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v., ""'· 2, 1972

' '

'!!!.&lt;!~~ ~~~!:~. ~o--~!!~~---Wahani~ Band 'Fops All;;~~~~~;;~
•

FIe
• Id s, m
• ·. p. ara·
. .·.d&lt;e..;·.w
. ork.

~:i~~ffs~~~~ri~t ~~~~o::~ McGo~ern1~01dd ca_pa w: rA

ti ~·

di~

• S
fn' Brze

Jessie Sansbury Died on Sunday

P-D Endorses
Mr. Nixon for ·

Re-Election

Market Report

President Keeping the Store,
Ignoring TaUnts bY McGovern

:~~:sstvillehs:la~terfa:O~;

Gallup poll. It showed the
Sattu'day evening
1
•~yed
on
the
.E
·as
·
t"
c
oast's
b
"l
"
•
~test.:
!'I
Ia
maTJOC:.~
r~
South
Dakota
senator
trailing
.
Camd.
en-CiarkendHosp
...
., on ue op c ue... ay tn . N11on by 28 per cent, havmg ·
·
. · .
. . · " Parker~btu'g
·
mg ana ex-n Guvsvl
, "ll"e·, . el"ght gra_ndelectoral states today . and BostO!l'S Courthouse· Square. narrowtidthe.edges\xiiercent. · .
... . . .
.
·
·
. tended.illness. ·
·
children,
10 ' great• '
· charged President Nixon was
The Democratic pr,eStden(ial ' In · a statement McGovern "MI\1lQN _,_ lrf splte uf cloudy Ashland, Ky.~ Saturd~y with lis downtown paraderegarljjess of. · Mrs. Taylor was born In grandchildren, and several
using Social Security checks as candidate, coming off what issued Sunday he called ·for a ·skies and threatenin¥ weather directors, Gerald Simmons and hand size ·or class went to , Athens County, the daughter of nieces and nephews. A brother
a •.. ~itical ploy" to win ·the · probably was ~Is last · rest revamping of the private the Wahama White Falcon ·charles Yeago, to partipipate Wahama. The Grand Chl\ffi· the late William and Viola Dye and a sister preceded her in
votes of the elderly.
period before the election, pension system and accused Marching Band "had it all this in the ninth Annual Eastern pion Award for the most Conant. She was a roember of death.
In · a statement, McGovern headed for New Jer$ey, New the White House of helping to Fall" just as one .of its gaily Kentucky Marching Band Outstanding Band," all festival the Alfred United Methodist
Funeral services will be held
bitterly protested that ·the next York, and Massachusetls.
"cheat American workers out pain led bus 'signs proclaimed. Festival.
activities and all hands con. . Church. A lifelong resident of at 2p. m. Tqesday at the Alfre!l
Social SecuritY checks, .which
Mween tbetll, New York of pension reform ."
•
The band traveled to
The master of ceremonies, sidered, went to the Wahama Athens County, Mrs. Taylor United Methodist Church with
include a 20 pet. across-the· (41), Massschuaetts (14), and
B. J . Lawrence, program Band Which has been invited to tall!{ht in the public schools of the Rev.. Jacob I,.ehman ofbOard increase, also s.tate that New Jersey (I 'I) have · 72
manager at WCMI, gave a return nexl year in the Honor that county and also was a ficiating. Burial will be in the
the extra money was· signed electoral vo~. In 1968, Hubert . 7\T
·•
~
hearty "bluegrass welcome" Band spot and present a ·field ·Sunday School teacher.
Coolville Cemell!ry. Friends
into law by Nixon.
.
. H. Humphrey captured New 1
to the Falcon band as the only maneuver as the most out.
. -· '· ·-·
... c..,..-~-may-caft at the White Fun.erlll
McGover~ said the "28 York and Massachusetts and
• 1 • .
· ·. .
\Vest Vi~ginil! banil , ptesent. .. standing band in 1972-1973:
She .is s~rvi.ved by her Home l!fter .3 p.m. Monday.
.nillion .recipients of Social PreslderilNixonbarelycarried
Four classes of bands
In past years the Grand husb&lt;lfld, Herman; three son~. The 1body will be taken to ,the
Seeutity benefits are rightly ~ew Jersey.
. ·
rCon linu~d from Page l ) ·
~ompeled which included 26 Champoinawardhasbeenwon · Charles T. Taylor , Torch ; ··church one hour prior to the
· disturbed that Richard Nixon;
Prior to leaving, McGovern rA roses and this one,of course, was rroexception.
high schools ranked according by AAAA schools only. Paul G. Rollin Hawk, Pomeroy, and service.
.l!.ho has negle"Cted them for 5\!heduled a major address ~.
.
·· to enrollment: Class A from 1). Blazer ijigh School; Ashland,
.
· four years, is trying to u;;e this the 13th annual United Press
COLUMBUS - CITY. BLUE COLLAR workers Sunday 500· Class AA from 501-~50; Ky,, won in 1964 and 1965;
Soci~l Security increase - InternatJo..l Edlt«s and Pub- ratified a ·new two-year contract with the city that includes pay Cia;., AAA from 751-1,000, and Covington-Holroes .- High
which he did everything In his Ushers Conference (9:30a.m.). hikes ranging from 5.5 to !Opel. The workers, roembers of Local Class AAAA froro 1,000 and · School, Covinglon, Ky., won in
power to prevent -as a
McGovern who stayed off the 1632of the American Federation of State, County ~nd Municipal over. Each band had seven 1966, 1967, 1968, and 1970, and
~- - · political ploy to win voJes in the • campaign trail three oftbe last Employes, voted on the contr~ct that was hammered out by minutes in which !o perform. George Rogers Clark High
Mrs. Jessie E. Sansbury, 88, husband, Rpy, in ·1930; a
upcoming election.'' '
four days, spent a leistu'ely" negotiators early Saturday after 17'h hours of talks. The pay
Winners in their respective School, .Winchester, Ky., in formerly of Middleport, who ~ugug~~~· a::~twr:,~~~:~a~~
Sunday, watching his Wife on hikes are delayed until Dec. 3.
classes were (in order listed): 1969 and 1971. This is the first died Sunday evening in
"
"Meet the .Press" and . then ·
"We're not too happy with the contract, but it is as much ss
Class A. - Wahama high year a smaller school has won Philadelphia, Pa., was the Schaaf, associated with The
,_
going to a performance of the could have been achieved under f¢deral wage and price School, Henry County, Bracken this honor.
daughter of the late Wall.ace B. Daily Sentinel a nwnber of
Israel Symphony ¥,! Kennedy stabilization policies," said the union's chief negotiators, Warren County.
and Adda Vlnln)l Smith, one of years . . "
Center ·In the evening,
Jennings. Ahazardou5weatherclause, a main bone of contention
Class AA ....: Bou~bon County,
HEARINGS BEGIN
· Meigs · County's pioneer
Mrs. .Sansbury was a
His pre.tdential hopes re- in the negotiations, was retained. Employes are not reqUired to Danv1lle, Jessamme County.
COLUMBUS (UPI) .-, The f~ilies. She was born In graduate of the School of
ceivejj a ~~ boO.t Sunday work 00·t..,fo(!oors when it is colder than 3above-zero.
· Class AAA _ East Hardin, Puhbhc Utlilties Comm1ss1on of MeBe1g~dCounhty on May 17h, 1884. Ntu'sing at State Hospital, Mt.
0
1
..
Boyd County, Shelby County"
10p anned to open ex~ns1ve .
s1 es _er parents, s e was ~=~:'r\lO::· H~ ~~~~
NEW YORK -A PO~ CONDUCTED BY Newsweek
Class AA~ - Covington- ~:~:~~~~etodri.•sonre~~~stBe~ preceded m death by her Methodist Church In MidCLEVELAND (UPI ) -The
magazine correspondents Indicates that Senator . George ~olmess, Harrtson County and increase rates by $166 million a .m::'::;::,~:;:::;:;:~m~,~~:::;:;:;:;:~:;~:;:s:;:; •. dleport 'a number of years, and
Cleveland Plain Dealer, which
McGovern has lost ground to President Nixon and that h1s defeat . rya~ tallon.
year.
·
was active in the Middleport
GALUPOLIS, OHIO,
endorsed Richard Nixon for
appears a Ylrtual certamty, the ma_gazlne reported Sunday. The
Covmgton-Holmes ·also won
The company filed the
Garden Club, the Meigs County
Saturday, Sept. 30, 1972,
Presi,dent in 1968, did so again
news
magazine
$Sid
Nixon
has
277
"solid"
eleCtoral
votes,
and
the
trophieS
for
b~st
request
more
than
a
year
ago
Pioneer and Historical Society,
SALES REPORT . OF
Sunday in a front-page editor!·
that another !52 are "leaning" towards .him. Only 270 electoral · majorettes m stre~t marchmg and big cities are lined up to
and the G.I.A. Surviving are a
Ohio Valfey Uvestock Co.
. al that said the evidenc.e was · HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 28 to votes are needed for Nixon's re~lection. The poll also indicated and contest show, and ~ast intervene in the case as is the ·
daughter, Mrs. Richard (June)
"lopsided" in his favor.
Hayman in Philadelphia; two
28.75; 220 to 250 lbs. 28.50 to~; . the Preside.nl is leading in 44 states and could conceivably come llardin won for. best fl.eld U. S. Defense Department,
The Plain Dealer·, Ohio's ,Light24·.50 to27; Fat Sows 21.50 withinreachofaSO..St;ttesweep,themagazinesaid.
ocmmander and drum maJOr . . which has many facilities In
(T.
Is ) granddaughters, Miss Sally
largest newspaper, said . the to 25.50; Stags 20 DOwn; Boars ,
McGovern polled just three electoral votes in the "solid"
The trophy awarded _fo~ t~e • the state that require telephone
rue
or
Fa
e
Schaaf,· Athens, and Mrs .
President had attained "a new 19 to 22; Pigs 15.oo to 30; Shoats category, according to Newsweek. Ail three were from the best performance '" t e service.
·
I. World War 2 Veterans are Richard (Virginia) Koehler,
look at Aiilerican involvement 22.50 to 39.
no Ionge~ eligible for a G. I. CollUllbus; a 'graridson, John
in Vietnarri" in his previous CATTLE ..:. Steers 35 to predominantly black District of Columbia. Another six votes, all
(FALSE)
Schaaf, Hilliard, and eight
four years and had managed to 37.75; Heifers 29.75 to 37.50-; from west Virginia, were leaning towards the Democratic .L' , o
l..o.:!n
·
great-grandchildren.
2. VA Pensioners over 72
Funeral arrangements are'
"lower the level of growing · Baby Beef 38 to 56.50; Fat Cows nominee, Newsweek said.
violence in this coirntry."
:.I
years of age no longer have to being . completed at the
20 to 24; Canners 18 to 27.10;
DAYTON -THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF the Dayton
The ne"'spaper also praised Bulls 27.50 to 32; Milk Cows 200
1
,..I.
anlC,
leS
report changes In their Income Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
,Area
Chamber
of
Conunerce
has
unanimously
endorsed
the
his "bril~nl diploroatic iniUa· to 475; Yearll;,g Steers 38 to 45.
(FALSE).
in Middleport.
proposed one.half per cent city incume tax increase to appear on
3. AVeteran, 85 years of age
live opening new avenues of
VEAL CALVES - Single
· Fra.nk L. Irion, 77, Lower two brothers and two sisters. or &lt;alder, is presumed to be
communication with Russia and Calves · to 56; ,Tops 54.60; the Nov. 7 ballot, it was announced today.
. "It is essential for the city of Dayton to have the funds whlch Ri ver Rd., died at 8:~ p.ro., He spent all his life in Gallia · permanently and · totally
China."
PleasaniValleyHospltal
•
Seconds 4?.5\l to 53.25; Medium are necessary to effectively run our urban eenter," said Robert Saturday In Holzer Medical County. ·
DISCHARGES - Mrs .
The . Democratic ticket .of· 46.50 to 51; Com. &amp; Hvs' 45 to
, Mr; Irion was ·a 5{)-year disabled for ~nslon purposes.
A. Kerr, president· of the. organization. "The problems of the Center. Mr. Irion had been in
Sen. George McGove~n and 53.75; Culls ~ DOwn. (TRUE).
Sheldon
Durst, Leon; Franklin
failing health since July.
member of Gallia Lodge, F and
central
city
are
complex
enough
without
having
to
face
the
ad4. APeacetime Veteran, with Smith, ' Gallipolis; Alley
S3rgent Shriver, it said, "Is
A retired mechanic for the AM, Eureka.
BAB¥ CALVES - 35 to 80.
ditional
burden
of
not
being
equipped
to
effectively
deal
with
no
service · connected crawford, Apple Grove;
one oi the weakest we have
Dravo Corp., Mr. Irion was
Funeral services will be held
LAMBS - Tops 28 .50;
seen in years.''
Seconds 23.50 to 26.75; Light ·.these complexities due tO inadequate financial resotu'ces.''
born Jan. 8, 1895, in Clay Twp., I p.m., Wednesday at the disabilities, is eligible for the Melvin Bush, Galliptilis Ferry;
"The radical reforins Sll!f· Wts. 20 to 24.
son of• theilate Charles and Wall!{h-Hall(!y-Wood Funeral VA Burial allowance; to be Glen Stanley, Point Pleasant;
gested ... (by McGovern) just
BELFAST · - NORTHERN IRELAND'S embattled Amanda Perkins Irion.
Home with Rev. Alfred Holley ' paid to his next of kin, when he Ralph Fisher, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Charles Hill, Racine ;
do not check out as either
Protestants and Roman Catholics btu'ied their differences long
He is survived by hls wife, officiating. Burial will be in dies. (FALSE).
5.
A
WldQ~or
a
~arVeteran,
.
Mrs. Larry llichard and son,.
practical or to the bene(it of
enough Sunday to pray together for pea~; during Ulster's Sadie Sheels Irion, whom he Mound Hill Cemetery.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCIV
the vast majority of the people · Steers : Choice, 3UO; Good, deadliest weekend in moriths. But the killing continued today.
married on Nov. 18, 1915; two
Friends may call at the who has r~med, and !las Pomeroy; Vickie Donohue,
of the United States," the edi- 34.50-35; Standard, 28.35-33.60.
A British army intelligence agent was kllled when·gunmen daughters and one son, Mrs. funeral home between 2-4:30 had a termmallon of her Wllliaro Mille~, Cora Abbott,
torial said. . ·
Heifers: Good, 34.60; intercepted a plainclothes patrol, riddling its light truck with George (Frances) Ruth, p.m.,and 7-9 p.m., on Tuesday. second marriage by death or Point Pleasant; Haydle Young,
"The Plain Dealer feels the Standard, 28.50-33.
bullets. The soldier was the 594tli person tiJ die in three years of Bucyrus; Mrs. James (Grace)
Masonic rites wlll be held divorce, may be eligible to Apple drove; Mrs . Lewis
receive Death-Pension Benefits Martin, Robertsburg; Mrs.
evidence is lopsided. We urge
Cows: Collllllercial, 26.40-- bloodshed between Northern Irleand's Irish Republican Army Johnson, Middleport, and 7:30p.m., Tuesday.
on
behalf of her -Veteran first Warren
Sturgeon,
Jr.,
the re-election cif President ~.10; Utility, 24.00.26; Canners (IRA) and the British army. Ei~t other persons died a_nd scores Kenneth Irion, Columbus. One
Pallbearers are: Charles
.
GallipollaFerry, Fred Paxton,
Richard M. Nixon:··
Lee
Holcqmb, Husband. (TRUE).
· and Cutters, .20.00.23:35.
were wounded Saturday and Sunday. While the guns still blazed, son preceded him ln death. Bailey,
as.
a
weekly
Patriot;•' MrS! 'Vernle Roush,
(Presented
Buill :' Commercial, 32.50-34. Cathollc.and Protestant gathered at more than 30 joint services Eight grand and one great- Lawrence Mooney, Lee Bur- public servl7" by your Meigs Point Pleasant; Usa Thomas,
cham, Denver Wallace, Wayne
Stockers and Feeders: Steer -an unprecendented gesture- to pray for an end to the kUling. grandchild survive.
fWnty Service office, Glen A. Gallipolis Ferry; Herman
He was preceded in death by Baker. ·
Calves, 45-63.50 ; Heifer
Johnson, service offi~r.)
Warren, Arbuckle.
Calves: 31.50-U.SO; Heavy
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
BIRTHS - Sept. 29, a
feeder, 26.50-37.
October 2-3
D OF A TO MEET
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Veal Calves: Choice, 52NOW YOU KNOW
Chester
Council 232, . Wayne Carter, New Haven,
54.50; Good, 40-45; Baby Calves
SKYJACKED
On Oct. 4, 1957, the Soviet
/"'
Daughters of America, will and Oct. I, a daughter to Mr .
(TO&lt;hilicolor l
By Th~ Head, 27-89.
Union launched Sputnik 1, a
BLACKPOOL, England oitrselves to let the British Umarketeers squared off for meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at and. Mrs. James Holley,
~ Charlton Heston
Lambs: Choice, 28.85.
hermetically sealed aluminum
Yvette Mimeaux
Hogs.: 201)-230, 29; No. I, globe filled with gaseous (UPI) - Labor Party Chair- people speak for themselves," what appeared llltely to be a the hall. The good of the order Galhpolls Ferry,
(.GPI
29.25; 230-240, 28.75; Sows, ni\rogen .. Sputnik was the man Anthony Wedgwood Benn he declared. "We must . bitter fight. ,
Colorcartoons
demanded today that the demand a general election and
Party Leader Harold Wilson &amp;ommittee will hold a 25 cent
S~ow Starts 1 P.M.
~.00.28.20; Boars 22.80; Pigs world's
first man-made British people be given the work hard . to bring about a was struggling not only to grab bag sale.
By The Head, 20-27.25.
satelUte.
right . to vote before this dissolution of Parliaroent prevent !hero tearing the party
OESTOMEET
~~~~~~-~ country enters the European before midnight on Dec. 31." apart. He alao was protecting
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
Common Market Jan. 1, 1973.
He charged that Prime his own position as party chief
The Bahama Islands eoti- of Eastern St8r, will meet a.t
"The people of Ireland, of Minister Edward Heath Is and his chances tor a uura- sist of 3 000 Islands car.s and 7:45 p. m. Tueaday at the
Norway, of Denmark have all actlng "as if he·actually owned _ te~~ comeback as pnme roeks iliafare scitlereif over · temple. Mefuben are asked lo
been consulted in referendWll Britain" by refusing a referen- mmiSter ·
an ocean area sllgh~y llrger pay dues and · turn In
The battle was join~ Sunday than Great Britain.
votes,'' ·he said. "It is dum vote or election on joining
houseware orders.
on the eve of the conference.
outrageous thet the people of the market,
Britain alone should not be
of Britain
consulted on this vital national not"The
havepeople
11," Benn
said. will ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....-~----..
Issue.''
A hattie on the Common
Benn spoke at the ope"rling of Market Issue began .sa the
tl)e Labor Party's annual rank- Labor Party meeting opened.
and.flle convention~
Promarketeers and an"We must solemnly pledge

leWs

·'

vetet8JlS'

'

.

·,.~,

By United Press International ing dinner" and ·an overnight

Sen. George S. McGovern, visit.
The White House said Nilon
public opinion polls, has at· plans no campaign trips this
tacked President Nixoo In an we_e~~,.The Pi'esident has made
attempt to ·"taunt" him intO only three lirlef campaign
open caropaignlng. But lijlloni; •~rancl!s since hls nominawhose aides . say he Is 'not . lion In August. .'1
•
hiding, is tending to the
Brushes.Charges Aside
''business of . the pres! den"He Is here .in W.ashlngton
cy, , .
attending to the busineSs of the
. The Ilelllocratic presidential presidency," said Pr,ess Secrecandidate swung up the popu- · tary Ronald L. Ziegler. Ziegler
lous '-and electoral-rich Ea"st _brushed aside McGovern's
Coast Mond~y . labeling charges that Nixon is "hiding"
Nixon's "the inost morally from the public.
bankrupt administration in the ·. McGovern unveiled hls new
tntir~ history of the country." frontal assault on Nixon at the
The attack drew no response United Press International
·from Nixon, who conferred at Editors and Publishers Conthe White House and Camp ·ference ih Washington MooDavid with Soviet Foreign day.
.
.
.
.
.
l\flnlster Andrei· Gromyko in
Vicl!"""l"i'esldent Spiro T.
· · .STIUKE
. ·.
.
.
.. • ·
·
preparation for a ceremony Agnew whq also spoke to the
ON
. - Forty'eight ~loyes of_Midwest ~leel Co., East .Main St., Po~...____today in which they will sign UP! ~ditots Monday, said
members of IA&gt;cal 6197l!nlted Stee! . W~kers of America wen\ on strike Monday OlQrning.
·interim strategic arnis limlta· McGovern's chilrge was "a
Workmen staled that !hell' contract expired at ml~ght on Oct. I. They ":ere offered a new
tion agreeroents. .
reckless allegation which
contract but turned It down. The men asked for more wages, better working c.ondit10ns and
Tl!e President met with shows a lack of maturity, selffringe benefits. The contract offered was for more !Doney, but with fringe benefits removed.
Gromyko ·for an hour at the discipline and a lack of quality
One worker said they were drawing "about $10 above unemployroent wages." Most of the men
White House before they flew a President should have."
lilvolved earn approximately $5,600 a year, another .worker said. Their union also is the
to Nixon's mountain retreat In
MCGovern kept the theme
bargainin~ agent at Kaiser Aluminum and Foote Mineral.
western Maryland for a "work- alive in New Jersey and
saying there is little value in

:Quiz

"Dr.•onk L. ln"on, .77,·
• d ech • D •
R etire

r--------.
MEIGS THEATRE

Labor Demands Referendum

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ack·ack

Just Arrived

(Continued from Page I)
shipyard No. 3 at the southwestern edge of iown and ·
reported destroying 10 supply ·
buildings. The shipyard had
been previously bombed July
31.
Later in the day Midway
pilots bombed the Chap Khe
barracks and supply storage
area 11 miles northeast of
Haiphong, the Navy said.
''There was roore 85nun
(anUaira-aft) fire than · I've
ever seen . before,·~ -Lt. (j.g.)
Ben Thompson, of Joplin, Mo.,
was quoted as saying, "Aa I
looked back at the target area
after my run It was covered

~lot of cardeals s~art ~ere
'

You can get more car for'less money with our help. Now, that
should appeal to your senses as much as that factory-fresh
· new~car Sl]lell .
·
'
. If you're thinking about a new car, discuss' your financing
with the' wide-awake bank before you start sniffing at cal'S.
Then, when you buy that"new car and get a good deal because of wide-awake bank rate financing, your nose will
really tickle with the sweet smell of success.
'

SMOCKS
The Jeans Topper
In ·Regular

and Extra Sizes
Big Selection
Of

Borrow-less financing on new &amp; used cars
.

WRANGLER -

I

:I 'lite ~~NJw~ke ou;o /onn 111nk~ itg!£.so eo~~
,,

.

'

~

. . . . . MllillllllllllftlfCI

Missy and ·JOnJor Sires-. ·
Revuiar-Boy Cut- Bikini Cut.

.
Shop Wttlcdays 9:30to 5 P.M.
Oper\ Fridays arid SlltiWdi!ys 9:30to 9 P.M.

.
'

Ftrllldl o.itlttr
.,

I'

•

Oli F~O.rpr(ve:tnWinllewltCI!Ieftfl.lll. lt7 p.m. IConti;....slyl.
L

JEANS
..

.The Fannets .Ban~ &amp; Savinp Co.
. ' POMIIOY. -OHIO '
Memberol Fecllrel R-.. s.,.t...,

.

.

Cabbage h~s ' been cultl·
vated fn various forms since .
prehistoric tlme.l.

ELBERFELDS IN .

pevoted To The Interull Of The Meigs-' Mason Area
• VOL XXV ND:' 119

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1972

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

New Truck

anted

Pomeroy council Monday of Lincoln Hill Drive told
night agreed to advertise for a council they are seeking exnew truck to be used by the tension of Vale St. which woul!
street depar!Inent after Calvin allow them to drive behind and
Lane, Dept. Supt.. told council below their properties .
the present truck is in bad
Residents of the area at
condition and should be present have to park autos on a
repalrM or replaced before narrow, rough berm on one
cold weather.
side, ot on a single sidewalk on
In other business, council- the other side, along the
agreed to change connections narrow "Lincoln Hill Drlve.
on fire pluge on El!st ~nd West
Whaley admitted that .,legal
Main and Butternut from four- ·action may have to be taken in
iilch to six-inch.
order to gain access to Vale St.
Tracy Whaley, Lincoln It was pointed out, however,
Drive, speaking for residents that the village has maintained

Vale St. that dead ends beyond
the Cline residence for a
nlUllber of years. •
Whaley offered a map of the
area to clarify the problem. He
observed that there are several"
"nice building lots" in the area
that could be used, if access to
area by extension of the street
were obtained.
Council agreed to investigate
the situ~tion Immediately .. .
Also meeting with council
were merobers of the Pomeroy
Winding Trail Garden Club
represented by Mrs. Uoyd
Moore, president, with Mrs.
u ..",.-!1'.~ .
hi"'PnlO:O .
'" OO:-· ";:;C"'"W'"I
.. . . .
""'h".::
. · Robert LewIs as spokesman.
~
On behalf of the club, Mrs.
Lewis asked council for its
••
If
. assistance in obtaining a tree
finn to assist in a proposed
recycling of Chrisiinas trees.
By United Press Inlematio:&amp; .
It was suggested that the
CLEVELAND -THE NINE-DAY-OLD municipal employes
strike was all but over today as negotiators for striking Local 100 village could pick up the
af the Ainerican Federation of State, County and Municipal Christmas trees on Wednesday
employes Unloo reached a tentative agreement with the city or Thursday after New Year's
Day and take the trees to a
early this morning.
designated place where they
. Robert Btlndza, director of District 78 of the AFSCME,
woUld be recyCled. Trees after
would not say if tenns of the agreement were slriillar to those being recycle6 are good mulch.
approved Monday night by two other municipal employes unions.
Mrs. Lewis also suggested an
"We will forward the pact to our executive comrolttee and
recommend acceptance," be said. "It will be submitted to Otu' .
membership at 7:30p.m. tonight."

• Br.,e
• s.
.e·ws ln

HONOLULU -DOCtoRS TODAY called It ''miraculous"
tbat a Honolulu man survived a 22-floor fall into a pile of garbage. Thomas Finney, 22, tumbled down a garbage chute at .the
~een Emma Gardens but the garbage at the bottom cushioned
his fall.
'
He told pollee·he was ''fooilng around" when he p!Ulllllleted
d9wn the"chute. He was hospitalized with only cuts and bruises.

PHONE 992-2156

Ceremony
Planned

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
strategic arms limitation
agreements between the
United States and the Soviet
Union go into full effect today
TEACHERS IN WASHINGTON, D. C. accepted a com- with the . signatures on
promise pay Increase Monday and ended a two-week strike, ratification documents of
President Nixon and Soviet
clearing th~ way for 141,0110 pupila to return to school today.
Members of the Washington 'l'eachen Union agreed to a 7 Foreign Minister Andrei .
: per cent raise retroactive to Sept. I and another 5 per cent in- Gtomyko .
Although final ratification is
crease next September. The 3,501knember U!lion had been
deliWt~ a 17 per cent ina-ease. Included In the agreement _
was strictly,· a formality, Nixon
a promise from the scbool board there would be ,no reprisals called for a full dress White .
agaln8t teachers who parUcipated In the strike. About half af the House ceremony to 'llr81D8tlze
the pact which he · and Com.
district's teachen are members of the union.
munist Party leader Leoni~ I.
Brezbnev signed , in Moscow
CINCINNATI - FRANK J. ,LAUSCHE, a !llave~?.ck last
May.
Democrat during his long years as Ohio governor and U. S.
The President has made the
11:1111tor, Monday endorsed Presldept Nixon for re-election. "The arms limitation treaty and
eecurity Of our nation and welfare af our people wlll be ~t other indications of a wanning
served by the re-election of President Nixon," Lausche said In an trend in u. S. • Soviet r~tatlons
sclualve Interview in Wsahingtoo with the Cincinnati Enquirer. a key 'part of his re-election
''The Presldent has taken loog steps in tenna of bringing campaign rhetoric . He also
about peace In the world," LaUIChe 1111ld: ''He has lessened the stresses his hlstqry-maklng
tenliiXII ellttlng betWeen otu' country on the .o~ ha,nd and trip lo 'China in his campaign
Ru11J1 and China on the other. "He has practically brought the speeches.
. · South Vietnam war 1o an end;" he a&amp;~ed, Lausche aald he did not
Nixon and Gromyko spent
enc1one 1U party's ticket beca~~~e "the record of Mr. McGovern rouch of Monday ln. each
lbowa that he Ia indeclalve and incollliatenl practically -day to other 's company. Gromyko
was Nixon's overnight guest at
day with the' courses he wUI follow," ·
Camp David follo"wlng a
WA811INGTON - THE !lOUSE HAS approvecl anti- " working dinner" at the
hijiiCklnlltPJation to enljNwm President Nlzm to ~ air western Maryland inolllltaln
~ bltwilillllbe Unitld Slalllllld natlonl which encourage top :retreat.
' Ill' plrae)i. The DMIIW't lldapt.d Mondly would Impose ~ .
~-181ce, at the dilcntloD or I jury, for I penon eonvJctet:
or ~. or 1 minimum »1ear prlaoo ililllleace .
Pulld by 1 3M to t .ote with only Rtpl. Pimp Burton, D.
CIIIf IIIII Jalll eaa,.n, J).Midt,, In a,p 'l'l!fm, tl!e DMII'ft Ia •
Sunny and wanner today"
· ,.;;.., ftr1k111 ala Seu'e ~••ed IIII1.1Jndar ·botli WJ., the with highs In the 701!1. ParUy
~ dt• ooald IIIIPif.d air llnlce to any forelp nation hlr.- . cloudy toilighi and Wednesday
bulllc liijadllrL Tbi billa ala nlllarile the lrlllEpGrtlllon with a chance of shOWefllln the
to wlfhhold tbe apntlltllidltclrltJ flllly forelln air north Wedhesday . Lows
"CIFTllr wball ...........
doll not maintain elhct'" IIC1IF'ity tonigh.t In '- the 5~. Highs
•.
W~esday In the 701!1 .
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brought New Yock aty Demci- mers and labol'.
-Gov. Ronald Reagan, c-.
crats at a fwid-rllising diilner · -Supporters of John G. Sch- palgnlng for Nixon in Houlon, ·
to their feet by saymg·, "A- mlu have submitted a petition siiJd"llebeUeves !hat McGOftl'll ·
leader who is afraid to change to place the Ainerican Party has an edge over the President
his mind for fear of losing face presidential candldate!s name in California.
is no leader- he Is · i on the New Jersey bl!llot In . - Treasury Secretary
disaster."
·~ .
place of George Wallace: ·Sch- George P. Shultz said in Loe
Th"e $50{}-a-plate . dinner, mllll in Raleigh, N.C., attacked Angeles that ·McQovern'• ·
which raised $600,000, also U.S. trade wiih Collllllunist elecUon would ...Suit In a large
heard Sen. ·Hubert H. Huin. nations.
-tat Increase.
phrey, D-Mlnn., say that
- Democra-tic Chairman . - Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
Nixon's doroestic program,, .Jean Westwood liald In Las Bethlehem, Pa., saya charges
presented "a miserable · .Vegas that ~lxon has been "too that It spent more than $500,000
record, a no good record.''
expensive ... for Otu' pocket- onbehalfofNixon'sre-electlon
A. McGovern aide said the books and for Otu' souls."
C8lllpllign are untrue.
Democratic candidate was trying to "taunt Nixon out and·
•
make him answer charges.and ~ag
spell out programs."
Not Concerned with Polls
·
·
McGovern also emphasized
·
that he was not coneerned with
polls showing him 28 t&gt;ercentage points behind Nixon. "I
have lived in that· Mtuatlon
before," he said.
In other developmenls :
-sargent Shriver the Democratic vice presidential nomiCOPENHAGEN (UPI) - wouldcallo.nQueenMargre!he
nee, said in Illinois that the
Soviet wheat deal had been Prime Minister Jens Otto Krag n, whoWII8!l'f&amp;entln the royal
made at the expense of far. resigned today as head of the box, later thlll afternoon.
Social Democratic minority Bows to Queea
government less than 12 hours
At the end of the »minute
after be led Denmark into the speech, Krag pau.sed for a
Etu'opean Common Market. rooment, looking at the l!el!ted
The surprise move stunned the assembly, and said: . ·
country.
"After yesterday's re!eren. .
The 58-year-&lt;lld Premier an- dum the parliamentary sltuanounced his resignation at the tlon Is unchanged, The govefn,.
end of his opening speech to the ment wW continue, but thLI
New Foiketing (Parliament). does not tiecessarUy mean that
It caught all but his closest the prime minister wUI carry
colleagues by surprise and was on."
·
TEN CENTS not included In his official l&amp;,ag paused agaln-llld ilald,
speech.
.
"It has long been my \l'ilh to
Denmark liatfjusl voted by a step down when there was an
better than 2 to I margin In a ~aston. Thill hat come now. I
plebl~lte to join the European will request a .talk with the
Common Market. Krag said queen later today."
me reason for his resignation
With a bow to the queen,
was that "the events -yester. ""Krag etepped down from the
day, which were so close to lilY flower decorated roltrum. On
heart, succeeded."
.. his way out of the clwnber
Krag, who returned to power Krag was turrounded by
In September, !971, said he gestlculatingcablnetJI\Inltters
W'N"'&lt;'•';&lt;'&lt;•'MW;.,vo&lt;«- who apparenUy had not been
.,,.,y.•:Y~w:·.,....,;,.~~-- informed of hie decision.

K

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u1ts
In Denmark

organized " litter walk" showed the depariinent made
through town before Easter 58 arrests, . investigated 15
and action to "keep our air accidenls, issued $871 parking
clean." &amp;he suggested that tickels, took in $2,724.50 from
people be encouraged to ride parking meters, collected
LOTS CLOSED
Oppooeoto Protei!
bicycles one day a week. $442.60 in delinquent tickets
The
two
parking
lots
In
Krag
refused to dlscuas his
Council agreed to assist the and drove its cruiser 4,990
Pomeroy will be clooed far auccenor, but Foreign
club in any way it could.
miles.
tralllc all day Wednetday In Minister K.B.Andersen was
Mrs. Pat Thoma, president
Council transferred $1,187.56
order lbal a aeal may be named acting prime pinllter.
of the Pomeroy PTA, asked if from the parking meter fund to
placed on 'utetr ourlaee1. The
"'l'he executive board·af .our
trick or treat night is going to the special street bond
loll will be clo.ed earlY So.clal Democratto l'artY wUI
be held in .Pomeroy.
retirement fwul
Wedne1day ualllllte worll1.
[Continued on page 12)
To this question, Pomeroy
Street Supt. Lane said both
completed,
It
WU
IIIIIOUDCed
Police c;:hief Jed Webster said parking lots will ~ 1 blocked off
MR. RARDIN
at Pomeroy Council meetlai
n_:___ ll#,--.-..1
that as soon as all villages in early Wednesday morning for
Monday
Dl&amp;bl
by
Street
Supt;
c
r~ '-'II e~
the county are contacted It the Shelly Company to place a
Calvin
Lane.
would be determined when seal.on them. The balance of
trick or treat would be held, the streets in the village will be
'
and it would be up to council if resurfaced the last of the
Two Red Cross
.it should be held at all.
·month or early in November.
The date of trick or treat will
Attending were Mayor
Courses Set Up
be proposed at the next William Barogick, Ralph
Three cash prize~ to classmeeting ot council. Racine · Werry , William Snouffer,
PT. PLEASANT _ William
Instruction in two standard level winners and a ,10 grand
alread~bas said It will not Etma Russell, and Jim Mees,
have ·one.
council members; Jane H. Rardin Sr., 89, prominent Red Cross first aid courses will prize will be awarded In the ·
Chief Webster's report for Walton, clerk; Chief Webster, Point Pleasant attorney, died begin next week In Melg1 Americanism contest befng
unexpectedly today in Clarks- County.
held for Meigs Co1111ty fourth,
August was accepted. It and Lane.
burg after becoming ill enroute Mrs. Merle Johnson will be fifth and sixth graders by the
home from a vacation In North . Instructor for both cotu'ses, one Ladles Auxiliary of Drew
Carolina,
on -Monday nlghta beginning Wetiater' P6At 39, Aifiei'lcan
Mr. Rardin left home last Oct. 9 and continuing . five Legion.
week accompanied by·hls wife, consectulve Monday nights at
Those entering the contest
Elsie for the short vacation the Salem Center School. The are to write an eiS8y on, "I'm
and ~as traveling along Roule second will be on Thursday Glad I'm an American" ·Using
50 when they stopped In Clarks- nights, beginning Oct. 12, at leu than 100 words. The esuya
The fund to build an animal obtain this objective.
The ·society expects to burg . Although complete Johnle's Beauty Shoppe wlll be judged on content.
shelter will benefit from a
rummage sale sponsored by sponsor a bazaar probably in details were not learned, he located at the lnter~ctlon of
The winner of each grade
the Meigs County Humane November, proceeds from died in St. Mary's Hospital Union Ave. and the Route 7 by- 'eve! wlll be presented a $3
Society Friday and Saturday in which also will be placed In the apparently shortly alter pass.
cash prize and the grand prize
the Coates Building in Mid· animal shelter building fund . midnight.
winner wiU receive a ''0 prize.
A daughter, Mrs . Samuel F.
LOCAL TEMPS
dleport from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Chairmen of the sale are
Mrs. Edith Fox, AmerJ.
The temperature · In down- canlam chairman of the ·
The only means the Humane Willie ~aude Coates of Mid· (Elsie Ann ) Roush, and a son,
Society has for obtaining dleport and Mrs. Donald Betz- William H. Rardin Jr., left town . Pomeroy · at ·11 a.m. unit, is In charge of the contest.
money Is through donations lng, Osborn St., Pomeroy. immediately to accompany. Tuesday was 62 degr~s under Entries are to be sent to Mrs.
and fund raising activities.
. Articles for the sale may be left their mother liack to Point sunny skies.
Grace Pr.att, Auxiliary
·Pleasant
after
rectHvlng
the
· The society 's first and at the Coates building from 1-5
President, North Third Ave.,
uniqu~ly ambitious project Is p.m. Wednesday (tomorrow), word at I :30 a.m.
CLOSED MONDAY,
not later than Oct. 15.
The body will he returned to _ Meigs County banks will be . ·
constru~tion of a modern or on Thursday if"necessary, or
animal shelter in the county, may be arranged to be picked the Crow-Russell Funeral 'closed all day l\1onday, Oct. 9,
Tentatively,
three-year up by· calling Mrs. Coates 'or Home with arrangements to be in observance of Columbus
. Day.
(ConUnued on page 12)
prograro has been set up to Mrs. Betzlng.

Attorney
Is Dead

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.•,•,•.·.·:·.-.... •.•.J'.",' . ',.... ..

For EsBBYB on
Americanism

Rummage Profits to Go
Into Fund for Shelter

a

2 Vehicles

Damaged
. Two cars were daroaged and
a driver ' was arrested on
charges of leaving the scene of
1111 accident and driving while
·Intoxicated as the result of an
accident In Pomeroy at 10:32
p.m. Monday.
Pomeroy pollee said a car
driven by Wayne Black, 54,
Roote I, Knox, Pi.., struck the
rear of a parke&lt;! car on Cotu't
St . Minor· daroages were
reported to the parked vehicle
owned ..by Leslie Carr, Unco(n
tnll.
Black's vehicle, not slol)plng,
went ori to Main St. where It
atruck a utlllly pole. Black'l
cat was a total 1011. He wu
arrested an the two charg•.

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mtri'HEIUi'B HOmxxnioNG QUEEN .....11.... ind

·wUI be Crowned at

hllf~ ldlvltlel rrkta)' •

at tbe

•ttendllnta ...:. CcmpitiDg for the lille fllioiDecomlJIS Queen . SOuthern-North Gallla footbell game. A ~~ wUI be beld
at .SOUthern 1fi811Schoolll't, bac:trow, 1-1', Jeen SIDttr, Ansle . · Friday, leaving the high I!Chool at 2 p.m.lltd move tbrou&amp;ll
.the village of Racine.
. "
Hubblrd and Aimee Halton, Nt1ion; attend8nta, froilt row,
Carol Mldilel,' Tammy BoUih,
and Beci1 Sayre. The qu.a .
,,
'

OFFJCE TO OPEN
The Pomeroy Chamber or
Coounerce olfice located 011
·the gro111d Door of the MeJp
County Courtltoule wUI be ....
· Monday, Wldn•ICI1y • and
Frklay from 12 to J lind
Tualday llld 'lbtn&lt;laJ from •
."10 12.
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Troy, the Queei1J Democratic
leader who is McGovern's '
••
aJmool weekly campaign national urban affm dlrecllir,
1top1 In the state, the . admlta that McGovern would
Mcllovern..sbriver l!cket is lose by 300,000· votes if the
dolJw llltlf ID clo.le President ~liOn '!'ere .held tllday.
Ntxon'a lead in tzlld!tionally
Rockefeller's strategy is to
. DeoJocratlc New York State. build the Presid~t·s plurality
IDfact,thereiaevidence'tbat in RePublican upatate New
~ Stn.·,Geoi"Je·McGov&amp;in'alnten- · ¥oR-toward the 700,000 vo~
. abe effort in )he state as:tuaUy ·level, while holding MCGovern
~ lacostlDg the Democi-ats votei:" lc!_a 400,000 vole margin in
·A. recent poll for Time Democratic New York City.
111111axlne by Daniel Yante!O; · This Ts the formula that won
vlch, lJic. llhowed that Nbfon'a · four terms for Rockefeller and
~ over McGovern had In- three for Gov. Tlxlmaa E.
.cnued 14 Jier cent In the last ~.
mmth. It gave Niml 57 per
Poll C8Ued Uarea!lsl!c
cent,McGovern26percentand
A tele~e poll by CBS
17 per cent uixlecided.
•, showed !he' President ahead
Private poJJa taken by both even In New York City, Jut
eandldatei are aald to cmflrm Nixon campaign . aides disthat McGovern Is not dolrig mls~ed these results as
well In the battle for New' "unresllatic."
·
York's 4i electoral votes.
"Right now our biggest ·
McGovern.llauariiJC Jew~ q,posltion. is· the polla, comBy aAY F. RlaiAIUIS

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President's Lead is Increased By 14% Last Month
with 57% to Challenger's 26%; 17% Undecided

. ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-!}e,.

uPState GOP stronldlold.
presidential ticket.
blocl!.ing the party that was
Democrats Visit Weekly
' One unknown factor in tlie formed primarily aa a rel\ctlon
McGovern and Shriver are New Y!&gt;rk State ,presidential to the Governor's policies.
expected , to keep up· their race is Nixon's croaa endorseweekly stops ·Iii the state. This ment ·by ·ttre~servative • This . yeat, White · House
week McGovern is bringing ~rty and McGovern's' by the pressure and the governor's
Sen. Edmund s. Muskie along Liberal Party. .
desire to assure a. Nlxm vicfor a campaign trip to Buffalo,
The Liberal Party J ine tory ill New York brought the
Which h8ll a heavy Polish brought the Democrats 311,000 conservative line to the Prespopuillllon.
votes" In '1968, or most of the ident.
The Democratic candiaatea' ·":310,000-votes-by·which Hubert
appearances iq New York Humphrey carried the state. · · The croaa endorsement also
State have been successful for ' A Republidia 'presidential assured an all.()ut effort on
the most part In te.rms of crowd ' candidate neve~ before !Ia~ ~ad : Nixon's behalf by Sen. James
response. But It awears that the Conservative Party line. L. Buckley,whowaselectedon
regular Democrats ara not Rockefeller has always denied the conservative line over
making their usual all-out . the Conservatives the right to Republlcan Sen. Charles E.
effort on tiehalf of the use GOP electors, effectively Goodell.

vn
·
E •d. • p
•
~~~~liea:~c: ~:r.~U:o=:.r:.~~
.at pi emic roportiOD
up COilllderably among Jewlah a bigh source In the Nixm state
wtera, wiio· Cast me ,out Of campaign. "It's nice to have

' every 10 ballots In New York,
In their almost weekly trips to
.the ' state, McGovern and
lluiver have made a special
point of resssurpig Jewa of
lbelr support for Israel.
.
' The NixOn campaign In New
York, headed by Gov-. Nelson
A. Rockefeller, Ia sltplng
ma:e ~ce. Rockefeller
originally Insisted the
Pl'elldent wu the unc!erdog In
the lllale, a line that now bas
been dropped.
R. Burdelt Bixby, the Clliil..lgn manager, 118id the po1Ja
lndleate · "the greatest
CI"OIIIOvef Of Derilocrats stnce
Eilenhower In 1958."
, Nixon lost New York badly In
hla prevlciua two prealdentlal
campaigns. But now Matthew

the candidate In that position
bUt the other two elements are
real concerns, espj!clally when
you have to worry about state
and lcica1 elecilona too."
Nixolllan't taking New York
for granted. Hla tentative plana
call for at least two more
appearancesinihestate,onein
the predominantly Republican
~burbs of Long !Bland and the
other. upstate in either
Syracuse or Buffalo.
· II can be assumed Nixon will
also make anotbefilOp li\N'elt
York City close to election day.
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew will also make two
stops In the state, probBbly to
address the Conservative
Psrty dinner In New York·City
and to visit Syracuse. the

Helen Help
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Us.

By Helen Bottel

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o· n 2-Year ·Increase. of 25 ot.o
7(
By LOUIS CASSW
·
United Preas International
Venereal disease, an ancient
scourge thllt modern medicine
thought It had conquered, is
reaching epidemic proportions
throughout ·America.
Tlie number of cases of In·
feetious syphilis and gonorrhea
reported to public health

national window
ailthorlties has Increased by
more than 25 per cent during
the past two years.
VD now ranks as America's
second most widespread communicable disease-surpassed
in fr!'llllency of incidence only
by the common cold. And all
lndica)ions are that tbe rise is
continuilig, perhaps accelerating.
.
The figures a~;e eveil more
alarming than they appear, for
they cover only officially
reported cases of VD. Public
". ~

health officials are sure millions of cases .go unreported
and untreated.
Early Cure Advised
Both syphilis and gonorrhea
can be cure\! with mqdern
antibiotics if treated in their
early stages, when their syrnptoms are plainly apparent. But
if left untreated, both diseases
lll3Y go underground, as it
were. Superficial symptoms
disappear, leaving the patient
with the illusion that he's well.
Actually,
the
deadly
spirochetes at this point are
spreading through the body.
Wlthoutlreatment, venereal
disease can lead eventually to
heart disease, blindness,
sterility or lnaanity.
The resurgence Of vP as a
major national health problem
is ironic because not many
years ago medical authorities
were speaking of it, along with
polio, smallpox and tubercillosis, as one of the once-dtead

Nixon, Gains Voting Lead

iome stage hlta. Tbelt.only bigaetim 11 fOotball·
basketball~ey - but moat oftheir tiCkets
'
. ' . T'S ms
' BABY. , are gone In an.a-. Iota.· """~
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YF.S, SIR, 11IA
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NEW YORK .(KFS) -No one's thought of
. P. J. Clarke's owner ..,..• .., ..,.vezzo a
inyjting Sir W"lliSion •s daughter, Sarah Chur· Giants Srtd ducats are beautifully located
chill, to the "Yoqng Wlnstoo" film opellln(l here smack on the Yank~ Stadium 00-yard_llne ~In _
Oct. 10 ... Ftab~rs inBIIt dining at Gallal!ller's 1!\e very tippety-top row. Yo11 need an elpEI!l·
before lbelr big f~ta Ia lllcky: Jut both 1'4. All · stocil, plorul, ovgeJ) mask and a blood transand F. Ps~raon .chomped Steaks !here earlier fusion to get there. ~ovea the antique stadium
·lhe day Floyd lost ... Ditto semt.flnaliBts Ken' really needa esc alton, Jiot to mentim a 'iJiimlng
Buchanan and Carlos Ortiz; catloa' stest was team ... Tennis imJilortlil Bo~y Riggs quit N·
unluCky, toO ..: Not .UIIme charilp .ie.Be Owens y . for calif. after ~ mllliorHluck !Vorce
who ra~ tiaiueh a meal a few feet away .... seltletneni from hla ncl) wife Of 25 ye . . .
When Stuart ·LeVIn toOk over Le PavUlon whicb
Why the new Duk! Elllngtoo melody. .will
just folded, a huge outatsndlng bill was Owned have lyrics by one Allison AsSante Instead _of,
by ·a famf4 .W88hlngt0n liostesa; on attempting say, Mltctv;~ Pa~lah who .!~ed sucb !me
to ·collect Stu was lnforme\1 she didn't pay such words to Sophisticated Lady , seems . ~ .
bills her 'appe&amp;rance alolte was worth tlie five- Duke's top aide Peter Dean went for irealment
~e "~iff" beciiuse the Old hamnle lna!Sted to Or, Mario .Assitnte in. ~ew Jersey durln,g
She wu worth ·u for "publlc relationa" ... which the doc showed De.an some of his wife s
Margaret Webster lilSIBts 'Jn interviews about- .llilm!!Nl wf!UI§~ ... Polls asaei"t the brutal
her neW book "Dop't Put Your'llaughter on the problems Of brushing off TOOl E!181eton rubbed
Stage;, the major trouble with the Bdwy. legit off llllll7 on sen. McGuf! than Eagleton wfiose
theater is ticket pricel (fl.iO to f9 for.straight ~1ty Ill sky-high ... New 11\lrVeya suggest
plays)· Maggi Webster's book has an even NIXon will win the 18-to-21 new-voters, too ...
stoute~ , 10 tageon it.
·
'
Newsweek's Gallup poll gives 52 pct. to Nixon,
Sir Alec Gulnness playing the title role In 4~ pet. to :f.!cGuff ... Drab general forecast: less
"Hitler·TheLastTenDa:Ys" movie reliearches than half the eligibles will vote.
his ~acters completely and '.was flab- . Lord La~ Olivier's "Sleuth" film ·marks
bergasted finding thla marginal history: "Do his 50th.. anm~eraary as a ~ummer. Played
you know what Hitler handed ·out as wedding Kate ,in Tammg of the Shrew at Stratford.()n.
gifts? ASliver framed photo of himself _ and a Avon with the Shak_espeare Festival Theater
couple of cyanide tablets!" Hpw thoughtful! · (ndw The Royal) m the ould Elizabethan
New guy in Raquel Welch's life 1a Robert mannerof_having lads play laaa!es. He was 15 ...
Ross, 43. Wanta him to direct her nest movie Oh, those liberal Red Chinese: screaming at the
after their Corsica and (very) Nice Idyll ... UN to oust the last five Taiwan newshands ·:·
Couple of spalpeens who came over here half a Read a ~ty quote by a Lindsay IDp aide tmt his
dozen years ago and. now own a mini- hotshot hierarchy had to pay when they ate
conglomerate of Irish pubs (Green Derby, John grandly after municipal conferences, no exBarleycorniwln the American Jriabmen of the pense accounts etc.; buHet the walters from the "
Year Award o1 the Emerald Society: Jerry defunct UEtolle restaurant tell you how they
Toner and Terry d'Neill ... Frederic Koewe and ignored the blll, stiffed the walters, etc.
Alan Lerner who made zillions from "My Fair
Richard Burton's hefty Basque chauffeur
Lady ""B~doon "etc then apllt with some didn't have room to park the Burtons' Ro~
ran~r are anchored In th~ Mediterranean on a outside a theater In Sicily. So he basqued up, got
big c~riered yacht adapting "Gig!" to the N. out, and lifted two Flats 500 to Rolls right In ·:·
y. nmsical stage. After opening first in L.A. ... Uganda-bl~ot~ Ge_n· Amin ':"ears Israeli- .
"Shaft" composer Isaac Hayes is launching a style filers wm~ on !lis army uniformB. Seems
low-income housing layout with other blaCk be.took the Israeli flymg courses ~ll right - and
bizmen ... Bdwy. theater brokers direly need failed.

·
·
diseases which were well on
the way to ellinination f~!!Yugh
new drug ani! vaccine
discoveries.
Overconfident Too Soon
But Americans got overconfidenf about VD too soon.
Appropriations for a nation·
wide campaign ·against the
social
diseases
were
drastically reduced.
There was a letdown in ef.
forts to educate all segments of
the public abOut the highly
contagious nature of VD; the
manner in which it is transmitted (almost exclusively
through sexual il\tercourse
with an Infected parlner); the
early symptoms of Infection;
the ease ·of treatment with
,
modern druga; the often fatal swirl~d lately around the
consequences of leaving It . question of whether, when. or
untreat~.
how general sex education
. . The result is that a genera- should be offered In achoola.
tio~ of young people has grown Whatever your position on that
up 111 America who do not take Issue, surely there _can be no
VD very seriously as a m~nace · argument about the need for
to health, and rarely take direct, explicit, vivid in·
precautions.
structlon of teenagers about
Much . controversy has the perils of venereal disease.

···Television Log
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out 14 men. But in the third he

got into a jam, and only a base,
miming nilshap · by usually
surefooted Luis Aparicio kept
the Red Sox from a big inning.
HarperS~Ies

Tommy Harper singled with
one out and raced ·to third on
Aparicio's hit and run single to
left field. Then a bal! hit by
Carl .Yastrzemski to right
center just dropped beyond the
reach of Mickey Stanley for a
double, scoring Harper to tie
the game, l·l. On the play,
Aparicio was attempting to
score too, but slipped rounding
th~ and hustlt!ll back to the
bag only to lind Yastrzemski
there waiting for him. Yaz was
tagged out and Lolich stranded
Aparicio when he fanned
Reggie Smith.
A home run by AI Kaline in
the first inning off loser John
Curtis, ll:S, gave Lolich an
early · boost .and a lead off
homer by Aurelio Rodriguez in
the fifth proved to be the

•.

I

.

Programs for Tonight'
and Tolnorrow

Amy Portofe
'

•,

•

•/.

Giants Spill
Eagles 21~12

p .m . .

St. Louis !Santorini 8-10) at
Pit.lsburgh (Moose 12· 10), 8
p.m.
·•
Los Angeles (Strahler 1·21 at
Atlanta !Niekro 16-lll, 8 p.m.
San Diego (Cal~well 7-10) at
San Francisco t Bryant 13-71, 11
p.m.
,,
New York (Webb 0-0 and
Seaver 20-121 at Montreal
IRenko 1-9 and Walker 2-1), 2, 6
p.m.
Wednesday's Games
New York at Montreal. night
St. Louis at Pitts, night
· Philadelphia at.Chicago
Los Ang at Atlanta, nighl
Houston at Cincinnati 1 night

San Diego al San Francisco
American League

East

w. I. pet. g.b.
85 69 .552
Boston
84 69 .549 •;,
Baltimore
79 73 .520 5
New York
79 14 .516 s•;,
71 83 .461 14
Cleveland
Milwauk ee
63 91 ,409 22
West
w. 1. pet. g.b~x-Dakland
92 61 .601 ~
Chicago
86 66 .566..~ SV•
Minnesota
76 76 .500 15'1&lt;
Kansas City 75 77 .493· 1611&lt;
Califronia
74 79 .4fl4 18
Texas
53 99 .349 38'1&lt;
•-Clinched division title
Monday's Results
Chicago 6 Minnesota 4
Detroit ; 'Boston 1
.MIIwauke&lt;) 6 New York 1
IOnly games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
IAll Times E'DT)
Chicago Bradley 15-141 at
Minnesota (Corbin 8·9), 2: IS
p.m.
Boston (Tiant 15·51 at Detroit
(Fryman 9-3), 9 p.m.
Oakland (Odom 14·61 at
C.lllornla (Wright 17-11 1, 11
p.m.
Milwa ukee (Lonborg 13·121 at ·
N~w York (Siottlemyre 14-171,
7:30 p.m.
.
Baltimore (Palmer 21 -10 and .
McNally 13-17) at Cleveland
(Tidrow 14· IS and Lamb IS-51; ..
2, 5:30p.m .
Texas 1Paul 7-9) a't Kansas
City !Busby 3-0L 8:30p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Oakland al Calif, night
Chicago at Minnesota
Texas at Kan City, night
Boston at Delrolf
Mllw al New York, nlghl
!Only games scheduled I
Oetroit

By BilL COOMBE.
on a five-y~d Rea~s pass to
PHILADElPHIA (UPI) _ Po James m the third 41Jarter
Versatile Ron John80n of the and field , gosls of 'J:I and 15
New York Giants runs Inside ya~s by Tom Dempsey in th,e
and out, catches passes long first half. A missed fleld goal,
and short, and makes fools of an interception in the.end zone
braggarts like Leonard Tose. by Spider Lockh..-t, a (wnble
The dapper Tose, who took recovery by Willie Williams
$16 million from his trucking and an !nte~ptlon by Jim
fortune to buy the lowly Files spoiled the other Eagle
Philadelphia Eagles three chances.
years ago '\Vent around town The Eagles' one bright spot
all last w~k "guaranteeing" was the play of wide receiver
his club would finally win a H~old Jackson, who mainfootball game Monday night tamed his league peas catching
before a ·nations! television lead wtth nine for 136 yards.
audience. Johnson proved Johnson set a club record
Tose's "guarantee" was 88 with his four to:uchdowns on
worthless as the warranty on a Snead paaaes of 16, 9 and 15
second-hand truck by scoring yards and a 5 yard run. He
four touchdowns In the Giants' carried 36 limes for 124 yards
first v!c!Dry of the season, 'J:I. and added 60 more on five
receptions.
12
To top everything off the Giant Coach Alex Webster:
, I
,.
Giants
were under the dlrec- seid his "game plan was to run
\
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'
lion of Norm Snead a quar- Johnson because we felt we
t
"~····
•
terback traded by th: Eagles a weren't playing ~. team like
\.
. \.
year alter Tose took command. Dallas or Detroit.
,.
"I can't believe that bleeping
Big EmoUooal Llll ·
Snead beat" this team " Tose John80n, at full strength
IN ACTION TONIGHT said afterward. "I'm' sick. I after being idled by leg llijuries
Cary Coutts and Amy just can't believe we're this lastyear,saidhisperformance
"was a "big emotions! lift
Portofe, who captured two bad "
This Wook's Spjtclal.. ·
· , What They Lac~ed\
~cause I !as playing cautious
individual first place finishes ·
each Saturday against
What the Eagles lack~ ~Ul now.,·
'• .
Muskingwn, will be on the a sense of oJIPortunism. With Although the Eagles.. rolletl
Rio Grande swim team this rookie , quarterback John up more YBI"dage, -~94 to the
evening · when Rio hosts Reaves stsrtlng his first game Giants 321, the Giants con'''
Capital at Lyne Center, after two losses under Pete verted 11 of 16 first downs, led
USED CARS
Liske they moved lna!de the 21:S at halftime and coasted
beginning at 7 o'clock.
Giant' 30-yard line seven times behind Snead's passing for 164
and had first downs inSide the yards on 12 of 19 attempts.
25 six limes. They scored only Snead surpassed lhe 25,000
mark in c81"eer yardage totala..
Major League Results
Tose, whose boisterous talk
· By United Press International
contrasts sharply with the
National League
2 DOOR H.T.
silence of head Coach Ed
Phila
000 001 002- 3 9 3
Chicago
201 010 oox- 4 52
Kbayat, blamed the loss on a
Twilchell, Scarce (51, Wilson
v.e motor. auto. trans.
NEW
'YORk
IUPIIThe
lack
of team "character."
l7l and Boone; Reuschel,
Ready
logo.
Phoebus (81, Pizarro (9) and United Press International to~ '"!'his team played like they
major college football teams
,
h
te "
Rudolph. WP- Reuschel (10-8). 20
with lorst place votes and won- don t have any c arac r,
LP- Twitc hell 15-91.
los I records In parentheses: Tose said. "I think our players
(Jst.ga'mel
14th weeki
have the ability to win and I
·
Team
Poinls
h theyre
• ' not
NewYork OOOOOOOD0-0 01 l. Southern Cal 122114.01336 dont, know wy
Monlreal
204 100 OOx- 7 10 1 Oklahoma 111 I (J.O) 321 w!Ming But it Is not the fault
·You'll Like Our Qualny
McAndrew, Strom 131. Rauch 2·
·
Way of OolnQ Buslnes5.
151, Sadecki (B) and Sudakis ; ~· Alaba~a Ill 14-01
212 of the coaching staff or the
203 front office "
GMAC FINANCING
Stoneman !12·141 and McCar- 5.· Ohio
Sate 13·11
Ill 12·01 ·. 181
N
ebraska
·
992-5342
J'orooro
ver. LP- McAn drew I11-8I. HR 6 Michigan 13.01
Asked whether that left the
178
Open
Evenings'TIIB:OO
- Fairly !16th).
·
T'
(1nd game I
7. Louisiana St. IJ.OI · 144 players to blame,
ose
,TII5.P.M.. ~Jf. , ·
8
137
2
0
New York 000 ooo 0) 1- 2 6 0 · Noire Dame 1 · )
anap!Jed "you're damn right."
Montreal
ooo 000 o!o- 1 9 I 9, Washington (4·01
65
•
d
8
Moore, Me Graw I I an 10.
11. Florida
St. 14-01
38 ~-------------.-----~
Texas (2·01
.
64
:Nolan ; Morton. Marshall (9) l2. Tennessee (3·11
t7
and McCarver, Boccabella (9). 13 UCLA IJ II
14
WP-MCgraw 18-61. LP-Marshall 14: Auburn lj·O)
13
!14·81.
15. Air Force (3·01
10
.
16.
Colorado
(3·11
9
!Only games scheduled)
17. Iowa State !3-01
7
American League
18.
Stanford
(3·0)
6
Chicago
010 001 040-6 8 2 19, Penn State (2-11
5
Minnesota 000 031 ODD- 4 10 2 20.
Arizona
Slate
12·11
2
Geddes, Lemonds (6), Neumeier 181. Forster !!I and
Brinkman; Woodson, LaRoche
(81 and Borgmann. WP. Lemonds (4-71. LP- LaRoche
15-71. HRs- Orta (3rd), Brad·
lord (2nd).

68 FORD
FAIRLANE

11

TIRE -SALEI.
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DELUXE atAMPION·SUPER
BELT • ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT

Fed. Ex. Tax

E78-14 ............. '22.83
F78-14 ... ;.......... '23.68
G78-14 ............ '24.11

'2.34
•2.52
'
'2.69

H78·14 ............. '24.97

'2.93

halnny
·
r

a

'- Downing-Childs.Agency Inc.
. INSURANCE BONDS
· MUTUA~ FUNDS

man

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G78-15 ..: ......... '24.54

·2~78

H78-15., .......... . '25.39

'3.01 '

'

J78-15..............

I

'27~96

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'3.12 .

WHITE.WAllS SLIGHTLY .HIGHER
BLEMISHES ONLY

Meigs .COunty's ·Oldc5t and

'I

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Karr' &amp; Van Zandt .

OOLUMBUS (UPI) ~ "It's weren't a vecy good team until
amazing bow one guy can fire ·we started using Hop."
up a football team," Ohio State
Hayes said Griffin's ability
. Cosch Woody Hayes said Mon- to ignite his team was ''more
daY. at his weekly press Jun. importal)t to me than the
cbeon, still marveling over tile record."
aploita of freshinan tailback
The Bu~eye coach said his
Archie Griffin.
team came out of the North
Griffin, the .5-10, 11K-pound Carolina game with a
former . ColumbuS Eaatmoor minimuin of injuries with ooly
High School aU.()bio star, was linebaCker ' Vic• Koegel, the
too good and 1don't think they
still the center "Of most of the team's.leadlng taCkler against
(Browns) really showed any
conversation for hiS record· the Tar Heels, being hobbled.
Cary Coutts
great J)liss ruah unill they hit
shattering performance Hayes said, however, Koegle
the bomb and got safely
Saturday against North would be ' ready to play
ahead," Brown Said. ''Then
Carotma,
.
Saturday when the· Buckeyes. B'
[ .,;r
J
they knew we bad to pass and
Hayes said he bad a · call travel to California. ·.
· ef!,g8 .L' 8RS .lJ R
'I:'
' the old adrenalin started flowMondliy morning from·former
1ng and they came after us."
Buckeye fullback Ollie Cline,
Griffin also:set a record for
CINCINNATI (.UP!) - derson.
Anderson said he still has lr~:r:~·h·~;,•:~::"~
whose individual game rushing receiving buckeye leaves, Cincinnati Bengals Coach Paul . "Anderson had trou~le hit- faith in the Bengal offense, Jut · I~
record Griffin smashed Satur· awarded foi19Wing each game Brown aays tile club's ling the open man Sunday, Jut "it's just a mat~r of going out
day with 239 yardS in 27. car- by Hayes for outstanding ind!· telephmes ""ve been ringing it's something he baa to go and showing It now."
riea.
vidual performances, when he furiously since Sunday and the through," the coach said. "He
"I wouldu't say I'!ll wonied
Cline, who set the ptevioua got six.
· .
talk isn't pleasant.
bad a bad day but it was hardly about It " he said. "As ·long as
record ol229 yards against Pitt
,He was named' the outatsndBrown said fans ·have been all hiS fault.
,
you ca~ look at the film.s and
·in 1915, called to have Hayes ing offensive bact, good for one registering their discontent
"The job may be just a little see where you made your milf.
congraW!ate Griffin on break- leaf, and pcked up one eacb for with the Bengal8' lnablllty to ~ig for him .still. And then he · takes, you have somethln~ to
' . ing the mark; ;
'·
his 20, 22, 32 and 5f&gt;.yam·ruris, score touChdown in the. last had to be up there before those work on."
.
· "Ollie iriade the remark that and also got another for a nine- two games. That problem 81,000 people. It's rough. His
'
!!!!!!!!!!.!li!!!!!!i!l!i!!i
. there have been a lot of greS\ yard touchdown. .
"
resulted In 41 27-6 loaa to , the s!W.tlon is similar to Mike
bacli:a at Ohio State In the · Belt Of 'l'lle Game
ClevEHand' Browns last Pltipps before thla year." ·
meant!Dle;" Hayfjl saki, "and . "That touchdown run was lils weekend. · · .
Phipps baa been With the
,, the!"!! IIU~ (!;lob) .Fef&amp;UI!Qll• best run of the g~e,•• Hayes
"You're nothing when you ' Browns 'three years, .lui just
PHONE 992-2342 .
• •.MIDDLEPORT, 0.
.• (l!ob) White, (Hop)' p&amp;asady, . Said. "He had to beat four pien lose,", Brown observed Mon, started lo click this sea8011.
1
.; . (-Don) Clark: and toOl• I've 00 that.one."
' . . day, "bUt \!ike a look. 'l'llere's
··n w.. a strance game and
' 1· ' ' '
'
. probably for~tten."
'The top J~n award went only one unbeaten 'team In pro ·K~n Is partly a v!cliln of It,"
~
,,. .·, tllllll*" PerfGniiiiiCe
to guard ChuCk Bonica, whlle football&gt;:" · ,
: Brown said. "Remember, we
.
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'
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·,HIY• i!OIJIPilred ' Griflin's the ou1818ndlnc defensive line- Until the llfowns game, the . gained more grOund, we ~ved
l, performance In the ~-14 , '
and .baCk bOOOI"I went to Bengala were• (lrlbeat~, Jut ' the ball llllll"e than .Cleveland ·
9letGr1 SaturdaY .to Camdy ~ tsCkJe Peii Cusick Brown said ,the .Josa will cause did, and yet our offense reallr
I
·' When be'pla;recl aa a fteihm8n and Senior aifety Rick Seifert. · him to make no "drastic ,had a bl!d d&amp;y. We jUst dldn t
·Largest
. · in liOHighl out of Columbui ' · Hay• sald 'tlle r(IIJIIilg ill changes"beforetllen~tgsme do a good job;" '.
· ~ ,
• 'Central lflllh SchoOl, , ·
Griffin alld juDior Elmer up. against the .Denver . ~ronC\)S. ·
The Bengals six pOints came
''aciP C' •elf 'elictrlfled • pert at taUbac.'ll may mike him ...-1 .And he said tbe blame should on two field .goals· .by Horst
'nsuran~
te1111 tbe 111111 waY Arehle.did · !live lpeedy Morrla l!radahaw 1101 be ·placed square!)' on tWo- · Muhlmann.
,
'
•turday," B1Jt1 IBid· ''We . a JOoltat split end. .
year ~ck Ken An"()ur pass protection was llot

b: di!d•

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Today's Probable Pitchers
IAll Times EDTI
Philadelphia (Carlton 26-10)
at Choca!)o !McGinn 0-4), 1:30
p.m.
Houston tForsch ~-7) at
Ctncinnati !McGlothlin 8-8), 8

'895 .

Woody Praises Fine
R ~nning Of Griffin

;a•tJ•

Major League Standings r
By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
x-P1tlsburgh 95 58 .621
Chicago
85 68 .556 10 ·
New York
80 73 .523 Iii
St. Louis
74 so .481 t'i'!,
Montrea l
70 83 o458 25
Philadelphia 57 97 .370 38'1&lt;
West
• w. I. pet. g.b.
x-Cinctnnati 93 59 .612 Houston
84 67 .556 a•;,
LosMgeles 83 70 ,542 10•;,
Atlanta
70 82 .461 lJ
San Francisco 67 86 .438 261;,
San Diego
58 93 .384 34'h
•-Clinched division title
Monday's Results
Chicago 4 Philadelphia 3
Monlreal 7 New York 0, 1st
New. York 2 Montreal 1. 2nd

•
College R attngS

thing.

1

Chicago.
Stoneman, who no.llit lhe
Pliillies on April 17,1969, had
only O!le scare of losing his gem
and that came on a ball hit ·
back to him in the fifth inning.
Don Hahn, a former teammate, hit a slow roller past the
mound and Stoneman made a
play for the ball but couldn't
handle II: The official scorer
ruled it an error.
A bases4oaded triple by
Boots Day iri the third inning
was the big blow in the Expos'
attack in the opener while
Dave Schneck singled in the
wiMing run for the Mets In the
ninth lnn:ing of the second
game.
Pete Lacock knocked In
three runs and pitcher Rick
Reuschel won his lOth game as
the Cubs turned back the Phils.

. '

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winner. RodrigueZ ·alsO sin~
in two other runs.
· In other American League
garnes Milwaukee defeated
New York, 6-1, and Chicago
downed Minnesota, &amp;4.
Bill Stoneman was the inan
Of the hour in the National
League. He pi!Ched the secood
no-hitter of his career. as
Montreal defeated New. York,
7..(), in the first game. of .a
doujlleheader. The Mets took
the nightcap, 2·1 .. Chicago
edged Philadelphia, 4,3.
Yankees in Fourth Plaetl
The Yankees drQpped into
fourth place in the East behind
Idle Baltimore as George Scott
W:ove in two runs, including
one with a sacrifi~ fly il) a
three-run eighth inning. Bobby
Murcer belted his 3:&gt;nd hoJller
for the Yailks' only run.
Buddy Bradford pinch-hit a
grand slam homer in the eighth
·inning to bring the White Sox
from behind to· beat. the Twins.
Jorge Orta also homered for

0

By "all this" iS meant those two couri cases plus the two fines
which they've played Erving. Kennedy says he'll keep fining the
Hawks every time they play him; the Hawks say fine, they'll
,;·. keep Ignoring the fines.
,
;,
If you're cUrious about how Erving is adapting to his "new"
~: club, all he did for Atlanta against the Carolina Cougars at
·. Raleigh, N.C., last Saturday was hit on 14 of 15 from the floor and
make four free throws for 32 points.
He also grabbed 10 rebounds and his overall performance was
.,
rated "escellent" during his 43 minutes on the floor.
' Some already are saying he's up there with the best forwards
'o( in the game today and that takes in quite a bit of territory when
'•.,'
you consider fellows like Dave DeBusschere, Tom Cunningham,
; . Connie Hawkins, Spencer Haywood, Gus Johnson and Rick
Barry. Some even ssy Erving could emerge into the greatest
player In the game, Jut he's not letting himself be carried away
by thla'kind"if talk. ,.,
.
'
'" ' ,. . .
"The first thing I think about is how reliable the source·is," he
says, lntelljgently enough.
·
'
Might be Surprised
.
Even so, he might be surprised at the reliability of some of.the
sources. Like say, a good percentage of both NBA and ABA
players.
.
"I want to be one of the greatest'"players who ever lived, if not
thegreatest,"Erving says. "This isoneofthe goals I've sorta set
for ·myself. What gives me the biggest charge out there.on the
floor? I'd say rebounding. I really like to rebound. I think that's
the strong part of·my game.
"If I'm rebounding well, especially getting defensive
rebounds, I can either take it up the middle or pitch it out or fill
the lanes. I like to run. Lots of limes rebounding iS a matter of
timing, .jumping ablllty and just all out haart and hustle. You
know If you're scared to go in the kitchen, you're not goMa get
many, rebounds., rm not the biggest. guy In the world, l!!" _th!L,
heaviest, but I'm not afraid to~o In there."
That's rather awarent.
Anybody who signs a ccintract for two million bucks after
having already signed one for half a million can't be afraid of• any

'

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of $25,000 apiece NBA Commissioner Walter Kennedy has imposed on the Hawks because of the two pre-&lt;~eason games. in

B8Jld Do.os

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"All This"

Southern '

age;

' \

MILTON· RICHMAN ·
By .G~EG GALLO
, .w
• tw.l !iPO!!S Editor
.0
UPI Spo~ Writer
·.NEW YORK (UPI)-Juli~ Erving is what they" call a "hot . ~t was ~e old lim~s for
property::
·
• ·
M1c~ey t.ohch Monday ~ht as
Certainly the hottest one in sports right now. Why he's 80 hot, heitphl~ed the Detroit Tigfersthto
you can hardly touch him
. .
, .
w m one game o . e..
n.f~ dill
t bask tb iJ
.
·
.
..
.
Arilerican League's Eastern
. er,en . . e a teams m two 1eagues are agonizmg Division title with a pressure
over. hiS serv1cb this Vl!f'Y moment .. One of these teams, the performance reminiscent of
Atlanta Ha~ks, alread~ has been fmed $50,000 for their m- the three games he .won in the
volvement with him, but that's chicken feed. 'Yhat's a mere. · 1968 World Serie~.
$50,000 when you're talkillg about. a talent like Julius 'Erving's?
In-a game that bas to rank as
He's so bo~ now it's taking two aifferentcourts simply to handle the most important the portly
• S&lt;ime of the litigation over him.
leftbander has pitched, since
In the first court in Brobklyn, Federal Court Judge R.W. he bested Bob Gibson in the
Neaher has issued a preliminary l.pjunction prohibiting the 22- final game of the Series four
year.()ld Erving from playing with .any other club than' the one years ago, Lolich hurled a sixwhlchoriginaily signed him, the-Virginia Squires of the ABA.
hitter and struck out 15 Boston
•·",In·the
·other
court
in
Atlants
;
action
is
pending
on
a
$2-million
Reli
Sox as the Tigers moved
1
suit filed by the Hawks against the NBi and the other 16 clubs In into first place with a 4-1 victhe league.
tory. Awin over Boston tonight.
or
Wednesday will clinch the
Need a R&lt;,)lld Map
You alffiosl need a road map to follolv all that's bap)1ened to flag for Detroit and sen&lt;! the
Julius Erving, who came to the attention of many people even Tigers into· the AL playoffs
before he was the nation's No. l rebounder at the University of against the Oakland Athletics,
the Western Division chamMassachusetts or UMass, as its frequently called.
on Saturday. •
First, Erving signs a four~year contract with the squires for pions,
Lolich was ·overpowering in
half a million bucks. So far, so good. As a matter of fact, so far, the first seven innings, striking
very good.
But that's ooly for openers.
Mter averaging 'J:I points a game and being voted the AHA's
Rpoki~ of the Year, Erving, -..;ho had never ~raduated, is selected
by the Milwaukee Bucks in last April's NBA college draft.
Less than 24 hours later it:comes to light the Hawks got his
name on one of their contracts even before the draft and all it
cost them was a few dollars this side of $2 million, including an
up.front bonus of $250,000, a beautiful apartment ior five years in
Atlanta and a brand new car. .,
"In some cases, you have to take these money figu~ with a
couple of pinches of salt, but in Erving's case, be's so good that I
have to believe Atlanta is paying him nearly two million," says
one nuin who should ~now.
"At least thls .kid bad :;orne integrity. When ~e signed with
Atlants he told the people there he wanted to fulfill his original ,
contract with Virginia first, but somewhere along the line
somebody found a couple of loopholes and now you have all this."

&amp; ·1HIN6S

G

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l Sport Parade- . II' · · .. . ·
·.;::l

A ROOM FULL OF BED
"-Dear Helen·
6· 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Hathayoga 33.
'
.
'
'
CLEVELAND (UPl.) ..:\nother poll was to be
6:30- News 3, 4, 15,6, 8, 10; I Dream of Jeanle;13; C&lt;rowing Him
Can you tell me why heme builders keep making bedrooms " f,residenl Nixon hils taken the conducted before the Nov. 7
Up 33.
.
~
,,
smaller
and smaller, while turnlture mak~rs·
keep irliiktnjj'beds lead over George McGovern in election.
'
7:00- News 6, 10; Whafs My Line 8; Elec. ~o ,. 20 ; Beal The
'
J-1;
·
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bigger ancl bigger?
Clock 4; I've Got A Secret 13; Truth or Conseq. 3; American
a poll of Cuyahoga County
The latest survey showed
I read tbe other day that king- and queeno~~ized beds were residents conducted by the . NiKon with 38.7 per cent,
Life Style 15.
.
•
7:
3o ~· Thls Is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call 4; To Tell The Truth
cloelng standard sizes out of the market. My wife read It tOo, so Cleveland Press.
·BT PAUL CRABTREE "
McGovern with 35.4 per cent
61 Price Is Rig lit 8, 10; Beat the Clock 13; Top of the Month 15; .
lbe ordered us a klngo!lize mooster which, when It came, left us
Insight 33.
"The survey reflects the · and 25.6 per cent still unMore new shows of the 1972-73 Season, with a goodie which 8:00- Bonanza 3, 4; Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8, 10;
not even enough apace to chase each other comfortably around possibility the President is decided. A previous poll taken
Age of Anxiety 33.
,
the~.
gaining many .voters who were in.. mid-August
showed probablywon•tmakelt,anda baddle that shouldn't:
8, 30 _ Hawaii Flve-08, 10; Movie "Playmates' 6, 13; Dateline
Now l.llke a long bed that I can stretch out In, but I see no previously undecided ·and McGovern with 35.5 per cent,
THE WALTONS, 'lbursdays, 8 p.m.,'CBS:
America 33.
,
9·oo-'Bold0nes3,4; .. Dick Van Dyke o3.
need for all that width, not If you're aa compatible as we are. cutting into some McGovern Nixon with 30 per cent and 31
Earl Hamner Jr. grew up In Appalachia, in the Valley of 9: 30 _ Movie "Footsteps" s, 10; Marshall Sports 33.
.
(Bothoaus sleep In the middle.) And I like to be able to open my support," the newspaper said. per cent undecided.
Virginia. His family was a close-lm!t, loving one, and full of 10:00- NBC Reports3. 4, 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13; Flmg
drelllel" drawers all the way.
•
Li~e 33.
'
hardships- because he grew up in the depths of the Depre~~~~lon .
•
'
ed-'
becoming
writer
and
ound
beln
1l
:OO-News3,4,6,8,
10, ]3, 15. -·
.
Are theBe big~ just,a fad and, if not, when.wjll arcliltects
He dream v•
a
,
w
up
ga 11 .30- DickCavetf6·JohnnyCarson3,4, 15;Virglnlan8; Movoe
make bedrooms to fit them - for middle Income people? - 2 x 6
VeteransMemor!aiHospltal very good one, writing such works as- "Spencer's Mountain,"
· "Les Mlserables': 10; Movie "The Presldent's.Lady" 13.
MAN WITH6\0x7'10 BED IN 10x10ROOM
ADMITrED - BeltYBroo"•
1:00
.... , later transferredtothe screen In a wry g'ood movie, and ''The
:30 -_ Your
News, Healtlr4,
Weather 4; Local News 13:
1
.
Albany; Carl Ed.wards, Homecoming," a fine story that made a moving Christmas
Dear h: 6:
·
Hartford; Jennifer Young special last winter.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1972
II
"-'•"'•a
to
think
sided
with
Ath
T
Wood
.
A'h·
'
·
6:00Sunrise
Seminar
4; S.cred
10. .
Happy
De
.
y. was....,. •• ~.,.
no one
me ._. . . _
._. ·- _ ~!I,S; .. IDY--~·--~"'~; ,..._NotawholelotbappenatotheWaltons-theSpencer.famUy~ ..6 , 1 s~Farmtlme
-10~
. -··
--· _.,Heart
......
agalnit lllng-tized ·beds. Now that I've found a friend, I .dare
Robert Staats, Middleport; name inexplicably was ellmil\ated -50 the weight of the aeries
6:20 - Farm Report U.
-ess my ~en, whlcb are: Not only do ldngo!lizers usurp
Melanie Barton, Mason; Mary
•· r the bea Uy
char cterizatl
d
t ... th
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
res.. a r . v on
a
on, an mos w e 6:30 - 'Columbus Today 4; News, Weather, Sports 6; Bible
needed 1pace, Jut they're expensiVe (thOse blankets, spreads
alllC
OW Smith, Middleport; Harold numet"llUI clan IS well-caet.
Answers 'S; Urban League Presents 10.
andslteetsl.!)andthey'rethewrYdlckenstol!18ke.
H~dna!l, Pomeroy; Fred
RichardThomaa,lntheroleofHamnerhlmaelfasa17-year- 6:25- Glory Road 13.
.
Arcbitects, bedroomfurnltilrelll8JDifacturers: Take note! _
The Southern High Sc
. hool Btrtcher, Pomeroy; Salim old Is escellent He plays big brother to six brothers and sisters
7:00- Today 3, 4, IS; News6, B, 13; CBS News.
Yates, Racine.
•
·
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
H.
marching band participated in
DISCHARGED _ Pauline with affection and warmth, anq just a bit too much syrup.
13.
·
+++
th bo eco~'·g parade of
Michael learned (that's a womsn buddy) does a fine job aa the ' · 8:00- CaptaJn Kangaroo ·8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St.
e m "~'
Derenberger, Stanley TrusseU,
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'~3; Timmy &amp; Lassie 6.
Dear Helen:
Wahama High School Friday. Jenny Neumeyer, Glenna mother, ~ut Ralph Waite is a llttle tOO uni-dlmenslmal as the
8:30- Jack La La nne 13; Romper Room 8; .New zoo Revue 6 .
In aiiSWel' to the !OI"IIlel' fat girl who yearned to wear a bikini
1'he band, directed by R. Little, Edith Sayre.
father,whowuastrmgcharacter,lndeed,lntheorlglnalworka.
8:55- Local News 13.
Jut her mother was shocked, you said, "Times are changing Thomas Phillips, moved
we haven'tseen enough of the rest of tile caet to ~ass judgment
9:110- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; What Every Woman
•
WantstoKnow3; Mr. Rogers33; Friendly Junction 10; Capt.
· bildnls don't even fetch stares any more."
other th an to say the kids areverycute .
through New Haven playing
,
Kangaroo 8; Ben Casey 13.
In 10 yearS I think women will be swimming topleaa aa men "On Wisconsin" and "Stand Up
. Hainner himself lam hand to supervise the Scripts and does
9:30- To Tell the Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hazel e.
-Land tha ....
be ' ....
. 9:55 - Chuck White Reports 10.
do now. Put that In your prediction book and see if I am right. and Cheer." Southern band
some of the narratlm in the ~w, .
t.a~ to a P1110• And . 10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Sp,llt Second 13; In
FRANK
members were guests for
SERVICE SET
thia show, which we frankly like, needs all lhe pi1181!11it can getSchool Instruction 33; Columbus Six Calling 6: Jokers Wild 8,
•
dinner at the homes of
Funeral services· for Mrs. it's crunched between Flip Wllson and Mod Squad for a sltate of
10; Dick Van Dyke 13 .
Wahama band members.
Jessie E. Sansbury, formerly th. 1.
.
10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Price Is Right 8, 10; Split Second 13;
, ·
llear Frank:
e ra mg~.
Phil Donahue 4.
~nd, you aren't abreast· of the limes! Out In ·calltorriia
·n.e Southern band switched of Middleport, who dled Sun+++
11 :00-.Sale of Century 3, 15; Love American Style 6; Gambit 8,
THE MEN JIGAW ..... ursda 9
ABC
' 10; Password 13.
girls are already 11rimming topless at certain public beaches. its halftime show to before the day In Philadelphia, Pa., will
be
held
at
2
p.m.
Wednesday
at
,:
'
...
ys,
p.m.,
:
·
11:30Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewltched6, 13; Love of Life
Authorities say they are within the law (if not the bra), and guess gdamef.l ITdh~ band moved the Rawlings "oats F)llleral
ABC moves Into the "three-In-one" series, with a trio Of
e, 10.
.
what: after the first few startled i!tarea, they are lai"gely ignored
own e 1D one company
"heroes fu rotating dramas, juat as NBC has~ doing - with 12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's so.so Club 4; Local News 10;
front, then split Into ranks and ·Home . ·The Rev. Robert mixed success.
·
·
•
News 13; Contact 8; Password 6.
•
- I'm told. - H.
+++ .
presented a precision drill to Baumgarner ·will officiate .
One silgment of thii new entry, •"'!be Men,"la called Jigsaw' 12: ~O~ 3W's Game 3, 15; Spill Second 6; Search for Tomorrow 8,
Dear Helen:
,
.,
. ·
· the music of "On Wisconsin," Burial will' he in the Bradford
df
J
W ln.....""! in the le-'
12 , 55 _NBC News 3, 15.
1.-'4'" there have been more articles a•alnst Je•·"··d then performed pin wheels and Cemetery. Friends may call at an eatw-es ames a "''6'' ll . ro "'''Mr. Keen, Tracer
1: oo - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My chiiUren 6, 13; Green
of Lost Persons," a radio me erdrams of the 1blrtle&amp; and
Acres 10; French Chef 3J; trs Your Bet 8; Watch Your Child
"""
•
,........ , step twos to· "Across the th~ funeral Mme any time.
abortloo than for it. Here are my somewhat dlf!erent-oplniollll. Field."
. _.
.
Forties.
15,
All over this coun'-·
""':"'le
are
dy'•a
at
various
rates
for
~
w
·
••ht bas been pdated of
· with ll riB of
1:20Luc1!1e Rivers.
Mov1·ng · 1"nto concert for~
amwr,..
u
• course,
a so
·
·-"'-·· Ia ka Th '"Tr-:r
ell slowly be ""' they la"
1: 30 - 3,.._AMath3
..,,.
c , 4, 15; The w·
orld Turns e. 10; Lers Make
... ......, c '
ey e
cause
c~ proper
mation, the band played "Get
interplay u be tries to locate the lost, including lureaucrallc
A Deal 6, 13.
.
· ·
1111trltlon, proper housing, medical treatment, things they Together," the majorettes,
fights within' the pollee hierarchy, but mske no !JIIatake, tlda,
2:00- Days Qf Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newi)wed Game 13; Mtke
marginally cannot afford. They die raph;Uy because·they run a Diane Norris, Valorie Johnson,
~OOSTERS TO MEET ' ''he's 111111 Mr. Keen, the -.me cat your diddles and mcminles 2: ~~~to~s 3: 4."15; Dating Game 13; Edge of NightS, 10.
RACINE: ·- Plans for listened to,awa:yback-ther.liefore you' were born.
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospltal6, 13; Love Is A
car's bnikes" or tires too many miles ·- no money for Nancy Crow and Denls'e
replllcementa. Tiley die from lack ol pnlpel" rest, holding down Hendrix, presenting a dance. Friday's Homecoming will be
The serlee opener was a diiuter, wttb a weaJt Jllql, ~Marry_ Splandored Thing 8, 10.
· two joba ID make the budtet bllance.ln general, they are loved twiri routlne.' The band moved completed when the Southern ~awn cllaracters, and 1 predictable conclUSion. .
..
3:30- Return to Pnton Place 3, 4, 1s, One Life to Live 6, 13;
and wanted people we bate to ~Gee. •
'
' ·into an "S" forniation to· play llocal Athletic Booaters meet
Wainwrl,ght uhlblta a dramatic range that runa. ~~~e ·sciale
;,:C:~·~~~~C:,.mc!;t:,OO 3; Somerset A, IS; Fllntstones ~~Love
WheniOC!ety forbids an abortion It Ia forcing_the creation of· '-Stand Up and Cheer" ·in . at 7:30. tonl~ht at the high from A to B, and the'rewere a Jot o1 cbue sceriea that Were at· American $tyle13; Merv Griffin~~ Sesame St. 33; Gilligan's
• ilpeCiflc8lly UiiWanted lallnan, wblcb Ia • trifle llbaStiY for that salute to 'the Southern team. school in Racme. All fans are tempta io .emulate the' ci-lap photOIII"aphic impact that makes
4::i3 1 en~arv Griffin 4) ABC. Alter School6, u: Andy Griffith 15 ,
lllnWI. bUt a1ao forces the dlvenlm ill some of society's
· ' ·
urged ·to.attend.
MannlnnotchaboVetheordlnai"ydete(l!vellor)'. The attempts
Death Valley Days 8; Petticoat Junction 3. . ·
- t o hla malntenance.;At the SBfD8tlme we're creating
· falled. · .
·
·
5:110- Mister Ragen 33; Dick Van Dyke 15; Daniel Boone 6;
niW ,._.,, frtlin overcrowding, m..ied fuN (for welfare),
, 1 Don't judge the other two entries in ' thla IJ"lp by thla one,
5;~~de~s~i11· Dillon 15; e'tec. Co. 33.; Gom~r. Pyle 13 ,
etc.,llld Ill• aff"ed!n8 the~ at which ''wanted" people die.
j\lease. They may be quite gOQd, fot •II l llllow, just aa NBC's
Dragnet 8.
,
•
~ rrt•D~ an abortion doem't,ln thla aoclety, result 1n a
,
.
atable, of seven su,_,en haw some wllo are more.,,_ than 6:110..:. News, Weather, Sporl$3, 4, 8, JO, 15; Truth or Conseq. 6:
·
•
•·
,... --.-Sporlaco~ 33.
.
.ftl!\pilllpllfe.SomewherewearebUIItlngawantedpenonlnto
.ACCIDENT REPORTED
4-H DAY SALE SE'l'
othera. But Jigsaw Ia 0!18 puasle you wm'l catch me trying to . 6:30' - NBC News 3, 4, 1,5; ABC. News 6; CIIS f'lews a, 10;
.. . . tollllke 1"011111 for an lmwanted person. It's a nap, and a
'l'he M •· C
. Th w•""of th Appl Gr
solve.
· ,
·
··
, .
Halhayoga 33; I Dream of JNnle 13.
,
·
-JIIIOI'CIII4i. .. ,
.
,
e.,.a , ounty Sherlff'S •
e """
e
e ove , Alinai-'"":Theiho!ria-,;.......larg""'byone ... the"''"·.' 7:'oO-News,WHiher,Sports6.10;MIIIIIontlcifProgren33;
r~'"'!'
•
·· Dept investigated a lllngle car Unite&lt;\ Methodist ,Church will.
...,...
.,..__
"V
"'
""'
Wllat'a My Line I; Truth cr Canuq(jen*3; ~I the Clock
I'Yt blard 11011111 ts11t about \'Otq reftrendiQIII on tbe sub- ·
·
hold . a rummage sale Wed- sniiHnlbn, and fiDdlnl anytldna acep1 that'pertlcular !rind
4; N8WIIYI•klr '72 131 Know YoUr khoOia 33.
·
jlctBow- n 111n In noll'tomakuure lt'u fair electiOr. aecldent Mmday at 4=30 a.m.
ofcaraolbillbi!W'Iaubardufindlnc~butllliltberklnd 7:30- EpisOde: Action 33; To Tell Till Truth 6; 1M JudgelO;
· • wtt11 ilalJ qUIIifled voters :.. 1mein - n !It child-bearing
~n~~~::Om~ sW~ ~~:i ~~U:'·~ Iliad 10 bit 00 'l'll4! Fila ,_ 1 P• bact. 'ftllt ~ CJf J)lltl'11t,
15; Beet,The Clock 13; Polk&lt;~ Sur:lfOil_2, ., Prolfttors •
of •••· 7 DAVID
. bypaaa. .
from 9a.m. to 4p.m. ~ch day. ad41J8lli!1 tbinll:b)g'lblluld.llave perilbe\fdecaclenco.
a:IIO~eaAd•m·12 3, 4, 15: Publlt Aflalra33; PaulL~ ~seball
·a
·uto
driven
'
by
o-nald
·
'·.
+++
·
·
,
JS; rol Burnette I, 10.
·
..
.
The;
0.. liNn:
nu
·
•
· t:J!iz.~ d.l9an 3, 4: Movie J' Roll_lng MI
..
n"
6,
13;
H.lllllfula
of .
33
•
._._ ,,
·
·
Wllllaln Harrison, 1g, of Gallla
ONTHETVDW..: ToRy ~llllllSPdclal, 7:11, WTAP·TV ... ·
l~lldlllr-8\ql •..,.-n•l" diiJdla nuirder 1 lui !do Coqrity;travelinseast, went oft
, · Age Of~. 1 ~.aJ bealth report, Ia ~tlld 111 WMtJL. . . 9:QO-Mfellcal Ctnter8,101 CQunlry'Road foSin)IIIOII CrHii3:1.
II* - fiiC1 WOOIIII ~ ~•1ilrlllg abilrtiiHi aould 11a ·
10:110- S..ch 3, 4; Julie Andrftl,6; 1SJ Cannon 1, 10; 'Soul 33.
, , I flrll d It u•
HER
lla ': · lhe road and tOre down a fence
MAR!qAGE LICENSE . TV, 8 ... ~ .Aal.el"ka wa ....,lllll8ltlld _ . ao WMlJL. 11:QO- Newn.•: News I. 10,13, 15,
.,
,
It I
•
111111t
.
J!II. not t t
· owned by Evelyn ' Thoma.a. . Ronald Mirvbi Younc, 36, .TV, 1: ll, alld It .,... . Bdtq ... Wind Uie Linll, .wlllc;h · 11:30 -,J.oi!I!IIY Carson 3, 4, 15; DICk Cavett 6; Vlrgl!llan '' Movie
1
0JMovfe''ThtHIInttrs"13, -l .
'Jf I Jt,ltlt \...,talwl.frlladi.MIII)'alicrtloncilnlaloffer There. were no Injuries or Racine,· •nd Car"lyn
Sue doeln'tiiOIIIICiexel"-, ..-llatlonat8 ... andMinballfeotblll
. ·110
"A_
, .!'~1ednd~
·
1
1
i'?i ·----·tt.-.OUGBTABBALAWFORAlL ,arrest.
M
y
• ...........
........
I
Vfeifh
•
· ' Haley, 35, Middleport._
hlgblighlll,III ,WMUL-TV, at bu.
1:30- L-1 News 13. .
·
··
·

. . ,.

"

} -The ~_ily Sentinel, Middlepo~W&gt;onieroy, 0., Oct. 3, 1m

BY J.WK -Q'IIIUAN

.

lJ

McGovern·Despite HeaVy.Pitches ' Sh~~s ·Voice along Br'War . . ~.-~Minus Results _in.
Democratic
New York
.
..,

..

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1

�,

'.

.,,
"

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·'

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.

Troy, the Queei1J Democratic
leader who is McGovern's '
••
aJmool weekly campaign national urban affm dlrecllir,
1top1 In the state, the . admlta that McGovern would
Mcllovern..sbriver l!cket is lose by 300,000· votes if the
dolJw llltlf ID clo.le President ~liOn '!'ere .held tllday.
Ntxon'a lead in tzlld!tionally
Rockefeller's strategy is to
. DeoJocratlc New York State. build the Presid~t·s plurality
IDfact,thereiaevidence'tbat in RePublican upatate New
~ Stn.·,Geoi"Je·McGov&amp;in'alnten- · ¥oR-toward the 700,000 vo~
. abe effort in )he state as:tuaUy ·level, while holding MCGovern
~ lacostlDg the Democi-ats votei:" lc!_a 400,000 vole margin in
·A. recent poll for Time Democratic New York City.
111111axlne by Daniel Yante!O; · This Ts the formula that won
vlch, lJic. llhowed that Nbfon'a · four terms for Rockefeller and
~ over McGovern had In- three for Gov. Tlxlmaa E.
.cnued 14 Jier cent In the last ~.
mmth. It gave Niml 57 per
Poll C8Ued Uarea!lsl!c
cent,McGovern26percentand
A tele~e poll by CBS
17 per cent uixlecided.
•, showed !he' President ahead
Private poJJa taken by both even In New York City, Jut
eandldatei are aald to cmflrm Nixon campaign . aides disthat McGovern Is not dolrig mls~ed these results as
well In the battle for New' "unresllatic."
·
York's 4i electoral votes.
"Right now our biggest ·
McGovern.llauariiJC Jew~ q,posltion. is· the polla, comBy aAY F. RlaiAIUIS

~

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President's Lead is Increased By 14% Last Month
with 57% to Challenger's 26%; 17% Undecided

. ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-!}e,.

uPState GOP stronldlold.
presidential ticket.
blocl!.ing the party that was
Democrats Visit Weekly
' One unknown factor in tlie formed primarily aa a rel\ctlon
McGovern and Shriver are New Y!&gt;rk State ,presidential to the Governor's policies.
expected , to keep up· their race is Nixon's croaa endorseweekly stops ·Iii the state. This ment ·by ·ttre~servative • This . yeat, White · House
week McGovern is bringing ~rty and McGovern's' by the pressure and the governor's
Sen. Edmund s. Muskie along Liberal Party. .
desire to assure a. Nlxm vicfor a campaign trip to Buffalo,
The Liberal Party J ine tory ill New York brought the
Which h8ll a heavy Polish brought the Democrats 311,000 conservative line to the Prespopuillllon.
votes" In '1968, or most of the ident.
The Democratic candiaatea' ·":310,000-votes-by·which Hubert
appearances iq New York Humphrey carried the state. · · The croaa endorsement also
State have been successful for ' A Republidia 'presidential assured an all.()ut effort on
the most part In te.rms of crowd ' candidate neve~ before !Ia~ ~ad : Nixon's behalf by Sen. James
response. But It awears that the Conservative Party line. L. Buckley,whowaselectedon
regular Democrats ara not Rockefeller has always denied the conservative line over
making their usual all-out . the Conservatives the right to Republlcan Sen. Charles E.
effort on tiehalf of the use GOP electors, effectively Goodell.

vn
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~~~~liea:~c: ~:r.~U:o=:.r:.~~
.at pi emic roportiOD
up COilllderably among Jewlah a bigh source In the Nixm state
wtera, wiio· Cast me ,out Of campaign. "It's nice to have

' every 10 ballots In New York,
In their almost weekly trips to
.the ' state, McGovern and
lluiver have made a special
point of resssurpig Jewa of
lbelr support for Israel.
.
' The NixOn campaign In New
York, headed by Gov-. Nelson
A. Rockefeller, Ia sltplng
ma:e ~ce. Rockefeller
originally Insisted the
Pl'elldent wu the unc!erdog In
the lllale, a line that now bas
been dropped.
R. Burdelt Bixby, the Clliil..lgn manager, 118id the po1Ja
lndleate · "the greatest
CI"OIIIOvef Of Derilocrats stnce
Eilenhower In 1958."
, Nixon lost New York badly In
hla prevlciua two prealdentlal
campaigns. But now Matthew

the candidate In that position
bUt the other two elements are
real concerns, espj!clally when
you have to worry about state
and lcica1 elecilona too."
Nixolllan't taking New York
for granted. Hla tentative plana
call for at least two more
appearancesinihestate,onein
the predominantly Republican
~burbs of Long !Bland and the
other. upstate in either
Syracuse or Buffalo.
· II can be assumed Nixon will
also make anotbefilOp li\N'elt
York City close to election day.
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew will also make two
stops In the state, probBbly to
address the Conservative
Psrty dinner In New York·City
and to visit Syracuse. the

Helen Help
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Us.

By Helen Bottel

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o· n 2-Year ·Increase. of 25 ot.o
7(
By LOUIS CASSW
·
United Preas International
Venereal disease, an ancient
scourge thllt modern medicine
thought It had conquered, is
reaching epidemic proportions
throughout ·America.
Tlie number of cases of In·
feetious syphilis and gonorrhea
reported to public health

national window
ailthorlties has Increased by
more than 25 per cent during
the past two years.
VD now ranks as America's
second most widespread communicable disease-surpassed
in fr!'llllency of incidence only
by the common cold. And all
lndica)ions are that tbe rise is
continuilig, perhaps accelerating.
.
The figures a~;e eveil more
alarming than they appear, for
they cover only officially
reported cases of VD. Public
". ~

health officials are sure millions of cases .go unreported
and untreated.
Early Cure Advised
Both syphilis and gonorrhea
can be cure\! with mqdern
antibiotics if treated in their
early stages, when their syrnptoms are plainly apparent. But
if left untreated, both diseases
lll3Y go underground, as it
were. Superficial symptoms
disappear, leaving the patient
with the illusion that he's well.
Actually,
the
deadly
spirochetes at this point are
spreading through the body.
Wlthoutlreatment, venereal
disease can lead eventually to
heart disease, blindness,
sterility or lnaanity.
The resurgence Of vP as a
major national health problem
is ironic because not many
years ago medical authorities
were speaking of it, along with
polio, smallpox and tubercillosis, as one of the once-dtead

Nixon, Gains Voting Lead

iome stage hlta. Tbelt.only bigaetim 11 fOotball·
basketball~ey - but moat oftheir tiCkets
'
. ' . T'S ms
' BABY. , are gone In an.a-. Iota.· """~
'.
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YF.S, SIR, 11IA
,•
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NEW YORK .(KFS) -No one's thought of
. P. J. Clarke's owner ..,..• .., ..,.vezzo a
inyjting Sir W"lliSion •s daughter, Sarah Chur· Giants Srtd ducats are beautifully located
chill, to the "Yoqng Wlnstoo" film opellln(l here smack on the Yank~ Stadium 00-yard_llne ~In _
Oct. 10 ... Ftab~rs inBIIt dining at Gallal!ller's 1!\e very tippety-top row. Yo11 need an elpEI!l·
before lbelr big f~ta Ia lllcky: Jut both 1'4. All · stocil, plorul, ovgeJ) mask and a blood transand F. Ps~raon .chomped Steaks !here earlier fusion to get there. ~ovea the antique stadium
·lhe day Floyd lost ... Ditto semt.flnaliBts Ken' really needa esc alton, Jiot to mentim a 'iJiimlng
Buchanan and Carlos Ortiz; catloa' stest was team ... Tennis imJilortlil Bo~y Riggs quit N·
unluCky, toO ..: Not .UIIme charilp .ie.Be Owens y . for calif. after ~ mllliorHluck !Vorce
who ra~ tiaiueh a meal a few feet away .... seltletneni from hla ncl) wife Of 25 ye . . .
When Stuart ·LeVIn toOk over Le PavUlon whicb
Why the new Duk! Elllngtoo melody. .will
just folded, a huge outatsndlng bill was Owned have lyrics by one Allison AsSante Instead _of,
by ·a famf4 .W88hlngt0n liostesa; on attempting say, Mltctv;~ Pa~lah who .!~ed sucb !me
to ·collect Stu was lnforme\1 she didn't pay such words to Sophisticated Lady , seems . ~ .
bills her 'appe&amp;rance alolte was worth tlie five- Duke's top aide Peter Dean went for irealment
~e "~iff" beciiuse the Old hamnle lna!Sted to Or, Mario .Assitnte in. ~ew Jersey durln,g
She wu worth ·u for "publlc relationa" ... which the doc showed De.an some of his wife s
Margaret Webster lilSIBts 'Jn interviews about- .llilm!!Nl wf!UI§~ ... Polls asaei"t the brutal
her neW book "Dop't Put Your'llaughter on the problems Of brushing off TOOl E!181eton rubbed
Stage;, the major trouble with the Bdwy. legit off llllll7 on sen. McGuf! than Eagleton wfiose
theater is ticket pricel (fl.iO to f9 for.straight ~1ty Ill sky-high ... New 11\lrVeya suggest
plays)· Maggi Webster's book has an even NIXon will win the 18-to-21 new-voters, too ...
stoute~ , 10 tageon it.
·
'
Newsweek's Gallup poll gives 52 pct. to Nixon,
Sir Alec Gulnness playing the title role In 4~ pet. to :f.!cGuff ... Drab general forecast: less
"Hitler·TheLastTenDa:Ys" movie reliearches than half the eligibles will vote.
his ~acters completely and '.was flab- . Lord La~ Olivier's "Sleuth" film ·marks
bergasted finding thla marginal history: "Do his 50th.. anm~eraary as a ~ummer. Played
you know what Hitler handed ·out as wedding Kate ,in Tammg of the Shrew at Stratford.()n.
gifts? ASliver framed photo of himself _ and a Avon with the Shak_espeare Festival Theater
couple of cyanide tablets!" Hpw thoughtful! · (ndw The Royal) m the ould Elizabethan
New guy in Raquel Welch's life 1a Robert mannerof_having lads play laaa!es. He was 15 ...
Ross, 43. Wanta him to direct her nest movie Oh, those liberal Red Chinese: screaming at the
after their Corsica and (very) Nice Idyll ... UN to oust the last five Taiwan newshands ·:·
Couple of spalpeens who came over here half a Read a ~ty quote by a Lindsay IDp aide tmt his
dozen years ago and. now own a mini- hotshot hierarchy had to pay when they ate
conglomerate of Irish pubs (Green Derby, John grandly after municipal conferences, no exBarleycorniwln the American Jriabmen of the pense accounts etc.; buHet the walters from the "
Year Award o1 the Emerald Society: Jerry defunct UEtolle restaurant tell you how they
Toner and Terry d'Neill ... Frederic Koewe and ignored the blll, stiffed the walters, etc.
Alan Lerner who made zillions from "My Fair
Richard Burton's hefty Basque chauffeur
Lady ""B~doon "etc then apllt with some didn't have room to park the Burtons' Ro~
ran~r are anchored In th~ Mediterranean on a outside a theater In Sicily. So he basqued up, got
big c~riered yacht adapting "Gig!" to the N. out, and lifted two Flats 500 to Rolls right In ·:·
y. nmsical stage. After opening first in L.A. ... Uganda-bl~ot~ Ge_n· Amin ':"ears Israeli- .
"Shaft" composer Isaac Hayes is launching a style filers wm~ on !lis army uniformB. Seems
low-income housing layout with other blaCk be.took the Israeli flymg courses ~ll right - and
bizmen ... Bdwy. theater brokers direly need failed.

·
·
diseases which were well on
the way to ellinination f~!!Yugh
new drug ani! vaccine
discoveries.
Overconfident Too Soon
But Americans got overconfidenf about VD too soon.
Appropriations for a nation·
wide campaign ·against the
social
diseases
were
drastically reduced.
There was a letdown in ef.
forts to educate all segments of
the public abOut the highly
contagious nature of VD; the
manner in which it is transmitted (almost exclusively
through sexual il\tercourse
with an Infected parlner); the
early symptoms of Infection;
the ease ·of treatment with
,
modern druga; the often fatal swirl~d lately around the
consequences of leaving It . question of whether, when. or
untreat~.
how general sex education
. . The result is that a genera- should be offered In achoola.
tio~ of young people has grown Whatever your position on that
up 111 America who do not take Issue, surely there _can be no
VD very seriously as a m~nace · argument about the need for
to health, and rarely take direct, explicit, vivid in·
precautions.
structlon of teenagers about
Much . controversy has the perils of venereal disease.

···Television Log
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out 14 men. But in the third he

got into a jam, and only a base,
miming nilshap · by usually
surefooted Luis Aparicio kept
the Red Sox from a big inning.
HarperS~Ies

Tommy Harper singled with
one out and raced ·to third on
Aparicio's hit and run single to
left field. Then a bal! hit by
Carl .Yastrzemski to right
center just dropped beyond the
reach of Mickey Stanley for a
double, scoring Harper to tie
the game, l·l. On the play,
Aparicio was attempting to
score too, but slipped rounding
th~ and hustlt!ll back to the
bag only to lind Yastrzemski
there waiting for him. Yaz was
tagged out and Lolich stranded
Aparicio when he fanned
Reggie Smith.
A home run by AI Kaline in
the first inning off loser John
Curtis, ll:S, gave Lolich an
early · boost .and a lead off
homer by Aurelio Rodriguez in
the fifth proved to be the

•.

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.

Programs for Tonight'
and Tolnorrow

Amy Portofe
'

•,

•

•/.

Giants Spill
Eagles 21~12

p .m . .

St. Louis !Santorini 8-10) at
Pit.lsburgh (Moose 12· 10), 8
p.m.
·•
Los Angeles (Strahler 1·21 at
Atlanta !Niekro 16-lll, 8 p.m.
San Diego (Cal~well 7-10) at
San Francisco t Bryant 13-71, 11
p.m.
,,
New York (Webb 0-0 and
Seaver 20-121 at Montreal
IRenko 1-9 and Walker 2-1), 2, 6
p.m.
Wednesday's Games
New York at Montreal. night
St. Louis at Pitts, night
· Philadelphia at.Chicago
Los Ang at Atlanta, nighl
Houston at Cincinnati 1 night

San Diego al San Francisco
American League

East

w. I. pet. g.b.
85 69 .552
Boston
84 69 .549 •;,
Baltimore
79 73 .520 5
New York
79 14 .516 s•;,
71 83 .461 14
Cleveland
Milwauk ee
63 91 ,409 22
West
w. 1. pet. g.b~x-Dakland
92 61 .601 ~
Chicago
86 66 .566..~ SV•
Minnesota
76 76 .500 15'1&lt;
Kansas City 75 77 .493· 1611&lt;
Califronia
74 79 .4fl4 18
Texas
53 99 .349 38'1&lt;
•-Clinched division title
Monday's Results
Chicago 6 Minnesota 4
Detroit ; 'Boston 1
.MIIwauke&lt;) 6 New York 1
IOnly games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
IAll Times E'DT)
Chicago Bradley 15-141 at
Minnesota (Corbin 8·9), 2: IS
p.m.
Boston (Tiant 15·51 at Detroit
(Fryman 9-3), 9 p.m.
Oakland (Odom 14·61 at
C.lllornla (Wright 17-11 1, 11
p.m.
Milwa ukee (Lonborg 13·121 at ·
N~w York (Siottlemyre 14-171,
7:30 p.m.
.
Baltimore (Palmer 21 -10 and .
McNally 13-17) at Cleveland
(Tidrow 14· IS and Lamb IS-51; ..
2, 5:30p.m .
Texas 1Paul 7-9) a't Kansas
City !Busby 3-0L 8:30p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Oakland al Calif, night
Chicago at Minnesota
Texas at Kan City, night
Boston at Delrolf
Mllw al New York, nlghl
!Only games scheduled I
Oetroit

By BilL COOMBE.
on a five-y~d Rea~s pass to
PHILADElPHIA (UPI) _ Po James m the third 41Jarter
Versatile Ron John80n of the and field , gosls of 'J:I and 15
New York Giants runs Inside ya~s by Tom Dempsey in th,e
and out, catches passes long first half. A missed fleld goal,
and short, and makes fools of an interception in the.end zone
braggarts like Leonard Tose. by Spider Lockh..-t, a (wnble
The dapper Tose, who took recovery by Willie Williams
$16 million from his trucking and an !nte~ptlon by Jim
fortune to buy the lowly Files spoiled the other Eagle
Philadelphia Eagles three chances.
years ago '\Vent around town The Eagles' one bright spot
all last w~k "guaranteeing" was the play of wide receiver
his club would finally win a H~old Jackson, who mainfootball game Monday night tamed his league peas catching
before a ·nations! television lead wtth nine for 136 yards.
audience. Johnson proved Johnson set a club record
Tose's "guarantee" was 88 with his four to:uchdowns on
worthless as the warranty on a Snead paaaes of 16, 9 and 15
second-hand truck by scoring yards and a 5 yard run. He
four touchdowns In the Giants' carried 36 limes for 124 yards
first v!c!Dry of the season, 'J:I. and added 60 more on five
receptions.
12
To top everything off the Giant Coach Alex Webster:
, I
,.
Giants
were under the dlrec- seid his "game plan was to run
\
. '
'
lion of Norm Snead a quar- Johnson because we felt we
t
"~····
•
terback traded by th: Eagles a weren't playing ~. team like
\.
. \.
year alter Tose took command. Dallas or Detroit.
,.
"I can't believe that bleeping
Big EmoUooal Llll ·
Snead beat" this team " Tose John80n, at full strength
IN ACTION TONIGHT said afterward. "I'm' sick. I after being idled by leg llijuries
Cary Coutts and Amy just can't believe we're this lastyear,saidhisperformance
"was a "big emotions! lift
Portofe, who captured two bad "
This Wook's Spjtclal.. ·
· , What They Lac~ed\
~cause I !as playing cautious
individual first place finishes ·
each Saturday against
What the Eagles lack~ ~Ul now.,·
'• .
Muskingwn, will be on the a sense of oJIPortunism. With Although the Eagles.. rolletl
Rio Grande swim team this rookie , quarterback John up more YBI"dage, -~94 to the
evening · when Rio hosts Reaves stsrtlng his first game Giants 321, the Giants con'''
Capital at Lyne Center, after two losses under Pete verted 11 of 16 first downs, led
USED CARS
Liske they moved lna!de the 21:S at halftime and coasted
beginning at 7 o'clock.
Giant' 30-yard line seven times behind Snead's passing for 164
and had first downs inSide the yards on 12 of 19 attempts.
25 six limes. They scored only Snead surpassed lhe 25,000
mark in c81"eer yardage totala..
Major League Results
Tose, whose boisterous talk
· By United Press International
contrasts sharply with the
National League
2 DOOR H.T.
silence of head Coach Ed
Phila
000 001 002- 3 9 3
Chicago
201 010 oox- 4 52
Kbayat, blamed the loss on a
Twilchell, Scarce (51, Wilson
v.e motor. auto. trans.
NEW
'YORk
IUPIIThe
lack
of team "character."
l7l and Boone; Reuschel,
Ready
logo.
Phoebus (81, Pizarro (9) and United Press International to~ '"!'his team played like they
major college football teams
,
h
te "
Rudolph. WP- Reuschel (10-8). 20
with lorst place votes and won- don t have any c arac r,
LP- Twitc hell 15-91.
los I records In parentheses: Tose said. "I think our players
(Jst.ga'mel
14th weeki
have the ability to win and I
·
Team
Poinls
h theyre
• ' not
NewYork OOOOOOOD0-0 01 l. Southern Cal 122114.01336 dont, know wy
Monlreal
204 100 OOx- 7 10 1 Oklahoma 111 I (J.O) 321 w!Ming But it Is not the fault
·You'll Like Our Qualny
McAndrew, Strom 131. Rauch 2·
·
Way of OolnQ Buslnes5.
151, Sadecki (B) and Sudakis ; ~· Alaba~a Ill 14-01
212 of the coaching staff or the
203 front office "
GMAC FINANCING
Stoneman !12·141 and McCar- 5.· Ohio
Sate 13·11
Ill 12·01 ·. 181
N
ebraska
·
992-5342
J'orooro
ver. LP- McAn drew I11-8I. HR 6 Michigan 13.01
Asked whether that left the
178
Open
Evenings'TIIB:OO
- Fairly !16th).
·
T'
(1nd game I
7. Louisiana St. IJ.OI · 144 players to blame,
ose
,TII5.P.M.. ~Jf. , ·
8
137
2
0
New York 000 ooo 0) 1- 2 6 0 · Noire Dame 1 · )
anap!Jed "you're damn right."
Montreal
ooo 000 o!o- 1 9 I 9, Washington (4·01
65
•
d
8
Moore, Me Graw I I an 10.
11. Florida
St. 14-01
38 ~-------------.-----~
Texas (2·01
.
64
:Nolan ; Morton. Marshall (9) l2. Tennessee (3·11
t7
and McCarver, Boccabella (9). 13 UCLA IJ II
14
WP-MCgraw 18-61. LP-Marshall 14: Auburn lj·O)
13
!14·81.
15. Air Force (3·01
10
.
16.
Colorado
(3·11
9
!Only games scheduled)
17. Iowa State !3-01
7
American League
18.
Stanford
(3·0)
6
Chicago
010 001 040-6 8 2 19, Penn State (2-11
5
Minnesota 000 031 ODD- 4 10 2 20.
Arizona
Slate
12·11
2
Geddes, Lemonds (6), Neumeier 181. Forster !!I and
Brinkman; Woodson, LaRoche
(81 and Borgmann. WP. Lemonds (4-71. LP- LaRoche
15-71. HRs- Orta (3rd), Brad·
lord (2nd).

68 FORD
FAIRLANE

11

TIRE -SALEI.
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DELUXE atAMPION·SUPER
BELT • ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT

Fed. Ex. Tax

E78-14 ............. '22.83
F78-14 ... ;.......... '23.68
G78-14 ............ '24.11

'2.34
•2.52
'
'2.69

H78·14 ............. '24.97

'2.93

halnny
·
r

a

'- Downing-Childs.Agency Inc.
. INSURANCE BONDS
· MUTUA~ FUNDS

man

I

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G78-15 ..: ......... '24.54

·2~78

H78-15., .......... . '25.39

'3.01 '

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J78-15..............

I

'27~96

·

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•cy

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'3.12 .

WHITE.WAllS SLIGHTLY .HIGHER
BLEMISHES ONLY

Meigs .COunty's ·Oldc5t and

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Karr' &amp; Van Zandt .

OOLUMBUS (UPI) ~ "It's weren't a vecy good team until
amazing bow one guy can fire ·we started using Hop."
up a football team," Ohio State
Hayes said Griffin's ability
. Cosch Woody Hayes said Mon- to ignite his team was ''more
daY. at his weekly press Jun. importal)t to me than the
cbeon, still marveling over tile record."
aploita of freshinan tailback
The Bu~eye coach said his
Archie Griffin.
team came out of the North
Griffin, the .5-10, 11K-pound Carolina game with a
former . ColumbuS Eaatmoor minimuin of injuries with ooly
High School aU.()bio star, was linebaCker ' Vic• Koegel, the
too good and 1don't think they
still the center "Of most of the team's.leadlng taCkler against
(Browns) really showed any
conversation for hiS record· the Tar Heels, being hobbled.
Cary Coutts
great J)liss ruah unill they hit
shattering performance Hayes said, however, Koegle
the bomb and got safely
Saturday against North would be ' ready to play
ahead," Brown Said. ''Then
Carotma,
.
Saturday when the· Buckeyes. B'
[ .,;r
J
they knew we bad to pass and
Hayes said he bad a · call travel to California. ·.
· ef!,g8 .L' 8RS .lJ R
'I:'
' the old adrenalin started flowMondliy morning from·former
1ng and they came after us."
Buckeye fullback Ollie Cline,
Griffin also:set a record for
CINCINNATI (.UP!) - derson.
Anderson said he still has lr~:r:~·h·~;,•:~::"~
whose individual game rushing receiving buckeye leaves, Cincinnati Bengals Coach Paul . "Anderson had trou~le hit- faith in the Bengal offense, Jut · I~
record Griffin smashed Satur· awarded foi19Wing each game Brown aays tile club's ling the open man Sunday, Jut "it's just a mat~r of going out
day with 239 yardS in 27. car- by Hayes for outstanding ind!· telephmes ""ve been ringing it's something he baa to go and showing It now."
riea.
vidual performances, when he furiously since Sunday and the through," the coach said. "He
"I wouldu't say I'!ll wonied
Cline, who set the ptevioua got six.
· .
talk isn't pleasant.
bad a bad day but it was hardly about It " he said. "As ·long as
record ol229 yards against Pitt
,He was named' the outatsndBrown said fans ·have been all hiS fault.
,
you ca~ look at the film.s and
·in 1915, called to have Hayes ing offensive bact, good for one registering their discontent
"The job may be just a little see where you made your milf.
congraW!ate Griffin on break- leaf, and pcked up one eacb for with the Bengal8' lnablllty to ~ig for him .still. And then he · takes, you have somethln~ to
' . ing the mark; ;
'·
his 20, 22, 32 and 5f&gt;.yam·ruris, score touChdown in the. last had to be up there before those work on."
.
· "Ollie iriade the remark that and also got another for a nine- two games. That problem 81,000 people. It's rough. His
'
!!!!!!!!!!.!li!!!!!!i!l!i!!i
. there have been a lot of greS\ yard touchdown. .
"
resulted In 41 27-6 loaa to , the s!W.tlon is similar to Mike
bacli:a at Ohio State In the · Belt Of 'l'lle Game
ClevEHand' Browns last Pltipps before thla year." ·
meant!Dle;" Hayfjl saki, "and . "That touchdown run was lils weekend. · · .
Phipps baa been With the
,, the!"!! IIU~ (!;lob) .Fef&amp;UI!Qll• best run of the g~e,•• Hayes
"You're nothing when you ' Browns 'three years, .lui just
PHONE 992-2342 .
• •.MIDDLEPORT, 0.
.• (l!ob) White, (Hop)' p&amp;asady, . Said. "He had to beat four pien lose,", Brown observed Mon, started lo click this sea8011.
1
.; . (-Don) Clark: and toOl• I've 00 that.one."
' . . day, "bUt \!ike a look. 'l'llere's
··n w.. a strance game and
' 1· ' ' '
'
. probably for~tten."
'The top J~n award went only one unbeaten 'team In pro ·K~n Is partly a v!cliln of It,"
~
,,. .·, tllllll*" PerfGniiiiiCe
to guard ChuCk Bonica, whlle football&gt;:" · ,
: Brown said. "Remember, we
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·,HIY• i!OIJIPilred ' Griflin's the ou1818ndlnc defensive line- Until the llfowns game, the . gained more grOund, we ~ved
l, performance In the ~-14 , '
and .baCk bOOOI"I went to Bengala were• (lrlbeat~, Jut ' the ball llllll"e than .Cleveland ·
9letGr1 SaturdaY .to Camdy ~ tsCkJe Peii Cusick Brown said ,the .Josa will cause did, and yet our offense reallr
I
·' When be'pla;recl aa a fteihm8n and Senior aifety Rick Seifert. · him to make no "drastic ,had a bl!d d&amp;y. We jUst dldn t
·Largest
. · in liOHighl out of Columbui ' · Hay• sald 'tlle r(IIJIIilg ill changes"beforetllen~tgsme do a good job;" '.
· ~ ,
• 'Central lflllh SchoOl, , ·
Griffin alld juDior Elmer up. against the .Denver . ~ronC\)S. ·
The Bengals six pOints came
''aciP C' •elf 'elictrlfled • pert at taUbac.'ll may mike him ...-1 .And he said tbe blame should on two field .goals· .by Horst
'nsuran~
te1111 tbe 111111 waY Arehle.did · !live lpeedy Morrla l!radahaw 1101 be ·placed square!)' on tWo- · Muhlmann.
,
'
•turday," B1Jt1 IBid· ''We . a JOoltat split end. .
year ~ck Ken An"()ur pass protection was llot

b: di!d•

'

Today's Probable Pitchers
IAll Times EDTI
Philadelphia (Carlton 26-10)
at Choca!)o !McGinn 0-4), 1:30
p.m.
Houston tForsch ~-7) at
Ctncinnati !McGlothlin 8-8), 8

'895 .

Woody Praises Fine
R ~nning Of Griffin

;a•tJ•

Major League Standings r
By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
x-P1tlsburgh 95 58 .621
Chicago
85 68 .556 10 ·
New York
80 73 .523 Iii
St. Louis
74 so .481 t'i'!,
Montrea l
70 83 o458 25
Philadelphia 57 97 .370 38'1&lt;
West
• w. I. pet. g.b.
x-Cinctnnati 93 59 .612 Houston
84 67 .556 a•;,
LosMgeles 83 70 ,542 10•;,
Atlanta
70 82 .461 lJ
San Francisco 67 86 .438 261;,
San Diego
58 93 .384 34'h
•-Clinched division title
Monday's Results
Chicago 4 Philadelphia 3
Monlreal 7 New York 0, 1st
New. York 2 Montreal 1. 2nd

•
College R attngS

thing.

1

Chicago.
Stoneman, who no.llit lhe
Pliillies on April 17,1969, had
only O!le scare of losing his gem
and that came on a ball hit ·
back to him in the fifth inning.
Don Hahn, a former teammate, hit a slow roller past the
mound and Stoneman made a
play for the ball but couldn't
handle II: The official scorer
ruled it an error.
A bases4oaded triple by
Boots Day iri the third inning
was the big blow in the Expos'
attack in the opener while
Dave Schneck singled in the
wiMing run for the Mets In the
ninth lnn:ing of the second
game.
Pete Lacock knocked In
three runs and pitcher Rick
Reuschel won his lOth game as
the Cubs turned back the Phils.

. '

,'

I

Sh

winner. RodrigueZ ·alsO sin~
in two other runs.
· In other American League
garnes Milwaukee defeated
New York, 6-1, and Chicago
downed Minnesota, &amp;4.
Bill Stoneman was the inan
Of the hour in the National
League. He pi!Ched the secood
no-hitter of his career. as
Montreal defeated New. York,
7..(), in the first game. of .a
doujlleheader. The Mets took
the nightcap, 2·1 .. Chicago
edged Philadelphia, 4,3.
Yankees in Fourth Plaetl
The Yankees drQpped into
fourth place in the East behind
Idle Baltimore as George Scott
W:ove in two runs, including
one with a sacrifi~ fly il) a
three-run eighth inning. Bobby
Murcer belted his 3:&gt;nd hoJller
for the Yailks' only run.
Buddy Bradford pinch-hit a
grand slam homer in the eighth
·inning to bring the White Sox
from behind to· beat. the Twins.
Jorge Orta also homered for

0

By "all this" iS meant those two couri cases plus the two fines
which they've played Erving. Kennedy says he'll keep fining the
Hawks every time they play him; the Hawks say fine, they'll
,;·. keep Ignoring the fines.
,
;,
If you're cUrious about how Erving is adapting to his "new"
~: club, all he did for Atlanta against the Carolina Cougars at
·. Raleigh, N.C., last Saturday was hit on 14 of 15 from the floor and
make four free throws for 32 points.
He also grabbed 10 rebounds and his overall performance was
.,
rated "escellent" during his 43 minutes on the floor.
' Some already are saying he's up there with the best forwards
'o( in the game today and that takes in quite a bit of territory when
'•.,'
you consider fellows like Dave DeBusschere, Tom Cunningham,
; . Connie Hawkins, Spencer Haywood, Gus Johnson and Rick
Barry. Some even ssy Erving could emerge into the greatest
player In the game, Jut he's not letting himself be carried away
by thla'kind"if talk. ,.,
.
'
'" ' ,. . .
"The first thing I think about is how reliable the source·is," he
says, lntelljgently enough.
·
'
Might be Surprised
.
Even so, he might be surprised at the reliability of some of.the
sources. Like say, a good percentage of both NBA and ABA
players.
.
"I want to be one of the greatest'"players who ever lived, if not
thegreatest,"Erving says. "This isoneofthe goals I've sorta set
for ·myself. What gives me the biggest charge out there.on the
floor? I'd say rebounding. I really like to rebound. I think that's
the strong part of·my game.
"If I'm rebounding well, especially getting defensive
rebounds, I can either take it up the middle or pitch it out or fill
the lanes. I like to run. Lots of limes rebounding iS a matter of
timing, .jumping ablllty and just all out haart and hustle. You
know If you're scared to go in the kitchen, you're not goMa get
many, rebounds., rm not the biggest. guy In the world, l!!" _th!L,
heaviest, but I'm not afraid to~o In there."
That's rather awarent.
Anybody who signs a ccintract for two million bucks after
having already signed one for half a million can't be afraid of• any

'

.

.

of $25,000 apiece NBA Commissioner Walter Kennedy has imposed on the Hawks because of the two pre-&lt;~eason games. in

B8Jld Do.os

-'I

I

'

"All This"

Southern '

age;

' \

MILTON· RICHMAN ·
By .G~EG GALLO
, .w
• tw.l !iPO!!S Editor
.0
UPI Spo~ Writer
·.NEW YORK (UPI)-Juli~ Erving is what they" call a "hot . ~t was ~e old lim~s for
property::
·
• ·
M1c~ey t.ohch Monday ~ht as
Certainly the hottest one in sports right now. Why he's 80 hot, heitphl~ed the Detroit Tigfersthto
you can hardly touch him
. .
, .
w m one game o . e..
n.f~ dill
t bask tb iJ
.
·
.
..
.
Arilerican League's Eastern
. er,en . . e a teams m two 1eagues are agonizmg Division title with a pressure
over. hiS serv1cb this Vl!f'Y moment .. One of these teams, the performance reminiscent of
Atlanta Ha~ks, alread~ has been fmed $50,000 for their m- the three games he .won in the
volvement with him, but that's chicken feed. 'Yhat's a mere. · 1968 World Serie~.
$50,000 when you're talkillg about. a talent like Julius 'Erving's?
In-a game that bas to rank as
He's so bo~ now it's taking two aifferentcourts simply to handle the most important the portly
• S&lt;ime of the litigation over him.
leftbander has pitched, since
In the first court in Brobklyn, Federal Court Judge R.W. he bested Bob Gibson in the
Neaher has issued a preliminary l.pjunction prohibiting the 22- final game of the Series four
year.()ld Erving from playing with .any other club than' the one years ago, Lolich hurled a sixwhlchoriginaily signed him, the-Virginia Squires of the ABA.
hitter and struck out 15 Boston
•·",In·the
·other
court
in
Atlants
;
action
is
pending
on
a
$2-million
Reli
Sox as the Tigers moved
1
suit filed by the Hawks against the NBi and the other 16 clubs In into first place with a 4-1 victhe league.
tory. Awin over Boston tonight.
or
Wednesday will clinch the
Need a R&lt;,)lld Map
You alffiosl need a road map to follolv all that's bap)1ened to flag for Detroit and sen&lt;! the
Julius Erving, who came to the attention of many people even Tigers into· the AL playoffs
before he was the nation's No. l rebounder at the University of against the Oakland Athletics,
the Western Division chamMassachusetts or UMass, as its frequently called.
on Saturday. •
First, Erving signs a four~year contract with the squires for pions,
Lolich was ·overpowering in
half a million bucks. So far, so good. As a matter of fact, so far, the first seven innings, striking
very good.
But that's ooly for openers.
Mter averaging 'J:I points a game and being voted the AHA's
Rpoki~ of the Year, Erving, -..;ho had never ~raduated, is selected
by the Milwaukee Bucks in last April's NBA college draft.
Less than 24 hours later it:comes to light the Hawks got his
name on one of their contracts even before the draft and all it
cost them was a few dollars this side of $2 million, including an
up.front bonus of $250,000, a beautiful apartment ior five years in
Atlanta and a brand new car. .,
"In some cases, you have to take these money figu~ with a
couple of pinches of salt, but in Erving's case, be's so good that I
have to believe Atlanta is paying him nearly two million," says
one nuin who should ~now.
"At least thls .kid bad :;orne integrity. When ~e signed with
Atlants he told the people there he wanted to fulfill his original ,
contract with Virginia first, but somewhere along the line
somebody found a couple of loopholes and now you have all this."

&amp; ·1HIN6S

G

'

...

l Sport Parade- . II' · · .. . ·
·.;::l

A ROOM FULL OF BED
"-Dear Helen·
6· 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Hathayoga 33.
'
.
'
'
CLEVELAND (UPl.) ..:\nother poll was to be
6:30- News 3, 4, 15,6, 8, 10; I Dream of Jeanle;13; C&lt;rowing Him
Can you tell me why heme builders keep making bedrooms " f,residenl Nixon hils taken the conducted before the Nov. 7
Up 33.
.
~
,,
smaller
and smaller, while turnlture mak~rs·
keep irliiktnjj'beds lead over George McGovern in election.
'
7:00- News 6, 10; Whafs My Line 8; Elec. ~o ,. 20 ; Beal The
'
J-1;
·
'
..
bigger ancl bigger?
Clock 4; I've Got A Secret 13; Truth or Conseq. 3; American
a poll of Cuyahoga County
The latest survey showed
I read tbe other day that king- and queeno~~ized beds were residents conducted by the . NiKon with 38.7 per cent,
Life Style 15.
.
•
7:
3o ~· Thls Is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call 4; To Tell The Truth
cloelng standard sizes out of the market. My wife read It tOo, so Cleveland Press.
·BT PAUL CRABTREE "
McGovern with 35.4 per cent
61 Price Is Rig lit 8, 10; Beat the Clock 13; Top of the Month 15; .
lbe ordered us a klngo!lize mooster which, when It came, left us
Insight 33.
"The survey reflects the · and 25.6 per cent still unMore new shows of the 1972-73 Season, with a goodie which 8:00- Bonanza 3, 4; Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8, 10;
not even enough apace to chase each other comfortably around possibility the President is decided. A previous poll taken
Age of Anxiety 33.
,
the~.
gaining many .voters who were in.. mid-August
showed probablywon•tmakelt,anda baddle that shouldn't:
8, 30 _ Hawaii Flve-08, 10; Movie "Playmates' 6, 13; Dateline
Now l.llke a long bed that I can stretch out In, but I see no previously undecided ·and McGovern with 35.5 per cent,
THE WALTONS, 'lbursdays, 8 p.m.,'CBS:
America 33.
,
9·oo-'Bold0nes3,4; .. Dick Van Dyke o3.
need for all that width, not If you're aa compatible as we are. cutting into some McGovern Nixon with 30 per cent and 31
Earl Hamner Jr. grew up In Appalachia, in the Valley of 9: 30 _ Movie "Footsteps" s, 10; Marshall Sports 33.
.
(Bothoaus sleep In the middle.) And I like to be able to open my support," the newspaper said. per cent undecided.
Virginia. His family was a close-lm!t, loving one, and full of 10:00- NBC Reports3. 4, 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13; Flmg
drelllel" drawers all the way.
•
Li~e 33.
'
hardships- because he grew up in the depths of the Depre~~~~lon .
•
'
ed-'
becoming
writer
and
ound
beln
1l
:OO-News3,4,6,8,
10, ]3, 15. -·
.
Are theBe big~ just,a fad and, if not, when.wjll arcliltects
He dream v•
a
,
w
up
ga 11 .30- DickCavetf6·JohnnyCarson3,4, 15;Virglnlan8; Movoe
make bedrooms to fit them - for middle Income people? - 2 x 6
VeteransMemor!aiHospltal very good one, writing such works as- "Spencer's Mountain,"
· "Les Mlserables': 10; Movie "The Presldent's.Lady" 13.
MAN WITH6\0x7'10 BED IN 10x10ROOM
ADMITrED - BeltYBroo"•
1:00
.... , later transferredtothe screen In a wry g'ood movie, and ''The
:30 -_ Your
News, Healtlr4,
Weather 4; Local News 13:
1
.
Albany; Carl Ed.wards, Homecoming," a fine story that made a moving Christmas
Dear h: 6:
·
Hartford; Jennifer Young special last winter.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1972
II
"-'•"'•a
to
think
sided
with
Ath
T
Wood
.
A'h·
'
·
6:00Sunrise
Seminar
4; S.cred
10. .
Happy
De
.
y. was....,. •• ~.,.
no one
me ._. . . _
._. ·- _ ~!I,S; .. IDY--~·--~"'~; ,..._NotawholelotbappenatotheWaltons-theSpencer.famUy~ ..6 , 1 s~Farmtlme
-10~
. -··
--· _.,Heart
......
agalnit lllng-tized ·beds. Now that I've found a friend, I .dare
Robert Staats, Middleport; name inexplicably was ellmil\ated -50 the weight of the aeries
6:20 - Farm Report U.
-ess my ~en, whlcb are: Not only do ldngo!lizers usurp
Melanie Barton, Mason; Mary
•· r the bea Uy
char cterizatl
d
t ... th
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
res.. a r . v on
a
on, an mos w e 6:30 - 'Columbus Today 4; News, Weather, Sports 6; Bible
needed 1pace, Jut they're expensiVe (thOse blankets, spreads
alllC
OW Smith, Middleport; Harold numet"llUI clan IS well-caet.
Answers 'S; Urban League Presents 10.
andslteetsl.!)andthey'rethewrYdlckenstol!18ke.
H~dna!l, Pomeroy; Fred
RichardThomaa,lntheroleofHamnerhlmaelfasa17-year- 6:25- Glory Road 13.
.
Arcbitects, bedroomfurnltilrelll8JDifacturers: Take note! _
The Southern High Sc
. hool Btrtcher, Pomeroy; Salim old Is escellent He plays big brother to six brothers and sisters
7:00- Today 3, 4, IS; News6, B, 13; CBS News.
Yates, Racine.
•
·
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
H.
marching band participated in
DISCHARGED _ Pauline with affection and warmth, anq just a bit too much syrup.
13.
·
+++
th bo eco~'·g parade of
Michael learned (that's a womsn buddy) does a fine job aa the ' · 8:00- CaptaJn Kangaroo ·8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St.
e m "~'
Derenberger, Stanley TrusseU,
·
'
•
'~3; Timmy &amp; Lassie 6.
Dear Helen:
Wahama High School Friday. Jenny Neumeyer, Glenna mother, ~ut Ralph Waite is a llttle tOO uni-dlmenslmal as the
8:30- Jack La La nne 13; Romper Room 8; .New zoo Revue 6 .
In aiiSWel' to the !OI"IIlel' fat girl who yearned to wear a bikini
1'he band, directed by R. Little, Edith Sayre.
father,whowuastrmgcharacter,lndeed,lntheorlglnalworka.
8:55- Local News 13.
Jut her mother was shocked, you said, "Times are changing Thomas Phillips, moved
we haven'tseen enough of the rest of tile caet to ~ass judgment
9:110- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; What Every Woman
•
WantstoKnow3; Mr. Rogers33; Friendly Junction 10; Capt.
· bildnls don't even fetch stares any more."
other th an to say the kids areverycute .
through New Haven playing
,
Kangaroo 8; Ben Casey 13.
In 10 yearS I think women will be swimming topleaa aa men "On Wisconsin" and "Stand Up
. Hainner himself lam hand to supervise the Scripts and does
9:30- To Tell the Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hazel e.
-Land tha ....
be ' ....
. 9:55 - Chuck White Reports 10.
do now. Put that In your prediction book and see if I am right. and Cheer." Southern band
some of the narratlm in the ~w, .
t.a~ to a P1110• And . 10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Sp,llt Second 13; In
FRANK
members were guests for
SERVICE SET
thia show, which we frankly like, needs all lhe pi1181!11it can getSchool Instruction 33; Columbus Six Calling 6: Jokers Wild 8,
•
dinner at the homes of
Funeral services· for Mrs. it's crunched between Flip Wllson and Mod Squad for a sltate of
10; Dick Van Dyke 13 .
Wahama band members.
Jessie E. Sansbury, formerly th. 1.
.
10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Price Is Right 8, 10; Split Second 13;
, ·
llear Frank:
e ra mg~.
Phil Donahue 4.
~nd, you aren't abreast· of the limes! Out In ·calltorriia
·n.e Southern band switched of Middleport, who dled Sun+++
11 :00-.Sale of Century 3, 15; Love American Style 6; Gambit 8,
THE MEN JIGAW ..... ursda 9
ABC
' 10; Password 13.
girls are already 11rimming topless at certain public beaches. its halftime show to before the day In Philadelphia, Pa., will
be
held
at
2
p.m.
Wednesday
at
,:
'
...
ys,
p.m.,
:
·
11:30Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewltched6, 13; Love of Life
Authorities say they are within the law (if not the bra), and guess gdamef.l ITdh~ band moved the Rawlings "oats F)llleral
ABC moves Into the "three-In-one" series, with a trio Of
e, 10.
.
what: after the first few startled i!tarea, they are lai"gely ignored
own e 1D one company
"heroes fu rotating dramas, juat as NBC has~ doing - with 12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's so.so Club 4; Local News 10;
front, then split Into ranks and ·Home . ·The Rev. Robert mixed success.
·
·
•
News 13; Contact 8; Password 6.
•
- I'm told. - H.
+++ .
presented a precision drill to Baumgarner ·will officiate .
One silgment of thii new entry, •"'!be Men,"la called Jigsaw' 12: ~O~ 3W's Game 3, 15; Spill Second 6; Search for Tomorrow 8,
Dear Helen:
,
.,
. ·
· the music of "On Wisconsin," Burial will' he in the Bradford
df
J
W ln.....""! in the le-'
12 , 55 _NBC News 3, 15.
1.-'4'" there have been more articles a•alnst Je•·"··d then performed pin wheels and Cemetery. Friends may call at an eatw-es ames a "''6'' ll . ro "'''Mr. Keen, Tracer
1: oo - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My chiiUren 6, 13; Green
of Lost Persons," a radio me erdrams of the 1blrtle&amp; and
Acres 10; French Chef 3J; trs Your Bet 8; Watch Your Child
"""
•
,........ , step twos to· "Across the th~ funeral Mme any time.
abortloo than for it. Here are my somewhat dlf!erent-oplniollll. Field."
. _.
.
Forties.
15,
All over this coun'-·
""':"'le
are
dy'•a
at
various
rates
for
~
w
·
••ht bas been pdated of
· with ll riB of
1:20Luc1!1e Rivers.
Mov1·ng · 1"nto concert for~
amwr,..
u
• course,
a so
·
·-"'-·· Ia ka Th '"Tr-:r
ell slowly be ""' they la"
1: 30 - 3,.._AMath3
..,,.
c , 4, 15; The w·
orld Turns e. 10; Lers Make
... ......, c '
ey e
cause
c~ proper
mation, the band played "Get
interplay u be tries to locate the lost, including lureaucrallc
A Deal 6, 13.
.
· ·
1111trltlon, proper housing, medical treatment, things they Together," the majorettes,
fights within' the pollee hierarchy, but mske no !JIIatake, tlda,
2:00- Days Qf Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newi)wed Game 13; Mtke
marginally cannot afford. They die raph;Uy because·they run a Diane Norris, Valorie Johnson,
~OOSTERS TO MEET ' ''he's 111111 Mr. Keen, the -.me cat your diddles and mcminles 2: ~~~to~s 3: 4."15; Dating Game 13; Edge of NightS, 10.
RACINE: ·- Plans for listened to,awa:yback-ther.liefore you' were born.
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospltal6, 13; Love Is A
car's bnikes" or tires too many miles ·- no money for Nancy Crow and Denls'e
replllcementa. Tiley die from lack ol pnlpel" rest, holding down Hendrix, presenting a dance. Friday's Homecoming will be
The serlee opener was a diiuter, wttb a weaJt Jllql, ~Marry_ Splandored Thing 8, 10.
· two joba ID make the budtet bllance.ln general, they are loved twiri routlne.' The band moved completed when the Southern ~awn cllaracters, and 1 predictable conclUSion. .
..
3:30- Return to Pnton Place 3, 4, 1s, One Life to Live 6, 13;
and wanted people we bate to ~Gee. •
'
' ·into an "S" forniation to· play llocal Athletic Booaters meet
Wainwrl,ght uhlblta a dramatic range that runa. ~~~e ·sciale
;,:C:~·~~~~C:,.mc!;t:,OO 3; Somerset A, IS; Fllntstones ~~Love
WheniOC!ety forbids an abortion It Ia forcing_the creation of· '-Stand Up and Cheer" ·in . at 7:30. tonl~ht at the high from A to B, and the'rewere a Jot o1 cbue sceriea that Were at· American $tyle13; Merv Griffin~~ Sesame St. 33; Gilligan's
• ilpeCiflc8lly UiiWanted lallnan, wblcb Ia • trifle llbaStiY for that salute to 'the Southern team. school in Racme. All fans are tempta io .emulate the' ci-lap photOIII"aphic impact that makes
4::i3 1 en~arv Griffin 4) ABC. Alter School6, u: Andy Griffith 15 ,
lllnWI. bUt a1ao forces the dlvenlm ill some of society's
· ' ·
urged ·to.attend.
MannlnnotchaboVetheordlnai"ydete(l!vellor)'. The attempts
Death Valley Days 8; Petticoat Junction 3. . ·
- t o hla malntenance.;At the SBfD8tlme we're creating
· falled. · .
·
·
5:110- Mister Ragen 33; Dick Van Dyke 15; Daniel Boone 6;
niW ,._.,, frtlin overcrowding, m..ied fuN (for welfare),
, 1 Don't judge the other two entries in ' thla IJ"lp by thla one,
5;~~de~s~i11· Dillon 15; e'tec. Co. 33.; Gom~r. Pyle 13 ,
etc.,llld Ill• aff"ed!n8 the~ at which ''wanted" people die.
j\lease. They may be quite gOQd, fot •II l llllow, just aa NBC's
Dragnet 8.
,
•
~ rrt•D~ an abortion doem't,ln thla aoclety, result 1n a
,
.
atable, of seven su,_,en haw some wllo are more.,,_ than 6:110..:. News, Weather, Sporl$3, 4, 8, JO, 15; Truth or Conseq. 6:
·
•
•·
,... --.-Sporlaco~ 33.
.
.ftl!\pilllpllfe.SomewherewearebUIItlngawantedpenonlnto
.ACCIDENT REPORTED
4-H DAY SALE SE'l'
othera. But Jigsaw Ia 0!18 puasle you wm'l catch me trying to . 6:30' - NBC News 3, 4, 1,5; ABC. News 6; CIIS f'lews a, 10;
.. . . tollllke 1"011111 for an lmwanted person. It's a nap, and a
'l'he M •· C
. Th w•""of th Appl Gr
solve.
· ,
·
··
, .
Halhayoga 33; I Dream of JNnle 13.
,
·
-JIIIOI'CIII4i. .. ,
.
,
e.,.a , ounty Sherlff'S •
e """
e
e ove , Alinai-'"":Theiho!ria-,;.......larg""'byone ... the"''"·.' 7:'oO-News,WHiher,Sports6.10;MIIIIIontlcifProgren33;
r~'"'!'
•
·· Dept investigated a lllngle car Unite&lt;\ Methodist ,Church will.
...,...
.,..__
"V
"'
""'
Wllat'a My Line I; Truth cr Canuq(jen*3; ~I the Clock
I'Yt blard 11011111 ts11t about \'Otq reftrendiQIII on tbe sub- ·
·
hold . a rummage sale Wed- sniiHnlbn, and fiDdlnl anytldna acep1 that'pertlcular !rind
4; N8WIIYI•klr '72 131 Know YoUr khoOia 33.
·
jlctBow- n 111n In noll'tomakuure lt'u fair electiOr. aecldent Mmday at 4=30 a.m.
ofcaraolbillbi!W'Iaubardufindlnc~butllliltberklnd 7:30- EpisOde: Action 33; To Tell Till Truth 6; 1M JudgelO;
· • wtt11 ilalJ qUIIifled voters :.. 1mein - n !It child-bearing
~n~~~::Om~ sW~ ~~:i ~~U:'·~ Iliad 10 bit 00 'l'll4! Fila ,_ 1 P• bact. 'ftllt ~ CJf J)lltl'11t,
15; Beet,The Clock 13; Polk&lt;~ Sur:lfOil_2, ., Prolfttors •
of •••· 7 DAVID
. bypaaa. .
from 9a.m. to 4p.m. ~ch day. ad41J8lli!1 tbinll:b)g'lblluld.llave perilbe\fdecaclenco.
a:IIO~eaAd•m·12 3, 4, 15: Publlt Aflalra33; PaulL~ ~seball
·a
·uto
driven
'
by
o-nald
·
'·.
+++
·
·
,
JS; rol Burnette I, 10.
·
..
.
The;
0.. liNn:
nu
·
•
· t:J!iz.~ d.l9an 3, 4: Movie J' Roll_lng MI
..
n"
6,
13;
H.lllllfula
of .
33
•
._._ ,,
·
·
Wllllaln Harrison, 1g, of Gallla
ONTHETVDW..: ToRy ~llllllSPdclal, 7:11, WTAP·TV ... ·
l~lldlllr-8\ql •..,.-n•l" diiJdla nuirder 1 lui !do Coqrity;travelinseast, went oft
, · Age Of~. 1 ~.aJ bealth report, Ia ~tlld 111 WMtJL. . . 9:QO-Mfellcal Ctnter8,101 CQunlry'Road foSin)IIIOII CrHii3:1.
II* - fiiC1 WOOIIII ~ ~•1ilrlllg abilrtiiHi aould 11a ·
10:110- S..ch 3, 4; Julie Andrftl,6; 1SJ Cannon 1, 10; 'Soul 33.
, , I flrll d It u•
HER
lla ': · lhe road and tOre down a fence
MAR!qAGE LICENSE . TV, 8 ... ~ .Aal.el"ka wa ....,lllll8ltlld _ . ao WMlJL. 11:QO- Newn.•: News I. 10,13, 15,
.,
,
It I
•
111111t
.
J!II. not t t
· owned by Evelyn ' Thoma.a. . Ronald Mirvbi Younc, 36, .TV, 1: ll, alld It .,... . Bdtq ... Wind Uie Linll, .wlllc;h · 11:30 -,J.oi!I!IIY Carson 3, 4, 15; DICk Cavett 6; Vlrgl!llan '' Movie
1
0JMovfe''ThtHIInttrs"13, -l .
'Jf I Jt,ltlt \...,talwl.frlladi.MIII)'alicrtloncilnlaloffer There. were no Injuries or Racine,· •nd Car"lyn
Sue doeln'tiiOIIIICiexel"-, ..-llatlonat8 ... andMinballfeotblll
. ·110
"A_
, .!'~1ednd~
·
1
1
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M
y
• ...........
........
I
Vfeifh
•
· ' Haley, 35, Middleport._
hlgblighlll,III ,WMUL-TV, at bu.
1:30- L-1 News 13. .
·
··
·

. . ,.

"

} -The ~_ily Sentinel, Middlepo~W&gt;onieroy, 0., Oct. 3, 1m

BY J.WK -Q'IIIUAN

.

lJ

McGovern·Despite HeaVy.Pitches ' Sh~~s ·Voice along Br'War . . ~.-~Minus Results _in.
Democratic
New York
.
..,

..

.
'

1

�·--.

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

~eigs

Property
Transfers .

.1
sv~it~~~~~Gs.
1 · Ed.NIIe:Leuenef :' a-arewe• ,._~•••t' I
beleti
....
M_.IalellctkudiiiiiJ-ue'abjed
I
TEAM
W L P OP
I
'edlliliC
fer
dariiJ
.
.
.
.
.
.
AD
leUin
lUll
caftJ'
a
_
Kyger
Creel&lt;
3
1 107 .IS
1
I
1
3 1 n 32
I bou fide -~bare. Name• IDlY be wllbbeld · fnm I Soulhern
Eastern
2 2 56 20
1 pa~tlool 1!*1 ,e ..elt bit wDI be 'meaie4 to Uyoae 1 North Gallla
2 2 68 75
apoa
de_.t.
Lett~
·
-'
·
•l!fl!'tll
jUa~,
DOt
per·
...
J
·Southwestern
o
4 32 103
I
·
·
·
Svmmes Valley 0 4 38 109
I IOII.I!ltitsfJ·
· •
·
·
. I Hannan Tra&lt;:e
0 4 · 0 134
I
rink ··
I.
. SVAC ONLY
I . .
~l31/bt
" I · TEAM
w L p OP
1
~·
· •
1 Kyger Creek
3 o· '19 6
•
.
•
.1 Southern
2 0 38 0
I. • • •
··
Easlern
2 1 56 13.
I
I North Gallla
2 1 62 38
I
I Symmes Valley 0 2 19 52
·
·
SOuthwestern
o 2 20 81
·
'
' Hannan Trace
0 · 3 0 10-4
the original American, Stand Up!
Totals
9 9 294 m

WIN

AT INIOOI

Now it Is up to South to
~. a s h. jl))
· his top .c uds In ..t··.
.KQ4
hearts,
diamonds
and clubs.
'A(! .
,
Maybe
the
squeeze
wiU de,
+AQ4
velop:
·
•
.
.
t
.. &lt;f,864:i2
It
doesn't,
but
something
'•
Wt:ST .
MST
I'
else
does.
South
watcht!s
!lie
~
Donald McKenzie·, Adm.. ,
• 86
.J973
1be IIJI1I8] ''Country Fait" of the Alhens Mental Health
fall
of
the
cards.
He
sees
~
,987 5
.632
Center will be beld from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Ocl12, ThunJday, Bertha· McKenzie, dec., . to
East
disl:ard
on
the
1econd
S.
,
+108
+97 5 32
club
'and
fourth
heart
and
•
· withthbyear'sproCeedstogo toward.l tile neW inter~itl11:hapel Richard A. Finlaw, Lot,
.KQ9 75
•10
· West discard o11 the third ;,;
so that patients lllllll)le to go to town to churcb have a chapel on. Pomeroy .
SOUTH
(D)
Mildred
o.
Harris
to
Dale
diamond. This gives him a ·"
lhe groWlds.
•A t0 52
perfect count of the East
Barr,
Pauline
Barr,
2.f&gt;8Acres,
'KJt04
Numerous booths are planned for the fait which is staged by Olive.
Friday's Games:
·
hand.
Three hearls, five dill; ,.:,
'·
KJ 6 '
As Americanism Chalrman of American Legion Auilliary, Kyger Creek at Eastern
the center's women~ fuxiliary . AmoiJ8. ~ are antiques,
monds,
one dub and four ~.
Ira Van Cooney to ,Gtorge PosiNo. 3t,AmeriQan Legton, I wish to·challenge.and encourage North&gt; Galli a at Southern
•AJ
other cards which have to··~
· bak&lt;Q goods, flower malt, homemade candy, hats and clothing,
Kauff,Mary L. Kauff, E 12 Lot all school$ of the Bend Area to delve into !lie Indi8n past. Begin ~~~i~~western at Symmes .
Both vulnor~ ble
be spades.
. ,..;,.,
artsandcrafiB,rt!fresbments, to ll8ljle only a parl
·
48, Pomeroy.
·
Wost
. North . East South
withthestudyofthlicultureof·Indiantribes.
- ··
Hannan, W. Va . at Hannan
Now South .cashes dum- ...
· : Mrs. Osb;v Martin is headlni the Meigs County women wh!J
I·
.
. · IN.T.
my's · king and queen of;'..,
Jerry L. Mathe0ey, Twila L.
During Education Week of Oct. 22 - 28 is a good time .to begin Trace
!'ass
6
N.T.
.Pass
Pass
11111 be ~king part at the homemad~ Qlndy and the baked goods , Matheney to Harry L. Eblin, !lie study,
spades
and . finesses again sf •
.:.
Pass
· booths. ·
·
East's
.
jack l.n ' ~ompl~te•• ~
Barbara L. Eblin, Lot, Mid·
We say that we stand as a Nation for justice, freedom and
Opening lead- • 9
safety.
·
;
dleport.
.
equality - then let us pause to'take account of and to understand
NFL Sla ndings
(NEWSPAPER EHTEkPliU ASSM.) " •
SfEVE POWELL, son of Mr. and Mrs; Gerald P~ell of
Vernon Darst, dec. to Ellison the talents and rich-culturlil history ol our otiginal AmerlcaJI!I.. By United Press International
•
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
Pomeroy, and a lip'ing graduate of Meigs High School, is Darst, Wanda Searles, Freda Let us give him tb.e honor and pride and achievement, so that we
National Conference
•In
Eastern Division
South can count 11 easy
working in horae training at the fai!V!IJI calumet Fatm at Russell, Martha Wol£e, Kay can say, "American: Stand up! We salute you!"
w.
I.
t.
pet.
Pf
pa
tricks
at his slam contract.
l.exingtOQ,Ky.Ste\'ehadoriglnally planned to attend college bit Barnett, Cert. of trans.,
The bidding has been:
·
Mrs, Edlth Fo:r, 'Dallas
2 I 0 .w 64 36 He also sees that if spades
7
71 55 break or the jack drops he West
changed his mind and began working for Calumet. His work dsy Middleport.
Washin~ton
2
1
0
.66
North East
Americanism Chainnan, N.Y. G1an ts I 2 0 .333 5765 h h' 12th,_. k · hlth
Lawrence L. Anderson to
starts at 6:30 tun. He loves!~, howeVer.
I 2 0 .. 333 39 52 1 as . IS
ulC r1g
ere.
American Legion Auxiliary .Post No. ;j9 American Legion Sl. Louis
1+ · . · Pass
Wilbur Imbodep , Frances
Philadelphia
. If he is a really good play· Pass
Pass
3
+
Pass
GARY SWOPE, MEIGS COUNTY game-protector,
notes . Imboden, _?.25 .,Acres, Rutland,
o 3 o .000 35 82 er he will note that there is
·1
.
You, South, hold:
Central Division
.
a p o s s i b I e club-spade
Wilbllr Imboden, d&lt;Q'd., to
Ohio's deel:,longbowseaaon wUlopenFtiday;Oct.13,
I.
t.
pet.
pf
pa
squeeze
but
that
he
should
.AK65
'AlOZ .K53 &lt;f,AI6 '
.
w.
· The total bo,r barvest for Southeastern Ohio iii 1971 was 228, Frances Imboden, Robert.
43 give up a trick to establish . ··What do you do now?
Green
Bay
2
1
0
.667
56
~.
Detro1t
2 I 0 .667 78 74 h
· · u'
the highest- figure l!ince the beginning of compulsory,-deer Imboden, Lilly Imboden,
Minnesola
1
2
o
.333
69
so
t
e
squeeze
s1tua
on.
.A-.Just
bid
three
DO•trump.
Charlotte Wright, Cert. of
cheCking of 1982.
Chicago
0 2 1 .167 58 88
The only place to give up You have a 4· 3·3-3 distribution
A valid hunting and trapping license and a special deer Trans., Pomeroy. "
Western Division
a trick is in . clubs so South and 19 points, u adverliled.
Robert L. Imboden, Shirley
. w. I. t. pet. pf pa wins the h e art lead in
penni! are required for those taking part in longbow hunting
TODAY'S QUESTION
Imboden,
Charlotte
E.
Wright,
San
FranciSco
dummy and leads a club to · Your partner continues to ..•
which Is open through Jan. 6.
2 1 0 .667 91 32
. . k
.
Roduey· D. Wright, Ully M.
four no-trump; What do you do
Atlanta
2 I 0 .667 88 4S hiS JaC · .
Southeastern Ohio's deer herd has continued to increase an~ F;ennedy, Billy J. Kennedy to
·
Los
Angeles
1
1
1
.500
so
~8
There
Is
another
eldra
LONDON ( UPJ ) - The could have been averted if New Orleans o 3 o .000 33 91 chance here. E a s t · mtght now?
should .provide for excellent hunting opportunities this faii, Frances Imboden, 2.25 Acres,
flower children may have heads of state had spent a bit · American Conference
Swope reports.
hold both the king and queen
•!
Rutland.
·
given up the "make love not more time in bed.
Eastern Oivision
of clubs and might not play ·------~-., ~
Audra T. Weddle to Hobart
w. I. t. pet. pf pa one of them.
MR. AND MRS. JAMES SIMPSON of Middleport have R. Cochran, Parcels, Lebanon. war" theme, but !lie slogan has "The cruelty and violence of Miami
3 o o 1.000 .70 37
The last chance does not
found a new home - on the Hi.tlerandStalin was explained N.Y .Jets
returned horne from .a pleasant Western vacaUon. . .
2 I 0 .667105 84 come off West wins the club
hypnotist's couch.
The ~ had their first plane trip
a part of the
by their meager sex lives," Dr. New England2 1 0 .661 52 74 and leads a second heart.
Dr.
William
Bryan,
head
of
Bryan told the gathering.
Baltimore 1 2 o .333 S4 54
vacation; leaving fmn the Hop!Wts Airport at Cleveland where
the
American
Institute
oi
"If
a
society
existed
where
Buffalo
1 2 0 .333 51 78
tlley also visited with his sister and ~ther-in-llw, Mr. and Mrs.
Hypnosis, told a group of 3!i all political leaders were ex· '
Central Oivis(on
Albert Wolfe.
·
w. I. I. pet .. PI pa
. ed t k
American hypnotists,
pee ted an d req!lll'
O eep .Cleveland
2 1 0 .667 64 49
. At Las Vegas, the Slmpsons were guests of her brother-In-law
physicians and scientists sexually satisfied and live up$&lt;1 Cincinnati 2 1 o .667 52 44
and slslei-, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Walker at the Nellis Air Force
Heat registers should be
Monday most of history's wars tlieir potenUal, theeffect would Pittsburgh 2 I o. .667 69 62
Base. They talked to Mrs. Don (Joy Boggs) RIJey and Harold
vacuumed
every time the
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Houston
1 2 0 .333 56 84
minimize
the
possibility
of
·
Western
Oivision
·Rice whlle~egas and visiU!d Hoover Dam in Arizona.
Mr. · and Mrs. Leonard
carpet is vacuumed and at
w. 1. r. pet. pi pa least once every winter
lncld
Uy, residents will be intemted to know that Harold Lawson of Columbus visited and Mrs. Morris Harden of violent thoughts ~d violent
solutions to problems entering Kansas City 2 1 0 .661 · 75 61
Rice, lOll Mrs. Romer Rice and the late Mr. Rice, has wrapPed Mrs. Gretta Simpson and at- Syracuse called on relatives
~1H. 2nd
Pomeroy
Oakland
I I 1 .500 6S 65 registers should be dismantled
San Diego
I I 1 .soo 57 65 . and cleaned.
Phone f/92..5~21
up his service In the U.S. Marines, He retired from service and Is tended Friends Night at Racine and friends here Sunday their minds."
He cited as an Ideal society Denver
1 2 o .333 68 99
Chapter OES. Mrs. Lawson followlll8 a vacation.
now a security guard at the famed Sahara C&amp;slno.
the Marquesas lslands in the
Monday's Results
was presented a 50 year pin.
Mr. and Mrs. Unley Hart South PacHic, "where war is
NY Giants 27 Phil a 12
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lawson
also
l()nly game scheduled)
visited
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laird
WALLACE E. BLAKE, ZANESVILLE, ttaveled !Ju'ough
unknoWn and girls have a
Sunday's Games
visited
other
friends
while
and family in Colwnbus then different lover every night, and
Melgll County recently making contacts In his bid for the State
Chicago
at Green Bey
visited Mr. and Mrs. John no case of rape has ever been
School Board from the lOth Oblo Co118reaslonal District. Blake Is here.
Denver at Cincinnal•
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Crill Fisher at Sandusky Bay over
Detroit at .Atlanta
a former teacher, administrator, superintendent of schools, and
recorded. "
Kan City at Cleveland
Bradford
and
·Mrs.
Esther
the
weekend.
Is now aloanofllcer.with the First Federal and Savqs and Loan
Miami
at NY Jets
Piper were·Mrs. John Boomer
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Simpson · SCHLUETER TRAD~
As.!n., inZailesvllle, and operates a 247 acre farm.
New England .at Buffalo
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Shank of Seymour, Ind., spent a
New Orleans at NY Giants
POR"" "'D O
(UP!)
Phi Ia at Washington .
and son, John, of Parkersburg weekend with his mother, Mrs.
'"""'
•
re.
"WHEN ARE THE JUNIORS COMING?" is the question at on Sunday. Also visiting
Pittsburgh
at Dallas
The Portland Trail Blazers
Gretta Simpson, who ac· Mondsytraded Dale Schlueter,
St. Louis at Minnesota
the ·Pomeroy and Middleport Elementary Schools.
Saturday afternoon were Mr. companied them home for a
San Diego.at Baltimore
These Ohio University juniors.wUI be working In the two · and Mrs. Donald P8rsons of visit. .
one of the team's foor centers,
San Fran al Los Angeles
schoola this fall •uloting children who may be hav11J8 one Athens, rural: and grandson,
IOnly games scheduled)
Mrs. Nola Bradshaw of for guard Dave \l'ohl of
Monday's Games
problem or another in their studies. The juniora, of course, do not Mr. and Mrs. Thadd Ellis of
Philadelphia.
Oakland
at Houston, night
Middleport
spent
several
da)'ll
The
6-footWohl
was
the
2
aerve as student teachers. Tiley jUst provide IndiVidual help for Burbank, Calif.
(Only
game
scheduled)
.
with her motlier' Mrs. Ben 76ers~ third round draft choice
tlle students.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith Shatter.
·
·
and daughter. Deah; of
Mrs. Ruby Hupp and il1 1971 aiid Sll!rted 32 games
Greenwich, Ohio, spent a children, Brian, Chris and last season, scoril)g 642 pointa HALL NAMED
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Anna Wines and for an average of 8.1 per game.
POMEROY LANES
George
L. Hall, 66, who reUred
Early Sunday Mixed
Otis Bailey and daughter. ·
daughter, Karen and Ada Schlueter, a 6-foot-10 four-year
September 24, 1972
Mr. and Mrs. John FiBber of ROwe were Sunday guests of vet, played as the. regular Sept. 1as goH coach at Cornell
.Keith Goble Ford
Won Lost
Bowlinu L01uue
Eagles Club
26
6 Akron spent several days with Mr. and Mrs, Steve Cleland center for Portland last year University, was named
Sept. 26,1972
Team 3
18
14 Mrs. Fisher's parents, Mr. and and children. •
and averaged 11.7 points and Mondsy as coach goH at the ·
Team
W. L. . Farmers Bank
18
14 Mrs. Henry Roush and Dale.
10.6 reboWlds per game.
University of Tampa. Hall's
No. 3
26 6 Mark V
.
14
18
tealll8 had a reeord of 163
Mr. and Mrs. Wright Roush
No. 5
22 10 Racine Food Market 10 22
victories,
112 losses and eight
No. 12
22 10 Tom's Carry Out
10 22 of Chillicothe visited Mr. and
In 1971, South VIetnamese
No.2
20 12
High Ind. Game - Jr. Phelps Mrs. Henry Roush ThursPresident Nguyen Van Thleu ties and his 1946 club won !lie
No. 6
18 14 199. Betty Smith 175; Second day.
No. 4
17 15 High, John Tyree 195, Helen
was r~ected by 90 per cent of Eastern Collegiate cham, No. I
16 16 Van Meter 174.
Mr, and Mrs. E. A. Win~ett
the vote In a one-man election. pionship.
No. 8
16 16
High Series - Junior Phelps attended a recent Democrat
No. 11
16 16 532, Belly Smith 456; Second meeting in Cleveland, They
No.9
12 20 High, Charles Smith 518, Helen
were accompanied by Mrs.
No. 10
12 20 Van Meter 439.
No. 14
12 20
Team High Game and Series Ann Coe woo spent a few days
No. 13
II 21 - Eagles Club 679 and 1878.
in Akron with Mr. and Mrs.
No. 7
4 28
By Mrs. Herbert llouJh
John Davis. They also visited
On Sepl. 26, Team No. 3 took.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
8 points from Team No: 5.
John Bentz at the horne of his Clifton visited Mrs. Edna
Bend
Leogue
Barbara Abshire was high for
September 25, 1092
son, William Bentz, In Roush at Racine and called on
Teani 3with 4951ilns, and Mary
Won
Lost
Roush was high for Team 5 Top Cats
8
1 Coshocton for a dsy and report Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger
wilh WI pins. ·
·
6
3 John is Improving after a and were dinner guests of Mr.
Team5
Team No. 12 took 6· points Team 2
4 · 5 hospitalization.
from Team No. 4. Dave Holley Bombers
and Mrs. Russell Roush and
4
5
Mr, and Mrs. Jerry PoweU family Sunday.
was high for T&lt;!am No. 12 with Team 4 ,
3
6
501 pins, and Merida Shaw was Twin City
2 · 7 vacaUoned in Virginia ·and
M.rs. Edna Roush of Racine
high for Team No. 4 with 549
High Team Series - Top West Virginia filr a few days. was a guest Friday of Mrs.
pins. ·
1963; High Team Game -'Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Russell Roush.
Team No. 2 look 7 points Cats
Top Cats 618.
from Team No. 13. Jack Mink
Spence
of Worthington were
High Ind. Series - Jurnior
Miss Ada Rowe spent Sunday
-was high for Team No. 2 with Phelps
596, J. Carsey 561 , T. weekend guests of Mr. and witli her). sister, Mrs. Anna
SC2 pins and Mario Bush was Clelland 526.
Mrs. Ben Phtlaon and Mrs. Wines, a .d family at Racine
high for Team No. 13 with 478
High
Ind.
Game
J.
Phelps
1
Mlna~ .
pins.
Sunday.
203.
R
,.
Kuhn
210,
J.
Phelps
198.
Team No. 1 took 6 poinls
Lynn Mallory and Kenny
Harold Lawson, son of Mr.
from Team No. 10. John
Theiss went to Athena to attend and Mrs. Charles Lawson, is a
Kennedy (sub} was high for
Ohio University.
Team No. 1 with 483 pins and
paUent at Pleasant Valley
Bob Teed was high for Team Wednesday Afternoon Leauue
Mrs. Bert House of Columbus )lospltal after cutting his leg on
No. 10 wllh 484 olns.
September 27, 1972
Team 14 took 8 polnl$ from
Won Lost - -- -- - - : - - - , a chain saw. Cards and letters
1earn No. 7. Helen Oseland was
'
15 would be appreciated.
19
5 Blakeslee-Hoyt
high for Team No. 14 with 427 ~am5
Gaul's
Shake
Haven
18
14
Moore-Morrow
·
12
Mrs. !)oris Sayre, Paul Sayre
pins and Kerm Malone was Lodwick's Markel
14
10
ullz.
Bentley
1
0
of
Columbull, Howard Sayre of
F
high for Team No. 7 with 462 Good's Pennzoll
15
17
High Individual Game Syracuse enjoyed a
pins.
...~ • ~
TV
12 20 Men, Russ IW&gt;ore 208; Women,
Team No. 11 'took , 6 points Ridenour's
Royal
Crown
t:ola
10
22
Hope
IW&gt;ore
1~.
dinner
at
the
home
of
Mr.
and
from Team No. 8. Elmer
High Ind. Game - Pearl
Second High Ind. Game Mrs. Herbert Shields Frida:v.
G·ardner (sub} was high for Russell
161, Betty. Frederick Men, Roy Holter 196; Roy
Olarles RingeisOIJ and
Team No. ll 'wlth 518 pins and 144.
Holler
189;
Women,
Ina
Charlet Neal was high for
High .Series - Hazllee Riebel Meadows 147; VIrginia Hoyt dsughter, Julia, of Columbus
Team No. 8 with 552 pins.
397,
Florine Ginther 389.
146.
.
visited Mra. Doris Sayre
· Team No. 6 look 6 points
Team
High Game and Series
High Series - Men, Roy &amp;mday morning.
from Team. No. 9. John Fuller - Lodwick's
Market, 327 and Holler 552 ; Women, Hope
Mr. and Mrs. RomleRuaseU
was high for Team No. 6 with
Moore 426.
556 pins and Gary Ellis was 877.
J
Second High Series - Men, andl,landy,Mr.andMrs.Dana
high for Team No . 9
,
RRuss
baMoore
548,
Dick
Lewis,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Steve
with \1110 pins.
.
osen urn 519; Women, Ina Haggy of Akron visited Mr. and
.11iuh slogte game tor 1110
Pomeroy Bowllnu unes
lad.ies for the evening was 181
~~dows
417~ _vtrglnl• Hoyt Mrs. R~ssell Roush and
Wednesday Late
pl~s held by Barbara Abshire
Mixed LMgue
Team High Game - Men, children.
and for the .men was 219 pins
Sept. 27, 1972
Holler
-Rawlings, Ro.sen ·
Mr1 BerthaRo"'-··- 1 a1
held by John Fuller.
_ Standings
•
baum -Moadows 635.
""'"'"'• oc ,
High series for the ladles was . Team
Pis.
Teain
High
Series
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Phillp
Radford
495 total pins, held by Barbara Rosenbaum-Meadows
24 Rooenbaum .Meadows 1835.
and
Stephanie
of
Pomeroy
'Abthlre and tor the men 556 Holler-Rawlings
19
total pint held by. John Fuller. Cassell -Carsey
Rou\e and· Mr. and Mrs, RICk
16
Early Sundar
Sargent of Columbull were
Mixed Lutl!t
Sunday dinner guelll of Mrs.
• Oct. 1, 1972
Jack Sargent.
Standlnus
Mr·,...._
and ............
••- 1 ~.Team
w.' .L.
tcr Ma nue1
E'agle.. Club
.32 8 and da_.ter cl Locan apent a
Anybody who) about lo move.has our ~ympalh~.
phones. Because th~re 's a I~H to choose frqm.
Farmers·Bank ·
26 1~ weekend with hla Jlll"'lll, Mr. . ·
We
know
hoW
complicated
it
Is
just
flgur.ing
out
how
to
'
,
We've got compact Starlile·" pholl«:~s with dials tharglow ' '
TReam NFo. Jod.Ma k t
2016 202' and !tin. PIUI Mlnuel. .
.
. rearrange your fu'miture, let alone your life.
:
In the dark. Supt!!r-modern Styleline• phones with rheir'dials
aclne o
r e
• · ·1 • t
.._ 1 R b · t ·)
Mer~v ·
16 24
..... er .... n~e,
o er
For inst•nce, yOu 'll p·robibly nHd to get in !ouch with
in their handseh. Nostal~icCiindle~tick phones to remind
~
Tom's"Carry Out , . 10 30 Roush ,lllld ICII, Bob .Jr., and ·
your~ srocer, milkrtHtn; school, and gas and electric ·
.you of the 1920's. And decoralor Cradlephones-the last
High Individual Game - Palll Manael ·attended a
~
company offices iS soon as you 've mo\ltd in. (And the list
wOrd in elegant convtrYtions.
\:;ry Dugan 221; Betty Smith IJIDpme bet11eeu Cincln•ti
doesn't end there.)
These phon6 1re available in many intef.esting colors,
~
' Which Is wily now i.s the time to.ger in touch Wi!h us.
too.
.
Second HIUh Ind. Game - and San Dletlo.
Decide on how ml'Q''llew phones you'll need 1nd where
So picking oul•nd ordering lhe phones you'll w•nl
•
Clarence lloylti 191; Julia
·PYI. Ronald RuiMll hill
you!ll nOed lhemJ and we'll ins!all!hese links to !he oulside .. should be alo! of fun.
·
BoviH Ill.
_ ....._. ..,_.__._ •-••••• t '
11
Hluh Series ·- Larry l)uuln _,.,.........,.......,w_..,,.a
worldbeforeyo move in.
· .
•
A~rerntmber,t'l;vlngthtfunnow-beforeyoumove ·
556; l'alty Young 455.
Ft. Knoz, KY., and ill llll'ndlng
. ' · t . Bul be sure and give yourself
enough
lime
lo
,eleci
your
-will,probably
make your./l(e a !otmc:&gt;;re pleaS'ant later ori.
' •
. '
.
•
Second Htuh 5erles - A. L. 1 111ft wllb Iii wife and
Phelps 491; Mlxlne Dugan -146. daughter Mn NI111PV Rn !II
' •.
••
TMm High Game - Tum and u •
Ft .
1iE11ERAL181 I UDIIE
No. 3 MO
.
en evu. to '
, Team High Series - Far· Meade Md, !rhere he will
mer~ Bank 1KI.
· enter ~VJ eqldii'NIIt ICIJoal.
.

. I .

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COKE

NORTH

:bottles . .
No Putthase Necessary

69.:

00

$

lVS.

With 3 Purehase · .

6·s· ~

16 oz.
btrs.

.

Round Steak
~·

Smoked Callies'
I

Real
Super

SUP'ERIORS

SK.INLESS 12Ol.
WIENERS Pk&amp;

Special! lb.
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200 LITTLE
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!FILTERS)

FAIRMONT

YELLOW' ONIONS
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BUTTER·
MILK

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JIFFY ·

EASY MONDAY .·

COTTAGE
CHEESE

CORN
MUFFIN
MIX

SPRAY
STARCH·

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Large Size Crt.

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JUMBO CELERY
bch. 29~

22 oz. Can

10$
e

RED RADISHES

871· Oz.
'•.• ';r80xes,''

oN•'-'

Get your phones in first.

Golden Ripe

am

H--.. .

...:u ._; ;;::_

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BAN.ANAS_ ':.

WINCHESTER
200 l-ITTLE
CIGARS
(FILTERS)

Seal test
ICE CREAM

-·st:n•n
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BANQUET
~Gal.

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lb.

"'

16 oz. Pkg.

c

'·

·BARS

SUPE~ MARKEl· Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. lO ~ 10

39e

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Corner Mill and Second Sts,

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SALE! 8-1RACK

VALUABLE COUPO N

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·TAPES

. JOY

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1000 .
DillY

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"We Reserve The

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MARK V

STORE '

.WtTM Tit~ Coli• 111

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RJc1rt To Umlt Quantities"

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FABRIC
SOFTENER ,

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LIQUID

POPUlAR
COUNTRY
WESTERN

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 9.92-3480 .

89

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t

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With tMr Cf!w- ONI.Y .
. :
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Without ~UJ*t
p!loa abe st.nf · 1

Fabric Sof~1.59 .Thlts Of• G.od
tltria 10:15-72'~ Oal7.

. MARl STORE

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Udt.l - ... IIJIIIIM- ---~

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$149

...... ,..

10 oz. '

BONUS

PACK

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26 oz ..- '

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NESTEA .

KING

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25' OFF

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30Z
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Rololl

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coupon per f""'lly
Good through '1().18-72

.... M Merit V 0111\'
U"lllli lllll,t ay ·

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NORTH STAR
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CAPE ANN

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1.98

FROZEN
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Purchase

(Upon Request) .

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ROOT BEER
8 pak .. .

USDA CHOICE BEEF

lb.

POLISH
SAUSAGE
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·2·HOUR .
CLE8NJN_
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SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS .-

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l6oz.

FOR

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SLICED
"
BOLOGNA lb.

Enough Love:

Racine
·Social EVents

BRE·AD

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SUPERIQRS

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J~o~
bottles

.16.8oz._. 69· ~

I.

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as

PEPPER ,
'8 PAK

Discards ·Are Finesse Clues · ·

I.!

·

'

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

~eigs

Property
Transfers .

.1
sv~it~~~~~Gs.
1 · Ed.NIIe:Leuenef :' a-arewe• ,._~•••t' I
beleti
....
M_.IalellctkudiiiiiJ-ue'abjed
I
TEAM
W L P OP
I
'edlliliC
fer
dariiJ
.
.
.
.
.
.
AD
leUin
lUll
caftJ'
a
_
Kyger
Creel&lt;
3
1 107 .IS
1
I
1
3 1 n 32
I bou fide -~bare. Name• IDlY be wllbbeld · fnm I Soulhern
Eastern
2 2 56 20
1 pa~tlool 1!*1 ,e ..elt bit wDI be 'meaie4 to Uyoae 1 North Gallla
2 2 68 75
apoa
de_.t.
Lett~
·
-'
·
•l!fl!'tll
jUa~,
DOt
per·
...
J
·Southwestern
o
4 32 103
I
·
·
·
Svmmes Valley 0 4 38 109
I IOII.I!ltitsfJ·
· •
·
·
. I Hannan Tra&lt;:e
0 4 · 0 134
I
rink ··
I.
. SVAC ONLY
I . .
~l31/bt
" I · TEAM
w L p OP
1
~·
· •
1 Kyger Creek
3 o· '19 6
•
.
•
.1 Southern
2 0 38 0
I. • • •
··
Easlern
2 1 56 13.
I
I North Gallla
2 1 62 38
I
I Symmes Valley 0 2 19 52
·
·
SOuthwestern
o 2 20 81
·
'
' Hannan Trace
0 · 3 0 10-4
the original American, Stand Up!
Totals
9 9 294 m

WIN

AT INIOOI

Now it Is up to South to
~. a s h. jl))
· his top .c uds In ..t··.
.KQ4
hearts,
diamonds
and clubs.
'A(! .
,
Maybe
the
squeeze
wiU de,
+AQ4
velop:
·
•
.
.
t
.. &lt;f,864:i2
It
doesn't,
but
something
'•
Wt:ST .
MST
I'
else
does.
South
watcht!s
!lie
~
Donald McKenzie·, Adm.. ,
• 86
.J973
1be IIJI1I8] ''Country Fait" of the Alhens Mental Health
fall
of
the
cards.
He
sees
~
,987 5
.632
Center will be beld from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Ocl12, ThunJday, Bertha· McKenzie, dec., . to
East
disl:ard
on
the
1econd
S.
,
+108
+97 5 32
club
'and
fourth
heart
and
•
· withthbyear'sproCeedstogo toward.l tile neW inter~itl11:hapel Richard A. Finlaw, Lot,
.KQ9 75
•10
· West discard o11 the third ;,;
so that patients lllllll)le to go to town to churcb have a chapel on. Pomeroy .
SOUTH
(D)
Mildred
o.
Harris
to
Dale
diamond. This gives him a ·"
lhe groWlds.
•A t0 52
perfect count of the East
Barr,
Pauline
Barr,
2.f&gt;8Acres,
'KJt04
Numerous booths are planned for the fait which is staged by Olive.
Friday's Games:
·
hand.
Three hearls, five dill; ,.:,
'·
KJ 6 '
As Americanism Chalrman of American Legion Auilliary, Kyger Creek at Eastern
the center's women~ fuxiliary . AmoiJ8. ~ are antiques,
monds,
one dub and four ~.
Ira Van Cooney to ,Gtorge PosiNo. 3t,AmeriQan Legton, I wish to·challenge.and encourage North&gt; Galli a at Southern
•AJ
other cards which have to··~
· bak&lt;Q goods, flower malt, homemade candy, hats and clothing,
Kauff,Mary L. Kauff, E 12 Lot all school$ of the Bend Area to delve into !lie Indi8n past. Begin ~~~i~~western at Symmes .
Both vulnor~ ble
be spades.
. ,..;,.,
artsandcrafiB,rt!fresbments, to ll8ljle only a parl
·
48, Pomeroy.
·
Wost
. North . East South
withthestudyofthlicultureof·Indiantribes.
- ··
Hannan, W. Va . at Hannan
Now South .cashes dum- ...
· : Mrs. Osb;v Martin is headlni the Meigs County women wh!J
I·
.
. · IN.T.
my's · king and queen of;'..,
Jerry L. Mathe0ey, Twila L.
During Education Week of Oct. 22 - 28 is a good time .to begin Trace
!'ass
6
N.T.
.Pass
Pass
11111 be ~king part at the homemad~ Qlndy and the baked goods , Matheney to Harry L. Eblin, !lie study,
spades
and . finesses again sf •
.:.
Pass
· booths. ·
·
East's
.
jack l.n ' ~ompl~te•• ~
Barbara L. Eblin, Lot, Mid·
We say that we stand as a Nation for justice, freedom and
Opening lead- • 9
safety.
·
;
dleport.
.
equality - then let us pause to'take account of and to understand
NFL Sla ndings
(NEWSPAPER EHTEkPliU ASSM.) " •
SfEVE POWELL, son of Mr. and Mrs; Gerald P~ell of
Vernon Darst, dec. to Ellison the talents and rich-culturlil history ol our otiginal AmerlcaJI!I.. By United Press International
•
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
Pomeroy, and a lip'ing graduate of Meigs High School, is Darst, Wanda Searles, Freda Let us give him tb.e honor and pride and achievement, so that we
National Conference
•In
Eastern Division
South can count 11 easy
working in horae training at the fai!V!IJI calumet Fatm at Russell, Martha Wol£e, Kay can say, "American: Stand up! We salute you!"
w.
I.
t.
pet.
Pf
pa
tricks
at his slam contract.
l.exingtOQ,Ky.Ste\'ehadoriglnally planned to attend college bit Barnett, Cert. of trans.,
The bidding has been:
·
Mrs, Edlth Fo:r, 'Dallas
2 I 0 .w 64 36 He also sees that if spades
7
71 55 break or the jack drops he West
changed his mind and began working for Calumet. His work dsy Middleport.
Washin~ton
2
1
0
.66
North East
Americanism Chainnan, N.Y. G1an ts I 2 0 .333 5765 h h' 12th,_. k · hlth
Lawrence L. Anderson to
starts at 6:30 tun. He loves!~, howeVer.
I 2 0 .. 333 39 52 1 as . IS
ulC r1g
ere.
American Legion Auxiliary .Post No. ;j9 American Legion Sl. Louis
1+ · . · Pass
Wilbur Imbodep , Frances
Philadelphia
. If he is a really good play· Pass
Pass
3
+
Pass
GARY SWOPE, MEIGS COUNTY game-protector,
notes . Imboden, _?.25 .,Acres, Rutland,
o 3 o .000 35 82 er he will note that there is
·1
.
You, South, hold:
Central Division
.
a p o s s i b I e club-spade
Wilbllr Imboden, d&lt;Q'd., to
Ohio's deel:,longbowseaaon wUlopenFtiday;Oct.13,
I.
t.
pet.
pf
pa
squeeze
but
that
he
should
.AK65
'AlOZ .K53 &lt;f,AI6 '
.
w.
· The total bo,r barvest for Southeastern Ohio iii 1971 was 228, Frances Imboden, Robert.
43 give up a trick to establish . ··What do you do now?
Green
Bay
2
1
0
.667
56
~.
Detro1t
2 I 0 .667 78 74 h
· · u'
the highest- figure l!ince the beginning of compulsory,-deer Imboden, Lilly Imboden,
Minnesola
1
2
o
.333
69
so
t
e
squeeze
s1tua
on.
.A-.Just
bid
three
DO•trump.
Charlotte Wright, Cert. of
cheCking of 1982.
Chicago
0 2 1 .167 58 88
The only place to give up You have a 4· 3·3-3 distribution
A valid hunting and trapping license and a special deer Trans., Pomeroy. "
Western Division
a trick is in . clubs so South and 19 points, u adverliled.
Robert L. Imboden, Shirley
. w. I. t. pet. pf pa wins the h e art lead in
penni! are required for those taking part in longbow hunting
TODAY'S QUESTION
Imboden,
Charlotte
E.
Wright,
San
FranciSco
dummy and leads a club to · Your partner continues to ..•
which Is open through Jan. 6.
2 1 0 .667 91 32
. . k
.
Roduey· D. Wright, Ully M.
four no-trump; What do you do
Atlanta
2 I 0 .667 88 4S hiS JaC · .
Southeastern Ohio's deer herd has continued to increase an~ F;ennedy, Billy J. Kennedy to
·
Los
Angeles
1
1
1
.500
so
~8
There
Is
another
eldra
LONDON ( UPJ ) - The could have been averted if New Orleans o 3 o .000 33 91 chance here. E a s t · mtght now?
should .provide for excellent hunting opportunities this faii, Frances Imboden, 2.25 Acres,
flower children may have heads of state had spent a bit · American Conference
Swope reports.
hold both the king and queen
•!
Rutland.
·
given up the "make love not more time in bed.
Eastern Oivision
of clubs and might not play ·------~-., ~
Audra T. Weddle to Hobart
w. I. t. pet. pf pa one of them.
MR. AND MRS. JAMES SIMPSON of Middleport have R. Cochran, Parcels, Lebanon. war" theme, but !lie slogan has "The cruelty and violence of Miami
3 o o 1.000 .70 37
The last chance does not
found a new home - on the Hi.tlerandStalin was explained N.Y .Jets
returned horne from .a pleasant Western vacaUon. . .
2 I 0 .667105 84 come off West wins the club
hypnotist's couch.
The ~ had their first plane trip
a part of the
by their meager sex lives," Dr. New England2 1 0 .661 52 74 and leads a second heart.
Dr.
William
Bryan,
head
of
Bryan told the gathering.
Baltimore 1 2 o .333 S4 54
vacation; leaving fmn the Hop!Wts Airport at Cleveland where
the
American
Institute
oi
"If
a
society
existed
where
Buffalo
1 2 0 .333 51 78
tlley also visited with his sister and ~ther-in-llw, Mr. and Mrs.
Hypnosis, told a group of 3!i all political leaders were ex· '
Central Oivis(on
Albert Wolfe.
·
w. I. I. pet .. PI pa
. ed t k
American hypnotists,
pee ted an d req!lll'
O eep .Cleveland
2 1 0 .667 64 49
. At Las Vegas, the Slmpsons were guests of her brother-In-law
physicians and scientists sexually satisfied and live up$&lt;1 Cincinnati 2 1 o .667 52 44
and slslei-, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Walker at the Nellis Air Force
Heat registers should be
Monday most of history's wars tlieir potenUal, theeffect would Pittsburgh 2 I o. .667 69 62
Base. They talked to Mrs. Don (Joy Boggs) RIJey and Harold
vacuumed
every time the
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Houston
1 2 0 .333 56 84
minimize
the
possibility
of
·
Western
Oivision
·Rice whlle~egas and visiU!d Hoover Dam in Arizona.
Mr. · and Mrs. Leonard
carpet is vacuumed and at
w. 1. r. pet. pi pa least once every winter
lncld
Uy, residents will be intemted to know that Harold Lawson of Columbus visited and Mrs. Morris Harden of violent thoughts ~d violent
solutions to problems entering Kansas City 2 1 0 .661 · 75 61
Rice, lOll Mrs. Romer Rice and the late Mr. Rice, has wrapPed Mrs. Gretta Simpson and at- Syracuse called on relatives
~1H. 2nd
Pomeroy
Oakland
I I 1 .500 6S 65 registers should be dismantled
San Diego
I I 1 .soo 57 65 . and cleaned.
Phone f/92..5~21
up his service In the U.S. Marines, He retired from service and Is tended Friends Night at Racine and friends here Sunday their minds."
He cited as an Ideal society Denver
1 2 o .333 68 99
Chapter OES. Mrs. Lawson followlll8 a vacation.
now a security guard at the famed Sahara C&amp;slno.
the Marquesas lslands in the
Monday's Results
was presented a 50 year pin.
Mr. and Mrs. Unley Hart South PacHic, "where war is
NY Giants 27 Phil a 12
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lawson
also
l()nly game scheduled)
visited
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laird
WALLACE E. BLAKE, ZANESVILLE, ttaveled !Ju'ough
unknoWn and girls have a
Sunday's Games
visited
other
friends
while
and family in Colwnbus then different lover every night, and
Melgll County recently making contacts In his bid for the State
Chicago
at Green Bey
visited Mr. and Mrs. John no case of rape has ever been
School Board from the lOth Oblo Co118reaslonal District. Blake Is here.
Denver at Cincinnal•
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Crill Fisher at Sandusky Bay over
Detroit at .Atlanta
a former teacher, administrator, superintendent of schools, and
recorded. "
Kan City at Cleveland
Bradford
and
·Mrs.
Esther
the
weekend.
Is now aloanofllcer.with the First Federal and Savqs and Loan
Miami
at NY Jets
Piper were·Mrs. John Boomer
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Simpson · SCHLUETER TRAD~
As.!n., inZailesvllle, and operates a 247 acre farm.
New England .at Buffalo
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Shank of Seymour, Ind., spent a
New Orleans at NY Giants
POR"" "'D O
(UP!)
Phi Ia at Washington .
and son, John, of Parkersburg weekend with his mother, Mrs.
'"""'
•
re.
"WHEN ARE THE JUNIORS COMING?" is the question at on Sunday. Also visiting
Pittsburgh
at Dallas
The Portland Trail Blazers
Gretta Simpson, who ac· Mondsytraded Dale Schlueter,
St. Louis at Minnesota
the ·Pomeroy and Middleport Elementary Schools.
Saturday afternoon were Mr. companied them home for a
San Diego.at Baltimore
These Ohio University juniors.wUI be working In the two · and Mrs. Donald P8rsons of visit. .
one of the team's foor centers,
San Fran al Los Angeles
schoola this fall •uloting children who may be hav11J8 one Athens, rural: and grandson,
IOnly games scheduled)
Mrs. Nola Bradshaw of for guard Dave \l'ohl of
Monday's Games
problem or another in their studies. The juniora, of course, do not Mr. and Mrs. Thadd Ellis of
Philadelphia.
Oakland
at Houston, night
Middleport
spent
several
da)'ll
The
6-footWohl
was
the
2
aerve as student teachers. Tiley jUst provide IndiVidual help for Burbank, Calif.
(Only
game
scheduled)
.
with her motlier' Mrs. Ben 76ers~ third round draft choice
tlle students.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith Shatter.
·
·
and daughter. Deah; of
Mrs. Ruby Hupp and il1 1971 aiid Sll!rted 32 games
Greenwich, Ohio, spent a children, Brian, Chris and last season, scoril)g 642 pointa HALL NAMED
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Anna Wines and for an average of 8.1 per game.
POMEROY LANES
George
L. Hall, 66, who reUred
Early Sunday Mixed
Otis Bailey and daughter. ·
daughter, Karen and Ada Schlueter, a 6-foot-10 four-year
September 24, 1972
Mr. and Mrs. John FiBber of ROwe were Sunday guests of vet, played as the. regular Sept. 1as goH coach at Cornell
.Keith Goble Ford
Won Lost
Bowlinu L01uue
Eagles Club
26
6 Akron spent several days with Mr. and Mrs, Steve Cleland center for Portland last year University, was named
Sept. 26,1972
Team 3
18
14 Mrs. Fisher's parents, Mr. and and children. •
and averaged 11.7 points and Mondsy as coach goH at the ·
Team
W. L. . Farmers Bank
18
14 Mrs. Henry Roush and Dale.
10.6 reboWlds per game.
University of Tampa. Hall's
No. 3
26 6 Mark V
.
14
18
tealll8 had a reeord of 163
Mr. and Mrs. Wright Roush
No. 5
22 10 Racine Food Market 10 22
victories,
112 losses and eight
No. 12
22 10 Tom's Carry Out
10 22 of Chillicothe visited Mr. and
In 1971, South VIetnamese
No.2
20 12
High Ind. Game - Jr. Phelps Mrs. Henry Roush ThursPresident Nguyen Van Thleu ties and his 1946 club won !lie
No. 6
18 14 199. Betty Smith 175; Second day.
No. 4
17 15 High, John Tyree 195, Helen
was r~ected by 90 per cent of Eastern Collegiate cham, No. I
16 16 Van Meter 174.
Mr, and Mrs. E. A. Win~ett
the vote In a one-man election. pionship.
No. 8
16 16
High Series - Junior Phelps attended a recent Democrat
No. 11
16 16 532, Belly Smith 456; Second meeting in Cleveland, They
No.9
12 20 High, Charles Smith 518, Helen
were accompanied by Mrs.
No. 10
12 20 Van Meter 439.
No. 14
12 20
Team High Game and Series Ann Coe woo spent a few days
No. 13
II 21 - Eagles Club 679 and 1878.
in Akron with Mr. and Mrs.
No. 7
4 28
By Mrs. Herbert llouJh
John Davis. They also visited
On Sepl. 26, Team No. 3 took.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
8 points from Team No: 5.
John Bentz at the horne of his Clifton visited Mrs. Edna
Bend
Leogue
Barbara Abshire was high for
September 25, 1092
son, William Bentz, In Roush at Racine and called on
Teani 3with 4951ilns, and Mary
Won
Lost
Roush was high for Team 5 Top Cats
8
1 Coshocton for a dsy and report Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger
wilh WI pins. ·
·
6
3 John is Improving after a and were dinner guests of Mr.
Team5
Team No. 12 took 6· points Team 2
4 · 5 hospitalization.
from Team No. 4. Dave Holley Bombers
and Mrs. Russell Roush and
4
5
Mr, and Mrs. Jerry PoweU family Sunday.
was high for T&lt;!am No. 12 with Team 4 ,
3
6
501 pins, and Merida Shaw was Twin City
2 · 7 vacaUoned in Virginia ·and
M.rs. Edna Roush of Racine
high for Team No. 4 with 549
High Team Series - Top West Virginia filr a few days. was a guest Friday of Mrs.
pins. ·
1963; High Team Game -'Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Russell Roush.
Team No. 2 look 7 points Cats
Top Cats 618.
from Team No. 13. Jack Mink
Spence
of Worthington were
High Ind. Series - Jurnior
Miss Ada Rowe spent Sunday
-was high for Team No. 2 with Phelps
596, J. Carsey 561 , T. weekend guests of Mr. and witli her). sister, Mrs. Anna
SC2 pins and Mario Bush was Clelland 526.
Mrs. Ben Phtlaon and Mrs. Wines, a .d family at Racine
high for Team No. 13 with 478
High
Ind.
Game
J.
Phelps
1
Mlna~ .
pins.
Sunday.
203.
R
,.
Kuhn
210,
J.
Phelps
198.
Team No. 1 took 6 poinls
Lynn Mallory and Kenny
Harold Lawson, son of Mr.
from Team No. 10. John
Theiss went to Athena to attend and Mrs. Charles Lawson, is a
Kennedy (sub} was high for
Ohio University.
Team No. 1 with 483 pins and
paUent at Pleasant Valley
Bob Teed was high for Team Wednesday Afternoon Leauue
Mrs. Bert House of Columbus )lospltal after cutting his leg on
No. 10 wllh 484 olns.
September 27, 1972
Team 14 took 8 polnl$ from
Won Lost - -- -- - - : - - - , a chain saw. Cards and letters
1earn No. 7. Helen Oseland was
'
15 would be appreciated.
19
5 Blakeslee-Hoyt
high for Team No. 14 with 427 ~am5
Gaul's
Shake
Haven
18
14
Moore-Morrow
·
12
Mrs. !)oris Sayre, Paul Sayre
pins and Kerm Malone was Lodwick's Markel
14
10
ullz.
Bentley
1
0
of
Columbull, Howard Sayre of
F
high for Team No. 7 with 462 Good's Pennzoll
15
17
High Individual Game Syracuse enjoyed a
pins.
...~ • ~
TV
12 20 Men, Russ IW&gt;ore 208; Women,
Team No. 11 'took , 6 points Ridenour's
Royal
Crown
t:ola
10
22
Hope
IW&gt;ore
1~.
dinner
at
the
home
of
Mr.
and
from Team No. 8. Elmer
High Ind. Game - Pearl
Second High Ind. Game Mrs. Herbert Shields Frida:v.
G·ardner (sub} was high for Russell
161, Betty. Frederick Men, Roy Holter 196; Roy
Olarles RingeisOIJ and
Team No. ll 'wlth 518 pins and 144.
Holler
189;
Women,
Ina
Charlet Neal was high for
High .Series - Hazllee Riebel Meadows 147; VIrginia Hoyt dsughter, Julia, of Columbus
Team No. 8 with 552 pins.
397,
Florine Ginther 389.
146.
.
visited Mra. Doris Sayre
· Team No. 6 look 6 points
Team
High Game and Series
High Series - Men, Roy &amp;mday morning.
from Team. No. 9. John Fuller - Lodwick's
Market, 327 and Holler 552 ; Women, Hope
Mr. and Mrs. RomleRuaseU
was high for Team No. 6 with
Moore 426.
556 pins and Gary Ellis was 877.
J
Second High Series - Men, andl,landy,Mr.andMrs.Dana
high for Team No . 9
,
RRuss
baMoore
548,
Dick
Lewis,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Steve
with \1110 pins.
.
osen urn 519; Women, Ina Haggy of Akron visited Mr. and
.11iuh slogte game tor 1110
Pomeroy Bowllnu unes
lad.ies for the evening was 181
~~dows
417~ _vtrglnl• Hoyt Mrs. R~ssell Roush and
Wednesday Late
pl~s held by Barbara Abshire
Mixed LMgue
Team High Game - Men, children.
and for the .men was 219 pins
Sept. 27, 1972
Holler
-Rawlings, Ro.sen ·
Mr1 BerthaRo"'-··- 1 a1
held by John Fuller.
_ Standings
•
baum -Moadows 635.
""'"'"'• oc ,
High series for the ladles was . Team
Pis.
Teain
High
Series
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Phillp
Radford
495 total pins, held by Barbara Rosenbaum-Meadows
24 Rooenbaum .Meadows 1835.
and
Stephanie
of
Pomeroy
'Abthlre and tor the men 556 Holler-Rawlings
19
total pint held by. John Fuller. Cassell -Carsey
Rou\e and· Mr. and Mrs, RICk
16
Early Sundar
Sargent of Columbull were
Mixed Lutl!t
Sunday dinner guelll of Mrs.
• Oct. 1, 1972
Jack Sargent.
Standlnus
Mr·,...._
and ............
••- 1 ~.Team
w.' .L.
tcr Ma nue1
E'agle.. Club
.32 8 and da_.ter cl Locan apent a
Anybody who) about lo move.has our ~ympalh~.
phones. Because th~re 's a I~H to choose frqm.
Farmers·Bank ·
26 1~ weekend with hla Jlll"'lll, Mr. . ·
We
know
hoW
complicated
it
Is
just
flgur.ing
out
how
to
'
,
We've got compact Starlile·" pholl«:~s with dials tharglow ' '
TReam NFo. Jod.Ma k t
2016 202' and !tin. PIUI Mlnuel. .
.
. rearrange your fu'miture, let alone your life.
:
In the dark. Supt!!r-modern Styleline• phones with rheir'dials
aclne o
r e
• · ·1 • t
.._ 1 R b · t ·)
Mer~v ·
16 24
..... er .... n~e,
o er
For inst•nce, yOu 'll p·robibly nHd to get in !ouch with
in their handseh. Nostal~icCiindle~tick phones to remind
~
Tom's"Carry Out , . 10 30 Roush ,lllld ICII, Bob .Jr., and ·
your~ srocer, milkrtHtn; school, and gas and electric ·
.you of the 1920's. And decoralor Cradlephones-the last
High Individual Game - Palll Manael ·attended a
~
company offices iS soon as you 've mo\ltd in. (And the list
wOrd in elegant convtrYtions.
\:;ry Dugan 221; Betty Smith IJIDpme bet11eeu Cincln•ti
doesn't end there.)
These phon6 1re available in many intef.esting colors,
~
' Which Is wily now i.s the time to.ger in touch Wi!h us.
too.
.
Second HIUh Ind. Game - and San Dletlo.
Decide on how ml'Q''llew phones you'll need 1nd where
So picking oul•nd ordering lhe phones you'll w•nl
•
Clarence lloylti 191; Julia
·PYI. Ronald RuiMll hill
you!ll nOed lhemJ and we'll ins!all!hese links to !he oulside .. should be alo! of fun.
·
BoviH Ill.
_ ....._. ..,_.__._ •-••••• t '
11
Hluh Series ·- Larry l)uuln _,.,.........,.......,w_..,,.a
worldbeforeyo move in.
· .
•
A~rerntmber,t'l;vlngthtfunnow-beforeyoumove ·
556; l'alty Young 455.
Ft. Knoz, KY., and ill llll'ndlng
. ' · t . Bul be sure and give yourself
enough
lime
lo
,eleci
your
-will,probably
make your./l(e a !otmc:&gt;;re pleaS'ant later ori.
' •
. '
.
•
Second Htuh 5erles - A. L. 1 111ft wllb Iii wife and
Phelps 491; Mlxlne Dugan -146. daughter Mn NI111PV Rn !II
' •.
••
TMm High Game - Tum and u •
Ft .
1iE11ERAL181 I UDIIE
No. 3 MO
.
en evu. to '
, Team High Series - Far· Meade Md, !rhere he will
mer~ Bank 1KI.
· enter ~VJ eqldii'NIIt ICIJoal.
.

. I .

.

,

.

COKE

NORTH

:bottles . .
No Putthase Necessary

69.:

00

$

lVS.

With 3 Purehase · .

6·s· ~

16 oz.
btrs.

.

Round Steak
~·

Smoked Callies'
I

Real
Super

SUP'ERIORS

SK.INLESS 12Ol.
WIENERS Pk&amp;

Special! lb.
, WINCHESTER '

1.98 crt.,

200 LITTLE
CIGARS
!FILTERS)

FAIRMONT

YELLOW' ONIONS
'

FAIRMONT

BUTTER·
MILK

\

\

Gallon Ca-rton·
'

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FAIRMONT

JIFFY ·

EASY MONDAY .·

COTTAGE
CHEESE

CORN
MUFFIN
MIX

SPRAY
STARCH·

'

"

'h Gal,

Large Size Crt.

'

.3 :g 39e.
JUMBO CELERY
bch. 29~

22 oz. Can

10$
e

RED RADISHES

871· Oz.
'•.• ';r80xes,''

oN•'-'

Get your phones in first.

Golden Ripe

am

H--.. .

...:u ._; ;;::_

..,•

BAN.ANAS_ ':.

WINCHESTER
200 l-ITTLE
CIGARS
(FILTERS)

Seal test
ICE CREAM

-·st:n•n
~

•

BANQUET
~Gal.

··n·

u

u"¥1"'~~"'

crtn,

u

lb.

"'

16 oz. Pkg.

c

'·

·BARS

SUPE~ MARKEl· Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. lO ~ 10

39e

.
·

Corner Mill and Second Sts,

./

SALE! 8-1RACK

VALUABLE COUPO N

t PT. I fL. OZ. 81ANT Sll£

·TAPES

. JOY

,ONLY

1000 .
DillY

AT

11111111

"We Reserve The

""'
COUPON.
=
~. === MONEY-SAVE;RS
=
=
-=
.•

MARK V

STORE '

.WtTM Tit~ Coli• 111

=
~

MIDOL

RJc1rt To Umlt Quantities"

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EPQRT 0

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' •

FABRIC
SOFTENER ,

-

LIQUID

POPUlAR
COUNTRY
WESTERN

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 9.92-3480 .

89

,.

,.
t

1
" 1

With tMr Cf!w- ONI.Y .
. :
.
I
Without ~UJ*t
p!loa abe st.nf · 1

Fabric Sof~1.59 .Thlts Of• G.od
tltria 10:15-72'~ Oal7.

. MARl STORE

.

Udt.l - ... IIJIIIIM- ---~

,.
:
I

$149

...... ,..

10 oz. '

BONUS

PACK

:

TIDE

26 oz ..- '

\

FABRIC SOt=TINIR .

NESTEA .

KING

·lllE

25' OFF

'•

. dlaln(flal'l'tll

.

30Z
JAR

. ' 99'
.

.

·

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sge ._...

·
'
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wltll thla coupon
' Attluler
Rololl

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L__·~~~--~----~----~----~--~--------~~~----------~~--- ·

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coupon per f""'lly
Good through '1().18-72

.... M Merit V 0111\'
U"lllli lllll,t ay ·

I

'

I

ONION
RINGS

NORTH STAR
' '
IQCR~AM

6PAK

'

MOORE'S

CAPE ANN

POT PERCH
PIES · l~b. pkg.

Crt .

1.98

FROZEN
FOOD SPECIALS!
-·?

It helps everything el~ fall into place.

'·

' 6~.

B~h.

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Weal Bowling

News Notes

..

Tender
Aavorful

lb.

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ROBINSON'S
·CLEANERS·

.
.
F·rurv:tew

c
89

Purchase

(Upon Request) .

.

ROOT BEER
8 pak .. .

USDA CHOICE BEEF

lb.

POLISH
SAUSAGE
.

·2·HOUR .
CLE8NJN_
G

btls,

. DAD'S

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS .-

So No ·War

l6oz.

FOR

1

SLICED
"
BOLOGNA lb.

Enough Love:

Racine
·Social EVents

BRE·AD

RC .

SUPERIQRS

.

·- ·

J~o~
bottles

.16.8oz._. 69· ~

I.

.

as

PEPPER ,
'8 PAK

Discards ·Are Finesse Clues · ·

I.!

·

'

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. \.

•

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I
I

••

POI..Ll;'S NINTEIIS

Baptists-Note
Cotning Events
•
Dr. llld Mrs. RliYJDC'Id Boice and Mr.

~d

Mrs. Delmar
·~ had I deUghtful weekend as guests cf the former's SOJI.
' in-law and daughter, Jerry, and Ramora Nil, and theif $even
' ,._-old 1011, RuueU.
llturday evening·they went to Hawaiian Village in Cilicinnati
:·w~~ere ,Jeny plaYB.drwm with an instrumental-group. He also
: liiWa, acwmpenylng hlmBelf 80Jlle~ on the ukelele. Quite a
•talent, we're told. The two couples enjoyed a dinner partl' at the
;new spUt-level homeoftheNUfamlly.at Springboro.
; · &amp;mday tvening the Canadays and Mrs_. Boice retumed to.
' Pomeroy and Dr. Boice left for lndiimapolis where he is at!tendlng a medical seminar. ·
.

.

.

•

: !liME VERY NICE MAN left a smaU pool · table aild a
· IIIJnber ol games at the Meigs County Children's Home recently,
;and Mrs. Harry !!:. Clark, matron there now, wants to express
;,her thanks. She says the things have provided many happy hours
-Jor the yoongsters.
·

•
•;
·

HAVE YOU MISSED the window display at the 'Meigs
~ty Bookmobile headquarters on Nye Ave.? That was one of
1he things which didn't get taken care of while Mrs. Vilma
ftkoja was Ul. But she's back on the jOb and feeling fine nC!W
:.00 any day you'D see a display ori ~oor gardening In one ollhe

:..U.SO.s,
•
•

MRS. LUCH..LE SEELIG in Cedar Rapids, Iowa for some
lime now il back here on a villi!. She was accompanied by her

:

Communications regarding
the Ohio Baptist Convention to
· be held Oct. 18-20 in Daytm and
the o!Jse~ of Women's
.Day were read by .. Mrs.
Elizabeth Searles · at the
Monday night ,neetmg of the B.
H. Sanbom Missionary SoCiety
of the Middleport First Baptist
Church ..
Other dates alliiOunced were
Oct. 8, \Vorld Fellowship
&amp;mday and Laymen'aSunday; Nov . 3, World · COmmunity
Day; Nov. 6, Baptist Women's
Day of Prayer.
Mrs. John Werner opened the
meeting held at the church
with prayer. Mrs. Richard
Owen of the Elect.B Circle gave
devotions UJing' "Appreciation
and &amp;,lpport" as her topic.
Booklets for spiritual growth
Jr!lgrams were glven·out to the
Jove gift chainnen of the cil'·
· cles.
.
Mrs. Charles Simons used
"People in love with People"
as the love gilt dedication
theme. Asslllting her were Mrs.

~, MJ;a. Ed D. Reed, and the two are guests of Jack Seelig

lind hla wife in Parkersburg.

gu•

; Monday Jack entertained for his mother with a luncheon at
Qle.Melgs IM. The
were long-time friends, lrla Kelton,
Margaret FoUrod, and Louise Rosenbaum, and three· of Mrs.
Seelig's former co-workers at Duttons, Nellie Werner, Betty
Cline and Katie Biron. Mrs. ~act Seelig 8nd Mrs. Reed W1!11! alao
at the ltlncheon.
WE'RE ANXIOUS TQ IU:SUME "Fun with Foods," now
that ran Ia here. So If there are recipes you woold Uke to have or If
there are IIOIJie you .wollld Uke to share, jUJt let UJ know. "Fun
With Foods" lllll!t be an ~e of YOUR recipes, tlpa for
~--ways of doing thiDga, and hlnbl on prepat'1!tloil, seaaoning,
etc. Come on now and let UJ hear from you.

Garden Toured
RUTLAND - Mra. Bruee
bavii,Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr.,
Mrs. Homer Parker, Mrs. Fred
Williamson, members of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
Danny Davis aDd Tllnmy Tillis
toured ' the flower garden of
Mrs. Ernest Wingett, Racine,
recently.
Mrs. Wingett, a member of
the Bend 0' The River Garden
Club provided peonies for each
ol her guests. Perennials.and
annuals in bloom were viewed
by the visitors. EIU'Oute to
Racine the group had a picnic
at the .Syrpcuae Roadside
Park. Spring bulbs for borne
gardens were dlscusaed and in
Pomeroy they slopped to
purchase bUlbs.

~'' ::.:::.:&lt;m:~w-'1

i~'' Pomeroy . . . ;
.·S&gt;. Persona
. I Notes ~~?
:;.:.·

~.~

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reibel
·of Morristown were guests
Thursday and Friday of Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel, Mr. and·
Mrs .. Charles Bradbury,
Middleport, and other relatives
and friends.
Mr. and Mrs . Ivan Watson of
Sterling Heights, Mich. visited
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Owen Watson.
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Martin of Sidney visited
relatives and friends of the
area over the wee~end.
Saturday they were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. 'owen Watson,
Racine. Mrs. Ellen Couch and
Mrs. Burton Smith, Pomeroy,
also visited with the Watsons.
Airman 1-c and 'Mrs. John
Card have reiurned to Warner
Robbins, Ga . · after visiting
. here with Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wright and the Rev. and Mrs.
Robert Card.
Guest$ of C. A. Jenkinson,
East Second St., over the
weekend were his son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell, and his grand·
daughter, 1\irs. Ned Grant,
Crooksville. They came
especially for an observance of
Mr. Jenkinson's birthday
anniversary which is today. On
Saturday Mrs. Grant was In
Point Pleasant to attend a
reunion of employes of the
former Sylvania Electric Plant
held at Krodel Park: The plant .
ceased' bUsiness a number of ·
years ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Reginold Fellows at
Shelby. They went especially
lor the wedding of Miss Della
Ramey and Ken Haun, Jr.,
Sunday at 2:'30 p.m. at the
Methodist Church at New
Washington . Mrs . .Haun is
employed by the City Loan at
Shelby, and Mr . Haun is
manager of the City Loan at
Hicksville where · the couple
will reside.

BARNEY

Social Calendar..
.

How To Remove.
·
Od
Maltress
. OtS

Pearl Hdfman, Mrs. M;lmirli
Kloes, and Mrs. Leora Siginan. ·
The program· by Mrs. Kloes .
and Mrs. Dale Walburn was
entitled "Born Free for
Others.' 1
.Responding to the roll call of
circles were eight from the
Dorcas Circle; five from
EJecta; five ,from love Joy,
and two guests.
Adessert·course was served
by Mrs. Fred LewiS; Mrs. Jsa ·
Turner, Mrs. Hoffman, ,Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs. Milton
H9od, and Mrs. Julia Grim of
the Dorcas Circle.

.

.

.

~

..._,-.;.1 -"•

iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiil
\I,S, Pot. Off.

IJ'LABNER

lloE..TTER!!-

-~

,.....,,.....,..--:-"7'"'i-:---rHow come

- •U••••y
~

.

;',•

·'

LjOu're not
workinq
toniqht?

I

&gt;

"

LA-Z-BOV

bJ Fish., .

.,..

'

•

ACROSS
1. Command
to a dog
team
5. Less
fresh
11. Wltbin
12. Word of
honor
13. Headline
L-----------~~.....J
attraction
14. Reftected
r:~;;::;:;:-t-:it:~s, U.
ll'c";'I_I~-.:!--M--,.-c-,-~
••~.~...~'N~NV:":"'~ r-------~:::1
c.
OF
. "One,"
Essen in
_:
, "" rw
SPEAKIN
16, Experi·
OAACi$T!R, FOR ONilll.l OIRLY MJI&lt;., 00 YOU
ence once
CAN'T STANO I-IlM.
SUPPOSE TJ.IE ~..JUICEmore
BOYS FINANCE I-IlN\?
17. Buttons
or Ball
20. Islet
21. Knell
22. Sweet·
heart or
fruit
23..Forum
garment
Blanched
26. Unnatu.::al 1
(var.) "
27. Song·
IICU.-.U
stress
Vikkl
~------"...&lt;:.---._~.., 28. Metric
NO, M: roN'T...111AI'S l'III&gt;\TTtte•.Y:TIOI~,'
land
MtfN lllfY SA~ 'li1551N6 IN ,.
measure
~·r (T! ·
29. Social
graces
32.Made
to •(uy

Sterlin&amp; .
'·

Silwr

',

39. Lady of
Madrid
40. Detail

(C 1072 l&lt;i r1~ FeaLUrr11 Sr1111lrRte, lnr. l

~1gl00[;3~;"'-~=•!:!· -'=

DOWN

· 1. Money-

grubber
2. Loosen
3. Be
obvious
(3 wds.)
f. Not
vertical ·
(abbr.l
5. Helical
6. Domesti·
cated
1. U.S.S.R.
inland
sea
8. Consequence
(2 wds.)
9. Make
bishop
cardinal

VnKramble thHt I'Gur Jumbl.., -one letter to U&lt;h oquare, to
form rour ordinary wordo.

ENSOO
Ye!lerday's Am/owe"
10. In tears
~5. Goat
( hyph. ·
IIOd
wd.)
27. f~ort~. of
18. fnviolale
'fhe
BE''Ll
19. Old musi·
49th I
L....!:.~'-'~,.......+-~,..-.:~~

1

22.

t"~g;~~. 29.:~:::.~ ~~~n~
(.' app .ratus

it!

23. ;~r~ ~~~-

SAVINGS ON

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30, ~:~ lornial LETIJAH, ~

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(2 wds.)
24. Roman
wri ttr of 1-...

comedies

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31. Bn~ rgy
V'
3r3· Sou• r~e
.
b._ -J~
~ of p •Ot
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~6. Silllinese ,.
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THI!'/ 5~0W 615N5
OF 8~1LLIAIIICe.

GANNIA

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

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Yeatfl•4•7'•

J"""'t..' DUCAT PANSY · LOUNOI IIIHOP
Antwerl TAb material mu.d bR cluu:lttd!- P~AID

uncle"

34. Career
tippler
SS.Crux(cross
symboliz·
ing Ufe)
S8. Glass
container
a'l. Crossed
the goal
line
38.- .Nazimo~a L.....L.....L.-l.....JI.....J..-.

.Reg. ssgp Sale s50495

·~

Yesterday'• Cryploquote: THE PAST ALWAYS LOOKS''
BETTER THA N IT WAS : IT'S ONLY PLEASANT BECAUSE
IT ISN'(I! IIERE.-t'INLE)" ,PETER DUNNE

by THOMAS JOSEPH

00

•

...,..

~

CHAIRS

MARAUDER

· -.T-It
. - .Mutlc

•

Class Plans Bazaar

SEWING

,.•

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Church Families Picnic at Park

.
NEW AT GOESSLER'S

CHARMS

lo

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700_W~ .Main • Pomeroy1··~

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FeELING I.OV!I,
~ . SGt: ~om:R: ;

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"' I-IARKNE~' .
1G REAU.Y

. .FURNITURE

- Chler Lead•r (3 Styles I

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ANP NOB0!1f 'TRIED 10
PICK I-IlM UP,

MASON

.

TOLD YE

1 COULD TIGHT UP THEM
.BRAKES FER YE,DOC

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Stiversville _
: News Notes

-Football

SEE THAR!! 1

.

PAR'l'V HEW
carla sue Smith entertained
Friday night with a slumber
party .at the oc.ne ol Mrs.
William Smith. Mrs. Bob
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Bishop was chaperone for the
party. Refreshmenla of 'pizza,
You wm receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
sloppy joes, cookie~, potato
Members of the Syracuse iuchard, Becky and Virgil,
bomemaklitg
Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
ch!Jll, minla and soft drinks
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.
United Methodist Church Mrs. RoseSecqy and daughter,
were served. Guests were
Sunday
School met recenUy at Grace, Annette and Tony
Rhonda Southern, Patty
the Syracuse Roadside Park · Hudson, Trlna Mike, and Susan
Mitchell, Saliy Hayman, Patty
'
for
a wiener roast.
Hudson, Mrs. Jo Ellen Roush
Dugan, Shauna Tackett, Julie
Attending were the Rev. and and Darin, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Napper, Angela Kennedy, and
Mrs.
Merren Floyd, Mrs. Edith l)uf{y and sons, Jackie, Eddie
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Foster and
Brenda Napper.
RUMMAGE SALE
Hood, Mrs. Ulltan Smith and and Davis,llfrs. Sltaron ~ey
. .. fal!liiY have purchased the
Aruuimage sale will be held
A JiQUdlly bazaar and bake tallance read t~ 34ih Psalm, · Maurice, Mrs. lj)Ueen . Clark, and l,{rlaUn; Mt:.!f,!t~. ROOney ~- '
Congress authorized the Delbert .Ours .property in
Frldloy from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. In
sale will' be held on 'Nov. 17 ai and a· meditation by Mrs. Mr. and' Mrs. Jim Hemsley, and Ml8iee Dawn Grueser,
Antarctic
Service Expedition Che$1er. Mr. Ours has moved
the first aid room at the
Dudley's Florists by the Loyal Roush taken froni "Our D!!iiY Joe, Bob and Karen, Mr. and Lori Hudaon, , Kathy, Bol,nie,
Pomeroy Village Hall by the under command of Rear Ad· • to his home i!l thlll communjty.
Women's Class of the Mid· Bread" was entitled "A Cool Mrs. Sam Pickens, Mrs. Nettie Brenda and Jay Pickens, Mrs.
mlral Richard E. Byrd in
Mr. and Mrs, Bill Berry and
Winding
Trail
Garden
Club.
Gift.''
,
dleporl Church of Christ.
•
Moore, Mrs. Icy Miller, Mrs. Norma Baker, Angela and
1939.
daughter of Mansfield, Mr. and
Mrs.
Reynolds
told of her Thelma Grueser, Mrs. Jeanie Ricky .
Plans
for
the
event
were
Mrs. Lawrence Ritchie Jr. and
made during a meeting ol the visit with Mrs. }.oyse at her Hudson and children, Ray,
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst and
group Thursday night. Wed· summer home In Mlchigan.sons, The ~lains visited Mr.
nesday members will meet at Guest at the meeting was Mrs. , . - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
and Mrs. R. R. Durst and son,
the church to begin sewln~ Robert Reibel, ·Morristown, a
Tom, last week.
project$ for t!te bazaar. Read former teacher of ·the class.
Mrs . PattyGiuesencamp and
at the meeting were com· Reported Ill were Mr. and Mrs.
Jane Allen shopped at the
munications from Mrs. Nina Floyd Boyer, Elmer Wehrung,
Grand Central Mall near
Bland and Mrs. Herman Lohse. and Mrs. Blanche Gilkey. Mrs.
Parkersburg recen Uy.
Mrs. Oscar Roush presided Reynolds and Mrs. Earl Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fitch
at the session which opened served refreshments.
and family of Belpre visited in
with devotions by Mrs. Willlam
this neighborhood on Saturday.
Now you can buy 1hat
Reynolds and the Lord's
Mr. and Mrs. AI Saunders of
comfor1able
La-Z- Boy
GROUPS
TQ
MEET
Prayer in unison. Mrs. Ernest
Xenia spent Wednesday and
chair
YOU
Ve
,
.
:
always
The aruwal Halloween party
dreamed
of
at
our
low
Thursday with her grand·
at the Pomeroy Elementary
prices.
mother, Mrs. Olive Talhott.
Ruby spent Wednesday
School will be plaMed at a
Mr. and Mrs. David Bryant, evening with Mr. and Mrs.
meeting
of the executive and
SPEAKER •NOTED
Mrs . Odessa Weddle and Paul Evans and Paul Dean.
· Authorized Dealer
Mr. Dean Mllls of Beverly ways and ml!lln&amp; cOmmitJees of
family, Mrs. Carroll Cornell
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Pickens
the PI' Ascheduled for 4 p.m.
and Sherry, Mrs . . Maxine are building a new home in this will be the evangellst for a Wednesday at the school. The
Durst, Mrs. Ma*lne Haines and community:· 'they presently revival at th"e Bradbury party is 81111ually IJlOIIsored by .
· Church of Christ to be held Oct. ·
Lori Mlddleswsllt were callers Jive at Akron.
the PTA and Mrs. Earl Thoma,
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. · Harold Brewer of Long 8-13, 7:30 p.m. each evening. president, requests filii atHormenGr~te
Music
director
for
the
special
777-5592
M..on, w. V•.
Bill Bryant and ~hildren during Bottom called on his parentS,
tendance by the conunltteea.
· the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Brewer and services will be Bill Carter.
Special mitsic will be featurfd
Mr ..and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson David on Saturday.
and Shawn of Columbus spent a
Mr. and Mrs. AI !launders of each evening. The public is
weekend with her parents, Mr. Xenia visited her aunt, Mrs. invited.
and Mrs. Rudy Durst.
Golda Clendenin on Thursday
Mr.' and Mrs. Terry Wolfe evening.
COMING TO CAMP
and son of Syracuse called on- Mrs. Ruby Bryant called on
Dixie Martin of Redwood
hi~p_arents, Mr. and Mrs. Gj ne Mrs. Carol Cornell and lamily Falls
. , N.. -M., · w111 be the
Wolfe and family !)unda~ ....
on. ~und~y afternoon.
featured speaker at the Ohio
.Mr. anct Mrs. Mac ViijiMRet
FOB BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
s.. ·,w, Durst , of _ Portland Valley Christian Assembly
and daughter ol Pomeroy were called on Mr. ·and Mrs. Rudy ---Women's Retreat .to be held-at-.
guests ol ()Is mother, Mrs. Ada
Durst Sunday· · ' ·
the Darwin citmp site on Oct.13
Van Meter on Saturday. ·
·
,
:~verar
fiiltn
here
attended
and
1
\
14 .
9 to $ DaUy-Sunday 1·9 - ' ·
Mrs. Mae Van Meter and the Southern-Eastern football
'
game at Eastem Friday night.
Greg Middleswart, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Middleswart, Is
tackle . lor the Southern TorMrs. -R. R. Durst, Gary Grlf·
nadoes.
fith, ·Patty Gluesencamp, Jane
S. W. Durst attended the Allen, Jack Cornell, Ronnie
Morse
Chapel
a,nnual and Johnny Johnson, :Mike
Homecoming at Spiller Sun· Frederick, J . W. Lawson,
da~~ce~t visitors of E. H. Lawrenee Ritchie Jr., )'.,eota
Ca
te
d famil were Birch,' Mr . and Mrs. AI .
1~lGS
rpeuln r an nd
. Y W Saunders, VIrgil Cozart and
. Pa Evans a ·son, 9· · Philip Pickens.
SCHOoL SPORTS
. Durst Ruby Bryant, Mr. and ·

~ANGELIST COMING
Denny l)awes Is . the
wlligelllt b' l(leclal services
beq c.ondllcted thla week at,
thi! Rutland Orun:h of auilt.
The aervlces will continue
through Sunday when · the
11)111111 church hornecGIIllng
Will he obaerved. Mr. Keith
Wlae, pastor, Is the song
leader.

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TUESOAY
' -Thursday at the Middleport
. EASTERN Al'H't,ETIC Maaoni~ T~mple. A 50 year pin .
·
·
·
·
·· bt a to~ presented to Mrs. Mildred
By POLLY CRAMER
Boosters, · Tuesday mg '
Fowler. ElecUon of officers for
p_m: Film of Federal Hocking· the 1972_73 year.
ART CLASS, Pomeroy
. DEAR POLLY-Mrs. W. -M. L. might try my method Eastern game to. be shown.
for removing odors from her mattress. Plain borax works . REGULAR MEETING, Elementsry School, 7:30to 8:30 ·
wonders on such odors. Dampen the spot, spread a layer· Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, p.m. Mrs . Margaret Ella
ol borax over it, rub slightly,Jet dry and then vacuum 7:30' p.m • . Tuesday at the · Lewis, instructor. .
.
off. !ihe may have to repeat the process silice hers has
1 All M te Masons
as r
MEIGS Countv, Connell
of
•·set." 1 used this when my children had accidents and, tempe,
~·
if applied immediately, no spot was left-KAREN
invited.
.
, Parents and Teachers, 7:30
MIDDLEPORT Firemen s p m Thursday at the Salem
DEAR POLLY-Mrs. ·w. M. b. should try a solution of Auxiliary, 7:30 Tuesday at the ~nier School. ·
baking soda and cold water for removing the .Odor from h · of Mr Th
Darst
her mattress. Soak a sponge in the ·solution, r~b mattress . · _orne . · s, omas
·
LAUREL Clilf Better Health
well so it is wet but not soggy .. This is a good remedy for
OHIO ETA !'HI Cha~ter, Club, anniversary dinner, 6;30
removing odor from a---dress when baby burps milk on 1leta Stgma Phi Sorority, IJ:I 5 . p m Thursday the home of
your shoulder. I have atso used it for perspiration Odors pm. Tuesday, Colun\b~s and ·Mrs·. Charles Karr.
·
in woolens.-MRS. R. W.
Southern Ohio Electrtc Co. MEIGS County Chapter,
American Red Gross, 7:30p.m.
DEAR POLLY- Mrs. W. M. L., who has the odor in Model m.eeting. .
her mattress, might find .it would lie a good investment
CHESTER Council 323, D. of Thursda;y at cafeteria,
to buy a plastic mattress cover and then a quilted mat· A., Tuesday, 7:30 P-~· at )Ja~. veterans Memorial .Hospital.
tress pad to go over that. I am· a sleep-in baby sitter and Good of order conmuttee Wtll
R E p 0 R T s 1r o m
am always surprised tb.at pillows and mattresses can be . hold a 2:&gt; cent grab bag sale. representatives to Girls and
so soiled and smelly in a house tpat is otherwise spotlessly
POMEROY Chapter. 186, Boys State will be given at~
clean. I usually take my own plastic pillows and pillowling of Xi Gamma Mu
case and have been known to wash the blankets and bed- OES, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Masonic
Temple.
Members
~~=pter,
Betii Sigma Phi
spread (if washable) before getting into a bed.-MRS.
E. W.
requested topay dues and turn Sorority, 7,45 p.m, Thursday
·in Stanley orders.
home of Nellie Brown.
Polly's Problttm 111111---~lllw:i'
CHESTER ~OUNCH.. 323,
WORK SESSION at the
DEAR POLLY-Is there any way to more or less
7:30 Tuesday mght at the hall. Episcapal Rectory on Thurs.
permanently mark tennis balls so you can identify
2:&gt; cent grab bag sale.
day, 10 a. m. Take a sack
your own? Ink and marke1""]iells wear off after a
· WEDNESDAY
lunch and cleaning Stipplles.
game ·or two and If unmarked balls go _into another
GROUP
1,
Middleport
First
AMERICAN CANCER
court they are often lost because of lack of indent!·
Uruted Presbytenan Church, Society will meet Thursday
fication .-PEGGY,
.
a~ the home of Mrs. Jack Oct. 5 at 7,30 p. m. at Its office
Coleman, Wednesday at 7:30 p. in Middleport.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is. wiUt these rocking m. Bake sale among the
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
horses and other amusements placed in front of .many members.
........-......................illt:""'"· 'Ch ch 8
stores. My son likes to ride them, a$ I am sure most
QUARTERLY Luncheon ~cr~ ~::ce~~ by~~i
children do, and occasionaUy I give him a dime so he Club, Wednesday, 12 noon at
.~ Y
7
1
can do so. Last week, while shoppin~, each time he tried
· p. m. FRIDAY
a ride the machine just collecte,d his dime and .gave n~ the Meigs Inn. Meeting to
SOUTHERN Homecoming
ride nor was his mqney returned. This happened foUr follow_ the luncheon at the home
times. Each time I had to make a trip to the courtesy of Mrsi.GTS. A. HenneAlsy. h I'
Dance, Southem High School
co\mter ' to replace my
0
- ME
County co tsm auditorium, music by "Foxx",
son's dime. I was furious and Drug Abuse Committee, 8
to midnight. Sponsored
and my son was unhappy p.m. Wednesday, St. Paul b10 p.m.
the Southern Band Boosters.
as he--never did get a ride Lutberan Church, Pomeroy.
Y
and finally had to settle for . Two films on alcoholism.
a candy bar.-DOROTHY
MIDDLEPORT Elementsry
DEAR POLLY- I have School art class begins tonight,
MRS. Cim.DS HOME
four small daughters so I 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Mrs.
Mrs. Martha Childs retumed
do a Jot of· sewing. The Margaret EUa Lewis, in· Saturday from a three week .
girls were always after me
visit with her son-in-law lind
to m a k e Barbie Doll structor .
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
THURSDAY
clothes. Now, each time I
EVANGELINE Chapter 172, , Faulkner, Tim, Jill and Dan,_
cut and sew an outfit for
one of them, I immediately make a Barbie outfit from Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 Birmingham, Ala.
the scraps while the right color th.read is on my' machine.
When four such outfits are made they ate handed out to
the girls.- J. 0.

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GOLDEN TOUCH I SEW• sewing machine with cab.inet.
Exclusive push-button, drop-in front bobbin, 10 stretchstitches, bullt~ln buttonholer, soft-touch f~rlc feed system. Many other features.
·
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.'

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The Fabric Shop
,

JIWILIY STORE

·

. SINGI.-MLIIISI.VItl
. Mcc,-.LL'I IIMI't.IC:ITT PATTI.NI

115 W. Secont!

Ptmeroy

· Pomwoy, 0.

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992-2214

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POI..Ll;'S NINTEIIS

Baptists-Note
Cotning Events
•
Dr. llld Mrs. RliYJDC'Id Boice and Mr.

~d

Mrs. Delmar
·~ had I deUghtful weekend as guests cf the former's SOJI.
' in-law and daughter, Jerry, and Ramora Nil, and theif $even
' ,._-old 1011, RuueU.
llturday evening·they went to Hawaiian Village in Cilicinnati
:·w~~ere ,Jeny plaYB.drwm with an instrumental-group. He also
: liiWa, acwmpenylng hlmBelf 80Jlle~ on the ukelele. Quite a
•talent, we're told. The two couples enjoyed a dinner partl' at the
;new spUt-level homeoftheNUfamlly.at Springboro.
; · &amp;mday tvening the Canadays and Mrs_. Boice retumed to.
' Pomeroy and Dr. Boice left for lndiimapolis where he is at!tendlng a medical seminar. ·
.

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: !liME VERY NICE MAN left a smaU pool · table aild a
· IIIJnber ol games at the Meigs County Children's Home recently,
;and Mrs. Harry !!:. Clark, matron there now, wants to express
;,her thanks. She says the things have provided many happy hours
-Jor the yoongsters.
·

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HAVE YOU MISSED the window display at the 'Meigs
~ty Bookmobile headquarters on Nye Ave.? That was one of
1he things which didn't get taken care of while Mrs. Vilma
ftkoja was Ul. But she's back on the jOb and feeling fine nC!W
:.00 any day you'D see a display ori ~oor gardening In one ollhe

:..U.SO.s,
•
•

MRS. LUCH..LE SEELIG in Cedar Rapids, Iowa for some
lime now il back here on a villi!. She was accompanied by her

:

Communications regarding
the Ohio Baptist Convention to
· be held Oct. 18-20 in Daytm and
the o!Jse~ of Women's
.Day were read by .. Mrs.
Elizabeth Searles · at the
Monday night ,neetmg of the B.
H. Sanbom Missionary SoCiety
of the Middleport First Baptist
Church ..
Other dates alliiOunced were
Oct. 8, \Vorld Fellowship
&amp;mday and Laymen'aSunday; Nov . 3, World · COmmunity
Day; Nov. 6, Baptist Women's
Day of Prayer.
Mrs. John Werner opened the
meeting held at the church
with prayer. Mrs. Richard
Owen of the Elect.B Circle gave
devotions UJing' "Appreciation
and &amp;,lpport" as her topic.
Booklets for spiritual growth
Jr!lgrams were glven·out to the
Jove gift chainnen of the cil'·
· cles.
.
Mrs. Charles Simons used
"People in love with People"
as the love gilt dedication
theme. Asslllting her were Mrs.

~, MJ;a. Ed D. Reed, and the two are guests of Jack Seelig

lind hla wife in Parkersburg.

gu•

; Monday Jack entertained for his mother with a luncheon at
Qle.Melgs IM. The
were long-time friends, lrla Kelton,
Margaret FoUrod, and Louise Rosenbaum, and three· of Mrs.
Seelig's former co-workers at Duttons, Nellie Werner, Betty
Cline and Katie Biron. Mrs. ~act Seelig 8nd Mrs. Reed W1!11! alao
at the ltlncheon.
WE'RE ANXIOUS TQ IU:SUME "Fun with Foods," now
that ran Ia here. So If there are recipes you woold Uke to have or If
there are IIOIJie you .wollld Uke to share, jUJt let UJ know. "Fun
With Foods" lllll!t be an ~e of YOUR recipes, tlpa for
~--ways of doing thiDga, and hlnbl on prepat'1!tloil, seaaoning,
etc. Come on now and let UJ hear from you.

Garden Toured
RUTLAND - Mra. Bruee
bavii,Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr.,
Mrs. Homer Parker, Mrs. Fred
Williamson, members of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
Danny Davis aDd Tllnmy Tillis
toured ' the flower garden of
Mrs. Ernest Wingett, Racine,
recently.
Mrs. Wingett, a member of
the Bend 0' The River Garden
Club provided peonies for each
ol her guests. Perennials.and
annuals in bloom were viewed
by the visitors. EIU'Oute to
Racine the group had a picnic
at the .Syrpcuae Roadside
Park. Spring bulbs for borne
gardens were dlscusaed and in
Pomeroy they slopped to
purchase bUlbs.

~'' ::.:::.:&lt;m:~w-'1

i~'' Pomeroy . . . ;
.·S&gt;. Persona
. I Notes ~~?
:;.:.·

~.~

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reibel
·of Morristown were guests
Thursday and Friday of Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel, Mr. and·
Mrs .. Charles Bradbury,
Middleport, and other relatives
and friends.
Mr. and Mrs . Ivan Watson of
Sterling Heights, Mich. visited
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Owen Watson.
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Martin of Sidney visited
relatives and friends of the
area over the wee~end.
Saturday they were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. 'owen Watson,
Racine. Mrs. Ellen Couch and
Mrs. Burton Smith, Pomeroy,
also visited with the Watsons.
Airman 1-c and 'Mrs. John
Card have reiurned to Warner
Robbins, Ga . · after visiting
. here with Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wright and the Rev. and Mrs.
Robert Card.
Guest$ of C. A. Jenkinson,
East Second St., over the
weekend were his son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell, and his grand·
daughter, 1\irs. Ned Grant,
Crooksville. They came
especially for an observance of
Mr. Jenkinson's birthday
anniversary which is today. On
Saturday Mrs. Grant was In
Point Pleasant to attend a
reunion of employes of the
former Sylvania Electric Plant
held at Krodel Park: The plant .
ceased' bUsiness a number of ·
years ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Reginold Fellows at
Shelby. They went especially
lor the wedding of Miss Della
Ramey and Ken Haun, Jr.,
Sunday at 2:'30 p.m. at the
Methodist Church at New
Washington . Mrs . .Haun is
employed by the City Loan at
Shelby, and Mr . Haun is
manager of the City Loan at
Hicksville where · the couple
will reside.

BARNEY

Social Calendar..
.

How To Remove.
·
Od
Maltress
. OtS

Pearl Hdfman, Mrs. M;lmirli
Kloes, and Mrs. Leora Siginan. ·
The program· by Mrs. Kloes .
and Mrs. Dale Walburn was
entitled "Born Free for
Others.' 1
.Responding to the roll call of
circles were eight from the
Dorcas Circle; five from
EJecta; five ,from love Joy,
and two guests.
Adessert·course was served
by Mrs. Fred LewiS; Mrs. Jsa ·
Turner, Mrs. Hoffman, ,Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs. Milton
H9od, and Mrs. Julia Grim of
the Dorcas Circle.

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iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiil
\I,S, Pot. Off.

IJ'LABNER

lloE..TTER!!-

-~

,.....,,.....,..--:-"7'"'i-:---rHow come

- •U••••y
~

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LjOu're not
workinq
toniqht?

I

&gt;

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LA-Z-BOV

bJ Fish., .

.,..

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ACROSS
1. Command
to a dog
team
5. Less
fresh
11. Wltbin
12. Word of
honor
13. Headline
L-----------~~.....J
attraction
14. Reftected
r:~;;::;:;:-t-:it:~s, U.
ll'c";'I_I~-.:!--M--,.-c-,-~
••~.~...~'N~NV:":"'~ r-------~:::1
c.
OF
. "One,"
Essen in
_:
, "" rw
SPEAKIN
16, Experi·
OAACi$T!R, FOR ONilll.l OIRLY MJI&lt;., 00 YOU
ence once
CAN'T STANO I-IlM.
SUPPOSE TJ.IE ~..JUICEmore
BOYS FINANCE I-IlN\?
17. Buttons
or Ball
20. Islet
21. Knell
22. Sweet·
heart or
fruit
23..Forum
garment
Blanched
26. Unnatu.::al 1
(var.) "
27. Song·
IICU.-.U
stress
Vikkl
~------"...&lt;:.---._~.., 28. Metric
NO, M: roN'T...111AI'S l'III&gt;\TTtte•.Y:TIOI~,'
land
MtfN lllfY SA~ 'li1551N6 IN ,.
measure
~·r (T! ·
29. Social
graces
32.Made
to •(uy

Sterlin&amp; .
'·

Silwr

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39. Lady of
Madrid
40. Detail

(C 1072 l&lt;i r1~ FeaLUrr11 Sr1111lrRte, lnr. l

~1gl00[;3~;"'-~=•!:!· -'=

DOWN

· 1. Money-

grubber
2. Loosen
3. Be
obvious
(3 wds.)
f. Not
vertical ·
(abbr.l
5. Helical
6. Domesti·
cated
1. U.S.S.R.
inland
sea
8. Consequence
(2 wds.)
9. Make
bishop
cardinal

VnKramble thHt I'Gur Jumbl.., -one letter to U&lt;h oquare, to
form rour ordinary wordo.

ENSOO
Ye!lerday's Am/owe"
10. In tears
~5. Goat
( hyph. ·
IIOd
wd.)
27. f~ort~. of
18. fnviolale
'fhe
BE''Ll
19. Old musi·
49th I
L....!:.~'-'~,.......+-~,..-.:~~

1

22.

t"~g;~~. 29.:~:::.~ ~~~n~
(.' app .ratus

it!

23. ;~r~ ~~~-

SAVINGS ON

l
·
I K '. t X]
.

30, ~:~ lornial LETIJAH, ~

1

(2 wds.)
24. Roman
wri ttr of 1-...

comedies

I I

x

31. Bn~ rgy
V'
3r3· Sou• r~e
.
b._ -J~
~ of p •Ot
"====~-..t:....a::...:..
~6. Silllinese ,.
.

THI!'/ 5~0W 615N5
OF 8~1LLIAIIICe.

GANNIA

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

L·~·+-+-J
r.;

'*·--..
Yeatfl•4•7'•

J"""'t..' DUCAT PANSY · LOUNOI IIIHOP
Antwerl TAb material mu.d bR cluu:lttd!- P~AID

uncle"

34. Career
tippler
SS.Crux(cross
symboliz·
ing Ufe)
S8. Glass
container
a'l. Crossed
the goal
line
38.- .Nazimo~a L.....L.....L.-l.....JI.....J..-.

.Reg. ssgp Sale s50495

·~

Yesterday'• Cryploquote: THE PAST ALWAYS LOOKS''
BETTER THA N IT WAS : IT'S ONLY PLEASANT BECAUSE
IT ISN'(I! IIERE.-t'INLE)" ,PETER DUNNE

by THOMAS JOSEPH

00

•

...,..

~

CHAIRS

MARAUDER

· -.T-It
. - .Mutlc

•

Class Plans Bazaar

SEWING

,.•

j t;

Church Families Picnic at Park

.
NEW AT GOESSLER'S

CHARMS

lo

q!l

700_W~ .Main • Pomeroy1··~

'

,,

FeELING I.OV!I,
~ . SGt: ~om:R: ;

'

I

I·, .

?."'

at

thl

••

_.

"' I-IARKNE~' .
1G REAU.Y

. .FURNITURE

- Chler Lead•r (3 Styles I

'I .
't

ANP NOB0!1f 'TRIED 10
PICK I-IlM UP,

MASON

.

TOLD YE

1 COULD TIGHT UP THEM
.BRAKES FER YE,DOC

------

1

-ll•k~ll

.

H~lPf 1H€
:lD
IS..mMI~ IDA JaJDI

...

Stiversville _
: News Notes

-Football

SEE THAR!! 1

.

PAR'l'V HEW
carla sue Smith entertained
Friday night with a slumber
party .at the oc.ne ol Mrs.
William Smith. Mrs. Bob
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Bishop was chaperone for the
party. Refreshmenla of 'pizza,
You wm receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
sloppy joes, cookie~, potato
Members of the Syracuse iuchard, Becky and Virgil,
bomemaklitg
Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
ch!Jll, minla and soft drinks
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.
United Methodist Church Mrs. RoseSecqy and daughter,
were served. Guests were
Sunday
School met recenUy at Grace, Annette and Tony
Rhonda Southern, Patty
the Syracuse Roadside Park · Hudson, Trlna Mike, and Susan
Mitchell, Saliy Hayman, Patty
'
for
a wiener roast.
Hudson, Mrs. Jo Ellen Roush
Dugan, Shauna Tackett, Julie
Attending were the Rev. and and Darin, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Napper, Angela Kennedy, and
Mrs.
Merren Floyd, Mrs. Edith l)uf{y and sons, Jackie, Eddie
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Foster and
Brenda Napper.
RUMMAGE SALE
Hood, Mrs. Ulltan Smith and and Davis,llfrs. Sltaron ~ey
. .. fal!liiY have purchased the
Aruuimage sale will be held
A JiQUdlly bazaar and bake tallance read t~ 34ih Psalm, · Maurice, Mrs. lj)Ueen . Clark, and l,{rlaUn; Mt:.!f,!t~. ROOney ~- '
Congress authorized the Delbert .Ours .property in
Frldloy from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. In
sale will' be held on 'Nov. 17 ai and a· meditation by Mrs. Mr. and' Mrs. Jim Hemsley, and Ml8iee Dawn Grueser,
Antarctic
Service Expedition Che$1er. Mr. Ours has moved
the first aid room at the
Dudley's Florists by the Loyal Roush taken froni "Our D!!iiY Joe, Bob and Karen, Mr. and Lori Hudaon, , Kathy, Bol,nie,
Pomeroy Village Hall by the under command of Rear Ad· • to his home i!l thlll communjty.
Women's Class of the Mid· Bread" was entitled "A Cool Mrs. Sam Pickens, Mrs. Nettie Brenda and Jay Pickens, Mrs.
mlral Richard E. Byrd in
Mr. and Mrs, Bill Berry and
Winding
Trail
Garden
Club.
Gift.''
,
dleporl Church of Christ.
•
Moore, Mrs. Icy Miller, Mrs. Norma Baker, Angela and
1939.
daughter of Mansfield, Mr. and
Mrs.
Reynolds
told of her Thelma Grueser, Mrs. Jeanie Ricky .
Plans
for
the
event
were
Mrs. Lawrence Ritchie Jr. and
made during a meeting ol the visit with Mrs. }.oyse at her Hudson and children, Ray,
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst and
group Thursday night. Wed· summer home In Mlchigan.sons, The ~lains visited Mr.
nesday members will meet at Guest at the meeting was Mrs. , . - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
and Mrs. R. R. Durst and son,
the church to begin sewln~ Robert Reibel, ·Morristown, a
Tom, last week.
project$ for t!te bazaar. Read former teacher of ·the class.
Mrs . PattyGiuesencamp and
at the meeting were com· Reported Ill were Mr. and Mrs.
Jane Allen shopped at the
munications from Mrs. Nina Floyd Boyer, Elmer Wehrung,
Grand Central Mall near
Bland and Mrs. Herman Lohse. and Mrs. Blanche Gilkey. Mrs.
Parkersburg recen Uy.
Mrs. Oscar Roush presided Reynolds and Mrs. Earl Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fitch
at the session which opened served refreshments.
and family of Belpre visited in
with devotions by Mrs. Willlam
this neighborhood on Saturday.
Now you can buy 1hat
Reynolds and the Lord's
Mr. and Mrs. AI Saunders of
comfor1able
La-Z- Boy
GROUPS
TQ
MEET
Prayer in unison. Mrs. Ernest
Xenia spent Wednesday and
chair
YOU
Ve
,
.
:
always
The aruwal Halloween party
dreamed
of
at
our
low
Thursday with her grand·
at the Pomeroy Elementary
prices.
mother, Mrs. Olive Talhott.
Ruby spent Wednesday
School will be plaMed at a
Mr. and Mrs. David Bryant, evening with Mr. and Mrs.
meeting
of the executive and
SPEAKER •NOTED
Mrs . Odessa Weddle and Paul Evans and Paul Dean.
· Authorized Dealer
Mr. Dean Mllls of Beverly ways and ml!lln&amp; cOmmitJees of
family, Mrs. Carroll Cornell
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Pickens
the PI' Ascheduled for 4 p.m.
and Sherry, Mrs . . Maxine are building a new home in this will be the evangellst for a Wednesday at the school. The
Durst, Mrs. Ma*lne Haines and community:· 'they presently revival at th"e Bradbury party is 81111ually IJlOIIsored by .
· Church of Christ to be held Oct. ·
Lori Mlddleswsllt were callers Jive at Akron.
the PTA and Mrs. Earl Thoma,
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. · Harold Brewer of Long 8-13, 7:30 p.m. each evening. president, requests filii atHormenGr~te
Music
director
for
the
special
777-5592
M..on, w. V•.
Bill Bryant and ~hildren during Bottom called on his parentS,
tendance by the conunltteea.
· the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Brewer and services will be Bill Carter.
Special mitsic will be featurfd
Mr ..and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson David on Saturday.
and Shawn of Columbus spent a
Mr. and Mrs. AI !launders of each evening. The public is
weekend with her parents, Mr. Xenia visited her aunt, Mrs. invited.
and Mrs. Rudy Durst.
Golda Clendenin on Thursday
Mr.' and Mrs. Terry Wolfe evening.
COMING TO CAMP
and son of Syracuse called on- Mrs. Ruby Bryant called on
Dixie Martin of Redwood
hi~p_arents, Mr. and Mrs. Gj ne Mrs. Carol Cornell and lamily Falls
. , N.. -M., · w111 be the
Wolfe and family !)unda~ ....
on. ~und~y afternoon.
featured speaker at the Ohio
.Mr. anct Mrs. Mac ViijiMRet
FOB BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
s.. ·,w, Durst , of _ Portland Valley Christian Assembly
and daughter ol Pomeroy were called on Mr. ·and Mrs. Rudy ---Women's Retreat .to be held-at-.
guests ol ()Is mother, Mrs. Ada
Durst Sunday· · ' ·
the Darwin citmp site on Oct.13
Van Meter on Saturday. ·
·
,
:~verar
fiiltn
here
attended
and
1
\
14 .
9 to $ DaUy-Sunday 1·9 - ' ·
Mrs. Mae Van Meter and the Southern-Eastern football
'
game at Eastem Friday night.
Greg Middleswart, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Middleswart, Is
tackle . lor the Southern TorMrs. -R. R. Durst, Gary Grlf·
nadoes.
fith, ·Patty Gluesencamp, Jane
S. W. Durst attended the Allen, Jack Cornell, Ronnie
Morse
Chapel
a,nnual and Johnny Johnson, :Mike
Homecoming at Spiller Sun· Frederick, J . W. Lawson,
da~~ce~t visitors of E. H. Lawrenee Ritchie Jr., )'.,eota
Ca
te
d famil were Birch,' Mr . and Mrs. AI .
1~lGS
rpeuln r an nd
. Y W Saunders, VIrgil Cozart and
. Pa Evans a ·son, 9· · Philip Pickens.
SCHOoL SPORTS
. Durst Ruby Bryant, Mr. and ·

~ANGELIST COMING
Denny l)awes Is . the
wlligelllt b' l(leclal services
beq c.ondllcted thla week at,
thi! Rutland Orun:h of auilt.
The aervlces will continue
through Sunday when · the
11)111111 church hornecGIIllng
Will he obaerved. Mr. Keith
Wlae, pastor, Is the song
leader.

.

.

TUESOAY
' -Thursday at the Middleport
. EASTERN Al'H't,ETIC Maaoni~ T~mple. A 50 year pin .
·
·
·
·
·· bt a to~ presented to Mrs. Mildred
By POLLY CRAMER
Boosters, · Tuesday mg '
Fowler. ElecUon of officers for
p_m: Film of Federal Hocking· the 1972_73 year.
ART CLASS, Pomeroy
. DEAR POLLY-Mrs. W. -M. L. might try my method Eastern game to. be shown.
for removing odors from her mattress. Plain borax works . REGULAR MEETING, Elementsry School, 7:30to 8:30 ·
wonders on such odors. Dampen the spot, spread a layer· Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, p.m. Mrs . Margaret Ella
ol borax over it, rub slightly,Jet dry and then vacuum 7:30' p.m • . Tuesday at the · Lewis, instructor. .
.
off. !ihe may have to repeat the process silice hers has
1 All M te Masons
as r
MEIGS Countv, Connell
of
•·set." 1 used this when my children had accidents and, tempe,
~·
if applied immediately, no spot was left-KAREN
invited.
.
, Parents and Teachers, 7:30
MIDDLEPORT Firemen s p m Thursday at the Salem
DEAR POLLY-Mrs. ·w. M. b. should try a solution of Auxiliary, 7:30 Tuesday at the ~nier School. ·
baking soda and cold water for removing the .Odor from h · of Mr Th
Darst
her mattress. Soak a sponge in the ·solution, r~b mattress . · _orne . · s, omas
·
LAUREL Clilf Better Health
well so it is wet but not soggy .. This is a good remedy for
OHIO ETA !'HI Cha~ter, Club, anniversary dinner, 6;30
removing odor from a---dress when baby burps milk on 1leta Stgma Phi Sorority, IJ:I 5 . p m Thursday the home of
your shoulder. I have atso used it for perspiration Odors pm. Tuesday, Colun\b~s and ·Mrs·. Charles Karr.
·
in woolens.-MRS. R. W.
Southern Ohio Electrtc Co. MEIGS County Chapter,
American Red Gross, 7:30p.m.
DEAR POLLY- Mrs. W. M. L., who has the odor in Model m.eeting. .
her mattress, might find .it would lie a good investment
CHESTER Council 323, D. of Thursda;y at cafeteria,
to buy a plastic mattress cover and then a quilted mat· A., Tuesday, 7:30 P-~· at )Ja~. veterans Memorial .Hospital.
tress pad to go over that. I am· a sleep-in baby sitter and Good of order conmuttee Wtll
R E p 0 R T s 1r o m
am always surprised tb.at pillows and mattresses can be . hold a 2:&gt; cent grab bag sale. representatives to Girls and
so soiled and smelly in a house tpat is otherwise spotlessly
POMEROY Chapter. 186, Boys State will be given at~
clean. I usually take my own plastic pillows and pillowling of Xi Gamma Mu
case and have been known to wash the blankets and bed- OES, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Masonic
Temple.
Members
~~=pter,
Betii Sigma Phi
spread (if washable) before getting into a bed.-MRS.
E. W.
requested topay dues and turn Sorority, 7,45 p.m, Thursday
·in Stanley orders.
home of Nellie Brown.
Polly's Problttm 111111---~lllw:i'
CHESTER ~OUNCH.. 323,
WORK SESSION at the
DEAR POLLY-Is there any way to more or less
7:30 Tuesday mght at the hall. Episcapal Rectory on Thurs.
permanently mark tennis balls so you can identify
2:&gt; cent grab bag sale.
day, 10 a. m. Take a sack
your own? Ink and marke1""]iells wear off after a
· WEDNESDAY
lunch and cleaning Stipplles.
game ·or two and If unmarked balls go _into another
GROUP
1,
Middleport
First
AMERICAN CANCER
court they are often lost because of lack of indent!·
Uruted Presbytenan Church, Society will meet Thursday
fication .-PEGGY,
.
a~ the home of Mrs. Jack Oct. 5 at 7,30 p. m. at Its office
Coleman, Wednesday at 7:30 p. in Middleport.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is. wiUt these rocking m. Bake sale among the
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
horses and other amusements placed in front of .many members.
........-......................illt:""'"· 'Ch ch 8
stores. My son likes to ride them, a$ I am sure most
QUARTERLY Luncheon ~cr~ ~::ce~~ by~~i
children do, and occasionaUy I give him a dime so he Club, Wednesday, 12 noon at
.~ Y
7
1
can do so. Last week, while shoppin~, each time he tried
· p. m. FRIDAY
a ride the machine just collecte,d his dime and .gave n~ the Meigs Inn. Meeting to
SOUTHERN Homecoming
ride nor was his mqney returned. This happened foUr follow_ the luncheon at the home
times. Each time I had to make a trip to the courtesy of Mrsi.GTS. A. HenneAlsy. h I'
Dance, Southem High School
co\mter ' to replace my
0
- ME
County co tsm auditorium, music by "Foxx",
son's dime. I was furious and Drug Abuse Committee, 8
to midnight. Sponsored
and my son was unhappy p.m. Wednesday, St. Paul b10 p.m.
the Southern Band Boosters.
as he--never did get a ride Lutberan Church, Pomeroy.
Y
and finally had to settle for . Two films on alcoholism.
a candy bar.-DOROTHY
MIDDLEPORT Elementsry
DEAR POLLY- I have School art class begins tonight,
MRS. Cim.DS HOME
four small daughters so I 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Mrs.
Mrs. Martha Childs retumed
do a Jot of· sewing. The Margaret EUa Lewis, in· Saturday from a three week .
girls were always after me
visit with her son-in-law lind
to m a k e Barbie Doll structor .
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
THURSDAY
clothes. Now, each time I
EVANGELINE Chapter 172, , Faulkner, Tim, Jill and Dan,_
cut and sew an outfit for
one of them, I immediately make a Barbie outfit from Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 Birmingham, Ala.
the scraps while the right color th.read is on my' machine.
When four such outfits are made they ate handed out to
the girls.- J. 0.

'

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'

GOLDEN TOUCH I SEW• sewing machine with cab.inet.
Exclusive push-button, drop-in front bobbin, 10 stretchstitches, bullt~ln buttonholer, soft-touch f~rlc feed system. Many other features.
·
750/692

.'

.'

4.25 to 5.75

The Fabric Shop
,

JIWILIY STORE

·

. SINGI.-MLIIISI.VItl
. Mcc,-.LL'I IIMI't.IC:ITT PATTI.NI

115 W. Secont!

Ptmeroy

· Pomwoy, 0.

..

-

992-2214

'··

1

•

-.
.I

• I

•

"

.'

.,

,..

�I

•

..

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middl,eport.Pomeroy. 0., Oct. 3, 1972

'

.. I

.

,.
"

•.

1972 -

..

.

..

..

.!.!

A OI.SCOU NT .

,.

DfPAR'fMENT STOllE

· PRICES IN EFFECT TUESDAY 5.P.M.!

PoiNT PLEASANT 0 R MASON

-...-.~-~!!l
·FOR All'

. lAWK &amp;
GARDEN

-

I

•

''J......_~:I'.ill

SMALL CERAMIC
.

HOLD7 1/ 2 BU EACH

. MELA\MINE
ASH JRAYS·

ADVANC~

,,

'

KEROSENE LAMPS

CAPES

16INCHES TALL-

TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY!

'• $ 00

.

.

,~~· -

-·

·,

ROCKING·HAM"
The handy little size at a· new low
sale price. Also heats water for
. instant coffee or tea. Bright
aluminum finish, cord inCluded.

OFFTHE
RETAIL
PRICE! .

BIKINI
PANTIES

'

"'

EA.

'1.56 VAlliE!
BUOWI\1

·THEME
BOOKS
SET
OF -- .
4

IJIIIITH
WHITE
FROST
TRIM!

¢

See Thru Cover!

-

$1.69 COLORS OF AVACADD-RED
OR GOLD

. VISIT YOUR NEAREST
SHOPPER.S MART - - -:- WE'VE
LOADED OUR STORES - SEE II

$

METAL
BUCKLES
LIGHT
WEIGHT!

+91NCH SIZE

MENS ·
Pr•.

·ON ANY
PAIR OF
MENS
FALL
PANTS

11!E44¢

BATH
TOWELS
.
ENTIRE sToCK OF

Pr.

·PLENTY
OF
Ft1EE
Plt\R.KING! ·

'EVERYDAY 941 SlOCK!

¢

22
EA.

SIZE 3to 18

--CLEAR
GLASS
4 STYLES!

BOYS SIZE

WIRE HANGER

LATEX

PAINT .

.PA~f. PAN .

. niTH

·.

EA.

FOAM BACK

· TABLE
. BED.
PILLOws· CLOTHS
¢

'"JUDD" ·

.CURTAIN RODS

EA.

. 1 LB BAG

FOAM
FLAKES .
DOZENS OF USES! '

57

¢··

-~EA~

BAG

s,ZE 72 X108 or 81 Xf9

. TRICOT '.

UMOHAWK" TASTEMAKER

WOMEN.S-.
PANTIES

J"USLIN

SHEETS · :

.E lastk fti, h\JII~ brief style In' many
colon, allflhl lrrttuiars lrom a . nry .
famous JNntY manufacture. Stock Up

Nowl ·

•.

.

WHILE STOCK.

AND
PAIR

The multi color rag rug that you like for
your traf!i&lt; are... Pick s1veral for your.
needs as we head Into the wet season. If
,perfect, you'd pay Sl.37 each.

WHILE THEY LAST!
LI"\J

A MUL:.TITUDE OF FLORAL PATTERNS .

..
Small lot to HICso be
tlrly tonlte . Fino ·
qulilily
musl·ln. ·
Stvtral dulgns lnd

colon.

VI

=

SIZE 24 X·45

.

..

1st QUALITY!

PASTELS

l

EA•

'REVERSIBLE BRAIDED RUG

PRINTED PILLOW CASES ·

WHITE ·.

NOTEBOOK BINDER

$- 88

REGUlAR sf.37

. SIZE 5-6-7

z~ To $ ~94-J
·. ~:::..

.,

'4. 9·7

_,!f

•

~

$

FOAM FIL-LED

SENSATIONAL SHEET SALE

FRENCH PURSES .

3 RING.StYLE-

Arainbow .

WHILE THEY LAST!

TO

,

·a.LUE CANVAs-

13¢

Select from 8 different dasigns ~nd patterns.
of colors·. Size 72x90. Allergy free.

SIZE S2X52

_LOOSE I.EA~__.... VALU!;
TINCH-ALUMINUM

THERMAL or PRINT BLANKETS ·

.67¢ 83¢

$ .94

'

I

EA,

SOme made with suction cups for moving. Soap dishes;
tumbler holders and paper dispensers now In stock,
too .

WaHz length 10wns and sleeps coals also
available. Brushed nylon feels cuddly soft...
. launders.easlly yet retains warmth. Regular
and' X- large Silos.
.

TEENS. MISSES, LADIES

67 .....,....

.

.

-12 Inch, 18 inch, 24 inch Single or double towel bars

_JUNIOR MISS·
PANTY -HOSE
For,.,. girl, IHn or lady ·who
happens to be small and 'sllm.
:. , Colors of Taupe, cinnamon,
beige or coffee. Ont lilt
to fit up to 100 lbt.

·

TOWEL BARS

'

I

'

NEWSELECTION! .
"PEERLESS" CHROME

GRANNY
GOWNS

FITS THE GALS 60 LBS. TO 100 LBS •.

$677 ·

"BEACON" QUALITY . . ·

SCENTED

·BRUSHED NYLON
WOMENS.LONG

•

·

FOR$

EXTRA WI DE-WITH VALANCE

I

37

OUR REGULARSS8.88VALUES!

Prinis or solid colora; Perfect quillfy ..fake' this ·
sale opportunity to give your bedroom a new look . Full
or twln t.bed me-Printed designs have matching
drapes.
.

TOILET BOWL
DEODORANT

¢

Ga1k1n

EA

.

AND

- ~~

$394 TO $9'97

•

-.QUILTED. BEDSPREADS · .

$127_
.

WOODEN CLOTHES PINS

PLASTIC DRAPES

EA.

MENS SIZE

BED
SIZE!

67 $

~

:~

· Solids, inuotl tones, jacquards---A complete
new assortment of quality bed spreads
Discount Priced!!!
·

FULL

.

For sizes l to 10. Devils, witches,
pirates, fairys, plus their favorite TV
characters. Flame resistant. Don't be
Too Lafe ... sy Theirs Now!

OUR EVERYDAY PRICE IS 5r

.

'

SECTIONED OFF FOR
. YOU~ NEEDS!

WEAR YOUR FAVORITE
'·

. CHENILLE.
BEDSPREADS

COSTUMES

$ 94

'lbe team 118me ID 1be color yoa 1ee oa TV-tcl'tell priDte d
oa llbot1•1eeve reg Nlblt1. Cboote from
Clevelaad BroWIII:•
•
.. .
Cblela, Dallas Cowboy&amp;, New .York Jep or
Baltimore
·
·-

TO

'

..,..

·. DIRtY G.REY T~SHIRTSI;
· WITH TEAM NAME

PAIR

·NEW

REGULAR 37c EACI-I

GLIDDEN
PAINT. REDUCED
..
. .
·DRIPLESS

'FOOTBALL LEAGUE·
'
.

' I

$487ro$98}

EA.·

00

MENS FLANNEL SHIRTS

NATIONAL

~ s.,¢

PILE &amp;·QUILT ·LINED

OF .48 CRAYOLA CRAYONS

I'HEY'LL GO FAST!! .

WHITE OR BLACK

JACKETS

ESSANDJEANS
(NOT WORK CLOTHE

Cl'i!an. clear plaid designs. Full .
cut, with long .tails. "Winter
Kl11g" Brand . Pre-shrunk .
Ma-chine washable of course. Size ·
sma•ll to X-Lg.

$ 14

.KNEE-HI
·sOCKS

~--

'

MAGAZINE .$
RACk

Girls and Misses

BOYS WINTER

.BEER. MUGS

EVERYDAY! .
BRASS FINISH - HANDY

.

PRICE
I

·w

49cVALUE

OOi:.

.ITS

"T'IO

'

5 DAY SALE!

NYLON
STRETCH
SOCKS

$ 22

WAX
GI.RLS AND WOMENS
APPLIER .DRESS BOOTS

19~EA.

MADE IN U.SA "JEANIDE"

CAKE
PAN
• With High Dome
¢

BULKY
ORLON
FABRIC!

CORDUROY, NYLONS, POPLINS FABRICS! ,

NEWEST SOLID COLORS
AND SMART PRINTS
"

SEE AND TAKE COVERED

¢

CEilAM~'C

$

PERMANENT PRESS!

HURRICANE
ANTIQUE LOOK!

HANDLE ·

DUST
·PAN

Z!

CLEAR CRYSTAL GLASS! .

4 FTWOOD

STYRENE
PLASTIC

ViOMENS

PRINTS&amp;
·
EMIII~OiDERS.

$

.

FO,R YOUR EMERGENCIES!
_..

SEl-ECT FROM 10 C01,0~50NE SIZE FITS 10 THIW 13
BOYS OR LON SOCKS--57c

,i..

ON SALE TUESDAY 5 P.M.!

· . or

.....,,., ORLON SOCKS.

-~ ·"••"C'~··

. ~ctuaUy a 89c value. Crushable style, one
me lots all women 90 lbs. to 150 lbs. New
tan m,ades ot cinnamon, beige .or tauPe.
Non! sold to merchants.
,
·

CAR COATS -·

SOFT, WASHABLE. LONG WEARING!

II

.

SAVJN(3S · • ·LA

ENTIRESTOCK WOMENS

::~~~-J'9¢
ORANG~~;,

$}14

,

. PERFEct QUALITY! .

I eoi•JA'j i:-=:1

PLASTIC COOKrE
BAGS .
JAR

BURN \PRQOF! .

HO~·· L...

MENS .PANTY

FALL AND WINTER

PKGOF7

.. ·COME IN AND
. HARVEST SAVINGS!

I,

r\ .\ .

OPEN
9:30T09PM
6 NIGHT$
SUNDAY
· 1 PM .
TO
6PM

....... .

~l:

COMPU;tEWITH
. · . FIT.TINGSI
.SLUE +WHI'TE

. . I

.

I

.

'

¢

... .

A o•SCOUNT ..

.DEPARTMENT STOltE

FOR

'

.

'

. .POINT '
•

•

.I

I

.

..'
I

�'.
11-'l'he DaUySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 3, 1972
~

..

Sentinel Classi/ieds ·o et Action! Sentinel Classi/ieds Get Res·ul~s!
2 rii!Ais
.Po '· .
., ·
·~
~·.
mtro·.·' .. . .
Busm·.es··s S·e·m'·.•·c.es'.
BUSINESS
OF
• tor Co
'

IN~::f!'::!~N

', . ~ .

.i

•

•

riOhl lo edll or reject any ad;
. deemed objectional . The

. 1971 PINTO FORD

great

iron pill

Vitam in c. Nelson Drug.
10-3-2tp

Insertion·~.

t

·
R'IlTES

Sale,

MiddiT,rl City Haii ..Oclo.ber

tFor wan\ Ad Service
6th an 7th, Lad ies Auxiliary
5 cents per \¥ord one insert_i on ., of Middleport Fire Dept.,
Minimum Charge 7Sc
beg ins at 9 a.m . Donations
12 cents per word thr:et~
accepted.

consecutive lns..-tlbns.. •·

10-3-3tc
con · - - - - - - - - - ·
YARDS 1
.
·t

18 ceMtS p&amp;r •word 5"'
secutive .Insertion$ . •
· 2s Per Ci!!nt Dlsc·ount on pal e
a e, you name I • we've
ads and ads paid within 10 .d.ays. · got it. Thursday, Friday and
CARD OF TH"NKS
Saturday, 43 Coal Street ,
'

&amp;

OBITUARY

Mid~eport .

.

sqo tOr so word minimum .
JQ.J •.4tc
Each addltiona1 word 2c .
-~-------

BLifiD ADS

RUMMAGE Sale, October 6th
Additional 25c ,Char"ge · per
and 7th, Hughes Building
Advertisement.
· ·
.
OFFIC.E HOUlt\- . .
acr o~s · fro'm Middleport
d :JO a.mr,IQ '5 :00tP .m .. tJatl)l

· 8:30 a.m. to
Satur~ay .

11: 00

Librar y, Beta Sigma Phi. .

llloo

I0-3-3tc

.

In

NEEDLECRAFT Shop,' Rt. 124.
lhru Friday by Thelma Lytle .
10·3·31c

--

·'Dear 'husbahCI, 1f' s lonesome
here without you/ I miss you

'

every day ; Life doesn't seem

torgotlen. to others. part ol
the pas f. To me who loved and

lost you; YoUr memory will
always last. !f's a lonesome
. house without you and sad Is

the way : for life and home are

·-

you
•

.

YARD SALE, everything from
· A to Z; October ·1st lo- 8th,
days and evenings; Howard

c:

Russell residence, Wolf
Pen. Road off Rt. 143, watch·

for signs.

10. 1·3tc

.

· condition.

more. For local interview,

Pomeroy ~Motor . C~.

992'-2448
7 omeroy, 0.

new products since the 'for·

matlon of this Company. Also . ORGAN and piano

i n~truction

graduate of

Cincinnati

by

Auto Sales
Help Wanted
WOMAN lo live in with elderly '70 BONNEVILLE , 2 door

Hardtop, factaq air, power
steering and brak"es ; phone

991-5934.

10-1-61c

1970 PLYMOUTH Duster 340 :
phone '192-3451 or 992-5488.
I0-1-6tp

- - -- - --,.
'70 OLDS, 4 door. A-1 condition.

38.000 miles; cal l 992-2023.
10.3-3tc

For Rent
2 BEDROOM, Furn..

all ·

ele.ct ric ap.artm.ent,. down ·

slaors. Avaolable thiS week.
Phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
_ _ _ _ _ __ _1_0·2·3tc
PHONE 992-2156 .
2 OR 3 BEDROOM home in
Mason: call Pt. Pleasant 675·
1684.
CARHOP wanled ; apply ito
10-3-3tp

The.Daily Sentinel

·- ~

On Most American ~rs
~-GUARANTEED­

Phone 992·2094

'

SMJllLNElSON
. MOTORt
INC.
Plh H2-2i74'
· Pomeroy

Pomeroy. Horne &amp;Auto
OpenHil5
.
Monday thru Slturct.v
606 E. M&lt;lin, Pomeroy, 0. ·

~;:======:::::,.:J 'S'~E-·US FOR :. ~wnlngs, ·lforln
~ROOFING
. doors
and wlndo~•. carpOrts,j
marquees, ~lumlnum .,ldlng
and railjng. •A. Jacob, Min
EAGlE INDUSTRIES
• HEATING
·
'
representative, . f'or ,free
es
tl mates. ··phone Cha"l'i
:AUTOMOSfLE
lnsurance
'tii!er·
Department BV
PLUM
IN
•
·
B
G
Lisle, Sv.racuse, V.;. ;y;
·
cancelled?
Lost'
·your
3938 Meadowbrook Road
operator's license? Call m
eCARPENTR y •, .~Johnson a"d Son. Inc. 3+tt~;
St. Louis Park,
2966.
.
Minnesota 55426
'
6-15-tfc
~~WING MAt:HINES. Repair:
' - - - - - - - - - - " - - ' - -- - - - ' - - . ··SPOUTING
servi~. all m~kes. 992-228~.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Wanted To Buy
•PAINTING
Authorized Singer Sales a~d
Employment Wanted
.

'SEPTIC tank; cleaned. Miller
. .Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
. 662-3035.
..
. 2-12-tf(

number :

'-'-'-~"'--

Va.

-

write, · Include telephone

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
-t&gt;!)MEROY, OHIO
,: .

W.

Free Estimates .. · We also
haul fill dirt, top $oil. DUmp
trucks and low.boy for hire,
See Bob or · Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alt~r 1 p.m. or phone 992.
5232.

establish accounls for you.
Car. references, and $995.00
to $1,995 .-llO cash capital
necessary. 4 to 12 hours
weekly could net' good pari
time Income . Full • lime

.

'5.55

From- tHe largest ·
or
Bulldozer Radiator to' the·
Sn\all,sl Heater Core.
-Nalllin Biggs .
Radiator
·-· Specialist

done by hour or COfitract.

!

16 TO 20 FT·. camping trailer.
Phone 992-7106.
110112
10-1-3tc HOUSEWORK
Mulberry, Pomeroy, bottom
apartment, downstairs.
GALLIPOLIS resident wants to
9-29-4tc
buy a , business. Will buy
busloess and property or
business with lease. Call For Sale
Gallipol is 446-«08.
· Limestone, excelsior
9-20-12tc ·COAL,
Salt
Works, E. Main St..
- - - - - -- - ~&gt;omeroy , Phone 992-3891.
OLD. Furniture: . oak tables,
4-12-tf&lt;:
orlJans, dishes, clocks, brass
beds. or complete households. 16' CAMPING TRAILt:K,
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Shasta, like new. Phone 985·
Pomeroy, Ohio: Call 992-62t) ., 3849.
6-28-tlc'
9-7-30tc

;&gt;ervlce. We Sharpen Scl.stors.
.
..Jo19;tfc
. ;• .

For Free Estimate
PHONE 992:2550

O;OELL WHEEL allgnme•
located at Crossroads, Rl. 12~.
Complete front . end service, .
For Sale
tune ~P and brake service.
APPLES , Fihpatrlck Or·
Wheels • balanced elec_chards, State Route 68~.
tronlcally.
All
work
. Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
guarssnteed.
A,.,.,.,I'\Ahl•
8-30-lfc ·niles . Phone 742·3232 , or
. 992-3213. .
7-77-Tff:
--1-22 x 8 FURNISHED trailer, '
good condition, $800; 1 - 32 x DOZER and back hoe-· work,
8 furnished , trailer, 2 ponds and septic tanks, ditbedroom, bath, good tires,
ching service; top soil, fill .
$1,200; Reynolds Flower · dirt, · limestone; B&amp;K ExShop, Mason; W.Va., 77J.S147.
ca·vatlng. Phone 992·5367,
9-27-6tp
Dick Karr, Jr .
9-1-tfc
COLONIAL style stereo, AMFM radio, 4 speakers, 4 speed
• t
.•
record changer. Balance Mobile Homes For, . Sale
, SEPTIC TANKS t.~t:ANED
.
$78.52. Use our budget terms.
RE~SONABLE rllte9. Ph. 4-46-.
Call 992-7085.
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,;
10-l-6tc
Owner
&amp; Operator. ! : .
· Air Conditioners
------~•
-1?c.lf&lt;
•Awnings
MODERN walnut sle~eo, AMFM radio, features 4 speed
'• Underpinning

.

------

person ; Craw's Steak House.

-~ ·

Bring Your Unhulled

9o29-61c TRAILER . Brown' s Trailer
Park, phone 992-3324.
10-3-lfc

WALNUTS

plus monthly specoals. All
Conservalory of Music Phone
. these in addlfion to the 992-3825.
·
onglnals. Ladies, we would
·
9-28-12tc
chaoger, 4 speakers, separate
like very much for you to try - - - - - , - - - - - , TO OUR
controls.' Balance $68.41. Use Complete mobile hame
our budge! terms. Call 992- · ·service ~ plus glganllc'
these cosmetics and to serve VIRGINIA's Beauty Salon on
of Columb4s spe~t Sunday with
By Bertha Parker
' MECHANICAL .
7085.
you. Phone •fjelen Jane, 992- Success Road between
'display of mobile homes
Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobs Mrs. Ferguson 's a nd Mi·ss
· HULLER
10-1-6tc :atways
5113.
Tuppers Plains and Long
5-1 ·1k·
available at .. .
Parker's
mother,
Mrs.
Bertha
of
Colwnbus
visited
over
a
!
10-1-tfc
Bottom. Open 6 days; some
~::-::-~--,.sNAPPER riding . mower. 8
. Phone 667·3041 , recent weekend with Mr. and Parker. Miss Parker remained
llEA,o~:MIX WNt.RIHI:
. MILLER
SKATE.AWAY, open Wed- evenings
h.p.. ·1972 model, 2 in stock.
Your
Walnuts
will
·
be
Operator , Virginia Hayman . Mrs . Pearl Jacobs and at- for several days' visit.
. deflvitred right' to ·:irO',U,t
nesday, Friday and Saturday
save $100; Gravely Tractor
9-14-30tc
pro/ect. Fast and easy. 'Fifti
Hulled
Free
of
Charge
evenings from 7: 30 p.m . to
MOBILE HOMES
Mr. and Mrs, James Gilmore
tended lh~ local church on
Sales, Pomeroy, Ohio.
est
males . Phone 992-32«
10:30 p.m. Available for
10-1-3tp
attended the Jackson Apple and We Will Pay 'You.
Sunday
morning.
1220
Washington
Blvd.
'
·
Goegleln
· Ready-Mix Co.:
private parties on Monday,
Middleport,
Ohio. ·
· .. .
:423-7521
BELPRE,
0.
FestivaL
Charles
Diehl
has
been
Tuesday and Thursday
3 YEAR old mare, brown and
6-JO.Ifc
evenlhgs, also Saturday and
returned ·home from UniverMr. and Mrs. Fritz Stahl of
· white : 18ft. boat ; phone 843· ,~----------------~~.·~
Per
Hundred
Sunday afternoons. Schedule ,
2778.
sity Hospital in Columbus New Marshfield and Mr. and
1971 LIBERTY Mobile-'·Home, 'BACKHOE AND DOtER "!or~::
your,p_arties early . Phone 985Pounds
10-l-31c
65x12, 3 bedrooms. !1/2 baths,
Mrs.
Bill
Perry
of
Athens
where
he
had
been
·a
patient
for
Septic tanks Installed . Georqo
3929\Qr 985-9996.
natural
gas
heal,
$5500;
only
In
recognition
of
"Education
·
(.BHI) Pullins." Phone 992-2p8.
visited
recently
with
Mr
.
.
and
two weeks.
10-1-12tc
Aller they
•
KING Coronet and Bundy
lived in 5 months. Phone 992••15-lfc
Sunday" on Sept. 24, the
'
Clarinet; phone 992-6078.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl of Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
are Hulled
3903.
•
10-1·3tc
Church School superin· Stockdale visited recently with
9-28-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
- ~LEGAL
Real Estate For Sale
tendent and the, teachers Mr . and Mrs. Norman Mrs. Georgia Diehl and M&lt;s.
~fAGNM~~~~~~
were nonored at the Alfred Schaefer.
'CASij paid for ali ina'f&lt;es· ·oud
Bertha Parker attended the Start Buying October 2, 1972. I
Price Smash!
· models of mobile homes.
MANAGEMiiH.'F AIU)
United Methodist Church.
Senior
Citizens
picnic.
Mrs. Hugh Ferguson and
CIRCULA:'I'ION
'Phone area code 614-4~3"sal
1. Title of Publ ication - Th e Recognized were Lloyd son, James Ferguson, Dick
hELAND REALTY.
Mrs. Roy Howell has
.
. . ~.!!:tilt
PANTS
&amp;
·JEANS
•
.
· · ·I
Daily Sen!inel and Sunday Dillinger, Howard Flanders, McManara, Miss Cleo Parker returned to Indiana where Mr.
608 E. M&lt;lln St.
Times -SenlineL
· M
~~eroy
Date of Filing _ oct . 2, 1972 .
yrtle Flanders, Doris
Howell is employed.
SALE I
..
......225P
Real
Estate
ror
Sale
,
,
3. Frequency . ol Issue : Dillinger, Nellie Parker, Helen
Dennis Gilmore, son of Mr.
Buy 2 Pairs and
~u~~d."/. through Fr iday and Woode, Osie Fotlrod and Vicki . June Stearns will lead the and Mrs . James Gilmore, has
HOUSE .In Long Soilom, phgnel
GEl 1 l'AIR FREE
.
985-3529.
•
i
•· Location of Known Office ot Carr . Several assistant program.
" VERY DESIRABLE''
enrolled in a school in
'All kinds, all ~lzes ror u.~:: .. ,
1
6·11
-lf~
,
P.O. Box 267
992-3891 ' women, young men, bi)ys·
~~~~~~t~~"Jh 1 ~ ~sf:9~rt Street, teachers were absent.
Refreslunents were · served Nelsonville.
We are fortunate to offer this
Pomeroy, Ohio
i5'oM~ROY House,6rooms'i charming ll/2 story . house~
5.
Locanon
of
!h e
Thelma Henderson, Helen by the hostess.
· and qlrls. Hurry to ...
Headquarters or Genera l W od
N'
b
bath, 2 large porches, large with three nice bedrooms
Business Off ices ol lhe
o e, ma Ro inson and
42ndAnnlversaryNoted
lot, newly painted; phone 992.
POMEROY
located In a fine neigh·
PubiiJhers: 111 .courl Street. Clara Follrod of Alfred
OnSunday,Sepl. 24, Mr. and
wA'NTED - Old . upright
3394.
'
·
'~'•·
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
borhood.
This home has new
Pom~roy , Ohio ~5769 .
.
,W
,
S · t .
b
pian os, grand pianos, old
10· 1-Jtp· paneling and ceiling tile, a
,_... Phone 992-2181
6. ames and Addresses of
omens
OCie y,
ac- Mrs . Ho art Swartz were
0
pump organs. Any condition.
'
.
- .
::-:-:-=: : - - - -Pub! sher .
Editor .
and companied by. Evelyn Lehman entertained at the home or Mr.
Paying $10 each . Write giving
garage and fruit storage
'RACINE - 10 room house/ building, plus many more
1
9
~~~~~~::' s. ~~~:.' ,/;~~1 !~~~;: and Edith Harper of Tuppers and Mrs. Gerald Swartz of
directions. Willen Piano Co., MISCELLANEOUS SALE. Old
bath, basement, garage, two
Ohio.
·
Plains attended the Athens Marietta, the oc~asion being
Box 128. Sardis. .Ohio 43946. picture frames, depression
..ots . Phone 949-4313.
1 extras you . must see. A
glass, chrome breakfast set,
9
2
4-5-11~ REAL BARGAIN FOR
M~~~~o;~rt,c8~~~er Tannehill , District meeting of the the 42nd wedding anniversary
· 9-6fp washer, sofa, Con lon mangle,
---,---~-=,;...=.. ',. $11,000.00.
Managing Editor , Roberl women's society held at the of the parenU&gt;. A decorated
For Rent
Sunbeam deep fryer, utility 8 ROOM house and
· "ANOTHER TEMPTING
ba.th,
nice
cart, porch swing, lawn
Hoeflich
. Pol"eroy, Oh io.
Nelsonville United Methodist cake was served with the noon
Mrs·. Everett Ray Johnson,
large
lot.
natural
gas,
built·in
BUY"
1. Owner : The Ohio Valley
ROOM &amp; bath furnished chairs,. mattresses and
cabinets
in
kitchen.
Close
to
Publl$hin~ co .. Pomeroy , Oh io; Church on Wednesday, Sept. meal. Other guests besides the Audra, Jeffery, Eric of 4 apartment,
Accent
on
value Is placed
springs, ladders, dishes. brlc·
utilities paid; no
radio
station
in
Bradbury.
1
rightly·
here,
~ndy place,
~~c~~~rd E·w?n~e n . f' dd~g~;;; 20. A short report of the family, were Nina Robinson Columbus, Mrs. James children or pets ; Bailey ' s' a-brae, odds and ends; 10 · Phone 992-2602.
a.m.
to
6
p.m.
;
October
6th
&amp;
with
lwo
porche.
s, . 1 story
Columbus. Ohio ; Mrs. Edgar s. meeting was given during the and Clara Follrod, ln the af. Johnson, Jamie Sue, Tood, Stare. Upper Business Block,
9-29-12tc frame with three bedrooms,
7th,
462
S.
51h
St..
Middleport,
~~~nngd, Th;~~~b~~ies ,O~i~. ; Wednesday evening prayer ternoon 'they visited another Teresa of Pomeroy and Mrs. Middleport.
,
10-J.6tc
located In Rutland, GOING
10-l-6tp Ohio.
truslee tor stephen Boles , hour and also during the son, Mr. aild Mrs. Harold Larry Johnson, Gina Rae,
PT PLEASANT - 6' room FOR $9,800.00.
Katherl~e
1usanBoles
Boles,
Roberl
worship
hour on Sunday Swartz . and family of Tahnee and Brady were 1 BEDROOM house. kitchen 1973 TRAILERS and campers in
house, 1'12 baths, recreation
"WORTH THE MONEY"
Boles,
Jan1ce
; Lynn
B.
.
room.
new built-in kitchen, This two bedroom house
stock
for
service
quality
Kauftmon , George w. Byers mormng.
Williamstown , W.'Va.
Saturday evening visitors of and balh, partly furnished.
musl sell , leaving town. Days
and price - vlsll Camp
Adulls only . Phone 992-7126.
-Ill.
Dione N. Byers. cuslodlan , The
Women 's. Society of
Word has been received here Mrs. Helen Johnson.
phone 992-3502, evenings! needs some repair, bul not
Conley, Starcrafl Sales, Rt. 62
for Beth Noland Byers. All
. .
· that much for the money,
addresses Columbus, Ohio .
Chrtsltan Serv1ce held its of ·the death of Linder RanMiss Naomi Jo Smith of 12 FT. WIDE mobile home, 1
N. of Pt. Pleasant behind Red · phone 675·2372.
Carpel Inn.
8-30-tfc nice lot, and excellenl
8. Known Bondhold ers. regular meeting Tuesday, dolph of Wilmington following Concord College was weekend bedroom , gas heat, air garage with attached room.
9-29-7tc
Morlgoges.
and
Sec ur ity1 Sept · 19 with an attendance of a lengthy illness.
Vl.sl' tor of her paren'", Mr. and conditioned, phone 9.49-2261,
IDEAl ·5:AcR·E RANCH. [ake THIS ONE YOU MUSTSEE,
Holders Owr)l
ng Olher
or Holding
Percenl of more of Tola l 10 members and three visitors
Weekend
guests
Of Mrs . Charley Smith. She also Albert HilL Racine. 9.27.61c TWIN Needle sewing machine Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975. IN RUTLAND onlv $5,500.00.
1972 model In walnut stand. No down . No Interest. $25 mo ..
AmounlStcurthes
ot B~~ds,: Morlgag
es or at the home
Genevieve Guthrie were Mr · visited Mr. and Mrs. Do,jle
'·- - - - - - - - "ATTENTION
other
Ohio Valley
· .. of Isola Taylor ·
1
All features buill In to make for 119 mos. VacaNon
INVESTORS"
Bank, Gallipolis. Ohio.
The meeting was opened by and Mrs. Delbert Yost and Knapp and family and Mr. and 2 BEDROOM trailer, adults
fancy designs and do stretch Paradise . Free Brochure . If you're llle man who can
Average . No. Copies Each the. president1 Nellie Parker • family and Ella Yost of Sugar Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
only
d ocated on Old 33; phone
sewing . Also buttonholes, Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
Issue Dunng Preceding 12
992-6385 .
blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash 2001DD. Alameda. California see the ct.wn ,you may be
Months
With prayer b~ Mrs. 4!hman . Grove. The latter remained to
Mr. and M.rs. William Boyce
9·27-6tc
Interested In lhls 1&lt;40 plus
94501.
price
' or terms available.
Ci;~·ula~~;;~ 1 .and Nalure 01 The hymn, "Marching to Zion" spend ' a week with Mrs. or Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Phone 992-5641 .
10-3-JOfp acres near Rutland. Barn
Ho'ward Russell visited 1~AND 4 RWM tu'rnfshed lflfif'
A. Total No. Copies Pr in ledc was sung. The number of sick · Guthrie.
10·3-61c
and other buildings Included
Dally 5 800 s d 11 600
unf•rnlshed. apartm~nls.
5
ROOM
house
and
bath,
B. P~ld t lr~~~a~i~n , '1. Sal es and shut-in calls re~o~ted was
Ruth Atherton of Carthage Saturday evening with Mr. and
"'hone 992. 54~.
,
_V_A_C_U_U_M
_ c- 011"'
'..,..-e-r-. - E
- l-ectro located on Brick Street, for only $15,000.00.
. HENRY E. CLELAND
through Dealers and Carriers, · 40. The pledge to m1ss10ns was Gap Is very Hi in Camden- Mrs. Harley Johnson .
'
·
.. · .
fi~tic
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Rutland; lnlerior being
· REALTOR ,
S)reet vendors and Counter made for 1973
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
Mrs. Paul' Pierce and fam1'ly ·· •
Sales: Do ily 4,264, Sunday 7,768
. ·.
SMALL trailer 10 m(les north ot ·has all cleaning attachments remodeled ; phone 742-3334.
PHONE.992-225t
plus the new Electro Suds for
J0-3·12tc
. 2. Moll Subscriplions : Daily
The nomtnaltng report was Her brother and sister-in-law, of Mason was Tuesday visitor
Pomeroy. Ideal for couple.
1•268 ' Sunday 3' 366 ·
shampooing
carpel. Only- - - - - - - -- .
given
by
Isola
Taylor
as
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Atherton
of
her
mother,
Geneva,
and
$65
a
month.
Phone
992-7'79.
C. Total Pcud Clrculafton :
· .
.
..
cashPhone
price992-5641.
or ferms I· \
Dolly 5,532 ; Sunday 11 ,134.
follows : President, Nellie have been with' her.
Mrs . Larry Johnson and·
9·29-tfc $27.50.
available.
D . Free Dillribution by MaU , Parker · vice president June
Ha' rry Swartz, a ,..nolient
at family ,
' 10-3-6tc
Carrier or Other Means
'
'
...
2 ROOMS. unfurnished; ·call
. 1, Samples. complimenlo ry. Stearns ; secretary , Helen Holzer llospital, is reported · Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
evenings 992-3429.
1972 REPossEssEo 8 track
;~,d s~~3;/1~~~ Copies: Da lly • Woode; • treasurer, · Nina · improving but still in intensive children ol Rutland visited
9·29-3tp
stereo, jus! like new. Take
110 Mechanic Street
2. Copies Dlslributed 1o News Robmso.n; secretary of care unit.
SaturdayeveningwithMt ..and -~---.....,.over payments of S7.25 per
mo. or pay balance of $88.47.
Agenls. but nol sold : Dally 27. missions Eleanor Boyles·
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode Mrs. DOyle Knapp and family.
Sunday 1S7
·
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'l'
J\TQT1C'D
Phohe 992-5331. •
Pomeroy, Ohio . 45769
E. Tolol · Distribu! lon : Da ily literature and publications, and Connl of Circleville came · Franklin · Russell of !)lid·
H'
·
L
10.3-61c
5,631' Sunday , 11.445.
Thelma Henderson· mem· last weekend to assist William dleport was a Tuesday evening · 1- .,.--,- - - - - - - - ----~NEXT Td SCHOOL
F . Offtce Un , Left -Over , ·
·
. .'
.
LEFT In lay-away, 1972 model
Unoctounted . Spoiled After bershlp and ·cultivation, Osle Carr, Sherman Henderson and caller of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
·.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3 bedroom modern home. Nice
zig-zag sewing machine. This
Prlnllng ; De ily 169; Sunday 155. Mae Fi&gt;llrod· spiritual life Chas. D. Woode with hay Russell.
batll, large living and utility room, Concrete front porch .
G .. Totak Do ll y 5,800; Sunday Ge
.
G 'th .. h ·
'
M
machine makes buttonholes,
Lot 100&gt;.400 well dri1lned. S16,000.00.
·
11,600.
·
nev1eve u rte; c 31rman baling and mowing p&amp;sture. · r. and Mrs. Don Russell,
darns, embrQ.Id.eries. Pay
.
.
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NEW
Actual Number of Copies of of nominations 1 Florence
Mr. ·and Mrs. Robert White of Mr. and Mrs. Steve .Haggy of
balance of $311.80 or pa{. $5.55
,
Single hsu&amp; Published Ne1rest
FULL BASEMENT-3 bedrooms, nice kitchen, bullt·lns.per mo. Phone 992-533 .
..
!o Flllnt Dale
Spencer. The report was ac- Keno joined the families for Akron and Mr . and Mrs.
stove
and refrigerator. 2 be Ills, garage. Ready to move
10-3-6tc
11. E~lenl· itnd Nature
of cepted and the above officers supper at the William Cilrr
· Ronnie ·Russell and dau•hter
.
Into.
Clrcutef100
•
.
rt
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·A. Total No . Copies Prlnled, elected to take office Jan. I, home Saturday evening. The were weekend visitors of ·Mr.
POTATOES, home grown
VACANT LAMD ·
Kennebecs
and
Irish
Cob·
Dally
5.850 ; Sunday, 12,250.
1973
I
I
Woodes
returned
to
Circleville
.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Russell.
~ACRES
More
or Ins to hunt, camp or vacation
B. Paid Circulation
·
,
biers
;
fre,.tl
supply
available
RL(IIand
Township.
On
a good gravel road. Only $5,000 oo'
!. .Solos Through D·ealers and
Vari ,o us fund , raising · l11te Saturday evening.
thi.s week and next. Call 843REASONABLE
'
. '
Carriers, 'Street Vendors and proje •~
discussed
and
Sat
da
ts
f
M
d
2186, Paul Sayre, Portland,
Countor .Sales ' Dolly . 4 , 450 ,
c.., were
ur Y gues o r. an
BEDROOMSFull
baMment,
play
room,
'gas
forced
3
Ohio. Greal Bend Road. Rt.
.The Antarctic
cap covsunday 8-287.
. reports on findings g'iven . Mrs. Vere Swartz were Mr. ·and
air fur~ce, 3 RO'Ches, large lot. Asking on)y$8500,00.•
338.'
2. Moll Subscrlpilons: Dolly Florence Spencer was named · Mrs. Murray · Hopkllfs and ers about 6 million square
.
.
RURAL
. ·
.
t.m; Sunday, 3,377. ·
h
.
For. bergalns gelora. Be
9-28-6tc
miles.
,
c. Tolol Po.ld Circulation : to '.i~veatigate I e sa 1e of · grandson of . Dayton, Sarah
RENOVATED- All new inllde with 'wall to ' ll'tell carsmart and Christmas shop
Dolly 5,729; Sunday 11.664.
· napkins and report at the · . 'Woode aM Sharon Swartz of
early, where some.,lng can
JUST TAJQN IN, Singer . poling.: All rooms penoled. Gas forced al~ furnace: City
. D. Free Distribution by Moll,
•·
water. Located ·on 124. Only Sl 1,500,
. ·
.··
·
'l
be
fOund
~r
each
ITtlmber
of
·
. Sewing Mlchlne. Will "'ll for
Ctl'rltr or Other Means. ·
October meeting.
.
Coolville. · ,. ..
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tht
family.
·.·
·
·
smell
·
baltnct
of
$36.21
or
.
.
117
ACRES
.
.
.
1, $emplos. CompllfJieritary., · 'Thellna Henderson led the
M and Mrs Chas D Woode
peymenfs may be arranged. · SUTTON TOWNSHIP - 6 room houM, barn end olh~
and Other Froo Copleo; Dolly
f.
the. booklet
r.
'
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50; 5vnday 132.
program . · rom ·
, attended Homecoming at the
We sell retail &amp; wholesale!' '' . Phone 992-5331 .
·
buildings:· Free gea wllll 011 woll. A~lng S20,00o,OO, • ·
2. copies Dlotrlb~tod !o New• "Bridge to the World" relliting Eagle: Ridge ·community
Special welcome to all
9-7-tfc
Agtflll, but not oold :. Dolly 20; to
"·- · 'K ''l3. Church last Sunday afternoon:
dealers! Follow the crowd, · _ ......__ _ _ _ _ _..:.,._
Ni·w '
Sundey 150.
·
evangeuam or ey
Frld~y.
Oclo
.
ber
6just
off
the
8
TRACK
STEREO.
freight
2 BE;DROOMS-Belll. llielectrlc'llome. Be~tment. Nlct
E. Total Dlstrlbutlon c Dolly 'Readings were given by.·
Mrs. Clara "'ollrod
onont
p
'damalltd, In belluttful walnut
2,7tt; Sund•v 11,9.. 6.
·
.
.,..
...r
lot on good c~ry ~oad neer RMCI~vlllo. ~ly 112.000.00. ·
Byconsore.
WIIIMIIfor
$101.50
or
omeroy
·Middleporf·
F. Ofllct use. Loft .over. several
members
and severaldayslaslweek with liet
·pass
on
old
Rl.
7
at
Laurel
pay
$1.50
per
week.
Phone
992·
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Untccounttd, Spoiled After ' discussions followed: · The aunt, Pbeobe Hueston at Uttle
STOP.
IN
AT
TilE
RE/IL
ESTATE
CENTER,
AND
TRY
·Cliff.
·
5331
.
'''"""':
Dally 51;
Sundtli
304. closing pr~yer ·w~ given
·
by Hocklng,aSilatlnginbe'rcare.
·
·
G. TOTAL:
Deily
Si850;
US FOR A GOOD BUY. IF YOU LIST YOUR PROPERl'Y
9-7-tfc·
1
An~ I inlle west 0t 'Rock
WITHUSANDNOSALE,
THERE WILLB~ NO COsT TO
..
'
M·tit
liN
olotomeoh
Helen,
Woode,
·
·.
Mn,
,
Addle
Scarberry
of
1
· Springs Felrtrounds:
.
YOU.
·
· ,
~DL'E
JIUPIIrH,
~~:.·
w •e •••• ere correct The ne~ meeting will be Chesapeal\e spent Sundal with
SALE
STARTS1100
P.M.
l.fO lUNDAY IHOWINGS
. Jf4~vlew .Kennels,
... .•
YOUR DIN.
liN ....,CMAIID I. OW IN . 'fueaday, Oct. 17, with the Mrs. 1Kate Honacher and
FRIDAY, OCT, 6
HELEN L. T!AFOIID, ASIOC!ATI
.
flO) 1, 1tc
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pillee to be IMOUDced later, family.
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Laurel Cliff News Notes

Alfred
Social Notes

$

NOTICE

...

Excelsior
SaH Works, Inc.

w Ifpen,

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~ . Herbert
w~~~.~Roush
!o~:
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....
·Benefits
of
Over
$400
To
Winner·
s
and son, Roger,
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and Jeff Miller spent Saljlrday • ·A scholarship and bond$ High School ln. Racin~.
1Jl!IY be ~ before the
evening with Mr, and Mrs. valued at more than .$4QO will
This was the tentative plan final night of !he flqeant.
· be given to the winners in the agreed upon by r.teigs County
Meigs . County hlah ldlool ·
· Da~a Lewis at Clifton. •
Wesley Pierce of NelsonviJie 1973 Meigs County Jwiior Miss Junior Miss, Inc., last ~~:eek . senior girlsiWill blveunW Oct.
· is visiting hi~ grandparents, Pagea~t Nov, 18 a~ Southern The scholarships and bonds 14 to enter the Plltanl. 1be
• ••
Me an,d. Mrs,· Ernest !lhuler,
.1
~winner.of the localplleanhriD
while hts parenU&gt;, Mr..- and Mrs.
·'
•
repr~5ent Meigs County at t1Ji!
. Robert Pierce of NelsOnville
·.
·
•
·
·
· Ohio Junior Miss Paceant In
are vacationing at Niagar:,P F
Assn. Will Meet Nov~mber If) Mount vernon
13-11,
Falls and other points. · .
·
1973. She will C&lt;lllqlele for
Richard Rowe and family
COLUMBUS- The Second Conference Registration approximately ,U,200 in .
are movhig from the Theron Annual Ohio Fir.s t Aid &amp; Committee, Box 28282, Uncoln ·· scholarships and awards.
Johnson !ann to a mobile home Rescue Association · State Village Branch, Columbus,
. Entry fol'l11! for the Paleant •
lhe purchased in llacine.
Conference will officially open Ohio, 43228.
can be obtained by wrilinl:
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp and at8:30a.m.Friday, November
'.
Meigs County Junior Mbo,
sonshavemovedtotheCharles 10,atthelmperiaiHouseWest,
Uranium 's Emirgy
. Inc., 296 · • Wist- SicBurri residenoe.
·• · · '
Colllinbus, it was announced by . One pound _or uramum-235 ond St., Pomeroy, ,Ohio 457811. ·
Gary Termeer and John · i~ &lt;~bout the s1ze of ,a walput, . The
American
Junior
·. The center of the earth Bernans ce&gt;&lt;halrmen.
. but this small amount pro- . Miss Pageant }Is spon•
. .'
!i
d duces as much heat energy
lies nearly 4,000 miles be·
neath our feet· to date man
Addillonal in1orma on an
as that produced by J,50&lt;! sored by · John ·H. Breck,
has . drilled 6 miles inio the r~gistration fo~ may be tons .of coal.
Kodak, and Kran l"oods,
earth.
obtained by contacting OFARA

'

'

dozers, ·2 size loaders. Work

from automatic diSpensers.
No experience needed • we

Vinyl interior, beige with brown vinyl top, 350 !ngine,
· power $leering, power brakes, turbohydramatic,· factOry
air conditioned, rad io. like new White-wall fires. fine

Hartford,

•

EXPERT
Wheel
Alignment
-

Doler &amp; End fo.ll ...r work,
Reliable person · from this · ·ponds, basement, land.
· scaping. We have 2 size
tJrea to service and collect

1971 CHEVROLET
·
$2995 ~
B
!AI
4
do
1
1
I
ilh
1
.
II
.
· e r · or. oca ·Owner car w very 9w m eage.

Clifton and

•

fARlH MOVING

MAN OR WOMAK

$2295

Harotop coupe, local low_ mileage. 1-owner car, 350 Y·8
engine, 4 speed transmission, power stee'r ing, (Mot
teen.age drive,), green vinyl bucket seafs. consOle. rear
air deflector:;, sharp green finish, radio. Sharp is the word!

'

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

KOSCOt KOSMETICS (MINK
OIL BASE) . We have many
several new ones th}s month

.

IN

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l179S

2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires , clean in .
ter lor, Qr'een finish, radio, 2000cc engine, .4 speed .

CARRIERS
WANTED

•

OPPORTUNITY

•

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bbard, phone 992-5397 or 9923507.
9-26-tfc

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Window
Air Conditiouers
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
·electrical Work

Sadly missed by wife, Clara
I0-3-1tp

NOTICE

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QUALifY

• 1970:3CAMARO

'

.~usiness Opportunities

. .

·

lady, goo.O salary, room and

nHEIL"

the samel To some you are

since

•

Syracuse, now open Monday

Memory
IN MEMdRY od Daniel Rees.
.. who passed away Oct. 2, 1968.

not the same,
passed away.

•

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now · wtfh

for ry.ore than one incorre~t YARD . and Rumniage

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.'··@
' /#. .:.... -

p~bllsher will not be responsible.. :-:-:-=-::--'-~::----·-----:

.

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Notice
· · . , OEAD'I.INES ..
. ·· . RE;DUCE safe. and fa sf w i t~
, pay· oe~:oun·e
8e.fore Publlc.
otlon::..... .~. w ."Gwater
oBese pills,"
Tablets
&lt;5 P.iJ..
Mond,av
9 a.m..
Nelson E•Vap
.Drug :·
cancellation-- Corrections ' '
~
' 10-J-1tp .
Will be accepted untll9 a.m. for
DRtgfJ'~fW&amp;~~n
NEW Improved ." Zippies 1" lhe ·
Thl Publlstier · reserves the

.

Apple Grove ·

10-Tbe.llel)y Sentinel, llj:iddleportcPomeroy, 0 ., OCt. 3,' 1972
.
.

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.

By M'RS. HERBERffiOUSH
. . ·. A.cookout was ~ njliyed· at the
-,~_ home · of · Mr. and Mrs. Jim' ·
Gupp Saturday evening by Mr.
and Mrs . • E. H. · Stewart of
' Vandalia , Mr. and Mrs. Clif.. ·
lord .Jones of West Columbia,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Jones and·
family of Pt. Pleasant and Mr.
and Mrs . .Dana iones of
Parkersburg. The guestS also
sp.ent the weekend with Mr
and Mrs. Hupp and. sons.
·
Mr. lind. Mrs. Sam Ebersbach and children, Terry and
Keith, of Lancaster spent a
recent weekend ·with Mrs .
Edna Shields and'Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Beegle and other
relatives,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell
and cl).ildren 'of Letart, W. Va .,
·sp!:nt Sunday with Mr.· and ·
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
THEY GET THE MESSAGE, even though neither is very much with words . Young
Keith. Mrs. Lillie Hart of
John Paui.Kill 01 Lake Elmo, Minn. , and " permunent residen_t ol a recreational
Racine was also a guest of the
area near Webster, Wts. , seem to be striking up a perfect friendship.
. Haymans.
· Mr , and Mrs. Herbert
, , Shields·, Mrs . Doris Sayre at Ripley, W. Va., and visited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. and children spent Sunday with
attenaed the Farm ~ience his sister-in-law Mrs. Ferne B. Bill Robinson and family . Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson .
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Pierce
Review· at Columbus Tues~Ay , Hayman Thursday enroilte and Mrs. John Stobart and
have
moved to the Everette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith horne. They also ·ca!Jed on his daughter, Beverly, and his
were visitors in Belpre.
brother, .Mr. and Mrs. Ray mother, Mrs . Robinson, took Ran so m residence at An·
'
him to Columbus Sunday tiqui ty.
Mrs . Delores Reese and Hayman.
Mrs. Everette Ransom is
,
daughter, Beth, were Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Me- where he went by plane to Ft.
confined
to Veterans Memorial
dinner guests of her parents, Nickles and son of Bowman's Carson .
Mr. and Mrs. Everette Con- Run Road visited Lloyd Nic.e
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner Hospital due to a fall while
nally.
Monday eveni~g .
spent'lneweekend at the Shady papering at her home in An·
tiqui ty.
Mr. and Mrs ~ Tom Brut van
Mr . and Mrs. George Rest Park at Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs . Erwin
and children of Cincinnati Donohew and children of
Mr . and Mrs. Benny Boggess
Sp!:nt a weekend with their Columbus spent a weekend sp~nt Sunday with the latter'•s Gloeckner and son, David,
· · grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. with his parents, Mr . and Mrs. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Everette . spent a few days with Mr. and
· ·' Ernest Grimm.
Roy Donohew and Greg.
, Clark and family at Cot- Mrs. Larry Badge)y, Fairfax,
Va . Christi Badgely ac·
E-2 Mike Robinson of Ft. tageville .
;. . Rev. Paul Hayman of Galion
.
companied
them home Sunday
Mr. and Mfs. Lloyd Sayre
attended the Pastors Retreat" Carson, Colo., spent a weekend
for a two weeks visit.
'
Mrs. Ada Norris returned
,.
home Sunday after a week's
,• ,
visit.
with her daughters, Mrs.
.,
Golda Story, at Darwin and
.•,
Mrs. Elsie Davis at Park-·
ersburg.
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Pearson
moved recently ·1rom their
farm which tliey sold to Sam
Cwnrnins , to ·their new home
they built at Dorcas.
Bill Wheeler went to
·l .
Columbus Sunday to begin his
st
udies a t Ohio State
. t. ~'
Unive rsi ty. Keith Ashley
.I .
reswned his sutides at Ohio
University in Athens.
Arthur Hill, who is enrolled
at Morehead University at
Morehead , Ky. , ·spent a
weekend with his mother, Mrs.
Dallas Hill and children .
Mr . and Mrs. Pete Bearhs of
Portsmouth, Va., spent a
week 's vacation with her
,.
mother , Mrs. Erma Wilson .
I '
'
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Casper
and grandchildren, Billy and·
Brian Dye of Columbus, Sp!:nt
CAMBODIAN SOLDIERS kneel to quench their thirst with muddy water from mora weekend with Mrs. Dolly
tar blast holes about 10 miles south of Phnom Penh, the capital.

•i

A&amp;RA

next Jan.

..
•- F,

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Retail value 39¢

r.

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News, Notes · ·

-

-

!,.")

•

="f'- ------------------..,

.sc

•

.Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker

STEE R.l
TO

HAYMAN'S
AUOION
HOUSE

ice

1

''like' p...... .
-

"11:f

••It

•

'

I

WMP0/1390. ··

with each $J gasOline pu.rchase•

•

Bold and lively Poppy Red coffee' mugs.
Smart, contemporary styling, Generous B·cunce size.
They ~tack to ~ave you storage space •
Oven and dishwasher safe, too.
.Start collecting a set now at participating
Ashland Oil stations.

.

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a

11 'y~u don't vole: ,, s lo ke pu.tl• rig a bl1 ~dfo l d on

what 1S ;n your own best 1nt'eres1 an? the pest m1eres1
uncle Sam. You ~an ' te•pect hrm to see your pomt ol vrew . of your ne1ghb0rs and communoty. And be at
'. unless yo"(ell him what it 1s,
.
, .your polhng place on November 7th.
. The nght and prrv1lege of votrng IS at the very loun·
. Vote.
{
'\
d tlon of our system of gOvernment . It means that each
o...•~ .. ~ .. rw u·SOI~Y ~·~~~ te•! r.uowoOO •a 1ne NAOA CO&lt;te o1
.._
. •
a
.
h
f
d I II th
. 8U~IO·~~ PI-;u;lu;;e~ Wl!l/eil~tV!CO·Of!'C1'1IeG01Ujf'hll1&gt;0h Wro1tt •
•
of IJS ,can express opfmons w 1t out ear. .an e
~ · · ' .....,buulyoMOiabl~~&lt; cat~•umef '~e•ar.ons sf!' . . oc:t
goVernment what derectton we want 1t to fo~ lo w. S•~ply . S!IU\.'1 N w wnto•.,o•on o c XIOOe ~

tiy vottng.

; ·
· ·
ee Informed on the(af\dldateS
and the ISS~es . Decide

X!OO K ·

-

l ••tN ~··oov ~&lt;i. U'

'ott

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One Ina series flltsonltd by N.A.D.A., The Daily Sltltlnol and,ihe Tri•C.. nty Automobile Dealers A,ssoc',

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We honor BankAmtrfHrd llld
Mester Char,. crtdil c.rcls.

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I IW;I t•w c • ...... .. . """" '11 ''" 11 0

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National Automobile Dealers Association
O U•t-II !Gitl•h lai iO&lt;I OI ~ ft'll!'ltl

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•.......,::.!:·

• •

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.Matchlns aii·P.,rpose canid.,~
Only 99C with any purcha~.
.
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I·
I .•'Of the people, by th• people, for the paopl~!'
i
.
But only" you
vote.
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11-'l'he DaUySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 3, 1972
~

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Sentinel Classi/ieds ·o et Action! Sentinel Classi/ieds Get Res·ul~s!
2 rii!Ais
.Po '· .
., ·
·~
~·.
mtro·.·' .. . .
Busm·.es··s S·e·m'·.•·c.es'.
BUSINESS
OF
• tor Co
'

IN~::f!'::!~N

', . ~ .

.i

•

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riOhl lo edll or reject any ad;
. deemed objectional . The

. 1971 PINTO FORD

great

iron pill

Vitam in c. Nelson Drug.
10-3-2tp

Insertion·~.

t

·
R'IlTES

Sale,

MiddiT,rl City Haii ..Oclo.ber

tFor wan\ Ad Service
6th an 7th, Lad ies Auxiliary
5 cents per \¥ord one insert_i on ., of Middleport Fire Dept.,
Minimum Charge 7Sc
beg ins at 9 a.m . Donations
12 cents per word thr:et~
accepted.

consecutive lns..-tlbns.. •·

10-3-3tc
con · - - - - - - - - - ·
YARDS 1
.
·t

18 ceMtS p&amp;r •word 5"'
secutive .Insertion$ . •
· 2s Per Ci!!nt Dlsc·ount on pal e
a e, you name I • we've
ads and ads paid within 10 .d.ays. · got it. Thursday, Friday and
CARD OF TH"NKS
Saturday, 43 Coal Street ,
'

&amp;

OBITUARY

Mid~eport .

.

sqo tOr so word minimum .
JQ.J •.4tc
Each addltiona1 word 2c .
-~-------

BLifiD ADS

RUMMAGE Sale, October 6th
Additional 25c ,Char"ge · per
and 7th, Hughes Building
Advertisement.
· ·
.
OFFIC.E HOUlt\- . .
acr o~s · fro'm Middleport
d :JO a.mr,IQ '5 :00tP .m .. tJatl)l

· 8:30 a.m. to
Satur~ay .

11: 00

Librar y, Beta Sigma Phi. .

llloo

I0-3-3tc

.

In

NEEDLECRAFT Shop,' Rt. 124.
lhru Friday by Thelma Lytle .
10·3·31c

--

·'Dear 'husbahCI, 1f' s lonesome
here without you/ I miss you

'

every day ; Life doesn't seem

torgotlen. to others. part ol
the pas f. To me who loved and

lost you; YoUr memory will
always last. !f's a lonesome
. house without you and sad Is

the way : for life and home are

·-

you
•

.

YARD SALE, everything from
· A to Z; October ·1st lo- 8th,
days and evenings; Howard

c:

Russell residence, Wolf
Pen. Road off Rt. 143, watch·

for signs.

10. 1·3tc

.

· condition.

more. For local interview,

Pomeroy ~Motor . C~.

992'-2448
7 omeroy, 0.

new products since the 'for·

matlon of this Company. Also . ORGAN and piano

i n~truction

graduate of

Cincinnati

by

Auto Sales
Help Wanted
WOMAN lo live in with elderly '70 BONNEVILLE , 2 door

Hardtop, factaq air, power
steering and brak"es ; phone

991-5934.

10-1-61c

1970 PLYMOUTH Duster 340 :
phone '192-3451 or 992-5488.
I0-1-6tp

- - -- - --,.
'70 OLDS, 4 door. A-1 condition.

38.000 miles; cal l 992-2023.
10.3-3tc

For Rent
2 BEDROOM, Furn..

all ·

ele.ct ric ap.artm.ent,. down ·

slaors. Avaolable thiS week.
Phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
_ _ _ _ _ __ _1_0·2·3tc
PHONE 992-2156 .
2 OR 3 BEDROOM home in
Mason: call Pt. Pleasant 675·
1684.
CARHOP wanled ; apply ito
10-3-3tp

The.Daily Sentinel

·- ~

On Most American ~rs
~-GUARANTEED­

Phone 992·2094

'

SMJllLNElSON
. MOTORt
INC.
Plh H2-2i74'
· Pomeroy

Pomeroy. Horne &amp;Auto
OpenHil5
.
Monday thru Slturct.v
606 E. M&lt;lin, Pomeroy, 0. ·

~;:======:::::,.:J 'S'~E-·US FOR :. ~wnlngs, ·lforln
~ROOFING
. doors
and wlndo~•. carpOrts,j
marquees, ~lumlnum .,ldlng
and railjng. •A. Jacob, Min
EAGlE INDUSTRIES
• HEATING
·
'
representative, . f'or ,free
es
tl mates. ··phone Cha"l'i
:AUTOMOSfLE
lnsurance
'tii!er·
Department BV
PLUM
IN
•
·
B
G
Lisle, Sv.racuse, V.;. ;y;
·
cancelled?
Lost'
·your
3938 Meadowbrook Road
operator's license? Call m
eCARPENTR y •, .~Johnson a"d Son. Inc. 3+tt~;
St. Louis Park,
2966.
.
Minnesota 55426
'
6-15-tfc
~~WING MAt:HINES. Repair:
' - - - - - - - - - - " - - ' - -- - - - ' - - . ··SPOUTING
servi~. all m~kes. 992-228~.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Wanted To Buy
•PAINTING
Authorized Singer Sales a~d
Employment Wanted
.

'SEPTIC tank; cleaned. Miller
. .Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
. 662-3035.
..
. 2-12-tf(

number :

'-'-'-~"'--

Va.

-

write, · Include telephone

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
-t&gt;!)MEROY, OHIO
,: .

W.

Free Estimates .. · We also
haul fill dirt, top $oil. DUmp
trucks and low.boy for hire,
See Bob or · Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alt~r 1 p.m. or phone 992.
5232.

establish accounls for you.
Car. references, and $995.00
to $1,995 .-llO cash capital
necessary. 4 to 12 hours
weekly could net' good pari
time Income . Full • lime

.

'5.55

From- tHe largest ·
or
Bulldozer Radiator to' the·
Sn\all,sl Heater Core.
-Nalllin Biggs .
Radiator
·-· Specialist

done by hour or COfitract.

!

16 TO 20 FT·. camping trailer.
Phone 992-7106.
110112
10-1-3tc HOUSEWORK
Mulberry, Pomeroy, bottom
apartment, downstairs.
GALLIPOLIS resident wants to
9-29-4tc
buy a , business. Will buy
busloess and property or
business with lease. Call For Sale
Gallipol is 446-«08.
· Limestone, excelsior
9-20-12tc ·COAL,
Salt
Works, E. Main St..
- - - - - -- - ~&gt;omeroy , Phone 992-3891.
OLD. Furniture: . oak tables,
4-12-tf&lt;:
orlJans, dishes, clocks, brass
beds. or complete households. 16' CAMPING TRAILt:K,
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Shasta, like new. Phone 985·
Pomeroy, Ohio: Call 992-62t) ., 3849.
6-28-tlc'
9-7-30tc

;&gt;ervlce. We Sharpen Scl.stors.
.
..Jo19;tfc
. ;• .

For Free Estimate
PHONE 992:2550

O;OELL WHEEL allgnme•
located at Crossroads, Rl. 12~.
Complete front . end service, .
For Sale
tune ~P and brake service.
APPLES , Fihpatrlck Or·
Wheels • balanced elec_chards, State Route 68~.
tronlcally.
All
work
. Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
guarssnteed.
A,.,.,.,I'\Ahl•
8-30-lfc ·niles . Phone 742·3232 , or
. 992-3213. .
7-77-Tff:
--1-22 x 8 FURNISHED trailer, '
good condition, $800; 1 - 32 x DOZER and back hoe-· work,
8 furnished , trailer, 2 ponds and septic tanks, ditbedroom, bath, good tires,
ching service; top soil, fill .
$1,200; Reynolds Flower · dirt, · limestone; B&amp;K ExShop, Mason; W.Va., 77J.S147.
ca·vatlng. Phone 992·5367,
9-27-6tp
Dick Karr, Jr .
9-1-tfc
COLONIAL style stereo, AMFM radio, 4 speakers, 4 speed
• t
.•
record changer. Balance Mobile Homes For, . Sale
, SEPTIC TANKS t.~t:ANED
.
$78.52. Use our budget terms.
RE~SONABLE rllte9. Ph. 4-46-.
Call 992-7085.
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,;
10-l-6tc
Owner
&amp; Operator. ! : .
· Air Conditioners
------~•
-1?c.lf&lt;
•Awnings
MODERN walnut sle~eo, AMFM radio, features 4 speed
'• Underpinning

.

------

person ; Craw's Steak House.

-~ ·

Bring Your Unhulled

9o29-61c TRAILER . Brown' s Trailer
Park, phone 992-3324.
10-3-lfc

WALNUTS

plus monthly specoals. All
Conservalory of Music Phone
. these in addlfion to the 992-3825.
·
onglnals. Ladies, we would
·
9-28-12tc
chaoger, 4 speakers, separate
like very much for you to try - - - - - , - - - - - , TO OUR
controls.' Balance $68.41. Use Complete mobile hame
our budge! terms. Call 992- · ·service ~ plus glganllc'
these cosmetics and to serve VIRGINIA's Beauty Salon on
of Columb4s spe~t Sunday with
By Bertha Parker
' MECHANICAL .
7085.
you. Phone •fjelen Jane, 992- Success Road between
'display of mobile homes
Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobs Mrs. Ferguson 's a nd Mi·ss
· HULLER
10-1-6tc :atways
5113.
Tuppers Plains and Long
5-1 ·1k·
available at .. .
Parker's
mother,
Mrs.
Bertha
of
Colwnbus
visited
over
a
!
10-1-tfc
Bottom. Open 6 days; some
~::-::-~--,.sNAPPER riding . mower. 8
. Phone 667·3041 , recent weekend with Mr. and Parker. Miss Parker remained
llEA,o~:MIX WNt.RIHI:
. MILLER
SKATE.AWAY, open Wed- evenings
h.p.. ·1972 model, 2 in stock.
Your
Walnuts
will
·
be
Operator , Virginia Hayman . Mrs . Pearl Jacobs and at- for several days' visit.
. deflvitred right' to ·:irO',U,t
nesday, Friday and Saturday
save $100; Gravely Tractor
9-14-30tc
pro/ect. Fast and easy. 'Fifti
Hulled
Free
of
Charge
evenings from 7: 30 p.m . to
MOBILE HOMES
Mr. and Mrs, James Gilmore
tended lh~ local church on
Sales, Pomeroy, Ohio.
est
males . Phone 992-32«
10:30 p.m. Available for
10-1-3tp
attended the Jackson Apple and We Will Pay 'You.
Sunday
morning.
1220
Washington
Blvd.
'
·
Goegleln
· Ready-Mix Co.:
private parties on Monday,
Middleport,
Ohio. ·
· .. .
:423-7521
BELPRE,
0.
FestivaL
Charles
Diehl
has
been
Tuesday and Thursday
3 YEAR old mare, brown and
6-JO.Ifc
evenlhgs, also Saturday and
returned ·home from UniverMr. and Mrs. Fritz Stahl of
· white : 18ft. boat ; phone 843· ,~----------------~~.·~
Per
Hundred
Sunday afternoons. Schedule ,
2778.
sity Hospital in Columbus New Marshfield and Mr. and
1971 LIBERTY Mobile-'·Home, 'BACKHOE AND DOtER "!or~::
your,p_arties early . Phone 985Pounds
10-l-31c
65x12, 3 bedrooms. !1/2 baths,
Mrs.
Bill
Perry
of
Athens
where
he
had
been
·a
patient
for
Septic tanks Installed . Georqo
3929\Qr 985-9996.
natural
gas
heal,
$5500;
only
In
recognition
of
"Education
·
(.BHI) Pullins." Phone 992-2p8.
visited
recently
with
Mr
.
.
and
two weeks.
10-1-12tc
Aller they
•
KING Coronet and Bundy
lived in 5 months. Phone 992••15-lfc
Sunday" on Sept. 24, the
'
Clarinet; phone 992-6078.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl of Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
are Hulled
3903.
•
10-1·3tc
Church School superin· Stockdale visited recently with
9-28-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
- ~LEGAL
Real Estate For Sale
tendent and the, teachers Mr . and Mrs. Norman Mrs. Georgia Diehl and M&lt;s.
~fAGNM~~~~~~
were nonored at the Alfred Schaefer.
'CASij paid for ali ina'f&lt;es· ·oud
Bertha Parker attended the Start Buying October 2, 1972. I
Price Smash!
· models of mobile homes.
MANAGEMiiH.'F AIU)
United Methodist Church.
Senior
Citizens
picnic.
Mrs. Hugh Ferguson and
CIRCULA:'I'ION
'Phone area code 614-4~3"sal
1. Title of Publ ication - Th e Recognized were Lloyd son, James Ferguson, Dick
hELAND REALTY.
Mrs. Roy Howell has
.
. . ~.!!:tilt
PANTS
&amp;
·JEANS
•
.
· · ·I
Daily Sen!inel and Sunday Dillinger, Howard Flanders, McManara, Miss Cleo Parker returned to Indiana where Mr.
608 E. M&lt;lln St.
Times -SenlineL
· M
~~eroy
Date of Filing _ oct . 2, 1972 .
yrtle Flanders, Doris
Howell is employed.
SALE I
..
......225P
Real
Estate
ror
Sale
,
,
3. Frequency . ol Issue : Dillinger, Nellie Parker, Helen
Dennis Gilmore, son of Mr.
Buy 2 Pairs and
~u~~d."/. through Fr iday and Woode, Osie Fotlrod and Vicki . June Stearns will lead the and Mrs . James Gilmore, has
HOUSE .In Long Soilom, phgnel
GEl 1 l'AIR FREE
.
985-3529.
•
i
•· Location of Known Office ot Carr . Several assistant program.
" VERY DESIRABLE''
enrolled in a school in
'All kinds, all ~lzes ror u.~:: .. ,
1
6·11
-lf~
,
P.O. Box 267
992-3891 ' women, young men, bi)ys·
~~~~~~t~~"Jh 1 ~ ~sf:9~rt Street, teachers were absent.
Refreslunents were · served Nelsonville.
We are fortunate to offer this
Pomeroy, Ohio
i5'oM~ROY House,6rooms'i charming ll/2 story . house~
5.
Locanon
of
!h e
Thelma Henderson, Helen by the hostess.
· and qlrls. Hurry to ...
Headquarters or Genera l W od
N'
b
bath, 2 large porches, large with three nice bedrooms
Business Off ices ol lhe
o e, ma Ro inson and
42ndAnnlversaryNoted
lot, newly painted; phone 992.
POMEROY
located In a fine neigh·
PubiiJhers: 111 .courl Street. Clara Follrod of Alfred
OnSunday,Sepl. 24, Mr. and
wA'NTED - Old . upright
3394.
'
·
'~'•·
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
borhood.
This home has new
Pom~roy , Ohio ~5769 .
.
,W
,
S · t .
b
pian os, grand pianos, old
10· 1-Jtp· paneling and ceiling tile, a
,_... Phone 992-2181
6. ames and Addresses of
omens
OCie y,
ac- Mrs . Ho art Swartz were
0
pump organs. Any condition.
'
.
- .
::-:-:-=: : - - - -Pub! sher .
Editor .
and companied by. Evelyn Lehman entertained at the home or Mr.
Paying $10 each . Write giving
garage and fruit storage
'RACINE - 10 room house/ building, plus many more
1
9
~~~~~~::' s. ~~~:.' ,/;~~1 !~~~;: and Edith Harper of Tuppers and Mrs. Gerald Swartz of
directions. Willen Piano Co., MISCELLANEOUS SALE. Old
bath, basement, garage, two
Ohio.
·
Plains attended the Athens Marietta, the oc~asion being
Box 128. Sardis. .Ohio 43946. picture frames, depression
..ots . Phone 949-4313.
1 extras you . must see. A
glass, chrome breakfast set,
9
2
4-5-11~ REAL BARGAIN FOR
M~~~~o;~rt,c8~~~er Tannehill , District meeting of the the 42nd wedding anniversary
· 9-6fp washer, sofa, Con lon mangle,
---,---~-=,;...=.. ',. $11,000.00.
Managing Editor , Roberl women's society held at the of the parenU&gt;. A decorated
For Rent
Sunbeam deep fryer, utility 8 ROOM house and
· "ANOTHER TEMPTING
ba.th,
nice
cart, porch swing, lawn
Hoeflich
. Pol"eroy, Oh io.
Nelsonville United Methodist cake was served with the noon
Mrs·. Everett Ray Johnson,
large
lot.
natural
gas,
built·in
BUY"
1. Owner : The Ohio Valley
ROOM &amp; bath furnished chairs,. mattresses and
cabinets
in
kitchen.
Close
to
Publl$hin~ co .. Pomeroy , Oh io; Church on Wednesday, Sept. meal. Other guests besides the Audra, Jeffery, Eric of 4 apartment,
Accent
on
value Is placed
springs, ladders, dishes. brlc·
utilities paid; no
radio
station
in
Bradbury.
1
rightly·
here,
~ndy place,
~~c~~~rd E·w?n~e n . f' dd~g~;;; 20. A short report of the family, were Nina Robinson Columbus, Mrs. James children or pets ; Bailey ' s' a-brae, odds and ends; 10 · Phone 992-2602.
a.m.
to
6
p.m.
;
October
6th
&amp;
with
lwo
porche.
s, . 1 story
Columbus. Ohio ; Mrs. Edgar s. meeting was given during the and Clara Follrod, ln the af. Johnson, Jamie Sue, Tood, Stare. Upper Business Block,
9-29-12tc frame with three bedrooms,
7th,
462
S.
51h
St..
Middleport,
~~~nngd, Th;~~~b~~ies ,O~i~. ; Wednesday evening prayer ternoon 'they visited another Teresa of Pomeroy and Mrs. Middleport.
,
10-J.6tc
located In Rutland, GOING
10-l-6tp Ohio.
truslee tor stephen Boles , hour and also during the son, Mr. aild Mrs. Harold Larry Johnson, Gina Rae,
PT PLEASANT - 6' room FOR $9,800.00.
Katherl~e
1usanBoles
Boles,
Roberl
worship
hour on Sunday Swartz . and family of Tahnee and Brady were 1 BEDROOM house. kitchen 1973 TRAILERS and campers in
house, 1'12 baths, recreation
"WORTH THE MONEY"
Boles,
Jan1ce
; Lynn
B.
.
room.
new built-in kitchen, This two bedroom house
stock
for
service
quality
Kauftmon , George w. Byers mormng.
Williamstown , W.'Va.
Saturday evening visitors of and balh, partly furnished.
musl sell , leaving town. Days
and price - vlsll Camp
Adulls only . Phone 992-7126.
-Ill.
Dione N. Byers. cuslodlan , The
Women 's. Society of
Word has been received here Mrs. Helen Johnson.
phone 992-3502, evenings! needs some repair, bul not
Conley, Starcrafl Sales, Rt. 62
for Beth Noland Byers. All
. .
· that much for the money,
addresses Columbus, Ohio .
Chrtsltan Serv1ce held its of ·the death of Linder RanMiss Naomi Jo Smith of 12 FT. WIDE mobile home, 1
N. of Pt. Pleasant behind Red · phone 675·2372.
Carpel Inn.
8-30-tfc nice lot, and excellenl
8. Known Bondhold ers. regular meeting Tuesday, dolph of Wilmington following Concord College was weekend bedroom , gas heat, air garage with attached room.
9-29-7tc
Morlgoges.
and
Sec ur ity1 Sept · 19 with an attendance of a lengthy illness.
Vl.sl' tor of her paren'", Mr. and conditioned, phone 9.49-2261,
IDEAl ·5:AcR·E RANCH. [ake THIS ONE YOU MUSTSEE,
Holders Owr)l
ng Olher
or Holding
Percenl of more of Tola l 10 members and three visitors
Weekend
guests
Of Mrs . Charley Smith. She also Albert HilL Racine. 9.27.61c TWIN Needle sewing machine Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975. IN RUTLAND onlv $5,500.00.
1972 model In walnut stand. No down . No Interest. $25 mo ..
AmounlStcurthes
ot B~~ds,: Morlgag
es or at the home
Genevieve Guthrie were Mr · visited Mr. and Mrs. Do,jle
'·- - - - - - - - "ATTENTION
other
Ohio Valley
· .. of Isola Taylor ·
1
All features buill In to make for 119 mos. VacaNon
INVESTORS"
Bank, Gallipolis. Ohio.
The meeting was opened by and Mrs. Delbert Yost and Knapp and family and Mr. and 2 BEDROOM trailer, adults
fancy designs and do stretch Paradise . Free Brochure . If you're llle man who can
Average . No. Copies Each the. president1 Nellie Parker • family and Ella Yost of Sugar Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
only
d ocated on Old 33; phone
sewing . Also buttonholes, Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
Issue Dunng Preceding 12
992-6385 .
blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash 2001DD. Alameda. California see the ct.wn ,you may be
Months
With prayer b~ Mrs. 4!hman . Grove. The latter remained to
Mr. and M.rs. William Boyce
9·27-6tc
Interested In lhls 1&lt;40 plus
94501.
price
' or terms available.
Ci;~·ula~~;;~ 1 .and Nalure 01 The hymn, "Marching to Zion" spend ' a week with Mrs. or Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Phone 992-5641 .
10-3-JOfp acres near Rutland. Barn
Ho'ward Russell visited 1~AND 4 RWM tu'rnfshed lflfif'
A. Total No. Copies Pr in ledc was sung. The number of sick · Guthrie.
10·3-61c
and other buildings Included
Dally 5 800 s d 11 600
unf•rnlshed. apartm~nls.
5
ROOM
house
and
bath,
B. P~ld t lr~~~a~i~n , '1. Sal es and shut-in calls re~o~ted was
Ruth Atherton of Carthage Saturday evening with Mr. and
"'hone 992. 54~.
,
_V_A_C_U_U_M
_ c- 011"'
'..,..-e-r-. - E
- l-ectro located on Brick Street, for only $15,000.00.
. HENRY E. CLELAND
through Dealers and Carriers, · 40. The pledge to m1ss10ns was Gap Is very Hi in Camden- Mrs. Harley Johnson .
'
·
.. · .
fi~tic
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Rutland; lnlerior being
· REALTOR ,
S)reet vendors and Counter made for 1973
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
Mrs. Paul' Pierce and fam1'ly ·· •
Sales: Do ily 4,264, Sunday 7,768
. ·.
SMALL trailer 10 m(les north ot ·has all cleaning attachments remodeled ; phone 742-3334.
PHONE.992-225t
plus the new Electro Suds for
J0-3·12tc
. 2. Moll Subscriplions : Daily
The nomtnaltng report was Her brother and sister-in-law, of Mason was Tuesday visitor
Pomeroy. Ideal for couple.
1•268 ' Sunday 3' 366 ·
shampooing
carpel. Only- - - - - - - -- .
given
by
Isola
Taylor
as
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Atherton
of
her
mother,
Geneva,
and
$65
a
month.
Phone
992-7'79.
C. Total Pcud Clrculafton :
· .
.
..
cashPhone
price992-5641.
or ferms I· \
Dolly 5,532 ; Sunday 11 ,134.
follows : President, Nellie have been with' her.
Mrs . Larry Johnson and·
9·29-tfc $27.50.
available.
D . Free Dillribution by MaU , Parker · vice president June
Ha' rry Swartz, a ,..nolient
at family ,
' 10-3-6tc
Carrier or Other Means
'
'
...
2 ROOMS. unfurnished; ·call
. 1, Samples. complimenlo ry. Stearns ; secretary , Helen Holzer llospital, is reported · Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
evenings 992-3429.
1972 REPossEssEo 8 track
;~,d s~~3;/1~~~ Copies: Da lly • Woode; • treasurer, · Nina · improving but still in intensive children ol Rutland visited
9·29-3tp
stereo, jus! like new. Take
110 Mechanic Street
2. Copies Dlslributed 1o News Robmso.n; secretary of care unit.
SaturdayeveningwithMt ..and -~---.....,.over payments of S7.25 per
mo. or pay balance of $88.47.
Agenls. but nol sold : Dally 27. missions Eleanor Boyles·
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode Mrs. DOyle Knapp and family.
Sunday 1S7
·
'
'
'l'
J\TQT1C'D
Phohe 992-5331. •
Pomeroy, Ohio . 45769
E. Tolol · Distribu! lon : Da ily literature and publications, and Connl of Circleville came · Franklin · Russell of !)lid·
H'
·
L
10.3-61c
5,631' Sunday , 11.445.
Thelma Henderson· mem· last weekend to assist William dleport was a Tuesday evening · 1- .,.--,- - - - - - - - ----~NEXT Td SCHOOL
F . Offtce Un , Left -Over , ·
·
. .'
.
LEFT In lay-away, 1972 model
Unoctounted . Spoiled After bershlp and ·cultivation, Osle Carr, Sherman Henderson and caller of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
·.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3 bedroom modern home. Nice
zig-zag sewing machine. This
Prlnllng ; De ily 169; Sunday 155. Mae Fi&gt;llrod· spiritual life Chas. D. Woode with hay Russell.
batll, large living and utility room, Concrete front porch .
G .. Totak Do ll y 5,800; Sunday Ge
.
G 'th .. h ·
'
M
machine makes buttonholes,
Lot 100&gt;.400 well dri1lned. S16,000.00.
·
11,600.
·
nev1eve u rte; c 31rman baling and mowing p&amp;sture. · r. and Mrs. Don Russell,
darns, embrQ.Id.eries. Pay
.
.
'
NEW
Actual Number of Copies of of nominations 1 Florence
Mr. ·and Mrs. Robert White of Mr. and Mrs. Steve .Haggy of
balance of $311.80 or pa{. $5.55
,
Single hsu&amp; Published Ne1rest
FULL BASEMENT-3 bedrooms, nice kitchen, bullt·lns.per mo. Phone 992-533 .
..
!o Flllnt Dale
Spencer. The report was ac- Keno joined the families for Akron and Mr . and Mrs.
stove
and refrigerator. 2 be Ills, garage. Ready to move
10-3-6tc
11. E~lenl· itnd Nature
of cepted and the above officers supper at the William Cilrr
· Ronnie ·Russell and dau•hter
.
Into.
Clrcutef100
•
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rt
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·A. Total No . Copies Prlnled, elected to take office Jan. I, home Saturday evening. The were weekend visitors of ·Mr.
POTATOES, home grown
VACANT LAMD ·
Kennebecs
and
Irish
Cob·
Dally
5.850 ; Sunday, 12,250.
1973
I
I
Woodes
returned
to
Circleville
.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Russell.
~ACRES
More
or Ins to hunt, camp or vacation
B. Paid Circulation
·
,
biers
;
fre,.tl
supply
available
RL(IIand
Township.
On
a good gravel road. Only $5,000 oo'
!. .Solos Through D·ealers and
Vari ,o us fund , raising · l11te Saturday evening.
thi.s week and next. Call 843REASONABLE
'
. '
Carriers, 'Street Vendors and proje •~
discussed
and
Sat
da
ts
f
M
d
2186, Paul Sayre, Portland,
Countor .Sales ' Dolly . 4 , 450 ,
c.., were
ur Y gues o r. an
BEDROOMSFull
baMment,
play
room,
'gas
forced
3
Ohio. Greal Bend Road. Rt.
.The Antarctic
cap covsunday 8-287.
. reports on findings g'iven . Mrs. Vere Swartz were Mr. ·and
air fur~ce, 3 RO'Ches, large lot. Asking on)y$8500,00.•
338.'
2. Moll Subscrlpilons: Dolly Florence Spencer was named · Mrs. Murray · Hopkllfs and ers about 6 million square
.
.
RURAL
. ·
.
t.m; Sunday, 3,377. ·
h
.
For. bergalns gelora. Be
9-28-6tc
miles.
,
c. Tolol Po.ld Circulation : to '.i~veatigate I e sa 1e of · grandson of . Dayton, Sarah
RENOVATED- All new inllde with 'wall to ' ll'tell carsmart and Christmas shop
Dolly 5,729; Sunday 11.664.
· napkins and report at the · . 'Woode aM Sharon Swartz of
early, where some.,lng can
JUST TAJQN IN, Singer . poling.: All rooms penoled. Gas forced al~ furnace: City
. D. Free Distribution by Moll,
•·
water. Located ·on 124. Only Sl 1,500,
. ·
.··
·
'l
be
fOund
~r
each
ITtlmber
of
·
. Sewing Mlchlne. Will "'ll for
Ctl'rltr or Other Means. ·
October meeting.
.
Coolville. · ,. ..
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tht
family.
·.·
·
·
smell
·
baltnct
of
$36.21
or
.
.
117
ACRES
.
.
.
1, $emplos. CompllfJieritary., · 'Thellna Henderson led the
M and Mrs Chas D Woode
peymenfs may be arranged. · SUTTON TOWNSHIP - 6 room houM, barn end olh~
and Other Froo Copleo; Dolly
f.
the. booklet
r.
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50; 5vnday 132.
program . · rom ·
, attended Homecoming at the
We sell retail &amp; wholesale!' '' . Phone 992-5331 .
·
buildings:· Free gea wllll 011 woll. A~lng S20,00o,OO, • ·
2. copies Dlotrlb~tod !o New• "Bridge to the World" relliting Eagle: Ridge ·community
Special welcome to all
9-7-tfc
Agtflll, but not oold :. Dolly 20; to
"·- · 'K ''l3. Church last Sunday afternoon:
dealers! Follow the crowd, · _ ......__ _ _ _ _ _..:.,._
Ni·w '
Sundey 150.
·
evangeuam or ey
Frld~y.
Oclo
.
ber
6just
off
the
8
TRACK
STEREO.
freight
2 BE;DROOMS-Belll. llielectrlc'llome. Be~tment. Nlct
E. Total Dlstrlbutlon c Dolly 'Readings were given by.·
Mrs. Clara "'ollrod
onont
p
'damalltd, In belluttful walnut
2,7tt; Sund•v 11,9.. 6.
·
.
.,..
...r
lot on good c~ry ~oad neer RMCI~vlllo. ~ly 112.000.00. ·
Byconsore.
WIIIMIIfor
$101.50
or
omeroy
·Middleporf·
F. Ofllct use. Loft .over. several
members
and severaldayslaslweek with liet
·pass
on
old
Rl.
7
at
Laurel
pay
$1.50
per
week.
Phone
992·
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Untccounttd, Spoiled After ' discussions followed: · The aunt, Pbeobe Hueston at Uttle
STOP.
IN
AT
TilE
RE/IL
ESTATE
CENTER,
AND
TRY
·Cliff.
·
5331
.
'''"""':
Dally 51;
Sundtli
304. closing pr~yer ·w~ given
·
by Hocklng,aSilatlnginbe'rcare.
·
·
G. TOTAL:
Deily
Si850;
US FOR A GOOD BUY. IF YOU LIST YOUR PROPERl'Y
9-7-tfc·
1
An~ I inlle west 0t 'Rock
WITHUSANDNOSALE,
THERE WILLB~ NO COsT TO
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M·tit
liN
olotomeoh
Helen,
Woode,
·
·.
Mn,
,
Addle
Scarberry
of
1
· Springs Felrtrounds:
.
YOU.
·
· ,
~DL'E
JIUPIIrH,
~~:.·
w •e •••• ere correct The ne~ meeting will be Chesapeal\e spent Sundal with
SALE
STARTS1100
P.M.
l.fO lUNDAY IHOWINGS
. Jf4~vlew .Kennels,
... .•
YOUR DIN.
liN ....,CMAIID I. OW IN . 'fueaday, Oct. 17, with the Mrs. 1Kate Honacher and
FRIDAY, OCT, 6
HELEN L. T!AFOIID, ASIOC!ATI
.
flO) 1, 1tc
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pillee to be IMOUDced later, family.
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Laurel Cliff News Notes

Alfred
Social Notes

$

NOTICE

...

Excelsior
SaH Works, Inc.

w Ifpen,

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~ . Herbert
w~~~.~Roush
!o~:
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....
·Benefits
of
Over
$400
To
Winner·
s
and son, Roger,
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and Jeff Miller spent Saljlrday • ·A scholarship and bond$ High School ln. Racin~.
1Jl!IY be ~ before the
evening with Mr, and Mrs. valued at more than .$4QO will
This was the tentative plan final night of !he flqeant.
· be given to the winners in the agreed upon by r.teigs County
Meigs . County hlah ldlool ·
· Da~a Lewis at Clifton. •
Wesley Pierce of NelsonviJie 1973 Meigs County Jwiior Miss Junior Miss, Inc., last ~~:eek . senior girlsiWill blveunW Oct.
· is visiting hi~ grandparents, Pagea~t Nov, 18 a~ Southern The scholarships and bonds 14 to enter the Plltanl. 1be
• ••
Me an,d. Mrs,· Ernest !lhuler,
.1
~winner.of the localplleanhriD
while hts parenU&gt;, Mr..- and Mrs.
·'
•
repr~5ent Meigs County at t1Ji!
. Robert Pierce of NelsOnville
·.
·
•
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·
· Ohio Junior Miss Paceant In
are vacationing at Niagar:,P F
Assn. Will Meet Nov~mber If) Mount vernon
13-11,
Falls and other points. · .
·
1973. She will C&lt;lllqlele for
Richard Rowe and family
COLUMBUS- The Second Conference Registration approximately ,U,200 in .
are movhig from the Theron Annual Ohio Fir.s t Aid &amp; Committee, Box 28282, Uncoln ·· scholarships and awards.
Johnson !ann to a mobile home Rescue Association · State Village Branch, Columbus,
. Entry fol'l11! for the Paleant •
lhe purchased in llacine.
Conference will officially open Ohio, 43228.
can be obtained by wrilinl:
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp and at8:30a.m.Friday, November
'.
Meigs County Junior Mbo,
sonshavemovedtotheCharles 10,atthelmperiaiHouseWest,
Uranium 's Emirgy
. Inc., 296 · • Wist- SicBurri residenoe.
·• · · '
Colllinbus, it was announced by . One pound _or uramum-235 ond St., Pomeroy, ,Ohio 457811. ·
Gary Termeer and John · i~ &lt;~bout the s1ze of ,a walput, . The
American
Junior
·. The center of the earth Bernans ce&gt;&lt;halrmen.
. but this small amount pro- . Miss Pageant }Is spon•
. .'
!i
d duces as much heat energy
lies nearly 4,000 miles be·
neath our feet· to date man
Addillonal in1orma on an
as that produced by J,50&lt;! sored by · John ·H. Breck,
has . drilled 6 miles inio the r~gistration fo~ may be tons .of coal.
Kodak, and Kran l"oods,
earth.
obtained by contacting OFARA

'

'

dozers, ·2 size loaders. Work

from automatic diSpensers.
No experience needed • we

Vinyl interior, beige with brown vinyl top, 350 !ngine,
· power $leering, power brakes, turbohydramatic,· factOry
air conditioned, rad io. like new White-wall fires. fine

Hartford,

•

EXPERT
Wheel
Alignment
-

Doler &amp; End fo.ll ...r work,
Reliable person · from this · ·ponds, basement, land.
· scaping. We have 2 size
tJrea to service and collect

1971 CHEVROLET
·
$2995 ~
B
!AI
4
do
1
1
I
ilh
1
.
II
.
· e r · or. oca ·Owner car w very 9w m eage.

Clifton and

•

fARlH MOVING

MAN OR WOMAK

$2295

Harotop coupe, local low_ mileage. 1-owner car, 350 Y·8
engine, 4 speed transmission, power stee'r ing, (Mot
teen.age drive,), green vinyl bucket seafs. consOle. rear
air deflector:;, sharp green finish, radio. Sharp is the word!

'

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

KOSCOt KOSMETICS (MINK
OIL BASE) . We have many
several new ones th}s month

.

IN

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l179S

2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires , clean in .
ter lor, Qr'een finish, radio, 2000cc engine, .4 speed .

CARRIERS
WANTED

•

OPPORTUNITY

•

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bbard, phone 992-5397 or 9923507.
9-26-tfc

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Window
Air Conditiouers
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
·electrical Work

Sadly missed by wife, Clara
I0-3-1tp

NOTICE

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QUALifY

• 1970:3CAMARO

'

.~usiness Opportunities

. .

·

lady, goo.O salary, room and

nHEIL"

the samel To some you are

since

•

Syracuse, now open Monday

Memory
IN MEMdRY od Daniel Rees.
.. who passed away Oct. 2, 1968.

not the same,
passed away.

•

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now · wtfh

for ry.ore than one incorre~t YARD . and Rumniage

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p~bllsher will not be responsible.. :-:-:-=-::--'-~::----·-----:

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Notice
· · . , OEAD'I.INES ..
. ·· . RE;DUCE safe. and fa sf w i t~
, pay· oe~:oun·e
8e.fore Publlc.
otlon::..... .~. w ."Gwater
oBese pills,"
Tablets
&lt;5 P.iJ..
Mond,av
9 a.m..
Nelson E•Vap
.Drug :·
cancellation-- Corrections ' '
~
' 10-J-1tp .
Will be accepted untll9 a.m. for
DRtgfJ'~fW&amp;~~n
NEW Improved ." Zippies 1" lhe ·
Thl Publlstier · reserves the

.

Apple Grove ·

10-Tbe.llel)y Sentinel, llj:iddleportcPomeroy, 0 ., OCt. 3,' 1972
.
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By M'RS. HERBERffiOUSH
. . ·. A.cookout was ~ njliyed· at the
-,~_ home · of · Mr. and Mrs. Jim' ·
Gupp Saturday evening by Mr.
and Mrs . • E. H. · Stewart of
' Vandalia , Mr. and Mrs. Clif.. ·
lord .Jones of West Columbia,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Jones and·
family of Pt. Pleasant and Mr.
and Mrs . .Dana iones of
Parkersburg. The guestS also
sp.ent the weekend with Mr
and Mrs. Hupp and. sons.
·
Mr. lind. Mrs. Sam Ebersbach and children, Terry and
Keith, of Lancaster spent a
recent weekend ·with Mrs .
Edna Shields and'Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Beegle and other
relatives,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell
and cl).ildren 'of Letart, W. Va .,
·sp!:nt Sunday with Mr.· and ·
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
THEY GET THE MESSAGE, even though neither is very much with words . Young
Keith. Mrs. Lillie Hart of
John Paui.Kill 01 Lake Elmo, Minn. , and " permunent residen_t ol a recreational
Racine was also a guest of the
area near Webster, Wts. , seem to be striking up a perfect friendship.
. Haymans.
· Mr , and Mrs. Herbert
, , Shields·, Mrs . Doris Sayre at Ripley, W. Va., and visited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. and children spent Sunday with
attenaed the Farm ~ience his sister-in-law Mrs. Ferne B. Bill Robinson and family . Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson .
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Pierce
Review· at Columbus Tues~Ay , Hayman Thursday enroilte and Mrs. John Stobart and
have
moved to the Everette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith horne. They also ·ca!Jed on his daughter, Beverly, and his
were visitors in Belpre.
brother, .Mr. and Mrs. Ray mother, Mrs . Robinson, took Ran so m residence at An·
'
him to Columbus Sunday tiqui ty.
Mrs . Delores Reese and Hayman.
Mrs. Everette Ransom is
,
daughter, Beth, were Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Me- where he went by plane to Ft.
confined
to Veterans Memorial
dinner guests of her parents, Nickles and son of Bowman's Carson .
Mr. and Mrs. Everette Con- Run Road visited Lloyd Nic.e
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner Hospital due to a fall while
nally.
Monday eveni~g .
spent'lneweekend at the Shady papering at her home in An·
tiqui ty.
Mr. and Mrs ~ Tom Brut van
Mr . and Mrs. George Rest Park at Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs . Erwin
and children of Cincinnati Donohew and children of
Mr . and Mrs. Benny Boggess
Sp!:nt a weekend with their Columbus spent a weekend sp~nt Sunday with the latter'•s Gloeckner and son, David,
· · grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. with his parents, Mr . and Mrs. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Everette . spent a few days with Mr. and
· ·' Ernest Grimm.
Roy Donohew and Greg.
, Clark and family at Cot- Mrs. Larry Badge)y, Fairfax,
Va . Christi Badgely ac·
E-2 Mike Robinson of Ft. tageville .
;. . Rev. Paul Hayman of Galion
.
companied
them home Sunday
Mr. and Mfs. Lloyd Sayre
attended the Pastors Retreat" Carson, Colo., spent a weekend
for a two weeks visit.
'
Mrs. Ada Norris returned
,.
home Sunday after a week's
,• ,
visit.
with her daughters, Mrs.
.,
Golda Story, at Darwin and
.•,
Mrs. Elsie Davis at Park-·
ersburg.
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Pearson
moved recently ·1rom their
farm which tliey sold to Sam
Cwnrnins , to ·their new home
they built at Dorcas.
Bill Wheeler went to
·l .
Columbus Sunday to begin his
st
udies a t Ohio State
. t. ~'
Unive rsi ty. Keith Ashley
.I .
reswned his sutides at Ohio
University in Athens.
Arthur Hill, who is enrolled
at Morehead University at
Morehead , Ky. , ·spent a
weekend with his mother, Mrs.
Dallas Hill and children .
Mr . and Mrs. Pete Bearhs of
Portsmouth, Va., spent a
week 's vacation with her
,.
mother , Mrs. Erma Wilson .
I '
'
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Casper
and grandchildren, Billy and·
Brian Dye of Columbus, Sp!:nt
CAMBODIAN SOLDIERS kneel to quench their thirst with muddy water from mora weekend with Mrs. Dolly
tar blast holes about 10 miles south of Phnom Penh, the capital.

•i

A&amp;RA

next Jan.

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Retail value 39¢

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News, Notes · ·

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!,.")

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="f'- ------------------..,

.sc

•

.Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker

STEE R.l
TO

HAYMAN'S
AUOION
HOUSE

ice

1

''like' p...... .
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"11:f

••It

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WMP0/1390. ··

with each $J gasOline pu.rchase•

•

Bold and lively Poppy Red coffee' mugs.
Smart, contemporary styling, Generous B·cunce size.
They ~tack to ~ave you storage space •
Oven and dishwasher safe, too.
.Start collecting a set now at participating
Ashland Oil stations.

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11 'y~u don't vole: ,, s lo ke pu.tl• rig a bl1 ~dfo l d on

what 1S ;n your own best 1nt'eres1 an? the pest m1eres1
uncle Sam. You ~an ' te•pect hrm to see your pomt ol vrew . of your ne1ghb0rs and communoty. And be at
'. unless yo"(ell him what it 1s,
.
, .your polhng place on November 7th.
. The nght and prrv1lege of votrng IS at the very loun·
. Vote.
{
'\
d tlon of our system of gOvernment . It means that each
o...•~ .. ~ .. rw u·SOI~Y ~·~~~ te•! r.uowoOO •a 1ne NAOA CO&lt;te o1
.._
. •
a
.
h
f
d I II th
. 8U~IO·~~ PI-;u;lu;;e~ Wl!l/eil~tV!CO·Of!'C1'1IeG01Ujf'hll1&gt;0h Wro1tt •
•
of IJS ,can express opfmons w 1t out ear. .an e
~ · · ' .....,buulyoMOiabl~~&lt; cat~•umef '~e•ar.ons sf!' . . oc:t
goVernment what derectton we want 1t to fo~ lo w. S•~ply . S!IU\.'1 N w wnto•.,o•on o c XIOOe ~

tiy vottng.

; ·
· ·
ee Informed on the(af\dldateS
and the ISS~es . Decide

X!OO K ·

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l ••tN ~··oov ~&lt;i. U'

'ott

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One Ina series flltsonltd by N.A.D.A., The Daily Sltltlnol and,ihe Tri•C.. nty Automobile Dealers A,ssoc',

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We honor BankAmtrfHrd llld
Mester Char,. crtdil c.rcls.

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I IW;I t•w c • ...... .. . """" '11 ''" 11 0

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National Automobile Dealers Association
O U•t-II !Gitl•h lai iO&lt;I OI ~ ft'll!'ltl

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.Matchlns aii·P.,rpose canid.,~
Only 99C with any purcha~.
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I .•'Of the people, by th• people, for the paopl~!'
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But only" you
vote.
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u-n.DdJII a :,nl'qt ti

Jackson

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.,,o.;ocu,~.m

Rag~s

Fir.,n Awltt;deJ.. Co~traci l~~t.~:

on Higl1way 1 ,

Lo!:. Hundreds of minibuses, · unkni!WII ea,_ 'l'llunday on
·
· Honolllha II tile city Ill lbe .
three-wheeled Lambrettaa and ill first CCIIIIbat ,.,....... OYet: .
Kyger Creek's !Jocal liNn! tiila Jill!
but was closed basketball one night a week at .Education appropriated $1,25o ·. United Stale• with lbe
other vehicles were back~ up North Vietnam. Its. two--·
• -- of Educatioo Moodily · •ll&amp;bl due to the ulltlng condluoos Gheshire•K}'ger - providing to th.e band dep;.rlment for !1Je ' . blgbe~t ,....,.." ' fllllllly In- ·
Vie.tnamese · for more. than IQ miles afong crewmen were mllltnc.
·award.ed J\lng ·Contracting on Aut- 1. Roter liornsby Pool their children be excluded purc!lase of two musical in- 1 elllile - $12,S31.
from
the
ac(ivitles,
approved
.,struments.
The
board
ap·
•
The
ageiK!y
lilted
the
top
Communist the highway, the reports said.
Mlllbn spolt.elnwl Uld 12
Inc ., Jackson, a contra~! Comjlany, CooMll~, w~s the .
lotaling$23,1.$0for the .;epalr Of" on1y other blcl!ler. •. · · ·· . · Home ins~·octiQil for .a six-year pr.oved •tl)e· purcha84l /If two !iO cities .in a report lnued , .
lliwhoc,utahighway.aboul · Ontbe~ntralcout~ondar, .. _U; - ~· :S$2 boa)bett OY'""'ht
the .Kyger ·Creek Swlmmln~ . Worli' .Is ex~ted 'h&gt; begin old .girl who recently moved water meters from the 'GJillla ·~ Monday, u uld San Jose,
nlirtheast of Salg'on, military sources uid . today, blisted Co~J~munl•t troop
into the districl and discussed County
Rur'al
Water . ·Calif., . wa1 1econd with
Pool This will be the first this fall.
.
'reports said.
Viet Cong troops tried .to concentratlona with aeG tona of,
major pool repair undertaken- Carpet Land Inc., Gallipolis, various transportation /.ssociation, employed Jack 1 $11,927 aad thai three o.lher
least Six civlllans were stampede a herd of water explosives between :16 and 32
Since the school was openea in '!1'8S awarded i coo!ract to problems.
.
Halley as a bus drfver and Callfornla clUes were In the killed and 28 wounded in the bilff_plo lhrough a government · miles from downtown SAigon, ·
1957.'
,
,
furnilh l.ndoor-outdoor ·carpet
At Mercerville, the Hannan signed an agreement to par-· top 10. .
lighting on Highway I near the ranger base but the stubborn and reported a string of North .
Bad weather has call.!ed !or. the ~mall auditorium at .the Trace Local Board of ticipat~ ln the Rehabilitation &gt;,;:;:;:~::;~::::;,:,:::::-.::-"'*'::*:?,::;&amp;e;w~ district l!eadquarters of HQOng animals balked at charging the· Vietnamese Sbellinga In the
cracking in the glaUd foun- high scbool. The carpet will
Service Project.
barbed wire perimeter. A. U. S. upper r,Jeklng Delta 20 to 35
dation: housing the walls ~nd cost f5.25 per square foot in·
adv~r described it as a "wild
nliles·southwest ol the capltil.
flooring. ' Th~ action is . being stat~, 'It 1rill replace the
West ·show."
The sources said lhe Com~
·lljken as ,a . safety me&amp;Sure ~~~~:llle floonng which was
The
U.
S.
cO)IImand
said
a
munists
had begun aicampalgi\
·HOLZER MEDICAL
Lelia Tedford, Roberta ouver,
since several persons received ru1~ed by last months . heavy
PORTLAND Wayne · RossHoback,ofGalilpolls·, two I
· CENTER
George Nlcinsky, · Marvin swing-wing Fill fighter • to cut road!i near· Sai&amp;on and
··· ;x,ay · laceration·~ during the 'i'alns.'
.
Mooday Dlsebarges
Miller, .Margaret McComas, bomber, the controversiar jet' carry out terrorist actions hi
Hoback,
83,
Po~t Ia nd Route I, • 's)sters,
·
Mrs.
Garnet
Smith
·
pl!St two seasons .. ·
The board In other !ll&amp;llers, died Tuesday morning at the Ervine, Portland, and Mrs.
Carl Blankenship, Matthew Lawrence · Henson, Jessie lirought back into the war last · the · refugee.awbnen city of
If the pool is npt repaired, the granted permission to the
after · persistent more than ,!Jiree m,uuon.
Roush, NeUie Nott, 1Velma Grueser, Wendy·· Gatewood. , w.eek
board woUld eventually , be members ( wo.mel) o( the ' Camden-Clark Hospital ·in Josephine Smith of Racine, and . T'li
.mechanical
bugs · forced Its
.
Randolph . Fraley·, Alberta
. several nieces and nephews. · 1 olson, Thomas
uli. BaUdwln,forced to close it.It was opened Cheshlr~ger P't'A lo play Parkersburg:_
11
He was preCeded in. death by ;- . Funeral services will be held LoreliB Jones, J a .t er, Dillon, Ben Dillard, Elda withdrawal from Indochina
..
_Stephanie Fain, Mrs. Steve Calaway, Thelma Brackman, four yeats ago, crashed' from
his parents, Joe and Nealy at 2 p.m. Thursday, at the Adams and daughtet, .Taulby Mrs. William Baldridge Gayla
J
',----···
Aumiller Hoback, and . two Morse Chapel with burial to be ·._Owens, Cyrus Leeport, Mis. Clark, Ma.Jor F~rrls. ,' Mrs..
brothers, Dennis and Floyd in th~ Browning Cemetery at -,c
Hoback.
.
Portland. Friends may call at · ha~les···Munt~ijf/ie'ty .. ·ll'~tr Donald King and daughter,
Mr. Hoback was a retired . the Ewing Funeral Home at daug~ter, Kel!h · Lewis, Ja·mes F.. Young, Jr .,
ASKS DIVORCE
Dixie Circle and lrlendl,
employe of the . Rust any time until noon Th
, ursliay . ,Thomas Johnson, Glenna Geraldine Stover, Rush King,
Shirley Schultz Racine has
·Heaberlm, Opal Harless, Mrs. Mrs. Rona'ld Jarvis and ·
·
'
' ·
Christine Shaw, of Cleveland
' E~gineering Co., Pittsbllrgh, m"e""' . ·•~m
Dan Hamilton and daughter d ht
M
. · 11
Sl kl
flied suit for divorce in Meigs spent a weekend with Mr. and
'*~....:... :;w ·· c: ~-m: '
'
' aug er, ar yn c es , · County Common Pleas Court ·
Pa .• havl' ng 48 ears of se-, •l·~ e
''
.
Blanche Gilkey Gerald Ed· Wil B sh Mr R
W II
.· . ·
'
Mrs. - Homer' Circle.
I.J
•
EXTENDED OUTLOOK . wards, Robert Burnett, Tara andm~n, ~~- M~~ha~f~tew:r~ aga_~nst Carl. Schultz, Jr., • Danny
COLUMBU~ (UP!) ~ Gov. now," Gilligan, said. "It'~ lhe with that firm. He was a
Perry of . Hollon
Ohio 1')xtended OuUook _ .Burdett.
·
and son M~s James LamiK)rt Ra,cme, chargin~ gross ne~ect visited with his Rrandmothe~.
John J. Gilligan said today that General Aaaembly's obligation member of the Morse Chapel
United
Methodist
Church.
Thursday
tlirougb
Saturday
Births
d da • hie · Mr G F 1
of duty and extreme cruelty. Mrs. Mary Circle during tru!
if Ohio's income tax is repealed under the Constitution to offer
Sw-viving are a brother,
A •bance of rain Salurd
. a·y·.
and d ughter,Mrs. Rlaryk Lonoey. Three nlinor chlldre~ are in·
next month II will be up to \he new revenue proposals. The
;. ,
.
Mrs . Terry Sickles, f\ay, a an aug r, s. c y g volved
weekend and also visited other .
General Assembly, spedflcally responaiblllly .Is wUh, the
Highs Ia the· mid ud upper son; Mrs. William Haines, and daughter, Lula Groves,
·
relatives.
the spons&lt;h of repeal, to offer sponsors. of the ' amendment
70s sad overnight lows in the Jackson, a son.
Deloris Henderson Everett
Mr. ancl Mrs. Gene Hudson,
;.
new revenue sources.
.
who have , been ·notoriously
iow aod mid 50s.
Discharges
Waugh, Lucille Six, :01auncey
Mr.
and Mrs. Fralik Hudson
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The governor
asked at a silent about alternatives; up to
Sept. 29-30 -0ct. l
Rife, Scott Roberts, Ruth
and Toni of Racirie and Mr. lilld
(continued from pa·ge I)
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
:mm;w:.~::::-;::w~:*&gt;.&gt;.':'*'*
Mr
Cha 1 w ts00
d
news .conference whether he now.
announced later.
s.
res a
an Musser, Maxl.ne Jones, called a! 10:40 p.m. Monday for Mrs. Shelby · Pickens and
woUld o!!er new tax propcisals
GUllgan said that If the tax is
Mr. Rardin was born Octo~r
daughter, Leon :S'anders, Etichard Bald, Willard Sheets Fred Birtcher, near the Jones , family · of Syracuse called at
If the voters ~t a proposed repealed, the state will be 12, 1902 in Beckley, a son of tqe
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Goldie Neville, Rodney Brand, and Timothy Miller.
Boys Store, West .Main St.,
constitutional . amendment without 25 pet. of its revenues ' late Frank M. Rardin and ROse
Goldie Herdman, Karen Sue
. Births
Taylor
on Sunday.
where Birtcher was ill. He was
forbidding c~Uection · of the from nex\ Jan. 1 1m til Nov. 'Staats Rardin, both ofwhom
Mr. and Mrs. Leverett Roush
(Continued froni page 1)
Casey- Qainy Simonette,
Mrs.
Wayne
Carter,
stale's personal and corporate 1973,'whlch Is the first general were members of pioneer meet later today to decide" on HeieOf. Childers, Rebecca daughter, .New Haven ; .Mrs. -taken to .Veterans Memorial of Middleport visited with Mr.
Hospital and admitted.
income taxes after next Jan. 1. election at which · the public famill~s gf Jackson County. , ·a new leader, Krag said.
and Mrs. Uoyd Roush on
·'Wng1{t, .fames Evans, Russell Paul Cherrington; daughter,,
. "We've got '!'hat we need ·could ra(lfy a fiat rate income
Wednesday.
· He attended Ohio Wesleyan
Outside the Parliament, a Roach, Clarence !son, Alyce · Jackson; Mrs . Edward Durst,
Bragg,
Mrs.
Roy
Keefer,
Point
tali:.
Mrs . Hattie Powell and
University • and graduated ·dozen opponents of Danish Will, Unda Kennedy, Oneida son, Middleport, all Friday.
The governor said the only frOIJl West Virginia University membership 'in the Common Mullens, Deraid Sowards, Mrs . Stanley Edwards, Pleasant; Mrs. Joe Dailey 8Jld . daughter, Addie, of Racine R.
way ·the legislature could College of Law in 1927.
Market had parked their Derek Godwin , Arthur daughter, Oak Hili ; Mrs. Gary daughter, Gallipolis, 0. ; Mrs. D. spenl an evening with Mrs.
replace .the lotlt revenues would
Mr. Rardin was a Gallia bicycles next to the queen's Chambers, Glenn Powell, Beth Blackburn,daughter,OskHill; Eimer Martin, Point Pleasant; 1'!1ary Circle recently.
be to enact a 7.5 'pet. sales tax. Academy
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
High
School shiny black Rolls-Royce Umou- Ann Huffman, Margar~t Eh· Mrs. Larry Speakman, son, William Newell, Southside;
Tonight, Oc1. J
Bryan
Ball,
Point
Pleasant;
Gilll&amp;an said he has no graduate and a member of the sine. When the 32-year-oid man, Jay Drummond, Pat.! Ray and Mrs. Gerald Mat·
Chester visited at the hom~ of ·
Mrs.
John
Cochran,
Gallipolis
;KYJACKEO
special plans to make personal Blue Devils football team .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee and
monarch walked down the red 'Burns, Mona Wilson, Gary thews, son , Cheshire, all
(Technicotor)
Ferry;
Mrs.
Delbert
Allton,
appearances or produce radio
family recently.
Active in Republican carpet from the building with .Russell, Richard Payne, Sara Saturday. Mrs ..James Holley,
Charlton Heston
Gallipolis
Ferry;
Mrs.
Charles
and
television
advertisements
poii tics, he was elected her mo.lher, Queen Ingrid, and Betz, Mrs. Jimmy Graham and daughter, Gallipolis Ferry, and
YvetteMimeaux
SHOOT PLANNED
oppoalng
repeal,
although
he
Prosecuting Attorney of Mason her husband, Prince Henrak, . son, William Casto, Elsie Mrs. Blain Friend, daughter, Criner, Point Pleasant, and
'
(GP)
:
PT. PLEASANT- The Point
Matthew Crabtree, ·Point
disclllle5 It wheh he visits County In 1928 and served four the crowd chanted ''parish ·.;stewart, Frances Stewart, Wellston, both Sunday.
ColorCO!rtoons
Pleasant,
Pleasant
Area Jaycees will
Show Storti 7 P.M.
various parts of .the state.
years, then was elected again council mayor " referring to Michelle Young, Sylvia Lane,
'
Births : Oct. 2, a daughter to hold a shotgUn shoot Sunday,
· "I can't think of anything as Prosecuting Attorney in 1936 the arg11111ent 'that Denmark Daisy Zerkle, Max Russell,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
more Important than de'feating and served three consecutive would be· reduced In lm· David Herbert, Nancy Stiltner,
Discharges: Betty Strawn, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Christy, Oct. 8, at I p·.m. at the Point
Pleasant Gun Club.
the .repeal queation,'' Gllligan terms, in all 16 years. .
portance iruJide the European Bertha C)ark, Brett Friend, Smithfield, 0 . ~ Mrs. Martha of Apple Grove.
_Mr. Rardin's servi·cr i rCcimmon Market.
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.,- . ' '

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*&gt;'

Wayne Hoback Died Tu~y ·· ; ·.

•

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orce IS

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y·

Mr. Rardin

was

Day I

.

K.rag QuitS.

MEIGS THEATRE

the
county level. He was
publicofficewasnotlimitedto
elected mayor of Point
Pleasant in 1949, and was
nominated · for Attorney
General of West Virginia in
1950. Named Divorce . Commissioner in Mason County by
Judge Lewis Miller, Mr.
Rardin served in this capacity
a number of years.
While he was well known in
public life, he will long ·be
remembered for his in~rest in
the churoh. Mr. Rardin was a
familiar figure in area churches duri~g the Easter season
as he narrated the legal
aspects of the Cruc.ifixion of
Christ. In the narration he
depicted how this came abOut,
although actually beillllo.. con-trary to their own laws~-Mr. Rardin was a member of
Trinity United Methodist
Church in 'Point Pleasant
where he also served on the
Board of Trustees.

Krag said
when heSeat
returned
Keeps
Parliament
to his home in a Copenhagen
, suburb early today after the
national referendum result "I
discussed my resignatioo wit~
my wife and a lew ciOIJe
friends.'~
.
. Kr'g said he would contilwe
as an ordinary backbench
member of Parllament.. He has
had a long political career. Hewas the ~- of trade .in
1947, fore~g~~ minister In 1958,
and served as prime minister
from I~ untll 1_968. After lhree
years m opposition against a
cenler.Uberal coalition govern·
men! of ~on~atives , liberals
and social-liberals, Krag won
the ~ptember' 1971 national
election.
Denmark's declslon to enter
the Common Market waa one of
the biggest political victories of
his career. Seated next !.o other
party leaders inside Christian·
sborg Castle, the home of
Parliament, he told lhe nation .
Mr. Rardin was a member of In a televised ad!lress :
the board of directors of the
Point pleasant Register Co.
REDS HOST ASTROS
since its formation in 1969 upon
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
the purchase of The ·Register Cincinnati Reds ' fibst the
by the Ohio Valley Publishing Houston Astros tonight.
Co.
· Jim McGlothlin (8·8) is
slated to start for the_keds_
against Ken Forsch (6-7).
The Reds were idle Monday.
. .

BROCK TO SPEAK
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
man who organized "Youth for
Nixon" groups at the Republican National Convention, Sen.
Bill Brodt, R-TeM., ~speak
at th'e "YoiDlg Voten for lhe
President Rally" 'at the Ohio
Thea!fe here thll ~enq.
Brilck was also llcheduled to
hold a news conference prior to
the rally... -- .......
·

•

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gtartd t.a your bu. . . Comt 'in
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BELLMON t' EA'l'lJKED
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
· Ohio Federation of Republican
Wom«~'s Organizallona was to
open Ita annual lhree-day fall
conference Thul'lday with sen.
Henry L. Belllnon, R.Okla.,
one of the .featured speaken,
Abo ach'i!duled.to speak were
Dr. Qeorge Olerlea Roche III,
President
of
Hillsdale
(Mich.iCoUege; Lt. Gov. Jolm
W. Brown; and John S.

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PANDA GOWN

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VOL XXV NO.· 120

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3,. 1972

•'

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'11 'lr Nlnll D&gt;UII~

r-ae Corpo,_laa

.

PHONE 992·2156 ·

·TEN CENS

Banquet
Speaker.
Named
The annual banquet and
of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
has been set for Nov: 9 at the
Salisbury Elementary School
with Roy Hobson , vice
president and manager of the
Petroleum Division of Land·
mark, Columl&gt;us, the guest
speaker.
Election of two supervisors
wiil be held and dinner will be
served by the Salisbury PTA.
Entertainment will be
provided by the Big Bend
Minstrel Assn. offering new
numbers in the association's
Fall Foi~es to be staged at the
Me1~s H!gh School on No~. 24.
T1~kets for the dmner
meeting may be ,purchased he·
tween Oct. 20 and Nov. 3 from
Wallace Bradford, George
Carper, Andy Cross, Lauren
Hoffman, Virgil King, David
·Koblentz, Robert · Mattox,
Donald Mora •. Roy Miller ,
Clarence Pnce, Homer
Radford, Orion ~oush, _TOI1l
Sayre, Rex Sheneftel~, Huam
Slawter, Charles The1ss, Gene
Yost, . the ACS Office, the
County Extension Office, or. th~
Soil Conservation, Office.
. ·TI]e board of ~upei'Vlsors in a
recen.t meetmg approved
sponaor1hip Qf tl!ree Southern
.!Jill~ . School ~l!ifl~2141 _Elisa
McM1llan, Corinle t&lt;oiill! and
&lt;¥icije Johnson, to atlend tbe
seventh .annual Youth and
Science Conference at Mershon Auditorium on the Ohio
State · University Campus
Saturday, Sept. 23.
meeti!)~

Miller .Bares .E xpected
Revenue Sharing Total
WASHI NG T 0 N
of funds to cities, towns,
Congressman Clarence Miiler counties, and towns hips is
has
released Treasury based on relative per capita
· Department figures showing income, population, and tax
the final ' breakdown of .. effQrt.
'
payments to Southeastern Ohio
Miller explain ed that
governmental units under the t reasury officials have slated
reve~~ sharing biil expec)ed that the first checks for half of
to be cleared by the Congress. the 1972 funds would be senl lo·
The five year $30 billion the. slates and localities in
measure will 'pump ne:w October alter President Nixon
federal monies into 38,000 has signed' the measure .
localities across the country
Distribution iD Meigs and
for such purposes as law en· Gallia· Counties is as follows:
forcement , fire protection,
Meigs Cou y - ·Total to ali
public transportation, health, Governm ts in County,
environmental protection, $249,749
recreation , libraries, and
Tota to ail County Govern·
social ~,,.vices for the poor or men( $149 719.
aged.
To~i to ~II Cities over 2,500,
Under the compromise $25,597. :
distribution formula agreed to
Total to ali Cities under 2 500
last week, first-year fdnds total '$9,0So.
'
' '
, ~.3 billion with two-thirds of
Tota l to qil Townships ,
tnat money , going to the $65,379.
·
localities and one-tfiird
Middleport Viilage, $13,688.
remaining with the state
Pomeroy Viilage, $11,909.
governments. ln Ohio, the sta.te
Gallia County - Total to ail
share during the first year Governments in County,
woUld be $69 miilion and the $373,210.
local $138 million. Distribution
Total to ali County Govern-

menl, $245,373.
Total to all Cities over 2,500,
$35,992.
Total to ail Cities under 2,500,
$9,447.
Total to ali Towns hips,
$82,397.
Gallipolis City, $35,992.

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Devoted To Thelnlerests Qf The Meigs-Mason Area

rins IS A PART OF 'i'HE: FEDERAL and state task
force which was at the Meigs County Courtroom Tuesday
evening to explain future growth and development of Meigs, ·
Galiia and Vinton Counties due to the development of the ···
Gavin Power Plant ·and the Southern Ohio Coal Company
operations.

GEM Will Sit

. Beller housing and roads, volvemenl in the three-county
good water, improved schools, area. But he stressed that
sewage disposal, expanded great "community effort" will
medical services and- more be necessary. '
· ·
ad ult education and ocPeterson introduced
cupationai training plainly are rep resentatives of
the
"problems'' in many com. several age ncies in ·the
munlties o( Meigs, Gaiiia and task force, most of whom
Vinton Counties.
pledged their support to local
A, task force of federal and programs, and some outlined
state officials is ready to help what already has been done.
"solve them;" but onl y
Lester Stone, state director
provided people want such of the Farmers Home Ad·
help. - ·
'
ministration, said that the task .
Local initiative and willing- force is a great opportunity. He
ness to cooperate in identifying pointed out that the FHA has
needs is necessary before the had experie nce ' in · Meigs
taslc fm·ce can step in, ac· · County. He cited the' work of .
,cording to James Peterson, the organization in Syracuse in
regional di rector of the the water . i,mprovement
Economic Development ·Ad· program and the Leading
ministration (EDA). He was Creek and Tuppers Plains •
speaking · to over 100 Chester Wat~r District.! where
businessmen, community large loans have been made.
leaders and citizens of the tri- He cited Rutland Village wllere
county area in the Meigs FHA ,is working on a w,ste
County Courthouse courtroom disposal system,
,
Tuesday evening.
AI Giles of ' the Health,
The forum-type meetingwas Education and Wel(are
in cooperation with the Department reviewed inBuckeye Hills-Hocking Valley voivement of his organization
Regional Development District in the current program to
and the Ohio Valley establish an emergency
Development Commission. It medical service in five
was the task force's op- southeastern Ohio counties. (A
portunity to point out what is perfect example of local
planned for the three counties cooperation, of people being
which are expected to· he af· willing to try to hete themfee-Led 'most by the economic selves),
• ·
impact o[ the . Ga~in Power
Ken Williams of the Housing
Plant and the Southern Ohio Urban Development spoke on
Coal Co. mine operations. lhe need of knowing the kind of
Rcpresentalives of 15 federal housing thai is going to be
and state agencies m~ake up the , needed and where growth is to
task Ioree.
occur . ·
Altho•1gh the meeting failed . James Pickford of the Apto produce any surprise an- palachian Regional Com·
nouncemcnts, it gave the mission, pointed out . that
impression of much help being funding for progralll5 under
available, provided there is the commission has been going
local agreement and recom- · on since 1966 and expressed his
mendallons on steps to be desire to cooperate in (uture
f&lt;lken.
.
programs.
.
Dan )loberll!on of the Ohio
Members of the task force
toured the area Monday night Bureau, of Employment, laid
to see for themselvls the !hal the bureau wJil ~evelop
communiti es of the three· occ upational tralnins
.county area ,
programs based on the netdl
Richard Holt, of Logan, of and the type of training ~
the
Buckeye
Hills to put unemployo:Q persons to
organization, In lnlr9ductory work.
remarks, called the task
flichard Reed of the manforce "an opportunity' of a power training program said a ·
lifetime. to an economically great amount of money haa ·
depressed area." He pointed been' spent in Ohio and that
out that It Is private capital, work will be done In the area ol
that of the American training In this sector:
Electric Power Co., that Is •· Other speakers· including
making all of the predicted those from ·the Small Busineu
economic outlook good.
Administration, the DepartIn his opening remarks, ment of Development, Slate of
Peterson warned that local Ohio, and the Department of
peOple must respond to provide Transportetion, si&gt;oke of their
the climate for Industrial willingness lo help solve local .
growth. He said the IBsk force problems .
personnel
are
"very . A representative of a.
professional," aiming at in·
(Continued on page 16)

revea led today.
However, company al·
torneys said in a brief flied in
U. S. District Court here ,
Consolidated's Hanna Coal Co .
hopes to cross 1-70 with a
smaller strip mining machine,
the Mountaineer, in December.
The brief; with the company 's change-of-mind, was in
answe r to a suit filed by
Citizens organized to defend
Five defendants forfei led Fined were James R. Pooler, the Environment, Inc., Friends
bonds, (our were fined and lwo 26, Middleport, and Dale G. of the Earth inc.,' and two in·
others were assessed costs on ly Winebrenner, 68, Minersville, dividuals. Two Columbus at·
·in. the court of Middleport $100 and costs each, and three tor neys, J oe l Thomas and
Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday days in jail on conviction of Jerry Jacover, filed the suit
drivin g while intoxicated;
nigh t.
Eileen Little, Middleport, $10 after Consolidated reached an
ag1·eement with the state last
Forfeiti ng bonds ~ere and costs, iighting in public, June lo close down I-70 for 24
Ronald Cowan, 23,$200, driving and Mary E. Eblin, no age or hours and move the GEM
while inloxlcatetl; G. C. address listed, $35 and costs, across.
Bradford, 38, Racine, $30, assa ult and battery and
Consolidatep, . in the, brief
failure lO ·' yieid the right-of- disturbing the peace.
filed
with federal Judge Joseph
Assessed costs only were
way; Charles W. Kerwood, 41,
Kinneary last week, said that
Gallipolis; $30, intoxication; Marion D. Kes\er, 72, instead of ,the GEM of Egypt, it
Tommy Stone, Middleport, $25, Pomeroy, driving left of intends lo cross the interstate
fightin g in public, and Wayne cenil!r, and Arnold R. Knight, with " the strip mining
Patton, 20, Dexter, $25, 69, Pomeroy, failure to stop for ma chinery known as the
a police cruiser.
squealing tires.
Mountaineer , which has a
capacity of 65 cubic ya rds and
weighs four million pounds,
and related eq'uipment during
a 24-hour period in the month of
December, 1972."
The GEM weighs 14 million
Approxtmateiy .50 persons
- The Coffee House, as nights, and on Friday and and several persons have
pounds.
met 'tueSday night at Meigs planned, will provide young Saturday open at the same donated furniture .
Adult
involvement
is
A Consolidated spokesman
·Junior lligh lichool tg hear people a place where they can lime but slay open until 12 or 1
needed . An adult workshop will said the home office In Pitts. about the Coffee House which assume the responsibility of o'clock.
1
. will open soon in Pomeroy.
leadership, the responsibility
- J'he Coffee House com- he held Oct. 14 beginning at· 9 burgh hasn 't yet received a
Rolf Stangel, adult coor- of . management and witness ml ttee. -lias
on ca ll a.m. at the Pome1•oy Junior copy of the ·brief. He said he
School Night for. Scouting in 'dinator ·0f the project; who self-achievement.
at present two nurses High SchooL There will be couldn 't confirm that the
the · M4M Scouting District presided,said the Coffee House
- There will be work· and hope to be able to psyc hologists from Ohio company has changed its'mind
will be heid·Tuesday, Oct. IO. willprovideaplaceforyouthto shops
on
religion, have a psychologist on call if University at the workshop and ···because of the suit.
The 'l'ri.State Area Council . relax
· and snack after. school arts· and crafts , wood- needed ·m the area of drug an d counseling on the dangers of
using drugs will be give~. The
said ~fforts to sign boys will be hours and evening. He stressed working,
pottery,
.and alcohol ~buse counselilig.
m
. ·ade·,_·n g·rades four. , five and . ·these other points '
,photography
' among· ·others.
Th
·
c
ff
H
·d
wo,kshop
is not open to the
- · e. o ee ouse 1 ca
. six;. Adult leaders . will . be .-: . The Coffee House is . - There will be adult arose to con!Pat hanging out on public, only to those inil!rested
pte!ient to . anawer questiims designed to proYide·a conimo~ supervision- at.· all : times, . the parf\lng1ots, as a pl~ce for In becoming familiarized on
. aboilt ~outing and its overall
ht
·
coun!eling._..•. ,
.
.program to · buila . go·0·d 1J1eetlng. plac~ where jroung .Stangel s,aid. The Coffee House •yo~t · o go.
Those
whO
attend
the
·
~opie ·can s.hare experiences, which will tte.· completed this
- Rooms a! Ute ·Coffee
~harai:ier, . attlt~de$ . 'oi cr.e·ate projects an!! lollpw weekend tentatively wiil open Ho~se. ' ioeat~ in .the Stark workshOp ana plan to work
· •itii:enshin.
·and pride · in them through and enjoy group Up between
··
·. 4 ·p.m. an d B111'id mg
'
· p omeroy •s Eas t with tlie Coffee House com·
'
~
J an~
on
growing strong in mind ·and planning and fellowship.
stay open to 10 or 11 p.m. week Second St., have been painted mittee will not be charged for
body:
the works~o p . However,
Gallia County School
persons who attend who do not
Supetinteqdent Clarence E.
plan to become involved with
Thompson said six county
the Coffee House will be
~hoot. will be opened at 7:30
charged $10. ·.
p.m. for "school night for
· Duri~g a question ·and answer period, one man asked if
Scouting.'' TheY. · aref' Addavme, Cheshire-J{yger,
it was to he a "hall-way
Centerville, · Vinton,
house." Ahalf-way hollse is for
Washington and Rio Grande
alcoholics or those on drugs to
Eiementaries. Boys wishing'to
start kicking the habit. ·
join the scouting prcit!ram may
The answer was ."definitely
attend any of the schools.
not. "
Anolhel' asked the age limit
In Meigs County, Middleport,
Pomeroy, Salem Center, and
to use the Coffee House, . and
the answer was, "teenagers, 13
Salisbury .Buildings and in
through 19."
Mason County at · Ordinance,
Another man stated tha\ kids
Beale, and Sunnyside.
today are no different from
what they were when he was a
Veteraua MemortafHotpllal
boy, and the youth have to have
ADMITTED - Pauline
· a place to go; he said he was
Gallagher, Middleport;
willing to help in any way he
Florence C~allan, Athens;
could , adding that he is a
Leigh Ann Enevoldsen, Reeds- ·
mechanic, and would give
ville·' Nellie Hatfird;. De:tter;
lessons in his trade.
Thomas Hysell, Pomeroy:
· The Coffee House, as soon as
Carol Hall, Vinton: Homer
.....' ' "
insurance is obtajned and an
Braley,. Pomeroy; ·Casale
insliection made by lhe health
.' '.
:Hudson,. Mineraville; Clarence .
department, will serve food at
Norris, Racine; M.arg,aret
a competitive price with .other
Rudolpha, 'Athen• ; Earl.
restaurants iii !.own.
Eric Morris,
·Cuiter' , 1. RacliJe;
· There Is M member~hlp fee;
&lt;.
..
New Haven. .. . .
no cover charge; hi&gt;wever, a·
'•
bi$CHARGED ~ Wellingtori
donation box will ·be near ,the
LAuREL CUFF NEIGHBORS, the Oscar Smith familY and the RonaiCI Brow.i!nc famlb',
· Halaey., Jtflrey ~usseli,
~oor.
.
.
·
with thealdofLawrer¥:eA. Snlith, Tueadsymadeapple biltter.:l'l~ maklngofapp!e
thll
Hamer Searll, Unnle 'l'lylor,
. "W~ ·are relying on money . ·sea8on was sonieowhat extinct due to the sc~~rclty of apple$. Shown at lhe apple butter kettle are ·
Edith Watkins. · ·
Snilth doinl! the II~
Oil' 'l'RE '11lllD lENIOR
otandlnl in the'** row will be.Crowned queen Qf •. !llilde fr.om ,the sale: of food and ' • 1..-, Mri Ronald Browning; ·Mri. Olear Smith, Anita Slnitb aoo
ad~lt.
donatio~~
...
·
a
M
sale
of
·
The
40
gallon
kettle
belong&amp;
to
Nick
Gtueaer.
Wben
the
apple
IMitler
ilflnlahed
they will ha'\'t 10
. lbe •ntn Jlllhlld!ODI Bomni~ Friday iligbt. 'lhe c~tea, selected by papular vote ·
~rlicles made by t,he youths t~
gaUons or~ quam. This 1.s the· second Ytlllr the families have baniled tocether to make the
lb.,I bodj, are from the left, N!llcy Sellon, Jane AJili Karr and Melinda. Amsdelicious sauee. Two silver dollars were pla&lt;'ee! In the kettle to keep the biltter from llllcklng.
,, baey, 'DieUIIIIIreta.nen ltttndEili.frllli the left are Jan Wilson, ~eahman ; MaryJu .MiiLs, . fmance -~ Coffee House,
SIBngd
&amp;ala.
'
Ll!~nce A. Smith, 81, father of Otcai-, who assisted with the project, was not available when
llii•""r.we,liid. Martie Caldwell, Junl:cl', 'lhe clalllaUendants were choBep by their res~tive ,
. Th~ attending wm _invited
th . ture was taken. He was enjoying a plane ~ide wlt)J Ronaldilrowntng~·How ab'lilt tlmiJ
d•
. Viddllplnar lsbelclnihcxJiacoming activities wl1l~h will bepreeented in conjuR;tiOn
followmg the meeting to go
e P1 c
. . . .•.
.
,
·
with the r.ap llllld tthow.
'
..
tour the Coffee .House.
app1es.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Consolidated Co~ l . Co . has
apparen tl y decided not to move
its 14 million pound, 20 story,
strip mining shovel, the GEM
or Egypt, across Interstate 70
in Belmont County, it was

5 Forfeit Bonds

Scouting ·Coffee House Goals Stressed
Nigh_t iS
0 Ct 1Oth

.

It is a good idea to install

weather. stripping around
windows and doors on all sides
of the houe . but pay· ~Ia!'
attention to the ·north and west
·. sides .which will gel. the full
blast ol .winter Winds. Weather
strl~ping around windo'WJ and
,doors can make a '"room more ' '
coinf~rtable without in- ·
creasing t)le amount' of heat
from your furnace,
:
~ Wr'aPIJlng insulation around 711-~
heating ducts where IIley rwi'
through unheated areas, llich
as erawl spaces. will save fuel
dollars.

Opportunity of L,ifetime
,.
For Economically Poor
Area to Get Assistance
.

at

'

Carm
· el News,
Byth~

.

•

1

Repealer-S ·Advised
of Consequenc~

'

•

to·

ea

•

HOSPITAL NEWS

I.

·'

.•

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND

.
SATURDAY 9:31).TO 9 PM .
.

bu""'

.ELB·ERFELDS IN

EROY ·

a

W~er

I

\

omu

,,

'

o.car

·,..,.,.,.the

.,
'

I

.

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