<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16763" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16763?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T18:51:45+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49912">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3b16a0e08c21c84ec7e6beca4b75bcf1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3a69d83e66dc94a5349cd0e6674ea840</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53536">
                  <text>I

''- ' '

"

I

'

,20 -

Children tour

Democrats ~stun GOP, take over control o
By RICK VANSANT
two yeRrs and could provide S.nate pattie in Dayton.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Demo- him -a base ·with which to run
Demooralic Rep. Tony P.
crats too~ control of the Ohio for re~lection .
Hall abandoned hjs !louse seat
House in Tuesday's · election,
Co net· des Loss
and defeated Republican Sen.
scoring several stuMing upHouse Speaker Charles Kur- David s. Holcomb.
sets over Republican in- fess, R-Bowling Green , who
Jt was a sharp turnaround for
eumbents.
won re~lection , early today Holcomb, who had won with a
Although many races were conceded loss of the chamber . comfortable 3-2margin in 1968.
close with results still trick" I only hope the new majorRepublican twins Tom and
ling in today, it · appeared ity is as kind to the minority as Ken Perk caught the political
Democrats won at least 58 the old majority was to the old bug from their father, Cleveseats, leavin g Republi cans mi norHy," Kurfess said .
land Mayor Ralph Perk , and
wi ll&gt; only 41.
• Among House Republican in- sought House seats. Both lost in
- Despite the final outcome, cumbents falling were Edward close races.
the importa_nt fact was known M. Ryder of Eudid, Donald R.
O'Neill Wins
· - Democrats overcame the 54- Fraser of Toledo, Ross HeinlIn .spite of the Democratic
45 deficit from last session and ze lman of Canton , Walter I'(aves, Republican c. William
took control of the chamber. Paulo of the Youngstown O'Neill, son of the Supreme.
Democrats also chipped suburb of Canfield, and .Ja ck Court chief justice of the same
away at the 2!1-13 Republican Oliver of Greenville.
name, defeated Earl Sisson in
· advantage in the Senate, but it
One of the most important suburban Columbus' 285h
still was not known early today Democratic House victories House district.
which party would control the came in Dayton's hotly conWhile many upstart Oem&lt;&gt;Senate.
tested 34th district.
crats were knocking off ReThe House victory by DemoRepublican David Albritto ·
publican veterans, most of the
crats came despite the poor a 12-year veteran legis!· or 'iRClill!lbent Democrats were
showing of party presidential and the state's only black OP victorious.
candidate George McGovern in representative, narrowly lost
House Minority Leader A. G.
.. (!)hio. The Democratic victory to Edward J. Orlett, 14,413 to Lancione of Bellaire won his
will help Gov. John J. Gilli- 13,-221.
14th term; William Hinig of
gan's legislative aims the next
Democrats also won a key New Philadelphia will be serv-

B!&gt;rry, who was reapportioned Wooster vs. David Headley of
J ist - Phill e Hale (OJ over
out of his old seat and wound up . Norton.
Lu cien Wr ight
. .
·32nd - Ja mes Baumann ( 0 1
facing the powerful Applegate ..
over Joel Mirman '
Successful Incumbents
JJ rd -- Mack Pemberton ( R I
ov(lr: John Fleckner
Successful Republican inreturns today indi ·
34 th Edward . Orlelt ( 0 )
cumbent senators included caUnotticial
ted t t}e following Oh io l egis -· over David Albrit ton
Paul Gillmor of P9rt Clinton, lat ive w inners :
35th -Thoma s Fr ies (OJ
House w inn ers :
over Jose"ph "Miller
Donald "Buzz" Lukens of
lSI d is tr ict - Raymond Lu 36th - CJ . Mclin (0~ over
Middletown, 12-year legislative !h er {R J over John Eshelman Edgar Ramsey
?nd
John Wargo 101 over
37th Paul leonard fDI
veteran Stanley Aronoff of John
Longswonh
over Eugene Fann in
CinciMati and Max Denis of
38th - Frederick Young ( R)
3rd ~- George Ma sti cs ( R ) .
uncontes ted
ove r Jose ph Davidson
Wilmington.
Ath - James- Ce lebn~'2-z-e- (D l
39t h - Vernon Coo k IDJ over
Republican Thomas A. Van over Joh n Day
Richa rd Williams
Richard Celeste fD )
40th -·.Paul W ingard IR_)
M.eter of Ashland defeated J&lt;&gt;- oveSth
r A n thony Sin agra
and Claude F iocca -- undecid seph Murray to fill an un61h ~. Patrick Swee ney (0) ed.
41st -'- Kenneth Cox (OJ over
.expired term ending~ Dec. 31, uncon tested
7t h _;.. Jerome Sta no fO l over Joh n Ha rig
1974.
John Ta rn ove cky
42nd - Peter Cros sland (0 )
8th - Edwa r d Fe ighan { OJ ove r Robert Mann ing
Five key .Senate races were over
Cla yton Krcal
43rd - Ronald Weyand (O J
yet to be decided, including 129th - Troy J~mes (OJ over over Carl Buller
44th - Richa r d Wittenberg
year legislator Robin Turner, Thomas l&gt;erk
lOth - Thomas Bell ( D) ov er I D l o.v er Donald Fraser
R-Marion, running against Jose ph Ba t tista
45th - Casey Jo nes ( OJ un llth - Robert Jas kul sk i ( 0 ) opposed
Gene Slagle of Galion. ·
46th - Arthur Wilkowsk i (0)
ov er Ken Perk
Also mdoubt were Republi12th - Donna Pope (R J over over Rob ert Maison
47th - . Barney Quilter (O J
can William Mussey of Batavia Walt er RutKowski
13th tk e Thomp son (D l over Gus Perry
vs. Ronald Shoemaker of Wav- over Ethe l Ro bi nson
48th - R ic: hard Re ichel { Rl
14th John sweeney (O J over Paul McCo rmic k
erly; Republican Walter White
over Duane Doyle
·
49th - Irene Smart (0) over
of Lima vs. James Gehrlich of
15th - John Th om pson 101 Ross Heintzelman
50th Jltme$ Thorpe (RJ
Wapakoneta;
Republican un cont es ted
16th - Ha r ry Lehman (OJ over William Healy
Anice Johnson of Aurora vs. over Edward K idCI
52nd Thomas Gilm art in
17th Leon.ard Ostrovsky (OJ over William Shranko
Thomas E. Walter of Kent, and
( OJ ove r Jame s Ma iler
52nd - George Tablsck ( OJ
Republican Robert Miller of
18th - John M cCorm ick , { OJ over G. Timothy Marks
ov er Edward Ryder
19th Richard F inan (R)
over Edward Wo!lerman
20th John Brandenburg
(R J ov er Peter Pandi lidi s
21s t - Norman Murdock (R J
over Thomas M ey ung
22Qd - Chester Cruze 1R 1
ove r Rona ld Ott ing
23rd - Will iam Ma ll ory 101
over Mark Pain ter
2.-tth - James L"uk en (0)
over Lawrence Mc Graw
25th Jam es Rankin (O J
over Rona ld Morgan
26th John Be chtold (R )
over Jero me O'Dowd
27 th - Alan Norr is (R 1 ov er
fd a Lockett
28th c. Wi ll iam O'Neill
(R} ov er earl Sisson
29th William K-opp (D)
ove r P hi li p A l len
30th - M ike St inziano (OJ
over,.CraiQ Mc i ntyre-

Most Congressmen easily victorious

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursda v
November 8·9
NOT OPEN

COLUMBUS (UP!) - At
least 12 Republican congressmen and seven Democratic incumbents were voted to new
terms Tuesday, most by huge
majorities, including Wayne L.
Hays who was returned to Congress a 13th time.
Results were inconclusive
early today in the four other
races two of them involving
irlcumbents.
.
Hays, 60, of Flushing, now
senior member of the Ohio
delegation, devastated his Re-

Friday thru Tuesday
November lD-14

Alfred Hits;hcock's
FRENZY
(lechnicolor)

John Finch
Alec McCow en

Thrills Ga lore!
HITCHCOC K'

ing hi.! 9th and lOth years, Vernal Riffe of New Boston woo his
·eighth term and Myrl Shoemaker of Boureville will go into
year No. 15 ln the chamber. ·
The Democratic tide did not
sink venerable Oakley Collins,
who after 19 years was reapportioned out of hi.! seat In the
Senate. Collins successfullyswitched to the House, defeating John Halliday in soutl.ern
Oliio's 92nd district.
Contributing to the Republican slip In the Ser.ate was Columbus City ,Councilman Donald Woodlaod, who ran a vigorous campaign and defeated
Robert Ramsey.
Among Democrats holding
onto Senate seats were Minority Leader Anthony Calabrese,
who handily defeated Elmer
Forsberg . Demoerat incumbent Ron Mottl of Parma
defeated George Pokorny,
Robert Secrest o! Cambridge
outpulled Clyde Hardesty; and
12-~year legislative veteran
Applegate
of
Douglas
Steubenville defeated Kenneth

That's
IRJ

Colorcartoon:

The First Telephone
Adults: SUO Children : 7Sc
Show Starts 7 ~ . M .

A,ol,e,. ·qooJ Bu'l
/rom Ba~,. 'J •••
'

3 toMPlElE

aooMs

•595

eSEOROO~M
eU~IMG

1\UV

...ntKE"
SHOP

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDU:PORT. 0.

publican opponent, dairy farmer Robert Stewart of Jewett, by
a nearly 3-1 margin.
Republican John -M. Ashbrook who provided a conservative
challenge
to
President Nixon in ~everal
primaries earlier this year,
downed. soda pop company
president Raymond Beck. Ashbrook, 43, was returned to a
ninth term.
In walkaways, Republican
Reps. Charles A. Mosher of
Oberlin won a seventh term
over John Ryan, a Lorain realtor; Charles W. Whalen Jr. of
Dayton won a fourth term over
college instructor John W. Lelak, Jr .; Delbert L. Latta of
Bowling Green won a seventh
term against Bruce Edwards,
a Bowling Green State University professor, and Clarence J.
Brown o\ Urbana was re~lect­
ed to a fifth term against
Newspaper columnist Dorthy
Franke. Mrs. Franke writes
for the Urbana Daily Citizen,
owned by Brown.
Three-term incumbent
Republican Charles E. Miller
of Lancaster overwhelmed
Ohio University· history
professor Robert H. Whealey;
J. William Stanton won a fifth
term over Oemocra t Dennis M.
Cnllahan; Samuel L. Devine of
Columbus was returned to an
eighth term over . James
Goodrich, a public relations
executive, and Chalmers Wylie
of Columbus won a fourth term
over architect Manley McGee.
William J . Keating, one-term
GOP incumbent from Cincinnati won over ~nsulting
psychologist Karl F:) Heiser ,
and Donald D. Clancy of
Cincinnati won a seventh term
over 26-year-old attorney
PeMy Manes.

Six-term Rep. William
Harsha of Portsmouth, a
Republican, ran unopposed.
Among those races easily
won by Oemocra ts, Thomas
Ashley of Waterville won a
tenth term over Joseph C.
Richards, an in-law of
comedian Bob Hope; John F.
.Seiberling of Akron defeated
Cuyahoga Falls Law Director
Norman W. Holt to win a
second term; Charles J . Carney of Youngstown won a second tenn over the Rev. Norman M. Parr of Poland, Ohio;
James V. Stanton of Cleveland
won a 2nd term over Maple
Heights real estate broker Th&lt;&gt;mas E. Vilt , Charles Vanik of
Euclid was returned to

Congress for a lOth term and
Louis Stokes of Cleveland won
a second term over black real
estate broker James D.
Johnson.
Ohio had 24 districts, but the
1970 census required redistricting to eliminate one when the
state failed to keep pa~e in
population with other states.
The compromise plan, approved earlier this year by the
Ohio General Assembly, combined the old districts of retiring RepubliCan Reps. William
M. McCulloch of Piqua and
Jackson E. Betts of Findlay.
That seat was contested by
veteran state Sen. Tennyson
Guyer, Findlay Republican,
and Democratic attorney

Dimitri Nicholas of Piqua .
Also retiring was Rep. Frank
T. Bow of Canton. His seat was
sought by state Sen. Ralph
Regula, Navarre Republican,
and Democratic lawyer Virgil
Musser of Massillon.
The Guyer-Nicholas race and
Regula-Musser contest
remained close early today.

the world • • •
at a Glance

53rd -

J . Leonard Ca mera

(0) over Ron Wichman

54th Donald Pease { OJ
over Sc r ibner Fauver
55 th Robe rt Nader ( OJ
over Alv in Sullivan
56th - M ichael Delbane ( 0 )
over David Alderma·n
57 th - Willi pm Donham ( R )
vs . David Armbr uster - unde cid ed .
58 th - Thomas Kin dness (Rl
over Michael Smith
59 th Joseph Tulley (R J
ov er Robert Slowey
60th Dav id Hartle-y (O J
ov er Robert Henry
6l st Joan Douglass ( R l
ov er Robert Sawyer
62nd - Mar Cus Roberto ( D)
over Ronald M ic hler
63rd - Jo hn Scott (R l over
Ja mes Zehner
64th - Waldo Rose (Rl oyer
Robe"rt Edging ton
65th - Fra nk Mayf ie ld ( RJ
over Robert Herk ing
66th Lawrence Hughes
(R J over Fred Richardson
67th - Larry Christman (Dl
over Dor is Copenhefer
68th John Johnson (0)
over Linsey Williams
69th - John Ga lbraith (RJ
over James Marlatt
70th Robert Levitt (Rl
over Richa rd Green
71st - Thomas Carney (0)
over Walter Paulo
72nd - Ethel Swan beck ( R l
over John Ma iden
73rd - Corwin Nhe on ( R) unopposed

.

.

All you have to do is ask.
Because you're welcome to a
variety of wide-awake checking_accoun ts, in- a variety of
.....check books that are bou nd to
pl ~ase.

. In terested? ·Then come in
for a full explanation of all
we have to offer. We will
1--:--taJ;e ca~re of you individually.·

i
i

Regular Checking
Special Checking

~Commercial Checking

,i

Student Checking _·

~ 'The ttJirle-rl/{1(/ke tltecki11g ntt0/111/ mnkes it!f4so efiS.!£

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
- -\ - -

POMEROY, OHIO

Member of Feder•l Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 .

.....

'·

a.m. to 7 p.m. IConliliuously) .
' ~o,ooo·Maximum ln.surance for .E"ch,,
Depositor

77th - Joseph Hiestand (R
over Daniel Gleason
•
78th - Rodney Hughes &lt;R
over Kay Albert
·
79th - Fred Hadley ( R)
Henry Diehl
80th -- Da le Locker (OJ
Jac k Oliver
Blsl Robert Netzley
over Theodore Finnarn
82nd ~ Mi chael OxleY.
over Denn is To iv onen
.
Blrd - -Char les Kurfess
over Wil liam Arti nO
'
B41h - Frederick Oeerrng (
over Mary Skirball
,
85th Gene
(R J over Francis
B61h ~ Walter McCI
over M ichael Fl ick
' 87th - Harry Malott fOl
William Games
88th - Myrl Sh oemaker (Ol
over Guy Brown
~
89th - vernal Riffe ( D)
James Murray
90th - Don Maddux ( 0 )
James Adcock
9lst - Cla ire Ball ( R) over
Harry Crewson
92nd - Oakley Collins ( R I
over John Halliday
•
93rd William Batchelder
(R l over Joel Bream
94th - Rex Kieffer ( R l ov~r
Paul Coffey
95th - Sam Speck (R l over
Delbert Ford ham
96th - Paul Hinnig I 0) over
Ralph Romig
97th - Robert Boggs (D) over
Chr ist ina Humphrey
98th - Arth ur Bowers
over Paul B igsby
99!h - A . G. Lancione ( 0)
over Earnest Loy
Stat e winn.ers :
.
2nd - Paul Gillmor ( R l over
Robert Smith
4th Donald Lukens ( R)
over William Meyer
6th - Tony Hall ( 0) over ,
Dav id Holcomb

8th - Sta nley Aronoff

I~

over James Cafeo

9:30 AM to 9 PM
Mens Flannel

Flannel
Pajamas

sm all {14-14'/z) ,
medium ( 15-15 111 ), large

WASHINGTON - High officials of the Nixon administration
say the North Vietnamese tried to use the election to force the
United States to end military action in Indochina without first
ensuring that proper safeguards would be taken ..

116-16'1&gt; ), extra large
( 17-17 111 I.
Permanent

press

~

long tails

~

100

percent cotton.
sale Price

Sizes 61o 16- Coat sty le
top. Adjustable gripper
bo)(er wai st
Permanent

bottom .
press .

Special sale price.

3.49
Sfzes '2a· to · - Popular wide width s.

· Brown or black. Sizes 32 to

50. 11;,. in-

ches wide. Cowhide bridle leather.

Wh it e and a big select ion of colors .

'2.50

'1.95

~-~~~·--------~~~~----~ .. •--------~

/

BONN- Envoys from East and West Germany put their
initials on a treaty today which establishes formal relations
between the two countries and symbolically ends 23 years of cold
war. The treaty allows both Germanys to become members of
the United Nations and permits much more relaxation in their
relationship.

At The
TOY
STORE

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1972

TEN CENS

emocrats c artm
ress
'

"-

'

l

BRIAN SIMPSON

WASIUNG'l'(jN (UP!) -As·
sured of continued House and
Senate control despite PresIdent Nixon's landslide, Democrats today charted goals for
the 93rd Congress-including
tax reform, consumer protection, national health Insurance
and a boosi in 'the minimum
wa&amp;e.
· '
• 'l'h!)'' said the flist VOWB II\
.th"f "new CQQgress, which
convenes Jan. 3 to spend its

Simpson nation·'s
top sharpshooter

Boys

SPORT
SHIRTS

.

•

1

·------------------------------------Open Jhursday 9:30 AM to 5 PM-Fridays and Saturdays

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.

I

'

Sizes

RACINE -Brian Simpson, a
native of Racine last month
became ~ U. S. individual
champion,_state police Marksman class, in the NRA National
Police Pistol Matches at
Jacbon, Misstsalppi with 543
pollee from throughout the
United States participating.
The matches were held Oct. 2-

5.

National Individual Championship in the State Police
Marksman Class. He is the son
of Mr . ·and Mrs. Chester
Simpson of Racine and i.!
married to the former Bonnie
Badgley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Badgley of Racine.
They have a daughter, Lisa,
age 12, and a son, Darin, age 1.
Brian and Bonnie are both •
graduates of Racine High
School, class of 1954, They
reside in Baltimore, Ohio.
Brian was stationed In
Jefferson County two years
and Monroe County eight
~ ·years. · He transferred to Wildlife District No. 1 in 1970
· where he works in the Training

ftrst month organizing, likely
will come on efforts to pass
again-over a presidential veto
if necessary_.,.me of the bills
Nixon killed by pocket veto
after the 92nd congress adjourned.
With the election behind
them, the Democrats also
ldclle!! oH a &lt;;onte~t for House
majotl!y leader 1 in the
probable event that the current
leader, Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La. ..
i.! dead. Boggs and Rep. Nick
B!ogtch, D-Alaska, have been
missing since their plane
disappeared over Alaska on
Oct. 16.
Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill, DMass., now the party whip in
the House, and Rep. Sam
Gibbons, D-Fla., a five-term
southern liberal, were reported

sounding out fellow members,
seeking support for the post.
A rumored challenge to
Speaker Carl Albert had not
materialized. Most members
now believed Albert, after one
term in the highest elective
office held by a Democrat,
would be picked without opposition at a pre.,session caucus
for another. . two_ years as
speaker. ·
... ear-final returns from
Tuesday's balloting showed Uie
Democrats had staved off the
Nixon aval8jlche to pick up two
seats in tbe Senate and to lose
no more than 12 or 13 in the
House. Thus they maintained
Democratic congressional control unbroken since .1954.
In retrospect, Republicans
said Nixon already could claim

a pretty fair "philosophical
majority" in the House, where
a coalition of Republicans and
conservative Democrats traditionally have been al!le to win .
As for the Senate, they
conceded that lt now takes on a
somewhat more liberal hue.
But they said Nixon's historic
win over George S. McGovern
must have carried·shock w8.vi!S
to Capitol HiU--Md1ila~Nixoh
now should get better support.
Both President Nixon and
key Democratic lawmakers
have pledged to make'"'tax
reform- sometimu called
"loophole closing" -a priority
matter next ye31'.
O'Neill also listed for major
attention of the new Congress
some form of national health
insurance; additional con-

sumer protection ; more aid for
mass transit ; a new money bill
for health, education and
welfare, to replace one vetoed
by Nixon as the old Congress
died; and re-passage of
another vetoed bill to improve
veterans' medical care.
Because of sensitivity over
the continued m~ing status of
Boggs, and the waning
possibility he and Beg!Ch stlll
mlglit he rescued, both O'NeiU
and Gibbons delayed announcing publicly for the
leadership post . However It
was learned that other
Democrats had received
solicitations from both members. Gibbons called a news
conference for noon EST
Friday, presumably to make
his announcement.

•

The Ohio Division of
Wildlife's four man Sharpshooter team won first place in
the ·team matches. The team
won a total of IB Individual and
team trophies.
Simpson, instructor with the
Ohio Division of Wildlife, won
first place in three individual
--.:II'Btc~he!t-:-•rqd:_ "-·.the- .high- - iffiil·--smew -se~t!Oll'Wtth -~,-~ ---'-~
aggregate total of all the , Williams, former Meigs
matches, in winning the . County game prote~tor.

ATI'Y'. ~OHNE, HALLIDAY

Halliday may ask
for vote recount
Gallipoli s Democrat Attorney John E. Halliday said
today he is studying whether or
not to request a recount in his
92nd District Representative
race with Republican Oakley
C. Collins of Ironton .
Unofficial tabulation showed
Collins won by just 178 votes in
the four county area of
Lawr&lt;•nce, Gallia, Meigs and
part of Athens.
Attorney Halliday wo~ Ga)lia
County by polllng 5,817 votes w
Collins' 3,262. He also captureQ
Meigs County, 4,202 to 3,968.
Collins had a IG-vote advantage

m

'iX:~&lt;X:!I.X~·wmMWH.»l

COACHES MEET

In Athens County, winning, 810
to 795. Former Senator Collins
won hill own county, collecting
12,710 votes to Halllday's 9,789.
Halliday said this morning
he iS waiting the official count
before making any decision on
a recount.
Collins said he was surprised
by the voting, but was glad he
was the winner.

Accidents
.
.
•
are mmor
Two accidents were investigated, one Wednesday and
one today, by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. No personal

Southern Valley Athletic
Conference ~~~~~;~~!!--..:..i~iu~·i~1~w;,.~~~~p~riedl.~"=.:::.._ _
~~ -~ - -coaches WIU';
--~New-Branch--Bank--Planned
Wednesday at 2 p. m. on
m. Tuesday at Osc
County Road 5 .In Salisbury
Restaurant In Gallipolis to
Twp., Nancy L! Snider, 19,
select the 1972 All ConPomeroy, and John Wayne
ference Football Team.
Russell, 64, Louisville, Ky.,
Basketball coaches will
· --~~~~~~~
drove their cars Into a collision
also attend to draw for the
in a curve. Russell was cited
Customers
will
have
easy
annual SVAC Preview
TUPPERS PLAINS - A conducted at 2:30 p. m.
Planning for the Tuppers
lor failure to yield half of the
modernistic approach to Saturday in Tuppers Plains 800 Plains facility was done by acces~ includ ing the con- scheduled Friday, Nov. 17 at
roadway. There was medium
customer service was taken feet north of the intersection of President Edison Hobstetter; venience of the "LeFebure- Kyger Creek High School. damage to the Snider car and
-~ - ~-· By Ualted Preas IDterDatiGaal
Spartan" drive-up window .
KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. -PRESIDENT Nixon huddles Wi\h today by the Pomeroy National Rt. 7 and Rt. 681. The date Vice-President Dennis E. Night depository service will .;:;w'ff.&lt;=!W.:W/#~oiO.'lti.I.Z?.l heavy to Russell's.
At 8:35 a. m. today In
his cloaest advisers today at his bayside v1lla to begin the search Bank in an announcement that coincides with groundbreaking Keney, the bank's board of also be provided by a recessed
a new all~lectric bank building ceremonies for the bank's new directors, and sal~ engineers of
Syracuse
at the intersection of
. fur fresh faces ud new Ideas for his next four years in the White
....:~
t
will be built on Route 7 in branch in Rutland, held on the LeFebure Corp., Colum- envelope depository . The
Second and Cherry Sts. Ben'H01111el Elated over his landBllde eleetlon victory but appearing
depository, as well as the
ei~UJ&amp;ca _ es
Tuppers Plains to serve as the Nov. II last year. The Tuppers bus, Ohio.
jamin F. Quisenberry,
weary, Nixon and his family flew here Wednesday night for a second branch of the ,bank.
Plains branch building will be
The colonial styling of the 'drive-up window , will be
Syracuse, traveling south on
telazed 10)0urn in the Florida sun.
•
Construction . will start im~ practically identical to the new new building will provide a sheltered from lhe weather.
Cherry , failed to stop hi.! car
The Chief Ezeclltlve aliO wUI be mapping strategy for his mediately . Public ground- Rutland branch structure.
Customer service will be f!lOOR
8
unique settjng for banking.
and collided with one driven
next terJ!l, &amp;~ to Pre!&amp; Seg-~lary Ronald_L. Ziegler, breaking · ceFemonies- will be - - - streamlined by. a functional, _. Bus driver certificates were east on Second by Mary M.
8efrft clepatlin&amp; wlshlngton, Nixon sununoned Cabinet of.
well-planned teil.e r . area · issued to Eloise Pickett, Esther Lisle, Syracuse. There was
flcials, White HOWle staffers and top federal bureaucrats for post
Located in th1s area! directly Black, John Ruth, Billy Hill, heavy damage to the
election sull(lll to remind them their "traditional" resignations
behmd the four statl_on teller Earl Adams and John Bentley Quisenberry car and light to
, 'were In order;'The t*eeplng request aliO applies to scores of
hnes, will ,be an 1 ~sulated by the Meigs County Board of Usle's. There was no citation
'Other J)l'elldent!al appo~.
1
ledge~ hous1ng umt,_ two Education Tuesday night.
· issued .
' ,
Many Members of Nixon's present administration were
te!lers desks, the dnve-up
The board ~dopted a
RACINE - Deborah Lee Lee's Music Cente~. Pomeroy . pageant is Meigs County wmd~w and . the mght resolution approving a state
a;peded to IUI'Yive the u and wUl be !Ilk~ to remain on In the
Stone,
daughter of Mrs. Renee
Miss Jeffers has been a Junior Miss, Inc., a non-profit depository recelVlng locker. plan for providing for the
MeOJid term. But there were indications a large scale shake up ;m
M, Stone and the late Mr. majorette, drum majorette, a organlzlition.
The Tuppers Plams struc- educational needs of hanthe permnent top COil1JII8Ild iB in the works.
.
cioudy and cool today, high
1
The first two contestants to lure, 26ft. by 52 It overall, ~Ill dicapped children. Attending in the upper 40s and lower 50s.
StOlle, Pomeroy -Ri. 3, and member of the band, student
pARJB _ THE UNJl'ED 8TlTES said today It wu ''aP. Debbie Kay Jeffers, daughter council, G.A.A., Pep Band, Pep enter the pageant were Sharon feature - a red bnck exte~1or were County Superintendent Partial clearing south and
proacbln&amp; whit we believe can be the final stage of our of Mr · and Mrs. John Jeffers, Club, and t~e Concert and Drake, sponsored by the accented by wh1te tnm , Robert Bowen and board · mostly ·-cloudy north today.
negolllllolll" of !he VIetnam peace talks and• promised tq Mine~sville Rt: I, are the latest Marching Band . at Eastern. Racine HoiJle National Bank, columns a~d a cupola . Ample ·members Virgil Atkins, Harold Low 35 to 40. MosUy cloudy and
ruf"':IICI'IIpuloally all provill(lll of 8 peace treaty. North entries In the ·1973 Meigs She was cl&gt;-editor of the school and Lee Ann Nease, sponsored parking Will be furmshed tn a Roush Harold Lohse ~ Gordon a little warmer Friday with
Collin; and George P~rry.
Vlemlmlald 11 Prelldtllt Nixon nnlll pe~~ce be should sign the County Junior Miss Pageant to newgpaper her junior year and by Davis-Wamer , Insurance, spacious lot at the rear.
chance of rain. High middle to
The
new
branch,
m
the
"'
·
Pomeroy
.
Both
of
these
con11re11117 neptllted CIIM !Ire apeeme;d immediately,
be
held
Saturday,
Nov.
1a;
at
8
is
active
in
4-H
club
work.
For
lower 30s.
1
.u...o .__.
ollatar WllllamJ Porter id t the P- m. at Southern High School. her talent she will present a testants are seniors at planning stage several years,
hopefully will be completed by
Tbe.,...~dcaneg
'
'
,' 1111 a
MissStcnehasbeenanhonor variety of dances. She is Southern High School.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
01111et IIlah II C11 t1 the~ llllb that Nlmn 1 rMctlon roll student at Eaatem High sponsored by Gaul's Market of
the spring of 1973. The
The Middleport E-R squad
CONTRACTS RENEWED
,1111
lbal ''wilb lft1'Y JIUIIIIC lily, puce eOillel pereepUilly School, is a member of the Chester.
NOW YOIf KNOW
Pomeroy National Bank is
answered
a
call
at
8:!3
p.
m.
The
Racine village fire.
--"He~ told the VIII~~ the North VlfllnrTII!....Jlrama_ and _Pep_Clubs the- rtckets..for the-pageant can Richard M. Nixon in.,\960 lost.- observing its'lOOth anniversary
Wednesday for Mrs. Roger department has renewed
,lbal """''~~* wlllld ID ••~ .
4jinihta to~ Olorus; and the Spanilh Club. be purchased from any con- the clcses\ presidential race of , this year,
Eblin,
Bradbury. A maternity · contracts with Letart, SUtton
118111 u 1111111 u Ill aCCllrllls CGICiuded 8lld ~ Hanoi to do Jl'or her talent, she will present · testant for $UO in advance and the 20th century - losing by
The public is invited to atMrs . Eblin was taken . and Lebanon_ Twpa., _It *II
!be - ·
' ··vocal and insirucmentalsolo. at the door the night of the 113,057 or one-tenth of 1 per tend Saturday's ground- patient,
to
the
Holz~r Medical Center. · reported today. .
'
(ConUnued on Pllflt 12)
She II 8pOIIIUI'ed by Bill and pageantfor $2. Spopsoring the cent of the total popular vote. breaking .

ews.. in Briefi

at Tuppen_:_PJains----

Bank announces second branch

6C.

b bo rd

MIAMI- Meyer Lansky, refused sanctuary on two continents,
returned to the United States Tuesday and surrendered to the
FBI on tax ~va~ion _ch~£es__,__The re uted financial wiZjlrd of the
Mafia's gambling empire was freed on $275,000 bond. When he
left the court and wearily climbed into his auto he round it had
been ticketed for overtime parking.

Y

Two EHS girls in pageant

NEW DEUli- Authoritles at New DeUti airport seized contraband goods worth $71,500 hidden in the luggage 'ot a 14-yearold guru whose followers call him "Lord of !he Universe." Many
of the 10,000 followers, including 3,000 Americal'6; who greeted
him at the airport called Ita ''frame.up."

WASHINGTON - A White House of!icill promised t~at a
federal task force to S\UdY Indian problema would be created,
and in return hundreds of Indians agreed to end today their weeklong occupation of the BID'eau of Indian Affairl. Several of the
Indians alrel!dy had started leaving, and most' of the rest "~llllt
to go home now,", said _a protester,

VOL XXV, NO. 146

lOth - Max Denn is (R J over
Robert Thompson
:
12th - Walter White (R l over
James Gehrlich
lAth - Will iam Mussey &lt;Rl
over Ronald Shoemaker
16th - D~nald Woodland &lt;Dl
over Ro bert Ramsey
·
l81h - An ic e John son (R)
over Thomas Walters
,
19th - Thomas Van Meter
{ R J over Joseph Murray
20th - Robert Secrest &lt;Dl
over Clyde Hardesty
22nd Anthony Calabrese
(Dl over Elmer Forberg
:
24th - Ronald Mottl (0) over
George Pokorney
~~
26th - Robin Turner ( R l over
Gene Slagle - undecided
'
28th - Dav id Headley Ull
over Robert Miller
•
30th Douglas Applegat·e .
(D) over Kenne th Berry
~
32nd - Thomas Carney I Dl
over John Lally
•

: Warehouse on Mechanic Street.

Roush, Steve Teaford and
Billie Jean ruce .

BIGGEST A'M'RACI'ION ON THE Charles and Tom
Theiss farm, Great Bend, was a small calf which tbe children
hovered around as they toured the dairy farm Wednesday.
The children attending were stUdents of Mrs. Jean Alkire's
Kindergarten class at Racine. Open house of the new dairy
operation will be held Sunday from 1-3 p. m, with the public
invited to attend. The chUdrer1, following the tOur, were
treated to m1lk and doughnuts.

Devoted To The lntere&amp;t&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

----------------Street aria ElberfeiCts l;

SAIGON - Typhoon weather conditions Tuesday curtailed
U.S. air strikes over North Vietnam to their lowest level since
Oct. 23 when Presipent Nixon ordered a cutback In bombing of
the north. But Americali warplanes continued bombing of
suspected Communist supply and troop concentrations in and
just south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). Ground action was
sporadic.

COLUMBIA, Mo .-About 200 striking food tlei'Vice workers
Tuesday smashed the wlndlhields of two cars with baseball bats
outside the University of Mimurl.COiumbia central food store
building . Several persons were reported injured.

Charles and Tom Theiss
Included in the :;oo acres are
gave kindergarten children of the former Charles Crow and
Mrs. Jean Alkire's .at Racine a Ham Parr property. An open
grand tour Wednesday of their house to show the new dairy
father-son dairy operation at installation will be held Sunday
Great Bend.
from I to 3p.m., with the public
Purpose of the tour was to invited.
acquaint the children with Making the tour were Amy
farm operations. The father Wells, Carol Ann O'Brien,
and son have 90 Holstein cows Vincent
Cleland,
Ray
in production . An ultra-modern Lawrence , Sean Riffle ,
milking parlor was added to Christina Arnold, Debbie
the dairy operation in Sep- Holter , Sandra Harden,
!ember. Work was done by -Bob Tammy Adkins, Linda EnTirompson which inducted the forth, Janna Wolfe , Greg
milk parlor, feeder stalls and Michael, Charles Theiss, Lois
feed manger. A ton and a half lie, Trudy Jones, Becky
of milk is produced each day. Ar ott, Greg Nease, Chad
There are 500 acres on the oberts, David Ebersbach,
Theiss !arm which was for- Kevin Teaford , Richard Davis,
merly owned oy Uoyd Harris. Juli a Houdashelt, Darin

r-~-----------------' Vtstt Elberfelds Toy Store on Front

The world at a glance
By United Press lnlernatlooal
BRUNSWICK, Ga. - Cars plunged 100 feet iDto the Brunswick
River Tuesday night when the freighter African Neptune, its
steering crippled, hit a drawbridge and rippped out 300 feet of it.
Some of the motorists saw the freighter would hit the bridge and
ran back. Others did not_. Rescuers continued a night-long search
for survivors and bodies.

LAS CRUCES, N.M,-A bus driver. was killed and 45 persons
injured whC!l a tour bus collided headon with a truck rig
Tuesday. The bus was chartered out of Cincinnati and was
headed hOme from a trip to California and.the Southwest.

i

M

In Pomeroy-Wearing Apparel For
Your Family and Furnishings For Your Horne

unsuceessful attempl to assassinate King Hassan II appear in
court in Rabat today for sentencing. Eleven air force officers,
including deputy commander Lt. Col. Mohamed Amekrane,
received death sentences ,Tuesday. Altogether, 220 men were
tried for their alleged roles in an attempt Aug. 16 to shoot' down a
jet carrying Hassan home from France ..

Separate checks, please

i

•

Elberfel~

BELFAST- British anny troops arrested two more leaders of
the Irish Republican Army's extremist Provisional wing
Tuesday at a roadblock. Political sources said lt raised to more
than 50 the number of Provisional extremists in custody and said
the Provisional organization appears virtually destroyed in paris
of the north.
·
.

dairy operation

74th James Muellet•
.•
over "_John Olsen
75t h - Ch;:lr tes Fry ( R l
James Hinc.he y
76th Harry Turner .
ove r Paul O"ltvis
•

Weather

~

Sale! BICYCLE-S
10 speed touring bikes - 10 speed racing bikes - 26 Inch standard bikes and th
:
bicycles with banana seats and hl-rl,. handle bars. ~I so.smaller bikes wit~ traln7n~~;;!:~.ular

•
Stop in the Toy Store 1 Select the bicycle you like and save during this sale:

- - - - - - --·
Be thrifty! Save

all of your Saleslips from

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'•

.,

t

'

•

I~

' .

,.t

�3- The Daily Sentinel

J

&amp; THINGS

Us.

BY PAUL CRABTREE
We've been updating the dialogue in old movies to fit latter
day circumstances, and showi!Jg how characters would react to a
given situation in movies made before 1950, during the
"maturing" 1~ era, and m today's ultra-permtSStve look m
the films you see on 'IV More 'examples
"Message" ftlm on race relattons. At the end, a black man
and whtte man say:
.Pre-1950: White man: "You're a good man underneath that
black skin, sam, and we're all sendmg a truckload of turkeys
down to your part of town, so that everyone wiD have a fme
Thanksgiving dmner." Black man: "Thank yuh, str, thanks."
1~: Whiteman : "We'll all have a Thanksgivmg feast m
this town together. After all, if our kids can go to the same
school, I don't know why we can't sit down at the same table,
sam." Black man : "That's right, Mr. Green"
Post-1965: White man: "Okay,' you win, Malcolm Z. The
white produce dealers are wiUlng to sell all the turkey1JIUcklng
franchises to your people." Black man : "Cool move, Honky You
didn'tknow, but the Panthers were ready to zap every market in
town at midmght."

+++
Teenage film, wtse father wtlh callow youth. The boy has just
admitted be has been smoking m his room, to whtch the father
replies:
Pre-1950: "Well,son,lguessweall need to tryout things that
are forbidden now and then. Just promise it won't happen agam
and we'll forget it."
1~: "You meathead. Don't you know clgarets can kill
you. Why did you think I made you read the Surgeon General's

report?"
Post-1965: "Nothmgbuttobacco' You're sure, son' You gtve
me your word, right." (Calls to wtfe) "Mabel, thank God, It was
only tobacco, just plain tobacco!"

+++
Sports film, with the coach and star quarterback conferring
in the closmg seconds of the Big Game. The quarterback says he
Ia Injured and cannot go on, to which tbe coach replies :
Pre-1950: "You've got to get back In there and pull it out for
Frankie, Joe. Just think of Frankie lying ln that hospital, and I
know you can do it."
1!160-65: "I don't give a danm if we have beaten the pomt
spread by two touchdowns. Get back ln there, or I'll blacklist you
with every team m the NFL."
Post-1965: "You're a rat, Joe, but it's a deal- an extra two
thouaand under the table, neat ... two girls in the apartment next
door, and ten per cent off the top at that casino I've got a piece

of."

+++
Love story, with the lovers deciding whether to Call It All

Off.
Pre-1950: He: "It'll be awful, living without you, Ann." Site .
"Not so loud. Daddy can hear everything we say he~e on this
front p_orch ."
195().65: He: "Go• Okay, go. But get your clothes on ftrst."

+++
Political drama. A supposedly lncorruptlble pollttetan has
been offered an irreststlble amouni of money to sell out to the
Special Interests. He says :
Pre-1950: "You've got yourself a deal."
1~: "You've got yourself a deal."
Post-1!1M· "You've ~ot yourself a deal."

TeleVision Log
6 DO - News 3, ~. 6, 8, 10, 15, AtiC New&gt; o, CBS News 8, 10.

Around the Bend 33, Sesame St 20
6 30 - News 3, ~. 15; News 6, 8, 10, 1 Dream of Jeannie 13,
Designing Women 33
•
7 00 - What's My line 8, Big Red Jubilee 1l, News 6, 10 , Truth
or Conseq. 3, Beat The Clock 4, Amazing World ot Kreskm
13, Elec. Co 20; Course ot Our Times 33
7 30 - I'll See You In Court 4, Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell The
Truth6; Wild Kingdom 10, Lassie 8, Beat the Cl~ck 13, Zoom
20 ; Black Journal 33
8 DO - Flip Wllstn 3, 4, 15, Mod Squad 6, 13, The Waltons 8 10
Advocates 20, 33
'
9 DO - lronslde3, 4, 15, Assignment. Vtenna6 13 Movte "Wa 1t
Until _Dark" 8. 10, International Perform;nc~ 20
10 ooONen Marshall 6, 13 , Dean Martin 3, 4, 15 , Mountameer
5 ports 33; News 20
11·00 - News3.~.6. 10, 13, 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Dick Cavett 6, Mov1e "Lovers on
a Tightrope" 8, Mov1e "The Sound and the Fury " 10. Movte

••

THE AFFAIR . CONTINUED
Dear Helen'
"Are Romeos supermep ?" one of your male correspondents
asks, and then wonders where a husband and father gets the time
or energy, Is he ktddmg' Or maybe he has an 8 to 5 JOb plus two
hours of commutmg and IS somewhat low m libtdo .
Not so w1th university professors. I am roamed to one. They
leave home at 8 a.m , return at 6·30 p.m. Since my husband's
ftrst class IS at 10, he has plenty of time before work for a JUlie
refreshing rendezvous. Then there are two hours frl't' at lunch
He fmlshes hts last class m mid-afternoon, and young chicks are
quite willing to improve hiS shlnmg leiSure hours.
It Ia the same with research people, salesmen and executives
who aren't jailed m time-clock offices Upper echelon hanky·
panky is expected. It's so routine that tf a man doesn't mdulge
himself he's constdered a little strange or, like your male
correspondent, very na1ve - A DISO,.LUSIONED WIFE
Dear Wife ·
. Or perhaps merely in love with hiS wife.
Honest, every man who has the opportunity uoesn'tlndulge
- but a suspicious wife may nudge hun m that direcl!on. - H.
P S. On the otherhand, many do· read on 1

Dear Helen .
It's tdiotic to constder sexual "ftdelity" the only cnterion for
a happy marrtage. If my husband is attracttve to other women
and falls for thetr charms once in a while, I constder this a
challenge. I'd hate to have a man no one else wants! He feels the
same about me. So we don't '1all" very often, but when we do,
lt'sno big trauma. Justa stgnal that we'd better stir up the home
fires. - MODERN

THERICH
POOR
LmLE
CROOK
NE y R
t W 0 K (KfFthS) -· Meybelrl Lansky IS the
secre opera 1or o ree gam ng CIISIDOS m
Yugosla
b t 1 t h 1 t be tak
b Ti
v•a u s 00 0 0
en m Y to
as a resident allen. Lansky has offered mtllions
for ,sanctuary anywhere outside the U S. but
can 1 get tt - Simply becau~ Uncle Sam's the
most powerful geopohtlcal force on earth, and
espectally behind tron and bamboo curtams
h
ood
wt erthe our tgh W111 agam. 1s betthng sLaoughkt 11
11
6; Hazel 8
a o more
mt
'fins an_
10 DO - Dmah Shore 3, ll ; Dick Van Dyke 13, Columbus Six crn~ma h etime 01, greed as accumulated
Calling 6, Joker's Wtld 8, 10
lesttmates of Meyers evt~-gotten spotls range
tO 30 - Concentration 3, 15 , Phil Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13 , from $300 mtlhon to a btllton).
Price Is Rtght 8, 10
H
11 DO - Love Amen can Style 6. Sale of the Century 3, 15. Gambtt
IS lenta~les have reached deep mto dozens
8, 10. Password 13
of countrtes vta bribery and muscle to erect his
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4, 15, Love of Lite 8, Bewttched 6, 13 casmos - he's the only outsider among the
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 , Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 , Password 6,
Local News 1. News 13, Contact B.
Malta, shU opera ling . Several "sutcldes"
12 3~e~n~ ~··e~~m~ 3 , \~ ' Search for Tomorrow 8, 10, Split weren t, they were carefully camouflaged
03
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13 ; II'~ Your Bet 8, Green klllt~gs; Jersey's Doc Hams saw the hand·
Acres tO, Watch Your Child 15.
.
wntmg on the tomb and took volun~ry
1 ~orl~ ~r~sMr~~ 13.5 ~. 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As The d~portatlon to Israel where he's been vegelaltng
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13 , Mtke Without apparent mvolvement wtlh the world's
Douglas 6, Guiding Light 8, 10.
mobs for a good reason · we heard a Mafia tough
2 30 - Doctors3,4, 15, DatlngGamelJ , Edgeo1Night8, tO
g once h D
d tr I off
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6. 13 , Love
uy
w en oc owne con
our or 1tve
• Splendored Thing 8, 10; Advocates 20
Las Vegas casmos harshly crttictze Doc
3
3, 4, 15; One Lite to Llve6. Book demandmg "Ain't he satisfted with the ptle
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 1l, Sesame St 20, 33 , Love
got in Swltzerl.~nd? .He oughta let the rest of the
American Style 13, Fllntotones 6, Gilligan's Island 8;-Merv- guys make II. Whtch was an unsubtle way of
Grlffln 4; Movte "Get Yoursell a College Girl"'to.
1 Doc 1
4 25 - Sports Club 6
revea mg . no onger was a sacrosanct four4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Merv Grlllln 15, PettiCoat Juncfton 3: star general 10 the underworld army, and It was
5 ~ndy~~:~;t~~~~r~~~~e{,,~~"C~~3Dyke ts, Ponderosa 3, 4, lime to go, qutetly, even as Frank Costello took
Daniel Boone 6
the ~rutal hint - the bullet that grazed hiS
l· 30 - Marshall Otllon 15 ; Elec . Co 33 , Dragnet 8; Gomer Pyle noggm tn the attempted ruboul - and Doc
t3, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
ll 1
ted lh 1
1
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10. 15, Truth or Con seq 6, Sesame st 20, wt mg Yaccep
e uxunous Yeasy way out.
Aroond The Bend 33
He also can go to France but not to England or
6 30 - News6, 13: French Chef 33. I Dream ol Jeannie 13.
lt&lt;tly.
7 00 - Truth or Con seq 3, Beat The Clock~. What's My Line 8,
Doc Ham 0 o ld ha
1 ted t0
1
Wild Ktng9om 13, News, Weather, Sports 6, 10, Saint t5. Folk
.
s u
vee ec
remam n
Guitar 33. Electric Co 20.
.
Amer~ca : he was born in Russta whiCh never
7. 30- To Tell The Truth 6, PMent Game 10, Porter Wagoner 3, accepts a gangster-deportee ... The blunt reason
~t~~p ~ee~~~~~,~~~~hee ~::i~~ 3i 1 t's Your Bet 8, Wall Lansky has remained alive is his brilll•ntly evil
8 00 - Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Brady Bunch 6, 13. Sonny &amp; Cher tmaginatlon tn ctrchng the world wlth hiS
8, tO; Week In Washington Preview 33, 20
·
casinos - with Maftc partnership ... He once
1:~.,;\\: ~eopte 3, 4, 15: Partridge Family 6, 13; Just operated a casino tn the savagely poor country
9:00-GhostStory 3, 4. 15; Room222 6, t3; Masterpiece Theatre of Ghana that made $2,1100,000 a year for
33; World Press 20; Movie "Hud" 10; Movie "Buccaneer" 8 Meyer's and Mafiosi SWISS accounts
9:30-0ddCouple6, 13, Thirty Minutes Wtth20
,
.
·
10:00- Banyon 3, ~. 15: Love American Style 6, 13; News 20,
Meyers man In the Phtllpplnes got tossed
W•ke Up Jolin Doe 33
out of that distant country a couple of dec d
11:00- Newl, Weather, Sports 6, 8, to, 13
a es
·11:30- Old&lt; Cavett 6,- Johnny Carson 3, t5 ; Movle~'How-To-ae - agol!')wl hts pre$!nce..there wauevealed by N.
Very, Very Popular" 8; Movie "The Day ot The Trifflds" 10, Y. newspapermen ... Lansky's local manager
Movie "The Raven" 8
there (a he
late 1 Glia
tossed
12:110- Roller Derby ~ ·
s was
r n
na,
out of
12:30- News 13.
there too) was Ted Lewin, an International
1:00- News •·
"pistol guy'' now dead quleUy ln bed of all
t: 15-' News 4.
'

o~e e;.!'~re

In any case, the rewlnng spht m the Federalist
ranks doomed Adams' ch.mces for a second 'term.
:'-lor was the shock to lm hypcrsensmve ~'gO lessened hy the fact that 1t was V ICC Prestdent Thomas
Jefferson who defeated h1m The re1cctton \1 as
polit1cal as well as personal because Jefferson \1 as
a Democrattc-Repubhcan, .md \dams distrusted
democracy. "There never was a democr.1cy yet that
did not commit su1ctde," he wrote
Adams' last days as Pres1dent were so barren
and spiteful that the sagactous Albert G .!llann
wrote that h1s acnons rcAccted "meanness, mde·
cency, even msamty " Pres1dent-clcct Jefferson w,\s
more restrained . " Mr i\ emb,urasses us," he sa1d.
"Manners arc the happy ways of domg thmgs,"
Emerson wrote Beca use John Adams never learn ed
thts tnck, he was often ove rshadm• ed by men no
more and sometimes less capable than he , but who
tempered thetr talents wtth en ility and a spmt of
compromtse.
In sp1te of h1s belhgercnt personality, Adams
hated 'War above all else. So that there would be
no doubt about what he cons1dcred h1s crownmg
achtevemcnt, he composed thts epttaph for his
gravestone: "Here hes John \dams, who rook upon
himself the responsibthty of the peace w1th France,

In the year 1800.''

co., ••

"l1l01 A..c , H li Mt l

NORTH

The

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

9

The biddmg has been·

1•

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
You, South, hold

Pass

2•

1.

South
?

TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead of b1ddmg two clubs
your partner has b1d one heart
What do you do now?

EVERYBODY
Shops the

Sentinel

C1ty Ed1lor
Pub!tshed dally except
Saturday by The Oh tO Valley
PubiiSh tng

Court

.Q8U.K953+A765 ... 3
What do you do now?
A-Poss. You don't like clubs,
but ony &lt;1111 other than pass is a
bad overbid.

Dai~

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
E ~eec Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

St ,

Company ,

Pomeroy,

45769 ,Bur.fne'Ss Office I !phone
992 2,156, EqttOrli!!d f?hone 992

2157

out.

He had to come down to six
cards mcludlng four dlamon ds. Tb e other two would
be either two spades or a
srade and the 10 of hearts.
I he came down to two
sPades you would be
squeezed ' in I!Pades and
hearts when I cashed my dlamonds. If he came down to
one of each, you would not
be squeezed but my ace of
spades play would drop hiS
queen and I would make the
slam by finessing against

Meigs slightly favored

Botttnell•

Gallagher , Inc , 12 East 42nd
St , New York City , New York
Subscrtpf ton rates
De
ltvered by carr,tr where

avatlable 50 cents per week,

UPI's selection board
Several atea coaches have
been ~e rvtng on Umted Press
lnlc1nat10nal 's High School
Boat d of Coaches The board
selects the top lugh school gnd
tea ms m the state each week
On the AAA boa1 d are B1ll
Bonar, Manetta and Roger

BY KEITH WISECUP

Merb, Portsmouth. Class AA
part1c1pa nts are J1m Rockwell,
New Lexmgton; Ed Miller,
Wheelersburg, John Ecker,
Galllpohs and Tom Oyer,
Wave!ly
Class
A ts
represented by J1m Srmth,
Portsmouth East

Coach D1ck Wa1 e's Btg
MEIGS PT PLEASANT PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
Blacks w1ll have a slight
OFFENSE
wetght advantage on the lme, MEIGS
WI Pos Wt
PT PLEASANT
187·181, but MC!gs has a b1gger Andy Veughan 112)
173 QB 1so
Randy
Warner t 11 1Or
Joss.
bac kft eld, o ut~ e 1ghm g PI
1SO
Rtck PICkens \121
Dal la s Weber ( 12)
179 FB 1~0
ffiONTON 18 FMRBORN PARK HILLS 6 Thts ts a hunch.
Steve Evans (12)
Pleasant 165-156
Mt
ck
Ash
\
Ill
147
WB 13S
J1mmy
Chand ler ( 11)
PORTSMOUTH 24 GALUPOLIS 12 B1g Blue had their
Me~ gs, wh1ch ended 1ts
Chuc k Fa ulk 1121
16u TB ISO
Bobby
Marttn (121
btggest game last week.
Sou theaste rn Oh10 Athlehc R1ck Gaul ( 12 1
153
c
170
Mtke
Gtbbs 1111
PORTSMOUTH WEST 18 JACKSON 16 lronmen end
League season last Fnday wtlh Lou M cK 1nney ( 12)
164 LG 705
Joey Roberts 1101
disappomtmg year
17l RG 180
a 10-6 loss agamst Gall!pohs to Joh n Lehew (Ill
Greg Johnson I 121
Ma
rk
Werry
(
11)
238 LT 7SO
POINT PLEASANT 28 MEIGS 14. Marauders lose fourth
wmd up 3-4 and tn a fifth place
Bol l Wallace 112 1
M ike M cDant el { 11)
200
RT
700
Btll Stiver 11 21
stratghl!
11e w1th Jackson , 1s hopmg to Boll Cheney 1121
180 RE 168
Pau
l Casto (111
R H Rawlmgs
44 36
Pomeroy Bowhng Lanes
snap a three-game losmg Ra ndy Chalm 11 21
GREENFIELD 14 WAVERLY 12 Ttgers ready to conIS5 LE 170
Bertha's
Grotery
42 38
Dave Stncklen ( 12) Or
Wednesday Late
slt·eak , the longest d1 ought m
centrate on basketball.
Kmg Builder's Supply 40 40
150
Joey Given (111
Mlked League
Metgs htstory
Royal Crown
26 54
SVAC
Nov 1, 1972
DEFENSE
Evelyn's
Grocery
20 60
Standmgs
Wtth several underclassmen
ALEXANDER 20 SOUTHERN 12. Spartans are ready to stop
MEIGS Alan Mclaughlin 11S3 3). moddl e guard Bill Slack
High lndlvtdual Game
Tea
m
Pts
stat tmg, th1s years Metgs g11d (168 3) and Lehew, lackles , Ro bert Quails 11 59 3) and Chaney, Rosenbaum Meadows
two games losmg spell.
46 Mary Voss 210
ends
M
cKin
ney
and
Weber
lmebacker
s
Ron
Couch
(
140
3)
and
squad
wdl
come
oul
better,
or
Secon d Htgh lnd Game M
oo
re
Morrow
44
FAIRLAND 60 SYMMES VALLEY 8. Dragons show no
Ash
,
cornerbacks
and
Dave
Wolfe
(
!58
3)
and
M
elvi
n
Cremeans
Ellamay
Norton 189
Blakeslee
H
oyt
39
al least as well as expected,
mercy.
11603) , sa let1es
Htgh Series - Mary Voss
H
oller
Rawltng
s
35
tins yeal Alter a year or
OTHERS
Fullz-Bentley
28 5l2
PT PLEASANT Sdver and e•ther Wall ace or Roberts,
1
ebU1id1ng,
the
Maraudet
s
Second High se,es - El
Carsey
McDonald
24
ta
ckl
es
Dwtght
Adk1
ns
(
lBO
3)
and
Byron
Shmn
(
150
J)
ends
Oak Hill 16 Wellston 0
tamay Norton d4
H1gh
IndiVIdual
Game
could
he
m
!me
lor
a
bette!
M•
ke
Fetty
(
170
4) Wayne Sanders (200 41. Frank Doolillle 1180
Federal Hocking 43 Glouster 12
Team High Game
Men. Roy Holte r 191, Women,
4 ) and Johnson, lmebackers Steve M 1ll er ( 170 4), and J1m
yea1 m 1973
Dorothy's Plnnettes 808
Lo1s
Rosenbaum
155
Vmton County 22 Unioto 7
Semors playmg thetr fmal Doeffm ger \165 3), halfba cks and G1ven, sa fety
Tea m High Series
Second Htgh lnd Game Wahama 28 Buffalo 16
Dorothy's
Plnnettes 2297
Men
Roy
Holl
er
1BJ
,
Women
,
ga me of the year Fnday wtll be
Coal Grove 32 Chesapeake 18
N,ea
cil
Carsey
15t
th1rd
men,
Andy Vaughan, Dtllard, Chuck Steve Jewell , Mark Werry, Lou lhe final Marauder game for Dan M eadows 182 women,
8-8
Portsmouth East 16 Ptketon 12
MC!gs has never beaten the Faulk, Dallas Weber, Jerry McKmney , Bill Chaney and another semor, Ttm Kmg, who Hope Moore 150
Wheelersburg 48 ironton St. Joe 8
Htgh Series - Men, Roy
Bl ac ks 1n three p1 ev10 us Coleman, Roger Pearch, Gaul, Randy Chafm 1'h1s w11l also be IS lnJUI ed
South Point 30 Rock Hill 12
Ho tt er 5Jl Women Lo1s
meetmgs, Josmg 28-u m 1968
Rose nbaum 4.tA
Second H1gh Senes - Men
and 28-12m 1969 and the t1e last
Dan M eadows 509 Women,
)eat
Hope Moor e 416 , th•rd , Men, EMERSON LEADS
Pt Pleasant, which plays s1x
Ch uck Blakeslee 488 , Women,
SAO PAULO, Braz!l·(UPI)Pat Holler 416
ofth e lOla• gestschools m West
Brazlllan
racing driver EmerTea m
H ig h
Ga m e
Vtrgmta year after year, IS
son Fttltpaldl can wln the
Meadows 621.
as coach was m Jeopardy when resignation, effectiVe at the Rosenbaum
currently
1-7-1
Thetr
lone
wm
CHICAGO
(UPI)
Oh
iO
Tea
m
H1gh
Se
r1
es
CINCINNATI (UP! )
second
Formula Two competilo contend w1th Ratder
the
Spartans
ended
Oh1o
Rosenbaum
Meadows
1759
end
of
the
season,
but
after
he
was
a
21J..6
dects10n
over
R1pley
State
will
be
hghtmg
trad1t10n
tion with a high finish ln
Cincmnat1 Bengals Coach Paul quat terback Daryl Lamomca,
&amp;lnday's
third and fmalleg of
Brown satd Wednesday he who I:Kes to throw long but The Blacks lied Wan en Local and sentunent when 11 lrtes to State's four-year dommation of announced last week that he
Wednesday Early Btrd
thiS
sertes
wtlh
a
17·10
upset
was
qu•thng,
the
Spart&lt;tns
retam
a
share
of
the
Btg
Ten
16-16
earlier
m
the
year
In
a
the race. Fitttpaldl leads with
League
probably would start Ron ha sn't been domg as much or
Nov 1, 1972
pre-season scnmmage agamst lead agamst M1ch1gan State v1ctory tn Columbus Af. went out and handed Purdue tis
15 points on a victory and a
Pritchard at right linebacker that lately
Standmgs
terward,
defensive
tackle
Ron
ftrst
conference
defeat,
22-12.
th1s
week
the
same
Wa1
ren
Local
eleven,
finish ln the first
thts weekend smce hoth Ken
HHe's cut down on h1s mTeam
w L. second-place
Curl
of
Mtch1gan
State
exHaving
knocked
the
Botler·
Tradition
has
11
that
under·
Me1gs
won
34·0
two
races.
Dorothy s P1nnette s
Avery and · Btll Peterson are lerceptwn percentage some ,"
68 12
plained
the
Spartans' makers from a share of the
dogs
play
well
m
the
Ohto
l:ttck
Gaul,
Me1gs'
153
Jb
mjured
sa1d Ra1d ers execullve
~ '
lead, Mich!.san ,fill\te now-,pan
'
•'
!. ,Reierson· and 11\veny •sat on asstst&lt;tnt ana ' foimer '' chtef ' ~e moe starting center,' wtll cb~ St~te':l!lll!hl gan Sta~ &amp;el'leS, mottvatlon .
-~
"They were blowmg smoke do the same to the Buckeyes,
' ' h1s ' back m the 'lineup lh1s wee~ parttcularly when the favonte
the "stdellnes along w1th two scout AI Locasale "And
at
the old man (Daugherty), so who are favored by two touchother hurt players , Bob ya1ds per completiOn have afte r stttmg 'o\lt I a~ I week's ts undefeated And there's
game when he became 111 the plenty of sentunent around )Ye dec1ded to put 11 together downs
Trumpy and Bob Johnson, and been cut down some, too "
for hun," Curl sa1d.
As recently as 1968, an un11
watc hed the rest of the team
0ne reason IS the nBture of day of the game. Metgs ' only M1ch1gan State to send Duffy
Th1s
year
the
smoke
got
thick
derdog
M1eh1ga n State team
get ready for Sunday's en- the amount of zone they're mJury lh1s week Will s1dehne Daughterly out a wmner
Last year, m fact, Duffy's JOb enough to Ioree Daugherty's abnost rumed Ohio Slate's
counter w1th the Oakland playmg, " he satd " Everybody sentor corn erback Jon D1llard,
dr1ve to a nattonal champtona 148 pounder who has come on
Ratders.
IS throwmg short these days
shtp before losing, 25-20. And m
The Bengal defense will have You t&lt;tke what they g1ve you " to play well the last lew ga mes
BUCKS
FAVORED
1968, when the Spartans were
Ron Couch, 140 lb JUmor, wtll
STATELINE,
Nev
(UPI
)
defendmg naltonal champwns,
replace Dillard
F'ourth-1 an ked Oh10 State IS a th ey barely got by the
stx-pomt
favonle ovet Buckeyes 11-8 before thetr
.. ..,.,. .. '"""'.. M1ch1gan State m their Btg Ten famous lte wtth Notre Dame.
football game thiS weekend ,
Wtth the poss1ble excepl!on
accordmg to odds listed by of 16th..-anked North Carohna,
Harrah's Tahoe Racebook
the Spartans will be the best
In the NFL, the oddsmakers team lourth.f'anked Ohio State
have gtven the Oakland has played this year.
By United Press International
Raiders and Cmcmnat1
But although the Buckeyes
The
Boston
Ceihcs
ran
their
e e •
Benga ls even odds and the San have not been severely tested,
~ay mto first place Wednesday
D~ego Chargers a lour-pomt
Daugherty 1s quick to pomt out
mght whtle the Phtladelphla
edge on the Cleveland Browns "no team has yet come close to
7Bers moved to w1thm strikmg
beatmg them."
d!sl&lt;lnce of a dubtous National
"The other teams usually get
Ba ske lball AssOC!Bhon record
thetr pomts after Ohio State
The Celts go t the1r fast-break
has butlt up a lead," he said.
gomg m the second pertod and
Fifth;anked Michigan, the
outscored Golden State, 77-55,
Btg Ten's other undefeated
over the next two penods to
team which IS tied with Ohio
YOUR
STORE
beat the Warnors, 128-111 John
State for the conference lead,
Havlicek scored 25 pomts, Don
Dav1d M. Hmdy to Patnc1a n.,,. •• to have no trouble at all
t.HOOLEPORT. OHIO
Chaney 23 and Paul Silas 20 as M
Middleport
Boston scored lts'llth Victory
'
m 12 games and moved a half. Robert E Buck, Com
to
game ahead of idle New York Dorothy M. Jenkins, lot,
m the Atlantic D1v1sion. Rtck Midpleport, Sc1p10
Barry had 34 pomts to lead the
Dorothy M Jenkms to Dav1d
Warrt ors
E Jenkms, 1nt m 38 acres,
Wmless Ph!ladelph!a, mean- ScipiO
while, dropped tis 14th slratght
Elizabeth E. Sm1th, Wilfred
'
game, one short of the league J Sm!lh , J ea n E Mann ,
record for defeats at the st&lt;trt George V Mann to United
of a season Nate ArChibald , St&lt;ttes, lnt m 011 and gas,
~ EXAMPLE
despite a spramed thumb, had Letart
34 pomts and 18 ass1sts to rally
V Faye Newhouse, Luctlle
the Kansas Ctty.Qmaha Kings DYke, Oliver Duke, Lester
over the 76ers, who have failed Newhouse to Trustees Racme
to Jell under new Coach Roy Gun Club, 29 1&gt;.. acres, Sutton
$3895
1972 DODGE, Monaco 2 dr. Hdtp., air.
Rubm
C W Bnght, Lola I Bnght
The 76ers, who were led by to Franklin Real Estae, 112
1972 DODGE, Dart 2 Dr. Hdtp. , ..
$2695
John Block's 35 pomts, took ijO acres, Salem
1971 DODGE, Monaco,4 dr. hdtp., air.
$3295
early 12-pomt lead but Arch1·
Dale G Wmebrenner, Nona
bald and Pat Rtley, who had 23, Wme6'renner to Jerry Ray
1971 PLYMOUTH, Duster 2 dr. Hdtp., air.
$2095
helped whtttle tt down
Custer, Myrna Custer, lot,
ln other NBA actwn, Phoemx Sutton
1971 DODGE, Demon, 2 dr. Hdtp.
""
$1995
downed Cleveland, 107-99, Baltt·
Rodney Downmg, Katherme
more bombed Buffalo, 126-94, Downtng to James H Rtck·
1970 CHEVROLET, Nova 2 Dr. Hdtp.
$1995
ALL NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS
and Mtlwaukee beat Seattle, man , Patncta A R1ckman,
$1895
1970 VOLKSWAGEN,2 Dr. Sedan, air.
116-103
nght of way, Middleport
Charlie Scott scored 34points,
Carl M. Gorby, Pauline L
$1795
1970 TOYOTA,2 Dr. Hdtp.
mcludmg 12 stratght durmg a Gorby to Franklin Real Estate
four-mmute stretch of the third Co , 2.04 Acres, Salem
$2295
1969 DODGE, Monaco 4 Dr. Sedan, Air.
quarter, and helped the Suns
Thomas E Turner IQ.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2848
$2295
beat Cleveland Phoemx trailed Frankhn Real Estate Co 85
1969 CHRYSLER, Newport 4 dr. sedan, air.
by nine points a.t the half when acres, Columbia .
1969 BUICK, La Sabre 4 Dr. Sedan, air.
$2095
Scotttgmted a th1rd'&lt;!uarter, 194rally that moved Phoemx to a
$1895
1969 CHEVROLET, Chevelle9 Pass. Wagon.
64-58 lead
I
Elvin Hayes h1t 12 of h1s
/
Q- Wh at was Gondwanaseason-h1gh 25 pomts m the last
land'
e1ghtmmutes to gtve Baltunore
A - The southern hemitts triumph over Buffalo and
sphere
the Coal Age
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar's 29 It wa&amp; adurmg
supercontment com·
points helped Milwaukee beat posed of parts of Sou t h
Gallipolis, Ohio
50 State Sl &amp; Upper Rl 7
Seattle, the Bucks' lOth victory Amer1ca, Africa , lndta. Aus·
in lZ games.
'
traha and Antarcltca
lf the MC!gs Marauders Jose
to Pt Pleasant at Marauder
Stadmm Fnday mght, they'll
have been elected to the
dubwus d1stmct10n of havmg
lhe wm st tecm d (5-5) 111 Me~gs'
stx-yea r gnd history
But should Coach Charley
Chancey's Marauders wm , and
lhey a1 e sllghlly favored, the
Marshall-graduate Chancey
"'ll have h1s ntnth wmmng
season m 10 yea rs of coachmg
H1s smgle non-wmmng season
"as that hard-luck ftrst yea r
leam, the Pomero} Pant11e1 s of
1961, when the old Purple and
Whtle went 5-5
F01 the second stra1ght
year, the Marauders w11l be
gmng agamst a Pt Pleasant
eleven w1th a very poor record
Last yea r, the B1g Blacks were
1-8 gomg mto the season fmale
while Me1gs ••s 7-2 They lied

Local Bowling

Bucks fight tradition

•

and the boot goes on
by 1)\;)nJb.cAn..

Celtics

By Motor Route where carrier
servtce not available , One
month Sl 75 By mall In Ohio
and W Va , One year su 00
St~~:
months $7 25
Three
months S4 50

Area coaches serve on

aoors Boors BOOTS

Second c lass postage pal~ at
Pomeroy , OhtO
Nat•anal adverhs•ng

representa t 1Ye

York None of those 1111 ee ha ~ a IIIll Ch "
los mg season
llul lhc Alexander passmg
The Tornadoes, who have g~me 1 ~ c;c 1tmn ly thc1 c,
gl d l!IHI out lllu::;t or their WinS be&lt; .tuse callin ~ thetr Signals
\\J ill .1 devasl.;:ltmg runmn g: wtll be semm· Greg Brooks, an
&lt;~ ll. il'k and a powerhouse all -0 11111
·~A"
honorabl e
defense, are btgger than the men tum last yea r Brooks has
Spat tans, but probably not as hll on 60 pet cent of hts passes
QUICk
11us yem
1 h.1 vc seen them play th iS
Anulher uutstandmg player
yea r and I know they're a [tne fu1 the Spartans IS 190 lb
team Coach Smpes said of semor fullback Greg Gilders,
the Tmnadoes ' rr II rams \\ IJq • ~ noI only btg, but runs the
Soulhet n w1ll ha\c the ad: 40 yard dash m 4 7 Gtldet s
van !.age because or their SIZ C leads the southeastern Otuo
li has been 1amy and muddy m area w1 th an amazmg 138
our last stx games, so we potnt s, a 17.3 per game Ne1gler
haven 1 been ah lf' tn " ~c:c: c~ve1 age Kceptn g lum oul of

.

111

0~10 ,

Subscrtptlon

pr1ce mcludes Sunday T1mes
Senftnel

WANT AD WAY

You 'II Save Christmas Dollars

sl~.;~~ at all," satd Geor~e . ...---~----.....
"You were both squeezed.
YOUR

unhkely local!ons, who used sleep dtplomacy,
brt bery and expertly suggested muscle to expand the Lansky gambling conglomerate
everywhere _ mcludmg one unusual flnanctal
nap, 10 Greece.
There's a popular suspicion among the
gambhng-defenerate laity which goes, the mob
runs honest betting establlshments because
they don't have to cheat ... Whtch they don't·
exce t th
Is h
thi
'
1 b
P
ey a 0 c ?se 0 ecome
eves,
murderers, brtbers, tnfectors of pubhc servan Is, the whole evtl works ... So why should the

By KEITH WISECUP
RACINE - Ah'eady havmg
won Ihen lu st Southern Valley
Conferenc.:e Iitle. and the most
ga mes m the n· school's tustory,
the Southern Tornadoes have
u n~ mm·e J:;ldnt step before
co mplelin g thetr season,
knoc kmg
orr
anothet
powet house, the Alexander
Spat tans at Albany Fnday.
Coac h Btll J ewell's Tornadoes, 7-1·1 on the }ear and
wmners of the SVAC wtth a 5.{).
1 slate, meet Coach Dave
Smpes' Spartans who are 5·3
Iins year , losmg only to Ky ger
Creek, Belp1e. and Nelsonville-

Pritchard will start

the first tnck "

'Generosity' Makes Squeeze

SOUTHERN ALEXANDER PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
OFFENSE
SOUTHERN
Wt Pos Wt
ALEXAND~R
Ve rn Ord 1111
150 QB 167
Greg Brooks 1111
Mtlch Nease t 10)
Ill HB 178
Ron Whtte (101
Nock Ihie (111
175 FB 190
Greg Gtlders 1121
M1k c Nease \17)
1~2 HB 14&lt; •
1;\tke Gab,el 1111
1hc end wne IS hke playmg Denm s Ha wk ( 11)
212
c 145
~etth Moody 1111
175
G 151
Dave Llewyn 1121
Wllhout a football You JUSt Bob Eynon 1111
Mt kc Codner ( 1t )
150
G 160
Mark Metts 1111
rlon'l do 1i
Ron H!ll (lrl
235
T 194
Steve
Thomas 1111
Back to the pndc and JOY of La rr y Wilcoxen ( 12) 240
T 182
J1m Klrkendolll111
H.tclne
Th e Torn adoes J •m W!l l1ams (11}
165 E 167
Dan Wal sh 1111
Jay Htll I 121
~.:uunte r Wllh a fme group of
150
E 177
Greg Sai lor 1111
hac kfl elders m Ntck !hie
DEFENSE
Mtlch and M1ke Nease, Jay Hill
SOUTHERN : R Ht ll, mtddle guard , Randy Forbes (160 3),
and Vern 01 d Top linemen and W•ll•am s, end s, Greg M•ddleswart ( 155 3) and Hawk,
mdude husky tackles Ron Htll tack les J Ht ll and e1 ther Tt m Mau rer (1 65 ~~ o r Gr eg Dunnmg
( 1&gt;0 ll I me backers I hie and Ord co rn erba cks, and M 1tch and
and l.atry Wtlcoxen , plus end M1ke
Nease safe t ies
Juu W1ll1ams
ALEXANDER Wal sh and Thomas ends Danny Zoulek
Sen1ors playmg thetr fmal \155 31 mtddle guard , Ktrk endoll and Sa dor tackles Metis and
ga me fut UH.~ 1'01 nadoes a1 e White, co rner I me ba ckers Doug Ltewyn ( 170 2) and G 1l der s
.l.ty lltll , Ron Htll , M1ke Nease, ms 1de linebac ker s, and Brooks and Gabne f halfback s
!hie, Wilcoxen. and Rodney

topple
Warriors

When You Shop For

heritage house
~~,~~

Property

l----iiiiiiiioiiiiii.oiiii_iilii___,;;.__~__,..;4

Transfers

-~U_'s_..naJ.v.e.publlc..expet::Uhem..not
to..r.un..'!bust
-PoWeaj~ck.meThere
was no~ ~~~;:-:m.:.J:5U:,~~~~::
-~·~7~.·~·:m~.to=S=::IO~p.~m:·~~~:::j~·il-·-t!
Joints" instead of the supposedly honest
once!gave you
7•· m."'

°

0

The !mal week of the 1972 football season IS upon us. It only
seems yesterday that the football season started It's hard to
believe 10 weeks have passed smce the Moleman came out of
hi bern alton to resume hiS l"eekly column.
Well, the season ts all but over, and yes, the Mole has his hole
mthe ground picked out to htbernate another year.
Ftrsl, before we leave, however, we must end our year long
battle wtth the old ptgskm prognosltcator, Major Amos B
Hoople.
If the Moleman has another good week, he will wm the local
predictton battle Wtlh Hoople a thtrd stratght year Gomg mto
Friday's action, Mole stands at137-31h5 Hoople recorded a Jj,S.J
mark last week, uppmg hts season record to 134-41-ii.
In 1970, Mole defeated Hoople by three games and last year
won agam by a larger margm. Both of us offer congratulatiOns to
the Ironton Tigers, champs of the SEOAL, and Southern's Tornadoes, SVAC champs.
SEOAL
CIRCLEVILLE 22ATHENS 16. Bulldogs fm1sh season w1th a

WIN AT BRIDGE

Voice along Br '~7ay
W •
t,;

3~eat ~~t.u~~~ef"lt~~';,,P~~c1~

Following George Washington in the American
presidential pageant would have been dtfficult for
any man, and the tllustrious Virginian, John
•\dams, f~tled to produce a stellar performance,
although 1t was m some respects very creditable
It was hts susptctous, querulous personality that
made •\dams' Presidency politically and personally
unsuccessful, not hts lack of talent or experience.
For he was such an eloquent and intrepid fighter
for Amencan independence, and his roles m the
drama so many and' well performed, that \dams'
colleagues dubbed him the Atlas of Independence.
But the fierce spirit of independence so vital to
a freedom fighter was a handtcap to \dams as Ch1ef
Exccuttve, for conciliation is the name or the game
m achtevmg success m modern pohncal leadershtp.
\comparison of the only two Federahst Prestdents'
handling of a delicate foreign cnsts ts mstructhc
in this respect.

•

BY JA K O'BRIAN

-----9:-J~ase~l~. ~~ J~~~s,;~~k"!+r~~;~aj~~rdy

Apostle and Atlas of Independence

Generous George overbtds
all
no-trump hands and most
.K107
suit
hands Hence hts three
.97 3
no-trump
cal!.
• 86
North put George right ln
.KJ1093
stx
and West opened the kmg
WEST
EAST
of
hearts.
George saw that
.J84
.Q965 3
six
clubs
would
have been a
.KQJ82
.1065
cinch but that SIX no-trump
t754
tJ109 2
might well not come m.
• 72 '
••
Dear Helen:
SOUTH (D)
Nothing showed on his
I thought I could be ''wtth tl," and carry on an affatr while
.A2
smiling face as he remarked
shll making my marriage happy and complete. But the com·
¥A4
to West, "I am generous
tAKQ3
partsons creep in Maybe man Is not a monogamous creature,
enough to let you 1\old this
.AQ865
ftrst trick."
but he tsn't equtpped to Jove two women equally.- TIRED AND
Both vulnerable
George won the continuaREFORMED
West North East South
tion and ran off his five
3N.T. clubs. Somewhere along the
Dear Helen :
Pass 6NT Pass Pass
!me East let go a diamond
Pass
The rules of "sampling" are sunple: When man and wife are
and the slam wheeled ln. •
Openmg lead-· K
"You talk like you are gen·
separated by work or war: tt's okay. When they're together: 11
B o ld
erous," remarked W e s t.
isn't. - EXPERIENCED.
Y swa &amp; James Jacoby "My partner is the generous
·m-;m::-m::.:.:=W:=~%-;~'@"'t:l~~~~;:~~·~AA'.wtm"~"~':Qli:O:e
·~:~:·~·~"~"AA"~??:Ij'?tii'IIPII"I:O:'I:O:'Itii:O:It'fll$$'·~--~~·l:l:'l':ltl1:lllNIIIIIII!1
one. He gave you your
....
xu
!C..&lt;&lt;JCdJ.
~ -;.

- - -- FRIDAY, NOV. tO, 1972
6 oo - Sunrise Semmar 4 , Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmttme 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8. Human DimenSion
10
7 00 - Today 3, ~. 15, CBS News 8, 10
7 ~~ - Romper Room 6. Sleepy Jeffers 8. Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle
8 00 - Capt Kangaro6 10, Sesame St 33, Romper Room 8,
Timmy and Lassie 6 , New zoo Revue 13
8 30 - Jack Lalanne 13, New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room 8
9 00 - Paul Dl•on 4 ; Phil Donahue 15, What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Concentration 6, F rlendly Jur.cllon tO ; Ben

Second Pre11dent John Adams
(Adminiotration: March 4, 1797-March 3, 1801)

Dear Helen
Extra-martial affairs were once constdered mostly for men,
while the true llttle wife waited at home. What these men don't
reahze ts that the wife has a much better opportunity for hanky·
panky than does her mate. Mter she sends the kids to school, she
has at least six hotirs of freedom, while her husband must
squeeze hts lnfidehties mto hours stolen from work.
I ftgured my husband was domg some sampling. So I pomted
out how easy an aflatr would be for a housewife - and planted a
few seeds of doubt, hke the "cat that ate the cream" smtle, an
unusual cigarette m an ash tray, etc.
He'snow homeat5 :45p m. (no more "traffic jams" or "late
hours").
Was I unfaithful' Wouldn't you - and he - just LOVE to
know' - TRUE GRET
Dear Helen
About affatrS · yes, we can fmd the time and energy! I've
been seeing a married man who has five young children but,
luckily, hts wife isn't mterested m him sexually She's relieved
that he doesn 'I bother her any more.
The "planning" part lSil'l too difficult as he works for
himself. He can be seemg a "chent," or an "agent," or "getting
equipment repaired" when he's out of the office. Which, In a way,
ts true. On days when he Is really busy, he leaves for work early
so he can be wlth me.
Yes, tl's worth the effort. I'd rather be his wife, but he won't
leave hts children, so half a loaf makes me a - HAPPY SAMP·
LER

By COl. Mole

CISm

+++

" The Racers" 13

1 00 _ News 4
1 30 - News 13

When the French Revolution degenerated uno
the Retgn of Terror and war w1th Engl.md seemed
imminent, President W.tshington, aware of h1s link
natton's weakness, reluctantly hut firmly decided
on a pohcy of neutrahty desp1te hiS knowledge of
America's dchr to France as a recent ally against
l·.ngland.
Faced wnh the same sttuation, President Adams
was tmpetuously amh1valent Followmg an ahsurd
quarrel with agents of the hench D~rcctory, he
reacttvated the mihua, named Washmgton commander and set aho ut putting the natton on a war
fO&lt;&gt;tlng Suddenly, he reversed h1mself by suggest·
mg a peace mlsston to hance. 1\ngered by opposi·
tion in the Senate, &lt;\dams d1spatched three comm•ss•oners anyway, then went home to Qumcy in
,1 huff and stayed seven months
When hts emtssancs s1gned a peace treaty wtth
"'apoleon Bona pam, \dams \1 as htghly pic~ sed
w1th the results of hiS conciliatory mm e \lex.mder
Hamilton, bnlhant Fcderahst tactician, bitterly v!ltficd Adams for makmg peace Smcc the first mts·
sum had foundered m the unsavory XYZ' 1\ffa1r ,
Hamilton \\oas not wnhout grounds for ht s cntt·

By Helen Bottel

1972

SVAC Champs meet-Spartans Friday

by Patterson and Patrick

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

Nov.

'

0

premtses from whtch the "skim" mtllions
Illegally
y
We know bookmakers who are breakln the
law _ JUst as we all broke the law dg 1·n
proh!b'!tion _ who have no truck w'tth durrugsg
orgamzed criminal tnfectlons of any kind ; the;
take thetr convtctions and . 1 te
(
1mposed ) with restgned ~~~~n a::~.::~;
come out of thetr brief federal rison ra s
healthier than an time m thetr li~es.
P
We have
bookm k f d
we don 't bet
n th
abeers or ecadeson any mg yond a person-toperson small wager over an 1 ti
ball
e ec on or a

tOP QUALITY

LOW COST

knO:

he'~ !:~:leg:t"du:i~~~~~:~ r~~:S~~~r ~lr

hlstortc frailties - where they are:.t Jl!lrt ; :
otgantze&lt;ldrug- ··~
-w- - H- -::, - ~-ne ... e over ea... one such
prominent New York bookie once when he was
told a mObster had been caught heroin-handed
and faced a certain extended stay In the pokie·
"Good," we heard him murmur softl .
.
Th
ld tyl bo kl
y
ese o s e o es go 'way back to
when bettmg at N.Y. tracks wasn't legal- but
was encouraged a d
te ced The
courtly gamblers" inco;:peccansnble. clotheusuasalley.
cepted bets publicly and with grace· on ot the
oldest sttll around dee In hls aOs ;
Madden 1
Coley
p
professi~n?":e ~:~.~u:'af: his precarlo;:
ever CQilstdered Col
thi ~~ an~nek w of
their betlin ur es ey any ng ~ a 0 er
on the d
g , who always paid off 100 pet.
a "ltne"ofo 'neve~ :~hed; Coley ~~-set up
r one va U uge-eum CUBwmcr that
decades-ago year when' Zev and Papyrus
galloped their hlatori 1
tch-r
ca rna
ace ... No
"line,"meaningodds, had been set by any of the
old breed o1 track bookmake . but Coley told
us 0
f
hom h~d·
mUD
ne man rom w
e won
one
begged for a "line " and Coley made It
.
'
'
even
money -and lost tlie $100,000 the man put up ...
And paid off with grace.

tu!

AT MOORE'S LOW PRICES!

Laugh at winter snows with

EXAMPLE

Child's
RED STOOL

MUD AND

SNOW

srti-~

RETREADS

'

99e

BAS-KET
GAME

(Basketball Game)

~~

$472

MOORE'S

..

..OwOrJJv

.....

WHIIIWAU

.....,,.;;;,;o•;;;,...... ,...""
,..... "' ...... ,.. '"' ...

35 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

.,

,.'
'

�3- The Daily Sentinel

J

&amp; THINGS

Us.

BY PAUL CRABTREE
We've been updating the dialogue in old movies to fit latter
day circumstances, and showi!Jg how characters would react to a
given situation in movies made before 1950, during the
"maturing" 1~ era, and m today's ultra-permtSStve look m
the films you see on 'IV More 'examples
"Message" ftlm on race relattons. At the end, a black man
and whtte man say:
.Pre-1950: White man: "You're a good man underneath that
black skin, sam, and we're all sendmg a truckload of turkeys
down to your part of town, so that everyone wiD have a fme
Thanksgiving dmner." Black man: "Thank yuh, str, thanks."
1~: Whiteman : "We'll all have a Thanksgivmg feast m
this town together. After all, if our kids can go to the same
school, I don't know why we can't sit down at the same table,
sam." Black man : "That's right, Mr. Green"
Post-1965: White man: "Okay,' you win, Malcolm Z. The
white produce dealers are wiUlng to sell all the turkey1JIUcklng
franchises to your people." Black man : "Cool move, Honky You
didn'tknow, but the Panthers were ready to zap every market in
town at midmght."

+++
Teenage film, wtse father wtlh callow youth. The boy has just
admitted be has been smoking m his room, to whtch the father
replies:
Pre-1950: "Well,son,lguessweall need to tryout things that
are forbidden now and then. Just promise it won't happen agam
and we'll forget it."
1~: "You meathead. Don't you know clgarets can kill
you. Why did you think I made you read the Surgeon General's

report?"
Post-1965: "Nothmgbuttobacco' You're sure, son' You gtve
me your word, right." (Calls to wtfe) "Mabel, thank God, It was
only tobacco, just plain tobacco!"

+++
Sports film, with the coach and star quarterback conferring
in the closmg seconds of the Big Game. The quarterback says he
Ia Injured and cannot go on, to which tbe coach replies :
Pre-1950: "You've got to get back In there and pull it out for
Frankie, Joe. Just think of Frankie lying ln that hospital, and I
know you can do it."
1!160-65: "I don't give a danm if we have beaten the pomt
spread by two touchdowns. Get back ln there, or I'll blacklist you
with every team m the NFL."
Post-1965: "You're a rat, Joe, but it's a deal- an extra two
thouaand under the table, neat ... two girls in the apartment next
door, and ten per cent off the top at that casino I've got a piece

of."

+++
Love story, with the lovers deciding whether to Call It All

Off.
Pre-1950: He: "It'll be awful, living without you, Ann." Site .
"Not so loud. Daddy can hear everything we say he~e on this
front p_orch ."
195().65: He: "Go• Okay, go. But get your clothes on ftrst."

+++
Political drama. A supposedly lncorruptlble pollttetan has
been offered an irreststlble amouni of money to sell out to the
Special Interests. He says :
Pre-1950: "You've got yourself a deal."
1~: "You've got yourself a deal."
Post-1!1M· "You've ~ot yourself a deal."

TeleVision Log
6 DO - News 3, ~. 6, 8, 10, 15, AtiC New&gt; o, CBS News 8, 10.

Around the Bend 33, Sesame St 20
6 30 - News 3, ~. 15; News 6, 8, 10, 1 Dream of Jeannie 13,
Designing Women 33
•
7 00 - What's My line 8, Big Red Jubilee 1l, News 6, 10 , Truth
or Conseq. 3, Beat The Clock 4, Amazing World ot Kreskm
13, Elec. Co 20; Course ot Our Times 33
7 30 - I'll See You In Court 4, Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell The
Truth6; Wild Kingdom 10, Lassie 8, Beat the Cl~ck 13, Zoom
20 ; Black Journal 33
8 DO - Flip Wllstn 3, 4, 15, Mod Squad 6, 13, The Waltons 8 10
Advocates 20, 33
'
9 DO - lronslde3, 4, 15, Assignment. Vtenna6 13 Movte "Wa 1t
Until _Dark" 8. 10, International Perform;nc~ 20
10 ooONen Marshall 6, 13 , Dean Martin 3, 4, 15 , Mountameer
5 ports 33; News 20
11·00 - News3.~.6. 10, 13, 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Dick Cavett 6, Mov1e "Lovers on
a Tightrope" 8, Mov1e "The Sound and the Fury " 10. Movte

••

THE AFFAIR . CONTINUED
Dear Helen'
"Are Romeos supermep ?" one of your male correspondents
asks, and then wonders where a husband and father gets the time
or energy, Is he ktddmg' Or maybe he has an 8 to 5 JOb plus two
hours of commutmg and IS somewhat low m libtdo .
Not so w1th university professors. I am roamed to one. They
leave home at 8 a.m , return at 6·30 p.m. Since my husband's
ftrst class IS at 10, he has plenty of time before work for a JUlie
refreshing rendezvous. Then there are two hours frl't' at lunch
He fmlshes hts last class m mid-afternoon, and young chicks are
quite willing to improve hiS shlnmg leiSure hours.
It Ia the same with research people, salesmen and executives
who aren't jailed m time-clock offices Upper echelon hanky·
panky is expected. It's so routine that tf a man doesn't mdulge
himself he's constdered a little strange or, like your male
correspondent, very na1ve - A DISO,.LUSIONED WIFE
Dear Wife ·
. Or perhaps merely in love with hiS wife.
Honest, every man who has the opportunity uoesn'tlndulge
- but a suspicious wife may nudge hun m that direcl!on. - H.
P S. On the otherhand, many do· read on 1

Dear Helen .
It's tdiotic to constder sexual "ftdelity" the only cnterion for
a happy marrtage. If my husband is attracttve to other women
and falls for thetr charms once in a while, I constder this a
challenge. I'd hate to have a man no one else wants! He feels the
same about me. So we don't '1all" very often, but when we do,
lt'sno big trauma. Justa stgnal that we'd better stir up the home
fires. - MODERN

THERICH
POOR
LmLE
CROOK
NE y R
t W 0 K (KfFthS) -· Meybelrl Lansky IS the
secre opera 1or o ree gam ng CIISIDOS m
Yugosla
b t 1 t h 1 t be tak
b Ti
v•a u s 00 0 0
en m Y to
as a resident allen. Lansky has offered mtllions
for ,sanctuary anywhere outside the U S. but
can 1 get tt - Simply becau~ Uncle Sam's the
most powerful geopohtlcal force on earth, and
espectally behind tron and bamboo curtams
h
ood
wt erthe our tgh W111 agam. 1s betthng sLaoughkt 11
11
6; Hazel 8
a o more
mt
'fins an_
10 DO - Dmah Shore 3, ll ; Dick Van Dyke 13, Columbus Six crn~ma h etime 01, greed as accumulated
Calling 6, Joker's Wtld 8, 10
lesttmates of Meyers evt~-gotten spotls range
tO 30 - Concentration 3, 15 , Phil Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13 , from $300 mtlhon to a btllton).
Price Is Rtght 8, 10
H
11 DO - Love Amen can Style 6. Sale of the Century 3, 15. Gambtt
IS lenta~les have reached deep mto dozens
8, 10. Password 13
of countrtes vta bribery and muscle to erect his
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4, 15, Love of Lite 8, Bewttched 6, 13 casmos - he's the only outsider among the
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 , Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 , Password 6,
Local News 1. News 13, Contact B.
Malta, shU opera ling . Several "sutcldes"
12 3~e~n~ ~··e~~m~ 3 , \~ ' Search for Tomorrow 8, 10, Split weren t, they were carefully camouflaged
03
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13 ; II'~ Your Bet 8, Green klllt~gs; Jersey's Doc Hams saw the hand·
Acres tO, Watch Your Child 15.
.
wntmg on the tomb and took volun~ry
1 ~orl~ ~r~sMr~~ 13.5 ~. 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As The d~portatlon to Israel where he's been vegelaltng
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13 , Mtke Without apparent mvolvement wtlh the world's
Douglas 6, Guiding Light 8, 10.
mobs for a good reason · we heard a Mafia tough
2 30 - Doctors3,4, 15, DatlngGamelJ , Edgeo1Night8, tO
g once h D
d tr I off
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6. 13 , Love
uy
w en oc owne con
our or 1tve
• Splendored Thing 8, 10; Advocates 20
Las Vegas casmos harshly crttictze Doc
3
3, 4, 15; One Lite to Llve6. Book demandmg "Ain't he satisfted with the ptle
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 1l, Sesame St 20, 33 , Love
got in Swltzerl.~nd? .He oughta let the rest of the
American Style 13, Fllntotones 6, Gilligan's Island 8;-Merv- guys make II. Whtch was an unsubtle way of
Grlffln 4; Movte "Get Yoursell a College Girl"'to.
1 Doc 1
4 25 - Sports Club 6
revea mg . no onger was a sacrosanct four4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Merv Grlllln 15, PettiCoat Juncfton 3: star general 10 the underworld army, and It was
5 ~ndy~~:~;t~~~~r~~~~e{,,~~"C~~3Dyke ts, Ponderosa 3, 4, lime to go, qutetly, even as Frank Costello took
Daniel Boone 6
the ~rutal hint - the bullet that grazed hiS
l· 30 - Marshall Otllon 15 ; Elec . Co 33 , Dragnet 8; Gomer Pyle noggm tn the attempted ruboul - and Doc
t3, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
ll 1
ted lh 1
1
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10. 15, Truth or Con seq 6, Sesame st 20, wt mg Yaccep
e uxunous Yeasy way out.
Aroond The Bend 33
He also can go to France but not to England or
6 30 - News6, 13: French Chef 33. I Dream ol Jeannie 13.
lt&lt;tly.
7 00 - Truth or Con seq 3, Beat The Clock~. What's My Line 8,
Doc Ham 0 o ld ha
1 ted t0
1
Wild Ktng9om 13, News, Weather, Sports 6, 10, Saint t5. Folk
.
s u
vee ec
remam n
Guitar 33. Electric Co 20.
.
Amer~ca : he was born in Russta whiCh never
7. 30- To Tell The Truth 6, PMent Game 10, Porter Wagoner 3, accepts a gangster-deportee ... The blunt reason
~t~~p ~ee~~~~~,~~~~hee ~::i~~ 3i 1 t's Your Bet 8, Wall Lansky has remained alive is his brilll•ntly evil
8 00 - Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Brady Bunch 6, 13. Sonny &amp; Cher tmaginatlon tn ctrchng the world wlth hiS
8, tO; Week In Washington Preview 33, 20
·
casinos - with Maftc partnership ... He once
1:~.,;\\: ~eopte 3, 4, 15: Partridge Family 6, 13; Just operated a casino tn the savagely poor country
9:00-GhostStory 3, 4. 15; Room222 6, t3; Masterpiece Theatre of Ghana that made $2,1100,000 a year for
33; World Press 20; Movie "Hud" 10; Movie "Buccaneer" 8 Meyer's and Mafiosi SWISS accounts
9:30-0ddCouple6, 13, Thirty Minutes Wtth20
,
.
·
10:00- Banyon 3, ~. 15: Love American Style 6, 13; News 20,
Meyers man In the Phtllpplnes got tossed
W•ke Up Jolin Doe 33
out of that distant country a couple of dec d
11:00- Newl, Weather, Sports 6, 8, to, 13
a es
·11:30- Old&lt; Cavett 6,- Johnny Carson 3, t5 ; Movle~'How-To-ae - agol!')wl hts pre$!nce..there wauevealed by N.
Very, Very Popular" 8; Movie "The Day ot The Trifflds" 10, Y. newspapermen ... Lansky's local manager
Movie "The Raven" 8
there (a he
late 1 Glia
tossed
12:110- Roller Derby ~ ·
s was
r n
na,
out of
12:30- News 13.
there too) was Ted Lewin, an International
1:00- News •·
"pistol guy'' now dead quleUy ln bed of all
t: 15-' News 4.
'

o~e e;.!'~re

In any case, the rewlnng spht m the Federalist
ranks doomed Adams' ch.mces for a second 'term.
:'-lor was the shock to lm hypcrsensmve ~'gO lessened hy the fact that 1t was V ICC Prestdent Thomas
Jefferson who defeated h1m The re1cctton \1 as
polit1cal as well as personal because Jefferson \1 as
a Democrattc-Repubhcan, .md \dams distrusted
democracy. "There never was a democr.1cy yet that
did not commit su1ctde," he wrote
Adams' last days as Pres1dent were so barren
and spiteful that the sagactous Albert G .!llann
wrote that h1s acnons rcAccted "meanness, mde·
cency, even msamty " Pres1dent-clcct Jefferson w,\s
more restrained . " Mr i\ emb,urasses us," he sa1d.
"Manners arc the happy ways of domg thmgs,"
Emerson wrote Beca use John Adams never learn ed
thts tnck, he was often ove rshadm• ed by men no
more and sometimes less capable than he , but who
tempered thetr talents wtth en ility and a spmt of
compromtse.
In sp1te of h1s belhgercnt personality, Adams
hated 'War above all else. So that there would be
no doubt about what he cons1dcred h1s crownmg
achtevemcnt, he composed thts epttaph for his
gravestone: "Here hes John \dams, who rook upon
himself the responsibthty of the peace w1th France,

In the year 1800.''

co., ••

"l1l01 A..c , H li Mt l

NORTH

The

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

9

The biddmg has been·

1•

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
You, South, hold

Pass

2•

1.

South
?

TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead of b1ddmg two clubs
your partner has b1d one heart
What do you do now?

EVERYBODY
Shops the

Sentinel

C1ty Ed1lor
Pub!tshed dally except
Saturday by The Oh tO Valley
PubiiSh tng

Court

.Q8U.K953+A765 ... 3
What do you do now?
A-Poss. You don't like clubs,
but ony &lt;1111 other than pass is a
bad overbid.

Dai~

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
E ~eec Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

St ,

Company ,

Pomeroy,

45769 ,Bur.fne'Ss Office I !phone
992 2,156, EqttOrli!!d f?hone 992

2157

out.

He had to come down to six
cards mcludlng four dlamon ds. Tb e other two would
be either two spades or a
srade and the 10 of hearts.
I he came down to two
sPades you would be
squeezed ' in I!Pades and
hearts when I cashed my dlamonds. If he came down to
one of each, you would not
be squeezed but my ace of
spades play would drop hiS
queen and I would make the
slam by finessing against

Meigs slightly favored

Botttnell•

Gallagher , Inc , 12 East 42nd
St , New York City , New York
Subscrtpf ton rates
De
ltvered by carr,tr where

avatlable 50 cents per week,

UPI's selection board
Several atea coaches have
been ~e rvtng on Umted Press
lnlc1nat10nal 's High School
Boat d of Coaches The board
selects the top lugh school gnd
tea ms m the state each week
On the AAA boa1 d are B1ll
Bonar, Manetta and Roger

BY KEITH WISECUP

Merb, Portsmouth. Class AA
part1c1pa nts are J1m Rockwell,
New Lexmgton; Ed Miller,
Wheelersburg, John Ecker,
Galllpohs and Tom Oyer,
Wave!ly
Class
A ts
represented by J1m Srmth,
Portsmouth East

Coach D1ck Wa1 e's Btg
MEIGS PT PLEASANT PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
Blacks w1ll have a slight
OFFENSE
wetght advantage on the lme, MEIGS
WI Pos Wt
PT PLEASANT
187·181, but MC!gs has a b1gger Andy Veughan 112)
173 QB 1so
Randy
Warner t 11 1Or
Joss.
bac kft eld, o ut~ e 1ghm g PI
1SO
Rtck PICkens \121
Dal la s Weber ( 12)
179 FB 1~0
ffiONTON 18 FMRBORN PARK HILLS 6 Thts ts a hunch.
Steve Evans (12)
Pleasant 165-156
Mt
ck
Ash
\
Ill
147
WB 13S
J1mmy
Chand ler ( 11)
PORTSMOUTH 24 GALUPOLIS 12 B1g Blue had their
Me~ gs, wh1ch ended 1ts
Chuc k Fa ulk 1121
16u TB ISO
Bobby
Marttn (121
btggest game last week.
Sou theaste rn Oh10 Athlehc R1ck Gaul ( 12 1
153
c
170
Mtke
Gtbbs 1111
PORTSMOUTH WEST 18 JACKSON 16 lronmen end
League season last Fnday wtlh Lou M cK 1nney ( 12)
164 LG 705
Joey Roberts 1101
disappomtmg year
17l RG 180
a 10-6 loss agamst Gall!pohs to Joh n Lehew (Ill
Greg Johnson I 121
Ma
rk
Werry
(
11)
238 LT 7SO
POINT PLEASANT 28 MEIGS 14. Marauders lose fourth
wmd up 3-4 and tn a fifth place
Bol l Wallace 112 1
M ike M cDant el { 11)
200
RT
700
Btll Stiver 11 21
stratghl!
11e w1th Jackson , 1s hopmg to Boll Cheney 1121
180 RE 168
Pau
l Casto (111
R H Rawlmgs
44 36
Pomeroy Bowhng Lanes
snap a three-game losmg Ra ndy Chalm 11 21
GREENFIELD 14 WAVERLY 12 Ttgers ready to conIS5 LE 170
Bertha's
Grotery
42 38
Dave Stncklen ( 12) Or
Wednesday Late
slt·eak , the longest d1 ought m
centrate on basketball.
Kmg Builder's Supply 40 40
150
Joey Given (111
Mlked League
Metgs htstory
Royal Crown
26 54
SVAC
Nov 1, 1972
DEFENSE
Evelyn's
Grocery
20 60
Standmgs
Wtth several underclassmen
ALEXANDER 20 SOUTHERN 12. Spartans are ready to stop
MEIGS Alan Mclaughlin 11S3 3). moddl e guard Bill Slack
High lndlvtdual Game
Tea
m
Pts
stat tmg, th1s years Metgs g11d (168 3) and Lehew, lackles , Ro bert Quails 11 59 3) and Chaney, Rosenbaum Meadows
two games losmg spell.
46 Mary Voss 210
ends
M
cKin
ney
and
Weber
lmebacker
s
Ron
Couch
(
140
3)
and
squad
wdl
come
oul
better,
or
Secon d Htgh lnd Game M
oo
re
Morrow
44
FAIRLAND 60 SYMMES VALLEY 8. Dragons show no
Ash
,
cornerbacks
and
Dave
Wolfe
(
!58
3)
and
M
elvi
n
Cremeans
Ellamay
Norton 189
Blakeslee
H
oyt
39
al least as well as expected,
mercy.
11603) , sa let1es
Htgh Series - Mary Voss
H
oller
Rawltng
s
35
tins yeal Alter a year or
OTHERS
Fullz-Bentley
28 5l2
PT PLEASANT Sdver and e•ther Wall ace or Roberts,
1
ebU1id1ng,
the
Maraudet
s
Second High se,es - El
Carsey
McDonald
24
ta
ckl
es
Dwtght
Adk1
ns
(
lBO
3)
and
Byron
Shmn
(
150
J)
ends
Oak Hill 16 Wellston 0
tamay Norton d4
H1gh
IndiVIdual
Game
could
he
m
!me
lor
a
bette!
M•
ke
Fetty
(
170
4) Wayne Sanders (200 41. Frank Doolillle 1180
Federal Hocking 43 Glouster 12
Team High Game
Men. Roy Holte r 191, Women,
4 ) and Johnson, lmebackers Steve M 1ll er ( 170 4), and J1m
yea1 m 1973
Dorothy's Plnnettes 808
Lo1s
Rosenbaum
155
Vmton County 22 Unioto 7
Semors playmg thetr fmal Doeffm ger \165 3), halfba cks and G1ven, sa fety
Tea m High Series
Second Htgh lnd Game Wahama 28 Buffalo 16
Dorothy's
Plnnettes 2297
Men
Roy
Holl
er
1BJ
,
Women
,
ga me of the year Fnday wtll be
Coal Grove 32 Chesapeake 18
N,ea
cil
Carsey
15t
th1rd
men,
Andy Vaughan, Dtllard, Chuck Steve Jewell , Mark Werry, Lou lhe final Marauder game for Dan M eadows 182 women,
8-8
Portsmouth East 16 Ptketon 12
MC!gs has never beaten the Faulk, Dallas Weber, Jerry McKmney , Bill Chaney and another semor, Ttm Kmg, who Hope Moore 150
Wheelersburg 48 ironton St. Joe 8
Htgh Series - Men, Roy
Bl ac ks 1n three p1 ev10 us Coleman, Roger Pearch, Gaul, Randy Chafm 1'h1s w11l also be IS lnJUI ed
South Point 30 Rock Hill 12
Ho tt er 5Jl Women Lo1s
meetmgs, Josmg 28-u m 1968
Rose nbaum 4.tA
Second H1gh Senes - Men
and 28-12m 1969 and the t1e last
Dan M eadows 509 Women,
)eat
Hope Moor e 416 , th•rd , Men, EMERSON LEADS
Pt Pleasant, which plays s1x
Ch uck Blakeslee 488 , Women,
SAO PAULO, Braz!l·(UPI)Pat Holler 416
ofth e lOla• gestschools m West
Brazlllan
racing driver EmerTea m
H ig h
Ga m e
Vtrgmta year after year, IS
son Fttltpaldl can wln the
Meadows 621.
as coach was m Jeopardy when resignation, effectiVe at the Rosenbaum
currently
1-7-1
Thetr
lone
wm
CHICAGO
(UPI)
Oh
iO
Tea
m
H1gh
Se
r1
es
CINCINNATI (UP! )
second
Formula Two competilo contend w1th Ratder
the
Spartans
ended
Oh1o
Rosenbaum
Meadows
1759
end
of
the
season,
but
after
he
was
a
21J..6
dects10n
over
R1pley
State
will
be
hghtmg
trad1t10n
tion with a high finish ln
Cincmnat1 Bengals Coach Paul quat terback Daryl Lamomca,
&amp;lnday's
third and fmalleg of
Brown satd Wednesday he who I:Kes to throw long but The Blacks lied Wan en Local and sentunent when 11 lrtes to State's four-year dommation of announced last week that he
Wednesday Early Btrd
thiS
sertes
wtlh
a
17·10
upset
was
qu•thng,
the
Spart&lt;tns
retam
a
share
of
the
Btg
Ten
16-16
earlier
m
the
year
In
a
the race. Fitttpaldl leads with
League
probably would start Ron ha sn't been domg as much or
Nov 1, 1972
pre-season scnmmage agamst lead agamst M1ch1gan State v1ctory tn Columbus Af. went out and handed Purdue tis
15 points on a victory and a
Pritchard at right linebacker that lately
Standmgs
terward,
defensive
tackle
Ron
ftrst
conference
defeat,
22-12.
th1s
week
the
same
Wa1
ren
Local
eleven,
finish ln the first
thts weekend smce hoth Ken
HHe's cut down on h1s mTeam
w L. second-place
Curl
of
Mtch1gan
State
exHaving
knocked
the
Botler·
Tradition
has
11
that
under·
Me1gs
won
34·0
two
races.
Dorothy s P1nnette s
Avery and · Btll Peterson are lerceptwn percentage some ,"
68 12
plained
the
Spartans' makers from a share of the
dogs
play
well
m
the
Ohto
l:ttck
Gaul,
Me1gs'
153
Jb
mjured
sa1d Ra1d ers execullve
~ '
lead, Mich!.san ,fill\te now-,pan
'
•'
!. ,Reierson· and 11\veny •sat on asstst&lt;tnt ana ' foimer '' chtef ' ~e moe starting center,' wtll cb~ St~te':l!lll!hl gan Sta~ &amp;el'leS, mottvatlon .
-~
"They were blowmg smoke do the same to the Buckeyes,
' ' h1s ' back m the 'lineup lh1s wee~ parttcularly when the favonte
the "stdellnes along w1th two scout AI Locasale "And
at
the old man (Daugherty), so who are favored by two touchother hurt players , Bob ya1ds per completiOn have afte r stttmg 'o\lt I a~ I week's ts undefeated And there's
game when he became 111 the plenty of sentunent around )Ye dec1ded to put 11 together downs
Trumpy and Bob Johnson, and been cut down some, too "
for hun," Curl sa1d.
As recently as 1968, an un11
watc hed the rest of the team
0ne reason IS the nBture of day of the game. Metgs ' only M1ch1gan State to send Duffy
Th1s
year
the
smoke
got
thick
derdog
M1eh1ga n State team
get ready for Sunday's en- the amount of zone they're mJury lh1s week Will s1dehne Daughterly out a wmner
Last year, m fact, Duffy's JOb enough to Ioree Daugherty's abnost rumed Ohio Slate's
counter w1th the Oakland playmg, " he satd " Everybody sentor corn erback Jon D1llard,
dr1ve to a nattonal champtona 148 pounder who has come on
Ratders.
IS throwmg short these days
shtp before losing, 25-20. And m
The Bengal defense will have You t&lt;tke what they g1ve you " to play well the last lew ga mes
BUCKS
FAVORED
1968, when the Spartans were
Ron Couch, 140 lb JUmor, wtll
STATELINE,
Nev
(UPI
)
defendmg naltonal champwns,
replace Dillard
F'ourth-1 an ked Oh10 State IS a th ey barely got by the
stx-pomt
favonle ovet Buckeyes 11-8 before thetr
.. ..,.,. .. '"""'.. M1ch1gan State m their Btg Ten famous lte wtth Notre Dame.
football game thiS weekend ,
Wtth the poss1ble excepl!on
accordmg to odds listed by of 16th..-anked North Carohna,
Harrah's Tahoe Racebook
the Spartans will be the best
In the NFL, the oddsmakers team lourth.f'anked Ohio State
have gtven the Oakland has played this year.
By United Press International
Raiders and Cmcmnat1
But although the Buckeyes
The
Boston
Ceihcs
ran
their
e e •
Benga ls even odds and the San have not been severely tested,
~ay mto first place Wednesday
D~ego Chargers a lour-pomt
Daugherty 1s quick to pomt out
mght whtle the Phtladelphla
edge on the Cleveland Browns "no team has yet come close to
7Bers moved to w1thm strikmg
beatmg them."
d!sl&lt;lnce of a dubtous National
"The other teams usually get
Ba ske lball AssOC!Bhon record
thetr pomts after Ohio State
The Celts go t the1r fast-break
has butlt up a lead," he said.
gomg m the second pertod and
Fifth;anked Michigan, the
outscored Golden State, 77-55,
Btg Ten's other undefeated
over the next two penods to
team which IS tied with Ohio
YOUR
STORE
beat the Warnors, 128-111 John
State for the conference lead,
Havlicek scored 25 pomts, Don
Dav1d M. Hmdy to Patnc1a n.,,. •• to have no trouble at all
t.HOOLEPORT. OHIO
Chaney 23 and Paul Silas 20 as M
Middleport
Boston scored lts'llth Victory
'
m 12 games and moved a half. Robert E Buck, Com
to
game ahead of idle New York Dorothy M. Jenkins, lot,
m the Atlantic D1v1sion. Rtck Midpleport, Sc1p10
Barry had 34 pomts to lead the
Dorothy M Jenkms to Dav1d
Warrt ors
E Jenkms, 1nt m 38 acres,
Wmless Ph!ladelph!a, mean- ScipiO
while, dropped tis 14th slratght
Elizabeth E. Sm1th, Wilfred
'
game, one short of the league J Sm!lh , J ea n E Mann ,
record for defeats at the st&lt;trt George V Mann to United
of a season Nate ArChibald , St&lt;ttes, lnt m 011 and gas,
~ EXAMPLE
despite a spramed thumb, had Letart
34 pomts and 18 ass1sts to rally
V Faye Newhouse, Luctlle
the Kansas Ctty.Qmaha Kings DYke, Oliver Duke, Lester
over the 76ers, who have failed Newhouse to Trustees Racme
to Jell under new Coach Roy Gun Club, 29 1&gt;.. acres, Sutton
$3895
1972 DODGE, Monaco 2 dr. Hdtp., air.
Rubm
C W Bnght, Lola I Bnght
The 76ers, who were led by to Franklin Real Estae, 112
1972 DODGE, Dart 2 Dr. Hdtp. , ..
$2695
John Block's 35 pomts, took ijO acres, Salem
1971 DODGE, Monaco,4 dr. hdtp., air.
$3295
early 12-pomt lead but Arch1·
Dale G Wmebrenner, Nona
bald and Pat Rtley, who had 23, Wme6'renner to Jerry Ray
1971 PLYMOUTH, Duster 2 dr. Hdtp., air.
$2095
helped whtttle tt down
Custer, Myrna Custer, lot,
ln other NBA actwn, Phoemx Sutton
1971 DODGE, Demon, 2 dr. Hdtp.
""
$1995
downed Cleveland, 107-99, Baltt·
Rodney Downmg, Katherme
more bombed Buffalo, 126-94, Downtng to James H Rtck·
1970 CHEVROLET, Nova 2 Dr. Hdtp.
$1995
ALL NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS
and Mtlwaukee beat Seattle, man , Patncta A R1ckman,
$1895
1970 VOLKSWAGEN,2 Dr. Sedan, air.
116-103
nght of way, Middleport
Charlie Scott scored 34points,
Carl M. Gorby, Pauline L
$1795
1970 TOYOTA,2 Dr. Hdtp.
mcludmg 12 stratght durmg a Gorby to Franklin Real Estate
four-mmute stretch of the third Co , 2.04 Acres, Salem
$2295
1969 DODGE, Monaco 4 Dr. Sedan, Air.
quarter, and helped the Suns
Thomas E Turner IQ.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2848
$2295
beat Cleveland Phoemx trailed Frankhn Real Estate Co 85
1969 CHRYSLER, Newport 4 dr. sedan, air.
by nine points a.t the half when acres, Columbia .
1969 BUICK, La Sabre 4 Dr. Sedan, air.
$2095
Scotttgmted a th1rd'&lt;!uarter, 194rally that moved Phoemx to a
$1895
1969 CHEVROLET, Chevelle9 Pass. Wagon.
64-58 lead
I
Elvin Hayes h1t 12 of h1s
/
Q- Wh at was Gondwanaseason-h1gh 25 pomts m the last
land'
e1ghtmmutes to gtve Baltunore
A - The southern hemitts triumph over Buffalo and
sphere
the Coal Age
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar's 29 It wa&amp; adurmg
supercontment com·
points helped Milwaukee beat posed of parts of Sou t h
Gallipolis, Ohio
50 State Sl &amp; Upper Rl 7
Seattle, the Bucks' lOth victory Amer1ca, Africa , lndta. Aus·
in lZ games.
'
traha and Antarcltca
lf the MC!gs Marauders Jose
to Pt Pleasant at Marauder
Stadmm Fnday mght, they'll
have been elected to the
dubwus d1stmct10n of havmg
lhe wm st tecm d (5-5) 111 Me~gs'
stx-yea r gnd history
But should Coach Charley
Chancey's Marauders wm , and
lhey a1 e sllghlly favored, the
Marshall-graduate Chancey
"'ll have h1s ntnth wmmng
season m 10 yea rs of coachmg
H1s smgle non-wmmng season
"as that hard-luck ftrst yea r
leam, the Pomero} Pant11e1 s of
1961, when the old Purple and
Whtle went 5-5
F01 the second stra1ght
year, the Marauders w11l be
gmng agamst a Pt Pleasant
eleven w1th a very poor record
Last yea r, the B1g Blacks were
1-8 gomg mto the season fmale
while Me1gs ••s 7-2 They lied

Local Bowling

Bucks fight tradition

•

and the boot goes on
by 1)\;)nJb.cAn..

Celtics

By Motor Route where carrier
servtce not available , One
month Sl 75 By mall In Ohio
and W Va , One year su 00
St~~:
months $7 25
Three
months S4 50

Area coaches serve on

aoors Boors BOOTS

Second c lass postage pal~ at
Pomeroy , OhtO
Nat•anal adverhs•ng

representa t 1Ye

York None of those 1111 ee ha ~ a IIIll Ch "
los mg season
llul lhc Alexander passmg
The Tornadoes, who have g~me 1 ~ c;c 1tmn ly thc1 c,
gl d l!IHI out lllu::;t or their WinS be&lt; .tuse callin ~ thetr Signals
\\J ill .1 devasl.;:ltmg runmn g: wtll be semm· Greg Brooks, an
&lt;~ ll. il'k and a powerhouse all -0 11111
·~A"
honorabl e
defense, are btgger than the men tum last yea r Brooks has
Spat tans, but probably not as hll on 60 pet cent of hts passes
QUICk
11us yem
1 h.1 vc seen them play th iS
Anulher uutstandmg player
yea r and I know they're a [tne fu1 the Spartans IS 190 lb
team Coach Smpes said of semor fullback Greg Gilders,
the Tmnadoes ' rr II rams \\ IJq • ~ noI only btg, but runs the
Soulhet n w1ll ha\c the ad: 40 yard dash m 4 7 Gtldet s
van !.age because or their SIZ C leads the southeastern Otuo
li has been 1amy and muddy m area w1 th an amazmg 138
our last stx games, so we potnt s, a 17.3 per game Ne1gler
haven 1 been ah lf' tn " ~c:c: c~ve1 age Kceptn g lum oul of

.

111

0~10 ,

Subscrtptlon

pr1ce mcludes Sunday T1mes
Senftnel

WANT AD WAY

You 'II Save Christmas Dollars

sl~.;~~ at all," satd Geor~e . ...---~----.....
"You were both squeezed.
YOUR

unhkely local!ons, who used sleep dtplomacy,
brt bery and expertly suggested muscle to expand the Lansky gambling conglomerate
everywhere _ mcludmg one unusual flnanctal
nap, 10 Greece.
There's a popular suspicion among the
gambhng-defenerate laity which goes, the mob
runs honest betting establlshments because
they don't have to cheat ... Whtch they don't·
exce t th
Is h
thi
'
1 b
P
ey a 0 c ?se 0 ecome
eves,
murderers, brtbers, tnfectors of pubhc servan Is, the whole evtl works ... So why should the

By KEITH WISECUP
RACINE - Ah'eady havmg
won Ihen lu st Southern Valley
Conferenc.:e Iitle. and the most
ga mes m the n· school's tustory,
the Southern Tornadoes have
u n~ mm·e J:;ldnt step before
co mplelin g thetr season,
knoc kmg
orr
anothet
powet house, the Alexander
Spat tans at Albany Fnday.
Coac h Btll J ewell's Tornadoes, 7-1·1 on the }ear and
wmners of the SVAC wtth a 5.{).
1 slate, meet Coach Dave
Smpes' Spartans who are 5·3
Iins year , losmg only to Ky ger
Creek, Belp1e. and Nelsonville-

Pritchard will start

the first tnck "

'Generosity' Makes Squeeze

SOUTHERN ALEXANDER PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
OFFENSE
SOUTHERN
Wt Pos Wt
ALEXAND~R
Ve rn Ord 1111
150 QB 167
Greg Brooks 1111
Mtlch Nease t 10)
Ill HB 178
Ron Whtte (101
Nock Ihie (111
175 FB 190
Greg Gtlders 1121
M1k c Nease \17)
1~2 HB 14&lt; •
1;\tke Gab,el 1111
1hc end wne IS hke playmg Denm s Ha wk ( 11)
212
c 145
~etth Moody 1111
175
G 151
Dave Llewyn 1121
Wllhout a football You JUSt Bob Eynon 1111
Mt kc Codner ( 1t )
150
G 160
Mark Metts 1111
rlon'l do 1i
Ron H!ll (lrl
235
T 194
Steve
Thomas 1111
Back to the pndc and JOY of La rr y Wilcoxen ( 12) 240
T 182
J1m Klrkendolll111
H.tclne
Th e Torn adoes J •m W!l l1ams (11}
165 E 167
Dan Wal sh 1111
Jay Htll I 121
~.:uunte r Wllh a fme group of
150
E 177
Greg Sai lor 1111
hac kfl elders m Ntck !hie
DEFENSE
Mtlch and M1ke Nease, Jay Hill
SOUTHERN : R Ht ll, mtddle guard , Randy Forbes (160 3),
and Vern 01 d Top linemen and W•ll•am s, end s, Greg M•ddleswart ( 155 3) and Hawk,
mdude husky tackles Ron Htll tack les J Ht ll and e1 ther Tt m Mau rer (1 65 ~~ o r Gr eg Dunnmg
( 1&gt;0 ll I me backers I hie and Ord co rn erba cks, and M 1tch and
and l.atry Wtlcoxen , plus end M1ke
Nease safe t ies
Juu W1ll1ams
ALEXANDER Wal sh and Thomas ends Danny Zoulek
Sen1ors playmg thetr fmal \155 31 mtddle guard , Ktrk endoll and Sa dor tackles Metis and
ga me fut UH.~ 1'01 nadoes a1 e White, co rner I me ba ckers Doug Ltewyn ( 170 2) and G 1l der s
.l.ty lltll , Ron Htll , M1ke Nease, ms 1de linebac ker s, and Brooks and Gabne f halfback s
!hie, Wilcoxen. and Rodney

topple
Warriors

When You Shop For

heritage house
~~,~~

Property

l----iiiiiiiioiiiiii.oiiii_iilii___,;;.__~__,..;4

Transfers

-~U_'s_..naJ.v.e.publlc..expet::Uhem..not
to..r.un..'!bust
-PoWeaj~ck.meThere
was no~ ~~~;:-:m.:.J:5U:,~~~~::
-~·~7~.·~·:m~.to=S=::IO~p.~m:·~~~:::j~·il-·-t!
Joints" instead of the supposedly honest
once!gave you
7•· m."'

°

0

The !mal week of the 1972 football season IS upon us. It only
seems yesterday that the football season started It's hard to
believe 10 weeks have passed smce the Moleman came out of
hi bern alton to resume hiS l"eekly column.
Well, the season ts all but over, and yes, the Mole has his hole
mthe ground picked out to htbernate another year.
Ftrsl, before we leave, however, we must end our year long
battle wtth the old ptgskm prognosltcator, Major Amos B
Hoople.
If the Moleman has another good week, he will wm the local
predictton battle Wtlh Hoople a thtrd stratght year Gomg mto
Friday's action, Mole stands at137-31h5 Hoople recorded a Jj,S.J
mark last week, uppmg hts season record to 134-41-ii.
In 1970, Mole defeated Hoople by three games and last year
won agam by a larger margm. Both of us offer congratulatiOns to
the Ironton Tigers, champs of the SEOAL, and Southern's Tornadoes, SVAC champs.
SEOAL
CIRCLEVILLE 22ATHENS 16. Bulldogs fm1sh season w1th a

WIN AT BRIDGE

Voice along Br '~7ay
W •
t,;

3~eat ~~t.u~~~ef"lt~~';,,P~~c1~

Following George Washington in the American
presidential pageant would have been dtfficult for
any man, and the tllustrious Virginian, John
•\dams, f~tled to produce a stellar performance,
although 1t was m some respects very creditable
It was hts susptctous, querulous personality that
made •\dams' Presidency politically and personally
unsuccessful, not hts lack of talent or experience.
For he was such an eloquent and intrepid fighter
for Amencan independence, and his roles m the
drama so many and' well performed, that \dams'
colleagues dubbed him the Atlas of Independence.
But the fierce spirit of independence so vital to
a freedom fighter was a handtcap to \dams as Ch1ef
Exccuttve, for conciliation is the name or the game
m achtevmg success m modern pohncal leadershtp.
\comparison of the only two Federahst Prestdents'
handling of a delicate foreign cnsts ts mstructhc
in this respect.

•

BY JA K O'BRIAN

-----9:-J~ase~l~. ~~ J~~~s,;~~k"!+r~~;~aj~~rdy

Apostle and Atlas of Independence

Generous George overbtds
all
no-trump hands and most
.K107
suit
hands Hence hts three
.97 3
no-trump
cal!.
• 86
North put George right ln
.KJ1093
stx
and West opened the kmg
WEST
EAST
of
hearts.
George saw that
.J84
.Q965 3
six
clubs
would
have been a
.KQJ82
.1065
cinch but that SIX no-trump
t754
tJ109 2
might well not come m.
• 72 '
••
Dear Helen:
SOUTH (D)
Nothing showed on his
I thought I could be ''wtth tl," and carry on an affatr while
.A2
smiling face as he remarked
shll making my marriage happy and complete. But the com·
¥A4
to West, "I am generous
tAKQ3
partsons creep in Maybe man Is not a monogamous creature,
enough to let you 1\old this
.AQ865
ftrst trick."
but he tsn't equtpped to Jove two women equally.- TIRED AND
Both vulnerable
George won the continuaREFORMED
West North East South
tion and ran off his five
3N.T. clubs. Somewhere along the
Dear Helen :
Pass 6NT Pass Pass
!me East let go a diamond
Pass
The rules of "sampling" are sunple: When man and wife are
and the slam wheeled ln. •
Openmg lead-· K
"You talk like you are gen·
separated by work or war: tt's okay. When they're together: 11
B o ld
erous," remarked W e s t.
isn't. - EXPERIENCED.
Y swa &amp; James Jacoby "My partner is the generous
·m-;m::-m::.:.:=W:=~%-;~'@"'t:l~~~~;:~~·~AA'.wtm"~"~':Qli:O:e
·~:~:·~·~"~"AA"~??:Ij'?tii'IIPII"I:O:'I:O:'Itii:O:It'fll$$'·~--~~·l:l:'l':ltl1:lllNIIIIIII!1
one. He gave you your
....
xu
!C..&lt;&lt;JCdJ.
~ -;.

- - -- FRIDAY, NOV. tO, 1972
6 oo - Sunrise Semmar 4 , Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmttme 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8. Human DimenSion
10
7 00 - Today 3, ~. 15, CBS News 8, 10
7 ~~ - Romper Room 6. Sleepy Jeffers 8. Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle
8 00 - Capt Kangaro6 10, Sesame St 33, Romper Room 8,
Timmy and Lassie 6 , New zoo Revue 13
8 30 - Jack Lalanne 13, New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room 8
9 00 - Paul Dl•on 4 ; Phil Donahue 15, What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Concentration 6, F rlendly Jur.cllon tO ; Ben

Second Pre11dent John Adams
(Adminiotration: March 4, 1797-March 3, 1801)

Dear Helen
Extra-martial affairs were once constdered mostly for men,
while the true llttle wife waited at home. What these men don't
reahze ts that the wife has a much better opportunity for hanky·
panky than does her mate. Mter she sends the kids to school, she
has at least six hotirs of freedom, while her husband must
squeeze hts lnfidehties mto hours stolen from work.
I ftgured my husband was domg some sampling. So I pomted
out how easy an aflatr would be for a housewife - and planted a
few seeds of doubt, hke the "cat that ate the cream" smtle, an
unusual cigarette m an ash tray, etc.
He'snow homeat5 :45p m. (no more "traffic jams" or "late
hours").
Was I unfaithful' Wouldn't you - and he - just LOVE to
know' - TRUE GRET
Dear Helen
About affatrS · yes, we can fmd the time and energy! I've
been seeing a married man who has five young children but,
luckily, hts wife isn't mterested m him sexually She's relieved
that he doesn 'I bother her any more.
The "planning" part lSil'l too difficult as he works for
himself. He can be seemg a "chent," or an "agent," or "getting
equipment repaired" when he's out of the office. Which, In a way,
ts true. On days when he Is really busy, he leaves for work early
so he can be wlth me.
Yes, tl's worth the effort. I'd rather be his wife, but he won't
leave hts children, so half a loaf makes me a - HAPPY SAMP·
LER

By COl. Mole

CISm

+++

" The Racers" 13

1 00 _ News 4
1 30 - News 13

When the French Revolution degenerated uno
the Retgn of Terror and war w1th Engl.md seemed
imminent, President W.tshington, aware of h1s link
natton's weakness, reluctantly hut firmly decided
on a pohcy of neutrahty desp1te hiS knowledge of
America's dchr to France as a recent ally against
l·.ngland.
Faced wnh the same sttuation, President Adams
was tmpetuously amh1valent Followmg an ahsurd
quarrel with agents of the hench D~rcctory, he
reacttvated the mihua, named Washmgton commander and set aho ut putting the natton on a war
fO&lt;&gt;tlng Suddenly, he reversed h1mself by suggest·
mg a peace mlsston to hance. 1\ngered by opposi·
tion in the Senate, &lt;\dams d1spatched three comm•ss•oners anyway, then went home to Qumcy in
,1 huff and stayed seven months
When hts emtssancs s1gned a peace treaty wtth
"'apoleon Bona pam, \dams \1 as htghly pic~ sed
w1th the results of hiS conciliatory mm e \lex.mder
Hamilton, bnlhant Fcderahst tactician, bitterly v!ltficd Adams for makmg peace Smcc the first mts·
sum had foundered m the unsavory XYZ' 1\ffa1r ,
Hamilton \\oas not wnhout grounds for ht s cntt·

By Helen Bottel

1972

SVAC Champs meet-Spartans Friday

by Patterson and Patrick

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

Nov.

'

0

premtses from whtch the "skim" mtllions
Illegally
y
We know bookmakers who are breakln the
law _ JUst as we all broke the law dg 1·n
proh!b'!tion _ who have no truck w'tth durrugsg
orgamzed criminal tnfectlons of any kind ; the;
take thetr convtctions and . 1 te
(
1mposed ) with restgned ~~~~n a::~.::~;
come out of thetr brief federal rison ra s
healthier than an time m thetr li~es.
P
We have
bookm k f d
we don 't bet
n th
abeers or ecadeson any mg yond a person-toperson small wager over an 1 ti
ball
e ec on or a

tOP QUALITY

LOW COST

knO:

he'~ !:~:leg:t"du:i~~~~~:~ r~~:S~~~r ~lr

hlstortc frailties - where they are:.t Jl!lrt ; :
otgantze&lt;ldrug- ··~
-w- - H- -::, - ~-ne ... e over ea... one such
prominent New York bookie once when he was
told a mObster had been caught heroin-handed
and faced a certain extended stay In the pokie·
"Good," we heard him murmur softl .
.
Th
ld tyl bo kl
y
ese o s e o es go 'way back to
when bettmg at N.Y. tracks wasn't legal- but
was encouraged a d
te ced The
courtly gamblers" inco;:peccansnble. clotheusuasalley.
cepted bets publicly and with grace· on ot the
oldest sttll around dee In hls aOs ;
Madden 1
Coley
p
professi~n?":e ~:~.~u:'af: his precarlo;:
ever CQilstdered Col
thi ~~ an~nek w of
their betlin ur es ey any ng ~ a 0 er
on the d
g , who always paid off 100 pet.
a "ltne"ofo 'neve~ :~hed; Coley ~~-set up
r one va U uge-eum CUBwmcr that
decades-ago year when' Zev and Papyrus
galloped their hlatori 1
tch-r
ca rna
ace ... No
"line,"meaningodds, had been set by any of the
old breed o1 track bookmake . but Coley told
us 0
f
hom h~d·
mUD
ne man rom w
e won
one
begged for a "line " and Coley made It
.
'
'
even
money -and lost tlie $100,000 the man put up ...
And paid off with grace.

tu!

AT MOORE'S LOW PRICES!

Laugh at winter snows with

EXAMPLE

Child's
RED STOOL

MUD AND

SNOW

srti-~

RETREADS

'

99e

BAS-KET
GAME

(Basketball Game)

~~

$472

MOORE'S

..

..OwOrJJv

.....

WHIIIWAU

.....,,.;;;,;o•;;;,...... ,...""
,..... "' ...... ,.. '"' ...

35 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

.,

,.'
'

�: I

•

New leaders emerge m
Ohio computer ratings
COLUMBUS (UP!) - New
leaders emerged U1 three of 12
regions in thenert to last week
of the computer football
ratings conducted by the Ollio
High
School
Athletic
Association.
The final ratings, which will
be released early next week,
will be used to select the four
semi-finalisU! in each class in
the first ever state high school
football playoffs, beginning the
following weekend.
Moving lo the IDp spots this
week were Toledo Central
Catholic in Class AAA Region
2, replacing last week's leader,
Toledo Scott; Akron St. Vincent in Class AA Region 5, replacing Warren John F. Kennedy ; and Lorain Clearview in
Class A Region 9, taking the
' place of Kirtland.
Three teams in each class
held their No. I spots, bpt the

•.

'
'

m..Ul::=~:W.~~~·;td ...... &gt;;b&gt;Xf,.-:?f@H.!o.&gt;Z1~W:!i1:.JH 'St

final week's games could see
more changes in the makeup .of
the ratings.
Warren Western Reserve,
Massillon an.d Princeton
continue ID lead the other three
AAA region's, with Columbus
Watterson, Hannibal River and
Reading still the AA frontrunners. Besides Clearview in
Class A the leaders are Marion
Pleasant, NewcomersiDwn and
Middletown Fenwick.
The IDp ten teams in each of
the regions are:
Class AAA
Region 1- 1. WaM'en Western
Reserve ; 2. Cleveland St.
Ignatius; 3. Lakewood St.
Edward; 4. Panna Senior; 5.
EaStlake North; 6. Cleve~nd
St. Joseph ; 7. Willoughby
South; 8. Elyria; 9. Berea; 10.
Midpark.
Region %-1. Toledo Central
Catholic; 2. Sandusky; 3.

...;.•

NBA Slo~ing•
Unitect Preu International

By
·
Eastern Confe.-..ce

AtLlntic Olvisi_.
t pet. g.b.
Boston
II 1 .917
New York
II 2 .846
'h
B.ulfalo
. 3 10 .231 8'h

w.·

Philadelphia 0 . 14 .000 12 '
Cen1r•l Division
w. I. pet. g,ll.

"
·~

'72 Dream Team will
be selected 'SundJJy
'

Houston

1

Atlanta

leams.
The 22-man squad and eight hnnorable
menlion players will be 'honored at the AIISEOt\ L Football Banquet scheduled for
Ironton in early December.
Sun.Jay's meetiJJg is set to start at 1 p. m.
at Jolly Lanes Bowling Center.

lf1

BallimOf'e
Cleveland

6 7 .462
4 11 .267

4'h

Chicago
KC.(,)maha
Detroit

8 4 .667 2
6 7 .462 41h
• 8 .333 6

.

at 11 games.
'
The 36th meeting in this
series, which dates back to
1895, has been sold out since
last spring, but the game is
being televised nationally
(ABC). Alabama, which ranks
fifth in the nation in scoring, is
rated a solid II points better
than the Tigers, who barely
squefz.d past Mississippi, 1716, last week.
With USC getting a week's
rest in preparation for its Rose
'th UCLA
B 1 h d
ow s ow own WI
•
second-ranked Nebraska gets a
chance to Impress th e coaches
o~ the UP! Ratings Boatd as it
takes its 7-1 record and
awesome offense against 14thrank ed Iowa State. The Cornhuskers, .who turned in four
consecutive shutouts before
having that skein ended last
Saturday by Colorado, are
overwnelming 21-point favorites.
OhloStateandMichigan, who
have a showdown of their own
commg up on Nov . 25 at

ByUnitedPresslnternational
Tradition is a pleasant
enough word that evokes fond
memories and sometimes a few
wet eyes. But when Alabama
and Louisian.a State clash on
the football field this Saturday ,
the past will be forgotten for
the sake of a meaningful
present. .
At stake, among other things,
at Birmingham will be the
perfect records of both schools,
the insloe track to the
SoutheasternConferencechampionship, the plush bowl bid
that goes with it, and a high
national ranking.
The Tide, which is 8-Q overall
and Ml in the SEC, and LSU, 70 for the year and ~ in league
play, are two of only five major
colleges still sporting perfect
records for 1972. The three
I
other teams lhat are unbeaten
and untied are top-ranking
Southern California (9-0 ), which
is idle this week, fourth-rankin g
Ohio State ( 7~). which meets
Michigan State, and fifthwhich
'•
iipjlii
In addition, I'.';U carries the
nation 's longest winning streak

Region 3-1. Massillon; 2.
Walsh Jesuit; 3. Canton
McKinley ; 4. Akron Garfield;
5. ZanesviDe; 6. Barberton; 7.
North Canton Hoover;·8. Akron

=~· ;rt~~rsville; 10. Aus-

Region 4-1. PrinceiDn; 2.
Kettering Fairmont East; 3.
c· · · Ed! 5
Troy; 4· UlCUUiati
er; ·
Cincinnati Moeller; 6. Middlebb
town; 7. Dayton Ste ins; 8.
Oxford Talawanda; 9. Centerville; 10. Oak Hills.
Class AA
Region s.-1. Akron St. ViRcent; 2. Warren Kennedy; 3.
Geneva; •.
• Chagr in FaUs ; s.
Campbell Memorial; 6. Lorain
Catholic; 7. Manch ester; 8. Columbiana ; 9. Cloverleaf; 10.
East Palestine.
Region 11--1. Columbus Watterson; 2. Lima Central Calli· 4. Ross!ord ;
ollc; 3. Fostorl8;
5. St. Marys Memorial ; 6. Ontarlo ; 7. Columbus DeSales ; 8.
Dublin· 9. Genoa· 10.
Coht~bus,fi~ure t?retai~ t~:,.:,. £ti~·Mf..-"Ot : .
'jf#feC m~llliiiligllano
. ',.e,!! !!!!. :- . anru
ver;
wfll![:oL BJg 10 actlvtty. The , ·2·. • Mlriel'va ; 3. Uniontown
Buckeyes may be m _for t.he Lake; 4. Ironton; 5. LolliJville
tougher battle as s1x-potnt St. Thomas Aquinas· 6. New
choices against Michigan State,
'
which appears to have rallied
behind departing Coach Duffy
WEEKEND SALE!
Daugherty, while Michigan Is
picked by 21 poinl.!l over Iowa .
1 Group Ladies'
Oklahoma, No. 7 in the
ratings with a t&gt;-1 record, is
picked by '1:1 points over
Missouri, which is making a
reputation this year for ill!
Reg .
upsets, eighth-ranked UCLA ( Il8.95
SAN DIEGO (UPl )-Duane
l) is seven over Washington
and ninth-ranked Texas (6-1) is Thomas won't be playing in the
13 over Baylor. Auburn, No. 10 National Football League this
Cor . Main &amp; Sycamore on the list at 7-1, is idle.
season .
The_$.!tn Diego Chargers
placed the controversial running back on the reserve list
Wednesday when he failed to
appear for practice. This
means he cannot again be
activated in 1972.
I want·to thank the people of Meigs County for
"Duane is not prepared to
laking time from their busy schedules to cast
play this season," said Chartheir ballot for me in Tuesday's election .
gers Coach Harland Svare.
"Obviously, he's got some
was much appreciated . I wish for Larry
rcoblems that won't. pennit

•.

w. t pet. g .b.

Los Angeles

GaldenState
Phaenix

-po

lola's Dress· Shop

THANKS I

•'

J .786 -

9 3 .750
6
4

. Seattle-

5 .545
9 .308

1
3112
6'1;

Portland
1 11 .083 9 •
Wednesday's Results
Basion 128 Golden St. 111
Baltimore 116 Buffalo 94
K.C..Qmaha 125 Phlla 107
Milwaukee 116 Seattle 103 -·
Phoenix 107 Cleveland 99
(On ly games scheduled!
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at New York
(On ly game scheduled I
ABA Slandongs
By United Press International
1

By Ualle!l Press lnteraiollonal
Georg.e McGinnis showed
Wednesday night why the
incikna Pacers feel he's one of
the rising super~tars o! th~
Anterican Baske'tball
Association. McGinn!$, a second-year pro
out of lnljiana University,
scored 35 • p&lt;)ints Wednesday
night to lead the Pacers to a
IJ:&gt;.I24 victory over the Utah
Stars and first place in the
ABA's Western Division.
Indiana broke open the game
with a 42-point third period
burst that enabled the Pacers
to take a half-gaiile lead,in the
Wesf. Mei Daniels added 24 and
Roger Browl! 22 for Indiana, .
including' three three-point
field goals. 'James Jones led
Utah with 32.
In other ABA action,
Carolina beat Kentucky, 12&amp;111, Virginiir stopped Denver,
116-111, and Dallas tripped
Memphis, 126-.118.
Mack Calvin had 33 poinl.!l
and Billy Cunningham 29 to
lead the Cougars, the Eastern

Signed : Mary Martin

considerable length of time."
Thomas, rega~ded as one of
the most talented, young
running backs in pro football,
was acquired before the start
of the season from the Dallas
Cowboys for running back
Mike Montgomery and wide

·.

\

PHILC011

W:

Car-olina

10

7

Kentucky
New York
Memphis

I. pet. g.b .

5 .667
8 .467

.

'

.

Americans advanced ID the
third round of (he $63,500
West
Stockhobri open tennis tourw. I. pet. g.b. nament Wednesday as Frank
Indiana
9 4 .692
Utah.
10 6 .615 'h Froehling of Miami, Fla.,
San Diego
8 6 .571
l 'h defeated Romania's Ion Tiriac,
Denver
7 7 .500 2'h 6-4, 7-6, and Jeff B&lt;lrowiak of
Dallas
4 7 .364
Wednesday's Results 4 Berkeley, Calif., ousted
veteran lj.oy Emerson of
Carolina 116 Kentucky 111
Indiana 135 Utah 124
Australia, 6-3,7-6.
·Dallas 116 Memphis 118

Lexington ; 7. Licking Valley;
8.
Whellersburg;
9.
Fredericktown; 10. Claymont.
Region 8--1. Reading; 2.
Loveland; 3. Hamilton Badin;
4. Wyoming ; 5. St. Paris Graham; 6. Dayton Jefferson; 7.
Circleville; 8. Milton Union ; 9.
Teays Valley ; 10. North
Virginia 116 Denver 111
College Hill.
(Only
games schedu.led)
Class A
Thursday's Games
Region 9--1. Lorain ClearIndiana vs. Virginia
view; 2. Kinland; 3. Lowellat Hampton, Va.
New
York
at
Utah
ville; 4. Dalton; ~. East Can(Only games scheduled)
ron; 6. Middlefield Cardinal; 7.
South Range; 8. Jackson MilAHL Standings
ton; 9. Richmond Heights; 10.
By United Press International
Hanoverton United.
East
.
w. I. t. pts gf ga
M
I
Region 10 · anon Prov idence
8 3 1 17 62 44
Pleasant; - 2. Spencerville; 3. Boston
8 4· 0 16 49 41
•
s
more
Rochester
7 4 1 15 50 46
Norwalk St · Pau I; •· yea .
Nova Scotia 6 4 J 15 54 42
Mohawk; 5. Riverdale ; 6. New Springfield
4 1 2 10 59 69
London; 7. Arlington; 8. Ada; New Haven
1 13 2 6 48 85
9. Fremont St. Joseph ; 10. Cory
West
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Rawson.
Tidewater
9 5 2 20 68 59
Region II - I. Newcomer- Cincinnat i
8 6 o 16 55 54
stown; 2. Berne Union; 3. Cleveland
5 6 3 13 57 51
Tuscarawas Valley; 4. Coal Hershey
5 5 1 11 51 43
Balllmore
4 6 3 11 44 56
Grove; S. (tie) Millersport and Richmond
5 B 1 11 51 58
Newark Catholic; 7. Danville;
Wednesday's Res11tts
Hershey 4 Cincinnati 2
8 Ce te burg 9 Beallsville·
· n r
; ·
'
Providence 5 New Haven 1
10. Lancaster Fisher.
Richmond 6 Baltimore 2.
Region 12-1. Middletown
Tidewater 4 Springfield 4
Fenwick; 2. Lockland; 3.
(Only games scheduled)
p t
th
Thursday's Games
Coving~?. ?, ; . ~ .,:}.r £,'!:ou s'' I' i eostO&lt;Ull Nova ·scotia ••
Notre Dame ,' o. Ceuarvwe; 1, , IQ!lly,garn,e,scheduteql , ,.. ·
Williamsburg; 7. Plain City ', . . ,
,
- NHL Standings
Jonathan Alder; 8. Frankfort
Adena ; 9. (tie) New Boston and By United Pre:~ 1nternational
1
Xenia Woodrow Wilson.
w. 1..t p1s g1 ga
Montreal
10 1 4 24 60 16
NV Rangers
9 4 1 19 54 38
Butlalo
6 1 5 11 4130.
Detroit
7 4 1 15 43 30
Boston
6 6 1 14 58 54,
Toronlo
5 7 2 12 40 45·
Vancouver
4 . 9 1 9 39 56
NV Islanders 2 9 I 5 29 60
West
w. I. I. pts gf ga
Los Angeles
9 6 I 19 60 48
Chicago
7 6 2 16 50 45
Pittsburgh
7 7 1 15 5151
Philadelphia 6 6 2 14 41 46
receiver Billy Parks.
6 5 2 14 39 33
He was activated for the first Minnesola
Atlanta
5 7 3 13 30 so
time last Sunday but saw no St. Louis
2 6 5 9 33 42
action. He did not take California
2 8 3 7 37·53
Wednesday's
Results
calisthenics with the team
N.Y
.
Rangers
5
Vancouver
2
then, walked along the
Pi1tsburgh 5 Philadelphia 1
sidelines during the playing of
Montreal 5 Toronto 2
Atlanta 3 Los Angeles 3
the National Anthem and sat on
Chicago6N
.V. Islanders 1 •
tne bench throughout the
Minnesota 5 California 2
game; staring straight ahead.
(Only games scheduled)
Tfiursday 's Games
" His actions SUnday were
Detroit at Boston
not deliberate and were not
California at Buffalo
intended to be disrespectful,"
Chicago at Philadelphia
(Only games scheduled)
said Svare. "He is a very
complicated young man.
"'!be problem is not narco-

, •••••

. . _ .••

cident."
Thomas went through a full
workout 1\resday and looked
quick on kickoff and punt
returns. However, Svare regarded Thomas' absence Wednesday as the final straw in the

•i

.., '

:. ~

.

..~.4

il.i'-'"·'

"

~
v
,\
Q

0

.,,•

;

' STORY BOOK TIME! - Attractive and unusual costuming depicting story book
characters will be featured in "A Child's World" presentation as a part of the "Fall Follies" 10
be'staged on Nov. 24at the ldeigs High School by the Big Bend Minstrel Association. The unique
C9Stu'ming has been created by members of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
AliOve are Raggedy Ann, right (Doris Ewing) and Raggedy Andy (Debbi Buck), left, and
Jayne Lee Hoeflich; center, who will present the original material set to a musical background
to introduce the story book characters of the segment. Others to be presented will include
Martha McPball and Carol McCullough as "Puff, the Magic Dragon" ; Sarah Bechtel,
Charlotte Taunton and Vikki Gloeckner as the three blind mice; Barbara Logan as the
Cowardly Uon from "The Wizard of Oz"; Carolyn Sattertield as Humpty Dumpty; Sue Zirkle
as the house of straw of one of the three little pigs; Becky Anderson as Charlie Brown 's Great
Pumpkin, and Sandra Sargent as Snoopy of Peanuts fame.

'

-'

,&lt;

One week only. Nov. 9-16

~

"

STIFFLER'S
IN POMEROY
.. '

FIVESimof
':~tluxt ClfMd Front
-

Priced As Low As

'•
"...,,
"
"

...

Merry Munchers

..'

4-H club meet
tuice recently

0

;~f:l~$:i*'~e:::&lt;!·:j:j'~:lm$d~ml~.:::::::::::::.-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~:::::;!:~~:~:::?.::::?.;:;:;::8~::e:::::::::::::::::=::::*

I Social Calendar
•

•

"

"
The Middleport Merry
,;
Munchers 4-H Club has met
• ' ·twice recently, the first time
-·· elecli~g ., of\icers to serve this
year. Following election, the
officerl!'flilitlr jUI\Ior. Ciaders,
Carol · tew1s an!I· Ingrid
Hawley, -w~re installed in a
ceremony condu~ted by Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee, advisor. Each
girl '/ a&amp; presented with a
minilt ure 4-H girl to_3~ar to
swnbolize her office in the
club.
A slumber party held at the
home !cif advisor Mrs. James
Butc¥~.highlighted tlie second
meeting: ¥embers roasted hot
dogs a~d played games during
the evening.
The l!ext morning the girls
and tht ir two advisors shopped
at the Fabfic Shop in Pomeroy
to buy materials each will need
· to complete her sewing project,
"Let's Sew." Attending the
slumbet / party were Phyllis
Davis, Pam Crooks, Kathy
Blake , Vangll Hart, Patfy
Cremeans, Nancy Wallace,
Mindy U&gt;ng, Shiela Horky,
Angela! Baker, Joy Edwards
and Julle- Biron.

. THURSDAY
ANNUAL Bazaar of Sacred
Heart Church at auditorium
Thursday. Dinners starting at 4
p.m.; games, prizes, fancy
stands, baked goods. Public
inviteri.
PAST Councilors, Theodorus
Council, D. of A., 7:30 p.m.
Thursday home of Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER; '!
O.E.S. installation, Thursday
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Tempie.
SOUTHERN LOCAL &amp;hool
Board, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
high school.
FRIDAY

JITNEY SUPPER, Pomeroy
Elementary School, 4 to 6 p.m.
Friday under sponsorship of
Pomeroy Elementary &amp;hool
Patrol.
SUPREME INSPEcrlON,
White Shrine. of Jerusalem,
District 16, 8 p.m. Friday night
at the IOOF hall, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Gordon Hawk, deputy
su preme
worthy
high
priestess, inspecting officer.

RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution 2
p.m. Friday, Episcopal Pa;ish
Hou se, Speaker, Emmett
Conway of Ohio University
whose topic will be pre-historic
Indian paths in Meigs county.
1 I
Members to respOrid to roll call
. D~r TO MEET
. with Indian name in Ohio.
.~Metfl!.9apter 53, .DAV• ~ 1ll-Jiostesses,.Mrs~~ark:Grueser- •
. .meet In regulat.seSs1on at r::so Mrs. Irving Karr, and Mrs.
p.. m. Monday with Neal Petty, George Skinner.
Nrnth DiStrict· Commander, to
be pre~nl. • All members are
SATURDAY
asked lj&gt; :be present. RefreshDINNER .AND bazaar •
ments Will be served.
Saturday, begrnmng 5 p.m. at

FIVE SIZES Of
Cnltlrl

-'"·"•

OtfoofW.• .....

BU

AI NT

WHA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. 1. t. pts gl go
Cleveland
8 3 1 17 50 33
Quebec
, 8 4 1 17 47 37
·New England . 8 4 0 16 51 37
New York
7 8 0 14 62 55
Ottawa ·
6 4 1 1351 .ill
Philadelphia 2 11 0 4 37 61
West
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
LosAngeles
8 4 1 174533
Alberta
7 6 I 1~ 44 f9
Winnipeg
7 7 1 15 .49 52
Houston
6 7 0 11 38 &lt;13
Ml nnesota
4 6 1 9 17 36
Chicago
2 9 1 5 27 39
Wednesday's Results
Quebec 3 Winnipeg 2
Los Angeles 2j'lew York 1
(Only games scheduled)
Thuroday's Gomts
Winnipeg at Ottawa
· Los Angeles at Alberta
(Only games scheduled)

Wllh buill-In :
• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
• 4·SPEED AUTOMATIC
RECORD CHANGER
• FM STEREO, 'FM/ AM
RADIO

•

'

'

I

}

H4fe

ALL
SIZES
·

INVITED TO COMPETE
LAS VF.GAS, NEV.(UPI)The four 1~ pr'o Football Hall
of Faine inductees """' Gino
Parker
Lamar H•rt-lrave
been invile!l to compete )II an
all-pro football golf tour·
nament here Jan. 111-24,

M!:&gt;DUPORT, 0.
'

runnin1 b OWW· dl'l"* IIUltd air down
bltw"n ;l!t fnlnt and .1'111' MCtiOns of
t~' heat cl 'mbtr llld pu~ it out elona
lilt c.bim 'lllnt-spreldill&amp; • ·wide car·

or Hml-autOIIIIIic Ollttltiolt ol ille

pet of wero. h -

PASSENGER

ALL FOR ONLY .

&amp; ABBOn

"TOP·O·MAnc• Cuh•
TOP.o.MATIC CONTROlS, tocltld ·

t1m1 lletr hatint Tht powerful,

Model H351BI'C
Pec8n veneer top end base,
~P molded d0011.

II 1 l".llt new IC!viiiCI In winter
home conifort.-WARM MORNING's ex•
Cllllivi''CirtMt of Colllfolt" hut flow for

'1200

your floors.

PIOYidt you witll, fuiiJ IUtamltio

fe

*"'" Slylh11

'

'.

WARM MOIINING'I « 1 4mllilf
Plicund 11r11 IIVIIWifllln. _ J1JU low orfli!lll Cll . . .

the blowtr IYI'
""' fQr IUIIIIIIII~ air lilcullllon.

lrtlllr.

992·2111

992-7161

•

BUT YOU ,A1 oftLY

$62! ·

1tts • new hilh fer lltlutY· ua1
WARM MORNlNG CQ ltMIIr \)1

like on atlflctlot -

rll "'"''::_' : : ' , : - 1111:.-'1111111111•"'·
LOW 0111 ..11 COlT•
LOW Of II A'- COif

:: =~,~. ~

=

-RSB-ACK HARDWARE

TIRE -SALES .-

.... '1.1S pl.

'

!... _

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1MSTOIITYM . .

Plus Reeappable Tire

Colon so allvt'
- 10 dlstlnctlvtl
And 4 flbuiOUI whltH
for ,,.,,.. ~h of
lheer eleganct.

..

"CarpttofW~.,..._,
la~etlh.l New •Piciwa

The "C1rpet of CO!nfolt" biOMr systetr.
ll completely 'aufomatk: •• , tumln1 on
when the hut starts flolti"'. turning off
When tht hut stops IIG!rifll. A Hlt9tOr
._itch livts J8ll the ChofCt of.fist. liltd""' or slow IPIIifl. 8)' simply turnioc
N blower CIIIIIOI flaM llllomalic to
......~you Clll oplfllt

.

· each

·-~GENERAL

quiet

: ,"'~.=a',::!.,~-~

POIIBOY

~VI

.. ~

'1.50 .

.

~t.y

•

P.RESIDINT
LATIX

.VW!Y WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
...___
.
'
SAI('IJ5 • .., .....

.

"

I

•
taken on a savings bond to be
awarded that day. Members
will t~kc a trip to th'e Fenton
Glass Factory on Nov. 14 and
are to meet In the upper
parking lot in Pomeroy at 6
p.m.
Mrs. Carol Adams, service
chairman, reported on a pizza

Observance planned

•
'

~·

I•

Ebersbach Has -

the football season.
Svare said the Chargers
would ''not be hurtin"' for
running backs and the status of
Thomas will have no influence
on tbe Chargers' draft next
year.

Plans for a holiday bazaar
were announced by Mrs.
Charlotte Taunton, ways ahd
means chairman, at a meeting
of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The bazaar will be held on
Dec. 4 at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. Donations will be

t)

Savings on other styles, too.

..

Bcrni,-e Winn led the group
singing accompanied by Mrs.
C. 0. Chapri1an al the piano.
Present to speak on the rive
mill operating levy for the
Meigs Local School District
was George Hargraves ,
superintendent.
Clarence Struble, president
of the Meigs County Councii on
Aging , conducted a short
business meeting at which time
the report of the nominating
committee was presented by
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell. It was

.

• The 60th anniversary observance of Theodorus Council
17, Daughters of America, was
set for Nov. 20 at the IOOF hall
during a planning session
Monday night. Mrs. Etta Will ,
councilor, presided at the
meeting.
A 6:30 p.m. potluck dinner
will be held With members to
lake a covered dish dinner.
' A report was given on
Friendship Night held at
Belpre recently wi.th the Belle
Prairie Council 269 as host.
Obligation night was observed
and an invitation was extended

to the Council from the Byesville Council 319 for a booster
meeting to be held tonight.
It was reported that Sadie
Brown is in University
Hospital, Columbus, that
Harold Will was to receive.
outpatient treatment there this
week, that Roy Mayer,
relatives· of Marie and Lillie
Houck, members of the
council, had undergone
surgery at the Holzer Medical
Center. The prize package
donated by Mrs. Edna Reibel
was won by Mrs. Glenora
Swatzel.

I Pledge service conducted
*

St. Paul's Methodist Church by

wscs.

MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers' luncheo n and
meeting, 12:30 p.m. Saturday,
R~lland United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
direc tor of Council on Aging,
speaker.
REGULAR MEET!ftj} of
Hemlock Grove Grange '!Ill be
Saturday at&gt; 6&gt;30 p.m. with a
potluck supper.
RACINE Chapter 134 O.E.S.
will hold a special meeting
Saturday for the purpose of
initiation...,f two candidates.
DANCE at Pomeroy Junior
High Saturday 9 to 12. Sponsored by Coffee House. Admission $1.
SHADE Elementary PTA
sponsoring a square dance 9 to
midnight Saturday at school
with Phil Sbjck and family
playing for dancing .

Shower given
Mr.J, .JTohnson
I

LETART FALLS - The
annual
pledge
service
highlighted a meeting of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the East Letart
United Methodist Church.
Mrs . Doris Adams had
charge of the service, opening
with the hymn, "Must Jesus
Beap •• the •IA CFos~ : :Alone 1,"
Plellges were 'pla'cl!d · on the
altar and the dedication prayer
was given in unison. At the
conclusion of the meeting the
pledge boxes and gifts for the
year were counted.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher
presided at the · meeting
opening with prayer by Mrs.
Howard Shiveley. Mrs. Mabel
Shields gave devotions using
Matt. S, 23-24. Mrs. Hazel Fox
read minutes of a previous
meeting. Program books for
the year were completed and
distributed. A parcel Post sale
was held following the meeting
and Mrs. Julia Norris and Mrs.

out · that the council
represents all senior citizens in
the county. As new clubs are
li!rmed throughout the county
the council membership is
increased .

Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
project director of the Council
on Aging, spoke on prospects
fur a R.S.V.P. (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program ) being
organized in the county. This
program is for senior citizens
interested in volunteer work
and being paid for their out-of-

Proceeds from an auction at the home of Mn. Emeno.
Well by the Frleudly Neighbors Club will be -d 10 parchase gUts for needy children.
Plans were made for .a Christmas dlnoer 10 be beld •
Dec. 19 at Bowers Restaurant. Games were played .ud
prizes awarded to Mrs. Robert Arnold,~. Willard IIIDel,
Mrs. George Buchanan, and Mrs. Ed Venoy. Mrs. Cbarle•
Werry will host the next meeting. Refreshments were
served by the hostess to the above and Mrs. Elwood Bowen
and Mrs. Roy Smith.
~~&lt;.&gt;:~-::::.;;::: 1j !i8S§.W!W.' .. T 's::!W::&amp;U£± .«"&gt;$: . .·.·.•,•.•.·.·.·.·.·..···.·.·
pocket expenses such as
transportation and meals.
Invocation preceding the
dinner was given by the Rev .
Robert Bumgarner, pastor of
the Rutland and Middleport

United Methndlst Churches.
Meeting with the group was
Mrs. Leafy Chastee,~, field
representative for the Area
Model Project on Aging
operating ·out of Rlo Grande.

THE "ROMEO"

A FAVORITE OF MEN
SOLID COMFORT IN
DAND EEE WIDTHS
Lay -Away for a Grand Christmas Gift.
A deposit will hold them for you.

I

I

THE SHOE BOX
Wluire Shoes Are Sensibly Priced!
. Ml DOLE PORT, 0.

Quilting done at
Hensley home

LONG BO'ITOM - The Long
Bottom-Chester Tuesday Club
met at the home of Mrs. Garnet
Hensley on Oct. 12 for a day of
quilt making and friendship. A
potluck dinner was served and
plans were made to make
Thanksgiving favors for one of
the rest homes.
The next meeting will be
Nov. 14 at Mrs. Ernestine
Hayman 's at Long Bottom
when the ladles again will
quilt. All women of the area are
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
in vile!! to bring a covered dish,
LONG BO'ITOM - Mr ..and neMle and tj)read. Huurs are
Mrs. David Smith entertamed from 10 a. m. till 2 p. m.
with a birthday pa.rty honoring
~eir da~ghter, Dtana, on her
e1ghlh bll'thday. Gu?sts ":ere
Lees~ Reed, Jodt Sm1th,
PARTY ENJOYED
Sherrte Da~ts, Judy Holter,
LONG BOTTOM - A
Angela Collrns, James Reed, community Halloween Party
Klare Kimes, Jimmy Carter, was held at the Methodist

.

WINTER COATS,
JACKETS,
SNOW SUITS

BOYS AND GIRLS
INFANT THRU SIZE 12

20%0FF.
THE

A

.KIDDIE SHOPPE .

Wey

On

Proceeds benefit children

. ~p&lt;J. !)l;s, Su~ ~~gle,.,h, .

SALE

5u .

party held at the Meigs County
Children's Home. Mrs. Ruth
Riffle thanked members for
assisting with the lea held
recently. A charm from International was presented to
Mrs. Becky Anderson who
rushed three girls for a
sorority.
Mrs. Karen McGraw was
named pledge captain, and big
sisters for the pledges named
were Mrs. Anderson for Mrs.
Karen Goins, Mrs. Judy WeM'y
for Mrs . .Darla Hawley, Mrs.
Wilma Reece for Mrs.
McGraw, Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield for Mrs. Edith Zirkle,
Mrs. Janet Pickens for Mrs.
Barbara Logan, Mrs. Doris
Ewing for Mrs. Debbie Buck,
Mrs. Donna Nease . for Mrs.
Sandy Sargent, and Mrs .
Karen Stanley for Mrs. Bessie
Sylvester.
·
The cultural program was on
personality and relationships
and was presented by Miss
Sarah Bechtle and Mrs.
Taunton. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Pickens, Mrs.
Werry , and Mrs . Jennifer
Sheets.

BOOSTER NIGHT SET
LETART FALLS - Ohio
Eula Wolfe served refresh- Valley Grange 2612 Letart
ments.
Falls, will hold a Booster Night
Attending besides those at the community hall Monday;
named were Mrs. Mary Roush, Nov . 13, at 6 p.m. with a
Mrs. Marga ret Gloeckner, potluck dinner followed by a
Mrs . Lucy Donahue, Mrs . . program. Everyone is asked to
Doris Sayre, Mrs. Mildred bring a covered dish . The
Donahew, · Mrs . Barbara public Is Invited to attend.
Duga~ and daughte,r, Dixie,

CHESTER. - A layette
shower honormg Mrs. Kathy
Tuttle Johnson was held
Tues~ay nrght followl~g a
meettng of Chester ~ounctl323,
Daughters of Amerrca, at the
hall.
_ ,Mrs Mar)l.. K._Holt.e.t Jelf~Cowdecy,-BrW.-Collins,_€hurch;-Prizes.for-IM'Inaskedcouncilor, presided at the Jerry Larkins, Dav1d Young, went to Dorsel Larkms, most
meeting attended by 24 Todd Clay, Mark Holter, Mr. unusual ; Mark Holter, ugliest;
members. It was reported that and Mrs. Tom Drake, Steve Leslie Wells, prettiest, . and
Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter had Holter, Dave Smith, Nancy Phyllis Larkins, most original.
~n involved in an accident, Bawn, Gayann Clay, Freda Cider and dotighnul.!l were
that Mrs. Goldie Krackom- Larkins, Nola Young, Orva served to approximately 125
berger and John Hayes are Jean Holter and A. M. Kibble. people. Treats were sent to the
hospitali~ed, that Mrs. Ada Sending gifl.!l were David Gaul, elderly people of the comMorris is ill at home, and that &amp;ott Hauber and Sue Martin. munlty.
Mrs, Hattie Frederick injured
herself in a fall at her trailer
home.
Mrs. Goldie Wolfe thanked
members for cards and gifts on
the occasion of her golden
FRIDAY. AND SATURDAY
wedding anniversary . A
communication from the slate
ONLY
councilor was read by Mrs.
Erma Cleland, deputy state
councilor. A report on
Friendship Night for District 13
held at Belpre last week was
given by Mrs .. Cleland. Plans
were made for a layette shower
honoring Mrs. Alice Curtis at
the Nov. 21 meeUng.
Others attending the meeting
and shower were Mrs. Mary
Showalter, Mrs . Letha Wood,
Mrs . Betty Roush, Mrs .
· Margaret Tut*, Mrs. Ada
Corduroy; Nylon, Fake . Fur.s.
Neutzling, Mrs. Hattie
Frederick, Mrs . Doris
Grue!fr, Mrs. Mary Kay Rose,
Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs.~.
Van Meter, Mrs. Dorothy. ,
Lawson, Mrs. Charlotte Grant,~ .
Use Our
I
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler and Mia .
Lay
Ferne Showalter.
'
IN HOSPITAI:i
Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter li a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Her room number iJ

.·.·.;.·.;-:-:··. ·.·.·.-. ·.· ..

~tint&lt;-d

Sorority planning bazaar

I'

$1.09

l·

'circulators

RUTLAND
Approximately 100 senior citizens
attended the recent countywide meeting and covered dish
dinner here at the elementary
sehoul.

()
\''
\
~

NOW

BEATTY ON WAIVERS
PITTSBURGH (UP!)Defensive back Charlie Beatty
was placed on waivers by the
Pittsburgh Steelers Wednesday and will be given his
unconditional' release if
another team does not claim
the former North Texas State
star.

.
'' 1 1

.

1

cA{ArQyeE.N.
Reg.$1.39

SHORT SIGNED
PlflLADELPillA (UPI)
Pitcher Chris Short, sidelined
most of last season with a
herniated dlBc, was signed by
the.Milwaukee Brewers '!bursday barely 2o minutes after he
was given ,his unconditiOnal
release bf, · the Philadephia
Phillies. Short, 35, compiled a
132-127 record in 13 seasons
with Philadelphia.

.

I

A highlight of tfie evening
was a slide series .of the Holy
Land shown by Edson Roush.
Entertainment was furnished
by L. R. Wiley o! Middlepor\,
Darrell Taylor ofRacine, Mrs.
Sallie Byers, Lenora Spencer
and Wilbur Bailey. Mrs .

Here 's some good news
if you're bad news on
panty hose; NOYJ, for
one week only, ¥ou can
buy longer wearrng
May Queen Panty Hose
, -~- for only $1.09. A1 \
savi ngs of 30c a pair.
And Ihat' s with all of
May Queen's su~e r fit
and sheer good looks"
thrown into the bargain.
Come in today and buy
a bunch. They're tough
to beat.

STOCKHOLM (UP!) - Two

5 7 .417
5 8 .385
3 10 .231 6

'

Ill

The panty hose
· sale for girls
who are to~gh
on panty hose.

TWOADV~CE

3
Jl/2
4

100 Attended Senior Citizens-dinner meetiii§

II ~'.I

MUD AND

STERfO SOUND
CENTER

Ml~lllmrntiiiAnnolre ­

I)ivison leaders, over Ken- Rich Jones and BOb Netolicky .
tucky and Ju.lius Erving's 311- combined for 45, poinl.!l in
point performance enabled Dallas' triumph 'civer MemVirginia to beat the Rockets. Phis. ·

East

I ~weighing
"'~~P~JJIUW,J
M~~- tif~~~~;j~~~~.
~-~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~·~~~
this decision 'for · a j,
·only in- ·drawn out over more than

. Adv .

\

11

McGinnis nets 35 in win ,

Thomas shelved
by SD Chargers

CARDIGAN
SWEATERS

•

1'12

Wes1ern Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
10 2 .833

Virginia

Grove City; 4. Toledo Scott: S.
Columbus Eastmoor i 6.
Columbus Northland; 7. (tie)
Upper Arlington and Lima
Shawnee; 9. Fremont Ross; 10.
Ashland.

5 .583

6 .538

7

Pacific Division

\1crnbers of the SEO Sportswriters and
. Broadcasters Association will meet Sunday in
· .Jackson to select the 1972 AII-SEOAL Football
Team, it was announced by President Eai-1
.James of Waverly.
.\II of the league's eight head grid coaches
will attend and ma!l.e their re.c ommendations
of players from their own and the opponents'

'Barna,., LSU clash for
'
SE Conference crown

--.

----'-~----'---------~

T ln .Middleport .

Plan

,

PETS AND FARM ANIMALS
HEALTH CENTER
VETERINARY SUPPLIES

.t

J...,...--------'---~ ::...----r-"-~-·~-------:·c----..,-

INJECTIONS
PENICILLIN lOcc and lOOcc
TERRAMYCIN SOcc
•
COMBIOTIC lOcc and lOOcc
VITAMIN B12-1000 meg.
TETANUS ANTITORAIN
ERYCIPELAS BACTERIN
BLACKLEG
TRIMANE
WORT VACCINE
VITAMIN ADE TETANUS ANTITOXIN
DISTEMPER - HEPATITIS
LEXTOSPIRA

······••e••.
PIPERAZINE WORMER
LIQUID
TERRAMYCIN ANIMAL
POWDER

TERRAMYCIN POULTRY
POWDER
TERRAMYCIN SCORERS
TAts LETS
WONDER WORMER FOR
HORSES
PIGDEX INJECTABLE
IRON (PIGS)
SULMET LIQUID (COCCIDIOSIS)
WHEAT GERM OIL
GOMBAUL TS CAUSTIC
BALSOM
FARNAM LICE POWDER
· PINE TAR
KOW KARE
SADDLE SOAP
ABSORBINE LINIMENT
FOOT ROT LIQUID
TEAl DILATORS
BLUE-.KOTE
UDDER BALM

lHESE ITEMS USTED ARE LESS lHAN tW.F (f OUR
STOCK. WE HAVE MANY MORE ·- IF IT'S AVETERINARY ·
.PRODUCT - ASK
IT - CHANCES ME WE HAVE IT.

�: I

•

New leaders emerge m
Ohio computer ratings
COLUMBUS (UP!) - New
leaders emerged U1 three of 12
regions in thenert to last week
of the computer football
ratings conducted by the Ollio
High
School
Athletic
Association.
The final ratings, which will
be released early next week,
will be used to select the four
semi-finalisU! in each class in
the first ever state high school
football playoffs, beginning the
following weekend.
Moving lo the IDp spots this
week were Toledo Central
Catholic in Class AAA Region
2, replacing last week's leader,
Toledo Scott; Akron St. Vincent in Class AA Region 5, replacing Warren John F. Kennedy ; and Lorain Clearview in
Class A Region 9, taking the
' place of Kirtland.
Three teams in each class
held their No. I spots, bpt the

•.

'
'

m..Ul::=~:W.~~~·;td ...... &gt;;b&gt;Xf,.-:?f@H.!o.&gt;Z1~W:!i1:.JH 'St

final week's games could see
more changes in the makeup .of
the ratings.
Warren Western Reserve,
Massillon an.d Princeton
continue ID lead the other three
AAA region's, with Columbus
Watterson, Hannibal River and
Reading still the AA frontrunners. Besides Clearview in
Class A the leaders are Marion
Pleasant, NewcomersiDwn and
Middletown Fenwick.
The IDp ten teams in each of
the regions are:
Class AAA
Region 1- 1. WaM'en Western
Reserve ; 2. Cleveland St.
Ignatius; 3. Lakewood St.
Edward; 4. Panna Senior; 5.
EaStlake North; 6. Cleve~nd
St. Joseph ; 7. Willoughby
South; 8. Elyria; 9. Berea; 10.
Midpark.
Region %-1. Toledo Central
Catholic; 2. Sandusky; 3.

...;.•

NBA Slo~ing•
Unitect Preu International

By
·
Eastern Confe.-..ce

AtLlntic Olvisi_.
t pet. g.b.
Boston
II 1 .917
New York
II 2 .846
'h
B.ulfalo
. 3 10 .231 8'h

w.·

Philadelphia 0 . 14 .000 12 '
Cen1r•l Division
w. I. pet. g,ll.

"
·~

'72 Dream Team will
be selected 'SundJJy
'

Houston

1

Atlanta

leams.
The 22-man squad and eight hnnorable
menlion players will be 'honored at the AIISEOt\ L Football Banquet scheduled for
Ironton in early December.
Sun.Jay's meetiJJg is set to start at 1 p. m.
at Jolly Lanes Bowling Center.

lf1

BallimOf'e
Cleveland

6 7 .462
4 11 .267

4'h

Chicago
KC.(,)maha
Detroit

8 4 .667 2
6 7 .462 41h
• 8 .333 6

.

at 11 games.
'
The 36th meeting in this
series, which dates back to
1895, has been sold out since
last spring, but the game is
being televised nationally
(ABC). Alabama, which ranks
fifth in the nation in scoring, is
rated a solid II points better
than the Tigers, who barely
squefz.d past Mississippi, 1716, last week.
With USC getting a week's
rest in preparation for its Rose
'th UCLA
B 1 h d
ow s ow own WI
•
second-ranked Nebraska gets a
chance to Impress th e coaches
o~ the UP! Ratings Boatd as it
takes its 7-1 record and
awesome offense against 14thrank ed Iowa State. The Cornhuskers, .who turned in four
consecutive shutouts before
having that skein ended last
Saturday by Colorado, are
overwnelming 21-point favorites.
OhloStateandMichigan, who
have a showdown of their own
commg up on Nov . 25 at

ByUnitedPresslnternational
Tradition is a pleasant
enough word that evokes fond
memories and sometimes a few
wet eyes. But when Alabama
and Louisian.a State clash on
the football field this Saturday ,
the past will be forgotten for
the sake of a meaningful
present. .
At stake, among other things,
at Birmingham will be the
perfect records of both schools,
the insloe track to the
SoutheasternConferencechampionship, the plush bowl bid
that goes with it, and a high
national ranking.
The Tide, which is 8-Q overall
and Ml in the SEC, and LSU, 70 for the year and ~ in league
play, are two of only five major
colleges still sporting perfect
records for 1972. The three
I
other teams lhat are unbeaten
and untied are top-ranking
Southern California (9-0 ), which
is idle this week, fourth-rankin g
Ohio State ( 7~). which meets
Michigan State, and fifthwhich
'•
iipjlii
In addition, I'.';U carries the
nation 's longest winning streak

Region 3-1. Massillon; 2.
Walsh Jesuit; 3. Canton
McKinley ; 4. Akron Garfield;
5. ZanesviDe; 6. Barberton; 7.
North Canton Hoover;·8. Akron

=~· ;rt~~rsville; 10. Aus-

Region 4-1. PrinceiDn; 2.
Kettering Fairmont East; 3.
c· · · Ed! 5
Troy; 4· UlCUUiati
er; ·
Cincinnati Moeller; 6. Middlebb
town; 7. Dayton Ste ins; 8.
Oxford Talawanda; 9. Centerville; 10. Oak Hills.
Class AA
Region s.-1. Akron St. ViRcent; 2. Warren Kennedy; 3.
Geneva; •.
• Chagr in FaUs ; s.
Campbell Memorial; 6. Lorain
Catholic; 7. Manch ester; 8. Columbiana ; 9. Cloverleaf; 10.
East Palestine.
Region 11--1. Columbus Watterson; 2. Lima Central Calli· 4. Ross!ord ;
ollc; 3. Fostorl8;
5. St. Marys Memorial ; 6. Ontarlo ; 7. Columbus DeSales ; 8.
Dublin· 9. Genoa· 10.
Coht~bus,fi~ure t?retai~ t~:,.:,. £ti~·Mf..-"Ot : .
'jf#feC m~llliiiligllano
. ',.e,!! !!!!. :- . anru
ver;
wfll![:oL BJg 10 actlvtty. The , ·2·. • Mlriel'va ; 3. Uniontown
Buckeyes may be m _for t.he Lake; 4. Ironton; 5. LolliJville
tougher battle as s1x-potnt St. Thomas Aquinas· 6. New
choices against Michigan State,
'
which appears to have rallied
behind departing Coach Duffy
WEEKEND SALE!
Daugherty, while Michigan Is
picked by 21 poinl.!l over Iowa .
1 Group Ladies'
Oklahoma, No. 7 in the
ratings with a t&gt;-1 record, is
picked by '1:1 points over
Missouri, which is making a
reputation this year for ill!
Reg .
upsets, eighth-ranked UCLA ( Il8.95
SAN DIEGO (UPl )-Duane
l) is seven over Washington
and ninth-ranked Texas (6-1) is Thomas won't be playing in the
13 over Baylor. Auburn, No. 10 National Football League this
Cor . Main &amp; Sycamore on the list at 7-1, is idle.
season .
The_$.!tn Diego Chargers
placed the controversial running back on the reserve list
Wednesday when he failed to
appear for practice. This
means he cannot again be
activated in 1972.
I want·to thank the people of Meigs County for
"Duane is not prepared to
laking time from their busy schedules to cast
play this season," said Chartheir ballot for me in Tuesday's election .
gers Coach Harland Svare.
"Obviously, he's got some
was much appreciated . I wish for Larry
rcoblems that won't. pennit

•.

w. t pet. g .b.

Los Angeles

GaldenState
Phaenix

-po

lola's Dress· Shop

THANKS I

•'

J .786 -

9 3 .750
6
4

. Seattle-

5 .545
9 .308

1
3112
6'1;

Portland
1 11 .083 9 •
Wednesday's Results
Basion 128 Golden St. 111
Baltimore 116 Buffalo 94
K.C..Qmaha 125 Phlla 107
Milwaukee 116 Seattle 103 -·
Phoenix 107 Cleveland 99
(On ly games scheduled!
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at New York
(On ly game scheduled I
ABA Slandongs
By United Press International
1

By Ualle!l Press lnteraiollonal
Georg.e McGinnis showed
Wednesday night why the
incikna Pacers feel he's one of
the rising super~tars o! th~
Anterican Baske'tball
Association. McGinn!$, a second-year pro
out of lnljiana University,
scored 35 • p&lt;)ints Wednesday
night to lead the Pacers to a
IJ:&gt;.I24 victory over the Utah
Stars and first place in the
ABA's Western Division.
Indiana broke open the game
with a 42-point third period
burst that enabled the Pacers
to take a half-gaiile lead,in the
Wesf. Mei Daniels added 24 and
Roger Browl! 22 for Indiana, .
including' three three-point
field goals. 'James Jones led
Utah with 32.
In other ABA action,
Carolina beat Kentucky, 12&amp;111, Virginiir stopped Denver,
116-111, and Dallas tripped
Memphis, 126-.118.
Mack Calvin had 33 poinl.!l
and Billy Cunningham 29 to
lead the Cougars, the Eastern

Signed : Mary Martin

considerable length of time."
Thomas, rega~ded as one of
the most talented, young
running backs in pro football,
was acquired before the start
of the season from the Dallas
Cowboys for running back
Mike Montgomery and wide

·.

\

PHILC011

W:

Car-olina

10

7

Kentucky
New York
Memphis

I. pet. g.b .

5 .667
8 .467

.

'

.

Americans advanced ID the
third round of (he $63,500
West
Stockhobri open tennis tourw. I. pet. g.b. nament Wednesday as Frank
Indiana
9 4 .692
Utah.
10 6 .615 'h Froehling of Miami, Fla.,
San Diego
8 6 .571
l 'h defeated Romania's Ion Tiriac,
Denver
7 7 .500 2'h 6-4, 7-6, and Jeff B&lt;lrowiak of
Dallas
4 7 .364
Wednesday's Results 4 Berkeley, Calif., ousted
veteran lj.oy Emerson of
Carolina 116 Kentucky 111
Indiana 135 Utah 124
Australia, 6-3,7-6.
·Dallas 116 Memphis 118

Lexington ; 7. Licking Valley;
8.
Whellersburg;
9.
Fredericktown; 10. Claymont.
Region 8--1. Reading; 2.
Loveland; 3. Hamilton Badin;
4. Wyoming ; 5. St. Paris Graham; 6. Dayton Jefferson; 7.
Circleville; 8. Milton Union ; 9.
Teays Valley ; 10. North
Virginia 116 Denver 111
College Hill.
(Only
games schedu.led)
Class A
Thursday's Games
Region 9--1. Lorain ClearIndiana vs. Virginia
view; 2. Kinland; 3. Lowellat Hampton, Va.
New
York
at
Utah
ville; 4. Dalton; ~. East Can(Only games scheduled)
ron; 6. Middlefield Cardinal; 7.
South Range; 8. Jackson MilAHL Standings
ton; 9. Richmond Heights; 10.
By United Press International
Hanoverton United.
East
.
w. I. t. pts gf ga
M
I
Region 10 · anon Prov idence
8 3 1 17 62 44
Pleasant; - 2. Spencerville; 3. Boston
8 4· 0 16 49 41
•
s
more
Rochester
7 4 1 15 50 46
Norwalk St · Pau I; •· yea .
Nova Scotia 6 4 J 15 54 42
Mohawk; 5. Riverdale ; 6. New Springfield
4 1 2 10 59 69
London; 7. Arlington; 8. Ada; New Haven
1 13 2 6 48 85
9. Fremont St. Joseph ; 10. Cory
West
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Rawson.
Tidewater
9 5 2 20 68 59
Region II - I. Newcomer- Cincinnat i
8 6 o 16 55 54
stown; 2. Berne Union; 3. Cleveland
5 6 3 13 57 51
Tuscarawas Valley; 4. Coal Hershey
5 5 1 11 51 43
Balllmore
4 6 3 11 44 56
Grove; S. (tie) Millersport and Richmond
5 B 1 11 51 58
Newark Catholic; 7. Danville;
Wednesday's Res11tts
Hershey 4 Cincinnati 2
8 Ce te burg 9 Beallsville·
· n r
; ·
'
Providence 5 New Haven 1
10. Lancaster Fisher.
Richmond 6 Baltimore 2.
Region 12-1. Middletown
Tidewater 4 Springfield 4
Fenwick; 2. Lockland; 3.
(Only games scheduled)
p t
th
Thursday's Games
Coving~?. ?, ; . ~ .,:}.r £,'!:ou s'' I' i eostO&lt;Ull Nova ·scotia ••
Notre Dame ,' o. Ceuarvwe; 1, , IQ!lly,garn,e,scheduteql , ,.. ·
Williamsburg; 7. Plain City ', . . ,
,
- NHL Standings
Jonathan Alder; 8. Frankfort
Adena ; 9. (tie) New Boston and By United Pre:~ 1nternational
1
Xenia Woodrow Wilson.
w. 1..t p1s g1 ga
Montreal
10 1 4 24 60 16
NV Rangers
9 4 1 19 54 38
Butlalo
6 1 5 11 4130.
Detroit
7 4 1 15 43 30
Boston
6 6 1 14 58 54,
Toronlo
5 7 2 12 40 45·
Vancouver
4 . 9 1 9 39 56
NV Islanders 2 9 I 5 29 60
West
w. I. I. pts gf ga
Los Angeles
9 6 I 19 60 48
Chicago
7 6 2 16 50 45
Pittsburgh
7 7 1 15 5151
Philadelphia 6 6 2 14 41 46
receiver Billy Parks.
6 5 2 14 39 33
He was activated for the first Minnesola
Atlanta
5 7 3 13 30 so
time last Sunday but saw no St. Louis
2 6 5 9 33 42
action. He did not take California
2 8 3 7 37·53
Wednesday's
Results
calisthenics with the team
N.Y
.
Rangers
5
Vancouver
2
then, walked along the
Pi1tsburgh 5 Philadelphia 1
sidelines during the playing of
Montreal 5 Toronto 2
Atlanta 3 Los Angeles 3
the National Anthem and sat on
Chicago6N
.V. Islanders 1 •
tne bench throughout the
Minnesota 5 California 2
game; staring straight ahead.
(Only games scheduled)
Tfiursday 's Games
" His actions SUnday were
Detroit at Boston
not deliberate and were not
California at Buffalo
intended to be disrespectful,"
Chicago at Philadelphia
(Only games scheduled)
said Svare. "He is a very
complicated young man.
"'!be problem is not narco-

, •••••

. . _ .••

cident."
Thomas went through a full
workout 1\resday and looked
quick on kickoff and punt
returns. However, Svare regarded Thomas' absence Wednesday as the final straw in the

•i

.., '

:. ~

.

..~.4

il.i'-'"·'

"

~
v
,\
Q

0

.,,•

;

' STORY BOOK TIME! - Attractive and unusual costuming depicting story book
characters will be featured in "A Child's World" presentation as a part of the "Fall Follies" 10
be'staged on Nov. 24at the ldeigs High School by the Big Bend Minstrel Association. The unique
C9Stu'ming has been created by members of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
AliOve are Raggedy Ann, right (Doris Ewing) and Raggedy Andy (Debbi Buck), left, and
Jayne Lee Hoeflich; center, who will present the original material set to a musical background
to introduce the story book characters of the segment. Others to be presented will include
Martha McPball and Carol McCullough as "Puff, the Magic Dragon" ; Sarah Bechtel,
Charlotte Taunton and Vikki Gloeckner as the three blind mice; Barbara Logan as the
Cowardly Uon from "The Wizard of Oz"; Carolyn Sattertield as Humpty Dumpty; Sue Zirkle
as the house of straw of one of the three little pigs; Becky Anderson as Charlie Brown 's Great
Pumpkin, and Sandra Sargent as Snoopy of Peanuts fame.

'

-'

,&lt;

One week only. Nov. 9-16

~

"

STIFFLER'S
IN POMEROY
.. '

FIVESimof
':~tluxt ClfMd Front
-

Priced As Low As

'•
"...,,
"
"

...

Merry Munchers

..'

4-H club meet
tuice recently

0

;~f:l~$:i*'~e:::&lt;!·:j:j'~:lm$d~ml~.:::::::::::::.-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~:::::;!:~~:~:::?.::::?.;:;:;::8~::e:::::::::::::::::=::::*

I Social Calendar
•

•

"

"
The Middleport Merry
,;
Munchers 4-H Club has met
• ' ·twice recently, the first time
-·· elecli~g ., of\icers to serve this
year. Following election, the
officerl!'flilitlr jUI\Ior. Ciaders,
Carol · tew1s an!I· Ingrid
Hawley, -w~re installed in a
ceremony condu~ted by Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee, advisor. Each
girl '/ a&amp; presented with a
minilt ure 4-H girl to_3~ar to
swnbolize her office in the
club.
A slumber party held at the
home !cif advisor Mrs. James
Butc¥~.highlighted tlie second
meeting: ¥embers roasted hot
dogs a~d played games during
the evening.
The l!ext morning the girls
and tht ir two advisors shopped
at the Fabfic Shop in Pomeroy
to buy materials each will need
· to complete her sewing project,
"Let's Sew." Attending the
slumbet / party were Phyllis
Davis, Pam Crooks, Kathy
Blake , Vangll Hart, Patfy
Cremeans, Nancy Wallace,
Mindy U&gt;ng, Shiela Horky,
Angela! Baker, Joy Edwards
and Julle- Biron.

. THURSDAY
ANNUAL Bazaar of Sacred
Heart Church at auditorium
Thursday. Dinners starting at 4
p.m.; games, prizes, fancy
stands, baked goods. Public
inviteri.
PAST Councilors, Theodorus
Council, D. of A., 7:30 p.m.
Thursday home of Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER; '!
O.E.S. installation, Thursday
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Tempie.
SOUTHERN LOCAL &amp;hool
Board, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
high school.
FRIDAY

JITNEY SUPPER, Pomeroy
Elementary School, 4 to 6 p.m.
Friday under sponsorship of
Pomeroy Elementary &amp;hool
Patrol.
SUPREME INSPEcrlON,
White Shrine. of Jerusalem,
District 16, 8 p.m. Friday night
at the IOOF hall, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Gordon Hawk, deputy
su preme
worthy
high
priestess, inspecting officer.

RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution 2
p.m. Friday, Episcopal Pa;ish
Hou se, Speaker, Emmett
Conway of Ohio University
whose topic will be pre-historic
Indian paths in Meigs county.
1 I
Members to respOrid to roll call
. D~r TO MEET
. with Indian name in Ohio.
.~Metfl!.9apter 53, .DAV• ~ 1ll-Jiostesses,.Mrs~~ark:Grueser- •
. .meet In regulat.seSs1on at r::so Mrs. Irving Karr, and Mrs.
p.. m. Monday with Neal Petty, George Skinner.
Nrnth DiStrict· Commander, to
be pre~nl. • All members are
SATURDAY
asked lj&gt; :be present. RefreshDINNER .AND bazaar •
ments Will be served.
Saturday, begrnmng 5 p.m. at

FIVE SIZES Of
Cnltlrl

-'"·"•

OtfoofW.• .....

BU

AI NT

WHA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. 1. t. pts gl go
Cleveland
8 3 1 17 50 33
Quebec
, 8 4 1 17 47 37
·New England . 8 4 0 16 51 37
New York
7 8 0 14 62 55
Ottawa ·
6 4 1 1351 .ill
Philadelphia 2 11 0 4 37 61
West
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
LosAngeles
8 4 1 174533
Alberta
7 6 I 1~ 44 f9
Winnipeg
7 7 1 15 .49 52
Houston
6 7 0 11 38 &lt;13
Ml nnesota
4 6 1 9 17 36
Chicago
2 9 1 5 27 39
Wednesday's Results
Quebec 3 Winnipeg 2
Los Angeles 2j'lew York 1
(Only games scheduled)
Thuroday's Gomts
Winnipeg at Ottawa
· Los Angeles at Alberta
(Only games scheduled)

Wllh buill-In :
• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
• 4·SPEED AUTOMATIC
RECORD CHANGER
• FM STEREO, 'FM/ AM
RADIO

•

'

'

I

}

H4fe

ALL
SIZES
·

INVITED TO COMPETE
LAS VF.GAS, NEV.(UPI)The four 1~ pr'o Football Hall
of Faine inductees """' Gino
Parker
Lamar H•rt-lrave
been invile!l to compete )II an
all-pro football golf tour·
nament here Jan. 111-24,

M!:&gt;DUPORT, 0.
'

runnin1 b OWW· dl'l"* IIUltd air down
bltw"n ;l!t fnlnt and .1'111' MCtiOns of
t~' heat cl 'mbtr llld pu~ it out elona
lilt c.bim 'lllnt-spreldill&amp; • ·wide car·

or Hml-autOIIIIIic Ollttltiolt ol ille

pet of wero. h -

PASSENGER

ALL FOR ONLY .

&amp; ABBOn

"TOP·O·MAnc• Cuh•
TOP.o.MATIC CONTROlS, tocltld ·

t1m1 lletr hatint Tht powerful,

Model H351BI'C
Pec8n veneer top end base,
~P molded d0011.

II 1 l".llt new IC!viiiCI In winter
home conifort.-WARM MORNING's ex•
Cllllivi''CirtMt of Colllfolt" hut flow for

'1200

your floors.

PIOYidt you witll, fuiiJ IUtamltio

fe

*"'" Slylh11

'

'.

WARM MOIINING'I « 1 4mllilf
Plicund 11r11 IIVIIWifllln. _ J1JU low orfli!lll Cll . . .

the blowtr IYI'
""' fQr IUIIIIIIII~ air lilcullllon.

lrtlllr.

992·2111

992-7161

•

BUT YOU ,A1 oftLY

$62! ·

1tts • new hilh fer lltlutY· ua1
WARM MORNlNG CQ ltMIIr \)1

like on atlflctlot -

rll "'"''::_' : : ' , : - 1111:.-'1111111111•"'·
LOW 0111 ..11 COlT•
LOW Of II A'- COif

:: =~,~. ~

=

-RSB-ACK HARDWARE

TIRE -SALES .-

.... '1.1S pl.

'

!... _

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1MSTOIITYM . .

Plus Reeappable Tire

Colon so allvt'
- 10 dlstlnctlvtl
And 4 flbuiOUI whltH
for ,,.,,.. ~h of
lheer eleganct.

..

"CarpttofW~.,..._,
la~etlh.l New •Piciwa

The "C1rpet of CO!nfolt" biOMr systetr.
ll completely 'aufomatk: •• , tumln1 on
when the hut starts flolti"'. turning off
When tht hut stops IIG!rifll. A Hlt9tOr
._itch livts J8ll the ChofCt of.fist. liltd""' or slow IPIIifl. 8)' simply turnioc
N blower CIIIIIOI flaM llllomalic to
......~you Clll oplfllt

.

· each

·-~GENERAL

quiet

: ,"'~.=a',::!.,~-~

POIIBOY

~VI

.. ~

'1.50 .

.

~t.y

•

P.RESIDINT
LATIX

.VW!Y WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
...___
.
'
SAI('IJ5 • .., .....

.

"

I

•
taken on a savings bond to be
awarded that day. Members
will t~kc a trip to th'e Fenton
Glass Factory on Nov. 14 and
are to meet In the upper
parking lot in Pomeroy at 6
p.m.
Mrs. Carol Adams, service
chairman, reported on a pizza

Observance planned

•
'

~·

I•

Ebersbach Has -

the football season.
Svare said the Chargers
would ''not be hurtin"' for
running backs and the status of
Thomas will have no influence
on tbe Chargers' draft next
year.

Plans for a holiday bazaar
were announced by Mrs.
Charlotte Taunton, ways ahd
means chairman, at a meeting
of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The bazaar will be held on
Dec. 4 at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. Donations will be

t)

Savings on other styles, too.

..

Bcrni,-e Winn led the group
singing accompanied by Mrs.
C. 0. Chapri1an al the piano.
Present to speak on the rive
mill operating levy for the
Meigs Local School District
was George Hargraves ,
superintendent.
Clarence Struble, president
of the Meigs County Councii on
Aging , conducted a short
business meeting at which time
the report of the nominating
committee was presented by
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell. It was

.

• The 60th anniversary observance of Theodorus Council
17, Daughters of America, was
set for Nov. 20 at the IOOF hall
during a planning session
Monday night. Mrs. Etta Will ,
councilor, presided at the
meeting.
A 6:30 p.m. potluck dinner
will be held With members to
lake a covered dish dinner.
' A report was given on
Friendship Night held at
Belpre recently wi.th the Belle
Prairie Council 269 as host.
Obligation night was observed
and an invitation was extended

to the Council from the Byesville Council 319 for a booster
meeting to be held tonight.
It was reported that Sadie
Brown is in University
Hospital, Columbus, that
Harold Will was to receive.
outpatient treatment there this
week, that Roy Mayer,
relatives· of Marie and Lillie
Houck, members of the
council, had undergone
surgery at the Holzer Medical
Center. The prize package
donated by Mrs. Edna Reibel
was won by Mrs. Glenora
Swatzel.

I Pledge service conducted
*

St. Paul's Methodist Church by

wscs.

MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers' luncheo n and
meeting, 12:30 p.m. Saturday,
R~lland United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
direc tor of Council on Aging,
speaker.
REGULAR MEET!ftj} of
Hemlock Grove Grange '!Ill be
Saturday at&gt; 6&gt;30 p.m. with a
potluck supper.
RACINE Chapter 134 O.E.S.
will hold a special meeting
Saturday for the purpose of
initiation...,f two candidates.
DANCE at Pomeroy Junior
High Saturday 9 to 12. Sponsored by Coffee House. Admission $1.
SHADE Elementary PTA
sponsoring a square dance 9 to
midnight Saturday at school
with Phil Sbjck and family
playing for dancing .

Shower given
Mr.J, .JTohnson
I

LETART FALLS - The
annual
pledge
service
highlighted a meeting of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the East Letart
United Methodist Church.
Mrs . Doris Adams had
charge of the service, opening
with the hymn, "Must Jesus
Beap •• the •IA CFos~ : :Alone 1,"
Plellges were 'pla'cl!d · on the
altar and the dedication prayer
was given in unison. At the
conclusion of the meeting the
pledge boxes and gifts for the
year were counted.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher
presided at the · meeting
opening with prayer by Mrs.
Howard Shiveley. Mrs. Mabel
Shields gave devotions using
Matt. S, 23-24. Mrs. Hazel Fox
read minutes of a previous
meeting. Program books for
the year were completed and
distributed. A parcel Post sale
was held following the meeting
and Mrs. Julia Norris and Mrs.

out · that the council
represents all senior citizens in
the county. As new clubs are
li!rmed throughout the county
the council membership is
increased .

Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
project director of the Council
on Aging, spoke on prospects
fur a R.S.V.P. (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program ) being
organized in the county. This
program is for senior citizens
interested in volunteer work
and being paid for their out-of-

Proceeds from an auction at the home of Mn. Emeno.
Well by the Frleudly Neighbors Club will be -d 10 parchase gUts for needy children.
Plans were made for .a Christmas dlnoer 10 be beld •
Dec. 19 at Bowers Restaurant. Games were played .ud
prizes awarded to Mrs. Robert Arnold,~. Willard IIIDel,
Mrs. George Buchanan, and Mrs. Ed Venoy. Mrs. Cbarle•
Werry will host the next meeting. Refreshments were
served by the hostess to the above and Mrs. Elwood Bowen
and Mrs. Roy Smith.
~~&lt;.&gt;:~-::::.;;::: 1j !i8S§.W!W.' .. T 's::!W::&amp;U£± .«"&gt;$: . .·.·.•,•.•.·.·.·.·.·..···.·.·
pocket expenses such as
transportation and meals.
Invocation preceding the
dinner was given by the Rev .
Robert Bumgarner, pastor of
the Rutland and Middleport

United Methndlst Churches.
Meeting with the group was
Mrs. Leafy Chastee,~, field
representative for the Area
Model Project on Aging
operating ·out of Rlo Grande.

THE "ROMEO"

A FAVORITE OF MEN
SOLID COMFORT IN
DAND EEE WIDTHS
Lay -Away for a Grand Christmas Gift.
A deposit will hold them for you.

I

I

THE SHOE BOX
Wluire Shoes Are Sensibly Priced!
. Ml DOLE PORT, 0.

Quilting done at
Hensley home

LONG BO'ITOM - The Long
Bottom-Chester Tuesday Club
met at the home of Mrs. Garnet
Hensley on Oct. 12 for a day of
quilt making and friendship. A
potluck dinner was served and
plans were made to make
Thanksgiving favors for one of
the rest homes.
The next meeting will be
Nov. 14 at Mrs. Ernestine
Hayman 's at Long Bottom
when the ladles again will
quilt. All women of the area are
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
in vile!! to bring a covered dish,
LONG BO'ITOM - Mr ..and neMle and tj)read. Huurs are
Mrs. David Smith entertamed from 10 a. m. till 2 p. m.
with a birthday pa.rty honoring
~eir da~ghter, Dtana, on her
e1ghlh bll'thday. Gu?sts ":ere
Lees~ Reed, Jodt Sm1th,
PARTY ENJOYED
Sherrte Da~ts, Judy Holter,
LONG BOTTOM - A
Angela Collrns, James Reed, community Halloween Party
Klare Kimes, Jimmy Carter, was held at the Methodist

.

WINTER COATS,
JACKETS,
SNOW SUITS

BOYS AND GIRLS
INFANT THRU SIZE 12

20%0FF.
THE

A

.KIDDIE SHOPPE .

Wey

On

Proceeds benefit children

. ~p&lt;J. !)l;s, Su~ ~~gle,.,h, .

SALE

5u .

party held at the Meigs County
Children's Home. Mrs. Ruth
Riffle thanked members for
assisting with the lea held
recently. A charm from International was presented to
Mrs. Becky Anderson who
rushed three girls for a
sorority.
Mrs. Karen McGraw was
named pledge captain, and big
sisters for the pledges named
were Mrs. Anderson for Mrs.
Karen Goins, Mrs. Judy WeM'y
for Mrs . .Darla Hawley, Mrs.
Wilma Reece for Mrs.
McGraw, Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield for Mrs. Edith Zirkle,
Mrs. Janet Pickens for Mrs.
Barbara Logan, Mrs. Doris
Ewing for Mrs. Debbie Buck,
Mrs. Donna Nease . for Mrs.
Sandy Sargent, and Mrs .
Karen Stanley for Mrs. Bessie
Sylvester.
·
The cultural program was on
personality and relationships
and was presented by Miss
Sarah Bechtle and Mrs.
Taunton. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Pickens, Mrs.
Werry , and Mrs . Jennifer
Sheets.

BOOSTER NIGHT SET
LETART FALLS - Ohio
Eula Wolfe served refresh- Valley Grange 2612 Letart
ments.
Falls, will hold a Booster Night
Attending besides those at the community hall Monday;
named were Mrs. Mary Roush, Nov . 13, at 6 p.m. with a
Mrs. Marga ret Gloeckner, potluck dinner followed by a
Mrs . Lucy Donahue, Mrs . . program. Everyone is asked to
Doris Sayre, Mrs. Mildred bring a covered dish . The
Donahew, · Mrs . Barbara public Is Invited to attend.
Duga~ and daughte,r, Dixie,

CHESTER. - A layette
shower honormg Mrs. Kathy
Tuttle Johnson was held
Tues~ay nrght followl~g a
meettng of Chester ~ounctl323,
Daughters of Amerrca, at the
hall.
_ ,Mrs Mar)l.. K._Holt.e.t Jelf~Cowdecy,-BrW.-Collins,_€hurch;-Prizes.for-IM'Inaskedcouncilor, presided at the Jerry Larkins, Dav1d Young, went to Dorsel Larkms, most
meeting attended by 24 Todd Clay, Mark Holter, Mr. unusual ; Mark Holter, ugliest;
members. It was reported that and Mrs. Tom Drake, Steve Leslie Wells, prettiest, . and
Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter had Holter, Dave Smith, Nancy Phyllis Larkins, most original.
~n involved in an accident, Bawn, Gayann Clay, Freda Cider and dotighnul.!l were
that Mrs. Goldie Krackom- Larkins, Nola Young, Orva served to approximately 125
berger and John Hayes are Jean Holter and A. M. Kibble. people. Treats were sent to the
hospitali~ed, that Mrs. Ada Sending gifl.!l were David Gaul, elderly people of the comMorris is ill at home, and that &amp;ott Hauber and Sue Martin. munlty.
Mrs, Hattie Frederick injured
herself in a fall at her trailer
home.
Mrs. Goldie Wolfe thanked
members for cards and gifts on
the occasion of her golden
FRIDAY. AND SATURDAY
wedding anniversary . A
communication from the slate
ONLY
councilor was read by Mrs.
Erma Cleland, deputy state
councilor. A report on
Friendship Night for District 13
held at Belpre last week was
given by Mrs .. Cleland. Plans
were made for a layette shower
honoring Mrs. Alice Curtis at
the Nov. 21 meeUng.
Others attending the meeting
and shower were Mrs. Mary
Showalter, Mrs . Letha Wood,
Mrs . Betty Roush, Mrs .
· Margaret Tut*, Mrs. Ada
Corduroy; Nylon, Fake . Fur.s.
Neutzling, Mrs. Hattie
Frederick, Mrs . Doris
Grue!fr, Mrs. Mary Kay Rose,
Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs.~.
Van Meter, Mrs. Dorothy. ,
Lawson, Mrs. Charlotte Grant,~ .
Use Our
I
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler and Mia .
Lay
Ferne Showalter.
'
IN HOSPITAI:i
Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter li a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Her room number iJ

.·.·.;.·.;-:-:··. ·.·.·.-. ·.· ..

~tint&lt;-d

Sorority planning bazaar

I'

$1.09

l·

'circulators

RUTLAND
Approximately 100 senior citizens
attended the recent countywide meeting and covered dish
dinner here at the elementary
sehoul.

()
\''
\
~

NOW

BEATTY ON WAIVERS
PITTSBURGH (UP!)Defensive back Charlie Beatty
was placed on waivers by the
Pittsburgh Steelers Wednesday and will be given his
unconditional' release if
another team does not claim
the former North Texas State
star.

.
'' 1 1

.

1

cA{ArQyeE.N.
Reg.$1.39

SHORT SIGNED
PlflLADELPillA (UPI)
Pitcher Chris Short, sidelined
most of last season with a
herniated dlBc, was signed by
the.Milwaukee Brewers '!bursday barely 2o minutes after he
was given ,his unconditiOnal
release bf, · the Philadephia
Phillies. Short, 35, compiled a
132-127 record in 13 seasons
with Philadelphia.

.

I

A highlight of tfie evening
was a slide series .of the Holy
Land shown by Edson Roush.
Entertainment was furnished
by L. R. Wiley o! Middlepor\,
Darrell Taylor ofRacine, Mrs.
Sallie Byers, Lenora Spencer
and Wilbur Bailey. Mrs .

Here 's some good news
if you're bad news on
panty hose; NOYJ, for
one week only, ¥ou can
buy longer wearrng
May Queen Panty Hose
, -~- for only $1.09. A1 \
savi ngs of 30c a pair.
And Ihat' s with all of
May Queen's su~e r fit
and sheer good looks"
thrown into the bargain.
Come in today and buy
a bunch. They're tough
to beat.

STOCKHOLM (UP!) - Two

5 7 .417
5 8 .385
3 10 .231 6

'

Ill

The panty hose
· sale for girls
who are to~gh
on panty hose.

TWOADV~CE

3
Jl/2
4

100 Attended Senior Citizens-dinner meetiii§

II ~'.I

MUD AND

STERfO SOUND
CENTER

Ml~lllmrntiiiAnnolre ­

I)ivison leaders, over Ken- Rich Jones and BOb Netolicky .
tucky and Ju.lius Erving's 311- combined for 45, poinl.!l in
point performance enabled Dallas' triumph 'civer MemVirginia to beat the Rockets. Phis. ·

East

I ~weighing
"'~~P~JJIUW,J
M~~- tif~~~~;j~~~~.
~-~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~·~~~
this decision 'for · a j,
·only in- ·drawn out over more than

. Adv .

\

11

McGinnis nets 35 in win ,

Thomas shelved
by SD Chargers

CARDIGAN
SWEATERS

•

1'12

Wes1ern Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
10 2 .833

Virginia

Grove City; 4. Toledo Scott: S.
Columbus Eastmoor i 6.
Columbus Northland; 7. (tie)
Upper Arlington and Lima
Shawnee; 9. Fremont Ross; 10.
Ashland.

5 .583

6 .538

7

Pacific Division

\1crnbers of the SEO Sportswriters and
. Broadcasters Association will meet Sunday in
· .Jackson to select the 1972 AII-SEOAL Football
Team, it was announced by President Eai-1
.James of Waverly.
.\II of the league's eight head grid coaches
will attend and ma!l.e their re.c ommendations
of players from their own and the opponents'

'Barna,., LSU clash for
'
SE Conference crown

--.

----'-~----'---------~

T ln .Middleport .

Plan

,

PETS AND FARM ANIMALS
HEALTH CENTER
VETERINARY SUPPLIES

.t

J...,...--------'---~ ::...----r-"-~-·~-------:·c----..,-

INJECTIONS
PENICILLIN lOcc and lOOcc
TERRAMYCIN SOcc
•
COMBIOTIC lOcc and lOOcc
VITAMIN B12-1000 meg.
TETANUS ANTITORAIN
ERYCIPELAS BACTERIN
BLACKLEG
TRIMANE
WORT VACCINE
VITAMIN ADE TETANUS ANTITOXIN
DISTEMPER - HEPATITIS
LEXTOSPIRA

······••e••.
PIPERAZINE WORMER
LIQUID
TERRAMYCIN ANIMAL
POWDER

TERRAMYCIN POULTRY
POWDER
TERRAMYCIN SCORERS
TAts LETS
WONDER WORMER FOR
HORSES
PIGDEX INJECTABLE
IRON (PIGS)
SULMET LIQUID (COCCIDIOSIS)
WHEAT GERM OIL
GOMBAUL TS CAUSTIC
BALSOM
FARNAM LICE POWDER
· PINE TAR
KOW KARE
SADDLE SOAP
ABSORBINE LINIMENT
FOOT ROT LIQUID
TEAl DILATORS
BLUE-.KOTE
UDDER BALM

lHESE ITEMS USTED ARE LESS lHAN tW.F (f OUR
STOCK. WE HAVE MANY MORE ·- IF IT'S AVETERINARY ·
.PRODUCT - ASK
IT - CHANCES ME WE HAVE IT.

�.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepqrt-Pom_~~~ 0., Nov. 9,1912 ..

·"

-Guerrera of Metropolitan
next on Concert .schedule
'

BY MRS. L. R. FORD
The first event of the winter
concert sea~on a solid success,
members of the Tri.COunty
Commtmity Concert Assn. are
looking forward to their second
p~oduction , the recital by
Metropolitan Opera Co. tenor,
Frank Guerrara.
Guerrera will appear in the
Gallia Academy High School
auditoriwn the evening of next
Jan . 18.
A capacity audience turned
out Wednesday evenirig, Oct.
25, to hear the Ronnie Kole
Trio, composed of Richard
Taylor, Drums, Everett Linle,
Jr. , Bass and Ronnie Kole at
the piano. They captivated
their listeners with exciting,
happy an d ingenious per·
formances.
The program· opened with a

'':l!~'~'''''''''~:::::,,~,,,,,~m:,,,,,:;,,,~,,,;,;:,~,,,,,~,; ,,::::,~;,~.w.:::~~'&amp;·~~=:::::w.&lt;«=~~l

II

1

.

$.'
~
0

::?:

:;::
:::·

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
A discussion on how to get people out to vote highlighted a
meeting of Middleport Junior Troop 39 Monday night at Heath
Methodist Church. The election question was one phase of the
scouts work on the active citizen badge.
.
The nag ceremony by Ute "Peacemakers" opened the
meeting with "The New Seekers" teaching the girls a new song,
"Hello". "'!be Reds" conducted a game·.
Members then divided into petrols and practiced laying and
following a trail outdoors.
SAUSBURV JUNIOR TROOP
An orr,anizatiori meeting of the new Salisbury JWlior Troop
was held Thursday at II\• school under the direction of Mrs. Mary
Dorst, leader, and Mrs. Nancy Morris, assistant leader. Mrs.
Connie Quivey is the committee mother.
Elected were Kathy Quivey, leader of the "Butterflies" patrol,
·with Regina Dorst as the assistant leader. Becky Dorst was
named treasurer, and Carol Morris, scribe.
The troop will meet each Thursday evening at the Salisbury
school. A kaper chart was prepared. Others at Ute meeting '
besides those named were Laura Ohlinger, Gwen Folmer, Patty
Parker, Christi Quivey, Delores and Donald Dorst. ·
MIDDLEPORTC:ADETI'EmOOP 185
Dolls for children at Veterans Memorial Hospital have ~n
made by members of Clldette Troop 185. Meeting Titesday night
at the home of Mrs. Fred Gibbs, leader, Ute girjs cpmpleted Ute
dolls which will be delivered by Mts..Gibbs."' ~; ,: '
.'
Work on Ute game leader and chlld care badges was carried
out by the g!Tis and plans were made to meet with the Middleport
Brownie Troops 174 and 87 In the near future for a game sesaion
as part of their work on the game leader badge. Attending the
meeting were Virginia Burchett, Tr1 ~• " ' 'Jbs, Judy Gilkey, Joni
Murray and Jennifer Wise.

died November 7

Charles Tipton

died Nov. 7th

PORTALND - Mrs. A. W.
(Lillian) Brewer, 81, formerly
RUTLAND - Charles R.
of Portland, died Nov. 7 at the (Pork Chop) Tipton , 54,
New Concord Rest Center Sprin gfield , formerly of
where she had been confined Rutland, died 'l'uesday night at
for a year after suffering a the Mercy Medical Center in
stroke.
Springfield.
. Mrs. Brewer is survived by
Mt. Tipton was born Jan. 12,
her husband A. W. (Gus) 1918 in Springfield but was
Brewer, two sons, David L. of reured in Rutland. He was the
Medina and Wilbur of St. son of the late Mervlin and
Cloud, Minn., and three Hetlle Musser Tipton and was
grandchildren. She was ~ employed as an assembler at
sister·in-law of Allen and International Harvester.
Edgar Brewer of Portland,
He is survived by his wife,
Earnest Brewer of Racine, and Carol Jean; two daughters,
Eber Brewer of East Liver- Meredith, at home, and Mrs.
at 10:30 a. m. Friday at the
Willi am Thompson Funeral
Home, White Cottage, Ohio.

Veterans' Qui:: ·
(TRUE OR FALSE) .
United States
veteran ponulation is %8
.
·'
·
.
molllon. (TRUE !
Z. Prescription drugs and
medication at VA expense are
ava II able to veterans in rece Ipi
of pension or compensation for
housebound rate or regular aid
and attendance. ·(TRUE)
3. Unremarried wlclows of
veterans who died while on
active duly or as the result of a
service connected disability
are ~ot eligible for VA loan
benefits. (FALSE)
.
4. A deceased veteran's
·
government bea dstone may be
replaced If it has become
unsightly or Illegible due to
age. !TRUE)
o. A VA burial allowance is
avalla)lle for the burial expense of widows of war
veterans. 1FALSE)
.Presented as a weekly Public
Service by your Meigs County
Veterans Office.
··1. • Total

a medley using the "over:
lure" approach, foll owed by
renditions of the individual
tunes. ending in a "finale
form ," using fragments of all
suggested melodies. Alley Cat,
Canadian Sunset, MacArthur
Parle, Yesterday, Lara's
Theme, Laura , Take De ATrain, and Godfather's Waltz,
were some of the favorites
presented in a,brilliant display
of musicianship by the trio.
During intermissio n th e
artists met the audience informally in the high school
lobby and signed autographs
. for adults and eager young
people.
A reception for the artists
was held at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. John Griffin, with Mr.
and Mrs. C. "Mac" McGinniss
assisting.
HS

SEOAL Standings

53· 113 7 799 13
37 . 78 6 56 4 5

DeStephen, J.
Skinner. A.
35 · 57 J 484 4
Kemper. L . n . 62 7 265 2
Vaughan. M. 26 · 70 J 432 3
PUNTING
(14ormorel
Yds No. Avg.
Kriebel , I.
648 15 43.2
Mojzer, L.
945 25 · 37.8
Walter, G.
1003 28 35.8
. ~~~~F~.Jti1
· ~jj ~~ ~~.;
RECEIVING
No. Yds TO
29 464
8
Maloy, Wav.
17 270 2
Topping, A.

Stevenson , J .
Dail ey, Wav .

Chaney, M.

Dixon. Well.

De£ections were heavy
cent four yea rs ago for
Hwnphrey and 90 per cent in
1964 for President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
Here again, there was distrust of McG&lt;IVern among
traditional liberal voters. ·AI·
though a strong supporter of
American support for Israel,
McGovernalso~uffered 'among

Jewish leaders because of his
advocacy of severe defense
cutbacks, which they feared
would
harm
Israel 's
security.
Also, McGovern's advocacy
of convention alarmed some
elements of the Jewish community, who have been the
victims of various arbitrary
quota systems socially and in
business.
Black Americans, according
to the NBC profile, remained
loyal to the Democrats·, giving
McGovern 89 per cent of their
votes-but even here Nixon's
11 per cent was up from 1968.
Among catholics, according
to CBS, Nixon took 56 per cent.
Just fou r years ago, an
estimated 59 per cent voted
Democratic.

2

12 191

4

9 197
9 159
9 145
9 91

0
I

KO RETURNS

Yds No.
260 14
228 12
226 8
198 11

Wells. Wa v.

JOHNSON
BABY
SHAMPOO

Style •.Color • Price

0
2

0
0

)

SINGER

The Fabric Shop

3950 TO 7000 .

•

• Pushbutton e jector.

• Tw in ch rome beaters.

ne tic lid gra bber .
Sharpens al l non -sca ll oped

. BAYER
ASPIRIN

SCOPE

New York Clothing House
. KERM'S KORNER

• 8 pushbu tton speed
selcr tions .
• Rugged 56-o z. container
wi th cosy -pour spou t and
ha ndle.

• 2-oz.

• Heel rest.

• Recipe booklet.

ONLY

$7ll

$15"

ONLY

:~t,.. niCK'

INJECTOR RAZOR
NO !.fOliE SNARLS!

REG. '1.29

REG. '1.15

'

DELUXE BLENDER

• 5 tested recipe speeds .

DIAL
DIAL
.
ANTI·
SHAMPOO· PERSP

REG. '2.61 $
149 _
300's

Coats by Curlee, J&amp;F, Darby House,
MacGregor, etc. You'·!I love th e new styl es and
colors. Excellent gift idea for him!

$666

SOLID STATE

mea sur ing cup,
• Top opening a llows a dd ing of ingredi ents while
un it is o pera ting.

• Store s in drawer or hongs
on wol f.

6 oz.

7 oz.

NTANGLER

For a natural
unmade-up look

FAMILY SIZE

POMEkOY

NORTHERN®

POWDER

coMb

Absorbs exoess facial oil,

.,

t 1p ;;,. It"!)

-1,,

24's

_WHITE RAIN

COIPOHS GOOD AHYT• .

HAIR SPRAY•

1593 EAsTERN AVE.,.
'

GALLIPOL,IS, OHIO

REG. '1.49

77~

fOK f

~Mil Y SKIN

'tf

I

I

(\•_

•.•• ,.... o~.......... ,.,.- · . ... ... rol• • • -

...... .........
_,,_, ... .,.,Hiooh_,.,.,

··- ·"'"'

G~ntly uMMgltu h1lr

SCHICK

;, seconds, wet or dry,
wirhout cream rlnlf,

INJECTOR
RAZOR

..vlrhoU,t brBiklng httit1

without split ends.

'22.95

VALUE

, Reg. $1.29

SINUS

j

The Un tang lcr Comb untangles ha ir easily- whether wei from washing
or dry but just snarled alter a night's sleep.

As close to nature
as make-up can be.
Try a puff! 200

( ..t.RE

SPRAY

•

Allo lvallatlle : CornS II k loo•• Powd1r,

It yently sets each strand of hair in motio~. smoothing awuy t.e nglts
and sna rl $, Does it gently, without pullmg, b~eak i n~, spl itting or
coat ing the hair . So gentl e it's perfect even lo r ch ildren S de!lcata hair.

Tlntad Found1Uon, 01!-Fru Foundation,

•

lh

'2r.r. Jtl...
.,.

·FINE-LIMP

HARD

•

Che•••·

Halm.'n ..

2.•.-.Jto

-..
"""'
·
Ill---.,--.--""'-··-•

A 1101. - - · ..........

Make your
Christmas gilt
lasting one with a
beaUlifu'lllulova.

•

•

,

-·--·~

C 4 Glell AiJ! .M_,:
Plrtki,.Uq · ·~­
allt'llc- ' I · '
2

·lllltcn;n
.• c.

•

•

0_7)

•
•

Soz.
•

,...

...,_"'__

111111. ••• , ....... , .....

·&lt;W(IIe OM "-i I

Plrllel,allll

J11 _,

IUKGEII

.,(""D;F .. l!tW, 7 !

..•

85'

REG.
11.50
.
10

SHAMPOO

•

•

. LEMON UP

CREME RINSE

oz.

t
;
77

'

30's ·

REG.

POLl DENT

63'

TABLETS
.,

REG. '1.59

60's
*"x5 YDS.
{

MINI
PADS

REG. 99'

Reg. '2.45

·

.

.

LOTION

·

· 39~

STAYFREE
MAXI
PADS

STAYFREE

$299

SUPER

CLOTH JAPE

69'

"0. 4752

77¢

r-------------1

SHOULDERS

,

.

ONLY

STELLER SET
DRYER HOT

99~

Re&amp;

~1.1i$

88

SOPHISTI~CATS

HEAD &amp;

:-77t;

REG.

. I

Reg. '1.49
7 oz.

REG.
'3.99

RADIO

REG. '1.50
.
dermicel

dermic:el

GRCCM

POCKET PORT ABLE

•

LIMON UP

iiilli=

39~

REG. .. l

SHAMPOO ••~

, t/rf!1"
-

LOOK

Effecti Ye on all types of hair.

COMB

c~&amp;CLEAN

1ernorn~

•

. ADHESIV~

PUStiiiiT ''C" Au10mlllc. Qulel·nt

t&gt;IAIIII.IIIRAY P'Qflll

TO MANAGE
HAIR
REG. '1.39

,.•••

is complete, and you're sure
to find the watch·you want . .
For him and lor her. From $10. ·

oz.
8 oz.

''

•'

FRIENDSHIP GARDEN
DUSTING POWDER

BODY!
'

IUli.GIK

-

REG. '1.39

SuiJ!.~H~~~:: .

,., -......,

. I.

cutting wheel for clean ,

ONlY

only

WYCK

Relieves sinus headache
and congestion
REG. 98~

"U~·

Pomero~

of can with " floa ting"

• Non -tilting bose .
• Bott le opener.

'

~·

• Lightweight
2114 lbs.

edge kn ives.

:

Court St.

5-SPEED HAND MllCERI

smooth edge.

"

wlfft lftil COUflll!l

.

CAN .OPENER

• Permanent ly affixed mag-

2~or89o

'

VAN WYCK

BOnLE
OPENER
• Opens any size or shape

lO's

.

Goessler Jewelry Store

VAN

MODEL 1/W-71

REG. '1.59

Big .Shet.

I C I - 1 1 "I" -~osttd
"w rnt. 17 jlwels. $11.

MODEL VW-55

•

•

~

EA!

REG. 1.69

2,.,1.09 .

Use Our '
lay-Away
Plan Now!

1FT

"'

'

CONTAC
CAPSULES

..

"'"· 23 jootb, ..._
d~l. $11.
lfAII-f "A" 4 dlantOIIIds. 14l 10lld
&amp;Old UN. 17 Jtotb. $1M. ' .

·m·
- •

99~

•

Christmas watch

TELEVISION- TAPE PLAYERS
'
RECORD
.
PLAYERS
1 '
RADIOS
TV ANTENNAS

.....

•

:-.

TWO CONTACTED
•":
CLE~ELAND ( UPI)
Sewing Machine
Industrialist Joseph E. Cole
and Ohio AFL.CIO President \1
For Christmas
Frank King have been con- If Small deposi t will hold .
tac ted by leaders of a
moveme nt who want to
reorganize the Democratic
11S W. Second
992· 2284 '
National Committee, it was
POMEROY,
OHIO
learned Wednesday.

REAT

,t•t ·~

14 oz.

oz.

121h

~"'

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

REG. '1.79

lay Away Your

!ri'RANGE Blli.D
SAIGON (UPI) -A strange•
looking bird with a band
around one leg was kiUed by
South Vietnamese gunfire in
fighting IOOay on the central
coast.
A U.S. senior military adviser said Ute inscription on the
leg band said the bird had been
tagged by a SOviet institution
studying migratory habits of
the birds.
"We don't know what kind of
bird it was," he said. " It had a
beak about five inches long. We
have Ute head and one leg
which has Ute soft-lead band
bearing the Russian i~­
scription .
"I'm afraid the rest of the
bird is in the cooking pot
already," he said.

OFFICIAL CHASED
BERKELEY,Clllif. (UPI) Antiwar protesters chased a
South Vietnamese official out
of a University of California
restaurant· Wednesday, spitting and jeering at him and his
interpreter.
Tran Cong Ham, chief of
planning for the Vietnamese
Department of the Interior, Ute rescue of Tuong ~an Than,
fled Ute Terrace Restaurant the interpreter' after he was
where he and his aide were spat upon and verbally abused
ea ling when some .200 by some of the crowd, which
demonstrators spotted them.
had ~n attending a rally.
University police rushed to
There were no arresta.

LYSOL
SPRAY

REG. 1.89

KNIT
SPORT
COATS

TO

BULOVA

Spr in gfield ; three
broth ers, Philip Tipton of
Springfield; Clyde McMillen of
Glendale , Ariz .; Patrick
McMillen of Colwnbus, and an
aun t, Mrs. Sylvia · Crosby and
an uncle, Russell Musser,
formerly of Rutland, both of
Springfield .
FWleral services will be held
at 10 a. m. Friday at the Lit·
tieton · Funeral Home in
Springfield after which time
the body will be taken to
Winchester, Indiana , for
burial.

·EVERY ITEM DISCOUNTED

.TOP SELECTION

STUFFINGTUESDAV ·
The annual stuffing bee of
1
Cunningham, A.
0
Ridge. J.
the Meigs CoWJty Tuberculosis
186 8 0
Berry. L.
and Health Association to
prepare Christmas seals for
PUNT RETURNS
Yd s No. TO mailing will be held at 9 a. m.
18 1 11
2
Carler. I.
United
Be r ridge, G.
84 11
0 Tuesday at the
82 8 0 Methodist Church, Second St.,
Berry. L
72
5 0
Smart. L
Pomeroy.
Ridge,J.
"
4
0
MORE READERS
INT. RETURNS
No. Yds TO
Circulation for the Pomeroy
Stevenson, J.
4 81
1 an d
Middleport
Public
3 48
0
Cremeans, M.
Libraries
and
Mr.
Eddy,
the
2 44 I ·
Ellwood. A.
2 40
0
Toppif19 , A.
bookmobile fo r August was
Berry, L
2 37 0 5,1116 and for September 9,146.
Holl ingshea d. W.
2 30 0
Magazine donations were by
Workm&lt;tn , Wav.
2 28
0
2 22
0 Mrs. Dan White, Mrs. Homer
Maloy. Wav .
Romig, A.
2 18 0 Cooper, Mrs. Torn Rue and
Hatten, Well .
! 18
0
2 15 0 Mrs. Charles Swatzel.
Smart. L.
2 s ·o
Spence. I .
Joseph, J.
2 2
0
Parker, I.
2 0 0
Dixon, Well.

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - In
the end, the poor and undereducated stuck with the
history professor.
But the Jewish vote, the blue
collar vote, the youth vote, the
black vote, the ethnic vote and
the colleg!Hlducated vote all~
to one degree or another~
defected from 'Sen. George
McGovern in Tuesday's
election.
Voters with a grade school
education earning less than
$7,000 per year-about onefourth of Ute national elecfDrate ~voted as usual for the
Democratic presidential nominee. They cast an estimated 62
per cent of their votes for
McGovern, only 3 per cent
fewer than Hubert H. Hwn·
phrey received from the group
in 1968.
·
It was one of the few
demographic groups in the .
country in which McGovern--,
the only Ph.D. in the Senateheld his own, according to spot
checks of voting districta by
UPI correspondents in Ute field
and computer analyses by the
networks. •
The blue collar vote, which
Democrats traditionally have
carried heavily, this time
appeared to have split almost
evenly between President
Nixon and McGovern.
McGovern, from the beginning, had diffi culties with
organized labor. The powerful
AFL-CIO hierarchy refused to
endorse McGovern because its
president, George Meany, felt
McGovern
was
an
"'isolationist" in foreign policy.
And McGovern was unable to
overcome his image with many
workingmen as a supporter of
welfare for the shiftless and
lazy.
Among Jews, McGovern also
appeared to have fared worse
than Demo era ts in the past.
NBC said McGovern carried
only 63 per cent of the Jewish
vote, compared with 80 per

16 212

swnmer,..-reported- their · ex.
periences. Memorial serviceR
were held for· the late Guy,
Reuter, Thomas Hennessy and
William Bailey. · Reported' ill
were Olin Knapp and Walter
~aughan. A guest . for the
meeting
was Don Collins,
Fifty memberS were·present post were.asked to meet at the
Hemlock Gr{)ve, a Vietnam
Tuesday night when Drew hall Thursday. night to assist
veteran.
.
Webster .Post 39, American with the program.
An oyster supper was served
Steve · Jewell and Bill
Legion, met to observe World
by
Charles Hayes assisted by
Vaughan, who attended Boys
War I night
World War I veterans on State ·at Ashland College last Robert Vaughan.
hand for the· observance were
Clarence Massar, Ben Neut.
zling, . Ernest Cale, Lincoln
Russell and Lawrence Smith.
During the meeting Henry
Cleland , Jr., announced that
the annual "dough for dough"
evening will be held next
Thursday in Pomeroy. During
•
this observance, members of
the post will move throug h the ·
community delivering bread
from door · to door with
'
residents expected to contribute to the program. FW1ds'
so raised go to the "Gifts for
the Yanks Who Gave" project
which is designed to provide
·remembrances for hospilalizcd
veterans. All members of the

50 Attended· Post
World War I nite

,.,!souTHEASTERN oHio
ATHLETIC LEAT SlATS.
FINAL INDIVIDUAL
LEADERS
I Finai .Unofficiall
RUSHING
Yds Car Avg.
Culbertson. L. nJ 113 6 .4
Volentine, J. · 6'8 117 5 .4
Faulk. M.
612 104 5.9
Mowery . 1.
575 113 5 . 1
Wood. A.
416 Ill 4. t
PASSING
cm.At tnt Yds TO
Shoemaker, Wav .

Jenki ns, J .
Kr ebs, L.

1

Charlene Hoeflich :;:::;::

Lillian Brewer

-~:· '-':'ffli*=:~'TW';WW

I

George Gershwin medley,
highlighted by the American
"classic," Rhapsody in Blue."
Favorites which followed were
"Bat lie Hymn of the Republic''
and "Yellow Bird."
A fascinating rendition of
"Big Noise from Winnetka "
feat ur ed drums and bass;
Ronnje Kole then indulged in
piano gymnastics doing "On a
Clear Day." By this time the
enthusiasm of the audience
proved so contagious · that a
potpourri entitled "R. K.'s
Boogie" exploded with hand·
clapping and toe-tapping.
E r ne s t o L e c u on a 's
"Malaguena" closed the first
half of the program .
The highlight of the second
half was the group's invitation
for ·the audience to suggest
selections which were played

. rl Scout
G
'
y
By
[
DIa

r

J

'

.
69

~

DERMICEL

STERILEPADS
2"x3"

39~

by Max Factor

Each holds a gold capped fl acon of precious
Primiti f, Hypnotiquc or Golden Woods perfume
in new colorful gift presentations.

30's

99~

PRlMJTIF · HY PNOTlQUE ·GOLDEN WOODS
Each in a choice of fi ve decorator ~olo rs.
. Midnight Black • Siamese Blue • Perstan Pmk

$J 95
•

each

I

�.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepqrt-Pom_~~~ 0., Nov. 9,1912 ..

·"

-Guerrera of Metropolitan
next on Concert .schedule
'

BY MRS. L. R. FORD
The first event of the winter
concert sea~on a solid success,
members of the Tri.COunty
Commtmity Concert Assn. are
looking forward to their second
p~oduction , the recital by
Metropolitan Opera Co. tenor,
Frank Guerrara.
Guerrera will appear in the
Gallia Academy High School
auditoriwn the evening of next
Jan . 18.
A capacity audience turned
out Wednesday evenirig, Oct.
25, to hear the Ronnie Kole
Trio, composed of Richard
Taylor, Drums, Everett Linle,
Jr. , Bass and Ronnie Kole at
the piano. They captivated
their listeners with exciting,
happy an d ingenious per·
formances.
The program· opened with a

'':l!~'~'''''''''~:::::,,~,,,,,~m:,,,,,:;,,,~,,,;,;:,~,,,,,~,; ,,::::,~;,~.w.:::~~'&amp;·~~=:::::w.&lt;«=~~l

II

1

.

$.'
~
0

::?:

:;::
:::·

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
A discussion on how to get people out to vote highlighted a
meeting of Middleport Junior Troop 39 Monday night at Heath
Methodist Church. The election question was one phase of the
scouts work on the active citizen badge.
.
The nag ceremony by Ute "Peacemakers" opened the
meeting with "The New Seekers" teaching the girls a new song,
"Hello". "'!be Reds" conducted a game·.
Members then divided into petrols and practiced laying and
following a trail outdoors.
SAUSBURV JUNIOR TROOP
An orr,anizatiori meeting of the new Salisbury JWlior Troop
was held Thursday at II\• school under the direction of Mrs. Mary
Dorst, leader, and Mrs. Nancy Morris, assistant leader. Mrs.
Connie Quivey is the committee mother.
Elected were Kathy Quivey, leader of the "Butterflies" patrol,
·with Regina Dorst as the assistant leader. Becky Dorst was
named treasurer, and Carol Morris, scribe.
The troop will meet each Thursday evening at the Salisbury
school. A kaper chart was prepared. Others at Ute meeting '
besides those named were Laura Ohlinger, Gwen Folmer, Patty
Parker, Christi Quivey, Delores and Donald Dorst. ·
MIDDLEPORTC:ADETI'EmOOP 185
Dolls for children at Veterans Memorial Hospital have ~n
made by members of Clldette Troop 185. Meeting Titesday night
at the home of Mrs. Fred Gibbs, leader, Ute girjs cpmpleted Ute
dolls which will be delivered by Mts..Gibbs."' ~; ,: '
.'
Work on Ute game leader and chlld care badges was carried
out by the g!Tis and plans were made to meet with the Middleport
Brownie Troops 174 and 87 In the near future for a game sesaion
as part of their work on the game leader badge. Attending the
meeting were Virginia Burchett, Tr1 ~• " ' 'Jbs, Judy Gilkey, Joni
Murray and Jennifer Wise.

died November 7

Charles Tipton

died Nov. 7th

PORTALND - Mrs. A. W.
(Lillian) Brewer, 81, formerly
RUTLAND - Charles R.
of Portland, died Nov. 7 at the (Pork Chop) Tipton , 54,
New Concord Rest Center Sprin gfield , formerly of
where she had been confined Rutland, died 'l'uesday night at
for a year after suffering a the Mercy Medical Center in
stroke.
Springfield.
. Mrs. Brewer is survived by
Mt. Tipton was born Jan. 12,
her husband A. W. (Gus) 1918 in Springfield but was
Brewer, two sons, David L. of reured in Rutland. He was the
Medina and Wilbur of St. son of the late Mervlin and
Cloud, Minn., and three Hetlle Musser Tipton and was
grandchildren. She was ~ employed as an assembler at
sister·in-law of Allen and International Harvester.
Edgar Brewer of Portland,
He is survived by his wife,
Earnest Brewer of Racine, and Carol Jean; two daughters,
Eber Brewer of East Liver- Meredith, at home, and Mrs.
at 10:30 a. m. Friday at the
Willi am Thompson Funeral
Home, White Cottage, Ohio.

Veterans' Qui:: ·
(TRUE OR FALSE) .
United States
veteran ponulation is %8
.
·'
·
.
molllon. (TRUE !
Z. Prescription drugs and
medication at VA expense are
ava II able to veterans in rece Ipi
of pension or compensation for
housebound rate or regular aid
and attendance. ·(TRUE)
3. Unremarried wlclows of
veterans who died while on
active duly or as the result of a
service connected disability
are ~ot eligible for VA loan
benefits. (FALSE)
.
4. A deceased veteran's
·
government bea dstone may be
replaced If it has become
unsightly or Illegible due to
age. !TRUE)
o. A VA burial allowance is
avalla)lle for the burial expense of widows of war
veterans. 1FALSE)
.Presented as a weekly Public
Service by your Meigs County
Veterans Office.
··1. • Total

a medley using the "over:
lure" approach, foll owed by
renditions of the individual
tunes. ending in a "finale
form ," using fragments of all
suggested melodies. Alley Cat,
Canadian Sunset, MacArthur
Parle, Yesterday, Lara's
Theme, Laura , Take De ATrain, and Godfather's Waltz,
were some of the favorites
presented in a,brilliant display
of musicianship by the trio.
During intermissio n th e
artists met the audience informally in the high school
lobby and signed autographs
. for adults and eager young
people.
A reception for the artists
was held at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. John Griffin, with Mr.
and Mrs. C. "Mac" McGinniss
assisting.
HS

SEOAL Standings

53· 113 7 799 13
37 . 78 6 56 4 5

DeStephen, J.
Skinner. A.
35 · 57 J 484 4
Kemper. L . n . 62 7 265 2
Vaughan. M. 26 · 70 J 432 3
PUNTING
(14ormorel
Yds No. Avg.
Kriebel , I.
648 15 43.2
Mojzer, L.
945 25 · 37.8
Walter, G.
1003 28 35.8
. ~~~~F~.Jti1
· ~jj ~~ ~~.;
RECEIVING
No. Yds TO
29 464
8
Maloy, Wav.
17 270 2
Topping, A.

Stevenson , J .
Dail ey, Wav .

Chaney, M.

Dixon. Well.

De£ections were heavy
cent four yea rs ago for
Hwnphrey and 90 per cent in
1964 for President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
Here again, there was distrust of McG&lt;IVern among
traditional liberal voters. ·AI·
though a strong supporter of
American support for Israel,
McGovernalso~uffered 'among

Jewish leaders because of his
advocacy of severe defense
cutbacks, which they feared
would
harm
Israel 's
security.
Also, McGovern's advocacy
of convention alarmed some
elements of the Jewish community, who have been the
victims of various arbitrary
quota systems socially and in
business.
Black Americans, according
to the NBC profile, remained
loyal to the Democrats·, giving
McGovern 89 per cent of their
votes-but even here Nixon's
11 per cent was up from 1968.
Among catholics, according
to CBS, Nixon took 56 per cent.
Just fou r years ago, an
estimated 59 per cent voted
Democratic.

2

12 191

4

9 197
9 159
9 145
9 91

0
I

KO RETURNS

Yds No.
260 14
228 12
226 8
198 11

Wells. Wa v.

JOHNSON
BABY
SHAMPOO

Style •.Color • Price

0
2

0
0

)

SINGER

The Fabric Shop

3950 TO 7000 .

•

• Pushbutton e jector.

• Tw in ch rome beaters.

ne tic lid gra bber .
Sharpens al l non -sca ll oped

. BAYER
ASPIRIN

SCOPE

New York Clothing House
. KERM'S KORNER

• 8 pushbu tton speed
selcr tions .
• Rugged 56-o z. container
wi th cosy -pour spou t and
ha ndle.

• 2-oz.

• Heel rest.

• Recipe booklet.

ONLY

$7ll

$15"

ONLY

:~t,.. niCK'

INJECTOR RAZOR
NO !.fOliE SNARLS!

REG. '1.29

REG. '1.15

'

DELUXE BLENDER

• 5 tested recipe speeds .

DIAL
DIAL
.
ANTI·
SHAMPOO· PERSP

REG. '2.61 $
149 _
300's

Coats by Curlee, J&amp;F, Darby House,
MacGregor, etc. You'·!I love th e new styl es and
colors. Excellent gift idea for him!

$666

SOLID STATE

mea sur ing cup,
• Top opening a llows a dd ing of ingredi ents while
un it is o pera ting.

• Store s in drawer or hongs
on wol f.

6 oz.

7 oz.

NTANGLER

For a natural
unmade-up look

FAMILY SIZE

POMEkOY

NORTHERN®

POWDER

coMb

Absorbs exoess facial oil,

.,

t 1p ;;,. It"!)

-1,,

24's

_WHITE RAIN

COIPOHS GOOD AHYT• .

HAIR SPRAY•

1593 EAsTERN AVE.,.
'

GALLIPOL,IS, OHIO

REG. '1.49

77~

fOK f

~Mil Y SKIN

'tf

I

I

(\•_

•.•• ,.... o~.......... ,.,.- · . ... ... rol• • • -

...... .........
_,,_, ... .,.,Hiooh_,.,.,

··- ·"'"'

G~ntly uMMgltu h1lr

SCHICK

;, seconds, wet or dry,
wirhout cream rlnlf,

INJECTOR
RAZOR

..vlrhoU,t brBiklng httit1

without split ends.

'22.95

VALUE

, Reg. $1.29

SINUS

j

The Un tang lcr Comb untangles ha ir easily- whether wei from washing
or dry but just snarled alter a night's sleep.

As close to nature
as make-up can be.
Try a puff! 200

( ..t.RE

SPRAY

•

Allo lvallatlle : CornS II k loo•• Powd1r,

It yently sets each strand of hair in motio~. smoothing awuy t.e nglts
and sna rl $, Does it gently, without pullmg, b~eak i n~, spl itting or
coat ing the hair . So gentl e it's perfect even lo r ch ildren S de!lcata hair.

Tlntad Found1Uon, 01!-Fru Foundation,

•

lh

'2r.r. Jtl...
.,.

·FINE-LIMP

HARD

•

Che•••·

Halm.'n ..

2.•.-.Jto

-..
"""'
·
Ill---.,--.--""'-··-•

A 1101. - - · ..........

Make your
Christmas gilt
lasting one with a
beaUlifu'lllulova.

•

•

,

-·--·~

C 4 Glell AiJ! .M_,:
Plrtki,.Uq · ·~­
allt'llc- ' I · '
2

·lllltcn;n
.• c.

•

•

0_7)

•
•

Soz.
•

,...

...,_"'__

111111. ••• , ....... , .....

·&lt;W(IIe OM "-i I

Plrllel,allll

J11 _,

IUKGEII

.,(""D;F .. l!tW, 7 !

..•

85'

REG.
11.50
.
10

SHAMPOO

•

•

. LEMON UP

CREME RINSE

oz.

t
;
77

'

30's ·

REG.

POLl DENT

63'

TABLETS
.,

REG. '1.59

60's
*"x5 YDS.
{

MINI
PADS

REG. 99'

Reg. '2.45

·

.

.

LOTION

·

· 39~

STAYFREE
MAXI
PADS

STAYFREE

$299

SUPER

CLOTH JAPE

69'

"0. 4752

77¢

r-------------1

SHOULDERS

,

.

ONLY

STELLER SET
DRYER HOT

99~

Re&amp;

~1.1i$

88

SOPHISTI~CATS

HEAD &amp;

:-77t;

REG.

. I

Reg. '1.49
7 oz.

REG.
'3.99

RADIO

REG. '1.50
.
dermicel

dermic:el

GRCCM

POCKET PORT ABLE

•

LIMON UP

iiilli=

39~

REG. .. l

SHAMPOO ••~

, t/rf!1"
-

LOOK

Effecti Ye on all types of hair.

COMB

c~&amp;CLEAN

1ernorn~

•

. ADHESIV~

PUStiiiiT ''C" Au10mlllc. Qulel·nt

t&gt;IAIIII.IIIRAY P'Qflll

TO MANAGE
HAIR
REG. '1.39

,.•••

is complete, and you're sure
to find the watch·you want . .
For him and lor her. From $10. ·

oz.
8 oz.

''

•'

FRIENDSHIP GARDEN
DUSTING POWDER

BODY!
'

IUli.GIK

-

REG. '1.39

SuiJ!.~H~~~:: .

,., -......,

. I.

cutting wheel for clean ,

ONlY

only

WYCK

Relieves sinus headache
and congestion
REG. 98~

"U~·

Pomero~

of can with " floa ting"

• Non -tilting bose .
• Bott le opener.

'

~·

• Lightweight
2114 lbs.

edge kn ives.

:

Court St.

5-SPEED HAND MllCERI

smooth edge.

"

wlfft lftil COUflll!l

.

CAN .OPENER

• Permanent ly affixed mag-

2~or89o

'

VAN WYCK

BOnLE
OPENER
• Opens any size or shape

lO's

.

Goessler Jewelry Store

VAN

MODEL 1/W-71

REG. '1.59

Big .Shet.

I C I - 1 1 "I" -~osttd
"w rnt. 17 jlwels. $11.

MODEL VW-55

•

•

~

EA!

REG. 1.69

2,.,1.09 .

Use Our '
lay-Away
Plan Now!

1FT

"'

'

CONTAC
CAPSULES

..

"'"· 23 jootb, ..._
d~l. $11.
lfAII-f "A" 4 dlantOIIIds. 14l 10lld
&amp;Old UN. 17 Jtotb. $1M. ' .

·m·
- •

99~

•

Christmas watch

TELEVISION- TAPE PLAYERS
'
RECORD
.
PLAYERS
1 '
RADIOS
TV ANTENNAS

.....

•

:-.

TWO CONTACTED
•":
CLE~ELAND ( UPI)
Sewing Machine
Industrialist Joseph E. Cole
and Ohio AFL.CIO President \1
For Christmas
Frank King have been con- If Small deposi t will hold .
tac ted by leaders of a
moveme nt who want to
reorganize the Democratic
11S W. Second
992· 2284 '
National Committee, it was
POMEROY,
OHIO
learned Wednesday.

REAT

,t•t ·~

14 oz.

oz.

121h

~"'

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

REG. '1.79

lay Away Your

!ri'RANGE Blli.D
SAIGON (UPI) -A strange•
looking bird with a band
around one leg was kiUed by
South Vietnamese gunfire in
fighting IOOay on the central
coast.
A U.S. senior military adviser said Ute inscription on the
leg band said the bird had been
tagged by a SOviet institution
studying migratory habits of
the birds.
"We don't know what kind of
bird it was," he said. " It had a
beak about five inches long. We
have Ute head and one leg
which has Ute soft-lead band
bearing the Russian i~­
scription .
"I'm afraid the rest of the
bird is in the cooking pot
already," he said.

OFFICIAL CHASED
BERKELEY,Clllif. (UPI) Antiwar protesters chased a
South Vietnamese official out
of a University of California
restaurant· Wednesday, spitting and jeering at him and his
interpreter.
Tran Cong Ham, chief of
planning for the Vietnamese
Department of the Interior, Ute rescue of Tuong ~an Than,
fled Ute Terrace Restaurant the interpreter' after he was
where he and his aide were spat upon and verbally abused
ea ling when some .200 by some of the crowd, which
demonstrators spotted them.
had ~n attending a rally.
University police rushed to
There were no arresta.

LYSOL
SPRAY

REG. 1.89

KNIT
SPORT
COATS

TO

BULOVA

Spr in gfield ; three
broth ers, Philip Tipton of
Springfield; Clyde McMillen of
Glendale , Ariz .; Patrick
McMillen of Colwnbus, and an
aun t, Mrs. Sylvia · Crosby and
an uncle, Russell Musser,
formerly of Rutland, both of
Springfield .
FWleral services will be held
at 10 a. m. Friday at the Lit·
tieton · Funeral Home in
Springfield after which time
the body will be taken to
Winchester, Indiana , for
burial.

·EVERY ITEM DISCOUNTED

.TOP SELECTION

STUFFINGTUESDAV ·
The annual stuffing bee of
1
Cunningham, A.
0
Ridge. J.
the Meigs CoWJty Tuberculosis
186 8 0
Berry. L.
and Health Association to
prepare Christmas seals for
PUNT RETURNS
Yd s No. TO mailing will be held at 9 a. m.
18 1 11
2
Carler. I.
United
Be r ridge, G.
84 11
0 Tuesday at the
82 8 0 Methodist Church, Second St.,
Berry. L
72
5 0
Smart. L
Pomeroy.
Ridge,J.
"
4
0
MORE READERS
INT. RETURNS
No. Yds TO
Circulation for the Pomeroy
Stevenson, J.
4 81
1 an d
Middleport
Public
3 48
0
Cremeans, M.
Libraries
and
Mr.
Eddy,
the
2 44 I ·
Ellwood. A.
2 40
0
Toppif19 , A.
bookmobile fo r August was
Berry, L
2 37 0 5,1116 and for September 9,146.
Holl ingshea d. W.
2 30 0
Magazine donations were by
Workm&lt;tn , Wav.
2 28
0
2 22
0 Mrs. Dan White, Mrs. Homer
Maloy. Wav .
Romig, A.
2 18 0 Cooper, Mrs. Torn Rue and
Hatten, Well .
! 18
0
2 15 0 Mrs. Charles Swatzel.
Smart. L.
2 s ·o
Spence. I .
Joseph, J.
2 2
0
Parker, I.
2 0 0
Dixon, Well.

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - In
the end, the poor and undereducated stuck with the
history professor.
But the Jewish vote, the blue
collar vote, the youth vote, the
black vote, the ethnic vote and
the colleg!Hlducated vote all~
to one degree or another~
defected from 'Sen. George
McGovern in Tuesday's
election.
Voters with a grade school
education earning less than
$7,000 per year-about onefourth of Ute national elecfDrate ~voted as usual for the
Democratic presidential nominee. They cast an estimated 62
per cent of their votes for
McGovern, only 3 per cent
fewer than Hubert H. Hwn·
phrey received from the group
in 1968.
·
It was one of the few
demographic groups in the .
country in which McGovern--,
the only Ph.D. in the Senateheld his own, according to spot
checks of voting districta by
UPI correspondents in Ute field
and computer analyses by the
networks. •
The blue collar vote, which
Democrats traditionally have
carried heavily, this time
appeared to have split almost
evenly between President
Nixon and McGovern.
McGovern, from the beginning, had diffi culties with
organized labor. The powerful
AFL-CIO hierarchy refused to
endorse McGovern because its
president, George Meany, felt
McGovern
was
an
"'isolationist" in foreign policy.
And McGovern was unable to
overcome his image with many
workingmen as a supporter of
welfare for the shiftless and
lazy.
Among Jews, McGovern also
appeared to have fared worse
than Demo era ts in the past.
NBC said McGovern carried
only 63 per cent of the Jewish
vote, compared with 80 per

16 212

swnmer,..-reported- their · ex.
periences. Memorial serviceR
were held for· the late Guy,
Reuter, Thomas Hennessy and
William Bailey. · Reported' ill
were Olin Knapp and Walter
~aughan. A guest . for the
meeting
was Don Collins,
Fifty memberS were·present post were.asked to meet at the
Hemlock Gr{)ve, a Vietnam
Tuesday night when Drew hall Thursday. night to assist
veteran.
.
Webster .Post 39, American with the program.
An oyster supper was served
Steve · Jewell and Bill
Legion, met to observe World
by
Charles Hayes assisted by
Vaughan, who attended Boys
War I night
World War I veterans on State ·at Ashland College last Robert Vaughan.
hand for the· observance were
Clarence Massar, Ben Neut.
zling, . Ernest Cale, Lincoln
Russell and Lawrence Smith.
During the meeting Henry
Cleland , Jr., announced that
the annual "dough for dough"
evening will be held next
Thursday in Pomeroy. During
•
this observance, members of
the post will move throug h the ·
community delivering bread
from door · to door with
'
residents expected to contribute to the program. FW1ds'
so raised go to the "Gifts for
the Yanks Who Gave" project
which is designed to provide
·remembrances for hospilalizcd
veterans. All members of the

50 Attended· Post
World War I nite

,.,!souTHEASTERN oHio
ATHLETIC LEAT SlATS.
FINAL INDIVIDUAL
LEADERS
I Finai .Unofficiall
RUSHING
Yds Car Avg.
Culbertson. L. nJ 113 6 .4
Volentine, J. · 6'8 117 5 .4
Faulk. M.
612 104 5.9
Mowery . 1.
575 113 5 . 1
Wood. A.
416 Ill 4. t
PASSING
cm.At tnt Yds TO
Shoemaker, Wav .

Jenki ns, J .
Kr ebs, L.

1

Charlene Hoeflich :;:::;::

Lillian Brewer

-~:· '-':'ffli*=:~'TW';WW

I

George Gershwin medley,
highlighted by the American
"classic," Rhapsody in Blue."
Favorites which followed were
"Bat lie Hymn of the Republic''
and "Yellow Bird."
A fascinating rendition of
"Big Noise from Winnetka "
feat ur ed drums and bass;
Ronnje Kole then indulged in
piano gymnastics doing "On a
Clear Day." By this time the
enthusiasm of the audience
proved so contagious · that a
potpourri entitled "R. K.'s
Boogie" exploded with hand·
clapping and toe-tapping.
E r ne s t o L e c u on a 's
"Malaguena" closed the first
half of the program .
The highlight of the second
half was the group's invitation
for ·the audience to suggest
selections which were played

. rl Scout
G
'
y
By
[
DIa

r

J

'

.
69

~

DERMICEL

STERILEPADS
2"x3"

39~

by Max Factor

Each holds a gold capped fl acon of precious
Primiti f, Hypnotiquc or Golden Woods perfume
in new colorful gift presentations.

30's

99~

PRlMJTIF · HY PNOTlQUE ·GOLDEN WOODS
Each in a choice of fi ve decorator ~olo rs.
. Midnight Black • Siamese Blue • Perstan Pmk

$J 95
•

each

I

�L

.'

C()Jrlte(i1r

·~~:~~,~~~~~:~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Jn~b~o~th~M~e~~~s~and~G~a~ll~ia~C~o~un~ti~es~,9f~~~==~~~~ ~.
m·
citizens or local school districts taxed

.
Earned znco
e ·wz.ll
Pe•nla·
ce p. 'I"'"Jle.
r ty
· znr
u .1::'
rt 0 f SCh00 lS
sunno
'.1::'.1::'

I

Jly l'rol. Ed tDocl Wallen
Rio Grande College
Another election has gone by the
board. The cilizetlS of Ohio liave made
their preferences, some of which .we
agree with and some of which we don' t
agree with . However, the great
American political system gives us this
right, and with it, responsibilities,
How do tlte results of Tuesday's
voting affect educa tion, especially as
related to Galiia and Meigs Counties?
First of all, the most significant
vote affecting education was that of the
defeat of Issue No. 2, tne proposition to
repeal the graduated State income tax.
This vote has the potential to completely restructure the financing of
education by placing $Ch()Qi support
more on an earned income basis and
less on a property value basis.
This restructuring of the finan cial

i

L...

••

Black goes on offense

IcHow Black Opens

White's eighth move is a.o.
Black's move is IHl.
White's ninth move is N-N3,
for two reasons, the lirst that
he is now protecting his important knight ; the second,
10.N-Q2, II.N-B3. The knight is
now protecting the king rook
pawn. Black's move is B-K3.
Black is attacking White's
knigh t, also indirectly While's
queen rook pawn. So While
doesn't want to move his knight
because 10, BxN 11. PxB giving
White doubled pawns, which by
theory is good because the first .
pawn can clear the path for the
second ·pawn, so the second
pawn can hopefully become a
queen . Note also that
sometimes it is bad .to have
doubled pawns . For example
your king pawn gets into your '
king bishop file , you have lost
your control of the center. Last
of all it only takes one enemy
man to hold up your two pawns.
But in this case you could say
that it is good to have doubled
pawns, because it will be doing
two things, one freeing your
queen rook, two putting an
· h
f
extra pawn m t e center or
more center control.
·
White's tenth move 'is P-B4.
This move frees the king-rook.
his is also a reason why White
doesn't move his knight. To see
the end result see picture No. I.
A game as follows. NOTE :
b
All games, etc . will e 1n
descriptive notation.

By Bertram G. Moshier
Kyger Creek High School
Chess Champion, 1972·73
This is the four.th of six chess
articles that the Sunday Times~ Sentinel hi.s agreed to publish.
If after reading this article you
learned something or 1ust
plainly liked it, write and tell

i

1··usTfus
article consists of two
maJor parts, the "king-pawn
return", and the "queen-pawn

return". The first opening is
the king-pawn return. For the
king-pawn return I am going to
uae the Sicilian Defence. The
second part, which is the
queen-pawn return, has two
parts. These parts are the Slav
Bertram Moshier Is lbe
president of the Kyger Creek
Hi&amp;b School Chess Clab. He
woa 1ecoad Ia the Ohio Chess
Cbamploillblps of the Order
of DeMolay, and II his high
~&lt;:bioi chess champion lor
ll'lZ-73.

tch
Defence and the Du
Defence.
Sicilian Defence

White's first move is P-Kt
Black's first move Is P-QB 3.
This· starts Black's hope for a
king-elde attach.
White's second move Is NKB3. This move is a developing
move, one that is in almost all
.
Bl k'
d
?P"nmgs . . ac s secon move
IS N-QB3. This, like N·KB3,1S a
basic opening move, which . White : Cortlever
controls the important queen 1. P·K•
2.N.K63
Rye square .
J.P.Q4
I Now, you might start 4.NxP
thinking that N-KB3 or N-QB3 S.N.Q63
6.B·K2
are great moves; bul!.don't get 7.0·0
me wrong, they are not the best 8. 6-KJ
l !l opening moves In the world. · 9.N.N3
lO.P-64
"' For example, I just played a ll.P·KRJ
person at my school last week 12. s.sJ
who on a certain game played · 13.R·K1
N-QB3 lor his first move, and 14.N-QS
15.PxN
he lost the game. Why? For two 16. P-RJ
reasons, one being that N-QB3 17.PxN
18.Q.Q2
does not control the center as 19.QR -B1
does P-Kt, or P-Qt; the second, 20.Qx6·2
_ that N-QB3 is a very unstable 21.Q.N3
22 .Q·Rl
~ move for i.N-QB3 P-Qt, 2. P- 13.QxB
QN3 P.Qa, the !might on queen 24.R·R1
!might live has to be moved to a 25.B·K4
~
;: bad square, beca~ oI un der- 26.R·K1
27 .P·BS
development on White's part. 28.QxQ
White's third move Is P-Q4. 29.B·N6
This move is to attack Black's JO.BxR
Jl.PxP
~ queen bishop pawn. Black's J2 .B·B2
..
li: third move is PxP. Black's JJ.R.Rl
,.. pawn Is protected by the queen · J4.B·Nl
JS.K-62
knight, lor QxP and NxP.
J6 . ~ · K 1
37.
res ign
::; - White's fourth inove is NxP.
• White's !might is protected by
~ the queen. (In .the beginning it
,. is bad to move your queen out.
Some players do it, for
· il; example, the guy I played for
$ my school's chess cham'
almost always moved

.I
E

!

.,

AF Team at

1.P.Q64
2. N.Q63
3.PxP
4.N-6J
S.P.QJ
6.P.KNJ
7.B·N2
8.0-0
9.6·KJ
lO.Q·Bl
lt .R.Ql
12. 6.65
1J.P-QR4
14. NxN
15. N.N5
16. BxN
17. Bx6P
18.6xP
19.6-86
20. BxR
21. P·RS
22.BxP
2J.Q.KB4
24.Q·B7
2S. Q.K7
26.Q.R3
27.Q·R4
28.RxQ
29.R·l·R1
JO.RxB
Jl .RPxP
32.R-R6
JJ. P.QN4
J4.P-NS
JS .R·B4
J6.R.66

Berry Hall
A U. S. Air Force information team will visit the
Ohio University Campus Nov.
13, 14, and 15 at Berry Hall
from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. to
discuss ttie programs available
to men and women college
graduates and senior students
within ISO days of graduation.
Applications are now being
accepted for Officer Training
School, a coeducational course
of instruction leading to .a
commission and duty in the Air
Force.
Applicants accepted for pilot
training will receive up to 48
weeks of classroom and flight
instructions and instructions in
aviation physiological training,
engineering, safety, principles
of flight weather, survival,
weapons, and navigation. No
appointment is necessary at
Berry Hall on the above dates.
If the time and dates conflict,
call 593&lt;3722.

of the garrie, the
being
that he lost the school chess
tournament.) Black's mJVe Is
N-83. Now you ask wh~ not 4.
... NxN 5, QxN? Becaullf Black
is one worried that While would
use his queen after 5.QxN, and
too N-83 is a better move
'
anyway.
,
White's filth move Is N.QB3.
This is to protect his kingpawn, which is under attack by
Black's king knight. Black's
move is P-Q3. This is theory 5,
P-KN3 is a weak move. Why,
because of B.NxN, QPxN 7.
QxQ, ch.
Whlie's sixth move is B-K2.
This move is to get the bishop
out of the way so IHl Is possible.
Black's m'mie is P-KN3. Black
Is setting up his defence. ·
White's seventh move is
BK3. This is getting White
ready · lor castl!ng. Black's
move is B-H2. Black's defence
is finished except lor o-o.

New fossil skull
found in Africa
the wind-swept, scru~overed,
bandit-infested desert east of
Lake Rudolf in Kenya where
his son now works.
Louis Leakey's finds, if
·accepted at his evaluation of
them, pushed back the origin of
modern man, homo sapiens, by
a million years. Richard
Leakey's skull adds another
half million years to homo's
age.
Describes Bones
Richard
Leakey,
administrative director of the
National Museums of Kenya,
described the skull and human
leg bones found nearby at a
scientific meeting In London.
"Preliminary comparisons
with other evidence indir.ate,"
be said, "that the new material
will take a central place In the
rethinking and re-evalua\ion of
the evidence for the origin of
homo sapiens."
Dr. Glynn Isaac, an an. thropologist
from
the
Ri chards, Lenna Pooler , University of California at
Patricia Pollitt, Mrs. Herbert Berkeley, and Richard Leakey
Phillips and daughter, Lisa led the expedition to the largely
Nida, Mrs. Carl Moore and unexplored Lake Rudolf region
son; Mrs. Charles Johnson and of Kenya .
daughter; Joan Ford, June
A complete skull of ancient
Epple, Billy Earls, Ransom
Coleman, Clara Borden , John
Boles, Matthew Baker and
June Benedict.
!Births)
Mrs. Vance Cline, Leon, W.
Va. , a daughter; Mrs. Donald
Eliason, Gallipolis, a daughter,
and Mrs . Walter Simpson, Oak
Hili, a son.

By JOSEPH L. MYLER
WA:SHINGTON (UPI ) Richard Leakey announced
today the discovery of a skull in
East Africa which he believes
proves that human beings lived
at least 2.5 million years ago,
at least hall a million years
earlier than ever supposed
before.
Richard leakey is the son of
the late Louis S. B. Leakey who
found fossil remains, also in
East Mrica, of a two-millionyearo()Jd creature which he
named homo habiiis in the
belief that it was the first toolmaking ancestor of modern
man.
The elderLeakey's exploralions were conducted over
many years in Olduvai Gorge
in Tanzania, 500 miles south of

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged)
Nancy Minton, Freda Sayre,
Mrs. John Sang and son; Joyce
Smith, Archie Browning,
Karen Clark, Wendolyn
Whited, Frank Long, Jr., Clara
Sheward, Stella Pettit, Roxie
Mercer, Audra Malone, James
Hutchinson, Wliiiam Graham,
Mrs. David Sprague and son;
Gloria Smith, Norma Maerker,
George Ware, Michelle Dixon ,
Emory Newman. Katheryn
Richards and Letha Robinson.
Roxford Robinson , Hulda
Gordon, Margaret Tope, Jack
Shloser, Mrs. Uoyd Searles
and son, Margaret Sayre,
Sheryl Robinson , Harley

Laurel Cliff WSCS
·to visit infirmary

t

basis shoUld (I) make for "fairer"
taxation and ( 2) more nearly equalize
educational opportunity for youngsters
throughout the state. · In Ga!lia and
Meigs Counties, where property values
ar~ relatively low, the school systems
will receive an extra amount of money
from the state. The five school systems
in Galiia County alone should receive
over $700,000 in state aid . .
It is to the credit of the citizens of
both Galiia and Meigs Counties that
they decisively voted against Issue No.
2 thus increasing the educational
opportuni ties for the youngsters of this
area.
This increase in state aid to
educa tion does not eliminate the ·need
for some local support. In order to
qualify for the money from the state,
local school districts are required to tax
at a mirtimum level of 22.5 mills.

cOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said Wednes·
day Democratic wins . In the
state legislature d~pite the
Nixon landslide Indicated "the
presidential candidate ·lost the
party."
Allbaugh President Nixon
- captured some 61 per cent of
the popular vote in Ohio, DemOcrats won at least 58 seats in
the House, taking cont,·ol for
the first time in a decade, and
nine Senate seats, coming
within one aeat of gaining the
majority in that chamber.
In other ticket.~&gt;plitting, two
Democrats de'fea ted
Republican incumbents on the
Ohio Supreme Court. In the
Congress, however; the spilt
eontinued the same - 16
Republicans and 7 Democrats.
"AmericariS"bought what the
Democrats stood for, but not
what Sen. McGovern stood
for," said Gilligan In a news
conference in his office. "What
happened is that th~ presidential candidate lost the party."
The Democratic wins In the
legislature, which give that
party a · 17-seat edge in the
House, and the defeat of the
Republican-sponsored state
income tax repealer shows the

·'

Black: Euwe
I

. this was asacrifieeonth~·partofvoters
fron1 the
Local '&amp;hool District
and the Southwestern School District.
The only local ~choollevy defeated
was that for permanent physical plant
improvements in the GaUipolis City
School District, and that by a very
nacrow rrlargin. The re~sons for this
defeat are oniy gue8ses at the moment.
It was, · howeter, the will of the
majority .
Overall, the citizens of Gaiiia and
Meigs Counties supported education .
They have shown they are willing to tax
themselves to provide a first-dass
education for the youth of the area.
Now, the bqrden is upon the school
people to prov,ide this quality
education. SchOOl board members,
administrators, teachers, custodians,
cooks, bus drivers, and ail other school
personnel must face the challenge of
improving education .
Ail involved must "give a little
ex tra" for every young person of Galiia
and Meigs Counties. It is only following
the example of the people who showed
us Tuesday that they were willing to
give.
Reasonable ?

M~igs

~

I

man was pieced together from
fragments found in fossil
deposits dated, along with
stone tools, at more than 2.5
million years . Its brain
capacity was much larger than
that of other early hominids
and its shape "is remarkably
reminiscent of modern man."
Thigh and lower leg bones,
Leakey .said, "are practically
indistinguishable from the
same bones of modern man."
It was once thought that
homo erectus, an upright
creature that lived 1about a
million years ago, was the
earliest evidence of ll!an's
forebears.
The
elder
Leakey's
discovery of homO habilis and
other fossils ''revolutionized
the study of prehistoric man,"
according to ihe National
Geographic Society which
sponsored his work.
Now the younger Leakey's
digging, sponsored by the
society and also by the
National Science Foundation
and the National Museums of
Kenya, promises to carrf the
revolution even further back
into the mists of time.

Will To Will fMpet Speeialilll

today·s FUNMY

JAMAOO PRESIDENT MEL MAGISOS, left, of Whetstone High School, hands a stock
·certfficate in the Junior Achievement company to Arthur G. Green, President of Columbus and
• Southe\'11 Ohio Electric,Company, sponsoring JAMACO. Donna Stanton, second from right, of
Whetstone, is JAMACO Vice President of Sales; Jody Croley, right of Worthington High &amp; hool,
is Treasurer.
'

Brass buys into JAMACO
COLUMBUS - Officers of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company invested
recently in shares of· JAMACO
stock. JAMACO &lt;s the Junior
Achiev er.' ent company
sponsored by the firm . Forking over a dollar apiece
were Arthur G. Green ,
President; Robert J. Grueser,
Executive Vice President;
Vice Presidents Robert L.
Rannells, Distribution and
Service; Ben T. Ray , E.!ll·
ploy~ Relations; Robert J.
Morris, General Services ;
James P. Fenstermaker ,
Ge~eration and Transmission;
John H. Inskeep, Purchasing
and Stores; John W. Leech,
Rates and Valuation and
William 0. Randall, Treasury;
Assi~tant Vice Presidents Fred

:i
~
z

I

.t
~

&lt;4-47

@

POMEROY

.'

.:.. PH. 't t2-75t0.

see DAN

MEADOWS
for all your.

walnuts '' JOIU: .lltllll\~ .......
MIDWAY MARKn
W. 0. BARNJTJ;
POMEROY, OHIO

~ lift!~, . . . .,

iMiillttijltiltlllltl

PROMPT
DELIVERY

BUYING STARTS OCTOBER 2
PLANT &amp; MAINTAIN BLACK: WALNUT TIIBI!S·l'Oil fti&gt;j!ll
LBT HAMMONS PRODUCI'S 01' STOU:XOK,MO.HI!i.PYOU.

,.

A COMPLETE STOCK ...
of the finest pharmaceuticals
enables us to serve all your drug
needs r!ght away!

A/free/
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
Nov. 5 was 43, the offering
$17.37. Worship services were
held at 11 o'clock with the Rev .
Lehman speakin g from
Hebrews 11: 23·30 (Moses,

Demos Control
Although
Nixon's
Congress
landslide
Tuesday carried every sta te
except Massachusetts (plus the
District of Columbia), the
Democrats gained two seats in
the Senate 'to give them a 57-43
edge and easil y re tain ed
control of the House.
The results of the congressional elections meant that
Nixon, In his second term,
would face a highly independent Congress and an
even more liberal Senate which
is certain to demand more
spending and higher priorities
for domestic programs.
It was clear, however, that
Nixon intends first to reshufne
his own administration, probably even before Co ngress
reconvenes Jan . 3.
After a half-hour White

fearful , but did not give up ), to
an attendance of 16.
The W.S.C.S. meeting will be House staff meeting in Key
Biscayne Wednesday, White
·held on Tuesday evening, Nov. House Chief of Stall H.R.
14, at the home of Thelma
Haldeman passed the word
Henderson with ali members that the traditional letters of
contributing to a Thanksgiving resignation,. always tendered
program.
.
at the end of a term, were
There will be a Thanksgiving expected on Nixon's desk
su pper held in the church promptly.
basement at 7:00 on Tuesday
AlreadyinMolion
evening , Nov. 21, for the entire
The White House press
church and any others who secretary, Ronald Ziegler, said
wish to join in this Fellowship
t'
Th
Nixon already had set into·
.
mee mg.
e mea 1 Wll1 be motion a "significant reorgani!l0tiuo~. ·
· :· ' .. zation of the White-Housll'•sl.aff
Eight members . of Alfred and the government in the next
Grange visited Rock Sprmgs term."
Grange Fnday evemng, Nov.
Among those expected to quit
3, and served the refresh· were Defense Secretary
ments.
Melvin Laird and Housing
M~s. Clara Folirod and Nina Secretary George Romney .
Robtn son had supper on
Saturday evening, Nov. 4, with
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ross and evening, Nov. 2.
family, of Albany, 0.
Helen Woode attended a
Funeral services were Mid mee ting of the Cluster 8ditors
on Saturday, Nov. 4, at 2 p.m. of the "Contact" at the comat the Orange Christian Church , pany office at Middleport, 0.,
for Mrs. Grace Kelly, with on Tuesday, Oct. 31, to help
Rev. Charles Domigan, of- prepare news for the printer.
ficiating. Interment was in the
Reports from ali the churchurch cemetery nearby.
ches are to have their next
Mr. and Mrs..Hobart Swartz, news to their Cluster editors by
Mary Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Nov. 26, so they may be sent or
Millard Swartz and Mr . and taken to the company office on
Mrs. Charles D. Woode, at- Nov. 27 and the paper
tended the Open House SOth .will be in each of
wedding anniver sa ry th e churc hes on Dec . . 3
celebration held for Mr. and and wtli foll ow on the f1rst
Mrs. Waid Swartz in the Party Sunday of each month
Ro om of the Kimes Con- thereafter .
valescent Center at Athens o.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White of
Sunday afternoon from 2-i. ' KenovisitedMrs..Wiliiam Carr
Sunday dinner guests of and daughters on Sunday af·
Clara Follrod and Ni na ternoon .
Robinson were Mr . and Mrs.
Mrs . Bertha Wright of
Follrod and Sue Ann of Athens.
Joining the above for a lunch
Sunday evening were Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Swartz and family
of Marietta , 0.
Dorothy
Robinson
is
recovering from Gall-bladder
surgery in Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Besides her family ,
others from here visiting her,
have been Genevieve Guthrie,
Nina Robinson , and Clara
Follrod.
Thelma Henderson , Isola
Taylor, and Florence Spencer
of the Alfred Church attended a ·
Pastoral Relations Committee
'meeting held at the Tuppers
Plains Annex, Thursday

100% solid state chassis
is so reliable we give
1-year-in·home seJVice.

*

OUR BEST COLOR CONSOLE TV
EQUIPPED WITH OUR 3 NEWEST FEATURES:
• 100'A SOLID STATE CHASSIS- Th!lt
means there are no tubes to burn out •• you
get dependability and we back It up-with
full1 -year guarantee on ALL parts and labor
(see guarantee below)•

a

• ONE BUTTON COLOR~Tint, brightness,
color, contrast end fine tuning are controlled
by one button-virtually eliminates picture
imperfections caused by misadjusted controis . • yet flexible enough to let you slightly
adjust color, tint, contrast, and brightness

}II

I h--.pocu-.

W57 Dl4362N

'lf'l

wt. :1115 ll&gt;o. .... .... .. fllnJ.88

W57 Dl431i0N .... wt.199 .......... .... 579.88

~

.. .700
W
.
J.~ain · Pomeroy ·
· 9 to 9 Dally-8ullday 1·9
·

~

•

heavy anodized aluminum
clothes hangers, a sa les-proven
product. The JA company
sponsored by Columbus and
Southern last year sold more
than $3,000 worth to earn the
Best Sales Company Award
from Junior Achievement of
Central Ohio, Inc.

WASHINGTON tUPI) -Savoring a . landslide mandate;
President Nixon today mapped
the sec'Ond four yea rs of his
administration while shattered
Democrats began demanding
that George S. McGovern and
his reformers relinquish
control of the party. ·
Elated by a historic personal
triumph, which he called his
"the very best one of all,"
Nixon summoned his top advisers to his Key Biscayne,
Fla ., retreat foraweekendthat
could shape . th e nation's
policies until 1976.
At the same time, ,Democratic leaders around the country
-laced with their most crushing presidential defeat-began
the arduous task of reshaping
their party 's leadership to put
it in contention for the 1976
election.
Disdaining any vacation,
Nixon less than 24 hours after
winning re-election moved
toward· a major government
shakeup and a review of the
domestic goals he might push
through a Democratic Congress.

o! Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Bill' sister, Mrs. Thelma Henderson

2 c.........,..,... nlaut m.eer.

BIG. DISCOUNT SAVINGS I
.FOR
..

V. Stine , Generation and
Transmission; Evan E.
Williams, Rates and Valuation
and John M. Emery, Treasury.
G. Clifford S~afer, Corporate
Secretary, and Raymond A.
Heimann, Conlroller, were not
available but had arranged to
purchase their stock by proxy .
First year advise rs for
JAMACO are Columbus and
Southern employees Linda
Clemens, General Accoun ling ;
Russell Paine, Commercial Industrial Marketing and John
Stock, Purchasing. Beginning
their second year of advisership are Ralph Maurer,
Marketing Services; Roy
Niceswanger, Special Reports .
and John Sanders, Distribution
Engineering.
JAMACO is manufacturing

VISIT OUR NEW ENLARGED.
-.GIFTS FOR

• BLACK MATRIX PICTURE TUBE-Sur·
' rounds dots that make up a color Tv picture
.~ 11 black background •• for .bright colors,
lharp.contrast

'

'

•

M

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Lizzie
Hanning,. Middleport; Pearl
Dillon , Reedsville; Madelyn '
Chaffin , Pomeroy ; David
Hendricks, Middleport ; Scott
Justis, Racine; Bernice Hawk,
Shade.

the

. . 11 . .

I

~ .
there's a crop nder JOUI' trees·· jist
for the picking. CASH IN ••• take r•

·~

. . . . . . . . . , ....115

Demo'cr11tic party "is . a
vigorous; vital and growmg
force in this state,"&gt;" the
governor said.
'
"Democrats across the state
supported a pr9gram, including tax reform, that made
sense to the people, Gilligan
said .
.
Nixon carried 86 counties m
the state. The two that went for
McGovern were Lucas and
Athens.

CUT'100

ears

Sibley, Charles Beegle, Eric
Wednesday night a Penny-aInfirmary was planned at
Morris, Lillian Walker.
Tuesday night's meeting of the Day program for missions was
Women 's Missionary Society of presented by the Christian
the Laurel Cliff Free MethOdist Crusaders under the direction
Church. The Society members of Mrs. Buckley, Mrs. Shirley
will join the Men's Fellowship Friend, and Mrs. Magel Smitl1. ·
RALLY SET
The program consisted of
for the visit on Nov. 20.
A Meigs County Youth Rally
Mrs. Jean Wright had charge songs, readings and a sktt. will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday at
of the meeting during which Mrs. Wise is the Penny-A-Day the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
time a collection was taken for chairman for the church.
.
..
missions . Mrs. Iva Powell
presented devotions with Mrs.
Donna Gilmore giving the
prayer. Mrs. Wright and Mrs.
Mildred Jacobs shared a tape
from a recent retreat which
they attended. Areading on the
thank offering box was given
by Mrs. Gilmore after which
each member stood and told of
something for which they were
thankful.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Esta Wise,
Tina Jacobs, Mrs. Marguerite
Leifheit, Mrs. Doris Buckley,
Mrs. Delia Curtis and Mrs:

111 W. MAIN

~

ul
WI•th oh•o
. J . res
·
·. ts.

themselves in this election to raise this
minimun'l amt~unt .. In many instances

•·

D~mocrats · in~ revolt

=·

a·clllll ...... W17 Dl4311N •

.

.

•SEARS 100" SOLID ST:ATE CONSOt:l
GUARANTEE
. TELEVISION
.

and family, and other relatives
here and ,at Tuppers Plains
over the weekend and attended
church here Sunday morning.

oo dangerous drugs and will
s~ren uous

vour

lif e

MONA DE x

vou

nervous .

No

exercise. Change
... start today .

costs u. oo· for a 20

day ;5 Upply and ss .oo tor twic e

the amount. Lose ugly fat or
vour money will be r ef unded
with flO qu es1ions asked bV !
Sw is he r &amp; Lohse Orugs. 112 E .
Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug
Store , Middleporl . Mail Orders

Filled .

•l

LA:--z~sov

•

CtiAIRS

t

E

Now · you can
comfortable

SEARS. ROEBUCK AND ·co,

chair

you ' ve

bu~

.that.
La-Z-Boy
always

dre8med of at 11\/r loW
prices.

'

SEARS

· AUTHORIZED

CATALOG-ME~CHANT

__.-·~tHE CREATOR OF

..;.MASON- .

__

·RIASONAILE DRUG PRICES"
271 Nartll SlcGnd
Middleport, Ohio

FURNITURE
herm•n Gr~te ·

777-5592

:c wt. 196 n...... ,..... 1179.M

•

t l.

.

\

Mason, w. v~ .

.

Many Specials ThrQughout the Store.
To
Mention A few :

'

~eg .
~eg .

51.29 4oz. Wool Yarn
49c- Rug Yarn
Reg . Sic Pr. Men's Hose
~eg . 51.98-lloz. Elmer's Glue-All
.
Reg . 58.S8- 16 pc. China Dinnerware Set
~eg . 51.00 Box so Christmas Cards
Reg . 3Jc KleeneM Tissues

87c
3Jc

l Pair 90c
99c
$6.66

68c

4 boxes 51 .00

Reg . 69c &amp; 79c Aluminum Bake-ware

Reg . 58.99 Electric Can Openers
Reg . 51 1.88 Afghan Kits

Jlor55.77
"'

$9.99

'

• .

'

, , r

MAKE POMEROY YOUR
SHOPPING
CENTER '
.•
.
,.
..
.....
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
:.~.:.:.~.~.:.:.~:-:{j:::::::::.::~;::·:·:·:-:o:.-.-.~:o:::::•::;•:•x•:·::::::::;···~-::g
... .. ... . ..... . .:.. . .

••• •.·•···=-···
.· .:.!-:·~·!·:·:-.-. •••.
····=·

····~· ··· ·····:.···-.;·i:!o;·:s········ ·-·.,...,.,.,.,

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
110 E. 2nd
•m .

SHIPMENT OF YOUNG PARAKEETS

BEN,FRANKLUN

PHONE
200-202 .-E(!st Main St.
992 -3498
POMEROY OHIO
- OPEN FRID.\1\y
.. &amp;. SA.TUIIllAV NIGHTS·TIL t

Pomeroy

.

""

'

~~---•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

SPEC.IALS

THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN.

The Schick

Hot Lather Machine
For Now- Reg.
For Gifts!
19.95

11

89

Clairol Air Brush Styling Dryer
Men or Ladies
Regular-',. Z4,34
'
'

laroid Colorpac
Film 108
Regular 5.39

97

ONLY

Mitchum Anti-Perspirant

SYLVANIA

BAYER

FLASHCUBES

CHILDREN'~

3 Cubes • 12 Rashes

ASPIRIN

Reg.
1.85

ONLY99e

. CONT
CAPSULES
VICkS
FORMULA 44
·EXTRA STRENGTH
COUGH MIXTURE
. 6-0UNCE
Reg. 1.98 .

119

36 Tabs
Reg. 43'

1 oz. Roll-On
REG.
3.00

19e

.SKINNY Dl

COLOGNE

ASPI~IN
100 Tablets • 5 Grains Eacb
Reg.

BAYER

2.25

ONLY

139

LAVORIS
.MOUTHWASH

PAMPERS

AND GARGLE
.'

7 OUNCE
Reg. 854

Daytime 30's
Reg.

1.85

PltFSCRIP110N
.· SERVICE .
'HARMACISTS
..Jo..:snv~

ONLY 69$

1.12
Reg.

2 oz. Cream

ONLY 1.89

4 RIGISTIRED
Authorized Dealer

'

Use Our Convement Lay-A-Way Plan ·

(Upon .Request)

1~:~ ONLY79e

not mak e

-·

t.'

.Dollar Stretcher Sale
Now In Progress

•

2-HOUR
CLEANING

10 CAPSULES

your desire fo r excess food .
Eat le ss -weigh leu . Contain s

.

JUST ARRIVED

Start losing weight today OR
MONEY BACK . MONADEX is
a tiny tablet that wHI help curb

.

.

-

Westwood, hand-picked by MeGovern as chairman of the
national commi ttee and a
symbpl of his reform move- ·
men t.
Even before the last votes
were counted, Sen. Lloyd M:Bentsen of Texas, Gov .
Wendell Ford of Kentucky, and
Gov . David Hall of Dklaboma
were calling for Mrs. Westwood's resignation.
Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel suggested that party
leaders responsible for Tuesday's debacle consider stepping down. Sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington also

LOSE UGLY FAT

f'!'• guo11111llle Itt S..il1~ Solid Slata Color 't,Yit~t·• ,

fret fron;l·deloda tn mmr1a1 or wonmenahlp. SIMiulil
deftd occur.M will:
·.
1. During the 111 yoer, fumllll aityl*ja 1~.-Wllli
necosaary to reinedy the der.ct frH ol charge. "·· ·
' 2. After 1 year and ~p lo Z year~, r11PW1he ~
be H ~.... cherglng only for ltbor. SerMt .Uftllll(.•
guarantee II 1\'llllble ' limply by COII~rigc IIIli
•
11 eton1 or Stmce C.nar tlirouv!1cMrt thll u.s; ·Jr{.
hol!18 iervlce on !&amp;ln. TVa end llrger.

Ot her likely departures,
all hough probably not so
quick.ly, were Attorney
General Richard G. Kleindie[lSt and Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson.
A "saddened" George S.
McGovern, his 22-month quest
for the presidency a disaster,
planned a long vacation in the
Virgin Islands, promising he
never again would seek the
White House. He told reporters
aboan) his plane " I really
· mean it."
But there was little clear
indica tion what McGovern
planned in the way of assuming
the ti tular leadership of the
De m o c r a t i c p a r t y ,
traditionally his 'until the next
convention .
Has Party Leadership
Frank Mankiewicz, his chief
political adviser, said that
McGovern, only 50, has "the
leadership of the party" and
will hold on until a new standard-bearer emerges.
Surveying the wreckage of
the returns, prominent Democrats began demanding that
the party dump Mrs. Jean·

-

cailect for a new lao~ at party subterfuge for a minority
reforms which he called "a takeover
._., ."
,,

YO.U

Open D11J 8 .U. 1D 10 P.M. ·- SundiJ 10:30 ll. tD 12:30 PJI.

ONLY

�L

.'

C()Jrlte(i1r

·~~:~~,~~~~~:~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Jn~b~o~th~M~e~~~s~and~G~a~ll~ia~C~o~un~ti~es~,9f~~~==~~~~ ~.
m·
citizens or local school districts taxed

.
Earned znco
e ·wz.ll
Pe•nla·
ce p. 'I"'"Jle.
r ty
· znr
u .1::'
rt 0 f SCh00 lS
sunno
'.1::'.1::'

I

Jly l'rol. Ed tDocl Wallen
Rio Grande College
Another election has gone by the
board. The cilizetlS of Ohio liave made
their preferences, some of which .we
agree with and some of which we don' t
agree with . However, the great
American political system gives us this
right, and with it, responsibilities,
How do tlte results of Tuesday's
voting affect educa tion, especially as
related to Galiia and Meigs Counties?
First of all, the most significant
vote affecting education was that of the
defeat of Issue No. 2, tne proposition to
repeal the graduated State income tax.
This vote has the potential to completely restructure the financing of
education by placing $Ch()Qi support
more on an earned income basis and
less on a property value basis.
This restructuring of the finan cial

i

L...

••

Black goes on offense

IcHow Black Opens

White's eighth move is a.o.
Black's move is IHl.
White's ninth move is N-N3,
for two reasons, the lirst that
he is now protecting his important knight ; the second,
10.N-Q2, II.N-B3. The knight is
now protecting the king rook
pawn. Black's move is B-K3.
Black is attacking White's
knigh t, also indirectly While's
queen rook pawn. So While
doesn't want to move his knight
because 10, BxN 11. PxB giving
White doubled pawns, which by
theory is good because the first .
pawn can clear the path for the
second ·pawn, so the second
pawn can hopefully become a
queen . Note also that
sometimes it is bad .to have
doubled pawns . For example
your king pawn gets into your '
king bishop file , you have lost
your control of the center. Last
of all it only takes one enemy
man to hold up your two pawns.
But in this case you could say
that it is good to have doubled
pawns, because it will be doing
two things, one freeing your
queen rook, two putting an
· h
f
extra pawn m t e center or
more center control.
·
White's tenth move 'is P-B4.
This move frees the king-rook.
his is also a reason why White
doesn't move his knight. To see
the end result see picture No. I.
A game as follows. NOTE :
b
All games, etc . will e 1n
descriptive notation.

By Bertram G. Moshier
Kyger Creek High School
Chess Champion, 1972·73
This is the four.th of six chess
articles that the Sunday Times~ Sentinel hi.s agreed to publish.
If after reading this article you
learned something or 1ust
plainly liked it, write and tell

i

1··usTfus
article consists of two
maJor parts, the "king-pawn
return", and the "queen-pawn

return". The first opening is
the king-pawn return. For the
king-pawn return I am going to
uae the Sicilian Defence. The
second part, which is the
queen-pawn return, has two
parts. These parts are the Slav
Bertram Moshier Is lbe
president of the Kyger Creek
Hi&amp;b School Chess Clab. He
woa 1ecoad Ia the Ohio Chess
Cbamploillblps of the Order
of DeMolay, and II his high
~&lt;:bioi chess champion lor
ll'lZ-73.

tch
Defence and the Du
Defence.
Sicilian Defence

White's first move is P-Kt
Black's first move Is P-QB 3.
This· starts Black's hope for a
king-elde attach.
White's second move Is NKB3. This move is a developing
move, one that is in almost all
.
Bl k'
d
?P"nmgs . . ac s secon move
IS N-QB3. This, like N·KB3,1S a
basic opening move, which . White : Cortlever
controls the important queen 1. P·K•
2.N.K63
Rye square .
J.P.Q4
I Now, you might start 4.NxP
thinking that N-KB3 or N-QB3 S.N.Q63
6.B·K2
are great moves; bul!.don't get 7.0·0
me wrong, they are not the best 8. 6-KJ
l !l opening moves In the world. · 9.N.N3
lO.P-64
"' For example, I just played a ll.P·KRJ
person at my school last week 12. s.sJ
who on a certain game played · 13.R·K1
N-QB3 lor his first move, and 14.N-QS
15.PxN
he lost the game. Why? For two 16. P-RJ
reasons, one being that N-QB3 17.PxN
18.Q.Q2
does not control the center as 19.QR -B1
does P-Kt, or P-Qt; the second, 20.Qx6·2
_ that N-QB3 is a very unstable 21.Q.N3
22 .Q·Rl
~ move for i.N-QB3 P-Qt, 2. P- 13.QxB
QN3 P.Qa, the !might on queen 24.R·R1
!might live has to be moved to a 25.B·K4
~
;: bad square, beca~ oI un der- 26.R·K1
27 .P·BS
development on White's part. 28.QxQ
White's third move Is P-Q4. 29.B·N6
This move is to attack Black's JO.BxR
Jl.PxP
~ queen bishop pawn. Black's J2 .B·B2
..
li: third move is PxP. Black's JJ.R.Rl
,.. pawn Is protected by the queen · J4.B·Nl
JS.K-62
knight, lor QxP and NxP.
J6 . ~ · K 1
37.
res ign
::; - White's fourth inove is NxP.
• White's !might is protected by
~ the queen. (In .the beginning it
,. is bad to move your queen out.
Some players do it, for
· il; example, the guy I played for
$ my school's chess cham'
almost always moved

.I
E

!

.,

AF Team at

1.P.Q64
2. N.Q63
3.PxP
4.N-6J
S.P.QJ
6.P.KNJ
7.B·N2
8.0-0
9.6·KJ
lO.Q·Bl
lt .R.Ql
12. 6.65
1J.P-QR4
14. NxN
15. N.N5
16. BxN
17. Bx6P
18.6xP
19.6-86
20. BxR
21. P·RS
22.BxP
2J.Q.KB4
24.Q·B7
2S. Q.K7
26.Q.R3
27.Q·R4
28.RxQ
29.R·l·R1
JO.RxB
Jl .RPxP
32.R-R6
JJ. P.QN4
J4.P-NS
JS .R·B4
J6.R.66

Berry Hall
A U. S. Air Force information team will visit the
Ohio University Campus Nov.
13, 14, and 15 at Berry Hall
from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. to
discuss ttie programs available
to men and women college
graduates and senior students
within ISO days of graduation.
Applications are now being
accepted for Officer Training
School, a coeducational course
of instruction leading to .a
commission and duty in the Air
Force.
Applicants accepted for pilot
training will receive up to 48
weeks of classroom and flight
instructions and instructions in
aviation physiological training,
engineering, safety, principles
of flight weather, survival,
weapons, and navigation. No
appointment is necessary at
Berry Hall on the above dates.
If the time and dates conflict,
call 593&lt;3722.

of the garrie, the
being
that he lost the school chess
tournament.) Black's mJVe Is
N-83. Now you ask wh~ not 4.
... NxN 5, QxN? Becaullf Black
is one worried that While would
use his queen after 5.QxN, and
too N-83 is a better move
'
anyway.
,
White's filth move Is N.QB3.
This is to protect his kingpawn, which is under attack by
Black's king knight. Black's
move is P-Q3. This is theory 5,
P-KN3 is a weak move. Why,
because of B.NxN, QPxN 7.
QxQ, ch.
Whlie's sixth move is B-K2.
This move is to get the bishop
out of the way so IHl Is possible.
Black's m'mie is P-KN3. Black
Is setting up his defence. ·
White's seventh move is
BK3. This is getting White
ready · lor castl!ng. Black's
move is B-H2. Black's defence
is finished except lor o-o.

New fossil skull
found in Africa
the wind-swept, scru~overed,
bandit-infested desert east of
Lake Rudolf in Kenya where
his son now works.
Louis Leakey's finds, if
·accepted at his evaluation of
them, pushed back the origin of
modern man, homo sapiens, by
a million years. Richard
Leakey's skull adds another
half million years to homo's
age.
Describes Bones
Richard
Leakey,
administrative director of the
National Museums of Kenya,
described the skull and human
leg bones found nearby at a
scientific meeting In London.
"Preliminary comparisons
with other evidence indir.ate,"
be said, "that the new material
will take a central place In the
rethinking and re-evalua\ion of
the evidence for the origin of
homo sapiens."
Dr. Glynn Isaac, an an. thropologist
from
the
Ri chards, Lenna Pooler , University of California at
Patricia Pollitt, Mrs. Herbert Berkeley, and Richard Leakey
Phillips and daughter, Lisa led the expedition to the largely
Nida, Mrs. Carl Moore and unexplored Lake Rudolf region
son; Mrs. Charles Johnson and of Kenya .
daughter; Joan Ford, June
A complete skull of ancient
Epple, Billy Earls, Ransom
Coleman, Clara Borden , John
Boles, Matthew Baker and
June Benedict.
!Births)
Mrs. Vance Cline, Leon, W.
Va. , a daughter; Mrs. Donald
Eliason, Gallipolis, a daughter,
and Mrs . Walter Simpson, Oak
Hili, a son.

By JOSEPH L. MYLER
WA:SHINGTON (UPI ) Richard Leakey announced
today the discovery of a skull in
East Africa which he believes
proves that human beings lived
at least 2.5 million years ago,
at least hall a million years
earlier than ever supposed
before.
Richard leakey is the son of
the late Louis S. B. Leakey who
found fossil remains, also in
East Mrica, of a two-millionyearo()Jd creature which he
named homo habiiis in the
belief that it was the first toolmaking ancestor of modern
man.
The elderLeakey's exploralions were conducted over
many years in Olduvai Gorge
in Tanzania, 500 miles south of

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged)
Nancy Minton, Freda Sayre,
Mrs. John Sang and son; Joyce
Smith, Archie Browning,
Karen Clark, Wendolyn
Whited, Frank Long, Jr., Clara
Sheward, Stella Pettit, Roxie
Mercer, Audra Malone, James
Hutchinson, Wliiiam Graham,
Mrs. David Sprague and son;
Gloria Smith, Norma Maerker,
George Ware, Michelle Dixon ,
Emory Newman. Katheryn
Richards and Letha Robinson.
Roxford Robinson , Hulda
Gordon, Margaret Tope, Jack
Shloser, Mrs. Uoyd Searles
and son, Margaret Sayre,
Sheryl Robinson , Harley

Laurel Cliff WSCS
·to visit infirmary

t

basis shoUld (I) make for "fairer"
taxation and ( 2) more nearly equalize
educational opportunity for youngsters
throughout the state. · In Ga!lia and
Meigs Counties, where property values
ar~ relatively low, the school systems
will receive an extra amount of money
from the state. The five school systems
in Galiia County alone should receive
over $700,000 in state aid . .
It is to the credit of the citizens of
both Galiia and Meigs Counties that
they decisively voted against Issue No.
2 thus increasing the educational
opportuni ties for the youngsters of this
area.
This increase in state aid to
educa tion does not eliminate the ·need
for some local support. In order to
qualify for the money from the state,
local school districts are required to tax
at a mirtimum level of 22.5 mills.

cOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said Wednes·
day Democratic wins . In the
state legislature d~pite the
Nixon landslide Indicated "the
presidential candidate ·lost the
party."
Allbaugh President Nixon
- captured some 61 per cent of
the popular vote in Ohio, DemOcrats won at least 58 seats in
the House, taking cont,·ol for
the first time in a decade, and
nine Senate seats, coming
within one aeat of gaining the
majority in that chamber.
In other ticket.~&gt;plitting, two
Democrats de'fea ted
Republican incumbents on the
Ohio Supreme Court. In the
Congress, however; the spilt
eontinued the same - 16
Republicans and 7 Democrats.
"AmericariS"bought what the
Democrats stood for, but not
what Sen. McGovern stood
for," said Gilligan In a news
conference in his office. "What
happened is that th~ presidential candidate lost the party."
The Democratic wins In the
legislature, which give that
party a · 17-seat edge in the
House, and the defeat of the
Republican-sponsored state
income tax repealer shows the

·'

Black: Euwe
I

. this was asacrifieeonth~·partofvoters
fron1 the
Local '&amp;hool District
and the Southwestern School District.
The only local ~choollevy defeated
was that for permanent physical plant
improvements in the GaUipolis City
School District, and that by a very
nacrow rrlargin. The re~sons for this
defeat are oniy gue8ses at the moment.
It was, · howeter, the will of the
majority .
Overall, the citizens of Gaiiia and
Meigs Counties supported education .
They have shown they are willing to tax
themselves to provide a first-dass
education for the youth of the area.
Now, the bqrden is upon the school
people to prov,ide this quality
education. SchOOl board members,
administrators, teachers, custodians,
cooks, bus drivers, and ail other school
personnel must face the challenge of
improving education .
Ail involved must "give a little
ex tra" for every young person of Galiia
and Meigs Counties. It is only following
the example of the people who showed
us Tuesday that they were willing to
give.
Reasonable ?

M~igs

~

I

man was pieced together from
fragments found in fossil
deposits dated, along with
stone tools, at more than 2.5
million years . Its brain
capacity was much larger than
that of other early hominids
and its shape "is remarkably
reminiscent of modern man."
Thigh and lower leg bones,
Leakey .said, "are practically
indistinguishable from the
same bones of modern man."
It was once thought that
homo erectus, an upright
creature that lived 1about a
million years ago, was the
earliest evidence of ll!an's
forebears.
The
elder
Leakey's
discovery of homO habilis and
other fossils ''revolutionized
the study of prehistoric man,"
according to ihe National
Geographic Society which
sponsored his work.
Now the younger Leakey's
digging, sponsored by the
society and also by the
National Science Foundation
and the National Museums of
Kenya, promises to carrf the
revolution even further back
into the mists of time.

Will To Will fMpet Speeialilll

today·s FUNMY

JAMAOO PRESIDENT MEL MAGISOS, left, of Whetstone High School, hands a stock
·certfficate in the Junior Achievement company to Arthur G. Green, President of Columbus and
• Southe\'11 Ohio Electric,Company, sponsoring JAMACO. Donna Stanton, second from right, of
Whetstone, is JAMACO Vice President of Sales; Jody Croley, right of Worthington High &amp; hool,
is Treasurer.
'

Brass buys into JAMACO
COLUMBUS - Officers of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company invested
recently in shares of· JAMACO
stock. JAMACO &lt;s the Junior
Achiev er.' ent company
sponsored by the firm . Forking over a dollar apiece
were Arthur G. Green ,
President; Robert J. Grueser,
Executive Vice President;
Vice Presidents Robert L.
Rannells, Distribution and
Service; Ben T. Ray , E.!ll·
ploy~ Relations; Robert J.
Morris, General Services ;
James P. Fenstermaker ,
Ge~eration and Transmission;
John H. Inskeep, Purchasing
and Stores; John W. Leech,
Rates and Valuation and
William 0. Randall, Treasury;
Assi~tant Vice Presidents Fred

:i
~
z

I

.t
~

&lt;4-47

@

POMEROY

.'

.:.. PH. 't t2-75t0.

see DAN

MEADOWS
for all your.

walnuts '' JOIU: .lltllll\~ .......
MIDWAY MARKn
W. 0. BARNJTJ;
POMEROY, OHIO

~ lift!~, . . . .,

iMiillttijltiltlllltl

PROMPT
DELIVERY

BUYING STARTS OCTOBER 2
PLANT &amp; MAINTAIN BLACK: WALNUT TIIBI!S·l'Oil fti&gt;j!ll
LBT HAMMONS PRODUCI'S 01' STOU:XOK,MO.HI!i.PYOU.

,.

A COMPLETE STOCK ...
of the finest pharmaceuticals
enables us to serve all your drug
needs r!ght away!

A/free/
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
Nov. 5 was 43, the offering
$17.37. Worship services were
held at 11 o'clock with the Rev .
Lehman speakin g from
Hebrews 11: 23·30 (Moses,

Demos Control
Although
Nixon's
Congress
landslide
Tuesday carried every sta te
except Massachusetts (plus the
District of Columbia), the
Democrats gained two seats in
the Senate 'to give them a 57-43
edge and easil y re tain ed
control of the House.
The results of the congressional elections meant that
Nixon, In his second term,
would face a highly independent Congress and an
even more liberal Senate which
is certain to demand more
spending and higher priorities
for domestic programs.
It was clear, however, that
Nixon intends first to reshufne
his own administration, probably even before Co ngress
reconvenes Jan . 3.
After a half-hour White

fearful , but did not give up ), to
an attendance of 16.
The W.S.C.S. meeting will be House staff meeting in Key
Biscayne Wednesday, White
·held on Tuesday evening, Nov. House Chief of Stall H.R.
14, at the home of Thelma
Haldeman passed the word
Henderson with ali members that the traditional letters of
contributing to a Thanksgiving resignation,. always tendered
program.
.
at the end of a term, were
There will be a Thanksgiving expected on Nixon's desk
su pper held in the church promptly.
basement at 7:00 on Tuesday
AlreadyinMolion
evening , Nov. 21, for the entire
The White House press
church and any others who secretary, Ronald Ziegler, said
wish to join in this Fellowship
t'
Th
Nixon already had set into·
.
mee mg.
e mea 1 Wll1 be motion a "significant reorgani!l0tiuo~. ·
· :· ' .. zation of the White-Housll'•sl.aff
Eight members . of Alfred and the government in the next
Grange visited Rock Sprmgs term."
Grange Fnday evemng, Nov.
Among those expected to quit
3, and served the refresh· were Defense Secretary
ments.
Melvin Laird and Housing
M~s. Clara Folirod and Nina Secretary George Romney .
Robtn son had supper on
Saturday evening, Nov. 4, with
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ross and evening, Nov. 2.
family, of Albany, 0.
Helen Woode attended a
Funeral services were Mid mee ting of the Cluster 8ditors
on Saturday, Nov. 4, at 2 p.m. of the "Contact" at the comat the Orange Christian Church , pany office at Middleport, 0.,
for Mrs. Grace Kelly, with on Tuesday, Oct. 31, to help
Rev. Charles Domigan, of- prepare news for the printer.
ficiating. Interment was in the
Reports from ali the churchurch cemetery nearby.
ches are to have their next
Mr. and Mrs..Hobart Swartz, news to their Cluster editors by
Mary Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Nov. 26, so they may be sent or
Millard Swartz and Mr . and taken to the company office on
Mrs. Charles D. Woode, at- Nov. 27 and the paper
tended the Open House SOth .will be in each of
wedding anniver sa ry th e churc hes on Dec . . 3
celebration held for Mr. and and wtli foll ow on the f1rst
Mrs. Waid Swartz in the Party Sunday of each month
Ro om of the Kimes Con- thereafter .
valescent Center at Athens o.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White of
Sunday afternoon from 2-i. ' KenovisitedMrs..Wiliiam Carr
Sunday dinner guests of and daughters on Sunday af·
Clara Follrod and Ni na ternoon .
Robinson were Mr . and Mrs.
Mrs . Bertha Wright of
Follrod and Sue Ann of Athens.
Joining the above for a lunch
Sunday evening were Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Swartz and family
of Marietta , 0.
Dorothy
Robinson
is
recovering from Gall-bladder
surgery in Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Besides her family ,
others from here visiting her,
have been Genevieve Guthrie,
Nina Robinson , and Clara
Follrod.
Thelma Henderson , Isola
Taylor, and Florence Spencer
of the Alfred Church attended a ·
Pastoral Relations Committee
'meeting held at the Tuppers
Plains Annex, Thursday

100% solid state chassis
is so reliable we give
1-year-in·home seJVice.

*

OUR BEST COLOR CONSOLE TV
EQUIPPED WITH OUR 3 NEWEST FEATURES:
• 100'A SOLID STATE CHASSIS- Th!lt
means there are no tubes to burn out •• you
get dependability and we back It up-with
full1 -year guarantee on ALL parts and labor
(see guarantee below)•

a

• ONE BUTTON COLOR~Tint, brightness,
color, contrast end fine tuning are controlled
by one button-virtually eliminates picture
imperfections caused by misadjusted controis . • yet flexible enough to let you slightly
adjust color, tint, contrast, and brightness

}II

I h--.pocu-.

W57 Dl4362N

'lf'l

wt. :1115 ll&gt;o. .... .... .. fllnJ.88

W57 Dl431i0N .... wt.199 .......... .... 579.88

~

.. .700
W
.
J.~ain · Pomeroy ·
· 9 to 9 Dally-8ullday 1·9
·

~

•

heavy anodized aluminum
clothes hangers, a sa les-proven
product. The JA company
sponsored by Columbus and
Southern last year sold more
than $3,000 worth to earn the
Best Sales Company Award
from Junior Achievement of
Central Ohio, Inc.

WASHINGTON tUPI) -Savoring a . landslide mandate;
President Nixon today mapped
the sec'Ond four yea rs of his
administration while shattered
Democrats began demanding
that George S. McGovern and
his reformers relinquish
control of the party. ·
Elated by a historic personal
triumph, which he called his
"the very best one of all,"
Nixon summoned his top advisers to his Key Biscayne,
Fla ., retreat foraweekendthat
could shape . th e nation's
policies until 1976.
At the same time, ,Democratic leaders around the country
-laced with their most crushing presidential defeat-began
the arduous task of reshaping
their party 's leadership to put
it in contention for the 1976
election.
Disdaining any vacation,
Nixon less than 24 hours after
winning re-election moved
toward· a major government
shakeup and a review of the
domestic goals he might push
through a Democratic Congress.

o! Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Bill' sister, Mrs. Thelma Henderson

2 c.........,..,... nlaut m.eer.

BIG. DISCOUNT SAVINGS I
.FOR
..

V. Stine , Generation and
Transmission; Evan E.
Williams, Rates and Valuation
and John M. Emery, Treasury.
G. Clifford S~afer, Corporate
Secretary, and Raymond A.
Heimann, Conlroller, were not
available but had arranged to
purchase their stock by proxy .
First year advise rs for
JAMACO are Columbus and
Southern employees Linda
Clemens, General Accoun ling ;
Russell Paine, Commercial Industrial Marketing and John
Stock, Purchasing. Beginning
their second year of advisership are Ralph Maurer,
Marketing Services; Roy
Niceswanger, Special Reports .
and John Sanders, Distribution
Engineering.
JAMACO is manufacturing

VISIT OUR NEW ENLARGED.
-.GIFTS FOR

• BLACK MATRIX PICTURE TUBE-Sur·
' rounds dots that make up a color Tv picture
.~ 11 black background •• for .bright colors,
lharp.contrast

'

'

•

M

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Lizzie
Hanning,. Middleport; Pearl
Dillon , Reedsville; Madelyn '
Chaffin , Pomeroy ; David
Hendricks, Middleport ; Scott
Justis, Racine; Bernice Hawk,
Shade.

the

. . 11 . .

I

~ .
there's a crop nder JOUI' trees·· jist
for the picking. CASH IN ••• take r•

·~

. . . . . . . . . , ....115

Demo'cr11tic party "is . a
vigorous; vital and growmg
force in this state,"&gt;" the
governor said.
'
"Democrats across the state
supported a pr9gram, including tax reform, that made
sense to the people, Gilligan
said .
.
Nixon carried 86 counties m
the state. The two that went for
McGovern were Lucas and
Athens.

CUT'100

ears

Sibley, Charles Beegle, Eric
Wednesday night a Penny-aInfirmary was planned at
Morris, Lillian Walker.
Tuesday night's meeting of the Day program for missions was
Women 's Missionary Society of presented by the Christian
the Laurel Cliff Free MethOdist Crusaders under the direction
Church. The Society members of Mrs. Buckley, Mrs. Shirley
will join the Men's Fellowship Friend, and Mrs. Magel Smitl1. ·
RALLY SET
The program consisted of
for the visit on Nov. 20.
A Meigs County Youth Rally
Mrs. Jean Wright had charge songs, readings and a sktt. will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday at
of the meeting during which Mrs. Wise is the Penny-A-Day the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
time a collection was taken for chairman for the church.
.
..
missions . Mrs. Iva Powell
presented devotions with Mrs.
Donna Gilmore giving the
prayer. Mrs. Wright and Mrs.
Mildred Jacobs shared a tape
from a recent retreat which
they attended. Areading on the
thank offering box was given
by Mrs. Gilmore after which
each member stood and told of
something for which they were
thankful.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Esta Wise,
Tina Jacobs, Mrs. Marguerite
Leifheit, Mrs. Doris Buckley,
Mrs. Delia Curtis and Mrs:

111 W. MAIN

~

ul
WI•th oh•o
. J . res
·
·. ts.

themselves in this election to raise this
minimun'l amt~unt .. In many instances

•·

D~mocrats · in~ revolt

=·

a·clllll ...... W17 Dl4311N •

.

.

•SEARS 100" SOLID ST:ATE CONSOt:l
GUARANTEE
. TELEVISION
.

and family, and other relatives
here and ,at Tuppers Plains
over the weekend and attended
church here Sunday morning.

oo dangerous drugs and will
s~ren uous

vour

lif e

MONA DE x

vou

nervous .

No

exercise. Change
... start today .

costs u. oo· for a 20

day ;5 Upply and ss .oo tor twic e

the amount. Lose ugly fat or
vour money will be r ef unded
with flO qu es1ions asked bV !
Sw is he r &amp; Lohse Orugs. 112 E .
Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug
Store , Middleporl . Mail Orders

Filled .

•l

LA:--z~sov

•

CtiAIRS

t

E

Now · you can
comfortable

SEARS. ROEBUCK AND ·co,

chair

you ' ve

bu~

.that.
La-Z-Boy
always

dre8med of at 11\/r loW
prices.

'

SEARS

· AUTHORIZED

CATALOG-ME~CHANT

__.-·~tHE CREATOR OF

..;.MASON- .

__

·RIASONAILE DRUG PRICES"
271 Nartll SlcGnd
Middleport, Ohio

FURNITURE
herm•n Gr~te ·

777-5592

:c wt. 196 n...... ,..... 1179.M

•

t l.

.

\

Mason, w. v~ .

.

Many Specials ThrQughout the Store.
To
Mention A few :

'

~eg .
~eg .

51.29 4oz. Wool Yarn
49c- Rug Yarn
Reg . Sic Pr. Men's Hose
~eg . 51.98-lloz. Elmer's Glue-All
.
Reg . 58.S8- 16 pc. China Dinnerware Set
~eg . 51.00 Box so Christmas Cards
Reg . 3Jc KleeneM Tissues

87c
3Jc

l Pair 90c
99c
$6.66

68c

4 boxes 51 .00

Reg . 69c &amp; 79c Aluminum Bake-ware

Reg . 58.99 Electric Can Openers
Reg . 51 1.88 Afghan Kits

Jlor55.77
"'

$9.99

'

• .

'

, , r

MAKE POMEROY YOUR
SHOPPING
CENTER '
.•
.
,.
..
.....
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
:.~.:.:.~.~.:.:.~:-:{j:::::::::.::~;::·:·:·:-:o:.-.-.~:o:::::•::;•:•x•:·::::::::;···~-::g
... .. ... . ..... . .:.. . .

••• •.·•···=-···
.· .:.!-:·~·!·:·:-.-. •••.
····=·

····~· ··· ·····:.···-.;·i:!o;·:s········ ·-·.,...,.,.,.,

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
110 E. 2nd
•m .

SHIPMENT OF YOUNG PARAKEETS

BEN,FRANKLUN

PHONE
200-202 .-E(!st Main St.
992 -3498
POMEROY OHIO
- OPEN FRID.\1\y
.. &amp;. SA.TUIIllAV NIGHTS·TIL t

Pomeroy

.

""

'

~~---•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

SPEC.IALS

THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN.

The Schick

Hot Lather Machine
For Now- Reg.
For Gifts!
19.95

11

89

Clairol Air Brush Styling Dryer
Men or Ladies
Regular-',. Z4,34
'
'

laroid Colorpac
Film 108
Regular 5.39

97

ONLY

Mitchum Anti-Perspirant

SYLVANIA

BAYER

FLASHCUBES

CHILDREN'~

3 Cubes • 12 Rashes

ASPIRIN

Reg.
1.85

ONLY99e

. CONT
CAPSULES
VICkS
FORMULA 44
·EXTRA STRENGTH
COUGH MIXTURE
. 6-0UNCE
Reg. 1.98 .

119

36 Tabs
Reg. 43'

1 oz. Roll-On
REG.
3.00

19e

.SKINNY Dl

COLOGNE

ASPI~IN
100 Tablets • 5 Grains Eacb
Reg.

BAYER

2.25

ONLY

139

LAVORIS
.MOUTHWASH

PAMPERS

AND GARGLE
.'

7 OUNCE
Reg. 854

Daytime 30's
Reg.

1.85

PltFSCRIP110N
.· SERVICE .
'HARMACISTS
..Jo..:snv~

ONLY 69$

1.12
Reg.

2 oz. Cream

ONLY 1.89

4 RIGISTIRED
Authorized Dealer

'

Use Our Convement Lay-A-Way Plan ·

(Upon .Request)

1~:~ ONLY79e

not mak e

-·

t.'

.Dollar Stretcher Sale
Now In Progress

•

2-HOUR
CLEANING

10 CAPSULES

your desire fo r excess food .
Eat le ss -weigh leu . Contain s

.

JUST ARRIVED

Start losing weight today OR
MONEY BACK . MONADEX is
a tiny tablet that wHI help curb

.

.

-

Westwood, hand-picked by MeGovern as chairman of the
national commi ttee and a
symbpl of his reform move- ·
men t.
Even before the last votes
were counted, Sen. Lloyd M:Bentsen of Texas, Gov .
Wendell Ford of Kentucky, and
Gov . David Hall of Dklaboma
were calling for Mrs. Westwood's resignation.
Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel suggested that party
leaders responsible for Tuesday's debacle consider stepping down. Sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington also

LOSE UGLY FAT

f'!'• guo11111llle Itt S..il1~ Solid Slata Color 't,Yit~t·• ,

fret fron;l·deloda tn mmr1a1 or wonmenahlp. SIMiulil
deftd occur.M will:
·.
1. During the 111 yoer, fumllll aityl*ja 1~.-Wllli
necosaary to reinedy the der.ct frH ol charge. "·· ·
' 2. After 1 year and ~p lo Z year~, r11PW1he ~
be H ~.... cherglng only for ltbor. SerMt .Uftllll(.•
guarantee II 1\'llllble ' limply by COII~rigc IIIli
•
11 eton1 or Stmce C.nar tlirouv!1cMrt thll u.s; ·Jr{.
hol!18 iervlce on !&amp;ln. TVa end llrger.

Ot her likely departures,
all hough probably not so
quick.ly, were Attorney
General Richard G. Kleindie[lSt and Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson.
A "saddened" George S.
McGovern, his 22-month quest
for the presidency a disaster,
planned a long vacation in the
Virgin Islands, promising he
never again would seek the
White House. He told reporters
aboan) his plane " I really
· mean it."
But there was little clear
indica tion what McGovern
planned in the way of assuming
the ti tular leadership of the
De m o c r a t i c p a r t y ,
traditionally his 'until the next
convention .
Has Party Leadership
Frank Mankiewicz, his chief
political adviser, said that
McGovern, only 50, has "the
leadership of the party" and
will hold on until a new standard-bearer emerges.
Surveying the wreckage of
the returns, prominent Democrats began demanding that
the party dump Mrs. Jean·

-

cailect for a new lao~ at party subterfuge for a minority
reforms which he called "a takeover
._., ."
,,

YO.U

Open D11J 8 .U. 1D 10 P.M. ·- SundiJ 10:30 ll. tD 12:30 PJI.

ONLY

�,,
•
-.
BARNEY

-·
WANt" ADS.
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

.S P .M. 'D ay Belore Publication
Monday oea'(tline 9 a.m.

Cancellation - Correc t ions
~Ill be accepted until9 a .m . for

1

1

Da'r' of Pub licat ion

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reser ves th1
right to ed it or reject any ad ~
aeemed
objec t ional.
The
ttubllsher w ill not be resp.on si bft

YARD SALE , Friday an d
Satur day , 10 a . m . to 5

Clothi ng, toys and household

For

RATES
Want Ad Serv ic e

5 cents per Word one lnserJior,
M inimum Charge 75c
12 · cents per word three

consecutive inser tions .
18 cents per wo1 d six con .

·secuf ive insertrons.
25 Per Cen t Discount on paid
Jds and 'ads pa id within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
n .so for 50 word min imum .
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

Advert isement'.

OFFICE HOURS

8:30a .m . to 5: 00p .m . Da ily,
8 : 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our .

~ dear

pups. 5 months old, 2
KOS C~ KO SME TICS . Our PUREBRED SALE : West. llEAGLE
male, 1 fe male, 515 each ;
l.:t l csl
is
"One
Da y"
fra gra nce. Ot he r s inc lud e
" K" an d The Lem on Grove.

art ic les ; Fran k Hud so n
residence across fr om R~ci n e

Food Market.

1

for more tha n one incorr ec
Insertion .

p, m .

For Sale

Notice

Notice

Notice

Al sn new chi ldren's. prod ucts.

Ph(}ne Helen Jane, 992-Sl 13.

11 ·9·1fc

We 'd like l o ser ve you.

_10 14-tfc

Virginia Polled Herefore 2nd

annual fall sale on .November ·

10, 19]2 starling al 6:30 .EST
Friday evening at the Delmar
Pursley Farm in Ripley , 1
mil e lrom 1·77. Selling 9 bulls
a nd 39 heifers.
ll -6-4tc

GUN
SHOOT ,
Sunda y,
November 12, 1 p. m. Factory REVIVAL in progress at
choked guns only. Second
Langsville Christian Chur ch.
· place shoo ter s gel free shot in
Serv ices nightly , 7: 30 p . m .
nex t match. Assor ted meats .
E ver y o n e
w e l co m e.
Lost
Raci ne Gun Cl ub.
Evangel ist , Patri ck Eads and
JJ -9-31c
Pastor , Robert Musser.
WHITE ·FACE Hereford calf in
St iversville area ; Phone 84311 -9·6fc
SHOOTING MATCH, Sunday,
2145, L. Glusen camp il found .
. Nov . 12 . 1 p. m. Side Hi ll Gun HAYMAN'S Aucli on ~ a good
11-5-5tc
Cl ub; factory choked guns
place to QO each Friday
on ly : no alcoholic beverag es evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel
all owed ,· Assorted meats. Soft
Clilf on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west Wanted To Buy
drinks will be sold ; free
of Rock Spr in gs Fairground . OLD Furnllure. oak fables ,
Coffee ; Direct ions to match organs, dishes, clocks, brass
10·10.tfc
31!2 miles N of Rutland to
beds, or complete households.
Forest Acre s Park , take
Write
M. D. Miller, Rf. 4,
• I
gravel road to first road left.
Pomeroy , Ohi o. Call 992-6271.
12 m il e ; there will be signs
6-28-lfc
fr om park to match . Not
respon sible for acc idents .
bt: E: I" hides, $8 each , raw furs ;
Jl -9·31c
Ginseng $52 lb., Goldseal S3
lb.;
Carl Chevalier, Main
GUN SHOOT, al so r ifle matches
St reet. Wa te r ford . Ohi o.
- open sites only and specia l
JJ -7-12tc
deer slug match ; Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
'
November 12, 12 noon.
1963 FORD T.' Bird Convertible
Window
1l -8-3tc
for parts; phone 985·3333.

-

"HEll"
HEATING
&amp;
•
COOLING

m other, grand!flother
, and sister , Augusta Wt ll. who
• passed away one year ago,
• Nov. 9, 1971.
· · In oUr hearts the torch ot THERE will be a dairy open
house at Charles Theiss and
· memory,
so
n farm, Rac.ine , Ohio,
Burns unfl ickering , brig ht and

Air COnditioners
Ho.t Water\ Heaters
Plumbin"g
Electrical Work
.

;

- - - - --

.

• THE SHOP
ROAD

5331 : ·

9-7-tfc

-----POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
Park vieW Kennels, Phone 9925443.
8-JS.tfc
MODERN Walnul slyle stereo·
radio, AM· FM radio, 4
speaker sound system • .:1 1
speed automatic changer .

Balance $68 .79 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
11-5·61c

------

Quick

DALE
LITTLE
992-3884
Le1 Dick and Dale Help You
.w ith Your Meat Problem$.
'

•ROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTiNG
For Free Estimate · •
PHONE ggz:zsso

EARLY American stereo.radio
combination, AM~ FM radio, 4
LADIES to do some lighl phone
speaker
s.ound system, 4
work from their home. No
speed automatic changer . Real Estate For Sale
sell ing . Good commissions.
Balance $77 .5.:1 . Use our
Work as they want . Send
budget
terms . Call 992-7085. 6 ROOM house and bath. sun
name,
address
and
phone
God gives us life and cal ls us
ll -5-61c porch, 2 edra lots, aluminum
number fa Carpet.Care. Inc.,
s iding . Rf. I, Middleport,
back.
Box 60 1, Parkersburg, W. Va. - - -- - -ifhe old. lhe young ones too ;
Ohio .
Charley
Clark
n .a.3tp 66 STARCRAFT len I frailer ;
992-2448
And just one year ago today,,
residence
.
Contact
Sam
Clark
· stove, refr igera1or, sink ,
,The Lord above called you.
992-63()6.
Pomeroy, o.
NEED 2 salesmen to work the double dinette ; sleeps 8, $900
I
l1 -9-6tc
Mason . Gallla . Meigs area . or best offer ; phone 367-7530.
iluf death has left a .loneliness,
11·5-61c 536 W. Main, Pomeroy~ 2 story
Full time or part time. No
GARAGE Sale, Thursday and
,The world could never IIII i
experience necessary. Will - - - - - - - - Friday ; bikes. good toys,
lVour memory is as fresh today,
frame, a rooms, 4 bedrooms.
train . Excellent commission. COAL furnace complete, stoker
clothing and miscellaneous
:As In the hour you passed e~way. ·
11!2 baths. garage, basement,
Send name, address, and
fed with all controls ; Ronald
By Mrs, Francis Morris
items ; Elaine Sayre and June
•Sadly missed by her daughters.
all utilities. R. Downing,
phone number to Carpet. Hart, Ra cine, 0 .
Baker ; at Charles Baker
J Kathryn
and
Paul ine ;
Mrs. Thomas Hylbert of
Broker, 992·3731.
JJI31c
Care , Inc .• Box 601. Parkers"residence , J mile s from
: grandchildren,
Patricia, Lancaster came Sunday
I J.9-3tc
burg , W. Va .
Racine off Rt . 124.
Terry and Bill. and sisters
morning to take his aunt, Mrs.
lJ .7.Jtc
11 -8-Jtp 3 BEEGLE S, I male and 2
Alta and Della .
SPECIAL : Move in before
femal es; phone 992 6871.
IJ .9. lfp Edna Hayman, to the airport in
winter . 4 bedroom ranch
l1 -7-3fc
BUTCHER
parf.time,
:- - -- ' ' - - - - -- Columbus where she left by MARRIED couple wanl fo rent
ho"me on lJ• acre lot . Bath and
Tuesdays and Fridays tor
farm or country house. Call
a
half, buill. in kitchen, wall to
5
PIECE
breakfast
sel,
formi
ca
local
store
;
write
to
P.O.
Box
I
plane to spend the winter in
collect 61 4·299·6908.
wall carpet and garage. Price
top
,
modern
60"
long,
ex
·
729-M.
c-o
The
Daily
Sentinel,
Tampa, Florida wlth her
ll -5-9lc
$20,750.00 ; also a 5 bedroom
cellent
condition ;
will
Pomeroy , Ohio .:15769.
:
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
colon ial house on a :~;,.acre lot
sacrifice
;
phone
992
-2961
after
11-7-tfc
Bath and a half. buill-in
5
p.m.
'
Hylbert. Mrs. Hayman has
kitchen, dining room, family
11
·7·3tc
NE
EO
someone
to
rake
and
bag
I
been a guest of Mr. and Mrs.
room and the works. priced
leaves in Pomeroy ; $1 per
·
CriltBradfordandMrs.Esther
LEGAL NOTICEi
530.000.00.
Call Sherman E.
KAWASAKI
250,
$450
;
phone
hour ; phone 992-5292.
To : David Eugene McDonald
Summerfield,
985-3598 or 985992-5064
after
5
p.m.
, Mrs. Nora Damewood, Piper.
.
and Velvle VIrginia McDonald,
IJ.7-3fc
4177 .
JJ
-7-3fc
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Arnott
whose
last
known
address
was
--··•Akron,hasbeenspendinga few
2477 Fourth Street, Columbus,
II -2-30ic
:days with her sister, Mrs. spent the weekend with Mr. Oh io. You ore hereby notified For Rent
TWIN needle sewing machine
that you are Defendants in a
1972 model in walnof stand .
!Mary Reed and also visiting and Mrs. Kenneth Ours al legal
action entitled Pomeroyo 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
All
features built -i n to make
:were her granddaughter, Mrs. Wellsville . They were ac· National
Bank,
Rutland
phone Albert Hill 949·2261.
fancy
designs and do stretch
rcLELAND'
•
1 d Sh' 1
companied by Mrs. Emma Branch,
Rutland ,
Ohio,
ll -6-6tc sewing . Also bulfonholes ,
,Sharon Michae an
1r ey
Plaintiff, vs. David Eugene
'· REALTY" , ·
blind hems , etc . S43 .35 cash
!Chapman ;
Yakley enroute to her home at McDonald and Velvie VIrginia
608 E. Main · I
price or terms available .
: Diana Massar spent the . Columbiana, after a visit with McDonald . This .action has been 12x52 T~AILER In Syracuse.
Pomeroy ~ ·.JIP" l
Phone
992-5641.
'o
ter,
Mrs.
Iva
Orr.
assog.ned.
Case
No.
14,945,
and
Is
Adults
only
Phone
985-3504
her S1 "
pend 1ng on the Courl of Common
·
JJ -7-6tc
1weekend at the home of Mr .
•
::.. /
j
'
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gould of Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
after 5 p. m.
•and Mrs. Oscar Babcock,
The object of lhe complaint is
11 -9-31p
]If, STORY BRICK
VACUUM CLEANER . Electro
:Tuppers Plains.
Marietta spent Sunday with to foreclose the mortgage - - - - -- - - - SYRACUSE
~ 4 B.R. New
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. againsl the following described APARTMENTS near new Hygiene New Demonstra1or bath, utility, kitchen has
p
Mildred
k
has all cleaning attachments
i. Irene
ar er,
real estate :
M
H' h s h 1 11 7
:Caldwell, Buel Swnmerfield, Francjs M. orris..
Situate In · the VIllage of
eigs og c 00 ; ca 73· plus lhe new Electro Suds for dining bar. NEW F.A.G.
Meigs County , Oh iO.
5268 after 5 p.m .
shampooing carpet . Only
Mrs . Blil m tth of D ton Rutland,
furnace, air cond. Roofed
Rex
Summerfield
acBeginning east . 125.3 feet from
10·29·12tp $27.50
cash price or terms palio, porch, 2, le,~el lots,
~
.•' .
' ~ed .tpeipno\)ter,,~dna_ . was a~·P~.~~ $a1!1r~ay oi he~.- tho norlhwest corner at LQt ·No .1
ava.Jiijb)e. Phone 992-5641 .
near school. ·Asking $11,900,,
a t ss._Ed1tJi HS. man
26 In sa id Village of Rutllf\&lt;l ; 3•AND 4 ROOM furnished and
'
'
11 -7-61c
Summerfield to Spencer, W.
un • :&lt;I
Y
· • thence north 74 degrees 21 1 east
TRAILER SETUP
unfurnished apartments.
Va to attend funeral services
Mrs. hereon Johnson spent '20 . 1 feet : thence south 15
RURAL
~ 10 ACRES ~
Phone 992·5434.
ALL my shop equipment ; wheel
3
4·12-ffc
water,
septic,
patio, dug
for.her uncle. Jessie Rinehart. a day in Lucasville with Mr: ~!~firel~n! ~ 1 ~~~te:~ ,~~~~i~~ :~:
allgnJllent and balancinr;J ;
------~--~---2
''basement
with
3300 file
Mr Rinehart would have been and Mrs. Scott Wheeler. She creek bank ar 45 feet; lhence
electric
and
acetylene
'
'ed h
b h
south 37 degrees -42' west 25 feet 12x60, two bedrOOm mobile·· welding ; brake drum lathe
blocks,
cabin.
Natural
gas
,100 years old Nov. 21.
wasaccompam
orne Y er along the centerline ot said
home across from Bradbury
and shoe grinder ; many o1her
available, S3.700.
· Mary Louise and Christina grand~aughter, Mary· creek ; thence north ll degrees
school. Call 992-5308 or see
ifems ; sold only in a lump
EXCELLENT BUY
1 •
El' beth Wh 1
13' west 75 feel , crossing the
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
sum ; Paul Grueser 992-2053 . RUTLAND - 1 story frame.
1R1ggs, daughters of Mr. and
IZ?
ee er.
creek bank al 15 leet. to the
south lrom Bradbury School.
ll ·7-3tp 3 B. R., large bath, kitchen &amp;
MISS Mary Ann Walker has po int of beginning. containing
. Mrs. David Riggs Vienna W.
Pets welcome.
•
· '
'
b
f d t0 h h
th
0.031 acre, more or less The
utility, dining R.. paneling,
Va. were spendmg the weekend
een con l~e . . ~r orne e easterly 1ine of the abov~'· P ~ rcel
J1 .9.ffc
level lot, storage bldg ..
with Mrs. Leota Massar. Also - past week wtlh lllness.
is 1.5 teet from the easterly side
"
porches. 19.800.
Mr . . and Mrs. Charles ~e~~:rryo~~~~ ~~ Jh1~~?tfraon~
visiting were Mrs. Ulah Swan,
4 ROOMS and balh unfurnished
JUST RENOVATED
sister of Mrs. Massar and Mrs. Mallory left Saturday for their westerly side of the house.
house, 1650 Lincoln Heights.
MIDOLEPORT -. 1 story, 2
'·
h
t
Ri
d
1
G
It
Being
part
of
the
real
estate
Phone 992·3874.
orne. 8
v.e r 8 e, 8: 8 ~r described In deed recorded in
Bess Voorhees, Sturgis, South
B. R. balh , nice kitchen ,
ll -9·tfc
Dakota a cousin of Mrs. spendmg lwo weeks w1th h1s Volume 251, Page 361, Meigs
dining bar and room, 26 ft .
'
•
ts M
d M Ch 1
County Deed Records .
L.R ., fireplace. carport, all
Massar whom she hasn t seen paren ' r. an
rs. ar ey
The demand Is to foreclose all
5
ROOMS
and
bath
,
un
rooms
carpeted. $12,500.
in many years and Mr . and Mallory.
inte~est owned by you and olher
furnished , $65 a month ; phone
LARGE
LEVEL LOT
Mrs . l{qward
Neig.ler pa~~~s~::dr:g~~~~~t~O answer
Mrs. Ray Just~, Mrs. Esther
992-5524 after 2 p.m.
SYRACUSE Jlh slory ,
Riggs and daughters Logan. returned home after spending the Complaint with in twenty ·
l1 -S.Sfc
3
B.R.,
bath,
New
frame.
·
'
k · C1 b
'th M
eoght days after the last
Visltmg Mr. and Mrs. Rex a wee m 0 urn us WI
r. publication of this noti ce, which - - - -- F.A.G. furnace. basement,
Summerfield were Eileen and Mrs. Clyde Cross. She will be published once each TRAILER lol. Bob's Mobile
porches, lot fenced 2 sides .
Court, Syracuse ; phone 992·
·d M
d Mr
week tor six consecutive weeks .
·s5.000.
Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald accompame
r . an
s. The la51 publication will be
2951.
SEE US lo BUY OR SELL.
Summerfield and Amber George Neigler who sp~nt made on November 16, 1972. and
10-31-tfc
Pomeroy,
0.
' S d i C1 b
the twenty -eight days for an HENRY E. CLELAND
992-297l
un ay n oum us.
swer will commence on that . FURNISHED 2 bedrovnl
Parkersburg, W. Va., ,Mr. and
REALTOR
Mrs.
Robert
Russell
Mr. andMrs. SteveJacobsof dote.
~arlmenf, adulls only ,
Phone
992-7259
M'PLES, Fitzpatrick Or ' L kb
AI
B
In case or your ,failure to
Pomeroy; Mrs. Ken Caldwell
oc ourne
r
a~e, an~wer or otherwise respond as
lddleport; phone 992-3874.
If
no
answer
992-2568
chards , State Route 689,
and son Kenny Tuppers Columbus, spent Saturday w1th required by the Ohio Rules of ____________1_0-_
22-lfc
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
'
'
h
d
'" M
d Civil Procedure, ludgment wlll
8·30·lfC
Plains.
er gran paren~,
r . an ·be rendered against you for the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gray Mrs. Henry Roush.
relief dtmonded In lhe com · Auto Sales
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. . Mr. and Mrs. Unley Hart pl~~~ed : OcJ·ob•er
1970 PLYMOUTH
Clyde Headley , Tuppers returned home from Delaware
318 cu. ln .. 3
where
Hart underwent
floor ; call
c
Bird and Shelia were Mr. and
'64 CHEVY Biscayne , 6
Mrs. Marcia Ann Wells of
Mrs. Rex Summerfield.
cylinder , standard, good
Buy 2
ORDINANCE 414
Buel
Su~merfield, Washington C. H. spent the
motor and transmission.
,_....,. Pairs
110 Mechanic St.
Phone 992-7595.
•ORDINANCE
Charleston, W.Va. spent a few weekend with her parents, Mr. AN
'
Pomeroy,
Ohio4S769
:1-PAIR
FREE.
ESTABLISHING A SPECIAL
11 ·9-3fc
.
- \.
days with his mother, Edna and Mrs. Harry Curtis.
FUND KNOWN AS THE
Tho best buy In tho area.
GENERAL 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
NEW LISTING
Summerfield. Also visiting her · Miss Kim Taylor of FEDERAL
Havo sl~cks &amp; jeans for the
REVENUE SHARING TRUST
Gallipolis
spent
the
weekend
door
hardtop
.
Factory
air,
8
ROOM
ANTIQUE BRICK
whole family: Save Dnewere Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
FUND
low
mileage.
new
tires.
Like
4
large
bedrooms,. bltth,
J'hird.
Parker, Syracuse; Mr. and with her grandparents, Mr.
new condition inside and out .
furnace
.
Living
room 1.6x36,
WHEREAS
,
the
Congress
has
"-POMEROY
Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Middleport; and Mrs. Frank Cleland.
Phore 985-3912.
en acted the State and Local
with
gas
fireplace.
Large
611 Jack W. Carsoy,Mgr .•
Assistance Act of 1972 prov iding
11 -9-6lp
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker
basement,
J
car
garage,
Phone 992-2181
a s ystem of general revenue
and children, Marietta.
barn for horses and about 2
shar ing with states and units of 1963 CORVETTER . Phone 992·
local government, and
5866
COAL. Limestone, Excelsior acres of land . All for
Mrs . Sandra Massar atWHEREAS, Section 12J ta l
.
Salt Works, E. Main St .. $21.500.00.
1-9-3tc
1
tended funeral services for
NOTICE ON FILING
(1 ) of the Federal Act requires
Pomeroy . Phone 992:3891.
NEW LISTING
OF INVENTORY
each unll of local government to
Mrs. Grace Kelly at the Orange
4-12·tfC
98 ACRES - Of vacant land
AND APPRAISEMENT
establish a trust fund Ia receive .1969 FORD, very good condition
Christian Church Saturday.
The Stale ol Ohio, Meigs federal revenue shar ing , and
on township road 141, most of
and low miles . Must sell due JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
WHEREAS , the Bureau ot
Wednesday evening supper County . Probate Court
to Illness. $1 ,195. Phone 985llfenced. Producing gas well
To the Adm lnistrator of fhe Inspection and Supervision of
Sewing Machine. Will sell for
4116.
with free gas for one
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rex estate ; to such ol t[le follow ing Public Of~lces has approved the
small
balance
of
$36.21
or
11 ·9·3tc payments may be arranged.
residence. All minerals.
Summerfield· were Mr. and· as are residents of fhe State ot establishment of a "Federal
Ohio , viz : - the survivinJI General Revenue Sharing Trust
Trailer
space with electric
992-5331.
Phone
Mrs. :. Herbert
Parker, spouse, the next of kin. the Fund" In each municipal For·Sale
dug
well. Asking
·and
·
9-7-!fc
Syracuse; Buel Summerfield, beneli clar les under the Wlll ; corporat i on receiving
$16,500.00.
and to the attorney or attorne~Ys assistance under the . Federa l
Charleston; Edna Sum- ~epresenting any of the Act. as required by Section HORSE and pony aucllon SCHNAUZER puppies, AKC,
NEW LISTING
Friday, Nov . 10, al 7 p.m.
Sail &amp; Pepper, ears chopped,
merfield, Sherman Sum· a1~j me~:~oy~ed0~~~~~~~:. Mid - fo0Je~2 , of ·the Ohio Rev ised
BUNGALOW
- 2 bedrooms,
8
Ohio Valley Livestock Co .•
wormed and shots ; healthy nice bafh, large living and
merfield and · Gerald Sum· dlepo r t, Ohio , Salisbury
NOW, THEREFORE , BE IT
Gallipolis.
S85 ; phone Coolville 667-6214.
ORDAINED by the Council of
merfield was a Saturday Town ship , No . 20804.
11 -8-3lc
. ll -5-12lp kitchen. Store ne~t door .
You are hereby notified that the Village of Pomeroy , State,of
Only $4500.00.
evening guest.
th e InVentory and 'Ap - Ohio that :
N,EW LISTING
·
SeCtion 1. There Is hereby APPLt:~. Red ano uv ...nm
.
Mrs. June Epple had surgery orai sement of the estate of th e
SALISBURY
TOWNSHIP~
aforefnent iQned. deceased , lote establiShed a SP,eciallund lobe
Delicious. Grimes, Romes, Real Estate For ale
at the Holzer Medical Center, of
said county , was filed in this known as the' Federal General
Winesaps, Jonathans-, CartMeigs school district, 2 or 4
HOUSE In Long Bottom ; phone bedrooms, bath, automatic
Court . Said Inventory and Revenue Shillrl~g Trust Fund "
1 d d M 1 1 h 10 lb f
Gallipolis. .
Appr!lsement will be tor· under the provisions of Sect1on
an an
C nos '
s. or
985.3529. ·
'
I
Sunday dinner. guests of hearing before this Court on the 570S. 12 of the Ohio Revised
furnace heal. Full b;!sement,
99 cents, $2 a bushel and up.
6-11-tfc'
lith
day
of
November
,
1972,
at
Code.
Same
special
price
on
1 acre of land. Asking
Edna Suriunerlield and
10 :00 o'clock A.M.
Section 2. All monies paid to
potafoesand kraul tabbage, J 8 RWM. house and oa1n, nice ·
$hernlan
Mr. and Mrs.
x~~~t.l g;;sot~e~::~· ri~u:r
~oec~lll~al~~.~'1:~1:~aen~!a~c~~t ~ ~"~ a
~ldway ~~et, . · large tot: natiJrafgas, bullf-in
tiOTTOM LAND
Earl ·s ummerfield, Murrys· ·ethem
at leasl flvt days prior to' 1972 shall ·be credited to said
· · alr'l ·• omeroy ,.
ne
cabinets In kitchen. Close to
6
ACRES
- 1 mile · from
992·2582 ·
ville, Pa. and IIley plan tO •lay the date set for ·heering .
lund and ex-p·ended •in ac radio station In .BradbUry.
route
7
just
off · 124. Now
11 ·8· 3tC
Given vndtr mv hand and cordance with tht terms and
Phone 992-2602.
for a w~k with his mother and
being
..
o!!ered..JQ!'.
-~,_0110.00. _
'sell I of said Court, this 31st day Provisions of seld Federal Ac1.
10-29·121C
1011.
WE ARE GLAD TO BE
ol October 1972.
Section 3. ThiS Ordinance CB RADIO, antenna, also pollee -.....,.----- - - - Manning D. Webster shalt take effect and be in force
SALES PEOPLE lN THE
Mn. Sandra Mil11881' went to
Judge anr;t eX-officio Clerk of from and after the earliest - scanner. Dailey's Radio Shop, I.OMFORTAI!L t: two srory
COUNTY. WANT TO SEE
aee Mr. Richard Spencer at . 1
Box 21 ·B, Long Bottom, Ohio. home, full basement, · bath
'
Meigs Countv peri!Od allowed bx taw .
THE PLACE GROW THEN
1
1-8-6tc
and
o
;,,
all
ached
garage,
and
Passed this 6th day of
Common Pleas Court
Camden Clark Hospital,
November, 1972. ·
LIST WITH US.
.
extra lot. In a good location.
ParlrllnburB and also Mrs.
Probate Division
Basic
furniture
available.
L.
'TEAFORD,
HELEN
W. G. Boronlck ONE REGISTERED female
Donna Ly0111, who has a new
ASSOCIATE
Bv A_
nn B. wBtson,
iree walker coon hound. Phore 992·7384 or 992·7133 for
Mayor
appplntmenf .
Deputy
Clerk
Phore 949-4761.
•by slrl. .
Attest: Jane IJI{allon
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWING$
1J-3.6tc
.
Jl -9-6fc
991·3!25
-~··Sandra Massar (11) 2, 9, 2t
(1119,16, 2tc
true ;
Its light Is sweet for il is fed,
On love end tender thoughts of
you .

Sunday, November 12. 1972.
11 ·8-3fc

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Racine

Social Events

I

'

;;-:-:-::::;-:-:::-:.---~

:Eastern

LEGAL NOTICE

Local News

s

ar

1::

SHOTGUNS
RIFLES
AND
AMMUNITION

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALIS AND SERVI~

Virgil B.
Broker
.

LEGAL NOTICE

------

S

I •

·were

m:

':t

GJMME' A
HAI\ID

JEST .
HEEREDTH'TERRIBLE BAD
NEWS ABOUT SNUFFY
BREAK IN' HIS LAIG

I

POMEROY

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

8 TRACK STEREO, freight
damaged , in beautiful walnut
console. Will sell for $101:50 or
pay S1 .50per week . Phone 992-

REGISTERED
German
shorthair Pointer Birddog
puppies . Expensive but worth
it.
Ready any time. Vernon
l1 -3-6lc
Weber, 742-5625.
ll ·Hic

Help Wanted

Business Services.

· youth bed complele, 120: steel
tool box for narrow bed
pickup; 16"x16"x50" , $25 1
phone 985·3373 evenings.
ll -8·3tp
---------,..
METAL La1he, 36" between
centers, 12" s;wvtng ; also large
drill press; phone 985·4118.
11·8-3rc

LOWEEZY!! I

HOME &amp; AUTO

'

992-2094
606 E. Main

From the largest T ••• ~.
Bulldozer Radiator
Small~st Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
R.!dl!tor Specialist

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

CAMPUS

and

SMlTH NELSON

¥0U'LL NI;VE~ GUESS WHAT$
WRONG WITH MYCOiiRSC: IN
ADVANCE!) ANALYnC,41.
GEOMETRYj

FURNITURE

MOTORtJNC.
992-2114 ·
Pomeroy

Stotf In and See Our
Floor Display.

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free E.Siimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or ROQer Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-352S
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232.

SOME KISS 6HE
GAve Me, EH, OFFICER 1

on Most American Cars

:-GUARANTEE0:..
Phnnl! 992-2094

U'LABNER

Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto

OH-

??·DIDN'T ·

OpenBTII S
Monday lhru SaturdaY
6~ E. Main,, ~~me_roy, 0 .

SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED,' REPAIRED.
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, 'OHIO. PHONE
662-3035.
10-4-lfc

·f5ULP!5HO'

'NUFF···

DRIVE A LITTLE
-SAVE A LOTI

Kuhl's Bargain Center
Rt. 1 "at caution light"

TUPPERS PlAINS

REA-OY -M'I·X
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.'
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30.ffc

Clean used furniture

Guaranteed appliances
BIKES Huffy' 20",
'Murray 10 speeds~ discount
prices.
-'' L:AYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7; Closed Mondays

WINNIE WINKLE
TELL IN?.. MYRT
® ! 1MSORR~ M\55 ThATMY TIME 15 IMI
6Ul MR. PORTANT, 1'00. HE
6U5Y.
NEEDS A LE550N IN

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rales. Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell , SEE US FOR:- Awnings, storm
Owner &amp; Operator.
doors and wfndows, carports,
5·12-ttc
marquees, aluminum siding,•
and railing. A. Jacob, sale!'
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer .
representative . For free
Complete Service
estimates, phone . Charles
Phone 949-3821
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V:
Racine, Ohio
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Criff Bradford
3-2-ttc'
5-1-tfc
·BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
DOZER and back hoe work,
Septic tanks installed. George
ponds and s~plic tanks, dll·
(Bill) Pullins. Phore 992-2478.
ching service; top soli, fill ,
4·25-tfc
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Excavating . Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr , Jr .
9·1 -lfc
.SEWING MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284 ..
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ,
Authorized Singer Sales and .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29·tfc,

MAKE
ANOTHER
DATE?

EVERYDAY

CAN

MANNE~ .

We talk· to wu

like a, pt!ISln

----'~--RUS~C:.LL. S
Furniture

and .

.

I

1t I I

, "

I

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Complete front end service, .
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced
elec-·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992-'
3213 .
7-27-ffc

.·.

Lost

your

2966.

6· 15-ffc

Can You
these Buys???

ATTENTION FARMERS .
Largest choice of all breeds of
A. I. Sires by phoning Leland
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
Chev. Biscayne, 4 dr. Vcall station for ·service , inautomatic.
p. steering,
formation or direct sales.
lvlnvlinlerior,
good
11 -9-30fc
$1295
Buick La Sabre H. T.,
latJlornalic,
P.S.,.P. B., radio.
PRICED for quick sale, 1965 51
$1295
x 10 New Moon Mobile Home,
furnished; call 992-2076.
JJ -Htp
Ply. Roadrunner, H.T.,
"'"""'""',..,-~"'-,---,-V-8, automatic, P.S.,
1..ASH paid for all makes and ln•dil&gt;.
$799
f.!IOdels of mobile homes. •
Phone area code 614-423-95jf. :
Chev. BelAir Wagon, V4-13-lfc
std.lrans., radio.
$1095
Chev. I mpa Cpe.. V-8,
Comet "6" 2 dr.~ std.
ltr•n•&gt;-. good tires.
$399

... SUCH MEASURES
GUESS YOU
TRIED \'OUR BEST,
.PUNJAB ·.. AH'THAT's IEXIREI~E
Jll L ANYBODY CAN
E~PECT

LIFE ANi50fATHr''
-,
- -~

~"'"~

FROM A

ACROSS
e.g.

4. Misstep ;
slip
9. Mother
of
Hezekiah
10. Slate of

confusion

LET I-IlM PULL I-llS
UP IF l-IE WANTS
WE'vE GOT ~IM.''

.

(~~ ·~

'

I SAYES

Behest;
~~:~~m~~iii1 12. edict
wmiams

10. Divulcecl
12. Btahop'a
heoddreu
17.

13. Owned
14, Son
of

'

·65.. Deceive
(3 wds.)
7, Surfeit
1. Corrected

u.!~r~

22.

21. Vehemenee

8 x 32, COMPLETELY fur nished, 2 bedrooms, Inside
billh, kitchen, living room and
TV, 5800 call or contact Lorry
Hubbard, Syracuse, Ohio 9923364.
ll-3·6tc
1970 MOBILE Home with
washer, air-conditioner and
olher e~tras Included ; excellent cordlflon; phone 992·
7387 or 985-3565. ,.
ll -J.6fp

n.

form

I

J)US/IOL

PMDE5 fS'I UNm~&amp;

'1Y

Zl.

NaYlco·

ton

lslancb
29. Colondo
retort
M.Oblerve

MIW II' ~

DIVIDING.

the eire led lelten
I ' I I toNowronn the ourprioe
u .
arralllt

Ir~~~,:Jii~~~·~;·;=l· ounemd bJihe above cartoon.
r

I

'i

IIIIIWtr,

MIIIMSIILGIIISWIIIIn

J

(X XIX XXXJ

J•mt.l.,, IMII. PIONY Kmll tAPill
l'eeterd•1 '•

POMEROY.
MOTOR 00.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Till I: 00

Nearly
-Mine"
Rib-tick·
llng
Mlschie·
vous
tyke

POMEROY

.MILLER &amp;
SONS
,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

At the Cross Roads on ·Rt. 124

AXYDLBAAXll
II L 0 N G FE L .L, O W
One letter simply ~tanda for anothe~. In thfl sample A- Is
used for the three L'o, X ·for the two O's, etc. Sin1ie letters,
apostrophes, the leneth arid formaUoil or the words au all
hlzltl. Ea~ day lhe code lelten are dlleunt.

SPECIAL
a Pek

16 oz. Btls

CllDTOQVOTB8

Plus Tax
&amp; Deposit
I

rx · [J

%5, Insect

1961
Rambler Wagon,
reduced.
1962 Olds Fas, 4 Dr. reduced.
1963 Nova HT Cpe., reduced.
Several other outstanding
buys in Budget Prlc.d Cars,

1220 Washington Blvd,
,
1:423·7521
BE~PRE, C .

.. =~=.

DOWN
1. Solemn
promises
2. Direction
on

ll.-

DICK TRACY

tlltM...,

.....,~ ..tJ c::

tiMerunble
Jumhla,
- letter, to IKh equue, to
form four ordln&amp;rJ wordo.

36. Classes;
kinds
37, Digit
38, Done
with
39. Chinese
dynasty

1. Encina,

(

o!J{!l]di1[£;-"'-~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

PERsoM '"

'99" Specials

MILLER ,
MO.BILE HOM'E~)

TH€ CfJL~ 1}11l.Y.?
SHE w.a.~T~D rOR A.

!!BfB~ Of'

EASY PICKIN'

Jf:,omplete mqblle hqm'e
vice ~ plus gigantic
l~:~~:~r of mobile home!
I•
avallable.at ...

IT~

RfTII&lt;~MENT ~FT!

Mobile Homes For Sale

Air
•Awnings .
•:··Underpinning.

. ;l l

.

in the
World • • •

-c--==----c=c---~

operator's license? Call 992-

· lit •

ON YOUR DIAL

AU.TOMObiLL.. 111!1\Jrance been

cancelled?

SOU~1

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

EARTH MOVING

Upholstery; free
delivery;
·
.

IT PDE$N'T HAVS

JEW

Fl

CARR9LLS

FJ

QXD,

-J l_~- YWFQS, .

YCD

EZOU

QXP . FJ

Z

~FUW

RZHZYOW

PHYSICALLY

. WQ XUNOWTADSHOMEWORRU:S

llf8TEAD 01' AN ACHJlfG BACX.-BOIIID lllGAJ\T
to 1m 11:1111 Ptaw. . sro•lealt, ,.,,)

.

'

XU

z- un'WQV -AFOOFZN HWQQ

Y.......,.. rij»l:.1,....: JOBS AU

B,UIR,BUT

~EZD

I •

An~•er1

SoNmb: Ub ,.. . ,.,., t,al~ a loolt at 1hU
dOfl llo C~lna-A "PIICI"

�,,
•
-.
BARNEY

-·
WANt" ADS.
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

.S P .M. 'D ay Belore Publication
Monday oea'(tline 9 a.m.

Cancellation - Correc t ions
~Ill be accepted until9 a .m . for

1

1

Da'r' of Pub licat ion

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reser ves th1
right to ed it or reject any ad ~
aeemed
objec t ional.
The
ttubllsher w ill not be resp.on si bft

YARD SALE , Friday an d
Satur day , 10 a . m . to 5

Clothi ng, toys and household

For

RATES
Want Ad Serv ic e

5 cents per Word one lnserJior,
M inimum Charge 75c
12 · cents per word three

consecutive inser tions .
18 cents per wo1 d six con .

·secuf ive insertrons.
25 Per Cen t Discount on paid
Jds and 'ads pa id within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
n .so for 50 word min imum .
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

Advert isement'.

OFFICE HOURS

8:30a .m . to 5: 00p .m . Da ily,
8 : 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our .

~ dear

pups. 5 months old, 2
KOS C~ KO SME TICS . Our PUREBRED SALE : West. llEAGLE
male, 1 fe male, 515 each ;
l.:t l csl
is
"One
Da y"
fra gra nce. Ot he r s inc lud e
" K" an d The Lem on Grove.

art ic les ; Fran k Hud so n
residence across fr om R~ci n e

Food Market.

1

for more tha n one incorr ec
Insertion .

p, m .

For Sale

Notice

Notice

Notice

Al sn new chi ldren's. prod ucts.

Ph(}ne Helen Jane, 992-Sl 13.

11 ·9·1fc

We 'd like l o ser ve you.

_10 14-tfc

Virginia Polled Herefore 2nd

annual fall sale on .November ·

10, 19]2 starling al 6:30 .EST
Friday evening at the Delmar
Pursley Farm in Ripley , 1
mil e lrom 1·77. Selling 9 bulls
a nd 39 heifers.
ll -6-4tc

GUN
SHOOT ,
Sunda y,
November 12, 1 p. m. Factory REVIVAL in progress at
choked guns only. Second
Langsville Christian Chur ch.
· place shoo ter s gel free shot in
Serv ices nightly , 7: 30 p . m .
nex t match. Assor ted meats .
E ver y o n e
w e l co m e.
Lost
Raci ne Gun Cl ub.
Evangel ist , Patri ck Eads and
JJ -9-31c
Pastor , Robert Musser.
WHITE ·FACE Hereford calf in
St iversville area ; Phone 84311 -9·6fc
SHOOTING MATCH, Sunday,
2145, L. Glusen camp il found .
. Nov . 12 . 1 p. m. Side Hi ll Gun HAYMAN'S Aucli on ~ a good
11-5-5tc
Cl ub; factory choked guns
place to QO each Friday
on ly : no alcoholic beverag es evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel
all owed ,· Assorted meats. Soft
Clilf on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west Wanted To Buy
drinks will be sold ; free
of Rock Spr in gs Fairground . OLD Furnllure. oak fables ,
Coffee ; Direct ions to match organs, dishes, clocks, brass
10·10.tfc
31!2 miles N of Rutland to
beds, or complete households.
Forest Acre s Park , take
Write
M. D. Miller, Rf. 4,
• I
gravel road to first road left.
Pomeroy , Ohi o. Call 992-6271.
12 m il e ; there will be signs
6-28-lfc
fr om park to match . Not
respon sible for acc idents .
bt: E: I" hides, $8 each , raw furs ;
Jl -9·31c
Ginseng $52 lb., Goldseal S3
lb.;
Carl Chevalier, Main
GUN SHOOT, al so r ifle matches
St reet. Wa te r ford . Ohi o.
- open sites only and specia l
JJ -7-12tc
deer slug match ; Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
'
November 12, 12 noon.
1963 FORD T.' Bird Convertible
Window
1l -8-3tc
for parts; phone 985·3333.

-

"HEll"
HEATING
&amp;
•
COOLING

m other, grand!flother
, and sister , Augusta Wt ll. who
• passed away one year ago,
• Nov. 9, 1971.
· · In oUr hearts the torch ot THERE will be a dairy open
house at Charles Theiss and
· memory,
so
n farm, Rac.ine , Ohio,
Burns unfl ickering , brig ht and

Air COnditioners
Ho.t Water\ Heaters
Plumbin"g
Electrical Work
.

;

- - - - --

.

• THE SHOP
ROAD

5331 : ·

9-7-tfc

-----POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
Park vieW Kennels, Phone 9925443.
8-JS.tfc
MODERN Walnul slyle stereo·
radio, AM· FM radio, 4
speaker sound system • .:1 1
speed automatic changer .

Balance $68 .79 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
11-5·61c

------

Quick

DALE
LITTLE
992-3884
Le1 Dick and Dale Help You
.w ith Your Meat Problem$.
'

•ROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTiNG
For Free Estimate · •
PHONE ggz:zsso

EARLY American stereo.radio
combination, AM~ FM radio, 4
LADIES to do some lighl phone
speaker
s.ound system, 4
work from their home. No
speed automatic changer . Real Estate For Sale
sell ing . Good commissions.
Balance $77 .5.:1 . Use our
Work as they want . Send
budget
terms . Call 992-7085. 6 ROOM house and bath. sun
name,
address
and
phone
God gives us life and cal ls us
ll -5-61c porch, 2 edra lots, aluminum
number fa Carpet.Care. Inc.,
s iding . Rf. I, Middleport,
back.
Box 60 1, Parkersburg, W. Va. - - -- - -ifhe old. lhe young ones too ;
Ohio .
Charley
Clark
n .a.3tp 66 STARCRAFT len I frailer ;
992-2448
And just one year ago today,,
residence
.
Contact
Sam
Clark
· stove, refr igera1or, sink ,
,The Lord above called you.
992-63()6.
Pomeroy, o.
NEED 2 salesmen to work the double dinette ; sleeps 8, $900
I
l1 -9-6tc
Mason . Gallla . Meigs area . or best offer ; phone 367-7530.
iluf death has left a .loneliness,
11·5-61c 536 W. Main, Pomeroy~ 2 story
Full time or part time. No
GARAGE Sale, Thursday and
,The world could never IIII i
experience necessary. Will - - - - - - - - Friday ; bikes. good toys,
lVour memory is as fresh today,
frame, a rooms, 4 bedrooms.
train . Excellent commission. COAL furnace complete, stoker
clothing and miscellaneous
:As In the hour you passed e~way. ·
11!2 baths. garage, basement,
Send name, address, and
fed with all controls ; Ronald
By Mrs, Francis Morris
items ; Elaine Sayre and June
•Sadly missed by her daughters.
all utilities. R. Downing,
phone number to Carpet. Hart, Ra cine, 0 .
Baker ; at Charles Baker
J Kathryn
and
Paul ine ;
Mrs. Thomas Hylbert of
Broker, 992·3731.
JJI31c
Care , Inc .• Box 601. Parkers"residence , J mile s from
: grandchildren,
Patricia, Lancaster came Sunday
I J.9-3tc
burg , W. Va .
Racine off Rt . 124.
Terry and Bill. and sisters
morning to take his aunt, Mrs.
lJ .7.Jtc
11 -8-Jtp 3 BEEGLE S, I male and 2
Alta and Della .
SPECIAL : Move in before
femal es; phone 992 6871.
IJ .9. lfp Edna Hayman, to the airport in
winter . 4 bedroom ranch
l1 -7-3fc
BUTCHER
parf.time,
:- - -- ' ' - - - - -- Columbus where she left by MARRIED couple wanl fo rent
ho"me on lJ• acre lot . Bath and
Tuesdays and Fridays tor
farm or country house. Call
a
half, buill. in kitchen, wall to
5
PIECE
breakfast
sel,
formi
ca
local
store
;
write
to
P.O.
Box
I
plane to spend the winter in
collect 61 4·299·6908.
wall carpet and garage. Price
top
,
modern
60"
long,
ex
·
729-M.
c-o
The
Daily
Sentinel,
Tampa, Florida wlth her
ll -5-9lc
$20,750.00 ; also a 5 bedroom
cellent
condition ;
will
Pomeroy , Ohio .:15769.
:
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
colon ial house on a :~;,.acre lot
sacrifice
;
phone
992
-2961
after
11-7-tfc
Bath and a half. buill-in
5
p.m.
'
Hylbert. Mrs. Hayman has
kitchen, dining room, family
11
·7·3tc
NE
EO
someone
to
rake
and
bag
I
been a guest of Mr. and Mrs.
room and the works. priced
leaves in Pomeroy ; $1 per
·
CriltBradfordandMrs.Esther
LEGAL NOTICEi
530.000.00.
Call Sherman E.
KAWASAKI
250,
$450
;
phone
hour ; phone 992-5292.
To : David Eugene McDonald
Summerfield,
985-3598 or 985992-5064
after
5
p.m.
, Mrs. Nora Damewood, Piper.
.
and Velvle VIrginia McDonald,
IJ.7-3fc
4177 .
JJ
-7-3fc
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Arnott
whose
last
known
address
was
--··•Akron,hasbeenspendinga few
2477 Fourth Street, Columbus,
II -2-30ic
:days with her sister, Mrs. spent the weekend with Mr. Oh io. You ore hereby notified For Rent
TWIN needle sewing machine
that you are Defendants in a
1972 model in walnof stand .
!Mary Reed and also visiting and Mrs. Kenneth Ours al legal
action entitled Pomeroyo 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
All
features built -i n to make
:were her granddaughter, Mrs. Wellsville . They were ac· National
Bank,
Rutland
phone Albert Hill 949·2261.
fancy
designs and do stretch
rcLELAND'
•
1 d Sh' 1
companied by Mrs. Emma Branch,
Rutland ,
Ohio,
ll -6-6tc sewing . Also bulfonholes ,
,Sharon Michae an
1r ey
Plaintiff, vs. David Eugene
'· REALTY" , ·
blind hems , etc . S43 .35 cash
!Chapman ;
Yakley enroute to her home at McDonald and Velvie VIrginia
608 E. Main · I
price or terms available .
: Diana Massar spent the . Columbiana, after a visit with McDonald . This .action has been 12x52 T~AILER In Syracuse.
Pomeroy ~ ·.JIP" l
Phone
992-5641.
'o
ter,
Mrs.
Iva
Orr.
assog.ned.
Case
No.
14,945,
and
Is
Adults
only
Phone
985-3504
her S1 "
pend 1ng on the Courl of Common
·
JJ -7-6tc
1weekend at the home of Mr .
•
::.. /
j
'
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gould of Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
after 5 p. m.
•and Mrs. Oscar Babcock,
The object of lhe complaint is
11 -9-31p
]If, STORY BRICK
VACUUM CLEANER . Electro
:Tuppers Plains.
Marietta spent Sunday with to foreclose the mortgage - - - - -- - - - SYRACUSE
~ 4 B.R. New
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. againsl the following described APARTMENTS near new Hygiene New Demonstra1or bath, utility, kitchen has
p
Mildred
k
has all cleaning attachments
i. Irene
ar er,
real estate :
M
H' h s h 1 11 7
:Caldwell, Buel Swnmerfield, Francjs M. orris..
Situate In · the VIllage of
eigs og c 00 ; ca 73· plus lhe new Electro Suds for dining bar. NEW F.A.G.
Meigs County , Oh iO.
5268 after 5 p.m .
shampooing carpet . Only
Mrs . Blil m tth of D ton Rutland,
furnace, air cond. Roofed
Rex
Summerfield
acBeginning east . 125.3 feet from
10·29·12tp $27.50
cash price or terms palio, porch, 2, le,~el lots,
~
.•' .
' ~ed .tpeipno\)ter,,~dna_ . was a~·P~.~~ $a1!1r~ay oi he~.- tho norlhwest corner at LQt ·No .1
ava.Jiijb)e. Phone 992-5641 .
near school. ·Asking $11,900,,
a t ss._Ed1tJi HS. man
26 In sa id Village of Rutllf\&lt;l ; 3•AND 4 ROOM furnished and
'
'
11 -7-61c
Summerfield to Spencer, W.
un • :&lt;I
Y
· • thence north 74 degrees 21 1 east
TRAILER SETUP
unfurnished apartments.
Va to attend funeral services
Mrs. hereon Johnson spent '20 . 1 feet : thence south 15
RURAL
~ 10 ACRES ~
Phone 992·5434.
ALL my shop equipment ; wheel
3
4·12-ffc
water,
septic,
patio, dug
for.her uncle. Jessie Rinehart. a day in Lucasville with Mr: ~!~firel~n! ~ 1 ~~~te:~ ,~~~~i~~ :~:
allgnJllent and balancinr;J ;
------~--~---2
''basement
with
3300 file
Mr Rinehart would have been and Mrs. Scott Wheeler. She creek bank ar 45 feet; lhence
electric
and
acetylene
'
'ed h
b h
south 37 degrees -42' west 25 feet 12x60, two bedrOOm mobile·· welding ; brake drum lathe
blocks,
cabin.
Natural
gas
,100 years old Nov. 21.
wasaccompam
orne Y er along the centerline ot said
home across from Bradbury
and shoe grinder ; many o1her
available, S3.700.
· Mary Louise and Christina grand~aughter, Mary· creek ; thence north ll degrees
school. Call 992-5308 or see
ifems ; sold only in a lump
EXCELLENT BUY
1 •
El' beth Wh 1
13' west 75 feel , crossing the
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
sum ; Paul Grueser 992-2053 . RUTLAND - 1 story frame.
1R1ggs, daughters of Mr. and
IZ?
ee er.
creek bank al 15 leet. to the
south lrom Bradbury School.
ll ·7-3tp 3 B. R., large bath, kitchen &amp;
MISS Mary Ann Walker has po int of beginning. containing
. Mrs. David Riggs Vienna W.
Pets welcome.
•
· '
'
b
f d t0 h h
th
0.031 acre, more or less The
utility, dining R.. paneling,
Va. were spendmg the weekend
een con l~e . . ~r orne e easterly 1ine of the abov~'· P ~ rcel
J1 .9.ffc
level lot, storage bldg ..
with Mrs. Leota Massar. Also - past week wtlh lllness.
is 1.5 teet from the easterly side
"
porches. 19.800.
Mr . . and Mrs. Charles ~e~~:rryo~~~~ ~~ Jh1~~?tfraon~
visiting were Mrs. Ulah Swan,
4 ROOMS and balh unfurnished
JUST RENOVATED
sister of Mrs. Massar and Mrs. Mallory left Saturday for their westerly side of the house.
house, 1650 Lincoln Heights.
MIDOLEPORT -. 1 story, 2
'·
h
t
Ri
d
1
G
It
Being
part
of
the
real
estate
Phone 992·3874.
orne. 8
v.e r 8 e, 8: 8 ~r described In deed recorded in
Bess Voorhees, Sturgis, South
B. R. balh , nice kitchen ,
ll -9·tfc
Dakota a cousin of Mrs. spendmg lwo weeks w1th h1s Volume 251, Page 361, Meigs
dining bar and room, 26 ft .
'
•
ts M
d M Ch 1
County Deed Records .
L.R ., fireplace. carport, all
Massar whom she hasn t seen paren ' r. an
rs. ar ey
The demand Is to foreclose all
5
ROOMS
and
bath
,
un
rooms
carpeted. $12,500.
in many years and Mr . and Mallory.
inte~est owned by you and olher
furnished , $65 a month ; phone
LARGE
LEVEL LOT
Mrs . l{qward
Neig.ler pa~~~s~::dr:g~~~~~t~O answer
Mrs. Ray Just~, Mrs. Esther
992-5524 after 2 p.m.
SYRACUSE Jlh slory ,
Riggs and daughters Logan. returned home after spending the Complaint with in twenty ·
l1 -S.Sfc
3
B.R.,
bath,
New
frame.
·
'
k · C1 b
'th M
eoght days after the last
Visltmg Mr. and Mrs. Rex a wee m 0 urn us WI
r. publication of this noti ce, which - - - -- F.A.G. furnace. basement,
Summerfield were Eileen and Mrs. Clyde Cross. She will be published once each TRAILER lol. Bob's Mobile
porches, lot fenced 2 sides .
Court, Syracuse ; phone 992·
·d M
d Mr
week tor six consecutive weeks .
·s5.000.
Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald accompame
r . an
s. The la51 publication will be
2951.
SEE US lo BUY OR SELL.
Summerfield and Amber George Neigler who sp~nt made on November 16, 1972. and
10-31-tfc
Pomeroy,
0.
' S d i C1 b
the twenty -eight days for an HENRY E. CLELAND
992-297l
un ay n oum us.
swer will commence on that . FURNISHED 2 bedrovnl
Parkersburg, W. Va., ,Mr. and
REALTOR
Mrs.
Robert
Russell
Mr. andMrs. SteveJacobsof dote.
~arlmenf, adulls only ,
Phone
992-7259
M'PLES, Fitzpatrick Or ' L kb
AI
B
In case or your ,failure to
Pomeroy; Mrs. Ken Caldwell
oc ourne
r
a~e, an~wer or otherwise respond as
lddleport; phone 992-3874.
If
no
answer
992-2568
chards , State Route 689,
and son Kenny Tuppers Columbus, spent Saturday w1th required by the Ohio Rules of ____________1_0-_
22-lfc
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
'
'
h
d
'" M
d Civil Procedure, ludgment wlll
8·30·lfC
Plains.
er gran paren~,
r . an ·be rendered against you for the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gray Mrs. Henry Roush.
relief dtmonded In lhe com · Auto Sales
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. . Mr. and Mrs. Unley Hart pl~~~ed : OcJ·ob•er
1970 PLYMOUTH
Clyde Headley , Tuppers returned home from Delaware
318 cu. ln .. 3
where
Hart underwent
floor ; call
c
Bird and Shelia were Mr. and
'64 CHEVY Biscayne , 6
Mrs. Marcia Ann Wells of
Mrs. Rex Summerfield.
cylinder , standard, good
Buy 2
ORDINANCE 414
Buel
Su~merfield, Washington C. H. spent the
motor and transmission.
,_....,. Pairs
110 Mechanic St.
Phone 992-7595.
•ORDINANCE
Charleston, W.Va. spent a few weekend with her parents, Mr. AN
'
Pomeroy,
Ohio4S769
:1-PAIR
FREE.
ESTABLISHING A SPECIAL
11 ·9-3fc
.
- \.
days with his mother, Edna and Mrs. Harry Curtis.
FUND KNOWN AS THE
Tho best buy In tho area.
GENERAL 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
NEW LISTING
Summerfield. Also visiting her · Miss Kim Taylor of FEDERAL
Havo sl~cks &amp; jeans for the
REVENUE SHARING TRUST
Gallipolis
spent
the
weekend
door
hardtop
.
Factory
air,
8
ROOM
ANTIQUE BRICK
whole family: Save Dnewere Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
FUND
low
mileage.
new
tires.
Like
4
large
bedrooms,. bltth,
J'hird.
Parker, Syracuse; Mr. and with her grandparents, Mr.
new condition inside and out .
furnace
.
Living
room 1.6x36,
WHEREAS
,
the
Congress
has
"-POMEROY
Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Middleport; and Mrs. Frank Cleland.
Phore 985-3912.
en acted the State and Local
with
gas
fireplace.
Large
611 Jack W. Carsoy,Mgr .•
Assistance Act of 1972 prov iding
11 -9-6lp
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker
basement,
J
car
garage,
Phone 992-2181
a s ystem of general revenue
and children, Marietta.
barn for horses and about 2
shar ing with states and units of 1963 CORVETTER . Phone 992·
local government, and
5866
COAL. Limestone, Excelsior acres of land . All for
Mrs . Sandra Massar atWHEREAS, Section 12J ta l
.
Salt Works, E. Main St .. $21.500.00.
1-9-3tc
1
tended funeral services for
NOTICE ON FILING
(1 ) of the Federal Act requires
Pomeroy . Phone 992:3891.
NEW LISTING
OF INVENTORY
each unll of local government to
Mrs. Grace Kelly at the Orange
4-12·tfC
98 ACRES - Of vacant land
AND APPRAISEMENT
establish a trust fund Ia receive .1969 FORD, very good condition
Christian Church Saturday.
The Stale ol Ohio, Meigs federal revenue shar ing , and
on township road 141, most of
and low miles . Must sell due JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
WHEREAS , the Bureau ot
Wednesday evening supper County . Probate Court
to Illness. $1 ,195. Phone 985llfenced. Producing gas well
To the Adm lnistrator of fhe Inspection and Supervision of
Sewing Machine. Will sell for
4116.
with free gas for one
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rex estate ; to such ol t[le follow ing Public Of~lces has approved the
small
balance
of
$36.21
or
11 ·9·3tc payments may be arranged.
residence. All minerals.
Summerfield· were Mr. and· as are residents of fhe State ot establishment of a "Federal
Ohio , viz : - the survivinJI General Revenue Sharing Trust
Trailer
space with electric
992-5331.
Phone
Mrs. :. Herbert
Parker, spouse, the next of kin. the Fund" In each municipal For·Sale
dug
well. Asking
·and
·
9-7-!fc
Syracuse; Buel Summerfield, beneli clar les under the Wlll ; corporat i on receiving
$16,500.00.
and to the attorney or attorne~Ys assistance under the . Federa l
Charleston; Edna Sum- ~epresenting any of the Act. as required by Section HORSE and pony aucllon SCHNAUZER puppies, AKC,
NEW LISTING
Friday, Nov . 10, al 7 p.m.
Sail &amp; Pepper, ears chopped,
merfield, Sherman Sum· a1~j me~:~oy~ed0~~~~~~~:. Mid - fo0Je~2 , of ·the Ohio Rev ised
BUNGALOW
- 2 bedrooms,
8
Ohio Valley Livestock Co .•
wormed and shots ; healthy nice bafh, large living and
merfield and · Gerald Sum· dlepo r t, Ohio , Salisbury
NOW, THEREFORE , BE IT
Gallipolis.
S85 ; phone Coolville 667-6214.
ORDAINED by the Council of
merfield was a Saturday Town ship , No . 20804.
11 -8-3lc
. ll -5-12lp kitchen. Store ne~t door .
You are hereby notified that the Village of Pomeroy , State,of
Only $4500.00.
evening guest.
th e InVentory and 'Ap - Ohio that :
N,EW LISTING
·
SeCtion 1. There Is hereby APPLt:~. Red ano uv ...nm
.
Mrs. June Epple had surgery orai sement of the estate of th e
SALISBURY
TOWNSHIP~
aforefnent iQned. deceased , lote establiShed a SP,eciallund lobe
Delicious. Grimes, Romes, Real Estate For ale
at the Holzer Medical Center, of
said county , was filed in this known as the' Federal General
Winesaps, Jonathans-, CartMeigs school district, 2 or 4
HOUSE In Long Bottom ; phone bedrooms, bath, automatic
Court . Said Inventory and Revenue Shillrl~g Trust Fund "
1 d d M 1 1 h 10 lb f
Gallipolis. .
Appr!lsement will be tor· under the provisions of Sect1on
an an
C nos '
s. or
985.3529. ·
'
I
Sunday dinner. guests of hearing before this Court on the 570S. 12 of the Ohio Revised
furnace heal. Full b;!sement,
99 cents, $2 a bushel and up.
6-11-tfc'
lith
day
of
November
,
1972,
at
Code.
Same
special
price
on
1 acre of land. Asking
Edna Suriunerlield and
10 :00 o'clock A.M.
Section 2. All monies paid to
potafoesand kraul tabbage, J 8 RWM. house and oa1n, nice ·
$hernlan
Mr. and Mrs.
x~~~t.l g;;sot~e~::~· ri~u:r
~oec~lll~al~~.~'1:~1:~aen~!a~c~~t ~ ~"~ a
~ldway ~~et, . · large tot: natiJrafgas, bullf-in
tiOTTOM LAND
Earl ·s ummerfield, Murrys· ·ethem
at leasl flvt days prior to' 1972 shall ·be credited to said
· · alr'l ·• omeroy ,.
ne
cabinets In kitchen. Close to
6
ACRES
- 1 mile · from
992·2582 ·
ville, Pa. and IIley plan tO •lay the date set for ·heering .
lund and ex-p·ended •in ac radio station In .BradbUry.
route
7
just
off · 124. Now
11 ·8· 3tC
Given vndtr mv hand and cordance with tht terms and
Phone 992-2602.
for a w~k with his mother and
being
..
o!!ered..JQ!'.
-~,_0110.00. _
'sell I of said Court, this 31st day Provisions of seld Federal Ac1.
10-29·121C
1011.
WE ARE GLAD TO BE
ol October 1972.
Section 3. ThiS Ordinance CB RADIO, antenna, also pollee -.....,.----- - - - Manning D. Webster shalt take effect and be in force
SALES PEOPLE lN THE
Mn. Sandra Mil11881' went to
Judge anr;t eX-officio Clerk of from and after the earliest - scanner. Dailey's Radio Shop, I.OMFORTAI!L t: two srory
COUNTY. WANT TO SEE
aee Mr. Richard Spencer at . 1
Box 21 ·B, Long Bottom, Ohio. home, full basement, · bath
'
Meigs Countv peri!Od allowed bx taw .
THE PLACE GROW THEN
1
1-8-6tc
and
o
;,,
all
ached
garage,
and
Passed this 6th day of
Common Pleas Court
Camden Clark Hospital,
November, 1972. ·
LIST WITH US.
.
extra lot. In a good location.
ParlrllnburB and also Mrs.
Probate Division
Basic
furniture
available.
L.
'TEAFORD,
HELEN
W. G. Boronlck ONE REGISTERED female
Donna Ly0111, who has a new
ASSOCIATE
Bv A_
nn B. wBtson,
iree walker coon hound. Phore 992·7384 or 992·7133 for
Mayor
appplntmenf .
Deputy
Clerk
Phore 949-4761.
•by slrl. .
Attest: Jane IJI{allon
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWING$
1J-3.6tc
.
Jl -9-6fc
991·3!25
-~··Sandra Massar (11) 2, 9, 2t
(1119,16, 2tc
true ;
Its light Is sweet for il is fed,
On love end tender thoughts of
you .

Sunday, November 12. 1972.
11 ·8-3fc

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Racine

Social Events

I

'

;;-:-:-::::;-:-:::-:.---~

:Eastern

LEGAL NOTICE

Local News

s

ar

1::

SHOTGUNS
RIFLES
AND
AMMUNITION

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALIS AND SERVI~

Virgil B.
Broker
.

LEGAL NOTICE

------

S

I •

·were

m:

':t

GJMME' A
HAI\ID

JEST .
HEEREDTH'TERRIBLE BAD
NEWS ABOUT SNUFFY
BREAK IN' HIS LAIG

I

POMEROY

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

8 TRACK STEREO, freight
damaged , in beautiful walnut
console. Will sell for $101:50 or
pay S1 .50per week . Phone 992-

REGISTERED
German
shorthair Pointer Birddog
puppies . Expensive but worth
it.
Ready any time. Vernon
l1 -3-6lc
Weber, 742-5625.
ll ·Hic

Help Wanted

Business Services.

· youth bed complele, 120: steel
tool box for narrow bed
pickup; 16"x16"x50" , $25 1
phone 985·3373 evenings.
ll -8·3tp
---------,..
METAL La1he, 36" between
centers, 12" s;wvtng ; also large
drill press; phone 985·4118.
11·8-3rc

LOWEEZY!! I

HOME &amp; AUTO

'

992-2094
606 E. Main

From the largest T ••• ~.
Bulldozer Radiator
Small~st Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
R.!dl!tor Specialist

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

CAMPUS

and

SMlTH NELSON

¥0U'LL NI;VE~ GUESS WHAT$
WRONG WITH MYCOiiRSC: IN
ADVANCE!) ANALYnC,41.
GEOMETRYj

FURNITURE

MOTORtJNC.
992-2114 ·
Pomeroy

Stotf In and See Our
Floor Display.

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free E.Siimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or ROQer Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-352S
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232.

SOME KISS 6HE
GAve Me, EH, OFFICER 1

on Most American Cars

:-GUARANTEE0:..
Phnnl! 992-2094

U'LABNER

Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto

OH-

??·DIDN'T ·

OpenBTII S
Monday lhru SaturdaY
6~ E. Main,, ~~me_roy, 0 .

SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED,' REPAIRED.
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, 'OHIO. PHONE
662-3035.
10-4-lfc

·f5ULP!5HO'

'NUFF···

DRIVE A LITTLE
-SAVE A LOTI

Kuhl's Bargain Center
Rt. 1 "at caution light"

TUPPERS PlAINS

REA-OY -M'I·X
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.'
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30.ffc

Clean used furniture

Guaranteed appliances
BIKES Huffy' 20",
'Murray 10 speeds~ discount
prices.
-'' L:AYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7; Closed Mondays

WINNIE WINKLE
TELL IN?.. MYRT
® ! 1MSORR~ M\55 ThATMY TIME 15 IMI
6Ul MR. PORTANT, 1'00. HE
6U5Y.
NEEDS A LE550N IN

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rales. Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell , SEE US FOR:- Awnings, storm
Owner &amp; Operator.
doors and wfndows, carports,
5·12-ttc
marquees, aluminum siding,•
and railing. A. Jacob, sale!'
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer .
representative . For free
Complete Service
estimates, phone . Charles
Phone 949-3821
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V:
Racine, Ohio
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Criff Bradford
3-2-ttc'
5-1-tfc
·BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
DOZER and back hoe work,
Septic tanks installed. George
ponds and s~plic tanks, dll·
(Bill) Pullins. Phore 992-2478.
ching service; top soli, fill ,
4·25-tfc
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Excavating . Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr , Jr .
9·1 -lfc
.SEWING MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284 ..
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ,
Authorized Singer Sales and .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29·tfc,

MAKE
ANOTHER
DATE?

EVERYDAY

CAN

MANNE~ .

We talk· to wu

like a, pt!ISln

----'~--RUS~C:.LL. S
Furniture

and .

.

I

1t I I

, "

I

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Complete front end service, .
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced
elec-·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992-'
3213 .
7-27-ffc

.·.

Lost

your

2966.

6· 15-ffc

Can You
these Buys???

ATTENTION FARMERS .
Largest choice of all breeds of
A. I. Sires by phoning Leland
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
Chev. Biscayne, 4 dr. Vcall station for ·service , inautomatic.
p. steering,
formation or direct sales.
lvlnvlinlerior,
good
11 -9-30fc
$1295
Buick La Sabre H. T.,
latJlornalic,
P.S.,.P. B., radio.
PRICED for quick sale, 1965 51
$1295
x 10 New Moon Mobile Home,
furnished; call 992-2076.
JJ -Htp
Ply. Roadrunner, H.T.,
"'"""'""',..,-~"'-,---,-V-8, automatic, P.S.,
1..ASH paid for all makes and ln•dil&gt;.
$799
f.!IOdels of mobile homes. •
Phone area code 614-423-95jf. :
Chev. BelAir Wagon, V4-13-lfc
std.lrans., radio.
$1095
Chev. I mpa Cpe.. V-8,
Comet "6" 2 dr.~ std.
ltr•n•&gt;-. good tires.
$399

... SUCH MEASURES
GUESS YOU
TRIED \'OUR BEST,
.PUNJAB ·.. AH'THAT's IEXIREI~E
Jll L ANYBODY CAN
E~PECT

LIFE ANi50fATHr''
-,
- -~

~"'"~

FROM A

ACROSS
e.g.

4. Misstep ;
slip
9. Mother
of
Hezekiah
10. Slate of

confusion

LET I-IlM PULL I-llS
UP IF l-IE WANTS
WE'vE GOT ~IM.''

.

(~~ ·~

'

I SAYES

Behest;
~~:~~m~~iii1 12. edict
wmiams

10. Divulcecl
12. Btahop'a
heoddreu
17.

13. Owned
14, Son
of

'

·65.. Deceive
(3 wds.)
7, Surfeit
1. Corrected

u.!~r~

22.

21. Vehemenee

8 x 32, COMPLETELY fur nished, 2 bedrooms, Inside
billh, kitchen, living room and
TV, 5800 call or contact Lorry
Hubbard, Syracuse, Ohio 9923364.
ll-3·6tc
1970 MOBILE Home with
washer, air-conditioner and
olher e~tras Included ; excellent cordlflon; phone 992·
7387 or 985-3565. ,.
ll -J.6fp

n.

form

I

J)US/IOL

PMDE5 fS'I UNm~&amp;

'1Y

Zl.

NaYlco·

ton

lslancb
29. Colondo
retort
M.Oblerve

MIW II' ~

DIVIDING.

the eire led lelten
I ' I I toNowronn the ourprioe
u .
arralllt

Ir~~~,:Jii~~~·~;·;=l· ounemd bJihe above cartoon.
r

I

'i

IIIIIWtr,

MIIIMSIILGIIISWIIIIn

J

(X XIX XXXJ

J•mt.l.,, IMII. PIONY Kmll tAPill
l'eeterd•1 '•

POMEROY.
MOTOR 00.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Till I: 00

Nearly
-Mine"
Rib-tick·
llng
Mlschie·
vous
tyke

POMEROY

.MILLER &amp;
SONS
,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

At the Cross Roads on ·Rt. 124

AXYDLBAAXll
II L 0 N G FE L .L, O W
One letter simply ~tanda for anothe~. In thfl sample A- Is
used for the three L'o, X ·for the two O's, etc. Sin1ie letters,
apostrophes, the leneth arid formaUoil or the words au all
hlzltl. Ea~ day lhe code lelten are dlleunt.

SPECIAL
a Pek

16 oz. Btls

CllDTOQVOTB8

Plus Tax
&amp; Deposit
I

rx · [J

%5, Insect

1961
Rambler Wagon,
reduced.
1962 Olds Fas, 4 Dr. reduced.
1963 Nova HT Cpe., reduced.
Several other outstanding
buys in Budget Prlc.d Cars,

1220 Washington Blvd,
,
1:423·7521
BE~PRE, C .

.. =~=.

DOWN
1. Solemn
promises
2. Direction
on

ll.-

DICK TRACY

tlltM...,

.....,~ ..tJ c::

tiMerunble
Jumhla,
- letter, to IKh equue, to
form four ordln&amp;rJ wordo.

36. Classes;
kinds
37, Digit
38, Done
with
39. Chinese
dynasty

1. Encina,

(

o!J{!l]di1[£;-"'-~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

PERsoM '"

'99" Specials

MILLER ,
MO.BILE HOM'E~)

TH€ CfJL~ 1}11l.Y.?
SHE w.a.~T~D rOR A.

!!BfB~ Of'

EASY PICKIN'

Jf:,omplete mqblle hqm'e
vice ~ plus gigantic
l~:~~:~r of mobile home!
I•
avallable.at ...

IT~

RfTII&lt;~MENT ~FT!

Mobile Homes For Sale

Air
•Awnings .
•:··Underpinning.

. ;l l

.

in the
World • • •

-c--==----c=c---~

operator's license? Call 992-

· lit •

ON YOUR DIAL

AU.TOMObiLL.. 111!1\Jrance been

cancelled?

SOU~1

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

EARTH MOVING

Upholstery; free
delivery;
·
.

IT PDE$N'T HAVS

JEW

Fl

CARR9LLS

FJ

QXD,

-J l_~- YWFQS, .

YCD

EZOU

QXP . FJ

Z

~FUW

RZHZYOW

PHYSICALLY

. WQ XUNOWTADSHOMEWORRU:S

llf8TEAD 01' AN ACHJlfG BACX.-BOIIID lllGAJ\T
to 1m 11:1111 Ptaw. . sro•lealt, ,.,,)

.

'

XU

z- un'WQV -AFOOFZN HWQQ

Y.......,.. rij»l:.1,....: JOBS AU

B,UIR,BUT

~EZD

I •

An~•er1

SoNmb: Ub ,.. . ,.,., t,al~ a loolt at 1hU
dOfl llo C~lna-A "PIICI"

�- , ,_ _ _. . . . . , . . , . . . , . .. . . &lt; . , .

a ;: a

t •

Iii • ,.!'* f'"1:' -,

I

'

I.

Fines levied

ELBERFE,tDS-IN~POMfRO~ ------i=-·
Storewide Sale Friday
9:30 to 9 P.M. and Saturday 9:30 t~ 9
.

!Continued from page I)
. MEX!CQ CI'i'Y ~ FIVI!: lflJAcKERS WHO threatened to
· kill one hQStage every 30 minutes .until their demands were mel
gained the release of six Mexican prisoners Wednesday, obtained
.$320,000 in ranso'!l and forced the crew of a Mexicans Airlines.jet
to fly iliem to Havana late Wednesday.
.
.
· Airline officials said the plane, its 73 passengers and seven
crew members may return home today. "The plane is' stiU in
Havana," one official said, "but we are pressing tbe a!lthorities
there to let it leave. It could take off at any time." The airline did
not identify passengers by nationality, but all of them bore
Spanish names except for three identified only as Wesley Paraons, Charles Dill and Teddy Stefanovik.
SAIGON~ TilE CHIEF AIDE

to presidential adviser Henry
A. Kissinger flew to Saigon today to confer with President
Nguyen Van Thieu on his objections to tbe language of a proposed
Vietnam peace settlement.
·
Gen. Alexander M. Haig was expected to meet Friday with
Thiell. The White House announcement of his departure S!lid he
would return Saturday or Sunday. Thieu is concerned that a
heretofore unpublished passage in the agreement woold create a
coaiition goverrnnent in disguise - something he has steadfastly
refllsed to accept.

Mayors' luncheon held
MASON - Several communities were represented
Wednesday when town officials
attended a, Mid-Ohio Valley
Mayors Association luncheon
in the social rooms of the
Mason United Methodist
Church. Mayor Roy Harless of
Mason and Mayor John Thorne
of New Haven were.hosts. The
luncheon was served by women
of the church.
Mayor William Nicley of
·Parkersbur g, president,
presided during the business
session. The program included
a film shown by a represen·

Seven defendants were fined
and three others forfeited
bunds Wednesday in the court
of Middleport Mayor John
Ze•·kle.
·
·
Fined were Larry Edmonds,
48, Middleport, $10 and costs,
inloxication; Raymond E .
Cunningham, 52, Middleport,
$5 and costs, speeding;
Richard E. Rathburn, ·22,
Middleport, $100 and costs and
three days in jail, driving while
inlllxicated ; Eloise M. Pickett,
37, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
assured clear distance; Mark
B. Williams, 18, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, speeding ; Larry L.
Cleland, 23, Langsville, $5 and
costs, failure to yield right of
way, and Fred Priddy, '21,
Middleport, $r0 and costs,
reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds of $30 each
were Jerry Jerguson, 33,
Middleport, and Paul Wolfe, 2:1.
Mason, botb . intoxication, and
Marlene Smith, 20, Middleport,
no operator's license.

!alive of the U. S. Corps of
Engineers of Huntington
projectin g the Ohio River
Basin the next 20 years.
Mayors attending were John
Musgrave, Point Pleasant;
Fred Smith, Spencer; Guy
Seven defendants forfeited
Duke,
Ripley ; . Ludena
bonds
and five were fined by
Stollings, Vinton; H. G. White,
Lowell; James Schweikert, Pomeroy Mayor William
Marietta; Clarence Gerber, St. Baronick.Wednesday night. . .
Forfeiting bonds were Carl
Mary 's, W. Va .; Donald
Barrett, Athens; William Jeffers, Thomas H. Sarver and
Nicley, Parkersburg, and the Basil Cremeans, $25 each,
host mayors. Also attending intoxication, (no addresses
were councilmen and legal recorded) ; Paul M. Darnell,
advisors of the communities. Jr., Pomeroy, $25, squealing
tires; Roger Roush, Racine,
'18. 70, and Robert Baker,
$23 .70,
both
Syracuse,
speeding, and Carlon A.
and Mary Porter Brafford. · Bauman, Reedsville, $15,
He was a member of Belpre failing to yield the right of way.
Fined were Charlie R.
Lodge 609 F f&lt;AM, Marietta
Commandry, Scottish Rite Stapleton, Crown City, $5 and
Valley of Colwnbus, Aliadin costs, assured clear distance;
Temple Shrine, Atbens County Timothy Gumpf, Chester, $10
Shrine
Club,
Ireland lllld costs, squealing tires;
Co.ngregatlonal Church and Johnnie M. Jones, New Haven,
generous contributor to tbe $25 and costs, crossing a double
Shrine crippled children's. yellow line; William Eads,
Charleston, W. Va ., $10 and
program.
He is survived by his wife, costs, reckless operation, and
Nellie Rogers Brafford ; two Thomas Reilmire, Pomeroy,
daughters, Mrs. Charles (Inez) $10 and costs, intoxication .
Bentz. Coolville, and Mrs.
David . (Jean) Nease, Minersville ; two brotbers, Lory F.
and Virgil G. Brafford,
Parkersburg; two sisters, Mrs.
Helen McMains, Aurora, Ohio,
and ?J'lr~. Nbrfl\~ McKay,
Five directors, all . UD&lt;&gt;P· ...
Newark: two grandsops, pqsed, were :re-i~Jectlid
Mickey Bentz, Coqlville, and nesday night in' tbe annual
Roger Nease, Minersville, and election of the Meigs County
one granddaughter, Roma Agricultural Society at tbe
Nease, Minersville.
office of the Meigs County
He was . also preceded In Commissioners in the courtdeath by a daughter and two house.
sisters.
Sixteen members of the
Funeral services will be society cast ballots, naming
Saturday a! 2p. m, at the White the same directors to three
Funeral Ho!ne in Coolville with year terms. Re-elected were
the Rev. Roy W. Rose of. Wallace Bradford, lncuinbent
nclating. Burial will be in president of the board ; Danny
Ireland Cemetery. Masonic Zirkle, Clarence Henderson,
rites will be conducted by Herman Carson and Fred
Belpre Lodge 609 F &amp;AM Goeglein.
Friday at 7:30 p. m. at the
funeral home. Friends may
Progress_noted'
call there alter noon Friday.

7 bonds given
up to court .

Luther Brafford is dead
COOLVILLE - Luther C.
Bi-afford, 80, Coolville, former
mayor here, died unexpectedly
Wednesday afternoon. Mr.
Brafford . was a prominent
cltizim of Coolville ln govern.ment, ~iness and sports.
In addition to being mayor,
be was a former state sales tax
auditor under Gov. John
Bricker, a restaurant operator,
and manager and organizer of
Independent basketball and
baseball teams in the Coolville

area.
Mr. Brafford was born in
, Washington County, Ohio, tbe
son of tbe late George Edward

DirectorS win
another term

Essie Vonce, 77
dies Wednesday I
Mrs. Essie Vance, 77, for
merly of the Rutland-Danville
~P.a, died Wednesday night at
her home on Laurel St. in
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Vance is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Mildred Grate,
Rutland Route 11 and two sons,
Lowell E., of East Uverpool,
and Kahle, of Waverly.
Preceding her in death were
ber husband, James, in 1969,
and two sons. Funeral
arrangements are being
completed at the Martin
Funeral Home in Rutland.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at . II a. m.
'Thursday was 48 degrees,
·under ~oudy skies.

MEIGS lHEATRE
OPEN .
Friday lhru Tuesday
November 10-14
Alfred Hilchcock's
FRENZY
(Technicolorl
John Finch
Alee McCowen
Thrills Galore! n . ••. •
HITCHCOCK !
IRI

Colorca rtoon :

The First Telephone
Adults: $1.50 Children :
Show ·Siarts 7 P.M.

•
on service

AT SEMINAR
Marilyn Wolfe, Lera Jones
and Joan Wolfe, assistant
cashiers of the Pomeroy
National Bank, artd Karen
Grate of the Rutland Branch of
the Pomeroy National Bank
attended a tellers' seminar
the Ohio Bankers

Lou Osborne reported on
progress being made In tbe
erection of a club service sign
near tbe Pomeroy entrance on
the Route 7 bypass when tbe
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club met" for a luncheon
Wednesday at tbe Meigs Inn.
Don Pearch, president, was
in charge of the meeting with

paper, "Our
International President." It ·
was reported that the club now
has 42 gum ball machines
placed in business houses as a
E:R UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad was part of its fund raising
called Wednesday at 3: 07p.m. program.
to the office of Dr. R. E. Boice
for Mrs. Grace R. Moser, 71, of .
809 30th St., Pt. Pleasant, who
became ill and died. The body Five couples in
was taken to the Crow-Hussell
Funeral
Home
where
arrangements are being made. divorce actions

WOMEN'~EOAT SALE
· Corduroy Pant Coats in Your Choice of
Three Style$.
Reaular i\nd Half Si.zes ·

In the main floor Lingerie ·D!!partmerit Jor the
$100 and $50 · Gift (:ertificat~s. •No purchase is
necessary. You need not be present to .win.

Ret:~ -

$14.98

COBBLER
JUMPERS

CPO SHIRTS

PRlCES·ARE RIGHT!

". /llitlt

~ .BUDGET

SHOP I
'

'

B"AK£R~:.~.o; ~

Regular.ties that you do,yourself and

bley E-Z on ready lied"ties.

SALE 7.00

WOMEN'S HATS

·y2 PRICE

' with balleries.
Complete

PANTY HOSE AND
STOCKINGS SALE ·

conditioning deodora nt and

~eg .

Flocked Dacron
· Marquisette

TAILORED
CURTAINS.

TOY STORE
AND BR-ING THE CHiLDREN WITH YOU

Friday and Sat1.1rday Only

ELECTRIC SHAVER

SALE 1.00
79c
SALE 50'.

Wem -

VISIT THE

SALE Vz PRICE

Special Purchas~
Clairol Kindness

a fine group of
·

There's hundreds and hUndreds of ties in the ·selection. in cluding sol id color s - lou·d·stripe!. - dots - neat patterns and of
course, white .
All th• popular wid ths . all excellen1 qua lily .and they're
ready for you to buy. Free gift box wifh every tie.

Denims - Corduroys ·
Brushed acrylics.

Juniors 5 to 13.

TOSS
CUSHIONs
·
'

BeauTJIUI
printed
covering .
Reg, Sl.69

WEMBLEY TIES

WOMEN'S JACKETS
and

Th e little ones en joy so -~ uch a "visit in the toy
store to see all that's new and their favorite toys
that they play with all year long.
Yoli'lllike the selection this year. You'll like the
way everything is arranged for your easy
viewing and selection. ·
The Toy Store is open every week day, 9:30A.M.
to 5 P.'M. - Friday and Saturday 9:30. A.M. to 9
P.M.

1

SALE 4.88

• ;:

l'

'

A WINNER - The historic RepubUean Party symbol is an elephant. Above, Helen Bailey,
pie baker at the Meigs Inn, made this elephant out of a loaf of bread and a bun.

3.99

Pair

Sweaters - - - - - - Sale
Sweaters - - - - - - Sale
Sweaters --- -·· -- Sale
Sweaters -- - - -- Sale
Sweaters-- - - -- Sale
Sweaters - - - - - - Sale

15.88
13.88
11.88
9.88
9.38
8.88

VOL XXIV NO. 147

You'll like the fine selection of these '73 models the excellent performance - and remember
Elberfelds has their own Service Department
and sensible Credit Service.
. ,/

FLARE LEG SLACKS

I.
·:~

· .•. i '

Sale

FURNITURE
100 Perf.~"! ~gllon In sbll~l!.

·~ Attractive

li!IB - ·llflHI£'

P!!lterns ahd i!oiors. Foam
backed . fringed all around.

..

. MEIGS• mGH PLAYEIIS. -I 1be .Meigs High Players,

Machine washabi_e , All
sizes - for smal~ 'chalrs,
most sofas, extra large

sofas, sectlonals, beds.

BOYS SWEATERS AND SWEATER VESTS

'

Sizes 2 to 12 and 8 to 20. Slipovers - Coat Sweaters
and a big selection of Vests .
8.95 Boys Sweaters
- - - Sale 7.99
6.95 Boys Sweaters
.Sale 5.99
5,95 Boys Sweaters
Sale 5.29
4.95 Boys Sweaters
Sale 4.39

Reg. 4.95
Reg. 6.95
Reg. 7.95
Reg. 8.95
Reg. 9.95
Reg. 10.95
Reg. 11.95
Reg. 12.95

Boys Regular and Slim Sizes 8 to 18.

Another Big Shipment! •

·-No IronSolid color cotton spread machine washable and
yable ,
hrunk,

FoAM lAMINATED

I

RTS

Sizes small, medium, large
and exira large. Zipper
front coal style · solid
colors.
Buy your needs now for

cold wi nter days ahead.

SALE 7.00

Twin and full sizes In

colors.

Stop in the Music Departf1lent on the 2nd floor See this fine line by Panasonic. Select what you
need for yourself or for gifts at Christmas lime.

SALE! LfE COVERALlS

...

FLARE

.

..

RED HEART

go'oo

~'WINTUCK''

· ! Irregular)

YARM
Regular $1.39 Skein

100 P~rcent"'Cotton sheet
blanket, while and colors,

\

size 80x90 .or 66x90.
.

·SPECIAL. 99~ SKEIN ·

Special Frld1y
and Sitwrday

2.29 '

Sale Friday and Saturday ·

45'-' Cone Lurvel Corduroy
Ribless- all cotton ' niachlne washable.
Beautiful colors.
·
Regular s2.o9:.!1 yard. ".
On. Sale Friday and Saturday ·

..•.,

., ·PRIN.TEO
FLANNELEII_E
''•

45" All

t;

~lfon

· Llghi anci dark prints
suitable for. ntghtwoar;
· tomforters. robia etc.

. '.

""

.

ews•• in Briefi . Bureaucrats

5.99 '
'

the clerk-custodian funds in all program is comparable and
of the schools as prepared by that all elementary schools in
· Mrs. Marilyn Powell. He spoke the district qualify for paron the Right to Read Program, ticipation.
reporting· that tbe Syracuse
Names of residents serving
Elementary School has been on the Rio Grande Community
named a model schoo.l in that College Committees were
program. Bill Baer is tbe head announced. These are James
teacher and representative of Wickline, Marilyn Powell,
thedistrictin the Right to Read Leah Ord, David Nease,
Program.
Grover Salser, Jr., Thereon
The superintendent ex- Johnson, Nancy Carnahan,
pressed pride in the ac- Tom Wolfe, Robert Beegle,
complishments of the band a••d Jennings Beegle, Ralph Sayre,

11\e
the otber.areas. The program
working togetber and
Sayre r~ported
48
enthusl·asm r·eflected 1·n the defec ts were no ted by the
covers an 11-coun ty area.
Sayre presented to the board district. He said the Title 1 Health Department before the
Portland "School was reopened
.x•.:.:.:.......
m. ,,,.~..
·~ this fall. All of these problems

'

SHEET
.
BLANKETS ·

'

, CHARLESTON, W. Va .
I UP! ) - The leader of the
slate's chief antistrip mine
group says his organization
will continue its fight for
abolition but admitted the
issue , which played a considerable
factor in the elections
the evacuat ion is 1 'semi·
eal"lier this week, can be
permanent" and the residents defused.
probably will riot be allowed to
resume liv i n~ there because of
Robert Handley, president of

By United Pre11 InterUtional
(l()WMBUS - SECRETARY OF STATE Ted W. Brown said
today 4,087,776, Ohioans voted for President Tue~y arid two
parties lost their party status because they did not receive the
required nwnber of votes. Brown said the American Independent
· Party and Socl•lil¢ Labor Party candidates for president failed ·
1D receive the_required five per cent of the Presidential votes cart
In Ohio.
~either party will he permitted ID participate in the oddnwnbered )'ear elections next year but if they wiah to qualify for
any htture elections it will he necessary for them to circulate
petitioJlllandobtaln signatures of one per cent of the Jl'llsidential
vote cast In the la!t preceding election, a total of 40,678
alpaturea.

have now been corrected. A
communication from Welch
Barnette, a state supervisor in
Vocational Agriculture,
commending tbe district on its
(Continued on page 3)

RUTLAND - A Rutland
man escaped serious injury or
possible death by drowning
Thursday night at II p.m.
when, in trying to avoid hitting
a deer, he swerved his car to
the left and in to swollen
Leading Creek where it ail but
submerged.
Dennis E. McKinney, 25,
Rutland, was driving northwest on County Road 10, one
· and one-half mile northwest of
Langsville, when the accident
occurred. McKinney was able
to jump from his car as soon as
'.it hit the water.
.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported three other
accidents in which there were
no personal injuries.
Thursday at 2:50 p.m. on
County Road 10, seven tenths of
a mile out of Langsville, David
H. Sigman, Letatt, W. Va .,
driving a Reiners bread truck
nor lhwest, went into a curve
and off the highway on the
right. His truck went 31 feet to
hit the end of a bridge, back
across the toad, anotber 29 feet
and off the road to the right into
a field:
Sigll)an was arrested on
charges of excessive speed for
road conditions. There ·was
medium damage to the truck.
At 12:14 a.m . today on
(Continued on page 31

Weather
Chance of showers

by afternoon and evening. Lows
tonight in the 40s. Mostly
cloudy Saturday witb a chance
of showers Saturday most •
likely southeast with scattered
thundershowers southeast.
Highs Saturday in the 50s.

TEN CENTS

Mr. Cll,;,.iihait,~ ·Mr. Hobaon, Mr. Johnaon

Hobson is S&amp;
Ray Hobson, vice president
of Farm Bureau, Inc. ,
Columbus, was guest speaker
Thursday night for the annual
dinner meeting of the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District
•t
Salisbury
Elementary School.
Harold Carn•hnn was
master of ceremonies, and
Thereon Johnson, introduced
Mr. Hobson. Carnahan and
Johnson are on the district
board of supervisors, Johnson

'

By George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs . Local School District
THANK YOU!

.

chairman.
In a talk marked with humor,
Hobson stressed the value of
"going beyond the call of duty"
on a job.
Johnson presented framed
certifica tes to three outsta ndin g Meigs farmers,
Clifford Might, Salem township ; Glen Robinson, Tuppers
Plains, and Bob Mattox·,
Carpenter.
On behalf of. her husband,

to those who distributed student-made signs and
printed signs. Thanks to those businesses and ined
·

Mrs. Charles lhle received the
Goodyear Award for out-.
standing farm practices from ··
John Fultz, owner of the Meigs
Tire Center.
Entertainment was acts
from the Fall Follies of the Big
Bend Minstrel Assn. The
~inner was 'served by tbe
Salisbury PTA. Door prizes
contributed · by the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. went to
Howard Frank and Mrs.
Richard Houdashelt.

spirit. Thanks to t!le high sehool band, tbe junior high
band, band director Dwight Goins, his assJstgnt Fred
Ruth, tbe organizer F'enton Taylor, the baton groups

the

for
.departments'. A special thanks to the Ruilaild
passage of the-levy on its
try. If I omit any in- their help. Thanks to Larry Morrison, who worked so Fire Department for supervising the bonfires.
dlvidual or organization, please forgive me.
d very, very hard. We wish him a speedy recovery from
Thanlal to the Sentinel and WMPO for their ·
Thanks to the nearly two dozen groups an
his present illness. ·
editorial support and fine coverage of smool acSpeaking of Schools-No. 256
1bankstotbemanypeoplewhocametomeetings tivities. Thanlal to our students who carried home
to learn tbe facts. Thanks to the PTA committee campaign literature and to their parents who read it.
organizations who passed resolutions supporting the
members who went house4o-house in every part of 1bsnks to all the district's employees who gave us
levy. Thanks to ·the . generous individuals and
the district distributing mat.erialB and talking with support.
organizations who gave us money to pay for
voters. Thanks to all the Pl'As and tbeir presidents.
And most Important of aU, thanks to the voters of ,
promotional materials and ads.
Thanks to all those who marched in our parades. tbe district for giving us a_~--~_pct·.l~~ vote on the
Thanks to the students who made signs. Thanks
These were not levy parades, but they helped the
(Continued on page 3)
~ :o"..W·=crxxrC~~-YJIY~"&gt;!··....•...Y...:?.::·.....

.
date.
u•ven
..
e- : · · New Welfare .,. . "':V';:"~';;;;:·~;;' · '·"·

Retired Rector is dead

ch·l·e·f named

. I
'

wen Sp~Jaker

Response to levy's 3rd try gratifying

KEY BISOAYNE, Fla .
•
MASON ~ Ray Tpcker,
(UPI) -President Nixon has
president of Mason Civic
set Dec. 15 as the target date
Council, said today the
Dr . Stanley Plattenburg, 65,
for acting .oil resignations of
Mason Youth Center must he former ree'tor of Grace
some 2,000 presidential aJ&gt;'
repaired before basketball Episcopal Church in Pomeroy
pointees· and reshaping the
COLUMBUS (UPI)
season starts Dec~ 1. A work and St. Peter's Epi scopal
government for l)is second Charles W. !!ales, executive detail wUI start Saturday at 9 Church in Galli poli s ~ied
lerm,. informed sources said direcior of li private !loston ~.m, and end at noon.
Thursday morning at a
today.
.
social service agency, has been
· All interested parents of hospital . in Cincinnati after
·The res~Bnalions , requested named . director of the Ohio Mason
grade
school becoming ill at his home there
by Nixon rn the a(termath of Department of Public ,Welfare, basketball players and adult 12 hours earlier.
. his overwhelming re .. lection effective Dec. 18, Gov. John J . basketball players are asked
. Dr. Plattenburg served the
to help. Tiley should bring local churches three years,
NEW YORit-EACY DAY, ..... DOGS 80 rlchly•fertWze victory, were beginning to pour · Gilligan announced today.
·
in
from
Cabinet
members
Bates,
who
SUcCeeds
·
John
saws,
hammers and other . having come from New York
. the lllreeta and sidewalb of New York that one wag suggested
Fun City could just u accurately be called dq city. Wbat.to do do;.n \0. tower level federal Hansen who resigned as · wei- tools to repait windows, City where he was on the
.
filre department head earlier build new baokboards and executive council ·of the
aboul tbe e«lmated 2110,000 powtdil of dog waste depoliltd daUy bureaucrats.
A "massive sweep" was the this year to head liP Gilligan's .~!l'~~~h~rs. ,
. Episcopal Church. Before that
hal become 111 .eniotlonaland polit!cally aenaitlve laue for the
.way one official d~scribed the office lltaff, receivel\ .hls mas- !';.;.,: !!;; , ;:o;e;m&lt;o
he had been director of the
dt}'.-,At a hearing 'lburlday, It irowked quarreliniiiJDODg
· - o~ .
'
Christian ·E:ducation. of the
cowiciiDIIIl indpt"'¥ate speeclies aboll pollliCI Allil]lollutlOl\, · govermqent housecleaning~ ·ters degree in soda! work !'ron!.
. Civil Service statlll! employes I.iJuliiana State University.
diocese of Southern Ohio and
illty and diM II!, love and laxity. ,
· •
will not be. affec(ed by the . Gilligan . said Bates . had
. BAND TO PLAY
. had spent 8 year in Brazil in
Altoul lSI people ~wded a City OIIIICi1 belting on a President's atte.fllp~ to move streamlined the operation ·of
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Episcopal Church activities.
p-opolll W!lleh would reqldri! dog O"!ftMI'I to pick up aile! get rid of
a.:-_ "''
"'lldren's SerVice Eas tern H"gh
Sch.ool Band 'w"1"11
Dr : PIa tten b.urg ret"1red 1ast
away from :'big govetnmenti' the """""'
I
their dop' feces or face a $100flne andOOda~ In JaU,
Nixon, Ziegler explained, is · Asaocl~.•
of~ nation's take part in the ground April and · moved from
seeking a more ''efficjent, oldest pnvate svoal ·Sfl'vice breaking ceremonies for. the Pomeroy to Cinci'nnati. He had
WASIIINGTON - (l()NGRB88, roNDAMENTAILY Wt- · effective governinen\·" ·arrd- agencletrBIIcJ-wu-rell!Oillible--new-hranch- ot"the- pomeroy- peen acfive Ti\TfiC Me1gs
dlqedbytbeelectlonl,appeanlobeooacoliJJioncouraewith "where ]IOIISible wants to cut for a ·wide varle~y of social · National Bank Ori . Route 7ln Coun ty Ministerial Association
PrellldentNiml. Route Spetqo Clrl~berherved notice on th! · the f!lt" out of llie feder~l · service programs for mlldren, Tilppers Plains at 2:~ p.m: · and the Meigs County Board of
,. (Continued on page 3)
· . payroll.
· lr;on tinued on page 3)
Salurday. The public is invited.. Meniill.. Retardation.

.

/ 'j

Commenting on the stunning
defeat of John D. Rockefeller,
IV, an outspo~en abolitionist,
Handley said the Democrat's
stand against strip mining was
not the only factor contributing
to his se tback.
"Certainly, Jay 's stand on
stripping had to be considered
a factor, but I don't think tbe'
stripping issue sank him," he
said.

PHONE 992-2156

me

ROY

Citizens to Abo lish Stl ip
Mining, Inc., said Thursday he
is "sure" his group will go on
with its work in the future.
But if Gov . Arch Moore "will
renew his comm itment to
reclamation and go ahead and
enforce the regulations as he
said he is going to do, it is
possible that the whole strip
mining issue could be
defused," Handley said.

.,.

----~
a
i
r
~
e
s
~
o
~
l
u
~
o
n
~
t
o
:
~
a
~
c
~
t
a
~
s
~
:
t
b
~
e
~
;
,
f
i
s
~
c
~
a
i
l
:·;
f
\
o
~
o
i
t
~
'
b
a
~
l
~
l
~te~a~m~~th~is~ff.al~l.~:~H~~e~J~~a;,m~e:is&amp;~;A~d:a:m:s:,
~~~::r-~:~::~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~
d
l
~
v
l
~
d
~
u
a
:
l
~
s
~who
displayto all
. our
s1gns.
·~liand
Meigs ·Local,.to all who
l:ir tbe successful · the
district.
Thanks
hoard
program·
'to participate rn ·
·of
people of the Gaye Price
r

Friday and Saturday
.

RED HEART KNITTING M)RSTED

Five suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
narrower . Brown • Black • Green . Tan .
Common Pleas Court, each
Select your Paris Bells now in the mens and boys deparlment
charging gross neglect of duty
on the I st floor .
and extreme cruelty. They are
Patricia Tolley, Rutland, vs.
FREE C&gt;lFT BOX WITH EVERY BELT.
Dennis Tolley, ' Carpenter;
Phillip W. Kelly, Pomeroy, Rt.
· 4, vs . Lois G. Kelly,
Charleston; Nina Jean Ritchie,
Tuppers Plains, vs. William J .
Sizes·3610 SO. Shor,ts . Regula rs· Longs · Two way zipper . lull
. Ritchie, tittle Hocking; Jane . cut . very well made.
L. Barnett, Syracuse, vs. Kyle
11.39 Lee Forest Green Twill Coveralls . . . - · Sate 9.69
j , Barnett·, Buffalo, W. Va.,
11.69 Lee Herringbone Twill Coveralls · · · . - Sale 9.89
and Joanne Wolfe, Syracuse,
" .
vs. Franklin Wol(e , same' 1-~----- -----,_.~ ..._,.._....;_~
adtlress. .
.
Sale! Boys Sizes 3 to. 7 . . ,
In other court action Sandra
Perry, Middleport, filed suit
SL~CKS
for SliPPOrt under the
Cordurqy - Polyester and Cotton ·blends. A fine
Reciprocal Agreement Act
selection of .styl,es.
againsf Raymond Joe Perry,
Sale 2.39
2.95 8oys Slacks - · - •
Azle, Texas, and .Audra M.
BoyJ_ ~ack!_ • _
. - -~ _
:. -Runyon,HamiiD, W. Va.,...filed
for possession of property
located in · S.lein Toimlh!p
agaih!t .Sernatd and Myrtle
Wilson, Rt. I, Vinton.

EL

AND PLAYERS

Now ori Sale in the Drapery D!!pt.

PARIS BELTS

..

RACINE - Soutbern Local
District Supt. of Schools Ralph
Sayre reported on the com' prehensive special education
program for handicapped
children as required by the
state to the board of education
Thursday night.
He stressed !bat a plan to be
carried out for tbe education of
these children must be submilled to the state by Dec. I.
Implementation will follow its
approval. The board approved

BEDSPREADS '

•.&lt;' ;(

PANASONIC PORTABLE TV SETS

Mens $7.95

2 tor 7.00

School board implements plan

Sale! $8.98

Corduroys - denims • twills · brushed denim
dacron and cotton blends.
4.95 Boys Siacks
Sale 3.80
5.95 Boys Slacks
Sale 4.30
6.95 Boys Slacks
Sale 5.80
8.95 Boys Slacks
Sale 6.80

Sizes 6 to 20 - Sol ids - ·
Stripes
Plaids ._
Excellent styles.
Two Day Sale

S,ale 3.99
. Sale 5.39
Sale 6.39
Saie 6.99
Sale 7.99
Sale 8.99
Sale 9.99
· Sale 10.39

.

FLARE LEG SLACKS

seeond row, Mite Hayes, Mike Rlmaids, Diana Carsey, Jan
Holter, Ingrid Hawley, Geneva KJng, Barbara Antho_ny,
VIcky Qelland, Rnd Pullins, and Rick Stobart; third row,
Sonya Ohlinger, Susie Jeffers, Roxie Patterson, Brenda
VanMeter, JU Smitb, Mike McDaniel, Melani.e Burt, Cherie
Reuter, Joann Blevins, Mary Krawsczyn and Mr. Corder.

lfPOnBOrel\ by the Junior claM, under the direction of Qtarles
Corder, will presmt a three-act comedy, "Rubberneck," ~t
Meigs High School Friday, Nov. l7, at 8p.m. Admission is $1
to adults and 50 cents to students. Front row, 1-i', are Ed
Mitchell, Rlmard Hatfield, David Swisher and Dave Miller;

large chairs and da,11enos,

Two Day Sa lei

and the residents

Escape,
barely

~~·-.-"··

Sizes 29 to 40 waist . M excellent selection of
styles - colors - fabrics . Stock. up on what you
need now. You can really save.
.qs Yodrig Mens Slacks . - . Sah! 4.30
6.95 Young Mens Slacks
Sale 4.80
7.95 Young ~ns Slacks
Sale 5.80
8.95 Young Mens Slacks - - .-- · Sale 6.80
9.95 Young ·Mens Sla~k~ - - - - - ·
Sale 7.80

perm~nent "

probably will not be allowed to
resume living there because of
the instability of the hilL Other
buildings in · the complex are
far enough away from the hill's
edge to be. safe, they said.

Athens County Prosecutor.
Clair Ball Jr. said damage to'
lhe-'road" was estimated at
$200,000. He said he would
recommend to the commissioners th~t they "seriously
consider" filing a suit against ·
the apartme nt owners for
reimbursement of the cost of
•·epairing the road.

Strip mine issue may die

I hen the city has "reinforced "
the aban~onm ent by placing a
condemnation order on the
four buildings.
"The people and their immediale belongings have been
removed, but furniture is still
in lhe buildings, " said Peters.
The owners, U. S. lnveslmen t Fund Ohio Corp., say

FRIDAY, NOVEMBEt&lt; 10. 1972

00

Sale! Young Mens

Long

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1

Music Department- 2nd Floor

The owners, U. S. Investment Fund Ohio Corp., say
lh e evacuation is ''semi ..

Devo.ted To The ln_terests OfTheMeigs-Mwon Area

Shredded foam·· fi lied,
completely ·w-ashable,
non:allerglc. Ideal for
Televiewing;
Traveling . and
Relaxing, .
Colorfu) Terryclo th,
Corduroy, Decorator
Print.

COLOR TV SETS - STEREOS - CLOCK RADIOS •
TAPE PRODUCTS • PORTABLE RECORD !'lAYERS

evncua t iQn Tue sday . Since

.

Keelhauling was a centuriesold seafaring punishment in
which saUors were dragged
witb ropes beneath the barnacle-crusted bottom of their
sailing vessel to be slashed by
the shells and pounded by the
rolling ship.

NECK PIU.OWS

SEE THE RCA

slides.
the instability of the hill. Other
The slide destroyed a 70Moot buildiligs in the complex are
sec liun of Ha stings Road below far enough away fl·om the ill's ·
lhc hill, used by a number of L&gt;dge to be safe, they said .
residents traveling to Athens
"The people and their imfrom the south.
•
media te belongings have been
removed, but furniture is still
The owners of the Monticello in the buildings," said Peters.
Village apartments complex, ''They have been roped off and
whose residents are mostly the public barred."
Ohio Un iversity faculty ·
members , decided on the

Now You Know

Pamper
,
ContoureCI

Coat sfyles · slipover styles
zipper neck
sweaters- skinny ribs. It's an excellent selection
and they're all sale priced for Friday and
Saturday. Regular and extra large sizes.

· Boys $3.95
Sleeve

'

81" Length
90" Lenqth

MEN'S SWEATERS

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

~

72" Length

SALE 3r PAIR

. Big Two Day Sale

18.95
16.95
14.95
12.95
10.95
9. 95

•

Scallbped. edge .sides,
5" boll.om hem, 82".
wide ptk pa.ir. White
with small all over
floral.

Reg. $1.00 to $3.00

gift box ..

AtHENS, Ohio (UP! ) - An
assistant Athens County
engineer said tod.ay luxury
apartment buildings forcibly
abandoned earlier this week
because of landslides probably
would not have been built if
local architects and officials
had ,been involved in their
planning . ,
La ndslides, caused by heavy
rains, endangered four apartment buildings Tuesday and
have resulted in the evacuation
ol residents of 32 apartments.
"The problem is thai no local
architects or officials were in
on the ori ginal planning or they
would have been aware of the
Instability of the area," said
Ernie Peters, .assistant county
engineer.
The apartments rent for
about $200 to $250 per month .
Three weeks ago an aparlment
building in the same area was
torn down because of land-

.

8

We' ve an excellen1 selection "of belts for men and also lor
boys. Bells for the young crowd. Wide ones · hardware type
. buckles . perforated leather . bright colors and white.
And !here's Paris Bells fo r the more conservative. A lillie

'

.

•
SJgll

Sale!

BE SURE TO REGISTER

SALE 1

'

.

.

,

'

l

..

Surviving are his wife, Mary
Ann, three daughters, and a
son , the Rev. George S.
Plattenburg of Moline, ID.;
three daughters, Mrs. William ·
F. Re id and Mrs. Steven M.
Wri2ht. both of Cincinnati, and
Mrs. John Fredenburgh,
Canton, and 11 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at II a.m. Saturday at Christ
Church in Cincinnati with the
Rt. Rev. John Druin, Bishop of
the Southern Ohio Diocese; tbe
Rt. Rev. Roger Bianchard,
New Yl&gt;rk City; executive vice
.,
president of- the . National ·
Council of ihe . Episcopal
ChurcJ&gt;, and the Rt. Rev.
Henry Wise Hobson; retired
~
·
bishop of the Southern O~io
·
·. ·
Diocese, as celebrants. . ''
,
Memorial services will · be
· ··
· . . -::---::-~~.::...~
.held at GraC'e . Episcop~l ~
· ·'
Church in the near future. The · ·
family has , requested that
DR. PLATfENBURG
·floj"ers be omitted .. ' '·
•,

-

:c.·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="731">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11131">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53538">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53537">
              <text>November 9, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7905">
      <name>bafford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="426">
      <name>brewer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="886">
      <name>tipton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1093">
      <name>vance</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
