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Dlii18Uine~11f1«por......_,,o.,Oct.17,1m -

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Commission Agrees to Make Needed Children's Home RepaJrs
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The Meigs County Gorn- N5n.
linoleum will be laid when all
elecll'ical receptacles in any Of them.
beginning of 1972, an additional · their findings and what ~d,
missioners today agnied to
The committee is working work at the home is compleled. today.
Mr. and Mrs . 'Harry Clark, the r ooms . · Commissioner
The commissioners agreed $4,700· was appropriated, and ditional furnishings will be
make needed repairs . to ~ for. better conditions . al the
Warden Ours said- a freezer "superintendent and matron at Clark is t0 see an electrician to rectify 'anything that was · this.has·been used lor medical needed. .
Children's Horne and to pur~ Chlldren's Horne since· there is will be purchased, possi~lv 'the home, sa.id there are no . aboul the crxst of installing
Attending the meeting In
wrong and complete the work, expenses, new equipment an~
chase a freezer desp:rately . no longer a county .Welfare
addition to those named were
that ·rn.s bee'n .s\arted.
.
maintenance.
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needed ~re.. .' .
Board.
The committee will make (he Rev. Arthur Lund; tlie Rev.
However, Clark said more
Meeting with.. the Meigs
The committee is interested
money will have to be obtained .annual inspections at the home .. Dwight Zavitz , the lte~ .
County Conunissioi\ers were in envlropmental conditions,
a's $27,500 was appropriated to and meet again with th~ Charles Simons, Hugh Mcrepresentatives of civic . furniahlngs and necessities .at
IRONTON - Three labor munlcipalitiJk_ in Lawrence, has 'demonstrated through the children 's .home fund at the 'commissioners in regard to Phail, and Martha Chambers,
organizations including the ~ children's home.
clerk.
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Mrs. Carol Adams, service unions representing over 2,000 Gallia ... ~eigs and Athens your efforts in the past a
Sigma PhiSorority,XiGamrna chairman of the Ohio Eta Phi , union members have endorsed Counties.
willingness to· be responsive to
Mu; the Chamber of Com- Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi ·the candidacy of · John E.
The AFSCME endorsement the needs of all public emrnerce, and the Ministerial Sororjty, as spokesman, asked Halliday, Gallipolis attorney In part said : "All candidates ployees. "
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the cilmmissioners .for a copy who is the Democratic nominee were carefully screened , for
Ally. Halliday will be among
WASHING'rON (UPI ) - · and Jim Brown all have one against school busing and his
HOSPITAL NEWS of the budget for the children's for 92nd House District, Ohio awareness of the r.roblems of several area candidates taking Leaders
of the congressional thing in common," said Rep . . vetoes of education money bills
public employees and . also a part in the Oct. 23 Town· Hall: black caucus say that. black Louis Stokes, IJ.Ohio, Monday. to help ghetto schools and child
Holzer Medical Cealer
home and a , breakd.own of House of Representatives .
William Jenkins, Gallipolis concern for improving the Politics '72 Special to be shown
.DISCHARGES - Kenneth expe~s . Copies of , several
entertainers and athletes · "They are all dancing to the care progr9ms.
Price Jr,, Mrs;·Denver Gibbs years' budgets were shown to a ttorney and .Halliday 's concti lions of .their em- over · .WSAZ-TV, Channel. 3, supporting President Nixon's tune of 'benign neglect." '
Equally strong cri~icism
campaign
"'anager
said
today
ployment."
H
concluded:
and daughter; Clara CardweU, the cP!Ill'llittee.
Huntington, W. \'a., between 8 candidacy are •qooJs" who
Stokes, chairman of the came from Reps. Wilham
"You have been selected as and II p.m.
Mrs. t.,nthony Nardel and
They were informed that a that the Ashland Area Labor
have been "duped by._. .one of caucus of the 13 blacks in the Clay, D:Mo., J9hn Conyers Jr.,
Coucnil
(
AFL-CIO);
the
one
of
those
canrlirletr,
who
daughter; Esla Welch, Helen breakdown of expenses could
·House, said Nixon "has begun IJ.Mich., am! Ralph Metcalfe,
their greatest oppressors."
Rollins,. Odessa Mor{lson, 'be obtained from the auditor's Carpenter's Local Union No.
"Sammy Davis Jr., Uonel . to strip away the constitutional D-Ill.
650,
Pomeroy
,
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a
nd
the
Ralph Mitchell, Jac'k E. office.
"It is both sickening and
Hampton, Bilty Eckstein, and hwnan rights of minority,
Pickens, Jr ., ~rs . George
Mrs.
Pearl
Welker , American Federation of Stale,
disg·
racefui for any blacks,
James Brown, Johnny Mathis poor and disadvantaged
County
and
Municipal
Em._.."6
Meetinll'
Miller and daughter. Gertrude representing the sororily, s:~id
Americans" in his stand especially entertainers who
Miller, Carol Masters, ..Oorll windows need repair, a dinette ployees , _Council No. 8,
are where they are because of
endorsed
Marshall, Sue Ann Knipp, Mrs. set Is needed, so are more Columbus, have
black support, to be duped by
•
Leonard Koenig and daughter; closet space and a utility Halliday's candidacy.
shrewd political con men and
James 0. Jenkins, Ann .E.
Avonell George, U~s Davis cupboard In the boys shower , The Ashland Area Labor
then to have the gall to try to
Jenkins to Raymond B. AllensCo
uncil
,
which
covers
and Stella Booten.".
room, and all cnildren need
con black people·into believing
worth, Betty Jo Allensworth,
BIRTHS - Mrs. Dudley tables and lamps as lighting at Lawrence county, filed a
The final.orientation meeting Corrected, Re-Recording ,
· that one of their greatest ophorne
is
"very written endorsement signed by for the 1973 Meigs County Middleport.
Wears, Applegrove, a son; the
pressor~. Richard Milhous
·
Mrs. William Lambert, Langs- Inadequate."
.
Woodrow
W. Coleman, Junior Miss Pageant will be
Nixon, is their friend and •
Lewis Harper, Unda Harper
ville, a daughter · Mrs. L!lrry
CharlesKarr, commissioner, president , and . Harry M: held Thursday at the Trinity
should be supported for reto Marion E. Gaylor, 80 Acres,
UP
mus 1·c, was named in·
NASHVILLE , Tenn: ( I)
election," said Clay. "This is
Boyer, Gallipolis, a son; Mrs. replied · that several cli&gt;sets Schaeffer, exec u I i v e Educational Building, Second R I
ut
and.
,
.
strumentalist
&lt;if
the
year.
· James Green, Gallipolis, a son have been built and more may secretary. The union serves St., Pomeroy, across from the
The Statler Brnthers , whose ilothiJjg but pure bull." ·
Hattie L. Nesselroad to - Smger Loretla Lynn becan:e
Clay said Nixon has spent
, and Mrs . Richard Avis, be lnlllt. Rooms at the home 1,200members in the Lawrence Pomeroy Post Office at 7:30 Joseph R.- Fields, Rita M. . the first wo~~n ever ~o wm
County
area.
.
.
p.m.
Gallipolis, a son. ·
are being painted and new
Fields, 65.07 Acres, Bedford. countr.y musiCs entertam.er. of big record was "Class 'of '57," more time with black athletes
The Carpenter's Umon en- . All high school senior girls
Lawrence R. Gluesencamp, the yea~ awar d Monday mg ht . were named the vocal group of and entertainers in the past
dorsement (AFL-CIO) was Interested in entering the Jr., Patricia Gluesencamp to and ~hided her husband for th~::~~~ fourth straight year, few weeks than he has with
. signed by Henry C Peery, pageant may do so at that Lawrence R. Gluesencarnp, sk!ppmg the event to go hun- Danny Davis and his Nashville "legitimate black leaders" in
business representaltve, and meeting.
. Mrs. Macy Letitia Gluu.,;nd, Mni. Gilbert (Catherine) Meal,
Sr ., Louise Gluesencamp, tmg.
Brass were named in- three years.
Entry fortns and other in- Parcel, Lebanon.
"He must think all blacks are
98, of 60 Chillicothe Rd., both of GaiUpolis, with whom represents 300 . members ,[n
"The only thing I'm sad strumental group of the year.
Lawrence,
Galha,
and
Me1gs
formation
in
regard
to
the
fool$
and will be r~pped off by
. Gallipolis, died· at ~:20 p.m., she made her home until
Ralph Brewer Violet Brewer about ts that my husbanu has . , Merle Haggard, was honored
pagean t will be available lo. Lawrence R. 'Gluesencamp, gone hunti~' and couldn't make for his albUm of the year, "Let 30 pieces of silver and his
Monday in the Wellston Nur- recimtly, and four grand- counties.
political trickery. Tricky Dick
The
AFSCME
(
AFL-CIO)
there. A film on the 1970 Sr Louise Gluesencamp 1 2 tt tomght, MISs Lynn told a
sing Home. She had been in children and · 12 g,·eat.,
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tel
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Me
Tell
You
About
a
Song."
endorsement was signed by natil!nal Junior Miss will be Acres Lebanon
hasn't changed a bit," said
nationa
ev1s10n au 1ence.
failing helllth the past three grandchildren.
Thomas
E.
Morgan,
233
S.
High
shown.
It
features
the
Ohio
Clay.
Sid~ey J. E;vin to Agnes
Miss Lynn, a coal miner:s
years.
She was preceded In death by
Street,
Columbus,
and
Junior
Miss
Pageant
and
the
Conyers said the black
Ervin Lot 311 Middleport.
daughter who staged a benefit
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Born Aug. 28, 1874, In Meigs her
husband,
Daniel
represen
ts
500
employees
of
Tennessee
State
Pageant.
has been waiting two
caucus
c. Schul~ · dec'd , to Paul performance last year for the ·
. L
N
n
County, she was the daughter Benajamln Gilliland, on May . state,
1
21
county
and
Th
widows and children of a
Eddie
ee
e so '
' months for a rnecting with
1
of the late' Daniel and Hannah 17, 1917.
Kentucky mine disaster, also
Rt.p2,
Nixon. Metcalfe said most
She was married on March
Smith Frank.
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lis'flerce
orne,
.
,
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blacks
were sophisticated
Schultz Jr. Albert H. Schultz
was named fema e voca &gt; o
k ' 'Pr
45 MidShe is survived by these 31, 1196, In Meigs County. One
.
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' the year and shared the vocal Jac Lee ovence, '
enough to ignore the "enchildren, Mrs. Adlai (Collie) son, Charles, preceded her in
Bntta B. Brown, Claron G.
d · . h dleport and Delores Ann Root,
dorsements from black enSchultz Dennis G. Schultz
duo of the year awar wtl .
• B tt
Rt I
Lievmg,
· Mason, w . va.; Mrs . death In Cincinnati on Oct. 9,
(Continued from page 1)
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35
Long
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om,
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tertainers and athletes as a
Gwynn N. Schultz, Cert. of
onway w1 ty.
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Orville (Berdle) White and 1959. Four brothers and two Seattle, Wash., and Washington, D. C.
means of influencing black
Trans
.,
Olive.
Charley
Pride,
the
o~ly
black
sisters preceded her In death.
voters."
singer to reach prommence m
She spent moat of ,her life In
MRS. BAILEY}'HOME
BONN , ,THE EAST GERMAN VOLKSKAMMER .
couhtry
·
music,
was
named
the Gallia and Meigs County parliament ratified Monday a treaty with West Germany that
Mrs. Harry Lee Bailey has
male vocalist of the year for
area.
been
returned to her Pomeroy
will make it possible for East Germans to pass through the Berlin
Tonight thru S.Oturday
the second year. in a row.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
October 17-21
DIVORCE ASKED
Wall for the first time since the Communists erected it in 1961 to
Former Louisiana Gov . horne after undergoing
10 a.m., Thliraday at MUler's stem the tide of refugees fleeing to the w,st.
medical
observation
and
A sui I for divorce has been
Jimmy Davis, b'lllt known for
Home for Funerals with Rev .
THE GOD FATHER
treatment
at
the
Holzer
filed
in Meigs County Common
Already some opponents of-Chancellor Willy Brandt's
the song "You(Are My SunMarion Brondo
' Paul Hawks officiating. Burial
(Continued from page I)
Medical
Center.
Pleas Court and another was
(R)
will be in . Mo~nd }{ill Eastern policies were expressing skepticism about East Gernian and Miss Blaettnar modeled shine, " was inducted into the
granted.
Filing was Ralston D.
3 hours. of
steadll{
promises to allow personal visits across the wall in connection
Country Music Hall of Fame.
Cemetery.
her cadette uniform while
engrossing entertalnmen .
Hemsley, same address,
Donna Fargo, a former
RUGS ARRIVE
AdultsI suo, Children 75c.
Frlenda may call at the with the new traffic treaty. "Now we will just have to wait and Paige Smith explained the
charging
gross neglect of duty
how the GDR (German Democratic Republic) fulfills Its
California schoolteacher and a
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) funeral heme between 6 and 9
insignia .on the badge sash.
and extreme cruelty. Wyatt E.
pledge to make it easier for West German citizens to enter the
p.m., Wednesday.
Show Storts 7 P.M.
Mrs. April Smith, leader of relative newcomer to country The first Oriental rugs from Radford was granted a divorce
GDR," said opposition Christian Democrat Johann-Bsptist the troop, commented on the music, was honored .for her China to arrive in the United
from Belva Radford, on
·
Grad! of Berlin. ·
origin of scouting and single of the year, " The States in more than 30 years charges •of gross neglect of
welcomed a new member, Happiest Girl in the Whole were due to be unloaded today duty. Bernl~e K. Saxton,
from the steamship Idaho, The
WASRINGTON - MOUNTING CONTROVERSY over a Melody Snouffer. Another new U.S.A."
The
song
of
the
year
was
22 rugs , described as Pomeroy, filed suit against
compromise $250 billion ceiling in government spending member, CheryI Lefebre was
Hart 's
"Easy "exquisitely btautiful," 'were Homer Eastman, St. Paul
threatened today to postpone further the already-delayed ad- unabl e to attend . Cindy Freddie
hand-made in Tientsen, the rug Minn., in the amount of $5,964,
journment of the 92nd Congress. "Why, the President could close McKinney recited a poem from Loving."
Charlie McCoy, who brought capital o( China, and were for support of two children for
down the Capitol," protested Sen. Charles McMathias, R-Md., as the Cadette handbook.
,a seven year period.
the harmonica back to country · valued in excess of $50,000,
lawm~~kers pored over the compromise, under which President
Badges were presented .by
Nixon could cut most outlays at will.
·
The bill was drafted in a huddle between House and Senate Mrs . Smith to the troop • - - - - - - - - - - - -...- - - - -...~~~~~~~~~-,
negotiators, with advice of administration officisls, as
congressional leaders sougllt in vain to wind up the two-year
session Saturday night. )l'lnal House and Senate votes on this and hospitality, outdoor cook, pen
another last-minute compromise on welfare and Social Security
personal health, and water
'a·
finally were put off until Ibis week with the revised abn of adSusan Burns - active
journing not later than Wednesday.
citizen ,
backyard
fun,
collector, books, hospitality,
songster, water fund, cyclist,
dabbler.
Cindy McKinney - Songster,
SYRACUSE - A Halloween categories with the top winners
party sponsored by Syracuse each receiving a silver dollar. personal health and sign of the
Vlllage Council the first time
Mrs. Robert Holstein and arrow.
Nita Rusche! - health aide,
wlll be held Sliturday, Oct. 28, Mrs. Jack Duffy will canvass
at the new municipal building. the town for donations. As of active citizen, backyard fun,
Children from toddlers through Monday donations totaled $65. collector, personal health,
junior high school age are Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPhail, songster, and sign of the star.
Jane Sisson - community
invited from Syracuse and Mrs. Corbett Patterson and
Minersville.
Eber Pickens will be in charge safety, dabbler, hospitality,
personal health, water fun ,
There will be games, four of games.
songster,
rambler, and
cake walks, candy treats, and
Children will be given tickets
refreshments of doughnuts, for each event, which .is free, in needlecraft.
Paige Smith - personal
cider, and candy apples.
order lhllt each child attending
For ciistwnes, a prize of $5 will receive treats. · The health, pets, home health and
will be awarded the winners in · committee of council planning safety, art in the round, magic
prettiest, funniest, most the party will meet again next carpet, dabbler, foot traveler,
original and ugliest categohes. )\{onday evening at the home of musician, my·community, my,
troop, pen pal, songstet, .story
Pre-schoolers will be judged· Katie Crow at 7:30 p.m.
teller, and troop dramatics.
separately in the four
The green and yellow color
~
scheme was carried out in the
refreshment'table decorations.
The cake, Inscribed " Girl
Scout Troop 61," was served
with lime punch and green and
yellow mints. Mrs . .John
William Blaettnar, Mrs. Paul
Burnes, Mrs. Edith Sisson, and
Miss Debbie Harbrecht, troop
... of peace of mind when you have
assistant assisled with the
serving.
The table was cena checking account. Whether .it be
tered wlth a dried winter
arrangement made by, Jane
personal Qr business. the records a
Sisson.

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3 Unions Eridorst{Halliday

Blacks for Nixon Ridiculed

Property

• al
Fm

Transfers

Is Thursday·

'.

Fork-tainer to Pick Up,"
Compact County'~ Wastes
. · A majpr step toward solving Meigs
County's'solid waste disposal problem has
been taken by the board of Meigs County
Commissioners.
Tues.day, a Cobey "fork-tainer, " a
huge piece of equipment which will lift and
empty large metal trash containers to be
placed about Meigs County was delivere'd.
The commissioners, Charles Karr, Sr.,
·Robert Clark and Warden Ours, received
the fork-tainer from J9mes ' stewart,
Reynolds Truck Bodies, Inc. , Columbus, ·
and Sonny Mansperger, regiomil sales
manager of the Perfection-Cobey Co.,
Galion.
Weighing 28,000 pounds, the "forklainer': will travel to 30 trash collection
stations in Meigs County, The equipment
will lift the stations and empty their
contents into its compactor. Trips will be

. Mjss Lyrtn Year's

1

Top Entertainer

News.

•••

in Briefs

pp~rnergy28,

Cloudy tonight with a chance
of snow north and rain or snow
south. Lows in the upper 20s
and 30s. Thursday, mosUy
sunny and cold. Highs in the
upper 30s and 40s.

•
Devoted To The lnleresu Of The Meigs·Mason Area'

VOL XXIV NO. 130

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18. 1972

-ELBERFELDS _IN POMEROY
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A88URfD

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·YOUR HEADQUARTERS
FOR .

ADMIRAL

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••

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checking account gives.you can help

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make tax time or any time easier to
know where you stand financially.

ftr .. jllbt. . . . . . . . . .

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•• rugged •• the men·
who weer t:hern ·

.·See th~ complete selection of
Carhsrtt Brown Duek Work
Clothes and Super l)u Hunfil!g
Clothes - Men's Dep.rtment,

P

' .....
IIDIMIDI•L111Cl•~olllll'I'T 01110
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ers
SAIGON (UP!)- The U.S. command today announced the
crash of two jet fighter:bombers - one of them a swingwing
Fill, the second of the controversial warplanes to crash over
North Vietnam since they returned to Indochina three weeks ago.
The $15 million swingwing Fill all-weather bomber and its
two crewmen were lost on a raid over the North Tuesday, the
command said, and an F4 Phantom crashed just ,before dawn
today about 10 miles north of its base at Ubon, Thailand, after a
bombing run in North Vietnam.
Hanoi Radio monitored in Saigon today said North Vietnamese antiaircraft gunners "blasted to pieces" the Fill
Tuesday over Vinh Phu Province northwest of Ha·noi. The
Communist broadcast said the two crewmen were killed but the
U. S. command officially listed them as missing in action and
said the "cause and location of the apparent crash are

MR.ANDMRS.JACKCARSEY,Ieft,recelved 25 year membership pins and Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens, Reedsville, received 30 year pins at the annual Farm Bureau meeting held in
Chester Tuesday night.

Co~Op

Members

Name Trustees
Honoring new and ling-time
. members , election of four
trustees,
adoption
of
resolutions covering a wide
range of subjects and entertainrnent
by
ins t.r u mentalists,
the
'runetirners, )\'ere highlights of
the annual Meigs County Farm
Bureau meeting at the Chester
Elementary School Tuesday
night.
Membership pins were
presented to new 1972 mem-

bers as well as long time
members . up to 45 years.
Receiving the pins !~om Robert
Burdette were :
New members of 1972 - Ron
Eastman, Harold White,
Hershel B. McClure, Florence
Wilson, Harold Proffitt,
Richard P . and Barbara
Dugan, Dallas Hill, Donald
Pigott, Kenneth Davis, Harry
· Richards, Homer A. Cole, Mike
Thompson, and James Kunath.
Also, Gljil Buck, Henry G..

'"lltlllll':lllll':SomomJ~
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Arnold,, Arthur 0. Reedy,
Norman R. Humphreys, Willis
Anthony, Lloyd Wright,
Mildred Frank, Doris Ramsburg, Tracy Whaley, Donald C.
Roush, Norman L. Weyersmiller, Virgil L. Hill, Maxine
Diddle, Jack Teaford.
Members getting 25 year
awards, J. M. Gaul, ·Jack W.
Carsey, U. S. Nease, Delbert
Smith, Virgil Hamm.
30 year awards, Howard
Parker, Ivan Well, Arthur
Spencer, Warren Pickens,
Dana C. McCain, Gerald F.
Morris, John T. Holliday.
35 year awards, Hwnphrey
Farms, Dan M. While, John E.
Grueser.
45 year award , G. L.
Michael.
The 175 persons attending lbe
(Continued on page 8)
·

·ews•• in BriefsJ ·O eland
By Untied Press Internaliooal .
HONOLULU -THE NAVY DISCLOSED Tuesday lhllt four
persons were injured and II arrested as the result of a · ~r~cial
bsttle" aboard the fleet oiler Hassayampa. It was the second
reported racial brawl aboard a Navy ship within. a week. The
incident occured while the Hassayampa was at Subic Bay in the
Philippines. The four injured all were white and the II arrested
all were black, said a spokesman for the conunander in chief of
the Pacific. "Charges are being prepared against" the II blacks,
he Sllid.
· · A Navy spokesman said he could not immediately explain
why ~nly blacks were arrested, wily only ':"hiles were injured and
how many crewmen were involved in the fighting.

To OJair
Program

Hank Cleland, · Jr ., was
named chairman for the annual Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave ·Program when Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, met Tuesday night at
the post home.
. COLUMBUS- SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN'S presidential
According to plans made at
campaign coordinator, Lawrence O'Brien, held a telephone last night's meeting presided
conference caU with Ohio newamen Tuesday ·and said respon, over by Kenneth Harris,
siblllty for "pollee state actions of the Republican Pa~ty in 1972 commander, Nov . 16 was
selected for the annuai ' 'Dough
must rest with President Nixon.
Dough" , campai!!n .
· Referring to the Watergate bugging incident, the former for
Through
the program, post
Democratlc·Party national chairman was aske!f why the bugging
mcident and other aCcusations of political espionage by the members deliver bread to
Republicans had not been reflected ln pubUc opinion polls which Pomeroy hom~s and accepr
contributions for the program.
show McGovern far behind the president.
"First of all it Is not accurate to say the polls have not Last year the Eighth District of
moved "said O'Brien. '•We still have a distance to go, We have to which the Pomeroy Chapter Is
move :Oore in the n~t two or three weeks. The American a part raised $6,000 for the
program to provide money and
people," he added, "will not tolerate political espionage."
gifts for veterans ln Veterans
Hospitals in Ohio.
ANCHORAGE ALASKA -'- DESPITE picking up brief
Three members, .Virgie
electronic . I s 'from an emergency ·beacon, Coast .Guard Hobstetter, (loy Reuter and
helicopters had no luck Tuesc~Jy intbeaearchfor a missing pisne Tom Hennessy were reported
. carrying pemocratlc House lead~ Hale Boggs and !hree.others. hospitalized •. Membership to
· The search wu caUed off at nlghtfaU arid was to r:esume at date was 'reported at 192,
dawn today~ The signalS were beard about 5.p.m. EDT while two · Tile annual oyster stew
Jtelicopters were over the rugged Chilkat mountain range on th~ dinner was set for Nov. 7 when
Manlftelcl Penlnlula, 10 miles south ol Juneau. The Coast Guard World . War I Night will be
said ~ first beep ~sted 40 minutes and the ~ond 3t) seconds: observed. A social night was
announced for Oct. 28 at the
DEMOCRAT GEORGE 8. M.OOVERN accused President post h.ame for members of the
·T
d fri nda
Nixon today ol callling a recession that put 2 million persons ~t
post, &amp;UXIUlfY' an
e . ·
·of work. '!'be President stayed in Walhing1M and turned his Members were asked to g1ve
attention to the ~nt of rela~ With C!Ua.
.
blood at the Bloodmobile on
' . McGovern, who continues to trail Nillon by ·a wide margm . Oct. 23. Refreshments were
~rvtid by Paul Case!.

unknown.''
Spokesmen said the two where captured documents
Phan tom crewmen "were
indicate a new country-wide
immediately rescued by a offensive has been ordered lor
locally based helicopter" with this weekend.
no injuries reported. They said
cause of the Phantom crash
- Monsoon weather agai n
was likewise unknown.
Tuesday restri cted U. S.
In other war developments : bombing raid s over North
_ Presidential adviser . Vietnam, with only 280 tactical
Henry A. Kissinger, following strikes reported. Spokesmen
another round of secret talks said the · radar-guided Fills
Tuesday in Paris with North remained airborne despite the
Vietnamese peace negotiators, Tuesday loss and flew night
was en route to Saigon today missions north of Hanoi.
- Government
for
consultations
with
id tod th military
·
Nguyen van Th 1eu
' o1 sources
President
'b' l'sat th ayC ere was
, ta
So
· t
u
s
poss1 1 t y e ommums s
~th VIe nam. · · Army · could hit Saigon with rockets
Ch1ef-&lt;&gt;f..Staff Gen. Creighton b t th t "th .
d
, f
W. Abrams arrived in the 0 a
ereisno a~ger 0
capital earlier today from a g·~r"d attack agamst · the
Washington but the Pentagon cap! · ·
refused to say if his visit was
related to the Kissinger
negotiations. White House
spokesmen soft-pedaled the
Kissinger trip but it fueled
speculation that progress was
being made in peace talks.
-The Saigon command said
government troops Tuesday
drove the Communists from
two Central Highlands hamlets
seized earlier in the day. But
the
North
Vietnamese
remained in control of four
other hamlets in the highlands,,

$'

RACINE - All Paren tTeacher Associatio ns and
Parent-Teacher Organizations
of Southern Local School
District have endorsed the five
mill renewa l levy to be voted
on Nov . 7, Ralph Sayre,
superi ntendent, told the
Southern Local School Board
Tuesday night.
Sayre said he has explained
the levy to all pr'inclpals and
non-teaching personnel of the
district and will talk with the
teachers of the dislrlct today.
In other business the board

named four persons to serve on
Uw Rio Grande Community

College committees. They are
the Rev . Charles Norris in the
area of education; Frank
Cleland, physical development; Larry Wolfe, historical
development, and Charles
Pyles, business and Industry.
Following recommendati~n
by Sayre the board hired John
Dudding as junior hi gh
basketba)l coach for the 1972,73
school year and set graduation
exercises on S~day, May 20,
1973.

Defendants Fined
Six defendants were fined
and four others forfeited bonds
in the court of Middleport
Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday
night.
Fined were Buddy McKinney, 55, Middleport, $15 and
cos ts, intox ica tion ; Don
Lovett, 49, Portland, $25 and
costs, intoxication; kenneth T.
Wyant, 62, V.ienna , W. Va ., $5
and costs, stop sign violation :
Carolyn Ann Charles, 34,
Logan, $5 and costs, following
too closely; Steven K. Lane, 18,
Middleport, $15 and costs,

speeding,
and
Frank
Lauderrnilt, 24, Middleport, $10
and costs, Intoxication.
Anna . M. Theiss, 47,
Syracuse, was assessed costs
only for opening a car door into
traffic.
Forfeiting bonds were
Melvin Darst, 42, Middleport;
Donald E. Pauley, 53, West
Carrollton, $30, and Jerome
Roberts, 65, Carrollton, $30
each, posted on Intoxication
charges, and Mary V.
Kesterson, 39, Pomeroy, $25,
driving left of center.

Meeting with the board was
Lyle Webster, Portsmouth, of
the Bureau of Rehabilitation.
He ssid people who may need
rehabilitated are invited to
attend a meeting on Oct. 5.
Sayre explained the Search for
Consensus and announced that
a county meeting will be held
at Meigs High School on May 25
at 7 p.m.
Also meeting with the board
was Charles Baer; head
teacher
at
Syracuse
Elementary, who reported on
the Right to Read Program at
Wellston on Oct. 12 which he
attended as a representative of
Meigs County,
Sayre presented the board a
· substitute teacher list; said he
had received an application for
a position as teacher from Rose
Ann Jenkins; reported on the
school lunch program, noting
that 37 pet. of the children In
the six schools of the district
are being fed under the free
lunch program, and that total
enrollment in the sit schools Is
1,033.
Sayre dis closed he had
received booklets on Ohio
Schools minimum standards
Including the latest revisions
for elel)!e~Cary 'and secQI!.~~Y
(Continue4 onf page 12)

Plaintiffs
Wm" .Awards
·Security Sewage Equipment
Company, Crestline,.9hio, and
Ray C. Blackburn of
Cleveland, Tuesday were 1
awarded verdicts against the '
Ohio Valley Electric Corporation of Cheshire, Huntington Piping Company,
Huntington and American
Electric Power Service Cor·
poratlon of New York.
Gallla County Common
Pleas Court Judge'Ronald R.
Calhoun ordered Hunt~
Piping Co. to pa~ the plaintlfb
$1,170. Security Sewage
. Equipment had. , originally
sought $8,157 ~Ius mterest.
OVEC . and . A~er~an
Electzic .Power .Service ere
ordered · to .}"BY the sum (l
$3, 372· In the origlnal p:Utlon
the plain~s sought ~,52UO. '
The a~lon derived from the
Installation of sewer equip:
ment at the . Kyger Creek
Power Plant.
Judge Calhoun .further or, · ·
·dered that upon payment of the
l dg Is. the rnechanic'lllen
u . men •
.
(Continued on ,Page 12)
.I

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1

TEN CENTS

,.

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PHON E 992-2156

androDyottRletLo3~

Council Sets Party Day

YOU'RE

missioners, from the left, Charles Karr, Sr., Warden Ours,
Robert Clark, county commissioners, and Sonny Mansperger, regional sales manager of the Perfection -Cobey Co.

American motorists drove an
estimated 945 billion miles in
passenger cars in 1971.

see

r:~:

'

Weather

Girls

:~~t~;~~lff~ws:~:n::.~~:

.

made as needed to a new county-&lt;&gt;perated a progressive step to improve the ecology
dump located .in the Thomas Fork area. of Meigs County. Meigs is the first county
The containers, of various sizes, will be in Ohio to adopt the fork-lainer and conplaced outside of villages the coun ty tainer system, the representa tives said.
C(llllmissioner said. Residents can travel
The equipment was ·purchased by the
to the containers to empty their refuse for county commissioners t hrough a federal
the pickup by the "fotk-lainer."
grant made some months ago to esta blish
The county-&lt;&gt;wned dump is almost a landfill facility. The landfill will be open
ready. Aroadway to it has beeh built and a for use by collectors operating in Meigs ,
driver has been employed to operate the County villages, but there will bt a charge.
fork-tainer. He will be given lextensiv~ There will be no charge to residents out- · .
training · on the equipment by Stewart side of the village who take their refuse to
when the landfill is ready for operations. the large metal coniainers to be placed at
The landfill will be wired for electricity various strategic points in all of the
upon final approval by the state. Movies of townships,
the equipment operations will be taken by
The cost of the compactor rig and
the two firms , Reynolds Perfection-Cobey, containers from the Reynolds Co . was
for showing in other Ohio counties.
$18,478.78. The chassis for the new
JAMES STEWART, left, Reynolds Truck Bodies, Inc.,
Representatives of the firms said the equipment was purchased through the
representative of Columbus, presents the keys to the new
equipmen t• nd container pickup system is Meigs Equipment Co. at a cost of $16,198.
garbage collection fork-tainer to Meigs County Com-

MEIGS THEATRE

CHECKS
AND
BALANCE

'

'·

Now You Know

Mary Gilliland Died on Monday

M.
irn
~i~~~u~z, Da~iel: ~~~~~ ~·

'

i

..

•
'

•

-

f

. ...•.

of
/

~.

WORKMEN OF TilE P. R. COFFEY CO., Raceland, ·

Ky. are removing tons of rock which fell near. the Pomeroy

Po~ Offi&lt;;e and the Pomeroy Public Ubrary last Dec ..3. Th~
•
(

\

then

.boulders are broken up and
hauled away. Windows of
il9th the post office Bl)d the library h.lve been boarded up for
protection,

.. ··

�%- Thi!llaily Sentinei,Mlddleport-PomerO'y, Oct 13, 1972

IDIJ'ORIAlS

"I'll Drop You a Cord!'·

3- The O.ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oct 18, 1972

Voice along .IBr'Way

'

Oh, Education,
Here Is Thy Sting

The Board of Education of the State of Ohio has Issued
a set of guidelines to prevent public school officials from
running afoul of recent court deCISIOns enlargmg student
ngh!s Among them
Ill The wearmg of '' buttons. badges, armbands and
other symbols of PQhtical or controversial sigmtwance 1s
fnmly p~otected
"
• Students cannot be required to salute the flag 01
recite the Pledge of Allegiance
• On the other hand, "at no lime should the black
power' or 'power to the people' salute be repressed un
less 11 IS a call to overt and 1mmed1ate disruptiOn of the
educational process "
It IS not clear whether or not 11 1s legal for school
off1c1als to d1srupt armband-wearmg, non-allegiance
pledgmg or pebple-power-salutmg to get on With the socalled education process Possibly a future court deCISIOn
Will clanfy this pomt

Water? He'll Drink to That
It was a httle )Ike Sp1ro Agnew appeanng at a Demo
cratlc fund-ra1smg dmner .when the head of tl1e American
Water Works Ass 0c1ation addressed the convention of
the Ame1"1can Bottled Water Association m Miami Beach
the other day Enc F Johnson, executive director of an assoctahon
representing 30,000 commumty suppliers of tap water,
had been responsible lor much unfa~ilr~ISie publicity
directed at bottled water
He took pains to assure the bottlers, however, that he
d1dn'~ really wear horns Smce JUSt about everybody
drmks water of one kind of another, h1s ma)or pomts
may bear repeatmg
."I have no quarrel w1th people who purchase bottled
water," said Johnson "But I don't think bottled water
should be sold on the bas1s that tap water 15 dangerous
or unsafe "
Bottled water Is not as a general rule subJected to the
survelllance and controls reqUired of tao water, he
]lomted out. Many bottled waters could not "meet federal
drinking water standards, although they are safe
"People m our affluent" society want what they want,
wliere they want It, and have evtdenced a Willingness to
pay for It," sa1d Johnson
"When bottled water serves a need unmet by public
water supply, or when people can afford the luxury of
buying exactly the quality they want m your bottles, we
have no quarrel wtth them or you "
•The common goal of both orgamzat10ns he stressed
was better water for people

WIN AT BRIDGE

Analysis: Where's Queen
'

NORTH

21

• 86

• 8 5 32
• 75
.98642

WEST (D)
.Q
.QJ964
• 1092

I•AKQ!O

EAST
• 7 432
¥ KlO
• QJ864
.J7

SOlJTII

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen BoHel

••

NOT A WELCOME MAT 1N SIGHT
Dear Helen:
I trav~l a lot It's a joy to Vlslt other states. People there
make youfeel welcome But our state (I'd better not menUon the
name, bilt rilldents of this beauUful, unfriendly "paradise" will
llnow) wants only Yis.ltors - and thell); mongy - no new
resl\lents'
.,, •
Lately they have been potting stickers on outo()f-6\ate cars
"Keep .. green. Go back 1I" Wa1tresses actually msult people
from a neighboring state Ou1' reSidents smgle out that particular
one for special dislike. People who move here from there are
considered ''dirty squatters" for the firSt 20years and after that

.AKJI095
.A7
.AK3
.53
Both vulnerable
West North East South
1¥
Pass
lNT Dble
2•
Pass
2¥
Pass Pass
Pass
Opemng lead-· K

4.

By Oswald &amp; James JacQb)
South's 1 u m p to lout
spades was a d1stmct over
bid The odds were agamst
his partner holdmg as much
as one queen and South was
lookmg at four probable
losers outside the t rum p
suit •
On the other hand the
game was rubbe1 bndge an~

rubber bndge pla~e1 s tend
to overbtd a tnfle With hands
as strong as the one South
was lookmg at
The dummy dtdn t even
hold a I 0- s pot , but the
doubleton diamond was like
money from home
South ruffed the thud club
and promptly played ace
kmg three of diamonds to
ruff m dummy Then South
led dummy's last trump ,
thought a while , went up
with his ace dropped West s
smgleton queen and claimed
game and rubber
NICe guess'" 1emarked
North
"It wasn't a guess," re.
phed South "West had
opened the b1ddmg With one
heart and rebtd two clubs
H1s club holdmg was ace
kmg-queen-10 and he would
have opened one club unless
hiS heart SUit was a ftvecarder That accounted for
mne cards and he had followed to three leads of diamonds That left him With
Just one spade "If 1t were
anythmg but the queen East

BRUCE BIOSSAT

"newcomera.''
I recently talked to a local Chamber of Commerce group, and
they told me, "At least we don't have blacks, minorities, and
other troublemakers .. the pollee meet mcomlng buses and
suggest they move on." Several Europeans passing through have
said ,they got no kindnesses here.
What gets me Is 1t'snot all that good bert Busmess is dying.
Uving costs balloon. TV reception is as bad as our waste disposal
system - which bas polluted our riVer past safe levels Mills
belch smoke Yet our people fight proposals of new Industry w1th
the llnow-bow to conquer air and water polluUon
I'm talking about one state, bill a dozen sparsely populated
states would fit my description. Why, Helen, do these people so
jealoualy guard their ''Wealth" when to share It would mean
greater opportunities for everyone? - ASHAMED OF MY
STATE
Dear Ashamed
Your question has split many a small town r1ght down the
mlddl~nd It's chlll'lllng up controversy In State leglslalllres
these days too
'lbough It's presented m terms of •ecology vs. In·
duatrlallzaUon, sometimes the basic feeling lB a holdover from
th~ early settlers. "ThiBiand is mine - and don't come clDS$1,
you varmint, 1Dlless you prove yourself first I" - H
Dear

Helen:

+++

What is the most common hoax letter you rece1ve In the
maiJ? -JERRY

Hurry-Up Tanaka
Tonic for Japan
81 BRUCE BIOSSi\T
WASHINGTON rNEAI
If 1mp1 ovement of US -Japanese 1elallons has a bette I
prospect w1th faste1 dec1s10n-makmg, then Japan's new
Pnme Mm1ste1 Kakue1 Tanaka rna) very well be good
for us
He IS provmg to be much quicker at deciSIOns than the
Japanese people are accustomed to The leadership habit
there IS to we1gh and consider endlessly until a deCISion
sort of comes mto bemg mstead of bemg made
When economic trouble developed over the Wide trade
gap between our two countries, thiS slowness was a
senous handicap to negotiatiOns Our Irnlations over tt
were a factor 10 the blunt, preCIPitate acbon we fmally
took m mid-1971 to restnct Japanese tra(le and force currency c~a nges
Tanaka's qutte d1ffe1 ent make-up made a good Impression on President Nixon m their Hawau meetmg Reabs
tlcally, hopes should be a little h1gher than before that
deeper mroads can be made mto the sticky trade gap
dilemma
Word from Tokyo IS , too, that Tanaka IS havmg a tome
effect 111 his own country The Japanese often have seen
deciSIOn delayed so long that the lime for action went by
Without any, whereupon p~ople glumly took the loss mvolved, shrugged, and watched the1r leaders agomze
over the next one
Tanaka's trip to Chma to establish a diplomatic lmk
With Pekmg and break off such ties w1lh Ta1wan came
extraordmanly soon after he took off1ce It really set the
torre for h1s regime
He, and h1s new, qUick ways are provmg very popular
In Japan It IS recogmzed that he probably w11l make
more mistakes than some of h1s predecessors, but th1s
does not seem to be wornsome The 1mportant thmg ts
that the mood of the Japanese today IS evidently a good
deal brighter than It has been for more than a year
None of th1s means a mag1c solvent suddenly has been
introduced mto the somewhat stiffened relations between
Japan and the Umted States A great deal remams to be
accomplished
Anli·J\rnencanlsm still IS runnmg frurly high The
Japanese have not yet forgotten what they regard as the
rude shocks of 1971, when we applied trade llmtts and
,N1xon announced hiS own tr1p to CHma
However our heavy troop pullout from V1etnam may be
seen elsewhere, to the Japanese It sigmfies a dimmtshlng
American mterest and mfluence m As1a Consequently,
they place less trust than before m our wntten pledges to
cQme to Japan's defense
Ob,viottsly lh1s makes the question of Japan
armed forces a more cruc1al

Jerry :
... The one which goes -with variations depending on what
"good guy" Is presenUy unpopular, or what profession turns the
writer off.
Dear Helen Please help me. I bave two brothers and two
siJters. One brother Is an Army recruiter The other was just
sentenced to death for murder My mother died of Insanity when
I was three years old My father sells nsrcotlcs and my two
slstets are !l'Dstltutes.
' Recently 1 met a girl who was released from prison after
lelliDg her illegitimate child, and stealilig back the money I
want to marry her, but lhowd !tell her about my brother, the
ArmY ret.TUiter? - ASHAMED
Sometimes I wonder if tliis quest1on, like hopscotch, will ever
go out of ltyle
I wonder about other idiotic thipgs too •• Ulte .
l Wlllder If anyone really watches the male dancers m a TV
eKtr8\'llpiiJ8 which features leggy female hoofers' No matter
bow qtle they are, those ponr suys are only window dressing.
I -der If some brave soul somewhere has actually written,
"I want my money back," to companies that proclabn, ''If our
(Ill pa tlwfll"', eaay-k, etc.) p-.od!Jct iln't better, cheaper and
full!' .dllnyoarfrom-ecratchreclpe we'llreturn your money ... ''
(On .,o1mdl thalli~~~~~ ''blUer"?).
,
__...; ~~~~r~
ItiiiiCIIrlfMirkSpltaeverdated Barbie Benton (nee Klein),
m ·t
..._ HI.. W'I &amp;irlfrlead' The)' are near the same sge, come be very dtfflcult
town ...:Carmlchaei.I could find out easily.
And, notwithstanding the somewhat euphoric mood
llllildlllltlrll fWI to wonder.
•
ushered in by Tanaka's ImpreSSive beginning, so will the
11 d· If J111t1
ever 1M!8 ts hi1 w1f
H rd US -Japanese trade gap Tokyo 1s well aware that its
I
-e, or owa
sw1ft off•r to buy billion more U S goods was only an
flit""' beala HIM' Of If Karen Valentine Scretly opemng gesture, )10wever welcome Tanaka's talents will
1111117
•
be taxed heavily to help produce longer range an$Wers
'r WilY tile ~ waltllig~lne always moves faster In the way of opening up the- Japanese market
. . tile • I chot11e?
Yet, as noted m prev1ous reports, the Japan of late 1972
l :•awlll If the bomHI-tbe.future will eliminate kitchens, Is also more mdependent m spmt And ~oundlngs there
. . .bralldlltGOIDIIInto hinll7 uvm, cenlc!n'
make it clear Tokyo w11l go only so far, and expect
l....,WIIyldDn'tptbwcktoadvlcecolUIDIIIllg? -H.
America to make up add1honal ground by a much touglier
attack on tis own problem of laggmg producl!vlty
~ar

..._
.,_11!1111
llltrw

"'"M'••

n

•

would have a sure spade
tnck and my only chance
was for West's smgleton to
be that card
South was nght He also
had shown the va1Id1ty of
our theory that If you want
to overb1de you should be
sure to play well
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

The b1ddmg has been
West
North
East

BY JACK O'BRIAN
AT LEAST MICK DIDN'T
LEAVE HER FLAT
NEW YORK (KFS}- Who says a Rolling
Stonega~~tersno Mas Mick'Jagger was hit With
another IJI!terruty S\lll by an a~rllne cut1e he
flew Joe Namath was on )he covers of Time &amp;
Sports llhistrated lost two games ma row The
old Cover Jmx Ticket scalpers hawk their
tllegal trade right m front of the cops outside
Yankee Stadium
Duke of Wmdsor's pop
named James refused to eat after his royal
master died and then James d1ed
G1ma
Cook, Wtdow of actor Donald Cook and owner of
the Leopard gourmet restsurant had a call !tom
rock star Neil Diamond's manager asking 1f
Neil could dme there sans cravat G101a replied
he'd been there dozens ot tilDes Without a
necktie, soNe1l arnved and G1orn did an elegant
doubletake she'd thought the call was from
world's champ comedy playwright Neil Sbnon
There's a pothole outstde chic Bergdorf·
Goodman's that 1ts preSident, Andrew Goodman, could bathe 111 , The Hippopotamus
discotek IS trying desperately to postpone
eviction New office bUI!dmg will riSe where
rock mustc fell It's part of the parcel P J
Clarke's owner Danny llivezzo packaged and
peddled for abnost $15 million
Jean-Luc
Godard's latest ag1tprop flick 1s a grmding
bormg messagey sermon serenadmg the Class
War One N Y rev1ewer slashed tt as a
"MaOist-mdoctrmation fllm/ 1 addmg, "'Who
wants to hear these Marxtsl harangues'"
You can't afford to not m1ss 11 Godard auns
his narrowstdes at The Proletariat- except m
America the proletanat are hardhats
The deaths of the dtgmfted and respel;led
mdustnal designer Henry Dreyfus and h1s wife,
DoriS, m a double-smc1de last week, came as
mournful news to the mruds on the Plaza Hotel
floor where the couple mamtamed a year-round
apartment When the couple left for California
not long ago, the1r most personal floor ma1d sa1d
blithely she'd see the Dreyfuses as customary
around Chrlsbnans and Mrs D replied, "I don't
thmk you'll see us any more " First tbne,
leading the maid to suspect the su1c1des were
planned not on a moment's spur
The oldest private th&lt;atncal club, The

Pass
1¥
Pass
Pass
3•
Pass
5t
Pass
Pass
Q-Who IS Thomas Lamer
Pass
6 "Pass
W!lllams'
You South hold
A-The playwnght Ten.AK86¥A102 +KS.A164 nessee Williams He was

•

taking m non~heatrlcal members ...
In these no.bra days, 1s 11 mterestlng tbat Mary
Phelps Jacob got $15,000 for her Invention of a
no-bones bra from the Warner Corset Co ' .
The Dems who control Congress threaten an
mvestlgaUon of theN. Y Port Authority GOP's
shrug 11 off as "politics" inall!DUch as New
Jersey and N V governors control 11, and
they're both Repobs
Flim producer Sam Bronston's w1fe,
Dorothea, had serious surgery 1D Fla. ..
Switzerland's strmgent control of property
bought by fore1gners (they're cash IS OK tho)
led to the Shah of Iran kiboshmg plans to bUY a
huge summ~ spot at llike Geneva .. Jeanrue
Berlin thinks the dll'ector of her latest flick,
"The Heartbreak K1d,"1s the best In the world·
her mother, Elaine May
Sylv18 Sidney's
rheumaUsm (she even does a rheumy-pill TV
pi\ch) slows down the erstwhile cute little hbn
kitten So her needlepomt book climbed verrrry
slowly to the hit list passed the 100,000 mark,
which would get 11 onto the Best Seller lists 1f it
were a novel or bmg But they don 11ist how-to
tomes Nor the Bible, wh1ch annually outsells
'em all
The smger, Frankie "13, ' swears on hJS
arithmetic book h1s name's JUSt that except m
ltahan 1t's Johnny Tredlcl; why not?
Remember U!ws PrllDa? loUIS Fll'st . West
Coast stores anapped up blue workers' SUits
from (:tuna on the backwash of Nixon's Maonow. They were fooled -marked down to $4 99
Backlash the Byrnes Bros group smgmg at
J1mmy Byrne's 2nd Ave spot close !hell' ~!bows
With a rousmg patriotic fmal 45 mmute flagwaver
Woody Allen's arranged flnancmg and
distribution already for hiS next fl1ck he 'II
WI'Ite, direct and star m this one, too Mara
Lynn Brown of the Royal Bo~ glitterevue
"R1smg Star" adm1ts she won $2,700 m Las
Vegas and bought herself a rmg. Doesn't care If
Uncle Sam knows about 1t, e1t11er . . Lmt·
picking Lisa Kirk at the Mwsonette sang a
topical nostalgia p1ece, "!Was Born Too Late."
True. if she weren't, she'd've known Paul
Whiteman never played the Commodore Hotel
The Biltmore and New Yorker, yes. And Paiii!S
Royal.

OAKLand (UP!) - They'll outfield was 111 rotten shape,
make another effort to play the totally unplayable," he said
third game of the World Senes
tomght, w1th both teams
"It would have taken three
stlckmg to the!l' qnal pll- hours to get the water off there
chmg plans, but c~nces of yet and we would not have been
another wet weather post- able to stage a proper World
ponement are strong
Series game "
The game was drowned out
Bolli managers, D1ck WilTuesday mght when a freak, liams of the A''!, who hold a 2-11
tropic-style rdm squall dumped lead 1n the ser1es and need only
another load of heavy water on two more WillS to wrap up the
already ~en Oakland Co- world champwnshlp, and
liseum only 16 mmutes before SparkY Anderson of the backsthe scheduled 5 30 p m PDT to-the-wall Reds, professed to
start
see the Tuesday ramout as a
The game was rescheduled shgbt advantage for their
for the same time torught wtth team
the same two nghthanders,
"It Will give the Reds
John "Blue Moon" Odom of the
another
chance to think about
A's and Jack Btllingham of the their s1tuation
two games
Reds, scheduled to do the behind," sa1d Williams
hurling
''The fact that if the series
Baseball CommissiOner now goes seven games the last
Bowte Kuhn, who made the fiVe games Will be played on
deCISion to postpone the game consecutive days w11l help us,"
Tuesday mght after personally sa1d Anderson
sloshing through the lakes 111
The fourth game now IS
the 6utfteld" warned that the scheduled for Thursday mght
weather forecast md1cated The fifth, if n"lcessary, wtll be
''We have trouble m the area played as a day game here
and we could have more of the Fr1day, whtch originally was
same problems today "
schedl,l)ed as an off day for
The off1c1al National travel The switch to daylime
Weather Servtce forecast for would be to allow the teams
Tuesday mght was a 60 per tilDe to travel to Cincmnati
cent chance of more ram Friday mght and play the sixth
durmg \he mght followed by a game Saturday afternoon as
30 per cent chance of ram originally scheduled there A
durmg the day Wedoesday seventh game would be played
The bureau gave no hope of m Cincmnat1 Sunday
clearmg until Thursday
The A's remam 7~ favorites
Kuhn called the deciSion to to wm the third game No team
cancel the game Tuesday "one ever bas won the fll'st three
of the eas1est" he's had to games of the senes and failed
make as commJSSwner "The to wm the world champiOnship

QIDCKQUIZ

~ r,:
:·

'fODAY'S QUEST:ON
Your partner continues to

SIX

spades What do you do now?

A-The candle That 1s,
the light from the flame of
a standard candle about an
mch m dtameter

--&amp;. nHINGS
,

BY PAUL CRABTREE

...
:

and Tomorrow
"' ----_-,

.

WEDNESDAY, OCT 18, 1972
6 00 - News Weather, Sports 3, 4, B, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6
Sportscope 33
6 30- NBC News 3 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS News B 10 1
Dream of Jeanie 13 Hathayoga 33
7 00 - News, Weather, Sports 6, 10, M•llstoneS-Df Progress JJ
What's MY L~ne 8, . Truth pr Conseq 3, Beat the c.ock
Newsmaker '72 13 Know Your Schools 33
7 30 - Episode Action 33, To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10
LasSie 15 Beat The Clock 13 Pollee Surgeon 3, 4, Protectors

4:

8

B 00-

Public AflalrsJJ , Paul Lynde6 13, Carol Burnelte8, 10
World Senes 3 4, 15
8 ~~ - Handfuls of Ashes 33, A Great Amencan Tragedy ' 6.

Tuday I'm gomg to lay mto the greediest man associated
wtth televlston
Jack Benny' Drysdale the Banker on "The Beverly
9 00 - MediCal Center B, 10, Chapter 33 33
H!llb!llles ?"
10 00 - Search 3 4, Julie Andrews 6, 13 Cannon 8, 10 Soul 33
Nope, not even close. I'm talking about His Royal Highness, 11 OO - News3,4, News8, 10, 13,15
- Johnny Carson 3, 4. 15, D1ck Cavett 6, V~rgm1an e
Pete Rozelle, Co111111lSSIOner and Most High of the Nahonal -I1 30
Movies "The Last Hurrah" 10 "Ten North Fredenck," 13
Football League
1 00 - News &amp; Weather 4
1 30 - Local News 13
It seems Congress bas been suggestmg, ever so gently, that
the NFL's blackout of hometown TV on games that are a complete sell~ut should he lifted, so the millions of !ruthful can see
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972
their professional heroes In Sellon.
"Heavens to Betsy 1" quoth Mr. Rozelle, when swnmoned 6 DO-Sunme Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10.
6 15-Farmt•me 10, Farm Report 13 . 6 2o-Paul Harvey 13
before a Senate hearmg mto the matter Such a revoluhonary 6 3D-Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers r, Amenca's Problems
10
Idea must have come out of Hano1, or at least the Black Panther
6 45- Corncob Report 3
Party It tears at the very fabriC of all that ts sweet and pure and
00- Today 3,4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, News 6
7
good m Amer1ca- the equivalent to rending the flag, r1ppmg up
7
301J:!-Romper
Room 6, Sleepy J\llers 8 Rocky and Bullwmkle
the Constttuhon to roll reefers, or melting the Liberty Bell mto a
13.
statue of Mao Tse-tung.
8 DO-Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame Street 33,
T1mmy and Lassie 6.
According to the over-reachmg Rozelle, that IS And the
8
3o-Jack
La Lanne 13 Romper Room s
arguments he made are so ludicrous, 11 would make you laugh, if
DO-Paul
DIXon
4, Phil Donahue 15, Ben Casey 13, Romper
9
11 dldn 't almost make you cry
Room 8, Peyton Place 13, What Every Woman Wants to
Th1s petty tyrant is telling the Amencan people that no home
Know 3, Mr Rogers 33, Capta•n Kangaroo 8 Concentration
teleVIsion should he permitted on a soldo()ut football game, even
6, Fnendly Junction 10.
though tens of millions of J\rner1cans support hiS 26-team ph~nx 9 3o-To Tell The Truth 3, HazelS, Jeopardy 6
so well that pro football has become the national sport (he says) 10 DO-Hathayoga 33 , 01ck Van Dyke 13 Dinah Shore 3,15,
Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild 8, 10.
JUst a generaUon or so from the days of the Ironton Tanks and the 10 3o-Concentratlon 3,15, Phil Donahue 4, Spilt Second 13,
Canton Bulldogs. What arrllllt junk I
Communique 6, Pnce Is Right 8, 10.
As "evidence," Rozelle ponr-mouths It by say,mg.
- Only 10 of the 26 pro teams are completely sold out for the 11 oo-Sale of the Century 3,4,15, Love American Style 6,
Gambit 8,10, Password 13
rest of thiS season, which Is four games old as this is written
11 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, Love of L•fe 8,10 , Bewitched
Cleveland, for example, Isn't quite sold out, with a lousy team
6,1J.
and an 84,000-seat stadium What a pity 1
12 DO-Jeopardy 3,15, Bob Braun's 5050 Club 4, Nows 10,13,
Jack•e Oblinger 8, PassiNord 6
- Last year, there were 52 games played lit the league that
12
3o-3
W's Game 3, Search for Tomorrows, 10, Spilt Second 6.
were not sello()qts My fourth-grade artthmetic tells me, ergo,
1
DO-News
3, All My Children 6,13 , It's Your Bet 8, Green
that there were 319 games that WERE sold out B1g deal, Pete,
Acres 10, Watch Your Child 15
you hypocflte.
1 3o-Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As The World Turns 8, 10, Three
On a Match 3,4,15
-Teams which permitted TV of a soldo()u\ home game rrught
2
DO-Days
of Our Lives 3,4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike
have a number of people not show up, If the wej\her turned lousy
Douglas
Guiding L•ght 8,10,
and the game was a snoozer And th1s woilld c!l1(1 the team 2 3o-Doctors6,3,4,
15, Dating Game 13, Edge ot'Nighl8,10.
money, m lost concessiOn and parking fees (Bullblftp! Does he 3 DO-Another World 3,4,15, General Hosp1tal 6,13, Love.ls A
Many Splendored Thmg 8,10
' really thmk those TV rlghta wouldn't make up for the lost hot
3
30-Return
to Peyton Place 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6,13,
dog~ and beer? Rozelle pretends that permitting such a to.ecast
Secret
Storm
8,10.
would be an act of charity on the part of the team - a patent
4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13, Fllntstones 6,
falsehood.)
Nlerv Gnffm 4, Somerset 15, G1lllgans Isle 8, Movie "Kid
- W1th bad weather, 15,134 persons failed to show up last
Millions' 10, Sesame 51 aJ.
season for a bad-weather,-late-fall game between the Giants and 4 llh-Merv Grlffm 4, I Love Lucy"&amp;, Daniel Boone 13, Andy
Gnfflth 15, Petticoat Junction 3, Merv Griffin 8
Esgles (He should be grateful that 15,134 would even bother to
Griffin I, Mister Rogers 33, Dick Van Dyke IS,
appear for such a sorry spectacle of two distinct non-contenders 5 0()--,Merv
Dan lei Boone 6, Ponderosa 3,4
-and he forgets that the team made Its nut on the game, even if 5 3D-Marshall Dillon 15, Dragnet 8, Electric Co 33, Gomer
Pyle 13.
the whole stadium was emptY The seats were sold, if vacant.
Thls gael! on and on, to try the paUence of the aversge 6 DO-News 3,48,10,15, Truth or Consseq 6, News 13, Travel
Lure 33.
vl~wer, Including Sen. John Pastore, chalnnan of the Senate
News 15, ABC News 6; CBS News 1,10; 1 Dream of
Communications Subcommittee And Pastore told him as much. , 6 »-NBC
Jeannie 1l ,
1
Women 33.
All of these crocodile ttars mean nothlnB at aU to viewers In ' 7 oo-Truth or
3, Beat The Clock
~the Melgs-Gallla-MIIIOII area1 escept tbat-rbl&amp;ht get to see a
good Bengais or Browns game once or twice a year, m addition to
what we get now The bli!Ckout Is a real heatlacbe In the franchised clUes, however
Rozelle's greedlneu didn't pa1111 muster with Pastore. And
Pa~re noted thllllt didn't escape the notice of a fan who lives
about 17blockllfrom the hellrlng room. !jedoeln't Uke the setup,
either, and Richard M. Nixon lin 't aull happy with Mr Rozelle's
position.
·

crutches.
Reggie Jackson came mto the room a httle uncerta1nly, the
way anyone does when he's venlllnng mto unfamiliar surroundmgs
Bench Spots Jackson
Johnny Bench, the Reds' personable young superstar, was
clear down at the other end of the clubhouse but he spotted
Jackson near the entrance and moved qutckly toward hun.
"How d'ya feel?" Bench asked '
"Okay," Jackson sa1d "How do you guys feel'"
"Better than we did," answered Bench "We've been down
before and came back. We can come back now "
"You got some place to eat? You got a nde from here' " the
A's' outfielder asked the Reds' catcher.
Johnny Bench sa1d he had a ride but wasn't sure yet where he
was going to eat
"Good," sa1d Regg1e Jackson. "You're gonna eat wtth me
tonight."
"Fine," sa1d Johnny Bench, and the two agreed where they'd
meet later.
Bench, m his mderwear and shower slippers, headed for the
shower and Jackson prepared to return to his own clubhouse
Before he could though, a newsman stopped him and asked him
how long he knew Bench, when did he fll'st meet him'
"I don't know," said Jackson, thmking "!just know hun from
All.Star games and thmgs like that, but I feel like I've known him
forever. It's bard to explain this I've read about him, he
probably read about me, and we've shared a lot of expenence
even though we've never played for the same team
Wilt Off Good
"We just kinda hill! off pretty good together from the fJrSt tilDe
wemet,butldon'tknowwhen that was.
"Remember the first day we came mto Cinc111,11all to work out'
Uist Friday I think It was. Itramed, and we never got a chance to
work QUI.
"Before we left the billl park, Jolumy came up to me and satd,
'What are you doing tonight'' hald nothing I'm hungry He said
'Would you like to go out to dinner tonight?' !8ald,sure
"Maybe Johnny felt sorry for me, I dunno," sa1d Jackson,
looking down at his crutches, "but he took me to this Italian
place, we had a litUe botUe of wme, and we must have sat there
and talked for five hours That's right, just the two of us
"I like him. He's a good person He cares about others That's
why I came m here to see hun now I'd like to take him to dmner
tonight."
Reggie Jackson paused a moment.
"!I would've been fun tobaveplayed In thiS thing together," he
said "II would've been nice to hive come up to the plate and say
to him, dldyooseehow far! hltthatone• He woold've come back
and uid to n!e, 'Hey, big man, did you see that last one I hit,
check that one out 1"'
A Last Goodbye
.Jacke6n turned to go

j

+++

ON THE TV fiiAL· World Series, 8:16 on WSAZ-TV .
"Public Affair: Election '72'' loob at a cotlnty which has votad
for the Prtsldentlal wlnber III every election llince 1118, at a on
WMUJ,TV . "SOul I" showuts golden oldies, 10, WMUJ,TV .
•

•' .
'.:
•

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporlll F.dltor
'
OAKLAND (UPI)-Ilaseball still clings to that age old ruleNo Fratermzlng
'l'hat means if the letters across your shirt say Oakland, you
can't get too buddy-buddy w1th me because the ones across mme
say Cmcmnati and if somebody ever sees us havmg a beer
together, Heaven forbtd, why, this World Series could be thrown
mto greater turmml than 11 already IS.
This wasn't so much fra~!]lJ;mg, though, \his was more m the
nalllre of humanizing This '\vas somethmg you don't see every
day, one human befng feeling for and thmklng·about another
regardless of the different letters across !hell' shirts
The third game of the World Senes already had been called off
for some tbne when Reggie Jackson, Oakland's mcapac1tated
slugger, hobbled mto the Cincmnati dressmg quarters on his

Programs for Tonight
-'

Today's

.tSport Parade

Television Log

What do you do now?
born m Mtss1sstpp1 but chose
Tennessee
as a pen name
A-B•d s•x d•amonds Your
pArtner •~ showlnr second round
Q-What IS the standard
club ('Ontrol Show your second
for lzght'
measurement
round d1amond control

•

er1es

~limbs, 18

I

him.
"See you later, bleep!"
Jacbon, ll"l!lllldbw to be .wng by the obla!nlty, turned back
and begiD ln.lullln&amp; Pera In !*feet Spanish Pere1 reeled off
11011141 ~ellghtfql Spwdlh trordl rl hb own.
Bobby Tolin, the Reds' celK«fielder sitting neartly, wrinkled
bll brow IDd boiimd at JlcltiOn:
"~ ~ to 111m. He'l • dtlzen now "
Reale J•tbon la1Jihed.
'l'on1 Perea and BobltY Tolan both played II stra1ght, and

Anderson sa1d Billingham s1xth and seventh m Cincmnati
would be hiS third game p1t- Sunday and Monday "
cher no matter when the game
Both teams had been on the
IS played and Don Gullett m the field m uniform and a syrnfourth game
phony orchestra In center field
"Since I'm two games down, was JUSt tunmg up to play the
I'm not thinkmg past the fourth national anthem when the ra111
game," Anderson satd "The struck
f1rst thmg I've got to make sure
Typical of the players'
of ts that there IS somethmg feelmgs were those of hustling
after the fourth game "
· Matty Alou of the A's and Pete
"H we do not play tonight, then Rose of the Reds
I believe we would play the
"I JUSt bate to s1t around and
th1rd, fourth, and fifth Thurs- do nothing," sa1d Alou
day mght, Fnday mght and
"I didn't come to Oakland to
Saturday afternoon here, the s1t around a hotel," said Rose

Rose echoed the feelm~ of
many observers when he said,
"H anything, the ramout would
hurt the As more than us
They're the ones who won the
first two games and have the
momentum gomg "
Though disappotnted at the
delay, Rose satd, "Kuhn did
the r1ght thing But I'll tell
you-! don't think the outf1eld
Will be any better tomght And
if we get ramed out tonight, we
will have gone three straigHt
days Without batlmg prac-

' Odom satd the delay "would
make me a httle stronger w1th
an extra day's rest " Blllmgham satd he was dJsappomted
at not p1tch1ng after bemg
mentally "up" for the b1ggest
game of htscareer, "but 11 wzll
be the same game tomght "
Williams 5a1d the ram settled
one thmg- V1da Blue now
deflmtely Will remam m the
bullpen and not start any
Series game
"I've discussed that with
V1da and he's happy about tt,"
Wtlllams sa1d

tice "

s0 uth ern Faces Symmes
Valley In SVAC Battle
Coach Bill Jewell's Southern
Tornadoes will try to move a
step closer to chnchmg their
first Southern Valley A\hlet1c
Conference tttle m football
Fnday night agamst the
Symmes Valley V1kmgs
Southern IS 3-0-1 m league
plai while Coach Jolm Patton s
V1kmgs are 1-2 m the league
and 1-5 overall
The Vtkmgs \\ere readmitted
to the SVAC a year ago ThiS IS
their ftrst season m football
competillon
Southern owns league VIC·
tortes over Hannan Trace,
Eastern and North Galha Last
week the Tornadoes battled
Kyger Creek to a 0-0 he
The Tornadoes rely on the
hard runmng of semors D1ck
!hie, Jay Hill and M1ke Nease
Symmes Valley's biggest
scormg punch has come from
\he passmg arm of semor
Jam1e Lafon Lafon's favorite
receiver IS end Dave Dunfee,
another semor
Hannan Trace sttll lookmg
for 1ls f1rst victory m the past
two seasons !ravels to North
Galha m the only other league
contest Coach Tom Belville's

knee InJury shelved Owen
Garnes The move forced
Blake to Insert Bruce Ruynon
a 212 pound freshman mto the
fullback pos1t1on Runyon
moved the ball well m hiS
tnitial start North Galha IS 2-2
m the league and 2-4 overall
Coach Jim .Sprague's Kyg~r
Creek Bobcats travel to
Alexander for a maJor test
The Bobcats are the lop defensive team m the league and
the area w1th a 3 8 average KC
has permitted JUSt 23 pomts m
SIX games The Bobcats Will
get a stiff test facmg the
Spartans, the area 's best offensive team w1th a 35 pomt per
game average Alexander has
scored 210 pomts m SIX outings
Coach Sprague faces two
maJor problems, stoppmg the
runmng and passmg game of
the Spartans and re-Igmtlng his
offense
Alexander has been paced by
\he runmng of semor fullback
Greg Gilders, a 180 pounder
Gilders bas scored 116 pomts
th1s season He had five touchdowns and mne extra pomts

Wildcats have not scored a
touchd~wn
this season' HT •
came close' last week agamst "'
Southwestern

The

'

!l
I ,U

~

l'

I'

OAKLAND (UPI)-If Tuesday's ramout of the World
Senes affects anybody, the
trailing Cmcmnall Reds ftgure
It w1U be the1r foes, the
Oakland Athletics
Pete Rose, the Reds' nustlmg
team captam, put 11 this way
"The ratnout has to affect
Oakland more than us "
Then, he logically added,
"Gomg mto yesterday's game,
they had the momentum After
all, they were the ones who won
the first two games Now, with
the ramout, thmgs might be
different "
Although down two games,
Rose expressed optllDlsm
"The astmosphere was
different around the club house
today," he said "! thmk we
can take 'em We're ready "
Then he pomted out to a
circle of writers around his
cubicle, "You guys all know we
have a bette~ record on the
road, so you can never tell "
The atmosphere Rose spoke
of was evident an hour befOre
game time
Johnny Bench, the major
league lea!ler m home runs and
runs batted In this season,
qUietly sat outside his locker
Wants to Play
"I'm ready," he said qu1etly
"I want to play " •
Then, after Baseball CommisSioner Bow1e Kuhn officially proclaimed the third
game of the series postponed,
Bench said, dej~:etedly, "I'm
disappointed But, nt be ready
tomorrow and for as long as
It takes lor !IS to win this
thmg "
Cmcmnati's scheduled pitcher, Jack Bllllngham, said he
was ''up" for the game, and
naturally, disappointed by the
washout caused by lightning,
thunder and an Intense down-

OAKLAND (UPI)-Hobbled
Reggie Jackson looked up at
the cloudburst, hail and
thunder around the packed
Oakland ColiSeum
"It could rain for the next
two months, every day, and I
still wouldn't he able to play,"
sa1d the d1sappomted outfielder of the Oakland Athletics
who IS Sidelined for the year
With a pulled hamstring •
Though the ram made httle

o~

1
kets
h1s last e1ght floor
shots
Boston won !Is fourth straight
by defeatmg Atlant.li, JJ9-JJ5,
New York downed Hooston, 10395, and Buffalo stopped Pht·
ladelphla, 122-114, m other
league acbon
John Havlicek broke a 113-1111
tte with a jumper and added
two free throws to boost Boston
past Atlanta Center Dave
Cowens, who blocked Pete
Marav1ch's potential tymg baske t on a drive m the !mal
seconds, tall1ed a game-h1gh ~
pomts for the Celts Havlicek
and Jo Jo Wh1te each netted 25
pomts Lou Hudson tallied 27
for the Hawks Atlanta Coach
Cotton Fitzsimmons was ejected after two technical fouls
were called against him
Buffalo's 4:!-polnt third quarter was too much for Philadelphia as the wmless 76ers lost
the1r fourth straight game. Bob
Kauffman contributed 24 points
to the Braves' attack, while
John Block led Philadelphia
with 'l1

A PENNY SAVED

'

d1fference to Jackson, 11
somewhat affected
nghthander John Odom who
was supposed to start
Tuesday's th1rd World Ser1es
game agamst the Clncmnat1
Reds
"!was ready I just wanted
to out and get 'em," said Odom
who prefers ]lllchmg w1th only
three or four days rest mstead
of the five or six he is now going
to get
"! hate to have an extr11
day's rest, especially slnce I
buill myself up for the game, I
went over their hattmg order
and was ready
"But I i:lon't think an extra
day w11l have any effect on my
control or pitching Naturally,
I'll be stronger with another
day's rest "
Does Not Falter
A's manager Dtck Williams
says he will stick w1th the
flreballlng righthander as his
th1rd-game pitcher "even if 11
rams for the next three days "
"This man (Odom) does not
falter under pressure," said
Williams "In success1ve starts
on the road this season, he beat
(Jtm) Palmer, (Gaylor) Perry
and (Mickey) LQhch and they
were all pressure games
" In fact, John has had SIX
and seven days between starts
during the season and It didn't

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game"

Perhaps the most ea er gu)
on the Cmcmnal! squ d was
Manager Sparfy Anderson
He wanted no part of a
ramdut

"I want to play 'em," he sa1d
as he peered out of his nearly
flooded dugout "A lot of people
say 11 (the ramout) would stop
the1t (Oakland Athletics)
momentum, but I don't believe
m that I just want to play 'em.
We can beat them even though
we're down py two games "
Continwng, he sa1d, uwe're a
proud ball club We still feel we
can beat the Oakland ball
club " Not Much Dtuerence
VVhen asked about the
posSibility of wear-and-tear on
his pttchmg staff by playing on
five consecutive- days, Anderson satd )le wasn't concerned
"We've played better over
f1ve game stretches before so 1t
won'treallymake that much of
a difference," be said
"Besides, our p1tchtng,
especially In the bu\lpQil, 1s not
hurting that much (Pedro)
Borbon, (Clay) Carroll and
(Tommy) Hall are used to
pitching everr day "
Anderson then confirmed
that he will go with Bllllngham,
as planned, on Wednesday
"I'll stay with blm even If 11
rains 10 days from now,"
Anderson saLd "I plan to go
with (DOn) Gullett In the fourth
game and I'm not planning
anything beyond that "
Almost as an afterthought,
he ·added, "I just hope the
serles goes beyond Gullett "

5~%

INTEREST":·.

cards Third baseman Sal
Sando, feelmg the weight of the
long season, sa1d he favored a
shorter season's schedule,
startmg In mid-April and
flmshmg In mld-&amp;lptemher
"Those of us WhO play llall
with West Coast teams never
have any time off from April
through October," he said
"There is always several hours
difference between coasts and
It seems like traveling takes up
all our time
"So the fewer ramouts 1 see,
the better I like It "
U.S. TEAM FAVORED
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)The United States men's
amateur goH team Is favored
to win the EISenhower Cup
from 31 other nahons In the
lour-day competition beglnmng today
Playmg for the US at the
Ohvos Golf Club are Ben
Crenshaw, Marvin Giles, Mark
S Hayes and Martin West

· · ·o·;;·9d.:Oa'y'

Certlflccstes
of Deposit
51!2 per cent per year
paid on 90 day Certificates of Depostt.
$1,000.00 Min1mum.

Interest
Quarterly.

Meigs Co. Branch

The Athens County
Loan Cc.
296 Second St
Pomeroy, Ohlc

All

as

Account5

Insured To

$2000000 by FSIIC

~------·-----~----·~._--~

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Go in Snow
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1967 JEEP
WAGON
dnve
Clean
whistle

pour
"I'll be up again tomorrow,"
he said "It Will be th~ same

I

''~

Alley

Automatic,
Now Save Up to 4c-a Gallon on C-ERTIFIED

diminish hls effectiveness"
The A's manager figures the
washout w11l put a bit more
pressure on the Reds
"Right now we have the
advantage, ' two games
to nothmg This will g1ve
them (Reds) another day of
thinking about thelr situation"
L"efthanded pitcher Vida
Blue, the A's relief sensaUon
durmg the American League
playoffs with the Detroit
Tigers alsO was 1tchmg for
anothe~ crack at the Reds Or
maybe he wants to see the
Serles over as soon as poss1ble
"Danumt," he said, and
auned a kick at the television
set In the locker room when the
ralnout was announced
Williams later announced
that Blue would remam In the
bullpen for the remamder of
the Senes
VIda In Bullpen
"Due to the travel day and
ralnout, plus the fact we need a
lefthanded stopper, Blue is now
In our bullpen and probably
won't start a World Series
game as we had planned
earlier," said Willtams
"V1da and I talked this over
and he has agreed to stay m the
bollpen "
Most of e A's took the
ralnoot In strlde by wakhlng
teleVISIOn, reading or playing

•
I

Momentum--Rose

U

1

Milwaukee

538 W. MAIN

Eastern 3-3 overall and 3-1m
the SV AC IS on the road agam
th1s week The Eagles will play
at Miller
Last Saturday, Eastern was
edged I 3-6 at Cadiz The Eagles
played particularly well
agamst the b1gger double A
team Miller defeated Vmton
County last Frtday mght
The Eagles, also, have a
hard-rock defense Coach Mel
Carter's Southwestern
Highlanders will go after their
second straight vtctory agamst
the Green Bobcats
Southwestern edged Hannan
Trace 8-0 last week, while
Green was defeatmg North
Galha, 26-12
The Highlanders' attack ts
led by semor Kevm Gtll,
sophomores Terry Carter and
John Earl Hutchmson
Mike Dillon, another semor,
out most of \he season With a
hand mjury suffered pnor to
the pre-season cond1t10mng
program, may add some more
punch to the scormg attack
Dillon played a quarter m last
Friday's league game

1

Portland Upsets
By United Press Intemallonal
The Portland Trail Blazers
were the worst defensive team
m the Na twpal Basketball
Assoc1at10n last season and
they still can't bandle Kareem
Abdui.Jabbar, but you can't get
the rest of the Milwaukee
Bucks to shed any tears over
the West Coast club
Portland edged Mtlwaukee,
111-108, Tuesday mght, desptte
Abdui.Jabbar's 49 pomts, leavmg the Boston Celtics as the
only unbeaten team m the
NBA The Blazers blew a 211pomt lead and had to rally
behind S1dney W1cks' clutch
shooUng to beat the Bucks
Wicks hit on two long jumpers
to give Portland the lead for
good with 1 18 left and then
sank two foul shots With SIX
seconds left to provtde the
Portland cushiOn
Wicks, last season's Rookie of
the Year, led Portland w1th 3;!
pomts, hill II was thts season's
rookte fmd, Olhe Johnson, who
kept the Blazers m the game
w1th 20 pomts, Including bas·

last Frtday m the Spartans' 838 romp over Glouster Greg
Brooks, a 167 pound semor
quarterback , IS another
Spartan, who must be stqpped
by the Bobcat defense
Kyger Creek has scored only
one touchdown m 1ls last two
games The Bobcats were
edged 8--s' at Easte1 n and lied
Southern 0-0 KC Will be
playmg without the serviCes of
Rick Smith, 145 pound jumor
tailback Sm1th suffered torn
ligaments m hiS nght foot and
w1ll probably be out the rest of
the season
This will no doubt hurt the
offense somewhat especially m
the passmg department Smith
teamed with wmgback Greg
McCarty on the Bobcats '
potent optiOn pass
Lawrence Tabor, another
JUnior tailback, who had been
alternatmg with Smith, will see
actiOn on a fullhme basis Jim
Bias and George Curry, both
senwrs, will alternate at the
fullback pos11Ion Mtke R1fe, a
prom1smg sophomore, IS also
expected to see actiOn

Rain Could Slow

OdOm H afeS E Xt... D'oy 'S 'R eSt "'

Htghlan~

ders held on m wmnmg an 8-0
game m the fourt~quarter
Hannan Trace's offe se was hit
by key lllJurles b fore the
season started
InJuries are also hurtmg the
North Galha P1rates Coach
John Blake rev1sed hiS lmeup
last Friday agamst the Gr~en
Bobcats
'
Phil Hollenbaugh, senior
fullback, was forced to
quarterback the club after a

didn't.

JI!+D 11111 dlnp to this age old rule-No Fratern1Zln8.
Ntlle rl the bMtllllllnll aeed worry, though
Nobody here l'llli1,WU

a1n.

WHITE
WALLS

�%- Thi!llaily Sentinei,Mlddleport-PomerO'y, Oct 13, 1972

IDIJ'ORIAlS

"I'll Drop You a Cord!'·

3- The O.ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oct 18, 1972

Voice along .IBr'Way

'

Oh, Education,
Here Is Thy Sting

The Board of Education of the State of Ohio has Issued
a set of guidelines to prevent public school officials from
running afoul of recent court deCISIOns enlargmg student
ngh!s Among them
Ill The wearmg of '' buttons. badges, armbands and
other symbols of PQhtical or controversial sigmtwance 1s
fnmly p~otected
"
• Students cannot be required to salute the flag 01
recite the Pledge of Allegiance
• On the other hand, "at no lime should the black
power' or 'power to the people' salute be repressed un
less 11 IS a call to overt and 1mmed1ate disruptiOn of the
educational process "
It IS not clear whether or not 11 1s legal for school
off1c1als to d1srupt armband-wearmg, non-allegiance
pledgmg or pebple-power-salutmg to get on With the socalled education process Possibly a future court deCISIOn
Will clanfy this pomt

Water? He'll Drink to That
It was a httle )Ike Sp1ro Agnew appeanng at a Demo
cratlc fund-ra1smg dmner .when the head of tl1e American
Water Works Ass 0c1ation addressed the convention of
the Ame1"1can Bottled Water Association m Miami Beach
the other day Enc F Johnson, executive director of an assoctahon
representing 30,000 commumty suppliers of tap water,
had been responsible lor much unfa~ilr~ISie publicity
directed at bottled water
He took pains to assure the bottlers, however, that he
d1dn'~ really wear horns Smce JUSt about everybody
drmks water of one kind of another, h1s ma)or pomts
may bear repeatmg
."I have no quarrel w1th people who purchase bottled
water," said Johnson "But I don't think bottled water
should be sold on the bas1s that tap water 15 dangerous
or unsafe "
Bottled water Is not as a general rule subJected to the
survelllance and controls reqUired of tao water, he
]lomted out. Many bottled waters could not "meet federal
drinking water standards, although they are safe
"People m our affluent" society want what they want,
wliere they want It, and have evtdenced a Willingness to
pay for It," sa1d Johnson
"When bottled water serves a need unmet by public
water supply, or when people can afford the luxury of
buying exactly the quality they want m your bottles, we
have no quarrel wtth them or you "
•The common goal of both orgamzat10ns he stressed
was better water for people

WIN AT BRIDGE

Analysis: Where's Queen
'

NORTH

21

• 86

• 8 5 32
• 75
.98642

WEST (D)
.Q
.QJ964
• 1092

I•AKQ!O

EAST
• 7 432
¥ KlO
• QJ864
.J7

SOlJTII

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen BoHel

••

NOT A WELCOME MAT 1N SIGHT
Dear Helen:
I trav~l a lot It's a joy to Vlslt other states. People there
make youfeel welcome But our state (I'd better not menUon the
name, bilt rilldents of this beauUful, unfriendly "paradise" will
llnow) wants only Yis.ltors - and thell); mongy - no new
resl\lents'
.,, •
Lately they have been potting stickers on outo()f-6\ate cars
"Keep .. green. Go back 1I" Wa1tresses actually msult people
from a neighboring state Ou1' reSidents smgle out that particular
one for special dislike. People who move here from there are
considered ''dirty squatters" for the firSt 20years and after that

.AKJI095
.A7
.AK3
.53
Both vulnerable
West North East South
1¥
Pass
lNT Dble
2•
Pass
2¥
Pass Pass
Pass
Opemng lead-· K

4.

By Oswald &amp; James JacQb)
South's 1 u m p to lout
spades was a d1stmct over
bid The odds were agamst
his partner holdmg as much
as one queen and South was
lookmg at four probable
losers outside the t rum p
suit •
On the other hand the
game was rubbe1 bndge an~

rubber bndge pla~e1 s tend
to overbtd a tnfle With hands
as strong as the one South
was lookmg at
The dummy dtdn t even
hold a I 0- s pot , but the
doubleton diamond was like
money from home
South ruffed the thud club
and promptly played ace
kmg three of diamonds to
ruff m dummy Then South
led dummy's last trump ,
thought a while , went up
with his ace dropped West s
smgleton queen and claimed
game and rubber
NICe guess'" 1emarked
North
"It wasn't a guess," re.
phed South "West had
opened the b1ddmg With one
heart and rebtd two clubs
H1s club holdmg was ace
kmg-queen-10 and he would
have opened one club unless
hiS heart SUit was a ftvecarder That accounted for
mne cards and he had followed to three leads of diamonds That left him With
Just one spade "If 1t were
anythmg but the queen East

BRUCE BIOSSAT

"newcomera.''
I recently talked to a local Chamber of Commerce group, and
they told me, "At least we don't have blacks, minorities, and
other troublemakers .. the pollee meet mcomlng buses and
suggest they move on." Several Europeans passing through have
said ,they got no kindnesses here.
What gets me Is 1t'snot all that good bert Busmess is dying.
Uving costs balloon. TV reception is as bad as our waste disposal
system - which bas polluted our riVer past safe levels Mills
belch smoke Yet our people fight proposals of new Industry w1th
the llnow-bow to conquer air and water polluUon
I'm talking about one state, bill a dozen sparsely populated
states would fit my description. Why, Helen, do these people so
jealoualy guard their ''Wealth" when to share It would mean
greater opportunities for everyone? - ASHAMED OF MY
STATE
Dear Ashamed
Your question has split many a small town r1ght down the
mlddl~nd It's chlll'lllng up controversy In State leglslalllres
these days too
'lbough It's presented m terms of •ecology vs. In·
duatrlallzaUon, sometimes the basic feeling lB a holdover from
th~ early settlers. "ThiBiand is mine - and don't come clDS$1,
you varmint, 1Dlless you prove yourself first I" - H
Dear

Helen:

+++

What is the most common hoax letter you rece1ve In the
maiJ? -JERRY

Hurry-Up Tanaka
Tonic for Japan
81 BRUCE BIOSSi\T
WASHINGTON rNEAI
If 1mp1 ovement of US -Japanese 1elallons has a bette I
prospect w1th faste1 dec1s10n-makmg, then Japan's new
Pnme Mm1ste1 Kakue1 Tanaka rna) very well be good
for us
He IS provmg to be much quicker at deciSIOns than the
Japanese people are accustomed to The leadership habit
there IS to we1gh and consider endlessly until a deCISion
sort of comes mto bemg mstead of bemg made
When economic trouble developed over the Wide trade
gap between our two countries, thiS slowness was a
senous handicap to negotiatiOns Our Irnlations over tt
were a factor 10 the blunt, preCIPitate acbon we fmally
took m mid-1971 to restnct Japanese tra(le and force currency c~a nges
Tanaka's qutte d1ffe1 ent make-up made a good Impression on President Nixon m their Hawau meetmg Reabs
tlcally, hopes should be a little h1gher than before that
deeper mroads can be made mto the sticky trade gap
dilemma
Word from Tokyo IS , too, that Tanaka IS havmg a tome
effect 111 his own country The Japanese often have seen
deciSIOn delayed so long that the lime for action went by
Without any, whereupon p~ople glumly took the loss mvolved, shrugged, and watched the1r leaders agomze
over the next one
Tanaka's trip to Chma to establish a diplomatic lmk
With Pekmg and break off such ties w1lh Ta1wan came
extraordmanly soon after he took off1ce It really set the
torre for h1s regime
He, and h1s new, qUick ways are provmg very popular
In Japan It IS recogmzed that he probably w11l make
more mistakes than some of h1s predecessors, but th1s
does not seem to be wornsome The 1mportant thmg ts
that the mood of the Japanese today IS evidently a good
deal brighter than It has been for more than a year
None of th1s means a mag1c solvent suddenly has been
introduced mto the somewhat stiffened relations between
Japan and the Umted States A great deal remams to be
accomplished
Anli·J\rnencanlsm still IS runnmg frurly high The
Japanese have not yet forgotten what they regard as the
rude shocks of 1971, when we applied trade llmtts and
,N1xon announced hiS own tr1p to CHma
However our heavy troop pullout from V1etnam may be
seen elsewhere, to the Japanese It sigmfies a dimmtshlng
American mterest and mfluence m As1a Consequently,
they place less trust than before m our wntten pledges to
cQme to Japan's defense
Ob,viottsly lh1s makes the question of Japan
armed forces a more cruc1al

Jerry :
... The one which goes -with variations depending on what
"good guy" Is presenUy unpopular, or what profession turns the
writer off.
Dear Helen Please help me. I bave two brothers and two
siJters. One brother Is an Army recruiter The other was just
sentenced to death for murder My mother died of Insanity when
I was three years old My father sells nsrcotlcs and my two
slstets are !l'Dstltutes.
' Recently 1 met a girl who was released from prison after
lelliDg her illegitimate child, and stealilig back the money I
want to marry her, but lhowd !tell her about my brother, the
ArmY ret.TUiter? - ASHAMED
Sometimes I wonder if tliis quest1on, like hopscotch, will ever
go out of ltyle
I wonder about other idiotic thipgs too •• Ulte .
l Wlllder If anyone really watches the male dancers m a TV
eKtr8\'llpiiJ8 which features leggy female hoofers' No matter
bow qtle they are, those ponr suys are only window dressing.
I -der If some brave soul somewhere has actually written,
"I want my money back," to companies that proclabn, ''If our
(Ill pa tlwfll"', eaay-k, etc.) p-.od!Jct iln't better, cheaper and
full!' .dllnyoarfrom-ecratchreclpe we'llreturn your money ... ''
(On .,o1mdl thalli~~~~~ ''blUer"?).
,
__...; ~~~~r~
ItiiiiCIIrlfMirkSpltaeverdated Barbie Benton (nee Klein),
m ·t
..._ HI.. W'I &amp;irlfrlead' The)' are near the same sge, come be very dtfflcult
town ...:Carmlchaei.I could find out easily.
And, notwithstanding the somewhat euphoric mood
llllildlllltlrll fWI to wonder.
•
ushered in by Tanaka's ImpreSSive beginning, so will the
11 d· If J111t1
ever 1M!8 ts hi1 w1f
H rd US -Japanese trade gap Tokyo 1s well aware that its
I
-e, or owa
sw1ft off•r to buy billion more U S goods was only an
flit""' beala HIM' Of If Karen Valentine Scretly opemng gesture, )10wever welcome Tanaka's talents will
1111117
•
be taxed heavily to help produce longer range an$Wers
'r WilY tile ~ waltllig~lne always moves faster In the way of opening up the- Japanese market
. . tile • I chot11e?
Yet, as noted m prev1ous reports, the Japan of late 1972
l :•awlll If the bomHI-tbe.future will eliminate kitchens, Is also more mdependent m spmt And ~oundlngs there
. . .bralldlltGOIDIIInto hinll7 uvm, cenlc!n'
make it clear Tokyo w11l go only so far, and expect
l....,WIIyldDn'tptbwcktoadvlcecolUIDIIIllg? -H.
America to make up add1honal ground by a much touglier
attack on tis own problem of laggmg producl!vlty
~ar

..._
.,_11!1111
llltrw

"'"M'••

n

•

would have a sure spade
tnck and my only chance
was for West's smgleton to
be that card
South was nght He also
had shown the va1Id1ty of
our theory that If you want
to overb1de you should be
sure to play well
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

The b1ddmg has been
West
North
East

BY JACK O'BRIAN
AT LEAST MICK DIDN'T
LEAVE HER FLAT
NEW YORK (KFS}- Who says a Rolling
Stonega~~tersno Mas Mick'Jagger was hit With
another IJI!terruty S\lll by an a~rllne cut1e he
flew Joe Namath was on )he covers of Time &amp;
Sports llhistrated lost two games ma row The
old Cover Jmx Ticket scalpers hawk their
tllegal trade right m front of the cops outside
Yankee Stadium
Duke of Wmdsor's pop
named James refused to eat after his royal
master died and then James d1ed
G1ma
Cook, Wtdow of actor Donald Cook and owner of
the Leopard gourmet restsurant had a call !tom
rock star Neil Diamond's manager asking 1f
Neil could dme there sans cravat G101a replied
he'd been there dozens ot tilDes Without a
necktie, soNe1l arnved and G1orn did an elegant
doubletake she'd thought the call was from
world's champ comedy playwright Neil Sbnon
There's a pothole outstde chic Bergdorf·
Goodman's that 1ts preSident, Andrew Goodman, could bathe 111 , The Hippopotamus
discotek IS trying desperately to postpone
eviction New office bUI!dmg will riSe where
rock mustc fell It's part of the parcel P J
Clarke's owner Danny llivezzo packaged and
peddled for abnost $15 million
Jean-Luc
Godard's latest ag1tprop flick 1s a grmding
bormg messagey sermon serenadmg the Class
War One N Y rev1ewer slashed tt as a
"MaOist-mdoctrmation fllm/ 1 addmg, "'Who
wants to hear these Marxtsl harangues'"
You can't afford to not m1ss 11 Godard auns
his narrowstdes at The Proletariat- except m
America the proletanat are hardhats
The deaths of the dtgmfted and respel;led
mdustnal designer Henry Dreyfus and h1s wife,
DoriS, m a double-smc1de last week, came as
mournful news to the mruds on the Plaza Hotel
floor where the couple mamtamed a year-round
apartment When the couple left for California
not long ago, the1r most personal floor ma1d sa1d
blithely she'd see the Dreyfuses as customary
around Chrlsbnans and Mrs D replied, "I don't
thmk you'll see us any more " First tbne,
leading the maid to suspect the su1c1des were
planned not on a moment's spur
The oldest private th&lt;atncal club, The

Pass
1¥
Pass
Pass
3•
Pass
5t
Pass
Pass
Q-Who IS Thomas Lamer
Pass
6 "Pass
W!lllams'
You South hold
A-The playwnght Ten.AK86¥A102 +KS.A164 nessee Williams He was

•

taking m non~heatrlcal members ...
In these no.bra days, 1s 11 mterestlng tbat Mary
Phelps Jacob got $15,000 for her Invention of a
no-bones bra from the Warner Corset Co ' .
The Dems who control Congress threaten an
mvestlgaUon of theN. Y Port Authority GOP's
shrug 11 off as "politics" inall!DUch as New
Jersey and N V governors control 11, and
they're both Repobs
Flim producer Sam Bronston's w1fe,
Dorothea, had serious surgery 1D Fla. ..
Switzerland's strmgent control of property
bought by fore1gners (they're cash IS OK tho)
led to the Shah of Iran kiboshmg plans to bUY a
huge summ~ spot at llike Geneva .. Jeanrue
Berlin thinks the dll'ector of her latest flick,
"The Heartbreak K1d,"1s the best In the world·
her mother, Elaine May
Sylv18 Sidney's
rheumaUsm (she even does a rheumy-pill TV
pi\ch) slows down the erstwhile cute little hbn
kitten So her needlepomt book climbed verrrry
slowly to the hit list passed the 100,000 mark,
which would get 11 onto the Best Seller lists 1f it
were a novel or bmg But they don 11ist how-to
tomes Nor the Bible, wh1ch annually outsells
'em all
The smger, Frankie "13, ' swears on hJS
arithmetic book h1s name's JUSt that except m
ltahan 1t's Johnny Tredlcl; why not?
Remember U!ws PrllDa? loUIS Fll'st . West
Coast stores anapped up blue workers' SUits
from (:tuna on the backwash of Nixon's Maonow. They were fooled -marked down to $4 99
Backlash the Byrnes Bros group smgmg at
J1mmy Byrne's 2nd Ave spot close !hell' ~!bows
With a rousmg patriotic fmal 45 mmute flagwaver
Woody Allen's arranged flnancmg and
distribution already for hiS next fl1ck he 'II
WI'Ite, direct and star m this one, too Mara
Lynn Brown of the Royal Bo~ glitterevue
"R1smg Star" adm1ts she won $2,700 m Las
Vegas and bought herself a rmg. Doesn't care If
Uncle Sam knows about 1t, e1t11er . . Lmt·
picking Lisa Kirk at the Mwsonette sang a
topical nostalgia p1ece, "!Was Born Too Late."
True. if she weren't, she'd've known Paul
Whiteman never played the Commodore Hotel
The Biltmore and New Yorker, yes. And Paiii!S
Royal.

OAKLand (UP!) - They'll outfield was 111 rotten shape,
make another effort to play the totally unplayable," he said
third game of the World Senes
tomght, w1th both teams
"It would have taken three
stlckmg to the!l' qnal pll- hours to get the water off there
chmg plans, but c~nces of yet and we would not have been
another wet weather post- able to stage a proper World
ponement are strong
Series game "
The game was drowned out
Bolli managers, D1ck WilTuesday mght when a freak, liams of the A''!, who hold a 2-11
tropic-style rdm squall dumped lead 1n the ser1es and need only
another load of heavy water on two more WillS to wrap up the
already ~en Oakland Co- world champwnshlp, and
liseum only 16 mmutes before SparkY Anderson of the backsthe scheduled 5 30 p m PDT to-the-wall Reds, professed to
start
see the Tuesday ramout as a
The game was rescheduled shgbt advantage for their
for the same time torught wtth team
the same two nghthanders,
"It Will give the Reds
John "Blue Moon" Odom of the
another
chance to think about
A's and Jack Btllingham of the their s1tuation
two games
Reds, scheduled to do the behind," sa1d Williams
hurling
''The fact that if the series
Baseball CommissiOner now goes seven games the last
Bowte Kuhn, who made the fiVe games Will be played on
deCISion to postpone the game consecutive days w11l help us,"
Tuesday mght after personally sa1d Anderson
sloshing through the lakes 111
The fourth game now IS
the 6utfteld" warned that the scheduled for Thursday mght
weather forecast md1cated The fifth, if n"lcessary, wtll be
''We have trouble m the area played as a day game here
and we could have more of the Fr1day, whtch originally was
same problems today "
schedl,l)ed as an off day for
The off1c1al National travel The switch to daylime
Weather Servtce forecast for would be to allow the teams
Tuesday mght was a 60 per tilDe to travel to Cincmnati
cent chance of more ram Friday mght and play the sixth
durmg \he mght followed by a game Saturday afternoon as
30 per cent chance of ram originally scheduled there A
durmg the day Wedoesday seventh game would be played
The bureau gave no hope of m Cincmnat1 Sunday
clearmg until Thursday
The A's remam 7~ favorites
Kuhn called the deciSion to to wm the third game No team
cancel the game Tuesday "one ever bas won the fll'st three
of the eas1est" he's had to games of the senes and failed
make as commJSSwner "The to wm the world champiOnship

QIDCKQUIZ

~ r,:
:·

'fODAY'S QUEST:ON
Your partner continues to

SIX

spades What do you do now?

A-The candle That 1s,
the light from the flame of
a standard candle about an
mch m dtameter

--&amp;. nHINGS
,

BY PAUL CRABTREE

...
:

and Tomorrow
"' ----_-,

.

WEDNESDAY, OCT 18, 1972
6 00 - News Weather, Sports 3, 4, B, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6
Sportscope 33
6 30- NBC News 3 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS News B 10 1
Dream of Jeanie 13 Hathayoga 33
7 00 - News, Weather, Sports 6, 10, M•llstoneS-Df Progress JJ
What's MY L~ne 8, . Truth pr Conseq 3, Beat the c.ock
Newsmaker '72 13 Know Your Schools 33
7 30 - Episode Action 33, To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10
LasSie 15 Beat The Clock 13 Pollee Surgeon 3, 4, Protectors

4:

8

B 00-

Public AflalrsJJ , Paul Lynde6 13, Carol Burnelte8, 10
World Senes 3 4, 15
8 ~~ - Handfuls of Ashes 33, A Great Amencan Tragedy ' 6.

Tuday I'm gomg to lay mto the greediest man associated
wtth televlston
Jack Benny' Drysdale the Banker on "The Beverly
9 00 - MediCal Center B, 10, Chapter 33 33
H!llb!llles ?"
10 00 - Search 3 4, Julie Andrews 6, 13 Cannon 8, 10 Soul 33
Nope, not even close. I'm talking about His Royal Highness, 11 OO - News3,4, News8, 10, 13,15
- Johnny Carson 3, 4. 15, D1ck Cavett 6, V~rgm1an e
Pete Rozelle, Co111111lSSIOner and Most High of the Nahonal -I1 30
Movies "The Last Hurrah" 10 "Ten North Fredenck," 13
Football League
1 00 - News &amp; Weather 4
1 30 - Local News 13
It seems Congress bas been suggestmg, ever so gently, that
the NFL's blackout of hometown TV on games that are a complete sell~ut should he lifted, so the millions of !ruthful can see
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972
their professional heroes In Sellon.
"Heavens to Betsy 1" quoth Mr. Rozelle, when swnmoned 6 DO-Sunme Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10.
6 15-Farmt•me 10, Farm Report 13 . 6 2o-Paul Harvey 13
before a Senate hearmg mto the matter Such a revoluhonary 6 3D-Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers r, Amenca's Problems
10
Idea must have come out of Hano1, or at least the Black Panther
6 45- Corncob Report 3
Party It tears at the very fabriC of all that ts sweet and pure and
00- Today 3,4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, News 6
7
good m Amer1ca- the equivalent to rending the flag, r1ppmg up
7
301J:!-Romper
Room 6, Sleepy J\llers 8 Rocky and Bullwmkle
the Constttuhon to roll reefers, or melting the Liberty Bell mto a
13.
statue of Mao Tse-tung.
8 DO-Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame Street 33,
T1mmy and Lassie 6.
According to the over-reachmg Rozelle, that IS And the
8
3o-Jack
La Lanne 13 Romper Room s
arguments he made are so ludicrous, 11 would make you laugh, if
DO-Paul
DIXon
4, Phil Donahue 15, Ben Casey 13, Romper
9
11 dldn 't almost make you cry
Room 8, Peyton Place 13, What Every Woman Wants to
Th1s petty tyrant is telling the Amencan people that no home
Know 3, Mr Rogers 33, Capta•n Kangaroo 8 Concentration
teleVIsion should he permitted on a soldo()ut football game, even
6, Fnendly Junction 10.
though tens of millions of J\rner1cans support hiS 26-team ph~nx 9 3o-To Tell The Truth 3, HazelS, Jeopardy 6
so well that pro football has become the national sport (he says) 10 DO-Hathayoga 33 , 01ck Van Dyke 13 Dinah Shore 3,15,
Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild 8, 10.
JUst a generaUon or so from the days of the Ironton Tanks and the 10 3o-Concentratlon 3,15, Phil Donahue 4, Spilt Second 13,
Canton Bulldogs. What arrllllt junk I
Communique 6, Pnce Is Right 8, 10.
As "evidence," Rozelle ponr-mouths It by say,mg.
- Only 10 of the 26 pro teams are completely sold out for the 11 oo-Sale of the Century 3,4,15, Love American Style 6,
Gambit 8,10, Password 13
rest of thiS season, which Is four games old as this is written
11 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, Love of L•fe 8,10 , Bewitched
Cleveland, for example, Isn't quite sold out, with a lousy team
6,1J.
and an 84,000-seat stadium What a pity 1
12 DO-Jeopardy 3,15, Bob Braun's 5050 Club 4, Nows 10,13,
Jack•e Oblinger 8, PassiNord 6
- Last year, there were 52 games played lit the league that
12
3o-3
W's Game 3, Search for Tomorrows, 10, Spilt Second 6.
were not sello()qts My fourth-grade artthmetic tells me, ergo,
1
DO-News
3, All My Children 6,13 , It's Your Bet 8, Green
that there were 319 games that WERE sold out B1g deal, Pete,
Acres 10, Watch Your Child 15
you hypocflte.
1 3o-Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As The World Turns 8, 10, Three
On a Match 3,4,15
-Teams which permitted TV of a soldo()u\ home game rrught
2
DO-Days
of Our Lives 3,4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike
have a number of people not show up, If the wej\her turned lousy
Douglas
Guiding L•ght 8,10,
and the game was a snoozer And th1s woilld c!l1(1 the team 2 3o-Doctors6,3,4,
15, Dating Game 13, Edge ot'Nighl8,10.
money, m lost concessiOn and parking fees (Bullblftp! Does he 3 DO-Another World 3,4,15, General Hosp1tal 6,13, Love.ls A
Many Splendored Thmg 8,10
' really thmk those TV rlghta wouldn't make up for the lost hot
3
30-Return
to Peyton Place 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6,13,
dog~ and beer? Rozelle pretends that permitting such a to.ecast
Secret
Storm
8,10.
would be an act of charity on the part of the team - a patent
4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13, Fllntstones 6,
falsehood.)
Nlerv Gnffm 4, Somerset 15, G1lllgans Isle 8, Movie "Kid
- W1th bad weather, 15,134 persons failed to show up last
Millions' 10, Sesame 51 aJ.
season for a bad-weather,-late-fall game between the Giants and 4 llh-Merv Grlffm 4, I Love Lucy"&amp;, Daniel Boone 13, Andy
Gnfflth 15, Petticoat Junction 3, Merv Griffin 8
Esgles (He should be grateful that 15,134 would even bother to
Griffin I, Mister Rogers 33, Dick Van Dyke IS,
appear for such a sorry spectacle of two distinct non-contenders 5 0()--,Merv
Dan lei Boone 6, Ponderosa 3,4
-and he forgets that the team made Its nut on the game, even if 5 3D-Marshall Dillon 15, Dragnet 8, Electric Co 33, Gomer
Pyle 13.
the whole stadium was emptY The seats were sold, if vacant.
Thls gael! on and on, to try the paUence of the aversge 6 DO-News 3,48,10,15, Truth or Consseq 6, News 13, Travel
Lure 33.
vl~wer, Including Sen. John Pastore, chalnnan of the Senate
News 15, ABC News 6; CBS News 1,10; 1 Dream of
Communications Subcommittee And Pastore told him as much. , 6 »-NBC
Jeannie 1l ,
1
Women 33.
All of these crocodile ttars mean nothlnB at aU to viewers In ' 7 oo-Truth or
3, Beat The Clock
~the Melgs-Gallla-MIIIOII area1 escept tbat-rbl&amp;ht get to see a
good Bengais or Browns game once or twice a year, m addition to
what we get now The bli!Ckout Is a real heatlacbe In the franchised clUes, however
Rozelle's greedlneu didn't pa1111 muster with Pastore. And
Pa~re noted thllllt didn't escape the notice of a fan who lives
about 17blockllfrom the hellrlng room. !jedoeln't Uke the setup,
either, and Richard M. Nixon lin 't aull happy with Mr Rozelle's
position.
·

crutches.
Reggie Jackson came mto the room a httle uncerta1nly, the
way anyone does when he's venlllnng mto unfamiliar surroundmgs
Bench Spots Jackson
Johnny Bench, the Reds' personable young superstar, was
clear down at the other end of the clubhouse but he spotted
Jackson near the entrance and moved qutckly toward hun.
"How d'ya feel?" Bench asked '
"Okay," Jackson sa1d "How do you guys feel'"
"Better than we did," answered Bench "We've been down
before and came back. We can come back now "
"You got some place to eat? You got a nde from here' " the
A's' outfielder asked the Reds' catcher.
Johnny Bench sa1d he had a ride but wasn't sure yet where he
was going to eat
"Good," sa1d Regg1e Jackson. "You're gonna eat wtth me
tonight."
"Fine," sa1d Johnny Bench, and the two agreed where they'd
meet later.
Bench, m his mderwear and shower slippers, headed for the
shower and Jackson prepared to return to his own clubhouse
Before he could though, a newsman stopped him and asked him
how long he knew Bench, when did he fll'st meet him'
"I don't know," said Jackson, thmking "!just know hun from
All.Star games and thmgs like that, but I feel like I've known him
forever. It's bard to explain this I've read about him, he
probably read about me, and we've shared a lot of expenence
even though we've never played for the same team
Wilt Off Good
"We just kinda hill! off pretty good together from the fJrSt tilDe
wemet,butldon'tknowwhen that was.
"Remember the first day we came mto Cinc111,11all to work out'
Uist Friday I think It was. Itramed, and we never got a chance to
work QUI.
"Before we left the billl park, Jolumy came up to me and satd,
'What are you doing tonight'' hald nothing I'm hungry He said
'Would you like to go out to dinner tonight?' !8ald,sure
"Maybe Johnny felt sorry for me, I dunno," sa1d Jackson,
looking down at his crutches, "but he took me to this Italian
place, we had a litUe botUe of wme, and we must have sat there
and talked for five hours That's right, just the two of us
"I like him. He's a good person He cares about others That's
why I came m here to see hun now I'd like to take him to dmner
tonight."
Reggie Jackson paused a moment.
"!I would've been fun tobaveplayed In thiS thing together," he
said "II would've been nice to hive come up to the plate and say
to him, dldyooseehow far! hltthatone• He woold've come back
and uid to n!e, 'Hey, big man, did you see that last one I hit,
check that one out 1"'
A Last Goodbye
.Jacke6n turned to go

j

+++

ON THE TV fiiAL· World Series, 8:16 on WSAZ-TV .
"Public Affair: Election '72'' loob at a cotlnty which has votad
for the Prtsldentlal wlnber III every election llince 1118, at a on
WMUJ,TV . "SOul I" showuts golden oldies, 10, WMUJ,TV .
•

•' .
'.:
•

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporlll F.dltor
'
OAKLAND (UPI)-Ilaseball still clings to that age old ruleNo Fratermzlng
'l'hat means if the letters across your shirt say Oakland, you
can't get too buddy-buddy w1th me because the ones across mme
say Cmcmnati and if somebody ever sees us havmg a beer
together, Heaven forbtd, why, this World Series could be thrown
mto greater turmml than 11 already IS.
This wasn't so much fra~!]lJ;mg, though, \his was more m the
nalllre of humanizing This '\vas somethmg you don't see every
day, one human befng feeling for and thmklng·about another
regardless of the different letters across !hell' shirts
The third game of the World Senes already had been called off
for some tbne when Reggie Jackson, Oakland's mcapac1tated
slugger, hobbled mto the Cincmnati dressmg quarters on his

Programs for Tonight
-'

Today's

.tSport Parade

Television Log

What do you do now?
born m Mtss1sstpp1 but chose
Tennessee
as a pen name
A-B•d s•x d•amonds Your
pArtner •~ showlnr second round
Q-What IS the standard
club ('Ontrol Show your second
for lzght'
measurement
round d1amond control

•

er1es

~limbs, 18

I

him.
"See you later, bleep!"
Jacbon, ll"l!lllldbw to be .wng by the obla!nlty, turned back
and begiD ln.lullln&amp; Pera In !*feet Spanish Pere1 reeled off
11011141 ~ellghtfql Spwdlh trordl rl hb own.
Bobby Tolin, the Reds' celK«fielder sitting neartly, wrinkled
bll brow IDd boiimd at JlcltiOn:
"~ ~ to 111m. He'l • dtlzen now "
Reale J•tbon la1Jihed.
'l'on1 Perea and BobltY Tolan both played II stra1ght, and

Anderson sa1d Billingham s1xth and seventh m Cincmnati
would be hiS third game p1t- Sunday and Monday "
cher no matter when the game
Both teams had been on the
IS played and Don Gullett m the field m uniform and a syrnfourth game
phony orchestra In center field
"Since I'm two games down, was JUSt tunmg up to play the
I'm not thinkmg past the fourth national anthem when the ra111
game," Anderson satd "The struck
f1rst thmg I've got to make sure
Typical of the players'
of ts that there IS somethmg feelmgs were those of hustling
after the fourth game "
· Matty Alou of the A's and Pete
"H we do not play tonight, then Rose of the Reds
I believe we would play the
"I JUSt bate to s1t around and
th1rd, fourth, and fifth Thurs- do nothing," sa1d Alou
day mght, Fnday mght and
"I didn't come to Oakland to
Saturday afternoon here, the s1t around a hotel," said Rose

Rose echoed the feelm~ of
many observers when he said,
"H anything, the ramout would
hurt the As more than us
They're the ones who won the
first two games and have the
momentum gomg "
Though disappotnted at the
delay, Rose satd, "Kuhn did
the r1ght thing But I'll tell
you-! don't think the outf1eld
Will be any better tomght And
if we get ramed out tonight, we
will have gone three straigHt
days Without batlmg prac-

' Odom satd the delay "would
make me a httle stronger w1th
an extra day's rest " Blllmgham satd he was dJsappomted
at not p1tch1ng after bemg
mentally "up" for the b1ggest
game of htscareer, "but 11 wzll
be the same game tomght "
Williams 5a1d the ram settled
one thmg- V1da Blue now
deflmtely Will remam m the
bullpen and not start any
Series game
"I've discussed that with
V1da and he's happy about tt,"
Wtlllams sa1d

tice "

s0 uth ern Faces Symmes
Valley In SVAC Battle
Coach Bill Jewell's Southern
Tornadoes will try to move a
step closer to chnchmg their
first Southern Valley A\hlet1c
Conference tttle m football
Fnday night agamst the
Symmes Valley V1kmgs
Southern IS 3-0-1 m league
plai while Coach Jolm Patton s
V1kmgs are 1-2 m the league
and 1-5 overall
The Vtkmgs \\ere readmitted
to the SVAC a year ago ThiS IS
their ftrst season m football
competillon
Southern owns league VIC·
tortes over Hannan Trace,
Eastern and North Galha Last
week the Tornadoes battled
Kyger Creek to a 0-0 he
The Tornadoes rely on the
hard runmng of semors D1ck
!hie, Jay Hill and M1ke Nease
Symmes Valley's biggest
scormg punch has come from
\he passmg arm of semor
Jam1e Lafon Lafon's favorite
receiver IS end Dave Dunfee,
another semor
Hannan Trace sttll lookmg
for 1ls f1rst victory m the past
two seasons !ravels to North
Galha m the only other league
contest Coach Tom Belville's

knee InJury shelved Owen
Garnes The move forced
Blake to Insert Bruce Ruynon
a 212 pound freshman mto the
fullback pos1t1on Runyon
moved the ball well m hiS
tnitial start North Galha IS 2-2
m the league and 2-4 overall
Coach Jim .Sprague's Kyg~r
Creek Bobcats travel to
Alexander for a maJor test
The Bobcats are the lop defensive team m the league and
the area w1th a 3 8 average KC
has permitted JUSt 23 pomts m
SIX games The Bobcats Will
get a stiff test facmg the
Spartans, the area 's best offensive team w1th a 35 pomt per
game average Alexander has
scored 210 pomts m SIX outings
Coach Sprague faces two
maJor problems, stoppmg the
runmng and passmg game of
the Spartans and re-Igmtlng his
offense
Alexander has been paced by
\he runmng of semor fullback
Greg Gilders, a 180 pounder
Gilders bas scored 116 pomts
th1s season He had five touchdowns and mne extra pomts

Wildcats have not scored a
touchd~wn
this season' HT •
came close' last week agamst "'
Southwestern

The

'

!l
I ,U

~

l'

I'

OAKLAND (UPI)-If Tuesday's ramout of the World
Senes affects anybody, the
trailing Cmcmnall Reds ftgure
It w1U be the1r foes, the
Oakland Athletics
Pete Rose, the Reds' nustlmg
team captam, put 11 this way
"The ratnout has to affect
Oakland more than us "
Then, he logically added,
"Gomg mto yesterday's game,
they had the momentum After
all, they were the ones who won
the first two games Now, with
the ramout, thmgs might be
different "
Although down two games,
Rose expressed optllDlsm
"The astmosphere was
different around the club house
today," he said "! thmk we
can take 'em We're ready "
Then he pomted out to a
circle of writers around his
cubicle, "You guys all know we
have a bette~ record on the
road, so you can never tell "
The atmosphere Rose spoke
of was evident an hour befOre
game time
Johnny Bench, the major
league lea!ler m home runs and
runs batted In this season,
qUietly sat outside his locker
Wants to Play
"I'm ready," he said qu1etly
"I want to play " •
Then, after Baseball CommisSioner Bow1e Kuhn officially proclaimed the third
game of the series postponed,
Bench said, dej~:etedly, "I'm
disappointed But, nt be ready
tomorrow and for as long as
It takes lor !IS to win this
thmg "
Cmcmnati's scheduled pitcher, Jack Bllllngham, said he
was ''up" for the game, and
naturally, disappointed by the
washout caused by lightning,
thunder and an Intense down-

OAKLAND (UPI)-Hobbled
Reggie Jackson looked up at
the cloudburst, hail and
thunder around the packed
Oakland ColiSeum
"It could rain for the next
two months, every day, and I
still wouldn't he able to play,"
sa1d the d1sappomted outfielder of the Oakland Athletics
who IS Sidelined for the year
With a pulled hamstring •
Though the ram made httle

o~

1
kets
h1s last e1ght floor
shots
Boston won !Is fourth straight
by defeatmg Atlant.li, JJ9-JJ5,
New York downed Hooston, 10395, and Buffalo stopped Pht·
ladelphla, 122-114, m other
league acbon
John Havlicek broke a 113-1111
tte with a jumper and added
two free throws to boost Boston
past Atlanta Center Dave
Cowens, who blocked Pete
Marav1ch's potential tymg baske t on a drive m the !mal
seconds, tall1ed a game-h1gh ~
pomts for the Celts Havlicek
and Jo Jo Wh1te each netted 25
pomts Lou Hudson tallied 27
for the Hawks Atlanta Coach
Cotton Fitzsimmons was ejected after two technical fouls
were called against him
Buffalo's 4:!-polnt third quarter was too much for Philadelphia as the wmless 76ers lost
the1r fourth straight game. Bob
Kauffman contributed 24 points
to the Braves' attack, while
John Block led Philadelphia
with 'l1

A PENNY SAVED

'

d1fference to Jackson, 11
somewhat affected
nghthander John Odom who
was supposed to start
Tuesday's th1rd World Ser1es
game agamst the Clncmnat1
Reds
"!was ready I just wanted
to out and get 'em," said Odom
who prefers ]lllchmg w1th only
three or four days rest mstead
of the five or six he is now going
to get
"! hate to have an extr11
day's rest, especially slnce I
buill myself up for the game, I
went over their hattmg order
and was ready
"But I i:lon't think an extra
day w11l have any effect on my
control or pitching Naturally,
I'll be stronger with another
day's rest "
Does Not Falter
A's manager Dtck Williams
says he will stick w1th the
flreballlng righthander as his
th1rd-game pitcher "even if 11
rams for the next three days "
"This man (Odom) does not
falter under pressure," said
Williams "In success1ve starts
on the road this season, he beat
(Jtm) Palmer, (Gaylor) Perry
and (Mickey) LQhch and they
were all pressure games
" In fact, John has had SIX
and seven days between starts
during the season and It didn't

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game"

Perhaps the most ea er gu)
on the Cmcmnal! squ d was
Manager Sparfy Anderson
He wanted no part of a
ramdut

"I want to play 'em," he sa1d
as he peered out of his nearly
flooded dugout "A lot of people
say 11 (the ramout) would stop
the1t (Oakland Athletics)
momentum, but I don't believe
m that I just want to play 'em.
We can beat them even though
we're down py two games "
Continwng, he sa1d, uwe're a
proud ball club We still feel we
can beat the Oakland ball
club " Not Much Dtuerence
VVhen asked about the
posSibility of wear-and-tear on
his pttchmg staff by playing on
five consecutive- days, Anderson satd )le wasn't concerned
"We've played better over
f1ve game stretches before so 1t
won'treallymake that much of
a difference," be said
"Besides, our p1tchtng,
especially In the bu\lpQil, 1s not
hurting that much (Pedro)
Borbon, (Clay) Carroll and
(Tommy) Hall are used to
pitching everr day "
Anderson then confirmed
that he will go with Bllllngham,
as planned, on Wednesday
"I'll stay with blm even If 11
rains 10 days from now,"
Anderson saLd "I plan to go
with (DOn) Gullett In the fourth
game and I'm not planning
anything beyond that "
Almost as an afterthought,
he ·added, "I just hope the
serles goes beyond Gullett "

5~%

INTEREST":·.

cards Third baseman Sal
Sando, feelmg the weight of the
long season, sa1d he favored a
shorter season's schedule,
startmg In mid-April and
flmshmg In mld-&amp;lptemher
"Those of us WhO play llall
with West Coast teams never
have any time off from April
through October," he said
"There is always several hours
difference between coasts and
It seems like traveling takes up
all our time
"So the fewer ramouts 1 see,
the better I like It "
U.S. TEAM FAVORED
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)The United States men's
amateur goH team Is favored
to win the EISenhower Cup
from 31 other nahons In the
lour-day competition beglnmng today
Playmg for the US at the
Ohvos Golf Club are Ben
Crenshaw, Marvin Giles, Mark
S Hayes and Martin West

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diminish hls effectiveness"
The A's manager figures the
washout w11l put a bit more
pressure on the Reds
"Right now we have the
advantage, ' two games
to nothmg This will g1ve
them (Reds) another day of
thinking about thelr situation"
L"efthanded pitcher Vida
Blue, the A's relief sensaUon
durmg the American League
playoffs with the Detroit
Tigers alsO was 1tchmg for
anothe~ crack at the Reds Or
maybe he wants to see the
Serles over as soon as poss1ble
"Danumt," he said, and
auned a kick at the television
set In the locker room when the
ralnout was announced
Williams later announced
that Blue would remam In the
bullpen for the remamder of
the Senes
VIda In Bullpen
"Due to the travel day and
ralnout, plus the fact we need a
lefthanded stopper, Blue is now
In our bullpen and probably
won't start a World Series
game as we had planned
earlier," said Willtams
"V1da and I talked this over
and he has agreed to stay m the
bollpen "
Most of e A's took the
ralnoot In strlde by wakhlng
teleVISIOn, reading or playing

•
I

Momentum--Rose

U

1

Milwaukee

538 W. MAIN

Eastern 3-3 overall and 3-1m
the SV AC IS on the road agam
th1s week The Eagles will play
at Miller
Last Saturday, Eastern was
edged I 3-6 at Cadiz The Eagles
played particularly well
agamst the b1gger double A
team Miller defeated Vmton
County last Frtday mght
The Eagles, also, have a
hard-rock defense Coach Mel
Carter's Southwestern
Highlanders will go after their
second straight vtctory agamst
the Green Bobcats
Southwestern edged Hannan
Trace 8-0 last week, while
Green was defeatmg North
Galha, 26-12
The Highlanders' attack ts
led by semor Kevm Gtll,
sophomores Terry Carter and
John Earl Hutchmson
Mike Dillon, another semor,
out most of \he season With a
hand mjury suffered pnor to
the pre-season cond1t10mng
program, may add some more
punch to the scormg attack
Dillon played a quarter m last
Friday's league game

1

Portland Upsets
By United Press Intemallonal
The Portland Trail Blazers
were the worst defensive team
m the Na twpal Basketball
Assoc1at10n last season and
they still can't bandle Kareem
Abdui.Jabbar, but you can't get
the rest of the Milwaukee
Bucks to shed any tears over
the West Coast club
Portland edged Mtlwaukee,
111-108, Tuesday mght, desptte
Abdui.Jabbar's 49 pomts, leavmg the Boston Celtics as the
only unbeaten team m the
NBA The Blazers blew a 211pomt lead and had to rally
behind S1dney W1cks' clutch
shooUng to beat the Bucks
Wicks hit on two long jumpers
to give Portland the lead for
good with 1 18 left and then
sank two foul shots With SIX
seconds left to provtde the
Portland cushiOn
Wicks, last season's Rookie of
the Year, led Portland w1th 3;!
pomts, hill II was thts season's
rookte fmd, Olhe Johnson, who
kept the Blazers m the game
w1th 20 pomts, Including bas·

last Frtday m the Spartans' 838 romp over Glouster Greg
Brooks, a 167 pound semor
quarterback , IS another
Spartan, who must be stqpped
by the Bobcat defense
Kyger Creek has scored only
one touchdown m 1ls last two
games The Bobcats were
edged 8--s' at Easte1 n and lied
Southern 0-0 KC Will be
playmg without the serviCes of
Rick Smith, 145 pound jumor
tailback Sm1th suffered torn
ligaments m hiS nght foot and
w1ll probably be out the rest of
the season
This will no doubt hurt the
offense somewhat especially m
the passmg department Smith
teamed with wmgback Greg
McCarty on the Bobcats '
potent optiOn pass
Lawrence Tabor, another
JUnior tailback, who had been
alternatmg with Smith, will see
actiOn on a fullhme basis Jim
Bias and George Curry, both
senwrs, will alternate at the
fullback pos11Ion Mtke R1fe, a
prom1smg sophomore, IS also
expected to see actiOn

Rain Could Slow

OdOm H afeS E Xt... D'oy 'S 'R eSt "'

Htghlan~

ders held on m wmnmg an 8-0
game m the fourt~quarter
Hannan Trace's offe se was hit
by key lllJurles b fore the
season started
InJuries are also hurtmg the
North Galha P1rates Coach
John Blake rev1sed hiS lmeup
last Friday agamst the Gr~en
Bobcats
'
Phil Hollenbaugh, senior
fullback, was forced to
quarterback the club after a

didn't.

JI!+D 11111 dlnp to this age old rule-No Fratern1Zln8.
Ntlle rl the bMtllllllnll aeed worry, though
Nobody here l'llli1,WU

a1n.

WHITE
WALLS

�·t-: t1le Dllily Sentinel, Middle&gt;port-Pomeroy, Oct. IS, 1972
o;,.o;,.Xo'o"
... • •
· ·~ · ~ o •• u o.oo '';&lt;'&lt;'O!!IS"IIIj~Will•"lllj
....W.•,V....",••'-'.~.·'ooYoW'o".~~--'-::;"
•x•:--.-:.•!·,·!-:·:{•:·:-;•:O:-;JOo:•:•:-=·:•:•:•~':·:05!0~Z·21
• ·;.;; ..
• •lllju~u~~·
• •• • 't'..~o.'.,.;.,;,w.-o."&lt;o.&lt;QI.
..,v.vr...~~

UPSET CHOICE--•

.Major Likes Colorado Over.
·Oklahoma; Picks Alabama, Arkansos

+ •

t

•

'-"

.

'

r Labors

•

1
M.., county News Notes i Priority
.,.,
By
Alma· Marshdt

...

~·M.&amp;R

.

OPEN 9~9- EVERY DAY SUNDAY ' 12-6

Deffued

· Every year ori his birth\lay Grover Rolish of Mason is the
guest Dl honor at a birthday dinner given by his wife. This
energetic 88-year old Mason resident goes fiShing, plants a
garden and still keeps busy. For this very reason, he is 88-years
young! 1n his lifetime he has built approximately 60 john boats.
His family and friends attended the ham andturkey dinner,
extended best·wishes, and h.elped 1o consume the birthday cake
Sunday at his home. ·
Attending were the honoree and his wife and Mr. and Mrs.
. Rarold Roush and son, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Tracy and son, all of
Philo, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs .. Clyde Roush, Old Town Rd., ft·
Pleasant; ·Mr. and Mrs. Artie Roush, Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs. Clara
Smith, Mrs. George Carson; Mason; Mrs. Ora Cochran, ·St.
Albans, and Mrs. Edna RouSh, New Haven.
v·1s1tmg
· ·• durmg
·
fte
.
the a rnoon were Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Rev.
Clar~nce McCloud ; Andy Humes, Mrs. Reuben Stewa11, .Mrs.
Maxme Arnold, all of Mason, .and Mrs. Mable Casto, Mrs. Kate
Roush and Mrs. Don Ohlinger, New Haven .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

AFL-CIO's chief economist
told Congress· today !hit the
government's top economic
priority should be "full employment" iJ) which jobs would
be available. to all persons
·~~~.:~;~ -Goldfinger, re- .
,
search director for. tbe labor :
federation, said . this would
•
t t f
JACit
SHIFLET
•
1
mean an unemp oymen ra e o
·from 2 to 2_5 per cent sil)ce
I
many .workers still would be
_out of jobs temporarily for
various reasons at any one
time.
THE "ROUSHES, BESIDES being numerous in Mason
Goldfinger, in testimony preCounty and elsewhere,
also inclined to be champions, pa~ed for the Joint Economic
JaCk H. Shiflet have
Anyhow, Donald Roush of New Ha:;en was just that this past Committee, thus dljagreed received
Station, Rodgers to
weekend, The Donald Roushes attended a "Holiday Camper'' with President Nixon's ap. Assistl!nt Shift Operating
to Unit Foreman.
Louis R. Ford, Jr., plant
.said Rodgers joined
campqut at Mason County Fairground this past weekend. It was proach that inflation, not
here that Donald took part in the horseshoe pitching contest and unemployment, is the biggest OYEC in January, 1955 and hu
entire career in the
won a trophy. There were about 20 participants and through the economic problem . Labor Operatioi]S Department. He ·~~~;:1r.:~:e~G;allla Academy .
process of elimination, Donald came up the winner. You can bet leaders have accused the_Wbite . High School with the Class of 1943 and
three years in
House of f~ghting inflation by the U.S. Nf!.vy. Rodgers and hill wife
daughter Cheryl and Mommie were proud.
reside at Cheshire,
increasing
unemployment.
He was urged to participate by Mrs. Roush, and his first
Ohio, and are the P4J'ents of five
James, Jr., Fred, _
The committee is holding Lois,'Marsha, and Nancy.
•
comment was, ''Those shoes are a different kind from the ones l
hearings on ways to lower the
have pitched."
~iflet also joul'oo OVEC in Jar1uat
jobless
rate,
currently
at
5.5
attendant in the Yard Department,
All the saying goes, nothing ventured, nothing gained. And so
per
cent
after
hanging
near
the
Donald has a trophy to Show for his venture. transferred to the Operationl·
There were 86 holiday trailers from Ohio and West V~rginia 6 per cent mark for 1g months. Pleasant native, having lltteilde!l
Goldfinger said the solution ~iflet now resides at letart; VI,
there; 180 adults; 51 teenagers, ani! 47 youngsters under 13 who
is simple: The · government
enjoyed the weekend campout.
and their children, Lirida, Del~, Ja1ck,
should take steps to create
more jobs, especially for the
AT MASON JUNIOR Girl Scout Troop 487 meeting held · semi-skilled and unskilled
ists said in a·study prepared for
~ illlCOIDE Was up $5.7
recently at Mason United Methodist Church the scouts cenwed workers.
September, the
the
committee
lhat
an
their program around National Fire Prevention Week which
He said this could be done by
Department said,
started0ct.l4. The GirlScoutslearned theorigiri and meaning of increased federal spending to unemployment rate of less .
to
a gain of $7.I
·
than
3 per cent was a · c
Fire Prevention Week and made posters and placed them in the create jobs directly or to spend
"realistic" goal for the next billimt; August.
local schools ane places of business.
money on projects that would decade. The Harvard and MIT
Their slogan is, "Stop Fires Before They Start." They were lead to · more Jobs. He said
faculty members also argued
given a check list of safety rules for the home.
federal efforts should be that the permanent unem- •
Attendijlg was their leader, Janell Call, and m·embers Karen selectively pinpginted toward ployment rate can be lowered
Brown, Debbie Cadle, Angie Casto, Jill Cundiff, Belinda and creating more jobs.
substantially "wi~hout inDorinda Deem, Nellie Escue, Pat\}' Estep, JaCkie Greene, Judy
Tuesday, a group of econom- dUcing an unacceptable rate of.
Hall, Kim Hudson, Angie Johnson , Dean Ann Johnson, Mary
Inflation ."
'l
Johnson, Terri Johnson, Brenda Qulnen. Sandy 'Quillen, Kelly
The report recommended
Roach, Tarruny Russell, Katie Saffel, Risa Sayre, Edie Shepard,
new pollcies to inct'ease the
Debbie Smith, Lisa Stewart and Britta VanMeter.
· stability of employment among
young workers, the elimination
NEIGHBORS AND FRIENDS of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Hoffman
of unnecessary seas.onal and
cyclical fluctuations in labor
surprised them recently with a housewanning at their new home
demand, and an increille in the
at Clifton. Their home iS located in the Lyons Addition. Mrs.
speed l'ith which the jobleso .;,
Hoffman is the former Sandy Bennett.
are returned to work.
Registering were Mrs. Margaret Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Jess
· •• The government Tuesday
Brown, Mrs. Denver Blake, Dorothy and Wilma Blake, Katie
reported healthy gains in in·
Oliver, Mrs. Louie Peters and Lisa, Mrs. Helen Barker, Clara
dustrial production and perWilliams, Hattie McDaniel, Mary Jewell, Mable Johnson, Mary
sonal
income in Seplen)ber;
PtckeiUl, Chloris Roush, .~ollie Fox, Frances·Oliver, Belly Hupp,
; :t'lle Fe~ral Reserve Board
~irley Tucker, Mrs. Paul Zerkle, Mrs. Sam Hoffman, Mrs&gt;•· said the output of the nation's
-&amp;bert,Hoffman, Mr:&amp;nd Mrs. Gerald Rood and Richmf, LoUise ..
, fac&amp;irie8 went up 0.6 per cent
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Gary RoOd, Phyllis Bennett, May Wamslast month, compared to 0.7per ,.,,,.,.
ley and Bonnie, Mrs. Mary Berry, Emma Rogers and Robbie.
1
cent for August.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roach, Katie Bass,
Mr. and Mrs. B. F . Board, Mrs. Jack Young, Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Joey Roush, Betty Call, Charlotte
lewis, Freda Henry, Mrs. Jan Robinson, Mrs. Olga lewis, Betty
Fox and Carol Workman.

2·

COLUMBU}.•(UPII - This
week's United· Press Inlernallonal Ohio 'Hiph School
Board ol Coaches foolball
ratings (with first place . votes
and won -los t records in ,
parentheses):
Class AAA
Team
~ Points
1. Massillon--' 08) WO-O) 336
2. Warren Western Reserve
(7) (6'0-0) 244
J. Sandusky
(4) (6-0-0) 242
4. Princeton (2) (5-0-1) 186
S. Clncinnali Elder
'
(4) (S-0-0) 147
6. Canton McKinley
(5-1-0) 128
. 7. Steubenville
(5-1-0) 93
8. Cincinnali Moeller
(5-1-0) 73
9. Akron Garfield
(4-1-0) 64
10. Fremont Ross (5-1-0l 58
Second ten: 11. Elyria 57; 12.
Cleveland St. Josefh 51; 13.
Kellering Fairmon East (2)
3'1 ; 14. (tie) Cincinnati LaSalle
and Barberton 37 each ; .16.
Cleveland Cathedral Latin (IJ
36; 17. Upper ~rlington 32 ; 18.
North Canton Hoover (I) 31 ;
19. Toledo Scott 28 ; ~0.
Louisville 26.
Others with ten or more
points: Niles McK inley,
Warren Harding, Struthers,
lima Senior, Cleveland St.
' Ignatius, Newark, Oregon Glay
. 11) , Toledo Cenlral Catholic,
Gahanna

j

I

f

Lincoln

and

'columbus Walnut Ridge.
Class AA
Te.am
Points
1. Warren. Kennedy
.
161 (6-0-0) 210
2. Cplumb us Watterson
.
(3) (6-0-0) 159
j _ Dayton Jefferson
121 (6·0-0) 101
4. Lima Central Calholic
.
(5·1-01 ·96
5. Can1pbell
1
6. St. Marys

I)

7. Sleubenville Calholic
•
•
·
•
·
(3-1-2) 71
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
8. River
(31 (6-0-01 69 United
Press International top
9. Ballaire
(1) i5-l-OI 66 ~0 college
div ision football
10. Hamilton Badin
teams
wifh
firs
t-place votes and
(6-0-0) 61 won-los t records
Second ten: 11 . Portsmouth theses: (6th Week ). in parenWest 56; 12. Fostoria Ill 55 ; 13.
Reading (2) 50; 14. Toronto 44 ;
t5. Buckeye South (1) 42 ; 16. Team
Points
(lie) Huron (IJ and Akron St. 1. !Tiel Oel. (19) 15-0)
JIS
Vincenl (11 34 eath ; 18. 2. 1Tiel La.Tch 1151 (5-0) 315
leaviltsburgh Labrae (I) 33; 3. North Dakota (6-0)
290
19. Rosslord (1) 31 ; 20. (tiel 4. McNeese St. (4-1)
153
Loveland (2) and Clyde (2) 29 5. Western Ill. (S-O)
122
each.
. 6. Cal Poly IS LOJ I4-0-ll112
Other~ with ten or more
7. Tennessee St. 15-1)
91
poi nts : Geneva, Dublin ,· 8. Drake (4-1)
88
Wheelersburg, . Canfield , 9. Fresno St. (4·1-1)
79
Buckeye North , Cad iz, 10. Boise State 14-ll
52
Minerva,
Ironton
II ), 11 . Lvigstn Ala. St. 15-0-1)49
Co I u m bus
DeS ales, 12. Hawaii (4-0)
39
13. Jackson State (5-0l
37
Bell efonta ine, Wroming and
Hartville Lake II .
14. Massachusefts (4-0)
30
15. South Dakota Il-l)
21
Class A
Team
IS
· Points 16. Weslern Car. (4-1-ll
17. Grambling (4-2)
u·
1. Marion Pleasant
18. Samford (S-1)
IJ
( 11) (6-0-01 204
II
2. Arlington
(3) (6-0-01 126 19. Ashlnd 10.) 16-0)
10
3. Ada
121 16-0-0l 120 20. Carsn-Newmn (5-IJ
4. Kirlland
(I) (6-0-0l 98
S.Cory- Rawson (5- 1-0) 96
6. Newcomerstown

(I) (6-0-0) 84
7. Norwalk Sl. Paul
.
(S- 1-0) 49
8. Parkway
15-1-0) 47
9. Portsmouth Notre Dame
(5-1-0) 45
10. Middletown Fenwick
(I) (4-1-1) 44

MRS. JOHN CARPENTER IS CHAffiMAN of New Haven
Grade School Second Winter Festival. She is urging wide participation in this event on Dec.1 and 2. The parade will be Friday
evening, Dec. I, and will be on a Christmas theme. A prize will be
given for the best float. All cluhe in the county, schools, and
hands are invited to participate. More information regarding this
matter can be obtained by calling Mrs. John Carpenter or Mrs.
Robert Gurtls, both of New Haven.
Mrs. Larry Angel is co-chairtnan Df the winter festival. The
chairman and co-chairman are open to suggestions to improve
this second festival and will welcome volunteers in helping to
make the affair a success.
Open house will be held at New Haven Grade School on
October 19. Babysltlers will be provided.

SUPER GAS RA-NGE

SALE

day night by Massillon, feU which played a scoreless tie
!ram third last week, while with Youngstown Ursuline,
Fremont Ross made a r~turn moved up to fifth .
Rounding out the Class AA
trip to the top ten after an IIHJ
victory over Jreviously un- top ten are St. Marys
beaten · and fourth-ranked Memorial, Steubenvllle
Elyria,
Central. River, Bellaire and
Kennedy Continued to run Hamilton Badin, unbeaten In
well ahead ot Columbus six games and making its first
Watterson In Class AA 1 appear!lllce ..
although the Eagles managed
.Cllli A Chueto chop a few points off the
In the Class A chase, PleaWarren lead with this week's sant•s top challenger the first
spread being 21()-IS9.
three weeks of the balloting,
Dayton Jefferson took over Cory-RaWliOII, went down lM!
third when Bellaire suffered its to Ar~ and the Hornets
first 1088 of the season .and . fell to fifth.
Uma Central Catholic, despite
Arlington look advantage of
a 12-7 1088 to AAA· Ketteriilg . its big wtn to grab the runnerup
Alter, moved up from fifth to spot, although the Red Devils
fourth. CampbeU Memorial, traU No. I Pleasant :.H-126 in
·~ .

22

Portsmouth
Notre Dame Fenand ·
newcomer Middletown
wick rounding out the top ten.

-For

'

Tigers, however, are defending
AAA champion Warren Harding, which has l118t two tough
decisions this sea8on, attckthe·
anmilll battle with.slxtiH'anted
Canton McKinley.
· Princeton; with only a scOreleu tl.e with Upper . Aru.toll ·
IIIIJTing an otherwise Pl!'fe!:t
rerorct. flnlllhed fourth 1n AAA
tlllnreek wltb 1.88 points, while
.abeet. Cincinnati Elder toolt: .
fifth, uri tine Dotchea from
1111 wett..
.·

Road Oat Tm
McKinley, Steuben¥1lle, CJn.
clanlll Moeller, Akran 0.·
and Fnmolit Roa round
GUt tbe lop t.l,
SteubenvUle, beaten ls-G P'rl·

Ham Sandwiches

!AR

. .

. COUPON

oz.

I

Goodal ;

I

Rutland.

I

,

1!:::::,:::;:;:;:::

TRUE VALUE

FRESH SKINLESS

SLICED
BACON

..

• FRESH SLICED

WIENERS- BOLOGNA.

.

l~b.

12 oz.

pkg.

pkg.

CHICKEN

2

lb.
pkg.

~~59

FOLGER'S
•

COFFEE

HOMO

V-8
JUICE

BLEACH

3-lb.
can

46 oz. can

Gallon

Gallon.
ALL GRINDS
It

'tU

'

l

r 1N

~

."

Only

Only

'

Parkay Margarine ....~:~~~~-~-~~-~:.~~~-. ~~~~:.~.~...29'
" h ·sauce...............................
HUNT'S
3·151(2cansoz. . ,
ManWIC
IGA Flour. . ~.~~~. ~~.~~~~~~~!~~...................~~.'~·. ~~~... 7 9'
IGA Bread . . ~.~-~~--~~~~~~ ...................... 5 for

STOKELY'S

APPLE
SAUCE

Rutla'id
I · Dopt.
Slcire,

Watd Cr.~is
I ·Sons, RaCine.

•

YELLOW

15 oz.
cans

1'1:(}/)/(/ J:()\/"1
I

WINESAP or RED DELICOUS

79~

APPLES
BANQUET

4-lb..

CREAM PIES

bag

·The

1T'STRUE". • •

~

lb.

Fully Cooked (Heat-Serve)
FROZEN FRIED

I.G.A.

.Freezer

11

PICNIC.

'

KLEENEX ':.., ASST. Ott

.

each

ONIONS
3-lb.

bag

25~-

GROUND II!I!F .
lb. CHUCK ROAST
lb. ROUND STEAK
· .4 lb. PORK CHOPS
lib. STEW MEAT
2 ib. SLICED BACON
~lb.

4
.r-;;;.,.., 4

12 SEMI-

1

VALWI
All

·lOUie

AI

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Your Order!

8 AKER........
-•..,. ..
.

I

. I

;

I

49c

(WHOLE ONLY)

I

u
TI'ss ·Es··

'

- - - - - -· --- -

,,__
' __.

I

200 COUNT

.

for

(136)

votes.
Still on the scbedule for the

APT. SIZE '11,. up '
30'''199• .up
'17Pup

IVORY
LIQUID

the point totals. Ada, third last
week, held its position, with
Kirtland moving up from
seventh to fourth and then
coines Cary-Rawson.
·
Newcomerstown, unbeaten
in six games, made its beat
showing of the year by taking
the No. 6 position, while
Norwalk St. Paul, a 34-12loser
W New London, Park.way,

~. ~39 ,WITH .

STORE

Time Is Running Out On Ohio O.allengers

COLUMBUS (UP!) - With
MasaUlon, Warren Kennedy
and Marlon Pleasant rolling
aloilg with clocklike precision,
Second ten : 11. Berne Union time begins to run out on any
37; 12. Newark Calhol ic 35; 13. potential challengers · in the
Cedarville (2) ; 14. Covington
(II ; 15. Spencervi ll e; 16 . · United Press International
Lorain Ciearview (I) 29 ; 17. Ohio High School Boatd of
-Tuscarawas Valley ; 18. Pla in Coaches' foqtball ratings.
Cily Jonathan. Alder 2J; 19.
With four weeks of the ratl~~~)=~t;
Untied
21
;
20.
(lie)
t
and Marion Loca l. ings down and four to go, the
with len or more · three leaders, MassUlon in
Calhollc
Sycamore AAA Kennedy in AA, and
Lehman, Pleasant in A, are not being
and Marion seriously pressed.
.Masslllon, which has led the
AAA ratings fr1111 the very first
week, still hold! a 92-point
margin over second place War·
ren Western Reserve, although
unbeaten Sandusky has jump. ed into the picture and is only
two in baCk of 'Reserve.
In the past three weeks, the
corisistent Tigers of coach Bob
Couunings have totaled 331, 338
and this week, 336 points, and
picked up 18 of the ,j(J firSt place

Fresh Made -Ready to Eat

8 OZ.

'

Smoked

·Taster's Choice .

IG 2
RES

LEN CAMP
Len Camp, ev~ugeUst
from the Neelysvllle Church
of Cbrlst near McConne~­
vllle, will speak at 7:30 eacb
evening Friday through
Sunday during a revival at
the Pomeroy Church of ·
Christ. There will 'be speelal
singing each evenlug. Mr.
Camp, a native of Iowa,
received his trainlug at the
School of Central Cbrlsllau
College fD Missouri. Tbe
publlc Is Invited.

PICNIC HAMS ....... :...........

RIGHT RESERVED TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

Men Pr.oted·

r:;=

n··
. ·. eon~ Ratings
zg~hSch.oo,lR
.~. atings

SLICED SMOKED

WASillNGTON (UP! )-The

are

Alabama rolling ·toward
the Southeastern t h r o n e
room will not be denied as
it turns back a r u g g e d
band o( 'l'ennessee volunooers, 27-22- har-rumph!.
We were forced to push the
Hoople Computers to the
limit to come up with enough
information to separate the
.fine Arkansas and Texas
elevens. We - kaff-kaff have narrowed it down to the
margin of a .field goal, 24-21,
in favor · bf the Razorbacks
over the Texas Longhorns!
The Air Force and Navy
will tangle for the fifth time
in their series and the Falcons figure to sink the Middies, 35-14. Meanwhile at
Altanta, Auburn will make
· Ramblin' Wrecks of Georgia
Tech• - heh-heh - as they
defeat the Yellow Jackets,
26-21 - kaff-kaff!

SHOP-PING CENTER

c.

·-

�·t-: t1le Dllily Sentinel, Middle&gt;port-Pomeroy, Oct. IS, 1972
o;,.o;,.Xo'o"
... • •
· ·~ · ~ o •• u o.oo '';&lt;'&lt;'O!!IS"IIIj~Will•"lllj
....W.•,V....",••'-'.~.·'ooYoW'o".~~--'-::;"
•x•:--.-:.•!·,·!-:·:{•:·:-;•:O:-;JOo:•:•:-=·:•:•:•~':·:05!0~Z·21
• ·;.;; ..
• •lllju~u~~·
• •• • 't'..~o.'.,.;.,;,w.-o."&lt;o.&lt;QI.
..,v.vr...~~

UPSET CHOICE--•

.Major Likes Colorado Over.
·Oklahoma; Picks Alabama, Arkansos

+ •

t

•

'-"

.

'

r Labors

•

1
M.., county News Notes i Priority
.,.,
By
Alma· Marshdt

...

~·M.&amp;R

.

OPEN 9~9- EVERY DAY SUNDAY ' 12-6

Deffued

· Every year ori his birth\lay Grover Rolish of Mason is the
guest Dl honor at a birthday dinner given by his wife. This
energetic 88-year old Mason resident goes fiShing, plants a
garden and still keeps busy. For this very reason, he is 88-years
young! 1n his lifetime he has built approximately 60 john boats.
His family and friends attended the ham andturkey dinner,
extended best·wishes, and h.elped 1o consume the birthday cake
Sunday at his home. ·
Attending were the honoree and his wife and Mr. and Mrs.
. Rarold Roush and son, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Tracy and son, all of
Philo, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs .. Clyde Roush, Old Town Rd., ft·
Pleasant; ·Mr. and Mrs. Artie Roush, Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs. Clara
Smith, Mrs. George Carson; Mason; Mrs. Ora Cochran, ·St.
Albans, and Mrs. Edna RouSh, New Haven.
v·1s1tmg
· ·• durmg
·
fte
.
the a rnoon were Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Rev.
Clar~nce McCloud ; Andy Humes, Mrs. Reuben Stewa11, .Mrs.
Maxme Arnold, all of Mason, .and Mrs. Mable Casto, Mrs. Kate
Roush and Mrs. Don Ohlinger, New Haven .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

AFL-CIO's chief economist
told Congress· today !hit the
government's top economic
priority should be "full employment" iJ) which jobs would
be available. to all persons
·~~~.:~;~ -Goldfinger, re- .
,
search director for. tbe labor :
federation, said . this would
•
t t f
JACit
SHIFLET
•
1
mean an unemp oymen ra e o
·from 2 to 2_5 per cent sil)ce
I
many .workers still would be
_out of jobs temporarily for
various reasons at any one
time.
THE "ROUSHES, BESIDES being numerous in Mason
Goldfinger, in testimony preCounty and elsewhere,
also inclined to be champions, pa~ed for the Joint Economic
JaCk H. Shiflet have
Anyhow, Donald Roush of New Ha:;en was just that this past Committee, thus dljagreed received
Station, Rodgers to
weekend, The Donald Roushes attended a "Holiday Camper'' with President Nixon's ap. Assistl!nt Shift Operating
to Unit Foreman.
Louis R. Ford, Jr., plant
.said Rodgers joined
campqut at Mason County Fairground this past weekend. It was proach that inflation, not
here that Donald took part in the horseshoe pitching contest and unemployment, is the biggest OYEC in January, 1955 and hu
entire career in the
won a trophy. There were about 20 participants and through the economic problem . Labor Operatioi]S Department. He ·~~~;:1r.:~:e~G;allla Academy .
process of elimination, Donald came up the winner. You can bet leaders have accused the_Wbite . High School with the Class of 1943 and
three years in
House of f~ghting inflation by the U.S. Nf!.vy. Rodgers and hill wife
daughter Cheryl and Mommie were proud.
reside at Cheshire,
increasing
unemployment.
He was urged to participate by Mrs. Roush, and his first
Ohio, and are the P4J'ents of five
James, Jr., Fred, _
The committee is holding Lois,'Marsha, and Nancy.
•
comment was, ''Those shoes are a different kind from the ones l
hearings on ways to lower the
have pitched."
~iflet also joul'oo OVEC in Jar1uat
jobless
rate,
currently
at
5.5
attendant in the Yard Department,
All the saying goes, nothing ventured, nothing gained. And so
per
cent
after
hanging
near
the
Donald has a trophy to Show for his venture. transferred to the Operationl·
There were 86 holiday trailers from Ohio and West V~rginia 6 per cent mark for 1g months. Pleasant native, having lltteilde!l
Goldfinger said the solution ~iflet now resides at letart; VI,
there; 180 adults; 51 teenagers, ani! 47 youngsters under 13 who
is simple: The · government
enjoyed the weekend campout.
and their children, Lirida, Del~, Ja1ck,
should take steps to create
more jobs, especially for the
AT MASON JUNIOR Girl Scout Troop 487 meeting held · semi-skilled and unskilled
ists said in a·study prepared for
~ illlCOIDE Was up $5.7
recently at Mason United Methodist Church the scouts cenwed workers.
September, the
the
committee
lhat
an
their program around National Fire Prevention Week which
He said this could be done by
Department said,
started0ct.l4. The GirlScoutslearned theorigiri and meaning of increased federal spending to unemployment rate of less .
to
a gain of $7.I
·
than
3 per cent was a · c
Fire Prevention Week and made posters and placed them in the create jobs directly or to spend
"realistic" goal for the next billimt; August.
local schools ane places of business.
money on projects that would decade. The Harvard and MIT
Their slogan is, "Stop Fires Before They Start." They were lead to · more Jobs. He said
faculty members also argued
given a check list of safety rules for the home.
federal efforts should be that the permanent unem- •
Attendijlg was their leader, Janell Call, and m·embers Karen selectively pinpginted toward ployment rate can be lowered
Brown, Debbie Cadle, Angie Casto, Jill Cundiff, Belinda and creating more jobs.
substantially "wi~hout inDorinda Deem, Nellie Escue, Pat\}' Estep, JaCkie Greene, Judy
Tuesday, a group of econom- dUcing an unacceptable rate of.
Hall, Kim Hudson, Angie Johnson , Dean Ann Johnson, Mary
Inflation ."
'l
Johnson, Terri Johnson, Brenda Qulnen. Sandy 'Quillen, Kelly
The report recommended
Roach, Tarruny Russell, Katie Saffel, Risa Sayre, Edie Shepard,
new pollcies to inct'ease the
Debbie Smith, Lisa Stewart and Britta VanMeter.
· stability of employment among
young workers, the elimination
NEIGHBORS AND FRIENDS of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Hoffman
of unnecessary seas.onal and
cyclical fluctuations in labor
surprised them recently with a housewanning at their new home
demand, and an increille in the
at Clifton. Their home iS located in the Lyons Addition. Mrs.
speed l'ith which the jobleso .;,
Hoffman is the former Sandy Bennett.
are returned to work.
Registering were Mrs. Margaret Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Jess
· •• The government Tuesday
Brown, Mrs. Denver Blake, Dorothy and Wilma Blake, Katie
reported healthy gains in in·
Oliver, Mrs. Louie Peters and Lisa, Mrs. Helen Barker, Clara
dustrial production and perWilliams, Hattie McDaniel, Mary Jewell, Mable Johnson, Mary
sonal
income in Seplen)ber;
PtckeiUl, Chloris Roush, .~ollie Fox, Frances·Oliver, Belly Hupp,
; :t'lle Fe~ral Reserve Board
~irley Tucker, Mrs. Paul Zerkle, Mrs. Sam Hoffman, Mrs&gt;•· said the output of the nation's
-&amp;bert,Hoffman, Mr:&amp;nd Mrs. Gerald Rood and Richmf, LoUise ..
, fac&amp;irie8 went up 0.6 per cent
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Gary RoOd, Phyllis Bennett, May Wamslast month, compared to 0.7per ,.,,,.,.
ley and Bonnie, Mrs. Mary Berry, Emma Rogers and Robbie.
1
cent for August.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roach, Katie Bass,
Mr. and Mrs. B. F . Board, Mrs. Jack Young, Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Joey Roush, Betty Call, Charlotte
lewis, Freda Henry, Mrs. Jan Robinson, Mrs. Olga lewis, Betty
Fox and Carol Workman.

2·

COLUMBU}.•(UPII - This
week's United· Press Inlernallonal Ohio 'Hiph School
Board ol Coaches foolball
ratings (with first place . votes
and won -los t records in ,
parentheses):
Class AAA
Team
~ Points
1. Massillon--' 08) WO-O) 336
2. Warren Western Reserve
(7) (6'0-0) 244
J. Sandusky
(4) (6-0-0) 242
4. Princeton (2) (5-0-1) 186
S. Clncinnali Elder
'
(4) (S-0-0) 147
6. Canton McKinley
(5-1-0) 128
. 7. Steubenville
(5-1-0) 93
8. Cincinnali Moeller
(5-1-0) 73
9. Akron Garfield
(4-1-0) 64
10. Fremont Ross (5-1-0l 58
Second ten: 11. Elyria 57; 12.
Cleveland St. Josefh 51; 13.
Kellering Fairmon East (2)
3'1 ; 14. (tie) Cincinnati LaSalle
and Barberton 37 each ; .16.
Cleveland Cathedral Latin (IJ
36; 17. Upper ~rlington 32 ; 18.
North Canton Hoover (I) 31 ;
19. Toledo Scott 28 ; ~0.
Louisville 26.
Others with ten or more
points: Niles McK inley,
Warren Harding, Struthers,
lima Senior, Cleveland St.
' Ignatius, Newark, Oregon Glay
. 11) , Toledo Cenlral Catholic,
Gahanna

j

I

f

Lincoln

and

'columbus Walnut Ridge.
Class AA
Te.am
Points
1. Warren. Kennedy
.
161 (6-0-0) 210
2. Cplumb us Watterson
.
(3) (6-0-0) 159
j _ Dayton Jefferson
121 (6·0-0) 101
4. Lima Central Calholic
.
(5·1-01 ·96
5. Can1pbell
1
6. St. Marys

I)

7. Sleubenville Calholic
•
•
·
•
·
(3-1-2) 71
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
8. River
(31 (6-0-01 69 United
Press International top
9. Ballaire
(1) i5-l-OI 66 ~0 college
div ision football
10. Hamilton Badin
teams
wifh
firs
t-place votes and
(6-0-0) 61 won-los t records
Second ten: 11 . Portsmouth theses: (6th Week ). in parenWest 56; 12. Fostoria Ill 55 ; 13.
Reading (2) 50; 14. Toronto 44 ;
t5. Buckeye South (1) 42 ; 16. Team
Points
(lie) Huron (IJ and Akron St. 1. !Tiel Oel. (19) 15-0)
JIS
Vincenl (11 34 eath ; 18. 2. 1Tiel La.Tch 1151 (5-0) 315
leaviltsburgh Labrae (I) 33; 3. North Dakota (6-0)
290
19. Rosslord (1) 31 ; 20. (tiel 4. McNeese St. (4-1)
153
Loveland (2) and Clyde (2) 29 5. Western Ill. (S-O)
122
each.
. 6. Cal Poly IS LOJ I4-0-ll112
Other~ with ten or more
7. Tennessee St. 15-1)
91
poi nts : Geneva, Dublin ,· 8. Drake (4-1)
88
Wheelersburg, . Canfield , 9. Fresno St. (4·1-1)
79
Buckeye North , Cad iz, 10. Boise State 14-ll
52
Minerva,
Ironton
II ), 11 . Lvigstn Ala. St. 15-0-1)49
Co I u m bus
DeS ales, 12. Hawaii (4-0)
39
13. Jackson State (5-0l
37
Bell efonta ine, Wroming and
Hartville Lake II .
14. Massachusefts (4-0)
30
15. South Dakota Il-l)
21
Class A
Team
IS
· Points 16. Weslern Car. (4-1-ll
17. Grambling (4-2)
u·
1. Marion Pleasant
18. Samford (S-1)
IJ
( 11) (6-0-01 204
II
2. Arlington
(3) (6-0-01 126 19. Ashlnd 10.) 16-0)
10
3. Ada
121 16-0-0l 120 20. Carsn-Newmn (5-IJ
4. Kirlland
(I) (6-0-0l 98
S.Cory- Rawson (5- 1-0) 96
6. Newcomerstown

(I) (6-0-0) 84
7. Norwalk Sl. Paul
.
(S- 1-0) 49
8. Parkway
15-1-0) 47
9. Portsmouth Notre Dame
(5-1-0) 45
10. Middletown Fenwick
(I) (4-1-1) 44

MRS. JOHN CARPENTER IS CHAffiMAN of New Haven
Grade School Second Winter Festival. She is urging wide participation in this event on Dec.1 and 2. The parade will be Friday
evening, Dec. I, and will be on a Christmas theme. A prize will be
given for the best float. All cluhe in the county, schools, and
hands are invited to participate. More information regarding this
matter can be obtained by calling Mrs. John Carpenter or Mrs.
Robert Gurtls, both of New Haven.
Mrs. Larry Angel is co-chairtnan Df the winter festival. The
chairman and co-chairman are open to suggestions to improve
this second festival and will welcome volunteers in helping to
make the affair a success.
Open house will be held at New Haven Grade School on
October 19. Babysltlers will be provided.

SUPER GAS RA-NGE

SALE

day night by Massillon, feU which played a scoreless tie
!ram third last week, while with Youngstown Ursuline,
Fremont Ross made a r~turn moved up to fifth .
Rounding out the Class AA
trip to the top ten after an IIHJ
victory over Jreviously un- top ten are St. Marys
beaten · and fourth-ranked Memorial, Steubenvllle
Elyria,
Central. River, Bellaire and
Kennedy Continued to run Hamilton Badin, unbeaten In
well ahead ot Columbus six games and making its first
Watterson In Class AA 1 appear!lllce ..
although the Eagles managed
.Cllli A Chueto chop a few points off the
In the Class A chase, PleaWarren lead with this week's sant•s top challenger the first
spread being 21()-IS9.
three weeks of the balloting,
Dayton Jefferson took over Cory-RaWliOII, went down lM!
third when Bellaire suffered its to Ar~ and the Hornets
first 1088 of the season .and . fell to fifth.
Uma Central Catholic, despite
Arlington look advantage of
a 12-7 1088 to AAA· Ketteriilg . its big wtn to grab the runnerup
Alter, moved up from fifth to spot, although the Red Devils
fourth. CampbeU Memorial, traU No. I Pleasant :.H-126 in
·~ .

22

Portsmouth
Notre Dame Fenand ·
newcomer Middletown
wick rounding out the top ten.

-For

'

Tigers, however, are defending
AAA champion Warren Harding, which has l118t two tough
decisions this sea8on, attckthe·
anmilll battle with.slxtiH'anted
Canton McKinley.
· Princeton; with only a scOreleu tl.e with Upper . Aru.toll ·
IIIIJTing an otherwise Pl!'fe!:t
rerorct. flnlllhed fourth 1n AAA
tlllnreek wltb 1.88 points, while
.abeet. Cincinnati Elder toolt: .
fifth, uri tine Dotchea from
1111 wett..
.·

Road Oat Tm
McKinley, Steuben¥1lle, CJn.
clanlll Moeller, Akran 0.·
and Fnmolit Roa round
GUt tbe lop t.l,
SteubenvUle, beaten ls-G P'rl·

Ham Sandwiches

!AR

. .

. COUPON

oz.

I

Goodal ;

I

Rutland.

I

,

1!:::::,:::;:;:;:::

TRUE VALUE

FRESH SKINLESS

SLICED
BACON

..

• FRESH SLICED

WIENERS- BOLOGNA.

.

l~b.

12 oz.

pkg.

pkg.

CHICKEN

2

lb.
pkg.

~~59

FOLGER'S
•

COFFEE

HOMO

V-8
JUICE

BLEACH

3-lb.
can

46 oz. can

Gallon

Gallon.
ALL GRINDS
It

'tU

'

l

r 1N

~

."

Only

Only

'

Parkay Margarine ....~:~~~~-~-~~-~:.~~~-. ~~~~:.~.~...29'
" h ·sauce...............................
HUNT'S
3·151(2cansoz. . ,
ManWIC
IGA Flour. . ~.~~~. ~~.~~~~~~~!~~...................~~.'~·. ~~~... 7 9'
IGA Bread . . ~.~-~~--~~~~~~ ...................... 5 for

STOKELY'S

APPLE
SAUCE

Rutla'id
I · Dopt.
Slcire,

Watd Cr.~is
I ·Sons, RaCine.

•

YELLOW

15 oz.
cans

1'1:(}/)/(/ J:()\/"1
I

WINESAP or RED DELICOUS

79~

APPLES
BANQUET

4-lb..

CREAM PIES

bag

·The

1T'STRUE". • •

~

lb.

Fully Cooked (Heat-Serve)
FROZEN FRIED

I.G.A.

.Freezer

11

PICNIC.

'

KLEENEX ':.., ASST. Ott

.

each

ONIONS
3-lb.

bag

25~-

GROUND II!I!F .
lb. CHUCK ROAST
lb. ROUND STEAK
· .4 lb. PORK CHOPS
lib. STEW MEAT
2 ib. SLICED BACON
~lb.

4
.r-;;;.,.., 4

12 SEMI-

1

VALWI
All

·lOUie

AI

. Pltoni'Us
Your Order!

8 AKER........
-•..,. ..
.

I

. I

;

I

49c

(WHOLE ONLY)

I

u
TI'ss ·Es··

'

- - - - - -· --- -

,,__
' __.

I

200 COUNT

.

for

(136)

votes.
Still on the scbedule for the

APT. SIZE '11,. up '
30'''199• .up
'17Pup

IVORY
LIQUID

the point totals. Ada, third last
week, held its position, with
Kirtland moving up from
seventh to fourth and then
coines Cary-Rawson.
·
Newcomerstown, unbeaten
in six games, made its beat
showing of the year by taking
the No. 6 position, while
Norwalk St. Paul, a 34-12loser
W New London, Park.way,

~. ~39 ,WITH .

STORE

Time Is Running Out On Ohio O.allengers

COLUMBUS (UP!) - With
MasaUlon, Warren Kennedy
and Marlon Pleasant rolling
aloilg with clocklike precision,
Second ten : 11. Berne Union time begins to run out on any
37; 12. Newark Calhol ic 35; 13. potential challengers · in the
Cedarville (2) ; 14. Covington
(II ; 15. Spencervi ll e; 16 . · United Press International
Lorain Ciearview (I) 29 ; 17. Ohio High School Boatd of
-Tuscarawas Valley ; 18. Pla in Coaches' foqtball ratings.
Cily Jonathan. Alder 2J; 19.
With four weeks of the ratl~~~)=~t;
Untied
21
;
20.
(lie)
t
and Marion Loca l. ings down and four to go, the
with len or more · three leaders, MassUlon in
Calhollc
Sycamore AAA Kennedy in AA, and
Lehman, Pleasant in A, are not being
and Marion seriously pressed.
.Masslllon, which has led the
AAA ratings fr1111 the very first
week, still hold! a 92-point
margin over second place War·
ren Western Reserve, although
unbeaten Sandusky has jump. ed into the picture and is only
two in baCk of 'Reserve.
In the past three weeks, the
corisistent Tigers of coach Bob
Couunings have totaled 331, 338
and this week, 336 points, and
picked up 18 of the ,j(J firSt place

Fresh Made -Ready to Eat

8 OZ.

'

Smoked

·Taster's Choice .

IG 2
RES

LEN CAMP
Len Camp, ev~ugeUst
from the Neelysvllle Church
of Cbrlst near McConne~­
vllle, will speak at 7:30 eacb
evening Friday through
Sunday during a revival at
the Pomeroy Church of ·
Christ. There will 'be speelal
singing each evenlug. Mr.
Camp, a native of Iowa,
received his trainlug at the
School of Central Cbrlsllau
College fD Missouri. Tbe
publlc Is Invited.

PICNIC HAMS ....... :...........

RIGHT RESERVED TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

Men Pr.oted·

r:;=

n··
. ·. eon~ Ratings
zg~hSch.oo,lR
.~. atings

SLICED SMOKED

WASillNGTON (UP! )-The

are

Alabama rolling ·toward
the Southeastern t h r o n e
room will not be denied as
it turns back a r u g g e d
band o( 'l'ennessee volunooers, 27-22- har-rumph!.
We were forced to push the
Hoople Computers to the
limit to come up with enough
information to separate the
.fine Arkansas and Texas
elevens. We - kaff-kaff have narrowed it down to the
margin of a .field goal, 24-21,
in favor · bf the Razorbacks
over the Texas Longhorns!
The Air Force and Navy
will tangle for the fifth time
in their series and the Falcons figure to sink the Middies, 35-14. Meanwhile at
Altanta, Auburn will make
· Ramblin' Wrecks of Georgia
Tech• - heh-heh - as they
defeat the Yellow Jackets,
26-21 - kaff-kaff!

SHOP-PING CENTER

c.

·-

�"'"''

h

.

.

!pmunity.
rner ·By Charlene Hoefli~h.

.

'

'

'

B&amp;J&gt;W Club·Honors .2 o 'its Metnbers ·
.

.

!Jonors canie to Mr.S: Alwllda
and Miss Freddie
Houdashen at a meeting of the
M.iddleport Business and
Professional Women's Club
Monaay night.
Mrs. Werner, club president,
was named ''Woman of the
· Y~ar," and Miss Hliudashelt, a
charter member of tlie Middhiport Club, was named
· "Woman of the Week "
Selectioii of the two to recei~e
the honors is a ·part .of the
club's ob:iervance of National
itustne~;S Women's Week, Oct.

elevate · the standards for
women in buSiness ana In the
professions, to promote the
intere~t of business and
Margaret (Mrs. Ernest) Bowles b hQJJle after almost a year .
professional women, to bring
In !lalfi!nore, Md.assislirig In the care of htir son, Ernest.
·about' a apirlt of cooperation
• Ernest w~ seriously injured In a.n automobile accident. He
. among
business
and
Ia now at the A{ontebeUo Rehabilitation Hospital for .therapy and
professional women of the
ill able to get around somewhat in a wheelchair. Altllough th~ Is
United Sta,es, .and to extend
aome question as to whether he will ever be able to'waik, some
opportunities to bui.tness and
, Jrogress Is being shown, and ~t's enoouraglng,
·
professional
women through ·
..
education along lines of in.
R&gt;UR·YEAlWLD USA MANLEY, daughter l!f Mr. and
dustrial, sCientific and
Mrs. · Lawrencel-. Manley, Jr., . carne home from Children's
vocational activities. ·
Hospital yest~.
.
Officers of the club for the 7273 year are . Mrs. Werner,
. I.J.s8 had been,up there for a week. She became ill at 'home .
1~21 .
president; Mrs. Beulah
taken by the Middleport emergellcy
.last ·WedneSday imd
.A proclamation has been Strauss, vice president; Mrs.
lqUild to Veter'"s Hospital. From. there she was trarisferred to
· signed by Mayor John Zerkle ·Wilpla Sargent, Secretary; and
Holzer, and then on to Columbo$. Sl!e
flile now, but will be
and posters to be placed in Mrs. Grace Prall, treasurer. •
going back .to 9hlldren's Hoapltalfot''a checkup ln.two weeks.
..
.
~usiness . windows
were
At the meeting Monday night
Usa came ~lome !(laded with toYs which l!ad been given to
distributed at Monday night's it was announced that
'
. her tm&gt;1J8h the hospital gift program: · ·
·
meeting.
Freddie Houdashelt
' Elizabeth Yerian, district
· . • Organized in 1946 by th'e director, will be a guest at the
. . THE HAPPY 1'RAVEIERs - J~hn Loose, Tim Glaze, and
Gallipolis Business ahd N.ovemher meeting. It was
. JIGger GllmOI'e of , Porrieri!Y - all ·studeilts at Ohio State
.Professional Women's Club, decided to continue ·with the
Unlver'llity,spen! two weeks at Yellowstone :National Pa.rk just
the Middleport group has six green and gold contest this
before the fall quarte~ (!l)elled. Tbe three were accompanied by a
active charter members . - . y¢arwithMissHoudasheltand
. hlutth• Jim Gerber, also a student, !Inc! after motoring oUt, they
Miss Houdashelt, Mrs. Edith Mrs. Farie Kennedy to head up
put oo packs and roughed lt. The bojs cooked their food on a
Forrest, Mrs. !;'earl Reynolds,. the teams for attendance and.
·
ca~ire, slept In piJp ten!B, and enjoYed t)le wildernes8 ~lth all
.. Mrs. Rose Reynolds, Mrs. club and civic activity. · .
Ita little atilmals and the bears. For the most P!IJ'I, they took the
Essie · Russell, and Mrs.
Mrs. Betty Cline of the World
.
..
llll!l'ked trails through the vast park.
.
.
Geraldine Swadley.
Affairs Committee introduced
Last Satqy night J!Oger was liOnie for the weekend with
The club is affiliated with the Mrs. Jean Moore who showed
A proclamation signed by problems ; to help them be of
ALWIL~A WER~R ·
lis parents, Eka and Evelyn GUmore; lrothers, Riel and Mike,
National Federation of slides of her trip to the Scan· Middleport Mayor Jol)n Zerkle greater service to their
at htme, and Joe of Antioch, Ill'., to show the 150 slides taken on
Business and Professional dinaviari countries. She also Monday made this "Na.tional community;
to
further
'•' ~· 0.• • • -.·· ·~ •M•N(/'~,.~· ·;.o· o •:to;•JhYo•o•o~o".JI''o';/£o'o".o!o'o'..o'Yo'o'o!o'o'o't'o'o'o'o'o'o'o'o;o'o"o ' o'o ' o'o' o"o 'o'o'o'o'
:"f:•,•!-.;•!o;;•!O:•!•.o!o,o!o.;q.;q;t/.f.o;.o!o,o!o~'f.V"o"..vvyr..;o~.V.v.l'"/o"o';-;"."..;I,':,O:.I'o':.lo~;.o;o,o, ;:.~o'•'•'•~•'•!•'•'•'•'•'t
the outing. Unda' ·wehrung and Connie Grueser joined the '..:.!
·
Inc.
in
Women's
Clubs,
Business
Women's
Week
in
friendship
with
women
.displayed
several
dolls
and
N
'
·
'
•
M
.Gilmore family to see .the sll~es. ·
Washington, D. C. and the Ohio other items which she had Middleport. Special emphasis throughout fhe world.
Federation of Business and secured on the trip. ·
is being placed on the following
AU citizens are proud of
THE CULTURAL ARTS programs .bJ Middleport and
Jli Professional Women's Clubs, The traveling pvize con- facts by the Middleport women's leadership . in many
Colwnbus. The 1972-73 theme tributed by Mrs. Moore was Business and Professional fields of endeavor.
· Pomeroy are _going "great guns" with over 100 elementary
'1( the Natlonal Federation is won 'by Miss Houdashelt. Fruit, Women's Club:
The proclamation urges all
· llludents e1r0Ued. ·
.
··
·'
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
"Objectives
in
Action."
Working women constitute 26 citizens in Midineport, aU civic
cookies and coffee were ser,, Due to a teachers' meeting In tl)e Meigs Local District
STATED
MEETING,
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening
ved.
'
Primary
projects
of
the
million
of the nation's working and fraternal · groups, all
Thursday night, Mrs. Margaret Ella LeWis,. Instructor, has Bosworth Council 46, R&amp;SM, at Danville Wesleyan Church
Middleport
Club
are
operation
force and are constantly educational associations, aU
cancelled the· Pomeri!Y session this week. Next week parents' 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at with Rev. C. 0. Walters as
of
a
hospital
loan
center,
a
s.triving
to serve ·their com- news media and other comPomeroy Temple. Pomeroy evangelist. Public invited.
1 Conferences will be held Thursday night so the Pomeroy session
nursing scholarship fund, the
munities, their states and their munity organizations to join In
will be beld on Tuesday. SO remember, none till$ week; on Chapter 80, RAM, 8:15 p. m.
REVIVAL
7:
30
each
evening
Heart'
Fund
'drive
in
Midnation in civic and cultural this salute to .working women
Wednesday {or conferral of RA
Tuesdaf next week.
MOTHER VISITED
programs.
. by encouraging and p~omoting
Degree on ·one candidate. All through Oct. 22 at Chester dleport, the local Women's
'
Church
of
the
Nazarene
with
Responsibility
for
Ac!'ident
.
Dr.
anqMrs.
E.
A.
Tracy
and
Major
goals
of
business
and
the celebration of the
MRS. ·Rp~ WOLFE, longtime Minersville resident, companion and officers urged GarnetJ and Doc Sexton , Prevention program, and ·~e of Columbus were the profes.&lt;ional women are to help achievements of all business
to attend these meetings.
~~!~derwent Qgery Monday at \~fount carmel Hospital. Up .there
Ashland, Ky., as evangelists cooperation in civic affairs.
w. kend guests of his mother, create better conditions for and professional women as
PAST PRESIDENTS of and special singing nightly.
to be with her were her daughters, Kathy Erwin and Pauline
Objectives of the Club .are to · Mr . Nellie Tracy, Pomeroy. business women through the they contribute- dally to our
Post 39 Public invited.
Reuter, Middleport. Mrs. Wolfe's room number Is 209, If you'd Drew Webster
study of social, educational, economic, civic and cultural
American1 Legion Auxiliary:
pare to send a card.
FRIDAY
economic and political purposes.
7:30Wednesday, at the home of
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Mrs. 0 . A. Martin.
POLLY~s
Enterprise United Methodist
THIRD
WEDNESDAY Church, 7:30 Fr.lday night at
Homemakers Club, Wed- the LaSall~ Hotel quarters of
How To Remove Crayon
nesday, 10 a.m. at club house, Mrs. Cordelia Bentz.
Municipal Park. Making of
SATURDAY
Marks From Blackboard
Mrs. Mark Fowler, the Hamm, Mrs . Charles Ed. owls, craft ,project with · HALLOWEEN PARTY,
I
former Karen Morris ,of wards, Mrs. I;!arold Chase,
materials furnished by club. Saturday, 7:30p.m. by MOdem
· By POLLY CRAMER
Marietta, was honored Mrs. Betty Fife, Mrs. Sherman
Final plans made to attend Woodman Lodge and Hemlock
recently
'with a ,bridal shower Buskirk, Jr., Mrs. John
Circleville Pumpkin Show Grange at ~range haU.
DEAR
POLLYI
want
to
tell
Mrs.
R.
P.
that
I
use
at the, Middleport First Baptist Werner, Mrs. Paul Smart, Mrs.
Thursday, ·
LETART FALLS PTA toothpaste to remove crayon marks' from a blackboard.
Church
social rootn by Mrs. Harry Houdashelt, Miss
PICTURES· OF the Holy
David Hofnnan, Tina Miljjlr,. Land wijt~K; ,shown ..Yednes_day staging a jitney supper; Smudge it on real thick, let .stand five minutes and re- ArlaHQ King with Mr.s, "lony , f,~~il,&lt;li' Ho.lllliJ~l\. MJ:~ ..~le
cathy Blake, Jeffrey Whit- at 7:~0 p,m, at For~st Run Saturday, at Letart Elemen- move with a damp cloth and a bit of elbow grease: Rinse Fowler as an assisting hostess. Walburn, llfr:~; fdannlng Kloes,
tary.School, serving starting at with a clean wet cloth. r buy toothpaste on sale to 6ave
• be voted on Nov. 7 was passed tington,
A yellow and green color ' Mrs. · Milton Hood, Mrs.
on hand for this purpose since I also use it for marks on
United Methodist Church by
by the Mlddlepot:t PTA at a
Fourth grade: Cathy Hess, Edson Roush. The event Is 5.
the woodwork and my brand new avocado refrigerator.- . scheme was carri.ed out with Dorothy Bryan, and Mrs.
SUNDAY
meelirig Monday night.
Tammi Stobart, Angela being sponsored by the WSCS.
JEANNE
the cake being Inscribed "Best Norma Wilcox.
ANNUAL RELIGIOUS
Supt. George Hargraves, Houchins, Stephen Carson,
In Marietta Saturday for the
DEAR POLLY-I am answering Mrs. R. P. who has Wishes, Karen and Mark."
Supt.
Larry Carla Rife, Sheri Stewart, The public is invited. Refresh- . Affirmation Day, 2 p.m.
Assistant
Lime
punch
and
nuts
were
wedding
were Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday . at the Pomeroy crayon marks- on her green blackboard. When this
Morrison, ·and Board of Bobby Duckworthy, Cindy ments.
served. The napkins were Arland King and chilcken, Mr.
THURSDAY
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy happened to me &lt;~nd the things I tried would not remove
Education President Frank Weaver, Patty Cremeans,
of
blackboard
paint
and
the
marks,
I
bought
a
small
can
inscribed "Karen and Mark" and Mrs. Clarence King, Mr.
MIDDLEPORT CCL, 7:30 Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Porter met with the PTA to .Randy Might, Kim Glass,
repainted
it.
Of
course,
the
green
board
became
,black
.
and
an
-arrangement and Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mid, review finances of the district Darla Wilcox, Mindy Long, and Thursday night, Columbus and Masons. Speaker and program That was the only color the paint came in at that time. of yellow and white dleport; .llirs. Mary MIUer, Mr.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. by Job 's Daughters and It worked fine for me-cMRS. M. C. F .
' I and the need flir passage of the Barbara Thomas.
daisies flanked by yellow and Mrs. Kenneth Cremeans,
I, · levy In order for the district to The posters w!U be displayed Program on Drug Abuse. Rev. DeMolay. Refreshments.
Arthur
Lund,
speaker.
£m!l!lr.l1!!!lll'&lt;~l!lfillll!ll.lill Polly's Problem
:m
: : - , ta!*rS centered the ,refresh- · Gallipolis; and Mr. and Mrs.
q!Wify for state assistance.
In Middleport business winment table."
Paul Fowler, Colwnbus. ·
Homemade masks to be
DEAR POLLY- I would · like some information ·
MDford Hysell, chllrman of doWs.
'Games were played with
judged.
concerning drying and preserving real flowers . I
the safety committee, asked
The meeting opened with the ·
prizes
going to Miss Rhoda
have heard that corn meal is used in this process.ROCK SPRINGS Better
. for volunteer mothers to work pledge to the fiag by Miss
Hall, Mrs. Fred Lewis, and
MARYB.
SPEAKS TO CLASS
Health Club, 1:15 p. m.
~ aaafety patrol, assisting the Barbara Logan's
second
Mrs.
Nan
Davis.
MASON -Mrs, Betty Cadle,
·• • 1
w
11 mi:: mm:m: m
:: llllll!illl m1 1
children In crossing the street grade. Devotions were . given Thursday home of Mrs . Scott
Guests
at
the
shower
were
owner
of Betty's Boutique in
Folmer with Mrs. Hugh Bearhs
. DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with those tacks that
and boarding the buses.
by Mrs. Arnold Ricbilrds of the in charge of program. Mem.
Mrs.
Lucille
King,
Mrs.
Lewis
Rev. · and Mrs. William hold the lining In summer straw bags. They keep coming
Mason, spoke on , good
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, who Mount Moriah Baptist Church.
and
son,
David,
Mrs.
Pearl
Knittel
and
family,
pastor
of
grooming
at Mrs. Betty
out and letting the lining hang loose. I do hope that before
last week attended the ·Ohio Greeters and hostesses were bers to take toys for Veterans
Ho.ffman, Mrs. Beulah White, Burris ' seventh
the Middleport United .Pen- they start making the ones
grade •
.
PTA oooveoUon In Colwnbus, Mrs. Logan's room mothers, MemorlsJ Hospital.
for
next
season
a
better
Mrs.
Lillian
McGhee,
Mrs.
Ed
tecostal
Cliurch,
South
Third
Home
Economics
class
EPISCOPAL Church
gave a resume of the meeting Mrs : Norma Custer, · Mrs.
way
of
securing
the
lining
Ave., have returned home from
Stiles and daughter, Nina, Miss on
Monday
at
Wa·
alld announced that two Martha Fox, Mrs . Sharon Women, 12:30 p.m. Thursday
Is found.-SALLY
a
trip
to
Florida.
They
attended
Hall,
Mrs
.
Davis,
Mrs.
W!Uis
hame
Junior
High
·
s
chool.
Middleport students had Doss, Mrs. Ruthann Plants, at Episcopal Parish House.
Anthony, Mrs. Ray .Morris of She spoke on the care of the
DEAR POLLY- My
RIVERVIEW GARDEN a United Pentecos tal In·
placed In the cultural arts Mrs. Nola Swisher, Mrs .
Marietta,
and Michl and hair .and demonstrated ·cutting
ternational Conference at" Pointer is for the gals who
dlapllly. Paul McElhinny look a Lucretia Stobart, and Mrs. Club members meet 6 p.m.
Marsha King . .-···
hair. She pointed out the proper
Thursday at Whitehead home Convention Hall in Miami can tomatoes. The neatest
BeCond place In sculpture, and Bessie Darst.
way
I
have
found
to
scald
Others presenting gifts to . hair style for a particular type
pre para tory to going to Beach where atlendance was them before peeling is to
Keith Doss an honorahle
about
U,DOO.
.
Mrs.
Fowler were Mrs. Dana face.
(
·
Napoli's Restaurant, Belpre,
,
mention In poetry. The only
use
my
deep
fat
fryer
.
Fill
The · meeting consisted of fryer about half full of wafor dinner.
other student from Meigs
Foreign Missionaries, 23 ter, let it come to a boil
County placing was Mark
, missionary families being . and then Immerse the
Wl.llta!m, third In prose . .
present. There were services basket which is filled with tomatoes. They are easily lifted . ,
~~l1'\U
''"
BRACElET_JJ,~'/j
. On display at the meeting
out and dumped into cold water in the sink and then the
\
~
on
the
home
missionary,
ladles
'
were levy promotion posters
skin
peels
right
off.MRS.
C.
C.
"'~
auxiliary, harvt!stllme radio
made by the students. The
division, editorial, and
DEAR POLLY....:Wheil wrapping a wedding, shower or - '\"'
·
FR_OM
winners ·receiving ribbon
devotions. Evening services even a birthday gift, put one of your name-and-address ·
e
'
awards Were as follows:
Christmas projects were
T ~tart
were
evangelistic.
sUckers
on
the
enc]osure
card.
The
recipient
will
thank
.L.Jj
11
First grade : Max Blake, discussed by the Sew-Rite
you for your thoughtfulness. She is saved the trouble of
• · .
Sewing
Club
recently
.
at
the
~ tf
-l
Becky Rife, Cheryl Ann Riffle;·
hunting up addresses.-MRS. C. N. D.
TtureW
Chris Burdette, Eric Cun- club house. Mrs. Edward Wells ·LETART FALLS - District
and
Mrs.
DQn
~cKriight
were
Supt.
Ralph
Sayre
was
the
ninghalp, Melissa McMillian,
..
speaker. when the Letart Falls
Laura lttrfley, Anthony Smith. hostesses.
Mrs.
Roll!'ld
Browning
was·
PTA held itS regular meeUng
Second grade: Tamil Hart,
named
to
buy
yarn
for
maklng
Monday,
Oct. 16, with the •·LONG BO'M'OM - Miss
•
Cindy Pa.t~er, Fred Nev!Ue,
Kimberly Roush, Jeffrey Christmascatdholdersand the president, Mrs. Judy Roberts, Mary Ellen Andrew returned
Baughman, Kris Snowden, ·members were asked to save presiding. A s~ort talk was to Colorado' Springs, · Colo.,
Craig Darst, Paula Swisher, juice cans. Members are also given by Supt. Sayre on .the after a weekend visit with her .
Sammy Plants, Greg Grimm, to.save potato chip cans to be lllplcs of the renewal levy, thO . parents, Mr. and tdrs. Francis
Joyce Stewart, and Steve decorated and used for way money is apent in the Andrews; . her slste~, Mrs .
homemade cookie containers. district, things which have Larry Collins and family, and
Powell.
Third grade: Melissa Mrs. Don Collins received a been accompUshed and things other relatives.
.
. Ml~ Andrew had been call~
Spelwer, Mike Adams, Jun gift from her secret sister on yet t.o be accompll~hed.
A question ·and answer .to Pittsburgh, Pa. for an IR·
Cremeans, Pam Crooks, Eddie her anniversary. Mrs. Elza
Gilmore,
Jr.
gave
the
period
followed. The Letart terview lor a position with
Daniels, Tammy Ferguson,
Phyllis Davis, Dsnny Hysell, secretary's report, and Mrs. PTA voted to endorse the Allegheny Alrllites,. Inc. For
the. past six months she has
·vour ChOice.
· Bob Aahley, Helen Slack, Don 'collins gave .. the renewal levy.
treasurer's report. Mrs. Larry . . Final plans were made lor .been emplored at the Air F'oree
. $37911
Wehrung .and Mrs . James, the jitney supper and fall Academy Foundation In
DJ-n.n in.u Ne~tzllng wiU be hostesses for . festival to be held Saturday Colora~o Sprlnga. She_will be
- ·fi!J CUI
--e the next meeting;
·
night, Oct. 21, at the Letart BSSll1lling,l)er new du!les with
Wern~r

.

was

? ,-The DaUy ~ntlnei,Middleport-Pomero;, Oct.li,1972.

'

seems

. Stresses
rOCIamahon
Wom
. en in Today's World
·/p· .

I Social Calendar

.

POINTERS

Bridal Shower Held

~ PTA

of
Middleport
.Backing School Levy
~ u: fir:~~·~~.~:::~'~

' ---,.

.

.-

•'1...•'*.'•'•'•'·'•'•'•&gt;'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'"'•'•'•'•'
.........
• ·:····...·.···· ··························~::· .

· Open to Public ··

;:.•

t

,,

\fU l

&amp;yre Speaks To
School PTA
At
Ra''Js

MARlEn A~ Tbt brief dedlcatoi-y ceremo~ies ·~12 ·
. : p.m. on Ff!day . reopening the oewly reatored Rufus ::~ .
: · Putnam HoUle wltbln tbe campai .Martiua M-.tm here [ili
MARIETTA · - The oldest · 17ll~ . Putnam was · th~ mortise and tenon framing. and · restorat.ioo program was ·a most educational and symbolic
are open to·the Pub!!~.·
-· - " "'
·
f.: ·kn own build'mg m
· Oh'.10, the . super"'
. •··nden't · ·vr !he Obt'o· thick plank siding of the fort . letter written by Puthdm ·on building, whiCh clearly shows
.,
no.,
· John A. Buruwortlt, foi'mer !Marietta mayor aDd . ~ .Rufus Putnam House of Company of- Associates· which showed that the wtdertaking July 1,1970 giving instructions the original place of the 'Put· trastee of The· Ohio Hlstorleal !lqc!ety, wnt give the · r ~l Campus Martius fortification, pioneered t~e first ot·ganilled would be much ' larger and on how .to complete his house nam' House as a part of the
.principal address of the event, speaking on "Yotir COO· ::;: has been ·totally (~stored and · sememenl' o{ the Northwest · more complicated 'than an- fo • occupancy' for .himself and larger military lort, an¢ how
1
servator..:. Tlte Oblo lllltortcaUloelety," aDd WU!iam ·G. · :~ will ()pen to the public at 2 p.m. · . Territory . following I .he ti~ipated.
.
•. · his
family.
Careful the Putnams occupied it in
· Keener, curator of blllory, The Ohio Historical Sqclety, · ~ Friday, October 2fl. ' · .
American Revolution:
Casting aside many cori- exaininalion of the letter by territorial days." ·
:~ will explain, the hlltoric role I!Dd restoration of the :~
Restored and administered
The house received its fir~l· meting· sources of informatjon staff researchers resulted in ·. The original portion of the
~ .Campus Marti111 forltflcallon of which the Putna.,.House .
by Tlie Ohio·Historical SQciety •.public attention as early as about the house and fort which reading new meanings into the hou.se iscompletely restored in
*i , was a . part. ,
.
..
. -r
;:;: within the C;tmpus Martius . 1905 when it was rented and has been_written dpr!ng the docume11t.
, __ __ ali details even to the plank
~ . State Senator Robert T. Secrest (~am~rldge) who i~i Museum, Washington and used occasionally by the years, r:esearchers and two ~'or example, Putnam used shutters, closed in time of
ti will represent Governor Gilligan at the ceremonies wiU :::: . Second streets here, the frl!m~ Marietta ·Chapter, Daughters architect ural historians the word "gorge!' to· describe threatened · attack. The- lid·:=;; make brief remarks.
·
:::: and plank building has been the of the Alnerican · Revolution. cond~cf.e9 an 0!1 site survey to where his. sewer was to run. dillon made at some later; as
Ribbon culling honors will be done by Mayo~ Jam~
most important Ohio symbol of The house was acqUired by the surrounding streets whicii had The word formerly was yet undetermined , date is
i~ . Sehwelkert of Marietta and Miits. Ruth Booher, Regent, . (:i first settlementthroughotit the 'state in 1917. A decade later, existed in their present thought to be.house: A gorge is shown as in the ·process of
~ .. Daughters of the Altlericao Revolution, for the re- ~:: 20th century.
$3;000 wil's .el'pended on a locaJ4!&gt;ns since the founding ·or a military term meaning rear being framed but not com@ opeolug.
·
·
. ::;:
The house was built as il part partial restoration : ln 1931 it Marietta in 1788, careflllly entra nce, or . gate, into a pleted. A floored section of the
:i:i of the· C;tmpus Martitf for- was · enclosed on its original sifted architectural evidence bastion .
framed-only .addition contains
. :::~::::::~::=::~~:i:!:~:~:~~:::~::::-::::s:!*~*::::::::::::::::=:::::::::--:::::::::::::::::~:::::::~::~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::?.i!!i:!: tificalion to .protect pioneer foundation within the campus as the house was being ' Putnam used the word sink an exhibit giving detailed InMarietta settlers beginning in Mlirtius State Museum by The disassembled, and went back in describing h.ls kitchen .formation ,on the restoration
· Ohio Historical Society, its to original descriptions, arr~ngement .. Sink in 1790 to process and sources .
administr~(or. Since that time,
drawings, and sketches of the most people, particularly
The original house is coman 'estimated two million fort and houSe, the most im· . military ,men, meant' latrine. pletely furn ished with both .
persons tramped through its portant of which were written
The resulting restoration Putnam family and oth~r,
rooms and halls.
by
Putnam
himself
'imd
by
which
took six years of detailed period furnishings acq4ired by
.
Physical deterioration of the other famity.mem"bers, or were research and labor shows the the Society. On the first floor
building, also known as the contain ed in official Ohio Putnam residen.ce as, it the kitchen is dominated by the
oldest wooden fortification in Company records.
originally appear!!d as part of large cooking fireplace .and
the Midwest · still standing,
Results were the. discovery the Campus. Martius for· hake oven. The parlor is shown .
became so bad that in July that what had been considered lification to 1795. Even the fort as !he family social cenfer·and ·
The Kyger Cree.k High Rock Hill; Qhlo, and Peters- areas).
Any and ail contributions 1966, it was closed to public use to be the original portion of the gateway at the south end of the · office for the General. Fur·'
&amp;;hool Ilobcat Marching Bitnd town, W. Va. First place was
would
be greatly appreciated as a safety hazard. A total of house was indeed a later ad- house and a mock-up of the niture is Windsor and prlmillye ,·
received a II, or excellent, ·won by the Wahama High ·
rating Saturday at the Tri- School Band, which also won and may be given to any b~ $1!8,000 was allocated from the dillon, while the so-called opposite dwelling are shown .. pieces of the type brought over
210 E .. 2nd · ·
Pomeroy
1965 and 1968 stale capt tal · addi lion was in fact Every scr.ap of original timber the mountains by the early setState Marching Band Festival HonO.. Band In the festival. · parent or may be mailed to
Phone 992-542
·
·
In Huntington.
Full .efforts are now being Kyger Creek High School Band Improvements bond -1ssues to the original portion of was retained. Bent beams were tiers.
Boosters
Club,
·
Kyger•
Creek
restore
the
bwldtng
to
tis
Ratings were decided by the centered upon the drive to
the fort built to pro- straightened by embedding
High
School,
.Cheshire
o.
ongmal
appearance.
teet Putnam and early set· steel rods in them.
average of scores from thfee raise $6,000 to purchase all new
45620.
'
'
Research
.
to
determine
the
tiers from Indian attack -until
"We expect criticism of the .
judges: Clinton E. ·Foster uniforms for the band. Along
original
appearance
of
the
1795
when
that
menace
no
restoration,"
Daniel R. Porter,
Supervisor of Musicln Warren: with many other comments,
The price of a single uniform
house
to
which
several
adlonger existed and the fort was . director of The Ohio Historical .
Ohio; Donald Wilcox, Director thejudges'sheetsstatethat the is $120, and 76 uniforms are to
ditions
and
changes
had
been
broken up.
·
Society stated, "because It
of ,Bands at West Virginia overall appearance of the band be ordered. "Please support
made
over
the
years
was
begun
The most important single does not appear as it formerly ·
University; Richard Jacoby was dull and ·dark. One even this drive with any and all
by
Society
stalf
in
1966.
docume11t
assisting in the did burdened with all the acDirector of Bands at Kent Stat~ staled that the addition -of contributions and make the ·
Removal
of
clapboards
from
a
cretions and alterations of
Uni~ersity .
'
brighter and more modern Kyger Creek Band one of the
portion
of
the
house,
and
time. However, the historical
Tile hand competed with ten · uniforms would . greatly im- finest in the at·ea," the spokescareful
disassembly
of
.
the
man
said.
'
facts
are indisputable, and
o.ther bands in .' the . "B" prove the apiJE,arance of the
nothing was done in haste," he
classification (between iiti and unit, These comments. further
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO,
emphasized. "The result is a
80 plliying members). and with emphasize the .fact · that new
Lo~
' .
Saturday, Oct. 14, 1972
26 bands QVerall.
uniforms ·are desperately
'·
SALES REPORT OF
Since the classification was needed to improve the apKEiTH GOBLE FORD
for 'Team 4 with 549 pins and
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
_•. based upon the total number of pearance and image of the
BOWLING LEAGUE
Charlie Neal was high for
·
October 10, 19i2
Tea m 8 with 571 pins.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 27.50
PlaY,ing members, the Bobcat . band.
Standings:
Team 14 look 8 points from
to
27.85 ; 220 to 250 lbs. 27.85 to
Band was in competition with
Manufactured by
the Team
Won Lost Team 11. Helen Oseland was
bands in the "B" class which Fechheimer Brothers of No. 5
36 12 hig h lor Team 14 with 497 pins 28.50; Light 26 to 27; Fat Sows
.
No.2
34 14 an d Betty Gooch was high for 22.25 to 24.35; Stags 15.50 to 16;
Just Received New Trailer LoacJ, ·
were 'fro•.&gt; schools of as many Cincinnati, Ohio, the ·uniforms No .3
31 16 Team 11 with 418 pins.
of 1500 students in grades 10 are due to be ready for ship- No.6
30 18
Team 9 took 6 points from Boars 17 to 19; Pigs 10 to 27.50;
through 12. Kyger Creek mentabout Jan . I ..The balance No . 12
30 18 Team 3. Clint Absh~re was high Shoats 25'to 37.
CATTLE - Steers 34.50 to
nwnberii .slightly less than 500 due must be· sent to the com- No.4
27 21
lor Team 9 with 529 pins and
t
No.8
26
22 Mary Allman was high tor
42; Heifers 30 to 40; Baby Beef
students in grades seven pany before the uniforms can No. 14
24 24 Team 3 with 485 pins.
through 12. There were very be delivered.
No.1
20 28
Team 10 split 8 points with 41 to 55; Fat Cows 20 to 23.85;
No . 11
20 28 Team 13. Bob Teed was high Canners 16 to 27; Bulls 27.50 to
Sweetest
Saturday
few hands in the contest which
A band spokesman said No .9
18 30 · tor Team 10 with 479 pins and
31;
Milk
Cows
200
to
450.
Day
Oct. 21st
used seventh and eighth today, "It indeed would he an No. 10
18 30 Marla Bush was high for Team
· Medium 2"- 6112• squafe foot
VEAL
CALVES
·Tops
~
1
graders on the field.
unfortunate thiiig to deprive No . 13
IS 33 13 with 482 pins.
No. 7
6 42
High single game for the Seconds 50 ).0 52; Medium 47 to
The Bobcat Band performed our studen'ts of the best they
On Oct. 10, 1972 Teams took a ladies for the evening was 212
Special 3" square foot
a show entitled "Another deserve and to fail to improve points from Team 12. Burl pins held by Doris Fitz . 50; Com. &amp; Hvs. 45 to 53.50;
Culls
47
Down
.
School Year" and featured the the image of the area through Cook was high for Team 5 with simmons and for the men was
530 pins and Jack Ferguson 218 pins held by Merida Shaw.
BABY CALVES - 35 to 80.
Full Thick 6"- 13• square foot
majorettes on a routine to the band. If the money is not . w_as high tor Team .12 wifh 480 • High seri es tor the-ladies was
-jiJ\
hl)!'j ,rU::liOiiJlJ Jl• , I
' ' 1.. '
, ,tl!\ J
• '
l,
1
·•I"Ma'
1 ' ' ·~~;-- ke "''e
m ' '""-1""'.''
o31nu: no&lt;o;l·
ne'::'~lOn I'
· avaiIabe
u-.ett • •lS Awhat • WilI ...&lt;f~II)S1. , -!""" 11 ,,, ,, -~,, 1··1 ~ ""·52,5 .• tota\ .pins, held byMPoris
1
1
1
11
• ••· :; ;,_ ·
,;· aruf hi'g'hligh'ietl 'rlh('Sl{~.·~00 h8~Pen'_7 '"' "'·
Team 2 took 6 ~oints from
Fitzsimmons and for the men .t ,..J;
'·
Prom.otion March and the
Band Boosters Represen- was
Teamhigh
7. for
Doris
.
Hockey League to
Team itzsimmons
2 with 525 571
Neal.total p'ins held by Charlie Amertcan
Kyger Creek figh,t song. The tatives are now canvassing the pins. and Kerm Malone was
"play himself back Into
performance lasted seven area businessmen to seek high for Team 7 with 478 pins.
. shape"
'b ·
· d
b d
Team 6 took 8 points from
·
·
.
minutes with three minutes contn uttons an
an
Team .1. John Fuller was high NEWELL TO VIRGINIA
Tbe 23-year-old Newell, oilMATERIALS CO.
allowed · to line . up at the members themselves will be on for Team 6 with 547 pins and
DETROIT (UP!).- Defense- talned from the New York
59N. Second St.
starting position. Bands per- the streets Saturday, Oct. 21 in Ora Baird was high for Team I man Rick Newell has ·been Rangers last May has been
Middleport, 0 .
I'
'ddl
d
with
447
pins.
bl
I
'tth
.
.
formlng immediately before Ga II tpo ts, Mt eport, an
MASON, W. VA. .
773-5554
Team 4 took 6 points from assigned by the parent Detroit una e t~ pay w
Detrmt
and after Kyger Creek were Pomeroy (with surrounding . Team a. Jack Janey was high Red Wings to Virginia of the because of a muscle spasm.

t

t

it. '.

'*

.

Kyger Creek Band Receives
E~cellent Mark At·Festival
'

'

'

.Before Winter Comes

Market Report

Bowling

c

"'"''

'

.". H·oct·~- &amp;. ziJsPAN:~~

••

Phebe Says:

~~ -

~

4 .

P-~~ count was taken with

Mr. and Mrs . William the sixth grade having lbe moat
IIGIIIU. or St. Claire Shore, parents present. Studenta from
Mlcll. have been hen visiting the ~t. aecand and third
Mill M..-le BicliDian and other grades ,sang ·Hall- 1011g11
acc~led by Mrs. I..te Lee.
lrltndl In Plmlerl!y.

and
.PEARL STS., RACINE- ·
.
'The Store With A-Heart,
Yo~ ,WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities

59 N. Second St.
Midclleport,·o.

•

.POTATOES

10

lb.

69~

5

1.

.Saturday 9 to 9
·CLOSED SUNDAYS

FAIRMONT
.
(

Red &amp;Golden Delicious

I

$} 00

.

_.

_

whip.

..

.3

lb.

49~

.·

.

.

lb.-69'

~:· · at~

BACON
ENDS
.
-AND PIECES .
51b.l69
' .

,,.
·SII)Es

-New
. Crop 113
. Size

POIIROY

CALIF. ORANGES

69°

20 cl
pkg.
·I

I

J

I

I

·.·

,'

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·Fresh 'Beef and
·Pork Mixed
'

($109

.

MEAT
LOAF
.
'

·MIX

II
I

I

2·

I
I
I

lb.

·.FRENat CITY II
WIENERS . lI ·

.

doz.

pkg.'

4·9~

3

Windsor .Sliced Bacon
'

Vanilla

r

AP~LES .

'
(

cans

enriched. Rich enough 1o ·
I'

.

Jello Pudding Treats~~=~cJI. ..........~.~: _·.
padf 1
WhI"te ·cl·.OU d T101.,.e~· T"ISSUe(....8 Rolls)
,..... 4 LPk&amp;L
~
.
.
z&amp;nz.49C
Heinz.Catsup ..~~~..~~~.~ .......:................ ~ .·
Ch .,.I I WI"th 8eans ..,ARMOUR
.................:......... 15~cansoz.•1

New from Jerzee - No butterfat. Contains vegetable oil.
Vitamins
and
minerals

2% MILK

2

'-

AT SAME ~OW PRICE

Prices
.. Effective Oct 18-25
M(llld,ay Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

l-Ib.

. .............
· ;.....p1astic39cG.oo. d L·uc k. Marganne.~
bowl
·
Popcorn ...~~.~~!..~..~~~.~~.~ .................;........ ~ 2 5 c

•

.

Chapman's

8

Home Gmwn. Kennebec

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Fciod_Stamps

~lect Yours:Toctayl

Dudle(s Flclist

· COLA

ON SALE OCTOBER 18 TO 25

AJtftMGEMENJS

H~E

(

16 oz. bots.

served by the hostesses to . The ' menu w!U be baked tiilrgh"Nov . . · .
. thoee nanied and Mrs, WlUard cream chicken, meat loaf, . ._ . ._._.__ _,
.... 1'11111
lbe Boyer; 1&gt;fta. Bob Potter,.l,(ra. hat1t, sweet potatoes, ,baked
Beaull.fut · .
'-IIMIII¥ 81110!~ Ray Bally, Mrs. Charles beans, green haans, lima
rail
· cr treat Hoftman, Mn. Flo Strickland, beans, cern, J10Qdlea, macaroni .
rN.L
.,~:~= at 1 l!ld Mn. Elmer White:
·. 1alad, potatO salad, lllaw, frolt
iiii
at T:JO p.m.
. ,~&amp;lad, pie, cake, ~ee and
II . t~ Racine
. •~
Kool-Aid. serving w!U start aU
Vivid Colors

I VISI'i1NG

QIU RITE

8

S@.JI!t~.JWli-.saJad,wereJleffi!!n~School,~.' ~-AlteghP.ny Alrllnes
:.:.·I2J~~~;I--

.

R9yal Crown Cola

Try Our

YOUNG ONES

_

..

Dudley's Florist·

FOR

~ co,;.:;._:_;; ;.• -. _,C !;d

Foil Faced Rock Wool Batts
15" WIDTH ·
a•

WE'VE GOT
'THE SHOE

P....,..,.,.

INSULATION

SAY THE
SWEETEST
ffiiNGS

Carave
· 11.e by Bulo·V8

.

INSTAU. OUR

FLOWERS

'CP

was Visiting Here

·2-HOUR
.CLEANING
(Upon ReqUest)
ROBINSON.'S ·
CLE{NERS· •·

ih;

t/fJt

A1Ylary

.
The second floor con~ I
hall 'and three bedrooms. 1AU
are furnished with Hep- ·
plewbite and primitive piece..
restoration
was
. ·.The
·supervised by· William G• .
Keener~ cura\or o( history o( ..
'!'he Ohio .llistorlcal Society.
Project afchitects were DeUai
· Harder, A.Lt\., Columbus, and
Miss Judith Kitchen of the
·Society's staff. Other research
and supervisory staff wOr.kltlg ·
on the project were Mr: and ·
ll!rs. Donald Hutslar, bo1J8lao
White', and Mrs. Catherine
. Remley, curator . or~mpus
Martius MuS.wn.
..
Project construction con·
lractar was the W, Helby .
Company of Marietta.
'
. The Putnam House . a:td
Campus Martius Musewn are
· regularly open 9 a.m. to 5 p:m.
Monday through•Saturday and
. 1 to 5 p.m, on Sunday.

Putnam. ·House Restored·

-~ .

.

Pastor, W!fo
At Convention

Projects of
Club Studied

'.

J •

•

I ,

j

;

'

'

'

�"'"''

h

.

.

!pmunity.
rner ·By Charlene Hoefli~h.

.

'

'

'

B&amp;J&gt;W Club·Honors .2 o 'its Metnbers ·
.

.

!Jonors canie to Mr.S: Alwllda
and Miss Freddie
Houdashen at a meeting of the
M.iddleport Business and
Professional Women's Club
Monaay night.
Mrs. Werner, club president,
was named ''Woman of the
· Y~ar," and Miss Hliudashelt, a
charter member of tlie Middhiport Club, was named
· "Woman of the Week "
Selectioii of the two to recei~e
the honors is a ·part .of the
club's ob:iervance of National
itustne~;S Women's Week, Oct.

elevate · the standards for
women in buSiness ana In the
professions, to promote the
intere~t of business and
Margaret (Mrs. Ernest) Bowles b hQJJle after almost a year .
professional women, to bring
In !lalfi!nore, Md.assislirig In the care of htir son, Ernest.
·about' a apirlt of cooperation
• Ernest w~ seriously injured In a.n automobile accident. He
. among
business
and
Ia now at the A{ontebeUo Rehabilitation Hospital for .therapy and
professional women of the
ill able to get around somewhat in a wheelchair. Altllough th~ Is
United Sta,es, .and to extend
aome question as to whether he will ever be able to'waik, some
opportunities to bui.tness and
, Jrogress Is being shown, and ~t's enoouraglng,
·
professional
women through ·
..
education along lines of in.
R&gt;UR·YEAlWLD USA MANLEY, daughter l!f Mr. and
dustrial, sCientific and
Mrs. · Lawrencel-. Manley, Jr., . carne home from Children's
vocational activities. ·
Hospital yest~.
.
Officers of the club for the 7273 year are . Mrs. Werner,
. I.J.s8 had been,up there for a week. She became ill at 'home .
1~21 .
president; Mrs. Beulah
taken by the Middleport emergellcy
.last ·WedneSday imd
.A proclamation has been Strauss, vice president; Mrs.
lqUild to Veter'"s Hospital. From. there she was trarisferred to
· signed by Mayor John Zerkle ·Wilpla Sargent, Secretary; and
Holzer, and then on to Columbo$. Sl!e
flile now, but will be
and posters to be placed in Mrs. Grace Prall, treasurer. •
going back .to 9hlldren's Hoapltalfot''a checkup ln.two weeks.
..
.
~usiness . windows
were
At the meeting Monday night
Usa came ~lome !(laded with toYs which l!ad been given to
distributed at Monday night's it was announced that
'
. her tm&gt;1J8h the hospital gift program: · ·
·
meeting.
Freddie Houdashelt
' Elizabeth Yerian, district
· . • Organized in 1946 by th'e director, will be a guest at the
. . THE HAPPY 1'RAVEIERs - J~hn Loose, Tim Glaze, and
Gallipolis Business ahd N.ovemher meeting. It was
. JIGger GllmOI'e of , Porrieri!Y - all ·studeilts at Ohio State
.Professional Women's Club, decided to continue ·with the
Unlver'llity,spen! two weeks at Yellowstone :National Pa.rk just
the Middleport group has six green and gold contest this
before the fall quarte~ (!l)elled. Tbe three were accompanied by a
active charter members . - . y¢arwithMissHoudasheltand
. hlutth• Jim Gerber, also a student, !Inc! after motoring oUt, they
Miss Houdashelt, Mrs. Edith Mrs. Farie Kennedy to head up
put oo packs and roughed lt. The bojs cooked their food on a
Forrest, Mrs. !;'earl Reynolds,. the teams for attendance and.
·
ca~ire, slept In piJp ten!B, and enjoYed t)le wildernes8 ~lth all
.. Mrs. Rose Reynolds, Mrs. club and civic activity. · .
Ita little atilmals and the bears. For the most P!IJ'I, they took the
Essie · Russell, and Mrs.
Mrs. Betty Cline of the World
.
..
llll!l'ked trails through the vast park.
.
.
Geraldine Swadley.
Affairs Committee introduced
Last Satqy night J!Oger was liOnie for the weekend with
The club is affiliated with the Mrs. Jean Moore who showed
A proclamation signed by problems ; to help them be of
ALWIL~A WER~R ·
lis parents, Eka and Evelyn GUmore; lrothers, Riel and Mike,
National Federation of slides of her trip to the Scan· Middleport Mayor Jol)n Zerkle greater service to their
at htme, and Joe of Antioch, Ill'., to show the 150 slides taken on
Business and Professional dinaviari countries. She also Monday made this "Na.tional community;
to
further
'•' ~· 0.• • • -.·· ·~ •M•N(/'~,.~· ·;.o· o •:to;•JhYo•o•o~o".JI''o';/£o'o".o!o'o'..o'Yo'o'o!o'o'o't'o'o'o'o'o'o'o'o;o'o"o ' o'o ' o'o' o"o 'o'o'o'o'
:"f:•,•!-.;•!o;;•!O:•!•.o!o,o!o.;q.;q;t/.f.o;.o!o,o!o~'f.V"o"..vvyr..;o~.V.v.l'"/o"o';-;"."..;I,':,O:.I'o':.lo~;.o;o,o, ;:.~o'•'•'•~•'•!•'•'•'•'•'t
the outing. Unda' ·wehrung and Connie Grueser joined the '..:.!
·
Inc.
in
Women's
Clubs,
Business
Women's
Week
in
friendship
with
women
.displayed
several
dolls
and
N
'
·
'
•
M
.Gilmore family to see .the sll~es. ·
Washington, D. C. and the Ohio other items which she had Middleport. Special emphasis throughout fhe world.
Federation of Business and secured on the trip. ·
is being placed on the following
AU citizens are proud of
THE CULTURAL ARTS programs .bJ Middleport and
Jli Professional Women's Clubs, The traveling pvize con- facts by the Middleport women's leadership . in many
Colwnbus. The 1972-73 theme tributed by Mrs. Moore was Business and Professional fields of endeavor.
· Pomeroy are _going "great guns" with over 100 elementary
'1( the Natlonal Federation is won 'by Miss Houdashelt. Fruit, Women's Club:
The proclamation urges all
· llludents e1r0Ued. ·
.
··
·'
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
"Objectives
in
Action."
Working women constitute 26 citizens in Midineport, aU civic
cookies and coffee were ser,, Due to a teachers' meeting In tl)e Meigs Local District
STATED
MEETING,
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening
ved.
'
Primary
projects
of
the
million
of the nation's working and fraternal · groups, all
Thursday night, Mrs. Margaret Ella LeWis,. Instructor, has Bosworth Council 46, R&amp;SM, at Danville Wesleyan Church
Middleport
Club
are
operation
force and are constantly educational associations, aU
cancelled the· Pomeri!Y session this week. Next week parents' 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at with Rev. C. 0. Walters as
of
a
hospital
loan
center,
a
s.triving
to serve ·their com- news media and other comPomeroy Temple. Pomeroy evangelist. Public invited.
1 Conferences will be held Thursday night so the Pomeroy session
nursing scholarship fund, the
munities, their states and their munity organizations to join In
will be beld on Tuesday. SO remember, none till$ week; on Chapter 80, RAM, 8:15 p. m.
REVIVAL
7:
30
each
evening
Heart'
Fund
'drive
in
Midnation in civic and cultural this salute to .working women
Wednesday {or conferral of RA
Tuesdaf next week.
MOTHER VISITED
programs.
. by encouraging and p~omoting
Degree on ·one candidate. All through Oct. 22 at Chester dleport, the local Women's
'
Church
of
the
Nazarene
with
Responsibility
for
Ac!'ident
.
Dr.
anqMrs.
E.
A.
Tracy
and
Major
goals
of
business
and
the celebration of the
MRS. ·Rp~ WOLFE, longtime Minersville resident, companion and officers urged GarnetJ and Doc Sexton , Prevention program, and ·~e of Columbus were the profes.&lt;ional women are to help achievements of all business
to attend these meetings.
~~!~derwent Qgery Monday at \~fount carmel Hospital. Up .there
Ashland, Ky., as evangelists cooperation in civic affairs.
w. kend guests of his mother, create better conditions for and professional women as
PAST PRESIDENTS of and special singing nightly.
to be with her were her daughters, Kathy Erwin and Pauline
Objectives of the Club .are to · Mr . Nellie Tracy, Pomeroy. business women through the they contribute- dally to our
Post 39 Public invited.
Reuter, Middleport. Mrs. Wolfe's room number Is 209, If you'd Drew Webster
study of social, educational, economic, civic and cultural
American1 Legion Auxiliary:
pare to send a card.
FRIDAY
economic and political purposes.
7:30Wednesday, at the home of
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Mrs. 0 . A. Martin.
POLLY~s
Enterprise United Methodist
THIRD
WEDNESDAY Church, 7:30 Fr.lday night at
Homemakers Club, Wed- the LaSall~ Hotel quarters of
How To Remove Crayon
nesday, 10 a.m. at club house, Mrs. Cordelia Bentz.
Municipal Park. Making of
SATURDAY
Marks From Blackboard
Mrs. Mark Fowler, the Hamm, Mrs . Charles Ed. owls, craft ,project with · HALLOWEEN PARTY,
I
former Karen Morris ,of wards, Mrs. I;!arold Chase,
materials furnished by club. Saturday, 7:30p.m. by MOdem
· By POLLY CRAMER
Marietta, was honored Mrs. Betty Fife, Mrs. Sherman
Final plans made to attend Woodman Lodge and Hemlock
recently
'with a ,bridal shower Buskirk, Jr., Mrs. John
Circleville Pumpkin Show Grange at ~range haU.
DEAR
POLLYI
want
to
tell
Mrs.
R.
P.
that
I
use
at the, Middleport First Baptist Werner, Mrs. Paul Smart, Mrs.
Thursday, ·
LETART FALLS PTA toothpaste to remove crayon marks' from a blackboard.
Church
social rootn by Mrs. Harry Houdashelt, Miss
PICTURES· OF the Holy
David Hofnnan, Tina Miljjlr,. Land wijt~K; ,shown ..Yednes_day staging a jitney supper; Smudge it on real thick, let .stand five minutes and re- ArlaHQ King with Mr.s, "lony , f,~~il,&lt;li' Ho.lllliJ~l\. MJ:~ ..~le
cathy Blake, Jeffrey Whit- at 7:~0 p,m, at For~st Run Saturday, at Letart Elemen- move with a damp cloth and a bit of elbow grease: Rinse Fowler as an assisting hostess. Walburn, llfr:~; fdannlng Kloes,
tary.School, serving starting at with a clean wet cloth. r buy toothpaste on sale to 6ave
• be voted on Nov. 7 was passed tington,
A yellow and green color ' Mrs. · Milton Hood, Mrs.
on hand for this purpose since I also use it for marks on
United Methodist Church by
by the Mlddlepot:t PTA at a
Fourth grade: Cathy Hess, Edson Roush. The event Is 5.
the woodwork and my brand new avocado refrigerator.- . scheme was carri.ed out with Dorothy Bryan, and Mrs.
SUNDAY
meelirig Monday night.
Tammi Stobart, Angela being sponsored by the WSCS.
JEANNE
the cake being Inscribed "Best Norma Wilcox.
ANNUAL RELIGIOUS
Supt. George Hargraves, Houchins, Stephen Carson,
In Marietta Saturday for the
DEAR POLLY-I am answering Mrs. R. P. who has Wishes, Karen and Mark."
Supt.
Larry Carla Rife, Sheri Stewart, The public is invited. Refresh- . Affirmation Day, 2 p.m.
Assistant
Lime
punch
and
nuts
were
wedding
were Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday . at the Pomeroy crayon marks- on her green blackboard. When this
Morrison, ·and Board of Bobby Duckworthy, Cindy ments.
served. The napkins were Arland King and chilcken, Mr.
THURSDAY
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy happened to me &lt;~nd the things I tried would not remove
Education President Frank Weaver, Patty Cremeans,
of
blackboard
paint
and
the
marks,
I
bought
a
small
can
inscribed "Karen and Mark" and Mrs. Clarence King, Mr.
MIDDLEPORT CCL, 7:30 Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Porter met with the PTA to .Randy Might, Kim Glass,
repainted
it.
Of
course,
the
green
board
became
,black
.
and
an
-arrangement and Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mid, review finances of the district Darla Wilcox, Mindy Long, and Thursday night, Columbus and Masons. Speaker and program That was the only color the paint came in at that time. of yellow and white dleport; .llirs. Mary MIUer, Mr.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. by Job 's Daughters and It worked fine for me-cMRS. M. C. F .
' I and the need flir passage of the Barbara Thomas.
daisies flanked by yellow and Mrs. Kenneth Cremeans,
I, · levy In order for the district to The posters w!U be displayed Program on Drug Abuse. Rev. DeMolay. Refreshments.
Arthur
Lund,
speaker.
£m!l!lr.l1!!!lll'&lt;~l!lfillll!ll.lill Polly's Problem
:m
: : - , ta!*rS centered the ,refresh- · Gallipolis; and Mr. and Mrs.
q!Wify for state assistance.
In Middleport business winment table."
Paul Fowler, Colwnbus. ·
Homemade masks to be
DEAR POLLY- I would · like some information ·
MDford Hysell, chllrman of doWs.
'Games were played with
judged.
concerning drying and preserving real flowers . I
the safety committee, asked
The meeting opened with the ·
prizes
going to Miss Rhoda
have heard that corn meal is used in this process.ROCK SPRINGS Better
. for volunteer mothers to work pledge to the fiag by Miss
Hall, Mrs. Fred Lewis, and
MARYB.
SPEAKS TO CLASS
Health Club, 1:15 p. m.
~ aaafety patrol, assisting the Barbara Logan's
second
Mrs.
Nan
Davis.
MASON -Mrs, Betty Cadle,
·• • 1
w
11 mi:: mm:m: m
:: llllll!illl m1 1
children In crossing the street grade. Devotions were . given Thursday home of Mrs . Scott
Guests
at
the
shower
were
owner
of Betty's Boutique in
Folmer with Mrs. Hugh Bearhs
. DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with those tacks that
and boarding the buses.
by Mrs. Arnold Ricbilrds of the in charge of program. Mem.
Mrs.
Lucille
King,
Mrs.
Lewis
Rev. · and Mrs. William hold the lining In summer straw bags. They keep coming
Mason, spoke on , good
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, who Mount Moriah Baptist Church.
and
son,
David,
Mrs.
Pearl
Knittel
and
family,
pastor
of
grooming
at Mrs. Betty
out and letting the lining hang loose. I do hope that before
last week attended the ·Ohio Greeters and hostesses were bers to take toys for Veterans
Ho.ffman, Mrs. Beulah White, Burris ' seventh
the Middleport United .Pen- they start making the ones
grade •
.
PTA oooveoUon In Colwnbus, Mrs. Logan's room mothers, MemorlsJ Hospital.
for
next
season
a
better
Mrs.
Lillian
McGhee,
Mrs.
Ed
tecostal
Cliurch,
South
Third
Home
Economics
class
EPISCOPAL Church
gave a resume of the meeting Mrs : Norma Custer, · Mrs.
way
of
securing
the
lining
Ave., have returned home from
Stiles and daughter, Nina, Miss on
Monday
at
Wa·
alld announced that two Martha Fox, Mrs . Sharon Women, 12:30 p.m. Thursday
Is found.-SALLY
a
trip
to
Florida.
They
attended
Hall,
Mrs
.
Davis,
Mrs.
W!Uis
hame
Junior
High
·
s
chool.
Middleport students had Doss, Mrs. Ruthann Plants, at Episcopal Parish House.
Anthony, Mrs. Ray .Morris of She spoke on the care of the
DEAR POLLY- My
RIVERVIEW GARDEN a United Pentecos tal In·
placed In the cultural arts Mrs. Nola Swisher, Mrs .
Marietta,
and Michl and hair .and demonstrated ·cutting
ternational Conference at" Pointer is for the gals who
dlapllly. Paul McElhinny look a Lucretia Stobart, and Mrs. Club members meet 6 p.m.
Marsha King . .-···
hair. She pointed out the proper
Thursday at Whitehead home Convention Hall in Miami can tomatoes. The neatest
BeCond place In sculpture, and Bessie Darst.
way
I
have
found
to
scald
Others presenting gifts to . hair style for a particular type
pre para tory to going to Beach where atlendance was them before peeling is to
Keith Doss an honorahle
about
U,DOO.
.
Mrs.
Fowler were Mrs. Dana face.
(
·
Napoli's Restaurant, Belpre,
,
mention In poetry. The only
use
my
deep
fat
fryer
.
Fill
The · meeting consisted of fryer about half full of wafor dinner.
other student from Meigs
Foreign Missionaries, 23 ter, let it come to a boil
County placing was Mark
, missionary families being . and then Immerse the
Wl.llta!m, third In prose . .
present. There were services basket which is filled with tomatoes. They are easily lifted . ,
~~l1'\U
''"
BRACElET_JJ,~'/j
. On display at the meeting
out and dumped into cold water in the sink and then the
\
~
on
the
home
missionary,
ladles
'
were levy promotion posters
skin
peels
right
off.MRS.
C.
C.
"'~
auxiliary, harvt!stllme radio
made by the students. The
division, editorial, and
DEAR POLLY....:Wheil wrapping a wedding, shower or - '\"'
·
FR_OM
winners ·receiving ribbon
devotions. Evening services even a birthday gift, put one of your name-and-address ·
e
'
awards Were as follows:
Christmas projects were
T ~tart
were
evangelistic.
sUckers
on
the
enc]osure
card.
The
recipient
will
thank
.L.Jj
11
First grade : Max Blake, discussed by the Sew-Rite
you for your thoughtfulness. She is saved the trouble of
• · .
Sewing
Club
recently
.
at
the
~ tf
-l
Becky Rife, Cheryl Ann Riffle;·
hunting up addresses.-MRS. C. N. D.
TtureW
Chris Burdette, Eric Cun- club house. Mrs. Edward Wells ·LETART FALLS - District
and
Mrs.
DQn
~cKriight
were
Supt.
Ralph
Sayre
was
the
ninghalp, Melissa McMillian,
..
speaker. when the Letart Falls
Laura lttrfley, Anthony Smith. hostesses.
Mrs.
Roll!'ld
Browning
was·
PTA held itS regular meeUng
Second grade: Tamil Hart,
named
to
buy
yarn
for
maklng
Monday,
Oct. 16, with the •·LONG BO'M'OM - Miss
•
Cindy Pa.t~er, Fred Nev!Ue,
Kimberly Roush, Jeffrey Christmascatdholdersand the president, Mrs. Judy Roberts, Mary Ellen Andrew returned
Baughman, Kris Snowden, ·members were asked to save presiding. A s~ort talk was to Colorado' Springs, · Colo.,
Craig Darst, Paula Swisher, juice cans. Members are also given by Supt. Sayre on .the after a weekend visit with her .
Sammy Plants, Greg Grimm, to.save potato chip cans to be lllplcs of the renewal levy, thO . parents, Mr. and tdrs. Francis
Joyce Stewart, and Steve decorated and used for way money is apent in the Andrews; . her slste~, Mrs .
homemade cookie containers. district, things which have Larry Collins and family, and
Powell.
Third grade: Melissa Mrs. Don Collins received a been accompUshed and things other relatives.
.
. Ml~ Andrew had been call~
Spelwer, Mike Adams, Jun gift from her secret sister on yet t.o be accompll~hed.
A question ·and answer .to Pittsburgh, Pa. for an IR·
Cremeans, Pam Crooks, Eddie her anniversary. Mrs. Elza
Gilmore,
Jr.
gave
the
period
followed. The Letart terview lor a position with
Daniels, Tammy Ferguson,
Phyllis Davis, Dsnny Hysell, secretary's report, and Mrs. PTA voted to endorse the Allegheny Alrllites,. Inc. For
the. past six months she has
·vour ChOice.
· Bob Aahley, Helen Slack, Don 'collins gave .. the renewal levy.
treasurer's report. Mrs. Larry . . Final plans were made lor .been emplored at the Air F'oree
. $37911
Wehrung .and Mrs . James, the jitney supper and fall Academy Foundation In
DJ-n.n in.u Ne~tzllng wiU be hostesses for . festival to be held Saturday Colora~o Sprlnga. She_will be
- ·fi!J CUI
--e the next meeting;
·
night, Oct. 21, at the Letart BSSll1lling,l)er new du!les with
Wern~r

.

was

? ,-The DaUy ~ntlnei,Middleport-Pomero;, Oct.li,1972.

'

seems

. Stresses
rOCIamahon
Wom
. en in Today's World
·/p· .

I Social Calendar

.

POINTERS

Bridal Shower Held

~ PTA

of
Middleport
.Backing School Levy
~ u: fir:~~·~~.~:::~'~

' ---,.

.

.-

•'1...•'*.'•'•'•'·'•'•'•&gt;'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'"'•'•'•'•'
.........
• ·:····...·.···· ··························~::· .

· Open to Public ··

;:.•

t

,,

\fU l

&amp;yre Speaks To
School PTA
At
Ra''Js

MARlEn A~ Tbt brief dedlcatoi-y ceremo~ies ·~12 ·
. : p.m. on Ff!day . reopening the oewly reatored Rufus ::~ .
: · Putnam HoUle wltbln tbe campai .Martiua M-.tm here [ili
MARIETTA · - The oldest · 17ll~ . Putnam was · th~ mortise and tenon framing. and · restorat.ioo program was ·a most educational and symbolic
are open to·the Pub!!~.·
-· - " "'
·
f.: ·kn own build'mg m
· Oh'.10, the . super"'
. •··nden't · ·vr !he Obt'o· thick plank siding of the fort . letter written by Puthdm ·on building, whiCh clearly shows
.,
no.,
· John A. Buruwortlt, foi'mer !Marietta mayor aDd . ~ .Rufus Putnam House of Company of- Associates· which showed that the wtdertaking July 1,1970 giving instructions the original place of the 'Put· trastee of The· Ohio Hlstorleal !lqc!ety, wnt give the · r ~l Campus Martius fortification, pioneered t~e first ot·ganilled would be much ' larger and on how .to complete his house nam' House as a part of the
.principal address of the event, speaking on "Yotir COO· ::;: has been ·totally (~stored and · sememenl' o{ the Northwest · more complicated 'than an- fo • occupancy' for .himself and larger military lort, an¢ how
1
servator..:. Tlte Oblo lllltortcaUloelety," aDd WU!iam ·G. · :~ will ()pen to the public at 2 p.m. · . Territory . following I .he ti~ipated.
.
•. · his
family.
Careful the Putnams occupied it in
· Keener, curator of blllory, The Ohio Historical Sqclety, · ~ Friday, October 2fl. ' · .
American Revolution:
Casting aside many cori- exaininalion of the letter by territorial days." ·
:~ will explain, the hlltoric role I!Dd restoration of the :~
Restored and administered
The house received its fir~l· meting· sources of informatjon staff researchers resulted in ·. The original portion of the
~ .Campus Marti111 forltflcallon of which the Putna.,.House .
by Tlie Ohio·Historical SQciety •.public attention as early as about the house and fort which reading new meanings into the hou.se iscompletely restored in
*i , was a . part. ,
.
..
. -r
;:;: within the C;tmpus Martius . 1905 when it was rented and has been_written dpr!ng the docume11t.
, __ __ ali details even to the plank
~ . State Senator Robert T. Secrest (~am~rldge) who i~i Museum, Washington and used occasionally by the years, r:esearchers and two ~'or example, Putnam used shutters, closed in time of
ti will represent Governor Gilligan at the ceremonies wiU :::: . Second streets here, the frl!m~ Marietta ·Chapter, Daughters architect ural historians the word "gorge!' to· describe threatened · attack. The- lid·:=;; make brief remarks.
·
:::: and plank building has been the of the Alnerican · Revolution. cond~cf.e9 an 0!1 site survey to where his. sewer was to run. dillon made at some later; as
Ribbon culling honors will be done by Mayo~ Jam~
most important Ohio symbol of The house was acqUired by the surrounding streets whicii had The word formerly was yet undetermined , date is
i~ . Sehwelkert of Marietta and Miits. Ruth Booher, Regent, . (:i first settlementthroughotit the 'state in 1917. A decade later, existed in their present thought to be.house: A gorge is shown as in the ·process of
~ .. Daughters of the Altlericao Revolution, for the re- ~:: 20th century.
$3;000 wil's .el'pended on a locaJ4!&gt;ns since the founding ·or a military term meaning rear being framed but not com@ opeolug.
·
·
. ::;:
The house was built as il part partial restoration : ln 1931 it Marietta in 1788, careflllly entra nce, or . gate, into a pleted. A floored section of the
:i:i of the· C;tmpus Martitf for- was · enclosed on its original sifted architectural evidence bastion .
framed-only .addition contains
. :::~::::::~::=::~~:i:!:~:~:~~:::~::::-::::s:!*~*::::::::::::::::=:::::::::--:::::::::::::::::~:::::::~::~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::?.i!!i:!: tificalion to .protect pioneer foundation within the campus as the house was being ' Putnam used the word sink an exhibit giving detailed InMarietta settlers beginning in Mlirtius State Museum by The disassembled, and went back in describing h.ls kitchen .formation ,on the restoration
· Ohio Historical Society, its to original descriptions, arr~ngement .. Sink in 1790 to process and sources .
administr~(or. Since that time,
drawings, and sketches of the most people, particularly
The original house is coman 'estimated two million fort and houSe, the most im· . military ,men, meant' latrine. pletely furn ished with both .
persons tramped through its portant of which were written
The resulting restoration Putnam family and oth~r,
rooms and halls.
by
Putnam
himself
'imd
by
which
took six years of detailed period furnishings acq4ired by
.
Physical deterioration of the other famity.mem"bers, or were research and labor shows the the Society. On the first floor
building, also known as the contain ed in official Ohio Putnam residen.ce as, it the kitchen is dominated by the
oldest wooden fortification in Company records.
originally appear!!d as part of large cooking fireplace .and
the Midwest · still standing,
Results were the. discovery the Campus. Martius for· hake oven. The parlor is shown .
became so bad that in July that what had been considered lification to 1795. Even the fort as !he family social cenfer·and ·
The Kyger Cree.k High Rock Hill; Qhlo, and Peters- areas).
Any and ail contributions 1966, it was closed to public use to be the original portion of the gateway at the south end of the · office for the General. Fur·'
&amp;;hool Ilobcat Marching Bitnd town, W. Va. First place was
would
be greatly appreciated as a safety hazard. A total of house was indeed a later ad- house and a mock-up of the niture is Windsor and prlmillye ,·
received a II, or excellent, ·won by the Wahama High ·
rating Saturday at the Tri- School Band, which also won and may be given to any b~ $1!8,000 was allocated from the dillon, while the so-called opposite dwelling are shown .. pieces of the type brought over
210 E .. 2nd · ·
Pomeroy
1965 and 1968 stale capt tal · addi lion was in fact Every scr.ap of original timber the mountains by the early setState Marching Band Festival HonO.. Band In the festival. · parent or may be mailed to
Phone 992-542
·
·
In Huntington.
Full .efforts are now being Kyger Creek High School Band Improvements bond -1ssues to the original portion of was retained. Bent beams were tiers.
Boosters
Club,
·
Kyger•
Creek
restore
the
bwldtng
to
tis
Ratings were decided by the centered upon the drive to
the fort built to pro- straightened by embedding
High
School,
.Cheshire
o.
ongmal
appearance.
teet Putnam and early set· steel rods in them.
average of scores from thfee raise $6,000 to purchase all new
45620.
'
'
Research
.
to
determine
the
tiers from Indian attack -until
"We expect criticism of the .
judges: Clinton E. ·Foster uniforms for the band. Along
original
appearance
of
the
1795
when
that
menace
no
restoration,"
Daniel R. Porter,
Supervisor of Musicln Warren: with many other comments,
The price of a single uniform
house
to
which
several
adlonger existed and the fort was . director of The Ohio Historical .
Ohio; Donald Wilcox, Director thejudges'sheetsstatethat the is $120, and 76 uniforms are to
ditions
and
changes
had
been
broken up.
·
Society stated, "because It
of ,Bands at West Virginia overall appearance of the band be ordered. "Please support
made
over
the
years
was
begun
The most important single does not appear as it formerly ·
University; Richard Jacoby was dull and ·dark. One even this drive with any and all
by
Society
stalf
in
1966.
docume11t
assisting in the did burdened with all the acDirector of Bands at Kent Stat~ staled that the addition -of contributions and make the ·
Removal
of
clapboards
from
a
cretions and alterations of
Uni~ersity .
'
brighter and more modern Kyger Creek Band one of the
portion
of
the
house,
and
time. However, the historical
Tile hand competed with ten · uniforms would . greatly im- finest in the at·ea," the spokescareful
disassembly
of
.
the
man
said.
'
facts
are indisputable, and
o.ther bands in .' the . "B" prove the apiJE,arance of the
nothing was done in haste," he
classification (between iiti and unit, These comments. further
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO,
emphasized. "The result is a
80 plliying members). and with emphasize the .fact · that new
Lo~
' .
Saturday, Oct. 14, 1972
26 bands QVerall.
uniforms ·are desperately
'·
SALES REPORT OF
Since the classification was needed to improve the apKEiTH GOBLE FORD
for 'Team 4 with 549 pins and
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
_•. based upon the total number of pearance and image of the
BOWLING LEAGUE
Charlie Neal was high for
·
October 10, 19i2
Tea m 8 with 571 pins.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 27.50
PlaY,ing members, the Bobcat . band.
Standings:
Team 14 look 8 points from
to
27.85 ; 220 to 250 lbs. 27.85 to
Band was in competition with
Manufactured by
the Team
Won Lost Team 11. Helen Oseland was
bands in the "B" class which Fechheimer Brothers of No. 5
36 12 hig h lor Team 14 with 497 pins 28.50; Light 26 to 27; Fat Sows
.
No.2
34 14 an d Betty Gooch was high for 22.25 to 24.35; Stags 15.50 to 16;
Just Received New Trailer LoacJ, ·
were 'fro•.&gt; schools of as many Cincinnati, Ohio, the ·uniforms No .3
31 16 Team 11 with 418 pins.
of 1500 students in grades 10 are due to be ready for ship- No.6
30 18
Team 9 took 6 points from Boars 17 to 19; Pigs 10 to 27.50;
through 12. Kyger Creek mentabout Jan . I ..The balance No . 12
30 18 Team 3. Clint Absh~re was high Shoats 25'to 37.
CATTLE - Steers 34.50 to
nwnberii .slightly less than 500 due must be· sent to the com- No.4
27 21
lor Team 9 with 529 pins and
t
No.8
26
22 Mary Allman was high tor
42; Heifers 30 to 40; Baby Beef
students in grades seven pany before the uniforms can No. 14
24 24 Team 3 with 485 pins.
through 12. There were very be delivered.
No.1
20 28
Team 10 split 8 points with 41 to 55; Fat Cows 20 to 23.85;
No . 11
20 28 Team 13. Bob Teed was high Canners 16 to 27; Bulls 27.50 to
Sweetest
Saturday
few hands in the contest which
A band spokesman said No .9
18 30 · tor Team 10 with 479 pins and
31;
Milk
Cows
200
to
450.
Day
Oct. 21st
used seventh and eighth today, "It indeed would he an No. 10
18 30 Marla Bush was high for Team
· Medium 2"- 6112• squafe foot
VEAL
CALVES
·Tops
~
1
graders on the field.
unfortunate thiiig to deprive No . 13
IS 33 13 with 482 pins.
No. 7
6 42
High single game for the Seconds 50 ).0 52; Medium 47 to
The Bobcat Band performed our studen'ts of the best they
On Oct. 10, 1972 Teams took a ladies for the evening was 212
Special 3" square foot
a show entitled "Another deserve and to fail to improve points from Team 12. Burl pins held by Doris Fitz . 50; Com. &amp; Hvs. 45 to 53.50;
Culls
47
Down
.
School Year" and featured the the image of the area through Cook was high for Team 5 with simmons and for the men was
530 pins and Jack Ferguson 218 pins held by Merida Shaw.
BABY CALVES - 35 to 80.
Full Thick 6"- 13• square foot
majorettes on a routine to the band. If the money is not . w_as high tor Team .12 wifh 480 • High seri es tor the-ladies was
-jiJ\
hl)!'j ,rU::liOiiJlJ Jl• , I
' ' 1.. '
, ,tl!\ J
• '
l,
1
·•I"Ma'
1 ' ' ·~~;-- ke "''e
m ' '""-1""'.''
o31nu: no&lt;o;l·
ne'::'~lOn I'
· avaiIabe
u-.ett • •lS Awhat • WilI ...&lt;f~II)S1. , -!""" 11 ,,, ,, -~,, 1··1 ~ ""·52,5 .• tota\ .pins, held byMPoris
1
1
1
11
• ••· :; ;,_ ·
,;· aruf hi'g'hligh'ietl 'rlh('Sl{~.·~00 h8~Pen'_7 '"' "'·
Team 2 took 6 ~oints from
Fitzsimmons and for the men .t ,..J;
'·
Prom.otion March and the
Band Boosters Represen- was
Teamhigh
7. for
Doris
.
Hockey League to
Team itzsimmons
2 with 525 571
Neal.total p'ins held by Charlie Amertcan
Kyger Creek figh,t song. The tatives are now canvassing the pins. and Kerm Malone was
"play himself back Into
performance lasted seven area businessmen to seek high for Team 7 with 478 pins.
. shape"
'b ·
· d
b d
Team 6 took 8 points from
·
·
.
minutes with three minutes contn uttons an
an
Team .1. John Fuller was high NEWELL TO VIRGINIA
Tbe 23-year-old Newell, oilMATERIALS CO.
allowed · to line . up at the members themselves will be on for Team 6 with 547 pins and
DETROIT (UP!).- Defense- talned from the New York
59N. Second St.
starting position. Bands per- the streets Saturday, Oct. 21 in Ora Baird was high for Team I man Rick Newell has ·been Rangers last May has been
Middleport, 0 .
I'
'ddl
d
with
447
pins.
bl
I
'tth
.
.
formlng immediately before Ga II tpo ts, Mt eport, an
MASON, W. VA. .
773-5554
Team 4 took 6 points from assigned by the parent Detroit una e t~ pay w
Detrmt
and after Kyger Creek were Pomeroy (with surrounding . Team a. Jack Janey was high Red Wings to Virginia of the because of a muscle spasm.

t

t

it. '.

'*

.

Kyger Creek Band Receives
E~cellent Mark At·Festival
'

'

'

.Before Winter Comes

Market Report

Bowling

c

"'"''

'

.". H·oct·~- &amp;. ziJsPAN:~~

••

Phebe Says:

~~ -

~

4 .

P-~~ count was taken with

Mr. and Mrs . William the sixth grade having lbe moat
IIGIIIU. or St. Claire Shore, parents present. Studenta from
Mlcll. have been hen visiting the ~t. aecand and third
Mill M..-le BicliDian and other grades ,sang ·Hall- 1011g11
acc~led by Mrs. I..te Lee.
lrltndl In Plmlerl!y.

and
.PEARL STS., RACINE- ·
.
'The Store With A-Heart,
Yo~ ,WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities

59 N. Second St.
Midclleport,·o.

•

.POTATOES

10

lb.

69~

5

1.

.Saturday 9 to 9
·CLOSED SUNDAYS

FAIRMONT
.
(

Red &amp;Golden Delicious

I

$} 00

.

_.

_

whip.

..

.3

lb.

49~

.·

.

.

lb.-69'

~:· · at~

BACON
ENDS
.
-AND PIECES .
51b.l69
' .

,,.
·SII)Es

-New
. Crop 113
. Size

POIIROY

CALIF. ORANGES

69°

20 cl
pkg.
·I

I

J

I

I

·.·

,'

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·Fresh 'Beef and
·Pork Mixed
'

($109

.

MEAT
LOAF
.
'

·MIX

II
I

I

2·

I
I
I

lb.

·.FRENat CITY II
WIENERS . lI ·

.

doz.

pkg.'

4·9~

3

Windsor .Sliced Bacon
'

Vanilla

r

AP~LES .

'
(

cans

enriched. Rich enough 1o ·
I'

.

Jello Pudding Treats~~=~cJI. ..........~.~: _·.
padf 1
WhI"te ·cl·.OU d T101.,.e~· T"ISSUe(....8 Rolls)
,..... 4 LPk&amp;L
~
.
.
z&amp;nz.49C
Heinz.Catsup ..~~~..~~~.~ .......:................ ~ .·
Ch .,.I I WI"th 8eans ..,ARMOUR
.................:......... 15~cansoz.•1

New from Jerzee - No butterfat. Contains vegetable oil.
Vitamins
and
minerals

2% MILK

2

'-

AT SAME ~OW PRICE

Prices
.. Effective Oct 18-25
M(llld,ay Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

l-Ib.

. .............
· ;.....p1astic39cG.oo. d L·uc k. Marganne.~
bowl
·
Popcorn ...~~.~~!..~..~~~.~~.~ .................;........ ~ 2 5 c

•

.

Chapman's

8

Home Gmwn. Kennebec

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Fciod_Stamps

~lect Yours:Toctayl

Dudle(s Flclist

· COLA

ON SALE OCTOBER 18 TO 25

AJtftMGEMENJS

H~E

(

16 oz. bots.

served by the hostesses to . The ' menu w!U be baked tiilrgh"Nov . . · .
. thoee nanied and Mrs, WlUard cream chicken, meat loaf, . ._ . ._._.__ _,
.... 1'11111
lbe Boyer; 1&gt;fta. Bob Potter,.l,(ra. hat1t, sweet potatoes, ,baked
Beaull.fut · .
'-IIMIII¥ 81110!~ Ray Bally, Mrs. Charles beans, green haans, lima
rail
· cr treat Hoftman, Mn. Flo Strickland, beans, cern, J10Qdlea, macaroni .
rN.L
.,~:~= at 1 l!ld Mn. Elmer White:
·. 1alad, potatO salad, lllaw, frolt
iiii
at T:JO p.m.
. ,~&amp;lad, pie, cake, ~ee and
II . t~ Racine
. •~
Kool-Aid. serving w!U start aU
Vivid Colors

I VISI'i1NG

QIU RITE

8

S@.JI!t~.JWli-.saJad,wereJleffi!!n~School,~.' ~-AlteghP.ny Alrllnes
:.:.·I2J~~~;I--

.

R9yal Crown Cola

Try Our

YOUNG ONES

_

..

Dudley's Florist·

FOR

~ co,;.:;._:_;; ;.• -. _,C !;d

Foil Faced Rock Wool Batts
15" WIDTH ·
a•

WE'VE GOT
'THE SHOE

P....,..,.,.

INSULATION

SAY THE
SWEETEST
ffiiNGS

Carave
· 11.e by Bulo·V8

.

INSTAU. OUR

FLOWERS

'CP

was Visiting Here

·2-HOUR
.CLEANING
(Upon ReqUest)
ROBINSON.'S ·
CLE{NERS· •·

ih;

t/fJt

A1Ylary

.
The second floor con~ I
hall 'and three bedrooms. 1AU
are furnished with Hep- ·
plewbite and primitive piece..
restoration
was
. ·.The
·supervised by· William G• .
Keener~ cura\or o( history o( ..
'!'he Ohio .llistorlcal Society.
Project afchitects were DeUai
· Harder, A.Lt\., Columbus, and
Miss Judith Kitchen of the
·Society's staff. Other research
and supervisory staff wOr.kltlg ·
on the project were Mr: and ·
ll!rs. Donald Hutslar, bo1J8lao
White', and Mrs. Catherine
. Remley, curator . or~mpus
Martius MuS.wn.
..
Project construction con·
lractar was the W, Helby .
Company of Marietta.
'
. The Putnam House . a:td
Campus Martius Musewn are
· regularly open 9 a.m. to 5 p:m.
Monday through•Saturday and
. 1 to 5 p.m, on Sunday.

Putnam. ·House Restored·

-~ .

.

Pastor, W!fo
At Convention

Projects of
Club Studied

'.

J •

•

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1.

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oct. 18,1972

•

fro files
•zn Coal

T
I.

BV JOHN REECE
"Diversified and challenging -these
two wo~ seem to sum up my background," ~id Hope J. Moore, who acts
training
the secretarial force of
Southern Ohio · Coal Company's
ope,ratlng department.
Since graduating as valedictorian
frol)l Normantown (W. ·va.) High
School Class Of 1941, her li(e has been
diversified as wife, mother, postal
clerk, outdoorswoman, bookkeeper,
office supervisor, student, and now
"coal miner."
In July 1942, Hope became the bride
of Russell W. Moore, who Is presenUy
(rincipal of Meigs Junior High School.
Their !hree children, Sharon, Linds,
and Russeli;"Jr., were bOrn during the
war years and sl)orUy thereafter.
From 1952 to 1959 she worked as a
postal clerk in Quinwood, W. Va. Mter
two years of being a housewife only
(during which time at· her husband's
coaching, she became an ardent
fisherwoman, Mrs. Moore became
receptionist and bookkeeper for the late
1
Dr. K. D. Amsbary, a prominent
Pomeroy dentist. She was also an office
supervisor for Landmark, Inc. in
Pomeroy from 1964 through 1971.

l

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HOPE MOORE: COAL MINER

To continue her educntion, Mrs.
Moore enrolled in a secretarial
refresher course at Tri-County
Vocational School In Nelsonville. That
secrctal-ial course helped her become a

Asbury Methodist Church in Syracuse,
Mrs. Moore joins her husband in a
mixed bowling league where she
carries a respectable average. Another
part,of her busy schedule is taken up by
the c!lairmanship of the scholarship
committee of the Ladies Auxiliary of
American Legion Drew Webster Post in
Pomeroy . .
· "My family comes from West
Virginia pioneer stock," she said
'referring to her family tree which includes Daniel Boone. "I think this may
be one reason why our family likes to
make quilts, afghans, and do some of
our own·bilking at holiday time. I even
have a dreamy recipe for fruit cake,"
the "coal miner" concluded.

''coal rninei.''
"Learning the coal mlliing terminology is really an exciting
challenge," she Said, "and I do enjoy
life with all of its challenges."
One of the greater challenges Hope
and her husband have faced is putting
all three of their children through
college. "Now we want to enjoy our
three grandchildren and some
outdoor recreation,",.she declared.
Besides being active as a Sunday
School teacher and choir mernber at

schools.
Class C Included bands with members
mimber!nll55or less and Class A was for
banda with 81 or more members.
Wahama received the higheat number
of poirtts ever awarded the band in
competition. One judge awarded 100
points out of a possible 100, the second
judge !11, and the thir.d judge 96 points.

~Dinner,

Dance Being Planned

PT. PLEASANT - Plans for president, is urging all ina big dinner and dance are
expected to be completed at a
regular meeting of the Mason
Col!lliY Republican Women's
Organization Thursday
evening at 7:30 at Republican
Headquarters.
Margoterete
Engel,
. .

terested women to attend since
further planning will be made
for the countywide pre-election
event to be held in the National
Guard Armory on State Route
62 north of Point Pleassnt,
later this month.
.

Don Wilcox, Director of Bands, West
Virginia University.
In response to requests !rom a nwnber
of interestesd people, some. of the
comments of the judges, are reported.
One judge comme~teed, in referring
to the Wahama Band, "There may be a
better high school marching band in
West Vir~tinia. but.l haven'tseenit veilThis group has a number of strong
points, the strongest of which is its
combination of a rather special level of
skill In its Director and a bunch of hard
working troops. Whatever he has tolp
you, it's right! Keep doing it!"
Another. 1uage commented:
"Excellent Individual playing and
ensemble sound.
Woodwinds very
prominent in entrance. Well done!
Beautiful carriage and pricision. ·
Beautiful style. Band does so well, I
would · suggest a litUe more complex
·routine .. This group could do it I'm sure.
A fine job."
And the third judge commenteed:
"Bravo! First 'real' band sound
I've ' heard
today!
Great
synchronization of music and routine.
Excellent choice of material."
The judges spoke equally well of the
majorettes, commenting "Great
precision... Very impressive military
style ... Even though the majorettes are
used as a part of the band's drills, your
marching steps set you apart and look
fantastic! Great, Great show!"
The Majorette Corps members are
Vivian Woodrum, Debbie Fields, Sharon
Froendt, Pam Weaver, Holly Layne,
and Frances Wriston. Head Majorette is
Linda VanMatre. The field commander
is Chuck Wood. Announcer for the band .
· is Mr. Sam McWhorter of the English
Oeparbnent at Wahama.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs . Stephen
Finlaw, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of a son,
Matthew Todd, born on Friday,
Oct. 13, at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
nine pounds. Mr. and Mrs.
Finlaw have a daughter,
Heather, 20 months. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Middleport,
Route 1, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Finlaw, Pomeroy R.
D. ·Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Grueser of Pomeroy are greatgranct~arents .

Pillsbury

Ca.UMIMM'·

LIONS"FOR LEVY
The Pomeroy - Middleport
Lions Club has endorsed the
Meigs Local School District
operating levy which will be on
the November 7. ballot.
Members of the organization
are encouraged to work for and
vote for this levy, said D. H.
Pearch, Jr., 931 Hysell St.,
Middleport.
CONFINED AT HOME
·Mrs. Harry Houdashelt,
Middleport, has been confined
to her home for the past two
weeks with a virus.

(Continued from page 1)
diimer meeting approved all
proposed resolutions · on the
coun ty, state and national
level, and elected Don Wilson
of Albany, as delegate to the
state convention in Columbus
Nov . 15 through Nov. 18.
Named alternates were Mrs.
David Koblentz, · Pomeroy
Route 3 ,an~.Harold G. Roush
of Portiano.
Trustees Elected
Elected to serve three year
terms .as trustees on the Farm
Bureau Board were William
Carr, Coolville Route I, from
the Olive, Orange and Chester
Townships District~ Wayne
Roush, Racine Route 1, from
Lhe Lebanon, Letart and Sutton
Townships District;' R. B.
Burdette, Pomeroy for the
Bedford, Scipio and Salisbury
Townships District and Oris
Roush, Langsville, from the
Rutland, Salem and Columbia
Townships District.
Following the dinner served
by the Chester PTA, Henry
Frank, board president, gave
the welcome. Rex Shenefield
spoke on Stale Issue 2 and gave
the nominating committee
report. Roy Miller presented
the resolutions and Virgil King
spoke on the Meigs Local
School District tax levy to be
voted on Nov. 7.
Sen. Oakley Collins gave a
legislative. report and state
trustee reports were by Mrs.
Monroe Strickler of Gambier

1lu".W11

IOQ::,·.74c

Resolutions approved were

!County) that:
Laws be amended to better

(Goo~

enable law enforcemen1 .offi cers to safe ly carry out their

With
This
Coupon
Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.)

Fresh,
Whole
Picnics

duties and court procedures be

revised to expedite the handli ng of the case load.
Sewage and pollution laws be

better controll ed.
Meigs County roads be
improved on a more permanent basis.

,'

The Fair Board gets help to
maintain
restroom facilities at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds .
Consideration and support be
tven to construction of a.

F~ii~~~5u~~s'hforMe~~~ c~~nt~

EDMUNDGRUESERofWhittier,Calif.,left,receiveda
3li year membership award at the annual Farm Bureau
meeting Tuesday night In Chester. Presenting the award is
Jack Carsey, Pomeroy, Meigs County Farm Btireau

Communitv Center .

manager.

All able bodied recipients of

welfare be required to work at
some designated job.

The seriouSness of the drug
situation in Meigs County be
fully realized and appropriate
action be taken.
Vocational Agriculture
Programs be refa ined and
promoted in all of the high
schools in the county.
. State Level
We stnve for ~ore research
to market da~ry produ~ts

and Route 7 By -pass.
. The state and federal
governments encourage and
mak'e avai lable the training of
more doctors.
We propose a countywide tax
base for schools with revenue
distributed to each school
district in the county on a per
pupil basis.
.
We support the enactment of

mination date be Labor Day.
We cont inue to support
legislation to control dairy and
beef import so that these
products do not necessarily
push down our domestic
markets.
All substitutes In beef and
pork products be it~mized in a
strict labeling act.
An imm~diate study be made

Decorated or Regular

Se.ot£ ·To...efa.,
~2-ro~ $100
~ pkgs.

i:
;1

.-;

-~+
·~

through

1:
a State Severance Tax in Oh io to set standards, regulations, ']'

It be mandatory . that _all
telephone compan_1es g1ve
ex~ended area servtce to all
adJacent exchanges.
Stale. laws . go~erning
restofat10n ~f stnp mme land
be more stnngently ~nforced .

the county at orig in.
We encourage legislation
before the. Ohio General
Assembly
which
would
guarantee that voluntary
agr icultural
accredited
marketing and bargaining

Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. ~~~=;:::

more attract,ve
new consumer Q~ extracted natura l resqurces .;t,rlctJawsrP." ,q)f!Stf.u dion ,and ~
products.
· ..
· · ' · v;oth the revenueo return~ct ,to · operMIOr\ 'lli'UII'I'a ~lg~ ~bltaQ'e .

packagmg and

transmission lin'e!i..
.
Any able bodied recipient of
we,lfare be required to work at
some designated job.
·
·
-------------

The state exped!le con . associations have the right to
slruclton of Route 33 to Athens meet with handlers of specific

Any able bodied recipient
welfare be required to work at
some designated job.
An immediate study be made
to set slandards, regulations.
and laws ori construction and
operation of ultra high voltage
transmission tines .
National
The cash basis of farm in·
criticized proposed water dis- come
reporting for income tax
charge standards and the per- be retained.
The starting date tor
centage of certain chemicals
ngs time be
which would be allowed in daylight
Memorial
and the tertreated water.
He said a requirement that
manganese not exceed five
milligrams per liter and water
acidity be limited to 9.0 "are at
odds with one another."
Lombardo said studies have
shown the·water acidity level
must' bt! above 9.4 to result In
"significant manganese reduc·

Confusion Cited
In· Mining Rules

COLUMBUS (UPI)-A
spokesman for an enviro.nmentaiist group said
Tuesday propased strip mine
regulations are so vague and
confusing they ' 1ull the strip
mlnere Into ·believing he can
reclaim land without paying
the necessary cost."
''The most disturbing part of
the regulations, however, is
that they don't go far enough in
'1'couraging citizen participalion in enforcement of strip
mlnfug la~tS," said RiChard.J . ..tion ."
Garrett of Barnesville, repre- · Phillip Burger of Bradford
senting Citizens Organized to Woods, Pa., a consultant
Protect the' Environment representing several strip
(COPE).
mining
companies
in
The third day of the hearings southeastern Ohio, challenged
by the state Natural Resources a regulation prohibiting
Deparbnent was scheduled to- blasting within 300 feet of
day.
·
buildings and houses.
"Distance alone is not an in·
Garrett recommended that
In some cases the identity of a dication of the hazard if the
~rson reporting a strip mining blasting Is COO trolled," Burger
violation be protected and oth· said, contending explosives
er steps be taken to encourage can safely be detonated within
Citizens to assist in .enforce- 100 feet of structures.
ment.
He said this rule would not
Coal companyc represen-. affect most stripping operatatives also found fault with the lions, but could be extended to
rules, being written by the quarrying and·construction Jn,
Division of Forestry and dustrles where it would handi·
Reclamation as require4 In a cap operations.
tough strip mine law passed by
"Most. sewage construction
the Ohio General Assembly. (rojects would severely be reJerry Lombardo, consultant stricted and many highway
to the ConsoUdaUon Coal Co., construction projects," he ·
said.

'

OOOBER

1 .~5,:
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ARE DOWN

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1 ~·
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1

· To Earll!. Compare!

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s.lb.

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Pineapples

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l·lb.'
bskt.

All Varieties-Betty Crocker

'

H......w.ge.'ll H~

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7oOL
pkgL

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Coupon

(G04'd Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.)

·'

VACUUM PAC:KED

Folger's Coffee
SHRIMP,

Told Ceual
.

\

loOL
pkg..

2 9"

This
.,. With
Coupon

(Good Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols.

SINGER SAlES&amp; SERVICE
McCALLS SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

992-2284
Pomeroy,O.

S~LMON,

1-lb.

•

I

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Puss 'n IDols rC:D

SLICED, CRUSHED OR CHUNK

95 Dole Pineapple

I

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FLAVORS

15:!:•17~ Hi·C Drinks

I

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ean

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TUNA

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MORTON FROZEN

AU VARIETIES

LiHie Friskies :JD •

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000 FOOD

~~ 95~ Bread Dough • • •
$299 INSTANT COFFEE
bar
Taster's Choice
•
LIGHT CHUNK
lO.Ib,$199
Starkist Tuna

Can·ned Spam

25-lb.

Friskies Dinners

1

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OCEAN FISH

Friskiu Cat Food

1

bag

.

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CHICKEN NOODLE

Carnation Slender •
NABISCO
Fig Newtons ·

Lipton Cup·a·Saup

~~42C: Folger's Coffee
VAC:UUM PACKED

1

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l·lb.

pkf,

~79~ Decaf Coffee

49~

..... $269
3-lb.

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INSTANT

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.~~~·51r Imperial Margarine •

KEEBLER

Zesta Saltines •
WAREHOUSE PRICED! CALGON
Water Conditio"er

Cll

so"

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12oOL

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INSTANT

I

"WHAT'S YOUR HANG-UP?"

..... $J01
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jor

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'·

SPECIAL SERVICE.

50¢1

DATE &amp; TIME: OCT. 20th, 8:00 o'clock
PLACE: MIDilEPORT UNITED PENTEOOSiAL atURaf

.'

H
,

Several Churches Will Be Represented At this Service.
.
Pastor, William Knittel

----

39'

(Good Thru Sat. Oct, 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Diy.)

2 a ·gc·~~1:

'

S. 3rcl Ave., Middleport
·
Speaker: REV. &amp; MRS. J. C. COLE
.Parkersburg, W.-Va.

'

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·• eft,

'eoupon •

'

DRUGS- POLITICS · "LCOHOL- SEX. FEAR
DISAPPOINl"MENTS · WA,.R -"FRIJSTRATION
, HATE-BOREDOM-SELF-S~OKING .··

•

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9 c v~~:

General Mills

llS W. Second

bW&gt;eh

PUERTO RICAN

'

The Fabric Shop

lorp

I

Joyli.cfw.£

41

Up to 5.95 Values

ggc

• • •

I

Detergent

;f

POLYESTER
KNITS

Broccoli

3 3t
IC:
lb.
bag

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13'

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-Large Table .

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" - - - - - - - - - - - - ...,,

EVENT!

'

FRESH CALIFORNIA

With This
4•0L
, Coupon
box
·
(Good Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.)

Main &amp; Sycamore :

FABRIC

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Gaht,1)~aef,

1:1

OUR PRICES

lOLA'S

King Size

1 ".:

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15-lb,

1

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WE MAY LOOK
EX PENS 1VE

NEW CROP FLORIDA

Grape
. fruJ't , WHITE
SEEDLESS
CRISPY JONATHON
Apples •

·

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• • ••• lb.

For Fast Relief

farm commodities .

· BARNE'IT ENLISTS
Wayne Virgil Barnett, 18, son
oi Mr: and'Mrs. Alvin Barnett,.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, has enlisted in
the Navy's 'occupational
Specialty School Guarantee ·
I~J&gt;i.O•l!tam which 'guarantees an
enllistrrtent in one of 2il oi:cupatlonal specialfies. He ls a ·
1972 gradUiite of Meigs High
School.

lb.

(i~

With Back
&amp; Giblets

and Golden Canaday of
Gallipolis. Invocation was by
Joe Sayre.
The TWletimers entertained
several times during the
meeting with old and modem
instrumental and vocal
nwnbers.

••, • • •

. I

Four Trustees

At ,Tri-State Festival
The judging was divided into three
categories:
1. Musical effect, including quality
and control of tone, style,
interpretation and dyriamics ... 50 ,
points.
.
2. Visual effect, including alignment,
precision, posture and general
appearance .... 30 points.
3.
General effect, including
originality and choice of material...20
points.
Winninl( bands. Usted according to
class are:
CLASS C. BANDS- 1st, Mann
Hillbillies; 2nd, George, Washington
Patriots; 3rd~ Pt. Pleasant 'Black
Knights.
MAJORETTES-1st, George
Washington; 2nd Hamlin H. S.; 3rd, Pt.
Pleasant.
CLASS B. BANDS-1st, Wahama
White Falcons; 2nd, Barboursville
Invlncibles; 3rd, Herbert Hoover
Huskies.
MAJORETTES-Is!, Wahama; 2nd
Barboursville; 3rd, Dawson-Bryant.
CLASS. A. BANDS-1st, Parkersburg
Big Red; 2nd, SLogan Wildcat; 3rd,
Ripley Vikings.
MAJORETTES-lsi, Ravenswood,
2nd, Logan; 3rd, Ripley.
HONOR BAND-Wahama High
School White Falcon Band
·
At the conclusion of the awards
presentation, the directors of the Band,
Mr. ~raid Simmons ·and Mr. Charles
Yeago, were hoisted to tile shoulders of
the jubilant young musicians and
carried off the 'field.
The judges for the Festival were: Mr.
· Richard Jacoby, Kent'State University,
Director of Bands; Mr. Clint Foster,
,Supervisor of Music, Warren, Ohio; Mr.

Full Cpt
Bone In

Co-Op Dines, Elects

Waflama Wins Top Honors
The li:aditional gaily-painted bus signs
reflecting the spirit and pride of tile
Wahama White Falcon Band, again
predicted the outcome of their most
recent competltlon, the Tri-State
Marching Band Festival In Fairfield
Stadimn October 14, sponsored by
Marshall University Music Department.
The lead bus sign proclaimed "We
have only just begun to win" which
proved to be true, as they carried home
First Place In their'Clasa, first place In
Majorette Competition, and topped it off
witll capturing the Honor Band trophy
which Is presenleld to · the over-all
winning band at the Festival.
,
· The Wahama Band, competing in
· Clai!ll B, pre&amp;ented a nearly perfect
perfonnance that thrilled tile audience
witll its precision and musicianship.
Signs tacked to the maple trees llnlng
the driv.Way ·to· Wahilma adrnoliishing
early arivals of the band on Saturday
morning to "look sharp" ... "pick up your
feet" ... and "toe to yard line" were
evidentl:y heeded by ~members, as the ,
band turned in a breathtaking
performance.
Class B was open to band s whose
membership ranged from 56 to 80
members, and included such high
schools as Rock Hill and Kyger Creek
from Ohio; Williamson, Herbert
Hoover, Huntington High, ·and
Barboursvllle, West Virginia high

t

DON WILSON, Albany, .
was elected delegate to the
state convention, Nov. 15-18,
· In Columbus at the annual
THESE i972 NEW MEMBERS of the Meigs County Farm Bureau receiv~d pins at the
meeting of Meigs County
annual meeting held Tuesday nlgqt. They are from the left Willis Anthony, Middleport; Mr.
Farm Bureau In Chesler " and Mrs. James Kunath, Langsville Route I, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold White, Pomeroy Route
· Tuesday night.
2.

, II

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With This Coupon
On 5·1b, box

...~

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1.

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oct. 18,1972

•

fro files
•zn Coal

T
I.

BV JOHN REECE
"Diversified and challenging -these
two wo~ seem to sum up my background," ~id Hope J. Moore, who acts
training
the secretarial force of
Southern Ohio · Coal Company's
ope,ratlng department.
Since graduating as valedictorian
frol)l Normantown (W. ·va.) High
School Class Of 1941, her li(e has been
diversified as wife, mother, postal
clerk, outdoorswoman, bookkeeper,
office supervisor, student, and now
"coal miner."
In July 1942, Hope became the bride
of Russell W. Moore, who Is presenUy
(rincipal of Meigs Junior High School.
Their !hree children, Sharon, Linds,
and Russeli;"Jr., were bOrn during the
war years and sl)orUy thereafter.
From 1952 to 1959 she worked as a
postal clerk in Quinwood, W. Va. Mter
two years of being a housewife only
(during which time at· her husband's
coaching, she became an ardent
fisherwoman, Mrs. Moore became
receptionist and bookkeeper for the late
1
Dr. K. D. Amsbary, a prominent
Pomeroy dentist. She was also an office
supervisor for Landmark, Inc. in
Pomeroy from 1964 through 1971.

l

!

Ir

1·

l

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HOPE MOORE: COAL MINER

To continue her educntion, Mrs.
Moore enrolled in a secretarial
refresher course at Tri-County
Vocational School In Nelsonville. That
secrctal-ial course helped her become a

Asbury Methodist Church in Syracuse,
Mrs. Moore joins her husband in a
mixed bowling league where she
carries a respectable average. Another
part,of her busy schedule is taken up by
the c!lairmanship of the scholarship
committee of the Ladies Auxiliary of
American Legion Drew Webster Post in
Pomeroy . .
· "My family comes from West
Virginia pioneer stock," she said
'referring to her family tree which includes Daniel Boone. "I think this may
be one reason why our family likes to
make quilts, afghans, and do some of
our own·bilking at holiday time. I even
have a dreamy recipe for fruit cake,"
the "coal miner" concluded.

''coal rninei.''
"Learning the coal mlliing terminology is really an exciting
challenge," she Said, "and I do enjoy
life with all of its challenges."
One of the greater challenges Hope
and her husband have faced is putting
all three of their children through
college. "Now we want to enjoy our
three grandchildren and some
outdoor recreation,",.she declared.
Besides being active as a Sunday
School teacher and choir mernber at

schools.
Class C Included bands with members
mimber!nll55or less and Class A was for
banda with 81 or more members.
Wahama received the higheat number
of poirtts ever awarded the band in
competition. One judge awarded 100
points out of a possible 100, the second
judge !11, and the thir.d judge 96 points.

~Dinner,

Dance Being Planned

PT. PLEASANT - Plans for president, is urging all ina big dinner and dance are
expected to be completed at a
regular meeting of the Mason
Col!lliY Republican Women's
Organization Thursday
evening at 7:30 at Republican
Headquarters.
Margoterete
Engel,
. .

terested women to attend since
further planning will be made
for the countywide pre-election
event to be held in the National
Guard Armory on State Route
62 north of Point Pleassnt,
later this month.
.

Don Wilcox, Director of Bands, West
Virginia University.
In response to requests !rom a nwnber
of interestesd people, some. of the
comments of the judges, are reported.
One judge comme~teed, in referring
to the Wahama Band, "There may be a
better high school marching band in
West Vir~tinia. but.l haven'tseenit veilThis group has a number of strong
points, the strongest of which is its
combination of a rather special level of
skill In its Director and a bunch of hard
working troops. Whatever he has tolp
you, it's right! Keep doing it!"
Another. 1uage commented:
"Excellent Individual playing and
ensemble sound.
Woodwinds very
prominent in entrance. Well done!
Beautiful carriage and pricision. ·
Beautiful style. Band does so well, I
would · suggest a litUe more complex
·routine .. This group could do it I'm sure.
A fine job."
And the third judge commenteed:
"Bravo! First 'real' band sound
I've ' heard
today!
Great
synchronization of music and routine.
Excellent choice of material."
The judges spoke equally well of the
majorettes, commenting "Great
precision... Very impressive military
style ... Even though the majorettes are
used as a part of the band's drills, your
marching steps set you apart and look
fantastic! Great, Great show!"
The Majorette Corps members are
Vivian Woodrum, Debbie Fields, Sharon
Froendt, Pam Weaver, Holly Layne,
and Frances Wriston. Head Majorette is
Linda VanMatre. The field commander
is Chuck Wood. Announcer for the band .
· is Mr. Sam McWhorter of the English
Oeparbnent at Wahama.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs . Stephen
Finlaw, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of a son,
Matthew Todd, born on Friday,
Oct. 13, at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
nine pounds. Mr. and Mrs.
Finlaw have a daughter,
Heather, 20 months. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Middleport,
Route 1, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Finlaw, Pomeroy R.
D. ·Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Grueser of Pomeroy are greatgranct~arents .

Pillsbury

Ca.UMIMM'·

LIONS"FOR LEVY
The Pomeroy - Middleport
Lions Club has endorsed the
Meigs Local School District
operating levy which will be on
the November 7. ballot.
Members of the organization
are encouraged to work for and
vote for this levy, said D. H.
Pearch, Jr., 931 Hysell St.,
Middleport.
CONFINED AT HOME
·Mrs. Harry Houdashelt,
Middleport, has been confined
to her home for the past two
weeks with a virus.

(Continued from page 1)
diimer meeting approved all
proposed resolutions · on the
coun ty, state and national
level, and elected Don Wilson
of Albany, as delegate to the
state convention in Columbus
Nov . 15 through Nov. 18.
Named alternates were Mrs.
David Koblentz, · Pomeroy
Route 3 ,an~.Harold G. Roush
of Portiano.
Trustees Elected
Elected to serve three year
terms .as trustees on the Farm
Bureau Board were William
Carr, Coolville Route I, from
the Olive, Orange and Chester
Townships District~ Wayne
Roush, Racine Route 1, from
Lhe Lebanon, Letart and Sutton
Townships District;' R. B.
Burdette, Pomeroy for the
Bedford, Scipio and Salisbury
Townships District and Oris
Roush, Langsville, from the
Rutland, Salem and Columbia
Townships District.
Following the dinner served
by the Chester PTA, Henry
Frank, board president, gave
the welcome. Rex Shenefield
spoke on Stale Issue 2 and gave
the nominating committee
report. Roy Miller presented
the resolutions and Virgil King
spoke on the Meigs Local
School District tax levy to be
voted on Nov. 7.
Sen. Oakley Collins gave a
legislative. report and state
trustee reports were by Mrs.
Monroe Strickler of Gambier

1lu".W11

IOQ::,·.74c

Resolutions approved were

!County) that:
Laws be amended to better

(Goo~

enable law enforcemen1 .offi cers to safe ly carry out their

With
This
Coupon
Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.)

Fresh,
Whole
Picnics

duties and court procedures be

revised to expedite the handli ng of the case load.
Sewage and pollution laws be

better controll ed.
Meigs County roads be
improved on a more permanent basis.

,'

The Fair Board gets help to
maintain
restroom facilities at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds .
Consideration and support be
tven to construction of a.

F~ii~~~5u~~s'hforMe~~~ c~~nt~

EDMUNDGRUESERofWhittier,Calif.,left,receiveda
3li year membership award at the annual Farm Bureau
meeting Tuesday night In Chester. Presenting the award is
Jack Carsey, Pomeroy, Meigs County Farm Btireau

Communitv Center .

manager.

All able bodied recipients of

welfare be required to work at
some designated job.

The seriouSness of the drug
situation in Meigs County be
fully realized and appropriate
action be taken.
Vocational Agriculture
Programs be refa ined and
promoted in all of the high
schools in the county.
. State Level
We stnve for ~ore research
to market da~ry produ~ts

and Route 7 By -pass.
. The state and federal
governments encourage and
mak'e avai lable the training of
more doctors.
We propose a countywide tax
base for schools with revenue
distributed to each school
district in the county on a per
pupil basis.
.
We support the enactment of

mination date be Labor Day.
We cont inue to support
legislation to control dairy and
beef import so that these
products do not necessarily
push down our domestic
markets.
All substitutes In beef and
pork products be it~mized in a
strict labeling act.
An imm~diate study be made

Decorated or Regular

Se.ot£ ·To...efa.,
~2-ro~ $100
~ pkgs.

i:
;1

.-;

-~+
·~

through

1:
a State Severance Tax in Oh io to set standards, regulations, ']'

It be mandatory . that _all
telephone compan_1es g1ve
ex~ended area servtce to all
adJacent exchanges.
Stale. laws . go~erning
restofat10n ~f stnp mme land
be more stnngently ~nforced .

the county at orig in.
We encourage legislation
before the. Ohio General
Assembly
which
would
guarantee that voluntary
agr icultural
accredited
marketing and bargaining

Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. ~~~=;:::

more attract,ve
new consumer Q~ extracted natura l resqurces .;t,rlctJawsrP." ,q)f!Stf.u dion ,and ~
products.
· ..
· · ' · v;oth the revenueo return~ct ,to · operMIOr\ 'lli'UII'I'a ~lg~ ~bltaQ'e .

packagmg and

transmission lin'e!i..
.
Any able bodied recipient of
we,lfare be required to work at
some designated job.
·
·
-------------

The state exped!le con . associations have the right to
slruclton of Route 33 to Athens meet with handlers of specific

Any able bodied recipient
welfare be required to work at
some designated job.
An immediate study be made
to set slandards, regulations.
and laws ori construction and
operation of ultra high voltage
transmission tines .
National
The cash basis of farm in·
criticized proposed water dis- come
reporting for income tax
charge standards and the per- be retained.
The starting date tor
centage of certain chemicals
ngs time be
which would be allowed in daylight
Memorial
and the tertreated water.
He said a requirement that
manganese not exceed five
milligrams per liter and water
acidity be limited to 9.0 "are at
odds with one another."
Lombardo said studies have
shown the·water acidity level
must' bt! above 9.4 to result In
"significant manganese reduc·

Confusion Cited
In· Mining Rules

COLUMBUS (UPI)-A
spokesman for an enviro.nmentaiist group said
Tuesday propased strip mine
regulations are so vague and
confusing they ' 1ull the strip
mlnere Into ·believing he can
reclaim land without paying
the necessary cost."
''The most disturbing part of
the regulations, however, is
that they don't go far enough in
'1'couraging citizen participalion in enforcement of strip
mlnfug la~tS," said RiChard.J . ..tion ."
Garrett of Barnesville, repre- · Phillip Burger of Bradford
senting Citizens Organized to Woods, Pa., a consultant
Protect the' Environment representing several strip
(COPE).
mining
companies
in
The third day of the hearings southeastern Ohio, challenged
by the state Natural Resources a regulation prohibiting
Deparbnent was scheduled to- blasting within 300 feet of
day.
·
buildings and houses.
"Distance alone is not an in·
Garrett recommended that
In some cases the identity of a dication of the hazard if the
~rson reporting a strip mining blasting Is COO trolled," Burger
violation be protected and oth· said, contending explosives
er steps be taken to encourage can safely be detonated within
Citizens to assist in .enforce- 100 feet of structures.
ment.
He said this rule would not
Coal companyc represen-. affect most stripping operatatives also found fault with the lions, but could be extended to
rules, being written by the quarrying and·construction Jn,
Division of Forestry and dustrles where it would handi·
Reclamation as require4 In a cap operations.
tough strip mine law passed by
"Most. sewage construction
the Ohio General Assembly. (rojects would severely be reJerry Lombardo, consultant stricted and many highway
to the ConsoUdaUon Coal Co., construction projects," he ·
said.

'

OOOBER

1 .~5,:
I :i

ARE DOWN

I ·:.
1 ~·
1•
1

· To Earll!. Compare!

1 ·,

s.lb.

J

.

1

,:_. 1

1

1

22·•L

il
'Ili

u
~'

.

~

btl• . ~

Pineapples

I

l·lb.'
bskt.

All Varieties-Betty Crocker

'

H......w.ge.'ll H~

'

7oOL
pkgL

. 'i

,

Coupon

(G04'd Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.)

·'

VACUUM PAC:KED

Folger's Coffee
SHRIMP,

Told Ceual
.

\

loOL
pkg..

2 9"

This
.,. With
Coupon

(Good Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols.

SINGER SAlES&amp; SERVICE
McCALLS SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

992-2284
Pomeroy,O.

S~LMON,

1-lb.

•

I

1

Puss 'n IDols rC:D

SLICED, CRUSHED OR CHUNK

95 Dole Pineapple

I

I

I

I

FLAVORS

15:!:•17~ Hi·C Drinks

I

I

ean

~

~LL

TUNA

I

MORTON FROZEN

AU VARIETIES

LiHie Friskies :JD •

I

000 FOOD

~~ 95~ Bread Dough • • •
$299 INSTANT COFFEE
bar
Taster's Choice
•
LIGHT CHUNK
lO.Ib,$199
Starkist Tuna

Can·ned Spam

25-lb.

Friskies Dinners

1

I

I

OCEAN FISH

Friskiu Cat Food

1

bag

.

I

CHICKEN NOODLE

Carnation Slender •
NABISCO
Fig Newtons ·

Lipton Cup·a·Saup

~~42C: Folger's Coffee
VAC:UUM PACKED

1

I

•

l·lb.

pkf,

~79~ Decaf Coffee

49~

..... $269
3-lb.

I

INSTANT

I

59~

I

.~~~·51r Imperial Margarine •

KEEBLER

Zesta Saltines •
WAREHOUSE PRICED! CALGON
Water Conditio"er

Cll

so"

I

I

12oOL

I

INSTANT

I

"WHAT'S YOUR HANG-UP?"

..... $J01
I

I

1

jor

.

'·

SPECIAL SERVICE.

50¢1

DATE &amp; TIME: OCT. 20th, 8:00 o'clock
PLACE: MIDilEPORT UNITED PENTEOOSiAL atURaf

.'

H
,

Several Churches Will Be Represented At this Service.
.
Pastor, William Knittel

----

39'

(Good Thru Sat. Oct, 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Diy.)

2 a ·gc·~~1:

'

S. 3rcl Ave., Middleport
·
Speaker: REV. &amp; MRS. J. C. COLE
.Parkersburg, W.-Va.

'

I

·• eft,

'eoupon •

'

DRUGS- POLITICS · "LCOHOL- SEX. FEAR
DISAPPOINl"MENTS · WA,.R -"FRIJSTRATION
, HATE-BOREDOM-SELF-S~OKING .··

•

I

9 c v~~:

General Mills

llS W. Second

bW&gt;eh

PUERTO RICAN

'

The Fabric Shop

lorp

I

Joyli.cfw.£

41

Up to 5.95 Values

ggc

• • •

I

Detergent

;f

POLYESTER
KNITS

Broccoli

3 3t
IC:
lb.
bag

•

I

\"'f.. ·

13'

-~ 1

-Large Table .

'· I

I

I

8Qc:

-.

11
.).
I
J
" - - - - - - - - - - - - ...,,

EVENT!

'

FRESH CALIFORNIA

With This
4•0L
, Coupon
box
·
(Good Thru Sat. Oct. 21st At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.)

Main &amp; Sycamore :

FABRIC

I

I

Gaht,1)~aef,

1:1

OUR PRICES

lOLA'S

King Size

1 ".:

BUT

15-lb,

1

,
;:
;,
~.•
~:

1 ~:-:..'1

WE MAY LOOK
EX PENS 1VE

NEW CROP FLORIDA

Grape
. fruJ't , WHITE
SEEDLESS
CRISPY JONATHON
Apples •

·

\

• • ••• lb.

For Fast Relief

farm commodities .

· BARNE'IT ENLISTS
Wayne Virgil Barnett, 18, son
oi Mr: and'Mrs. Alvin Barnett,.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, has enlisted in
the Navy's 'occupational
Specialty School Guarantee ·
I~J&gt;i.O•l!tam which 'guarantees an
enllistrrtent in one of 2il oi:cupatlonal specialfies. He ls a ·
1972 gradUiite of Meigs High
School.

lb.

(i~

With Back
&amp; Giblets

and Golden Canaday of
Gallipolis. Invocation was by
Joe Sayre.
The TWletimers entertained
several times during the
meeting with old and modem
instrumental and vocal
nwnbers.

••, • • •

. I

Four Trustees

At ,Tri-State Festival
The judging was divided into three
categories:
1. Musical effect, including quality
and control of tone, style,
interpretation and dyriamics ... 50 ,
points.
.
2. Visual effect, including alignment,
precision, posture and general
appearance .... 30 points.
3.
General effect, including
originality and choice of material...20
points.
Winninl( bands. Usted according to
class are:
CLASS C. BANDS- 1st, Mann
Hillbillies; 2nd, George, Washington
Patriots; 3rd~ Pt. Pleasant 'Black
Knights.
MAJORETTES-1st, George
Washington; 2nd Hamlin H. S.; 3rd, Pt.
Pleasant.
CLASS B. BANDS-1st, Wahama
White Falcons; 2nd, Barboursville
Invlncibles; 3rd, Herbert Hoover
Huskies.
MAJORETTES-Is!, Wahama; 2nd
Barboursville; 3rd, Dawson-Bryant.
CLASS. A. BANDS-1st, Parkersburg
Big Red; 2nd, SLogan Wildcat; 3rd,
Ripley Vikings.
MAJORETTES-lsi, Ravenswood,
2nd, Logan; 3rd, Ripley.
HONOR BAND-Wahama High
School White Falcon Band
·
At the conclusion of the awards
presentation, the directors of the Band,
Mr. ~raid Simmons ·and Mr. Charles
Yeago, were hoisted to tile shoulders of
the jubilant young musicians and
carried off the 'field.
The judges for the Festival were: Mr.
· Richard Jacoby, Kent'State University,
Director of Bands; Mr. Clint Foster,
,Supervisor of Music, Warren, Ohio; Mr.

Full Cpt
Bone In

Co-Op Dines, Elects

Waflama Wins Top Honors
The li:aditional gaily-painted bus signs
reflecting the spirit and pride of tile
Wahama White Falcon Band, again
predicted the outcome of their most
recent competltlon, the Tri-State
Marching Band Festival In Fairfield
Stadimn October 14, sponsored by
Marshall University Music Department.
The lead bus sign proclaimed "We
have only just begun to win" which
proved to be true, as they carried home
First Place In their'Clasa, first place In
Majorette Competition, and topped it off
witll capturing the Honor Band trophy
which Is presenleld to · the over-all
winning band at the Festival.
,
· The Wahama Band, competing in
· Clai!ll B, pre&amp;ented a nearly perfect
perfonnance that thrilled tile audience
witll its precision and musicianship.
Signs tacked to the maple trees llnlng
the driv.Way ·to· Wahilma adrnoliishing
early arivals of the band on Saturday
morning to "look sharp" ... "pick up your
feet" ... and "toe to yard line" were
evidentl:y heeded by ~members, as the ,
band turned in a breathtaking
performance.
Class B was open to band s whose
membership ranged from 56 to 80
members, and included such high
schools as Rock Hill and Kyger Creek
from Ohio; Williamson, Herbert
Hoover, Huntington High, ·and
Barboursvllle, West Virginia high

t

DON WILSON, Albany, .
was elected delegate to the
state convention, Nov. 15-18,
· In Columbus at the annual
THESE i972 NEW MEMBERS of the Meigs County Farm Bureau receiv~d pins at the
meeting of Meigs County
annual meeting held Tuesday nlgqt. They are from the left Willis Anthony, Middleport; Mr.
Farm Bureau In Chesler " and Mrs. James Kunath, Langsville Route I, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold White, Pomeroy Route
· Tuesday night.
2.

, II

'I

With This Coupon
On 5·1b, box

...~

~~~~
'

�I

'

,

. '•
'

"

WANT ADS

·

~
. INP'QRio\AtiQ~
.
\
·'
,
Dt!ADt.INES
.
.!: J P.M . Day 8t:fpre Pllblicatlo~
~
Monday Ptadllne 9 e.m.
'Clnt;:elfatlon- Corrections
: .WIIIbeaceapted un(ll9a .m. for .
...
Day of PtJblrcatlon
'
REGULATIONS
~ t'he'.toPublisher
reserves
the
righ
edit 0,. reject
any ads
1
dttmed
objectional . . The .
PUblisher will not_be responsible.
for more than one incorrect
insertion.
,.
' RATES
tFor Wan~ Ad Service
5 ·cants per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
"-:'1'--c-~ ·-lJ--:"cents----pe,........,.ord....,..three:tonsecutlve lnsert itirfs .
ll,, cents pe-r'wo1d six c.on ·
·ucutlve Insertions.
. 25 Per C~nt Dlscounl on paid
.JdS and ads paid within 10 days.
CA:Do~rTJ~:~KS
Sl.$0 tor 50 word minimum .
Each addltiona1 word 2c.
BLIND ADS
. Additional 2sc charge · per
Advertisement. ·
·
OFFICE H0\1111,.'
. ot8~30 a.m, 19 S:OOlf&gt; .m. Daily,
8 : JO a .m. to 1;~:00 Noon
Saturday.

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS ~CURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION

Michael J. Fry, '
Co-Executor of the

Estate of Harrie Marie

Smith, Deceased, et at:,
Plaintiffs

vs. '

@)

r----.-,---~,;_, ·.

1971 BUICK

Defendants

-

'~HEll"

52849

Mo
'"meroy
tor
V

Hot Water. Heaters
Plumbing ·
Electrica.l Work

··ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992 - ~448

Pomeroy, 0 .

OPEM EVES. 8:00 I' .M .
1'!*EI!OY, OHIO

NOTICE
SOMEONE has been shooting
BB's al the flower pots at the
Greenwood Cemetery; and if
they should get caught, they
will be pu~ished to the fulles t
extent of the law .
Mrs . Oretha Snider &amp;family
10·1/ .Jtc

-----

1 'Un~nown

YARD &amp; good used clothi ng sale
at Chesler Methodist Church,
October 201h and 21st from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m.
10·11·3tc

ahy, wi ll take notice that on the

Found

MEIGS County Fish &amp; Game
Association, Thursday, Qc . HAYMAN' S Audion - a good
Iober 19, 7: 30 p.m ..~ members
place to QO each Friday
the Estate of Harrre ·M8rie
only , Syracuse Club Rooms.
eve.ning , 7 p.m. at Laurel
Smith, deceased, flied their
10·11·31c
Cl iff on old Rt. 7. 1 mile west
plaint in the Probate Court
of Rock Springs Fairground.
elgs County, Ohio, alleging
it appeared that the CARPORT Sale. clothing, jars,
10-IO·IfC
electric motors, electric
naming of Mildred Flower in
the Will of the said Harrle Mar ie sweeper, toys and household ANYONE having any in Sm lfh appeared to be an error
odds and ends too numerous
formation of the poisoning of
and if appeared that Mildred
to mention ; Russ Little
a dog at 113 Ebenezer Street,
Fowler is the true beneficiary of
East
of
Rutland
on
residence,
poison was thrown on porch,
said Will. The complaint also
Route 124, Friday and
please contact Ernest "Rink "
alleges other mat-lers in ap.
Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21. 10
Davidson . Violators will be
parent need of ctar lficatton . The
a.m.
·
prayer of the comp]aint is thai
prosecuted. ,
the Will t}e clarified to de:ctare
10-.18·31c
. 10·15-6tp
that the name · of Mildred
.Flower be declared an error GARAGE Sale, Oct. 21 and 22,
and that Mildred Fowler be
463 Grant St., Middleport ;
declar,d the true beneficiary
dishes, furniture , clothing ,
herein . Tt\e prayer also
requested further clarification antiques and misc. items.
in said Will.
10"18·31p ~-------------The said defendant is
required to answer on or before GUN Shoot, also rifle matches,
I
the 30th d~:~y of November, 1972. open sites only, Forked Run I
Francis Biron
Sportsman Club, Sunday, Oct.
bring you
Michael J, Fry
22, 12 noon .
Co -Executors
10-18-3tc 1
extra cash
I
By HamHn C. King,
Altorney, -at -Ll!lw
- -- - - - I
I
of the f rm ot
PIANO Tuning, Lane Dani~ls, I
f 0r
I
B'nnett &amp; King
Oclober 28th thru December
I
21 Locust Street
15th, 259 Broadway, Mid· 1 shopping sprees
I
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
1
dlport ; phone 992-2082.
1
26th day of September, 1972, the
undersigned, Francis Siron and
·Michael J . Fry, Co -Executors of.

•

ON POMEROY Bend Bridge on.
I
Wesl Virg inia side on !he
NOTICE
walkway, a pc~ir of men' s
preScription glasses with wire
GOSPEL Meeting, October 16·
frames ; phone 992-2756.
25; 7: 30p.m . each evening ;
10·11·31c
Evangeli st, . Bob Kessinger.
Church of Chr ist, Miller 51.,
Ma son, W. Va . Vis itors
Wanted To Buy
welcom e.
10-15-51p
WANTED - Old upright
pianos, grand pianos, old
KOSCOT KOSMETICS (MINK
pump
organs . Any condition .
OIL BASE) . We have many
Paying $10 each . Write giving
new products since the for .
directions. Witten Piano Ca ••
mation of this Company: Also
Box 188, Sard is, Ohio 43946.
several new ones this month
I
10·1J.61p
plu s monthly specials. All
these i.n addition t.o the
or iginals. Ladies, we would OLD Furniture, oak tables.
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
lik e very much for you to try
beds, or complete households.
these cosmetics and to serve
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
you. Phone Helen Jane, 992·
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271.
511 3,
6·28·1fc
10·1·1fc

Bring Your Unhulled

WALNUTS
TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER

- - ----

: Classified Ads . I

l

I

. . ' •.. , '' ~0 .·16_~-t.. t c..."' ~ ..~':,- - - . - - - - - -.-t- 191 'l7 no1 4, 11 •. ia, 25 111 1 1. 61 -~~~ff~·~!-~1·

-

azon Greatest
And Purest ·River

Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

$

Per Hundred
Pounds
After they
are Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1.972 .

Excelsior
Salt Works, Inc.
P.O. Box 267
992·3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

Help Wanted

1971 DODGE Charger. power
steering ; gold with black
vi nyl lop ; phone 949-5424.
10·18·61c
POTATOES, .50 lbs. No. 1, $2. 19,
B size , $1.39, un classified
$179, 20 lbs. 85c; apples $2 per
bushel and up, 9 varieties ;
cabbage 7c a lb .; prices good
through Sunday . Midway
Market, W. Ma in St ..
Pomeroy, phone 992·2582.
I0-18-3tc

·Business·
. Services
.

~=::;;======::::-~=====;====:--.::=========~
eROOFING
fARnt MOVING
If I HAVE
To Go
eHEA TING
Oazer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, l1~d~
Take Me To
•PLUMBING
5caping; We have 2 s•ze
ctours. 2 size loaders. Work
THE SHOP
•CARPENTR Y
done by hOur -or . contract.
-··p(it,iN1TE RIDGE ROAD
·
Free E~timates. We also
•
ROY, .O.
··SPOUTING
haul
fill dirt, lop 50!1. Dump
"Custom Meat
trucks and lo!N·bOY ~or hire.
Quick and Courteous Service
•PAINTING
DALE
. DICK
See ilob or Ro9er JeHen,
For_ Free Estimate
PHONE 99n550

992-2094
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to y_our
project. Fast and eaSy. Free
est imates . Phone 992 -3284 .
Goe.glein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30-tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4182, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator .
5·12.tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
·-=-=-=...,...:...,..,..,._ __ 5·1-ttc

SEE US FOR : Awn ings, storm
door s and windows, carports,
m'arquees, aluminum sfding
and ra iling . A. _Jacob, sales
representative. , For tree
estimates , phone Charles
li sle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3-2-tfc

.

AOVEJ:mSING.

SMIDt_ N~LSON ·
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2174

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
*5.55 .
On Most American Cars

Monday thru Saturday
Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

606 E.

DIDN'T KN:JW
YDU WERE
. ·6U5YI

CDME RIGHT IN 1
13EB51E. YOU'RE
1HE REASON WE
AI?E BUSY!

,

HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
985·3529.
6-11 -lfc
PIIRHAPS 'IOU
COULD, DORIC.,

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

------

service; top soil , fill
1972 Clearance Sale ching
dirt , limestone ; B&amp;K Ex.
cavafing . · Phone 992-5367,
Save 15-20%
Dick Karr, Jr .
9-1-lfc
on 1972 models
Real Estate For Sale
9 New tractors
I·
List Sate

ME1WINNIE, l

BUYER CAME
IN AND PlACED
AN ORDER!

Open 8 Tll5

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic 1tanks installed. George
!Bill I Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
4-25-tfc

-DOZER
- -- and back hoe work,

OH ,EXCUBE 1

ANOTHER

Pomeroy,Home &amp;Auto

Real Estate For Sale

PUL.L.. OVER T'
CURB FER A
MINUTE,
P"TUNIAI

WINNIE

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

I

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

ponds and septic tanks, dit-

MONEY · SAVER

9USINES6 W/&gt;G SLOW
I'D 'Tl?i

·so I~

.,.YOU WILL BE:
REQUIRED TO TAKE
A C&lt;:)LD SHOWE~J

From the largest Troork
Bulldozer Radiator
Small~st Heater Core.
Nath••' Biggs
Radiator Specialist

FURNITURE

-~-,--~--

PANTS &amp; JEANS

-·

POMEROY
.HOME &amp; AUTO

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284 ..
The · Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
GENTLE riding horse and
Service. We Sharpen Sclssors.
pony, ca ll after 6 p.m. 9923·29-tfc
5224,
10·16-Jtc AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
,Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6.15-llc

GRAVELY
TRACTORS

.

Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. · or phOne 992·
5232.

\

..... . ......
1~·•;•," • '&gt;

_

TAKI! HIM/
INSIDE _,
,.,.., .,.
~.··

GASOLINE ALLEY

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ollio 45769
NICE ONE:S
ROOMS - llf2 baths,
flreP,lacEt;, In, .,. large liyLng~
Nice dining with sliding
glass doors. Modern kitchen
has stove and refrigerator.
Gas forced air fur,,ace.
Garage.

6

r

6 ROOMS - 1112 baths, all
electric. Beautiful kitchen
and dining area . Large
living, utility, 2 garages In
the country. Carpet except
the utility room .

REAL BARGAINS
WANTED, r iver de ckhands,
Buy 2 Pairs5
ROOMS
- 2 bedrooms,
call only . M &amp; G Transport
were found . to have " a leached the soil of readily
By JOSEPH L. MYLER
~ath,
basement, front
nice
! PAIR FREE
Serv ices, In c., 446-1014,
CLELAND
1 Super ·c.s
718. 610.
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The chemical purity· nearly soluble minerals that affect the
lot In back .
porch.
Large
Gallipolis, Ohio.
l Super C-1
647.
550.
equivalen\
to
that
of
distilled
chemical
pilrity
of
a
river,"
Asking
$5,500.00.
Amazon Is by far the greatest
10-12-6tc All kinds , all sizes tor men,
REALTY
I Custom C-8
618. 525.
according to the Geological
·NEW 5 ROOMS - Nice
river on earth . .It drains 2.3 water."
women, young men, boys
2 Custom C·l
547. · 465.
608
E.
Main
,c·
kitchen with stove and
How can this be the case in Survey.
and girls. Hurry lo ...
mUilon ~~quare miles of land,
I Model C-lO·A 867. 737.
For
Rent
refrigerator. Gas forced air
The soil in the Amazon basin,
I Model C·12
including the WO&lt;'Id's la~gest view. of the fact that the
932.
793.
furnace.
Lots of closets, and
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
2 Demonstrators
1.27 ACRE
rain forest. Ita drainage basin Amazon is 3,900 miles·long and the Survey said, has been so
POMEROY
unfurnished apartments . ... _
cupboard space. Carpet and
1 Super C-1
647. 518.
llflijf Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
REAL COUNTRY LIVING
Is nearly three-quarters the is fed by more than 200 thoroughly leached of mineral
Phone 992.5434.
panel in g. Only $16,000.00
Phone 992-2181
I Model 430
1266. 1013.
. CLOSE IN - .7 rooms , bath,
4-12-tfc
with
2 !ots.
size of the United StaleS before tributaries, some of which are content "that it is not suf·
'---:------___J
utility
room
,
basement,
lnore than 1,000 miles in ficiently fertile for most
Alaska and HawaU.
3 ROOM house and bath, fur· 19M STARCRAFT Tent Trailer,
natural gas forced air fur·
agricultural cr,0ps." Only
sleeps 8; double dinette,
WORTH THE MON~Y
Nevertheless, ac~rdlng to ~ length?
~ ! shed ; also tra iler ; adults
nace ,
garage,
other
stove, sr_pk and ice box ; also
GAS
FURNACE 3
Rain Leached Soil
along the flood plains is the Soil
Pomeroy~ Ohio
only: phone 992-5592.
recent report by the U.S.
buildings. $8,000.00.
Sears 12 fl. Johnboat,
bedrooms,
bath,
large
Phone
992-2975
living
10-17-tfc
One
reason
is
that
for
a
rich
enough
for
agricultural
JUST RENOVATED
Geological Survey, its waters
aluminum, $60; phone 367with ,fireptaco: Otnlng room,
·OVER" 1;ooo ~sq. ft . living
are purer than "most of the tap period of perhaps-tll!IIIOII~ 01 --· development.~ · -·-··- ····- 20R3 BEDROOM mobile home . 7530.
full
basement and garage
area here. 1 story, 5 rooms,
10·1Htc
This has been proved by illin Mason . Call Point Pleasant
water in the United States." years heavy rainfall - now
room
for 3 cars. A
bath, nice kitchen, L.R. 26
Real Estate For Sale
675-1684.
In some places accor.dlng to around 50 to 12Q Inches a year- fated attempts in times past to
magnificent
home. $21,000.
ADMIRAL
TV,
black
and
white,
ft., 2 car carport, ALL NEW
IO·IJ.6tc
ROOMS &amp; bath, 3 acres of
30
ACRES
4 bedrooms,
,
the SUrvey, Amazon samples has " almost completely carve fanns out of the rain
call 1·985 ·3901 , Gertrude 4 land,
CARPETING
two -thirds basement,
Warner
.
·
1
bath,
gas
well
with
free gas
forest by clearing the land of TWO
turnished
rooms ,
THROUGHOUT.
building 20' x 40', plus barn,
10-12-6tp
.
oil.
Some
bottom
land.
and
its age~ld tree cover. The
available now , 413 Spring
jacated in Long Bottom, city
I BEAUT I F U L) - -JUST
Only
$15,000.00.
Ave.;
phone
992·3429.
$12;500.00.
forests were luxuriant, so why
BSA 6.50, chopper, coffin tank , · water, partially remodeled :
10·8-12tp
phone
985·3529.
LEVEL LOTIOOx13~
wouldn't the land be, once the
springer custom pa int,
10·17·3fp
l
lf2
story
frame, 2 bedrooms.
Harley
Davidson
rear
end,
WE HAVE SEVERAL NICE;
trees were got out of the way?
(carpeted) bath, dining,
$1
,400
or
less.
Phone
992-5663.
HOUSES BUT FINANCING
It turned out that the ripe. Mobile Homes For Sale
10·12-61p 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
porches, gas F. F., utility,
IS
A PROBLEM. SEE
large Jot, natural gas, built-in
growth of the richly watered CASH paid tor all makes and
storm doors and windows.
ABOUT
IT THEN SEE US.
cabinets in kitchen . Close to
models of mobile homes. 1971 KAWASAK I 100, excellent
rain forests was sustained
THIS YOU MUS'~' SEE,
WE'LL
HELP
YOU FIND A
in
.
Bradbury
.
radio
station
co ndition , '""r eady to go .
Phone area code 614-423:953) .
JUST 58,500.00.
largely by their 0wn acHOME
bF
YOUR
OWN.
Phone
992-2602.
Sacrifice for only $260. Phone
4·13-tfc
BEAtJ.TtFUL
·HOME
cumulated humus, a resource
10·13·12tp
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
Coolville 661·6214.
I story frame, 3 large B. R.,
ASSOCIATIO
that vanished when the trees TWO bedroom mobile home, in
10·5· t2tc
large
closets,
beautiful
bath,
.IDEAL
5-ACRE
RANCH.
Lake
$1
;600
.
PHONE
t92-ll25
good
conditi
on,
Sam Grissom of ComSidney W. Copeland of went down. The cleared land
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
level lot out of floods 100x120.
Zuspan's
Trail
e
r
Court
,
monwealth Management Inc., ·commonwealth Management was baljed by the sun Into
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
Velma G. Zuspan , Mason , W.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Kitchen has bulll·in range,
St. Paul, Minn., announced has been employed as an inn· laterite, a mineral as hard as
for 119 mos . Vacation
Pomeroy . Phone 992·389.1.
Va .
double oven, ref. and
4·12.tfc
Petradise . Free Brochure.
10·12·1llp
today Oct. 28, has been set as keeper.
concrete and as inhospitable to
freezer, loads of upper and
Ranchos
Lake Conchas : Box
base cabinets, D. R. carthe new date for the opening of
Copeland reported today thai life.
JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
2001 DD, Alameda. Calllornia
peted, patio, electric heat.
the Holiday Inn of Gallipolis. the entire slaff has been em· Source of Wealth
- sewing Machine. Will sell for
94501.
MANY
OTHER FEATURES
;
Air
Conditioners
small balance . of $36.21 or
10·3·30tp
The 100 unit inn located at 4SC pioyed. There will be 6C full and · Nevertheless, the Amazon is ·
$23,000.00.
payments
may
be
arranged.
•Awnings ·
Pike St., Kanauga, was parllime employees . AP· a fascinating river and its
Phone 992-5331.
·
RACINE - 10 room house,
' · ·Underpinning
originally slated to open on plications are still being ac· basin a potentially rich 'source
9-7-ttc
bath, basement, garage, two WE HAVE NEW LISTINGS
lots. Pho~e 949-4313.
Oct. lf. Grisson.said he doesn'.t cepted for future use.
of wealth If properly exploited.
EACH WEEK, ~ALL US
· MAKE YOU
. complete mobile home:
4·5·1fp FOR YOUR NEE OS IN
an~clpale any further delays.
years
U.S. ·service ~ plus gigantic . 8 TRACK , STEREO, freight
For
some
damaged , In beautiful walndt
- :&amp;
:""cb-a-::th- w""
llh or REAL ES·TATE.
Women, Pat Holier 196.
Geological Survey. scientists · 'display of mobile homes .
console. Will sell for S101.50or 7 ROOM·-:h-o-use
with out furniture , pa'neled &gt; HENR~· E. CLELAND
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Second High Ind . Game have been working with their •lways available at .. .
pay St. SOper week . Phone 992·
REALTOR
and carpeting ; phone 7425331.
Wedne•day Late
Roy Holter 190; Women, Betty · Brazilian counterparts to
t92-225t
Mixed League
Fullz 160; third, Russ Moore
3875.
9-7-ttc
MIL.LER
Oct. 11, 1'72
180; Virginia Hoyt 155.
· measure the river's stupen.
IQ·11-6tp If no answer t92·2568
Standings
High Series - Roy Holter dous flow.
·
·. MOBILE HOMES • · POODLE puppies.· Silver . Toy, ·Yes, we pay "1D percent ln.
Tum·
Pto. 503 ; Pat Hotter 425.
The mo!!t recent measure·
Parkvtew
Kennels,
Phone
992;::---.:,_-------~~---::-:-::--::-•
mo Washington BIYd.
1 tirell on oil deposits ond ,.,
5443,
Bil
Clplc)ty
29
Second High Series -, Men, ment, conducted by Survey : 423-7521
Bl•kostee-Hoyt
BELPRE;, 0.
Holler-Rawlings
27 Dan Mea.dows 497 ; Women,
8·15·.1fc
. M1yt11
~t-Morrow
26 Virginia Hoyt 422 ; third ,. Russ hrdrologist George F. Smoot, ' - ' - - - - - - - - -~...! - - - - - - - - Autom1tlc1
APPLES, Fitzpatrlc~ Or.
2 spttd operation .
Rosenbaum-Meadows
24 Moore 48.1; Joy Bentley 397.
dlsclo·sed that at Obldos,
chards~ State Route 689,
Chofce: of water .
CaiHII·Carsey
20
Teem HIQtl Game ~ Fultz. Brazil, 'the Amazon was For Sale
Fullz·Benlley
18 Beottey.
.
. '
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
temps. · Auto . ,.
ANTIQUE pump organ, all
'3Qtf
wat·e r . ·tevel
High · lndhtl dual . Game . Team High Scores - Fultz· transporting water I!J the rate
original e.xcept new "bellows ..
,
.
·
c
controL
Lint
On 5 \lr. Dtpotlts
·of four billion gallons per
Mtn, Ber.~ard ,..f. ultz 193; ~nttey.
Over . 80 years old. Made by
~~--~--~~------~,;_~----------~ minu~.
··
~:~~rv ~~~t~~.~y.-er
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co.,
--:-~"'":'-~"k.
Worcester,
,
Mass.
One
·bellows
Permi ~Pren
The Amazon's average flow,
Large ~ bedroom home, new bath upstairs,
type. Phone l92·3904.
Moy111
according to Smoot,' is more
AT
HIIOofHtlt '
10-13-tf
very large living room, log burning fireplace,
than four times that of the
Dryers
large entrance hall, dining room, · newly
Surround' clothes
Congo, the wodd's second Auto Sales
with ·gentle, even
r~odeled kitchen, 112 bath, with shower
largest river, and.· about 10
heat
. No hot spots,
downstairs, large ' corner lot, located at 285 ·
"' ovtrdrying, ·
tlme8 that of the Mtssiulppt, . 1942 JEEP, . fu/1 cab; ~ood
South Third Street, Middleport , Ohio . • the largest river In the United condition, 4 wheel dnve ;
Fine Mesh Lin~
Filter.
phone·992-6383.
Financing available. Priceq right to sell fast.
states
.
.
We SptCIIRIIIn
10·
17-6tp
..
11
MAYTAG
The ~azon 's flow.," Smoot
said, "accoWits for about · 15 1971 VOLKSWAGEN, super
beetle, cheap, 24,000 miles, A·
per cent of all the fre&amp;~ water
~I Estate Broker
ttl N. Se CeiMI
1 1 cpndlllon; phone 992-6222
dlacharged
into
the
oceans
by
·after 5 p.m•.ltll 7 p.m.
.
,,.
Phone
fiMllhfter
4
P.M,
Millllllll«t~ONo
,.
. ' 10-17-5tp· ._
741-4211
r Arnold Grate
Rutland
all the rivers of the .world." · · . ' ,
.,._,....._;.....__;
. --~

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
'

THE VAPCRS FRoM THE ROOT
Of' THE IK'CURSED M~NDRA~O~A
B~QW

... ~

~,, ,,,

~
ACROSS
1. Secrete
6. Principal
10. Blanched

...OICJ(-TRACY •..
ONE
SIDE,

BUT ,MRS, 1'111AR/1 t&lt;HOWS
AMP 5Hf TELL5 .!If l'M
100 lOING 10 ASK ,..-:.,.._

QUE5TION5!

10%

12%

care of
· (2wds. J

I 1'HILE
16. Weep
27, Storage
18, Gaelic
box
John
28, Sea vessel
19. Building
30. Gaggle's
extension
member
22. Telegraph 31, Record in
a ledger
23. Fluttered,
33. QultUlfg
.as
an •
time
eyelash
.36. Dove's
24. Served
sound
25. Motor
37. Kimono
truck
sash

ZIPER

[j

tJ

ll
Yellerd•,••

cross

I

Now ..,..,.,. tho
... form lhe
ou,...WIIr

.........
letlen

l

,.

(A.M...,. ....,....J

Anlwer1 Tilt ./ft'd pttrl if mrher llettpy, b"t tile U!ltole
t'an be lifted tf,.iJy-whl .Miln#ylA ''JANI(o.AID''

1'1\,11~

.,.

•
wotlnt: - r----.,.--'-~'--......, ,....H_OW_CAN_'(__
OU 't_A_u&lt;.,..ltl-'"t""1

~ X Y D I, B A A X R
Ia L 0 N G F B L L 0 W , .
,
·One Iotter simply stands !Qr another, In thts s ~mple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word• are aU
hints. Each day .!he eode.!etters
are dllr~rent.
·
·
.
I

Ingels Investment Co.

tJ

l•..~let• GAWKY JAIIY NUJIIA DIJINI

Anthony's

29. Anceslr)·
32. Actress
Pamela
34. John son
of
• the
Giants
Fay
French
painter
Seek
out
fncts
39. Over·
weight
tO. India's
axis
41. Cargo
ship

·===~-

I ""' ..- -... ICIIIIIXIIIJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to

·rr--.....

11

1, 11 1!

SOMEONE WHO KEEPS
$AVIN6,"AU CONTRAIRE"?

CRYPTOQUOTES

F J P lt W R D lt K M R F P·W li B J W F R L 0 PT.
L O.R KM FRP f•Jt..F~ -F GW IF .

Yomrd~Y't Cryploquole: INSANITY IS QFTEN THE LOGIC

INGELS FURNITURE ·

OP AN ACCURA'l'E MINI! OVERTAXEO.-OLIVER .WEN·
HEI~L KOLMES
I
,
.

L ON YOUR DIAL

I

Jrom
"Doctor
Zhivago"
13. Italian
. city
14. Expunge
15. Nether.
lands
commune
16, Nativity
scene
17. Pastry or
pudding
20. Relatives
21. Slippery
22. Departed
23. Funda·
mental
25. Zodiec
sign
26. Bard's
river
27. Pointed·
2tr. St.

TERRY

MONEY

__

1o e1&lt;h ~quare, to
torm rour ordlnarr .. orda,

remark

LET YOUR ·

WMP0/1390-. RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~=·'

U~~~eramble theN bar Jumblet,

one letw

French

dish
(2 wds.)
4. Barnyard
creature
5. Last ·
Spanish
queen
6, Ever
vigilant
7. lnfre·
quent
8. Pertain·
ingto
homely
philosophy ( 2
wds.)
9. Bungling
12. Taken ·

Theme''

lnn Will

George 5. Hobstetter ·Jr.

~&amp;d~;f'-1::" '-:!;:

DOWN
I. Boxed
2. In reserve
3. Fluffy

· n.· ~-

Open Oct. 28

..

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Gravely Tractor Sales

Holiday

JAMMED IIJTO A GtASS'
. OF A:lLLtiTED I4Jii\!10R.I

I

PAR SON'S New Furnilure,
Cutting'~
K;mauga , Ohio, 2 miles above
Silver Bridge is having an old
fa shioned trade. Jn week . 1-IT1LE
VAUGHN
992-3374
Trade in yoUr old for new . 99).6346
Don' t miss our 6 piece living . Lef Dick and Dale Help You
room suites for only $199 .95 . with Your Meat ' Problems.
Don' t forget we deliver free .
So shOp thi s week and save.
10·11·4lc
DRIVE ALITTLE
- SAVE A LOT!
UTILITY trail er - 4 x 8 bed, 16
inch tires ; two single and one
Kuhl's Bargain Center
Hollywood type beds, nearly
Rt. 7 "at caution light"
new; 19 inch Portable Phil co
B&amp;W T.V. wilh sland; 366
Loc usl St., Middleport, Ohio .
TUPPERS PLAINS
10·17.Jtp
Clean used furniture
ONE slighlly used Homelite
Guaranteed appliances
Chain Saw ; Pomeroy Home &amp; BIKES Huffy' 20",
Auto ; phone 992·2094.
·
Murray 10 speeds - di.scount
10·11·5rc prices.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
JO ACRES with some f-arm
Open to 7; Closed Mondays
ma chinery ; call 667.3333.
I0-17·51c ' - - - -- -----.J
WILL c ut or trim trees,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
reasonable ; also Clean out
Cleaner complete with at.
basements,
att ics and
tachmenls, cordwinder and
cella rs ; phone 949-3221.
pa int spray. Used but in like
10·4·30tc
new condition . Pay $34,45
cash or budget plan available . SEPT IC
TANKS
AROBIC
Phone 992-5641.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
10-17·.61c
CLEANED, REPAIRED .
MILLER SANITATION,
NEW 1972 Zig ·Zag Sewing
STEWART, OH 10. PHONE
Machine in original factory
662"3035 .
carton . Zig -Zag ' to make
10·4·tfc
buttonholes, sew on buttons, ~=---c--,....-=--­
monograms and make fancy O'DELL WHEEL alignment
designs with just the twist of a
localed at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
single·dial. Left in lay-away
Complete front end service,
and never been used. Wi II sell
tune up and brake servi ce.
for only $47 cash or credit Wheels
ba lanced elec·
terms avai lable. Phone 992· Ironically .
All
work
5641.
guaranteed .
'Reasonable
10·1J.6tc ra tes. Phone 742 -3232 or 992·
3213.
COME AND SEE . Have new
7-27.tfc
shipment of flowers for fall
and Christmas ; will make
flower arrangements; have For Sale
over LOOO gift items, also
iewe lr y, Avon bottles, some 2 YEAR. ,dd male German
Shepherd, gentle disposition ;
ant iques; open 9 a.m. to 6
ph
one
675·5267,
Point
p.m ., except Friday, closed
Pleasan t.
Friday; phone 985 ·3537 ;
10·15-6tp
Small ey's Gift Shop, Chester.
Ohio.
10·18.12tc CAMPER to til 'I• ton truck or
bui lt .up pickup, all self ·
contained
; $700 ; phone 992 WINTER potatoes, $5 a 100 lb. ;
7106.
phone 247.2642.
10-15-6tp
. 10-18-6tc
_,___:_

___

.....

I

THEM'S MI NE -·
I WUZ BREAKII\i'
'IOR'N IN FER 'IE

Tf.IEM THINGS AilE
PLUMB WORE OUT

our
7085.budge t term s. Call 992- r
10 15 61
'------ . . c
WA C. NUT, modern style Stereorad io. AM-F M radio, 4
spea ke r so und system, ~
s p e~d aut orriali c cha·nger.Ba tanc e S69 .Sl. Use our
• budgel lerm s. Call 992-7085.
10· 15-61c

Window,
Air Conditioners

c0.

•

BEAUTIFUL Maple stereo.
radi o· c;Ombinati on, AM·FM .
radio, 4 speed interml&gt;:.ed
change r. 4 ·$peaker sound
sysfcn• . Balance $79 .34. Use

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

engine. automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes, like
new w-w tires. It you want a show plece &amp; plenty of luxury
try this outstanding buy .
.
1971 CHEVROLJ;OT
S3095
Malibu hardtop touj:'ie, low mileage. new cal" title, san.
dalwood finish with brown vinyl roof, vinyl saddle in·
--=--' terio r;---4;-se(lson~al r conditioning , turbohydramatiC, power
steering, white-wall fir-es, rally wh. eels, front &amp; rear
gua'rds, pow.er brak,es. radio.
·
1970 CAM~RO
$l095
Hardtop coupe. local ~w mileage, l-owner car. 307
engine, -3-speed transmiss ion, power . steering. b~tket
seats, console, ~rp blue finish , ra'dio, SHARP IS THE
WORD!
·
~
- ' '
•

BIG John 's Auction , Clition,
No 20742
West Yirginia . Every ThursLEGAL NOTICE '
day
n.ghf, 7:30p.m., Buyers
Mildred Flower, whose place
of residence is unknown. if she . and Dealers welcome.
be llv fng, and if she be dead. the
10"17·31p
heirs, next of kin ,
devisees,
l e.Q atees.
legal
represer,tatlves of M ildr ·ed
Flower, deceased, and her legal
representatives and a~signs , If
any, ,
and
their
· legal
representatives and assigns, If

PoMroy .
Motor Co.

2 SICIS
·Of
QU"LIJY
A

Spor t wagon. I) eau tlf U1 cora t f"rn1s
· h w lth v 1ny 1 interior,
factory air conditioned. luggage rack , radio , 350 V-8

:-:--

sacred, Heart Church, et al..,

t#
. ."· .

I'

'

BALLS 0' FIRE!!

Get Action! Sentinel ._Classifieds Get .Results!.
For Sale ·

f

S MIUION CI*'Rii:l£:!t

•

0

rr , .

f I '·

BARNEY ·

10- The Dally Sentinel, Mtddleport.-Porneroy, Oct. 18, 1972

;

t {

•

:

f Sentinel .Classified:s

I' l I

'·

'

'

•

r. f

,

ii

I

I .

. I

''

�I

'

,

. '•
'

"

WANT ADS

·

~
. INP'QRio\AtiQ~
.
\
·'
,
Dt!ADt.INES
.
.!: J P.M . Day 8t:fpre Pllblicatlo~
~
Monday Ptadllne 9 e.m.
'Clnt;:elfatlon- Corrections
: .WIIIbeaceapted un(ll9a .m. for .
...
Day of PtJblrcatlon
'
REGULATIONS
~ t'he'.toPublisher
reserves
the
righ
edit 0,. reject
any ads
1
dttmed
objectional . . The .
PUblisher will not_be responsible.
for more than one incorrect
insertion.
,.
' RATES
tFor Wan~ Ad Service
5 ·cants per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
"-:'1'--c-~ ·-lJ--:"cents----pe,........,.ord....,..three:tonsecutlve lnsert itirfs .
ll,, cents pe-r'wo1d six c.on ·
·ucutlve Insertions.
. 25 Per C~nt Dlscounl on paid
.JdS and ads paid within 10 days.
CA:Do~rTJ~:~KS
Sl.$0 tor 50 word minimum .
Each addltiona1 word 2c.
BLIND ADS
. Additional 2sc charge · per
Advertisement. ·
·
OFFICE H0\1111,.'
. ot8~30 a.m, 19 S:OOlf&gt; .m. Daily,
8 : JO a .m. to 1;~:00 Noon
Saturday.

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS ~CURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION

Michael J. Fry, '
Co-Executor of the

Estate of Harrie Marie

Smith, Deceased, et at:,
Plaintiffs

vs. '

@)

r----.-,---~,;_, ·.

1971 BUICK

Defendants

-

'~HEll"

52849

Mo
'"meroy
tor
V

Hot Water. Heaters
Plumbing ·
Electrica.l Work

··ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992 - ~448

Pomeroy, 0 .

OPEM EVES. 8:00 I' .M .
1'!*EI!OY, OHIO

NOTICE
SOMEONE has been shooting
BB's al the flower pots at the
Greenwood Cemetery; and if
they should get caught, they
will be pu~ished to the fulles t
extent of the law .
Mrs . Oretha Snider &amp;family
10·1/ .Jtc

-----

1 'Un~nown

YARD &amp; good used clothi ng sale
at Chesler Methodist Church,
October 201h and 21st from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m.
10·11·3tc

ahy, wi ll take notice that on the

Found

MEIGS County Fish &amp; Game
Association, Thursday, Qc . HAYMAN' S Audion - a good
Iober 19, 7: 30 p.m ..~ members
place to QO each Friday
the Estate of Harrre ·M8rie
only , Syracuse Club Rooms.
eve.ning , 7 p.m. at Laurel
Smith, deceased, flied their
10·11·31c
Cl iff on old Rt. 7. 1 mile west
plaint in the Probate Court
of Rock Springs Fairground.
elgs County, Ohio, alleging
it appeared that the CARPORT Sale. clothing, jars,
10-IO·IfC
electric motors, electric
naming of Mildred Flower in
the Will of the said Harrle Mar ie sweeper, toys and household ANYONE having any in Sm lfh appeared to be an error
odds and ends too numerous
formation of the poisoning of
and if appeared that Mildred
to mention ; Russ Little
a dog at 113 Ebenezer Street,
Fowler is the true beneficiary of
East
of
Rutland
on
residence,
poison was thrown on porch,
said Will. The complaint also
Route 124, Friday and
please contact Ernest "Rink "
alleges other mat-lers in ap.
Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21. 10
Davidson . Violators will be
parent need of ctar lficatton . The
a.m.
·
prayer of the comp]aint is thai
prosecuted. ,
the Will t}e clarified to de:ctare
10-.18·31c
. 10·15-6tp
that the name · of Mildred
.Flower be declared an error GARAGE Sale, Oct. 21 and 22,
and that Mildred Fowler be
463 Grant St., Middleport ;
declar,d the true beneficiary
dishes, furniture , clothing ,
herein . Tt\e prayer also
requested further clarification antiques and misc. items.
in said Will.
10"18·31p ~-------------The said defendant is
required to answer on or before GUN Shoot, also rifle matches,
I
the 30th d~:~y of November, 1972. open sites only, Forked Run I
Francis Biron
Sportsman Club, Sunday, Oct.
bring you
Michael J, Fry
22, 12 noon .
Co -Executors
10-18-3tc 1
extra cash
I
By HamHn C. King,
Altorney, -at -Ll!lw
- -- - - - I
I
of the f rm ot
PIANO Tuning, Lane Dani~ls, I
f 0r
I
B'nnett &amp; King
Oclober 28th thru December
I
21 Locust Street
15th, 259 Broadway, Mid· 1 shopping sprees
I
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
1
dlport ; phone 992-2082.
1
26th day of September, 1972, the
undersigned, Francis Siron and
·Michael J . Fry, Co -Executors of.

•

ON POMEROY Bend Bridge on.
I
Wesl Virg inia side on !he
NOTICE
walkway, a pc~ir of men' s
preScription glasses with wire
GOSPEL Meeting, October 16·
frames ; phone 992-2756.
25; 7: 30p.m . each evening ;
10·11·31c
Evangeli st, . Bob Kessinger.
Church of Chr ist, Miller 51.,
Ma son, W. Va . Vis itors
Wanted To Buy
welcom e.
10-15-51p
WANTED - Old upright
pianos, grand pianos, old
KOSCOT KOSMETICS (MINK
pump
organs . Any condition .
OIL BASE) . We have many
Paying $10 each . Write giving
new products since the for .
directions. Witten Piano Ca ••
mation of this Company: Also
Box 188, Sard is, Ohio 43946.
several new ones this month
I
10·1J.61p
plu s monthly specials. All
these i.n addition t.o the
or iginals. Ladies, we would OLD Furniture, oak tables.
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
lik e very much for you to try
beds, or complete households.
these cosmetics and to serve
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
you. Phone Helen Jane, 992·
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271.
511 3,
6·28·1fc
10·1·1fc

Bring Your Unhulled

WALNUTS
TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER

- - ----

: Classified Ads . I

l

I

. . ' •.. , '' ~0 .·16_~-t.. t c..."' ~ ..~':,- - - . - - - - - -.-t- 191 'l7 no1 4, 11 •. ia, 25 111 1 1. 61 -~~~ff~·~!-~1·

-

azon Greatest
And Purest ·River

Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

$

Per Hundred
Pounds
After they
are Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1.972 .

Excelsior
Salt Works, Inc.
P.O. Box 267
992·3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

Help Wanted

1971 DODGE Charger. power
steering ; gold with black
vi nyl lop ; phone 949-5424.
10·18·61c
POTATOES, .50 lbs. No. 1, $2. 19,
B size , $1.39, un classified
$179, 20 lbs. 85c; apples $2 per
bushel and up, 9 varieties ;
cabbage 7c a lb .; prices good
through Sunday . Midway
Market, W. Ma in St ..
Pomeroy, phone 992·2582.
I0-18-3tc

·Business·
. Services
.

~=::;;======::::-~=====;====:--.::=========~
eROOFING
fARnt MOVING
If I HAVE
To Go
eHEA TING
Oazer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, l1~d~
Take Me To
•PLUMBING
5caping; We have 2 s•ze
ctours. 2 size loaders. Work
THE SHOP
•CARPENTR Y
done by hOur -or . contract.
-··p(it,iN1TE RIDGE ROAD
·
Free E~timates. We also
•
ROY, .O.
··SPOUTING
haul
fill dirt, lop 50!1. Dump
"Custom Meat
trucks and lo!N·bOY ~or hire.
Quick and Courteous Service
•PAINTING
DALE
. DICK
See ilob or Ro9er JeHen,
For_ Free Estimate
PHONE 99n550

992-2094
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to y_our
project. Fast and eaSy. Free
est imates . Phone 992 -3284 .
Goe.glein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30-tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4182, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator .
5·12.tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
·-=-=-=...,...:...,..,..,._ __ 5·1-ttc

SEE US FOR : Awn ings, storm
door s and windows, carports,
m'arquees, aluminum sfding
and ra iling . A. _Jacob, sales
representative. , For tree
estimates , phone Charles
li sle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3-2-tfc

.

AOVEJ:mSING.

SMIDt_ N~LSON ·
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2174

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
*5.55 .
On Most American Cars

Monday thru Saturday
Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

606 E.

DIDN'T KN:JW
YDU WERE
. ·6U5YI

CDME RIGHT IN 1
13EB51E. YOU'RE
1HE REASON WE
AI?E BUSY!

,

HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
985·3529.
6-11 -lfc
PIIRHAPS 'IOU
COULD, DORIC.,

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

------

service; top soil , fill
1972 Clearance Sale ching
dirt , limestone ; B&amp;K Ex.
cavafing . · Phone 992-5367,
Save 15-20%
Dick Karr, Jr .
9-1-lfc
on 1972 models
Real Estate For Sale
9 New tractors
I·
List Sate

ME1WINNIE, l

BUYER CAME
IN AND PlACED
AN ORDER!

Open 8 Tll5

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic 1tanks installed. George
!Bill I Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
4-25-tfc

-DOZER
- -- and back hoe work,

OH ,EXCUBE 1

ANOTHER

Pomeroy,Home &amp;Auto

Real Estate For Sale

PUL.L.. OVER T'
CURB FER A
MINUTE,
P"TUNIAI

WINNIE

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

I

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

ponds and septic tanks, dit-

MONEY · SAVER

9USINES6 W/&gt;G SLOW
I'D 'Tl?i

·so I~

.,.YOU WILL BE:
REQUIRED TO TAKE
A C&lt;:)LD SHOWE~J

From the largest Troork
Bulldozer Radiator
Small~st Heater Core.
Nath••' Biggs
Radiator Specialist

FURNITURE

-~-,--~--

PANTS &amp; JEANS

-·

POMEROY
.HOME &amp; AUTO

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284 ..
The · Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
GENTLE riding horse and
Service. We Sharpen Sclssors.
pony, ca ll after 6 p.m. 9923·29-tfc
5224,
10·16-Jtc AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
,Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6.15-llc

GRAVELY
TRACTORS

.

Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. · or phOne 992·
5232.

\

..... . ......
1~·•;•," • '&gt;

_

TAKI! HIM/
INSIDE _,
,.,.., .,.
~.··

GASOLINE ALLEY

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ollio 45769
NICE ONE:S
ROOMS - llf2 baths,
flreP,lacEt;, In, .,. large liyLng~
Nice dining with sliding
glass doors. Modern kitchen
has stove and refrigerator.
Gas forced air fur,,ace.
Garage.

6

r

6 ROOMS - 1112 baths, all
electric. Beautiful kitchen
and dining area . Large
living, utility, 2 garages In
the country. Carpet except
the utility room .

REAL BARGAINS
WANTED, r iver de ckhands,
Buy 2 Pairs5
ROOMS
- 2 bedrooms,
call only . M &amp; G Transport
were found . to have " a leached the soil of readily
By JOSEPH L. MYLER
~ath,
basement, front
nice
! PAIR FREE
Serv ices, In c., 446-1014,
CLELAND
1 Super ·c.s
718. 610.
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The chemical purity· nearly soluble minerals that affect the
lot In back .
porch.
Large
Gallipolis, Ohio.
l Super C-1
647.
550.
equivalen\
to
that
of
distilled
chemical
pilrity
of
a
river,"
Asking
$5,500.00.
Amazon Is by far the greatest
10-12-6tc All kinds , all sizes tor men,
REALTY
I Custom C-8
618. 525.
according to the Geological
·NEW 5 ROOMS - Nice
river on earth . .It drains 2.3 water."
women, young men, boys
2 Custom C·l
547. · 465.
608
E.
Main
,c·
kitchen with stove and
How can this be the case in Survey.
and girls. Hurry lo ...
mUilon ~~quare miles of land,
I Model C-lO·A 867. 737.
For
Rent
refrigerator. Gas forced air
The soil in the Amazon basin,
I Model C·12
including the WO&lt;'Id's la~gest view. of the fact that the
932.
793.
furnace.
Lots of closets, and
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
2 Demonstrators
1.27 ACRE
rain forest. Ita drainage basin Amazon is 3,900 miles·long and the Survey said, has been so
POMEROY
unfurnished apartments . ... _
cupboard space. Carpet and
1 Super C-1
647. 518.
llflijf Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
REAL COUNTRY LIVING
Is nearly three-quarters the is fed by more than 200 thoroughly leached of mineral
Phone 992.5434.
panel in g. Only $16,000.00
Phone 992-2181
I Model 430
1266. 1013.
. CLOSE IN - .7 rooms , bath,
4-12-tfc
with
2 !ots.
size of the United StaleS before tributaries, some of which are content "that it is not suf·
'---:------___J
utility
room
,
basement,
lnore than 1,000 miles in ficiently fertile for most
Alaska and HawaU.
3 ROOM house and bath, fur· 19M STARCRAFT Tent Trailer,
natural gas forced air fur·
agricultural cr,0ps." Only
sleeps 8; double dinette,
WORTH THE MON~Y
Nevertheless, ac~rdlng to ~ length?
~ ! shed ; also tra iler ; adults
nace ,
garage,
other
stove, sr_pk and ice box ; also
GAS
FURNACE 3
Rain Leached Soil
along the flood plains is the Soil
Pomeroy~ Ohio
only: phone 992-5592.
recent report by the U.S.
buildings. $8,000.00.
Sears 12 fl. Johnboat,
bedrooms,
bath,
large
Phone
992-2975
living
10-17-tfc
One
reason
is
that
for
a
rich
enough
for
agricultural
JUST RENOVATED
Geological Survey, its waters
aluminum, $60; phone 367with ,fireptaco: Otnlng room,
·OVER" 1;ooo ~sq. ft . living
are purer than "most of the tap period of perhaps-tll!IIIOII~ 01 --· development.~ · -·-··- ····- 20R3 BEDROOM mobile home . 7530.
full
basement and garage
area here. 1 story, 5 rooms,
10·1Htc
This has been proved by illin Mason . Call Point Pleasant
water in the United States." years heavy rainfall - now
room
for 3 cars. A
bath, nice kitchen, L.R. 26
Real Estate For Sale
675-1684.
In some places accor.dlng to around 50 to 12Q Inches a year- fated attempts in times past to
magnificent
home. $21,000.
ADMIRAL
TV,
black
and
white,
ft., 2 car carport, ALL NEW
IO·IJ.6tc
ROOMS &amp; bath, 3 acres of
30
ACRES
4 bedrooms,
,
the SUrvey, Amazon samples has " almost completely carve fanns out of the rain
call 1·985 ·3901 , Gertrude 4 land,
CARPETING
two -thirds basement,
Warner
.
·
1
bath,
gas
well
with
free gas
forest by clearing the land of TWO
turnished
rooms ,
THROUGHOUT.
building 20' x 40', plus barn,
10-12-6tp
.
oil.
Some
bottom
land.
and
its age~ld tree cover. The
available now , 413 Spring
jacated in Long Bottom, city
I BEAUT I F U L) - -JUST
Only
$15,000.00.
Ave.;
phone
992·3429.
$12;500.00.
forests were luxuriant, so why
BSA 6.50, chopper, coffin tank , · water, partially remodeled :
10·8-12tp
phone
985·3529.
LEVEL LOTIOOx13~
wouldn't the land be, once the
springer custom pa int,
10·17·3fp
l
lf2
story
frame, 2 bedrooms.
Harley
Davidson
rear
end,
WE HAVE SEVERAL NICE;
trees were got out of the way?
(carpeted) bath, dining,
$1
,400
or
less.
Phone
992-5663.
HOUSES BUT FINANCING
It turned out that the ripe. Mobile Homes For Sale
10·12-61p 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
porches, gas F. F., utility,
IS
A PROBLEM. SEE
large Jot, natural gas, built-in
growth of the richly watered CASH paid tor all makes and
storm doors and windows.
ABOUT
IT THEN SEE US.
cabinets in kitchen . Close to
models of mobile homes. 1971 KAWASAK I 100, excellent
rain forests was sustained
THIS YOU MUS'~' SEE,
WE'LL
HELP
YOU FIND A
in
.
Bradbury
.
radio
station
co ndition , '""r eady to go .
Phone area code 614-423:953) .
JUST 58,500.00.
largely by their 0wn acHOME
bF
YOUR
OWN.
Phone
992-2602.
Sacrifice for only $260. Phone
4·13-tfc
BEAtJ.TtFUL
·HOME
cumulated humus, a resource
10·13·12tp
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
Coolville 661·6214.
I story frame, 3 large B. R.,
ASSOCIATIO
that vanished when the trees TWO bedroom mobile home, in
10·5· t2tc
large
closets,
beautiful
bath,
.IDEAL
5-ACRE
RANCH.
Lake
$1
;600
.
PHONE
t92-ll25
good
conditi
on,
Sam Grissom of ComSidney W. Copeland of went down. The cleared land
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
level lot out of floods 100x120.
Zuspan's
Trail
e
r
Court
,
monwealth Management Inc., ·commonwealth Management was baljed by the sun Into
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
Velma G. Zuspan , Mason , W.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Kitchen has bulll·in range,
St. Paul, Minn., announced has been employed as an inn· laterite, a mineral as hard as
for 119 mos . Vacation
Pomeroy . Phone 992·389.1.
Va .
double oven, ref. and
4·12.tfc
Petradise . Free Brochure.
10·12·1llp
today Oct. 28, has been set as keeper.
concrete and as inhospitable to
freezer, loads of upper and
Ranchos
Lake Conchas : Box
base cabinets, D. R. carthe new date for the opening of
Copeland reported today thai life.
JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
2001 DD, Alameda. Calllornia
peted, patio, electric heat.
the Holiday Inn of Gallipolis. the entire slaff has been em· Source of Wealth
- sewing Machine. Will sell for
94501.
MANY
OTHER FEATURES
;
Air
Conditioners
small balance . of $36.21 or
10·3·30tp
The 100 unit inn located at 4SC pioyed. There will be 6C full and · Nevertheless, the Amazon is ·
$23,000.00.
payments
may
be
arranged.
•Awnings ·
Pike St., Kanauga, was parllime employees . AP· a fascinating river and its
Phone 992-5331.
·
RACINE - 10 room house,
' · ·Underpinning
originally slated to open on plications are still being ac· basin a potentially rich 'source
9-7-ttc
bath, basement, garage, two WE HAVE NEW LISTINGS
lots. Pho~e 949-4313.
Oct. lf. Grisson.said he doesn'.t cepted for future use.
of wealth If properly exploited.
EACH WEEK, ~ALL US
· MAKE YOU
. complete mobile home:
4·5·1fp FOR YOUR NEE OS IN
an~clpale any further delays.
years
U.S. ·service ~ plus gigantic . 8 TRACK , STEREO, freight
For
some
damaged , In beautiful walndt
- :&amp;
:""cb-a-::th- w""
llh or REAL ES·TATE.
Women, Pat Holier 196.
Geological Survey. scientists · 'display of mobile homes .
console. Will sell for S101.50or 7 ROOM·-:h-o-use
with out furniture , pa'neled &gt; HENR~· E. CLELAND
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Second High Ind . Game have been working with their •lways available at .. .
pay St. SOper week . Phone 992·
REALTOR
and carpeting ; phone 7425331.
Wedne•day Late
Roy Holter 190; Women, Betty · Brazilian counterparts to
t92-225t
Mixed League
Fullz 160; third, Russ Moore
3875.
9-7-ttc
MIL.LER
Oct. 11, 1'72
180; Virginia Hoyt 155.
· measure the river's stupen.
IQ·11-6tp If no answer t92·2568
Standings
High Series - Roy Holter dous flow.
·
·. MOBILE HOMES • · POODLE puppies.· Silver . Toy, ·Yes, we pay "1D percent ln.
Tum·
Pto. 503 ; Pat Hotter 425.
The mo!!t recent measure·
Parkvtew
Kennels,
Phone
992;::---.:,_-------~~---::-:-::--::-•
mo Washington BIYd.
1 tirell on oil deposits ond ,.,
5443,
Bil
Clplc)ty
29
Second High Series -, Men, ment, conducted by Survey : 423-7521
Bl•kostee-Hoyt
BELPRE;, 0.
Holler-Rawlings
27 Dan Mea.dows 497 ; Women,
8·15·.1fc
. M1yt11
~t-Morrow
26 Virginia Hoyt 422 ; third ,. Russ hrdrologist George F. Smoot, ' - ' - - - - - - - - -~...! - - - - - - - - Autom1tlc1
APPLES, Fitzpatrlc~ Or.
2 spttd operation .
Rosenbaum-Meadows
24 Moore 48.1; Joy Bentley 397.
dlsclo·sed that at Obldos,
chards~ State Route 689,
Chofce: of water .
CaiHII·Carsey
20
Teem HIQtl Game ~ Fultz. Brazil, 'the Amazon was For Sale
Fullz·Benlley
18 Beottey.
.
. '
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
temps. · Auto . ,.
ANTIQUE pump organ, all
'3Qtf
wat·e r . ·tevel
High · lndhtl dual . Game . Team High Scores - Fultz· transporting water I!J the rate
original e.xcept new "bellows ..
,
.
·
c
controL
Lint
On 5 \lr. Dtpotlts
·of four billion gallons per
Mtn, Ber.~ard ,..f. ultz 193; ~nttey.
Over . 80 years old. Made by
~~--~--~~------~,;_~----------~ minu~.
··
~:~~rv ~~~t~~.~y.-er
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co.,
--:-~"'":'-~"k.
Worcester,
,
Mass.
One
·bellows
Permi ~Pren
The Amazon's average flow,
Large ~ bedroom home, new bath upstairs,
type. Phone l92·3904.
Moy111
according to Smoot,' is more
AT
HIIOofHtlt '
10-13-tf
very large living room, log burning fireplace,
than four times that of the
Dryers
large entrance hall, dining room, · newly
Surround' clothes
Congo, the wodd's second Auto Sales
with ·gentle, even
r~odeled kitchen, 112 bath, with shower
largest river, and.· about 10
heat
. No hot spots,
downstairs, large ' corner lot, located at 285 ·
"' ovtrdrying, ·
tlme8 that of the Mtssiulppt, . 1942 JEEP, . fu/1 cab; ~ood
South Third Street, Middleport , Ohio . • the largest river In the United condition, 4 wheel dnve ;
Fine Mesh Lin~
Filter.
phone·992-6383.
Financing available. Priceq right to sell fast.
states
.
.
We SptCIIRIIIn
10·
17-6tp
..
11
MAYTAG
The ~azon 's flow.," Smoot
said, "accoWits for about · 15 1971 VOLKSWAGEN, super
beetle, cheap, 24,000 miles, A·
per cent of all the fre&amp;~ water
~I Estate Broker
ttl N. Se CeiMI
1 1 cpndlllon; phone 992-6222
dlacharged
into
the
oceans
by
·after 5 p.m•.ltll 7 p.m.
.
,,.
Phone
fiMllhfter
4
P.M,
Millllllll«t~ONo
,.
. ' 10-17-5tp· ._
741-4211
r Arnold Grate
Rutland
all the rivers of the .world." · · . ' ,
.,._,....._;.....__;
. --~

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
'

THE VAPCRS FRoM THE ROOT
Of' THE IK'CURSED M~NDRA~O~A
B~QW

... ~

~,, ,,,

~
ACROSS
1. Secrete
6. Principal
10. Blanched

...OICJ(-TRACY •..
ONE
SIDE,

BUT ,MRS, 1'111AR/1 t&lt;HOWS
AMP 5Hf TELL5 .!If l'M
100 lOING 10 ASK ,..-:.,.._

QUE5TION5!

10%

12%

care of
· (2wds. J

I 1'HILE
16. Weep
27, Storage
18, Gaelic
box
John
28, Sea vessel
19. Building
30. Gaggle's
extension
member
22. Telegraph 31, Record in
a ledger
23. Fluttered,
33. QultUlfg
.as
an •
time
eyelash
.36. Dove's
24. Served
sound
25. Motor
37. Kimono
truck
sash

ZIPER

[j

tJ

ll
Yellerd•,••

cross

I

Now ..,..,.,. tho
... form lhe
ou,...WIIr

.........
letlen

l

,.

(A.M...,. ....,....J

Anlwer1 Tilt ./ft'd pttrl if mrher llettpy, b"t tile U!ltole
t'an be lifted tf,.iJy-whl .Miln#ylA ''JANI(o.AID''

1'1\,11~

.,.

•
wotlnt: - r----.,.--'-~'--......, ,....H_OW_CAN_'(__
OU 't_A_u&lt;.,..ltl-'"t""1

~ X Y D I, B A A X R
Ia L 0 N G F B L L 0 W , .
,
·One Iotter simply stands !Qr another, In thts s ~mple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word• are aU
hints. Each day .!he eode.!etters
are dllr~rent.
·
·
.
I

Ingels Investment Co.

tJ

l•..~let• GAWKY JAIIY NUJIIA DIJINI

Anthony's

29. Anceslr)·
32. Actress
Pamela
34. John son
of
• the
Giants
Fay
French
painter
Seek
out
fncts
39. Over·
weight
tO. India's
axis
41. Cargo
ship

·===~-

I ""' ..- -... ICIIIIIXIIIJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to

·rr--.....

11

1, 11 1!

SOMEONE WHO KEEPS
$AVIN6,"AU CONTRAIRE"?

CRYPTOQUOTES

F J P lt W R D lt K M R F P·W li B J W F R L 0 PT.
L O.R KM FRP f•Jt..F~ -F GW IF .

Yomrd~Y't Cryploquole: INSANITY IS QFTEN THE LOGIC

INGELS FURNITURE ·

OP AN ACCURA'l'E MINI! OVERTAXEO.-OLIVER .WEN·
HEI~L KOLMES
I
,
.

L ON YOUR DIAL

I

Jrom
"Doctor
Zhivago"
13. Italian
. city
14. Expunge
15. Nether.
lands
commune
16, Nativity
scene
17. Pastry or
pudding
20. Relatives
21. Slippery
22. Departed
23. Funda·
mental
25. Zodiec
sign
26. Bard's
river
27. Pointed·
2tr. St.

TERRY

MONEY

__

1o e1&lt;h ~quare, to
torm rour ordlnarr .. orda,

remark

LET YOUR ·

WMP0/1390-. RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~=·'

U~~~eramble theN bar Jumblet,

one letw

French

dish
(2 wds.)
4. Barnyard
creature
5. Last ·
Spanish
queen
6, Ever
vigilant
7. lnfre·
quent
8. Pertain·
ingto
homely
philosophy ( 2
wds.)
9. Bungling
12. Taken ·

Theme''

lnn Will

George 5. Hobstetter ·Jr.

~&amp;d~;f'-1::" '-:!;:

DOWN
I. Boxed
2. In reserve
3. Fluffy

· n.· ~-

Open Oct. 28

..

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Gravely Tractor Sales

Holiday

JAMMED IIJTO A GtASS'
. OF A:lLLtiTED I4Jii\!10R.I

I

PAR SON'S New Furnilure,
Cutting'~
K;mauga , Ohio, 2 miles above
Silver Bridge is having an old
fa shioned trade. Jn week . 1-IT1LE
VAUGHN
992-3374
Trade in yoUr old for new . 99).6346
Don' t miss our 6 piece living . Lef Dick and Dale Help You
room suites for only $199 .95 . with Your Meat ' Problems.
Don' t forget we deliver free .
So shOp thi s week and save.
10·11·4lc
DRIVE ALITTLE
- SAVE A LOT!
UTILITY trail er - 4 x 8 bed, 16
inch tires ; two single and one
Kuhl's Bargain Center
Hollywood type beds, nearly
Rt. 7 "at caution light"
new; 19 inch Portable Phil co
B&amp;W T.V. wilh sland; 366
Loc usl St., Middleport, Ohio .
TUPPERS PLAINS
10·17.Jtp
Clean used furniture
ONE slighlly used Homelite
Guaranteed appliances
Chain Saw ; Pomeroy Home &amp; BIKES Huffy' 20",
Auto ; phone 992·2094.
·
Murray 10 speeds - di.scount
10·11·5rc prices.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
JO ACRES with some f-arm
Open to 7; Closed Mondays
ma chinery ; call 667.3333.
I0-17·51c ' - - - -- -----.J
WILL c ut or trim trees,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
reasonable ; also Clean out
Cleaner complete with at.
basements,
att ics and
tachmenls, cordwinder and
cella rs ; phone 949-3221.
pa int spray. Used but in like
10·4·30tc
new condition . Pay $34,45
cash or budget plan available . SEPT IC
TANKS
AROBIC
Phone 992-5641.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
10-17·.61c
CLEANED, REPAIRED .
MILLER SANITATION,
NEW 1972 Zig ·Zag Sewing
STEWART, OH 10. PHONE
Machine in original factory
662"3035 .
carton . Zig -Zag ' to make
10·4·tfc
buttonholes, sew on buttons, ~=---c--,....-=--­
monograms and make fancy O'DELL WHEEL alignment
designs with just the twist of a
localed at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
single·dial. Left in lay-away
Complete front end service,
and never been used. Wi II sell
tune up and brake servi ce.
for only $47 cash or credit Wheels
ba lanced elec·
terms avai lable. Phone 992· Ironically .
All
work
5641.
guaranteed .
'Reasonable
10·1J.6tc ra tes. Phone 742 -3232 or 992·
3213.
COME AND SEE . Have new
7-27.tfc
shipment of flowers for fall
and Christmas ; will make
flower arrangements; have For Sale
over LOOO gift items, also
iewe lr y, Avon bottles, some 2 YEAR. ,dd male German
Shepherd, gentle disposition ;
ant iques; open 9 a.m. to 6
ph
one
675·5267,
Point
p.m ., except Friday, closed
Pleasan t.
Friday; phone 985 ·3537 ;
10·15-6tp
Small ey's Gift Shop, Chester.
Ohio.
10·18.12tc CAMPER to til 'I• ton truck or
bui lt .up pickup, all self ·
contained
; $700 ; phone 992 WINTER potatoes, $5 a 100 lb. ;
7106.
phone 247.2642.
10-15-6tp
. 10-18-6tc
_,___:_

___

.....

I

THEM'S MI NE -·
I WUZ BREAKII\i'
'IOR'N IN FER 'IE

Tf.IEM THINGS AilE
PLUMB WORE OUT

our
7085.budge t term s. Call 992- r
10 15 61
'------ . . c
WA C. NUT, modern style Stereorad io. AM-F M radio, 4
spea ke r so und system, ~
s p e~d aut orriali c cha·nger.Ba tanc e S69 .Sl. Use our
• budgel lerm s. Call 992-7085.
10· 15-61c

Window,
Air Conditioners

c0.

•

BEAUTIFUL Maple stereo.
radi o· c;Ombinati on, AM·FM .
radio, 4 speed interml&gt;:.ed
change r. 4 ·$peaker sound
sysfcn• . Balance $79 .34. Use

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

engine. automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes, like
new w-w tires. It you want a show plece &amp; plenty of luxury
try this outstanding buy .
.
1971 CHEVROLJ;OT
S3095
Malibu hardtop touj:'ie, low mileage. new cal" title, san.
dalwood finish with brown vinyl roof, vinyl saddle in·
--=--' terio r;---4;-se(lson~al r conditioning , turbohydramatiC, power
steering, white-wall fir-es, rally wh. eels, front &amp; rear
gua'rds, pow.er brak,es. radio.
·
1970 CAM~RO
$l095
Hardtop coupe. local ~w mileage, l-owner car. 307
engine, -3-speed transmiss ion, power . steering. b~tket
seats, console, ~rp blue finish , ra'dio, SHARP IS THE
WORD!
·
~
- ' '
•

BIG John 's Auction , Clition,
No 20742
West Yirginia . Every ThursLEGAL NOTICE '
day
n.ghf, 7:30p.m., Buyers
Mildred Flower, whose place
of residence is unknown. if she . and Dealers welcome.
be llv fng, and if she be dead. the
10"17·31p
heirs, next of kin ,
devisees,
l e.Q atees.
legal
represer,tatlves of M ildr ·ed
Flower, deceased, and her legal
representatives and a~signs , If
any, ,
and
their
· legal
representatives and assigns, If

PoMroy .
Motor Co.

2 SICIS
·Of
QU"LIJY
A

Spor t wagon. I) eau tlf U1 cora t f"rn1s
· h w lth v 1ny 1 interior,
factory air conditioned. luggage rack , radio , 350 V-8

:-:--

sacred, Heart Church, et al..,

t#
. ."· .

I'

'

BALLS 0' FIRE!!

Get Action! Sentinel ._Classifieds Get .Results!.
For Sale ·

f

S MIUION CI*'Rii:l£:!t

•

0

rr , .

f I '·

BARNEY ·

10- The Dally Sentinel, Mtddleport.-Porneroy, Oct. 18, 1972

;

t {

•

:

f Sentinel .Classified:s

I' l I

'·

'

'

•

r. f

,

ii

I

I .

. I

''

�..........
I

John Ketchka Died Tne8day ·.
John'L. Ketchka, 73, Pe-dt'OCk Pomeroy Chapter 80, K&amp;.SM'.
Mr: Ketchka was born Sept.
Ave;, Pomeroy, died TUeSday
afternoota
at
Veterans 2,1899, in Pittsburgh, the son of
. Memorial Hospital where he the late Edw&lt;ird and Mary
.
· had been taken late . that Smith Kietchka.
Surviving
are
his
wife,
Mae
;
wrning by the pomeroy E-R ·
squad after becoming ill at two sons, ~dward Robert, of
home,
Beckie)·, W. Va . ·and Johl)
Mr. Ketchka was a retired Arch, of Indianapolis, Ind. ; a
foreman -of the Central Co;d sister, Mrs. Margaret Clauss,
p
d t
·
Co., Philip Sporn, where .he Mc Cung1e,
a., an , wo
served lor 22 years, He had grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
also served fhree years on .the
Middleport Police Dept. at 2 p.m. Friday at the
following his retirement. Mr, Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Ketchka ·was a member of with the Rev. Robert
Heath· United Methodist Baumgarner officiating .
Church in Middleport, Mid- Masonic servie~:S will he held
dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, for at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
IS years having "been . past funeral home by Middleport
master, and had .served as ·Lodge 363. Friends may call at
secretary three years; a the funeral home any time
member of Ohio ValleY. after 10 a.m. Thursday. Burial
Commandery, Knight/ will be In Riverview Cemetery.
Templar 24, .Bosworth Collhcil
. .
46, Royal Arch Masons, ahd
:

AMONG THOSE taking p11t In lilt AI It n~~r~e ayle
show at"'Dav!S Hall Tuelday wert MaT Brldblll')', left,
Middleport, and En)ily Groae, «;ll~..'lbe e~nt lfuheld
In cormection with Student Nune Week. The 'llll'ses above
served as narrawra for the style llbow1ulnl&amp;llt.

a

I Style Show oPens Wee~
.

\

AStyle Show iii Davis Hallln
Gallipolis began tile activiti~;~
for Student Nurse Week.
Modeling was done by the
student nurses and fashions
were provided by Amy's of
Gallipolis.
Karen Evans opened the
style show with a warm
welcome. Narrator~, M.ary
Bradbury and E!llily Grose did
a great job in presenting the
girls and· their various outfits.
Participating were student
nurses of the Holzer Medical .
·Center School of Nursil!l!Girls modeling were Terri

~~ Be~

Barker,
nett, Rhea
Dun, Jill Harris, Connie
Grueser, ~ Hayes, Betsy
Hughea, Dline, O'Llnn, Sharon
Pyles, Julie Rice, Dorma Rose,
and Kathy)uhars, .The girls
modeled' ·elolhel In various
categorlei·. Including dress wear, sleep wear, coats, sports
wear,
Mill Clrla Burns provided
beautiful plano background
lllllllc. Ati4Rdlng were student
rnir~e~, pannta, and Mr. and
Mrs. Rlebird Carter. Refresh· men II ·were ·aerved by the
h0111e1110thers.

Pay Hike Stqdy'· Possihle
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Gov.
. Jolm J. Gilligan, who In the
past has maintained that state ·
legtslators are generally underpald, may name a Clm·
mlasion later .this week. w
make recommendations m pay
hlk~;~ for the General Assembly
and other elected offiC~:S.
The nine-member commlasion Is due wreport w the
legislature and the governor on
Its flndlngs by Nov. IS, one day
after .the General Al!aembly
reconvenes· for a lametluck
aession. Any salary lncreas~:S
could be approved before the
end of the year,
,
Robert E. Cecile, Gilligan's
e•ststant In charge of appoint..
menta, wd Tuuy he hopes
·W suggest nOOJinees w the
COOlllllaalon before the end of
the week.
"I'd like to. present the
-

MEIGS lHEATRE
' Tonightthru S.tu~y
October 18·21
THE GOD FATHER
Marlon Brando
(R)

3

hours

of

steadily

engrossing . en,ertalnmenf.

Adults $1.50, Children 75c.

r.-oiSilhO'iiwi.Siitiiartsiiil7i.iPii.iiM.ii.-l'

llle eovernor can
a'nnOUIICt the commission
befwe tile end Of the week, but
I cu;t promlae af\Ythlng,"

namt1

10

Ce!;lle aakl.

7\Te··~s
1 l j IN

u of to-

cllly llllder a llw .which the
Generll Alillmb~ passed earller lh1l y.....
·

PAIITY TONIGHT
Paat · prelldents of the
Atrieric¥ Leclon Auxiliary,
Drew Wtbltar Post 39, will
hold • muted· Halloween
party at:tllel}ome of Mrs. Mary
Martih at 7:30 tonight.
MRII. VAUGHAN TOO
The name Dl Ruby Vaughan,
repreaa,n!lnc,!lle ~~jga County
PTA .cqullcll, was unintentloda!iy omitted as at·
tendlnt the meeting with the
Mel&amp;&amp; COIUity Commissioners
Tuesday morning.

. ..
WINTER HERE
A wfntr)r ·chill continued to
llri~l:fb or the nation today,
M10W flurries spinning
11
DV'I' .!bf.aouthem and eastern
~~~- or the Great Lakes, the

VPI ..Iii.

SUPPORT LEVY
. RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters went on
record Tuesday night in full
support of t11e five mill renewal
levy to be voted on at the Nov. 7
election. In other business the
board set Saturday, Nov. 18, at
6:30 p.m. for the annual
football banquet. Tickets to the
banquet will go on sale soon.
REPORT FILED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. received a call Tuesday
night from Russell Cummins
.
'
Racine, that glass had been
broken out of an unoccupied
house
near
Cummins'
residence. The incident is
under investigation .
BAKE SALE SET
The Meigs County Women's
Democrat Club will sponsor a
bake sale Saturday at 9 a.m. at
Democrat headquarters in the
·Downie.&lt;; ross building, East
·Main· St., Pomeroy.

I'

Mrs. Elizabeth Pau me
Alhnan, 72, South Third Axe.,
Middleport; died late Tuesday
night at the Holzer Medical
Center
Mrs.' Allman was born May

ff . , t'
Baumgarner o ICia mg .
Burial wiU be in Riverview
"•meterv, Friend
_ s may call at
""
·'
the funeral home any time
after 10 a.m. Thursday ,

20, 1900 in H,untingt.on, W. Va.,
VeteraJil;MemoriaiHospital
the daughter of tbe late Henry
A. and Sarah H. catron Wise,
ADMITTED
Frank
Zerkle,
New
Hav
.
en;
Mary
She was also preceded in death
by her husband, Charles Sti)f, Middleport; Clair Lynch,
Wjlllam, in I004; a brother, and Athens; Jerry Davis, Mid. four sisters.
dleport ; Melody Morgan ,
Mrs. Allman was a memher . Syracuse; . Edison Hobstetter;
. of ·Heatll United Methodist Pomeroy.
Church, Evangeline Chaplet
DISCHARGE~ - Martha
Order of Eastern Star, and the Hoffman, Corwm Earl Custer,
Pythian Sisters Lodge. . . , Donna Brtggs, Mary For!! •.
Surviving are
. a brother, c. Janet Price . .
R. (Ross) Wise of Middleport,
and several nieces and
"
nephews.
.
.
LOCAL TEMPS
l'uneral servtc~s w11l he held
Temperature m downtown
at 4 p.m. Fnday at the Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m.
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home was 47 degrees under cloudy
with the Rev. Robert skies.

·Plaintiffs
1continued from page I)
in favor of the plaintiffs filed in
Graham Station, W, Va. ,
againSt the Philip Sporn Plant,
AEP Company be cancelled.
Defendants were also ordered
to pay costs of the aCtian.

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

ElBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

ON WOMENS

SPORl~W.EAR

I

TOP5-PANT5-SKIRT5-SHIRTS
SELECTED FROM OUR REGtJiAR STOCK

of $130 a month for an
individual and 5195 a,_.roonth for
a couPle. This federallies what
is now a state welfare program
but states would be!ermitted,
although not require , to add to
the federal payments. Add ition.

ally, the first $20 of Socia l
Security or other benefits they
receive and the first $65 of
earned Income cou ld not cause
a cutback in these guaranteed
income payments.

- Widows could receive 100
per cent of their husbands'
Social Security entitlements

rather than the present 82.5 per

cent. An estimated 3.8 million
persons would benefit from this
pr"Jvisi on at a cost of Sl.l
billion.
- Social · Security retirees
could earn up to $2,100 a year
without loss of benefits, rather

lhan the present $1,680. An

eligible for this coverage at a

cost of $1.4 billion.
- The bi II would create a new
policy of Issuing Social Security
numbers to children when they
enter first grade. Presently,
anYone ca n gel a number by

applfing lor lt.
-

ea rnings.

The

effect

of

the

increase would be that

rate
the

present $468 ma xi murn payroll
tax now paid would incr~ase to

$631.80 in 1973 and go to $102 in
t974.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Save As Much As $5 or $6 sq. yd.

Support
(Continued from page I)
schools. The next regional
eleven-county meeting for
' service for handicapped
children will be Oct. 30 and 31
at a location to. be announced.
The next regular meeting of
Southern Board will be Nov, 9
at 7:30p.m.
'

REGULAR '9.99

Now ·. • •

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
· Case No. 20,794
Eshte of Charles E . Larkins
Deceased .

Not ice Is her.eby given that
Joseph ine Osborne of Box 29,
Long Bottom, Ohio, has been
duty appointed Administratrix
of the Estate of Ch.artes E.
Larkins , deceased., late of
Chester, Ml!llgS County, Ohio .
Creditors are . ~equlred to file
their claims with said tldutlar'y
wi'thln four monthS .
Dated th'ls 16th day of October

Borrow·less financing on new &amp;used cars

Easy
Terms!

Short Rolls of Carpet

'lhe witk_owokf ouio loop.mok~s iJ!!fLso ens:ffi ·

Mann lOg Webster

110) 18, 25 llll I,

.

Jl

, JUdi_!

'Auto Sales
1968 DODGE, t.ton truck, atak.e
body, ·good condition. Phone
985-4190 or 985·4153. ·
10·18·6tc
.
Emplo)mient Wanted ·
WILL DO babyslillng lor
preschool children In !11Y
home by the day. Reliable end
mature. Phone 9A9.5101.
10-18.6tc

.The Farm111·Ill$ ,~ Savin&amp;$_Co.·
ltC)MIIOY.. Otp)

Bank

12' wide to 30' long

1972.

Rate;

Nytons-Acrians-Kqdel

Kitchen Carpet On Sale

Foam Back Nylon Carpel .

square3

Four Colors ............................. vard .

99

e

011 FrNeysCIIIr Drtv•'!' Wl•lwll . . .fl, 111. t.7 P, m. (Contlnuouoty) ,
- • • ·~~". auallwlacii~Hw

. I

' 992-2635

INGELS FURNITURE
'

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Weather
•

enttne

' ·

0

'
Mostly clear and very cold
tonight with· lows in the upper
teen~ lo mid 20s. Fair and not
as~ool Fridty wJt~ highs in the
mid 40s lo low ·:;os.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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•

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972

0

PHONE 992·2156

· TEN CENTS

•

For More, Peace Talks
8' A I G 0 N
( UP I ) Presidential adviser Henry
Kissinger held two rounds of
private talks with President
Nguyen Van Thieu on endlng
the Vietnam war today and as
they: ·met, the Saigon govern·
ment rejected a coalition with
· the Conununists as a peace
condition.
The South Vietnamese Infor·
mation MiniStry issued an
unprecedented ststement reaf·
firming Thleu•s opposition to
the Communist-proposed

three-part coalition. Normally,
official statements on · talks
between representatives of the
allies are issue&lt;! jointly at the
conclusion of the conferences.
The statement was delivered
. wthe Vietnamese press before
the em! of Kissinger'S 3\2-llour
morning session at Independence Palace. Kissinger, Thien
and
U.S,
Ambassador
'Ellsworth C. Bunker held a
second l\2hour conference
later today.
No statements were given to

newsmen by participants in the
discussions .after either of the
meetings. Kissinger returned
to Bunker~s villa after the ·
afternoon session.
Kissinger arrived in Saigon
Wednesday, a day after his
latest round of secret peace
talks in Paris with North
Vietnamese negotiators. The
unexpected second trip to
Saigon within two months
heightened speculation in
South Vietnam that major new
developments 'had occurred at
his private Paris talks.
But high level officials in
Washington told UP! reporter
Stewart Hensley that Thieu
was "highly suspicious" of.
American contentions that

COLUMBUS -:- PRESIDENT NIXON is tentatively
scheduled to make a whirlwind motorcade tour in northeastern
Ohio Oci. 281n what probably will be his only campaign stop in
the state. WhUe White House officials have made no official
announcement of the trip, both the Ohio Corruiuttee to Re-Elect
the President and R.Publican state Chairman John Andrews
said they were working around.the last Saturday of the month as
the probable date.
Preliminary plans reportedly called for the President to fly
·. to Cleveland and then .travel by motorcade to Youngstown. "We
don't know whether he will speak from his car or get out at points
· . along the way and make speeches from platforms," said Andrews. "As far as we know, there won't be any stops where he
goes Inside a hall to make a speech or anything like that.''
SEN. GEORGE _
s. McGOVERN sees no prospect of a quick
end to the Indochina war under the policies of President Nixon.
He accused Nixon and his aides Wednesday of "playing games"
. · with the issue. The Democratic presidential candidate returned
· to the war theme as he barnsrormed through the big cities of the
"I hope I'm wrong," McGovern said at Cleveland. "I hope
. the war would end today. I don't see any prospect of it. 1 think
they i!fe playlj!&amp; P}llei." Iri w~. administration of.
flcilals said there was "significant" movement In the peace talks.
The officials said that for the first time the Communists were
softening their conditiOns for a coalition government in Saigon.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew attacked McGovern on the
issue from another angle. He said at Grand Rapids, Mich., that
the South Dakota senator was the "voice of isolation," He said
internationalism had been U. S. policy since World War II.
CHICAGO- FOUR ACCUSED MEMBERS of De Mau Mau
gang raised shackled fists In a black power- salute as they were
led to the courtroom Wednesday to answer charges of mass
murder.
"Aln~ this one hell of a thing," Mike Clark, one of the
defendants, said spitting Into the pack of newsmen and
cameramen. "We're gonna be famous." Eight men, all said to he
members of a black terrorist gang with roots among soldiers in
Vietnam, have been charged in the murders of nine persons,
includlng the executlon-61yle alaylngs of two white families,
TOLEDO, OHIO- AMONG THE 8,000 or so who turned out
for a rally for Sen. George s. McGovern here Wednesday night
was a tax! driver who once supported George Wallace,
"McGovern means wme the end of a lot of waste In America's
govenunent," 18id Rudy Ke,medy, 36. "He's going to getus out
cirVi:etnam, which Is someplace we should never have gone.
"I was for Wallace untO George McGovern started talking
English. And now I'm one of his men."

~'significant"

progress at the
Paris talks had been made that
could head at least to an in·
terim peace pact.
The Washington officials told
Hensley that Thieu doubted the
sincerity of Hanoi's concession
on a coalition government and
said it was not adequate even If
true. The officials indicated the
Communists have dropped the
demand that Thien be ·barred
from any interim 'OOalition
pending elections.
The statement issued by the
South Vietnamese Information
Ministry during the morning
and given again to newsmen
during the evening military
briefing reaffirmed Thleu 's
opposition to a coalition.
· The sta\ement · said ''the
Republic of Vietnam will not
accept a · threei&gt;art coalition
government in Vietnam or any

solution that is not accepted by
the people of South Vietnam
through demQCratic methods."
Thieu has said he would step
down one month before internationally supervised
elections in South .Vietnam.
The Communists have rejected
the international supervision of
elections or a cease-fire and
instead proposed an interim
coalition government including
the Communists, neutralists
and rightists.
Alter his second conference
with
Kissinger,
Thieu
scheduled meetings with South
Vietnamese legislative leaders·
and politicians. The Information Ministry statement
said Tliieu prior to Kissinger's
arrival held "wide con·
sultations with legislators,
justices of the Supreme Court
and politicians,"
HAROLD GODDARD,
Athens, and his staff were In
charge of auctioneering the
collection of antiques of Miss
Harrie
Marie Smith,
yesterday and today, in
Pomeroy. A local collector
said bidding Wednesday was
" beyond reason." Tbe
collection was appraised. at
·over $22,000, before the sale.

Heinrich Boell
Wins Lit Award
By

SOREN FOGELBERG

STOCKHOLM (UPI)- West
German novelist Heinrich
Boell won the 1972 Nobel Prize
lor Literature today, the
Swedish
Academy
announced.
The M-year-old writer won
the SIOO,OOO award "for his
writing which through its
combination of a broad perspective on his time and a
sensitive skill In charac&gt;.
·teriuttion has contributed to a
of
German
renewal
TINY WILLIAMS
literature," the Academy said.
MARIETTA
Tiny more
Williams, freshman of
Boell, who has been
Pomeroy, above, starting
fullback of the Marietta.._ ~scribed as the best known
postwar writer in both GerCollege Pioneers, Injured a
manies, became the first
knee in the Pioneers' 42-14
German to win the world's
victory -over Otterbein last
most coveted literary award
Saturday and may be lost for
since Thomas Mann got the
two to four weeks. No 1929 prize,
decision has been reached on
German-born Hermann
whether surgery will be
Hesse was a Swiss citizen when
needed. Marlelia, now 4·1 he won the prize In 1946.
overall and shooting for the
Boell, a chunky man who
Ohio Conference Iitle, takes cares little about his clothes
on tough Deolson at Gran- and general appearance, has
viile Saturday.
published a string of novels and
short stories since World War
u.
HE CAN'T COME
His best known works inDr. Alphus Christensen,
clude
"The Clown," "Billiards
president of Rio Grande
College will be unable to fulfill at Nine-Thirty" and "Doctor
an engagement to speak to Murke's Collected Silencea,"
HIS last novel, "Gruppenbtld
members of tlie MiddleportDer
Dame" (Group Portrait of
Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday
evening. Program chairman a Lady), published in the fall of
John Will said it is hoped Dr. 1971, was a success both with
Christensen will be able to the 'critics and the readers.
Boell, a Cologne-bam Roman
come later.
Catholic,
published his fll'st
The club will meet at the
Middleport Legion Hall this book in 1949. Since tlien be has
Friday at 6 p.m. instead of at written BOme ~ volumes.
Boell and his fellow country·
Heath U'nited Methodist
man,
Guenter Grass, wbo in
Church.
ctlltrast to Boell iB an active
supporter
of Chancellor Willy
.LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown Brandt's Social Democratic
Pomeroy Thursday at II a.m. Party, have been amoog the
iWas 43 degrees under sunny leading candidates for the
Nobel award In recent years,
skies.

Sin.ith Collection
Going in Auction

By BOB HOEFLICH
Although Boell has refused to
The late Miss· Harrie Marie
join any political party he has
Smith of Middleport spent her
heen closely associated with
lifetime collecting antiques as
the left in postwar Germany.
a hobby and in preserving
Earlier this year Boell toucbed
those which had been handed
of a political controversy by
down In her family,
·
.spe,aking out in defense of the
Wednesday and today, in
Baader-Meinbol anarchist
accordance with her hand·
group in West Germany.
written will prepared at the
Thirteen of tile 18 members
Holzer Medical Center a few
of the Academy took part In
days
before her death last July
Two 17-year old youths of
today's l prize-awarding Syracuse were reporled today 21, the collection was sold at
meeting. Dr, Kari-Ragnar · to have left their homes public auction held at the
G!erow, permanent secretary sometime Monday, according Pomeroy Junior High ·School
of the Academy, made the to Meigs County Sheriff Robert auditorium.
announcement in his oak C. Hartenbach's Dept,
Local collectors were joined
panelled office In the
They were Homer Wills, Jr., by collectors from several
Stockholm Stock Exchange 6 feet 2 inches tall, long brown states. They flocked to the sale
buildlng just as the clock on the
hair, 170 pounds, last seen location and bidding was fast
11
wall struck one.
wearing a brown coat and on a and , strong. Articles/.' one
· Dr. Gierow read the Acade- motorcycle, with Bobby observer said, "went beyond
my's citation but refused t.o Patterson; owner of the bike. reason" in the bidding.
answer newsmen '~ questions. Patterson is said t.o be apVal~e of the antiques In the
proximately 5feet 9 inches tall, home of the late Miss Smtih, a
blonde hair, and weighing be- former director of the Meigs
County Welfare Department,
tween 120 and 130 pounds.
The sheriff's office received·
the report Wednesday at 7:01
p.m. The youths are believed to
Six defendan Is forfeited be headed for Florida.

2 Youths
_Missing

Six Give up
Court Bonds
bonds and two others were

::::::::::~=::::::~:::::::::::::::::!i;i~:::?.::~:?,;:!%:.:9.~:::;::

fined in the court of Pomeroy
ECONOMY POORLY
WASHINGTON (UPII _
Mayor William Baronick
Wednesday night.
The nation's economy
Forfeiting · bonds were
slowed considerably this
Russell W. Manuel, Racine, ~ summer, with Inflation
$200, driving while intoxicated ;
creeping higher and real
Kelly Johnson, PO address, $25,
output dropping by a third
int.oxication; Charles J. Ebersthe government reported
bach, Pomeroy, $20, squealing
today.
tires ; Chester C. Hawk, ReedsThe Commerce Depurt·
ville, $25, assured clear
menl said preliminary
distance ; Gerald Sellers,
figures showed the "real"
Racine, $18.70, assured clear
growth in lhe economy
distance, and Ray Rose,
during the third quarter was
Hockingport, $15, running a red
5.9 per ce.;t compared to an
light.
unusually robuot 9.4 per cent
Fined $5 and costs each were
In the April-June quarter. At
Hershel M. Manuel, Syracuse,
lhe same lime, prices rose
running a red light, and Dana
from a 1.8 per cent
A. Covert, Pomeroy, failure to
seasonally adjusted annual
yield lhe right of way.
rate In the second quarter (&lt;)
Z.2 per cent tn the summer
Homer M. Braley
quarter ~ July
through
September.

was appraised at over $22,o00
prior to the sale.
According to Miss Smith's
lasl wlll and testament, $5,000
of her estate will go to the
Sacred Heart Church, of which
she was a member, for masses. ·
The remainder of the proceeds
- she had provided that the
public sale of her belongings be
held "T are to go to the catholic
Bishop at Steubenville to be
invested in certificates of
deposit with the Interest t.o be
used In the education of priests,
Miss Smith further provided
that proceeds from the sale ill
her diamond rings be given to
St. John's Villa Children's
Home at Carrollt.on, and that
several friends be given their
choice of one piece of furniture
from her home before the sale.
One of the friends was also
given all · of her costume
jewelry,

Search Fruitless

ANCHORAGE, Alaska flight !rom Anchorage to
(UPI) - Coast Guard ships Juneau.
Planes and ships "spent a ,
and planes searching . for
Democratic House Majority good deal of time" checking
Leader Hale Boggs and three out the area from where the
other persons Wednesday radio transmissions were
checked the desolate Alaska supposed to have originated,
coastline after ham radio said a spokesman at Elmedorf '
oper~tors said they spoke with
Air Force Base , search
the pilot of an atrcrafl crashed headquarters.
B~t. he said, no trace had
on.." be~ch.
All m the plane were in- been found of the orange-andjured just this side of Juneau," while aircraft taking Boggs to
was the last message the ham a political function. Rep. Nick
operators said they picked up Begich, D-Alaska, his aide,
on Monday, the day the twin• ·Ru!!Seli Brown, were with the
engme Cessna 310 carrying Louisiana Democrat on the
Boggs dtsappeared while on a plane piloted by'Oon E, Jonz, a
veteran mer,

Dr. Webb to Speak

The Rev. Dr. Donald A.
Webb, an assistant professor of
:::::::::::~:::::;z::::::::::::~::~~::=::::$-:::::~::::::;:~ theology and dean . of adJ.-=~::::::=:-.:::::t::::::=~====~::::::::::::~::::::::::::X:::m::::~.::::.':!»"*::::--:;:;s:s::::::!::::::::~:::::::::-;:;:-.::::::::~:~:*::::::~::::::::::;:~~;:::::~=:~::::::::::~::!l:::::*:~:?.!:!:o:•:::::::::.::=:::::=::::::::=::::::::.-::::::::o:::::::::;:::::::::::--:::::~;: · Of Pomeroy Dies
missions al the Methodist
•
f
.
.
,,
~
Homer M. Braley, 69, of 902
Theological
School
in
East. Main St., Pomeroy, died
Delaware, will be speaker for
by
Wednesday at Veterans
the afternoon program at the
·
education are handled on a state-wide .
Memorial Hospital.
homecoming of lhe Morning
·
basis, Taxes such as the sales tax and
:~
Surviving are his wife ,
RIO GRANDE ~ The Star United Methodist Church
income tax are collected across the
~ Lucille Braley, Pomeroy ; a Areawide Model Project on on Sunday.
·s.l3te.:r'heyproduce_thestate'sshareof
son, Jack M. Brallljt, Pomeroy ; Aging, a federally funded
The Rev. Mr. Webb, a native
U
.
fmancmg schools. ,
ti a stepdaughter, Mrs, Robert program headquartered at Rio of England; was educated at
. Unless some further legal hassi~
~ Stevens, Columbus ; two
Grande College, will host an Cam brLdge University in ·
By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
But, there are those (who could afford develops, the citizens of Ohio will' vote
sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Strauss Open House for the publicfrom · England. He was invited by
It used t.o be siad that there were it) who would prefer "education on the state Income tax this November, .
and Mrs. Katherine Mees, both 1:,.,...:
'" • 30 p. m, 0 n Fr1'day, .Bishop Hazen Werner to accept
only two sure things: Death and Taxes. without taxation."
We now have the tax; the vote actually
of Pomeroy; ·four grand· October 20, at the project a pastoral appointment in ·
When you .tl)ink about It, the
· The other alternative Is tha( public is whether or not t.o repeal It,
child.ren,
lour ·· step- headquarters in the former . Ohio. For five years ·he served
statement may be more than a little educatiOI\ should exist. To express this
The.form of taxation to be used is;
grandchildren and several Dean's .house on south College as pastor of the Magnetic
true, One thing is certain, though. prefere~ce is · to say that each In- and should be, up t.o the pe~le. E~ery
nieces and nephews.
Avenue in Rio Grande.
Springs and J?harisburg United
Without taxes, .the schools are dead.
dlvidual is willing to tax himself and his effort should be made t.o mform the
Funeral services wlll be held
The purpose of the project Methodist Churches while
This is the essence of public neighbor ,to support public education. public of the financial needs of
.~ at !'p. m. Friday at the Ewing
according~to Jerry Ram!llly, studying . at Ohio Wesleyan
educatlQ!l~ Public education is_ l;!llled
Thus, if one wants public schools - education. Citizens; asindi~iduals and
~' Funer'll Home wit!.- the Rev:- projecl direotor, is t.odefine.the University' where he received .
pubUc education because Ills financed for all children, taxation is Inevitable. groups, should study the var1ous means
®. Robert.Card officiating, Burial needs of the older citizens in his BA degree with high honors
REV. WEBB
~
through public taxation: Should this be? The issue then becomes: Which fonn of .of taxation and the effects o( each .upon
~ will be in Beech Grove
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, Scioto in 1960. He received his Master
I
One first must answer the qu~;~Uon: taxation is preferable?
themselves,
%, Cemetery. Fljends may call at · and Vinton counties,. The of Divinity Degree in 1963 from worship and the Rev. MarthaShould public education nisi? If the
In Ohio the public can finance
Then, on election day, each citizen
~ the funeral ho!De anytime.
project staff will then submit a the Methodist Theological Ar)n Mattner, pastor, speaking. .
anawer 1a no; the alternative Ia clear, edu~ation thr011g11 seve~al klnds of should express his decision .by voting
'ii
plan oc' action t.o the Ohio School and earned his Ph. D Following the Worship service, .
educ:ation anciiChoois should be private taxaiion. The three most significant are and acceptfng the conoequ~nces of that · ·
Administration on Aging to degree from Drew University Sunday School will be held at
io thoee who can pily for them.
property tax, sales tax and Income tax. decision.
.
.
-~~
SUIT FiLED
\
. reduce some of the needs of the in 1966. While at Drew, Dr. 10:30 a, m1with a basket lunch
This would, of course, re~~trlct ; The property tax' Is used to raise
Oh, y~;~, ·Shakespeare IDight well
Lela Cremeans •. Rt. I, elderly , by providing such Webb was awarded tile Ralph at 12:30 p, m. .
elementary and teCOndary education w funds locally for JIChoolllnance. Thus, ha:ve said, "To tax, or not to tax: that Is ?.' Reedsville, filed suit in Meigs services as hot .food and Sociqnan· Fellowship. 'He and
The afternoon service will
the relatively wealthy. On the average, · any local School levin on the ballot in · t])e question /' . · ' ,
:~ CoWJty Common Pleas Court transportation.
his wife, .Renee, · and five begin at-··2-''P'- m. During the··.
It ~~~ nearly a Sl;'bOO per student pet Gallla and Meigs counties, when ap.
The ·question can only be answered
~ - against Harry Lee PoweD, Rt.
Area agencies havi~g children reside In Worthington. celebration, the church will
year wprovide an adeouate education, proved by the voters, would be paid lor by you.
~ t, Reedsvllle, for conveya~ce programs and concerns which
The annual celebration of the hold a special memorial to Ora
~ of real estate \located In Olive affect the elderly populaUon Morning Star CQurch will begin Archer, M~s. Archer's gift
"MIIIIIWMO$MO:C~~~~-••1'1811li8111:11111!11~11111!11l81111'18;mo;mo;mc~.~~&gt;.::w.;:~_;.;t,W4f" •·r#:W..&gt;)~~·om;waW..f.:. ·Twp,
.
are Invited.
at 9:30 a. m, with mOrning · (Continued on page 8)

..

t~~ro~~~ ta~~x~s sup~orting ~
f,

public lnVI'ted
To Open House

i

f:

il

.~

Mtrnblrql l'_..lltiMM Sys~

VOL~ XXIV NO. 131

the Questl.on is to
...,o t ax
·
·ox
or
no
t
t

sg.
yd.

J

Devoted To The lntereJI3 Of The Meigs-Mason Area

'

TOLEDO, OHIO - WHAT HAPPENS TO George
McGovern's Jresidentlal candidacy If peace is declared? "We
rejoice," says the candidate.
"It's Nixon's ball game," says Hugh Corrigan, the
Democratic co-dlalrman of Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), "If
the prisoners are released, It hurts McGovern," says Bill Boyle,
Democratic chairman of Lucas County here, a Democratic
stronghold. "If It's a staged thing; political, obvious, it could
1
rebound against Nixon."
"We go on to discuss other issues - Nixim's credibility,
(Continued on page 8)

he present 5.2 per cent

payroll tax on the Hrsl $9,000 of

··.

· Middle West.

Ingels Buys A Carpet Closeout!
25
ROLLS GREAT
ON CARPET
SALE! SALE!

. .

•

•

· The only amphibia living
north of the Arctic Circle are
two species of frogs, the
common frog of England,
Europe and Asia, and the wood
frog ol North AI!Jerica.

By Uolted Press International

SAVE ONE-.HALF

. '

Now You Know

SHOP tHURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

3 million aged (65 and 5.85 per cent rate would be

receiving Social Security dlsabi·
lily payments before becoming
22. An eslimaled 1.7 million
dis8bled beneficiaries would be

You .can get mot·e car for I~ money with our help, Now, that
should appeal to your senses liS much as that factory-fresh,
new-car smell.
lC you're thinking about a new car, discuss yoUI··linan(ilng
with the wide-awake ,bank /nfort you start sniA\ng at cars.
· Then, wheri you buy that new car and get a good cieal be·
cause of wide-awake bank rate llnancing, your nose will
really tickle with the sweet amell of success.

Elizabeth Allman ,Died on ·Tuesday

now must carry the entire 100
·
tte
tabled
pet.
The
rna
r
was
until the program IS needed.
Councilman Fowler reported
.
b Al
on an estimate gtven y
·
. Conard tor the two ' windows
and door for the lace of the city
building, His estimate of $600 '
for two plate glass windows
and one·siore front type door irt
aluminum frame was ac.
cepted.
Mayor Harless explained
plans for house numbering and
cowtcil agreed to send a map
n~ed by a firm in Clnclnnitti
to do this.
Bills of $104.37 for the water
department and $454.66 for the
town were paid.

overt, blind and totally disabled applied to the first $12,000 of

estimated 1.2 million benEificia ries would gain from this
provision at a cost of $856
million.
- Persons now getting mini mum benefits because ofJears
. . . . . . of low earnings waul
be

ul!qt of cardeals start here

h

place and sma\ler st.one wiiJ ·be re~ulalions. governing t .e
placed at a later date when the · "WIN" program. The federal
base is settled, he· said.
government paid 50 pet. for a
·1t learned of the new limited time only and · the
C•unc
Y
·
participating organizations

COORDINATE

approved by Congress Tuesday : 1973, lor both employe and
- A guaranteed annual in - efilployer. On Jan. 1, 1974, the

and widows between age 50 and
65 and to persons 18 and over

.

.

WASHINGTON tUPII - Ma- earnings would be increased to
jor provisions of the comprom - 5.85 per cent on the first $10,800
•se Soc ial Security -welfare bill of earnings effective Jan . 1.

guaranteed $170 a month after
30 years of Social Security
~~~e~~RfonThis would costa~ul
- Medicare coverage wou ld
be extended, for the first lime,
to persons under 65. II would be
available to disabled workers

I

•

Compromise SS
Bill Approved
come fbr

·

rn· Bne·~s
J t. -.
•

• • •
.
PARTY AT SCHOOL
'
\Continued from pag~ I)
· .TUPPERS PLAINS- The with but three weeks of the campaign remaining; sc!Miduied a
community's annual speech before the Economic Club of Detroit. In his prepared
Halloween party will be held remarka the South Dakota senator said a ''Nixon recession" had
at the elementary school sharply ;educed tax revenues, "strangled the economy" and cut
here. at 7:30p.m. Saturday. national outJIIt by $175 bUllon. He said it was Nixon's policies
Features . will Include a
that forced the President to ask for a rigid limit on federal
country store, a bake shop, spending,
treasure chest, surprise
'package booth, dart game,
WASHINGTON - TELEPHONE CALLS intended for an
bingo and others. Door
antiwar
crusader In the Fontalnebleu Hotel during the
prizes will be awarded.
The event, open to the Republican NationaL!;pnve~tion were blocked in a conspiracy
public, Is sponsored by the that included the GOP National Committee, a suit filed TUesday
Tuppers Plains School alleges,
The American Civil Liberties Union Foundation namfld the
Boosters.
National Committee, the Conuni!tee to Re-Elect the President,
HURT IN FALL
. wp federal security officials and the Fontalnebleu Hotel as
The Middleport E·R un1t defendants in the Sl,125,000 suit. It was filed on behalf of Mrs.
;nswered a call at 5:26 p.m. Katherine C. Warden, of Weston, Mass., who set up a two-room
uesday to ~orth Second Ave. headquarters In the Fontainebleu to receive calls from symfor Walter Kmg who had fallen. pathizers with her antiwar views,
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated and released.

. The ioftrnor Ill empowered
to 'IUIIIII 1 co~Dndaton

Mason .Delays Halloween· Decision
Mason's Town Council
Monday
evening
agafn
discussed Halloween Trick or
Treat Night and again reached
no decision.
At the same session, plans
were announced for Mayors of
Mason and New Haveruto host
the Mid.Ohio Valley Mayors
· ·N
meelmg . ovember 6 in the
social rooms of the Mason
United Methodist Church.' ·
Council delayed making a
decision on the Halloween
· h
1
mg t unti the time can be
arranged to coincide whh those
of the surroun d'LDg co-.. ,.
. munities of Middleport,
Pomeroy and New 'Haven.
Council!llan Richard Fowler
reported on progress on
iimestoning of the alleys,
Most of the large stone is in

~
.'

•

MIDDLEPORT

,..-..

'. ..

•

...

I.

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