a year
for street work, Mayor John

~~::::::~o?.::::::;:..~n:::o

.. m.~~'*·W.W.i@J~

ews•. in Briefs •
"'"'0'--------------------

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

don't, come in and open one with the "Wide-Awake Bank"
and 200 Foto Accent Checks will be yo1U'8

FREE.

second game .:md give the

vic tory lo Marichal. He scored "~:::~..:::";
•• olhooo ••
twice to bring his season total · vo
llo "'""' ...... lot
to 100 runs .
- -""'''' lloll- It,"
"I figw-e I should score at
Seei ng is believing, so, make
least 1110 rW1s every year. If I a li st of ill! your needs i'nd
bring it down to The
don'l I'm not doing my job as a
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
leadoff man . I also think I
Our
"FRIENDLY ONES"
should hit about 25 homers and
pride themselves in showing
steal as many bases as I can,"
how you can get the very
Buncts said.
be st in quality merchandise
~I
il price lo Iii your budget .
Bonds connected for a threerun homer off los;ng pitcher
Jim McGlothlin in the second

periences of almost 30 years ago when ~e was a prisoner of the
Japanese on Bataan and completed the Death March even
though he had shrapnel in his leg at the time. Along with other
prisoners, he was moved to a prison camp on the island of
Honshu and was assigned to assist a Japanese blacksmith .
However, one day he accidentally the wrist or the blacksmith
with a hammer and was ordered into the coal mines as punishment.
It was in the mines that he was injured in a fall of rocks. Five
of the men who were at he reunion were among those who
removed Van lnwagen from under the rocks. His leg was amputated by the Japanese, but after that, Van lnwagen, recalls, it
was a case of "take care of yourself."
Even though an amputee, he was forced to work in the camp,
trying to balance himself on one leg. There were the skimpy
rations of rice in the morning and at noon, a bowl of "dog soup"
being added to the rice for the evening meal .
Veterans of Bataan and Corregidor meeting for the reunion
held business sessions for a half of each of the five days. Besides
discussing serious business, the veterans, including Army nurses
who were also prisoners, reminisced of what they considered
(Continued on page 10)

Navy-Black· Brown

"RBis are rea lly the most
important. TI1at's what wins
games. If you hit homers, you
get RBls. I would like to hit .280
but that really isn't quite as

fur Bobby Bonds and Juan
Marichal of the Giants.
Bonds bla sted his 22nd
homer to break a 2-2 tie in the

Nations and peoples through all lime have been reminded or
man's inhumanity to man.
Survivors of the infamous Bataan Death March in 1942 need
no reminder. They recall all too vividly their forced march from
Bataan in the Philippine Islands to island Jap prisoner of war
camps and to ports of embarkation for the Japanese home
Islands were American prisoners furthered the Empire's war
objectives against the U.S. by forced labor, or died.
Edgar Van lnwagen, Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, like the
others - dwindling now in numbers -remembers.
For the first time in roughly 27 years since his release as a
POW on the island of Honshu: Van Inwagen this year attended
the annual reunion of The American Defenders of Bataan and
Corregidor, Inc. Meeting five days at Fontana Village Resort,
Fontana Dam, N.C. The survivors have been gathering regularly
since shortly after their release in 1945 following the triumphant
entry of American Armed Forces in Tokyo shortly after V-J Day,
Aug. 14, 1945.
Van Inwagen, a leg amputee, remembers well his ex-

Although uranium is usually
regarded as one of the rarer
elements, there is actually
more of It present in the earth's
crust than
uco mmon "
elements such as mercury,
silver and iodine .

.

runs.

Yes, too ·Well

Now You Know

Picture here

Reds the tyi ng and winning
runs in the eigh th inning of
Sunday's first game .

mark .
It was a noteworthy day too

•

CHESTER ·- Graveside
services will be conducted at
11:30 a.m. Tuesday in the
Chester cemetery for Mrs.
Lorena E. Whiteside, 83, native
of Meigs County or Akron, who
died Saturday following a brief
illness.
She was the daughter of the
late William and Elizabeth
Hoff, formerly of Middleport.
Mrs. Whiteside moved to
Akron in 1910. She later lived in
Hollywood, Calif. where she
worked as a photographer 20
years.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. David (Marguerite)
Warshaw, Valley Cottage, N.
Y., two granddaughters, Mrs.
Charles Peterson, Longwood,
Fla., and Mrs.
Totka, Altamonte Springs,
Fla., a great-grandson; three
nephews, George Reuter,
Canton; Frank Burlingame,
Cleveland, and Harrison Hart·
man, Akron, and a niece, Mrs.
Floyd Carter of Akron.
Mrs. Whiteside was a
member of the Eastern Star,
Nehta Chapter, Akron, and of
the Social Order of Beucant K.
T., of which she was a past
president.
Eastern Star services will be
held at 8 this evening at the
Eckhard-Baldwin Funeral
Home in Akron.

run-scol' ing single to give the

good year without hitting .280."
Bench had three hits in the
doubleheader to keep his
batting average around the .260

PH. 992-3629

Died Saturday

20 games this year, a dismal
but likely prospect at one time.
" I was lhrowing hard but I
didn't know where the ball was
going," Marichal said. "I don't
like to give up runs on walks. I
can understand if they get runs
.by hitt ing th e ball ."
Sam McDowell uncorked a
Wild pitch and then gave up a

important. You can have a

-

Mrs. Whiteside

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Be the first to have your

THE BISCUIT

(Technicolor)

William R. Bailey, 80, of 405
Grant St, Middleport, died
Sunday morning at the Holzer
Medical Center after a long
illness.
Mr.' Bailey was born March
18, 1892, the son · of the late
Henry S. and Maggie Becker
Bailey. He was a retired
employe of 'the New York
Central f.ailroad, employed as
a car repairman 46 years.
Preceding him in qeath was his
wife, Florence.
Mr. Bailey was a member of
the Modern Woodman Lodge

STUDENTS!

MEIGS THEATRE

Walt Disney's .
BEAVER VALLEY

Funeral services will be 1\eld
at 11 a.m. WedneMay at !he
and of Railroad organizations. Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Surviving are a daughter, wih the Rev. Raulin Moyer~
Miss Jane Bailey, librarian of pastor of the Middleport
the Middleport Public Library; Church of Christ, offlclatjng .
a son Clarence of Springfield, Burial will be in the .Rock
Ohio;' two grandson, and two Springs Cemetery. Fnends
sisters, Mrs. Ada Zeishler and may call at the funeral home,
Mrs. Helen Radfor!l, Pomeroy. any time.

Wmiam Bailey Died at .Holzer

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see one
of the Friendly Tellers ...
'

lHE FARMERS BMK &amp; SAVINGS 00.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal R -.. Sytlem

On Fridoya Our Drlv•tn WlMowla
Opon to.m.lo 7 p.m., (ConHnuoliSly).
120.000 Mlximum l,.ureiiCt
For Eeclt Dt!teaitw

By United Press International
STOCKHOLM - SWEDISH AND DANISH police are
searchlnl! for Leila Khaled, the Palestinian guerrUia and alr·
plane hijacker, the Stockholm newspaper Expressen said today.
The Swedish National Pollee Board would not confirm the report
but a spokesman said Interpol, the internatiooal police
organization, circulated a warning two weeks ago that the 26year&lt;Jld guerrilla girl was hiding somewhere in Europe.
Expressen said Miss Khaled was in West Germany during
the guerrilla attack at the Munich Olympic games and then fled
to Denmark and possibly across to Sweden. The newspaper
quoted ''reliable sources" as saying Miss Khaled had been seen
in Denmark last week and in western Sweden this week.

ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER GOLDA MEIR SAID today in
Jerusalem the new wave of Arab guerrilla attacks threatened
Middle East peace efforts. She vowed that Israel would "smite
the terrorists wherever it can reach them."
Mrs. Meir was addressing a special mid-recess session of the
Knesset parliament called to dlacuss the Arab guerrilla killing of
the 11 members of the Israeli team at the Munich Olympic
Games. She commended the West German government for its
decision to use force against the guerrillas but said there was
"room for criticism" for the way the rescue attempt was carried
out. She did not elaborate, but nine Israelis died in the shootout.
COLUMBUS- COLUMBUS REALTOR Kemet~ F. Wright
Jr. told a seminar on property management Monday rea) estate
lntereata must get tOgether llll reforms that eliminate "evil slum
owDer." from their bualnesa.
"We must see that the reformB are written in such a mamer
that we can live with thi!m," Wr!Rht said at the seminar held
during the U"d annual cooventlon of the Ohio Assn. of Real
Eltate Boards. "Change Is necessary and we've got to parUclpate ),Of) pet. in writing them," he said. "We must get Involved
to pruteet legitimate landlords."
(Continued on page 10)

Zerkle reported.
Fire Chief Bob Byer conferred with council on a 36-hour
required state vocational fire
school which will be held in
Middleport each Wednesday
evening. The Meigs Board of
Education and Middleport
Village share in the cost of the
school, Chief Byer said.
He also dis cussed the
existing burning ordinance in
effect. It was decided that
burning can continue in containers, and that residents
wishing to do "open burning "
must secure burning pennits
either from Byer or from Pete
Kloes at the Middleport Lunch
Room or the Dudley Florist
Shop.

Hours of such burning will be
designated in the permit, Chief
Byer said. Burning of leaves
and garbage in the community
is prohibited by the ordinance.
Council approved a second
reading of a new ordinance
which levies a charge for
refuse, other than garbage,
being hauled away for
residents by village employes.
This includes waste refuse
which is too cumbersome for
garbage collection service in
the community to handle.
Mayor Zerkle reported that
he had conferred with state and
oounty officials on the planned
improvements to Page St., to

Fire, Aid Units

Go Out 27 Times
The Middleport Fire
Department answered 27 calls
during August, Fire Chief Bob
Byer reported to Middleport
Council Monday night.
Of the total calls, seven were
fire calls and 20 were first aid
calls. Of the 20 first aid runs, 12
were in town and eight were
out of town with ·three calls
Involving motor vehicles in
accidents, one being a fatality.
Miles driven during the month
for all vehicles totaled 252,7
and there were 35 man hours
involved in the seven fire calls.
The average men per fire call
was 13.3.

be paid for from State Bond
Issue I fW1ds and that the
project should be ready to
advertise for bids in the spring .
The report of the mayor for
August showing receipts of
$1 ,746.75 in fines and fees and
$183 in merchant police
collections for a total of
$1,929.75 was approved.
Charles Searls, Pearl St.
resident, met with council to
request that some action be
taken against customers or the
M. and R. Bargainland cluttering up the street with papers
and oth~r articles from their
cars . He asked also that
council request some relief
from the dust on the parking lot
of this business. Council agreed
to confer with the management ·
on possible relief.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Zerkle, Councilmen
David Ohlinger, Hoffman, Dick
Vaughan, Lawrence Stewart
and William Walters ; Chief of
Police J. J . Cremeans,
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase, and Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate.

tuition whi ch i s estim&lt;1ted to
cos t
each
s tudcn l
ap-

proximately $600 per year

High School at a cos t of $4,659.

The planning co mmi ssion
wi ll consist of a business and
industry committee, educC~tion

The bui lding fs presently being
used for mining classes.

The board also increased
committee, historical com- substitute tea chers pay from
miltee, and an economic and $11; to $18 a day and $18 to $20
~ocir)logical committee.
after the 11th day .
In other business the school

The followin g

::~ppointmenLo;;;

re commended by George
Hargraves, Supt., were approved : Samuel Crow as
assistant freshman football
coach , Richard Sweet as
assistant jum or high football
coach, John Bentley as wrestling coach (Mr. Taylor: who
was the wrestling coach, left
the post due to his duties as

assistant princi pal!, Margaret
Parsons as h81f-time Title I
teacher at Salem Center, Mrs.
Linda Hunter as a teacher,
beginnmg Sept. 5, at Salem
Ce nter ; the following as aides
at $1.80 per hour for 180 da ys
eac h, Mrs. Phyllis Dugan, Mrs.
Kathy Hood , Mrs. Gracie
!Con tinued on page 10)

Stalemate Cracked
SAIGON (UPI )-South Viet·
nam ese marines racin g a
Wednesday deadline have bro·
ken the bloody stalemate at
Quang Tri City by storming the
walls of the 19th cen tur y
Citadel and linking up inside its
high brick walls, field reports
said today.
While th e marines scored
their impressive victory at
Quang Tri City over North
Vietnamese ordered to battle

to the death, the U.S. command
was reporting what it called
the most destructive ra ids over
Nor th Vietnam since heavy
bombing was resumed more
than five months ago. The U.S.
planes using ''smart" bombs
hit three bridges within 28
miles of China.
The military situation wor·
sened below Da Nang,
however, and field reports
today said a battalion of 250

Suuth Vietnamese troops at bombed to keep North VietnaTien Phuoc, 38 miles south of mese reinforcements away.
Da Nang, broke and ran under
Marine Scale Wall
a furious Communist assault
The first marine units en'that included a 200 round of 130 tered Sunday night through a
mm artillery.
hole blasted in the southeast
Initial reports from .Quang corner or the Citadel by a u.s.
Tri said contact with Commu- Air Force laser-guided
nist troops was light inside the "smart" bomb July 10, UPI
Citadel, but the biggest guns in reporter Ted Kurrus said. On
the North Vietnamese arsenal Monday night, reinforcements
were pounding the advancing plunged through the hole in the
marines while U.S. B52s 15-foot-high wall while another
unit scaled over the opposite
northeast corner, he said.
The.two W1its, totaling about
300 men, soon joined up along
the eastern wall and hegan
Means Co., Huntington, went pushin g toward the heavy
left of center, striking the bunkers in the western sector.
Communists have held the
Johnson vehicle.
Citadel
for 135 days.
Reval L. Patterson, Mid·
President Nguyen Van Thieu
dleport, filed suit for divorce
against Charles E. Patterson, has set Sept. 19 as the deadline
Pomeroy, charging gross for the recapture of all occupied territory. Kurrus said
neglect of duty.
military sources told him the
marines at Quang Tri were
ordered to secure the forbidding Citadel by Wednesday.
The Citadel, captured by the
William Walter Benson, Rt.
Communists
May I, loomed
3, Albany, and Adam J.
Jacobson, Rt. I, Rutland have clearly today against blue
been charged with cultivating skies as the highest point in
marijuana without first ob- battle-flattened Quang Tri
taining a lice nse as a City. Kurrus said more than 15
by
low-flying
manufacturer of drugs as attacks
American
and
South
Vietrequired by the state board of
pharmacy , a violation of namese planes hit Commun ist
Section 371902 of the Ohio bunkers on the floor and along
the western wall today.
Revised Code.
North Vietnamese troops,
The men are in Meigs County
under
orders to "hold until
Ja il.
(Continued on page 10)

$307,000 Asked in 2 Suits
Lawsuits as king com·
pensatory and other damages
in two court actions totaling
$307,000 have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Carl H. Rairden and Beatrice
Rairden, Hartford, W. Va.,
filed suit againt William R.
Hayes, Jr., and William R.
Hayes, Sr., Syracuse, for
compensatory damages in the
amount of $222,000.
The plaintiffs petition that on
Sept. 14, 1971, on SR 7, approximately five miles northeast of Pomeroy, the defendant, William R. Hayes, Jr .,
unlawfully, intentionally and
maliciously struck the
plaintiff, Carl H. Rairden with
an auto driven by William R.
Hayes, Jr. The suit is for in·
juries received, earnings lost,
and medical an d hospital
expenses.

Boyd Eugene Johnson, Rt. 1,
Tuppers Plains, filed suit in the
amount of $115,000 as a result of
injuries suffered in an auto
accident on July 30, 1971 on SR
7. The plaintiff charges that
Dallas Gambill , driving a
vehicle belonging to F. W.

Air Space High on Pot
A mari juana cro p confiscated Saturday in Meigs
County north of HarrisonviUe
valued now by officials between $70,000 and a quarter of a
million dollars, was burned in
Athens Monday afternoon.
In Athens to work with police
there in the destruction of the
3,000 plants were represen·
tatives of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept and Middleport
Police Dept. The plants were
burned outdoors.

Directors Elected by ~amber

Seven directors were elected
Monday to two-year terms by
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce in a regular session
at the Meigs Inn.
An essay contest on
Elected by secret ballot were
Americanism for fourth, filth Fred Crow, Jack Kerr, Ralph
and sixth graders of Meigs Graves, Tom Cassell, Ted
County will be conducted by Reed, Louis Osborne and Don
the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Pearch.
Webster Post 39, American
Carry over officers from last
Legion.
year are Marge Hoffner, Earl
Mrs . Edith Fox, auxiliary Ingels, Bill Grueser, Jack
Americanism chairman, an- Carsey, Bob Ja cobs and
nounced details of the contest Ri cha rd Chambers. The
which will offer a prize to each directors will meet at a later
grade winner plus a prize for date and elect the president of
the hest essay written by a the chamber for the 1972-73
fourth, fifth or sixth grader on year.
the subject.
In other business, C. E.
Mrs. Fox said that essays Blakeslee presented copies of
must be 100 words or less and the 1970.1990 Meigs County
deal with the subject, "I'm Comprehensive Plan which
Glad I'm An American ." covers all planning proposals
Judging will be on the basis of for Meigs County. The report
essay content. Entries are to he I represents an integration of all
sent to Mrs. Grace Pratt, the individual plans and
auxiliary president, North policies that have evolved
Third Ave., Middleport, and. through planning to date. It
lllust be postmarked by Oc- will he the official policy guide
tober 15.
for growth during the next 20

Essay Contest
Is Announced

bow·d approved repair to the
fu rnace at the Pomeroy Junior

years .
Th e report deals with
existing land use and housing,
community facilities, utilities,
and thoroughfares in Meigs
County and the projected needs
of each.

Blakeslee noted that a
meeting with the Meigs County
Commissioners on sub-division
reguiarions will be held Sept.
28. Any changes in the subdivision regulations will be
made at that time, Blakeslee
said.
If sub-division regulations
are adopted, they will be of no
use unless enforced, Blakeslee
said.
Cop ies of U1e Comprehensive
Plan in book form were given
to those who were interested.
Persons wishing to have a book
as a souvenir may buy one for
$6. Blakeslee made these other
poinls, that Meigs Is '" the
second year of planning, the
state has n·ot said how much
money it will contribute toward
comprehensive planning, but it

is hoped Pomeroy will be part
or the program.
Federal funds which pay the
salary of Joyce Bunch, who is
employed at the Chamber
office located on the ground
floor of the courthouse, will not
be available at the end of the
month. It was indicated that
the chamber office perhaps
may be closed for a 31klay
period.
However, it was concluded
that the chamber might bear
the expense of the secretary
until the program is refunded .
Jack Kerr, president, is to
con tact Richard Sayre of the
C.A.P. to see what is available
and when.

pie with d1·ugs, their effects
and
what
to
do. There are two medical
people on the staff at the
present time, nurses, and it is
hoped a doctor ca n be added.
Kerr in other business stated
that plans lor the Christmas
promotion should get underway soon. It was also
suggested that merchants be
contacted, and if they are in·
terested in the Christm as
promotion, an evening dinner
meeting he set to discuss and
make plans. Letters will be
sent to all merchants in regard
to the promotion and meeting.

It was noted that rental
homes and houses for sale are
Rolf Stangel, co-ordinator of being sent to the Meigs Mine as
the Meigs County Coffee submitted by local realtors.
House, met with the chamber · Attending were Kerr, Marge
to explain the use of the Coffee Hoflner, Bob Jacobs, Doc
House.
Schuler, Fred Crow, Blakeslee,
He said plans call for arts Jack Carsey, Bill Grueser,
a nd crafts, services, coun Earl Ingels, Joyce Bunch, Tom
seling on , drug abuse Cassell, Jim Mees, Rolf
and adult evening work- Stangel, Beulah Jooes and
shops familiarizing peo- Katie Crow.

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