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                  <text>16 ~The J)allySentinel,Middlepotl.Pomeroy, 0.. Del. 11. 1972·

News ·•·•• ·in ·Briefs
•

I

--

•

Servi~s

Dixie WelcOming Nixon

Mr. Harry Kessel

•

1Continued from page I )

·the state income tru&lt; repeale~ "is really a referendum to
determine whether or noi-to lock our schools. No one likes to pay
taxes btlt neither does anyone want to padlock our sch~JQ!s," said
llebastla~· Lupica , ex!lCI!tive secretary of the labo_r federation . .
.
"Nullific;ltion of the state income tax would k1ll our school
system. The truth of the matter is that the forthcoming v?te on
repeal of the state income tax is really a referendum to determine whether or not to lock our schools in the face of the coming
generation."

Set for

Funeral services were h1.1ld
al , 2 p.m : today at the Jagers

and Sons Funeral Home in
Athetis for Harry Kessel, ~7,
All\ei,IS, an ofrtcial in the
American Conference of the
National Football League and
sta te examiner, who died
Monda y following an illness.
Mr. Kessel was a former
.
· official in the Southeastern
TALLAHASSEE, FLA. - UNLESS . PRUDENTIAL In- , Ohio Athletic League. He
surance Co. of America plans to pass out chips ?ff the_old rock of received his BA degree in
Gibraltar, or share its vast financial emplre,WJth policyholders, business administration from
Insurance Commissioner Thomas D. O'Malley wants 1!.9 current Ol&gt;io Unive rsity and his
advertlsir)!i campaign stopped. O'Malley issued_ a three-page_ Master's Degree from Ohio ~.
order Tuesday setting a Dec. 6 hearing for the g•ant insurance University iri 1961.
cornpahy to show w~ it should not be order_ed to halt its "Own a
He was a member of the
THE SYRACUSE munlcip81 building and f!restatiOil is near completion.
piece of the rock" adVertisements in Flor1ds.
National Association Football
fire wml is being laid. A ~eating plant ~d partitions ha.;_. tO ~ installed. ·
The
exterior of the new steel structure has been completed and this week a
"Such advertisements encouraged viewers to 'Buy a piece of League Conference, llle . Ohio
Syracuse vi]lage cQunCil plans to have llle btllldtng_ready for occupancy 1n
.
the rock' and thereby acquire an interest' in steel mills, the Association of Football and
llle near future.
· Empire State Building, textile companies, the ~ufacturing Basketball Officials, the
;rf=:s::-::==:=======::====================:===:::~:::===;=~=:====::!::=====:=====~==:=.=~=====;.-::::;:=:=:.::=:::::::::::~:::::x=:~=:~=::::::-~~~·
companies and fashion design industty," O'Malley ~id. "Such Athen~ Chapter of the Ohio
.~
advertisementS deceptively misrepresent to the v1ewers that AssociatiOn of _Football a~d
REEDSVILLE
Audra
E.
k''
.,,
W. Va ., and Clyde of Streetpollcy holders of Prudential Insurance Co. of America are en- Basketball Off)ctals, the OhiO
57,
Reedsville
Route
1,
W
yers,
bm·o, Ohio; two sister.s, Mrs.
titled to actina mangerialcapaClty, overseeing the operatiOns of . H1gh . S chool
Athiet~ c
!11
Holzer Medical Center
:):
:;:;
llle various enterprises which are 'a piece of the rock'."
Assoc i~ twn,
the
Oh1o died 'unexpectedly at his home Leslie (Edith) Anthony of
Tuesday
evening.
Disch~rges Melissa ~;
!j;
Parkersburg, and Mrs. G~orge
Umvers1ty Green and Wh1te
Mr.
Wyers
was
born
in
CONSUMERS AND NEWSPAPERS
!;!; .
(Mary) Farley of Little Handcock, Mrs. Keith Thorn- ~:i
Club, the Athens County Club
_
J
ackson
County,
W.
Va.,
a
son
ton,Mrs.
Charles
Cruinp
and
;;;;
;:;;
Hocking, and two grand,
and American Legion Post and
of
the
tale
David
and
Martha
children, Gary and · Melissa daughter, William Powell, !!!! Everything about a newspaper is consu111er-orl• !iii
Beta Alpha Phi Fraternity.
Eldon Will, 80, Died on Tuesday
Wyers. He was a .member of Scarbroug-h. He was preceded Stacey Reed, Mrs. Jerry ~:; ented,
· ,
::::
the White Chapel Wesleyan in death by two brothers and 'i'risch and 'daughter, Rev. \~~
That's why both ·men and women consumers 'i!l
Church and was employed 31 two sisters.
SYRACUSE - Eldon (Dock) was preceded in death by his
Clarence Flath, Guy Mapes, :;~ read news~apers more regularly and carefully ;:;;
years with the Wal ker - Funeral services will be held Luta Hubbard Thomas Freed- :::: than .a nythmg else.
:);
Will, 80, Syracuse , died parents, Daniel G. and Ellen
Parkersburg
Co.
man
Charle;
Parks
Frank
}
·
That's
because
newspapers
are
the
FULL
in~(
1\lesday evening at Veterans Buck Will; his wife, Eunice, .ou
at 2 p.m. Friday at the White
'
'
"
f
t'
d'
vl
(Continued
from
page
I)
Surviving
are
·
his
wife,
·
, , !!!l
Memorial Hospital. Mr. Will August ,15 of this year and
Chapel Church with the Rev. flose, Joseph Wolfe, Lester !:l orma J~n me IU'?.
Florence
Pullins
Wyers;
two
hours
after
Klssinger
reported
Thompson,
Ivan
Brumfield,
.
;:;;
M?re
m~ormat10n
on
consumer
matters
JS
b~m~;l
seven brothers and sisters.
Roy D~eter officiating. Burial
Surviving are a daughter, to llle French government sons, Jeff, at home, and Ed- will Qe in the Weatherby Jr. , Earnest Welch, Marjie :!:! pubhshed .m ,ne"':spaP.ers today than at any bme ~
.
;t,· _
Mrs. Opal Kloes of Syracuse Tuesday on the progress of his ward, of Belpre ; two Cemetery. Friends may call at Price, Ralph Null, Francis ;:;: m ou~ n~~;t10n s ~•story,
;:;; E~1tonal wnters, reporte~s, colummsts and :;:;
'
.
and several nieces and peace negotiations. Kissinger daughters, Marcella, at home the White Funeral Ho111e in Johnson James Dotson .
'
B'
th
::::
pages
regu- -::;:
and
Mrs.
Leslie
{Ruth
Ann)
nephews. Mr. Will was a met with Schuma!Ul who imCoolville any time after 3 p.m.
" s
.... Ispec1al
I y onfeature
. and art1cles comment
~·
Tonight~ Thursday
:;:;
ar
consumer
1ssues.
.
~;:
1
Scarbrough
,
Coolville;
two
medately
reported
lo
Pompimember or the Syracuse
Thursday.
October 11-12
Mrs. Joe Chand er, a_son, 1j; Advertisements provide facts and information ~;
brothers, Fred of Sandyville,
NOT OPEN
Asbury United Methodist dou.
Jackson_; Mrs ..Clyde Srmth, a !1!1 to help them. shop better, save money, use time
Government spokesman
Church.
son, Bidwell' Mrs . David ;;:; wisely, and hve better year after year.
&gt;:::
Friday &amp; Saturday
Funeral services will be held Jean Lecat said today in reply
DIVORCES ASKED
October 13-14
S•mpkms,
a
daughter • ;:l
Classified advertising helps consumers many ~~
at 3 p.m. Friday at the Asbury to questions as to why
GODZILLA vs THE
Three sui(s for divorce have Gall1pohs; Mrs. Ernest Mille~. ::;; important ways, assisting in such major events in ;:;:
SMOG MONSTER
Methodist Church with the Kissinger and Schumann ni~t
been filed · in ·Meigs County a son , Lancaster, and Mrs. );; an average person's lifetime as helpin_g find a job, f:;!
l Color)
Rev. Merrlll Floyd and the that " the contribution of
Common Pleas Court, each Anthony Narde1, a daughter, ~:; a home and a car.
~:;:
(Continued from page I)
Aklra Yamauchi
France
to
the
reestablishment
Rev . Wendell Stutler ofHlroyukl Kawase
!~ Ollr economy and standard of living are depend. ~~
send his vice-president, charging gross neglect of duty Pomeroy.
ficiating . Burial will bti in the of peace in Vietnam coUld be
{GI
and
extreme
cruelty.
They
Veteraus Memorial Hospital · !!!;: ent in great degree on good productive advertising, ;;:;
Sargent Shriver, to H;moi to
CATLOW
Letart Falls _ Cemetery. -important.
were by James Morton, Wyllis
ADMITIED - Flora Kinch, ~; as carried by this and thousands of other news. ;=::
{Technlcotor)
"Under present , conditions speed the release of Ameri9an Hill, Pomeroy, against Betty Pomeroy; Tammie Jewell, ~; papers.
Friends may .call at the Ewing
, ,
;:;;
prisoners-of-war and would
Richard Crenna
Fran~ can only be discreet
Funeral
Home
any
time.
Morton,
same
address;
Ada
F.
West Columbia;. · Lennie §! Perhaps it IS time ,to applaud the many &amp;'?od !1i1!
Yul Brynner
and, in the absence of any seek to salvage U.S. military Sellers, Racme, Rt. 2, agamst Taylor Rutland
{GP)
~: merchants and advertisers who have ~een he)pmg _:::::
'
official commentary, must material.
Show Starts 7 P.M.
Gerald Sellers, Racine, Rt. I,
msffiARGED _ Thomas ~ c~nsume:s
this a~ea live better 1ear a~ter year i!i!
McGovern's Plan
wait for the final results at the
and
William
VanMeter
,
Hysell,FredBirtcher,
KelUleth
w1th
the1r
mformatlve
newspaper advertising.
%
McGovern's seven-point
proper moment. "
Middleport
,
against
Myrna
Eneveldsen, Claude Roy.
:;:;
.
}':
The Vlet Cong and North peace plan :
Joyce
VanMeter,
Farnham,
u . .. .. · · · · · · · · ·····•···
· ·•·•·•·•· • · ····················x··.-.·.-.·~~·····6················:-····:.!·:-··:-··-.··-.··
..............
PLEASANT VALLEY
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·.·
....:·:·.·.·.·,·:·:·:·,.,·,······=·····=·····?.·~·=···-•:.=·=··
...•••••·•·•·•••••· •••..-.-. •••.......................
- Immediately after taking
Vietnamese peace negotiators
Iowa.
DISCHARGES : Wilki e
in communiques to the press the oath of office, he would
cease
the
bombing
:
terrnina
te
Elston, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
NO MORE, PLEASE
protested today's bombing
CLOTURE FALLS SHORT
shipments
of
military
supplies;
MARRIAGE
LICENSE
Everett
Jeffers,
Grimms
SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
raids on the center of Hanoi.
Charles Thomas Hamm, 19, Landing; Mrs . Denver Bowen, Fire Dept. Ladies Auxiliary
The Viet Cong delega lion begin the withdrawal, to he
WASHINGTON (UP!) completed
in
90
days,
of
Minersville,
and Linda Valerie Mason ; William Na pi er, ca nnot accept any more apple Sen. Robert A. Taft Jr., Rspokesman sald the bombing
"Is a very serious event and a American forces for Vietnam, Hollon, 19, Minersville; Jackson, 0 .; Claude Davis, butter orders this year. To fill Ohio, Tuesday voted against
deliberate act. The Americans Cambodia, and Laos, and Delbert W.- Teaford, J,·., 29, Robertsburg; Junior Mc- orders already placed, the cutting off debate on an antica!Ulot pretend it is an error retrieval of satvagable equip. Racine, Rt. 2, and Terrie· Lee Dougle, Sandyville, and group will have to make apple busing bill , Sen. William B.
Miller,- 20, Rt. 1, Rutland; Charles Ward, Point Pleasant. butter a second time.
because they know the city." ment.
Saxbe, R.Ohio, did not volA!.
-Notify
North
Vietnam,
Darold Rutt, 44, Patriot,
James
The Communist Vietnamese
had no comment as to whether that the United States expects and Wilovene Winona Zurcher,
they had protested to Klssinger the release of all prisoners-of- 45, Pomeroy.
personally concerning the war, an accounting of the
missing in action, and pledge to
bombing raids.
·
CHOIR WANTED
With American voters no longer interfere in the internal
-politics
of
South
VietAll
residents who are inpreparing to vote Nov. 7 on
terested in participating in a
President Nixon's reelection, nam.
for the crusade, 11 Seven
choir
-Send
Shriver
to
Hanoi
in
an
Paris newspapers speculated
lllat the negotiations had gone effort to speed the return of Nights for Christ" are asked to
.
be at the Wesleyan Church in
into high gear because POWs.
- Af!A!r all prisoners are Racine at 8 p.m. Thursday.
Klssinger was at!A!mpting to
reach a peace settlement returned, U.S·: bases in Thailand would be closed down and
OAPSE TO MEET
before October's end. .
U.S.
naval
craft
taken
out
of
The
Southern Local Chapter
. Kissinger's stayover marked
Indochina
wa!A!rs.
453 of Ohio Association of
the second extension of llle
--Once
the
political
situation
Public School Employes will
unprecedented meetlngs.
is worked out by the Vietna- meet at Southern High School
mese, the United States would Thursday at 8 p.m. All
join In repairing the wreckage members and employes are
of the war,
urged to attend . A state
- An expanded program for representative, Fred Haines,
veterans with the guarantee of will speak.
a good job or a fully-funded
education.
8
GRANGE TO MEET
-Amnesty'
with
suggestion that draft evaders LETART FALLS _ Ohio
volun!A!er for two years of
.
bll
i d t Valley Grange 2612 will hold 1ts
pu c serv ce u y.
regular meeting at 8 p.m.
Thursday at llle hall. Election
of officers will be held and
LEVY SUPPORTED ·
HARRISONVILLE - The potluck refreshments served.
· ·Harrisonville Parent
Teachers Organization 'has
TO PLAN DINNER
endorsed the Meigs ..Local
School District operating levy LETART FALLS - There '
to be voted upon on Nov, 7. will be a meeting at 1 p.m.
Members of the organization Friday·at the community hall
are encouraged to work for and here to plan an election day
vote for the' ·levy, Mrs. Ann dinner. Ali persons in!A!r.es!A!d
--Barrett,-president, said. ~ illhelping .are.asked to allend.\

Audra Wyers Died Tuesday

. HOSPITAL

. NEWS.

I

M

EDITORlALS

Talks

MEIGS THEATRE

*!

Danger

.

!n

t

BAKER
FURNITURE
.
.
MIDDLEPORT

EADQUARTERS
FOR

Eltierlelds In Pomeroy
FALL FABRIC SALE

ADMIRAL
APPLIANCES

Thursday 9:30 to 5:00
Friday 9:30 to 9 p.m.
Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

Regular 5.49 and
,_ 3.99-yard

1PO% Polyeste

Double Knit
---

58160" Width
PRICES GOOD THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.

POTATO -SALE

~lot of cordeals start here
You can gel more car for less money with ou t· help, Now t hat
'
shou ld · appeal to your senses as much as t hat factory-fresh
,
new-car smell.

'

Ohio Grown U. S. No. 1

.

,. ,

H y~u' re t hinking ·about a new cii'l·, discuss you•· financing

with the wide-awake bank before you start sniffing at cars.
Then, when you buy that new car and get a good deal be- .
cause ~( Wide-awake bank rate financing,_ your nose will
really ~1ck le with the ·sweet smell of success.
·
'

Borrow-less financing on new &amp;used cars

.

.

-

.

85~

SO lb. 'B' Slz•---~-------1.39
so lb. Unclaulfled. _____ .:...1.79
'

- ~'The wide-fill!oke auto loo11 moi'es itf!!!Jo ~o.~~

2''

50 lb.
bag
20 lb.
bag
'

'

'

I

9 VARIETIES .Of. ~PPL~S .
•2.00 bu. &amp; UP
OTHER FRUITS &amp;VEG£TABLU

1111 Fanners Bank &amp;Savings Co.

in Texas-a compleie reversal , War 90days after taking (){lice. r~ption for officials of ids
of tpe perind of almost 100 Wednesday, he struck back at campaign committees and of
years ago when )Jemocrats .llle Claims of NiXon supporters R ep· u·b I I c a n p a r t y
could colint oo the solid S!IPport that he was preaching surren- organizationS of 10_Southern
of Uie Soulll,
der .
states.
McGovern, still trailing
McGovern sald in Boston
In other campaign developbadly in the poDs, stwnped the lllat it was Nixoo who was in ment.9: ·
populous sta!A!s of the Midwest favor of surrender. ·
.:..Democratic vice presidenand Northeast, sounding again
''To keep a corr!IPt dictator- ·. tial candida!A! Sargent Shriver
his antiwar llleme.
'
ship in power in Saigon, llley're told an . audience at Notre
Conf~deracy,
D,~mocrat
Tuesday , M,cGovern willing to surrender our prlso- Dame University .in South
George S. McGovern is repeated in a televised address ners of war to endless captivity Bend, Ind., lllat it should not be
believed.to have a chance only his pledge to end the Vietnam In North Vietnam," McGovern "swept. along by the conunon
said.. "They are willing to corruption and Cynicism" of
surrender $250 million in taxes the Nixon administration.
every ·week.
- Vice Presidoot Spiro T.
''And llley are willing to Agnew said at Mobile, Ala.;
surrender our ~ns to danger that Nixoo had '!put the brakes
and death in a conOlct that Is on llle runaway inflation he
not worth one more American inherited," Earlier Agnew paid ·
life, one more American dollar a calion Alabama Gov. George
or one more drop of American C. Wallace in Montgomery and
blood. That is the true meaning repor!A!d Wallace was looking
1
d It· !Sa
·
· · ~uch
stronger."
.
0 f th e NIXonpan~n
m
certain path to the real
-Rep. John G. Schmitz, RVoters o! the Eas!A!rn Local assistant, re.pectively, of the surrehder of America,"
Calif., the presidenti&amp; candlSchool District will vote again girls athletic program and , . Nixon planned to spend 3\2 dale of the Am~rican party,
on an approXimate 2. 75 mill plans were made for minor hours in Atlanta. His only said in lloise, · Idaho, that
NEW FACIUTIES ...:. This area near Meigs High School
to Shelly and Sands Construction Co., which donated
. building addition bond issue building repairs and some public exposure was to be a Nixon 's administration is
at Rock Springs Is being prepared for a baseball park, track
equipment,
Jaymar Coal Company which donated equipment
·:next spring, according to ac· remodeling at the · ' Tuppers motorcade &amp;ong the city's guilty of "institutlonallzed
faciUtles, football practice field, bund practice field and
and operators, Local 18 of the Operating Engineers which
tion taken by the Eastern Local Plains · Elementary School. At famed Peachtree Street.'
physical education area without any cost to llle taxpayers of
corruption." He said Nixon
donated operators and City Ice and Fuel which donated
School District Board of the Tuppers Plains school, one
Meigs Locw School District. Head football coach Charles
The President also scheduled was "totalitarianizlng this
diesel fuel .
Education Tuesday night.
large room will be partitioned a spee ch to an m
· vi tation-on 1y country. "
Chancey extends the appreciation of tbe alllletic department
The issue would provide and a library for the school
funds to.build an addition to the created during the remodeling.
high school, thereby relieving
The board agreed to accept ·
llle crowding in the grade quotes from all interested
schools since the seventh and insurance firms on burglary
eighlll grades would be moved insurance at all four buildings.
to the high school building. High school graduation was set
Voters of the district turned for May· 20 .and eighth grade
down a bond issue· on the ad- graduation in the district for
dition at a special election in May 21. The names of fo ur
August. .
·
residents were agreed upon to
Devoted To The InwresiA OJTiie Meigs-Mason Area
District Supt. John Riebel be submitted to serve on
estimated that it will be committees for the Rio Grande
February ·or March of next Community College. Two VOL. XXV NO. 126
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
PHONE 992-2156
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1972
year before the next special parents appeared before the
TEN CENS
election on the measure can be board in regard to the kinheld.
\]ergarten program. However,
The board made plans for an it was agreed by the board that
afternoon of parent-teacher the policy of all.&lt;fay sessions
conferenceson the afternoon of for kindergarten pupils will be
Oct. 17. Schools of the district continued in the district.
wlll be dismissed at 12:30 p.m.
Attending the meeting were
and parents are invi!A!d to visit board mem~ers , I. 0. McCoy,
the schools and confer with Oris Smith, Roger Epple ,
PARIS (UPI) - U. S. Plesldenttal adviser Henry A.
their teachers about their Clyde Kuhn , Howard Caldwell, Klsslnger, hatless aod with a big smDe, left for Washington today
-children.
Jr., Supt. Riebel, Principal af!A!r completing four days ot'peace negoUaUoos wlth4he North
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Vennis Charles Swogger and C. 0. Vietnamese.
were employed as dlrecto; and Newland, clerk.
Kissinger refllSed to comment to newsmen when he arrived In
a U. S. Embassy limousine at tbe Orly airport VIP lounge. The
White House said he bad concluded his lOp secret !alb aod would
report to Preside~! Nixon tonight.
~
Rlchilrd Nixm today visitS
what ihe Democratic party
used to call its "solid South."
The one.day campaign trip 10
Atlanta probably Will be his
mly prwlectlon jaunt into the
region all forecasts; say he .
should sweep handily.
In the II states of the old

Voters Get
2nd Chance

Fun at 5th &amp; Vine
CINCINNATI . (UP!) Thousands of baseball-drunk
Clndnnall Reds fans flooded
into the downtown area
Wednesday night, giving vent
to their happiness over winning
the National League pennant.
Polt~ blocked off llle intersection Qf 5th and Vine Sts. at
Fountain Square as the crowd
began to grow after the game
lllat did it for llle Reds-a 4-3 ·
tlirlller over the Pittsburgh Plrates.
· ·
The scene was nearly all gai·
ty and laughter, 'and police
merely stood about and watched,
At Central Station, a pollee
lfPOkesman said it was "even
quhiter than normal" and said
no arrests had been reported.
''This Is where baseball began and llle Cincinnati fans are

the best there are," said bank
clerk Carl Horton, one of the
Cincinnatians who could not
resist the urge to gather in the
streets.
"I couldn 'I go to the game,
but I saw most of it on television and now I'm here to
celebrate," he said.
Steve Mlller, a college student, walked about the crowd
with an index finger waVing in
the air, shouting, "We're No.
1. "

"!knew the Reds would do it,
I never had a doubt," he yelled.
Mechanic Barry Scholl,
clutching a beer can in one
hand and a Reds' pennant in
llle other, said this celebration
was ''nothing." ·
"W&amp;t till we win llle World
Series," he said.

2 Drivers Injured
Two-drivers were injured in
a collision at the in!A!rsection of
South Third and Main Sts. in
M'iddlej,ort at 2:12 p.m.
Wednesday.
Middleport police said a car
driven by Mrs. Betty Lane of
Middleport pulled from Main
onto Third into the path of a
southboWld vehicle driven by
Randolph Fraley, Cheshire
Route i. Modera!A! damages
we'fe reported to both vehi~es :
"' . Fraley, who complained of
chest pains from striking his
'steering wheel, upon the impKI, wu taken to the Holzer

Medical Cen!A!r by the Middleport E-R squad. Mrs. Lane
suffered a lacerated hand and
was treated a couple of hours
after the accident at Ve!A!rans
Memorial Hospital. Investigation of the accident is
continuing, police said.

Mrs. Vaughan Elected
District 16 Director

PARIS (UP!) - Communist
Vietnamese peace negotiators
charged today President Nixon
was escalating the war whlle
ignoring their peace terms, but
the s tatements were not
believed to reflect the status of
the secret talks between
Presidential advi ser Henry
Kis~inger
and
Hanoi
representatives.
In sharp attacks on
President Nixon's policies,
North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong representatives offered
no evidence at today's regular
session that Kissinger's concurrent secret contacts had
made progress.
South Vietnamese negotiator
Pham Dang Lam told the 163rd
peace conference meeting a

~-:&amp;.:~t~~~:k%~,:~l:?:?:::;:~:?:
PARTY PLANNED
RUTLAND - Although
trlck-&lt;lr-treat _night bas been
cancelled In Rulland, Mayor
Eugene Thompson an-

'

01 Prtlllrl 0111' llrtft. .. 'M •aa II a.u t a. ni.to 1 11. m. (Contlnuoualy),
. . . M*llllmtlill-.-l'ot hell DIP 111111

MIDWAY
W. MAIN

MARK~T

~2·2582

POMEROY

F.ifth graders of Mrs. Mary
· Hysell . of the Pomeroy
Elementary School learned
Wednesday lllat .lllere's truth
· tn, ••one good turn deservea ·

another".

Be Sure To See Elberfelds Bargain Days

'·

.b· Each carrying

a toy or a

book for the cblldren 's ward of

In The Thurscta'y Newspaper

Ve!A!rails Memorial Hoapital,
. lbe pupils, accompanied by
Mrs. Hysell and Mrs. Pat
n,oma serving as a room
mother, walled from the
school to the hoepital.

ID i&amp;GRADBSIULCHIBttfllrl.li.r,&amp;;,.elllttbePwuaOi ~Sdloolwere
M tllllclenu~~lllll alaklll W•'+llt w1i1n they delivered toys to lbe cbillhn'1 Wll'li of
VellrllllllemGrilllloljitlllfler bobtt callect.ad •·• flir lbe purcha,ee of the toys and
boab.

.I

·
c
0 Ve_
r 0 n ar-

Toys Taken to Hospital

Yard

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

a

chlldren.
.,
Mrs. Howard Birchfield
The Meigs County Sheriff's control, got left of center lor damage to the car.
and Mrs. Bruce Davis •Wlll Dept. invesUgated a semi-rig 120 feet, finally turning over
At 1 a.m. today on SR 7 In
serve as general chairman and car accident Wednesday at onto a car owned and occupied Salisbury Twp. a deer was
lor the party, Th~ lime and 7:30 a.m. at Salem Center on by James Wells, Vinton , killed when it ran into th~ path
place will be announced SR 124.
parked at the Thomas Ashland · of a car driven by ViolM R. ,
la!A!r· Cash donations and
Ch ar 1es
A.
Nuckl es, lot at the edge of SR- 124.
Brown, Pomeroy, There . was
At 1:11 p.m. Wednesday the other contributions for the Gallipolis, was driving his Wells was not injured. medium damage to the car.
E-R was called to the home of party are needed and anyone tractor trailer eastward Into a Nu~kles ~rested for ~:&gt;.:zi:i:i'«8'W7~::::Wh?i:' .:.:.•.•.&amp; .a&lt; ·
Lawrence Manley, Laurel St., desiring to contribute is sharp right hand c.irve lost driving left~r. The truck
EXTENDED OUTLOOK _
for four-year old Li~ M~nley, .......ask.ed to c.ootact Mrs. _Birch~ --,- --~
' -- '
was- toa'di!d-wlth":COlil. weDS' - - Ohio - Extended O~tlook
Wlio was ill. She was taken to . field at 74U834, Mrs. Davis
car ,was demolished.
Saturday Through Monday:
Ve!A!taris ' Memorial Hospital at 742-4714, or Mrs. Eugene
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. on
Partly cloudy Saturday
and then sent on to the Holzer Thompson, 74W313. ·
LEVY ENDoRSED
County Road 32 in Chester wllh a chance of ohowers
Medical Cen!A!r.
:tr(,m.,,
l
&amp;~ The Pllmeroy Chamber ol Twp., Roger D. Coats, Miners- becoming moslly fair and
Conunerce has endorsed the ville, Rt. 1, driving west on
cool Sunday and Moaday.
Meigs Local School Disltict County Road 32 lost conltol, Daytime highs ln the 60s and
operating levy to be voted upon went into a ditch on llle right,
tow 70s Saturday aud in the
at the Nov. 7 election, Mem- came back across the highway
upper 50s and lower 601
bers of the orgamzatlon are to an embankment on the left. 'sunday and Monday. Night
encouraged to work for and
Coats was arrested for extime tows In the 30s and
vote for this levy, according to · cesslve speed. He was not
lower 40s.
John Kern, chamber president. injured . There was medium ;,::::::::;::~:;::~,:~~:::;::o;.~:&gt;.;:&gt;,::~;&gt;.;:;w..;:~

. POMao~. OHIO .
"'"'"Ill' al Federal R-w Svst~

sides because of what he called
Mrs . Richard Vaughan, Middleport, was committee. Mrs. Vaughan has attended
llle communists' refusal to elected director of District 16, Ohio four state conventions and three national
make visiable concessions.
Congress of Parent.9 and Teachers, Inc. at conventions.
Observe'rs said llle Com- the 67th Ailnulll !l!lnvenUon of the Ohio
She is president of the Mel&amp;&amp; County
munist statements did not PTA which concluded in Columbus Council of Parents and Teacbera, a
necess&lt;Jrily reflect the current Wednesday.
position sbe has held for three years., For
stage of llle secret talks betAs the new district director, Mrs. five years she was a delega!A! to County
ween Kissinger and senior Vaughan will be responsible for counseling Council and for two years served as
Hanoi diplomats Le Due Tho 52 units in the counties of Hocking, Athens, publicity chairman .
and Xuan . Thuy.
Vinton, Jackson , 'Meigs, Gallla and
Mrs. Vaughan first became a member of
Thuy's absence at today's Lawrence. She will be responsible for the PTA in 19S9 when she joined the
meeting
strengthened plannin_g district conf~ren~es, organizing Middleport unit. She served as the _PTA
widespread press report.9 he . new on1ts, and dlssemmahng Information room mother representative for nine
and Tl)o were again meeting from the state orgamzahon to the local . years, was first vice · president and
Kissinger, who cancelled his units.
program chairman, two years, secretary,
Mrs. Harold Lohse of Pomeroy was the magazine chairman, publicity chalnnan,
scheduled departure Wednesday night to expand 197().72 district director but ·was not a publications chairman, and cultural arts
his stay here for an un- candidate forre-&lt;!lection at th~ convention. chairman.
precedented filth day of talks.
Mrs. Vaughan has been act1ve In PTA 14
Her interest In youth has extended Into
talks.
years and for th~ past three years has girl scout work and for seven years she
"The American government, served on -the Oh1~ PTA Board. For two was leader of a troop. She is an active
MRII •• VAUGHAN ·
while claiming it wants peace, years she was pubhcabons cHairman, and member of the Order of Eas!A!rn Star a'nd
is intensifying more than ever for the past year has served .as juvenile .the Middleport First United Presbyterian
the war," Mrs. Binh told u.s. pro~~tion and recreation ch~ lrman . In Church where she serves as treasurer or
negotiator William J . Porter add1t1on she has been a member of the . Group I of llle Women 's Association. She Park and swimming pool,
and Lam in the heavily nominating committee for board chair- has been employed two straight summers
Thls year she received the 1972 Out·
guarded conference room.
.men, and member of the legislative as director of the Middleport Municipal standing Young Woman award,

R
•
T
:::e!u~h~ i.e~~m~ru~~~
Ig urns
...

.49
~Advertisement

-

'

'

By United Pr011 Internatlonol

In a large selectionof solids
and textures, including
black, white, fall fashion
shades, and Holiday pastels.
Over 1,000 yards . in selec;
tion.

Sale

•·'

There they ·were welcomed
bY Scott Lucas, aaalatant admlnillrltor, and ~~. George
Hobstetter, Jr., R.N., who

'heads the program to provide
toys
for
youngsters
hospitalized. The youngsters
were escorted to llle hospital
cafeteria where they ·were
served ice cream and cookies
and turned· their toy gifts over
to Mrs. Hobstetter. ·
Learning of the shortage of
toys and books for children who
are hospitalized, the boys and
girls colll'Cted $2S.40 to make
the purchases delivered
Wednesday. Severa! · mer·
chants gave the students a
"good 1eal" on the toys bought
for the program, Mrs. Hysell
sajd.
'
The .pUp;Js .included carrie

Bearhs, Mike Bowles, Larry
Brown, Jack Corder, Ronald
Cullums, Robin Dugan,
Darlene Dunn, Christine Fry,
NEW OFFICEI!B ollbe Meigs County ~rial, I to ,r, ,
'Genla Grover, Timollly ·Herd·
are the Rev. Rol!ert Sbo9k, paator of lbe Ml, Hernion United ·
man, Tlmrny Hysell, Terl
Brethren in Clrilt 0\urcb, president; the Rev. Dwight
Jacobs, Joe Jeffers, Clifford
Zavllz, director of the United Presbyterian Minlltry In Meigs ·
Kennedy, Rena Lefebre, Lee
COUnt}', vice p~ent, and the Rev. Audry Mlller, putor of
Lewis; Barbara Murphy;
tile Middlepiri Cb~ch of the Nuareiie, secretary-lrea8llrer, ·
Noel, 'Jennifer
Herbie
Ohlinger, Tom Owens, Robert
AUTO BURNED
Veteruli M_emorlal BOI(Itlal
Petrie, · Brenda Richards,
The Pomeroy Fire Dept. •as ADMlTTED - Lovle Wat..
Linda Rosenbatlm, Jimmie called !Q Laure1 St. Wednt!llday aon, Pomeroy; Beth CuetO,
Snider, Larry Snyder, Curtis where a car owned by Clifford Middleport; Mary Grad,.,
S))!!ncer, Kelly Thoma, · Cindy lliurray had caught fire due
Racine; Larry Hoachar,
.Thompson, Bobby Wears, a defective carb~retor. -Pomeroy.
Chris Woods, SusAn Zirkle, Damages were estim8ted at DISCHARGED - Jiullor
Cletus Be go, . and Jlnimy $200 by Fira Chief Henry Autberson, Carol Hall, BtadleJ
· Hayes.
Werry.
· Kran, Herald Hullnan .

to:

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2- Tbe llllil)' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1972

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f"~""'Gen~;;;;r Rap
•

Voice along Br'Way . i i

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WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
• K 1065
.KQ 1052

By Helen and Sue Hottel .

IZ

'

PITTSBURGH
ab r
Stennett, If
, 4 o h1 bi0
Oliver , cf
3 0
0
Clemente, rf
· 3 o 01 -o
Stargell, lb
4 o
Robertsn, 1b
o o 00 00

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Television Log

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NEW

Go West, Young Man in

Santin•!

A's, Tigers In Clash

For AL Marbles Today

r-------------------.

°

·LIJ(;JT

Ceiling Paint

LUCITr CEILING PAINT

m

..

FOREMAN &amp;· ABBOn

d

Hard Way To
Go Manny •• •

A COMPLETE STOCK

The

It's Thursday once again, time for the fearless forecast by .
the unpredictable Moleman.
.
Well, this has been some week, watching our favorite
baseball team, the National Leagu~ Champion Cincinnati Reds .
Win the pennant. Johnny Bench, one.of the Moleman's favorite
Reds, really came through in the clutch Wednesday night. What
a way to make the fans forget 197l !
OUr hat is also tipped to little Joe Morgan, Bobby ToliJII, Pete
Rose; Ciay Carroll, Tom Hall and Pedro Borbon. Then there are .
th
1 f t
ose ess or .unate Reds like you and me, who must '!!it and
watch the actton.
·' '
j
Speaking of action, Major Amos B. Hoople edged your• truly. 1
by one game last week and took a one game lead in our own t
"pennant chase."
Hoople posted a 17-3 week while the Moleman was 16-1. Both
missed the Eastern-Kyger Creek ;'Jackson-Athens and ~;airland·
Coal Grove games. Hoople also scored on the Gallipolis-Waverly
game.
Afterfiveweeksofpredlctions, Major H; ople stands at 76-23-

!

- ~ ~~

,.

By Col. Mole

Cash, 2b
Geronimo.
Alley,
He got Geronimo to fly deep Blass, ss
p
to right with pinchrunner Hernande z, p
George Foster moving to third, Giusti , p
CINCINNATI
(UP!)- The power was there but our brought George Foster streakMoose, p
and . then Darrel Chaney Totals
Johnny Bench says he always pitchers were lame. This team ig from third with the deciding
popped to shortstop 'Gene
does
what his mother tells him has the pitching and the run in the bottom of the ninth.
CINCINNATI
Alley. With a one and one count
to
do
defense to go with the power.''
"But when it's for aU the
ab r
h
bi
So
~en
Mom
Bench
called
Rose
echoed
Anderson's
marbles,
you take it anyway
on · pinchhitter Hal McRae, Rose, /1
3 0
Morgan
,
2b
~
~
for
a
home
run
in
the
ninth
comments
on
Pittsbur,gh.
you
can,"
he said.
however, Moose broke a slider
4 0
Tolan
,
cf
4
0
into the dirt in front of the Bench, c
o o inning of the Cincinnati Reds- "They have a great club," he
Rose said he would favor
4 I 2 1
plate. It bounced off catcher Perez, lb
Pittsburgh Pirates National said. "Neither team would Detroit slightly as a World
4 0
1 o0 League playoff game Wednes- have to be ashamed of losing Series opponent, but was not
Manny Sanguillen 's arm and Fos ler, pr
0 I 0
Menke, Jb
3 0 t o day, Johnny had to come this game.''
Foster easil)' scored with the Geronimo,
concerned about which the
rf
4 t
1 through .
winning run.
I
"You
don't
like
to
win
a
Reds face•
Chaney ; ss
4 I
CINCINNATI (UP!) _
"! think the Good Lord just Gullelt, p
"I saw·Mom as I was walking game like that," he added,
"It doesn't matter," he said.
0 0 ~ ~
Tickets for the four World wanted the Cincinnati Reds to Borbon, p
0 0 o o from the dugout to the plate, however.
"This year we're going to win it
Uhiaandr, ph
1 0
Series games that will be represent the National League Hall,p
A wild pitch in the dirt all.''
0 0 o 0 and sbejust nodded to me as if
played here go on sale today in the World Series," said a Hague, ph
0 0
is 75-24-2. Now let's see if the Mole can make hay
at 9 a.m. IEDT) at 'River· ha'ppy, but thoughtful An- Concepcn, pr
0 0
0 0 o o homer.' 1 always mind my :;:,
front Stadium. Reserved derson . "I think that's the only Carroll, p
=:::
SEOAL
McRae, ph
0 0 0 0
seats are $8, with a thing that kept the Pirates Totals
:::;
ATHENS 22 WAVERLY 6. Bulldogs bounced back last week
mother."
31 4 7
maximum of four tickets per from winning . " ~
~ Bench boomed a homer out
D
;!:~ against lronmen. They should really be rough against the Tigers.
purchase.
·
Cincinnati's starting pitcher,
Two oul when winn ing run of Riverfront stadium to tie the
~non
rja~'ll
~:.~
ffi0NTON24LOGAN6. Tigers afterstrongvlctory last week
The first game of the 21-year-old southpaw Don Gul- scored in ninth.
final
playoff
game
at
3:3,
.
:
.
:
:
.
.
.
:I:'
:,·:&lt;, appear to have Jt sewed up.
to
020 100 000-3
· th
f
series will be played lett, made it into the fourth Pills.
Cincin .
001010 002- 4 pavmg eway ortheReds'4By MILTON RiCHMAN .
JACKSON18MEIGS14.Well, Ihuvebeenwrongbefore.
Saturday and the second on inning, when he gave way to
E- Chaney. OP- Cincinnatl 3 victory and a berth in the ·:·:
UPJ ""orts Editor
;;~
GAL!JPO!JS 16 WELLSTON 0. Believe this is the first time
1'1'
this
·
Sunday. Starting times both Pedro Borbon with the Pirates I. LOB- Prtlsburgh 5, Cin . World Series.
5.
2BHebner.
Rose
.
Sparky
Anderson,
a
gentle·
CINCINNATI
(UP!)A
White
House
visitor
once
asked
Abe
.season
I
have
gone with the Devils. No, the pressure isn't
cinnali
days will be I p.m. (EDT) . leading, 2-1, runners on first
HRGeronimo,
Bench. s- man who belt'eves m
' ••
mvm
' g Lincoln what he thought was the most terrible thing in the world, gettmg to me.
and second, and none out. Dave G
Oliver, Rose.
SV .
ulletl,
ip h r er bb so credi! where it is due, had and without hesitating so much as a minute, Lincoln said it was
AC
•
teams over in that league " Cash greeted Borbon with a
1
Blass
7
1·3
4
2
2
2
3
nothing
but
praise
for
the
ingratitude.
.
KYGER
CREEK
13
SOUTHERN
6.
It's homecoming at
said a happy Reds Manag~r run-scoring single, but PitHernandez
2·3 0 0 0 0 1 Piraies.
Webster defines ingratitude as forgetfulness of, or poor return Bobcatland, the .'Cats are hungry af{er last week's loss at
Sparky Anderson, when tsburgh got only one hit the rest Giusli(LJ
0
32200
Eat
dtrdti
Moose
2-3
o
o
o
o
o
"Pittsburgh
is
still
as
good
as
for
kindness received.
s t;rn an a I on goes a long way.
someone asked him whom he 'd of the. way off Borbon, Tom
rather face in the Wrold Series Hall and winner Clay Carroll. Gullett
3
6 J J o 2 we are," he said as he toweled
Nobody ever will be able to accuse Sparky Anderson, manager
SOVTHWESTE~ 20 ~NAN TRACE 0. The Highlanders
which starts here Saturday.
Blass Walks Hague
~~~~on
j : ~ ~ ~ champagne from his hair.
of Cincinnati's new National League champs, of that in his are ready for that fll'st IllusiVe victory.
,
Steve Blass, the Pittsburgh Carroll I W)
"We'll just play whoever
1
o o o o o "I've said all along that one relationship with the people around hlm.
NORTH GALLIA 16 GREEN 6. Pirates bounce back against
Gullett pitched to two batters team was as Iough as the other
Beyond a question, nobody ever.will be able to point a finger at . Bobcats.
wins."
starter, had the Reds pretty
The Tigers and the A's, tied much under control while he \~r:~ub~~~er;:~s~ilnr~tched to and this proves it," he said. "It him and accuse him of that in the relationship he had, and still
IV_URTLAND 16 SYMMES VALLEY 12. VIkings come close
at two games apiece ·in their was in there, but walked - WP- Gulleft, Moos e, T- was dead even all the way.
talks about, with Harold "Lefty" Phillips, who died at the age of but still lose.
. .
best-of.five playoff, were to pinchhitter. Joe Hague leading 2: 19. A- 41 ,BS7.
"I knew we were in deep 53 last June in f'ullerton, Calif.
. CADIZ 30 EASTERN 0. The Eagles are playing way out of
meet today in Detroit in the off the eighth inning. After
trouble when they (Pirates)
SUIJ Thinks of Old Friend
the1r class this week.
fifth an~ deciding game for the pinchrunner Dave Concepcion
Even now, on Cloud Nine as he is over leading the Reds to their
OTHERS
scored early· I just hoped we
American League title.
was sacrificed to second,
could hold them to three runs." , second NL pennant in the past three seasons, Sparky Anderson
Belpre 16 Federal-Hocking 0
Reds Come Back
Pirate Manager BilL Virdon
The bed!Reds clubfhouse was a finds it virtually impossible not to keep thinking about his old
Nelsonville-York 24 Warren Local 6
On Wednesday, the Reds brought in southpaw Ramon
soggy
am o champagne. friend, Lefty Phillips.
.
Vinton County 28 Miller 6
came back from what looked Hernandez, who retired Joe
Major League Slandinps
Tony Perez wearing a ,. "As I'
'd
'f
AleXBnder 56 Glouster o
" ve sat to my Wl..e, as far as I'm concerned, Lefty is still
Huntington East 21 Pl. Pleasant 12
like a heartbreaking loss, Morgan on a ground out and By United Pr~ss lnternahonal borrowed polic~an's hat and
Championship Playoffs
douaing everyone in sight with here, says Anderson. He has never left, and he never will.
Wahama 13 Winfield
scoring two runs in the bottom struck out Bobby Tolan .
(Best of Five!
12
bubbly, roared his warning to People who have such a tremendous influence on your life never
Fairland 18 Rock Hill
of the ninth inning, to win, 4-3.
Giusti relieved Hernandez at
National League
0
Catcher Johnny Bench, who the start of the ninth and the
w. I. pet. the Reds' opponent in th really leave you.
·Cincinnati
e "I'll probably never win an award, but if 1 dn, Lefty will win it
Coal Grove 20 Oak lllll 14
3 2 .600 World Series.
"just had a feeling," led off the rest is just a bad memory for &gt;&lt;Pittsburgh
2 3 .400
"We don't care wlio we right there wtth me. A Iotta people will say that's corny. 1 can't
South Point 32 Chesapeake 20
inning with a towering home the Pirates.
American League
Wheelersburg 24 Minford 14
run into the rightfield seats off
Casb drove in two of the 0
w. I. pet. play," he shouted. "We're help that. Basically, Lefty Phillips accounts for 7S per cent of
akland
2
2
ready
for
anybody."
what
I
do
in
baseball.
He
taught
me
the
baslca,
what
this
game
;,
Cincinnati
McNicholas 22 Portsmouth 20
Pittsburgh relief ace Dave Pirate runs with singles in the Detroit
2 2 .500
.500
Pete Rose, holding two-year- all about. I wouldn't be here today if It wasn't for him, and what
Giusti.
second and fourth innings and
X·Ciinched pennant
old Peter Rose on his shoul· he did for me."
The right-handed Bench, who the other scored when Chaney
WednesdaT's Rosults
Natlona League
had 40 homers during the let an outfield throw go through
ders, talked more sedately.
Sparky Anderson was sitting in the trainer's room as he spoke.
Clnci 4 Pittsburgh 3
regular season, said it was only him for an error.
"This
year
we
can.
go
to
the
There
was nobndy around, and he sat on one corner of tl!e table. replied Anderson. "I just want to prqve I belong in baseball.
American League
So Sparky Anderson took the manager's joll~t Rock IIIli, S.C.,
his secon!l to the opposite field Runs Off Blass
Detroit 4 Oak 3, 10 inns
Series and play our klnd of He wanted to talk about his friend, Lefty Phillips, and. his mind
· Thunday's Game
in 1965 and from there he moved .to St. Pe~sburg, Modesto,
all season, with the other one
The two runs the Reds got off
game," he said. "We have raced back now to their first meeting.
'
·
'
'Am
orlean
L~ajjue
Ashevllle and finally up to Cincinnati three aeMOna ago, I •
also coming against the .Blass came on a double by
speed, power and pitching.
Met 25 Years Ago
Oaklandot Detroil
He never forgot what his friend·, Lefty Philllpt, did for him. In
Pirates.
Rose in the third which scored
"In 19'70 we had problems.
"I first met Lefty in Rancho Playground in los Angeles 25
all
likelihood, he never will.
The pitch that cost the Chaney from second, and a
years ago," remembered the Reds' manager. "!was jUBt a kid
Pirates the game and the home run over the right field
"When it came purely to baseball,'' says Anderson, "I don1
playing ball in what they called the Playground League, and he
National League pennant, fence in the fifth by Geronimo.
was bird:dogging for the Reds and also working for the railroad. think anybody was his equal. I'm talking about baseball
however, was served up by Bob
Anderson, who led the Reds
He used to be there in the playground all the time, and he'd lalk specifically. I'm not talking about other things, like handling
people or the press."
Moose, the fourth Pittsburgh to their . second National
with me and encourage me. By the time I went to high school, he
hurler, and It came just as it League championship in the
Sparlcy Anderson received the news of Lefty Phlllips' death
went with the Dodgers and later on I played for a weekend team
appeared ·the stocky righthan- .last three years, has already
last June at his home in Cincinnati. He went to the room where he
he had that he called the Dodgers."
der would work out of a sticky announced Gary Nolan will
Time moved along, and when he was 19, Anderson signed to likes to sit and reflect about things late at night, he closed the
situation he Inherited.
pitch . the first World Series
door, and cried.
·
CINCINNATI
(UPI )'Moose Relieves Giusti
game, if he is physically sound. Manny Sanguillen was still the Pittsburgh Pirates' catcher play for Santa Barbara, which was then an affiliate of the ·
Moot!" relieved Giusti with If not, it will be Jack smiling, but it came a little Wednesday after his team lost Dodgers In the California Slate League. That was in 1953 and
4-3 to the Cincinnati Reds and after an 11-year playing career, 10 of which were spent in the
runners on first and second, Billingham, with
Ross harder.
with it a chance for a second minors, Anderson got a chance to manage Toronto in the In·
nobody out, and a two:ball, no- Grimsley and Gullett going in
"It's a hard way to ~t that's straight National League ternationai League .
strike count on the Reds' Cesar • games two and three ..
the way you have to go," said Championship.
He finished fifth and that winter, this was 1964, the people
"Btit am I stlll smiling?? 1 running the Toronto club decided to change their working
am," he said. "! keep my agreement and go with the Boston Re&lt;l Sox.
confidence, but it's hard to Toronto Sends Telegram
lose; it's hard.''
"Toronto sent me a telegram saying I'd been released and that
Sanguillen wasn't smiling, Dick W'tllia11111 was gohig to get the job," says Anderaon.
though, when a Bob Moose "Naturally,! called Harold right away. He told me to call Buzzie
slider to Reds' pinch hitter Hal (Buzzle Bavasi, then vice president with the Dodgers) . I also
McRae in the bottom of the wrote letters to a Iotta clubs, and you know what they said. 'Drop
ninth irming, hit the dirt, too~ 1!. us a line next year."'
weird bounce over him and
Nothing happened untu Lefty Phillips, getting ready to go to
DETROIT (UPI)-The Oak·
land Athletics, at long last? Dr would guess which will earn . the A's, wbo took a 3-llead into rolled to the backstop, allowing spring training with the Dodgers, walked into Dick Walsh's office
the right to meet the Cincinnati the loth inning of the fourth pinchrunner Ge?rge F~ster to one day. Walsh was a Dodger exec at the time.
the Detroit Tigers, with a 1968Reds in the. World Series.
game Wednesday and looked frscoomre ththll'
. ed-.Reds wmrung run
"Do you know anyone personally with the Cardinals?" Phillips
style "miracle?"
John "Blue Moon" Odom, like chamno-411JtiJ the Tigers
asked Walsh
The American League play- who pitched a shutout for \he came back""with three runs to
"! was m
. fron I fth e ball"
• · "Y " said. Walsh "Bob H
"
offs; seemingly locked up for A's in the second game of the win, 4-3, 1n the last of the loth. Sanguillen said "I was ready
es,
·
owsam.
·
"George Anderson needs a job bad," said Phillips. "Would you
the A's and now suddenly aU piayoff s, will be on the mound
"If we're good ballplayers to catch it.
kH
if
be h h
1 him
tied up, will be decided In the again against National League that shouldn't bother us.:
"Then it hit something and as owsam may e as one or
?"
fifth and final game today at castoff Woody Fryman for the insisted A's captain Sal Bando. went up. It hit something, then
Walsh SB;Id he would, and he did. ~?wsa~ subsequently in·
12:30 p.m. EST at Tiger fired :Up Tigers. ,
"We'll just have to win it it hit my hand as it went up. structed h1s farm director, Sheldon Chief Bender, to call
Stadium. After what happened
A Stunnlug Situation . .
today:•
You gotta move fast . I tried to Anderson, who was.selling cars in Los Angeles.
Wednetlday, only a brave man
It's !! stunn~ slt'!lltion for
!!ut Fryman insisted, get up for it but I ~uldn't."
Bender Calla _ .
.. .
_ - . _
..
--~--"We've got the momentllm - SanglilllenShook his head, ' !Would you be interested li1 t~lng a managerial job even
..
~~now."
·
then he smiled ..
·
though it's in the..Western Carolinas League?" Bender asked ..
/ ,· ll
If the Tigers do emerge the
"See, I still am happy.~· he
"I'll take a job anywhere and I don't care what the money is,"
/
,· ' ,I \
cllamplons, both they and the said, ''but it's hard to lose."
·
A's will replay over.anct-over
Moose took the fateful pitch a
·,I I
in their minds the wild loth little harder.
inning of tbe fourth game.
"What can I say. It felt like
.o\1 that point It was all tied at an ordinary pitch," the stocky
i._,__
1-1, thanks to a third-inning righthander said.
Because we can h,andle early Christmas
~) '0
homer by Dick McAuliffe of the
"It hit something and went
business more efficiently. we can make this
TigtV and a seventh4nning straight up in the air," Moose
special offer:
Colors 10 all\1•
homer
by
Mike
Epstein
of
the
continued.
"If
It
bounces
- 10 dlttl'1cflvtl
And • fabUlous whltn
A's. And then the A'! struck for normal then maybe Manny has
When the sefling prices of
lorth.tt&gt;touchof
.
two
Bingle by pinch- it and maybe we get out of the
lhMr lleganet: ·
the items you purchase on
SEARS
1ny order from Sears
hitter Gohzalo Marquez, a Inning. I don't know whatit hit.
" I . . . !7JS ill
.
Christmas
Clta1og
total
SSO
double by Matty Alou on which Maybe It was a funny !pin;
Early Shoppe(s
more, 1nd the order is
BUT YOU PAY ONLY Marquez actred as catcher Bill maybe it hit a rock. Hell, I or
pl1cad uylime through
Freehan couldn't handle the don't know."
OciO!Itr 30, 1972.
tlirow, and a lingle by Ted
Pirates' Manager Bill Vlrdon
Longhorns are
Kubiak.
· saw the bouncing pitch as the
slyled al/er /he authen/rc
~VI
"Everybody was saying on end of a long struggle between
wes1ern bool pattern s of a
'1.50
the bench, 'Let's geh runner wha\ most people think are the
DISCOUNT
century ago. Made out ol raw. hel/y,
on base and maybe somebody two best teams .ln ba~ball.
br1ar-ocarred leather. L£11lghorns are as r·ugged as
will hlt one out !Jf h~e;:• said
"That was It but I've gotta
therr namesake. They're 1he perlect boot for a(\y
Tiger AJ Kallne. That'a not think they're No. 1,'' Virdon
occasion from a day on !he range loa night on lhe town Get
quite the way It worked.
said of the Reds. "They beat WI
into ihe sprr~ and rope yo"rseli a new look The only !hrng more
You can . get this Discount
Flnt McAuliffe ...led and and they deserve ·to be No. 1.
western lhan Longhorns rs Oodge Crly Longhorns by Thorn
whether you.o,rdet: by Phone
so did Katlne and 111e tylnfl runs
"But they kno'l they had a ·
MeAn.. oardner.
or in Person.
were on bue with nilne out. struggle," he oontlnued. "I
PRill
DINT
' .
,
nle A'Neqi for reliever Joe talked to each ol IUY guys inLATIX
lbll!ll to face pinch~fur . dlvidually. 'I told them it's a
Gates Brown . •A wild pltcb bird ll(ay tO go, and we'll get
AUTHORIZED
mooed the two l'UII1erl up and 'em next year. Wliat elle can I
CATALOG MERCHANT
thl!ll Brown walked to 9111 l!lt' say,
IM'U5•_,JIII
willling run 111 the loeded . ''I atllllaywe're the two'best
l20.E. MAtN
992-2t78
POMEROY
,
.
baaea. Freehan rapped · a teams. It had to COOJe to tllll."
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
ll'OIIIder to Dando at !bird, Mon., TuH., Wed. &amp; S.t. ""'
Fingerprlritlng b the most
Thurs. I to Noon, Frldly t:OOtot:OO
and lnllelld tA. throwing home, infallible method of identi·
·MIDDLEPORT, 0.
BandO t1nw to ~e~»ncl. ,
flcatlon.

s

,, for ~II your

••••
••
•

4 2 2 0
4 1 2 0
4 o 2 2
4 o 0 0
3 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
o 0 0 0
o o 0 0
33 3 8 2

Mom Said ·Hit
One, So l Did ·
Says Big John

~ ~ ~ec~~:?~=~ s~~ i~;~.~~c~ ·;(~&gt;::: :•; ~:;:: : : : : : : :: : :,. &gt;:: : : : : : : ::::~&lt;:: :: : : ::: : : : : : :~~,~~::m:::: : : : : : : ;,:,:,:;: : , W:=:'\f ~~7-hi~::~le
Today's
r:
&gt;t
Il
e "
)f
f

Tuppers Plains
Society News

MEADOWS

Sanguillen, c
Hebner-, Jb

CINCINNATI (UPI )-A single pitch, one which hit in front
of the plate and bounded away,
made the difference between
what most people consider the
two best teams In baseball and
•
now that they're No. I, the
National League champion
Cincinnati Reds aren·•t par.
ticularly choosy who they go
against in the World SeriesDetroit or Oakland.
·
"I wouldn't pick either of the

'"'

'"'

'72 NL
Champs

'·

·.

notions.on how to make this dream come true.103
'
BY PAUL CRABTREE •
RING f'IGIIT HAS FALSID RINO
classy ... The seven.,scream group he carries
WEST
EAST
• 72
• 43
with him has been extended by what seemed Helen and Sue:
.83
.764
!thought i loved this guy. We'd been together almost a year._.
ahnost a symphOnic string orchestra faded into
'
The tastes of Middle America, or the Mid.Obio Valley, aren't
t KQJ987
t A1043
the dimlit camouflage .llf the equipment • 1o celebrate my 21St birthday, he took me to Las ,Vegas for a
necessarily
the same as those of the entertainment moguls who
.K84
.A976
little
bit
of
legal
gambling.
·
crowdeil, psychedelically flashing background;
sit in their walnut-and:ehrome offices in New York and
SOUTH (D)
We used mostly' my money, as he was between jobs and he
a conductor wielded an electrified baton (rock
.AQJ98 . .
Hollywood and tell us what we ought to see, and hear, and buy .
.AJ9
calls lor electrification of everything and, was "borrowing" from me most of the evening. He did that quite
I could write a colwnn, or a book, on the BUbject, ~t I
•
2.
lot
but
seldom
if
ever
repaid.
a
ultima tely, an unwired, frankly excited
wouldn't tell it half so eloquently as Roy Clark, the guitar player
•QJsi
Well,
he
used
my
money
for
a
keno
ticket
and
hit:
Actually,
audience J ... Acres of fiddles , cellos, at least two
and sometime singer, does in a new release he has recorded. It
Norih-South vulnerable
standard double bass violins - all scraped their I chose the numbers, gave him the money, and he took it to the
says It aU.
·
West North Easl South
supportive sounds into dozens of loud-speakers desk ; so we agreed that we'd use "our" winnings to pay for the
I'm not even sure of the title, but I think It's ''The Lawrence
2t
31o
St Slo .. Welk-Hee Haw Counter-Revolutionary Polka."
aimed sll;ategically at the crowd with the care trip - and the rest would go for a $200 diamond ring for me. It
,
Pas5
Pass
Pass
and logistical canniness of a general using aural wasn't an engagement ring - we weren't planning marriage. 1
· Anyhow, it describes how the networks canned Welk and Hee.
Op eni~ g lead- + K
ammunition instead of lethal ; the differ~ n ce wore it 'on my right hand.
Haw- only to see them oom'e back, succeasfully, in syndlcatlon
Three months later we split up. It was pretty bitter. Today I
seemed minimal often enough.
and draw some very good audiences, indeed.
· Diamona himself is a slender, quick.:eyed, received a letter from him asking for "his ring" back. To clinch By Oswald &amp; JaAies Jacoby
America Is indeed a plunilistic society -of soul and suburb,
warily arrogant lad in a beaded deep-red shirt it, he enclosed a cheap little "friendship ring" I'd given him.
One of the most eff&lt;ftive city and country. And if Lawrence, Buck Owens, Roy and others
bids in match·point duplicate can make it via the syndication route, more power to them.
and what seemed red .suede pants ; not nearly so Made a few threats.
is
the premature save . At
Must I give back a ring that my money won ? Can he sue or
sartorially spaced 'o~t as Mick Jagger or that
(Intellectuals reading this might. want to go back and read
least,
it is effective when it
guy who calls himself Alice ; in fact in that anything? - UNLUCKY AT LOVE
the
first
verse of Benet's "John Brown's Bndy" in preference to
pushes your opponents one
P.S.
I
guess
l'd,better
be
completely
honest
:
I
was
ten
days
overdressed league, Diamond dressed with
hearing Roy.Clark'srecord. That says It all,toQ,friend.)
trick beyond their limit.
from
being
21,
so
I
COU\dn't
gamble
legally,
though
no
one
more functional flamboyance - far from the
+++
It turns out to be a dissilly drag-excesses ol the hysterically freaked- checked my !.D. card. That's why !let him place the bigger bet aster when ; instead of being
Bumper sticker parlay of the week, seen across the back
while I played the slots. Could he have me prosecuted for this? stampeded into the strato- window of a car in Mason: ''God Loves You- Wahama White
up screamers.
sphere, they stop to double Falcons - If You Know Jesus, Honk Twice." •
His music cannily exploded through hypedyou
and it turns out that they
up speakers whose noise races. through the floor Unlucky:
+++
couldn't make a game.
Don't worry about prosecution .- ypu didn't place any bet
and literally up your theater seats to really
An
Ohio
FM
station
in
Medina
has begun broadcasting part
East's jump to five dia·
this
chintzy
guy
can
prove.
"Persecution?"
He
may
try
but
he
jangle your eardrums and rib cage ; we don't
monds was one of those pre- of its programmin~ in the new quadrophonlc system, whiclj- in
won
't
get
far.
The
gift
"your"
winnings
bought
didn't
come
with
mature saves. He decided effect - uses four sound sources instead of two, as in stereo
understand how tliese young rock-committed
t
h a t his opponents could systems. I haven't heard the effect' on quad equipment yet, aud
a
return
clause.
HELEN
lads can wind up anywhere but deaf ; leaving the
make
four spades and that
+++
Winter Garden was much like debarking a ship
the
loss
his partner would we can't get a good signal here, but look for it -it's coming.
U
at
L
:
onto a calm dock directly from some jari:ed-up
+++
take at five diamonds douTell
you
what
you
do
:
Send
back
the
cheap
little
friendship
bled
would
be
less
than
the
typh oon; Broadway's normal ultradecibel
Southeastern Ohio's only TV station, WOUJI.TV In Athens
clangor ~eemed downright pastoral.
, ring with a note, "Please keep this as a remembrance of the good score for a vulnerable game . (Cable Channel II), was supposed to be ciff the air for about 60
He was pretty sure that if days, to permit erection of a new tower.
·
Diamond works hard, long (two hours times we had - on my money."
he
bid four diamonds and
If
he
bothers
you
again,
present
a
bill
for
the
approxiniate
without intermission) and ,often pleasing_ly. He
The so· days are up and we haven't he8rd a word about
then five he would be doutorture~ his face and music to inject soul into amount he borrowed. Like about. $200? - SUE
resumption
of prograrrunlng as yet. Ahd some of the natives are
bled and he hoped that his
+++
Brooklynese; proud of his Jewishness, ban.
quick jump to that contract getting restless. (WOUB-TV has the only dally new~cast on TV
Dear
Rap:
might get him a reprieve:
tering to "the little Jewish girls" who haunt his
aimed'exclusively at Southeastern Ohio and West Virginia area
I've
got
a
sort
of
pixie
face
.
I
read
somewhere
that
girls
with
It
did.
South
decided
that
news.)
stage doors (tho' we know his appeal is rock-roll
five spades would wheel in
ecumenical ); conjuring up what seems his small, turned-up noses and big eyes were apt to fall in love first and
+++
that he couldn't set five
and
think
later.
In
other
words,
they
could
be
easy
pushovers
for
private analysis of a life triumphant over
I've got a hangup about Bonall28, now that Dan Blocker is
diamonds enough to cover
persuasive
guys.
tribulations from agents, cynically unknowing
dead and the program restructured, I just feel no desire at all to
the loss of the game.
Girls with longer noses, the article read, knew a stinker when
He was right to that ex· tune in the show, which was an above..average program for so
recording executives, cigar-chomping cliches
tent. West would be down many years. (I really liked Blocker. The only other TV per.
of inattentive, rock-ignorant Bdwy. music they met one. True? - A LITTLE WORRIED
500 at five diamonds doupublishers ; all flung with often an artily
sonallty whose death hit me so hard was the very Innovative
bled.
Dear
Worried:
·
pretentious, arrogant wariness at a mixture of
He was w r o n g in his Ernie Kovacs.)
Don't
believe
every
survey
you
read.
Maybe
the
"researstandard First Night types and teenage
In its he~y, Bonanza made quite a name for itself. But It's
major premise. He couldn't
figured
a
long
nose
was
better
for
smelling
a
rat.
Or
It
cher"
demake
spades
since
the
devotees.
not the same out there on the desert, on a namewithnoHoss,
fense collected a diamond
could be he just discovered small..,osed girls are easier to kiss +++
and two c I u b s before he
thus get more offers "they can't refuse." - SUE
ON
THE
TV
DIAL:
Pernell
Roberts, ivhom I didn't miss at
could gain the lead.
+++
aU when he left Bonanza, is guest star on Jigsaw tonight, 9:30 on
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Dear Worried:
,
WHTN-TV ... WVU football highlights at 10, WMUL-TV.
Never heard of this small nose-big eye survey, but be that as
it may : pushovers are girls whose "No's" are NOT as
pronounced as their "Ayes." -HELEN
The bidding h.., been:
.
+++ ·
West
North
East
South
'.
BY EVELYN BRICKLES
Dear Helen :
Mrs. Velma Matlack went to
1t
Pass
21o
In a recent column, you used the terms "latent homosexual" Pass
?
Arizona to spend the· winter and .. cloSet queen."
Pass
3•
Pass
You, South, hold:
with her daughter.
explain
what
they
mean.
,
Please
.AK86 .Al02 tKS .AJ64
Mr . and "Mrs. Lawrence
Also,
would
a
male
with
breasts
that
seem
to
be
getting
Hasbagen and family and Mrs.
What do you bid now ?
~indsay Lyons and daughter of bigger and female-type, tend to be faggy? - PUZZLED AND
A-Bid three no·trump. Your
Programs for Tonight .
·
.
WORRIED
,llft\')I)C.f
mlp;
,1';ell
be
slariing
0
Parkersburg, Mrs :· Marton· · 1 " 1•1 ~·wrt
'"
"' •
''"'I ''' It•• -.t1A IJJI '.N
1~' 1;.( lit\
'"
'"
to:war~ a ... ~•~Jf he is, he will
Riggs and family and Mrs.
·•
.,
and Tomorrow'!"
find a furt~tJ rbid now.
Danny Duvall and family of Dear P and W:
.,
'
•
·"·- -- _1
TODAY'S QUESTION
Logan, Mr . and Mrs. Ed Moore
· A "latent" homosexual does not actively seek mates of the
~
Your partner does fmd a
of Gallipolis all were Sunday same sex, but is bent in that direction. A "closet queen" is a further
bid. 1t is six no-trump.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey secret gay who only comes out with his homosexual friends. One What do you do now ?
THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 1972
Lyons and son, Lemar, and who "comes out" no longer hides his preferences from the
Mrs. Eulah Swan. They came straight world.
to celebrate Lemar 's 13th
Boys' breasts often become enlarged· when they enter
6:00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Conseq. 6; Hathayoga 33.
birthday.
puberty. It's part of growing up and has absolutely NOTHING to Monday witn her daughter, Mr. 6:30- NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I
Dream of Jeannie 13.
Mrs. Agnes Hill returned do with "being faggy." Also some males naturally have larger and Mrs. Lawrence Balser.
7:00
- Course of Our Ti01es 33; Whars My Line B; Big Red
Mr . and Mrs. Tommy
home from Camden Clark breasts than do others. Stop worrying! - HELEN
Jubilee
15; News 6, 10; Truth or Consequences 3; Beat The
Watson were Sunday guests of
Hospital, Parkersburg, after
Clock 4; Amazing World of Kreskln 13.
.
his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Gary 7: 30-1'11 See You In Court 4; Hollywood Squares 3; To'Tell The
being a medical patient there .
Truth 6; Wild Kingdom 10; LassieS; Beat The Ciobk 13.
Barnheart of Logan .
She is somewhat improved.
Vienna , W. Va. were Sunday Eldred Grimes and Mrs. Cora
8:00 - Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15; Mod Squad 6, 13; The Walfons 8 10
Roger Clark of New Jersey dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Grimes of Athens visited Mrs.
9:00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15 ; Jigsaw 6, 13; International Per:
• • •
formance 33; Movie " Marlowe~&lt; 8, 10.
was a recent guest here of his Oscar Babcock. Afternoon . Weatherman on Sunday.
Dai~
10:00
- Owen Marshall6, 13; Dean Marlin 3, 4, 15 ; Mountaineer
of the finest pharmaceuticals
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Way callers were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Gary BarnSports 33.
·
DEVOTED TO THE
Clark.
INTEREST
OF
News3,
4,
6,
10,
13,
15.
1:00
Starling Massar and Mrs. heart and family of ReedsMEIGS ·MASON AREA .
enables us to serv~ all your drug
1:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavett 6; Movies "Hellcats
Mr . and Mrs . D_insmore Leota Massar of Ellstern. ville have moved to Logan,
CHESTE A L . TANNEHILL,
of the Navy" 8; "Act of Love" 10; "From Hell to Texas" 13.
Exec. Ed.
Boyles attended the funeral of David Riggs took them all for a Ohio where he has em2:00
- News 4.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
needs right away!
'
Mrs. Herman Taylor at Alfred ride in his large motor van to ployment. She is tfie grand- ·
2:30
News 13.
"•
City Editor
Published
aaily
except
one day last week.
Royal Oak Park .
daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. Fon Saturday by The Ohlo Valley
Wellie Halsey returned home
Mrs. Marvin Walker and Halsey and Mrs. Effie Watson . Publishing Company , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy. Ohio,
from Veterans Memorial daughter, Ruthie , spent
Mr . and Mrs. Hobert 45769
Off1Ce Phone
Hospital , Pomeroy , after Sunday I' i lh ,relatives in Whiteside and granddaughter 992.2156,Business
Editorial Phont 992 .
FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1972
2151 . .
spending several weeks there Colu;nbus.
6:00
Sunrise
Seminar
4; Sacred Heart 10.
of Parkersburg were &amp;llflday
Second class postage pl)ld at
6:15
Farmtlme
10.
as a medical patient.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar guests of Mrs. Bessie Webster. Pomeroy , Oh io
6:20 - Farm Report 13.
.National adveortis i ng
· Mr.andMrs. GeneRiggsand McKnight of Marietta were
Mrs. Lawrence Salser is representative
- Paul Harvey 13.
6:25
.
family of Eastern and Mr. and Monday guests of Mrs. Neisel selling Christmas jewelry for Go llagher , In c., 12 8ottlnetll
6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Public Aflalr 10.
East 42nd
7 : 00 - Today3 , 4,15;CBSN~ws8,JO.
,
Mrs. David Riggs and family of Weatherman. Mr. and Mrs. the WSCS and anyone wishing St ., Ntw York Cit\1. New York .
Subscription rates : De VISIT OUR
ENLARGED
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
livered by carrier whtre
13.
.
to buy some may contact Mrs. available 50 cents per wtek ,
8:00Capt,
Kangaroo
8,
10;
New
Zoo
Revue
13;
Sesame
St. 33;
Balser.
GIFT SECTION • · GIFTS FOR
By Motor Route whert carrltr
Friendly
Junction
10;
New
Zoo
Revue6;
Romper
Room
B.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barrett of serv ice not availeble : One
8:30
Jack
La
La
nne
!3;
New
Zoo
Revue6.
month
11
.75
.
By
mail
In
Ohio
mE ENTffiE FAMILY
Delaware were Sunday guests and W. Va ., One year $1.too.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Oonahue 15; What Every}woman
of Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey She months S7 . 25 . Thret~
Wants to Know 3; Concentration 6; Friendly Junction 10; Ben
months S4 .50 . Subscrlption . , Casey 13; Mr. ROgers 33; Capt. Kangaroo B.
and brother, Wellie.
price Includes Sunday Ttmes .
9:30- one Lite to Uve 13; Elec. Co. 33; To Tell The. Truth 3;
Mrs . Win Blake spent Sen11nel ,
Jeopardy 6; Haze' 8.
.
•
10:00- Olnah Shore 3, 1$; Lucille Ball 10; Dick Van Dyke 13;
Halhay0ga 33; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild 81 10.
10:30-COhcenlrallor\ 3, !5; Phil Donahue4; ln-Schoollnotructlon
33; Spill Second 13; Price Is Right 8, 10.
·
.
11 :00 - Love American Style 6; Sale of the Century 3, 15; Elec.
Co. 20; GamblU, 10.
11
:30Hollywood Squares&lt;, 15; Love of Life 8; Bewitched 6, 13;
PHILCO®
Sesame St. 20.
·
~ STEREO SOUND
12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4; Password 6;
LocaJ News 10; News 13; Contact B.
•
CENTER
12:30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15; Searoh for Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
S01=ond 6; Elec. Co. 33.
.
· .
with buill·ln:
1:00
'News
3;
All
My
Children
6,
13;
lnternotlonal
Cookbook
•
• 8 TRACK TAPE
· 33; It's Yo~r Bet 8; Green Acres 10; Watch Your Child 15.
t :30 - 3 on A Match 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Societies In
CARTRIDG~ .PLAYER
Transition 33.
'HPEED AUTOMATIC
2:30- Doctors 3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Evenl~g at Pops 33;
RECORI!I CHANGER
Edge of Night 8, 10.
'
3:00- Another World 3; 4, 1'; General Hospital 6, !3; Love
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
Splend01ed Thing 8, 10.
RADIO
''
3:30-Return to "-vton Place 3, 4, 15; one Llle to Live 6; Boo~
Beat 33; Secret Storm I, 10.
'
. · .
&lt;:00- Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 20, 22; Lo~e ,. ···
American Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Gilligan's
Island 8; Movie "Tho Leather Saint" 10.
~;30- I Love Lucy 6; Mtrv Grllfln 8; .. Anay Griffith 15;
Pottlcoot Junction 3; Daniel Boone 13.
5:00- Mister .Rogers 33; Dick Van Dyke U; Pondtrola 3, &lt;;
Dante! Boone 6.
5:30 - Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co. 33; Dr1g,..t I; Gomer Pyle
1l
.
6:00- News3, 4, 8, 111, 15; Truth or ConHq,t; Hatt111yog1 33.
• Beautiful "flat white"
6:30- News6, 13; FrenchChef33; 1DrHmofJeannlolJ.
7:60-Truth or ConHq. 3; &amp;,at Tht Clock 4; 'WillY• Mr t.lne I; ·
finish
• Helps hide surfac~ defet;l.$
llolk Guitar 33; Wild Kingdom 13; News, Wuther, Sports 6,
10; Saint 15.
.
•· No stirring, no thinning, • Soap and water clean-up .·
7:30- To Tell The Tr.utll6; Perent GamtlO; Porter WtogDMr 3;
no priming
· ·
·
Young Dr. Klldlrt •:. Ileal Thll Clock 13.
·
1: 60-S.nford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Bratty Bunch 6, 13; Sonny &amp; CherI,
Model H3S88PC
10; Week In Wnhlngton R.,IIW 33; NtwtmMer '7213.
·
ALL FOR ONLY
8:,30Little
Pqle
3,
4.
U;
PartrldAt
Family
6.
13
Mldlterr1nun Armoire '
9:00- Ghaot Stor~ 3, .. 15; Room
6, 13; Movlts "Spen~s
Pecan veneet top and base;
· ' Mounl81n" I; ! Love With tilt Proper Stranger" 10.
•.
9: 30 - Odd Cclvl»&gt;tt •• 13.
'
deep molded doors.
10:00- l!ai'IVOII ~. 4, 151 Love American Style 6, 13; Wake Up.
'1HI CIIAIOR OF
John Dol, 33.
,
·
10.30 - Walhlnglan Wttk In Rovltw 33. ·
DRUG P.IIQS" ·
11:00,.- Ntws. W111her, Sportu, 1, 10,13. ·
Hours: 71. m. to 5:21p.m, ~ly
Dick C.wtl6; ·Movl• "Fighlw Attack" I; "Voyage to 1
11:30773-$513 ' .
MASON, W.VA.
Pr.hl•torlc
Pllntf' 10; "Splrlb Ill !h. Dlld" 13.
Mtddllpot~, Ohio
~ 1. m. tot p, m. Frldly &amp; S.t · 'oy
1:00Rrf!:
Dtrby4;
Movle"WiurdiJI Mal'l"10.
IVliDDLIPORT, 0.
1:3013. '
2:00- News.. .

see DAN

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middlef10rt·Pomer.oy, 0., Ocl.l2, 1972

' r;

'

• 65

BY JACK O'BRIAN
BROACHING DIAMOND
AS A GEM
NEW YORK (l{FS) - Neil Diamond
practices what might be called Subjective
Rock; it's all his own music and words, all self.
centered, ego-freaking, wallowing in the arty
bathos of his vividly remembered childhood and
youth, proud of where he is now - a great big
smashing hit at the Winter Gardens on
Broadway; the supreme musical comedy
Uieater in New York where AI Jolson did ·one.
man shows almost hall a century before Neil
Dl~mond opened his current one:ego, manyinstrumented, sensationally exciting series of'
s,hows that were sold out solidly before opening
night. ·
,
We don't think /olson would be rolling over
in his grav~ or groove at Neil Diamond's explosive . success, more sheer energy than
singing; and tho this Diamond in the roughrock:rulture (he doesn't go the acid or harddrug route :.. he adl)lits lighting up a Mary Jane
occasionally) isn't any World's Greatest Entertainer (any more than is another claimant ,
Sammy Davis) he is truly, loudly, screamingly
exciting. We even watched a Shubert Theater
. executive w~ hadn't seen smile in years not only
grinning happily, facing his Mecca, an inspiring
boxoffice, but the dour square even was clap·
ping his hands in rock-applause as were th\
gangs of young girls.
··
Subjective Rock is what we consider Neil
Diamond's subculture simply because he rolls
back his memory to the long-ago, all the way to
1966, for instance, to wax, or tape, nostalgic
amid what 'he considered the "sensual" combination of a Latin American beat, or thud, the
rock form dr~ped over same ..': It explqdes
noisily short ol Brazilian bossa nova or Cuban
rhwnba or Argentinian samba ; but the effect,
blasted in electronic salvos of his seven-piece
rockompaniment, generates detonative sounds
which dynamite sensitivities from the deeptwanging wildwoods of an insufllative fender
bass, screamingly amplified guitars, mandolin,
even a roaring ukulele piped into the collective
eustachian canals in a manner Duke Kahanmoku never dreamed.
Diamond's dream, come roaringly true,
was to star on Broadway. He has positive

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2- Tbe llllil)' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1972

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By Helen and Sue Hottel .

IZ

'

PITTSBURGH
ab r
Stennett, If
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Oliver , cf
3 0
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FOREMAN &amp;· ABBOn

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A COMPLETE STOCK

The

It's Thursday once again, time for the fearless forecast by .
the unpredictable Moleman.
.
Well, this has been some week, watching our favorite
baseball team, the National Leagu~ Champion Cincinnati Reds .
Win the pennant. Johnny Bench, one.of the Moleman's favorite
Reds, really came through in the clutch Wednesday night. What
a way to make the fans forget 197l !
OUr hat is also tipped to little Joe Morgan, Bobby ToliJII, Pete
Rose; Ciay Carroll, Tom Hall and Pedro Borbon. Then there are .
th
1 f t
ose ess or .unate Reds like you and me, who must '!!it and
watch the actton.
·' '
j
Speaking of action, Major Amos B. Hoople edged your• truly. 1
by one game last week and took a one game lead in our own t
"pennant chase."
Hoople posted a 17-3 week while the Moleman was 16-1. Both
missed the Eastern-Kyger Creek ;'Jackson-Athens and ~;airland·
Coal Grove games. Hoople also scored on the Gallipolis-Waverly
game.
Afterfiveweeksofpredlctions, Major H; ople stands at 76-23-

!

- ~ ~~

,.

By Col. Mole

Cash, 2b
Geronimo.
Alley,
He got Geronimo to fly deep Blass, ss
p
to right with pinchrunner Hernande z, p
George Foster moving to third, Giusti , p
CINCINNATI
(UP!)- The power was there but our brought George Foster streakMoose, p
and . then Darrel Chaney Totals
Johnny Bench says he always pitchers were lame. This team ig from third with the deciding
popped to shortstop 'Gene
does
what his mother tells him has the pitching and the run in the bottom of the ninth.
CINCINNATI
Alley. With a one and one count
to
do
defense to go with the power.''
"But when it's for aU the
ab r
h
bi
So
~en
Mom
Bench
called
Rose
echoed
Anderson's
marbles,
you take it anyway
on · pinchhitter Hal McRae, Rose, /1
3 0
Morgan
,
2b
~
~
for
a
home
run
in
the
ninth
comments
on
Pittsbur,gh.
you
can,"
he said.
however, Moose broke a slider
4 0
Tolan
,
cf
4
0
into the dirt in front of the Bench, c
o o inning of the Cincinnati Reds- "They have a great club," he
Rose said he would favor
4 I 2 1
plate. It bounced off catcher Perez, lb
Pittsburgh Pirates National said. "Neither team would Detroit slightly as a World
4 0
1 o0 League playoff game Wednes- have to be ashamed of losing Series opponent, but was not
Manny Sanguillen 's arm and Fos ler, pr
0 I 0
Menke, Jb
3 0 t o day, Johnny had to come this game.''
Foster easil)' scored with the Geronimo,
concerned about which the
rf
4 t
1 through .
winning run.
I
"You
don't
like
to
win
a
Reds face•
Chaney ; ss
4 I
CINCINNATI (UP!) _
"! think the Good Lord just Gullelt, p
"I saw·Mom as I was walking game like that," he added,
"It doesn't matter," he said.
0 0 ~ ~
Tickets for the four World wanted the Cincinnati Reds to Borbon, p
0 0 o o from the dugout to the plate, however.
"This year we're going to win it
Uhiaandr, ph
1 0
Series games that will be represent the National League Hall,p
A wild pitch in the dirt all.''
0 0 o 0 and sbejust nodded to me as if
played here go on sale today in the World Series," said a Hague, ph
0 0
is 75-24-2. Now let's see if the Mole can make hay
at 9 a.m. IEDT) at 'River· ha'ppy, but thoughtful An- Concepcn, pr
0 0
0 0 o o homer.' 1 always mind my :;:,
front Stadium. Reserved derson . "I think that's the only Carroll, p
=:::
SEOAL
McRae, ph
0 0 0 0
seats are $8, with a thing that kept the Pirates Totals
:::;
ATHENS 22 WAVERLY 6. Bulldogs bounced back last week
mother."
31 4 7
maximum of four tickets per from winning . " ~
~ Bench boomed a homer out
D
;!:~ against lronmen. They should really be rough against the Tigers.
purchase.
·
Cincinnati's starting pitcher,
Two oul when winn ing run of Riverfront stadium to tie the
~non
rja~'ll
~:.~
ffi0NTON24LOGAN6. Tigers afterstrongvlctory last week
The first game of the 21-year-old southpaw Don Gul- scored in ninth.
final
playoff
game
at
3:3,
.
:
.
:
:
.
.
.
:I:'
:,·:&lt;, appear to have Jt sewed up.
to
020 100 000-3
· th
f
series will be played lett, made it into the fourth Pills.
Cincin .
001010 002- 4 pavmg eway ortheReds'4By MILTON RiCHMAN .
JACKSON18MEIGS14.Well, Ihuvebeenwrongbefore.
Saturday and the second on inning, when he gave way to
E- Chaney. OP- Cincinnatl 3 victory and a berth in the ·:·:
UPJ ""orts Editor
;;~
GAL!JPO!JS 16 WELLSTON 0. Believe this is the first time
1'1'
this
·
Sunday. Starting times both Pedro Borbon with the Pirates I. LOB- Prtlsburgh 5, Cin . World Series.
5.
2BHebner.
Rose
.
Sparky
Anderson,
a
gentle·
CINCINNATI
(UP!)A
White
House
visitor
once
asked
Abe
.season
I
have
gone with the Devils. No, the pressure isn't
cinnali
days will be I p.m. (EDT) . leading, 2-1, runners on first
HRGeronimo,
Bench. s- man who belt'eves m
' ••
mvm
' g Lincoln what he thought was the most terrible thing in the world, gettmg to me.
and second, and none out. Dave G
Oliver, Rose.
SV .
ulletl,
ip h r er bb so credi! where it is due, had and without hesitating so much as a minute, Lincoln said it was
AC
•
teams over in that league " Cash greeted Borbon with a
1
Blass
7
1·3
4
2
2
2
3
nothing
but
praise
for
the
ingratitude.
.
KYGER
CREEK
13
SOUTHERN
6.
It's homecoming at
said a happy Reds Manag~r run-scoring single, but PitHernandez
2·3 0 0 0 0 1 Piraies.
Webster defines ingratitude as forgetfulness of, or poor return Bobcatland, the .'Cats are hungry af{er last week's loss at
Sparky Anderson, when tsburgh got only one hit the rest Giusli(LJ
0
32200
Eat
dtrdti
Moose
2-3
o
o
o
o
o
"Pittsburgh
is
still
as
good
as
for
kindness received.
s t;rn an a I on goes a long way.
someone asked him whom he 'd of the. way off Borbon, Tom
rather face in the Wrold Series Hall and winner Clay Carroll. Gullett
3
6 J J o 2 we are," he said as he toweled
Nobody ever will be able to accuse Sparky Anderson, manager
SOVTHWESTE~ 20 ~NAN TRACE 0. The Highlanders
which starts here Saturday.
Blass Walks Hague
~~~~on
j : ~ ~ ~ champagne from his hair.
of Cincinnati's new National League champs, of that in his are ready for that fll'st IllusiVe victory.
,
Steve Blass, the Pittsburgh Carroll I W)
"We'll just play whoever
1
o o o o o "I've said all along that one relationship with the people around hlm.
NORTH GALLIA 16 GREEN 6. Pirates bounce back against
Gullett pitched to two batters team was as Iough as the other
Beyond a question, nobody ever.will be able to point a finger at . Bobcats.
wins."
starter, had the Reds pretty
The Tigers and the A's, tied much under control while he \~r:~ub~~~er;:~s~ilnr~tched to and this proves it," he said. "It him and accuse him of that in the relationship he had, and still
IV_URTLAND 16 SYMMES VALLEY 12. VIkings come close
at two games apiece ·in their was in there, but walked - WP- Gulleft, Moos e, T- was dead even all the way.
talks about, with Harold "Lefty" Phillips, who died at the age of but still lose.
. .
best-of.five playoff, were to pinchhitter. Joe Hague leading 2: 19. A- 41 ,BS7.
"I knew we were in deep 53 last June in f'ullerton, Calif.
. CADIZ 30 EASTERN 0. The Eagles are playing way out of
meet today in Detroit in the off the eighth inning. After
trouble when they (Pirates)
SUIJ Thinks of Old Friend
the1r class this week.
fifth an~ deciding game for the pinchrunner Dave Concepcion
Even now, on Cloud Nine as he is over leading the Reds to their
OTHERS
scored early· I just hoped we
American League title.
was sacrificed to second,
could hold them to three runs." , second NL pennant in the past three seasons, Sparky Anderson
Belpre 16 Federal-Hocking 0
Reds Come Back
Pirate Manager BilL Virdon
The bed!Reds clubfhouse was a finds it virtually impossible not to keep thinking about his old
Nelsonville-York 24 Warren Local 6
On Wednesday, the Reds brought in southpaw Ramon
soggy
am o champagne. friend, Lefty Phillips.
.
Vinton County 28 Miller 6
came back from what looked Hernandez, who retired Joe
Major League Slandinps
Tony Perez wearing a ,. "As I'
'd
'f
AleXBnder 56 Glouster o
" ve sat to my Wl..e, as far as I'm concerned, Lefty is still
Huntington East 21 Pl. Pleasant 12
like a heartbreaking loss, Morgan on a ground out and By United Pr~ss lnternahonal borrowed polic~an's hat and
Championship Playoffs
douaing everyone in sight with here, says Anderson. He has never left, and he never will.
Wahama 13 Winfield
scoring two runs in the bottom struck out Bobby Tolan .
(Best of Five!
12
bubbly, roared his warning to People who have such a tremendous influence on your life never
Fairland 18 Rock Hill
of the ninth inning, to win, 4-3.
Giusti relieved Hernandez at
National League
0
Catcher Johnny Bench, who the start of the ninth and the
w. I. pet. the Reds' opponent in th really leave you.
·Cincinnati
e "I'll probably never win an award, but if 1 dn, Lefty will win it
Coal Grove 20 Oak lllll 14
3 2 .600 World Series.
"just had a feeling," led off the rest is just a bad memory for &gt;&lt;Pittsburgh
2 3 .400
"We don't care wlio we right there wtth me. A Iotta people will say that's corny. 1 can't
South Point 32 Chesapeake 20
inning with a towering home the Pirates.
American League
Wheelersburg 24 Minford 14
run into the rightfield seats off
Casb drove in two of the 0
w. I. pet. play," he shouted. "We're help that. Basically, Lefty Phillips accounts for 7S per cent of
akland
2
2
ready
for
anybody."
what
I
do
in
baseball.
He
taught
me
the
baslca,
what
this
game
;,
Cincinnati
McNicholas 22 Portsmouth 20
Pittsburgh relief ace Dave Pirate runs with singles in the Detroit
2 2 .500
.500
Pete Rose, holding two-year- all about. I wouldn't be here today if It wasn't for him, and what
Giusti.
second and fourth innings and
X·Ciinched pennant
old Peter Rose on his shoul· he did for me."
The right-handed Bench, who the other scored when Chaney
WednesdaT's Rosults
Natlona League
had 40 homers during the let an outfield throw go through
ders, talked more sedately.
Sparky Anderson was sitting in the trainer's room as he spoke.
Clnci 4 Pittsburgh 3
regular season, said it was only him for an error.
"This
year
we
can.
go
to
the
There
was nobndy around, and he sat on one corner of tl!e table. replied Anderson. "I just want to prqve I belong in baseball.
American League
So Sparky Anderson took the manager's joll~t Rock IIIli, S.C.,
his secon!l to the opposite field Runs Off Blass
Detroit 4 Oak 3, 10 inns
Series and play our klnd of He wanted to talk about his friend, Lefty Phillips, and. his mind
· Thunday's Game
in 1965 and from there he moved .to St. Pe~sburg, Modesto,
all season, with the other one
The two runs the Reds got off
game," he said. "We have raced back now to their first meeting.
'
·
'
'Am
orlean
L~ajjue
Ashevllle and finally up to Cincinnati three aeMOna ago, I •
also coming against the .Blass came on a double by
speed, power and pitching.
Met 25 Years Ago
Oaklandot Detroil
He never forgot what his friend·, Lefty Philllpt, did for him. In
Pirates.
Rose in the third which scored
"In 19'70 we had problems.
"I first met Lefty in Rancho Playground in los Angeles 25
all
likelihood, he never will.
The pitch that cost the Chaney from second, and a
years ago," remembered the Reds' manager. "!was jUBt a kid
Pirates the game and the home run over the right field
"When it came purely to baseball,'' says Anderson, "I don1
playing ball in what they called the Playground League, and he
National League pennant, fence in the fifth by Geronimo.
was bird:dogging for the Reds and also working for the railroad. think anybody was his equal. I'm talking about baseball
however, was served up by Bob
Anderson, who led the Reds
He used to be there in the playground all the time, and he'd lalk specifically. I'm not talking about other things, like handling
people or the press."
Moose, the fourth Pittsburgh to their . second National
with me and encourage me. By the time I went to high school, he
hurler, and It came just as it League championship in the
Sparlcy Anderson received the news of Lefty Phlllips' death
went with the Dodgers and later on I played for a weekend team
appeared ·the stocky righthan- .last three years, has already
last June at his home in Cincinnati. He went to the room where he
he had that he called the Dodgers."
der would work out of a sticky announced Gary Nolan will
Time moved along, and when he was 19, Anderson signed to likes to sit and reflect about things late at night, he closed the
situation he Inherited.
pitch . the first World Series
door, and cried.
·
CINCINNATI
(UPI )'Moose Relieves Giusti
game, if he is physically sound. Manny Sanguillen was still the Pittsburgh Pirates' catcher play for Santa Barbara, which was then an affiliate of the ·
Moot!" relieved Giusti with If not, it will be Jack smiling, but it came a little Wednesday after his team lost Dodgers In the California Slate League. That was in 1953 and
4-3 to the Cincinnati Reds and after an 11-year playing career, 10 of which were spent in the
runners on first and second, Billingham, with
Ross harder.
with it a chance for a second minors, Anderson got a chance to manage Toronto in the In·
nobody out, and a two:ball, no- Grimsley and Gullett going in
"It's a hard way to ~t that's straight National League ternationai League .
strike count on the Reds' Cesar • games two and three ..
the way you have to go," said Championship.
He finished fifth and that winter, this was 1964, the people
"Btit am I stlll smiling?? 1 running the Toronto club decided to change their working
am," he said. "! keep my agreement and go with the Boston Re&lt;l Sox.
confidence, but it's hard to Toronto Sends Telegram
lose; it's hard.''
"Toronto sent me a telegram saying I'd been released and that
Sanguillen wasn't smiling, Dick W'tllia11111 was gohig to get the job," says Anderaon.
though, when a Bob Moose "Naturally,! called Harold right away. He told me to call Buzzie
slider to Reds' pinch hitter Hal (Buzzle Bavasi, then vice president with the Dodgers) . I also
McRae in the bottom of the wrote letters to a Iotta clubs, and you know what they said. 'Drop
ninth irming, hit the dirt, too~ 1!. us a line next year."'
weird bounce over him and
Nothing happened untu Lefty Phillips, getting ready to go to
DETROIT (UPI)-The Oak·
land Athletics, at long last? Dr would guess which will earn . the A's, wbo took a 3-llead into rolled to the backstop, allowing spring training with the Dodgers, walked into Dick Walsh's office
the right to meet the Cincinnati the loth inning of the fourth pinchrunner Ge?rge F~ster to one day. Walsh was a Dodger exec at the time.
the Detroit Tigers, with a 1968Reds in the. World Series.
game Wednesday and looked frscoomre ththll'
. ed-.Reds wmrung run
"Do you know anyone personally with the Cardinals?" Phillips
style "miracle?"
John "Blue Moon" Odom, like chamno-411JtiJ the Tigers
asked Walsh
The American League play- who pitched a shutout for \he came back""with three runs to
"! was m
. fron I fth e ball"
• · "Y " said. Walsh "Bob H
"
offs; seemingly locked up for A's in the second game of the win, 4-3, 1n the last of the loth. Sanguillen said "I was ready
es,
·
owsam.
·
"George Anderson needs a job bad," said Phillips. "Would you
the A's and now suddenly aU piayoff s, will be on the mound
"If we're good ballplayers to catch it.
kH
if
be h h
1 him
tied up, will be decided In the again against National League that shouldn't bother us.:
"Then it hit something and as owsam may e as one or
?"
fifth and final game today at castoff Woody Fryman for the insisted A's captain Sal Bando. went up. It hit something, then
Walsh SB;Id he would, and he did. ~?wsa~ subsequently in·
12:30 p.m. EST at Tiger fired :Up Tigers. ,
"We'll just have to win it it hit my hand as it went up. structed h1s farm director, Sheldon Chief Bender, to call
Stadium. After what happened
A Stunnlug Situation . .
today:•
You gotta move fast . I tried to Anderson, who was.selling cars in Los Angeles.
Wednetlday, only a brave man
It's !! stunn~ slt'!lltion for
!!ut Fryman insisted, get up for it but I ~uldn't."
Bender Calla _ .
.. .
_ - . _
..
--~--"We've got the momentllm - SanglilllenShook his head, ' !Would you be interested li1 t~lng a managerial job even
..
~~now."
·
then he smiled ..
·
though it's in the..Western Carolinas League?" Bender asked ..
/ ,· ll
If the Tigers do emerge the
"See, I still am happy.~· he
"I'll take a job anywhere and I don't care what the money is,"
/
,· ' ,I \
cllamplons, both they and the said, ''but it's hard to lose."
·
A's will replay over.anct-over
Moose took the fateful pitch a
·,I I
in their minds the wild loth little harder.
inning of tbe fourth game.
"What can I say. It felt like
.o\1 that point It was all tied at an ordinary pitch," the stocky
i._,__
1-1, thanks to a third-inning righthander said.
Because we can h,andle early Christmas
~) '0
homer by Dick McAuliffe of the
"It hit something and went
business more efficiently. we can make this
TigtV and a seventh4nning straight up in the air," Moose
special offer:
Colors 10 all\1•
homer
by
Mike
Epstein
of
the
continued.
"If
It
bounces
- 10 dlttl'1cflvtl
And • fabUlous whltn
A's. And then the A'! struck for normal then maybe Manny has
When the sefling prices of
lorth.tt&gt;touchof
.
two
Bingle by pinch- it and maybe we get out of the
lhMr lleganet: ·
the items you purchase on
SEARS
1ny order from Sears
hitter Gohzalo Marquez, a Inning. I don't know whatit hit.
" I . . . !7JS ill
.
Christmas
Clta1og
total
SSO
double by Matty Alou on which Maybe It was a funny !pin;
Early Shoppe(s
more, 1nd the order is
BUT YOU PAY ONLY Marquez actred as catcher Bill maybe it hit a rock. Hell, I or
pl1cad uylime through
Freehan couldn't handle the don't know."
OciO!Itr 30, 1972.
tlirow, and a lingle by Ted
Pirates' Manager Bill Vlrdon
Longhorns are
Kubiak.
· saw the bouncing pitch as the
slyled al/er /he authen/rc
~VI
"Everybody was saying on end of a long struggle between
wes1ern bool pattern s of a
'1.50
the bench, 'Let's geh runner wha\ most people think are the
DISCOUNT
century ago. Made out ol raw. hel/y,
on base and maybe somebody two best teams .ln ba~ball.
br1ar-ocarred leather. L£11lghorns are as r·ugged as
will hlt one out !Jf h~e;:• said
"That was It but I've gotta
therr namesake. They're 1he perlect boot for a(\y
Tiger AJ Kallne. That'a not think they're No. 1,'' Virdon
occasion from a day on !he range loa night on lhe town Get
quite the way It worked.
said of the Reds. "They beat WI
into ihe sprr~ and rope yo"rseli a new look The only !hrng more
You can . get this Discount
Flnt McAuliffe ...led and and they deserve ·to be No. 1.
western lhan Longhorns rs Oodge Crly Longhorns by Thorn
whether you.o,rdet: by Phone
so did Katlne and 111e tylnfl runs
"But they kno'l they had a ·
MeAn.. oardner.
or in Person.
were on bue with nilne out. struggle," he oontlnued. "I
PRill
DINT
' .
,
nle A'Neqi for reliever Joe talked to each ol IUY guys inLATIX
lbll!ll to face pinch~fur . dlvidually. 'I told them it's a
Gates Brown . •A wild pltcb bird ll(ay tO go, and we'll get
AUTHORIZED
mooed the two l'UII1erl up and 'em next year. Wliat elle can I
CATALOG MERCHANT
thl!ll Brown walked to 9111 l!lt' say,
IM'U5•_,JIII
willling run 111 the loeded . ''I atllllaywe're the two'best
l20.E. MAtN
992-2t78
POMEROY
,
.
baaea. Freehan rapped · a teams. It had to COOJe to tllll."
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
ll'OIIIder to Dando at !bird, Mon., TuH., Wed. &amp; S.t. ""'
Fingerprlritlng b the most
Thurs. I to Noon, Frldly t:OOtot:OO
and lnllelld tA. throwing home, infallible method of identi·
·MIDDLEPORT, 0.
BandO t1nw to ~e~»ncl. ,
flcatlon.

s

,, for ~II your

••••
••
•

4 2 2 0
4 1 2 0
4 o 2 2
4 o 0 0
3 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
o 0 0 0
o o 0 0
33 3 8 2

Mom Said ·Hit
One, So l Did ·
Says Big John

~ ~ ~ec~~:?~=~ s~~ i~;~.~~c~ ·;(~&gt;::: :•; ~:;:: : : : : : : :: : :,. &gt;:: : : : : : : ::::~&lt;:: :: : : ::: : : : : : :~~,~~::m:::: : : : : : : ;,:,:,:;: : , W:=:'\f ~~7-hi~::~le
Today's
r:
&gt;t
Il
e "
)f
f

Tuppers Plains
Society News

MEADOWS

Sanguillen, c
Hebner-, Jb

CINCINNATI (UPI )-A single pitch, one which hit in front
of the plate and bounded away,
made the difference between
what most people consider the
two best teams In baseball and
•
now that they're No. I, the
National League champion
Cincinnati Reds aren·•t par.
ticularly choosy who they go
against in the World SeriesDetroit or Oakland.
·
"I wouldn't pick either of the

'"'

'"'

'72 NL
Champs

'·

·.

notions.on how to make this dream come true.103
'
BY PAUL CRABTREE •
RING f'IGIIT HAS FALSID RINO
classy ... The seven.,scream group he carries
WEST
EAST
• 72
• 43
with him has been extended by what seemed Helen and Sue:
.83
.764
!thought i loved this guy. We'd been together almost a year._.
ahnost a symphOnic string orchestra faded into
'
The tastes of Middle America, or the Mid.Obio Valley, aren't
t KQJ987
t A1043
the dimlit camouflage .llf the equipment • 1o celebrate my 21St birthday, he took me to Las ,Vegas for a
necessarily
the same as those of the entertainment moguls who
.K84
.A976
little
bit
of
legal
gambling.
·
crowdeil, psychedelically flashing background;
sit in their walnut-and:ehrome offices in New York and
SOUTH (D)
We used mostly' my money, as he was between jobs and he
a conductor wielded an electrified baton (rock
.AQJ98 . .
Hollywood and tell us what we ought to see, and hear, and buy .
.AJ9
calls lor electrification of everything and, was "borrowing" from me most of the evening. He did that quite
I could write a colwnn, or a book, on the BUbject, ~t I
•
2.
lot
but
seldom
if
ever
repaid.
a
ultima tely, an unwired, frankly excited
wouldn't tell it half so eloquently as Roy Clark, the guitar player
•QJsi
Well,
he
used
my
money
for
a
keno
ticket
and
hit:
Actually,
audience J ... Acres of fiddles , cellos, at least two
and sometime singer, does in a new release he has recorded. It
Norih-South vulnerable
standard double bass violins - all scraped their I chose the numbers, gave him the money, and he took it to the
says It aU.
·
West North Easl South
supportive sounds into dozens of loud-speakers desk ; so we agreed that we'd use "our" winnings to pay for the
I'm not even sure of the title, but I think It's ''The Lawrence
2t
31o
St Slo .. Welk-Hee Haw Counter-Revolutionary Polka."
aimed sll;ategically at the crowd with the care trip - and the rest would go for a $200 diamond ring for me. It
,
Pas5
Pass
Pass
and logistical canniness of a general using aural wasn't an engagement ring - we weren't planning marriage. 1
· Anyhow, it describes how the networks canned Welk and Hee.
Op eni~ g lead- + K
ammunition instead of lethal ; the differ~ n ce wore it 'on my right hand.
Haw- only to see them oom'e back, succeasfully, in syndlcatlon
Three months later we split up. It was pretty bitter. Today I
seemed minimal often enough.
and draw some very good audiences, indeed.
· Diamona himself is a slender, quick.:eyed, received a letter from him asking for "his ring" back. To clinch By Oswald &amp; JaAies Jacoby
America Is indeed a plunilistic society -of soul and suburb,
warily arrogant lad in a beaded deep-red shirt it, he enclosed a cheap little "friendship ring" I'd given him.
One of the most eff&lt;ftive city and country. And if Lawrence, Buck Owens, Roy and others
bids in match·point duplicate can make it via the syndication route, more power to them.
and what seemed red .suede pants ; not nearly so Made a few threats.
is
the premature save . At
Must I give back a ring that my money won ? Can he sue or
sartorially spaced 'o~t as Mick Jagger or that
(Intellectuals reading this might. want to go back and read
least,
it is effective when it
guy who calls himself Alice ; in fact in that anything? - UNLUCKY AT LOVE
the
first
verse of Benet's "John Brown's Bndy" in preference to
pushes your opponents one
P.S.
I
guess
l'd,better
be
completely
honest
:
I
was
ten
days
overdressed league, Diamond dressed with
hearing Roy.Clark'srecord. That says It all,toQ,friend.)
trick beyond their limit.
from
being
21,
so
I
COU\dn't
gamble
legally,
though
no
one
more functional flamboyance - far from the
+++
It turns out to be a dissilly drag-excesses ol the hysterically freaked- checked my !.D. card. That's why !let him place the bigger bet aster when ; instead of being
Bumper sticker parlay of the week, seen across the back
while I played the slots. Could he have me prosecuted for this? stampeded into the strato- window of a car in Mason: ''God Loves You- Wahama White
up screamers.
sphere, they stop to double Falcons - If You Know Jesus, Honk Twice." •
His music cannily exploded through hypedyou
and it turns out that they
up speakers whose noise races. through the floor Unlucky:
+++
couldn't make a game.
Don't worry about prosecution .- ypu didn't place any bet
and literally up your theater seats to really
An
Ohio
FM
station
in
Medina
has begun broadcasting part
East's jump to five dia·
this
chintzy
guy
can
prove.
"Persecution?"
He
may
try
but
he
jangle your eardrums and rib cage ; we don't
monds was one of those pre- of its programmin~ in the new quadrophonlc system, whiclj- in
won
't
get
far.
The
gift
"your"
winnings
bought
didn't
come
with
mature saves. He decided effect - uses four sound sources instead of two, as in stereo
understand how tliese young rock-committed
t
h a t his opponents could systems. I haven't heard the effect' on quad equipment yet, aud
a
return
clause.
HELEN
lads can wind up anywhere but deaf ; leaving the
make
four spades and that
+++
Winter Garden was much like debarking a ship
the
loss
his partner would we can't get a good signal here, but look for it -it's coming.
U
at
L
:
onto a calm dock directly from some jari:ed-up
+++
take at five diamonds douTell
you
what
you
do
:
Send
back
the
cheap
little
friendship
bled
would
be
less
than
the
typh oon; Broadway's normal ultradecibel
Southeastern Ohio's only TV station, WOUJI.TV In Athens
clangor ~eemed downright pastoral.
, ring with a note, "Please keep this as a remembrance of the good score for a vulnerable game . (Cable Channel II), was supposed to be ciff the air for about 60
He was pretty sure that if days, to permit erection of a new tower.
·
Diamond works hard, long (two hours times we had - on my money."
he
bid four diamonds and
If
he
bothers
you
again,
present
a
bill
for
the
approxiniate
without intermission) and ,often pleasing_ly. He
The so· days are up and we haven't he8rd a word about
then five he would be doutorture~ his face and music to inject soul into amount he borrowed. Like about. $200? - SUE
resumption
of prograrrunlng as yet. Ahd some of the natives are
bled and he hoped that his
+++
Brooklynese; proud of his Jewishness, ban.
quick jump to that contract getting restless. (WOUB-TV has the only dally new~cast on TV
Dear
Rap:
might get him a reprieve:
tering to "the little Jewish girls" who haunt his
aimed'exclusively at Southeastern Ohio and West Virginia area
I've
got
a
sort
of
pixie
face
.
I
read
somewhere
that
girls
with
It
did.
South
decided
that
news.)
stage doors (tho' we know his appeal is rock-roll
five spades would wheel in
ecumenical ); conjuring up what seems his small, turned-up noses and big eyes were apt to fall in love first and
+++
that he couldn't set five
and
think
later.
In
other
words,
they
could
be
easy
pushovers
for
private analysis of a life triumphant over
I've got a hangup about Bonall28, now that Dan Blocker is
diamonds enough to cover
persuasive
guys.
tribulations from agents, cynically unknowing
dead and the program restructured, I just feel no desire at all to
the loss of the game.
Girls with longer noses, the article read, knew a stinker when
He was right to that ex· tune in the show, which was an above..average program for so
recording executives, cigar-chomping cliches
tent. West would be down many years. (I really liked Blocker. The only other TV per.
of inattentive, rock-ignorant Bdwy. music they met one. True? - A LITTLE WORRIED
500 at five diamonds doupublishers ; all flung with often an artily
sonallty whose death hit me so hard was the very Innovative
bled.
Dear
Worried:
·
pretentious, arrogant wariness at a mixture of
He was w r o n g in his Ernie Kovacs.)
Don't
believe
every
survey
you
read.
Maybe
the
"researstandard First Night types and teenage
In its he~y, Bonanza made quite a name for itself. But It's
major premise. He couldn't
figured
a
long
nose
was
better
for
smelling
a
rat.
Or
It
cher"
demake
spades
since
the
devotees.
not the same out there on the desert, on a namewithnoHoss,
fense collected a diamond
could be he just discovered small..,osed girls are easier to kiss +++
and two c I u b s before he
thus get more offers "they can't refuse." - SUE
ON
THE
TV
DIAL:
Pernell
Roberts, ivhom I didn't miss at
could gain the lead.
+++
aU when he left Bonanza, is guest star on Jigsaw tonight, 9:30 on
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Dear Worried:
,
WHTN-TV ... WVU football highlights at 10, WMUL-TV.
Never heard of this small nose-big eye survey, but be that as
it may : pushovers are girls whose "No's" are NOT as
pronounced as their "Ayes." -HELEN
The bidding h.., been:
.
+++ ·
West
North
East
South
'.
BY EVELYN BRICKLES
Dear Helen :
Mrs. Velma Matlack went to
1t
Pass
21o
In a recent column, you used the terms "latent homosexual" Pass
?
Arizona to spend the· winter and .. cloSet queen."
Pass
3•
Pass
You, South, hold:
with her daughter.
explain
what
they
mean.
,
Please
.AK86 .Al02 tKS .AJ64
Mr . and "Mrs. Lawrence
Also,
would
a
male
with
breasts
that
seem
to
be
getting
Hasbagen and family and Mrs.
What do you bid now ?
~indsay Lyons and daughter of bigger and female-type, tend to be faggy? - PUZZLED AND
A-Bid three no·trump. Your
Programs for Tonight .
·
.
WORRIED
,llft\')I)C.f
mlp;
,1';ell
be
slariing
0
Parkersburg, Mrs :· Marton· · 1 " 1•1 ~·wrt
'"
"' •
''"'I ''' It•• -.t1A IJJI '.N
1~' 1;.( lit\
'"
'"
to:war~ a ... ~•~Jf he is, he will
Riggs and family and Mrs.
·•
.,
and Tomorrow'!"
find a furt~tJ rbid now.
Danny Duvall and family of Dear P and W:
.,
'
•
·"·- -- _1
TODAY'S QUESTION
Logan, Mr . and Mrs. Ed Moore
· A "latent" homosexual does not actively seek mates of the
~
Your partner does fmd a
of Gallipolis all were Sunday same sex, but is bent in that direction. A "closet queen" is a further
bid. 1t is six no-trump.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey secret gay who only comes out with his homosexual friends. One What do you do now ?
THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 1972
Lyons and son, Lemar, and who "comes out" no longer hides his preferences from the
Mrs. Eulah Swan. They came straight world.
to celebrate Lemar 's 13th
Boys' breasts often become enlarged· when they enter
6:00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Conseq. 6; Hathayoga 33.
birthday.
puberty. It's part of growing up and has absolutely NOTHING to Monday witn her daughter, Mr. 6:30- NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I
Dream of Jeannie 13.
Mrs. Agnes Hill returned do with "being faggy." Also some males naturally have larger and Mrs. Lawrence Balser.
7:00
- Course of Our Ti01es 33; Whars My Line B; Big Red
Mr . and Mrs. Tommy
home from Camden Clark breasts than do others. Stop worrying! - HELEN
Jubilee
15; News 6, 10; Truth or Consequences 3; Beat The
Watson were Sunday guests of
Hospital, Parkersburg, after
Clock 4; Amazing World of Kreskln 13.
.
his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Gary 7: 30-1'11 See You In Court 4; Hollywood Squares 3; To'Tell The
being a medical patient there .
Truth 6; Wild Kingdom 10; LassieS; Beat The Ciobk 13.
Barnheart of Logan .
She is somewhat improved.
Vienna , W. Va. were Sunday Eldred Grimes and Mrs. Cora
8:00 - Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15; Mod Squad 6, 13; The Walfons 8 10
Roger Clark of New Jersey dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Grimes of Athens visited Mrs.
9:00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15 ; Jigsaw 6, 13; International Per:
• • •
formance 33; Movie " Marlowe~&lt; 8, 10.
was a recent guest here of his Oscar Babcock. Afternoon . Weatherman on Sunday.
Dai~
10:00
- Owen Marshall6, 13; Dean Marlin 3, 4, 15 ; Mountaineer
of the finest pharmaceuticals
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Way callers were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Gary BarnSports 33.
·
DEVOTED TO THE
Clark.
INTEREST
OF
News3,
4,
6,
10,
13,
15.
1:00
Starling Massar and Mrs. heart and family of ReedsMEIGS ·MASON AREA .
enables us to serv~ all your drug
1:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavett 6; Movies "Hellcats
Mr . and Mrs . D_insmore Leota Massar of Ellstern. ville have moved to Logan,
CHESTE A L . TANNEHILL,
of the Navy" 8; "Act of Love" 10; "From Hell to Texas" 13.
Exec. Ed.
Boyles attended the funeral of David Riggs took them all for a Ohio where he has em2:00
- News 4.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
needs right away!
'
Mrs. Herman Taylor at Alfred ride in his large motor van to ployment. She is tfie grand- ·
2:30
News 13.
"•
City Editor
Published
aaily
except
one day last week.
Royal Oak Park .
daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. Fon Saturday by The Ohlo Valley
Wellie Halsey returned home
Mrs. Marvin Walker and Halsey and Mrs. Effie Watson . Publishing Company , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy. Ohio,
from Veterans Memorial daughter, Ruthie , spent
Mr . and Mrs. Hobert 45769
Off1Ce Phone
Hospital , Pomeroy , after Sunday I' i lh ,relatives in Whiteside and granddaughter 992.2156,Business
Editorial Phont 992 .
FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1972
2151 . .
spending several weeks there Colu;nbus.
6:00
Sunrise
Seminar
4; Sacred Heart 10.
of Parkersburg were &amp;llflday
Second class postage pl)ld at
6:15
Farmtlme
10.
as a medical patient.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar guests of Mrs. Bessie Webster. Pomeroy , Oh io
6:20 - Farm Report 13.
.National adveortis i ng
· Mr.andMrs. GeneRiggsand McKnight of Marietta were
Mrs. Lawrence Salser is representative
- Paul Harvey 13.
6:25
.
family of Eastern and Mr. and Monday guests of Mrs. Neisel selling Christmas jewelry for Go llagher , In c., 12 8ottlnetll
6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Public Aflalr 10.
East 42nd
7 : 00 - Today3 , 4,15;CBSN~ws8,JO.
,
Mrs. David Riggs and family of Weatherman. Mr. and Mrs. the WSCS and anyone wishing St ., Ntw York Cit\1. New York .
Subscription rates : De VISIT OUR
ENLARGED
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
livered by carrier whtre
13.
.
to buy some may contact Mrs. available 50 cents per wtek ,
8:00Capt,
Kangaroo
8,
10;
New
Zoo
Revue
13;
Sesame
St. 33;
Balser.
GIFT SECTION • · GIFTS FOR
By Motor Route whert carrltr
Friendly
Junction
10;
New
Zoo
Revue6;
Romper
Room
B.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barrett of serv ice not availeble : One
8:30
Jack
La
La
nne
!3;
New
Zoo
Revue6.
month
11
.75
.
By
mail
In
Ohio
mE ENTffiE FAMILY
Delaware were Sunday guests and W. Va ., One year $1.too.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Oonahue 15; What Every}woman
of Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey She months S7 . 25 . Thret~
Wants to Know 3; Concentration 6; Friendly Junction 10; Ben
months S4 .50 . Subscrlption . , Casey 13; Mr. ROgers 33; Capt. Kangaroo B.
and brother, Wellie.
price Includes Sunday Ttmes .
9:30- one Lite to Uve 13; Elec. Co. 33; To Tell The. Truth 3;
Mrs . Win Blake spent Sen11nel ,
Jeopardy 6; Haze' 8.
.
•
10:00- Olnah Shore 3, 1$; Lucille Ball 10; Dick Van Dyke 13;
Halhay0ga 33; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild 81 10.
10:30-COhcenlrallor\ 3, !5; Phil Donahue4; ln-Schoollnotructlon
33; Spill Second 13; Price Is Right 8, 10.
·
.
11 :00 - Love American Style 6; Sale of the Century 3, 15; Elec.
Co. 20; GamblU, 10.
11
:30Hollywood Squares&lt;, 15; Love of Life 8; Bewitched 6, 13;
PHILCO®
Sesame St. 20.
·
~ STEREO SOUND
12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4; Password 6;
LocaJ News 10; News 13; Contact B.
•
CENTER
12:30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15; Searoh for Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
S01=ond 6; Elec. Co. 33.
.
· .
with buill·ln:
1:00
'News
3;
All
My
Children
6,
13;
lnternotlonal
Cookbook
•
• 8 TRACK TAPE
· 33; It's Yo~r Bet 8; Green Acres 10; Watch Your Child 15.
t :30 - 3 on A Match 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Societies In
CARTRIDG~ .PLAYER
Transition 33.
'HPEED AUTOMATIC
2:30- Doctors 3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Evenl~g at Pops 33;
RECORI!I CHANGER
Edge of Night 8, 10.
'
3:00- Another World 3; 4, 1'; General Hospital 6, !3; Love
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
Splend01ed Thing 8, 10.
RADIO
''
3:30-Return to "-vton Place 3, 4, 15; one Llle to Live 6; Boo~
Beat 33; Secret Storm I, 10.
'
. · .
&lt;:00- Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 20, 22; Lo~e ,. ···
American Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Gilligan's
Island 8; Movie "Tho Leather Saint" 10.
~;30- I Love Lucy 6; Mtrv Grllfln 8; .. Anay Griffith 15;
Pottlcoot Junction 3; Daniel Boone 13.
5:00- Mister .Rogers 33; Dick Van Dyke U; Pondtrola 3, &lt;;
Dante! Boone 6.
5:30 - Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co. 33; Dr1g,..t I; Gomer Pyle
1l
.
6:00- News3, 4, 8, 111, 15; Truth or ConHq,t; Hatt111yog1 33.
• Beautiful "flat white"
6:30- News6, 13; FrenchChef33; 1DrHmofJeannlolJ.
7:60-Truth or ConHq. 3; &amp;,at Tht Clock 4; 'WillY• Mr t.lne I; ·
finish
• Helps hide surfac~ defet;l.$
llolk Guitar 33; Wild Kingdom 13; News, Wuther, Sports 6,
10; Saint 15.
.
•· No stirring, no thinning, • Soap and water clean-up .·
7:30- To Tell The Tr.utll6; Perent GamtlO; Porter WtogDMr 3;
no priming
· ·
·
Young Dr. Klldlrt •:. Ileal Thll Clock 13.
·
1: 60-S.nford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Bratty Bunch 6, 13; Sonny &amp; CherI,
Model H3S88PC
10; Week In Wnhlngton R.,IIW 33; NtwtmMer '7213.
·
ALL FOR ONLY
8:,30Little
Pqle
3,
4.
U;
PartrldAt
Family
6.
13
Mldlterr1nun Armoire '
9:00- Ghaot Stor~ 3, .. 15; Room
6, 13; Movlts "Spen~s
Pecan veneet top and base;
· ' Mounl81n" I; ! Love With tilt Proper Stranger" 10.
•.
9: 30 - Odd Cclvl»&gt;tt •• 13.
'
deep molded doors.
10:00- l!ai'IVOII ~. 4, 151 Love American Style 6, 13; Wake Up.
'1HI CIIAIOR OF
John Dol, 33.
,
·
10.30 - Walhlnglan Wttk In Rovltw 33. ·
DRUG P.IIQS" ·
11:00,.- Ntws. W111her, Sportu, 1, 10,13. ·
Hours: 71. m. to 5:21p.m, ~ly
Dick C.wtl6; ·Movl• "Fighlw Attack" I; "Voyage to 1
11:30773-$513 ' .
MASON, W.VA.
Pr.hl•torlc
Pllntf' 10; "Splrlb Ill !h. Dlld" 13.
Mtddllpot~, Ohio
~ 1. m. tot p, m. Frldly &amp; S.t · 'oy
1:00Rrf!:
Dtrby4;
Movle"WiurdiJI Mal'l"10.
IVliDDLIPORT, 0.
1:3013. '
2:00- News.. .

see DAN

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middlef10rt·Pomer.oy, 0., Ocl.l2, 1972

' r;

'

• 65

BY JACK O'BRIAN
BROACHING DIAMOND
AS A GEM
NEW YORK (l{FS) - Neil Diamond
practices what might be called Subjective
Rock; it's all his own music and words, all self.
centered, ego-freaking, wallowing in the arty
bathos of his vividly remembered childhood and
youth, proud of where he is now - a great big
smashing hit at the Winter Gardens on
Broadway; the supreme musical comedy
Uieater in New York where AI Jolson did ·one.
man shows almost hall a century before Neil
Dl~mond opened his current one:ego, manyinstrumented, sensationally exciting series of'
s,hows that were sold out solidly before opening
night. ·
,
We don't think /olson would be rolling over
in his grav~ or groove at Neil Diamond's explosive . success, more sheer energy than
singing; and tho this Diamond in the roughrock:rulture (he doesn't go the acid or harddrug route :.. he adl)lits lighting up a Mary Jane
occasionally) isn't any World's Greatest Entertainer (any more than is another claimant ,
Sammy Davis) he is truly, loudly, screamingly
exciting. We even watched a Shubert Theater
. executive w~ hadn't seen smile in years not only
grinning happily, facing his Mecca, an inspiring
boxoffice, but the dour square even was clap·
ping his hands in rock-applause as were th\
gangs of young girls.
··
Subjective Rock is what we consider Neil
Diamond's subculture simply because he rolls
back his memory to the long-ago, all the way to
1966, for instance, to wax, or tape, nostalgic
amid what 'he considered the "sensual" combination of a Latin American beat, or thud, the
rock form dr~ped over same ..': It explqdes
noisily short ol Brazilian bossa nova or Cuban
rhwnba or Argentinian samba ; but the effect,
blasted in electronic salvos of his seven-piece
rockompaniment, generates detonative sounds
which dynamite sensitivities from the deeptwanging wildwoods of an insufllative fender
bass, screamingly amplified guitars, mandolin,
even a roaring ukulele piped into the collective
eustachian canals in a manner Duke Kahanmoku never dreamed.
Diamond's dream, come roaringly true,
was to star on Broadway. He has positive

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heritage house

�t-Tbe Daily Sentinel,Middlepori-POIIIel'oy,O., Oct.12, lt72

•- '!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 19'/2

Tornados· Go for
. BOBCAt OFFENSE
.TORNADO OFFENSE
The most important game in
Southern football history will
be this Friday when the
powerful Torn~dos travel to
Kyger Creek to battle the
Bobcats in what might be the
"run for the roses.''
Southern is 3-0 in Southern
Valley Conference play and
Kyger Creek is 3-1; losing only
to Eastern 11-4) last week.
Eastern is also 3-1 in league
play . Southern defeated

Eastern 6,0 in an earlier game fide All-Americans, but several
this year.
"good boys" who, as a group,
Coach Bill Jewell's Tor. have played ·very well. The
nados, headed for their Tornados are the bigger ;
greatest season in history, are weight-wise, but probably not
4-1 overall, losing only to quite as fast as the Bobcats.
Wahama 20-6. The Bobcats also Southern lias three boys who
lost to Wahama ~play both way and KC has five.
Both the Tornados and
Jim SpFag\le, a first-year
Bobcats have great defensive coach like Jewell, plays a wide
squads, Kyger Creek giving up open tjope offense. At q1.1arbut 2:i points this year and terback is little 135 lb. senior
Southern 40. The Tornados Johnny Baird. ,"Tiie .two top
have scored 95 aild :Kc 113.
·Bobcat. run_ners are 145 lb.
Neither team has any bona junior Lawrence Tabor and 140
lb . senior Greg McCarty.
Nick !hle, 175 lb. senior
halfback, paces Southern 's
offense. Vern Ord has handled
the quarterback slot well this
year while Mitch Nease and
Jay Hill add running strength.
Giant tackles Ron Hill, 235 lb.
senior, and Larry Wilcoxen,
240 lb. senior, anchor the line.

Eagles Facing
Great Runner
•
The Eastern Eagles face one
of the state's best runners this
Saturday in Calvin Gregory, a
200lb. senior hal(back who.was
the "AA'' statechampiorrin the
180 low hurdles last year. The
Eagles face a powerful Cadiz
Cardinal eleven at Cadiz in a
non-league game.
Gregory has gained around
680 .yards this year and according to his coach, firt-year
.'
M1ke Warbell, "always breaks
loose at least 3 or 4 times a
game." Cadiz lost their opener
7-6 to Buckeye West and have
not been beaten since in four
· games.
Those Eagle fans planning on
taking the trip ·to Cadiz had
better start early. It's ap.
proximately 150 miles away. It

is loc.ated 38 miles. from
Cam~ridge on Rout.e 22. Game
t1me IS 7:30.
.
•
Coach Rog,er K1rkhart s
Eagles. ~re 3-2 on !Jle year and
are commg off a tremendous 86 win over Kyger Creek last
week. Kirkhart lila de some
changes in the lineup, moving
1551b. junior Dan Chaffee from
guard to the backfield, where
he'll team up with Alan Duvall,
Randy Boring, and Ralph
·Parker, and 180 lb. junior John
Sheets will go to tight end from
the backfield replacing Phil
Bowen.
Eastern is 3-2 overall and 3-1
in league play. The Eagles'
meeting with the Cardinals will
be the first ever.

TORNADO OFFENSE
POl. WI.,
V
Ord (II)
QB uo:
· ~~Nease( 10)
HB I~
Nick lhle (1 2)
HB 175
Jay Hill 112)
FB 100
Denni.sHawk(ll)
c 212
Bob Eynm (II)
G 175
Mike Codner (11)
G 100
Ron Hill (12)
T 235'
larry Wilcoxen (12)
T 240·
Jim Willlama Ill)
E 165 '
Mike Nease (12)
E 142
DEFENSE
R.Hill,JQ!ddleguard; Randy
Forbes, 160 lb., (II), and
Wllllama, endl; Greg Middles-;
wart, 1~ lb. (11), and Hawk, .
tackles; J. Hill and Tim;
Maurer, 165 lb. (10), ,
linebackers; Ihle and Ord,
cornerbaclla, and Mitch Nease
and Mike Nea.se, _safeties.

Lakers Blast

ole Thing

The Jackson Ironmen, ap· parenUy minus the services of
halfback sensation Kenny
Valentine, invade Marauder
Stadium Friday night in
another of those "weekly
croocial" Southeastern ·Ohio
Athletic League games.
The winner of Friday's game
will stay in a challenging
position for the SEOAL title
while the loser might as well
hang up all championship

Montreal

1 0 1_ 3 5 2

Vancouver
N.Y. Rangers
Toronto
N.Y.Istandrs

110267
1 2 0 2 9 13

0 I I 1 J 5
points and John Brisker added
0 1 0 0 2 3
The Los Angeles i..akers 19. Fred Carter paced Boston
0 2 0 0 5 8
Wednesday night picked up Philadelphia With 23.
West
w. I. I. pis gf ga
this season right where they
John Havlicek scored 29 Chicago
J o 0 6 12 3
left off last season.
points In Boston's victory over Pittsburgh
2 o o 4 9 4
The Lakers, kicking off their Detroit. Dave Bing and Bob Minnesota
1 1 0 2 5 5
1 2 o 2 9 13
NBA 1g72-73 season, had little Lanier hit :IB apiece in the Los Angeles
Atlanta
~
.1
2 0 2 711
trouble blasting something 108lng Detroit Clluse.
Philadelphia
o o 1 1 ~ 4
called the Kansas City-Omaha
St. Louts
o 1 1 1 6 9
Kings by a 129-94 margin. Tbey
Californ
ia
·
0
2 0 0 • 8
NBA Standirigs
Wednesday's
Results
were the old Cinciruiati Royals,
By United Press International
N.Y. Rangers 5 Vancouvr 3
Eastern Conference
who were the old Rocbester
Buffalo
7 Los Angeles 3
Atlantic Division
Royals.
Torontq
Montreal 2
w. I. pet. g.b. Detroit 42Boston
3 . The game was played In New York
1 0 1.000
Minnesota
5Calif
2
1 o 1.1100
Omaha and the new fans didn't Boston
Chicago
4
Atlanta.1
Buffalo ·
0 1· .1100
get much .to cheer for as the Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
5
st.Louis'
2·
o 2 .000 l'h
(Only
games
schedul.edl
Lal\ers cruised to a 69-39 lead
Central Division
Thursday's Games
while hitting 69 per cent of their
w. I. pet. g.b. Atlant~
at Montreal ,~ ·· ~ "'-Atlanta
l . 0_1,.000
shots in the first half.
Los
Ang
at N.Y. lsl and~ rs
Baltimore ·
1 0 .1.000
Vancouver
Phil a
Wilt Chamberlain, who is Houston
o 0 .000 •;, !Only game•atsche~uled)
W)ing the regular season ~or his Cleveland . 0 1 .000 I
. Westorn ·t::onltretice
lleason luneup after his · tong
Midwest Division
holdout, was conlent to pass oft
w. 1· pet. g.b.
WHA Standings
and scored just seven points.
Chicago
I
0
1.000
By
United
Press International
He didn 'I even take a shot until M
0
.000 1;,
Eastern Division
08ll,waukee
roll
0 1 .000 1
1t t 1
there was just 3:30 left ifi the KC-Omaha
o 1 .000 1
w. · · P s g ga
second period.
Pacific Divioion
. Cleveland
1 o 0 2· ,2 o
New England
0 o o 0 0 0
I
Jim McMillian led the winw. t. PC • g.b. New York
0 0 0 0 0 0
ners with 23 and Jerry West k~~~~geles
: ~ 1: : ,12 Philadelphia
0 0 0 0 0 0
added 19.
G ld St
Quebec
0 1 0 0 0 2
g g :: '12 Ottawa
0 1 0 0 4 7
In the other two games, P~oe~7x ·
Portland
o
o
.000
:~
Western
Division
.
Seattle downed Philadelphia,
Wednesday's Results
w. I. t. pts gf ga
106-100, and Boston downed
Seattle 105 Phlla 100
Alberta
1 0 0 2 1 4
Boston 121 Detroit 108
Chicago
0 0 0 0 0 0
Detroit, 121-108.
Los Ang 129 KC-Qmaha 94
Houston
Spencer Haywood scored 22
Los Angeles . 0o 0o 00 0o 0o 0o
games scheduled)
Minnesota
0 0 0 0 0 0
points ID pace Seattle. Dick ' (OnlyThursday's
Games
Snyder chipped In With 20 ·(No
hed t d)
Winnipeg
0 0 0 0 0 0·
games sc .u e
Wednesday's Results
Cleveland 2 Quebec 0
, ...............................~---.., Alberta 7 Ottawa 4
IOnly games scheduled)
Thursday's ~mes
Winnipeg at New York
Chicago at Houston
Phlla at New England
(Only games scheduled!

By United Press Intemalloaal

°

App~eciated.

GUEST S:fAR

New;

you can · tiuy that
·c;omfortable
La·Z-Boy
:chair y~u've always
dreamed of at our low
prices.

.-.Sltl

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FINISHING
.
.

'

•

SAME DAY
SERVICE
, In At 9:-0ut At~ -

Authorized O..ler

MASON

.

STARTING. FRIDAY
. EvENIN~

.

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AT TH_E_

FAMOUS
KING'S
ARMS
.· . On Rt. 7 Below 1\Mddllport .
MISS
MARTY CAMPBFJJ.
Tennessee's "Beautiful Talented Singing Str.
Along With

.FURNITURE
HermtnGr.tt

George Hall and till Hallmarks

•. ·

Only

Darst Family Has
Annual Reunion

For your .

Thanksgiving
Engagement
..

Express
fll\IIY . with mree t'.'l'll'
love lrom Art&lt;:arv111&lt;1
diamond ring and we.ddir1gj
band for tne bride, 1nd
matching wedding ring
the groom.

Honored Sat~rday Night

Slacks

FIVESilnof
Dtluxt CloMd Front
Circulators
Priced At Low As

Shirts

Blouses Skirts
and Sets

More couples select
ICa1rved rings than any oth1erl
brand because MCa~vedl
has the most ap~&gt;l!atmll·
and complete selectlc:m
styles. And the Arte:arv~!d!
name is your absollut,el
assurance of quality.
If you're planning a Thtanks·i
giving engagemen~ pian
visit us soon.

oo

AppruO'td "' tt..

~ictnGu

THE-KIDDIE SHOPP

·!Ji

Auociltlon for
111t witli n1tural,
manulactuttCI,

LP'., 1nd ·
mixld Plllfo

FIVE SIZES Of .
Cusllttt De.luu
RM!et Cinulttt•rs
Prkl4nltw·as
'
·'

Jewelly Store
Court St.,

RIDAY the·· l3th

!

.'

-.

GREAT 1 DAY BARGAIN EVENT!
,.. II 1

ALL OTHER· KNITS

ldVIta in winter

home
MORNiNG's ex•
elusive "CCrpet of ComFort" hilt flow fOt
1111'111 flelr
Till ponrful, quiet
runnirc b~ drnl htmd 1ir down"
bttwMn 1M front and rur MCtions of

helti.,..

.WIDTHS

N-M-W .

·pet of Wlrmth over rour flooq.
Tilt "Carpet of Cotnlort" biowlr system
. It completely ~tic ... tuminl on
·. When 1t1e 11t1t lllrts flcMirc. tumifll off.
· When ltle hilt 1tap1 .flawl~~~o A lllector
IWitcll J'QU ltle choice of .... medium or ""'
ill 11r slmplr tumilll
the lllouu•
from IUIDmllic lo .
•null, JOU Clll apaltl till lllowa SJ'o
tn fir llttiiiiiMime lir chculltlat•

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Extra Bonus! This Sale Only!
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EIERSBACH

'
roa· BI~ ·DISCOUNT _ &amp;AVI~ost

700 W~. Main ~ ·Pomeroy

·

110 w. MAl• .

't &amp;o t D•U,

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13.00 OR MORE. FRIDAY QftLYJ ·

·T~e F!~!~S....~hop.
· rACCALL'S SIMPLICITY PATTIItNS

nsw. Second ·

Pomeroy, 0.

·

•
'

ARTCARVEDRINGS

PlAY CLOTHES

ti~t£ &amp;_toral Family is

tht htlt chlmbtr llld pusha it out 11onc
tht Clblntt fl'ont.-..tprwdlnc • wide car·

CHAI'RS

lJUnd.S

lOLA'S

...

UGLY

-Adv.

Jd afid Sa/e
. .

one

5.00

GAS HEAlERS

Filled.

. noied . that th~ unit lllldt
membership qqota plu
prior to the fall conference .nd
was presented at that Ume a
flower llrrangement from
Robert Waddell, Elgbth
Dlstri.ct Commander. A 8!ft
from Mrs. Charles Keuingl!r,
Eighth District Auxiliary
president, was given to Mn.
' Hampton for collecting the
most dues.
Mrs. Campbell Harper,
Americanism chaifrnan,
reported on plano for the year.
Assessments for chlldre~ ·and
youth and veterans affain
were paid, and a bond for the
secretary and !reamer m
approved.
A. Christmas party wa1
tentatively set for Dec. 7. Mrs.
Hampton presided at the
meeting which opened In
ritualistic form with Mtl.
Nellie Winston as chapjaln. 1'1!
conc.lude the meeting, the
group sang the hymn of lbe
month, "How Firm a FQUDo
dation.''
Following retirement ·.of lbe
colors, . the · hostess served
salad!, sandwiches, .00 pie
from a table decorated in the
Halloween motif. Mra."Arnold
Richards .won the door prize.

-------

Ebersbach Has -

Thu,...y'sGame~
!Nogamess~heduledl

TC'C'S t0

Rally Day
On Oct. 29

looal Bowling

GET COURT ORDER
BALTIMORE (UPI) -The
Baltimore Bullets obtained a
court order Wednesday temporarily barring holdout guarct
Archie Clark from playing for
any.- other professional basket,
Women's Thursday
ball ream.
Afternoon League
Oct. l, 1972
An Oct. 24 hearing was stared
Standings
for
U.S. District Court here,
Team
W. L.
New York Clothing
34 14 club officials said.
Pomeroy Motors
26 22
Pullins Excavation
22 26
Major t.eague Results .
Heletl's Beauty Shop
22 26
Pomeroy Lanes
20 28 By United Press International
Championship Playoffs
Simon's Market
20 28
· National League
High Team Three GamesNew York Clothing 1725 ; Pittsbrgh 020 100 ooo- 3 8"0
Pullins Excavatlno 1685; Cincinnati 001 010 002- 4 7 1
Blass, Hernandez (8), Giusti
Pomeroy Motors 1641. ·
High Team Game ·- New {9), Moose (9) and Sangulllen;
York Clothing 605; Pullins Gullett, Borbon 141, Hall (6),
Excavating 594; Pullins Ex- Carroll (9) and Bench. WPcavating 591.
· Carroll. LP- Glustl . HRsHigh Ind. Series - Betty Geronlmo, Bench.
Smith 516 ; Mary Voss 464;
American League ·
,110 innings)
Julie Boyles ~ High ' Ind . &lt;r.!me - Belly Oak
000 000 100 2- 3 9 2
Smith 195; Julie Boyles 178: · Del
001 000 000 3- 4 10 1
Hunter, Fingers (8), Blue (9),
/ll)ary Voss, 176.
Locker (10). Harten (10).
Hamilton · (10) and Teiiace,
AHt: Standings·
Duncan (7); Lolich, Seelbach
By United Press International (10), Hiller (10) and Freehan.
- WP-HIIIer. LP- Horlen. HRs.
East " ·~·
w. 1. t. pts gf ga · McAuliffe, Epstein.
Springfield
2 0 1 5 15 9
Pr.ovid~nte
2 1 0 4 13 10
Nova Scotia
I 0 1 . 3· 8 4
LOSE
FAT .
Rochester
1 1 0 2 1 9
Boston
1202811 Start tostno weight today OR
New Haven
0300611 MONEY• BACK . MONADEX Is
a tiny tablet that will help curb
W~st
y_our desire for e•cess food.
w. I. I. pis gf ga eat
leu . weigh less. Contains
Tidewater
3 0 0 6 16 10 no dang!rous drugs and will
Baltimore
~ 1 1 3 710 not make you nervous. No
Cleveland
1 3 1 3 13 18 strenuous exerc!s&amp; . Change
life ... star't today.
Cincinnati
1 0 0 2 5 2 your
MONADEX
costs 13.00 for a 20
Hershey
1 2 0 2 12 12 day supp ly and
$5.00 tor tw lc!
Richmond
1 2 0 2 6 10 the amount. Lose ugly fat or .
your money will ~?• refunded ,
Wednesdoy's Results
with no questions asked by :
Providence 4 Cleveland 2
Swl1her
&amp; LOhlt DrUQI • 112 E.
Richmond 2 New Haven 1
Main, Pomuoy &amp; Dutton Drug
(Only games scheduled)
• Middleport. Mtll Orders

Mrs. Sylvia Midkiff was ' means chairman, reported .on «
~""··
elected worthy . matron !'fld . items purchased for resale And ~ . .
Six.: ,applicatiQJ!S for mem•
Genevie.ve Burns., Mrs.
Dale Smith, worthy patron at a asked· that £·floris be made to ~ .
~ . liership were approved Mrs.
AnnaMoon, Mr's, Darlene
By Bob.Hoejlich
Tue!ldaynightbythe American
recent meeting of Pomeroy see lh~ remaining items .
Bland, and Mrs . Anna
Chapter 1116, Order of the Money is ID be tur~ed in at the
THURSDAY
Legion Auxiliary .of Lewis Williams: ·Eastern Star.
· November meeting.
MOTHER - DAUGHTER · Manley Post 263 at the home of
Areport on the District 8fall
.. , Millllleport Village MaintenanCe &amp;!pervisQr Harold Chase i.s
Other officers elected were
Plans were made to furnish banq~et ·at Middleport Church Mrs. con Young,
conference
at Lithopolis last
appealing to all Middleport residents to refrain from parking on Mrs. Joan Rayburn, a~iare lunch for an _auction sale on of ·Christ, 6:"30 p.m. Thursday.
Accepted were Mrs. Lucy
week was given by Mrs. Ernest
NorthSecood Ave., Friday night so that the street can be cleaned matron; ·Tom Edw.rds, Oct. 13 and 14. Refreshmen~ Take table serVice.
Cousins, Mrs. Olevia Scott, Bowles. Mrs. Allen Hampton
, early-Saturday morning. The no paridng request covers the area associate patron ; Mrs. Marie were served by Mr. and Mrs.
REGULAR MEETING,
· from F..-eman and. Abbott to the .''T".
. .. Curd, secretary; Mrs. DOrothy Dale Smith, Mrs. Shirley Smith Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Woodard, treasurer; Mrs. and Mrs. Midkiff. Members Thursday, 7:30p.m. at remple. Tl'
U
V
VY .,,)
110
l
SEVERAL OF 1liE songs of Forest Kyle, Colwnbus, for- Florence WeD, conductress; · were reminded of Grand All Master Masons invited.
Mrs
.
.
Jacqueline
Zirkle,
Chapter
session
to
lie
held
the
PAST
COUNCIWRS
Club,
•·
·
• merly of Meigs County, are being prese~ at the Kinga Anna
Theodorus Council, Daughrers
A yard .sale was planned.for were read. The program
Club below Middleport by talented organlsl•vocali.st, George associate .co·nductress; and . last .week in October.
Hall.
.
Mrs. Myrtle Sisson, trustee.
of America, Thursday, 7:30 TuesdayattheP..-tlandUnited presented by Mrs. Opal Diddle
During the meeting presided
p.m., home . of Mrs Fred Methodist Church by the ir)cluded readings, "God Love
'
.
over
by
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
:
,
Dessauer.
··
• Women's Society of Christian You" by Mrs. Hilton; "Give
:
FOUR MEIGS OOUNTY young men - Keith Ashley, Bill
XI GAMMA MU Chaprer, Service recently at the~home of That Cup of Water" by Mrs.
' Beegle, ·Martin Ollborn and Torn GwnJi - are keeping busy 8li Woodard, it was noted that •
Carribean cruise in January is
"'
BeLa Sigma Phi Sorority Mrs. Cora Hilton. Plans were Ruth Ebersbach; "God Old
· members of the Ohio University marching band.
being
sponsored
by
General
meeting 7:45 p.m. Thursda~ also made to have a Days" by Mrs. Fern
over the weekend, the band was at Lawrenceburg, Ind., on
Chapter. Ge.t-well cards
home of Mildred Karr Mid- housewares party Nov. 7 at the Cheese brew . Articles on
Friday and stayed overnight there. On SaiJ!rday,_the band took Grand
were.sent to liill Hayes, Mrs.
1
'l
dleport.
'
"home ~f Mrs, Hilton. At the Halloween were read by Mrs.
part in the Fairbome band contest and Saturday afternoon Annetre Knight, Tom Bowen,
AFTERNOON CIRCLE, . 2 suggestion of Mrs. Shirley Elva Dailey, Mrs. Ethel
' played frir the O.U. game in Cincimatl. On Sunday, the band
and Mrs. Ula Matlack during
Fund raising projects were p.m. Thursday at the Heath Johnson, the s~iety voted to Johnson, Mrs. Dfddle, Mrs.
:]X'esented the half-time show at the Cincimati-lironcos game SepleD)ber, it was reported: discussed at a meeting United Methodist Church. Mrs. pay the church msurance.
Agnes Price, Mrs. Johnson,
and W&amp;li relevised doing the show.
Devotions· from Isaiah 32, and Mrs. Gertrude Lehew, a
Reports of the audit, budget Tuesday night of the Easterri' Nan Moore will present the
On Nov. 5, the O.t/. band will present the half-ilme show at
and trustee committees were High School Band Boosters.
_lesson and the hostesses will be Revelation S and Psalm 100 guest. Mrs. Hilton served
•the Pitltlburgh Steelers game and will.be at ihe O.U.-Bowling presented and It was voted to
refreshments.
The group-···Wil\ serve two ·- Mrs. Emerson Jones, Mrs .
:Green game.
·
increase insurance coverage banquets, one on Oct. 17 at 7:30 Rose McDade.
·
on the chapter contents.
p.m. to the Farm Bureau, and
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
MRS. ALICE NEASE, talented stage performer and a forMr.s . Midkiff, ways and the other on Oct. 23 to a 7:30Thursdaynightatthehall.
:mer vocal mUBic teaeher, will be heading a minstrel show to be
sorority. Several other money
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
;staged under the sponsorship of the Eastern Local Athletic
making activities were Letart Falls, regular meeting,
;Boosters on Nov. 10 and ll,at the high school. Those Interested in
discussed with decisions being 8 tonight at hall; election of
,taldng.part are to·.meet at the school at 2 p.m. Sunday. Parp03tponed until the November officers, potluck. refreshments.
:ticularly fprmer ~d men in Mrs. Nease's minstrels are asked to
meeting.
THOSJ;: interested in par•be present for Sunday's meeting.
Charles Wills, band director, ticipating in choir for "Seven
The 13th annual re!iolon of Ronnie Spencer and Trisha,
spoke briefly to the Boosters on Nights for Christ" crusade the Rev. and Mrs. B. ~- Darst Chester, and Mrs. Sarah
TilE HOME OF MRS. RICHARD Rosenbaum, Wright St.,
Rally Day .observance on the all..:ounty band which is please ·report to Wesleyan family was held Sunday, Oct. I, Spencer, Buffalo, W. Va.
Acordial welcome was given
'Pomeroy, will be the scene ol a yard sale from I to 4 p.m. Oct. 29 at the Bradford Church being organized to play for the Church, Racine, 8 p.m. Thurs- at the home of the host, Budd,
Junior
Miss
Pageant.
He
also
day.
by
the host and Rev. Darst
Junior
Darst,
Middleport
Rt.
1.
:Saturday under the sponsorship of XI Gamma Mu Chaprer of of Christ was planned by the
FRIDAY
Th&lt;ise attending were Rev. prayed the ble~ for the
:Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. The sorority stresses that the sale does .Adult Class recently at the stated that he would like to
stage
a
band
show
following
MEETING
at
Letart
Falls
and
Mrs. B. L. Darst of food. The aftemoon was spent
:not include rummage.
church.
•
Arr&lt;1ngements were made to football season. He asked that · Community Hall, I p.m. Friday Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Budd playing, singing and visiting
MR. ~ MRS. OORWYN Enevoldaen, Tuppers Plainll, are have a program on that day. A each band member contribute to make plans for election day Junior Darst, Rex, Ellen and with each other. All but seven
:announcing the adoption of their sixth child and thlrd son, delegation from the class was $1.25 toward cleaning the dinner. All interested In Patty and Desi Jeffers, Mr. of the family were present.
and Mrs. Lonnie Darst and
named to attend revival uniforms and also mentioned helping, please attend.
;Kenneth Dorwyn, 12. on Oct. ?,
Ken Ia welcomed by Leigh Anne, 17; Jo Lynn, 16; Melanie meetings at the Bradbury and that each member must have MARY SHRINE 37, Order or" Lisa J~n. PQmeroy; Rev ..and _......,...._Tuppers Plains Churches in insurance for his instrument. the White Shrine of Jersualem, Mrs. Ershel Curfman, David
&amp;!e, 14; Tim, 10 and Steve, 6.
Tbe trip to Cadiz for the 8 p.m. Friday-at the IOOF hall, and Freda Cantor, Mr. and
· Ken's adojrtion Saturday was a bit unusual in that his brothers progress this week. A com- football game was discussed by Pomeroy. Material objective
This ed will be
Mrs. William Curfman, Kristy
and sisters were at the final hearing but he was a patient at mittee was appointed to check the director who reported that night and practice for and Scotty, Mr. and Mrs.
Worth
'veterans Memorial Hospital due to a football injury. However, on the number of residents at two buses will be used·to trans- ceremonial. All officers and Elmer Sigman of Cheshire;
the Meigs County Infirmary
..his adoption papers were presented to him at the hospital.
where fruit will be P~ken before port the band and that members urged to attend . Mr. and Mrs. John Sigman,
hopefully a pickup truck will be Potluck refreshments.
Johnnie and Randy, Addison;
Thanksgiving.
townds purchue of
TilE SOME 30 GIRLS WHO have registered to take part in
to
transport
the
•
RETURN
JONATHAN
available
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Rife, Mr.
Winter Jacket or
Mrs.
Frances
Hysell
the pony chOl'WI lines of the "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend presided at the meetin~ which equipment. There will be four Meigs Chaprer, Daughters of and Mrs. Rodger Lou Master
C01t. Now at ...
Minstrel Alaoclation Will meet at 7 1\looc!ay evening at the opened with devotions by Mrs. chaperones on each bus, he American Revolution, 2 p.m. and Paul Allen, Mrs. Ina Rife,
,Pomeroy Elementary School. Assisting In the instruction of the Tressie Hendricks .who used said • and this will include an Friday at the home of Mrs. Dar Kenton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
;lines will be Debbie Buck, &amp;!sie Soulsby, Mary Midkiff, Peggy the scripture, Acts 1, 6-11, with extra bus driver. Each Schaefer with Mrs. A. R. Lemley, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
~ O'Brien and Cathy Werry. Although guests ·will be permitted her topic, "Ye Shall be Wit- member will be allotted $1 for Knight and Mrs. Patrick Curfman, Kenney and Rickie,
~ !liter, it ia request~ that no visitors accompany the girls for the nesses." Two poems, "My food on the way and reser- Lochary co-hostesses . Miss of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
:first several meetings.
Faith" and "What is Faith'·\ vatlons are being made for this Bernice Graham to· be the
purpose, he said.
speaker. Members to name an
were read and prayer was
The lack of working mem- ancestor for roll call.
given by Mrs. Hendricks.
A potluck supper was served bers was discussed and band
SUNDAY
at the meeting attended by Mr. , parents and others Interested
HYMN SING ·at salvation
and· Mrs! HOi!M!I''FOr't'elit, Mr:'· m ~he,pror~m lfO ·bei~g urg"'! Army, Butt~r?ut Ave., · ·r
and Mrs·. , ~Sisson, Mrs. , to ta~e an. active part. Pomeroy, · 2 p.m. Sunday;
Frances Hysell, Mrs. Hen- Meetings are held the second public invited.
dricks, Mrs. Nora Cambron, Tuesday of each month at 7:30 REVIVAL Sunday through
Mrs. Verna Hysell, Mrs. p.m.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. each
APPLE GROVE, Ohio- The money from the Apple Grove Eleanor Hoover and Laura.
evening, at Graham's Chapel
pple Grove-East J,.etart church to Rev. Shiveley and Bible quizzes were conducted.
Church, 31; miles Northeast of
nlted Methodist Churches family and Mrs. Gerald Next meeting will he held on
Shade with the Rev. Carl
SON IS ·BORN
ld a reception at the Letart Hayman one froin the East Nov. 3.
Radcliff, evangelist: Special
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bryan of singing and public Invited.
ails
Community ' hall Letart church.
Reynoldsburg are announcing
t:!aturday night in honor of the
Rev.
Shiveley read
MONDAY
the birth of a son, eight pounds
~v. and Mrs. Howard Shively Scripture from the 6th chaprer
CHESTER PTA, 7:30 p.m.
and 10 ounces, ·born Oct. 6 at
fand sons, Gene, Bill, Jim and of Epheasians and gave the
Monday,
at the school. Carl
INFANT CHRISTENED
Doctors'
Hospital,
Columbus.
· ohn.
table grace before dinner.
Hysell, Jr. will speak on drugs.
Christening services for
!'-'·Rev. Shiveley and family
The hymn "Blest Be the Tie Jason Lee Wright, son of Mr. The baby has been named Program committee meeting
~cently moved to Racine from that Binds" was sung and all and Mrs. Michael Wright, were T)mothy Albert. Grandparents at 7:15p.m. preceding meeting
)Wilmington to serve as pastor repeated the LOrd's Prayer to held on Oct. 1 at the Laurel are Mr. and Mrs. John Bryan, In lbe fourth grade room.
Middleport; and Mr. and Mrs.
it the Racine, Letart Falls, close the service.
Cliff Free Methodist Church. Harry Cummings of Reynoldsl!,pple Grov€ and East Letart
Attending were Rev. and The Rev. Robert Buckley ofNEPHEW VISITED
~hurches. .
Mrs. Shiveley and sons, Jenny ficiated. Atrending along with burg. The Bryans have three
Mr
. and Mrs. Fielding
daughters, ·Ruth Ann, 10,
Sizes 2 to 6x In Carter's and
• A slt~'Ciock dinner was Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. RoiM!I-t ' the church congregation were
Hawkins, Middleport, have
Darlene, nine, and Marcie,
Heotth-Tex. Sizes 7 to U In
~eld. Guests were seated at Sinlth, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tammy Kathyr"en Wright, three.
returned from a vi.slt with Mrs.
Berkshire knits Jnd
i!Bbles decorated with purple Ables, Ronnie, Paul and Yield Jason's si.srer, Mr. and Mrs.
Hawkins' nephew, Mr. and
Country
Alre.
•end gold flower arrangements Ables; Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Mrs
.
Charles
Athey
and
Lloyd Wright, his grandwhite table covers.
Whire, Darla, Deanna, Keith parents, anif Mrs. Beulah
children, Charles, Jr., Patti .
~· After the dinner a program and ·Kevin; Mr. -and Mrs. Oehler, a great-grandmother.
· and Tammy in ~acl(Son, Mo.
-~----- ·-- Mr."anli~Mtr.HliWIUN aliO
charge of Mrs. ·Russell DaHarHiii;-Dean· and"'l\rthur, Jason iSalso 1hegranason r.C
traveled over Into Arkansas
Boush and DaD!!s Hill was held Mrs. Marshall Roush and Joe, Mr. and Mrs. James Whitlatch,
lfith Mr. Hill as' narrator. Old- Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler, Middleport.
and returned hoine via KenTURNERS
VISITED
ON THE TIN MIDDLEPORT
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Olden
Thuton,
tucky making an 1,800 mile
~shioned hymns were sung,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dale
K.
Roush
trip.
~ by Mr. Hill with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.- Herbert Shields,
and
daughrers,
Kathy,
Apple
fllarlene Fisher at .the plano. Mrs. Eulah Wolfe and Aaron
Creek, were weekend guests of
Readings given were . a Wolfe,. Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
SURGERY TAKEN
·monologue, "The Choir Norris and Clarence, Mrs. Roy
'
Kim Adams, daughrer of Mr. her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
~tor," by Mrs. Fisher; a Buck, Early Roush, Mrs. Dolly and Mrs. Jim Adams, High St., Turner, Middleport. Other
floem, "Wh~n the Minister Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Pom~roy, underwent an recent guests of the Turners
j;lllls," by Mrs. Roy Donohew; Roush, Sharon, Cindy, David adenoidectomy at Children's were Mrs. Owen .Watson,
Racine, and Mrs. Ivan Watson,
~Y Bible and I," by · Mrs. and Eddie; Millie Ripley, Mr · · Hospital, Colwnbus, today.
'
.
Sterling
Helghts,
Mich.
!,lpnna Hill; "A Home \}'Ithou! and .JIIrs. Ernest Clark, Mr.
l.Bible," by Mrl. Joyce_White; and -Mr,s. John O'Brien, Mrs.
'«t•ve Got i Secret,"'' b)&lt;. Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Greg
trl.zel Fox, ''When I Met the Donohew, Randy Pyles; Mr.
Master," by Mrs. Eileen Buck. and Mrs. Roy Donohew, Mrs.
·A history of the Apple Grove Bill Fox and David, Mrs.
•
and community was Marlene Fisher, Mollie, Larry
by_. Mrs . Roberta and Amy; Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
Parsons and Mrs. Facie
Hayman.
.
.

R·azse
•

chocolates &amp; confections

•

Icsoa3i"'
l
Six
oin
:A
uxiliarj
:a·1en·d·ar*. · .

Booster.·(' to

Sampler

LA-Z-BOV

~.w.v

Always

Chief

Second High Serie• NHL Standings
Follrod
and Korn 395. ·
By United Press International
Team
High Game - Ex·
East
celslor
Oil
Co. 746.
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Team
High
Series - ExBuffalo
2 0 0 4 12 6 celsior Ott Co. 2157
.
Detroit
2 0 0 4 9 6

Officers Elected

.

455.

Kings 129-94

m.sm

in 1911, Chinese n:volutionaries overthrew the ME nchu
Dynasty.

against Athens and was on,.---------'-----------~
crutches in the second half.
Prior to the injury, the ·au.
league halfback was the fourth
top rusher in ·the leagile and
has sc·ored 30 points th.is year.
Jackson, 3-2 overall, has the
league.'s top passer in 140 lb.
junior Art DeStephen, who has
complered 22 of 36 attempts for
350 yards and four touchdowns.
Sophomore Randy Ridge, a 150
lb. sophomor~, is leading the
'2.50 lb.
leaguelii sco~!rig 'with 28 points
MEIGS-JACKSON PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS 1
and 160 lb. junior end Tom
OFFENSE
Stevenson
leads ln the league
Meigs
WI. Pos. Wt.
Jackson
..
Andy Vaughan ( 12)
17-3 QB 140
Art DeStephen (11) in receptions with 11.
Chuck Faulk (12)
160 TB 150
Randy Ridge (10)
Dean of SEOAL. coaches,
·Dallas Weber ( 12)
179 FB 110 Brad Thompson (11) Charles Chancey, has quite a
MtckAsh (11)
14"7 WB 160
Steve Jenkins (11) . problenl; other than Jacksoo,
Melvin Cremeans (11)
160 TE 162
Howard
Priest 1121
Bill Chaney (12)
180 SE 160 Tom Stevenson (111 because his number one
Mark Werr~ 112)
238 .r 208
Joe Dalton (12) punter, 155 lb. senior Randy
RandL Fau k 11o&gt;
265 T 212
Randy
Farrar (111
John ehew (11)
185 G 163 R"S'er Staflord 1121 Chafin, won' t dress due to
Lou McKinner (12l
115
G 170
teve Rlege I (11 I illness, and back-up punter, 180
Rick Gaul ( 12
153
c 175
Dan Morrow 1121 lb. junior Robbie Eason, has
mononucleosis and won't play.
Who'll punt? Well, nobody
DEFENSE
MEIGS: Alan McLaughlin, 138 lb., 11 , middle guard ; Lehew knew Wednesday night !
and Bill Slack, 168, 11, tackles; Chaney and Tom Lowery, 150 lb.,
Other than Chafin, who
11. ends; McKinney and Weber, linebackers ; Jon Dlll~rd, 148 lb.,
12, and Ash, cornerbacks. and Dave Wolfe, 160 lb., 11, and starts at offensive end,' the
Cremeans, deep backs.
1
starting line-up will not
JACKSON : Doug Jude, 174 lb., (1 1). middle guard; Bill change. Randy Faulk, 265 lb.
Lewis, 2121b., (11). and Scott Keller, 210 lb .. (11),-lackles; Don
Armstrong, 165 lb., (12). and Mike Ridge, 1651b., (10). ends; John ' sophomore tackle, didn't start
Gilliam, 160 lb., (10), and Merrill Scott, 165 lb., (121, linebackers; last week but played quite a
Stevenson and B•lan Joseph, 140 lb., 110) , cornerbacks, and bit, will start this week.
Ridge and Bill Mosslander, 165 lb ., (111, safeties.
The Marauders, 4-1 overall,
have lost to Jackson twice in
five
games, those in 1968 130A~els
18) and 1969 (35-18). Meigs won
ANAHEIM (UPI) - At 42, manager during the past last year, 32-16.
Meigs will have a weight
Bobby Winkles is blazing a new season, could remain with the
advantage
at both the line and
trail from college baseball Angels in another capacity if
coach to major league he wished . Rice was not backfield. Meigs is 190 across
the front line while Jackson
manager.
present.
Winkles, a pepper pot who
Winkles made !I name for averages 179 and the
wants 110 per cent from his himself as coach of Arizona Marauders have a •166-155
players, replaced Del Rice as Sta!e where he spent 13 years backfie.Jd advantage.
The Marauders are fourth in
manager of the California and had a won-lost record of
total
offense in the league while
Angels Wednesday.
524-173 for a great .752 perJackson is second. The IronGeneral Manager Harry centage.
men are sixth in total defense
Dalton announced at a news
conference that Rice, 50, who · ALEXANDER RELEASED and Meigs is fifth .
made his debut as a big league
. WNG BEACH, Calif. (UPI)
-Kermit Alexander, veteran
Bloodotone
defensive back, cleared
!'rescription 5ervice-4 Registered Pharmacists to Serve
Medieval
folk believe that
waivers Wednesday and was
You!
Open Daily 8:00a.m. to 10 p.m.- Sunday 10;30a.m.
released by the l.Ds Angeles the bloodstone received its
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
.to
12:30
p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.
coloring from Christ's own
Rams as a free agent.
blood falling upon a green
Morning Glories
. ., " -. ... ., .....
~'' ·
Oct. :h· \~12
· · ~ , ,:I:l/11 , ~l.'lfei!.r.-oJ.&lt;!... , (qqne~ stY!l~ Jt..l/le {o\l!rR~tl/18 Cross •.
1.!~ star,broke ~is rl.81!~, arm
t
Standings
Team
'
'· · Pts. A1,1g. 19.!llld.had ' beeri on the
Gibbs Grocery
26 injured reserve list.
Newell Sunoco
22
Alexander was a first-round
Spencer's Market
22
DONTWAITI
Dick's Grocery
draft
choice of the San Fran18
G. &amp; J. Auto Parts
18 cisco 49ers in 1963. The Rams
BUY NOW/
Excelsior Oil Co.
14 obtained him in 1970 in a trade
High Individual Game
April Smith 158.
for placekicker Bruce Gossett
Second High Ind. Game and a second-round draft
April Smith 156.
choice.
High Series - April Smith
hopes this year. Both the
lronmen and Marauders are Z.
1 in league play and are coming
off their only league loi'Bes
from last Friday.
Jackson, leading 8-l&gt; going
into" the last quarter, was
beaten by Athens 12-8 and
Meigs was man-handled by a
fired up Ironton eleven 37-ll, the
worst defeat in.- Meigs history.
, Valentine, Jackson's speedy
ace runner, was injured early

. I

.Of the Bend.

lronman Valenline Won't Start

Wmkles New

EASTERN -DADIZ STARTING LINEUPS
BOBCAT OFFENSE
Eastern ·
WI. Pos. WI.
Cadiz . ... Player'"·· ·Pos. WI.
Randy Boring U2)
145 QB 165
Terry Coleman (12) .Juhn Baird (12)
QB 135
Ralph Parker (12)
140 HB 200
Calvin Gregory (12)
Greg
McCarty
(12)
WB
140
Dan Chaffee (11)
155 HB T65
Eric Miller (.12)
Alan Duvall (12)
190 FB 175
Kevin Kendzlorskl (12) Lawrence Tabor (11) TB 145
George Mora (12)
190 C 175
-Dave Smith (12) Or Rick Smith (II)
145
Dave Griffith (12)
155 G 175
Gary Jamison (12) · Jim Bias 112)
· FB 165
163
.
Steve Millhoan (12)
or Tim Baum (11)
Or
George
Curry
(12)
180
165 G 170
Terry Stms·l12)
Dick Stellter (12)
189 T 185
Ed Spikes (11) Marshall French (12) C 145
Steve Reed (12)
210 T 185
Bruce Campbell (11) Terry Sheets (11)
QG 175
John Sheets 111)
180 E 175
Melvin Beyers 112)
Or
Dwight
Thompson
(
11) 153
Bobby Edwards (12)
120 E 165
Randy Barnhart 112)
Dave Wise (10)
SG 100
Ron Fi.sber(l2)
QT 205
DEFENSE
EASTERN: Duvall and Baum, etlds; Stettler and Mora, Orland Cremeans ( 12)
liT 220
tackles: Reed, middle guard; Donnie Eichinger, 1381b., (9), and
Griffllh or Mlllhoan, linebackers : Chaffee and Osbourne, cor- Mark D,arst (12)
SE 160
nerb;lcks, and Sh ..ts and Edl'far,~s. s~s · , , , _,
ClayHudson(ll)
TE
172 ·
\11, ~RJZ;,I9ffi Tllr/Wut,\,2\5 tb., (12)1, Ml;.,IMy~s-i05 tb.,
Defense ~lib Smith (3-210) ·~
1lf:it\ds; D~ve Heard, 180 b.. (12), _and·' Ca.Wpliell, tackles ;
I.JamlsQnJ
, MIUe&lt;, and l Simms, llnebackers1: Kend}lorskl and and Bias, ends~ David ClaY. (3Walter Krltlnskt, 175 lb., (12) , cornerbacks, and Barnhart and
270) and Brian Tucker (4-210),
Coleman, safeties:
tackles; Curry, BiU Rife (4154), Sheets, and Smith,
linebackers; Darst and
Oudson, cornerbacks; McCarty, John Roush (4-1~) and
French, safeties.

Beat~· •.

..

,._

�t-Tbe Daily Sentinel,Middlepori-POIIIel'oy,O., Oct.12, lt72

•- '!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 19'/2

Tornados· Go for
. BOBCAt OFFENSE
.TORNADO OFFENSE
The most important game in
Southern football history will
be this Friday when the
powerful Torn~dos travel to
Kyger Creek to battle the
Bobcats in what might be the
"run for the roses.''
Southern is 3-0 in Southern
Valley Conference play and
Kyger Creek is 3-1; losing only
to Eastern 11-4) last week.
Eastern is also 3-1 in league
play . Southern defeated

Eastern 6,0 in an earlier game fide All-Americans, but several
this year.
"good boys" who, as a group,
Coach Bill Jewell's Tor. have played ·very well. The
nados, headed for their Tornados are the bigger ;
greatest season in history, are weight-wise, but probably not
4-1 overall, losing only to quite as fast as the Bobcats.
Wahama 20-6. The Bobcats also Southern lias three boys who
lost to Wahama ~play both way and KC has five.
Both the Tornados and
Jim SpFag\le, a first-year
Bobcats have great defensive coach like Jewell, plays a wide
squads, Kyger Creek giving up open tjope offense. At q1.1arbut 2:i points this year and terback is little 135 lb. senior
Southern 40. The Tornados Johnny Baird. ,"Tiie .two top
have scored 95 aild :Kc 113.
·Bobcat. run_ners are 145 lb.
Neither team has any bona junior Lawrence Tabor and 140
lb . senior Greg McCarty.
Nick !hle, 175 lb. senior
halfback, paces Southern 's
offense. Vern Ord has handled
the quarterback slot well this
year while Mitch Nease and
Jay Hill add running strength.
Giant tackles Ron Hill, 235 lb.
senior, and Larry Wilcoxen,
240 lb. senior, anchor the line.

Eagles Facing
Great Runner
•
The Eastern Eagles face one
of the state's best runners this
Saturday in Calvin Gregory, a
200lb. senior hal(back who.was
the "AA'' statechampiorrin the
180 low hurdles last year. The
Eagles face a powerful Cadiz
Cardinal eleven at Cadiz in a
non-league game.
Gregory has gained around
680 .yards this year and according to his coach, firt-year
.'
M1ke Warbell, "always breaks
loose at least 3 or 4 times a
game." Cadiz lost their opener
7-6 to Buckeye West and have
not been beaten since in four
· games.
Those Eagle fans planning on
taking the trip ·to Cadiz had
better start early. It's ap.
proximately 150 miles away. It

is loc.ated 38 miles. from
Cam~ridge on Rout.e 22. Game
t1me IS 7:30.
.
•
Coach Rog,er K1rkhart s
Eagles. ~re 3-2 on !Jle year and
are commg off a tremendous 86 win over Kyger Creek last
week. Kirkhart lila de some
changes in the lineup, moving
1551b. junior Dan Chaffee from
guard to the backfield, where
he'll team up with Alan Duvall,
Randy Boring, and Ralph
·Parker, and 180 lb. junior John
Sheets will go to tight end from
the backfield replacing Phil
Bowen.
Eastern is 3-2 overall and 3-1
in league play. The Eagles'
meeting with the Cardinals will
be the first ever.

TORNADO OFFENSE
POl. WI.,
V
Ord (II)
QB uo:
· ~~Nease( 10)
HB I~
Nick lhle (1 2)
HB 175
Jay Hill 112)
FB 100
Denni.sHawk(ll)
c 212
Bob Eynm (II)
G 175
Mike Codner (11)
G 100
Ron Hill (12)
T 235'
larry Wilcoxen (12)
T 240·
Jim Willlama Ill)
E 165 '
Mike Nease (12)
E 142
DEFENSE
R.Hill,JQ!ddleguard; Randy
Forbes, 160 lb., (II), and
Wllllama, endl; Greg Middles-;
wart, 1~ lb. (11), and Hawk, .
tackles; J. Hill and Tim;
Maurer, 165 lb. (10), ,
linebackers; Ihle and Ord,
cornerbaclla, and Mitch Nease
and Mike Nea.se, _safeties.

Lakers Blast

ole Thing

The Jackson Ironmen, ap· parenUy minus the services of
halfback sensation Kenny
Valentine, invade Marauder
Stadium Friday night in
another of those "weekly
croocial" Southeastern ·Ohio
Athletic League games.
The winner of Friday's game
will stay in a challenging
position for the SEOAL title
while the loser might as well
hang up all championship

Montreal

1 0 1_ 3 5 2

Vancouver
N.Y. Rangers
Toronto
N.Y.Istandrs

110267
1 2 0 2 9 13

0 I I 1 J 5
points and John Brisker added
0 1 0 0 2 3
The Los Angeles i..akers 19. Fred Carter paced Boston
0 2 0 0 5 8
Wednesday night picked up Philadelphia With 23.
West
w. I. I. pis gf ga
this season right where they
John Havlicek scored 29 Chicago
J o 0 6 12 3
left off last season.
points In Boston's victory over Pittsburgh
2 o o 4 9 4
The Lakers, kicking off their Detroit. Dave Bing and Bob Minnesota
1 1 0 2 5 5
1 2 o 2 9 13
NBA 1g72-73 season, had little Lanier hit :IB apiece in the Los Angeles
Atlanta
~
.1
2 0 2 711
trouble blasting something 108lng Detroit Clluse.
Philadelphia
o o 1 1 ~ 4
called the Kansas City-Omaha
St. Louts
o 1 1 1 6 9
Kings by a 129-94 margin. Tbey
Californ
ia
·
0
2 0 0 • 8
NBA Standirigs
Wednesday's
Results
were the old Cinciruiati Royals,
By United Press International
N.Y. Rangers 5 Vancouvr 3
Eastern Conference
who were the old Rocbester
Buffalo
7 Los Angeles 3
Atlantic Division
Royals.
Torontq
Montreal 2
w. I. pet. g.b. Detroit 42Boston
3 . The game was played In New York
1 0 1.000
Minnesota
5Calif
2
1 o 1.1100
Omaha and the new fans didn't Boston
Chicago
4
Atlanta.1
Buffalo ·
0 1· .1100
get much .to cheer for as the Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
5
st.Louis'
2·
o 2 .000 l'h
(Only
games
schedul.edl
Lal\ers cruised to a 69-39 lead
Central Division
Thursday's Games
while hitting 69 per cent of their
w. I. pet. g.b. Atlant~
at Montreal ,~ ·· ~ "'-Atlanta
l . 0_1,.000
shots in the first half.
Los
Ang
at N.Y. lsl and~ rs
Baltimore ·
1 0 .1.000
Vancouver
Phil a
Wilt Chamberlain, who is Houston
o 0 .000 •;, !Only game•atsche~uled)
W)ing the regular season ~or his Cleveland . 0 1 .000 I
. Westorn ·t::onltretice
lleason luneup after his · tong
Midwest Division
holdout, was conlent to pass oft
w. 1· pet. g.b.
WHA Standings
and scored just seven points.
Chicago
I
0
1.000
By
United
Press International
He didn 'I even take a shot until M
0
.000 1;,
Eastern Division
08ll,waukee
roll
0 1 .000 1
1t t 1
there was just 3:30 left ifi the KC-Omaha
o 1 .000 1
w. · · P s g ga
second period.
Pacific Divioion
. Cleveland
1 o 0 2· ,2 o
New England
0 o o 0 0 0
I
Jim McMillian led the winw. t. PC • g.b. New York
0 0 0 0 0 0
ners with 23 and Jerry West k~~~~geles
: ~ 1: : ,12 Philadelphia
0 0 0 0 0 0
added 19.
G ld St
Quebec
0 1 0 0 0 2
g g :: '12 Ottawa
0 1 0 0 4 7
In the other two games, P~oe~7x ·
Portland
o
o
.000
:~
Western
Division
.
Seattle downed Philadelphia,
Wednesday's Results
w. I. t. pts gf ga
106-100, and Boston downed
Seattle 105 Phlla 100
Alberta
1 0 0 2 1 4
Boston 121 Detroit 108
Chicago
0 0 0 0 0 0
Detroit, 121-108.
Los Ang 129 KC-Qmaha 94
Houston
Spencer Haywood scored 22
Los Angeles . 0o 0o 00 0o 0o 0o
games scheduled)
Minnesota
0 0 0 0 0 0
points ID pace Seattle. Dick ' (OnlyThursday's
Games
Snyder chipped In With 20 ·(No
hed t d)
Winnipeg
0 0 0 0 0 0·
games sc .u e
Wednesday's Results
Cleveland 2 Quebec 0
, ...............................~---.., Alberta 7 Ottawa 4
IOnly games scheduled)
Thursday's ~mes
Winnipeg at New York
Chicago at Houston
Phlla at New England
(Only games scheduled!

By United Press Intemalloaal

°

App~eciated.

GUEST S:fAR

New;

you can · tiuy that
·c;omfortable
La·Z-Boy
:chair y~u've always
dreamed of at our low
prices.

.-.Sltl

... ,.

FINISHING
.
.

'

•

SAME DAY
SERVICE
, In At 9:-0ut At~ -

Authorized O..ler

MASON

.

STARTING. FRIDAY
. EvENIN~

.

:

AT TH_E_

FAMOUS
KING'S
ARMS
.· . On Rt. 7 Below 1\Mddllport .
MISS
MARTY CAMPBFJJ.
Tennessee's "Beautiful Talented Singing Str.
Along With

.FURNITURE
HermtnGr.tt

George Hall and till Hallmarks

•. ·

Only

Darst Family Has
Annual Reunion

For your .

Thanksgiving
Engagement
..

Express
fll\IIY . with mree t'.'l'll'
love lrom Art&lt;:arv111&lt;1
diamond ring and we.ddir1gj
band for tne bride, 1nd
matching wedding ring
the groom.

Honored Sat~rday Night

Slacks

FIVESilnof
Dtluxt CloMd Front
Circulators
Priced At Low As

Shirts

Blouses Skirts
and Sets

More couples select
ICa1rved rings than any oth1erl
brand because MCa~vedl
has the most ap~&gt;l!atmll·
and complete selectlc:m
styles. And the Arte:arv~!d!
name is your absollut,el
assurance of quality.
If you're planning a Thtanks·i
giving engagemen~ pian
visit us soon.

oo

AppruO'td "' tt..

~ictnGu

THE-KIDDIE SHOPP

·!Ji

Auociltlon for
111t witli n1tural,
manulactuttCI,

LP'., 1nd ·
mixld Plllfo

FIVE SIZES Of .
Cusllttt De.luu
RM!et Cinulttt•rs
Prkl4nltw·as
'
·'

Jewelly Store
Court St.,

RIDAY the·· l3th

!

.'

-.

GREAT 1 DAY BARGAIN EVENT!
,.. II 1

ALL OTHER· KNITS

ldVIta in winter

home
MORNiNG's ex•
elusive "CCrpet of ComFort" hilt flow fOt
1111'111 flelr
Till ponrful, quiet
runnirc b~ drnl htmd 1ir down"
bttwMn 1M front and rur MCtions of

helti.,..

.WIDTHS

N-M-W .

·pet of Wlrmth over rour flooq.
Tilt "Carpet of Cotnlort" biowlr system
. It completely ~tic ... tuminl on
·. When 1t1e 11t1t lllrts flcMirc. tumifll off.
· When ltle hilt 1tap1 .flawl~~~o A lllector
IWitcll J'QU ltle choice of .... medium or ""'
ill 11r slmplr tumilll
the lllouu•
from IUIDmllic lo .
•null, JOU Clll apaltl till lllowa SJ'o
tn fir llttiiiiiMime lir chculltlat•

t
',

Extra Bonus! This Sale Only!
'

tha

•u
'*"'"

••••r•••• ...

.

IHE SHOE. lOX

•

..-._.~a.-·.

EIERSBACH

'
roa· BI~ ·DISCOUNT _ &amp;AVI~ost

700 W~. Main ~ ·Pomeroy

·

110 w. MAl• .

't &amp;o t D•U,

I•«•J 1..

.

.

.

'

lO% OFF

•

j

. ON ALL. CAsH PURaiASES OF
.

.

.

~

'

1

13.00 OR MORE. FRIDAY QftLYJ ·

·T~e F!~!~S....~hop.
· rACCALL'S SIMPLICITY PATTIItNS

nsw. Second ·

Pomeroy, 0.

·

•
'

ARTCARVEDRINGS

PlAY CLOTHES

ti~t£ &amp;_toral Family is

tht htlt chlmbtr llld pusha it out 11onc
tht Clblntt fl'ont.-..tprwdlnc • wide car·

CHAI'RS

lJUnd.S

lOLA'S

...

UGLY

-Adv.

Jd afid Sa/e
. .

one

5.00

GAS HEAlERS

Filled.

. noied . that th~ unit lllldt
membership qqota plu
prior to the fall conference .nd
was presented at that Ume a
flower llrrangement from
Robert Waddell, Elgbth
Dlstri.ct Commander. A 8!ft
from Mrs. Charles Keuingl!r,
Eighth District Auxiliary
president, was given to Mn.
' Hampton for collecting the
most dues.
Mrs. Campbell Harper,
Americanism chaifrnan,
reported on plano for the year.
Assessments for chlldre~ ·and
youth and veterans affain
were paid, and a bond for the
secretary and !reamer m
approved.
A. Christmas party wa1
tentatively set for Dec. 7. Mrs.
Hampton presided at the
meeting which opened In
ritualistic form with Mtl.
Nellie Winston as chapjaln. 1'1!
conc.lude the meeting, the
group sang the hymn of lbe
month, "How Firm a FQUDo
dation.''
Following retirement ·.of lbe
colors, . the · hostess served
salad!, sandwiches, .00 pie
from a table decorated in the
Halloween motif. Mra."Arnold
Richards .won the door prize.

-------

Ebersbach Has -

Thu,...y'sGame~
!Nogamess~heduledl

TC'C'S t0

Rally Day
On Oct. 29

looal Bowling

GET COURT ORDER
BALTIMORE (UPI) -The
Baltimore Bullets obtained a
court order Wednesday temporarily barring holdout guarct
Archie Clark from playing for
any.- other professional basket,
Women's Thursday
ball ream.
Afternoon League
Oct. l, 1972
An Oct. 24 hearing was stared
Standings
for
U.S. District Court here,
Team
W. L.
New York Clothing
34 14 club officials said.
Pomeroy Motors
26 22
Pullins Excavation
22 26
Major t.eague Results .
Heletl's Beauty Shop
22 26
Pomeroy Lanes
20 28 By United Press International
Championship Playoffs
Simon's Market
20 28
· National League
High Team Three GamesNew York Clothing 1725 ; Pittsbrgh 020 100 ooo- 3 8"0
Pullins Excavatlno 1685; Cincinnati 001 010 002- 4 7 1
Blass, Hernandez (8), Giusti
Pomeroy Motors 1641. ·
High Team Game ·- New {9), Moose (9) and Sangulllen;
York Clothing 605; Pullins Gullett, Borbon 141, Hall (6),
Excavating 594; Pullins Ex- Carroll (9) and Bench. WPcavating 591.
· Carroll. LP- Glustl . HRsHigh Ind. Series - Betty Geronlmo, Bench.
Smith 516 ; Mary Voss 464;
American League ·
,110 innings)
Julie Boyles ~ High ' Ind . &lt;r.!me - Belly Oak
000 000 100 2- 3 9 2
Smith 195; Julie Boyles 178: · Del
001 000 000 3- 4 10 1
Hunter, Fingers (8), Blue (9),
/ll)ary Voss, 176.
Locker (10). Harten (10).
Hamilton · (10) and Teiiace,
AHt: Standings·
Duncan (7); Lolich, Seelbach
By United Press International (10), Hiller (10) and Freehan.
- WP-HIIIer. LP- Horlen. HRs.
East " ·~·
w. 1. t. pts gf ga · McAuliffe, Epstein.
Springfield
2 0 1 5 15 9
Pr.ovid~nte
2 1 0 4 13 10
Nova Scotia
I 0 1 . 3· 8 4
LOSE
FAT .
Rochester
1 1 0 2 1 9
Boston
1202811 Start tostno weight today OR
New Haven
0300611 MONEY• BACK . MONADEX Is
a tiny tablet that will help curb
W~st
y_our desire for e•cess food.
w. I. I. pis gf ga eat
leu . weigh less. Contains
Tidewater
3 0 0 6 16 10 no dang!rous drugs and will
Baltimore
~ 1 1 3 710 not make you nervous. No
Cleveland
1 3 1 3 13 18 strenuous exerc!s&amp; . Change
life ... star't today.
Cincinnati
1 0 0 2 5 2 your
MONADEX
costs 13.00 for a 20
Hershey
1 2 0 2 12 12 day supp ly and
$5.00 tor tw lc!
Richmond
1 2 0 2 6 10 the amount. Lose ugly fat or .
your money will ~?• refunded ,
Wednesdoy's Results
with no questions asked by :
Providence 4 Cleveland 2
Swl1her
&amp; LOhlt DrUQI • 112 E.
Richmond 2 New Haven 1
Main, Pomuoy &amp; Dutton Drug
(Only games scheduled)
• Middleport. Mtll Orders

Mrs. Sylvia Midkiff was ' means chairman, reported .on «
~""··
elected worthy . matron !'fld . items purchased for resale And ~ . .
Six.: ,applicatiQJ!S for mem•
Genevie.ve Burns., Mrs.
Dale Smith, worthy patron at a asked· that £·floris be made to ~ .
~ . liership were approved Mrs.
AnnaMoon, Mr's, Darlene
By Bob.Hoejlich
Tue!ldaynightbythe American
recent meeting of Pomeroy see lh~ remaining items .
Bland, and Mrs . Anna
Chapter 1116, Order of the Money is ID be tur~ed in at the
THURSDAY
Legion Auxiliary .of Lewis Williams: ·Eastern Star.
· November meeting.
MOTHER - DAUGHTER · Manley Post 263 at the home of
Areport on the District 8fall
.. , Millllleport Village MaintenanCe &amp;!pervisQr Harold Chase i.s
Other officers elected were
Plans were made to furnish banq~et ·at Middleport Church Mrs. con Young,
conference
at Lithopolis last
appealing to all Middleport residents to refrain from parking on Mrs. Joan Rayburn, a~iare lunch for an _auction sale on of ·Christ, 6:"30 p.m. Thursday.
Accepted were Mrs. Lucy
week was given by Mrs. Ernest
NorthSecood Ave., Friday night so that the street can be cleaned matron; ·Tom Edw.rds, Oct. 13 and 14. Refreshmen~ Take table serVice.
Cousins, Mrs. Olevia Scott, Bowles. Mrs. Allen Hampton
, early-Saturday morning. The no paridng request covers the area associate patron ; Mrs. Marie were served by Mr. and Mrs.
REGULAR MEETING,
· from F..-eman and. Abbott to the .''T".
. .. Curd, secretary; Mrs. DOrothy Dale Smith, Mrs. Shirley Smith Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Woodard, treasurer; Mrs. and Mrs. Midkiff. Members Thursday, 7:30p.m. at remple. Tl'
U
V
VY .,,)
110
l
SEVERAL OF 1liE songs of Forest Kyle, Colwnbus, for- Florence WeD, conductress; · were reminded of Grand All Master Masons invited.
Mrs
.
.
Jacqueline
Zirkle,
Chapter
session
to
lie
held
the
PAST
COUNCIWRS
Club,
•·
·
• merly of Meigs County, are being prese~ at the Kinga Anna
Theodorus Council, Daughrers
A yard .sale was planned.for were read. The program
Club below Middleport by talented organlsl•vocali.st, George associate .co·nductress; and . last .week in October.
Hall.
.
Mrs. Myrtle Sisson, trustee.
of America, Thursday, 7:30 TuesdayattheP..-tlandUnited presented by Mrs. Opal Diddle
During the meeting presided
p.m., home . of Mrs Fred Methodist Church by the ir)cluded readings, "God Love
'
.
over
by
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
:
,
Dessauer.
··
• Women's Society of Christian You" by Mrs. Hilton; "Give
:
FOUR MEIGS OOUNTY young men - Keith Ashley, Bill
XI GAMMA MU Chaprer, Service recently at the~home of That Cup of Water" by Mrs.
' Beegle, ·Martin Ollborn and Torn GwnJi - are keeping busy 8li Woodard, it was noted that •
Carribean cruise in January is
"'
BeLa Sigma Phi Sorority Mrs. Cora Hilton. Plans were Ruth Ebersbach; "God Old
· members of the Ohio University marching band.
being
sponsored
by
General
meeting 7:45 p.m. Thursda~ also made to have a Days" by Mrs. Fern
over the weekend, the band was at Lawrenceburg, Ind., on
Chapter. Ge.t-well cards
home of Mildred Karr Mid- housewares party Nov. 7 at the Cheese brew . Articles on
Friday and stayed overnight there. On SaiJ!rday,_the band took Grand
were.sent to liill Hayes, Mrs.
1
'l
dleport.
'
"home ~f Mrs, Hilton. At the Halloween were read by Mrs.
part in the Fairbome band contest and Saturday afternoon Annetre Knight, Tom Bowen,
AFTERNOON CIRCLE, . 2 suggestion of Mrs. Shirley Elva Dailey, Mrs. Ethel
' played frir the O.U. game in Cincimatl. On Sunday, the band
and Mrs. Ula Matlack during
Fund raising projects were p.m. Thursday at the Heath Johnson, the s~iety voted to Johnson, Mrs. Dfddle, Mrs.
:]X'esented the half-time show at the Cincimati-lironcos game SepleD)ber, it was reported: discussed at a meeting United Methodist Church. Mrs. pay the church msurance.
Agnes Price, Mrs. Johnson,
and W&amp;li relevised doing the show.
Devotions· from Isaiah 32, and Mrs. Gertrude Lehew, a
Reports of the audit, budget Tuesday night of the Easterri' Nan Moore will present the
On Nov. 5, the O.t/. band will present the half-ilme show at
and trustee committees were High School Band Boosters.
_lesson and the hostesses will be Revelation S and Psalm 100 guest. Mrs. Hilton served
•the Pitltlburgh Steelers game and will.be at ihe O.U.-Bowling presented and It was voted to
refreshments.
The group-···Wil\ serve two ·- Mrs. Emerson Jones, Mrs .
:Green game.
·
increase insurance coverage banquets, one on Oct. 17 at 7:30 Rose McDade.
·
on the chapter contents.
p.m. to the Farm Bureau, and
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
MRS. ALICE NEASE, talented stage performer and a forMr.s . Midkiff, ways and the other on Oct. 23 to a 7:30Thursdaynightatthehall.
:mer vocal mUBic teaeher, will be heading a minstrel show to be
sorority. Several other money
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
;staged under the sponsorship of the Eastern Local Athletic
making activities were Letart Falls, regular meeting,
;Boosters on Nov. 10 and ll,at the high school. Those Interested in
discussed with decisions being 8 tonight at hall; election of
,taldng.part are to·.meet at the school at 2 p.m. Sunday. Parp03tponed until the November officers, potluck. refreshments.
:ticularly fprmer ~d men in Mrs. Nease's minstrels are asked to
meeting.
THOSJ;: interested in par•be present for Sunday's meeting.
Charles Wills, band director, ticipating in choir for "Seven
The 13th annual re!iolon of Ronnie Spencer and Trisha,
spoke briefly to the Boosters on Nights for Christ" crusade the Rev. and Mrs. B. ~- Darst Chester, and Mrs. Sarah
TilE HOME OF MRS. RICHARD Rosenbaum, Wright St.,
Rally Day .observance on the all..:ounty band which is please ·report to Wesleyan family was held Sunday, Oct. I, Spencer, Buffalo, W. Va.
Acordial welcome was given
'Pomeroy, will be the scene ol a yard sale from I to 4 p.m. Oct. 29 at the Bradford Church being organized to play for the Church, Racine, 8 p.m. Thurs- at the home of the host, Budd,
Junior
Miss
Pageant.
He
also
day.
by
the host and Rev. Darst
Junior
Darst,
Middleport
Rt.
1.
:Saturday under the sponsorship of XI Gamma Mu Chaprer of of Christ was planned by the
FRIDAY
Th&lt;ise attending were Rev. prayed the ble~ for the
:Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. The sorority stresses that the sale does .Adult Class recently at the stated that he would like to
stage
a
band
show
following
MEETING
at
Letart
Falls
and
Mrs. B. L. Darst of food. The aftemoon was spent
:not include rummage.
church.
•
Arr&lt;1ngements were made to football season. He asked that · Community Hall, I p.m. Friday Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Budd playing, singing and visiting
MR. ~ MRS. OORWYN Enevoldaen, Tuppers Plainll, are have a program on that day. A each band member contribute to make plans for election day Junior Darst, Rex, Ellen and with each other. All but seven
:announcing the adoption of their sixth child and thlrd son, delegation from the class was $1.25 toward cleaning the dinner. All interested In Patty and Desi Jeffers, Mr. of the family were present.
and Mrs. Lonnie Darst and
named to attend revival uniforms and also mentioned helping, please attend.
;Kenneth Dorwyn, 12. on Oct. ?,
Ken Ia welcomed by Leigh Anne, 17; Jo Lynn, 16; Melanie meetings at the Bradbury and that each member must have MARY SHRINE 37, Order or" Lisa J~n. PQmeroy; Rev ..and _......,...._Tuppers Plains Churches in insurance for his instrument. the White Shrine of Jersualem, Mrs. Ershel Curfman, David
&amp;!e, 14; Tim, 10 and Steve, 6.
Tbe trip to Cadiz for the 8 p.m. Friday-at the IOOF hall, and Freda Cantor, Mr. and
· Ken's adojrtion Saturday was a bit unusual in that his brothers progress this week. A com- football game was discussed by Pomeroy. Material objective
This ed will be
Mrs. William Curfman, Kristy
and sisters were at the final hearing but he was a patient at mittee was appointed to check the director who reported that night and practice for and Scotty, Mr. and Mrs.
Worth
'veterans Memorial Hospital due to a football injury. However, on the number of residents at two buses will be used·to trans- ceremonial. All officers and Elmer Sigman of Cheshire;
the Meigs County Infirmary
..his adoption papers were presented to him at the hospital.
where fruit will be P~ken before port the band and that members urged to attend . Mr. and Mrs. John Sigman,
hopefully a pickup truck will be Potluck refreshments.
Johnnie and Randy, Addison;
Thanksgiving.
townds purchue of
TilE SOME 30 GIRLS WHO have registered to take part in
to
transport
the
•
RETURN
JONATHAN
available
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Rife, Mr.
Winter Jacket or
Mrs.
Frances
Hysell
the pony chOl'WI lines of the "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend presided at the meetin~ which equipment. There will be four Meigs Chaprer, Daughters of and Mrs. Rodger Lou Master
C01t. Now at ...
Minstrel Alaoclation Will meet at 7 1\looc!ay evening at the opened with devotions by Mrs. chaperones on each bus, he American Revolution, 2 p.m. and Paul Allen, Mrs. Ina Rife,
,Pomeroy Elementary School. Assisting In the instruction of the Tressie Hendricks .who used said • and this will include an Friday at the home of Mrs. Dar Kenton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
;lines will be Debbie Buck, &amp;!sie Soulsby, Mary Midkiff, Peggy the scripture, Acts 1, 6-11, with extra bus driver. Each Schaefer with Mrs. A. R. Lemley, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
~ O'Brien and Cathy Werry. Although guests ·will be permitted her topic, "Ye Shall be Wit- member will be allotted $1 for Knight and Mrs. Patrick Curfman, Kenney and Rickie,
~ !liter, it ia request~ that no visitors accompany the girls for the nesses." Two poems, "My food on the way and reser- Lochary co-hostesses . Miss of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
:first several meetings.
Faith" and "What is Faith'·\ vatlons are being made for this Bernice Graham to· be the
purpose, he said.
speaker. Members to name an
were read and prayer was
The lack of working mem- ancestor for roll call.
given by Mrs. Hendricks.
A potluck supper was served bers was discussed and band
SUNDAY
at the meeting attended by Mr. , parents and others Interested
HYMN SING ·at salvation
and· Mrs! HOi!M!I''FOr't'elit, Mr:'· m ~he,pror~m lfO ·bei~g urg"'! Army, Butt~r?ut Ave., · ·r
and Mrs·. , ~Sisson, Mrs. , to ta~e an. active part. Pomeroy, · 2 p.m. Sunday;
Frances Hysell, Mrs. Hen- Meetings are held the second public invited.
dricks, Mrs. Nora Cambron, Tuesday of each month at 7:30 REVIVAL Sunday through
Mrs. Verna Hysell, Mrs. p.m.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. each
APPLE GROVE, Ohio- The money from the Apple Grove Eleanor Hoover and Laura.
evening, at Graham's Chapel
pple Grove-East J,.etart church to Rev. Shiveley and Bible quizzes were conducted.
Church, 31; miles Northeast of
nlted Methodist Churches family and Mrs. Gerald Next meeting will he held on
Shade with the Rev. Carl
SON IS ·BORN
ld a reception at the Letart Hayman one froin the East Nov. 3.
Radcliff, evangelist: Special
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bryan of singing and public Invited.
ails
Community ' hall Letart church.
Reynoldsburg are announcing
t:!aturday night in honor of the
Rev.
Shiveley read
MONDAY
the birth of a son, eight pounds
~v. and Mrs. Howard Shively Scripture from the 6th chaprer
CHESTER PTA, 7:30 p.m.
and 10 ounces, ·born Oct. 6 at
fand sons, Gene, Bill, Jim and of Epheasians and gave the
Monday,
at the school. Carl
INFANT CHRISTENED
Doctors'
Hospital,
Columbus.
· ohn.
table grace before dinner.
Hysell, Jr. will speak on drugs.
Christening services for
!'-'·Rev. Shiveley and family
The hymn "Blest Be the Tie Jason Lee Wright, son of Mr. The baby has been named Program committee meeting
~cently moved to Racine from that Binds" was sung and all and Mrs. Michael Wright, were T)mothy Albert. Grandparents at 7:15p.m. preceding meeting
)Wilmington to serve as pastor repeated the LOrd's Prayer to held on Oct. 1 at the Laurel are Mr. and Mrs. John Bryan, In lbe fourth grade room.
Middleport; and Mr. and Mrs.
it the Racine, Letart Falls, close the service.
Cliff Free Methodist Church. Harry Cummings of Reynoldsl!,pple Grov€ and East Letart
Attending were Rev. and The Rev. Robert Buckley ofNEPHEW VISITED
~hurches. .
Mrs. Shiveley and sons, Jenny ficiated. Atrending along with burg. The Bryans have three
Mr
. and Mrs. Fielding
daughters, ·Ruth Ann, 10,
Sizes 2 to 6x In Carter's and
• A slt~'Ciock dinner was Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. RoiM!I-t ' the church congregation were
Hawkins, Middleport, have
Darlene, nine, and Marcie,
Heotth-Tex. Sizes 7 to U In
~eld. Guests were seated at Sinlth, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tammy Kathyr"en Wright, three.
returned from a vi.slt with Mrs.
Berkshire knits Jnd
i!Bbles decorated with purple Ables, Ronnie, Paul and Yield Jason's si.srer, Mr. and Mrs.
Hawkins' nephew, Mr. and
Country
Alre.
•end gold flower arrangements Ables; Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Mrs
.
Charles
Athey
and
Lloyd Wright, his grandwhite table covers.
Whire, Darla, Deanna, Keith parents, anif Mrs. Beulah
children, Charles, Jr., Patti .
~· After the dinner a program and ·Kevin; Mr. -and Mrs. Oehler, a great-grandmother.
· and Tammy in ~acl(Son, Mo.
-~----- ·-- Mr."anli~Mtr.HliWIUN aliO
charge of Mrs. ·Russell DaHarHiii;-Dean· and"'l\rthur, Jason iSalso 1hegranason r.C
traveled over Into Arkansas
Boush and DaD!!s Hill was held Mrs. Marshall Roush and Joe, Mr. and Mrs. James Whitlatch,
lfith Mr. Hill as' narrator. Old- Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler, Middleport.
and returned hoine via KenTURNERS
VISITED
ON THE TIN MIDDLEPORT
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Olden
Thuton,
tucky making an 1,800 mile
~shioned hymns were sung,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dale
K.
Roush
trip.
~ by Mr. Hill with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.- Herbert Shields,
and
daughrers,
Kathy,
Apple
fllarlene Fisher at .the plano. Mrs. Eulah Wolfe and Aaron
Creek, were weekend guests of
Readings given were . a Wolfe,. Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
SURGERY TAKEN
·monologue, "The Choir Norris and Clarence, Mrs. Roy
'
Kim Adams, daughrer of Mr. her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
~tor," by Mrs. Fisher; a Buck, Early Roush, Mrs. Dolly and Mrs. Jim Adams, High St., Turner, Middleport. Other
floem, "Wh~n the Minister Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Pom~roy, underwent an recent guests of the Turners
j;lllls," by Mrs. Roy Donohew; Roush, Sharon, Cindy, David adenoidectomy at Children's were Mrs. Owen .Watson,
Racine, and Mrs. Ivan Watson,
~Y Bible and I," by · Mrs. and Eddie; Millie Ripley, Mr · · Hospital, Colwnbus, today.
'
.
Sterling
Helghts,
Mich.
!,lpnna Hill; "A Home \}'Ithou! and .JIIrs. Ernest Clark, Mr.
l.Bible," by Mrl. Joyce_White; and -Mr,s. John O'Brien, Mrs.
'«t•ve Got i Secret,"'' b)&lt;. Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Greg
trl.zel Fox, ''When I Met the Donohew, Randy Pyles; Mr.
Master," by Mrs. Eileen Buck. and Mrs. Roy Donohew, Mrs.
·A history of the Apple Grove Bill Fox and David, Mrs.
•
and community was Marlene Fisher, Mollie, Larry
by_. Mrs . Roberta and Amy; Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
Parsons and Mrs. Facie
Hayman.
.
.

R·azse
•

chocolates &amp; confections

•

Icsoa3i"'
l
Six
oin
:A
uxiliarj
:a·1en·d·ar*. · .

Booster.·(' to

Sampler

LA-Z-BOV

~.w.v

Always

Chief

Second High Serie• NHL Standings
Follrod
and Korn 395. ·
By United Press International
Team
High Game - Ex·
East
celslor
Oil
Co. 746.
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Team
High
Series - ExBuffalo
2 0 0 4 12 6 celsior Ott Co. 2157
.
Detroit
2 0 0 4 9 6

Officers Elected

.

455.

Kings 129-94

m.sm

in 1911, Chinese n:volutionaries overthrew the ME nchu
Dynasty.

against Athens and was on,.---------'-----------~
crutches in the second half.
Prior to the injury, the ·au.
league halfback was the fourth
top rusher in ·the leagile and
has sc·ored 30 points th.is year.
Jackson, 3-2 overall, has the
league.'s top passer in 140 lb.
junior Art DeStephen, who has
complered 22 of 36 attempts for
350 yards and four touchdowns.
Sophomore Randy Ridge, a 150
lb. sophomor~, is leading the
'2.50 lb.
leaguelii sco~!rig 'with 28 points
MEIGS-JACKSON PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS 1
and 160 lb. junior end Tom
OFFENSE
Stevenson
leads ln the league
Meigs
WI. Pos. Wt.
Jackson
..
Andy Vaughan ( 12)
17-3 QB 140
Art DeStephen (11) in receptions with 11.
Chuck Faulk (12)
160 TB 150
Randy Ridge (10)
Dean of SEOAL. coaches,
·Dallas Weber ( 12)
179 FB 110 Brad Thompson (11) Charles Chancey, has quite a
MtckAsh (11)
14"7 WB 160
Steve Jenkins (11) . problenl; other than Jacksoo,
Melvin Cremeans (11)
160 TE 162
Howard
Priest 1121
Bill Chaney (12)
180 SE 160 Tom Stevenson (111 because his number one
Mark Werr~ 112)
238 .r 208
Joe Dalton (12) punter, 155 lb. senior Randy
RandL Fau k 11o&gt;
265 T 212
Randy
Farrar (111
John ehew (11)
185 G 163 R"S'er Staflord 1121 Chafin, won' t dress due to
Lou McKinner (12l
115
G 170
teve Rlege I (11 I illness, and back-up punter, 180
Rick Gaul ( 12
153
c 175
Dan Morrow 1121 lb. junior Robbie Eason, has
mononucleosis and won't play.
Who'll punt? Well, nobody
DEFENSE
MEIGS: Alan McLaughlin, 138 lb., 11 , middle guard ; Lehew knew Wednesday night !
and Bill Slack, 168, 11, tackles; Chaney and Tom Lowery, 150 lb.,
Other than Chafin, who
11. ends; McKinney and Weber, linebackers ; Jon Dlll~rd, 148 lb.,
12, and Ash, cornerbacks. and Dave Wolfe, 160 lb., 11, and starts at offensive end,' the
Cremeans, deep backs.
1
starting line-up will not
JACKSON : Doug Jude, 174 lb., (1 1). middle guard; Bill change. Randy Faulk, 265 lb.
Lewis, 2121b., (11). and Scott Keller, 210 lb .. (11),-lackles; Don
Armstrong, 165 lb., (12). and Mike Ridge, 1651b., (10). ends; John ' sophomore tackle, didn't start
Gilliam, 160 lb., (10), and Merrill Scott, 165 lb., (121, linebackers; last week but played quite a
Stevenson and B•lan Joseph, 140 lb., 110) , cornerbacks, and bit, will start this week.
Ridge and Bill Mosslander, 165 lb ., (111, safeties.
The Marauders, 4-1 overall,
have lost to Jackson twice in
five
games, those in 1968 130A~els
18) and 1969 (35-18). Meigs won
ANAHEIM (UPI) - At 42, manager during the past last year, 32-16.
Meigs will have a weight
Bobby Winkles is blazing a new season, could remain with the
advantage
at both the line and
trail from college baseball Angels in another capacity if
coach to major league he wished . Rice was not backfield. Meigs is 190 across
the front line while Jackson
manager.
present.
Winkles, a pepper pot who
Winkles made !I name for averages 179 and the
wants 110 per cent from his himself as coach of Arizona Marauders have a •166-155
players, replaced Del Rice as Sta!e where he spent 13 years backfie.Jd advantage.
The Marauders are fourth in
manager of the California and had a won-lost record of
total
offense in the league while
Angels Wednesday.
524-173 for a great .752 perJackson is second. The IronGeneral Manager Harry centage.
men are sixth in total defense
Dalton announced at a news
conference that Rice, 50, who · ALEXANDER RELEASED and Meigs is fifth .
made his debut as a big league
. WNG BEACH, Calif. (UPI)
-Kermit Alexander, veteran
Bloodotone
defensive back, cleared
!'rescription 5ervice-4 Registered Pharmacists to Serve
Medieval
folk believe that
waivers Wednesday and was
You!
Open Daily 8:00a.m. to 10 p.m.- Sunday 10;30a.m.
released by the l.Ds Angeles the bloodstone received its
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
.to
12:30
p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.
coloring from Christ's own
Rams as a free agent.
blood falling upon a green
Morning Glories
. ., " -. ... ., .....
~'' ·
Oct. :h· \~12
· · ~ , ,:I:l/11 , ~l.'lfei!.r.-oJ.&lt;!... , (qqne~ stY!l~ Jt..l/le {o\l!rR~tl/18 Cross •.
1.!~ star,broke ~is rl.81!~, arm
t
Standings
Team
'
'· · Pts. A1,1g. 19.!llld.had ' beeri on the
Gibbs Grocery
26 injured reserve list.
Newell Sunoco
22
Alexander was a first-round
Spencer's Market
22
DONTWAITI
Dick's Grocery
draft
choice of the San Fran18
G. &amp; J. Auto Parts
18 cisco 49ers in 1963. The Rams
BUY NOW/
Excelsior Oil Co.
14 obtained him in 1970 in a trade
High Individual Game
April Smith 158.
for placekicker Bruce Gossett
Second High Ind. Game and a second-round draft
April Smith 156.
choice.
High Series - April Smith
hopes this year. Both the
lronmen and Marauders are Z.
1 in league play and are coming
off their only league loi'Bes
from last Friday.
Jackson, leading 8-l&gt; going
into" the last quarter, was
beaten by Athens 12-8 and
Meigs was man-handled by a
fired up Ironton eleven 37-ll, the
worst defeat in.- Meigs history.
, Valentine, Jackson's speedy
ace runner, was injured early

. I

.Of the Bend.

lronman Valenline Won't Start

Wmkles New

EASTERN -DADIZ STARTING LINEUPS
BOBCAT OFFENSE
Eastern ·
WI. Pos. WI.
Cadiz . ... Player'"·· ·Pos. WI.
Randy Boring U2)
145 QB 165
Terry Coleman (12) .Juhn Baird (12)
QB 135
Ralph Parker (12)
140 HB 200
Calvin Gregory (12)
Greg
McCarty
(12)
WB
140
Dan Chaffee (11)
155 HB T65
Eric Miller (.12)
Alan Duvall (12)
190 FB 175
Kevin Kendzlorskl (12) Lawrence Tabor (11) TB 145
George Mora (12)
190 C 175
-Dave Smith (12) Or Rick Smith (II)
145
Dave Griffith (12)
155 G 175
Gary Jamison (12) · Jim Bias 112)
· FB 165
163
.
Steve Millhoan (12)
or Tim Baum (11)
Or
George
Curry
(12)
180
165 G 170
Terry Stms·l12)
Dick Stellter (12)
189 T 185
Ed Spikes (11) Marshall French (12) C 145
Steve Reed (12)
210 T 185
Bruce Campbell (11) Terry Sheets (11)
QG 175
John Sheets 111)
180 E 175
Melvin Beyers 112)
Or
Dwight
Thompson
(
11) 153
Bobby Edwards (12)
120 E 165
Randy Barnhart 112)
Dave Wise (10)
SG 100
Ron Fi.sber(l2)
QT 205
DEFENSE
EASTERN: Duvall and Baum, etlds; Stettler and Mora, Orland Cremeans ( 12)
liT 220
tackles: Reed, middle guard; Donnie Eichinger, 1381b., (9), and
Griffllh or Mlllhoan, linebackers : Chaffee and Osbourne, cor- Mark D,arst (12)
SE 160
nerb;lcks, and Sh ..ts and Edl'far,~s. s~s · , , , _,
ClayHudson(ll)
TE
172 ·
\11, ~RJZ;,I9ffi Tllr/Wut,\,2\5 tb., (12)1, Ml;.,IMy~s-i05 tb.,
Defense ~lib Smith (3-210) ·~
1lf:it\ds; D~ve Heard, 180 b.. (12), _and·' Ca.Wpliell, tackles ;
I.JamlsQnJ
, MIUe&lt;, and l Simms, llnebackers1: Kend}lorskl and and Bias, ends~ David ClaY. (3Walter Krltlnskt, 175 lb., (12) , cornerbacks, and Barnhart and
270) and Brian Tucker (4-210),
Coleman, safeties:
tackles; Curry, BiU Rife (4154), Sheets, and Smith,
linebackers; Darst and
Oudson, cornerbacks; McCarty, John Roush (4-1~) and
French, safeties.

Beat~· •.

..

,._

�Tbe
·-

'

Carnival Committees -Announced

J

-·

.a .

GOOD·
FRIDAY .
SATURDAY .
SUNDAY

•••

0•
h
'( f

"'
,f

.I

b ,.

. '·

7~Tbe DaiiYSemlnei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Oct.il2, 1972

..:uu Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1972
u-K,J

,_

Cummiltees
lor
the
Halloween carnival to be·
s taged at the · Pomeroy
Elementary . School on
Saturday, Oct. 28 from 6:30 to
10 p.m. haye been named.
• Set-up time for the carnival
is 1 p.m. on the day ol the
event. Admission is free and
tickets for all games. will be 10
·cents. ALransisler radio .will be
given as · a door pri~e .
Do~alio ns are needed lor a flea
l}larkel and sweel shop. The
carniVal is not a costume affair .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Mitch and
Mr:andMrs. TomGrueserwiil
have charge of the ticket sales.
Handling the flea market will
be Mrs. Pa't Duffy at!d Mrs.
Thomas, co-&lt;:hairmen, Mrs .
Simon Johnson, Mrs. Vincent
Knight, Mrs. Boyd Kinzel, and

AMERICAN- HARDWARE
PERMANENT
.

Anti-Freeze

"

,

WITH
COOLANT

,,
,

.

!•

GALLON

I.G.A.

CENTER CUT

PORK

WHITE

CHOPS

HOMO

·'

-

WITH COUPON
..

'

'

LIMIT 2
LOW POLICE BAND

"MARKS''o'N •. 15000''.
RADIO, All band solid stote
porto~ I•' radio. AM~FM-MB-SWI-SW~·PB·YHFl·VH F2·W8 Squelch control ,
fine turiing control, world mop ·with time zone.

LB.

oz.

$
GUTTER s~xto'
'

'

WHITE ALUMINUM

CAN

88

WHITE -ALUMINUM

OOWNSP()(jy$

CELLO
CARROTS

LOIN END

CALIFORNIA
GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB. BAG

• lARGE STALKS

.

$

BLUE
STOVE

PORK .STEAK

'

FRESH

OR

I.G.A.

CHICKEN
LIVERS

'

FRESH ·PORK
.

PIPE

THROW
AWAY .

KIT

CIGARETTE
LIGHTER

6"

BLUE
6" ELBOW$

SPARE RIBS

$

%''PANELING

33

W'x4'x8'

SMOKED ·

POLISH
SAUSAGE

WHITE . ·
CEILING 12u 12,
TILE
~

2-LB.

BOX

BOUNTY
TOWELS

44 .
1250 oLB. CRUSH

-·····-couPoN··------,
4"xi0'

.

NESCAFE ·
INSTANT
COPFEE

~

lO ~OZ.
, I WITH ,CQUJON

1-P£1 PEISON
MU RJODUNER

BONElESS
WASTE FREE'

EXPIRES 10/14

·KING SIZE BREAD
FOR

.
I

ENGLISH .
ROAST

.I. •.G.
. A.

20'

AMERICAN ·
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREESE

84.~

WITH COOLANT

LB.

I. G. A.

conAGE
CHEESE

2 LB. BOX

5

MRS.
. - FILIEII'S

PURDU
.

'

POPCORN

MARGARINE
'
lLB.
PKGS. .

2 LB~ BAG

IR

I EXPIRES 10..15-72
1

.

Halloween carnival were
appointed. The committee
mem!Jers are to meet at the
gym on Thursday, Oct. 26, at 1·
p.m . lo set up the game booths.
The committees are as follows :
Pop can' toss: MiJry Jane

Arms, Daisy Patterson, Ava

Brickey, Corolyn Roush and
Nancy Hubbard .
Penny drop : Joyce Thoren,
Imogene Holstein, Faye
Clifford, Shirley Hubbard.
Money tree ~ Etta Mae

Norton.
Cider and donuts : 11/Jr. and

Mrs. P~att, Dojl&amp;thy Am .
berger, MiJry Chancey.
Popcorn: Jeanette Duffy ,
Noanne Wolfe and Irene Dill.
Fish pond: Martha McPhail.
Gloria Michael, Terry Michael.
Joy Bentley, end Jeonle Allen.
Cane Toss : Linda Hubbard,
Barbara Chapman, and Bessie
Sylvester. .
R. C. Toss : Tom Chapmon,
Gordon Winebrenner; Bob and
Beverly Chapman, Mary Belle
Warner, Gerald Wells.

Picnic Enjoyed at Park
Friends and relatives of Mr. the Route 33 park for a picnic.
and Mrs. Max Reider of Mrs . Reider Is the former
Denver, Colo. met Sunday at Mary Thoma.
Attending wered Mrs. Laura
Schaefer, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Thoma, Helen, Billy,, Cilrmen,
Diana and Danny of Letar.t
Falls; Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Thoma, Gail and Linda, Mrs.Wilhelmina Thoma, Mrs .
Georgia Thoma, Cheater; Mr.
and Mrs. Eari •Thoma, Kelly ·
and Suzan, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Smith, Jan and Jayne Smith,
Forrest M. White, Northa A. Mrs . Margaret Houdashelt,
White to Peter I. White, Edna Pomeroy.
S. White,.Parcel, Columbia.
Mrs. Mildred Ziegler and
Bart .Haley, dec, ·to Tula Roger, R.F.D. Pomeroy; Mr.
Haley, Norman J . Haley, and Mrs. Guy Thoma, Terri
James A. Haley, Birdie Mae and Kevin, Rutland; Mr. and
Hysell, Charles M. Haley, Aff. Mrs. Leo King and Michael,
for trans., Rutland.
Miss Margie McDaniel, Mr.
Anna M. Ryther, Com ,, Tula and Mrs. Tom McCIWig, Jim,
Haley, dec. to Norman . J. Suanne, and Sue, Colwnbus;
Haley, James A. Haley, Birdie . Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lohn, and
Mae Hysell, Charles M. Haley, Mrs .
Albert
Heilman,
Parcels Rutland.
Pomeroy.
Goldie Sargent Reed, Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Reider are
W. Reed, Guy Sargent, Sandra enroute hOIJ!e today expecting
Sargent, Carol Sprouse, James to arrive there on Saturday.
A. Sprouse to !.etta A. Spencer,
3.2 Acres, Salisbury.
Letla A. Spencer to Guy
Sargent, Sandra Sargent, 3.2
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Acres, Salisbury.
ClfESHIRE- Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd D. Cleland, Della A. Gerald Matthews of Cheshire
leland to- Wendell- Cleland, are announdng - thr blrtlr orAnna Louise Cleland, .95 Acre, their first child, a son, Sept. 30
Rutland.
at Holzer Medical Center. The
Marvin B. Wilson, Roberta 5 lb., 6\i oz. Infant ·has been
H. Wilson to William Paul named · Gerald Eugene, Jr.
Graves, Connie Jane Graves, Maternal grandparents are
80 Acres, Salem.
Mr.andMrs.RobertGoodallof
Donald Myers, Pauline MiddleJ)Qrt, Rt. I, and paternal
Myers to Monongahela Power grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Co., Ease., Olive.
.
Carroll Matthews, Cheshire.
Meigs Local School Dlst. to Great-grandmothers are Mrs.
Richard C. Folirod, G. Roger Bessie Fife and Mrs. Phyllis
.Morgan, Ease., Salisbury.
Mulford.

Property
·Trarisfers

69

3 JOINTS 24" VENT PIPE
2 ADJ.
. ELBOWS
.

SLICED ·

.
SYRACUSE - Ralph Sayre,
superintendent of Southern
Local School District, and
David Nease •. president of the
Southern Local School Board
attended Tuesday night when
the Syracuse PTA voted to
endorse the five mill renewal
levy on the district ballot ne~t
month .
Mrs. Shirley Huston, vice
president, conducted. the
meeting which included vocal
music by the first and second
grades under the direction of
Mrs: Lee Lee. Mrs. Judy Flagg
repurted that Mrs. Judy Riggs
.has agreed to give baton
lessons after the football
season.at the Syracuse school if
enough children are Interested
in enrolling. Officers reports
were given by Mrs. Janice
Deem and Mrs. Jane Barnett.
Committees for the annual

Pop: Betty Hayes, Lou
Ferrell, Opal Zerkle, Louise
Frank.
Fun house : Judy Flagg,
Holen Hubbard, Judy Gibbs,
and Rhonda Dempsey.
Dart board: Pot Patterson,
Bob Davis, Bob. Holstein, and
Bob Gibbs.
Country kitchen : Marcia
Arnold, MiJry Guinther, Susie
Grueser, Jonetta Davis.
Balloons: Jean Wells,
Darlene Jeffers, Betty Ash.
Cotton Candy : Janice
Lawson, Charlotte Nease,
Mildred Pierce.
·
Basketball throw : Mr. and
Mrs. William Baer.
Tickets: Janet Bornett,
Janice Deem .
Cake walk: Mory Chancey,
Shirley Huston, Susie Grueser.
Door: Mrs . Louks, Mrs.
Hllldore, Beverly Price, and
Miss Honkela.
Marshall : Pete Thoren. '
Announcer: Shirley Huston.
Po$ters : Beverly Price.
The attendance owara went
to Mrs. Louks' first grade. A
display of ar ts and crafts will
be featured at the November
meeting. Refreshments will be
served at that meeting by the
fifth grode.

JUMBO ROLLS

·II
LIMIT 2 GAL I

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

..- SUPER BLEND ·

LIMIT 6 QT.

116 W.MAIN

'"·IJ·15to
~n

FlidiJ 11'-TI L110
1u 'sA Tns or lanW.JIItiUd

WHY BE
.DEAF?
ACT NOW!
MOST HEARING PROBLEMS
CAN BE HELPED
.

•

t:(

f\\\.\.

.

HEARING
WORKSHOP

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13
MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO
9 AM TO 61'1

,.

for everyone

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TEST
Find out If you really have a hearing
problem

FREE

SERVIC~

on all makes of hearing aids

FREE CONSULTATION
on all hearing aid problems

FREE WIND NOISE REDUCER
tor some types of aids

FREE DEMONSTRATIONS
of·newest Bellone hearing aid models

'~-----------------------~
DON1 PUT UP WITH WHISTLING I

PUFFS

I

FACIAL
'

.

~:!::.Oliitt'lllllldal
•. "''* ·

l

WITHOUT COUPON '1.29 I
. M&amp;R BARGAINLANDJ.

ROIL

Wail To W1U Carpet Specialiltl .

F·REE GIFTS

.~

WITH
COUPON

•• • •

CARPET-LAND, INC.

i ...

3 ROLlS

Frank Sisson.
Coke machine: Mr. and Mn.
Don Thomas:· Mr. and · Mn.
Charles Evans, and Mr: and
Mrs. Richard Jones.
• ·..
Ring toss: Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs. Oaf
Betzing.
• ;"
Tic, .tac, toss : Mr, and Mn.
Paul Pauley, Mr. and Mn.
William McKinney, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Morrow.
Pocket ladles : Mrs. Tom
Werry, Mrs. Jerry Fields, Mrs.
Cliff Kennedy, and Mrs.'Jtoger
Kovalchik.
.
Ball toss : Mrs, H&amp;cold
Morton, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
Whitlatch, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Houdashelt, Mr . and Mts.
Everett Lightfoot.
Balloons: Bob Lewis, Ea~l
Thoma, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Zirkle.
Penny Pitch: Mr. and Mrs,
William Barnhart~ Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin B'!J't. Mr. ~d
Mrs. Kenneth Rorrii!le, Mrs.
Goldie Fridley.
Lollipop Tre~: Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Porter, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Deiner, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Rowsey, Mr. and. Mrs.
Richard Rupe. .
,
Ping-pong toss: Mrs. Ja!l)es .
Wamsley, Mr. and · Mrs.
Keoneth BraWl, and Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Collums.
Candy corn guess: Mrs. Ray
JewelL

B,e1ort YIIU Buy ,You Should TIJ .

, Meigs

4" VENT KIT.
FO~~ PRYER .
1 VENT tftJoD

.

WITH BLADES

) '

CELERY

PORK

SCHICK
INJECTOR
RAZORS

99

(

•

EA.

Batteries and house

cu;rent operGted.

24

Sharon Zurcher.
Three legged race :' Mr, and
Mrs. :Joe Fields, Mr. and Mrs.
Karl Krautter, Mr. and Mrs.
John Blaettner .
Jailhouse : , Mrs . James
Hemsley, Mrs. Lewis Osborne,
Mr. ~nd Mrs, Richard
Rosenhawn .
Fish ponds: Mrs. John
Murphy, chairman of one and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Smith,
chairman of another, with !\Irs.
Viola Haning, Mrs. Gloria
Johnson, Mrs. Kalhern
Johnson, and Mrs. Jan Knapp
to work wilh Mrs. Murray, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Moon and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Long to
work·with the Smiths,
Pop bottle toss: Mr. and Mrs.
Bill McDaniel,. Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Wood, Mr. and Mrs.

PTA Backs Renewal Levy

MILK

JAR

Mrs. Jackie Elam. Mrs. Robert
Lewis is chairm~n of ~e sweet
and worKing with her will be
Mrs. Ray Jewell, Mrs. Orval
Wlles, . and Mrs . . James
Hawley.
,
A spook house is · planned
wilh Mrs. William Anderson,
Mrs. Ken McCullough, and
Mrs. Charles Gloeckner to take
care of··that, and Mrs. Kel!h
Riggs will agajn this' year be
the fortune teller.
The other' committees are as
folloivs :
Cake walk : Mrs. Jerry
Colmer,
Mrs.
William
Stevenson, and the Rev. and
Mrs. W. H. Perrin .
Sack race : Mr. and Mrs.
Larrr · )Iaker, Mrs . Jack
Braley, Mrs. Jim Bentz, Mrs.
Diane Hawley , and Mrs.

,.
.• .., .... ,.. .... )1st

TISSUES
BOXES

00

.

for the picldll. •

waiMts
.

I ... tiM ,...

te,.. _..MA•n
...........
MIDWAY
¥1.0. •AIM~
. POMIIOY, OHIO · .

iUYING STARTS OctOII. 2

I IOaW~ .
J.ET 1W1M0N1 PltlOUCIIOI' ITOCII'U\, 1110. _,YOU.

· JIUNT 4,MJORTAIII ••atWAUCU'I' I

a new custom ear mold coulcfhelp

Jl

L~!!~-~!~R!~-l!!~~~K_~!- .
SPECIAL l Batteries l/2 price

.

.

(Limit one pkg. per customer)
.
.
.

.

..

'

·
If you can't come In for this ·
Hearing Workshop, 011r Cons111taiit will come
to you. C. II for homuppoh)tment.

-

.

B.6•·
· HEARING AID
·SERVICE CENTER

601 SIXTH AVENUE
HUNTINGTON, W. VA. ·

li!i;;ii;ili;-

••

,,

. •
•

'·

I •

:•
l

�Tbe
·-

'

Carnival Committees -Announced

J

-·

.a .

GOOD·
FRIDAY .
SATURDAY .
SUNDAY

•••

0•
h
'( f

"'
,f

.I

b ,.

. '·

7~Tbe DaiiYSemlnei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Oct.il2, 1972

..:uu Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1972
u-K,J

,_

Cummiltees
lor
the
Halloween carnival to be·
s taged at the · Pomeroy
Elementary . School on
Saturday, Oct. 28 from 6:30 to
10 p.m. haye been named.
• Set-up time for the carnival
is 1 p.m. on the day ol the
event. Admission is free and
tickets for all games. will be 10
·cents. ALransisler radio .will be
given as · a door pri~e .
Do~alio ns are needed lor a flea
l}larkel and sweel shop. The
carniVal is not a costume affair .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Mitch and
Mr:andMrs. TomGrueserwiil
have charge of the ticket sales.
Handling the flea market will
be Mrs. Pa't Duffy at!d Mrs.
Thomas, co-&lt;:hairmen, Mrs .
Simon Johnson, Mrs. Vincent
Knight, Mrs. Boyd Kinzel, and

AMERICAN- HARDWARE
PERMANENT
.

Anti-Freeze

"

,

WITH
COOLANT

,,
,

.

!•

GALLON

I.G.A.

CENTER CUT

PORK

WHITE

CHOPS

HOMO

·'

-

WITH COUPON
..

'

'

LIMIT 2
LOW POLICE BAND

"MARKS''o'N •. 15000''.
RADIO, All band solid stote
porto~ I•' radio. AM~FM-MB-SWI-SW~·PB·YHFl·VH F2·W8 Squelch control ,
fine turiing control, world mop ·with time zone.

LB.

oz.

$
GUTTER s~xto'
'

'

WHITE ALUMINUM

CAN

88

WHITE -ALUMINUM

OOWNSP()(jy$

CELLO
CARROTS

LOIN END

CALIFORNIA
GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB. BAG

• lARGE STALKS

.

$

BLUE
STOVE

PORK .STEAK

'

FRESH

OR

I.G.A.

CHICKEN
LIVERS

'

FRESH ·PORK
.

PIPE

THROW
AWAY .

KIT

CIGARETTE
LIGHTER

6"

BLUE
6" ELBOW$

SPARE RIBS

$

%''PANELING

33

W'x4'x8'

SMOKED ·

POLISH
SAUSAGE

WHITE . ·
CEILING 12u 12,
TILE
~

2-LB.

BOX

BOUNTY
TOWELS

44 .
1250 oLB. CRUSH

-·····-couPoN··------,
4"xi0'

.

NESCAFE ·
INSTANT
COPFEE

~

lO ~OZ.
, I WITH ,CQUJON

1-P£1 PEISON
MU RJODUNER

BONElESS
WASTE FREE'

EXPIRES 10/14

·KING SIZE BREAD
FOR

.
I

ENGLISH .
ROAST

.I. •.G.
. A.

20'

AMERICAN ·
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREESE

84.~

WITH COOLANT

LB.

I. G. A.

conAGE
CHEESE

2 LB. BOX

5

MRS.
. - FILIEII'S

PURDU
.

'

POPCORN

MARGARINE
'
lLB.
PKGS. .

2 LB~ BAG

IR

I EXPIRES 10..15-72
1

.

Halloween carnival were
appointed. The committee
mem!Jers are to meet at the
gym on Thursday, Oct. 26, at 1·
p.m . lo set up the game booths.
The committees are as follows :
Pop can' toss: MiJry Jane

Arms, Daisy Patterson, Ava

Brickey, Corolyn Roush and
Nancy Hubbard .
Penny drop : Joyce Thoren,
Imogene Holstein, Faye
Clifford, Shirley Hubbard.
Money tree ~ Etta Mae

Norton.
Cider and donuts : 11/Jr. and

Mrs. P~att, Dojl&amp;thy Am .
berger, MiJry Chancey.
Popcorn: Jeanette Duffy ,
Noanne Wolfe and Irene Dill.
Fish pond: Martha McPhail.
Gloria Michael, Terry Michael.
Joy Bentley, end Jeonle Allen.
Cane Toss : Linda Hubbard,
Barbara Chapman, and Bessie
Sylvester. .
R. C. Toss : Tom Chapmon,
Gordon Winebrenner; Bob and
Beverly Chapman, Mary Belle
Warner, Gerald Wells.

Picnic Enjoyed at Park
Friends and relatives of Mr. the Route 33 park for a picnic.
and Mrs. Max Reider of Mrs . Reider Is the former
Denver, Colo. met Sunday at Mary Thoma.
Attending wered Mrs. Laura
Schaefer, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Thoma, Helen, Billy,, Cilrmen,
Diana and Danny of Letar.t
Falls; Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Thoma, Gail and Linda, Mrs.Wilhelmina Thoma, Mrs .
Georgia Thoma, Cheater; Mr.
and Mrs. Eari •Thoma, Kelly ·
and Suzan, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Smith, Jan and Jayne Smith,
Forrest M. White, Northa A. Mrs . Margaret Houdashelt,
White to Peter I. White, Edna Pomeroy.
S. White,.Parcel, Columbia.
Mrs. Mildred Ziegler and
Bart .Haley, dec, ·to Tula Roger, R.F.D. Pomeroy; Mr.
Haley, Norman J . Haley, and Mrs. Guy Thoma, Terri
James A. Haley, Birdie Mae and Kevin, Rutland; Mr. and
Hysell, Charles M. Haley, Aff. Mrs. Leo King and Michael,
for trans., Rutland.
Miss Margie McDaniel, Mr.
Anna M. Ryther, Com ,, Tula and Mrs. Tom McCIWig, Jim,
Haley, dec. to Norman . J. Suanne, and Sue, Colwnbus;
Haley, James A. Haley, Birdie . Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lohn, and
Mae Hysell, Charles M. Haley, Mrs .
Albert
Heilman,
Parcels Rutland.
Pomeroy.
Goldie Sargent Reed, Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Reider are
W. Reed, Guy Sargent, Sandra enroute hOIJ!e today expecting
Sargent, Carol Sprouse, James to arrive there on Saturday.
A. Sprouse to !.etta A. Spencer,
3.2 Acres, Salisbury.
Letla A. Spencer to Guy
Sargent, Sandra Sargent, 3.2
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Acres, Salisbury.
ClfESHIRE- Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd D. Cleland, Della A. Gerald Matthews of Cheshire
leland to- Wendell- Cleland, are announdng - thr blrtlr orAnna Louise Cleland, .95 Acre, their first child, a son, Sept. 30
Rutland.
at Holzer Medical Center. The
Marvin B. Wilson, Roberta 5 lb., 6\i oz. Infant ·has been
H. Wilson to William Paul named · Gerald Eugene, Jr.
Graves, Connie Jane Graves, Maternal grandparents are
80 Acres, Salem.
Mr.andMrs.RobertGoodallof
Donald Myers, Pauline MiddleJ)Qrt, Rt. I, and paternal
Myers to Monongahela Power grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Co., Ease., Olive.
.
Carroll Matthews, Cheshire.
Meigs Local School Dlst. to Great-grandmothers are Mrs.
Richard C. Folirod, G. Roger Bessie Fife and Mrs. Phyllis
.Morgan, Ease., Salisbury.
Mulford.

Property
·Trarisfers

69

3 JOINTS 24" VENT PIPE
2 ADJ.
. ELBOWS
.

SLICED ·

.
SYRACUSE - Ralph Sayre,
superintendent of Southern
Local School District, and
David Nease •. president of the
Southern Local School Board
attended Tuesday night when
the Syracuse PTA voted to
endorse the five mill renewal
levy on the district ballot ne~t
month .
Mrs. Shirley Huston, vice
president, conducted. the
meeting which included vocal
music by the first and second
grades under the direction of
Mrs: Lee Lee. Mrs. Judy Flagg
repurted that Mrs. Judy Riggs
.has agreed to give baton
lessons after the football
season.at the Syracuse school if
enough children are Interested
in enrolling. Officers reports
were given by Mrs. Janice
Deem and Mrs. Jane Barnett.
Committees for the annual

Pop: Betty Hayes, Lou
Ferrell, Opal Zerkle, Louise
Frank.
Fun house : Judy Flagg,
Holen Hubbard, Judy Gibbs,
and Rhonda Dempsey.
Dart board: Pot Patterson,
Bob Davis, Bob. Holstein, and
Bob Gibbs.
Country kitchen : Marcia
Arnold, MiJry Guinther, Susie
Grueser, Jonetta Davis.
Balloons: Jean Wells,
Darlene Jeffers, Betty Ash.
Cotton Candy : Janice
Lawson, Charlotte Nease,
Mildred Pierce.
·
Basketball throw : Mr. and
Mrs. William Baer.
Tickets: Janet Bornett,
Janice Deem .
Cake walk: Mory Chancey,
Shirley Huston, Susie Grueser.
Door: Mrs . Louks, Mrs.
Hllldore, Beverly Price, and
Miss Honkela.
Marshall : Pete Thoren. '
Announcer: Shirley Huston.
Po$ters : Beverly Price.
The attendance owara went
to Mrs. Louks' first grade. A
display of ar ts and crafts will
be featured at the November
meeting. Refreshments will be
served at that meeting by the
fifth grode.

JUMBO ROLLS

·II
LIMIT 2 GAL I

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

..- SUPER BLEND ·

LIMIT 6 QT.

116 W.MAIN

'"·IJ·15to
~n

FlidiJ 11'-TI L110
1u 'sA Tns or lanW.JIItiUd

WHY BE
.DEAF?
ACT NOW!
MOST HEARING PROBLEMS
CAN BE HELPED
.

•

t:(

f\\\.\.

.

HEARING
WORKSHOP

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13
MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO
9 AM TO 61'1

,.

for everyone

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TEST
Find out If you really have a hearing
problem

FREE

SERVIC~

on all makes of hearing aids

FREE CONSULTATION
on all hearing aid problems

FREE WIND NOISE REDUCER
tor some types of aids

FREE DEMONSTRATIONS
of·newest Bellone hearing aid models

'~-----------------------~
DON1 PUT UP WITH WHISTLING I

PUFFS

I

FACIAL
'

.

~:!::.Oliitt'lllllldal
•. "''* ·

l

WITHOUT COUPON '1.29 I
. M&amp;R BARGAINLANDJ.

ROIL

Wail To W1U Carpet Specialiltl .

F·REE GIFTS

.~

WITH
COUPON

•• • •

CARPET-LAND, INC.

i ...

3 ROLlS

Frank Sisson.
Coke machine: Mr. and Mn.
Don Thomas:· Mr. and · Mn.
Charles Evans, and Mr: and
Mrs. Richard Jones.
• ·..
Ring toss: Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs. Oaf
Betzing.
• ;"
Tic, .tac, toss : Mr, and Mn.
Paul Pauley, Mr. and Mn.
William McKinney, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Morrow.
Pocket ladles : Mrs. Tom
Werry, Mrs. Jerry Fields, Mrs.
Cliff Kennedy, and Mrs.'Jtoger
Kovalchik.
.
Ball toss : Mrs, H&amp;cold
Morton, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
Whitlatch, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Houdashelt, Mr . and Mts.
Everett Lightfoot.
Balloons: Bob Lewis, Ea~l
Thoma, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Zirkle.
Penny Pitch: Mr. and Mrs,
William Barnhart~ Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin B'!J't. Mr. ~d
Mrs. Kenneth Rorrii!le, Mrs.
Goldie Fridley.
Lollipop Tre~: Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Porter, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Deiner, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Rowsey, Mr. and. Mrs.
Richard Rupe. .
,
Ping-pong toss: Mrs. Ja!l)es .
Wamsley, Mr. and · Mrs.
Keoneth BraWl, and Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Collums.
Candy corn guess: Mrs. Ray
JewelL

B,e1ort YIIU Buy ,You Should TIJ .

, Meigs

4" VENT KIT.
FO~~ PRYER .
1 VENT tftJoD

.

WITH BLADES

) '

CELERY

PORK

SCHICK
INJECTOR
RAZORS

99

(

•

EA.

Batteries and house

cu;rent operGted.

24

Sharon Zurcher.
Three legged race :' Mr, and
Mrs. :Joe Fields, Mr. and Mrs.
Karl Krautter, Mr. and Mrs.
John Blaettner .
Jailhouse : , Mrs . James
Hemsley, Mrs. Lewis Osborne,
Mr. ~nd Mrs, Richard
Rosenhawn .
Fish ponds: Mrs. John
Murphy, chairman of one and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Smith,
chairman of another, with !\Irs.
Viola Haning, Mrs. Gloria
Johnson, Mrs. Kalhern
Johnson, and Mrs. Jan Knapp
to work wilh Mrs. Murray, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Moon and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Long to
work·with the Smiths,
Pop bottle toss: Mr. and Mrs.
Bill McDaniel,. Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Wood, Mr. and Mrs.

PTA Backs Renewal Levy

MILK

JAR

Mrs. Jackie Elam. Mrs. Robert
Lewis is chairm~n of ~e sweet
and worKing with her will be
Mrs. Ray Jewell, Mrs. Orval
Wlles, . and Mrs . . James
Hawley.
,
A spook house is · planned
wilh Mrs. William Anderson,
Mrs. Ken McCullough, and
Mrs. Charles Gloeckner to take
care of··that, and Mrs. Kel!h
Riggs will agajn this' year be
the fortune teller.
The other' committees are as
folloivs :
Cake walk : Mrs. Jerry
Colmer,
Mrs.
William
Stevenson, and the Rev. and
Mrs. W. H. Perrin .
Sack race : Mr. and Mrs.
Larrr · )Iaker, Mrs . Jack
Braley, Mrs. Jim Bentz, Mrs.
Diane Hawley , and Mrs.

,.
.• .., .... ,.. .... )1st

TISSUES
BOXES

00

.

for the picldll. •

waiMts
.

I ... tiM ,...

te,.. _..MA•n
...........
MIDWAY
¥1.0. •AIM~
. POMIIOY, OHIO · .

iUYING STARTS OctOII. 2

I IOaW~ .
J.ET 1W1M0N1 PltlOUCIIOI' ITOCII'U\, 1110. _,YOU.

· JIUNT 4,MJORTAIII ••atWAUCU'I' I

a new custom ear mold coulcfhelp

Jl

L~!!~-~!~R!~-l!!~~~K_~!- .
SPECIAL l Batteries l/2 price

.

.

(Limit one pkg. per customer)
.
.
.

.

..

'

·
If you can't come In for this ·
Hearing Workshop, 011r Cons111taiit will come
to you. C. II for homuppoh)tment.

-

.

B.6•·
· HEARING AID
·SERVICE CENTER

601 SIXTH AVENUE
HUNTINGTON, W. VA. ·

li!i;;ii;ili;-

••

,,

. •
•

'·

I •

:•
l

�[.

.
'
8- The Dally sentinel, Middleport•Pcxneroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1972

Honor Roll Apple Grove ;f"*"':::=:=::::x~,,~"''"'*'•'f«'::'~'*"'- "·"""bill ' ::
Church:· They also called
. on A E rtJ.an
relatives.
·
l Q ". . d News, Events
~tudents, '
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Me- ·,
.
·
.

\ Ra!ine ·Sociaf Events .
·. .,:, •

By Mrs. FraaciB Morris
Mrs. Charles Norris was
hostess for the meeting of the
•'Esther Circle MontiJ!y evening,. Namee of Delaware, Mr. and
\ Oct. -9 at the Baptist' Par- Mrs . Arthur McNamee of
...~!onage. oeVotioos were given Columbus and Mrs. Esta: Wise
by Mrs. Edna PicKens, using of Pomeroy called ·on Mr. and
, Scripture from the eighth Mrs. Francis Morris Saturday,
·, chapter of U Cor. A program Oct. 7.
' by Mrs. Lillian ·Hayman
Miss Wilma Rose of
folldwed. Title, "The Lonely In . Columbus spent week with
Need of Fam[ly" with reading Mr . and Mrs . Herman Wolfe
' ) and discussion. A poem, "A. and Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
""' Thought for Each Oily in the Mrs. Sayre accompanied her
" ' Week" aQd prayer by Mrs. home for a visit and visited her
Helen Simpspn closed the aunts.
. program. The busiliess session
Guests of Mr . and Mrs. Crill
was in · charge of Vice Bradford and Mrl. Estber
President, Mrs. Ura Morris, Piper for · several days were
after which a Love Gift Mrs. Chester R. Mitchell and
program by Mrs.- Marie Roush Mrs. Frances Grey of Atlanta,
entitled, "Stop. Look • Listen • Ga.
Love". During the fellowship
Mr. and Mrs. Max Reddar of
hour, lovely refreshments were Denver, Colorado; Mr. and
servedbyMrs.Norris, assisted Mrs. Dale Smith and Mr. and
by her daughter.
Mrs. Otto Lohn of Pomeroy ;
Mrs . ·Maude Young is a Anita Houdashelt of Gallipolis
patient In Holzer Medical and Jaxne and Jan Smtt.h of
· , Center.
'.
Eastern speul Sunday evening
' Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. with · Mrs.
Margaret
-.Ada Bays accom(lanled Mrs. Houdasbelt.
Elva Cottrill or' Logan to
Mr. and Mrs. navid Roush .
!lelpre, Sunday, Oct. 1 and and daughter, Lorlel of
attended the !50th anniversary Columbus, spent the weekend
';1' of Rockland United Methodist "with his father, Mr. Dal~ Roush

a

I

Annotlnced
.
PORTLAND .,. Larry Wolfe,
principal, has announced the
honor roll for the first six
weeks grading period at the
Portland Elementary School.
Named to · the roll were:
{those in capital letters
received all A's) :,
6th Grade - JEFF !IROWN,
BEVERLY McLAIN, NICKI
VANMETER, DANIELLE
SMITH, Janis Carnahan ,
Tammy Cozart, Lisa Warner,
Cheryl Teaford.
5th Grade - BRIAN
JOHNSON, James Meadows,
Ray Deem, Sheila Brown.
.
·4th Grade - BONNIE BOSO,
JANET MIDDLESWART,
Tina Cozart, Armintha Holter,
Joe Johnson, . Sam, Person;
Diann Ward .
3rd Grade .,.. Sherry Beegle,
Vicky Deem, Rbonda Kern,
Alica Evans.
2nd .Grade - CINDY
EVANS: t AMMY MEADOWS,
Bruce Johnson, Debra Bryant,
Jl:lttie Sellers, Danelle Weddle.

SAVE $ AT DELL'S
and the grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laird and
family of New Albany spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Unley Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
and children of Baltimore
spent the weekend with Mr ,
and Mrs. Chester Simpson.
Mrs. Elmer Frecker, son
Don and Kenneth Newland of
Pine Grove were guests of Mrs.
Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada
Bays on Thursday.
Mrs: Vashti Grimm of Letart
Falls called on Mrs. Frankie
Neigler, Miss Vera Beegle and
Mrs. Ira Beegle recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Marietta were Sunday guests
of her par~nts, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris.

WHOLESALE PRICES FOR
EVERY ONE···

- ~E ·

In 1963, an estimated 3,000
:;:~o~s iereNdr~~ned ~:~en a
. urs 10 or ern
y.

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE

18 8
1NNAT us Other guests of the Boggess
K
LE, •JR ..c C.
INcKIBBLE,
KIBBLE
C.
1; . KIBBLE , H. e. KIBBLE , If and ·Andersons were Orville
living whose exac t addresses Jarrell and children and Sieve
are unknown and whose last

known

CHRISTM.AS
DECORATIONS
"

WITH 5-WAY

FLASHER

'1

ONLY

99

SET

100 LIGHTS WITH
,
349
5.WAY FLASHER ...... ..... .. ....
SET ·

ICICLES
200 STRANDS .................... 5 PKGS. '1.00
525 STRAftDS ................... 3 PKGS. 'tOO

BOWS STICK ON ........ 2

$1

25

COMPLETE
HALLOWEEN · ALL

00

89C:

SIZES .

~:::~:::::;:·=--=======~~

~

Fire Kin!J_

8 'rrack

OVEN WARE TAPES $299
By Anchor Hocking
4x6

AREA RUGS $JOO
Reg.

$14.95

rs

1, Norris.

Route

Reedsville , Ohio and If
Mr.andMrs. HoytFugerson
decened , the unknown heirs ,
dev isees, legatees. executors, of Camp Conley, W. Va., spent
administrators and -or assigns Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
~·,b~r;:h•J:[J;e. ~rkl~e~·g~• Homer Warner.
clnnatus Kibble. Cincinnatus Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shain
~\~~~e~. JrH.. _KibKb11~6,~; ~j and fam)ly have moved from
dece
..ed , will take notice that the former Erma Wilson farm
J . B. O'Brlen · and Roberta C.
O' Brien flied their complaint to the residence of James Ray
September
26 , 1972 In the Hill in Letart.
·
Common Pleas CoUrt of Meigs
Countv, Ohio, Case No . 15143, Mrs. Joyce White and son
g~~~~~g 0,'~"/0 l~:/res1rrn :~: Kevin called on Mrs. Russell
following described rear estate, Roush Sunday afternoon. Other
and
praying that title to said visitors in the Roush home over
real estate be quieted aod for
partition of sold real estate.
the weekend were Ronald
ta~=~~~~~or~a~bt~~~ ·~.~=db~;~ Russell of Ft. Meade, Md.; Mr.
made portles defendant to sa id and Mrs. Steve Hagey of
com
plaint and they are Akron, and Mr. and Mrs. Dana
required fo answer within
twenty -eight days after Lewis. .
·
November 11 , 1972 or on or Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roush,
before the 9th day of December, M hall R sh M
d
1972.
ars
ou , r. an Mrs.
Saldrealestatebeing situated -Herschel Roush and daughter
lntheTownsh lpofOiive, County
·
'
of Meigs and State ol Ohio :
Tammy, Mr. and MrB. Herbert
The· undivided
seven-lenths
Roush attended the wedding of
(7 - 101
of
the
tollowtng :
Beginning ol the northwest Carolyn Hagey and Ronald
corner
of said 160 acre lot No. Young at the Nazarene
Church
116A ; thence east · o10 rods ;
·
thence south 80 rods ; thence at Middleport Saturday
west •o rod : thence north 80 evening.
rods to the place of beg inn ing, Mrs. Iva 0 rr,· Mrs. Emma
containing 20 acres .
The und lvlded seven -lenths Hokley spent Sunday with Mrs.
7
&lt;
·10J
of ,twenty
acru
of land
being the
east holt
of the
nor - Gl adys Croy a t Ch ester.
thwest quarter of lot No . 1164, Mr . and Mrs. Geor•e
and beginning AO rods east of the
•
northwest corner of said lot No , Cummins and sons have
~~:~~e t~g~f~ 8 ga~~d,',0 t~~~~~ purcha:&gt;-d the Burke residence

ce

TREE LIGHTS
50 LIGHJS
'

address

w01t to•o the
•odSI
theno·
north 80.'
tods
place
of ebeginning
The und ivided three -tenths (310J of the follow ing described
tract :·.beglnnlng al the ·norlhwest corner of Slid tot No .
116&lt; : thence east 80 rods;
thence south 80 rods; thence
west 80 rods : thence north 80
rods to the place of beginning,
contain ing ·•o acres.
J . e. O' Brien, Plaintiff
"J 21 (101 5,12 , 19, 26 (IIJ 2, 6tc

~

tn Clarence
Racme. (Tom) Norris is
.

•

:o..,•oo.·.·=·=·=·····o·:·=·=·=·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:o:o:o:o:·::~:::::::.~w;:.~m~uc ••:u~ .: .xx ••

' ·· ·

Over 2,000 Masons
T.o Meet Satur.d. ay

REG.
1
2.05

attendance of 28.
'J'
· Laymen's
wasdinob·
ed
f SUnday
II
Re
[1\.1 t
serv as o ows:
a g,
OCUl 1 '\'0
"Tower of Babel," Fannie
Bernard ; song, "Take My
SundaySchoolattendanceon
Hand,
. Precious Lord," DinsOct 8
48 Th
· was . e offering was more Boyles and Florence
$20.89.
Spencer; song, "The Old
Worship services were held Rugged Cross Made the Dif·
at 11 with the Rev. Lehman . terence," Florence Spencer
speaking from Gal. 6:1-9, on and Howard Flanders; 'and
"Duty to the Weak" (In- "He Touched· Me," by the
te
rcessory Prayer and help of audience with Howard FJan.
. other kinds to our brethren)
," ders leading; Scripture, Gal.
·
·
6:1·9, Thelma Henderson, and
song, "Love Found AWay,"' by
Columbus, visited Saturday the. audience, with Charles D.
with Mrs. Nice
and Mr. Woode,
J Balser
k
· leader.
and' Mrs. ac Ables and
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
family. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll spent last Wedneaday with Mr.
Balser of Mansfield were and Mrs. Wald Swartz In
weekend guests
1 of Mrs. Balser Athens. On the way home, they
and the Abeses.
called on Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Erncoy Clarence Swartz, at Lottrldge,
of Blairsville, Pa ., spent 0
.
Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
Several local families atEd
d M'll
d
war
t er, an
on tended the services for Nura
Tuesday
the
Millers
were
Taylor at the church here on
dl
nner guests of the Erncoys at Tuesday, Oct. ·3, at 2 p.m. and
Crow's
T d Steak · House . On also previously visited at the
ues ay evemng they all White Funeral Home. Burial
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob was In the Coolville cemetery.
Cornwall at Gallt'polt's.
Mrs Nlna Robinson. received
Miss Mary Congo of Portland word of the birth of a son to Mr.
spent Friday afternoon with . and Mrs. Robe
. rt Robinson of
Butch Ables at the home of his Belpre, 0 . at a Parkersburg
Mr nd
parents,
. a Mrs. Jack hospital Oct. 2. Mrs. Robinson
Abl.eS.
is helping 'out at her son's

S •

REGULAR

to

Bl1

es

..•

The original Lodges were in Marietta,
Cincinnati, Warren, Worthington, ;r,anesville, and Chillicothe. There
now
260,000 Masons in Ohio. The Grand Lodge
of Ohio is the largest Masonic jurisdiction
in North America.

are

t1116Mon.
DownTown

4~.~,;'~'.!'.
_'· -

SERVICE HELD
Funeral services for Mrs.
Alice Fink were conducted
Tuesday at the Rawlings Coal.!
Funeral Home by the Rev.
Raul lin Moyer. Burial was In
the Cheshire Cemetery. Among
those from out-of-town here··for
the . services were Mrs .
George Fry and Mrs.
Ruth Pettibone, Ashville;
Mrs. Mary Sells, Co•
·lumbus; Mrs . Freda Bar-·
cus and Mrs. Erma , Green,
Gallipolis; the Rev. and Mrs.
John Kimbler, Steubenvllle;
and Mr._and Mrs. John Buckley
and Jeff, Chesapeake.

Columbus.

(;.

Dtf:p deans ind brishtena '

colon. Rutoree tha( aoft
plush feel to carpetins! Uae ·
m

your carpet ehampooer,

or ...

.

Rem El«:!ric Sltampooer

I 1 per day wilh purrluJie of Blue Lwtre

~

'

'

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'

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'

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•

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I

I

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RINSE
AQAY

9o~

. no

UIU YU " " ' U• CU l t At&lt;UIJI.B 10·~~

more

Alka ·Seltzer I
REG. 79'
25's

44~

ST. JOSEPH
CHILDREN'S
. DECONGEST
ANT
.
.
TAlii:ETS

. 26~

tangles

¥2

REG.

$1.89

99

REG. 98'

BODY
LOTION

60 Liners

3

TABLETS

lOO's · .

PAiR

ggc

REG. 23' .

12c;

REG. 'US .

400's

'I

men's boots by · W.Y~ftMrv,
111110 •nd Hlwkeye. Silt encla

.. '

M.......lta•s•is

MIDOL£PORT'.

•tty Olllilllll', owner
102 E: r.fAIN
· . ..
~·ROY

.
•

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$116

R£G. 'lJt
.RES. '1.69
36's

1~

.'1.25
I

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2 OZ. I "1 :

I

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'''

. $4.50
HANKSCRAFT

'REG.

•••
•
'

Vaporizer . . ;'
•
''

l•

•'•

TALCUM
5S'·

(

TEN.O.SIX
LOTION

POND'S

~=

f

'•
•'
•

4 oz. ....... .'1.95

IOOYD f OOQ ~ANJ

!' .

8 oz... ....... '3.50PT. ........ ,...'5.50

•

REVLON
TOUCH &amp;GLOW
·LIQUID MAKEUP
SPECI~L
"Get Acquainted"

59C:

12 Oi.

!'

BONNE BELL

Nil ~

Sue

VITALIS .

.

''

·"•

Reg.

POND'S
LEMON
FRESH

DIAPARENE OINTMENT
REG.

•

.,''

COMPLETE WITH
BOTTLE

REG.

MTIII.ETS

I

ALADDIN LUNCH KIT

'1.00.

GROOMS WITHOUT
GREASE

........
-...-

I

REG. ig,95

......... ' ......

our

I

$177

$111

REG. '1.29

· J

I
I

REG.

MICRIN ·
MOUTHWASH.

'

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l
.l
,•

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gge

REG. '1.65

\

-~----------·

SATURDAYS UNTIL f P.M.

Reg . $1.75
]0 oz.

COTTON
SWABS

99~

UNICAP CHEWABLE

.,,,

· Ali-Over

87/FFERII!

'1.77

VICKS
SIN EX
NASAL SPRAY
New From
· JERGENS

•

(100 WITH 24 FREE)

6 oz.

~

UNICAP
VITAMINS

·VITAMINS

REG. 11.98

'

••'

(100 with 24 Free)
Reg .
$3.11

FORMULA 44

More protection for Bi6y ...
More "convenience for you.

REG.

REG.
$1.39

oz.

REG. '2.19
1 oz.

24's ·

'

Reg .
$3.99 ONLY

VICKS

'

12 Ol

'$-_

I

I

Jim
creme nme
for
children!

If

bottle o f 100 tablets
' I also av ailable with lro nl

Fast sinus
relief'in a
penetrating
spray

8 oz.

TJtADIMAIII!;

•

•••

REG. 11.09

'

t "~
" :..

1/:Y.!li!.-,

' ,j l

'2.10

12 oz. $122

59~

'

~ ,.,..-

GREATEST
TASTE IN

REG. 98'

.

;

';.

POLY·VI·
THE

V0-5 SHAMPOO
15 Ol

'•'

~

BATH OIL
BEADS
~~-~ L ·.JIEG:

'

•

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Reg. 69c

SOFTIQUE

/

'

.. •

'

I

.,

BAKER ~URNITURE
.

'

••

. ...

sge.

""

•

•

•

REG. 12.95
20's

49c

REG. 89'

SAT., 14TH

~our lldies' fllhion 'boola lnd

Now. safo-dtiign

'\.

•

0

'

I

CAPSULES

RAZOR BlADES

59~

43' '

Ol.OFF' ·

GOLDFISH SE.T
rigi'!_

I

, .....

I

~

•

REG. $1.19

'
I'
.,'

Ladles' dressy- and cuual
styles. Black. Brown. Narrow .&amp;
wide widths.

J A .. S

.

0 ••

'

• ~-

I

•

Anti-Perspirant
Powder or Mist

•

. BARGAIN" TABT~E

.

CONTAC

66~

REG. '1.15
8 oz.

CALM

. .Look What We Got!

.", "'"'

•

•

$2.07

Woode from

Eve-rything for
loween - costumes.
masks, novelties, toys, candy, etc.

~ ·o• ••

•

REG.

last week In St. Joseph Hospital
tp k b
W V H Is
a ar ers l!!'g, . a; e
'borne and doing nicely.
d d
Mary Amos atten e a :,•
'
beautician show recently In
I
I
Parkersburg, W. Va. Mary
'
works at St. Joseph Hospital
th
and also keeps. up wi some ' ;
work as a ~uticlsn, at home.
;
',

WHArs LEFT ON

•

• "'

&gt;'

'

, AND

•

..
.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Atherton spent Sunday at the
home of th&amp;ir son, Mr.
and Mrs. Clsrence Atherton of
Long Bottom, where the latter.
Mrs. Atherton is ill. .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode attended the annual
homecoming at the Flatwoods
Methodist Church on Sunday,
Aug. 8.
.
The WSCS will hold its
regular monthly meetin• at the
0
church here on Tuesday
evening, Oct. 17, at 8 o'clock,
with June Stearns as program
leader.'
Clara Follrod aQd Mr, and
Mrs. Charles 0. Woode called .
on Carr.ie Swartz, Mrs. Kelly; .
and others at the Elmwood
Nursing Home, last Tuesday
afternoon.
Jinuny Brooks, young son of
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks,
underwent ·sur-gery for
adenoids and enlarged tonsils,

SJO.t$ •

RADIO. $2r-'
DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

~

''

PEANUTS

Plus Conditioner

9 oz.

'

'·,

DRY ROASTED

~

RINSE

REG. 1L50

~

REG•

\

....... iouild.

.
: ..... ,.
.· ...,,.. .: ..
••' .
'
I ..·
..
'' ..
•/

~

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Double Kay

FOR ALOVELIER YOU!

•

.,'

•29.88

REG. f39.95

• • •

CREME

HAIR SPRAY

-

..

,., ,...........

BACK MASSAGER

Gillette

V0-5 LEMON

o

cme are on a vacation tr p. Charles D.

FAMILY SIZE

59~

--

dial

POLLENEX DEEP HEAT

¢

SHAMPOO

HAIR DRESSING
'REG.
11J5

Reg. $1.29
6 Oz.

oz.

LOTION - . TUBE OR JAR

ss~

TueSctay"eveiiiiig Until Thurs..
day evening of last week were
her brother-In-law Blld sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Balnum
of

,__~

FAMILY SIZE
REG. '1.59

REG. 11.59

7,'::'
. '-;;:
~:::.:':::.::~::c
.. -:~
:::::.;::;.~
~ ;:;. ~--._________.:______

Al~'red

SECRET

ANTI
PERSPIRANT DEODORANT

DEODORANT

REG. 1.19

1Vz

"·

Ant~Perspirant

1

YOUR

/

DIAL

BAN
ROLL.ON

HEAD &amp;

95e

ONLY

SECRET

CHoiCE •

AM.fM-A.f.C.

0

SUPER SCOPE

LUCKY FOR YOU

Croll COuntry Po-ftr

~·

r: re: ·i ··=n¢cc: .enii u, co::: :u: uo:. e:

.LADIES' SHOES.

SET
$349

luliMn baltory c.,.rgor,
AC &amp; iX wllll revolving

0 .

·;:::x:':'$::::::::::::::::-=·=x·w..,.s;g:~a ~ cj

SALAD

ELEC.
IJMPS

\

g

7 PC.

Hobnail _Whale Oil

'1. ]:
..•.

·have obligations ·

Mr. and
Mrs. Ber~
Grimm,
a· -Grella
and Isabelle
Simpson
of ·home:Guellts of Mr. . and Mrs.
Ra ·
~
· ·
1

surgtcal patten! at .Veterans
Memorial Hospital Mr. and
""
.
'
Mcs. Herbert Roush and
Richard Weaver visited Mr
°
Norris Satunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Balser and
son, Johnnie, of Granville, 0 .;
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Balser of

.

.:::::

schools

Ashtabula. o.
The birthdays of Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe Blld Dallas Hill were
celebrated with a dinner at the
.
·
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Hill Tuesday evening . AtMore than 2,000Masons from throughout Hubler of Dayton, Grand Orator; Charles
tending were Saint Clair Hill, the state will convene in Columbuit Friday S. Ward ol Mentor, Grand Marshal; Jerry
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Norris and Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21, for the 163rd C. Rasor of Commercial Point, Senior
arid daughter, Tracy,,Mr. and annual meeting of the Grand Lodge of Grand Deacon ; Daniel F. Iceman ol
Mrs. Marshall Roush and s'On Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio.
Wooster, Junior Grand Deacon, Robert L;
Joey, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, and
Delegates f.rom Ohio's 680 Masonic . ' Henderson of Waverly, Grand Tyler.
Dean Hill.
Lodges, the oldest and largest fraternal
Masonic dignitaries from throughout
Arthur Hill of Morehead, Ky. organization in Ohio, will elect new Grand the United States and Canada, including
University spent the weekend Lodge Officers for 1972. Outgoing Grand several Past Grand Masters, will atiend
with his parentS, Mr. and Mrs. Master of Ohio is Fay L. Gullion of the convention.
Dallas Hill. A birthday dinner Columbus, who Is a clerk of the Probate
Delegates wlll hear reports on Ohio
was held in his honor at the Hill Court of Franklin County.
Masonry and its activities during the past
home Sunday. Attending were
The two day session will be held at the year.
Miss Leanne Nease, Mr. and Veterans Memorial Auditorium. Other
They include the Ohio Masonic Home
Mrs. Marshall Roush and Joey, present officers of the Grand Lodge of Ohio in Springfield, which cares for nearly 500
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Norris besides Gullion are:
residents at an annual cost of $3 milllon,
and daughter, Tracy.
Dr. Dale E. Fox of Cincinnati, Deputy and the '!/ Grand Lodge scholarships,
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe was a Grand Master, who is in line to be elected awarded each year at 'J:1 Ohio colleges,
Sunday guest of her son, Mr. Grand Master for the coming year; Royal universities and theological seminaries.
and Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Jr. at . C. Scofield of Sebring, Senior Grand
All Master Masons may attend the
Gallipolis Rt.
Warden; Robert D. Sager of Oregon, Grand Lodge activities from 9 a.m. to 4
Mt. and Mrs. Herbert Roush Junior Grand Warden; James J. Harbage p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. until noon Saturspent Friday evening with Mr. · of Worthington, Grand Treasurer; Robert day. Freemasonry in Ohio began in
and Mrs. Oil Boston at ·Racine. A.· Hinshaw of Worthington, . Grand January, 1808 when 12 delegates from six
Mrs. Davis Jones and two Secretary; The Rev. Morris J. Allton of Lodges met In Chillicothe and·formed the
children of Hillsboro, w. Va., Westerville, Grand Chaplain; Calvin T. · Grand Lodge of Ohio.
spent Sunday with Mr. and

M~: ~J ~A K 18~~ 1E!c.~JACa~; Mrs., Jess ~derSO~ 1and 'alSo
P R ' c e, c r Ncr NNAr .u s called on Mrs. Zelpha Boggess.

BUY EARLY -AND SAVE

.

.
The disturbing feature is that a!1 ?
too often the case liaa ·been decided In ''
favor of the student and against, the
sehool. This cituld well mean that
schools have been g~lty of violating the
:~:.
hasic constitutional rights of studen~ .
~ ·
. The guidelines published by Ute
§; ·
State
Board of Education do permit
t,:
local school boards to adopt
&lt;~
"reasonable regulations." The problem
~
will be over deftnlqg what Is
~
•t....,..'reasonable
... '
-.. ~.
:{:
By Prof. ·Ed WaJJe 9
suspicion. It is a time when the legal
~Y not involve our students ~
~;
"I've got my rights!"
document has replaced the handshak help1ng to determl"ne what ts
~
Over
the
years,
this
has
been
the
as
binding a deal. ·
·
e . "reason~ble?.' .' This _would open up
~
While one may lament this change, avenues· of co_mmuntcation between
:;:; batUe cry of the American citizen who
has
fell
put
upon,
Such
a
cry
·usu81ly
perhaps
it is · necessary. The legal generations. Thtswouldsh~theyo\lllg
~;;
evokes the understanding arid sym, document ·replaced !he handshake !*ople of Gallla and Metgs Count!.,
.~)
f.: pathy of those citizens to whom It is because there were thoSe who misused that we adults do ~onslder students as
said. For truly, · in America, every the handshake. It seems to the State Important_people with rights ..
~
citizen "has his rights"- or does he? Board ·'that enough Instances of the
. A,Jso, mvolvlng studenjs tn deter=
::l
This week, the Board of Education violation of students' rights have OC· mmmg reasonable regulations would
~:
oftheStateofOhiopublishedguldelines curred to warrant the issuance- of intcodu~e them ~.o .the ~!ten overlooked
@!
designed to guarantee the extension of guidelines.
compamon of rtghts - .RESPON"right..:" to. the public school student. ·
Indeed, over the past decade, many SIBILITY. The school has nghts, _too;
;~
How
dtd
this
happen?
What
prompted
cases
have been taken to courts by but it h~~ .a major responslbUity. the
~)
!ij the State Board to take such action? parents and students cllarging the r~sponstbllity to produce competent ,
In all probability, the guidelines schools with a violation of the basic cttizens.
,.;
;
Wouldn't it be .beautiful if the adult ~
•· are the result of a general "legalism" rights of the slitdent. Such suits have
sweeping the .country . We 'are wi· dealtwlthhairanddress.style,freedom of the future ouldtd us, and whe~ put · t,:
dergoing a transition In which ,11'11111 in of speech, search of student lockers,- upon, he would·say, '_'l'~e.go!~Y rij!hls ~:
............~~~-... .f~l~~~.. . ~~~ 1s. _re~laced . by ,and fr~o~-~f the press,
·
-AND my responstbllities.
~

I

By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Randy PyleS of Racine spent
the weekend · wi th Greg
Donohew.
Mr.- and Mrs. Lester Roush
are on a vacation through the
soulherrt states. Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Manuel and Angie are
staying with the Roush
children while they are away.
Miss Christi Badgely spent
Sunday afternoon with Linda
and Carol O'Brien.
. Brice Hart of Racine spent
Friday night \vtth Ke ith
Hayman.
Erwin Gloeckner · and
granddaughter , Christi
Badgely, spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Pearson at Dorcas.
Mrs. Golda Shain was a
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Roush Sunday.
Mrs. Lillie -Hart of Racine
visited her parenlli, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hayman saturday
evening.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Bearhs of
Portsmoutl), Va., and Mrs.
Erma Wilson, local, spent a
week's vacation with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burri and Bill'at
Bolivar Dam and Mr. and Mrs.
Bud Wilson and family at ·

1 ., " ""

TUCo TRIPL-~ICK

93'

4 o2. · 4·9·~ PICTURE
PUZZLE
I

.

~\

·.

-

•.

'I'

.

�[.

.
'
8- The Dally sentinel, Middleport•Pcxneroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1972

Honor Roll Apple Grove ;f"*"':::=:=::::x~,,~"''"'*'•'f«'::'~'*"'- "·"""bill ' ::
Church:· They also called
. on A E rtJ.an
relatives.
·
l Q ". . d News, Events
~tudents, '
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Me- ·,
.
·
.

\ Ra!ine ·Sociaf Events .
·. .,:, •

By Mrs. FraaciB Morris
Mrs. Charles Norris was
hostess for the meeting of the
•'Esther Circle MontiJ!y evening,. Namee of Delaware, Mr. and
\ Oct. -9 at the Baptist' Par- Mrs . Arthur McNamee of
...~!onage. oeVotioos were given Columbus and Mrs. Esta: Wise
by Mrs. Edna PicKens, using of Pomeroy called ·on Mr. and
, Scripture from the eighth Mrs. Francis Morris Saturday,
·, chapter of U Cor. A program Oct. 7.
' by Mrs. Lillian ·Hayman
Miss Wilma Rose of
folldwed. Title, "The Lonely In . Columbus spent week with
Need of Fam[ly" with reading Mr . and Mrs . Herman Wolfe
' ) and discussion. A poem, "A. and Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
""' Thought for Each Oily in the Mrs. Sayre accompanied her
" ' Week" aQd prayer by Mrs. home for a visit and visited her
Helen Simpspn closed the aunts.
. program. The busiliess session
Guests of Mr . and Mrs. Crill
was in · charge of Vice Bradford and Mrl. Estber
President, Mrs. Ura Morris, Piper for · several days were
after which a Love Gift Mrs. Chester R. Mitchell and
program by Mrs.- Marie Roush Mrs. Frances Grey of Atlanta,
entitled, "Stop. Look • Listen • Ga.
Love". During the fellowship
Mr. and Mrs. Max Reddar of
hour, lovely refreshments were Denver, Colorado; Mr. and
servedbyMrs.Norris, assisted Mrs. Dale Smith and Mr. and
by her daughter.
Mrs. Otto Lohn of Pomeroy ;
Mrs . ·Maude Young is a Anita Houdashelt of Gallipolis
patient In Holzer Medical and Jaxne and Jan Smtt.h of
· , Center.
'.
Eastern speul Sunday evening
' Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. with · Mrs.
Margaret
-.Ada Bays accom(lanled Mrs. Houdasbelt.
Elva Cottrill or' Logan to
Mr. and Mrs. navid Roush .
!lelpre, Sunday, Oct. 1 and and daughter, Lorlel of
attended the !50th anniversary Columbus, spent the weekend
';1' of Rockland United Methodist "with his father, Mr. Dal~ Roush

a

I

Annotlnced
.
PORTLAND .,. Larry Wolfe,
principal, has announced the
honor roll for the first six
weeks grading period at the
Portland Elementary School.
Named to · the roll were:
{those in capital letters
received all A's) :,
6th Grade - JEFF !IROWN,
BEVERLY McLAIN, NICKI
VANMETER, DANIELLE
SMITH, Janis Carnahan ,
Tammy Cozart, Lisa Warner,
Cheryl Teaford.
5th Grade - BRIAN
JOHNSON, James Meadows,
Ray Deem, Sheila Brown.
.
·4th Grade - BONNIE BOSO,
JANET MIDDLESWART,
Tina Cozart, Armintha Holter,
Joe Johnson, . Sam, Person;
Diann Ward .
3rd Grade .,.. Sherry Beegle,
Vicky Deem, Rbonda Kern,
Alica Evans.
2nd .Grade - CINDY
EVANS: t AMMY MEADOWS,
Bruce Johnson, Debra Bryant,
Jl:lttie Sellers, Danelle Weddle.

SAVE $ AT DELL'S
and the grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laird and
family of New Albany spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Unley Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
and children of Baltimore
spent the weekend with Mr ,
and Mrs. Chester Simpson.
Mrs. Elmer Frecker, son
Don and Kenneth Newland of
Pine Grove were guests of Mrs.
Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada
Bays on Thursday.
Mrs: Vashti Grimm of Letart
Falls called on Mrs. Frankie
Neigler, Miss Vera Beegle and
Mrs. Ira Beegle recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Marietta were Sunday guests
of her par~nts, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris.

WHOLESALE PRICES FOR
EVERY ONE···

- ~E ·

In 1963, an estimated 3,000
:;:~o~s iereNdr~~ned ~:~en a
. urs 10 or ern
y.

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE

18 8
1NNAT us Other guests of the Boggess
K
LE, •JR ..c C.
INcKIBBLE,
KIBBLE
C.
1; . KIBBLE , H. e. KIBBLE , If and ·Andersons were Orville
living whose exac t addresses Jarrell and children and Sieve
are unknown and whose last

known

CHRISTM.AS
DECORATIONS
"

WITH 5-WAY

FLASHER

'1

ONLY

99

SET

100 LIGHTS WITH
,
349
5.WAY FLASHER ...... ..... .. ....
SET ·

ICICLES
200 STRANDS .................... 5 PKGS. '1.00
525 STRAftDS ................... 3 PKGS. 'tOO

BOWS STICK ON ........ 2

$1

25

COMPLETE
HALLOWEEN · ALL

00

89C:

SIZES .

~:::~:::::;:·=--=======~~

~

Fire Kin!J_

8 'rrack

OVEN WARE TAPES $299
By Anchor Hocking
4x6

AREA RUGS $JOO
Reg.

$14.95

rs

1, Norris.

Route

Reedsville , Ohio and If
Mr.andMrs. HoytFugerson
decened , the unknown heirs ,
dev isees, legatees. executors, of Camp Conley, W. Va., spent
administrators and -or assigns Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
~·,b~r;:h•J:[J;e. ~rkl~e~·g~• Homer Warner.
clnnatus Kibble. Cincinnatus Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shain
~\~~~e~. JrH.. _KibKb11~6,~; ~j and fam)ly have moved from
dece
..ed , will take notice that the former Erma Wilson farm
J . B. O'Brlen · and Roberta C.
O' Brien flied their complaint to the residence of James Ray
September
26 , 1972 In the Hill in Letart.
·
Common Pleas CoUrt of Meigs
Countv, Ohio, Case No . 15143, Mrs. Joyce White and son
g~~~~~g 0,'~"/0 l~:/res1rrn :~: Kevin called on Mrs. Russell
following described rear estate, Roush Sunday afternoon. Other
and
praying that title to said visitors in the Roush home over
real estate be quieted aod for
partition of sold real estate.
the weekend were Ronald
ta~=~~~~~or~a~bt~~~ ·~.~=db~;~ Russell of Ft. Meade, Md.; Mr.
made portles defendant to sa id and Mrs. Steve Hagey of
com
plaint and they are Akron, and Mr. and Mrs. Dana
required fo answer within
twenty -eight days after Lewis. .
·
November 11 , 1972 or on or Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roush,
before the 9th day of December, M hall R sh M
d
1972.
ars
ou , r. an Mrs.
Saldrealestatebeing situated -Herschel Roush and daughter
lntheTownsh lpofOiive, County
·
'
of Meigs and State ol Ohio :
Tammy, Mr. and MrB. Herbert
The· undivided
seven-lenths
Roush attended the wedding of
(7 - 101
of
the
tollowtng :
Beginning ol the northwest Carolyn Hagey and Ronald
corner
of said 160 acre lot No. Young at the Nazarene
Church
116A ; thence east · o10 rods ;
·
thence south 80 rods ; thence at Middleport Saturday
west •o rod : thence north 80 evening.
rods to the place of beg inn ing, Mrs. Iva 0 rr,· Mrs. Emma
containing 20 acres .
The und lvlded seven -lenths Hokley spent Sunday with Mrs.
7
&lt;
·10J
of ,twenty
acru
of land
being the
east holt
of the
nor - Gl adys Croy a t Ch ester.
thwest quarter of lot No . 1164, Mr . and Mrs. Geor•e
and beginning AO rods east of the
•
northwest corner of said lot No , Cummins and sons have
~~:~~e t~g~f~ 8 ga~~d,',0 t~~~~~ purcha:&gt;-d the Burke residence

ce

TREE LIGHTS
50 LIGHJS
'

address

w01t to•o the
•odSI
theno·
north 80.'
tods
place
of ebeginning
The und ivided three -tenths (310J of the follow ing described
tract :·.beglnnlng al the ·norlhwest corner of Slid tot No .
116&lt; : thence east 80 rods;
thence south 80 rods; thence
west 80 rods : thence north 80
rods to the place of beginning,
contain ing ·•o acres.
J . e. O' Brien, Plaintiff
"J 21 (101 5,12 , 19, 26 (IIJ 2, 6tc

~

tn Clarence
Racme. (Tom) Norris is
.

•

:o..,•oo.·.·=·=·=·····o·:·=·=·=·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:o:o:o:o:·::~:::::::.~w;:.~m~uc ••:u~ .: .xx ••

' ·· ·

Over 2,000 Masons
T.o Meet Satur.d. ay

REG.
1
2.05

attendance of 28.
'J'
· Laymen's
wasdinob·
ed
f SUnday
II
Re
[1\.1 t
serv as o ows:
a g,
OCUl 1 '\'0
"Tower of Babel," Fannie
Bernard ; song, "Take My
SundaySchoolattendanceon
Hand,
. Precious Lord," DinsOct 8
48 Th
· was . e offering was more Boyles and Florence
$20.89.
Spencer; song, "The Old
Worship services were held Rugged Cross Made the Dif·
at 11 with the Rev. Lehman . terence," Florence Spencer
speaking from Gal. 6:1-9, on and Howard Flanders; 'and
"Duty to the Weak" (In- "He Touched· Me," by the
te
rcessory Prayer and help of audience with Howard FJan.
. other kinds to our brethren)
," ders leading; Scripture, Gal.
·
·
6:1·9, Thelma Henderson, and
song, "Love Found AWay,"' by
Columbus, visited Saturday the. audience, with Charles D.
with Mrs. Nice
and Mr. Woode,
J Balser
k
· leader.
and' Mrs. ac Ables and
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
family. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll spent last Wedneaday with Mr.
Balser of Mansfield were and Mrs. Wald Swartz In
weekend guests
1 of Mrs. Balser Athens. On the way home, they
and the Abeses.
called on Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Erncoy Clarence Swartz, at Lottrldge,
of Blairsville, Pa ., spent 0
.
Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
Several local families atEd
d M'll
d
war
t er, an
on tended the services for Nura
Tuesday
the
Millers
were
Taylor at the church here on
dl
nner guests of the Erncoys at Tuesday, Oct. ·3, at 2 p.m. and
Crow's
T d Steak · House . On also previously visited at the
ues ay evemng they all White Funeral Home. Burial
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob was In the Coolville cemetery.
Cornwall at Gallt'polt's.
Mrs Nlna Robinson. received
Miss Mary Congo of Portland word of the birth of a son to Mr.
spent Friday afternoon with . and Mrs. Robe
. rt Robinson of
Butch Ables at the home of his Belpre, 0 . at a Parkersburg
Mr nd
parents,
. a Mrs. Jack hospital Oct. 2. Mrs. Robinson
Abl.eS.
is helping 'out at her son's

S •

REGULAR

to

Bl1

es

..•

The original Lodges were in Marietta,
Cincinnati, Warren, Worthington, ;r,anesville, and Chillicothe. There
now
260,000 Masons in Ohio. The Grand Lodge
of Ohio is the largest Masonic jurisdiction
in North America.

are

t1116Mon.
DownTown

4~.~,;'~'.!'.
_'· -

SERVICE HELD
Funeral services for Mrs.
Alice Fink were conducted
Tuesday at the Rawlings Coal.!
Funeral Home by the Rev.
Raul lin Moyer. Burial was In
the Cheshire Cemetery. Among
those from out-of-town here··for
the . services were Mrs .
George Fry and Mrs.
Ruth Pettibone, Ashville;
Mrs. Mary Sells, Co•
·lumbus; Mrs . Freda Bar-·
cus and Mrs. Erma , Green,
Gallipolis; the Rev. and Mrs.
John Kimbler, Steubenvllle;
and Mr._and Mrs. John Buckley
and Jeff, Chesapeake.

Columbus.

(;.

Dtf:p deans ind brishtena '

colon. Rutoree tha( aoft
plush feel to carpetins! Uae ·
m

your carpet ehampooer,

or ...

.

Rem El«:!ric Sltampooer

I 1 per day wilh purrluJie of Blue Lwtre

~

'

'

~·----~-~~

'

.·

'

•... ,•!

•

•

I

I

•• •

I

I

. .' ''
..
0

1

."

I

,

RINSE
AQAY

9o~

. no

UIU YU " " ' U• CU l t At&lt;UIJI.B 10·~~

more

Alka ·Seltzer I
REG. 79'
25's

44~

ST. JOSEPH
CHILDREN'S
. DECONGEST
ANT
.
.
TAlii:ETS

. 26~

tangles

¥2

REG.

$1.89

99

REG. 98'

BODY
LOTION

60 Liners

3

TABLETS

lOO's · .

PAiR

ggc

REG. 23' .

12c;

REG. 'US .

400's

'I

men's boots by · W.Y~ftMrv,
111110 •nd Hlwkeye. Silt encla

.. '

M.......lta•s•is

MIDOL£PORT'.

•tty Olllilllll', owner
102 E: r.fAIN
· . ..
~·ROY

.
•

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..

$116

R£G. 'lJt
.RES. '1.69
36's

1~

.'1.25
I

··~ -

2 OZ. I "1 :

I

.
'''

. $4.50
HANKSCRAFT

'REG.

•••
•
'

Vaporizer . . ;'
•
''

l•

•'•

TALCUM
5S'·

(

TEN.O.SIX
LOTION

POND'S

~=

f

'•
•'
•

4 oz. ....... .'1.95

IOOYD f OOQ ~ANJ

!' .

8 oz... ....... '3.50PT. ........ ,...'5.50

•

REVLON
TOUCH &amp;GLOW
·LIQUID MAKEUP
SPECI~L
"Get Acquainted"

59C:

12 Oi.

!'

BONNE BELL

Nil ~

Sue

VITALIS .

.

''

·"•

Reg.

POND'S
LEMON
FRESH

DIAPARENE OINTMENT
REG.

•

.,''

COMPLETE WITH
BOTTLE

REG.

MTIII.ETS

I

ALADDIN LUNCH KIT

'1.00.

GROOMS WITHOUT
GREASE

........
-...-

I

REG. ig,95

......... ' ......

our

I

$177

$111

REG. '1.29

· J

I
I

REG.

MICRIN ·
MOUTHWASH.

'

l
l
.l
,•

I

gge

REG. '1.65

\

-~----------·

SATURDAYS UNTIL f P.M.

Reg . $1.75
]0 oz.

COTTON
SWABS

99~

UNICAP CHEWABLE

.,,,

· Ali-Over

87/FFERII!

'1.77

VICKS
SIN EX
NASAL SPRAY
New From
· JERGENS

•

(100 WITH 24 FREE)

6 oz.

~

UNICAP
VITAMINS

·VITAMINS

REG. 11.98

'

••'

(100 with 24 Free)
Reg .
$3.11

FORMULA 44

More protection for Bi6y ...
More "convenience for you.

REG.

REG.
$1.39

oz.

REG. '2.19
1 oz.

24's ·

'

Reg .
$3.99 ONLY

VICKS

'

12 Ol

'$-_

I

I

Jim
creme nme
for
children!

If

bottle o f 100 tablets
' I also av ailable with lro nl

Fast sinus
relief'in a
penetrating
spray

8 oz.

TJtADIMAIII!;

•

•••

REG. 11.09

'

t "~
" :..

1/:Y.!li!.-,

' ,j l

'2.10

12 oz. $122

59~

'

~ ,.,..-

GREATEST
TASTE IN

REG. 98'

.

;

';.

POLY·VI·
THE

V0-5 SHAMPOO
15 Ol

'•'

~

BATH OIL
BEADS
~~-~ L ·.JIEG:

'

•

•

Reg. 69c

SOFTIQUE

/

'

.. •

'

I

.,

BAKER ~URNITURE
.

'

••

. ...

sge.

""

•

•

•

REG. 12.95
20's

49c

REG. 89'

SAT., 14TH

~our lldies' fllhion 'boola lnd

Now. safo-dtiign

'\.

•

0

'

I

CAPSULES

RAZOR BlADES

59~

43' '

Ol.OFF' ·

GOLDFISH SE.T
rigi'!_

I

, .....

I

~

•

REG. $1.19

'
I'
.,'

Ladles' dressy- and cuual
styles. Black. Brown. Narrow .&amp;
wide widths.

J A .. S

.

0 ••

'

• ~-

I

•

Anti-Perspirant
Powder or Mist

•

. BARGAIN" TABT~E

.

CONTAC

66~

REG. '1.15
8 oz.

CALM

. .Look What We Got!

.", "'"'

•

•

$2.07

Woode from

Eve-rything for
loween - costumes.
masks, novelties, toys, candy, etc.

~ ·o• ••

•

REG.

last week In St. Joseph Hospital
tp k b
W V H Is
a ar ers l!!'g, . a; e
'borne and doing nicely.
d d
Mary Amos atten e a :,•
'
beautician show recently In
I
I
Parkersburg, W. Va. Mary
'
works at St. Joseph Hospital
th
and also keeps. up wi some ' ;
work as a ~uticlsn, at home.
;
',

WHArs LEFT ON

•

• "'

&gt;'

'

, AND

•

..
.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Atherton spent Sunday at the
home of th&amp;ir son, Mr.
and Mrs. Clsrence Atherton of
Long Bottom, where the latter.
Mrs. Atherton is ill. .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode attended the annual
homecoming at the Flatwoods
Methodist Church on Sunday,
Aug. 8.
.
The WSCS will hold its
regular monthly meetin• at the
0
church here on Tuesday
evening, Oct. 17, at 8 o'clock,
with June Stearns as program
leader.'
Clara Follrod aQd Mr, and
Mrs. Charles 0. Woode called .
on Carr.ie Swartz, Mrs. Kelly; .
and others at the Elmwood
Nursing Home, last Tuesday
afternoon.
Jinuny Brooks, young son of
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks,
underwent ·sur-gery for
adenoids and enlarged tonsils,

SJO.t$ •

RADIO. $2r-'
DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

~

''

PEANUTS

Plus Conditioner

9 oz.

'

'·,

DRY ROASTED

~

RINSE

REG. 1L50

~

REG•

\

....... iouild.

.
: ..... ,.
.· ...,,.. .: ..
••' .
'
I ..·
..
'' ..
•/

~

••

Double Kay

FOR ALOVELIER YOU!

•

.,'

•29.88

REG. f39.95

• • •

CREME

HAIR SPRAY

-

..

,., ,...........

BACK MASSAGER

Gillette

V0-5 LEMON

o

cme are on a vacation tr p. Charles D.

FAMILY SIZE

59~

--

dial

POLLENEX DEEP HEAT

¢

SHAMPOO

HAIR DRESSING
'REG.
11J5

Reg. $1.29
6 Oz.

oz.

LOTION - . TUBE OR JAR

ss~

TueSctay"eveiiiiig Until Thurs..
day evening of last week were
her brother-In-law Blld sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Balnum
of

,__~

FAMILY SIZE
REG. '1.59

REG. 11.59

7,'::'
. '-;;:
~:::.:':::.::~::c
.. -:~
:::::.;::;.~
~ ;:;. ~--._________.:______

Al~'red

SECRET

ANTI
PERSPIRANT DEODORANT

DEODORANT

REG. 1.19

1Vz

"·

Ant~Perspirant

1

YOUR

/

DIAL

BAN
ROLL.ON

HEAD &amp;

95e

ONLY

SECRET

CHoiCE •

AM.fM-A.f.C.

0

SUPER SCOPE

LUCKY FOR YOU

Croll COuntry Po-ftr

~·

r: re: ·i ··=n¢cc: .enii u, co::: :u: uo:. e:

.LADIES' SHOES.

SET
$349

luliMn baltory c.,.rgor,
AC &amp; iX wllll revolving

0 .

·;:::x:':'$::::::::::::::::-=·=x·w..,.s;g:~a ~ cj

SALAD

ELEC.
IJMPS

\

g

7 PC.

Hobnail _Whale Oil

'1. ]:
..•.

·have obligations ·

Mr. and
Mrs. Ber~
Grimm,
a· -Grella
and Isabelle
Simpson
of ·home:Guellts of Mr. . and Mrs.
Ra ·
~
· ·
1

surgtcal patten! at .Veterans
Memorial Hospital Mr. and
""
.
'
Mcs. Herbert Roush and
Richard Weaver visited Mr
°
Norris Satunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Balser and
son, Johnnie, of Granville, 0 .;
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Balser of

.

.:::::

schools

Ashtabula. o.
The birthdays of Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe Blld Dallas Hill were
celebrated with a dinner at the
.
·
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Hill Tuesday evening . AtMore than 2,000Masons from throughout Hubler of Dayton, Grand Orator; Charles
tending were Saint Clair Hill, the state will convene in Columbuit Friday S. Ward ol Mentor, Grand Marshal; Jerry
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Norris and Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21, for the 163rd C. Rasor of Commercial Point, Senior
arid daughter, Tracy,,Mr. and annual meeting of the Grand Lodge of Grand Deacon ; Daniel F. Iceman ol
Mrs. Marshall Roush and s'On Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio.
Wooster, Junior Grand Deacon, Robert L;
Joey, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, and
Delegates f.rom Ohio's 680 Masonic . ' Henderson of Waverly, Grand Tyler.
Dean Hill.
Lodges, the oldest and largest fraternal
Masonic dignitaries from throughout
Arthur Hill of Morehead, Ky. organization in Ohio, will elect new Grand the United States and Canada, including
University spent the weekend Lodge Officers for 1972. Outgoing Grand several Past Grand Masters, will atiend
with his parentS, Mr. and Mrs. Master of Ohio is Fay L. Gullion of the convention.
Dallas Hill. A birthday dinner Columbus, who Is a clerk of the Probate
Delegates wlll hear reports on Ohio
was held in his honor at the Hill Court of Franklin County.
Masonry and its activities during the past
home Sunday. Attending were
The two day session will be held at the year.
Miss Leanne Nease, Mr. and Veterans Memorial Auditorium. Other
They include the Ohio Masonic Home
Mrs. Marshall Roush and Joey, present officers of the Grand Lodge of Ohio in Springfield, which cares for nearly 500
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Norris besides Gullion are:
residents at an annual cost of $3 milllon,
and daughter, Tracy.
Dr. Dale E. Fox of Cincinnati, Deputy and the '!/ Grand Lodge scholarships,
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe was a Grand Master, who is in line to be elected awarded each year at 'J:1 Ohio colleges,
Sunday guest of her son, Mr. Grand Master for the coming year; Royal universities and theological seminaries.
and Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Jr. at . C. Scofield of Sebring, Senior Grand
All Master Masons may attend the
Gallipolis Rt.
Warden; Robert D. Sager of Oregon, Grand Lodge activities from 9 a.m. to 4
Mt. and Mrs. Herbert Roush Junior Grand Warden; James J. Harbage p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. until noon Saturspent Friday evening with Mr. · of Worthington, Grand Treasurer; Robert day. Freemasonry in Ohio began in
and Mrs. Oil Boston at ·Racine. A.· Hinshaw of Worthington, . Grand January, 1808 when 12 delegates from six
Mrs. Davis Jones and two Secretary; The Rev. Morris J. Allton of Lodges met In Chillicothe and·formed the
children of Hillsboro, w. Va., Westerville, Grand Chaplain; Calvin T. · Grand Lodge of Ohio.
spent Sunday with Mr. and

M~: ~J ~A K 18~~ 1E!c.~JACa~; Mrs., Jess ~derSO~ 1and 'alSo
P R ' c e, c r Ncr NNAr .u s called on Mrs. Zelpha Boggess.

BUY EARLY -AND SAVE

.

.
The disturbing feature is that a!1 ?
too often the case liaa ·been decided In ''
favor of the student and against, the
sehool. This cituld well mean that
schools have been g~lty of violating the
:~:.
hasic constitutional rights of studen~ .
~ ·
. The guidelines published by Ute
§; ·
State
Board of Education do permit
t,:
local school boards to adopt
&lt;~
"reasonable regulations." The problem
~
will be over deftnlqg what Is
~
•t....,..'reasonable
... '
-.. ~.
:{:
By Prof. ·Ed WaJJe 9
suspicion. It is a time when the legal
~Y not involve our students ~
~;
"I've got my rights!"
document has replaced the handshak help1ng to determl"ne what ts
~
Over
the
years,
this
has
been
the
as
binding a deal. ·
·
e . "reason~ble?.' .' This _would open up
~
While one may lament this change, avenues· of co_mmuntcation between
:;:; batUe cry of the American citizen who
has
fell
put
upon,
Such
a
cry
·usu81ly
perhaps
it is · necessary. The legal generations. Thtswouldsh~theyo\lllg
~;;
evokes the understanding arid sym, document ·replaced !he handshake !*ople of Gallla and Metgs Count!.,
.~)
f.: pathy of those citizens to whom It is because there were thoSe who misused that we adults do ~onslder students as
said. For truly, · in America, every the handshake. It seems to the State Important_people with rights ..
~
citizen "has his rights"- or does he? Board ·'that enough Instances of the
. A,Jso, mvolvlng studenjs tn deter=
::l
This week, the Board of Education violation of students' rights have OC· mmmg reasonable regulations would
~:
oftheStateofOhiopublishedguldelines curred to warrant the issuance- of intcodu~e them ~.o .the ~!ten overlooked
@!
designed to guarantee the extension of guidelines.
compamon of rtghts - .RESPON"right..:" to. the public school student. ·
Indeed, over the past decade, many SIBILITY. The school has nghts, _too;
;~
How
dtd
this
happen?
What
prompted
cases
have been taken to courts by but it h~~ .a major responslbUity. the
~)
!ij the State Board to take such action? parents and students cllarging the r~sponstbllity to produce competent ,
In all probability, the guidelines schools with a violation of the basic cttizens.
,.;
;
Wouldn't it be .beautiful if the adult ~
•· are the result of a general "legalism" rights of the slitdent. Such suits have
sweeping the .country . We 'are wi· dealtwlthhairanddress.style,freedom of the future ouldtd us, and whe~ put · t,:
dergoing a transition In which ,11'11111 in of speech, search of student lockers,- upon, he would·say, '_'l'~e.go!~Y rij!hls ~:
............~~~-... .f~l~~~.. . ~~~ 1s. _re~laced . by ,and fr~o~-~f the press,
·
-AND my responstbllities.
~

I

By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Randy PyleS of Racine spent
the weekend · wi th Greg
Donohew.
Mr.- and Mrs. Lester Roush
are on a vacation through the
soulherrt states. Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Manuel and Angie are
staying with the Roush
children while they are away.
Miss Christi Badgely spent
Sunday afternoon with Linda
and Carol O'Brien.
. Brice Hart of Racine spent
Friday night \vtth Ke ith
Hayman.
Erwin Gloeckner · and
granddaughter , Christi
Badgely, spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Pearson at Dorcas.
Mrs. Golda Shain was a
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Roush Sunday.
Mrs. Lillie -Hart of Racine
visited her parenlli, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hayman saturday
evening.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Bearhs of
Portsmoutl), Va., and Mrs.
Erma Wilson, local, spent a
week's vacation with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burri and Bill'at
Bolivar Dam and Mr. and Mrs.
Bud Wilson and family at ·

1 ., " ""

TUCo TRIPL-~ICK

93'

4 o2. · 4·9·~ PICTURE
PUZZLE
I

.

~\

·.

-

•.

'I'

.

�"""r~f,.,,

.
10-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pomeroy, o., Oct. 12, 1m

Sentinel Classifieds Get' Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!.
r

. WAN'f ADS. ·
NO TIC_E
INFORMATION
"--'
·' • OEAD\.IN!OS
N'S A 1.
·,$P .M. Doy Before Publlco tlorl: HAYMA
uc •on - a Q"""
· Monday De-ad line 9 a.m . ,

place t o qo

Fnday

each

Cancellatlon- .Correefions

evenin9, 7 p.m . at laurel

Will be accepted Unt/19 a.m . for ,
Day of P&amp;bllcation

Cli ff on old Rt. ·7, 1 mi'le west
of Rock Spri ngs Fairground.

..1,

REGULATIONS

·

10-10-tfc

'

Wanted To Buy

For Rent

GOOD quality hay, 300 to 500
bales; phone 992-2789.

'

For Sale

. .

----=======::'::=::_-;

Minimum Charge7sc

•.
,'"
"w

,,"'
'

,.'

12 cents per word three
consecutive insertiorf's.
18 centS p&amp;r ' word she: con .
secutlve insertions . ·
25 Per Cent Discount on 'paid
·ads and ads paid within lOdays.

10-ll -2tc

GUN Shoot, also rl,le m~t ches
- open .si tes only, Forked
Run Sportsman Cfub, Sunday,
Oc tnber 15. 12 noon .

31
10-11 · C

CARD OF THANKS
1
&amp; OBITUARY
51.50 for so word mln tmum . SKATE-AWAY, open WedEach addltion81 word 2c. .
nesday, Friday and SatUtday
evenings from 7:30 p.m. to
. _ BLIND ADS .
· Add t!tonal 2Sc .Charge per- lO · 30 p m Available for
Advertrsement.
:
· ·.
OFFIC-E HOU'11\-,
pnvate parltes on Monday,
1.8 ~ 30 a.m, tq s :oo, p.m. Daily, ·
Tuesday and Thursday
1 : 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
even ings, also Saturday and
Saturdav.
·
Sunday afternoons. Schedule
your parties early. Phone 985·
3929 or '985-9996.

Mus1cal Instruments

ring Your Unhulled

WALNUTS
TO OUR
. MECHANICAL
HI,ILLER
Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We .Will Pay You.

GIBSON Guitar, beautiful Les
Paul cusfom, sunburst finish, WEEKEND Rev ival at t&lt;unarrc
Per Hundred
new, 'h price $375; phl?r.1e 388Apostolic Church , Frlsja.v.~-1-- •
. Pounds ·
8271.
Del. 13 through Del. 15;
I0-6-61p
p.m. Speakers will be
After they
Evangelists Arlen and Mary
are Hulled
Hughes
of
Columbus.
Employment Wanted
Everyone welcome .
PAINTING, interior and ex.
10-8-6fc
terior ; phone 882-2482.
Start Buying October 2, 1972.
10-6-61p

-------

lost

UHEIL"

MAN ' S glasses, gold frames , on
North Second St. in Middleport ; phone 992-3145.
10-11 -3tc

Extelsior

Salt Works, Inc.

HEATING &amp;
•
COOLING

NOTICE

P.O. Box 267
992-3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

Window 1
Air Conditioners

YARD Sate, October 12th &amp;
13th, , Thursday and Friday,
312 Pearl Street, Middleport ;
sponsored by Silver Memorial
Youth.
10-10-ltc

Auto 'Sales

Hot Water. Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

RUMMAGE SALE In Hughes
Building, former electric
plant Thursday and Friday;' ~
a.m . to .4 p.m.
10 · 11 · 2'C

1970 PLYMOUTH, 4 door , good
fires and exhaust, air, power
brakes and steering ;, very
good condition, S1 ,400; phone
after 6 p.m. or all day
Saturday or Sunday, 992·5310.
10-6-61c

ARNOLD

BROTHERS

- - - - ---

FREE -'- To good home.- Half
992-24&lt;t8
' 65 FORO Falcon ; phone 742Siamese kittens , Hbuse
p
4649.
broken. Very atrectlonate. L_ _ _o_m_e_ro_y::.~'o_._ _.J
10-I0-3tc
Call 992-7201 after 5.
I0-11 -4tc GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Dctobe;
15, 1 p.m., Mite Hill road. 1970
TOYOTA
Corona ,
YARD Sale, Thursday, Friday
Pulled chokes and sleeve guns
automatic
tra nsmiss ion,
and Saturday on Larkin St.. · to be handicapped, 20, 16, and
radio and new radia l tires.
Rutland ; baby clothes and
12 gauges. Assorted meats.
Call 992-;201 after 5 p.m.
little girls :dresses.
Sponsored by Racine Fire _ _ _ _ _ ___,_0-8-61p
Department.
10•11 _3tc
I0-10-5tc 1965 FORD Galaxie 500, 2 door
Hardtop, 390, standard, red
YARD Sale, lfa mile from Rock
and
white ; excellent, $495 ;
Springs Fairground on Old
will take trade-in, 4 miles on
Rt. 3c, Friday and sa.turday, 9
County Rd. 3 from 7 bypass ;
a.m.
phone 742-3656.
10-11 -21c
10-ll -4tp
LEGAL NOTICE
To : David E~gene McDonald KOSCQT ,KOSMEI.ICS \MINK '70
VOLKSWAGEN, good
and \{elvl~ Virginia McDonald.
01 L Jl,ASE) . We have many
condition
. CaJJ after 6 p. m .
whose last known address was
new products since the for.
992-3401.
2'H7 FOurth Street, Columbus,
matlon of this Company. Also
Ohio . You are hereby notified several
I0-9-61p
neW ones this month
that vou are Defendants In a
plus monthly ~pecials . All
le;af action entitled Pomeroy
these in addi lion to the
Bank,
Rutland
National
Mobile Ho1;,~s For Sale
Branch,
Rutland ,
Ohio ,
originals. l.adies, we would
Plaintiff, YS. David Eugene
like very much for you to try CASH paid for all makes and
McDoneld and Velvle Virginia
these cosmefics and to serve
models of mobile homes.
·, · McDonald . This action has been you. Phone Helen Jane, 992assigned Case No. 1,.,945, and IS 5113.
Phone area cilde 614-423-9531.
pending In the Court of Common
____:
4-lJ.tfc
10-1-lfc
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
oblect of the complaint is
,. to The
TWO bedroom mobile home, in
foreclose the mortgage ViRGIN lA'S Beauty Salon on
good condition, $1,600.
against the following described Success Road between
Zuspan's Trailer Court,
real estate :
Tuppers Plains and Long
Velma G. Zuspan, Mason, W.
Situate in the VIllage of
Bottom . Open 6 days; some
Va .
Rutland. Meigs county , Ohio .
Beginning east 125 .3 feet frorn evenings . Phone 667-3041,
10-12-flip
the northwest corner of Lot No. Operator, Virginia Hayman.
9-14-lOtc
26 In said Village of Rutland ;
thence north 7,. degrees 27' east
·Meigs Mobile Homes
20 . 1 feet ; thence south 15
degrees 33 1 east 60 feet to the Help Wanted
center! ine of creek, crossing the
creek bank at ~5 feet ; thence 53.04 PER hotJr . Ideal part-time
south 37 degrees ,.2 ' west 25 feet
w ork , for mothers and
along the centerline of said
housewives. For interv iew,
crMk ; thence north 15 degrees
write C·O The Daily Sentinel,
33' west 75 feet , crossing the
Bo• 729-C, Pomeroy, Ohio
creek bank at 15 feet , to the
On Our Last
45769.
point of beginning, conta ining
0.031 acre , more or tess . The
ID-10-31p
1972 MOBILE HOME
easterly line of the above parcel
Is 1.5 teet from the easterly side WOMAN to live In and care for 9
left on our lot.
of the house on the lot and the
month old c hild ; salary
westerly line Is 2 feet from the
negotiable ;
references
westerly side of the house.
required
;
phone
992·3652.
Being part of the real estate
t0-I0-3tc · Whi ch we are ordering for
described in, deed recorded in
Volume 251, Page 361, Meigs
our customers, are approved
County Deed Records .
CARHOP wanted ; apply In
by
" Und e rwriters
The demand Is to foreclose all
person ; Craw' s Sfeak House.
Laborator,y"
to
insure ..
Interest owned by vou ef1d other
. I0-6-61c
customers the best Quality
parties , and for costs .
Home.
You are requ ired to answer
the Compla int with in twenty - WOMAN to live In with elderly
e ight days after . the last
lady, good salary , room and
Befo·re you buy, drive to
publication of th is notice, wh ich
board,
phone
992-5397
or
992Tuppers Plains and check
will b~ published on ce each
3507.
our Homes and Pri(:es.
week for six consecutive Weeks .
9-26-lfc
The lest publicat ion will be
'• made on November 16, 1972, and
the twenty ·eight days for an · PART-TIME ·low alto or boss
• swer
will commence on that
singer for local female gospel
'date .
.
group:
Phone 992-3089. I
In case or your failure to
10-12-llp
answer &lt;)I' otherwise respond as
required by the Oh io Rules of
• Civil Procedyre, ludgm~nt will WANTED, river deckhands , .
be rendered against you for th e
call only. M &amp; G Transport
667-3891 Tuppers Plains, 0 .
relief demanded In the Com .
Services, Inc .. .446 - 1014,
plaint.
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Dated : October )0, 1972.
I0-12-61c For Rent
Evelyn Lucke , Clerk
Court of Common Pleas
of Meigs County, Ohio FULL time barmaid and part- TRAILER lot ; Bob's Mobile
flO ) 12, 19, 26, Ill ) 2, 9, 16, 61
Court, Syracuse ; phone 992time waitress, apply in persorf
2951.
.. only, Wh ispering Pines Nile
- - - - - - - -- - Club.
10-11 -3tp

lEGAl NOTICE

_____

PRICE
REDUCED

1973 HOMES

MEIGS
MO.ILE
HOMES -

- -- -- -

33 ; phone 992-2941 or 992_-2689.

small balance of $36.21 or
payments may be arranged .
Phone 992-5331.
9-7-lfc

10-8-7tc

0

FALL special - 1967 Crestline
16 fl. fiberglas boat with 1967
V-4 Ev inrude motor, Gator·
lilt trailer ; two gas tanks plus
new battery included ; will
sacrifi ce for $1,000 ; also left
hand set of Sam Snead golf
clubs - 5 irons, 2 wood and
putter complete wit h bag , $60,
li ke new ; ca ll 992-7095after 5

EARlH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, land.sCaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size toaders. Work
done by hour or contract,
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Oump
trucks and tow-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9925232.

•

;WMP0/1390.

l'

1220 Wallllngton Blvd.

ly Ann 1. Walton
(lt)

12, It, 21

'4».7521.

o.,.vly~rk

·

I

\

.

BELPRE,~ ., •

'ON YOUR DIAl ,

'I~-_._~~~.:..,_.._!,

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display,.

From the largest T"""
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Sma Il~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
.. R~_dialor Speciatis1_..

''

r

.

'
'' .

1

'IJ.lEI?E S ONL.'(
ONE SIAAI.L.
DRAW6ACK .. 1

CAMPUS CLATrER

FOOTBALL
'IJ.lE 1-Q.IRG ARE

!FtHCRf, MlD.l &lt;OE:T
FREE MEDICAL.

WHeN I

'.
ONE INCH
CLOSER

AN''IO'Da=
FRIOUREO
- THAT
NATIONAL.
AAZARD'S
SKULL-

Plr. 992-2174

- - - -- -

SAID, ..

I [IIDN'r !#:AN

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

Real Estate For Sale

.,
,1
j _

J

WINNIE WINKLE

·'
,,

'YOU1RE NOT
iHINJ&lt;ING OF
SETTING HER

BACK AT 80NNAZ ....

HOIISE AFIRE!

,·.

TO·

.I

I KNOW/I.
LIKE IDPAY

Sf/HPRISE
VISIT8 ID OUR
SUPPLIE~

- -- - - -

.n,,
...

•'

:·
;I

., .

5331 .

10-10-61c
SIN GER sewing machine. Will
sell for re: pair bill of $29.50 or
payments may be arranged ;
phone 992-5331.
t0-10-6tc

~-~-~s_oLo

AKC registered Australian
terrier puppies, 7 weeks old,
S40 each ; phone 698-3202,
Clinton Gilkey .
10-10-6tc

•

' --

CLOSE out on 1971 full size zig zag sewing mach ine. For
sewing
stretch fabrics ,
buttonholes. fancy designs,
etc . Paint sl ightly blemished .
Choice of carrying case or
sewing stand. S49.80 cash or
terms available. Phone 9925641.
10-I0-6tc

Cleland
Realty

We're Not Foolin'
You Can't'beat our Used Car Prices.

.SONS

oz,

Botls.

Plus Tax
&amp;' Deposit
With NCh 0.00 PurcllaM
ol. Allllllllll GMeliM,

'

''·

Art' 't'OU rtEVfR. '

lAic

'•

BIG

Yli&amp;erdOJ'Ii C~aoli: A HOME-MADE FRmND WEMIS
LONGER THAN ONE. YOV BUY IN THE MARKET.-AUSTIN
O'JIAII.H
,

'roU lllf JEWEL EO
BOX:) "OAODY"?

(0 1911 I:IDI l'tala- ll'lltlloalt, Ia&lt;.)

ACROSS

/tO·Il!&gt;7zj

1971 BUICK ........................ '2849

•

Sportwagon. Beautiful coral finish with vlny; Interior,
factory air conditioned, luggage rack, radio, 350 V-8
engine, automatic trans., power steering &amp; bral&lt;es, llke
new w.w tires. If you want a show piece &amp; plenty of lu xury
try this otJtslandlng buy.

197i CHEVROLET .................
•3095
'
- ..

~~~:::=._
'lOUR I&lt;NOWL.EOGE OF

Hardtop cciujle, local low mileage, 1-owner car, 307.
engine, 3-Speed transmission, ))OWer steering, bucket
seats, console, sharp blue linlsh, radio, ~HARP IS THE
WORD!
.
ttttttltttlltiiiiLo.,

WOEFULLY DEI"ICIENT.
I'M CORRECTINCi
VOUR SKETCH.

.

Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title, sandalwood finish with brown vinyl roar, vinyl saddle Interior, 4-season air condllltlonlng, turbohydramallc, ·
' power steering, whlte-wallllres, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.
.

1968 CHEVEu.E

•

.• '
'

'.•

.•
&gt;
\

..

•

'

795
TERRY
~Ml

1968 CAMARO Conve~ble .....•1795

AND
SNOW
RETREADS

HIRMOMft

.

TEtmY.

1966 CHEVROLET ................... '649

1966 FORD ......._••••••.•••••••.•.••. '3M
. Falrlane 500' dr., _locol owner, spotless clean Interior, 6
cyl, .engine, std. trans., radio, Special for weekend.

~ GENERAL

TIRE SALES

Y.. •""r"•

POMEROY.
"four Chevy
l

992-2126

~I...

-·"· lou.r-1111111
Mlflol .... ,... · - ., 1M •'"' •I•

to work

It:

Ia L 0 N G-1" B L L 0 W

,._

One letter •Imply lltaDdl for another: In· thiJ sample A Itt
1lltd for the three L'1, X for .the two O'a, ett. Slnlle letleniil
apoatropbes, the lenctb ucl formaUon of the wordS ~~
bintl. Each cla7 the code letten are clll!emt.
C&amp;YPTOQt10TB8

•

J DP WltB CNL GVMNCH DP . JDYLS;
CN L HGLW CLH C V H CD XL

DHitr"

-RVS ABCWSIIf

nil

I

1,

\I

wee a I l l

J 'I , IPm fliTCH WILY AIACUI

AXYDLBAAXll

Prompt Delivery on
'73 CBrs &amp;
Truck•

WITH EXCHANGE
. .
' CASING

CERUDE

(A

DAILY CRYPTOQUoTE- Here's h~w

.-

I
II 0

I ANAUF·

DOWN
1, Dolores
-Rio
%. Yale
3. Nether- ,
lands
river
4. "__: Maria"
•

BelAir St. Wagon, I owner, local car &amp; sPotless vinyl Interior, good tires, V-8 engine, power slftrlng, brakes,
automatic Irons., radio. See this car as II Is priced low,
low, low.
·
·

00

•'

of-"
44. Wife of
Ia go
45, Cornice
=='~
qr seckel
Kind of
agent

ll!TURH5 TO ·
-INGTON.

-

. (Sl.)

It. Little
drink

Yellerda7'• An1wer
· 25. 37, MiStt
Domini
Farrow
27. One-horse
38. Wooden
earrlage
core
· 28. "Down
3&amp;. Time
period
under"
bird
(abbr.)
10. Catch
4t, Corrlda
~~Exclude
. shout
33, Incense· - - "41. Mar1ou
. ment
tree
35, Cafnlp 4"27Adjectlv&lt;
36. Mexican
for a
tree
Lotbarlo

..Essays

1\:f 011 10
1ltf: ~T
ro&gt;.5T.

Local 1-owner low mileage car, beautiful creem finish
with bloc~ lop, bucket seats, with console, new while-wall
tires, power steering and automatic transmission. Radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY .
COME.

tion ,

6. Painful
yearning
Football
number
Ruffian
13. Effortlessly
(2 wds.)
(st.)
15. Well now!
16. Check attendance
(2 wds. )
sl.)
for

5, Craving
6, Greek
island
7. Greek
letter
8. Vandal
9. Fellow (sl.)
11. Not a soul
(2 wds.l
14. However
(var. )
16. Point
oi land
17, Japanese
city
18. Increased

tt,Aitempt
Zl. Barby
_ lega.l
~~- --=-=- out ___ _ · means
%2. Yourig
(supplestem or
ment)
twig
, Hot desert wind
.Number·
ing; comprising
(3 wds.)
Time period
.Include;
contain
(2 wds.)

•'

Malibu Spt, Cpe, air conditioned, 307 engine, power :
' steering &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl lop &amp; blk.
vinyl Inferior, radio, good w-w tires.
·

MUD

;oc:..:.:1D~

· TI-lE I-lUMAN EAR IS

I. Retarda-

____:. . ____J::

DICK TRACY

1970 CAMARO .......,. .............•2095

.MIDDLEPORT, 0.

EYE&amp; 0111liE

GuY \11110 GA'IE

Only •3799

8 PAK
16'

t
t

''·

Less than 1800 miles, new car title &amp;warranty, tint.
glass, factory air cond., p. steering &amp; brakes, turbo
hydramatlc, while-wall tires, w-covers, E. clock,
radio, Deluxe guards.

FOR SALE by owner, home at
Pt. Pleasant , W. Va. ,
beautiful permastone_ home
with spacious lawn, excellent
residential area 1 floor plan, 7
exceptionally large rooms,
fully carpeted, 3 file baths,
basement. Can be 1 or 2
family dwelling . May be seen
by calling 1-304-675-4856 or 1304-675-3138.
10-12-ltp.

SPECIAL CONTINUEs
'

·'

'

.1972 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 4 DR._

PHON E•992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHQWINGS
·please

WHY PAY RENT?
You can own th is 7 rooms, 3
bedroom home for a price so
low you won't believe II. This
2 story frame has 2 porches
and a nice carport and bath.
DON'T DELAY. SS,ooO.
IN SYRACUSE
Stately older plac~ l~ .a g~ _-~
rocation . · .7 rooms ,- .4
b.edrooms ,
2
baths,
basement, garage, level lot.
Sl2,500.
GROWING FAMILY?
Your first consideration
must be size. This 5 bedroom
home may solve your
problem . Located In a good
neighborhood. 1'12 baths,
garage, utility etc. $12,800.
-RARE OPPORTUNITYA nice J bedroom api. plus a
good business, located In a
town destined to grow. This 5
·room apt. has nice kitchen
hardwood rtoors , both.'
EQUIPMENT AND STOCK
GOES. $17,900.
TO BUY OR SELL CONTACT US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
PHONE 992-2259

.

YOU MONEY!

HOUSES DON'T SELL THEMSELVES, THEY CAN'T
, SAY A WORD. SOMETIMES IT TAKES A ~RO WHO
HAS TRAINING TO DO THE JOB. LET US DO YOUR
TALKING FOR A CHANGE . THE SIGN BELOW COULD ..
APPEAR ON YOUR PROPERTY NEXT WEEK.

Atthe Cross Roads on Rt. 124

MILLER .
[ MQIILE HOMIS

I

''
'
'

992:2094

GooD

MI~L.ER '&amp;

lilt.,....

ON M'-1 NOSE

FAMIL.'/, ,

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

ponds~

2 , FOR
w.·"" to yoU

LEETLE POWDER
· DABBIW' M'ISELF

CARE FOR HN

2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace . Storm
doors and windows . Aluminum siding. A neat house on a
nice lot.
4 ACRES
4 BEDROOMS - large TV lounge, 7 closets. 1'12 baths.
Large kitchen with solid oak cabinets and double sink.
Basement. Beautiful 9lew of Route 7.

STEREO 8 track , 1972 model in
walnut console, take over
pay ments of $6 .55 a month or
pay balance of $94.25 ; call 992-

All kinds, 'oil sizes for men,
women, young men, boys
and girls. Hurry to .. .

I BETTER DO A

WECAN ·SAVE

NEW hospita l bed, S150; new
wheelchair , SlOO ,· one com·
mode cha ir, $20; phone 9925736.
10-I0-3tp

Buy 2 Pairs1 PAIR FR'EE

Dick and Dale Help Yau
Your Meat · Problems.

GLORVBE!!

..

10-10-3tc

MONEY . SAVER

OpenBTiiS
Monday lhru Salurda y
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 ,

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

t MALE Oalmalian pup; pnon•
992-5535 after 5 p.m.
10-I0.3tc

-;::::=========~
PANTS &amp;JEANS

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING ,.
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate-'
PHONE 992:2550

WINDER WHILE I DAB ·
A LEETLE PoWDER

l

itROOFING

WILL cut or trim trees ,
reasonable; a lso clean out SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows~ carports,
basements, attics and
7 ROOM house &amp; bath with or
marquees, aluminum siding
cellars; phone 949-3221.
without furniture, paneled
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
I0-4-301c
and carpeting ; phone 742representative,. For free
3875.
TANKS AROBIC
estimates, phone Charles
10-ll-6tp SEPTIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
Lisle, Syracuse~ V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
CLEANED," REPAIRED .
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
3-2-tfc
MILLER SANITATION,
Conchas, New Mexico. S2,975.
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
No down . No Interest. S25 mo.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
662-3035.
for 119 mos . Vacation
Septic tank s Installed, George
10-4-tfc
Paradise . Free Brochure.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box
4--25-tfc
CONCRETE
200100. Alameda, California READY -MIX
delivered right to your
94501.
project. Fast and easy. Free SEWING MACHINES. Repair
10-3-30tp
.estimates. Phone 992 -3284.
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ..
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
5 ROOM house and batb,
Authorized Singer 4iales and
Middleport, Ohio.
·•
located on Brick StreeT.
Service. Wfi Sharpen Scissors.
6-30-tfc
Rutland ; Interior being
3-29-lfc
remodeled; phone 742-3334.
· 10-3-12tc sePTIC · TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
HOUSE In Long Bottom , phone
4782, Gallleolis, John Russell,
cancelled?
Lost
your
985-3529.
operator's license? Call 992Owner &amp; operator .
2~66 .
.
5-12-tfc
6-11 -tfc
6-15-lfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Phone 949-3821
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Racine, Ohio
Complete front !nd service,
CriII Bradford
tune up and brake service.
110 Mechanic Street
5-1-tfc
balanced
elecWheels
--~--All
work
tronically'.
DOZER and back hoe work,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Reasonable
ponds and septic tanks, dit- guaranteed.
rates . Phone 742-3232 or 992,
ching service; top soli, fill
NEW LISTING
3213.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K ExSYRACUSE - 7 room home with nice bath, 3 or 4
7-27-tfc
cavating. Phone 992-5367,
bedrooms. Closets. Gas furnace heat. TV room .
Dick Karr, Jr.
Basement, 2 porches ~nd garage.
9-1 -lfc
HOT WATER HEAT
3 BEDROOMS- Nice kitchen, bat~, dining and Jarge
\
living. Baseboard heafwllh modern gaS" bJ!ILer. Lots of
· closet space. Fenced yard. Carport,
COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - 3 bedrooms with large closets. Nice
both, natural gas forced air furnace. Birch kitchen with
lots of cabinets and cook units. Rec. room with shower.
Carport.
-

2 BLACK miniature poodles,
males, S25each ; 1 Monogram
oil heater, 33,600 BTU, $75;
phone 882-3205.
________
1o_-8-6tp

YAMAHA Enduro 250, 9 months
old, like new, S500. Phooe 9927109.
IO-Htc

THE _SHOP

- GUARANTEEDP.hone 992·2094

- =--- ----'---

ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model. Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
u~es paper bags . Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new,.
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-5641.
10-i0-6tc

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

On Most American,cars

HOU SE and tra il er space ;
con tac t Don Milior 992-5693.
10-10-6fc 8 TRACK STEREO, freight
----c-- - - -- - - damaged, in beautiful walnut
TWO
furnished
room s , console. Will sell for ·S101.50or.
available noW, 413 Spring pay Sl.SO per week . Phone 992Ave.; phone 992-3419.
5331.
10-8-t21p - - - - - - - - 9-7-lfc
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
For Sale
Park view Kennels, Phone 9925443.
1969 VW Formula Vee, mags,
tape player, the works , - - - - - - - - - -8-_15-tfc
1
$ •400 '
phone 992 -5695 APPLES, Fitzpatr ick Or evening s.
10-11 -ltc chards, State Route 6°9,
•
.Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
AKC registered Collie pups, 6 _ __ _..:..._ ___8_
·30-tfc
weeks old; phone 675-1745
_
after 6 p.m.
~
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-up
10-11 -6tc camper ; includes spare tire,
--------canopy and plastic storm
EARLY American stereo-radio window . Trailer has been
combinafion, AM-FM radio, 4 wired for electr ic, 3 outlets.
speaker sound system , 4 Excellent condition, $650 ;
speed automatic .changer . call 992-5815 after 5 p.m.
Balance S77 .54 . Use our
.
10-12-41c
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
· I0-8-6tc ADM IRAL TV, black and white,
call 1-985-3901, Gertrude
·MODERN Walnut type stereo- Warner .
radio, AM-FM radio, 4
10·12-6lp
speaker sound system, .4
\
speed automatic changer. BSA 650, chopper, coffin tank,
Balance $68 .79 . Use our springer custom paint,
budget terms . .Call 992-7085. Harley Davidson rear end,
10-8-6tc $1 ,400 or less . Phone 992-5663.
- - - - -- - -10-12-6tp
SQUARE DEAL, NEW DEAL - - - - - - - politics aside, it's alwayS a
GOOD DEAL at KUHL'S Real Estate For Sale
BARGAIN CENTER, Rt. 7 RACINE - 10 room house,
" at caution light," Tuppers
bath , basement, garage, two
Plains . Open to 7; closed
lots. Phone 949-4313.
Mondays; phone _667-3858.
4-5-tfp
Besides· usual selection of - ; - - - - -- clean
used
furniiure , 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
guaranteed appliances, just
large lot, natural gas, built-in
arr iv ed NEW Hurty 20" cabinets
In kitchen. Close to
Chester
Slick
bikes;
radio station in Bradbury.
discounted to $40 ; Murray 10Phone 992-2602.
speed bikes , $79. LAYAWAY
9-29-12fc
for XMAS. .
I0-8 -6tc

DOE EIIINV SecoNTtvOW,

r

Busin~ss Services

EXPERT
· Wheel Alignment
'5.55

BuBBA IS .

PAW··WATCH OUT.TH' .

~=========~-;=========~-;:=========~

1
·:"the. Publisher reserv~s the - - -- - - - - --,----beds, or complete households. 3 ROOM furni shed itpar1ment,
right to edit or reject any ads
Writ~ M . D. Miller. Rt. 4,
util it.les paid, 1 child, no pets; COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
deemed
obiectiona l.
The
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271 .
356 North 4th Sf. , Middleport
Salt Work s, E. Main St.,
publisher will not. be respons ible. ··YARD Sa le, Thursday and
.
6-28.tfc
Wm . Smith, $80 mo. ,
Pol)ler9y- Pirone 992-3891-.for m.ore than one incorrect
Friday , Bashan ·Eagle Ridge
10-8-BtP
·innrtlon .
Road at old Frank Smith t
4-12-tfc
•
I RATES
f
tl
odd
5
tFor Wan\ Ad Service
arm ; some an ques,
TRAILER space cloSe to new JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
5 c~nts: p~r Word one Insertion
and ends; starts at 9 a.m.
8
Meigs High Sch~l on old Rt.
Sewing Machine. Will sell for

ffN BROTHER

'

~------~-----.---~--------~------,

3 BEDR(J()M mobile home
10-8-6tc
in Ma son. Cal l Poi·nf Plec:isant 1971 KAWASAKI 100, excellen·l
condition , ready to go .
-- - - -- 675-1684.
Sa crifice for only $260 . Phone
OLO Furn iture, oak· tables,
10-6.6
organs,' dishes, cloCks, brass - - - -- - -10-5-12tc
Coolville 667-6214,
20 ~

·~'

W Y D CNL.G L.,-..;;.....;;;':-"~

1

•••l

�"""r~f,.,,

.
10-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pomeroy, o., Oct. 12, 1m

Sentinel Classifieds Get' Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!.
r

. WAN'f ADS. ·
NO TIC_E
INFORMATION
"--'
·' • OEAD\.IN!OS
N'S A 1.
·,$P .M. Doy Before Publlco tlorl: HAYMA
uc •on - a Q"""
· Monday De-ad line 9 a.m . ,

place t o qo

Fnday

each

Cancellatlon- .Correefions

evenin9, 7 p.m . at laurel

Will be accepted Unt/19 a.m . for ,
Day of P&amp;bllcation

Cli ff on old Rt. ·7, 1 mi'le west
of Rock Spri ngs Fairground.

..1,

REGULATIONS

·

10-10-tfc

'

Wanted To Buy

For Rent

GOOD quality hay, 300 to 500
bales; phone 992-2789.

'

For Sale

. .

----=======::'::=::_-;

Minimum Charge7sc

•.
,'"
"w

,,"'
'

,.'

12 cents per word three
consecutive insertiorf's.
18 centS p&amp;r ' word she: con .
secutlve insertions . ·
25 Per Cent Discount on 'paid
·ads and ads paid within lOdays.

10-ll -2tc

GUN Shoot, also rl,le m~t ches
- open .si tes only, Forked
Run Sportsman Cfub, Sunday,
Oc tnber 15. 12 noon .

31
10-11 · C

CARD OF THANKS
1
&amp; OBITUARY
51.50 for so word mln tmum . SKATE-AWAY, open WedEach addltion81 word 2c. .
nesday, Friday and SatUtday
evenings from 7:30 p.m. to
. _ BLIND ADS .
· Add t!tonal 2Sc .Charge per- lO · 30 p m Available for
Advertrsement.
:
· ·.
OFFIC-E HOU'11\-,
pnvate parltes on Monday,
1.8 ~ 30 a.m, tq s :oo, p.m. Daily, ·
Tuesday and Thursday
1 : 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
even ings, also Saturday and
Saturdav.
·
Sunday afternoons. Schedule
your parties early. Phone 985·
3929 or '985-9996.

Mus1cal Instruments

ring Your Unhulled

WALNUTS
TO OUR
. MECHANICAL
HI,ILLER
Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We .Will Pay You.

GIBSON Guitar, beautiful Les
Paul cusfom, sunburst finish, WEEKEND Rev ival at t&lt;unarrc
Per Hundred
new, 'h price $375; phl?r.1e 388Apostolic Church , Frlsja.v.~-1-- •
. Pounds ·
8271.
Del. 13 through Del. 15;
I0-6-61p
p.m. Speakers will be
After they
Evangelists Arlen and Mary
are Hulled
Hughes
of
Columbus.
Employment Wanted
Everyone welcome .
PAINTING, interior and ex.
10-8-6fc
terior ; phone 882-2482.
Start Buying October 2, 1972.
10-6-61p

-------

lost

UHEIL"

MAN ' S glasses, gold frames , on
North Second St. in Middleport ; phone 992-3145.
10-11 -3tc

Extelsior

Salt Works, Inc.

HEATING &amp;
•
COOLING

NOTICE

P.O. Box 267
992-3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

Window 1
Air Conditioners

YARD Sate, October 12th &amp;
13th, , Thursday and Friday,
312 Pearl Street, Middleport ;
sponsored by Silver Memorial
Youth.
10-10-ltc

Auto 'Sales

Hot Water. Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

RUMMAGE SALE In Hughes
Building, former electric
plant Thursday and Friday;' ~
a.m . to .4 p.m.
10 · 11 · 2'C

1970 PLYMOUTH, 4 door , good
fires and exhaust, air, power
brakes and steering ;, very
good condition, S1 ,400; phone
after 6 p.m. or all day
Saturday or Sunday, 992·5310.
10-6-61c

ARNOLD

BROTHERS

- - - - ---

FREE -'- To good home.- Half
992-24&lt;t8
' 65 FORO Falcon ; phone 742Siamese kittens , Hbuse
p
4649.
broken. Very atrectlonate. L_ _ _o_m_e_ro_y::.~'o_._ _.J
10-I0-3tc
Call 992-7201 after 5.
I0-11 -4tc GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Dctobe;
15, 1 p.m., Mite Hill road. 1970
TOYOTA
Corona ,
YARD Sale, Thursday, Friday
Pulled chokes and sleeve guns
automatic
tra nsmiss ion,
and Saturday on Larkin St.. · to be handicapped, 20, 16, and
radio and new radia l tires.
Rutland ; baby clothes and
12 gauges. Assorted meats.
Call 992-;201 after 5 p.m.
little girls :dresses.
Sponsored by Racine Fire _ _ _ _ _ ___,_0-8-61p
Department.
10•11 _3tc
I0-10-5tc 1965 FORD Galaxie 500, 2 door
Hardtop, 390, standard, red
YARD Sale, lfa mile from Rock
and
white ; excellent, $495 ;
Springs Fairground on Old
will take trade-in, 4 miles on
Rt. 3c, Friday and sa.turday, 9
County Rd. 3 from 7 bypass ;
a.m.
phone 742-3656.
10-11 -21c
10-ll -4tp
LEGAL NOTICE
To : David E~gene McDonald KOSCQT ,KOSMEI.ICS \MINK '70
VOLKSWAGEN, good
and \{elvl~ Virginia McDonald.
01 L Jl,ASE) . We have many
condition
. CaJJ after 6 p. m .
whose last known address was
new products since the for.
992-3401.
2'H7 FOurth Street, Columbus,
matlon of this Company. Also
Ohio . You are hereby notified several
I0-9-61p
neW ones this month
that vou are Defendants In a
plus monthly ~pecials . All
le;af action entitled Pomeroy
these in addi lion to the
Bank,
Rutland
National
Mobile Ho1;,~s For Sale
Branch,
Rutland ,
Ohio ,
originals. l.adies, we would
Plaintiff, YS. David Eugene
like very much for you to try CASH paid for all makes and
McDoneld and Velvle Virginia
these cosmefics and to serve
models of mobile homes.
·, · McDonald . This action has been you. Phone Helen Jane, 992assigned Case No. 1,.,945, and IS 5113.
Phone area cilde 614-423-9531.
pending In the Court of Common
____:
4-lJ.tfc
10-1-lfc
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
oblect of the complaint is
,. to The
TWO bedroom mobile home, in
foreclose the mortgage ViRGIN lA'S Beauty Salon on
good condition, $1,600.
against the following described Success Road between
Zuspan's Trailer Court,
real estate :
Tuppers Plains and Long
Velma G. Zuspan, Mason, W.
Situate in the VIllage of
Bottom . Open 6 days; some
Va .
Rutland. Meigs county , Ohio .
Beginning east 125 .3 feet frorn evenings . Phone 667-3041,
10-12-flip
the northwest corner of Lot No. Operator, Virginia Hayman.
9-14-lOtc
26 In said Village of Rutland ;
thence north 7,. degrees 27' east
·Meigs Mobile Homes
20 . 1 feet ; thence south 15
degrees 33 1 east 60 feet to the Help Wanted
center! ine of creek, crossing the
creek bank at ~5 feet ; thence 53.04 PER hotJr . Ideal part-time
south 37 degrees ,.2 ' west 25 feet
w ork , for mothers and
along the centerline of said
housewives. For interv iew,
crMk ; thence north 15 degrees
write C·O The Daily Sentinel,
33' west 75 feet , crossing the
Bo• 729-C, Pomeroy, Ohio
creek bank at 15 feet , to the
On Our Last
45769.
point of beginning, conta ining
0.031 acre , more or tess . The
ID-10-31p
1972 MOBILE HOME
easterly line of the above parcel
Is 1.5 teet from the easterly side WOMAN to live In and care for 9
left on our lot.
of the house on the lot and the
month old c hild ; salary
westerly line Is 2 feet from the
negotiable ;
references
westerly side of the house.
required
;
phone
992·3652.
Being part of the real estate
t0-I0-3tc · Whi ch we are ordering for
described in, deed recorded in
Volume 251, Page 361, Meigs
our customers, are approved
County Deed Records .
CARHOP wanted ; apply In
by
" Und e rwriters
The demand Is to foreclose all
person ; Craw' s Sfeak House.
Laborator,y"
to
insure ..
Interest owned by vou ef1d other
. I0-6-61c
customers the best Quality
parties , and for costs .
Home.
You are requ ired to answer
the Compla int with in twenty - WOMAN to live In with elderly
e ight days after . the last
lady, good salary , room and
Befo·re you buy, drive to
publication of th is notice, wh ich
board,
phone
992-5397
or
992Tuppers Plains and check
will b~ published on ce each
3507.
our Homes and Pri(:es.
week for six consecutive Weeks .
9-26-lfc
The lest publicat ion will be
'• made on November 16, 1972, and
the twenty ·eight days for an · PART-TIME ·low alto or boss
• swer
will commence on that
singer for local female gospel
'date .
.
group:
Phone 992-3089. I
In case or your failure to
10-12-llp
answer &lt;)I' otherwise respond as
required by the Oh io Rules of
• Civil Procedyre, ludgm~nt will WANTED, river deckhands , .
be rendered against you for th e
call only. M &amp; G Transport
667-3891 Tuppers Plains, 0 .
relief demanded In the Com .
Services, Inc .. .446 - 1014,
plaint.
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Dated : October )0, 1972.
I0-12-61c For Rent
Evelyn Lucke , Clerk
Court of Common Pleas
of Meigs County, Ohio FULL time barmaid and part- TRAILER lot ; Bob's Mobile
flO ) 12, 19, 26, Ill ) 2, 9, 16, 61
Court, Syracuse ; phone 992time waitress, apply in persorf
2951.
.. only, Wh ispering Pines Nile
- - - - - - - -- - Club.
10-11 -3tp

lEGAl NOTICE

_____

PRICE
REDUCED

1973 HOMES

MEIGS
MO.ILE
HOMES -

- -- -- -

33 ; phone 992-2941 or 992_-2689.

small balance of $36.21 or
payments may be arranged .
Phone 992-5331.
9-7-lfc

10-8-7tc

0

FALL special - 1967 Crestline
16 fl. fiberglas boat with 1967
V-4 Ev inrude motor, Gator·
lilt trailer ; two gas tanks plus
new battery included ; will
sacrifi ce for $1,000 ; also left
hand set of Sam Snead golf
clubs - 5 irons, 2 wood and
putter complete wit h bag , $60,
li ke new ; ca ll 992-7095after 5

EARlH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, land.sCaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size toaders. Work
done by hour or contract,
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Oump
trucks and tow-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9925232.

•

;WMP0/1390.

l'

1220 Wallllngton Blvd.

ly Ann 1. Walton
(lt)

12, It, 21

'4».7521.

o.,.vly~rk

·

I

\

.

BELPRE,~ ., •

'ON YOUR DIAl ,

'I~-_._~~~.:..,_.._!,

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display,.

From the largest T"""
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Sma Il~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
.. R~_dialor Speciatis1_..

''

r

.

'
'' .

1

'IJ.lEI?E S ONL.'(
ONE SIAAI.L.
DRAW6ACK .. 1

CAMPUS CLATrER

FOOTBALL
'IJ.lE 1-Q.IRG ARE

!FtHCRf, MlD.l &lt;OE:T
FREE MEDICAL.

WHeN I

'.
ONE INCH
CLOSER

AN''IO'Da=
FRIOUREO
- THAT
NATIONAL.
AAZARD'S
SKULL-

Plr. 992-2174

- - - -- -

SAID, ..

I [IIDN'r !#:AN

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

Real Estate For Sale

.,
,1
j _

J

WINNIE WINKLE

·'
,,

'YOU1RE NOT
iHINJ&lt;ING OF
SETTING HER

BACK AT 80NNAZ ....

HOIISE AFIRE!

,·.

TO·

.I

I KNOW/I.
LIKE IDPAY

Sf/HPRISE
VISIT8 ID OUR
SUPPLIE~

- -- - - -

.n,,
...

•'

:·
;I

., .

5331 .

10-10-61c
SIN GER sewing machine. Will
sell for re: pair bill of $29.50 or
payments may be arranged ;
phone 992-5331.
t0-10-6tc

~-~-~s_oLo

AKC registered Australian
terrier puppies, 7 weeks old,
S40 each ; phone 698-3202,
Clinton Gilkey .
10-10-6tc

•

' --

CLOSE out on 1971 full size zig zag sewing mach ine. For
sewing
stretch fabrics ,
buttonholes. fancy designs,
etc . Paint sl ightly blemished .
Choice of carrying case or
sewing stand. S49.80 cash or
terms available. Phone 9925641.
10-I0-6tc

Cleland
Realty

We're Not Foolin'
You Can't'beat our Used Car Prices.

.SONS

oz,

Botls.

Plus Tax
&amp;' Deposit
With NCh 0.00 PurcllaM
ol. Allllllllll GMeliM,

'

''·

Art' 't'OU rtEVfR. '

lAic

'•

BIG

Yli&amp;erdOJ'Ii C~aoli: A HOME-MADE FRmND WEMIS
LONGER THAN ONE. YOV BUY IN THE MARKET.-AUSTIN
O'JIAII.H
,

'roU lllf JEWEL EO
BOX:) "OAODY"?

(0 1911 I:IDI l'tala- ll'lltlloalt, Ia&lt;.)

ACROSS

/tO·Il!&gt;7zj

1971 BUICK ........................ '2849

•

Sportwagon. Beautiful coral finish with vlny; Interior,
factory air conditioned, luggage rack, radio, 350 V-8
engine, automatic trans., power steering &amp; bral&lt;es, llke
new w.w tires. If you want a show piece &amp; plenty of lu xury
try this otJtslandlng buy.

197i CHEVROLET .................
•3095
'
- ..

~~~:::=._
'lOUR I&lt;NOWL.EOGE OF

Hardtop cciujle, local low mileage, 1-owner car, 307.
engine, 3-Speed transmission, ))OWer steering, bucket
seats, console, sharp blue linlsh, radio, ~HARP IS THE
WORD!
.
ttttttltttlltiiiiLo.,

WOEFULLY DEI"ICIENT.
I'M CORRECTINCi
VOUR SKETCH.

.

Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title, sandalwood finish with brown vinyl roar, vinyl saddle Interior, 4-season air condllltlonlng, turbohydramallc, ·
' power steering, whlte-wallllres, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.
.

1968 CHEVEu.E

•

.• '
'

'.•

.•
&gt;
\

..

•

'

795
TERRY
~Ml

1968 CAMARO Conve~ble .....•1795

AND
SNOW
RETREADS

HIRMOMft

.

TEtmY.

1966 CHEVROLET ................... '649

1966 FORD ......._••••••.•••••••.•.••. '3M
. Falrlane 500' dr., _locol owner, spotless clean Interior, 6
cyl, .engine, std. trans., radio, Special for weekend.

~ GENERAL

TIRE SALES

Y.. •""r"•

POMEROY.
"four Chevy
l

992-2126

~I...

-·"· lou.r-1111111
Mlflol .... ,... · - ., 1M •'"' •I•

to work

It:

Ia L 0 N G-1" B L L 0 W

,._

One letter •Imply lltaDdl for another: In· thiJ sample A Itt
1lltd for the three L'1, X for .the two O'a, ett. Slnlle letleniil
apoatropbes, the lenctb ucl formaUon of the wordS ~~
bintl. Each cla7 the code letten are clll!emt.
C&amp;YPTOQt10TB8

•

J DP WltB CNL GVMNCH DP . JDYLS;
CN L HGLW CLH C V H CD XL

DHitr"

-RVS ABCWSIIf

nil

I

1,

\I

wee a I l l

J 'I , IPm fliTCH WILY AIACUI

AXYDLBAAXll

Prompt Delivery on
'73 CBrs &amp;
Truck•

WITH EXCHANGE
. .
' CASING

CERUDE

(A

DAILY CRYPTOQUoTE- Here's h~w

.-

I
II 0

I ANAUF·

DOWN
1, Dolores
-Rio
%. Yale
3. Nether- ,
lands
river
4. "__: Maria"
•

BelAir St. Wagon, I owner, local car &amp; sPotless vinyl Interior, good tires, V-8 engine, power slftrlng, brakes,
automatic Irons., radio. See this car as II Is priced low,
low, low.
·
·

00

•'

of-"
44. Wife of
Ia go
45, Cornice
=='~
qr seckel
Kind of
agent

ll!TURH5 TO ·
-INGTON.

-

. (Sl.)

It. Little
drink

Yellerda7'• An1wer
· 25. 37, MiStt
Domini
Farrow
27. One-horse
38. Wooden
earrlage
core
· 28. "Down
3&amp;. Time
period
under"
bird
(abbr.)
10. Catch
4t, Corrlda
~~Exclude
. shout
33, Incense· - - "41. Mar1ou
. ment
tree
35, Cafnlp 4"27Adjectlv&lt;
36. Mexican
for a
tree
Lotbarlo

..Essays

1\:f 011 10
1ltf: ~T
ro&gt;.5T.

Local 1-owner low mileage car, beautiful creem finish
with bloc~ lop, bucket seats, with console, new while-wall
tires, power steering and automatic transmission. Radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY .
COME.

tion ,

6. Painful
yearning
Football
number
Ruffian
13. Effortlessly
(2 wds.)
(st.)
15. Well now!
16. Check attendance
(2 wds. )
sl.)
for

5, Craving
6, Greek
island
7. Greek
letter
8. Vandal
9. Fellow (sl.)
11. Not a soul
(2 wds.l
14. However
(var. )
16. Point
oi land
17, Japanese
city
18. Increased

tt,Aitempt
Zl. Barby
_ lega.l
~~- --=-=- out ___ _ · means
%2. Yourig
(supplestem or
ment)
twig
, Hot desert wind
.Number·
ing; comprising
(3 wds.)
Time period
.Include;
contain
(2 wds.)

•'

Malibu Spt, Cpe, air conditioned, 307 engine, power :
' steering &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl lop &amp; blk.
vinyl Inferior, radio, good w-w tires.
·

MUD

;oc:..:.:1D~

· TI-lE I-lUMAN EAR IS

I. Retarda-

____:. . ____J::

DICK TRACY

1970 CAMARO .......,. .............•2095

.MIDDLEPORT, 0.

EYE&amp; 0111liE

GuY \11110 GA'IE

Only •3799

8 PAK
16'

t
t

''·

Less than 1800 miles, new car title &amp;warranty, tint.
glass, factory air cond., p. steering &amp; brakes, turbo
hydramatlc, while-wall tires, w-covers, E. clock,
radio, Deluxe guards.

FOR SALE by owner, home at
Pt. Pleasant , W. Va. ,
beautiful permastone_ home
with spacious lawn, excellent
residential area 1 floor plan, 7
exceptionally large rooms,
fully carpeted, 3 file baths,
basement. Can be 1 or 2
family dwelling . May be seen
by calling 1-304-675-4856 or 1304-675-3138.
10-12-ltp.

SPECIAL CONTINUEs
'

·'

'

.1972 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 4 DR._

PHON E•992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHQWINGS
·please

WHY PAY RENT?
You can own th is 7 rooms, 3
bedroom home for a price so
low you won't believe II. This
2 story frame has 2 porches
and a nice carport and bath.
DON'T DELAY. SS,ooO.
IN SYRACUSE
Stately older plac~ l~ .a g~ _-~
rocation . · .7 rooms ,- .4
b.edrooms ,
2
baths,
basement, garage, level lot.
Sl2,500.
GROWING FAMILY?
Your first consideration
must be size. This 5 bedroom
home may solve your
problem . Located In a good
neighborhood. 1'12 baths,
garage, utility etc. $12,800.
-RARE OPPORTUNITYA nice J bedroom api. plus a
good business, located In a
town destined to grow. This 5
·room apt. has nice kitchen
hardwood rtoors , both.'
EQUIPMENT AND STOCK
GOES. $17,900.
TO BUY OR SELL CONTACT US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
PHONE 992-2259

.

YOU MONEY!

HOUSES DON'T SELL THEMSELVES, THEY CAN'T
, SAY A WORD. SOMETIMES IT TAKES A ~RO WHO
HAS TRAINING TO DO THE JOB. LET US DO YOUR
TALKING FOR A CHANGE . THE SIGN BELOW COULD ..
APPEAR ON YOUR PROPERTY NEXT WEEK.

Atthe Cross Roads on Rt. 124

MILLER .
[ MQIILE HOMIS

I

''
'
'

992:2094

GooD

MI~L.ER '&amp;

lilt.,....

ON M'-1 NOSE

FAMIL.'/, ,

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

ponds~

2 , FOR
w.·"" to yoU

LEETLE POWDER
· DABBIW' M'ISELF

CARE FOR HN

2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace . Storm
doors and windows . Aluminum siding. A neat house on a
nice lot.
4 ACRES
4 BEDROOMS - large TV lounge, 7 closets. 1'12 baths.
Large kitchen with solid oak cabinets and double sink.
Basement. Beautiful 9lew of Route 7.

STEREO 8 track , 1972 model in
walnut console, take over
pay ments of $6 .55 a month or
pay balance of $94.25 ; call 992-

All kinds, 'oil sizes for men,
women, young men, boys
and girls. Hurry to .. .

I BETTER DO A

WECAN ·SAVE

NEW hospita l bed, S150; new
wheelchair , SlOO ,· one com·
mode cha ir, $20; phone 9925736.
10-I0-3tp

Buy 2 Pairs1 PAIR FR'EE

Dick and Dale Help Yau
Your Meat · Problems.

GLORVBE!!

..

10-10-3tc

MONEY . SAVER

OpenBTiiS
Monday lhru Salurda y
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 ,

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

t MALE Oalmalian pup; pnon•
992-5535 after 5 p.m.
10-I0.3tc

-;::::=========~
PANTS &amp;JEANS

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING ,.
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate-'
PHONE 992:2550

WINDER WHILE I DAB ·
A LEETLE PoWDER

l

itROOFING

WILL cut or trim trees ,
reasonable; a lso clean out SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows~ carports,
basements, attics and
7 ROOM house &amp; bath with or
marquees, aluminum siding
cellars; phone 949-3221.
without furniture, paneled
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
I0-4-301c
and carpeting ; phone 742representative,. For free
3875.
TANKS AROBIC
estimates, phone Charles
10-ll-6tp SEPTIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
Lisle, Syracuse~ V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
CLEANED," REPAIRED .
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
3-2-tfc
MILLER SANITATION,
Conchas, New Mexico. S2,975.
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
No down . No Interest. S25 mo.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
662-3035.
for 119 mos . Vacation
Septic tank s Installed, George
10-4-tfc
Paradise . Free Brochure.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box
4--25-tfc
CONCRETE
200100. Alameda, California READY -MIX
delivered right to your
94501.
project. Fast and easy. Free SEWING MACHINES. Repair
10-3-30tp
.estimates. Phone 992 -3284.
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ..
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
5 ROOM house and batb,
Authorized Singer 4iales and
Middleport, Ohio.
·•
located on Brick StreeT.
Service. Wfi Sharpen Scissors.
6-30-tfc
Rutland ; Interior being
3-29-lfc
remodeled; phone 742-3334.
· 10-3-12tc sePTIC · TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
HOUSE In Long Bottom , phone
4782, Gallleolis, John Russell,
cancelled?
Lost
your
985-3529.
operator's license? Call 992Owner &amp; operator .
2~66 .
.
5-12-tfc
6-11 -tfc
6-15-lfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Phone 949-3821
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Racine, Ohio
Complete front !nd service,
CriII Bradford
tune up and brake service.
110 Mechanic Street
5-1-tfc
balanced
elecWheels
--~--All
work
tronically'.
DOZER and back hoe work,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Reasonable
ponds and septic tanks, dit- guaranteed.
rates . Phone 742-3232 or 992,
ching service; top soli, fill
NEW LISTING
3213.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K ExSYRACUSE - 7 room home with nice bath, 3 or 4
7-27-tfc
cavating. Phone 992-5367,
bedrooms. Closets. Gas furnace heat. TV room .
Dick Karr, Jr.
Basement, 2 porches ~nd garage.
9-1 -lfc
HOT WATER HEAT
3 BEDROOMS- Nice kitchen, bat~, dining and Jarge
\
living. Baseboard heafwllh modern gaS" bJ!ILer. Lots of
· closet space. Fenced yard. Carport,
COUNTRY HOME
NEAR POMEROY - 3 bedrooms with large closets. Nice
both, natural gas forced air furnace. Birch kitchen with
lots of cabinets and cook units. Rec. room with shower.
Carport.
-

2 BLACK miniature poodles,
males, S25each ; 1 Monogram
oil heater, 33,600 BTU, $75;
phone 882-3205.
________
1o_-8-6tp

YAMAHA Enduro 250, 9 months
old, like new, S500. Phooe 9927109.
IO-Htc

THE _SHOP

- GUARANTEEDP.hone 992·2094

- =--- ----'---

ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model. Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
u~es paper bags . Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new,.
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-5641.
10-i0-6tc

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

On Most American,cars

HOU SE and tra il er space ;
con tac t Don Milior 992-5693.
10-10-6fc 8 TRACK STEREO, freight
----c-- - - -- - - damaged, in beautiful walnut
TWO
furnished
room s , console. Will sell for ·S101.50or.
available noW, 413 Spring pay Sl.SO per week . Phone 992Ave.; phone 992-3419.
5331.
10-8-t21p - - - - - - - - 9-7-lfc
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
For Sale
Park view Kennels, Phone 9925443.
1969 VW Formula Vee, mags,
tape player, the works , - - - - - - - - - -8-_15-tfc
1
$ •400 '
phone 992 -5695 APPLES, Fitzpatr ick Or evening s.
10-11 -ltc chards, State Route 6°9,
•
.Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
AKC registered Collie pups, 6 _ __ _..:..._ ___8_
·30-tfc
weeks old; phone 675-1745
_
after 6 p.m.
~
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-up
10-11 -6tc camper ; includes spare tire,
--------canopy and plastic storm
EARLY American stereo-radio window . Trailer has been
combinafion, AM-FM radio, 4 wired for electr ic, 3 outlets.
speaker sound system , 4 Excellent condition, $650 ;
speed automatic .changer . call 992-5815 after 5 p.m.
Balance S77 .54 . Use our
.
10-12-41c
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
· I0-8-6tc ADM IRAL TV, black and white,
call 1-985-3901, Gertrude
·MODERN Walnut type stereo- Warner .
radio, AM-FM radio, 4
10·12-6lp
speaker sound system, .4
\
speed automatic changer. BSA 650, chopper, coffin tank,
Balance $68 .79 . Use our springer custom paint,
budget terms . .Call 992-7085. Harley Davidson rear end,
10-8-6tc $1 ,400 or less . Phone 992-5663.
- - - - -- - -10-12-6tp
SQUARE DEAL, NEW DEAL - - - - - - - politics aside, it's alwayS a
GOOD DEAL at KUHL'S Real Estate For Sale
BARGAIN CENTER, Rt. 7 RACINE - 10 room house,
" at caution light," Tuppers
bath , basement, garage, two
Plains . Open to 7; closed
lots. Phone 949-4313.
Mondays; phone _667-3858.
4-5-tfp
Besides· usual selection of - ; - - - - -- clean
used
furniiure , 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
guaranteed appliances, just
large lot, natural gas, built-in
arr iv ed NEW Hurty 20" cabinets
In kitchen. Close to
Chester
Slick
bikes;
radio station in Bradbury.
discounted to $40 ; Murray 10Phone 992-2602.
speed bikes , $79. LAYAWAY
9-29-12fc
for XMAS. .
I0-8 -6tc

DOE EIIINV SecoNTtvOW,

r

Busin~ss Services

EXPERT
· Wheel Alignment
'5.55

BuBBA IS .

PAW··WATCH OUT.TH' .

~=========~-;=========~-;:=========~

1
·:"the. Publisher reserv~s the - - -- - - - - --,----beds, or complete households. 3 ROOM furni shed itpar1ment,
right to edit or reject any ads
Writ~ M . D. Miller. Rt. 4,
util it.les paid, 1 child, no pets; COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
deemed
obiectiona l.
The
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271 .
356 North 4th Sf. , Middleport
Salt Work s, E. Main St.,
publisher will not. be respons ible. ··YARD Sa le, Thursday and
.
6-28.tfc
Wm . Smith, $80 mo. ,
Pol)ler9y- Pirone 992-3891-.for m.ore than one incorrect
Friday , Bashan ·Eagle Ridge
10-8-BtP
·innrtlon .
Road at old Frank Smith t
4-12-tfc
•
I RATES
f
tl
odd
5
tFor Wan\ Ad Service
arm ; some an ques,
TRAILER space cloSe to new JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
5 c~nts: p~r Word one Insertion
and ends; starts at 9 a.m.
8
Meigs High Sch~l on old Rt.
Sewing Machine. Will sell for

ffN BROTHER

'

~------~-----.---~--------~------,

3 BEDR(J()M mobile home
10-8-6tc
in Ma son. Cal l Poi·nf Plec:isant 1971 KAWASAKI 100, excellen·l
condition , ready to go .
-- - - -- 675-1684.
Sa crifice for only $260 . Phone
OLO Furn iture, oak· tables,
10-6.6
organs,' dishes, cloCks, brass - - - -- - -10-5-12tc
Coolville 667-6214,
20 ~

·~'

W Y D CNL.G L.,-..;;.....;;;':-"~

1

•••l

�•

•

•

'

•

..

U-The DIIUiSeJ111nei,MlddleporW&gt;cmeroy;O.,Oet.l2, 1972 .
.No:.:: :: esc ·r .,., e r
r ·w sa( J t .t j - : ni;&amp;w

COLUJoJIIUS CUPII - '1\e Slate rlre 111'*-1'~ offke
Aid todly two youllllllad beellari ulid II ~ wtlb
the ~ million fire at lbe Ohio. Slate ....,....._ llere
fuesday.
.
.
'l1le fire Manllal'l Qlflce llld - ·!loy llaupected of
·slartln' the blaze and theolber -held u • ~.A
spokesman said ·~ooee lalk" by 011e tt tbe yoallllled to the
arrests.

ews.:Tnm&lt;l
·~~:w-·B!I!IIil"''r....~'i~-,fi-·~~
...
•

By United l'resslntemallonal
STOCKHOLM - 'I1IE' 197% Novel Prize for Medicin~ .....
awarded today to Dr .. Gerald Edehnan of the United Slates and
Dr. Rodney Porter of Britai~ (or their studies of antibodies .the
~ill in human mechanism against infection. The prize this ;ear
IS worth $100,00Q.
Scientists have concenirated on this study of immunology in
·hopes of !!riding some antibody that could kill cancer cells and
would lead scientists to solving the problem of the humari body's
automatic rejection of transplanted organs. Edehnan, 43, is with
Bids ·will be sought In the veneer. it will be, built on the R9Ckeleller University in New York City which he joined in
next 21 days on the new Butternut Ave., on property 1960. Porter, 55, has been professor of biochemistry at Britain's
headquarters of the Pomeroy purchalled aeveral montha ago Oxford University since 1967.
.•
Fire Dept., Joe. Struble ·of the by the department from
WASHINGTON ..,. GEN. CREIGIITON W. Abrams won
Manning Webster.
department said today.
Senate confirm~Uon today to be Army chief of staff after a six·
, The department has received
,month
controversy over whether he had knowledge of
. a federal gran1 of $75,200 from
unauthorized U.S. air raids over North Vietnam last winter.
the Economic Development
Administration to fund · the
Some senators, iricluding Sens. Margaret Chase Smith, R·
'
..
project. · According
to
Maine and William Proxmire, D-Wis., served notice they would
specifications, the new
continue to press the pentagon for a complete investigation of the
·headquarters will be of cement
series of raids from November to March.
block construction with brick
The Pomeroy • Middleport
SAIGON -PRESIDENTNGUYENVAN.TiiiEU said today
Lions Club endorses the five
mill operating levy of the he would "fight to the end" to prevent the Communists from
Meigs Loeal Srh&lt;lol j)istrict, to imposing a coalition government on South Vietnam.
'be voted upon Nov. ?, at a
''Those In South Vietnam who want to promote a cOalition
luncheon meeting held Wed· with the Communlats should raise their hands. I am sure the
Tonight, October 12
nesday at the Meigs Inn.
population and the soldiers will rtot Jet them live lor more than
.NOT ,OPEN
on hand to explain aspects of five minutes," Thieu told 25,000 high school and university
the levy was Alllatant Dlatrict students. The crowd at the Republican Stadium In Saigon was the
Friday &amp; Saturday
Superintendent Larry largest ever addressed by Thieu, spokesmen said. The Youth
October 13·14
Morrison who used · an Day ceremonies included a parade by students·selected to defend
GOOZILLA vs THE
overhead projector to point up their schools in case of a Communist attack on tbe capital.
. SMOG MONSTER
the varl0111 !lnanclalupects of
· (Color)
·
Akira ¥ami1Uchi
the levy, II II reported that the
COLUMBUS -THE OHIO DEPARTMENT of Agriculture
Hlroyukl Kawase
dlatrlct inuat have 22.5 mills for
&lt;G l
operali0111 In effect If It Is to has removed from Ohio stores a Georgia brand of "chicken.
CATLOW
receive full !lnanclal belp from franks" which were found to be adulterated despite a seal of
(Technlcolorl
the state folll!datlon program. approval from the U.S. Department of Agrh;ulture. They contain
Richard Crenna
Yut Brynner
CJarence struble presented a feathers and chicken ha~ visible to the naked eye.
(GP)
Abercrombie said the discovery was made Oct. 4 by a
tetter from the MGM Boy Scout
Show Storts 7 P.M.
woman
at a Circleville store. Chick'enfranks are hot dogs made
District thanking the 'club for
contributing . to the Scout out of ground· chicken.
program. Bob Miller presented
. ~ arUcle on Uonism, a
regular feature of club
·meet1n11. Morrison was
Nine defendants were fined of way; Pamela K. Hoffman,
presented b~ Wendell Hoover.
Don Pearch, praldent, was in - two for failing to pay Pomeroy Route 3, $5 and costs,
Fri.-Sat..sun. ·
parking meter violation tickets failur~ to have vehicle under
charge .
October 13·14-15
- and two others forfeited control; ·Beatrice Cain, Racine
"DOB.ERMAN GANG"
'TJS'T
TRUE
bonds in the court of Pomeroy · Route 1, $25 and costs; driving
ByronMabe
Julie Parrish
. Rtm.AND - ~Is that Mayor William Baronick without an operator's license;
.
Rated (GP)
the curfew In Rutland has been Wednesday night.
Carl R. Hall, Pomeroy Route 4,
Plus ·
.
lifted
are
·
not
true.
Mayor
Fined
were
Earl
Ingels,
Jr.,
squealing
tires, $10 apd costs;
ND WAY OUT
Eugene
Thomp1011
reports
that
Middl~port , $84 and costs, Donald [,.&lt;!vett, Portland, $10
Ge·ne Hackman
the 9 p.m..cur!.W for all per- failing to pay parking meter and costs, intoxication, and
Karen Bla~k
Kris Kristofferson
sons \lltder II years of age violation tickets, and Roger Ronald Williams, no address
(R)
remallts In effect.
Hooker, Pomeroy; $14 and $10 and costs, intoidcation. '
.costs, same charge; Williani
R. Eads, Charleston, $100 and
Forfeiting bonds were James
costs and three days in jail, Lee Allen, n~addres8;. $25 for
driving while intoxicated ; disturbing the peace, and Rena
Marvin Wisecup, Pomeroy, $5 Marshall, Crown City, $13.70,
and costs, failure to yieltl right failing to yield right of way.
.

Bids Wanted in 21 Days

Lions·Support

.SchoolS' Levy

MEIGS THEATRE

9 Fined by-The Mayor

KERMIT IS HAVING ·AWINGDINGER!

Mrs. Edith Dent Died Tuesday

FRI.

t3'tli

•

SAT.

14tb .

SALE!
ALL
•

Mrs. Edith Joan Qualls Dent,
37, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Tuesday at home in
Springiield, Ohio.
Mrs. Dent, who graduated
from Pomeroy High School in
1953, was a member of the
Eastern Star in Gallipolis, the
St. John's Missionary Baptist
Church in Springfield and an
employe of the Wright·
Patterson Air Force Base in
Dayton.
Surviving are her son,
Eugene, of Springfield; her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl E.
Qualls,
Chester
Road,
Pomeroy; a·brother, James E.
Qualls, Pomeroy, and five
nephews, Jimmy D., Blaine,
Dwayne, Troy Robbin and

Art Workshop

BRAND NEW
FALL STOCK!

Is Scheduled

OUR 25.00

The Salisbury sChool PTA is
sponsoring an art workshop
which will be conducted at the
school under the direction of
Mr. and Mrs. David Lynas.
The first. workshop will last
for an eight week period from 7
to 9 p.m. with printing,
drawing and sketching to be
included. The fee
be from
50 ~enti to $1 depending on
enrollment. In case enrollment
is~- htgh there will he two
evenings of the workshop each
week so that students will get a
full opportunity to learn. The
evenings of classes have not
been selected.
Anyone Interested
is
.requested to contact the school,
992·3404. Lynas ,has held
various art positions and more
recently was acting chairman
of the design department at
· Ohio University.

KNITS

19

88

OUR 19.98

will

KNITS

1488
OUR 18.98

.KNITS

1388
OUR 16.98

KNITS .
12~
OUR-14.98 .

KNITS
.
'

1088
,.

t

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Charles C.
Wood, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Larry Je!fers, So!jthside ;
Cathy Birchfield, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. James Ully, Point
Pleasant; Joyce Fitch, Ashton ;
Barbara Snyder. Pomeroy ;
Polly Fife, Gallipolis; Otis
V~ \1 Knight, Mi&lt;ldleport; Rob~rt
Cantor, Jackson,. 0.; Carolyn
DeeJII,.
Mason;
Clara
Hamilton, ~int Ple&amp;l!lnt, and
Mrs. Ernest McDonald, Point

Forrest Qualls of Pomeroy.
Friends may visit at the
Robert C. Henry Funeral
Home in Springfield anytime
until noon Friday when the
body will be taken to the St.
John's Missionary Baptist .
Church for the funeral at I p.m.
Following the funeral in
·springfield, the body will be
brought to the Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy where
friends may call beginning at 7
p.m. Friday, Eastern Star
services will be held at 8 p.m.
Friday at the funeral home
here. Officiating at services at
I p.m. Saturday will be the
Rev. Roosevelt Walker. Burial
will be In Meigs Memory
Garden.

Garnet Goodnite
Died Wednesday

Ke1 m '• Kot'llet' ·.'.

NeW York
'

House

p9,MIROY, OHIO

•

•

Sheriff Not. Called m Killing of Pony

•

ELBERFELDS BARGAIN DAYS
FRIDAY

DSATURDAY 9:30 A,., TO 9 PM

Famous Maker

Sale! Men's Dress Slacks ··

WOMEN'S DRESSES

Most all are double knih, Sizes from
colors · stripes . neat patterns.
.

You 'll recognize the quality and workmanship in
these Fall Dresses reduced for this sale.
Reg . 10.00
Reg . 67 .oo
Reg. S7 .oo
Reg . 55,00
Reg. 54.00
Reg . 48,00
Reg. 42.00
Reg . 40.00
Reg . ".19 .oo
Reg . 34.00

Sale 41.88
Sale 39.88
Sale 3d8
Sale 32.88
.. · · · • ; • Sale 31.88
Sale 28.88
Sale 25.88
Sale 24.88
Sale ·23.88
Sale 20.88

Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses
Dresses

9.95
.1-1.15
13:95
14.95
15.95
16.95
17.95

Mens
Mens
Meni
Mens
Mons
Mens
Mens

Dross Slacks
Dr~• Slacks
Dress Slacks
Dress Slacks
Dress Slacks
Dress Slacks
Dress Slacks

Stop in the busy mens department'tst floor. Try. on a pair or
Mens Lee $1.1.98

soo

Coats is

Pant length · Regular · Boot length. Fake Furs.
Meltons · Fur Trimmed · Suedes . Leathers .
Polyester blends · Nylon quilts . Corduroys .

Solid color Royal Blue or
Loden Green. Sm•l I,

MISSES AND JUNIOR

Well known brand that sells
·tor uo ~ · pair. Stripes .
neat patterns . _good
selection of colors. F ih
sizes 10 through 13.

50'

9.69

pair

Carhartt Blanket Lined

BROWN
DUCK JACKETS AND COATS
.
\
.Corduroy collar · 16 oi. blanket llnlng. Full freedom action
back· adjustable cuff closure. Completely washable. Sizes 36
to 50. .
·

Ancient Egyptians believed
the onion was a symbol of
eternity and it was the custom
to hold an onion in one's right
hand upon laking an oath.

Generally clear tonight, lows
ii\ the . mid to upper 40s.
Saturday partly cloudy south.
High from the tower 60s north
to the lower 70s extreme south.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Devoted To The lntereJtl&amp; Of The Meigs· Mason Area
FRIDAY, OC10BER 13, 1972

QUEEN CASUALS
SPORTSWEAR
Special
Sale Prices

We~ve

just

Reg. 9.95 Knit Shirts .
Reg. 8.95 Knit Shirts .

Sa1f 8.00
Sale 7.00

Nixon
Courts

Large selection ol prints.

Only

4.98

WORK UNIFORMS

Pants in sizes 29 to 44 waist. Shirts in sizes 141;, to 17. Sleeve
lengths 32, 33, 34 Inches long.
.
Loden green · Forest green · Suntan and Ch•rcoal grey,
Lee Tech Twills are 50 per cent polyester and 50 per cenf
f1tf1ng - long wearing.

Labor

·

RM. I NE

7.29 Lee Tech Twill Pants . . . . • . . .
Lee Tech Twill Matching Shirts

YARD

0oo a[R

Sate 6.35
Sale 5.45

6.19

100% POLYESTER FABRIC
2.49

.,,

c.ot!an. Permanent press and an excellent quality. Perfect

Save During Our Fashion Fabric Sale.
Reg. $5.49 yd. and $3.99 yd.

SALE

LEE PREST TECH TWILL

received

another big shipment of

SMOCKS

.#c.."'-

·;i.

CORDUROY WO"RK PANTS

p
6

.... } •
.

. ~..

·~· ··

·J: . ~·
·~"' . !;).

R ~ l (s • · 't'~
~

By United Press International

\t, nn

50 1)1'
.S\l
PHR
,-,
.f 00

Mens ~o;r)

•

..;) .

·SlN&lt;-o

Sizes 32 to 44 in brown, charcoal grey and Lodeh green.
Rugged thickset corduroy. Full cut for extra comfort -

Bargain Days 0.1ly

.

•

"

o; • •
Ilk.

:.J..'f?:

reinforced crotch - 100 per ceni cotton : sanforlzed shrunk.

Sale Prl~e Friday and Soturday

HANDBAGS
Vinyls : Leathers • Suedes.
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags

Friday and Saturd'lY

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

·•

6.79
5.99
5.29
4.49
3,.79
3.19
2.39

Girls

CAPES AND
PONCHOS

COATS AND
JACKETS ·

Sale prices on our entire

stock of knit Capes and

Ponchos. White and colors.

Our en~lrestoc'k of girls 3 to
6x and 7 to t4 is r.educed for
Bargain Days.

Boys $3.98 Wrangler

BLUE DENIM JEANS
Super lean · slim fitting jeans in sizes 6 to 18.
Slims and regulars . Extra heavy 14 oz . plus blue
denim . Sanforized shrunk.
Friday· Saturd~y Sale Price

WINNERS - Taking first, second and third place
respectively in a poster contest advertising the annual
Racine Elementary PTA School Carnival on Oct. 21 were, 1-r,

5.99
,_

Mens 6.95 heavy cotton twltt full cut work pants - green or
grey: Sizes 32 to 46 waist.

5.99
Friday . Saturday
Boys

'•

sus

COVERALLS

Sizes 6 to 20. ·solid colors . stripes . novelty
patterns. All permanent press. Excellent
selection of colors. Well ' known makes.
Friday · Sa.tur~ay Sale

3.33

Buy for wear right now or for gifts later on and
save•
Sizes 3 to 7
· Reg. ·$1.39 Skein

KNITTING WORSTED

YARN
SALE 99' SKEIN

· Sale!.. Eveready Aashlight
AashUghts and Transistor .Batteries

.

7.43

QUILT LINED INSULATED COVERAllS

·.

SALE 64.00

25.88

ews.• in Briefst New ·Stalemate
At Goodyear
· By United Press International

MOSCOW -THE~
· VIET COMMUNIST party newspaper
Pravda praised Presi t Nixon's foreign policy today and said
he looked a sure bet fo · re-election. It pictured Sen. George S.
McGovern as a man constantly shifting his positions.
The 'newspaper's Washington correspondent, Boris
Strelnlkov, in a review of the presidential campaign so far, said
despite an absence of enthusiasm among all American voters
"' and a particular sense of disillusionment among Democrats and
Republicans, "a vast majority of observers predict victory" for
Nixon over McGovern.

LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS

BOYS
FlARE SLACKS

Beth Ann Huffman, Amy Fisher and Kent Varney. They are
members of Duane Wolfe's fifth grade class. 'n!,e pasters
made by pupils will be placed in local business establish·
ments throughout the county.

. .. . . · .•~~-w~:=::tt.:-».~·-" ··r ., :r ·=: ·mt.=:.-:::=:!:!~':!:!~:::-j

or
MASON - Mrs. Garnet N.
All permanent press .
Excel tent selection of
Goodnlte, 73, died Wednesday
styles in solid colors WINTUCK ORi.oN
at home here. Bom Sept. 2,
•.
plaids . stripes . .
1899, she was the daughter of
the late George W. and Lena L.
Boys 2.95 Flare
.. - Sate 2.49
Clark Oliver at West Columbia. t"----·---.,-,---·------~----.1 Boys 3.95Stacks
Flare
Mens Big Ben $7.98
Surviving are her husband,
Slacks· .. Sole 3.49
Oris; a daughter, Mrs. Olin
(Freda 1 Wolf, Mason; a son,
.~ries,
!larry, of Point Pleasant; three
slst,ers, Mrs·. Gladys Goulding
Sizes 36 to 50 In shorts· regulars · longs. Bi-Swing
and Mrs. Gorma Bumgarner of
action back .. Plenty of useful pockets.
••
New Haven, and Mrs. Gertrude
Choose serviceable blue denim
green
Flashlight batteries In all sizes - Compfete
Young of Mason ; a brother,
herringbone cloth or grey .F isher stripe. All
selection of radio batteries · Eveready lan·
Chester Oliver of Clifton; eight
sanforized shrunk.
terns : Flashlights · Pen llghts.
grandchildren, and five great.
•
Friday · Saturday Sale
In on the 2nd floor and save now 011 you;
&lt;
grandchlidren . • ,
services will be held at 1:30
~~~~~~a~n~d~~~:nee~d~s~·------------J ;
p.m. Saturday at the Foglesong
Furniture Department · Third Floor '
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Mens Carhart!
29.25
Paul Fortney and the Rev.
SAL£! REGULAR '79.00 PLATFORM ROCKERS
Clarence McCloud officiating.
Long wearing upholstery In tweeds, florafs,
Burial wlll be in Graham
mattalasses.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Greens, Golds, Rusts ~ with open arms 'and
Sizes 36 to 50. Shorts · Regulars . Longs. Rugged brown duck .
the funeral ·home from 2.to 4
maple swan neck.
.
wafer repellent. Corduroy collar · adiustoble cuff •nd leg
and from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
closure · he•vy duty two-way zipper front . BI.Swing back .
.
.Warm, red nylon quilted lining.
·•
Sale Price Friday . Salurdoy
~
GOES TO JAIL
Robert E. ward, 25, Mta.
dlepor\, hasheen fined $100 imd
•
•
costs and sentenced to three
$52.00 . Ebony finish . vanity, accented with
.••
•
days in jail on a conviction of .· Save Now on Mens and Boys
12"x20" adJustable tilt mirror. Stain proof white
,•
driving while intoxicated by
shelv_, plus a $24.00 Mediterranean Boudoir
Middleport Mayor John Zerkle.
chair, Spanish Influenced. Baked ebony accenteel .
. .
·
.
.
with coiQrful red corduroy solid ,core toam
''•
ru~ber, .
·, ·
.
'
·

2.99

mi CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

patterns. An excellent selection.

BIG SELECTION

Just Arrived

Members of the . society •
agreed that what happened to
the pony was deplorable, but
the letter to 11\e editor . wu
unfair to the sheriff.
One of the persons involved
in the killing of the pony was to
appear in Meigs County court .
today, the sheriff and Fultz
disclosed .
Gary Dill, hwnane officer,
reported that he was not
permitting any adoptions of
dogs at this time. He said Sllllle
that had been adopted earlier
have been abandoned a!\er
having a litter of pups.
Since Dill was employed last
spring, he has traveled 2,000.
miles and made 60 in·
vestigations. He said a typical
trip results in his finding dogs
and cats in cisterns and wells,
some in steel traps, and some
dogs being tortured .
· Barbara Betzing asked,
"Who is responsible for
• burying ·dead animals?" Dill
gets many calls lor this chor.e.
It was concluded the owner of
the animal apparently (s
responsible.
(Continued on Page 10)

Weather

VOL. XXIV . NO.l27

Sizes smatt, 114-14'12), medium (15-15'12), large (16· t6;;, ),
extra large (17-17 'h). Solid colors . checks . stripes. fancy

Denims · Velvets - Corduroys - Acrylics . In
Regular, . Bikini or Boy Cuts.

Gallia County.
F'ulti suggested
that
ij()meone !rom the Humane
Society who had no ax to grind
call Mrs. Swisher and lind out
what information she has. "It
is only lair the sheriff's record
be cleared up," Fultz said.
He went on ,to say that be
had worked with the 'sheriff
for 12 years and knew or no ,
· one doing a better job.
"The letter seemed to be a
personal attack , If lair
criticism ·is warranted, we
accept it," Fultz said.
Fultz·asked assistance of the
society in tracking down the
basis for the letter.
Fultz and the sheri!! agreed
that the act committed to the
pony was inhumane and Mts.
Swisher had the right to
complain, but they felt the
truth of the matter should be
determined.
Mrs . Clinton
Fisher,
president, gave the sheriff and
Fultz a vote of confidence. She
agreed that Mrs. Swisher
should be interviewed and a
report of the society's findings
relayed to the sheriff and

'

Men's Knn Dress and Sport Shirts .

REDUCED FOR BARGAIN DAYS ONLY

C. Swisher, believed to Jive in Fultz.

Now You Know

For This Salel

JEANS

8.98
7.98
6.98
5.98
4.98
3.98
2.98

DRESS SOCKS

15.99 Blank.e t Lined Coats • . • • • Sale 14.78
15.79 Blanket Lined Zipper Jackets .• Sale l4.48

The Sale event you've been w;~iting lor.
Our Entire StQck Of

·Reg.
Reg.
Reg,
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

.

Mens Fancy Pattern

JUMP .SUITS

Save this weekend on your Fall Coat. Petites.
Regulars and Half sizes.

Our entire stock of over
Reduced for this Sale.

.

two and buy what you need now and s.ave.

tongs. Short sleeves . patch
pockets · zipper front.
Sale Friday.Saturday

WOMEN'S COATS

to &lt;16 waist. Solid
·
.
Sola 7.00'
Sate 9,00
Sole 11.00
· ·· Sole 12.00
Sole 12.50
Sole 13.00
Sole y.so

.

~

medium, large and extra
large sizes in regulars and

Friday and Saturday Only

,

29

•

Charges in a letter to the unfortunate and unfair," and indicated that the "sherift was
editor of Oct. i in The Sundav "damaging to Bob's character. not concerned, which isn't
Times-Sentim·l that Sheriff There should be .a society lor tr~, " Fu)tz observed.
Robert C. Hartenbach ignored humane tr.eatment for the
The letter is .incorrect
a plea for thdaw to take action sheri!!," F-ultz said.
because on the day of the in·
in the case of a pony being · Fultz said the letter slated cident Sheriff Hartenbach was
killed at an auction sale were that someone called the sheriff in Columbia Township from 10
· denied Thursday . night by about the incident, that a pony · a.m. to 6 p.m . The Jetter stated
County Pro.secutor Bernard had · died as a result of that. someone talked to thec
Fultz and the sheriff at·an open · inhumane treatment at an sheri{{ at 4 p.m.
meeting of the County Humane auction sale in western Meigs
Sheriff Harten bach stated
Society at the Meigs Inn.
County on Sept. 23, and the that every call that comes into
. Also meeting with the.society sheriff was supposed to have his sheriff's department is
was Charles R. Karr, county said he did not have time to typed on a J~g by the ciispal·
commissioner,
come.
cher on duty. Nb such .~ail was
Fultz said statements made 'The complaint was not recorded as was inferred in-the
about the sheriff were . "very justified, Fultz said. The Jetter letter.
The only call recorded Jn
regard to the Incident ·was
LED BY BRENDA TAYLOR, the majorette co,rps of the :one made at 6 p.m. by Walter
MelgSlllgb Sehool Band strutted down Pomeroy's Main St. as F, 'Games who requested a
the first homecoming parade of lbe school was held Thursday registration of a truck In
Dight. The parade·also marched In Middleport anci.Rut\and.
order to ascertain who the
Homecoming queens, mayors of Pomeroy, Middleport and people were that beat the
Rutland, the jWiior baod, a mounted Meigs Marauder, fire animal, and another call by
eqillpment from the three towns, .a decorated car, and the pollee · Garnes at 7:40 p.m. when be
ud sheriff's depilrtment completed the parade. The Marauden called and asked where be
{O after the Jacksoillronmeo tonight In Marauder Stadium at 8 might get a warrant for a
p.m. Both teams are 2-lln league action. See more pictures on. man that heal a pony to
death.
·
Page 4.
These were U1e only calls
. AT LEFr, a small section of the Meigs lligh School band
made to the sheriff's office in
moving along Thursday night's homecoming parade route.
regard to the incident reported
in the letter signed by Mrs. L.

SAL£! VANITY. WITH MATatiNG atAIR

-.
.:

.

Theee Prj.ces Oct. '13 &amp;: 14 Oldy

Pleasant.

•

CLEVELAND-DEMOCRATIC VICE presidentllll nominee
Sargent Shriver said today President Nixon was "the greatest
·cor~ artist" in American hiStory.
.
Speaking during a television show taping at the start of a lull
dayoicampa!golitg here, Shriver said Nixon ''tells you what you
want to hear, somehow gets you to believe it's that way and then
says,
what I've done for you.' "

'see

WASHINGTON -JUST BACK FROM Paris and four days of
Jrivate talks with Hanoi diplomats, Henry A. Kissinger met
again today with President Nixon to discuss the prospects for ·
VIetnam peace.
.
At the same time, Le Due Tho, the chief North Vietnamese
negotiator in ·tJie ,extraordinary Paris discussions, departed
Paris for eonfererices of his own In Hanoi. Kissinger had nothing
to say, on his return to Washington, about hqw thingS went in
Paris but T)lo said &lt;\ifflculties still l'ell!Bined.
·
Tho headed lor Hanoi via Peking, with the remark to
reporters that ''there are many difficult things" left to solve
before peace could come. Asked to elaborate on his discussions
'with Kissinger, he responded: "!have nothing to SI!Y .''

Maps,
sketches,
en·
virorunen\al factors and all
other information con·
cer~mg the proposal are
.. avmlable to the public for
viewing at the county
engineer's office, co~nty
th Rock Sprmgs
garage, on e
fairgro\lltds.

.' .

BY GEORGE HARGRAVES, SUPT. ,
Melga Local Scbool DistriCt
. Tonight finds . us with Homecoming at' Marauder
Stadium, Our opponenta will be Jack8on. Both tearits will be
attanptlng to bo\lltce bacl,lafter.league loaseil last wee~&lt;. We
.

"

'

·,

" · .Speakltig_ of Schoo~No. 252
look foi.waro to seeing you at aboUt a.

:-•

I

Pomeroy, northwesterly to
relocated Ohio 7. Plans call for
new 2()-foot pavement with six
foot shoulders and a new
concrete slab structure over
Thomas Fork.

.'?',;'·

WORKERS OF mE P.R. COFEY CO. of Rllceland, Ky., are prepll'ing to remove tons·or
rock which fell near the Pomeroy Post Office and Pomeroy Publlc Ubrary last Dec. 3. Win·
dows of both the post office and library are being boarded up by the firm as a protective
measure before the work (next Monday) begLns.

8th Fatality in Gallia
Gallla County recorded Its
eighth traffic fatality of the
year at 11:38 p.m. Thursday on
Rt. 35, live tenths of a mile
west of Rt. 160 In front of the
State IJ!ghway Patrol Post.
The Gallla·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said an auto
driven by Billy Joe Burdette,
37, Rio Grande, traveling west
on Rt. 35 veered to the left of
the cen~ line . striking a
tractor traller operated by
Thomas Taylor, Jr., 46, Win·
ston-Salem, N. C., beadon.
Burdette died Instantly of
multiple fractures and Internal
injuries.
His auto . was demolished.
Taylor sustained minor in·
juries but was not hnmediately
treated. There was moderate
damage lo hls truck.
Billy Joe Burdette; 37, a
resident of Rio ·Grande, was
born March 25, 1935, at
Wharton, W. Va. He was the
son of Mrs. Halcle Wright

It's Homecoming at .M arauder Stadium Tonight

Our·thinks go to all who belped organ~ and who J.llr·
tlclp1ted In OUl' Homecccnlng p1rade and bM ·~ jjep' rally.
tt took a lot of UliataiiCe from a lot of people. l'm certain that
Fenlon Taylor, whc coordinated this activity, eztends his
ptltude alao.
.

. IN SURGERY ·
RACINE' - Mrs. Charles
(Katel McNtckl~, Racine, Rt.
2, underwent surgery today at
Holur Medical Center. Her
1'0011\' ls 231.

vote, due to the long length of
the strike, to see if they want to
continue the work stoppage.
However, Christian further
said this would have been the
course "if the company agreed
to reinstate five men it had
fired , and lift the suspension 9n
eight others, but the company
refused this."
"Therefore, at that point,"
he stated, "the union com·
mit tee could no longer agree to
bring it back to the mem·
bership for vote."
Company officials were
contacted but have declined
comment on the Thursday
session. The strike a! 'the
Goodyear plant began June l.

Design Approved

Ohio Departinent of Trans·
portation ptrector J. PhilliP
_Rich ley said today the highway
division has approved location
and design for proposed im·
provement of 1.6 mlles of the
lliland Road in Pomeroy and
Salisbury Township as
"'IGON..:. '111E U.s: COMMAND sent FillA swlngwlng ' requested by the Meigs County
""'
Board of Commissioners .
fighter-bombers on raids only 10 miles from Hanoi Thursday -~ public hearing for the
night despite the controversy' stDToWiding the bombing of tl)e propo~ was held in Pomeroy
French and ~erian missions In the North Vietnamese capital, on Aug. 29.
military spokesmen said today.
hnprovement would extend
The command said the all-weather, radar-guided FH!s from the Hiland Road to the
(Continued on Page 10)
· Mulberry Ave. intersection In

-~:

·

PT. PLEASANT - Talks
between Goodyear Tire and
Rubbe~ Company and union
officials apparently broke off
just before midnight Thursday
wi th no indication of any other
meetings being scheduled.
Representatives of the
company and of Local 644,
Rubber, Cork and Linoleum
and Plastic Workers of
America, AFL-CIO met in a
session which began at 6 p.m.
at the Red Carpet Inn near
Point Pleasant.·
Daniel Christian, president
of Local 644, said today the
union negotiating committee
agreed to .bring the contract
back to the membership fpr a

Sen. George McGovern con·
centrated on the populous West
Coast today In his uphill quest
for presidential support, while
back at the White House
President Nixon courted
further labor backing.
McGovern , in a 16-hour
cross • country canvass
Thursday that took · him
from Boston to Seattle,
told cr~wds at stops along
the way that he would
choose his ctefense secretary
from among military advisers
who tried to dissuade Presidfll!t
Johnson from escalating the
war, and his agriculture
secretary from the ranks of
farmers.
Nixon lrongh\ the executive
board of the Utility Workers of
America to the White House for
a chat.
In an afternoon of campaign· ·
ing in Atlanta Thursday-his
first in two weeks-Nixon was
greeted by a crowd of several
hundred thousand persons
linin~ his motorcade route.
Welcome is Indication
He told a rally the welcome
was an Indication of the
response he will receive In the
election, an election. he said
would mark an end to any
political division between the
North and South and would
produce a new political align.
ment nationwide.
Nixon took the occasion to
again pledge not to raise taxes
In a second administration II
Congress will only give him
"my tax-proof ceiling on
spending."
. At Minneapolis, McGovern
played a tape of a telephone
call, made to.-a Boston radlo
talk show by a young man who
said he had served in Vietnam,
for a group of some 12,000
University of Minnesota
students .
All the students llstened In
hushed silence and McGovern
looked grimly Into space, the .
voice described 'in tones of
. ing 'tali the de station
· ~ agl on
va
Into villag after
e wen1
es
they dropped napalm and
(j::ontlnued on Page 10)

With volunteer help and with donated .Q~ipment, ij()me
earth is being moved behind the high school. We are trying to
develop a football practice area, a baSeball diaplond, and
eventually a track. At the present time we ,Pf&amp;ctlce football
behind Sallsbury and come Into Middleport for track and
baseball. There llabeolutely no truth, repeat.- no ,truth, to
the rumor that we are start~ or planning to build a stadium
at the school. If someone tells yoU thlit, tell hiiJI thai he is
wrong·. Ntd lhilt's a fact .
· .
On l'lt$esday of thla week we had a meetiJig on PRI,DE
(Prot¢am Re'riew to lnttrOve, DeveiOI) and ExJ!e.nd
vocational education )l Attending were several represen·
taUves from the 'state Department of Education plus
repreM~~tatives from all school disti-icts in Meigs C01111ty.

Burdette, Rt. 2, VInton, and the
late Cecli Burdette .
He married Phyllla Kinder,
at Wharton, W. Va., who
survives, as do three chUdren,
James Earl, Billy Junior and
Belinda Sue, ali at home, and
two sisters, Mrs , Unda
·Crothers, Rt. l, Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Betty McCloud, Thealka,
Ky. One brother preceded him

·

OOPS, THERE!
Early Halloweeners
. picked the wrong car to
throw.. torn at Thursday
night.
Meigs County lleputy
Sbetl!f Robert Beegle was
cruising through Letart
Falls last night when
his car wao pepper·
ed. Beegle slopped to
chase !our boys on fool.
Three got away, but Beegle
caught one of them. He will
be cited to juvenile court a·s
will the oth.ers If their
Identify Is proved,
::::::::::::::::~~~:m:;-;..::;.)".,.::~::,e:~;

·In death.
James Wright, Rt. 2, VInton,
a grandfather, survives.
Mr. BW'de\te wu employed
at the GalllpoUB State Institute.
He was a member of the Gallia
County Coon Club, and
Gallipolis Fraternal Order of
E;agles.
Funeral~~ervlces will be beld
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Otapel
.Hill Church-of Otrist with John
Rockhold' and Joe Galloway
offlclatil)g. The body will lie in
state at the church one hour
prior to the 11ervlees. BUrial
will follow In Calvary
Cemetery at Hio Grande. ·
Vlailation will be held at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
from U ~.m. Saturday.

WC:r&lt;f'S'

Veterans Memorlalllollpltal
This meeting was a part of the extensive and Intensive
ADMITTED. - · Barbara ,
self-evalUIItlon project \hal we will be involved in 'for the nezt · McDouglu, Middleport; Mary
several months. On the same daY all three board clerka met 'Erwin, Pomeroy; Pauline
·with another representaUve from the State Deparln!ent as Mlller, West Columbia; Calvin
they do the Hnanclal part of the PRIDE study'. '
Lane, Middleport; · Ima
The Ohio Univer!ily Juniors started their work at Blevins, Pomeroy; Nora
Pomeroy and MiddlepOrt this past Tuesday. They come tO Ralrdjm, Hartford: .
.
our schools as part of a ~ntlnulng ezpeflment of tbe 0 . U.. . DISCHARGED .,- Dorothy
. ·, College of EducaUon. They have been a great Help in giving Anthony , F:lqrence Chalfan,
· indlvldllal asslatance to·students in these two schools. They Br-&lt;!nda S~aats, • theodore .
are most welcome
·,
.
Woods, Carol McDouglaa,
YESTERDAY YOU should have reeeiv,S your .first Sheridan Rusaell, Tammy ,
r~t card of this'school year. The only exception to this . Jewell, WUllam Orr, Franklin
·
(Continued on Page 2)
· · ·. Lemley, Betty Broolla.

Autos Collide ·
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. lhvesUgated a two-&lt;:ar
accident Thursday at 9:45p.m.
in Lebanon Township at Bald
Knobs. Gary D. Black, 16,
Portland, Rt. I, was stopped on
County Road 3ljust over a hl1l
crest when William D. Bryant,
32, Portland, Rt.. I, came over 1
the hill and, unable · to Stop,
'struck Black's car in the rear.
There were . no Injuries or
arrests. There was medluni
damage to both velllcles .

.

LODGE TO.MEET .
A special meeting of ~de
River Lod•e 463, F&amp;AM1 will
be held at 7:30p.m. 'l'uelday.
There will be Wll!'k In the EA
degree. All master ma10111 are
invited.

�</text>
                </elementText>
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