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8- The O.ily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Nov .13,1972 ..

Two

school~~v-andalized ·-.

MASON -Police Chief John
Harrah and Sheriff Troy
Huffman are continuing in·
vestiga tion today of a double
breaking and entering of the
Wahallla junior and senior high
school buildings resulting in
appa~ent heav y property

Thanksgiving

dillll&lt;Jgt• and Ihe loss uf about
$.100 cash.
Occurring
apparently
some lime Friday evening, the
va ndalis m w.as di scovered
Saturday.
· Entrance was ·gained in the
old junior high building by
breaki ng lgass in a door.
Several rooms were ransacked
and dour lucks tampered with.
There was nothing determined
missing.
The sen ior high building was
nor so fortunate.

(Continued from Page 4)
hall and of additional flatware
were approved. The bazaar
and mar.ke.t of the Loyal
· Women's Class was announced
for Nov. 17 at Dudley's Flower
. Shop,
,
r' r·ederick William Ohlinger,
Mrs. Cline, Mrs. Ella Reuter,
Mrs. Ervin, Mrs . Bessie 72, Walnul St., Middleport, a
Ashley, and Mrs. L&lt;&gt;rena Rice . retired New York Central
rai lroad engineer, died
were hosU!sses.
Salnrday nigllt at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Veterans Memorial Hospl1al
Mr. Ohlinger was born in
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Middleport on Jan. 30, 1900, the
-Cheryl Barrett, Langsville ; sun of the late William and
John Blosser , ·Middleport; Mar·y Ann Jenkinson Ohlinger.
Ellen Couch, Pomeroy ; Tyllc He was also preceded in ~eath
. ..., ...
Roush, New Haven; Dorothy by lwo sisters and a brother.
Snyder , · Hockingport;
Mr. Ohlinger was a member
Catherine Roach, Middleport; of the Brotherhood of Railroad
Leveda Yost,
Rutland; Trainmen and belonged to
Michael Still, Minersville; Middleport Lodge 363, Free
Herman Jones, Cheshire; and Accepted Masons. He
Harold K:ing, Po111eroy.
al.lended the Middleport First
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
John . Hayes, Melvin
Cremeans, Charles Beegle,
LODGE TO MEET
Landon McDaniel , Martha
A special meeting of Shade
Searls.
Riv er Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will be
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - held Wednesday at 7:30 p. m.
Raymond La111bert, Rutland; for work in the Fellow Craft
Carolyn Adams, Racine; Edna degree. All master masons are
Hart, Pomeroy; John Thomas, invited.
1
Middleport; Barbara Fetty,
Langsville.
.
LODGE TO MEET
"SUNDAY DISCHARGES Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will
Michael Still, Lilly Coates, meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m.
Mila
Hudson ,
Cynthia wheM election of officers will be
Jacobson, Edward Bowen, held. Annual dues are also due.
Melania Walding.
All master masons are
welco111e.

Here the vandals apparently
gut in through an unlocked
duor. They smashed glass in
lhc door·s of five class rooms,
lore up a !lUmber of roonls,
leaving scatlered litter frt1m
teachers' desks, and round an ,
eslimated $.100 in teachers'
desk drawers.
One theory advanced is that
lhe persons were looking for
gr·ade records. Report cards.
were to have been made up
early this week.

Frederick Ohlinger dies

" If

you I eel that

you have no faults,
• go no further . That

was a good one to
start with!"

up to the next tall job
lw•ith
a
WERNER
ALUMINUM LADDER
from the Pomeroy Cement

Block Company, the Home
of the " FRIENDLY
ONES". From Utility to
El&lt;tension you' ll never find

fault with a WERNER
UMINUM
LADDER.

United Presbyterian Church.
Survivors are his wife, Ada
Virginia Zahl Ohlinger ; three
daughters, Mrs. Albert (Mary)
Schleicher, Cleveland; Mrs.
James ( Martha ) Vennari;
Pumeroy, and Mrs . Joe
!Mildred) Bailey, Pomeroy;
three sisters, Mrs. Howard
(Mary Ann ) Poole of Stow,
Mrs . George
(Stinard)
Magadore, and Mrs. Nellie
Bradley, Columbus.
Funeral services will be held
al 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings.Coats Funeral Home
wilh the Rev. Dwight Zavitz
ulficiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery. Masonic
services will be held at 7:30 this
evening by the Middleport
Lodge. Friends may call at the
funeral home aoy time.

Open Every Week Day 9:30 a..m. to 5 p.~. - and .on Fridays and Saturdays
9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. ·
-------.. . ------~~---------~------------~---·----------~---·--·-·-·--·~::-·--·~"1
. . . 'fUtf'

IN HOLZER
Lee Johnson, Racine Route I,
is a patient at the Holzer
Medical tenter. His room
number is 420.

Too Late to Classify

OIIDER

TWELVEGRADUATE-Nomore than 12 seniors will·be leaving the Marauder Marching
• Band next spring, guaranteeing Director Dwight Goins a "veteran unit " when the 1973 foot ba II
: season opens. Four of the 12 are majorettes, including head majorette and field commander
: Julia Hutchison. Above, I tor, kneeling, are Leta Floyd, Miss Hutchison, Brenda,lJ!y!or, and
•· Mindy YoWlg; second row, Liz Blaettnar, Sheila McKnight, Donna Francis, Patti Well, Diana
" Young; third row, Scott VanVranken,Dennis Glaze and Phil Moon. -Picture by Gary Walker·.

LCCD bids
to be asked

You'll enioy a visit to the TOY STORE and so
will your children. You'll find a really ex·
cellent selection of toys, books, games,
bicycles, tricycles, wagons, puzzles, and dolls.
You'll find excellent quality, names and
brands that are known for creating and
building toys that the children really enioy.

-

· Drinks and
oesserl E.tra .

Lay-Awa5' Plant !
You can select toys now and they will be ready for you
to pick up at Christmas lime.
You ' ll like the way the toys are arranged for your
easy selection. You'll find ca pable sa les people to help
you make your selections.

&amp;der our regul~r m&amp;hu every nl_ghi s io .10_.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629

POMEROY

f ·

The Barr Construction Cu. of
Gallipoli~ was authorized to
proceed with its plans to build
lwo JO.unit apartment houses
in Middleport by Middleport
Council Monday nighl.
Meeting with council in the
mar ter were Tony Barr of the
construction firm, and Dean
Circle, builder , both of
Gallipolis, a'nd Edison Baker of
lhe Middlepor t Plannin g
Commission. The visilors
displayed plans for the two
apartment complexes which
are tu be built at the corner of
Walnul and First Sts. on lots 5,
6, 7 and 8.
Council, upon the recom.
mendation of the Planning
Commission, changed the
wning of the lots from business
to residential, and it was
agreed to abandon the present
sidewalk. Part of where the
present sidewalk is located will
be 'used to provide head.in
parking near the apartment

(Tochnicolor)
John Finch
Alec McCowen
Thr ills Galore! That's
HITCHCOCK!
(Rf
Colorcartoon:
Tilt First Telephone
Adullo: Sl.l8 Chitdrtn: 75c
Show Start• I P:M.

houses, and a new walk will be
built.
Parking will be provided in
frunl and at the rear of the
buildings and there will be a
play area for children living in
them. Four me«!rs on Walnut
Sr. will be removed to per111il
the change in the sidewalk and
to complement lhe parking
plan.
Cosl of I he housing projec l is
eslimalcd at around $270,000,
Circle sa id.
Coun cil suspended rules and
gave all three readings to an
ordinance to set up a '~ £ederal
general revenue 'sharing trust
fnnd" as required . by the
village if it is to participate in
rhe reven ue sharing program
uf the federal government.
Council approved the Oc·
Iuber report of Mayor John
Zerkle showing receipts of $147
in merchant police collections
and $2,227.50 in fines and fees
fur a total of $2,374.50.

Request.&gt;; fur street lights on
Hailroa d, Fain•iew a,nd a~ the
marint~ were referred , to the
lighl committee by Mayor
Ze rkl e. Mayor- Zerkle also said
thai the street sweeper is
·~beyo nd repair.'' Maintenance
Su pervisor Harold Chase
eslimated that $2,000 would be
RALPH WERRY, CO-CIIAIRMAN of the annual Meigs
required to repair the sweeper.
County
Junior Miss Pageant, right, hands an advance ticket
It also was noted tha t even with
to William Reed at Bill end ue's Music Center in Pomeroy.
the expe nditure the sweeper
would no t be efficient. Mayor • The advance sale tickets, being sold at a price under door
admission, can also be purchased at the New York Clothing
Zerkle referred the matter to
House in Pomeroy and at Dutton Drugs and the Village
Ihe equipment committee.
Pharmacy in MidcUeport. The pag~nt will be held at 6
II was agreed to purchase an
Saturday
night at Southern llil!ll School in Racine ..
addit iona l 200 feet of guard
rail ing from Ben:rom Corp.
F'uur hundred feet were in,
stall ed up Middl eport Hill al lhe sewage disposal lagoon gravel from Letart Falls .
r·ecently and the additional 200 so lltat workers will be able to
Attending were Mayor
feel will complete the job, the reach the river bank area to Zerkle, Clerk·Treasurer Gene
mayor sa id . The railing will make repairs . If repairs are Grate, Chase, Police Chief J. J.
add tu the safety of travelers nol made, the lagoon will be Cremeans, Barr, Circle, and
over Middleport Hill , he noted. "going into the river," Chase council members Lawrence
. Chase discussed with council war· ned.
SU!wart, Mrs. Roger Morgan,
1he need uf some 15 truckloads
It was agreed to secure the David Ohlinger, Fred Hoffman
or gravel to use on a roadway services of a large h·uck to haul and William Walters.

School Board appreciative .of levy vote

The board also approved necessary for the board to use Dixon as instructor of the
The Meigs Local District
The high school tutoring
Board of Education Monday applications for water service the entire building.
Ca rpenter Apprentice class program was reviewed. It was
Mrs. Thomas asked the (his salary will be paid partly suggested that James Diehl,
'
night approved a resolution for Bradbury, Salem Center·
•
.
thanking all persons who and Harrisonville from board for two downstairs and by the union and partly from a principal, meet with the board
worked for the passage of the Leading Creek Conservancy two upstairs rooms .
special state subsidy with no at the next meeting to discuss
Porter explained that the local funds involved), and the program further.
five mill sehoul operating levy District and an easement for
and also thanking voters for Leading "Creek Conservancy board could take no action until approved the request of the
Hargraves said 20 names
further
study
is
made.
He
District
to
construct
and
repair
their
support.
American
Bankers
Life
have
been submitted for the
•
••
Board president Frank W. water lines on the Salem suggested that Mrs. Tho111as Assurance Co . of Miami, Fla., Rio Grande College com·
Porter, and Don Mullen, vice Center, Harrisonville and meet with Supt. Hargraves as to sell sheltered annuities to mittee.
• Advertisements for bids to
The bids will be for raw
president, expressed their Bradbury school properties. to what actually is needed, and employes and have the
The board also approved a
lluild a new rural water supply water transmission main and
the
board
will
act
later.
Mrs.
Porter
said
Salem
Center
will
thanks
to
voters
,
board
payments deducted from the ·resolution requested by Ohio
and distribution system will be appurtenanc~s; treated water
Thomas
said
there . ~re senior
be
the
first
school
to
be
served
~!:~~~~~~,::a
!l,'
l
nd
Supt.
George
pa~roll~
. University conQernins student
jilac~IL' 11\la , w•~ by lh~ , malno, ~ oervlcea,· anti ap~·
tititens
who
cart
heTp
wltlt\1\e
from
lhe
new
water
system
.
..
·
ana
kst.
Supt.
It
was
suggest
ed
that
the
Lee
· ·te«chers a,..uring there is no
Leading_ Creek: Conseryll!lCY purtenances ; steel water
high
school
tutoring
program
The
treat111ent
plant
will
be
Larry
Morrison
who,
ac.
McComas, clerk, check and see discrimination due to race,
rlistrict,
•
storage tanks and foundations;
as
we
ll
as
in
the
remedial
located
near
mine
No.
1,
Porter
cording
to
Porter,
"worked
like
how many deductions are color, national origin or sex in
Bids on the project estimated the treatment plant ; wells and
reading program.
said
.
.
trojans"
to
pass
the
levy.
prese
ntly being made and the schools.
t1J cost in excess of $4 million well pumps ; service meters;
She also said that the first report at the next meeting.
M
eeting
with
the
board
was
In
other
business
the
board
The board agreed to further
will be opened at 12 noon on treated water mains, services
senior
citizens
com111ittee
to
be
Mrs.
Eleanor
Thomas
of
the
approved
Hargraves
report
on
Louie
M.
Christian
was
study
a letter from the Meigs
Dec. 15 at the Rutland and appurtenances, steel water
formed
was
the
one
at
M
eigs
County
Council
on
Aging
the
Comprehensive
Special
appointed . as substitute Local Chapter of the Ohio
EI e m e n t a r y S c h o o I storage tank and foundations,
Harrisonville.
who
asked
for
additional
rooms
Education
Program
for
han·
custodian who wlll be working Association of Public School
SAMUEL B. MAY
auditorium .
and service meters.
In
other
business
the
board
the
Pomeroy
Junior
High
at
dicapped
children
as
required
at Rutland, and the resignation Employees requesting the
': Attorney Frank W. Porter
Separate ' copies of the
took the followin g action of C'harles Pullins as present right to represent and
building
for
one
year.
The
by
the
state.
said Monday tliat if bids are . complete bidding documents
Hargraves said a plan to be board at its last meeting following Hargraves ' custodian at Rutland was negotiate for non·certifled
accepU!d, contracts will be and plans for each division of
carried out for the education of agreed to the use of the home recommendations:
accepted.
employees and the hiring of an
a)Varded shortly after Jan . I, the work may be obtained at
Accepted
the
resignation
of
economics
room
as
an
office
in
these
children
must
be
sub·
Substitute
bus
driver
ap·
additional maintenance man .
1973, raw water would be the office of the Engineer,
Thelma Grueser, cook at pointrnents, pending approval
order
that
application
may
be
mit
ted
to
the
state
by
Dec
.
I.
Attending were Porter,
available about June I, 1973, Commonwealth Systems
Pomeroy, due to ill health; of the county board, were Mullen, Carroll Pierce, Virgil
made
to
receive
federal
funds
Implementation
will
follow
.
A
'and treated water about Nov. I, Corp., 1000 N. Madison Ave.,
resolution to act as the fiscal for the program by Jan . 1, with accepted the resignation of Robert Pickett, Fred Ruth, King, and Joe Sayre board
1973,
Greenwood, Indiana .
Samuel Bruce May, master agent in some areas of the the understanding that the Louise Kahn as French and Warren Black and John members ; Hargraves, and
maintenance man at the Ohio program and to participate in office space would have to be English teacher at the high Bentley.
McComas .
-~~1!\'11&lt;\WI~~;~~~t~w.:r.
... m-:::::.~J: ~ c
: ~-~~:::::::::::::::::::::::1
Valley Electric Corp., Kyger the other areas was approved. relinquished If it became school; approved Herbert
Creek plant, will be installed as
Master of Middleport Lodge
363, Free and Accepted
.••
Masons, Middleport, on Nov.
By United Press lntematlonal
The Middleport Police Dept. stop signs, three each;
28, at 7:30p.m. at Middleport
ST. TIIOMAS, V.I.- SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN said Masonic HaiL
made 56 arrest.&gt;; during the speeding, three; left of center
today "it would be a nustake" for Democrats to oust Jean
month of October, Police Chief and improper backing, two
Installing officer will be Ben
Westwood as Democratic national chairman now.
J.
J . Cremeans reporU!d when each; disturbing the peace and
H. Philson, Racine, District
· Any decision about the leadership of the party structure Deputy Grand Master of the
Middleport Village Council met assault and battery, four each,
should be postponed u,ntU after the first of the year, the defeated Twelfth Masonic District of
and one each for following too
Monday night.
Democratic presidential nominee, who chose her for the job last Ohio. May, who has been a
The greatest number of closely, disregarding safety,
July, told reporters at hls post-election retreat in the Virgin Mason five years, was elected
offenses •!Dong the arrests was and failure to transfer plates.
for intoxication with 19 arrests Charges were dropped in one
fillands. Five governors -members of the executive committee to the Lodge's top post Nov. 7.
'
made while driving while in· instance.
Qf the Democratic Governors Conference - recommended that
Other olficers of the Lodge
The department Investigated
toxicated was second with
Mrs.'Westwood step.down before a National Committee meeting are Darrell Bechtle; Senior
17
accidents and the cruiser
eight arrests being made on
Warden ; John Nash, Junior
Dec. 9.
•
that charge. Arrest, for other was driven 4,716 miles during
Warden; · Ja111es Euler,
charges included fa!lure to the month . Parking meter
• DAVENPORT, .IOWA - RISING WATERS from the Treasurer; Paul Darnell,
· yield the right of way, five ; collections totaled $1,387.50.
MississipPi River and the closing of the old city dump created a Secretary ; Carl Taylor,
running red light and running
!Duchy situation for Davenport officials - an invasion of 1,000 to Chaplain ; Paul' Roush, Senior
Deacon ; Allen Page, Junior
1,500 rats.
However, Public Works Director Rex Mathews says there's Deacon; George F. Stewart,
m reason for concern as the migration of rats poses "no Sen ior Steward; Charles
Winebrenner, Junior Steward;
~roblem,nohealth danger" at present, as long as residents don't
CoWlcil approved a first
James
Criswell, Tyler, and
Following tradition, lllid·
' Qllnic."Mathews said Monday so far no one has come close to
reading
of an ordinance which
Carl Taylor, Trustee. James S. .
dleport's parking meU!rs will
being attacked by a rat and poisoned food has been placed in
Buchanan is the outgoing
be free for shoppers during the raises the penalty for overtime
sewers and catch basins to eliminate,the·vagabonds.
parking meter violations from ·
Master.
Christmas season.
25
cents to 50 cento .
May and wile, Joan, and two
.Middleport village council
.chi ldren, De.bra Jo, . who is a
Monday night agreed to the
EDGAR VAN INWAGEN ,right, a survivor of World War II's Bataan Qeath March, wUI be
lreshman "a t Ohio University,
request
of the Middleport
·one of the members of Drew· We~er Post 391 American uglon, taking part in Thursday
and
Michael,
a
junior
at
Meigs
Chamber of Commerce to free
The total in aU Middleport •water merer trusts, $225, $160,
get
evening's annual "dough for dough" program. Through the program, post members will move
High
School
reside
in
Rutland
.
$6,394.23;
fire
house
con·
the
meters
from
Dec.
11
Village funds as of Oct. 31 was
through Pomeroy distributing loaves of bread at homes. In exchange they will accept con·
through Dec. 24. The cham·
~,276.18,
Clerk·Treasurer struction , no receipts, $457,71, The installation service is an
tributions which go to the · ''Gifts for the Yanks Who Gave" project designed to provide
open
meeting
to
all
Master
$16,665.69;
general
bond
ber wlll make a cash
Gene Grate reported Monday
remembrances for hospitalized veterans. Hank Cleland, Jr., chairman of the project, asks th~t
contribution
to the vii·
night to Middleport Council. retirement, $3,945.36, $3,423.36, Masons and In vited guests.
post members participating meet at the post home at 6:45p.m. Thursday. W1th Van lnwage~ lS
$17,547.71.
!age. Council also agreed
Over o~e·fourth of the balance,
George Grate, manager of the Betsy Ross Baking Co., Middleport, which w111 be prov1dtng
Receipts in October were
to decide at its next regular
or $58,671.86, is in the un·
CALLED TWICE
bread
for
Thursday
night's
activity.
Middleport
Fire
meeting whether meters will _ The
touchable sanitary sewer $3,945.36 and disbursements
The Pomeroy E·R squad
' .
.$3,423.36.
no
fire
Department
answered
be
made
free
during
the
answered
a
call
at
8:06
a.m.
escrow l~md.
alarms in October but its first
.holiday season in 1973.
, Becelpts, disbursements,
today to _H;~rrisonvlll~ for Mrs.
aid Wlit went out 20 times
~tively, and the balance
Guy Bolin. who was taken to
according to Fire Chief Bob
of each fund as of Oct. 31 In·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
DIVORCE ASKED
Byers' report to Middlejloi"t
and · admitted as a medical
elude:
.·
·
A
,suit
for
divorce
and
an
'l'HUI\MONT, Md. (UPI) - meeting at the !'resident's to comment on the travels:• of Veterans Meinorlal Hospital Council Monday night.
patient. At 10:55 p.m. Monday,
: General, $9,154.93, $6,776.92,
.action for money has been filed the squad was called to Bailey With a shroud of .secrecy Maryland mountain retre~t. KiSsinger. Whelihan said that
ADMITTED - Amy Eynon,
Of 19 emergency .calls, 16
f.l6,818.04; cemetery, $166.88,
in Meigs County common pleas
protecting
the
whereabouts
of
Hanoi announced that it had Kissinger went to Camp David Syracuse; Jason Drenner, were in town and three were
t!9\l 40 $789.42; fire eqwp- court. Minnie Wise, Rt. 2, Run for Mrs. Paula VanMeter,
Henry
A.
Kissinger:
President
dispatched
key North Vletna· Monday -"'You have photos of Langsville;
Donald out.. Three calls for accidents
a maternity .patient. She Was
ITle~t,' no receipts, U%2.94,
Cheshire,
was
granted
a
t'UA so· swimming pool, $26.64,
taken to Veterans Memorial Nixon worked at · hls Camp mese peace negotiator Le .Duc him getting off the helicopter" Blankenship, Albany; Roberta involved motor vehicles.
divorce from Wesley L. Wise,
One miscellaneous call was
~i~3s,' $3,971.41; plan~ing Middleport, on charges of Hospital, \hen translerred to David retreat tooay on the Tho to Paris to resume talks -but hi! would not corriment on Daile1, Middleport: William
VIetnam
peace
negcillations.
with
the
United
States,
whether
Kissinger
was
stU!
at
Hobstetter,
Rutland
;
Edna
for
a gasoline spill on Route 5$4
the Holzer Medical Center.
eommission, . no rece~pts,
JII'OIII neglect or duty and ex·
The President met. Monday
was
not
known
if Kissinger the Maryland retre~t tooay. Stiles, Pomeroy; Emma in Cheshire ·Township where a
It
f29.76, $373.
with KiBsinger and Ki88inger 's was going to Paris to confer
the President met with Jacobs, Middleport; Wanda storage tank was discovered '·
LOCAL TEMPS
Street . ma"lntenance, treme cruelty. Keith Goble
Ford, Inc., Middleport, filed
Gen.
Alell8nder
M.
Haig
with
Tho.
Kissinger
and Haig fe!' 90 Campbell, Hartford ; Charles leaking. Eight men anaw\ll"ed
aide,
Temperature In downtown
$2 071.51, $3,138.74, $12,123.49; IIIII for money plus interest
White House spokesman minutes, Deputy r-ress Hendefhan, Marietta.
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m. Jr., who had just returned from
that calL The department
ia'n!tarY sewer, . $3,1191.110,
lllalnlt
William
T.
Soulsby,
was ~9 degrees, under cloudy dlsc1188lona in Saigon.
Bruce Whelihan said in Wash· Secretary Gerald L, Warren
DISCHARGED
Ross traveled 392.7 'l)iles during
$3 112.09, tU,IIC!.M; water, Pomeroy' Rt: I. .
Several
hours·.
after
the
skies
.
ingtpn
that
''we're
not
going
·.
(Con\inueo
on
Page
10)
October. ·
Nofris,
Mary
Still.
..:•.71, ..
"!1....57;

install May

ews•• in· Briefst

CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Shrihe Club in
Racine . All Shriners are urged
to at«!nd.

F"RENZY

TEN CENTS

Lodge will

Many, Many
Items
For
Your Selection!

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 52 degrees, under
cloudy skies.

Allred Hitchcock's

PHONE 992-2 156

.

Use Elberfelds

Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted for
1rea t111ent.

Tonight a~d Tuesday .
. November tl-14

Cloudy, colder, diminishing.
winds toni~ht and Wednesday.
Chance of snow western sec·
lion and snow flurries, likely
eastern sections. Low tonight
in the lower 30s. High Wed·
nesday in the 30s.

'

dies at Holzer

MEIGS THEATRE
Wide Menu ·
Chofce

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

entine

Devoted To The lntere6t.' Of The"Meigs-Mason Area
TUESDAY; NOVEMBER 14, 1972

Charles Cornwell

CRIMINAL SUBSIDIES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state paid out $115,937 to 52 ·
counties in October for the cost
of trying indigent felony
defendants, Auditor Joseph
Ferguson announced today.
The subsidies cover attorney
fees, court expenses, travel
cos)s for witnesses and trans·
portatlon of the prisoner to his
place of confinement, and are
paid when the penniless
defendant is convicted.

s to 9: JG-$2.50 all you can eal, lor Ala Carte) .

NO. 149

Weather

New apartment
complex is go

BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

~VOL XXIV
•

For Rent
12 X 60 MOBILE home, inquire
NEED AGREEMENT
at Baer's Market, Syracuse.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Rep.
11·13·tlc ·william Keating, R.Qhio, !laid
Sunday hijackings will not stop
until all countries agree to
eliminate sanctuaries. "I think
it's going to take international
agreeme nt and some sanctions
by this country on those
countries that provide sane·
tuary," Keating said.

DINING

-••

~sl\er,Price Toys

PT. PLEASANT - Charles
B. (Jr.) Cornwell, 54, of 142
Park Drive, Pt. Pleasant, died
unexpectedly this morning at
3:40 in ·the Holzer Medical
Center of a heart attack.
Mr. Cornwell was a masU!r
maintenance man in the
IWLATOMEET
Maintenance Department of
Directors of the Ken Am· the Central Operating Com·
sbary. Chapter, lzaak Walton pany at the Philip Sporn Plant
League of America, will meet at New Haven where he had
at 7 tonight at the farm . Gun been employed 22 years.
tickets are to be turned in .
The funeral services will be
al 2 p.lll. Wednesday at the
CLUB TO MEET
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
The Middleport Literary Point Pleasant with Rev .
Club will meet at 2 p. m. Norville White officiati ng .
Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Burial will be in the Suncrest
Nan Moore . Mrs . Richard Cemetery.
Owen will review, "The
Friends may call, at the
Peaceable Kingdom" by Jan funeral home after 4 p.m.
De Hart.og. Members will give Tuesday. Mr . Cardwell is
comments on the book in an· survived by his wife, Eloise,
swer to roll calt
anci OHe Slster, Mi's. H&amp;iiiet
Lowe, Sr. '
PTA TO MEET
RUTLAND - The Rutlimd
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
PTA wlll meet at 7:30 this
The Pomeroy E·R squad
evening in the school gym. answered a call to the Harold
nasium . The third grade of King residence on Route 33 at
Mrs. Ann WebsU!r will present 7:10p.m. Saturday. Mr. King,
a program.
who was ill, was taken to
WHALEY CONFINED
Donald E. Whaley, Darwin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Whaley, is confined to the
Holzer Medical Center. His
room number is 308.

••

The 3rd century Greek •
astronomer
Fratosthenes
h lculated the earth's cir·
;cwnference to within 70 miles
~ its correct distance. ·

58 Arrests recorded

Meters to he freed

..

• •"

~ &amp;o f

~··

SPILL AND SPELL •

'

•

"famous Brands!

Clerk makes his report ·

ROADMASTER
MURRAY
PLAYSCHOOL

CHRISTMAS
.
.

DECO~ATIONS
An excellent selection of

Big Sflection
O{GaTJ~esL

•

Christmas
tree
Or·
naments,
Christmas
decorations, trims, tree
lights and outdoor lights.

,,

Electric Trains "*•
&gt;

.MANY SPECIAL VALUES

ELBE.RFELDS IN POMEROY
.•

Firemen

month off but

not E-R unit

President in seclusion.

.-u.

'

.

\

'

.I

•·

\

~! '

�, 0., Nov .14, 1972
'

Television Log

By Helen and

S~e

Bottel

there .IS no returning.
South was unlucky to find ,
.KQ72
four missing trulnps in
BY PAUL CRABTREE
A PITCH FOR HITCHHIKING
• Q 84
ProJ(rams for Tonight
olle hand, but he had made
Helen and Sue:
+A K 8 74
a " nothing" play in trumps
.
Military servtce has never been exactly one of young
Wh~ it that hitchhiking in the. U.S.A. is conde_!l!l_led as__ ·
"'Q
Exsr--__
and h~dJlwl_.wellpugjshed
--··-- ~ "----~~ -Am~rlcm• ·ravorite occupaliollS, ·even wnen!ffiiy fiaveuUle--dangerous or'liemued 1111 freeloading when in Europe (t's enWEST ".;._~for 11.
•
da
of
he ·
hotf'ed'
.JI05J
.Void ·
If East h~ld all four trumps.
ltwMI$$$1#&gt;1#&gt;~&lt;*==-===-==•*'*'*'!M
nger ever armga ,s . tr manger.
.
.
couraged:
¥Jl0 9
•7652
there would have been no
Today's serviceman is tittle dtfferent from hiS ancestors m
Do you suppose It's tlle "image"? In Europe, where I
• Ql02
• J96 5 3
way to make the grand slam
griping about the chow , the officers and unpleasant assignments. traveled by IJJwnb aU summer, I Willi considered an intereS!ing
32
8 54
TUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1972
but South could have guarded
But, believe me, he's got nothing to gripe about m the matter of college girl seeing the wocld on a shoestring. There were one or
SOUTII
against
all four trumps in
6 00 - News 3, 4, 10. 15; Sesame Street 20 , Around the Bend 33. transportation.
two "invitations," but very civilized and proper.
'
; ~~8364
the
West
hand by playing his
6· 30 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 15, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing
Permit
me
to
illustrate
:
Yet
over
here
In
America,
a
girl
hltcher
is
fair
game.
If
she
•
Void
ace
of
spades
first.
Him Uo 33.
Shortly after the shooting stopped in World War II, I joined says "No," she might he either dumped In the middle of the
• A K 97 6
1 00 - What's My Line 8; Beat The Clock 4 , I've Got A Secret
After East showed out
13 ; Tno~th or Cons~ 3; Film 15 , Electric Co 20
the
Army,
survived
basic
trairung,
and
was
shipped
home
to
Oak
desert
or,
1111 In a few well publicized instances, dwnped AFNorth-South
vulnerable
South
would have been able
7: 30 - This Is Your L1fe 3; Doctors On Call 4, To Tell The Truth
to
lead
through West's jackHill, Ohio, ,for a brief vacation hefore heading for duty with the TERWARDS. Most people rate her lower clasS "trash," with
w..t North East South
6; Price is Right 8. 10. Beat The Clock 13, Top ollhe Month
10
twice
; pick up the· suit
IS ; RFD 20; Feast of Language 33 .
Japanese Occupation Forces.
morals to match. And a lot of people won't pick up hitchhikers of
I•
Pass 2 •
and
aU
the
marbles.
8:00 - Temperatures Rising 6, 13. Maude 8, 10, Age ol Anxiety
On Dec. 21 of that year, I left for the Far East. My family either sex because they're afraid of being robbed or murdered.
~: ~:
~=-~ ~:~T.
33 ; Bonanza 31 4, 15. Ohio Th•s Week 20
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSti.)
took me to Portsmouth, where I caught a train to Cincinnati. .
Why don't we adopt the Polish system? There, liltchers are
Pass
8·30 - Hawaii Five-08, 10; Bill Moyer's Journal 20. JJ ; Mov 1e
" The Victim" 6, 13.
Then I waited for several hours, and -caught another train to given coupon books after they are checked and found "safe." A
, Opening lead- • J
M;)
9· 30 - Marshall Sports 33; Black Journal 20
Chicago,
whereyou
guessed
it
I
boarded
another
train
for
fellow
or
girl
waving
a
coupon
book
gets
a
lift
quite
easily,
10:00 - Marcus Welby MD. 6, 13, America 3, 4, 15. Ftl m 33,
News 20.
·
St. Paul(theonlygood,fasttralnlntheentiretrip).
hecause they are no threat and also because motorists earn By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby The b1dding has been:
11.00 - News3, 4,6,8,10, 15, 13
West North East
I was due to leave on an "express"_fr(IIII St. Paul to Seattle, coupons for giving rides. They turn in coupona.periodically and
10 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4. 15. Dick Cavett 6. V1rgin1an 8.
South's biddirig was very
Pass
my point of -embarkation. The "express" proceeded to leave prizes are given to holders of lucky numbers. This system was good indeed. Once his partMovies "Su nda y in New York" 10 ; " Law of th e Lawless" 13
Pass
1•
Pass
1.00 - Your Health .
about 20 hours late, made up some of the time across the Dakota started by Univentty of Warsaw students after World War II ner jumped from two spades Pass 4"'
Pass
1 30 - News 4, 13.
Oatiands, but then got behind again in the snowbound Rockies. becauseofashortageofcais,andlt'sstillpopular.
to four spades it became evi- You, South, hold:
Riding in a day coach, not a·sleeper, we finally got to Seattle 14
What with exhaust fume poUution and overcrowded high: dent to South that the grand .QS42.K953 +A765 ... 3
WEDNESDAY, NOV . 15, 1972
hours late.
ways, you'd think the U.S. would encourage hitching as a way of slam would be there if North What do you do now?
6·00
- Sunrise Sem;nar 4. Sacred Heart 10
It took three days to process us around and about Ft. keeping heaklp jalopies off the road Maybe wUIIng motocists held both the king and queen
A-Just bid [our spades. You
6: 15 - Farmt1me 10
of spades and South's grand
6. 20 - Farm Report 13.
Lawton, Wash., and on New Year's Eve, we finally departed IJJe could he Issued coupona too, or carry clearance signs in their slam force was designed to bid all your values and maybe
U.S.A., on a converted liberty ship which could accommodate windows ... sothekidswouldknowTIIEYweresafe.
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
find out if North held those a trifle more when you jumped
to three spades.
6 30 - Columbus Today 4. News. Weather, Sports 6 . Bi ble
about 600 troops comfortably. The only problem was that there
OKAY? CARLESS (BUT NOT CARELESS) \AI
""LLEGE cards.
Answers 8; Urban League Presents 10
TODAY'S QUESTION
6:25 - Glory Road 13
,
we~e 1,800 of us on board.
GIRL
North's jump to seven
West bids one heart over your
7:00 - Today 3, 4, 15, News 6. s, 13
It took 19-days of pitchin~ and tossing a~oss the Pacific, c BUT NOT C:
spades was right out of the one diamond. Your partner and
7 : ~~ :- Romp~r Room 6 ; Sleepy Jeffers S; Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle battllng the waves most of the way (I was betlin[! on the waves),
Okay! Why not start this PpUsh system at your coUege? book. He did hold two of the East pass. What do you do?
s 00 - Capt. Kangaroos, 10, New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame ; t 33. to reach Yokohama. Then aoother train ride to replacement There's no teillng how far and fast a good idea will travel, given three top honors.
play was not up to
8: 3~1m"J~c~ C!C~I~n~- 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6 depot out near MI. Fuji, a week or so in iU-beated tents, and an enthusiastic send-off and national publicity.- HELEN AND ..hisSouth's
bidding.
He took one look
This Weok's Sp,clal
8 55 - Local News 13.
another train ride back to Yokohama, where I got my first hot SUE
at
dummy
and
relaxed
.
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue IS , What Every Woman
shower and a good night's sleep in a real bed, after total elapsed
+++
T~en he won the heart in
Wants to Know 3, Mr. Rogers 33, Friendly Junction 10 : Capt
time of 31 days and three hours.
Kangaroo 8; Ben Casey 13, Concentration 6.
Dear Rap:
his 'own h a n d and led a
VALUE
9:30 - To Tell The Trulh 3; Jeopardy 6; Hazels
Slow, cumbersome, inefficient - and abysmally untrump to dummy's queen.
Gloria Steinem would spit!
RATED
9:55 - Chuck White Reports 10.
comfortable. That was the way servicemen traveled back in 1946.
The
Chauvinist
who
said
"Sure,
boiJJ
Adam
and
Eve
had
East
showed
out
and
the
re10:00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS, Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13 ; In A W ld W 1 id' f
te
tu
I'
ld h
' School Instruction 33; Columbus Six Calling 6; Jokers Wilds.
or
ar so ter o a quar r-een ry ear 1er wou ave navels" because "God created Adam wiiJJ a navel and had to laxing was over. At least the
10; Dick Van Dyke13.
madeaboutasg0Qdtime - andmaybebetter. Butlwasl7,and give Eve one to keep her big jealous mouiJJ abut" was so hilarious happy relaxing was over.
USED CARS
10:30 - Concentration 3, IS, Love American Slyle 6; Phi l durable enough not to care very ll'uch.
Soutb's
grand
slam
had
dehe should be writing jokes foc IJJe Lawrence Welk show. But he
Donahue 4; Price Is R1ght 8, 10.
11 :00- Sale oft he Century 3. IS ; Love American Slyle 6; Gambit
But that is history. Now, for comparison, consider the went too far when he added that E.ve got so excited over having a parted to that bourne of
space and time from which
8; Password 13; Electric Co. 20
·
situation of a young man whom I've had under my roof for the navel of her very own that she kicked up her heels and got IJJem
11 :30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS ; Bew1lched 6, 13, Love of Ute past 16 years.
8, 10; Sesame Street 20.
both kicked out of Eden. Of course he didn't mention Adam has
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Local News 10.
He recently joined the Navy, and after boot camp and ad- something to do with that too.
News 13: Contact 8, Password 6.
vanced training for a brief period, was sent home with orders to
He should just remember that God created man, stepped
12:30
3
W's
Gamel,
IS
;
Split
Second6
;
Search
tor
Tomorrow
8,
join the U.s. Seventh Fleet in the Mediterranean, with Naples,
10.
COMPOSER DIES
back and said, "I can do better than that," then created woman.
12:55 - NBC News 3, IS.
.
Italy, as home port.
LOS ANGELES IUP! )
-MS.
1· 00- News. Weather, Sports 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green
On Sunda
With v myl roof and a1r
0 ing he left home at a 30 was driven to
Rudolf
Friml,
the
Acres 10; French Chef 33; It's Your Bet 8; Watch Your Child
Y m rn •
: 1
Charleston, where he boarded a J'etfor Washington shortly before MS.ES ALL:
15.
Czechosiovakian-born com·
1:20 - Lucille Rivers 3.
noon. From there, he flew to JFK airport in New York, and was
poser
of "Rose Marie," ":rhe
Yea-a-a-a, woman: from rib to Ub- you'vecome a long way,
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15, The World Turns 8, 10. Let's Make on a Pan-American flight to Rome before the dinner hour.
Vagabond King," and "Donkey
A Deal 6, 13.
baby! -HELEN
Serenade,"
is dead at the age
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Landing in Rome early the next morning, he was scheduled
+++
Douglass 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
to catch a flight for Naples that arrived in the City at 11:05 a.m.,
of 92. The internationaiiy ac"You'll like uur Quality
2:30 - Doctors3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Edge of NightS, 10.
giving him six hours to catch a cab, or something, for his ship. As NoTE FROM SUE: But don't forget your sense of hwnor!
claimed
composer died at 11
J:OO - Another Wo'rld 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Love
+++
.Way of Doing Bus~ness ."
p.m. Sunday night of a brain
Splendored Things, 10; RFD 20.
nearlyaslknow,hemadeltonscheduleyesterday.
GMAC FINANCING
Helen
and
Sue:
hemorrhage five weeks after
Total elapsed time : 26 hours, 35 minutes - from Pt. Pleasant
3: 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Ute to Live 6, 13,
992-5342
pomeroy,
Secret Storm 8, 10; Ohio· This Week 20.
.
I liked Ronnie a lot and then I feU in love witb him, and then I entering Hollywood
Open
Evenings
'Til
8:00
4:00 - Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Ftlntstones 6; Love to Naples.
found out he was married and has two chUdren. When I asked Presbyterian Hospital.
Till
P.M.
s.t,
American Style 13; Merv Grlttln 4; Sesame St. 33; G11ligan's
The armed services ·may not be better - but they're cerhim about his famUy he said It was all over. He even menUoned
lstand 8; Movie "The Catered Affair" 10.
inl f t toda
4: 30 - Merv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13 :
Ia Y as er
y,
marriage.
Petticoat Junction 3, ABC After School 6, 13
+++
As long as I told him I wasn't sure about my feelings, he '
5:00 - Mister Rogers 33; Dick Van Dyke IS; Daniel Boone 6;
ON THE TV DIAL: Only one recommendation tonight, but a
couldn't
see enough of me, but then I mentioned "love," and he's
Ponderosa 3, 4.
"d b
AZ TV
5:30 - Dragnet 8; Electric Co 33; Gomer Pyle 13 ; Marshall great one. The acclaimed series "America, e utson WS •
backed off.
'· tl ,!IQO! ISi ~dgep~~e Lodge 20.
at 10. To our Shame, this program was developed and produced in
I went to see him at his office and he-wu ~g ,ln the oar
6~ !,!~e'Ois, Wealher,'Sports 3, 4, S, 10, IS , Truth or Con seq . 6;
Britain.
Sportscope 33; Sesame Street 20.
, with a woman, The secretary.sald it.was his wlfe,and,they had
6:30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10, t - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - never been separated. How could he do this to nie? -JILTED
Dream of Jeannie 13; Hathayoga 33.
Rams
12
1·00- News. Weather. Sports 6. 10; Millstones of Progress 33 ,
10lh Dear Jilted:
Apaches
What's My Line 8; Truth or Conseq. 3: Beat the Clock 4,
High Individual Game
Know Your Schools 33; Anything You Can Do 13; Electric
His wife probably asked the same question -and may ask It
Bobby Powers 175
Company 20 .
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Second High Ind. Game - again and again. Be g41d she is stuck with him - not you! 7:30 - Episode: Action 33; To Tell The Truth 6; The Judge 10,
Nov. 4, 1972
Kelly Winebrenner 171.
Lassie IS; Beat the Clock 13 ; Pollee Surgeon 3; Protectors 8;
Saturday Senior League
High Series Kelly HELEN AND SUE
. Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Standings
462 .
8:00 - Public Attairs33, 20 : Carol Burnette S, 10, Adam-12, 3, 4,
Team
Pis. Wmebrenner
Second High Senes - Steve
15; Jacques Cousteau 6, 13
Gutter Ou ster s
21
Bachner 416.
8:30 - Banacek 3, 4, 15, Playhouse New York 20
Larry Dugan 204.
Pi rl Cru sher s
17 1/ 2
Third High Series - A. L.
Team
High
Game
Impacts
9:00 - Medical Center 8, 10; Chapter 33 33: Burt Bacharach 6,
Third High lnd Game Pin
Buslers
14'1:?
Phelps
Jr . 564.
13.
Blaine Carter 204.
1/ 2 923
Born
Losers
13
Team
High Game - Davis
10:00 - Search 3, IS ; Cannon 8. 10; Soul 33 ; Alan K1n9 6, 13:
Team High Series - Rams
~igh Series - Larry Dugan
Dlng.A-Lings
13'12 2577
Warner
Ins.
947.
News 20.
598
Herbie's
10
Team High Series - Davis
11:00- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Dick Cavell 6; Vtrg1nian 8;
Second High Series - Dale Warner Ins. 2739.
H1gh Individual Game "
·Movies "Stagecoach" 10; "The Trap" 13
Davis 569.
Rich
Bailey
175
Tri.County League
T: 00 - News &amp; Weather 4.
Second High Ind . Game ]: 30 - Local News 13.
Nov. 7, 1972
Rich Batley, Rick Stobart 170.
Standings
Team
Pis.
---------------~:----,
•·
H1gh
Series
Rich
Bailey
•
,
494 .
Oav1s Warner Ins .
65
Second H1gh Series - R1ck R&amp;H Rawlings
54
Slobart 454.
Gro
Boys
40
Team High Game
Pin
Pomeroy
Cement
Block
Co.
38
Cru shers 783
Pm H&amp;R Firestone
24
Team High Series
Mayer &amp;Hill
21
Crushers 2225
High Individual Game
. . even for those late, Iale calls. L1ke th'e STAR LITE® telephone . the
Larry Dugan 216
dainty high-style phone with a dial that glows. It's 1deal for her van1ty or
Second High Ind . Game
Saturday Bantam League
night !able for after-dark dialing , or jUSt as a friendly soft n1ght light (wilh
Nov. 4, 1972
adjuslable brightness) . Bedroom or breakfast nook, k;tchen or rumpus
Standings
The Daily Sentinel
Team
Pts.
room . . every home shOuld have a second phone , a step- and work DIVOTID TO THI
Ball Bombers
16
INTI RUT 0,
saver for your greater pleasure, convenience and security. Wherever
Red Barons
11
MIIOI
·MAION
ARU
All Stars
your need, whatever your taste or dei;or, there's a fascina ti ng
11
CHESTIR L. TANNIHILL,
Cyclones
8
hoc.ld.
selection of styles, colors and special -purpose telephones
Banana Spills
1
RO.IR T HOI'LICH,
m General Telephone's Exlension Exlravaganza
Pin Busters
1
City ldttor
Publlsntd dilly txtopt
High Individual Game
SaturdiV by Tht Ohio Vlllty
Kevin Yeauger 149.
Publishing Comp•nv . 111
Second High Ind . Game - Court
St.. Pomerov. Ohio ,
David Burl 140.
•5769.
8uslntn
Pnont
High Series - David Burt 992-2156. EdltorltlOftlct
Pnont 992.
263.
.
21l7 .
Second .High Series - Kevin
Second c;:l111 posteQe paid 1t
Pomeroy, Onto .
Yeauger 261
National edvtrllslne
Team High Game
rtprutntetlvt BottlntlllCyclones 731.
tllovher, Inc .. 12 !ut 12nd
Team High Series
St., New Yorlc Cltv. New York .
Cyclones 1434.
Subscription rtttt : Dt·
NORTH

••o

(D )

14

au

"'J

0:

:)I!MUf!)

_I.

..

'72 OLDS

Cutlass Supreme
H.T. SEDAN
'3695

Karr &amp;Van lao.dt.

Local Bowling

wide-awake styles

CHRISTMAS SHOP
With peace 'ot mind. No need to carry
large sums of money. Just pay by
Check.

llvtrtd bv Cltrltr whtrt
IYIIIIblt 50 untl Ptr Wttk;
By Motor Routt where urrltr
service not IVIIIIbll : Ont

Saturday Junior League
Nov. 4, 1972
montn 11.75. lr moll In Oh io
Standings
lnd
VI ., Ont Ytlr $10.00.
Team
Pis. 51• W.months
11.25. Thrtt
Impacts
19
month•
s•
.so.
Sub•crlpllon
Batt Busters
19
price lncludtl Sundev Tlmtt·
Dreamers
16'12 Sentinel.
Alley Cats
13

I

liii&lt;G&amp;l. IH:II"' 0Mta

·- ----

---Bal\k
Cili}tnl ,.atlor\11

"IT'S TRUE" - - -

&amp;enERAL RLEPHDnE

m111•••••n.Ohl•

And you will also have a record of all
your. shopping.
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CHEBTPHONE .. a real man-type
decorator ph one lor the living
room , his special room~ desk or
table. Modern stylized· Instrument
handsomely set in a black leather
chest with walnut trim
In
catved walnut . or even with a
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set on the lid I

~

the -Sports·

Chargers 21-17 victim

SAN DIEGO (UP!) --QuarMike ~ipps was
thinking field goal, but Coach
. Nick Skorich wanted it all and
..__.,.,_ _~~&gt;...!.......,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,tot his decision resulted in a 21-17
.-.
'vtctory for the Cleveland
Tonight puts the final whistle to the 1972 Southeastern Ohio Browns over the San Diego
League football season for the Meigs Marauders when the Chargers before a national
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary Club's Sixth Annual Football . television audience Monday
night .
Banquet takes off at 6:30p.m. Attention will he directed upon two
"I was going to go across the
principals of the evening: the football squad and its ooacbes, and middle and set up a field goal,"
a smallish guy who 40 years ago was a premium Pomeroy school Phipps said. "When the coach
boy three-sport star and today one of the nation's most res~cted sent the play in I thought it had
uni'(ersity athletic administrators.
. - .. -,
a chance but I thought I threw
'!bat would be WiUiam Henry Hamson (Tippy) Dye, it too far."
director of athletics at Northwestern University, EVljnston, lll.
"We told Frank to take off
There's ari ancient cliche that goes something like this: "The and we would throw to him,"
event honoring (John Doe) attracted a host of friends and Skorich said.
relatives ... "
The result was a 38-yard
So will the appearance of Mr. Dye at Rllck Springs this touchdown pass taken by
evening . Tip no longer has a host of relatives in these parts, but Frank Pitts in the rear of the
he has that many-if not more-friends. There are teammates end zone with only 41 seconds
left.
still around from those great years of Pomeroy High football,
The Chargers had taken the
1930through 1932with Tip as quarterback and Fred Crow at end.
They were equally as great, even greater, in (act, times for PHS lead only 40 seconds earlier on
a three-yard scoring crack
basketbaii and baseball.
There are men around galore like Elbert (Robbie) Robinson, over left guard by Mike
Edison Hobstetter, Fred Blaettnar, Doc Tom Crow, Alfred Garrett. But Phipps needed
Elberfeld, Charley Gibbs (who won't return to Florida unit! only three plays after the
Wednesday), Bob Hartenbach, Asa Hoskins (who taught him ensuing kickoff to march his
ClUb 64 yards for the WIMing
Math), Bob Roberts, and Zeke Zahl just for starters who cheered score . He hit Ken Brown on
those great teams on.
passes of seven and 19 yards
Tip's dossier of achievements, having been published before firing the bomb to Pitts.
recently, needs· no repeating .
The win, Cleveland's fourth
He will receive a warm welcome Tuesday night. It will be his on the road this season, gave
ftrst at the podium for a sports event in the new Meigs High the Browns a 6-3 record,
School.
leaving them only one game
CharlesCh~ncey, head Marauder football coach, may not be
behind Pittsburgh in the
able to relish the memory of the 1972 season in years to come American Conference Central
insofar as its won~ost record stands. Like most coaches, though, Division.
The loss dropped the Char. Mr. Chancey wiU attest - and honestly - his boys tried as hard
, and won respect during 1972 as in any year, notwithstanding their gers deep in tbe cellar in the
6-4 record.
Western Division at 2-6-1.
Phipps was the indiVJdual
And before you write this off as a "bad year," as one of
Chancey's poorer productions, know this, that a great many he~o for the Browns, completclose and enthusiastic Marauder foUowers had 1972 marked ing 13 of 21 passes for 166 yards
down for a s.5 or W season. As for Sports Desk, his private vote and ru!Uling for 17 yards, inwas an optimistic 7-3, and I look back on that thing at Waverly cluding a one-yard touchdown
and the other thing two weeks ago against Gallipolis and I know dive with 15 seconds to go in the
that the season, but for a couple or three terrible things thai first half to give Cleveland a 7-3
lead .
happened, could have been 8-2!
Know this too :
That Injuries eliminating certain players took away all the
Marauders' offense betweet the tackles in the Gallipolis game.
That the pass defense in the Waverly game - for example has to be blamed in part on the fact that the squad really cannot
get good instruclion in pass defense on its present practice field
· in back of Salisbury Elementary School where there are no
sidelines, nJl yard lines, and such a limited area that an end going
deep runs into a creek before he barely gets up full steam.
"That hurt us plenty this year," said Chancey grimly, after
FOXBORO, Mass. (UP! ) the Gallipolis loss.
Phil Bengtson was named
This is a situation that will be corrected before next full ,
interim coach of the Patriots
~ libpe~, l! r!ir1.1t prOKI'esa con.lhlues,ln...)uliO,ing a Pl'actiC&lt;l Monday, &gt;a~t!!Ht&gt; .hours,.iBiter
field and full quarter mile track on the Meigs High campus.
John Mazu... ~jlped down and
•
Two other factors made 1972 an "iffy" year: lack of depth
only one day . after New
and lack of over all experience, which suggests that one of the
England suffered the worst
best things about this 6-4 season at Meigs High is that there is a
defeat in its history, 52-0, at the
next year.
hands of the unbeaten Miami
Dolphins.
Bengtson, former head coach
and general manager of the
Green Bay Packers and currently personnel director for
•
the San Diego Chargers, said
his new assignment was
strictly on an interim basis.
"I just plan to finish the
season," he said. ''I was really
aJLUMBUS (UP!) _ The
Nye suggested farmers post
surprised at the change."
upland game hunting season "no hunting" signs in unbarHe said he plaMed to return
will begin as scheduled vested fields and post notices
to the Chargers when the
• Wedensday despite requests by at their farmhouses that they season ended.
Ohio Farmers for a delay are not pennitting hunting.
Will Think Over Plans
because of unharvested corn
Dan C. Armbrusl!'r, chief of
On his plans for the Patriots,
and soybean 'fields.
the division of wildlife, said
a team that Mazur left with a
While refusing to delay the most hunters "will want to laid
dismal2-7 record, including six
season, however, Natural Re· farmers in this unusual straight losses, Bengtson said
sources Director William B. weather situation by mainhe would think them over on
Nye warned hunters that 88 taining good hunter-farmer
the long plane flight to Boston
game protectors and other relations."
this morning.
enforcement agents will be
Armbruster said there are
The Patriots said Bengtson,
working to strictly enforce more than 500,000 acres of pu[}.
who was named head coach of
hunting laws and attempt to lie hunting land In Ohio.
the Packers in 1968, general
keep h)IDters out of unharRoyal R. Cox, assistant to the manager the following year
vested fields.
director of the state
and beld both positions until
The Ohio Farm Bureau Fed- Agriculture Depariment, said 1970, "brings to New England a
eration had asked for a two- only a hard freeze would let career of more than three
week delay because wet wea· farmers onto their croplands. decades of coiiege and profes.
ther has left two-thirds of Atwo week delay in the start of sional coaching expenence."
Ohio's corn crop and half the the hunting season, he said,
Mazur, faced with mounting
would
"not accomplish
soybean crop unharvested.
anything because the fields criticism as the Patriots lost
Nye said his deparbnent con- aren't going to dry out before heavily in game after game,
suited with the Farm Bureau
announced his resignation
Federation and the state Agri- winter."
Monday afternoon.
cutlture Department before
C. William Swank, executive
"! have always placed upmaking a decision to go ahead vice president of the Farm permost in my mind the best
with the hunting of pheasant, Bureau Federation, warned if interests of any organization
farmers are able to get into
rabbit, quail and Hungarian theirfieldsandhunters "devil" with which I have been
partridge.
h
associated," Mazur said in a
He said economic factors on ~em for permission to unt brief statement released by tlle
, both sides were considered - while tbey are trying to har- club.
farmersgetting their crops and ' vest, ''we're going to be right
"In accordance with this
vacations and back here telling Mr. Nye It long-term policy, I am resignhun ter~ tak;na
• ., .
didn't work and ask for a
· of h tin ..
reservmg lodgmg In aning my job," he said.
ticipation of the beginning of suspens1on
un g.
Mazur Takes Over
the season.
Mazur took over the Patriol.!t
in the middle of the 1970 season
after New England lost six of
its first seven games under
Clive Rush. The Patriots
finished 2-12 that year, but
Mazur directed the club to a
surprising 6·8 record last
DAYTONA -BEACH, Fla . C.~iiniShed third in Sunday's season that included upsets of
· Oakland, Baltimore and
(UP!) -There Isn't too much Texas 500 to take the overall
Miami.
doubt today about who Is the season title and also the third
New England jwnped off to a
most successful stock car leg of the Winston Cup series,
boosting his season's earnings
driver of aU time.
.
Richard Petty, NASCAR's to $227,015.
Petty finished the year witJJ
all-time
leading
mon1,701.4
points. Second-place Old Dominion 500.
ey winner, Monday. was
His victories jumped hl.s
acknowledged as the only Bobby Alllaon totaled ,8,573.5
points,
but
was
the
top
money
careet"
total to 148-rnore than
driver to win his fourth
double hl.s closest competitor,
Grand National di'Tvliijj cJwn.. winner with f2'/1,395.
Petty's
eight
wln.l
this
year
David Pearson, who has 86.
pionshlp .
Petty's other champlonahl)lll
'[11e title was worth f25,000 were the Western Winlton 1100,
and brought Petty's aU-time the l.Gne Star 500, the Rich- came In 1964, 1967 and last
rnoney winnings to a fat mond 500, ~ C&amp;pttal City 500, year. The only other driven to
the Gwyn Staley tOO, tfle Wilkes win three times are Petty's
1 !3115,14•.
•'petty, • • G(ft........
n
N.
tOO, the Vlrglula 1100 and the father, la! and Pearson,
'

By Chet Tannehill

Des-k

terb~ck

Bengtson

succeeds

Mazur

~ Hunting

season

starts Wednesday

Petty adds $25,000
to his rich purse

San Diego retounded to take
a 10.7 third quarter margin on
a four-yard pass from John
Had! ~ Cid Edwards, but
Cleveland countered with a
twoyard scormg plunge by
Brown with 9:54 left m the
game to take a 14-10 lead.
The Chargers drove from
their 23 to Cleveland's four in
15 plays the first tune they got
the bail, only to fumble on a
busted play , with former
Bob
Briggs
Charger
recovermg for Cleveland to

Phipps and the rest of the Steelers, "and I saw them shut
stop the scoring dnve.
B~owns
watched the Pitts- off the runrung and passmg. I
San Diego's only first half
score came on a 26-yard field burgh Steelers completely didn't sec anything I could do
goal by Dennis Partee with stifle the Kansas Ctty Ch1efs against them but I haven't seen
6:57lefl in the second quarter . -Sunday.
·$e hlms.n
.
They entertain the Steelers
The receiving of Pitts proved
" Pittsburgh was great
too much for the Chargers as next Sunday in the1r big one yesterday In sa id Browns'
he hauled m ftve passes for 96 and, whtie expressing .awe, coach Nick Skorich. "They
yards, most of them in critical they are confident of moving have a terrific defense, but we
mto a lie wtth the Amencan have an exceiienl chance. We
situations.
The Chargers' ground game Conference Central Dtvision play Pittsburgh twice and
proved effective as Garrett leaders of the National Foot- Cincinnati once more, and lo
gamed 89 yards and Edwards ball League .
win your division you have to
"I watched them on teleVI- beat the tea ms in your
91 , but mistakes in crucial
Situattons cost them the game. sion," Phtpps satd of the division.n

Phipps deal greatest--Skorich
SAN DIEGO (UP!) -"The
trade of Paul Warfield for the
chance at Mike Phipps was one
of the greatest deals the
Cleveland Browns ever made,"
Browns' Coach · Nick Skorich
beamed after a 21-17 National
Football League win over the
San Diego Chargers Monday
night.
"There was no other way we
could get a top young quarterback. We had confidence
Phipps wouiq develop. "
The trade of Warfield for
Phipps has been crttidzed
most of the past three years, as
the premier wide recetver has

been a key !actor in the
meteoric rise of the expanston
Miami Dolphins.
But a national televiston
audience saw what Skorich
meant Monday night when the
third year quarterback from
Purdue cohSistently hit on
third down plays and finally
uncorked a 38-yard bomb to
Frank Pitts with only 41
seconds left for the win.
Phipps needed only three
pia ys to rebound Cleveland
from a 17-H def1cit. He hit on
passes of seven and 19 yards to
Ken Brown coming out of the

Pro Standings
NFL Stand1ngs
l
By United Press lnternationot
National Conference
East
w. I. t. pet. pf PI
Washng tn 8 1 0 889 227 124
Dall as
1 2 0 .77S 217 1ol9
N Y G1a nts s 4 0 .556 210 191
Sf LOUIS
2 6 I .278 122 195
Phiia
2 6 I .278 86 194
Central

w. I. t. pet. pi , pt
0 667 179 161
0 556 199135
0 556 213 185
1 . 3!. ~ 149 165
West
w. I. t. pet. pi PI
Los Ang
5 3 1 611 177148
Atl an ta
5 4 0 556 199 183
San Fra n 4 4 1 500 232 175
NewOrlns 1 I 1 167 135 253
Amer1can Conference
East
w. I. t. pet. pf pa
M1am1
9 0 0 1.000 250 103
N Y Je ts
6 3 0 .667 279 192
Bal t1mor e 2 7 0 .222 139 186
Buffalo
2 7 0 .222 168 253
Green Bay 6 J
Mm nesota 5 4
De troll
5 4
Ch1cago
3 5

New Eng

2 1 0 .222 10'1 296

Central

w. I. I. pet. pi PI

2 0 .778 233 134
6 3 0 .667 162 151
5 4 0 .556 169 152
threw the bail away and was
1 8 0 .Ill 104 233
htt only with a two-yard
West
grounding penalty instead of a
w. I. I. pet. pi pt
safety. The Browns punted out Oakla nd
5 J 1 .611 22'1169
5 4 0 .556 202 156
of danger when they could have Ka n City
Denver
3 6 0 .333 181 232
been behmd
Sa n D;ego 2 6 1 .278 169 224
Monday's Results
Cleve 21 San Diego 17
Criticized as a loser his ftrst
(Only game scheduled)
two years and early this
Sunday's Games
season , Phipps has led the
Bal li mor e at Cmcinnatl
Bullal o at New Englan~
Browns to four straight wtns.
Dallas al Philadelphia
"I wasn't down," he sa1d. "I
Gree n Bay at Houston
knew it would Ulke a couple of
M 1nnesota at Los Angeles
years to get in. Now f'm just
New Orl ean s at Detroit
N Y Giants at St Louis
playmg. 1 make mistakes and
N Y Jels at Miami
make corrections. I JUSt want
Oakland at Denver
to be the best consistent
Piltsburgh at Cleve
San D1 ego at Kan City
quarterback around."
San Francisco at Chicago
!Onl y games scheduled)

backfield and then nailed Pitts.
"! called the screen and
flair," Phtpps satd , "and they
sent in the last play. I was
going to go across the middle to
set up a field goal When I
threw it I thought maybe 1t was
out of reach."
Phipps hit 13 passes for 186
yards and one touchdown. He
plunged one yard for a score
with only 15 seconds left in the
half, but his big play may have
come early in the game.
Hopelessly trapped by
Deacon Jones and Lionel
Aldridge deep in the end zone,
he shook loose and obviously

Pi! tsbr gh
Cleveland
C1ncmna l 1
Houst on

I

Monday's Games

Hayes regrouping forces
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State Coach Woody Hayes,
faced with the task of
regroupmg hts forces for the
final two games against North·
western and Michigan, called
Monday's weekly press lun·
cheon "not exactly a happy
occasion."
Hayes, of course, was referrmg to Saturday's 19-12loss the
Buckeyes suffered at Michigan
State, l he fir. ; defeat of the
'"a son. It dropped the Bucks
;rom a first place tie with
Michigan, but wins in the last
two games could salvage a tie
for the title and a posstble Rose

. ,,

•'

.

Bowl trip.
After looking at films of the
game, Hayes came to the conclusion the offense, which he
coaches, "ail played a lousy
bail game ."
He was asked if he had any
idea what caused the Buckeyes
.to fumble five times, three of
them covered by the SparUins.
"It has to be psychological,"
he said. " People lose their
sur~ness. You never seem to
have one fumble but what you
have more. II never rains but
what it pours."
Scorns Hijacking
Hayes got off the subject of

against Michigan State, Hayes
satd . "We decided not to give
any awards this week ."
"We didn't come close to
achieving our goals," he said.
"We all share in our victories
and we all have to share m this
defeat."
He said any player who earned a Buckeye Leaf award for
the game would receive it next
week.
George Htll, Hayes' defensive coordinator, also withheld
his Buckeye Leaf awards this
week, but had high praise for
linebacker Randy Gradishar,
middle guard Arnie Jones and
end Jtm Cope.

football for an instant, turning
to the bizarre hijacking of a
Southern Airlines jet last
weekend by three armed men.
"Do you want to know how I
feel about those three hi·
jackers?" Hayes asked. "I
think its a damn shame we
don't have the supreme penalty
for kidnapping.
"There are so many people
in this world trying to do the
right thing," he said, "but
don't get any credit for it. To
some people, these three
hijackers are heroes."
To emphasize how "lousy"
he felt the offense played

11

Cook still working out
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Cincinnati Bengals Coach Paul
Brown said today he would not
use quarterback Greg Cook at
ali this year unless injuries
"force us to · change our
minds "
Cook, the American Football
League rookie of the year in
1969, has not played since then
hecause of a shoulder injury.
He has undergone several
operations and is stili attempting a comeback .
"He's (Cook ) not ready to
throw yet/' Brown said. "He
can't come completely ail the
way through with his throwing
arm.
"I think what we'D do with
Greg is let him keep on throwing all winter and during the

other way.'' he said . " We're
not going to panic or come up
with some mumbo jumbo just
because we've lost a couple of
football games.
"We're still in this thing
(title race) . Don't let anyone
tell you we're out of it with just
four losses."
Brown said the 20-14 loss to
Oakland Sunday did not indicate many weaknesses m the
Bengals.
"We were playing a fine
football game for the first half
except for those two blocked
field ~goals," he ,satd , adding
the blocked shots were not the
fault of kicker Horst
Muhlmann but were breakdowns on the line .
"It's true our quarterbacks
did not have a good day agamst
Oakland," he said. But Anderson, who played early in
the game, was taken out ana
returned when Carter was
hurt, "did a creditable job,"
the coach said.
The Bengais play Baltimore
Bowl game at New Orleans, here Sunday.
Nixon wired the team suggesting that tt try a slant pattern
toward the goal post with Bob
Griese throwing to wide receiver Paul Warfield. Dallas
won the game easily.
Simla was presented a trophy
by Joseph Robbie, the unbeaten Dolphins' managing
partner, which featured the
game ball from Sunday's 5~
win over New England.
Simla expressed his thanks
for the trophy and the praise
offered at a Monday noon
luncheon and added: "l also
want to thank the President for
offering not to send any more
plays. He's got a pretty poor
record in that tine."
Eight other NFL coaches
have won 100 games, but Shula
Is IJJe first to do it in 10 years.
spring and then bring him into
camp next summer and let him
go through all of it.
"We've stuck with him too
long and invested a lot in him to
risk playing him now," the
coach said, "unless, of course,
injuries would force us to
change our minds."
Brown said he intended, Injuries Withstanding, to alternate between quarterbacks
Virgil Carter and Ken Anderson .
The Bengals are 5-4 and third
In the Central Division of the
American Conference after tlle
weekend loss to Oakland, but
Brown said he planned "no
wholesale changes."
"What can you do to make
the pendulum start going the

No more federal help
for Dolphins--Nixon
MIAMI (bPI) - There will
be no more federal in·
terference with the Miami
Dolphins' football fortunes,
according to President Nixon.
In a telegram to Dolphin
Coach Don Simla, congratulat.
ing him on his 100th win In 10
years Sunday, the President
said : "This new milestone is
convincing proof of your
superior coaching ability and,
therefore, I will do my very
best to resist suggesting any
more plays should you gel
through tbe playoffs and into
the Super Bowl again. "
Before last January's Super
2-1 start tllis season with upsets
of Atlanta and Washington, but
started its six-game skid with a
38-14 loss at Buffalo. The
record feU to 2-7 when Mazur
called it quits.
Some saw Mazur as a victim
of dissension in the front office
that spread to the players.
Upton BeU, who took over as
general manager a_t about the
time Mazur stepped up from
the assistant coaching ranks,
was known to be dlssaUsfied
with the former Notre Dame
quarterback.
The quarterback, Jim Plunkett, insisted It wa!lll't Mazur's
fault. "It's everybody's fault,"
he saicj, Some of the guys on
tllis tdm have the pride to go
out and play ball for their own
sakes. Some, but not all of

them."

Great P\~y,

Gradishar ; despite being tdie
for three weeks with a knee
mjury, led the team in tackles
with 13 solos and 12 assists.
Jones had 12 and eight, and
Cope, who suffered a knee
injury later, blocked a Spartan
punt in what Hill called "just a
great play."
"We're glad to have Gradishar back In there," Hili said of
the 6-3, ZlJl.pound junior, who
was on the field for 63 plays.
Of Jones, a Dayton
sophomore who has taken over
the middle from injured Vic
Koegel who IS out for
theseason, Htll said, "we were
very pleased with his play."
Hayes said Michigan State,
"without question," was the
best team the Buckeyes had
faced in eight games.
"And , obviously, they 're gel1m better," he said, reminding
those present of his old theory
that all teams are either get.
tmg better or worse at this lime
in the season.
"You've heard me say that a
thousand limes," he said.
Where does that ieaue the
Buckeys ?
"We're in a position where
we have to get going again," he
said.

MUD AND
~I'IIOW

RETREADS

FINISHES SEVENTH
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Don
J ohnson of Akron, Ohio,
finished seventh Monday night'
·in the $50 ,000 Arrterican
Airlines 0~ bowling tournament
Johnson had a 14-1()..() match
game record and 9,756 pinfall.
Earl Anthony of Tacoma,
Wash., won the Professional
Bowlers Association title,
earning $6,000 for his 11&gt;-9
match game and 10,382 pinlali
finish .

FOR
All Sizes

Pl.,.l&amp;4'perr i••FMI h lll••nd2rK•Pfi•IMronsotlyollrear

WHITEWALL
•, ,
AllllfiC" plut )7t 10 67t Ptf jl,.
•nd 2 IKjjlplblt tnl otl your tar

,t(l, f- ljR

.,,

Atlanta al Wash, night
!Onl y ga me scheduled)
WHA Standings
By Umted Press International
East
w l.t . plsgfga
Cleveland
10 3 I 21 57 35
Quebec
9 4 I 19 50 38
New England 9 4 I 19 62 46
Oltawo
I 5 1 15 54 53
New Yorl&lt;.
7 9 0 14 67 61
Ph11 adelph1a 2 12 0 4 38 69
West
w I. I . pts gf ga
Alberta
9 1 I 19 57 57
Wi nnipeg
9 8 I 19 59 60
Los Angeles
6 7 I 17 5250
Houston
6 6 1 13 43 50
Mm nesola
56 1 113237
Chicago
2 10 1 S 28 43
Monday's Results
New Eng 4 Hous 4, ot
!Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

Los Angeles at Winnipeg
Philadelphia al Chicago
Cl eveland at Minnesota
!On ly games scheduled)

College Ratings
'V(,c,

NEW

'YORK

IUPI)- The

Un1l ed Press International top

major college football teams
wi th f irst place votes and wonlost records in parentheses:

IlOth week--only 19 teams

r eceived votes) .

Team
I Sou Cal 131) (9-0)
2. Alabama 13) 19-0)
3. Mi chigan (9·01
4 Oklahoma 17-1)
5 Nebraska II) 17-1-11
6 Texas (6-11
1 LSU 11·1)
6 Penn Stale 18·0
9 Ohio State (7.1)
IO.Auburn (7·11
11 Noire Dame (7-1)
12 Iowa Stale 15-2-1)
13 Tennessee (5 2)
14 UCLA 18 21
IS Colorado (1-J)
16 Washington (8-2)
17.Norlh Carol ina (7-11
18 !Tiel Am St (7-21
19 IT1e) Utah St. 16 3)

Pol nit
346
309

276
222
169
151
99
98
78
53
46

24
19
10

9
3

2
1
1

PLAYERS OF WEEK
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Quarterback Sonny Sixklller of
Washington and tailback Ken
Grandberry of Washington
State were named Pacific-3
conference offensive players of
the week Monday. Slxkiller led
the Huskies to a 30-21 win over
UCLA while Grandberry
rushed for H9 yards in the
Cougars' victory over Stanford.

•

�, 0., Nov .14, 1972
'

Television Log

By Helen and

S~e

Bottel

there .IS no returning.
South was unlucky to find ,
.KQ72
four missing trulnps in
BY PAUL CRABTREE
A PITCH FOR HITCHHIKING
• Q 84
ProJ(rams for Tonight
olle hand, but he had made
Helen and Sue:
+A K 8 74
a " nothing" play in trumps
.
Military servtce has never been exactly one of young
Wh~ it that hitchhiking in the. U.S.A. is conde_!l!l_led as__ ·
"'Q
Exsr--__
and h~dJlwl_.wellpugjshed
--··-- ~ "----~~ -Am~rlcm• ·ravorite occupaliollS, ·even wnen!ffiiy fiaveuUle--dangerous or'liemued 1111 freeloading when in Europe (t's enWEST ".;._~for 11.
•
da
of
he ·
hotf'ed'
.JI05J
.Void ·
If East h~ld all four trumps.
ltwMI$$$1#&gt;1#&gt;~&lt;*==-===-==•*'*'*'!M
nger ever armga ,s . tr manger.
.
.
couraged:
¥Jl0 9
•7652
there would have been no
Today's serviceman is tittle dtfferent from hiS ancestors m
Do you suppose It's tlle "image"? In Europe, where I
• Ql02
• J96 5 3
way to make the grand slam
griping about the chow , the officers and unpleasant assignments. traveled by IJJwnb aU summer, I Willi considered an intereS!ing
32
8 54
TUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1972
but South could have guarded
But, believe me, he's got nothing to gripe about m the matter of college girl seeing the wocld on a shoestring. There were one or
SOUTII
against
all four trumps in
6 00 - News 3, 4, 10. 15; Sesame Street 20 , Around the Bend 33. transportation.
two "invitations," but very civilized and proper.
'
; ~~8364
the
West
hand by playing his
6· 30 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 15, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing
Permit
me
to
illustrate
:
Yet
over
here
In
America,
a
girl
hltcher
is
fair
game.
If
she
•
Void
ace
of
spades
first.
Him Uo 33.
Shortly after the shooting stopped in World War II, I joined says "No," she might he either dumped In the middle of the
• A K 97 6
1 00 - What's My Line 8; Beat The Clock 4 , I've Got A Secret
After East showed out
13 ; Tno~th or Cons~ 3; Film 15 , Electric Co 20
the
Army,
survived
basic
trairung,
and
was
shipped
home
to
Oak
desert
or,
1111 In a few well publicized instances, dwnped AFNorth-South
vulnerable
South
would have been able
7: 30 - This Is Your L1fe 3; Doctors On Call 4, To Tell The Truth
to
lead
through West's jackHill, Ohio, ,for a brief vacation hefore heading for duty with the TERWARDS. Most people rate her lower clasS "trash," with
w..t North East South
6; Price is Right 8. 10. Beat The Clock 13, Top ollhe Month
10
twice
; pick up the· suit
IS ; RFD 20; Feast of Language 33 .
Japanese Occupation Forces.
morals to match. And a lot of people won't pick up hitchhikers of
I•
Pass 2 •
and
aU
the
marbles.
8:00 - Temperatures Rising 6, 13. Maude 8, 10, Age ol Anxiety
On Dec. 21 of that year, I left for the Far East. My family either sex because they're afraid of being robbed or murdered.
~: ~:
~=-~ ~:~T.
33 ; Bonanza 31 4, 15. Ohio Th•s Week 20
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSti.)
took me to Portsmouth, where I caught a train to Cincinnati. .
Why don't we adopt the Polish system? There, liltchers are
Pass
8·30 - Hawaii Five-08, 10; Bill Moyer's Journal 20. JJ ; Mov 1e
" The Victim" 6, 13.
Then I waited for several hours, and -caught another train to given coupon books after they are checked and found "safe." A
, Opening lead- • J
M;)
9· 30 - Marshall Sports 33; Black Journal 20
Chicago,
whereyou
guessed
it
I
boarded
another
train
for
fellow
or
girl
waving
a
coupon
book
gets
a
lift
quite
easily,
10:00 - Marcus Welby MD. 6, 13, America 3, 4, 15. Ftl m 33,
News 20.
·
St. Paul(theonlygood,fasttralnlntheentiretrip).
hecause they are no threat and also because motorists earn By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby The b1dding has been:
11.00 - News3, 4,6,8,10, 15, 13
West North East
I was due to leave on an "express"_fr(IIII St. Paul to Seattle, coupons for giving rides. They turn in coupona.periodically and
10 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4. 15. Dick Cavett 6. V1rgin1an 8.
South's biddirig was very
Pass
my point of -embarkation. The "express" proceeded to leave prizes are given to holders of lucky numbers. This system was good indeed. Once his partMovies "Su nda y in New York" 10 ; " Law of th e Lawless" 13
Pass
1•
Pass
1.00 - Your Health .
about 20 hours late, made up some of the time across the Dakota started by Univentty of Warsaw students after World War II ner jumped from two spades Pass 4"'
Pass
1 30 - News 4, 13.
Oatiands, but then got behind again in the snowbound Rockies. becauseofashortageofcais,andlt'sstillpopular.
to four spades it became evi- You, South, hold:
Riding in a day coach, not a·sleeper, we finally got to Seattle 14
What with exhaust fume poUution and overcrowded high: dent to South that the grand .QS42.K953 +A765 ... 3
WEDNESDAY, NOV . 15, 1972
hours late.
ways, you'd think the U.S. would encourage hitching as a way of slam would be there if North What do you do now?
6·00
- Sunrise Sem;nar 4. Sacred Heart 10
It took three days to process us around and about Ft. keeping heaklp jalopies off the road Maybe wUIIng motocists held both the king and queen
A-Just bid [our spades. You
6: 15 - Farmt1me 10
of spades and South's grand
6. 20 - Farm Report 13.
Lawton, Wash., and on New Year's Eve, we finally departed IJJe could he Issued coupona too, or carry clearance signs in their slam force was designed to bid all your values and maybe
U.S.A., on a converted liberty ship which could accommodate windows ... sothekidswouldknowTIIEYweresafe.
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
find out if North held those a trifle more when you jumped
to three spades.
6 30 - Columbus Today 4. News. Weather, Sports 6 . Bi ble
about 600 troops comfortably. The only problem was that there
OKAY? CARLESS (BUT NOT CARELESS) \AI
""LLEGE cards.
Answers 8; Urban League Presents 10
TODAY'S QUESTION
6:25 - Glory Road 13
,
we~e 1,800 of us on board.
GIRL
North's jump to seven
West bids one heart over your
7:00 - Today 3, 4, 15, News 6. s, 13
It took 19-days of pitchin~ and tossing a~oss the Pacific, c BUT NOT C:
spades was right out of the one diamond. Your partner and
7 : ~~ :- Romp~r Room 6 ; Sleepy Jeffers S; Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle battllng the waves most of the way (I was betlin[! on the waves),
Okay! Why not start this PpUsh system at your coUege? book. He did hold two of the East pass. What do you do?
s 00 - Capt. Kangaroos, 10, New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame ; t 33. to reach Yokohama. Then aoother train ride to replacement There's no teillng how far and fast a good idea will travel, given three top honors.
play was not up to
8: 3~1m"J~c~ C!C~I~n~- 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6 depot out near MI. Fuji, a week or so in iU-beated tents, and an enthusiastic send-off and national publicity.- HELEN AND ..hisSouth's
bidding.
He took one look
This Weok's Sp,clal
8 55 - Local News 13.
another train ride back to Yokohama, where I got my first hot SUE
at
dummy
and
relaxed
.
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue IS , What Every Woman
shower and a good night's sleep in a real bed, after total elapsed
+++
T~en he won the heart in
Wants to Know 3, Mr. Rogers 33, Friendly Junction 10 : Capt
time of 31 days and three hours.
Kangaroo 8; Ben Casey 13, Concentration 6.
Dear Rap:
his 'own h a n d and led a
VALUE
9:30 - To Tell The Trulh 3; Jeopardy 6; Hazels
Slow, cumbersome, inefficient - and abysmally untrump to dummy's queen.
Gloria Steinem would spit!
RATED
9:55 - Chuck White Reports 10.
comfortable. That was the way servicemen traveled back in 1946.
The
Chauvinist
who
said
"Sure,
boiJJ
Adam
and
Eve
had
East
showed
out
and
the
re10:00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS, Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13 ; In A W ld W 1 id' f
te
tu
I'
ld h
' School Instruction 33; Columbus Six Calling 6; Jokers Wilds.
or
ar so ter o a quar r-een ry ear 1er wou ave navels" because "God created Adam wiiJJ a navel and had to laxing was over. At least the
10; Dick Van Dyke13.
madeaboutasg0Qdtime - andmaybebetter. Butlwasl7,and give Eve one to keep her big jealous mouiJJ abut" was so hilarious happy relaxing was over.
USED CARS
10:30 - Concentration 3, IS, Love American Slyle 6; Phi l durable enough not to care very ll'uch.
Soutb's
grand
slam
had
dehe should be writing jokes foc IJJe Lawrence Welk show. But he
Donahue 4; Price Is R1ght 8, 10.
11 :00- Sale oft he Century 3. IS ; Love American Slyle 6; Gambit
But that is history. Now, for comparison, consider the went too far when he added that E.ve got so excited over having a parted to that bourne of
space and time from which
8; Password 13; Electric Co. 20
·
situation of a young man whom I've had under my roof for the navel of her very own that she kicked up her heels and got IJJem
11 :30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS ; Bew1lched 6, 13, Love of Ute past 16 years.
8, 10; Sesame Street 20.
both kicked out of Eden. Of course he didn't mention Adam has
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Local News 10.
He recently joined the Navy, and after boot camp and ad- something to do with that too.
News 13: Contact 8, Password 6.
vanced training for a brief period, was sent home with orders to
He should just remember that God created man, stepped
12:30
3
W's
Gamel,
IS
;
Split
Second6
;
Search
tor
Tomorrow
8,
join the U.s. Seventh Fleet in the Mediterranean, with Naples,
10.
COMPOSER DIES
back and said, "I can do better than that," then created woman.
12:55 - NBC News 3, IS.
.
Italy, as home port.
LOS ANGELES IUP! )
-MS.
1· 00- News. Weather, Sports 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green
On Sunda
With v myl roof and a1r
0 ing he left home at a 30 was driven to
Rudolf
Friml,
the
Acres 10; French Chef 33; It's Your Bet 8; Watch Your Child
Y m rn •
: 1
Charleston, where he boarded a J'etfor Washington shortly before MS.ES ALL:
15.
Czechosiovakian-born com·
1:20 - Lucille Rivers 3.
noon. From there, he flew to JFK airport in New York, and was
poser
of "Rose Marie," ":rhe
Yea-a-a-a, woman: from rib to Ub- you'vecome a long way,
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15, The World Turns 8, 10. Let's Make on a Pan-American flight to Rome before the dinner hour.
Vagabond King," and "Donkey
A Deal 6, 13.
baby! -HELEN
Serenade,"
is dead at the age
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Landing in Rome early the next morning, he was scheduled
+++
Douglass 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
to catch a flight for Naples that arrived in the City at 11:05 a.m.,
of 92. The internationaiiy ac"You'll like uur Quality
2:30 - Doctors3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Edge of NightS, 10.
giving him six hours to catch a cab, or something, for his ship. As NoTE FROM SUE: But don't forget your sense of hwnor!
claimed
composer died at 11
J:OO - Another Wo'rld 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Love
+++
.Way of Doing Bus~ness ."
p.m. Sunday night of a brain
Splendored Things, 10; RFD 20.
nearlyaslknow,hemadeltonscheduleyesterday.
GMAC FINANCING
Helen
and
Sue:
hemorrhage five weeks after
Total elapsed time : 26 hours, 35 minutes - from Pt. Pleasant
3: 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Ute to Live 6, 13,
992-5342
pomeroy,
Secret Storm 8, 10; Ohio· This Week 20.
.
I liked Ronnie a lot and then I feU in love witb him, and then I entering Hollywood
Open
Evenings
'Til
8:00
4:00 - Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Ftlntstones 6; Love to Naples.
found out he was married and has two chUdren. When I asked Presbyterian Hospital.
Till
P.M.
s.t,
American Style 13; Merv Grlttln 4; Sesame St. 33; G11ligan's
The armed services ·may not be better - but they're cerhim about his famUy he said It was all over. He even menUoned
lstand 8; Movie "The Catered Affair" 10.
inl f t toda
4: 30 - Merv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13 :
Ia Y as er
y,
marriage.
Petticoat Junction 3, ABC After School 6, 13
+++
As long as I told him I wasn't sure about my feelings, he '
5:00 - Mister Rogers 33; Dick Van Dyke IS; Daniel Boone 6;
ON THE TV DIAL: Only one recommendation tonight, but a
couldn't
see enough of me, but then I mentioned "love," and he's
Ponderosa 3, 4.
"d b
AZ TV
5:30 - Dragnet 8; Electric Co 33; Gomer Pyle 13 ; Marshall great one. The acclaimed series "America, e utson WS •
backed off.
'· tl ,!IQO! ISi ~dgep~~e Lodge 20.
at 10. To our Shame, this program was developed and produced in
I went to see him at his office and he-wu ~g ,ln the oar
6~ !,!~e'Ois, Wealher,'Sports 3, 4, S, 10, IS , Truth or Con seq . 6;
Britain.
Sportscope 33; Sesame Street 20.
, with a woman, The secretary.sald it.was his wlfe,and,they had
6:30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10, t - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - never been separated. How could he do this to nie? -JILTED
Dream of Jeannie 13; Hathayoga 33.
Rams
12
1·00- News. Weather. Sports 6. 10; Millstones of Progress 33 ,
10lh Dear Jilted:
Apaches
What's My Line 8; Truth or Conseq. 3: Beat the Clock 4,
High Individual Game
Know Your Schools 33; Anything You Can Do 13; Electric
His wife probably asked the same question -and may ask It
Bobby Powers 175
Company 20 .
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Second High Ind. Game - again and again. Be g41d she is stuck with him - not you! 7:30 - Episode: Action 33; To Tell The Truth 6; The Judge 10,
Nov. 4, 1972
Kelly Winebrenner 171.
Lassie IS; Beat the Clock 13 ; Pollee Surgeon 3; Protectors 8;
Saturday Senior League
High Series Kelly HELEN AND SUE
. Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Standings
462 .
8:00 - Public Attairs33, 20 : Carol Burnette S, 10, Adam-12, 3, 4,
Team
Pis. Wmebrenner
Second High Senes - Steve
15; Jacques Cousteau 6, 13
Gutter Ou ster s
21
Bachner 416.
8:30 - Banacek 3, 4, 15, Playhouse New York 20
Larry Dugan 204.
Pi rl Cru sher s
17 1/ 2
Third High Series - A. L.
Team
High
Game
Impacts
9:00 - Medical Center 8, 10; Chapter 33 33: Burt Bacharach 6,
Third High lnd Game Pin
Buslers
14'1:?
Phelps
Jr . 564.
13.
Blaine Carter 204.
1/ 2 923
Born
Losers
13
Team
High Game - Davis
10:00 - Search 3, IS ; Cannon 8. 10; Soul 33 ; Alan K1n9 6, 13:
Team High Series - Rams
~igh Series - Larry Dugan
Dlng.A-Lings
13'12 2577
Warner
Ins.
947.
News 20.
598
Herbie's
10
Team High Series - Davis
11:00- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Dick Cavell 6; Vtrg1nian 8;
Second High Series - Dale Warner Ins. 2739.
H1gh Individual Game "
·Movies "Stagecoach" 10; "The Trap" 13
Davis 569.
Rich
Bailey
175
Tri.County League
T: 00 - News &amp; Weather 4.
Second High Ind . Game ]: 30 - Local News 13.
Nov. 7, 1972
Rich Batley, Rick Stobart 170.
Standings
Team
Pis.
---------------~:----,
•·
H1gh
Series
Rich
Bailey
•
,
494 .
Oav1s Warner Ins .
65
Second H1gh Series - R1ck R&amp;H Rawlings
54
Slobart 454.
Gro
Boys
40
Team High Game
Pin
Pomeroy
Cement
Block
Co.
38
Cru shers 783
Pm H&amp;R Firestone
24
Team High Series
Mayer &amp;Hill
21
Crushers 2225
High Individual Game
. . even for those late, Iale calls. L1ke th'e STAR LITE® telephone . the
Larry Dugan 216
dainty high-style phone with a dial that glows. It's 1deal for her van1ty or
Second High Ind . Game
Saturday Bantam League
night !able for after-dark dialing , or jUSt as a friendly soft n1ght light (wilh
Nov. 4, 1972
adjuslable brightness) . Bedroom or breakfast nook, k;tchen or rumpus
Standings
The Daily Sentinel
Team
Pts.
room . . every home shOuld have a second phone , a step- and work DIVOTID TO THI
Ball Bombers
16
INTI RUT 0,
saver for your greater pleasure, convenience and security. Wherever
Red Barons
11
MIIOI
·MAION
ARU
All Stars
your need, whatever your taste or dei;or, there's a fascina ti ng
11
CHESTIR L. TANNIHILL,
Cyclones
8
hoc.ld.
selection of styles, colors and special -purpose telephones
Banana Spills
1
RO.IR T HOI'LICH,
m General Telephone's Exlension Exlravaganza
Pin Busters
1
City ldttor
Publlsntd dilly txtopt
High Individual Game
SaturdiV by Tht Ohio Vlllty
Kevin Yeauger 149.
Publishing Comp•nv . 111
Second High Ind . Game - Court
St.. Pomerov. Ohio ,
David Burl 140.
•5769.
8uslntn
Pnont
High Series - David Burt 992-2156. EdltorltlOftlct
Pnont 992.
263.
.
21l7 .
Second .High Series - Kevin
Second c;:l111 posteQe paid 1t
Pomeroy, Onto .
Yeauger 261
National edvtrllslne
Team High Game
rtprutntetlvt BottlntlllCyclones 731.
tllovher, Inc .. 12 !ut 12nd
Team High Series
St., New Yorlc Cltv. New York .
Cyclones 1434.
Subscription rtttt : Dt·
NORTH

••o

(D )

14

au

"'J

0:

:)I!MUf!)

_I.

..

'72 OLDS

Cutlass Supreme
H.T. SEDAN
'3695

Karr &amp;Van lao.dt.

Local Bowling

wide-awake styles

CHRISTMAS SHOP
With peace 'ot mind. No need to carry
large sums of money. Just pay by
Check.

llvtrtd bv Cltrltr whtrt
IYIIIIblt 50 untl Ptr Wttk;
By Motor Routt where urrltr
service not IVIIIIbll : Ont

Saturday Junior League
Nov. 4, 1972
montn 11.75. lr moll In Oh io
Standings
lnd
VI ., Ont Ytlr $10.00.
Team
Pis. 51• W.months
11.25. Thrtt
Impacts
19
month•
s•
.so.
Sub•crlpllon
Batt Busters
19
price lncludtl Sundev Tlmtt·
Dreamers
16'12 Sentinel.
Alley Cats
13

I

liii&lt;G&amp;l. IH:II"' 0Mta

·- ----

---Bal\k
Cili}tnl ,.atlor\11

"IT'S TRUE" - - -

&amp;enERAL RLEPHDnE

m111•••••n.Ohl•

And you will also have a record of all
your. shopping.
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ldli

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VA....S
- '

AB

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telephone puts the worl&lt;s
right In tho palm of your hand . . .
handott, dial and recall buHon. Make
call after call without setting down the
phone. Comea In white, green, Ivory,
yellow, plnl(, beige, or avocado.
ITYULIN!I

ITVLILIN..
WALL,HOIII
buulilul,

convtnlent

SleP•IIVtr lor htr
kl!chen, laundry room
tor an~ place
where 11'1 hard to find
counter or llbll·lop

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choice ol eight dtli·
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COmll

crous colors.

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•••

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•••
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NIJ)Dl.EI'OilT, OHIO

...........1111 .,.,.... 1111- Corplnlll.a

BAKER

•
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0

I'UINIIUB .
I•EPOIT,O:
Open 8:30AM until 5:00 PM. Clll our busineas office.

••
•••

CHEBTPHONE .. a real man-type
decorator ph one lor the living
room , his special room~ desk or
table. Modern stylized· Instrument
handsomely set in a black leather
chest with walnut trim
In
catved walnut . or even with a
sardonyx stone hunhng scene in ·

set on the lid I

~

the -Sports·

Chargers 21-17 victim

SAN DIEGO (UP!) --QuarMike ~ipps was
thinking field goal, but Coach
. Nick Skorich wanted it all and
..__.,.,_ _~~&gt;...!.......,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,tot his decision resulted in a 21-17
.-.
'vtctory for the Cleveland
Tonight puts the final whistle to the 1972 Southeastern Ohio Browns over the San Diego
League football season for the Meigs Marauders when the Chargers before a national
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary Club's Sixth Annual Football . television audience Monday
night .
Banquet takes off at 6:30p.m. Attention will he directed upon two
"I was going to go across the
principals of the evening: the football squad and its ooacbes, and middle and set up a field goal,"
a smallish guy who 40 years ago was a premium Pomeroy school Phipps said. "When the coach
boy three-sport star and today one of the nation's most res~cted sent the play in I thought it had
uni'(ersity athletic administrators.
. - .. -,
a chance but I thought I threw
'!bat would be WiUiam Henry Hamson (Tippy) Dye, it too far."
director of athletics at Northwestern University, EVljnston, lll.
"We told Frank to take off
There's ari ancient cliche that goes something like this: "The and we would throw to him,"
event honoring (John Doe) attracted a host of friends and Skorich said.
relatives ... "
The result was a 38-yard
So will the appearance of Mr. Dye at Rllck Springs this touchdown pass taken by
evening . Tip no longer has a host of relatives in these parts, but Frank Pitts in the rear of the
he has that many-if not more-friends. There are teammates end zone with only 41 seconds
left.
still around from those great years of Pomeroy High football,
The Chargers had taken the
1930through 1932with Tip as quarterback and Fred Crow at end.
They were equally as great, even greater, in (act, times for PHS lead only 40 seconds earlier on
a three-yard scoring crack
basketbaii and baseball.
There are men around galore like Elbert (Robbie) Robinson, over left guard by Mike
Edison Hobstetter, Fred Blaettnar, Doc Tom Crow, Alfred Garrett. But Phipps needed
Elberfeld, Charley Gibbs (who won't return to Florida unit! only three plays after the
Wednesday), Bob Hartenbach, Asa Hoskins (who taught him ensuing kickoff to march his
ClUb 64 yards for the WIMing
Math), Bob Roberts, and Zeke Zahl just for starters who cheered score . He hit Ken Brown on
those great teams on.
passes of seven and 19 yards
Tip's dossier of achievements, having been published before firing the bomb to Pitts.
recently, needs· no repeating .
The win, Cleveland's fourth
He will receive a warm welcome Tuesday night. It will be his on the road this season, gave
ftrst at the podium for a sports event in the new Meigs High the Browns a 6-3 record,
School.
leaving them only one game
CharlesCh~ncey, head Marauder football coach, may not be
behind Pittsburgh in the
able to relish the memory of the 1972 season in years to come American Conference Central
insofar as its won~ost record stands. Like most coaches, though, Division.
The loss dropped the Char. Mr. Chancey wiU attest - and honestly - his boys tried as hard
, and won respect during 1972 as in any year, notwithstanding their gers deep in tbe cellar in the
6-4 record.
Western Division at 2-6-1.
Phipps was the indiVJdual
And before you write this off as a "bad year," as one of
Chancey's poorer productions, know this, that a great many he~o for the Browns, completclose and enthusiastic Marauder foUowers had 1972 marked ing 13 of 21 passes for 166 yards
down for a s.5 or W season. As for Sports Desk, his private vote and ru!Uling for 17 yards, inwas an optimistic 7-3, and I look back on that thing at Waverly cluding a one-yard touchdown
and the other thing two weeks ago against Gallipolis and I know dive with 15 seconds to go in the
that the season, but for a couple or three terrible things thai first half to give Cleveland a 7-3
lead .
happened, could have been 8-2!
Know this too :
That Injuries eliminating certain players took away all the
Marauders' offense betweet the tackles in the Gallipolis game.
That the pass defense in the Waverly game - for example has to be blamed in part on the fact that the squad really cannot
get good instruclion in pass defense on its present practice field
· in back of Salisbury Elementary School where there are no
sidelines, nJl yard lines, and such a limited area that an end going
deep runs into a creek before he barely gets up full steam.
"That hurt us plenty this year," said Chancey grimly, after
FOXBORO, Mass. (UP! ) the Gallipolis loss.
Phil Bengtson was named
This is a situation that will be corrected before next full ,
interim coach of the Patriots
~ libpe~, l! r!ir1.1t prOKI'esa con.lhlues,ln...)uliO,ing a Pl'actiC&lt;l Monday, &gt;a~t!!Ht&gt; .hours,.iBiter
field and full quarter mile track on the Meigs High campus.
John Mazu... ~jlped down and
•
Two other factors made 1972 an "iffy" year: lack of depth
only one day . after New
and lack of over all experience, which suggests that one of the
England suffered the worst
best things about this 6-4 season at Meigs High is that there is a
defeat in its history, 52-0, at the
next year.
hands of the unbeaten Miami
Dolphins.
Bengtson, former head coach
and general manager of the
Green Bay Packers and currently personnel director for
•
the San Diego Chargers, said
his new assignment was
strictly on an interim basis.
"I just plan to finish the
season," he said. ''I was really
aJLUMBUS (UP!) _ The
Nye suggested farmers post
surprised at the change."
upland game hunting season "no hunting" signs in unbarHe said he plaMed to return
will begin as scheduled vested fields and post notices
to the Chargers when the
• Wedensday despite requests by at their farmhouses that they season ended.
Ohio Farmers for a delay are not pennitting hunting.
Will Think Over Plans
because of unharvested corn
Dan C. Armbrusl!'r, chief of
On his plans for the Patriots,
and soybean 'fields.
the division of wildlife, said
a team that Mazur left with a
While refusing to delay the most hunters "will want to laid
dismal2-7 record, including six
season, however, Natural Re· farmers in this unusual straight losses, Bengtson said
sources Director William B. weather situation by mainhe would think them over on
Nye warned hunters that 88 taining good hunter-farmer
the long plane flight to Boston
game protectors and other relations."
this morning.
enforcement agents will be
Armbruster said there are
The Patriots said Bengtson,
working to strictly enforce more than 500,000 acres of pu[}.
who was named head coach of
hunting laws and attempt to lie hunting land In Ohio.
the Packers in 1968, general
keep h)IDters out of unharRoyal R. Cox, assistant to the manager the following year
vested fields.
director of the state
and beld both positions until
The Ohio Farm Bureau Fed- Agriculture Depariment, said 1970, "brings to New England a
eration had asked for a two- only a hard freeze would let career of more than three
week delay because wet wea· farmers onto their croplands. decades of coiiege and profes.
ther has left two-thirds of Atwo week delay in the start of sional coaching expenence."
Ohio's corn crop and half the the hunting season, he said,
Mazur, faced with mounting
would
"not accomplish
soybean crop unharvested.
anything because the fields criticism as the Patriots lost
Nye said his deparbnent con- aren't going to dry out before heavily in game after game,
suited with the Farm Bureau
announced his resignation
Federation and the state Agri- winter."
Monday afternoon.
cutlture Department before
C. William Swank, executive
"! have always placed upmaking a decision to go ahead vice president of the Farm permost in my mind the best
with the hunting of pheasant, Bureau Federation, warned if interests of any organization
farmers are able to get into
rabbit, quail and Hungarian theirfieldsandhunters "devil" with which I have been
partridge.
h
associated," Mazur said in a
He said economic factors on ~em for permission to unt brief statement released by tlle
, both sides were considered - while tbey are trying to har- club.
farmersgetting their crops and ' vest, ''we're going to be right
"In accordance with this
vacations and back here telling Mr. Nye It long-term policy, I am resignhun ter~ tak;na
• ., .
didn't work and ask for a
· of h tin ..
reservmg lodgmg In aning my job," he said.
ticipation of the beginning of suspens1on
un g.
Mazur Takes Over
the season.
Mazur took over the Patriol.!t
in the middle of the 1970 season
after New England lost six of
its first seven games under
Clive Rush. The Patriots
finished 2-12 that year, but
Mazur directed the club to a
surprising 6·8 record last
DAYTONA -BEACH, Fla . C.~iiniShed third in Sunday's season that included upsets of
· Oakland, Baltimore and
(UP!) -There Isn't too much Texas 500 to take the overall
Miami.
doubt today about who Is the season title and also the third
New England jwnped off to a
most successful stock car leg of the Winston Cup series,
boosting his season's earnings
driver of aU time.
.
Richard Petty, NASCAR's to $227,015.
Petty finished the year witJJ
all-time
leading
mon1,701.4
points. Second-place Old Dominion 500.
ey winner, Monday. was
His victories jumped hl.s
acknowledged as the only Bobby Alllaon totaled ,8,573.5
points,
but
was
the
top
money
careet"
total to 148-rnore than
driver to win his fourth
double hl.s closest competitor,
Grand National di'Tvliijj cJwn.. winner with f2'/1,395.
Petty's
eight
wln.l
this
year
David Pearson, who has 86.
pionshlp .
Petty's other champlonahl)lll
'[11e title was worth f25,000 were the Western Winlton 1100,
and brought Petty's aU-time the l.Gne Star 500, the Rich- came In 1964, 1967 and last
rnoney winnings to a fat mond 500, ~ C&amp;pttal City 500, year. The only other driven to
the Gwyn Staley tOO, tfle Wilkes win three times are Petty's
1 !3115,14•.
•'petty, • • G(ft........
n
N.
tOO, the Vlrglula 1100 and the father, la! and Pearson,
'

By Chet Tannehill

Des-k

terb~ck

Bengtson

succeeds

Mazur

~ Hunting

season

starts Wednesday

Petty adds $25,000
to his rich purse

San Diego retounded to take
a 10.7 third quarter margin on
a four-yard pass from John
Had! ~ Cid Edwards, but
Cleveland countered with a
twoyard scormg plunge by
Brown with 9:54 left m the
game to take a 14-10 lead.
The Chargers drove from
their 23 to Cleveland's four in
15 plays the first tune they got
the bail, only to fumble on a
busted play , with former
Bob
Briggs
Charger
recovermg for Cleveland to

Phipps and the rest of the Steelers, "and I saw them shut
stop the scoring dnve.
B~owns
watched the Pitts- off the runrung and passmg. I
San Diego's only first half
score came on a 26-yard field burgh Steelers completely didn't sec anything I could do
goal by Dennis Partee with stifle the Kansas Ctty Ch1efs against them but I haven't seen
6:57lefl in the second quarter . -Sunday.
·$e hlms.n
.
They entertain the Steelers
The receiving of Pitts proved
" Pittsburgh was great
too much for the Chargers as next Sunday in the1r big one yesterday In sa id Browns'
he hauled m ftve passes for 96 and, whtie expressing .awe, coach Nick Skorich. "They
yards, most of them in critical they are confident of moving have a terrific defense, but we
mto a lie wtth the Amencan have an exceiienl chance. We
situations.
The Chargers' ground game Conference Central Dtvision play Pittsburgh twice and
proved effective as Garrett leaders of the National Foot- Cincinnati once more, and lo
gamed 89 yards and Edwards ball League .
win your division you have to
"I watched them on teleVI- beat the tea ms in your
91 , but mistakes in crucial
Situattons cost them the game. sion," Phtpps satd of the division.n

Phipps deal greatest--Skorich
SAN DIEGO (UP!) -"The
trade of Paul Warfield for the
chance at Mike Phipps was one
of the greatest deals the
Cleveland Browns ever made,"
Browns' Coach · Nick Skorich
beamed after a 21-17 National
Football League win over the
San Diego Chargers Monday
night.
"There was no other way we
could get a top young quarterback. We had confidence
Phipps wouiq develop. "
The trade of Warfield for
Phipps has been crttidzed
most of the past three years, as
the premier wide recetver has

been a key !actor in the
meteoric rise of the expanston
Miami Dolphins.
But a national televiston
audience saw what Skorich
meant Monday night when the
third year quarterback from
Purdue cohSistently hit on
third down plays and finally
uncorked a 38-yard bomb to
Frank Pitts with only 41
seconds left for the win.
Phipps needed only three
pia ys to rebound Cleveland
from a 17-H def1cit. He hit on
passes of seven and 19 yards to
Ken Brown coming out of the

Pro Standings
NFL Stand1ngs
l
By United Press lnternationot
National Conference
East
w. I. t. pet. pf PI
Washng tn 8 1 0 889 227 124
Dall as
1 2 0 .77S 217 1ol9
N Y G1a nts s 4 0 .556 210 191
Sf LOUIS
2 6 I .278 122 195
Phiia
2 6 I .278 86 194
Central

w. I. t. pet. pi , pt
0 667 179 161
0 556 199135
0 556 213 185
1 . 3!. ~ 149 165
West
w. I. t. pet. pi PI
Los Ang
5 3 1 611 177148
Atl an ta
5 4 0 556 199 183
San Fra n 4 4 1 500 232 175
NewOrlns 1 I 1 167 135 253
Amer1can Conference
East
w. I. t. pet. pf pa
M1am1
9 0 0 1.000 250 103
N Y Je ts
6 3 0 .667 279 192
Bal t1mor e 2 7 0 .222 139 186
Buffalo
2 7 0 .222 168 253
Green Bay 6 J
Mm nesota 5 4
De troll
5 4
Ch1cago
3 5

New Eng

2 1 0 .222 10'1 296

Central

w. I. I. pet. pi PI

2 0 .778 233 134
6 3 0 .667 162 151
5 4 0 .556 169 152
threw the bail away and was
1 8 0 .Ill 104 233
htt only with a two-yard
West
grounding penalty instead of a
w. I. I. pet. pi pt
safety. The Browns punted out Oakla nd
5 J 1 .611 22'1169
5 4 0 .556 202 156
of danger when they could have Ka n City
Denver
3 6 0 .333 181 232
been behmd
Sa n D;ego 2 6 1 .278 169 224
Monday's Results
Cleve 21 San Diego 17
Criticized as a loser his ftrst
(Only game scheduled)
two years and early this
Sunday's Games
season , Phipps has led the
Bal li mor e at Cmcinnatl
Bullal o at New Englan~
Browns to four straight wtns.
Dallas al Philadelphia
"I wasn't down," he sa1d. "I
Gree n Bay at Houston
knew it would Ulke a couple of
M 1nnesota at Los Angeles
years to get in. Now f'm just
New Orl ean s at Detroit
N Y Giants at St Louis
playmg. 1 make mistakes and
N Y Jels at Miami
make corrections. I JUSt want
Oakland at Denver
to be the best consistent
Piltsburgh at Cleve
San D1 ego at Kan City
quarterback around."
San Francisco at Chicago
!Onl y games scheduled)

backfield and then nailed Pitts.
"! called the screen and
flair," Phtpps satd , "and they
sent in the last play. I was
going to go across the middle to
set up a field goal When I
threw it I thought maybe 1t was
out of reach."
Phipps hit 13 passes for 186
yards and one touchdown. He
plunged one yard for a score
with only 15 seconds left in the
half, but his big play may have
come early in the game.
Hopelessly trapped by
Deacon Jones and Lionel
Aldridge deep in the end zone,
he shook loose and obviously

Pi! tsbr gh
Cleveland
C1ncmna l 1
Houst on

I

Monday's Games

Hayes regrouping forces
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State Coach Woody Hayes,
faced with the task of
regroupmg hts forces for the
final two games against North·
western and Michigan, called
Monday's weekly press lun·
cheon "not exactly a happy
occasion."
Hayes, of course, was referrmg to Saturday's 19-12loss the
Buckeyes suffered at Michigan
State, l he fir. ; defeat of the
'"a son. It dropped the Bucks
;rom a first place tie with
Michigan, but wins in the last
two games could salvage a tie
for the title and a posstble Rose

. ,,

•'

.

Bowl trip.
After looking at films of the
game, Hayes came to the conclusion the offense, which he
coaches, "ail played a lousy
bail game ."
He was asked if he had any
idea what caused the Buckeyes
.to fumble five times, three of
them covered by the SparUins.
"It has to be psychological,"
he said. " People lose their
sur~ness. You never seem to
have one fumble but what you
have more. II never rains but
what it pours."
Scorns Hijacking
Hayes got off the subject of

against Michigan State, Hayes
satd . "We decided not to give
any awards this week ."
"We didn't come close to
achieving our goals," he said.
"We all share in our victories
and we all have to share m this
defeat."
He said any player who earned a Buckeye Leaf award for
the game would receive it next
week.
George Htll, Hayes' defensive coordinator, also withheld
his Buckeye Leaf awards this
week, but had high praise for
linebacker Randy Gradishar,
middle guard Arnie Jones and
end Jtm Cope.

football for an instant, turning
to the bizarre hijacking of a
Southern Airlines jet last
weekend by three armed men.
"Do you want to know how I
feel about those three hi·
jackers?" Hayes asked. "I
think its a damn shame we
don't have the supreme penalty
for kidnapping.
"There are so many people
in this world trying to do the
right thing," he said, "but
don't get any credit for it. To
some people, these three
hijackers are heroes."
To emphasize how "lousy"
he felt the offense played

11

Cook still working out
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Cincinnati Bengals Coach Paul
Brown said today he would not
use quarterback Greg Cook at
ali this year unless injuries
"force us to · change our
minds "
Cook, the American Football
League rookie of the year in
1969, has not played since then
hecause of a shoulder injury.
He has undergone several
operations and is stili attempting a comeback .
"He's (Cook ) not ready to
throw yet/' Brown said. "He
can't come completely ail the
way through with his throwing
arm.
"I think what we'D do with
Greg is let him keep on throwing all winter and during the

other way.'' he said . " We're
not going to panic or come up
with some mumbo jumbo just
because we've lost a couple of
football games.
"We're still in this thing
(title race) . Don't let anyone
tell you we're out of it with just
four losses."
Brown said the 20-14 loss to
Oakland Sunday did not indicate many weaknesses m the
Bengals.
"We were playing a fine
football game for the first half
except for those two blocked
field ~goals," he ,satd , adding
the blocked shots were not the
fault of kicker Horst
Muhlmann but were breakdowns on the line .
"It's true our quarterbacks
did not have a good day agamst
Oakland," he said. But Anderson, who played early in
the game, was taken out ana
returned when Carter was
hurt, "did a creditable job,"
the coach said.
The Bengais play Baltimore
Bowl game at New Orleans, here Sunday.
Nixon wired the team suggesting that tt try a slant pattern
toward the goal post with Bob
Griese throwing to wide receiver Paul Warfield. Dallas
won the game easily.
Simla was presented a trophy
by Joseph Robbie, the unbeaten Dolphins' managing
partner, which featured the
game ball from Sunday's 5~
win over New England.
Simla expressed his thanks
for the trophy and the praise
offered at a Monday noon
luncheon and added: "l also
want to thank the President for
offering not to send any more
plays. He's got a pretty poor
record in that tine."
Eight other NFL coaches
have won 100 games, but Shula
Is IJJe first to do it in 10 years.
spring and then bring him into
camp next summer and let him
go through all of it.
"We've stuck with him too
long and invested a lot in him to
risk playing him now," the
coach said, "unless, of course,
injuries would force us to
change our minds."
Brown said he intended, Injuries Withstanding, to alternate between quarterbacks
Virgil Carter and Ken Anderson .
The Bengals are 5-4 and third
In the Central Division of the
American Conference after tlle
weekend loss to Oakland, but
Brown said he planned "no
wholesale changes."
"What can you do to make
the pendulum start going the

No more federal help
for Dolphins--Nixon
MIAMI (bPI) - There will
be no more federal in·
terference with the Miami
Dolphins' football fortunes,
according to President Nixon.
In a telegram to Dolphin
Coach Don Simla, congratulat.
ing him on his 100th win In 10
years Sunday, the President
said : "This new milestone is
convincing proof of your
superior coaching ability and,
therefore, I will do my very
best to resist suggesting any
more plays should you gel
through tbe playoffs and into
the Super Bowl again. "
Before last January's Super
2-1 start tllis season with upsets
of Atlanta and Washington, but
started its six-game skid with a
38-14 loss at Buffalo. The
record feU to 2-7 when Mazur
called it quits.
Some saw Mazur as a victim
of dissension in the front office
that spread to the players.
Upton BeU, who took over as
general manager a_t about the
time Mazur stepped up from
the assistant coaching ranks,
was known to be dlssaUsfied
with the former Notre Dame
quarterback.
The quarterback, Jim Plunkett, insisted It wa!lll't Mazur's
fault. "It's everybody's fault,"
he saicj, Some of the guys on
tllis tdm have the pride to go
out and play ball for their own
sakes. Some, but not all of

them."

Great P\~y,

Gradishar ; despite being tdie
for three weeks with a knee
mjury, led the team in tackles
with 13 solos and 12 assists.
Jones had 12 and eight, and
Cope, who suffered a knee
injury later, blocked a Spartan
punt in what Hill called "just a
great play."
"We're glad to have Gradishar back In there," Hili said of
the 6-3, ZlJl.pound junior, who
was on the field for 63 plays.
Of Jones, a Dayton
sophomore who has taken over
the middle from injured Vic
Koegel who IS out for
theseason, Htll said, "we were
very pleased with his play."
Hayes said Michigan State,
"without question," was the
best team the Buckeyes had
faced in eight games.
"And , obviously, they 're gel1m better," he said, reminding
those present of his old theory
that all teams are either get.
tmg better or worse at this lime
in the season.
"You've heard me say that a
thousand limes," he said.
Where does that ieaue the
Buckeys ?
"We're in a position where
we have to get going again," he
said.

MUD AND
~I'IIOW

RETREADS

FINISHES SEVENTH
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Don
J ohnson of Akron, Ohio,
finished seventh Monday night'
·in the $50 ,000 Arrterican
Airlines 0~ bowling tournament
Johnson had a 14-1()..() match
game record and 9,756 pinfall.
Earl Anthony of Tacoma,
Wash., won the Professional
Bowlers Association title,
earning $6,000 for his 11&gt;-9
match game and 10,382 pinlali
finish .

FOR
All Sizes

Pl.,.l&amp;4'perr i••FMI h lll••nd2rK•Pfi•IMronsotlyollrear

WHITEWALL
•, ,
AllllfiC" plut )7t 10 67t Ptf jl,.
•nd 2 IKjjlplblt tnl otl your tar

,t(l, f- ljR

.,,

Atlanta al Wash, night
!Onl y ga me scheduled)
WHA Standings
By Umted Press International
East
w l.t . plsgfga
Cleveland
10 3 I 21 57 35
Quebec
9 4 I 19 50 38
New England 9 4 I 19 62 46
Oltawo
I 5 1 15 54 53
New Yorl&lt;.
7 9 0 14 67 61
Ph11 adelph1a 2 12 0 4 38 69
West
w I. I . pts gf ga
Alberta
9 1 I 19 57 57
Wi nnipeg
9 8 I 19 59 60
Los Angeles
6 7 I 17 5250
Houston
6 6 1 13 43 50
Mm nesola
56 1 113237
Chicago
2 10 1 S 28 43
Monday's Results
New Eng 4 Hous 4, ot
!Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

Los Angeles at Winnipeg
Philadelphia al Chicago
Cl eveland at Minnesota
!On ly games scheduled)

College Ratings
'V(,c,

NEW

'YORK

IUPI)- The

Un1l ed Press International top

major college football teams
wi th f irst place votes and wonlost records in parentheses:

IlOth week--only 19 teams

r eceived votes) .

Team
I Sou Cal 131) (9-0)
2. Alabama 13) 19-0)
3. Mi chigan (9·01
4 Oklahoma 17-1)
5 Nebraska II) 17-1-11
6 Texas (6-11
1 LSU 11·1)
6 Penn Stale 18·0
9 Ohio State (7.1)
IO.Auburn (7·11
11 Noire Dame (7-1)
12 Iowa Stale 15-2-1)
13 Tennessee (5 2)
14 UCLA 18 21
IS Colorado (1-J)
16 Washington (8-2)
17.Norlh Carol ina (7-11
18 !Tiel Am St (7-21
19 IT1e) Utah St. 16 3)

Pol nit
346
309

276
222
169
151
99
98
78
53
46

24
19
10

9
3

2
1
1

PLAYERS OF WEEK
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Quarterback Sonny Sixklller of
Washington and tailback Ken
Grandberry of Washington
State were named Pacific-3
conference offensive players of
the week Monday. Slxkiller led
the Huskies to a 30-21 win over
UCLA while Grandberry
rushed for H9 yards in the
Cougars' victory over Stanford.

•

�.,

•

•
•

•

mmun1ty
rn
. . e··r· 8Y Char1ene Hoefl'ICh:
•

Show opensSaturday

RUTLAND - 'fhe public is · '" 8 p.111. Saturday, and~ p.m.
invited to view the exhi bits in '" 4 p.lu . Sunda). Mrs. Charles
; . the "Sing a Song of · christ- l,cwis is general chairman of
·.: mas!" fl uwer show of the llr ~ show which will be judged
If you are planning to make the Oatmeal Batter Bread, the Rutland Garden Club to be by Mrs. Gilbert Cullen of
recipe for which was included in the Sunday Times-Sentinel story staged this weekend at the Marie II&lt;!, an accredited judge,
. m the 'n!anksgiving dinner prepared bt J&lt;;xtension Service Rutland Me thodist Chu rch beginning at I p.m. on
Saturday.
basement.
llltrition aides, please take note of this correction.
Wi th the exception of five
Directions were not complete in either the story or on the
Hours of the show are 1 p.m.
·mimeographed recipe sheets distributed by the Extension
Service. In the directions
for mixing the batter, the statement '
.
"Add remaining Rour and mix with spoon until flour is all
blended in," should be added just prior to the instruction on
spreading the batter in the pan.
Now, go· stir up some oatmeal batter bread!

Green Thumb

elasses

in

the artistic
~rra~gement s category; all
rlasscs are op~n fvr com~
pclililm . There is nu limi t on
Ihe number of entries which an
exhibit or can n1ake 'in the
horticul ture cla5S&lt;!S.
The invitational classes in
the artistic arra ngemen ts
division are "We Three Kings
of Orient Are," in a Jap~nese
manner; and "There's a Song
in the Air, There's aStar in the
.Sky," a modern design.
ll special feature of the show
will be an exhibit of pictures or
plaqu es contai nin g plant
material which are suitable for
use in a home at either Thanks.giving or Christmas. Books on
gardening , horticulture and
arran ging will aiso be on
exhibit, as well as a special
display on African Violets and
colla ges and their composition.

·•I Mrs. Nan MCJ&lt;JI'C . Mrs.
1\i ch:~rd Owen reviewing "The
Pcw·cabre Kingdom " with
comments on the book answer
lu roll call.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
}'&amp;AM speCial meeting
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. Work
in . Fellow Crall Degree. All
master masons invite~ .
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
Wedneooay 7:.30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. All officers
and companions urged to attend .
. BAZAAR, Trinity Church, 9
a.m. · Luncheon to be served
beginning al 11 a.m.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Beller
Health Club, Thursday afternoon al the home of Mrs.
William Folmer, with Mrs.
Scott Folmer lo have the
program, and Mrs . Hugh
Bearhs, the contest.
EPISCOPAL Church
Women, Grace Church, luncheon, 12:30 p.m. Thursday.
Mrs. Fred Charles, Marietta,
district chairman, to be guest
spea ker. Hostesses, Mrs. J . E.
D. Hartinger, Mrs. H. 0.
Ewing, Mrs. Leo Story' Miss
Helen Lochary, Mrs. A. R.

Skit staged for PTA
.SALEM CENTER- A skit,
" Heraldin g Election,"
highlighted a meeting of the
Salem Center PTA Monday
night.
_
Fifth graders taking part in
lhe skit written by their
teacher, Mrs. Anna Turner,
were Penny Jack,s, Van
Willford, Lannie Longstreth,
and Mike McGuire, election
officials; Paul Matson, the
presiding judge; Carl Rupe
and David Thornton, candidates ; Jan Smith , Mary
Colwell , Debbie Adkins,
voters; Paul Sturgeon, Teresa
While, and Ronnie Dugan,
school officials promoting a
levy; John Sturgeon , a
negative voter; and Kathleen
Sturgeon, _Gary Holliday,

•
•

Some of the troubles
that beset house plants

: s0cI•a1
F'

'.

1-3 Graders to
sing for PTA.

Calendar :,~~~~:v~:::;.d~~:;~u~i

' '

..

Middleport
Personal Notes

PRICE EFFECTIVE All WEEK

•

Brenda Smith, Cindy Davis, ;
Craig Swick; and Patty Oyer of •
the . sixth grade, .the cam- :
paigners.
..,
James Sheets, State High- •
way patrolman, gave a talk •
with unusual aids on highway ~
safety and what alcohol does to :
the driver . Mrs . Avanell :
Holliday announced that the •
Salem Center PTA had
been.
.
awarded a certificate by the •
Ohio PTA. for ·securing •
magazine subscriptions. She ~
thanked William Willfor.d and ~
Robert Dugan for erectirig the ,
volleyball post. Mrs. Willford :
reported on the recent Meigs •
County Council meeting . .
Mrs. Bonnie Johnson, ways
and means chairman, reported •
that the fail festival proceeds
tOtaled $622. King and queens
were Sheila Fetty and John '
Van Meter, fourth graders ;
and the prince and princess .
were Jeff Gilkey and Trina·•
Johnston, first graders. .
'
David Bowen, band director;:
presented his fifth grade ~
nutophone students. Devotions:
by Mrs. Alma Smith carried, ·
out the Thanksgiving theme.
Mrs. Roberta Wilson's sixth
grade won the attendance •
banner. Refreshments were':
served.

You Can't Lose

bOis.

16 oz. bottles
MiDA CUOICI MEATS

...

Fresh Jirst Cuts

SINGER

The fabric Shop

ORDER YOUR

Thanksgiving Tu~key,
Chicken
and Hams Now!

I

700 W. Main • Pomeroy··

and
Save!

Scot Lad

..

•

T-ow Price Buy!

SEALTEST HOMO

ORANGE JUICE
16 oz. can 49e

· PINTO BEANS

4

Rich's

WHIPPED TOPPING
3
1.00

}49

II oz.

I
I
I

Bonu
Pac•

Umit
1 Per
FamDy

Scot L1d Pure Pak

JURK V STORE
.

----------VAl UARU COUPON

311111nce
JKING SIZE

.

MARK V

ONLY

STORE
·12·1·72

'· =
___,
~
~

'' --=
:.i

-

I

I.

••

.'

99e

Ore Ida

DEEP FRIES

-

.

24 oz.
size

091
'

~

11•17•72

1=:::::::

Ull" 1 COUPON Pill I'URCHAII

l

·--=-

F~esh

l

·-

11·17-ll

P~

19e

Carnation Instant

1 59·

14 quart
box on~

'1.00

t

Large Unclassified

EGGS
3 dot · .1.00
ww Price!
FAVORITE BREAD

.·CAT FOOD ·
' ,. $

Everyday

5 ~ 1.00

oz.
cans

6~

Red Ripe

TOMATOES
2 lb, pkg.

'

394

UlTLE CIGARS

.

Non-Fat Dry Milk

PUSS &amp; BOOTS

Winchester

59e

PRODUCE BUY

=

i

$a

WITH THII COUPON

AT

IICPIIU ;

pkgs.

lb;
bag

. 5

MARK

o•L• ·STORE
V

3

ga1•.

11111111~

: ~Jttlltll

1.00 .

North Star

Van~la

AT

I

pkgs.

ESKIMO PIES
6 p3k 39e
Scot Pride ICE CREAM

•

!:!Y

800D

16 oz.

3

•

·BETSY ROSS
BROWN &amp;SERVE ROU.S

STRAWBERRIES

EXPIRES SATURDAY

l

Y2 GAL.
CRT.

:nf

Fre ..e-Dried Coffee

I

3 : 1:00.

FAMILY SUPPERS
each 99e

gg~

'

29

Sliced$
. lb.·

MARGARINE

Varieties of On Cor

SPECIAL PRICE
I!ITH 111~ COUPON

BOILED
HAM
Kraft Miracle

Dairy &amp; Frozen Food Sale
~II

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

'

COFFEE CRYSTALS

Nov

Thank
·
. You!
.

lb. .

INSTANT FOLGER'S

Today

ROBINSON'S

CLEANERS ·

...

SUPERIORS

BUDGET BRAUNSBACON CHWEIG&amp;
Jll
.
~
~
JR· Al l. ~,/
n!IW1~ .

By The Piece

WHEN YOU BUY A
II ·or. IIf'. of

-

SUPERIORS

·BOLOGNA

SAVE 9(r

Clip

From 1130 p.m. until 2:15p.m•

(Upon Request), ·

SUPERIORS

;.

A Planned Service Interruption

'

lb.

·. .We Remind You!

Wednesday, ·.Nov. ·15

2·HOUR
CLEANING

c

Choice Cuts

Will Be Necessary On

the

PORK CHOPS

PORK CHOPS
Assorted

To
·ohio Power ·Customers

RT. 33, RT. 7, ENTERPRISE, ROSE HILL
From 1:30 p.m. until 3:15 .p.m:

FAMILY

CHOICE

lb.

'89.75

THE AREAS AFFECTED ARE AS FOUOWS:
MINERSVILU, SYRACUSE, RACINE,
E. MAIN ~ IN POMEROY, FROM
MIDWEST STEEL TO VIUAGE UMITS

Center and Loin Cuts

PACK

Important Announcement

Pamphlets at
show are free

Superiors USDA Choice P01t

Superiors

USDA

PORK CHOPS

Goessler.

First full-cast
rehearsal set

DR. ·PEPPER
8 pak

16 oz. bottles

'16 oz.

LOVE

. Final military
rites condticted

DAD'S ROOT BEER
·or .DIET RITE COLA ·

RC .COLA

.

SPEAKING OF EXTENSION SERVICE programs, don't
forget the "Homemakers' Holiday " to be held Thurway at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church. Homemakers everywhere are invited
to attend. The program is sure to provide new ideas for the ·
A weekly feature of Meigs
holidays.
County Garden Club members.
Misl! Dale Steck, extension agent from Vinton County, will be
there to demonstrate at 9:45a.m. just how versatile the blender
can be and will be giving new recipes and tips on getting the most
use out ·of the appliance.
Suzy carpenter will sbow what can be done with pine cones in
1!1\'~~,~~&gt;.::j
Pupils of the first three
a wreath demonstration at II o'clock, Mrs. John Wyman of
grades under the direction of
~
Zaleski will share her ideas for holidaf gifts from nature at I
Mrs. Christine Guthrie will
ili.:
~.
•
::1
p.m. and Mrs. Hazel Sellers of Portland will have a display of
present vocal selections when
BY MRS. G. A. RADEKIN
the Salisbury PTA ineets at
homemade candles and will demonstrate how to make peanut
Star
Garden
Club
7:30 tonight at the school.
brittle, chocolate-covered cherries, and other candies, at 1:45
It
is
usually
thought
thi.t
houseplants,
sheltered
indoors
from
Grade one selections will
p.m. At 11:30 there'll be a holiday poiluck. Everyone's invited.
lt.l
J:,
.
insect pests and disease, would be free from troubles. Yet many
, Mrs. Roy Hannum. Take gifts include " Good Evening to
There is a SO-cent registration fee.
of the letters that come to ·garden trouble..shooters have to do
for Athens Mental Health You ," "Hello, Everybody,"
TUESDAY
"Marching Song/' "Let's Go
NO ONE COULD BE MORE delighted than Eloise Hayes, a- with pests and disease questions relating to house plants.
SALISBURY PTA, Tuesday, Center.
RUTLAND Volunteer Fire Walking," "Halloween/' "A
The truth is, house plants probably were the first acute 7:30p.m. al the school.
victim of multiple sclerosis, one· of the first Meigs disabled
annual Thanks- Trip to the Moon," "Thank
Department's
sufferers
from
envrionmental
pollution
or,
at
least
from
en. persons to get a talking book machine through the Rehabilitation
ANNUAL Stuffing bee of giving turkey dinner, Thurs- You, God" and "I've Got
Services Commission. Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja delivered it tbe other vironment so unsuitable as to damage their health.
Christmas Seals for Meigs
A plant may be unhealthy for one of these reasons ' (If It is County Tuberculosis and day, Ruliand Grade School Two." ~
day after being contacted by Mrs. Hayes who thought the
Selections by the second
program was just "too good to be true." She read about it in The diseased; that is, a fungus bacterium or virus is causing local or Health Assn., 9·a.m. Tuesday, cafeteria starting at 5:30p.m.
Tickets
from
any
firemen
or
at
grade will include "Let Us
general infection. (:i) It is parasitized by a pest of some sort; at Pomeroy United Methodist
Daily Sentlnel. It is entirely free.
the
door.
Open
to
public.
Smile,"
" Sing High, Sing
indoors this usually is limited to the gnawings of a snail or slug or Church.
THURSDAY
Low ,'' " Slumber ' Boat,''
to the depredations of an insect. 3. It has what scientists call a
Evangeline Mi ss ionary
TWIN
CITY
Shrine
Club
"Circl'e Around " " Peter
"physiogenic disease." This means it cannot thrive in its en- Society Thanksgiving dinner at
THE PARSONAGE of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at Shrine Pumpkin," uover ' the River"
vironment.
Air
is
too
hot,
or
too
dry,
or
both;
light
is
wrong;
a
home of Eileen Bowers, 6:30 Club in Racine. All Shriners
Church has taken on a new look. Two new rooms have been added
and "All Praise to Thee."
cold
draft
is
blowing
on
its
leaves;
its
owner
waters
it
too
much,
p.m.
Tuesday.
and new carpeting has been installed to the delight of the new
Third graders will sing
urged to attend.
too little, or shocks it with chilly water unthinkingly. Now is the
NON-TEACHING personnel
pastor, the Rev. Robert Buckley, and family.
"Hike
Along," "I Can't Spell
MAGNOLIA Club Christmas
time for a generality : mostplants in modern houses show stress of Southern Local will meet
dinner Thursday, 6:30 p.m., Hippopotamus·," " Peter
from physiogenic disease; almost none of them is attacked by Tuesday, 7:30p.m. al Southern
Craw's Steak House. Party to Pumpkin ," " Thanksgiving
fungus, bacterial or viral diseases; and too many of them are High School in Racine.
follow at home of Mrs. Dale Song," "Happiness," "I Like it
parasitized by insects.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM Smith. Secret pal exchange.· Here" and " All Praise to
to matching diamond wedding
When you breathe fresh air, get plenty of rest, eat and drink Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Election of
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, Thee ."
bands, one for the bride
properly, and all the rest ofit,you seldom catch the bugs that are officers. Annual dues now due . Thursday night, 7:30 at the
Teachers of the grades are
and one tor the groom.
going around. If you treat your planlB to an environment that All Master Masons invited.
Mrs.
Martha
Hoover,
Mrs
.
hall.
In
14-karal whitt or yellow
Military riles were con- makes them sturdy and strong, disease will seldom be a
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Helen
Dais
and
Miss
Rosalie
MEIGS
COUNTY
Women's
gold.
Choose the most
Mrs. Nina Bland has ducted Tuesday in Bellefon- problem, and Insect pests will be easy to control. Grandma grew Democrat Assn., meeting Conservation League , 7:30 Story.
bteutilul rings In the worid.
returned to Akron after visiting taine lor Dennis Douglas, wonderful house plants because she stuck them off in the dining Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., home of Thurway night, home of Mrs.
~((Gf-JT ~fUH&lt;(l)
herewlthhersister,Mrs. Pearl former resident.
room bay window or in thdront parlor, rooms that were barely Mrs. William Snouffer, Wehe John Sebo. Representatives of
FOR . VOUR PROTECTION
Mr
.
Douglas
served
in
the
U.
Reynolds. 9\e was taken to
heated except' on Sunday. Most homes have fairly dry air when Terrace, Pomeroy.
Family Planning Clinics to
Marietta Saturday by Mrs. S. Army during World War II the furnace is going. As it is ahnost impossible to keep the air
speak. White elephant sale.
WEDNESDAY
COMMITIEE TO MEET
Pearl Reynolds and Mrs. Helen with the U. S. Medical Corps in (lamp enough for their druthers at 75 degrees, why not don a
BUSY BEE Class, MidTHIRD
WEDNESDAY
Reynolds where they met Mrs. the European Theater for three sweater and drop the.temperature to 65 degrees or even a shade Homem~kers Club, Syracuse, dleport First Baptist Church,
A regular monthly meeting
years. He was the son of the
Charles Archer of Akron.
Wednesday
at Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the of the Meigs Democratic
late
Harry 0. and Ruth Barn- less? At the cooler temperature - and higher relative humidity meeting
Mrs. Mike Shafer, Tirtlmy
Executive Committee will take
- the plants will thrive. Incidentally, so will you. Every English- meeting house in Municipal church.
hart
Douglas
of
Letart
Falls.
~and Corrie, are ilpenctlng the
STEAK SniPJr?r ~ to 8 p,m, place at 7:30p.m. Thursday at , , ,"'
man knows that Americans overheat their homes to a point of Park. Geneva Nolan and Unda
AtteMing
services
!tom
this
t:l"~ here wit}l or. and Mrs.
Ferrell, hostesses. Christmas Thursday, ~er Grade Grace Episcopal Parish !lOuse "''
general bronchial and pulmonsry disease!
area'"\vere
!Jarry
Douglas,
Jr.,
in Pomeroy. The public is
Ray Pickens and Mr. and Mrs.
Root environment, too, is critical. A house plant book will trees to be made. Irene Parker School by Chester Fire
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Denzel
Boggess
invited. Refreshments will be
George Hackett, Sr., while her
give the proper soil mixture for each of your plants, and will also and Virginia Salser, project Department; proceeds to the
and
son,
Eugene,
Mrs.
Linda
served.
husband 18 In Philadelphia
t,ell
about
watering.
Do your watering in the morning; put the . leaders . Bring new or used new fire truck ..
Roberts,
Pomeroy
;
Mr.
and
attending a training school.
FRIDAY
furnace fillers, colored egg
The family will be moving in Mrs. Norman Hawley, Rhonda , water on the soil, not the plants, and have it room temperature if ' carton, glue and scissors.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving
the near future to Dearborn, Jeff and Tom, Mr. and Mrs. possible . As day length decreases, grow most plants on the drier
LYDIA CIRCLE, Pomeroy dinner, Racine Grange, 7 p.m.
Marlin Major and Mrs. Marge side, with no fertilizing . But in late winter, as days begin to
Mich.
Friday, home of Earl Cross.
set
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Van- Ferguson of Middleport. Burial lengthen, begin feeding and step up the watering so the plants United Methodist Church, 7:30 Take covered dish, table
was
in
the
Bellefontaine
p.m.
Wedneway
at
the
church.
will make vigorous new growth. House plants respond to spring
derhoof and Mark of Waldo
Use Our Lay Away Plan For
ON
Hi
s
wife,
Ova
BIG BEND Neig hborhood service, gift for Southeast Ohio
Cemetery
.
just as garden plants do.
'
spent the weekend here visiting
Christmas Giving.
QUAL'ITY
Mee ting, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Mental Center and for pig
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. McComas. Kathleen Douglas, preceded
in poke auction.
S.ELECTION
Fir·st Baptist Church, Palmer
· Saturday evening guests at the him in death.
.
FRIDAY
VALUE
SORORITY PLEDGED
St. , Middleport. Leaders,
McComas home were Mr. and
COURTESY
GIDEON TO SPEAK
THIRD Friday Club, home of
Miss Jo Ellen Diehl , assistant leaders, Committee
SETTER PRICE~
Mrs. Lloyd McComas. On
A representa tive of the
Mrs.
Mabel Wolfe, 6 p.m.
daughter
of
Mr
.
·
and
Mrs
.
.
members
and
anyone
inSunday Mrs. McComas enJewelry Store
Gideon Society will speak
polluck. Members to take
James A. Diehl of Mulberry terested invited to attend.
tertained with a pre-ThanksSunday morning at the Midlola's Dress Shop
Heights, Pomeroy, has been
PAST Presidents, Ladies covered dish dinner. Prizes
Court st .• Pomeroy
giving dinner attended by the
dleport First Baptist Church
will
be
furnished
.
pledged
to
Gamma
Kappa
Auxiliary
Drew
Webster
Post
lllu,tra tion
Vanderhoof family and Mr.
dur ~ng the Sunday School hour .
POMEROY
The
first
entire
cast
Enlarged .•
Chapter
of
Sigma
Sigma
Sigma
39,
American
Legion,
7:30p.m.
and Mrs. Harold George,
A
special
offering
will
be
taken
Brent, Brian, David and rehearsal of the. Big Bend for the Gideon work of the Sorority al Marietta College. Wednesday at post home with
Minstrel's "Fall Follies" will
Miss Diehl graduated from Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew and
Christopher.
be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday at makin g the Bible available to Meigs High School last spring. Mrs. Paul Casci, hostesses.
the Pomeroy Elementary , ali people.
She was a member of the
MIDDLEPORT Literary
School. The show will be
National Honor Society, played Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday home
rehearsed · in order of
In lhe band, sang in the choir,
presentation for the Nov. 24
and was a cheerleader. A
DANCE
PLANNED
show.
freshman , she is a member of
Now! Lay It Away
HARRISONVILLE - The
Final rehearsals of the fall
the College Singers.
show will be held at the Meigs Harrisonville PTO will sponsor
High School beginning Sunday. a square dance Friday night at
SERVICE SET
On Sunday rehearsal will start the school. Music will be by the
The Middleport Community
Hilltoppers. Adult admission
The educational division of at ·I p.m. and will be with will be 50 cents, and children Thanksgiving service will be
Sewing_r.t~hine
the Meigs County Garden lighting. On Wednesday, Nov . will be admitted for 25 cents. held on Wednesday evening,
Nov. 22, al 7:30 p.m. at the .i
Club's annual Christmas 22, a complete dress rehear- Refreshmenls
For Christmas '72
will
be Middleport Fir st Baptist il
sing
will
be
held
beginning
at
7
flower show will feature a
Small dep(iiilt will hold.
available.
Church. Special music will be
variety of free pamphlets on at the high school. The final run
through rehearsal will be on
supplied by the y~uth of the
flowers and shrubs.
BAZAAR
ON
FRIDAY
Friday,
Nov.
24,
the
show
date,
Middleport Nazarene Church,
Available at the show to be
A
bazaar
and
bake
sale
will
from
I
to
3
p.m.
at
the
high
and
speaker for the service will . , 1ll W. Sesond
.992-2284'
held Dec. 2 and 3 in the
be held by the Loyal Women's be the Rev. Henry Key, pastor .. . POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy Elementary School school.
Class of the Middleport Church of the Mount Moriah Church.
will be free copies of ~he
of Christ Friday from 9 a.m. to · ~~-llllll-illiliiill_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"ii
following brochures obtained
ATIEND CHRISTENING
4 p.m. at Dudley's Florist Shop.
through
Congressman
Mr . and Mrs. Everett
I
Clarence Miller: "H.ow to Buy Bachner, Middleport, and Mr.
A Christmas Tree," "Growing and Mrs. Donald -Brown, Sr.,
. IN ARIZONA
Holly," "Summer Flowering New Haven, W. Va., were In
Mr.
and Mrs. Russell E.
Bulbs," "Growing Flowering Columbus Sunday for the
----------~----~-~------ ------~------Miller
and
children,
Tina
and
11
Perennials, "
Growing christening of their grandson,
Flowering A'nnuals," Christopher Lee, infani son of Tim, Pomeroy, are visiting in
' "Growing Flowering Dog- Mr. arid Mrs. Donald Brown, Tucson , Ariz. with Mr: and
wood.'' "Roses for the H~me," Jr . at the St. Andrews Mrs. Richard ,Riebel. The
and ." Insecticides
for Presbyterian Church. Mr. and Riebels' son Is seriously ill In
St. Joseph Hospital. He is alsp
Houseplants ."
Mrs . Bachner were the a grandson of Walter Cook of
Pamphlets provided through weekend guests of their son-inthe Extension Service include law and daughter at their home Syracuse.
"Care and Selection of Foliage in Westerville.
Plants,',' "Delphiniums in the
Home Garden," "Mulches for
A thought for 'the day : On his
.the Home Ground," "Planting
ALSO THERE
70th b.irthday, Swedish inventor
"
"Pru
·
Charles
Francis Kettering said,
Trees and Shr Ubs,
mng
CHESTER - Attending the
Landscape 'Plants," "Selected 50th we\lding anniversary
-·~A man · must have a certain
Ground Covers,'' and "Spring observance of Mr . and Mrs, amount of inlelligent Ignorance
Flowering Bulbs for the Curtis Wolfe Chester but not . •to•g•e•t•a•hyw•
. •he•r•e•
..._ _ _, .
Home," .
·
. previo~sly r~ported w'ere Mrs.
Several hundred bulletins . Esther Ridenour and Mr . and
wUI be available to Rower show Mrs. Forrest Showalter.
vlaltors. Mrs. Hiram Fisher
.and Mrs. Edison Hollon have
In case of lnclementweather, service Interruption will be Thursday
charge of the educational
16, 1972, and at same hours. as above.
'
··
dlvlslm of the show which will
PROGRAM PLANNED
I® feature llfiiCW dllplay of
The Mt. Hermon UB-Ghurch
,.lh.ls planned ·Interruption Is necessary to Improve service In these areas.,
Chrislmls Cl'lfll by the art will have a ~hanklgiv.lng ·
.FOR
BIG
DISCOVNT
SAVINGS
I
clul of Mtlp 11111t School, an program ~t 7:30p.m. Sunday.
811tlblt on pltlllt fooda, and The public is Invited. The
,,
lumdcr1fted Cbrlatmas ar- Christmas program will be
21tE
.
2ncL
Pomeroy
ticle~ for. atfll
and-or held on Saturday, Dec. 23, at
. u to 9 Dally-Sunday t-9
· Phone 992-1428 .
ClecoraUOIII.
7:30p.m.

Notes . ...

"

(

~

;

SUPER MARKET • Open Dai~ 9 to 10 .· Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept f?ederal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

Sts. .'"We

The

Quantities"

�.,

•

•
•

•

mmun1ty
rn
. . e··r· 8Y Char1ene Hoefl'ICh:
•

Show opensSaturday

RUTLAND - 'fhe public is · '" 8 p.111. Saturday, and~ p.m.
invited to view the exhi bits in '" 4 p.lu . Sunda). Mrs. Charles
; . the "Sing a Song of · christ- l,cwis is general chairman of
·.: mas!" fl uwer show of the llr ~ show which will be judged
If you are planning to make the Oatmeal Batter Bread, the Rutland Garden Club to be by Mrs. Gilbert Cullen of
recipe for which was included in the Sunday Times-Sentinel story staged this weekend at the Marie II&lt;!, an accredited judge,
. m the 'n!anksgiving dinner prepared bt J&lt;;xtension Service Rutland Me thodist Chu rch beginning at I p.m. on
Saturday.
basement.
llltrition aides, please take note of this correction.
Wi th the exception of five
Directions were not complete in either the story or on the
Hours of the show are 1 p.m.
·mimeographed recipe sheets distributed by the Extension
Service. In the directions
for mixing the batter, the statement '
.
"Add remaining Rour and mix with spoon until flour is all
blended in," should be added just prior to the instruction on
spreading the batter in the pan.
Now, go· stir up some oatmeal batter bread!

Green Thumb

elasses

in

the artistic
~rra~gement s category; all
rlasscs are op~n fvr com~
pclililm . There is nu limi t on
Ihe number of entries which an
exhibit or can n1ake 'in the
horticul ture cla5S&lt;!S.
The invitational classes in
the artistic arra ngemen ts
division are "We Three Kings
of Orient Are," in a Jap~nese
manner; and "There's a Song
in the Air, There's aStar in the
.Sky," a modern design.
ll special feature of the show
will be an exhibit of pictures or
plaqu es contai nin g plant
material which are suitable for
use in a home at either Thanks.giving or Christmas. Books on
gardening , horticulture and
arran ging will aiso be on
exhibit, as well as a special
display on African Violets and
colla ges and their composition.

·•I Mrs. Nan MCJ&lt;JI'C . Mrs.
1\i ch:~rd Owen reviewing "The
Pcw·cabre Kingdom " with
comments on the book answer
lu roll call.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
}'&amp;AM speCial meeting
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. Work
in . Fellow Crall Degree. All
master masons invite~ .
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
Wedneooay 7:.30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. All officers
and companions urged to attend .
. BAZAAR, Trinity Church, 9
a.m. · Luncheon to be served
beginning al 11 a.m.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Beller
Health Club, Thursday afternoon al the home of Mrs.
William Folmer, with Mrs.
Scott Folmer lo have the
program, and Mrs . Hugh
Bearhs, the contest.
EPISCOPAL Church
Women, Grace Church, luncheon, 12:30 p.m. Thursday.
Mrs. Fred Charles, Marietta,
district chairman, to be guest
spea ker. Hostesses, Mrs. J . E.
D. Hartinger, Mrs. H. 0.
Ewing, Mrs. Leo Story' Miss
Helen Lochary, Mrs. A. R.

Skit staged for PTA
.SALEM CENTER- A skit,
" Heraldin g Election,"
highlighted a meeting of the
Salem Center PTA Monday
night.
_
Fifth graders taking part in
lhe skit written by their
teacher, Mrs. Anna Turner,
were Penny Jack,s, Van
Willford, Lannie Longstreth,
and Mike McGuire, election
officials; Paul Matson, the
presiding judge; Carl Rupe
and David Thornton, candidates ; Jan Smith , Mary
Colwell , Debbie Adkins,
voters; Paul Sturgeon, Teresa
While, and Ronnie Dugan,
school officials promoting a
levy; John Sturgeon , a
negative voter; and Kathleen
Sturgeon, _Gary Holliday,

•
•

Some of the troubles
that beset house plants

: s0cI•a1
F'

'.

1-3 Graders to
sing for PTA.

Calendar :,~~~~:v~:::;.d~~:;~u~i

' '

..

Middleport
Personal Notes

PRICE EFFECTIVE All WEEK

•

Brenda Smith, Cindy Davis, ;
Craig Swick; and Patty Oyer of •
the . sixth grade, .the cam- :
paigners.
..,
James Sheets, State High- •
way patrolman, gave a talk •
with unusual aids on highway ~
safety and what alcohol does to :
the driver . Mrs . Avanell :
Holliday announced that the •
Salem Center PTA had
been.
.
awarded a certificate by the •
Ohio PTA. for ·securing •
magazine subscriptions. She ~
thanked William Willfor.d and ~
Robert Dugan for erectirig the ,
volleyball post. Mrs. Willford :
reported on the recent Meigs •
County Council meeting . .
Mrs. Bonnie Johnson, ways
and means chairman, reported •
that the fail festival proceeds
tOtaled $622. King and queens
were Sheila Fetty and John '
Van Meter, fourth graders ;
and the prince and princess .
were Jeff Gilkey and Trina·•
Johnston, first graders. .
'
David Bowen, band director;:
presented his fifth grade ~
nutophone students. Devotions:
by Mrs. Alma Smith carried, ·
out the Thanksgiving theme.
Mrs. Roberta Wilson's sixth
grade won the attendance •
banner. Refreshments were':
served.

You Can't Lose

bOis.

16 oz. bottles
MiDA CUOICI MEATS

...

Fresh Jirst Cuts

SINGER

The fabric Shop

ORDER YOUR

Thanksgiving Tu~key,
Chicken
and Hams Now!

I

700 W. Main • Pomeroy··

and
Save!

Scot Lad

..

•

T-ow Price Buy!

SEALTEST HOMO

ORANGE JUICE
16 oz. can 49e

· PINTO BEANS

4

Rich's

WHIPPED TOPPING
3
1.00

}49

II oz.

I
I
I

Bonu
Pac•

Umit
1 Per
FamDy

Scot L1d Pure Pak

JURK V STORE
.

----------VAl UARU COUPON

311111nce
JKING SIZE

.

MARK V

ONLY

STORE
·12·1·72

'· =
___,
~
~

'' --=
:.i

-

I

I.

••

.'

99e

Ore Ida

DEEP FRIES

-

.

24 oz.
size

091
'

~

11•17•72

1=:::::::

Ull" 1 COUPON Pill I'URCHAII

l

·--=-

F~esh

l

·-

11·17-ll

P~

19e

Carnation Instant

1 59·

14 quart
box on~

'1.00

t

Large Unclassified

EGGS
3 dot · .1.00
ww Price!
FAVORITE BREAD

.·CAT FOOD ·
' ,. $

Everyday

5 ~ 1.00

oz.
cans

6~

Red Ripe

TOMATOES
2 lb, pkg.

'

394

UlTLE CIGARS

.

Non-Fat Dry Milk

PUSS &amp; BOOTS

Winchester

59e

PRODUCE BUY

=

i

$a

WITH THII COUPON

AT

IICPIIU ;

pkgs.

lb;
bag

. 5

MARK

o•L• ·STORE
V

3

ga1•.

11111111~

: ~Jttlltll

1.00 .

North Star

Van~la

AT

I

pkgs.

ESKIMO PIES
6 p3k 39e
Scot Pride ICE CREAM

•

!:!Y

800D

16 oz.

3

•

·BETSY ROSS
BROWN &amp;SERVE ROU.S

STRAWBERRIES

EXPIRES SATURDAY

l

Y2 GAL.
CRT.

:nf

Fre ..e-Dried Coffee

I

3 : 1:00.

FAMILY SUPPERS
each 99e

gg~

'

29

Sliced$
. lb.·

MARGARINE

Varieties of On Cor

SPECIAL PRICE
I!ITH 111~ COUPON

BOILED
HAM
Kraft Miracle

Dairy &amp; Frozen Food Sale
~II

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

'

COFFEE CRYSTALS

Nov

Thank
·
. You!
.

lb. .

INSTANT FOLGER'S

Today

ROBINSON'S

CLEANERS ·

...

SUPERIORS

BUDGET BRAUNSBACON CHWEIG&amp;
Jll
.
~
~
JR· Al l. ~,/
n!IW1~ .

By The Piece

WHEN YOU BUY A
II ·or. IIf'. of

-

SUPERIORS

·BOLOGNA

SAVE 9(r

Clip

From 1130 p.m. until 2:15p.m•

(Upon Request), ·

SUPERIORS

;.

A Planned Service Interruption

'

lb.

·. .We Remind You!

Wednesday, ·.Nov. ·15

2·HOUR
CLEANING

c

Choice Cuts

Will Be Necessary On

the

PORK CHOPS

PORK CHOPS
Assorted

To
·ohio Power ·Customers

RT. 33, RT. 7, ENTERPRISE, ROSE HILL
From 1:30 p.m. until 3:15 .p.m:

FAMILY

CHOICE

lb.

'89.75

THE AREAS AFFECTED ARE AS FOUOWS:
MINERSVILU, SYRACUSE, RACINE,
E. MAIN ~ IN POMEROY, FROM
MIDWEST STEEL TO VIUAGE UMITS

Center and Loin Cuts

PACK

Important Announcement

Pamphlets at
show are free

Superiors USDA Choice P01t

Superiors

USDA

PORK CHOPS

Goessler.

First full-cast
rehearsal set

DR. ·PEPPER
8 pak

16 oz. bottles

'16 oz.

LOVE

. Final military
rites condticted

DAD'S ROOT BEER
·or .DIET RITE COLA ·

RC .COLA

.

SPEAKING OF EXTENSION SERVICE programs, don't
forget the "Homemakers' Holiday " to be held Thurway at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church. Homemakers everywhere are invited
to attend. The program is sure to provide new ideas for the ·
A weekly feature of Meigs
holidays.
County Garden Club members.
Misl! Dale Steck, extension agent from Vinton County, will be
there to demonstrate at 9:45a.m. just how versatile the blender
can be and will be giving new recipes and tips on getting the most
use out ·of the appliance.
Suzy carpenter will sbow what can be done with pine cones in
1!1\'~~,~~&gt;.::j
Pupils of the first three
a wreath demonstration at II o'clock, Mrs. John Wyman of
grades under the direction of
~
Zaleski will share her ideas for holidaf gifts from nature at I
Mrs. Christine Guthrie will
ili.:
~.
•
::1
p.m. and Mrs. Hazel Sellers of Portland will have a display of
present vocal selections when
BY MRS. G. A. RADEKIN
the Salisbury PTA ineets at
homemade candles and will demonstrate how to make peanut
Star
Garden
Club
7:30 tonight at the school.
brittle, chocolate-covered cherries, and other candies, at 1:45
It
is
usually
thought
thi.t
houseplants,
sheltered
indoors
from
Grade one selections will
p.m. At 11:30 there'll be a holiday poiluck. Everyone's invited.
lt.l
J:,
.
insect pests and disease, would be free from troubles. Yet many
, Mrs. Roy Hannum. Take gifts include " Good Evening to
There is a SO-cent registration fee.
of the letters that come to ·garden trouble..shooters have to do
for Athens Mental Health You ," "Hello, Everybody,"
TUESDAY
"Marching Song/' "Let's Go
NO ONE COULD BE MORE delighted than Eloise Hayes, a- with pests and disease questions relating to house plants.
SALISBURY PTA, Tuesday, Center.
RUTLAND Volunteer Fire Walking," "Halloween/' "A
The truth is, house plants probably were the first acute 7:30p.m. al the school.
victim of multiple sclerosis, one· of the first Meigs disabled
annual Thanks- Trip to the Moon," "Thank
Department's
sufferers
from
envrionmental
pollution
or,
at
least
from
en. persons to get a talking book machine through the Rehabilitation
ANNUAL Stuffing bee of giving turkey dinner, Thurs- You, God" and "I've Got
Services Commission. Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja delivered it tbe other vironment so unsuitable as to damage their health.
Christmas Seals for Meigs
A plant may be unhealthy for one of these reasons ' (If It is County Tuberculosis and day, Ruliand Grade School Two." ~
day after being contacted by Mrs. Hayes who thought the
Selections by the second
program was just "too good to be true." She read about it in The diseased; that is, a fungus bacterium or virus is causing local or Health Assn., 9·a.m. Tuesday, cafeteria starting at 5:30p.m.
Tickets
from
any
firemen
or
at
grade will include "Let Us
general infection. (:i) It is parasitized by a pest of some sort; at Pomeroy United Methodist
Daily Sentlnel. It is entirely free.
the
door.
Open
to
public.
Smile,"
" Sing High, Sing
indoors this usually is limited to the gnawings of a snail or slug or Church.
THURSDAY
Low ,'' " Slumber ' Boat,''
to the depredations of an insect. 3. It has what scientists call a
Evangeline Mi ss ionary
TWIN
CITY
Shrine
Club
"Circl'e Around " " Peter
"physiogenic disease." This means it cannot thrive in its en- Society Thanksgiving dinner at
THE PARSONAGE of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at Shrine Pumpkin," uover ' the River"
vironment.
Air
is
too
hot,
or
too
dry,
or
both;
light
is
wrong;
a
home of Eileen Bowers, 6:30 Club in Racine. All Shriners
Church has taken on a new look. Two new rooms have been added
and "All Praise to Thee."
cold
draft
is
blowing
on
its
leaves;
its
owner
waters
it
too
much,
p.m.
Tuesday.
and new carpeting has been installed to the delight of the new
Third graders will sing
urged to attend.
too little, or shocks it with chilly water unthinkingly. Now is the
NON-TEACHING personnel
pastor, the Rev. Robert Buckley, and family.
"Hike
Along," "I Can't Spell
MAGNOLIA Club Christmas
time for a generality : mostplants in modern houses show stress of Southern Local will meet
dinner Thursday, 6:30 p.m., Hippopotamus·," " Peter
from physiogenic disease; almost none of them is attacked by Tuesday, 7:30p.m. al Southern
Craw's Steak House. Party to Pumpkin ," " Thanksgiving
fungus, bacterial or viral diseases; and too many of them are High School in Racine.
follow at home of Mrs. Dale Song," "Happiness," "I Like it
parasitized by insects.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM Smith. Secret pal exchange.· Here" and " All Praise to
to matching diamond wedding
When you breathe fresh air, get plenty of rest, eat and drink Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Election of
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, Thee ."
bands, one for the bride
properly, and all the rest ofit,you seldom catch the bugs that are officers. Annual dues now due . Thursday night, 7:30 at the
Teachers of the grades are
and one tor the groom.
going around. If you treat your planlB to an environment that All Master Masons invited.
Mrs.
Martha
Hoover,
Mrs
.
hall.
In
14-karal whitt or yellow
Military riles were con- makes them sturdy and strong, disease will seldom be a
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Helen
Dais
and
Miss
Rosalie
MEIGS
COUNTY
Women's
gold.
Choose the most
Mrs. Nina Bland has ducted Tuesday in Bellefon- problem, and Insect pests will be easy to control. Grandma grew Democrat Assn., meeting Conservation League , 7:30 Story.
bteutilul rings In the worid.
returned to Akron after visiting taine lor Dennis Douglas, wonderful house plants because she stuck them off in the dining Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., home of Thurway night, home of Mrs.
~((Gf-JT ~fUH&lt;(l)
herewlthhersister,Mrs. Pearl former resident.
room bay window or in thdront parlor, rooms that were barely Mrs. William Snouffer, Wehe John Sebo. Representatives of
FOR . VOUR PROTECTION
Mr
.
Douglas
served
in
the
U.
Reynolds. 9\e was taken to
heated except' on Sunday. Most homes have fairly dry air when Terrace, Pomeroy.
Family Planning Clinics to
Marietta Saturday by Mrs. S. Army during World War II the furnace is going. As it is ahnost impossible to keep the air
speak. White elephant sale.
WEDNESDAY
COMMITIEE TO MEET
Pearl Reynolds and Mrs. Helen with the U. S. Medical Corps in (lamp enough for their druthers at 75 degrees, why not don a
BUSY BEE Class, MidTHIRD
WEDNESDAY
Reynolds where they met Mrs. the European Theater for three sweater and drop the.temperature to 65 degrees or even a shade Homem~kers Club, Syracuse, dleport First Baptist Church,
A regular monthly meeting
years. He was the son of the
Charles Archer of Akron.
Wednesday
at Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the of the Meigs Democratic
late
Harry 0. and Ruth Barn- less? At the cooler temperature - and higher relative humidity meeting
Mrs. Mike Shafer, Tirtlmy
Executive Committee will take
- the plants will thrive. Incidentally, so will you. Every English- meeting house in Municipal church.
hart
Douglas
of
Letart
Falls.
~and Corrie, are ilpenctlng the
STEAK SniPJr?r ~ to 8 p,m, place at 7:30p.m. Thursday at , , ,"'
man knows that Americans overheat their homes to a point of Park. Geneva Nolan and Unda
AtteMing
services
!tom
this
t:l"~ here wit}l or. and Mrs.
Ferrell, hostesses. Christmas Thursday, ~er Grade Grace Episcopal Parish !lOuse "''
general bronchial and pulmonsry disease!
area'"\vere
!Jarry
Douglas,
Jr.,
in Pomeroy. The public is
Ray Pickens and Mr. and Mrs.
Root environment, too, is critical. A house plant book will trees to be made. Irene Parker School by Chester Fire
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Denzel
Boggess
invited. Refreshments will be
George Hackett, Sr., while her
give the proper soil mixture for each of your plants, and will also and Virginia Salser, project Department; proceeds to the
and
son,
Eugene,
Mrs.
Linda
served.
husband 18 In Philadelphia
t,ell
about
watering.
Do your watering in the morning; put the . leaders . Bring new or used new fire truck ..
Roberts,
Pomeroy
;
Mr.
and
attending a training school.
FRIDAY
furnace fillers, colored egg
The family will be moving in Mrs. Norman Hawley, Rhonda , water on the soil, not the plants, and have it room temperature if ' carton, glue and scissors.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving
the near future to Dearborn, Jeff and Tom, Mr. and Mrs. possible . As day length decreases, grow most plants on the drier
LYDIA CIRCLE, Pomeroy dinner, Racine Grange, 7 p.m.
Marlin Major and Mrs. Marge side, with no fertilizing . But in late winter, as days begin to
Mich.
Friday, home of Earl Cross.
set
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Van- Ferguson of Middleport. Burial lengthen, begin feeding and step up the watering so the plants United Methodist Church, 7:30 Take covered dish, table
was
in
the
Bellefontaine
p.m.
Wedneway
at
the
church.
will make vigorous new growth. House plants respond to spring
derhoof and Mark of Waldo
Use Our Lay Away Plan For
ON
Hi
s
wife,
Ova
BIG BEND Neig hborhood service, gift for Southeast Ohio
Cemetery
.
just as garden plants do.
'
spent the weekend here visiting
Christmas Giving.
QUAL'ITY
Mee ting, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Mental Center and for pig
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. McComas. Kathleen Douglas, preceded
in poke auction.
S.ELECTION
Fir·st Baptist Church, Palmer
· Saturday evening guests at the him in death.
.
FRIDAY
VALUE
SORORITY PLEDGED
St. , Middleport. Leaders,
McComas home were Mr. and
COURTESY
GIDEON TO SPEAK
THIRD Friday Club, home of
Miss Jo Ellen Diehl , assistant leaders, Committee
SETTER PRICE~
Mrs. Lloyd McComas. On
A representa tive of the
Mrs.
Mabel Wolfe, 6 p.m.
daughter
of
Mr
.
·
and
Mrs
.
.
members
and
anyone
inSunday Mrs. McComas enJewelry Store
Gideon Society will speak
polluck. Members to take
James A. Diehl of Mulberry terested invited to attend.
tertained with a pre-ThanksSunday morning at the Midlola's Dress Shop
Heights, Pomeroy, has been
PAST Presidents, Ladies covered dish dinner. Prizes
Court st .• Pomeroy
giving dinner attended by the
dleport First Baptist Church
will
be
furnished
.
pledged
to
Gamma
Kappa
Auxiliary
Drew
Webster
Post
lllu,tra tion
Vanderhoof family and Mr.
dur ~ng the Sunday School hour .
POMEROY
The
first
entire
cast
Enlarged .•
Chapter
of
Sigma
Sigma
Sigma
39,
American
Legion,
7:30p.m.
and Mrs. Harold George,
A
special
offering
will
be
taken
Brent, Brian, David and rehearsal of the. Big Bend for the Gideon work of the Sorority al Marietta College. Wednesday at post home with
Minstrel's "Fall Follies" will
Miss Diehl graduated from Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew and
Christopher.
be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday at makin g the Bible available to Meigs High School last spring. Mrs. Paul Casci, hostesses.
the Pomeroy Elementary , ali people.
She was a member of the
MIDDLEPORT Literary
School. The show will be
National Honor Society, played Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday home
rehearsed · in order of
In lhe band, sang in the choir,
presentation for the Nov. 24
and was a cheerleader. A
DANCE
PLANNED
show.
freshman , she is a member of
Now! Lay It Away
HARRISONVILLE - The
Final rehearsals of the fall
the College Singers.
show will be held at the Meigs Harrisonville PTO will sponsor
High School beginning Sunday. a square dance Friday night at
SERVICE SET
On Sunday rehearsal will start the school. Music will be by the
The Middleport Community
Hilltoppers. Adult admission
The educational division of at ·I p.m. and will be with will be 50 cents, and children Thanksgiving service will be
Sewing_r.t~hine
the Meigs County Garden lighting. On Wednesday, Nov . will be admitted for 25 cents. held on Wednesday evening,
Nov. 22, al 7:30 p.m. at the .i
Club's annual Christmas 22, a complete dress rehear- Refreshmenls
For Christmas '72
will
be Middleport Fir st Baptist il
sing
will
be
held
beginning
at
7
flower show will feature a
Small dep(iiilt will hold.
available.
Church. Special music will be
variety of free pamphlets on at the high school. The final run
through rehearsal will be on
supplied by the y~uth of the
flowers and shrubs.
BAZAAR
ON
FRIDAY
Friday,
Nov.
24,
the
show
date,
Middleport Nazarene Church,
Available at the show to be
A
bazaar
and
bake
sale
will
from
I
to
3
p.m.
at
the
high
and
speaker for the service will . , 1ll W. Sesond
.992-2284'
held Dec. 2 and 3 in the
be held by the Loyal Women's be the Rev. Henry Key, pastor .. . POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy Elementary School school.
Class of the Middleport Church of the Mount Moriah Church.
will be free copies of ~he
of Christ Friday from 9 a.m. to · ~~-llllll-illiliiill_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"ii
following brochures obtained
ATIEND CHRISTENING
4 p.m. at Dudley's Florist Shop.
through
Congressman
Mr . and Mrs. Everett
I
Clarence Miller: "H.ow to Buy Bachner, Middleport, and Mr.
A Christmas Tree," "Growing and Mrs. Donald -Brown, Sr.,
. IN ARIZONA
Holly," "Summer Flowering New Haven, W. Va., were In
Mr.
and Mrs. Russell E.
Bulbs," "Growing Flowering Columbus Sunday for the
----------~----~-~------ ------~------Miller
and
children,
Tina
and
11
Perennials, "
Growing christening of their grandson,
Flowering A'nnuals," Christopher Lee, infani son of Tim, Pomeroy, are visiting in
' "Growing Flowering Dog- Mr. arid Mrs. Donald Brown, Tucson , Ariz. with Mr: and
wood.'' "Roses for the H~me," Jr . at the St. Andrews Mrs. Richard ,Riebel. The
and ." Insecticides
for Presbyterian Church. Mr. and Riebels' son Is seriously ill In
St. Joseph Hospital. He is alsp
Houseplants ."
Mrs . Bachner were the a grandson of Walter Cook of
Pamphlets provided through weekend guests of their son-inthe Extension Service include law and daughter at their home Syracuse.
"Care and Selection of Foliage in Westerville.
Plants,',' "Delphiniums in the
Home Garden," "Mulches for
A thought for 'the day : On his
.the Home Ground," "Planting
ALSO THERE
70th b.irthday, Swedish inventor
"
"Pru
·
Charles
Francis Kettering said,
Trees and Shr Ubs,
mng
CHESTER - Attending the
Landscape 'Plants," "Selected 50th we\lding anniversary
-·~A man · must have a certain
Ground Covers,'' and "Spring observance of Mr . and Mrs, amount of inlelligent Ignorance
Flowering Bulbs for the Curtis Wolfe Chester but not . •to•g•e•t•a•hyw•
. •he•r•e•
..._ _ _, .
Home," .
·
. previo~sly r~ported w'ere Mrs.
Several hundred bulletins . Esther Ridenour and Mr . and
wUI be available to Rower show Mrs. Forrest Showalter.
vlaltors. Mrs. Hiram Fisher
.and Mrs. Edison Hollon have
In case of lnclementweather, service Interruption will be Thursday
charge of the educational
16, 1972, and at same hours. as above.
'
··
dlvlslm of the show which will
PROGRAM PLANNED
I® feature llfiiCW dllplay of
The Mt. Hermon UB-Ghurch
,.lh.ls planned ·Interruption Is necessary to Improve service In these areas.,
Chrislmls Cl'lfll by the art will have a ~hanklgiv.lng ·
.FOR
BIG
DISCOVNT
SAVINGS
I
clul of Mtlp 11111t School, an program ~t 7:30p.m. Sunday.
811tlblt on pltlllt fooda, and The public is Invited. The
,,
lumdcr1fted Cbrlatmas ar- Christmas program will be
21tE
.
2ncL
Pomeroy
ticle~ for. atfll
and-or held on Saturday, Dec. 23, at
. u to 9 Dally-Sunday t-9
· Phone 992-1428 .
ClecoraUOIII.
7:30p.m.

Notes . ...

"

(

~

;

SUPER MARKET • Open Dai~ 9 to 10 .· Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept f?ederal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

Sts. .'"We

The

Quantities"

�" ' ' I f ! If ! '

.~

.

' ·, .

~

. , •. ,

. , f

~

r

;

7 •'-TheoatJyse~eJX&gt;I1·Pomerov.ICNov. l4,1972

·---;_

·------

-

.

J·Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!•

~·

.

.•

.

WANT AD,S
INFORMATION .
" " 5 P.M .•. Day
DEADLINES
.
·~
Before Publlca11on
Dett~dllne
9 a.m.
,•:,,.. Monday
Cancellation
- Corrections

:l ,

:t.

Will be accepted until9 a.m. for

,

REGULATIONS

~";

I'' . ,

•' J
1

HE IL',

®

,

Day of Publicat ion

·~

The Publisher reserves tht

· ~ right to edit or reject any ads
:~ dttmed

object iona l.
The
'- - PUbl isher will not be respons ible
•~.. .for more tha.n one lnco rrec1
~ Insertion .
:',;RATES
1
Ad Service
• For Want
5 cents per Word one ins~rrt l on
Minimu m Charge 75c
12 cents per word three ·
consecutive Insertions .
·!"% 18 cents per word six con
~ "lecutlve Insertions.
~ · 25 Per Cent Discount on palo
~ ~d$1nd ads palO with in 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
'
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per

HEATING &amp;
COOLING window

Air COnditioners
Hot Water\ Heifers
Plumbmg
E lectrica I Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Polar a, factory· air condi t ion ing , v.a engine, automatic
t~ansmission , power steering, power brakes, good white
Slde·walls, many more extras . White fini sh. black vmyl
roof , Priced to move
"

..

:1

"K" and The Lemon Grove.

Also new children's products.
Phone Helen Jane, 992-5113.
We'd like to serve you.
10-24-tfc

REVIVA L in

progress

@)

:Po'!~!~!s: ~~r ·co.

992-2448

PRE -CHRISTMAS sale :
Crushed velvet, pol yester,
bonded acrylic. all reduced.
•'
Will give gift certificates . The
Notice
Sew and Go Shop in the Alfred
:i KOSCOT KOSMETICS . Our area . Owner, Mrs. E. T.
"
latest IS
" On e
Day "
Calaway.
-" fragrance . Others include
ll -12-6tc

:~

~1 895

1970 DOOGE

1'J)MEROY, OHIO

1970 PLYMO UTH 4 door Fury I,
white, ex -patrol car, $1,400.

Phone 991-5310.

11 · 1A-5tc

-

EARlH MOVING

haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump

trucks and low-boy for hire.

1'

Langsville Christian Church .

Guaranteed appliances

SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE
POMEROY• OH 10

qPERT
Wheel'Alignment

.....

992-2094

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

II I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

THE SHOP
A!~~~.'~.:

DALE
LITTLE
992·3884

SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED, REPAIRtD.
MILLER SANITAT ION,
STEWART, DH 1~ . PHONE
662·3035.
10-4-tfc

State Route· No . 124 as Sta te
Route 124 exists on Augusl lSI .,
1972. th ence in an Easter l y
direction along a li ne that is 200
feet North of the center li ne of
said State Route No . 124 to the
point in th e North line of the
corp oration I im Its of the Village
of Raci ne, Meigs county, Ohio ;
thence East along th e North
corp oration line of the Vil lage of
Racine to th e Northeast corner
thereof; thence South along the
East line of th e co rporat ion
I i m its of the Village of ~aclne to
the center l ine of sa id Sta te
Route No . 124 ; t hen ce East
along th e center line of said
State Ro ute No. 124 to the East
line of Section 16 in Sutton
Towns hip; thence Sou th along
the East line of sa id Sect io,n 16
to the Southeast corner thereof ;
thence East to th e Northeast
corn er of 100 Acre lot No . 279 ;
thence South along the East line
of 100 Ac r e Lois No . 279, 27 8 and
277 to th e So uth east corner of
sai d 100 Acre Lot No . 277 ;
thence West along lhe Sou lh line
of 100 Acre Lot No . 277 to th e
So ut hwes t corner t hereof ;
th ence in a Nor thw es terly
direction fol lo w ing the boun ·
dary line of the State of Ohio to
the place of beg inni ng.
Any per so n or any political
Subdivis ion residing . or lying
w ithin the area affected by the
organizat ion of the District. on
or before the date set for th e
cause to be t'!eard may fil e an
objection to the granting of th e
request made in the prayer of
the
Pet i t ion
requesting
esta blishment of the Sy r acuse .
Racine
Regiona l
Sewe r
Distr ic t.
Saie
Pet i tio n
fo r
the
establ ishme nt of said Distri ct is
Case No . 15,155 of the Co urt of
Common Pl~as of M eigs
County , Ohio, and the Pet ition
of said m~tter is now on fil e and
may be exa m Ined at the offic e
of the Clerk of said Cou rt at the
Cou rt House in Pomeroy, Ohio .

MAH 'IOKUvl

HAIN'T GONNA
~E.EASi

TO

KETCH IN THE
COf.JD ITION
HE. 15.

YO' NEEDS A
PRE.-DICTION
FUM OLE MAN
iv\OSE- IF HE.
HAIN'T KICKED
TH'BUCKET-

~~:

~

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and wi ndows. carports,
ma rquees, aluminum siding

and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. Fo r fre e
es1 imate s, ph one Charles

Lisle.

Sy ra cuse,

V.

V.

Johnson and Son, Inc .

J.2-tfc

- - -- - -

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Sept ic tanks ins talled. George
IBilll Pulli ns. Phone 992·2478.
'
4-25-tfc

----READY·M'Ix
del ivere d

CO NCRETE
r ig ht

to

your

project. Fast and easy. Free
es t imates. Phone 992·3284 .·
Goegieln Ready -Mi x Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-~0 · tf~

- ------

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
ONner &amp; Operator .

5-12-tfr
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio

Crltt Bradford
5·l·tfC

-----

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
Ching serv ice ; top so li , fill

dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex cavat ing. Phone 992 - ~367 ,
Dick Karr , Jr .
·
9-1 -tfc
-::=-=-:'-:-:::~-­

O'DELL WH EEL a11gnment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,

NOTICE

Noti ce is hereby given tha t

Audrey Patterson . Emerson
Hysell, Harold Dewhurst.
Ca r rie Moore and Beatri ce
May, as Trust ees of the Hysell
Run Free Methodist Church, R .
D., Pomeroy , Ohio. have fli ed
th ei r pet ition in the Common '
Pleas Court alleging that the
following desc ribed real estate
is no longer needed for chu rch
pur poses, and request authority
to setl said rea l estate, wh ich
real es tale is descr ibep as
follows ; to .wit :
Situa l e In Section 3, Town 6,
Ra ng e 14, Ru t la nd Township ,
Meigs County , Ohio , and bei ng
more parlicularly described as
follows :
Com men cing at lh e So utheast
corner of Sec t ion 3; then ce
along the Sou th line of said
Section , North 84 degrees 16'
10" West 119 rod s to a Railroad
spike in the cent er line of Hysell
Run Road, and th e true point of
beginning f or the follow ing
descri bed tract : thence North
84 degree:, 16' lC" West (passing
an Iron pin at 21 .26 fee tl for a
total distance of 1,336.50 feet to
an iron pin: thence No rth 4
degrees 12' 30" East 416.81 feet
to an iron pin ; thence South 84
degrees 16' 10" East 1,227.71
feet to· an Iron pin ; thence South
10 degrees 36' West 85 .98 feet to
11n iron pin: thence South 68
degrees 33' 40" East {passi ng
an Ir on pin at 279. 34 feet) for a
total distance of 303. 11 feet to a,
ra ilroad spike In the centerline
,of Hysel l Run Road i thence
along said centerline South 39
degrees 12' 30" West 298 .46 teet
to the point of beginning , con ·
tai ni ng 13.10 ac r es .
Sa~d p~tition will be for
hearmg on · the 25th day of
November, 1972, at the Com·mon
Pl eas Cour troom at Pomeroy
Ohio .
'

tune up .and brake , service.

Whee ls balanced
tronically .
All
guaranteed .

elec work

Rea sonable

rates. Phone 742·3232 or 992·
3213.
1·27-tfc

1101

2~ .

nw ~ UII-IAT

IF I TAl&lt;~ AWA~ l!le~AA%,
\IIHAflS -me DI~~CB;

lt\U1 tm:~ AA~ ~R ~
AND OOAVOGAIX)S,,

'): o$1.,~ 1100\

lllAie

"~!

!

3·29-tfc

~

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

e)

__

~

.._..... _,..,_

by THOMAS JOSEPH

YeoierdaT• CI1PM'I•ote: NOTHING MAKES YOUR TID
GD FASTER THAN BUYING ON lT.- FRANKLIN P. JONa

DOWN

(0 1872 Klnr Ftalam Syndlealt, Inc.)

l. Scblsgal

play

·2, Suffix for
Israel or
Islam
3. Go wrong

c. Alaskan

native
5. Junior's
vehicle
6. Opp.
ofvert.
7. Dutch

.aTNI

painter
8. Famed

aviator,

~

20. Towns·

man
22. Andes
81'188

114. Uon's
- Balbo
lair
9. Cap sans 26. Nigerian
visor
· city
11. Prompt 27. - of

18. Groovy,
in astronaut talk
17. Cover
18. Fuss

19. Italian
painter

1812

2J, Hold Ill
30. Artist's

purchase
31. Till
now
(2 wds.)

U . Hack·

I NOKTE

Indian

n. Barrel

(abbr.)
38. One
kind

~II

39. Spanish

I SKlJYH

()

II

TIBBEG

II

I () I
I
I I

queen

fO. Burning
bright

I tJ

I I

.neyed

33. - you
believe?
S5. Manitoba

GOFTER

Neii'MI . . . . . lt'W..
................
.
(
!::::!·=~·=!:;:~;::~-~~~~~~~~lltttllt....,.wl o

~

IL._.:.::'*:.:..====•=--__,1 [I .1 I I l

'

Audrey Patterson
EmerSon Hysell
Harold Dewhurst
Carrie Moore
Beatric e May.
Trustees of Hysell
Run Free Methodist
Church .

,_.....,.,.,l

(t

operator's li.cense? Dill 992 ·

2966.

~

,..._..,l....,tllle•-c•'

]1, 1111 7. 14. "

In 1918, _Thomas Masaryk was

llErn'?

1 6·15-lfc elected ftrst president of the

'f'E5, MA'AAI ..

Republic of Czechoslovakia.

l ADMIT
IT... .

~---~~~----••••------·

·

LA-Z·-BOV

CHAIRS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worUt:

.N.Ow you ·can buy th~t
&lt;;omtortable
~a-z- ~ ·
chal r you've always
dreamed of at our low·
prices.

. AuthOrized

. ,

AXYDLIAAXa

II L 0 N G F I ' L L 0 W

,

Durer

One letter limply standi for IDother. ln lhll IIDiple A Ia
Uled for the three L'1, X for the two O'r, etc. Sluele letlerl,
apootropbei, tho' lenl(h and formaUan of the wonlr •r• Ill
blnll. Eaeb day the tode lettel'l aN dllferent.
.
catFIVQVOTBB

MASON .
I1'Uil

FKQHF

.U..

HCYKCPH,

DWT
.

PDX,

AXF

p .wrD

PDCA

UCIF
' NUXA.(l ' ...._..._
.
I

.

ZXQJ:

WA ZXQK KXXT,. FQlAH XSCK ZXQJ:
.

Htnnan ......

L•••.J.~~--.;.~'~-~m:;.u:~n::...;":•:u:•~•~·v:•~
)

I

eawJ

J ,, • POPA UIIC UNCUB calfll

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your

-·- '--------

•

OH-'10' IS WELCOME. TO
11-lAT, WHATEV;o:R IT
JoiOOODV'S 15. IT'S LONESOME. AA
5EENHiM- LOVE.S -

Serv i ce. We Sharpen Scissors .

Dai~

1

NOT THIS
YOKUM .

EVELYN S. LUC KE,
SE WING MACHINES. Repair
CLERK OF THE
servi.ce. all makes. 992-2284.
COMMON
P LEAS COURT
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
OF MEIGS COU NTY , OHIO
Authorized Si ng er Sales and ( 10) 24 , 31 (11) 7 , 14, 21, 5tc

Syracuse

•

DICK
VAUGHN
992·1174

Let Dick and Dale Help You
_with Your Meat Problems . _

in

WMP0/1390

RIDGE ROAD

EROY , O.
" Custom Meat Cutting "
Quick and Courteous Service

Carrier 'Needed

.

Our

Floor Display •

!

We talk to you
like a persoo.

Pomeroy

Stolf' In and See

AHISIN
LOVE WIF
A YOKUM-

co rporation limits ol lh e Village
of Syrac use to a poi nt that is 200
feel North of the center line ol

HOME &amp; AUTO

----'-----

Sentinel
992-2156

/Nf.X'(;O.

the

Meigs CC'unty, Oh io; thence
South along the East line of the

POMEROY

606 E. Main

inte r sec ts

which co rner is siluate , In 100
Acre Lo l 287, Sutlon Township,

~

Vzrgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Local Bowling

WE~ JUST LEAVING
ONA~lPlO

limits of th e Vlllagf-o t Syracuse
to th e Northeast corner thereof

'ti

·::==========-,.,

- -----

I WON~ER JUST
HOW MUCH HE CAN
COMPREHEND

boundary of lhe Slale ot Ohio
1n the Ohio Riv~~ which po lnf ts
also the Northwest corner of the
Village of Syracuse. thence In
an Easterly direction following
the Norlh l'ine of the co rporat ion

For Free Eslimat
PHONE 992!2550

16

!: Carpenter
'~. News, Event

FASCINATE
HI/{\

Syrac use .

Racine Regional sewer District
Oiled in said court .
The descrip t io n of the
terr ilory IO be included In the
author ity is as follows :
Siluate in Sullon Township,
Meigs Cou nty, Ohio. and
Syracuse

•ROOFlNG
•HEATING
.PLUMBING
CARPENTRY
•
.SPOUTING
•PAINTING

.

..,

EVEN THE
COMME~ IA~S

~

the Norlh line ol lhe Villaot ot

STEAK SUPPER

:I

~

11-115 WAIT 1
MV .+!UGBANP N&gt;D I

CLA'ITER

commencing at a point whert

'5.55

Grade School
a

establis hment of

BIKES Huffy' 20",
Murray tO speeds- discount
er.LicAesY.AWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7; Closed Mondays

CALL 992-5786

CHEVY II Nova. 6 cyl inder. See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
'70 BONNEVILLE, 1 door '68automa
t ic; phone 742 ·5943 . Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
•~.
Se rvices nightly. 7:30 p. m. , Hardtop, $2,400, factory air ;
11 ·14-3tc after 1 p.m. or phone 992.
:~
Everyone
welcome .
phone 991-5934.
5232.
Evangelist. Patrick Eads and
~11 -12-6tc 1971 TRIUMPH Spilfore con. ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
...,
REDUCE safe &amp; fast with
On Most American Cars
Pastor. Robert Musser .
-;' GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
vertible. tour new tires ; must F S I
11·9-6tc 1965 PONTI AC Bonneville, 2
-GUARANTEEI&gt;:~~ " water pills," Nelson Drug.
se ll ; call 992-2329 before 2 or a e
door
hardtop.
Factory
air,
Phone 992-2094
p.m . or 992· 7523 after 5 p.m. GIRL's St ingray in good con ·
U-13-2tp HAYMAN 'S Auction - a ~oOd
low mil eage, new ti'res. Like
11 ·14-61p dilion ; phooe 992-3374.
place
to
qo
each
Fnday
:,!MARRIED couple want to rent
new condition inside and ou t
Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto
- - - - -- - - 11 -14-Jt c
evening. 7 p.m. at Laurel
· farm. or country house. Call
Phone
985-3912.
Open 8 Til 5
Cliff on old Rl . 7, 1 mile west
11·9·61p For Sale
collect 614·2'19·6908.
SCH NAUZER puppies, AKC.
Monday
thru Saturday
of
Rock
Springs
Fairground.
11 -5-91c
10·10·ttc
AUCT ION Sa le, Sa t urday Sai l &amp; Peooer. eors chopped,
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
1970 FIAT Sport Spider Con. morning, Nov ember 18, worm ed and shots ; healthy
vertlble, $1,250; phone 773- starti ng at 10 a.m. Many good $85; phone Coolville 667.6214.
5613.
11 -5· 111p ATTENTION FARMERS .
arlicles. St . Paul 's Method ist
Largest choice of all breeds of
11
·12-Jtc
Church, Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Sponsored by Chester
A.l.
Sires by phoning Leland
on Rt . 7 at old form er EUB
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Parker
992·2264. Pomeroy or
Church.
Wanted To Buy
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
ca
ll
stat1on
for service, in 11 ·14.4tc CASH paid for ali makes and
THURSDAY,
5 TO 50 ACR ES or more of ni ce
formation or dii'ect sales.
models of mobi le homes.
woods with a stream deep HOUSEFUL of furniture; also
11-9·301c
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
enough
tor
a
small
rowboat.
NOVEMBER
Buy 2
deep
lr
eeze,
chesl.type
and
4-13-lfc RUSSELL ' S
Reasonable r,rice and ac·
Furnitur e
._.._,. Pairo
appliances; New Haven 882·
cessi
ble.
Wrl
e
fully
to
Box
·
Upholstery
;
free
pickup and
at
Chester
2089.
1970 MOBILE home with a ir
l .PAIR FREE
729-W, c-o The Dally Sentinel,
delivery
;
phon
e
992-5771.
i
11 ·14-3tc
con di1ionin9 , washer, ex·
Pomeroy, Ohio.
10-27-Jotc
Tho best buy In the area.
ceilent
cond1llon, lot can be
11
·12-6lp
:1 Serving 5 Til P.M.
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
ren ted. Phone 992·7387.
whole family. Save One.
zig-zag sew ing machine. For
11 -12-6tp
'dLD
Furniture,
oak
tables.
Third.
·
Real Estate For Sale
Not
Advance
Tickets
organs, d ishes , clocks, brass
sewi
ng
st r etch
fabrics,
e(
Necessary.
bUttonholes,
fancy
designs,
fo
9._
POMEROY
beds, or comple te households.
'• L=~----'
elc . Painl slight ly blem ished.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
6ir1l Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
·Air Conditioners
Choice of carry ing case or
,.
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Call
991·6271.
Phone 992-2181
sewing
stand.
$49.80
cash
or
•Awnings
6·28- tfc
term s available . Phone 992 ·
·
· ·Underpinning
564 1.
BEEF hides, $8 each, raw furs ;
11 -lHtc
Ginseng $51 lb., Goldseal SJ
Complete mqblle nQme
'
lb.; Carl Chevalier. Main
"
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe service ....... plus gigantic
Str eet , Waterford, Ohio.
model. Compl ete with all 'display of mobile home&gt;
11 -7· 111c
cleaning allachments and :always available at ...
uses paper bags. Slightly used
.
,
POMEROY LANES
110MechonicSt.
but cleans and looks like new .
MILLER
Lost
Morning Glories League
:: Mr. and Mrs. Ray Daniels,
Will se ll fo r $37.25 cash or
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
October 31, 1972
terms available. Phone 992· MOBILE HOMES
BLACK Scottish dog In Mid·
;: Fernda~, Mich., spent a few
Pis.
NEW HOME
5641.
dleport
;
answers
to
Amos;,.
•; days recently witb Mr. and Dick 's Grocery
ll-IHtc
1220
Washington
Blvd.
42
2
BEDROOMS
- Ail paneled
r eward for safe return; phone
-•23-7S21
BELPRE,
0
.
Glbbs'Grocery
42
Mrs. WUllam Lawson.
inside,
electric
heat, nice
991 -2420.
4Q
bath. Full ba!if'.[llOnt . Sc hoo l
- Mn.-Nora Mll!'doclt, Vernon, Newell sur:-oco I
11 -1 4-61c '71 HORNET Sport about stat ion ,
Excel•lor 011 Co.
32
wagon, 4 door , like new ;
·
bu s and
if\aH· ·routes
( Francia and Doria of Dundas, Spencer,'.s Market
32 LOST - BLACk cat wearing
Sli,ooo.oo.
.......
phone 992.s131 up to 5 p.m.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
: Evelyn Rife, Orville Hogue and G&amp;J Au1o Parts
28
11
-14-Jtc
red collar with ldentification
NEW LISTING
COM FORTABLE two s tor y
HIQ.h Ind . Game
L.
: Dcra Carpenter of · RuUand
tag. Lost on Wehe Terrace.
·1
ACRE
- On T.P. water
McKnight and A. Smith 111.
1972 STEREO 8 track in walnut home, fu ll basement, bath
Call
Marcia
Houdashelt,
992.
; were guests of couslns, Mr. and Second
lin
e.
Trees
for shade .
and 1f1, attached garage, and
High Ind. Game - E.
co nsole,
equip ped
wi t h
3612
.
Tr
a
il
ers
welcome.
S25()(1 for
; Mrs. G. R. Cline.
extra lot. In a good location.
Gilmore and K. Wildermuth
speclker base and balance .
ll
-12-31c
the
lsi
acre,
then
$500.00
per
, Mr. am Mrs. Nell Martin 159.
Take over payments of $6.50 a Basic furniture available.
acre
up
to
4
m
or
e.
Phone
992-7384
or
992-7133
for
Series - Jan J enkins
month or pay $101.50. Phone
; and daughter have moved to 423High
HOT WATER HEAT
appoi ntm ent .
and Evelyn Gilmore 421.
992-5331.
: the Christian property on State
3
NICE
BEDROOMS.
Team High Gam e and Series Employment Wanted
11
-10-61c
11 -14-61c
Bath, large living and dining
: Route 143 near the Experiment - G&amp;J Auto Parts 792 and 2241 .
area
. M odern
kitchen,
SEWING
Machine
.
Left
in
6
ROOM
house
with
balh,
full
YOUN(;
man
age
23wants
radio
! Farm.
b,asement,
ca
rport,
and
layaway
,
deluxe
zig
·
zag
basement,
see
to
appreciate.
di spatcher's job with or
Mr. and Mrs. Graham
Wednesday Early Bird
sewi
ng
ma
chine.
Th
is
Phone
882-2829
New
Ha
ven,
fenced
yard.
Only
$20,000.00.
without offi ce work . Phone
November 8, 1972
: Haning of Columbus visited
991-7541 .
NEAR POMEROY
mac hi ne makes buttonholes, W. Va .
Won Lost
11 · 10·6tc
darns and embroideries all
11 -12-6tc
ONE FLOOR - 3 or A
~ with his brother am sister-InDorothy's Plnnettes
74 14
without attachmen t s. Pa y - - - - - - - -be droom s,
bath,
nice
: law, Mr. and Mrs. Max Haning. R. H. Rawl ings
SO 38 LiCENSED beautician wants
balance of $39.20 or pay SS per FIVE ROOM house and bath ; moder n bi r ch k itchen with
•. Friends here have learned of KlnQ Builders Suppl y 46 A1
full or part time job: phone
month ; phone 992·5331 .
in t e rior
com pletely
cook units . Rec . room ,
44 44
949·2822.
11 ·1A-6tc remodeled ; located on Brick
the birth of a daughter, Elaine Berllia's Grocery
carport and barbecue pit,
Royal Crown
28 60
11 -14-6tc
Street in Rutland ; phone 742· $16.500.00.
Kay, to Mr. am Mrs. Edward Evelyn's Grocery
22 66
AKC Toy Poodles. Phone 742· 3334.
50 ACRES
stanley of Johnstown. The
High Ind. Game - Mary
11 -12·121c FOR HUN / I NG - Rutland
3872.
father, along with his parents, Voss 194; Second High, Mary Salesmen Wanted
11 -12-121c
Township . All min eral s
Voss and LOuise Harrison 165.
8 RWM house and ba th, nice except
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stanley
coal. SIOO.OO an acre.
High Series - Mary Voss AN OHIO OIL CO. offers op. I NEW hospita l bed. $250, new
large lot, natural gas, built.in
of Belpre, were former 510 ; Louise Harri son 428 .
PLAINS
TUPPERS
portunlty for high income
ca binets in kitchen . Close to
wheelchai r, $100. Phone 991·
Team High Game and Series
MODERN
3
bedrooms,
PLUS cash bonuses and
residents of this area.
radio
stati6n
in
Bradbury.
5736.
'
- Dorothy 's Pinnettes 796 and
convention trips to mature
with
large
closets
.
Nice si ze
11-12-3tc
Phone 992-2602.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. 2195.
man In P omeroy area. - - - - -- - - living.
lront
porch.
and lot
10-29-12tc
Morriaon, Cincinnati, called on
Regardless of experience, air NOW WRECKING the for mer ,..,.,.
100x400.
Asking
$16,000.00.
.
mall A. I. Read , Pres.,
Mr. am Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
115 ACRES
Epple' s Grocery Store NU USE in Long Bottom; phone
Am er ica n Lubricants Co. ,
WILD AND WOOLY - Old 6
building in Pomeroy . All
985-3519.
and Mrs. Elfie Woods.
Box 696, Dayton, Ohio 45401.
kinds of bu ild ing materia'is
6-11 -lfc room frame house, barn , and
Miss Lois Gaston and friend , a~tended the youth meeting at
ll -12-4tp
for sale on the job including 2
severa l outbuildings . Free
Unda Corbett, who attend Temple Church on Sunday·
gas . Only $20,000.00.
and 3 in . heavy material, 8 ROOM house &amp; bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, built-in
school in Columbus, spent a evening. The activities were Help Wanted
shee ting and cherry stai r
JO ACRES
ca
binets in kit chen , close to A BEDROOMS - Bath, large
rai ling ; call 992·5946 or 882·
weekend here with Miss directed by Mr. and Mrs.
radio station In Bradbury. din ing, 3 rooms paneled .
TARY needed for out-of.
3219.
Gastoo 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, Mr. arid Mrs. SECRE
Phone 992-2601.
state construction firm ; office
11 -10-tfc
Free gas well with plenty of
11-12-12tc gas . Lar ge garden . All
Donald Comer and Joy and
Paul Gaaton, Leah and Joe.
near Salem Cen ter; phone
367-7348 lor appointment.
Bertha Crippen, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree .
TWO HEREFORD steers. POMEROY - House, 6 rooms mineral s. $1.5,000 .00 . Th is is a
11·14-llc
weigh approx . 450 lb. each;
Mrs. Eat! Starkey, Mr. Carl
Mr. and Mrs . Johnny
bath, 2 large porches, good buy.
good
4-H project ; phone 985· and
NEW LISTING
large
lot, new ly painted ;
Greenlees and Mr. and Mrs. Swearingen and children have BUTCHER
part-time ,
3846. VIrgil Windon.
HOBSON
- 6 room frame
phone 992 - 339~ .
Tuesdays and Fridays for
Mendal Jordan;., Columbia moved to the property that
11
-12-3tp
home,
bath.
3 bedrooms, gas
loca l store; wri te to P.O. Box
11 -12-3fc
Grange members, attended they recently purchased from
furnace ,
porches, 8nd
729-M. c-o The Dally Sent inel. TWO RABBIT dogs; also set of
basement
.
Level
lot. Drilled
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
MelS! County Po'!IOn~ G_r!!_nge Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Burke and
14" plows or trade for rotary
well.
Only
$9.000.00.
ll
·7·fiC
the
Burke
family
have
moved
meeting at Rock Springs.
mower ; Nat e Vanaman ;
phone 742-5322.
Plans were made for an all- to their new home In the
11 ·12-3tc
·c . .
.
WE HAVE MANY OTHE R
Chesser
addition
hear
Hunters
county Grange Officers ConPROPERTIES FOR YOU
store.
ference on November 31!.
RINGNECK pheasants on foot
CLELAND·'
TO SEE. GIVE US A CALL
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Culwell. of
Mr. and Mrs. IWbert Cox of
or dressed . Roger Leifhe it.
AND WE WILL HElP YOU
REALn:
Rock Springs Rd ., Pomeroy,
Albany called on Mr. am Mrs. Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs.
FINO A HOME . PICTURES
. 608 E. Matn
Phone 992-3446.
OF OUR OFFER INGS ON
John CUlwell and family ot
Ronald Whittington.
~ Pomeroy
11 · 12-31p
OUR OFFICE WA LL.
The church supper and Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
!lazaar at the Carpenter Hensley and family, Mr. and
ONE REGISTERED female
30
ACR'ES
ASSOCIATE
tree walker coon hound.
Baptist Ourch was well at- Mrs . Roscoe Tackett and
NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS
NO
SUNOAY
SHOWINGS
Phone 949-4761.
- All minerals ·&amp; fenced. 4
family, and Mrs. Mary CoiUer
992·3325
tended.
1f.9-61c B.R. home, bath , basement,
Cecil lloyd ls convalescing and family of Flatwoods, Ky.,
porches, garage &amp; other
eatlsfactorily at home area along with Mr. and Mrs.
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy, buildings. Just Sl2,900.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992foDowing surgery at O'Bieness T. H. Blanton and Greg of
FOUR or five bedroom home
2 YEARS OLD
'
5443.
five miles wesl of Ath ens nea;
MIDDLEPORT - Out of
Jackson were aU called here
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
8-15-tfc· floods, 3 large B.R. W.
Roule 50-W; built -in ap.
Reed Jeffar• attemed the and to the funeral home In
pliances, separate· dlnlnQ
double
closets,
dream
kit.
CB RADIO, antenna, also police
funeral ol Willie Gerson MUM Beaver by the serious Illness
room, carpeted, central air··
For Rent
chen, dln inq r. carpeted,
nner. Dailey's Radio Shop,
Athens City Schools; ca ll 593:
at Hughel Funeral Home In and death of their mother' Mrs. UNFURNISH ED 5 room and sca
lar ge
L. R., II replace .
Box 21-B, Long Bottom, Ohio.
,, Au- on &amp;mday. Mr. MUM Jerry Culwell. Mr. and Mrs. bath' houSe. Phone 992-2780 or
11 ·8·6fc ·Utility R. Patio, basement,
poi
ntment,
$29,900. for ap.
3881
or 594·4296
elec tric heat . Lot 100x120.
· •l f«merly Uved in Albany.
992-3432.
Alfred Rice, sons Steve and
11 -10-lotc
11-12-tfc EARLY American stereo-radio ASKING $23,000.
1 Mr, a00 Mrs. Qair Dale Rick, and friend, Columbus,
CORNER LOT
AM-FM radio, j
Stlnlbur7, Julia, Oara, and also visited her parents, Mr. 2 BEDROOM mobile home: • combination,
speaker sound system, ... MIDDLEPORT - f112 story
1
SPEciAL : Move In before
. Bobby ol GroYeport, and Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam CUlwell and
frame, 3 B.R., bath, utility
s~eed automatic changer .
adults only; phone 992-5247.
winter. 4 · bedroom ranch
Balance $79.31. Use our R. Gas F.A. heat, paneled ·&amp;
• IIIIIMn.lMry Stanaben-y and attended her grandmother's
1l -14-12tp
home on 'I• acre lol. Bath and
budget terms. Call 992-7085 . tiled . Garage, cellar.
•
..
IOD, Reynoldsburg were
funeral In Beaver.
a half, built-In kitchen, wall·lo
·.
;.•
1
2-61c
ASkiNG JUST $11 ,000.
' 3 AND 4 ROOM furni shed and
wall carpet and g~ragec Price
llla)day guelti at the home of
STATELY OLDER HOME
uofurnlshed apa rtments.
$10,750.00;
also a s bedroom
. lllelr pannll, Mr. and Mrs. .
MODERN Walnut style stereo. SYRACUSE
Good
Phone 992-5434.
colonial house on"' "" acre lot.
radio
,
AM-FM
radio
,
j
Dlle Sf nol!Jry.
4-12-tfc speakeo sou"d system , j location, ~ B.R., 2 baths,
Bath aod a half, buill-in
paneling, tiled, porches, gas · kitchen, dining room, fam.lly
1111. hye Jardan i!pellt a
speed automatic changer . F.A.H., basement, _garage.
'rRAfUR ,in country, large
room and the works, priced
wu&gt;mt with t. 1011 and
Balance So8. H. Use our River lrontage. A STEAL
yard and 'garde~ ; phone 992·
$30,000.00.
·Call Sherman E.
budget
terms.
Phone
992-7085.
6658.
.
~.Mr. IIIII Mrs.
m
.~.
Summerfield,
985·3598 or 985·
11 · 12-61c
11· 12-3tc
4177.
•
'
D•.,- JGrclu llld family.
MANYDTHER .
11-2·301C
IInce _IIIII Vlc*y Gillogly, .
TRAILER lot, Bob's Mobile APPLES, fitzpatrick Or .,
PROPERTIE~.
chards. State Route 689,
1 0 IIIII lteliD Crablne,
Court, Syracuse; phone 992·
.,
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
HENRY E. CLELAND,
2951.
111ft ..... Rldllrd llld
6
ROOM
house
and
bath,
sun
a.JO.Ifc
REAL'rDR
10-31-tfc
91ekJ Comer, ltltby Hut.
porch.
2
extra
tots,
aluminum
HENRY E. CLELAND, Jr.
siding. Rt. , 1, Middltporl,
...._, Debbie and Lori
SafntiiAn, "'·4209
FUR~I~Ht::U
1
Dt:Uruun•
COAL, Limestone, E.ceisior
Ohio.
Charley
Clark
apartment, adulls only,
..... 111M, Jeff 1114 AINia
Salt Works, E. Main St.,' KATHLEEN M. CLELAND,
OM YOUR DIAL
residence.
Contact
Sam
Clark
Mlddlepo~t i phone 992-3874.
Saltst.dy, " '·4209
Pomeroy . Phone 992-381'1. ,
.cJIIllllJ, BryiD apd ,Keith
992-6306.
I •
I
10·22·ffc
4·12-lfc 992-2259 If no ana..,. m-2UI
• ..... llld lllella Woalen,
11·9·61&lt;
•(

SE W E R

DISTRICT.
No. 15 .155
LEGAL NOTICE
Public not ice Is hereby given
pursuant lo Ohio Revised Code,

lhe 22nd day ol November ,
1971, at 11 :oo A.M. in the Meigs
County Court House , Pomero·y,
Ohio. on the Petitio n for

Cl eanusedf urnl·1ure

n-

R E G I 0 N A L

Pl easofMe igsCou~ly , Oh io , on

TUPPERS PLAINS

niversary get-together
or a Spec'lal Hol'd
I ay,
we will cater delicious
d .IS hes f 0 your home
or party rooms.

COUR T OF MEIGS COUN-

TY ,

Section
6119 .0.4 ,
that
a
preliminary hearing wil l be
, held by the Cou rf of Common

Rt . 7"atcaution light"

Party
Preparations at a Low,
Low Cost _ Whether 1.t
be a Weddin
A

9 ·

·

Kuhl's Bargain Center

Care - F ree

IN THE COMMON PLEAS

OHIO
RE
PROPOSED
SYRAC USE -R ACINE

.PRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT 1

CATERING

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992-2 174
Pomeroy

OA'IS ARE
OVER NOW

/ JN

0 -,.-------,,.----, .

'"

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, land scaping. We have 2 size I
'dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
1951 FORu pickup with 1953 tlat done by hour or contract.
heat V-8; see George Hill , 949· Free Estimates. We also
438 I.

ll -10-6tc

at

PARTY PLANNING?
LET US DO 'rLI[

ponds ,

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

,

0

r --:-:::-:::-:--:-------,

From the largest
Bulldozer Rad iator to
Small~s t Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
Ra.dlator Specialist

M'l CO'JRTIN'

LEGAL NOTICE

Business Services

S2995 ·

Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title , sa n.
da lwood finis~ wi th brown vinyl roof, vinyl saddle in .
terior, 4.season air conditionmg, turbohydramatic, power
steeri ng , whife.wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
Quards , power brakes. radio .
1968 CHE V.ELLE
~1195
Malibu Spt. Cpe .. air condition ed , J07 ~ngme, powe1
steering &amp; brakes, red finish with bla ck vinyl 1op &amp; blk
vinyl interior, radio, qood W· W tires.

8:30a .m. to 5:00p .m . Dally ,
1:30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

=:

IUALITY

Pomeroy·
Motor Co.

1971 CHEVROLET

·.Pomeroy, 0 .

OFFICE HOURS

ZSIGNS
.. Of

'IES, MA'ANI ..

•

.'

Notice .

-~-~.~----

VN VCK H'.-RXDN AA II NHV~K UNS!&lt;{ F Cit
I,

'A

tuW-IION

�" ' ' I f ! If ! '

.~

.

' ·, .

~

. , •. ,

. , f

~

r

;

7 •'-TheoatJyse~eJX&gt;I1·Pomerov.ICNov. l4,1972

·---;_

·------

-

.

J·Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!•

~·

.

.•

.

WANT AD,S
INFORMATION .
" " 5 P.M .•. Day
DEADLINES
.
·~
Before Publlca11on
Dett~dllne
9 a.m.
,•:,,.. Monday
Cancellation
- Corrections

:l ,

:t.

Will be accepted until9 a.m. for

,

REGULATIONS

~";

I'' . ,

•' J
1

HE IL',

®

,

Day of Publicat ion

·~

The Publisher reserves tht

· ~ right to edit or reject any ads
:~ dttmed

object iona l.
The
'- - PUbl isher will not be respons ible
•~.. .for more tha.n one lnco rrec1
~ Insertion .
:',;RATES
1
Ad Service
• For Want
5 cents per Word one ins~rrt l on
Minimu m Charge 75c
12 cents per word three ·
consecutive Insertions .
·!"% 18 cents per word six con
~ "lecutlve Insertions.
~ · 25 Per Cent Discount on palo
~ ~d$1nd ads palO with in 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
'
· &amp; OBITUARY
11 .50 for 50 word m lnlmum
• Each additional word 2c.

!

'
i

BLIND ADS

·~ Additional 2Sc
· Advertisement.

Charge

per

HEATING &amp;
COOLING window

Air COnditioners
Hot Water\ Heifers
Plumbmg
E lectrica I Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Polar a, factory· air condi t ion ing , v.a engine, automatic
t~ansmission , power steering, power brakes, good white
Slde·walls, many more extras . White fini sh. black vmyl
roof , Priced to move
"

..

:1

"K" and The Lemon Grove.

Also new children's products.
Phone Helen Jane, 992-5113.
We'd like to serve you.
10-24-tfc

REVIVA L in

progress

@)

:Po'!~!~!s: ~~r ·co.

992-2448

PRE -CHRISTMAS sale :
Crushed velvet, pol yester,
bonded acrylic. all reduced.
•'
Will give gift certificates . The
Notice
Sew and Go Shop in the Alfred
:i KOSCOT KOSMETICS . Our area . Owner, Mrs. E. T.
"
latest IS
" On e
Day "
Calaway.
-" fragrance . Others include
ll -12-6tc

:~

~1 895

1970 DOOGE

1'J)MEROY, OHIO

1970 PLYMO UTH 4 door Fury I,
white, ex -patrol car, $1,400.

Phone 991-5310.

11 · 1A-5tc

-

EARlH MOVING

haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump

trucks and low-boy for hire.

1'

Langsville Christian Church .

Guaranteed appliances

SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE
POMEROY• OH 10

qPERT
Wheel'Alignment

.....

992-2094

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

II I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

THE SHOP
A!~~~.'~.:

DALE
LITTLE
992·3884

SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED, REPAIRtD.
MILLER SANITAT ION,
STEWART, DH 1~ . PHONE
662·3035.
10-4-tfc

State Route· No . 124 as Sta te
Route 124 exists on Augusl lSI .,
1972. th ence in an Easter l y
direction along a li ne that is 200
feet North of the center li ne of
said State Route No . 124 to the
point in th e North line of the
corp oration I im Its of the Village
of Raci ne, Meigs county, Ohio ;
thence East along th e North
corp oration line of the Vil lage of
Racine to th e Northeast corner
thereof; thence South along the
East line of th e co rporat ion
I i m its of the Village of ~aclne to
the center l ine of sa id Sta te
Route No . 124 ; t hen ce East
along th e center line of said
State Ro ute No. 124 to the East
line of Section 16 in Sutton
Towns hip; thence Sou th along
the East line of sa id Sect io,n 16
to the Southeast corner thereof ;
thence East to th e Northeast
corn er of 100 Acre lot No . 279 ;
thence South along the East line
of 100 Ac r e Lois No . 279, 27 8 and
277 to th e So uth east corner of
sai d 100 Acre Lot No . 277 ;
thence West along lhe Sou lh line
of 100 Acre Lot No . 277 to th e
So ut hwes t corner t hereof ;
th ence in a Nor thw es terly
direction fol lo w ing the boun ·
dary line of the State of Ohio to
the place of beg inni ng.
Any per so n or any political
Subdivis ion residing . or lying
w ithin the area affected by the
organizat ion of the District. on
or before the date set for th e
cause to be t'!eard may fil e an
objection to the granting of th e
request made in the prayer of
the
Pet i t ion
requesting
esta blishment of the Sy r acuse .
Racine
Regiona l
Sewe r
Distr ic t.
Saie
Pet i tio n
fo r
the
establ ishme nt of said Distri ct is
Case No . 15,155 of the Co urt of
Common Pl~as of M eigs
County , Ohio, and the Pet ition
of said m~tter is now on fil e and
may be exa m Ined at the offic e
of the Clerk of said Cou rt at the
Cou rt House in Pomeroy, Ohio .

MAH 'IOKUvl

HAIN'T GONNA
~E.EASi

TO

KETCH IN THE
COf.JD ITION
HE. 15.

YO' NEEDS A
PRE.-DICTION
FUM OLE MAN
iv\OSE- IF HE.
HAIN'T KICKED
TH'BUCKET-

~~:

~

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and wi ndows. carports,
ma rquees, aluminum siding

and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. Fo r fre e
es1 imate s, ph one Charles

Lisle.

Sy ra cuse,

V.

V.

Johnson and Son, Inc .

J.2-tfc

- - -- - -

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Sept ic tanks ins talled. George
IBilll Pulli ns. Phone 992·2478.
'
4-25-tfc

----READY·M'Ix
del ivere d

CO NCRETE
r ig ht

to

your

project. Fast and easy. Free
es t imates. Phone 992·3284 .·
Goegieln Ready -Mi x Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-~0 · tf~

- ------

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
ONner &amp; Operator .

5-12-tfr
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio

Crltt Bradford
5·l·tfC

-----

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
Ching serv ice ; top so li , fill

dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex cavat ing. Phone 992 - ~367 ,
Dick Karr , Jr .
·
9-1 -tfc
-::=-=-:'-:-:::~-­

O'DELL WH EEL a11gnment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,

NOTICE

Noti ce is hereby given tha t

Audrey Patterson . Emerson
Hysell, Harold Dewhurst.
Ca r rie Moore and Beatri ce
May, as Trust ees of the Hysell
Run Free Methodist Church, R .
D., Pomeroy , Ohio. have fli ed
th ei r pet ition in the Common '
Pleas Court alleging that the
following desc ribed real estate
is no longer needed for chu rch
pur poses, and request authority
to setl said rea l estate, wh ich
real es tale is descr ibep as
follows ; to .wit :
Situa l e In Section 3, Town 6,
Ra ng e 14, Ru t la nd Township ,
Meigs County , Ohio , and bei ng
more parlicularly described as
follows :
Com men cing at lh e So utheast
corner of Sec t ion 3; then ce
along the Sou th line of said
Section , North 84 degrees 16'
10" West 119 rod s to a Railroad
spike in the cent er line of Hysell
Run Road, and th e true point of
beginning f or the follow ing
descri bed tract : thence North
84 degree:, 16' lC" West (passing
an Iron pin at 21 .26 fee tl for a
total distance of 1,336.50 feet to
an iron pin: thence No rth 4
degrees 12' 30" East 416.81 feet
to an iron pin ; thence South 84
degrees 16' 10" East 1,227.71
feet to· an Iron pin ; thence South
10 degrees 36' West 85 .98 feet to
11n iron pin: thence South 68
degrees 33' 40" East {passi ng
an Ir on pin at 279. 34 feet) for a
total distance of 303. 11 feet to a,
ra ilroad spike In the centerline
,of Hysel l Run Road i thence
along said centerline South 39
degrees 12' 30" West 298 .46 teet
to the point of beginning , con ·
tai ni ng 13.10 ac r es .
Sa~d p~tition will be for
hearmg on · the 25th day of
November, 1972, at the Com·mon
Pl eas Cour troom at Pomeroy
Ohio .
'

tune up .and brake , service.

Whee ls balanced
tronically .
All
guaranteed .

elec work

Rea sonable

rates. Phone 742·3232 or 992·
3213.
1·27-tfc

1101

2~ .

nw ~ UII-IAT

IF I TAl&lt;~ AWA~ l!le~AA%,
\IIHAflS -me DI~~CB;

lt\U1 tm:~ AA~ ~R ~
AND OOAVOGAIX)S,,

'): o$1.,~ 1100\

lllAie

"~!

!

3·29-tfc

~

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

e)

__

~

.._..... _,..,_

by THOMAS JOSEPH

YeoierdaT• CI1PM'I•ote: NOTHING MAKES YOUR TID
GD FASTER THAN BUYING ON lT.- FRANKLIN P. JONa

DOWN

(0 1872 Klnr Ftalam Syndlealt, Inc.)

l. Scblsgal

play

·2, Suffix for
Israel or
Islam
3. Go wrong

c. Alaskan

native
5. Junior's
vehicle
6. Opp.
ofvert.
7. Dutch

.aTNI

painter
8. Famed

aviator,

~

20. Towns·

man
22. Andes
81'188

114. Uon's
- Balbo
lair
9. Cap sans 26. Nigerian
visor
· city
11. Prompt 27. - of

18. Groovy,
in astronaut talk
17. Cover
18. Fuss

19. Italian
painter

1812

2J, Hold Ill
30. Artist's

purchase
31. Till
now
(2 wds.)

U . Hack·

I NOKTE

Indian

n. Barrel

(abbr.)
38. One
kind

~II

39. Spanish

I SKlJYH

()

II

TIBBEG

II

I () I
I
I I

queen

fO. Burning
bright

I tJ

I I

.neyed

33. - you
believe?
S5. Manitoba

GOFTER

Neii'MI . . . . . lt'W..
................
.
(
!::::!·=~·=!:;:~;::~-~~~~~~~~lltttllt....,.wl o

~

IL._.:.::'*:.:..====•=--__,1 [I .1 I I l

'

Audrey Patterson
EmerSon Hysell
Harold Dewhurst
Carrie Moore
Beatric e May.
Trustees of Hysell
Run Free Methodist
Church .

,_.....,.,.,l

(t

operator's li.cense? Dill 992 ·

2966.

~

,..._..,l....,tllle•-c•'

]1, 1111 7. 14. "

In 1918, _Thomas Masaryk was

llErn'?

1 6·15-lfc elected ftrst president of the

'f'E5, MA'AAI ..

Republic of Czechoslovakia.

l ADMIT
IT... .

~---~~~----••••------·

·

LA-Z·-BOV

CHAIRS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worUt:

.N.Ow you ·can buy th~t
&lt;;omtortable
~a-z- ~ ·
chal r you've always
dreamed of at our low·
prices.

. AuthOrized

. ,

AXYDLIAAXa

II L 0 N G F I ' L L 0 W

,

Durer

One letter limply standi for IDother. ln lhll IIDiple A Ia
Uled for the three L'1, X for the two O'r, etc. Sluele letlerl,
apootropbei, tho' lenl(h and formaUan of the wonlr •r• Ill
blnll. Eaeb day the tode lettel'l aN dllferent.
.
catFIVQVOTBB

MASON .
I1'Uil

FKQHF

.U..

HCYKCPH,

DWT
.

PDX,

AXF

p .wrD

PDCA

UCIF
' NUXA.(l ' ...._..._
.
I

.

ZXQJ:

WA ZXQK KXXT,. FQlAH XSCK ZXQJ:
.

Htnnan ......

L•••.J.~~--.;.~'~-~m:;.u:~n::...;":•:u:•~•~·v:•~
)

I

eawJ

J ,, • POPA UIIC UNCUB calfll

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your

-·- '--------

•

OH-'10' IS WELCOME. TO
11-lAT, WHATEV;o:R IT
JoiOOODV'S 15. IT'S LONESOME. AA
5EENHiM- LOVE.S -

Serv i ce. We Sharpen Scissors .

Dai~

1

NOT THIS
YOKUM .

EVELYN S. LUC KE,
SE WING MACHINES. Repair
CLERK OF THE
servi.ce. all makes. 992-2284.
COMMON
P LEAS COURT
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
OF MEIGS COU NTY , OHIO
Authorized Si ng er Sales and ( 10) 24 , 31 (11) 7 , 14, 21, 5tc

Syracuse

•

DICK
VAUGHN
992·1174

Let Dick and Dale Help You
_with Your Meat Problems . _

in

WMP0/1390

RIDGE ROAD

EROY , O.
" Custom Meat Cutting "
Quick and Courteous Service

Carrier 'Needed

.

Our

Floor Display •

!

We talk to you
like a persoo.

Pomeroy

Stolf' In and See

AHISIN
LOVE WIF
A YOKUM-

co rporation limits ol lh e Village
of Syrac use to a poi nt that is 200
feel North of the center line ol

HOME &amp; AUTO

----'-----

Sentinel
992-2156

/Nf.X'(;O.

the

Meigs CC'unty, Oh io; thence
South along the East line of the

POMEROY

606 E. Main

inte r sec ts

which co rner is siluate , In 100
Acre Lo l 287, Sutlon Township,

~

Vzrgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Local Bowling

WE~ JUST LEAVING
ONA~lPlO

limits of th e Vlllagf-o t Syracuse
to th e Northeast corner thereof

'ti

·::==========-,.,

- -----

I WON~ER JUST
HOW MUCH HE CAN
COMPREHEND

boundary of lhe Slale ot Ohio
1n the Ohio Riv~~ which po lnf ts
also the Northwest corner of the
Village of Syracuse. thence In
an Easterly direction following
the Norlh l'ine of the co rporat ion

For Free Eslimat
PHONE 992!2550

16

!: Carpenter
'~. News, Event

FASCINATE
HI/{\

Syrac use .

Racine Regional sewer District
Oiled in said court .
The descrip t io n of the
terr ilory IO be included In the
author ity is as follows :
Siluate in Sullon Township,
Meigs Cou nty, Ohio. and
Syracuse

•ROOFlNG
•HEATING
.PLUMBING
CARPENTRY
•
.SPOUTING
•PAINTING

.

..,

EVEN THE
COMME~ IA~S

~

the Norlh line ol lhe Villaot ot

STEAK SUPPER

:I

~

11-115 WAIT 1
MV .+!UGBANP N&gt;D I

CLA'ITER

commencing at a point whert

'5.55

Grade School
a

establis hment of

BIKES Huffy' 20",
Murray tO speeds- discount
er.LicAesY.AWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7; Closed Mondays

CALL 992-5786

CHEVY II Nova. 6 cyl inder. See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
'70 BONNEVILLE, 1 door '68automa
t ic; phone 742 ·5943 . Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
•~.
Se rvices nightly. 7:30 p. m. , Hardtop, $2,400, factory air ;
11 ·14-3tc after 1 p.m. or phone 992.
:~
Everyone
welcome .
phone 991-5934.
5232.
Evangelist. Patrick Eads and
~11 -12-6tc 1971 TRIUMPH Spilfore con. ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
...,
REDUCE safe &amp; fast with
On Most American Cars
Pastor. Robert Musser .
-;' GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
vertible. tour new tires ; must F S I
11·9-6tc 1965 PONTI AC Bonneville, 2
-GUARANTEEI&gt;:~~ " water pills," Nelson Drug.
se ll ; call 992-2329 before 2 or a e
door
hardtop.
Factory
air,
Phone 992-2094
p.m . or 992· 7523 after 5 p.m. GIRL's St ingray in good con ·
U-13-2tp HAYMAN 'S Auction - a ~oOd
low mil eage, new ti'res. Like
11 ·14-61p dilion ; phooe 992-3374.
place
to
qo
each
Fnday
:,!MARRIED couple want to rent
new condition inside and ou t
Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto
- - - - -- - - 11 -14-Jt c
evening. 7 p.m. at Laurel
· farm. or country house. Call
Phone
985-3912.
Open 8 Til 5
Cliff on old Rl . 7, 1 mile west
11·9·61p For Sale
collect 614·2'19·6908.
SCH NAUZER puppies, AKC.
Monday
thru Saturday
of
Rock
Springs
Fairground.
11 -5-91c
10·10·ttc
AUCT ION Sa le, Sa t urday Sai l &amp; Peooer. eors chopped,
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
1970 FIAT Sport Spider Con. morning, Nov ember 18, worm ed and shots ; healthy
vertlble, $1,250; phone 773- starti ng at 10 a.m. Many good $85; phone Coolville 667.6214.
5613.
11 -5· 111p ATTENTION FARMERS .
arlicles. St . Paul 's Method ist
Largest choice of all breeds of
11
·12-Jtc
Church, Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Sponsored by Chester
A.l.
Sires by phoning Leland
on Rt . 7 at old form er EUB
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Parker
992·2264. Pomeroy or
Church.
Wanted To Buy
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
ca
ll
stat1on
for service, in 11 ·14.4tc CASH paid for ali makes and
THURSDAY,
5 TO 50 ACR ES or more of ni ce
formation or dii'ect sales.
models of mobi le homes.
woods with a stream deep HOUSEFUL of furniture; also
11-9·301c
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
enough
tor
a
small
rowboat.
NOVEMBER
Buy 2
deep
lr
eeze,
chesl.type
and
4-13-lfc RUSSELL ' S
Reasonable r,rice and ac·
Furnitur e
._.._,. Pairo
appliances; New Haven 882·
cessi
ble.
Wrl
e
fully
to
Box
·
Upholstery
;
free
pickup and
at
Chester
2089.
1970 MOBILE home with a ir
l .PAIR FREE
729-W, c-o The Dally Sentinel,
delivery
;
phon
e
992-5771.
i
11 ·14-3tc
con di1ionin9 , washer, ex·
Pomeroy, Ohio.
10-27-Jotc
Tho best buy In the area.
ceilent
cond1llon, lot can be
11
·12-6lp
:1 Serving 5 Til P.M.
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
ren ted. Phone 992·7387.
whole family. Save One.
zig-zag sew ing machine. For
11 -12-6tp
'dLD
Furniture,
oak
tables.
Third.
·
Real Estate For Sale
Not
Advance
Tickets
organs, d ishes , clocks, brass
sewi
ng
st r etch
fabrics,
e(
Necessary.
bUttonholes,
fancy
designs,
fo
9._
POMEROY
beds, or comple te households.
'• L=~----'
elc . Painl slight ly blem ished.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
6ir1l Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
·Air Conditioners
Choice of carry ing case or
,.
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Call
991·6271.
Phone 992-2181
sewing
stand.
$49.80
cash
or
•Awnings
6·28- tfc
term s available . Phone 992 ·
·
· ·Underpinning
564 1.
BEEF hides, $8 each, raw furs ;
11 -lHtc
Ginseng $51 lb., Goldseal SJ
Complete mqblle nQme
'
lb.; Carl Chevalier. Main
"
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe service ....... plus gigantic
Str eet , Waterford, Ohio.
model. Compl ete with all 'display of mobile home&gt;
11 -7· 111c
cleaning allachments and :always available at ...
uses paper bags. Slightly used
.
,
POMEROY LANES
110MechonicSt.
but cleans and looks like new .
MILLER
Lost
Morning Glories League
:: Mr. and Mrs. Ray Daniels,
Will se ll fo r $37.25 cash or
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
October 31, 1972
terms available. Phone 992· MOBILE HOMES
BLACK Scottish dog In Mid·
;: Fernda~, Mich., spent a few
Pis.
NEW HOME
5641.
dleport
;
answers
to
Amos;,.
•; days recently witb Mr. and Dick 's Grocery
ll-IHtc
1220
Washington
Blvd.
42
2
BEDROOMS
- Ail paneled
r eward for safe return; phone
-•23-7S21
BELPRE,
0
.
Glbbs'Grocery
42
Mrs. WUllam Lawson.
inside,
electric
heat, nice
991 -2420.
4Q
bath. Full ba!if'.[llOnt . Sc hoo l
- Mn.-Nora Mll!'doclt, Vernon, Newell sur:-oco I
11 -1 4-61c '71 HORNET Sport about stat ion ,
Excel•lor 011 Co.
32
wagon, 4 door , like new ;
·
bu s and
if\aH· ·routes
( Francia and Doria of Dundas, Spencer,'.s Market
32 LOST - BLACk cat wearing
Sli,ooo.oo.
.......
phone 992.s131 up to 5 p.m.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
: Evelyn Rife, Orville Hogue and G&amp;J Au1o Parts
28
11
-14-Jtc
red collar with ldentification
NEW LISTING
COM FORTABLE two s tor y
HIQ.h Ind . Game
L.
: Dcra Carpenter of · RuUand
tag. Lost on Wehe Terrace.
·1
ACRE
- On T.P. water
McKnight and A. Smith 111.
1972 STEREO 8 track in walnut home, fu ll basement, bath
Call
Marcia
Houdashelt,
992.
; were guests of couslns, Mr. and Second
lin
e.
Trees
for shade .
and 1f1, attached garage, and
High Ind. Game - E.
co nsole,
equip ped
wi t h
3612
.
Tr
a
il
ers
welcome.
S25()(1 for
; Mrs. G. R. Cline.
extra lot. In a good location.
Gilmore and K. Wildermuth
speclker base and balance .
ll
-12-31c
the
lsi
acre,
then
$500.00
per
, Mr. am Mrs. Nell Martin 159.
Take over payments of $6.50 a Basic furniture available.
acre
up
to
4
m
or
e.
Phone
992-7384
or
992-7133
for
Series - Jan J enkins
month or pay $101.50. Phone
; and daughter have moved to 423High
HOT WATER HEAT
appoi ntm ent .
and Evelyn Gilmore 421.
992-5331.
: the Christian property on State
3
NICE
BEDROOMS.
Team High Gam e and Series Employment Wanted
11
-10-61c
11 -14-61c
Bath, large living and dining
: Route 143 near the Experiment - G&amp;J Auto Parts 792 and 2241 .
area
. M odern
kitchen,
SEWING
Machine
.
Left
in
6
ROOM
house
with
balh,
full
YOUN(;
man
age
23wants
radio
! Farm.
b,asement,
ca
rport,
and
layaway
,
deluxe
zig
·
zag
basement,
see
to
appreciate.
di spatcher's job with or
Mr. and Mrs. Graham
Wednesday Early Bird
sewi
ng
ma
chine.
Th
is
Phone
882-2829
New
Ha
ven,
fenced
yard.
Only
$20,000.00.
without offi ce work . Phone
November 8, 1972
: Haning of Columbus visited
991-7541 .
NEAR POMEROY
mac hi ne makes buttonholes, W. Va .
Won Lost
11 · 10·6tc
darns and embroideries all
11 -12-6tc
ONE FLOOR - 3 or A
~ with his brother am sister-InDorothy's Plnnettes
74 14
without attachmen t s. Pa y - - - - - - - -be droom s,
bath,
nice
: law, Mr. and Mrs. Max Haning. R. H. Rawl ings
SO 38 LiCENSED beautician wants
balance of $39.20 or pay SS per FIVE ROOM house and bath ; moder n bi r ch k itchen with
•. Friends here have learned of KlnQ Builders Suppl y 46 A1
full or part time job: phone
month ; phone 992·5331 .
in t e rior
com pletely
cook units . Rec . room ,
44 44
949·2822.
11 ·1A-6tc remodeled ; located on Brick
the birth of a daughter, Elaine Berllia's Grocery
carport and barbecue pit,
Royal Crown
28 60
11 -14-6tc
Street in Rutland ; phone 742· $16.500.00.
Kay, to Mr. am Mrs. Edward Evelyn's Grocery
22 66
AKC Toy Poodles. Phone 742· 3334.
50 ACRES
stanley of Johnstown. The
High Ind. Game - Mary
11 -12·121c FOR HUN / I NG - Rutland
3872.
father, along with his parents, Voss 194; Second High, Mary Salesmen Wanted
11 -12-121c
Township . All min eral s
Voss and LOuise Harrison 165.
8 RWM house and ba th, nice except
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stanley
coal. SIOO.OO an acre.
High Series - Mary Voss AN OHIO OIL CO. offers op. I NEW hospita l bed. $250, new
large lot, natural gas, built.in
of Belpre, were former 510 ; Louise Harri son 428 .
PLAINS
TUPPERS
portunlty for high income
ca binets in kitchen . Close to
wheelchai r, $100. Phone 991·
Team High Game and Series
MODERN
3
bedrooms,
PLUS cash bonuses and
residents of this area.
radio
stati6n
in
Bradbury.
5736.
'
- Dorothy 's Pinnettes 796 and
convention trips to mature
with
large
closets
.
Nice si ze
11-12-3tc
Phone 992-2602.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. 2195.
man In P omeroy area. - - - - -- - - living.
lront
porch.
and lot
10-29-12tc
Morriaon, Cincinnati, called on
Regardless of experience, air NOW WRECKING the for mer ,..,.,.
100x400.
Asking
$16,000.00.
.
mall A. I. Read , Pres.,
Mr. am Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
115 ACRES
Epple' s Grocery Store NU USE in Long Bottom; phone
Am er ica n Lubricants Co. ,
WILD AND WOOLY - Old 6
building in Pomeroy . All
985-3519.
and Mrs. Elfie Woods.
Box 696, Dayton, Ohio 45401.
kinds of bu ild ing materia'is
6-11 -lfc room frame house, barn , and
Miss Lois Gaston and friend , a~tended the youth meeting at
ll -12-4tp
for sale on the job including 2
severa l outbuildings . Free
Unda Corbett, who attend Temple Church on Sunday·
gas . Only $20,000.00.
and 3 in . heavy material, 8 ROOM house &amp; bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, built-in
school in Columbus, spent a evening. The activities were Help Wanted
shee ting and cherry stai r
JO ACRES
ca
binets in kit chen , close to A BEDROOMS - Bath, large
rai ling ; call 992·5946 or 882·
weekend here with Miss directed by Mr. and Mrs.
radio station In Bradbury. din ing, 3 rooms paneled .
TARY needed for out-of.
3219.
Gastoo 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, Mr. arid Mrs. SECRE
Phone 992-2601.
state construction firm ; office
11 -10-tfc
Free gas well with plenty of
11-12-12tc gas . Lar ge garden . All
Donald Comer and Joy and
Paul Gaaton, Leah and Joe.
near Salem Cen ter; phone
367-7348 lor appointment.
Bertha Crippen, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree .
TWO HEREFORD steers. POMEROY - House, 6 rooms mineral s. $1.5,000 .00 . Th is is a
11·14-llc
weigh approx . 450 lb. each;
Mrs. Eat! Starkey, Mr. Carl
Mr. and Mrs . Johnny
bath, 2 large porches, good buy.
good
4-H project ; phone 985· and
NEW LISTING
large
lot, new ly painted ;
Greenlees and Mr. and Mrs. Swearingen and children have BUTCHER
part-time ,
3846. VIrgil Windon.
HOBSON
- 6 room frame
phone 992 - 339~ .
Tuesdays and Fridays for
Mendal Jordan;., Columbia moved to the property that
11
-12-3tp
home,
bath.
3 bedrooms, gas
loca l store; wri te to P.O. Box
11 -12-3fc
Grange members, attended they recently purchased from
furnace ,
porches, 8nd
729-M. c-o The Dally Sent inel. TWO RABBIT dogs; also set of
basement
.
Level
lot. Drilled
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
MelS! County Po'!IOn~ G_r!!_nge Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Burke and
14" plows or trade for rotary
well.
Only
$9.000.00.
ll
·7·fiC
the
Burke
family
have
moved
meeting at Rock Springs.
mower ; Nat e Vanaman ;
phone 742-5322.
Plans were made for an all- to their new home In the
11 ·12-3tc
·c . .
.
WE HAVE MANY OTHE R
Chesser
addition
hear
Hunters
county Grange Officers ConPROPERTIES FOR YOU
store.
ference on November 31!.
RINGNECK pheasants on foot
CLELAND·'
TO SEE. GIVE US A CALL
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Culwell. of
Mr. and Mrs. IWbert Cox of
or dressed . Roger Leifhe it.
AND WE WILL HElP YOU
REALn:
Rock Springs Rd ., Pomeroy,
Albany called on Mr. am Mrs. Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs.
FINO A HOME . PICTURES
. 608 E. Matn
Phone 992-3446.
OF OUR OFFER INGS ON
John CUlwell and family ot
Ronald Whittington.
~ Pomeroy
11 · 12-31p
OUR OFFICE WA LL.
The church supper and Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
!lazaar at the Carpenter Hensley and family, Mr. and
ONE REGISTERED female
30
ACR'ES
ASSOCIATE
tree walker coon hound.
Baptist Ourch was well at- Mrs . Roscoe Tackett and
NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS
NO
SUNOAY
SHOWINGS
Phone 949-4761.
- All minerals ·&amp; fenced. 4
family, and Mrs. Mary CoiUer
992·3325
tended.
1f.9-61c B.R. home, bath , basement,
Cecil lloyd ls convalescing and family of Flatwoods, Ky.,
porches, garage &amp; other
eatlsfactorily at home area along with Mr. and Mrs.
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy, buildings. Just Sl2,900.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992foDowing surgery at O'Bieness T. H. Blanton and Greg of
FOUR or five bedroom home
2 YEARS OLD
'
5443.
five miles wesl of Ath ens nea;
MIDDLEPORT - Out of
Jackson were aU called here
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
8-15-tfc· floods, 3 large B.R. W.
Roule 50-W; built -in ap.
Reed Jeffar• attemed the and to the funeral home In
pliances, separate· dlnlnQ
double
closets,
dream
kit.
CB RADIO, antenna, also police
funeral ol Willie Gerson MUM Beaver by the serious Illness
room, carpeted, central air··
For Rent
chen, dln inq r. carpeted,
nner. Dailey's Radio Shop,
Athens City Schools; ca ll 593:
at Hughel Funeral Home In and death of their mother' Mrs. UNFURNISH ED 5 room and sca
lar ge
L. R., II replace .
Box 21-B, Long Bottom, Ohio.
,, Au- on &amp;mday. Mr. MUM Jerry Culwell. Mr. and Mrs. bath' houSe. Phone 992-2780 or
11 ·8·6fc ·Utility R. Patio, basement,
poi
ntment,
$29,900. for ap.
3881
or 594·4296
elec tric heat . Lot 100x120.
· •l f«merly Uved in Albany.
992-3432.
Alfred Rice, sons Steve and
11 -10-lotc
11-12-tfc EARLY American stereo-radio ASKING $23,000.
1 Mr, a00 Mrs. Qair Dale Rick, and friend, Columbus,
CORNER LOT
AM-FM radio, j
Stlnlbur7, Julia, Oara, and also visited her parents, Mr. 2 BEDROOM mobile home: • combination,
speaker sound system, ... MIDDLEPORT - f112 story
1
SPEciAL : Move In before
. Bobby ol GroYeport, and Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam CUlwell and
frame, 3 B.R., bath, utility
s~eed automatic changer .
adults only; phone 992-5247.
winter. 4 · bedroom ranch
Balance $79.31. Use our R. Gas F.A. heat, paneled ·&amp;
• IIIIIMn.lMry Stanaben-y and attended her grandmother's
1l -14-12tp
home on 'I• acre lol. Bath and
budget terms. Call 992-7085 . tiled . Garage, cellar.
•
..
IOD, Reynoldsburg were
funeral In Beaver.
a half, built-In kitchen, wall·lo
·.
;.•
1
2-61c
ASkiNG JUST $11 ,000.
' 3 AND 4 ROOM furni shed and
wall carpet and g~ragec Price
llla)day guelti at the home of
STATELY OLDER HOME
uofurnlshed apa rtments.
$10,750.00;
also a s bedroom
. lllelr pannll, Mr. and Mrs. .
MODERN Walnut style stereo. SYRACUSE
Good
Phone 992-5434.
colonial house on"' "" acre lot.
radio
,
AM-FM
radio
,
j
Dlle Sf nol!Jry.
4-12-tfc speakeo sou"d system , j location, ~ B.R., 2 baths,
Bath aod a half, buill-in
paneling, tiled, porches, gas · kitchen, dining room, fam.lly
1111. hye Jardan i!pellt a
speed automatic changer . F.A.H., basement, _garage.
'rRAfUR ,in country, large
room and the works, priced
wu&gt;mt with t. 1011 and
Balance So8. H. Use our River lrontage. A STEAL
yard and 'garde~ ; phone 992·
$30,000.00.
·Call Sherman E.
budget
terms.
Phone
992-7085.
6658.
.
~.Mr. IIIII Mrs.
m
.~.
Summerfield,
985·3598 or 985·
11 · 12-61c
11· 12-3tc
4177.
•
'
D•.,- JGrclu llld family.
MANYDTHER .
11-2·301C
IInce _IIIII Vlc*y Gillogly, .
TRAILER lot, Bob's Mobile APPLES, fitzpatrick Or .,
PROPERTIE~.
chards. State Route 689,
1 0 IIIII lteliD Crablne,
Court, Syracuse; phone 992·
.,
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
HENRY E. CLELAND,
2951.
111ft ..... Rldllrd llld
6
ROOM
house
and
bath,
sun
a.JO.Ifc
REAL'rDR
10-31-tfc
91ekJ Comer, ltltby Hut.
porch.
2
extra
tots,
aluminum
HENRY E. CLELAND, Jr.
siding. Rt. , 1, Middltporl,
...._, Debbie and Lori
SafntiiAn, "'·4209
FUR~I~Ht::U
1
Dt:Uruun•
COAL, Limestone, E.ceisior
Ohio.
Charley
Clark
apartment, adulls only,
..... 111M, Jeff 1114 AINia
Salt Works, E. Main St.,' KATHLEEN M. CLELAND,
OM YOUR DIAL
residence.
Contact
Sam
Clark
Mlddlepo~t i phone 992-3874.
Saltst.dy, " '·4209
Pomeroy . Phone 992-381'1. ,
.cJIIllllJ, BryiD apd ,Keith
992-6306.
I •
I
10·22·ffc
4·12-lfc 992-2259 If no ana..,. m-2UI
• ..... llld lllella Woalen,
11·9·61&lt;
•(

SE W E R

DISTRICT.
No. 15 .155
LEGAL NOTICE
Public not ice Is hereby given
pursuant lo Ohio Revised Code,

lhe 22nd day ol November ,
1971, at 11 :oo A.M. in the Meigs
County Court House , Pomero·y,
Ohio. on the Petitio n for

Cl eanusedf urnl·1ure

n-

R E G I 0 N A L

Pl easofMe igsCou~ly , Oh io , on

TUPPERS PLAINS

niversary get-together
or a Spec'lal Hol'd
I ay,
we will cater delicious
d .IS hes f 0 your home
or party rooms.

COUR T OF MEIGS COUN-

TY ,

Section
6119 .0.4 ,
that
a
preliminary hearing wil l be
, held by the Cou rf of Common

Rt . 7"atcaution light"

Party
Preparations at a Low,
Low Cost _ Whether 1.t
be a Weddin
A

9 ·

·

Kuhl's Bargain Center

Care - F ree

IN THE COMMON PLEAS

OHIO
RE
PROPOSED
SYRAC USE -R ACINE

.PRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT 1

CATERING

SMilH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992-2 174
Pomeroy

OA'IS ARE
OVER NOW

/ JN

0 -,.-------,,.----, .

'"

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, land scaping. We have 2 size I
'dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
1951 FORu pickup with 1953 tlat done by hour or contract.
heat V-8; see George Hill , 949· Free Estimates. We also
438 I.

ll -10-6tc

at

PARTY PLANNING?
LET US DO 'rLI[

ponds ,

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

,

0

r --:-:::-:::-:--:-------,

From the largest
Bulldozer Rad iator to
Small~s t Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
Ra.dlator Specialist

M'l CO'JRTIN'

LEGAL NOTICE

Business Services

S2995 ·

Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title , sa n.
da lwood finis~ wi th brown vinyl roof, vinyl saddle in .
terior, 4.season air conditionmg, turbohydramatic, power
steeri ng , whife.wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
Quards , power brakes. radio .
1968 CHE V.ELLE
~1195
Malibu Spt. Cpe .. air condition ed , J07 ~ngme, powe1
steering &amp; brakes, red finish with bla ck vinyl 1op &amp; blk
vinyl interior, radio, qood W· W tires.

8:30a .m. to 5:00p .m . Dally ,
1:30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

=:

IUALITY

Pomeroy·
Motor Co.

1971 CHEVROLET

·.Pomeroy, 0 .

OFFICE HOURS

ZSIGNS
.. Of

'IES, MA'ANI ..

•

.'

Notice .

-~-~.~----

VN VCK H'.-RXDN AA II NHV~K UNS!&lt;{ F Cit
I,

'A

tuW-IION

�I.

....

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·~

-:·
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1-TbeDIIIySentlnel,Mitldleport-Pomeroy,O., Nov. 14,1972

~~;;~~::m:i'l'il::V~.~m:;:~~ftJS:ll~~-~P.~-:~:::«-l~~*"w.·~w.;""h*""'·'N~a--:t-.ion 's

.·Now You Know

middle suffering . -~

t-ase of allact on~ ihe
~lfOIIId
· base at Omaha, was dlverled to
another base for landings and
lltkeof!s. Tile cilRlllland .Inlly Unlk-d Press International '""'wstom: that clugg.,; roads, spilling over breakwaters onto cludes several groups of planes
By Unl~ Press llltei")Uitlonal
• A sava!(c storm raged stranded motoriSl&lt;, and forced adjat-ent hi~hlvays.
which relieves earh other.
North Vietnamese politburo member Le Due 11toJeft
through the nation's mid· the closing of airP&lt;Jrts. A 30Michael Keene, a student
Up to a foot of snow shrouded
Hanoi for Paris today to resume cue.flrt oegottalloos
section Monday night and early yc~··•ld mother of six was from Cleveland, Ohio, was
with the Unlted States despile Hanoi'• ~vlo!ls obJectioos
today, etching a psth of death ck'&lt;lrot;U!ed when she feU 'On a missing and presumed
to more sucb meetings. But Radio ljanol nld If lbe U.S . .
and destruction from the Great ,.,ow-&lt;low ne-d power line , in · drowned after being , washed
side lteept delaying peace, the Comm•lll• wDI coniine
Lakes to Texas.
•·airbury, Ncb.
into the lake along with several
"and step up" the war.
At least seven persons were
Atlts Southern reaches, the other students who were
•'Of late," Radio Hanoi said, "the Unlled Slalelslde
killed and scores were ln.lured storm spawned tornadoes and slltndlng on a Chicago breakPHONE tn-2342
in blizzard.proportion snows, violen~ winds, sweeping water watching the waves. The
has proposed another private meeling between the Unlled
tornadoes and high winds eastward through the Gulf others swam or were pulled to
States and the Democratic Republic of VIetnam (North
spawned by the storm.
slates with unrelenting fury safety.
Vielnam) to settle the slgnlog of an agreement on ending
At
least
one
death
was
atand leaving at least two per- · Air traffic was halted in and
the war aod restoring peace In VIetnam."
· tributed to a· midwestern sonsdeadandatleasl30others out of Eppley Airfield in
•'Once again to show Its good will and Its serious al·
injured· in southwest and Omaha, Neb. and nearby
Illude," II said, ''the Democratic Republic of North
central Texas. Damage was Offutt Air Force . Base,
Vietnam said bas agreed to this U. S. proposal."
. BOOSTERs TO MEET
estimated in excess of $1 headquarters of the Strategic
::~=~::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;:::~::::~:::::::f.~:=:::=:::-~.::::::::--:::;:::r.:::::::o:::--s;s~~
A regular meeting of the million.
Air Command, was snowed ln.
. '
mese ... "
Ssigon, and they.flew together Eastern Band Booslers will be
The roaring winds whipped
A SAC spokeSman said Its
Kisainger mel Halg Monday by helicopter to Camp David to held at 7:30 tonight.at the high up huge whitecaps on lake airborne jet command which
as soon as he returned from brief the ·President.
school.
Michigan, sending the waves remains in the air constantly In

1\esident

-r

,I Continued from Page 1)
lllid. He said after the meeting
.~er and Hatg plan~d to
return to WaShington, but it
•WM never ~onfirrned that they
ftturned to Washington or
where they were today.
Monday the 'While House
backed off its pre-election
optimism that "peace is at
band." Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler said that more
,,consultatiof!S with the South
VIetnamese will be needed
:liefore the fighting stops.
. :I Ziegler's evaluation con,.-asted with Kissinger's statement Oct. 26 that "what
temalns to he done can be
,.ttled In one more negotiating
1Je881on with the North Vietna-

~

·e

clllllllbim ltilic~ ,,

and norlhwe1tern lan ...
Three persOna were k!lled in
the Kanua MJaowi area in
what authorities· said were
weathc~-related traffic accidents.

snake skins,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

urt

INSURANCE· BONDS
MUTUAL fUNDS

Weather

e.n tine

Devoted To The lnteresb Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIV . NO. !50

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

1

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VOl

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WEDNESUAY. NOVEMBER !5,1972

PHONE 992-2!56

Ohio farnlers lose case
in property valuation

'

(UPI) - The John J. Gilligan and the state
"Vocational education blunts
Lyons said ~,277 ,207 was
•• COLUMBUS
Board of Education rec- legislature to use the ftutds to the welfare crisis by providing needed for seven joint

~~

"'OIIIIIlended Monday that Ieder=II funds to Ohio be used to
,;construct new vocational edu"cation facii!Ues.
~ The board called upon Gov.

match locally-voted money for young adults with the altitudes
the facilities and also to pro- and skllls necessary for galnvide assistance to school dis- lui, productive employment,"
llicts unable to flnsnce class- said boarcl member Robel't A.
room construction.
Lyons of Dayton.

.'

:~Erie

Shore homes ·evacuated

.By Unlled Press lnlematlooal
: Families were . evacuated
."from their homes in at least
:.four counties bordertitg on
:western Lake Erie today as a
&lt;result of heavy rains and
:strong winds. Snow was expected to add to northern
:ohio's misery.

ty sheriff's office said.
Locust Point, Ssnd Beach In
Ottawa County were evll(luated
by authorities using amphibious vehicles. At least 26
.persons were housed at an
evacuation center while others
sought lodging among friends.
Parts of roads in the county
11
•
l've never ' seen so much were washed out. Ohio 53 and
:water this time of year," a portions of Ohio 1S3 were
:&lt;uspatclter at the Ottawa Coun- closed.

: Land61) plans are retumed
• The Meigs County board of
:commissioners Tuesday
· .reported that a letter had been
-received ffom the Ohio En:vironmental Protection
:t\gency asking furtller revision
·of proposed sanitary landfill
plana.
The letter said detE Ued plans
:for the proposed sanitary
'landftll, llituated off SR 143 in
Salisbury Townlldp have been

received and were being
returned for further changes.
The commissioners In other
business agreed to receive
sealed bids at their office In the
courthouse until 10 a.m. on
Dec. sfor two 1973 model dump
trucks. Attending were Charles
R. Karr, Bob Clark, and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Otambera, clerk.

ELBERfELDS IN POMEROY

SliP

Reno Beach in eastern Lucas
CQunty was evacuated after
parts of a dike broke, putting
the area under two to three feet
of water. "Nwnerous" famlUes
'were evacuated, the sheriff's
office said.
"Travel definitely is at a
standstm," said a deputy.
In Erie County, about 40
people were evacuated from
their homes In the White's
landing area and Ohio 2 and 6
were closed. Winds were expected "to reach 35 to 40 knots.
The Whiteman's Grove area
of Ssndusky County was reported "pretty well under water" and Ohio 523 was closed.
Only minor fiopding was reported In Lorain County to the
east and i10 evacuation.
The National Weather ServIce issued a fiash flood alert for
Roas County, particularly the
·Bourneville area, unW, noon
today, The Weather Service
said Paint Creek there was expected to crest at 11 feet, 10 feet
above flood at age.

Dairy school
on Thmsday,
Meigs Area dairymen are
invited to a dairy school to be
held at the Episcopal Parish
House in Pomeroy from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 16.
The 'topic will be "Raising
Dairy Herd Replacements."
Ralph Porterfield, Dairy
Extension Specialist; Joe
Blickle, Agricultural
Engineer; Bill Smith, Area
Ex tension Agent, Farm
Management, and Dr. J. S.
Theiss, Veterinarian; will
discuss "Economics, Buildings
and Equipment, Management,
and Health in' the Raising of
Dairy Herd Replacements.
Acatered lunch (-dutch treat)
will be served at ,noon. The
mee ling is open to anyone
interested.·

..

Collins by
184, official
count reveals

Air pocKels sea\

According to the official
count of last Tuesday's
General Election, Sen. Oakley
C. Collins or Ironton defeated
Gallipolis Attorney John E.
Halliday by 184 votes.
The official count in
Lawrence County was completed Monday.
Collins and Halliday both
picked up two votes in
Lawrence County. Collins
finished with 12,712 votes to
Halliday's 9,791.
Halliday won Gallia CQunty
with ~ .786 votes to CQlllns'
3,262. Halltday also won Meigs
CQunty, 4,202 to 3,968. Collins
carried the follf precincts in
Athens County by 15 votes.
Final official count was
Collins 20;747, Halliday 20,563.

1n

body warmth and keep
out the cold . 00%
cellon and 00%
polyester. shrink·
resistant Thermal
Is easily washed.
Heat-resistant elastic
waist band and the
ribbed cuffs kee~ that
neat lrim fit Natural
color.

Sizes: Small. Med:um .
Large and

Extr~-Large

~·*'*'"

.

.

.

Be sure to see all the other styles of Mens and
Boys Hanes 1./nderwear. Busy Mens and Boys
Department on the lsi Floor.

..

SAVE YOUR $II ES SUPS FROM
I

•

•

£1 BIIFEI ns .IN POMEROY

r ; ;; : n; u

;·j

vocatlo9al school districts and
several city districts, like
Toledo
and
Columbus,
Cieveiand Heights-University
Heights.
•
Bryce L. Welker of Tiffin,
board president, said dislrlcte
with voter approval and await·
lng matching funds included
BuUer County, Central Ohio,
Delaware County, Galli&amp; County (also aerving Jackson County), Jefferson County and
North Portage Jolnj Vocational
School districts.

under unifornl procedure

•

Brighten up

rholidays.

/

TWO QUARTERBACKS- Andy Vaughan, the Meigs Marauder senior quarterback and ·an
all~eague selection, is congratulated by Tippy Dye, athletic director of Northwestern
Unlverslty, himseH once the quarterback for the old Pomeroy Panthers (1929-33). Dye, in his
address Tuesday night to the Marauder squad, observed that players today average three
inches taller than 40 years ago when he played. This picture by Keith Wisecup proves the
average applied here.

Mrs. Cross to
head PI staff
forSEOEMS

OLD FRIENDS - Tippy Dye, left, the one-time 145 lb. quarterback for the old Pomeroy
Pantllers and Ohio State Buckeyes, greets old friend Robert Roberts, right, retired fifth grade
teacher at Sugar Run Elementary School. Beside Roberts is Tom Metiers, Athens newsman.
Dye gave the principal address Tuesday night at Meigs High when the 1972 Marauder squad
was honored. ~cture by Keith Wisecup,

Meigs gridders honored

Dr. Donald A. Campbell,
Ohio State University School of
Preventive Medicine and
Educational Director of the
newly created Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service
(SEOEMS), today announced
appointment of Mrs. Cay Cross
of Nelsonville as public in·
formation director for the
service.
Mrs. Cross, a native of Ohio,
served unW recently as a
public relations consultant in
Appalachia for the State
Department ol Development,
and llijs a b~cllgr9un~ in
journalism and newspaper
writing.
The totally unique southeast
Ohio Emergency Medical
Service wUI provide complete
emergency care for the first
ttme ever to some 213,1100
Ohioans, in the seven-county
demonstration area and
provide employment to nearly
330 people on a full or part-time
basis.
When in full service,
SEOEMS w!U consist of a fleet
of up-to-date, properly
equipped ambulances,
strategically located, using an
advanced communications
network. The system calls for
increased staffing and lm·
proved !raining, as well as
other related health services
for emergency room personnel
and modernization of several
of these facilities.
SEOEMS will be centrally
located in Gallipolis, and will
serve the counties o( Athens,
Galiia, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs and Vinton.

Fifty Meigs High School
varsity and reserve football
players, 29 freshmen gridders,
cheerleaders, team managers,
and their nine-man coaching
staff : were honored Tuesday
evening in the Sixth Annual
Rotary. Club Football Banquet
in the high school cafeteria.
Tippy Dye, director of
athletics at Northwestern
University, Evanston, IIi.,
. J'oml!roy High Sc~ool, 1933,
· born in Harrisonville, was the
l!J)eaker. ~e wa.s pr.esented by
t::dison Hobstettei, president or
the Pomeroy National· Bank, a
Ufe-long friend.
Prosecuting Attorney
Bernard Fultz of the Rotary
Club was · master
of

ceremonies. The Rev. Robert
Kuhn gave the invocation
before a steak dinner served in
the cafeteria by girls of the ·
home economics department .
Two men and the players
received standing ovations
when presented. The men were
Dye and head coach Otarles
Otancey.
Introducing Chancey, Fultz
said there is no coach in the
area who comlnands greater
respect from fans or piayers
tl)an Chancey. The best )&gt;roof
of this is that Meigs is used to
winning.
"When you tell somebody the
next day who didn 't go to the
game the night before that
Meigs lost he is always sur-

.
prised," said Fultz. "We're
used to winning."
Coach Chan.cey introduced
each varsity and reserve
player, the managers, and his
coaching staff.
He extended his appreciation
to the adminis tration and to the
many others outside the school
who assisted in the football
program .
Dye brought greetings to his
many friends from Ray Farnam of Cincinnati, coach of
Pomeroy Higb when Dye
played varsity athletics 1929·
1933, and from Mrs. Dye (nee
Mary Russell ).
' Reminiscing, he recalled
with obvious pleasure his high
sc hool days at Pomeroy .

"These were good years," he
said, "and football meant a lot
to me." He c&amp; ~tioned players
to regard grades as important
as sports because without
adequate grades there is no
football alter high school.
Dye, one ol lhe nation's most
respected big university
athletic administrators
•
discussed with deep insight the
problems of the Big Ten
Athletic
Conference In
maintaining respectability il\
the face of growing strength of
the six or seven other major
conferences of the coun try.
A former three-sport star at
Ohio State (1934-38 ), Dye .
coached champion basketball
(Continued on page 7)

Five fined
by mayor

late to
be classified

Five defendants have been
ijned and four others forfeited
bonds in the court or Middleport Mayor John Zerkle.
Fined were Michael E.
Adkins, 19, Syracuse, $10Q and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while intoxicated, and
$50 arid costs for not ha ving an
operator 's license; Wilbur L.
Ward, 20, Middleport, $10 and
costs, speeding; James R.
Betz, Jr., 19, Langsville, $10
and costs, stop sign violation;
Charles
Kerwood ,
41 ,
Gallipolis, $25 and costs, in·
toxication, and Fay Cowdery,
41, Reedsville, $25 and costs,
assault and battery and
disturbing the peace.
Forfeiting bonds were
Leland C. Saxton, 65, Pomeroy ,
$200, DWI ; John M. Burdette,
54, Pt. Pleasant, $50, shoplif·
ling; Earl S. Ingels, Jr:, 26,
Middleport, $25, stop sign
violation , and Sharon Lee
Cunningham, 25, New Haven,
$25, improper backing.

Retail
Value

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Dillie Me·
Combs, Gallipolis; Mrs. Bob
Powers, Henderson; Mary
Thornton, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Leo Thompson, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Coy Beckett, '
Cottageville; Deann Cook,
Apple Clrove; Andrew McCoy,
Ewington, 0 .

25¢

too

Notice
BASEMENT sale Thursday and
Friday, 10 a.m. to 6
894
Pearl St.. Mlddlepor . .
ll-1A-21c

with each $3 gasoline purchase.
\

f..m.

;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

MEIGS lliEATRE

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Tburoday tbrou1h
Tonight, November 14
Saturday, warm las trend
throogh ·period. Chance of
Allred Hitchcock's
showen
Friday
and
FRENlY
,Saturday. Daytime bl&amp;lllla
ITechnlcolorl
lbe low le mid th OD TbunJohn Finch
day rlllqlolo lbe upper dl
Alee McCowen
and SOi oa r'rlday and · Thrills Galore! That's
Saturday. Low1 ID lbe lh oa HITCHCOCK!
I R)
• . Salarday. Lot\'IID lbe lh OD
Colorartoon:
Tllanclay rlsllle Into llle toll
The First T~Mf&gt;hone
on Friday ami Saturday.
Adults: 11.50 Chlldren: 75c
ShoW Storts 1 P.M.
'181 ;)!
:::::::: ..
....
.. .. n:e:e.e...
. ;; ..•...
te.ex.

.

w~

00

hoaor BankAmerieaJd and
Muter Charp cNdlt cardo.

.

i

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Candle-lite's Cameo* candles set a happy
holiday mood in your home.
·
These hand,-dipped tapers come in rich red
and stand a graceful ten iriches. Lovely on the table.
Mantle. In decorations.
Stock up on candles n~w for all the· holidays
.ahead. Available at participating Aabland Oil stations.

Help Wanted
PIANO and ~ss guitar player
for Gospel singing group.
Phone 992·3089.
11·14-:llc

-

TEN CHNTS

current use

MailS County's Oldest and Largest
.
Insurance Agency

State
board
recommends
federal
'
fund~ to build vo-ed schools

-. - ctoudy northeast- portion
tonight becoming partly cloudy
and colder in the remainder of
the state: Lows tonight from
the middle to upper 308
southeast. Thursday ~artly
cloudy and not as cold .. Highs
from the upper 30s to th~ lower
40s.
'

Lunches
•
pnce up

Nlt;IC ". IHLE
Nleh Ihle, Southern Tornado running back, was
voted " Most Valuable Back"

by the coa~hes ol the
Southern Valley Alhlelle
Conference Tuesday night.
Said lhle today : "When I
started playing footb\ill a
long time ago this Is what I
dreamed about winning."
See page 6 for account of
selections.

FAUST TO SPEAK
A smorgasbord dinner will
be sen1!d at the Eastern
Athletic Boosters annual
football banquet Tuesday
night wllh Jerry Faust, head
lootball coach of Cinclnnall,
as guest speaker.
Anyone who has not been
contacted lor food and would
like to attend is asked to take
a covered dish. Meal, rolls
and beverages will be
provided by the Boosters.
Food is to be on the tables by
6:15 p.m. with serving to
begin at 6:30 p.m. Awards
will be presented to varsity,
reserve and junior high
loolball players
and
cheerleaders.

Due to increasing food costs,
lun ches at schoo ls in the
Easte•·n Local District were
increased by the board of
education Tuesday night.
The board increased lunches
at the elementary schools from
25 cenl~ to 30 cents a day and at
the high school from $1.25 to
$1.50 for a weekly ticket, or
from 30 to 35 cents a day on a
daily basis. The change will go
into effect on Dec. 4.
In other business the board
agreed to purchase new fur·
niture, about 30 desks for one
classroom at the Chester
Elementary School, and additional reading aid materials
for both the grade and high
school levels.
A special meeting was set for
Nov. 30 to meet with the
district teachers association,
at the request or the teachers.
C. 0 . Newland, clerk, was
authorized to transfer funds
within the budget.
The board discussed employment of a partlime cook at
the Chester school but took no
ac tion. The substitute list of
uncertified personnel was
updated. The Bar 30 Horsemen 's Assn. was authorized

to use the Tuppers Plains
building for a bazaar and a
local plan for education of
handicapped children as
required by slate law was
adopted. Bills were approved
for payment.
Attending were Supt. John
Riebel , Principal Charles
Swogger. board members Oris
Smith , Howard Caldwell,
Roger Epple and Clyde Kuhn,
and Clerk Newland.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Ohio Supreme Coort today upheld
a law which staggers implementation of uniform property tax
rates over a six year period, striking down as unconstitutional a
law stating that all property be assessed at a uniform rate on a
basis of its current use .
The court's unanimo~s decision, in a suit filed by Park Investment 9f Cleveland, said the "current use" as the basis for
valuation violated the constitutional provision that land and
Improvements thereon shall be taxed by "unlform rule" according to value.
I
The court, in Its decision, appraisa 1s during a single
however held that a pari of year ...
the law was unconstitutional;
Dale Peters, a spokesmim
thereby dealing a setback to for the state Board of Tax
farmers .
Appeals, said he expects the
The portion declared un- board to be pleased with&gt; the
constitutional
by the court court dect·s,·on sl· nee 1't ap1
ca led for reappraisal or land . proved an orderly schedule for
on a current use basis, instead attaining uniform assessment.
of market value.
"Time is short; it would have
Prior to the~· passage of the been next to impossible for
law by the Legislature the county auditors to arrive at
Board of Tax Appeals had uniform assessment this
adopte~ rules requiring ail real year ... he said.
property to be assessed at 35
pet. of current market value. Backed m' ditch
Park Investment had asked
the court to hold the board in
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
contempt but the court refused C. Hartenbach's Dept. inbecause it said the board "is an vestigated a single car acadministrative agency subject cident Tuesday at 10 a.m. on
to legislative authority" so It County Road 18 in Bedford
has to follow the law of the Twp. Richard Lee Fraley, 2!!
legislature.
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, was traveling
The legislature at first north on Township Road 141
passed a biii putting the law when he pulled across County
into effect in early 1972 but Road 18 in'to a driveway and as
changed th'at to 1977 .to give he went to turn around, he .
what t~e court called "a more backed in to a ditch.
orderly and less expensive
Fraley was arrested on
alternative to completion of charges od driving under
suspension . There was minor
::::::::i:::~::::::~:::~::::~:::x:::::;:;:::::~~m::~::~x:: .damage to the undercarriage
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
of the car. Fraley was not
Friday Through Saturday, injured.
Cool lltrough the pfrlod.
Highs from the upper !Ill
COFCTOMEET
south to the lower 40s north.
The Middleport Chamber of
Lows In the mid 30s. Chance Commerce wlil meet at 7:30
of showers Friday and again p.m: Friday at ·the Columbus
Sundsy night.
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room.

Wallace's chance
to walk dimmed
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) Doctors who were at · first
optimistic about Alabama Gov .
George C. Wallace's chances of
walking again now think his
chances are slim.
"We were at first optimistic
because the governor's spinal
cord was not completely
severed," said Dr. J. Garber
Galbraith Monday. "But now it
appears the chances for his
recovering from this paralysis
are becoming increasingly
unlikely."
Galbraith, a Birmingham,
Ala. , doctor who treated
Wallace for gunshot wounds
received in an attack tast May,
sa id the bullet apprently
cause~ Irreparable damage.
"Even though the bullet

which lodged in the governor's
spinal cord was successfully
removed, there was damage to
his nerve track," said
Galbraith, who was attending
the
Southern
Medical
Association convention.
"So the governor remains
paralyzed in both legs." He
said he thought the chances for
full recovery were slim
because "there has been no
improvement in his paralysis
despite the removal of the
buiiet from his spine." He said
Waiiace was in good condition
otherwise.
"There has been a great deal
of improvement both In his
general health and his mo: ale.
All the infection has cleared up
and he has gained weight."

WHO WOUlDN'T, IF HE COULD? - Pomeroy POIImalter James Soulsby will VIICIIllze,
"I'm Slttln' on T~ of the World,'' for these dancers featured in the annusi "FaU Follies" to be
presenled at 8:10p.m. Thursday, Nov. 24, at Meigs High School. Dancers from the left are
Sonya Ohlinger, SusleJeffera, Cathy Osborne, Linda Rupe, Judy Snowden and Merrl Ault. '

RECEIPTS TOTALLED
Meigs County Court receipts
in October totaled $5823.25,
according to Deputy Clerk
Betty Hobstetter. Receipt~
were disbursed as follows, .
fines to slate, $1,983.60, fees to
sheriff, $146.50; lines and costa
to county general fund
Pomeroy," he said.
$2,068.15; law library fund,
In addition to distributing $677.34 and to auto license and
more than 6,1100 oartons of tax· gas fund, $947.66 .
free cigarets to veterans, the
PLACE CHANGED
Ohio Legion. also is conIt has been necessary to
tributing $8,250 to the five gift
change
the location of a dairy
shops operated at VA hospitals,
from which patients may select school · Thursday to the
· gilts to send their families, and Pomeroy United Methodist
more than $35,1100 lot the Church on East Second St. The
purchase of canteen books for school will be from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. with extension specialist.
VA patients.
Fourteen color TV sets for Ralph Porterfield, Joe Blickle,
the VA hospitals and the Bill Smith, and Veteranarlan J.
Soldiers and Ssllors' Home are S. Theiss in cllsrge.
.
I
also provided again this year
LOCAL
TEMPS
frorr: program funds. The fund
Temperature in downtown
will also spend $15,1100 on other
than Christmas activities for Pomeroy at.ll a.m. was 40
VA and state hospital patients. degrees under cloudy skies.

·Dough wanted for dough
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, will conduct
its annual "dough for dough"
fund drive in the "Gifts for the
Yanks Who Gave" program In
Pomeroy Thursday evening.
Hank Cleland, Jr., chairman,
asks all members of the post to
meet.at the post home at 6:45
p.m. Thursday to begin the
delivery of bread loaves
throughout the towri. In exchange for the loaves ,
letlonnaires will accept con~
trlbullons for the "Gifts"
program. All residents wishing
to parUclpste in the program
are asked to turn their porch
lights on. beginning at 7.

This Is the 21st consecutive
year the Ohio Legion is pooling
.funds from posts for gifts and
activities benefiting veterans
in 17 state hospitals, five VA
hospitals and the Soldiers' and
Ssilors' Home at Ssndusky.
"This effort is not limited to
members or the Legion,'' said
Post Commander Kenneth
Harris. "We welcome contributions from Individuals and
business establishments to
help finance the slate&lt;~ide
program that costs over
$68,1100. These "may be made
payable to 'Gifts -for Yanks'
and sent to .the local chairman,
Cleland, 608 E. Main St.,

'

\

STUFFING BEE - The. 66th annual Christmas Seal
Campaign got underway Tuesday at a stuffing bee In the
Pomeroy United MeUtodlst Oturch. The Christmas Seal sale
is the annual fund drive of the Meigs County Tuberculosis &amp;
Heal:h Association. Vernon L. Weber Is the Christmas Seal
lllairman. Ladies helping, above, are Rhoda Hackett,
Myrtle Walker,. Mary Martin, Ruth Thornton, Eunice

Brinker, Lulu Hampton, Ollie Mae Court, Edna Plctens,
Jeanne Card, Gertrude Mitchell, Clara Tho111118, Cora
Beegle, ·Mildred Betzing, Faye Wildermuth, Edna F.
Schoenieb, Pearl Welker, Ruth Ann Riffle, Joan ChildS,
Elizabeth Cutler, Harriett Neigler, Eula•J. Wolfe, Muritl
Bradford, Norma Alnsbary and Dolly Hayes.

..

.
..

\I

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