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12:--~he-~ SenUnel, Mlddleport-Ptinero_y! 0., Nov, &amp;, 1972

Ceci1ia Goett Died·~urday
Mra. Cecilia Wippel 'Goett,
531 died unexpectedly Saturday
afternoon at her home, 106
· ., Union Ave., ·pomeroy. The
daughter of the late Albert and
Mary Fugate Wippel, she was
also preceded in death by a
sister, Margaret-Cosier.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
John Wayne in

"THE COWBOYS"

GP

Colorcar1oon: Invitation ·

Adults: $1.50 Children : 75c
Show Starts 1 P.M.

A member of the Sacred
Heart Church and the Catholic
Women's Club, Pom~roy, M~s .
Goetl is survived. by her
husband, Jobn S. Goett, Jr.; a
son, · Thomas S. Goett,
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews. Funeral services
will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday
at the Sacred Hearl Church
with the Rev. Father Bernard
Kracjovic officiating. Friends
may call at th.e Ewing Funeral
Home anytime." Burial will be ·
in Sacred Heart Cemetery.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
A meeting of the Eastern
Athletic Boosters will be held
at 8 p. m. Tuesday at the high
school. Video tape will be
discussed and voted upon.

·.··-···-:-::.···..·.·:·... :.

Rex Argahrite age 76, dies
REEDSVILLE - Rex D.
Argabrite, Sr., 76, Reedsville
· Route I, . died Satutilay afternoon at Veterans Memorial
~ospi lal following ,an extended
' illness.
Mr. Argabrite was born at
Spencer, W. Va., the son Or the
late Floyd and Fairlena Lowe
Argabrite. He was also
preceded in death by his first
wife,
Bessie
Spencer
Argabrite; a son, a daughter,
two brothers, and lour sisters.
Mr. Argabrite, a retired
employe of the Ohio Research
Center in Wooster, also had
worked in Akron and Rittman
several years. He was a

member ol the Spencer
Methodist Church. ·
$urviving are. his wife, Cora
Bailey Arg&lt;tliri te; six . sons,
John L. of Belpre; Russell R.,
Norfolk, Va.; William F. of
Kingston, Md.; Clarence K. of
Marietta; Stanley D. ol
Wooster, and Rex, Jr., .at
home; 19 grandchildren, two
great-grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
White Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robert Wyatt~ officiating.
Burial will be In the Reedsville
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and' from 7 to 9 p. m. today.

:

.

.

Died on Sunday

Bradley Meek, 95, Parkersburg, formerly of Frost
(Meigs County, Ohio J was
pronounced dead on arrival at
the St. Joseph Hospital here
Sunday afternoon .
Mr. Meek was born in Athens
County, son of the late Nancy
Johnson and Lewis Van Buren
Meek. He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Annabelle, in
1910, and four brothers.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Rose officiating. Burial will be
in Coolville. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 3 p.
m. Tuesday. Mr. Meek was a
member of the Coolville United
Methodist Church.

••

4 Copter

crewmen

killed
SAIGON (UP I) - Four
American helicopter crewmen
were killed and another was
wounded in clashes with
Communist troops who shot
down three U. S. helicopters
Sunday below Da Nang, field
reports said.ltwas the highest
American death toll in recent
months in dir.,ct combat with
the Communista.
A crash last Tuesday of a
CH41 Chinook helicopter in the
Meko•Jg Delta took 22
American lives, but U. S. of. ,
ficials have never announced
an official cause. A heat- '
seeking rocket is suspected.
Radio Hanoi reported ioday
aU. S. Air Force B52 bomber '
and two A7 Corsair jet fighterbombers were downed over
North Vietnam the past two
days.
A command spokesman said ·
B52s had carried out more
strikes against North Vietnam
during the past three days than
at any other time during the
entire war. Through noon
today the B52s made 32 strikes, ·
four more than the previous .
high of 28 reported Aug. 1().13.
Hanoi Radio called them '
"an nihilation raids" and
coupled the charge with a
blistering commentary
criticizing the United States for
not signing a proposed truce
agreement. The broadcasts,
monitored in Saigon, charged
"the logic of gangsters'' was
being used by America in
stalling a peace treaty while
rushing huge new arm~
shipments into South Vietnam.
1
1

If you are eighteen (18) years of age or older, and have full
rights of citizenship on November 7, 1972, you can become one of the
most important people in the country - a voter in the U. S. general
elections..
·
.
,
You can try to blame the ills of this country on the politicians
the establishment, the pressure group, or the weirdos. You haven~
right to complain if you do not vote . Do not stay on the sidelines and
let other people run your country. Get yourself fully informed and
then VOTE.
.
One vote does count!
One vote made Oliver Cromwell Lord Protector of the Commonwealth.
One vote caused Charles I to be executed.
One vote decided that Americans speak English rather than
.
German.
One vote kept Aaron Burr, later charged with treason, from
becoming President.
One vote elected Marcus Morton Governor of Massachusetts .
One vote made Texas part of the U.S.
One vote saved President Andrew Johnson from impeachment.
One vote changed France from a monarchy to a republic.
One vote admitted California, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon to
the Union.
·
On~ vote elected Rutherford B. Hayes to the· Presidency. And the

man 1n the electoral college who cast that vote was an Indiana
Congressman elected by one vote.
One vote made Adolph Hitler head of the Nazi party.
One vote saved the selective service system only 12 weeks before
Pearl Harbor.
One vote put over a thousand students into a modern school.
Yes, one vote DOES count. And if you constder ten, a hundred, or a thousand votes, it
screams a demand; for in our democracy, the
people get the kind of government they deserve.

Weekend full of
minor accidents
Pomeroy police Investigated
a wave of minor traffic accidents over the weekend.
There were no Injuries or
arrQsts in any of the accidenls
and damages were light. :A car ·
owned by Harold Grate,
Langsville, drifted Into another
parked car owned by John
Burns, Columbus, on Ci'ow's
Steak Hou·se parking lot
Sunday.
At 9:15p.m. Saturday, a car
driven by Roger Abbott,
Pomeroy, pulled from a stop
street and struck a southbound
car on Mulberry Ave. driven by
Michael Van Meter, Syracuse.
At 3 a. m. Saturday a car
driven by Earl L. &amp;ush,
Pomeroy, struck a utility pole
on Mulberry Ave.
Veterans Memorial dosptal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Mark Tillis, Pomeroy; Mary
Russell, Pomeroy; Eloise
Matson, Rutland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Carolyn Thompson, Viola
Roush, Sandra Hoffman,
Louise Yates, Georgia Smith,
Willard Clay.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Carl Sibley, Gallipolis; Ruth
Spaun, Pomeroy; Mila Hudson, Syracuse.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Mark Tillis, Gladys Taylor.
Each cell of a honeycomb
has six sides. Th~ walls are
1/BOth of an inch thick but
can support 30 times their
own weight.

I

STORM IN PHILIPPINES
MANILA (UP!) -Typhoon
Pamela plowed through the
Philippines just south of Luzon
island Sunday and moved into
the South China Sea early today
on a course roughly in the
direction of Hong Kong.
The Philippine weather
bureau placed the typhoon, with
winds of 72 miles an hour, at
about 192 miles west southwest
of Manila at 1 p.m. Em' and
said it was moving at 18 miles
an hour.
There were no immediate
reports of damage.

Taken lo HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called at 10:42 p. m. Saturday
for Carl Sibley, Gallipolis, who
became ill whlle hunting
between Langsvllle and
Dexter. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

WEDDING PLANNED
NEW YORK (UP!)
Television personality David
Frost and singer Diahann
Carroll announced plans
Sunday to marry in London
next Easter. The couple, whose
two-year off-again on-again,
romance spanned two continents, made the announcement at a news conference in the lobby Of the posh
Plaza Hotel. ,
SEEKS SUPPORT
LONDON (UP!) - Prime
Minister Edward Heath took
his battle to check soaring
inflation and faltering confidence in the pound to
Parliament and the nation
today. Parliamentary sources
predicted an immediate payprice freeze . Heath reshuffled
his cabinet Sunday in
preparation for his promised
annoUncement in Parliament
detailing government
measures to control prices and
incomes. He will address
Parliament at 10:30 a. m. EST
and appear on television five
hours later to explain his action
to the nation.

News

make between fhe time we

get out of It and the time we
hit II."

. {ss.ued A~ A Public Service By . . .

'

..

I

The Farmers Bank &amp;' Savings Co.
POMEROY. OHIO
Member of Federal R~rve Svstem .
c

"

On Frld1ys Our Dr i v~··'·• ·Window isOptn '"· m. toi p. m. (Conllnuouiirl.

$20,000 Maximunr .nsuronce t'o; Each ofpOsitor · ,

•

J I,

·

For those small home
repair lobs that should
have been done already.
visit the "F RIEND.LY
ONES" at the Pomeroy
Cement !\lock Company for
the tools and materials you
need. (Now is !he lime to
" make hay" while the sun
Is still shining I. .

DEER KILLED
Adeer was killed by a car in
an accident on Route 7 north of
county road 30 at 9:30 a.m.
today. Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's Dept. said the deer
ran into the psth of a car driven
south by Rebecca Mankin,
Pomeroy Route 3. The driver
was not injured . Property
damage was medium.
·
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature In downtOwn Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 62 degrees under
SWlny skies. '
MARRIAGE lJCENSES
Rodney Ray Sayre, 24,
Middleport, -nd ·Kathy Lynn
Boyd, 18, Racine; Stephen
Michael Oiler, 20, Middleport,
and Unda Sherrell Sue Workmart, · 20, Pomeroy; William
Thomas Bates, 18, Colwnbua,
and Peggy Pauline Priddy, 17,
Rutland; Ronald Vincent
.
'
Jones, 23, Racine Route I, and
Mary Marie Bradshaw, 17,
Pomeroy.

broadcast also reported a Joint
ml!t!ting of two major Viet
Cong political arms that caDed
for stepped-up war ln South
Vietnam.
The National Liberation
Front (NFL) and the Alliance
of National Democratic and
Pea.ce Forces concluded that
"the
development
of
revolutionary warfare cannot
be stopped," Radio Hanoi said.
The joint 1:9nference called
on the United Statea to sign the
draft pea.ce treaty, but warned
the Viet Cong were )repared to
continue !ightiilg ''to complete
victory" If necessary.
Radio Slilgon said today the
Souih Vietnamese people "oppose a shameful peace agreement, a nonguaranteed cea~~&amp;­
flre and any form of coalition
with the Communists."
The giwernment radio said ln
a second broadcast that South
Vietnam's ''resaonsble . peace
stand ...has remained unchanged. The passive attitude
of Hanoi to (this stand) has
cyeated doubts ln the public
mind about the slneerity and
honesty of the Communists ln
implementing not only~ cea~~&amp;­
flreagreementbutabo!orany
solution for the Vietnam war."
Jn Washington, Rogers characterized as "Irresponsible"
contentions by Sen. George S.
McGovern that President Nixon's administration Is only
pretending the war Is near a
settlement.
As to the nearness of a settlement, &amp;gers said, ''I think
It wlll be several weeks.
Whether it runs Into more than
that I am not sure. But I think It
Is quite possible we will have
one, as I say ln the near I
future."
As to McGovern's suggestion
that Nixon had practiced
"cruel deception" regarding
the peace settlement, &amp;gers
said, " ...1think that charge by
Mr. McGovern was very
irresponsible, and I think it
shows it was an act of
desperation ln the final days of
the campaign."
·

.

•••

in Briefs

First Family will v~te
in Califorftia, fly, to

.

appeal for peace plan~
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
·( UP!) -President Nixon
awaited a landslide victory
today, saying the Vietnam War
is ahnost over bot appealing to
voters to "sef'K( a message" to
Hanoi that the nation stands
behind his demand for "peace
With honor" ln Southeast Asia.
Nixon continued campaigning on election day itself
buying radio· time around th~
nation for replays of his "look
to the future" address.
The President and Mrs.
Nixon were to cast their ballots
at the Concordia Avenue
Elementary School on Avenida
del Presidente-named in his
honor-c-two blocks from the
Western White House.
They were to vote at 10 a.m.
Em'.
The Nil&lt;ons planned to return
to Washington after voting,
apparently calm and confident
that the massive victory
predicted by the pollsters
would he theirs tonight.
Mrs. Nixon's Comment
"We're not calling the movers yet," was Mrs. Nixon's
comment.
Nixon addressed the nation
on television on the eve of !he
election, repeating his
assurances
that
a
breakthrough had been
achieved in the peace talks
with the North Vietnamese
government "which will lead to
peace."
"There are some details that
we are Insisting still be worked
out," he said. "We insist ·
because we want to be sure
that this will be not simply a
temporary peace, but a peace
that will last.
"But I am completely con-

fident that we will soon reach
an agreement which will end
the war in Vietnam. ·
"You can help achieve that
goal," he told IIi~ nation's
voters.
"By your votes.• you can send
a message to those with whom
we are negotiating, and to the
leaders of the world, that you
back the President of the
United States as he insists that
we seek peace with honor and
never peace with surrender."
Implies. Waste
Without mentioning George
McGovern by name, Nixon
implied that aU the patient
diplomacy which went into
working out an agreement with
Hanoi to end the fighting,
return prisoners and provide
for a post-war government ln
the South Vietnam would go to
waste if McGovern won the
election.
Reporters have not seen
Nixon since he rang down the
curtain on his public campaigning Friday night but his
mood was described as "calm
and positive" by his
spokesman:
His strategists mostly fear
voter apathy.
The President and Mrs.
Nixon were looking forward to
a celebration dinner tonight
With their daughters Tricla Cox
and Julie Eisenhower, who are
voting on the East Coast. Their
husbands,· Edward Finch Cox
and Lt. David Eisenhower also
will be on hand.
Late . ln tbe evening, the
presidential entourage will
drive to the Shoreham Hotelln
Washington to thank campaign
supporters.

VOL XXV NO. 144

TOKYO- JAP~E POlJCE DISGUISED as airport
workers today overpowered and subdued a balding, 47-year&lt;&gt;id
Japanese who hijacked a domestic airliner and held 126 persons
hostage for eight hours at Tokyo International Airport with a
demand for $2 mlllion ransom and a fllghtto Cuba. He tolcl pollee
he was Tatsuji Nakaoka, 47, who left Japan ln September,1971, to
reside ln the United States. Nakaoka said his wife, Takeilo,llves
ln Los Angeles.
The daylong drama, watched by milllona over television,
halted air traffic Into the world's largest city. The hijacker seized
a short range Boeing 'l'r1 and then demanded an Intercontinental
DC8 for the flight to Cuba. It was the transfer that led to his
Wldoing. Polic;e hid aboard the DC8 and subdued Nakaoka as
darkness feU over the smog blanketed airport.
DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL candidate Sen. George McGovern Is heading for "a crushing defeat
in Ohio," according to a poll conducted by Ohio's largest newspaper, the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The resulls of the poll, published Sunday, show President
Nixon has 54 pet. of the vote, McGovern has 33.7 pet., American
Party candidate Rep. John Sclunitz .3pet. and Communist Party
candidate Gus Hall only .I pet. Another 11.9 pet, of the l,:m
r~glstered voters questioned said they were silii undecided.

.

'

.

HeadquarteB For
H~nes
r

'.

...

UNDERWEAR
Ptclured is the new Henn Thermal
"shirt and drawers made of 50 per:
cent Kodel and 50 percent Cotton.
- Alr·pockels seal In warmth • ..,, out
cold, shrink resistant, easily--·
washed, . heat resistant, elastic
waistband. Sizes small, ·medium,
large, ·e•fra large and e•tra, extra
large.
Be sure to see all the other styles of
Hanes undet .,.ar for men and boys
In the mons department, 1st floorT-shlrts, briefs, union suits, mid
length shorts, athi.Uc shim,-·-.
stoevelou llndershlrts. 5oe the new
calor undlo ,...., In illllk tap, briefs,
tee shirts, lfhtellc shirts. You'll find
a complete stlldlon of style lnd
·you'll find evwy llzt.

..•

. ;.?mt;-;~~.:.:f&gt;Je w W 'lW c®'B~m: ·••·. ,

By United Preas tnlernatiooal

MIAMI - MEYER LANSKY, REPUTED financial brain of
the Wlderworld's gambling empire, was arrested by federal
agenls today when be returned to the United States from a futile
quest on two conoinents for sanctuary from American justice.
Lansky, 70, was escorted off a Braniff jetliner from South
America by Kenneth Whittaker, special agent in charge of the
Miami FBI office, and several other agenls.
He left Israel late Sunday, five days before authorities said
they would deport him if he tlid not leave voiuntarily. Lansky's
arrest ended a 12,700-mlle flight in search of a new home, where
he could find asylum outside the United States. His last bid failed
when Peru joined Israel, Switzerland, Argentina and Paraguay
In rejecting him.
·

-·

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

lnteres~

before going to nearby Sioux Nixon 'COattailsn were not
Falls for election night.
copsidered long enough to pull
Vice President Spiro T. in sufficient Republican senaAgnew and the Democratic torial and House candidates to
vice-presidential candidate, let the GOP win congressional
Sargent Shriver, both were control.
expected to vote in their home
state ol Maryland and stay in
The Republicans need a net
the Washington area.
_gain of five Senate seats and 39
Although the Nixon-Agnew House seats.
ticket was considered an
overwhelming favorite, the
Final surveys by pollsters
1

brought grim news to McGovern Monday as he completed 22 montbs of campaigning for the presidency.
The Gallup poll put him 26
points . behind Nixon; the
Harris poll showed a deficit of
24; a United Press International poll . showed
McGovern lucky \O ca..ry
(Continued on page 4)

OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

llJESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENS

or revenue share
An ordinance setting up a
fund for •·eceiving revenue
sharing money from the
Federal Government was
adopted under emergency
measures by Pomeroy council
in regular session Monday
night.
'
The new fund, known as the
"Federal General Revenue
Sharing Trust Fund" is
required under guidelin es
established in U1e new sharing
program.
Mrs. Jane Walton, clerk.,
who attended a day-long
session to study the program in
Columbus, reported to council
there are many acceptable
ways the new money may be
spent. She sa id , however, local
officials were strongly urged to
spend the nfoney so as to aid
"the most people. "
Council may spend th&lt;
n10ney received in the
remainder of 1912 as it sees lit,

as )ong as guidelines are
followed.
However, in January, 1973,
council must outline and
publish how funds received
during the year will be spent,
which cannot be deviated from.
The revenue sharing
program is of a five-year
dUJ·ation . Money must be spent
on projects which will involve
no local operating costs after
they are established, the clerk
said.
Council accepted the bid of
the Meigs Equipment Co. for a
new street department dump

truck at a price of $5,299. The
only other bid received on the
vehicle was from the Pomeroy
Motor Co. The bid of the Meigs
Equipment Co. on the International truck was the lower
bid.
A number of residents attended the council session to
discuss problems.
Fred Blaettnar, retired auto
agency owner' complained of
the narrowness of Spring Ave.
and of a slip in it beyond a
building he owns in Naylors
Run. Council had no firm idea
(ConUnued on Pag• :4)

Delegate Ball
of·Point dies

i

operator here. He had
represented Mason County in
the House since 1969, · com*1
pleting the second year of his
Presidents of Manifest course ol history. [I avoids the
second lwo-year term.
Destiny, an illuminating and dry biographica l approac h
House , Speaker Lewis Me- ·
historical election year series found in so many textbooks
Manus,. upon learning of Mr.
based on the times and lives of (studen ts and teachers, please
Ball's death, said : "He was a
the various men chosen to lead note) and instead focuses on
line legislator and a good man.
the Republic, is appearing what major issues faced each
He wlll be badly missed."
daily and Sunday in this news- President when he took office
McManus added, "It was a
paper beginning today.
and how capably he coped with
real pleasure to serve with him
Presidents of Manifest these issues.
when I was chairman of the
Destiny is written by Wallace
Election year, 1972, will
Finance Committee, because
Palterson,
author,
historian
mark
the
47th
presidential
of
his conscientious and
(
•
and consul tant in psychology election of our Republic, and
positive attitude."
and education for the Bureau of · Presidents of Manifest Destiny
A spokesman for Secretary
Auditory Education. He is the wi ll enable our readers to
of State John D. Rockefeller IV
co. founder of Creative En.' examine the course of events
also expressed deep regret :
\
te1·prises which applies and personalities that shaped
,upon learning of Mr. Ball's
EUGENE BALL
I
modern technology to the the last 196 years of our
death .
Wallace Patter son
Sam Patrick
creation
of
recorded histor·y.
Mr. Ball was owner of Gene
educational materials.
Plan on taking this
PT. PLEASANT _ Del. Ball's Restaurant and Drive.In
Palterson is currently educational look at our Eugene "Gene" Ball, D- and was a representative lor
working on an intriguing book presidential history each day, Mason, 51, seeking his third the John Hancock Insurance •
based on the extent to which an election-year exclusive term in the Stale House of Company.
each President's personality appearing only in these pages. Delegates in todats election,
He graduated from Hannan ·
affected his performance in
died of an apparent heart at- High School in the Class of 1938
office and place in history.
tack early Tuesday morning at · and from Marshall University
The series' illustrati ons
SPECIAL COMING
home.
in 1949. A member of the
MASON - Burning of leaves smaller stones are to be added are by Sam Patrick, three·lirne
The regular meeting of the
Mr . Ball, of 116 Highland Marshall Universily Alumni
in Mason today had prompted later.
winner of the Freedoms Meigs County Humane Society Ave., was dead on arrival at Association, he' was president ,
town officials to ask area
Council agreed to install a Foundation award for hi s this Thursday has been post· Pleasant Valley Hospital at of its Mason County brlmch.
residents to stop and to help streetlight by the city building. syndicated newspaper series poned unti l a week ahead, Nov. 3:40 a.m. He had a history of
Active in Masonic bodies, he
getting rid of the annual
Bernard Scarberry, water " Dur Presidents ," "Jesus 16, when a special program heart lllness, but was believed was a member of Minturn
autumn fallout in other ways. supervisor, said workmen are .Loved Them." He had had a opened to the public - to be to have recovered, and had Lodge No. 19 AF &amp; AM,
It was during a regular , installing a new 15·horsepower long career as staff artist for announced - will be given.
completed h\s third campaign member of the Franklin
meeting of the Mason Town pump at the pump house to the Los Angeles Times.
against Michael Shaw, his Commandery No. 11 Knighls
Council Monday ~yening that replace o~e which recently Pres idents of Manifest
Republican opponent.
:]'emplar, Chapter 1 of the
the problem was called to the became defective. He also Destiny,
shows
how
Rain over entire state this
Should Mr. Ball win today's Royal Arch Masons, Beni
attention of town officials. Due reported Jhat one water and presidentia l power developed afternoon. Cooler tonig ht, rain election, a successor would be Kedem Shrine at Charleston
to the hazardous smoke sewer tap have been made and •nd how the Chief Executive likely. Lows in the upper 30s named by Gov. Arch Moore . and the Pat Wilson Shrine Club
problem experienced in the town workmen have been used th•t power, both wisely and lower 40s. Cloudy, cooler
A prominent businessman, of Point Pleasant.
community
last
night, engaged
in
spreading and unwisely , to influence the tomorrow.
Mr. Ball was a restaurant
He was immediate past
residents are being requested limestone .
president of the Poinl Pleasant
to bag their leaves and place
The town and water
Kiwanis Club and was a
them next to the street where department financial reports
member of the Kiwanis Board
the town truck will make were made as follows:
of Directors. He held tnempickups Friday of this week.
Town of Mason - balance as
berships in the Loyal Order of
It was specified that this is of September 30, '$2,929.43;
A membership committee Monday , · Wed nesday and committee be formed the first the Moose Club in Point
for leaves only. No garbage is receipts, $5,028.29; expenses, was organized and Carolyn Friday from 12 to 3 and of the year to plan a work Pleasant, of the Board of
to he in 1/Je baggage.
$3,182.58; balance as of Oc- Th'omas, secretary, was em- Tuesday and Thursday from 9- schedule for the year 1973 and Directors of Pleasant Valley
It was . pointed out that tob~r 31, $4,m.l4.
ployed fuli' time beginning 12. It is located on the ground present the program to local Hospital, and was a former
several persons experienced . Water D~par(!ll~nt balance Wednesday by the Pomeroy floor of the courthouse.
~ merchanls and chamber president of the Point Pleasant
re,.Piratoiy problems due to as of September 30, $3,292.31; . Chamber of Commerce
Mrs. Thomas suggested that members.
- Mason .CoWlty Chamber of .
the heavy smoke hanging over receipts, ·$4,619.40 ; expenses, Monday following its regular the seventh and eighth grade . It also was suggested that the Commerce. He was a.member
the area.
.,
$4,374.28; balance as of Oc· . luncheon a\ the ,Meigs Inn .
cheerleaders of Meigs Jr . High Pom.eroy firemen, Cable TV or of . the: West Virginia
Councilman Richard Fowler tober 31, $3,537.52.
Named to the membership assist . Santa in distributing the telephone company be ' Restaurant Association and of
reported that materials have · Town bills will be paid in the committee were Ralph Graves, candy treats on his arrival on contacted In regard to pullipg Trinity United Methodist
been purchased for the .amount of $1,394.44 and water Bob Jacobs and Henry Cleland . . Thursday, Nov. 30, which is the up Chrisimas lighting.
'
Church.
·
remodeling of the city building department bills in the amount Mrs. Thomas, who was hired kickoff of the annual Christmas
Attending were Jack Kerr, ' A Navy veteran of World
and that brick work sho'!Jd of $2,745.83. ·
for ,three hours per day, five season promotion.
president; N. w. compton, War 1), ,he belonged to. the
begin t~is week. It was
MayorRoyHarlesspresided, days a week, was placed on a·
The, chamber, in other Ingels; Dennis Keney, Bill . American Legion Point
disc~o~d that · to dl!ll! ap- assisted -by Recorder Gary full time basis for two weeks to business, voted,to purchase the Grueser, Virgil Teaford, Ralph Pleasant Post No. 23.
·proximately 171 tons of. Gibbs with Councihnen Joe assist -the 'memoorship com- annual tickets for the ''tiold- Graves, Henry Cleland, Bob - He was porn Jillre 6, 1921 in
limestone have been put on ' Jone;, · Richard Fowler; mittee and in Christmas Star Christmas Give-A.way" Jacobs, Ted Re,ed, Louis Mason County, a son of Roy
alleys. All alleys have been Russell Barton and Thomas promotion work.
from Bob Jacobs.
Osoorne, Beulah Jones and and Myrtia Rowsey a.JI of
covered with l•rge stones and Layton present.
The Chmllber office is Open
Earl Jn~ds suggested a Carolyn Thomas.
(Continued on page 10)

Presidential series begins today

1

4 .

1

Leaf burning in
Mason now no-no

BONN - EAST .AND WEST GERMAN envoys completed
nesotiaUons Monday night on a treaty governing relations
between the two countries and said a draft agreement would go
to their respective governments today for approval.
The Bonn government was announcing today whether it
found the treaty ready for initiailiog or whether it should go back
for further negotiations. "I would say the chances are :i0-50,"
said deputy goverrunent spokesman Ruredlger von Wechmar. ·
The decisive day for the treaty followed five months of
negotiation ln Berlin between State Secretaries Egon Bahr of
West Germany and Michael Kohl of East Germany.

Weather

Cham'her commJ•ttee named

MOSCOW -THE SOVIET UNION MARKED the 55th an-niversary of lis Bolshivlk Revolution today by ,parading wellknown military hardware and declaring that International
tensions are relaxing. The !Oornlnute military display o! ·rockets,
· tanks inti guns through Red Sq~ produ~ no surprises. The
oratory from the tribune of Lenin's mawtOieum was mild comP!Ired to psst years and did not assail the United ,States or China

name. .

vote in a San Clemente, Calif.,
schoolhouse when the polls
open at 7 a.m. He then was
scheduled to fly lo Washington .
-arriving late in the afternoon
-and watch the returns.
McGovern, the 5().year&lt;&gt;ld
South Dakota senator who
broke out of obscurity to win
the Democratic presidential
nomination, planned to vote at
his home. Mitchell. S.D..

r;:;:;::;~:~,~~&gt;.&gt;,::::;::::~~:::::.&lt;~~,~~)~~,~~:::~~::::::::::~::::::::::~:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::m:i::::::::::::::::i::::::i::::::::::::i:::::::::~~:::~i.::~;;::::~:&gt;,:;~~

MOSCOW - TilE SOVIET UNION marked the 55th anniversary of its Bolshevik Revolution today with a traditional
military parade through Red Square and a pledge to defend the
"great gains of socialism" with its armed might.
Western military experts who viewed several dress
rehearsals of the parade past the Lenin mausoleum said they
expected little new ln the roUpast of tanks, gWls and missiles. It
is the IOOth such parade since the revolution.
Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko, in an order&lt;&gt;f-the.&lt;Jay
to his troops reported by the Tass news agency, said the Commoolst party and the government paid particular attention to
Increasing the nation's defensive capacity and strengthenning its
army and navy.

b).

.

FIRST SALE - Walter Grueser of Pomeroy purchased the fir.lt two tickets sold for the
"Fall Follies" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association when they went on sale Monday afternoon
from Rose Sisson at the New York Clothing House. Mrs. Robert Lewis, Pomeroy, is advance
ticket sales chairman for the production sponsored by the Meigs High School Band Boosters to
be stagedat8p.m., Friday, Nov. 24. Advance tickets are being sold at $1 each while admission
at the door on show night will be $1.25. Tickets may be purchased from Nelson's Drugs, Swisher
and Lohse DrUgs and !he New York ClothinS HOUS! )!I Pomeroy; Villagei\lij~macy, Dutton
Drugs and Bahr Clothier in Middleport, and at the Rutland Furniture Store. Grueser has
purchased the first tickets to the annual presentation the past two years. Mrs. Ronald
Williams, Rutland, is in charge of ticket sales in the.western areas of the county.

SAIGON- AU. S. FILL SWING-WIN JET vanished early
today over North Vietnam, the third of the controversial $15
million planes lost since they returned to action in Indochina
Sept. 28 for the first time in four years.
It was the second U. S. jet lost over North Vietnam in' 24
hours. AU. S. Navy A7 Corsair was downed by "probable antiaircraft lire" Monday 120 miles south of Hunoi, the U: S.
COIIIIIUind said. Its pilot Is missing. The missing Fill was Oylng
fast and low on a solo ''penetration mission" - meaning it was
supposed to be over the target before North Vietnamese air
defense could detect it - when It ~lsappeared, military sources
said. Both cyewmen were missing.

ELBERFELDS ·tN POMEROY

.

•

CLEVELAND -

SAIGON - A HIGHLY PLACED American civUtan source
said today that failure of the White House to keep the Defenae
Department Informed of truce taJb )rogress led to a last minute
stampede to get new weapons Into South Vietnam before a truce
went Into effect. The source said Defense Department offlclals
apparently had not been Informed of the terms of the proposed
agreement unW it was ready for slgning. When they learned it
would ban Introduction of any new or addlU911ai weapons and
)rovide only for replacement of existing weapona ln the South
Vietnamese army, they protested.
At that point, the stampede begsn to bring ln new weapons
)rior to signing of an accord. In Washington, the Defenae
Department annoooced that It was "borrowing" F~ Freedom
Fighter jet altack bombers from Iran, Taiwan and South·Korea
for the South V.ietnameae Air Force.

'

an

Pomeroy ready

~.t.

seltlement.

-·

· Devoted To The

.
B
.
ews•• ln rre1sJ

. .. .

ectin

WASHINGTON (UP!)
the 18-to-2J'year&lt;&gt;lds.
Richard M. Nixon was rated a
The National Weather
prohibitive favorite to defeat Service predicted mild temGeorgeS. McGovern today and peratures throughout most of
win a second term in what he the nation. There may be
called the "clearest choice" in showers over a third of U1e
a century · ol presidential country but no winterlike
elections.
storms that could cui the voter
An estimated 60 to 85 million turnout.
Americans were expected to
Staying overnight in the
vote, including, for the first Western White House, Nixon
time in a presidential election, planned to get up early and

Capital tonight; makes

(Continued from Page I)

.

" Hay Is something we must

·resz ent

Hanoi claiming: 'I:~ul'

FOLLIES' CHANGE
Due. to the use ol the
Pomeroy Elementary School
as · a voting location, By Uolted Press. International 'oThiS act of war runs counter
Tuesday's rehearsal of the . North Vietnam said today to the spirit and conteols of !he
· "Fall Follies" has been the U.S. strengthening of South complete provlsioruJ of the
cancelled, According to the Vietnamese armed forces en- agreement which should have
revised schedule, aU dance dangers any peace agreement been signed by now," the of.
lines will rehearse at the because it is In violation of the flcial North Vietnamese radio
school this eveniug begin- spirit of the accord, ''which .said.
ning with ihe fourth grade should have been signed by · The broadcast came one day
after Secretary of State WU- '
group at 6:30 p. m. On now."
Wednesday evening, a
The Viet Cong again ap. liam P. &amp;gers said peace
program to be' glveo at the pealed for the United Statea to negotiations would resume
Soil and Water District sign the agreement bot llltid ll . shortly, but ex)ressed caution
meeting on Thursday wlU be was ready otherwise to fight · that the war Itself would end
· rehearsed at 6:30 p. m. All on.
before several more weeks.
The
North
Vietnamese
.
s
tate-.
The Engllsh~anguage Hlllloi
dancers wlll rehearse from 7
to 8 and all soloists are to ment,was broadcast by Radio
report irom 8 to 9 p. m. at the Hanoi and heard ln Saigon. It
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Pomeroy
Elementary said the U.S. buildup of Saigon
The Middleport E-R squad
building.
forces "also threatens . the answered a call to North
breaking of the agreement." Second St. at 10:42 a. m.
Sunday for Kimberly Lewis, 1~.
who was ill and ruoniog a high
Bradley Meek, 95
. temperature. She was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

'

~·

"'11tanks to the principled and Oexible foreign 'policy of the
SoViet Union and other Socilllist states, as well as to the vigorous
activities of pntgresslve forces of the world, some .relaxation of
_,-..intem.tloaal tension has been- ~!Uevta Of J!tte/' said Defense
Minllter ~ Anchl A. Grechko.
"How;;a, 1111 lte imperlalilt force~ are atiU active ln
(CGrltinued on page 10)

EIBERfEIIIIN POIEIJY·'
\

�...

2- The Dallysentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Nov 7, 1972

I--------------------------,I
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lht Almanac
lly Urnll-d Press Intematlonal
T&lt;XIay ts Tuesday. Nov 7, the
3121h day of 1972 wtth 54 to

Lftt1n ef ep1a1oa 1ft weleomed They should be less
lllaMwenls loa&lt; (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
_.mat be signed with the signee's address. Names may be

I
l
l1 llloald
wtdlheld upon publication, however, on request Letters I
be good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. 1
In

~
A)~

I
I

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l

! ••• 'Jitt. fdi!Dt:
I

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Letter to Defense folks
Dear Editor
We would like wdtrect thts letter to the Gailla County CIVIl
Defense and the Shenff's J,Jepartment
First of ali, we did not think we caused any trouble over
Halloween We were out havmg fun, m the open, like lots of
others, but unlike so'!le adults who maybe drank roo much
.dcoholm the secrecy of thetr mce homes, then perhaps got m
their cars rodnve around and maybe hit someone
Adeputy shot at us while we were at the graveyard throwmg
corn at cars We dtd not harm anyone Mter we were run off at
the graveyard, we went to Cheshire wrun around a while While
there, we were surrounded by the Ctvli Defense Ail we did there
Wllll soap some wmdows and pull a tratler out in the road
Now we would !Ike w make some suggestions to the CIVIl
Defense First of all, you shouldn ~ have everyone m your
depsrtrnent followmg us You should have had some left 10 Addison, some 10 Cheshtre, and some m Georges Creek We would
only like to ask one thmg of you Don 't shoot at us next year We
don't like VIolence Until next year
Yours truly, The Addison Hoodlums and Cheshtre Naval
Academy (Name Withheld on request )

JACK KANE
Jack Kane, Rad1o Statton
WMPO program dtrector
"111 emcee the 1972 Meigs
County Junror Mrss Pageant
to be held at 8 p m on
Saturday, Nov 18, at the
Southern High School m
Racme Kane, 26, has been a
radio figure smce 1969,
havmg "orked at WCAW rn
Charleston and WMPO
Prior to JOIIItng WMPO,
Kane was a production
engmeer for WKYC Radto m
Cleveland. Thrs is his thtrd
year of association wllh the
Junror Mrss Pageant

i'lw moon IS belween 1ts new
phase dDd fu st quarter
The mormng stars are Ven•s,
Mar s and Saturn
'llw cvcmng sl;rrs are MereuryandJupJler
Those born on thiS dale are
under the s1gn of Scorpto
Evangelist Brlly Graham was
burn Nov 7, 1918
On Lhrs day m hJSrory
In 1805, tile Lewts and Clark
Expedrlwn sighted the Pactfrc
Ocean at the mouth of the
Columbia R1ver
In 1874, the first cartoon
deptc ling the elephant as the
S) m~ol of the Republican party
""' prmled tn Harper's Weeklv
In 1916, Republican Jeanette
Ra nktn of Montana became the
fn sl woman elected to the US
House of Representahves
In 1968 crowds tn Prague,
Czechoslovakia burned Russtan
flags and battled pollee m the
slreets the notmg was qutckly
quelled
'

'---------......1

t)lought you would stay m
spades I would have doubled ..
South said, "Thank you,"
$nd proceeded to wrap the
contract around West's neck.
West was an honest man
Hts remark clearly mdicated
that he held four truml?.s to
the queen-Jack. It also told
South that he could make his
contract if West held the
nght distrtbution
South won the diamond.
Cashed one trump and the
other high diamond to discard one club from dummy.
Ruffed a diamond In dummy
and played three rounds of
hearts to d1scard his own last
dtamond, followed by three
rounds of clubs South had to
ruff the last club while unfortunate West was followmg
suit
Everyone was down to
three cards South led l .low
trump and West won w1m an
honor and had to lead the
sutt back and give South the
last two trtcks.

By Oswald &amp; Jemes Jacoby
Yesterday we commented
on the madvJSabillty of declarer talkmg durmg the
play It IS even less advisable for a defender to talk
We have set up the same
North-South hands as yester(NEWSPAPER INTERPliSl lSSN )
day, but changed the EastA thought for the day Jnsh West holdmgs and the btddmg
pnet playwnght and wtt Oscar
North rebtd two no-trump
Wilde sard, ''Expenence IS the
West opened the queen of The brddrng has been
...J''.'.",._.,..;-_.;.v:o)
.,.
I
•
.~;.......v!«•:O.O:••,•~ l'ooo': " IJ';&gt;•••••:OAr.•XV:::~ :0 .-.,:,.r,_&lt;;.o"o',1;,o.;?
na me evervone g1ves to theJr dtamonds, took one look at West North Eut South
rmstakes '
dummy and remarked, "If I
I.
Pass
?
~
1i
You, South, hold
?o
.Q8U.KU3.A785.3
:d
By Helen and Sue Bottel
:S :-:-:;:;::m;-.z-»-::~..:::::.:.-:·.··:·····: •• •·= ·==·=-=-·==-= ·.:;-·=-= .·'$:-:=:~.:::::;~:x·:~m~·(. · . . .~..~·~··· · ·· ·1~* -::: v !"e"·
What do Y9U do now?
A-Bid one diamond. T1W
"OLDER WOMAN" TURNS HIM OFF
mak.. it euy lor Jlllrlner to bid
Helen and Sue
a heart or SJIIIdo II be holrb lour
eardo in the suit.
I'm a 16-yearo()ld guy who IS old for hts age. ThiS 21l-yearo()ld
TODAY'S QUESTION
college gtrl was a great chtck, but after a couple of months I
You
btd one diamond and
knew we couldn't make 1t together I've rold her honest but nrce,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
same-named dad was the gifted drummer for your partner btds one no-trump
thalli's over, but ..
LADIES AREDAVID'S GOLIATH
the old Smatra~ra Harry James, and Artie What do you do now?
The trouble IS, she hangs on She calls and comes over m her
NEW YORK (KFS) - Davtd Ntven m "21"
Shaw bands . Ask Artie Shaw what the
car and even though I don't want her to take me out - well I can't rold us he's "scared stliy" at startmg hiS lecture
DINNER, BAZAAR SET
redheaded gal S8ld to h1tn just as she left his
tell her wgo take a fiymg jump because that would be mean - so rour The mast suave flln! star's aurobwg, "The
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
apartment house elevaror after Artie accused
I end up gomg And when I'm wtth her I thmk about thiS gtrl my Moon's a Balloon," made hun the highest patd
dmner
and bazaar wtll be held
her of pushing all the down-buttons; turned out
age whom I'd like to date tf I could JUS! get Jane off my back
darling of the nation 's ladles clubs before he
Saturday
begmnmg at ~ p m
some kid pranked them all which made the lift a
What do you do when an older woman says she can't live even sets a WnsJI waggmg
Sinatra's lovely
local mstead of the express Arlie pshawed. It's by the WSCS at the St Paul
without you• - TIM
Nancy Gunderson switched to wme nulllona1re
Umled Methodtsl Church
an unprmtable howl'
annex
m Tuppers Plams The
P.S Jane has fnends her own age - she's not relirrded or AleJOs Ltchme, (who told us m LouiSe's he sold
Ftve Whtte House administrations of
anything Not backward either'
his vast wme busmess - for a fortune ) Gene
canme-stt!ing for Traphes Bryant, whose menu wtll mclude baked
Cavallero Jr sold hts gourmet heaven, "The
gradable bio IS due any mo, titled "Life m the chtcken and dressmg, mashed
Tim
Colony, to a patr of Germans who'll open 11 as a
White House Dog House" ... Baseball's Larry potatoes and gravy, green
beans, noodles, ham, sweet
H "me~ and honest" doesn't work, take another route: Act pop-prtced eatene
ersatz soul smger Tom
MacPhail's sprtg, Jean, has the engagement
potatoes, salad, pte, cake and
YOUNGER than your age for a change Make Jane feel like a Jones reserved rooms m Bhghty's Nuffteld
rmg from Conn. lad James Duncan, Jr., who coffee The dmner prtce IS $1 50
mother-unage. Put on the dumb ktd brother act If you're a good Hospttal for a phizz~tft
graduates mto the Marme Corps next spnng .. for adults and children, $1
enough actor, she won't be hanging around much longer - SUE
Sarah Churchill at John Barleycorn wasn't
N Y liquor stores have a run on mini-cognac
overly complimentary about the "Young
+++
bottles every Fnday - the halfbuck jobs are
Dear Tun
The Daily Sentinel
Wtnston" flick, which presumably btogs ber
favontes at college and pro grid games . Carol
DEVOTED
TO THE
... Unless Jane ENJOYS playmg mother
dad's youthful escapsdes But she gave a $20
Channmg's heartbreak was nQt getting the
INTEREST OF
Sometimes "bemg mean " is the ooly way w get your lip to gwtanst - vocalist Charlie Magee when he
MEIGS-MASON AREA
"Hello, Dolly" flini role she originated )n the
CHESTER
L TANNEHILL ,
lJieanmg across If Sue's ruse doesn't work, then tell her you're sang m her honor, "Maybe It's Because I'm a Bdwy stage; so 1t0agme the annoyance- she's
Exec Ed
through, you have another gtrl now; and don't back down' Londoner That I Love London Town" One of
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
bad to sit through "Dolly" Strelsand m the film
Cllr Edtlor
HELEN
Noel Coward's delightful antiques m the enthree t~tnes m atrplanes.
Published dall~ ucept
Saturday bV The Ohto Vall~y
chantmg "Oh Coward" revue at the New
+++
George C Scott's wanted for the Gen. Publ
ts hing Company, 111
Dear Rap·
Theatre IS "London Pnde," so touchmg a gentle
MacArthur f1bn, but tells everyone Cary Grant Court St , Pomeroy Ohio.
~5769 Business Olflce Phone
~ I'm more mature than most kids of 16 I IU{e a guy who 1s 21,
potgnancy that 11 e\ren reached an Irtsh crtllc's
should retlte from retirement for it ... Tuesday 992
2156 Edllor.al Phone 992
heart ~ •
., ... 1
bUt he used wtake dope and my parents wdll't give him a' chance
Weld and her (beautiful) siSter, Sally (Mrs 7157
Second clan postage peld 1t
Really, he's cllang&amp;i
11!:.
Queen"Ltz - Prmce J1litl InVited a group of ' Howard) COOper, dined during the early show at Pomeroy,
Ohio
I don't like sneaking, but my folks won't even let me talk to folks to their Silver weddmg anmversary m Casmo Russe and left swmgmg tennis racquets
Naltonal adverttStng
representative Bottmelll
him on the telephone He wants me to travel with h1tn next Westrnmster Abbey who were wed that same
- for a mtdnight sweat at the new tenrJS club Gallagher, In c. 12 E~tt 42nd
New York City, New York
summer and I'm wild about traveling, but if I go, my father Nov '47 day The 5th Coast Guard Dts!rtc!
atop an E 70s apartment house Which does so St Subscrtptton
rates
Oe
might track me down and put hltn m Jail Meanwhile I see him com"'ander ktboshed federa l-patd sub- much business it's open 16 hours a day ... lrvered by carrter
where
SO cents per week.
•
·ons to Playboy notmg 11 has "gone beyond
whenever! can get away Naturally, he won't come wthe hou9e
Huntingron Hartford's new Show Club has a available
Bv Motor Route where carrier
.... • ....ds of what many constder proper",
How do you convince hopelessly old-fashwned parents• brace of old familiar kissers at the velvet rope: servtce not available One
month 1175 By mat! m Ohio
WISHING AND HOPING
naw , tl's JUSt dull prurtency . In the necessary
Ed WyMe whose Harwyn Club was m con- and
W va , One veer Sl• oo
hstmgs of magazme owners, Smatra's num- tention wtth the Srork Club for a few long-ago Sr• months S7 25 Thret
months U 50 Subscription
Dear Wand H.
bered as a New York mag mvestor . Met a
mmutes, pius Tony Butrtco who once head· prtce mcludes Sunday Times
Senttnel
Sometimes "old-fashioned" parents are like ant1ques They muscled lad named Ralph Watkins, one of the
wattered at the Stork
Washmgton Redskins coaches, turned out h15
bavea lot of value, once you pohsh them up
Instead of putting them down as hopeless, try really talkmg
11 out. When they know you'll come half-way to see thetr stde,
maybe they'll gtve your guy a chance wprove he's changed
SUE
"Pll~~~~·w.~NoYoWo"h-.•o•

•••~•._,_. , ,,

y--u..-.•~

. R ap
Generahon

I Voice along Br'Way

.

Dear Wand H
And maybe he hasn't changed as much as you'd like to
believe Would a trustworthy adult ask a 16-yearo()ld gtrl for
sneak dales' Would he encourage her to run off and travel wtth
him?
Parents aren't "hopelessly old-fashtoned" when they worry
about a daughter who tsn 't as "mature" as she thmks If your
guy is really strrught, he'd make an effort to convmce your folks
he'sno threat I doubt that he has even trted norw11lhe, so long
as you keep meeting him on the sly Do 'I' - HELEN

+++
Rap·
"Martm," who suffered out gym classes, could have been me
ln junior hi and high school Durmg those years I measured tune
by the next phys ed class - 11 was either "Thanks God, three
wbole days without gym," or "In only two hours I'll be through P
E. class." Of course we only played football, basketball and
baseball, the three sports wtth the least carryo()ver value for
adult life
, !{ow I'm nearly 10 years away from school At last the tdea of
exercise and athlebc games doesn't seem repugnant, but I shll
tend to assume people Will humiliate me for bemg clumsy
I don't know what schools or parents can do about this, but
it's true that gym classes can easily aggravate a personality
problem A diet of ridicule !wtce a week or more never helped
anyone's ega' The poor athlete feels that hiS manhood IS
threatened and so he's cut off from his peers - STEVE

OUR BOARDING HOUSE
TO ~C.TUI'\LLY
6T~I&lt;r YOUR MACHINE
OR DID YOU PR,O,G II£
OVfl! TO flt::l'-.11. YOUR
LIFE STORY-~CH l&gt;o~
IT IS' I DON'T l!ELIE.VE
YOU I!E,o.J.LY C,J..N 1'\l&gt;.KE
/'. !'"'PER BRICK '

ISOINCS.

with Mojor Hoople

&amp; THINBS

Defender Had a Big Mouth
NOR'l11 (D)
1
• 9 83
• KQJ 2
• 5
WEST "'A Q6 54 EAST
•QJ S2
••
• 8 63
¥ 10 9 1 5
• Q J 10
• 914 3 2
• J 10 3
"'9 8 2
SOUTH
•AKI076
: ~ ~ 86
"'K 7
North-South vulnerable
West North Eut S..Uth
I "'
Pass 2 •
Pass 2 NT Pass 3 •
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 NT.
Pass s•
Pass 6•
Pass Pass Pass
Openrng lead- • Q

PRESIDENTS Of" MANIFEST DESTINY

.

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3-Tbe Dally Benllliel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Nov 7,1972

w•N AT BRIDGE

r~·ll tl \\1

li-

by PaHerson and Patrick

\nd what a natton 11 "as, thts brash vtctor 0\ er
the \\orld's mtghttest emptre There were less than
4 mtlhon people-mcludmg 700,000 ~laves-m .til
of the 13 states, each belligerently Jealous of tts
snvcre1gnty There was little cash, less credit, a
natmnal debt of some $50 mtlhon, and m~a11on was
rampant
\s nearly al\\ays before a momentotts event he
was to head, Washmgton was uncertam and pcsstmts!lc Moreover, the proud , sensttne Vtrgmtan,
not una\\are of postcmy, knew hts every act would
be a precedent-settmg one "I walk, as 11 were, on
untnxlden ground ," he confided to a fnend, addmg
"that I shall feel an msuperable diffidence in my
own abthttes "
\ tall, 111uscular mesomorph, Washmgton had
the temperament m which pesstmtsm normally fell
to np!lmtsm in the heat of actton. Now, wnh the
atd of Congress and Cabmet, the man who had
become the symbohc "father figure" of hts countrymen "ent In wnrk cstablishmg the departments and
procedures that sent the Umted States of \menc.1
on lis swift climb to world power.
However, the President's satisfactiOn With
domestic progress was fretted by growmg concern
nvcr foretgn affatrs . The French Revolution, of
wh tch he had first heartily approved, had degenerated mto the Retgn of Terror and subsequent \1 ar
f1rsl Ptes1dent George Wash1nglon
With England '\merican popular opmton strongly
(F~rsl Admml5trohon Aprol 30, 1789-March 4, 1793)
favored stdmg wnh France.
Washmgton was fully aware of hts country's
great debt to France for atd m the Amencan
"/ walk
on tmtrodden ground''
Revolution, but he was also aware of his country's
tinanctal msolvency and military impotence. FearWhen George Washmgtun toolt the oath of - mg the Umted States might be engulfed m the conoffice .ts the first Pre~tdent of the Umted States
fltct and destroyed, the Prestdent reluctantly but
\pnl 30, 1789 , m Nc\1 York Ctty, there had been
firmly decided on a neutral policy.
nearly e•ght yc.m of more or less "n~nonlcss" exts· '
The resulting crtticism upset him terribly, and
tcncc under the loosely "orded and carelessly
he let 1t be known that he intended to retire to
,tdmmtstcrcd •\mclcs of Confederation smce he had
hts beloved Mount Vernon at the end of his term .
accepted Bnttsh Genera l Corn\\ .1llis' surrender at
But the idea of an Amenca without Washingtnn
Yorktthvn to end the Revoluuonary War
at thiS r~fllous pertod caused friend-and f&lt;le to join
Now there finally was a CanstiiUIIOn, and now
ranks and beg htm to reconsider ":'llorth and South
the man who had worked so cffec111 ely as ",1 Samwtll hang together," Secretary of State Jefferson
son m thl· field," to horro\\ 'I hl)mas Jefferson's
told the Pcestdent, "tf they have you to hang on "
.1ppropnate phr.tse, had been unammously elected
Once .tgam George Washmgton stood up to he
to serve .ts ".t Solomon tn the councr l" f•lf the new
counted, a1ul once ag~m he uas unammously
'
n.ltlon
electt•d
c.~, ... "'' lOS •1*01111 H.,l l

Best we've aced-Woody

BY PAUL CRABTREE
A fairy !ale :
It all began In mid-1973, when some of the gang at Lou

Harris, Gallup, Sindlinger and all the other polls had nothing to
do but sit on their rucuit boards between electtons, smce there
was so little polling w be done.
After a Manhattan-etyle lunch at which abnost everyone had
too many martinis, they went back to work and spent the af·
temoon talking rather incoherently to !hell' computers
Suddenly, there was a flash of light and a cloud of blue smoke
spread over computer control at Gallup Simultaneously, the
same thl!lg happened at Gallup and Sindlinger. The computers,
ptcking up the slightly-mtoxlcated braln waves of thetr bosses,
all prmted out lhe1r most closely·luut secreta
- The voters at Buttercup Ave School m Pomeroy, at
Precmct 57 m Mason County, W. Va. and at James Monroe
Jumor High m Gallipolis had voted exactly as the whole natton
had in every smgle election since 1900.
-What IS more, the Meigs County polling place had always
been staunchly Republican; the Gallia school was exactly 50-SO
mregistration; and the Mason precmct was solidly Democratic.
With that, all three computers sent the same message
''This mformation (hie') makes us obsolete. We are
therefore terminating all programmmg. In five 9econds, our
memory banks (hie') will 9eH-destruct, because we have no
further usefulness Goodbye and (hie') good luck. Poooooof '"
Armed with such awesome knowledge, the pollsters virtually
shut down !hell' operations. Lou HarriS fll'ed his staff and traded
his broken co!JlpUter 10 on a pocket calculator offered at
tremendous savlngs by a gasoline eredtt-card outf1t. The Gallup
people sold the1r computer wan outfit which advertised a polite
way wbest BoriS Spsssky m chess through use of computertzed
data~ And Sindlinger's got out of polling altogether and started
selling encyclopedias door-to-door
Closely locked m a vault at the Chase Manhattan Bank was
the secret of the dead computers, and the pollsters silently
descended upon the Metgs, Gallia and Mason precinclll for the
1976 electiOn -covering no other section of the country
They were rewarded handsomely For about I pet of their
prevtous expenses, they correctly predtcted the outcome of the
claSSLc struggle between Teddy Agnew and Sp1ro T KeMedy m
the 1976 presidential election Their margm of error was zero. In
1980, the same thing happened. Right on the button
By thiS tln!e,their onuSCJence had become so mattero()f.fact
that their off-season staff consiSted of a phoneilllSwermg devtce
at Harris' g1ant offtce operation, while Gallup depended on an
elderly lady who typed but didn~ take shorthand Sindlinger's
people got 15 pet. off the tap for keep111g !hell' mouths shut.
In 1984, the obscure county regiStrar of VItal sta!JSllc m
Fresno, Calif , William Henry Hamson Blastoff, was nominated
for President by one psrty, while the other chose the Governor of
East VirgiiUa, Beauregard Calhoun
The pollsters hired a part-tltne staff, gave tbem a desulrory
course in how to conduct polling, and sent them wtthout further
instructions to the Trt-County area
When the results were in, the polls conftdently predtcted that
Blastoff would win the election handtly, with 58.544 pet of the
vote to 41,936 for Calhoun, and the rest undecided Everyone sat
back, confident of the infallibility of the polls. then voted, and
went home and turned on the TV wsee their polls (and votes)
conflrDled.
To the aslonislunent of the natton, and the everlastmg
destruction of the polls, Calhoun won the eleclion gomg away,
gelling 60 pet. of the vote.
You see, In the meanline, the people at Precmct 57, Buttercup Ave. and Monroe Jumor High had all d~vered the
Manhattan-etyle lunch And when you've had too many martmls,
yoli tend lillie a lot.

Television Log
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 Around The Bend 33
6 30 - News 3, 4. 6. B, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Growing
H1m Up 33
7 00 - News 6, 10, What's My Lrne8 Elec Co 20 Andy Griffith
15 Beatthe Clock 4, I've Got A Secret 13, Truth or Con seq 3
Samt 15, Elec Co 20
7 30 - Thrs Is Your Lrfe 3, To Tell The Truth 6 Proce Is R•ghl8,
10 , BeaiThe Clock 13 RF D20 : Feast of Language 33
8 00 -

Bonanza 3, 4 15 Temperatu res

R1smg 6, I:J , Mauae

~

10, Ageo1 Anxrety 13 Oh1o ThiS Week20 Age of Anxoely 33

8 30 - Elechon Coveraoe 20, Dateline Amer1ca 33

00 - Beh1nd The Lines 33
9 30 - Marshall Sports 33
10 00 - NBC Report 3 4, 15 Marcus Welby. M D 6 13 News 20
11 00- News. Weather. Sports 3. 4, 6 8, 10. 14. 15
11 30 - Election Coveragel. 4. 8. 10 13. 15
11 00 - Your Health 4
1 30 - News. Weather 4 Local News 13
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8. -1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmttme 10, Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4, Brble Answers 8. Urban League 10
7 00 - Today3, 4,15 CBSNews8, 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8, Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullw(nkle
13
8 00 - Capt Kan~aroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame Sl 33 ,
9

T1mmy &amp; Lass1e 6

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room 8
8 55- Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Drxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Concentration 6

Cap1 Kangaroo

a,

Friendly Juncl1on 10, Ben Casey 13
.
9 30 - Elec Co 33 , To Tell lhe Trulh 3, Jeopard~ 6. Hazel a
10 00 - Dinah Shore3, 15, Columbus s,. Calling 6, Joker's W1ld
8, 10 , Dick Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentrat,on3 15. Ph1f Donohue4 . Price Is R1ght8, 10 ,
Spill Second 13
11 00 - Sale of Century 3, 15 Love Amerrcan Style 6, Gambits.
10 Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4, 15 , Love o1llfa8, 10, Bew1fched 6
13

-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - One of
the btg questions facmg Ohto
State this week as the fourth·
ranked Buckeyes prepare w
meet M1ch1gan State IS
whether or not the Spartans
will still be emotionally htgh
because of the announced
ret~rement of Coach Duffy
Daugherty
Last week, Michigan State,
which had stumbled w a 2-4-l
mark In tis first seven games,
knocked Purdue from a tie for
the Btg Ten lead wtth a 22-12
wm over the Boilermakers It
came two days after Daugherty's announcement
Ohto State Coach Woody
Hayes, who has to be wondering what frame of mmd the
Spartan players wtll be m, called Mtchigan State "an exceptionally fme team whtch has
the abthty to play up w an
emotiOnally high peak.
"There's no queshon Mtchigan State wtll be the best team
we've faced all seuson,"Hayes
wid the gathering at hts weekly
press luncheon

Esco Sarkkmen, however,
who saw the MSU·Purdue
tussle Saturdlty, satd be dtdn't
thmk the Spartans were
"blazmg emotiOnally htgh" at
the start of the game, although
he dtd admtt "they got pumped
up as the gwne went on ''
Sarkkinen warned, however,
"they'll get up for our game "
Leaves "Trimmed"
Hayes satd the offense m the
MtMesota wm was "not qutte
what 11 has been" and 11
showed m the number of
Buckeye Leaf performance
awards he handed out
Quarterback Greg Hare, who
Hayes satd "played an errorproof game,'' was named the
top back and recetved two
leaves Champ Henson, the
bru1smg sophomore fullback,
got three leaves for hiS twotouchdown performance and
I31 yards rushmg, mcludm{ur
couple of btg plays
Freshmen Bnan Baschnagel
and Archte Grtffm each pte ked
up two awards, wtlh tackle
Merve Teague, the top lineman

NBA Sllndlngs
By United Pren tnternallon11
Eastern Conference

West

w I pel g b
10 5 667
tnd1ana
7 4 636 I
San 01ego
7 6 538 2
Denver
7 6 ..138 2
Dallas
3 7 300 41f1
at safety
Monday's Results
DeMoss, who hunself was
Utah 124 Carol1na 112
SJdelmed wtth pn•umoma, was
(On ly game scheduled I
Tuesday's Games
okayed by doctors for a hght
New
York at San Otego
work schedule thiS week and
lndtana at Memphts
wtll be on the s1dehnes
{On ly games scheduled}
Saturday for the PurdueWHA Standmgs
Wtsconsm game
By Umted Press International
East
llllm defenSive stalwart Ken
w I t pts ga ga
Brtd, who leads JlhnoiS m Cleveland
8 3 11 75033
tackles, will play Saturday New England 8 4 0 16 52 37
7 4 1 15 4435
agamst Indtana desptle an Quebec
New
York
7 6 0 14 59 49
allmg arm, 11 was announe&lt;:d Ottawa
6 4 I 13 51 48
Monday Bratd suffered an Ph1ladelph1a 2 11 0 4 37 67
West
arm mJury durmg Dlmots' 43·
14 romp over Northwestem W1nnrpeg w 7t 6t I ptsgtga
IS 47 49
last week
Los Angeles
7 4 I 15 43 32
Bratd and offensive tackle AI Alberta
6 6 1 134047
Houston
5 7 0 10 35 41
Kustok, who both sat out a year
Minnesota
4 6 1 9 27 36
of competition due to m)ury, Ch1cago
2 B I 5 25 36
Will ask the Btg Ten for an
Monday's Results
New England 6 Wtnnrpeg 2
extra year of ehgtbthly.
{Only games scheduled)
Wlsconsm Coach John JarNFL Standongs
dine smd Monday hiS Badgers
By
Unoted
Press International
w11l psss a lot agaUtSt the
Nahonal Conference
Bmlermakers Saturday due w
East
w I t pet pi pa
the tn)ury of rop ruMmg back
Washngtn 7 1 0 875 200 111
Rufus Ferguson
Dallas
6 2 0 750 184 125
"Purdue IS awesome defen- N Y Gran Is 5 3 0 625 197 \64
siVely," Jardine satd. "We Sl LOUIS
2 5 I 313 98 162
I 6 1 188 68 177
won'! be able wrun over them Phila
Central
Uke we dtd agaULSt Ohio State
w II pel pi pa
Tltey're JUSt roo powerful."
De trod
5 3 0 625 199 169
Green Bay 5 3 0 625 156 144
Mtnn
4 4 0 500 183 121
Ch1cago
3 4 I 438 132 142
West
w II pet pi pa
Los Ang
5 2 1 688 167 132
Altanta
4 4 0 500 163 163
San Fran 3 4 1 438 208 154
NewOrtns 1 6 1 188 115 217

Overconfidence biggest problem
CHICAGO ( UPI) -Ohio
State coach Woody Hayes
knows what overconfidence
can do to a htgh-flymg team
late 10 a successful season So
does Mtchigan's Bo Schembechler
And m the closmg weeks of a
neck-and-neck battle for the
Btg Ten championship, netther
coach IS lettmg hiS undefeated
team lose 1ts emotiOnal zealm
the closmg games · of the

season
"There's no questton Mtchigan State Will be the best learn
we've faced all season," Hayes
satd Monday The fourthranked Buckeyes travel to
East Lansmg Saturday to face
a scrappy Spsrtan squad that
Hayes fears could pull an upset
and break open the IItle race
"Michtgan State IS an excep!JOnally fme team whtch has
the abtll!y to play up to an

Carburetor sleeves
are reduced in size
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla
(UPI) - NASCAR has decided
to reduce the s1ze of carburetor
sleeves next year to reduce
racmg speeds and equalize
compellhon between cars
usmg large racmg engmes and
those wtth small street
producbon powerplants
NASCAR President Btll
France Jr , who announced the
ne1r rule~ M?j).®Yl•P.'&amp;b'~ ~"1\l.,
he ll,idn't think'' tne smaller
carouretor sleeves "Will have
more than a four mtle per hour
effect on the top speeds "
• France sa td there IS a trend
toward smaller engmes and to
encourage their development,
11 was necessary to establish a
formula to equalize the compebbon
"We have felt we could do a
little bttrbClter JOb of bnngmg
them closer together," France
satd, "Although we felt under
the 1972 rules they were exceptiOnally close and we had
tremendous events "
The changes - the ftrst m
over a year, will go mto effect
Jan I, 1973 The new carburetor sleeve s1ze lmnlaltons
are ·
--Ali 367 to 430 cubtc mch
Chrysler heml racmg and Ford
Boss hem• head engines wtll
have 1-1-32 Inches sleeve
opemng mstead of l-l-8 mches
- Ail 367 to 430 cubtc inch
Ford tunpelport racmg and 306
w 366 Chrysler hemt racmg
and Ford Boss racmg engmes
wtll have l-3-32 mch sleeve
opemngs mstead of l-3-16
-Ali 367 w 430 cubic mch
street type wedge type lnline

and staggered valve, volume
produetwn destgn, General
Motors, Ford, Chrysler and
Amencan Motors engmes w1ll
have a 1-17~4 mch sleeve
opemng mstead of 1-3-8 mches
- All 306 to 366 cubtc mch
street type wedge mlrne and
staggered valve, volume
production destgn , and all
engmes 305 cub1c mches and
~lfl~ller wtU ,be ~Uow~d t~e 1,,
11-16 mch unrestricted carb
open Size as they are presently
allowed

Everything
broke down
for Cincy
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincmnali Bengals had the Natwnal Football League's rop
defense gomg moo theJr game
Sunday at Pittsburgh, but no
more.
"It was JUSt one of those days
when nothmg went rtght," satd
linebacker BtU Bergey "I
think they were wmtmg for
us " "We just Hroke down
everywhere, 1! seems," added
Royce Berry.
Defenstve tackle Mike Retd
added the Steelers "played a
very good game on our enttre
defense They· pretty much
played their game all day "
The 46-17loss set the Bengals
back m a he for second in the

emotiOnally high peak," Hayes
satd
Schembechler, whose fifthranked Wolvennes fought off a
tough lndtana team last week,
sa1d h1s team was not Hmen·
tally alert" agamst the
Hoos1ers but, wtth a "couple of
tough practices" tlus week,

wtll be ready for Iowa Saturday
Iowa and M10h1gan State
fought to a ~ he last week
"I thmk I dtd a bad JOb,"
Schembechler satd "Probably
all of us did We were not
mentally alert."
Indtana Coach John Pont
sa1d hts team may have a
rough time "gettmg up" for
Saturday's contest wtth IllinoiS
after last week's phystcal and
emolwnal beatmg by the
Wolvermes
"We went all out," Pont satd
Monday "And after you gear
all week and practice that hard
and then come up short 1t's not
easy to come back "
Pont smd startmg quarterhack Rod Hams, who suffered
a brmsed shoulder agamst
Mtolugan , ) · rematnS1 ·a:
questionable starter agamst
the llhm
Purdue's defenSive standout,
Carl Caprta, who suffered a
spramed shoulder agamst
Mtchtgan State last week, IS
lost for the season, Coach Bob
DeMoss satd Monday Semor
Chuck P1ebes wtll replace him

Central DtVIson of the
American Conference wtth
Cleveland Cmcmnah plays at
home thts weekend agamst
Oakland
"Our had start wtth two fumbles and the fact that Pt!tsburgh made some great plays
made the difference," Bengals
Coach Paul Brown admitted
after VJewmg the game on
ftlrns Monday
"As the game went on, we
got better offensively and
poorer defenstvely ," he daid
Bergey satd tf the Bengals
can come back and beat Oakland, 11 will prove "we're made
out of somethmg "
"If we hddle around like we
did with Pittsburgh, I guess
we're not much of a team," he
said.

,

' '

5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15. Elec Co 33, Dragnet 8, Gomer Pyle

USMC 13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20

Utah

Staroba
may start
for Browns

Amer1can Conference

East
w I t. pet pi pa
B 0 0 I 000 198 103
5 3 0 625 238 189
2 6 0 250 109 244
2 6 0 250 165 212
2 6 0 250 218 162
Central
w I t pet pi pa
6 2 0 750217127
5 3 0 625 155 132
5 3 0 625 141 134
I 7 0 125 87215
West
wltpctpfpa
5 3 0 625 195 140
4 3 1 563 209 ISS
2 5 I 313 152 203
2 6 0 250 165 222

M1am1

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Paul
Staroba, rookie w1de recetver
from Mtchtgan, may get his btg
chance next week Browns
Head Coach Ntck Skomh satd
Monday
Skonch satd he wtil start
Staroba agamst San Otego next
Monday mght if veteran Frank
Pttts IS unable to work hiS
nght end poSition for the
Browns
"We won't know about Ptlts
until later m the week," Skortch satd as he discussed Sunday's vtctory agamst the Houston Oilers at hts weekly press
conference "He has a wrenched back and tl's pretty sore
right now
"H Frank can't play we have
conftdence that Staroba can
get the )Db done We feel Paul
is a hne rece1 ver He doesn 't
have Pt!ts' burnmg speed but
It's possible that he runs more
dlsctplmed pattersn," Skorich
Bald
Skor~ch S3ld the early goal
stand agamst Housron, when
the Oilers were repulsed m a
fourth down btd from one foot
out, was "a btg emotiOnal thmg
ln the game"
"It ptcked up the entire ball
club," he s~nd 11TI'Iis was cer~
talnly a contributing factor m
th shutout. After that the defense wanted a shutout "
The Chargers, Skor~ch said,
"are a well balanced team "
''They have been on the
verge of beating some very
strong teams and wtth Duane
Thomas back m the lineup ·
we'll have to he very careful,"
he sa1d

N Y Jets
New Eng
Buffalo
Balf1mre

P1tfsbrg h

C1nctnnall

Cleveland
Houston

Kan C1fy
Oak land.
San D1ego
Denver

Monday's Games

Baltimore 24 New Eng 17
{Only game scheduled}
Sunday's Games
Balhmore at San Fran

Monday night to vost a lll-95
VICtory, m the only Nallonal
Basketball Assoctallon game
played.
Memmger, Bradley and

Colts break
losing streak
FOXBORO, Mass (UPI) - A
frustrated J1m Plunkett
moaned aloud m the New
England Patnots' dressmg
room Carl Garrett grumbled
m agreement
Over m the Baltimore Colts'
stde of the building, Coach
John Sandusky was huffing and
puffing about a btg wm. Not a
pretty one, but a btg one
The Colts had just ended a
four-game Josmg streak wtth a
24-l7wtn over the Patrtots m a
nationally televised Amencan
Football Conference game
The loss dropped New England
mto a three-way lie for last
place wtth Baltunore and the
Buffalo Bills, leavmg all three
clubs wtth 2~ records
It was the ftrst wm for
Sandusky smce he took over
the sk1dd10g Colts from Don
McCafferty
It Wasn't Pretty
"It wasn't pretty," Sandusky
satd, "but boy, 11 was a wm
That's onem the wm coltmm A
'W' ts a lot better thlln "" 'L'

any tune"
Safety Bruce Laird provtded
the fireworks for the Colts as
they wrapped up the game ln
the second half He set up one
third-quarter touchdown by
ptckmg up Carl Garrett's
fumble on the punt return and
another with a 73-yard kickoff
return
Marty Domres followed Garrett's fumble w11h a 23-yard
touchdown psss to light end
Tom Mitchell wgive Baltunore
a l7-31ead at 3 36 of the th1rd

SVAC standings

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P OP
Southern
7 I 1 165 58
Kyger Creek 5 3 1 194 82
Eastern
5 4 0 163 B6
North Gallla 4 5 0 128 125
Symmes Valley
2 7 0 116 240
Southwestern 1 8 0 72 226
Hannan Trace 0 8 0 24 242
SVAC ONLY (FINAL!
TEAM
W L T P OP
Southern
5 0 1 112 20
Eastern
5 I I 143 45
Kyger Creek 4 I I 145 14
NorlhGaltla 3 3 0 114 8B
Symmes Valley
2 4 0 97 150
Southwestern I 5 0 54 184
Hannan Trace 0 6 0 24 188
Totals
20 20 I 689 689
Frtday' s Games

Fairland al Symmes Valley
Southern at Ale xander
BOSSART TO ROBINS
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - •
The Philadelphia Flyers of the
National Hockey League satd
Monday they have sent denfenseman Willte Bossart to the
team's Hiclvnond (Va ) Robms
Farm Club
Brossart suffered a severe
shoulder bruise Oct 7 and has
not seen action since He Is
expected to be with the Robins
for two weeks whde he gets moo
shape

quarter
The Patriots got that score
back on the next sertes as
Plunkett ran two yards for a
touchdown, but Latrd moved
the ball to the New England 25
on the ensumg ktckoff
A penalty look the ball back
to the Patriots' 41, but Norm
BuiaJCh hulled over from the
one yard !me ftve plays later to
wrap up the Baltimore scormg
Run Lifts New England
Garrett's one-yard run wtth
3 54 left m the f10al quarter
lifted New England to withm
one touchdown
Sam Havrilak scored from 32
yards out on a ~ouble reverse
for Ba lt~tnore m the ftrst
quarter and Jun O'Bnen added
a nme-yard fteid goal m · the
second pertod Charlie Gogolalt
hit on a 36-yard fteld goal for
the Patnots m the opemng
quarter
The PatriOts lost two chances
to he the game m the closmg
moments when Jerry Logan
mtercepted a Plunkett pass
after Gogolak's onstde kick
was successful and Rtck Volk
ptcked off another toss at the
Colts' nine-yard !me
Plunkett satd the Patrlolll
"had a few chances at the end
-but that'sno fun etther What
are you going to do• We should
have done it earlier."
And Garrett grumbled from
nearby "If I knew what was
wrong with this team, I'd say
something I'd tell everybody.
But I don't know "

Dave OeBusschere combined
for ~ polnlll in the quarter •
the Knicks outscored Pmllnd,
34-18, to take a 15-ilolnl 11M
mto the filial pertod.
Portland had moved out to •
52-Sl haHllme lead, hlghll.......
by hne shooting and tile
sterlmg pluy of Sidney Wlcb,
who pumped in IS points In lbe
ftrst half
But a tenacious Knicll defense contributed to IIIIIIII!rOUI
Blazer
turnovers
and
Memmger was open underneath while Bradley and
DeBusschere htl from the
perln!eter
The Blazers showed slgrut ol
a comeback In the fourtb
period and got wwithin ll, 11382, before Walt Frazier and an
appar-ently healthy Willla Reed
applied enough pressure to
keep the Blazers at bay.
Frazter scored 12 of hill :IS
pomls m the final period, wbiJe
Reed, who piJIYI'd 33
added 17

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Buffalo al N Y Jets

Delrort a1 Minnesota
Green Bay at Ch1cago
Kan Clly at P11fsburgh
New England at Mlam •
New Orleans al Atlanta
N Y Giants at Wash
Oakland af Cmcmnat1

Philadelphia al Houston
Sl Lours at Dallas
IOnly games scheduled}

College Ratings
NEW

YORK

ma1or college football teams

w1th llrs1 place votes and won
lost records In parentheses

(91h

week-&lt;&gt;nly

17

teams

Team
I Sou Cal 127} (9 O}
2 Nebraska (6} {7 I}
3 Alabama (2} (8 0}
4 Ohio Slate 17 0}
5 Mlch1gan (8 01
6 La State 17 O)
7 Oklahoma 16 I}
8 UCLA (81)
9 Texas 16 II
lOAuburn (7 1}
11 Penn Slate (7 1}
12 Noire Dame 161}
13 Tennessee (52}
14 Iowa Slate IS 2}
15 Texas Tech (7 1)
16 ITre l No Car (6 1)
16 (Tre} Colo 16 3}

Points
342
284
280
245
226

rece1ved

votes)

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Meigs &amp;Mason

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aiANEYHAULED DOWN -Melp ollloteqdlngllllllor end, Bill &lt;llaney (MI) is hauled
down 111re lifter c•lctlq a p~~~lrom Andy V•Jglwll. Maldng the stop for GAHS are Pal
Bolter and John Walter, along witb Ken Colller. In ._ckground are Leon Smith and Mtke
llerrldle. GABS Willi, lH (Steve Wilaon photo). ,
.
'• '

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
l;

.Pomeroy

OpenEvenlngs'11li:IMI I
Tll5 P.M. Sit,
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177

170
98
60

31
26
19

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7 00- New• 6, 10, What's My Line 8, Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
The Clock 41 Anything You Can Do 13, Saint 15, Kn.,.; Your
Schools 33
7 30- To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10, Pollee Suergeon 3 4
Protectors 8. Beat the Clock 13, Andy Grrfflth 15 A Publl~
Aff•lr Election '72 20, 33
·
8 ~-Adam 12 4, Af1alr 3:) , Carol Burnett 8, 10; Paul Lynde 3,
8.30 - Playhouse New York 20, Haf1(fuls of Ashes 33; Madigan
3, 4, 15, Movie "The Croot&lt;ed Hearts" 6, 13
9 00-Madical Centers, tO, Chapterl:l,l:l •
10 00 - Search 3, 4, IS. Julie Andrews 6; Soul 33, News 20,
Campaign 72 8, 10
II 00 - News3,4,6,8, 10,13,15
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 15, Dick Cavetl6; VIrginian e. Movie
"The Barefoot Conlessa" 10; Movlt "The Upper Hand" 13
I 110 - News 4
1 30- News 13

PORTLAND, Ore (UPI)The New York Kmcks, sparked
by Dean Memlnger and Btll
Bradley, pulled away from the
stubborn Portland Tratl
Blazers m the th~rd perrod

Denver at Los Angeles

6 00 - Truth or COnseq 6, News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Sesame st 20

Around The Bend 3:)
'
6 ~:- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeannie 13; Hathayoga

Knicks post 111-95 win

Atlantic DIVISIOn

wlpelgb
Boston
10
1 909
wtlh 61 per cent consistency, preVIOUS games and because of
New
York
11
2
846
ltght ends Fred Pagac and Ted "a lack of enthusiasm on the Buffalo
3 8 273 7
Powell, andpard Jun Kregel part of the players for the Phil adelphia 0 13 000 11
Central DIVISIOn
each geltmg one
games "
w I pel gb
Hayes S3ld guard Chu~ Hayes S3ld he hadn't come to Houston
7 4 636
Bomca would be out a couple of a deciSIOn yet on whether Ohto Allanta
6 6 500 1'12
days wtlh a knee btimp but will State would play Jayvee games Ba1t1more
5 6 455 2
Cleveland
4 10 286 4117
play Saturday and wmgback m future years "we'll have to
Western Conference
Rtck Galbos, who has been watt and see," he sa1d
Mtdwest DIVISIOn
Sldelmed wtth a knee Injury,
Htil presented three buckeye
wlpclgb
9 2 818
would have the cast removed leaves each to halfback Jeff M1lwaukee
Gh1cago
8
4 667 1
Wday and "has an outStde DaviS, tackle George Hasen- KC Omaha
5 7 417 4
chance of playmg "
ohrl, end Van DeCree and hne- Detro•!
4 8 333 5
PacifiC DIVISIOn
Defenstve coordinator backer Ken Kuhn DeCree and
George Htil satd hts squad "got llasenohrl deadlocked for top x Golden State wlpclgb
8 2 800
a couple of head bumps," but lineman and Davts was eaSily Los Angeles 10 3 769
PhoeniX
5 5 500 3
expects all hands to be ready the best back
Seattle
4 8 333 5
for the Spartans wtth the exKuhn , a freshman from
Por tland
1 11 OB3 8
cephon of lmebacker Randy Loutsvtlle , turned m the
Monday's Results
Gradtshar
game's key play wtth a pass
New York Ill Portland 95
(On lygame scheduled}
"He (Gradtshar) IS gomg w mtercept10n m the second
Tuesday's Games
work out romght," Htll satd of quarter whtch stopped a
Golden State at Buffalo
defenSive leader, "but tis Gopher touchdown dnve on the
Houston at Los Angeles
Ba lt1 more at Atlanta
stnctly a day to day thmg I'm Ohto State ll yard hne He ran
IOnlygames scheduled}
optnmsllc, but I'm reahsllc, 11 out to the 31 and Ohto Stale
ABA Standmgs
roo "
scored SIX plays later.
By Un1ted Press 1n1ernat1onal
Cancels JV Games
"I'd hke to gtve hun four
East
Hayes announced the leaves on that one play," Hill
w. I pel g.b
9 5 643
remammg JUntor varstty satd, referrmg to Kulm's Inter- Carolm a
Ken
lucky
5 6 455 2112
games had been cancelled cepbon "He's gettmg better Vtrg tn ta
6 8 429 3
because of tnJunes suffered m and better every day "
New York
5 7 417 3
MemphiS
3 8 273 ;11/ 2

12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4
News 13, Contact 8, News 10
'
12 30- Spilt Second 6. Search for Tomorrow 8, 10. Who, What,
Where 3, 15
I 00- News, Weather, Sports3 , All My Chlldren6, 13 , It's Your
Bet 8, Green Acres 10. Watch Your Chrld IS
1 20- Lucille Rivers J
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 ot Our Lives J, 4, 15 . Newlywed Game 13, Mike
Douglas 6 Guldmg Light 8, 10
2 30- Dating Game 13, Doctors 4, 15, Edge of Nlghl8, 10
3 00 - Another World 3, 15, General Hospital 6, 13, Love
Splendored Thing 8, 10, RFD 20
'
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, IS. One Life to Live 6 lJ
Secret Storm 8, 10, Ohio Thrs Week 20
' '
4 00 - Mr Cilrtoon 3, Somerset IS, Sesame Sl 33 Love
American Style 13, Merv Griffin 4, Fllntstones 6. Gilligan's
Island B. Movie "Town T•mer" 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30- I Love Lucy 6, Andy Griffith 15, Pettocoat Junctloo 3
Merv Griffin 8, Daniel Boone 6
'
5 00 - Mr Rogers33, Dick Van Dyke15 . Ponderosa3 4 Daniel
Boone 6

Pro Standings

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BEGINS AT 9 P.M.
UNTIL RESULTS ARE IN!

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�...

2- The Dallysentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Nov 7, 1972

I--------------------------,I
I
I

lht Almanac
lly Urnll-d Press Intematlonal
T&lt;XIay ts Tuesday. Nov 7, the
3121h day of 1972 wtth 54 to

Lftt1n ef ep1a1oa 1ft weleomed They should be less
lllaMwenls loa&lt; (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
_.mat be signed with the signee's address. Names may be

I
l
l1 llloald
wtdlheld upon publication, however, on request Letters I
be good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. 1
In

~
A)~

I
I

,

I
I

-

l

! ••• 'Jitt. fdi!Dt:
I

I
I

Letter to Defense folks
Dear Editor
We would like wdtrect thts letter to the Gailla County CIVIl
Defense and the Shenff's J,Jepartment
First of ali, we did not think we caused any trouble over
Halloween We were out havmg fun, m the open, like lots of
others, but unlike so'!le adults who maybe drank roo much
.dcoholm the secrecy of thetr mce homes, then perhaps got m
their cars rodnve around and maybe hit someone
Adeputy shot at us while we were at the graveyard throwmg
corn at cars We dtd not harm anyone Mter we were run off at
the graveyard, we went to Cheshire wrun around a while While
there, we were surrounded by the Ctvli Defense Ail we did there
Wllll soap some wmdows and pull a tratler out in the road
Now we would !Ike w make some suggestions to the CIVIl
Defense First of all, you shouldn ~ have everyone m your
depsrtrnent followmg us You should have had some left 10 Addison, some 10 Cheshtre, and some m Georges Creek We would
only like to ask one thmg of you Don 't shoot at us next year We
don't like VIolence Until next year
Yours truly, The Addison Hoodlums and Cheshtre Naval
Academy (Name Withheld on request )

JACK KANE
Jack Kane, Rad1o Statton
WMPO program dtrector
"111 emcee the 1972 Meigs
County Junror Mrss Pageant
to be held at 8 p m on
Saturday, Nov 18, at the
Southern High School m
Racme Kane, 26, has been a
radio figure smce 1969,
havmg "orked at WCAW rn
Charleston and WMPO
Prior to JOIIItng WMPO,
Kane was a production
engmeer for WKYC Radto m
Cleveland. Thrs is his thtrd
year of association wllh the
Junror Mrss Pageant

i'lw moon IS belween 1ts new
phase dDd fu st quarter
The mormng stars are Ven•s,
Mar s and Saturn
'llw cvcmng sl;rrs are MereuryandJupJler
Those born on thiS dale are
under the s1gn of Scorpto
Evangelist Brlly Graham was
burn Nov 7, 1918
On Lhrs day m hJSrory
In 1805, tile Lewts and Clark
Expedrlwn sighted the Pactfrc
Ocean at the mouth of the
Columbia R1ver
In 1874, the first cartoon
deptc ling the elephant as the
S) m~ol of the Republican party
""' prmled tn Harper's Weeklv
In 1916, Republican Jeanette
Ra nktn of Montana became the
fn sl woman elected to the US
House of Representahves
In 1968 crowds tn Prague,
Czechoslovakia burned Russtan
flags and battled pollee m the
slreets the notmg was qutckly
quelled
'

'---------......1

t)lought you would stay m
spades I would have doubled ..
South said, "Thank you,"
$nd proceeded to wrap the
contract around West's neck.
West was an honest man
Hts remark clearly mdicated
that he held four truml?.s to
the queen-Jack. It also told
South that he could make his
contract if West held the
nght distrtbution
South won the diamond.
Cashed one trump and the
other high diamond to discard one club from dummy.
Ruffed a diamond In dummy
and played three rounds of
hearts to d1scard his own last
dtamond, followed by three
rounds of clubs South had to
ruff the last club while unfortunate West was followmg
suit
Everyone was down to
three cards South led l .low
trump and West won w1m an
honor and had to lead the
sutt back and give South the
last two trtcks.

By Oswald &amp; Jemes Jacoby
Yesterday we commented
on the madvJSabillty of declarer talkmg durmg the
play It IS even less advisable for a defender to talk
We have set up the same
North-South hands as yester(NEWSPAPER INTERPliSl lSSN )
day, but changed the EastA thought for the day Jnsh West holdmgs and the btddmg
pnet playwnght and wtt Oscar
North rebtd two no-trump
Wilde sard, ''Expenence IS the
West opened the queen of The brddrng has been
...J''.'.",._.,..;-_.;.v:o)
.,.
I
•
.~;.......v!«•:O.O:••,•~ l'ooo': " IJ';&gt;•••••:OAr.•XV:::~ :0 .-.,:,.r,_&lt;;.o"o',1;,o.;?
na me evervone g1ves to theJr dtamonds, took one look at West North Eut South
rmstakes '
dummy and remarked, "If I
I.
Pass
?
~
1i
You, South, hold
?o
.Q8U.KU3.A785.3
:d
By Helen and Sue Bottel
:S :-:-:;:;::m;-.z-»-::~..:::::.:.-:·.··:·····: •• •·= ·==·=-=-·==-= ·.:;-·=-= .·'$:-:=:~.:::::;~:x·:~m~·(. · . . .~..~·~··· · ·· ·1~* -::: v !"e"·
What do Y9U do now?
A-Bid one diamond. T1W
"OLDER WOMAN" TURNS HIM OFF
mak.. it euy lor Jlllrlner to bid
Helen and Sue
a heart or SJIIIdo II be holrb lour
eardo in the suit.
I'm a 16-yearo()ld guy who IS old for hts age. ThiS 21l-yearo()ld
TODAY'S QUESTION
college gtrl was a great chtck, but after a couple of months I
You
btd one diamond and
knew we couldn't make 1t together I've rold her honest but nrce,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
same-named dad was the gifted drummer for your partner btds one no-trump
thalli's over, but ..
LADIES AREDAVID'S GOLIATH
the old Smatra~ra Harry James, and Artie What do you do now?
The trouble IS, she hangs on She calls and comes over m her
NEW YORK (KFS) - Davtd Ntven m "21"
Shaw bands . Ask Artie Shaw what the
car and even though I don't want her to take me out - well I can't rold us he's "scared stliy" at startmg hiS lecture
DINNER, BAZAAR SET
redheaded gal S8ld to h1tn just as she left his
tell her wgo take a fiymg jump because that would be mean - so rour The mast suave flln! star's aurobwg, "The
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
apartment house elevaror after Artie accused
I end up gomg And when I'm wtth her I thmk about thiS gtrl my Moon's a Balloon," made hun the highest patd
dmner
and bazaar wtll be held
her of pushing all the down-buttons; turned out
age whom I'd like to date tf I could JUS! get Jane off my back
darling of the nation 's ladles clubs before he
Saturday
begmnmg at ~ p m
some kid pranked them all which made the lift a
What do you do when an older woman says she can't live even sets a WnsJI waggmg
Sinatra's lovely
local mstead of the express Arlie pshawed. It's by the WSCS at the St Paul
without you• - TIM
Nancy Gunderson switched to wme nulllona1re
Umled Methodtsl Church
an unprmtable howl'
annex
m Tuppers Plams The
P.S Jane has fnends her own age - she's not relirrded or AleJOs Ltchme, (who told us m LouiSe's he sold
Ftve Whtte House administrations of
anything Not backward either'
his vast wme busmess - for a fortune ) Gene
canme-stt!ing for Traphes Bryant, whose menu wtll mclude baked
Cavallero Jr sold hts gourmet heaven, "The
gradable bio IS due any mo, titled "Life m the chtcken and dressmg, mashed
Tim
Colony, to a patr of Germans who'll open 11 as a
White House Dog House" ... Baseball's Larry potatoes and gravy, green
beans, noodles, ham, sweet
H "me~ and honest" doesn't work, take another route: Act pop-prtced eatene
ersatz soul smger Tom
MacPhail's sprtg, Jean, has the engagement
potatoes, salad, pte, cake and
YOUNGER than your age for a change Make Jane feel like a Jones reserved rooms m Bhghty's Nuffteld
rmg from Conn. lad James Duncan, Jr., who coffee The dmner prtce IS $1 50
mother-unage. Put on the dumb ktd brother act If you're a good Hospttal for a phizz~tft
graduates mto the Marme Corps next spnng .. for adults and children, $1
enough actor, she won't be hanging around much longer - SUE
Sarah Churchill at John Barleycorn wasn't
N Y liquor stores have a run on mini-cognac
overly complimentary about the "Young
+++
bottles every Fnday - the halfbuck jobs are
Dear Tun
The Daily Sentinel
Wtnston" flick, which presumably btogs ber
favontes at college and pro grid games . Carol
DEVOTED
TO THE
... Unless Jane ENJOYS playmg mother
dad's youthful escapsdes But she gave a $20
Channmg's heartbreak was nQt getting the
INTEREST OF
Sometimes "bemg mean " is the ooly way w get your lip to gwtanst - vocalist Charlie Magee when he
MEIGS-MASON AREA
"Hello, Dolly" flini role she originated )n the
CHESTER
L TANNEHILL ,
lJieanmg across If Sue's ruse doesn't work, then tell her you're sang m her honor, "Maybe It's Because I'm a Bdwy stage; so 1t0agme the annoyance- she's
Exec Ed
through, you have another gtrl now; and don't back down' Londoner That I Love London Town" One of
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
bad to sit through "Dolly" Strelsand m the film
Cllr Edtlor
HELEN
Noel Coward's delightful antiques m the enthree t~tnes m atrplanes.
Published dall~ ucept
Saturday bV The Ohto Vall~y
chantmg "Oh Coward" revue at the New
+++
George C Scott's wanted for the Gen. Publ
ts hing Company, 111
Dear Rap·
Theatre IS "London Pnde," so touchmg a gentle
MacArthur f1bn, but tells everyone Cary Grant Court St , Pomeroy Ohio.
~5769 Business Olflce Phone
~ I'm more mature than most kids of 16 I IU{e a guy who 1s 21,
potgnancy that 11 e\ren reached an Irtsh crtllc's
should retlte from retirement for it ... Tuesday 992
2156 Edllor.al Phone 992
heart ~ •
., ... 1
bUt he used wtake dope and my parents wdll't give him a' chance
Weld and her (beautiful) siSter, Sally (Mrs 7157
Second clan postage peld 1t
Really, he's cllang&amp;i
11!:.
Queen"Ltz - Prmce J1litl InVited a group of ' Howard) COOper, dined during the early show at Pomeroy,
Ohio
I don't like sneaking, but my folks won't even let me talk to folks to their Silver weddmg anmversary m Casmo Russe and left swmgmg tennis racquets
Naltonal adverttStng
representative Bottmelll
him on the telephone He wants me to travel with h1tn next Westrnmster Abbey who were wed that same
- for a mtdnight sweat at the new tenrJS club Gallagher, In c. 12 E~tt 42nd
New York City, New York
summer and I'm wild about traveling, but if I go, my father Nov '47 day The 5th Coast Guard Dts!rtc!
atop an E 70s apartment house Which does so St Subscrtptton
rates
Oe
might track me down and put hltn m Jail Meanwhile I see him com"'ander ktboshed federa l-patd sub- much business it's open 16 hours a day ... lrvered by carrter
where
SO cents per week.
•
·ons to Playboy notmg 11 has "gone beyond
whenever! can get away Naturally, he won't come wthe hou9e
Huntingron Hartford's new Show Club has a available
Bv Motor Route where carrier
.... • ....ds of what many constder proper",
How do you convince hopelessly old-fashwned parents• brace of old familiar kissers at the velvet rope: servtce not available One
month 1175 By mat! m Ohio
WISHING AND HOPING
naw , tl's JUSt dull prurtency . In the necessary
Ed WyMe whose Harwyn Club was m con- and
W va , One veer Sl• oo
hstmgs of magazme owners, Smatra's num- tention wtth the Srork Club for a few long-ago Sr• months S7 25 Thret
months U 50 Subscription
Dear Wand H.
bered as a New York mag mvestor . Met a
mmutes, pius Tony Butrtco who once head· prtce mcludes Sunday Times
Senttnel
Sometimes "old-fashioned" parents are like ant1ques They muscled lad named Ralph Watkins, one of the
wattered at the Stork
Washmgton Redskins coaches, turned out h15
bavea lot of value, once you pohsh them up
Instead of putting them down as hopeless, try really talkmg
11 out. When they know you'll come half-way to see thetr stde,
maybe they'll gtve your guy a chance wprove he's changed
SUE
"Pll~~~~·w.~NoYoWo"h-.•o•

•••~•._,_. , ,,

y--u..-.•~

. R ap
Generahon

I Voice along Br'Way

.

Dear Wand H
And maybe he hasn't changed as much as you'd like to
believe Would a trustworthy adult ask a 16-yearo()ld gtrl for
sneak dales' Would he encourage her to run off and travel wtth
him?
Parents aren't "hopelessly old-fashtoned" when they worry
about a daughter who tsn 't as "mature" as she thmks If your
guy is really strrught, he'd make an effort to convmce your folks
he'sno threat I doubt that he has even trted norw11lhe, so long
as you keep meeting him on the sly Do 'I' - HELEN

+++
Rap·
"Martm," who suffered out gym classes, could have been me
ln junior hi and high school Durmg those years I measured tune
by the next phys ed class - 11 was either "Thanks God, three
wbole days without gym," or "In only two hours I'll be through P
E. class." Of course we only played football, basketball and
baseball, the three sports wtth the least carryo()ver value for
adult life
, !{ow I'm nearly 10 years away from school At last the tdea of
exercise and athlebc games doesn't seem repugnant, but I shll
tend to assume people Will humiliate me for bemg clumsy
I don't know what schools or parents can do about this, but
it's true that gym classes can easily aggravate a personality
problem A diet of ridicule !wtce a week or more never helped
anyone's ega' The poor athlete feels that hiS manhood IS
threatened and so he's cut off from his peers - STEVE

OUR BOARDING HOUSE
TO ~C.TUI'\LLY
6T~I&lt;r YOUR MACHINE
OR DID YOU PR,O,G II£
OVfl! TO flt::l'-.11. YOUR
LIFE STORY-~CH l&gt;o~
IT IS' I DON'T l!ELIE.VE
YOU I!E,o.J.LY C,J..N 1'\l&gt;.KE
/'. !'"'PER BRICK '

ISOINCS.

with Mojor Hoople

&amp; THINBS

Defender Had a Big Mouth
NOR'l11 (D)
1
• 9 83
• KQJ 2
• 5
WEST "'A Q6 54 EAST
•QJ S2
••
• 8 63
¥ 10 9 1 5
• Q J 10
• 914 3 2
• J 10 3
"'9 8 2
SOUTH
•AKI076
: ~ ~ 86
"'K 7
North-South vulnerable
West North Eut S..Uth
I "'
Pass 2 •
Pass 2 NT Pass 3 •
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 NT.
Pass s•
Pass 6•
Pass Pass Pass
Openrng lead- • Q

PRESIDENTS Of" MANIFEST DESTINY

.

......

3-Tbe Dally Benllliel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Nov 7,1972

w•N AT BRIDGE

r~·ll tl \\1

li-

by PaHerson and Patrick

\nd what a natton 11 "as, thts brash vtctor 0\ er
the \\orld's mtghttest emptre There were less than
4 mtlhon people-mcludmg 700,000 ~laves-m .til
of the 13 states, each belligerently Jealous of tts
snvcre1gnty There was little cash, less credit, a
natmnal debt of some $50 mtlhon, and m~a11on was
rampant
\s nearly al\\ays before a momentotts event he
was to head, Washmgton was uncertam and pcsstmts!lc Moreover, the proud , sensttne Vtrgmtan,
not una\\are of postcmy, knew hts every act would
be a precedent-settmg one "I walk, as 11 were, on
untnxlden ground ," he confided to a fnend, addmg
"that I shall feel an msuperable diffidence in my
own abthttes "
\ tall, 111uscular mesomorph, Washmgton had
the temperament m which pesstmtsm normally fell
to np!lmtsm in the heat of actton. Now, wnh the
atd of Congress and Cabmet, the man who had
become the symbohc "father figure" of hts countrymen "ent In wnrk cstablishmg the departments and
procedures that sent the Umted States of \menc.1
on lis swift climb to world power.
However, the President's satisfactiOn With
domestic progress was fretted by growmg concern
nvcr foretgn affatrs . The French Revolution, of
wh tch he had first heartily approved, had degenerated mto the Retgn of Terror and subsequent \1 ar
f1rsl Ptes1dent George Wash1nglon
With England '\merican popular opmton strongly
(F~rsl Admml5trohon Aprol 30, 1789-March 4, 1793)
favored stdmg wnh France.
Washmgton was fully aware of hts country's
great debt to France for atd m the Amencan
"/ walk
on tmtrodden ground''
Revolution, but he was also aware of his country's
tinanctal msolvency and military impotence. FearWhen George Washmgtun toolt the oath of - mg the Umted States might be engulfed m the conoffice .ts the first Pre~tdent of the Umted States
fltct and destroyed, the Prestdent reluctantly but
\pnl 30, 1789 , m Nc\1 York Ctty, there had been
firmly decided on a neutral policy.
nearly e•ght yc.m of more or less "n~nonlcss" exts· '
The resulting crtticism upset him terribly, and
tcncc under the loosely "orded and carelessly
he let 1t be known that he intended to retire to
,tdmmtstcrcd •\mclcs of Confederation smce he had
hts beloved Mount Vernon at the end of his term .
accepted Bnttsh Genera l Corn\\ .1llis' surrender at
But the idea of an Amenca without Washingtnn
Yorktthvn to end the Revoluuonary War
at thiS r~fllous pertod caused friend-and f&lt;le to join
Now there finally was a CanstiiUIIOn, and now
ranks and beg htm to reconsider ":'llorth and South
the man who had worked so cffec111 ely as ",1 Samwtll hang together," Secretary of State Jefferson
son m thl· field," to horro\\ 'I hl)mas Jefferson's
told the Pcestdent, "tf they have you to hang on "
.1ppropnate phr.tse, had been unammously elected
Once .tgam George Washmgton stood up to he
to serve .ts ".t Solomon tn the councr l" f•lf the new
counted, a1ul once ag~m he uas unammously
'
n.ltlon
electt•d
c.~, ... "'' lOS •1*01111 H.,l l

Best we've aced-Woody

BY PAUL CRABTREE
A fairy !ale :
It all began In mid-1973, when some of the gang at Lou

Harris, Gallup, Sindlinger and all the other polls had nothing to
do but sit on their rucuit boards between electtons, smce there
was so little polling w be done.
After a Manhattan-etyle lunch at which abnost everyone had
too many martinis, they went back to work and spent the af·
temoon talking rather incoherently to !hell' computers
Suddenly, there was a flash of light and a cloud of blue smoke
spread over computer control at Gallup Simultaneously, the
same thl!lg happened at Gallup and Sindlinger. The computers,
ptcking up the slightly-mtoxlcated braln waves of thetr bosses,
all prmted out lhe1r most closely·luut secreta
- The voters at Buttercup Ave School m Pomeroy, at
Precmct 57 m Mason County, W. Va. and at James Monroe
Jumor High m Gallipolis had voted exactly as the whole natton
had in every smgle election since 1900.
-What IS more, the Meigs County polling place had always
been staunchly Republican; the Gallia school was exactly 50-SO
mregistration; and the Mason precmct was solidly Democratic.
With that, all three computers sent the same message
''This mformation (hie') makes us obsolete. We are
therefore terminating all programmmg. In five 9econds, our
memory banks (hie') will 9eH-destruct, because we have no
further usefulness Goodbye and (hie') good luck. Poooooof '"
Armed with such awesome knowledge, the pollsters virtually
shut down !hell' operations. Lou HarriS fll'ed his staff and traded
his broken co!JlpUter 10 on a pocket calculator offered at
tremendous savlngs by a gasoline eredtt-card outf1t. The Gallup
people sold the1r computer wan outfit which advertised a polite
way wbest BoriS Spsssky m chess through use of computertzed
data~ And Sindlinger's got out of polling altogether and started
selling encyclopedias door-to-door
Closely locked m a vault at the Chase Manhattan Bank was
the secret of the dead computers, and the pollsters silently
descended upon the Metgs, Gallia and Mason precinclll for the
1976 electiOn -covering no other section of the country
They were rewarded handsomely For about I pet of their
prevtous expenses, they correctly predtcted the outcome of the
claSSLc struggle between Teddy Agnew and Sp1ro T KeMedy m
the 1976 presidential election Their margm of error was zero. In
1980, the same thing happened. Right on the button
By thiS tln!e,their onuSCJence had become so mattero()f.fact
that their off-season staff consiSted of a phoneilllSwermg devtce
at Harris' g1ant offtce operation, while Gallup depended on an
elderly lady who typed but didn~ take shorthand Sindlinger's
people got 15 pet. off the tap for keep111g !hell' mouths shut.
In 1984, the obscure county regiStrar of VItal sta!JSllc m
Fresno, Calif , William Henry Hamson Blastoff, was nominated
for President by one psrty, while the other chose the Governor of
East VirgiiUa, Beauregard Calhoun
The pollsters hired a part-tltne staff, gave tbem a desulrory
course in how to conduct polling, and sent them wtthout further
instructions to the Trt-County area
When the results were in, the polls conftdently predtcted that
Blastoff would win the election handtly, with 58.544 pet of the
vote to 41,936 for Calhoun, and the rest undecided Everyone sat
back, confident of the infallibility of the polls. then voted, and
went home and turned on the TV wsee their polls (and votes)
conflrDled.
To the aslonislunent of the natton, and the everlastmg
destruction of the polls, Calhoun won the eleclion gomg away,
gelling 60 pet. of the vote.
You see, In the meanline, the people at Precmct 57, Buttercup Ave. and Monroe Jumor High had all d~vered the
Manhattan-etyle lunch And when you've had too many martmls,
yoli tend lillie a lot.

Television Log
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 Around The Bend 33
6 30 - News 3, 4. 6. B, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Growing
H1m Up 33
7 00 - News 6, 10, What's My Lrne8 Elec Co 20 Andy Griffith
15 Beatthe Clock 4, I've Got A Secret 13, Truth or Con seq 3
Samt 15, Elec Co 20
7 30 - Thrs Is Your Lrfe 3, To Tell The Truth 6 Proce Is R•ghl8,
10 , BeaiThe Clock 13 RF D20 : Feast of Language 33
8 00 -

Bonanza 3, 4 15 Temperatu res

R1smg 6, I:J , Mauae

~

10, Ageo1 Anxrety 13 Oh1o ThiS Week20 Age of Anxoely 33

8 30 - Elechon Coveraoe 20, Dateline Amer1ca 33

00 - Beh1nd The Lines 33
9 30 - Marshall Sports 33
10 00 - NBC Report 3 4, 15 Marcus Welby. M D 6 13 News 20
11 00- News. Weather. Sports 3. 4, 6 8, 10. 14. 15
11 30 - Election Coveragel. 4. 8. 10 13. 15
11 00 - Your Health 4
1 30 - News. Weather 4 Local News 13
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8. -1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmttme 10, Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4, Brble Answers 8. Urban League 10
7 00 - Today3, 4,15 CBSNews8, 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8, Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullw(nkle
13
8 00 - Capt Kan~aroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame Sl 33 ,
9

T1mmy &amp; Lass1e 6

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room 8
8 55- Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Drxon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Concentration 6

Cap1 Kangaroo

a,

Friendly Juncl1on 10, Ben Casey 13
.
9 30 - Elec Co 33 , To Tell lhe Trulh 3, Jeopard~ 6. Hazel a
10 00 - Dinah Shore3, 15, Columbus s,. Calling 6, Joker's W1ld
8, 10 , Dick Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentrat,on3 15. Ph1f Donohue4 . Price Is R1ght8, 10 ,
Spill Second 13
11 00 - Sale of Century 3, 15 Love Amerrcan Style 6, Gambits.
10 Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4, 15 , Love o1llfa8, 10, Bew1fched 6
13

-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - One of
the btg questions facmg Ohto
State this week as the fourth·
ranked Buckeyes prepare w
meet M1ch1gan State IS
whether or not the Spartans
will still be emotionally htgh
because of the announced
ret~rement of Coach Duffy
Daugherty
Last week, Michigan State,
which had stumbled w a 2-4-l
mark In tis first seven games,
knocked Purdue from a tie for
the Btg Ten lead wtth a 22-12
wm over the Boilermakers It
came two days after Daugherty's announcement
Ohto State Coach Woody
Hayes, who has to be wondering what frame of mmd the
Spartan players wtll be m, called Mtchigan State "an exceptionally fme team whtch has
the abthty to play up w an
emotiOnally high peak.
"There's no queshon Mtchigan State wtll be the best team
we've faced all seuson,"Hayes
wid the gathering at hts weekly
press luncheon

Esco Sarkkmen, however,
who saw the MSU·Purdue
tussle Saturdlty, satd be dtdn't
thmk the Spartans were
"blazmg emotiOnally htgh" at
the start of the game, although
he dtd admtt "they got pumped
up as the gwne went on ''
Sarkkinen warned, however,
"they'll get up for our game "
Leaves "Trimmed"
Hayes satd the offense m the
MtMesota wm was "not qutte
what 11 has been" and 11
showed m the number of
Buckeye Leaf performance
awards he handed out
Quarterback Greg Hare, who
Hayes satd "played an errorproof game,'' was named the
top back and recetved two
leaves Champ Henson, the
bru1smg sophomore fullback,
got three leaves for hiS twotouchdown performance and
I31 yards rushmg, mcludm{ur
couple of btg plays
Freshmen Bnan Baschnagel
and Archte Grtffm each pte ked
up two awards, wtlh tackle
Merve Teague, the top lineman

NBA Sllndlngs
By United Pren tnternallon11
Eastern Conference

West

w I pel g b
10 5 667
tnd1ana
7 4 636 I
San 01ego
7 6 538 2
Denver
7 6 ..138 2
Dallas
3 7 300 41f1
at safety
Monday's Results
DeMoss, who hunself was
Utah 124 Carol1na 112
SJdelmed wtth pn•umoma, was
(On ly game scheduled I
Tuesday's Games
okayed by doctors for a hght
New
York at San Otego
work schedule thiS week and
lndtana at Memphts
wtll be on the s1dehnes
{On ly games scheduled}
Saturday for the PurdueWHA Standmgs
Wtsconsm game
By Umted Press International
East
llllm defenSive stalwart Ken
w I t pts ga ga
Brtd, who leads JlhnoiS m Cleveland
8 3 11 75033
tackles, will play Saturday New England 8 4 0 16 52 37
7 4 1 15 4435
agamst Indtana desptle an Quebec
New
York
7 6 0 14 59 49
allmg arm, 11 was announe&lt;:d Ottawa
6 4 I 13 51 48
Monday Bratd suffered an Ph1ladelph1a 2 11 0 4 37 67
West
arm mJury durmg Dlmots' 43·
14 romp over Northwestem W1nnrpeg w 7t 6t I ptsgtga
IS 47 49
last week
Los Angeles
7 4 I 15 43 32
Bratd and offensive tackle AI Alberta
6 6 1 134047
Houston
5 7 0 10 35 41
Kustok, who both sat out a year
Minnesota
4 6 1 9 27 36
of competition due to m)ury, Ch1cago
2 B I 5 25 36
Will ask the Btg Ten for an
Monday's Results
New England 6 Wtnnrpeg 2
extra year of ehgtbthly.
{Only games scheduled)
Wlsconsm Coach John JarNFL Standongs
dine smd Monday hiS Badgers
By
Unoted
Press International
w11l psss a lot agaUtSt the
Nahonal Conference
Bmlermakers Saturday due w
East
w I t pet pi pa
the tn)ury of rop ruMmg back
Washngtn 7 1 0 875 200 111
Rufus Ferguson
Dallas
6 2 0 750 184 125
"Purdue IS awesome defen- N Y Gran Is 5 3 0 625 197 \64
siVely," Jardine satd. "We Sl LOUIS
2 5 I 313 98 162
I 6 1 188 68 177
won'! be able wrun over them Phila
Central
Uke we dtd agaULSt Ohio State
w II pel pi pa
Tltey're JUSt roo powerful."
De trod
5 3 0 625 199 169
Green Bay 5 3 0 625 156 144
Mtnn
4 4 0 500 183 121
Ch1cago
3 4 I 438 132 142
West
w II pet pi pa
Los Ang
5 2 1 688 167 132
Altanta
4 4 0 500 163 163
San Fran 3 4 1 438 208 154
NewOrtns 1 6 1 188 115 217

Overconfidence biggest problem
CHICAGO ( UPI) -Ohio
State coach Woody Hayes
knows what overconfidence
can do to a htgh-flymg team
late 10 a successful season So
does Mtchigan's Bo Schembechler
And m the closmg weeks of a
neck-and-neck battle for the
Btg Ten championship, netther
coach IS lettmg hiS undefeated
team lose 1ts emotiOnal zealm
the closmg games · of the

season
"There's no questton Mtchigan State Will be the best learn
we've faced all season," Hayes
satd Monday The fourthranked Buckeyes travel to
East Lansmg Saturday to face
a scrappy Spsrtan squad that
Hayes fears could pull an upset
and break open the IItle race
"Michtgan State IS an excep!JOnally fme team whtch has
the abtll!y to play up to an

Carburetor sleeves
are reduced in size
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla
(UPI) - NASCAR has decided
to reduce the s1ze of carburetor
sleeves next year to reduce
racmg speeds and equalize
compellhon between cars
usmg large racmg engmes and
those wtth small street
producbon powerplants
NASCAR President Btll
France Jr , who announced the
ne1r rule~ M?j).®Yl•P.'&amp;b'~ ~"1\l.,
he ll,idn't think'' tne smaller
carouretor sleeves "Will have
more than a four mtle per hour
effect on the top speeds "
• France sa td there IS a trend
toward smaller engmes and to
encourage their development,
11 was necessary to establish a
formula to equalize the compebbon
"We have felt we could do a
little bttrbClter JOb of bnngmg
them closer together," France
satd, "Although we felt under
the 1972 rules they were exceptiOnally close and we had
tremendous events "
The changes - the ftrst m
over a year, will go mto effect
Jan I, 1973 The new carburetor sleeve s1ze lmnlaltons
are ·
--Ali 367 to 430 cubtc mch
Chrysler heml racmg and Ford
Boss hem• head engines wtll
have 1-1-32 Inches sleeve
opemng mstead of l-l-8 mches
- Ail 367 to 430 cubtc inch
Ford tunpelport racmg and 306
w 366 Chrysler hemt racmg
and Ford Boss racmg engmes
wtll have l-3-32 mch sleeve
opemngs mstead of l-3-16
-Ali 367 w 430 cubic mch
street type wedge type lnline

and staggered valve, volume
produetwn destgn, General
Motors, Ford, Chrysler and
Amencan Motors engmes w1ll
have a 1-17~4 mch sleeve
opemng mstead of 1-3-8 mches
- All 306 to 366 cubtc mch
street type wedge mlrne and
staggered valve, volume
production destgn , and all
engmes 305 cub1c mches and
~lfl~ller wtU ,be ~Uow~d t~e 1,,
11-16 mch unrestricted carb
open Size as they are presently
allowed

Everything
broke down
for Cincy
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincmnali Bengals had the Natwnal Football League's rop
defense gomg moo theJr game
Sunday at Pittsburgh, but no
more.
"It was JUSt one of those days
when nothmg went rtght," satd
linebacker BtU Bergey "I
think they were wmtmg for
us " "We just Hroke down
everywhere, 1! seems," added
Royce Berry.
Defenstve tackle Mike Retd
added the Steelers "played a
very good game on our enttre
defense They· pretty much
played their game all day "
The 46-17loss set the Bengals
back m a he for second in the

emotiOnally high peak," Hayes
satd
Schembechler, whose fifthranked Wolvennes fought off a
tough lndtana team last week,
sa1d h1s team was not Hmen·
tally alert" agamst the
Hoos1ers but, wtth a "couple of
tough practices" tlus week,

wtll be ready for Iowa Saturday
Iowa and M10h1gan State
fought to a ~ he last week
"I thmk I dtd a bad JOb,"
Schembechler satd "Probably
all of us did We were not
mentally alert."
Indtana Coach John Pont
sa1d hts team may have a
rough time "gettmg up" for
Saturday's contest wtth IllinoiS
after last week's phystcal and
emolwnal beatmg by the
Wolvermes
"We went all out," Pont satd
Monday "And after you gear
all week and practice that hard
and then come up short 1t's not
easy to come back "
Pont smd startmg quarterhack Rod Hams, who suffered
a brmsed shoulder agamst
Mtolugan , ) · rematnS1 ·a:
questionable starter agamst
the llhm
Purdue's defenSive standout,
Carl Caprta, who suffered a
spramed shoulder agamst
Mtchtgan State last week, IS
lost for the season, Coach Bob
DeMoss satd Monday Semor
Chuck P1ebes wtll replace him

Central DtVIson of the
American Conference wtth
Cleveland Cmcmnah plays at
home thts weekend agamst
Oakland
"Our had start wtth two fumbles and the fact that Pt!tsburgh made some great plays
made the difference," Bengals
Coach Paul Brown admitted
after VJewmg the game on
ftlrns Monday
"As the game went on, we
got better offensively and
poorer defenstvely ," he daid
Bergey satd tf the Bengals
can come back and beat Oakland, 11 will prove "we're made
out of somethmg "
"If we hddle around like we
did with Pittsburgh, I guess
we're not much of a team," he
said.

,

' '

5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15. Elec Co 33, Dragnet 8, Gomer Pyle

USMC 13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20

Utah

Staroba
may start
for Browns

Amer1can Conference

East
w I t. pet pi pa
B 0 0 I 000 198 103
5 3 0 625 238 189
2 6 0 250 109 244
2 6 0 250 165 212
2 6 0 250 218 162
Central
w I t pet pi pa
6 2 0 750217127
5 3 0 625 155 132
5 3 0 625 141 134
I 7 0 125 87215
West
wltpctpfpa
5 3 0 625 195 140
4 3 1 563 209 ISS
2 5 I 313 152 203
2 6 0 250 165 222

M1am1

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Paul
Staroba, rookie w1de recetver
from Mtchtgan, may get his btg
chance next week Browns
Head Coach Ntck Skomh satd
Monday
Skonch satd he wtil start
Staroba agamst San Otego next
Monday mght if veteran Frank
Pttts IS unable to work hiS
nght end poSition for the
Browns
"We won't know about Ptlts
until later m the week," Skortch satd as he discussed Sunday's vtctory agamst the Houston Oilers at hts weekly press
conference "He has a wrenched back and tl's pretty sore
right now
"H Frank can't play we have
conftdence that Staroba can
get the )Db done We feel Paul
is a hne rece1 ver He doesn 't
have Pt!ts' burnmg speed but
It's possible that he runs more
dlsctplmed pattersn," Skorich
Bald
Skor~ch S3ld the early goal
stand agamst Housron, when
the Oilers were repulsed m a
fourth down btd from one foot
out, was "a btg emotiOnal thmg
ln the game"
"It ptcked up the entire ball
club," he s~nd 11TI'Iis was cer~
talnly a contributing factor m
th shutout. After that the defense wanted a shutout "
The Chargers, Skor~ch said,
"are a well balanced team "
''They have been on the
verge of beating some very
strong teams and wtth Duane
Thomas back m the lineup ·
we'll have to he very careful,"
he sa1d

N Y Jets
New Eng
Buffalo
Balf1mre

P1tfsbrg h

C1nctnnall

Cleveland
Houston

Kan C1fy
Oak land.
San D1ego
Denver

Monday's Games

Baltimore 24 New Eng 17
{Only game scheduled}
Sunday's Games
Balhmore at San Fran

Monday night to vost a lll-95
VICtory, m the only Nallonal
Basketball Assoctallon game
played.
Memmger, Bradley and

Colts break
losing streak
FOXBORO, Mass (UPI) - A
frustrated J1m Plunkett
moaned aloud m the New
England Patnots' dressmg
room Carl Garrett grumbled
m agreement
Over m the Baltimore Colts'
stde of the building, Coach
John Sandusky was huffing and
puffing about a btg wm. Not a
pretty one, but a btg one
The Colts had just ended a
four-game Josmg streak wtth a
24-l7wtn over the Patrtots m a
nationally televised Amencan
Football Conference game
The loss dropped New England
mto a three-way lie for last
place wtth Baltunore and the
Buffalo Bills, leavmg all three
clubs wtth 2~ records
It was the ftrst wm for
Sandusky smce he took over
the sk1dd10g Colts from Don
McCafferty
It Wasn't Pretty
"It wasn't pretty," Sandusky
satd, "but boy, 11 was a wm
That's onem the wm coltmm A
'W' ts a lot better thlln "" 'L'

any tune"
Safety Bruce Laird provtded
the fireworks for the Colts as
they wrapped up the game ln
the second half He set up one
third-quarter touchdown by
ptckmg up Carl Garrett's
fumble on the punt return and
another with a 73-yard kickoff
return
Marty Domres followed Garrett's fumble w11h a 23-yard
touchdown psss to light end
Tom Mitchell wgive Baltunore
a l7-31ead at 3 36 of the th1rd

SVAC standings

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P OP
Southern
7 I 1 165 58
Kyger Creek 5 3 1 194 82
Eastern
5 4 0 163 B6
North Gallla 4 5 0 128 125
Symmes Valley
2 7 0 116 240
Southwestern 1 8 0 72 226
Hannan Trace 0 8 0 24 242
SVAC ONLY (FINAL!
TEAM
W L T P OP
Southern
5 0 1 112 20
Eastern
5 I I 143 45
Kyger Creek 4 I I 145 14
NorlhGaltla 3 3 0 114 8B
Symmes Valley
2 4 0 97 150
Southwestern I 5 0 54 184
Hannan Trace 0 6 0 24 188
Totals
20 20 I 689 689
Frtday' s Games

Fairland al Symmes Valley
Southern at Ale xander
BOSSART TO ROBINS
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - •
The Philadelphia Flyers of the
National Hockey League satd
Monday they have sent denfenseman Willte Bossart to the
team's Hiclvnond (Va ) Robms
Farm Club
Brossart suffered a severe
shoulder bruise Oct 7 and has
not seen action since He Is
expected to be with the Robins
for two weeks whde he gets moo
shape

quarter
The Patriots got that score
back on the next sertes as
Plunkett ran two yards for a
touchdown, but Latrd moved
the ball to the New England 25
on the ensumg ktckoff
A penalty look the ball back
to the Patriots' 41, but Norm
BuiaJCh hulled over from the
one yard !me ftve plays later to
wrap up the Baltimore scormg
Run Lifts New England
Garrett's one-yard run wtth
3 54 left m the f10al quarter
lifted New England to withm
one touchdown
Sam Havrilak scored from 32
yards out on a ~ouble reverse
for Ba lt~tnore m the ftrst
quarter and Jun O'Bnen added
a nme-yard fteid goal m · the
second pertod Charlie Gogolalt
hit on a 36-yard fteld goal for
the Patnots m the opemng
quarter
The PatriOts lost two chances
to he the game m the closmg
moments when Jerry Logan
mtercepted a Plunkett pass
after Gogolak's onstde kick
was successful and Rtck Volk
ptcked off another toss at the
Colts' nine-yard !me
Plunkett satd the Patrlolll
"had a few chances at the end
-but that'sno fun etther What
are you going to do• We should
have done it earlier."
And Garrett grumbled from
nearby "If I knew what was
wrong with this team, I'd say
something I'd tell everybody.
But I don't know "

Dave OeBusschere combined
for ~ polnlll in the quarter •
the Knicks outscored Pmllnd,
34-18, to take a 15-ilolnl 11M
mto the filial pertod.
Portland had moved out to •
52-Sl haHllme lead, hlghll.......
by hne shooting and tile
sterlmg pluy of Sidney Wlcb,
who pumped in IS points In lbe
ftrst half
But a tenacious Knicll defense contributed to IIIIIIII!rOUI
Blazer
turnovers
and
Memmger was open underneath while Bradley and
DeBusschere htl from the
perln!eter
The Blazers showed slgrut ol
a comeback In the fourtb
period and got wwithin ll, 11382, before Walt Frazier and an
appar-ently healthy Willla Reed
applied enough pressure to
keep the Blazers at bay.
Frazter scored 12 of hill :IS
pomls m the final period, wbiJe
Reed, who piJIYI'd 33
added 17

mJauta.

-

· Th11 Wnk's S,.clal
VALU.
AATIID

.

USED CARS

67 FORD

GALAXIE 500
2 DR. H. T.
V 8 motor and auto trans
miSSIOn

'895
Karr &amp;.Yan landt
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Way of Doing Business '
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Buffalo al N Y Jets

Delrort a1 Minnesota
Green Bay at Ch1cago
Kan Clly at P11fsburgh
New England at Mlam •
New Orleans al Atlanta
N Y Giants at Wash
Oakland af Cmcmnat1

Philadelphia al Houston
Sl Lours at Dallas
IOnly games scheduled}

College Ratings
NEW

YORK

ma1or college football teams

w1th llrs1 place votes and won
lost records In parentheses

(91h

week-&lt;&gt;nly

17

teams

Team
I Sou Cal 127} (9 O}
2 Nebraska (6} {7 I}
3 Alabama (2} (8 0}
4 Ohio Slate 17 0}
5 Mlch1gan (8 01
6 La State 17 O)
7 Oklahoma 16 I}
8 UCLA (81)
9 Texas 16 II
lOAuburn (7 1}
11 Penn Slate (7 1}
12 Noire Dame 161}
13 Tennessee (52}
14 Iowa Slate IS 2}
15 Texas Tech (7 1)
16 ITre l No Car (6 1)
16 (Tre} Colo 16 3}

Points
342
284
280
245
226

rece1ved

votes)

Get
Meigs &amp;Mason

IUPII- The

Un1 ted Press InternatiOnal 1op

MIDDLEPORT, 0

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MUTUAL FUND$
aiANEYHAULED DOWN -Melp ollloteqdlngllllllor end, Bill &lt;llaney (MI) is hauled
down 111re lifter c•lctlq a p~~~lrom Andy V•Jglwll. Maldng the stop for GAHS are Pal
Bolter and John Walter, along witb Ken Colller. In ._ckground are Leon Smith and Mtke
llerrldle. GABS Willi, lH (Steve Wilaon photo). ,
.
'• '

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
l;

.Pomeroy

OpenEvenlngs'11li:IMI I
Tll5 P.M. Sit,
I

177

170
98
60

31
26
19

4
3

2
I
I

ELECTION
RETURNS
ON CABLE CH. 5

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

7 00- New• 6, 10, What's My Line 8, Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
The Clock 41 Anything You Can Do 13, Saint 15, Kn.,.; Your
Schools 33
7 30- To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10, Pollee Suergeon 3 4
Protectors 8. Beat the Clock 13, Andy Grrfflth 15 A Publl~
Aff•lr Election '72 20, 33
·
8 ~-Adam 12 4, Af1alr 3:) , Carol Burnett 8, 10; Paul Lynde 3,
8.30 - Playhouse New York 20, Haf1(fuls of Ashes 33; Madigan
3, 4, 15, Movie "The Croot&lt;ed Hearts" 6, 13
9 00-Madical Centers, tO, Chapterl:l,l:l •
10 00 - Search 3, 4, IS. Julie Andrews 6; Soul 33, News 20,
Campaign 72 8, 10
II 00 - News3,4,6,8, 10,13,15
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 15, Dick Cavetl6; VIrginian e. Movie
"The Barefoot Conlessa" 10; Movlt "The Upper Hand" 13
I 110 - News 4
1 30- News 13

PORTLAND, Ore (UPI)The New York Kmcks, sparked
by Dean Memlnger and Btll
Bradley, pulled away from the
stubborn Portland Tratl
Blazers m the th~rd perrod

Denver at Los Angeles

6 00 - Truth or COnseq 6, News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Sesame st 20

Around The Bend 3:)
'
6 ~:- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeannie 13; Hathayoga

Knicks post 111-95 win

Atlantic DIVISIOn

wlpelgb
Boston
10
1 909
wtlh 61 per cent consistency, preVIOUS games and because of
New
York
11
2
846
ltght ends Fred Pagac and Ted "a lack of enthusiasm on the Buffalo
3 8 273 7
Powell, andpard Jun Kregel part of the players for the Phil adelphia 0 13 000 11
Central DIVISIOn
each geltmg one
games "
w I pel gb
Hayes S3ld guard Chu~ Hayes S3ld he hadn't come to Houston
7 4 636
Bomca would be out a couple of a deciSIOn yet on whether Ohto Allanta
6 6 500 1'12
days wtlh a knee btimp but will State would play Jayvee games Ba1t1more
5 6 455 2
Cleveland
4 10 286 4117
play Saturday and wmgback m future years "we'll have to
Western Conference
Rtck Galbos, who has been watt and see," he sa1d
Mtdwest DIVISIOn
Sldelmed wtth a knee Injury,
Htil presented three buckeye
wlpclgb
9 2 818
would have the cast removed leaves each to halfback Jeff M1lwaukee
Gh1cago
8
4 667 1
Wday and "has an outStde DaviS, tackle George Hasen- KC Omaha
5 7 417 4
chance of playmg "
ohrl, end Van DeCree and hne- Detro•!
4 8 333 5
PacifiC DIVISIOn
Defenstve coordinator backer Ken Kuhn DeCree and
George Htil satd hts squad "got llasenohrl deadlocked for top x Golden State wlpclgb
8 2 800
a couple of head bumps," but lineman and Davts was eaSily Los Angeles 10 3 769
PhoeniX
5 5 500 3
expects all hands to be ready the best back
Seattle
4 8 333 5
for the Spartans wtth the exKuhn , a freshman from
Por tland
1 11 OB3 8
cephon of lmebacker Randy Loutsvtlle , turned m the
Monday's Results
Gradtshar
game's key play wtth a pass
New York Ill Portland 95
(On lygame scheduled}
"He (Gradtshar) IS gomg w mtercept10n m the second
Tuesday's Games
work out romght," Htll satd of quarter whtch stopped a
Golden State at Buffalo
defenSive leader, "but tis Gopher touchdown dnve on the
Houston at Los Angeles
Ba lt1 more at Atlanta
stnctly a day to day thmg I'm Ohto State ll yard hne He ran
IOnlygames scheduled}
optnmsllc, but I'm reahsllc, 11 out to the 31 and Ohto Stale
ABA Standmgs
roo "
scored SIX plays later.
By Un1ted Press 1n1ernat1onal
Cancels JV Games
"I'd hke to gtve hun four
East
Hayes announced the leaves on that one play," Hill
w. I pel g.b
9 5 643
remammg JUntor varstty satd, referrmg to Kulm's Inter- Carolm a
Ken
lucky
5 6 455 2112
games had been cancelled cepbon "He's gettmg better Vtrg tn ta
6 8 429 3
because of tnJunes suffered m and better every day "
New York
5 7 417 3
MemphiS
3 8 273 ;11/ 2

12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4
News 13, Contact 8, News 10
'
12 30- Spilt Second 6. Search for Tomorrow 8, 10. Who, What,
Where 3, 15
I 00- News, Weather, Sports3 , All My Chlldren6, 13 , It's Your
Bet 8, Green Acres 10. Watch Your Chrld IS
1 20- Lucille Rivers J
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 ot Our Lives J, 4, 15 . Newlywed Game 13, Mike
Douglas 6 Guldmg Light 8, 10
2 30- Dating Game 13, Doctors 4, 15, Edge of Nlghl8, 10
3 00 - Another World 3, 15, General Hospital 6, 13, Love
Splendored Thing 8, 10, RFD 20
'
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, IS. One Life to Live 6 lJ
Secret Storm 8, 10, Ohio Thrs Week 20
' '
4 00 - Mr Cilrtoon 3, Somerset IS, Sesame Sl 33 Love
American Style 13, Merv Griffin 4, Fllntstones 6. Gilligan's
Island B. Movie "Town T•mer" 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30- I Love Lucy 6, Andy Griffith 15, Pettocoat Junctloo 3
Merv Griffin 8, Daniel Boone 6
'
5 00 - Mr Rogers33, Dick Van Dyke15 . Ponderosa3 4 Daniel
Boone 6

Pro Standings

Insurance Agency

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BEGINS AT 9 P.M.
UNTIL RESULTS ARE IN!

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.4- 'l'hl! Dallf lientintl, Mlddlepon t-Pw:ueo.f, 0., Nov. 7,t972

Cartwright TV saga ambushed
HOLLYWOOD !UPI)"Bollanza," the se&lt;;ond longest
nflnln« televisi&lt;m Westem se. rte.has been drygulched at the
· TV pass-cancelled:
The seemingly intenninable .
1111• of Ben C;irtwrlght and his
aa, born to different wives
IIIOiellme 'in his past, holding
lacether a giant ranch on the
lbores ol Lake Tahoe, will
lroadcast its last chapter In
January, NBC announ~ed
Monday ,
1be $ow has run for 14
~ars . It may be the most
widely syndicated television
aeries .ever made, airing in
almost every country that
broadcasts.
After more than decade as
a national viewing institution,
It was fmally brought down by
the loss of one of its original
stars -D-•n Blocker. ,
A shift In ttme and stiffer
competition finished it off.
Blocker Dies
Blocker played "Hoss" Cart·
wright; Ben's bearUke, goodhearted son, until he died last
ljJI'Ing.
"I was frankly surprised the
network decided to continue
the show without Dan, I
thought it would be over then,"
said Lome Green, who played

10 111 the ratings . "Bonanza"
the patriarch of the Ponderosa. ' ment.
bad
sunk to &amp;2nd.
"We all knew it would have
With the loss of. Blo;:ker, the
With the death of "Bonanto come to an end eventually, show was shifted from its
za,"
only two Westerns
but I had no idea it would be · traditional Sunday night tiine
this ·soon." Greene said. He spot to Tuesday night ("with remain, the comparatively
was told Friday that he should very litUe publicity about the recent entry of "Alias slnith
attend a meeting Monday, change," complained Greene and Jones," and the daddy of
Greene said, but was unable to In looking back) where it ran them all - ''Gunsmoke,'' the
make It Monday he leamed it into a barrage of hot · com· longest-running Western, now
was to announce that the petition: The new "Maude" in its 18th ~ar . It appears safe,
episode now being filmed will series by the makers of the tucked up high in the ratings.
Getting the NBC ax with the
he the last.
super-success " All ill the
The other original star of the Family, the popular "Hawaii Ponderosa were "The . Bold
series, Michael Landon, who in Flve.Q," and ABC's Tuesday Ones," " Rod Serling's Night
Gallery" and "Banyon."
recent years has been writing night movie.
Replacing the venerable
and directing some episodes as
In the figures for one week
well as playing "Uttle Joe," last month, all 'three competi· Westem will be an "NBC
was not available for com. live programs were in the top Tuesday Night · Movie," the
network announced,

USDA CHOICE
MEATS

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. ·•we Reserve 1be Right To lbnit Quantities" .

SUPERIORS

a

New strike talks in limbo
POINT PLEASANT - No
date has been set for resump·
lion of negollations between
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
officials and striking labor
leaders, according to a
Goodyear spokesman.
The 492 hourly workers, who

walked off their jobs June I,
voted Sunday by a 95 pet.
margin to reject the company 's
latest proposal.
The new offer delineated a
four per cent wage increase for
the employes . This figure
would break down to a !!kent

Dianne Cornelius dies

Miss Dianne Joy Cornelius,
17, Front St., Cheshire, died
early today at Cabell Hun·
lington Hospital. Miss Cor·
nelius was born Feb. 28, 1%5 at
. (Continued from Page L)
Pt. Pleasant.
Ma811achussetts and the
She is survived by her
District of Columbia; and state parents, Robert J . and Erna E.
polls In N~ York, Minnesota, .S hoemaker Cornelius,
California, Michigan and other.
Cheshire; two sisters, Mrs.
ltates provided parallel find·
Ray (Erna) A. Saxon, Rt. I,
lngs.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Francis
By every indicator, Nixon
(Jacqueline )
K.
Case,
WSIJ headed for a landslide on
Cheshire; three brothers,
the dimensions of President
Jr .,
Robert
Cornelius,
Lyndon B. Johnson's -1964
Ohio
;
Ronald,
Baltimore,
victory over Sen. Barry M,
Lancaster, and Claude Lee, at
Goldwater of Arizona-a 22 per
home; three nieces, and a
cent difference.
nephew. '
As he lias done from the
Miss Cornelius was a
beginning, McGovern disputed
of the Cheshire
member
the polls, claiming they are at
Baptist Church, a student at
leu! two weeks behind and not
reflecting the true feelings of Kyger Creek High School, ·a
member of the Cheshire
the voters.
1be prairie populist was Garden Club, Keyette Club,
banking heavily on newly Kyger Creek High School Art
registered voters, especially Club, •Jf newspaper staff for
youth, and their determinaUon Kyger Creek High School and
to vote Iii contrast to poi!Bible of the Girls' Athletic
apathy among Republicans. A Association. She had been a
low voter turnout was eipected carrier lor The Gallipolis Daily
to help the South Dakota Tribune the last five years.
Funeral services will be held
senator. ·
McGovern traveled 4,399
miles from Philadelphia on the
Ealt Coast to Long Beach in SCOPS to meet
California before flying Into
Sioux Falls late Monday night
In some of his harshest in Chillicothe
language of the campaign,
McGovern told an airport rally
CHILLICOTHE - The South
at Long Beach Monday night Central Ohio Preservation
that Nixon's handling of the Society, inc., (SCOPS), will
VIetnam peace negotiations hold its annual meeting Sun.
''was no mistake. That was day, Nov. 12, at 2 p.m. in the
deliberate, comiving decep- Col. McKell Library, West
tion." He also called the break· Fifth St., Chillicothe. There
in at Democratic headquarters will be a tour of the library
at W{lshington 's Watergate which contains Col. McKell's
building "a r.alculated crime." rare collection of illuminated
McGovern said the election manuscripts.
may decide America's course
This will be followed by
"po8111bly {Of the rest of our election of officers and short
U\'el. II
reports of committee chair·
While McGovern ended hill men. The meeting will include
jet odySIJey, Nixon remaliled In a walking tour of about six
seclusion at San Clemente. His blocks of the "old residential
only campaigning was a morn- district" of Chillicothe as it
Ing radio address and a taped· was designated for nomination
half-hour network program In to the National Register.
the evening.
"You know what the Issues
are," Nixon said In the
televised program. "You·know
that this is the clearest choice
that Americans have probably
had for president in this cen·
MASON - Sue Johnson, 80,
tury.''
He lilslsted that agreement Mason·, died Monday afternoon
on ending th~ fighting In at the Holzer Medical Center.
VIetnam and bringing home all She was born Oct. 18, 1892 at
U.S. troops had been reached Clifton, the daughter of the late
and all that remained was to Robert and Ruth Van Meter
Tate. Also preceding her in
work out some details.
death
were her husband, Fred,
"By your votes, you can send
a me8118ge to those with whom in 1968, and a son, l!Dmer Ray,
we are negotiating and to the killed in World War II .
are
three
Surviving
leaders of the world that you
daughters,
Mrs.
Frances
back the President of the
United States as he Insists thst Gehring, Mrs. Cathern Ward,
we seek peace with honor and both of New Cumberland, Ohio,
never peace with surren- and Mrs. Eulah Redman,
der.n
Mason: four sons, Howard,
Top Republican strategists Franklin and Donald, all of
have conceded that ·even if Mason, and Robert, of Toronto,
Nlllon wins by a wide margin, · Ohio; 22 grandchildren, and 16
the GOP camot take the House great.grandchildren .
llld has UtUe chsnce to gain
Mrs. Johnson was a member
control of the Senate.
of the Mason United Methodist
1bere are also · 18 guber· Church, the Ladies Auxiliary of
natorlal seats at stake with the Smith·Capehart Post 140,
buttle betw(!en Incumbent Re· American j..egiQn, and the
publiCan IUchard B. Ogilvie S.F.R. Clli8s -0 f- the -Mason
..d reformer Daniel Walker In United Methodist Church .
'Funeral services will beheld
Dllnol8; young Jay Rockefel·
ler'l bid to ouat Republican at ~ p.m. Thursday at the
. Arch Moore In_West VIrginia; Mason United Methodist
and the race between Republi- Church with the Rev. Clarence
can cm11topber s. "Kit" Bond McCloud officiating. Burial
IIIII Edwll'd Dowd in flllaaourl will be in the Suncrest
11110111 the cloeest.
Memorial
Park • Point
~'can~ hope to pick up Pleasant: Friends may call at
a nel pin crl five In the Senate the. restdence after noon
wllldJ would auow Acnew, if Wednesday. The body will be
neJedad, to help the GOP take taken to the church to lie in
ctllfrol. 'lbe JWIIID'. lineup Ia state one hour befo~e the
111-41 for lbe Democrats. service . The Foglesong
~
Funeral Home is in charge.

Polls tip

Sue Johnson·of
Mason is dead

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

Friday at 11 a.m. at Rawlings
Coals Funeral Home with the
Rev . Huber officiating. Bu~ial
will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 10 a.m.
Thursday.

revenue
sharing

hourly
increase
from
November 1972 to November
1973, with !!kent hourly in·
creases for each of the
following two years.
Of issue only recently in the
negotiations has been the
company's dismissal of two
men who allegedly were in·
volved in a June disturbance
during the strike.
Bargaining in Akron with the
International Committee of the
United Rubber Workers failed
to get the men returned to their
jobs. However, Goodyear did
reinstate three other men who
had earlier been dismissed.
According to Point Pleasant
Magistrate Robert Peoples, at
least one of the men was
charged with brandishing a
deadly weapon. The cases of
both former emplo yes are
being held "in abeyance," he
said, pending the outcome of
the strike.

FIXm•
• g

charged

being made as a safety measure as several persons have
suffered bndy lacerations the past two swimming seasons. It
is the first major pool repair undertaken since the school
opened in 1957.

, POOL REPAffi STARTED - King Contracting Inc.,
JacksOn, has begun work on the renovation of the Kyger
Creek High School swimming pool. Sub-freezing weather has
caused the pool 's deck and lining to deteriorate. The repair is

Another nut loose

0 0

SUPERIORS

,.

Sharpen your Mind

Miller said the writer made
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
no
specific reference to Pres(UPI) - Investigators have no
"solid leads" in their search ident Nixon but that "we
for an anonymous letter writer assume that's who he is talking
who has threatened to put about."
"He also said he would place
cyanidelaced food packets on
supermarket shelves if the the packages in other clUes,"
"killer" responsible for the Miller said, "but we have
nothing to indicate this thing
Vietnam war is re-elected.
Sacramento County authori- has gone any further."
ties reported Monday that four
more local residents received
letters with fond packages · charJ~n
containing a "lethal dose" of
(.l.(J
cyanide along with a handwritten note warning that
similar packages would be
placed on supermarket
shelves.
COLUMBUS(UPI)- Austin·
William Miller, a spokesman town Fitch won the Class AAA
for the Sacramento County division of the Ohio High School
sheriff's Department, said a Cross Country Meet here Saturtotal of nine residents received day, while Chardon took the
letters with the poisoned food Class AA crown and Cortland
since they were first reported Maplewood won the Class A
last Friday.
title.
Miller said the letter writer
Bob Lunn paced Austintown
threatened that "he will kill to the Class AAA win by runn· Innocent people if the killer in
ing the two mile course at Ohio
the Vietnam War is returned to State University in 9:45.
office."
Austintown finished with 112'

ca'Ptu•...es
AA
'

Eddy's schedule

Mr. Eddy Educator 's
schedule for Meigs County this
week.:
Nov. 7 - Rutland Salem St.,
7:45. 8:15.
points, followed by Upper Arl·
Nov . 8- WMPO, 7:30·8 p.m.
ington with 153. Cincinnati El·
Nov. 9 -Salem Center, 5:45.
der was third with 154. Bay 6 ~ Hysell Run , 6:30 • 7:30;
Village had 190, Worthington Hyland Church, 8-8: 15.
201, Talmadge 204, Toledo St.
Nov. 10 - Pearl Street, 9John 213, Euclid 216, Lima 11:30; Portland Ele:, 1-2:30;
Shawnee 230 and Amherst Great Bend, 3-3:30; SliversSteele 234.
ville, 4-5; Spiller W.S., 5:15 •
Chardon topped Class AA 5:30; Rizer's, 8-8:30; Syracuse
teams with 105 points, followed P.O., 6:45 • 7:15; Minersville
by Elyria Catholic 115, Dayton Arms, 7:45. 8:15.
Stivers 144, Ashland Crestview
156, Colonel Crawford 158, Can·
field 169, Bucyrus 190, Kenston
217; Perrysburg 229 and Bexley
230.
Only nine teams were enter·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ed
in the Class A division, won
ADMITTED - Terry Little,
Athens; Marilyn Burke, by Cortland Maplewood with 90
Sewjng Machine •.
Pomeroy;
Con
Roush poinls.Caldwellwassecondwith
For Christmas
Pomeroy; Bobby Imboden: 100, while Bethel Tate and Lib· '
erty
Center
tied
for
third
with
Small deposit witt hold.
Rutland; Melania Walding,
109.
Plymouth
finished
fifth
Racme.
DISCHARGED - . Ronald· with 119, followed by George·
Bostic, Marilyn Burke, James · town 125, Lisbon Anderson 130,
11S W. Second
992·2284'
Osborne, Dorothy Robinson, New Bremen 137 and Sugar
l'OMEROY, OHIO
.
Creek Garaway, 140.
Betty Reed.

'8

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Cross-country title

HUNT ENDED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - About
3,000 hunters participated in
Ohio's fourth annual primitive
weapons hunt last '¥eek, the
state Department of Natural
Resources reported today .
Using muzzle-loading rilles
and shotguns, hunters killed
175 deer during the six day
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Creek in Morgan Coun ty and
Salt Fork in Guernsey County.

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(Pomeroy Public Ubrary)
QUESTIONS
I. What president had the most children?
2. How many of Ohio's 88 counties 11re uamed for people?
3. What was the first talking movie?
4. Who wrote the song "Beautiful Dreamer?"
5. What Js an 11 lbeX?"
(Answers on page 7)

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SLICED

WIENERS

(Continued !rom Page I)
on how the avenue ·could be
widened from East Main St.
out the run . However, it was
concluded that "some action ..
can be taken about the slip so
that Blaettnar's building used
for storage can be approached
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
from the opposite direction. Federal Trade Commission
The matter was referred to the (FTC) Monday accused the
street committee.
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio
A group of Laurel St. (SOHlO) of illegally fixing the
residents expressed ap· price of gasoline and coercing
preciation for the rece nt Its dealers into maintaining the
resurfacing of their street. prices.
However , they said the
The commission gave Sohio
resurfacing left about a 10 inch 10 days to agree to a consent
dropoff at the sides. Council decree to settle the matter.
agreed to fill in those areas SOHIO officials here denied the
with hot mix . A turn-around on charges and vowed to "contest
the street was discussed every aspect of the combecause it was not paved. plaint.''
Council took no action on that
Carol G. Emmerling, Cleveproblem.
land regional director of the
Agroup of Lincoln Hill Drive Commission, charged that So·
residents again asked con· hio unlawfully fixed gasoline
sideralion on an earlier prices through temporary
proposal to extend Vale St. to competitive allowances and
the hill road. However, one forced retail dealers to use
resident has refused to grant a trading stamps and to stock
right.&lt;Jf.way. Since expensive accessories
sold
or
litigation would be required to manufactured by Sohio.
secure it, the project wai'
The commission complaint
deemed impractical, and also . alleged · Sohio coerced
tabled.
dealer compliance with its
Parking on Osborne St. was conditions by control 'of lease
discussed with several of its terms and by the heavy con·
residents. It was agreed that centration of company-owned
Police Chief Jed Webster, service stations, which com·
Mayor William Baronlck and prise about one-third of all
Solicitor Fred Crow will study Sohio outlets, and which
the parking problems and compete with dealer-owned
. discuss them "on the scene" stations.
with the residents.
Robert G. Griffin, vice presi·
Council transferred $4,570.15 dent of marketing at Sohio,
from the parking meter fund io called the FTC action "a test
the street rund to help with the case, in which it is apparent
costs involved ih · the recent th.at the FTC is trying to .set.
resurfacing program.
new standards which go well
It was reported that down- · beyond the provisions of the
town merchants have lodged law."
complaints about the use of
Members of the Northern
litter cans in the business · Ohio Petroleum Retailers
section as garbage dropolfs for · ~~iation hailed the comresidents. This will not be . mtsston action, for whtch they
permitted to continue and had been fighting sine 1955.
anyone caught du.;,ping
~hio said it would n~ agree
garbage into these litter cans to a con:rent de~ee wtth the
will be prosecuted, council ~mmtsston. In tis ~esponse,
warned. 11 was again reported the company said tt would
that the street department will . contest . every aspect of the
pick up leaves throughout complamt, ~~~ that Sohlo
town . Residents are asked to officials are firmly convlilced
put leaves into plastic bags and that none.ofthe pracUcesdted.
leave them near the curb.ll the ... are. .'m.proper .?~ illegal
leaves are not picked up in two under extstmg laws.
days, then residents are asked NOW IT'S FRISBEE
to call town hall and request a
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J .
pickup.
(UPI) -Princeton and
It was also reported that
Rutgers, the universities which
leaves on sidewalks throughout . played the first Intercollegiate
town are becoming slick and football game 103 years ago,
hazardous. Property owners met Monday In a roped off
are responsible for·any injuries parking lot in the nation's' first
and should remove them.
organized intercoilegiate
Ch' f
frisbee
match ..
te Webster's report for
History was repeated-RutOctober showed 40 arrests, 21
gers
won the match, 29-27. On
accidents investigated and 951
parking meter violation tickets Nov.· 6, 111611, Rutgers beat
issued by his department. Princeton, 8_., on a New.
Parking meter collections Brunswick fOQtbaU field.
totaled $3,% 7.
, A crowd of about 400
Attending were Mayor .gathered around the parking
Baronick, Mrs. Walton, Chief lot behind the Rutgers gym.
Webster, and council members nasium to watch the frisbee
Don Colli~s. Lucien. Poulin, match, pla~d between seveO: _
William Snouffer El
person teams according to
. Russell and Ralph Werry rna rules developed by Columbia
·
High School of Ma&gt;'wood, N.J.
,
h
be
asked for a rematch
A Chickens . eart ats l'rin~ton
thltlm
about 300 times 8 mlnu· 1
- s . e on gass an d on its
e.
home' turf.

Superiors Smoked. Callies

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Cartwright TV saga ambushed
HOLLYWOOD !UPI)"Bollanza," the se&lt;;ond longest
nflnln« televisi&lt;m Westem se. rte.has been drygulched at the
· TV pass-cancelled:
The seemingly intenninable .
1111• of Ben C;irtwrlght and his
aa, born to different wives
IIIOiellme 'in his past, holding
lacether a giant ranch on the
lbores ol Lake Tahoe, will
lroadcast its last chapter In
January, NBC announ~ed
Monday ,
1be $ow has run for 14
~ars . It may be the most
widely syndicated television
aeries .ever made, airing in
almost every country that
broadcasts.
After more than decade as
a national viewing institution,
It was fmally brought down by
the loss of one of its original
stars -D-•n Blocker. ,
A shift In ttme and stiffer
competition finished it off.
Blocker Dies
Blocker played "Hoss" Cart·
wright; Ben's bearUke, goodhearted son, until he died last
ljJI'Ing.
"I was frankly surprised the
network decided to continue
the show without Dan, I
thought it would be over then,"
said Lome Green, who played

10 111 the ratings . "Bonanza"
the patriarch of the Ponderosa. ' ment.
bad
sunk to &amp;2nd.
"We all knew it would have
With the loss of. Blo;:ker, the
With the death of "Bonanto come to an end eventually, show was shifted from its
za,"
only two Westerns
but I had no idea it would be · traditional Sunday night tiine
this ·soon." Greene said. He spot to Tuesday night ("with remain, the comparatively
was told Friday that he should very litUe publicity about the recent entry of "Alias slnith
attend a meeting Monday, change," complained Greene and Jones," and the daddy of
Greene said, but was unable to In looking back) where it ran them all - ''Gunsmoke,'' the
make It Monday he leamed it into a barrage of hot · com· longest-running Western, now
was to announce that the petition: The new "Maude" in its 18th ~ar . It appears safe,
episode now being filmed will series by the makers of the tucked up high in the ratings.
Getting the NBC ax with the
he the last.
super-success " All ill the
The other original star of the Family, the popular "Hawaii Ponderosa were "The . Bold
series, Michael Landon, who in Flve.Q," and ABC's Tuesday Ones," " Rod Serling's Night
Gallery" and "Banyon."
recent years has been writing night movie.
Replacing the venerable
and directing some episodes as
In the figures for one week
well as playing "Uttle Joe," last month, all 'three competi· Westem will be an "NBC
was not available for com. live programs were in the top Tuesday Night · Movie," the
network announced,

USDA CHOICE
MEATS

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. ·•we Reserve 1be Right To lbnit Quantities" .

SUPERIORS

a

New strike talks in limbo
POINT PLEASANT - No
date has been set for resump·
lion of negollations between
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
officials and striking labor
leaders, according to a
Goodyear spokesman.
The 492 hourly workers, who

walked off their jobs June I,
voted Sunday by a 95 pet.
margin to reject the company 's
latest proposal.
The new offer delineated a
four per cent wage increase for
the employes . This figure
would break down to a !!kent

Dianne Cornelius dies

Miss Dianne Joy Cornelius,
17, Front St., Cheshire, died
early today at Cabell Hun·
lington Hospital. Miss Cor·
nelius was born Feb. 28, 1%5 at
. (Continued from Page L)
Pt. Pleasant.
Ma811achussetts and the
She is survived by her
District of Columbia; and state parents, Robert J . and Erna E.
polls In N~ York, Minnesota, .S hoemaker Cornelius,
California, Michigan and other.
Cheshire; two sisters, Mrs.
ltates provided parallel find·
Ray (Erna) A. Saxon, Rt. I,
lngs.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Francis
By every indicator, Nixon
(Jacqueline )
K.
Case,
WSIJ headed for a landslide on
Cheshire; three brothers,
the dimensions of President
Jr .,
Robert
Cornelius,
Lyndon B. Johnson's -1964
Ohio
;
Ronald,
Baltimore,
victory over Sen. Barry M,
Lancaster, and Claude Lee, at
Goldwater of Arizona-a 22 per
home; three nieces, and a
cent difference.
nephew. '
As he lias done from the
Miss Cornelius was a
beginning, McGovern disputed
of the Cheshire
member
the polls, claiming they are at
Baptist Church, a student at
leu! two weeks behind and not
reflecting the true feelings of Kyger Creek High School, ·a
member of the Cheshire
the voters.
1be prairie populist was Garden Club, Keyette Club,
banking heavily on newly Kyger Creek High School Art
registered voters, especially Club, •Jf newspaper staff for
youth, and their determinaUon Kyger Creek High School and
to vote Iii contrast to poi!Bible of the Girls' Athletic
apathy among Republicans. A Association. She had been a
low voter turnout was eipected carrier lor The Gallipolis Daily
to help the South Dakota Tribune the last five years.
Funeral services will be held
senator. ·
McGovern traveled 4,399
miles from Philadelphia on the
Ealt Coast to Long Beach in SCOPS to meet
California before flying Into
Sioux Falls late Monday night
In some of his harshest in Chillicothe
language of the campaign,
McGovern told an airport rally
CHILLICOTHE - The South
at Long Beach Monday night Central Ohio Preservation
that Nixon's handling of the Society, inc., (SCOPS), will
VIetnam peace negotiations hold its annual meeting Sun.
''was no mistake. That was day, Nov. 12, at 2 p.m. in the
deliberate, comiving decep- Col. McKell Library, West
tion." He also called the break· Fifth St., Chillicothe. There
in at Democratic headquarters will be a tour of the library
at W{lshington 's Watergate which contains Col. McKell's
building "a r.alculated crime." rare collection of illuminated
McGovern said the election manuscripts.
may decide America's course
This will be followed by
"po8111bly {Of the rest of our election of officers and short
U\'el. II
reports of committee chair·
While McGovern ended hill men. The meeting will include
jet odySIJey, Nixon remaliled In a walking tour of about six
seclusion at San Clemente. His blocks of the "old residential
only campaigning was a morn- district" of Chillicothe as it
Ing radio address and a taped· was designated for nomination
half-hour network program In to the National Register.
the evening.
"You know what the Issues
are," Nixon said In the
televised program. "You·know
that this is the clearest choice
that Americans have probably
had for president in this cen·
MASON - Sue Johnson, 80,
tury.''
He lilslsted that agreement Mason·, died Monday afternoon
on ending th~ fighting In at the Holzer Medical Center.
VIetnam and bringing home all She was born Oct. 18, 1892 at
U.S. troops had been reached Clifton, the daughter of the late
and all that remained was to Robert and Ruth Van Meter
Tate. Also preceding her in
work out some details.
death
were her husband, Fred,
"By your votes, you can send
a me8118ge to those with whom in 1968, and a son, l!Dmer Ray,
we are negotiating and to the killed in World War II .
are
three
Surviving
leaders of the world that you
daughters,
Mrs.
Frances
back the President of the
United States as he Insists thst Gehring, Mrs. Cathern Ward,
we seek peace with honor and both of New Cumberland, Ohio,
never peace with surren- and Mrs. Eulah Redman,
der.n
Mason: four sons, Howard,
Top Republican strategists Franklin and Donald, all of
have conceded that ·even if Mason, and Robert, of Toronto,
Nlllon wins by a wide margin, · Ohio; 22 grandchildren, and 16
the GOP camot take the House great.grandchildren .
llld has UtUe chsnce to gain
Mrs. Johnson was a member
control of the Senate.
of the Mason United Methodist
1bere are also · 18 guber· Church, the Ladies Auxiliary of
natorlal seats at stake with the Smith·Capehart Post 140,
buttle betw(!en Incumbent Re· American j..egiQn, and the
publiCan IUchard B. Ogilvie S.F.R. Clli8s -0 f- the -Mason
..d reformer Daniel Walker In United Methodist Church .
'Funeral services will beheld
Dllnol8; young Jay Rockefel·
ler'l bid to ouat Republican at ~ p.m. Thursday at the
. Arch Moore In_West VIrginia; Mason United Methodist
and the race between Republi- Church with the Rev. Clarence
can cm11topber s. "Kit" Bond McCloud officiating. Burial
IIIII Edwll'd Dowd in flllaaourl will be in the Suncrest
11110111 the cloeest.
Memorial
Park • Point
~'can~ hope to pick up Pleasant: Friends may call at
a nel pin crl five In the Senate the. restdence after noon
wllldJ would auow Acnew, if Wednesday. The body will be
neJedad, to help the GOP take taken to the church to lie in
ctllfrol. 'lbe JWIIID'. lineup Ia state one hour befo~e the
111-41 for lbe Democrats. service . The Foglesong
~
Funeral Home is in charge.

Polls tip

Sue Johnson·of
Mason is dead

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

Friday at 11 a.m. at Rawlings
Coals Funeral Home with the
Rev . Huber officiating. Bu~ial
will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 10 a.m.
Thursday.

revenue
sharing

hourly
increase
from
November 1972 to November
1973, with !!kent hourly in·
creases for each of the
following two years.
Of issue only recently in the
negotiations has been the
company's dismissal of two
men who allegedly were in·
volved in a June disturbance
during the strike.
Bargaining in Akron with the
International Committee of the
United Rubber Workers failed
to get the men returned to their
jobs. However, Goodyear did
reinstate three other men who
had earlier been dismissed.
According to Point Pleasant
Magistrate Robert Peoples, at
least one of the men was
charged with brandishing a
deadly weapon. The cases of
both former emplo yes are
being held "in abeyance," he
said, pending the outcome of
the strike.

FIXm•
• g

charged

being made as a safety measure as several persons have
suffered bndy lacerations the past two swimming seasons. It
is the first major pool repair undertaken since the school
opened in 1957.

, POOL REPAffi STARTED - King Contracting Inc.,
JacksOn, has begun work on the renovation of the Kyger
Creek High School swimming pool. Sub-freezing weather has
caused the pool 's deck and lining to deteriorate. The repair is

Another nut loose

0 0

SUPERIORS

,.

Sharpen your Mind

Miller said the writer made
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
no
specific reference to Pres(UPI) - Investigators have no
"solid leads" in their search ident Nixon but that "we
for an anonymous letter writer assume that's who he is talking
who has threatened to put about."
"He also said he would place
cyanidelaced food packets on
supermarket shelves if the the packages in other clUes,"
"killer" responsible for the Miller said, "but we have
nothing to indicate this thing
Vietnam war is re-elected.
Sacramento County authori- has gone any further."
ties reported Monday that four
more local residents received
letters with fond packages · charJ~n
containing a "lethal dose" of
(.l.(J
cyanide along with a handwritten note warning that
similar packages would be
placed on supermarket
shelves.
COLUMBUS(UPI)- Austin·
William Miller, a spokesman town Fitch won the Class AAA
for the Sacramento County division of the Ohio High School
sheriff's Department, said a Cross Country Meet here Saturtotal of nine residents received day, while Chardon took the
letters with the poisoned food Class AA crown and Cortland
since they were first reported Maplewood won the Class A
last Friday.
title.
Miller said the letter writer
Bob Lunn paced Austintown
threatened that "he will kill to the Class AAA win by runn· Innocent people if the killer in
ing the two mile course at Ohio
the Vietnam War is returned to State University in 9:45.
office."
Austintown finished with 112'

ca'Ptu•...es
AA
'

Eddy's schedule

Mr. Eddy Educator 's
schedule for Meigs County this
week.:
Nov. 7 - Rutland Salem St.,
7:45. 8:15.
points, followed by Upper Arl·
Nov . 8- WMPO, 7:30·8 p.m.
ington with 153. Cincinnati El·
Nov. 9 -Salem Center, 5:45.
der was third with 154. Bay 6 ~ Hysell Run , 6:30 • 7:30;
Village had 190, Worthington Hyland Church, 8-8: 15.
201, Talmadge 204, Toledo St.
Nov. 10 - Pearl Street, 9John 213, Euclid 216, Lima 11:30; Portland Ele:, 1-2:30;
Shawnee 230 and Amherst Great Bend, 3-3:30; SliversSteele 234.
ville, 4-5; Spiller W.S., 5:15 •
Chardon topped Class AA 5:30; Rizer's, 8-8:30; Syracuse
teams with 105 points, followed P.O., 6:45 • 7:15; Minersville
by Elyria Catholic 115, Dayton Arms, 7:45. 8:15.
Stivers 144, Ashland Crestview
156, Colonel Crawford 158, Can·
field 169, Bucyrus 190, Kenston
217; Perrysburg 229 and Bexley
230.
Only nine teams were enter·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ed
in the Class A division, won
ADMITTED - Terry Little,
Athens; Marilyn Burke, by Cortland Maplewood with 90
Sewjng Machine •.
Pomeroy;
Con
Roush poinls.Caldwellwassecondwith
For Christmas
Pomeroy; Bobby Imboden: 100, while Bethel Tate and Lib· '
erty
Center
tied
for
third
with
Small deposit witt hold.
Rutland; Melania Walding,
109.
Plymouth
finished
fifth
Racme.
DISCHARGED - . Ronald· with 119, followed by George·
Bostic, Marilyn Burke, James · town 125, Lisbon Anderson 130,
11S W. Second
992·2284'
Osborne, Dorothy Robinson, New Bremen 137 and Sugar
l'OMEROY, OHIO
.
Creek Garaway, 140.
Betty Reed.

'8

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HUNT ENDED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - About
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(Pomeroy Public Ubrary)
QUESTIONS
I. What president had the most children?
2. How many of Ohio's 88 counties 11re uamed for people?
3. What was the first talking movie?
4. Who wrote the song "Beautiful Dreamer?"
5. What Js an 11 lbeX?"
(Answers on page 7)

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ARMOUR'S
SLICED

WIENERS

(Continued !rom Page I)
on how the avenue ·could be
widened from East Main St.
out the run . However, it was
concluded that "some action ..
can be taken about the slip so
that Blaettnar's building used
for storage can be approached
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
from the opposite direction. Federal Trade Commission
The matter was referred to the (FTC) Monday accused the
street committee.
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio
A group of Laurel St. (SOHlO) of illegally fixing the
residents expressed ap· price of gasoline and coercing
preciation for the rece nt Its dealers into maintaining the
resurfacing of their street. prices.
However , they said the
The commission gave Sohio
resurfacing left about a 10 inch 10 days to agree to a consent
dropoff at the sides. Council decree to settle the matter.
agreed to fill in those areas SOHIO officials here denied the
with hot mix . A turn-around on charges and vowed to "contest
the street was discussed every aspect of the combecause it was not paved. plaint.''
Council took no action on that
Carol G. Emmerling, Cleveproblem.
land regional director of the
Agroup of Lincoln Hill Drive Commission, charged that So·
residents again asked con· hio unlawfully fixed gasoline
sideralion on an earlier prices through temporary
proposal to extend Vale St. to competitive allowances and
the hill road. However, one forced retail dealers to use
resident has refused to grant a trading stamps and to stock
right.&lt;Jf.way. Since expensive accessories
sold
or
litigation would be required to manufactured by Sohio.
secure it, the project wai'
The commission complaint
deemed impractical, and also . alleged · Sohio coerced
tabled.
dealer compliance with its
Parking on Osborne St. was conditions by control 'of lease
discussed with several of its terms and by the heavy con·
residents. It was agreed that centration of company-owned
Police Chief Jed Webster, service stations, which com·
Mayor William Baronlck and prise about one-third of all
Solicitor Fred Crow will study Sohio outlets, and which
the parking problems and compete with dealer-owned
. discuss them "on the scene" stations.
with the residents.
Robert G. Griffin, vice presi·
Council transferred $4,570.15 dent of marketing at Sohio,
from the parking meter fund io called the FTC action "a test
the street rund to help with the case, in which it is apparent
costs involved ih · the recent th.at the FTC is trying to .set.
resurfacing program.
new standards which go well
It was reported that down- · beyond the provisions of the
town merchants have lodged law."
complaints about the use of
Members of the Northern
litter cans in the business · Ohio Petroleum Retailers
section as garbage dropolfs for · ~~iation hailed the comresidents. This will not be . mtsston action, for whtch they
permitted to continue and had been fighting sine 1955.
anyone caught du.;,ping
~hio said it would n~ agree
garbage into these litter cans to a con:rent de~ee wtth the
will be prosecuted, council ~mmtsston. In tis ~esponse,
warned. 11 was again reported the company said tt would
that the street department will . contest . every aspect of the
pick up leaves throughout complamt, ~~~ that Sohlo
town . Residents are asked to officials are firmly convlilced
put leaves into plastic bags and that none.ofthe pracUcesdted.
leave them near the curb.ll the ... are. .'m.proper .?~ illegal
leaves are not picked up in two under extstmg laws.
days, then residents are asked NOW IT'S FRISBEE
to call town hall and request a
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J .
pickup.
(UPI) -Princeton and
It was also reported that
Rutgers, the universities which
leaves on sidewalks throughout . played the first Intercollegiate
town are becoming slick and football game 103 years ago,
hazardous. Property owners met Monday In a roped off
are responsible for·any injuries parking lot in the nation's' first
and should remove them.
organized intercoilegiate
Ch' f
frisbee
match ..
te Webster's report for
History was repeated-RutOctober showed 40 arrests, 21
gers
won the match, 29-27. On
accidents investigated and 951
parking meter violation tickets Nov.· 6, 111611, Rutgers beat
issued by his department. Princeton, 8_., on a New.
Parking meter collections Brunswick fOQtbaU field.
totaled $3,% 7.
, A crowd of about 400
Attending were Mayor .gathered around the parking
Baronick, Mrs. Walton, Chief lot behind the Rutgers gym.
Webster, and council members nasium to watch the frisbee
Don Colli~s. Lucien. Poulin, match, pla~d between seveO: _
William Snouffer El
person teams according to
. Russell and Ralph Werry rna rules developed by Columbia
·
High School of Ma&gt;'wood, N.J.
,
h
be
asked for a rematch
A Chickens . eart ats l'rin~ton
thltlm
about 300 times 8 mlnu· 1
- s . e on gass an d on its
e.
home' turf.

Superiors Smoked. Callies

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•
6- The DaUySentinel,l\fiddle~rt-Pomeroy;O., Nov. 7,1972

$2, 000 [Jequest received
from the Sanborn estate
A P.OOO bequest from her
estate by the late Miss Bess
Sanborn to the B. H. Sanborn
Ml18lonary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
· Church was disclosed Monday
night at a meeting at the
church.
The money was bequeathed
In memory of her father and
brother for whom the Society
was named.
Mrs. John Werner announced that the Middleport
community Thanksgiving Eve
aervice will be at the First
Baptist Church. She also urged
llll!mbers "to get out and vote"
today, .announced Laymen's
SUnday for Nov. 12, and a
dinner on Nov. 13 at 6:15p.m .
where the guest speaker will be
a representative from the
American Baptist Convention.

The love gift dedication was
conducted by Mrs. Werner,
assisted by Mrs . Manning
Kloes, Mrs. Pearl Hollman ,
and Mrs. U!ora Sigman.
Mrs. Richard Owen, white
cross chairman, presented the
quotas for overseas and
overland . She read a story on
white cross work from the
Philippines, and announced the
theme, "Faith and Justice. "
She also read a thank you note
from Dorothy Johnson, a
missionary, and reported on
the Alaska quota which is to go
to the Dayton Christian Center.
II was voted to contribute $20 to
the Burma White Cross, and
$7.50 to the Latin American
White C~oss.
The Baptist World Day of
Prayer service preceded the
meeting. Assisting Mrs.

C harl e~ Searles, chairman,
were Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs.
Kloes. and Mrs . Dale Walburn .
The theme was " World
Missions of Reconciliation
llll'ough Jesus Christ." Mrs.
Hoffma n had readings and a
prayer. An offerin~ was taken
and members joined hands for
prayer by Mrs. Kloes, Mrs.
Willis Anthony, Mrs. Owen,
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins, Mrs.
Dana Hamm, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, ahd Mrs. Paul
Smart.
Answering the roll call were
nine from the Dorcas Circle,
seven from Elecla, seven from
Love Joy , and four guests.
Relreshments
were served by
.
'
Mrs. Walburn , Mrs. Bodimer,
Miss Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs.
John Fultz, Mrs. Kloes, and
Mrs. Hoffman .

1· Social Calendar IMrs. Roush honored
;1*~'
ll&amp;!llWO!li~o:;O!li
·aO!li~oo
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7 Tbe
.
Dilly Smiinel,Mkkt~, o., Nov. 7,1972

·

fior lona services

Highway need~

-

Middleport 1
Personal ·Notes;

TUESDAY
,
. WEDNt:SDAY
:t
l
1F:LF:CTION .Day dinner . at
POMEROY - Middleport
j5
·
Mrs. Eula Swan and !i{rs.
Masonic Hall ; Chester, IJons t:lub, noon Wednesday at
Mrs. Lettie Roush, treasurer James Buchanan, worshipful Lindsey Lyons of Tuppers
Tuesday, by Chester United lhc Meigs Inn.
of Evangeline Chapter, Order masier of Middleport Lodge, Plains were weekend visitors
Methodist Church . Soup,
POMEROY Chapter 80, of the Eastern Star of Mid- James Clatworthy, Glen of Mrs. Geneva Yates. Monday
sandwiches, pie, cake, co[fee, Royal Arch Masons • 7·30
dl eport, for 17 years was Evans, AI 1en Pa1ge,
·
Robe r t
·
Mrs . Yates went to Cleveland
plate lunches.
Wednesday at the Masonic hunored at the Thursday night King, Allen . Hughes, Harry lor a two week visit with her
SOUP DINNER Tuesday , Tcinple. ·Officers and com- meeting held at the Masonic Cheshire, and Paul Darnell. son, Morgan Arthur Yates, who
Syracuse Presbyterian Church panions urged to attend.
· Temple.
The charter was draped in came here lor her, ·
annex, starting at 11:30 a.m.
WHITE ROSE LODGE, I :30
Mrs. Roush was escorted to a memory of two deceased
Recent guests of Mr. and
Vegetable soup, sandwiches, p.m. Wednesday at the Mid- ·seat in the East, presented with members, Mrs. Elizabeth Mrs. Clifford Hayes and son,
pie, colfee.
dleport Legion Hall.
a money gift from the Chapter,' Allman and Mrs . . Pauline Gregory, have been Mrs. Anna
SOUP Dinner , Pomeroy
THURSDAY
and a red carnation corsage Gallagher.
Loga, Nitro, W. Va., Miss Effie
United Methodist Church, II to
ANNUAL Bazaar of Sacred from Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Mrs. Chesl)er thanked the Price and E. J. Price, St.
3 p.m. serving time. Soup,
c
.
. If
Heart Church at auditoritim. hester, worthy matron and officers and members for all Albans, W. Va.; and Mr. and
sandwiches, pte · anu co ee. Thursday. Dinners starting at 4, patron.
.
their
courtesies
·and
Russell
Bainum,
Soup also available by the p.m. ; games, prizes, fancy
·1m·t·tatory work was exem- cooperation during . the year. Mrs.
Columbus.
quart. '
stands, baked goods. Public plified fol' two candidates, Mr. Associate matron-elect, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Burnett
· ELECTION Day Dinner invited.
and Mrs. Charles Winebrenner Helen Milhoan, announced her of New Castle, Pa , ·were
Tuesday
at
Syracuse
PAST Councilors, Theodorus and a tribute was given to the installation for Nov. 9. A
Presbyterian
Church. Council, D. of A., 7:30 p.m. Star Point Ruth by Mrs. Naomi practice a~d cle,anup session weekend guests "of Mrs. Con
Homemade vegetable soup, hot Thursday home of Mrs. Mabel Kmg,
. past grand Ruth of the will be held Wednesday night Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
dogs, ham salad sandwiches,
Gran d Chapter of Ohio. The at 6:30 p.m.
.d
d
.
Wolfe
.
Reynolds.are in Morgantown,
cof ree, tea, K00l • At an pte
station in Evangeline Chapter
Asocial hour was held in the W. Va. lor a several days v,jlii.l
will be sold. Soup will be sold
FRIDAY
I·S f"ll
1 e(l by Mrs. Farie Ken- basement dining room. Mrs. with Mr. and Mrs. Val
fur carry-out but containers
RETURN
JONATHAN nedy.
Chesher served a decorated
Reynolds and family . .
must be furnished by con- Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Chesher gave cake and coffee with Mrs.
lainers. The dinner is being the American Revolution , 2 special recog nition to the Evelyn Lewis and Mrs. Bessie
sponsored by members of the p.m. Friday, Episcopal Parish Ma sons present including King assisting.
Sunshine Makers Class.
House, Speaker, Emmett
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Conway of Ohio University
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 whose topic will be pre-historic
p.m. Tuesday, Columbus and Indian paths in Meigs County.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. , Members to respond to roll call
Nieces and nephews of Mrs. Jeff, Albany .
Plans for sponsoring a dance
Sarah Bechtle and Charlotte with Indian name in Ohio.
James
and
Ben
Cotterill,
Catherine
Rickey
honored
her
Thursday,
Nov. 23, from 9 to
Taunton to have the cultural Hostesses, Mrs. Mark Grueser,
program.
Mrs. Irvi ng Karr, and Mrs. on her 90th birthday an- Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs. midnight at the Pomeroy
niversary Sunday with a dinner Paul Dye of Cleveland; Mr . Junior High School, have been
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, George S~inner .
party featuring homemade ice and Mrs . Kenneth Steward, made by the Meigs Chapter of
Daughters of America, 7:30
cream and a decorated cake. Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry the Ohio Association of Public
p.m. Tuesday at the hall. First
Attending the celebration Steward, Steve and Amy , School employes.
nomination of officers. Layette
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert King Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Mrs . Alice Globokar,
shower for Kathy Tuttle
King,
Columbus;
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
and
Tim
·
of
Bradbury;
Liz
president,
said "Foxx" will
Johnson.
By Glenna S. Milhoan
Charles
Domigan
of
Pomeroy
;
BlaettnarofPomeroy; Mr. and
provide music for dancing,
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Mrs. Ivan Cotterill, Jenniler Mr. and Mrs. Alexander May, Chaperones are needed. Those
Racine Wesleyan United Clara Milhoan and Glenna
and Dean, Columbus; Mr. and Pomeroy; and Mrs. Bessie wishing to volunteer may
Methodist Church Tuesday at Milhoan made a business trip
Mrs . Raymond Cotterill, Steve, Musser of Albany, and Mrs. contact Mrs. Globokar.
II :30 a. m. and 4:30 p.m. in to Athens Thursday.
Wayne, Denver and Larry of Oleva Cotterill of Bradbury, Members are also being asked
church annex . Sponsored by
Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy,
Harrisonville; Mrs. Catherine sisters of Mrs. Rickey.
to make candy to be sold .at the
ladies of the church.
Mrs . · Alice Dodson acUnable to attend but sending dance. The group also enDomigan, Pomeroy; Mr. and
GOLDEN RULE Class of companied by Mrs. Alice
Mrs . Dan Cremeans, Darin and gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Don dorsed the five mill ~chool
Pomeroy Church ol Christ Furgeson of Huntington took a
Cotterill and Helen of operating levy being voted
Thanksgiving dinner (potluck) two weeks vacation to Mem· Derick, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Harrisonville.
Paul , Cotterill, Christy and
upon in the district today.
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. home of phis, Tenn. to visit their son
Mrs. Frances Eskew.
and brother, Mr. and Mrs.
EASTERN
AthI e tic Durwood Conway,
Boosters, 8 p.m. tonight at high
Bobby Hunt purchased a
DAUGHTER BORN
LUNCH AT SALE
SUPPER PLANNED
school. Everyone invited.
riding horse and Larry Farley
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lyons of
CHESTER - The Chester
The Pomeroy Elementary
WEDNESDAY '
has two horses.
AMATEUR GARDEN Club,
Clara Milhoan accompanied School safety Patrol to help PTA will serve lunch at the Pontiac, Mich. are announcing
Wednesday, 8 p.m. home of her sister, Mrs. Mary Shafer to raise funds for a trip to Saturday auction on the Bird the birth of a daughter, Tonya
Mrs. Harold Lohse, Pomeroy. Holzer Medical Center one day Washington, D. C., will hold a farm, Route 7, beginning at 10 Lynn, on Saturday, Nov. 4, at
jitney supper from 4 to 6 p.m. a.m. Members are asked to St. Joseph Hospital in Pontiac.
LAUREL CLIFF Better last week for treatment.
Health Club, 7:30 p.m. ThursMr. and Mrs . John Brewer Friday at the school before the contribute sloppy joes, The infant weighed six pounds,
day at the home of Mrs. Robert visited a week in Adams county Meigs-Point Pleasant game. cupcakes or pie and seven ounces. Grandparents
The menu will include ham, take them to the Ches- are Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons,
Bowen.
where they formerly lived.
Chool
on Middleport, and Carlton
MISSIONARY Society, ' Mr.andMrs.ErrollConroy, chicken, meatloaf, hot dogs, ter Grade
Pomeroy Baptist Church, 7:30 Mrs. Alice Dodson attended the green beans, scalloped Friday afternoon. Volunteers Scherlitz, Marion, Mich. Mrs .
p.111. Thursday night. Baptist 501h wedding anniversary potatoes, salads, baked beans, are needed to work one or two Bernard Schramm of ZanesWomen's Day of Prayer to be observance of '4r. and ..Mfg. hot rolls, noodles, cake, pie, hour shifts between 10 a.m. and ville is a grea!-grandmother.
5 p.'m. Those willing to work Mr:-and Mtsnlyons ,•their• slilr,~'
observed with Mrs. L. R Cu&gt;lis Wolfe ~ at the .pbwer milk and coffee.
ani asked . to call Gladys Bernard, andctl1eir grandMon1'1
Sterrett, chairman.
house one day last week.
Spencer, 985-3530, Catherine Eddie, were in Pontiac over the
AFTERNOON Circle, Heath
Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan and
Windon , 985-3846, or Virginia weekend to visit the Tom Lyons
United Methodist Church, 2 lad y friend of Middleport
DINNER SET
l_amily and Linda Lyons.
Kirkhart, 667-3704.
p.m. Thursday, Mrs. David called on Mrs. Glenna Milhoan
RUTLAND - The annual
En tsmin ge r to have the and Bernard Sunday.
Thanksgiving turkey dinner of
progra m; Mrs. James Jividen,
M. E. Milhoan of Shade the Rutland Volunteer Fire
Mrs. Roy Cassell, and Mrs. 0. ca lled at the farm home Department has been set for
P. Klein, hostesses.
Wednesday ol Mrs. Glenna Thursday, Nov. 16, at the
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter, Milhoan .
Rutland
Grade
School
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Conroy of cafeteria with serving to start
his mother, Mrs. Myla Hudson,
By Mrs. Ada Slack
p.m . Thursday, home of Columbus visited Saturday and at 5:30p.m. Tickets are being
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Max E. Sunday.
Margaret Follrod, Pomeroy. Sunday with relatives here.
sold by firemen or can be Folmer and daughter, Pam , of Mr. and Mrs. James Harden
Mr . and Mrs. George Conray purchased at the door. Tickets Cincinnati spent a week with of London visited recently with
and Kimberly visited Mrs. are $1.50 for adults and 75 cents her parenls, Mr. and Mrs. his p~re n ts, Mr. and Mrs.
Effie Hoosier, on Saturday.
Alice Dodson.
ror children .
Robert' Harden and sister,
Robert Hysell.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bolen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden Debbie.
and Mrs . Jack Bolen and son
visited in Marion with their son Mr . . John Carroll of
ALSO RECOGNIZED
GOODIES NEEDED
were dinner guests on Friday
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Charleston, visited recently
Unintentionally omitted
Homemade candy and Mrs . Robert Harden and son, with his sister and brother-inor Mrs. C. E Stout of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs . Dale and rrom a listing of seniors cookies for a veterans' party at Eric. The latter Mr. Harden is law, Mr . and Mrs . John
diJUghter of Fort Lauderdale, recognized Friday by the the Southeastern Ohio Mental recuperating athis home after Bahram and his sister and
Fla ., were honor guests. Other Southern Tornado marching Health Center, Athens, are being hospitalized due to a brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
guests were Mr. and ~rs . band was Barbara Fisher. The being solicited by Mrs. Charles blood clot in his lung.
Herschel Rose and family of
Grover Stout, Mr. and Mrs. band did an "S" formation Kessinger , Eighth District,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jenks, Minersville.
Bernard Alien and family, Mr. salute to the seniors who were American Legion Auxiliary, sons Bruce and Scott of Louisa,
and Mrs. John Stout, Mr, and recognized along with their president. The party is spon- Ky., were recent weekend
YOU WILL
sored by the junior auxiliary gues ts of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley and family and parenls.
members of the district. , Mrs. William Brown.
Octa Gillogly . Evening callers
Anyone wanting to attend is
were Nellie Vale, Fannie Pettit
Mr . and Mrs . George
SALE
DAYS
SET
asked to notify.Mrs. Kessinger. Schneider and Mrs , Daisy
and Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Bolen
OUR
A rummage sale will be held The party slarls at I p.m.
and Teressa.
QUALITY
Ro~sh have moved into the
Mrs. Zelia · Weyand and at the Pomeroy First Baptist Thursday.
former Elden Will property on
SELECTION
daughter and family of Church Thursday and Fri~ay
College Street.
VALUES
Columbus were guests ol Mrs. by the One-Won.()ne Class of
Ernest Quillen is confined to
TWO DAY SALE
Weyand 's mother, Mrs. U1e church, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ·
the
Veteran:S Hospit.l, Ward
A rummage sale will be held
Geneva Foster Saturday and
Friday and Saturday at the lA, Huntington, W. Va.
Sunday. On Sunday evening
Rev. Ralph Hudson and son,
SEE THE CIRCUS
Kingsland building on Court St.
they attended the festival at
The Middleport First Baptist starting at 9a.m. each morning Anthony, of Portsmouth vlsi ted
the Columbia Chapel Church.
Church bus was used to trans- by Return Jonathan Meigs
. Mr. Mike Hensler o[ Belpre
port children of the Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the
was a weekend guest of his
County Children's Home and American Revolution. Mrs.
grandmother , Mrs . Grace
residenls of the Meigs County Dwight Milhoan, Mm. A. R.
Hensler.
Infirmary to Athens Saturday Knight, and Mrs. George
Guests for the weekend of
to see a circus. Clifford Hays .Skinner will handle pickup for
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
drove the bus:
the sale. .
Chapman were Mrs. ChaP,.
man 's sisters, Edith and Doris
and husband.
PECANS ARE HERE:
INFANT CONFINED
The Eddie Jordan family of
Pecans to be sold by ciass 12
Matthew Baker, 15-monthNeb1·aska were weekend of Heath United Methodist
old
S&lt;lJl of Mr. and Mrs. Lsrry
guests.of their parents, Mr. and Church have arrived and may
Mrs. L. D. Cottrill and Mrs. be purchased from Mrs. Nan Baker, Middleport, remains
Faye Jordan.
Moore, Mrs. Glenn Lambert, confined to Holzer Medical
Center for observation,
Mrs. E. G. Nelson had as her . or Mrs. James Criswell.

are discussed

I

~ISCUSsF8 ffiGHWAY NEEDS ~ Atty. Johrl E.
Halliday, len, discusses highways needs of southern Ohio
with J. Phlllip Richley, Ohio Transportation "Director.

OAPSE dance

Fairview
News Notes

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Shields, Early Roush, Mrs.
Roy Buck, and Mrs. Gladys
Shields attended the 50th
wedding anniversary obaervance of Mr. and Mrs. Mont
QUillen at Veto on Sunday.
Roy Buck and mother, )'.trs.
C«a Buck took a vacation trip
to Buffalo Creek, W. Va., the
Smoky Mts. and visited other
places of interest in Kentucky
and Tennessee. Mr. Buck took
his mother to Columbus on
Sundsy where she will spend
the winter with her daughters,
Mrs. Betty Stewart and Mrs.
Mildred Foster,
Mrs. Focie Hayman spent
Slturday night with her son,
Mr. and' Mrs. Ted Hayman at
Westervllle. The Haymans
brought her home Sunday and
spent the night with Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hayman retur1ning to Westerville on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer War·
ner, Mrs. Floyd Norris called
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home Saturday evening to pay
respect to their cousin, Carl
Edwards,.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norris of
Syracuse called on Mr. and
Mrs . Tom Norris Sunday. Mr .
Norris was returned home
from Veterans Memorial
H0511ital on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pooler at Mt.
Herman.
Mrs. Virgie Stewart and Mrs.
Frances Young of Charleston
spent Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Anderson
spent a day with her brother,
Lester Rhodes, at Baden, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Carr of
Columbus spent a weekend
with the latter's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Foster.
Mrs. Millie Norris and sons,
Chuck and Frank, of Laurel,
Md., spent Tuesday thru
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs.
Adams
and
Marshall
Raymond.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
visited their son, Arthur, at
Morehead College in Kentucky
on ThurSday and visited other
points of · interest before
returning home Saturday.
Carl Wolfe Jr., son of Mrs.
Dally Wolfe was a medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center for a few days, retur-

fiNISHING.
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9;-0u.ll\t 5·
Ult our FrH Parking Lot :

Qeaners
:t '' t. Jna,

t'omeroy

Mrs. T. M. Cotterill, Jill,
Joan and Jennifer of Carroll,
spent the weekend here visi ling
Mrs. J . Edward Foster and
other relatives.
Airman and Mrs. David
Oliver and daughter, Tracy
Lynn , have left for their home
at North Kingstown, R. I. after
visiting here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Oliver and Mr . and Mrs . Er·
nest ward.
Mrs. J. W. Myers and Mrs.
June Carnell of Swarthmore,
Pa . have been the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. A. R. Knight.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Powell
and daughter, Mila, Teresa
Thomas, Mrs. Hattie Powell,
and Miss Addie Powell were in
Lexington , Ky, over the
weekend to visit Steve Powell
at Calumet Farms. Steve will
leave for Florida later this
week.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Miss Ada Rowe spent Sunday
with Mrs. Anna Wines, Karen
and Jackie, of Racine. They
were all dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Cleland and
children.
Mrs. Dorothy Parsons and
sons of Antiquity, Ernest
Hutton were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
and family .
Ci nd y
Lawson
spent
Saturday night with her sister,
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Parsons and
sons of Antiquity.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
visited Paul North and Charles
(Grandad) Shain at Holzer
Medical Center last week.
Ronald Russell of Ft. Meade,
Md., spent several days with
his wife, Mrs . Nancy Russell
and daug hter, Mandy, and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell at Wolf Pen.
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Lawson
and son, Chuck, of Letart, W.
Va ., spent Saturday with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Lawson and
lamily.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and daughter, Mandy, visited
Mr. and Mrs·. Dana Lewis at
Cliton .
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre of
Rio Grande spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Sayre and David.
Mr . and Mrs. He rbert
Shields, Mrs . Bertha Robinson,
Mrs. Facie Hayman attended
the wedding of Miss Pamela
Corwin and Lloyd Dalton at the
Trinity United Methodist
Ch urch at Grove City,
Saturday at2 :30 p. m. October
21. A reception lollowed in the
church annex. Mr. and Mrs.
Dalton visited Mrs. Bertha
Robinson Monday. They are at
home to their friend s in
Columbus.
Jeff Wickersham spe nt
Saturday night with Ll!rcy
Hupp.

ning home Saturday.
AFC Jeff Donohew and
friend, AFC Fred Spriggs of Ft.
Meade, Md., spent th~ wee~e.nd
with Jeff.s parents, Mr . and
Mrs. Roy Donohew and Greg .
Called here by the death of
their lather and attending
funeral services Thursday at
Ewing Funeral Home for
Marvih Wickersham were Mr .
and Mrs. Don Hodge, Mary Lou
Wickersham of Columbus,
Mrs. Patty Florian and son,
Brei of Lexington, Charles and
Harold Hayman of Westerville.
Interment was in Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Mrs. Linda Winebrenner and
children, Ricky, Vicky and
Joyce, of Cheshire were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Vernon Donohew.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis ol
Parkersburg visited Mr. and
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and
Mrs. Ada Norris Sunday.
Vickie Roush spent the
weekend with her sister, Mr .
and Mrs. Roger Manuel and
Angela at Racine.
The annual Fail Festival at
St. Clair Hill is a medical
Columbia
Chapel Church was
patient at Holze r Medical
well attended. Proceeds of $22:&gt;
Center.
will be placed in the building
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connolly
and children, Shelly and Brian, fund.
1\ir. and Mrs. Randall Smith
of Syracuse, Mrs. Roger
and
Mr. Alfred Smith of
Manuel and daughter, Angela,
of Racine were Sunday guests flazard , Ky ., and Mr. and Mrs.
of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush. Corwin Smith and daughte rs of
Weekend guests of Mrs. Columbus spent the weekend
Erma Wilson were Mr. and with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Marvin Wil so n. The
Mrs. Charles Burri and Bill
Wilsons have sold their !arm
Wilson of Bolivar Dam.
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence home here and expect to move
to a new home on the New
B~lser and children of Tuppers
Lima
Road when tht house is
Plains spent Sunday with Mrs.
Alice Balser and called on Mr. completed.
Mrs . Ma rie Hobbs of Pliny,
and Mrs. Jack Ables and
family Sunday alternoon. Mrs. W. Va., visited her cousin, Mrs.
Basler accompanied them
home and spent Sunday night, children of Gasglow, W. Va.,
Weekend guests of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis,
Mrs. Everette Ransom were Shadyside, Harry Snyder and
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Lee Lusher daughter, Connie, of Radnor.
of Charleston, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Her~rt Roush spent
John Norman and three Tuesday with Mrs. Roberta
Lewis at Clifton.

Point Rock

LA-Z-BOV ·

90th Birthday observed

/

Set Nov. 23rd

Kh:•gsbury

News, Notes By the Day
Mrs. Sally Byers visited at
Dingess with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Balsen and family .
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and Sherman
were , Mr. ·and Mrs. David
Glenn and family of Tipp City,
Mrs. Connie Jarrell of Bidwell
and Mr. and Mrs. James
Barker and family of Glenwood, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited Mrs. Carl's
father, Clyde Harrison, at
Middleport recently.
· Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Murray and family
were Mr. ana Mrs. Jim Gordon
and family of St. Albans, W.

VOTE FOR

lOLA'S

"

POMEfiOY, OHIO

tbl

THURS.,_NOV. 9

•'

· Authorized Dealer

·Dinners, Gaines. Prizes '
Fancy Stands, Baked Goods.

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I

]00 W. Main - Pomeroy ·

- ·.-· ··-·l•to-t•Da-Uii.y-Ban--da.iyllllill•-1.1,•·. - ··· · · ~~:
'.

'

;..cal Bowling

I. William Ht•nry, Harrison,
10.
2. 50.
:l. "'Thr Jazz Singer" in 1927,
starring AI Jolson.

4. Stephen C. Fnskr.
5. A wild goat.

progress of the Route 35 ·
project would be reviewed anrl ·:::::::~::::::::::!::::;::~::~::&amp;::~:::~:::::~:;:~:::::~::::;:::::·
that the required publi c .
hea ri ng would be scheduled. lonsillectomy at the CamdenThe director told Halliday that Clark Hospil&lt;tl in Parkersburg.
the Route 124 improvement
Kcccnl visilurs of Mrs. Rose
would be recommended to the 'l'i111mas were Mr. and Mrs. Joe
governor for the increas&lt;d l.touric uf Co!tu nbus, Mr. and
fede ral funding, and that he Mrs. Brad Tanner of Lanwould have Deputy Director· caslcr, Mr•. Gladys Baughman
Max Farley submit an and Jack Gale of Gahanna .
engineering and design
Miss Patl&lt;;·nce Russell of
proposal on the Route 33 dver Coll!lnbus visil(!d with Mr•.
crosswg.
Opal Handolph.
M1·. and Mrs . Gene Wilson
a I tended the Pumpkin Show at
Cil"cleville.
Michael Martin of Alexandria, Va ., spent a few days with
0
hisgrw1pdarents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gmnl Boring.
David Van Meter of Belpre
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
was il weekend guest of his
Mr. and Mrs. Ga ry Barnhart, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jami e and Brad , recen tl y Lawrence Rose.
discharged from the Air Force
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
al Fort Shaw, S. C. have Whitehead and family honored
returned to this vicinity and he their daughter, Jane, with a
has employment at Goodyear fami ly di nner on he r 16th birthin Logan . They live in the day Sunday . Attending
Green -Acres Traile1· Court were Mr . and Mrs. Harold
nea r Logan .
Sauer and family of MidJackie Bise recently had a dicporl, Mr . and Mrs. Bill

ReelL;;;
. .] , vill.e
News, N teS

i'oslmastcrs of Meigs County
have lisl(!d the following deadlines relative to delivery of
mail during the coming Christl!las season.
,
SAM: which is mail (parcels )
up lo 15 pounds in weight which
will be airlifted on a space
&lt;~va il a bl e. basis should be
mailed to Taiwan and the Far
East tiy November 20.
PAL, which is mail (parcels)
up to 30 pounds in weight and 60
inches in length, width and
girth combin ed, sent by
regular pal"cel routes to the
point of embarkation and then
airli fted to its destination . The
charge is $1 for air lifti ng plus
regular parce l rates with
delivery being effected approximately ,one week after
leav ing the POE :
Nea r East, Nov. 7; Africa
and South and Cen tral
1\mel"ica, Nov . 17; Fal" East,
Nov. 27; Canada and the Arclie, Nov . 30; Europe, Dec . 1.
Surface Civilian Parcels :
Meredith of Beverly, Mr. and
Ml"s. Denver Webel" and
fami ly, Mr. and Mrs. Warren'
Pickens and Kay Balderson,
Mr . and Mrs. James carpenter and Penny of Louisville
visited with Mrs. Bess Larkins
recen tly.

Europe and South and Central .
America, Nov. 1!1 Alaska and·
flawaij, Nov. 30; Canada and ·
Mexico, Dec. 2; Air Parcels to
Europe,, Dec. II.
Parcels within the United
States, Distant States, Dec. 10;
Local and Nearby States, Dec.
15; Airmail Parcels, Dec. 20.
Cards and Letters : Surface
to South and Central America

and Europe, Nov. 17; Surface
to Canada and Mexico, Dec:"?; ,
Airmail to Europe, Dec. li. ..
Customers are. reminded
that cards are 8 cenll per · ·
ounce (domestic) surface mall
and . II cents per oUDee
(domestic airmail) eltber
sealed or unsealed. It Ia ·
suggested that the sender
make sure that the addreaa,
including zip code, is complete
and legible and that they include their return address.
MCRT A to meet
Cards undeliverable as addressed will then be returned to
on November 11
the sender, otherwise they ·will
go to the dead letter branch.
RUTLAND - The fall
Parcels should be wellmeeting of U1e Meigs County packed to guard against
Retired Teachers' Association damage with some inexpensive
will be held Saturday, 'Nov. 11 material · such as popcorn or ·
at the Rutland Methodist other cushioning agent. 'ftle
Church. There will be a tun- ,sender should also include;
cheon at 12:30 p.m., followed inside the parcel, a lilt at
by a talk by Mrs . Eleanor contents plus their rellim
Thomas, director, on the address. Some ltelllll are not
progress of the Research and mailable, especially to APo 111'
Planning Project of the Meigs · FPO offices and sllould. llle
County Council of the Aging. customer have a quettlon ·
Also on the agenda will be a concerning this ·or any oilier
report on the Burr Oak district problem they should canlact
meeting and election of of. their local postmaster.
ficers . Reservations may be
It is also suggested that cub
made with (\1rs. Anna Hilldore not be sent In letters but either
at 992-5!23 ; or with the sendamoneyorderorachect,
telephone chairmen by Wed- Cooperation of the customers
nesday, Nov. 8.
will be greatly appreclat8d.

•

en it comes to an

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T
J...AJ
Wednesday Early Mixed
OctoberlS, tm

Pis
· k Qiler'sSohio
40
Mr · an d Mrs . P atnc
Smith-Nelson Motors
40
Williams and family of Young's Market
38
McArthur, Mr. and Mrs . Zide's Sport Shop
38
Ronald McNalley and daughter Tenth Framers
32
Team No. S
28
of Athens and Mr. and Mrs.
High Ind. Game
Men, ·
Lester Arnold and Billy of Junior Phelps 212, Willard
Columbus visited Mrs. Hazel Boyer 210; Women, Helen Van
Meter 218, Linda Winebrenner
Arnold and Walter.
204.
A Halloween party was
High Series - Willard Boyer
8P.~ by the,l!iacbert!&gt;l:thei·/1 60~h J~,nlw ,~h~tRs 5.84;,. 1 u?~a
cradl,e Roll Class of tbe ~~~e~;r:,er56%...3 ~nd Hefen
Ca.rletoil Church, Mrs. Louise
Team High Game and Series
Harrison, for her students and - Oiler's Sohio 720 and 2055.
their grandmothers. Games
were played and prizes given to
Saturday Senior
October 28, 1972
Janeth Beat, Scott Harrison,
Pt.
Brill King and Brett Carl. Gutter Dusters
18
1511:1
Cookies, ice cream, Kool-Ade Pin Crushers
Pin
Busters
14112
and candy were served and
12V,
· gifll were given to all the Dig-A-Lings
Born Lasers
1 Jl/~
chllclren. 'lhose attending were Herbies
9
High Ind. Game - Rich
Seott Harrison and Jodi
198, Melanie Burt 191.
Harrison and grandmother Bailey
High Series - Rich Bailey
Louise Harrison, Brett Carl, 552, Melar1ie Burt 474 .
Team 'High Game - Born
Randy Carl, Danny Carl, Brian
Losers
852 ; Team High Seri es
King; Mona King, Brill King, - Gutter
Dusters 2295.
Phillip King and their grandmother, Sadie Carl, Wesley
Saturday Junior
Young and grandmothers,
Pis.
Alpha Bailey and Janeth Beal; Ba II Busters
19
18
Audra Houdashelt, Grand- Impacts
Dreamers
131!,
mothet Ruby Burnside, Mary Alley Cats
11
Perdss, Grandmother, Janeth Apaches
10112
9
Beat, Angela! Hatfield and Rams
High
Ind
.
Game
Kelly
Barbara Ha field, grand- Winebrenn er 194, Steve
mother, Marjorie Smith, Terri Bachner 176.
High Series - Chuck Foil rod
Gilliam, Eddie Gilliam,
Kelly Winebrenner 420.
grandmother, Goldie Wyant, 432,
Team High Game - Ball
Geneva King, grandmother, Buslers872; Team High Series
Neva King. Elizabeth Murray - Dreamers 2422.
also attended.
The Carleton Church held its
Saturday Bantam
Halloween Party al the BedOctober 28, 1972
Pis
ford Youth Center Saturday
Ba II Bombers
15
evening. Those masked win- Red Barons
11
ning prizes in the Cradle Roll MIMars
9
Banana
Splits
7
Class were Ivan Carl, Brill
Cyclones
6
King .and Phil King; In the Pin Busters
6
Sunbeam Class, .Helen King,
Hi~h Ind. Game Ronnie
Brenda Ross and Mona King; Casc1 1~, Dav id Burt 151 :
High Series - Ronnie Casci
In the Busy Bee ClAss, Geneva 289 ; David Burt 259,
King, Mary King, David King
Team High Game and Denise Hendricks ; in Cyclones 749 ; Team High
Young Adulta Class, Floyde Series ~ Ball Bombers 1434.
Roes, Harold and{Zra~e White,
Wednesday"Eariy Mixed
After the unmasklng everyone
November 1, 1972
enjilyeil a potluck lunch.
Smith-Nelson Motors
Mr. ilnd Mrs. John Dean and Young's Market
42
Mr • ~- Mrs. John Walljlr Oiler's Solflo
42
.
n
attended
s.
"a11oween
..
Zid&lt;i's
Sport
Shop
.
40
Dea
,.
Tenth .Framers
38
party at the home of Mr. and Teams
'
34
Mrs . Clair Waggoner at
High Ind. Game - Men:
Harrisonville. Others at- VIc Wipple 215, Bill Porter 213;
Women : Aprn Smith 199, Betty
tending were Mr. and Mrs. Smith and April Smith 111.
Paul Paynter of Carpenter,
High Series - Men: Willard
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gilkey, Boyer ~a: Junior Phelps 524.
Women: April Smith 526, Beffy
Rldt:, Tammy and CindY.. of Smith 41&gt;7.
Au-, Mr. and Mrs. John
Team High Game and Series
GWogly, l\lark and David of - Team 5, 673 and .l945.
carpenter, Jim Hailey of
RUtland and Joy Waggoner, 6FFENSIVE PlAYER
TUUIA, Okla. (UPJ)-Junlor
Richard Dean who enlisted in
the Air Force is stationed at taHbflck. Jerry Heaton, who
L,aclr!and Air Force Bue, ~n paced Drake'• 111-f comeback
Anlllllio, Texu, where he will victory over Southern Illlnola
caplele hill butt training. Saturday with 135 yarda
Hil tlddnll It: Richard L. I'Uiblng 111111 two "louchdoWill,
Dlln, P'R lll:a&amp;.'IIIH CMR No. Monday was named oi!enllve
!Uyer of the week In the
•· Sq.
rtt. 1342, Lackland M1uourl
1falley Cmference.
Alr Fan:t Bue, TeUJ, 71236.
The victory clinched 11 leut
a Ue for the MVC Utle for the
Ia Greek IIIYtii010D the f'dk'ap -and was the lith
&amp;od of mll'l'lqt wu JJymea lltllclll pme In wtich Heilon
wbo wu pletured.u ·a yoiltll 1u 1tiiNd for at leut 100

ANSWEIIS

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1m
there is no
n
- ta a us
.) 1·" •

... .
I

,;:Jr ';

Everybody wants an improved environment , but
wishing won't make it so .
There is much to be done
and it's going to cost
everybody a lot of money.
Many people say " !"
don't cause pollution ...
" they" do . "They"
should give me back my
clean air and pure water,
and "they" should pay
for it. The truth is all of us
are polluters and all of
us must pay for improving our environment.
The price tag attached
is going to be a stiff one.
Controlling pollution,
whether ·by a device in a
car, a new sewage disposal
plant, or equipment at a power
plant, will have an inevitable
cost to each of us as a consumer. We should make
sure the benefits a·re worth
the price.

P!:

Mrs .. Emma Yokley• of._. guests Saturday and Suriday, r---~---------------·
Columbtana spent Monday her sister Marie and husband
SACRED HEART CHURCH
with Mrs. Herschel Roush.
of Woodsfield.

Now you con buy tha\
~fortoble
.L&lt;I·Z·8oy
choir . you've always
dreamed of at O&lt;Jr low
prices.
I

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
and daughter of Racine and
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens
and family of Syracuse spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Allan Taylor.
Mrs. Donald Pierce of
Alhens visited her mother,
Mrs. Mary Circle on ·Saturday
evening.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Orvy Gainer
and Mr . and Mrs. Bennie
Gainer and family of Hebron
called at the home of Mrs.
Dean Brinker on Sunday. \

1fa.

Syracuse News, Society

ANNUAL BAZAAR

'

'

Keno Ridge

\ CHAIRS'

Carmel News,

Gallipolis Atty . John
.Halliday met with the Director
of the Department of Transporation, J . Philtip Richter ·in
Columbus recently to disc~ss
the highway needs of '
Southeastern Ohio.
Atty, Halliday asked
Director Richley to give top
priority to three major projects
affecting Meigs and Gallia
counties. Halliday asked the
director to speed up the
engineering and planning on
the completion of Route 35
· from Holzer Medical Center to
Thurman . He also requested
the director to designate Route
124 from Route 7 to the Appalachia Highway as an
emergency federal aid project
because of the new mine
location.
This ~el;ignation would make
the improvement of Route 124
qualify for 70 pet. federal
funding, Halliday also asked
Director Richley to initiate
discussion with the State of
West Virginia for a river
crossing in the Long BottomRavenswood area.
Richiey promised that

. I

WHAT ABOUT THE ENVI·
RONMENTAL PRICE TAG
ON ELECTRIC POWER?
The cost of new pollution
control equipment at power
generating plants will
show up in all of &lt;;&gt;ur
electric bills. How high
t]1e_price will be cannot
be forecast. Much depends on government
regulations. In our opinion. some are unrealistic because
they can't be met, and if they could
be met would be u,nnecessary. AN
EXAMPLE: We must burn coal to make electricity.

.~

JUdi.

.

However, there 's no commercially
successful way to remove sulfur oxides
from power plant stacks on
con' tinuous basis in the amounts specified
by the new government regulations.
Millions are being spent. on research
to find a way, and we are takin~t
a signilicant part in that research .
We have no doubt a way will
be found , but more time is
needed. When-science
finds a way, we'll promptly
adopt it.
1

a

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.•'

r

We, like you , want to protect
our environment .. . make It
l;ietter than it is today. But, there
is no Santa Claus, when It comes
to an improved environment. We
need to be sure that sought-after im- ·
provements are possible and wor.\h their
cost. We need to avoid unnecessary increases in our electric bills .

..
.'

Understanding of !he possible and the im ~
possible together with the inevitable price
tag . is the fir~t step toward a se nsible· ap- ,
proach to protecting and improving .our
environment.
'
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('\1~---~""·OHIO ~OWER COMPA~Y
l

l
J

if.

j

. ,.,

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"·•

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New government regulations say our . burning coal
puts too much sulfur oxides in the air-and this
is harmful. The fact is that only high concentrations of sulfur oxides at ground level not in the upper atmosphere-can be
harmful. Sulfur oxides exhausted from
plant stacks high iii the atmosphere
are quickly diffused so as to meet
strict government regulations.We are
and will continue to protect against
harmful ground- level concentrations
of sulfur ox ides.

me-

curylag a torch.

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•
6- The DaUySentinel,l\fiddle~rt-Pomeroy;O., Nov. 7,1972

$2, 000 [Jequest received
from the Sanborn estate
A P.OOO bequest from her
estate by the late Miss Bess
Sanborn to the B. H. Sanborn
Ml18lonary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
· Church was disclosed Monday
night at a meeting at the
church.
The money was bequeathed
In memory of her father and
brother for whom the Society
was named.
Mrs. John Werner announced that the Middleport
community Thanksgiving Eve
aervice will be at the First
Baptist Church. She also urged
llll!mbers "to get out and vote"
today, .announced Laymen's
SUnday for Nov. 12, and a
dinner on Nov. 13 at 6:15p.m .
where the guest speaker will be
a representative from the
American Baptist Convention.

The love gift dedication was
conducted by Mrs. Werner,
assisted by Mrs . Manning
Kloes, Mrs. Pearl Hollman ,
and Mrs. U!ora Sigman.
Mrs. Richard Owen, white
cross chairman, presented the
quotas for overseas and
overland . She read a story on
white cross work from the
Philippines, and announced the
theme, "Faith and Justice. "
She also read a thank you note
from Dorothy Johnson, a
missionary, and reported on
the Alaska quota which is to go
to the Dayton Christian Center.
II was voted to contribute $20 to
the Burma White Cross, and
$7.50 to the Latin American
White C~oss.
The Baptist World Day of
Prayer service preceded the
meeting. Assisting Mrs.

C harl e~ Searles, chairman,
were Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs.
Kloes. and Mrs . Dale Walburn .
The theme was " World
Missions of Reconciliation
llll'ough Jesus Christ." Mrs.
Hoffma n had readings and a
prayer. An offerin~ was taken
and members joined hands for
prayer by Mrs. Kloes, Mrs.
Willis Anthony, Mrs. Owen,
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins, Mrs.
Dana Hamm, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, ahd Mrs. Paul
Smart.
Answering the roll call were
nine from the Dorcas Circle,
seven from Elecla, seven from
Love Joy , and four guests.
Relreshments
were served by
.
'
Mrs. Walburn , Mrs. Bodimer,
Miss Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs.
John Fultz, Mrs. Kloes, and
Mrs. Hoffman .

1· Social Calendar IMrs. Roush honored
;1*~'
ll&amp;!llWO!li~o:;O!li
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;

7 Tbe
.
Dilly Smiinel,Mkkt~, o., Nov. 7,1972

·

fior lona services

Highway need~

-

Middleport 1
Personal ·Notes;

TUESDAY
,
. WEDNt:SDAY
:t
l
1F:LF:CTION .Day dinner . at
POMEROY - Middleport
j5
·
Mrs. Eula Swan and !i{rs.
Masonic Hall ; Chester, IJons t:lub, noon Wednesday at
Mrs. Lettie Roush, treasurer James Buchanan, worshipful Lindsey Lyons of Tuppers
Tuesday, by Chester United lhc Meigs Inn.
of Evangeline Chapter, Order masier of Middleport Lodge, Plains were weekend visitors
Methodist Church . Soup,
POMEROY Chapter 80, of the Eastern Star of Mid- James Clatworthy, Glen of Mrs. Geneva Yates. Monday
sandwiches, pie, cake, co[fee, Royal Arch Masons • 7·30
dl eport, for 17 years was Evans, AI 1en Pa1ge,
·
Robe r t
·
Mrs . Yates went to Cleveland
plate lunches.
Wednesday at the Masonic hunored at the Thursday night King, Allen . Hughes, Harry lor a two week visit with her
SOUP DINNER Tuesday , Tcinple. ·Officers and com- meeting held at the Masonic Cheshire, and Paul Darnell. son, Morgan Arthur Yates, who
Syracuse Presbyterian Church panions urged to attend.
· Temple.
The charter was draped in came here lor her, ·
annex, starting at 11:30 a.m.
WHITE ROSE LODGE, I :30
Mrs. Roush was escorted to a memory of two deceased
Recent guests of Mr. and
Vegetable soup, sandwiches, p.m. Wednesday at the Mid- ·seat in the East, presented with members, Mrs. Elizabeth Mrs. Clifford Hayes and son,
pie, colfee.
dleport Legion Hall.
a money gift from the Chapter,' Allman and Mrs . . Pauline Gregory, have been Mrs. Anna
SOUP Dinner , Pomeroy
THURSDAY
and a red carnation corsage Gallagher.
Loga, Nitro, W. Va., Miss Effie
United Methodist Church, II to
ANNUAL Bazaar of Sacred from Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Mrs. Chesl)er thanked the Price and E. J. Price, St.
3 p.m. serving time. Soup,
c
.
. If
Heart Church at auditoritim. hester, worthy matron and officers and members for all Albans, W. Va.; and Mr. and
sandwiches, pte · anu co ee. Thursday. Dinners starting at 4, patron.
.
their
courtesies
·and
Russell
Bainum,
Soup also available by the p.m. ; games, prizes, fancy
·1m·t·tatory work was exem- cooperation during . the year. Mrs.
Columbus.
quart. '
stands, baked goods. Public plified fol' two candidates, Mr. Associate matron-elect, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Burnett
· ELECTION Day Dinner invited.
and Mrs. Charles Winebrenner Helen Milhoan, announced her of New Castle, Pa , ·were
Tuesday
at
Syracuse
PAST Councilors, Theodorus and a tribute was given to the installation for Nov. 9. A
Presbyterian
Church. Council, D. of A., 7:30 p.m. Star Point Ruth by Mrs. Naomi practice a~d cle,anup session weekend guests "of Mrs. Con
Homemade vegetable soup, hot Thursday home of Mrs. Mabel Kmg,
. past grand Ruth of the will be held Wednesday night Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
dogs, ham salad sandwiches,
Gran d Chapter of Ohio. The at 6:30 p.m.
.d
d
.
Wolfe
.
Reynolds.are in Morgantown,
cof ree, tea, K00l • At an pte
station in Evangeline Chapter
Asocial hour was held in the W. Va. lor a several days v,jlii.l
will be sold. Soup will be sold
FRIDAY
I·S f"ll
1 e(l by Mrs. Farie Ken- basement dining room. Mrs. with Mr. and Mrs. Val
fur carry-out but containers
RETURN
JONATHAN nedy.
Chesher served a decorated
Reynolds and family . .
must be furnished by con- Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Chesher gave cake and coffee with Mrs.
lainers. The dinner is being the American Revolution , 2 special recog nition to the Evelyn Lewis and Mrs. Bessie
sponsored by members of the p.m. Friday, Episcopal Parish Ma sons present including King assisting.
Sunshine Makers Class.
House, Speaker, Emmett
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Conway of Ohio University
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 whose topic will be pre-historic
p.m. Tuesday, Columbus and Indian paths in Meigs County.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. , Members to respond to roll call
Nieces and nephews of Mrs. Jeff, Albany .
Plans for sponsoring a dance
Sarah Bechtle and Charlotte with Indian name in Ohio.
James
and
Ben
Cotterill,
Catherine
Rickey
honored
her
Thursday,
Nov. 23, from 9 to
Taunton to have the cultural Hostesses, Mrs. Mark Grueser,
program.
Mrs. Irvi ng Karr, and Mrs. on her 90th birthday an- Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs. midnight at the Pomeroy
niversary Sunday with a dinner Paul Dye of Cleveland; Mr . Junior High School, have been
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, George S~inner .
party featuring homemade ice and Mrs . Kenneth Steward, made by the Meigs Chapter of
Daughters of America, 7:30
cream and a decorated cake. Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry the Ohio Association of Public
p.m. Tuesday at the hall. First
Attending the celebration Steward, Steve and Amy , School employes.
nomination of officers. Layette
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert King Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Mrs . Alice Globokar,
shower for Kathy Tuttle
King,
Columbus;
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
and
Tim
·
of
Bradbury;
Liz
president,
said "Foxx" will
Johnson.
By Glenna S. Milhoan
Charles
Domigan
of
Pomeroy
;
BlaettnarofPomeroy; Mr. and
provide music for dancing,
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Mrs. Ivan Cotterill, Jenniler Mr. and Mrs. Alexander May, Chaperones are needed. Those
Racine Wesleyan United Clara Milhoan and Glenna
and Dean, Columbus; Mr. and Pomeroy; and Mrs. Bessie wishing to volunteer may
Methodist Church Tuesday at Milhoan made a business trip
Mrs . Raymond Cotterill, Steve, Musser of Albany, and Mrs. contact Mrs. Globokar.
II :30 a. m. and 4:30 p.m. in to Athens Thursday.
Wayne, Denver and Larry of Oleva Cotterill of Bradbury, Members are also being asked
church annex . Sponsored by
Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy,
Harrisonville; Mrs. Catherine sisters of Mrs. Rickey.
to make candy to be sold .at the
ladies of the church.
Mrs . · Alice Dodson acUnable to attend but sending dance. The group also enDomigan, Pomeroy; Mr. and
GOLDEN RULE Class of companied by Mrs. Alice
Mrs . Dan Cremeans, Darin and gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Don dorsed the five mill ~chool
Pomeroy Church ol Christ Furgeson of Huntington took a
Cotterill and Helen of operating levy being voted
Thanksgiving dinner (potluck) two weeks vacation to Mem· Derick, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Harrisonville.
Paul , Cotterill, Christy and
upon in the district today.
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. home of phis, Tenn. to visit their son
Mrs. Frances Eskew.
and brother, Mr. and Mrs.
EASTERN
AthI e tic Durwood Conway,
Boosters, 8 p.m. tonight at high
Bobby Hunt purchased a
DAUGHTER BORN
LUNCH AT SALE
SUPPER PLANNED
school. Everyone invited.
riding horse and Larry Farley
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lyons of
CHESTER - The Chester
The Pomeroy Elementary
WEDNESDAY '
has two horses.
AMATEUR GARDEN Club,
Clara Milhoan accompanied School safety Patrol to help PTA will serve lunch at the Pontiac, Mich. are announcing
Wednesday, 8 p.m. home of her sister, Mrs. Mary Shafer to raise funds for a trip to Saturday auction on the Bird the birth of a daughter, Tonya
Mrs. Harold Lohse, Pomeroy. Holzer Medical Center one day Washington, D. C., will hold a farm, Route 7, beginning at 10 Lynn, on Saturday, Nov. 4, at
jitney supper from 4 to 6 p.m. a.m. Members are asked to St. Joseph Hospital in Pontiac.
LAUREL CLIFF Better last week for treatment.
Health Club, 7:30 p.m. ThursMr. and Mrs . John Brewer Friday at the school before the contribute sloppy joes, The infant weighed six pounds,
day at the home of Mrs. Robert visited a week in Adams county Meigs-Point Pleasant game. cupcakes or pie and seven ounces. Grandparents
The menu will include ham, take them to the Ches- are Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons,
Bowen.
where they formerly lived.
Chool
on Middleport, and Carlton
MISSIONARY Society, ' Mr.andMrs.ErrollConroy, chicken, meatloaf, hot dogs, ter Grade
Pomeroy Baptist Church, 7:30 Mrs. Alice Dodson attended the green beans, scalloped Friday afternoon. Volunteers Scherlitz, Marion, Mich. Mrs .
p.111. Thursday night. Baptist 501h wedding anniversary potatoes, salads, baked beans, are needed to work one or two Bernard Schramm of ZanesWomen's Day of Prayer to be observance of '4r. and ..Mfg. hot rolls, noodles, cake, pie, hour shifts between 10 a.m. and ville is a grea!-grandmother.
5 p.'m. Those willing to work Mr:-and Mtsnlyons ,•their• slilr,~'
observed with Mrs. L. R Cu&gt;lis Wolfe ~ at the .pbwer milk and coffee.
ani asked . to call Gladys Bernard, andctl1eir grandMon1'1
Sterrett, chairman.
house one day last week.
Spencer, 985-3530, Catherine Eddie, were in Pontiac over the
AFTERNOON Circle, Heath
Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan and
Windon , 985-3846, or Virginia weekend to visit the Tom Lyons
United Methodist Church, 2 lad y friend of Middleport
DINNER SET
l_amily and Linda Lyons.
Kirkhart, 667-3704.
p.m. Thursday, Mrs. David called on Mrs. Glenna Milhoan
RUTLAND - The annual
En tsmin ge r to have the and Bernard Sunday.
Thanksgiving turkey dinner of
progra m; Mrs. James Jividen,
M. E. Milhoan of Shade the Rutland Volunteer Fire
Mrs. Roy Cassell, and Mrs. 0. ca lled at the farm home Department has been set for
P. Klein, hostesses.
Wednesday ol Mrs. Glenna Thursday, Nov. 16, at the
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter, Milhoan .
Rutland
Grade
School
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Conroy of cafeteria with serving to start
his mother, Mrs. Myla Hudson,
By Mrs. Ada Slack
p.m . Thursday, home of Columbus visited Saturday and at 5:30p.m. Tickets are being
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Max E. Sunday.
Margaret Follrod, Pomeroy. Sunday with relatives here.
sold by firemen or can be Folmer and daughter, Pam , of Mr. and Mrs. James Harden
Mr . and Mrs. George Conray purchased at the door. Tickets Cincinnati spent a week with of London visited recently with
and Kimberly visited Mrs. are $1.50 for adults and 75 cents her parenls, Mr. and Mrs. his p~re n ts, Mr. and Mrs.
Effie Hoosier, on Saturday.
Alice Dodson.
ror children .
Robert' Harden and sister,
Robert Hysell.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bolen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden Debbie.
and Mrs . Jack Bolen and son
visited in Marion with their son Mr . . John Carroll of
ALSO RECOGNIZED
GOODIES NEEDED
were dinner guests on Friday
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Charleston, visited recently
Unintentionally omitted
Homemade candy and Mrs . Robert Harden and son, with his sister and brother-inor Mrs. C. E Stout of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs . Dale and rrom a listing of seniors cookies for a veterans' party at Eric. The latter Mr. Harden is law, Mr . and Mrs . John
diJUghter of Fort Lauderdale, recognized Friday by the the Southeastern Ohio Mental recuperating athis home after Bahram and his sister and
Fla ., were honor guests. Other Southern Tornado marching Health Center, Athens, are being hospitalized due to a brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
guests were Mr. and ~rs . band was Barbara Fisher. The being solicited by Mrs. Charles blood clot in his lung.
Herschel Rose and family of
Grover Stout, Mr. and Mrs. band did an "S" formation Kessinger , Eighth District,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jenks, Minersville.
Bernard Alien and family, Mr. salute to the seniors who were American Legion Auxiliary, sons Bruce and Scott of Louisa,
and Mrs. John Stout, Mr, and recognized along with their president. The party is spon- Ky., were recent weekend
YOU WILL
sored by the junior auxiliary gues ts of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley and family and parenls.
members of the district. , Mrs. William Brown.
Octa Gillogly . Evening callers
Anyone wanting to attend is
were Nellie Vale, Fannie Pettit
Mr . and Mrs . George
SALE
DAYS
SET
asked to notify.Mrs. Kessinger. Schneider and Mrs , Daisy
and Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Bolen
OUR
A rummage sale will be held The party slarls at I p.m.
and Teressa.
QUALITY
Ro~sh have moved into the
Mrs. Zelia · Weyand and at the Pomeroy First Baptist Thursday.
former Elden Will property on
SELECTION
daughter and family of Church Thursday and Fri~ay
College Street.
VALUES
Columbus were guests ol Mrs. by the One-Won.()ne Class of
Ernest Quillen is confined to
TWO DAY SALE
Weyand 's mother, Mrs. U1e church, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ·
the
Veteran:S Hospit.l, Ward
A rummage sale will be held
Geneva Foster Saturday and
Friday and Saturday at the lA, Huntington, W. Va.
Sunday. On Sunday evening
Rev. Ralph Hudson and son,
SEE THE CIRCUS
Kingsland building on Court St.
they attended the festival at
The Middleport First Baptist starting at 9a.m. each morning Anthony, of Portsmouth vlsi ted
the Columbia Chapel Church.
Church bus was used to trans- by Return Jonathan Meigs
. Mr. Mike Hensler o[ Belpre
port children of the Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the
was a weekend guest of his
County Children's Home and American Revolution. Mrs.
grandmother , Mrs . Grace
residenls of the Meigs County Dwight Milhoan, Mm. A. R.
Hensler.
Infirmary to Athens Saturday Knight, and Mrs. George
Guests for the weekend of
to see a circus. Clifford Hays .Skinner will handle pickup for
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
drove the bus:
the sale. .
Chapman were Mrs. ChaP,.
man 's sisters, Edith and Doris
and husband.
PECANS ARE HERE:
INFANT CONFINED
The Eddie Jordan family of
Pecans to be sold by ciass 12
Matthew Baker, 15-monthNeb1·aska were weekend of Heath United Methodist
old
S&lt;lJl of Mr. and Mrs. Lsrry
guests.of their parents, Mr. and Church have arrived and may
Mrs. L. D. Cottrill and Mrs. be purchased from Mrs. Nan Baker, Middleport, remains
Faye Jordan.
Moore, Mrs. Glenn Lambert, confined to Holzer Medical
Center for observation,
Mrs. E. G. Nelson had as her . or Mrs. James Criswell.

are discussed

I

~ISCUSsF8 ffiGHWAY NEEDS ~ Atty. Johrl E.
Halliday, len, discusses highways needs of southern Ohio
with J. Phlllip Richley, Ohio Transportation "Director.

OAPSE dance

Fairview
News Notes

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Shields, Early Roush, Mrs.
Roy Buck, and Mrs. Gladys
Shields attended the 50th
wedding anniversary obaervance of Mr. and Mrs. Mont
QUillen at Veto on Sunday.
Roy Buck and mother, )'.trs.
C«a Buck took a vacation trip
to Buffalo Creek, W. Va., the
Smoky Mts. and visited other
places of interest in Kentucky
and Tennessee. Mr. Buck took
his mother to Columbus on
Sundsy where she will spend
the winter with her daughters,
Mrs. Betty Stewart and Mrs.
Mildred Foster,
Mrs. Focie Hayman spent
Slturday night with her son,
Mr. and' Mrs. Ted Hayman at
Westervllle. The Haymans
brought her home Sunday and
spent the night with Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hayman retur1ning to Westerville on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer War·
ner, Mrs. Floyd Norris called
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home Saturday evening to pay
respect to their cousin, Carl
Edwards,.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norris of
Syracuse called on Mr. and
Mrs . Tom Norris Sunday. Mr .
Norris was returned home
from Veterans Memorial
H0511ital on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pooler at Mt.
Herman.
Mrs. Virgie Stewart and Mrs.
Frances Young of Charleston
spent Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Anderson
spent a day with her brother,
Lester Rhodes, at Baden, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Carr of
Columbus spent a weekend
with the latter's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Foster.
Mrs. Millie Norris and sons,
Chuck and Frank, of Laurel,
Md., spent Tuesday thru
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs.
Adams
and
Marshall
Raymond.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
visited their son, Arthur, at
Morehead College in Kentucky
on ThurSday and visited other
points of · interest before
returning home Saturday.
Carl Wolfe Jr., son of Mrs.
Dally Wolfe was a medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center for a few days, retur-

fiNISHING.
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9;-0u.ll\t 5·
Ult our FrH Parking Lot :

Qeaners
:t '' t. Jna,

t'omeroy

Mrs. T. M. Cotterill, Jill,
Joan and Jennifer of Carroll,
spent the weekend here visi ling
Mrs. J . Edward Foster and
other relatives.
Airman and Mrs. David
Oliver and daughter, Tracy
Lynn , have left for their home
at North Kingstown, R. I. after
visiting here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Oliver and Mr . and Mrs . Er·
nest ward.
Mrs. J. W. Myers and Mrs.
June Carnell of Swarthmore,
Pa . have been the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. A. R. Knight.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Powell
and daughter, Mila, Teresa
Thomas, Mrs. Hattie Powell,
and Miss Addie Powell were in
Lexington , Ky, over the
weekend to visit Steve Powell
at Calumet Farms. Steve will
leave for Florida later this
week.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Miss Ada Rowe spent Sunday
with Mrs. Anna Wines, Karen
and Jackie, of Racine. They
were all dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Cleland and
children.
Mrs. Dorothy Parsons and
sons of Antiquity, Ernest
Hutton were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
and family .
Ci nd y
Lawson
spent
Saturday night with her sister,
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Parsons and
sons of Antiquity.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
visited Paul North and Charles
(Grandad) Shain at Holzer
Medical Center last week.
Ronald Russell of Ft. Meade,
Md., spent several days with
his wife, Mrs . Nancy Russell
and daug hter, Mandy, and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell at Wolf Pen.
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Lawson
and son, Chuck, of Letart, W.
Va ., spent Saturday with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Lawson and
lamily.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and daughter, Mandy, visited
Mr. and Mrs·. Dana Lewis at
Cliton .
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre of
Rio Grande spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Sayre and David.
Mr . and Mrs. He rbert
Shields, Mrs . Bertha Robinson,
Mrs. Facie Hayman attended
the wedding of Miss Pamela
Corwin and Lloyd Dalton at the
Trinity United Methodist
Ch urch at Grove City,
Saturday at2 :30 p. m. October
21. A reception lollowed in the
church annex. Mr. and Mrs.
Dalton visited Mrs. Bertha
Robinson Monday. They are at
home to their friend s in
Columbus.
Jeff Wickersham spe nt
Saturday night with Ll!rcy
Hupp.

ning home Saturday.
AFC Jeff Donohew and
friend, AFC Fred Spriggs of Ft.
Meade, Md., spent th~ wee~e.nd
with Jeff.s parents, Mr . and
Mrs. Roy Donohew and Greg .
Called here by the death of
their lather and attending
funeral services Thursday at
Ewing Funeral Home for
Marvih Wickersham were Mr .
and Mrs. Don Hodge, Mary Lou
Wickersham of Columbus,
Mrs. Patty Florian and son,
Brei of Lexington, Charles and
Harold Hayman of Westerville.
Interment was in Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Mrs. Linda Winebrenner and
children, Ricky, Vicky and
Joyce, of Cheshire were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Vernon Donohew.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis ol
Parkersburg visited Mr. and
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and
Mrs. Ada Norris Sunday.
Vickie Roush spent the
weekend with her sister, Mr .
and Mrs. Roger Manuel and
Angela at Racine.
The annual Fail Festival at
St. Clair Hill is a medical
Columbia
Chapel Church was
patient at Holze r Medical
well attended. Proceeds of $22:&gt;
Center.
will be placed in the building
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connolly
and children, Shelly and Brian, fund.
1\ir. and Mrs. Randall Smith
of Syracuse, Mrs. Roger
and
Mr. Alfred Smith of
Manuel and daughter, Angela,
of Racine were Sunday guests flazard , Ky ., and Mr. and Mrs.
of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush. Corwin Smith and daughte rs of
Weekend guests of Mrs. Columbus spent the weekend
Erma Wilson were Mr. and with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Marvin Wil so n. The
Mrs. Charles Burri and Bill
Wilsons have sold their !arm
Wilson of Bolivar Dam.
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence home here and expect to move
to a new home on the New
B~lser and children of Tuppers
Lima
Road when tht house is
Plains spent Sunday with Mrs.
Alice Balser and called on Mr. completed.
Mrs . Ma rie Hobbs of Pliny,
and Mrs. Jack Ables and
family Sunday alternoon. Mrs. W. Va., visited her cousin, Mrs.
Basler accompanied them
home and spent Sunday night, children of Gasglow, W. Va.,
Weekend guests of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis,
Mrs. Everette Ransom were Shadyside, Harry Snyder and
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Lee Lusher daughter, Connie, of Radnor.
of Charleston, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Her~rt Roush spent
John Norman and three Tuesday with Mrs. Roberta
Lewis at Clifton.

Point Rock

LA-Z-BOV ·

90th Birthday observed

/

Set Nov. 23rd

Kh:•gsbury

News, Notes By the Day
Mrs. Sally Byers visited at
Dingess with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Balsen and family .
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and Sherman
were , Mr. ·and Mrs. David
Glenn and family of Tipp City,
Mrs. Connie Jarrell of Bidwell
and Mr. and Mrs. James
Barker and family of Glenwood, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited Mrs. Carl's
father, Clyde Harrison, at
Middleport recently.
· Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Murray and family
were Mr. ana Mrs. Jim Gordon
and family of St. Albans, W.

VOTE FOR

lOLA'S

"

POMEfiOY, OHIO

tbl

THURS.,_NOV. 9

•'

· Authorized Dealer

·Dinners, Gaines. Prizes '
Fancy Stands, Baked Goods.

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I

]00 W. Main - Pomeroy ·

- ·.-· ··-·l•to-t•Da-Uii.y-Ban--da.iyllllill•-1.1,•·. - ··· · · ~~:
'.

'

;..cal Bowling

I. William Ht•nry, Harrison,
10.
2. 50.
:l. "'Thr Jazz Singer" in 1927,
starring AI Jolson.

4. Stephen C. Fnskr.
5. A wild goat.

progress of the Route 35 ·
project would be reviewed anrl ·:::::::~::::::::::!::::;::~::~::&amp;::~:::~:::::~:;:~:::::~::::;:::::·
that the required publi c .
hea ri ng would be scheduled. lonsillectomy at the CamdenThe director told Halliday that Clark Hospil&lt;tl in Parkersburg.
the Route 124 improvement
Kcccnl visilurs of Mrs. Rose
would be recommended to the 'l'i111mas were Mr. and Mrs. Joe
governor for the increas&lt;d l.touric uf Co!tu nbus, Mr. and
fede ral funding, and that he Mrs. Brad Tanner of Lanwould have Deputy Director· caslcr, Mr•. Gladys Baughman
Max Farley submit an and Jack Gale of Gahanna .
engineering and design
Miss Patl&lt;;·nce Russell of
proposal on the Route 33 dver Coll!lnbus visil(!d with Mr•.
crosswg.
Opal Handolph.
M1·. and Mrs . Gene Wilson
a I tended the Pumpkin Show at
Cil"cleville.
Michael Martin of Alexandria, Va ., spent a few days with
0
hisgrw1pdarents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gmnl Boring.
David Van Meter of Belpre
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
was il weekend guest of his
Mr. and Mrs. Ga ry Barnhart, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jami e and Brad , recen tl y Lawrence Rose.
discharged from the Air Force
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
al Fort Shaw, S. C. have Whitehead and family honored
returned to this vicinity and he their daughter, Jane, with a
has employment at Goodyear fami ly di nner on he r 16th birthin Logan . They live in the day Sunday . Attending
Green -Acres Traile1· Court were Mr . and Mrs. Harold
nea r Logan .
Sauer and family of MidJackie Bise recently had a dicporl, Mr . and Mrs. Bill

ReelL;;;
. .] , vill.e
News, N teS

i'oslmastcrs of Meigs County
have lisl(!d the following deadlines relative to delivery of
mail during the coming Christl!las season.
,
SAM: which is mail (parcels )
up lo 15 pounds in weight which
will be airlifted on a space
&lt;~va il a bl e. basis should be
mailed to Taiwan and the Far
East tiy November 20.
PAL, which is mail (parcels)
up to 30 pounds in weight and 60
inches in length, width and
girth combin ed, sent by
regular pal"cel routes to the
point of embarkation and then
airli fted to its destination . The
charge is $1 for air lifti ng plus
regular parce l rates with
delivery being effected approximately ,one week after
leav ing the POE :
Nea r East, Nov. 7; Africa
and South and Cen tral
1\mel"ica, Nov . 17; Fal" East,
Nov. 27; Canada and the Arclie, Nov . 30; Europe, Dec . 1.
Surface Civilian Parcels :
Meredith of Beverly, Mr. and
Ml"s. Denver Webel" and
fami ly, Mr. and Mrs. Warren'
Pickens and Kay Balderson,
Mr . and Mrs. James carpenter and Penny of Louisville
visited with Mrs. Bess Larkins
recen tly.

Europe and South and Central .
America, Nov. 1!1 Alaska and·
flawaij, Nov. 30; Canada and ·
Mexico, Dec. 2; Air Parcels to
Europe,, Dec. II.
Parcels within the United
States, Distant States, Dec. 10;
Local and Nearby States, Dec.
15; Airmail Parcels, Dec. 20.
Cards and Letters : Surface
to South and Central America

and Europe, Nov. 17; Surface
to Canada and Mexico, Dec:"?; ,
Airmail to Europe, Dec. li. ..
Customers are. reminded
that cards are 8 cenll per · ·
ounce (domestic) surface mall
and . II cents per oUDee
(domestic airmail) eltber
sealed or unsealed. It Ia ·
suggested that the sender
make sure that the addreaa,
including zip code, is complete
and legible and that they include their return address.
MCRT A to meet
Cards undeliverable as addressed will then be returned to
on November 11
the sender, otherwise they ·will
go to the dead letter branch.
RUTLAND - The fall
Parcels should be wellmeeting of U1e Meigs County packed to guard against
Retired Teachers' Association damage with some inexpensive
will be held Saturday, 'Nov. 11 material · such as popcorn or ·
at the Rutland Methodist other cushioning agent. 'ftle
Church. There will be a tun- ,sender should also include;
cheon at 12:30 p.m., followed inside the parcel, a lilt at
by a talk by Mrs . Eleanor contents plus their rellim
Thomas, director, on the address. Some ltelllll are not
progress of the Research and mailable, especially to APo 111'
Planning Project of the Meigs · FPO offices and sllould. llle
County Council of the Aging. customer have a quettlon ·
Also on the agenda will be a concerning this ·or any oilier
report on the Burr Oak district problem they should canlact
meeting and election of of. their local postmaster.
ficers . Reservations may be
It is also suggested that cub
made with (\1rs. Anna Hilldore not be sent In letters but either
at 992-5!23 ; or with the sendamoneyorderorachect,
telephone chairmen by Wed- Cooperation of the customers
nesday, Nov. 8.
will be greatly appreclat8d.

•

en it comes to an

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T
J...AJ
Wednesday Early Mixed
OctoberlS, tm

Pis
· k Qiler'sSohio
40
Mr · an d Mrs . P atnc
Smith-Nelson Motors
40
Williams and family of Young's Market
38
McArthur, Mr. and Mrs . Zide's Sport Shop
38
Ronald McNalley and daughter Tenth Framers
32
Team No. S
28
of Athens and Mr. and Mrs.
High Ind. Game
Men, ·
Lester Arnold and Billy of Junior Phelps 212, Willard
Columbus visited Mrs. Hazel Boyer 210; Women, Helen Van
Meter 218, Linda Winebrenner
Arnold and Walter.
204.
A Halloween party was
High Series - Willard Boyer
8P.~ by the,l!iacbert!&gt;l:thei·/1 60~h J~,nlw ,~h~tRs 5.84;,. 1 u?~a
cradl,e Roll Class of tbe ~~~e~;r:,er56%...3 ~nd Hefen
Ca.rletoil Church, Mrs. Louise
Team High Game and Series
Harrison, for her students and - Oiler's Sohio 720 and 2055.
their grandmothers. Games
were played and prizes given to
Saturday Senior
October 28, 1972
Janeth Beat, Scott Harrison,
Pt.
Brill King and Brett Carl. Gutter Dusters
18
1511:1
Cookies, ice cream, Kool-Ade Pin Crushers
Pin
Busters
14112
and candy were served and
12V,
· gifll were given to all the Dig-A-Lings
Born Lasers
1 Jl/~
chllclren. 'lhose attending were Herbies
9
High Ind. Game - Rich
Seott Harrison and Jodi
198, Melanie Burt 191.
Harrison and grandmother Bailey
High Series - Rich Bailey
Louise Harrison, Brett Carl, 552, Melar1ie Burt 474 .
Team 'High Game - Born
Randy Carl, Danny Carl, Brian
Losers
852 ; Team High Seri es
King; Mona King, Brill King, - Gutter
Dusters 2295.
Phillip King and their grandmother, Sadie Carl, Wesley
Saturday Junior
Young and grandmothers,
Pis.
Alpha Bailey and Janeth Beal; Ba II Busters
19
18
Audra Houdashelt, Grand- Impacts
Dreamers
131!,
mothet Ruby Burnside, Mary Alley Cats
11
Perdss, Grandmother, Janeth Apaches
10112
9
Beat, Angela! Hatfield and Rams
High
Ind
.
Game
Kelly
Barbara Ha field, grand- Winebrenn er 194, Steve
mother, Marjorie Smith, Terri Bachner 176.
High Series - Chuck Foil rod
Gilliam, Eddie Gilliam,
Kelly Winebrenner 420.
grandmother, Goldie Wyant, 432,
Team High Game - Ball
Geneva King, grandmother, Buslers872; Team High Series
Neva King. Elizabeth Murray - Dreamers 2422.
also attended.
The Carleton Church held its
Saturday Bantam
Halloween Party al the BedOctober 28, 1972
Pis
ford Youth Center Saturday
Ba II Bombers
15
evening. Those masked win- Red Barons
11
ning prizes in the Cradle Roll MIMars
9
Banana
Splits
7
Class were Ivan Carl, Brill
Cyclones
6
King .and Phil King; In the Pin Busters
6
Sunbeam Class, .Helen King,
Hi~h Ind. Game Ronnie
Brenda Ross and Mona King; Casc1 1~, Dav id Burt 151 :
High Series - Ronnie Casci
In the Busy Bee ClAss, Geneva 289 ; David Burt 259,
King, Mary King, David King
Team High Game and Denise Hendricks ; in Cyclones 749 ; Team High
Young Adulta Class, Floyde Series ~ Ball Bombers 1434.
Roes, Harold and{Zra~e White,
Wednesday"Eariy Mixed
After the unmasklng everyone
November 1, 1972
enjilyeil a potluck lunch.
Smith-Nelson Motors
Mr. ilnd Mrs. John Dean and Young's Market
42
Mr • ~- Mrs. John Walljlr Oiler's Solflo
42
.
n
attended
s.
"a11oween
..
Zid&lt;i's
Sport
Shop
.
40
Dea
,.
Tenth .Framers
38
party at the home of Mr. and Teams
'
34
Mrs . Clair Waggoner at
High Ind. Game - Men:
Harrisonville. Others at- VIc Wipple 215, Bill Porter 213;
Women : Aprn Smith 199, Betty
tending were Mr. and Mrs. Smith and April Smith 111.
Paul Paynter of Carpenter,
High Series - Men: Willard
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gilkey, Boyer ~a: Junior Phelps 524.
Women: April Smith 526, Beffy
Rldt:, Tammy and CindY.. of Smith 41&gt;7.
Au-, Mr. and Mrs. John
Team High Game and Series
GWogly, l\lark and David of - Team 5, 673 and .l945.
carpenter, Jim Hailey of
RUtland and Joy Waggoner, 6FFENSIVE PlAYER
TUUIA, Okla. (UPJ)-Junlor
Richard Dean who enlisted in
the Air Force is stationed at taHbflck. Jerry Heaton, who
L,aclr!and Air Force Bue, ~n paced Drake'• 111-f comeback
Anlllllio, Texu, where he will victory over Southern Illlnola
caplele hill butt training. Saturday with 135 yarda
Hil tlddnll It: Richard L. I'Uiblng 111111 two "louchdoWill,
Dlln, P'R lll:a&amp;.'IIIH CMR No. Monday was named oi!enllve
!Uyer of the week In the
•· Sq.
rtt. 1342, Lackland M1uourl
1falley Cmference.
Alr Fan:t Bue, TeUJ, 71236.
The victory clinched 11 leut
a Ue for the MVC Utle for the
Ia Greek IIIYtii010D the f'dk'ap -and was the lith
&amp;od of mll'l'lqt wu JJymea lltllclll pme In wtich Heilon
wbo wu pletured.u ·a yoiltll 1u 1tiiNd for at leut 100

ANSWEIIS

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1m
there is no
n
- ta a us
.) 1·" •

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Everybody wants an improved environment , but
wishing won't make it so .
There is much to be done
and it's going to cost
everybody a lot of money.
Many people say " !"
don't cause pollution ...
" they" do . "They"
should give me back my
clean air and pure water,
and "they" should pay
for it. The truth is all of us
are polluters and all of
us must pay for improving our environment.
The price tag attached
is going to be a stiff one.
Controlling pollution,
whether ·by a device in a
car, a new sewage disposal
plant, or equipment at a power
plant, will have an inevitable
cost to each of us as a consumer. We should make
sure the benefits a·re worth
the price.

P!:

Mrs .. Emma Yokley• of._. guests Saturday and Suriday, r---~---------------·
Columbtana spent Monday her sister Marie and husband
SACRED HEART CHURCH
with Mrs. Herschel Roush.
of Woodsfield.

Now you con buy tha\
~fortoble
.L&lt;I·Z·8oy
choir . you've always
dreamed of at O&lt;Jr low
prices.
I

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
and daughter of Racine and
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens
and family of Syracuse spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Allan Taylor.
Mrs. Donald Pierce of
Alhens visited her mother,
Mrs. Mary Circle on ·Saturday
evening.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Orvy Gainer
and Mr . and Mrs. Bennie
Gainer and family of Hebron
called at the home of Mrs.
Dean Brinker on Sunday. \

1fa.

Syracuse News, Society

ANNUAL BAZAAR

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Keno Ridge

\ CHAIRS'

Carmel News,

Gallipolis Atty . John
.Halliday met with the Director
of the Department of Transporation, J . Philtip Richter ·in
Columbus recently to disc~ss
the highway needs of '
Southeastern Ohio.
Atty, Halliday asked
Director Richley to give top
priority to three major projects
affecting Meigs and Gallia
counties. Halliday asked the
director to speed up the
engineering and planning on
the completion of Route 35
· from Holzer Medical Center to
Thurman . He also requested
the director to designate Route
124 from Route 7 to the Appalachia Highway as an
emergency federal aid project
because of the new mine
location.
This ~el;ignation would make
the improvement of Route 124
qualify for 70 pet. federal
funding, Halliday also asked
Director Richley to initiate
discussion with the State of
West Virginia for a river
crossing in the Long BottomRavenswood area.
Richiey promised that

. I

WHAT ABOUT THE ENVI·
RONMENTAL PRICE TAG
ON ELECTRIC POWER?
The cost of new pollution
control equipment at power
generating plants will
show up in all of &lt;;&gt;ur
electric bills. How high
t]1e_price will be cannot
be forecast. Much depends on government
regulations. In our opinion. some are unrealistic because
they can't be met, and if they could
be met would be u,nnecessary. AN
EXAMPLE: We must burn coal to make electricity.

.~

JUdi.

.

However, there 's no commercially
successful way to remove sulfur oxides
from power plant stacks on
con' tinuous basis in the amounts specified
by the new government regulations.
Millions are being spent. on research
to find a way, and we are takin~t
a signilicant part in that research .
We have no doubt a way will
be found , but more time is
needed. When-science
finds a way, we'll promptly
adopt it.
1

a

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.•'

r

We, like you , want to protect
our environment .. . make It
l;ietter than it is today. But, there
is no Santa Claus, when It comes
to an improved environment. We
need to be sure that sought-after im- ·
provements are possible and wor.\h their
cost. We need to avoid unnecessary increases in our electric bills .

..
.'

Understanding of !he possible and the im ~
possible together with the inevitable price
tag . is the fir~t step toward a se nsible· ap- ,
proach to protecting and improving .our
environment.
'
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'

('\1~---~""·OHIO ~OWER COMPA~Y
l

l
J

if.

j

. ,.,

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•

"·•

•
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New government regulations say our . burning coal
puts too much sulfur oxides in the air-and this
is harmful. The fact is that only high concentrations of sulfur oxides at ground level not in the upper atmosphere-can be
harmful. Sulfur oxides exhausted from
plant stacks high iii the atmosphere
are quickly diffused so as to meet
strict government regulations.We are
and will continue to protect against
harmful ground- level concentrations
of sulfur ox ides.

me-

curylag a torch.

• '

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·s;;tf;;;ra;;;ifietls Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!.
'~

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Employment Wanted

wA'NT ADS .
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

·.s P.M. Day

Belpre Publi cation.

Mond'y DeadiJne 9 a .m.

OF

CancellatJon- Corrections

Will be accepted unt il 9 a .m . for.

QUALITY

. Day of Publicafion

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reser ves the
ri ght to edit Or r eject any ads
dumed
objectional.
The
flubllsher will not be responsiblr
for more than one incorrec

· insertion .

RATE$

For· Want Ad Service
Wo rd one in sertion
"4inimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
con~ec utiv e insertions .
· 18 cents per word six con

5

cents Per

·secutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Di scou l)t on pa io
ads and ads paid with in 10 days

·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 for

so

word min imum .
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Charg e pe r
Ad vertisem ent .

.

"-

- 1971 BUICK

8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m . Da ily
a . m. to 12 : 00 NOOI
Sa turday ,

11695

Two Door , local 1 owner , low mi leage, good t ir es, clean

interi or , gr een fmi sh, rad io, 2,000 c. c. engine, 4 speed.

1971 CHEV. 8' FLEETSIDE

Nov. 9th, six miles east of

and

11 ,6,3tp

great ir on pill now with
Vitamin C. Nelson Drug .

'

PUREBRED

]] ,6·21p

SALE:

Wes t

Virginia Polled He re for~ 2nd
annual fall sale on November

Baker ; at Charles Ba ker

Fri day evening at the De lmar
Pursley Farm in Ripley , 1
mile from Pl . Selli ng 9 bulls
and 39 heifers .

10. J972 start ing at 6:30 EST

clothing and m iscella neous
items: Elaine Sayre an d June

YARD

Sa le,

from

11 ,6-4tc

11 I3tc

------

Thursday,

IF THE person tha t is stea ling
food out of my deep freeze is

Novem ber 9, end of street
behind Syra cuse Grade
School at John VanMeter
residence ;
ni ce
cheap
clothing, hou se hold item s,
bnby
needs
and
mis.
cellaneous items ; 10 a .m.

till 5 p.m.

hungry, if they will knoc k on
my door I will give it to them .
They won' t have to steal it.
Mrs. James Mash

Jl ,6,31c

PIANO and organ lessons by

n .noc

.

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"HEll"

HEATING &amp;
•
COOLING

Window
Air Conditioners
· Hot Wale!\ Heaters
Plumbing
Electric~ I Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992:2448

graduale
of
Cin ci nna t i
Conservat ory of Music ; phone

992.3825.

Kuhl's Bargain Center

'5.55

TUPPERS PlAINS

On Most American Cars

. -GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

$MONEY$

Open 8 Till
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

No ex pen ence neces sa ry .
Must have car and be willing
to lear n business.

· Nathan Biggs
Ra.diator Specialist

PERSONNEl

9n2174

446~677

For Rent

n ,s,5tc TRAILER space. Phone 9n
2324.
II ,Htc
CHOCO LATE brown bi llfold.
gold cla sp on front ; contain s
pic lures and other va luable
il em s; los t in lower Mid·
d!epo rt ; anyone find ing
return to Mrs. Lorena Dunn,

95 Pearl St .. Middleporl.

11 · 16fc

11

DUPL EX ; unfurnished 5
room s and bath, wall to wa ll
carp eti ng ; avai lable now ;

MODERN Wal nu t style stereo·

radio, AM -FM radio , 4
speaker sound syste m , .4
spee d automatic cha ng er.
Balan ce $68 .79 . Use our

Hart , Racin e, 0.

]1 .7-Jic

3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and

Wanted To Buy

BEEF hides, sa each, raw fur s;

Ginseng $52 lb., Gold seal $3

Ca r l Cheva lier, Mai n
Str eeL We~te rford , Oh io.
lJ. 7.121c

lb ;

apar t m en t s.

Phone 992-5434 .

4, J2,1fc

P~ONE

3 BEEGLES, I male and 2
females ; phone 992 -6871 .

11 ·7·3tc
APART MENTS near new
Meigs High School; call 773· 5 PIECE br eak fast set, formica
top, modern 60" long, ex ·
5268 after 5 p.m.
ce ll ent
condi t ion ;
will
10,29·12fp

Goegle in Ready -Mi x

Middleport, Ohio .

Co.,

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, land-

6-30.tfc

scaping . W~ have 2 sin i
dours, 2 size loaders. Work

-------

done by hour or contract.
Free EStimates. We also
Owner &amp; Operator.
· haullill dirt, top soil. Dump
5,12.ttc ·trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger JeHers,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
Complete Service
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
Phone 949,3821
5232.
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
s:J ,tfc
SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
-----SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
DOZER and back hoe work,
CLEANED. , REPAIRED .
pond s and septic tanks, dit,
MILLER SANITATION,
ching service; top soil, fill
STEWART. OHIO. PHONE
dirt. limestone ; B&amp;K Ex,
66no3s.
cavating . Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr .
9, J,tfc

- - - -- -

late st
is
" On e
Day "
fr agrar t:e. Ot hers includ e
" K" and The Lemon Gr ove.
Also new c hildren's producls .

Phone Helen Jane, 992 5113.

Tuppers Plains
Society News

We 'd like to ser ve you.

J0,24·1fc

in

Mason, $27 .50 a

Phone 675,1684.

week .

• 11 ,5,3tp

price

or

terms

Phone 992 ·5641.

available.

Real Estate For Sale
CLELAND·
REALTY

Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

608 E. Main '
• Pomeroy :· ·
- ....
P/2 STORY BRICK
SYRACUSE- 4 B.R. New
bath, utility, kitchen has
dini ng bar, NEW F.A.G. ·
furna ce, air cond. Roofed
patio, porch, 2 level· lots.
near sc hool. ASking $17,900.
,TRAILER SETUP
RURAL - 10 ACRES -

3,29·1fc

l'1 -7-6tc

.

TRAILER lot, Bob's Mobile VACUUM CLEANER . Electro O' DELL WHEEL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads / Rt . 124.
Court, Syracuse ; phon e 992··
Hygi ene New Demonstrator
Complete front fnd service,
2951.
has all cleaning att ac hm ent s
tune up and brake service.
10,3J ,Itc
plu s the new Electro Suds for
Wheels balanced elec,
shampooing ca rpet . Only
Ironic
all y.
All
work
FURN.ISHED 2 bedroom
$27.50 cash price or term s
guaranteed
.
R!
aso
nab.l
e
apartment, adults only.
available. Phone 992,5641.
rates
.
Phone
742-3232
or
992·
phone
9n3874.
Middleport;
1J.7·61c
3213.
10,22-tfc
-----n7,1fc

-·

By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Massar
of Circleville, Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Conkle of Lexington,
Ky . and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
ALL my shop equi pment ; wheel
water, 'septic, patio, dug
a l ignment and bala nci ng ; AUTOMOBILE insu ran ce been
Edwards of Chillicothe were For Sale
basement with 3300 tile
elect ri c
and
at...:.&gt;ty lene
cance ll ed?
Lost
your
Sunday di nner guests of Mr. ONE YOUNG beet cow. weight
blocks. cabin, Natural gas
welding ; brake drum lathe
opera tor 's license ? Call 992· available, $3.700.
and Mrs. Harold Massa r.
and
shoe
grinder
;
man
y
other
850 to 900 lbs .• price $225.
2966.
EXCELLENT BUY
items ; so ld only in a lump
Phone 742·4459.
Mrs. Deloris Frank of Long
6, J5,ttc
11 ,5,3tc
sum ; Paul Grueser 992· 2053 .
RUTLAND
- 1 story frame,
Boltom, Mrs. Eloise Conley of
11 ·7 ·31p
3 B. R., large bath, kitchen 8.
Eastern, Mrs. Helen Sprague, REG ISTERED Angus calves ; 2
·--Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
ut ility , dining R.• paneling,
bulls
of
breedi
ng
age
;
Er
isco
Mrs. Eulah Landon, local, all
66 STARC RAFT tent trailer;
level lot. storage bldg .,
William Thomas lor the
and Wye blood lines ; Bill
stove,
refrigerator,
sink,
spent
a
day
recent
with
Mrs
.
porches.
$9,800.
w~ekend were her sister, Amy
Witte. Rock Springs. Ohio ; double dinette; sleeps 8, $900 Mobile Homes For Sale
JUST
RENOVATED
Leona Babcock .
Caldwell, ahd her niece and
phone 99n7B9 .
or
best
offer;
phone
36n530.
MIDDLEPORT
- I story, 2
10,25, 121c
Mr . and Mrs. Harry Riggle of
IJ ,s,61c PRICED tor quick sale, 1965 51
:amily, Mr. and Mrs. John
B.
R.
bath.
nice
kitchen,
K 10 New Moon Mobile Home,
Athens were Friday guests of
Kimes
and
daughter,
dining bar and rooll). 26 ft .
TRACK STEREO, freight HENS, phone 843,2435.
fur nished; call 9'12-2076.
of Commerce in Columbus Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey and a damaged,
Columbus.
in beautiful walnut
ll ·Hip L. R.. fireplace, carport, all
11 ,5,Jic
console . Will sell tor Sl01.50or - - - - - rooms carpeted. $12,500.
,, Mrs. T. J . Spurlock and son , spe nt the weekend with her brother, Wellie.
pay
51.50
per
week
.
Phone
992·
pare
nls,
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Lewis
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wayne
LARGE LEVEL LOT
2 END tabl es and 1 coffee table, CASH paid for all makes and
Richard, and Mr. and Mrs.
5331
."
maple;
like
new
;
phone
992
models of mobile homes . SY RACUSE - 1'12 story
Brickles were Thursday guests
Mendal Jordan spent Saturday Smi th .
9-7,1fc 3120.
Phone area code 614-423 -9531. frame, 3 B. R.• bath. New ·
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey of his sister, Mr . and Mrs. Jack
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
4-13,tfc F.A. G. furnace, basement,
-P-0-0D_L_E_p_u_p_p-ie-,-.-S-ilv_e_r~Toy, ~:::::::::::::::l:J,:5,_3,tp
attended
an
insurance Stanley of Athens.
Arthur Crabtree.
porches, lot fenced 2 sides.
Parkvi ew Kennels, Phone 992· r
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Riggs and
Mrs. Merlin Teets and her meeting in Columbus and
$5,000.
5443.
8, 15,tfc
Air Conditionen
SE E US to BUY OR SELL.
parents, Mr: and Mrs. Robert called to see his sister, Mrs. fami ly of Easwrn, Ray Justis
HENRY E. CLELAND
Jessie
JewelL
They
also
visi!Ald
Success
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
or
•Awnings
Stout recently relurnetl from a
REALTOR
REGISTERED
German
their
son-in-law
and
daugh!Alr,
David
Riggs
and
family
of
···Underpinning
trip to Macon, Ga,, where they
shortha
ir
Pointer
·Birddog
Phone
992-2259
visited another daughter, Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Donald Jones in Vienna, W. Va ,, were Sunday
puppies. Expensive but worth
If
no
answer
9!2-2568
Complete mQblle hQme
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
it. Ready any time. Vernon
James Willis and family. They Nelsonville enroute.
·s ervice - plus gigant ic
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stout Oscar Babcock.
Weber. 742·5625.
saw various points of interest
'display of mobile homes
1
J.5.6fc
Several from here called at
and s lopped enroute home in attended the funeral services
;always available at ...
lor
his
brother,
J
.
D.
Stout,
of
lhe
While Funeral Home at EARLY Am eri can stereo·radio
Tennessee where they were
MILLER
combination , AM-FM radio, 4
guests of other family mem- Bidwell . Services were held at Coolville and attended the
.. --·
speake
r
sound
sys
tem
~
4
Harrisonburg
Baptist
Church
funeral
of
Wilbur Nickles who
bers, Mr. and Mrs. Es,te l Kirby
MO.BILE HOMES . ·
speed automa ti c changer.
and· family of -Elizabethton, with burial in Vinton Memorial did· at an ' Athens · hospital.
Ba la nce $77 .54. Use our
1220 Washington Blvd.
budge! lerms. Call 992,7085.
Tenn.; Mrs. Na ncy Dowell and Cemetery. Other members of Buri al was at Fredrick , Md.
13-7521
BELPRE, 0.
Pomeroy,
0
.
11-5-6tc 992-29,75
',
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman
Mrs. Fanny Pa rker, Mr . and the Robert Stout fam ily at,
l
'
Mrs. Oscar Howard and Mr. le nding were Mr. and Mrs. Ted a'nd their daughter, ·Mrs .
APPLES . Fit zpatr ick Or - 8 x 32, COMPLETELY fur ,
AUCTION
110 Mechanic St,
chords, State Route 689, nis hed, 2 bedrooms, inside
and Mrs. Charles Potter, Stout, Mike and Karen , sinnley Gary were Sunday SATURDAY, Nov. 11, beginning
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45169
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785,
bath, kitchen, living room and
at 10:00 A.M. Jlf2 miles NE of
.\
Mountain City, Tenn., and Mr. Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. fu!y dinner guests of their son, Mr.
a,30,ffc
TV,
$800
call
or
contact
Larry
Chester,
Ohio
on
State
Route
and
family
of
Charleston,
Stout
and Mrs. Dana Hoffman Jr. of
and Mrs. pave Raynard and
Hubbard, Syra cuse, Oh io 992·
NEW LISTING
7, have sold my farm and will - - -- - -- - - - Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Stout
and
Rutland.
3364.
'
family, Johnson City, Tenn.
BUNGALOW - 2 bedrooms,
sell the following :
NOW WRE (K ING lhe former
Mrs. Lucy Kim returned
11 '3-61c
nice bath. large li ving and
Mrs . Zelia Weyand and family and Mrs. Ida Teets,
Epple's Grocery Store
home
after
a
couple
of
weeks
1964
V8
Ford
pick
,up.
7
HP
local.
.kitchen,
Store next door.
daugh!Alr, Mrs. Connie G&lt;Xld,
building in Pomeroy . All 1970 MOBILE Home with
with her .d aughter, Mrs.
Homko riding mower, 20 ln.
Only
$4500.00.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eddie
Jordan
kinds of building materials
wa sher, air -conditioner and
Jeremy and Jenny, Columbus,
Rotary mower, 4 HP Homko
NEW LISTING
lor
sale
an
the
job.
Call
992·
and
Clay
William
,
Fairburg,
other
extras Included; ex Thelma
Chase
·and
sons
of
,
garden
tiller,
~
x
8
utility
spen t a weekend here with
SALISBURY
TOWNSHIP 5946
or
882,3219.
cellent condition ; phone 992,
Mrs.
Weyand 's . mother, Neb., visited their pare nts, Marion. She also visited her . tr ai ler , co rn sheller with
10·26, 12tc
Meigs
school
distri ct, 2 or 4
7387
or
985,3565.
elec tri c motor , electric
sis ter, Mr. and;, Mrs. Frances
lJ
,Htp
bedrooms,
bath,
automatic
Ginevra Foster, and at!Alnded Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mr. and
grinder 1 Ram 7 in. power saw,
Mrs.
L.
D.
Cottrill
and
other
Toombs
of
Marion
and
a
niece,
electric
drill
,
chain
holst.
3,pt,
Full
basement,
furnace
heat.
the Harvest Festival at
hitch potato plow, 24ft. ext . .
1. acre of land. Asking
Columbia Chapel Church on relatives in the area . They also Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Earhart
Real
Estate
For
Sale
ul
Bucyrus.
ladder,
electric
fencer
,
6,amp
$12.000.
at tended the festival at
Saturday evening.
H ROOM house and 'bath, nice
battery charger. 1 lot 4 ln.
BOTTOM LAND
Mrs . · Maxine Chapman
plastic pipe, feed bin 1 lot of
large lot, natural gas. built-In 6 ACRES - I mile from
ON PANTS&amp; JEANS
Several friends from this Columbia Chapel Church on
cabinets In kitchen. Close to
good hand tools, tool boxes,
area also at!Alnded the festival Sturday evening and saw many returned home after spending
radio ·station In Bradbury. roule 7 jusl off 124. Now
several
weeks
with
her
wheel
barrow
.
platform
being offered for $3,000.00.
at Columbia Chapel Church friends there.
Phone 992-2602.
·
scales.
Buy!
Muri Gala way was a guest on daughter, Mrs. Duane Beaver
NEW L(STING
HOUSEHOLD .
10·29·12fc
were a g&lt;Xld crowd gathered on
'--"lit' Pairs
8 ROOM ANTIQUE BRICK
Saturday evening to support Sunday afternoon at the home and family at New Matamoris. TAPPAN gas range (like new).
·1-PAIR FREE , C:uivi~ORTABLE t,wo story - 4 large ~edrooms . bath,
I
Mo·. and Mrs. Carl Watson
Kelvinator and Westinghouse
of
her
son-in-law
and
daughter,
the activities.
home, full basement, bath furnace . Living room 16x36,
and friends,· Mr. and Mrs .
refrigerators. Maytag auto.
the area .
Tht best buy
Murl Galaway atwnded 'the Mr. and Mrs-. Leon Woodrum in
washer, Signature Dryer , · Have sla&lt;ks &amp; .. ns for the
and '12, attached garage. and with gas llreploce. Large
, ,
Ronald Bradley of Dayton and
cabinet sink, utility cabinet. 3
extra lot. In a good location . · basem~nt, l 'car garage,
whole family. Save One.
wedding of her · great- McArthur .
Basi c furniture available . barn for horses and about 2
Mr
.
ahd
Mrs.
Wai!Alr
Watson
of
bedroom
suiles,
odd
beds
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joe
McWhorter,
]'hi rd.
granddaughter, Karen Petty, ·
Phone 99~-7384 or 992·7133 tor
Parkersbur" were weekend
bedding , 2·piece living room
·acres of land. All for
'W'._
POMEROY
and Randy Radcliff, both of and family were recent guests
b
suite- ~ Chair and ottoman , end
appointment.
$21,500.00.
I
6il
Jack
W
.
Carsey,
M9r,,
of
Mr
.
an
d
Mrs.
Jimmi
e
ll
,Htc
guests
of
MrS.
Elfje
Watson
.
and
coffee
.tables.
Ieiding
McArthur, which was held at
Phone
m
-2181
NEW
LISTING
Mr . .and · Mrs . , Clarence
chairs, table with four chairs.
the P'etty home in McArthur on Haning and daughters.
Nichols were Sunday guests .of
lawn furniture. plano with
Mrs.
Leona
Folden,
widow
of
SPECIAL: Mov.e In before 98 Ac'R ES - Of vacant land
Friday evening. "
bench, 23 · lri. Zenith TV,
winter. _. bedroom ranch · on township road W, most of
pprtable TV, por.fable stereo. COAL, Limestone. Excelsior
lilr. and Mrs . Lewis Smith the late Howard Folden, who their daugh!Alr, Mr. and Mrs.
home on 'I• acre tot. Bath and ltfenced, Producing gas well
Wilford Tippie of Athens. .
J.speed 20 ln . fan , motorized Salt Works, E. Main St .•
spen
t
most
of
her
life
In
the
a
half, buill-In kitchen, wall to · with ·free gas for one
and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
. Mrs. Larry· Cur tis
gill! 2 girl 's bicycle~ and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Dyesvilie
area,
passed
away
in
and
Mr.
wall
carpet and garage. Price 'residence. ·All m lnerals.
·
Whittington have returned
othe~ household Items. ' ·
.
4-12-lfc
$20.750.00;
also a 5 bedroom Trailer space wlfh electric
··
.
· from a week's vacation that Gallipolis. Survivors include a and family of Long Bottom and GUNS ·AND COLLECTIBLES
colonial
house
on a 'I• acre lot. and dug · well . Asking
Mr ..and Mrs. John Newell and MODEL 17 Rfmlngton 20 gauge JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
Bath
and
a
half, buill-In $16,500.00.
took them to Orange Park, dau ghter, Myrtle Folden family
of Columbus were . pump gun, 22· Winchester Sewing Machine. Will sell for
Queen
of
Gallipolis
and
a
son,
kitchen,
dining
room , family WE ARE GLAD TO BE
Fla., where they visited with
nday dinner guests of Mr.
single shot rifle, 2 glass-door small b;alance of $36.21 or
room
and
the
works,
priced
·Loyal
Folden
in
Florida
;
a
Su
r
cupboards. qyllling frames. payments may be arranged.
1\!r. and Mrs. John Rawlings
$30,000.00.
Call
Sherman
E. SALES PEOPLE IN THE
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Welker
and
krauJ
cutter.
sfee),yards.
Phone
992-5331.
brother
,
Glen
R.
Cline,
local
and their son-in-law anp
Summerfield, 985·3598 or 985, COUNTY. WANT TO SEE
daughter,
Ruthie,
and
Mrs.
insulators,
large
amountof
·
9-7-tlc
THE PLACE GROW THEN.
4177.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs . and several grandchildren. A
t
misc.
Items
not
listed.
Lunch
1H·30fc LIST WITH US.
served . . Not responsible 10 ~ SCHNAUZER puppies, AKC.
Charles McCalL They visited son, Carol Folden,, preceded Wa lker's brothe~. Mr. R ober
HELEN L TEAF01lD.,
accidents. L. D.,Bird, owner . Salt &amp; Pepper. ears chooped.
many points of inte,rest her in death. Funeral servic¢s Howard or Lucasville a·nd
HOUSE
In
Long
·Botiom;
phone,
ASSOCIATE
L 0. " Mac" McCoy. auc, wormed and shots: healthy
were held at the Dyesville daughter, Mr. and Mrs, Deport
enroute.
·
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
985·3529.
Bowan of Columlius visired the
lloneer. 985-3944.
S8S ; p~o~e Coolville 667-621~.
6·1 t-Ile'
Mill Nancy Smith, .who is a church with burial in ~hoot
•
n.5,Jic
11-Hztr
m-ms
Walkers on saturday.
_ _ _ __;;_ __
s)Udent at Nationwide CillleAe Lot cemtery.
Pomeroy , 0 .

Carpenter

News, Event

GET
AmiiTIOII

SHOTGUNS
RIFLES
AND
AMMUNITION

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES AND SERVICE

I"

\

i

.

Virgll B.

~-

.

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

j

{
~

~

~ L~~iJd0

11•1

1'•\'

. .-.r

CAMPUS CLATTER

I ~ON'T CARE

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUN·
TY ,
OHIO
IN
R~ ·
PROPOSED
SYR ACUSE · RACINE
REGIONAL
SEWER
DISTRICT.
No . 15,155
LEGAL NOTICE

I"

-

.

.,AND WAL.TE~

AND t&gt;AVI&lt;) AND
ERIC HAVE SAlD
IT'S CLEAR·CUT J

. ~i..CANDIDAT5§ CE"ESRATING ITl ANt&gt;
MV CANDIMTE HAS

PROSLEM
1\-IE MJf::IOR
WAN'IS

I 'M NOT PAYo NG
YOU ~NTIL EVERY
LAST VOTe IS

CONCEDED ITr

1\-IE~

1\-IATS

·------··

)

EVE.RYONE'S COMPUTER
~S PROJECTED IT I

~10

IN\IESOGA~)

COUNTED 1

MAYOR
HAWKINS

SUMMONS

ff-WHEN AH FIRES- P.UN !!AH FIRESAGfN•SADtE FWNS"
TH' PORf SOUL SHE KETCHES GOTTA tAARR:'i
HER, AN NO Ale-IN' FO' M£RCV !!

WHEON

SADIE CAUGHT A HUSBMJD. 114E
5Pit-JSTERS OF DOGPATCH
Llt\.IO.LJTHE IDE A .

THE

LOCAL
~f\EI.OPS

-AND THE'SADIE HAWKINS DA'Y
RACE.BECAMEAN ANNUAL(s"uDoER.')
~SJT WHICH SPREAD AlL OVER ,
THE WORLD!!
c:aa_ C"{"'\"--

PLATT~ ITS DEAD.
THE'( YLAN TORE·
RUN SOME: GABLE
MOVIES, THE:
ECONOMY

..

... THEY CAN7. ..
I NEEOECJ
THAT .SHOI'i.'..
IJAOLY.'

•
~

1$N 'T... .

'· .

,,'·

... HE SseMS OUITii
ANKIOUS 10 1l\LK 10
US .t.IIOUT SOME1HIN6!

{.,,,,

" I

' ,,""
,.I'

,;
'·
'·
,,'·

.

11 -7

'

..

..

.l

...,
,,

'

County, Ohio. and the Petition

•

N

·EVELYN S. LUCKE,
CLERK OF THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
OF MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
(lOJ 24, 31 ( ll l 7. 14, 21. Sic

\ l"llor NlA, 10&lt; , 1,1.1. .... U.l

'-'· Off.

"

Yest.!nlly'o Cryploquot.!: POLITICS IS AND ALWAYS HAS
BEEN AN IMITATION OF WAR AIMED AT EXORCISING .,
.,
WAR.,MAX ASCOLI

ACROSS

DICK TRACY

Range 14, Rulland Township.

Meigs County, Ohio, and being
more particularly described as
,

· Commencin'g at the Southeast
corner of Section J; thence

olong lh.e south line of sold

~~::;7-:::::=:::---,-

Sect ion , NOflh BA degrees 16'
10" West ,.,. rods to a Railroad
spike ln the centerline of Hysell
Run Road , and the true point of
beginnipg for the following
described .tract ; .thence North ·
84 degrees 16' 10" West (passing
an Iron pin at 2l.26 teet) tor a

-=::::=:::::~120. -(agitated)
up

/r-~-.....--~~---~ 21.
Detest
CENTR.i FICAL FORCE!
22, Stet's
CI&gt;.N TilE SPACE COUPE SNAG

antithesis

;:::;::::= L...:T~iii:!E~'C;!O~P::T~E:t&lt;;;'s~=;;_;~ 23, _"
E\~an

10

calsuffix
DOWN

1, Tropical

ungulate
Z. Expiate
3. Famed
battle·
ground of
the
Korean
War (3
wds.)
4. '4Uncle"

In Dundee
5. Place
side .
by side
6. Swell
. ?. - bono
publico
10. Never!
(sl.) (4

wds.)

10 degree• 36' West 85.98 feotlo

an Iron pin ; thence south 68
degrees 33' .tO" East (paning
an iron pin at 279. 3,. teet) for a
total distance of 303.11 feet to a
railroad spike ln1 the centerline
of Hysell Run Road ; thence
along said centerline South 39
degrees 12' JO" West 291.46 feet
to the point of beQinnlng, cOn , tainlng 13. 10 acres.
'
Sald petition will be tor
. hearing on the 25th dey ·of
November, 1972, at the Com·mon
Plees Courtroom at Pomeroy,·

.

1,:,

..•
JJ&amp;dM;r=::.:::~!! -t.c ::

U , Numeri·.

25, Document
26. Kola
peninsula
native
21. California
Indian
28. I (Ger.)
29. Glittering
ornament
32, Greek
letter
33. Small
horse
34. Musical
. note
35. "The
Miracle

an Iron pin ; thence North 4
degrees 12 ' JQ" East 416 .81' feet
to an Iron pin ; thence South 84
degrees 16' 10" East 1,227 .71
feet to an iron pin ; thence South

••

(C ]972 Kinr Future• Syndicate, Ine .)

1. Masking,
e.g.
5,Snake
8. Ultimate
particle
9, Word per·
fecUonis\
13. Skin
aperture
11. Right now
15. Sign
16. Small
wheel
17. Vietnamese boll·
day
18. Hermit

..•

,u

,.

by THOMAS JOSE'H

. Not ice is hereby given that
Audrey Patterson , Emerson
HyselL Harold Dewhurst ,
Ca rrie Moore and Beatrice
May , as Trustees of the Hysell
Run Free Methodist Church, R.
0 ., Pomeroy / Ohio, have flied
their petition in the Common '
Pleas Court alleging that the
following described real estate
is no longer needed for church
purposes, and request authority
to sell said real estate, which
real estate Is described as
follows ; to -wit :
Situate in Section 3, Town 6,

Ohio .

~
11-7

. ~,.CD~r

NOTICE

f~el

I

II

.'·

of said matter is now on file ..,d
may be ex amined at the office
of the Clerk of said Court at the
Court House in Pomeroy, Ohio .

total distance of 1,336.50

&gt;&lt;

CONTR161,nV~.

in the Ot'.io Rivet Whlcn potnt s
also the Northwest corner of the
Village of Syracuse; thence In
an Easterly direction following
the North line of the corporation
lim its of the Villag~of Syracuse
to the Northeast corner thereof
which corner is situate In 100
Acre Lot 287, Sutton Township,
Meigs County, Ohio ; thence
South along the East line of the
corporal ion tim its of the VIllage
of Syracuse to a point that Is 200
feet North of the center line of
State Route No . 124 as State
Route 124 ex ists on August 1st.,
1972; thence in an Easterly
direction along a line that Is 200
fe et North of the center line of
said State Route No . 12.4 to the
pi!Jint In the North line of the
CQrporation limits of the Village
of Racine , Meigs County, Ohio;
thence East along the North
corp or at ion line ofthe Village of
Recine to the Northeast corner
thereof ; thence South along the
East line of the corporation
limits of the Village of Racine to
the center line of said State
Route No . 124 ; thence East
along the center nne of said
State Route No. 124 to the East
line of Section 16 In SuNon
Township ; thence south along
the East line of nid Section 16
to the Southeast corner thereof ;
thence East to the Northeast
corner of 100 Acre Lot No. 279 ;
thence South along the East line
of 100 Acre Lots No . 279, 278 and
277 to the Southeast corner of
said 100 Acre Lot No. 277;
then ce West along the South line
of 100 Acre Lot No. 277 to the
Southwest corner thereof;
thence in a Northwesterly
direction following the boun·
darv line of the State of Ohio to
the piece of beg'lnnlng.
Any person or anv PO.Iitlcel
subdivision resl~lng . or lying
within the nreli a,fected by the
organil itioii orthe ·olstrl~t, o-ftor before the date set for the
ca use to be heard may tile en
objection to the granting of the
request made in the prayer of
the
Petition
requesting
establishment of the Syracuse.
Racine . Reg_ional
Sewer
District .
Saie
Petition
for
the
establishment of said District 11
Case No . 15, 155 of the Court of
Common Pleas of MtiQS

·

,.

TO RE·ELECT 'll1E
MAVOr&lt; WAN'TS US
10 INVE6TlGA1E

. boundary of the Stale of Ohio

follows :

;

ll&lt;E COMMI'f'TfOE

Publ ic notice is hereby given '
pursuant to Ohio Revised Code,
Sec t ion
6119 .0.4,
that
1
prelim inary hearing will be
held by the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio, on
the . 22nd . day of New ember·,
1972, at 11 :00 A .M . in the Me iOI
County Court House , Pomeroy,
Qhlo, on the Petition for
establishment of SyracuuRacine Regional Sewer Disfrlct
f iled in said court .
The description of the
territory to be· Included In the
authority is as follows :
' Situate in Sutton Town$hlp,
Me igs ·c-ounty, Ohio, .and
commenc ing at a point where
the North line of the Vl.ll~ge of
Syracuse
Intersects
the

EARlll MOVING

es tim ates. Phone 992-3284:

10,25, 12tc . ---- ------·
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
sacrif ice ; phone 992 -2961 after
organs, di shes, clOcks, brass
HAY MAN'S Auction - a good
5 p.m .
beds, or complete households. APARTMENT, 3 ROOMS AND
place to go each Friday
J1 .7,31c
Wr
ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
BATH, MUST BE SEEN TO
evening, 7 p.m . at Laurel
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
BE APPRECIATED, PHONE KAWASAKI 250, 1450; phone
Clilf on old Rl . 7, I mile west
6,28,ttc
ol Rock Springs Fairground .
992-2053.
99?·5064 after 5 p.m.
--~----RUSSELL'S
Furnitur e
·
10·JO,Ifc
1n -Jic
11 ,n tc
Uphol
stery
;
free
pick up and
1963 FOR D T:Bird Convertible
delivery;
phone
992·5771.
tor parts; phone 995,3333.
5 ROOMS and bath , un , TWIN nee dl e sew ing machine
MARRIED couple want to rent
10-27-30tc
II ,3,6fc
fu rn ished 1 $65 a month; phone
farm or country house. Call
1977 model in wal nut sta nd .
99J.l524 after 2 p.m.
collect 614-299·6908.
All features buill -in to mak e SEWING MACHINES. Repair
]1 ,5,5fc
11·Hic
fancy design s and do str etc h
service, all makes. 992-2284.
-----sew ing . A l so buttonh oles,
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
NEW 2-bedroam mobile home
blind hems , etc . $43.35 cash
KOSCDT KOSMET ICS . Our
-----''----

992!2550

CONCRETE

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
budg et terms. Call 9n7085. REASON&gt;'.BL,E rates. Ph . 446c
l] ,Htc
~7B2 , Gallipolis. John Russell,

phone 9'1 ?·?780 or 9n3432.
COAL furna ce com plete, stoker
11 .7. ttc
fed with a ll con trol s; Rona ld
unf urn ishe d

For Free Estimate

delivere d right .fo your
pro ject. Fa st and easy . Free

For Sale

WHITE ·FACE Hereford calf in

•ROOFING
eHEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

'·

~

LEGAL NOTICE

.w ith Your M.eat Problems.

Floor Display.

~

1

4-2S.Hc

!!2·337 4
Let bick ./nd Dale Help Yr;»u

Slaty In and See Our

5

!

·BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
. Septic tanks lnsfalled. Georlllt
1Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2-ol.

DICK
. VAUGHN

992 ,3884

FURNITURE

READY ·M.IX

-----~

St i ver sv ille area ; Phone 843 ·
2145, L. Glusencamp if found.

· LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 1 ; Closod Mondays

DALE
LITTLE

and

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

MANAGER

11 ·5·2tc

20" ,

OFFICE SUPPLIES ·

Smallest Heater Core.

CALL

r ing, yel low gold ; return to
Shoe Box for r eward ; sen ·
limental value.

Huffy'

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

From the largest

\

3-2-Hc

.._ POMEROY,O .
· "Cuttom Mea1 Cutting"
Quick and'Courteo~s Service

HOME &amp; AUTO
Bulldozer Radiator to

COSTU ME iewe lr.y, round ear ·

BIKES -

Murray 10 speeds- discount
pr;ices.
. .

,

and railing . A. Jacob, sat•
representative. For frM
estimates, phone Charlll
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son. Inc.

, PLEASANT RIDGE ROAO

POMEROY

'3.50 PER HOUR

Lost

·THE SHOP

Clean used furniture
Guaranteed appliances

:;

~~;~~~-w~7~~l~~~·r~

ToGo
Take Me To

Rt. 7 "at caution light"

r-,.-----_;_____,...., :·..

SEE US FOR: Awnings, atorrn

If I HAVE

Wheel Alignment

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

FULL OR
PART TIME

For Rent

GARAGE S• le, Thursday and
Friday; bikes, good toys,

Racine ott Rl. 124.

11 ,7.Jtc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

NEW Improved "Zippies," th e

Good

3 m iles

lea ves in Pom eroy ; Sl per
hour ; phone 992-5792.

chrome fron t bu mper, r ear s tep bumper, radi o, beau tiful
bla ck accented w ith whil e. This is an extremely low
m ileage truck . Real hP.rtutv .

- - -- - -

ware,

used Selmer cornet and case,
318 -'63, Dodge automatic

residence ,

N E: E 0 so meone to rilk e and bag

DRIVE A LITTLE
- SAVE A LOT!

EXPERT

I

,, ,7.11c

2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
phone Albert Hill 949,2261.
' \•later pills," Nelson Dr ug .
11·6·6tc
1J.6,2fp

Chester on Rt. 24B, Ronald

transm ission, $30.

Tuesday s and Fr idays for
local store; wri te to P.O. Box
7?9 ·M , C·O The Daily Sentinel.
Pom eroy, Ohi o 45769 .

RE DUCE safe and fas t with
GoBese Tablets and E,Vap

GARAGE SALE, Th ursday,

miscellaneous item s.

12B95

part l1me,

350 v .a eng ine, auto. trans , P .S., P . B., Cheyenne equip .,

Notice

antiques

: AU TCHEI&lt;

--'.-

THEN 'IE CAN GO AHEAD
AN' CRAWL IN TH'
BEDSTID

B~~~s~v~

• e·s's .Serv.I·c-es'
Busm

Help Wanted

Li.----"----~------,---"' ,•

Notice

clothing,

12849.'

1971 PINTO FORD

.1

'-----·~-

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

8 : 30

depression

l V repairman ; Wr ite C·O P. ·o.
-· Box 729~ L. The Dii ily Sentinel,
Pomeroy .
If ·5·Jic

Spor twag on. Beaut iful coral finlsh wi1h vinyl interior,
t~ c tor y ..=t i r cond itioned, luggage rack, r adio, 350 V -B
engine, automati c trans,, power steering &amp; br akes , like
neww-w tires. II you wan I a show piece &amp; plenty of luxury
try this ou ts tan ding~ bu y.

OFFICE HOURS

~borne i

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

·-.----

Un~enmble th ... Cour Jumbl"
ont letter to e1&lt;h ~quare, to
form four ordfnar7 wordo.

Yest.!rday'o Alllwer
11, English
25. Turf
esaayist
27. Rose
12, Wobble
family
16. Preco,
shrub
clous
29. Stringent
19, Li&amp;bt
30, French
source
river
22. Mend
31. "Lady of
23, Movie
the Lake"·
horae
36. N!Jotic
2t. Jacob's
trobesman
favorite
37, Dobbin's
wife
doc

I

IRI'I"'
V: ~

L..:1.:.:,;;.:'~
' '-

L1

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r

I I
·

·

IWI'O/,r

p
"j
1-., A

I·

I I I

WHAT PWPL~ WHO

!!&gt;00 AT PERFOIWER5

..·'
..,
Now ..,...... the circled !etten
80'1\li'!'IM~

ARE.

I

Lr__:_:::Priii::.:'*'::.:•==IIII:.::::MSWIII=-==-....J' 4t x x J-m" 'i~
(AMwen to•onow)

-l--+-1

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to form the ourpriH IUUIWer, u ....
L=~~l~)~~·::;::::;·=~·_:I~UIIOitecl b7 the'.....t cutoon. "
I

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'"

.

,.-i--+-4-+--+--l

l'ORFT

JumbO..o MONIY
Ynlerday'•

IOUND fOMINT LADING

..
,,

rh~ ~t~rden!"- "I LOOM"

Ant•efl "Come ouJ in

.--------:---1
15 HE ALL RI5HT? WAS'
' IT SOMETHIN5 I 5AIO?

Worker"

.
0

f

heroine
31. Bridal
symbol
38. Entice,
men!
39. "Jane-"
40. " - Clear
, l)ay" (2
wds.)

Audrey Patterson
Emerson Hysell
. Harold Oawhur1t
Carrie Moore
Beatrice M1y
Trustee• of HyHII
Run Free Methodllt

· ·
Church .
(10) 24, 31, (11) 7. 1•, .,

'I

'

DAILY CRYPToQUOTE - Here's how to work It: rr--,__'""'"'..._~ ..--~------. il"'
AXYDLBAAXIl
HE'5 A GREAT
II LONGFELLOW
PEPIATRICIAN. SUT CIIILDREN
MAKE HIM NERVOV5 !
-:,
One letter aimply stands for another. In thlo 01mple A 1.!

,,

uud for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apoatropbea, the lentlth and formation of the words are Ill
hints. Each day the code letters are dlft'erent.

'i

WMP0/1390

0

CRYPTOQUOTBS

I··· · ·

HNN
BHXQ'M
S.

LX

VEUQ

HZO

V.W YA

H

ZE

INHR

LHQAII

VAHNSKR · VWOEV .-

OAULESS

.
I

"

•

•

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'

-

·s;;tf;;;ra;;;ifietls Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!.
'~

.

Employment Wanted

wA'NT ADS .
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

·.s P.M. Day

Belpre Publi cation.

Mond'y DeadiJne 9 a .m.

OF

CancellatJon- Corrections

Will be accepted unt il 9 a .m . for.

QUALITY

. Day of Publicafion

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reser ves the
ri ght to edit Or r eject any ads
dumed
objectional.
The
flubllsher will not be responsiblr
for more than one incorrec

· insertion .

RATE$

For· Want Ad Service
Wo rd one in sertion
"4inimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
con~ec utiv e insertions .
· 18 cents per word six con

5

cents Per

·secutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Di scou l)t on pa io
ads and ads paid with in 10 days

·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 for

so

word min imum .
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Charg e pe r
Ad vertisem ent .

.

"-

- 1971 BUICK

8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m . Da ily
a . m. to 12 : 00 NOOI
Sa turday ,

11695

Two Door , local 1 owner , low mi leage, good t ir es, clean

interi or , gr een fmi sh, rad io, 2,000 c. c. engine, 4 speed.

1971 CHEV. 8' FLEETSIDE

Nov. 9th, six miles east of

and

11 ,6,3tp

great ir on pill now with
Vitamin C. Nelson Drug .

'

PUREBRED

]] ,6·21p

SALE:

Wes t

Virginia Polled He re for~ 2nd
annual fall sale on November

Baker ; at Charles Ba ker

Fri day evening at the De lmar
Pursley Farm in Ripley , 1
mile from Pl . Selli ng 9 bulls
and 39 heifers .

10. J972 start ing at 6:30 EST

clothing and m iscella neous
items: Elaine Sayre an d June

YARD

Sa le,

from

11 ,6-4tc

11 I3tc

------

Thursday,

IF THE person tha t is stea ling
food out of my deep freeze is

Novem ber 9, end of street
behind Syra cuse Grade
School at John VanMeter
residence ;
ni ce
cheap
clothing, hou se hold item s,
bnby
needs
and
mis.
cellaneous items ; 10 a .m.

till 5 p.m.

hungry, if they will knoc k on
my door I will give it to them .
They won' t have to steal it.
Mrs. James Mash

Jl ,6,31c

PIANO and organ lessons by

n .noc

.

.'
'

"HEll"

HEATING &amp;
•
COOLING

Window
Air Conditioners
· Hot Wale!\ Heaters
Plumbing
Electric~ I Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992:2448

graduale
of
Cin ci nna t i
Conservat ory of Music ; phone

992.3825.

Kuhl's Bargain Center

'5.55

TUPPERS PlAINS

On Most American Cars

. -GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

$MONEY$

Open 8 Till
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

No ex pen ence neces sa ry .
Must have car and be willing
to lear n business.

· Nathan Biggs
Ra.diator Specialist

PERSONNEl

9n2174

446~677

For Rent

n ,s,5tc TRAILER space. Phone 9n
2324.
II ,Htc
CHOCO LATE brown bi llfold.
gold cla sp on front ; contain s
pic lures and other va luable
il em s; los t in lower Mid·
d!epo rt ; anyone find ing
return to Mrs. Lorena Dunn,

95 Pearl St .. Middleporl.

11 · 16fc

11

DUPL EX ; unfurnished 5
room s and bath, wall to wa ll
carp eti ng ; avai lable now ;

MODERN Wal nu t style stereo·

radio, AM -FM radio , 4
speaker sound syste m , .4
spee d automatic cha ng er.
Balan ce $68 .79 . Use our

Hart , Racin e, 0.

]1 .7-Jic

3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and

Wanted To Buy

BEEF hides, sa each, raw fur s;

Ginseng $52 lb., Gold seal $3

Ca r l Cheva lier, Mai n
Str eeL We~te rford , Oh io.
lJ. 7.121c

lb ;

apar t m en t s.

Phone 992-5434 .

4, J2,1fc

P~ONE

3 BEEGLES, I male and 2
females ; phone 992 -6871 .

11 ·7·3tc
APART MENTS near new
Meigs High School; call 773· 5 PIECE br eak fast set, formica
top, modern 60" long, ex ·
5268 after 5 p.m.
ce ll ent
condi t ion ;
will
10,29·12fp

Goegle in Ready -Mi x

Middleport, Ohio .

Co.,

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, land-

6-30.tfc

scaping . W~ have 2 sin i
dours, 2 size loaders. Work

-------

done by hour or contract.
Free EStimates. We also
Owner &amp; Operator.
· haullill dirt, top soil. Dump
5,12.ttc ·trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger JeHers,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
Complete Service
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
Phone 949,3821
5232.
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
s:J ,tfc
SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
-----SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
DOZER and back hoe work,
CLEANED. , REPAIRED .
pond s and septic tanks, dit,
MILLER SANITATION,
ching service; top soil, fill
STEWART. OHIO. PHONE
dirt. limestone ; B&amp;K Ex,
66no3s.
cavating . Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr .
9, J,tfc

- - - -- -

late st
is
" On e
Day "
fr agrar t:e. Ot hers includ e
" K" and The Lemon Gr ove.
Also new c hildren's producls .

Phone Helen Jane, 992 5113.

Tuppers Plains
Society News

We 'd like to ser ve you.

J0,24·1fc

in

Mason, $27 .50 a

Phone 675,1684.

week .

• 11 ,5,3tp

price

or

terms

Phone 992 ·5641.

available.

Real Estate For Sale
CLELAND·
REALTY

Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

608 E. Main '
• Pomeroy :· ·
- ....
P/2 STORY BRICK
SYRACUSE- 4 B.R. New
bath, utility, kitchen has
dini ng bar, NEW F.A.G. ·
furna ce, air cond. Roofed
patio, porch, 2 level· lots.
near sc hool. ASking $17,900.
,TRAILER SETUP
RURAL - 10 ACRES -

3,29·1fc

l'1 -7-6tc

.

TRAILER lot, Bob's Mobile VACUUM CLEANER . Electro O' DELL WHEEL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads / Rt . 124.
Court, Syracuse ; phon e 992··
Hygi ene New Demonstrator
Complete front fnd service,
2951.
has all cleaning att ac hm ent s
tune up and brake service.
10,3J ,Itc
plu s the new Electro Suds for
Wheels balanced elec,
shampooing ca rpet . Only
Ironic
all y.
All
work
FURN.ISHED 2 bedroom
$27.50 cash price or term s
guaranteed
.
R!
aso
nab.l
e
apartment, adults only.
available. Phone 992,5641.
rates
.
Phone
742-3232
or
992·
phone
9n3874.
Middleport;
1J.7·61c
3213.
10,22-tfc
-----n7,1fc

-·

By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Massar
of Circleville, Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Conkle of Lexington,
Ky . and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
ALL my shop equi pment ; wheel
water, 'septic, patio, dug
a l ignment and bala nci ng ; AUTOMOBILE insu ran ce been
Edwards of Chillicothe were For Sale
basement with 3300 tile
elect ri c
and
at...:.&gt;ty lene
cance ll ed?
Lost
your
Sunday di nner guests of Mr. ONE YOUNG beet cow. weight
blocks. cabin, Natural gas
welding ; brake drum lathe
opera tor 's license ? Call 992· available, $3.700.
and Mrs. Harold Massa r.
and
shoe
grinder
;
man
y
other
850 to 900 lbs .• price $225.
2966.
EXCELLENT BUY
items ; so ld only in a lump
Phone 742·4459.
Mrs. Deloris Frank of Long
6, J5,ttc
11 ,5,3tc
sum ; Paul Grueser 992· 2053 .
RUTLAND
- 1 story frame,
Boltom, Mrs. Eloise Conley of
11 ·7 ·31p
3 B. R., large bath, kitchen 8.
Eastern, Mrs. Helen Sprague, REG ISTERED Angus calves ; 2
·--Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
ut ility , dining R.• paneling,
bulls
of
breedi
ng
age
;
Er
isco
Mrs. Eulah Landon, local, all
66 STARC RAFT tent trailer;
level lot. storage bldg .,
William Thomas lor the
and Wye blood lines ; Bill
stove,
refrigerator,
sink,
spent
a
day
recent
with
Mrs
.
porches.
$9,800.
w~ekend were her sister, Amy
Witte. Rock Springs. Ohio ; double dinette; sleeps 8, $900 Mobile Homes For Sale
JUST
RENOVATED
Leona Babcock .
Caldwell, ahd her niece and
phone 99n7B9 .
or
best
offer;
phone
36n530.
MIDDLEPORT
- I story, 2
10,25, 121c
Mr . and Mrs. Harry Riggle of
IJ ,s,61c PRICED tor quick sale, 1965 51
:amily, Mr. and Mrs. John
B.
R.
bath.
nice
kitchen,
K 10 New Moon Mobile Home,
Athens were Friday guests of
Kimes
and
daughter,
dining bar and rooll). 26 ft .
TRACK STEREO, freight HENS, phone 843,2435.
fur nished; call 9'12-2076.
of Commerce in Columbus Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey and a damaged,
Columbus.
in beautiful walnut
ll ·Hip L. R.. fireplace, carport, all
11 ,5,Jic
console . Will sell tor Sl01.50or - - - - - rooms carpeted. $12,500.
,, Mrs. T. J . Spurlock and son , spe nt the weekend with her brother, Wellie.
pay
51.50
per
week
.
Phone
992·
pare
nls,
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Lewis
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wayne
LARGE LEVEL LOT
2 END tabl es and 1 coffee table, CASH paid for all makes and
Richard, and Mr. and Mrs.
5331
."
maple;
like
new
;
phone
992
models of mobile homes . SY RACUSE - 1'12 story
Brickles were Thursday guests
Mendal Jordan spent Saturday Smi th .
9-7,1fc 3120.
Phone area code 614-423 -9531. frame, 3 B. R.• bath. New ·
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey of his sister, Mr . and Mrs. Jack
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
4-13,tfc F.A. G. furnace, basement,
-P-0-0D_L_E_p_u_p_p-ie-,-.-S-ilv_e_r~Toy, ~:::::::::::::::l:J,:5,_3,tp
attended
an
insurance Stanley of Athens.
Arthur Crabtree.
porches, lot fenced 2 sides.
Parkvi ew Kennels, Phone 992· r
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Riggs and
Mrs. Merlin Teets and her meeting in Columbus and
$5,000.
5443.
8, 15,tfc
Air Conditionen
SE E US to BUY OR SELL.
parents, Mr: and Mrs. Robert called to see his sister, Mrs. fami ly of Easwrn, Ray Justis
HENRY E. CLELAND
Jessie
JewelL
They
also
visi!Ald
Success
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
or
•Awnings
Stout recently relurnetl from a
REALTOR
REGISTERED
German
their
son-in-law
and
daugh!Alr,
David
Riggs
and
family
of
···Underpinning
trip to Macon, Ga,, where they
shortha
ir
Pointer
·Birddog
Phone
992-2259
visited another daughter, Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Donald Jones in Vienna, W. Va ,, were Sunday
puppies. Expensive but worth
If
no
answer
9!2-2568
Complete mQblle hQme
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
it. Ready any time. Vernon
James Willis and family. They Nelsonville enroute.
·s ervice - plus gigant ic
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stout Oscar Babcock.
Weber. 742·5625.
saw various points of interest
'display of mobile homes
1
J.5.6fc
Several from here called at
and s lopped enroute home in attended the funeral services
;always available at ...
lor
his
brother,
J
.
D.
Stout,
of
lhe
While Funeral Home at EARLY Am eri can stereo·radio
Tennessee where they were
MILLER
combination , AM-FM radio, 4
guests of other family mem- Bidwell . Services were held at Coolville and attended the
.. --·
speake
r
sound
sys
tem
~
4
Harrisonburg
Baptist
Church
funeral
of
Wilbur Nickles who
bers, Mr. and Mrs. Es,te l Kirby
MO.BILE HOMES . ·
speed automa ti c changer.
and· family of -Elizabethton, with burial in Vinton Memorial did· at an ' Athens · hospital.
Ba la nce $77 .54. Use our
1220 Washington Blvd.
budge! lerms. Call 992,7085.
Tenn.; Mrs. Na ncy Dowell and Cemetery. Other members of Buri al was at Fredrick , Md.
13-7521
BELPRE, 0.
Pomeroy,
0
.
11-5-6tc 992-29,75
',
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman
Mrs. Fanny Pa rker, Mr . and the Robert Stout fam ily at,
l
'
Mrs. Oscar Howard and Mr. le nding were Mr. and Mrs. Ted a'nd their daughter, ·Mrs .
APPLES . Fit zpatr ick Or - 8 x 32, COMPLETELY fur ,
AUCTION
110 Mechanic St,
chords, State Route 689, nis hed, 2 bedrooms, inside
and Mrs. Charles Potter, Stout, Mike and Karen , sinnley Gary were Sunday SATURDAY, Nov. 11, beginning
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45169
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785,
bath, kitchen, living room and
at 10:00 A.M. Jlf2 miles NE of
.\
Mountain City, Tenn., and Mr. Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. fu!y dinner guests of their son, Mr.
a,30,ffc
TV,
$800
call
or
contact
Larry
Chester,
Ohio
on
State
Route
and
family
of
Charleston,
Stout
and Mrs. Dana Hoffman Jr. of
and Mrs. pave Raynard and
Hubbard, Syra cuse, Oh io 992·
NEW LISTING
7, have sold my farm and will - - -- - -- - - - Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Stout
and
Rutland.
3364.
'
family, Johnson City, Tenn.
BUNGALOW - 2 bedrooms,
sell the following :
NOW WRE (K ING lhe former
Mrs. Lucy Kim returned
11 '3-61c
nice bath. large li ving and
Mrs . Zelia Weyand and family and Mrs. Ida Teets,
Epple's Grocery Store
home
after
a
couple
of
weeks
1964
V8
Ford
pick
,up.
7
HP
local.
.kitchen,
Store next door.
daugh!Alr, Mrs. Connie G&lt;Xld,
building in Pomeroy . All 1970 MOBILE Home with
with her .d aughter, Mrs.
Homko riding mower, 20 ln.
Only
$4500.00.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eddie
Jordan
kinds of building materials
wa sher, air -conditioner and
Jeremy and Jenny, Columbus,
Rotary mower, 4 HP Homko
NEW LISTING
lor
sale
an
the
job.
Call
992·
and
Clay
William
,
Fairburg,
other
extras Included; ex Thelma
Chase
·and
sons
of
,
garden
tiller,
~
x
8
utility
spen t a weekend here with
SALISBURY
TOWNSHIP 5946
or
882,3219.
cellent condition ; phone 992,
Mrs.
Weyand 's . mother, Neb., visited their pare nts, Marion. She also visited her . tr ai ler , co rn sheller with
10·26, 12tc
Meigs
school
distri ct, 2 or 4
7387
or
985,3565.
elec tri c motor , electric
sis ter, Mr. and;, Mrs. Frances
lJ
,Htp
bedrooms,
bath,
automatic
Ginevra Foster, and at!Alnded Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mr. and
grinder 1 Ram 7 in. power saw,
Mrs.
L.
D.
Cottrill
and
other
Toombs
of
Marion
and
a
niece,
electric
drill
,
chain
holst.
3,pt,
Full
basement,
furnace
heat.
the Harvest Festival at
hitch potato plow, 24ft. ext . .
1. acre of land. Asking
Columbia Chapel Church on relatives in the area . They also Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Earhart
Real
Estate
For
Sale
ul
Bucyrus.
ladder,
electric
fencer
,
6,amp
$12.000.
at tended the festival at
Saturday evening.
H ROOM house and 'bath, nice
battery charger. 1 lot 4 ln.
BOTTOM LAND
Mrs . · Maxine Chapman
plastic pipe, feed bin 1 lot of
large lot, natural gas. built-In 6 ACRES - I mile from
ON PANTS&amp; JEANS
Several friends from this Columbia Chapel Church on
cabinets In kitchen. Close to
good hand tools, tool boxes,
area also at!Alnded the festival Sturday evening and saw many returned home after spending
radio ·station In Bradbury. roule 7 jusl off 124. Now
several
weeks
with
her
wheel
barrow
.
platform
being offered for $3,000.00.
at Columbia Chapel Church friends there.
Phone 992-2602.
·
scales.
Buy!
Muri Gala way was a guest on daughter, Mrs. Duane Beaver
NEW L(STING
HOUSEHOLD .
10·29·12fc
were a g&lt;Xld crowd gathered on
'--"lit' Pairs
8 ROOM ANTIQUE BRICK
Saturday evening to support Sunday afternoon at the home and family at New Matamoris. TAPPAN gas range (like new).
·1-PAIR FREE , C:uivi~ORTABLE t,wo story - 4 large ~edrooms . bath,
I
Mo·. and Mrs. Carl Watson
Kelvinator and Westinghouse
of
her
son-in-law
and
daughter,
the activities.
home, full basement, bath furnace . Living room 16x36,
and friends,· Mr. and Mrs .
refrigerators. Maytag auto.
the area .
Tht best buy
Murl Galaway atwnded 'the Mr. and Mrs-. Leon Woodrum in
washer, Signature Dryer , · Have sla&lt;ks &amp; .. ns for the
and '12, attached garage. and with gas llreploce. Large
, ,
Ronald Bradley of Dayton and
cabinet sink, utility cabinet. 3
extra lot. In a good location . · basem~nt, l 'car garage,
whole family. Save One.
wedding of her · great- McArthur .
Basi c furniture available . barn for horses and about 2
Mr
.
ahd
Mrs.
Wai!Alr
Watson
of
bedroom
suiles,
odd
beds
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joe
McWhorter,
]'hi rd.
granddaughter, Karen Petty, ·
Phone 99~-7384 or 992·7133 tor
Parkersbur" were weekend
bedding , 2·piece living room
·acres of land. All for
'W'._
POMEROY
and Randy Radcliff, both of and family were recent guests
b
suite- ~ Chair and ottoman , end
appointment.
$21,500.00.
I
6il
Jack
W
.
Carsey,
M9r,,
of
Mr
.
an
d
Mrs.
Jimmi
e
ll
,Htc
guests
of
MrS.
Elfje
Watson
.
and
coffee
.tables.
Ieiding
McArthur, which was held at
Phone
m
-2181
NEW
LISTING
Mr . .and · Mrs . , Clarence
chairs, table with four chairs.
the P'etty home in McArthur on Haning and daughters.
Nichols were Sunday guests .of
lawn furniture. plano with
Mrs.
Leona
Folden,
widow
of
SPECIAL: Mov.e In before 98 Ac'R ES - Of vacant land
Friday evening. "
bench, 23 · lri. Zenith TV,
winter. _. bedroom ranch · on township road W, most of
pprtable TV, por.fable stereo. COAL, Limestone. Excelsior
lilr. and Mrs . Lewis Smith the late Howard Folden, who their daugh!Alr, Mr. and Mrs.
home on 'I• acre tot. Bath and ltfenced, Producing gas well
Wilford Tippie of Athens. .
J.speed 20 ln . fan , motorized Salt Works, E. Main St .•
spen
t
most
of
her
life
In
the
a
half, buill-In kitchen, wall to · with ·free gas for one
and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
. Mrs. Larry· Cur tis
gill! 2 girl 's bicycle~ and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Dyesvilie
area,
passed
away
in
and
Mr.
wall
carpet and garage. Price 'residence. ·All m lnerals.
·
Whittington have returned
othe~ household Items. ' ·
.
4-12-lfc
$20.750.00;
also a 5 bedroom Trailer space wlfh electric
··
.
· from a week's vacation that Gallipolis. Survivors include a and family of Long Bottom and GUNS ·AND COLLECTIBLES
colonial
house
on a 'I• acre lot. and dug · well . Asking
Mr ..and Mrs. John Newell and MODEL 17 Rfmlngton 20 gauge JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
Bath
and
a
half, buill-In $16,500.00.
took them to Orange Park, dau ghter, Myrtle Folden family
of Columbus were . pump gun, 22· Winchester Sewing Machine. Will sell for
Queen
of
Gallipolis
and
a
son,
kitchen,
dining
room , family WE ARE GLAD TO BE
Fla., where they visited with
nday dinner guests of Mr.
single shot rifle, 2 glass-door small b;alance of $36.21 or
room
and
the
works,
priced
·Loyal
Folden
in
Florida
;
a
Su
r
cupboards. qyllling frames. payments may be arranged.
1\!r. and Mrs. John Rawlings
$30,000.00.
Call
Sherman
E. SALES PEOPLE IN THE
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Welker
and
krauJ
cutter.
sfee),yards.
Phone
992-5331.
brother
,
Glen
R.
Cline,
local
and their son-in-law anp
Summerfield, 985·3598 or 985, COUNTY. WANT TO SEE
daughter,
Ruthie,
and
Mrs.
insulators,
large
amountof
·
9-7-tlc
THE PLACE GROW THEN.
4177.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs . and several grandchildren. A
t
misc.
Items
not
listed.
Lunch
1H·30fc LIST WITH US.
served . . Not responsible 10 ~ SCHNAUZER puppies, AKC.
Charles McCalL They visited son, Carol Folden,, preceded Wa lker's brothe~. Mr. R ober
HELEN L TEAF01lD.,
accidents. L. D.,Bird, owner . Salt &amp; Pepper. ears chooped.
many points of inte,rest her in death. Funeral servic¢s Howard or Lucasville a·nd
HOUSE
In
Long
·Botiom;
phone,
ASSOCIATE
L 0. " Mac" McCoy. auc, wormed and shots: healthy
were held at the Dyesville daughter, Mr. and Mrs, Deport
enroute.
·
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
985·3529.
Bowan of Columlius visired the
lloneer. 985-3944.
S8S ; p~o~e Coolville 667-621~.
6·1 t-Ile'
Mill Nancy Smith, .who is a church with burial in ~hoot
•
n.5,Jic
11-Hztr
m-ms
Walkers on saturday.
_ _ _ __;;_ __
s)Udent at Nationwide CillleAe Lot cemtery.
Pomeroy , 0 .

Carpenter

News, Event

GET
AmiiTIOII

SHOTGUNS
RIFLES
AND
AMMUNITION

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES AND SERVICE

I"

\

i

.

Virgll B.

~-

.

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

j

{
~

~

~ L~~iJd0

11•1

1'•\'

. .-.r

CAMPUS CLATTER

I ~ON'T CARE

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUN·
TY ,
OHIO
IN
R~ ·
PROPOSED
SYR ACUSE · RACINE
REGIONAL
SEWER
DISTRICT.
No . 15,155
LEGAL NOTICE

I"

-

.

.,AND WAL.TE~

AND t&gt;AVI&lt;) AND
ERIC HAVE SAlD
IT'S CLEAR·CUT J

. ~i..CANDIDAT5§ CE"ESRATING ITl ANt&gt;
MV CANDIMTE HAS

PROSLEM
1\-IE MJf::IOR
WAN'IS

I 'M NOT PAYo NG
YOU ~NTIL EVERY
LAST VOTe IS

CONCEDED ITr

1\-IE~

1\-IATS

·------··

)

EVE.RYONE'S COMPUTER
~S PROJECTED IT I

~10

IN\IESOGA~)

COUNTED 1

MAYOR
HAWKINS

SUMMONS

ff-WHEN AH FIRES- P.UN !!AH FIRESAGfN•SADtE FWNS"
TH' PORf SOUL SHE KETCHES GOTTA tAARR:'i
HER, AN NO Ale-IN' FO' M£RCV !!

WHEON

SADIE CAUGHT A HUSBMJD. 114E
5Pit-JSTERS OF DOGPATCH
Llt\.IO.LJTHE IDE A .

THE

LOCAL
~f\EI.OPS

-AND THE'SADIE HAWKINS DA'Y
RACE.BECAMEAN ANNUAL(s"uDoER.')
~SJT WHICH SPREAD AlL OVER ,
THE WORLD!!
c:aa_ C"{"'\"--

PLATT~ ITS DEAD.
THE'( YLAN TORE·
RUN SOME: GABLE
MOVIES, THE:
ECONOMY

..

... THEY CAN7. ..
I NEEOECJ
THAT .SHOI'i.'..
IJAOLY.'

•
~

1$N 'T... .

'· .

,,'·

... HE SseMS OUITii
ANKIOUS 10 1l\LK 10
US .t.IIOUT SOME1HIN6!

{.,,,,

" I

' ,,""
,.I'

,;
'·
'·
,,'·

.

11 -7

'

..

..

.l

...,
,,

'

County, Ohio. and the Petition

•

N

·EVELYN S. LUCKE,
CLERK OF THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
OF MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
(lOJ 24, 31 ( ll l 7. 14, 21. Sic

\ l"llor NlA, 10&lt; , 1,1.1. .... U.l

'-'· Off.

"

Yest.!nlly'o Cryploquot.!: POLITICS IS AND ALWAYS HAS
BEEN AN IMITATION OF WAR AIMED AT EXORCISING .,
.,
WAR.,MAX ASCOLI

ACROSS

DICK TRACY

Range 14, Rulland Township.

Meigs County, Ohio, and being
more particularly described as
,

· Commencin'g at the Southeast
corner of Section J; thence

olong lh.e south line of sold

~~::;7-:::::=:::---,-

Sect ion , NOflh BA degrees 16'
10" West ,.,. rods to a Railroad
spike ln the centerline of Hysell
Run Road , and the true point of
beginnipg for the following
described .tract ; .thence North ·
84 degrees 16' 10" West (passing
an Iron pin at 2l.26 teet) tor a

-=::::=:::::~120. -(agitated)
up

/r-~-.....--~~---~ 21.
Detest
CENTR.i FICAL FORCE!
22, Stet's
CI&gt;.N TilE SPACE COUPE SNAG

antithesis

;:::;::::= L...:T~iii:!E~'C;!O~P::T~E:t&lt;;;'s~=;;_;~ 23, _"
E\~an

10

calsuffix
DOWN

1, Tropical

ungulate
Z. Expiate
3. Famed
battle·
ground of
the
Korean
War (3
wds.)
4. '4Uncle"

In Dundee
5. Place
side .
by side
6. Swell
. ?. - bono
publico
10. Never!
(sl.) (4

wds.)

10 degree• 36' West 85.98 feotlo

an Iron pin ; thence south 68
degrees 33' .tO" East (paning
an iron pin at 279. 3,. teet) for a
total distance of 303.11 feet to a
railroad spike ln1 the centerline
of Hysell Run Road ; thence
along said centerline South 39
degrees 12' JO" West 291.46 feet
to the point of beQinnlng, cOn , tainlng 13. 10 acres.
'
Sald petition will be tor
. hearing on the 25th dey ·of
November, 1972, at the Com·mon
Plees Courtroom at Pomeroy,·

.

1,:,

..•
JJ&amp;dM;r=::.:::~!! -t.c ::

U , Numeri·.

25, Document
26. Kola
peninsula
native
21. California
Indian
28. I (Ger.)
29. Glittering
ornament
32, Greek
letter
33. Small
horse
34. Musical
. note
35. "The
Miracle

an Iron pin ; thence North 4
degrees 12 ' JQ" East 416 .81' feet
to an Iron pin ; thence South 84
degrees 16' 10" East 1,227 .71
feet to an iron pin ; thence South

••

(C ]972 Kinr Future• Syndicate, Ine .)

1. Masking,
e.g.
5,Snake
8. Ultimate
particle
9, Word per·
fecUonis\
13. Skin
aperture
11. Right now
15. Sign
16. Small
wheel
17. Vietnamese boll·
day
18. Hermit

..•

,u

,.

by THOMAS JOSE'H

. Not ice is hereby given that
Audrey Patterson , Emerson
HyselL Harold Dewhurst ,
Ca rrie Moore and Beatrice
May , as Trustees of the Hysell
Run Free Methodist Church, R.
0 ., Pomeroy / Ohio, have flied
their petition in the Common '
Pleas Court alleging that the
following described real estate
is no longer needed for church
purposes, and request authority
to sell said real estate, which
real estate Is described as
follows ; to -wit :
Situate in Section 3, Town 6,

Ohio .

~
11-7

. ~,.CD~r

NOTICE

f~el

I

II

.'·

of said matter is now on file ..,d
may be ex amined at the office
of the Clerk of said Court at the
Court House in Pomeroy, Ohio .

total distance of 1,336.50

&gt;&lt;

CONTR161,nV~.

in the Ot'.io Rivet Whlcn potnt s
also the Northwest corner of the
Village of Syracuse; thence In
an Easterly direction following
the North line of the corporation
lim its of the Villag~of Syracuse
to the Northeast corner thereof
which corner is situate In 100
Acre Lot 287, Sutton Township,
Meigs County, Ohio ; thence
South along the East line of the
corporal ion tim its of the VIllage
of Syracuse to a point that Is 200
feet North of the center line of
State Route No . 124 as State
Route 124 ex ists on August 1st.,
1972; thence in an Easterly
direction along a line that Is 200
fe et North of the center line of
said State Route No . 12.4 to the
pi!Jint In the North line of the
CQrporation limits of the Village
of Racine , Meigs County, Ohio;
thence East along the North
corp or at ion line ofthe Village of
Recine to the Northeast corner
thereof ; thence South along the
East line of the corporation
limits of the Village of Racine to
the center line of said State
Route No . 124 ; thence East
along the center nne of said
State Route No. 124 to the East
line of Section 16 In SuNon
Township ; thence south along
the East line of nid Section 16
to the Southeast corner thereof ;
thence East to the Northeast
corner of 100 Acre Lot No. 279 ;
thence South along the East line
of 100 Acre Lots No . 279, 278 and
277 to the Southeast corner of
said 100 Acre Lot No. 277;
then ce West along the South line
of 100 Acre Lot No. 277 to the
Southwest corner thereof;
thence in a Northwesterly
direction following the boun·
darv line of the State of Ohio to
the piece of beg'lnnlng.
Any person or anv PO.Iitlcel
subdivision resl~lng . or lying
within the nreli a,fected by the
organil itioii orthe ·olstrl~t, o-ftor before the date set for the
ca use to be heard may tile en
objection to the granting of the
request made in the prayer of
the
Petition
requesting
establishment of the Syracuse.
Racine . Reg_ional
Sewer
District .
Saie
Petition
for
the
establishment of said District 11
Case No . 15, 155 of the Court of
Common Pleas of MtiQS

·

,.

TO RE·ELECT 'll1E
MAVOr&lt; WAN'TS US
10 INVE6TlGA1E

. boundary of the Stale of Ohio

follows :

;

ll&lt;E COMMI'f'TfOE

Publ ic notice is hereby given '
pursuant to Ohio Revised Code,
Sec t ion
6119 .0.4,
that
1
prelim inary hearing will be
held by the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio, on
the . 22nd . day of New ember·,
1972, at 11 :00 A .M . in the Me iOI
County Court House , Pomeroy,
Qhlo, on the Petition for
establishment of SyracuuRacine Regional Sewer Disfrlct
f iled in said court .
The description of the
territory to be· Included In the
authority is as follows :
' Situate in Sutton Town$hlp,
Me igs ·c-ounty, Ohio, .and
commenc ing at a point where
the North line of the Vl.ll~ge of
Syracuse
Intersects
the

EARlll MOVING

es tim ates. Phone 992-3284:

10,25, 12tc . ---- ------·
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
sacrif ice ; phone 992 -2961 after
organs, di shes, clOcks, brass
HAY MAN'S Auction - a good
5 p.m .
beds, or complete households. APARTMENT, 3 ROOMS AND
place to go each Friday
J1 .7,31c
Wr
ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
BATH, MUST BE SEEN TO
evening, 7 p.m . at Laurel
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
BE APPRECIATED, PHONE KAWASAKI 250, 1450; phone
Clilf on old Rl . 7, I mile west
6,28,ttc
ol Rock Springs Fairground .
992-2053.
99?·5064 after 5 p.m.
--~----RUSSELL'S
Furnitur e
·
10·JO,Ifc
1n -Jic
11 ,n tc
Uphol
stery
;
free
pick up and
1963 FOR D T:Bird Convertible
delivery;
phone
992·5771.
tor parts; phone 995,3333.
5 ROOMS and bath , un , TWIN nee dl e sew ing machine
MARRIED couple want to rent
10-27-30tc
II ,3,6fc
fu rn ished 1 $65 a month; phone
farm or country house. Call
1977 model in wal nut sta nd .
99J.l524 after 2 p.m.
collect 614-299·6908.
All features buill -in to mak e SEWING MACHINES. Repair
]1 ,5,5fc
11·Hic
fancy design s and do str etc h
service, all makes. 992-2284.
-----sew ing . A l so buttonh oles,
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
NEW 2-bedroam mobile home
blind hems , etc . $43.35 cash
KOSCDT KOSMET ICS . Our
-----''----

992!2550

CONCRETE

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
budg et terms. Call 9n7085. REASON&gt;'.BL,E rates. Ph . 446c
l] ,Htc
~7B2 , Gallipolis. John Russell,

phone 9'1 ?·?780 or 9n3432.
COAL furna ce com plete, stoker
11 .7. ttc
fed with a ll con trol s; Rona ld
unf urn ishe d

For Free Estimate

delivere d right .fo your
pro ject. Fa st and easy . Free

For Sale

WHITE ·FACE Hereford calf in

•ROOFING
eHEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

'·

~

LEGAL NOTICE

.w ith Your M.eat Problems.

Floor Display.

~

1

4-2S.Hc

!!2·337 4
Let bick ./nd Dale Help Yr;»u

Slaty In and See Our

5

!

·BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
. Septic tanks lnsfalled. Georlllt
1Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2-ol.

DICK
. VAUGHN

992 ,3884

FURNITURE

READY ·M.IX

-----~

St i ver sv ille area ; Phone 843 ·
2145, L. Glusencamp if found.

· LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 1 ; Closod Mondays

DALE
LITTLE

and

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

MANAGER

11 ·5·2tc

20" ,

OFFICE SUPPLIES ·

Smallest Heater Core.

CALL

r ing, yel low gold ; return to
Shoe Box for r eward ; sen ·
limental value.

Huffy'

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

From the largest

\

3-2-Hc

.._ POMEROY,O .
· "Cuttom Mea1 Cutting"
Quick and'Courteo~s Service

HOME &amp; AUTO
Bulldozer Radiator to

COSTU ME iewe lr.y, round ear ·

BIKES -

Murray 10 speeds- discount
pr;ices.
. .

,

and railing . A. Jacob, sat•
representative. For frM
estimates, phone Charlll
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son. Inc.

, PLEASANT RIDGE ROAO

POMEROY

'3.50 PER HOUR

Lost

·THE SHOP

Clean used furniture
Guaranteed appliances

:;

~~;~~~-w~7~~l~~~·r~

ToGo
Take Me To

Rt. 7 "at caution light"

r-,.-----_;_____,...., :·..

SEE US FOR: Awnings, atorrn

If I HAVE

Wheel Alignment

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

FULL OR
PART TIME

For Rent

GARAGE S• le, Thursday and
Friday; bikes, good toys,

Racine ott Rl. 124.

11 ,7.Jtc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

NEW Improved "Zippies," th e

Good

3 m iles

lea ves in Pom eroy ; Sl per
hour ; phone 992-5792.

chrome fron t bu mper, r ear s tep bumper, radi o, beau tiful
bla ck accented w ith whil e. This is an extremely low
m ileage truck . Real hP.rtutv .

- - -- - -

ware,

used Selmer cornet and case,
318 -'63, Dodge automatic

residence ,

N E: E 0 so meone to rilk e and bag

DRIVE A LITTLE
- SAVE A LOT!

EXPERT

I

,, ,7.11c

2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
phone Albert Hill 949,2261.
' \•later pills," Nelson Dr ug .
11·6·6tc
1J.6,2fp

Chester on Rt. 24B, Ronald

transm ission, $30.

Tuesday s and Fr idays for
local store; wri te to P.O. Box
7?9 ·M , C·O The Daily Sentinel.
Pom eroy, Ohi o 45769 .

RE DUCE safe and fas t with
GoBese Tablets and E,Vap

GARAGE SALE, Th ursday,

miscellaneous item s.

12B95

part l1me,

350 v .a eng ine, auto. trans , P .S., P . B., Cheyenne equip .,

Notice

antiques

: AU TCHEI&lt;

--'.-

THEN 'IE CAN GO AHEAD
AN' CRAWL IN TH'
BEDSTID

B~~~s~v~

• e·s's .Serv.I·c-es'
Busm

Help Wanted

Li.----"----~------,---"' ,•

Notice

clothing,

12849.'

1971 PINTO FORD

.1

'-----·~-

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

8 : 30

depression

l V repairman ; Wr ite C·O P. ·o.
-· Box 729~ L. The Dii ily Sentinel,
Pomeroy .
If ·5·Jic

Spor twag on. Beaut iful coral finlsh wi1h vinyl interior,
t~ c tor y ..=t i r cond itioned, luggage rack, r adio, 350 V -B
engine, automati c trans,, power steering &amp; br akes , like
neww-w tires. II you wan I a show piece &amp; plenty of luxury
try this ou ts tan ding~ bu y.

OFFICE HOURS

~borne i

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

·-.----

Un~enmble th ... Cour Jumbl"
ont letter to e1&lt;h ~quare, to
form four ordfnar7 wordo.

Yest.!rday'o Alllwer
11, English
25. Turf
esaayist
27. Rose
12, Wobble
family
16. Preco,
shrub
clous
29. Stringent
19, Li&amp;bt
30, French
source
river
22. Mend
31. "Lady of
23, Movie
the Lake"·
horae
36. N!Jotic
2t. Jacob's
trobesman
favorite
37, Dobbin's
wife
doc

I

IRI'I"'
V: ~

L..:1.:.:,;;.:'~
' '-

L1

. . .

~,::11:;/r=M~.S:.;:'(..:.:;'l,=-t--,1:"""~...,

r

I I
·

·

IWI'O/,r

p
"j
1-., A

I·

I I I

WHAT PWPL~ WHO

!!&gt;00 AT PERFOIWER5

..·'
..,
Now ..,...... the circled !etten
80'1\li'!'IM~

ARE.

I

Lr__:_:::Priii::.:'*'::.:•==IIII:.::::MSWIII=-==-....J' 4t x x J-m" 'i~
(AMwen to•onow)

-l--+-1

\'

"'

V '\J
to form the ourpriH IUUIWer, u ....
L=~~l~)~~·::;::::;·=~·_:I~UIIOitecl b7 the'.....t cutoon. "
I

,.,.-+--+--l

I I ·1 I·
I I

+-..-..........,

~
_ _:::::~-..L.......J-.J
'"

.

,.-i--+-4-+--+--l

l'ORFT

JumbO..o MONIY
Ynlerday'•

IOUND fOMINT LADING

..
,,

rh~ ~t~rden!"- "I LOOM"

Ant•efl "Come ouJ in

.--------:---1
15 HE ALL RI5HT? WAS'
' IT SOMETHIN5 I 5AIO?

Worker"

.
0

f

heroine
31. Bridal
symbol
38. Entice,
men!
39. "Jane-"
40. " - Clear
, l)ay" (2
wds.)

Audrey Patterson
Emerson Hysell
. Harold Oawhur1t
Carrie Moore
Beatrice M1y
Trustee• of HyHII
Run Free Methodllt

· ·
Church .
(10) 24, 31, (11) 7. 1•, .,

'I

'

DAILY CRYPToQUOTE - Here's how to work It: rr--,__'""'"'..._~ ..--~------. il"'
AXYDLBAAXIl
HE'5 A GREAT
II LONGFELLOW
PEPIATRICIAN. SUT CIIILDREN
MAKE HIM NERVOV5 !
-:,
One letter aimply stands for another. In thlo 01mple A 1.!

,,

uud for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apoatropbea, the lentlth and formation of the words are Ill
hints. Each day the code letters are dlft'erent.

'i

WMP0/1390

0

CRYPTOQUOTBS

I··· · ·

HNN
BHXQ'M
S.

LX

VEUQ

HZO

V.W YA

H

ZE

INHR

LHQAII

VAHNSKR · VWOEV .-

OAULESS

.
I

"

•

•

,}-

�'

•

f

•

•

1.

'

10....:. ~ Ollily Sentinel, Miildleport~P&lt;meroy, 0., Nov. 7, 1972 ·

Electoral Record, Maybe

.·.·.·.·.-.·.·...·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.· ·.·.·.···· .·.·.· ·•·.·.·• · Bone&amp; folUid, but. · ·...

RAY CROMUY
.

Landslide .vote

Peace Draft Weak
In Crucial Detail

All Signs Say Nixon Sweep.
fly BRUCE BIOSSAT
- tNEA I from analysts. observers and
- President Nixon appears politicians at the other end
NEA 1972 Election Countdown
to be headed for a re -election · of the telephone line: "No
Nizon
Mc:Govern
Doubtful
victory which could give him signi ficant movement for
Electoral Vote1
an electoral vote total some· McGovern he re."
McGovern 's most promisNEW ENGLAND
where in the record range
ing
state.
Massachusetts
,
Maine
14)
4
achieved by Franklin D.
with
14
votes
is
handed
to
Ve
rmont
13)
3
Roosevelt in his second
New
Hampshire
14)
hi
m
in
this
survey
though
4
triumph in 1936.
Massachusetts
(
14)
14
some
observers
think
the
NEA's third and fina l elec·
Rhode
Island
(4)
President
may
even
break
toral vote survey from coast
Connecticut
(8)
' to coast indicates that he through and take this nor.
Total
37
0
Ukely will take at least 47 maliy heavy Democratic ·
states with 511 votes, with a state .
MID. ATLANTIC
Kept in the doubtful...,ate·
New York
(41)
teasonably good prospect of
41
New Jersey (I 7)
17
adding two others here listed gory are West Virginia t6
Pennsylvania 12·7)
27
as doubtful (and having a votes ! and Hawaii (4), de·
Delaware
(3}
3
total of 10 more votes ). Vic· spite strong advices fro m
some sources that either or
10
Maryland
11 Ol
tory requires 270.
West Virginia 16)
6
The Democratic nominee. both could go to Nixon . Hawaii
never
has
gone
Republi·
Dis!.
of
CoL
(3)
3
Sen. George McGovern, is
Total
107
98
3
6
given just one state , by . a can in its brief time as a state.
JH
the
previous
check
,
West
shaky ma rgin, and the DisSOUTH
trict of Columbia - · for a Virginia was awarded to Me·
Virginia
(12)
12
total of just 17 electoral Govern , but his position
N.
Carolina
113)
13
there has since declined .
votes.
S. Carol ina
(8)
8
While both national and
In 1936 when there were
Georgia
(12)
12
only 48 states and presiden· respected state public opin·
Florida
(17)
17
tial voting was barred in the ion polls indicate a narrow·
Alabama
19)
9
District of Columbia, Roose· ing of the once enormous
Mississippi
(7)
7
velt defeated Republican Nixon lead, the President's
louisiana
(I0)
10
10
Alfred M. Landon 523 to 8, suggested margins still are
Tennessee
II 0)
Arkansas.
(6)
6
winning all but Maine and generally very substantial
and in a few cases (Califor·
Texas
(26)
26
Vermont.
Total
130
130
0
0
Lyndon Johnson's 486 in nia, for in s tan ce! ha ve
1964 is the second highest actually increased.
MIDDLE WEST
ll is worth noting furthertotal on reco rd, and Gen.
Kentucky
(9)
9
Dwight D. Eise nhower's 457 more that Mr . Nixon's lead
Ohio
(25)
25
in 1956 is the top Republican is probably rock·solid in
Indiana
(13)
13
enough places to assure him
figure .
Illinois
(26)
26
As was reported in NEA's a fo undation of at least 235
Michigan
(21)
21
second survey earlier in Oc- electoral votes 1only 35 short
Wisconsin
111)
11
tober, so it is with this final of election), before one even
Minnesota
II 0)
10
review : No evidence of really examines the outlook in the
Iowa
(8)
8
major vote shifts toward Me· more hotly contested big
Missouri
112)
12
Govern could . be detected northern states .
0
0
TOTAL
135
135
Consequently, a consider·
. anywhere. Agai'n and again
PLAINS
tlhe word came through able further narrowing 61 his
North
Dakota 13)
3
indicated popular vote perSouth
Dakota
(4)
4
centage margins probably
Nebraska
15)
5
would not seriously endanger
Kansas
17)
7
his re-election prospects .
Oklahoma
18)
8
Polls of recent vintage
TOTAL
27
27
0
0
show Mr . Nixon leading by
good to very sizable margins
MOUNTAIN
in all of the eight most pop·
14)
Montana
4
13)
ulous northern states except
Wyoming
3
(7)
7
Colorado
Massachusetts . Two or three
(4)
4
New IY\exico
of.these are thought by some
16) Arizono
6
appraisers to be still moder·
14)
4
Utah
ately fluid. They are CaliI
(3)
Nevodo
3
fornia ( 45 votes ). New York
(4)
4
Idaho
(41), Michigan (21) . Yet on
35
0
0
TOTAL
35
balance, the judgments in
these places is that they will
PACIFIC
all land in the Nixon elec·
(45)
California
45
toral c'olumn on Nov. 7.
(6)
Oregon
6
If the surveyer were to add
19)
Washington
9
their combined 107 votes to
(J)
3
Alaska
McGovern's present total,
4
(4)
Hawaii
throw in 10 votes from the
4
TOTAL
67
63
0
two doubtful states, yield a
bit and give him another 37
GRAND
10
17
TOTAL 538
from R\lode Island, C9n511
When every second counts,
necticut, Maryland , Wiscon·
Needed to Elect: . 270.
abe needs a timepiece she · sin and Sotith Dakota , the
can coum on. Like these
senator's total then would be
neatly designed nurses'
171, still 99 short of victory.
watches by Bulova.
Sen. Hubert Humphrey won man and numerous other must be ac knowledged that a
Shock. resistan t. 17
the first three of these in 1968. specialists made similar surprise McGovern victory
jewels precise. With
Wisconsin is thought to be a judgments.
could somehow happen. But
~ sweep second
pretty good McGovern state ,
there simply are no signs
Politics
is
a
more
volatile
hand, unbreakable
and South Dakota . is his and uncertain business today pointing to it.
mainspring,
horne base (though he trails than it was in 1948 and it
easy·reading
now ).
dial.
Again however, the im.
portant consequence of this
last survey is that the weight
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
of judgment is against Me·
Ohio Extended Outlook
Govern in nearly all these (Continued from Page 1)
states. Only the two doubt· Point Pleasant, who survives. Thursday lhrough Saturday.
fuls, West Virginia's 6 and
Alsoamonghissurvivorsare
Partly cloudy Thursday
Hawaii's 4, look even mea· his wife, Estella Smith Ball, and Friday with a chance of
.
gerly promising for him.
It should be pointed out whom he married December showers Saturday. Near
that NEA's checking in the 17, 1943; a d~ughter, Mrs. normal temperatures
heavily contested I a r g e · Tressa Kay TilliS, and a son, predicted. Daytime highs In
northern states (and many Philip E. Ball, both of Point the middle to upper 50s
others)
came after announce· Pleasant; a grandson, Nathan
Thursday, and the upper 50s
boltom:
Round·fltld clanlc
ments
m
Hano1
,
Pans
and
Ball
and
a
brother
Rodric
R
to lower 60s Friday and
with tumtnoUJ dtat
Washington made early Viet- Ball' of Apple Grov~.
· Saturday. Overnight lows in
marktra. $10.
nam peace arrangement
.
the 30s early Thursday and
seem a plausible prospect.
Fun era1sefVlces will be held
the lower 40s early Friday
NEA 's survey also carne at 2 p.m. Friday In the Crowand early Saturday.
after many new allegations Bussell Funeral Home with the
seeming to link high Nixon . Rev. Charles S. Thompson and
aides to efforts to spy upon the Rev. William (Bud) Hal·
and . ~abotage Democratic field officiating. Burial will TilE OPPOSITES
actiVIties; Contrary to some follow in Kirkland Memorial
LONDON (UP!) -John
reporters new field fmdm~s , Gardens Friends may call at
Shuttleworth called his boss a
·
our check d1d not show s1g·
nificant genera l impact dam · the ·funeral home after 2 p.m. fourletter word and .a court
aging"to Mr. Nixon.
·
Wednesday.
awarded him $5,076.
'Most political reporters and
Margaret Pritchard tried to
analysts and poll·lake~s are
blow up her bo68 and a court
haunted somewhat by the
DROPPED IN HOLE
placed her 01) probation lor 24
rn e m or y of 1948 when the
The Meigs County Sheriff's months.
Gallup Poll forecast victory
Dept.
investigated a minor
Shuttleworth
won
a
for the late Thomas E.
Court St.
Pomeroy Dewey over President Tru· accident today at 1:15 p.m. on . judgment against his boss,
SR 71n Salisbury ToWilshlp just Der~ Cotton, after a court In
north of Meigs-Gallia line. Birmingham decided Colton
Herbert H. Ballentine 38 New fll'ed him without justlflcallon.
Philadelphia , was ' p~rked The fourletter word was
headed south when he started shouted by Shuttleworth during
. to back up Into a driveway and a boardroom argument over a
his left ft'bnt wheel dropped ma pro~sed bl:!Siness deal.
hole on the left. There was light
M1ss Pntchard, 19, was
damage to the car, no arrests placed on probation for two
or injuries.
years after a London court
··
heard her explain why she
tried to blow up her boss,
Simon Philips. She said she put
Molotov cocktails in Philips'
car because he left hl.s wife.

0

Practical
and Lovely.
A Bulova
Nurse's
Watch

Del·• Ball

B,i' RA V CROMLEY
WASHINGTON INEA)
The draft agreement on peace in Vietnam is woefully
·
weak in its details.
My own experience in negotiating with Communists,
and in watching first·hand while others negotiated, has ·
ta ught me lhat technical pol.Q!s- not overall principlesare the heart of success or failure. Neglecting details can
be disastrous.
·
There is the da nger· th.at here, as in the grain talks
with Russia, we negotiated so rapidly in our desire for a
solution , and were so poorly informed on what the other
side was doing that we have blundered in important re·
spects on what should have been a magnificent coup.
Perhaps because the brilliant Dr. H~mry Kissinger wa""
tired-dead on his feet after weeks of heavy negotiating
strain. Hopefully, renegotiations will correct these weak·
nesses before the pact if; signed.
There is· evidence that Hanoi's urgent demands for a
quick agreement may be aimed at not giving us time to
read the fine print .
·
There are two versions of the draft treaty-the English
version interpreted by Kissinger, the Vietnamese version
interpreted by Hanoi. '!'he differences are not minor:
Item - Hanoi claims the d~cument calls for a coalition
government with considerable power. Kissinger, reading
the English text and using words supplied by Hanoi in
English, sees the same committee of the national concord
as a powerless, advisory group. The difference is cruciaL
As history makes clear, a coalition would give Hanoi a
sure·fire way to sabotage and then take power by coup ..
Item - There· is the matter of who controls what
patches of territory, what the boundarieS are for each
patch, and how a local government is to be resupplied if
its territory is a city island in a sea of enemy.held coun·
tryside. No detailed agreed·On maps show which side controls what land. Each side is free to int~rpret what is· held.
Item - The problem of resupply has not been adequately defined. There is a definite but inexact limit on what
arms can be sent from the United States for South Viet.
nam . There is no limit on the arms the Communist bloc
can supply Hanoi. The United States is depending on the
good will and verbal assurance of Peking and Moscow.
Theoretically, Hanoi is not to supply its southern forces at
a higher level than the level at the time of the cease·fire.
But no one knows what that level is or how to define it
within reasonable limits.
Item - The English version of the draft, as Kissinger
reads it, calls for evacuating all foreign troops , including
North Vietnamese, from Laos and Cambodia. But to
Hanoi, many North Vietnamese ar.e not foreigners in Cam.
bodia and parts of Laos. In some areas, Hanoi's cadres
have adopted Lao and Cambodian names. A half-million ,
North Vietnamese live in Cambodia; many serve as
officers and recruits in Hanoi's local armies . The boun·
daries of some North Vietnamese tribal communities
stretch well into Laos.
Some say such details can be worked out later ; get the
pact signed now . This is nonsense. In a cease.fire, as in
an omelet, once the eggs are broken, it is impossible to
turn back .

not skyjacker's

DIXVILLE NOTCH,N. H.
KELSO, Wash. (UPI)
(UP II -This little mountain
hamlet early today became · Human bones found in the area
where hijacker "D. B. CooPer"
the first community in the
hailed out of a jeUiner with
nation to register its vole and it was President Nixon ' $200,000 last Thanksgiving
turned out to be those of a
by a landslide.
mis$lg
·hunter and not the
Nixon received 16 votes
elusive skyjacker.
and GeorgeS. McGovern got
The bones were found In the
3. One voter did not check off
Cinnamon
Park area of southa choice for the presidency.
west
Washington
arid
Nilon could take little
thought
they
authorities
first
comfort, however, from
might be the remains of
winning here. Dixville Notch
"Cooper;" the named used by
has voted agahist the
lhe llij~cker. But Monday
nationwide trend In every
sheriff's
deputies identified the
presidential election since II
remains as those of James
first balloted as a town In
Annis, 16, Hockinson, who
1960.
disappeared last November
while hunting.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Burying George S. McGovern under

peace ... that man has ever known," he added, shortly after
continued Democratic domination of Congress and the nation's
McGovern. had sent a telegram of concession to the White
statehouses.
'
·
House,
Nixon's ~ictory gave him freedom to pursue his cherished
In Sioux Falls, S.D., a gaunt and furrowed McGovern· told his
followers that "it hurts to lose" but added :
• foreign policy goals and shattered the national' Democratic
pojrly's reform leadership. But the Democrats will be in a
"There can be no question that we pushed this country in the
posttion to block or overhaul his domestic proposals.
direction of peace and I think each of us prefers the title of
~o.r the Dlief Executive, the last race of hiS· 26-year old
peacemaker to any other title In the land "
political career was his greatest triwnph, a personal victory of
Pledges SUpport . ·
nearly unprecedented dimensions.
Although McGovern pledged !tiS support to Nixon, he told his
Nixon crushed McGovern, the 50-yearo()ld South Dakota senafollowers "we do not rally to the support of policies that we
lor, In every part of the country,losing only Massachusetts and
deplore. But we do love this country and we will continue to
th~ District .of Columbia.
beckon it to a higher standard."
.
Coattails Not Enou~
.
McGovern's defeat was the worst suffered by a Democratic
. But the strategy that produced the landslide also virtually
candidate and the third worst in history. Only John Quincy
Ignored GOP Senate, House lll)d gnbernatorial candidates. And
Adams in 1620 and All Landon in 1936 fared more poor Jy.
the presidential coattails were noi'eiiough.
The second worst showing by a Democrat was Gen. George B.
The Republicans failed to gain control of either the Senate or
McC)ellan's 21 electoral votes against Abraham Lincoln in 1864.
the House, which have not been in GOP hands since 19M.
The great Democratic coalition- first forged by Franklin D.
Instead of picking up .the. five Senate seats they needed for
Roosevelt in 1932 and a principal key to the party's succe:ises
control, the Republicans lost two, leaving the Democrats in
since-collapsed in face of the Nilon steamroller.
control 57 to 43. In the House, the Republicans made some gains, ·
McGovern was Deserted
perhaps as many as a dozen seats, but fell far short ·of the
McGovern was deserted by the urblin dwellers, the blue collar
needed 39.
'
workers, the aged, and the Catholics. Only the lowest income
At the statehouse level, Republicans lost a seat, leaving the
voters, the blacks, and Jews remained true to the coalition.
. party division 31 Democrats and 19 Republicans.
The big cities- traditional Democratic strongholds- failed to
Speaks to the Nallon
deliver. At best they gave McGovern only fractional leads not
With victory assured early election night, Nixon spoke to ·the
enough to offset Republican votes elsewhere.
'
nation from his Oval Office in the White Hoose imd urged
Drawing virtually all of George C. Wallace 's 1968 vote, Nixon
Americans to ''work together to achieve our common great
marched through the South like Sherman, sweeping the 11 slates
goals of peace at home and peace for all nations in the world...
of the Old Confederacy. Even Arkansas, which had never voted

CLUB TO MEET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
early voter turnout in the Tuppers Plains Community
heavily industrialized areas of Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Ohio was reported from Wednesday at the home of
"heavy to very heavy" with Vera Weber. Plans will be
only the Dayton area in S'Juth- made for a turkey dinner and
west Ohio reporting a "light to · variety show. New officers will '
medium" turnout . It was be elected.
raining In most parts of the
state.
LOCAL TEMPS
Ohioans went to tile polls
Temperature in downtown
toda¥ to select .a president,
congressman, legislators, local Pomeroy Tuesday at II a.m.
officials and whether or not to was 52 degrees under rainy
repeal the state income tax.
skies.

News •. • in Briefs
(Continued from Page I )
the world," he said . "They stubbornly resist a relaxation of international tension and any peace-loving actions by the Soviet
Union and other Socialist countries, wage a shameful war In
Indochina, prevent the settlement of the Middle East crisis, heat
up and unleash armed confllcts.

VOL. XXIV NO. 145

Furniture Department on the Jrd Floor has many excellent new items for your home. At this time of
the year most everyone add s some new piece of furniture. Now is a fine time to make your choice, We
have a large seledion . Buy now for yourself or for gifts.

th e

Nice

Selection

CLOCKS

selection of gun
cabinets , 6, 8 and
ten

gun

fini sh,

Grandfather Clocks
Modern and Early
American wa II clocks
with chimes .
Cuckoo Clocks.

locking

doors.

'

'

•

Jewelry Store

ANOTHER GREAT BUY FROM

. Q\~\\\S

""'seats·

ss.oo eadl
BAKERS .

Aulo Sates
1970 PLYMOUTH, 4-door Fury .
CHOIR COMiNG
1. white, ex·palrol car, $1,400.
HAR'I'FORD - The Point
Phone 992·5310.
Mission Choir will be
Pleasant
IJ.1.6tc
at the Church of Christ in
· Christian Union at Hartford,
W. Va. at 7:30 tonight. Pastor
Bill Campbell invites . the
public.
Tonioht, Nov.7
John )'layne lh
"THE CQWBOYS"
GP
111REE 'UNBEATENS

MEIGS THEATRE

ll

DESKS

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
November 8·9
NOT OPEN

squads In the cowntry.
Ohio State, il 7.0, Helc.lelb~itg
is 8-0 and Ashland boasts a
record.

With one exception Meigs commissioners and the clerk of district.
4
For full term beginning Jan.
County
continued
its courts we re unopposed. All are
The county went with the I, 1973 - William !l. Brown,
Republican tradition in Republicans. Their unofficial nalion in the Presidential race.
3,076; Louis J. Schneider, Jr.,
Tuesday's Presidential elec. totals are:
Nixon.Agnew received 5,961 2,176.
tion when 8,818 voters went to
Be rn ard V. Fultz for votes, the McGovern.Shriver
the polls, despite a chilly rain prosecuting attorney, 5,852'; ticket 2,340. James C. Schmitz For full term beginning Jan.
2,1973 - Paul W. Brown, 3,996;
which fell most of the day.
Ro bert C. Harteobach for of the American Independen t Lloyd 0. Brown, 1,331.
two sheriff, 6,431 ; Eleatior Robson party received 115 votes for
Voters
returned
Republican county com. for county recorder, 6,147; president . Louis · Fisher For unexpired term ending
missioner lncuinbent.s to their Howard E. Frank for received four and Gus Hall; the Dec. 31, 1974 - Robert E.
Leach, 3,180; Frank D.
.,...pOiits and strongly supported treasurer, 6,168; Theodore Communist candidate, seven.
Celebreeze, 1,813.
the Republican candidate for Beegle for county engineer,
On the non·partisan ballot,
On the state consltutional
clerk of courts.
5, 719, and Rankin Ray Pickens Manning D. Webster, serving convention measure Meigs ·
Returned to their corn- for coroner, 5,603. All are in· as probate judge by apCounlians voted 1,791 in favor
missioner posts for another cum bents.
pointment, was elected to a full of the convention and 4,510
four years were Ra lph W.
Meigs County gave strong term . Webster, of Pomeroy, against it.
Ours, R, who defeated support to Clarence E. Miller, received 6,078 votes in his
On the Issue II, Meigs
. TALKING BOOKMACIUNES are available at no coSI to the bUnd t~.ose with partial vision,
Democrati c cand idat e, R. . in his bid for reelection for' unopposed bid .
Countians cast 1,543 11yes"
and the physically handicapped by application through Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, left, of the Meigs
William E. Snouffer, 4,379- Representative to Congress
WARDEN OURS
Horner E. Abele, unopposed votes and 5,160 11 nO" votes,
3,537, for the full tet'nl com· from the lOth District. In for judge in the Court of Ap·
· Bookmobile. She has been authorized by the Ohio Rehabilitation Services Commission to
ali gning themselves solidly
mencing Jan . 2, 1973, and Meigs, Miller received 6,295 peals, received 5,136 votes .
&amp;itirmine eligibility ol all applicants. Mrs. Pikkoja, above, is oullinlng the project - an exwith the state's decision to
Robert Clark, R, who defeated compared to 1,955 votes for
pojndedservice , not a new one - to Mrs. Margaret Amberger, an aide with the Meigs County
For the Supreme Cour t, retain iL• graduated income
Democrat Joe Denison, 4,262· Robert H. Whealey of Athens. here's how Meigs Countains lax.
Council on Aging who was in the headquarters to make referrals of people who mlght qualify.
3,650,
for the full term corn· Miller won handily in the voted:
The machines, the talking book recordings, and the magazine listing available material is
mencing Jan . 3, 1973.
provided free of charge to the ellgible blind, parii'!_IlY blind, and the physically handicapped.
Larry Eugene Spencer, R,
Racine, a newcomer to the
political scene, defeated Mary
Council on Aging will be Martin, D., to become clerk of
helping to find people who need courts, 5,843-2,360.
the service.
Meigs Countians strayed
Tax levies in Meigs County mill current operating expense purcha sed by residents of the
Mrs . Pikkoja was in from the Republican path to
town. VIllage officials had
Columbus Monday for a give John E. Halliday, villages and townships, mostly levy, a renewal.
renewals,
fared
well
in
Rutland
Village
voters
ap·
asked
for the tax for mainstatewide talking book Gallipolis, D., 4,202 votes in his
Tuesday's
election
with
Olive
proved a 178-&amp;J a two and one- tenance of village streets.
workshop. As a result of her bid for slate representative,
By Charlene Hoefiicb
Township
the
only
su
bdivision
half
mill current operating
In Hacine, now dry and
day spent \here, Meigs County while Republican, Oakley C.
Heard any good books lately?
where
any
fa
iled.
.
expense levy, a renewal.
destined to remain so, voters
will initially receive 10 talking Collins, received 3,968 votes.
Almost 100 years ago Thomas Edison predicted that one day book machines for use by the However Collins won a seat in
In Pomeroy Village vote rs
Two new levies went down by cast 212 ballots against the sale
his most popular invention, lhe phonograph, would be used to blind, the partially blind, and the General Assembly in a approved 705452 a two mill small margins in Olive of beer in the town and 117 in
~urr ent operating expense levy
play books for the blind and physically handiC!'pped.
·
Township. A one·half mill new favor.
the physically handicapped. light race, 20,719 to 20,603.
for
stree.
l
lighting.
Rac
in
e
Teclutically, his dream became reality in 1934 when the
tax in that township for
Rutland Township, excluding
Local candidates, besides the
Once a person's eligibility
Village
approved
a
two
mill
Ubrary of Congress began distributing "talking books" to the bas been determined - and
cemetery maintenance was Hutland Village, also soundly
current
operating
ex
pense
defeated.. 220 for and 255 defeated four separate local
·blind.
.
:
ROBERT CLARK
this de~islon is· made through ,
levy,
2.
3
8-78;
Both
·
were
against. ·. The second one.' options · on the ·sa le of malt'
But through the years ·there have been many problems. personal contact - a machine
renewals.
. half
mi ll
levy
in beverages and wine and mixed
Distribution hilS been limited, quality sometimes hasn't been the is delivered to the horne and
In
Letart
Township
a
one
the township, tha t one for beverages by the package. The .
best, and in many instances the blind either had to purchase their instructions are given on its
mill
current
operating
ex
pense
fire
protection, went down 250- vote on these measures were : lOth District
own machines, or walt weeks and sometimes months to get one of operation. A subscription to a
renewal
was
approved
202-73
222.
sale for off the premises
the free machines provided through the Ubrary of · magazine entitled "Talking
while
Rutland
Township
ap·
In
Middleport
on
a
consumption only, 107 yes; 296, Congressional
Book Topics," published bi·
Congress.
proved a one-half mill current referendum action, voters no; for on or off the premises
monthly, goes to every eligible
Things are different today !
Four accidents were in· operating ex pense renewal,
lOth CONGRESSIONAL
No longer will there be long Vilma Pikkoja of the Meigs person, and from the book, vestigaled in the past 24 hours 403·268. Sutton Township voters tu rned down 716 to 451 a $5 consumption, yes, 97; no, 297;
DISTRICT RACE
permissive
auto
license
tax
of
liquor
by
the
glass,
94,
yes;
292,
delays in getting talking hook County Bookmobile is the only which includes a recording on by the Meigs County Sheriff's approved 883-367 a one·half
County
M
W
'$5 on s ach set of license plates no. and sa le in state store, 98, Alhens
11 ,688 7, 681
machines or the talking book local person authorized to available topics for the blind Dept. three on Tuesday and one
yes, and 290, no.
Fairlield
24,916 7,435
recordings. These can be made determine eligibility, althougll and near-blinp and printed early today . No personal inGallla
6.870 1,957
available almost Immediately, numero'!S agencies, including material for the otherwise juriea were re ported and
Hocking
6,114 2.204
Jackson
7,743 2,643
Action handicapped, selections of properly damage was light to
once eligibility for the service the Community
Lawrence
14.365
7,323 ·
is established. Presently, Mrs. Program and the Meigs County
\'-onunued on page l•J
rnediwn.
6,295 1.955
Meigs
Margan
4,251 940
At 12:45 p.m. on SR 7 in
A 5 mill new school tax in the to hear complaints of school election. A total of 1,291 ap-. Muskingum
21,910 8,437
Chester, Beverly Jean Collins, Meigs Local School Dis\rict, patrons and act upon them.
proved re newal of a five mill Noble
719 245
31• Tuppers Plains, was ral·sl·ng local participation to
·Perry
8,356 2;451
Voters
of
the
dl
"
strl
·
'
c
t
had
I
d
t
'56
h
ted
traveling south when her car
evy compare 0 • w Ovo
Vin ton
2.697 1,360
started to "noat" on the wet the state's required 22.5 mills, turned down the new five mill against the renewal.
Washinglon
13,866 3,637
}19,790 48,269
surface. When she applied was appr.oved Tuesday 2,726to tax in May and aga in in a
In the only other school TOTALS
M-Miller ; W-Whealey.
OOLUMBUS (uPI)~io of new and underprivileged the Ohio House most of the brakes the car slid off the high- . 2,122.
special election several weeks measure voted on Tuesday may not have a monopoly on voters In the Buckeye State. group
of
maverick way to the left into an emPassage of the levy climaxed following th~~May primary.
one affecting the entire county
weird elections yet, but It is twQ
McGovern had coatlllils a Republicans who thought up bankmenl, bounced off 10 an intense campa ign on the
South ern Loca l School - voters approved a 5,129 to
92nd District
. legs up on retiring the trophy. mile long, but he forgot It! put the Idea of repeal.
go anotlier 60 feet and recross measure ifl' the district and a District voters also approved a 3,272 a one quarter mill
92nd Dislrict
They said elections couldn1 on the coat. Democrata at the
It waa a cruel turn ol events the highway, slid an additional program by the adrilinjstration fi ve mill levy at Tuesday's renewa l for the operation of the
Representative
couldn't come any worse than state level had a field day. for House Speaker Olarles F.
Counly
·
C
H·
feet,
and
into
an
em·
Meigs
County
Community
la9l May's Ohio primary, when They captured the Ohio House l!:urfess, R-Bowllng Green, 30
810 79S
banlanent backwards.
lL..
School for retarded children. Athens
Lawrence
12,1 10 9,789
some polls stayed open unW for the firsJ time In more than a who tried to steer a middle
No citation was issued. There
Ga
tt
ia
3.231 S,811
midnight. and · the result! decade by thrashing Republl. coutse, ended up plugging for
Meigs 3,968 4,202
weren't In for three days.
can candidates left and right. the inc~ tax an d was l~fI was rnediwn damage to the . COLUMBUS (U'PI )
TOTAlS
20,719
20,603
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
1,250,636, or 39 pet. American
C
-Collins:
H-Hattiday.
Tuesday night, the returns
And the Democ~ata came 110 with barely more than 40 House car·
b' President Nixon swept to a party candidate John Schmitz
ADMISSIONS.,.- Pauline
At UO p.m. on Colurn 1a
d
came In record time, 8lld folks close to taking over the Senate Republicans to ,.,,_1de ••~·gh
Derenbetger, Pomeroy; Floyd
""""
B landslide victory over Sen. 11a 59,561 votes.
~ two years.
township road 405, Robert
.
MeG
I
Oh'
Th
p
'd
lied
h
are going to need a lot more that Republican floor leader the ne &amp;&lt;
Brewer;
Rut)and; Edna
h d
George S.
overn n 10
e res1 enl ro
up uge
"-eover,ltshlftedKurfess' Rndebaugh,24,Dcxter, ea ed
. h
.
I · t· . . th
.
than three days f(lr the Impact Ted Gray'a hair matclled Iii
THEa.~ PROBED
:~
"""
f
....
south had stopped at his Tuesday mg t, capturmg · 95. . p ura 1t1es 10 e conservallve Sizemore, Rutland ; Landon
to 10111t: in.
name by the time he left the vUIIIIE' point rom 'llhil:n le mailbOx ·on the left side of the pet. 'of the state's 88 counties areas of Ci ncin nati and McDaniel, Middleport; Lyle
The Meigs County Sheriff's
"I've seen weird electiO(ll Stalellouse at 4:30 a.m.
Dept.
investigated a breaking
Wlldlna ~ble bid for gover- highway when a car driven.by and showing virtually un· Columbus , and crushed Hysell, Pomeroy; John Hayes,
Repeal Rejftted
.
before," said a .veter.n poU~­
· nor J.,,,
·
d p
Rl 4 precedenled strength for a McGovern in rural Ohio, Long Bottom ; John Salser, and entering of a car owned by
hiQget.on scanning the reOblo ~otel'8, tuppoaedly jCIIt
, ·
Harry. Kinzey that was parked
Kurfess wasn't W"Plae but Dora M. Ree ' omeroy, · ' Republican in Democratic dorbinating 84 of the 88 counties Racine.
--~~~ •'buf'llilnnetalt:es the waltlnfl to get their hands 011 he was obvloully
by ~also~trJIY.ellng south, stopped areas:-'rhe win waS""wurth-25~in. the sla te.
DISCHARGES - James at the Kings Arms Nile Club
...
ke
the
Income
1111
!bat
started
ca.
what he called "clr- . behind Radebaugh . When electoral votes.
But the big surprise was ·Sellers, Walter Vaughan, from 8:50 p.m. Tuesday to 2
To' begin with, President · piclt:lng their poc\leta last cumstances" - a dwindling Radebaugh backed up he
Wit~ 10,062 of 12,7S5 Njxon's 18,000-vote victory in Clarence Napper, Salem a.m. today . Entry ·wasrnade by
NIDn r111 off and bid frGm Sen. January, soundly rejected the majority hindered by reap. struck the Reed vehide.
preCincts reported, or 79 pet. of Cuyahoga County, horne of Yates, Ha~riett Hyatt, George breaking the wing glass on the
a.«~e s. M«lolem, l'ho wu repeal PI Cl(lolal.
portklnment, the fight over the
Radeballjlh was _cited for the vote, Nixon had t,885,610 Cleveland, w~ich is essential to Sellers, Ollie Young, Earl left side. Missing w~re four ·
qp-1 to l:rlng out mma,..• Con~ly' they returned to
Werner, ·netores Cundiff.
tapes .and one mace gun. . :·
!Continued on Page 17)
!Continued on Page ~7)
votes, or 60pct., to Mc&lt;lovern's Democratic fortunes .

Levies fare well

Book machines
available now

LAMPS

This one takes the cake

Jr.d Floor Furnilure Dept - We have a
large selection ol desks In maple,
walnut and pecan. Kneehole Secretary. Early American, Modern,
Mediterranean. Some with file drawers
and locks, laminated plastic tops:

.·
Pick. a beautiful table
lamp from the large
·selec;tion on display in
the Jrd floor Furniture
Dept. A lamp to blend
with you~ room styling.

•

SMOKERS
· .,_

We

have a large selection of
srnokers and combination
magazine, racks . with sinokers,
Modern, Early American and
Mediterranean styles.

fc--lJ~~::r:·!~~:~ 1nv!t1tion7 5 0 NEW
YORK (UPI) - Thre.e .
0
&lt;iartC~h~i.p~~·~,~'~-~f--ilrhldi.ehte,aatem,ds-c· •allrlee!gae·rn~uon,ogt.ba~ll . ll~::::::~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~:.-.:::::::::=::::::::~::::~~::~~==~~~~
•

TEN I:ENTS

Two levies for schools win

IAKE:R':S_.;__.---,

l\1t\\t"

PHONE 992·2156

Noone
injured

Goesslet

~4f-"­
ttOOot"

POMERUY·MitJDLEPOH I, UHtu

Devoted To The lnteresls OfTheMeigs-Mason Area
WEDNESDAY, NOVEfilBER 8, 1972

'

size.

Maple and oak

Rain throughout the day.
Clearing but cloudy through
the evening. Cooler, lowest iit
the 40s south. Partly cloudy
Thursday, little temperatura
change. Highest 50 to 55.

.

Every home should
have a nice clock and in
the 3rd ·floor furniture
dept. we have a large
selection.

large

Weather

Clark, Ours, Spencer winners

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

See

President Richard Nixon
' Personal Triumph
Wins

! Con tin ned on Page 17)

A flea can store enormous
amounts of energy and release
it with a force 140 times that of
gravity, enabling it to leap a
foot or more beyond reach of a
scratching finger or paw .

STANFORD, CALIF. - FORMER CHILD movie star
Shirley Temple Black, recuperating from the removal of a breast
because of cancer, said Monday her doctors are "100 per cent
sure" they excised the tumor.
"Mrs. Black, 44, had a "simple mastectomy" operation the remove! of one ·breast - last Friday at Stanford Medical
Center,where she will remain for a few more days before
returning home. She said "the only reason I am teWng this is to
convince other women to watch for any lump or unusual symp.
torn. There is almost certain cure for this cancer if it is caught
early enough."

On The
Jrd Floor

Republican since Reconstruction ended, fell Into Nixon's
column.
Nixon easily controlled the "Big Eighl"-California, New
York, Pennsylvania, Ohjo, Illinois, Michigan, Texas, and New
Jersey- the traditional keys to winning national elections.
.
Piles Up Majorities
In the usual Republican areas of the Midwest and the
mountain states, Nixon piled up huge majorities .
At the pinnacle of his political power and having said he will
never face the electorate again, Nixon is expected to turn his
attention Ill history rather than political tactics.
.
Given his overwhelming vote, Nixon undoubtedly intensify his
personal diplomacy in the next four years and probably will
seek to remake much of the post World War II international
power structure.
Nixon envisions a new partnership bet'!'een the United States
and Europe, coupled with peaceful competition between the
West and the Communist states.
The Presiderlt plans again to seek welfare reform, government reorganization, and antibusing legislation . But foreign
policy unquestionably will be foremost in his thinking.
_ strategy Could Leave Scars
He said he would propose no programs requiring higher taxes
and would veto any budget.busting bills enacted by Congress.
In the field of politics, folixon's campaign strategy of virtually
ignoring GOP Senate and House candidates could leave its'
scars. Republicans may resent that Nixon declined to risk his
position as oddso()n favorite to help them.
Nixon also is expected to reshuffle his Cabinet early in his
second term. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird has announced he
will leave and early replacements are expected. at the Depart-

Now You Know

I

Cabinets

p~osperity."

8ecOnd term victory. But his personal triumph was marred by

Early turnout
in north is heavy

· Gun

and for that new progress and

811
• avalanche of votes, President Nixon Tuesday won a historic · ·-,-.- "Weare on the eve of what could be the greaiest generation of

Of you wish; use our lay-awa.y pllirtG"Imtctyovrselectlon until Christmas.

·ELIERFELDS IN

y

ide
rres nt gets 95% of IJ8 counties

.

shlltered

••

'.
I
•'

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