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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

.

•

'

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

~
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•

MIDDLEPORT

,..-..

'. ..

•

...

I.

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1

1- 'l1le DIIIIJW MIHepwt-l'umeroy,'U,, Oct. 19, lt'/2

_
3-The Dally Sentlnel,

New Drug Abuse Control Law :Becomes Effectiv~
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A new state
· Now the state will license
91lres the f!ljte Deparblient of drug treabnenl centers and reMentalHealtb ..d Retardation gulate the use of methadone,
to compile a ''data bank" of an addictive drug subsllture
eu~~ hllltolies 8111 treabnent of used lor treatiilg herwn adIll drug depenilent persons in dicls.
Clllo, keeping tbeir names
Mastics lklld state regtstra·
c:onfldential.
tion would curtail "phony" me-The comprehenstve drug
.oo.e 'cootrol law also giVes
the Slate the tools to:
- Crack down on illegal possession of barbiturates and
amJIIIetamines.
By NORMAN KEMPSTER.
- Close, down ''phony" metWASHINGTON
(U PI )hadone clinics and regulate m·
dependent drug treatment cen- After almost 30 years of cold
ters, both potential breeding war tensions, the Umted States
and the Soviet Uruon have
III:OIDlda for drug abuse.
histone
trade
signed
- Make sun: hypodermic
needles and drug samples stay agreements that settle World
out of the hands of War n debts, slash tariffs and
JrOmise a tripled pace of
lllauthorized personnel
busine&amp;!
between the world's
The new law, enacted last
July, took 16 months to get two largest economies,
"Theae are vPry significant
through the General Assembly
steps
In the direction of better
although It had una'nimous
political relations between the
baclring of the lawmakers.
The puql09e of the "data Soviet Union and the United
bank" on drug dependncy States ... there is a much better
cases &amp;calrding to state Rep. ch81)ceforpeace m the world,"
~e E. Mastics, R-Falrvlew Secretary of State William P.
Park, 18 not to single out drug Rogers told newsmen following
abusen but to oollect statiBtlca signing ceremonies Wed·
"10 that the nature and eztent nesday .
of ck-ug abuse throughout Ohio
can be fully known and under-

thadone clm&lt;'ls and treatment

&amp; THINBS

he and pnvate hosp1lals or climes and COI'mmruly mental
health nnd relatdlltton boards
to dispense methadone only m
compball&lt;'e With stnct stand·
ards
Bootleg methadone sales and
furmshmg the drug to those

get prescnpttons wtll be 'Jilaxunum $1,000 fine.
punishable by a maximum
Outlets for hypodermiCneedBY PAUL CRABTREE
"spnngmg up hke mushrooms
$5,000 Imp and a one-to-10 year les and drug samples also wtll
m drugstorf fronts and
prtson sentence.
bear the burden · ol stormg
The American langusge, sometimes referred to as English,
churches and could very well
them safely and seemg they is constantly in a state of change.
become spawmng grounds for
Possession Lim'tted
I have just been forcefully reminded of this. ( Of course, if It
don't fall into the wrong hands.
addtction "
FaiiUJ e to reg1ster a drug
Possesswn of. hypodermic never changed, we'd all still be speaking like Chaucer and
treatment program w1th the
.'
The bureau wdl hcense pub- who fe1gn firm! rtPOPnttP.,rP to state wtll be punishable by a needles is limited lo a list of wouldn't understand one another at all.)
authorized persons, and the
My wife has been taking an English refresher, along with
maximum penalty for illegal · some other subjects, just for the fun of it at the Mason
posseSSion is doubled to 10 Vocationai-Tecltntcal Center. One of her texts is a spelling brushyears m pnson for repeat of· up book, first copynghted in 1960.
lenses.
11 uses several standard dictionaries as 1ts base, principally
Dtsplay of hypodermics for _ it would seem _ the Webster's Sixth Collegiate, Jllblished
The pacts are sweepmg in Yugoslavia and Poland,
Peterson emphaSized that sale is prohibtted. So is fatlure from tune to time untill961. Since then, the Seventh.polle81/lte,
scope, even covermg 1tems as guarantee nondiscrunmatory U S exports would far exceed to take precautions to prevent as well as the often-berated Third International Unabl-idged has
'
mundane as slenographtcal tanff rates. The tariffs on unports, thus unproving the thefts, and discarding a neeqle appeared.
Without
rendering
ll
useless.
·
.
,
.
service for Amertcan busmess- products from nations whtch do U.S balance of trade by
&amp;lch
violations
draw
a
$25
to
V.
Some
of
the
usage
recOIJJJ?ended
m
the
book
just
didn
t
nng
men in Moscow. Commerce not enJOY most favored nation "several hundred million dol$100 rme or impru;onment for true to me, so I began comparmg the source material, espectaUy
Secretary Peter G. Peterson status are much htgher.
lars "
30
to too' days.
the Sixth with the Seventh (this is the red-covered Merrl8ffi·
predicted the goal of $1.5 billion
The trade package mcludes
Off1ctalssatd the agreements
Manufacturers dealer. Webster used in most htgh schools and colleges) I was right.
in two-way trade during the were a dtrect result of
-A RUSSl8D promiSe to pay
'
three year pact would be · President Ntxo n's tr1p to at least $722 million in the next pharmactsts, d~ctors and There have been many, many updalings :
nurses
must
not
furnish
"Comptroller,"
for
example,
could
only
be
pronounced
surpassed.
Moscow last May. Negoliahons 29 years to settle 1ts debt for
But the whole package lS whtch began then were conti- World War II Lend Lease goods unauthortzed persons wtth "controUer" In the Sixth. The Seventh g1ves up and uses the
needles, at the nsk of a pronunciation most Amertcans prefer: "KOMP-trol-ler."
contingent upon approval by nued by Peterson and Sovtet ongmally worth $11.1 billion.
maxnnum
$1,000 fine or one-to"Prelnlere," once listed as the leading female part In a play
Congress of "most favored Trade Mmtster Ntkolat S.
- Acomnubnent to mcrease
nation" tartff treatment for the Patohvhev
two-way trade between the two five year prison term for the or drama, now is listed with a principal meaning familiar to us
SoVIet Union . The pacts would
Peterson, Rogers and Pato- nattons to $1.5 billion during first offense, and a maxunwn all: thefirstperformanceofalmostanydramaticwork
"Lingerie" no longer means "linen goods." The Seventh
become vot&lt;b if the tariff hchev stgned the documents. the life of the pact, three times $5,000 fine or two-to-20 year
concessions are denied.
The trade pact runs for three the commerce durmg the prtson term for subsequent fields to progress and admits it usually refers to ''women's in- '
timale apparel."
•
The most favored nation years but Peterson satd negoti· three-year pertod that ended \'ll))attons.
Unttl now, hypodermtc need"Ensemble" is pronounced in the SIXth with aU those nasal
rules, which now apply to all ahons'wtU·begm soo n ooextend last Dec. 31
non-Communist countrtes plus it.
- Extension to tfie Russians les have sometunes been a_vail· French sounds no American ever seems to master, but the
of credit from the U.S. Export- able ~n a self-sel'Vlce bas~ .
Seventh simplified both the way to say 1t, and the meanmg of "a
hnport Bank on the same
The new law places sunllar complete outfit that matches," instead ~f the precise, but outterms that apply to all other controls on dru8 ':""~les .. Ne- moded "thre01Jlt!Cf garment."
stood."
nations.
ghg_ence m dtslnbuhng ,
"Entree," whtch Americans refer to as the main course of a
MlalmumTerm
- Comprehensive rules stormg or discarding samples meal, finally is g1ven that pre-eminent mesnmg in the Seventh,
Failure to furnish Incovering the treatment of 1finspurush ablle bYda $25_to_ 100 while the older dictionary sticks with the definition of
formation about caae histories
eor 30 o 100 aySIDJ&amp;1.
.,
dbetw
"
ch
businessmen in each nation
In the past' according to
something serve
~en courses, or some su . .
upon request of the Departincluding a section guaran"Protege," another Pansian lmJl?rl, also is Amerlcantzed to
Mashes, drug' samples have
ment of Mental Health and
teeing billngljlll stenographers
been repackaged and sold indicate the status of a patron.pupil connotation the word ~as
Retardatiorlls punishable by a
By HELEN THOMAS
McGovern was buoyed by a Lockheed loan," he noted. and adequate commwlications
fine of up to $500. However,
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)--Sen. turnout of several thousand "Why should 1t not he extended facilities for U.S. businessmen Illegally or stored beyond !herr attained, instead of "someone entrusted to the care ?r attention
exp1ration date.
of another," which would encompass a convict and hlB warden, a
Identification of the patients George S. McGovern satd fans at a rally here Wednesday to cover retrremenl mcome m Moscow.
master and his slave, or a child and his parent.
cannot be reqwred.
today the
Nixon
ad- night and scheduled appearan· ea rned by working people and
Would you believe that pnor to publication of the Seventh in
A aecood cooviction on a mmlstratlon's pension reform ces with black voters today at set astde for them in penswn
1965,
"Capitol" was always spelled with a capital letter, and
Charge of illegal possession of plan "diBcrimlnates heavily" Cheyney State Colleg~ m plans.
WIN AT BRIDGE
meant, principally, the Temple of Juptter In
Now it
barbiturates or amphetamines in favor of the rich and un- PeMsylvania and a rally at
"More than 35 mtlhon
means, first, any state capitol building, or the U. S. capttol in
now draws a minimum one· veiled a proposal of his own to Bedford-Stuyvesant in American workers are enrolled
Washmgton.
year prlaon term. Previously, guaranl!!e workers retirement Brooklyn wtth Rep. Shirley m pnvate penston plans, yet
such an offence was either a pay after five years on the job. Chisholm, who sought the more than half of them Will
Punctuation IS also more perrrussive. The textbook insists
Jump to four spades, as do
NORTH
misdemeanor or felony with no
The Democratic presidential ' Democratic prestdenllal recetve absolutely no pension
!6 1 · we. You can't pI a y your that phrases like the "1970's" be set off ~lth an apostrophe, and
• 108 52
minimum sentence.
partner for a blank hand m the same with "mind your P's and Q's." The Seventh notes it
candidate annolUlced his new nomination herself.
heneftts when they rettre and
'II'Q864 2
these
sttuahons "
The deparbnent's \lUreau of Jrogram far private peOSJon
isn't terribly unportant if you say 1960s or 1970s, the Three Rs,
+K 76
As outlined, hts pension many others Will recetve only
Jun · "Jeff netther recom- and forget the apostrophe - so long as the meaning IS clear.
dr¥g abuae llPefates 11 drug plans backed by federal insur- reform program would requrre l mmunal returns. The Nixon
oloJ
mends nor dtsapproves of
treabnent centers throughout ance In a statement for the guaranteemg of 50 per cent adm1nistrat10n has largely WEST
EAST (D)
West's
five-club bid. Thts Really, you can do it either way.
• K 74
• Vmd
Ohio on a budge of $1.6 million delivery at a labor luncheon in of the beneftts after ftve years ignored thts inJusllce.
time 1t works well as North
'II'A10 9
YJJ
through nelrt JlUlf 30. But lnde· Philadelphia. Before leaving of work and an addttional 10
"For two years 1t had made
bids a doubtful flYe spades."
+QJ4
+t0 832
pendent drug treabnent cen- Toledo, he planned w hold a per cent for each year of no sertous proposal for peDSJon
Oswald " The Important
olol0 652
,f.K Q98743
ters and methadone clinics breakfast meeting With local servtce thereafter up to ft ve reform " he said. "Last year It
blt of advice comes next
SOUTH
have never answered to the union officials.
Rubens pomts out that West
fmally made a proposal which
.AQJ 963
years.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972
expects to beat five spades,
'II'K7 5
The guarantees would apply f11s neatly mlo the lradtllonal
but
there
IS
no
point
in
a
+
A95
6 IJO.,-News 3,48,10,15, Truth' or Consseq 6, News 13, Travel
retroactively for workers over Republtcan mold ;
oloA
double. If West does beat five
Lure 3).
40, he satd. ''Otherwtse, these dtscrimmatmg heavtly m favor
spades he IS sure of a mighty 6 31)--NBC News 4,15, ABC News 6; CBS News 8,10 , I Dream of
North-South vulnerable
older workers wtll be deprived of the rich and domg nothing West North East South
good score. A double would
Jeannie 13; Des1gnln9 Women 33.
of a proposal as this if adop- for many of those m greatest
gain maybe half a match 7 oo--Trulh or Consequences 3, Seal The Clock 4; Course of our
•
3,fo
4.
need."
ted," he said. ,
po~nt ''
5..
Pass Pass
Helen and Sue Bottel
Times 33, Pick, V.an Dyke 4, w~at:s M~•• ~J ne? 8; . e.~ , Rljd
In a half hour televiston
Pass
Jim · "While it really does
To avert personal hardships,
Jubilee 15 ) News6; Amazl~g World of Kresklp 13. ·'
not change any of Jeff's 7 30-Chapter 33. HollywoOII Squares'3', Til fell' The 'trOfh '6~ ·
Openmg lead- • 2
he also proposed that a federal telethon Wednesday camed
"FAT GIRL" GETS FAT. MAIL
pomts, it turns out that four
Wild Kingdom 10; I'll See You In Court 4, Beat the Ciolek 13;
tnsurance program be esta- over stations whtch blanketed
Dear Helen and Sue:
lasSie a; Black Journal 33.
Ohto and parts of . West By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby spades w1ll be beaten if West
blished
Which of your letters got the most mail recently• 8
llO--Mod
Squad 6,13 , The Wallons 8,10, Advocates 33; World
leads
a
diamond
when
he
"Federal Insurance already Virgmta, Kentucky and PennOswald " Jeff Rubens of gets m wtth the king of
ALWAYS INTERESTED
Senes, 3,4,15
covers bank depostts, home sylvania, McGovern satd New York has been a great spades and the subsequent 9 oo- Hollywood TeleviSion Theatre 33 . AsSignment. Vienna
mortgages, secunttes losses taunted Prestdent Ntxon to bndge theonst for many defense doesn't sltp at all "
6,13, Mov1es "The Legend of lylah Clare" 8, " The Roman
Dear AJ.:
years He fmally showed his
"come
out
and
debate."
Spnng
of Mrs Stone" 10; lnfernahonal Performance 33.
resultmg
from
the
fatlure
of
(NEWSPAPER ENTU.PikiSE ASSN )
"Miss 22», Five Feet Five" who wondered why nobody loves
10 oo--Owen Marshall 6,13 ; Mounlameer Sports 33.
"If he keeps hidmg m the abthty as a player when hts
brokerage
houses
and
the
a fat girl, got the Aching Feet of the Month award from Norm,
10 3()-Rogondus 33.
White House, slltmg there on team won the Spmgold Cup
our friendly, strong-backed mailman. Amazingly, more than half
this year so that h1s new
11 QO-News 3,4,6,10,13,15.
his Gallup Poll, there's gomg to book, 'The Secrets of Wm11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, D1ck Cavelt 6; Movies "A Man
our correspondents here were male, and the majority mststed
be a surprtse," McGovern srud. ni ng Br td ge,' 1s rather
The b1ddmg has been:
Alone" 8, "Sweet B1rd of Youth" 10, "N•ghtand the City" 13
they COULD love a fat girl-In fact some already did.
"But I guess he remembers timely '
West
North
East
1 oo- News 4
Examples:
1 31)--News 13.
what John Kennedy did to him
Jtm 'He ts a duplicate
· Pass
1'11'
' +++
m the TV debates m the 1960 player rather than a rubber Pass
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1972
You, South, hold
Rap:
bndge player As would be
prestdential race."
This letter concerns "Miss 22»." I am a 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld man. I
Eulogies to the late Edtlh Q.
McGovern also found hunsell expec ted, hts sectiOn on dup- .AK86 'II'Al02 +K S ,f.A164
6. 00- Sunn se Semrnar 4,· Sacred Heart 10.
What do you do ~ow?
eat aU I want and stay thin, and lam married to a so-called "Fat Dent were g1ven at her funeral heckled a bit at the telethon by hcate is v e r y goo d Hts
6 15-Farmllme 10 , Farm Report 13. 6 20--Paul Harvey 13,
A-Bid two spades. You realGirl" whom 1 adore!
by the Rev Roosevelt Walker, a caner who questioned his chapters on rubber bndge
6 25- Biue &amp; Ridge Quartet 13.
are
not
up
to
that
standard
"
ly
like
your
hand.
6 31)--Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8, Bullwmkle and Rockey
~ot all men love sklnnys - It's predictable that you two
pastor of th e St. John consistency. "Any leader who
133.
Oswald "East's three-club
TODAY'S QUESTION
advise reducing, as you're JrObably both thin, but a lot of people Missionary Baptist Church, can't change hts mind for fear
Your
partner
reb1ds
to
three
00 Jootfor other things m persons besides their shapes.
Springfield, where he was a of losing face is not a leader, he btd 1s a typtcal non-vulner- hearts What do you do now? 8 DO-Capt Ka ngaroo 10, New Zoro Revue 13, Sesame St 33,
able match pomt preempt
Romper Room 8, T•mmy &amp; Lass1e 6.
I've seen people lose their health from drastic diets - not to
member. Prayer was gtven by Is a disaster," McGovern said. Jeff recommends South's
8 31)--Jack Lala nne 13, New Zoo Revue6. Romper Room a
Miss
1 th
the Rev Clyde Henderson,
9 oo- Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue IS, What Every Woman
speak ofthelr good dispositions. My advise to · 220 s IS · As • pas lor of the Church of the
Wants to SKnow 3; Concenfrahon 6. Capt K ~ ngaroo 8; Ben
Joog aaa woman is neat, cheerful, kind, haPJly, her shape can be
Na zarene, Pomeroy
Casey 13, dMr Rogers 33 , Friendly Junction 10.
overlooked.1When the r!gbt !!!!!l.J.'9IDes along,@..ID&gt;.!Jl.me how
The- Rev - Nyle Borden ::--:~m.~~:.~"?l';?"~~~:~:z;;.;:--w:?;-;.~:::.:om~:~'ft«)!..~~~m::-:•.f:.i»~~'@'~~~
9,JO,..Jeopardy 6, Hazel-81 T-o Te!H he' fruth-s-. · muchyouwelgh. - HAPPILYMARRIEDTOAFATGIRL
-'i·tonducted the funeral semce
10 00- DmaH Shore3,15; D1ck VanDyk~ 13, HazelS , Columbus
S1x Callmg 6, Joker's W1ld 8,10.
+++
\ whtch was held at 1 p m on
10 31)--Concenlrallon 3,15, Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13,
Helen and Sue:
Salurday, Oct 14, at Ewmg
Pnce Is R•ghl B,10.
Maybe It wouldn't be so Iough, staymg with a diet if everyone
Funeral Home The obttuary
dldn'l ask, "How are you doing with your diet?" How much
BV JACK O'BRIAN
was read by Dorts James of
in a Brigttte Bardo! fltck' Yep - "The 11 llO--Love American Style 6. Sale of the Century 3,15,
Password 13, Gambit 8,10.
weight have you lost?" Then I get discouraged and start eating. I Sprmgfteld and song offered by
'NOW KilLER CAN
Weekend"! ... Met Tony Randall walking on 11 31)--love of L1fe8 , Bew1lched6,1J; Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
tried dietlog secretly, but people thought I was sick 'cause J Beatrtce . Benson also of
FLY GERALDINE
smog along 5th Ave. - agog sliD after-seeing 12 llO--Jeopardy 3,15, Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Password 6,
didn't eat. Won't you please teD well meaning friends and Sprmgfteld
NEW YORK (KFS) - Flip Wilson chirstens · "Tales of Hoffman" at the Metopera the night
Local News 10; News ll , Conlact a.
relatives to keep quiet?- W.O.W.
Pallbearers were James a new Nat'] Airlines plane thts week · he was before : "Best show In town, on or off Broad- 12 31)--3 W's Game 3,15, Search for Tomorrow 8,10, Spill Second
6.
Quails, Max Groff, Charles and hijacked to CUba on one three years ago. He'll way" was the Odd Single's hosannah ... "Hurry,
o--News 3, All My Children 6,13, Green Acres 10; It's Your
W.O.W.:
Larverne Boyd, Luther Rob- he the first ever hijacked to have a plane named Harry" IS the sad little new musical at the Ritz 1 OBel
8, Walch Your Child 15.
Will do: The best help for dieters Is stlent reinforcement : like
m~on and John Pat Boyd.
after him ("Geraldine") .. Russian diplomat to Theater, and better hurry, Harry, It won't tarry 1 30- 3 On A Match 3,4, 15, lei's Make A Deal6,13 , As the World
having carrot sticks Instead of candy bars handy m the
Turns a,IO.
an American UN dj.!to discussing the George long; succeeds only in pulling off the Ritz.
refrigerator. - SUE
Holzer Medical Center
Wallace and other U. S. assassmahons · "I
Richard Roth didn't mind being hired as a 2 110-'--Days of OUr lives 3,4,15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike
Douglass 6, Guiding Lighl 8, 10.
'
+++
Discharges
wonder what would have happened if Khrush- standln on ''The Naked Ape" flick; what hurt
2
30--Doclors
3.4,15
,
Dallng
Game
IJ;
Edge
of N1ght8, 10.
Rap:
Bertha Ingels, Mrs. Edward [chev had been assassinated Instead of John him deeply was - he stood in for a was statue 3 llO--Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospllal 6, 13, Love
This Is the very first letter I've ever written to a columnist,
Kmcatd and son; Mrs Paul Kennedy." The U.S. dip shrugged and replied, which couldn't stand the heat from studio lights
Splendored Thing a, 10.
but I wa.s so moved by Miss 22», Five Feet Five's distress that I
Malson and daughter; Josetta "I don 't know - except that Aristotle Onassls ... Don't invite NBC's critic Gene Shallt and the 3 3o--Return to Peyton Place 3,4, 15, Secrel StormJ,10; One life
to live 6, 13.
had to send her some cheer.
Noble, Roberta Htll, Carolyn never would have marrted Mrs. Khrushchev." New Yorker's Pauline Kael to the same
4
llO--Mr
Cartoon 3, Somerse115, Sesame ,St. 33, Fflnfslones ' ·
I've always been large - so fat as a baby my mother couldn 'I
Hayes, Freda Burns, Memll
John Ringling North and his brother Henry screening --'- Miss Kael's guest at a p-eview
love,
American
Style 13; Merv Griffen 4, Gilligan's Island
carry me. It's true: people ralaed fat have temble problems
Geer, Jr , Mrs Steven Htll and of the Ringling Bros. Clrc~oundlng family remarked Gene was the "only other critic"
a.
Mov1e " Dark Command" 10.
trying to get thin. I tried every kind of dlet, probably lost 500
daughter ; Corbett Stull, Dame! satled leisurely mlo Manhattan aboard the S. S. Jresent and la Kael replied, "There's still no 4.31)--1 Love Lucy 6, Passwored 13 ; Merv Griffin a, Andy
poiDlda In all, and gained them all back. Finally I dectded to eat
Garthee, Donald Carruthers, France as befits the last of the great other critic here"; meeeowww! ... WW1der if
Griffith }5; Daniel Boone 13, Pefl•coat Junc1ton 3.
what l felt I needed for health - and I haven't gained a pound in
Nanme Comstock, B.etty Diehl, boulevardiers ... First local stop of course "21" "Terry \II the Pirates" cartoonist George 5 llO--Misler Rogers 33, D1ck Van Dyke 15; Ponderosa 1,4 ,
Daniel Boone 6.
loutyears- but I stUI weigh 210 pounds. LuckUy, my husband lB
Jame~ Jeffers, Ona Mellon, where the finest wines, foods and fixln~ were WW1der knows there's a rock pack singing at
5
30--Marshall
Dillon 15, Elec Co. 33, Gomper Pyle 13,
a great B!IY who says, ''There's just that mucJ\ more of you to Anne Parsnell, Ruby Preston, the order of the evening : John with his own O'Lunney's East biDed as ''Terry ' &amp; the
Dragnet' 8.
1
love."
~
Mrs James Russell and son, private stock of superb antique bourbon, wines Pirates."
6 00--News 3,4,a,I0,15 ; NBC News I, 13, Trulh or Cons~. 6,
I've made my size pay off. I now design dresses, bridal
Orville Scarberry and Della . and brandies In the "21" cellars. John's almost
lnslghl 33,
'
Things to come portent? Madame Nguyen
gowns, etc. fOl' the Size 3}.up crowd, and my crealtons can make Stmpson.
6
31)--NBC
News
3,4,15
;
ABC
News
6;
CBS
News
I,
10;
I
Dream
Harry Swartv, Barbara an extinct, certainly an endangered, species Van Thieu, wife of tbe VIetnam boss, placed
or Jeannie 13, Halhoyoga 33.
·
heavies look 111mo1t1 alim. lt'san art. l?m happy wtth my career,
Wtlson, Jay Wtseman, Jewell and a last bulwark versus the Hamburger their two cblldren in Brltiah schoola ... Christ· 7 llO--Whal My Lihe 8, Masterpiece Theatre 33; Wfl~ Kingdom
my tnar'l'lqe- and, finally, my weight. - EMILV
mas on London's BBC wiD be "Bing O'osby
Crunutte, Wilma Barlow, Generation.
13, News 6,10, Truth or Conseq. 3; Saint 15; Beat The Clock
4,
Folk Guitar 33.
Arthur
Strauss ,
John
Elder sage Buckn11nster Fuller In the King Week." Bing's "White Christmas" recording Is
Dear Overweight Readers of Rap :
7
30-To
Tell The Truth 6; Parent Game 10, Beat the Clock 13;
Panabaker, Esler Fink, and Cole Room of the St. Regis was Inscribing his the best'IOUer of the wu;~ang - 71 million ,
'l1le belt way to reduce 18 to join a "reducers club" and there ' Alma Moore.
Porter Wagoner 3, Young Dr Kildare 4; It's Your Bet 8; '
latest tome ( "lnlul~on") to Mr . Bert, finest recorda of Irving Berlin 'a great Yule sslute
Wall 51 Week 33.
.-e many In almOst every towh, from "Overeaters Anonymous"
Births ~~
~ headwalte~ In tllif flnlck' ftown ... Georgie
Since 1942 ... Ed McMahon lolt one of his many s·oo-'BOilk Ileal 33, Brady Bunch t, 13; L•on AI World's End
(ftee, but you can offer contrlb~tlions tf you wish), to T.O.P.S
3,4,15; Sonny &amp; Cher a, to.
Mrs. Billie Keith Wtlhams, Jesse! In "21" announced he was wooDed and commercials (not the beer) after his apllt with
(Tab Oft Poundll &amp;inlllbly, a dues.paying organization) to
Willow Wood, ~ son, and Mts that he'd just returned from Wllblpgtoli, D. C. . longplay wife, Alyce. Sountla ailly these days; 8·30--Partrldge Family 6113; Little People 3,4,1~; Jus!
Generation 33.
Waldlen, which chqea a fee for each meeting. Also you Clarence Rice, Jr ., Pt whe~e "I sat with Gen. Q-elghton Abr&amp;ml untU Ed also wanted to Include aon, Jeff, 12, In his
• flO to a beallb ia1Gn where for around $15 a month you get A Pleasant, a son
he got the Senate okay as Chief of Staff"; and if cafe act, but Alyce dampered the Idea.
9 110 - Room 222 6,13; Masterpiece Theatre 33; How to Handle a
WilD of elftl8el, calorie budgeting, etc.
"Sleuth," aUil IOOH-bumpins merrily
Woman 4,54, 15, Movie "Lure of the Wilderness" I; CBS ,
Veterau MemortalH Ita!
that wasn't a big enough name-drop, J - l
Jllneoftbtproirlllll )MIIbtlthe "crash diet" which juJt turns
Reports to.
ADMJTI'ED _Mary";l:uler exposed his cuffs with, "And then Prelldent alq, II put tbe 410 pet. profit nwt ... Bid ID
JMIIIIo a JO-t'O, IIICI• II
1 retrain your eating habits,
9:
30--Love
, American Sl\rfe 6, 13.
Pomeroy· ·Guy Swain Miners: Nixon sent me over a p&amp;lr of his cullllnU." nota thai Smut Slntt (Old) II 11M ume pf
10:00-The American Experience 3,4,1S ; Smithsonian
'
, . . . a tlldeittary l»tJotllder should eat no more than
old lllowbl&amp; lharoa8hf..-e whereon were llarrad
ville; Stacy Coon Ne~ Haven· . Wore an his medals, too, In his clvvleHapel.
Adven1ure 10; Wake Up John ,Doe 33.
.......... a day (mulllply 12times your Ideal weight, which
Jerry Aleshire, jr. , Syracuse'.
We hearthe Allied TOW!lel' (formerly Times John Barrymore at 11M IW'rta In "Hamlet," The 11. DO-News 3,4A,I,10, 13, IS.
,.u want to malnlaln at 135, your calorie intake can
DISCHARGED _ Raymond Tower) In Times Square mllbt -If no one buys Astalne at the Lllierty In "Lidy Be Good"; 11: 30--Dlck CaveH I; Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Movlu "Malar
~ r~e
t,lll) -and you mull stick to this the rest of your Hartley, 'Orvtlle (Jake) GaUl it at $7,000,000- wind up wltb tile city (allfl Fred, Ljbby Holman and attton Webb In
Dundee" I, "The War of the Worlds" It; "Devll's A""tls"
13:
...
'
~·ranees Howery, Frankll~ mayhap?) to be torn down ind 1101~ nme. ''Tllree'1 • &lt;l'owd" at the Selwyn Zlellfeld 1 00--Roller Derby 4; Mutiny In Outer Space 11.
llln't UIJ, llutll'l mrarcliJ!g.- A WEIGHT WA'I'CHER Triplett,
Square's traffic jumble ... Epd- Rid Nellon Folllw at the New Amlterdlm, etc.
1 30--Nt!ws 4, 13.

ltate law, effective today, re-

cerilers, whach he satd are

0

Agieemept Settles War Debts

McGovern Claims Nixon's
Pension Plan Favors Rich

*

Rome.

No Point in Double Here

Television Log

Generation Rap

5.

By

'

LA#Bn:HAM!fiXl

Eulogies Given
By Rev. Walker

I Voice along Br'Way

w•

man

-==It..

..

\

I

Muldleport-Pom~roy, U.,.()ct.19, 1972

e
'h'?-.•,-.;,·.-,~·· •:O:D~o:o:o..-. • ~ • • ,_. ._._. •
o
~o;,.,,
.v.•, ,._..,..,•,:.:.:.!O!~~;:·::o:.Y.o'»},o;•;-;o'~h'•'o.::.::•..';&gt;'•:-'•:• ..'•'·~~-~.~.·. ,•.o,•;o,•,•:O:•:•:-:·:~·:·;.-,•,•,•,

I

Box s~~;;"""'"""" ' il

Ctnbnnah
Rosell
Morgan 2b
Tolan cf
Bench c

Pere z lb

Menke 3b

rl
Chaney ss
Billingham p
Carroll p
Totals
Oakland
Geron1mo

Campaner1sss

Alou rt
Rud•ll
Epstem lb
Banda 3b
Hendnck cf

Tenace c

Green 2b
Marquez ph

's

e

ab r h b• Kub iak 2b
3 0 0 0 Odomp
F 1ngers p

3 1 I 0 Tolals
2 0 1 0
4 0 I I
4 0 0 0

4

0 0 0 0
29

Cincmnall
Oakfand

OAKLAND ( UPI ) - hseum, Anderson uamed f~r~- p1lch hom A'• starter John
&amp;lddenly, defying h1story, the ballmg left-bander Don Gullett 'Blue Moon" Odom and
Cincmnati Reds are ahve again (9-10) as his get-even pttcher rapped lt mto short center fteld
and Manager D•ck W1lhams or lor a ~mgle Perez came
m the 1972'World Sertes.
"We're on our way, u trwn the A's also ptcked a left ~ aroWld third on a wtde turn
peted cm'cmnall
Reds' jlander, Ken Holtzman (19-11), hcadmg for the plate and
Manager Sparky Anderson m the wmner of the opemng game suddenly he slipped and fell on
the wake of Wednesday mght's of the Sertes m Cincmnatt last the soggy turf
1-&lt;1 pttching battle lrmmph that Saturday
In center held , George
cut the A's' lead in the best-&lt;&gt;f·
Reds Buck History
Hendrtck had run m, scooped
seven Fall classic to two games
The Reds are bucking base- up the hall, and threw 1t to
to one.
hall htstory which says that no shortstop Bert CampaneriS
''Watch us now," said Ander- team ever has'lost the ftrst two Inslmcttvely, Campanem
son. "I still think the same as I games of the Sertes at home looked to frrst base to keep
did after we came here to and come back to win the world Gerommo from advancmg--he
Oakland tratltng, ~. in games champtonshtp
hadn't noticed that Perez had
- we are gomg to wm the
Cmcinnati scored the game's fallen and he never thought he
Senes in seven games. They've only run on a smgle by Tony had a play at home.
got a real good club but we've Perez, a sacriftce by Derus
Campanerls Doesn't Hear
got a real good club, too, and Menke, and another smgle by
catcher Gene Tenace was
you're startmg to see 1t now " Cesar Geronimo
screammg for the ball From
For tomghl's 5:15 p.m PDT
Perez was on second b!ise the dugout, Wilhams was
fourth gte at Oakland Co- when Geronuno laced mto a hollenng, too. Campanerts
never heard 'em-crowd notse
"[ hear nothing," satd
campaneriS "! was lookmg at
the hall and at Gerorumo "
So the moment was lost, and
With
1t the game Because
last week
Chuck Faulk IS !led for
meanwhtle
Jack Btllingham
Vaughan, w1th a bnlhant 6-9 second m the league sconng
passmg performance (two race hehmd Athens' Don Wood was mowing down the A's
TDs) last Fnday, moved up to ' and !Jed w1th Jackson's Randy
s1xth place m that category and Rtdge Faulk 1s also second m
has thrown only two tn- rushmg wtlh 405 yards but lops
lerceptwns thts year, second the league m yards ga med per
only to Athens' Greg Skmner
carry with an 8.6 average

0 0 0 0
2000
1000
0 0 0 0

3 0 0 0 Eganph
4 0 1 0 Blue p
4 0 0 0

0 3 0

000 000 10()-1

1100 000 000-0
E- Tenace, Epste1n, Bench ,

4 0 0. 0 Morgan DP- Cmcinnat1 I LOB
0 0 0 0 - Cmcmnah 8, Oaklan~ 6
31 I 4 I
SB- Rose, Geron tmo, Tolan
ab r h b1 S Menke Aloo
3 0 0 0

3 0 0 0 B1ll1ngham W
4 0 I 0 Carroll

IP, h

-

r er bb so

83003 7
10000 0
2 0 0 0 Odom L
73
11 2ll
4 0 0 0 Blue
1310010
4 0 0 0 Ftngers
1230001 3
3 0 0 0
Save- Carroll T- 2 24 A2 0 1 0 49,410
l 0 I 0

Marauders Favored at Waverly
By KEITH WISECUP
The Metgs Marauders go
agamst the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League's top passer,
John Shoemaker of the
Waverly Tigers, but nevertheless Wlll be favored heavily to
wm thetr stxth game agamst
one defeat at Ttgerland this
Fnday mght II is the last road
tnp for the Metgs club thts
season.
Waverly , wmless m stx
starts, has gained 369 yards
through the atr, tops in the
league. But Coach Tom Oyer's
Ttgers also, regretfully, have
the loop's leaktest defense,
allowmg 374 yards a game
Waverly is shan~g the bottom
spol wtth the also wmless
Wellston Rockets.
Meigs, fr es h off of a
resoundmlf '28-6 thrashing of
the Jackson Jronmen last
Friday, is !ted with Athens for
second place at 3-1 Ironton
leads everybody wtth 4-&lt;l. The
Marauders clash wtlh the
Bulldogs next Friday at Metgs.
Athens travels to Galhpolis thts

Fnday
Meigs' J . D. Story, a 170 lb.
junior, Is out for the season
with a broken hand he suffered in the Jackson game.
Story has come off the bench
several tbnes this year to
perform well at linebacker,
but more lmportpntly has
centered on punts all of this
year, all of which have been
perfect.
Btg Mark Werry, a 235 lb.
semor offenstve tackle, wtll
take over the cructal centenng
of pWlls job ThiS wtll be
Werry's first crack at the task
Qther Marauders banged up
lhts week are 265lb sophomore
tackle Randy Faulk wtth a
brmsed midsection and 155 lb
Jumor mtddle guard Alan
McLaughlin wtlh a spramed
ankle Both are expected to
start, however. Randy Chafm ,
a !55 lb. semor end who sat out
last week's game because_of
Illness, should also be ready to
start and take over hts punlmg
JOb that was handled capably
by quarte rback Andy Vaughan

MEIGS WAVERLY PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
WAVERLY
WI. Pos. Wl
John Shoemaker I11 I
173 QB 160
T1m Anderson 1121
160 TB 160
John Walters I121
179 FB 180
M1ke M•ghm ko (10)
147 WB 160
Jeff Anderson (121
153
c 160
Rudy Spaeth 1121
160
177
G
Dave Fassen (11 I
175
G 180
Steve Oyer ( 12)
235
T 175
Bob Sayre Ill I
210
265
T
B•ll Malo~ 112 1
180
E 185
Jed Dalley I121
155
E 170
DEFENSE
Me1gs : Alan Mclaughlin, 155 lb , Ill). m1ddle guard. Bill
Slack, 168 tb (ll ), and Lehew, ta ckles, Tom Lowery, 150 lb Ill).
and Chaney, ends, McKinney and Weber. lineba ckers, Jon
Dillard, 1481bs. (12). and Ash, cornerbacks, and Dave Wolfe, 160
lbs (ll ).a ndMelv lnCremeans, 160ibs (ll),deepbacks
WAVERLY· Joh n Lawson. 175 lbs (121. m1ddle guard .
Kev 1n Case. 210 lbs (11), and Walters, tackles , Jeff Roads, 160
lb , (11 ), and Oyer, ends , T Anderson and Fossen, linebackers,
and M•ghmko, Maloy , Dalley and Mark Workma n. 16Q lb (111,
deep backs

MEIGS
Andy Vaughan (12)
Chuck Faulk 1121
Dallas Weber ll21
M1ck Ash III I
R1ck Gaul (12)
Lou McKi n ne~ (12)
John Lehew Ill I
Mark Werry (12)
Randy Faulk (10)
B•ll Chaney 1121
Randy Chafm I121

Tornado Win Friday is _for Titl~
gold who have only weak wm over the Bobcats Eastern, should be pretty tough next
ho'):e~~r, IS also m the ~lJ!l mng year as they return s1x of' RACINE -t :r~e'' ~tp~rn . Southwestern to play later
Tornadoes can clinch at least a
The Tornadoes, 4-1-1 overall with a 3·1 record
fenSive and seven defenstve
Coach John Patton's Vtkmgs slarters.
tie for thetr first Southern and 3-1).1 m league play, are
Valley Conference title Fnday commg off a 0-0 lle agamst the are 1-5 overall this year and 1-2
Leader of the Tornadoes ts
in
SV
AC
play
They
have
had
agamst Symmes Valley here. Kyger Creek Bobcats, who are
175 lb senior ha lfback Ntck
A Tornado win, whtch JS 3-1-1m league play The t1e has thetr woes defensively, glVlrlg !hie, a con te nder for the SVAC
expected, would all but wrap been the key factor m the SVAC up an average of near 26 pomls " player of the year " Pacmg
thmgs u~ for the purple and race along wtth Eastern 's 8-6 per game. The Tornadoes, the Southern defense has been
coached by Btll Jewell, on the Ron Htll, Jtm Wtlhams, Greg
other hand, have a great DWlnmg, Tim Maurer, and the
NH L Slandmgs
The Daily Sentinel
•
By Un1ted Press lnlerlilallonal defense, perm1ttmg an average
Nease brothers, M1ke and
DEVO!ID TO THE
East
INT1&lt;REST OF
of only 7 pomls per game. 1 M1tch
w. I 1 pis gf ga
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Coach Jewell, m hts fll'St
The mam threa t for the
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
De troll
400822 8
Euc Ed
Mon treal
3 0 1 7 16 9 year as a head coach, has put Vtkings IS 180 lb. semor
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
N Y Rangers
33 062322 together an amazmg group of fullback Raymond Mlller who
C1ty Ed1tGr
Toronto
221515 15 boys, none of whom possess 1s stxth 1n SVAC sconng, and
Publ•shed derly except
Van
couver
2
2 1 5 18 20
s,turdly by The Oh io Valley
Boston
23
042123 oulslandmg talent, but all Dave Dunfee, a 160 lb semor
Publ•shmQ Company , 111
I 3 0 2 9 17 bemg dedtcated to play good end, who IS !ted for thtrd m
Court St, Pomeroy , Oh10 , NY Islanders
45769 Busmess Off1ce Phone
West
football The Tornadoes also SVAC scormg
992 2156 , Ed•tonel Phone 992
wllptsgfga
2157
P1llsburgh
4 2 0 8 26 18
Second class postage pau::lat
Ch1cago
4 2 0 8 20 14
Pomeroy , Oh•o
SOUTHERN SYMMES VALLEY PROBABLY STARTING
2 2 1 5 16 14
National advertiS ing Mmnesota
LINEUPS
Phlladelph•a
2
2
1
5
16
19
representat•ve Botllnell l
l 2 2 4 15 18
Gallagher, Inc , 12 Eut &lt;12nd 51 LOUIS
SYMMES VALLEY
WI Pos WI
Atlanta
1 4 1 3 8 21 SOUTHERN
St , New York Crty, New York
150 QB 160
Jamie Lafon 1121
Sl.lbScr•ptlon rates
De
CalifQrn•a
1 3 0 2 10 14 Vern Drd 1ll l
l i vered by carr1tr where
Dallas Berry I121
155 HB 150
los Angeles
1 6 0 2 20 34 Mitch Nease llOl
avalleble 50 cents Per week
Jerry Pinet lO I
175 HB 165
N•ck Ihie 1121
Wednesday's Results
~- By Motor-Route where c-arrier
Jay l'f 111(121 -~ -· 1s~
FB lsoRay Miller I101
·
Toronfo
4 p,fls5urgh 1
•
serv rce not a'lla ll able One
Ed Berry I12)
212
c
200
DenniS
Hawk
I
111
Minnesota
6
Allanta
0
month Sl 7S By ma11 In Oh•o
Robert
Murnahan
I121
1/5
G
200
Bob
Eynon
Ill
I
St Louis 4 Montreal 4
and w va , One year S14 00
Bill
McCarty
I101
150
G
160
Mike
Codner
(
11
I
N Y Rangers 7 Boston 1
Snc montf'IS S7 25
Three
Bi ll Webb I12]
Ron Hill (12 )
235
T 215
months SA SO Subscr1pf10n
Philadelphia 4 Los Ang 3
John Mann ( 12)
Larry W1lcoxen (121 240
T 160
pricf lncludu Sunday T1mes
(Only games scheduled!
Dave
Dunfee (12)
Sentinel
165
E
160
Jim
Williams
I
lll
Thursday's Games
lewiS Hilgenberg (101
142
E 165
M1 ke Nease (12J
Vancouver at Buffal o
IOnly game schedul ed)
DEFENSE
Pd Pol Adv
SOUTHERN : R. Hill, middle ~uard; Randy Forbes, 160 lb
WHA Slandmgs
tlll and Williams, ends, Greg Middleswarl, 155 lb (ll), and
By Un1ted Press International
Hawk, tackles. J Hill and TI{Tl Maurer, 1651b (10) , linebackers .
tmat~lne whllt a
Eastern DIVISIOn
lhle and Ord, cornerbacks, and Mitch Nease and Mike Nease.
2-CENT lncreue In the
w I. pis gf ga safehes
Sale• Tax would do
Cleveland
A 0 8 16 10
SYMMES VALLEY: Murnahan and Hilgenberg, ends, Webb
to my Mom I
New England
4 0 6 12 5 a nd Mann orE Berry, tackles , Miller, m iddle guard , Pin e and
2 2 4 20 16 McCarty. linebackers . D fl\!rry and Rodney Bennell, 160 lb
New York
Quebec
1 12 62 I11). cornerbacks, and Lafon and James Tomlm , 160 ib (10),
Ph•ladelph1a
o 2 o 3 9 hall backs
Ottawa
0 3 0 15 22

By KEITH WISECUP

Mmnesota

Stop the Switch
to Unfair Taxes

VOTE NO on 2
orde ceunc•l fllr ld&amp;l':atilft

M,., Jeen DJt, """' Cln. Ht1., D.

w. 1. pis gf ga
3 2 ~ 17 17
2 2 4 14 15
2 2 4 8 13
2 1 4 12 5

Important! ORDER. EARLY
Because we can handle early Christmas
business more efficiently, we can make this
special offer :

1 2 2 7 11

Ch•cago
o 3 o 5 10
Wednesday's Results
New England 4 Houston 1
!On ly game scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Mmnesota at Houston
Quebec at N.ew England
Chicago al Ottawa
Phlla at Los Angeles
Cleveland at New York
(Clnlygan\es scheduled)

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eas tern Eagles wtll try
lo pul together their lhtrd
straigh t tremendous effort thts
Friday when they battle nonleague foe Miller at Miller.
Coach Roger Ktrkh art's
defense-mtnded Eag les
defea led a !me Kyger Creek
eleven two weeks ago 8-Q, then
lost13-6lasl Saturday night at
Cadiz agamst the powerhouse
Class AA Cardtnals The
Eagles are 3·3 for the year and
3-l 1n the Southern Valley
Conference
Coach Jtm Cook's Mtller
Falcons are also 3-3 on the
year The upstaters do not play
m a league
Randy Bonng, 145 lb. senwr
run mqg back and about every

any order from Se1rs

DEFENSE
EASTERN. Duvall and Baum . ends; Stettler and Mora,
tack les . Reed, middle guard , Clonn•e Eichinger. 138 lb. (9) , and
Gr llfll h or Mlllhoan. linebackers ; Chaffee and Osbourne. cor
nerbacks. and Sheets and Edwards. safeties
MILLER : J1m Slarner. l50 lb (101 and Lanning, ends, Tolh
and Bernard. tackles. Allea r and McFann, guards , D Starner,
Merck le, F•clllan, lmebackers, and Scott Bankes, 151 lbs 1111
and H1nk le, safeties

Chnslmas Catalog lola! S50
or more, and the order IS
placed onytlme lhrough
October 30, 1972.

YOU'LL
GET A ••

LA-Z-BOV

CHAIRS ,

Best 4 Ply

Now you can buy !hal
comfortable
La-Z-Boy
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you ' ve

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prices

Authorized Dealer

:- SEARS

,MASON

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lltl-nGrllt
777.f5ft
MoiOII, w. Yo.

tracti on

W•de, fl at iread
4-ply Nygen cord tore body
f1gh ls off 1mpacts, mois ture,

c lea t

atlern muff les road no1ce
uragen !read rubber

Is

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This W~ks
Special Buy

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Ex. Tax 2.63

Mounted&amp;
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•

THE
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ONES

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New
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'

From

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POMEROY, OHIO

WEATHER STRIPPING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
HEAT TAPES- DOOR STRIPS
WARM MORNING HEATERS
( Gas &amp; Coall

PERFECTION OIL HEATERS
ELECTRIC HEATERS
WINDOW
GLAS5-THERMOMETER$
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PIPE INSULATION
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHOULDERS,
COAL BUCKETS, ETC.

Ebersbach Hardware ·
~Main

Street

Ph. 992·2811

or in Person.

always

ROBINSON'S .
CLEANERS

WITH THESE

Wl"-.c'ii'
NYGEN
Heffy cleats for deep drill

+ Fed.

You· can get this DiscDu'nt
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{Upon Request)

GEHERALtS

•

DISCOUNT

2-HOUR ·
CLEANING

olher offenstve postllon, leads
the SVAC m scormg w1th 46
pomls, a good pace ahead of
Stet hng Logan's second place
total of 28
Bormg, the mal~ cog of the

Contmuous running

SEARS
Early Shopper's

Vtda Blue, who was ineffective play
m bnef relief, but then were
More than that, Bench
closed out the rest of the way fanned thrj!e limes-mcludmg
by Rollie Fingers, who pitched once when the A's made a
out of a bases-loaded Jam m sucker of him on a fake lJI.
that etghth.
tentional walk, qutte a lrtck to
And the VICtory got Bench, P.Ull on posstbly the greatest
the Reds' super.,star, off the ca(Qber 0~ the ~eneration.
hook becau5e he was m ihe . ' . running to be the "goat" of !lie
game
.._
He made an error on a throw
to first on a bunt and on the
same play neglected to call
time before complammg to the
umprre, which led to the ruMer
at second base advancmg to
third on a throwing error by
Joe Morgan. It was the btg jam
of the game for the Reds, who
go t out of that stxth-iMing 210 E 2nd
• Pomeroy
ptckle when Billingham got Sal
Phone 992-5428
!lando to rap mto a double

Eastern offense, runs with the
ball whtle at halfback, later '
mtght throw 11 from quar-·
tcrback, an d somellmes durmg
U1e game goes to flanker where
he catches the ball He's a
lnple threat wtth the ball, the
ha1·d way'
Othe1 s who have helped the
Eagles thts year mclude tackle
Dick Stettler, quarterback
John Sheets, and fullback Alan
Duvall All of the ablJve four
ate returmng starters from
last year's great undefeated
Eastern team
Mill er has a lemendous
break-away runner in halfback
Dave Starner, who has npped
for ~4 points th1s year, good for
ftfth m the southeastern Ohto ·
area

EASTERN MILLER PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
EASTERN
Wl. Pos WI
MILLER
Randy Boring 1121 145 QB 163
Jeff Flcillan 11 11
Ralph Parker (12) 140 HB 175
Da ve Starner (12 1
DanChaffeel111
155 HB 131
Roger Hinkle (121 •
Alan Duva ll tl2)
190 FB 160
Carl McFa nn (12]
George Mora I12)
190
C 164
Denny Allear I111
DaveGnff•th (l2) 155
G 150
D~rk Sllckdorn (10
Steve M1ilhoan ( 121 163
R1ck Merckle I121
G 175
Or T•m Baum Ill l 165
Joe Toth 1101
T
190
D ~ek Stettler 1121
189
Mike Bernard 112)
Steve Reed 112)
210
T 204
J•m Lann1ng (II]
JohnSheets (ll)
180
E 158
JoeDallas(lll
E 163
Bobby Edwards I 12) 120

damage, heal
When the selhng prices of
the ttems vou purchase on

Btlhngham gave up only
three hits, none of whtch left
the mfteld, wh1ch prompted
Anderson to claun wtth a laugh
that he pttched "a no-hitter."
Only three halls were htt to the
Red~' outfteld, all of them
caught by center ftelder Bobby
Tolan
Btlhngham needed ninthlMmg rehef from Clay Carroll
- or, anyway, Anderson
thought he needed tt--&lt;~fter he
had thrown three balls to
leadoff hatter Mike Epstem.
Carroll threw a strike, then got
Ep.stem to groWld out, and got
the next two batters, too, to end
the game.
"Jack was JUSt great," satd
Anderson ''He'll get another
start m the Senes, probably m
the sixth game."
Brilliant Pitching
The Reds' trmmph spoiled a
brilliant pitchmg effort by
Odom, who fanned 11 batters m
the seven IMirlgs he worked
and gave up three of the Reds'
four hits. Omcmnati got one
more hit in the e1ghth inning off

Eagles Needing
3rd Big Effort

Western DiviSIOn

Alberta
w.nn lpeg
Houston
Los Angeles

ount

Pomeroy, 0.
~.

AUTHORIZED
MERCHANT

~ATALOG

992·2l7a
POMEROY
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
Mon., Tues., Wtd. &amp; 5111. ttoJ
Thurs. flo Noon. Friday 9:00to9:oo
.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,

SALES
9'1'!-7161
MidcUeport,
I.---

o.

"Everything In Hardware"

----'

\

�..

•

I

1

1- 'l1le DIIIIJW MIHepwt-l'umeroy,'U,, Oct. 19, lt'/2

_
3-The Dally Sentlnel,

New Drug Abuse Control Law :Becomes Effectiv~
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A new state
· Now the state will license
91lres the f!ljte Deparblient of drug treabnenl centers and reMentalHealtb ..d Retardation gulate the use of methadone,
to compile a ''data bank" of an addictive drug subsllture
eu~~ hllltolies 8111 treabnent of used lor treatiilg herwn adIll drug depenilent persons in dicls.
Clllo, keeping tbeir names
Mastics lklld state regtstra·
c:onfldential.
tion would curtail "phony" me-The comprehenstve drug
.oo.e 'cootrol law also giVes
the Slate the tools to:
- Crack down on illegal possession of barbiturates and
amJIIIetamines.
By NORMAN KEMPSTER.
- Close, down ''phony" metWASHINGTON
(U PI )hadone clinics and regulate m·
dependent drug treatment cen- After almost 30 years of cold
ters, both potential breeding war tensions, the Umted States
and the Soviet Uruon have
III:OIDlda for drug abuse.
histone
trade
signed
- Make sun: hypodermic
needles and drug samples stay agreements that settle World
out of the hands of War n debts, slash tariffs and
JrOmise a tripled pace of
lllauthorized personnel
busine&amp;!
between the world's
The new law, enacted last
July, took 16 months to get two largest economies,
"Theae are vPry significant
through the General Assembly
steps
In the direction of better
although It had una'nimous
political relations between the
baclring of the lawmakers.
The puql09e of the "data Soviet Union and the United
bank" on drug dependncy States ... there is a much better
cases &amp;calrding to state Rep. ch81)ceforpeace m the world,"
~e E. Mastics, R-Falrvlew Secretary of State William P.
Park, 18 not to single out drug Rogers told newsmen following
abusen but to oollect statiBtlca signing ceremonies Wed·
"10 that the nature and eztent nesday .
of ck-ug abuse throughout Ohio
can be fully known and under-

thadone clm&lt;'ls and treatment

&amp; THINBS

he and pnvate hosp1lals or climes and COI'mmruly mental
health nnd relatdlltton boards
to dispense methadone only m
compball&lt;'e With stnct stand·
ards
Bootleg methadone sales and
furmshmg the drug to those

get prescnpttons wtll be 'Jilaxunum $1,000 fine.
punishable by a maximum
Outlets for hypodermiCneedBY PAUL CRABTREE
"spnngmg up hke mushrooms
$5,000 Imp and a one-to-10 year les and drug samples also wtll
m drugstorf fronts and
prtson sentence.
bear the burden · ol stormg
The American langusge, sometimes referred to as English,
churches and could very well
them safely and seemg they is constantly in a state of change.
become spawmng grounds for
Possession Lim'tted
I have just been forcefully reminded of this. ( Of course, if It
don't fall into the wrong hands.
addtction "
FaiiUJ e to reg1ster a drug
Possesswn of. hypodermic never changed, we'd all still be speaking like Chaucer and
treatment program w1th the
.'
The bureau wdl hcense pub- who fe1gn firm! rtPOPnttP.,rP to state wtll be punishable by a needles is limited lo a list of wouldn't understand one another at all.)
authorized persons, and the
My wife has been taking an English refresher, along with
maximum penalty for illegal · some other subjects, just for the fun of it at the Mason
posseSSion is doubled to 10 Vocationai-Tecltntcal Center. One of her texts is a spelling brushyears m pnson for repeat of· up book, first copynghted in 1960.
lenses.
11 uses several standard dictionaries as 1ts base, principally
Dtsplay of hypodermics for _ it would seem _ the Webster's Sixth Collegiate, Jllblished
The pacts are sweepmg in Yugoslavia and Poland,
Peterson emphaSized that sale is prohibtted. So is fatlure from tune to time untill961. Since then, the Seventh.polle81/lte,
scope, even covermg 1tems as guarantee nondiscrunmatory U S exports would far exceed to take precautions to prevent as well as the often-berated Third International Unabl-idged has
'
mundane as slenographtcal tanff rates. The tariffs on unports, thus unproving the thefts, and discarding a neeqle appeared.
Without
rendering
ll
useless.
·
.
,
.
service for Amertcan busmess- products from nations whtch do U.S balance of trade by
&amp;lch
violations
draw
a
$25
to
V.
Some
of
the
usage
recOIJJJ?ended
m
the
book
just
didn
t
nng
men in Moscow. Commerce not enJOY most favored nation "several hundred million dol$100 rme or impru;onment for true to me, so I began comparmg the source material, espectaUy
Secretary Peter G. Peterson status are much htgher.
lars "
30
to too' days.
the Sixth with the Seventh (this is the red-covered Merrl8ffi·
predicted the goal of $1.5 billion
The trade package mcludes
Off1ctalssatd the agreements
Manufacturers dealer. Webster used in most htgh schools and colleges) I was right.
in two-way trade during the were a dtrect result of
-A RUSSl8D promiSe to pay
'
three year pact would be · President Ntxo n's tr1p to at least $722 million in the next pharmactsts, d~ctors and There have been many, many updalings :
nurses
must
not
furnish
"Comptroller,"
for
example,
could
only
be
pronounced
surpassed.
Moscow last May. Negoliahons 29 years to settle 1ts debt for
But the whole package lS whtch began then were conti- World War II Lend Lease goods unauthortzed persons wtth "controUer" In the Sixth. The Seventh g1ves up and uses the
needles, at the nsk of a pronunciation most Amertcans prefer: "KOMP-trol-ler."
contingent upon approval by nued by Peterson and Sovtet ongmally worth $11.1 billion.
maxnnum
$1,000 fine or one-to"Prelnlere," once listed as the leading female part In a play
Congress of "most favored Trade Mmtster Ntkolat S.
- Acomnubnent to mcrease
nation" tartff treatment for the Patohvhev
two-way trade between the two five year prison term for the or drama, now is listed with a principal meaning familiar to us
SoVIet Union . The pacts would
Peterson, Rogers and Pato- nattons to $1.5 billion during first offense, and a maxunwn all: thefirstperformanceofalmostanydramaticwork
"Lingerie" no longer means "linen goods." The Seventh
become vot&lt;b if the tariff hchev stgned the documents. the life of the pact, three times $5,000 fine or two-to-20 year
concessions are denied.
The trade pact runs for three the commerce durmg the prtson term for subsequent fields to progress and admits it usually refers to ''women's in- '
timale apparel."
•
The most favored nation years but Peterson satd negoti· three-year pertod that ended \'ll))attons.
Unttl now, hypodermtc need"Ensemble" is pronounced in the SIXth with aU those nasal
rules, which now apply to all ahons'wtU·begm soo n ooextend last Dec. 31
non-Communist countrtes plus it.
- Extension to tfie Russians les have sometunes been a_vail· French sounds no American ever seems to master, but the
of credit from the U.S. Export- able ~n a self-sel'Vlce bas~ .
Seventh simplified both the way to say 1t, and the meanmg of "a
hnport Bank on the same
The new law places sunllar complete outfit that matches," instead ~f the precise, but outterms that apply to all other controls on dru8 ':""~les .. Ne- moded "thre01Jlt!Cf garment."
stood."
nations.
ghg_ence m dtslnbuhng ,
"Entree," whtch Americans refer to as the main course of a
MlalmumTerm
- Comprehensive rules stormg or discarding samples meal, finally is g1ven that pre-eminent mesnmg in the Seventh,
Failure to furnish Incovering the treatment of 1finspurush ablle bYda $25_to_ 100 while the older dictionary sticks with the definition of
formation about caae histories
eor 30 o 100 aySIDJ&amp;1.
.,
dbetw
"
ch
businessmen in each nation
In the past' according to
something serve
~en courses, or some su . .
upon request of the Departincluding a section guaran"Protege," another Pansian lmJl?rl, also is Amerlcantzed to
Mashes, drug' samples have
ment of Mental Health and
teeing billngljlll stenographers
been repackaged and sold indicate the status of a patron.pupil connotation the word ~as
Retardatiorlls punishable by a
By HELEN THOMAS
McGovern was buoyed by a Lockheed loan," he noted. and adequate commwlications
fine of up to $500. However,
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)--Sen. turnout of several thousand "Why should 1t not he extended facilities for U.S. businessmen Illegally or stored beyond !herr attained, instead of "someone entrusted to the care ?r attention
exp1ration date.
of another," which would encompass a convict and hlB warden, a
Identification of the patients George S. McGovern satd fans at a rally here Wednesday to cover retrremenl mcome m Moscow.
master and his slave, or a child and his parent.
cannot be reqwred.
today the
Nixon
ad- night and scheduled appearan· ea rned by working people and
Would you believe that pnor to publication of the Seventh in
A aecood cooviction on a mmlstratlon's pension reform ces with black voters today at set astde for them in penswn
1965,
"Capitol" was always spelled with a capital letter, and
Charge of illegal possession of plan "diBcrimlnates heavily" Cheyney State Colleg~ m plans.
WIN AT BRIDGE
meant, principally, the Temple of Juptter In
Now it
barbiturates or amphetamines in favor of the rich and un- PeMsylvania and a rally at
"More than 35 mtlhon
means, first, any state capitol building, or the U. S. capttol in
now draws a minimum one· veiled a proposal of his own to Bedford-Stuyvesant in American workers are enrolled
Washmgton.
year prlaon term. Previously, guaranl!!e workers retirement Brooklyn wtth Rep. Shirley m pnvate penston plans, yet
such an offence was either a pay after five years on the job. Chisholm, who sought the more than half of them Will
Punctuation IS also more perrrussive. The textbook insists
Jump to four spades, as do
NORTH
misdemeanor or felony with no
The Democratic presidential ' Democratic prestdenllal recetve absolutely no pension
!6 1 · we. You can't pI a y your that phrases like the "1970's" be set off ~lth an apostrophe, and
• 108 52
minimum sentence.
partner for a blank hand m the same with "mind your P's and Q's." The Seventh notes it
candidate annolUlced his new nomination herself.
heneftts when they rettre and
'II'Q864 2
these
sttuahons "
The deparbnent's \lUreau of Jrogram far private peOSJon
isn't terribly unportant if you say 1960s or 1970s, the Three Rs,
+K 76
As outlined, hts pension many others Will recetve only
Jun · "Jeff netther recom- and forget the apostrophe - so long as the meaning IS clear.
dr¥g abuae llPefates 11 drug plans backed by federal insur- reform program would requrre l mmunal returns. The Nixon
oloJ
mends nor dtsapproves of
treabnent centers throughout ance In a statement for the guaranteemg of 50 per cent adm1nistrat10n has largely WEST
EAST (D)
West's
five-club bid. Thts Really, you can do it either way.
• K 74
• Vmd
Ohio on a budge of $1.6 million delivery at a labor luncheon in of the beneftts after ftve years ignored thts inJusllce.
time 1t works well as North
'II'A10 9
YJJ
through nelrt JlUlf 30. But lnde· Philadelphia. Before leaving of work and an addttional 10
"For two years 1t had made
bids a doubtful flYe spades."
+QJ4
+t0 832
pendent drug treabnent cen- Toledo, he planned w hold a per cent for each year of no sertous proposal for peDSJon
Oswald " The Important
olol0 652
,f.K Q98743
ters and methadone clinics breakfast meeting With local servtce thereafter up to ft ve reform " he said. "Last year It
blt of advice comes next
SOUTH
have never answered to the union officials.
Rubens pomts out that West
fmally made a proposal which
.AQJ 963
years.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1972
expects to beat five spades,
'II'K7 5
The guarantees would apply f11s neatly mlo the lradtllonal
but
there
IS
no
point
in
a
+
A95
6 IJO.,-News 3,48,10,15, Truth' or Consseq 6, News 13, Travel
retroactively for workers over Republtcan mold ;
oloA
double. If West does beat five
Lure 3).
40, he satd. ''Otherwtse, these dtscrimmatmg heavtly m favor
spades he IS sure of a mighty 6 31)--NBC News 4,15, ABC News 6; CBS News 8,10 , I Dream of
North-South vulnerable
older workers wtll be deprived of the rich and domg nothing West North East South
good score. A double would
Jeannie 13; Des1gnln9 Women 33.
of a proposal as this if adop- for many of those m greatest
gain maybe half a match 7 oo--Trulh or Consequences 3, Seal The Clock 4; Course of our
•
3,fo
4.
need."
ted," he said. ,
po~nt ''
5..
Pass Pass
Helen and Sue Bottel
Times 33, Pick, V.an Dyke 4, w~at:s M~•• ~J ne? 8; . e.~ , Rljd
In a half hour televiston
Pass
Jim · "While it really does
To avert personal hardships,
Jubilee 15 ) News6; Amazl~g World of Kresklp 13. ·'
not change any of Jeff's 7 30-Chapter 33. HollywoOII Squares'3', Til fell' The 'trOfh '6~ ·
Openmg lead- • 2
he also proposed that a federal telethon Wednesday camed
"FAT GIRL" GETS FAT. MAIL
pomts, it turns out that four
Wild Kingdom 10; I'll See You In Court 4, Beat the Ciolek 13;
tnsurance program be esta- over stations whtch blanketed
Dear Helen and Sue:
lasSie a; Black Journal 33.
Ohto and parts of . West By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby spades w1ll be beaten if West
blished
Which of your letters got the most mail recently• 8
llO--Mod
Squad 6,13 , The Wallons 8,10, Advocates 33; World
leads
a
diamond
when
he
"Federal Insurance already Virgmta, Kentucky and PennOswald " Jeff Rubens of gets m wtth the king of
ALWAYS INTERESTED
Senes, 3,4,15
covers bank depostts, home sylvania, McGovern satd New York has been a great spades and the subsequent 9 oo- Hollywood TeleviSion Theatre 33 . AsSignment. Vienna
mortgages, secunttes losses taunted Prestdent Ntxon to bndge theonst for many defense doesn't sltp at all "
6,13, Mov1es "The Legend of lylah Clare" 8, " The Roman
Dear AJ.:
years He fmally showed his
"come
out
and
debate."
Spnng
of Mrs Stone" 10; lnfernahonal Performance 33.
resultmg
from
the
fatlure
of
(NEWSPAPER ENTU.PikiSE ASSN )
"Miss 22», Five Feet Five" who wondered why nobody loves
10 oo--Owen Marshall 6,13 ; Mounlameer Sports 33.
"If he keeps hidmg m the abthty as a player when hts
brokerage
houses
and
the
a fat girl, got the Aching Feet of the Month award from Norm,
10 3()-Rogondus 33.
White House, slltmg there on team won the Spmgold Cup
our friendly, strong-backed mailman. Amazingly, more than half
this year so that h1s new
11 QO-News 3,4,6,10,13,15.
his Gallup Poll, there's gomg to book, 'The Secrets of Wm11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, D1ck Cavelt 6; Movies "A Man
our correspondents here were male, and the majority mststed
be a surprtse," McGovern srud. ni ng Br td ge,' 1s rather
The b1ddmg has been:
Alone" 8, "Sweet B1rd of Youth" 10, "N•ghtand the City" 13
they COULD love a fat girl-In fact some already did.
"But I guess he remembers timely '
West
North
East
1 oo- News 4
Examples:
1 31)--News 13.
what John Kennedy did to him
Jtm 'He ts a duplicate
· Pass
1'11'
' +++
m the TV debates m the 1960 player rather than a rubber Pass
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1972
You, South, hold
Rap:
bndge player As would be
prestdential race."
This letter concerns "Miss 22»." I am a 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld man. I
Eulogies to the late Edtlh Q.
McGovern also found hunsell expec ted, hts sectiOn on dup- .AK86 'II'Al02 +K S ,f.A164
6. 00- Sunn se Semrnar 4,· Sacred Heart 10.
What do you do ~ow?
eat aU I want and stay thin, and lam married to a so-called "Fat Dent were g1ven at her funeral heckled a bit at the telethon by hcate is v e r y goo d Hts
6 15-Farmllme 10 , Farm Report 13. 6 20--Paul Harvey 13,
A-Bid two spades. You realGirl" whom 1 adore!
by the Rev Roosevelt Walker, a caner who questioned his chapters on rubber bndge
6 25- Biue &amp; Ridge Quartet 13.
are
not
up
to
that
standard
"
ly
like
your
hand.
6 31)--Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8, Bullwmkle and Rockey
~ot all men love sklnnys - It's predictable that you two
pastor of th e St. John consistency. "Any leader who
133.
Oswald "East's three-club
TODAY'S QUESTION
advise reducing, as you're JrObably both thin, but a lot of people Missionary Baptist Church, can't change hts mind for fear
Your
partner
reb1ds
to
three
00 Jootfor other things m persons besides their shapes.
Springfield, where he was a of losing face is not a leader, he btd 1s a typtcal non-vulner- hearts What do you do now? 8 DO-Capt Ka ngaroo 10, New Zoro Revue 13, Sesame St 33,
able match pomt preempt
Romper Room 8, T•mmy &amp; Lass1e 6.
I've seen people lose their health from drastic diets - not to
member. Prayer was gtven by Is a disaster," McGovern said. Jeff recommends South's
8 31)--Jack Lala nne 13, New Zoo Revue6. Romper Room a
Miss
1 th
the Rev Clyde Henderson,
9 oo- Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue IS, What Every Woman
speak ofthelr good dispositions. My advise to · 220 s IS · As • pas lor of the Church of the
Wants to SKnow 3; Concenfrahon 6. Capt K ~ ngaroo 8; Ben
Joog aaa woman is neat, cheerful, kind, haPJly, her shape can be
Na zarene, Pomeroy
Casey 13, dMr Rogers 33 , Friendly Junction 10.
overlooked.1When the r!gbt !!!!!l.J.'9IDes along,@..ID&gt;.!Jl.me how
The- Rev - Nyle Borden ::--:~m.~~:.~"?l';?"~~~:~:z;;.;:--w:?;-;.~:::.:om~:~'ft«)!..~~~m::-:•.f:.i»~~'@'~~~
9,JO,..Jeopardy 6, Hazel-81 T-o Te!H he' fruth-s-. · muchyouwelgh. - HAPPILYMARRIEDTOAFATGIRL
-'i·tonducted the funeral semce
10 00- DmaH Shore3,15; D1ck VanDyk~ 13, HazelS , Columbus
S1x Callmg 6, Joker's W1ld 8,10.
+++
\ whtch was held at 1 p m on
10 31)--Concenlrallon 3,15, Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13,
Helen and Sue:
Salurday, Oct 14, at Ewmg
Pnce Is R•ghl B,10.
Maybe It wouldn't be so Iough, staymg with a diet if everyone
Funeral Home The obttuary
dldn'l ask, "How are you doing with your diet?" How much
BV JACK O'BRIAN
was read by Dorts James of
in a Brigttte Bardo! fltck' Yep - "The 11 llO--Love American Style 6. Sale of the Century 3,15,
Password 13, Gambit 8,10.
weight have you lost?" Then I get discouraged and start eating. I Sprmgfteld and song offered by
'NOW KilLER CAN
Weekend"! ... Met Tony Randall walking on 11 31)--love of L1fe8 , Bew1lched6,1J; Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
tried dietlog secretly, but people thought I was sick 'cause J Beatrtce . Benson also of
FLY GERALDINE
smog along 5th Ave. - agog sliD after-seeing 12 llO--Jeopardy 3,15, Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Password 6,
didn't eat. Won't you please teD well meaning friends and Sprmgfteld
NEW YORK (KFS) - Flip Wilson chirstens · "Tales of Hoffman" at the Metopera the night
Local News 10; News ll , Conlact a.
relatives to keep quiet?- W.O.W.
Pallbearers were James a new Nat'] Airlines plane thts week · he was before : "Best show In town, on or off Broad- 12 31)--3 W's Game 3,15, Search for Tomorrow 8,10, Spill Second
6.
Quails, Max Groff, Charles and hijacked to CUba on one three years ago. He'll way" was the Odd Single's hosannah ... "Hurry,
o--News 3, All My Children 6,13, Green Acres 10; It's Your
W.O.W.:
Larverne Boyd, Luther Rob- he the first ever hijacked to have a plane named Harry" IS the sad little new musical at the Ritz 1 OBel
8, Walch Your Child 15.
Will do: The best help for dieters Is stlent reinforcement : like
m~on and John Pat Boyd.
after him ("Geraldine") .. Russian diplomat to Theater, and better hurry, Harry, It won't tarry 1 30- 3 On A Match 3,4, 15, lei's Make A Deal6,13 , As the World
having carrot sticks Instead of candy bars handy m the
Turns a,IO.
an American UN dj.!to discussing the George long; succeeds only in pulling off the Ritz.
refrigerator. - SUE
Holzer Medical Center
Wallace and other U. S. assassmahons · "I
Richard Roth didn't mind being hired as a 2 110-'--Days of OUr lives 3,4,15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike
Douglass 6, Guiding Lighl 8, 10.
'
+++
Discharges
wonder what would have happened if Khrush- standln on ''The Naked Ape" flick; what hurt
2
30--Doclors
3.4,15
,
Dallng
Game
IJ;
Edge
of N1ght8, 10.
Rap:
Bertha Ingels, Mrs. Edward [chev had been assassinated Instead of John him deeply was - he stood in for a was statue 3 llO--Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospllal 6, 13, Love
This Is the very first letter I've ever written to a columnist,
Kmcatd and son; Mrs Paul Kennedy." The U.S. dip shrugged and replied, which couldn't stand the heat from studio lights
Splendored Thing a, 10.
but I wa.s so moved by Miss 22», Five Feet Five's distress that I
Malson and daughter; Josetta "I don 't know - except that Aristotle Onassls ... Don't invite NBC's critic Gene Shallt and the 3 3o--Return to Peyton Place 3,4, 15, Secrel StormJ,10; One life
to live 6, 13.
had to send her some cheer.
Noble, Roberta Htll, Carolyn never would have marrted Mrs. Khrushchev." New Yorker's Pauline Kael to the same
4
llO--Mr
Cartoon 3, Somerse115, Sesame ,St. 33, Fflnfslones ' ·
I've always been large - so fat as a baby my mother couldn 'I
Hayes, Freda Burns, Memll
John Ringling North and his brother Henry screening --'- Miss Kael's guest at a p-eview
love,
American
Style 13; Merv Griffen 4, Gilligan's Island
carry me. It's true: people ralaed fat have temble problems
Geer, Jr , Mrs Steven Htll and of the Ringling Bros. Clrc~oundlng family remarked Gene was the "only other critic"
a.
Mov1e " Dark Command" 10.
trying to get thin. I tried every kind of dlet, probably lost 500
daughter ; Corbett Stull, Dame! satled leisurely mlo Manhattan aboard the S. S. Jresent and la Kael replied, "There's still no 4.31)--1 Love Lucy 6, Passwored 13 ; Merv Griffin a, Andy
poiDlda In all, and gained them all back. Finally I dectded to eat
Garthee, Donald Carruthers, France as befits the last of the great other critic here"; meeeowww! ... WW1der if
Griffith }5; Daniel Boone 13, Pefl•coat Junc1ton 3.
what l felt I needed for health - and I haven't gained a pound in
Nanme Comstock, B.etty Diehl, boulevardiers ... First local stop of course "21" "Terry \II the Pirates" cartoonist George 5 llO--Misler Rogers 33, D1ck Van Dyke 15; Ponderosa 1,4 ,
Daniel Boone 6.
loutyears- but I stUI weigh 210 pounds. LuckUy, my husband lB
Jame~ Jeffers, Ona Mellon, where the finest wines, foods and fixln~ were WW1der knows there's a rock pack singing at
5
30--Marshall
Dillon 15, Elec Co. 33, Gomper Pyle 13,
a great B!IY who says, ''There's just that mucJ\ more of you to Anne Parsnell, Ruby Preston, the order of the evening : John with his own O'Lunney's East biDed as ''Terry ' &amp; the
Dragnet' 8.
1
love."
~
Mrs James Russell and son, private stock of superb antique bourbon, wines Pirates."
6 00--News 3,4,a,I0,15 ; NBC News I, 13, Trulh or Cons~. 6,
I've made my size pay off. I now design dresses, bridal
Orville Scarberry and Della . and brandies In the "21" cellars. John's almost
lnslghl 33,
'
Things to come portent? Madame Nguyen
gowns, etc. fOl' the Size 3}.up crowd, and my crealtons can make Stmpson.
6
31)--NBC
News
3,4,15
;
ABC
News
6;
CBS
News
I,
10;
I
Dream
Harry Swartv, Barbara an extinct, certainly an endangered, species Van Thieu, wife of tbe VIetnam boss, placed
or Jeannie 13, Halhoyoga 33.
·
heavies look 111mo1t1 alim. lt'san art. l?m happy wtth my career,
Wtlson, Jay Wtseman, Jewell and a last bulwark versus the Hamburger their two cblldren in Brltiah schoola ... Christ· 7 llO--Whal My Lihe 8, Masterpiece Theatre 33; Wfl~ Kingdom
my tnar'l'lqe- and, finally, my weight. - EMILV
mas on London's BBC wiD be "Bing O'osby
Crunutte, Wilma Barlow, Generation.
13, News 6,10, Truth or Conseq. 3; Saint 15; Beat The Clock
4,
Folk Guitar 33.
Arthur
Strauss ,
John
Elder sage Buckn11nster Fuller In the King Week." Bing's "White Christmas" recording Is
Dear Overweight Readers of Rap :
7
30-To
Tell The Truth 6; Parent Game 10, Beat the Clock 13;
Panabaker, Esler Fink, and Cole Room of the St. Regis was Inscribing his the best'IOUer of the wu;~ang - 71 million ,
'l1le belt way to reduce 18 to join a "reducers club" and there ' Alma Moore.
Porter Wagoner 3, Young Dr Kildare 4; It's Your Bet 8; '
latest tome ( "lnlul~on") to Mr . Bert, finest recorda of Irving Berlin 'a great Yule sslute
Wall 51 Week 33.
.-e many In almOst every towh, from "Overeaters Anonymous"
Births ~~
~ headwalte~ In tllif flnlck' ftown ... Georgie
Since 1942 ... Ed McMahon lolt one of his many s·oo-'BOilk Ileal 33, Brady Bunch t, 13; L•on AI World's End
(ftee, but you can offer contrlb~tlions tf you wish), to T.O.P.S
3,4,15; Sonny &amp; Cher a, to.
Mrs. Billie Keith Wtlhams, Jesse! In "21" announced he was wooDed and commercials (not the beer) after his apllt with
(Tab Oft Poundll &amp;inlllbly, a dues.paying organization) to
Willow Wood, ~ son, and Mts that he'd just returned from Wllblpgtoli, D. C. . longplay wife, Alyce. Sountla ailly these days; 8·30--Partrldge Family 6113; Little People 3,4,1~; Jus!
Generation 33.
Waldlen, which chqea a fee for each meeting. Also you Clarence Rice, Jr ., Pt whe~e "I sat with Gen. Q-elghton Abr&amp;ml untU Ed also wanted to Include aon, Jeff, 12, In his
• flO to a beallb ia1Gn where for around $15 a month you get A Pleasant, a son
he got the Senate okay as Chief of Staff"; and if cafe act, but Alyce dampered the Idea.
9 110 - Room 222 6,13; Masterpiece Theatre 33; How to Handle a
WilD of elftl8el, calorie budgeting, etc.
"Sleuth," aUil IOOH-bumpins merrily
Woman 4,54, 15, Movie "Lure of the Wilderness" I; CBS ,
Veterau MemortalH Ita!
that wasn't a big enough name-drop, J - l
Jllneoftbtproirlllll )MIIbtlthe "crash diet" which juJt turns
Reports to.
ADMJTI'ED _Mary";l:uler exposed his cuffs with, "And then Prelldent alq, II put tbe 410 pet. profit nwt ... Bid ID
JMIIIIo a JO-t'O, IIICI• II
1 retrain your eating habits,
9:
30--Love
, American Sl\rfe 6, 13.
Pomeroy· ·Guy Swain Miners: Nixon sent me over a p&amp;lr of his cullllnU." nota thai Smut Slntt (Old) II 11M ume pf
10:00-The American Experience 3,4,1S ; Smithsonian
'
, . . . a tlldeittary l»tJotllder should eat no more than
old lllowbl&amp; lharoa8hf..-e whereon were llarrad
ville; Stacy Coon Ne~ Haven· . Wore an his medals, too, In his clvvleHapel.
Adven1ure 10; Wake Up John ,Doe 33.
.......... a day (mulllply 12times your Ideal weight, which
Jerry Aleshire, jr. , Syracuse'.
We hearthe Allied TOW!lel' (formerly Times John Barrymore at 11M IW'rta In "Hamlet," The 11. DO-News 3,4A,I,10, 13, IS.
,.u want to malnlaln at 135, your calorie intake can
DISCHARGED _ Raymond Tower) In Times Square mllbt -If no one buys Astalne at the Lllierty In "Lidy Be Good"; 11: 30--Dlck CaveH I; Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Movlu "Malar
~ r~e
t,lll) -and you mull stick to this the rest of your Hartley, 'Orvtlle (Jake) GaUl it at $7,000,000- wind up wltb tile city (allfl Fred, Ljbby Holman and attton Webb In
Dundee" I, "The War of the Worlds" It; "Devll's A""tls"
13:
...
'
~·ranees Howery, Frankll~ mayhap?) to be torn down ind 1101~ nme. ''Tllree'1 • &lt;l'owd" at the Selwyn Zlellfeld 1 00--Roller Derby 4; Mutiny In Outer Space 11.
llln't UIJ, llutll'l mrarcliJ!g.- A WEIGHT WA'I'CHER Triplett,
Square's traffic jumble ... Epd- Rid Nellon Folllw at the New Amlterdlm, etc.
1 30--Nt!ws 4, 13.

ltate law, effective today, re-

cerilers, whach he satd are

0

Agieemept Settles War Debts

McGovern Claims Nixon's
Pension Plan Favors Rich

*

Rome.

No Point in Double Here

Television Log

Generation Rap

5.

By

'

LA#Bn:HAM!fiXl

Eulogies Given
By Rev. Walker

I Voice along Br'Way

w•

man

-==It..

..

\

I

Muldleport-Pom~roy, U.,.()ct.19, 1972

e
'h'?-.•,-.;,·.-,~·· •:O:D~o:o:o..-. • ~ • • ,_. ._._. •
o
~o;,.,,
.v.•, ,._..,..,•,:.:.:.!O!~~;:·::o:.Y.o'»},o;•;-;o'~h'•'o.::.::•..';&gt;'•:-'•:• ..'•'·~~-~.~.·. ,•.o,•;o,•,•:O:•:•:-:·:~·:·;.-,•,•,•,

I

Box s~~;;"""'"""" ' il

Ctnbnnah
Rosell
Morgan 2b
Tolan cf
Bench c

Pere z lb

Menke 3b

rl
Chaney ss
Billingham p
Carroll p
Totals
Oakland
Geron1mo

Campaner1sss

Alou rt
Rud•ll
Epstem lb
Banda 3b
Hendnck cf

Tenace c

Green 2b
Marquez ph

's

e

ab r h b• Kub iak 2b
3 0 0 0 Odomp
F 1ngers p

3 1 I 0 Tolals
2 0 1 0
4 0 I I
4 0 0 0

4

0 0 0 0
29

Cincmnall
Oakfand

OAKLAND ( UPI ) - hseum, Anderson uamed f~r~- p1lch hom A'• starter John
&amp;lddenly, defying h1story, the ballmg left-bander Don Gullett 'Blue Moon" Odom and
Cincmnati Reds are ahve again (9-10) as his get-even pttcher rapped lt mto short center fteld
and Manager D•ck W1lhams or lor a ~mgle Perez came
m the 1972'World Sertes.
"We're on our way, u trwn the A's also ptcked a left ~ aroWld third on a wtde turn
peted cm'cmnall
Reds' jlander, Ken Holtzman (19-11), hcadmg for the plate and
Manager Sparky Anderson m the wmner of the opemng game suddenly he slipped and fell on
the wake of Wednesday mght's of the Sertes m Cincmnatt last the soggy turf
1-&lt;1 pttching battle lrmmph that Saturday
In center held , George
cut the A's' lead in the best-&lt;&gt;f·
Reds Buck History
Hendrtck had run m, scooped
seven Fall classic to two games
The Reds are bucking base- up the hall, and threw 1t to
to one.
hall htstory which says that no shortstop Bert CampaneriS
''Watch us now," said Ander- team ever has'lost the ftrst two Inslmcttvely, Campanem
son. "I still think the same as I games of the Sertes at home looked to frrst base to keep
did after we came here to and come back to win the world Gerommo from advancmg--he
Oakland tratltng, ~. in games champtonshtp
hadn't noticed that Perez had
- we are gomg to wm the
Cmcinnati scored the game's fallen and he never thought he
Senes in seven games. They've only run on a smgle by Tony had a play at home.
got a real good club but we've Perez, a sacriftce by Derus
Campanerls Doesn't Hear
got a real good club, too, and Menke, and another smgle by
catcher Gene Tenace was
you're startmg to see 1t now " Cesar Geronimo
screammg for the ball From
For tomghl's 5:15 p.m PDT
Perez was on second b!ise the dugout, Wilhams was
fourth gte at Oakland Co- when Geronuno laced mto a hollenng, too. Campanerts
never heard 'em-crowd notse
"[ hear nothing," satd
campaneriS "! was lookmg at
the hall and at Gerorumo "
So the moment was lost, and
With
1t the game Because
last week
Chuck Faulk IS !led for
meanwhtle
Jack Btllingham
Vaughan, w1th a bnlhant 6-9 second m the league sconng
passmg performance (two race hehmd Athens' Don Wood was mowing down the A's
TDs) last Fnday, moved up to ' and !Jed w1th Jackson's Randy
s1xth place m that category and Rtdge Faulk 1s also second m
has thrown only two tn- rushmg wtlh 405 yards but lops
lerceptwns thts year, second the league m yards ga med per
only to Athens' Greg Skmner
carry with an 8.6 average

0 0 0 0
2000
1000
0 0 0 0

3 0 0 0 Eganph
4 0 1 0 Blue p
4 0 0 0

0 3 0

000 000 10()-1

1100 000 000-0
E- Tenace, Epste1n, Bench ,

4 0 0. 0 Morgan DP- Cmcinnat1 I LOB
0 0 0 0 - Cmcmnah 8, Oaklan~ 6
31 I 4 I
SB- Rose, Geron tmo, Tolan
ab r h b1 S Menke Aloo
3 0 0 0

3 0 0 0 B1ll1ngham W
4 0 I 0 Carroll

IP, h

-

r er bb so

83003 7
10000 0
2 0 0 0 Odom L
73
11 2ll
4 0 0 0 Blue
1310010
4 0 0 0 Ftngers
1230001 3
3 0 0 0
Save- Carroll T- 2 24 A2 0 1 0 49,410
l 0 I 0

Marauders Favored at Waverly
By KEITH WISECUP
The Metgs Marauders go
agamst the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League's top passer,
John Shoemaker of the
Waverly Tigers, but nevertheless Wlll be favored heavily to
wm thetr stxth game agamst
one defeat at Ttgerland this
Fnday mght II is the last road
tnp for the Metgs club thts
season.
Waverly , wmless m stx
starts, has gained 369 yards
through the atr, tops in the
league. But Coach Tom Oyer's
Ttgers also, regretfully, have
the loop's leaktest defense,
allowmg 374 yards a game
Waverly is shan~g the bottom
spol wtth the also wmless
Wellston Rockets.
Meigs, fr es h off of a
resoundmlf '28-6 thrashing of
the Jackson Jronmen last
Friday, is !ted with Athens for
second place at 3-1 Ironton
leads everybody wtth 4-&lt;l. The
Marauders clash wtlh the
Bulldogs next Friday at Metgs.
Athens travels to Galhpolis thts

Fnday
Meigs' J . D. Story, a 170 lb.
junior, Is out for the season
with a broken hand he suffered in the Jackson game.
Story has come off the bench
several tbnes this year to
perform well at linebacker,
but more lmportpntly has
centered on punts all of this
year, all of which have been
perfect.
Btg Mark Werry, a 235 lb.
semor offenstve tackle, wtll
take over the cructal centenng
of pWlls job ThiS wtll be
Werry's first crack at the task
Qther Marauders banged up
lhts week are 265lb sophomore
tackle Randy Faulk wtth a
brmsed midsection and 155 lb
Jumor mtddle guard Alan
McLaughlin wtlh a spramed
ankle Both are expected to
start, however. Randy Chafm ,
a !55 lb. semor end who sat out
last week's game because_of
Illness, should also be ready to
start and take over hts punlmg
JOb that was handled capably
by quarte rback Andy Vaughan

MEIGS WAVERLY PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
WAVERLY
WI. Pos. Wl
John Shoemaker I11 I
173 QB 160
T1m Anderson 1121
160 TB 160
John Walters I121
179 FB 180
M1ke M•ghm ko (10)
147 WB 160
Jeff Anderson (121
153
c 160
Rudy Spaeth 1121
160
177
G
Dave Fassen (11 I
175
G 180
Steve Oyer ( 12)
235
T 175
Bob Sayre Ill I
210
265
T
B•ll Malo~ 112 1
180
E 185
Jed Dalley I121
155
E 170
DEFENSE
Me1gs : Alan Mclaughlin, 155 lb , Ill). m1ddle guard. Bill
Slack, 168 tb (ll ), and Lehew, ta ckles, Tom Lowery, 150 lb Ill).
and Chaney, ends, McKinney and Weber. lineba ckers, Jon
Dillard, 1481bs. (12). and Ash, cornerbacks, and Dave Wolfe, 160
lbs (ll ).a ndMelv lnCremeans, 160ibs (ll),deepbacks
WAVERLY· Joh n Lawson. 175 lbs (121. m1ddle guard .
Kev 1n Case. 210 lbs (11), and Walters, tackles , Jeff Roads, 160
lb , (11 ), and Oyer, ends , T Anderson and Fossen, linebackers,
and M•ghmko, Maloy , Dalley and Mark Workma n. 16Q lb (111,
deep backs

MEIGS
Andy Vaughan (12)
Chuck Faulk 1121
Dallas Weber ll21
M1ck Ash III I
R1ck Gaul (12)
Lou McKi n ne~ (12)
John Lehew Ill I
Mark Werry (12)
Randy Faulk (10)
B•ll Chaney 1121
Randy Chafm I121

Tornado Win Friday is _for Titl~
gold who have only weak wm over the Bobcats Eastern, should be pretty tough next
ho'):e~~r, IS also m the ~lJ!l mng year as they return s1x of' RACINE -t :r~e'' ~tp~rn . Southwestern to play later
Tornadoes can clinch at least a
The Tornadoes, 4-1-1 overall with a 3·1 record
fenSive and seven defenstve
Coach John Patton's Vtkmgs slarters.
tie for thetr first Southern and 3-1).1 m league play, are
Valley Conference title Fnday commg off a 0-0 lle agamst the are 1-5 overall this year and 1-2
Leader of the Tornadoes ts
in
SV
AC
play
They
have
had
agamst Symmes Valley here. Kyger Creek Bobcats, who are
175 lb senior ha lfback Ntck
A Tornado win, whtch JS 3-1-1m league play The t1e has thetr woes defensively, glVlrlg !hie, a con te nder for the SVAC
expected, would all but wrap been the key factor m the SVAC up an average of near 26 pomls " player of the year " Pacmg
thmgs u~ for the purple and race along wtth Eastern 's 8-6 per game. The Tornadoes, the Southern defense has been
coached by Btll Jewell, on the Ron Htll, Jtm Wtlhams, Greg
other hand, have a great DWlnmg, Tim Maurer, and the
NH L Slandmgs
The Daily Sentinel
•
By Un1ted Press lnlerlilallonal defense, perm1ttmg an average
Nease brothers, M1ke and
DEVO!ID TO THE
East
INT1&lt;REST OF
of only 7 pomls per game. 1 M1tch
w. I 1 pis gf ga
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Coach Jewell, m hts fll'St
The mam threa t for the
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
De troll
400822 8
Euc Ed
Mon treal
3 0 1 7 16 9 year as a head coach, has put Vtkings IS 180 lb. semor
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
N Y Rangers
33 062322 together an amazmg group of fullback Raymond Mlller who
C1ty Ed1tGr
Toronto
221515 15 boys, none of whom possess 1s stxth 1n SVAC sconng, and
Publ•shed derly except
Van
couver
2
2 1 5 18 20
s,turdly by The Oh io Valley
Boston
23
042123 oulslandmg talent, but all Dave Dunfee, a 160 lb semor
Publ•shmQ Company , 111
I 3 0 2 9 17 bemg dedtcated to play good end, who IS !ted for thtrd m
Court St, Pomeroy , Oh10 , NY Islanders
45769 Busmess Off1ce Phone
West
football The Tornadoes also SVAC scormg
992 2156 , Ed•tonel Phone 992
wllptsgfga
2157
P1llsburgh
4 2 0 8 26 18
Second class postage pau::lat
Ch1cago
4 2 0 8 20 14
Pomeroy , Oh•o
SOUTHERN SYMMES VALLEY PROBABLY STARTING
2 2 1 5 16 14
National advertiS ing Mmnesota
LINEUPS
Phlladelph•a
2
2
1
5
16
19
representat•ve Botllnell l
l 2 2 4 15 18
Gallagher, Inc , 12 Eut &lt;12nd 51 LOUIS
SYMMES VALLEY
WI Pos WI
Atlanta
1 4 1 3 8 21 SOUTHERN
St , New York Crty, New York
150 QB 160
Jamie Lafon 1121
Sl.lbScr•ptlon rates
De
CalifQrn•a
1 3 0 2 10 14 Vern Drd 1ll l
l i vered by carr1tr where
Dallas Berry I121
155 HB 150
los Angeles
1 6 0 2 20 34 Mitch Nease llOl
avalleble 50 cents Per week
Jerry Pinet lO I
175 HB 165
N•ck Ihie 1121
Wednesday's Results
~- By Motor-Route where c-arrier
Jay l'f 111(121 -~ -· 1s~
FB lsoRay Miller I101
·
Toronfo
4 p,fls5urgh 1
•
serv rce not a'lla ll able One
Ed Berry I12)
212
c
200
DenniS
Hawk
I
111
Minnesota
6
Allanta
0
month Sl 7S By ma11 In Oh•o
Robert
Murnahan
I121
1/5
G
200
Bob
Eynon
Ill
I
St Louis 4 Montreal 4
and w va , One year S14 00
Bill
McCarty
I101
150
G
160
Mike
Codner
(
11
I
N Y Rangers 7 Boston 1
Snc montf'IS S7 25
Three
Bi ll Webb I12]
Ron Hill (12 )
235
T 215
months SA SO Subscr1pf10n
Philadelphia 4 Los Ang 3
John Mann ( 12)
Larry W1lcoxen (121 240
T 160
pricf lncludu Sunday T1mes
(Only games scheduled!
Dave
Dunfee (12)
Sentinel
165
E
160
Jim
Williams
I
lll
Thursday's Games
lewiS Hilgenberg (101
142
E 165
M1 ke Nease (12J
Vancouver at Buffal o
IOnly game schedul ed)
DEFENSE
Pd Pol Adv
SOUTHERN : R. Hill, middle ~uard; Randy Forbes, 160 lb
WHA Slandmgs
tlll and Williams, ends, Greg Middleswarl, 155 lb (ll), and
By Un1ted Press International
Hawk, tackles. J Hill and TI{Tl Maurer, 1651b (10) , linebackers .
tmat~lne whllt a
Eastern DIVISIOn
lhle and Ord, cornerbacks, and Mitch Nease and Mike Nease.
2-CENT lncreue In the
w I. pis gf ga safehes
Sale• Tax would do
Cleveland
A 0 8 16 10
SYMMES VALLEY: Murnahan and Hilgenberg, ends, Webb
to my Mom I
New England
4 0 6 12 5 a nd Mann orE Berry, tackles , Miller, m iddle guard , Pin e and
2 2 4 20 16 McCarty. linebackers . D fl\!rry and Rodney Bennell, 160 lb
New York
Quebec
1 12 62 I11). cornerbacks, and Lafon and James Tomlm , 160 ib (10),
Ph•ladelph1a
o 2 o 3 9 hall backs
Ottawa
0 3 0 15 22

By KEITH WISECUP

Mmnesota

Stop the Switch
to Unfair Taxes

VOTE NO on 2
orde ceunc•l fllr ld&amp;l':atilft

M,., Jeen DJt, """' Cln. Ht1., D.

w. 1. pis gf ga
3 2 ~ 17 17
2 2 4 14 15
2 2 4 8 13
2 1 4 12 5

Important! ORDER. EARLY
Because we can handle early Christmas
business more efficiently, we can make this
special offer :

1 2 2 7 11

Ch•cago
o 3 o 5 10
Wednesday's Results
New England 4 Houston 1
!On ly game scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Mmnesota at Houston
Quebec at N.ew England
Chicago al Ottawa
Phlla at Los Angeles
Cleveland at New York
(Clnlygan\es scheduled)

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eas tern Eagles wtll try
lo pul together their lhtrd
straigh t tremendous effort thts
Friday when they battle nonleague foe Miller at Miller.
Coach Roger Ktrkh art's
defense-mtnded Eag les
defea led a !me Kyger Creek
eleven two weeks ago 8-Q, then
lost13-6lasl Saturday night at
Cadiz agamst the powerhouse
Class AA Cardtnals The
Eagles are 3·3 for the year and
3-l 1n the Southern Valley
Conference
Coach Jtm Cook's Mtller
Falcons are also 3-3 on the
year The upstaters do not play
m a league
Randy Bonng, 145 lb. senwr
run mqg back and about every

any order from Se1rs

DEFENSE
EASTERN. Duvall and Baum . ends; Stettler and Mora,
tack les . Reed, middle guard , Clonn•e Eichinger. 138 lb. (9) , and
Gr llfll h or Mlllhoan. linebackers ; Chaffee and Osbourne. cor
nerbacks. and Sheets and Edwards. safeties
MILLER : J1m Slarner. l50 lb (101 and Lanning, ends, Tolh
and Bernard. tackles. Allea r and McFann, guards , D Starner,
Merck le, F•clllan, lmebackers, and Scott Bankes, 151 lbs 1111
and H1nk le, safeties

Chnslmas Catalog lola! S50
or more, and the order IS
placed onytlme lhrough
October 30, 1972.

YOU'LL
GET A ••

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CHAIRS ,

Best 4 Ply

Now you can buy !hal
comfortable
La-Z-Boy
chair

you ' ve

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prices

Authorized Dealer

:- SEARS

,MASON

220 E. MAIN

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777.f5ft
MoiOII, w. Yo.

tracti on

W•de, fl at iread
4-ply Nygen cord tore body
f1gh ls off 1mpacts, mois ture,

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atlern muff les road no1ce
uragen !read rubber

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This W~ks
Special Buy

G-78·15 24.74
Ex. Tax 2.63

Mounted&amp;
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•

THE
R
ONES

Your
New
Jacket

Comes
'

From

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J

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

WEATHER STRIPPING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
HEAT TAPES- DOOR STRIPS
WARM MORNING HEATERS
( Gas &amp; Coall

PERFECTION OIL HEATERS
ELECTRIC HEATERS
WINDOW
GLAS5-THERMOMETER$
.
PIPE INSULATION
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHOULDERS,
COAL BUCKETS, ETC.

Ebersbach Hardware ·
~Main

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Ph. 992·2811

or in Person.

always

ROBINSON'S .
CLEANERS

WITH THESE

Wl"-.c'ii'
NYGEN
Heffy cleats for deep drill

+ Fed.

You· can get this DiscDu'nt
whether you order by Phone

{Upon Request)

GEHERALtS

•

DISCOUNT

2-HOUR ·
CLEANING

olher offenstve postllon, leads
the SVAC m scormg w1th 46
pomls, a good pace ahead of
Stet hng Logan's second place
total of 28
Bormg, the mal~ cog of the

Contmuous running

SEARS
Early Shopper's

Vtda Blue, who was ineffective play
m bnef relief, but then were
More than that, Bench
closed out the rest of the way fanned thrj!e limes-mcludmg
by Rollie Fingers, who pitched once when the A's made a
out of a bases-loaded Jam m sucker of him on a fake lJI.
that etghth.
tentional walk, qutte a lrtck to
And the VICtory got Bench, P.Ull on posstbly the greatest
the Reds' super.,star, off the ca(Qber 0~ the ~eneration.
hook becau5e he was m ihe . ' . running to be the "goat" of !lie
game
.._
He made an error on a throw
to first on a bunt and on the
same play neglected to call
time before complammg to the
umprre, which led to the ruMer
at second base advancmg to
third on a throwing error by
Joe Morgan. It was the btg jam
of the game for the Reds, who
go t out of that stxth-iMing 210 E 2nd
• Pomeroy
ptckle when Billingham got Sal
Phone 992-5428
!lando to rap mto a double

Eastern offense, runs with the
ball whtle at halfback, later '
mtght throw 11 from quar-·
tcrback, an d somellmes durmg
U1e game goes to flanker where
he catches the ball He's a
lnple threat wtth the ball, the
ha1·d way'
Othe1 s who have helped the
Eagles thts year mclude tackle
Dick Stettler, quarterback
John Sheets, and fullback Alan
Duvall All of the ablJve four
ate returmng starters from
last year's great undefeated
Eastern team
Mill er has a lemendous
break-away runner in halfback
Dave Starner, who has npped
for ~4 points th1s year, good for
ftfth m the southeastern Ohto ·
area

EASTERN MILLER PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
EASTERN
Wl. Pos WI
MILLER
Randy Boring 1121 145 QB 163
Jeff Flcillan 11 11
Ralph Parker (12) 140 HB 175
Da ve Starner (12 1
DanChaffeel111
155 HB 131
Roger Hinkle (121 •
Alan Duva ll tl2)
190 FB 160
Carl McFa nn (12]
George Mora I12)
190
C 164
Denny Allear I111
DaveGnff•th (l2) 155
G 150
D~rk Sllckdorn (10
Steve M1ilhoan ( 121 163
R1ck Merckle I121
G 175
Or T•m Baum Ill l 165
Joe Toth 1101
T
190
D ~ek Stettler 1121
189
Mike Bernard 112)
Steve Reed 112)
210
T 204
J•m Lann1ng (II]
JohnSheets (ll)
180
E 158
JoeDallas(lll
E 163
Bobby Edwards I 12) 120

damage, heal
When the selhng prices of
the ttems vou purchase on

Btlhngham gave up only
three hits, none of whtch left
the mfteld, wh1ch prompted
Anderson to claun wtth a laugh
that he pttched "a no-hitter."
Only three halls were htt to the
Red~' outfteld, all of them
caught by center ftelder Bobby
Tolan
Btlhngham needed ninthlMmg rehef from Clay Carroll
- or, anyway, Anderson
thought he needed tt--&lt;~fter he
had thrown three balls to
leadoff hatter Mike Epstem.
Carroll threw a strike, then got
Ep.stem to groWld out, and got
the next two batters, too, to end
the game.
"Jack was JUSt great," satd
Anderson ''He'll get another
start m the Senes, probably m
the sixth game."
Brilliant Pitching
The Reds' trmmph spoiled a
brilliant pitchmg effort by
Odom, who fanned 11 batters m
the seven IMirlgs he worked
and gave up three of the Reds'
four hits. Omcmnati got one
more hit in the e1ghth inning off

Eagles Needing
3rd Big Effort

Western DiviSIOn

Alberta
w.nn lpeg
Houston
Los Angeles

ount

Pomeroy, 0.
~.

AUTHORIZED
MERCHANT

~ATALOG

992·2l7a
POMEROY
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
Mon., Tues., Wtd. &amp; 5111. ttoJ
Thurs. flo Noon. Friday 9:00to9:oo
.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,

SALES
9'1'!-7161
MidcUeport,
I.---

o.

"Everything In Hardware"

----'

\

�fie••••••------------..,

,,

Moloy, W. J.
33 24 11
Stevenson,
20 s.s
1.0
··
on the World
OeStephen. J. 3 o 18 4.5
'
'
Berridge, G.
2 4 16 4.0
Series and of
SVAC SCORING
Name
TO PAT Pts Avg
Boring. E.
1 4 46 11 5
other baseballia
19~.2 SOUTHEJ\STERN
logan, NG
4 ;' 28 1.0
OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGU! STATISTICS ·
Taber, KC
S 0 30 6.0
•hem.
( lnclu•s games through Oct. i3l
.,
Dunfee. SV
3 o 1B 6.0
By Col. Mole
TEAM STATISTICS 14Ga"'esl
By Chet Tannehill
Garnes, NG
J 2 20 5.0
To make a long story shprt, a
FIRST DOWNS PASSING
PLAYS
Miller, sv ·
2 · o 12 4.0
few years ago i)ly husband hid
tNm
No.. Avg. Op. Avg. Q.m-AI Int. No. Avg. Op. Avg . . McCarty, KC
3 0 18 3.6
Athens
64 16.0 35 8.8 17-34 3 223 55.8 182 45.5
Eight ttf;'d withi J 0 ~verages .
For the first time since the Moleman began his weekly
100110111001100- -110011100110CJt a conslruction job in the
Gallipolis
49 12.3 49 12.3 7-24 4 212 SJ.O' 195 48.8
mountains near lhe Maryland column for the Ohio Valley Publishing Company three years ago,
lronlon
57 10 25 6.3 11-27 2 224 56.0 157 39.3
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
border.
a letter of disagreement has been received from a fan of one of
Jackson
53 13.3 53 13.3 22-44 5 212 ' 53.0 221 55.3
FRIDAY
The
rains
in
the
Bay
Area
more
lhan
-10
years
ago.
We renled a lovely old home
logan
41 10.3 41 10.3 15-39 4 182 45.5 195 48.8
SEOAL
permilling, the third game of
I won't prell!nd to explain place from a professor who the niany schools involved In our predictions.
Meigs
so 12.5 53 13.3 14-39 1 197 49.3 208 52.0 Athens at Gallipolis
Well, let me say, it is nice to be read, whether one agrees or
Waverly
43 10.8 67 16.8 27-70 4 203 S0.8 245 61.3 Wellston at Ironton
!he Red!Hlaldand World Series why. No one knows all lhe 1aughl at Pitt.
Wellslon
27 6.8 71 17.8 17-45 7 170 42.5 220 55.0 Logan at Jackson
will have become history by answers; a dozen Ph. D's in
One weekend he came down disagrees with my prognostications. We have had a lot of fun
RUSHING PASSING T. OFF T. DEF
Meigs at Waverly
Team ·
lhe time you read these words. behavioral psychology could and had my sons, Rocky and picking the scores of the many Friday night games, even If we dt
Yds. · Avg. Yds. Avg. Yds. Avg. Yds. Avg.
TRI-VALLEY
....
AI hens
. 769 192.3 259 64.B 1028 257.0 574 143.5 Nelsonville· York at Belpre
Sparky Anderson of the split6and6onthewhyofit.
· Mark, help him clean out the step on a few feel.
Gallipolis
772 168.0 176 44.0 948 237.0 700 11!.0 Vinton County at Federal · Cincinnatians was quoted after
Last' year yours truly was hanged in effigy twice In Gallia
Maybe it's because baseball, garage. In a stack of old
Ironton
' 8'14 223.5 320 80.0 1124 281 .0 441 110.3 Hocking
·
County!
lhesecondgamewaslqsf, "I'm as is so many olher sporls, so ne,wspapers Mark found the
Jac~son
. 727 181 .B JSO B7.S 1077 269.3 1036 25?.0
SVAC
All is not rosey iJ;J this profession. When you say someone is
Logan
695 173.8 213 53.3 908 227.0 606 151.5 Hannan Trace at North Gallia nol ready to panic yet, ijut I'm easy to watch, so plenlifully 1916 standings (See below-Ed .)
Meigs
753 188.3 252 63.0 1005 251 .3 959 239.8 Symmes Valley at Southern
about to." If his club loses the displayed on the tube, and yet and cut it our for me because going to win and someone is going to lose you will alway~ make
Waverly ._.
355 ·88.8 369 92.3 724 181.0 1498 374.5
·Others
someone unhappy, but, as they say In real life, "that's the way
lhird game panic will l)!lve hit : so much a spectator · rather he knew I liked the Rells.
' Wellston
237 59.3 176 44.0 413 103.0 1353 338.3 Fo•t Frye al Warren Local
Sparky full blown. No team !han a participating sport.
I thought you might' like to the ball bounces".
Eastern at Miller ·
Kyger Creek at Alexander
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
SVAC STANDINGS
Now let me colTUllent on the letter which appears In to-•
ever has l&lt;JSt the first three and
In this conneclion, read what see i/. It gives both leagues but
RUSHING
Team
·w L T Pis OP Green at Southwestern
then won four straight since Mrs. Roy (Iris) Williams wrote look ·how they gave 'the day's Daily ,Sentinel, written by a 100 )!Ct. •. never-1111y-dle
Yds Car Avg. Southern
3 0 1 56 8 Glouster at Centerburg
inception of, the seven-game I&lt;&gt; Sporls Desk from Mid- statistics in 1916!
Culbertson, l.
SOS 77 6.6 K. Creek
3 1 1 105 U Pl. Pleasant at Ripley
Eastern fan .
Faulk, M.
405 59 B.6 Eastern
3 1 0 3B 19 Ravenswood a1 Wahama
series in 1905 (with temporary • dlepor t under date of Oct. 17:
By the way 'iny grandiather ·near Eastern Fans:
Mowe~y. Iron.
333 66 s.o N. Gail Ia
2 2 0 70 56
changes in World War 1). No Dear Sir: ·
was also -Charles 1Ears )
The Mole doesn't always·pick your team to lose. In 1971, I can ' •.
Wood, A.
315 65 4.8 S. Valley
1 2 0 41 64
learn ever has lost the frrsl two
I am a Reds fan, and have Winebrenner's grandfather. only reeall one game lriwhich he picked Eastern to lose..
Grah~rn. Gall.
2B1 65 4.3 S'western
1 3 0 40 103
PASSING .
Han-Trace
0 &lt; 0 0 112
(as the Reds did) on i~ home been since I was a little girl Maybe that is why he likes --.. This year, however, has been a different story. First, let's
Cm-At lnt Yds .TD
TRI-VALLEY
field' and gone on to win the when my grandfalher, Charlie baseball so much.
face it, you don't have the ball club you had a year~go. On the
Shoemaker, W.
Team
W L T Pis OP
series.
(Pitlsburgh last year Winebrenner, made me come
Mrs. Roy (Iris ) Williams subject of the Southern game, the Molema.1 sincerely felt
26'63 3 364 4 Nels-York
2 0 0 91 6
losl the first lwo at Baltimore, in from playing house or
DeStephen, J. 22-42 4 3SO 4 Belpre
1 o o 40 14
Southern woufd defeat the Eagles."They did just that, on your
Skinner, A. 17-27 11 259 2 W. Local
1 1 0 34 SJ
won
ihe
third
at
Three
Rivers.
making
mud
pies
lo
listen
to
THANK
you,
Mrs.
Williams
field.
-Kemper, L. 15-39 4 ' 213 1 Vinton Co.
0 1 0 14 2B
Stadium).
1he radio and tell him what the for explaining why Charles
Peoples, Well. 13-34 6 364 o ~ed-Hocklng 0 2 0 14 92
In your letter, you stated the Tornadoes got all tlw: breaks,
Vaughan, M. 1:1'38 2 236 3
OFFENSIVELY
Reds were doing.
Winebrenner 1formerly of including the officials. Well, the game was played at Eastern,
PUNTING
Team
Pis IGI Jlvg.
THERE IS LEGITIMATE
Back then in the hot summer Middleport, now of Cheshire,
(tor morel
Alexander
210 (6) 35.0
and the officials were hired by your athletic director or football
suspicion
thst
the
generation
the static was so bad that .the and one of MHS's fine athletes
Yds No. Avg. Nels-York
200 (6) 33.3
now flexing ils physical arid only way you could hear an- , including baseball of the 50s), coach.
Kriebel, Iron.
568 13 43.7 Belpre
1SO (6) 2&gt;.0
You're right, we did pick cadiz to win 3().(), and were sur·
Walter, Gail.
584 IS 38.9 Meigs
145 16) 24.2
mental muscles finds baseball lhing was to sil on lhe floor · slill loves baseball and the
COLUMBUS(
U
PI
)Unbeaten
Mo~er, L.
567 15 ' 37.8 Jackson
144 (6) 24.0 Warren Western Reserve has uninteresting . Too slow
wilh your ear in the speaker. Cincinnati Reds . And you prised that Eastern's defense held them to a 1~ game. The Mole
Ri e. Jack .
513 16 32.1 K. Creek
113 (6) 18.8 taken over the lop spot in .Class
Mat r, Well. ' 557 18 30.9 Wahama
109 161 18.2 AAA Region 1 in this week's moving. Too individualized. That is what I did. When I know, too, of course, there is agrees your team has a good defense and lots of spirit, but it can
RECEIVING
Athens
105 (6) 17.5 Ohio High School Athletic As- Unexciting.
starled, I didn't know a ano t her Winebrenner break at times.
No. Yds TQ Ironton
96 16) 16.0 sociation ~computer ratings,
Speaking of breaks, you got them in another league game
Evidence? Even our own homerun from a foul ball but as generation coming · along in
Maloy, Wav.
14 202 2 Southern
95 (6) 15.8
while Columbus Walnut Ridge Peewee farm systems cannot the years went on I grew to love Rick Winebrenner, Charles' didn't you?
Stevenson, J..
11 167 2 N. Gallia
88 161 14.7 moved
into a 11e with Sandusky
Sincerely, The Mole
Topping, Alh.
B 156 1 VInton Co.
86 16) 14.3
supply the little leaguers in baseball and of course lhe Reds son, who'd rather play baseball
in
Region
2.
Jenkins, J.
' 6 100 o Miller
83 (6) . 13.8
Last week, Major Amos B. Hoople and yours truly had 15-S-1
sufficient nwnbers to maintain were my favorite.
lhan eat or sleep.
Five tied with five each.
Logan
77 (6) 12.8 · The two newcomers join
My Dad alSo was a great fan
Which has to be proof the records. Hoople still holds his one game lead going intO Friday's
KO RETURNS
Eastern
70 (6) 11.7 Massillon and Princeton as the lhe nwnber of 15-boy squads
Yds No. TD Gallipolis
10 16) II .7 lop contenders in lhe sixth ol kept on our local diamonds no and we took many trips to see breed is nol yet extinct.
action. Now let's see what's in store :
Wells, Wav.
147 B o Waverly
68 (6) 11.3 10 weeks of computer ratings ,
SEOAL
.
Cunningham, A.
99 4 o W. Local
63 (6) 10.5 with the 12 regional winners,
Athens 22 Gallipolis 12. The Blue Devils have improved since
Rld!le. J.
96 6 o S. Valley
60 16) 10.0 three in classification, qualify Faulk, M.
78 3 o S'westtf'n
52 (6) 8.7 ing for state semi-final playtheir opening games but do they have enough to defeat the
.
Steger, Wav.
72 4· o Fed-Hocking
52 16) 8.7 offs.
Bulldogs?
The lour Class AA leaders
PUNT RETURNS
Pt. Pleasant
48 16) 8.0
Ironton 40 Wellston 0. Poor Golden Rockets.
Yds. No. TD Glouster
34 16) 5.7 this week are Campbell MemoNA.TIO!'!AL LEAGUE 1916.
Carter, I.
174 10 2 Wellston
6 (6)
1.0 rial in Regions. Columbus WatJackson 14 Logan 12. This rates as a toss-up.
'Club--:Played Tied Won Lm t Runs
Hits Errors L.B. O.R.
Berry, L.
68 s o Han-Trac~
0 (6) 0.0 lerson ' in Region 6, Hannibal
Meigs 22 Waverly 6. Marauders roll Tigers.
Ri•er In Region 7, and Reading
Brooklyn , .. .... 156
2
94
60
585
1346
Berridge, Gall.
56 7 0
. DEFllNSIV ELY
224
1020
471
Faulk. M.
43 4 o Team
Ptl IGI Avg. in L~~~~~~~ ~-he four Class Are- . :Philadelphia ... . . 154
SVAC
1 · 91
62
680
1245
232
913
502
Whitlatch, M.
35 3 o K. Creek
'23 (6) 3.8
Sd,uthern 14 Symmes Valley ~· Tornadoes bounce back
-13ostoil · · · · · · · · .158
6
89 ~ 63
542
1176
249
994
493
INT. RETURNS
Alexander
28 161 4.7 glans are Kirtland in Region 9,
NeW.: York ...... 155
a 86 66 597 1309 241
·(Continued on Page 6 )
No. Yds TD Nels-York
30 (6) 5.0 Marion Pleasanl in Regi on 10,
925
504
ChiCago ... ... .. 156
3
67
86
52'2
1233
Stevenson, J. •
2 52' o Ironton .
33 16) s.s Newcomers Iown in Region 1,1,
296
968
538
~~~~~
Cremeans, M.
2 48 o Eastern
39 (6) 6.5 and Mlddlelown Fenwick in ReJlttsburgh ...... 157
3
65
89
616 '
1245
246
1012
596
·
Romig, Ath.
2 18 o Southern
40 (6) 6.7 glon 12.
The top ten teams in each
flt, Louis . • ..... . 153
0
60
93
474
1223
282
043
629
25 tied with one each.
Athens
69 16) 11 .5
region
are
:
•
Cincinnati
..
..
..
155
2
6Q
93
505
1330
236
OVERALL STANDINGS
Mei~s
69 (6) 11.6
1010
615
Class AAA
.
'
AMERIOAN~ l.l!JAGUE 1916
(As of Oct. w
Gallipolis
72 161 12.0
TNm
W L T Pis OP Logan
' ·88 161 14.7
·ClubPlayed Tied Won Loet Runs Hits
Errors L.B. -O.R.
1. WarrenR'(lJ!~~e~n Reserve;
Alexander
S 1 0 210 28 Belpre .
g'i- 16) 15.3
2.
Cleveland
SI.Joseph;
3.
Cleve.Boston
.........
156
2
91
63
.
550
1236
192
1024
480
Nels· York
s 1 o 200 30 Wahama
94 (6) 15.7
1
110
64
602
t;sa· 210 1009 .496
Meigs
s 1 o 145 69 Miller
108 16) 1B.O land St. lgnalius; 4. Parma sen- 'Chicago •....•.. 165
•In Former BRW Hdwe. Room, Pomeroy
:Oetrolt ·... . .. , .. 154
1
85.
68
657
l3A2
223
Southern
4 1 o 95 40 Jackson
115 (6) 19.2 lor; s. Lakewood St. Edward;
1085
584
'!N y k
156
2
80
7''
68 •
.,.
, Belpre
4 2 o 1SO 92 N. Gall :a
119 16) 19,8 6 Berea; 7. Willoughby South;
1059
51i1
' ew or '· · · • ·
·,
12;,
226
Wahama
4 2 0 109 94 W. Local
122 (61 20.3 8. Bedford; 9. Cleveland Calhedral
Latin
;
10:
Eastlake
North.
St.
Louis
.......
158
4
79
76
586
1238
~49
873
542
Ironton
4 2 0 96 33 S'western
125 16) 20.8
Region 2
· Cleveland . : . ·... 157 ;· 3
77
77
627
1245
237
K. Creek
3 2 1 113 23. Vinton Co.
134 16) 22.3
994
suo
Jackson
3. 3 o U4 115 S. Valley
, 154 (6) 25.7
1. Ilie) Sandusky and Colum- .Washington,- , , , .i59 1 6
76
77
536
1239
~54
1072 ..542
Athens
J J '1H!l5 69 oJ Han-Tr~cc....- 166 (6) 2U bus Walnut Ridge ; J. Upper A~''nhfl•delphla ,
15" · 1
36 .. 117 ' 446 ' '11M.' •"' {ii'e3
·1 ....u J. u,. ~~~~~ &gt;.h h.
~... u •d .zu" ·d•i . H
· , I, Hll.d •.a «l
1DQ7,( , ~1$. } ,~:/••.•~.hJ,·.,~ ....
Miller
3 3 0 B3 108 " Fed•Hi!cl&lt;lng
17~ (6) 29.7 'lll'(gtM , ~:'Galiolr;-s. Co!Uh'ib·us
1
'"
"
~
•
·
·
·
"
·
,.
·
·.
~~
'
"
·
·
M&amp;W~
~
';,., · t "' · I "•,'[~. .
,
lMI Jo·., .,,-,
~In ton Co
3. 3 o 86 134 Pt. Plo:s,sant
182 (6) 30.3 Easlmoor; 6. Ashland ;&gt;;,, (lie)
•
3,\·i· ' . · . · ,. • ll;,ll
' .,
fEastern ··
3 3 o 70 39 . Waver~·
· · 188 (6) 31.3 Gahanna Lincoln and Lima
..i\,"Ce
_
Applies On
,
Logan
.
2 3 1 77 88 Wellston
209 (6) 34.8 Shawnee ; 9. Fremonl Ross; 10.
Gallipolis
2 3 1 70 72 Glouster
253 (6) 42.2 Grove City .
j).l'LOW
RENTAL
PLAN
.
Purchase Price
W. Local
2 3 1 63 122
OVERALL SCORING
Region 3
If You Prefer.
·
N. Gall Ia
2 4 0 88 119 Name
TD PAT Pis Avg.
1. Massillon
Barberton
; 3.;
S. Valley
1 5 0 60 154 Gliders, A.
15 20 116 19.3 Akron
East ; ;4.2.Walsh
Jesuit
w·
tLanham, will be tile meet ~===~==~:::~:::::~:!:::::~~~~~~~=
dir to
·
S'western
1 5 0 52 125 Woodson, N-Y 9 17 74 12.3 s. Akron Garfield ; 6. Canton
ec r.
Fed-Hocking 1 s 0 52 178 Smathers, N-Y 12 0 72 12.0 McKinley ; 7. Steubenville; 8.
"
In compliance with Ohio
Pt. Pleasant 0 5 1 48 182 ' Vannoy, B.'
10 2 62 10.3 Ausllntown Fitch ; 9. Green; 10.
Rio Grande College will be
Eleven teams are entered in High
School
Athletic
Waverly
0 6 o 68 188 Starner, M
8 6 54 9.0 Canton Central Catholic.
Glouster
o 6 o 34 253 Boring, E.
8 4 52 8.7
Region 4
the site of the Southeastern Class "A": Frankfort Adena, AssociaUon rules, teams and
Wellston
o . 6 o 6 209 Faulk, M.
6 4 40 6.7
1. Princeton;
Kettering
" d Bloom of Sou th Webs ter, Individual runners wIll a dFairmonl
East; 2.
3. Cincinnati Ohio Sectional ClaS!J "A an
Han-Trace
o 6 o o 166 Weber, M.
6 2 3B 6.3
SEOAL STANDINGS
Five tied lor ninth and lOth Elder ; 4. Centerville ; 5. Cln- "AA" Cross Country meet Chesapellke, Federal Hocking, vance to the combined district
Team
w L T Pts OP with 6.0 averages.
cinnati Moeller ; 6. Troy ; 7. Cin- Friday afternoon at Evans' Lynchburg Clay, Manchester, meet at the Raymond
Ironton
4 o o 89 14
SEOAL SCORING
cinnatl LaSalle : 8. Cincinnati Field.
North Adams of Seaman, Memorial Golf Course near
Athens
3 1 0 86 21 Name
TD PAT Pis Avg. Woodward ; 9. (tie) Franklin
In conducting the meet at Peoples High School, Ross Colwnbus for further com·
Meigs
3 1 0 86 57 Wood, A.
5 0 30 7.5 and Portsmoulh.
ARE ALWAYS FILLED
Jackson
2 2 o B8 68 Rld!le, J.
J 10 28 7.0
Class AA
Rio Grande for ihe first time, a Southeastern, West Union, and petition Oct. 28.
Gallipolis
2 1 1 so 28 Faulk M.
4 4 28 7.0
Region s
total of eighteen teams will .Mowrystown White Oak. In
For Class "A", the four
Logan
1 2 1 49 26 Massey, I.
2 9 27 6.8
1. Campbell Memoria l; 2. AkPROMPTLY HERE!
Class "AA", it will be highest ranking teams and
Waverly
0 4 o 49 133 Culbertson, l: 4 2 26 6.5 ron St. VIncent; 3. Warren Ken- compete In the two classes.
Fairland, Greenfield McClain, twelve top individual runners 1
Wellston
o 4 o 6 146 Carter, I.
4 I 25 6.3 .nedy; 4. Chagrin Falls; s. ManThere's no· unnecessary
chester; 6. Coventry ; 7. Genva;
Ironton, Rock Hill, :.~hornville advance to Columbus. In Class
.
.
B. Lorain Catholl·c,· 9. Canfield,· dinal ;6. Dalton ; 7. Atwater Wa - Sheridan, Warren
IAcal and "AA", the first two teams and
10. Columbiana.
terloo; 8. Jackson Milton ; 9.
waiting here for your pre·
Region 6
Smithville; 10. Mogadore.
Wheelersburg.
thesixfastestrunnersadvance
.,
1. Columbus Waterson; 2. Li Region 10
The Class "A" schools will to the district level.
scriptions ... we make it
2
ma Central CatHolic; 3. llie)
1. Marion Pleasant ' · Syca - ~o· at 3 o'clock followed by the
The sectional meet at Rio
Fostoria and Rossford ; 5. Co- more Mohawk; 3. Norwalk St. ~ ,
our business to take care
.
--~
lumbus DeSales; 6. St. Marys Paul : 4. Arlington ; s. New Lon - AA teams at ~:30 p.m. . · Grande Is open to the public
Memorial' 7. Huron : 8. Giyde , . .don ; 6. .Co(.Y-·liaws.on;J, S~en -_ .The. athletie.director of. Rio --Friday afternoon starting at 3
"
ofyournialt.h rieeds first.
9. Dublin ; 10. Ontario . .
cerville ; 8. Fremont St. Joseph G d
College, Arthur o'clocL.
Region 7
9. (lie) Liberty Benlon and Riv- ran e
•
And you can count on our ,
1. Hannibal
RiverAquinas
; 2. Louiserdale. Region II
..-------------------,
ville
St. Thomas
1 3.
Buckeye South; 4. Bellaire : s. I. Newcomerstown ; 2. TusP~eroy
using only the best products!
•

SEOAL . Statistics .

the Sports

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

Desk

.

OhwHS

Computer
Ratings

1916 ~ajor League Standings

YOU'lL FIND US AT
111 Second St.

BILL &amp; LEE'S

nd' (nsttU'l.h' ls

"Jl).S

R

Tto Host A, AA Mee

SAVE $ AT DEU'S

.

WHolESALE PRICES 'FOR --·
EVERY ONE···

At Goessler's In

Minerva ; .6. Uniontown Lake ; 7. car a was

Fredericktown;

e.

Valley; 3. Berne
Ironton ; 9. Union ; 4. centerburg; 5. New-

Licking Valley 1 10. Hebron Lakewood.
Region 8
1. Reading ; 2. Loveland ; 3.
Wyoming ; 4. Hamilton Badin ;
5. Teays Valley ; 6. Tipp City :
7. Millon Union; B. North College Hill ;· 9. Cincinnati McNIchola s; 10. Harrison.
Class A 1
Region 9
Klr·t1a1nd ; 2. Lorain Clerview

FINE
1\TtDES
HOliDAY GIFTING\

ark Calhollc; 6. Millersport ; 7.
Itie) Beallsville and Coal Grove
9. Racine Southern ; 10. Danville.
Region 12
!.Middletown Fenwick; 2. Covlnglon ; 3. Lockland ; 4. Plain
City Jonathan Alder ; s. Wil liamsburg; 6. (tie) Greenview I
and Porlsmouth· Notre Dame ;
8. Xenia Woodrow Wilson ; 9.
(lie) Frankfort Adeha, Marion
Local and Sidney Lehman Catholic.

Give the watch with
tuning fork ·accuracy

Accutron~

Halloween ~oociies
POPULAR PRICES!
COSTUMES
All sizes - some can
be used for pajamas
atterward . Party
Items - napk ins ,
favors, novelties, toys.
candy, etc.

NE.W CROP

Jennet
Double Glo6e

LAMPS

$25

00

.SPANISH P-EANuTs
JUST ARRIVED lb
COOKED FRESH
•
DAILY IN OUR STORE

M EXCEl! EIIIT SELECTION
OF AIJSS WARE

12$0.

I

Swisher &amp; Lohse Specialties

I

D. V.
PAIN CAPSULES
Contains no aspirin. Analg~sic for pain. relief.''
•

'

J

..

~

20 capsules 1.75
'

For relief
rheumatism.

of

headache.

neuralgia,

SUEP-ETTES
temporary relief of slmple .(lervoull'ien.'

By Katie ,Crow

3 Circles Meet

1
.
'
.
Perso'nal· Notes
Pomeroy

i

Ra'l' Carnt'" 'a/ .
Q Sa

Pomeroy

See Our

'

•'

:

''

CARPn-LAND, INC.

12
BY

'

CARTER'S

YOUTH ENTERTAINED
Edith Mees entertained with
her guitar and original music
at a meeting of the Baptist
Youlh Fellowship at a meeting
Sunday night at the Middleport
Baplist Church. She also ac·
companied for group singing.
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Pam Crow, leader, Marty
Krawsczyn, Trina Gibbs, Patty
Boyles, Jill Walburn, and
Valerie Lewis.

WOMEN'S FASHIONS

Be Our Guest
For Best ..
SELECTION
SERVICE
COMPETITIVE
PRICES

Boys' PJ's with. feet. mo. to
yrs. Boys' Ski Pajamas size 4 to ·
.
Girls Pa Iii mas and Gowns. Size
4 to 14. Brushed Trlcof and
Nylon .

7 The Kiddie Shoppe
, " ·" ON THE T IN6 MIDDLEPORT

Cor. Main &amp; Sycamore
•

'

'

'

l

.

10.

lOLA'S
••

Prices elfectlve through Oclober 23

PLYMOUlH

Beoutllul flocked portlollo stationery, 24
sheets, 1:2 envelopes .. .. .. .... .79c value

JJ'.U To JJ'.U cBpet Speculilt.

POMIROY

•

TtM Mldlllll1t10rt;

Wea,.

ciPACOL

14-oz of re.

ALIUTO V0-5
SHAMPOO.

lreshlng mouth wash and gargle
in shatterproof
bottle.
S1.29 value

Big u .oz. size,

Regular, Dry or
Super Lather.
S2.07 value

79~

69~

..
lotO'l

MENNEN
IIAIY MAGIC
LOTIOII
16-oi.
S1.98 value

--~

.,., ;... a., .You Sllauld r., :

IMfiiiMllttD

"tor 11M,..,,

· record were sh&lt;1wn the group
by Mrs. W. H. Perrin.
• Lae Ling will be II IIi
November and indicated In ber
letter her happiness at bekls
able tp attend a school in Hq
Kong sponsored by the churdl
\n China.
Mrs. James Fugate gave a
report for the nomlnatlni
corrunittee. The present officers will serve for another
year .
iL__baskets . wert
delivered and a seco~d order Ia
being made. Several were
reported ill and cards will be
sent.
Mrs. Kennetll Harris showo!d
pictures of l~e art glass windows of Trinity church made
by Dick Nease and announced
that prints are available.
Refreshments were served
with decorations carrying out
the Halloween motif. Hostesses
were Mrs. Cacl Kautz and Mn.
Mora.

at your fip store

r!:.n
·PH•.112-7590
..... ,, .......... 5

,Jewelry ,Store
'WI w6H lllllftt to

brought out-the thought that a referred· to God's wor'lls to
very common article as Moses' Moses : "What Is that in thy
rud, wilh the help of God, could hand? " to point up the fact that
be used to serve Him. The God expecls only what we are
leader commented that God able to give.
expecls only what we have to
The spirit of giving of time,
give and that we need to be ta lents and money were
willing to give whal is ours. She discussed (jy the ·leader and
this was followed by a question
and answer period . Prayer by
the leader closed the program.
Presiding in the absence of
lhe president, Miss Eliulbeth
FlcK
who is ill, Mrs. Pearl
missioners' meeting wit~ her
were Mrs. Charlotte Taunton, Mora presented Miss Fick's
Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, and suggestions to the group for
Mrs. Texanna Well. Mrs . consideration. A gift of money
Adams also commented on the will be sent to the Meigs County
organization o( the Citizens Children's Home lo be used
Commillee which will visil the there al the discretion of the
matron.
Children's Home.
Plans were made to send a
Mrs. Taunton, ways and
birthday
gift to 'Lai Ling, the
means chairman, announced a
bake sale to be held Nov. 4. She Chinese child whose education
also noted that candy bars will is sponsored by Trinity Church ..
Lellers from her which inbe sold for 50 cenls each.·
cluded
her picture and school
The cullural program on
environment, health , work,
and play was presented by
Mrs. Satterfield and Mrs.
Charlotte Hanning . On display
were a bicycle, a rowing
machine, 1and other exercise
equipment which the members
tried. Mrs . Jeannie Ebersbach,
Mrs. Connie Bailey, and Mrs.
Sandy Korn served refreshments.

MRP,.Levy Endorsed

.1 l6 W. MAIN

NG

MAKE

.

;

24 cap~~~lel 1.39
Mild sedative to aid In promoting' sle., &amp; for

COurt St.

Carnival -Set

Giving Explored in .Circle 's Study 1'opic ---~

"What ShaUl Give".from the
sl
u~y
hook, Church Women at
CHESTf;R .:.. Plans for a coie,
c ha~rman ,
Mrs.
Halloween carnival were made Nathaniel Carpenter. Mrs . Worshfp, was presented by
Harold Newell, Mrs. Richard Mrs: Phil Globokar· when
al Monday night's meeting of Fick, Sr., Mrs. ·Lowell Bing .
the Chesler P.T.A. presided
Duck Pond : Mr. and Mrs Friendly Circle of Trinity
over by Mrs. Charles Goeglein, Alvin Tripp, chairman, and Church nlct Tuesday nigh!.
/
.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown.
Scriplure from Exodus 4
prestdent.
.
.
.
Sweet Shop : "t&gt;r s Ma x
The response of the citizens of Syracuse to the colTUllunity
The carmval wtll be held tn Eic hinger, chairman . Mrs
Halloween party is unbelievable.
'
the Chesler School auditoriwn · Ri chard Gaul, Mrs. Roger
Over •100 has been received and money is still coming ln. 0n Oct -~.,.,'wl'th asoupsupper 1O , Keller.
Clown · Mrs. Barbara Hart
First plans were made for the event Monday, with fmal plans to be served prior to the opening chai rman ,
Mrs . Henr y
be made next Monday evening. For those who didn't catch lhe of lhe carnival ,activilies. The Eichinger.
Country Store_: Mrs . Roger
news, MinerSVille children are included. The party is being ways and means committee
,
Starcher, cha1rman , Mrs .
staged for toddlers through junior high.
will meet at the school Thurs- Sharon Louks, Mr s. Glen
The one-fourth of one milt
There will be games, cake walks', C&lt;UldY treats, candy ap- day at I p.m. to finalize plans Lawson.renewal levy for the Meigs
Duck~ng for Apples : Mr . and
ples, refreshments of douglututs, cider and Kool-Aid. So that no for the affair. The commil~es
, •-&gt;
li d bel
Mrs. John G1nlher, Mr . and Counly mental retardation
chUd is slighted, ticket,s will be given to each chlld for ~~ch event appomu:u are ste
ow.
.Mrs. Ernest Deeter .
·program was endorsed by the
' The ~econd phase of the "'~ Pound toe Nail : Mrs. James Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Bel&lt;l
an~ treat which is free to all.
Thomas. chairman, James Sigma Phi Sorority at a
The new municipal building is to be made ready for the · Search for Consensus was
Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs .
.
meeting Tuesday night at the
party. It will be held In tbe fire department portion of the announced for Oct. 25 at Metgs George Morris.
School 7 to 10 p.m.
Fi~h Ponds: Mrs. Theodore Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
building.
I High
Mrs. Alvin Tripp discussed Pullins, Mr. and, Mrs. Roger Electric Co.
The party Is a first for Syracuse Village which is being spop. d.
d . Re1bel. Mr. ana Mrs . Gary
th
e membe rs htp me an tt Griffith. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Mrs . Jeanette Crooks, a
sored by Syracuse VIllage Council.
was
announced
that
after
Jan
.
Dill.
Mrs.
Selma
Call,
and
Mr
.
:f!esidents seem to think it is a great idea_. They're really 1 the state ~ortion of the dues and Mrs . Thomas Mankin, Mr . teacher at one of thr community classes, spoke on the
pulling together. This makes for a great conunWlity.
·11 be 30
Is "
J h and Mrs. Richard Fick, Jr ..
cen . ~&gt;nrs. o n Mr. and Mrs. John ReibeL Mrs . need for the levy and asked the
Racine Is also staging a party for ila youngstl'rs as is Rutland WI
Reibel reported on the pur- James Hollon. Mrs. Betty help of the sorority in
VU!age. Middleport ill having its ann~ Halloween party which chase of health supplies for the Topnyt. f
d
promoling ils passage.
Is held on the Middleport Football field sponsored, by Fenney
· k
·
a ro 1 or groun s: Mr. John
s1c . roo'?. Also presented at Reibel. Herber! Matheny,
Mrs. Carol Adams, service
Bennett Post of the American Legion, and Pomeroy Village will the meeting was a report by Mark Vennls. Max Eichinger,
chairman, reported on her
continue with Trick or Treat night, limiting It to ontH!alf hour for Mrs. Goeglein on lhe PTA Nathaniel Carpenter, Victor meeting with the Meigs County
Bahr.
children 12 and younger.
workshop held recent I y al
Pocket lady: Mrs. Roger Commissioners about the
Athens and the Ohio PTA Gaul, chairman, Mrs . Sue · Children's Home and the needs
FRED CROW, Pomeroy Attorney, is back at his office after convention held last week i~ Anderson.
. !here. Altending the ComRing the Cane: Mrs. B1ll
being confined at Holzer Medical Center where he underwent Colwnbus · She announced the1 Pooler,
Jr., cha1rman, Mrs.
minor surgery.
·
new cultural arts theme , Emerson Pooler, Mr. and. Mrs.
"Responding to Life' '·
Larry Hudson.
.
MEETING CHANGED
Mrs
James
Folmer
reported
P~ngpong
Toss:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
SPEAKING OF SURGERY, my aWl!, Mrs. Helen Wetzel of
A
meeting of the American
·
Everett Calloway , cha1rman,
on
lhe
Meigs
County
Council
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Parker.
Colwnbus, Wlderwent major surgery recently at Riverside
Legion Auxiliary of Racine
Games: Mr . and Mrs. Bruce Post 602 has been changed
Hospital, Colwnbus. She has several friends In the area who 1 Parents and Teachers'
held at Salem Cenler Myers. Mr . .and Mrs. Darrell from Oct. 24 to Oct. 31 due to
know would be interested In hearing news of her. Her room meeling
.
' Hawthorne.
number Is 6022.
·
and tl was noled that the other
Ticket: Miss Nancy Kirby, special evangelistic services in
meetings for the school year Mrs. Doris Well. Mrs. Betty lhe community. The meeting
MR. AND MRS. DONALD BREWER, Portland, received will be Nov. 2 at Sali~bury, Ro~~; prizes: Mrs. Larry wilt be held at 7:30p. m. at the
word Tuesday night that tbelr.son, Jeff, was seriously injured in Feb. I at Syracuse, Aprtl 5 at Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy hail on Oct. 31.
Bradbury, and May '3 at McGrath, Mr . and Mrs .
a fall believed to have happened at his employment.
Sexson . at the car.
TO SELL FLOWERS
Jeff, a graduate of Southl)l'il High School, Ia in critical con- Chester.. The host unils. .are Oemar1s
other workers
Forget-Me-Not Week will be
dition and ill in Isolation, In Elyria Veterans Memorial'll:ospltal. responsible for the butldmg, nival will be Oliver Swain. Mrs.
pledge,
devotions
and
refresh'
James
Hollon,
Mrs.
Robert
observed
by the Auxilillfy of
We hope his condition improves.
meniS
Bowen, Jr .. Billy Richardson, the Met' gs County D1'sabled
·
Yolan Satterfield, Mrs. James
Mrs. Selma can and Mrs . Folmer, Mrs . Paul Larry American Veterans this
John Reibel were named as Smith, Mrs. Willard Taylor, weekend with a sale of the
additional first grade room Mrs. Phillip Werry .
flower on the streels of both
mothers.
Pomeroy and Middleport.
Members of the auxiliary will
Mrs. Howard Parker 's ff:-'\'&gt;!:&lt;:'. • '
kindergarten, Class A, won the f'.:.~i
~ be selling the flower both
altendance banner.
'
• • ·•
· F 'd
ds d
H~ I1'day proJec
. t s wer el an d Mrs. Le ora s·tgman. Judy
rt ay an tur ay.
The carnival committees: '·
~
. planned during meetings of the, Owen was a guest.
Fun House: Mrs . Roger
three circles of the B. H.'
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
~encer, cha irman, Mr. and ·~&lt;
•
REVIVAL IS ON
: Sanborn Missionary Society of
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
M~~~inR~~i7eTrus sell, Mrs .
Emmett Blackburn and Mrs.
-Revival services are stili in
, llle'· Middleport First Baptist Charles Simons, the Eove Joy
Kitchen : Mrs. Jan ice Rit- Harold
Ebersbach
ac· P.rogre•s at Nease Settlemenl
: Church Tuesday night.
Circle · members planned
companied Mrs. Nora Mills to Uni,ted Brethren Church.
•; The Dorcas Circle, meeting Halloween remembrances for
Colwnbus Tuesday where she Services are held nightly at
.: at the home of Mrs. Harold the residents of the Syracuse
1
remained to assist in the care 7:30p.m . with the Rev. George
: Hubbard, Sr., arranged to fix a · Rest Home. Mrs. Dale Walburn
f,
V•
of Mrs. James Ebersbach and Oiler as guest speaker. The
• ~ ba,skel of foOd for a needy was appointed to handle
infanl son.
Rev. Oiler is First Church of
' family and fruit plates for shut- arrang~ments for thiS.
.J _
Mrs. Naomi Bentley, God minister having served at
·~.sat Thanksgiving. The group ~Ut·tns Will be remembered~ 'f/;
turcuJ1Jjel Rutland,' has ·returned home Mullens, W. :Va: l r ;,!'!
' Ill also re~nemller,, !helr a~ 'nl:&amp;nksglvlng time. Mrs,,
'..J"
after a several days' visit in
, ,pedal interest miSsionaries, Mannmg Kloes, chalrma?,
·
Colwnbus with her nephew,
~ both home and foreign, with anno~ced_ thlit the CICCI; wtll
RACINE -A fall carnival to Leonard Burney and cousin,
: gilLs.
have hos~Ita~ty for the San· be held at Racine Elementary Evelyn Warner.
• Mrs. Fred Lewis presided at born meeting m November and School Saturday night was
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks,
ll1e meeting with Mrs. Hubbard appointed Mrs. Walburn, Mrs. planned during a meeting of Tom, Mary Beth, of Gallipolis
giving the white cross quota. • Bert Bodimer, Mrs. John Fultz the Racine PTA Monday night and Mrs. Leslie Price of
. The prayer of dedication for · and Miss Freddie Houdashelt at th!o school. It will begin at 6 Pomeroy were weekend
·· the love gift offering of·$14 was to this conunittee.
p.m., preceded at 5 p.m. by visitors of Miss Genevieve
, given by Mrs. Pearl Hoffman.
Mrs. Fultz read the white supper.
Stobart. Also visiting with Mrs.
; The general offering was $11 cross quota and the . circle
Meeting with lhe PTA were Stobart and Mrs. Ethel Koenig
• and it was noted that the bottle arranged to fill lt. It was David Nease , and Grove was Mrs. Susie Windon of
cap redemption check · was reported that Miss Emma Salser, Jr.,
school board Henderson, w. Va., sister of
. $14.96.
Matthews has been returned to members, who discussed the Mrs. Koenig.
A poem entitled "October" the Athens Mental Health five mill operating levy to be
by Mrs. LewiS opened the Cenler for treatment. For the voted on next month. It was
Pd Pol . Adv
. meeting with Mrs. Beulah dedication of the love gift Mrs . voled by the PTA to endorse
. White giving devotions on a Bodimer read the Love Gift the levy.
You mnn to oey It cuto
~ Halloween theme. Two articles Parable. Mrs. Dana HalTUll
Mrs. Coralee Cummins gave texeo on Bll Buolneoo ..•
Rei"" Tex.. on People?
from the American Baptist used an article by Billy , devolions to open the meeting.
; Magazine, "Missionary Work Graham for devotions.
She _used a poem, "My Child".
• In Zaire", and "Up to Zongo · "New Machines for New A quartet composed of Duane
' and Back" were read. Mrs. Hwnanlty" was the program Wolfe, Dellnis Manual, Robert
· topic of Mrs. Fultz, Mrs. . Harl and Mrs. Janice Salser,
. Paul Smart gave prayer.
~ Mrs. Lewis assisted the Simons and )Irs. John Werner accompante~· by Mrs. Lillian
· ; hostess in- serving a- dessert served refreshmenLs:
---Hayman s~ng · "i've · Been ; course. Others attending were
'
Working on the Railroad", "In
Mrs . Gwinnie White, Mrs .
The Almanac
the Evening by the Moonlight",
Elsie l Turner, a guest, Mrs. By United Press International "Daddy Sang Bass", and "In
Milton Hood, Mrs, .1Wlllls An·
Today Is Thursday, Oct. 19, Times Like These". Fathers'
; thony, Mrs. David Darst, and the 293rd day of 1972 with 73 to night was observed and the
• Mrs. Iva Turner.
follow.
attendance banner and the $5 Stop the Switch
'
ELECI'A CIRCLE
The moon is approaching ils award went to the kin- to U n fa 1r Taxes
A vlsl! to the Meigs County full phase.
dergarten class.
wllh
treats
The morning stars are Venus,
Refreshmenls were served
Infirmary.
, sometime before Thanksgiving Mars and Saturn.
by the fac-ulty.
Ohll Council for ldwutian
Mn. Jean 011, Prtt., Cln. Hts., 0.
; was planned during the .Eiecta
The evening stars are Mereu·
• Circle meeting. The circle will ry and Jupiter.
• also remember shut-ins, the
Those born on this date are
BapUstscholarshipglrland the under the sign of Libra.
servicemen on Thanksgiving.
American novelist Fannie
A report on the white cross Hurst was born Oct. 19, 1889.
quota was given by Mrs.
On this day In history:
P-HIL CO®
Elizabeth Slavin who noted
In 1781, the American Revolu·
STEREO SOUND
: iliere Is approximately two tionaty War neare&lt;l an end as
CENTER
' months to fill it. The love gift British general, Lord Cornwal: offering was $9.25, while the lis surrendered at Yorktown,
wllh built-In:
• regular offering was $10.
Va.
• 8 TRACK TAPE
, Miss Rhoda Hall had
In 1814, "The Star Spangled
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
: devotions using John IS, 5-17, Banner" was sung In Baltimore
• 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC
: and a meditation entitled for the first time.
,
RECORD CHANGER
In 1936, an around-the-world
; :'Without Me You Can Do
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
: Nothing". "God's Rule for alrp)ane race by three newspaRADIO
: Uving" was the program topic per writers ended at Lakehurst,
• by. Mrs. Richard Owen. N.J. H. R. Elklrut won over
: Refreshments were served to Dorothy Kilgallen and Leo
: those named and Mn. Fielding Kiernan .,.ith a lime of 18 days,
' !Jawkinl, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, 11 hours, 14 minutes and 33
: Mrs. laabelle Winebrenner, aeconda.

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~

�fie••••••------------..,

,,

Moloy, W. J.
33 24 11
Stevenson,
20 s.s
1.0
··
on the World
OeStephen. J. 3 o 18 4.5
'
'
Berridge, G.
2 4 16 4.0
Series and of
SVAC SCORING
Name
TO PAT Pts Avg
Boring. E.
1 4 46 11 5
other baseballia
19~.2 SOUTHEJ\STERN
logan, NG
4 ;' 28 1.0
OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGU! STATISTICS ·
Taber, KC
S 0 30 6.0
•hem.
( lnclu•s games through Oct. i3l
.,
Dunfee. SV
3 o 1B 6.0
By Col. Mole
TEAM STATISTICS 14Ga"'esl
By Chet Tannehill
Garnes, NG
J 2 20 5.0
To make a long story shprt, a
FIRST DOWNS PASSING
PLAYS
Miller, sv ·
2 · o 12 4.0
few years ago i)ly husband hid
tNm
No.. Avg. Op. Avg. Q.m-AI Int. No. Avg. Op. Avg . . McCarty, KC
3 0 18 3.6
Athens
64 16.0 35 8.8 17-34 3 223 55.8 182 45.5
Eight ttf;'d withi J 0 ~verages .
For the first time since the Moleman began his weekly
100110111001100- -110011100110CJt a conslruction job in the
Gallipolis
49 12.3 49 12.3 7-24 4 212 SJ.O' 195 48.8
mountains near lhe Maryland column for the Ohio Valley Publishing Company three years ago,
lronlon
57 10 25 6.3 11-27 2 224 56.0 157 39.3
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
border.
a letter of disagreement has been received from a fan of one of
Jackson
53 13.3 53 13.3 22-44 5 212 ' 53.0 221 55.3
FRIDAY
The
rains
in
the
Bay
Area
more
lhan
-10
years
ago.
We renled a lovely old home
logan
41 10.3 41 10.3 15-39 4 182 45.5 195 48.8
SEOAL
permilling, the third game of
I won't prell!nd to explain place from a professor who the niany schools involved In our predictions.
Meigs
so 12.5 53 13.3 14-39 1 197 49.3 208 52.0 Athens at Gallipolis
Well, let me say, it is nice to be read, whether one agrees or
Waverly
43 10.8 67 16.8 27-70 4 203 S0.8 245 61.3 Wellston at Ironton
!he Red!Hlaldand World Series why. No one knows all lhe 1aughl at Pitt.
Wellslon
27 6.8 71 17.8 17-45 7 170 42.5 220 55.0 Logan at Jackson
will have become history by answers; a dozen Ph. D's in
One weekend he came down disagrees with my prognostications. We have had a lot of fun
RUSHING PASSING T. OFF T. DEF
Meigs at Waverly
Team ·
lhe time you read these words. behavioral psychology could and had my sons, Rocky and picking the scores of the many Friday night games, even If we dt
Yds. · Avg. Yds. Avg. Yds. Avg. Yds. Avg.
TRI-VALLEY
....
AI hens
. 769 192.3 259 64.B 1028 257.0 574 143.5 Nelsonville· York at Belpre
Sparky Anderson of the split6and6onthewhyofit.
· Mark, help him clean out the step on a few feel.
Gallipolis
772 168.0 176 44.0 948 237.0 700 11!.0 Vinton County at Federal · Cincinnatians was quoted after
Last' year yours truly was hanged in effigy twice In Gallia
Maybe it's because baseball, garage. In a stack of old
Ironton
' 8'14 223.5 320 80.0 1124 281 .0 441 110.3 Hocking
·
County!
lhesecondgamewaslqsf, "I'm as is so many olher sporls, so ne,wspapers Mark found the
Jac~son
. 727 181 .B JSO B7.S 1077 269.3 1036 25?.0
SVAC
All is not rosey iJ;J this profession. When you say someone is
Logan
695 173.8 213 53.3 908 227.0 606 151.5 Hannan Trace at North Gallia nol ready to panic yet, ijut I'm easy to watch, so plenlifully 1916 standings (See below-Ed .)
Meigs
753 188.3 252 63.0 1005 251 .3 959 239.8 Symmes Valley at Southern
about to." If his club loses the displayed on the tube, and yet and cut it our for me because going to win and someone is going to lose you will alway~ make
Waverly ._.
355 ·88.8 369 92.3 724 181.0 1498 374.5
·Others
someone unhappy, but, as they say In real life, "that's the way
lhird game panic will l)!lve hit : so much a spectator · rather he knew I liked the Rells.
' Wellston
237 59.3 176 44.0 413 103.0 1353 338.3 Fo•t Frye al Warren Local
Sparky full blown. No team !han a participating sport.
I thought you might' like to the ball bounces".
Eastern at Miller ·
Kyger Creek at Alexander
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
SVAC STANDINGS
Now let me colTUllent on the letter which appears In to-•
ever has l&lt;JSt the first three and
In this conneclion, read what see i/. It gives both leagues but
RUSHING
Team
·w L T Pis OP Green at Southwestern
then won four straight since Mrs. Roy (Iris) Williams wrote look ·how they gave 'the day's Daily ,Sentinel, written by a 100 )!Ct. •. never-1111y-dle
Yds Car Avg. Southern
3 0 1 56 8 Glouster at Centerburg
inception of, the seven-game I&lt;&gt; Sporls Desk from Mid- statistics in 1916!
Culbertson, l.
SOS 77 6.6 K. Creek
3 1 1 105 U Pl. Pleasant at Ripley
Eastern fan .
Faulk, M.
405 59 B.6 Eastern
3 1 0 3B 19 Ravenswood a1 Wahama
series in 1905 (with temporary • dlepor t under date of Oct. 17:
By the way 'iny grandiather ·near Eastern Fans:
Mowe~y. Iron.
333 66 s.o N. Gail Ia
2 2 0 70 56
changes in World War 1). No Dear Sir: ·
was also -Charles 1Ears )
The Mole doesn't always·pick your team to lose. In 1971, I can ' •.
Wood, A.
315 65 4.8 S. Valley
1 2 0 41 64
learn ever has lost the frrsl two
I am a Reds fan, and have Winebrenner's grandfather. only reeall one game lriwhich he picked Eastern to lose..
Grah~rn. Gall.
2B1 65 4.3 S'western
1 3 0 40 103
PASSING .
Han-Trace
0 &lt; 0 0 112
(as the Reds did) on i~ home been since I was a little girl Maybe that is why he likes --.. This year, however, has been a different story. First, let's
Cm-At lnt Yds .TD
TRI-VALLEY
field' and gone on to win the when my grandfalher, Charlie baseball so much.
face it, you don't have the ball club you had a year~go. On the
Shoemaker, W.
Team
W L T Pis OP
series.
(Pitlsburgh last year Winebrenner, made me come
Mrs. Roy (Iris ) Williams subject of the Southern game, the Molema.1 sincerely felt
26'63 3 364 4 Nels-York
2 0 0 91 6
losl the first lwo at Baltimore, in from playing house or
DeStephen, J. 22-42 4 3SO 4 Belpre
1 o o 40 14
Southern woufd defeat the Eagles."They did just that, on your
Skinner, A. 17-27 11 259 2 W. Local
1 1 0 34 SJ
won
ihe
third
at
Three
Rivers.
making
mud
pies
lo
listen
to
THANK
you,
Mrs.
Williams
field.
-Kemper, L. 15-39 4 ' 213 1 Vinton Co.
0 1 0 14 2B
Stadium).
1he radio and tell him what the for explaining why Charles
Peoples, Well. 13-34 6 364 o ~ed-Hocklng 0 2 0 14 92
In your letter, you stated the Tornadoes got all tlw: breaks,
Vaughan, M. 1:1'38 2 236 3
OFFENSIVELY
Reds were doing.
Winebrenner 1formerly of including the officials. Well, the game was played at Eastern,
PUNTING
Team
Pis IGI Jlvg.
THERE IS LEGITIMATE
Back then in the hot summer Middleport, now of Cheshire,
(tor morel
Alexander
210 (6) 35.0
and the officials were hired by your athletic director or football
suspicion
thst
the
generation
the static was so bad that .the and one of MHS's fine athletes
Yds No. Avg. Nels-York
200 (6) 33.3
now flexing ils physical arid only way you could hear an- , including baseball of the 50s), coach.
Kriebel, Iron.
568 13 43.7 Belpre
1SO (6) 2&gt;.0
You're right, we did pick cadiz to win 3().(), and were sur·
Walter, Gail.
584 IS 38.9 Meigs
145 16) 24.2
mental muscles finds baseball lhing was to sil on lhe floor · slill loves baseball and the
COLUMBUS(
U
PI
)Unbeaten
Mo~er, L.
567 15 ' 37.8 Jackson
144 (6) 24.0 Warren Western Reserve has uninteresting . Too slow
wilh your ear in the speaker. Cincinnati Reds . And you prised that Eastern's defense held them to a 1~ game. The Mole
Ri e. Jack .
513 16 32.1 K. Creek
113 (6) 18.8 taken over the lop spot in .Class
Mat r, Well. ' 557 18 30.9 Wahama
109 161 18.2 AAA Region 1 in this week's moving. Too individualized. That is what I did. When I know, too, of course, there is agrees your team has a good defense and lots of spirit, but it can
RECEIVING
Athens
105 (6) 17.5 Ohio High School Athletic As- Unexciting.
starled, I didn't know a ano t her Winebrenner break at times.
No. Yds TQ Ironton
96 16) 16.0 sociation ~computer ratings,
Speaking of breaks, you got them in another league game
Evidence? Even our own homerun from a foul ball but as generation coming · along in
Maloy, Wav.
14 202 2 Southern
95 (6) 15.8
while Columbus Walnut Ridge Peewee farm systems cannot the years went on I grew to love Rick Winebrenner, Charles' didn't you?
Stevenson, J..
11 167 2 N. Gallia
88 161 14.7 moved
into a 11e with Sandusky
Sincerely, The Mole
Topping, Alh.
B 156 1 VInton Co.
86 16) 14.3
supply the little leaguers in baseball and of course lhe Reds son, who'd rather play baseball
in
Region
2.
Jenkins, J.
' 6 100 o Miller
83 (6) . 13.8
Last week, Major Amos B. Hoople and yours truly had 15-S-1
sufficient nwnbers to maintain were my favorite.
lhan eat or sleep.
Five tied with five each.
Logan
77 (6) 12.8 · The two newcomers join
My Dad alSo was a great fan
Which has to be proof the records. Hoople still holds his one game lead going intO Friday's
KO RETURNS
Eastern
70 (6) 11.7 Massillon and Princeton as the lhe nwnber of 15-boy squads
Yds No. TD Gallipolis
10 16) II .7 lop contenders in lhe sixth ol kept on our local diamonds no and we took many trips to see breed is nol yet extinct.
action. Now let's see what's in store :
Wells, Wav.
147 B o Waverly
68 (6) 11.3 10 weeks of computer ratings ,
SEOAL
.
Cunningham, A.
99 4 o W. Local
63 (6) 10.5 with the 12 regional winners,
Athens 22 Gallipolis 12. The Blue Devils have improved since
Rld!le. J.
96 6 o S. Valley
60 16) 10.0 three in classification, qualify Faulk, M.
78 3 o S'westtf'n
52 (6) 8.7 ing for state semi-final playtheir opening games but do they have enough to defeat the
.
Steger, Wav.
72 4· o Fed-Hocking
52 16) 8.7 offs.
Bulldogs?
The lour Class AA leaders
PUNT RETURNS
Pt. Pleasant
48 16) 8.0
Ironton 40 Wellston 0. Poor Golden Rockets.
Yds. No. TD Glouster
34 16) 5.7 this week are Campbell MemoNA.TIO!'!AL LEAGUE 1916.
Carter, I.
174 10 2 Wellston
6 (6)
1.0 rial in Regions. Columbus WatJackson 14 Logan 12. This rates as a toss-up.
'Club--:Played Tied Won Lm t Runs
Hits Errors L.B. O.R.
Berry, L.
68 s o Han-Trac~
0 (6) 0.0 lerson ' in Region 6, Hannibal
Meigs 22 Waverly 6. Marauders roll Tigers.
Ri•er In Region 7, and Reading
Brooklyn , .. .... 156
2
94
60
585
1346
Berridge, Gall.
56 7 0
. DEFllNSIV ELY
224
1020
471
Faulk. M.
43 4 o Team
Ptl IGI Avg. in L~~~~~~~ ~-he four Class Are- . :Philadelphia ... . . 154
SVAC
1 · 91
62
680
1245
232
913
502
Whitlatch, M.
35 3 o K. Creek
'23 (6) 3.8
Sd,uthern 14 Symmes Valley ~· Tornadoes bounce back
-13ostoil · · · · · · · · .158
6
89 ~ 63
542
1176
249
994
493
INT. RETURNS
Alexander
28 161 4.7 glans are Kirtland in Region 9,
NeW.: York ...... 155
a 86 66 597 1309 241
·(Continued on Page 6 )
No. Yds TD Nels-York
30 (6) 5.0 Marion Pleasanl in Regi on 10,
925
504
ChiCago ... ... .. 156
3
67
86
52'2
1233
Stevenson, J. •
2 52' o Ironton .
33 16) s.s Newcomers Iown in Region 1,1,
296
968
538
~~~~~
Cremeans, M.
2 48 o Eastern
39 (6) 6.5 and Mlddlelown Fenwick in ReJlttsburgh ...... 157
3
65
89
616 '
1245
246
1012
596
·
Romig, Ath.
2 18 o Southern
40 (6) 6.7 glon 12.
The top ten teams in each
flt, Louis . • ..... . 153
0
60
93
474
1223
282
043
629
25 tied with one each.
Athens
69 16) 11 .5
region
are
:
•
Cincinnati
..
..
..
155
2
6Q
93
505
1330
236
OVERALL STANDINGS
Mei~s
69 (6) 11.6
1010
615
Class AAA
.
'
AMERIOAN~ l.l!JAGUE 1916
(As of Oct. w
Gallipolis
72 161 12.0
TNm
W L T Pis OP Logan
' ·88 161 14.7
·ClubPlayed Tied Won Loet Runs Hits
Errors L.B. -O.R.
1. WarrenR'(lJ!~~e~n Reserve;
Alexander
S 1 0 210 28 Belpre .
g'i- 16) 15.3
2.
Cleveland
SI.Joseph;
3.
Cleve.Boston
.........
156
2
91
63
.
550
1236
192
1024
480
Nels· York
s 1 o 200 30 Wahama
94 (6) 15.7
1
110
64
602
t;sa· 210 1009 .496
Meigs
s 1 o 145 69 Miller
108 16) 1B.O land St. lgnalius; 4. Parma sen- 'Chicago •....•.. 165
•In Former BRW Hdwe. Room, Pomeroy
:Oetrolt ·... . .. , .. 154
1
85.
68
657
l3A2
223
Southern
4 1 o 95 40 Jackson
115 (6) 19.2 lor; s. Lakewood St. Edward;
1085
584
'!N y k
156
2
80
7''
68 •
.,.
, Belpre
4 2 o 1SO 92 N. Gall :a
119 16) 19,8 6 Berea; 7. Willoughby South;
1059
51i1
' ew or '· · · • ·
·,
12;,
226
Wahama
4 2 0 109 94 W. Local
122 (61 20.3 8. Bedford; 9. Cleveland Calhedral
Latin
;
10:
Eastlake
North.
St.
Louis
.......
158
4
79
76
586
1238
~49
873
542
Ironton
4 2 0 96 33 S'western
125 16) 20.8
Region 2
· Cleveland . : . ·... 157 ;· 3
77
77
627
1245
237
K. Creek
3 2 1 113 23. Vinton Co.
134 16) 22.3
994
suo
Jackson
3. 3 o U4 115 S. Valley
, 154 (6) 25.7
1. Ilie) Sandusky and Colum- .Washington,- , , , .i59 1 6
76
77
536
1239
~54
1072 ..542
Athens
J J '1H!l5 69 oJ Han-Tr~cc....- 166 (6) 2U bus Walnut Ridge ; J. Upper A~''nhfl•delphla ,
15" · 1
36 .. 117 ' 446 ' '11M.' •"' {ii'e3
·1 ....u J. u,. ~~~~~ &gt;.h h.
~... u •d .zu" ·d•i . H
· , I, Hll.d •.a «l
1DQ7,( , ~1$. } ,~:/••.•~.hJ,·.,~ ....
Miller
3 3 0 B3 108 " Fed•Hi!cl&lt;lng
17~ (6) 29.7 'lll'(gtM , ~:'Galiolr;-s. Co!Uh'ib·us
1
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"
~
•
·
·
·
"
·
,.
·
·.
~~
'
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M&amp;W~
~
';,., · t "' · I "•,'[~. .
,
lMI Jo·., .,,-,
~In ton Co
3. 3 o 86 134 Pt. Plo:s,sant
182 (6) 30.3 Easlmoor; 6. Ashland ;&gt;;,, (lie)
•
3,\·i· ' . · . · ,. • ll;,ll
' .,
fEastern ··
3 3 o 70 39 . Waver~·
· · 188 (6) 31.3 Gahanna Lincoln and Lima
..i\,"Ce
_
Applies On
,
Logan
.
2 3 1 77 88 Wellston
209 (6) 34.8 Shawnee ; 9. Fremonl Ross; 10.
Gallipolis
2 3 1 70 72 Glouster
253 (6) 42.2 Grove City .
j).l'LOW
RENTAL
PLAN
.
Purchase Price
W. Local
2 3 1 63 122
OVERALL SCORING
Region 3
If You Prefer.
·
N. Gall Ia
2 4 0 88 119 Name
TD PAT Pis Avg.
1. Massillon
Barberton
; 3.;
S. Valley
1 5 0 60 154 Gliders, A.
15 20 116 19.3 Akron
East ; ;4.2.Walsh
Jesuit
w·
tLanham, will be tile meet ~===~==~:::~:::::~:!:::::~~~~~~~=
dir to
·
S'western
1 5 0 52 125 Woodson, N-Y 9 17 74 12.3 s. Akron Garfield ; 6. Canton
ec r.
Fed-Hocking 1 s 0 52 178 Smathers, N-Y 12 0 72 12.0 McKinley ; 7. Steubenville; 8.
"
In compliance with Ohio
Pt. Pleasant 0 5 1 48 182 ' Vannoy, B.'
10 2 62 10.3 Ausllntown Fitch ; 9. Green; 10.
Rio Grande College will be
Eleven teams are entered in High
School
Athletic
Waverly
0 6 o 68 188 Starner, M
8 6 54 9.0 Canton Central Catholic.
Glouster
o 6 o 34 253 Boring, E.
8 4 52 8.7
Region 4
the site of the Southeastern Class "A": Frankfort Adena, AssociaUon rules, teams and
Wellston
o . 6 o 6 209 Faulk, M.
6 4 40 6.7
1. Princeton;
Kettering
" d Bloom of Sou th Webs ter, Individual runners wIll a dFairmonl
East; 2.
3. Cincinnati Ohio Sectional ClaS!J "A an
Han-Trace
o 6 o o 166 Weber, M.
6 2 3B 6.3
SEOAL STANDINGS
Five tied lor ninth and lOth Elder ; 4. Centerville ; 5. Cln- "AA" Cross Country meet Chesapellke, Federal Hocking, vance to the combined district
Team
w L T Pts OP with 6.0 averages.
cinnati Moeller ; 6. Troy ; 7. Cin- Friday afternoon at Evans' Lynchburg Clay, Manchester, meet at the Raymond
Ironton
4 o o 89 14
SEOAL SCORING
cinnatl LaSalle : 8. Cincinnati Field.
North Adams of Seaman, Memorial Golf Course near
Athens
3 1 0 86 21 Name
TD PAT Pis Avg. Woodward ; 9. (tie) Franklin
In conducting the meet at Peoples High School, Ross Colwnbus for further com·
Meigs
3 1 0 86 57 Wood, A.
5 0 30 7.5 and Portsmoulh.
ARE ALWAYS FILLED
Jackson
2 2 o B8 68 Rld!le, J.
J 10 28 7.0
Class AA
Rio Grande for ihe first time, a Southeastern, West Union, and petition Oct. 28.
Gallipolis
2 1 1 so 28 Faulk M.
4 4 28 7.0
Region s
total of eighteen teams will .Mowrystown White Oak. In
For Class "A", the four
Logan
1 2 1 49 26 Massey, I.
2 9 27 6.8
1. Campbell Memoria l; 2. AkPROMPTLY HERE!
Class "AA", it will be highest ranking teams and
Waverly
0 4 o 49 133 Culbertson, l: 4 2 26 6.5 ron St. VIncent; 3. Warren Ken- compete In the two classes.
Fairland, Greenfield McClain, twelve top individual runners 1
Wellston
o 4 o 6 146 Carter, I.
4 I 25 6.3 .nedy; 4. Chagrin Falls; s. ManThere's no· unnecessary
chester; 6. Coventry ; 7. Genva;
Ironton, Rock Hill, :.~hornville advance to Columbus. In Class
.
.
B. Lorain Catholl·c,· 9. Canfield,· dinal ;6. Dalton ; 7. Atwater Wa - Sheridan, Warren
IAcal and "AA", the first two teams and
10. Columbiana.
terloo; 8. Jackson Milton ; 9.
waiting here for your pre·
Region 6
Smithville; 10. Mogadore.
Wheelersburg.
thesixfastestrunnersadvance
.,
1. Columbus Waterson; 2. Li Region 10
The Class "A" schools will to the district level.
scriptions ... we make it
2
ma Central CatHolic; 3. llie)
1. Marion Pleasant ' · Syca - ~o· at 3 o'clock followed by the
The sectional meet at Rio
Fostoria and Rossford ; 5. Co- more Mohawk; 3. Norwalk St. ~ ,
our business to take care
.
--~
lumbus DeSales; 6. St. Marys Paul : 4. Arlington ; s. New Lon - AA teams at ~:30 p.m. . · Grande Is open to the public
Memorial' 7. Huron : 8. Giyde , . .don ; 6. .Co(.Y-·liaws.on;J, S~en -_ .The. athletie.director of. Rio --Friday afternoon starting at 3
"
ofyournialt.h rieeds first.
9. Dublin ; 10. Ontario . .
cerville ; 8. Fremont St. Joseph G d
College, Arthur o'clocL.
Region 7
9. (lie) Liberty Benlon and Riv- ran e
•
And you can count on our ,
1. Hannibal
RiverAquinas
; 2. Louiserdale. Region II
..-------------------,
ville
St. Thomas
1 3.
Buckeye South; 4. Bellaire : s. I. Newcomerstown ; 2. TusP~eroy
using only the best products!
•

SEOAL . Statistics .

the Sports

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

Desk

.

OhwHS

Computer
Ratings

1916 ~ajor League Standings

YOU'lL FIND US AT
111 Second St.

BILL &amp; LEE'S

nd' (nsttU'l.h' ls

"Jl).S

R

Tto Host A, AA Mee

SAVE $ AT DEU'S

.

WHolESALE PRICES 'FOR --·
EVERY ONE···

At Goessler's In

Minerva ; .6. Uniontown Lake ; 7. car a was

Fredericktown;

e.

Valley; 3. Berne
Ironton ; 9. Union ; 4. centerburg; 5. New-

Licking Valley 1 10. Hebron Lakewood.
Region 8
1. Reading ; 2. Loveland ; 3.
Wyoming ; 4. Hamilton Badin ;
5. Teays Valley ; 6. Tipp City :
7. Millon Union; B. North College Hill ;· 9. Cincinnati McNIchola s; 10. Harrison.
Class A 1
Region 9
Klr·t1a1nd ; 2. Lorain Clerview

FINE
1\TtDES
HOliDAY GIFTING\

ark Calhollc; 6. Millersport ; 7.
Itie) Beallsville and Coal Grove
9. Racine Southern ; 10. Danville.
Region 12
!.Middletown Fenwick; 2. Covlnglon ; 3. Lockland ; 4. Plain
City Jonathan Alder ; s. Wil liamsburg; 6. (tie) Greenview I
and Porlsmouth· Notre Dame ;
8. Xenia Woodrow Wilson ; 9.
(lie) Frankfort Adeha, Marion
Local and Sidney Lehman Catholic.

Give the watch with
tuning fork ·accuracy

Accutron~

Halloween ~oociies
POPULAR PRICES!
COSTUMES
All sizes - some can
be used for pajamas
atterward . Party
Items - napk ins ,
favors, novelties, toys.
candy, etc.

NE.W CROP

Jennet
Double Glo6e

LAMPS

$25

00

.SPANISH P-EANuTs
JUST ARRIVED lb
COOKED FRESH
•
DAILY IN OUR STORE

M EXCEl! EIIIT SELECTION
OF AIJSS WARE

12$0.

I

Swisher &amp; Lohse Specialties

I

D. V.
PAIN CAPSULES
Contains no aspirin. Analg~sic for pain. relief.''
•

'

J

..

~

20 capsules 1.75
'

For relief
rheumatism.

of

headache.

neuralgia,

SUEP-ETTES
temporary relief of slmple .(lervoull'ien.'

By Katie ,Crow

3 Circles Meet

1
.
'
.
Perso'nal· Notes
Pomeroy

i

Ra'l' Carnt'" 'a/ .
Q Sa

Pomeroy

See Our

'

•'

:

''

CARPn-LAND, INC.

12
BY

'

CARTER'S

YOUTH ENTERTAINED
Edith Mees entertained with
her guitar and original music
at a meeting of the Baptist
Youlh Fellowship at a meeting
Sunday night at the Middleport
Baplist Church. She also ac·
companied for group singing.
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Pam Crow, leader, Marty
Krawsczyn, Trina Gibbs, Patty
Boyles, Jill Walburn, and
Valerie Lewis.

WOMEN'S FASHIONS

Be Our Guest
For Best ..
SELECTION
SERVICE
COMPETITIVE
PRICES

Boys' PJ's with. feet. mo. to
yrs. Boys' Ski Pajamas size 4 to ·
.
Girls Pa Iii mas and Gowns. Size
4 to 14. Brushed Trlcof and
Nylon .

7 The Kiddie Shoppe
, " ·" ON THE T IN6 MIDDLEPORT

Cor. Main &amp; Sycamore
•

'

'

'

l

.

10.

lOLA'S
••

Prices elfectlve through Oclober 23

PLYMOUlH

Beoutllul flocked portlollo stationery, 24
sheets, 1:2 envelopes .. .. .. .... .79c value

JJ'.U To JJ'.U cBpet Speculilt.

POMIROY

•

TtM Mldlllll1t10rt;

Wea,.

ciPACOL

14-oz of re.

ALIUTO V0-5
SHAMPOO.

lreshlng mouth wash and gargle
in shatterproof
bottle.
S1.29 value

Big u .oz. size,

Regular, Dry or
Super Lather.
S2.07 value

79~

69~

..
lotO'l

MENNEN
IIAIY MAGIC
LOTIOII
16-oi.
S1.98 value

--~

.,., ;... a., .You Sllauld r., :

IMfiiiMllttD

"tor 11M,..,,

· record were sh&lt;1wn the group
by Mrs. W. H. Perrin.
• Lae Ling will be II IIi
November and indicated In ber
letter her happiness at bekls
able tp attend a school in Hq
Kong sponsored by the churdl
\n China.
Mrs. James Fugate gave a
report for the nomlnatlni
corrunittee. The present officers will serve for another
year .
iL__baskets . wert
delivered and a seco~d order Ia
being made. Several were
reported ill and cards will be
sent.
Mrs. Kennetll Harris showo!d
pictures of l~e art glass windows of Trinity church made
by Dick Nease and announced
that prints are available.
Refreshments were served
with decorations carrying out
the Halloween motif. Hostesses
were Mrs. Cacl Kautz and Mn.
Mora.

at your fip store

r!:.n
·PH•.112-7590
..... ,, .......... 5

,Jewelry ,Store
'WI w6H lllllftt to

brought out-the thought that a referred· to God's wor'lls to
very common article as Moses' Moses : "What Is that in thy
rud, wilh the help of God, could hand? " to point up the fact that
be used to serve Him. The God expecls only what we are
leader commented that God able to give.
expecls only what we have to
The spirit of giving of time,
give and that we need to be ta lents and money were
willing to give whal is ours. She discussed (jy the ·leader and
this was followed by a question
and answer period . Prayer by
the leader closed the program.
Presiding in the absence of
lhe president, Miss Eliulbeth
FlcK
who is ill, Mrs. Pearl
missioners' meeting wit~ her
were Mrs. Charlotte Taunton, Mora presented Miss Fick's
Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, and suggestions to the group for
Mrs. Texanna Well. Mrs . consideration. A gift of money
Adams also commented on the will be sent to the Meigs County
organization o( the Citizens Children's Home lo be used
Commillee which will visil the there al the discretion of the
matron.
Children's Home.
Plans were made to send a
Mrs. Taunton, ways and
birthday
gift to 'Lai Ling, the
means chairman, announced a
bake sale to be held Nov. 4. She Chinese child whose education
also noted that candy bars will is sponsored by Trinity Church ..
Lellers from her which inbe sold for 50 cenls each.·
cluded
her picture and school
The cullural program on
environment, health , work,
and play was presented by
Mrs. Satterfield and Mrs.
Charlotte Hanning . On display
were a bicycle, a rowing
machine, 1and other exercise
equipment which the members
tried. Mrs . Jeannie Ebersbach,
Mrs. Connie Bailey, and Mrs.
Sandy Korn served refreshments.

MRP,.Levy Endorsed

.1 l6 W. MAIN

NG

MAKE

.

;

24 cap~~~lel 1.39
Mild sedative to aid In promoting' sle., &amp; for

COurt St.

Carnival -Set

Giving Explored in .Circle 's Study 1'opic ---~

"What ShaUl Give".from the
sl
u~y
hook, Church Women at
CHESTf;R .:.. Plans for a coie,
c ha~rman ,
Mrs.
Halloween carnival were made Nathaniel Carpenter. Mrs . Worshfp, was presented by
Harold Newell, Mrs. Richard Mrs: Phil Globokar· when
al Monday night's meeting of Fick, Sr., Mrs. ·Lowell Bing .
the Chesler P.T.A. presided
Duck Pond : Mr. and Mrs Friendly Circle of Trinity
over by Mrs. Charles Goeglein, Alvin Tripp, chairman, and Church nlct Tuesday nigh!.
/
.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown.
Scriplure from Exodus 4
prestdent.
.
.
.
Sweet Shop : "t&gt;r s Ma x
The response of the citizens of Syracuse to the colTUllunity
The carmval wtll be held tn Eic hinger, chairman . Mrs
Halloween party is unbelievable.
'
the Chesler School auditoriwn · Ri chard Gaul, Mrs. Roger
Over •100 has been received and money is still coming ln. 0n Oct -~.,.,'wl'th asoupsupper 1O , Keller.
Clown · Mrs. Barbara Hart
First plans were made for the event Monday, with fmal plans to be served prior to the opening chai rman ,
Mrs . Henr y
be made next Monday evening. For those who didn't catch lhe of lhe carnival ,activilies. The Eichinger.
Country Store_: Mrs . Roger
news, MinerSVille children are included. The party is being ways and means committee
,
Starcher, cha1rman , Mrs .
staged for toddlers through junior high.
will meet at the school Thurs- Sharon Louks, Mr s. Glen
The one-fourth of one milt
There will be games, cake walks', C&lt;UldY treats, candy ap- day at I p.m. to finalize plans Lawson.renewal levy for the Meigs
Duck~ng for Apples : Mr . and
ples, refreshments of douglututs, cider and Kool-Aid. So that no for the affair. The commil~es
, •-&gt;
li d bel
Mrs. John G1nlher, Mr . and Counly mental retardation
chUd is slighted, ticket,s will be given to each chlld for ~~ch event appomu:u are ste
ow.
.Mrs. Ernest Deeter .
·program was endorsed by the
' The ~econd phase of the "'~ Pound toe Nail : Mrs. James Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Bel&lt;l
an~ treat which is free to all.
Thomas. chairman, James Sigma Phi Sorority at a
The new municipal building is to be made ready for the · Search for Consensus was
Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs .
.
meeting Tuesday night at the
party. It will be held In tbe fire department portion of the announced for Oct. 25 at Metgs George Morris.
School 7 to 10 p.m.
Fi~h Ponds: Mrs. Theodore Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
building.
I High
Mrs. Alvin Tripp discussed Pullins, Mr. and, Mrs. Roger Electric Co.
The party Is a first for Syracuse Village which is being spop. d.
d . Re1bel. Mr. ana Mrs . Gary
th
e membe rs htp me an tt Griffith. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Mrs . Jeanette Crooks, a
sored by Syracuse VIllage Council.
was
announced
that
after
Jan
.
Dill.
Mrs.
Selma
Call,
and
Mr
.
:f!esidents seem to think it is a great idea_. They're really 1 the state ~ortion of the dues and Mrs . Thomas Mankin, Mr . teacher at one of thr community classes, spoke on the
pulling together. This makes for a great conunWlity.
·11 be 30
Is "
J h and Mrs. Richard Fick, Jr ..
cen . ~&gt;nrs. o n Mr. and Mrs. John ReibeL Mrs . need for the levy and asked the
Racine Is also staging a party for ila youngstl'rs as is Rutland WI
Reibel reported on the pur- James Hollon. Mrs. Betty help of the sorority in
VU!age. Middleport ill having its ann~ Halloween party which chase of health supplies for the Topnyt. f
d
promoling ils passage.
Is held on the Middleport Football field sponsored, by Fenney
· k
·
a ro 1 or groun s: Mr. John
s1c . roo'?. Also presented at Reibel. Herber! Matheny,
Mrs. Carol Adams, service
Bennett Post of the American Legion, and Pomeroy Village will the meeting was a report by Mark Vennls. Max Eichinger,
chairman, reported on her
continue with Trick or Treat night, limiting It to ontH!alf hour for Mrs. Goeglein on lhe PTA Nathaniel Carpenter, Victor meeting with the Meigs County
Bahr.
children 12 and younger.
workshop held recent I y al
Pocket lady: Mrs. Roger Commissioners about the
Athens and the Ohio PTA Gaul, chairman, Mrs . Sue · Children's Home and the needs
FRED CROW, Pomeroy Attorney, is back at his office after convention held last week i~ Anderson.
. !here. Altending the ComRing the Cane: Mrs. B1ll
being confined at Holzer Medical Center where he underwent Colwnbus · She announced the1 Pooler,
Jr., cha1rman, Mrs.
minor surgery.
·
new cultural arts theme , Emerson Pooler, Mr. and. Mrs.
"Responding to Life' '·
Larry Hudson.
.
MEETING CHANGED
Mrs
James
Folmer
reported
P~ngpong
Toss:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
SPEAKING OF SURGERY, my aWl!, Mrs. Helen Wetzel of
A
meeting of the American
·
Everett Calloway , cha1rman,
on
lhe
Meigs
County
Council
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Parker.
Colwnbus, Wlderwent major surgery recently at Riverside
Legion Auxiliary of Racine
Games: Mr . and Mrs. Bruce Post 602 has been changed
Hospital, Colwnbus. She has several friends In the area who 1 Parents and Teachers'
held at Salem Cenler Myers. Mr . .and Mrs. Darrell from Oct. 24 to Oct. 31 due to
know would be interested In hearing news of her. Her room meeling
.
' Hawthorne.
number Is 6022.
·
and tl was noled that the other
Ticket: Miss Nancy Kirby, special evangelistic services in
meetings for the school year Mrs. Doris Well. Mrs. Betty lhe community. The meeting
MR. AND MRS. DONALD BREWER, Portland, received will be Nov. 2 at Sali~bury, Ro~~; prizes: Mrs. Larry wilt be held at 7:30p. m. at the
word Tuesday night that tbelr.son, Jeff, was seriously injured in Feb. I at Syracuse, Aprtl 5 at Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy hail on Oct. 31.
Bradbury, and May '3 at McGrath, Mr . and Mrs .
a fall believed to have happened at his employment.
Sexson . at the car.
TO SELL FLOWERS
Jeff, a graduate of Southl)l'il High School, Ia in critical con- Chester.. The host unils. .are Oemar1s
other workers
Forget-Me-Not Week will be
dition and ill in Isolation, In Elyria Veterans Memorial'll:ospltal. responsible for the butldmg, nival will be Oliver Swain. Mrs.
pledge,
devotions
and
refresh'
James
Hollon,
Mrs.
Robert
observed
by the Auxilillfy of
We hope his condition improves.
meniS
Bowen, Jr .. Billy Richardson, the Met' gs County D1'sabled
·
Yolan Satterfield, Mrs. James
Mrs. Selma can and Mrs . Folmer, Mrs . Paul Larry American Veterans this
John Reibel were named as Smith, Mrs. Willard Taylor, weekend with a sale of the
additional first grade room Mrs. Phillip Werry .
flower on the streels of both
mothers.
Pomeroy and Middleport.
Members of the auxiliary will
Mrs. Howard Parker 's ff:-'\'&gt;!:&lt;:'. • '
kindergarten, Class A, won the f'.:.~i
~ be selling the flower both
altendance banner.
'
• • ·•
· F 'd
ds d
H~ I1'day proJec
. t s wer el an d Mrs. Le ora s·tgman. Judy
rt ay an tur ay.
The carnival committees: '·
~
. planned during meetings of the, Owen was a guest.
Fun House: Mrs . Roger
three circles of the B. H.'
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
~encer, cha irman, Mr. and ·~&lt;
•
REVIVAL IS ON
: Sanborn Missionary Society of
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
M~~~inR~~i7eTrus sell, Mrs .
Emmett Blackburn and Mrs.
-Revival services are stili in
, llle'· Middleport First Baptist Charles Simons, the Eove Joy
Kitchen : Mrs. Jan ice Rit- Harold
Ebersbach
ac· P.rogre•s at Nease Settlemenl
: Church Tuesday night.
Circle · members planned
companied Mrs. Nora Mills to Uni,ted Brethren Church.
•; The Dorcas Circle, meeting Halloween remembrances for
Colwnbus Tuesday where she Services are held nightly at
.: at the home of Mrs. Harold the residents of the Syracuse
1
remained to assist in the care 7:30p.m . with the Rev. George
: Hubbard, Sr., arranged to fix a · Rest Home. Mrs. Dale Walburn
f,
V•
of Mrs. James Ebersbach and Oiler as guest speaker. The
• ~ ba,skel of foOd for a needy was appointed to handle
infanl son.
Rev. Oiler is First Church of
' family and fruit plates for shut- arrang~ments for thiS.
.J _
Mrs. Naomi Bentley, God minister having served at
·~.sat Thanksgiving. The group ~Ut·tns Will be remembered~ 'f/;
turcuJ1Jjel Rutland,' has ·returned home Mullens, W. :Va: l r ;,!'!
' Ill also re~nemller,, !helr a~ 'nl:&amp;nksglvlng time. Mrs,,
'..J"
after a several days' visit in
, ,pedal interest miSsionaries, Mannmg Kloes, chalrma?,
·
Colwnbus with her nephew,
~ both home and foreign, with anno~ced_ thlit the CICCI; wtll
RACINE -A fall carnival to Leonard Burney and cousin,
: gilLs.
have hos~Ita~ty for the San· be held at Racine Elementary Evelyn Warner.
• Mrs. Fred Lewis presided at born meeting m November and School Saturday night was
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks,
ll1e meeting with Mrs. Hubbard appointed Mrs. Walburn, Mrs. planned during a meeting of Tom, Mary Beth, of Gallipolis
giving the white cross quota. • Bert Bodimer, Mrs. John Fultz the Racine PTA Monday night and Mrs. Leslie Price of
. The prayer of dedication for · and Miss Freddie Houdashelt at th!o school. It will begin at 6 Pomeroy were weekend
·· the love gift offering of·$14 was to this conunittee.
p.m., preceded at 5 p.m. by visitors of Miss Genevieve
, given by Mrs. Pearl Hoffman.
Mrs. Fultz read the white supper.
Stobart. Also visiting with Mrs.
; The general offering was $11 cross quota and the . circle
Meeting with lhe PTA were Stobart and Mrs. Ethel Koenig
• and it was noted that the bottle arranged to fill lt. It was David Nease , and Grove was Mrs. Susie Windon of
cap redemption check · was reported that Miss Emma Salser, Jr.,
school board Henderson, w. Va., sister of
. $14.96.
Matthews has been returned to members, who discussed the Mrs. Koenig.
A poem entitled "October" the Athens Mental Health five mill operating levy to be
by Mrs. LewiS opened the Cenler for treatment. For the voted on next month. It was
Pd Pol . Adv
. meeting with Mrs. Beulah dedication of the love gift Mrs . voled by the PTA to endorse
. White giving devotions on a Bodimer read the Love Gift the levy.
You mnn to oey It cuto
~ Halloween theme. Two articles Parable. Mrs. Dana HalTUll
Mrs. Coralee Cummins gave texeo on Bll Buolneoo ..•
Rei"" Tex.. on People?
from the American Baptist used an article by Billy , devolions to open the meeting.
; Magazine, "Missionary Work Graham for devotions.
She _used a poem, "My Child".
• In Zaire", and "Up to Zongo · "New Machines for New A quartet composed of Duane
' and Back" were read. Mrs. Hwnanlty" was the program Wolfe, Dellnis Manual, Robert
· topic of Mrs. Fultz, Mrs. . Harl and Mrs. Janice Salser,
. Paul Smart gave prayer.
~ Mrs. Lewis assisted the Simons and )Irs. John Werner accompante~· by Mrs. Lillian
· ; hostess in- serving a- dessert served refreshmenLs:
---Hayman s~ng · "i've · Been ; course. Others attending were
'
Working on the Railroad", "In
Mrs . Gwinnie White, Mrs .
The Almanac
the Evening by the Moonlight",
Elsie l Turner, a guest, Mrs. By United Press International "Daddy Sang Bass", and "In
Milton Hood, Mrs, .1Wlllls An·
Today Is Thursday, Oct. 19, Times Like These". Fathers'
; thony, Mrs. David Darst, and the 293rd day of 1972 with 73 to night was observed and the
• Mrs. Iva Turner.
follow.
attendance banner and the $5 Stop the Switch
'
ELECI'A CIRCLE
The moon is approaching ils award went to the kin- to U n fa 1r Taxes
A vlsl! to the Meigs County full phase.
dergarten class.
wllh
treats
The morning stars are Venus,
Refreshmenls were served
Infirmary.
, sometime before Thanksgiving Mars and Saturn.
by the fac-ulty.
Ohll Council for ldwutian
Mn. Jean 011, Prtt., Cln. Hts., 0.
; was planned during the .Eiecta
The evening stars are Mereu·
• Circle meeting. The circle will ry and Jupiter.
• also remember shut-ins, the
Those born on this date are
BapUstscholarshipglrland the under the sign of Libra.
servicemen on Thanksgiving.
American novelist Fannie
A report on the white cross Hurst was born Oct. 19, 1889.
quota was given by Mrs.
On this day In history:
P-HIL CO®
Elizabeth Slavin who noted
In 1781, the American Revolu·
STEREO SOUND
: iliere Is approximately two tionaty War neare&lt;l an end as
CENTER
' months to fill it. The love gift British general, Lord Cornwal: offering was $9.25, while the lis surrendered at Yorktown,
wllh built-In:
• regular offering was $10.
Va.
• 8 TRACK TAPE
, Miss Rhoda Hall had
In 1814, "The Star Spangled
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
: devotions using John IS, 5-17, Banner" was sung In Baltimore
• 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC
: and a meditation entitled for the first time.
,
RECORD CHANGER
In 1936, an around-the-world
; :'Without Me You Can Do
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
: Nothing". "God's Rule for alrp)ane race by three newspaRADIO
: Uving" was the program topic per writers ended at Lakehurst,
• by. Mrs. Richard Owen. N.J. H. R. Elklrut won over
: Refreshments were served to Dorothy Kilgallen and Leo
: those named and Mn. Fielding Kiernan .,.ith a lime of 18 days,
' !Jawkinl, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, 11 hours, 14 minutes and 33
: Mrs. laabelle Winebrenner, aeconda.

NOn-Habit Forming Sleeping· capsules.

our convenient LIIY-A~·v Pion for ony merchondllt you chooH. A
deposit holds your stltctlon. Poy 111'-nce 11 your
convlftilllte.

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Gpett911UMan.thruS.t.

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Katie's rKorner

1..

VOTE NO on 2

by Bulova

The most welcome gill of all is an
Accutron by Bulova. So precise is
the 'Accutron tuning fork
movement that accuracy is
guaranteed to
within a minute
a month.•
See our full
$election of
Accutron
models now.
From $110.

~,.:::J:~:::::~o~.,Oct.Jt,lfl2

IUPEICAIIAL

MMiittrriMin Armolr•
Pecan veneer lop and base,
deep mold,cl doors.

ALL .FOR ONLY

'399
'

.

95·

3~

Anesthetic ointment for hemorrhoids.
1-oz. lube ........ .......... . SUS value

95~

PlliES-11110 WffiiiG SOLUTION

51.19

2-oz .......... : . ............. .. S2 . ~ value

DtYiiJlSS
VAPOIIZEI "132
Sale, sturdy,
steams all night.
Gallon capacity,
flp-res.lsianf,
matic shut-off.

Oouble shield
keeps water at
tow temp. level.
$7 .9S va lue ·

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
,MIDDLEPORT, 0.
'

.
~

�•

Dill¥ Stnllnel,, ~ddle•port-P(lmeroy, 0 ., Ocl.l9, t972

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Oct.l9,1972

1

Salisbury· PTA Eniio.rses ·Meigs School~~ _....111!111-_ -;..
. ~--~- ~·-......__....._
tendent, And F~al)k' Wc':l'orter, plications are still being ;~c­
president of the ' "Board of repted !.or the art class. Mrs.
Education.
Walter M.9rris noted that
R. J. Browning pre~~ided at Salisbury ~eatsh~rt~ are fo&lt;
the·meetiqg during which time I!Bie. )?inal plans were made
·the unit voted tri give each for serving the soil con· room $15 for recreational Servation dinner on Nov. 9. Ed
equipment needs. Elected as Bartels' fourth grade won the
delegates to the Meigs County attendance banner.
Council of Parents and · A report on the recent Meigs .
Teachers were Mr. and Mrs. County Council' meeting was
Dale Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. given by Mr . and Mrs.
Ed KeMedy and Mrs. R. J.
named news reporter, and Browning·. The alternates are Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Kennedy, and ·Mrs:--B!'OWI!Ing
Mrs . Bill Brown will have Mrs. Ev.a King, Mrs. ~harQn
who attertded.
.
charge ol the flOwer fund.
Swindell, Mr. and Mrs. Dale . Song~ .were presented by ~e .
Plans were made to serve a · Colburn .and · Mrs. Roger
filurth, fifth and sixth grade
lunch at the Brogan farm sale Gillispe .
students under the direction of
on Oct. 28. The traveling prize
It was reported that ap- Mrs. Christine Guthrie.
brought by Mrs. Miller was
won by Mrs. Williamson. The
next meeting will be held on
Nov. 21, with Mrs. Marilyn
Wilcox to furnish the traveling
THE ENERGY CRISIS
prize and Mrs. Quillen and
Mrs. Charles Barrett, Jr. to
·have refres11ments.
Mrs. Bishop and Mrs.
Williamson serve!! refresh.mentS to those ilamed and Mrs .
· Dick Foley and Mrs. Russell
Uttle.

. . DRUGS- POLITICS- ALCOHOL- SEX- FEAR . '-..
DISAPPOINTMENTS , WAR- FRUS.TRATION
.
HATE- BOREDOM- SELF- SMOKING

Firemen 's Auxiliary Will
Support Meigs School Levy

RUTLAND - A contribUtion
1o the RuU3nil Comnlunity
Hall Q\veen party and en. dorsement of the five mill
operating levy fo~ the Meigs
Local School District we~e
actions of the Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary -Tuesday
night.
Officers for the 197z.73 year
were elected and include Mrs.
Bruce Davis, president; Mr~ .
REV.HAWKS
James Quillen, first vice
·.President ; Mrs. Bob·· Miller,
second vice president; · Mrs.
Bill Williamson, secretary;
Mrs . Howard Birchfield,
assistant secretary, and Mrs.
Kenneth Michael, treasurer.
Larry Edwards was
Mrs.
RACINE - The Rev. Paul
W. Hawks will be evangelist ':j:;::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::;~:::::~;':~~=!~:::::-:.:--:::=::t;:::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~::::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:::.
--llightly oCt. 23 through Oct. 29
at services in the Southern
High School auditoriwn here.
II:
The Rev. Mr. Hawks is a
'
native of Hastings, Mich., a
THURSDAY
Saturday, at Letart Elemengraduate of AsbUry College, is
MIDDLEPORT CCL, 7:30 tary School, serving starting at ·
'• married, · and has three Thursday
night, Columbus arid 5.
\,
children. He haS spent one year Southern .Ohio Electric Co.
SUNDAY
in the u.'s. Navy, four years in Program on Drug Abus¢. Rev.
ANNUAL · RELIGIOUS
the Marine Corps. and was a Arthur
Lund, sjleaker. Affirmation Day , 2 p.m.
captain in the u:S. Air Force. Homemade masks to be
Sunday at the Pomeroy
He has traveled extensively judged.
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy
throughout the world including
ROCK SPRINGS Better Chapter 80, Royal Arch
visits in the Middle East and Health Club , I: 15- p. m.
Masons. Speaker and program
the Holy Land. He annually Thursday home of Mrs. Scott
by Job's Daughters and
travels !0 Grace Hospital in Folmer with Mrs. Hugh Bearhs
DeMolay. Refreshments.
Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
in charge of program. MemDESCENDANTS of Allen
The Rev. Mr. Hawks has bers to take toys for Veterans
and
Mary Eblin will have a
served churches in Detroit,
' Toledo, and is now pastor of the Memorial Hospital.
reunion Sunday at the west
EPISCOPAL
Church
roadside
park on Route 33,
Grace United Methodist
Women, 12:30 p.m. Thursday three iniles north of Pomeroy ..
Church in Gallipolis. ·
at Episcopal Parish House .
A basket dinner will be held at
Theme ·for the week-long
GARDEN
RIVERVIEW
1 p. m.
crusade is "Seven Nights for
Club
members
meet
6
p.m.
L f
• Christ," with special music Thursday at Whitehead home
each evening by the Angelaires
~ of Sugar Grove. Services are at preparatory to going to
~
Napoli's Restaurant, Belpre,
7:30. The public is invited.
FntST BORN IS SON
'
for dinner.
Mr.
and Mrs. James
'
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening
~
Ebersbach of Columbus are
1
A thought for the day: al Danville Wesleyan Church announcing the birth of their
'!( German author Thomas a with F.ev. C. 0. Waiters as
first child, a son, on Oct. 12.
, Kempis said, "Be not angry evangelist. Public invited.
The five pound, three ounce
~
that you cannot make others as
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening infant has been named Bryan .
• you wish them to be, since you through Oct. 22 at Chester Todd. G:randparents are Mr.
cannot make yourself as you Churc,lt of , the Na~arene with and Mrs. Harold Ebersbach of
• wish."
Garnett and Doc Sexton, Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs:
~I
Ashland, Ky., as evangelists Ralph Besco of Pedro. The
too
and special singing nightly. - paternal great-grandfather is
Public invited.
Emmett
Blackburn
of
FRIDAY
Pomeroy, and the maternal
WILLING WORKERS Class, grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
•
Enterprise United Methodist Mattie Banks of Dayton. Mr .
:
NOTICE
: SHOTGUN shooti ng match , Church, 7:30 Friday night at and Mrs. Harold Ebersbach,
l Rutland Gun Club, Sunday, the LaSalle Hotel quarters of Emmett Blackllurn and Mrs.
Oct. 22, 1 p. m . All hand Mrs. Cordelia Bentz.
,
Nora Mills were in Columbus
~
choked and sleeved gun s will
SATURDAY
Sunday to see the new baby.
:
be handicapped. No alcoholic
,,
beverages are allowed.
HALLOWEEN PARTY,
:
]Q. J9.Jic Saturday, 7:30p.m. by Modem
•
Woodman Lodge and Hemlock
I•
In 1967, the American space
Grange at grange hall.
LETART FALLS PTA vehicle Mariner 5 swept past ·
s taging a jitney supper, Venus.

·J. Evangelistic

Series is Set

·social Calendar

.

SPECIAL SERVICE
DATE &amp; TIME: OCT. 20th, 8:00 o'dock

PLACE: MIDDLEPoRT UNITED PENTECOSTAL
.

Speaker : REV. &amp; MRS. · C. COLE
· Par.kersburg, W.Va.

.

Se~icer(ll Chor~hes Wi II Be Represente~ At This Service. ·
Pastor, William Knittel
·

IS THREATENING YOUR WAY O'F LIFE
·'

--------------------------,

\

il

'

VOTE NO on 2

DAN
MEADOWS

see

. until

Mrs. Hutchison to the Jackson-Meigs homecoming game al
which his cousin, Julia Hutchison, was crowned homecoming
queen.

BOOTS FOR THE LADIES
By
Can America .. better its environ ment ·and develop its energy resources atthe same time? It can and must. In fact improving the
quality of every citizen's life is de pendent upon having enough
··• · energy to make· it-happen:
- -·

the mole says • • •

I
l

I
PMOIIt

maa

(Con Unued from page 4)
following last week's 0-0 tie.
'· North Gallla 30 Hannan Trpce 0, P!rnt!lll.Arc..hurtlng M _
should-have enough against Wildcats.
.
Alexander 13 Kyger Creek 7. Spartans have top offense In
area while Bobcats are the top defenaive unit. I
'
Eastern -7 Miller 0. Uh, no comment.
Green 20 Southwestern 8. Bobcats defeat another SVAC
team. .
·
.
OTHERS
Nelsonville-York 20 Belpre 14, Vinton County 8 FederalHocking o, Fort Frye 18,,\Yarren Local 13, Ripley 20 Point
·Pleasan\ 18, Ravenswood 24, Wahama 8, Oak Hill 21, Rock Hill
12, Fairland 30 Ironton St. .J.oe 6, Coal Grove. 28, South Point 22,
Wheelersburg 27, PortsmoUth West 20, Portsmouth 20 Portsmouth Notre Dame 14and Centerburg 14Glouster 0.

The National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), passed in
1970, had as its objective the improvement of the environment
and quality of life. Columbia ·unqualifiedly endorses this objective. However, environmental
concerns can and must be balanced realistically with the nation's.growing .energy require ments . An adequate supply of
energy and a proper environment
are both essential to the physical
and economic well-being of the
American people.
·

DON'T

i(.J~N

SACK ·oNe

~ .
a· crop lllder JIUI' bees just
fw the . . . CASII II ••• take.,_

SON-

DAV,oc;r:
2.9!

MIDWAY MAIKO
W.O.IAINnz ·
POMDOY, OHIO

..
_.,.__~

~:·~lll:&amp;:IJI:oft~Mf=··=·~,'lt~~w.=~:AtMU'l'=:~·:-~~
· -ILJIOl'il
I
-.,fOIL

.

J HCkS(}" E. Beu ·'·

.

Thomas L. Aslt/ey
Clarence E. Miller
J. Will1am Stanton
Samuel L. Devino

I

PP.!~.!

This must be done now. All of our
·· major gas supply projects con tinue to face delays .because of
multiple and overlapping deci'sions and revievt.~ ThfL !Iatio_n's
economy will suffer, energy costs
will rise unnecessarily, and ultimately some areas of our country
will face energy shortages of
major proportions.

Black or Brown Leather
~.._..::anQ BEus~e~ ~iK. S~i~.:..
9/8 HEEL

•

You can help. Your elected officials respond to your wishes
when you make them1known.
Write to your Senators and Representative about the liji)Wing
energy crisis. Urge them to review
the National Environmental . Pol '
icy Act" and amend it to assure
a proper balance .between your
energy needs and the safety of
your environment.

Jolin F. Seiberling
Chalmers P. Wylie
Frank T. Bow
John M. Ashbrook
.W~ yne L,. Hays '

e

•

I

. ~

THE SHOE BOX

Record Sales, Net
Income ·R eported
By Goodyear Firm

AKRON - The Goodyear income of $41,072,000 or 56
Tire &amp; Rubber Company cents a share in the same three
achieved record sales and net months of 1971.
income for the third-quarter
Goodyear's sales for the first
and nine-month periods, Board nine monthS of this year were
Chairman Russeli DeYoung $2,986,001,000 or 12.1 per cent
and President Charles J. ahead of ·the $2,664,872,000 in
Pilliod Jr. reported today.
sales for the like 1971 period.
Sales for Goodyear in the
Nine-month net income was
three months ended Sept. 30 up 12.6 per cent to $136,765,000
reached $1,00li,l17,000, an 11.5 or $1.88 a share, vs. profits of
·per· en gajn over the·- $121,439;000 or tl.67 a -share tn
$901,384,000 in sales during the the same pertod la~t year.
year-ago period.
Even though all .ftgw;es :--ere
It was only the second time in re~ords, DeYoung . and. Pilliod
history - · and the second satd results con~nue to be
quarter in a row - that sales affected by lower mcome from
topped the billion-dollar mark European operations due to a
at the world's largest rubber slowdown in the over-all
economy.
company.
"Third-quarter earnings
totaled $43,575,000 or 60 cents a
share, up 6.1 per cenl from net
.~

, Where Sllota Ate SeMillty Prlctdl

___....,____
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

· ··

,_
Charles J. Carney
James·V. Stanton
Louis Stokes
Charles A. Vanik
William E. Minshall ·
Walter E. Powell

TILT SET JULY%7
•
CHICAGO (I!Pl)- The 40th
annual All-Star football game
sponsored by the Chl~ago
Tribune Charities, Inc., will be
played next summer at Chicago's Soldier Field on July 27, it
was announced Wednesday.
The game again will pit a
picked squad of college footbAll
stars against the winner of the
1973
"Super . Bowl"
professional championship
game.

''T'S TRUE" - · •
A COMPLETE STOCK ...
of the finest pharmaceuticals
enables us

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'
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~

BAKER

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....... ,... .... ._.. ......
. BUYING STARTS OCTOBER 2

Congress should promptly review
the National Environmental Policy
Act, including its current admin _.
istration and the courts' interpretations of it, and should amend
the Act to provide for realistic
·procedures .and less time -consu-

Hush
lli

ming administration.

UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVES .
Clarence J. Brown
CharlesA. Mosher '

William J . Kealing
Donald D. Clancy
Charles W. Whalen. Jr
William M. McCulloch
Delbert L. Lat(a •'
William H. Harsha

YOUR Cl..OCI&lt;
~OUR

Unfortunately, vague standards
set forth in the Act, and unwieldy
procedures used by some ad min istrative agencies to implement
the law, have caused unnecessary
delays in efforts to supply you
- and·other consumers with energy,
including clean -burning natural
gas. As NEPA is now interpreted
and' administered, almost anyone
can .stall any energy project in the
courts for long periods of time
without regard to his direct interest, the needs of others; or the
added costs of such del~ys .

UNITED STATES SENATORS .
William B. Saxbe
Robert To i•. Jr.

~r&lt;&amp;eT

TO

·.· for all your
PRESCRIPTION NEEDS

n

.

I

I

miS IS THE NEW administration building (multi-.
, purpose) at Kentucky ~istian College and is being paid 'for
solely. by contributions ft'om interested persons at a cost·of
over one million dollars. The Bradbury Church of Chtist will
pay special tribute to the college Sunday.

'

•' be classified
••

I

tlr uv ide citize ns the oppo&lt;!unity io lnake. needed
changes. modifications and
refinements in lhe goals."
Response to the local citizens
seminars was remark ably
successful, said Bowen, with
604 of the state's 621 school
districts conducting meetings.
These local sessions also gave

Regional Citizens Councils &gt;rill
further review the tentative
. ~latement of goals, and ned
January, a statewide goals
conference will be convened.
The th ird cycle, according to
.Stale Superintendent ol Public
Instruction, Martin W. Essex,
will sustain involvement
throug h the Bicentennial observancc in t976 and will in-

Of the Bend

late to

I

" If it is not, these meetings

__
•factors deemed most im· achieving the goals
forth in
1
1 • .COLUMBUS (UP!)- ACin- th'e ~ommisslon , the Ohio porlanl in their school the series ot'cillzens' meetings.
1 cinnati-based advertiSin·g electrical utilities would be ... districts.
"I · hope every interested
The Bradford Chut·ch of which they were in d es~orate
1 agency filed a sta tement ·placedinlistrait-jacketinsofar_) The conc~pt f?~ thi~ most citizen in Meigs County will
Christ
is announcing "K. C.C. need. ,
1 Wednesday with the state as the use use of advertising 0 ~ comprehensive bt1ze~s study avail himself of the opportunity
The activities for the day of
'I Public Utilities Commission public relations messages _ever underta~en tn Ohto to express·his opinions on these Day" at the church on Sunday,
'
in
special
recognition
of
the
t'ecognition
will include the
I defending money spent by would be concerned," the resulted from the desire of the tentative goals for education,
By Bob Hoeflich
' electrit; ompanies on ad- ·statement said.
• State Board of Education 's and to suggest revisions, ad- outstanding work done by the , morning worship service, 9:30
vertising.
"The use of advertising Committee for Ed ucational dilions, or deletions as they see college in the Kingdom of God. a. ni., with special singins by a
Mrs. C. H. (Sis) Wise of Middleport and Waverly has been
Kentucky Christian Coliege group from the college, a
Robert Acomb Inc. ad- whichwouldhelplowercoststo Redesign and Improvement to fi t. It is only tht•ough this type
named a Kentucky. Colonel by Kentucky Governor Wendell H. dressed itself to a complaint the consumer, or would aid in determine the opinions of Ohio of involvement can we assist is located in Grayson, Ky.; , dinner following the service
Ford. Are there any other women about our area with this honor? filed with PUCO Sept. IS by the improving the environment or citizens as to the neeiJ for the Stale Department of about twenty-five miles east of .• with fel,lowship time, and the
Ohio Public Interest Action wouldpromote the health ~nQ revision of existing objectives Edu cation in determining Ashland on ~oute 60. The evening service at 7 p.m. with
MRS. GRACE PRATT~ PRESIDENTof the Ladies Auxiliary Group seeking to restrain 11 welfare of our people, or would or new goals for educalton.
accurate antj meaningful college is now in its 53rd year of Ute work ol K.C.C. selfj1forth.
A special offering will be
ol DrewWebster J;'ost 39, American Legion, reports tremendous major utilities from any ad- benefit industry and comFoliowmg the County objectives for o~r schools," service, having . changed its
name in 1945 from Christian receive'&lt;! in the evening for the
response to the essay contest held by the group !or fourth , fifth vertising which "encourages merce, could be prohibited," it Citizens Assemblies, 12 Bowen said.
Normal Insti tute. At the college. Clifford L. Smith, host
and slxtlt·graders of Meigs County. Some 150 youngsters across the consumer demand for and said.
·
present
time t(he college is in minister, extends an invitation
the county wrote essays on the subject, "I'm Glad ·rm An the use or consumption of
the final stages of buillling a to the public to attend flle
American" . Judging will be completed In the near future· and · electrical power." '
Acomb branded as "totally I
new
multi-purpose building of Sunday observance.
-The Acomb agency said far false" OPIAG's complaint that I
cash prizes awarded the winners. Mrs. Edith Fox, Americanism
Letters
of
opinion
are
welcomed
.
They
should
be
less
•
from aggravating a national advertising creates overcon- I
chairman of the post, is heading the contest.
than
300
words
long
(or
he
subje,·t
to
reductl.on
by
the
editor)
energy shortage and causing swription of power, resulting in I
Pet PoL Adv.
I
and
must
Ire
signed
with
the
signee's
address.
Names
may
be
•
the
advertising
rate
increases,
I
MIDDLEPORT COUNCIL will not meet in regularly
brownouts or blackouts.
withheld upon publicallon, however, on request. Lettet"tl
, .• and juet when the
ELLSWORTH ,WINS .
has
been
effective
in
"aiding
'11ie statement said outages I should be in good taste, a~dresslng issues, not personalit ies.
scheduled session on Monday, Oct. 23, Mayor John Zerkle has
State
wao finally starting
NAPA, Calif. (UPI )-Ken
disclosed. A special session will be held to make up the meeting. cuslomers in using electrical occur when 11Small , vocal I
to pay a Fair Share of the
Ellsworth·, 29, a professi00ai
. 'pressure groups' have im- I
energy most effectively."
C.oot of my Education!
The mayor' by the way' is endorsing the school tax levy in
I
from Harbor City, Calif., shot a
"This,
in
turn,
assists
the
peded
the
nedessary
expansion
the Meigs Local School District to be voted upon on Nov. 7.
sixot~nder-par 66 on the Silveraelectric utility companies in - programs planned by the I
"We have tO have education and we have to keep it at home,"
I
do Club's south course Wednesubtaining important economies Ohio electric utilities."
the mayor ~~&amp;id.
I
day
to win the $500 first prize in
in the generation and transBy the same Ioken, Mayor Zerkle is asking support of the
the Kaiser International promission of power and so aids
The OPIAG it said, should I
Middleport auto' license tax fee which will be voted upon at the
amateur
competition .
in the massive construction redirect its attention to a "pasNov. 7 election in Middleport only. The $5 tax would provide programs which are carried itive approach."
He was followed by tour
Boos
to
the
Mole
and
Hoople
money for street repair in Middleport and has been earmarked forward to provide abundant
regulars Dewitt Weaver and
"For example, they could
Babe Hiskey, who both shot 67
for that only. There are some 2200 cars in Middleport and a $5 facilities for tomorrow 's help convince federal state and
October
16,
1972
on the same course.
payment on each would be made if the measure is approved by need," the statement said.
private sources to initiate a Dear Mr. Editor:
.
l.eadini the half of the field
voters on Nov. 7. Mayor Zerkle stresses that the income from·the
The Acomb agency said ad- crash research program in
ba
We Eastern fans sorta ve a pet-peeve with "The Mole" playing 6n the longer north Stop the Switch
Vertl·sm·g by utt"lities can create coal gasification," tt. was
tax will be used for street repair only.
· 11
d Mr R 1
course were former Masters to Unfair Taxes
an "understanding" by con- suggested.
especl8 Y, an
· oop e.
"The electric utilities face
How does it come Eastern is usually always your underdog in champion Charles Coody, and
MRS. VISTA FRANK IS observing her 95th birthday an- sumers of the need for prompt
one-time National PGA king
nlversary"today. Mrs. Frank makes her home with her son and licensing of atomic power plant enormous problems In the all yo~r predictions ?
This doesn't really bother the morale of our great team, Dave Marr. Both shot 68, lwo
Ohio council tor lduullon
· daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frank, Pomeroy Route 3. construction, ''viise Interprets- years ahead. Advertising
Mrt, Jtln DJI, Pr11., Cltv. Mts., 0 ,
shots
higher
than
Ellsworth.
tion
of
new
plant
emission
should
be
available
as
a
hecausetheyarefartoobroadminded,asamatterolfact,
it
stirs
· Best wishes!
standards," and the "urgent flexible tool for the solution of them on to make your prediction wrong again.
these problems."
Eastern has a very good team this year. When we played
MEIG!i COUNTY RESIDENTS are asked to get behind a need" for increasing rates.
"The necessary rate inNamed in the OPIAG com- Southern, .they certainly had all the breaks, Including the
bazaar being staged by the Meigs County Humane Society on
Saturday, Nov. 4, ar the Grace Episcopal Parish House in creaSes will not have been plaint were Cincinnati Gas &amp; referees,ortheywouldneverhavebeatenus!Ml .
caused by the use of ad- Electric Co., Cleveland ElecThis past Saturday rtightour teain proved just how good tliey
Pomeroy.
co ., are when they didn't have to contend with biased referees, who
Stray dogs and cats can be handled through the society if vertising," the advertising," trlc · Illuminating
the
statement
said
.
"Adeoiumbus
&amp;
Southern
Electric
called a fair and square game at Cadiz .
funds can be secured 1o carry out the group's program including
vertising can be counted upon Co.,DaylonPower&amp;UghtCo.,
When fans arrived in town the townspeople there said why
the construction of an animal shelter.
Residents ·having any handmade items or "collectibles" as a means of effecting irn- DownlownService, Inc., Huron did you ever bring a team as small as yours to our town ? Don't
portant operating economies . Service Co;, Monongahela you know we are state champions?
which they wish to contribute to the sale are asked to take them
and keeping rates as low as Power Co., Ohio Edison Co.,
I guess 'the team showed them. Their team admitted to
to the.sale location from 7 to 9 p. m. on Friday, the night before
•
O~£~er
Co., ~io }'a~ - y e r s that ~ · · bad 1~ hesl defense that the~ )Wve ' ,
.the bazaar. -;&amp;t'\fill •
. jl a,
will
jnue possible.
't! 'If•· •· t . , ,t co"""lll\\antS:
E
.
·
·~
~
""'
'
·
din g'" .,jG
'" ·' •'-uentra
""'" "I· 'H igh
' "· '
":"' ~ :
, · . .. , "!!!JJP·:!:'
I 'l ' ·. o1 .
_ agamst,
um'!"s
.
aU the j._";/ • • t10ld. ""· • .
· IJPIAtl w~re to be up~eld bY,.c, EdiBOn c;o.
~~
.Qh!t:f"y the way,Mble;lfyou haven'theardyet, the score was
'
.
Cadiz 13-Eastern 6. Not 30-0!
TOMMY JUDGE, AN ELECTRICAL engineering student at
Eastern fims who feel we bave(he greatest team in the land.
. West Virginia University, was the weekend guest of his uncle. and
Writer's name withheld on request.
..,. aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Hutchison and accompanied his aunt,

t

·--t

.

e: .• •

•

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· • utill•ty
Electnc
f.---t---1~~~-~·~=~~'!"=-"';~iii,.-""";"~, - 'Ad
. :8- 12'@-:l!V-@.
.
~
-~~~J3~J]il~--~:c~o~m~m~u~n1~i~ti~es~~~:~~~t·~~ ~ ~-.~v~ol~ve~~a·l~l~m?&lt;em~~he~r~s~oK:f~th~c~O~h~iol ~;-~~~~--ll~~~:~()~====~~]i------!\Ul
~et
K. C•.C. Day Planned
"

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· .A county citizens' assembly schools in Ohio during the
Thus, the County Citizen~ 1a1ive slalement is an accurate
on schools ~ part of Ohio's Bicentennial era to cll!hax in Assemblies provi~e ....an oprefiecliQn of 1heir wishes and
Search for Consensus - will 1976:
.
portunity for all residents oi hopes . for ellucation in the
convene at 8 p.m. Wednesday,
The county mee lings follow the.counly to voice their views s1a1e."
Oct. 25, in Meigs High School. local . citizen
seminars .as to wlll' th£&gt;•· nr no' •hi ~ •rn.
County Supt. of Schools throughout the state last May.
Robert Bowen ·said the Recommendation s and
assembly will provide Meigs opinions obtained from citizens
Countians a convenient way to at the local seminars have been
participate in fixing goals for directed to a tentative set of
.
.
. .
elementary and secondary goals for education in Ohio:

1

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County Assembly on SchOOls to Convene Oct~ 25

"WHAT'S YOUR HANG-UP'"

The Salisbury PTA endorSed ·
Present- 1o discuss the need
the five mill levy for the MeigS . for the levy and to 311!1wer
Local Schooi District .at a questions regarding It were
l)leetin~ Tuesday night atlhe
George Hargraves, SU!K!rfn·school.

,
1

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PINat tend me a copy
. of your booklet
"Ail Action Program
to Hflp Correct

. City .. .• ~ •

Brown, smooth leather:

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'I!:::J..:::J@l}S @()::30@

'

Waffle wedge heel and
sole .
Slf2 · lOB

..Zip _ . _ :.:=,.:~. ---·

•j

I

•

- ·- - - . ~- ... --- ~
I

tagr

WAYOUT

th• Netlonal
Energy Criais"' .

'

,.

St,.et ·

/

~

J'

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

· 700 W. Main • PomeroY

- ..

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armnry

..

"THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"
271 North Second
M. .port, Oltkl

heritage

1 10 t Dilly 8 day 1·9

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Dill¥ Stnllnel,, ~ddle•port-P(lmeroy, 0 ., Ocl.l9, t972

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Oct.l9,1972

1

Salisbury· PTA Eniio.rses ·Meigs School~~ _....111!111-_ -;..
. ~--~- ~·-......__....._
tendent, And F~al)k' Wc':l'orter, plications are still being ;~c­
president of the ' "Board of repted !.or the art class. Mrs.
Education.
Walter M.9rris noted that
R. J. Browning pre~~ided at Salisbury ~eatsh~rt~ are fo&lt;
the·meetiqg during which time I!Bie. )?inal plans were made
·the unit voted tri give each for serving the soil con· room $15 for recreational Servation dinner on Nov. 9. Ed
equipment needs. Elected as Bartels' fourth grade won the
delegates to the Meigs County attendance banner.
Council of Parents and · A report on the recent Meigs .
Teachers were Mr. and Mrs. County Council' meeting was
Dale Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. given by Mr . and Mrs.
Ed KeMedy and Mrs. R. J.
named news reporter, and Browning·. The alternates are Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Kennedy, and ·Mrs:--B!'OWI!Ing
Mrs . Bill Brown will have Mrs. Ev.a King, Mrs. ~harQn
who attertded.
.
charge ol the flOwer fund.
Swindell, Mr. and Mrs. Dale . Song~ .were presented by ~e .
Plans were made to serve a · Colburn .and · Mrs. Roger
filurth, fifth and sixth grade
lunch at the Brogan farm sale Gillispe .
students under the direction of
on Oct. 28. The traveling prize
It was reported that ap- Mrs. Christine Guthrie.
brought by Mrs. Miller was
won by Mrs. Williamson. The
next meeting will be held on
Nov. 21, with Mrs. Marilyn
Wilcox to furnish the traveling
THE ENERGY CRISIS
prize and Mrs. Quillen and
Mrs. Charles Barrett, Jr. to
·have refres11ments.
Mrs. Bishop and Mrs.
Williamson serve!! refresh.mentS to those ilamed and Mrs .
· Dick Foley and Mrs. Russell
Uttle.

. . DRUGS- POLITICS- ALCOHOL- SEX- FEAR . '-..
DISAPPOINTMENTS , WAR- FRUS.TRATION
.
HATE- BOREDOM- SELF- SMOKING

Firemen 's Auxiliary Will
Support Meigs School Levy

RUTLAND - A contribUtion
1o the RuU3nil Comnlunity
Hall Q\veen party and en. dorsement of the five mill
operating levy fo~ the Meigs
Local School District we~e
actions of the Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary -Tuesday
night.
Officers for the 197z.73 year
were elected and include Mrs.
Bruce Davis, president; Mr~ .
REV.HAWKS
James Quillen, first vice
·.President ; Mrs. Bob·· Miller,
second vice president; · Mrs.
Bill Williamson, secretary;
Mrs . Howard Birchfield,
assistant secretary, and Mrs.
Kenneth Michael, treasurer.
Larry Edwards was
Mrs.
RACINE - The Rev. Paul
W. Hawks will be evangelist ':j:;::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::;~:::::~;':~~=!~:::::-:.:--:::=::t;:::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~::::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:::.
--llightly oCt. 23 through Oct. 29
at services in the Southern
High School auditoriwn here.
II:
The Rev. Mr. Hawks is a
'
native of Hastings, Mich., a
THURSDAY
Saturday, at Letart Elemengraduate of AsbUry College, is
MIDDLEPORT CCL, 7:30 tary School, serving starting at ·
'• married, · and has three Thursday
night, Columbus arid 5.
\,
children. He haS spent one year Southern .Ohio Electric Co.
SUNDAY
in the u.'s. Navy, four years in Program on Drug Abus¢. Rev.
ANNUAL · RELIGIOUS
the Marine Corps. and was a Arthur
Lund, sjleaker. Affirmation Day , 2 p.m.
captain in the u:S. Air Force. Homemade masks to be
Sunday at the Pomeroy
He has traveled extensively judged.
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy
throughout the world including
ROCK SPRINGS Better Chapter 80, Royal Arch
visits in the Middle East and Health Club , I: 15- p. m.
Masons. Speaker and program
the Holy Land. He annually Thursday home of Mrs. Scott
by Job's Daughters and
travels !0 Grace Hospital in Folmer with Mrs. Hugh Bearhs
DeMolay. Refreshments.
Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
in charge of program. MemDESCENDANTS of Allen
The Rev. Mr. Hawks has bers to take toys for Veterans
and
Mary Eblin will have a
served churches in Detroit,
' Toledo, and is now pastor of the Memorial Hospital.
reunion Sunday at the west
EPISCOPAL
Church
roadside
park on Route 33,
Grace United Methodist
Women, 12:30 p.m. Thursday three iniles north of Pomeroy ..
Church in Gallipolis. ·
at Episcopal Parish House .
A basket dinner will be held at
Theme ·for the week-long
GARDEN
RIVERVIEW
1 p. m.
crusade is "Seven Nights for
Club
members
meet
6
p.m.
L f
• Christ," with special music Thursday at Whitehead home
each evening by the Angelaires
~ of Sugar Grove. Services are at preparatory to going to
~
Napoli's Restaurant, Belpre,
7:30. The public is invited.
FntST BORN IS SON
'
for dinner.
Mr.
and Mrs. James
'
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening
~
Ebersbach of Columbus are
1
A thought for the day: al Danville Wesleyan Church announcing the birth of their
'!( German author Thomas a with F.ev. C. 0. Waiters as
first child, a son, on Oct. 12.
, Kempis said, "Be not angry evangelist. Public invited.
The five pound, three ounce
~
that you cannot make others as
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening infant has been named Bryan .
• you wish them to be, since you through Oct. 22 at Chester Todd. G:randparents are Mr.
cannot make yourself as you Churc,lt of , the Na~arene with and Mrs. Harold Ebersbach of
• wish."
Garnett and Doc Sexton, Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs:
~I
Ashland, Ky., as evangelists Ralph Besco of Pedro. The
too
and special singing nightly. - paternal great-grandfather is
Public invited.
Emmett
Blackburn
of
FRIDAY
Pomeroy, and the maternal
WILLING WORKERS Class, grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
•
Enterprise United Methodist Mattie Banks of Dayton. Mr .
:
NOTICE
: SHOTGUN shooti ng match , Church, 7:30 Friday night at and Mrs. Harold Ebersbach,
l Rutland Gun Club, Sunday, the LaSalle Hotel quarters of Emmett Blackllurn and Mrs.
Oct. 22, 1 p. m . All hand Mrs. Cordelia Bentz.
,
Nora Mills were in Columbus
~
choked and sleeved gun s will
SATURDAY
Sunday to see the new baby.
:
be handicapped. No alcoholic
,,
beverages are allowed.
HALLOWEEN PARTY,
:
]Q. J9.Jic Saturday, 7:30p.m. by Modem
•
Woodman Lodge and Hemlock
I•
In 1967, the American space
Grange at grange hall.
LETART FALLS PTA vehicle Mariner 5 swept past ·
s taging a jitney supper, Venus.

·J. Evangelistic

Series is Set

·social Calendar

.

SPECIAL SERVICE
DATE &amp; TIME: OCT. 20th, 8:00 o'dock

PLACE: MIDDLEPoRT UNITED PENTECOSTAL
.

Speaker : REV. &amp; MRS. · C. COLE
· Par.kersburg, W.Va.

.

Se~icer(ll Chor~hes Wi II Be Represente~ At This Service. ·
Pastor, William Knittel
·

IS THREATENING YOUR WAY O'F LIFE
·'

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VOTE NO on 2

DAN
MEADOWS

see

. until

Mrs. Hutchison to the Jackson-Meigs homecoming game al
which his cousin, Julia Hutchison, was crowned homecoming
queen.

BOOTS FOR THE LADIES
By
Can America .. better its environ ment ·and develop its energy resources atthe same time? It can and must. In fact improving the
quality of every citizen's life is de pendent upon having enough
··• · energy to make· it-happen:
- -·

the mole says • • •

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maa

(Con Unued from page 4)
following last week's 0-0 tie.
'· North Gallla 30 Hannan Trpce 0, P!rnt!lll.Arc..hurtlng M _
should-have enough against Wildcats.
.
Alexander 13 Kyger Creek 7. Spartans have top offense In
area while Bobcats are the top defenaive unit. I
'
Eastern -7 Miller 0. Uh, no comment.
Green 20 Southwestern 8. Bobcats defeat another SVAC
team. .
·
.
OTHERS
Nelsonville-York 20 Belpre 14, Vinton County 8 FederalHocking o, Fort Frye 18,,\Yarren Local 13, Ripley 20 Point
·Pleasan\ 18, Ravenswood 24, Wahama 8, Oak Hill 21, Rock Hill
12, Fairland 30 Ironton St. .J.oe 6, Coal Grove. 28, South Point 22,
Wheelersburg 27, PortsmoUth West 20, Portsmouth 20 Portsmouth Notre Dame 14and Centerburg 14Glouster 0.

The National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), passed in
1970, had as its objective the improvement of the environment
and quality of life. Columbia ·unqualifiedly endorses this objective. However, environmental
concerns can and must be balanced realistically with the nation's.growing .energy require ments . An adequate supply of
energy and a proper environment
are both essential to the physical
and economic well-being of the
American people.
·

DON'T

i(.J~N

SACK ·oNe

~ .
a· crop lllder JIUI' bees just
fw the . . . CASII II ••• take.,_

SON-

DAV,oc;r:
2.9!

MIDWAY MAIKO
W.O.IAINnz ·
POMDOY, OHIO

..
_.,.__~

~:·~lll:&amp;:IJI:oft~Mf=··=·~,'lt~~w.=~:AtMU'l'=:~·:-~~
· -ILJIOl'il
I
-.,fOIL

.

J HCkS(}" E. Beu ·'·

.

Thomas L. Aslt/ey
Clarence E. Miller
J. Will1am Stanton
Samuel L. Devino

I

PP.!~.!

This must be done now. All of our
·· major gas supply projects con tinue to face delays .because of
multiple and overlapping deci'sions and revievt.~ ThfL !Iatio_n's
economy will suffer, energy costs
will rise unnecessarily, and ultimately some areas of our country
will face energy shortages of
major proportions.

Black or Brown Leather
~.._..::anQ BEus~e~ ~iK. S~i~.:..
9/8 HEEL

•

You can help. Your elected officials respond to your wishes
when you make them1known.
Write to your Senators and Representative about the liji)Wing
energy crisis. Urge them to review
the National Environmental . Pol '
icy Act" and amend it to assure
a proper balance .between your
energy needs and the safety of
your environment.

Jolin F. Seiberling
Chalmers P. Wylie
Frank T. Bow
John M. Ashbrook
.W~ yne L,. Hays '

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THE SHOE BOX

Record Sales, Net
Income ·R eported
By Goodyear Firm

AKRON - The Goodyear income of $41,072,000 or 56
Tire &amp; Rubber Company cents a share in the same three
achieved record sales and net months of 1971.
income for the third-quarter
Goodyear's sales for the first
and nine-month periods, Board nine monthS of this year were
Chairman Russeli DeYoung $2,986,001,000 or 12.1 per cent
and President Charles J. ahead of ·the $2,664,872,000 in
Pilliod Jr. reported today.
sales for the like 1971 period.
Sales for Goodyear in the
Nine-month net income was
three months ended Sept. 30 up 12.6 per cent to $136,765,000
reached $1,00li,l17,000, an 11.5 or $1.88 a share, vs. profits of
·per· en gajn over the·- $121,439;000 or tl.67 a -share tn
$901,384,000 in sales during the the same pertod la~t year.
year-ago period.
Even though all .ftgw;es :--ere
It was only the second time in re~ords, DeYoung . and. Pilliod
history - · and the second satd results con~nue to be
quarter in a row - that sales affected by lower mcome from
topped the billion-dollar mark European operations due to a
at the world's largest rubber slowdown in the over-all
economy.
company.
"Third-quarter earnings
totaled $43,575,000 or 60 cents a
share, up 6.1 per cenl from net
.~

, Where Sllota Ate SeMillty Prlctdl

___....,____
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

· ··

,_
Charles J. Carney
James·V. Stanton
Louis Stokes
Charles A. Vanik
William E. Minshall ·
Walter E. Powell

TILT SET JULY%7
•
CHICAGO (I!Pl)- The 40th
annual All-Star football game
sponsored by the Chl~ago
Tribune Charities, Inc., will be
played next summer at Chicago's Soldier Field on July 27, it
was announced Wednesday.
The game again will pit a
picked squad of college footbAll
stars against the winner of the
1973
"Super . Bowl"
professional championship
game.

''T'S TRUE" - · •
A COMPLETE STOCK ...
of the finest pharmaceuticals
enables us

VALUES

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~

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FURNITUB

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·Ru11t, Bei ge, 1tr1d Oruwn Sueded

Wo!Oe Wedge Heel an d Sole

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....... ,... .... ._.. ......
. BUYING STARTS OCTOBER 2

Congress should promptly review
the National Environmental Policy
Act, including its current admin _.
istration and the courts' interpretations of it, and should amend
the Act to provide for realistic
·procedures .and less time -consu-

Hush
lli

ming administration.

UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVES .
Clarence J. Brown
CharlesA. Mosher '

William J . Kealing
Donald D. Clancy
Charles W. Whalen. Jr
William M. McCulloch
Delbert L. Lat(a •'
William H. Harsha

YOUR Cl..OCI&lt;
~OUR

Unfortunately, vague standards
set forth in the Act, and unwieldy
procedures used by some ad min istrative agencies to implement
the law, have caused unnecessary
delays in efforts to supply you
- and·other consumers with energy,
including clean -burning natural
gas. As NEPA is now interpreted
and' administered, almost anyone
can .stall any energy project in the
courts for long periods of time
without regard to his direct interest, the needs of others; or the
added costs of such del~ys .

UNITED STATES SENATORS .
William B. Saxbe
Robert To i•. Jr.

~r&lt;&amp;eT

TO

·.· for all your
PRESCRIPTION NEEDS

n

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miS IS THE NEW administration building (multi-.
, purpose) at Kentucky ~istian College and is being paid 'for
solely. by contributions ft'om interested persons at a cost·of
over one million dollars. The Bradbury Church of Chtist will
pay special tribute to the college Sunday.

'

•' be classified
••

I

tlr uv ide citize ns the oppo&lt;!unity io lnake. needed
changes. modifications and
refinements in lhe goals."
Response to the local citizens
seminars was remark ably
successful, said Bowen, with
604 of the state's 621 school
districts conducting meetings.
These local sessions also gave

Regional Citizens Councils &gt;rill
further review the tentative
. ~latement of goals, and ned
January, a statewide goals
conference will be convened.
The th ird cycle, according to
.Stale Superintendent ol Public
Instruction, Martin W. Essex,
will sustain involvement
throug h the Bicentennial observancc in t976 and will in-

Of the Bend

late to

I

" If it is not, these meetings

__
•factors deemed most im· achieving the goals
forth in
1
1 • .COLUMBUS (UP!)- ACin- th'e ~ommisslon , the Ohio porlanl in their school the series ot'cillzens' meetings.
1 cinnati-based advertiSin·g electrical utilities would be ... districts.
"I · hope every interested
The Bradford Chut·ch of which they were in d es~orate
1 agency filed a sta tement ·placedinlistrait-jacketinsofar_) The conc~pt f?~ thi~ most citizen in Meigs County will
Christ
is announcing "K. C.C. need. ,
1 Wednesday with the state as the use use of advertising 0 ~ comprehensive bt1ze~s study avail himself of the opportunity
The activities for the day of
'I Public Utilities Commission public relations messages _ever underta~en tn Ohto to express·his opinions on these Day" at the church on Sunday,
'
in
special
recognition
of
the
t'ecognition
will include the
I defending money spent by would be concerned," the resulted from the desire of the tentative goals for education,
By Bob Hoeflich
' electrit; ompanies on ad- ·statement said.
• State Board of Education 's and to suggest revisions, ad- outstanding work done by the , morning worship service, 9:30
vertising.
"The use of advertising Committee for Ed ucational dilions, or deletions as they see college in the Kingdom of God. a. ni., with special singins by a
Mrs. C. H. (Sis) Wise of Middleport and Waverly has been
Kentucky Christian Coliege group from the college, a
Robert Acomb Inc. ad- whichwouldhelplowercoststo Redesign and Improvement to fi t. It is only tht•ough this type
named a Kentucky. Colonel by Kentucky Governor Wendell H. dressed itself to a complaint the consumer, or would aid in determine the opinions of Ohio of involvement can we assist is located in Grayson, Ky.; , dinner following the service
Ford. Are there any other women about our area with this honor? filed with PUCO Sept. IS by the improving the environment or citizens as to the neeiJ for the Stale Department of about twenty-five miles east of .• with fel,lowship time, and the
Ohio Public Interest Action wouldpromote the health ~nQ revision of existing objectives Edu cation in determining Ashland on ~oute 60. The evening service at 7 p.m. with
MRS. GRACE PRATT~ PRESIDENTof the Ladies Auxiliary Group seeking to restrain 11 welfare of our people, or would or new goals for educalton.
accurate antj meaningful college is now in its 53rd year of Ute work ol K.C.C. selfj1forth.
A special offering will be
ol DrewWebster J;'ost 39, American Legion, reports tremendous major utilities from any ad- benefit industry and comFoliowmg the County objectives for o~r schools," service, having . changed its
name in 1945 from Christian receive'&lt;! in the evening for the
response to the essay contest held by the group !or fourth , fifth vertising which "encourages merce, could be prohibited," it Citizens Assemblies, 12 Bowen said.
Normal Insti tute. At the college. Clifford L. Smith, host
and slxtlt·graders of Meigs County. Some 150 youngsters across the consumer demand for and said.
·
present
time t(he college is in minister, extends an invitation
the county wrote essays on the subject, "I'm Glad ·rm An the use or consumption of
the final stages of buillling a to the public to attend flle
American" . Judging will be completed In the near future· and · electrical power." '
Acomb branded as "totally I
new
multi-purpose building of Sunday observance.
-The Acomb agency said far false" OPIAG's complaint that I
cash prizes awarded the winners. Mrs. Edith Fox, Americanism
Letters
of
opinion
are
welcomed
.
They
should
be
less
•
from aggravating a national advertising creates overcon- I
chairman of the post, is heading the contest.
than
300
words
long
(or
he
subje,·t
to
reductl.on
by
the
editor)
energy shortage and causing swription of power, resulting in I
Pet PoL Adv.
I
and
must
Ire
signed
with
the
signee's
address.
Names
may
be
•
the
advertising
rate
increases,
I
MIDDLEPORT COUNCIL will not meet in regularly
brownouts or blackouts.
withheld upon publicallon, however, on request. Lettet"tl
, .• and juet when the
ELLSWORTH ,WINS .
has
been
effective
in
"aiding
'11ie statement said outages I should be in good taste, a~dresslng issues, not personalit ies.
scheduled session on Monday, Oct. 23, Mayor John Zerkle has
State
wao finally starting
NAPA, Calif. (UPI )-Ken
disclosed. A special session will be held to make up the meeting. cuslomers in using electrical occur when 11Small , vocal I
to pay a Fair Share of the
Ellsworth·, 29, a professi00ai
. 'pressure groups' have im- I
energy most effectively."
C.oot of my Education!
The mayor' by the way' is endorsing the school tax levy in
I
from Harbor City, Calif., shot a
"This,
in
turn,
assists
the
peded
the
nedessary
expansion
the Meigs Local School District to be voted upon on Nov. 7.
sixot~nder-par 66 on the Silveraelectric utility companies in - programs planned by the I
"We have tO have education and we have to keep it at home,"
I
do Club's south course Wednesubtaining important economies Ohio electric utilities."
the mayor ~~&amp;id.
I
day
to win the $500 first prize in
in the generation and transBy the same Ioken, Mayor Zerkle is asking support of the
the Kaiser International promission of power and so aids
The OPIAG it said, should I
Middleport auto' license tax fee which will be voted upon at the
amateur
competition .
in the massive construction redirect its attention to a "pasNov. 7 election in Middleport only. The $5 tax would provide programs which are carried itive approach."
He was followed by tour
Boos
to
the
Mole
and
Hoople
money for street repair in Middleport and has been earmarked forward to provide abundant
regulars Dewitt Weaver and
"For example, they could
Babe Hiskey, who both shot 67
for that only. There are some 2200 cars in Middleport and a $5 facilities for tomorrow 's help convince federal state and
October
16,
1972
on the same course.
payment on each would be made if the measure is approved by need," the statement said.
private sources to initiate a Dear Mr. Editor:
.
l.eadini the half of the field
voters on Nov. 7. Mayor Zerkle stresses that the income from·the
The Acomb agency said ad- crash research program in
ba
We Eastern fans sorta ve a pet-peeve with "The Mole" playing 6n the longer north Stop the Switch
Vertl·sm·g by utt"lities can create coal gasification," tt. was
tax will be used for street repair only.
· 11
d Mr R 1
course were former Masters to Unfair Taxes
an "understanding" by con- suggested.
especl8 Y, an
· oop e.
"The electric utilities face
How does it come Eastern is usually always your underdog in champion Charles Coody, and
MRS. VISTA FRANK IS observing her 95th birthday an- sumers of the need for prompt
one-time National PGA king
nlversary"today. Mrs. Frank makes her home with her son and licensing of atomic power plant enormous problems In the all yo~r predictions ?
This doesn't really bother the morale of our great team, Dave Marr. Both shot 68, lwo
Ohio council tor lduullon
· daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frank, Pomeroy Route 3. construction, ''viise Interprets- years ahead. Advertising
Mrt, Jtln DJI, Pr11., Cltv. Mts., 0 ,
shots
higher
than
Ellsworth.
tion
of
new
plant
emission
should
be
available
as
a
hecausetheyarefartoobroadminded,asamatterolfact,
it
stirs
· Best wishes!
standards," and the "urgent flexible tool for the solution of them on to make your prediction wrong again.
these problems."
Eastern has a very good team this year. When we played
MEIG!i COUNTY RESIDENTS are asked to get behind a need" for increasing rates.
"The necessary rate inNamed in the OPIAG com- Southern, .they certainly had all the breaks, Including the
bazaar being staged by the Meigs County Humane Society on
Saturday, Nov. 4, ar the Grace Episcopal Parish House in creaSes will not have been plaint were Cincinnati Gas &amp; referees,ortheywouldneverhavebeatenus!Ml .
caused by the use of ad- Electric Co., Cleveland ElecThis past Saturday rtightour teain proved just how good tliey
Pomeroy.
co ., are when they didn't have to contend with biased referees, who
Stray dogs and cats can be handled through the society if vertising," the advertising," trlc · Illuminating
the
statement
said
.
"Adeoiumbus
&amp;
Southern
Electric
called a fair and square game at Cadiz .
funds can be secured 1o carry out the group's program including
vertising can be counted upon Co.,DaylonPower&amp;UghtCo.,
When fans arrived in town the townspeople there said why
the construction of an animal shelter.
Residents ·having any handmade items or "collectibles" as a means of effecting irn- DownlownService, Inc., Huron did you ever bring a team as small as yours to our town ? Don't
portant operating economies . Service Co;, Monongahela you know we are state champions?
which they wish to contribute to the sale are asked to take them
and keeping rates as low as Power Co., Ohio Edison Co.,
I guess 'the team showed them. Their team admitted to
to the.sale location from 7 to 9 p. m. on Friday, the night before
•
O~£~er
Co., ~io }'a~ - y e r s that ~ · · bad 1~ hesl defense that the~ )Wve ' ,
.the bazaar. -;&amp;t'\fill •
. jl a,
will
jnue possible.
't! 'If•· •· t . , ,t co"""lll\\antS:
E
.
·
·~
~
""'
'
·
din g'" .,jG
'" ·' •'-uentra
""'" "I· 'H igh
' "· '
":"' ~ :
, · . .. , "!!!JJP·:!:'
I 'l ' ·. o1 .
_ agamst,
um'!"s
.
aU the j._";/ • • t10ld. ""· • .
· IJPIAtl w~re to be up~eld bY,.c, EdiBOn c;o.
~~
.Qh!t:f"y the way,Mble;lfyou haven'theardyet, the score was
'
.
Cadiz 13-Eastern 6. Not 30-0!
TOMMY JUDGE, AN ELECTRICAL engineering student at
Eastern fims who feel we bave(he greatest team in the land.
. West Virginia University, was the weekend guest of his uncle. and
Writer's name withheld on request.
..,. aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Hutchison and accompanied his aunt,

t

·--t

.

e: .• •

•

l'

L •

· • utill•ty
Electnc
f.---t---1~~~-~·~=~~'!"=-"';~iii,.-""";"~, - 'Ad
. :8- 12'@-:l!V-@.
.
~
-~~~J3~J]il~--~:c~o~m~m~u~n1~i~ti~es~~~:~~~t·~~ ~ ~-.~v~ol~ve~~a·l~l~m?&lt;em~~he~r~s~oK:f~th~c~O~h~iol ~;-~~~~--ll~~~:~()~====~~]i------!\Ul
~et
K. C•.C. Day Planned
"

•

I·
'•t

.

· .A county citizens' assembly schools in Ohio during the
Thus, the County Citizen~ 1a1ive slalement is an accurate
on schools ~ part of Ohio's Bicentennial era to cll!hax in Assemblies provi~e ....an oprefiecliQn of 1heir wishes and
Search for Consensus - will 1976:
.
portunity for all residents oi hopes . for ellucation in the
convene at 8 p.m. Wednesday,
The county mee lings follow the.counly to voice their views s1a1e."
Oct. 25, in Meigs High School. local . citizen
seminars .as to wlll' th£&gt;•· nr no' •hi ~ •rn.
County Supt. of Schools throughout the state last May.
Robert Bowen ·said the Recommendation s and
assembly will provide Meigs opinions obtained from citizens
Countians a convenient way to at the local seminars have been
participate in fixing goals for directed to a tentative set of
.
.
. .
elementary and secondary goals for education in Ohio:

1

!

_

County Assembly on SchOOls to Convene Oct~ 25

"WHAT'S YOUR HANG-UP'"

The Salisbury PTA endorSed ·
Present- 1o discuss the need
the five mill levy for the MeigS . for the levy and to 311!1wer
Local Schooi District .at a questions regarding It were
l)leetin~ Tuesday night atlhe
George Hargraves, SU!K!rfn·school.

,
1

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I
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I
L

•

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PINat tend me a copy
. of your booklet
"Ail Action Program
to Hflp Correct

. City .. .• ~ •

Brown, smooth leather:

--·· - ------ -'--- - -- .C.:....--

'I!:::J..:::J@l}S @()::30@

'

Waffle wedge heel and
sole .
Slf2 · lOB

..Zip _ . _ :.:=,.:~. ---·

•j

I

•

- ·- - - . ~- ... --- ~
I

tagr

WAYOUT

th• Netlonal
Energy Criais"' .

'

,.

St,.et ·

/

~

J'

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

· 700 W. Main • PomeroY

- ..

.,

.

armnry

..

"THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"
271 North Second
M. .port, Oltkl

heritage

1 10 t Dilly 8 day 1·9

•

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�'
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a- The O.Uy Seltlnel, Middleporl-Poflleroy, 0 ., Ol'!. 19, 1972

.
'
'
SAIGON (UPI).:..u.s. and rounding Saigon- Wednesday
SouthVIetll8llle!le jet bombers · and early U!&lt;/ay · ,lci)led II$
' blaated Coniinunisl . positions Communist troops and
•ound Saigon and fll!hting wrecked 59 bunkers.
flandnearthe CliPitaltoday as
Troops IDiereept Red Team
top allled leaders. lield urgent
In earlier action, governconferences on the war sltua- . men! trOQps intercepted and
tkln.
battered a
Communist
· Presidential adviser Henry demolitions team Wednesday
A. Kissinger, who arrived near Hue and' the U.S. com1
Wednesday from his. latest mand said Bli2s dumped nearly
round of secret talks wilh 1,000 tons of bombs on

fighter-bomber raids over
· North Vietnam, wilh .only 200
strikes reported . .
Air Force planes destroyed
two highway bridges outside
Quang Khe, 60 miles north of
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
separating the two Vietnams,
spokesmen said. Heavy strikes
also were carried out near lhe
soulhernmost port of Dong Hoi,
38milesabovetheDMZ.Raids

namese President Nguyen Van
'lbleu at Independence Palace.
U.S. ArmyCbiefofStaffGen.
Q-eightm W. Abrams and U.S.
Ambe••edor Ellsworth Bunker
also were present . Allied
spokesmen said the Independence Palace talks concerned
the batuefield situation and the
Paris talks but would comment
no further.
FlgbtiDg lteported
Mllitary spokesmen said
fighting was reported early
today three miles southeast of
Pllu Cuong; a province capital
13 miles north of Saigon. They
said eight Communist soldiers
were killed and reported no
· government casulllfies.
Field reports said Viet Cong
units during the night inffitrated the hamlet of Thanh Hoa, 10
miles northeast of Saigon, but
details on flghtipg were not yet
available,
The U.S. Command said A4
Skyhawk and A'¥/ Dragonfly jet
pilots destroyed 21 "enemy
emplacements" and caused a
number of secondary explosions in strikes 15 miles
nortbweat ol the capital.
ASouth Vietnameae military
communique said government
alr strikes in Military Region

supply storage areas near the
country. The
command city "caused · numerous
reported Successful drl'ves seCondary explosions and· 17
againsl Communist forces in fires," the Air Force said.
two other areas near Hue, in MlnlbU. Strikes Mine
the Central lllgi\lands and
In South Vietnam's Mekong
around Saigon.
Delta, a three-wheeled LamA U.S. Command commu- · brett·a minibus Wednesday
nique said monsoon rains struck a mine on a rural road
Wednesday again limited and 13 civilians were ki11P&lt;l •nd

'I

Boys Register

For Scoutmg'

• in Briefs

(Continued from page 1)
.Correction, the economy," says a McGovern speechwriter. "In
that sense, peace could help us. It turns attention to the fundamental differences between the two men."

BELFAST - THE BRITISH ARMY said today it has
evidence hinting at collusion between the Pr~visional wir\g of the
Irlah Republican Army (IRA) and the Protestant Ulster Defense
Asaoclation (UDA), two militant organizations believed to have
been at odda during three years of Northern Ireland strife.
An army spokesman said the evidence Included a letter
seized from one of the IRA men in custody at Long Kesh internment camp and a picture of a group of UDA men, one
carrying what appeared to be an IRA weapon.

.,

~-

!icer said fighting continued and he was a member of Drew
Wednesday in three hamlets 13 Webster .Post 39, American
to 30 miles from Saigon. He
said they were the last of 18 Le gion ...
8 urvtvm g
hamlets occupied by North
are
three
Vietnamese troops Oct. 5 in the '
·
'
Saigon region and that "the Bradbury School
Communists now hold nothing" Sh
. G t
in the capital area.
ares m ran

-··Up·tight. over- big bills
?·
.

an$wer
125 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·2171

. '.

.• ,I. IIIIIIIIIII'O IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItttl.

10

FIREI\1EN CALLED

. a $4,848 grant from the Ohio
Arts Council to the Ohio
University School or Theatr&lt;! to
help support a pilot program in
creative movement and drama ·
for
elementary
school
students.
The school of theatre wiU
undertake separate programs
in each of two schools located
al Bradbury in Meigs County
and at Zaleski in Vinton
County. Alvin S. Kaufman,
director, expects to determine
the imporl&lt;!nce of drama and
dance in the, learning process
of the elemenl&lt;!ry school child.
At the Bradbury School, the
program will involve approximately 138 fifth and sixth
graders under the directio_n .of
Mrs. Joan Wickstrom and Mrs.
Stephanie Miller.

The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called to the Blue Sulphur
area on Route 554 in Cheshire
. Township at 11 a. m. Wednesday to flush the area due to
leak in a tanker vehicle. The
lead had allowed gasoline to
accumulate on the ground near
a building in the area where the
coal conveyor belt is being
constructed.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Carl Birch.
. .
f1eld, Galhpohs Ferry; Mr~.
John Carpenter, New Haven ,
The Rev. Charles Thompson, '
:f'olnt J'le~sant; Mrs,._ .t1~9 ,
'Holley, Pmnt Pleasant; Mrs.
Dallas Edwards, Glenwood;
Mrs.
Yvonne
Wright,
SUPPER SET
Cheshire: Mabel Spurlock,
A soup supper and carnival Rodney, 0.; Robert Cantor,
will· be held at the Racine Jackson, 0. ; Durward Smith,
Elementary School beginning Point Pleasant, and Mrs.
at 5 p.m. Saturday . .
Orville Likens, Henderson.

WALLACE VOTE SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
faction of · the Ohio American'
Independent Party has
declared a write-in ticket for
the Nov. 7 presidential-election
designed to represent Alabama
Gov. George C. Wallace.
Richard B. Kay, Cleveland
attorney and leader of the
faction, filed the declaration of
candidacy with Secretary of
&amp;tate Ted Brown Wednesday.
Ohioans will be able to write in
the names of Edward A.
Wallace, of Miamisburg, and
Robert B. Mess, of Careyville,
'FeQn.&gt;.for• President and vice
PresfJe'nt.;·accortling to ·Kay.
'
.

grandchildren, ·several ·nieces
and neph.ews, and his .
housekeeper for 14years, Betty
Lovell. Mr . Bailey was £
· .,
·
f armer. ·
Funeral services will be held
at 2. p'.· m.· su'nda' y'at the White
Funeral !lome in Coolville with
burial to be in the Reedsville
·
Cemetery. Fnends
may call at
the funeral home at anytime
after 7 p. m. Fnday.

\

·
. wei ht tod•~ uR
~&amp;'~ ~~'acK . ~ONADEX ~~
~d~~v ~~~~~~ '~gi ~~~~:~P ~~~d .
Eat tess . weigh less . co ntol7,1
no danoero.us drugs an 0 w
not moko. yov nervous. No
"'"""~"' exerciSe . cr~nge
YOOUNrAo"'E'x c"o' sii~~~Jo fo,F,~o
M
,
e
~:~ !::l'J'J~ 1 ~"~o=~- ~.~~' ra'i' ~'
your money w.lll .be refdunobed
with no questtons aske
'i·
Swisher &amp; Lohse orv~s ·mE.
~t~CI:r:;,~~~~ 'M~~~ '"8r~~~~
Filled.
-Adv.

'·

CLQSE,' OUT
'

.,

Due to the unavailability of
glass, the grand opening of the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn located
at 450 Pike St., Kanauga, will
be delayed once again.
Sam Grissom · of Commonwealth ·Management Inc.,
St. Paul, Minn., announced
Tuesday the 100 unit- irrn was
scheduled for opening on
Saturday, Oct. 28, barring any
unforeseen delays.
Grissom learned Wednesday
that the glass for the structure
is not available at this time. It
Is nol 1\nown when ,the project

CORN POPPER

\

.

.

Save As Much As 5 or 6 sq. yd.

REGULAR '9.99

BROMO
SELTZER

NOW ...

9 oz.

-

..;;.'f~

sq.

yd.

REG.

.'

Terms!

Short Rolls of-Carpet
Good Choice of Colots

, Nylons-Acrilans-Kodel

KI"tchen Carpe t Qn Sale

Foam Ba.ck Nvlon Carpet

Rate

ULTRA-BRITE

Financing

TOOTHPASTE

square

Four Colors ........................... yacd

M_EDIUM SIZE
REG. 69'

3• 99

INGELS FURNITURE .
992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

2 for

49e
NO. ·881

LKINSON

PAMPERS
REG.
.. . '· 15's·
..•99!'
,, .

REG.

1.09

2 oz.

1

49~

ss~

REG.

REG.

2.19

1

60's

99

Stop the 'Switch ,,,,
to Unfair Taxes

USTERINE

...

;;

MOUTH WASH

~:

VOTE NO on 2
Ortio Council for lduo1tion
Mn. J11n Dye, Pres., Cftv. Htt,~ 0 .

REG.
7f!

REG.
1
2.49

32

· 25's

HIGH SEAS
AFTER SHAVE
LOTION ·

oz.

BOffiE

REG. 11.79

99~

.

572
VICKS
VAPORUB

.'

FRIDAY THRU SUNDAY, OCT. 20~21~22

t

.

1503 IAS1ERN AVENUE
GAWPOLIS, OHIO

\

30Z.

~ ..

ULTRA

EDGE

BAN

SHAVE
CREAM
1.25

1

EFFERDENT
TABLETS

REG. 11.69

REG. 11.29

4 oz.

4Ws

gge

20's......... 96 ~

6·9.~

NEW

RUBBER TIPPED

40's ..... ~ ....~ 1
t

REG.

BEN-GAY
LOTION

76

•

· 79~

10's

44~

REG. sge 12's ............. 73e
REG. sl 19

'

REG. 1.69

5 oz.

SUPER ANNAHIST
TABLETS

Dig in~o 2 Super Shefs$ at a great low price. Eyery Sup?r Shef gives
you a perfecily grilled !4 pound of l~an beef, tangy melted cheese,
plus all the good fixings like mayonnaise, pickles. catsup, .lettuce,
tomato and onion served on a delicious toasted bun. That's a lot of
special eating at a very special price.

--~==·~aJ~~----------~~~~-~.

.

)

-----t7

1

REG. 11.35

· ALKA·SELTZER

..

CONDITIONER

·CONTAC ·
CAPSULES

60's

77~

2.00

~~

I

45's

'165

REG.

DEODORANT

. $1.29

, ' RmoN FID BALsAM &amp; PROTEIN .
SHAMPOO

~

49~--

oz.

.,.5
16

REG. 15.69

j'
· REG.

REG. 12.10

.POLAROID COLOR PACK
TYPE 108 LAND FILM

IRON
REG.' 12.59

LISTERINE
LOZENGES
-'--·· ... _
18's

500 COUNT
REG. IJ.29

1

PURE PETROLEUM JELLY

WITH

~}19

RE~.

AQUAMARINE
LOTION .

REG.

FLINTSTONE$
VITAMINS
PLAIN

DENTURE CLEANSER
TABLETS

79'

Vaseline

59~

POLl DENT

-.

REVLON

DAYTIME

TUBE

_REG.
7f!

Stainless Blades

DEObdRANl

killed Wednesday when his

I

MEDICATED SHAMPOO

HOUR AFTER
HOUR

MIDDLEPORT .

JUMBO
PACK

TEGRIN

8 oz.

'

·EILLER
PAPER

Bank

12' wide to 30' long

PLANE CltASH FATAL
GNADENHUTTEN, Ohio
(UP!) - A Michigan man was

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

66~

80l

Easy

REG. 1.69

'1 .... .., - -

'

PEPTO-BISMOL

. 6 oz.

'119

BUr YOU PAY DillY

-

'2''

'·

REG. 1169

ll'l!&gt; • •• ptu• Hither
ISroPI!rty T•xu?

lip,.;,. • '410.

"

PROPA P.H.

REG. 12.29

BROMO
t•LTZ••

You mean the Salee
T•K could 10 up to

LATIX

I-·

. IT'S NO TRICK TO .MAKE YOUR MONEY GO FURTHER

1

Pd . Pol. Adv .

PRISIDINT

ONLY

ROLLS
ON
SALE!

built by the late Bob Rees will
be ojlened.
Sidney W. Copeland of
Commonwealth Management
has been selected as innk~eper. The Holiday Inn's full
'and parttime sl&lt;lff has been
employed.

c.

1

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. JIIC. '1.15 ....

011 EIIIJ

.

UMBRELLA

'

1

'

.

'

25

LIMITED
SUPPLY

MEN'S-··SEJ,;f OPEfiiiNG

lngels ·Buys A Carpet Closeout!

for tNt- touch of
~Mw .. -oanc:e.

'1.50

-

~

- 10 dlttlndlvtl
And A t.tluiOift Whiltl

~VI

'689

REG.
1 95
10 FOR

alive

$62!

I•

DOMINION '··

Holiday Inn·Opening
Will Be Delayed

single-engine plane crashed in
a wooded area live miles south
of here in Tuscarawas County.
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
Armand G. Moore, 43, of
Corunna, Mich., was following
a flight pian from Morgantown,
w.Va.,to Flint Mich. His plane
struck a tree, broke a wing and
crashed to the ground.
Coto"

releasing the Pentagon Papers
in 1969.
He told the students he has
found university audiences on
the whole apatlietic about
major issues. He recently
visited Kent State University,
where in May 1970, four
students were shot to deaby by
National Guard troops, and he
found it "macabre and silent. "
He also made several pitches
for the election olSen. George
McGovern. "People who are
doing less than they can to
dethrone Nixon and elect
George McGovern are con-.
tribuling to the downfall of the
country," be said.

State Rep.

~~~;!~~'i!~~t~n~!~~~

Ellsberg Hero In Youth Years Was Rosa Parks

Services

••

A high.,-ailking ·saigon of-- overseas with the u. s. Army

COLUMBUS -

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Parks because she took a risk.
Daniel Ellsbe•g was asked by a
"To be silent in the face of
college crowd Wednesday evil is to consent to that evil
night who his hero was when he and even to contribute to Its
was attending school in the corruption," Ellsberg said. He
mid-1950's.
faces a possible 115 years in
"Rosa Parks, he replied.
prison for copying and
Rosa Parks was the black
woman who re[used to
relinquish her b~ seat to ~ ·
white man, and. m so domg c;.
inspired the non-violent civil
rights campaign of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., Ellsberg said.
Boys were registered for
Ellsberg, who released the scouting at the annual Scout
"Pentagon Papers" on Viet- Night observance
held
nam, told 4,500 students at Ohio Tuesday night at lhe MidUniversity he admired Mrs. dleport Elementary School.
Milford Hyseil explained the
scouting program advising
Masonic Orders
how a boy becomes a scout
through the help of parents and
To Meet Sunday
den mothers. Mrs. Marion
UI-the llilfOV!nce area 811'· Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM, Francis distributed "Cub
Scouting and Your Boy"
will hold a special meeting pamphlets and Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday at 2 p. m. at the Francis
handled . the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple to registrations. 11 was reported
observe the annual Religious that three den mothers are
' Oh1o
.
Affirmation Day and lhe
needed and anyone interested
1
(Continued from page &gt;
Royal Arch observance of St.
·
in serving as den mother 1s
P,nabled the Morning Star John's Day.
asked to telephone 992-5884.
church to undertake an exThe program will feature a
terior renovation of the speaker and activities by
PARTYPLANNED
building. New paint has been members of Bethel 62, InLETAR';r FALLS - A
applied as well as the windows ternational Order of Job's Halloween party will bil held at
have been reset and storm Daughters and tlie Meigs the Lel&lt;!rt Falls Community
'windows added.
Cbap~r. Order ofDeMolay. All Building Tuesday, Oct! 31,
During the program there Masons, members of Job's from 7 to 9 p. m.. Tht:, party
will be speeial music by both Daughters, Order of DeMolay, takes the place of the annual
groups and individuals. The Order · J){ Eastern Star and trick or treat night and is only
public Is invited \0 attend the families are invited. Refresh- for thf, children of( the w ,t,art
homecoming . .. ·
•~ •• " nlents '~'' lfbe ·~~~..... ':
Community. Children are lo
...
come masked. Games and
prizes will be offered.

News

REEDSVILLE - William daughters, Mrs . . Richard
(Bill) Bailey, 74, Reedsville, I !Mh) Myers, Reedsville ;
died Thursday morning · at Mrs, Billy (Betty) Damson ;
· camden-Clark Memorial Ravenna; Mrs. Faye Cowdery,
ijospi.(al in Parkersburg . Middleport; three sons, Ansil,
'. a bne
'' r 1'II ness.
Vt'enn'a , w·. va·'•. Oll' ver' E'.
roII owmg
··
He was bor n in Meigs Reedsville, and J'immy Lee,
County, the son of the late · Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs .
Frank and Melissa Spawn ,John
(Cora)
Coleman,
Bailey. Also preceding him in Springfield; Mrs. R. C. (Etta)
death were his wife, Rita Crump, Canyon, Tex., and
Wilson Bailey, three children, .
two brothers, and two sisters.
Mr. Bailey was a veteran of

six wounded, spokesmen ·said.
The mll!hap oocurred outside
Cai Lay, 46 miles southwe~t of
SaigOn.
.
The U.S. Command in its
weekly casualty report said
today two Americans were
killed and ·four wounded in
action last week. It brought
overall U.S. casualties for the
war to 45,884 killfll and 303,461
wounded, the command said.

~agaiDliL_amrnuniti!ln~~

312 hours with South Viet-

· 9 ~The
Daily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 19: 1972
'
..

Mrs. Ann Mays, Piqua: 20

Jet Bombers.
Hit
.

.

BOB·PINS

ALL CLEAR

REG. 29'

·liEG. 98'

,~

12's

77e

,RED LINE HEATING PAD
.1YEAR GUARANTEE

·... OGILVIE
.

HOME PERMANENT
FOR
BEITER BODY

FOR
EXTRA BODY
AND SET .

only . $250
VAL 11/HII i

1 "·

only
4 111/I'()N

$275
11111111

uuz. .. ., lUI

IVORY

~WJID , 37~

REG. '
4.95

1

'
I

�'
I.
•
a- The O.Uy Seltlnel, Middleporl-Poflleroy, 0 ., Ol'!. 19, 1972

.
'
'
SAIGON (UPI).:..u.s. and rounding Saigon- Wednesday
SouthVIetll8llle!le jet bombers · and early U!&lt;/ay · ,lci)led II$
' blaated Coniinunisl . positions Communist troops and
•ound Saigon and fll!hting wrecked 59 bunkers.
flandnearthe CliPitaltoday as
Troops IDiereept Red Team
top allled leaders. lield urgent
In earlier action, governconferences on the war sltua- . men! trOQps intercepted and
tkln.
battered a
Communist
· Presidential adviser Henry demolitions team Wednesday
A. Kissinger, who arrived near Hue and' the U.S. com1
Wednesday from his. latest mand said Bli2s dumped nearly
round of secret talks wilh 1,000 tons of bombs on

fighter-bomber raids over
· North Vietnam, wilh .only 200
strikes reported . .
Air Force planes destroyed
two highway bridges outside
Quang Khe, 60 miles north of
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
separating the two Vietnams,
spokesmen said. Heavy strikes
also were carried out near lhe
soulhernmost port of Dong Hoi,
38milesabovetheDMZ.Raids

namese President Nguyen Van
'lbleu at Independence Palace.
U.S. ArmyCbiefofStaffGen.
Q-eightm W. Abrams and U.S.
Ambe••edor Ellsworth Bunker
also were present . Allied
spokesmen said the Independence Palace talks concerned
the batuefield situation and the
Paris talks but would comment
no further.
FlgbtiDg lteported
Mllitary spokesmen said
fighting was reported early
today three miles southeast of
Pllu Cuong; a province capital
13 miles north of Saigon. They
said eight Communist soldiers
were killed and reported no
· government casulllfies.
Field reports said Viet Cong
units during the night inffitrated the hamlet of Thanh Hoa, 10
miles northeast of Saigon, but
details on flghtipg were not yet
available,
The U.S. Command said A4
Skyhawk and A'¥/ Dragonfly jet
pilots destroyed 21 "enemy
emplacements" and caused a
number of secondary explosions in strikes 15 miles
nortbweat ol the capital.
ASouth Vietnameae military
communique said government
alr strikes in Military Region

supply storage areas near the
country. The
command city "caused · numerous
reported Successful drl'ves seCondary explosions and· 17
againsl Communist forces in fires," the Air Force said.
two other areas near Hue, in MlnlbU. Strikes Mine
the Central lllgi\lands and
In South Vietnam's Mekong
around Saigon.
Delta, a three-wheeled LamA U.S. Command commu- · brett·a minibus Wednesday
nique said monsoon rains struck a mine on a rural road
Wednesday again limited and 13 civilians were ki11P&lt;l •nd

'I

Boys Register

For Scoutmg'

• in Briefs

(Continued from page 1)
.Correction, the economy," says a McGovern speechwriter. "In
that sense, peace could help us. It turns attention to the fundamental differences between the two men."

BELFAST - THE BRITISH ARMY said today it has
evidence hinting at collusion between the Pr~visional wir\g of the
Irlah Republican Army (IRA) and the Protestant Ulster Defense
Asaoclation (UDA), two militant organizations believed to have
been at odda during three years of Northern Ireland strife.
An army spokesman said the evidence Included a letter
seized from one of the IRA men in custody at Long Kesh internment camp and a picture of a group of UDA men, one
carrying what appeared to be an IRA weapon.

.,

~-

!icer said fighting continued and he was a member of Drew
Wednesday in three hamlets 13 Webster .Post 39, American
to 30 miles from Saigon. He
said they were the last of 18 Le gion ...
8 urvtvm g
hamlets occupied by North
are
three
Vietnamese troops Oct. 5 in the '
·
'
Saigon region and that "the Bradbury School
Communists now hold nothing" Sh
. G t
in the capital area.
ares m ran

-··Up·tight. over- big bills
?·
.

an$wer
125 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·2171

. '.

.• ,I. IIIIIIIIIII'O IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItttl.

10

FIREI\1EN CALLED

. a $4,848 grant from the Ohio
Arts Council to the Ohio
University School or Theatr&lt;! to
help support a pilot program in
creative movement and drama ·
for
elementary
school
students.
The school of theatre wiU
undertake separate programs
in each of two schools located
al Bradbury in Meigs County
and at Zaleski in Vinton
County. Alvin S. Kaufman,
director, expects to determine
the imporl&lt;!nce of drama and
dance in the, learning process
of the elemenl&lt;!ry school child.
At the Bradbury School, the
program will involve approximately 138 fifth and sixth
graders under the directio_n .of
Mrs. Joan Wickstrom and Mrs.
Stephanie Miller.

The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called to the Blue Sulphur
area on Route 554 in Cheshire
. Township at 11 a. m. Wednesday to flush the area due to
leak in a tanker vehicle. The
lead had allowed gasoline to
accumulate on the ground near
a building in the area where the
coal conveyor belt is being
constructed.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Carl Birch.
. .
f1eld, Galhpohs Ferry; Mr~.
John Carpenter, New Haven ,
The Rev. Charles Thompson, '
:f'olnt J'le~sant; Mrs,._ .t1~9 ,
'Holley, Pmnt Pleasant; Mrs.
Dallas Edwards, Glenwood;
Mrs.
Yvonne
Wright,
SUPPER SET
Cheshire: Mabel Spurlock,
A soup supper and carnival Rodney, 0.; Robert Cantor,
will· be held at the Racine Jackson, 0. ; Durward Smith,
Elementary School beginning Point Pleasant, and Mrs.
at 5 p.m. Saturday . .
Orville Likens, Henderson.

WALLACE VOTE SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
faction of · the Ohio American'
Independent Party has
declared a write-in ticket for
the Nov. 7 presidential-election
designed to represent Alabama
Gov. George C. Wallace.
Richard B. Kay, Cleveland
attorney and leader of the
faction, filed the declaration of
candidacy with Secretary of
&amp;tate Ted Brown Wednesday.
Ohioans will be able to write in
the names of Edward A.
Wallace, of Miamisburg, and
Robert B. Mess, of Careyville,
'FeQn.&gt;.for• President and vice
PresfJe'nt.;·accortling to ·Kay.
'
.

grandchildren, ·several ·nieces
and neph.ews, and his .
housekeeper for 14years, Betty
Lovell. Mr . Bailey was £
· .,
·
f armer. ·
Funeral services will be held
at 2. p'.· m.· su'nda' y'at the White
Funeral !lome in Coolville with
burial to be in the Reedsville
·
Cemetery. Fnends
may call at
the funeral home at anytime
after 7 p. m. Fnday.

\

·
. wei ht tod•~ uR
~&amp;'~ ~~'acK . ~ONADEX ~~
~d~~v ~~~~~~ '~gi ~~~~:~P ~~~d .
Eat tess . weigh less . co ntol7,1
no danoero.us drugs an 0 w
not moko. yov nervous. No
"'"""~"' exerciSe . cr~nge
YOOUNrAo"'E'x c"o' sii~~~Jo fo,F,~o
M
,
e
~:~ !::l'J'J~ 1 ~"~o=~- ~.~~' ra'i' ~'
your money w.lll .be refdunobed
with no questtons aske
'i·
Swisher &amp; Lohse orv~s ·mE.
~t~CI:r:;,~~~~ 'M~~~ '"8r~~~~
Filled.
-Adv.

'·

CLQSE,' OUT
'

.,

Due to the unavailability of
glass, the grand opening of the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn located
at 450 Pike St., Kanauga, will
be delayed once again.
Sam Grissom · of Commonwealth ·Management Inc.,
St. Paul, Minn., announced
Tuesday the 100 unit- irrn was
scheduled for opening on
Saturday, Oct. 28, barring any
unforeseen delays.
Grissom learned Wednesday
that the glass for the structure
is not available at this time. It
Is nol 1\nown when ,the project

CORN POPPER

\

.

.

Save As Much As 5 or 6 sq. yd.

REGULAR '9.99

BROMO
SELTZER

NOW ...

9 oz.

-

..;;.'f~

sq.

yd.

REG.

.'

Terms!

Short Rolls of-Carpet
Good Choice of Colots

, Nylons-Acrilans-Kodel

KI"tchen Carpe t Qn Sale

Foam Ba.ck Nvlon Carpet

Rate

ULTRA-BRITE

Financing

TOOTHPASTE

square

Four Colors ........................... yacd

M_EDIUM SIZE
REG. 69'

3• 99

INGELS FURNITURE .
992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

2 for

49e
NO. ·881

LKINSON

PAMPERS
REG.
.. . '· 15's·
..•99!'
,, .

REG.

1.09

2 oz.

1

49~

ss~

REG.

REG.

2.19

1

60's

99

Stop the 'Switch ,,,,
to Unfair Taxes

USTERINE

...

;;

MOUTH WASH

~:

VOTE NO on 2
Ortio Council for lduo1tion
Mn. J11n Dye, Pres., Cftv. Htt,~ 0 .

REG.
7f!

REG.
1
2.49

32

· 25's

HIGH SEAS
AFTER SHAVE
LOTION ·

oz.

BOffiE

REG. 11.79

99~

.

572
VICKS
VAPORUB

.'

FRIDAY THRU SUNDAY, OCT. 20~21~22

t

.

1503 IAS1ERN AVENUE
GAWPOLIS, OHIO

\

30Z.

~ ..

ULTRA

EDGE

BAN

SHAVE
CREAM
1.25

1

EFFERDENT
TABLETS

REG. 11.69

REG. 11.29

4 oz.

4Ws

gge

20's......... 96 ~

6·9.~

NEW

RUBBER TIPPED

40's ..... ~ ....~ 1
t

REG.

BEN-GAY
LOTION

76

•

· 79~

10's

44~

REG. sge 12's ............. 73e
REG. sl 19

'

REG. 1.69

5 oz.

SUPER ANNAHIST
TABLETS

Dig in~o 2 Super Shefs$ at a great low price. Eyery Sup?r Shef gives
you a perfecily grilled !4 pound of l~an beef, tangy melted cheese,
plus all the good fixings like mayonnaise, pickles. catsup, .lettuce,
tomato and onion served on a delicious toasted bun. That's a lot of
special eating at a very special price.

--~==·~aJ~~----------~~~~-~.

.

)

-----t7

1

REG. 11.35

· ALKA·SELTZER

..

CONDITIONER

·CONTAC ·
CAPSULES

60's

77~

2.00

~~

I

45's

'165

REG.

DEODORANT

. $1.29

, ' RmoN FID BALsAM &amp; PROTEIN .
SHAMPOO

~

49~--

oz.

.,.5
16

REG. 15.69

j'
· REG.

REG. 12.10

.POLAROID COLOR PACK
TYPE 108 LAND FILM

IRON
REG.' 12.59

LISTERINE
LOZENGES
-'--·· ... _
18's

500 COUNT
REG. IJ.29

1

PURE PETROLEUM JELLY

WITH

~}19

RE~.

AQUAMARINE
LOTION .

REG.

FLINTSTONE$
VITAMINS
PLAIN

DENTURE CLEANSER
TABLETS

79'

Vaseline

59~

POLl DENT

-.

REVLON

DAYTIME

TUBE

_REG.
7f!

Stainless Blades

DEObdRANl

killed Wednesday when his

I

MEDICATED SHAMPOO

HOUR AFTER
HOUR

MIDDLEPORT .

JUMBO
PACK

TEGRIN

8 oz.

'

·EILLER
PAPER

Bank

12' wide to 30' long

PLANE CltASH FATAL
GNADENHUTTEN, Ohio
(UP!) - A Michigan man was

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

66~

80l

Easy

REG. 1.69

'1 .... .., - -

'

PEPTO-BISMOL

. 6 oz.

'119

BUr YOU PAY DillY

-

'2''

'·

REG. 1169

ll'l!&gt; • •• ptu• Hither
ISroPI!rty T•xu?

lip,.;,. • '410.

"

PROPA P.H.

REG. 12.29

BROMO
t•LTZ••

You mean the Salee
T•K could 10 up to

LATIX

I-·

. IT'S NO TRICK TO .MAKE YOUR MONEY GO FURTHER

1

Pd . Pol. Adv .

PRISIDINT

ONLY

ROLLS
ON
SALE!

built by the late Bob Rees will
be ojlened.
Sidney W. Copeland of
Commonwealth Management
has been selected as innk~eper. The Holiday Inn's full
'and parttime sl&lt;lff has been
employed.

c.

1

'

. JIIC. '1.15 ....

011 EIIIJ

.

UMBRELLA

'

1

'

.

'

25

LIMITED
SUPPLY

MEN'S-··SEJ,;f OPEfiiiNG

lngels ·Buys A Carpet Closeout!

for tNt- touch of
~Mw .. -oanc:e.

'1.50

-

~

- 10 dlttlndlvtl
And A t.tluiOift Whiltl

~VI

'689

REG.
1 95
10 FOR

alive

$62!

I•

DOMINION '··

Holiday Inn·Opening
Will Be Delayed

single-engine plane crashed in
a wooded area live miles south
of here in Tuscarawas County.
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
Armand G. Moore, 43, of
Corunna, Mich., was following
a flight pian from Morgantown,
w.Va.,to Flint Mich. His plane
struck a tree, broke a wing and
crashed to the ground.
Coto"

releasing the Pentagon Papers
in 1969.
He told the students he has
found university audiences on
the whole apatlietic about
major issues. He recently
visited Kent State University,
where in May 1970, four
students were shot to deaby by
National Guard troops, and he
found it "macabre and silent. "
He also made several pitches
for the election olSen. George
McGovern. "People who are
doing less than they can to
dethrone Nixon and elect
George McGovern are con-.
tribuling to the downfall of the
country," be said.

State Rep.

~~~;!~~'i!~~t~n~!~~~

Ellsberg Hero In Youth Years Was Rosa Parks

Services

••

A high.,-ailking ·saigon of-- overseas with the u. s. Army

COLUMBUS -

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Parks because she took a risk.
Daniel Ellsbe•g was asked by a
"To be silent in the face of
college crowd Wednesday evil is to consent to that evil
night who his hero was when he and even to contribute to Its
was attending school in the corruption," Ellsberg said. He
mid-1950's.
faces a possible 115 years in
"Rosa Parks, he replied.
prison for copying and
Rosa Parks was the black
woman who re[used to
relinquish her b~ seat to ~ ·
white man, and. m so domg c;.
inspired the non-violent civil
rights campaign of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., Ellsberg said.
Boys were registered for
Ellsberg, who released the scouting at the annual Scout
"Pentagon Papers" on Viet- Night observance
held
nam, told 4,500 students at Ohio Tuesday night at lhe MidUniversity he admired Mrs. dleport Elementary School.
Milford Hyseil explained the
scouting program advising
Masonic Orders
how a boy becomes a scout
through the help of parents and
To Meet Sunday
den mothers. Mrs. Marion
UI-the llilfOV!nce area 811'· Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM, Francis distributed "Cub
Scouting and Your Boy"
will hold a special meeting pamphlets and Mr. and Mrs.
Sunday at 2 p. m. at the Francis
handled . the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple to registrations. 11 was reported
observe the annual Religious that three den mothers are
' Oh1o
.
Affirmation Day and lhe
needed and anyone interested
1
(Continued from page &gt;
Royal Arch observance of St.
·
in serving as den mother 1s
P,nabled the Morning Star John's Day.
asked to telephone 992-5884.
church to undertake an exThe program will feature a
terior renovation of the speaker and activities by
PARTYPLANNED
building. New paint has been members of Bethel 62, InLETAR';r FALLS - A
applied as well as the windows ternational Order of Job's Halloween party will bil held at
have been reset and storm Daughters and tlie Meigs the Lel&lt;!rt Falls Community
'windows added.
Cbap~r. Order ofDeMolay. All Building Tuesday, Oct! 31,
During the program there Masons, members of Job's from 7 to 9 p. m.. Tht:, party
will be speeial music by both Daughters, Order of DeMolay, takes the place of the annual
groups and individuals. The Order · J){ Eastern Star and trick or treat night and is only
public Is invited \0 attend the families are invited. Refresh- for thf, children of( the w ,t,art
homecoming . .. ·
•~ •• " nlents '~'' lfbe ·~~~..... ':
Community. Children are lo
...
come masked. Games and
prizes will be offered.

News

REEDSVILLE - William daughters, Mrs . . Richard
(Bill) Bailey, 74, Reedsville, I !Mh) Myers, Reedsville ;
died Thursday morning · at Mrs, Billy (Betty) Damson ;
· camden-Clark Memorial Ravenna; Mrs. Faye Cowdery,
ijospi.(al in Parkersburg . Middleport; three sons, Ansil,
'. a bne
'' r 1'II ness.
Vt'enn'a , w·. va·'•. Oll' ver' E'.
roII owmg
··
He was bor n in Meigs Reedsville, and J'immy Lee,
County, the son of the late · Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs .
Frank and Melissa Spawn ,John
(Cora)
Coleman,
Bailey. Also preceding him in Springfield; Mrs. R. C. (Etta)
death were his wife, Rita Crump, Canyon, Tex., and
Wilson Bailey, three children, .
two brothers, and two sisters.
Mr. Bailey was a veteran of

six wounded, spokesmen ·said.
The mll!hap oocurred outside
Cai Lay, 46 miles southwe~t of
SaigOn.
.
The U.S. Command in its
weekly casualty report said
today two Americans were
killed and ·four wounded in
action last week. It brought
overall U.S. casualties for the
war to 45,884 killfll and 303,461
wounded, the command said.

~agaiDliL_amrnuniti!ln~~

312 hours with South Viet-

· 9 ~The
Daily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 19: 1972
'
..

Mrs. Ann Mays, Piqua: 20

Jet Bombers.
Hit
.

.

BOB·PINS

ALL CLEAR

REG. 29'

·liEG. 98'

,~

12's

77e

,RED LINE HEATING PAD
.1YEAR GUARANTEE

·... OGILVIE
.

HOME PERMANENT
FOR
BEITER BODY

FOR
EXTRA BODY
AND SET .

only . $250
VAL 11/HII i

1 "·

only
4 111/I'()N

$275
11111111

uuz. .. ., lUI

IVORY

~WJID , 37~

REG. '
4.95

1

'
I

�'

'

r

.
'

•
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-PiliiJef'oy, 0., Ocl.l~, 1972

Sentinel

C~ass.ifieds

.

Mond•y Deadline ,9 a .m . ·
Can:Cel at ion .... C~rrectiOn!i

.

Will b.,: ac'cepted until 9 a.m . tor
·

Day of P&amp;.blicatlon

REGULATIONS .

.. I he~ Publisher re-serves the

right to edit or reject anv ads
detmed
objectional .
The
pUblisher will not, be responsible

for more than one incorrect

Insert ion .

·RATES
tFor wan' Ad Service
5 c~nts per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 15c
12 c•nts per word thr!e
(Onsecutive insertirrfs. ·
18 cents per ' ViOrd sl)( con ·
secutlve- Insertions.
.25 Per Cent Discount on paid
a~s anl;j ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.$0 for 50 word minimum.
Ea~h addltloria1 word 2e .
BLIND ADS
Additional 2sc· Charge, pe1
Advertisement,
·
OFFICE HOUl!\
&lt;8;30 a .m, t9 5,oo,_p.m, Daily .
1 : 30 a .m. to lz : OO Noor.
Saturday.
·

Ca,rd !!f Thanks

'

.@) QUAliTY
' '·
1970 CAMARO

ANTIQUE pump organ, all
;---~-----:
"_-:.:::':':'-!:t or lginal -~x.epl _ new- bellows,,
. Over 110 . year s old. Mnde by
· Taylor and Fraley Organ Co .•
Worcester. Mass . One bellows
ty pe : Phone 992-3904.
10-13-lt
PA-R-SO_N
_'-:-S- N_e_w-::Fcur nit ure ,
•
Kana uga, Ohio, 2 m i les above
• Silver Bridge is having an old
fashi oned trade ·in wee-k.
Window,
Trade in your old for new.
Don ' t miss O~.tr 6 piece living
Air Conditioners
room suite1 for only $199 .95.
Hot Water. Heaters
Don ' t fOrge t we del1ver Ire~ .
So shop this week and save.
Plumbing
10-17-41&lt;

S2095

seals. console, sharp blue fin ish, rad io. SHARP IS THE
WORD!
.
1968 CHEVELLE
S1795
Malibu Spt. Cpe., air conditioned , 307 engine, power
steering &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl lop &amp; blk:vlnyl Interior, radio, good W·W t .l res.

$1795
Local l ~ owner low .mileage car, beautiful cream finish
with black top, bucket Seats, with console. new white-wall
·tires! power steering ~nd automatl.c transmission . Radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME.
..

HEATING &amp;
OOOUNG

i:leclrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Ponteroy Motor Co.

992 -2448

Pomeroy , 0 .

OPEN IVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

NOTICE

WE WISH to thank our many
relalives friends and neigh - V. F.W . ·Shoaling Match · at
bors who helped us in many ,·Broad Run Rod &amp; Gun Club,
ways dvrin_g the. death of our ' New Haven; Starts at noon ,
daughter, Edith Quails DenL Sunday , Oclober i~.nd ;
Thanks for the flowers, food ·. sponsored by Post 9~16 ,
and cards.
Mason w va
The family of Mr. and Mrs.
' · :
10-19-31c
Carl Quails.
10-19-ltp GUN SHOOT, Sunday. October
22, 1 p. m. Factory choked
guns only. Second place
Found
shooters get free shot. in next
ON POMEROY Bend Bridge on
match . Assorted meats .
Wesl. VIrginia _side on the
Racine Gun Club.
walkway, a pair of men 's
10-19-3tc
prescription glasses with wire
frames; phone 991 -27~6 .
10-17-3tc YARD SALE , Fri~ay and
Saturday, on County Road 19,
first hous.e west of New 33 ;
Employment Wanted
Sla'rts at 10 a. m.
10-19-1tc
WIL L 00 babysilling for - - - - -- - - - preschool children in my 12x52 trailer in Syracuse-.after
home by the day. Reliable and Oc t. 22; Private lot, adulls
malure. Phone 949-5101.
only . Phone 985-3504 af.ler 5 p.
10-18-6tc m.
10-19-31c

UTILITY trailer - 4 x 8 bed, 16
inch tires; two single and one
HollywOod lype beds, nearly
, n ~w ; '19 inch Por table Phi lea
B&amp;W T.V. with sland ; 3U
Locust St., Middleport, Ohio.
. 10-1).31p
ONE slightly used Homelite
Chain Saw i Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto ; phone 991-2094.
10-17-5rc

Wanted To Buy
SOM!OON E has been Shooting
BB's al lhe flower pols at the
Greenwood Ce metery : and if
should get caught, they
· the(
wil be punished to lhe fullest
ex tent of the law.
Mrs . Oretha Sn ider &amp; family
10-17-3tc
BIG John's Auction , Clifton,
West .Virginia . Every Thurs.

day n1ghf, 7:30 p.m ., Buyers

and Dealers welcome .

·

10-17-31p
YARD &amp;good used clolhing sale
at Chester Methodis t Church,
October 20th and 21st from 10
a .m . to 6 p.m.

10-17-Jtc
MEIGS Counly Fish &amp; Game
,, Associati on, Thursday, Qc .
tober 19, 7:30p.m ., members
only, Syracuse Club Rooms.
10· 17-3tc

LEGAL NOTICE

.J

~ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

.fARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End l.. der work,
ponds; basement, lands.caping. We have i site
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contra(!.
Free Estima~fes. We also
·haul fill dirt, top soil. Qump
trucks and low-bov for hire.
See .Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525 .
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232.

EXPERIENCED
Ra~lato

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

WALNUTS

CAR PORT S~le, clothing; iars,
electric motors, electric
GOSPEL
Meellng,
October
16LEGAL NOTICE
sweeper, toys and household
25 ; 7:30p.m. each evenin~g ;
To: Oav:td Eugene McDonald
·odds and ends too numerous
and Ve1vie VlrOifllll McDonald,
Evangelist, Bob Kessinger,
Whose last known address was
lo mention ; Russ Little
Church of Christ, Miller Sl.,
2-477 , Fourth Str~et, Columbus,
residence, Easf of Rutland on
Mason, W. Va. Visitors
Ohio. You are hereby notified , welcome .
Route 124, Friday ahd
that you are Defendants in a
Saturday,
Oct . 20 and 11, 10
10-15-Sip
legal action entitled Pomeroy
a
.m
.
National
Sank,
Rutland
10-18-3tc
Branch,
Rutland,
Ohio , KOSCOT KOSMETICS IMINK
Plalnllff, vs. David Eugene
OIL BASEl . We have many
McDonald and Velvle VIrginia
new products since · the for- GARAGE Sale, Ocl. 2i and 22,
McDonald . This action has been
463 Grant St .. Middleport;
mation of this Company. Also
asslgntd Case No. l4,9•S. and Is
( dishes. furniture, clothing,
several
new
ones
this
month
pending In the Court of Common
antiques and misc. items.
plus monthly specials. All
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
10. 18-3tp
lhese In addition to the
The ob feet of the complaint Is
to forecton the mortgage
~riglnals . Ladles. we would
against the fcllowing described like very much for you lo try GUN Shoot, also rifle matches,
rtal estate :
open sites only, Forked Run
these cosmetics and to serve
Sltutte In the VIllage of you. Phone Helen Jane, 992Sportsman Club, Sunday, Oct.
Rutland, Meigs County, Ohio .
22, 12 noon.
5113.
Beolnnlng east .125.3 feet from
10-18-3tc
tht northwest corner of Lot No. --.....,~-----1~
0· J.tfc
26 In said Village of Rutland;
thence nqr!h 71 degrees 27' east AN YON E having any ln - PIANO Tuning, Lane Daniels,
October ·18th lhru December
20.1 feet " !hence south 15 formation of the poisoning of
15th, 159 Broadway, Mid degrees 33' eut 60 feet to the a dog at 113 Ebenezer Street,
dlport ; ph011e 991-2002.
centerline of cree·k, crossing the
polson 'f"as 11thrown Ofl porch,
creek bank at 45 feet; thence
~ease ~ohtaCl .Ernlsf " Rink "
10-16-Stc
south 37 degrees 42' west 25 teet
along the centerline of said
avidson. Viol,ators will be
creek; thence north 15 degrees prosecuted .
33' west 75 feet , crossing the
10·1S-6tp
For Sale
creek bank at 15 feet, to the
point of beginning. containing HAYMAN'S Auction - a good 1971 STEREO 8 track in walnut
console with speaker balance
0.031 acre, more or less. The
1
t
h F 'd
easterly line ot the ·above parcel
P ace· 0 go eac
n ay
and base. Take · over
evening, 7 p.m . at Laurel
5
f
If
ld
paymenfs of S6.50 per month
5
Is I. ee rom the eaoterly
e . Cliff on old Rl. 7, 1 m1'le wesf
of the house on the lot and the
or pay balance of 5101 .50. Call
westerly line is 2 teet from the of Rock Springs Fairground.
992-5Jll .
westerly s1de ot the house .
10· 10-tfc
10-19-5
Biting pert of the real estate
descrl,bed In deed recorded In
LEGAL NOTICE
V6l\fine 2.51, Page 361, Meigs
MARTHA
PRICE
aka LEFT IN lay-away Delux Zig
Zag sewing machine. This
County Deed Records.
MARTHA KIBBlE , JACOB
mac hine overcasts , darns,
The demand is to foreclose all p R 1c E ,
c 1N c 1 N'N AT us
interest owned .bY you and ·o ther K 18 B L E , c 1Ncr N NAT us
embr oi deries a.nd makes
parties, and fOr costs.
KIBBLE JR C KIBBLE C
butlon holes . Pay balance of
You ·are required
to answer
' , ''H. E.
·"'"" KIBBLE,
' II·
$41
.50 or pay 55.15 per month .
·
I
.
I
t
E.
KIBBLE
the Comp I~·n Wtlh n twen Y· living whose e)(act addresses
Call 992-5331.
·
eight days after the last are unknown and whose last
10-19-5
publication of this notice. which known address IS Route 1,
will be published once each Reedsville , Ohio and If
week for $IX consecutive weeks. deceased, the unknown he irs ,
The la5t publlcat1on will be devisees, legatees. executors ,
madton November 16, 1972, and administrators and -or assigns
the lwentv-elght days lor On · of Martha Price, aka Marlha
swer will commence on that Kibble , Jacob Price . Cln ·
dale .
Mr . and Mrs. Bige Lambert,
clnnatus Kibble, Cinc innatus
In case o,hr yolur 1ai 1ured to Kibble, Jr .. C. Kibble, C. e.
answeroro erwserespon as Kibble , H. e . Kibble , If whoarenolongerabletocare
required by the Ohio Rules of .decellsed, will take notice that
1
Civil Procodure. iudgment will J . B. O' Br ien and Roberta c. for lhemse ves, broke up
be rendered againSI you for the O'Brien filed their complaint housekeeping. He went to live
: relief deman,ded In the Com . September 26 , 1972 In the
d
hte
1'
plaint.
common Pleas Courl of Meigs with his aug r, A ICe Mae
Oated : October 10. 1972.
, ·countv, Ohio, case No . 15143, · Reeves and she went to her son
Evelyn Lucke, Cl~rk alleging that th&amp;y are the ·
·
Court of Common Pleas owners of 9.10 Interest In the in West Virginia .
.
of Meigs County, Ohio following described rear estate,
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Rhodes
(10) 12, 19, 26, llll 2, 9, 16, 6t
and praying that titre to s.11ld
roal e&gt;tate be quieted and for have purchased a home in New
partition of said real e&gt;tate .
Marshfield .
The persons above named will
M
d M w It B k
take notice thai they ha•e been
r . an
rs . a er ur e
·• Underpinning
NOTICE ON F-ILING
made parlles defetidanl to sa id of Racine sold their home and
· 1966 STARCRAFT Tenl Trailer,
I)F INVENTORY
complain! and they ore
h d
tr '1
d '11
sleeps 8; double dinette,
AND APPRAISEMENT .
required to answer within pure ase a at er an Wl
Complete mQblle hom•.
stove, sink and Ice box ; also
The Sfltt of Ohio, Meigs twenty .elght
days
after · locate in Athens, 0 .
service - plvs gigantic
Sears 12 fl . Johnboat ,
County. Probate Court
November 11 , 1972 or on or
M
W'ld
H ·
·
To the E~~:ecutrl)( of the before the 91 h ~ay 01 December.
rs.
1 a
amng IS 'display of mobile homes
aluminum
, S60 ; phone 367always available at ...
estate; to such of the following 1972
r
1'ng fr m a b ok
7530.
· reel estate being situated · ecover
o
r en
a. · ~ue residfnts of the State of
Said
kl
10-15-61&lt;
Ohio, viz : - the surviving in the Townsh ip ot Olive, county an e.
spouse, the next of kin, the of Me igs and State of Ohio :
Mr. and Mrs. Estep who
Toy Poodles, Phone 742·
beneflc:iarles under the will ;
T
d' 1
1 th
MOBILE HOMES. AKC
he
un
ov
ded
se.en
en
s
lt
'
ved
In lhe renta·l properly of
3872.
and to fhe attJrney or .11ttorneys· (7-1o) ot 'l'h e tollow lng :
10-19-61c
~~::,•~:~: 1i3~ad :~r~on~:f the · Beginn ing at the northwest Ro~rt Clark, have purchased 1 423-~~~~ Washjng~~n~~'t 0.
corner
of
said
160
acre
lot
No
.
a
home
in
Galll'pol
's
and
have
1
Mary L. Emmlsh , Dece~sed ... 1164 : thence east 40 rods ;
Llmeslone, Excelsior
Middleport, Ohio , Salisbury thence south 80 rods ; thence moved there.
---------~·., COAL,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Township, No. 20717 .
1 o d 1 th
th 80
You oro htrebv notified thai we! ' ro
ence- nor
The Lend-A-Hand look in $79
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Auto Sales
the Inventory and
Ap . rods to the place of beginning ,
4-12-lfc
20 acres .
at their yard sale Friqay and
Pralsoment 01 the estale 01 lho containing
1968 DODGE. l-Ion truck, stake
The undivided se-ven.tenths Sat d
iforementloned; deceased, late (7 .10) of twenty acres of land
ur ay.
body, good condition . Phone JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
or said Counly, w.. flied In this being tho east halt ol the nor Mrs. Ava Lutz and friends of
Sewing Machine. Will sell for
905-4190
or 98S-4153.
Court. Said, Inventory and thwest quarter of lot No. 1164, La
0
11 d
h
small balance of SJ6.21 or
1
10·10-6tc
Appraisement will be for and beginning 40 rods ~astof the
ncas er, . ca e on er
payments may be arranged.
hearing before this Court on the northwest corner of said tot No . nieces, Lola Clark and Frances
Phone 992-5331.
'69
CADILLAC,
sodan
DeVIlle,
21st day of October. 1972, at, 1164 ; thence east 4tt roCs ; Alk'
11
·
•
9-7,tfc
. 10:00 o'clock A.M.
thence south ' 80 rods ; thence
Ire recen y,
air conditioned, green with
Any person · desiring to tile west 40 rodS; theoce north ao
Clinton Gilkey visited his
brown vinyl top. All power.
eXCtptions thereto must file
d 10 h 1
·
0 t beg 1nntng
automatic, good condition. ·a TRACK STEREO, freight
them at least five davs
prior
to
ro
s
t
e
P
ace
.
great-uncle,
Howard
Landaker
,
The undivided three.tenths (3damaged, In beautiful walnut
Phone 992·2130.
lht dale sel lor ~earlng .
lOi of the following described of near Xenia Sunday. He is 00
·
console
. Will sell for $101.50or
10-19-31p
Ulven under my hand and t t b 1 1
t th
pay
Sl
.SO
per week. Phone 992·
seal of said court, thl$ lOth day thwest
rae ' corner
eg nn ng
• id lot
e nor
of sa
No -. years old and in poor health.
53ll
.
of October 1972.
11641 !hence east eo rodS;
Mrs. Rosalie Sayre is a 1971 VOLKSWAGEN. super
9-7-tfc
Manning D. Webster th enoe sou th 80 ro d" th ence surgl'cal pall' enl at Holzer.
beetle, cheap, 24,000 miles, A·
J u dge an d e)(.oIf lclo Clerk west 80 rods ; thence north 80
·
. 1 condition : phone 992-6222 POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
of Common Pleas Court, rods to th'e place of beg inning ;
Mrs. Frances How~ry is a
afler S p.m. 1111 7 p.m .
Probate Division
t 11
o
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone 992con a n no ' actes .
medical patient. at Veterans
10·17-51p
5443. ,
By
Ann
B.
Watson
, B. O'Brien , Plarntiff Memorial Hospital.
1
8· 15-lfc
Deputy Clerk 19i 28(10)J 5,
12, 19, 26 (11) 2, 6tc
(10) ll, 19, 2t
Miss Eunice Bradfield Is 1942 JEEP, full cab ; good
condition. 4 wheel drive ; APPLES, Fitzpatrick Qr.
phone 992-6383.
chards , Stale Route 689,
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . spending
Mason. some lime with May
I0-1J-61p
Phone Wllkes,ville . 6:ia~;J.ffc
Mr. and Mrs. F .
Whaley
.
__;,_
...
and granddaughter, Ann, spent
tMigs A_.lt No. 2111 Fr1ttr1111 Ordtr of Eagles.
For
Sale
Saturday night with Ava
Pomotoy, Ohio, will etltbrllt Its Thirty-Eighth AnGilkey and attended the BEAUTIFUL Maple stereonlv.rsary S.turdoy, Oc- 21 1nd Sunday, October 22,
radio combination. AM-FM
1972.
Whaley reunion al the
radio. 4 speed int~rmlxed
SATURDAY., OCTOIER2ls!
fairgrounds Sunday.
changer, 4 ·speaker sound
II:IOA.M. -Club Opens
system . Balance S19.34. Use
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Blizzard
7:00P.M.- F- Fish Fry
our bt.idgel terms. Call 992·
like~pdn.··
10':10-Till- O.nct (Lt.. Mu1lcl
and Vern Blizzard of Denver,
1085.
SUNDAY, OCTOIER 22nd
Colo. sperot Tuesday tj.rough
lQ·lHic
11 tOO A.M.- Clllll Opons
Thursday With Ava Gilkey.
•stereo-• . .
4:00P.M:- Frtt Chicken Dinner
WALNUT,
modern
style
Mr: Clarence Eastman is
5:01' f:OO- O.nh (Live Music I
radio, · AM· FM radio, -4
sick and in an Athens hospilal.
WELCOME
WELCOME '
WELCOME
speaker sound system. 4
The Olftc..s of Mtlgs Aerlt No. 2171 welcomes all
speed automatic changer.
, . .
Mr. Hurley Hutton is moving
lllgle Mtmben. F•mllle, 1nd Gunts io join them In
Balance
S69
.Sl.
Use
our
In the ~ouse veea ted li:ly the.
GIII•I•Hne·our l'ltlrty-llgblh Anniversary.
budget lerms . Call 992·7085. 'i
, l'
Bige !,amberts.
1
·
10·15-6tc , ~~.....,------:---,,.-,.......!

Service

.

ACRES · with some farm
Old upright 30machinery
i call 667·3333.
pianos, grand pianos, old
10-17-Sic
pump organs. Any condition .
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Paying SlO each. Write giving
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
directions. Witten Plano Co.. Cleaner complete with at and
Box 188, Sardis, Oh io 43946. tachments, cordwinder and
10-13-61p painl spray. Used but In like
FURNITURE
new condition . Pay $34.45
OLD Fur ni lur~. oak fables. cash or budget plan available. Stop In and See Our
organs, dishes , clocks, bras's
Floor Display.
Phone 992-5641.
beds, or complete households.
10-17-6!c
Wr ile M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. NEW 1972 Zig -Zag -' Sewing. READY -MIX
CONCRETE
6-18-tft
delivered right to your
Mach ine in original factory
project. Fast and easy. Free
carton. Zig -Zag to make
estimates.
Phone 992-3284.'
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
monograms and make fancy
Middleport, Ohio.
designs with just the twist of a
Bring Your Unhulled
6-30-lfc
single-dial. Left In lay-away
. and never been used. Will sell
------~TANKS CLEANED
for only $47 cash or credit SEPTIC
REASONABLE
rates. Ph. 446terms available. Phone 992·
4782.
Gallieolis.
John Russell.
5641.
Ovmer &amp; Operator.
I0-17-61c
5-11-lfc
-TO OUR
COME AND SEE . Have new
Auctioneer
·- shipment of flowers for fall c. BRADFORD,
MECHA-NICAL
Complete
Service
and Christmas ; will make
HULLER
Phone 949-3821
flower arrangements; have
Racine, Ohio
over 1.000 gift items, also
Crill
Bradford
jewelry, Avon bottles, some
Your Walnuts will be
antiques; open 9 a.m . to 6 - - , - - - - -- S-l-Ife
p.m.. except Friday, closed WILL cut or trim trees,
Hulled Free of Charge
Friday; phone 985.3537;
reasonable; also clean out
and We Will Pay You.
Smalley's Gill Shop, Chesler,
basements,
attics
and
Ohio .
·
ceflars ; phone 949-3221.
10. 10-12tc
10-4-lOic
Per Hundred
WINTER potatoes. S5 a 100 lb.; SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
Pounds
phone 147-2642.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
10-18-6tc
CLEANED,
REPAIRED.
After they
MILLER SANITATION,
are Hulled
1971 DODGE Charger, power
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
sleerlng ; gold with black
662-3035.
vinyl lop ; phone 949-5424.
10-4-tfc
10-18-61c
Slart Buying Oclober 2, 1972.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
POTATOES, 50 lbs. No. 1, $2.19,
located at Crossroads, Rt. l24.
B size, Sl.39, unclassified
Complete front end service,
$1.79,10 lbs. 8Sc; apples 52 per
tune up and brake service.
bushel and up, 9 varieties;
elecWheels balanced
cabbage 7c a lb. ; prices good
tronically.
All
work .
through Sunday. Midway
guaranteed .
Reasonable
Markel, W. Main St .,
rales. Phone 741-3232 or 992Pomeroy, phone 992-2582.
3213.
10-18-Jtc
7-27-lfc
P.O. Box 267
992-3891
Pomeroy, Ohio
HOUSEHOLD AUCTION.
Saturday, Del. 21st, 10 a.m . I For Sale
am leaving my home and will
sell the personal properly. 536
For Rent
West Main St. m Pomeroy ,
PANTS &amp; JEANS ·
3 AN 0 4 ROOM furnished and Ohio, next to the Shamrock
unfurn ished apartments . Motel at the end of PomeroyMONEY· SAVER
Maso'l Bridge. Kelvinator
Phone 992-5434.
4-12-tfc refrigerator , Tappan gas
range, dishes and cooking
Buy 2 Pairs- - - -- utensils,
utility
cabinet
and
3 ROOII'\ house and bath, fur 1 PAl R FREE
nished ; al so trailer; adults carts, electric roaster- on
stand, electric hot plate, gas
only ; phone 992-5591.
10-17-lfc heater~. bedroom suite All kinds, all sizes for men,
complete, 2 high headboard women, young men, bpys
TWO
turni s hed
rooms , single beds, bedding and and girls. Hurry to ...
available now, 413 Spring clothing, dresset;s, stands ,
rockers and other chairs,
Ave.; phone 992-3429.
'1'. _
POMEROY
10-8-12tp rugs, 3 large wardrobes
Icedar and oak!. hall trees,
6ill Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
library fable , book shelves, , _ _ _ _ _
P_ho_n_e_99_2_-2_1_81_ _,
pictures,
gossip
..
lamps
,·
Mobile Homes For
bench, portable sewing 2 YEAR old male German
Shepherd, genfle disposition;
CASH paid for all makes and machine, patio furniture,
phone
675-5267,
Point
models of mobll.e homes. Maylag wringer washer .
Pleasanl.
Phone area code 614-423-9531. r inse tubs, Whirlpool gas
10-15-6tp
4· 13-tfc dryer, fireplace sel, power
!awn mower, 22 ln ., RCA and
TWO bedroom mobile home, In Sparlan TV, black and white : CAMPER to fit 3.4 ton truck or
built -up ·pickup, all self·
g_ood
condition, $1,600. lool boxes and tools, a 1mall
Zuspan's Trailer Courl, shop full of tools and
~f~~ined; S700; phone 992·
Velma G. Zuspan , Mason, W. miscellaneous articles. This
10-15-61p
Va .
is clean merchandise. Mrs.
10-12-lStp Lee Roush, owner. Terms:
Cash. Not re&gt;ponslble for
accidents. Bradford Auction
Co ., C. C. Bradford, auc·
·, Air Conditioners
tioneer . Lunch served.
• Awnipgs
10-19-ltc

WANTE 0

NOTICE

$

Salt WOrks, Inc.

From the iargest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator fo the
Small~st Heater Core .
. Nathan Biggs .
Ra_dia_tor Spetialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph·. 992-2174
Pomeroy
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and ·windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representa1ive . For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3-2-lfc
_B_A_C_K_H_O_E_A
_N
_D
_ D_O.cZE::-R::--work.
:Septic tanks installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tfc

fAGLES.AN.NIVERSARY CELEBRATION

o.

•.

_

·Vit.falk;ID you

.WMP0/1390 _
()N IIOtJR DIAL •

Ill '•; ltNIN' TO

HNU OUl WHt lll
HIS GRANOPAPPY
WUI BORNEO

Kuhl's Bargain Center
Rt. 7 11at caution tight"

'·

TUPPERS PLAINS

1972 aearance Sale
-~ 15-20%
on 1972 models
9 New tractors
List Sale
718. 610.
1 Super C-8
3 Super C, 1
647. 550.
1 CuStom C· l
618. 525.
2 Custom C-1
547 •" 465.
1 Model C-10-A 8.17. 737 ,
1 Model c. 12 ·
932. 793,
2·Demonstrators
1 Super C.l
647. 518.
1 Model 430
1264. 1013.

GraVely Tractor Sales
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pllone 992-2975

Real Estate For Sale
4 ROOMS &amp; bath, 3 acres of
. land, lwo-lhirds ·basement, .
· buil~ing 20' x 40 ', plus born,
located In Long Bottom, city
water, partially remodeled;
phone 985-3539.
10·19-Jip

IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
Conches, New Mexico. $2.975.
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
for 119 mos. Vacation
Paradise. Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake ~onchos: Box
2001 DO, Alameda, Cellfornla
94501.
10-3-:IOtp

POLITICAl:
DEBATE

I WATQ-1 fOR
, __fjAI.E6' Bf..l'l
.IN QI.IANTITY .. ,

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

... MoM?s?

On Most Ameri(an Cors

----~~----..:®

'-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

.'
'K:J' SHORE WAS RIGHT
'BOUT ME, RALPH

Pomeroy llolile &amp; Auto

-

REALTY
.....;;608;;.;E~.~M11~.1nii!:;.-..-

No, •. CAtf-IONIJAu.S !

BUT-50.8!- EVERYTl-liNG
KEPT COMIN' OUT
DEE.•LISMUS-

AH IS A 1-JASHUNAIHAZARD. AH n-.IED.
BEIN'A SJ..Oe-BUT
AH FAILED--

NEEDLER-

Open aT II 5

Monday fhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

THE SHOP

WHO'S "TI-IAT CLUCK

-

AJlOUNQ iH' GORIU.A

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

..

, .,,,

ROAD
Quick a
DALE
LITTLE

Service
DICK
, V/IUGHN
992-6l46
. 992-1174
Let hick and Dale Help You
with · Your Meat Problems.

10·11
,

JUST LIKE I ALWAYS &amp;AID.... IF
yOU LIVE LON6
ENOUGH EVERY·
· THING 6OMES

® MOTHER ,THE DESIGN .

nlAT ~UNT" 6E551E
CAME UP WITH .....TH I:.
ONESTAN 1 JAN IE AND
15COFFEDAT ....

I

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Sf.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Real Estate For Sale

(cLELAN~

JAN£FON!JA
Al&lt;l&gt; JOliN
WAYN£

EXPERT

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, ditching service ; top soil, fill
dirt, limestone i B&amp;K · Excavating . Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr , Jr.
9-1-lfc

GRAVELY
TRAaORS

8 ROOM house ana bath, nice
large lot, natural gas. buill-In
cabinets In kitchen. Close fo
radio .station. in Bradbury.
Phone 992-2602.
·
10-13-12tp

$EE IF YOU .
CA~ G~f nlil BIG

Clean used furniture
Gu•ranteed opplionces
Bl KES Huffy' 20"'
Murray 10 speeds- distount
price$.
.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7: Closed Monda_ys

- -- -- -

I

HOW DO 'ltlU
KEEP '!OUR
FOOI;I PR~
IJOWN, WJM '?

CAMPUS CLA TIER

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. Real Estate For Sale
3-29-lfc HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
--,--- - - 985-3519.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
6-11-lfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

Sale

ft\U.LER

HL'I, IIIOIJIOU6. ..U .T .
K"'-"' 'iDME fOfT~ E t

DRIVE A LITTLE
"-SAYE A.I,DTI

Excelsior

Harri'sonvt'lle
SocJ' ely News

'

r====::---::::::::::7-:-;H;E':;: S SErTI N' IN
HOW'S 'lORE MAN
TH'HOUSE
SNUFFY TH ESE
RE ADiN 'TH'GOOD
DAVS, LOWEEZ'I &gt;
BOOK , PARSON

- Business··Services·

... ''HElL"

Hardtop coupe, loCal low mileage, 1-owner car, 307·
engine, J.speed transmission, power steering, bucket

1968 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE

.,

, . , -- - . -·---·

BARNEY

. .

F.or Sale

Notice

Ponttroy .
·_· Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

•

Get Actipnl SeTiti~el Classifieds Get Res.ults!

WA~f AD~

INI'ORMATION
· . , DEA!It.INE$ ·
.S P.M . .oa.v Bttort Publlc4t lol"f':

.

NICE ONES
ROOMS :.. m baths, •
fireplace in large living.
Nice dining with sl 'dlng
glass doors. Modern kllchen
has stove and refrigerator.
Gas forced air furna(e .

, ro 'PO'

''"

6

I&lt;NO\IJ Wf\'1
'IOU'REO

WTit&gt;J&lt;o

1W&gt;

Garag~.
1.27 ACRE
REAL COUNTRY LIVING
6 ROOMS - l'/2 baths, all
CLOSE IN - 7 rooms, bath,
elecjrlc. Beautiful kitchen
utility room , basement,
and dining area. Lorge
.natural gas forced air fur·
living, utility, 2 garages In
nace,
garage/
·o ther
the country. Carpet except
buildings. $8,000.00.
the ulillty room.
JUST RENOVATED
OVER 1,000 'll· ft . living
REAL BARGAINS
area hel'e. 1 story, 5 rooms,
5 ROOMS - . 2 bedrooms,
bath, nice kitchen, L.R. 26
nice bath, basement, front
fl.• 2 car carport. ALL NEW
porch. Large lot In back.
CARPETING
Asking $5,500.00.
THROUGHOUT.
I. NEW 5 ROOMS - Nice
(BEAUTIFUL!
JUST
klt~hen with stove and
$12,500.00.
refrigerator. Gas forced air .
LEVEL LOTIOOxllO
furnace. Lots of closets, and
11h story frame, 2 bedrooms,
cupboard space. CarMI and
(carpeted) bath, dining,
paneling . Only $16,000.00
porches, 9as F.F., utility,
with 2 lots.
storm doors and windows.
THIS YOU MUST SEE,
WORTH THE MONEY
JUST $0,500.00.
GAS FWRNACE 3
B~AUTIFUL HOME
bedrooms. bath, large living
1 story frame, 3 large B.R .•
with flr~place. Dining room,
large ciosets, beautiful bafh,
full basement and garage
Ieveii of out of floods 100xl20.
room for 3 cars. A ·
Kitchen has buill-In range,
magnificent home. $21,000.
double oven, ref . and
30 ACRES - 4 bedrooms,
freezer, loads of upper and
bath, gas well wlfh free gas
base cablnefs, D. R. carand oil. Some· bottom land.
peted, patio, electric heat. , Only 515,000.00.
MANY OTHER FEATURES
523.000.00.
WE HAVE SEVERAL NICE
HOUSES BUT FINANCING
WE HAVE NEW LISTINGS
I·S A PROBLEM. · SEE
EACH WEEK, CtLL US
FOR YOUR NEEDS IN
ABOUT IT THEN SEE US.
WE'LL HELP YOU FINO A
REAL ESTATE.
HOME OF YOUR OWN.
HENRY E. CLELAND
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
REALTOR
ASSOCIATE
992-.2259
PHONE 992·3325
If no answer 992-1568

LICK!~'?

U'l'll.E ORPHAN ANNIE
, .. IT CARRIES A

MESSA~E

IN THE

~
lO•It

VAPOR THAT EVEH NOW. ESCAPES

FROM IT ... A MESSAGE THAT

THE ~SP SAID 1: 0 ~INDY~ UP HERE,
PUNJAB~ I, WANTED 1' TELL '&lt;II THE

SUMMONS US fASTWARD~

DoCTORS ARE TAl KIN' A LOT OF
MUMBO JUMBO'" BUT WHAT ~ ADDS
UP T' IS '" THEY DON' T KHOW
,

WHAT '$ MAKiii' "iii\\Oy"SiCK!

~

'·

c1JW/Mm~·"'-1Jtt•:l!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY

•

ACROSS .
1. Rum cake
5. Dross
9. Quiet
before the
storm
10. Phil or
Julie
13. Border on
14. Emphasize
15. Under·
aland
16. Anterior
(pre!.)
17. Nigerian
city
lB. Trebled

ze. Pinch

%1. Approxl·
mate
%2. Exchange
• %3. Hamburg·
er'sshape
25. "Remem·
berthe

_

~1'- .....Jutnlllel.
Wier to
llllt. to

DOWN
1. Explosion
2. "Fra
Dlavolo"

..-------,
TI!IHK 'IOllt ~Ooi\ING
RMJIL! II/TUITION 15 Oft THI!

large 4 bedroom home, new bath upstairs:
very large living room, l.og burning fireplace,
large entr.ance hall, dining room, newly
remod!lled kitchen, 112 bath, with shower
downstairs, large corner lot, located . at 285
South Third Street. Middleport. Ohio.
Financing available. Prlcfd ( lght to sell fast.

I

George S. Hobstetter Jr.
Real Estate Broker
Phone985-4tllhfJer4 P.M.

form lour ordinary words.

composer

3. In hys.
terics ( 4
wds.)
4. Height
(abbr. I
5. Partlcl·
pant
6. Spiked
·the punch
7. Circle
segment
8. Jealous
(3 wds.)
UK!nd of
llle
12. Russian
plain
16. Drama

_..

19. "Piccolo

30. Journal ·
1st
Pyle
31. Admlnia·
tered
36•.Clay
molding
plate
37. Poet's

22. Seaman
23.~oupled

24. •vn the go
25. Bearing'
21. Heavy
29. Gotten·
burg
native

1:1\ 5TAYIN6

Z6. Painful
loiiJIIng
Z7. Bounc~
tune
ze. Resident
(aulf.l
If. Dolled
1%• .Moroccan
mountain
rsnge
u. Pallid
U. Before
Sl. Dodged
11. Sicilian
city
II. Do cryptograph;
work
P.-eye .
H. Parsd!Je
tl. U.N. veto

II I

SITMIF

SPECIAL CONTINUES

J-koo LITHI

PaU:I

AMwer~ If'~•' .~..,..l.t

IRUTAL

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

CAIOLI

olcl.to1-ILLt,TICAL
("a lip tickle")

IIXJRRIEP AND IUORRIED
ANP WORRIED ...

"1""?-----..:-.,..--+::Hr-T.._......._ _"..,-1
I

hlDtl. Each day the code letten ore dilerent.

WA~ED A

69&lt;JO W,ORR&lt;(!

One let\er simply stsnds for 1110ther. In thll maple A b
used for the three L'l, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
spostrophet, the length aild formstlon of the words m all

AUhe Cross Roads on Rt. 124

Plus Tax
,. Deposit

IDENCUF

re..en~.,.·,

A X T D L ·B A A X R
b t 0 N GF B L t o W

MILLER &amp; SONS

·16
oz. Bc!lls.
8 PAK

II

"even"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

RC. COLA

*" ..

-

..

~

,._,=

·

CRTPTOQUOTES

73'

-

NLHRT

QWLLI

GIIKB

PMJU

F L'H A K U , W M I , M R 1 U 1 U AN

.

XBK

I L T XBK

llfN . .:.FPJ,IIAWUK VXRTKWUN

Telloril''l Cit» I..- : SOME REMEDiEs ARE WORSE

~ACINE--:_ 10 room houso,
both. basement, garage, lWo

•

THAN THE DISEASI:S,-SYRUS
·• .'
(0 lrtfltlnc FtahiW Srndloato, I~.)

I.
l'

.

'

lots. Pllone 949•4313.

4-S.~fp

-------=

I

\

�'

'

r

.
'

•
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-PiliiJef'oy, 0., Ocl.l~, 1972

Sentinel

C~ass.ifieds

.

Mond•y Deadline ,9 a .m . ·
Can:Cel at ion .... C~rrectiOn!i

.

Will b.,: ac'cepted until 9 a.m . tor
·

Day of P&amp;.blicatlon

REGULATIONS .

.. I he~ Publisher re-serves the

right to edit or reject anv ads
detmed
objectional .
The
pUblisher will not, be responsible

for more than one incorrect

Insert ion .

·RATES
tFor wan' Ad Service
5 c~nts per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 15c
12 c•nts per word thr!e
(Onsecutive insertirrfs. ·
18 cents per ' ViOrd sl)( con ·
secutlve- Insertions.
.25 Per Cent Discount on paid
a~s anl;j ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.$0 for 50 word minimum.
Ea~h addltloria1 word 2e .
BLIND ADS
Additional 2sc· Charge, pe1
Advertisement,
·
OFFICE HOUl!\
&lt;8;30 a .m, t9 5,oo,_p.m, Daily .
1 : 30 a .m. to lz : OO Noor.
Saturday.
·

Ca,rd !!f Thanks

'

.@) QUAliTY
' '·
1970 CAMARO

ANTIQUE pump organ, all
;---~-----:
"_-:.:::':':'-!:t or lginal -~x.epl _ new- bellows,,
. Over 110 . year s old. Mnde by
· Taylor and Fraley Organ Co .•
Worcester. Mass . One bellows
ty pe : Phone 992-3904.
10-13-lt
PA-R-SO_N
_'-:-S- N_e_w-::Fcur nit ure ,
•
Kana uga, Ohio, 2 m i les above
• Silver Bridge is having an old
fashi oned trade ·in wee-k.
Window,
Trade in your old for new.
Don ' t miss O~.tr 6 piece living
Air Conditioners
room suite1 for only $199 .95.
Hot Water. Heaters
Don ' t fOrge t we del1ver Ire~ .
So shop this week and save.
Plumbing
10-17-41&lt;

S2095

seals. console, sharp blue fin ish, rad io. SHARP IS THE
WORD!
.
1968 CHEVELLE
S1795
Malibu Spt. Cpe., air conditioned , 307 engine, power
steering &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl lop &amp; blk:vlnyl Interior, radio, good W·W t .l res.

$1795
Local l ~ owner low .mileage car, beautiful cream finish
with black top, bucket Seats, with console. new white-wall
·tires! power steering ~nd automatl.c transmission . Radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME.
..

HEATING &amp;
OOOUNG

i:leclrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Ponteroy Motor Co.

992 -2448

Pomeroy , 0 .

OPEN IVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

NOTICE

WE WISH to thank our many
relalives friends and neigh - V. F.W . ·Shoaling Match · at
bors who helped us in many ,·Broad Run Rod &amp; Gun Club,
ways dvrin_g the. death of our ' New Haven; Starts at noon ,
daughter, Edith Quails DenL Sunday , Oclober i~.nd ;
Thanks for the flowers, food ·. sponsored by Post 9~16 ,
and cards.
Mason w va
The family of Mr. and Mrs.
' · :
10-19-31c
Carl Quails.
10-19-ltp GUN SHOOT, Sunday. October
22, 1 p. m. Factory choked
guns only. Second place
Found
shooters get free shot. in next
ON POMEROY Bend Bridge on
match . Assorted meats .
Wesl. VIrginia _side on the
Racine Gun Club.
walkway, a pair of men 's
10-19-3tc
prescription glasses with wire
frames; phone 991 -27~6 .
10-17-3tc YARD SALE , Fri~ay and
Saturday, on County Road 19,
first hous.e west of New 33 ;
Employment Wanted
Sla'rts at 10 a. m.
10-19-1tc
WIL L 00 babysilling for - - - - -- - - - preschool children in my 12x52 trailer in Syracuse-.after
home by the day. Reliable and Oc t. 22; Private lot, adulls
malure. Phone 949-5101.
only . Phone 985-3504 af.ler 5 p.
10-18-6tc m.
10-19-31c

UTILITY trailer - 4 x 8 bed, 16
inch tires; two single and one
HollywOod lype beds, nearly
, n ~w ; '19 inch Por table Phi lea
B&amp;W T.V. with sland ; 3U
Locust St., Middleport, Ohio.
. 10-1).31p
ONE slightly used Homelite
Chain Saw i Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto ; phone 991-2094.
10-17-5rc

Wanted To Buy
SOM!OON E has been Shooting
BB's al lhe flower pols at the
Greenwood Ce metery : and if
should get caught, they
· the(
wil be punished to lhe fullest
ex tent of the law.
Mrs . Oretha Sn ider &amp; family
10-17-3tc
BIG John's Auction , Clifton,
West .Virginia . Every Thurs.

day n1ghf, 7:30 p.m ., Buyers

and Dealers welcome .

·

10-17-31p
YARD &amp;good used clolhing sale
at Chester Methodis t Church,
October 20th and 21st from 10
a .m . to 6 p.m.

10-17-Jtc
MEIGS Counly Fish &amp; Game
,, Associati on, Thursday, Qc .
tober 19, 7:30p.m ., members
only, Syracuse Club Rooms.
10· 17-3tc

LEGAL NOTICE

.J

~ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

.fARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End l.. der work,
ponds; basement, lands.caping. We have i site
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contra(!.
Free Estima~fes. We also
·haul fill dirt, top soil. Qump
trucks and low-bov for hire.
See .Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525 .
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232.

EXPERIENCED
Ra~lato

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

WALNUTS

CAR PORT S~le, clothing; iars,
electric motors, electric
GOSPEL
Meellng,
October
16LEGAL NOTICE
sweeper, toys and household
25 ; 7:30p.m. each evenin~g ;
To: Oav:td Eugene McDonald
·odds and ends too numerous
and Ve1vie VlrOifllll McDonald,
Evangelist, Bob Kessinger,
Whose last known address was
lo mention ; Russ Little
Church of Christ, Miller Sl.,
2-477 , Fourth Str~et, Columbus,
residence, Easf of Rutland on
Mason, W. Va. Visitors
Ohio. You are hereby notified , welcome .
Route 124, Friday ahd
that you are Defendants in a
Saturday,
Oct . 20 and 11, 10
10-15-Sip
legal action entitled Pomeroy
a
.m
.
National
Sank,
Rutland
10-18-3tc
Branch,
Rutland,
Ohio , KOSCOT KOSMETICS IMINK
Plalnllff, vs. David Eugene
OIL BASEl . We have many
McDonald and Velvle VIrginia
new products since · the for- GARAGE Sale, Ocl. 2i and 22,
McDonald . This action has been
463 Grant St .. Middleport;
mation of this Company. Also
asslgntd Case No. l4,9•S. and Is
( dishes. furniture, clothing,
several
new
ones
this
month
pending In the Court of Common
antiques and misc. items.
plus monthly specials. All
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
10. 18-3tp
lhese In addition to the
The ob feet of the complaint Is
to forecton the mortgage
~riglnals . Ladles. we would
against the fcllowing described like very much for you lo try GUN Shoot, also rifle matches,
rtal estate :
open sites only, Forked Run
these cosmetics and to serve
Sltutte In the VIllage of you. Phone Helen Jane, 992Sportsman Club, Sunday, Oct.
Rutland, Meigs County, Ohio .
22, 12 noon.
5113.
Beolnnlng east .125.3 feet from
10-18-3tc
tht northwest corner of Lot No. --.....,~-----1~
0· J.tfc
26 In said Village of Rutland;
thence nqr!h 71 degrees 27' east AN YON E having any ln - PIANO Tuning, Lane Daniels,
October ·18th lhru December
20.1 feet " !hence south 15 formation of the poisoning of
15th, 159 Broadway, Mid degrees 33' eut 60 feet to the a dog at 113 Ebenezer Street,
dlport ; ph011e 991-2002.
centerline of cree·k, crossing the
polson 'f"as 11thrown Ofl porch,
creek bank at 45 feet; thence
~ease ~ohtaCl .Ernlsf " Rink "
10-16-Stc
south 37 degrees 42' west 25 teet
along the centerline of said
avidson. Viol,ators will be
creek; thence north 15 degrees prosecuted .
33' west 75 feet , crossing the
10·1S-6tp
For Sale
creek bank at 15 feet, to the
point of beginning. containing HAYMAN'S Auction - a good 1971 STEREO 8 track in walnut
console with speaker balance
0.031 acre, more or less. The
1
t
h F 'd
easterly line ot the ·above parcel
P ace· 0 go eac
n ay
and base. Take · over
evening, 7 p.m . at Laurel
5
f
If
ld
paymenfs of S6.50 per month
5
Is I. ee rom the eaoterly
e . Cliff on old Rl. 7, 1 m1'le wesf
of the house on the lot and the
or pay balance of 5101 .50. Call
westerly line is 2 teet from the of Rock Springs Fairground.
992-5Jll .
westerly s1de ot the house .
10· 10-tfc
10-19-5
Biting pert of the real estate
descrl,bed In deed recorded In
LEGAL NOTICE
V6l\fine 2.51, Page 361, Meigs
MARTHA
PRICE
aka LEFT IN lay-away Delux Zig
Zag sewing machine. This
County Deed Records.
MARTHA KIBBlE , JACOB
mac hine overcasts , darns,
The demand is to foreclose all p R 1c E ,
c 1N c 1 N'N AT us
interest owned .bY you and ·o ther K 18 B L E , c 1Ncr N NAT us
embr oi deries a.nd makes
parties, and fOr costs.
KIBBLE JR C KIBBLE C
butlon holes . Pay balance of
You ·are required
to answer
' , ''H. E.
·"'"" KIBBLE,
' II·
$41
.50 or pay 55.15 per month .
·
I
.
I
t
E.
KIBBLE
the Comp I~·n Wtlh n twen Y· living whose e)(act addresses
Call 992-5331.
·
eight days after the last are unknown and whose last
10-19-5
publication of this notice. which known address IS Route 1,
will be published once each Reedsville , Ohio and If
week for $IX consecutive weeks. deceased, the unknown he irs ,
The la5t publlcat1on will be devisees, legatees. executors ,
madton November 16, 1972, and administrators and -or assigns
the lwentv-elght days lor On · of Martha Price, aka Marlha
swer will commence on that Kibble , Jacob Price . Cln ·
dale .
Mr . and Mrs. Bige Lambert,
clnnatus Kibble, Cinc innatus
In case o,hr yolur 1ai 1ured to Kibble, Jr .. C. Kibble, C. e.
answeroro erwserespon as Kibble , H. e . Kibble , If whoarenolongerabletocare
required by the Ohio Rules of .decellsed, will take notice that
1
Civil Procodure. iudgment will J . B. O' Br ien and Roberta c. for lhemse ves, broke up
be rendered againSI you for the O'Brien filed their complaint housekeeping. He went to live
: relief deman,ded In the Com . September 26 , 1972 In the
d
hte
1'
plaint.
common Pleas Courl of Meigs with his aug r, A ICe Mae
Oated : October 10. 1972.
, ·countv, Ohio, case No . 15143, · Reeves and she went to her son
Evelyn Lucke, Cl~rk alleging that th&amp;y are the ·
·
Court of Common Pleas owners of 9.10 Interest In the in West Virginia .
.
of Meigs County, Ohio following described rear estate,
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Rhodes
(10) 12, 19, 26, llll 2, 9, 16, 6t
and praying that titre to s.11ld
roal e&gt;tate be quieted and for have purchased a home in New
partition of said real e&gt;tate .
Marshfield .
The persons above named will
M
d M w It B k
take notice thai they ha•e been
r . an
rs . a er ur e
·• Underpinning
NOTICE ON F-ILING
made parlles defetidanl to sa id of Racine sold their home and
· 1966 STARCRAFT Tenl Trailer,
I)F INVENTORY
complain! and they ore
h d
tr '1
d '11
sleeps 8; double dinette,
AND APPRAISEMENT .
required to answer within pure ase a at er an Wl
Complete mQblle hom•.
stove, sink and Ice box ; also
The Sfltt of Ohio, Meigs twenty .elght
days
after · locate in Athens, 0 .
service - plvs gigantic
Sears 12 fl . Johnboat ,
County. Probate Court
November 11 , 1972 or on or
M
W'ld
H ·
·
To the E~~:ecutrl)( of the before the 91 h ~ay 01 December.
rs.
1 a
amng IS 'display of mobile homes
aluminum
, S60 ; phone 367always available at ...
estate; to such of the following 1972
r
1'ng fr m a b ok
7530.
· reel estate being situated · ecover
o
r en
a. · ~ue residfnts of the State of
Said
kl
10-15-61&lt;
Ohio, viz : - the surviving in the Townsh ip ot Olive, county an e.
spouse, the next of kin, the of Me igs and State of Ohio :
Mr. and Mrs. Estep who
Toy Poodles, Phone 742·
beneflc:iarles under the will ;
T
d' 1
1 th
MOBILE HOMES. AKC
he
un
ov
ded
se.en
en
s
lt
'
ved
In lhe renta·l properly of
3872.
and to fhe attJrney or .11ttorneys· (7-1o) ot 'l'h e tollow lng :
10-19-61c
~~::,•~:~: 1i3~ad :~r~on~:f the · Beginn ing at the northwest Ro~rt Clark, have purchased 1 423-~~~~ Washjng~~n~~'t 0.
corner
of
said
160
acre
lot
No
.
a
home
in
Galll'pol
's
and
have
1
Mary L. Emmlsh , Dece~sed ... 1164 : thence east 40 rods ;
Llmeslone, Excelsior
Middleport, Ohio , Salisbury thence south 80 rods ; thence moved there.
---------~·., COAL,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Township, No. 20717 .
1 o d 1 th
th 80
You oro htrebv notified thai we! ' ro
ence- nor
The Lend-A-Hand look in $79
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Auto Sales
the Inventory and
Ap . rods to the place of beginning ,
4-12-lfc
20 acres .
at their yard sale Friqay and
Pralsoment 01 the estale 01 lho containing
1968 DODGE. l-Ion truck, stake
The undivided se-ven.tenths Sat d
iforementloned; deceased, late (7 .10) of twenty acres of land
ur ay.
body, good condition . Phone JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
or said Counly, w.. flied In this being tho east halt ol the nor Mrs. Ava Lutz and friends of
Sewing Machine. Will sell for
905-4190
or 98S-4153.
Court. Said, Inventory and thwest quarter of lot No. 1164, La
0
11 d
h
small balance of SJ6.21 or
1
10·10-6tc
Appraisement will be for and beginning 40 rods ~astof the
ncas er, . ca e on er
payments may be arranged.
hearing before this Court on the northwest corner of said tot No . nieces, Lola Clark and Frances
Phone 992-5331.
'69
CADILLAC,
sodan
DeVIlle,
21st day of October. 1972, at, 1164 ; thence east 4tt roCs ; Alk'
11
·
•
9-7,tfc
. 10:00 o'clock A.M.
thence south ' 80 rods ; thence
Ire recen y,
air conditioned, green with
Any person · desiring to tile west 40 rodS; theoce north ao
Clinton Gilkey visited his
brown vinyl top. All power.
eXCtptions thereto must file
d 10 h 1
·
0 t beg 1nntng
automatic, good condition. ·a TRACK STEREO, freight
them at least five davs
prior
to
ro
s
t
e
P
ace
.
great-uncle,
Howard
Landaker
,
The undivided three.tenths (3damaged, In beautiful walnut
Phone 992·2130.
lht dale sel lor ~earlng .
lOi of the following described of near Xenia Sunday. He is 00
·
console
. Will sell for $101.50or
10-19-31p
Ulven under my hand and t t b 1 1
t th
pay
Sl
.SO
per week. Phone 992·
seal of said court, thl$ lOth day thwest
rae ' corner
eg nn ng
• id lot
e nor
of sa
No -. years old and in poor health.
53ll
.
of October 1972.
11641 !hence east eo rodS;
Mrs. Rosalie Sayre is a 1971 VOLKSWAGEN. super
9-7-tfc
Manning D. Webster th enoe sou th 80 ro d" th ence surgl'cal pall' enl at Holzer.
beetle, cheap, 24,000 miles, A·
J u dge an d e)(.oIf lclo Clerk west 80 rods ; thence north 80
·
. 1 condition : phone 992-6222 POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
of Common Pleas Court, rods to th'e place of beg inning ;
Mrs. Frances How~ry is a
afler S p.m. 1111 7 p.m .
Probate Division
t 11
o
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone 992con a n no ' actes .
medical patient. at Veterans
10·17-51p
5443. ,
By
Ann
B.
Watson
, B. O'Brien , Plarntiff Memorial Hospital.
1
8· 15-lfc
Deputy Clerk 19i 28(10)J 5,
12, 19, 26 (11) 2, 6tc
(10) ll, 19, 2t
Miss Eunice Bradfield Is 1942 JEEP, full cab ; good
condition. 4 wheel drive ; APPLES, Fitzpatrick Qr.
phone 992-6383.
chards , Stale Route 689,
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . spending
Mason. some lime with May
I0-1J-61p
Phone Wllkes,ville . 6:ia~;J.ffc
Mr. and Mrs. F .
Whaley
.
__;,_
...
and granddaughter, Ann, spent
tMigs A_.lt No. 2111 Fr1ttr1111 Ordtr of Eagles.
For
Sale
Saturday night with Ava
Pomotoy, Ohio, will etltbrllt Its Thirty-Eighth AnGilkey and attended the BEAUTIFUL Maple stereonlv.rsary S.turdoy, Oc- 21 1nd Sunday, October 22,
radio combination. AM-FM
1972.
Whaley reunion al the
radio. 4 speed int~rmlxed
SATURDAY., OCTOIER2ls!
fairgrounds Sunday.
changer, 4 ·speaker sound
II:IOA.M. -Club Opens
system . Balance S19.34. Use
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Blizzard
7:00P.M.- F- Fish Fry
our bt.idgel terms. Call 992·
like~pdn.··
10':10-Till- O.nct (Lt.. Mu1lcl
and Vern Blizzard of Denver,
1085.
SUNDAY, OCTOIER 22nd
Colo. sperot Tuesday tj.rough
lQ·lHic
11 tOO A.M.- Clllll Opons
Thursday With Ava Gilkey.
•stereo-• . .
4:00P.M:- Frtt Chicken Dinner
WALNUT,
modern
style
Mr: Clarence Eastman is
5:01' f:OO- O.nh (Live Music I
radio, · AM· FM radio, -4
sick and in an Athens hospilal.
WELCOME
WELCOME '
WELCOME
speaker sound system. 4
The Olftc..s of Mtlgs Aerlt No. 2171 welcomes all
speed automatic changer.
, . .
Mr. Hurley Hutton is moving
lllgle Mtmben. F•mllle, 1nd Gunts io join them In
Balance
S69
.Sl.
Use
our
In the ~ouse veea ted li:ly the.
GIII•I•Hne·our l'ltlrty-llgblh Anniversary.
budget lerms . Call 992·7085. 'i
, l'
Bige !,amberts.
1
·
10·15-6tc , ~~.....,------:---,,.-,.......!

Service

.

ACRES · with some farm
Old upright 30machinery
i call 667·3333.
pianos, grand pianos, old
10-17-Sic
pump organs. Any condition .
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Paying SlO each. Write giving
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
directions. Witten Plano Co.. Cleaner complete with at and
Box 188, Sardis, Oh io 43946. tachments, cordwinder and
10-13-61p painl spray. Used but In like
FURNITURE
new condition . Pay $34.45
OLD Fur ni lur~. oak fables. cash or budget plan available. Stop In and See Our
organs, dishes , clocks, bras's
Floor Display.
Phone 992-5641.
beds, or complete households.
10-17-6!c
Wr ile M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. NEW 1972 Zig -Zag -' Sewing. READY -MIX
CONCRETE
6-18-tft
delivered right to your
Mach ine in original factory
project. Fast and easy. Free
carton. Zig -Zag to make
estimates.
Phone 992-3284.'
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
monograms and make fancy
Middleport, Ohio.
designs with just the twist of a
Bring Your Unhulled
6-30-lfc
single-dial. Left In lay-away
. and never been used. Will sell
------~TANKS CLEANED
for only $47 cash or credit SEPTIC
REASONABLE
rates. Ph. 446terms available. Phone 992·
4782.
Gallieolis.
John Russell.
5641.
Ovmer &amp; Operator.
I0-17-61c
5-11-lfc
-TO OUR
COME AND SEE . Have new
Auctioneer
·- shipment of flowers for fall c. BRADFORD,
MECHA-NICAL
Complete
Service
and Christmas ; will make
HULLER
Phone 949-3821
flower arrangements; have
Racine, Ohio
over 1.000 gift items, also
Crill
Bradford
jewelry, Avon bottles, some
Your Walnuts will be
antiques; open 9 a.m . to 6 - - , - - - - -- S-l-Ife
p.m.. except Friday, closed WILL cut or trim trees,
Hulled Free of Charge
Friday; phone 985.3537;
reasonable; also clean out
and We Will Pay You.
Smalley's Gill Shop, Chesler,
basements,
attics
and
Ohio .
·
ceflars ; phone 949-3221.
10. 10-12tc
10-4-lOic
Per Hundred
WINTER potatoes. S5 a 100 lb.; SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
Pounds
phone 147-2642.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
10-18-6tc
CLEANED,
REPAIRED.
After they
MILLER SANITATION,
are Hulled
1971 DODGE Charger, power
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
sleerlng ; gold with black
662-3035.
vinyl lop ; phone 949-5424.
10-4-tfc
10-18-61c
Slart Buying Oclober 2, 1972.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
POTATOES, 50 lbs. No. 1, $2.19,
located at Crossroads, Rt. l24.
B size, Sl.39, unclassified
Complete front end service,
$1.79,10 lbs. 8Sc; apples 52 per
tune up and brake service.
bushel and up, 9 varieties;
elecWheels balanced
cabbage 7c a lb. ; prices good
tronically.
All
work .
through Sunday. Midway
guaranteed .
Reasonable
Markel, W. Main St .,
rales. Phone 741-3232 or 992Pomeroy, phone 992-2582.
3213.
10-18-Jtc
7-27-lfc
P.O. Box 267
992-3891
Pomeroy, Ohio
HOUSEHOLD AUCTION.
Saturday, Del. 21st, 10 a.m . I For Sale
am leaving my home and will
sell the personal properly. 536
For Rent
West Main St. m Pomeroy ,
PANTS &amp; JEANS ·
3 AN 0 4 ROOM furnished and Ohio, next to the Shamrock
unfurn ished apartments . Motel at the end of PomeroyMONEY· SAVER
Maso'l Bridge. Kelvinator
Phone 992-5434.
4-12-tfc refrigerator , Tappan gas
range, dishes and cooking
Buy 2 Pairs- - - -- utensils,
utility
cabinet
and
3 ROOII'\ house and bath, fur 1 PAl R FREE
nished ; al so trailer; adults carts, electric roaster- on
stand, electric hot plate, gas
only ; phone 992-5591.
10-17-lfc heater~. bedroom suite All kinds, all sizes for men,
complete, 2 high headboard women, young men, bpys
TWO
turni s hed
rooms , single beds, bedding and and girls. Hurry to ...
available now, 413 Spring clothing, dresset;s, stands ,
rockers and other chairs,
Ave.; phone 992-3429.
'1'. _
POMEROY
10-8-12tp rugs, 3 large wardrobes
Icedar and oak!. hall trees,
6ill Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
library fable , book shelves, , _ _ _ _ _
P_ho_n_e_99_2_-2_1_81_ _,
pictures,
gossip
..
lamps
,·
Mobile Homes For
bench, portable sewing 2 YEAR old male German
Shepherd, genfle disposition;
CASH paid for all makes and machine, patio furniture,
phone
675-5267,
Point
models of mobll.e homes. Maylag wringer washer .
Pleasanl.
Phone area code 614-423-9531. r inse tubs, Whirlpool gas
10-15-6tp
4· 13-tfc dryer, fireplace sel, power
!awn mower, 22 ln ., RCA and
TWO bedroom mobile home, In Sparlan TV, black and white : CAMPER to fit 3.4 ton truck or
built -up ·pickup, all self·
g_ood
condition, $1,600. lool boxes and tools, a 1mall
Zuspan's Trailer Courl, shop full of tools and
~f~~ined; S700; phone 992·
Velma G. Zuspan , Mason, W. miscellaneous articles. This
10-15-61p
Va .
is clean merchandise. Mrs.
10-12-lStp Lee Roush, owner. Terms:
Cash. Not re&gt;ponslble for
accidents. Bradford Auction
Co ., C. C. Bradford, auc·
·, Air Conditioners
tioneer . Lunch served.
• Awnipgs
10-19-ltc

WANTE 0

NOTICE

$

Salt WOrks, Inc.

From the iargest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator fo the
Small~st Heater Core .
. Nathan Biggs .
Ra_dia_tor Spetialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph·. 992-2174
Pomeroy
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and ·windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representa1ive . For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3-2-lfc
_B_A_C_K_H_O_E_A
_N
_D
_ D_O.cZE::-R::--work.
:Septic tanks installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tfc

fAGLES.AN.NIVERSARY CELEBRATION

o.

•.

_

·Vit.falk;ID you

.WMP0/1390 _
()N IIOtJR DIAL •

Ill '•; ltNIN' TO

HNU OUl WHt lll
HIS GRANOPAPPY
WUI BORNEO

Kuhl's Bargain Center
Rt. 7 11at caution tight"

'·

TUPPERS PLAINS

1972 aearance Sale
-~ 15-20%
on 1972 models
9 New tractors
List Sale
718. 610.
1 Super C-8
3 Super C, 1
647. 550.
1 CuStom C· l
618. 525.
2 Custom C-1
547 •" 465.
1 Model C-10-A 8.17. 737 ,
1 Model c. 12 ·
932. 793,
2·Demonstrators
1 Super C.l
647. 518.
1 Model 430
1264. 1013.

GraVely Tractor Sales
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pllone 992-2975

Real Estate For Sale
4 ROOMS &amp; bath, 3 acres of
. land, lwo-lhirds ·basement, .
· buil~ing 20' x 40 ', plus born,
located In Long Bottom, city
water, partially remodeled;
phone 985-3539.
10·19-Jip

IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
Conches, New Mexico. $2.975.
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
for 119 mos. Vacation
Paradise. Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake ~onchos: Box
2001 DO, Alameda, Cellfornla
94501.
10-3-:IOtp

POLITICAl:
DEBATE

I WATQ-1 fOR
, __fjAI.E6' Bf..l'l
.IN QI.IANTITY .. ,

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

... MoM?s?

On Most Ameri(an Cors

----~~----..:®

'-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

.'
'K:J' SHORE WAS RIGHT
'BOUT ME, RALPH

Pomeroy llolile &amp; Auto

-

REALTY
.....;;608;;.;E~.~M11~.1nii!:;.-..-

No, •. CAtf-IONIJAu.S !

BUT-50.8!- EVERYTl-liNG
KEPT COMIN' OUT
DEE.•LISMUS-

AH IS A 1-JASHUNAIHAZARD. AH n-.IED.
BEIN'A SJ..Oe-BUT
AH FAILED--

NEEDLER-

Open aT II 5

Monday fhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

THE SHOP

WHO'S "TI-IAT CLUCK

-

AJlOUNQ iH' GORIU.A

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

..

, .,,,

ROAD
Quick a
DALE
LITTLE

Service
DICK
, V/IUGHN
992-6l46
. 992-1174
Let hick and Dale Help You
with · Your Meat Problems.

10·11
,

JUST LIKE I ALWAYS &amp;AID.... IF
yOU LIVE LON6
ENOUGH EVERY·
· THING 6OMES

® MOTHER ,THE DESIGN .

nlAT ~UNT" 6E551E
CAME UP WITH .....TH I:.
ONESTAN 1 JAN IE AND
15COFFEDAT ....

I

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Sf.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Real Estate For Sale

(cLELAN~

JAN£FON!JA
Al&lt;l&gt; JOliN
WAYN£

EXPERT

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, ditching service ; top soil, fill
dirt, limestone i B&amp;K · Excavating . Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr , Jr.
9-1-lfc

GRAVELY
TRAaORS

8 ROOM house ana bath, nice
large lot, natural gas. buill-In
cabinets In kitchen. Close fo
radio .station. in Bradbury.
Phone 992-2602.
·
10-13-12tp

$EE IF YOU .
CA~ G~f nlil BIG

Clean used furniture
Gu•ranteed opplionces
Bl KES Huffy' 20"'
Murray 10 speeds- distount
price$.
.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7: Closed Monda_ys

- -- -- -

I

HOW DO 'ltlU
KEEP '!OUR
FOOI;I PR~
IJOWN, WJM '?

CAMPUS CLA TIER

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. Real Estate For Sale
3-29-lfc HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
--,--- - - 985-3519.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
6-11-lfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

Sale

ft\U.LER

HL'I, IIIOIJIOU6. ..U .T .
K"'-"' 'iDME fOfT~ E t

DRIVE A LITTLE
"-SAYE A.I,DTI

Excelsior

Harri'sonvt'lle
SocJ' ely News

'

r====::---::::::::::7-:-;H;E':;: S SErTI N' IN
HOW'S 'lORE MAN
TH'HOUSE
SNUFFY TH ESE
RE ADiN 'TH'GOOD
DAVS, LOWEEZ'I &gt;
BOOK , PARSON

- Business··Services·

... ''HElL"

Hardtop coupe, loCal low mileage, 1-owner car, 307·
engine, J.speed transmission, power steering, bucket

1968 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE

.,

, . , -- - . -·---·

BARNEY

. .

F.or Sale

Notice

Ponttroy .
·_· Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

•

Get Actipnl SeTiti~el Classifieds Get Res.ults!

WA~f AD~

INI'ORMATION
· . , DEA!It.INE$ ·
.S P.M . .oa.v Bttort Publlc4t lol"f':

.

NICE ONES
ROOMS :.. m baths, •
fireplace in large living.
Nice dining with sl 'dlng
glass doors. Modern kllchen
has stove and refrigerator.
Gas forced air furna(e .

, ro 'PO'

''"

6

I&lt;NO\IJ Wf\'1
'IOU'REO

WTit&gt;J&lt;o

1W&gt;

Garag~.
1.27 ACRE
REAL COUNTRY LIVING
6 ROOMS - l'/2 baths, all
CLOSE IN - 7 rooms, bath,
elecjrlc. Beautiful kitchen
utility room , basement,
and dining area. Lorge
.natural gas forced air fur·
living, utility, 2 garages In
nace,
garage/
·o ther
the country. Carpet except
buildings. $8,000.00.
the ulillty room.
JUST RENOVATED
OVER 1,000 'll· ft . living
REAL BARGAINS
area hel'e. 1 story, 5 rooms,
5 ROOMS - . 2 bedrooms,
bath, nice kitchen, L.R. 26
nice bath, basement, front
fl.• 2 car carport. ALL NEW
porch. Large lot In back.
CARPETING
Asking $5,500.00.
THROUGHOUT.
I. NEW 5 ROOMS - Nice
(BEAUTIFUL!
JUST
klt~hen with stove and
$12,500.00.
refrigerator. Gas forced air .
LEVEL LOTIOOxllO
furnace. Lots of closets, and
11h story frame, 2 bedrooms,
cupboard space. CarMI and
(carpeted) bath, dining,
paneling . Only $16,000.00
porches, 9as F.F., utility,
with 2 lots.
storm doors and windows.
THIS YOU MUST SEE,
WORTH THE MONEY
JUST $0,500.00.
GAS FWRNACE 3
B~AUTIFUL HOME
bedrooms. bath, large living
1 story frame, 3 large B.R .•
with flr~place. Dining room,
large ciosets, beautiful bafh,
full basement and garage
Ieveii of out of floods 100xl20.
room for 3 cars. A ·
Kitchen has buill-In range,
magnificent home. $21,000.
double oven, ref . and
30 ACRES - 4 bedrooms,
freezer, loads of upper and
bath, gas well wlfh free gas
base cablnefs, D. R. carand oil. Some· bottom land.
peted, patio, electric heat. , Only 515,000.00.
MANY OTHER FEATURES
523.000.00.
WE HAVE SEVERAL NICE
HOUSES BUT FINANCING
WE HAVE NEW LISTINGS
I·S A PROBLEM. · SEE
EACH WEEK, CtLL US
FOR YOUR NEEDS IN
ABOUT IT THEN SEE US.
WE'LL HELP YOU FINO A
REAL ESTATE.
HOME OF YOUR OWN.
HENRY E. CLELAND
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
REALTOR
ASSOCIATE
992-.2259
PHONE 992·3325
If no answer 992-1568

LICK!~'?

U'l'll.E ORPHAN ANNIE
, .. IT CARRIES A

MESSA~E

IN THE

~
lO•It

VAPOR THAT EVEH NOW. ESCAPES

FROM IT ... A MESSAGE THAT

THE ~SP SAID 1: 0 ~INDY~ UP HERE,
PUNJAB~ I, WANTED 1' TELL '&lt;II THE

SUMMONS US fASTWARD~

DoCTORS ARE TAl KIN' A LOT OF
MUMBO JUMBO'" BUT WHAT ~ ADDS
UP T' IS '" THEY DON' T KHOW
,

WHAT '$ MAKiii' "iii\\Oy"SiCK!

~

'·

c1JW/Mm~·"'-1Jtt•:l!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY

•

ACROSS .
1. Rum cake
5. Dross
9. Quiet
before the
storm
10. Phil or
Julie
13. Border on
14. Emphasize
15. Under·
aland
16. Anterior
(pre!.)
17. Nigerian
city
lB. Trebled

ze. Pinch

%1. Approxl·
mate
%2. Exchange
• %3. Hamburg·
er'sshape
25. "Remem·
berthe

_

~1'- .....Jutnlllel.
Wier to
llllt. to

DOWN
1. Explosion
2. "Fra
Dlavolo"

..-------,
TI!IHK 'IOllt ~Ooi\ING
RMJIL! II/TUITION 15 Oft THI!

large 4 bedroom home, new bath upstairs:
very large living room, l.og burning fireplace,
large entr.ance hall, dining room, newly
remod!lled kitchen, 112 bath, with shower
downstairs, large corner lot, located . at 285
South Third Street. Middleport. Ohio.
Financing available. Prlcfd ( lght to sell fast.

I

George S. Hobstetter Jr.
Real Estate Broker
Phone985-4tllhfJer4 P.M.

form lour ordinary words.

composer

3. In hys.
terics ( 4
wds.)
4. Height
(abbr. I
5. Partlcl·
pant
6. Spiked
·the punch
7. Circle
segment
8. Jealous
(3 wds.)
UK!nd of
llle
12. Russian
plain
16. Drama

_..

19. "Piccolo

30. Journal ·
1st
Pyle
31. Admlnia·
tered
36•.Clay
molding
plate
37. Poet's

22. Seaman
23.~oupled

24. •vn the go
25. Bearing'
21. Heavy
29. Gotten·
burg
native

1:1\ 5TAYIN6

Z6. Painful
loiiJIIng
Z7. Bounc~
tune
ze. Resident
(aulf.l
If. Dolled
1%• .Moroccan
mountain
rsnge
u. Pallid
U. Before
Sl. Dodged
11. Sicilian
city
II. Do cryptograph;
work
P.-eye .
H. Parsd!Je
tl. U.N. veto

II I

SITMIF

SPECIAL CONTINUES

J-koo LITHI

PaU:I

AMwer~ If'~•' .~..,..l.t

IRUTAL

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

CAIOLI

olcl.to1-ILLt,TICAL
("a lip tickle")

IIXJRRIEP AND IUORRIED
ANP WORRIED ...

"1""?-----..:-.,..--+::Hr-T.._......._ _"..,-1
I

hlDtl. Each day the code letten ore dilerent.

WA~ED A

69&lt;JO W,ORR&lt;(!

One let\er simply stsnds for 1110ther. In thll maple A b
used for the three L'l, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
spostrophet, the length aild formstlon of the words m all

AUhe Cross Roads on Rt. 124

Plus Tax
,. Deposit

IDENCUF

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A X T D L ·B A A X R
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MILLER &amp; SONS

·16
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Telloril''l Cit» I..- : SOME REMEDiEs ARE WORSE

~ACINE--:_ 10 room houso,
both. basement, garage, lWo

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THAN THE DISEASI:S,-SYRUS
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••- rhe Daily Sentinei;Middl~-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. J~, ~~·12

.Now You Know

Lists 97 on

-

Honor ·Roll

I

OPEN .FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGH·TS .UNTIL ' P.M.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY
FALL DRESSES
CAPE COD CURTAINS

· . The Meigs Junior High
School honor roll for fhe flrsf
si&lt; weeks of fhls term hils ~1
seventh grade and 56 eighth

.grade students ... They are:

Seventh Grade - Jeff Arnold, Rita Bailey, Scott
· Bearhs, Cathy Blaeflnar; Rory
Cole, Jeff Couch, Tamml
DeBord, Marcia Dillard, Terry
File. Chuck Follrod,. Becky
Fry , Vicky German, Carl
Gheen, Trina Gibbs, Gene
Halley, Tom Harper, Kelly
Hawk. Rodney Hill, Judy'

Women's Pants Sale
Our entire stock of Misses •
J(Jnior? · Extra size pants is
reduced for this sale. Choose
double · knit Polyester • Wool
blends - Double knit Acrylics in
solids and Jacquards. •

Holliday , L~ura Hoover,
Randr. · Houdashelt, Penny

Hysel , Ray Janey, ,Sue Kennedy, Paula !&lt;foes, Trenf
Knittle, Kimberly Kraufter,
Marty Krawsczyn , Valerie
LeVfiS, Cindy McKinney, Mark
Mitcll, Cindy Norman, Pamela
Powers, KenneiH 'Roush, Ricky
Smifh, Melody S,nouffer, Brent
Stanley, Nancy Stanley, Steve

Mike Wayland.
Eighth Grade - Mary
Blaettnar, .Tammy Blake, Dale
Browning, Kel/ee Burdette,
Carl carmichael, Terry Clark,
• Kelly Coleman, ·Elaine Cors/ 1
Mark Davis, Mary Durst,
Paula Eichinger, Theresa
Ellis, Vanessa Folmer, Becky
Fultz, Sandy Garnes, Gregory
Glaze, Jennifer Grate, Kim·
berly Grueser, Crystal Hall,
James Hawley, Robert
Johnston, Vicki Johnston,
Cheryl Kennedy, . James
Kennedy, Paul Klein, Lonnie

· Lawson,

Sheila

LaWson,

Denise Marshall, Marshall
McCoy, Loraine McElhaney,
Duane Mclaughlin; Scoff
Napper, Richard O.Ven, Faith
Perrin, Bobby Powers,. Debbie
Quivey, Trudy Roach. Suzy
Samuels, Tim Sclles, Kim
Sebo, Tim Smifh, Debbie
Shelton, Allen Stewart,
William Snyder, Debbie
Taylor, Becky Thomas, Tim
Thomas, Diana Thornton, Tom
Tucker; Sherr/ Vinlnj!; .June
. Wamsley, Raymond Waugh,
Duane Weber, Beverly Wilco&lt;,
Beverly Will and Kelly Wilson.

Womens

Just Arrived

Palazzo Pants

24.95 Boys
Coats and
22.95 Boys
Coats and
19.95 Boys
Coats ·and
16.95 Boys
Coats and
14.95 Boys
Coats and
12.95 Boys
Coats and
9.95 .Boys
Coats and

Jackets

20.00

Jackets

18.00

Jackets

16.00

Jackets

13.00

Jackets

12.00

Jackets

10.50

Perfect for school and everyday 'wear. Corduroys . Brushed
Denims · Chambrays .· Brushed Sateens . Polyester and
Colfon blends. Big selection a~ styles and colors. Sizes 8 to 18.
Regulars and Slims.
.
Slacks
Slacks
Slacks
Slacks

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

4.28
4.88
5.48
6.88

MEN'S BANLON

DRESS. SOCKS
Fils all sizes 10 to 13. 100
· percent nylon In a big
selection of colors. Our

pair

Famous Wembley lies that
look so nice · wear S9 well and
are complefely wash.ble. Slop

1 quart, 1112 quart and 2 quart sizes.
Blue Cornflower design. · With covers and
detachable handle and table saver. Reg. $23.85Save $3.97.
'
·
·

SPECIAL 19.88

Many, many · styles.
Sizes 36 to 54. Stop .In try on what you like and
save right now.

_______

--~--3-,t-~~riisas

1 quart, 1'12 quart and 2 Quart sizes.
Floral Banquet design. With covers and
detachable handle. Reg. $26.85- Save $3.97.

29.95
28.95
26.95
24.95
22.95
19.95
18.95
16.95

Coats and
Coats and
Coats and
Coats and
'Coats and
Coats and
Coats and
Coats and

Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets

Sale
Sale
Sale
sa'Je
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

24.0.0
23.00
21.50

2o.oo

18.50
16.00
14.00
13.00

SPECIAL 22.88
~ - ,'~-&lt;,

'

Yisit Elberfelds ~arehouSI! on Mechanic Street
tn Pomeroy for f1ne selecttons of:
·Youngstown Kitchen Sinks
42-54-66 Inch widths
• Metal Cabinets
China-Base· Wall Cabinets in the latest colors
and In various sizes.
•Linoleum and Congoleum.
· Man~ patterns and 9 and 12 ft. widths.
•Nylon Carpets
· · ·
12'x15'- 12'x16' · 12'x17'- 12'xl8'.
Also Carpel, Braided Rugs and Ax minster
Carpets . . 1.

FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS
100 per cent woven Cotton flannel. Neck sizes 14112 to
17. Sanforized shrunk - two button through pockets.
Made with long tails · lull cut · colorfu·l plaid patterns.
, Friday!. Saturday Sale .
'

FOR THIS SALE
Mens $4.95 E~tra heavy flilnnel Work Shirts- Sizes
l4V2 to 17.
.•
.

2 for 9.00

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Thieu discloses refusal
.

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SAIGON (UPI) - President Nixon rejected a North Vietnamese request for a Vietnam War c.ease-fire before the U. S.
presidential elections, legislative officials said today .
The chairman of the lower house Ethnic Minority Com. mittee, Danh No, said President Nguyen Van Thieu of South
Vietnam told members of the National Assembly about Ute
cease-fire offer Tliursday night following a five-hour meeting between Thieu and presidential adviser Henry K~inger.
MRS. GARNET "MA" WILLIAMSON, Rutland
Legislators said Thleu gave no reason for Nixon's rejection
businesswoman, will observe her 81St birthday anniversary
of the cease.fire offer. They reported Thieu said only that he
Sunday.
SECOND · INDIAN MOUND
There are
Utought a lruce . before the election would be more
arrowheads and hatchets. Barbara Sargent has disclosed
more mounds Utan the Indian mound
at
advantageous to Ute Communists than afterward when Nixon
th~re is an Indian mound In Chester, There is spectaculation
PorUand Park In Meigs County. One, above,
would have four more years to negotiate an end to the war.
whetlter ·311y of the mounds In Meigs County have been
Mrs. Williamson
is located in a field off Yellow Bush Road near Racine on '
opened. Mike Simmons, owner of ''Arrowhead" at Little
Deputy Nguyen Van Thong,
property formerly owned by Ute late Albert Wolfe, now by
Hocking wanted to open the one pictured here, but its owners
secretary general of the Cham- legislators Kissinger h~d not
fooled everybo_dy
ber of Deputies, said Thieu told finished briefing Thiqu on
Janet Oiler. Granddaughters of Mr, Wolfe recall that when
preferred it remain 'Undisturbed. Sinunons, former owner of
L'Je legislators Kissinger report- results of his private talks·.
known lo do a bll of tractor
tliey were children they dug around tbe mound for
Tri.Stale Materials Corp., Pomeroy, is a member of the
repairing.
ed on his secret Paris talks
Pawnee Tribe of Oklahoma.
No said the North Vietnamese
with North Vietnamese dele- proposed a cease-fire prior to
However, upon the death of
..
..
, -:::=::.~W.&gt;.=?.m:g,ogo~;m::::~
her husband, It was still a bit of
gates, incIudiiig Politburo mem- the presidential election fol·
ber Le Due Tho. But Thong lowed by establishment of a
a Challenge to become· "boss
said lhe president told the three·pa rlcoali lion government
lady" of the business. Take
over
she did, Utough, and has
extending from the national
BY BOB HOEFLICH
operated It quite capably over
By United Press International
RIO GRANDE - Proposed held in lhe Rio Grande College
down lo lhe hamlet level. No
RUTLAND
Talk
about
the years. Her grid and keen
c;:afeteria.
ANCHORAGE, ALASKA -MIIJTARY SPY planes capable programs and others In
and other legislators said the
"true
grll,"
Mrs.
Garnet
(Ma)
sense
.of humor have apE. .E. Davis, SEORC
of spotting a human from 15 miles above the earth and of operation under the direction
Communists wanted the truce
"seeing" at night swept over Ute rugged Alaska coastline today of Or. David C. Sweet, director president, presided. Carl
now to avoid "heavy military Willtamson, Rutland parenlly helped a great deal.
Speaking of her business
looking for Democratic House Majority Leader Hale Boggs and of the Ohio Department of Dahlberg, council executive
pressure " from the United businesswoman, has Ill
Economic and Community director, introduced guests.
States, If Nixon defeats Demo- Sent home from a hospltal20 ·career, Mrs. Williamson
three other missing persons.
Dr. Sweet pointed out several
cratic candidate Sen. George S. years ago told she had about commented:
A 2;IJOO.mlle an hour SR71 reconnaissance jet and two Army Development, were discussed
six months to live, Mrs ,
"I've made a little money,
McGovern .
Mohawk twin-engine turboprops· using infrared scanning gear by Dr. Sweet Thursclay night at Ohio communities are losing
EXTON·,
Pa.
Foote
Thleu has repeatedly opposed Williams wlll observe her 81sl made a Uvlng, and a lot of
were ordered In after scores of military and civilian aircraft the annual fall membership out on federal funds because of Mineral Company has reported
birthday Sunday!
1
friends."
failed to find any trace of the plane that disappeared while meeting of the Southeastern improper planning and red net sales of $66,571,137 for the a three-part coalition govern·
Despite a battle In the early
A true homebody, Mn.
tape now involved.
Ohio RegiOMl Council.
men! that would Include Corn·
carrying BOIIP'~ ~~g~ to ~11ft8!1U on Monday. Snow and
firs\
nine
months
of
1972
By , redesigning
the
· Approximately 80 persons
mllhlsts, neutralists and right· 50s with', Cl\IIC~r, .,a , -l'll'!ent ,Wlllilowon·mai\Yilia-.tll•~~ee~,...~...ll"!)
rain storms closed over much of the 56(kntle long search area
compared
with
net
sales
of
heart c!)ndl\lon, bilh blood who work today to lltCUl'e
development
organization
on
a
attended lasi night's session,
ists.
tltreatenlng to hamper efforts until better weather returns.
$73,421,046
in
the
comparable
regional basis, Dr. Sweet hopes
About 40 members of the pressure 'and other physical "wonderful new homes" and
period
of
1971.
Weathem1en said that may be as long as three days.
to condense some 360 Ohio
National ABsemblyaltended the ailments, Mrs. Wllllamaon then never slay home to enjoy
Net
earnings
for
the
1972
conUnues .active In her Allis· th em.
districts into 12, thus making it
two-hour
meeting
Thursday
period
were
$414,990
compared
COLUMBUS -EIGHTY·NINE HOGS were killed on a farm
easier lo obtain federal help for
night al the Presidential Chalmers tractor Sales and · "Perhaps, Utat's a part of
with
$2,230,276
reported
for
the
In southwestern Clarlt County in Ute state's largest outbreak of
much-needed projects in rural
Palace. Opposition members service business here. She Is on what's wrong with this old
same
period
of
1971.
After
hog cholera, State Velernarian Dr. Harry' Goldstein announced
southern Ohio.
said they boycotted.the seiSSion the job In the bloek building country today," she said.
provision
for
lhe
dividend
Thursday. An automatic quarantine, required by federal law, is
Asked If she's ever done
The speaker urged southern
because they feared Tbleu next to her Items every day of
requirement
on
lhe
company's
the
week.
much
traveling,
Mrs.
, In effect for a !Ive-rn lie radius around the farm.
Ohioans lo vote against Issue
would claim later that he had
preferred
stock,
there
were
no
She amazes friends wltlt her Williamson's sense of humor
"But tltere
no hogs for several miles," Goldstein said.
Work resumed this morning No. 2,lhe tax repeal, which will earnings in lhe first nine their support for his position.
ability
lo locate tractor parts In readily shows Utrough.
"We were really fortunate this tul,e." The quarantine means no al Ohio Electric Company's appear on the Nov. 7 ballot. To
Thieu spent early today
months
of
1972
available
lo
the
feeder or breeder pigs can move In or out of the area. Slaughter James M. Gavin plant a! conclude the program, a onemeeting with other south their maze of bins and boxes. · "Yes, I've been down to Ute
common
stock
compared
with
Born In Salem Township, the corner," she replied.
hogs can be sold provided officials inspect \hem within 24 hours Cheshire following . a one day · minute film strip promoting
Vietnamese political Jeaders
5
cents
per
common
share
in
Mr. and Mrs. Williamson
southern Ohio was shown.
of shipment.
and Kissinger conferred with daughter of the late John
strike.
1971.
Next council meeting, to be
American governmentandmill- William...,and Emaretta Lutz, never had children, but they
The stoppage came ThursBoth
sales
and
earnings
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO CIVIL SERVICE .Employees day as a result of an,altercation held either the lalt~r part of during the first nine months of tary officials during the morn- Mrs . Wi1~mson and her did rear a niece and nephew
husband,. LOrain, moved to whom they took In at a very
Association aMounced Thursday It has contributed $10,000 to over a difference of~lnion be- November or early December 1972 reflect lower sales to Ute ing.
Rutland
In 1921. Mr. early age when the mother of'
fight llle repeal of state Income tar. OCSEA President Richard tween two employees of Delta- at the Ohio University Inn at specialty steel industry as
Williamson was a car and the .children 1 died. Mrs.
Warman reiterated the association's firm commitlment to fight Jackson , the main electrical Athens, will be the annual compared with the same
truck mechanic. However, 38 Williamson's brother, the late
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
the repeal forces In every possible way.
contractor al the 2.6 million ·uMan of the Year" awards period in 1971. Lower prices
Ohio Extended Outlook years ago they decided to open Wayne Lutz, was at one time
"We are urging everyone of our 33,000 members to vote 'no' killowatt generating station session.
and
volwnes
.of
ferroalloys
are
superintendent of schools both
Outstanding community
Sunday through Tuesday: a tractor business.
on issue 2," he said, "and this $10,000 check is just one of Ute which has been under conthe principal factors in reduced
Mr. and Mrs. WiWamson .In P9meroy and GalllpoUu.
leaders in southern Ohio sa)es and are ·attributed in
Cloudy and nilld with a
many ways we are fighting the repeal of the state's graduated struction since March 1971.
worked
side by side in the Mrs. Williamson Is a memb&lt;!r
chance of rain or showers
. Both employees were ter· coun lies who belong to the large part to increased foreign
income tax. We are In the 11th hour and as the largest
SEORC will be honored.
Sunday and Monday. Fair business until his death In 1953. of the Rutland Baptist Church.
imports
competing
for
organization of public employes In the state ofOhio, we are proud min ated by the contractor.
Re tl rem en t?
Mrs ,
Prior to Thursday's dinner
and cooler Tueoday. Hlgbo In Mrs. Williamson was active In
to help fight to defeat Ute forces which are attempting to send However, one. of the men ap· session at Rio Grande, domestic markets. Sales of the 60s Sunday and Monday, the parts department, witlt llle Williamson has no plans for
peared at the gate Thursday
lithium products, however,
state government into financial chaos," ·he said.
bookkeeping, and was even that!
morning dfsplaying an in· members · met at the Bob have shown a substantial In· dropping Into the 50s
Evans Sh~lter House I for a
Tuesday. Lows In the 40s.
crease during the year lo dale.
PARIS - PIJi'RRE SUS IN!, 52, the French delegate general formation sign -indicating he hospitality hour.
·During the third quarter of
to North Vietnam who W881njured when his mission In Hanoi was was unjuslly terminated . .The
craft
workers,
approximately
1972 nel sales were $21,152,902
damaged during an American air raid Oct. 11, died Thursday
PARTY INBRADBURY
1,600 strong, honored the one·
·compared!
with
$18,546,835
In
The lradllionallrlck or treat
night, hospital official! said today.
man picke~ and did not pass. Veterans Memorial Hospital the 1971 period. The net loss night wlll not be held In
Reports from Hanoi said at least four Nortlt Vietnamese
Delta-JaCkson officials
ADMITTED - Claude Roy, from operations was $33,521 In Bradbury this year, In lieu of
employes of Ute French mission were killed. Suslni was flown to apparently cleared up the
Racine;
Dixie Blevins, New lhe 1972 third quarter com- the observance, a community
Paris Oct. 17 and admilted to Percy Hospital for Intensive care. misunderstanding.
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UP!) Joseph P. Gills, Ohio Power
Haven; Rally Harmon, pared with a net loss of $169,751 Halloween party will be held in
The United states apologized to France the day after the raid.
The
Ohio
Power
Co.
said
Thurs·
executive
vice· president, said
Rutland; Hattie Powell, Port- in 1911.
the basement of lhc Bradbury day preliminary studies are
the firm's parent-company, Ute
land.
The company noted that il Church of Christ at 1 p.m.
DAYTON - STATE SEN. DONALD "BtJZ" Lukens, R·
underway
~~
a
2,400-acre
site
American
Electric Power Sys' LOCAL TEMPS .
DISCHARGED - Edison . expects the level of sales to Monday, Oct. 30. Anyone
Mld&lt;!letown, will seek the governorship In 1974, according to Ute
on
Sandusky
Bay
to
determine
U!m In New York, Is conducting
Temperature in downtown Hobstelter, Marcia Hobstelter, increase during the balance of
Dayton Daily News. A!Utough Lukens was not quoted directly as Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was Edna Klein, Charles Woode, the year, particularly to its wishing to contribute to the If it is suitable for construction a site research project on the
party may call 992-5586, 992saying he would run; he was reported Thursday discussing the · 41 degrees, under sunny skies. James Roush.
of a nuclear or fossil-fueled bay In an area· just north of
steel related customers.
5187 or 992-5964.
power plant.
political strategies of two oUter. posslble~ndidates, former
Vickery ,
governor James A. Rhodes and Sen. RobertT ft, R-Ohlo. ,
Gills emphasized, however,
.:~~::::~::::::~:::::~::-::::@»"h:"-:W-m~n.:-:;m?.i.:w.:~:'«&gt;.::-.m-:::.:mt.:$-*~w.:::!~~:::?.::~:~:=-;::::.::;:::::::::~:;::::::::~::::::::::::::~x::::::::·:::::::~:!:::::::::::::;::::~::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::8::!::::~:::::::::-:::~-::::::~?.?.;r.--/.m.w~.#'~
I.Aikens Jftdicted he would be Ute "hea er" between Ute
the Investigations are only pre·
Rhodes and Taft factions in the Republican party. Lukens, 40, a
limlnary and that "any plant
on the site now being studied
U.S. re!J"esentative for two terms, iil6i-1970, was appointed to a
would n(il be operational Wllil
.acant seat in the state Senate In 1970.
at least 1979."
William W. Cor bill, an ,\mer·
PHILADELPHIA - THE PENN CENTRAL Railroad lost
By GEORGE HARGRAVF.'I, Supt.
electricity. In jlOWer mechanics the students are witlt over 700 visitors. We look forward to hliving lllat
$11 mllllon In September, according to a report submitted to U.S.
MetgaLoeaiSchoollllltrlct
exposed to the theory of power, Including steam, many or more for tltls second one. Please try to lean Power public affairs offi·
District Court by the railroad's board of lrustees.
Industrial arts is required In grades 9 and 10 for gasoline and diesel-powered engines. They wHI work. arrange your schedule to that you can visit with us clal, said In New York e0gi·
neers have begun to take core
The September figure brings Ute bankrupt railroad's net loss alllloys not in the college prep course or In vocational on two and four cyfle gasoline engines. The graphic next Thursday evening.
samples
of the ground at Ute
for the first nine montbs of 1972 to $175.9 mllllon, The figures agriculture. It is our basic purpose during thiJ two arts .program 'will Include bookbinding and silk
Please remember tha~ there will be.no school on site and will construct a tower
compaf'e!l With a net lou of _$~.3 mllllon In SepteinlJI!r, 19'71, and year period to Introduce each stQdenl io a.vll!iety of screen prlnling .
Friday, October 'J:l •.~t is the dale for thz district for ·meteorological testing.
a net loss of $195.5mJillon ~ Ute first nine months.of 1971. .
· activities. Let me describe wbat·we offer these boys, . . When fund! become available, we plan to add teachers' meeting at.Rio Grande. Teachers of soutlt·
Corbill also stressed ~he ·pre·
The first 12 weeks of Industrial Arts I is devoted printing as another part of the graphic arts program. eastern Ohio .will' attend.
·
llmlnary nature of the •tudles.
HOBART, TASMANIA -A GROUP OF medical ~rchers to beslc drafting. Leatlter craft is taught the oUter six We also want to add some' general metal work in"There's no decision to be
cluding cutting, soldering and etchln€.
has lsollted and Identified the fatty substance which acts as a
Another reminder is that aU of next week, Oc· made in the forseeable future
dottln~ lgent iri heatl attacks, One of' the researchers said he
Speaking of schools··No. 253
INDUSTRIAL ARTS II also available .as an Iober 23-27, IB American Education Week. During the because a · number of human
belleves"isolation of Ute fat PI&amp;Y rule out cholesterol as a major
elective when we bave llle space available after entire week and at any time schoolts in session, you environmental /actors apply,"
weeks in the first aelnester. During !he 18 weeks of scheduling all those who are t;equlred to take Jt. Our are eordlally Invited to vlalt your schooll. Please ta)&lt;e .he said. "Notably, Ute energy
cat~~e of heart dlaea8e.
the
secood eemelter, beaic principles of woodworking tw.o teachers-In Industrial arts are hotb Melga County
Iir. R. s. PatSOils, a member of the reitearch team at the
8dvalitage oflhls opportunity. Come and viB!t. See for supply may change, and needs
taught Thil Involves an Introduction to 1hz men, Ben Slawter and Charles Frecker. They are
Unlvenlty of Tllllllnla, said Thursday that their findings ir·
yourilelf what we are trying to do for yolir children In may c)lange of Ute popul,alion
working hard to mak_e industrial arts a significant your schools.
dlcated that a more Important factor In preventing heart attacks primary band tooil and woodworlr.lttg macbjnel.
.
in a given area.''
.
In
Incmlrial
Arta
II,
In
grade
10,
Ute
first
part rl our· curriculum.
wuto fbd a melhod ol contro!Ung the behavior of the fat, whic~
Anun'Jberof organizations have gone on record in . The proposed !lite, ai»ut .12
Bell)eller
of
18
w.U
Ia
dlvJ4ed
between
woodcraft
·
THE
SEOOND
OPEN
HOUSE
will
lalr.e
pillce
bulldl up at timetl of tttreu. 'l1)e team hopes the discover)' wUI
· support of our school levy after heerlng a talk ~bout ·.l"lfessoilthwestO!hete,stre!Ch· .
· lead to apreventive for the blood clots which c.U. heart attacks. and pllatlat. In woodcraft we deal' with carving, r.ext!Thursday, Oct. 26, when 'chool will be dismissed
the ISsue. If your organitlltlon wan(s aspeaker, CliU. es from the b8y south act&lt;iM
lamination and turning wood on a lathe. "n1e plutlcs 2'h hours early, Teachers will be back In their
992-2153andwey&lt;llltrytoarrangeforone.
U.S. 6, nortlt of Vickery. It is
Il'ogram,
of
course,
1.1
a
bulc
Introductory
course:
If
your
organization
just
wants
to
go
on
record
In
about
15 nlifes soutlteaat of the
buildings
from
7:00
to
9:30
to
meet
parents.
Us THAN' t.• UNITED Atrro W0UERs walked 'off
During Ute leCOild ~emester of the 11ophomore
There will be no morning or afternoon kln· favor of the Issue, we can send you a fonn to uee or controversial Davis-Beaae nu·
111e1r jobilllte Thunday DICht at a General Moton Assembly
just let us and the news media know of your action. clear power plant being con·
Dlvlllon pld In P'alrfu, Kan. Anotber 8,400 UAW members year, we go Into bulc electricity, JIOtller mech8nlcs, dergsrten classes.
We
wlll appreciate your support.
(Continued 911 page 10)
and
graphic
arts.
We
,
have
training
kit!
to
do
the
We
had
a
good
~esponse
to
our
first
open
house,
!ConUaued on page 10)

Business
as usual

ews•• in-- Briefsr 80 hear Sweet

at · age 81

Foote's net in
three quarters
down from '71

Gavin work

is resmned

are

Power study in
Sandusky area

. Sa.lel Mens and Young ,Mens
'

ln. Seled one or two now.

2 for 7.00

"THE CONQUEROR
WOitM"
lc:.forl
Prlct

Y.d.

· new colors.

MEN'S 3.95 HEAVY WEIGH:r

(PG)

1.00

New patterns

Show Storts 7 P.M.

Also

'

Cloth back. Black
green · white · brown ·
gold · yellow · blue.

New solid colo.rs in
ready-tied ties ani! fourin -hand
ties .

3
hours of steadily
engrosslng entertiJinme·nt.
Actuits $1.50, Chlld~en 75c.

. Flti.·SAT.cSUN.
OCT. 2G·21·22
Doullle Ft1ture
FROGS
Ray Mill and
Sam Elliott
{Color)

DRESS
FABRIC

54" VINYL
UPHOLSTERY

. FOR. MEN

'

(R)

1 Group Reg. 99c

12.95

·sus

1.00

MEIGS·THEATRE
THE GOD FATHER
Marton Branda

8.95

45x45 Round

SPECIAL 7.77
·----------------------.
---·
3 PC. SAUCE PAN

WEMBLY TIES

. Only clfizenship right de•
nted to a naturalized citizen
of the United Slates is that
he may not become presi·
dent.
.

Tonight thru Saturday
October 19-21

Beauti.ful designs and good colors - fringed all
around.

Blue Cornflower design . Reg. $9.95- Save $2.18.

and Jackets

'

elections in the states

13 INQt OPEN ROASTER WITH RACK

Men's Coats ,

'

TEN .CENTS

l

to stop war before the

CORNING WARE SPECIALS.

Another Big Shipment

m.

/

Rlbless - 45" wide.
Machine wash . Big
selection beautiful colors.
For Thl• Sole

i

..

2 Yds.l.OQ

regular price 69c.

2

•

992·2156

'

-o r cease zre

1.69'

wide. Prints . Blends .
Cottons . Acetates.

8.00

Friday-Saturday Sale

Sale! Boys Flare Slacks
Flare
Flare
Flare
Flare

Jackets

WRVEL
CORDUROY

P~ONE

•

BRIER ROSE AXMINISTER RUGS

27x51

THIS BIG SALE

Sizes 2 to 20. Excellent styles for boys of all ages.

The grange 8hlo voted to vote
"no" to repeal the State Income Tax on Nov. 7.
A literary program was
given by Erma Wilaon and
Mrs. Herbert Roush. A
Halloween game, a dressing
Cllntest, and a hose gar11e were
played with prizes going to
Eula Wolfe, Herbert Rouab,
Alice Balser and Florence
Smith . .
A 911ng, "Wifie and Hubble"
was sung by Enna WUson and
Mary Roush and the group
sang several songs.
Potluck refreshments were
served. The next meeting Is to
be Nov. 8 at the hall at 7:30 p.

13.99

New Shipment!

SAVE DURING

BOYS COATS AND JACKETS

Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

84" long

~S"

Sale Prices Now

l

9(49
10.49
12.49

I

4.95
5.95
6.95
8.95

$2.09

NTED FJPERGLAS
.~DRAPERIES
,.

2 pairs 1.00

Are Ekcted

m~tlng.

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Regular price 69c. One size fits all sizes fo to 13.
75 pet. Hi-bulk orion· 25 pet. stretch nylon.
Fine color selection In light and dark shades.

Brown.

Weekend
on Girls
Sizes 3 to 6x
and 7'to 14;

Vests
Pants
Pants
Coats

ORLON DRESS SOCKS

Navy . Burgundy .

Save This

Hunting
Hunting
Hunting
Hunting

Sale! Young Mens and Mens

40" Flare In sizes
8 to 16. Black .

Grange 2612's
·.New Officers

. .

stzes .

12.60 Carhartt
13.90 Carhartt
16.70 Carhartt
17 .so Carhartt

•
Reg!llar $7.95

Clear to partly cloudy
tonight, not as cold, lows
mostly in the 30s. Wanner
Saturday, a chance of showers
except for the southeast. Highs
Saturday in the 50s and low IIQI.

•

•

$1.29

3.;99

~amous Carhartt quality . Complete selection of
..
·

Our entire stock of
womens separate Shirts ·
Blouses · Knit Tops is
reduced for this sale.

SLACKS
AND JEANS

.

1 Group

HUNTING CLOTHES

TOP SAL£

'

LETART FALts · - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 of Letart
Falls met at the hall Thursday
night with Worthy Master
Early Roush as pr&lt;Hem in the
chair when the following of.
ficers were elected:
·. Master, Herbert .Shields;
Overseer, Erma Wilton;
Le~turer, Florence Smith;
Eula
Wolfe;
Steward,
Chaplain, Bertlta Robinson;
Asst. Steward, Herbert Rouab;
Lady Asst: Steward, Iva Orr;
Gatekeeper, Alice Balser;
Treasurer, Early Roush;
Secretary, Mrs. Herber.t
Roush; Pomona, Elizabeth
Roush· Ceres Doris Sayre·'
Flora,
Mabel
Shields;
executive committee, Harriett
Neigler, legislative, and
business agent, Early Roush.
The Grange voted to hold
"Boost the Grange" night Nov.
13 at the ball. It is to be an open

REG. 3.00 JEWELRY............. SALE 1.49\
REG. 2.00 JEWELRY .............. SALE. 99'
REG. 1.00.JEWELRY .............. SALE 49'
SALE: CARHARTl SUPER DUX

Valances to Match · •

·Devoted To The lnter.~,ts ·cij The Meigs~Miuon Area
I
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1~72

•
entre ecte

.JEWELRY SALE

Straight leg · Rare . Cuffed .

Girls

VOL. XXIV NO. 132

Permanent Press. No Ironing. Machln.e
Washable. Wrinkle Free.
50 pet. Kodei Polyester • 50 pet. Avril Rayon.
r-~~----~----~----..4 -White · and colors. .
.
24" Length
S2.49
$3.29
54" Length
36" Length
$2.49
$3.59
63" Length.
45" Length
$2.99

.

Stout, Teresa VanMeter .and

I' .

Weekend S11e · Savings on Misses
Juniors • Ha'lf Sizes. Selected from our
regular stock . ·
·

Jewelry selec'te~ from our regular stock.

Weather

•

When a sirl from the
Etltlopian Wollomo tribe is
·ahoul lo marry, tradition
requires lhal she elope. The
tradition further demands tltal, .
·as she elopes, she steal from
her parents everything she
can. -

FLARE LEG SLACKS ·
Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Fine •election of popular styles and '
colors: Corduroys · Brushed Denims . Denims . All Cottons .
Cotton and Polyester blends.
You can really save on whaf you need during this sale.
5.95 Young Mens Slacks
4.99
6.95 Young Mens Slacks
5.99
7.95 Young Mens Slacks
6.79
8.95 Young Mens Slacks
· • 7' 49
9.95 Young Mens Slacks
7.99

1---~.,--.---------~
Newl

...ESCAPADE" WGGAGE .BY AIRWAY

~

Save up to $61.00 on DineHe Sets
Just arrived """ new shipment of

DOUGLAS DINETTE SETS
- Large selection of styles and colors.

s and

7

Piece Sets.
Round .a nd rectangular tables.

The soft look and feel af casual ztppertcl luggage with lilt
slrllftgth and durability of molded luggage.
.

.Rtt. 1ot.oo 5 pc. Dinette Sets •. · S.ve 121.10-S.It li.oo
Reg. 119.00 7 pc. Dinette Sets • · · SIYt UJ.IO-S.Ie H. II
Reg, 129.00 7 pc. Dlneft. lets • · • S.VIIU.IO-S.Ie 1114 II

Outside covering of strong vinyl with luxurious linings. tough
reinforced handle. nylon zipper . polished die case locks.
·For ·Him: Companion, Wardrobe, and Garment .Bag- In
Brown.
··
· . ··
For Her: Cosmetic, Weekender, Wardrobe·and Garment Bog .
In Burnt Orange, Blue or Green.
.
·

R111.

nue s u

Reg. 14~.00 7 pc,
Reg. '159.01 7 pc.
Reg. '"·" s pc,
Reg. 21uo s pc.
Reg, Ht.M 5 pc.
Reg. 2Jf.ll S pc.

We hive the right plttt of lutllollll for every trovellng ·n eed.
Comt In end make your 101t~on.

.

BE THRinYI.SAVE ALL OF Y:OUR SA.LISLIPS FROM . ·

pc. D l - Seta - • .s.V. w .....s.le m:..
Dinette Sttl · · · S.Yt IM.....S.Ie llf.OO
Dinette lets · · · · S.Yt U1 .....S.II '121.11
Dlnttte lets ..• s.,. w .....s.~e \52.11
Dinette lets. S.vt u ......S.Ii w.11 ·
Dlntlte lets · • • SIYt U1 .....S.Ie 241.10 .
Dlntlte Sets · · · S.Yt M7 .....S.Ii 1f2,11

On S.le In 11ft F11nliluno

on 11ft~ Floor.

I

.

Industrial Arts program .explained ·1

.are

'.

I

. . -- .

- .

. '

l

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