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·Plaque awarded
By United Press lntematlonal

the touching strains of· the
BACHTEL STADIUM During the half-time activities Wahama Alma Mater, Gerald
ol the Wahama-Ra.venswood Simmons, director of bands at
football game on Friday night, Wahama, washpnored with the
as the 180 member Ravens. presentation of a plaque in
wood Red Devil band played · connection with Outstanding
'·
Bandmaster Award for the
State of ·west Virginia given .
Court sets up
him In March, 1972 at the West
Virginia Music Educators
tax , ~epeal · wte
convention in Parkersburg.
'
The plaque is ·in recognition
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The of the fine bands Mr. Sinunons
Ohio Supreme Court Friday . has brought to Wahama during
rejected three · separate athis years as director. Mr. Jim
tempts by op)lOilentll of the
.Porter, director of the Ravensincome tax repeal movement
wood band and Vice President
and ruled Issue 2should stay on
of
TAU Chapter, PHI Beta Mu,
SIMMONS HONORED - Gerald Slmlnons, Wabama '
the Nov. 7 ballot.
·
National Music · Organization,
Band Director, was honored with a· plaque given to him for
Both Gov. John J. Gilligan made the presentation.
being
selected Outlltanding Bandmaster of the Year at the
and Ohioans for Fai" Taxation . · Mr. Simmons joined the
West Virginia Mqsic Educators Convention In Parkersburg.
I,Yelcomed the high court's
facul ty at Wahama in the fall of
At left is Mr. Sinunons and Jim Porter, Band Director .of
decision, confident that by 1966 as director of bands. Since
Ravenswood High School. -Photo by sam Nichols Ill.
election day the people will find
that time both the Junior and
the tax reform program fair Senior bands have brought
and vote the Issue down.
many trophies and honors to
their school. Some of the many as Covington-Holmes and won superior ratings In both conactivities they have par- first in their class, first in cert music and marching. The
ticipated in are the Elkins parade marching, and cat·ried Wahama Band during the
Forest Festival, Spencer Black home the coveted honor band years of 1970 and 1971 sealed
Walnut Festival, Glenville trophy . They participated for more of itll members in the All
N&gt;\ME PALLBEARERS
Homecoming, Ohio University the first time thi.s ye~r in the State Band than any other high
GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers Band Day, Marshall Univer- Tri-State · Marc.hing Band school band In the state,
for saturday morning's ser- sity Band Day, Virginia Beach Festival sponsored by ·Mar- regardless of class or size. The
vices of John Churchhill were Band Festival, Mariatta, Ohio shall University and came Band also has the distinction of
named Saturday by the Waugh- Band-0-Rama in which they home with first place in their this year being chosen Honor
Halley-W,ood Funeral Home. won first in field maneuvers; class and the honor band Band for the State of West
They are Jim Davidson , The Annual Eastern Kentucky trophy .
Virginia. '
George Ossman, . Lonnie Marching Band Festival in
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald SimThe band participates each
Burger, •lim Churchill, Bill which this year they competed year in the Regional Ratings mons niake their home in New
·Lakin, and Oscar Cain.
againslsuch outstanding bands Festival and consistently wins Haven. ·

RepOrts persisted today that
a cease-fire agreement in the .
Vietnam War might be near.
The Communist delegations to
the .Paris peace talks said
conditlons for peace were at.
hand but ttiat basic .issues
.~emained unsolved.
uRwnor$ are rwnor:s, but
bombs are bombs," said Ly
Van Sau, the Viet Cong
spokesman in Paris:
U.S. Presidential Adviser
Henry A. Kissinger today
ended five days of talks with
South Vietna.mese President
Nguyen Van Thieu tn Saigon
an~ flew back to Washington lo
report to President Nixon. The
U.S. embassy would say only
that the talks " made
progress."
. Some South Vietnamese
government sources said Thieu

.

QUEEN AND &lt;XlURT - M\18 ((1m Pope, 1972 Soutll·
western Homecoming Queen, is shown with members of her
court. They are, left to right, Carolyn Baker, Barbara Hailey,
Diane Terry, ~ella Blevins, and Sherry Peck. Not shown,
Linda Coilier, flower girl, and Mary Ruff.

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GalliJJ

By Hobart Wilson }r.

THE long-awaited boom predicted for thiS inunedlate area
has arrived. Traffic in downtown Gallipolis resembles Broad and
.High In Columbus most of the time. Newcomers are out in full
force searching for homes to rent or buy. Local merchantll,
llfOcers, schools, business establlshmentll and especially utility
firms are feeling the impact.
· -

++++
THREE or four years ago development officials said there
would be some "growing pains" as the area moved forward.
Local officials spent many hours, days and even months
preparing for the big change. like everything e.Jse, however,
there's always the unexpected, and this tends to curtail overall
acUvlUes. Tbese problems are being met headon, and hopefully
will be worked out, eventually.

++++

KIM POPE, a senior, wucrowlll41he IJ'/2bomecomlng
&lt;queen Friday night at ~thwesleJ'!I Hilh Sdlool.

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·Amendment endorsed
'

, PT. PLEASANT- The Point
Pleasant-Mason County
Cbal'hber of Commerce in a
brd · of Directors luncheon
mee Ung Friday noon endorsed
the Better School Buildings

PoUution control
project approve,d
PT. PLEASANT - The
Mason ·County Court has
authorized a poUution control
project at Foote Mineral
Company's Ne)V Haven Plant,
to be financed by Industrial
Development B.onds.
. Tbese ·bonds are payable
solely by the Company and the
County Government has no
cost or liability as these bonds
will be issued pursuant to the.
New Industrial Development
Bond Act.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES : Daniel
Paxton, Patriot, 0., Vernon
Johnson, Racine; Mrs. Earl
Freeman, Lakin ; Oden
Pearson, Point Pleasant;
Robert Strange, Letart; Mrs.
George Glll, Letart; Patricia
Con dee, Henderson; Mrs .
Bonnie \!aldie, Point Pleasant,
and Mrs . Roy Bauer, Point
Pleasant.

Bring the Children To

NEW(X)MERS, or anyone for 'til at matter nee ling
aulstance, shoillll contact tbe G•llia County Area Information
Service, ~9266, between 9 a.m., and 5 p.m., or 446-4952. RQbin
Johruion, a member of the GAHS Cooperative Office E&lt;;lucation
OaiS, 1s on duty in the afternoons to follow up individual calls to
tee that the person l}eeding aaslstance ge!B it. The project is
being conducted by tbe Firat United ·fresbyterlan Church In
coollfation with the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce.

MRS. Vaughn Glassburn, Gallipolis, received a newspaper
clipping recently from Peekskill, N.Y., telling of the retirement
of M~ Dorothy Raymond, former Gallla County District
Ubrary employ!lf.

Amendment. In doing so, the
++++
cc jJlned eubernatcir.tal
MISS Raymond was a member ol the Gallia library staff for
candidates and ~y others in
five
years (1!KIU7). While bere, she was active in tbe Business
support of the amendment
which ivlll face voters in the and Professional Women's Club, Episcopal Cburch and many
General ElecUon, Noy~mber 7. other community activities. She· was also Instrumental in obPaul Crabtree, cc president, taining bookmobile service for rural Gallia County.
++++
presented the proposal to
directors. He said Ibis would
MISS Raymond's retirement as librarian of tbe Field .
amount to $3.5 million for Ubrary in Peeksklll became effective last Sunday (Oct. 1; ). She
~ason County.
had served the profession 51 years in five states. Miss Raymond
The ,•purpose of the amend- plans to "take It easy" and visit areas where she has practiced
ment. is to authorize the her profession during the pS,t half century.
legislature to issue and sell
++++
state bonds in an amount not ' A GRADUATE of the Ubrary School at the University of
exceedlJlg $200 million for Buffalo, Miss Raymond later continued her study in the field at
distribution to county boards of Detroit. Her first job was in Troy, Ohio, then her native
education for use by such Binghamton, N. Y.,followed by al4-yearstay (~erlongest at any
boards for 'the co111truction, one location) atOlean, N.Y. From Olean she went to Savannah,
renovation, remodeling and Ga., then to Gallipolis. From here, she went to Ft. Walton Beach,
equipping -of ·elementary. and Fla., then to DeKal~, Ill., where she -.as before going to Peekssecondary school buildings and kill. She plans to reside in Savannah.
facilities and . for acquisition
++++
and preparation of sites
ADD LOOSE NOTES- During the recent recognition tea at
therefore.
the Gallipolis State Institute, tbe Gallipolis Junior Women's Club
and James Rose were presented certificates. Somehow, tbey
were omitted from the story which appeared In the Tribune the
day after the ceremony took place.
PALLBEARERS NAMED
++++ .
GALLIPOLIS - Pallbeare~"S
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
for Laura Clark's I p.m.
and
w,eekly Gallla Times .. . Pt. Pleasant Register printed in
Sunday services at Mt. Zion
Church were announced . Parkersburg after blaze destroys newspaper plant in downtown
Saturday by the Waugh-Halley- Pt. Pleasant ... Glen Patiley, 19, loses lltile finger, part of ring
Wood Funeral Home. They finger in C()rn picker acci&lt;lent ... Temperature dips to 20 degrees,
are: Carl Montgomery, Lee Gallia records first snowfall of season ... Dr. Donald R.
Montgomery, Calvin Layne, Warehime to build $75,000 clinic next to city building ... Boosters
Clarence Layne, Junior invite 1932 SEOAL championship Blue Devils to attend 1952
homecoming game with Atbens ... GAHS slaps 13-0 upset lo.Ss on
McGuire and Johnny Ward.
defending league champion Wellston.

.

reminded Sen. M. Morris Jack- iilg that death is a "cruel and been, prepared, and th~ comson, a committee member and unusual" penalty the way it is mlttee is to select tbe best one.
Deaih is ·pre84lrlbed for kill·
a black Democrat from Cleve.- now carded out.
land wllo believes "any indlv!·May be Restudied
ing Qigh state and federal of-.
dual who hu a handgun is a
The capital punishment sec. flclals, kllllng for hire or for a
potential criminal." ·
lion Is part of an enUre new ' crime syndicate, mass mut·
"Jesus said to forgive .70 criminal code on which the der, killing prison guards or
times seven," countered L. D. commlllee is working. U it is law enforcement or court of- ·
Pollard, a black prisoil chai&gt;" not approved, by the end of the ficers, or murdering. defenJain representing the ~hio year, tile pr~posed code wlll seless babies, old people or the
Council of Churches wlio have to start all over again in physically ,or mentally ill..
claimed he could forgive next year's General As$embly.
The dlriiculty in making such
somebody who murdered a
While members of the Judi- a list .is deciding_who should
member of his own family, ciary Committee complain· be 9h it. As Sen . . &gt;1e"1'
given a lltUe imie.
·
· ·eVen they'- mostly lawyers:.... O'Shaugmessy·, O.Cohqnbus, a
The Judiciary Comniittee Ia cannot' fully Interpret the committee member, said:
not out to e'llract anY eyf!l and &amp;lpreme Court's narrow 5-4 "You can't judge the qualitY ol
teeth, nor.lrill It have the In- rullng, the lawmakers are a human life by the status of
finite ,patience reconunended proceeding on these assuml&gt;" the person living 11." ..
by ·Re'l'. Pollard. M with.Q!oet tloos:
·
Wllether death shOuld be exlellalation, : the answer · Is
- KUling of ~rpose and not lracted 1n return for death in
somewhere lti bet"!veen.
of passion rate the death penal- those epeclal cases is a quesThe committee is faced with ty.
.lion for the committee to pondmodify~ OlllQ'a old law on
- Among the cruelties of er. .
ln.uropce. Contoot capital puria~JWent to conform death are the agonizing
The three pfliPOI&amp;ls also rec.
~with a u.s. &amp;upreme.Court.rul· procesB .of exhaulling all-letlal- IIJllllelld death for. llllll'llers
hopes and the falllblllty of 12 motivated by.L 'racial · or
human beings pronouncing a rellcloqa hatred, killings
sentence of such finality on designed to advance or deter
R..,t Estate for sale
another of their ldnd.
political lntereat lab« unions
CHARMI.NG. older brick and Swift death, unlfonnly but ot a poUtlcll PldloeoPIIY.
·
frame home across fr.om liumanely applied to those who
When the coiiUlllttee retllrnl
Syracuse trade school - 4 perpetrate wWful and heinous after the election. It wiD have
~f:~: ;.:o:;~~~~~~1; murders, might meet the .Su- 1o decldi whether a per10n'1
many extr~1 , $11,000. For preme ()pll't pldellnes, the thouahll, ofttn IJI1II'ky n,n to
;a~'• show'.~ c:au 1-111- lawmakaibelieve.
· trallled ]ll)'eblatrllill. Clll be
lll-22_3fc
And 10 I trlo of · CIJII~ Jlllde cllar
lo .-vi! M
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Plllhlt••t
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Devoted To The lnlere&amp;l&amp; OJ The Meig.,·Mason Area

McGovern will

VOL. XXV NO. 133

See all the wonderful .
. tQy~ for boys and girls
of all ages. They'll en joy
seeing the excellent
selection and you can
. use our lay-away plan to
hold · the .toys your
children want . Bicycles
- Tricycles - Wagons Games · Books - Pool
Tables - Fish~r Price ·
Playskool · - Tonka .
' Doll..s · Gun and Holster
sets ·. Erector - Sets •
Chemistry - Romper
. Room · Arts and Crafts -·
Doll Furniture - Chairs ·
Table ·and ' Chair Sets
and ma,ny, many other
Items.

You'll enjoy a trip to the
Toy Store to see what's
new for, Otrllfmas '72.
:

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENS,·

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take to tube

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Deadline to kill passengers.extended

:.: .:.

SOFIA, Bulgaria (UP!) - Four Turkish hijackers extended their deadline for the
release of 12 political prisoners from Turkish jails today, saying that if Turkey refu~d
they would blow up their planeload of hostages. The gang's first deadline pass(jd as,the
plane sat on the runway at Sofia Airport and Radio Sofia announced that "thanks to the
intervention of Bulgarian authorities, the deadline has been extended." The radio did not
announce the new deadlirie.
In Ankara the Turkish Interior Ministry said the hijackers had set the new deadline
as 7:30p.m. (1:30 p.m. EDT.). Turkey, in a note to the Bulgarian government, said it
would under no circumstances agree to negotiate with the hijackers. The Turkish cabinet
has been meeting in emergency ,session to consider the incident. The hijackers, who
commandeered the ,Turkish Airlines Boeing 707 over Turkey on a flight to Sofia early
Sunday morning, demanded freedom for a dozen political prisoners and sweeping social
reforms in Turkey.
H their orders were not carried out, the hijackers said, they would blow up themselves
and their 66 hostages.
During an inftight shooting shortly before landing Sunday, the hijackers wounded a
crew memberianald a pusenger. They were taken off the piJine lor emergency treatment
at a city hosp t .
Sunday's snowst~rm made it difficult for witnesses to keep track of the activity going
on around the plJ!ne as passengers were permitted to walk in small groups for exercise.

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WASHINGTON (UP!)- GeorgeS. McGovern, who says he
is confident of an upset victory by a narrow margin, plans to
concentrate on television appearances in poplilous industrial
states in the waning days of his campaign.
The Democratic presidential cundidate flies today to
Philadelphia where he wlll pay a Veterans Day call on wounded
servicemen in a U. S. naval hospital. He planned a television
appearance before leaving Philadelphia for New York City,
where another in a series of telethons is scheduled.
The focus on television in the last two weeks of his uphill
campaign reflected McQovern 's need to reach mass audiences
oofore the Nov. 7 b811oting. On election eve, he will hold another
marathon telethon and on tbe.day of the balloting he will be home
in Sioux Falls.
In an interview on ABC's Nguyen Van) Thieu down the
"Issues and Answers" Sunday, river" after standing by him
McGovern aaid the alleged for four years.
bugging of Democratic headMcGovern objected mildly
quarters
and political when told that the White House
espionage indicate that had suggested some of the
President Nixon knew what questions for the TV interview
was happening or "has lost and said he thought it was
control of his campaign."
"interesting that the President
Either explanation, he said, himself is afraid, apparently,
. for such "scandalous, illegal, to come on this program with
unconstitutional behavior" me, or to come on any other
was p~oof Nixon "is not television program and raise
qualified to serve as his own question&amp;".
With peace rumors circlilating around the world, McGovern also told interviewers
that he was "still very skeptical that Mr. Nixon is going to
negotiate an end to this war
before the election ."
But, he added, ''now It may
be that he is trying to figure out
some way to sell General
(South Vietnamese President

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slalebo- Reporter
OOLUMBU~ (l:I.PI) - The
Senate Judiciary Committee,
before It pu,t off untU after the
election a decision on restoring
the death penalty ' in Ohio,
heard last week from both ex•
tremes on the matter.
"The Bible aays 'an eye for
an eye and a tooth for a tooth/"

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Pr~sident."

Committee hears both ·extremes
'

NO S'l'OP PROJECT- Work on the ground near Meigs High
School at Rock Springs continued Sunday as huge equipment
moved diri in preparation for a baseball park, track .facilities,
football practice field, band practice field and physical education
area. The Shelly and Sands Construction Company is donating
El'!uipment, Jaymar Coal Company equipment and operators,
Local 18 of the operating engineers, operators, and City Ice and
Fuel the diesel fuel n.eeded. ·

final 3 weeks

lberfelds
Toy Store

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and Kissinger had reached an UP! correspondent George
agreement in principle for an Sibera, repeated the Commu- 1
Indochina cease.f11e before the nisi position : "more than ever, ·
U.S. presidential elections 15 Thleu must go." Both delega.
days away, but neither f$!.~in- · tions said Thieu was blocking
ger nor the embassy would plans for a South Vietnamese
comment on these reports.
.goverriment "of national aclndications in Saigon and cord" -{)ne that would include . ·
Paris were that the chief ob- the Communists.
stacle to an Immediate
The Coiillllunist statements
agreement was Thieu's opposi- ' coincided with the publication
lion to a coalition .government of bold French newspaper
that would include the Commu- headlines predicting an early
nists. There were no official cease-fire and peace agreestatements on this because of ment.
·· 1
the secrecy of the Thieu"Vietnam on the verge of
Kissinger talks, but the Peace," said 1.3 milllongovernment-controlled Saigon circulation · France-Soir. The
radio and television repeated paper's Saigon correspondt!llt
previous Thieu speeches op- said:.an agreement In principle
posing a· coalition with the on ·a cease-fire throughout ·
Communists. · ·
Indochina wolild be announced
The Viet Cong and North before Nov. I but that all the
Vietnamese Paris delegations, ll'oblems have not been settled
in telephone interviews with · (Continued on page 10)

But in res)lOilse to one White
House question submitted,
McGovern denied . ever
coparing Nixon to Adolf Hitler.
He said, however, that Nixon's
policy of dropping "several
mlllion tons" of bombs on
North Vietnam "is the most
barbaric thing that has happened since World War II since the days of Adolf Hitler."

ews.. in Briefi

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15 days left for
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McGovern's race

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By United Press International
.·.:,.i_•.r_..;.
George S. McGovern, who
Insists
he will beat President
::;:
:::: Nixon, has 15 days to make up
~ what pollster Louis Harris
:;:;
estimates at a 26 percentage
:;:; points deficit.
·
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Harris said Sunday Nixon
i:~~ was leading McGovern 59 to 34
·.~.·.:_:. per cent on the basis of a
·,. survey conducted Oct. 17-19.
:;l But the pollster said in an In·

t,
~

Eagle
award
made
Cow,deer die on roads .

Three accldentll were investigated by the Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach's
Department over the weekend.
Saturday al8 :30 p.m. on SR
7, one-tenth of a mile south of
Hidden Lakes Road, Ellen A.
Wirth , Charleston , was
traveling northeast when a cow
ran into the path of her car, and
was killed. In .a~Qther accident
a deer was killed.
Mrs. Wirth had visible in.
jUries but was not immediately
treated. There was heavy
damage to the front end of the
car .

The cow, valued at $300, was
owned by Jennings Beegle,
Minersville, Rt. I.
Sunday at 2:40a.m. on SR 7,
al the junction of Old Chesler
Road, Larry A. Eblin, 29,
Pomeroy, was traveling southwest when he came into a
curve al the end of the old Dark
Hollow Road. The truck he was
driving went off the road,
struck and tore. out 8 posts
and 100 feet of guardrail,
turned upside down to go
another 100 feel on its top
and into a creek. Eblin apparently was thrown from the

Citizens' assembly hour
on Wednesday changed

, County but 1·n Oht' o Recom
A Meigs County Citizens
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m
ndations
and
opinions
ob
A
bl
Sch
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shot down three Ruaslan-built MIG2ls, the fastest jets in the
ssem yon
oo s ortgma Y e
·
North Vietnamese air arsenal, in a dogfight over the Hanoi area, announced for 8 p.m. Wed- tai ned from citizens at the local
the U.S. command said today. No U. S. planes were damaged in nesd ay wt'11 be held a1 the seminars have been directed to
· ·•·
Metgs
nlgh Sch oo1a t 7:30 p.m. a te n tat·Jve se t of goa1s for
the fight, the command said. The ..aerial battle occurred Oct. 15,
·
c t ed uc atJ·on ·,n Ohio ·
Wd d
e nes ~Y. Met~s oun Y
but the story was released only today because ''we just got
Superintendent of Schools
confirmation" of the MIG kills, the command said. A command
Robert
Bowen said today.
spokesman said he had no explanation of why it took so long to
The
assembly
will provide
make the confinnation,
.. In the ground war, field reports said VietCong commandos Meigs Countians a convenient . Showers, windy and mild
launched a fuWe attack in the village of Suol Giua only 11 miles way to participate in fixing today. Highs in the low to mid
north of Saigm before dawn today and were beaten off by goa ls for elementary and 60s. Showers, windy and tursecondary schools in ' Ohio ning cooler tonight. Lows in the
government troops. The reports said two Communists were .
during the bicentennial era to 40s. Tuesday cloudy and colder
killed In the fighting.
climax in 1976, Bow~n said.
with a chanee of showers north
· The county meeting follows portions. Highs in the upper 40s
WASHINGTON - A DEMOCRATIC congressman says he ·the
la local citizen seminars
. held to low 60s.
(Continued on Page 10)
. sl May, not only in Meigs
.
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Wea'ther

LANGSVILLE - The Eagle
award, highest in scouting, was
vehicle. He was lying on the presented to Robert Council, ·
opposite side of the road.
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
He was taken to Veterans Council , at the Langsvi lle
Memori a l Hospital by the Church of Christ here Sunday.
Pomeroy E-R squad where he
Robert is a member of Exwas treated and released. The plorer Post 239, Langsville, of
accident is still under in· which his father is advisor. He

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The truck was
Sunday at 11 :30 a.m. on
County Road 32, Eagle Ridge
Road, three-tenths of a mile
east of SR 7, Shirley Bentz
. Long, Minersville, Rt. I, was
traveling west when a small
buck deer jumped into the path
of the pickup truck and was
killed . There was minor
damage to the truck.

~~o~~phomore at Meigs High

Young Council bega n in
scouting in November, 1966,
with Pack 240 In Rutland. He
was In Cub Scouting and
Webel.os for 2\'.! years, then
went into U1e Boy Scouts in
May, 1969 until February, 1971.
In March, 1971, he joined
Explorer Posl 239. He has held
offices in post and Troop 239 as
::-.::r.::-;o;~·:~·:::•:·l~::·::=::-::;::·~:·:-::.:::·:o.:::···:·:-:·····» well as being a den chief in Cub
OUTLOOK...... Scouting. He presenlly is a
Ohio Extended Outlook
member of the Order of the
Arrow. He has served on the
Wednesday Through Friday:
slaff of Camp Arrowhead with
Cold WedneRday through
Friday. Chance of showers
the kitehen crew and as an
.
archery instructor.
Wednesday night and Thnr..
..,.
Scout Troop 239 and Post 239
day. Highs In the upper 50s.
members served as the color
Low• near 40 early Wedguard for Sunday's ceremonies
nesday and In the low to mid
in leading the Pledge of
40s Thunday and Friday.
Allegiance to the Flag. Robert
::~~~,:~:::f.~&lt;'::ff.f~§J='~*'-::~7&amp;::::* presented his mother the Eagle
pin and his father a tie bar.

·EXTENDED

HQ bSQfi ,.W ~
11
,
speak here
·
~...!

Ray Hobson, vice president
of Ohio Landmark, Inc., will be
k.
1 th
th
1
spea
er
a
e
29
annua
dinner meeting of the Meigs

ww 2 no

·~

Robert was presented his · district level.
medal by former scoutmoaster
Jane Ann Bobo presented the
Robert Swick of Troop 239.
organ prelude and Carl Gorby, ·
Glen Crisp, an Eagle Scout, post institutional represenalso served on the Court of !alive, was · master of
·Honor as well as Harlin ceremonies. A reception was
Newsome, Lyle Dunsmoor and held in the church fellowship
William R Knight from the room following the court.

Bike-a-Thon set
Bicycle riders will have fun
and at the same lime earn
money for the Meigs County
Chapter of the American
Cancer Society Sunday.
Mrs . Ferman Moore,
president, said "blke-a-lhon"
will be sponsored Saturday
from the Cancer Society
headquarters on Cole St. in
Middleport, beginning at9a.m.
to Point Pleasant.
Everyone from eight to 80 is
invited to take part. No motor
bikes will be permitted. Bike
riders are asked to secure
sponsors who will agree to
contribute a sum of money to
in be
f th
the ~apter I name o e
individual making the trip.
F a m i 1y ,
I r i e nd s ,
businessmen or the individual
may serve as sponsors. Any

.OVer,
. quz
- •o-t-e- ~

amoun l from a penny up Is
accepl.able, Mrs. Moore sal&lt;!. It
is suggested sponsors pledge a
figure "per mile" ridden by the
participants. Everyone wllling
to sponsor a rider is asked to
call Mrs. Moore.
The event wiJJ start at 9 a.m.
Saturday. Riders wlll repor·t 'to
the Cancer HQ building on Cole
· Sl. where they wlll pick up
name carda .and sign an accident release form. The ride
not only. will be from Middleport lo Point Pleasant, but
also will include the return
trip. Free Royal Crown Colli
will b~ provided riders at
various points along the way.
This is the first time the local
unit has attempted the blke-alhon. Mrs. Moore niay be
contacted at 992-7231.

One]ap "ghting

Soil and Water Conservaliun
District at 7:30p.m. on Thurs.

LUBANG . ISLAND, . PhUipo

;
Williamsburg, Ohio, grew up
" The Eisenhower Ad another holiday 10 relax on. on a farm · in warren county.
ministration, following the This may delight lhe tourist He . attended Wilmington
Soviet Leninist tradition of ·industry,. but it ·is api mmoral College and the University of
renaming sacred traditions, example for youth.
Cincinnati.
changed the hame from Ar·
·Entertainment at the dinner
mistice Day to Veterans Day·
,;If elected to Congress, 1will will include numbers from the
. Now this is . followed by the sponsor legislation to restore "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend
Ntxonaclion mmoving the day the real name and meaning of Minstrel Association 's new
from II Nov.e.mber to 1111llL...Al'IT!lsUce- Day on Novemoor-snoWllni("tlierewnJ~lie an
Monday .in October, so that 1) . This shoul~ be done to help election or two supervisors.
people could .forget the . real raise the moral tone of our
Recognition will· be given
· mea~mg of war and J.l"ace, and · society which 'is already ou Is tanding · .cooper a tors
of ·the .~ce _foll~mg World suffering ·. from an excess ol durins the past year and a
War I 'n particular·
pleasure and a lack of political door prize will be awarded. The
:·.Now we just have another and historical judgment.'!
Salisbury PTA will serve the
long weekend tn October,
·
·
dinner.

.for oneoftwo holdout Japanese
soldiers authorltles say may
have killed and wounded ·130
personsina27-year-oldprlvate
war.
The defense department said
in Manila today that despite
this, ltmlght forgive the man If
and wben he is captured. His
comrade - lilthejungJesof
· Lubang Island died Thursday
in a clash with' pollee.
"World War n would have
ended · (for both men) on
•Thursday, but one man got
·away," said Lt. Col. Pedrlto de
Guzman, ,,f!ief of the national

-Veterans'' Day shift .a ssailed · I~!~:~~~~![a::sbur:C -~l~:r:~;:~z!E~~

I
l

later telethon appearance in
New York City. Nixon
schedliled an afternoon and
evening motorcade swing
through three counties in the
suburbs of New York City,
Westchester, Suffolk and
Nassau counllea.
On Sunday, Nixon. made
another .campalp raclio addreaaea from hia Camp David,
(Conilnuect on Page 10)

\%:::::::::::::~:::::::::::8:8~:~=~~:;;;;;:;:::;:;:::::::::~::::::::::'-:!:=::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=~:8!:?.::::i8::~:::;;;:::::~:: :;~:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;d!l:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~1;i

By United Press International
SAIGON - U. s: F• PHANTOM jet fighter-OOmbers have

Tent!l CongreSsional District Veterans Day was originally
· Democratic candidate Bob known as Armistice Day, and
Wbealey today assailed the was the one 'day in the year
Nixon Administration's action America celebrated peace,
of putting Veteran's Day 011 an because it was on the lith hour
October Monday ao that peDP.le of tbe lith day ',of the lith
could have one mll'e long month of 1918 .that the brutal
weekend. He released the four years' trench warfare in
--- ~lo.wi!!J 'l'.e.ten._l!!' ....D,. ac3-Y....,.o:Frcuan..,ce fi,!!lll!y came IQ l!!! mi.
statement.
"As a historian and the son.of
a World War I veteran, and,as
''Our veterans ol aU wars,
a veteran myself, I personally
who acrlflced their Uves that
resent what some politicians In
othen mJcbt live are properly
recent yesrs ])ave done to
remembered on Me:mcrlal Day dishonor
the moral meaning of
in ]IJlly. The FaD celebration of ArrnisUce Pay.

terview that "we still have
over two weelis to go and there
could be some shifts."
McGovern said In another
Interview that he believed ''we
are going to )\'In the election by
a narr.ow margin."
Today, the South Dakota
aenator scheduled a Vetera111
Day call upon WQWlded servicemen In a U.S. naval
hospital at PhUadelphla and a

pollee on the Wand.
Authorities tentatively
identified the . surviVQr stlll
fighting the - war' with a
Japanese army rlfle used a
generation ago as 2nd 'Lt. H1roo
Onoda, 50. He was listed by
authorities u the J~st holdout
ofthe Pacific war which ended
officially In 1945. ·
Searchers atepped ·up their
hunt on the .102-equare-mlle
Wand located 7S miles 10uthwest ofMiillliliybt'iifglng- lil
helicopters to track down the
man.
The man and his companion,
l'fc. Kirlshlchi Kozub, were
accused by Wand mWtary
authorities of killing_30pereoll8
and wounding more than 100

others during the past 'l1 years.
.Kozuka, 51, wai llaln in an
encounter with a five-lilan
patrol Thursday ·while his
wounded companion fled,
armed with a .25 caliber World
War, II Japanese rlfle. Kozukli
was identlfled Sunday by his
lrother.
·
, Defense ~cretary Juan
Ponce Enrile wu asked what
would happen to the remaiDlng
holdout In llght of the 3!1
murder.ch11J11es.
"It depends on what hu
· happened," be'aald. "We will ·
bave lo deal with him with a
certain drlree ol camp rdon.
Having beta in the jungle for 10
lOIII,maybebe hu '*n..actlnc
to 111'1111 ve hhn'llf"

�2- The DallySentmel, Mtddleport-PomeroJ, 0, Oct 23, 1972

Kole Trio opens series

Television Log

3-TheDaUyS.nlinel: Middloport-Pomeroy,O ,Ort 23,1972

with New South s.o unds
Followmg a record-breakmg Com m u n 1t y Co n c e r t
membership campaign last Association as a vital cultural

- - - : - - -'--111 onth;-the--'ftl~ntr- C~tn~

mumty Concert Assocrahon
Will open 1ts 26th season
Wednesday evenmg with the
appearance of the Ronme Kole
Tr10 at 8 p m at the Galha
Academy
H1gh
School
audttormm
Described as ' New Orleans '
Newest SOund," the tno IS
composedofRonmeKoleat Ute
piano, Rtchard Taylor, drums,
and Everett Link, Jr , hass
The1r program will mclude a
Gershwm medley, the ' Battle
Hymn of the Republic, "
"Yellow Bird," "Big NOise
f r om
W1n n e t k a , ' '
"Malaguena," and other
selections
•
The ass""iatlon's board of
directors Is proud to an·
nouoce that a third concert
has been scheduled for Jan.
18. Featured artist will be
the handsome and talented
Metropolitan Opera
baritone, Frank Guarrera
The final l""al concert will
be the Texas Boys Choir on
March 13.

I~

Membership cards, along
with a schedule of community
concerts available throughout
the area, have been matted out
thiS past weekend to a total of
823 subscribers In Galha,
Jackson, Meigs and Mason
CoWJties Th1s represents the
highest membership m the
assoc1a11on's a-year
exiStence, surpassmg the total
of 808 m 1959
Dr
Lewts
Schmidt,
association president, and Mrs
Donald Thaler, 1972 drive
chatrman, have expressed
their great apP,rec 1 a~wn to the
many enthusiastic workers for
their hard work m making the
dr1ve so successful Cred1t also
goes 10 the fme cooperation
g1ven by Ute GallipoliS Dally
Tr1bune, Pomeroy Sentmel, Pt
Pleasant Reg1ster, Jackson
Publishmg Co, WJEH, WMPO, WLMJ, and schools and
busmesses throughout the
area
Dr Schmidt pomts out that
he and the other members of
the board of dll'ectors feel that
the success of th1s year's
• membership Call_lfa~gn Is a,

Lucy 6, Petttcoat Junchon 3, Merv Gnffm

Stauffer ChemiCal Co
Me~gs County patrons are

13, Andy Griffith 15
Dick Van Dyke 15, PonderosaJ, 4

in;;UIJrtiuJ~r~r•di•~lls"eUor·tsir:"Ai~ffih:Nujfi-si~gs-li!ir--j::f:*~J:t*

bnngmg !me, bve mustcal
ent;,rtarnmeno here over the
past 25 yeilr.l!.
ParttctJlarly gratifying IS the
growmg number of J?alrons
supporting the assoc1at10n
The1r membership ourchases
enable a great many h1gh
school and college musrc
students and residents of
children's homes throughout
the area to att;,nd the concerts
Galha County patrons 10elude the Commercial and
Savmgs bank, F1rst National
Bank, Evans Packmg Co , M
J Fry Automatic Weldmg,
GalhpolJS Savmgs and Loan,
Holzer Medtcal Center Clime,
Gavm Plant (OhiO Electr1c
ConstructiOn Department),
Mr and Mrs L Claude Miller,
OhiO Valley Bank, Mr. Jose
Ov1es, Scott;,n-D1llon Co, the
Rev and Mrs Linson H
Stebbms, Mr and Mrs Carl
Dahlberg , Ohio Bell Telephone
Co , and Mr and Mrs Merlyn
G Ross
Mason County patrons ar~
Clhzens National Bank, Dave
O'Neal Real Estate Agency,
Pantasote Co of N Y, Inc,
People's Bank, PI Pleasant
Bmldmg and Loan Assoctatwn,
Prrce Patrick, P A , and

5 30 - Elec Co 33,

I Drllon 15
13 Hodgepodge
6 00 - News 3 4, 8,
Truth or Conseq
Societies In TranSition 33 Sesame 51 20
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4 15, ABC News 6 , CBS News 8, 10
Gurlar 33, I Dream ol Jean me 13, Hathayoga 33

Loan Bahr
Baker
Furmture, Chapman Shoes,
C111zens Natwnal Bank, City
Loan and sav1ngs Co ,
Economy Savmgs and Loan,
Ewmg Funeral Home, Far.
mers Bank and Savmgs,
Foreman and Abbott Furmture , G and J Auto,
H and r
Firestone,
George S Hobstetter, K10g'
Builders Supply Co , Nelson's
Drugs, New York Clothing
House, Pomeroy Natwnal
Bank, R.acrne Home National
Bank , Swrsher and Lohse
Drugs and Vdlage Pharmacy
Rectproctty has agam been
extended to members of the
TCCCA by the Assoctahons 10
Charleston, W Va, and Zanesv1lle Charleston's senes will
feature Marrlyn Horne,
soprano, the C1ncmnah
Symphony w1th Dmo C1am,
prams!, and Van Chburn,
p1amst Appearmg m Zanesv1lle wtll be the Duke Ellington
Band, the Czech State Orchestra and the Amerrcan
Chamber Ballet A fourth
concert has been announced by
the Lancaster association,
wh1ch has scheduled Ronaldr
and Jeffrey Marlowe, duopramsts, on Apnl 5

7 00 - News6 TruthorConseq 3 BeattheCiock4 ; Circus ' t3
InSight 33, What's My Lme 8, Samt IS Read Your Way Up

33 Eleclnc Co 20 , Sa1nt 15
To Tell The Truth 6 , Traffic Court 10, EpiSode Acl•on 33
Parent Game~ Hollywood Squares 4 Youn~ Dr Kildare a
Hodgepodge lodge 20 Town Hall Pollhcs 72 3
8 00 - Gunsmoke a, 10, Rowan and Marhn's Laugh In 4 15
UFO 6, Hollywood TeleviSion Theatre 33
, '
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10 , Pro Foolball6 13, Movie They M1ght
Be Giants" 4, 15
9 30 - Dons Day 8 Only the Strong 10, Book Beat 20,33
10 00 - B1ll Cosby 8 10, News 20 From The Hills 33
10 30 - Concerts In the Lawn 33
11 00 - Newp, 4, 6. 8 10, 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Carson 3 4, 15, Mov1es "Cutter s
Trail" 8, " Stop Tram 349" 10
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4
12 00 - News 6
12 30- Mov1es ' Carry On Teacher ' 6 Mr Scoutmaster' 13
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
2 00 - News4
2 30 - News 13
TUESDAY, Oct 24, 19ll
7 30-

6 00 -

6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmt•me 10
6 20 - Paul Harvey 13

6 25 - Fa.th For Today 13

"

TJ:O •C
pr 4 l

ment 10

6 45 - Corncob Report 3

55 OO 7 30 13
8 00 6
7

1
l
B
'IYJ:
~
e a 0 ng r w ay ~.

,.,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SPLIT END FOR WIDE
RECEIVER'S FOLKS
NEW YORK (KFS) -The Delos Rentzels,

Back Again

.84

I.

Pass

Opemng lead- •

Q

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Not a Single Disease

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald "We have had a
lot of requests to do another
sertes of articles on the
squeeze play "
Jim "Let's do 1t The
squeeze IS a play m whtch
you make It tmposstble for By Lawrence Lamb, MD.
your opponents to keep pro·
Dear Dr. Lamb - I Mve
tection m two or three SUits colitis and m_y doctor d1d not
by playmg out high cards m give me a d1et He satd eat
the others In general the whatever I want and ehmmsqueeze 1s used to brmg m ate whatever causes trouble
one extra t r 1c k although I am 70 years old
some squeeze ~ &lt;lo «Wen -- --•·
better "
Dear Reader- ! rece1ve a
Oswald "Here 1s a very lot of letters on cohhs and
stmple squeeze Anyone who the problem In answenng
stops at SIX no-trump has no them IS that cohtts IS a _genwomes about his contract
He starts with 12 winners A IS squeezed JUSt as surely as
match point player Will go If he had to play before
after the overtr1ck on the South "
theory that an overtrtck IS
(NfWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE .ASSN I
always worthwhile "
Jlm "Change the EastWest hands around and if
declarer Just cashes dum- The hiddmg has been
my's wmners there will be West North East
a al m pIe squeeze agamst Pass
Pass
Eut There doesn't appear Pass 31•
•
Poss
to be&lt; any squeeze against Poss
5•
•Pass
Weet, since Weat alta in back P...
Pass
of Soutb but South cah han· Pass
6•
Pass
die We1t'a caae alm~t as You, South, ~old

Colitis Is a General Word

6"'

eully,"

Olll'lld "It just requires

Every Woman Wan1s fo Know J

Ronnie Kole Trio

Squeeze PI

Poss

.AK88 .AlOZ .K5 .AJU

tb8t SOuth clllh his tricks in What do· you do now?
A-Pill, You have__Ml the
tlle-rllltt order He wins the controls,
but there will surely
apade lead· takee hll ace be proltlorns
at oeven,
IDd klag ';/ bell"tl and now
TODAY'S QUESTION
1'11111 oil dummy's winners to
You,
South hold
CGIIIt down to 1he nine of
• AK862 •Az t5 .AK86%
illlrtl and Mven c•f spades
Ia dummy IIIII IICil-lmaU of What IS your open1n,11 brd?
Answer tomorro-..
~ bi bl1 own bend West 1

eral term It literally means
mflammation or n ntal!on of
the colon Thts can be as
soctated With constipation
wh1ch 1s the most common
form These mdlVIduals 1m
prove markedly by drmkmg
adequate amounts of water
or otMt llljuids aifd- formti\g
a re~ular h a b 1t (Which
doesn t mean that 1! IS neeessary every day ) I usually recommend that patients
do th1s by drmkmg at least
two cups of liQUid at breakfast and more tf they tolerate 11 well and then gomg to
the bathtoom tmmedl3(ely
after breakfast and s1ttlng
for a reasonable length of
time or until they feel the
Ul ge
By conhnumg th1s
practtce dally, many JndlVlduals Will develop a more
regular habit
For. tbts type ol cohtis 11
IS Important to mcrease the
amount of roughage 10 the
diet which mcludes vege.
tables and foods containing
bulk; such as cereals, wtth
less emphaSIS on high calor~, low bulk tiwds sucb. assweets, candles, cakes and
starchy foods
Other people who are told
they have cohhs have an
overactiVe colon w h 1c h
causes recurrent bouts of
diarrhea and sometimes ex-

Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue6, 13 Sesame St 33

T1mmy &amp; Lass1e 6

1

Pass

Fllntslones 13
T\)day3,415 CBSNews8,10 News6
Sleepy Jefters 8 Romper Room 6, Bullw1nkle &amp; Rocky

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8, New Zoo Reyue 6
9 00 - Paul DIXOn 4, Phil Donahue 15 Romper R'oom a Con
centratoon 6 Fr~endly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 , What

eqtuty m heu of rent "
Stereotypical stupidity Stx-f1gure-Balaned
N y Kn k
1c s star Wall Fraz1er parked h1s Rolls,.
R
f
oyce m ront of J1mmy Weston 's spot Arookie
parents of Lance Rentzel of pro football and cop boobooed over With, "I don't care who you
JoeyHeatherton fame, split after 35 years TV dr1ve for paj. you're gomg to have to move thiS
medicO Vmce Edwards &amp; wife split, he says, heap " who was the blonde beauty at every
over~ love for horses Slow ones The black one of the court sess10ns durmg fmanc1er Lou
pols for McGoff are loud-liberals - liberal over Wolfson's tr18l'
Bishop Sheen quote
everything but showb12 blacks for NIXon Then "Baloney Is flattery so thick 11 cannot be true
It's abuse RadloCityMuslcHaDisthiscloseto Blarney IS flattery so thm we hke 1t"
The
QUttlmg forever
Old Pulitzer Prtzewmrung huntmg season'&amp; oh, and Northwest All"hnes IS
editor Max Kase told us a funnee U S offermg $25,000 to woods-prowlers fmdlng and
OlympiCS swun coach Shenn Cleaver - can't returnmg the $200,000 phantom hiJacker D B
swim r
Cooper a1rhe1sted, convmced he dldn 't survtve
At Stratford, Ont , William Hutt was to enJOY
starrmg as "King Lear " Backstage radio
It took smger Jerry Wayne 19 years to cure
reported the Canadian hockey team just had himself of a tortured back condition and he's
trounced Russia Hutt stepped out of Lear wntten a book about 1t and cure !'The Bad
Ch&amp;[pct~1 an-J!Jlfli!O.l\llc&lt;;a,thV;\9\ l!U'&lt;~ .'IPd g91 1);l.&lt;lcll Book " Expects Il'll be as widespread as
ti(Qf illdi~ttb!t Of th~ ilil-,.,, 11,\~.;lll~g~t,~vi!Uwi~.~~ life
.. ~~ ;· -l' "· jl!IIW Da~ O;n\er. at 1'1"114~ .Heller's sa1d hls
•IJ(I1Bnre the fl'eslden!S this ••. l'!l~nel&lt;l' ilillsfcal ~'P.1ppi~' JSsetm the time .. , autob10g will shape up with four chapters
arel place od the TrJ~wnty of Charlemagne - but director~horeographer devoted to Betty Grable
L1za Mmnelh's
WIN AT BRIDGE Bob Fosse still manages to get hJS dancers mto Jommg Ute cookbook brigade Thmk MCA Isn't
straw hats &amp; canes . David Merrtck's books hugely successful' Why - 11 JUSt borrowed
runneth over m black mk his production of $140,000,000 And you gotta be big to manage
aySWoody Allen's "Play It Agam, Swn" (flim fees that' Malta's prem1er Dom Mmtoff couldn't
included) shows a profit of more than $1,000,000 get along With other countries, and now hts wtfe
JOinS the rnlffed-wtth-Mmtoff brtgade, She's
Margaret Tnunan's agents says she's back m ~Ighty
Bernard Lee plays James
amenable to a Bdwy play Singer Jack Jones, Bond's boss "M" m the spy senes So he just got
a multt-marrled, may mulU agam wtth Br1tlsh mugged, beaten and robbed by a couple of thugs
NORTH (D)
actress
Susan George
Barbara Slljllwyck's after a g~rl he'd befnended set hun up
.75
wrtting her memou-s Her Frank Fay chapter "Cabaret," when shown m Germany, chopped
.962
.AKQJIO
should be a doozer When Fay opened as the out the Naz1-1rony of its "Tomorrow Belongs to
"'AKQ
smash of the year ( '44) m "Harvey," Barbara's Me" song Even though 1ts pomt ts a mam target
WEST
EAST
pals asked if she'd go see 11 whtle in N Y The m the fhck Let's not be nasty to the Nazis, as
• QJ108
.93
wry gal's response "I saw enough stx-foot Noel Coward burlesqued 11 m Hitler days
• QJI07
rabb1ts when I was marrted to hun'"
+2
.98784
Author V1ctor Lasky abandoned his book about
"'J852
"'10973
Half the mcome of the filthiest porno sheet D1ck Ntxon for one about Moshe Dayan
SOU'DI
goes to ftght the decent folks who get the law on
Jack Lemmon flnJShed f1lmmg "Avant!"
.AK6U
11
Young comic Jackte Clark's opening hiS and early spies tell us 1t's a stylish com1c
.AK 53
own Eastside nightclub, "The Squawk Box," trmmph Billy Wilder filmed 11 from the brtght,
U3
Oct.
26 Jackie's glmmlck-mvltmg anyone sophisticated stage comedy by Samuel Taylor
"'6 4
None vulnerable
wtth any gripe whatever on his tongue to sound ( "Sabrma" etc ) The 111m opens up the ItaiiBnWest North East South 11 off One of Fun Ctty's btggest realty fll111S based fun by settmg 11m a sea resort mstead of
Pass
(Mwdman) advertises for office tenants w1th a Rome hotel We read the scrtpt - a nifty,
Pass
p.., 4NT.
Pass
Pass 5N'!:. thiS recession come-on "Will accept stock or naughty delight
P... 6.
Pass 6NT.

1.!3.&gt; .

,

6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Boble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com

~i'!llm~~~:$';-W..,;uX?W£-:&gt;:&lt;::::.:rk";~~tm:=~::-:'(.~~~,m,m~:m,;-;$b.:&gt;.«W".«-::x::%$;--.a.:&gt;».&gt;wi*

l':l'

Sunnse Semmar 4, Sacred Heart 10

Us.

I

By Helen Bottel

••

GRATEFUL FOR SMAU.. BLESSINGS
Dear Helen
My wtfe wants an operallon to enlarge her breasts I fought if
before With "too costly "But now she has worked and saved the
money We don't need lt elsewhere, so I can't staU much longer
The plam fact IS, Helen, I have seen both well~ndowed and
lesser~ndowed women m the1r 40s and I much prefer my
beaullfuJ w1fe as 1s Big-busted females aren't my bag I try to
get thts across, but of course I can't adnut to personal experience, so she thinks I am JUS! bemg kind
Please don't thmk she wants this operallon so that she can
charm other men She lovea only me, but how do you tell a
woman who believes th1s propaganda about all men worshipmg
b1g boobies that some men still bke understated thmgs' - MR
CURIOSITY SATIS FlED
_ ".. • , , ,
P..S. I'm womed too about the-safety of1P!'t!mg plastic gags
II). ~ woman's body Qln medtca~ problemsr-esult?
Dear Mr CS
Perhaps your .v1fe might outgrow th1s b1g Amer~can Breast
Fellsh 1f you'd get tembly knowledgeable and refer her to a
study published by researchers Paul Mussen and Alvm Scodell
These authors found that men who prefer top heavy women are
"q10re dependent," fear deCISive actiOn, need safety - mother
words, they're lookmg for a mother to protect them
Tell your wife you don't f1t the unage, and Isn't she lucky''
Actually, she should be grateful for small blessings - they're
commg back m style - H
P S Any major operation has a danger factor, as your doctor
Will agree Also, unplants might slow the detection of breast
cancer

9 30 - ToTeiiTheTruth3 Jeopardy6 HazelS
10 00 - D1nah Shore3, 15 Dock Van Dyke13 Jokers Wild 8,10
Columbus S1x Caliln~ 6
10 30 - Concentrat1on 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Splot Second lJ
Pr1ce Is Right 8 10
11 00 - Sale of the Century 3, 4, 15 Love American Style 6
Gambit 8, 10, Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 Love of Life 8, 10, Bewotched
6 13
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4
Jackie Oblonger 8 News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3W'sGame3 15 SplotSecond6 SearchforTomorrowa
10
I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 It's Your Bet a Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Let's Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00- Days of Our L•ves 3, 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglass 6 , Gu1d1ng L•ght 8 10
2 30 - Doators 3, 4, 15 Datmg Game 13, Edge of Noght 8 10,
Just GeneratiOn 20
3 00 - General Hosp•tal 6 13 Another World 3, 4 15 Love "
Splendored Thmg 8 10
3 30 - One Lite to L1ve6. Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 Secret
Storm 8, 10, Maggoe &amp; The Beaul•ful Machine 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 Sesame St 33, 20, Love
Amer1can Style 13 Merv Gnffrn 4 Fll ntsfones 6 Grlhgan s
Isle 8 Movie "Red Hot &amp; Blue" 10

4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Pettocoat Junction 3 Dame I Boone 13
Merv Griffon 8 Andy Gnfflth 15
5 00 - Dock Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers 33, 20, Ponderosa 3 4
Damel Boone 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet a Gomer Pyle
13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 00 - News 3, 4 8, 10, 15, Human DimenSion Jj
6 30 - News 3 4 15, 6, 8 10, I Dream q~o~Jann l e 13, Grow•ng
Hlni' \'Jp 33
" 0 11!&lt; I w
7 00 - News6, 10 Whats Mj.une,• Elec. Co 20 A~l(y, G"ff•lh
15, Beat the Clock 4, 6 I ve Got A Secret 13, Trutn or Con
sequences 3, Samt 15, Electnc Co 20
7 30 - ThiS IS Your Lite 3 Doctors on Call 4 To Tell The Truth
6 Pncc Is R1ght 8, 10, Beat the Clock 13, RFD 20 InSight 33
8 00 - Bonanza 3 4 15, Temperatures Rosing 6, 13 , Maude a
10 Age of Anx1ety 13 Umted Nations Day, 1972 20
8 30 - Hawaii Five 08, 10, Mov1e Short Walk to Dayloght '6
13 Umted Nallons Day Concert 33
9 00 - Bold Ones 3, 4 15, John Davidson 15
9 30 - Of Thee I Sing 8, 10
10 00 - NBC Reports 3 4 15 Marcus Welby M D 6 13 News
20
11 00 - News Weather Sporls3,4,6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4, 15, V~rgm1an 8
Movies "Splendor In The Grass ' 10, The Enemy Below 13
12 00 - Your Health 4
1 30 - N•ws Weather 4 Local News 13

+++

Helen
A comment on the doctor's quotes you published m response
to "Sneezy's" quesllonsaboutmanjuana You should check your
sources mor~ carefully You refer to pot as "a kmd of grass" that
might cause hay fever As a hotanJSt, I must p01nt out that
CaiUlabts IS about as closely related to the grass family as you
are to a carp or a canary Th1s is not to discount the poss1b1lity
that some people are allergic to 1!, JUSt as others react to
ragweed (whtch 1s also not a grass)
A siX-year veteran of mariJUana use, I have yet to see
ev1dence that either I or my fr1ends have different skin quality,
as the good Dr Whats1sname suggests m your column What IS
needed on thiS subject IS a well'lles1gned sctentif1c study rather
than a strm~ of casual observations
'
There IS a lot of fear and nusunderstandmg
about pot, the use
(
of which Is only mcreased byunfoundf\11 statements presented as
truth to the reading public It Is the responstbility of any wr~ter to
check h1s or her facts thoroughly before publlcallon' - MIFFED

•

Dear Miffed
cesstve gas formatiOn These
Correction (Please forgive). "Grass" IS not grass CaiUlabis
mdiv1duals have a some Sativa IS a PLANT of tbe nettle family. Small rebuttal It makes
what different problem and
may need a bland diet often mesneeze-andthatJSnolan "unfounded statement," though1t
contammg soft foods
doesn 't prove anythmg either Both you and my doctor agree it
Then there are some peo- COULD cause aUerg1c reactions
ple who have colitis or overLarger rebuttal COncerrung the quoted statements of a
!llltionally.known.doctw:..(.on.relatlonshlp of-pot to possible akm
ad1ve colon on the basis- of
thetr mtolerance -to certam problems), they're conSiderably more "folUided" than yours,
foods Thts mcludes milk which unply, "My frlenda and I blow weed; we don't have acne
Some people cannot d1gest or mflamed eyelids, therefore Dr Herschenshon's observations
the milk sugar and It causes are false "
them a considerable amount
On one pomt, however, we fully agree a great deal more
of difficulty mcludmg gas, SCientific study is needed here My object in offering occasional
distention and related prob
!ems Coffpe also 1s an trn- "mconclus1ve reports" 18 not to "prove," but to mspll'e contant to till colon and even tmued research
though drmkmg decaffelnOnequest1on· WoilldyoubelieveANYreseardl,nomatter
ated products helps there are how scientific, which didn't prove wbat you want to believe• a reasonable number jj{ peo- H
pie who still get 1rntat10n
- :--:::--.:--;---;:;-:--;--------.....:.....,._ __
of the dlj!est 1ve tract from ency People who can't tolriiitant Fame
the otis m the coffee that erate milk w11l need to con,
,
The editorial, What s ~~
1mpart Its flavor )'hils, sider obtaming calcmm supstmply sw1tchmg from reg-_ plemeots
• f;ia t te r wlth Kansas ,
Ular coffee to a decaft"emIn letters from readers I roulht overnight fame to
8,{Je~a~~~~:
a ted product wlll help some detect there Is some con
people but there are sttll fusiOn on the use of raw lished in the Emporia Gaothers who must g1ve up aJl fruits While they may be lr- zette It was used In tbe
forms of coffee
rttatmg to some people who C&amp;ll)paign to elect Wilham
It is entirely true that have an overactive colon McKinley as president of the
some mdivtduals--w~U-learn whiCh k one fQrm elf colittsJ_ United eStates
__
by e~penence that there are illey are helpful for lndiVtdcertam foods that they can't uals who have the constipation colitis Raw frUit and
tolerate and 1111 of these, of even some cooked frutt, for ,
course. should hP avo1ded example prunes, often help
Thts may mean takmg vrta m mamtiumng good bowel The only state m the Union
min pills io make sure that functiOn
which has a coffee-growing
there IS no vttamm def1c1&lt;NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE •~•
1 industry •• Hawaii

Wrw.:

&amp; ·THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Welcome back, WOUB up there m Athens'
Unless some last-mmute h1tch developed, WOUB-TY (UHF
Channel 20, Cable ChaMel II), returned to the all' !f~t mght,
after an absence of some two months Or, tf there 'were a few
bugs to be worked out, It comes back on today
We're happy to see the Oh10 Umverslty station back 10
busmess (the shutdown was to pernut erection of'" new tower
and a ''feed" to a satellite statiOn, Channel« m Cambridge)
WMUL-TV IN Huntington provtded the area with local public
teleVISion m the lnterun, domg Its usual good job, but there are
many reasons for rej01cmg about WOUB-TV's return
• F1rst 1s the "Newswatch" program, which concentrates on
Southeastern OhiO and the rtver counties 10 West Vlrginis every
rught at 10- plus the usual weather and sports. It's the nearest
thmg to a "local" TV station In Ohio we have (l can't avoid a
plug for WSAZ-TV, however, which does yeoman sernce m
trymg to cover a huge Signal area )
But there are other reasons, too One IS the fact that WOUBTV will run ftve hours of kiddie programs every Saturday
morning, according to the gracious WOUB publiciSt, Gert
Eyman It'll be "Electric Company" and "MISter Rogers" and
the like- reruns, we woul4 gu~ ~o complrunts, though, Even
reruns of quality shows are unprovements over most of the mindmacerating goo that the networks run for the lltUe ones every
Saturday
'
(And, like WMUL-TV, WOUB-TV will be broadcastmg the
new Saturday and SWlday everung schedules )

+++

For fans of WOUB-FM, th~ big 50,1100-watt publtc radio
station will rersume broadcasting some time th1s week, 'with the
exact date not certain.

+++
1 face a decfalon What should we put as audio on our news
channel, PoinTVtew OJ 5· WOUB-FM or the cather pleasant
middle-of-the-road radio station, WAMX-FM 1n AaiJland·
Huntington' Both have !hell' advantages, and I'd like to hear any
and aU opinions on the subject
'
.
I

+++

ClliCINNATI (UP!)- Gene
Tenace may have waved the
magic wand, but Manager
Dick Williams was the head
magician of the scrambling,
scrapping and now world
champion Oakland Athletics
Every move Williams made,
and he made a million of them,
was as good as gold-~wen to
taking "Most Valuable
Player" Tenace out of the ball
game for a pinchrunner only
halfway through the A's'
dramatic 3-2 triUmph over the
Cincinnati Reds m Sunday's
aeventh.game clincher
Tenace had, mdeed, done his
job In the first five games of
the Senes, he slammed four
homers to put himself m the
Series record book alongside
the likes of Babe Ruth and lou
Gehrig He dldn 't break those
fellows' record in the seventh
game-but he dld dme m two

Tenacctn, which is the way he
ongmally w,as chriStened, was
voted the "Most Valuable
Player" award by the sports
writers covermg the Senes,
which means he gets a new car
from a magazme
The A's' first run was set up
With one out m Ute first ummg
when Angel Mangual slammed
a center field drive that center
fielder
Bobby
Tolan
mJSjudged, coming In and then
gomg out and leapmg and
havmg the ball tip off his glove
for an error that allowed
Mangual to go all the way to
thU'd One out later the art1fic1al turf got mto the act
DeniS Menke was backing up
at third to field what looked
like a third-out hopper from Sal
Sando when the hall struck the

high boun&lt;'&lt;' over his head for a
smgle that scored Mangual
The Reds fmaUy matched
that run m thef1fth mnmg when
Tony Perez doubled off A's'
starter John Odom and one out
later was moved to third by
success1ve walks to Cesar
Gei'onllliO and DaVId Concepcton, and then brought home
when pmcholutter Hal McRae
hit a sacrifice fly off reliever
Jup Hunter , the eventual
wumer
'
But that very play could have
been the turnmg pomt agamst
the Reds Cincy starter Jack

stra1ght batters at the po1nt
where Reds manager Sparky
Anderson elected to have
McRae htt for him
Anderson Just wasn't havrng
luck With liis dec1s1ons the way
WtllJams was
When he brought m Pedro
Borbon to replace Billingham,
the game went out the wmdow
rap1dly Bert Campanens SID·
gled to greet Pedro, moved to
second on a sawf1ce and thml
on anmf1eldout Enter Tenace
agam- With a lm~riYe double
mto the left field corner that let
Campanens trot m Exit
,
~~
. ,,,

:; Today's

'

~Sport

And then Bando rtpped a
lmednve to dead center field
for another double that would
have scored Jumbo the
Elephant, let alone speedy Al
LeWis On that play Tolan went
back, suffered a cramped
hamstrmg muscle that later
forced hlm from the game, and
m1s,sed a desperate leap for the
ball
The Reds got one r110 back tn
the etghth, but that's all as
Williams kept jugglmg When
Pete Rose led off w1th a smgle,
that was onl)"' the fll'st hlt
HWlter had allowed-but Wil-

he d1d m yanking Tenace
In came Ken Holtzman, and
Joe Morgan doubled to put
runners at second and third
Undaunted, Wi111ams sent for
rehef ace Rollle Fingers, and
that wrapped It up Fingers got
pmcholutter Joe Hague on a
pop, intentionally walked
Johnny Bench gave up a
sacr1f1ce fly io Perez that
scored Rose and then made
Menke his blg "out man" on a
pop fly to left Menke after a
fine Series, left five 'runners
stranded m the finale
The Reds' last gas11 came

hit by a pitch But Fmgers got
Rose to lift a fly to Joe Rudi 1n
left and the seven-game Senes,
m wh1ch a record SIX games
were dectded by one rWl, was
all over
Williams disclosed he almost
made one more move right
there at the end and was talked
out of it He was thinking of
lifting Fingers and callmg on
Vida Blue to Fitch to Rose
"Leavehunm"," 88ld catcher
Dave .~can "He's throwing
good
Williams had provuled a
shocker with hiS opening

at bat m the Ser1es, moving
Tenace to first base where he'•
rarely played, and putting
Duncan behmd the plate.
"I took a chance," said
Wtlllams "I've done It
before "
"Oakland has to be Ute bell
team 10 basebaU," said ADderson, who stirred up a Jot ot
people m that California dty
when he sa1d before the Series
he thought the Reds and Plt1.sburgh Pirates were the two
best teams m baseball.
"They're the world cham·
PlODS"

And so they are

:Reds pay full tribute to champs

Parade

.•
..''

CINCINNATI (UPI)-Down- Tenace as the -premter star of
cast but not demoralized, the the World Series
- liP! ~arts Editor
·- Cincinnati Reds pa1d full
An obacure bench-warmer
CINCINNATI (UPI)- A comprehensrve sW"Vey was once done tnbute to the underdog for Oakland until mid«ason,
to detenrune what there IS so spec1al m the background of that Oakland Athletics who Tenace only hlt five home 1"llliS
man who displays extraordmary valor under severest con- defeated them, 3-2, Sunday to durmg the regular season
Natrona! Basketball Assoc•atton N a 1 10 n a 1 Football League
Yet m the Series, Tenace outditions, that man who usually wms the Medal of Honor, and they Win the World Senes
Standrng•
Stand•ngs
"Oakland has to be the best homered the entire Cincinnati
By Un11ed Press lnrernatlonal
By Umted Press ln1ernattonal found out there 1sn 't necessarily anything so spectal about such a
Eastern ConfQrence
Amertcan Football Conference man at all
team m baseball-they're the team, four to three It was Uttle
Allanl1c Drvlsron
East
world champions," S81d Reds wonder that he was chosen
wl pet gb
wl t p-et ptpa The same holds true With those ballplayers we hke to designate
manager
Sparky Anderson, recipient of Sport Magazine's
Boston
6 0 1000
M1an10
6 o o 1000 145 87 as World Senes "heroes u
swallowmg his disappointment "Most Valuable Player"
New York
5 1 833 1 N y Jets .; 2 o 667 187 w
Buffalo
2 4 333 4 Bullal o 2 4 o 667 128 144 They come m all shapes, colors and s1zes
at seemg the l{eds lose the award, a new car
Philadelphia 0 5 000 511, New Eng 2 4 0 333 82 186 There are the superstars, of course, ballplayers like Roberto
Morgan shouldered most of
Central DIYISton
Ba1t1more
Clemente, who dominated the World Senes last year; Brooks Ser1es for the second tune m
three
years
the
blame hlmself for Cin·
w I pet g b
1 s o 167 94 122 Robmson, who did 1! the year before, Frank Robmson, the 1006
Houston
3 2 600
Central
"My guys don't have to hang cmnati 's losing the Series, but
Bal hmore
3 3 500 'n
w 1 t pet pt pa shckout, and Sandy Koufax, who took all honors m 1!165
their lfeads for anything and he said, "I'm a Utile dlsapAllanla
2 4 333 l'l2 P•llsburgh
On the other hand, there are those With far less ability w..o they know It," Anderson sa1d ~ pointed that our pitchers let
Cleveland
0 6 000 3'12
4 2 o 667 139 89
suddenly emerge as "stars" m the World Ser1es Players like
Western Conference
C1ncmnal1
"Oakland never qu1t," said him do as much damage as he
Midwest DIVISion
4 2 o 667 108 85 util1tyman Al We1s, ll"On-handed Chuck Hiller and even Billy Clncmnati second baseman Joe dld "
W I pet 9 b Cleveland
Morgan in grudgmg adMorgan went hitless through
Milwaukee
5 1 833
3 3 0 500 94 114 Martm
KC Omaha
2 2 500 2 Houslon 1 5 0 167 80 165 Gene Tenace belongs to thiS second group He was a parttuner m1rahon. "They deserve to be Ute first five Series games and
Detro• t
2 2 500 2
With the Oakland A's all season, battmg only 225m 79 games for world champions "
Wost
wound up with o,nly three hits
Chocago
2 3 400 2'1,
wltpclpfpa
them
all
year
and
hlttmg
but
five
homers
Like
many
fans,
the
Reds
m
24 at bats
Pactftc [.itvtston
3 2 1 583 150 111
Along
comes
the
WorldSer1es
and
he
acts
as
If
he's
Blll
Dickey,
wlpctgb Oakland
were somewhat dumbfoWlded
Morgan's roommate, Bobby
Kan Coty 3 3 o 500 142 112
Phoen1x
3 1 750
Mickey Cochrane, Errue Lombardi and Yog1 Berra all rolled into by the emer~ence of Gene Tolan,waslnthecentralftgure
SanD1ego
2
3
I
417
110143
GoldenState 3 1 750
Denver 2 4 0 333 128 166 one He clubs folll' home runs against the startled Cincmnati
Los Angeles
4 2 667 Natrona IFootball Conference Reds, which is as many as Babe Ruth or lou Fehrtg ever hit m
Seattle
3 3 500 1
East
1 5 167 3
Portland
any series and more than such other far more famous sluggers as
wltpctpfpa
Sunday's Results
W
shngln
5 1 0 833 142 7a Joe Dimagg~o, Hank Aaron and Willie Mays ever d1d, he dr1ves m
Mtlwaukee 104 Cleveland 84
Dallas
4 2 0 667 122 73
Los Angeles 104 Ch1cago '19
9of Ute A's 16 runs, and he tears up Cincumatl pitchers for 8 hits
N Y G1anls
Seallle 120 Portland 119
4 2 0 667 152 124 m 23 tunes up for an eye-blmking 348 figure which makes him
fovert1me)
51 LOU IS 2 4 0 333
82 129 the ser1es MVP walking away
(only games $cheduled&gt;
Pholdlpha
Today S Games
Gene Ten ace doesn't even look like a World Ser1es hero
I 5 0 167
59 150
Pholadelphoa at Boston (after
Central
He's listed as being 190 and 6 feet but that must be with a safe
noon)
wltpctpfpa
on hiS back when he's standing on a step ladder
Ionly game scheduled)
Green Ba y
4 2 0 667 109 93 The little blond moustache he wears accentuates hiS pale
Delr01t
4 2 0 667 161 141 complexiOn, and many of his teammates call this amtable httle
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Oak- WorldSeriesbestofallSunday
American Basketball
Mmnesota
Association Standrngs
Italian
from
Lucasville,
Ohio,
"Ten-ach1"
wh1ch
IS
the
name
his
land
captain Sal Bando might after the A's had handed the
2 3 0 400 109 89
By United Press lnteroahonal Ch•cago 1 3 I 300 92 108 forebearers went by
have summed up the 1972 Clnt;lnnatl Reds a 3-2loss in the
E1st ~
West
"Ten-aeh\;
Il&lt;lve
you,"
Dick
Williams,
the
A's'
manager
called
.....
. .. ....... ..........
'. seventh and final game.
wloct ab
w I I pet pf pa
~~·· •• :. • • ••••• ••• !o; .-:-;.;.·· •• ' ........... ~i
Carolina
426671
out to hun whlle he was bese1ged by newsmen following Sunday's
"I don't think we could have
Los Angeles
Kentucky
225001
4 1 I 750 130 80 finale m which he knocked in the wmners' f1rst run With a smgle
eltpected to beat a team like
New York
335001
:1&lt;·
nta 4 i 0 667 142 94 and then !hell' go-ahead run With a SIXth mnmg double
Memphis
2 3 400 1'12 Atla
" Cincinnali In less tban seven
San Fran 2 3 1 41 7 135 106
~:
}~
Vrrgm 1a
243332
games," said the Oakland third
Tenace didn't even hear h1s manager
New Orleans
West
0 s 1 083 88177 He was busy answermg quest10ns Quest10ns about great
baseman, who knocked in the
Yl I pel g b
Sunday's
Results
N
Y
Jets
24
third and deciding run In the
San Diego
4 1 800
baseball men like Babe Ruth
Oakland
Bal hmore 20
Denver
4 1 800
abrhbl sixth Inning With a long double
M1am 1 24 Buffalo 23
"I haven't heard too much about hun," sa1d Tenace
Utah
3 3 500 1'12
Ca m pnrs ss
4 I 2 0 to center field
Po
ttsburgh
33
New
Englan~ 3
Why?
Indiana
243332
Mangual
cf
4
1 0 0
N Y Giants 27 Sl Louis 21
Dallas
1 4 200 2'12
"I wasn't even born when he was playmg "
Rudolf
3 0 0 0 "We had them on Ute ropes
Atlanta 10 Green Bay 9
Sunday's Result
Tenacelb
3 0 2 2 but let them get sway," conCleveland 23 Houston 17
What about havmg a baseball1dol when he was a k1d'
New York 119 Utah 116
Lewtspr
0 I 0 0
Ph•ladelph•a 21 Kansas City Tenace stood there thinkmg He sucked some champagne from
(only games scheduled )
Hegan lb
I
0 0 0
20
statement
little,
Monday's games
tinued
Bando,awho
didsaying
modifyIt
Bando3b
4 0 1 1 his
the bottle and that seemed to help the thought processes
Detrool 34 San Dffgo 20
(n o games scheduled)
Alou rf
3 0 0 0 might have been a different
Los Angeles 15 Cmcmnat1 12
"Mickey Mantle," he S81d, "then Yog1 Berra "
Duncan c
3 0 0 0 series if the A's had had
Washmgton 24 Dallas 20
Some crackpot had threatened to shoot hun if he hit another Green 2b
4 0 f 0 slugging centerfielder Reggie
Denver JO Oakland 23
Odom
p
2
0 0 0
San Franc1sco 20 New Or home r110 Satlll'day How had he slept before the final game'
Hun
terp
0
0
0 0 Jackson and southpaw relief
leans 20
"I didn't sleep very well I was restless," he said, "but 11 Holtzman p
0
o
0 0 pitcher Darrold Knowles, both
Ionly games scheduled)
wasn
'I
because
of
that
guy
oranything
like
that
"
Fmgersp
I
0
0
0 of whom were lnjlll'ed
Today's Games
C1nctnnah
M1nnesota at Ch1cago (night)
One of the Oakland players able to relate with Gene Tenace
Oakland took the first two
ab 4 h bl
(only game scheduled )
was Ted Kubiak, who came to the A's from the last-place Rose If
5 1 2 0 gsmea In Cincinnati and held a
3 0 I 0 3-1 edge in games going into
Milwaukee Brewers last year and IS a part-tune performer Morgan 2b
Tolancl
2 0 0 0 Friday's fifth game But the
Sunday's Baseball Results
himself. He watched Tenace getting most of the adulation In the
Jav•enph
0
0 0 0
By Unrted PreS$ International A's' quarters following the club's 3-2 wrap-up of the Reds and felt Hague ph
1
0
0 0 Reds, traDing most of that
World Series
Fostercf
0 0 0 0 contest, rallied for a 5-4 victory
Oakland
100 002 ooo- 3 6 1 good vicariously
Bench c
3 0 0 0 to bring the Series back here
Cmconnal• 000 010 011)- 2 4 2 "I'm happy for htm," Said Kub1ak "You have to be a little btl Perez
1b
2 1 I 1
Odom, Hunter (5), Holtzman
h he f 1s ht
4 0 0 0 and then won an 8-1 "Iaugher"
Menke 3b
I8J. Fmgers (S) and Duncan m the same boat yourself to appreciate ow
ee ng now
3 0 0 0 Saturday
Blilmgham Borbon (6), Carroll What makes a ballplayer like him emerge like he dld m a World Geron1mo rf
Concepcion
ss
3 0 0 0 Prior to the start of the
(6), Gr~msley (7) , Hall 181 and Series? It's hard to say Some guys thrtve In pressure situations
B•llmgham p
I 0 0 0
Bench WP Hunter LP Borbon Their battmg averages before that don't seem to matter, Gene McRae ph
0 0 0 I Seriea, there was talk of a fourBorbonp
0 0 0 0 game Cincinnati sweep, and
The ma)or Slll'VIvmg work obviously IS that kind ofbaUplayer, I say hooray for htm "
Carroll
p
0 0 0 0 the Reds were liBted as 7-4
of the famous magazme edl·
That was the general sentiment among aU the A's
Gr~m s ley p
0 0 0 0 fa vor1tes to take the Utle
"It coulm't happen to a better guyt chipped m Sal Bando, Uhlaender ph
tor, Sarah Josepha Hale, Is
1 0 0 0
the children's poem, "Mary
Hall p
o 0 o o "I don't think Cincinnati was
Had a Little Lamb "
Tenace's roomie.
Chaney ph
0 0 0 0 overconfident," Bando said.
Totals
21
2 4 2
Dave
Duncan,
the
A's'
regular
catcher
who
sat
out
most
of
the
l
100 002 OOD-3 "They just dldn 'I expect us to
series behind Tenace, apparently felt the same way as Bando Oakland
Cmcmnall
000 010 011)-2 play as well as we do.''
"Nothmg could make me happier than what Gene did," said
E - Tolan , Concepcion , Following losses in the ftfth
Duncan,
obVIously
smcere
"If
I
can't
play,
I'm
delighted
that
Campanerls
DP - Oakland 1
America is the place that
LOB
Oakland
8 Cincinnati 8
Ute man who took my place did what he did We're both With the
is made out of drealll8.
28 - Perez, Tenace Banda
same ball club, we're both trying to accomplish the same thing Morgan SB - Bench S And, U.S.SavingsBonds
SAME DAY
SWORDS LOS!!
Mangual
Campanerls
SF
He
did.
My
hat's
off
to
hun
"
CINCINNATI
(UP!)
have been helping to
SERVICE
McRae Perez
SATURDAY NIGHT
make happy dreams
In At 9-out At 5
ALL GOT OUT
IP H R Er Rb So Defenseman Jean Lagace
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Odom
41321142 scored a goal from 185 feet Into
come true for years.
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Ftre
FOOTBALL RESULTS
Hunter
2 2 3 1 1 1 1 3 an empty net to guarantee the
Untfed Press International
Now, Bonds mature
Usa Our FrH P~rtung Lot
broke out m a bulldmg at the
Hoi
tzman
0
t 0 0 0 0
Pennsboro IW Va I 22 Fingers
Hershey Bears a 5-3 American
in leY than six yean.
Cleveland st~te Mental Frontier Local 0
2
0 Hockey League win over the
That meana your drealll8
Hospttal Sunday, but all 136 B ella~re 14 Wheeling IW Va ) Hill ing ham 0 0 0 0
Cmclnnatl Swords here Sunday
Central 8
5
21014 mght
can come true faster I••2•1'•E•2•nd•'•Po•m-•ro_y_. . pahents
were
safely New Martonsv olle IW Va I 41
Borbon
23 3 2 2 0 0
""a'=Ualed
Bellaire St Johns 0 Carroll
than ever before.
Tied 3-3 at the end of two
0 0 0 2 1
Y oungstown Wilson 38
Gr~msley
1
3
0
0
0
1
1
periods,
Jim Wiley scored the
Yoli can buy shares in
Youngstown Rayen 0
Hall
2
I
0
0
0
3
Y oungstown
Urs1lme
22
your particular dream
Hunter pitched to one batter go-ahead goal for Hershey in
"COOKIE SHACK II
Struthers 15
In 8th, Holtzman pitched to one the fmal period and Lagsve got
by joining the Payroll
Lowellville 6 McDonald 0
lla1ter '" 8th
his nnk-long shot In the closing
• d1namlc buslne11 opportunity
Savmgs Plan where you
Save - Fingers HBP - by seconds Both teams are now 3F1ngers (Chaney)
work, or the Bond-aP ",,.part""' wldl 1 famllot- film wllo SELECT - ' •
The Dljly Sentinel
WP - Hunter A - 56,0&lt;40 3
upoo
QUALIFICATIONI
and
nol
upon
wllll
11101'
DEVOTED TO THE
Month plan where you
kVENDING PUSINUI·
INTEREST OF
bauk.
MEIGS-MUON AltEA
WE OFFER:
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
WE REQUIRE:
Before you know it,
htc Ed
•A DESIRE FOR SUCCESS
AOIERT HOEFLICH,
your American dream
•La lkw• olttllnld br company •Time to .moe rou•
Cltr EdiiOr
"Ca ...... lnlfnjiii-A.B,C
•Foflow prown PI'D(I'Im
will be a reality.
Publlsht~
dilly t)(Cept
-clulllty, dup11 1 I I ..uipmtftt
•IMaaunt ofll00.. 1100
Salo.irditY
by
The OhiO VI lily
for aqutpnwm, prooluct,
By MILTON RICHMAN

Pro standings

in two cructal misplays that
helped Oakland wln the
decisive game SWJday.
In the first, he misjudged a
line drive by Angel Mangual
that went for a three-base error
and led to Oakland's first run In
the opening 1Ming.
The second resulted In what
proved to be the wlnillng run
when Tolan failed to catch a
drive to deep center by Sal
Bando and It dropped for a
double Racing toward the
fence with his back to the plate,
the Cincinnati center Reider
appeared to pull up l81ne
suddenly and feU to the ground
Tolan sustained a cramp In
his left leg on the play and left
the game an lnnlng later
He vowed that he would not
let himself be tormented by
thoughts of what might have
been if he had made the two
catches,

"These things are golns to
happen," Tolan said '1 believe
things are predestined There'•
no sense in replaying them. t
won't get &amp;ck over any '-11

game"
Oakland relief pitcher Bob
locker, in a vlslt to the Redo'
dressing room, told Menke, "It
could have gone either way.
Ball games are just a matter of
breaks"
The Reds probably would
have to agree, But after loslnl
two World Series in the ~
three years, they are won·
dering when Ute J:reaka will
come their way.

A's beat tough team,
pitching difference

1

.

f.~

...

A's win f
it all ~

Great
American
Dream
Machine.

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Th, O.ily Stntl,.l

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roply •

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technical schools.
Straight from the
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This guide lays
out the facts. What
technical fields have
job openmgs. Where
to write for the
names of schools
that are best qualified to prepare
you for these careers. There'seven a section
on gettmg help w1th tuttton money.
Most technicians' jobs pay double what
the average high school graduate earns As
much as some college graduates make. So
they're surely worth investigating.
Now it doesn't cost you a cent to investigate them Just send In this ad today.

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To Careers, Washmgton, DC 20202
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Adv1rtlsln1 contributed lor the .oubllc •I'IOd In CooPetallon wtta

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1

The Mwerlllhtl Council 1nd tho lnlernttlonal N•wst~aper Afttrtltlllf blllltltlf

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DEPT•536

ras~w~e~w~in~"------~~;~;~~~~

I
I
I ~
I
1 sra1e

of Ill kind ... -

llnll

EVERY
FOG'FBAU.- ~
GAME

P•t+•"·

-matwdt-11111........... .

and sixth games, Oakland
manager Dick WUilams shook
up hls lineup for the finale,
oon~hl~~ ' fl~t b~llelna'll ' Mike
Epstein, whowaaO.for·18 in the
first six games, moving the
amazing Gene Tenace from
catcher to first base, and
starting Dave Duncan behind
the plate
Wllllams said he discUssed
the move with Epstein before
the game and Ep81eln went
along with the move "as long

HUSTLE
AFI'ER

"c..lltl' ffnanollll " " · OUR IUCCI!IIII PAlED UI'ON YOUR IUCCISS

Speaking ollcida' proflrama, as I was a moment ago, I IJid a
recent column bemoaning the fact that "LuCt's To)'lhopt" a
ColumlMIHMIIId program for the lliDAI1 eel, fln't on lll1 men I
am advieed by 111 Ohio l'lltlder, name unknown, tbll Luclleft the
show todevc!le more tb!!l to berfkNrlahincpuppet"'"'"'·
'lbepuJ!Peb' pin !urea televillon's lou, Luciwaa 1ood.
ON TilE TV DIAL· GaiiiPolls' Jolm llalll.!a7 II me of the
participants em a "Town HaD" show of area c:andidates, at aon
WSAZ-TV ... 'lbedepreued YiklDga meet the UR4Jftd.4owli Bean
I
on the fll'ldlron, 9 on WHrN-TV ... And llwn'aa ciGM-kil*llt our
defense posture, compared with ~·s, at 9:101 WBNS-TV

seam of the carpet around the B1lhngham had been mowmg Tenac-e- for pmchrunner Al hams didn't I heSitate m w1th two out m the omth when • lineup, benching first baseman
For_thls ~Fiort .c..G mo ~dirt-third base area and-took-ac-llle-A-'s-down,.-l'e~mng-104~·"'~~-'-----~-.,.nldrrg-tJiJrrany-longerthanPincfilillteFDiiiTel Cnaney was Mike Epstein who was OOior-18

of the three runs

•

�2- The DallySentmel, Mtddleport-PomeroJ, 0, Oct 23, 1972

Kole Trio opens series

Television Log

3-TheDaUyS.nlinel: Middloport-Pomeroy,O ,Ort 23,1972

with New South s.o unds
Followmg a record-breakmg Com m u n 1t y Co n c e r t
membership campaign last Association as a vital cultural

- - - : - - -'--111 onth;-the--'ftl~ntr- C~tn~

mumty Concert Assocrahon
Will open 1ts 26th season
Wednesday evenmg with the
appearance of the Ronme Kole
Tr10 at 8 p m at the Galha
Academy
H1gh
School
audttormm
Described as ' New Orleans '
Newest SOund," the tno IS
composedofRonmeKoleat Ute
piano, Rtchard Taylor, drums,
and Everett Link, Jr , hass
The1r program will mclude a
Gershwm medley, the ' Battle
Hymn of the Republic, "
"Yellow Bird," "Big NOise
f r om
W1n n e t k a , ' '
"Malaguena," and other
selections
•
The ass""iatlon's board of
directors Is proud to an·
nouoce that a third concert
has been scheduled for Jan.
18. Featured artist will be
the handsome and talented
Metropolitan Opera
baritone, Frank Guarrera
The final l""al concert will
be the Texas Boys Choir on
March 13.

I~

Membership cards, along
with a schedule of community
concerts available throughout
the area, have been matted out
thiS past weekend to a total of
823 subscribers In Galha,
Jackson, Meigs and Mason
CoWJties Th1s represents the
highest membership m the
assoc1a11on's a-year
exiStence, surpassmg the total
of 808 m 1959
Dr
Lewts
Schmidt,
association president, and Mrs
Donald Thaler, 1972 drive
chatrman, have expressed
their great apP,rec 1 a~wn to the
many enthusiastic workers for
their hard work m making the
dr1ve so successful Cred1t also
goes 10 the fme cooperation
g1ven by Ute GallipoliS Dally
Tr1bune, Pomeroy Sentmel, Pt
Pleasant Reg1ster, Jackson
Publishmg Co, WJEH, WMPO, WLMJ, and schools and
busmesses throughout the
area
Dr Schmidt pomts out that
he and the other members of
the board of dll'ectors feel that
the success of th1s year's
• membership Call_lfa~gn Is a,

Lucy 6, Petttcoat Junchon 3, Merv Gnffm

Stauffer ChemiCal Co
Me~gs County patrons are

13, Andy Griffith 15
Dick Van Dyke 15, PonderosaJ, 4

in;;UIJrtiuJ~r~r•di•~lls"eUor·tsir:"Ai~ffih:Nujfi-si~gs-li!ir--j::f:*~J:t*

bnngmg !me, bve mustcal
ent;,rtarnmeno here over the
past 25 yeilr.l!.
ParttctJlarly gratifying IS the
growmg number of J?alrons
supporting the assoc1at10n
The1r membership ourchases
enable a great many h1gh
school and college musrc
students and residents of
children's homes throughout
the area to att;,nd the concerts
Galha County patrons 10elude the Commercial and
Savmgs bank, F1rst National
Bank, Evans Packmg Co , M
J Fry Automatic Weldmg,
GalhpolJS Savmgs and Loan,
Holzer Medtcal Center Clime,
Gavm Plant (OhiO Electr1c
ConstructiOn Department),
Mr and Mrs L Claude Miller,
OhiO Valley Bank, Mr. Jose
Ov1es, Scott;,n-D1llon Co, the
Rev and Mrs Linson H
Stebbms, Mr and Mrs Carl
Dahlberg , Ohio Bell Telephone
Co , and Mr and Mrs Merlyn
G Ross
Mason County patrons ar~
Clhzens National Bank, Dave
O'Neal Real Estate Agency,
Pantasote Co of N Y, Inc,
People's Bank, PI Pleasant
Bmldmg and Loan Assoctatwn,
Prrce Patrick, P A , and

5 30 - Elec Co 33,

I Drllon 15
13 Hodgepodge
6 00 - News 3 4, 8,
Truth or Conseq
Societies In TranSition 33 Sesame 51 20
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4 15, ABC News 6 , CBS News 8, 10
Gurlar 33, I Dream ol Jean me 13, Hathayoga 33

Loan Bahr
Baker
Furmture, Chapman Shoes,
C111zens Natwnal Bank, City
Loan and sav1ngs Co ,
Economy Savmgs and Loan,
Ewmg Funeral Home, Far.
mers Bank and Savmgs,
Foreman and Abbott Furmture , G and J Auto,
H and r
Firestone,
George S Hobstetter, K10g'
Builders Supply Co , Nelson's
Drugs, New York Clothing
House, Pomeroy Natwnal
Bank, R.acrne Home National
Bank , Swrsher and Lohse
Drugs and Vdlage Pharmacy
Rectproctty has agam been
extended to members of the
TCCCA by the Assoctahons 10
Charleston, W Va, and Zanesv1lle Charleston's senes will
feature Marrlyn Horne,
soprano, the C1ncmnah
Symphony w1th Dmo C1am,
prams!, and Van Chburn,
p1amst Appearmg m Zanesv1lle wtll be the Duke Ellington
Band, the Czech State Orchestra and the Amerrcan
Chamber Ballet A fourth
concert has been announced by
the Lancaster association,
wh1ch has scheduled Ronaldr
and Jeffrey Marlowe, duopramsts, on Apnl 5

7 00 - News6 TruthorConseq 3 BeattheCiock4 ; Circus ' t3
InSight 33, What's My Lme 8, Samt IS Read Your Way Up

33 Eleclnc Co 20 , Sa1nt 15
To Tell The Truth 6 , Traffic Court 10, EpiSode Acl•on 33
Parent Game~ Hollywood Squares 4 Youn~ Dr Kildare a
Hodgepodge lodge 20 Town Hall Pollhcs 72 3
8 00 - Gunsmoke a, 10, Rowan and Marhn's Laugh In 4 15
UFO 6, Hollywood TeleviSion Theatre 33
, '
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10 , Pro Foolball6 13, Movie They M1ght
Be Giants" 4, 15
9 30 - Dons Day 8 Only the Strong 10, Book Beat 20,33
10 00 - B1ll Cosby 8 10, News 20 From The Hills 33
10 30 - Concerts In the Lawn 33
11 00 - Newp, 4, 6. 8 10, 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Carson 3 4, 15, Mov1es "Cutter s
Trail" 8, " Stop Tram 349" 10
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4
12 00 - News 6
12 30- Mov1es ' Carry On Teacher ' 6 Mr Scoutmaster' 13
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
2 00 - News4
2 30 - News 13
TUESDAY, Oct 24, 19ll
7 30-

6 00 -

6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmt•me 10
6 20 - Paul Harvey 13

6 25 - Fa.th For Today 13

"

TJ:O •C
pr 4 l

ment 10

6 45 - Corncob Report 3

55 OO 7 30 13
8 00 6
7

1
l
B
'IYJ:
~
e a 0 ng r w ay ~.

,.,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SPLIT END FOR WIDE
RECEIVER'S FOLKS
NEW YORK (KFS) -The Delos Rentzels,

Back Again

.84

I.

Pass

Opemng lead- •

Q

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Not a Single Disease

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald "We have had a
lot of requests to do another
sertes of articles on the
squeeze play "
Jim "Let's do 1t The
squeeze IS a play m whtch
you make It tmposstble for By Lawrence Lamb, MD.
your opponents to keep pro·
Dear Dr. Lamb - I Mve
tection m two or three SUits colitis and m_y doctor d1d not
by playmg out high cards m give me a d1et He satd eat
the others In general the whatever I want and ehmmsqueeze 1s used to brmg m ate whatever causes trouble
one extra t r 1c k although I am 70 years old
some squeeze ~ &lt;lo «Wen -- --•·
better "
Dear Reader- ! rece1ve a
Oswald "Here 1s a very lot of letters on cohhs and
stmple squeeze Anyone who the problem In answenng
stops at SIX no-trump has no them IS that cohtts IS a _genwomes about his contract
He starts with 12 winners A IS squeezed JUSt as surely as
match point player Will go If he had to play before
after the overtr1ck on the South "
theory that an overtrtck IS
(NfWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE .ASSN I
always worthwhile "
Jlm "Change the EastWest hands around and if
declarer Just cashes dum- The hiddmg has been
my's wmners there will be West North East
a al m pIe squeeze agamst Pass
Pass
Eut There doesn't appear Pass 31•
•
Poss
to be&lt; any squeeze against Poss
5•
•Pass
Weet, since Weat alta in back P...
Pass
of Soutb but South cah han· Pass
6•
Pass
die We1t'a caae alm~t as You, South, ~old

Colitis Is a General Word

6"'

eully,"

Olll'lld "It just requires

Every Woman Wan1s fo Know J

Ronnie Kole Trio

Squeeze PI

Poss

.AK88 .AlOZ .K5 .AJU

tb8t SOuth clllh his tricks in What do· you do now?
A-Pill, You have__Ml the
tlle-rllltt order He wins the controls,
but there will surely
apade lead· takee hll ace be proltlorns
at oeven,
IDd klag ';/ bell"tl and now
TODAY'S QUESTION
1'11111 oil dummy's winners to
You,
South hold
CGIIIt down to 1he nine of
• AK862 •Az t5 .AK86%
illlrtl and Mven c•f spades
Ia dummy IIIII IICil-lmaU of What IS your open1n,11 brd?
Answer tomorro-..
~ bi bl1 own bend West 1

eral term It literally means
mflammation or n ntal!on of
the colon Thts can be as
soctated With constipation
wh1ch 1s the most common
form These mdlVIduals 1m
prove markedly by drmkmg
adequate amounts of water
or otMt llljuids aifd- formti\g
a re~ular h a b 1t (Which
doesn t mean that 1! IS neeessary every day ) I usually recommend that patients
do th1s by drmkmg at least
two cups of liQUid at breakfast and more tf they tolerate 11 well and then gomg to
the bathtoom tmmedl3(ely
after breakfast and s1ttlng
for a reasonable length of
time or until they feel the
Ul ge
By conhnumg th1s
practtce dally, many JndlVlduals Will develop a more
regular habit
For. tbts type ol cohtis 11
IS Important to mcrease the
amount of roughage 10 the
diet which mcludes vege.
tables and foods containing
bulk; such as cereals, wtth
less emphaSIS on high calor~, low bulk tiwds sucb. assweets, candles, cakes and
starchy foods
Other people who are told
they have cohhs have an
overactiVe colon w h 1c h
causes recurrent bouts of
diarrhea and sometimes ex-

Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue6, 13 Sesame St 33

T1mmy &amp; Lass1e 6

1

Pass

Fllntslones 13
T\)day3,415 CBSNews8,10 News6
Sleepy Jefters 8 Romper Room 6, Bullw1nkle &amp; Rocky

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8, New Zoo Reyue 6
9 00 - Paul DIXOn 4, Phil Donahue 15 Romper R'oom a Con
centratoon 6 Fr~endly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 , What

eqtuty m heu of rent "
Stereotypical stupidity Stx-f1gure-Balaned
N y Kn k
1c s star Wall Fraz1er parked h1s Rolls,.
R
f
oyce m ront of J1mmy Weston 's spot Arookie
parents of Lance Rentzel of pro football and cop boobooed over With, "I don't care who you
JoeyHeatherton fame, split after 35 years TV dr1ve for paj. you're gomg to have to move thiS
medicO Vmce Edwards &amp; wife split, he says, heap " who was the blonde beauty at every
over~ love for horses Slow ones The black one of the court sess10ns durmg fmanc1er Lou
pols for McGoff are loud-liberals - liberal over Wolfson's tr18l'
Bishop Sheen quote
everything but showb12 blacks for NIXon Then "Baloney Is flattery so thick 11 cannot be true
It's abuse RadloCityMuslcHaDisthiscloseto Blarney IS flattery so thm we hke 1t"
The
QUttlmg forever
Old Pulitzer Prtzewmrung huntmg season'&amp; oh, and Northwest All"hnes IS
editor Max Kase told us a funnee U S offermg $25,000 to woods-prowlers fmdlng and
OlympiCS swun coach Shenn Cleaver - can't returnmg the $200,000 phantom hiJacker D B
swim r
Cooper a1rhe1sted, convmced he dldn 't survtve
At Stratford, Ont , William Hutt was to enJOY
starrmg as "King Lear " Backstage radio
It took smger Jerry Wayne 19 years to cure
reported the Canadian hockey team just had himself of a tortured back condition and he's
trounced Russia Hutt stepped out of Lear wntten a book about 1t and cure !'The Bad
Ch&amp;[pct~1 an-J!Jlfli!O.l\llc&lt;;a,thV;\9\ l!U'&lt;~ .'IPd g91 1);l.&lt;lcll Book " Expects Il'll be as widespread as
ti(Qf illdi~ttb!t Of th~ ilil-,.,, 11,\~.;lll~g~t,~vi!Uwi~.~~ life
.. ~~ ;· -l' "· jl!IIW Da~ O;n\er. at 1'1"114~ .Heller's sa1d hls
•IJ(I1Bnre the fl'eslden!S this ••. l'!l~nel&lt;l' ilillsfcal ~'P.1ppi~' JSsetm the time .. , autob10g will shape up with four chapters
arel place od the TrJ~wnty of Charlemagne - but director~horeographer devoted to Betty Grable
L1za Mmnelh's
WIN AT BRIDGE Bob Fosse still manages to get hJS dancers mto Jommg Ute cookbook brigade Thmk MCA Isn't
straw hats &amp; canes . David Merrtck's books hugely successful' Why - 11 JUSt borrowed
runneth over m black mk his production of $140,000,000 And you gotta be big to manage
aySWoody Allen's "Play It Agam, Swn" (flim fees that' Malta's prem1er Dom Mmtoff couldn't
included) shows a profit of more than $1,000,000 get along With other countries, and now hts wtfe
JOinS the rnlffed-wtth-Mmtoff brtgade, She's
Margaret Tnunan's agents says she's back m ~Ighty
Bernard Lee plays James
amenable to a Bdwy play Singer Jack Jones, Bond's boss "M" m the spy senes So he just got
a multt-marrled, may mulU agam wtth Br1tlsh mugged, beaten and robbed by a couple of thugs
NORTH (D)
actress
Susan George
Barbara Slljllwyck's after a g~rl he'd befnended set hun up
.75
wrtting her memou-s Her Frank Fay chapter "Cabaret," when shown m Germany, chopped
.962
.AKQJIO
should be a doozer When Fay opened as the out the Naz1-1rony of its "Tomorrow Belongs to
"'AKQ
smash of the year ( '44) m "Harvey," Barbara's Me" song Even though 1ts pomt ts a mam target
WEST
EAST
pals asked if she'd go see 11 whtle in N Y The m the fhck Let's not be nasty to the Nazis, as
• QJ108
.93
wry gal's response "I saw enough stx-foot Noel Coward burlesqued 11 m Hitler days
• QJI07
rabb1ts when I was marrted to hun'"
+2
.98784
Author V1ctor Lasky abandoned his book about
"'J852
"'10973
Half the mcome of the filthiest porno sheet D1ck Ntxon for one about Moshe Dayan
SOU'DI
goes to ftght the decent folks who get the law on
Jack Lemmon flnJShed f1lmmg "Avant!"
.AK6U
11
Young comic Jackte Clark's opening hiS and early spies tell us 1t's a stylish com1c
.AK 53
own Eastside nightclub, "The Squawk Box," trmmph Billy Wilder filmed 11 from the brtght,
U3
Oct.
26 Jackie's glmmlck-mvltmg anyone sophisticated stage comedy by Samuel Taylor
"'6 4
None vulnerable
wtth any gripe whatever on his tongue to sound ( "Sabrma" etc ) The 111m opens up the ItaiiBnWest North East South 11 off One of Fun Ctty's btggest realty fll111S based fun by settmg 11m a sea resort mstead of
Pass
(Mwdman) advertises for office tenants w1th a Rome hotel We read the scrtpt - a nifty,
Pass
p.., 4NT.
Pass
Pass 5N'!:. thiS recession come-on "Will accept stock or naughty delight
P... 6.
Pass 6NT.

1.!3.&gt; .

,

6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Boble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com

~i'!llm~~~:$';-W..,;uX?W£-:&gt;:&lt;::::.:rk";~~tm:=~::-:'(.~~~,m,m~:m,;-;$b.:&gt;.«W".«-::x::%$;--.a.:&gt;».&gt;wi*

l':l'

Sunnse Semmar 4, Sacred Heart 10

Us.

I

By Helen Bottel

••

GRATEFUL FOR SMAU.. BLESSINGS
Dear Helen
My wtfe wants an operallon to enlarge her breasts I fought if
before With "too costly "But now she has worked and saved the
money We don't need lt elsewhere, so I can't staU much longer
The plam fact IS, Helen, I have seen both well~ndowed and
lesser~ndowed women m the1r 40s and I much prefer my
beaullfuJ w1fe as 1s Big-busted females aren't my bag I try to
get thts across, but of course I can't adnut to personal experience, so she thinks I am JUS! bemg kind
Please don't thmk she wants this operallon so that she can
charm other men She lovea only me, but how do you tell a
woman who believes th1s propaganda about all men worshipmg
b1g boobies that some men still bke understated thmgs' - MR
CURIOSITY SATIS FlED
_ ".. • , , ,
P..S. I'm womed too about the-safety of1P!'t!mg plastic gags
II). ~ woman's body Qln medtca~ problemsr-esult?
Dear Mr CS
Perhaps your .v1fe might outgrow th1s b1g Amer~can Breast
Fellsh 1f you'd get tembly knowledgeable and refer her to a
study published by researchers Paul Mussen and Alvm Scodell
These authors found that men who prefer top heavy women are
"q10re dependent," fear deCISive actiOn, need safety - mother
words, they're lookmg for a mother to protect them
Tell your wife you don't f1t the unage, and Isn't she lucky''
Actually, she should be grateful for small blessings - they're
commg back m style - H
P S Any major operation has a danger factor, as your doctor
Will agree Also, unplants might slow the detection of breast
cancer

9 30 - ToTeiiTheTruth3 Jeopardy6 HazelS
10 00 - D1nah Shore3, 15 Dock Van Dyke13 Jokers Wild 8,10
Columbus S1x Caliln~ 6
10 30 - Concentrat1on 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Splot Second lJ
Pr1ce Is Right 8 10
11 00 - Sale of the Century 3, 4, 15 Love American Style 6
Gambit 8, 10, Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 Love of Life 8, 10, Bewotched
6 13
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4
Jackie Oblonger 8 News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3W'sGame3 15 SplotSecond6 SearchforTomorrowa
10
I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 It's Your Bet a Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Let's Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00- Days of Our L•ves 3, 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglass 6 , Gu1d1ng L•ght 8 10
2 30 - Doators 3, 4, 15 Datmg Game 13, Edge of Noght 8 10,
Just GeneratiOn 20
3 00 - General Hosp•tal 6 13 Another World 3, 4 15 Love "
Splendored Thmg 8 10
3 30 - One Lite to L1ve6. Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 Secret
Storm 8, 10, Maggoe &amp; The Beaul•ful Machine 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 Sesame St 33, 20, Love
Amer1can Style 13 Merv Gnffrn 4 Fll ntsfones 6 Grlhgan s
Isle 8 Movie "Red Hot &amp; Blue" 10

4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Pettocoat Junction 3 Dame I Boone 13
Merv Griffon 8 Andy Gnfflth 15
5 00 - Dock Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers 33, 20, Ponderosa 3 4
Damel Boone 6
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet a Gomer Pyle
13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 00 - News 3, 4 8, 10, 15, Human DimenSion Jj
6 30 - News 3 4 15, 6, 8 10, I Dream q~o~Jann l e 13, Grow•ng
Hlni' \'Jp 33
" 0 11!&lt; I w
7 00 - News6, 10 Whats Mj.une,• Elec. Co 20 A~l(y, G"ff•lh
15, Beat the Clock 4, 6 I ve Got A Secret 13, Trutn or Con
sequences 3, Samt 15, Electnc Co 20
7 30 - ThiS IS Your Lite 3 Doctors on Call 4 To Tell The Truth
6 Pncc Is R1ght 8, 10, Beat the Clock 13, RFD 20 InSight 33
8 00 - Bonanza 3 4 15, Temperatures Rosing 6, 13 , Maude a
10 Age of Anx1ety 13 Umted Nations Day, 1972 20
8 30 - Hawaii Five 08, 10, Mov1e Short Walk to Dayloght '6
13 Umted Nallons Day Concert 33
9 00 - Bold Ones 3, 4 15, John Davidson 15
9 30 - Of Thee I Sing 8, 10
10 00 - NBC Reports 3 4 15 Marcus Welby M D 6 13 News
20
11 00 - News Weather Sporls3,4,6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4, 15, V~rgm1an 8
Movies "Splendor In The Grass ' 10, The Enemy Below 13
12 00 - Your Health 4
1 30 - N•ws Weather 4 Local News 13

+++

Helen
A comment on the doctor's quotes you published m response
to "Sneezy's" quesllonsaboutmanjuana You should check your
sources mor~ carefully You refer to pot as "a kmd of grass" that
might cause hay fever As a hotanJSt, I must p01nt out that
CaiUlabts IS about as closely related to the grass family as you
are to a carp or a canary Th1s is not to discount the poss1b1lity
that some people are allergic to 1!, JUSt as others react to
ragweed (whtch 1s also not a grass)
A siX-year veteran of mariJUana use, I have yet to see
ev1dence that either I or my fr1ends have different skin quality,
as the good Dr Whats1sname suggests m your column What IS
needed on thiS subject IS a well'lles1gned sctentif1c study rather
than a strm~ of casual observations
'
There IS a lot of fear and nusunderstandmg
about pot, the use
(
of which Is only mcreased byunfoundf\11 statements presented as
truth to the reading public It Is the responstbility of any wr~ter to
check h1s or her facts thoroughly before publlcallon' - MIFFED

•

Dear Miffed
cesstve gas formatiOn These
Correction (Please forgive). "Grass" IS not grass CaiUlabis
mdiv1duals have a some Sativa IS a PLANT of tbe nettle family. Small rebuttal It makes
what different problem and
may need a bland diet often mesneeze-andthatJSnolan "unfounded statement," though1t
contammg soft foods
doesn 't prove anythmg either Both you and my doctor agree it
Then there are some peo- COULD cause aUerg1c reactions
ple who have colitis or overLarger rebuttal COncerrung the quoted statements of a
!llltionally.known.doctw:..(.on.relatlonshlp of-pot to possible akm
ad1ve colon on the basis- of
thetr mtolerance -to certam problems), they're conSiderably more "folUided" than yours,
foods Thts mcludes milk which unply, "My frlenda and I blow weed; we don't have acne
Some people cannot d1gest or mflamed eyelids, therefore Dr Herschenshon's observations
the milk sugar and It causes are false "
them a considerable amount
On one pomt, however, we fully agree a great deal more
of difficulty mcludmg gas, SCientific study is needed here My object in offering occasional
distention and related prob
!ems Coffpe also 1s an trn- "mconclus1ve reports" 18 not to "prove," but to mspll'e contant to till colon and even tmued research
though drmkmg decaffelnOnequest1on· WoilldyoubelieveANYreseardl,nomatter
ated products helps there are how scientific, which didn't prove wbat you want to believe• a reasonable number jj{ peo- H
pie who still get 1rntat10n
- :--:::--.:--;---;:;-:--;--------.....:.....,._ __
of the dlj!est 1ve tract from ency People who can't tolriiitant Fame
the otis m the coffee that erate milk w11l need to con,
,
The editorial, What s ~~
1mpart Its flavor )'hils, sider obtaming calcmm supstmply sw1tchmg from reg-_ plemeots
• f;ia t te r wlth Kansas ,
Ular coffee to a decaft"emIn letters from readers I roulht overnight fame to
8,{Je~a~~~~:
a ted product wlll help some detect there Is some con
people but there are sttll fusiOn on the use of raw lished in the Emporia Gaothers who must g1ve up aJl fruits While they may be lr- zette It was used In tbe
forms of coffee
rttatmg to some people who C&amp;ll)paign to elect Wilham
It is entirely true that have an overactive colon McKinley as president of the
some mdivtduals--w~U-learn whiCh k one fQrm elf colittsJ_ United eStates
__
by e~penence that there are illey are helpful for lndiVtdcertam foods that they can't uals who have the constipation colitis Raw frUit and
tolerate and 1111 of these, of even some cooked frutt, for ,
course. should hP avo1ded example prunes, often help
Thts may mean takmg vrta m mamtiumng good bowel The only state m the Union
min pills io make sure that functiOn
which has a coffee-growing
there IS no vttamm def1c1&lt;NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE •~•
1 industry •• Hawaii

Wrw.:

&amp; ·THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Welcome back, WOUB up there m Athens'
Unless some last-mmute h1tch developed, WOUB-TY (UHF
Channel 20, Cable ChaMel II), returned to the all' !f~t mght,
after an absence of some two months Or, tf there 'were a few
bugs to be worked out, It comes back on today
We're happy to see the Oh10 Umverslty station back 10
busmess (the shutdown was to pernut erection of'" new tower
and a ''feed" to a satellite statiOn, Channel« m Cambridge)
WMUL-TV IN Huntington provtded the area with local public
teleVISion m the lnterun, domg Its usual good job, but there are
many reasons for rej01cmg about WOUB-TV's return
• F1rst 1s the "Newswatch" program, which concentrates on
Southeastern OhiO and the rtver counties 10 West Vlrginis every
rught at 10- plus the usual weather and sports. It's the nearest
thmg to a "local" TV station In Ohio we have (l can't avoid a
plug for WSAZ-TV, however, which does yeoman sernce m
trymg to cover a huge Signal area )
But there are other reasons, too One IS the fact that WOUBTV will run ftve hours of kiddie programs every Saturday
morning, according to the gracious WOUB publiciSt, Gert
Eyman It'll be "Electric Company" and "MISter Rogers" and
the like- reruns, we woul4 gu~ ~o complrunts, though, Even
reruns of quality shows are unprovements over most of the mindmacerating goo that the networks run for the lltUe ones every
Saturday
'
(And, like WMUL-TV, WOUB-TV will be broadcastmg the
new Saturday and SWlday everung schedules )

+++

For fans of WOUB-FM, th~ big 50,1100-watt publtc radio
station will rersume broadcasting some time th1s week, 'with the
exact date not certain.

+++
1 face a decfalon What should we put as audio on our news
channel, PoinTVtew OJ 5· WOUB-FM or the cather pleasant
middle-of-the-road radio station, WAMX-FM 1n AaiJland·
Huntington' Both have !hell' advantages, and I'd like to hear any
and aU opinions on the subject
'
.
I

+++

ClliCINNATI (UP!)- Gene
Tenace may have waved the
magic wand, but Manager
Dick Williams was the head
magician of the scrambling,
scrapping and now world
champion Oakland Athletics
Every move Williams made,
and he made a million of them,
was as good as gold-~wen to
taking "Most Valuable
Player" Tenace out of the ball
game for a pinchrunner only
halfway through the A's'
dramatic 3-2 triUmph over the
Cincinnati Reds m Sunday's
aeventh.game clincher
Tenace had, mdeed, done his
job In the first five games of
the Senes, he slammed four
homers to put himself m the
Series record book alongside
the likes of Babe Ruth and lou
Gehrig He dldn 't break those
fellows' record in the seventh
game-but he dld dme m two

Tenacctn, which is the way he
ongmally w,as chriStened, was
voted the "Most Valuable
Player" award by the sports
writers covermg the Senes,
which means he gets a new car
from a magazme
The A's' first run was set up
With one out m Ute first ummg
when Angel Mangual slammed
a center field drive that center
fielder
Bobby
Tolan
mJSjudged, coming In and then
gomg out and leapmg and
havmg the ball tip off his glove
for an error that allowed
Mangual to go all the way to
thU'd One out later the art1fic1al turf got mto the act
DeniS Menke was backing up
at third to field what looked
like a third-out hopper from Sal
Sando when the hall struck the

high boun&lt;'&lt;' over his head for a
smgle that scored Mangual
The Reds fmaUy matched
that run m thef1fth mnmg when
Tony Perez doubled off A's'
starter John Odom and one out
later was moved to third by
success1ve walks to Cesar
Gei'onllliO and DaVId Concepcton, and then brought home
when pmcholutter Hal McRae
hit a sacrifice fly off reliever
Jup Hunter , the eventual
wumer
'
But that very play could have
been the turnmg pomt agamst
the Reds Cincy starter Jack

stra1ght batters at the po1nt
where Reds manager Sparky
Anderson elected to have
McRae htt for him
Anderson Just wasn't havrng
luck With liis dec1s1ons the way
WtllJams was
When he brought m Pedro
Borbon to replace Billingham,
the game went out the wmdow
rap1dly Bert Campanens SID·
gled to greet Pedro, moved to
second on a sawf1ce and thml
on anmf1eldout Enter Tenace
agam- With a lm~riYe double
mto the left field corner that let
Campanens trot m Exit
,
~~
. ,,,

:; Today's

'

~Sport

And then Bando rtpped a
lmednve to dead center field
for another double that would
have scored Jumbo the
Elephant, let alone speedy Al
LeWis On that play Tolan went
back, suffered a cramped
hamstrmg muscle that later
forced hlm from the game, and
m1s,sed a desperate leap for the
ball
The Reds got one r110 back tn
the etghth, but that's all as
Williams kept jugglmg When
Pete Rose led off w1th a smgle,
that was onl)"' the fll'st hlt
HWlter had allowed-but Wil-

he d1d m yanking Tenace
In came Ken Holtzman, and
Joe Morgan doubled to put
runners at second and third
Undaunted, Wi111ams sent for
rehef ace Rollle Fingers, and
that wrapped It up Fingers got
pmcholutter Joe Hague on a
pop, intentionally walked
Johnny Bench gave up a
sacr1f1ce fly io Perez that
scored Rose and then made
Menke his blg "out man" on a
pop fly to left Menke after a
fine Series, left five 'runners
stranded m the finale
The Reds' last gas11 came

hit by a pitch But Fmgers got
Rose to lift a fly to Joe Rudi 1n
left and the seven-game Senes,
m wh1ch a record SIX games
were dectded by one rWl, was
all over
Williams disclosed he almost
made one more move right
there at the end and was talked
out of it He was thinking of
lifting Fingers and callmg on
Vida Blue to Fitch to Rose
"Leavehunm"," 88ld catcher
Dave .~can "He's throwing
good
Williams had provuled a
shocker with hiS opening

at bat m the Ser1es, moving
Tenace to first base where he'•
rarely played, and putting
Duncan behmd the plate.
"I took a chance," said
Wtlllams "I've done It
before "
"Oakland has to be Ute bell
team 10 basebaU," said ADderson, who stirred up a Jot ot
people m that California dty
when he sa1d before the Series
he thought the Reds and Plt1.sburgh Pirates were the two
best teams m baseball.
"They're the world cham·
PlODS"

And so they are

:Reds pay full tribute to champs

Parade

.•
..''

CINCINNATI (UPI)-Down- Tenace as the -premter star of
cast but not demoralized, the the World Series
- liP! ~arts Editor
·- Cincinnati Reds pa1d full
An obacure bench-warmer
CINCINNATI (UPI)- A comprehensrve sW"Vey was once done tnbute to the underdog for Oakland until mid«ason,
to detenrune what there IS so spec1al m the background of that Oakland Athletics who Tenace only hlt five home 1"llliS
man who displays extraordmary valor under severest con- defeated them, 3-2, Sunday to durmg the regular season
Natrona! Basketball Assoc•atton N a 1 10 n a 1 Football League
Yet m the Series, Tenace outditions, that man who usually wms the Medal of Honor, and they Win the World Senes
Standrng•
Stand•ngs
"Oakland has to be the best homered the entire Cincinnati
By Un11ed Press lnrernatlonal
By Umted Press ln1ernattonal found out there 1sn 't necessarily anything so spectal about such a
Eastern ConfQrence
Amertcan Football Conference man at all
team m baseball-they're the team, four to three It was Uttle
Allanl1c Drvlsron
East
world champions," S81d Reds wonder that he was chosen
wl pet gb
wl t p-et ptpa The same holds true With those ballplayers we hke to designate
manager
Sparky Anderson, recipient of Sport Magazine's
Boston
6 0 1000
M1an10
6 o o 1000 145 87 as World Senes "heroes u
swallowmg his disappointment "Most Valuable Player"
New York
5 1 833 1 N y Jets .; 2 o 667 187 w
Buffalo
2 4 333 4 Bullal o 2 4 o 667 128 144 They come m all shapes, colors and s1zes
at seemg the l{eds lose the award, a new car
Philadelphia 0 5 000 511, New Eng 2 4 0 333 82 186 There are the superstars, of course, ballplayers like Roberto
Morgan shouldered most of
Central DIYISton
Ba1t1more
Clemente, who dominated the World Senes last year; Brooks Ser1es for the second tune m
three
years
the
blame hlmself for Cin·
w I pet g b
1 s o 167 94 122 Robmson, who did 1! the year before, Frank Robmson, the 1006
Houston
3 2 600
Central
"My guys don't have to hang cmnati 's losing the Series, but
Bal hmore
3 3 500 'n
w 1 t pet pt pa shckout, and Sandy Koufax, who took all honors m 1!165
their lfeads for anything and he said, "I'm a Utile dlsapAllanla
2 4 333 l'l2 P•llsburgh
On the other hand, there are those With far less ability w..o they know It," Anderson sa1d ~ pointed that our pitchers let
Cleveland
0 6 000 3'12
4 2 o 667 139 89
suddenly emerge as "stars" m the World Ser1es Players like
Western Conference
C1ncmnal1
"Oakland never qu1t," said him do as much damage as he
Midwest DIVISion
4 2 o 667 108 85 util1tyman Al We1s, ll"On-handed Chuck Hiller and even Billy Clncmnati second baseman Joe dld "
W I pet 9 b Cleveland
Morgan in grudgmg adMorgan went hitless through
Milwaukee
5 1 833
3 3 0 500 94 114 Martm
KC Omaha
2 2 500 2 Houslon 1 5 0 167 80 165 Gene Tenace belongs to thiS second group He was a parttuner m1rahon. "They deserve to be Ute first five Series games and
Detro• t
2 2 500 2
With the Oakland A's all season, battmg only 225m 79 games for world champions "
Wost
wound up with o,nly three hits
Chocago
2 3 400 2'1,
wltpclpfpa
them
all
year
and
hlttmg
but
five
homers
Like
many
fans,
the
Reds
m
24 at bats
Pactftc [.itvtston
3 2 1 583 150 111
Along
comes
the
WorldSer1es
and
he
acts
as
If
he's
Blll
Dickey,
wlpctgb Oakland
were somewhat dumbfoWlded
Morgan's roommate, Bobby
Kan Coty 3 3 o 500 142 112
Phoen1x
3 1 750
Mickey Cochrane, Errue Lombardi and Yog1 Berra all rolled into by the emer~ence of Gene Tolan,waslnthecentralftgure
SanD1ego
2
3
I
417
110143
GoldenState 3 1 750
Denver 2 4 0 333 128 166 one He clubs folll' home runs against the startled Cincmnati
Los Angeles
4 2 667 Natrona IFootball Conference Reds, which is as many as Babe Ruth or lou Fehrtg ever hit m
Seattle
3 3 500 1
East
1 5 167 3
Portland
any series and more than such other far more famous sluggers as
wltpctpfpa
Sunday's Results
W
shngln
5 1 0 833 142 7a Joe Dimagg~o, Hank Aaron and Willie Mays ever d1d, he dr1ves m
Mtlwaukee 104 Cleveland 84
Dallas
4 2 0 667 122 73
Los Angeles 104 Ch1cago '19
9of Ute A's 16 runs, and he tears up Cincumatl pitchers for 8 hits
N Y G1anls
Seallle 120 Portland 119
4 2 0 667 152 124 m 23 tunes up for an eye-blmking 348 figure which makes him
fovert1me)
51 LOU IS 2 4 0 333
82 129 the ser1es MVP walking away
(only games $cheduled&gt;
Pholdlpha
Today S Games
Gene Ten ace doesn't even look like a World Ser1es hero
I 5 0 167
59 150
Pholadelphoa at Boston (after
Central
He's listed as being 190 and 6 feet but that must be with a safe
noon)
wltpctpfpa
on hiS back when he's standing on a step ladder
Ionly game scheduled)
Green Ba y
4 2 0 667 109 93 The little blond moustache he wears accentuates hiS pale
Delr01t
4 2 0 667 161 141 complexiOn, and many of his teammates call this amtable httle
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Oak- WorldSeriesbestofallSunday
American Basketball
Mmnesota
Association Standrngs
Italian
from
Lucasville,
Ohio,
"Ten-ach1"
wh1ch
IS
the
name
his
land
captain Sal Bando might after the A's had handed the
2 3 0 400 109 89
By United Press lnteroahonal Ch•cago 1 3 I 300 92 108 forebearers went by
have summed up the 1972 Clnt;lnnatl Reds a 3-2loss in the
E1st ~
West
"Ten-aeh\;
Il&lt;lve
you,"
Dick
Williams,
the
A's'
manager
called
.....
. .. ....... ..........
'. seventh and final game.
wloct ab
w I I pet pf pa
~~·· •• :. • • ••••• ••• !o; .-:-;.;.·· •• ' ........... ~i
Carolina
426671
out to hun whlle he was bese1ged by newsmen following Sunday's
"I don't think we could have
Los Angeles
Kentucky
225001
4 1 I 750 130 80 finale m which he knocked in the wmners' f1rst run With a smgle
eltpected to beat a team like
New York
335001
:1&lt;·
nta 4 i 0 667 142 94 and then !hell' go-ahead run With a SIXth mnmg double
Memphis
2 3 400 1'12 Atla
" Cincinnali In less tban seven
San Fran 2 3 1 41 7 135 106
~:
}~
Vrrgm 1a
243332
games," said the Oakland third
Tenace didn't even hear h1s manager
New Orleans
West
0 s 1 083 88177 He was busy answermg quest10ns Quest10ns about great
baseman, who knocked in the
Yl I pel g b
Sunday's
Results
N
Y
Jets
24
third and deciding run In the
San Diego
4 1 800
baseball men like Babe Ruth
Oakland
Bal hmore 20
Denver
4 1 800
abrhbl sixth Inning With a long double
M1am 1 24 Buffalo 23
"I haven't heard too much about hun," sa1d Tenace
Utah
3 3 500 1'12
Ca m pnrs ss
4 I 2 0 to center field
Po
ttsburgh
33
New
Englan~ 3
Why?
Indiana
243332
Mangual
cf
4
1 0 0
N Y Giants 27 Sl Louis 21
Dallas
1 4 200 2'12
"I wasn't even born when he was playmg "
Rudolf
3 0 0 0 "We had them on Ute ropes
Atlanta 10 Green Bay 9
Sunday's Result
Tenacelb
3 0 2 2 but let them get sway," conCleveland 23 Houston 17
What about havmg a baseball1dol when he was a k1d'
New York 119 Utah 116
Lewtspr
0 I 0 0
Ph•ladelph•a 21 Kansas City Tenace stood there thinkmg He sucked some champagne from
(only games scheduled )
Hegan lb
I
0 0 0
20
statement
little,
Monday's games
tinued
Bando,awho
didsaying
modifyIt
Bando3b
4 0 1 1 his
the bottle and that seemed to help the thought processes
Detrool 34 San Dffgo 20
(n o games scheduled)
Alou rf
3 0 0 0 might have been a different
Los Angeles 15 Cmcmnat1 12
"Mickey Mantle," he S81d, "then Yog1 Berra "
Duncan c
3 0 0 0 series if the A's had had
Washmgton 24 Dallas 20
Some crackpot had threatened to shoot hun if he hit another Green 2b
4 0 f 0 slugging centerfielder Reggie
Denver JO Oakland 23
Odom
p
2
0 0 0
San Franc1sco 20 New Or home r110 Satlll'day How had he slept before the final game'
Hun
terp
0
0
0 0 Jackson and southpaw relief
leans 20
"I didn't sleep very well I was restless," he said, "but 11 Holtzman p
0
o
0 0 pitcher Darrold Knowles, both
Ionly games scheduled)
wasn
'I
because
of
that
guy
oranything
like
that
"
Fmgersp
I
0
0
0 of whom were lnjlll'ed
Today's Games
C1nctnnah
M1nnesota at Ch1cago (night)
One of the Oakland players able to relate with Gene Tenace
Oakland took the first two
ab 4 h bl
(only game scheduled )
was Ted Kubiak, who came to the A's from the last-place Rose If
5 1 2 0 gsmea In Cincinnati and held a
3 0 I 0 3-1 edge in games going into
Milwaukee Brewers last year and IS a part-tune performer Morgan 2b
Tolancl
2 0 0 0 Friday's fifth game But the
Sunday's Baseball Results
himself. He watched Tenace getting most of the adulation In the
Jav•enph
0
0 0 0
By Unrted PreS$ International A's' quarters following the club's 3-2 wrap-up of the Reds and felt Hague ph
1
0
0 0 Reds, traDing most of that
World Series
Fostercf
0 0 0 0 contest, rallied for a 5-4 victory
Oakland
100 002 ooo- 3 6 1 good vicariously
Bench c
3 0 0 0 to bring the Series back here
Cmconnal• 000 010 011)- 2 4 2 "I'm happy for htm," Said Kub1ak "You have to be a little btl Perez
1b
2 1 I 1
Odom, Hunter (5), Holtzman
h he f 1s ht
4 0 0 0 and then won an 8-1 "Iaugher"
Menke 3b
I8J. Fmgers (S) and Duncan m the same boat yourself to appreciate ow
ee ng now
3 0 0 0 Saturday
Blilmgham Borbon (6), Carroll What makes a ballplayer like him emerge like he dld m a World Geron1mo rf
Concepcion
ss
3 0 0 0 Prior to the start of the
(6), Gr~msley (7) , Hall 181 and Series? It's hard to say Some guys thrtve In pressure situations
B•llmgham p
I 0 0 0
Bench WP Hunter LP Borbon Their battmg averages before that don't seem to matter, Gene McRae ph
0 0 0 I Seriea, there was talk of a fourBorbonp
0 0 0 0 game Cincinnati sweep, and
The ma)or Slll'VIvmg work obviously IS that kind ofbaUplayer, I say hooray for htm "
Carroll
p
0 0 0 0 the Reds were liBted as 7-4
of the famous magazme edl·
That was the general sentiment among aU the A's
Gr~m s ley p
0 0 0 0 fa vor1tes to take the Utle
"It coulm't happen to a better guyt chipped m Sal Bando, Uhlaender ph
tor, Sarah Josepha Hale, Is
1 0 0 0
the children's poem, "Mary
Hall p
o 0 o o "I don't think Cincinnati was
Had a Little Lamb "
Tenace's roomie.
Chaney ph
0 0 0 0 overconfident," Bando said.
Totals
21
2 4 2
Dave
Duncan,
the
A's'
regular
catcher
who
sat
out
most
of
the
l
100 002 OOD-3 "They just dldn 'I expect us to
series behind Tenace, apparently felt the same way as Bando Oakland
Cmcmnall
000 010 011)-2 play as well as we do.''
"Nothmg could make me happier than what Gene did," said
E - Tolan , Concepcion , Following losses in the ftfth
Duncan,
obVIously
smcere
"If
I
can't
play,
I'm
delighted
that
Campanerls
DP - Oakland 1
America is the place that
LOB
Oakland
8 Cincinnati 8
Ute man who took my place did what he did We're both With the
is made out of drealll8.
28 - Perez, Tenace Banda
same ball club, we're both trying to accomplish the same thing Morgan SB - Bench S And, U.S.SavingsBonds
SAME DAY
SWORDS LOS!!
Mangual
Campanerls
SF
He
did.
My
hat's
off
to
hun
"
CINCINNATI
(UP!)
have been helping to
SERVICE
McRae Perez
SATURDAY NIGHT
make happy dreams
In At 9-out At 5
ALL GOT OUT
IP H R Er Rb So Defenseman Jean Lagace
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Odom
41321142 scored a goal from 185 feet Into
come true for years.
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Ftre
FOOTBALL RESULTS
Hunter
2 2 3 1 1 1 1 3 an empty net to guarantee the
Untfed Press International
Now, Bonds mature
Usa Our FrH P~rtung Lot
broke out m a bulldmg at the
Hoi
tzman
0
t 0 0 0 0
Pennsboro IW Va I 22 Fingers
Hershey Bears a 5-3 American
in leY than six yean.
Cleveland st~te Mental Frontier Local 0
2
0 Hockey League win over the
That meana your drealll8
Hospttal Sunday, but all 136 B ella~re 14 Wheeling IW Va ) Hill ing ham 0 0 0 0
Cmclnnatl Swords here Sunday
Central 8
5
21014 mght
can come true faster I••2•1'•E•2•nd•'•Po•m-•ro_y_. . pahents
were
safely New Martonsv olle IW Va I 41
Borbon
23 3 2 2 0 0
""a'=Ualed
Bellaire St Johns 0 Carroll
than ever before.
Tied 3-3 at the end of two
0 0 0 2 1
Y oungstown Wilson 38
Gr~msley
1
3
0
0
0
1
1
periods,
Jim Wiley scored the
Yoli can buy shares in
Youngstown Rayen 0
Hall
2
I
0
0
0
3
Y oungstown
Urs1lme
22
your particular dream
Hunter pitched to one batter go-ahead goal for Hershey in
"COOKIE SHACK II
Struthers 15
In 8th, Holtzman pitched to one the fmal period and Lagsve got
by joining the Payroll
Lowellville 6 McDonald 0
lla1ter '" 8th
his nnk-long shot In the closing
• d1namlc buslne11 opportunity
Savmgs Plan where you
Save - Fingers HBP - by seconds Both teams are now 3F1ngers (Chaney)
work, or the Bond-aP ",,.part""' wldl 1 famllot- film wllo SELECT - ' •
The Dljly Sentinel
WP - Hunter A - 56,0&lt;40 3
upoo
QUALIFICATIONI
and
nol
upon
wllll
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DEVOTED TO THE
Month plan where you
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for aqutpnwm, prooluct,
By MILTON RICHMAN

Pro standings

in two cructal misplays that
helped Oakland wln the
decisive game SWJday.
In the first, he misjudged a
line drive by Angel Mangual
that went for a three-base error
and led to Oakland's first run In
the opening 1Ming.
The second resulted In what
proved to be the wlnillng run
when Tolan failed to catch a
drive to deep center by Sal
Bando and It dropped for a
double Racing toward the
fence with his back to the plate,
the Cincinnati center Reider
appeared to pull up l81ne
suddenly and feU to the ground
Tolan sustained a cramp In
his left leg on the play and left
the game an lnnlng later
He vowed that he would not
let himself be tormented by
thoughts of what might have
been if he had made the two
catches,

"These things are golns to
happen," Tolan said '1 believe
things are predestined There'•
no sense in replaying them. t
won't get &amp;ck over any '-11

game"
Oakland relief pitcher Bob
locker, in a vlslt to the Redo'
dressing room, told Menke, "It
could have gone either way.
Ball games are just a matter of
breaks"
The Reds probably would
have to agree, But after loslnl
two World Series in the ~
three years, they are won·
dering when Ute J:reaka will
come their way.

A's beat tough team,
pitching difference

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FOG'FBAU.- ~
GAME

P•t+•"·

-matwdt-11111........... .

and sixth games, Oakland
manager Dick WUilams shook
up hls lineup for the finale,
oon~hl~~ ' fl~t b~llelna'll ' Mike
Epstein, whowaaO.for·18 in the
first six games, moving the
amazing Gene Tenace from
catcher to first base, and
starting Dave Duncan behind
the plate
Wllllams said he discUssed
the move with Epstein before
the game and Ep81eln went
along with the move "as long

HUSTLE
AFI'ER

"c..lltl' ffnanollll " " · OUR IUCCI!IIII PAlED UI'ON YOUR IUCCISS

Speaking ollcida' proflrama, as I was a moment ago, I IJid a
recent column bemoaning the fact that "LuCt's To)'lhopt" a
ColumlMIHMIIId program for the lliDAI1 eel, fln't on lll1 men I
am advieed by 111 Ohio l'lltlder, name unknown, tbll Luclleft the
show todevc!le more tb!!l to berfkNrlahincpuppet"'"'"'·
'lbepuJ!Peb' pin !urea televillon's lou, Luciwaa 1ood.
ON TilE TV DIAL· GaiiiPolls' Jolm llalll.!a7 II me of the
participants em a "Town HaD" show of area c:andidates, at aon
WSAZ-TV ... 'lbedepreued YiklDga meet the UR4Jftd.4owli Bean
I
on the fll'ldlron, 9 on WHrN-TV ... And llwn'aa ciGM-kil*llt our
defense posture, compared with ~·s, at 9:101 WBNS-TV

seam of the carpet around the B1lhngham had been mowmg Tenac-e- for pmchrunner Al hams didn't I heSitate m w1th two out m the omth when • lineup, benching first baseman
For_thls ~Fiort .c..G mo ~dirt-third base area and-took-ac-llle-A-'s-down,.-l'e~mng-104~·"'~~-'-----~-.,.nldrrg-tJiJrrany-longerthanPincfilillteFDiiiTel Cnaney was Mike Epstein who was OOior-18

of the three runs

•

�'.

.

•

' .

Phipps~ - got
. '

.

.

~

h

l

ard

~6leadonSkipButler's46-yard

field goal with 9:35 to go.
. At the time of Butler's field
· goal, .the anemic Cleveland
offenseb~~cdonly 179yardstotal
offense. The Browns' only

::sby~eCo~kr:~w!~ ~~=~y ~:~; f:rn~n:~~h!et~~~

yarders .and 26-yarder-and a
27-yard pass from Phipps to.
Frank Pitts with 31 seconds
remaining in tbe first half. .
The Oilers never had put
together a suS!Bined.drive, but
Dan PaS!Orini had .connected
on two long touchdown passes
illld had scrambled 14.yards to
the aeveland ali to set up
Butler's field goal.
Pastorini Had hit CharUe
Joiner on a 51-yard scoring
pais over Ben Davis in tbef!rst
quarter and had found ,Ken
Burrough free behind Clarence
Scott on an SO.yarder .to open
·
·

stage for Phipps: sneak.
Coach Nick Skorich, who still
has illusions of winning the
Central Division of the Ainerican
conference,
was
pleased.
''We moved the ball when we
had to and that's the sign of a
team that wants to win,"
Skorich S8id. "We didn't have a
turnover. we had eight two
weeks ago agnlnst the Chiefs
and lost a fumbl~ on the
Chicagq i5 iast w~ against
the Bears:
'
.
"Our running game- hasn't
been good, but its on the way
back now;" he said. "We
haven't got a good enough
running game to will in this
league. We've had to make so
many changes in the offensive
line. But 1 think we're getting
settled down now.''
The Browns finished with
more yards running, 135, than
passing, 119 .. Skorich can see
the llght.
·

Walk ·takes
care of
• •
VlSWn

CINCINNATI (UPI)-Do
you believe In ESP?
'11ult 's extra sensory perception, and Johmy Qench, tbe
Cincinnati . Reds' catcher,
doesn't actually say whetber
he does or not, but Usten to his
Utile story .and , judge for
·yourself, . ·
Bench says he lllld Reggie By United Press International
Jackson, the Oakland A's'
Ashland College is bandaged
outfielder sidelined lor the and bruised but still unbeaten.
·entire ·World Series witb an
'The Eaglfl8, · 19th ranked
· Injured leg.' had dinner small college team in the coun~gtt":ilk:mr:Y t n~ht 10 try, gl!lned Uielr sa~eftth win of
a u ·e .
the s&lt;fllson. Sat)ll'\la,Y,in dwn. ~fl.
.
·
ping Ohio Northern 27-10.
I. told hLm llmew how the · But the win was a sobering
Series was g~~g- to wind up," one for Ashland as the injury
said Bench. I w":' g~ing to list grew longer.
come up · in the .llite mnings
"Our injuries are mounting
. (~ollie) Fingers would be up and th~y are becommg ai.PLtching, he had 180\ten me most unbelievable," said
twice (in previous games), and Coach Fred Martinelli.
now Would be my tJ,U'Il to get
Punt · return specialist and
him. , ,
,
defensive back Dave Burke
, Bench s 'Vision was goo~- suffered a probable broken
· up~- a point. He came up With arm when he collided with an
runners on second and _third, Ohio Northern running back
one out and the Reda trailing, 3- . after intercepting a pass in the
1, In the last of the eighth second period. Ashland now
Sunday • Fingers was pi\clllng counts 10 "serious injuries" for
for the A's.
the season
·
"IIooked over in their dugout
Quarterback Ron Slater hit
and
ther'
was
Reggie
noljdlng
M
·•· bauser for two
hi h d dsmlling 1 · ,
ark N'L....,r
s ea an
a me, touchdown passes. Jon Viar
Bench related.
.scored on a one-yard plunge
But Fingers wilked him and Dick Mlller ran back a
lntentionally, and that took · pass Interception 34 yards for
care of the ''Vision" as the th E 1 • ·
Oald d ell
itched his
e ag es !mal touchdoMJ.
811 r ever P .
Bob Hltcheri5 pushed his seaway out of the lnnlng With only son rushing total to 940 yards in
one run being scored _againsf Miami's win over South
him.
. ,
CaroUna 21-8. Tbe jUnior tallback averages 156.7 yards for
the six games he has -jllayed,
1
tops in the nation.
. re8
He ground out 2;11 yards in 44
carries and scored two touchRichmond Heights 39 Beach- downs. One of tbe scores came
Wood 18
on a 58 yard run.
Newbury 7 Cleve. Lutheran
Miami's
prime
MidEast 6
Buckeye 35 . Lutheran ·West 14 American Conference foe,
University School 28
Kent State, downed nonPittsburgh Shadyside 3
Indian Valley North 28 conference opponent Xavier 2616, and drew admiration from
Ridgewood 18
Malvern 21 Slrausburg 0
Tuscarawas Valley 26 Sandy
Valley o
Canton McKinley 11
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney

Bro.w n incredible for 'Skins
.

. BY JOE CARNlcELLl
UPI

t":

!!

High School
Sco

' .
.
. a ·pair cf toul!n~wns. "It was

Mercury Morris' ~~·aro

-

his

·

Of the

beat determined Buffalo · to
reina\D the NFL's lone tmbea·\en team.
Art MatOI)e plunged onl!-y~rd
for a.score·;ind Bill Beilkicked
a 24-yard field goal in tbe .third
J)eriod to offset three lield
goals by Chesler Marco! and
lead the· Falcons i&gt;ver the
·Packers:
·
IJ;ivid Ray kicked a 32-yard
field goal as time ran out after
Horst Muhlmann had blown
lbree ·chl!HJhot field goals as
Los Angeles . downed Clncinhati.
.Eddie Bell took ' a twicedefiected joe Namath pass on

B.u.ck.,s d' o.·' .all
·
•
·
h
Jahh
·
. . .. . ng 't
. ' ·. ar1e. ss '
·..·

.
.
,
.
. The Milw~ukee B~cks , PlaYLucius Allen added 20 points Austin carr, Charlie Davlund Cavaliers with 14 points each;
mg their th1rd straight game to Milwaukee's attack while John Johnston paced the
without SUJII!r star Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, got a 27.point
effort from Bob Dandridgf and
23 more from ·ve!eran, Oscar
RobertsonSundaynight{jibeat
the Clevel~nd Cavaliers, Jil-1-84. The Rio Grande cross Rex Brockschmit. On Oct. 20, ed by Rio's Stacy Osborne in
The victory was the fiftH jn six country team wop~ triang~lar 1971, B~ockschmit established fiftli, Osborne's time was 21:44.
games .for the Bucks this meet Saturday at Urbana. The the old record of 21:i7. Rio Musklngum's Randy Barkare~
season and it was their third final score was Rio Grande 18, Grande's Jack Finch, the came in sixth; then it was Rio
triumph without the ailing Muskingum 43, and' Urbana 77. junior ftom Chesapeake, broke · runners winning the seventh,
Alihough it was a three way the old mark with ease. Finch eighth and ninth positions.
Jab bar in the lineup.
In the only other National meet, the teams conside~ed it had a time of 20:36 over the Mike Gross was seventh with a
Basketball AssociRUon games, was two dual m~ts with Rio four mile course at Urbana . time of 22:09, Kev Honnold,
Los Angeles trimmed Chicago, beating Muskingum Ul-43 and Behind Finch were teammates eighth at ·22&gt;22 and Bill Can·Ken ·Sanders and Bruce field ninth at 22:34.
104-~9, · and Seattle edged Urbana 15-50.
The
Redmen
displayed
their
Melton . . Sanders came in
The Redmen in dual meets
Portland, l20-ll9, in overtime.
best
performance
of
the
season
second
with
a
time·
of
2{):45
and
are !&gt;-0. CO!lch Bruce Curtis
Milwaukee took an ll.point
with
Ken
Sanders,
Jack
Finch
Melton
was
third
with
a
time
of
was well pleased by his team's
lead after the first quarter but
and
Bruce
Melton.brea.king
the
21
,
n.
victory at Urbana. Rio Grande
Cleveland hit on half of its
course
record
set
almOst
one
Mark
Bonasort
of
Mushas a young. team tbat a year
attempt.s from the ffeld in the
year
W
the
(jay
by
Findlay's
kingwn
placed
fourth
follow.
ago lost to Marietta College in
second quarter to move witliln
.
I
,
,
the Rio Grande ' Invitational.
&lt;
three at halftime. An 11-1 I
streak by the· Bucks midway I
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I Saturday the Redmen for the
through the third quarter put
than 300 words long (or be subjeet to redaction by the e~~Jior) I second time beat llluskingum
the game ,out of reach.
1 and must be signed wlth ihe signee's address. Names may be ~ and earlier this season
Muskingum downed Marietta.
1 withheld upon pubUcalion, how~ver, ·on request. Letters
1 should )!e .ln goOd li!sle, addressing Issues, not personalities. J The key to the Redmen team
this fall could lie In a couple of
freshmen from Coshocton.
Mike Gross and Kev Honnald a
year ago were leading their
high school team to a good
season. Gross' running
They're proud ·of their team Racine,Ohio · Saturday
was particularly
encouraging.. Gross finished
the defeated Musketeers.
Dear Sir:
"I'd say Kent's as good as
We are writing this letter concerning \lie Eastern fans. We. seventh. It was the first time he
Miami," Xavier Coach Tom think they were unfair in their declaration of the football game was among the top ten
finishers since the West
Cecchini said. "Kent IDBY not between Southern and ,Eastern.
be as consistent, but they have
They said Mr, Mole does not predict fairly. You said Southerr Virginia Tech Invitational.
Tlle'Jiio cr,osl country team
a lot of .yo~g. t,ale~t. ~ .
&lt;;·~i l'!.d '·pjhej~~dv~lyts, Even;tliollgh thef &amp;)rid,tlie_refer"''J were
will
li€1id!e unlit FridaY: The
Cecchln!. LB U) · ~ . po§Jtlon to lnour favor t~y {E~tetn ~ picked tjlelt-referees and' t)ley had
Redmen will'participate in the
judge. Xavier has lost to both their home field. ·
teams this seaSQn.
Southern and Eastern have battled almost from tbe beginning Morris Harvey Invitational.
In other game~, Ohio , Sll)te of the history of the two schOOls. Southern has lost almost con- The M.orris Harvey event will
s'."a~p~d Indiana 44-7 ; tlnuously totbe Eastern team. When In time of fate Eastern loses provide strong competition
feahirJng Marshall's ThunVrrgl!lla Tech dowlied Ohio U. to Southern, they say we didn't play fair!
53-21; Toledo beat Day!Dn 20Southern has worked hard for Ibis team and we have plenty dering Herd.
17; Wittenberg blanked
·· .
. .
wooster 24~· Wabash (lnd ) of sprrlt m S.H.S. There,lB never a perfect team, but everyone
'
edged Ohio 'wesleyan !4-!2; tries to be perfect even though evetyo~e l?ses a few ..
Musklngum whipped Otterbein
WhenS.H.S.Iost to Wahama we dLdn t complain to the editor
54-21: Capital bea_t Mount that Wahama had all tbe ,advantages or that someone un;
Union 21-14· Kenyon defeated derestimated us. We know when we are. defeated but we don t
Oberlin 34-t4, and Heidelberg pout about it; we just try harder for another victory.
squeezed past Baldwin Wallace
We are proud of our team this year and we are proud to be .
10-7.
·
,
partofthespirlt that's behind our S.H.S. team.
Also, Westminster ( Pa.)
We are riot ashamed to slgn our names because we are proud
downed
Defiance 17-7; of our team!
Wilmington edged Hanover
-Connie Smith, Karen Nelgler, Gra~ Phillips, Diane Black,
(Ind .) 15-14; John Carroll Sharon Holter and Debbie Millirqn.
defeated Carnegie Mellon 10-7;
'
Findlay tolled over Grand
·.
Valley State 311-f; Central State
'·
edged West VJr~la State 2019, and Youngstown halted
Akron 22-21.
'
Ohio State quarterback Greg •
Hare and fullback Champ HenSliD each scored two !oll!:h'
•
doMJs as the Buckeyes rolled
tD their flftb wil), tbird in the
Big Ten.
·
Virgin'ta Tech, quarterback
Don Strock, leading passer !h
the country, set a school record ·
with hiS four touchdown passes·
against. OU. Bobcat quarterback Rich Bevly relnjured
an ankle in the second period
and was lost for the rest of the
game.

Redm~n . capture 3-way meet

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

I

Ashland injury
list mounting

.er

5:...

a
sea5Qn game.
thesecondhalf:Otherwise, two Ocl!lber for Georg~ Allen llut
Dallailsurgeda!oiWleadin
Siln$Y,
.lost fumbles , dropped passes · Tom Landry still has his mind the · setond quarter on Toni Miami edged
24-23,
Md penalties had stymied the on the one in JanUary. ··
Fritsch'~· fi¢ld goals of 13 and Atlanta.nipped Green Bay, 10Oilers, who ran up 364 yards
· Allen's. Washington Red- . ·12 yards and a 39-yard toll!'h· 9, Los Angeles downed Cintotal offense· but no more skins, sparked by an incredible ~wnpllSI! from Craig .Morton . cinnati;"J,s-.1;, the New York
points.
.
individual perfo_rmance · by_ to .. Ron Sellers. . Sonny Jets squeezed past Baltiinore, .
The Browns didn't have a Larry.Brown;rallied to defeat Jurgertsen; wh0 became only 24-20, the New York Giants
turnover !or achange, but they - Landry's Dallas Cowboys, 24- the third passer in NFLhi!ltvrY rallied tri beat St ..Louis, 24-21!;
'didn't have nm~h else eith'er20, Sunday and take unlfujputed Ul surpass 30,000. yard~ durlng Philadelphia stunned Kansas
until Butler's go-ahead field possession of.fi,rst place in. the his career, threw ' a !!!-yard . Clty,:il'20,.Plitsburgh crushed
goaL Then Phipps, Leroy National Football Conference . pass tD Brown to start the New England, 33-3, Detroit
. ~elly, · Bo Scott and Fair Eastern Division.
.
Washington scoring.
whipped San Diego, 31-20,
Hooker took charge.
"ll was one of the finest
Walt Garrison'sonf&gt;-yard l'll!l Denver surprised Oak!Md, 30Kelly and Scott moved the games I ever watched," said boosted D8)las to a 2G-7 lead 23, .San Francisco tied New
ball from their own 20 to the 32 Allen after Br~wn caught but It was all Wasllington after Orleans, 21).20, and Cleveland
·in four carrie5 and Phipps hit 5even passes -for 100 yards, that. Brown burst 34 yards for defeated Houston, · 23-17.
Hooker on two straight passes rushed for 95 more and scored onescore, LUr!Knight kicked a Mi!lnesota is at Chicago
to the Oiler .20. Then it was
42-yard field .goal arid Charlie tonight.
K¢1ly (or four, Scott for three,

HOUSTON (UPI.) -Mike
Phipps ·and the . Cleveland
. Browns are still trying 1o pot
together a running attack this
~ason, but Phipps got tbe one
yard he needed most in the
'tourih quarter Sunday,
. The yard, behin.d left guard
Gene Hickerson,- came· with'
3:36 remaining to give \lie
BroWns a touchdown and a 2317 victory O.er the Houston
Oilers: Houston.had taken a 17-

! . j)~J}~=6~

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van

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-Financing •..

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1112 • I'INANCINCl OHIO P.EOPLE FOJII 1D YIARI • 1t71 -

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Wide SelftctfOn/

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs~old Lawson
and sari! Chuc , of Letart, w, .
Va ., Mr. and
. Diamond
Lawson of MI. oriah spent
Sunday with Mr, and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wlliicm
and children spent a weekend •
with Mr. and Mrs: Frank Dines
at Parkersburg.
VIsiting Mrs. Ronald RusseU
and daughter, Mandy, and
Mrs. RuliseU Roush and famUy
Sunday were Mrs. Joyce White
lild children, Mr. .and Mrs.
Howai-d Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Rullell, all of Wolf Pen
and Mr. and Mrs. Steve HaW
of Akron. .
Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Roush
and.JDLI, Paul, were vtsi.tors In
Belpre an Sunday. ·
· Mri. Iva Orr and Mrs .
l!!m1ila Yokely spe~t Taeiday
evening with Mr. and Mn.
Gordon Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
iAWII OUr• of Tannen Run and
· the Wolre,' aan, Burhl Wolfe of
Buckeye Lake also visited with

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PHONE 912·3411

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Right Reserved· to
. I(!M · Li,mit Quanfltie_s. ,

BEN _FRANKliN
, .•POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

c-o.· - ,.,., ~-e...,

......, ............. Pifl.

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STORE ··

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Answers
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. 89tp~lr

S t~I IU S ~ od · r uoa lant

. NEW
FREEDOM

Mr. and Mrs. 011 BOlton of
a.c:tne cilled (ll Mr. and Ml'I:,Cc ..:..:..L~l[)ai:u - - - Sunday. _ '

...

.

hi·

News Notes

lbel!l.

,,

.992-2171 .

d~51gned ,

baGkong Many CO lOrS

Fairview

i$. the" an$wer

700 W. Main • Pom,eroy

'

Decor~to r

Olle 5ht{l 10 .ChOICI! Ol

of

, A m &amp; r i c a it HockeY \eaaue

',

.,r,l '

Pi on!• UP
l ~ f~ i UII
wun 11 ~I I '~ color•
S1 fa , ncn ·lo •oc

Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and son Of Sissonville spent a
weekend with Mrs. Erma
Wilson.
Mr. ·and ·Mrs. Albert Hll
Jr., Mr .and Mrs. Ralph Bade!)
spent a week with thE
Badgelys' son, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Badgely at Fairfax, Va.,
and tbelr daughter, Mt. and
Mrs. Tom Ekersley at Hannibal, N. Y. ·
.
· carl Robinson of Norfoll&lt;,
Va., Howard Robinson of
Flatwoods, W. Va., and Mrs.
Bertha Robinson were recent
Sunday dlrlner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Shields.
Mr. and Mrs. Chrissie Powell
Racine and grandson,
Roblnsoq
of
Raymond
Philadephla, spent a Sunday
evenifig with Mrs. Bertha
Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Sargent of Racine also visited

.

.

.

E-Z011 Mekt-~p

II

SAVINGS I

¥ mh\ 'l'lJ n:uO:)

...

When you buy ~nything which require$. financing, ·
we h!Jve a plan to fit your budget. We're on the local
scene and give fast service. It will always pay
.ask. your dealer for thrifty CitY. . Loa(l "Actlon~Pian
·. · Fln~n~:;ing.'!
, ·
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.125 E. MAIN

nee~tl!!d

S1rttel\tt IO l• t 5 ate

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15+

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2nd

COSTUMES

City Loan is the answ~r. We make
.. quick, convenien) signature loans · In
amounts up to $1000 ..- ... and larger loans for bHI
consolidation, emergencies, travel and .other
family expenses.
·

Akron 51. Vincent 12
Niles 35 East Liverpool ·6
Newton .Falls 30 Canfield 8
Warren JFK 40 Poland 13
,. West ·Branch 40 Pymaluning
. : Valley 12 · .
··
Niles MeKtnte~ " 35 East .
Liverpool 6 · .
.
Cleve. La.lin 55 Bedford Chane!

PricesI

_.

andlow.fat

=that
great!

ANKLIQJ

Power...Quality II• at Low, Low

(

Warren Western Reserve 36 ·

I

E

.

• '.

Akron

.,
$tandints · ·
. . By Vnlted Press International
'East ·
. w.' I. t.pts
Nova Seta
4 1 2 10
. Providence ·
-• "2 1 9
Boston
·
4 3 o 8
Rochest~r· ·
4 3 o 8
Sprjleld
. 2 3 q1
Nt.w ·.l:m!le!l
.,nest
•• - . ' 107 :J ,....,,•• _...__.
1
.
w. t. t:pls
Tldew.eler
5 3 0 10
Richmond
4.. • 0 8 ·
Cleveland
3 5·1 1
Clncln,.tt
·3 . 3 o 6
FOR. , BIG ,DISCOUNT
· !lattimore
2 '2 2 6
HersheY
. ·
j J. o 6

0
. .0 - r n

D
.
on

r ·VA:LUEs

.&lt;t;Jkttt
,.,,.·

Canton Timken 20 Gilmore
Academy 7
Alliance 19 St. Thomas Aquinas
Akron Kenmore
Buchtel 21

guests .of Mr. ·and Mrs.
RiChard Ables,- Bashail Road. · Lawrence Theiss
· in Gallipolis
Mrs. Fannie Durst, local, recently.
· Mt. and Mrs. Shan Wells and
. 1 nn
f G
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Martin,
a I y 0 ' , UYSVI11e were . Beverly, · called on ' Mr • . and
WASHINGTON (UPI)-:-In a has pl,edged not to .'•make a granting 311)11esty to deserters price ·for their choice." .
.In his remarks on amnl;Siy,
the Baltimore 30 and raced intD • seconds left earned San Fran. witb winless NeW
.
ML · liMn · . . · ;"esday evenm!J ..callers of Mrs. Allen Brewer and David radio address prepared for ·mockery" of the saerifices of and draft dodgers.
l'njoying a 59 to 34 per cent Nixon did. not refer directly to
end
fot a TD with 63 ·
..,_,c;;.,..._ _ .~-·· ·-· ·.All
.lmiiS.l)ei nx of · ohn-W;llls-J~.,...l.ong--BotMn:'~Siiffiljjy aftet'l'oon: -''~- --Veterans·llay,Presldent-N~riei!n . servicemen-~~Nixon-said-$11A&lt;Iay...:iR--a~")ead o;;~~E~rr
· ~-~~~~~~-~~~-~;~~,=~:.fi~~~~;[~~~::--~~
Charlie
~ohnson's
TD
passes
Fairfax,
·va.,
have
·ptirchased
~s.Ruby
Bryant
;md
_Miss
Mrs.
EvelYn
HolterofRacine
.
.
speech
fi:oin
his
Camp
David,
McGovern
in
the latest
who he
1
.an Sl&gt;yai-d scoring ~ •• •••~ 11ft
of
yards
to
Buiy
Maslers
and
th.
e
property
formerly
owned
Maxme.
PoweU
were
bUSI!less
.
called
on
Mrs.
Ada
Meter
,
Md.,
retreat
that
the
United
Harris
poll,
Nixon
planned
has p_roposed granting am21
tbe Jets over-the
.
.
by
Mt:
and
Mrs.
Ben
Allen.
·
VLSLtorsm.Po
.
meroyo.nMonday
Fr'
l
day.
their
son,
Mr.
;md.Mrs.
Terry.
PTA
meeting
at
Porlland
st
1
h
Jd
"h
th
tod
k
Uttle helped ·
Mr De' .. ,_
f
·
.
a es s. ou
on.or . e
ay to rna e a one-day af- nesty to ...the.OYo.ung men who
Pete Uslle threw a 67-yard 32 yards to Floytl
· evening campaign
·
·
, Rll!ders for
. s. -...x:.. • sister of Mrs: afternoon.
.Mr. an·d Mrs. Richard Abels Wol e and son, Syracuse, ·
grade school Monday evening,· m1'II'1on~ who.ha ve.1oy all. Y st. oo d 1ernoon and
Denver
beat
the
. chose jail· or exile because they
TD pass to Ben Hawkins and ·
, -·ws
·. """·Mr. and·Mrs. Mac Van Meter . Recent guests 'of E. H. ~Y !herr . country w.hen. the swing thrQu· gh three su· b.urban
uld
· ·
·
and Mr. and Mrs'. ...,
scyring passes of 36 and 41 to the firr$1 .time since 1962 and
""~ and daughter spe
· nt. Sunday C;lrpenter ;md family were Mr.
.
co not m conscience fight ill
·
called on Mr and Mrs Paul
challengetofreedomca(ledfor countiesnearNewYorkCity - this war." "
Harold Jackson . tO 'lead the MlkePhlpps'threw27yardsto
· previqusJy·winless Eagles .to a Frank Pitts for one score and
Evans and so~. recel)tl;.
~~~ :-:-~:.~ i::!~~~ :;~ ~n~hu~· M~~- Mi~~~dy· service."
Westchester, Nassau and
Nixon said there were.voices
Mr. and Mrs.•Wiley Cornell
"We are not going to make a SUffolk. White•House aides said being heard today that were
stunning upset of Kansas &lt;;ity. plunged over ftomthe one with
.
d b. b
·
chie Jr. ·
Gluesencamp, Mrs. Richard mockery of.their sacrifice by Nixon would use a motorcad· e callm'g "for a weak·
er1'ca,.
Pete Gogolak .kicked field 3:36Ieft as.Cleveland beat the
'
·
an . a Y were in Pomeroy
Mr.. and Mrs. Richard Van Abels, Mrs. Howard Allen and
..ByMrs.HerbertRousb
Mrs. Robinson. .
shopping on Monda·yafternoon
surrendering to the enemy, or for the J'ilunt.
for ·b.lunders."
goals of 16 and 43·yards to cap a Oll·ers.
M d-M
. R ·
·
.
·
·. . · Meter of Beverl'1. spent a daughter, Tom Durst, Mr. and
C r. an ... rs. oy Bilek, Mrs. · Mr. and Mrs.1Jrice Sayre of
Mr. · and Mrs. Larry recent weekend wlth Mr. and . Mrs. Louis De Lux, Dan by o(fering amnesty to draft
The White House announced
''The same misguided think20-polnt outburst in tbll second
. o~a Buck . and Early Roush Rio Grande, Mr, and Mrs. Glues~ncal?p were at the Mrs. Donald Brewer aiuf'l'im. Talbott, Mrs.- Ada Van Meter, dodgers and deserters," Nixon Sunday that Nixon would fly ing they espouse today led 8n
half that' cBrried the Gilmts
vislletj
.over the ·weekend at Da.nny Sayr.e, Mr.· an• . M
. rs. Columbus a;...,.. on Thur·••y
·
said: "The two and one-half Thur~day to ·Ashland, Ky., ior a unprepared Amer.i.ca into .two ,
You Will Find Tilt •
past St. I.nuis. .
Whites
1PhIll&gt; Springs, Elkins, Norman Styer of w
~
" Ro'"·
· ':""''
. w~· is
~ · Mr. and Mrs. Victor. Durst Mrs. Fannie Durst, Gene
.
.
u
·.
atetford,
tD
meet
1\llen
on
d
·
..,
·
. ars in · th.is c.entury
Te.:rr Bradsha)V tbrew a 30,.
. . . · ~u·
• • ~.,
an sons, The r•ains, SJII!nl Carpenter, Lawrence Ritchie mil.lion who chose to serve campaign rally at Paul Blazer world w
nd
th
a . ·0 er p..:.ces o! interest.
Paul Sayre of Columbus visited leave from a GeorgLa mr base Su da
·
America in Vietnam have paid High SchooL On Saturday., he beca.use it encouraged oij!ers
yard TD pass to Ron ShankUn
M
. r.a
. qd Mrs.
Stevens of M
·
·
Mt' ndMr Gen w "
d.
n Y with his parents, Mr. Jr., Wesley Allen, Mr. and Mrs. a pr.ice for their choice. The plans· an
ile• motprc·ade to belL'eve that their
and Jack Ram returned an
r. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
.a
s.
e ouean andMrs,_R. R.DurstandTom. Roy Martin, Niki Dawn Van
.
.I
Cul\odenand St. Claif Hill were over a recent weekend.
famll! w~e___recen
. t guests of
·Mts. llllke Evans atleOded 8 Meter and J. W. Law.On.
few· hwidred who chose to through 14 Ohio communities aggressions · w.ould , go. pn·
Interception 32 yards . for
dinner ~uesls; SI!IIday of Mr:
.
desert America must pay a beginning In aeveland.
.., punished," Nixon ~~Bld.
0
another TO as Pittsburgh'
an\f Mrs. Dallas Hill and
overwhelmed New 'Englapd.
In F.ashions At
family.
.
,.
Mel Farr, starting for the
Mr
..
liqd
Mrs.
Orville
Harpold
first time in more tban a year,
Of Belpre were Sunday guestS
.hBd TD runs of one and two
ot
Mr. and Mrs. Bill-Fox and
yards to lead the Lions over
David.
·
San Diego and Bruce&lt;losdett"s
.&lt;"41h Main ~cJ!it!':!'~
· .Mrs. Phyllis Young, · Mr5.
36-yard field goal .with three
GlOt-ia Wh!Uach
. alld
. baby of
Ma~on spent Taesday with Mr.
antl Mrs.. Gerald Hayman.
Mrs'. Gerald Hayin;m and ·
• Super $tret~h
~Pn . ''J(eith, spent Thursday
• Super Sheer
e)r.ening with Mrs. Bertha
-~qliinson.
·
100% nylon, One
·Lewis Ours and Ernest
size fit s wom
Huiton called on Mr. and Mrs.
5' to 5' 6", be~
Roy Donobew. ·
tween 100 and
' •"•
Mrs. ROy Donobew attended
150-tbs. Fashion
shades.
the w!\dding of Tom Hamm and
Linda''Hollon at the Forest Run
Methtldist Church.
Mr .' and Mrs . Gerald
HByman and son, Keith, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell ·and children at
Get
Letart, W. Va. 'itoute
Miss Tressa Wolle spem a
lor only
Saturday with her grandmother, Mrs. Dolly. Wolfe. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner took their granddaughter, Christi Badgely
• Frttkl 1~ Fvnnt..
hometo Fairfax, Va .•. Wed•· Prtncu aftd Pup•
• Gt!o111 1nd
nesday returning on ThursSay.
Gobllnt
Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Homer
Co5tumu to
OLEEM II ®
make you what
Warner .. and Mr. and Mrs.
Tho EXETER • D3722W
you want to be
TOOTH
PASTE
I Of· tr ic k or
Arthur Warner shopped In
. Ame~can Walnut color cabinet.
treatirl '
Par)l:ersburg last week.
High-Performance Chassis. Super Video
;.,,sa~
Range Tuner. Autonlattc Fine-Tuning Control.
Mrs. Iva Orr and Mrs.
Enuna Yokel)' ·of Collllllbiana ·
Head I Sho11ldew
spent Friday evening with Mr.
Pec.~ift ®
NEW
Now 11 lhf
IO o&amp;piD(al Old w Otr'Hll.ll
SIIAIIIPOOS cro.. or lttltn
and Mrs. Garrett . Circle at
TOOl~ MO(I bUy th e 0081 ~01.1 ve t i'foiSYI
ll·tl. ltlitn, l ·tl, llllil
1973
wanted AM
..,lltl•t OliCI JOU ct n I
Racine.
1Uouj m,\ 11 0 $1(1(:il · upl
Howard Roush, a. ·former
"•'~~~.tu&amp;t~~~~
local resident, is confined tD
rau
lor lun '

..

AT YOUR STORE OR
AT YOUR DOOR

·President vow~ . hard line .against amnesty

Mr, and Mrs. R•"dall
~··
TalbollofNewLexington'spent
Saturday. alternoo.n with . his
mother, Mrs. Olive Talbott
,
". '

I

3

9

ne Dally Senlinei, MklcUeport-POmeroy' 0., Oct. 23, 1912 . .
~. Stive_
l."S.vill
. e _News- 1--,
lYote
Mr. and . Mrs. L. R.
~
. · s · Cluesencamp
and .Niki ljlere

I

4- The Deily Sentinel1 Middleport-Poineroy, 0., Oct. 23, 1972

.I

�'.

.

•

' .

Phipps~ - got
. '

.

.

~

h

l

ard

~6leadonSkipButler's46-yard

field goal with 9:35 to go.
. At the time of Butler's field
· goal, .the anemic Cleveland
offenseb~~cdonly 179yardstotal
offense. The Browns' only

::sby~eCo~kr:~w!~ ~~=~y ~:~; f:rn~n:~~h!et~~~

yarders .and 26-yarder-and a
27-yard pass from Phipps to.
Frank Pitts with 31 seconds
remaining in tbe first half. .
The Oilers never had put
together a suS!Bined.drive, but
Dan PaS!Orini had .connected
on two long touchdown passes
illld had scrambled 14.yards to
the aeveland ali to set up
Butler's field goal.
Pastorini Had hit CharUe
Joiner on a 51-yard scoring
pais over Ben Davis in tbef!rst
quarter and had found ,Ken
Burrough free behind Clarence
Scott on an SO.yarder .to open
·
·

stage for Phipps: sneak.
Coach Nick Skorich, who still
has illusions of winning the
Central Division of the Ainerican
conference,
was
pleased.
''We moved the ball when we
had to and that's the sign of a
team that wants to win,"
Skorich S8id. "We didn't have a
turnover. we had eight two
weeks ago agnlnst the Chiefs
and lost a fumbl~ on the
Chicagq i5 iast w~ against
the Bears:
'
.
"Our running game- hasn't
been good, but its on the way
back now;" he said. "We
haven't got a good enough
running game to will in this
league. We've had to make so
many changes in the offensive
line. But 1 think we're getting
settled down now.''
The Browns finished with
more yards running, 135, than
passing, 119 .. Skorich can see
the llght.
·

Walk ·takes
care of
• •
VlSWn

CINCINNATI (UPI)-Do
you believe In ESP?
'11ult 's extra sensory perception, and Johmy Qench, tbe
Cincinnati . Reds' catcher,
doesn't actually say whetber
he does or not, but Usten to his
Utile story .and , judge for
·yourself, . ·
Bench says he lllld Reggie By United Press International
Jackson, the Oakland A's'
Ashland College is bandaged
outfielder sidelined lor the and bruised but still unbeaten.
·entire ·World Series witb an
'The Eaglfl8, · 19th ranked
· Injured leg.' had dinner small college team in the coun~gtt":ilk:mr:Y t n~ht 10 try, gl!lned Uielr sa~eftth win of
a u ·e .
the s&lt;fllson. Sat)ll'\la,Y,in dwn. ~fl.
.
·
ping Ohio Northern 27-10.
I. told hLm llmew how the · But the win was a sobering
Series was g~~g- to wind up," one for Ashland as the injury
said Bench. I w":' g~ing to list grew longer.
come up · in the .llite mnings
"Our injuries are mounting
. (~ollie) Fingers would be up and th~y are becommg ai.PLtching, he had 180\ten me most unbelievable," said
twice (in previous games), and Coach Fred Martinelli.
now Would be my tJ,U'Il to get
Punt · return specialist and
him. , ,
,
defensive back Dave Burke
, Bench s 'Vision was goo~- suffered a probable broken
· up~- a point. He came up With arm when he collided with an
runners on second and _third, Ohio Northern running back
one out and the Reda trailing, 3- . after intercepting a pass in the
1, In the last of the eighth second period. Ashland now
Sunday • Fingers was pi\clllng counts 10 "serious injuries" for
for the A's.
the season
·
"IIooked over in their dugout
Quarterback Ron Slater hit
and
ther'
was
Reggie
noljdlng
M
·•· bauser for two
hi h d dsmlling 1 · ,
ark N'L....,r
s ea an
a me, touchdown passes. Jon Viar
Bench related.
.scored on a one-yard plunge
But Fingers wilked him and Dick Mlller ran back a
lntentionally, and that took · pass Interception 34 yards for
care of the ''Vision" as the th E 1 • ·
Oald d ell
itched his
e ag es !mal touchdoMJ.
811 r ever P .
Bob Hltcheri5 pushed his seaway out of the lnnlng With only son rushing total to 940 yards in
one run being scored _againsf Miami's win over South
him.
. ,
CaroUna 21-8. Tbe jUnior tallback averages 156.7 yards for
the six games he has -jllayed,
1
tops in the nation.
. re8
He ground out 2;11 yards in 44
carries and scored two touchRichmond Heights 39 Beach- downs. One of tbe scores came
Wood 18
on a 58 yard run.
Newbury 7 Cleve. Lutheran
Miami's
prime
MidEast 6
Buckeye 35 . Lutheran ·West 14 American Conference foe,
University School 28
Kent State, downed nonPittsburgh Shadyside 3
Indian Valley North 28 conference opponent Xavier 2616, and drew admiration from
Ridgewood 18
Malvern 21 Slrausburg 0
Tuscarawas Valley 26 Sandy
Valley o
Canton McKinley 11
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney

Bro.w n incredible for 'Skins
.

. BY JOE CARNlcELLl
UPI

t":

!!

High School
Sco

' .
.
. a ·pair cf toul!n~wns. "It was

Mercury Morris' ~~·aro

-

his

·

Of the

beat determined Buffalo · to
reina\D the NFL's lone tmbea·\en team.
Art MatOI)e plunged onl!-y~rd
for a.score·;ind Bill Beilkicked
a 24-yard field goal in tbe .third
J)eriod to offset three lield
goals by Chesler Marco! and
lead the· Falcons i&gt;ver the
·Packers:
·
IJ;ivid Ray kicked a 32-yard
field goal as time ran out after
Horst Muhlmann had blown
lbree ·chl!HJhot field goals as
Los Angeles . downed Clncinhati.
.Eddie Bell took ' a twicedefiected joe Namath pass on

B.u.ck.,s d' o.·' .all
·
•
·
h
Jahh
·
. . .. . ng 't
. ' ·. ar1e. ss '
·..·

.
.
,
.
. The Milw~ukee B~cks , PlaYLucius Allen added 20 points Austin carr, Charlie Davlund Cavaliers with 14 points each;
mg their th1rd straight game to Milwaukee's attack while John Johnston paced the
without SUJII!r star Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, got a 27.point
effort from Bob Dandridgf and
23 more from ·ve!eran, Oscar
RobertsonSundaynight{jibeat
the Clevel~nd Cavaliers, Jil-1-84. The Rio Grande cross Rex Brockschmit. On Oct. 20, ed by Rio's Stacy Osborne in
The victory was the fiftH jn six country team wop~ triang~lar 1971, B~ockschmit established fiftli, Osborne's time was 21:44.
games .for the Bucks this meet Saturday at Urbana. The the old record of 21:i7. Rio Musklngum's Randy Barkare~
season and it was their third final score was Rio Grande 18, Grande's Jack Finch, the came in sixth; then it was Rio
triumph without the ailing Muskingum 43, and' Urbana 77. junior ftom Chesapeake, broke · runners winning the seventh,
Alihough it was a three way the old mark with ease. Finch eighth and ninth positions.
Jab bar in the lineup.
In the only other National meet, the teams conside~ed it had a time of 20:36 over the Mike Gross was seventh with a
Basketball AssociRUon games, was two dual m~ts with Rio four mile course at Urbana . time of 22:09, Kev Honnold,
Los Angeles trimmed Chicago, beating Muskingum Ul-43 and Behind Finch were teammates eighth at ·22&gt;22 and Bill Can·Ken ·Sanders and Bruce field ninth at 22:34.
104-~9, · and Seattle edged Urbana 15-50.
The
Redmen
displayed
their
Melton . . Sanders came in
The Redmen in dual meets
Portland, l20-ll9, in overtime.
best
performance
of
the
season
second
with
a
time·
of
2{):45
and
are !&gt;-0. CO!lch Bruce Curtis
Milwaukee took an ll.point
with
Ken
Sanders,
Jack
Finch
Melton
was
third
with
a
time
of
was well pleased by his team's
lead after the first quarter but
and
Bruce
Melton.brea.king
the
21
,
n.
victory at Urbana. Rio Grande
Cleveland hit on half of its
course
record
set
almOst
one
Mark
Bonasort
of
Mushas a young. team tbat a year
attempt.s from the ffeld in the
year
W
the
(jay
by
Findlay's
kingwn
placed
fourth
follow.
ago lost to Marietta College in
second quarter to move witliln
.
I
,
,
the Rio Grande ' Invitational.
&lt;
three at halftime. An 11-1 I
streak by the· Bucks midway I
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I Saturday the Redmen for the
through the third quarter put
than 300 words long (or be subjeet to redaction by the e~~Jior) I second time beat llluskingum
the game ,out of reach.
1 and must be signed wlth ihe signee's address. Names may be ~ and earlier this season
Muskingum downed Marietta.
1 withheld upon pubUcalion, how~ver, ·on request. Letters
1 should )!e .ln goOd li!sle, addressing Issues, not personalities. J The key to the Redmen team
this fall could lie In a couple of
freshmen from Coshocton.
Mike Gross and Kev Honnald a
year ago were leading their
high school team to a good
season. Gross' running
They're proud ·of their team Racine,Ohio · Saturday
was particularly
encouraging.. Gross finished
the defeated Musketeers.
Dear Sir:
"I'd say Kent's as good as
We are writing this letter concerning \lie Eastern fans. We. seventh. It was the first time he
Miami," Xavier Coach Tom think they were unfair in their declaration of the football game was among the top ten
finishers since the West
Cecchini said. "Kent IDBY not between Southern and ,Eastern.
be as consistent, but they have
They said Mr, Mole does not predict fairly. You said Southerr Virginia Tech Invitational.
Tlle'Jiio cr,osl country team
a lot of .yo~g. t,ale~t. ~ .
&lt;;·~i l'!.d '·pjhej~~dv~lyts, Even;tliollgh thef &amp;)rid,tlie_refer"''J were
will
li€1id!e unlit FridaY: The
Cecchln!. LB U) · ~ . po§Jtlon to lnour favor t~y {E~tetn ~ picked tjlelt-referees and' t)ley had
Redmen will'participate in the
judge. Xavier has lost to both their home field. ·
teams this seaSQn.
Southern and Eastern have battled almost from tbe beginning Morris Harvey Invitational.
In other game~, Ohio , Sll)te of the history of the two schOOls. Southern has lost almost con- The M.orris Harvey event will
s'."a~p~d Indiana 44-7 ; tlnuously totbe Eastern team. When In time of fate Eastern loses provide strong competition
feahirJng Marshall's ThunVrrgl!lla Tech dowlied Ohio U. to Southern, they say we didn't play fair!
53-21; Toledo beat Day!Dn 20Southern has worked hard for Ibis team and we have plenty dering Herd.
17; Wittenberg blanked
·· .
. .
wooster 24~· Wabash (lnd ) of sprrlt m S.H.S. There,lB never a perfect team, but everyone
'
edged Ohio 'wesleyan !4-!2; tries to be perfect even though evetyo~e l?ses a few ..
Musklngum whipped Otterbein
WhenS.H.S.Iost to Wahama we dLdn t complain to the editor
54-21: Capital bea_t Mount that Wahama had all tbe ,advantages or that someone un;
Union 21-14· Kenyon defeated derestimated us. We know when we are. defeated but we don t
Oberlin 34-t4, and Heidelberg pout about it; we just try harder for another victory.
squeezed past Baldwin Wallace
We are proud of our team this year and we are proud to be .
10-7.
·
,
partofthespirlt that's behind our S.H.S. team.
Also, Westminster ( Pa.)
We are riot ashamed to slgn our names because we are proud
downed
Defiance 17-7; of our team!
Wilmington edged Hanover
-Connie Smith, Karen Nelgler, Gra~ Phillips, Diane Black,
(Ind .) 15-14; John Carroll Sharon Holter and Debbie Millirqn.
defeated Carnegie Mellon 10-7;
'
Findlay tolled over Grand
·.
Valley State 311-f; Central State
'·
edged West VJr~la State 2019, and Youngstown halted
Akron 22-21.
'
Ohio State quarterback Greg •
Hare and fullback Champ HenSliD each scored two !oll!:h'
•
doMJs as the Buckeyes rolled
tD their flftb wil), tbird in the
Big Ten.
·
Virgin'ta Tech, quarterback
Don Strock, leading passer !h
the country, set a school record ·
with hiS four touchdown passes·
against. OU. Bobcat quarterback Rich Bevly relnjured
an ankle in the second period
and was lost for the rest of the
game.

Redm~n . capture 3-way meet

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

I

Ashland injury
list mounting

.er

5:...

a
sea5Qn game.
thesecondhalf:Otherwise, two Ocl!lber for Georg~ Allen llut
Dallailsurgeda!oiWleadin
Siln$Y,
.lost fumbles , dropped passes · Tom Landry still has his mind the · setond quarter on Toni Miami edged
24-23,
Md penalties had stymied the on the one in JanUary. ··
Fritsch'~· fi¢ld goals of 13 and Atlanta.nipped Green Bay, 10Oilers, who ran up 364 yards
· Allen's. Washington Red- . ·12 yards and a 39-yard toll!'h· 9, Los Angeles downed Cintotal offense· but no more skins, sparked by an incredible ~wnpllSI! from Craig .Morton . cinnati;"J,s-.1;, the New York
points.
.
individual perfo_rmance · by_ to .. Ron Sellers. . Sonny Jets squeezed past Baltiinore, .
The Browns didn't have a Larry.Brown;rallied to defeat Jurgertsen; wh0 became only 24-20, the New York Giants
turnover !or achange, but they - Landry's Dallas Cowboys, 24- the third passer in NFLhi!ltvrY rallied tri beat St ..Louis, 24-21!;
'didn't have nm~h else eith'er20, Sunday and take unlfujputed Ul surpass 30,000. yard~ durlng Philadelphia stunned Kansas
until Butler's go-ahead field possession of.fi,rst place in. the his career, threw ' a !!!-yard . Clty,:il'20,.Plitsburgh crushed
goaL Then Phipps, Leroy National Football Conference . pass tD Brown to start the New England, 33-3, Detroit
. ~elly, · Bo Scott and Fair Eastern Division.
.
Washington scoring.
whipped San Diego, 31-20,
Hooker took charge.
"ll was one of the finest
Walt Garrison'sonf&gt;-yard l'll!l Denver surprised Oak!Md, 30Kelly and Scott moved the games I ever watched," said boosted D8)las to a 2G-7 lead 23, .San Francisco tied New
ball from their own 20 to the 32 Allen after Br~wn caught but It was all Wasllington after Orleans, 21).20, and Cleveland
·in four carrie5 and Phipps hit 5even passes -for 100 yards, that. Brown burst 34 yards for defeated Houston, · 23-17.
Hooker on two straight passes rushed for 95 more and scored onescore, LUr!Knight kicked a Mi!lnesota is at Chicago
to the Oiler .20. Then it was
42-yard field .goal arid Charlie tonight.
K¢1ly (or four, Scott for three,

HOUSTON (UPI.) -Mike
Phipps ·and the . Cleveland
. Browns are still trying 1o pot
together a running attack this
~ason, but Phipps got tbe one
yard he needed most in the
'tourih quarter Sunday,
. The yard, behin.d left guard
Gene Hickerson,- came· with'
3:36 remaining to give \lie
BroWns a touchdown and a 2317 victory O.er the Houston
Oilers: Houston.had taken a 17-

! . j)~J}~=6~

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By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs~old Lawson
and sari! Chuc , of Letart, w, .
Va ., Mr. and
. Diamond
Lawson of MI. oriah spent
Sunday with Mr, and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wlliicm
and children spent a weekend •
with Mr. and Mrs: Frank Dines
at Parkersburg.
VIsiting Mrs. Ronald RusseU
and daughter, Mandy, and
Mrs. RuliseU Roush and famUy
Sunday were Mrs. Joyce White
lild children, Mr. .and Mrs.
Howai-d Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Rullell, all of Wolf Pen
and Mr. and Mrs. Steve HaW
of Akron. .
Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Roush
and.JDLI, Paul, were vtsi.tors In
Belpre an Sunday. ·
· Mri. Iva Orr and Mrs .
l!!m1ila Yokely spe~t Taeiday
evening with Mr. and Mn.
Gordon Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
iAWII OUr• of Tannen Run and
· the Wolre,' aan, Burhl Wolfe of
Buckeye Lake also visited with

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Mr. and Mrs. 011 BOlton of
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Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and son Of Sissonville spent a
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Wilson.
Mr. ·and ·Mrs. Albert Hll
Jr., Mr .and Mrs. Ralph Bade!)
spent a week with thE
Badgelys' son, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Badgely at Fairfax, Va.,
and tbelr daughter, Mt. and
Mrs. Tom Ekersley at Hannibal, N. Y. ·
.
· carl Robinson of Norfoll&lt;,
Va., Howard Robinson of
Flatwoods, W. Va., and Mrs.
Bertha Robinson were recent
Sunday dlrlner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Shields.
Mr. and Mrs. Chrissie Powell
Racine and grandson,
Roblnsoq
of
Raymond
Philadephla, spent a Sunday
evenifig with Mrs. Bertha
Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Sargent of Racine also visited

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When you buy ~nything which require$. financing, ·
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Akron 51. Vincent 12
Niles 35 East Liverpool ·6
Newton .Falls 30 Canfield 8
Warren JFK 40 Poland 13
,. West ·Branch 40 Pymaluning
. : Valley 12 · .
··
Niles MeKtnte~ " 35 East .
Liverpool 6 · .
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'East ·
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Nova Seta
4 1 2 10
. Providence ·
-• "2 1 9
Boston
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4 3 o 8
Rochest~r· ·
4 3 o 8
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Cleveland
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Canton Timken 20 Gilmore
Academy 7
Alliance 19 St. Thomas Aquinas
Akron Kenmore
Buchtel 21

guests .of Mr. ·and Mrs.
RiChard Ables,- Bashail Road. · Lawrence Theiss
· in Gallipolis
Mrs. Fannie Durst, local, recently.
· Mt. and Mrs. Shan Wells and
. 1 nn
f G
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Martin,
a I y 0 ' , UYSVI11e were . Beverly, · called on ' Mr • . and
WASHINGTON (UPI)-:-In a has pl,edged not to .'•make a granting 311)11esty to deserters price ·for their choice." .
.In his remarks on amnl;Siy,
the Baltimore 30 and raced intD • seconds left earned San Fran. witb winless NeW
.
ML · liMn · . . · ;"esday evenm!J ..callers of Mrs. Allen Brewer and David radio address prepared for ·mockery" of the saerifices of and draft dodgers.
l'njoying a 59 to 34 per cent Nixon did. not refer directly to
end
fot a TD with 63 ·
..,_,c;;.,..._ _ .~-·· ·-· ·.All
.lmiiS.l)ei nx of · ohn-W;llls-J~.,...l.ong--BotMn:'~Siiffiljjy aftet'l'oon: -''~- --Veterans·llay,Presldent-N~riei!n . servicemen-~~Nixon-said-$11A&lt;Iay...:iR--a~")ead o;;~~E~rr
· ~-~~~~~~-~~~-~;~~,=~:.fi~~~~;[~~~::--~~
Charlie
~ohnson's
TD
passes
Fairfax,
·va.,
have
·ptirchased
~s.Ruby
Bryant
;md
_Miss
Mrs.
EvelYn
HolterofRacine
.
.
speech
fi:oin
his
Camp
David,
McGovern
in
the latest
who he
1
.an Sl&gt;yai-d scoring ~ •• •••~ 11ft
of
yards
to
Buiy
Maslers
and
th.
e
property
formerly
owned
Maxme.
PoweU
were
bUSI!less
.
called
on
Mrs.
Ada
Meter
,
Md.,
retreat
that
the
United
Harris
poll,
Nixon
planned
has p_roposed granting am21
tbe Jets over-the
.
.
by
Mt:
and
Mrs.
Ben
Allen.
·
VLSLtorsm.Po
.
meroyo.nMonday
Fr'
l
day.
their
son,
Mr.
;md.Mrs.
Terry.
PTA
meeting
at
Porlland
st
1
h
Jd
"h
th
tod
k
Uttle helped ·
Mr De' .. ,_
f
·
.
a es s. ou
on.or . e
ay to rna e a one-day af- nesty to ...the.OYo.ung men who
Pete Uslle threw a 67-yard 32 yards to Floytl
· evening campaign
·
·
, Rll!ders for
. s. -...x:.. • sister of Mrs: afternoon.
.Mr. an·d Mrs. Richard Abels Wol e and son, Syracuse, ·
grade school Monday evening,· m1'II'1on~ who.ha ve.1oy all. Y st. oo d 1ernoon and
Denver
beat
the
. chose jail· or exile because they
TD pass to Ben Hawkins and ·
, -·ws
·. """·Mr. and·Mrs. Mac Van Meter . Recent guests 'of E. H. ~Y !herr . country w.hen. the swing thrQu· gh three su· b.urban
uld
· ·
·
and Mr. and Mrs'. ...,
scyring passes of 36 and 41 to the firr$1 .time since 1962 and
""~ and daughter spe
· nt. Sunday C;lrpenter ;md family were Mr.
.
co not m conscience fight ill
·
called on Mr and Mrs Paul
challengetofreedomca(ledfor countiesnearNewYorkCity - this war." "
Harold Jackson . tO 'lead the MlkePhlpps'threw27yardsto
· previqusJy·winless Eagles .to a Frank Pitts for one score and
Evans and so~. recel)tl;.
~~~ :-:-~:.~ i::!~~~ :;~ ~n~hu~· M~~- Mi~~~dy· service."
Westchester, Nassau and
Nixon said there were.voices
Mr. and Mrs.•Wiley Cornell
"We are not going to make a SUffolk. White•House aides said being heard today that were
stunning upset of Kansas &lt;;ity. plunged over ftomthe one with
.
d b. b
·
chie Jr. ·
Gluesencamp, Mrs. Richard mockery of.their sacrifice by Nixon would use a motorcad· e callm'g "for a weak·
er1'ca,.
Pete Gogolak .kicked field 3:36Ieft as.Cleveland beat the
'
·
an . a Y were in Pomeroy
Mr.. and Mrs. Richard Van Abels, Mrs. Howard Allen and
..ByMrs.HerbertRousb
Mrs. Robinson. .
shopping on Monda·yafternoon
surrendering to the enemy, or for the J'ilunt.
for ·b.lunders."
goals of 16 and 43·yards to cap a Oll·ers.
M d-M
. R ·
·
.
·
·. . · Meter of Beverl'1. spent a daughter, Tom Durst, Mr. and
C r. an ... rs. oy Bilek, Mrs. · Mr. and Mrs.1Jrice Sayre of
Mr. · and Mrs. Larry recent weekend wlth Mr. and . Mrs. Louis De Lux, Dan by o(fering amnesty to draft
The White House announced
''The same misguided think20-polnt outburst in tbll second
. o~a Buck . and Early Roush Rio Grande, Mr, and Mrs. Glues~ncal?p were at the Mrs. Donald Brewer aiuf'l'im. Talbott, Mrs.- Ada Van Meter, dodgers and deserters," Nixon Sunday that Nixon would fly ing they espouse today led 8n
half that' cBrried the Gilmts
vislletj
.over the ·weekend at Da.nny Sayr.e, Mr.· an• . M
. rs. Columbus a;...,.. on Thur·••y
·
said: "The two and one-half Thur~day to ·Ashland, Ky., ior a unprepared Amer.i.ca into .two ,
You Will Find Tilt •
past St. I.nuis. .
Whites
1PhIll&gt; Springs, Elkins, Norman Styer of w
~
" Ro'"·
· ':""''
. w~· is
~ · Mr. and Mrs. Victor. Durst Mrs. Fannie Durst, Gene
.
.
u
·.
atetford,
tD
meet
1\llen
on
d
·
..,
·
. ars in · th.is c.entury
Te.:rr Bradsha)V tbrew a 30,.
. . . · ~u·
• • ~.,
an sons, The r•ains, SJII!nl Carpenter, Lawrence Ritchie mil.lion who chose to serve campaign rally at Paul Blazer world w
nd
th
a . ·0 er p..:.ces o! interest.
Paul Sayre of Columbus visited leave from a GeorgLa mr base Su da
·
America in Vietnam have paid High SchooL On Saturday., he beca.use it encouraged oij!ers
yard TD pass to Ron ShankUn
M
. r.a
. qd Mrs.
Stevens of M
·
·
Mt' ndMr Gen w "
d.
n Y with his parents, Mr. Jr., Wesley Allen, Mr. and Mrs. a pr.ice for their choice. The plans· an
ile• motprc·ade to belL'eve that their
and Jack Ram returned an
r. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
.a
s.
e ouean andMrs,_R. R.DurstandTom. Roy Martin, Niki Dawn Van
.
.I
Cul\odenand St. Claif Hill were over a recent weekend.
famll! w~e___recen
. t guests of
·Mts. llllke Evans atleOded 8 Meter and J. W. Law.On.
few· hwidred who chose to through 14 Ohio communities aggressions · w.ould , go. pn·
Interception 32 yards . for
dinner ~uesls; SI!IIday of Mr:
.
desert America must pay a beginning In aeveland.
.., punished," Nixon ~~Bld.
0
another TO as Pittsburgh'
an\f Mrs. Dallas Hill and
overwhelmed New 'Englapd.
In F.ashions At
family.
.
,.
Mel Farr, starting for the
Mr
..
liqd
Mrs.
Orville
Harpold
first time in more tban a year,
Of Belpre were Sunday guestS
.hBd TD runs of one and two
ot
Mr. and Mrs. Bill-Fox and
yards to lead the Lions over
David.
·
San Diego and Bruce&lt;losdett"s
.&lt;"41h Main ~cJ!it!':!'~
· .Mrs. Phyllis Young, · Mr5.
36-yard field goal .with three
GlOt-ia Wh!Uach
. alld
. baby of
Ma~on spent Taesday with Mr.
antl Mrs.. Gerald Hayman.
Mrs'. Gerald Hayin;m and ·
• Super $tret~h
~Pn . ''J(eith, spent Thursday
• Super Sheer
e)r.ening with Mrs. Bertha
-~qliinson.
·
100% nylon, One
·Lewis Ours and Ernest
size fit s wom
Huiton called on Mr. and Mrs.
5' to 5' 6", be~
Roy Donobew. ·
tween 100 and
' •"•
Mrs. ROy Donobew attended
150-tbs. Fashion
shades.
the w!\dding of Tom Hamm and
Linda''Hollon at the Forest Run
Methtldist Church.
Mr .' and Mrs . Gerald
HByman and son, Keith, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell ·and children at
Get
Letart, W. Va. 'itoute
Miss Tressa Wolle spem a
lor only
Saturday with her grandmother, Mrs. Dolly. Wolfe. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner took their granddaughter, Christi Badgely
• Frttkl 1~ Fvnnt..
hometo Fairfax, Va .•. Wed•· Prtncu aftd Pup•
• Gt!o111 1nd
nesday returning on ThursSay.
Gobllnt
Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Homer
Co5tumu to
OLEEM II ®
make you what
Warner .. and Mr. and Mrs.
Tho EXETER • D3722W
you want to be
TOOTH
PASTE
I Of· tr ic k or
Arthur Warner shopped In
. Ame~can Walnut color cabinet.
treatirl '
Par)l:ersburg last week.
High-Performance Chassis. Super Video
;.,,sa~
Range Tuner. Autonlattc Fine-Tuning Control.
Mrs. Iva Orr and Mrs.
Enuna Yokel)' ·of Collllllbiana ·
Head I Sho11ldew
spent Friday evening with Mr.
Pec.~ift ®
NEW
Now 11 lhf
IO o&amp;piD(al Old w Otr'Hll.ll
SIIAIIIPOOS cro.. or lttltn
and Mrs. Garrett . Circle at
TOOl~ MO(I bUy th e 0081 ~01.1 ve t i'foiSYI
ll·tl. ltlitn, l ·tl, llllil
1973
wanted AM
..,lltl•t OliCI JOU ct n I
Racine.
1Uouj m,\ 11 0 $1(1(:il · upl
Howard Roush, a. ·former
"•'~~~.tu&amp;t~~~~
local resident, is confined tD
rau
lor lun '

..

AT YOUR STORE OR
AT YOUR DOOR

·President vow~ . hard line .against amnesty

Mr, and Mrs. R•"dall
~··
TalbollofNewLexington'spent
Saturday. alternoo.n with . his
mother, Mrs. Olive Talbott
,
". '

I

3

9

ne Dally Senlinei, MklcUeport-POmeroy' 0., Oct. 23, 1912 . .
~. Stive_
l."S.vill
. e _News- 1--,
lYote
Mr. and . Mrs. L. R.
~
. · s · Cluesencamp
and .Niki ljlere

I

4- The Deily Sentinel1 Middleport-Poineroy, 0., Oct. 23, 1972

.I

�' '

_I

7- The DIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.PIIIieroy, 0., Oct. :1.1, 1972
&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 23, 1972

.

€ommunityHalloweenl SociallCommittees
:; :
f
. . .
pa-r:.ty P.lannedMonday tl Calendarl fa8°~~ii~~e~/0;he~~l~;~~
P.T.A. have been named

c---~--~~~~~Ofiim~.ulhe;-o~;nn.,.~ba;dd(c~ommmnn~~~~omnlh~c~actctu~s-~~~~~~~:~~--~~~~-~~~w
mlmlty Halloween party to be
ltaged.Qt;t. 30 at 7 p.m. in the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
·School gymnasium was
discussed durin• a meeting of
the Rose Garden Club of
Tuppers Plains held at the
home of Mrs. Carl Barnhill.
The·.club also arranged to
provi~e a Oower I)Ooth at the
halloween carnival at the
TUppers Plains schoo1 which
was held Saturday night.
Holiday activities were
discussed and members had a
name exchange for Christmas
sifts. Mrs. Charles Clll'r
Jl'esided at the meeting which
opened wit/1 devotions by Mrs.
James Stout who read a
"Morning ,Prayer." Members
gave the · Lord's ·Prayer in
111lson, anll.r~ded to roll
caU by nallijng the flowers they
most hated to see frozen. Mrs.
Leola Maaaar gave the verse of
the month·. .
1 An article,. "Christmas
Gactus," was given bY Mrs.
Glen Sto~t. Several members

and Mrs. eula Swan told of on~
she has had several years.
The special arrangement
was displayed bY Mrs. Floyd
stout who used bronze mwns,
gre~ery, in a. bronze . duck
container. Arrangements were
used throughout. the home
carrying out the themes of
Thanksgiving and ran. Mrs.
Harold Massar·, game chair.
f
man, conducted a series o
quizzes which were orally
answered.
Mrs. Jacob Lehman was
accepted into the club membershlp.
The November meeting will
include a tour of the Dudley
Greenhouse at Parkersburg,
W. Va.- and will be followed by
the regular m~tlng at the
home of ' Mrs. Frederick
Goebel.
The traveling prize was
awarded to Mrs . Carr .
Helreslunents were served by
Mrs..Bamhlll assisted bY her
daughters; Mrs. James Stout
and Mrs. Larry Millhone.

or

Jack Welker, ch~irmen . The Mrs. John Lisle,
festival is scheduled for Nov. 18 Fish Pond 1: Mr. and Mrs:
beginning at 6 p.m. Persons in
THf; · SUNBONNET Junior char"e of booths are tn beg1'n
G d Cl b M d 3
"
v
ar en u
on ay p.m. seltin" up al noon that day.
h
f El ·
B h t
"
ome 0
ame arn ar .
The commit~es appoin~d
I
Everyone to bring grocery are as foll~"s ·' .
k ·d · tte
""
sac an cu rs.
Ticket sellers : Mrs. Oscar
. BEND 0' The River Garden
·
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday home
Contributions . to the Meigs
r
M
Ed
d
s·
County
Children's Home from
0
rs . . war
Impson,
the Rock Springs Bet~r Health
Racin.e, with Mrs. Clifford
. . 1 '1
Cl b will bed liv r d
b
Morns, co-hostess. New .
.
Mu
.
e e_e
Y Y
program books for year to be . .
.. •
rs. Fred Goeg1em. ,
distributed.
Arrangements to giVe .to the
C'.t
0 .
.
·Home were made durmg a
TUESDAY
•
·
meeting Thursday afternoon at
MEIGS County Church
Recognition of octogenarians the home of Mrs. Scott Folmer.
Women United, planning was a feature of the Sunday Members also brought toys "for
meeting for World Community school hour at the Middleport the children hospitalized at
Day, I p.m. Tuesday at Grace Church of Christ Sunday Veterans Memorial. It was
EpiSCOPal Church. Key women morning .
. 'noted that the club's
of churches urged to attend.
A tribute to th~ 12 over-80 wheelchair has Q&lt;en loaned.
World Community Day will be year olds for their service and
Welcomed into m~mbership
observed on Nov. 3 at Grace dedication to the church was of the club was Mrs. William
Church. Mrs. Campbell Harper given by Mrs. Denver Rice who Radford.
Mrs.
Folmer
is president.
also commented on the many presided at the meeting which .
DREW WEBSTER Post 39 hours of fellowship enjoyed opened with the LorCl's Prayer
American Legion Auxiliary' with those recognized.
in unison and the pledge to the
or the 12 octogenarians of the flag. Mrs. William Morgan and
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at hall. Mrs:
Russell Moore education and church, only two were able to Mrs. Hugh Bearhs were ap-

. IZAAK WALTON Monday at
club house, 7 p.m.
·

1

t
.
oda

UO
.
w
youths
s·neak~~~i;:~~~~~:::::.r~:
E£~~:~~;~1:s~!~~~::~~~
.
poin:~:v~lete
lll ,
'J:' .
.

·· •
.
·
"Yollth Speaks and Adults
Retpond" waa the topic of a
JI'OIII'&amp;Ol presented bY Mrs. I.
B. Wslker at a meeting Thursday night of the Missionary

decline In the Importance of
Institutions and the stl"ll8gle for
the rights of minority groups."
Scripture selections were
read, including Matthew 23, I·

Ga1ne: Dale Harrison,

DonafJ. •ons

12 E'ldeM·try
d
1i'/)COI anzze

Chapter 186, OES, Tuesday
evening, home of Mrs. Norma
Parker
SOUTHERN
Boosters, 7P.Jil· Tuesda~ ~!Nth~
high schooL All members
asked to attend.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion

Blanche Gilkey, Mrs. Fred
DeWeese, Mrs. Effie Montgomeroy, Mrs. Hattie Swift,
Mrs . Lena Wolfe, Mrs.
G'eiievleve Farmer, Mrs.
Nellie Betz, Mrs. Stella Smith.
. The other three are Mrs.
Nettie'Mitchell, 98, who resides

estivalan.noun~ed .

Smith, Mrs. · R6salie Story, John Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. · Jack Welker.
Mrs. Rowland Dais.
Door

Albert Roush and son,
Kenny, and Mr. a,nd Mrs.
Roger Roush and son, Doug,
were at Blacksville, W.Va.
saturday. l!'rom there they
·..went to Waynesburg, Pa., to
visit Albert Roush's brother,
Homer Roush who Is

=~-of the Pomeroy Bapllsl ~a~~~~:~~~~::~~~ ~:i:~~~ p. !_e;~:~~ye:~~! ~:d~;~~~:~e~i:: r::~~~~ ~::t~C~~:~~~:.e remains

made

arrangerilenfl! for the Christ;.
mas dinner to be held on Dec.
12.

The program by ll!rs. Bearhs
included "Survival. s,-etcher
System·for Heart Vlctlms" by
Mrs. Goeglein; "Colposcope
for Cervical Cancer Test," by
Mr~ . Harold Bla~kston; "T.B.
Immunity by Aerosol" by Mrs.
James Conkle; "Get the
Tenderizer" by Mrs. Louis
Grueser.
Mrs. Conkle conducted ~
con""'t which was won by, Mrs.
Bearhs and Mrs. Blackston.
Mrs. Willlam Folmer wiD host
the next meeting with Mrs.
Scott Folmer to have the
program and Mrs. Bearhs, the
contest. Sunshine secret pals
were revealed and new ones
were drawn . Refreshments
were served.
Others attending were Mrs.
.Emerson Johnson, Mrs. Jeff
Folmer, Mrs. Arlie Abbott,
Mrs. Willlsm Fof!ner, Mrs.
William Grueser, Mrs. Lewis
Grueser, Mrs. George Skinner,
and Mrs. Welby Whaley.

R

Mrs. Clarence
Macaroni games: Mrs. Ned
and Mrs. Robert Hawk,
Swindell, Mrs. John Bla~e.
and· Mni. Paul Sinclair.
Jail: Dale Colburn.
Kitchen: Mrs. Ed Kennedy,
Fortune teller; Ronald
Mrs. Lloyd Haggy,Mrs. James Browning.
WiU, Mrs.' Richard Friend,
King and queen contest:
Mrs. Floyd Brickles, Mrs. Paul John Lisle.
SimpsOn, ~rs. Robert Buckley,
Bazaar: · Mrs . Wllllam
Mrs. Richard Cole, Mrs. Ohlinger, Mrs. Jack Welker.
Richard Jeffers.
Door prizes: Mrs. Walter
Pocket Ladies: Mrs. Dale Morris; Mrs. Jack Welker and
Harrison and Mrs. Walter Mrs. Ronald Browning.
Morris.
Balloon men: BIU ObUnger,
Sweet .Shop: Mrs. Betty Phil Ohlinger.
Folmer; Mrs. Rodney Quiver.,
Milk · BotUe toss : Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Oblinger, Mrs. Mrs. Bill Pullln, Mr. and Mrs.
Iona Brlck!es, Mrs. Rogeh Boy Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Gillispie, Mrs. Bar~ara WoodrOw· Call, Mr. an9 , Mrf!.
Phillips, Mrs. Vernal Well.
Tom Reuter,
Country and bookstOre: Mrs.
Milk can toss: Mr. and Mrs.
Ll«7d King; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hart, Mr. and Mrs.
David Ljrnas, Mrs . Dale Charles Marshall, Mr. and
Colburn, Mr. and Mrs. Freil" Mrs. Ralston Hemsley.
·
· ca'ke Wslk; Mrs. Dorothy
Chaney, Mrs. Wendell Hoover,
Mrs. John Arnott.
HELP NEEDED.
Basketball toss: Ed KenAsalBtance in serving the SoU
and Water Qlnservatlon dinner nedy, Ned Swind~U! ,.Ed Bartels, John Arnott.
, .....
on Nov. 9 at the Sallabury
Cakes for cakewalk : Mrs.
Elementary School Is needed
Geoffrey Wllaon, Mrs;' Ned
by the Sallsbury PTA. Those
. PTA members who are Swlnd•ll, Mrs. , Willian\
Ohlinger, Mrs. Vernal Well,
avaUable to work ~re required
to have aktn tests and these Call Mrs. William Carswell. ·
be o~tained free of charge at
the Meigs County Health
Bean Bag, Mr, and· Mrs.
·Department any Monday, Donald Dorst and Mr. and Mrs.
Tuesday or Wednesday, 8:30 to Earl Young.
11 a.m.

·

ast(Jr speaks to cCL membership

talk,

·-·

Today's "CirCUfifion

Sharpen your mind

By the Day

The Daily Sentinel

"ow You Know
Merchants • •• •

Almanac

Mrs. Vickers
h tS Jad'zes

.THAMI!NDMINT TO
ta~es bt based on ability to pay
E CONSTITUTION
· .
,. .Rropooe~ by . - --- OON LT BE MISLED INTO
., lnltloJI¥1 Petlllon
PAVING MORE THAN YOUR
\.
FAI.R SOIARE FOR GOOO
T.. tol the Proposed
. GOVERN'MENT .
t

1-

•••

Constituhon•l Amendn~eqt

The Daily Sentinel. is delivered to more (3 times as many)
homes in your immediate selling area
than any other newspaper.

IF THERE
REALLY IS NO .NEED FOR
.
CONTINUOUS ADVERTISING . • •

t&gt;OtST BE A BORN
L.O~R! S~T YOUR
C.L.OCKS SACK
.. OM6
HOUR ·?OtJDAY, OCT,
1-9!
.
.

0

_PAPER POWER

Vote no on Issue l
Cotnm ltl~e · sgalns-t

TEN MILL \..IMITATION
NOTICE is
that
in pur suance ot a
of

NOTICE OF
ON TAX
EXCESS

The Pot ts for ~a id Elecfion
w i U be·open a1 6: JO o' clock A .M .
1 and remain open until 6:30
o'clock P .M , Enltrn St1nqard

~LIE.CT

TEN · MI
NO-TI CE '

Update ·Turtle Necks
Ri~ turtleneck dresse1
in basic colors, biKk and
brown can be ' updated from
last season by adding a colorful patchwork pr plain vHt.

T i me of .)a id day .

'By ord er of the Board or
E lec tion s. ol Meigs County ,

th e Board of
of th e Township ot

Oh io .

pa ssed on th e ll fh
!ember ,

1972,

there

Edw in S. Cozart

subm i tted to a vote of

the

Cha irman
Jg~ket ·sweaten ·..
Dorothy M. Johnston
. Sash-tied jacket sweatera ·
mrec;tor ·
Dated sept . 29, 1972
m
.mohair can
wom
·m
of suit

of sa id Township at

Amendment : William W. Tall ,
James J . Fla11n~ry , Ol iver

Bur:son. Mr~ and Mrs. ' Gary
Mr. and Mrs. KenMr. and MI'B .

Mrl . Walker began her Price; John 4, 7-IS by Mrs. L. Middleport ball.
being unable to attend the
5
JI'OI!I'Brn with a commentary P; Sterrett; Gal. • I0-!7; by . PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy observance; Mrs. Cash Braley,
DAUGIITER BORN
The Rev. Arthur Lund, spoke of what can be done In John Blaker '!\'On the traveling
011 wllat happened In the :/All, Mrs. Joseph Cook., A prayer
in a Church of Christ home
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hayes
...
--~
the
....
and
the
circle
closed
the
program.
Chapter
186,
O.E.S.,
7:30
director
of the Meigs County the home to prevent drug and prize, and Mrs. Louis Osborne
the ""' •nu
of Letart, W. Va., are an""'•
T
sd
t
th
h
f
M
near
Clncinna
ti
·
,
and
Mrs.
Mrs. J. Edward "'oster
ue ay a e orne o rs.
Alcohol and Drug Abuse alcohol use and about the was the hostess gil\. recipient.
effect of the depressl·on both
who lives with a. nouncing the birth of a Committee, was guest speaker CARE line which Is to be For roll call members
' the presided at tl)e meeting' which Dwight Par ker. Mrs. AIfred Clar•.Pilgard,
World War I and ,IT, and
•
daughter, Susan Diane, on Oct.
Industrial d'lfvel opment. opeiled with prayer and the Crow to have devotions, Mrs. daughter in Cleveland ..
displayed homemade
19, at the Holzer · Medical when the · Middleport CbUd established.
theme
song.
Mrs.
Orval
Wiles
Dale
smith,
the
program.
Miss
Mildred
Hawley
Conservation League met
Arrangements were made Halloween masks. Prizes were
M hers elatea their 1m
em
r
'
presented Mrs. Reuter and Mr. Center. The infant weighed five Thursday night In Middleport.
for
the t:CL to serve the can- won by Mrs. Cobb .and Mrs.
prelliOIIII · of wbat hapPened Jl'esented the White Cross
WEDNESDAY
Boyer with long stemmed pounds, 14 ounees. Grand·
The Rev, Mr. Lund explained teen at the Meigs County visit Don Grueser.
... ~-g •~•period ""'-n
the quota, II was aMounced that
OHIO VALLEY Com- carnations and Helen Steiner par~l!l are Mr.. and Mrs.
,...."'
wua
"''"
his
work concerning alcohol of the American Red Cross
Refreshments were served
first automobile; the first the Bapllsl Women's Day of mandery 24, Knight Templars, Rice books. The books will be Arnold Hayes, Middleport, and
by Mrs. Don Thomas, Mrs.
radio, the first television were Prayer will be observed on stated conclave, Wednesday, sent to the other 10 and the Mrs. Bert (Gaynell) McAbee, and Wugs and spoke of the bloodmobile today.
guidtince
and
counciUng
given
Sebo, and Mrs. Grueser.
John
Introduced
Nov. 9. Mrs. Sterrett is
Mrs. Charles Cobb was a
In her
Mrs. Walker said program chairman for that. 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic local octogenarians will each West Columbia, W. Va. Mrs. to those with the problem. He guest at the meeting, Mrs. A white elephant sale will be
Sylvia Badgley of Middleport Is
World r~~uiilty Dey was Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30 receive a carnation.
held at the N"'lember meellng.
In
that the generation now
- ••..,.
p.m. All Sir Knights requested
L. R. Wiley sang two a great'fjrandmother.
control of events (the announced ·for Nov. 3 at the
eatablilhment) spent Its early Grace Episcopal Church.
to wear their uniforms.
selections accompanying
years in at least three
I~and an old fashioned
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m. , himself on Jhe guitar. Mrs.
8tr1iggles. She spoke of the · pltUW!tl and bowl filled . with Wednesday, United Methodist Rice to conclude the
,
ter d th e1r sh Church.
recognition service quoted a
'
economic problems and the mums cen . e
e r • • SENIO~I\IJ::Al:l,{..egjqq ... phil~opher - "To be ,BI),y,~[S;~,
. ' :.
. ,' ....
.
Great Depresalon which made· ment table. A dessert course Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett young is sometimes far
peopl~ conscious of money and waa served by Mrs. Lester . Post 128, 6:30 p. m. Potluck cheerful and hopeful than to be
material comforta.
. Price, and Mrs. Foster. Others
supper with members to lake a 4fr years old ."
·
''lbe concerns of the rising present were Mrs. Lillian casserole. Meeting to follow
generation," Mrs. Wslker aald, Pierce, Mrs. George Skinner,
"relate to the Importance of Mrs. Oliver Michael, and Keith with girl state delegates to
Ball
report.
people over Institutions, the
ey, a guest.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p. m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. James Euler. "The
Election Game" by Joseph
Napolitan to he reviewed by
Miss Lucille Smith. Roll call Mr. and Mrs. John Ours of
(Wlthlaformatlon from the Mldd)eporl Public Library)
An election I remember.
Belpre
visited' Mr. and Mrs.
1. What Internationally (amous British mystery writer's first
Douglas Circle recently.
novel was The Mysterious Affair at Styles?
THURSDAY
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle,
2. What date was the U,. S. Army Medal of Honor authorized
WOMEN'S ASSN. , MidGeorge
Circle of New Haven,
to be given in the name of Congress to no~W&gt;ommlssloned officers dleport
First
United
and privates who distinguish themselves by their gallantry in Presbyterian Church, ·7:30 p. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle,
'
Mariann and Mark of
action?
m. at the church. Mrs. Dwight
3. Name the Republican candidate for president of the Wallace to review "The Spring Columbus visited with Mrs.
Mary Circle during a recent
Unltt!d States In 1940.
Wind," Mrs. Eddie Crooks to
f. Can you name the famous fictional detectlve created by Sir give devotions. Hostesses, Mrs. weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Barnltz,
-·
Arthur Conan Doyle?
Richard Vaughan, Mrs .
Tom and Tim, of Kingston,
5. Who was the first president of the U.S. to appear on color Dwight Zavltz, Mrs. James Mrs. Hayman Barnitz of
Harley, Mrs : E. 0. Tewksbary
teleVIsion1
Pomeroy, Betty Van Meter,
and Mrs. Eddie Burkett.
' (Answers on Page 5)
Margaret Ann Johnson,
Patrick and Sheryl LeAnn,
local, called at the · home of
T~y's
Mrs. Dean Brinker on Sunday.
hardt
was
born
Oct.
23,
1845.
Florence Circle spent a
By UDited Preu International
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Today Is Monday, Oct. 23, the On this day In history:
'
John Circle of Columbus.
297th day of 1972 with 69 to In 1915, an estimated 2,500
women marched In New York
OS
Owen Taylor of Chippewa
follow.
Lake, Ohio, wasa guest of Mr.
The moon is between Its full City demanding the right to
vote throughout the United
NEW HAVEN- Mrs. Harry and Mrs. Allan Taylor and
phase and last quarter.
States.
Vickers
Jr. hosted members of celelrated his 89th birthday
The morning stars are Venus,
.
In 1942, the British 8th Army the Haven Homemakers at her wbUe here. Burl Taylor and
Saturn and Mars.
,The evening stars are Mercu· launched an offensive at El home with Mrs. James Wise Mr · and Mrs. Albert Jamison
Alamein, Egypt, starting a calling the meeting to order, of Lodl carne to thel Taylor
ry and Jupiter.
campaign
that was to sweep ·' Mrs. Iva Capehart read home to Lake Mr. Tay or home
Those born on this date are
the Axis forces out of North Matthew S:39 and the members with them. Others calling at
MINISTERS- should preach only one sermon or so a year.
under the sign of Scorpio.
Africa.
repeated the national flag , the Taylor home on Sunday
French actress Sarah BernPeople are against sin anyway, so why harp on It?
salute and club pledge followed were Mr · and Mrs. Frank
Hudson and Toni of Racine.
. by ~rayer. Th e 0 cto ber
Mr and" Mr J
Pat-·
TRAFFIC LIGHTS - should be turned off at dangerous
meetmg Is for reorganization. ·
·
s. ames
It waa noted that the following terson and sons of Racine R. D.
Intersections to save electricity. Ev~rybody knows it's a
members hold office for 1973: visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard
dangerous spot and that Is sufficient.
President, Mrs. James Wise; Wrltesell of
Columbus
Vice president, Mrs. Emory recently.
TEACHERS- shouldn't review lessons. Tell children just " '
Hart; treasurer, Mrs.l!Dberta
Powder Lgshes
once ancnney'll never forget lt. . '
·
Maynard; sec~etary, Mrs.
A thin coat of powder, tal~
.
Harry Vickers Jr.; telephone, cum or race powder, applied
Mrs. Sadie Warth; newspaper, on the la!hes before maseau
HIGHWAY POLICE- should stop driving up and down the
Mrs. Aulry Newell.
wiD make !hem look loqer
highways. No need to cautio" drivers by patrolling highways.
The treasurer's report waa aDd thicker , without havlllg
··
·· _
Drivers ~now the Jaw and obey lt. · ·
read by Mrs. David Zerkl~. to put OJ! three coat•. of ~is­
.
Secret sister gilts·were paased cara.
out.
'NCitural' Bronze ·
BUT IF YOU are one of the foolish kind ~ like the Notte
Enjoying !be evenlng were
For the tan that bas faded
Dame ·cathedral 'that has stood for six centuries but conMrs. Harry Vlckeril Jr., too soon, and not very eventinues to ring the bell every day to let people know, It Is stilt
Matthew, Mrs. Iva Gapebart, ly, a bron:rer Is a bandy ald.
0
Mrs. Mayme Atmliruster, ~s. Be sufe that only a thin coat
there ...- believe In continuous,. profitable advertising, then·
0
James Wise, Mrs. David of bronzer or gleamet is used
use
~kle, Terrfe, Debbie 111d in order to retain a "natural"
Brenda, Mrs. 1Awls Johnson, look.
Mrs. Russeil Maynard,
Samanathia, .Mrs. Aubry
Button, Button·
Newell, Mrs. Robert Msyniril
Buttons strung together for
.
.'
and Mrs. Emory Hart.
.I
necklaces, belts, chokers and
IY ADVImJING IN THI ·
The N01•ember meeting 'Will bracelets is becoming a 'fash.be held at the ·home of Mrs. Iva ionable craze. Pearl buttons
Capehart.
can be used to make jewelry
more.appropriate for evening
New York City's Central wear. Pastel baby bpttons or
Park, stretching from 59th oversized wooden buttons are
to 110tb Street; contains 840 perfect for casual sweater
acres.
.
and slacks outfits.

Carmel News,

. NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE

LEGAL NOTICE

•

.

eLECTION

Ocasek.~ E . W. Lamq~on .

Town sh

r eg ular

. be

of .

on

levy ing . in
tor the
cor .
l imitation .
Townsh ip. for
SE';,·~·_;·l'::~ w,~- 'c·T,&lt;T"
business
PV!P?1'~ of Current Expenses.
and taxable
ma i
I.
.
B
tax bein9 : a renewal o t ol
Oli
ve i
any such tax shall Secretary ,
Townsh
of the
an eM. isting tax of .SOPI2J mill to Sais ta x
br at a non.graduated rate Ohio, do hereby certify
run
for
five
yea rs. tax of .'50
within each of the two foregoing is a true
clnsiflc:ations, and may be· text Of a proposed constftut
a rate not exc.eeding .50 mi! l Five y ea r ~ .
'·at 1 ratt n·ot txcetding 1.'0 mill at
iPPII~ to .such incomes as may amendment
i
tor
each one dollar of valuat ion ,
tor each one dollar ot valu•tton, wh lch
be designated by taw. Provided , petition,
a r at e not exceed ing .SO mill
togeth'r
wl
amounts to Five Cents tor at
which
amountl
to
Ten
Cents
for
however, that with the ex - argumehts for its adoption
for ea ch on e dollar •of valua.t ion ,
each
one
hundred
dollars
of
each
one
hundred
dollars
of
ception of Investments in ln - arguments against Its adop I
wh ic h amounts to Fl lve Cents for
valuat ion , for Five years.
valuation, for Five years.
tangt~le rersonal properl')' no filed In the Office of
each one hundred dollar s of
The
Polls
for
said
Election
· The Polls . for said Election
law .shal be enacted bY ' the Secretary of State an
v aluat ion , for F ive ye ars .
will be open at 6:JOo'clock A .M . will open. at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
Generel A~sembly and no proposing to amend the abovt and
The Poll s for sa id E lec tion
and
remain
open
until
6:30
remain open until 6:3Q
tXI$tlng or. future l'aw shall be Section of the Constitution of
Wi l t be open at 6:3Qo'clock A .M .
P.M.
!:astern
Standard
o'clock
o'clock P .M. Entern Standard Time of said day .
·enforced by any Officer of this Ohio .
and rema in open until 6: 30
. o'c
Time of said day.
st~tt , or subdivislrn thereof
lock P .M. Eastern Standard
By
order
of
the
Board
of
By order of the Board. ot Elections, of Meigs County , Trme
i{nposlng , collecting , Or
of said doy .
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF , Elections,
of Meigs County, Ohio .
otherwise leVying anv tax on , or I have hereu"to subscribed by Ohio.
By order of the Board of
mee,urlng any taK by, income name and affixed my official
Elections, of Meigs Count y.
Ohio .
of natural persons , car . sea l at Columbus the twenty .
Edw
in
S.
Cozart
Edwin S. Cozart
POi"atlons, or other bUSiness fourth day of September, 1972.
Edw in S. Cozart
Cha ir'man
Cha irman
organizations and taxable
Qhai rman
tn,tlties or lncreeslng the rates
TED W. BROWN
Dorothy
M
.
Johnston
Dorothy M . Johnston
Doro thy M . Johnston
thereof unless. SUC!h tax or in .
S~(J~tary of State
·· ·- ''"Director Dated Sept . 29, 1972 Direc tor
crease 11 aeproved by at least a
Direc tor
Detod Sept. 29, 1972
Dat ed Se pt . 29, 1972
malorlty of the electros of the
state or of the subdivision (9) 75. no) 2. 9, 16, 23, Stc
· (10) 2, 9, lA . 1.1. 4t
(lQ) 2, 9, .16. 23, 4t
( IO J J, 9 , 16, 23, 4t
voting on , ~uc:h proposlatlon .
Nothing contained herein shall
NOTICE OF ELECTION
prhent ffle collection of, or the
ON TAX LEVY IN
The Poll s fo r said Election
enforcement of the law reiating
EXCESS OF THE
~ i ll open at 6 :30 o'clock A .M .
to, any lax liabil ity Which has
TEN MILL LIMITATION
and rema in open until 6: 30
accrued ' prtor to the effective
NOTICE rs hereby sllven
o'c lock P .M . Eastern Standard
date of.thjs section .
in pursuance of.a Resolution
Time ol said day.
The questions of such a tax on the Council of the Vlll«tgr
By orde ol !h e Boa rd of
Incomes or lntrraae In the rates . Racine, Ohio, passed the
Elect ions , 6t M eig s County ,
thereof shell be submitted at a day of August, 1972,
Ohio .
ventral election to the electors be submitted
of this st•te or of thi!' subdivision
Edwin S. Cozart
for thtlr apt,~roval or rejection
Ch air m an
in a manner prescribed by law .
Provided further, however,
Dorot hy M . Jo hn~o n
that thiS tection shall nol affect
Director
the, authority of m uniclpalitles,
Da ted Sep t. 29, 1971
sublect to the provisions of
[ 10 ] 2, 9. 16, 23 , 41
Section · 6, Ar.tlcle XIII and
Section 13, Article XVIII of lhis
Constitution to Impose, collect.
or otherw l~e levy any tax on , or
to measure any tax by, Income
of nl'tural pMsons , cor .
poratlons, or other business
orgenlzatlons end taxable at a rate not exceeding 2.0 mills
entitles. or to increase the- rates for each one dollar of valuation ,
thereof . ,,.
which amounts to Twerity Cents
for eac.h one hundred dollars of
ARGUMENT IN
valuation, for Five years ..
FAVOR OF
The Polls for said Election
PROPOSED AMENDMENT wll.l beol)en at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
If approved by the voters at and remain open until 6 :30
. the ~ovimber election, the o'clock P.M. Easter.n Standard
1• proposed ame-ndment to Ohio's
Time of said day .
constitution would greatly
By ·order of the Board of
im prove the opportunity of the Elections, of Meigs County,
public to participate in the Ohio .
decision as to how, and how
,_,
much, illS to be taxed. FOr' the
Edwin S. Cozart
first time1 the public would have
Chairman
the right to vote on taxation and
government spending at the
Dorothy M . Johnston
stett level.
Director
Tht ,law already guarantees oat~d Sept. 29, 1972
the public this right of control at
thelocolleve/ in.tht field of real (101 2, 9, 16, 23, 41
estate taKes and municipal
Income taxes:
If approved, the constiM/on
IN THE COMMON
would then P;rovlde that the rate
PLEAS COURT OF
at state Income taxation must
ME·IGS COUNTY. OHIO
be tht s.ame for all natural
..
persons . The constltvlion IN THE MATTER OF CON·
llready requires that the rate VEYANCE OF CERTAIN
indvaluatlnforpropertytaxes REAL ESTATE OF THE
must br the same tor all tax- s y R A c u 5 e . u N 1 TED
pef~~s . ~mendmcent would METHODIST CHURCH,
•ov.ldt for income taxation CESSOR
SYRACUS~, OHIO, SUC'
:ro
THE
'· Chtd upon 'ablll1y to pay ; thai !VANGELICAL UNITED
Is, the greater a taxpayer's BRETHREN CHURCH AT
Income, the more tax he would ·SYRACUSE,
OHIO,
A
poy ; tht smaller a taxpayer's RELIGIOUS SOCIETY · DULY
: Income, the less ta-x he would ORGANIZED UNDER THE
pay.
LAWS OF THE STATE OF
A "YES" vote on the Issue IS OHIO
, nec,.sury
'\ '
'l'h
j
to , .u=corn.pllsh the 1 ,~ ·
No. u,t49
, followln;; .
~ . M
," '
NbTICE 'IY .,
·· •
""
; "
(I) Prilto,ibi1, collectlpn of the
PUBpCATION
,• present !n~ome B!nd lnco!'"e· Notice-· Is hereby give-n to the
.. relettd tax,
.
. off icers and members of
,
(2) Give the public the rttttht to SyracUse Unit!d Methodist
~: voft on any proposed income church, Syracuse, Ohio, and to
~ tax In the future (except the
former officers and
;1 municipal tax ),·
members, If any , of The
(3l , A:'quire public approval Evangelical united Brethren
1
~ before an.v proposed Increase of Church It Syracuse. Ohio, and
,. any such ta)l could. take effect. to all others whom It may
~
The effect, If any,, which concern, thai an the 6th day of
:. . approval of the const•tutlonal october. 1972, the Trustns of
'1:. amendment might have on
the Syracuse united Methodist
{ current state expenditures will · Church, successor In In terest to
~· only. lattfor six months. But the the
Evangelical
United
\ control by the public ovtr ex· ~rernren Church at Syracuse,
·~ ceulve state
government Ohio, filed in the common Pleas
~ spending ~~~~ be a permanent Court of Meigs County, Ohio,
\ · part of Oh10 s constitution that case No. 15,U9, their certain
1'i neither
uovernor
nor Petition praying for an order
~ legiSlature, now or In the future, giving them authority to sell
Everybody wants an imcan ever take away from the and convey In fee simple to
people.
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and
proved environment, but
The November election may Elizabeth Ann Hemsley, the
be the last chance that Ohioans following described real ettate
wishing won 't make it so.
·ever Qet to control directly situate In the County of Meigs,
· runaway Jspend ing at the state State
of Ohio , and \Wiage
·of
There is much to be done
' 10 01
,
Y •
Syracuse,
to.wlt : · I
and it's going to cost
Committee for the Amend- Being the surface only of the
ment: Chester T. Cruze, Robert following described reel estate :
everybody a lot ol money.
E. Le¥111, Josepn P. Tulley,
Beginning It lho south east
Rar,mo,nd P. Luther, Howard A. corner of Lot No. 31 In High •
li Kn ghl. ,
,
Lawn Subdivision to the VII loge
Many people say " I"
l'l
ARGUMein IN
of Syracvse, Ohio ; thenco along
don't cause pollution ...
·
OPPOSITION TO
the south bO~indary line of Hid
Lot No . 3110 a polnl.lntorucllng
PROPOS EO AMENDMENT
"lhey" do. "T hey "
the western boundary line of thl
VoI I No on li sui ..
lot .now owned l)y ' the
should give me back my
Approving Issue ,2 will hurt Evangelical United Brethren
YOU.
Church (Syracuse United
clean air and pure water,
ISSUE 2 WILL DESTROY THE Methodist Chvrch) at Syracuse,
and "they" should pay
. HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION Ohio
; thepce
north
projected
line of
the along
westernI
for it. The truth is all of us
. AN 0 10 PCT . PROPERTY TAX boundary line of said Church
' REDUCTION .
·
Lot across Lot 31 to • po/nl in
are polluters and all ol .
· Loss of the real estate tax Lot No. 32, 15 feet from the
reduction• the corporate anrl northern boundary lint of Lot
us must pay for improv·peraonal,";·.lntomt t1xes mede No . 321n Hlgh .t,.awn Subdivision
ing our environment.
posslbll
would
cost of the VIllage of Syrecust, Ohio;
homeowners who art ovrr 64, thrt:tce East following 1 lint 15
yearly taK savingt amounting to feet from tl'lt north bOundary
The price tag attached
11 much as 80 pet. of their line of· Lot· No . 32 and parllltl
pr(llpl'tty taus end would tal&gt;l.e with the north lint of &amp;aid Lot
is going lo be a still one.
1wey ;.aU other taxpayers' 10 No. 32 to College Road Street ;
thence southtesterly following
. pet. r~al e~tete t1x rollback.
Cont~olling pollution,
"
the meanderlr\QS of Collegt
whether by a device in a
ISSU!! 2 WILL CAUSE OTHER Road Street 10 the southtiSt
' NEW ANO INCREASED corner of Lot No. 31 or to lhe
car, a new se'!"age disposal
TAXES FOR INDIVIDUAL~ . . placo qf beginning . , ,
~
Supporters of tssue 1. don t Reference Deed : VoL 211,
plant, or equipment at a power
went I reduced spending. They Page 45, Deed Rtcords of Meigs
'·,want to shift the burden of county, Ohio.
plant, will have an inevitable
taxation from the wealthy to the But reserving from th t
cost to each of us as a con·
avtra'ge taxpayer by a flat premises the right to use for
f- Income tax which would churctl parking an arn · tx'sumer. We should make
t. DOUBLE taxes tor families tending w11t a depth of forty
, ~ earning $9,000 or ltss and would feet from tbe boundary line
sure the benelits are wo'rth
E: rtduct texea ONLY for families eiOnu College Road Strtet and
~~ ·earnlnt over $11,500.
extending the tnt1re width of'tht
the price.
property· conveyed for as long
ISSUE 2 WILL CAUSE as tht remaining church
WHAT ABOUT THE ENVI. HIGHER TAXES FOR THE property to the south end od·
t' SMALL BUSINESSMAN .
flet nl to the property htrtln
RONMENTAL PRICE TAG
\ High -profit' corporations conveyed belongs to the Unlttd
'ftOUJd.flvtlbOut SlSO million If Methodist Church , Grantor
;ON ELECTRIC POWER?
: 1asut 2 passes. A flat -rltt In· herein .
.
. The cost ol new pollution ·
come tax for all businesses,
Said Petition and cause will
i lnclucUng partnersh ipS and bt heard Ofi the ath day of
control equipment at power
t; proprlitorshlps, wovtd force all November, )972, or as soon
businftltl to pay the same rate. therufter as mav be.
generating piants will
{
REDUCE
· . Mm~~Y~fcUHNJ~~~
show ·up in all of our ·
·
'TO YOUR. ; .
1Y Roymond Ktldar.
electric bills. How hfgh
.
Edith Hood
Ml1&gt;fi,Plckons
the price'will. be cannot
Btn OIIIHnberrv
ThelmJI H1w1ey
be lorecast. Much de·
(101 9, 16, 23. ;JO. ~'
pendS on government
regulations. In our opin·
ion, some are unrealistic because
tney can't be met, and il they could .
be met would be unnecessary. AN
EXAMPLE: We must burn ccial tb make electricity.

:~1r~~J~tt1:~ii~:

ot Nov•,m&lt;•er,
of levy ing, excess of the ten
mi ll limitation, tor the benefirot
Southern Local School District
for the 'purt,~os e at Current
ex penses .
Said ta x. being : a renewal of
an ex ist ing tax uf 5.0 mills to run
tor a continu ing perlod at a rate
not exceed im;, S.Q mills for each
one doll ar of valuation, wh ich
amounts to Fifty Cents tor each ·
on e hundr ed dOllars of
valuat ion , tor a con tinu ing
period .
·

·

.·

'

.. J

OPTOMETRIST.

OFFICE HOURS 9:~0 TO 12,2 To's (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST CQURT ST.

HAVE

in the

Yellow

Pages

•

n it comes to an
•
environment,
1mp
there is.no
nta
.;-;

! jl

~
~

!
~

.10

,.,; • ,b A .c•I&lt;Jr J '
l '

r

'l ),;

.l~ d · ~l.t Lf 1\" ll ..,.~ flt:A.l 1k\•J'lr3
JP1 1;'./.,•r) ')ftjJ ~"I{f

New government regulations say our burning coal
puts too much sullur oxides In the air-and this
is harmlul. The fact Is that only high concentrations ol sullur oxides at ground levelnot in the upper atmosphere-can be
harmlul. Sullur oxides exhausted from
plant stacks high In the atmosphere
are quickly dlllused so as to meet
strict government regulations.We are
and will continue to protect against
harmlul ground-level concentrations
of sullur oxides.
However, there's no commercially
successlul way to remove sullur oxides
lrom power plant stacks on a continuous basis in the amounts specllied
by the new government regulations.
Millions are being span I on research ·
to lind a way, and we are taking
a signilicant pari in that research.
We have no doubt a way will
be lound, but more time Is
needed . When-science
linds a way, we'll promptly
adopt it.

t
~

..

1

!

•

We, like you, wanl to protect
our environment . .. make it
better than it is today. But, there
is no Santa Claus, when it comes
to an improved environment. We
need to be sure that sought-alter im·
provements are possible ~nd worti' their
cost. We need to avoid unnecessary in·
creases in our ele.ctiic bills.
.
'
. Understan(ling. ol the possible and ihe 1m"
possible together with the inevitable price
tag_ is the lirst step toward ~. sensi~le appr!tach tq protecting and 1mprov1ng our
environment.
..

OHIO POWER . COMPANY ·

'

.

,

The Daily·Sentinel

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1.

i

1

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_I

7- The DIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.PIIIieroy, 0., Oct. :1.1, 1972
&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 23, 1972

.

€ommunityHalloweenl SociallCommittees
:; :
f
. . .
pa-r:.ty P.lannedMonday tl Calendarl fa8°~~ii~~e~/0;he~~l~;~~
P.T.A. have been named

c---~--~~~~~Ofiim~.ulhe;-o~;nn.,.~ba;dd(c~ommmnn~~~~omnlh~c~actctu~s-~~~~~~~:~~--~~~~-~~~w
mlmlty Halloween party to be
ltaged.Qt;t. 30 at 7 p.m. in the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
·School gymnasium was
discussed durin• a meeting of
the Rose Garden Club of
Tuppers Plains held at the
home of Mrs. Carl Barnhill.
The·.club also arranged to
provi~e a Oower I)Ooth at the
halloween carnival at the
TUppers Plains schoo1 which
was held Saturday night.
Holiday activities were
discussed and members had a
name exchange for Christmas
sifts. Mrs. Charles Clll'r
Jl'esided at the meeting which
opened wit/1 devotions by Mrs.
James Stout who read a
"Morning ,Prayer." Members
gave the · Lord's ·Prayer in
111lson, anll.r~ded to roll
caU by nallijng the flowers they
most hated to see frozen. Mrs.
Leola Maaaar gave the verse of
the month·. .
1 An article,. "Christmas
Gactus," was given bY Mrs.
Glen Sto~t. Several members

and Mrs. eula Swan told of on~
she has had several years.
The special arrangement
was displayed bY Mrs. Floyd
stout who used bronze mwns,
gre~ery, in a. bronze . duck
container. Arrangements were
used throughout. the home
carrying out the themes of
Thanksgiving and ran. Mrs.
Harold Massar·, game chair.
f
man, conducted a series o
quizzes which were orally
answered.
Mrs. Jacob Lehman was
accepted into the club membershlp.
The November meeting will
include a tour of the Dudley
Greenhouse at Parkersburg,
W. Va.- and will be followed by
the regular m~tlng at the
home of ' Mrs. Frederick
Goebel.
The traveling prize was
awarded to Mrs . Carr .
Helreslunents were served by
Mrs..Bamhlll assisted bY her
daughters; Mrs. James Stout
and Mrs. Larry Millhone.

or

Jack Welker, ch~irmen . The Mrs. John Lisle,
festival is scheduled for Nov. 18 Fish Pond 1: Mr. and Mrs:
beginning at 6 p.m. Persons in
THf; · SUNBONNET Junior char"e of booths are tn beg1'n
G d Cl b M d 3
"
v
ar en u
on ay p.m. seltin" up al noon that day.
h
f El ·
B h t
"
ome 0
ame arn ar .
The commit~es appoin~d
I
Everyone to bring grocery are as foll~"s ·' .
k ·d · tte
""
sac an cu rs.
Ticket sellers : Mrs. Oscar
. BEND 0' The River Garden
·
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday home
Contributions . to the Meigs
r
M
Ed
d
s·
County
Children's Home from
0
rs . . war
Impson,
the Rock Springs Bet~r Health
Racin.e, with Mrs. Clifford
. . 1 '1
Cl b will bed liv r d
b
Morns, co-hostess. New .
.
Mu
.
e e_e
Y Y
program books for year to be . .
.. •
rs. Fred Goeg1em. ,
distributed.
Arrangements to giVe .to the
C'.t
0 .
.
·Home were made durmg a
TUESDAY
•
·
meeting Thursday afternoon at
MEIGS County Church
Recognition of octogenarians the home of Mrs. Scott Folmer.
Women United, planning was a feature of the Sunday Members also brought toys "for
meeting for World Community school hour at the Middleport the children hospitalized at
Day, I p.m. Tuesday at Grace Church of Christ Sunday Veterans Memorial. It was
EpiSCOPal Church. Key women morning .
. 'noted that the club's
of churches urged to attend.
A tribute to th~ 12 over-80 wheelchair has Q&lt;en loaned.
World Community Day will be year olds for their service and
Welcomed into m~mbership
observed on Nov. 3 at Grace dedication to the church was of the club was Mrs. William
Church. Mrs. Campbell Harper given by Mrs. Denver Rice who Radford.
Mrs.
Folmer
is president.
also commented on the many presided at the meeting which .
DREW WEBSTER Post 39 hours of fellowship enjoyed opened with the LorCl's Prayer
American Legion Auxiliary' with those recognized.
in unison and the pledge to the
or the 12 octogenarians of the flag. Mrs. William Morgan and
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at hall. Mrs:
Russell Moore education and church, only two were able to Mrs. Hugh Bearhs were ap-

. IZAAK WALTON Monday at
club house, 7 p.m.
·

1

t
.
oda

UO
.
w
youths
s·neak~~~i;:~~~~~:::::.r~:
E£~~:~~;~1:s~!~~~::~~~
.
poin:~:v~lete
lll ,
'J:' .
.

·· •
.
·
"Yollth Speaks and Adults
Retpond" waa the topic of a
JI'OIII'&amp;Ol presented bY Mrs. I.
B. Wslker at a meeting Thursday night of the Missionary

decline In the Importance of
Institutions and the stl"ll8gle for
the rights of minority groups."
Scripture selections were
read, including Matthew 23, I·

Ga1ne: Dale Harrison,

DonafJ. •ons

12 E'ldeM·try
d
1i'/)COI anzze

Chapter 186, OES, Tuesday
evening, home of Mrs. Norma
Parker
SOUTHERN
Boosters, 7P.Jil· Tuesda~ ~!Nth~
high schooL All members
asked to attend.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion

Blanche Gilkey, Mrs. Fred
DeWeese, Mrs. Effie Montgomeroy, Mrs. Hattie Swift,
Mrs . Lena Wolfe, Mrs.
G'eiievleve Farmer, Mrs.
Nellie Betz, Mrs. Stella Smith.
. The other three are Mrs.
Nettie'Mitchell, 98, who resides

estivalan.noun~ed .

Smith, Mrs. · R6salie Story, John Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. · Jack Welker.
Mrs. Rowland Dais.
Door

Albert Roush and son,
Kenny, and Mr. a,nd Mrs.
Roger Roush and son, Doug,
were at Blacksville, W.Va.
saturday. l!'rom there they
·..went to Waynesburg, Pa., to
visit Albert Roush's brother,
Homer Roush who Is

=~-of the Pomeroy Bapllsl ~a~~~~:~~~~::~~~ ~:i:~~~ p. !_e;~:~~ye:~~! ~:d~;~~~:~e~i:: r::~~~~ ~::t~C~~:~~~:.e remains

made

arrangerilenfl! for the Christ;.
mas dinner to be held on Dec.
12.

The program by ll!rs. Bearhs
included "Survival. s,-etcher
System·for Heart Vlctlms" by
Mrs. Goeglein; "Colposcope
for Cervical Cancer Test," by
Mr~ . Harold Bla~kston; "T.B.
Immunity by Aerosol" by Mrs.
James Conkle; "Get the
Tenderizer" by Mrs. Louis
Grueser.
Mrs. Conkle conducted ~
con""'t which was won by, Mrs.
Bearhs and Mrs. Blackston.
Mrs. Willlam Folmer wiD host
the next meeting with Mrs.
Scott Folmer to have the
program and Mrs. Bearhs, the
contest. Sunshine secret pals
were revealed and new ones
were drawn . Refreshments
were served.
Others attending were Mrs.
.Emerson Johnson, Mrs. Jeff
Folmer, Mrs. Arlie Abbott,
Mrs. Willlsm Fof!ner, Mrs.
William Grueser, Mrs. Lewis
Grueser, Mrs. George Skinner,
and Mrs. Welby Whaley.

R

Mrs. Clarence
Macaroni games: Mrs. Ned
and Mrs. Robert Hawk,
Swindell, Mrs. John Bla~e.
and· Mni. Paul Sinclair.
Jail: Dale Colburn.
Kitchen: Mrs. Ed Kennedy,
Fortune teller; Ronald
Mrs. Lloyd Haggy,Mrs. James Browning.
WiU, Mrs.' Richard Friend,
King and queen contest:
Mrs. Floyd Brickles, Mrs. Paul John Lisle.
SimpsOn, ~rs. Robert Buckley,
Bazaar: · Mrs . Wllllam
Mrs. Richard Cole, Mrs. Ohlinger, Mrs. Jack Welker.
Richard Jeffers.
Door prizes: Mrs. Walter
Pocket Ladies: Mrs. Dale Morris; Mrs. Jack Welker and
Harrison and Mrs. Walter Mrs. Ronald Browning.
Morris.
Balloon men: BIU ObUnger,
Sweet .Shop: Mrs. Betty Phil Ohlinger.
Folmer; Mrs. Rodney Quiver.,
Milk · BotUe toss : Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Oblinger, Mrs. Mrs. Bill Pullln, Mr. and Mrs.
Iona Brlck!es, Mrs. Rogeh Boy Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Gillispie, Mrs. Bar~ara WoodrOw· Call, Mr. an9 , Mrf!.
Phillips, Mrs. Vernal Well.
Tom Reuter,
Country and bookstOre: Mrs.
Milk can toss: Mr. and Mrs.
Ll«7d King; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hart, Mr. and Mrs.
David Ljrnas, Mrs . Dale Charles Marshall, Mr. and
Colburn, Mr. and Mrs. Freil" Mrs. Ralston Hemsley.
·
· ca'ke Wslk; Mrs. Dorothy
Chaney, Mrs. Wendell Hoover,
Mrs. John Arnott.
HELP NEEDED.
Basketball toss: Ed KenAsalBtance in serving the SoU
and Water Qlnservatlon dinner nedy, Ned Swind~U! ,.Ed Bartels, John Arnott.
, .....
on Nov. 9 at the Sallabury
Cakes for cakewalk : Mrs.
Elementary School Is needed
Geoffrey Wllaon, Mrs;' Ned
by the Sallsbury PTA. Those
. PTA members who are Swlnd•ll, Mrs. , Willian\
Ohlinger, Mrs. Vernal Well,
avaUable to work ~re required
to have aktn tests and these Call Mrs. William Carswell. ·
be o~tained free of charge at
the Meigs County Health
Bean Bag, Mr, and· Mrs.
·Department any Monday, Donald Dorst and Mr. and Mrs.
Tuesday or Wednesday, 8:30 to Earl Young.
11 a.m.

·

ast(Jr speaks to cCL membership

talk,

·-·

Today's "CirCUfifion

Sharpen your mind

By the Day

The Daily Sentinel

"ow You Know
Merchants • •• •

Almanac

Mrs. Vickers
h tS Jad'zes

.THAMI!NDMINT TO
ta~es bt based on ability to pay
E CONSTITUTION
· .
,. .Rropooe~ by . - --- OON LT BE MISLED INTO
., lnltloJI¥1 Petlllon
PAVING MORE THAN YOUR
\.
FAI.R SOIARE FOR GOOO
T.. tol the Proposed
. GOVERN'MENT .
t

1-

•••

Constituhon•l Amendn~eqt

The Daily Sentinel. is delivered to more (3 times as many)
homes in your immediate selling area
than any other newspaper.

IF THERE
REALLY IS NO .NEED FOR
.
CONTINUOUS ADVERTISING . • •

t&gt;OtST BE A BORN
L.O~R! S~T YOUR
C.L.OCKS SACK
.. OM6
HOUR ·?OtJDAY, OCT,
1-9!
.
.

0

_PAPER POWER

Vote no on Issue l
Cotnm ltl~e · sgalns-t

TEN MILL \..IMITATION
NOTICE is
that
in pur suance ot a
of

NOTICE OF
ON TAX
EXCESS

The Pot ts for ~a id Elecfion
w i U be·open a1 6: JO o' clock A .M .
1 and remain open until 6:30
o'clock P .M , Enltrn St1nqard

~LIE.CT

TEN · MI
NO-TI CE '

Update ·Turtle Necks
Ri~ turtleneck dresse1
in basic colors, biKk and
brown can be ' updated from
last season by adding a colorful patchwork pr plain vHt.

T i me of .)a id day .

'By ord er of the Board or
E lec tion s. ol Meigs County ,

th e Board of
of th e Township ot

Oh io .

pa ssed on th e ll fh
!ember ,

1972,

there

Edw in S. Cozart

subm i tted to a vote of

the

Cha irman
Jg~ket ·sweaten ·..
Dorothy M. Johnston
. Sash-tied jacket sweatera ·
mrec;tor ·
Dated sept . 29, 1972
m
.mohair can
wom
·m
of suit

of sa id Township at

Amendment : William W. Tall ,
James J . Fla11n~ry , Ol iver

Bur:son. Mr~ and Mrs. ' Gary
Mr. and Mrs. KenMr. and MI'B .

Mrl . Walker began her Price; John 4, 7-IS by Mrs. L. Middleport ball.
being unable to attend the
5
JI'OI!I'Brn with a commentary P; Sterrett; Gal. • I0-!7; by . PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy observance; Mrs. Cash Braley,
DAUGIITER BORN
The Rev. Arthur Lund, spoke of what can be done In John Blaker '!\'On the traveling
011 wllat happened In the :/All, Mrs. Joseph Cook., A prayer
in a Church of Christ home
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hayes
...
--~
the
....
and
the
circle
closed
the
program.
Chapter
186,
O.E.S.,
7:30
director
of the Meigs County the home to prevent drug and prize, and Mrs. Louis Osborne
the ""' •nu
of Letart, W. Va., are an""'•
T
sd
t
th
h
f
M
near
Clncinna
ti
·
,
and
Mrs.
Mrs. J. Edward "'oster
ue ay a e orne o rs.
Alcohol and Drug Abuse alcohol use and about the was the hostess gil\. recipient.
effect of the depressl·on both
who lives with a. nouncing the birth of a Committee, was guest speaker CARE line which Is to be For roll call members
' the presided at tl)e meeting' which Dwight Par ker. Mrs. AIfred Clar•.Pilgard,
World War I and ,IT, and
•
daughter, Susan Diane, on Oct.
Industrial d'lfvel opment. opeiled with prayer and the Crow to have devotions, Mrs. daughter in Cleveland ..
displayed homemade
19, at the Holzer · Medical when the · Middleport CbUd established.
theme
song.
Mrs.
Orval
Wiles
Dale
smith,
the
program.
Miss
Mildred
Hawley
Conservation League met
Arrangements were made Halloween masks. Prizes were
M hers elatea their 1m
em
r
'
presented Mrs. Reuter and Mr. Center. The infant weighed five Thursday night In Middleport.
for
the t:CL to serve the can- won by Mrs. Cobb .and Mrs.
prelliOIIII · of wbat hapPened Jl'esented the White Cross
WEDNESDAY
Boyer with long stemmed pounds, 14 ounees. Grand·
The Rev, Mr. Lund explained teen at the Meigs County visit Don Grueser.
... ~-g •~•period ""'-n
the quota, II was aMounced that
OHIO VALLEY Com- carnations and Helen Steiner par~l!l are Mr.. and Mrs.
,...."'
wua
"''"
his
work concerning alcohol of the American Red Cross
Refreshments were served
first automobile; the first the Bapllsl Women's Day of mandery 24, Knight Templars, Rice books. The books will be Arnold Hayes, Middleport, and
by Mrs. Don Thomas, Mrs.
radio, the first television were Prayer will be observed on stated conclave, Wednesday, sent to the other 10 and the Mrs. Bert (Gaynell) McAbee, and Wugs and spoke of the bloodmobile today.
guidtince
and
counciUng
given
Sebo, and Mrs. Grueser.
John
Introduced
Nov. 9. Mrs. Sterrett is
Mrs. Charles Cobb was a
In her
Mrs. Walker said program chairman for that. 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic local octogenarians will each West Columbia, W. Va. Mrs. to those with the problem. He guest at the meeting, Mrs. A white elephant sale will be
Sylvia Badgley of Middleport Is
World r~~uiilty Dey was Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30 receive a carnation.
held at the N"'lember meellng.
In
that the generation now
- ••..,.
p.m. All Sir Knights requested
L. R. Wiley sang two a great'fjrandmother.
control of events (the announced ·for Nov. 3 at the
eatablilhment) spent Its early Grace Episcopal Church.
to wear their uniforms.
selections accompanying
years in at least three
I~and an old fashioned
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m. , himself on Jhe guitar. Mrs.
8tr1iggles. She spoke of the · pltUW!tl and bowl filled . with Wednesday, United Methodist Rice to conclude the
,
ter d th e1r sh Church.
recognition service quoted a
'
economic problems and the mums cen . e
e r • • SENIO~I\IJ::Al:l,{..egjqq ... phil~opher - "To be ,BI),y,~[S;~,
. ' :.
. ,' ....
.
Great Depresalon which made· ment table. A dessert course Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett young is sometimes far
peopl~ conscious of money and waa served by Mrs. Lester . Post 128, 6:30 p. m. Potluck cheerful and hopeful than to be
material comforta.
. Price, and Mrs. Foster. Others
supper with members to lake a 4fr years old ."
·
''lbe concerns of the rising present were Mrs. Lillian casserole. Meeting to follow
generation," Mrs. Wslker aald, Pierce, Mrs. George Skinner,
"relate to the Importance of Mrs. Oliver Michael, and Keith with girl state delegates to
Ball
report.
people over Institutions, the
ey, a guest.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p. m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. James Euler. "The
Election Game" by Joseph
Napolitan to he reviewed by
Miss Lucille Smith. Roll call Mr. and Mrs. John Ours of
(Wlthlaformatlon from the Mldd)eporl Public Library)
An election I remember.
Belpre
visited' Mr. and Mrs.
1. What Internationally (amous British mystery writer's first
Douglas Circle recently.
novel was The Mysterious Affair at Styles?
THURSDAY
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle,
2. What date was the U,. S. Army Medal of Honor authorized
WOMEN'S ASSN. , MidGeorge
Circle of New Haven,
to be given in the name of Congress to no~W&gt;ommlssloned officers dleport
First
United
and privates who distinguish themselves by their gallantry in Presbyterian Church, ·7:30 p. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle,
'
Mariann and Mark of
action?
m. at the church. Mrs. Dwight
3. Name the Republican candidate for president of the Wallace to review "The Spring Columbus visited with Mrs.
Mary Circle during a recent
Unltt!d States In 1940.
Wind," Mrs. Eddie Crooks to
f. Can you name the famous fictional detectlve created by Sir give devotions. Hostesses, Mrs. weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Barnltz,
-·
Arthur Conan Doyle?
Richard Vaughan, Mrs .
Tom and Tim, of Kingston,
5. Who was the first president of the U.S. to appear on color Dwight Zavltz, Mrs. James Mrs. Hayman Barnitz of
Harley, Mrs : E. 0. Tewksbary
teleVIsion1
Pomeroy, Betty Van Meter,
and Mrs. Eddie Burkett.
' (Answers on Page 5)
Margaret Ann Johnson,
Patrick and Sheryl LeAnn,
local, called at the · home of
T~y's
Mrs. Dean Brinker on Sunday.
hardt
was
born
Oct.
23,
1845.
Florence Circle spent a
By UDited Preu International
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Today Is Monday, Oct. 23, the On this day In history:
'
John Circle of Columbus.
297th day of 1972 with 69 to In 1915, an estimated 2,500
women marched In New York
OS
Owen Taylor of Chippewa
follow.
Lake, Ohio, wasa guest of Mr.
The moon is between Its full City demanding the right to
vote throughout the United
NEW HAVEN- Mrs. Harry and Mrs. Allan Taylor and
phase and last quarter.
States.
Vickers
Jr. hosted members of celelrated his 89th birthday
The morning stars are Venus,
.
In 1942, the British 8th Army the Haven Homemakers at her wbUe here. Burl Taylor and
Saturn and Mars.
,The evening stars are Mercu· launched an offensive at El home with Mrs. James Wise Mr · and Mrs. Albert Jamison
Alamein, Egypt, starting a calling the meeting to order, of Lodl carne to thel Taylor
ry and Jupiter.
campaign
that was to sweep ·' Mrs. Iva Capehart read home to Lake Mr. Tay or home
Those born on this date are
the Axis forces out of North Matthew S:39 and the members with them. Others calling at
MINISTERS- should preach only one sermon or so a year.
under the sign of Scorpio.
Africa.
repeated the national flag , the Taylor home on Sunday
French actress Sarah BernPeople are against sin anyway, so why harp on It?
salute and club pledge followed were Mr · and Mrs. Frank
Hudson and Toni of Racine.
. by ~rayer. Th e 0 cto ber
Mr and" Mr J
Pat-·
TRAFFIC LIGHTS - should be turned off at dangerous
meetmg Is for reorganization. ·
·
s. ames
It waa noted that the following terson and sons of Racine R. D.
Intersections to save electricity. Ev~rybody knows it's a
members hold office for 1973: visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard
dangerous spot and that Is sufficient.
President, Mrs. James Wise; Wrltesell of
Columbus
Vice president, Mrs. Emory recently.
TEACHERS- shouldn't review lessons. Tell children just " '
Hart; treasurer, Mrs.l!Dberta
Powder Lgshes
once ancnney'll never forget lt. . '
·
Maynard; sec~etary, Mrs.
A thin coat of powder, tal~
.
Harry Vickers Jr.; telephone, cum or race powder, applied
Mrs. Sadie Warth; newspaper, on the la!hes before maseau
HIGHWAY POLICE- should stop driving up and down the
Mrs. Aulry Newell.
wiD make !hem look loqer
highways. No need to cautio" drivers by patrolling highways.
The treasurer's report waa aDd thicker , without havlllg
··
·· _
Drivers ~now the Jaw and obey lt. · ·
read by Mrs. David Zerkl~. to put OJ! three coat•. of ~is­
.
Secret sister gilts·were paased cara.
out.
'NCitural' Bronze ·
BUT IF YOU are one of the foolish kind ~ like the Notte
Enjoying !be evenlng were
For the tan that bas faded
Dame ·cathedral 'that has stood for six centuries but conMrs. Harry Vlckeril Jr., too soon, and not very eventinues to ring the bell every day to let people know, It Is stilt
Matthew, Mrs. Iva Gapebart, ly, a bron:rer Is a bandy ald.
0
Mrs. Mayme Atmliruster, ~s. Be sufe that only a thin coat
there ...- believe In continuous,. profitable advertising, then·
0
James Wise, Mrs. David of bronzer or gleamet is used
use
~kle, Terrfe, Debbie 111d in order to retain a "natural"
Brenda, Mrs. 1Awls Johnson, look.
Mrs. Russeil Maynard,
Samanathia, .Mrs. Aubry
Button, Button·
Newell, Mrs. Robert Msyniril
Buttons strung together for
.
.'
and Mrs. Emory Hart.
.I
necklaces, belts, chokers and
IY ADVImJING IN THI ·
The N01•ember meeting 'Will bracelets is becoming a 'fash.be held at the ·home of Mrs. Iva ionable craze. Pearl buttons
Capehart.
can be used to make jewelry
more.appropriate for evening
New York City's Central wear. Pastel baby bpttons or
Park, stretching from 59th oversized wooden buttons are
to 110tb Street; contains 840 perfect for casual sweater
acres.
.
and slacks outfits.

Carmel News,

. NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE

LEGAL NOTICE

•

.

eLECTION

Ocasek.~ E . W. Lamq~on .

Town sh

r eg ular

. be

of .

on

levy ing . in
tor the
cor .
l imitation .
Townsh ip. for
SE';,·~·_;·l'::~ w,~- 'c·T,&lt;T"
business
PV!P?1'~ of Current Expenses.
and taxable
ma i
I.
.
B
tax bein9 : a renewal o t ol
Oli
ve i
any such tax shall Secretary ,
Townsh
of the
an eM. isting tax of .SOPI2J mill to Sais ta x
br at a non.graduated rate Ohio, do hereby certify
run
for
five
yea rs. tax of .'50
within each of the two foregoing is a true
clnsiflc:ations, and may be· text Of a proposed constftut
a rate not exc.eeding .50 mi! l Five y ea r ~ .
'·at 1 ratt n·ot txcetding 1.'0 mill at
iPPII~ to .such incomes as may amendment
i
tor
each one dollar of valuat ion ,
tor each one dollar ot valu•tton, wh lch
be designated by taw. Provided , petition,
a r at e not exceed ing .SO mill
togeth'r
wl
amounts to Five Cents tor at
which
amountl
to
Ten
Cents
for
however, that with the ex - argumehts for its adoption
for ea ch on e dollar •of valua.t ion ,
each
one
hundred
dollars
of
each
one
hundred
dollars
of
ception of Investments in ln - arguments against Its adop I
wh ic h amounts to Fl lve Cents for
valuat ion , for Five years.
valuation, for Five years.
tangt~le rersonal properl')' no filed In the Office of
each one hundred dollar s of
The
Polls
for
said
Election
· The Polls . for said Election
law .shal be enacted bY ' the Secretary of State an
v aluat ion , for F ive ye ars .
will be open at 6:JOo'clock A .M . will open. at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
Generel A~sembly and no proposing to amend the abovt and
The Poll s for sa id E lec tion
and
remain
open
until
6:30
remain open until 6:3Q
tXI$tlng or. future l'aw shall be Section of the Constitution of
Wi l t be open at 6:3Qo'clock A .M .
P.M.
!:astern
Standard
o'clock
o'clock P .M. Entern Standard Time of said day .
·enforced by any Officer of this Ohio .
and rema in open until 6: 30
. o'c
Time of said day.
st~tt , or subdivislrn thereof
lock P .M. Eastern Standard
By
order
of
the
Board
of
By order of the Board. ot Elections, of Meigs County , Trme
i{nposlng , collecting , Or
of said doy .
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF , Elections,
of Meigs County, Ohio .
otherwise leVying anv tax on , or I have hereu"to subscribed by Ohio.
By order of the Board of
mee,urlng any taK by, income name and affixed my official
Elections, of Meigs Count y.
Ohio .
of natural persons , car . sea l at Columbus the twenty .
Edw
in
S.
Cozart
Edwin S. Cozart
POi"atlons, or other bUSiness fourth day of September, 1972.
Edw in S. Cozart
Cha ir'man
Cha irman
organizations and taxable
Qhai rman
tn,tlties or lncreeslng the rates
TED W. BROWN
Dorothy
M
.
Johnston
Dorothy M . Johnston
Doro thy M . Johnston
thereof unless. SUC!h tax or in .
S~(J~tary of State
·· ·- ''"Director Dated Sept . 29, 1972 Direc tor
crease 11 aeproved by at least a
Direc tor
Detod Sept. 29, 1972
Dat ed Se pt . 29, 1972
malorlty of the electros of the
state or of the subdivision (9) 75. no) 2. 9, 16, 23, Stc
· (10) 2, 9, lA . 1.1. 4t
(lQ) 2, 9, .16. 23, 4t
( IO J J, 9 , 16, 23, 4t
voting on , ~uc:h proposlatlon .
Nothing contained herein shall
NOTICE OF ELECTION
prhent ffle collection of, or the
ON TAX LEVY IN
The Poll s fo r said Election
enforcement of the law reiating
EXCESS OF THE
~ i ll open at 6 :30 o'clock A .M .
to, any lax liabil ity Which has
TEN MILL LIMITATION
and rema in open until 6: 30
accrued ' prtor to the effective
NOTICE rs hereby sllven
o'c lock P .M . Eastern Standard
date of.thjs section .
in pursuance of.a Resolution
Time ol said day.
The questions of such a tax on the Council of the Vlll«tgr
By orde ol !h e Boa rd of
Incomes or lntrraae In the rates . Racine, Ohio, passed the
Elect ions , 6t M eig s County ,
thereof shell be submitted at a day of August, 1972,
Ohio .
ventral election to the electors be submitted
of this st•te or of thi!' subdivision
Edwin S. Cozart
for thtlr apt,~roval or rejection
Ch air m an
in a manner prescribed by law .
Provided further, however,
Dorot hy M . Jo hn~o n
that thiS tection shall nol affect
Director
the, authority of m uniclpalitles,
Da ted Sep t. 29, 1971
sublect to the provisions of
[ 10 ] 2, 9. 16, 23 , 41
Section · 6, Ar.tlcle XIII and
Section 13, Article XVIII of lhis
Constitution to Impose, collect.
or otherw l~e levy any tax on , or
to measure any tax by, Income
of nl'tural pMsons , cor .
poratlons, or other business
orgenlzatlons end taxable at a rate not exceeding 2.0 mills
entitles. or to increase the- rates for each one dollar of valuation ,
thereof . ,,.
which amounts to Twerity Cents
for eac.h one hundred dollars of
ARGUMENT IN
valuation, for Five years ..
FAVOR OF
The Polls for said Election
PROPOSED AMENDMENT wll.l beol)en at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
If approved by the voters at and remain open until 6 :30
. the ~ovimber election, the o'clock P.M. Easter.n Standard
1• proposed ame-ndment to Ohio's
Time of said day .
constitution would greatly
By ·order of the Board of
im prove the opportunity of the Elections, of Meigs County,
public to participate in the Ohio .
decision as to how, and how
,_,
much, illS to be taxed. FOr' the
Edwin S. Cozart
first time1 the public would have
Chairman
the right to vote on taxation and
government spending at the
Dorothy M . Johnston
stett level.
Director
Tht ,law already guarantees oat~d Sept. 29, 1972
the public this right of control at
thelocolleve/ in.tht field of real (101 2, 9, 16, 23, 41
estate taKes and municipal
Income taxes:
If approved, the constiM/on
IN THE COMMON
would then P;rovlde that the rate
PLEAS COURT OF
at state Income taxation must
ME·IGS COUNTY. OHIO
be tht s.ame for all natural
..
persons . The constltvlion IN THE MATTER OF CON·
llready requires that the rate VEYANCE OF CERTAIN
indvaluatlnforpropertytaxes REAL ESTATE OF THE
must br the same tor all tax- s y R A c u 5 e . u N 1 TED
pef~~s . ~mendmcent would METHODIST CHURCH,
•ov.ldt for income taxation CESSOR
SYRACUS~, OHIO, SUC'
:ro
THE
'· Chtd upon 'ablll1y to pay ; thai !VANGELICAL UNITED
Is, the greater a taxpayer's BRETHREN CHURCH AT
Income, the more tax he would ·SYRACUSE,
OHIO,
A
poy ; tht smaller a taxpayer's RELIGIOUS SOCIETY · DULY
: Income, the less ta-x he would ORGANIZED UNDER THE
pay.
LAWS OF THE STATE OF
A "YES" vote on the Issue IS OHIO
, nec,.sury
'\ '
'l'h
j
to , .u=corn.pllsh the 1 ,~ ·
No. u,t49
, followln;; .
~ . M
," '
NbTICE 'IY .,
·· •
""
; "
(I) Prilto,ibi1, collectlpn of the
PUBpCATION
,• present !n~ome B!nd lnco!'"e· Notice-· Is hereby give-n to the
.. relettd tax,
.
. off icers and members of
,
(2) Give the public the rttttht to SyracUse Unit!d Methodist
~: voft on any proposed income church, Syracuse, Ohio, and to
~ tax In the future (except the
former officers and
;1 municipal tax ),·
members, If any , of The
(3l , A:'quire public approval Evangelical united Brethren
1
~ before an.v proposed Increase of Church It Syracuse. Ohio, and
,. any such ta)l could. take effect. to all others whom It may
~
The effect, If any,, which concern, thai an the 6th day of
:. . approval of the const•tutlonal october. 1972, the Trustns of
'1:. amendment might have on
the Syracuse united Methodist
{ current state expenditures will · Church, successor In In terest to
~· only. lattfor six months. But the the
Evangelical
United
\ control by the public ovtr ex· ~rernren Church at Syracuse,
·~ ceulve state
government Ohio, filed in the common Pleas
~ spending ~~~~ be a permanent Court of Meigs County, Ohio,
\ · part of Oh10 s constitution that case No. 15,U9, their certain
1'i neither
uovernor
nor Petition praying for an order
~ legiSlature, now or In the future, giving them authority to sell
Everybody wants an imcan ever take away from the and convey In fee simple to
people.
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and
proved environment, but
The November election may Elizabeth Ann Hemsley, the
be the last chance that Ohioans following described real ettate
wishing won 't make it so.
·ever Qet to control directly situate In the County of Meigs,
· runaway Jspend ing at the state State
of Ohio , and \Wiage
·of
There is much to be done
' 10 01
,
Y •
Syracuse,
to.wlt : · I
and it's going to cost
Committee for the Amend- Being the surface only of the
ment: Chester T. Cruze, Robert following described reel estate :
everybody a lot ol money.
E. Le¥111, Josepn P. Tulley,
Beginning It lho south east
Rar,mo,nd P. Luther, Howard A. corner of Lot No. 31 In High •
li Kn ghl. ,
,
Lawn Subdivision to the VII loge
Many people say " I"
l'l
ARGUMein IN
of Syracvse, Ohio ; thenco along
don't cause pollution ...
·
OPPOSITION TO
the south bO~indary line of Hid
Lot No . 3110 a polnl.lntorucllng
PROPOS EO AMENDMENT
"lhey" do. "T hey "
the western boundary line of thl
VoI I No on li sui ..
lot .now owned l)y ' the
should give me back my
Approving Issue ,2 will hurt Evangelical United Brethren
YOU.
Church (Syracuse United
clean air and pure water,
ISSUE 2 WILL DESTROY THE Methodist Chvrch) at Syracuse,
and "they" should pay
. HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION Ohio
; thepce
north
projected
line of
the along
westernI
for it. The truth is all of us
. AN 0 10 PCT . PROPERTY TAX boundary line of said Church
' REDUCTION .
·
Lot across Lot 31 to • po/nl in
are polluters and all ol .
· Loss of the real estate tax Lot No. 32, 15 feet from the
reduction• the corporate anrl northern boundary lint of Lot
us must pay for improv·peraonal,";·.lntomt t1xes mede No . 321n Hlgh .t,.awn Subdivision
ing our environment.
posslbll
would
cost of the VIllage of Syrecust, Ohio;
homeowners who art ovrr 64, thrt:tce East following 1 lint 15
yearly taK savingt amounting to feet from tl'lt north bOundary
The price tag attached
11 much as 80 pet. of their line of· Lot· No . 32 and parllltl
pr(llpl'tty taus end would tal&gt;l.e with the north lint of &amp;aid Lot
is going lo be a still one.
1wey ;.aU other taxpayers' 10 No. 32 to College Road Street ;
thence southtesterly following
. pet. r~al e~tete t1x rollback.
Cont~olling pollution,
"
the meanderlr\QS of Collegt
whether by a device in a
ISSU!! 2 WILL CAUSE OTHER Road Street 10 the southtiSt
' NEW ANO INCREASED corner of Lot No. 31 or to lhe
car, a new se'!"age disposal
TAXES FOR INDIVIDUAL~ . . placo qf beginning . , ,
~
Supporters of tssue 1. don t Reference Deed : VoL 211,
plant, or equipment at a power
went I reduced spending. They Page 45, Deed Rtcords of Meigs
'·,want to shift the burden of county, Ohio.
plant, will have an inevitable
taxation from the wealthy to the But reserving from th t
cost to each of us as a con·
avtra'ge taxpayer by a flat premises the right to use for
f- Income tax which would churctl parking an arn · tx'sumer. We should make
t. DOUBLE taxes tor families tending w11t a depth of forty
, ~ earning $9,000 or ltss and would feet from tbe boundary line
sure the benelits are wo'rth
E: rtduct texea ONLY for families eiOnu College Road Strtet and
~~ ·earnlnt over $11,500.
extending the tnt1re width of'tht
the price.
property· conveyed for as long
ISSUE 2 WILL CAUSE as tht remaining church
WHAT ABOUT THE ENVI. HIGHER TAXES FOR THE property to the south end od·
t' SMALL BUSINESSMAN .
flet nl to the property htrtln
RONMENTAL PRICE TAG
\ High -profit' corporations conveyed belongs to the Unlttd
'ftOUJd.flvtlbOut SlSO million If Methodist Church , Grantor
;ON ELECTRIC POWER?
: 1asut 2 passes. A flat -rltt In· herein .
.
. The cost ol new pollution ·
come tax for all businesses,
Said Petition and cause will
i lnclucUng partnersh ipS and bt heard Ofi the ath day of
control equipment at power
t; proprlitorshlps, wovtd force all November, )972, or as soon
businftltl to pay the same rate. therufter as mav be.
generating piants will
{
REDUCE
· . Mm~~Y~fcUHNJ~~~
show ·up in all of our ·
·
'TO YOUR. ; .
1Y Roymond Ktldar.
electric bills. How hfgh
.
Edith Hood
Ml1&gt;fi,Plckons
the price'will. be cannot
Btn OIIIHnberrv
ThelmJI H1w1ey
be lorecast. Much de·
(101 9, 16, 23. ;JO. ~'
pendS on government
regulations. In our opin·
ion, some are unrealistic because
tney can't be met, and il they could .
be met would be unnecessary. AN
EXAMPLE: We must burn ccial tb make electricity.

:~1r~~J~tt1:~ii~:

ot Nov•,m&lt;•er,
of levy ing, excess of the ten
mi ll limitation, tor the benefirot
Southern Local School District
for the 'purt,~os e at Current
ex penses .
Said ta x. being : a renewal of
an ex ist ing tax uf 5.0 mills to run
tor a continu ing perlod at a rate
not exceed im;, S.Q mills for each
one doll ar of valuation, wh ich
amounts to Fifty Cents tor each ·
on e hundr ed dOllars of
valuat ion , tor a con tinu ing
period .
·

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OPTOMETRIST.

OFFICE HOURS 9:~0 TO 12,2 To's (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST CQURT ST.

HAVE

in the

Yellow

Pages

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n it comes to an
•
environment,
1mp
there is.no
nta
.;-;

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.10

,.,; • ,b A .c•I&lt;Jr J '
l '

r

'l ),;

.l~ d · ~l.t Lf 1\" ll ..,.~ flt:A.l 1k\•J'lr3
JP1 1;'./.,•r) ')ftjJ ~"I{f

New government regulations say our burning coal
puts too much sullur oxides In the air-and this
is harmlul. The fact Is that only high concentrations ol sullur oxides at ground levelnot in the upper atmosphere-can be
harmlul. Sullur oxides exhausted from
plant stacks high In the atmosphere
are quickly dlllused so as to meet
strict government regulations.We are
and will continue to protect against
harmlul ground-level concentrations
of sullur oxides.
However, there's no commercially
successlul way to remove sullur oxides
lrom power plant stacks on a continuous basis in the amounts specllied
by the new government regulations.
Millions are being span I on research ·
to lind a way, and we are taking
a signilicant pari in that research.
We have no doubt a way will
be lound, but more time Is
needed . When-science
linds a way, we'll promptly
adopt it.

t
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We, like you, wanl to protect
our environment . .. make it
better than it is today. But, there
is no Santa Claus, when it comes
to an improved environment. We
need to be sure that sought-alter im·
provements are possible ~nd worti' their
cost. We need to avoid unnecessary in·
creases in our ele.ctiic bills.
.
'
. Understan(ling. ol the possible and ihe 1m"
possible together with the inevitable price
tag_ is the lirst step toward ~. sensi~le appr!tach tq protecting and 1mprov1ng our
environment.
..

OHIO POWER . COMPANY ·

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,

The Daily·Sentinel

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a.:.. The Daily Senllntl, Middieport-POtJleroy, 0., Oi-t. 23, 1972

•

.Sentin~l Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
LEGAL NOTICE
Trust~es
; ~~:~snho:~j~NOTlCE

L;,~~::~o;1

~·

·r CE
O
LEGAL N I .

NOTlCE
ON FlUNG
OF i~VENTORY

.or

@)

,--:--~~'---.-~-----.:..--,--"'"'",For
..

~-

receive .
AND APPRAI'SEMENT
.M. Nov . ' The 51a!e of Ohio, Meigs

Po

2 SfGII$
· .

•

Of

·

·guaLIJY
c

.

ror.
Mot
·
.
.
Ot· Oe
.

•

- e~Pf;~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ;r.,~ ~;the~;~ Y.,;~o.~IJ',~h;e~--~--~--~----~::A~~-~~~~
---i~--~~~~~:~~:~~:~1;9;.7:~~ii:dm~s: ~d~ ~:~c~o1~o~n~~~~
are residents

•.

c·

,n2 STEREO B track in walnu1
consolebwi1h
-speTakekr
balance
and
ase .
a e
over
payments of $6.50_per mooth
. orpayba&gt;anceof$101.50 . Call

of
viz: the surviving
spouse, the next of kin , th e
benef iciaries under the wil l;

r:::===::::-::r siiVNiiiiuF~FV.'t:s~;:;:-\';1
LOOKV
YONDER, .
LUKEV!!

Busine.ss .· Services-

~VCK!, I J ·l&lt;JAS
IIJ 1'1E MOOD FOI&lt;. a.JE !

HISSELF A
OUTBOARD

KICKER FER
HIS BOAT 1!

'7 .,

1

..,

•~-i"~~9'1~1~-S~3;3~1.~======~~~1-.f"~=:==-::~::=:~~==l~l
rARTH MOVING r-~~·,~~=-------~--,-r-~~~~::::,~--~--~----ROOFING .

l!!"ll..

0

bed 10ft. x 7 tt . w 2s ·1n;
.
$2849
LEFT IN lay -away Detox Zig .
.&amp;:It
e ·.
,
1ides with 31 ln . head ' and
por wagon. Beautiful coral finish with vinyl interia ·
lag sewing machine. Thi s
If I HAVE
tailgate with c enler door in
fact.ory a ir con~itioned, luggage rack, radio, 350 v:8
machine overcasts, darns ,
ToGo
tailgate.
~nd to the attorney or attorneys
engme,. a~tomaf1c trans., power steering &amp; brakes, like
· em'bro ide rie s and makes
Dozer &amp; End foader work,
e·ed to be mounted and represent ing any of the
neww_- w t.re-s. If you want a s hoW piece &amp; plenty of lu xury
button holes. Pay balance of
ponds, basement, · land.
Take Me To
pain teO . Heavy duty 71 1 in . or l'lforemention:ed persons :
try lht s outstand1ng buy.
$41.50 or pay $5.25 per month .
scaping, We have · 2 size
larger
EmmaBoMttom
. Barber,
Deceased
Call 991-533 1.
dorers, 2 sire loaders. Work
THE SHOP ·
eCARP~·
levers . hois1 with .P T.O. an a Long
, Ohio
, Oliv~.
.£J NTRY
12 cab protector with 2 ln . Township, No . 20718.
l971_CHEVROLET
.
•
S309S
10-19.6tc
done by hour or contract.
Wli'lgs .
A hie- r Barber , Decease d.
fv,al!bu ha_rdtop c~upe, low mileage, new car title, san"'
Free Estimates. We also
A!·~'.'.·'.: RIDGE ROAD
4 corn6r lights. 6 reflectors Long Bottom , Ohio, Olive
dal.wood fmlsh w1lh brown vinyl roof, vinyl sa ddle in ANT IQUE pump organ , all
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
a.:;;~k•:;~"Jnc:~R·;~O:!Y~c,uu~~ilrtg"
• · ._c
·
and mud flapS .
NQ. 20719 .
tenor
original except new bellows . trucks and low-boy for
1 1 ·•ng , 1ur bah Yd ramatic, power
Wheelbase su rtable for body . Township,
You are hereby
nolified that
. .' 4 ·season air cond·t·on
· hire.
Servl~e
25,000 lbs . G.V .W. or heavier . the Inventories and Ap steermg, wh ite-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
Over 80 years old. Made ,by See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
DICK
7t000 lbs . !-Beam front axle- . praisements of the esl·atesof the
guards. poWer brakes. radio .
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co., Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
VAUGHN
ror
· Free Estimate
18,000 lbs . 2 speed rear a)(le . aforementioned, deceased , lat e
Worces ter, Mass . One 'bellOws after 7 p m or phone 992·
992-3374
r
5 speed synchromesh Trans . of sa id County , were filed in I h iS
ty pe . Phone 992 -3904.
S232.
· ·
'
Let Dick and D•le Help You
miSSion
..
Direc1
in
flf1h
.
·courl.
Said
lnv
enlor
les
and
1o
_
.1J.If
L
'
with
Yo~r Meat Problem •.
lHcu . in . VBeng ine Orlarger . Appraiseme.nt s wilt be for
Ill
Heavy duly oil Filter .
hearing before th iS Court on the
4,000 lbs . m inimum front ~5th day of October , 1972, at
REG ISTERED EnQiish Setter
spring capaci1y.
10 ,00 o'clock A.M.
'lPEN EVES, 8:00P.M.
puppies, 6 weeks old: phone
POMEROY
11,000 lbs. minimum Rear
Any perso.n desir ing to file
"PPMEROY, OHIO
992-5072.
spring capacity .
exceptions thereto must file ·
10-20-Jtc
Auxiliary Rear springs.
them a11oast five days prior to ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -.....!
HOME &amp; AUTO
Combination rear &amp; dlrec- the date set for he8r ing .
19
KAWAS
Given under my hand on a
WANT ADS
Nott.Ce
71
AKI 100, excellent
lional signa11igh1s wlth Hazara
992 _2094
swi·tch .
seal or said Court, this 12th day
. NFORMATION 1
co ndit ion, ready to go.
From the largest
Dual electric horns .
of October 1972.
. • DEADLINES
Sacri fice for only $235. Phone 606 E. Main Pomeroy
Cab marker lights .
Mann ing D. Webster ,5 P.M. Day Before Publicatiorr: HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good
Coolville 667 -621.11.
Bulldozer Radiator to
On Most American C..rs
Judge ana exofticto Clerk
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
pl ace lo qo each Friday
10-20,12tp
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
Healer &amp; defroS1er .
Small~st H.eater Core.
P~&gt;wer Steering.
of said Meigs Covnty
Ca nce llation . . . . Corrections
evenmg, 7 p .m. at Laurel
Nathan Biggs
"-GUARANTEED2 speed wind~hield wipers &amp;
Common Pleas Court Will be accepted unf il 9 a.m . tor , Cliff on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west Mobile Homes for Sale
and
Ra.diator
Specialist
Phone 992-2094
washer .
ProbateD lyisi on
OayofPubJication
of Rock Spring s Fairground . 1965 ATLAS~ 0 b 1'l
h
900 x 20 - 10pJy.trpn1 &amp; spare
r REGULATIONS
'"
e ome,
FURN
tire highway, tread 7'' rims .
By Ann B. Watson
Th e Publisher reserves the -·-·
10-10-lfc
SOx lO, two bedroom , front
JTURE
Po111eroy_Home Auto
900 )( 20 .,._ 10 ply Dual rear
Depu ty crerk right to edit or reject any ads
kitchen. eKcellent cond ition .
·
Open8Til5
mud &amp; snow !read , 7" rlms .
aeemed , obieclional.
The
Ph one 985-3555.
Stop In and See Our
CaS! spoke wheels.
(10 ) 16, 23,21
pub lisherw ill no1beresponsible Real Estate For Sale
10-20-61p
Fl
I
Monday lhru Saturday
Heavy dUty 13" min imum
for more I than one incorrect'
OOr
ISP ay.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.
Clutch ,
·
inse rt ion .
Heavy duty Brake Booster
RATES
CHARMING, old er bri ck and COME AND SEE . Have new
with 7 in . rear brakes .
' For Wan' Ad Service
fra me home across fr om shipment ot flowers I~ fall
Heavy duty Bumper &amp; front
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Sce nt s per Word. one insertion
Syracuse grade schoo l - 4 and Christmas ; will make Real Estate For Sale
DOZER and back hoe work,
DRIVE A LITTLE
tow hooks .
ON TAX LEVY IN
Minimum Charge75c
bcdrqoms,
new
furnace,
builtponds and septic tanks, ditR
1
1
EXCESS OF THE
12
1
flower
arrangements;
have
- SAVE A LOTI
ear qw oop .
TEN MILL LIMITATION
c~n s per word three
in kitc hen, lOOx 100 corner lot, over 1,000 gift items, also FARMLAND for sale by owner.
ching service; top soil. fill
L.H. &amp; R .H . Sr .. West Coa st
co nsec ut iv e insert ioris.
82 acres of level land . Meigs
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex lllflny ex tra s, $18,000. For
Bargain Center
NOTICE is hereby given that
18 cents per ·word six con
mirrors.
jewelry , Avon bottles, some
County, Oh io, on County Road
10 amp . Battery .
In pursuance of a Resolut ion ot secufive Insertions .
cavating. Phone 992-5367,
priva te show ing ca ll l -888 - antiques ; open 9 a.m. to 6
46, located 2 3-10 miles south
Rt. 1 "at caution light"
50 amp . or larger altunator . the Boord of Townsh ip Trustees
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Dick Karr, Jr.
1957 ,
p.m ., e)(cept Friday, closed
of
Tuppers
Plalns
P.O.
on
Cab grab handles Left &amp; of the Township of Sutlon. Ohio, ads and ads paid within 10 day s
9-1-tlc
10 22-31c
Fr iday ; phone 985-3537;
CARD OF THANKS
Right.
passed on the 1St day of August.
-good hard surfaced road; also - --'---- Smalley's
Gilt
Shop,
Chester,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Full Depth Foam seat .
1972, there will be submitted to
&amp; OBITUARY
.on Tupper s Plains Water
Ohio.
Heavy duty factory rein · a vote of the people of said
$1.50 for 50 word mi nimum
system; includes farm house
Clean used furnllur•
10-18-12tc
forced trame .
.
Town s hip at a General
Each addition"' word 2c .
Help. Wanted
in need of repair, two barns in Real Estate For Sale
Truck and bed to be painted ELECTION to be held in th e
BLIND ADS
Guaranteed
appliances
good condition, several
Omaha Orange,
Township of Sutton , Ohio, at the
Additiona l 25 , Charge per
WINTER
pol
aloes.
$5
a
100
lb.;
Huffy'
20",
BIKES
ou tbuildlngs; land lays well;
BidderS are requested to reqular a la ces of vntino th,..rPin . Advertisement .
phone
247-1642.
Murray
10
speedsdiscount
has beautiful mo-untainous
OFFICE HOUJt~ .,
submit with their bid for above on Tuesd~y . the 7th day or No 10-18-61c
equipment a further bid for a vember, 1972, the ques t-ion of •8;30 a.m;' to 5:00 ,p.m, Da ily,
view in all directions ; ap.
prices.
. DELIVERY
---::-:-~.....,.--1962 International 1700 series levy ing , inex cessofthetenm ill B: 3C a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
proximately 25 miles from
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
1971 DODGE Charger, power
dump truck to be a trade -In on limitation. tor the benefit of Saturday .
Athens,
Ohio
and
ParkersOpen
to7; Closed Mondays
new truck.
Sutton Township for the purpose
stee ring ; gold with black
W.
Va
.,
14
mlles
North
burg,
The Township Trustees may Of Current expenses.
DRIVER SALES
vin)·f top ; phone 949-5424.
of Pomeroy, Ohio. Ideal for
accept the lowest bid and
Said tax being: a renewal of
10-18-61c
nice home(s) development. ·
reserve the right to reject any an u istlng tax of .50(112 ) m ill to In Memory
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
------------etc. . Southeastern Ohio Real
or all bids or any part thereof . run for five years.
delivered
right
to your
IN MEMORY of ou r dea r
1966 - 266 CU. IN. V-B In·
Estate Company, Broker;
l,.ebanon Township Trustees
project. Fast and easy. Free
Father, Fred M. Co llins, who
ternational engine, 4 speed
Clarence G . Lawrence , Clerk at a rate not exceeding .so mill
phone Belpre, 423-6293 ;
estimates . Phone 992 -3284:
P . o . BoK 34, Portland , Ohio for each one dollar o·r valuation ,
transmission complete;
passed away 9 years ag o.
Parkersburg, 485-7539 or 422· ·
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
$3.57
PER
HOUR
.. sno
which amoUnts to Flv&amp;·Cents tor
phone 992-7384.
110 Mechanic St.
Oc Iober 13, 1963.
8905 . Price $35,000; terms,
Middleport,
Ohio.
(10) 23, 11
each one hundred dollars of Th,•usand
thoug hts of one so
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 •
10-22-3tc
cash. Ask directions at
valuation. for Fiv-e. Years .
6-30-llc
dear,
Mlllhone's Service Station at
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M . 01len brings a tiny tear ;
Tuppers Plains .
$4,000.00
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
16 FAT la mbs, ready for the
NOTlCE OF ELECTION
and remain open until 6 : 30 Thoug hts go back to scenes long
10-22-91p
2
BEDROOMS
- Stove and
REASONABLE- rates , Ph. 446·
'
freezer
;
phone
992-2630.
ON TAJC LEVY IN
past,
·
o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard
No
experience
refrigerator included in this
4782, GalliE&gt;Oiis, John Russell,
EXCESS OF THE TEN
10-22-3tc
Time of said d~y.
1
e
rol
ls
on,
But
memories
Tin
2 STORY home, bath and 112, sale. uv·tng and dining
MILL L!MlTATlON
Owner
&amp; Operator.
By order of the Board of
lt~s l .
carpeted, may be had with
NOTICE IS herebY given that Electrons, of Meigs County,
5-12-lfc
room,
front
and
back
por.
MODERN
walnut
stereo,
AM·
Sad ly missed by daughters : necessary. On the job
in pursuanclt of a Resolution of Ohio .
basic furniture ; for apF
M
radio,
4
speed
changer,
4
ches.
2
dug
wells.
1;,
acres
of
Mr
s.
Lore
na
M.
Rice.
Mr
s.
the Board of County Com ·
pointment call9'12-7384 or 992·
C. BRADFORD, Aucti~neer
speaker sound system .
'missioners of the county of
land.
Fl orence L. McDan ieL Mrs . training. Ph. 446-0677
Edwin S. Cozart
7133 .
Complete Servlce
Meigs, Ohio, passed on the 5th
Balance $68.27. Use our
Bernice V. Pauley.
Chairman
BUSINESS RENTAL
10-22-3tc
Phone 949-3821
day of September, 1J72, there
budget
term
s.
Call
992-7085.
10-12 -llp
BLOCK
4
room
business
Racine, Ohio
will be submUttd to a vote of the
for
personal
interview.
Dorothy M Johnston
10-22-61c
building and a modern 3
people of said Meigs County at 11
Critt
Bradford
Director
~:-::---:----:-­
General ELECTION 10 be held Dated Sept . 29 , 1972
bedroom paneled home with
~- 1 -llc
Notice
MAPLE
stereo-radio
com
In the County of Meigs, Ohio, at
bath,
furnace
heat,
front
-=--,--CLELAND·
bination,
AM-FM
radio,
4
tht regular places of vot ing (10) 2, 9, 16, 23, 41
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
porch and view of the Ohio
Employment Wante,d
speed changer, 4 speaker
.~hertinj on Tuesday, the 7fh day
REALTY
doors and Windows, carporfs,
sound system . Balance $73 .45.
Rlver.
Wood
burning
of Novtm.ber:. 1972, the auesHon
608 E. Main ·
marquees, aluminum siding
WILL DO baby s itling for
of levying, In excess of the ten
Use our budge! terms. Call
fireplace ln living. Beautiful
mill Umllotlon , for lhe beneflt ol
railing . A. Jacob, sales
preschool ch ildr en in my
and
. Pomeroy .
9'12-7085 .
kitchen : Large lot. All for
I
Meigs
Countv
for
the
purpose
of
NOTICE
Of_
ELECTION
hOfYle
by
lheday
.
Reliable
and
representative.
For free
:
10-22-~lc
.I
only $25,000.00.
the maintenance and operation
ON TAX LEVY
'
mature. Phone 949-5101 .
estimates, phone Charles
of schools, traln'ing centers or
IN EXCESS OF THE
COUNTRY
Lisle, Syracuse, v. V.
. 10-18-61c E L ECTROLUX. Vacuum
.work ahops for mentally
TEN MILL LIMITATION
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
2
BEDROOMS
Bath,
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
retarded persons.
. NO'TICE is hereby given that
Cleaner complete with at - brick. 2 or 3 bedrooms, bath,
'
plains
water.
Front
and
back
3·2-lfc
_ Said tax being : a renewal of -m pursuance of a Resolution of
tachments, cordwinder and
dining room , gas forced air
· en ulstlng tax of .25 (•1•) m 11 1 to the Council of the Village at
porches.
Garage
and
garden
:-:-::~-::-:-~~­
Wanted To Buy
pain! spray. Used bt in like
ruo t.or five years.
Pomeroy, Ohio, passed on the
heat, storm doors and
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
spot. Only $d,OOO,OO.
new
condition . Pa ~· $34.45
Window
21st day of August, 1972, there
WOULD like 1o buy used flute in
Sep11c tanks installed. George
2
porches.
garage,
windows,
MIDDLEPORT
cash or budget plan available.
at a rete not exceeding .25 mills will besubrrillted to a vote of th e
Air Conditioners
good condition; call after 6
( Bill) Pull&gt;ns. Phone 9'12-2478.
lot.
$8,500.00.
level
Phone 992-5641.
MODERN 4 BEDROOMS • tor 18Ct1 one dollar of valuation, people of said Village at a
p.m.
992-5224.
4· 25-lfc
which amounts to Two and one- General ELECTION to be held
10-17-6tc
2 baths, nlce kitchen with bar
Hot Water. Heaters
10-22-31c
half cents for each one hundred In the Village of Pomeroy , Ohio,
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
and cook units. Garage and
Plumbing
dollars at valuation, for Five at the regular places of voting
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
NEW 1972 Zig -Zag Sewing
frame. 5 l~rge bedrooms, 11f7
rec. room In basement.
'ytars.
therein , on Tuesday, the 7th day
Iocaled at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
200
BALES
of
good
th
is
year's
Machine
Electrical
Work
In
original
factory
baths,
dlnlng,
nlce
kllchen
,
of November, 1972, the question
.
.. . .
Large
covered
patio
full
Complete
front ~nd servlce,
hay,
delivered;
phone
742
·
ca rlon . Zig -Zag , lo make
cellar, 2 glassed in por ches,
• The Polls tor uld Election of levying , in excess of the ten
length of house. Asking
tune
up
and
brake service.
4459.
buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons
.
will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. mill limitation, for the benet it of
garage, ca rport. $12,800.00.
$24,000.00.
balanced elec·
Wheels
10-20-3tc
and remain open until 6:30 Pomeroy VIllage for the pur monograms and make fancy
Ironically.
All
work
• 165 ACRES
•
o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard POse of Current Expenses .
designs with ius! the lwist of a
POMEROY
2
story
frame,
Time ot sal(f day .
Said ta)l being : a renewal of
guaranteed
.
Reason1ble
1960-1965 VOLKSWAGEN for
single-dial. Left in lay -away
STOCK FARM - 2 houses, f
Sv order of the Board of an e)C!St!ng tax of Two mills to
2 bedrooms, bath, nice
rates. Phone 742·3232 or 992parts; phone 985-4118.
and
nev
er
been
used.
Will sell
farm
ponds. Several out1
Elections, of Meigs County, run tor five years .
3213.
kllchen, carpeted, iusl
10-20-31&lt;.
for
only
·
$47
cash
or
Credit
buildings. All m&gt;nerals. On
Ohio .
·
992 -2448
7-27-lfc
terms available. Phone 992 renovated throughout.
Edwin s. Cozart at a rate not excee'd ing 2.0 mills
school bus and mall routes.
5641
.
$8,500.00.
.
Pomeroy,
Chairman for each one dolla·r of valuation ,
;:W-;:1-;-L-;-L-c-u-;-1- o-r--:-tr- lm
Want $25,000.00 .
OLD Furniture , oak tables,
- -1-rees:
Which amounts to Twentv Cents
10-17-61c
organ s, dishes , clocks, brass
125
ACRES
easonable;
also
clean ou1
Dorothy M . Johnston for each one hundred dollars of
MIDDLEPORT RURAL -- 1
beds, or complete households .
KOSCOT KOSMETlCS (M INK
120 IN WOODS - Good 9
Director valuation. for Five years .
basements ,
attics
and
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
story, 3 bedrooms, utility,
O&gt;L BASE&gt;. We have many
Dated Sept. 29, 1972
The Polls for said Election
room house with 2 baths, gas
cellars; phone 949·3221 .
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 9'12-6271 .
Will be open at 6 : 30 o'clock A . M .
bath, gas forced air furnace,
new products since the for heal, water well, 3 porches, 2
10·4-JOic
(10) 2, 9j 16. 23, -4t
and remain open · unlll 6: 30
6-28-lfc
mation of this Company. Also
recreat io n room, fruit
large
gardens,
and
all
c k P.M. Eastern Standard
several new ones this month
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
storage, paneling and tile.
- -----------o'clo
Time or said day .
minerals ." $26,000.00.
plus
monthly
speclals.
All
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
$9,800.00.
By
order
of
the·
Board
of
NOTICE OF ELECTION
106 ACRES
these in addition to the For Sale or Trade
CLEANED.' REPAI·RED.
Elections, of Meigs County,
ON TAX LEVY
4
BEDROOM
MODERN
McCormick
No.
16
originals . Ladles, we would 1963 CHEV . Station Wagon,
Ohlo.
MILLER SAN&gt;TATION,
IN EXCE$5 OF THE
WANT TO SELL? LIST
HOME- Enclosed bath wllh
like very much for you to try
Edwin S. Cozart
TEN MILL LIMlTATtON
.
STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE
excellent condition, sell or FIELD HARVESTER
WITH US, WE ADVERTISE
Chairman
large utility. Beautiful
these cosmetics and to serve
NOTICE Is hereby given that
662-3035.
trade lor Volkswagon of equal
Good Condition
YOUR
PROPERTY,
In pursuance of a Resolution of
you . Phorie Helen Jane, 992kitchen, gas lorced air
va lue ; phone 985-4118.
10-4-lfc.
Dorothy M : Johnston
the Council of the VIllage of
5113.
THROUGH
OHIO AND W.
furnace
and
basement,
30
10-20·31c
Director •
Rutland, Ohio, passed on the
McCormick No, 50
__:__
VA.
10-1-ttc
acres of meadow. Garage
2nd day of August, 1972, there Dated Sep t . 29, 1972
SEWlNG MACHINES, Repair
HENRY E, CLELAND
1961 FORO Futuro, 2 door, FIELD HARVESTER
will be submitted to a vote ot the
and all minerals. 527,000.00.
service, all makes. 9'12-2284.
MISCELLANEOUS Sale, Port.
REALTOR
people of said Village at a (10) 2, 9, 16, 23, 41
stan dard transmission , extra With nearly new 1 row corn
HAVING
TROUBLE
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Church,
land
Methodist
General ELECTION lo be held - - - - - , - - - - - - - good con dition or will trade head . Thls can use 2-row
Phone 992-2259
Authorized
SELLING,
THEN
YOU
Singer Sales and
In the VIllage of Rutland , Ohio,
Thursday, Friday ; October
for an aulomatic of equal
NOTlCE
OF
ELECTION
Service.
We
Sharpon Scissors.
SHOULD
CALL
US
FOR
AN
at the regular place of voting
26th and 27th ; baked goods,
unit.
· ON TAX LEVY lN
va lue; phone 949-3915.
therein , on Tuesday, the 7th day
3-29-tfc
&gt;NTERVIEW.
Frlday.
RACl
NE
10
room
house,
lEXCESS OF THE
10-20-3tc
1-Gehl
of November, 1972, the question
balh, basement, garage, two
TEN MlLL L1M1TAT10N
HELEN
L,
TEAFORD,
10-22-3tc
-:;-A-;-:
U-:
TO;::::M::;O::;B-;:1L-:E:-:-In-su- r-an_c_e_been
of levy ing, in excess of the ten
Is heret1y given that
lo1s. Phone 949-4313.
ASSOCIATE
FIELD
HARVESTER
mill limitation, for the benetit'of In NOTICE
cancelled?
Lost
your
of a Resolut ion of I WILL nol be responsible for
4-5- ttp
Rutland VIllage for the purpose thepursuance
992-3325 or 992-3278
Good condition.
Board of Townsh ip Trustees
Call
992operator's
license?
any
debts
co
ntracted
by
any
of Cur-rent -expenses .
No
Sunday
Showiogs
of the Towns'hi p of Olive , Ohio ,
2966.
one other than myse lf.
HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
Said tax be-Ing : a renewal of passed on the 11th day of Sep 6-15-lfc
985-3529.
Signed , Larry R. Hubbard.
an existing tax of 2112 mills to tember, ·1972, there will be
run for five years.
10·20
-31p
submitted to a voteot the people
5-ACR E RANCH. Lake
PH. 9?2·2176
-------...:6~
- 11 - tfc IDEAL
of said Townsh ip at a General
Conchas,
New Mexico. $2,975.
POMEROY,
OHIO
at a rate not exceeding 2112 mIlls ELECTION to be held in REDUCE sale and last with · For Rent
8
ROOM
house
and
bath,
nice
·No
down
.
No lnleresl. $25 mo.
for each Of\e dollar of valuation, Township of Olive , Ohio, at the
GoBese Tabl e ts &amp; E-Vap 3 AND 4 ROOM furnlshed and
large lot, natural gas, built-i n for 119 mos . Vacallon
which amounts to twenty .flvt regular places of votino therein ,
"wa ter pills," Nelson Drug .
unfurnished
apartments GOLDMASTER 66 TR mineral
cents for each one hundred on Tuesday, the 7th day of
cabinets in kitchen . Close to
Paradise . Free Brochure .
dollars of valuat ion for fi'Ve November , 1972, the question of
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
'
10-23 -lfp
Phone 992-5434.
· metal mone~ finder, new
radio station in Bradbury.
·years.
Phone 992-2602.
2001 DO, Alameda, California
levying, in excess of the ten mill
$269.50,
2
months
old.
price
The Polls for said Election limitation , for the benefit of NEW lmproved " Zippies," the
10-13-121p 94501.
Sell lor $160. 1 yr . warranty.
will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M . Oli'Ve Township for the purpose
great iron pill now with
10·3-JOtp
Ph
one
773-5503.
and remain open unlll 6:30 of prov iding and maintaining
Vita min C. Ne lson Drug .
10-23-31c
o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard ftre apparatus, appl iances,
l0-23-21p
Time of said day .
5 ROOM house and bath,
Mobile Homes For Sale
buildings or si1es therefor or
. .pebol
. .. .
By ord.er of the Board of sources
. located on Brick Street,
·
of
water
supply
and
Elections, of Meigs County , materials therefor or the
Rutland ; interior being
Ohio .
establishment and maintenance
remodeled ; phone 742-3334.
of lines of fire alarm telegraph
l0-,20-121p
A Georgia Pori
Edwin S. Cozart or tl'ie payment of permt~nent,
Chairman part-time, or volunteer firemen~avannah, Ga., with Its
POMEROY - House, 6 rooms
or fire flghting companies to cobblestoned r 1 v e rf r a n t,
Dorothy M . Johnston operate the same. ,
and bath, 2 large porches,
Director
broad avenues, and oaklarge lot. newly painted ;
Said
taK
being
:
an
addlt
i9na
l
Dated Sept. 29, 1972.
ON YOUR DIN.
tax of · .SOI'h l mIll lo run for shaded squares,. was one of
phOne 9'12-3394.
Five years.
FU.
R
NISHED
2
bedroom
the
first
planned
cities
In
·
(10) 2, 9, 16, 23, "
'
apartment, adults only,
at a rate not exce-ed ing .50 m Ill North America. The port
Middleport ; phone 9'12·3874.
- - - - - - - - - - - - for each one dollar of valuation, was founded in 1733 by Gen.
·
10·22-llc
_ Which amounts to Five Cents for James Edward Oglethorpe
· LEGAL Nonc·e
each One hundred do.ll ars · of and a band of Englisll setTRAILER, Brown's Trailer.
T~e annual eJection of the valuation , for F lve Ye~rs . .
'· ·
·Court;.- pflilne - 992-3324. ·
Mt1g~ County Agrlculfural
The ·Polls tor said · Election tlers.
Soctet-Y· Directors will be held will be open at 6 :30 o'ciotk A.M .
' 10-22-f!c ·
·
Wednesday, November a, 1972 and remain· open until 6:30
at the ~ffl!=e of the Meigs County o'clock' P.M. Eastern s.tandard
12 X 60 MOB&gt;LE home ; .adults
9-7-lfc .,L
Comm•ss•onen In the court Time of said day .
only; call 9'12-5443.
=-=-:-::----:--.,.,
House at Pomeroy, OhiO fr,om s By order of the Board of
10-22-lfc .POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy, TWO bedroom. mobile home, In
p.m. fG 9 p.m .
Elections, of Metgs County
Parkv&gt;ew Kennels, Phone 992· · good condlllon, S1.600.
•
Quallficatlon:s for dl~:"tctors Ohio . , . •
'
5443.
.
tre that they .must be a
-~ ·
' .
~
'
'
Zuspan's Troller Court,
qulllfled vottr 01 Meigs County
Edwin s. Cozart
8-15-ttc
For
Sale
Velma G. Zuspan, Mason, W. .
ON
P.AIHS
&amp;
JEANS
lnd must have a membership
Chairman
Va.
ticket rn seid socltty for 1972,
APPLES, Fi1zpatrlck Qr·
10-12·151p
c,.ndldate-s~ petlllQns must be
Dorothy M. Johnstc.,
chords, State Route 689, Auto Sales
flltd with the Sic'rettry no later
.
Director
Buy~
Phone WllkesvlHe 669 -3785,
CASH paid for all makes and
than 5 p.m . Tuesday, October Dated Sept. 29, 1972
P1lrs
8·30-lfc 1 9 6 7
31, lf72.
V 0 L K S wA G E N ,
models of mobile homes.
:--::--:::=====:.......~~ec~anlcaJly...good;.calLatJer
Phone area oode 61H2J.mL _
'""' ····-- On~'t.
P•U~ns
ho.ldlng _(!O.l 2, t, 16, 23. .,
-lll~u.-· 1 :~A I R FREE
mtmutrlhfP t'c"fts at the close
·
AKC
Toy
Pood
les·,
Phone
H26
p.m.,
Lawrence
Donohue,
.
-- ------4.....:
·13-lfc
The best buy In the area ,
of the 1972 County Fair or ~ at
3872.
742-3048.
feast flft"n {151 calendar days
H•ve slacks &amp;'loans for the
&gt;0-20-llc Auto Sales
I
.
1Q-19-6tc
· btfort the date of election are
whole family , Save One.
qualified to vott.
The United States ·Steel
Third.
·
' The Meig&gt; County Corp. , financed by J .. P.
1950 1•}CTON Ford pickup lruc.k; 1968 OODGE, 1-ton truck, slake 1942 JEEP, full cab · good
9._
POMEROY .
Agricultural Society Morgan, was the nation's
conditlon, 4 wheel ,r drl·ve ;
body, good condition. Phone
Marlin rifle; 3 sowsi phone
8r :. Mn . Mtrvln King,
.
6il
Jock
C..rsty, Mgr, ·
phone 9'12-6383 .
985-4190
or
9~5 - 41 .53. ·
.
247-2161
.
Secretiry first billion-dcUar corpora·
Phone
992-2111
10·1B-61c
r Arnold Gr1lt
10-20-3tc
t10-17-61p . 741-4211
!1~) ~7. 23, 30, 3tc
Rutl1nd
tion,
as
Ohio.

s1971 tBUICK

•

Sale

. BARNF.Y

e·HE.ATJNG ·

•PLUMBING

CAMPUS CLA'ITER

SPOUTING
ePAINTING
. .

·p·,-,,,,.M.otor Co. @t: ____________

SHARK, ARE \'OU L EFT~
NEW LEFn RIG.HT;;
F,J.R RIGHT'{;

l

W ~i TE: ~ ~ .;,.;T ,

T~ROII

I\\ NOT

I WAN'f" 10 GO OUT AND
GE.f MVSEL.F 50MEltiiNG 10 EAT.

BOY, M11 GLAD 'tl:lU
CAME RIGHT OVER
AFTER I CALLED!

"EFT, ~ N~ EAT
BOTH

\liT~

SJ~E

!

1

PHONE 992:2550

WOULD 'IOU

EXPERT

MIND WA1tHING
1l-ltG PLACE RJR
A trn'LE ~ILE .

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

o·

&amp;

'1

WHUTIS
'10'
KISS IN;
DEAR?

Kilhl's

4

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

- -- - - -

"HEI.L"
HEATING &amp;

70MA!(E.

WINNIE
BELIEVE ME,:£
DIDN'T MEAN
10 DECEIVE
YOU

euT THE
OTHER NICHT... '
IN MY HOTEL
ROOM ...IWENT
iHROUGH iHIS

OLD 5CR&lt;\P
BOOK OF
MINE .••

---=-,------

.

COOLING

llOIJ

- - -- - -

I'M CfSIQ6 ~-;

ARNOLD

BROTHERS
o.

USED

-----

· Meigs Equipment

FORCE! THEREFORE, USC QQ!lE

.£"KHI£ Al!D
PUMJAl!

10 lRAP THEM!

ARRIVE ili
THIS !tEMtHG
CMSTAL CITY
HUH!!l!G FOR

~

A ClUt TO

THE MYSTERY 1:.-1--.
OF TH!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MIINPRl\GORA•

ACROSS
L Irish
county
5. Let fly, as
DICK TRACY
HIS HELPER IS IN
~E HOSPITAL.

:.....-------:---Y,;

w.

----~--

'

r-------=~"

THINK VOU CAN WORK
lN AN fNTIRN'S GOWN?

~UT~~~···

a)l)/1,~ .at't.~:,

V ERAS__ER-1.

. • ·'&gt;• .._ ·,

· · .. q

~...,

------

,~,.,.

1-lOSPITAl.
BED HE WILl. GIVE VOU
EYEWITNESS ·oesc:Rt P·
FOR A SKeTCH,

~~ :~~&lt;:{~ ~ '?

lie'

.,....,~

~IS

r-.

We'talk to JOU,

~.,.,.

U. English
river

DOWN
I. Haze
2. French
city
3, Former
showcase
for
Snooky
LanSQn
(3 wds.)
4. United
5. Tune In
6. WIJte
about
7, Full of

an arrow

-------

.WMP0/1390;

N,AI{Be .'01116
Uf'$100 ~~!
.; HI C.~

niE OHE WITH THE FlAMING HAIR
THE GIANT! IT \I./Out.D Sf: FOOLlSt1 FOR.
l'OIJ TWO Pt.HW SPECIMENS TO ATIE&gt;IPI

Farm Equipment

_____

ro 'Dl IQIOtN

11. One of
the Ages
12. Harebrained
13. Veer
14, "- by
15.

~ri~~ht"

(mus. &gt;
JU:ar
(comb.
form)
IT. Wine
(Fr.)
..__...., 18, Take part
In
20, Blithe
21. 11 Terrlble"
czar
22. Highway
of Pom·
pey's day
ZS. Deadly
25. Pluvipus
26, Skiers'

.r

(autr.)

I. Major
Barbara's
group
(2 wds.)
t, Animate

I MAUCS
NOI•ER

!

I

Yesterday'• An~wer
'.1
10. Clergy·
25. Tru1t
man'sresl· 27. Anthology -~:::;¢;:~-"""~'--'
dence
30. Exhaust
r
U, Viva voce 32. "Henry
Y.-WINT '
It Sea call
IV" char·
)
'
acter
20, Climbing
34. Au
plant
nature!

t

23. sluggish
Least

36, Water·
courtre

\

:14. Everywhere
(2 wds. J

barrier
31. Overweight

.

II

I
I
I
I I

1ANIAT
.

l.A

II

•

.

mecca

l\l!l!SSA\5~

10 iHFOI!M Tt"R!!"I'
lliiiT HER MOTHEI't
HA5 A6AIN GONE
· OUT ATN~T
WlTlfOUT AN
l!XPLANATION
lS FtruSTRATED
al'MRS.WI~
VlGILAHCe.

27. Nevada
city
28. Strip of
wood
Z9. African
antelope
31. Craggy
hill
3%. Earnings
33. Alder tree
(Scot. l
35, Circum·
ventetl
17. Munich·
01
Mr"S."
U . Unruflled
3t, Among
fO. QuaverIng sound

Pt \ ' l 1.,

DAJLY CRYPTOQUOTE _: Here's

how to work it:
,
A,XYDLiiAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply 1tand1 for another , In this sample A 15
used for the three L'•. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apootr~pbe~ the length and formation of the words are all
lilnll, Ea(h day -the (Qde llltters are dllrerent. ·
.·
CIIYPTOilUOTES
ON
VA

VDSV
EN

BLAO

VDRIZi

DN

INKPR· KNIV

ENRIK
•,

QSl
RJ

GAAL.-JSOFN I'

SBBALU

IAV

BSLI-..::lt:Elt;..--

XADIJA'l

,\

•

�. '

a.:.. The Daily Senllntl, Middieport-POtJleroy, 0., Oi-t. 23, 1972

•

.Sentin~l Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
LEGAL NOTICE
Trust~es
; ~~:~snho:~j~NOTlCE

L;,~~::~o;1

~·

·r CE
O
LEGAL N I .

NOTlCE
ON FlUNG
OF i~VENTORY

.or

@)

,--:--~~'---.-~-----.:..--,--"'"'",For
..

~-

receive .
AND APPRAI'SEMENT
.M. Nov . ' The 51a!e of Ohio, Meigs

Po

2 SfGII$
· .

•

Of

·

·guaLIJY
c

.

ror.
Mot
·
.
.
Ot· Oe
.

•

- e~Pf;~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ;r.,~ ~;the~;~ Y.,;~o.~IJ',~h;e~--~--~--~----~::A~~-~~~~
---i~--~~~~~:~~:~~:~1;9;.7:~~ii:dm~s: ~d~ ~:~c~o1~o~n~~~~
are residents

•.

c·

,n2 STEREO B track in walnu1
consolebwi1h
-speTakekr
balance
and
ase .
a e
over
payments of $6.50_per mooth
. orpayba&gt;anceof$101.50 . Call

of
viz: the surviving
spouse, the next of kin , th e
benef iciaries under the wil l;

r:::===::::-::r siiVNiiiiuF~FV.'t:s~;:;:-\';1
LOOKV
YONDER, .
LUKEV!!

Busine.ss .· Services-

~VCK!, I J ·l&lt;JAS
IIJ 1'1E MOOD FOI&lt;. a.JE !

HISSELF A
OUTBOARD

KICKER FER
HIS BOAT 1!

'7 .,

1

..,

•~-i"~~9'1~1~-S~3;3~1.~======~~~1-.f"~=:==-::~::=:~~==l~l
rARTH MOVING r-~~·,~~=-------~--,-r-~~~~::::,~--~--~----ROOFING .

l!!"ll..

0

bed 10ft. x 7 tt . w 2s ·1n;
.
$2849
LEFT IN lay -away Detox Zig .
.&amp;:It
e ·.
,
1ides with 31 ln . head ' and
por wagon. Beautiful coral finish with vinyl interia ·
lag sewing machine. Thi s
If I HAVE
tailgate with c enler door in
fact.ory a ir con~itioned, luggage rack, radio, 350 v:8
machine overcasts, darns ,
ToGo
tailgate.
~nd to the attorney or attorneys
engme,. a~tomaf1c trans., power steering &amp; brakes, like
· em'bro ide rie s and makes
Dozer &amp; End foader work,
e·ed to be mounted and represent ing any of the
neww_- w t.re-s. If you want a s hoW piece &amp; plenty of lu xury
button holes. Pay balance of
ponds, basement, · land.
Take Me To
pain teO . Heavy duty 71 1 in . or l'lforemention:ed persons :
try lht s outstand1ng buy.
$41.50 or pay $5.25 per month .
scaping, We have · 2 size
larger
EmmaBoMttom
. Barber,
Deceased
Call 991-533 1.
dorers, 2 sire loaders. Work
THE SHOP ·
eCARP~·
levers . hois1 with .P T.O. an a Long
, Ohio
, Oliv~.
.£J NTRY
12 cab protector with 2 ln . Township, No . 20718.
l971_CHEVROLET
.
•
S309S
10-19.6tc
done by hour or contract.
Wli'lgs .
A hie- r Barber , Decease d.
fv,al!bu ha_rdtop c~upe, low mileage, new car title, san"'
Free Estimates. We also
A!·~'.'.·'.: RIDGE ROAD
4 corn6r lights. 6 reflectors Long Bottom , Ohio, Olive
dal.wood fmlsh w1lh brown vinyl roof, vinyl sa ddle in ANT IQUE pump organ , all
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
a.:;;~k•:;~"Jnc:~R·;~O:!Y~c,uu~~ilrtg"
• · ._c
·
and mud flapS .
NQ. 20719 .
tenor
original except new bellows . trucks and low-boy for
1 1 ·•ng , 1ur bah Yd ramatic, power
Wheelbase su rtable for body . Township,
You are hereby
nolified that
. .' 4 ·season air cond·t·on
· hire.
Servl~e
25,000 lbs . G.V .W. or heavier . the Inventories and Ap steermg, wh ite-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
Over 80 years old. Made ,by See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
DICK
7t000 lbs . !-Beam front axle- . praisements of the esl·atesof the
guards. poWer brakes. radio .
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co., Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
VAUGHN
ror
· Free Estimate
18,000 lbs . 2 speed rear a)(le . aforementioned, deceased , lat e
Worces ter, Mass . One 'bellOws after 7 p m or phone 992·
992-3374
r
5 speed synchromesh Trans . of sa id County , were filed in I h iS
ty pe . Phone 992 -3904.
S232.
· ·
'
Let Dick and D•le Help You
miSSion
..
Direc1
in
flf1h
.
·courl.
Said
lnv
enlor
les
and
1o
_
.1J.If
L
'
with
Yo~r Meat Problem •.
lHcu . in . VBeng ine Orlarger . Appraiseme.nt s wilt be for
Ill
Heavy duly oil Filter .
hearing before th iS Court on the
4,000 lbs . m inimum front ~5th day of October , 1972, at
REG ISTERED EnQiish Setter
spring capaci1y.
10 ,00 o'clock A.M.
'lPEN EVES, 8:00P.M.
puppies, 6 weeks old: phone
POMEROY
11,000 lbs. minimum Rear
Any perso.n desir ing to file
"PPMEROY, OHIO
992-5072.
spring capacity .
exceptions thereto must file ·
10-20-Jtc
Auxiliary Rear springs.
them a11oast five days prior to ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -.....!
HOME &amp; AUTO
Combination rear &amp; dlrec- the date set for he8r ing .
19
KAWAS
Given under my hand on a
WANT ADS
Nott.Ce
71
AKI 100, excellent
lional signa11igh1s wlth Hazara
992 _2094
swi·tch .
seal or said Court, this 12th day
. NFORMATION 1
co ndit ion, ready to go.
From the largest
Dual electric horns .
of October 1972.
. • DEADLINES
Sacri fice for only $235. Phone 606 E. Main Pomeroy
Cab marker lights .
Mann ing D. Webster ,5 P.M. Day Before Publicatiorr: HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good
Coolville 667 -621.11.
Bulldozer Radiator to
On Most American C..rs
Judge ana exofticto Clerk
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
pl ace lo qo each Friday
10-20,12tp
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
Healer &amp; defroS1er .
Small~st H.eater Core.
P~&gt;wer Steering.
of said Meigs Covnty
Ca nce llation . . . . Corrections
evenmg, 7 p .m. at Laurel
Nathan Biggs
"-GUARANTEED2 speed wind~hield wipers &amp;
Common Pleas Court Will be accepted unf il 9 a.m . tor , Cliff on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west Mobile Homes for Sale
and
Ra.diator
Specialist
Phone 992-2094
washer .
ProbateD lyisi on
OayofPubJication
of Rock Spring s Fairground . 1965 ATLAS~ 0 b 1'l
h
900 x 20 - 10pJy.trpn1 &amp; spare
r REGULATIONS
'"
e ome,
FURN
tire highway, tread 7'' rims .
By Ann B. Watson
Th e Publisher reserves the -·-·
10-10-lfc
SOx lO, two bedroom , front
JTURE
Po111eroy_Home Auto
900 )( 20 .,._ 10 ply Dual rear
Depu ty crerk right to edit or reject any ads
kitchen. eKcellent cond ition .
·
Open8Til5
mud &amp; snow !read , 7" rlms .
aeemed , obieclional.
The
Ph one 985-3555.
Stop In and See Our
CaS! spoke wheels.
(10 ) 16, 23,21
pub lisherw ill no1beresponsible Real Estate For Sale
10-20-61p
Fl
I
Monday lhru Saturday
Heavy dUty 13" min imum
for more I than one incorrect'
OOr
ISP ay.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.
Clutch ,
·
inse rt ion .
Heavy duty Brake Booster
RATES
CHARMING, old er bri ck and COME AND SEE . Have new
with 7 in . rear brakes .
' For Wan' Ad Service
fra me home across fr om shipment ot flowers I~ fall
Heavy duty Bumper &amp; front
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Sce nt s per Word. one insertion
Syracuse grade schoo l - 4 and Christmas ; will make Real Estate For Sale
DOZER and back hoe work,
DRIVE A LITTLE
tow hooks .
ON TAX LEVY IN
Minimum Charge75c
bcdrqoms,
new
furnace,
builtponds and septic tanks, ditR
1
1
EXCESS OF THE
12
1
flower
arrangements;
have
- SAVE A LOTI
ear qw oop .
TEN MILL LIMITATION
c~n s per word three
in kitc hen, lOOx 100 corner lot, over 1,000 gift items, also FARMLAND for sale by owner.
ching service; top soil. fill
L.H. &amp; R .H . Sr .. West Coa st
co nsec ut iv e insert ioris.
82 acres of level land . Meigs
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex lllflny ex tra s, $18,000. For
Bargain Center
NOTICE is hereby given that
18 cents per ·word six con
mirrors.
jewelry , Avon bottles, some
County, Oh io, on County Road
10 amp . Battery .
In pursuance of a Resolut ion ot secufive Insertions .
cavating. Phone 992-5367,
priva te show ing ca ll l -888 - antiques ; open 9 a.m. to 6
46, located 2 3-10 miles south
Rt. 1 "at caution light"
50 amp . or larger altunator . the Boord of Townsh ip Trustees
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Dick Karr, Jr.
1957 ,
p.m ., e)(cept Friday, closed
of
Tuppers
Plalns
P.O.
on
Cab grab handles Left &amp; of the Township of Sutlon. Ohio, ads and ads paid within 10 day s
9-1-tlc
10 22-31c
Fr iday ; phone 985-3537;
CARD OF THANKS
Right.
passed on the 1St day of August.
-good hard surfaced road; also - --'---- Smalley's
Gilt
Shop,
Chester,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Full Depth Foam seat .
1972, there will be submitted to
&amp; OBITUARY
.on Tupper s Plains Water
Ohio.
Heavy duty factory rein · a vote of the people of said
$1.50 for 50 word mi nimum
system; includes farm house
Clean used furnllur•
10-18-12tc
forced trame .
.
Town s hip at a General
Each addition"' word 2c .
Help. Wanted
in need of repair, two barns in Real Estate For Sale
Truck and bed to be painted ELECTION to be held in th e
BLIND ADS
Guaranteed
appliances
good condition, several
Omaha Orange,
Township of Sutton , Ohio, at the
Additiona l 25 , Charge per
WINTER
pol
aloes.
$5
a
100
lb.;
Huffy'
20",
BIKES
ou tbuildlngs; land lays well;
BidderS are requested to reqular a la ces of vntino th,..rPin . Advertisement .
phone
247-1642.
Murray
10
speedsdiscount
has beautiful mo-untainous
OFFICE HOUJt~ .,
submit with their bid for above on Tuesd~y . the 7th day or No 10-18-61c
equipment a further bid for a vember, 1972, the ques t-ion of •8;30 a.m;' to 5:00 ,p.m, Da ily,
view in all directions ; ap.
prices.
. DELIVERY
---::-:-~.....,.--1962 International 1700 series levy ing , inex cessofthetenm ill B: 3C a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
proximately 25 miles from
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
1971 DODGE Charger, power
dump truck to be a trade -In on limitation. tor the benefit of Saturday .
Athens,
Ohio
and
ParkersOpen
to7; Closed Mondays
new truck.
Sutton Township for the purpose
stee ring ; gold with black
W.
Va
.,
14
mlles
North
burg,
The Township Trustees may Of Current expenses.
DRIVER SALES
vin)·f top ; phone 949-5424.
of Pomeroy, Ohio. Ideal for
accept the lowest bid and
Said tax being: a renewal of
10-18-61c
nice home(s) development. ·
reserve the right to reject any an u istlng tax of .50(112 ) m ill to In Memory
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
------------etc. . Southeastern Ohio Real
or all bids or any part thereof . run for five years.
delivered
right
to your
IN MEMORY of ou r dea r
1966 - 266 CU. IN. V-B In·
Estate Company, Broker;
l,.ebanon Township Trustees
project. Fast and easy. Free
Father, Fred M. Co llins, who
ternational engine, 4 speed
Clarence G . Lawrence , Clerk at a rate not exceeding .so mill
phone Belpre, 423-6293 ;
estimates . Phone 992 -3284:
P . o . BoK 34, Portland , Ohio for each one dollar o·r valuation ,
transmission complete;
passed away 9 years ag o.
Parkersburg, 485-7539 or 422· ·
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
$3.57
PER
HOUR
.. sno
which amoUnts to Flv&amp;·Cents tor
phone 992-7384.
110 Mechanic St.
Oc Iober 13, 1963.
8905 . Price $35,000; terms,
Middleport,
Ohio.
(10) 23, 11
each one hundred dollars of Th,•usand
thoug hts of one so
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 •
10-22-3tc
cash. Ask directions at
valuation. for Fiv-e. Years .
6-30-llc
dear,
Mlllhone's Service Station at
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M . 01len brings a tiny tear ;
Tuppers Plains .
$4,000.00
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
16 FAT la mbs, ready for the
NOTlCE OF ELECTION
and remain open until 6 : 30 Thoug hts go back to scenes long
10-22-91p
2
BEDROOMS
- Stove and
REASONABLE- rates , Ph. 446·
'
freezer
;
phone
992-2630.
ON TAJC LEVY IN
past,
·
o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard
No
experience
refrigerator included in this
4782, GalliE&gt;Oiis, John Russell,
EXCESS OF THE TEN
10-22-3tc
Time of said d~y.
1
e
rol
ls
on,
But
memories
Tin
2 STORY home, bath and 112, sale. uv·tng and dining
MILL L!MlTATlON
Owner
&amp; Operator.
By order of the Board of
lt~s l .
carpeted, may be had with
NOTICE IS herebY given that Electrons, of Meigs County,
5-12-lfc
room,
front
and
back
por.
MODERN
walnut
stereo,
AM·
Sad ly missed by daughters : necessary. On the job
in pursuanclt of a Resolution of Ohio .
basic furniture ; for apF
M
radio,
4
speed
changer,
4
ches.
2
dug
wells.
1;,
acres
of
Mr
s.
Lore
na
M.
Rice.
Mr
s.
the Board of County Com ·
pointment call9'12-7384 or 992·
C. BRADFORD, Aucti~neer
speaker sound system .
'missioners of the county of
land.
Fl orence L. McDan ieL Mrs . training. Ph. 446-0677
Edwin S. Cozart
7133 .
Complete Servlce
Meigs, Ohio, passed on the 5th
Balance $68.27. Use our
Bernice V. Pauley.
Chairman
BUSINESS RENTAL
10-22-3tc
Phone 949-3821
day of September, 1J72, there
budget
term
s.
Call
992-7085.
10-12 -llp
BLOCK
4
room
business
Racine, Ohio
will be submUttd to a vote of the
for
personal
interview.
Dorothy M Johnston
10-22-61c
building and a modern 3
people of said Meigs County at 11
Critt
Bradford
Director
~:-::---:----:-­
General ELECTION 10 be held Dated Sept . 29 , 1972
bedroom paneled home with
~- 1 -llc
Notice
MAPLE
stereo-radio
com
In the County of Meigs, Ohio, at
bath,
furnace
heat,
front
-=--,--CLELAND·
bination,
AM-FM
radio,
4
tht regular places of vot ing (10) 2, 9, 16, 23, 41
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
porch and view of the Ohio
Employment Wante,d
speed changer, 4 speaker
.~hertinj on Tuesday, the 7fh day
REALTY
doors and Windows, carporfs,
sound system . Balance $73 .45.
Rlver.
Wood
burning
of Novtm.ber:. 1972, the auesHon
608 E. Main ·
marquees, aluminum siding
WILL DO baby s itling for
of levying, In excess of the ten
Use our budge! terms. Call
fireplace ln living. Beautiful
mill Umllotlon , for lhe beneflt ol
railing . A. Jacob, sales
preschool ch ildr en in my
and
. Pomeroy .
9'12-7085 .
kitchen : Large lot. All for
I
Meigs
Countv
for
the
purpose
of
NOTICE
Of_
ELECTION
hOfYle
by
lheday
.
Reliable
and
representative.
For free
:
10-22-~lc
.I
only $25,000.00.
the maintenance and operation
ON TAX LEVY
'
mature. Phone 949-5101 .
estimates, phone Charles
of schools, traln'ing centers or
IN EXCESS OF THE
COUNTRY
Lisle, Syracuse, v. V.
. 10-18-61c E L ECTROLUX. Vacuum
.work ahops for mentally
TEN MILL LIMITATION
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
2
BEDROOMS
Bath,
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
retarded persons.
. NO'TICE is hereby given that
Cleaner complete with at - brick. 2 or 3 bedrooms, bath,
'
plains
water.
Front
and
back
3·2-lfc
_ Said tax being : a renewal of -m pursuance of a Resolution of
tachments, cordwinder and
dining room , gas forced air
· en ulstlng tax of .25 (•1•) m 11 1 to the Council of the Village at
porches.
Garage
and
garden
:-:-::~-::-:-~~­
Wanted To Buy
pain! spray. Used bt in like
ruo t.or five years.
Pomeroy, Ohio, passed on the
heat, storm doors and
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
spot. Only $d,OOO,OO.
new
condition . Pa ~· $34.45
Window
21st day of August, 1972, there
WOULD like 1o buy used flute in
Sep11c tanks installed. George
2
porches.
garage,
windows,
MIDDLEPORT
cash or budget plan available.
at a rete not exceeding .25 mills will besubrrillted to a vote of th e
Air Conditioners
good condition; call after 6
( Bill) Pull&gt;ns. Phone 9'12-2478.
lot.
$8,500.00.
level
Phone 992-5641.
MODERN 4 BEDROOMS • tor 18Ct1 one dollar of valuation, people of said Village at a
p.m.
992-5224.
4· 25-lfc
which amounts to Two and one- General ELECTION to be held
10-17-6tc
2 baths, nlce kitchen with bar
Hot Water. Heaters
10-22-31c
half cents for each one hundred In the Village of Pomeroy , Ohio,
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
and cook units. Garage and
Plumbing
dollars at valuation, for Five at the regular places of voting
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
NEW 1972 Zig -Zag Sewing
frame. 5 l~rge bedrooms, 11f7
rec. room In basement.
'ytars.
therein , on Tuesday, the 7th day
Iocaled at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
200
BALES
of
good
th
is
year's
Machine
Electrical
Work
In
original
factory
baths,
dlnlng,
nlce
kllchen
,
of November, 1972, the question
.
.. . .
Large
covered
patio
full
Complete
front ~nd servlce,
hay,
delivered;
phone
742
·
ca rlon . Zig -Zag , lo make
cellar, 2 glassed in por ches,
• The Polls tor uld Election of levying , in excess of the ten
length of house. Asking
tune
up
and
brake service.
4459.
buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons
.
will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. mill limitation, for the benet it of
garage, ca rport. $12,800.00.
$24,000.00.
balanced elec·
Wheels
10-20-3tc
and remain open until 6:30 Pomeroy VIllage for the pur monograms and make fancy
Ironically.
All
work
• 165 ACRES
•
o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard POse of Current Expenses .
designs with ius! the lwist of a
POMEROY
2
story
frame,
Time ot sal(f day .
Said ta)l being : a renewal of
guaranteed
.
Reason1ble
1960-1965 VOLKSWAGEN for
single-dial. Left in lay -away
STOCK FARM - 2 houses, f
Sv order of the Board of an e)C!St!ng tax of Two mills to
2 bedrooms, bath, nice
rates. Phone 742·3232 or 992parts; phone 985-4118.
and
nev
er
been
used.
Will sell
farm
ponds. Several out1
Elections, of Meigs County, run tor five years .
3213.
kllchen, carpeted, iusl
10-20-31&lt;.
for
only
·
$47
cash
or
Credit
buildings. All m&gt;nerals. On
Ohio .
·
992 -2448
7-27-lfc
terms available. Phone 992 renovated throughout.
Edwin s. Cozart at a rate not excee'd ing 2.0 mills
school bus and mall routes.
5641
.
$8,500.00.
.
Pomeroy,
Chairman for each one dolla·r of valuation ,
;:W-;:1-;-L-;-L-c-u-;-1- o-r--:-tr- lm
Want $25,000.00 .
OLD Furniture , oak tables,
- -1-rees:
Which amounts to Twentv Cents
10-17-61c
organ s, dishes , clocks, brass
125
ACRES
easonable;
also
clean ou1
Dorothy M . Johnston for each one hundred dollars of
MIDDLEPORT RURAL -- 1
beds, or complete households .
KOSCOT KOSMETlCS (M INK
120 IN WOODS - Good 9
Director valuation. for Five years .
basements ,
attics
and
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
story, 3 bedrooms, utility,
O&gt;L BASE&gt;. We have many
Dated Sept. 29, 1972
The Polls for said Election
room house with 2 baths, gas
cellars; phone 949·3221 .
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 9'12-6271 .
Will be open at 6 : 30 o'clock A . M .
bath, gas forced air furnace,
new products since the for heal, water well, 3 porches, 2
10·4-JOic
(10) 2, 9j 16. 23, -4t
and remain open · unlll 6: 30
6-28-lfc
mation of this Company. Also
recreat io n room, fruit
large
gardens,
and
all
c k P.M. Eastern Standard
several new ones this month
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
storage, paneling and tile.
- -----------o'clo
Time or said day .
minerals ." $26,000.00.
plus
monthly
speclals.
All
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
$9,800.00.
By
order
of
the·
Board
of
NOTICE OF ELECTION
106 ACRES
these in addition to the For Sale or Trade
CLEANED.' REPAI·RED.
Elections, of Meigs County,
ON TAX LEVY
4
BEDROOM
MODERN
McCormick
No.
16
originals . Ladles, we would 1963 CHEV . Station Wagon,
Ohlo.
MILLER SAN&gt;TATION,
IN EXCE$5 OF THE
WANT TO SELL? LIST
HOME- Enclosed bath wllh
like very much for you to try
Edwin S. Cozart
TEN MILL LIMlTATtON
.
STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE
excellent condition, sell or FIELD HARVESTER
WITH US, WE ADVERTISE
Chairman
large utility. Beautiful
these cosmetics and to serve
NOTICE Is hereby given that
662-3035.
trade lor Volkswagon of equal
Good Condition
YOUR
PROPERTY,
In pursuance of a Resolution of
you . Phorie Helen Jane, 992kitchen, gas lorced air
va lue ; phone 985-4118.
10-4-lfc.
Dorothy M : Johnston
the Council of the VIllage of
5113.
THROUGH
OHIO AND W.
furnace
and
basement,
30
10-20·31c
Director •
Rutland, Ohio, passed on the
McCormick No, 50
__:__
VA.
10-1-ttc
acres of meadow. Garage
2nd day of August, 1972, there Dated Sep t . 29, 1972
SEWlNG MACHINES, Repair
HENRY E, CLELAND
1961 FORO Futuro, 2 door, FIELD HARVESTER
will be submitted to a vote ot the
and all minerals. 527,000.00.
service, all makes. 9'12-2284.
MISCELLANEOUS Sale, Port.
REALTOR
people of said Village at a (10) 2, 9, 16, 23, 41
stan dard transmission , extra With nearly new 1 row corn
HAVING
TROUBLE
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Church,
land
Methodist
General ELECTION lo be held - - - - - , - - - - - - - good con dition or will trade head . Thls can use 2-row
Phone 992-2259
Authorized
SELLING,
THEN
YOU
Singer Sales and
In the VIllage of Rutland , Ohio,
Thursday, Friday ; October
for an aulomatic of equal
NOTlCE
OF
ELECTION
Service.
We
Sharpon Scissors.
SHOULD
CALL
US
FOR
AN
at the regular place of voting
26th and 27th ; baked goods,
unit.
· ON TAX LEVY lN
va lue; phone 949-3915.
therein , on Tuesday, the 7th day
3-29-tfc
&gt;NTERVIEW.
Frlday.
RACl
NE
10
room
house,
lEXCESS OF THE
10-20-3tc
1-Gehl
of November, 1972, the question
balh, basement, garage, two
TEN MlLL L1M1TAT10N
HELEN
L,
TEAFORD,
10-22-3tc
-:;-A-;-:
U-:
TO;::::M::;O::;B-;:1L-:E:-:-In-su- r-an_c_e_been
of levy ing, in excess of the ten
Is heret1y given that
lo1s. Phone 949-4313.
ASSOCIATE
FIELD
HARVESTER
mill limitation, for the benetit'of In NOTICE
cancelled?
Lost
your
of a Resolut ion of I WILL nol be responsible for
4-5- ttp
Rutland VIllage for the purpose thepursuance
992-3325 or 992-3278
Good condition.
Board of Townsh ip Trustees
Call
992operator's
license?
any
debts
co
ntracted
by
any
of Cur-rent -expenses .
No
Sunday
Showiogs
of the Towns'hi p of Olive , Ohio ,
2966.
one other than myse lf.
HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
Said tax be-Ing : a renewal of passed on the 11th day of Sep 6-15-lfc
985-3529.
Signed , Larry R. Hubbard.
an existing tax of 2112 mills to tember, ·1972, there will be
run for five years.
10·20
-31p
submitted to a voteot the people
5-ACR E RANCH. Lake
PH. 9?2·2176
-------...:6~
- 11 - tfc IDEAL
of said Townsh ip at a General
Conchas,
New Mexico. $2,975.
POMEROY,
OHIO
at a rate not exceeding 2112 mIlls ELECTION to be held in REDUCE sale and last with · For Rent
8
ROOM
house
and
bath,
nice
·No
down
.
No lnleresl. $25 mo.
for each Of\e dollar of valuation, Township of Olive , Ohio, at the
GoBese Tabl e ts &amp; E-Vap 3 AND 4 ROOM furnlshed and
large lot, natural gas, built-i n for 119 mos . Vacallon
which amounts to twenty .flvt regular places of votino therein ,
"wa ter pills," Nelson Drug .
unfurnished
apartments GOLDMASTER 66 TR mineral
cents for each one hundred on Tuesday, the 7th day of
cabinets in kitchen . Close to
Paradise . Free Brochure .
dollars of valuat ion for fi'Ve November , 1972, the question of
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
'
10-23 -lfp
Phone 992-5434.
· metal mone~ finder, new
radio station in Bradbury.
·years.
Phone 992-2602.
2001 DO, Alameda, California
levying, in excess of the ten mill
$269.50,
2
months
old.
price
The Polls for said Election limitation , for the benefit of NEW lmproved " Zippies," the
10-13-121p 94501.
Sell lor $160. 1 yr . warranty.
will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M . Oli'Ve Township for the purpose
great iron pill now with
10·3-JOtp
Ph
one
773-5503.
and remain open unlll 6:30 of prov iding and maintaining
Vita min C. Ne lson Drug .
10-23-31c
o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard ftre apparatus, appl iances,
l0-23-21p
Time of said day .
5 ROOM house and bath,
Mobile Homes For Sale
buildings or si1es therefor or
. .pebol
. .. .
By ord.er of the Board of sources
. located on Brick Street,
·
of
water
supply
and
Elections, of Meigs County , materials therefor or the
Rutland ; interior being
Ohio .
establishment and maintenance
remodeled ; phone 742-3334.
of lines of fire alarm telegraph
l0-,20-121p
A Georgia Pori
Edwin S. Cozart or tl'ie payment of permt~nent,
Chairman part-time, or volunteer firemen~avannah, Ga., with Its
POMEROY - House, 6 rooms
or fire flghting companies to cobblestoned r 1 v e rf r a n t,
Dorothy M . Johnston operate the same. ,
and bath, 2 large porches,
Director
broad avenues, and oaklarge lot. newly painted ;
Said
taK
being
:
an
addlt
i9na
l
Dated Sept. 29, 1972.
ON YOUR DIN.
tax of · .SOI'h l mIll lo run for shaded squares,. was one of
phOne 9'12-3394.
Five years.
FU.
R
NISHED
2
bedroom
the
first
planned
cities
In
·
(10) 2, 9, 16, 23, "
'
apartment, adults only,
at a rate not exce-ed ing .50 m Ill North America. The port
Middleport ; phone 9'12·3874.
- - - - - - - - - - - - for each one dollar of valuation, was founded in 1733 by Gen.
·
10·22-llc
_ Which amounts to Five Cents for James Edward Oglethorpe
· LEGAL Nonc·e
each One hundred do.ll ars · of and a band of Englisll setTRAILER, Brown's Trailer.
T~e annual eJection of the valuation , for F lve Ye~rs . .
'· ·
·Court;.- pflilne - 992-3324. ·
Mt1g~ County Agrlculfural
The ·Polls tor said · Election tlers.
Soctet-Y· Directors will be held will be open at 6 :30 o'ciotk A.M .
' 10-22-f!c ·
·
Wednesday, November a, 1972 and remain· open until 6:30
at the ~ffl!=e of the Meigs County o'clock' P.M. Eastern s.tandard
12 X 60 MOB&gt;LE home ; .adults
9-7-lfc .,L
Comm•ss•onen In the court Time of said day .
only; call 9'12-5443.
=-=-:-::----:--.,.,
House at Pomeroy, OhiO fr,om s By order of the Board of
10-22-lfc .POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy, TWO bedroom. mobile home, In
p.m. fG 9 p.m .
Elections, of Metgs County
Parkv&gt;ew Kennels, Phone 992· · good condlllon, S1.600.
•
Quallficatlon:s for dl~:"tctors Ohio . , . •
'
5443.
.
tre that they .must be a
-~ ·
' .
~
'
'
Zuspan's Troller Court,
qulllfled vottr 01 Meigs County
Edwin s. Cozart
8-15-ttc
For
Sale
Velma G. Zuspan, Mason, W. .
ON
P.AIHS
&amp;
JEANS
lnd must have a membership
Chairman
Va.
ticket rn seid socltty for 1972,
APPLES, Fi1zpatrlck Qr·
10-12·151p
c,.ndldate-s~ petlllQns must be
Dorothy M. Johnstc.,
chords, State Route 689, Auto Sales
flltd with the Sic'rettry no later
.
Director
Buy~
Phone WllkesvlHe 669 -3785,
CASH paid for all makes and
than 5 p.m . Tuesday, October Dated Sept. 29, 1972
P1lrs
8·30-lfc 1 9 6 7
31, lf72.
V 0 L K S wA G E N ,
models of mobile homes.
:--::--:::=====:.......~~ec~anlcaJly...good;.calLatJer
Phone area oode 61H2J.mL _
'""' ····-- On~'t.
P•U~ns
ho.ldlng _(!O.l 2, t, 16, 23. .,
-lll~u.-· 1 :~A I R FREE
mtmutrlhfP t'c"fts at the close
·
AKC
Toy
Pood
les·,
Phone
H26
p.m.,
Lawrence
Donohue,
.
-- ------4.....:
·13-lfc
The best buy In the area ,
of the 1972 County Fair or ~ at
3872.
742-3048.
feast flft"n {151 calendar days
H•ve slacks &amp;'loans for the
&gt;0-20-llc Auto Sales
I
.
1Q-19-6tc
· btfort the date of election are
whole family , Save One.
qualified to vott.
The United States ·Steel
Third.
·
' The Meig&gt; County Corp. , financed by J .. P.
1950 1•}CTON Ford pickup lruc.k; 1968 OODGE, 1-ton truck, slake 1942 JEEP, full cab · good
9._
POMEROY .
Agricultural Society Morgan, was the nation's
conditlon, 4 wheel ,r drl·ve ;
body, good condition. Phone
Marlin rifle; 3 sowsi phone
8r :. Mn . Mtrvln King,
.
6il
Jock
C..rsty, Mgr, ·
phone 9'12-6383 .
985-4190
or
9~5 - 41 .53. ·
.
247-2161
.
Secretiry first billion-dcUar corpora·
Phone
992-2111
10·1B-61c
r Arnold Gr1lt
10-20-3tc
t10-17-61p . 741-4211
!1~) ~7. 23, 30, 3tc
Rutl1nd
tion,
as
Ohio.

s1971 tBUICK

•

Sale

. BARNF.Y

e·HE.ATJNG ·

•PLUMBING

CAMPUS CLA'ITER

SPOUTING
ePAINTING
. .

·p·,-,,,,.M.otor Co. @t: ____________

SHARK, ARE \'OU L EFT~
NEW LEFn RIG.HT;;
F,J.R RIGHT'{;

l

W ~i TE: ~ ~ .;,.;T ,

T~ROII

I\\ NOT

I WAN'f" 10 GO OUT AND
GE.f MVSEL.F 50MEltiiNG 10 EAT.

BOY, M11 GLAD 'tl:lU
CAME RIGHT OVER
AFTER I CALLED!

"EFT, ~ N~ EAT
BOTH

\liT~

SJ~E

!

1

PHONE 992:2550

WOULD 'IOU

EXPERT

MIND WA1tHING
1l-ltG PLACE RJR
A trn'LE ~ILE .

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

o·

&amp;

'1

WHUTIS
'10'
KISS IN;
DEAR?

Kilhl's

4

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

- -- - - -

"HEI.L"
HEATING &amp;

70MA!(E.

WINNIE
BELIEVE ME,:£
DIDN'T MEAN
10 DECEIVE
YOU

euT THE
OTHER NICHT... '
IN MY HOTEL
ROOM ...IWENT
iHROUGH iHIS

OLD 5CR&lt;\P
BOOK OF
MINE .••

---=-,------

.

COOLING

llOIJ

- - -- - -

I'M CfSIQ6 ~-;

ARNOLD

BROTHERS
o.

USED

-----

· Meigs Equipment

FORCE! THEREFORE, USC QQ!lE

.£"KHI£ Al!D
PUMJAl!

10 lRAP THEM!

ARRIVE ili
THIS !tEMtHG
CMSTAL CITY
HUH!!l!G FOR

~

A ClUt TO

THE MYSTERY 1:.-1--.
OF TH!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MIINPRl\GORA•

ACROSS
L Irish
county
5. Let fly, as
DICK TRACY
HIS HELPER IS IN
~E HOSPITAL.

:.....-------:---Y,;

w.

----~--

'

r-------=~"

THINK VOU CAN WORK
lN AN fNTIRN'S GOWN?

~UT~~~···

a)l)/1,~ .at't.~:,

V ERAS__ER-1.

. • ·'&gt;• .._ ·,

· · .. q

~...,

------

,~,.,.

1-lOSPITAl.
BED HE WILl. GIVE VOU
EYEWITNESS ·oesc:Rt P·
FOR A SKeTCH,

~~ :~~&lt;:{~ ~ '?

lie'

.,....,~

~IS

r-.

We'talk to JOU,

~.,.,.

U. English
river

DOWN
I. Haze
2. French
city
3, Former
showcase
for
Snooky
LanSQn
(3 wds.)
4. United
5. Tune In
6. WIJte
about
7, Full of

an arrow

-------

.WMP0/1390;

N,AI{Be .'01116
Uf'$100 ~~!
.; HI C.~

niE OHE WITH THE FlAMING HAIR
THE GIANT! IT \I./Out.D Sf: FOOLlSt1 FOR.
l'OIJ TWO Pt.HW SPECIMENS TO ATIE&gt;IPI

Farm Equipment

_____

ro 'Dl IQIOtN

11. One of
the Ages
12. Harebrained
13. Veer
14, "- by
15.

~ri~~ht"

(mus. &gt;
JU:ar
(comb.
form)
IT. Wine
(Fr.)
..__...., 18, Take part
In
20, Blithe
21. 11 Terrlble"
czar
22. Highway
of Pom·
pey's day
ZS. Deadly
25. Pluvipus
26, Skiers'

.r

(autr.)

I. Major
Barbara's
group
(2 wds.)
t, Animate

I MAUCS
NOI•ER

!

I

Yesterday'• An~wer
'.1
10. Clergy·
25. Tru1t
man'sresl· 27. Anthology -~:::;¢;:~-"""~'--'
dence
30. Exhaust
r
U, Viva voce 32. "Henry
Y.-WINT '
It Sea call
IV" char·
)
'
acter
20, Climbing
34. Au
plant
nature!

t

23. sluggish
Least

36, Water·
courtre

\

:14. Everywhere
(2 wds. J

barrier
31. Overweight

.

II

I
I
I
I I

1ANIAT
.

l.A

II

•

.

mecca

l\l!l!SSA\5~

10 iHFOI!M Tt"R!!"I'
lliiiT HER MOTHEI't
HA5 A6AIN GONE
· OUT ATN~T
WlTlfOUT AN
l!XPLANATION
lS FtruSTRATED
al'MRS.WI~
VlGILAHCe.

27. Nevada
city
28. Strip of
wood
Z9. African
antelope
31. Craggy
hill
3%. Earnings
33. Alder tree
(Scot. l
35, Circum·
ventetl
17. Munich·
01
Mr"S."
U . Unruflled
3t, Among
fO. QuaverIng sound

Pt \ ' l 1.,

DAJLY CRYPTOQUOTE _: Here's

how to work it:
,
A,XYDLiiAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply 1tand1 for another , In this sample A 15
used for the three L'•. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apootr~pbe~ the length and formation of the words are all
lilnll, Ea(h day -the (Qde llltters are dllrerent. ·
.·
CIIYPTOilUOTES
ON
VA

VDSV
EN

BLAO

VDRIZi

DN

INKPR· KNIV

ENRIK
•,

QSl
RJ

GAAL.-JSOFN I'

SBBALU

IAV

BSLI-..::lt:Elt;..--

XADIJA'l

,\

•

�,.
.'

..
•, l

10 - The Daily Sentinel, ~lddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 23, 1972

William Estep died Saturday ·
WEST COLUMBIA, W. va .
- Wllliam Eswp, 72, a retired
coal miner, died Saturday at
·
.
. h
h1s orne at West Colu!llbia
ROilte I.
Mr. Estep was born,Oct. .22,
.1B99; at Robertsburg, w. Va.,
· soh o! 'the late · Lou and

•

grandchildren, and 17 great,
grandchildren. ·
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Christian Brethren Church at
Mason wllh James Lewis of·
!iciating, Burial will be at the
Clifton Hill Cemetery. Friends

Merlie Zwilling .

Oied on Sunday

1\T

lleWs •••
'

HARTFORD, W. Va .
Merlie N. Zwillin•,
84, Streets0
buro,· Ohio, died Sunday at St.
· Eiizabe~h Hospital, Youngstown , Mrs. Zwilling was born
here .

in Bn·e.J.f.s
.&amp;

(Contin.ued from Page 1)

.

has discovered that James W. McCloud Jr., one of seven men
· tbe wawrgate bugging case, took part In ·the drafting
·
arrest ed m
1
o a secret government contingency blueprint ,for imposing
national censorship. Rep. WilliamS. Moorhead of Pemsylvania
said S~daylhecW1destlne plan, which he obtained and studied,

~------~a~ls~o~p~r~e:ce~
· ~d~edr~in~~d~e:a~t~h~b~y~a~-~F~un~e~ratl~H~o~m~e~~An;y~ttrnn~~e;.;T~he~~~~s~~;~M~rs:;.~w~i~
lb~ur;Y~o~u~n~g~.~ According to Moorhead, Ute national censorship
w~. plan details
~
daughter, Mrs .. Sadie Bell body will be taken to
Ohio; Mrs. Eileen

the
Hicks in 1945.
church one hour before Ute Justice, Middleport, and Miss steps to be taken for opening !llBil, !llOnitoring broailcasts and
Surviving are his wife, Mary service to lie in slaw.
Josephine Zwilling, Hun- questioning ·tra:.relers en(!!ring the country. He said McCord
Young Estep ; five sons,
ling ton; two sons, Lewis Bath, participated In the drafting of a "National Watchllst" as part of
Charles Henry, Willie Robert, B
. M
Streetsboro, and Melvin t!Je censorship plan.
Herman and Harry, all of
essie cKnight
Cunningham, Pomeroy; 22
Mason, and George of Me·
·
grandchildren, and several
NEW YORK .-A NE~ YORK GAS station owner waging a
connellsville; four daughters, died on Sunday
great-grandchildren.
one-man war aga111StMobileOII Co:says "gaspline prices will go
Mrs. Nellie Albright, Malta;
Bessie McKnight, M, Mid·
Funeral services will be held to SO or 70 cents a gallon" If the finn ill aUo)Ved to repiace its
Mrs .
Leona
McCarty, dleport Route 1, died Sunday at Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Ewing dealers with "contract managers." Paul .Rubenleld, a franchise
Delaware ,
Ohio; . Mrs. Veterans Memorial Hospital. Funeral Home.
dealerfor the past 17 years, said Sunday Mobile has cut oft' his
Catherine Lyons, Lagrange, Mrs. McKnight was born in ~;::8;:;::8:::;:;:;~:;~:;:::~:::::~~::~,:~,:~:~::&gt;.:::::;:::; gas supplies and is trying to evict him from Ute station In the
Ohio, and Mrs. Jennie Neal, Middleport, Dec. 19, 1887, the
MEETING SET·UP
Glen Oaks section of Queens because he has ignored "suggested"
Columbus ; two sisters, Mrs . daughter of Ute late Arthur and
PT. PLEASANT
company prices and posted his own.
·
Lillie Walker and Mrs. Bess Nora Price. She was also
Negolialions apparently will
"I'm supposed to be an independent businessman,"
Young , both of Middleport; a preceded in death by her
be conlinued Tuesday at 10
Rubenfeld said, "so I decided to igmre their ·price schemes,
·brother, Pearl, West Colum· husband, Lafe.
a.m. in settling the Goodyear
which change every oUter day, and set my own more stable
bia ; a half-brother, Charles
Slirviving are two sons, Don, · strike when a federal
prices." Rubenfeld has taken his eviction to court. He claims
negotl~tor and represen·
Mobil wants to get rid of all its dealers and replace them with
'Knapp, West Columbia; 24 of Middleport Route I, and
Vaughn, Columbus; eight
tallves trom the Goodyear
"eontract ll)anagers" who. wpuld run Ute stations on 30-day
grandchildren, and IS great Tire and Rubber Co., and
leases specifying the use of company prices.
grandchildren. i
Local. su; -~ubber, Cork,
Funeral services will be held
Linoleum and Plastic
all p.m. Tuesday at the'Martin
Workers, AFL-CIO, meet at
Trick or Treat
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Funeral Home with Ute Re\C··· the Blue Fountain Motel in
Oct. 23·24
Keith Wise officiating. Iiurial
Gallipolis.
set for Oct. 30
(Con linued from page 1)
Clint Eastwood
will be In Gravel Hill Cemetery :::::~:::=:~=:&gt;.:::::::::;!;!;!;!;:;:::::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::: yet.
MASON - Trick or treat
In
at Cheshire. Friends may call
JOE KIDD
The 500,000-circulation night has been scheduled for
at Ute funeral home any time; Rally Day. set at
I Technicolor)
conservative newspaper Monday, Oct. 30, Mayor Roy
" G P"
Figaro said an agreement on a Harless announced today.
Nazarene church
~olorcartoons :
cease-fire,
a provisional Saigon
The observance will be' held
Buller Fly
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The
Middleport
Nazarene
Happy Hayride
regime and the return of U.S. between 6:30 and 7:30 p. m. At
The Meigs Alhletic Boosters Sunday School will observe
.Ice Cream Helps
prisoners of war iS reportedly 7:30, three short sounds will be
will meet at 7;30 p.m. Tuesday Rally Day Sunday. Anyone who
agreed, and that France would blown on Ute town siren to
Show Starts 7 P.M.
at the high school.
has ever attended ·sunday help guarantee free Viet' signify Ute end.
School at the Middleport namese elections.
Mayor Harless is asking
church is urged to attend.
Hanoi spokesman Nguyen parents . to accompany their
Lewis Ellis, Sunday School Thanh Le and Viet Cong children and only children 12
superintendent, extends a spokesman Ly Van Sau agreed years and under !llBy par.
cordial invitation to ·come lhat conditions lor peace were licipate in Ute celebration.
Sunday and meet old friends . at hand but said "Until this Mayor Harless and the town
Certificates for new shoes day, the Vietnamese problem officialsadvise the children not
will be given to two people who has not been solved. The war is to eat their treats until
have brought the largest being prolonged and intensi· carefully examined by the
number of people to Sunday lied."
parent.
School during October.
Le said, "the question is
Pleasant Valley Hospital
whelher Ute Nixon administra·
DISCHARGES
I . Mrs.
LODGE TO MEET
· lion really wishes to have
•. ' .
The Twin City Shrinettes will serious negotiations or Is In· Andrew Byus, Pt. Pleasant;
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at dulging in maneuversaimed at Mrs. Leroy Rainey and son, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. William Jefthe social room of the . inlsleading public opinion."
.5 to 9: 30..:.$7.50 all you can eat, (or AI a Carle).
Columbus and Soulhern Ohio
Two major U.S. news maga. fers, Southside; Mrs. Harold
Electric Co. In· Middleport. zines reporred Sunday that Ute Supple, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Members are to bring bottle United States and North Charles Lee, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Vietnam have reached agree- Norman Ridgeley, Buffalo.
caps for redemption.
ment on a Vietnam peace
settlement. And statements by
TRIO TO SING
The Heavenly Highway Trio Premier Prince Souvanna
will be singing Wednesday at Phowna of Laos and .Field
7:30p.m. at Ute Church of God MarshalThanom Kitllkachorn,
in Pl. Pleasant, behind the new head of Uie Thai G9vemment,
Lutheran Church. Everyone is said lhat a peace settlement
might be near.
welco!lle .
·
Kissinger remained silent as
he has throughout the secret
NOW YOU KNOW
talks In Paris and Saigon.
Drink sand
Wide Menu
The
famous
circus
fat
lady,
Dessert Extra.
Choice
Dolly Dimple, reduced her
weight from ~ pounds to 120
Order our regu lar menu every nlghl51o 10.
pounds in a period of 14 monlhs
during the late 1950s.
The Middleport E·R squad
answered a call to the Mid·
dleport jail at 9:06 p.m. where
LOCAL TEMPS
Waller King, Middleport, a
The wmperature in down· prisoner, was hemorrhaging.
town Pomeroy at II a.m. He was taken to Veterans
PH. 992·3629
Monday was 60 under cloudy Memorial Hospital where he
POMEROY
skies.
was !reared and released for
return to confinement. At 5:17
p.m. Sunday the squad was
called to the .home of Carol
Lunsford, South Third Ave. She
was · taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was .admitted as a medical
patient.

MEIGS THEATRE

Peace

BUFFET

DININ.G
TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

T

d
killed
wo eer

VeteraasMemortalHotpllal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONTwo deer were killed in Barbara Baer, Minersville.
~even weekend traffic ac· SATURDAY DJSCJ{ARGES
· cldents in Gallla County .. The - Jerry "Ward, Alice Mills,
quadrupeds w.ere the only Sally Erwin, Lennie Taylor,
lata
. lilies. .
lma Blevins, Dtx' ie Blev·1·ns
· ,
According to the Gallia· , IUchafll Hanni.
Meigs Post ~tate Highway . SUNDAY ADMISSIONS _
Patrol, the. dirst deer died at 3 · Mrs . Dwight
Rl.
A
ran into the paUl of an auto ··
operated by Kermit Fisher, 36,
Rt. 2, G;~Dipolis. There was
minor damage to his car.
Another deer was killed in a
mishap at 7:30 p. m. on Rt. 7,
four and two-tenlhs miles north
of R!. 35. It ran into Ute path of
a car driven by· Robert S.
Jeffers, 52, Syracuse. There
were no personal injuries in Ute
other accidents , and · only
minor to medium property
damage.

Pomeroy; James Sellers, :Racine;
Joan
Jlaum, .
Pomeroy; Erma Norris,
Racine ; Norman Laudermilt,
Mason; Carol Lunsford, Middleport, and Helen Baer;
MinerSv'ille.
'·
. SUNDAY DISCHARGES - ·
Jerrie Davis, Patty Harmon,
Jimmy Snider, Jeack Teaford,'

SAIGON (UP!) - President
Nguyen Van Thieu.said tonight
he has ''not agreed to any
cease-lire" in the lndoehina
War,
In a lengthy ((!levision and
radio address to Ute nation
Thieu said any cease-fir~
would have to be guaranteed
by the Soviet Union and China.
He Indicated no such
guarantees had been obtained.
"We have not agreed to any
cease-lire," Thieu told Ute
nation. "Any cease.fire has to
be Ute result of a political and
military agreement. We have
.to guarantee a cease-fire."
' Thieu spoke one day after he.
completed five days of talks
with U.S. Presidential adviser
Henry A. Kissinger. Kissinger
said In Washington he hlid
• made "some progress" in his

J.S.I.® Socks

14

in value, comfdrt, or looks

VOL. XXV NO. 134

un·

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Richard. C. Glasgow of llle
engineering firm of Auble,
Mi~hell and Burgess told the
Meigs County commissioners
today that plans submitwct for
a Meigs County sanitary
landfill have won tentative
approval by district engineer
Bernard Bowman of Ule State
Board of Heallh.
.. · .. · · ....
· .. ,

.
Argumen1
· .

goes on

Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest.

By United Press International

Sen. George S. McGovern
contends President Nixon
could just as easily have ended
the Vlelnam War four years
·ago, but Nixon argues lhere
has been more progress toward
real peace In the world this
year than In any other.
The contenders for the
)X'esldency debawct Ute issue
during sep~ate appearances
Monday night In New York
stare, where they sought Ute
'nation's second largest bloc of
electoral votes.
, McGovern appeared on a
telethon in New York City and
com!llented on reports a settlemeni might be near In the
war.
"I would like to have him rell
us why be waited four years to
end a war that could just as
easily have been ended four
years ago," McGovern said.
About the same time, Nixon
was at an evening rally at
Mineola In New York's Long
Island suburbs. He said Utere
had been slgnificanf progress,
toward ending Ute war.
"'lbe year 1972 will go down
sa the year in which mote
)X'ogress was made toward
real peace In the world Ulan.
(Continued on page 6)

"Man begi"s to bork at his
fellow men . whin he
realjzn 114! is !fl'lriO to the
dogs. "
~rom 'doghouses, garages,
room.additions to comrlete
i&gt;omes, you'll lind. al 'the
mate.lals you need ot 1114!
POMEROY O'EMENT
BLOCK CO., the home of
lilt "fRIENDLY ONES".

W&lt;• twt•d yolJr help to bring hJppines;
awarded. Don'l worry about sewing .
. to 1wedy children this Chri stnias.:Corr\e
.. skills. Your ·doll will fin.d ·a·home•inthe ·
i 11 nc1w - supply of d(lll s is Ii mi ted - and
arms oi a child on Christmas day, and ·.
·pick up a free doll. Design and sew an
be loved·.
·
·
·. outfit ior it, then return it to us. It will
You make Dre ss-A-Doll* a happiness
he disp'layed in our lobby with all the
th!i1g. Thank you .
11rPss-A-Do ll &lt;lolls. Priz es will be ·
.'

Co.

A#111tlral

·I .

Dtdlc•fl11 .

.

Member of Federal Rtserw System

On Frldoys Our Driv•ln WindoW Is Open h. m. to 7 p. m.·!Co.ntlnuously).

. ,__

.

RICHA.RD M. NIXON
President of the United States

Glasgow said Bowman saw
no reason why a permit could
not be issued within seven
days. The site of the landfill,
located on Norman and
Mildred Humphreys' property,
on SR 143 just west of the new
bypass, was approved earlier.
Verbal approval was given
the CO!Ilmissioners to start site
.preparation to allow a more
speedy operation. The commission has purchased all
eqUipment necessary to begm

the landfill operation.
Thirty containers will he
placed thro ughoui Meigs
County for any resident of the
county to use free of charge.
. Individuals dumping at the
landfill will be charged,
however. The pickup service
now in service in Meigs County
will remain the same. The
county will not be involved in
pickup service-.
Glasgow said the Meigs
County Regional Planning

Commission, the local Board of
Health, and the State Con·
servation Service have ap·
proved the site.
The commission said old
refrigerators or stoves could be
dumped at the landfill, but no
car bodies. The landfill will ·
have regulawct hours.
The commission also said
containers will be placed in
villages. Township trustees
have designated container
locations.

PHONE 992·2156

S. J. (SAM) NIXON POSES beside a large photograph of
his second cousin, President 'Richard Nixon, in the Meigs
County Republican Headqu~ters at Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.
Sam Nixon has resided near Rutland since his retirement
from the staff of Ute Boys' Industrial School at Lancast.;. in
1961. He married the former Anna Pearl McCleary Brogdon,
also an employe of B.l.S., in 1957 and Ute couple moved t:
Meigs County into property owned by Mrs. Nixon. Sam Nixon
displayed a photograph·taken of himself and President Nixon
in Alhens when President Nixon was vice president under
Eisenhower (1953-'60).

. $20,009 Maximum l~IIUrance For Each Depositor

TEN CENS

Better home
is assured

ecte
r-~~,:::~::x::;:;:,:;:;:;:;~!;!;~~~~~::::"..--:m,-,:.&lt;:::::::::&gt;.::::::.~:,~;;,:,.~;x,l

The Meigs County commissioners today agreed to continue
wilh furUier improv.ements at the children's home when a
citizens' committee concern~'(! wllh the safety and heallh of Ute
children residing atlhe home met again wllh commissioners.
Mrs. carol Jean Adams, spokesman, presented a list of
By United Press International
EDWARDSVILLE, ILL. -CONSUMER ADVOCATE 'Ralph suggestions that the committee would like to see carried out, to
Nader charged Monday that Congress has ·ignored its respon. which Ute commissioners agreed.
sibility to investigate the Watergate hugging prior to the Nov. 7
A freezer has been pur- llli did Mrs. Adams.
Serving on the citiz ens
presidential election. Nader said pressure for an inquiry will he chased, It was noted and Ute
co!llmissloners · agreed to committee are Mrs. Adams,
less after Ute election.
calling Waterga!Al "a spectacular invasion of privacy," purchase additional blankets Mrs. f'e~l Welker, Mrs. Ruby
Nader said, "The Democrats don't know how to inrerpret Ute and sheets, six double Vaughan, Hugh Mc!'hall, and
Watergate affair to Ute advantage of the voters. People see it as a . fluorescent lights at $13.96 the Rev. Dwight Zavitz.
Attending in addition to U!ose
micrO&lt;osmic battle between Republican and Democratic each, repair or replace urinals
In
Ute
boys'
bathrooms
and
named
were·Charles R. Karr
politicos when actually it is an unprecedented sabotage of Ute
poli\[cal process which is symptomatic of broader invasions of ~rchase needed dressers and Bob Clark, Warden Ours,
commissioners; Martha
people's privacy throughout the country by snooping govern· five dlnetw sets.
The Rev. Charles Simons Chambers, clerk; Mary
· men!," he said,
expressed his lhanks to Ute Hobstetter, and Mr. and Mrs.
commissioners for their Harry Clark, superintendent
WASHINGTON -THE U. S. SUPREME COURT agreed cooperation and Interest - In and matron of the children's
today to decide whether federal courts .are open to Kent Stare matters at the children's home, home.
University students who are challenging the Ohio National
Guard in a case growing out of the 1970campus disorders.
The court will hear the case later in the term and·follow·with·
a written opinion. Three issues raised by Ute students were
dismissed by a federal court in Cleveland, but the 6lh Circuit
Court of Appeals reinstated one of them and sent Ute case back to . An accidental shooting
was removed to Veterans'
Cleveland for more proceedings.
·
Monday at 2 p.m. was In· M.emorla l Hospital by the
vestigated by Sheriff Robert C. Racine E·R squad, where he
BELFAST - BRITISH OFFICERS said today they were Hartenbsch's dept.
was treated and released .
disgusted at the "animals" who use young children to shelter
Woodrow Hall, Jr., 20,
The Sheriff's Dept. received
lhem from army gunfire. Agunman spotted Monday by a British Racine, Rt. 2, was target a call Monday at 5:45 p.m.
patrol in \~Je Roman caUtolic New Lodge Road area of Belfast practicing on Cedar Hill at from John Golden, Bishan,
grabbed a seven-year-old boy and, using him as a shield, fired Letart Falls when he fell on his thai his wife, Bette Golden, ~6.
four shots at sold!ers before escaping. Troops held lheir fire gun, a .22 rifle. The gJW had been missing from home
discharged , the slug striking since Oct. 21. Mrs. Golden is
· because of Ute child.
:•Just what kind of animals are we fighting ?" one officer Hall In the left shoulder. He five foot six inches tall, weighs
140 pounds and has brown hair
satd. "Because from lhis incident and from many others we ' 'I ' ' ' I '
·,- . ' O::o "o' .-o' o' ' •' -' • ' • ' •
d eyes. Anyone knowmg
• the
~:-.-:·:~--~·:·:o!·.;:
••
.:.:o:o:-:o.;:::".W..:.:.:.y.·,;:.;,.,;:.:-:·:·:-:
an
come up against In Belfast, animals some of them certainly are.
whereabouts of Mrs. Golden is
They're not human. We've had incidents before of kids being
EXT~NDED OUTLOOK
asked
to notify the sheriff's
given guns, being handed explosives to throw - you couldn't sink
Ohio Extended Outlook department.
any lower," he said .
Thurs,day through Saturday:
Cool Thursday thtough
DALLAS -NEGROES ~GERED OVER Ute lhird shooting
Saturday . A chance of
In 12 days of a black man by pollee marched on City Hall iare
showers
•·rtday
and
Cloudy rind coolin the norlh
Monday, vowing to free Ill$' people from "racist Dallas police."
Saturday. Highs In lhe 50s.
and partial clearing in Ute
.Lows ·In the 30s Thursday
R!ot troops, state pollee, city police and county sheriffs were
south tonight. Lows in Ute 30s.
and Friday and in the mid
(Continued on page 8 )
'. r. -,
Wednesday, partly doudy and
30s to lower 40s Saturday.
continued cool. Highs in the
50s.

~;News •• in

Briefsf

'

Teachers endorse levy,
would keep income tax
.

The Meigs Local Teachers
Assn.; meeting last week at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport, endorsed the
Meigs Local ·school District's
five mill operating levy and
went on record against Ute
proposal to repeal the state
income tax.
·
Both measures are to be
voted upon at the Nov. 7
election. Committee ap·
pointments were made for Ute
year and membership was
reported at an all-time high of
122 members. The association
set Nov. 15 as the dale to
achieve 100 pet. membership in
two professional organiza lions,
the Meigs Local Teachers
Assn., and the Ohio Education
Assn.

.

at 7:30 tonight at the Meigs
High· School. A report by Ute
committee on Professional
Standards and Teacher
Education Committee was
given and forwarded to news
media. Teachers were urged to
attend and participate in all
meetings in 1972-73. ·

A report by the Committee
on Professional Standards and
Teacher Education for the
Meigs Local School District
was endorsed. It made lhese
points:
- Teachers in the district
have constantly worked to
improve their qualifications
over the past five years. This
has been extremely difficult as
five years ago minimum sa lary
was $4,400 per year.
- Al the time of COD·
Robert Morris, president,
announced the Search for solidation of Ute five school
Consensus meeting to be held districts into one, lhere were 23

teachers employed with a
degree; now the district has
but six nono{!egree teachers in
the total 141 academic·
teaching faculty .·
- In 1967 only 13 teachers
held Master's Degree ; at
present, 30 have attained that
degree and at least eight are
working toward completion of
the Master's.
- T.l!achers have earned
their additional training by
spending summer vacations in
college and by commuting to
nearby universities for night
classes throughout the year
while working on the lowest
Salary schedule in Ute State of
Ohio.
- The professional staff of
the Meigs Local School have
contributed lheir time and
talents to Ute up-grading of Ute
curriculum of Ute Meigs Local
District.
'

Fridlly, Dec. 22.
S!Drel will begin 1taylng
, open !« the Christmas aeUon
in the eveillngl cin Dec. 11. In ·
.compleU. plans, the 111!1'•
· chinll lllo voted $100 to the
FHney·Bennett Post 128
.~ America~~ Leafon lor their
work In proYidln&amp; holiday
lrelll lor eblldren In the
~eMNmllity' '

.

Sho{ by-accident

o;o · o;o·o;o:.·o ·o·o ·o~· · ·

Weather

\

Meigs Schools to .lose
$700,000 in tax repeal
School districts In Meigs
Coun ty could lose nearly
$700,000 In state aid, including
. $;135,000 this school year, if the
.. state income tax:-ts repealed.
According. to figures com·
piled by the State Department
·Of Finance the three school
districts in Meigs county are
·· scheduled to receive $670,142 in ·
additional aid this school year.
About half that money will
already have been received
before the income tax repeal
would go into· effect, if suc·

A 1973 Ford Pinto will be
given away as a part of the
amiual Christmas Promotion
of ihe MlddleP«t ~ber of
. eornmerct and the Middleport
Merchants Assn.
The groupa met Monday
night to complete pla111 for
• their promotion. A kickoff
. parade w!U be h8ld at6:30p~.
on Monday, Nov. 'rl wllh a
moonU,ht sale 'planned by
merchinta that evening. The
1973 car 1rill be given away on

(

'·

"Only when they stop bringing down their tanks and at·
tillery and weapons will it be
safe for us to stop the bombing
of North Vietnam."
Thieu blasted the North
Vietnamese as "invaders" and
Ute Viet ·Cong, or National
Liberation Front, as a puppet
of North Vietnam."
"The North Vietnamese have
nothing to do ·with this
(situation in South Vietnam),"
Thieu said. "But still North
Vietnam continues scheming to
take over the NLF."
Thieu pledged to free Ute
countryside of Communist
troops.
"No Communists who
disrupt the countryside can be
tolerated," he said. "Every
Communist plot to disrupt Ute
· ( Co~linued on page 8)

Pinto will
he awarded

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EYE INJUREO
RACINE - Mitchell Allen,
24, Racine, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Racine E·R squad
Saturday afternoon suffering
an eye injury. He was treated
and released.

'.

government; whi!'h means they
. want to wipe out everybody
and start all over again,"
Thieu 511id.
·"Even if we agreed I.Q a
pease.fire and a stop in Ute
bombing and new elections
within six rnonths, we would
wind ' up finding ourselves
fighting on the battlefields six
monlhs from now," Thieu said.
A cease .fire "would have to
be guaranteed by the Soviet
Union and Peking. But even at
Uta! point the North Vielna·
mese Communists would continue invading us, and Peking
and Moscow would say llle
North Vietnamese are doing
what they want on lheir own.
"The North Vietnamese
would still be bringing down
their tanks from North Vietnam .

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a

llement.
During his long and. some·
times rambling address over a
nationwide radio and television
network Thieu gave his version
of negotiations for an In·
dochina peace over Ute 'past
year.
He said Ute ' Communists
continued to demand total
American withdrawal; a halt
to aU bombing over North Vietnam and a coali'tion government in Saigon.
He said Ute North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong have
demanded a total rearing down
of the South Vietnamese
government.
"The Communist are not
only sa'ying now they must do
away with Thieu, but with 'Ute
legislature, Ute administration
and the justice sections of

TV"

a ·t.appiness thing.

Provides •• impressive may of most-wanted features ·and adds.
.-•n elepnt &lt;Mslsner touch to your kitchen decor. Quallty-enSI•
neerod in f!Very detail, thlulimline niodeilncludes lhese"Pian"''CC ·
·convenience" fealures: fuiJ.-ividlh~lb. freezer chest, full-width ·
"Freeze· Mart" chiller drawtr for mt.IIS and cheeses, 'twO allde-out
tip·proof shelves plus ·shelf civer porcelain crisper, twin ea
shelves and ·"bookcase" door shel¥es. Wlde·rmp te!npttature
.control ... double·se•l rillsneilc doo.r &amp;asket ., .''penny plncher''
power unit 58~' h., 28''w., l8t'a" d. .

talks wilh Thieu butlhe tone of
Thieu's longest speech in more
Ulan a year was generally
pessimistic.
· The to'ne of the speech
seemed tQ indicate that war
would continue in Indochina ·
despite worldwide reports in .
Ute past lew days lhat a ceasefire might be imminent.
Thieureferred to Communist
offers for a cease.fire and new
elections In South Vietnam as
"booby traps on Ute road to
what U!ey call
peace set·
tlement."
Thieu said he could never ·
agree to a coalition govern·
meni lhat would include Ute
COmmunists-one of t!le main
points Utought to be holding up
a settlement. The Communists
have demanded a coalition as
one of the prices of a set·

Nothing tops .

Dress-A-Doll~is

Called to jail

....

.,Elberfelds In

15 days
(Continued from Page 1)
Md., retreat and decl~ed In
his Vererans Day remarks thlit
he would not "make a
mockery'' of the sacrifices u.S.
servicemen have made in
Vietnam by granting armesty
to draft dodgers and deserters.
The White House also an·
nounced that Nixon would
make a campaign trip Thur·
sd!IY to Ashland, Ky. Earlier it
had been announced lhat he
would barnstorm by motor·
cade lhrough 14 Ohio com·munities next Saturday.
McGovern was interviewed
&amp;mday on ABC's "Issues and
Answers."
He said he suspected Nixon
was ready to abandon his
support for Soulh Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu in
order to achieve a pre-election
settlement of the Indochina
war. McGovern also declared
that Republican espionage had
hurt his campaign.
Harris was interviewed on
NBC's ''Meei Ute Press."
Asked if Nixon has the
election locked up, Harris
replied thlit ''in our busineSil
we do not take Ute American
voter for granted.
·
"Certainly, the burden is on
McGovern to take up the
slack ...tbe largest we've seen
in any modern election,"
Harris said.

Thien ·demands Soviets,

ce~s!ul

.. ,..
A SALtfi'E to

mer-·who Jlft their Jlftl lor

their .

ODWitry wu liven by members ol Meigs Chapter 53, PAV,
MlddJtport Feeney-Benllett I'VIIt.l21, and Drew Webster Post'

39., American J.eclon~ In lnint of the Civii ·War monument
ne~ the Meigs County CourthoiJae Moriday. The service was
held at 'nun., the hour at which Ute. ~aditional V~wrans
Day service wu held during past years.

n~DY.e.mbe~:,_btit

beyond January, Ute entire
financial future looks clouded
at best.
.
While funds a~e appropriated
for 'this . biemiium and the
.current iiscal year, state of.
· ficials say without Ute income
tax, there would not he enough
money to :neet those com•
mitments.

It would be up to Ute new
For example, in Meigs Local
le~islature .to determine where school district the schools
a vaiiabie . funds would go, would receive $366,08l in added
despjte the hugh additional aid this year, but according to
grants made to publi~ Ute finance report, .it would .
ed~cation during the last 109Ui require 16.46 · mills in new
General ASSembly.
·
phiperty' taxes in the district to ·
According to finance . produce that amount of money,
department figures, schools if Ute income tax. is repe~led
within the county enrolled 5,085 · and no further funds ap·
students and would . receive propriated. ·
$2.446,977 during the currehl
"
biennium.
This would mean :an ·· ad~
Meanwhile, Ia~ relief as a diijonal $16.46 in new real
resu lt of the income tax would estate taxes for e11ch $1000 ln
total 141 007 indudlng $6!,200 tax valuations.
, ~nder the Homestead exemp- . ' Other districts in Meigs
bon and $82,807 from the 10 per County would . be ~ill\ilarly
cent property tax rollback. . affected. . For example,
The report said that without ··1 Eastern Local, wilh the annual
the income tax, it would increase in ~tate aid of $~50,584,
require an average additional · would reqwre 22.9:t extra mills
18.~1 m!Us in new real estate to yield . that much, and
taxe~ throughout the cDII!'ty .to Sou.thern I.,ocal, receiving
contmue education fundmg at $11'&gt;3,471, would reqwre 20.73
current levels.
mills.

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