<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="18563" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/18563?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T01:07:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="52036">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b2b87fbd73166d3d536bc52675f13c5a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2f34d7409aca4b3098fa46a503355889</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="59001">
                  <text>\

Cable TV Construction Begins

..

••

Stringing of the firat sec11ona of cable of
an lllknlle system which will bring cable
lolevtalon service to five mld.Ohlo Valley
commoniUes Ia llcheduled at 11 :30 a.m.,
Friday, Oct. Z3.
Brief ceremonies at the site on W. Va.
Route 62, near the entrance o! Lakin State
Hospital will mark the occasion. The
public Ia Invited.
Beginning of CUUitrucUon of the CATV
syatem lollowa closely upoo the slgntns of
a CUUIIrucUon asreement between Paul
Crabtree and Associates, Inc., ot
Charlealon and the Jerrold Corp. of
Pblladelphla. The asreemen~ signed last
Thunday, provides lor compleUon of the
syatem within a 36-week period to make
total CATV aervlces available to Pt.
Pleasant, Maaon and New Haven In West
VIrginia, and Pomeroy and Mlddleport in
Ohio.
Jerrold will "wire" the towns from a
central tower locaUon approximately mid·
way between Pt. Pleaaant and the MJd.
dleport ·Pomeroy brldile, Paul Crabtree,
president of the developlnB company, said.
Altholll!h utillzlnB a atnsle tower, two
separate syatema will be buUt.
The first will be a trunk line numing
south from the tower to serve Pt. Pleasant.
The second will be a northern trunk to
serve the Middleport • Pomeroy and
Mason • New Haven areaa.
The system will be designed to provide

sciti
bqll

atl

:r

I

...

M!!

~
le,l

.

\&lt;,.l •'··

'

·~'

I

I
(
(

!

•'

'

..,

,~

I 1::./JOI.U e\!E.Rfn.l1~

M\f.~T~!
'·
'
~

.....

&lt;

.. ...

;.

I

\.

I

I.

.. .

-

'·
:r::
.,.-

··'··. ·-·
..
.

~·-·

12 channels of lelevtalon service at the
beginning, allhougb the exact number of
channels whlch the system can provide
may depend on antlclpeted new rulemaking resardins CATV l)'ltema by the
Federal Communications Commission.
The new rules are expocled late tills year
or early In 1971.
The lolloWins signala are plallned:
Hontinglon, W. Va.: WSAZ-TV (Cb.
3) ; WH'l'N·TV (Cb. 13); WMtJL.TV ( Cb.
33) ; Cbarleslon, .W. Va.: WCIJS.TV (Cb.
8) ; Parkersburg, W. VI. : WTAP·TV (Cb.
15) ; Athene, Ohio: WOIJII..TV (Ch. 20);
Ashland, Ky. ; WKAS..TV (Cb . 2$) ;
Columbus, Ohio: · WLWC-TV (01. 4);
WTVN·TV (Ch. 6); and WBNS.TV (Cil.
10). Also available will be 24 · hour · a· dey
weather Information and an additional
channel for commonlty news and events In
the area.
Crabtree said be Ia hlghly pleased with
the contract with Jerrold, the world's
larseet CATV system manufacturer and
builder. Beginning of construction beralde
the cllmu of more than a year of effort by
the company to brinB CATV service to the
area.
Franchises were sranted by Pl.
Pleasant In December, 1969, and accepted
by the linn In January; by Middleport and
Pomeroy in April; and condiUonal fren·
cblsea dependent on the abluty to make
service available for Mason and New

....
0

G

Haven in July.
Ftr several montlle, Crabtree said; $!WW~.t:::·~·::zw..m~mrxn
plans were ataUed by hlsh cost esUmates,
,.,;m,
W:w.l.:OW.~ · '
the Ugh! money sltuaUon, and the need far
rHnstneertns certain aecUona of the...-----=-- - - - -- -- - - - -- - - - ----,
system.
The concept of uatns a centrally •
located tower to serve the two systems
solved a major problem, enabll1111 the
company to overcome Ill other dllliculU01
an~ to proceed with conatrucUon.
"Coble lelevlalon Is one of the mOIIl
dynamic and promislns forma of CQIIIo
municalion today, and it Ia a shame that
our re81on wu not wired for CATV
years earlier, since there is a clear
lor diversified p&lt;ogramming - especioilly'l
for educaUonal and other non • CQIIIo
mercial TV," Crabtree aald.
"We are bringing a llrek!laaa system
with firsk!laaa services to the reglnn ,
we believe pubUc inleresl Ia very
thus assuring our succeas," he
Crabtree said be wanted to
hlsh prise to all the monlclpal
with whom be -ked in developing
sy~tem, and to the work done by hill
aaaoclalea, who Include former Gov.
Hulett C. Smith, former Secretary of Stale
DIAGRAM SHOWS BOW 11IE CATV SYSTEM WilL truntJine cable lliendJrW norlbnrd aJIII IOUibward. The
Robert D. Bailey, Pl. Pleasant
BE BUILT-In CCMinldlall the PolntVIow and 'J'WIJIVIIIage nm phase will be bodJdl•g the CATV dLotribullon 8)'ltem In
businessmen Jack Fruth and Vltua Har·
cable ll)'lleml, tllelolloorb!gaclledule wiD be followed: Flnt Pt. Pleaean~ lollcnred by cOIIIIrucllon rl. dlllrlbui!Gn
tley,'Jr., and Polneroy denUat and civic
will come """"truclion of the 11nrer and inllallai!Gn of
8)'8lema in the lour "'"
CGIIlllluniUeo. First ltringing of
leader Dr. Harold D. Brown.
electrmlc tflllpment at the tower llle, approxlmak!ly
cable lor the joint 8)'8IA!ml will bejin Mondey.
(ConUnued on pege 8)
midway betweeo Pt. Pleasant and Muon, with heavy

"*'* ·

u,..,.

• l'.t '

'

-~
. ~

''·

Now You Know

.,

'

·~
~

Sheep and ~oats are WI·
dHferenUeted In the Arabic
Jansuage, which refera to both
as "ghanBDl."

'" l

::.:
,....

,.,...

-...

I.

•

at y

e

~~

.,.

Weather

en tine

·~

Mostly &amp;Winy and mBd today,
high In the 60s. lncreulng
cloudineaalonlght and Tueaclty
with a chanco of llgbt rain aoutll
and weal central. Low lonlghtln
the 40s north to low SOil aoutll.
Hlgh Tueadey In the 1118.

Devoted To 1fle llllea,. Of 1fle Meigi-M01011 Area

BIJT E-Ek . TA.PPI~ A MMJ'S

1 DIDIJ'T TAP

VOLXXII NO. 131

HIS "TELEF+\ON€...

Tt:l£PI-IDIJE; IS AGF&gt;.It.JST

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

Tl-\E lAW!

MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1970

TEN CENTS

~---

Nixon Bracketing Doves
WA8JIINGTON ( UPI) - PresIdent Nixon, with the fuU force
of his office, opened a
campaign acroaa the American
midland today in a fight to
retire prominent Democratic
cloves from the Senate.
Nixon left on a tw&lt;&gt;&lt;lay
political foray that will take
him to the doorstepe of Sena.
Albert Gore, [).Tenn., Stuart
V~ce
H.rtke, b-Ind., IJ1d other
Democrata who have lllood uP
againat admjnistntlon foreign
policy and defense )ll'08r11118,
ond who must answer to the
voters Nov. 3.
The President planned to slop

~ 1170 br N!A. '"· T.M.

!t
I

•

,.

..
..

'

-

.. ~

... 1

''

'"'m'l"". P-t4o., .

\

,.

.

/:-

.·

'

'

!i!:IN&lt;SS A Lor 6EoTnR S!N~J: ..
~1)/:fD IT. DOE5111&lt;T tr, PeP? ·

first in Columbus, Ohio, for a
noon rally to support IU!p.
Robert A. Tall Jr., in hill bid
for a Senale seat. He plallned
to go on to North Dakota and
Mlasourl today, and Tenneasee,
North Carolina and Indiana
Tueadey.
Tall Ia in a nlp.&lt;md.tuck race
with wealthy Clevelander How·
ard Metzenbaum, a criUc of
N~'aVIe\M!D~es.

II wu tilt Ptaident's third
poliUcal outiJII of the 1t111011,
.. be Intervened personally in
cloae races with bopes of
reveratns the traditional trend
of congrealonal off-year election louea bY the party in the

,.' ,')'

i"

L

PARENTS AND FRIEND8 PERCHED on lhe hillside as
lhlo bonfire ligbted up the camp area for a Saturday night

'• II

bY the M.(l.M Boy Scouta al-

period of stunts and songa
tending the camporee.

How Doe. One An-est a Dog?

I

llllerill'o deptalleo refilled to lane a oh!lllall S!mdly
priHie property at El!!eb.
. Jppare!!tly ~ lllkon ........ t - alter
olacovertn&amp; G!e driver ollbe 111lo l!!v.m.l Wl8 ...,. oilier
IliaD ......
IIIJPUed lbell!llfbe Fred MHM• uo lid several of
the Walt DiiHy cbaneten l!ld l!!vaded G.wa Caarty.
a""*• ..... w11at reaDy
~• :
Mr. ud Mn. Clyde Sllllden, ll!nU 8lar Rl.,
Galllpolll, J!!!lled lalo llluey'o Otooery • RL Tllll!nU to
purclaue I BCWQ FJ!r,
Tbe Huple left their auto !'l!llliq with their pet dol
llllde.
Tbe ulmal apporeall)' Ill! the lllllfllevor, baeltlq II
!ram part lalo .........
'11!11, _.....,. to . . reporl, l!larted llirup ••
eveall.
'1'lle - • J.ebud ...... G!e p •twe J!EIII

I

D
dtsa?od •
. . to ll!e ptM!1ee paapl.

ltllllwilll 111 aceldoal •

·Kiashuta Hums
Pteturu ud Report
ly Bob lloeiUeb
CIIE8TER - The billa above
Camp Klalhuta near here were
allVJ over the weekend will!.the
IO!Illda of a Fall Camporee held
by some 100 Boy Scouts and
·their leaders from the Meigs •
Gallia • Muon Dlatrlcl.

'

:EM SORRY, DEAr&lt;?, BUrTric

MUMBLE...
MUf&lt;\8LENIUM8t.e.

·,

c005 SrJ..l(J(To\!-IE PA~-­
AND l EJLI~NeD Ti-le TOt\ST.' ·

' ..

~ .:

., ..~!_
; . 7~'.. '.

!IIUM&amp;LE·~

~Ot.\e,t.E"""

MU!o\81£· •

RougbinB it blgb above the
camp building, the scouts
funcUoned without matehea to
Usbt fires, and canned foode
were "no no."
To beat the rap, two lloopa
arrived on the scene with Uve
chlckena whlch were clreasecl
(Continued OR Page 4)

Bne
. ,./.s

•w

r--------------~------------,

I

1\T

•

: 11ews••• ln
I

1

1

sevenlll!tleo belere ...... to •irlll•ll!e pamp lalud.

1•-

~

IIJ llllled Pnu IDternl~
}UIIt FirJe

MPH Sla01~ of Record

B &amp;E Probed PlllfN"' Hopefuh

IIONNEVILI.ESALT J!'LATS, Utah -The Blue Flame roctet
car flashed aC!'III!! lbe lltimevllle Salt 1'1&amp;11 at a beeatiHakln&amp;,
11rP0PPin8 m mUea 111 hour Sunday bulleU five mUea 1bor1 rl.
lllliDII • new land wotk! IPeed .-d.
Whether 8IICIIber lhot at the record would be made
lnday wu up lD tile lir. Ptojecl Mlnqer Dean Dlelri&lt;l! ~
to meet with the Dime's *!vii' and crew earJ,y today to decide
willtber to !!like anatber nm Immediately or 10 wort 011 lbo
eaatne llain and pcalbly ...., order II!Otber fuel mlslurt.

Gallia

County aberlff't
depliles Sunday inveotlpted 1
lrreUins aJIII enllrins 111 lbo
former Bllhop Fenwick
C.lholic School north of
a...bJre. ·
AccordiiW 10 omc.n, entry
- !Dide by breUinC • win·
..._
·~ --' ...... of the
_, on "'" '""' -

zo

Jli'ec:f~Nad.ty

The IIIII Mllp Olunty Junior
MlllarlenllliGIIJI!HUnewillbe
beld al7:31 p.in. Wednaday In
the ninity Cntreh eclilcatlonal
bulidlnll lD I'Gmaoy located
ICI'GIIfromthe l'canenypubllc
Ubrary.
All hilb ldiool aenlor prJa
lnlereated in ~~~~~ the Illnual Junior Nils l'altul
sboul4 alltnd. EnltJ and
aro., Ill be
turned lD II ill!a lliiit!. \'be 1171
l'ljeanlla to be held. at 1bo ..,.
l!rlelp HJcb Sdlool audltarlum
II Raclt ~~fir~~*' Gil Nov. ..

~l•ln&amp;enlr)',llllruden ~I !on~,.

iCM60N MO~Oe' I
P~CENT
lf\JDU~IM. FLJM:I!5 ~p 15'
PE~f\\T SMOKE.

f.X~EMEL'(

I

Meet

Ai~ WIU-&lt;fif..rrAIJo.l ~ · P£1i!CeN,T·

FO!i:ECAST
INDtCt\TeS

Jtenr, . . lethe ut.ud

' cbd the locpnr, lbrew
IDjt 'IYII' tbe Willi in die
~ clllcl1ii'Pd ·tbnie

,~ !IIIII

aetlwo

While House.
The visit to Columbus will be
the President's flret since 1968
when be opoke here durlns a
campelgn appearance. Nl:lon
visited ClnclnnaU earlier lhlo
year.

Nixon had not explained pre..
clsely when filet generation
would begin.

''We are •ndinB the war In a
way that the younger brotbera
and the 10118 of those fighting In
Vietnam won't have to be
fighting In some other VIetnam
Nixon's me8888e bas been some time In the future," be
that a quick, preclpllole with· told audiences In the East 1aat
drawal from ,~:'am would wee~. AI one
be apoke of
onJr laid "' • . 'l!~~t~yma. !Wit,..,.. .......... .lllllll! ........
Wllat be Ia aeeldng, tie ~. day' aruilvers&amp;ry -88 ltie~
Is a settlement that wUI by which the country would be
produce somefllinB the United at peace.
Staleo bu not known in tllla And Nixon claimed be will
century -a seneraUon !ree not be able to reach IIIII soaJ
from war.
without a Conareaa which will
Before he set out today, support him.

otop

~on

Gets Paper

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - A man troops followlns demon·
sentenced to 20 to to yean In atrations proteattns the exprison for se~ drugs was panslon rl. the war in IDdochlna .
charged with lour criminal One of the dead llludents """'
coonla, illcJndi!J8 flrel degree a coal whlch bad a quantity cl.
riot, In Indictments banded · narcotics in one pocket.
down bY a opeclal grand jury Olrlstopher Croaa, a stall
lnvesllgating the Kent Stale member witb the President's
l!boollnp and served today.
Cwnmission m C•mpus Unrest,
Rlcbard C. Felber, 21, Akrun, said It wae never determined
was served wilh the Indictment whether tbe coat actually
in hill cell at the !'&lt;Rise County belonged to the victim.
jaU in nearby RaV1!111111 wbere
"The victim did not own the
be was awaiting lr8!1!l'er 10 lbo coal," said er..a. "No attempt
Manafleld State Reformatory. was made by us to determine
Felber .... alao charged with ownerahlp of the sannent. We
attempt to burn property, did not do lll)'lhlns in tile way of
aaaault and llrikiD8 a !Inman determlnlfti whether tJ!ere
and lnlerferlne with a fireman _.. narcotic• violators Ill the
at the ocene cl. 1 fire.
wee.''
The Indictments were Mcn arrests """' expected
returned appae~~Uy In em· later today.
nectloa with a lire which
destroyed an RDl't: INIMlns m
the Kent $tate 111!1nral1J Purclulse of Olaio
ca'"ll"l 1117 1
r- iiladlalllwweldlled and Prod.u:e B11il.diJtfl
Dine . . . .w1t11
'""""""
lD •Guard
!ronllllall
Nalionll

-:a:· Ia Confirmed
r
x
:
~. .
R Knl&amp;h Po
lin. .lof I l'e)l, _, bl a!,. ct the ~m,~~

w·w·e:. ...

at."-:.lllll,wlw at~
11 111- •
.._
1
01
1• 1 ._ wUI
....,.
1M 'ul'l!l.. ,.. .. ~
Help ....... '"•iiiJ ...
lllfp IIIP rt I Ia
,.,~ I rll hi Ia .U.

*'-

M i _ .,. . . llf
tMt .......,,. II'1M l8re II
11119

blOCk~~=-..,

- •

~

Tbo l*ndatw
W
been Iii' lral!id tbo,pul G ,_.

lird!l nour... IIIII .._
WUilltabo. ,_.,
1!1 ss;;;; . · ' '"• Kllilbt 11111 be

tuL 11lerit -Pt'h, lin. I
..,1,

a -

Co., the Galllpolk Malar 01.,
and lbo 11uon CIDunl,y Nalm,
today wallaauid tile pw•'
of the Obill Ptuduoe c • 111.
qae rl. the Gldeal llrml In
Ga"lpal' ,_
.....

l'e)l lUI.

by

-=•lllo ·~ 1o Oubholl8eB&amp;E Detected~ !J.·:n~l;JIIV,o•

.. .' .:lsT'
•.::,..:.
' " ' ....;.~
~
of ...
Ji-;!'o:o\
':'-:--':
· ,..
. _.;...________...__ .illvetflealt
- . , .._ a;,.., __
~_..,.....,
i):;;, ~ ' ' . • •' ' l
'
; . ; ; . , ; ; ; ; ;";';.!'1;

.:f'.;J.Ad~~for w~A:elld InJuri..

I

1

''I'•
''

.

'I

~.,

•

....

'·
~-,······

' .

·-

i1

'';

I

' '

•

·I

·;·
A''·c-:--::.:·.r'·
;., ·.:.:. ... :·.·. . ..-..;.::.:: :- .
I

\

',.,...,;_:,_¥

•

~._

...... !'\,. . , ..••• •-.,... .,. -

~

. . .. .,........
~

...._ ............... ____ ,.., . - .. ..

'

'

~

......... ~

1 :

.,.

'

"

:

'

• '.

&lt;.-

.J
•

'.

MeJp min
to the 'HOIW-

·over

'.
I

\1

1

~~~~

• '

'

••.

' ..

• ....

. .

• beclt

=:r·
''

117

.,•!J'I... Dr.•

�.... ---- ..... -- -· ... - - -.--

..,......,_...,_..._ ... . .,. .... '*- ,.,.::;:___ . .___ • .... ... . . . • ..

~ ....

·· ··~ ·~·-. -"" - -. ..... ......... "'~....... ...

6&gt; . . . . _

rlllii..AII!all1•iii'S'$\~"'~

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

.

•

S- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport·l'omll-oy, 0 ., Oct.l9, 19'10

t - The Deily Sentlnei,MI&amp;Ieport·Pam...or. o.. Oct. It, 1970

8FIUCE Ell

BAT ·

"Toke That

Carpenter

. . and That!"

'Live' Candidate
Vs. Trite TV Spots

~
~

.
•
,

WASHINGTON (NEA)
A lot ol sage \fpes are saying television Is running away
with the political show these days, but in important ways
they're overstating th~&gt;-case.
Fred Dutton, former Kennedy aide busy these days try in&amp; to help New York Democrals sell governorship nominee
Artbur G'oldber~'s rather cumbersome personality, says
telev!Jion Is taking M to 80 per cent o! many campaign
budgets this year--a new high.
In California, they've been saying for at least lour years
that In that sprawling stale the campaign "begins on the
tube at 6 o'clock every evening."
No question about it, that's where the big money is going.
No question, either, that the art ol the paid political commercial has reached a peak of sophistication. Everybody is
hiring the acknowledged specialists like Charles Guggenheim, who has gained a reputation for excellence that makes
him sort of the Allred Hitchcock of political film.
Yel, after five weeks on the road Viewing various key
Senate and governorship campaigns, I've concluded that
the best efforts are being made by those who know how to
work their states in person.
Among these, so far, are Sen. Edward Kennedy of Mas·
sachusetts and Govs. Nelson Rockefeller of New York and
Francis Sargent of Massachusetts. None of these fellows
neglects the tube. Obvious!~ , Rockefeller and Kennedy can
ana do hire the best televiSIOn masters. But they go beyond.
Says a Kennedy aide :
"He's our biggest asset. The most important thing is
where he is today, tomorrow and the next day."
Obviously, it's the same for that veteran battery-charger,
Rockefeller. When anybody ~auging his political future says
"great campaigner" he isn t talking about his fancy television spots but the man himself. -what Rocky has that
shows all the time is lo,·e of the game. You don't have to
paekage it for the screen, and anyway it's better in the
flesh.
" If you like people and like problems, this is the business
to be in," says the governor.
In Tennessee, beleaguered old Sen. Albert Gore, fighting
for survival, has some of the juiciest television stuff ever
put on, showing him playing checkers with oldsters in his
home town county square and meeting an ancient chap who
says he told the senator six years ago he hoped he'd live
long enough to vote for him once more. The man winds up
saying: "Well, Albert, here I am."
Good show, Brother Guggenheim. Except that a friend
of Gore's who watched his expert television spots during the
hot summer before the primary decid•d that what came
through after many viewings was Gore's arrogance.
An astute Illinois politician says he thinks the point bas
been reached where so much television production expertise
is being employed by political candidates that tile stuff is
tending to cancel itself out.
We may not be far from that moment when the' viewer
who sees a candidate with his coat slung over his shoulder
in the now stereotyped "natural bit" may simply conclude
that the guy can 'I afford a well-fitted suit.
With experts on both sides showing thelr candidates proving their human qualities by mixing with "the people" in
endlessly ''normal" situations, the ploy eventually is going
to wear itself out. Television has a capacity for exhausting
practically everything.
None of this means th• medium will not be used heavily
in the future just as now. But there Is likely to be less stuff
from the presently touted television production smarties
an4 more actl'l'l\ieo willch get the candlilati!i Oli tlioi regUlar
· n - sbow!i atld on informal talk programs where they
may perform less predictably.
We already have a good deal of this, especially from the
good campaigners who know how to make news without a
production man at their elbow. And, in plain fact, it is
simply standard politics updated- to cope with the realities
of urban sprawl, crushing traffic and a consistently distracted voting public. There has been plenty of change,
but more fuss over it than it warrants.

.·
;.

;:.
~.

''

~

~
~

1

•

••

'•

:,

:.
'·
.'
::
;'
·•'''
', '
·, •
·: •
J:
''· •'
"
•'
•

,. :·&lt;~· ·."·: . '.
•:·· :;'.
'·'.

~-

...···:.:·

r-·-----------.. ---------------1

!Helen Help Us!
I

Not a Good Word for Cigarettes

I

t

By Helen Bottel

Smokers, You Pollute the Air

1

WOMEN'S LIB MOST
POPULAR FALL TOPIC
Dear Helen :
SummaUon time again. What
topic• hit the popularity button
this fall' Which of the burning
questions in your column
brought m.,t response from
readers ? - A.T.

storm lroop angle for publicity
purposes, so that the movement
ly LAWRENCE E. LAMI, M.D.
wiD get enough attenUon to
bring about needed reforms.
Bra-burning and picketing all· What do you think Is the Automobiles? Factories? No! other pollutanlll, such as polsoo Is removed, the tla·
male bars DO hook the major source of pollution of Cigarettes win by a country tars, and there are pollulalttl sues are healtbler and func·
in contamiltjlted a1r other lion more effleleaUy. The
audience. Then, when you hear the air in American lungs! mlle.
If
you
are
serious
about
than carbon monoxide.
metabollam Is lower In most
these same wild ones on !alii WIN AT BRIDGE
18 alter thefhetop amok·
fighting air pollution, your The build-up of carbon
shows, they sound quite sen·
first target sbould be clga- monoxlda from cigarettes II ~ ~~::;lea :'ore~
Dear A.:
sible. But I stiU don 't like their
relies. I am ellstressed at the associated with Increased clently. Then some people
Women' s Lib won by a "down with men" attitude!
antipolluUon
milltant, pollut· arteril.ll disease. II also de- eat more to satlafy their
country mile.
I think men are the greattst
inl ltia lungs with cigarette creases the abiUty of the oral uree or nervous habit.
And, not •urprisingly, ladies things that evar happened to
smoke.
blood to carry oxygen. When The way to avoid 181Dlng
agaillllt total liberation out- women, and U~ey're very easy By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The people who have the this Is severe en o u I h it weliht wben you qulf amok·
numbered Equality-Now gala to work with, for, or aroand. I
most medical problema !rom affects the function ol the ing 1a to eat 1 UtUe leu and
seven to one.
can 't say the same about
NORTH
air pollution are cigarette brain-leading to men t a I satlafy your nervous habit
II
While most women agree that women bosses. In fact, if I had
smokers. Nonsmokers In the confusion.
with a Utue more phyalcal
environment
are
less
Carbon
mono1ide
desiroys
actiVity. Even if you ptn a
same
job discrimination should end to work with certain Lib types
:~ 54 3
likely
to
he
affected.
the
chemical
in
the
eye
nee·
Utue
weight, within reason,
and certain state laws need I've met, I might end up
• Q 10 85
The
largest
amount
of
a1r
essary
for
night
vision.
If
that
won't
be 81 harmful to
modernizing, the majority still opening a vein - or theirs. • J 10 7 2
pollution
caused
by
carbon
rou
smoke
three
cigarettes
your
health
aa a cJearette
11
"enjoy being a girl." What they LIBERAL BUT NOT LIB- WI!ST
EAST
m011011d1. '""IJ -~•••o... ••· m a row, night _v!Jion can , )labit.
really want is the best of ' tWo ERATED .
,
•10975
o.W
"" • .,. ~~;' cteereaselll ·p er·.ebt. · .
·.I
'
.
worlds - and tJi, ;m.rt !ltUe . l1iilr Hllen !
:~;.
"·
1 ""'' · %'~~ 32
11
34
feminine croat~JrU· Jllribd'g us Though it's thJe that a few :AQGJ
..K954
manage this very well, thank complainta voiced by Feminlsl.&lt;
SOIJ'l11 (D)
In his lungs than 11 caused the heart and circulation In
by the air in the moat pol· an unhealthy faohion. Tbls
you.
are JUStified, so many, to my
• AKQJ4 3
luted
city in the U n 1ted lends to offset the beneficial
Here is a smpting of letters: nund, are outrageOIJll.
• A K Q 10 6
States
on Its wont day. The eHecta ol a loocl exercise
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Ma.ar
Dear Helen ,
A woman has a choice - to be
+7
effecta
of
cJsaretteo
and
air
proiJ'am
and
decrease
the
vtalted Mrs. David Rf&amp;ga and
Perhapa it is as you say, ahomemaker,haveacareer,or
•a
pollution are additive; i.e., worlclne capacity of the oewdauchter. ChrlsUtla Ann, at
Helen, "Libbies" beef up the a combination. What man has
Both vulnerable
heart. They also stimulate
this choide? Feminlata may West Nortb loot Soutb one iJ added to the other.
lrreiularitl8s of the heart the Canulen-Ciarlt BIIIPilal, at
Cilaretles alao reI e ao e and anyone with exira beats Parkenburg, W. Va. rect~~Uy .
counter with "What man In his
2•
Pass 2•
P... 2•
or "flip Oops" should not
Mrs. Maey Reed, Mrs.
right mind would be a Pass 2 N.T. p.,. 3 •
smoke.
Norman McCain and Mrs. Roa
homemaker?" My an:_~~wer: Pass 4 •
Pass PSSI!I
Often when a cJ&amp;arelte Clehmd eslled on their liater.JnHouse and family may entail Pass
smoker quits smoking, his law and aunt, Mn. CaDle
long hours, but the stress and
Opening lead- • A
se1ual capacity will In· Werner, at Middleport 'l'burs' compeUtlon cannot be comcrease.
for his hirthday; ridee it, too, pared with the buainesa world.
day.
Oswald : "My first use of
II Is difficult to find any·
but wife Hildy steers ... Pen C. Besides, many women prefer point coWtt was to teach your
The 8tarUng !olaaar family
thing lood that cigarettes do
Pencil steakery gen1 mgr. Bob being homemakers. This Is mother how to play bridge
1p011t
Sunday with her puenta,
for you. Since they are a
Jenczewskl C. frau penciled in tboir chosen role and a very when we were married back Mrl. Bess Lerklna 'Vill!td source
of air polluUon, I am Mr. and lin. DIDomore Boyles
the stork for March .... Stan and rewarding one. Those who don't in 1932. In those days , ex· with her datq]bter, Mrl. Doris convinced they obould not be and other retau- at Allrad.
Jan Berenstain, ' " - comic should make certain they find a ports ail thought they were MarU of Chester recemly.
allowed In crowded publle
Mill Oelia McCoy llflODt a
panels perk up Good husband who agrees on their far too good to bother with Mr. and Mrl. Dale Newland of places. After all, over hall ol recent weekend with her
Housekeeping magazine, have a career aims. A woman mathematical valuation. In Kansu spent eevero1 dayo with lbe public no longer amotes. puenta, Mr. and lin. I. 0.
Why ohould tbls nonsmoking
new book with an enchanting shouldn't blame a man for her teaching her. I found that Mr. and Mrs. D. c. Riebel.
point
count
helped
my
gsme
R.
E.
William•
wu
patient
1
majority
be aubjeeted to McCoy. Mlas McCoy Ia a student
title : "How To Teach Your unhappy state if she knew alao and I became the first
the
unpleasant
uperlence? I al· Glanvllla Colfe&amp;e, W. Va.
Children Ahout Sex .... Without how he felt before marriage. expert to use it in my bid· at ~ • Clark Holpilal,
Mr. and Mrs. Joaspb Coonally
wish
to
deny
don't
ding."
l'atterlburi, W.Va. fer a lew rette smoker's rl&amp;llttheto cigaMaking a Complete Fool of
poor relunted home recenllf .tier
Younelf."
A woman's way to Identity Jim: "When we decided to doYJ.
health, but it seems reuoD· iplndlns several da71 in
While everything else around and equality in bed with her use the forcing two-dub bid Mr. and Mrs. Otarlel Barn- able his rights lhould 1to,J!
rlartda.
Bdwy. seems to be cuWng husband ts not to shout it from as port of JACOBY MOD· bart and 111111, Vaughan, are where the other person 1
lin. Howanl Clldwell, Sr.,
down, Roseland Ballroom now the rooftops, to picket, or punish ERN l!lld Meade Monroe aug· saylngwltb his pa'elil, Mr, and rights beghl.
bu
relunted .to 1111 bome alter
has three alklay, continuous him by denial. It comes only guesled that we use hil)l· lin. Carl llarnborl. Qlarlea
•
poinlll as the balls of ~ waa tllldtarptllrom
Dear Doelllr-Wbf do you belnc boopllallled atlbe Holler
lflree.&lt;&gt;rcbeslra dance sessions through mutual admiration • card
our Drat response, we felt ..._ 8. . ..._ --'•• .. pill wefeht wbett you atop Medleal Clnller.
(Sat.-&amp;m.·Tlmll.) .... Melican conalderatlon and com- that it was a eadget for the .... u. Navy, ..,..._._ ..,
The Norman McCain fam117
•molina? II there any way
film star Antonio Agu1lar put up municatloo.
public. Then we tried it out lour ,an.
to prevent tbll?
eslled
CJII Mr. and lin. Gale
$5,000,000 of his own cash
I am happily married. UnW with several hundred com·
Jbn Dettiaoa of Rutland and
McCain
and aon at Torch
Dear lteluler- Tobaeco 1J
producing the new "Emillano recently I bald a full time puler hands anrt found that Helen Ardter apetll Sunday with
!son
(It
1J
eveD
uoed
In
Sunday. Mr. and lin, Dina
Zapata," and says he knows posiUon. Now, by my own we ~d improved our bidding Ule Ilmald Coii'D'Iil famll7 of
water to ldll worm• McCain of Lone Bollom were
Columbul.
be 'II take a net profit of decilion, I'm working part time also.
e
no). Wbenever a aiiO callers.
because
we
have
a
Utile
girl
Oswald:
"The
first
reMr. and Mrs. Frederick
f20,000,000 (After tacos?) ....
Dennis Hopper of "Easy Rider" who neede me Do 1 m1as my sponse to a two-club opening llmillt and famiiJ of Ilcme New
No .:_ I have a better in JACOBY MODERN shows York vtalted with IMr ,.;..,
inlame will direct Puccini's "career'"
·
high-card points as foDowa:
''Girl of the Golden Well" apera one at home. And somebow l two diamunds 0-3, two bearll Mr ·
Mrl. Frat* Blae !fnd
"live" at Dallas next year; and feel very sorry for the unhappy U, two spades 7-9, two no- fantlly,IJ\d lin. Mabel Heller.
swears he'll produce a barroom Feminist. - GLAD ro BE A trump 10.12 and three clubs Mr. and lin. Bad Dollfllas of
brawl to end them aU at Ule Drst WOMAN
13 or more. We could go on HarrlsonvUie "''" recent
Dear Helen:
up the line but you won't be 'Villlln It the R. E. WllllatDI
act's finale .
women are not downlrodden. looklllg at 13 points or more home.
We are the moral paCHJetters, ~CU~~w~~or,.ntng
a.c.nt vllltGn of Mn. !Ju1
the strengtheners of family !Ia Jim "H
'·
"''" the Ont_Ue
Larkinl
:
ere .. one o1 nur Larldnl '--"- of C.'- and
- and, becau1e we are haad 1. Plsyins JACOBY
•-~
-.
Bob Fitzpatrick and Lori of atronger, we con aiiO beve MODERN It 1J euy to stop B. W• ......,. of Belpre.
Mn. lawU!a Barnett, a filr.
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Dick outalde careers without falling at fopr hearts. South know1
apart.
Becsuoe
we
are
that
his
partner
doe1n't
hold
mer
r l'eDt of bert, 11 a
!layman and sons of CoolVille,
"special"
we
enjoy
special
an
~e."
lllqieal
patient allbe Oltndel·
1dr. and Mrs. Keith llldenour of
conalder1tlon!rom
men.
Even
a
Oswald:
"Stalldard
Amerl·
Clark
Boapltal.
l'lrlll•lbut •·
Chester, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
bil of pampering See!DI to me can bidden would 1rrtve at W. Va,
Heyman and daughters.
Mr. and lin. 1:¥1 Bllekley
Mr. and Mrs. Dorael Larkins the Uherallon ~ont ts lighting four hearts but a lot of South
to give away our ()edestsla Our players might now try Bisek· . .
at Daytona .
were visiting Mr. and Mrs.
two teenage daughters ~gree ::"".:.
Bndl. l'la. ·
VirgO Wamsley, Cheshire.
with
me.
-Mrs.
B.
aiJpellr
to
be
ufe
but
this
"-----_,_..,.__...,.
Mrs. Perry Cortls, Reedstiine, ail lour trumps In one
ville, Maude Seala, Tuppers Dear Helen:
I'm
very
conttnt
with
the
way
hand, the moat South cen 'IJ.( IIll() ,!i·n /t 'U
Plains, and Ruby McPeek,
things are now
man- make 11 10 trick• and gsme
&amp;elpre, were visiting Ada wi&gt;IIW1wlae,
and 1
this and rubber will have ~~
Tho btddinl boa 1Jotn:
Bissen and Leona Hensley.
goes/or most other girla. Ilook thrown out the window,
WOIII
~%"'
t:•h
Mr . and Mrs. Martin
Pw
2 li' , ,.. . ··~ .
Neaseiroad are •acaijoning in forward to marriage and haVIng tip to their rfChtftd plaeeo,
a
man
who
wiD
keep
me
IJeCUre
Saems
.lo
u.,
''flmintnl"
,
You,
-...111
1111
ltentucky.
· · ·
1 'l!olll: · .' •' 1,
and
happ)'
-·••1
plan
to
keep
gals
do
too
mucll
lnt!erlnC
•rp.u
.,
•AKf.J! .... F
Bernice Prince and Mr. and
Thea•
Women's against the fem!nl1ts who
Whit do y~ 4• -~ 'r. ~ "
Mrs. Steven Poole, Athens, HIM .
A.-.ew IIi- ,....._. '1'1114 •IJ
atteoded a bridal shower lor Uberatora act 18 If they have rot&amp;er., ditaerve PJ"alu ' lor
the
support
of
the
whole
'
f
emale
..........
women
out
of...._.
__
,
........
~.,. · - l1li4
MOlle Burloo of Columbus.
•-·•-·-t
All
1me
~~-"'
.
·
400!:
,...
'"' ,.
'"''
Iu
Rld
~......
~
n, It's much w.,... fill'~ 11'0111111 to ln•t•• ~ .,,.,.
• .,..,.Hril!r
tlir" pt,..
Mary Pierce and Mrs. Larry ....
, ~I
Curtis ~re visiting Mr. ar14.l say Aye! - _AYE, AYE, AYE downgt'adtanolherwoman.lllte te.~l.
should saye IIUCh tllcllcl lor
TODAY'll QUIII'I'ION
Mrs. Hobart Newell of Chester. Dear Helen :
The Women'• Ub group lJ not men -who dae"e tho~ I My
y 0 u, partl'kll'·, l'Untlmli, In
Mike MarUn v!Jdted Mr. and
four diamondll. WhMi 1\cl '-'1111 lin
'.,, J
Mrs. Harold Newlun and putUng other women down. husband agrees with
They're trying to help pull them L.F,L.
now"
-~:---:-"..,-T:-:-;;;-_..,
_.::::..;:;::.2,;;.:.:'?_:_:__
Sandra .

1::':

.,

Forcing Two-Ciub
Holds Down Bid

,.Btl!·'"'
.
i

I
fllms into "hard ticket"
theatres (reserved oeata twice
dally; sometimes eight times
weekly a Ia Bdwy. legit sbows)
is another victim of the
recession: ''Ryan's Daugh!tr"
and "Cromwell," two of the
biggest in any year, will open on
continuous· run basis, known in
the trade as the ''grind" ....
Perle Meola's hometown pride
may suffer at thil: The
Canadian gov't now gives
"hardship money" (combat
pay?) to civil service employes
assigned to W88hlngton, D. C., a
pre.f'ioting choice post.
Tennessee Wllllams' brother,
Dakin, salclat La Petite Malson
he'll run against
Sen. Percy
in '72; file that under Fat
O.ance .... In Jamaica, "mlnl
mini" isn't a tlrlgMtigh Bidrt :
It's the spoil in !root of your
eyee when someone f(ives yw a
klop .... &lt;Do of the female dirty·
book authors says she never
goes out without a wts; we
wondered wby her bead looked
made of vinyl.
Blind singer Jose Feliciano's
wile gave him a motor ICOOier

.... H we con get men m the
moon, why can't we get rid of
dope puoben .... And filthy
fllma .... Adam Caytm Powell
11
Celebrated"
bll
final
fnlllratim- the court deeiaim
that he can't nm for re-electlm
- by being the loudest ap.
plaucler for smgater Val An·
thmy at the Part One plusbery
.. :. Mm. night pro footllallcastJ
aren't just hurting restaurants
..d cafes- but movie and lef(lt
theatres .... A happy 70 to dear
Belen Hayes (Oct. 10) .. ..
Columbia's "Creatures the
Wll"ld Forgot" had the usual
physician m ita African location
- but a witclJ doctor had to be
added at eslru' iMIItence:
They have a VflrY otro~ unlm,
IIJd spear!.
Vlsll&lt;n to Manhattan ........
-'6
the best rock spot to tae their
kida might try lllepheard'l in
IJJew's Drake Hotel: The belt in Several attended the golden
modern noises ln a moat wedding annhersary
respectable premises .... The celebration of Mr. and Mrs.
CIIIIAln of booking blockbuster Fred Larkins held at the home
· of their daughter, Vera Weber,
THE DAILY SENTINEL , Tuppers Plains.
DEVOTED TO
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell
INTEREST OF
entertained with a birthday
MEI G ~ -M'ASON AREA
AI ...... h""""'·· Le
H nsl
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.
uuo~r ~~•"'
0118 e
ey
Exec. Ed.
and Loots Ferrell.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH.
Visitin•a Mr. anrl Mrs. Larry
C:lty Editor
Publishe-d
daily
eKcepf Curtis were Mr. and Mrs.
kturdiY by Tht Ohio Valley M• ·
Walk er, Tuppers
Publishing company. 111 court
rvm
St., Pomeroy. Of11o. 45769. Plalns; Mr. and Mr1. RuueU
Buslneu Office Phone 992·2156,' •I,,.. Meter and Freda ••kJ.
Edltorlel Phon~ P92-21S7
Yli.a•
""
I Setond clan postage paid all dle1worth, PorUand.
Ppm.,-oy,
Ohio. •dvertlllng
M.f, and Mrs , J oe F---•Nitionel
UWIUa,
npresef'tativt Botllnelll · Chandler-·111 M
d Mr
GOIIaoller, Inc .• 12 East"" St.,
•• e, r. an
s.
N... York City, New York.
Dale Newland, lola, Kansas,
~blcrlptlon r1tn : Qellvtrtd and Dorotha
bi' carrier Wh~e available 415
Rt.ebel. Reedsville,
untt ,..,. - k ' one veer In ,.ere dinner guests of Mr. and
ldr:lnct at TM Dell v Sentinel
omcw, S2J.AO. Six montn1 ., Mrs. Wayne Prince .
ltUO. ThrH months. 15.1.5. Bv
NeUie Stethem is a patient at
Motor ~oute 'Where carrier
Hrvlu not available One- Veterans Memorial Hospital.
month tl 50. By malt. One veor
VI . . M'
112.10, ~i\i
$6.~5. Threo
sotmg r . and Mrs. Guy
molllf\s~.OII, · Silbtcrlptlon ~leo Hayman were Mr and Mro C
tnclu'dft SundiV Times. -Sentintl. ·
·
·
· ·
~-- ·
"---- B. Hayman and Mr. and Mrs.

m.

m"""''

tiunt

·* ··.•

me. -

_

410 .800
1 &lt; 0 .200
1 4

o· ~ .200

1 4 d' '.200
Central
W. LT. Pd.
Cleveland
320 .600
Houston
230 .400
Pittsburgh
230 .400
Cincinnati
140 .200
West
Buffalo

W. L. T. Pd.

Denver
4 1 0
Kansas City
3 2 o
Oakland
1 2 I
San Dl0110
I 3 I
National Conference
East
W, L. T,
St. Louis
A 1 0
Dallas
3 2 0
Washington
2 2 0
N.Y. Giants
2 3 0
Philadelphia
0 5 0

••
•I

-~ ·

Minnesota

Detroit
Green Bay

Los Anuetes

Wnf

San Francisco

Atlanta

New Orleans

, ..

i
.. .l·.r

. eoo

.600
.333
.250
Pet.

.800

.600

.500

.400
.000

Central
W. L T. Pet.

Chicago

•

::! \

the loss to Washington and
remained Ued with Minnesota
by blasting Cleveland as Bill
Munson loosed three TD passes
and the Uons intercepted five

........

Surprising Denver remained
a game ahead of Kllnsas City in
the AFC West by clowning
Atlanta. Len Dawsoo came oil
the bench to lead Kanaas City
past Cincinnati.
. In Ule other games: Terry
Bradshaw threw the first
louchdown pasa of his pro
career, a 6'1-yard strike to Ron
Shanklin, to give Pittsburgh the
victory over H11111ton; John
Badl came off the bench and
loosed two 41-yard TD pasaes to
Gary Garrison as San Diego
beat Cblcago, two former
Forty-Niners, Dave Parks and
BUl Kilmer, combined on • 13yard TD pasa with 42 seconds
left go give New Orleans the lie
with San Francisco; the New
York Giants got three field
goalf from Pelt Gogolsk and a
touchdown pass from Fran
Tarkenton to beat Boston.

"We gave it a @ood try but we water on us," Brown comgave away many things in the mented.

first hall," he said. "We haven't
gotten away from being an
npansion team in that
respect."
Brown said he felt the
Bengals still had a good chance
in lhe fourth quarter with the
Chiefs leadlog 24-19 on a third
and nine yards to go situaijon.
A pass interference call gave
Kansas City a first down,
however, and eveninaUy led to a
field goal by Jan Slenerud
which all but eliminated the
Bengal&amp;.
"We were on fire at that polnt
but someone threw a bucket of

4 1 0 .800

Baltimore
N.Y. Jets
BOSton
1

BERRY'S WORLD

:=

W. L. T. Pet .

Miami

anti'

C:::r

Stanford Rips
Washington 63-16

East

News, Notes

";:v:

Yepremian kleked four field
goals as the surprising Mlomi
!tam beat Buffalo to remain
tied with Baltimore.
Green Bay l&lt;led to win on
"Bart Starr Day" and the
Packers came close against Los
Angeles. Bul the Rams snapped
a tie with 10 poinla in the final
two minutes to spoil the
festivities.
Detroit bounced baek from

Pro Standings
American Conference

Reedsville

aca1loninl

Logan ,
Larry Csonka scored two
touchdowns
and
Garo

momentum going for the Chiefs.
"It's very Important to
capture control of the game
whenever possible, " Stram
said, "and we always seemed to
gain the momentum when we
needed it."
Dawson entered the game in
the second quarter and guided
the Chiefs from a 11-0 deficit to a
17-9 hail-time load. This ineluded a Sll-ylll'd pass play to
POdolak down the sidelines.
Uttle Ashamed '
Bengala bead coach Paul
Brown seemed a litUe ashamed
ol the way his players squan·
dered the early nine-point lead
and went on to lose the contest.

NFL Stondlnus

Social Notes

Long Bottom Social Notes

sola took a I~ lat.jler!Od lead
and added 7D points in the
second periOd to make it a rout.
Minnesota's ~t I!Plurge set
a team record.
Baltimore, meeting the Jell
for the ltrat time since Super
BOlli m, aU but guaranteed
that the Jets won't make II to
Super Bowl V this January,
The Colts jumped to a 17~
lead, forcing Joe Namath to the
air in an at!tmpt to get baek in
the game. Namathcompleted 34
of 62 ........ but the Colts in·
tercep!td sb&lt;, three by Jerry

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Hank
Stram said the difference in his
!tam's victory over the Cincinnati Beogala here Sunday
boiled down to making the biB
plsy when it coun!td.
The Kanaas City head coach
said his Chiefs ''made the big
play every time they had to" in
the 2'1·19 win for the pro football
champions.
"We're plsying better each
week," Stram said. "Everything is coming together
very weD."
Str~ pointed out that big
plays from running haek Ed
Podolak and veteran quar·
lerbaek Lenny Dawson kept the

By United Press International

~::•~!:Stt~=~ n~:~:~~~ f:m~:l! .~t~rn Local

•

Baltimll"e and Miami in the
M 'C East; Cleveland (despi!t a
loss) in the AFC Central and
Denver in the AFC West-the
leaders remained on top. In the
NFC Central, Mlitnesota and
Detroit remained tied whlle
Green Bay fell a game back.
In the other NFC games, Loa
Angeles downed Green Bay 31·
21, New Orleans lied San
Fran,_.,--·
M... . - - and st . Louis
rou!td Philadelphia, 35-20.
In the AFC, Baltimore
blse!td the New Yll"k Jets, 2922, KaMas City topped Cincln·
nati 2'1 ·19 Miam( drubbed
Buftalo :i14 arni"Pittsburgh
edged Hous~. 7-3.
In Inter-conference games,
the New York Giants blanked
Buffalo, IS..; Detroit blasted
Cleveland, 41-24, Denver beat
AUanta, 24-10, and San Diego
topped Chicago, llJ.7.
Washington will be at Oakland In tonight's television
game.
'!be Cowboys, who are now 32 thts year, suffered their
second straight loss as Minne.

410
410
320
230

.800
.800
.600
.400

W. L T. Pet.

• 1 o .800

J 1 1 .750

2 3 o .400

1 3 1 .250

Sunday's ResuHs
Baltimore 29 N.Y. Jets 22
Detroit &lt;1 Cleveilrld 24
Miami J3 Buffalo 14
N.Y. Giants 16 Boston o
Sf. Louis 35 Philo 20
San 010110 20 Chicago 7
Los Anu 31 Gt-een Bay 21
Minnesota 54 Oall!s 13
Kan City 27 Cincinnati 19
Sen Fran 20 New Orlean• 20
Pilfoburgh 7 Houston 3
Denver 24 Atlanta 10
!Only uamos scheduled!

By STEVE SlollLANICH
. UP! 8porlll Writer
Last week Jim Plunkett
guided Stanford to Its first win
in 12 seasons ovar USC and he
followed up that performnnce
by writing his name In the
NCAA record book Saturday in
a 63-16 shellacking of Washington Stale.
The sturdy Stanford quarttrhack completed 10 of 14 passes
for 224 yards and rushed for 51
yards to push his career total
to 6,1134 yards, breaking the old
NCAA record of 8,5611 umassed
by Steve Ramsey of North
Texas State.
But while Saturday •aas a day
to remember fot Hei.mlan
candida!t Plunkett, II was a
day Helam•n candidate Archie
Manning of Mlssi!llippi wuld
rather forget.
Manning turned in his usual
sparl&lt;ling performance but Ole
Miss was beaten by llghUy
regarded Southern Misalsslppl,
a school which hadn't def-.a!td
Ole Miss since the two schools

began -~ling one 1r1otber in
191:1.' :!9fl_slilril ~ · the
mighty !l'~els by a ~0-14
margin.
Mississippi's upset was one of
several involving the top-ranked
teams. In other •urprlaes
Oklahoma knocked off 13thranked Colorado, 23-1~; previously winless Maryland
stopped \4th-ranked South Carolina, 21·15; Pittsburgh pulled
out a 36-35 triumph over 19th·
ranked West Virginia and lowly
Syracuse handed Penn Stale its
third loss of the season, 24-7.
Top-ranked Ohio Sial&lt;, third·
rated Notre Dame, No. l
Nebraska, sixth-ranked Air
Force Academy, No. 7 Michi·
gan and No. 8 Auburn all won
as expected.
John Brockington scored
twice and quar!trback Rex
Kern sho\Ved improved consisIeney a• Ohio Sta!t ran ita
record to W with a 28-11
decision over stubborn Minneao-

Th •

College Scores

2 .. 1 Mil
t 1

\'Y,

'2
. 2.,_ ·
··
. Gl
~".

MiJI....t

Ohio St ltl Minnesota 8
North_,.tern 11 Wla. 14
Indiana SO Illlnots II
Nel!nW u Kansas :Ill
Purdue 11 10114 3
"llcb· M Mich. St. 20
lCansas Sl. 171~ $1. 0
Toledo 20 Well. Mich. o .
01)19 U. ;I Miami (0) 211
BOwllnC·tlrn ·44 Kent St. ·O
Notra Dame H Mllsourl 7
.....
I" ·
...._
.. _......
.....,._..,_
..-nm ill

_ VPLA· ·""""""' Jl!llt Calllor·
AlA $1-1!11
'· nla, Ml; ~. Stolt lJeal
ly Ifni~ t'~1. ...-t*wt IltlghalD _ f q.· 2'1~; . and
E•ll ·
, SoiJt!t!n'n .Calllornia dfleated
W2; ·_LI) .
01 •.. W••hiAoton;:JI.a,
~·r,. ,
, . . . · ,. , . ·
Virginia
·Ktntucky
: 2
"Y, , ·~ u..J::~1'.:J::..nlillllt !nUt. 17 All\'a:t 1
' ,
Ftorldl""s . · 2
~q
latt.
•
No.
DM.
1 v.
l'lfflburgh
,"
Wllyn lJ
York
1 ~ Sorlngltitd•.
.....
"''· If
ali~
2
'

,

s

,Ntv&gt;/Car
.

"~·~~.

(\,Oboe\

/.IJoni(U,\ ,, ','

·

CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
Detroit uw ba.. a curious
mastery over the Cleveland
Browns and it was demonstrated again Sunday.
An alert Detroit defense
intercep!td ftve passes and
quorterbaek Bill Munson hit on
nine of 19 p&amp;IIIUI f..- three
louchdowna as Ule Uons
downed the Browns tl-24. II
wu the Uooa' ninth win over
C)eveland in the lset 10 regular
season games.
The Browns marebed 79
)'ll1'da in eight plays with
quarterback Bill Nelsen hitting
Fair Hooker with a 16-yard
touchdown pass to cut the JJons
lead to 17•14 with 6:28 left In
the first half. But those next m
minutes were a nightmare as
the JJons punched across three
TO's.
Larry Walton, who grabbed
four pa.... for 153 yards during
the afternoon, took a 2&amp;-yard
scoring aerial from Munson
with 4:09 left in the half.
Safetyman Mike Weger gave
Detroit a 31-14 lead 95 seconds
later by picklog off a Nelsen
)&gt;86S and racing 29 yards lor
the sccre.
Walton's grab was a leaping
catch between two Clevelsnd
defenders that even surprised
Munson.
Threw It High
"I threw the hall high and
thought there would be trouble
but Walton really went up in
the air and he made a great
catch," said Munson.
"J went deep into the corner
of the end zone and had to
come hack for the baD," said a
smiling Walton, a second year
wide receiver from Arizona
State. "I knew I had to leap
high to gel it snd I Ju•t
outjwnped the other two guys."

by 1:het Tannehill

R'ellmefll" Principal Jimmy Diehl to brulb oil every knob
and blade of graa 011 the hillside above Marauder Stadium oo
wiJleb a footbaU flill may lind a perch.
The Drst of two sbowdoWDI upcmling Ule nat two weekends
begins at I p. m. Friday when the mdefeated Gallipolis Blue
Devlla &lt;XI1IO in to lelt Charley Chancey'eo~ated football
players. 'lbe follo1ri1l(l Friday nl&amp;l&gt;t tlte Marauders go north to
meet the undefeated (as ol now) Lopn a.JeltairuJ.
Not only will Marauder fans tum out In unpreOedented
IIIIDbers. The Old French Ctty ts ecstatic over Johnny Ecker's
1170 Blue Devlla. Gallipolis Friday ni&amp;l&gt;l will r r nble a Nevada
ghost town. The fever ts so !ligh in GalJipolls that the Blue Devils •
footbaU reporter, Hobart Wilson Jr., is 8DIIous to make a deal in
which should GaDipolls win he will write the game report but if
the Marauders win Keith Wisecup of The Senllool staff will do it.
Wilson, a Blue Devil guard in the early 50s, won't have the heart to
describe the game in the wake of a loss.
'lbta apparent enthusiasm for a mere baiUe of gridiron
gladiators of high school age may not be good for the soul. But
what else do we have to be concerned about that llft8 the spirit?
Crime in the streets, fool air thai smarts the eyes and roughens
the throat on approaching New York City, Phiiadelphls, Chicago,
Cleveland and a dozen other ma88ive concentrations of homo
sapiens; war, racism, halt of man toman ... Who could not prefer
a week of anticipating a good footbaU game? We shall escape, for
two weeioJ perhaps, the pain of being human.
'!be Mareuders by defeating Gallipolis and Logan, and finally
Wellston, could insure a tie for the championship, their second in
four years. They won in all in 1967, finished in the pack in 1968,
came in second Last year.
'!be Blue Devils will be tough. They have a fine quarterback
in scramblblg Larry Snowden, lSI lb. junior, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carol Snowden, formerly of Rutlsnd. '!belr fuUbaek is 1115 lb.
speedater Tom Prooe, a senior, whose credenllals from his
sophomoro year were stamped, "Big Ten Material." Their
wingbsck is 1511 lb. Dave Burnett, a senior, and their running
baek, or tailback, is 172 ib. Delbert (Pete ) Neal.
Coach Ecker pula all his backs to work on offense. Against
Ironton last Friday night, which fell 2&amp;-13 to Gallipolis (Meigs
defeated Ironton &amp;.8), Prose hod 611 yards in 10 carries, Burnett :;:;
in 10, Neal114 in 22, and Snowden 161n 39 (the option). This Is
dividing up the job, and complicates Mr. Chancey's problem is
setting up adequate defenses.
One other inb!resting point : Comparative scores against
common opponents will mean little Friday night. On paper,
perhaps, the Marauders are the stronger. For esample, Athens
beat Jackson IU on Sept. 25, Jackson beat Meigs IU on Oct. 2, By united Press International
Outbidding the rival National
MelBa defeated Athens 4U Friday night! Gallipolis defeated
Basketball Association for the
Waverly U, Meigs wrecked Waverly ~!
services of Dan Issei and
Charlie Scott certainly has
f!!i~~
giv~n, ~- &lt;\qlorjl;!lft 1!4s!&lt;ethall

..............

.. 1
~

With I :53 lei! in U,. ~.
linebaeker Mike Lllcci· llillr·
cepted another Nefien 'pu~ on

:"un:"r"'~ ~ton~ -:!

next play to .
give the JJons a st-lt halftime
lead.
The Browns had been the
fire! to ac&lt;ttin.Uie ..... of!ao
recovering 1 fumbled Jlllt on
Ule llatroil 20 yantllne.
end zone on the

PUI l'lolrN 011
The lsed wu lhort U'JOd u
Detroit defenalve end Larry
Hand pleked off a Nelsen IIWing
pa• intended fCC" Bo Scott and
ramb!td liZ yardl fll" the l}'ing
touchdown at 1:11 of the fire!
periOd.
With 3:12 left in the firllt
quarter, Munson passed to Allie
Taylor for two yards to climax
• sb&lt;-play, 77-yard touchdown
drive and the Browns never got
back into the game.
The U001 8lso got a pair of
field goala from Errol' Mann.
who kleked a Slofarder in Ule
second quarter and got the
Uons only score in the IIOCOIId
haU when he booted one from
34 yards.
Bright spot for the Browns
was the play of rookie
quarterback Mike Phlppa.
Phipps, who played the entire
second haU, direc!td the
Browllll' attack that went 70
yards in nine plays for their
finsl touchdown with I :57 left in
the game. He hit on siJ of 13
passes for 141 yards.
" It was good experience for
me but a bad experience for
the Browllll," said Phlppa, who
also carried the ball twice for
17 yards.
Leroy Kelly lugged the ball 24
limes for 1116 yards, including
jaunl.&lt; or 24 and 2Z yarda.

Issei Nets 30, Paces
Colonels To ABA Wzn
113, behind Bill Keller's 32
points and 30 more by Roger
Brown.

'"'c'

Standings

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
By United Prtss International
Independents W L T
Ohio Slate
4 0 o
Akron
4 0 0
Cincinnati
4 o o
Dayton
3 2 1
Ashland
2 3 o

A!sociation a touch of class.
lssel, who starred for the
University of Kentucky and now
very convenien tly displays his

talents lor the Kentucky
Colonels, tallied hall ol his 30
Ohio Conterence

points in the fourth quarter

Leque Overa II Sunday night in leading the
WLT WLT
Capital
3 o o 4 o o Colonels to a 121-115 vic tory
Wooster
3 0 0 4 0 0 over the Carolina Cougars.
Musklngum
3 O0 4 1 0
Issei was helped by Darrel
Wittenberg
2 oo 5 o o
Mt . Union
2 1 o 4 1 o Carrier's 20 pointe; and 18 more
Baldwin-Wallace I I 0 A 1 0 by Oncy Powell as Kentucky
Heidelberg
2 2 o 3 2 o upped its record to 2-1. George
Marietta
2 20 2 3 0
Kenyon
1 2 o 3 2 o Lehmann paced the Cougars
Hiram
1 3 o 1 3 o with 22 points and Bob Verga
Otterbein
1 3 0 1 -4 0 had 21.
&lt;l&gt;erlin
010220
Denison
o 3o 23o
Scott, who played for tHe
Ohio Wesleyan
0 3 o 0 s o University of North Carolina,
Micf...Ohlo Conference
scored 29 poinLs for the second
Laque Overa 11 straight night in helping VirgiWLT WLT
Defiance
2 o o 5 1 o nia down the New York Nets,
Wilmington
1 1 0 2 2 0 •. IIJ3.Illl, and givmg the Squires
Findlay
110130thelf'
· second consecu IveIwm
. .
o
20 0 6 0
Bluffton
Doug Moe tallied 19 poinls for
the Squires who led practically
throughout the entire game.
Oren Taylor paced the Nets'
Hockey Leasue. Bathgate, 31, attack with 17 points.
was a New York Rangers star In the only other ABA games,
Ill" 12 years before he wu lost Mack CalVin's 41 pointa led the
in the expanolon draft .
Floridians past Pittsburgh, 125llaltday
m, and Indian won its third
BONNEVILLE, Utah IUP!) stral8ht by downing Texas, 134- Blue Fl1me rocket car ran a
measured mUe of 621 mllea per
hour .but mi e~ a world land
speed record when it couldn't
make a return run.

Weekend Sports Summary

eek 's

'lua&amp;:f

Sports
Desk

Youngstown State
0 5 0
Xavier
0 6 0
By Unl!td Preu lateruattollal
Mki-Amerlcan COnference
Uague Overall
East
WLT WLT
Penn 31 Lafayel!t 7D
Toledo
300 60 0
Fordham 12 Duquesne 0
ctllo University
2 10 3 2 0
Mi,ml
1 1 0 41 1 0
Syracuse 24 Penn st. 7
Kent State
1 20 23 0
Darlmouth 42 Bro·wn 14
Bowling Green
120131
Pittsburgh iNI West Va 35
Western Mlchlgtn 130 330
Dayton 41 Boffalo 0
Louisvl 16 Marshall 14
Boston U 33 Holy Cross 23
Harvard 27 Cornell 24
BY Ualted Press Jaternatlollal
Air Force 26 Navy 3
Salunlay
Princeton :14 Colgate 14
NEWMARKET, England
Delaware S4 Rutgers 21
(UP!) - Nijinsky lost a leogth
Yale 32 Columbia 15
decision to Lorenzacclo, a 1011-7
Soatb
ioogshot, in the $98,432 ChamDuke 22 No. Car. St. 8
pion Stakes.
MaryiBnd 21 South Car. 15
Wake Forest 31 Clemson :Ill
NEW YORK (UP!) - Fort
TenneSsee 24 Alabama o
Marcy won the $ll6,100 Man 0'
Virginia 21 Army 31
War Stakes at Belmont Park by
Georgia 27 VanderbU1 3
a length and three-quarters
ncrlda :Ill Richmond o
over Loud.
So. Milll. 30 Misaiasippi 14
·
EDINBURGH
ScoUand
Ftirman 31 Davidson 24
Wm .. Mary 24 VMI 10
(UP!) -Tom ' Gorman of
Seatlle, Wash. and Sharon
Eut Ky. 21 Easl Mich. 10
Mlaa St. 311 T.... Tech 18
Walsh of San Rafael, C&amp;llf.,
Sou. m1,• ....
~-- t Car. 12
won lingles Iilla in the Dewar
LSU l4 kentueky 7
Cup indoor tennis tournament.

Games

3 . 01-QOO '

The call was a close one with
both receiver Ollll Taylor and
defender Fletcher Smith going
into the air !or the baD, but
Brown said he had no comment
on the official's decision.
"A JudRement CaD"
" II was a )udgllll\nt caU ,"
said Smith, a veteran defensive
back. "I thought I had a clean
shot at the bail but maybe the
officials thought I hit him
(Taylor) before the ball got
there."
Dawson, who entered the
game in the second quarter
after Mike Livingston was
unable to move the Kansas City
offense, asid his injured leg
"felt fine" during the game.
"l didn't practice much last
week but I was ready to play
today," he said. "We knew they
were an aggressive team so I
was prepared to go into the
game any time."
BOilgali, quar!trhacl: 'llrgU
Car!tr, ~o completed 23 of 44
passes for 1811 yards and the
aerlsi honors for the day, said
Kansas City was )ust as good as
he had expected.
"ll's like p!aylog an aU-pro
team," he explsined. "There
are no weak sisters. Their
defense make• It tough to throw
deep.
"They're a winning team and
they come up with key plays "
•
he said. "If we start wlnniog I

.,

think the momentwn wUl come John Carroll
1 2 1
Central State
1 3 0
our way."
Cillo North&lt;!rn
1 1 0
case West~rn Reserve 0 ) I

ots.

Notre Dan!e, behind the
passing of quarttrbsck Joe
IF)'
Tholamann, tamed MisGorl, 247: Nebrllllkaremaineclunbeaten
IS ,
af!tr tak1ng a 41-31 win OV&lt;r
Kanaas and Air Fll"ce pos!td
ita sisth win without a IOS8 in
sinldng Navy, :IS-3.
Michigan got Ita bi!si often.
By Unltld Pross lnteriHitlonat
Mond8y's GamH
S.turday tOct. l~l
aive
effort of the season in
Wash al Oakland, fwlille
Ohio State at llllnolt
balling
arch rival Miehigar1
Sunct•r'• Gamn
Bowling Green at Miami
Boston at llalfimll"e ·
State, 24-211, and Auburn disToledo at Kent State
Buffalo af N.Y. Jots
Ohio Unlverllty at Clnc:l·nnatl Played an awesome allaek in
Cincinnati at Wash
Wlffonberg ot Beldwln-Wallnce beating Gell"gls Tech 31-7.
Cleveland at Miami
IN)
'
Second-ranked 'l'ew oncl No.
Dallas af 1&lt;41n City
Mutklnuum at Capital
10 Ar,• 10-sas were Idle
Denver ·at Sen Fran
Oberlin at Denison
Detroll at Chicago
Westminster at Heidelberg
H""'fon al San ])logo
Mt. Union at Hiram
Sa~~ games, Tenoessee
New Orleans at Atlanta
Woostet' at Kenyon
Philo vs. Grn Bay af Mllw
otterbein at ,_'\arietta
bisnked Alabama, 24-4; San
Pllfsburuh at O.klend
Wobash at Ohio Wesleyan
Diego St.te beat San JOIII,
Sf. Louis at N.Y. Gionto
Dayton af Akron I Nl
State, SU; ,HoustOn downed
iOnlyJ::d:' scheduled)
Alhtand at Ohio Northern
~ay'sGomos
Oregon
Stott, le.l&amp;; Tulane
Wllmlnglon at Case Woalorn
Los Ang at Mlnn, night
Renrvt
downod ljGrtb C!frollna, 2147;
!Onlygamescheduledl
Central State af West VIrginia l "'Iiiiana Slllte llelll Ken~.
Slott
·14-7; 'I"I!XIII Ell'litl oglacored
Jolin Carroll at All~heny
NIA Standings
xav1or
•I
Tampo
(
N)
·
Colorado State University as
By Unltad ProsslnflmltiOIIIll
Otllance at Bluffton
Atlonttc Division
ter~. Cf!!,&amp; ~
W, I. Pc;t. G. Fl~~t~rN~~h~lll~~.lt . .
"'" ' a ~ ..,......;,. ~· Y•.uo;

Lions Riddle
Browns, 41-~4

the

Chiefs Outlast Bengals

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Voice along Broadway \

:; management training course

:

,.

By vrro ·STELLINo
VPI Sporll Writer
For four consecullve yesn,
the puzzling Dallas Cowboys,
who look so good on paper and
so erratic on the field, have
loolted sharp in the regular
.....,.. and failed in the
playoffs. N.,. they're even
IOIIog their relll!lar aeason
touch. They were trounced by
the Minnesota Vlklnga, 54-13,
Sunday and were dumped out of
fire! place in the NFC Eastern
Divtaion by St. Louis in the only
majll" change in pro footbaU's
six divlaionJ.
The Vlklnga ran CraiB Morton
out of the game in the
first half and then sacked his auccesaor, Roger
Staubach, seven times while
Ed Sharockman led the
defensive effort by running
back a blocked punt and a
Morton pass fer touchdowns.
What was expected to be a
close game turned wt to be the
worst defeat in Cowboy history.
In four of the divisions-Los
Angeles in the NFC West;

r------------------------------------------

BY JACK O'IIIUAN
:.
NEW YORK - First sign of
;: winter : Jules Fodell announced
• his New
Year's
Eve
Copacabana prices : $25 and PI!
per penon .... Bdwy. prostles
dropped their prices .... U. S.
•~ DavlsCuppen Bob !Jltz &amp;Stan
~ Smith
joined the Pepsi
~ Generation the Pepsi
;
;
:

Nejo and Robbie Parker,
Middleport, were wee)lend
R~ests
ol their great·
grandparenta, Mr. and Mrs.
Ney carpenter· '!belr parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. l!obert Parker
and Cindy Joined them ot the
carpenter home on &amp;lnday.
Mr. Cecil Dwelley, Ortanclo,
Fla., llflODt a lew clays here
with his aoM~n-law and
dangblerfl, Mr. and Mrs. Cay
•..•,; ... Jordan, Barbarund Dale, and
. :,·
Mr. and Mrs. Granville Stout,
Jimmie and George.
Deaole
Perry,
Ellen
Facemyre, lllcldl and Ronl
Plekett, and Linda McComas,
visi!td relatives in tha Dayton
area over !he weekend.
Mrs. Ney Carpenter and
daughter, Mrs. Martha Mays
vtal!td with a friend, Mrs.
Charles Fuller, New Plymouth,
and were Joined by other
frlencb, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Faulkner, Athens.
Betty Miller, llebbardVille,
called on Murl Galsway. Mrs.
Eva McKnight, who Ia moving
to Columbus fer the winter, 81so
caUed at the Galaway home.
Kenneth Erickson visi!td his
father, Hamilton Erickson,
near Clinton, Mo., and helped

ly llUCE IIOSSAT
NEA Washington Cor......,dent

'·

'

News, Event

DallasBo.mbed54·1

him celebrat, hla 74th birthday. Included Maxine and -Gloria
Mrs. WiUlan1 Thomas and Haniog, Vivian Gaston, f:llie
llister, Mrs. Fo)'e Kalb,calied to · McVJy, E;mma Whittingt~n ,
see Mrs. Faye Jordan, who was Joann Stout, Minnie Irvin,
visiting her son, Mendal Jordan Wan&lt;la Burke, Sue LoodneJ •
and family.
Mary Loudner, Mary and Helen
Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly Peck and the demonJtrator,
and fanilly were hosta to a Glsdene Ryl!ll.
cookout on Saturds)' evening fer
A family dinner in bon« of
her relatives lncluding Mr. and the ~irthday of illrs. Goldie
Mrs. Harley Haning, Mr. and Gllloglywasbeldatthehomeof
Mra. Marvin Whtte, Denise and Mr. and Mrs. ceell Gillogly and
Brlari, Mrs. Helen Johnson, Mr. family where Mrs. Gillogly also
and Mrs,' Gene Lambert, lives. Others who ,..,. gueata
l'&lt;lllleroy. Mr. and Mrs. ken· included Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
neth(lroverailddaughlerfi, Joy Crabtree, Russell and Kevin
and Jennifer, Cheater, llnd Mr. Crabtree, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
and Mrs. Carl MornlitC. Elyria. Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
Milia Helen Peek, daughter of local; Mrs. llernlce McKnl8ht,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and a Sllaron and Christie, and Mr.
1969 graduate 'of Alexander and Mrs. Roger McKnilht,
High School, haa been accepted Danny, Randy and Darrln,
by the U. S. Air Force and wiD Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
reportsoonfcrbaslctraininKat Frazier, Danny and Jerry,
Lackland Air Force Base, San Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Antonio, Texas.
· Paul Gaston, Lois, Lesh 1111d
Mrs. OruziiJa Woodrum and Joe, Albany.
Mrs. Mae McLead, Albany,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Burnette,
accompanied Mrs. Ma•tha Charleston, W.Va., v!Jdted her
Mays to Athens rec&lt;mUy where brother and sister-In-law, Mr.
they were busineas vtaltora.
and Mrs. Webster Facemyre,
Mr. and Mrs. George Ragan, local, over the weekend.
Wilkesville, were Sunday
dinner guesta of Mr. and Mrs. - - - - - - - - Tom Fauber and sons. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Stevens and
Q-Whllt onlmol if tht
children, Chillioothe, were source of co!rim1
weekend guests at the Fauber A- The Atlantic stur&amp;eo~ .
The average female pro·
home.
duces
in excus of 1.5 mil·
Mrs. Esther Peck entertained Uon eggs;
prepared and
with a Stanley Party on salted, these are known as
Thursday evening. Her guesta caviar.

Your
Insurance
Agent

Dale Warner

PolicJ. is

tailored to needs.
Whether you want auto,
life or homeowners insurance, we will design
a policy to fit your individual requirements ...
Discuss your specific
needs with us.

~"1-114 Court St. ·
Poft.ervy

SAINTE • NOM · LA .
BRETCIIE, France (UPI) Briton Tony Jacklin won
Champions golf tournament
with a 2111 total, beating Arnold
Palmer and Spain's Ramon
Solll by one strok.,,

SYDNEY (UP!) -England's
PllliiBURGH (UP!) - Ve- Briar. Barnes won the WUls
teran Ancly Ba!hi1!t ligned Masters tournament by a
willl PI~ of Ule National stroke wl.th a 288 total.

•

Need an extra paydtzy
tlds-month ?
•• •pidc up the plwne
Cllll

�.... ---- ..... -- -· ... - - -.--

..,......,_...,_..._ ... . .,. .... '*- ,.,.::;:___ . .___ • .... ... . . . • ..

~ ....

·· ··~ ·~·-. -"" - -. ..... ......... "'~....... ...

6&gt; . . . . _

rlllii..AII!all1•iii'S'$\~"'~

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

.

•

S- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport·l'omll-oy, 0 ., Oct.l9, 19'10

t - The Deily Sentlnei,MI&amp;Ieport·Pam...or. o.. Oct. It, 1970

8FIUCE Ell

BAT ·

"Toke That

Carpenter

. . and That!"

'Live' Candidate
Vs. Trite TV Spots

~
~

.
•
,

WASHINGTON (NEA)
A lot ol sage \fpes are saying television Is running away
with the political show these days, but in important ways
they're overstating th~&gt;-case.
Fred Dutton, former Kennedy aide busy these days try in&amp; to help New York Democrals sell governorship nominee
Artbur G'oldber~'s rather cumbersome personality, says
telev!Jion Is taking M to 80 per cent o! many campaign
budgets this year--a new high.
In California, they've been saying for at least lour years
that In that sprawling stale the campaign "begins on the
tube at 6 o'clock every evening."
No question about it, that's where the big money is going.
No question, either, that the art ol the paid political commercial has reached a peak of sophistication. Everybody is
hiring the acknowledged specialists like Charles Guggenheim, who has gained a reputation for excellence that makes
him sort of the Allred Hitchcock of political film.
Yel, after five weeks on the road Viewing various key
Senate and governorship campaigns, I've concluded that
the best efforts are being made by those who know how to
work their states in person.
Among these, so far, are Sen. Edward Kennedy of Mas·
sachusetts and Govs. Nelson Rockefeller of New York and
Francis Sargent of Massachusetts. None of these fellows
neglects the tube. Obvious!~ , Rockefeller and Kennedy can
ana do hire the best televiSIOn masters. But they go beyond.
Says a Kennedy aide :
"He's our biggest asset. The most important thing is
where he is today, tomorrow and the next day."
Obviously, it's the same for that veteran battery-charger,
Rockefeller. When anybody ~auging his political future says
"great campaigner" he isn t talking about his fancy television spots but the man himself. -what Rocky has that
shows all the time is lo,·e of the game. You don't have to
paekage it for the screen, and anyway it's better in the
flesh.
" If you like people and like problems, this is the business
to be in," says the governor.
In Tennessee, beleaguered old Sen. Albert Gore, fighting
for survival, has some of the juiciest television stuff ever
put on, showing him playing checkers with oldsters in his
home town county square and meeting an ancient chap who
says he told the senator six years ago he hoped he'd live
long enough to vote for him once more. The man winds up
saying: "Well, Albert, here I am."
Good show, Brother Guggenheim. Except that a friend
of Gore's who watched his expert television spots during the
hot summer before the primary decid•d that what came
through after many viewings was Gore's arrogance.
An astute Illinois politician says he thinks the point bas
been reached where so much television production expertise
is being employed by political candidates that tile stuff is
tending to cancel itself out.
We may not be far from that moment when the' viewer
who sees a candidate with his coat slung over his shoulder
in the now stereotyped "natural bit" may simply conclude
that the guy can 'I afford a well-fitted suit.
With experts on both sides showing thelr candidates proving their human qualities by mixing with "the people" in
endlessly ''normal" situations, the ploy eventually is going
to wear itself out. Television has a capacity for exhausting
practically everything.
None of this means th• medium will not be used heavily
in the future just as now. But there Is likely to be less stuff
from the presently touted television production smarties
an4 more actl'l'l\ieo willch get the candlilati!i Oli tlioi regUlar
· n - sbow!i atld on informal talk programs where they
may perform less predictably.
We already have a good deal of this, especially from the
good campaigners who know how to make news without a
production man at their elbow. And, in plain fact, it is
simply standard politics updated- to cope with the realities
of urban sprawl, crushing traffic and a consistently distracted voting public. There has been plenty of change,
but more fuss over it than it warrants.

.·
;.

;:.
~.

''

~

~
~

1

•

••

'•

:,

:.
'·
.'
::
;'
·•'''
', '
·, •
·: •
J:
''· •'
"
•'
•

,. :·&lt;~· ·."·: . '.
•:·· :;'.
'·'.

~-

...···:.:·

r-·-----------.. ---------------1

!Helen Help Us!
I

Not a Good Word for Cigarettes

I

t

By Helen Bottel

Smokers, You Pollute the Air

1

WOMEN'S LIB MOST
POPULAR FALL TOPIC
Dear Helen :
SummaUon time again. What
topic• hit the popularity button
this fall' Which of the burning
questions in your column
brought m.,t response from
readers ? - A.T.

storm lroop angle for publicity
purposes, so that the movement
ly LAWRENCE E. LAMI, M.D.
wiD get enough attenUon to
bring about needed reforms.
Bra-burning and picketing all· What do you think Is the Automobiles? Factories? No! other pollutanlll, such as polsoo Is removed, the tla·
male bars DO hook the major source of pollution of Cigarettes win by a country tars, and there are pollulalttl sues are healtbler and func·
in contamiltjlted a1r other lion more effleleaUy. The
audience. Then, when you hear the air in American lungs! mlle.
If
you
are
serious
about
than carbon monoxide.
metabollam Is lower In most
these same wild ones on !alii WIN AT BRIDGE
18 alter thefhetop amok·
fighting air pollution, your The build-up of carbon
shows, they sound quite sen·
first target sbould be clga- monoxlda from cigarettes II ~ ~~::;lea :'ore~
Dear A.:
sible. But I stiU don 't like their
relies. I am ellstressed at the associated with Increased clently. Then some people
Women' s Lib won by a "down with men" attitude!
antipolluUon
milltant, pollut· arteril.ll disease. II also de- eat more to satlafy their
country mile.
I think men are the greattst
inl ltia lungs with cigarette creases the abiUty of the oral uree or nervous habit.
And, not •urprisingly, ladies things that evar happened to
smoke.
blood to carry oxygen. When The way to avoid 181Dlng
agaillllt total liberation out- women, and U~ey're very easy By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The people who have the this Is severe en o u I h it weliht wben you qulf amok·
numbered Equality-Now gala to work with, for, or aroand. I
most medical problema !rom affects the function ol the ing 1a to eat 1 UtUe leu and
seven to one.
can 't say the same about
NORTH
air pollution are cigarette brain-leading to men t a I satlafy your nervous habit
II
While most women agree that women bosses. In fact, if I had
smokers. Nonsmokers In the confusion.
with a Utue more phyalcal
environment
are
less
Carbon
mono1ide
desiroys
actiVity. Even if you ptn a
same
job discrimination should end to work with certain Lib types
:~ 54 3
likely
to
he
affected.
the
chemical
in
the
eye
nee·
Utue
weight, within reason,
and certain state laws need I've met, I might end up
• Q 10 85
The
largest
amount
of
a1r
essary
for
night
vision.
If
that
won't
be 81 harmful to
modernizing, the majority still opening a vein - or theirs. • J 10 7 2
pollution
caused
by
carbon
rou
smoke
three
cigarettes
your
health
aa a cJearette
11
"enjoy being a girl." What they LIBERAL BUT NOT LIB- WI!ST
EAST
m011011d1. '""IJ -~•••o... ••· m a row, night _v!Jion can , )labit.
really want is the best of ' tWo ERATED .
,
•10975
o.W
"" • .,. ~~;' cteereaselll ·p er·.ebt. · .
·.I
'
.
worlds - and tJi, ;m.rt !ltUe . l1iilr Hllen !
:~;.
"·
1 ""'' · %'~~ 32
11
34
feminine croat~JrU· Jllribd'g us Though it's thJe that a few :AQGJ
..K954
manage this very well, thank complainta voiced by Feminlsl.&lt;
SOIJ'l11 (D)
In his lungs than 11 caused the heart and circulation In
by the air in the moat pol· an unhealthy faohion. Tbls
you.
are JUStified, so many, to my
• AKQJ4 3
luted
city in the U n 1ted lends to offset the beneficial
Here is a smpting of letters: nund, are outrageOIJll.
• A K Q 10 6
States
on Its wont day. The eHecta ol a loocl exercise
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Ma.ar
Dear Helen ,
A woman has a choice - to be
+7
effecta
of
cJsaretteo
and
air
proiJ'am
and
decrease
the
vtalted Mrs. David Rf&amp;ga and
Perhapa it is as you say, ahomemaker,haveacareer,or
•a
pollution are additive; i.e., worlclne capacity of the oewdauchter. ChrlsUtla Ann, at
Helen, "Libbies" beef up the a combination. What man has
Both vulnerable
heart. They also stimulate
this choide? Feminlata may West Nortb loot Soutb one iJ added to the other.
lrreiularitl8s of the heart the Canulen-Ciarlt BIIIPilal, at
Cilaretles alao reI e ao e and anyone with exira beats Parkenburg, W. Va. rect~~Uy .
counter with "What man In his
2•
Pass 2•
P... 2•
or "flip Oops" should not
Mrs. Maey Reed, Mrs.
right mind would be a Pass 2 N.T. p.,. 3 •
smoke.
Norman McCain and Mrs. Roa
homemaker?" My an:_~~wer: Pass 4 •
Pass PSSI!I
Often when a cJ&amp;arelte Clehmd eslled on their liater.JnHouse and family may entail Pass
smoker quits smoking, his law and aunt, Mn. CaDle
long hours, but the stress and
Opening lead- • A
se1ual capacity will In· Werner, at Middleport 'l'burs' compeUtlon cannot be comcrease.
for his hirthday; ridee it, too, pared with the buainesa world.
day.
Oswald : "My first use of
II Is difficult to find any·
but wife Hildy steers ... Pen C. Besides, many women prefer point coWtt was to teach your
The 8tarUng !olaaar family
thing lood that cigarettes do
Pencil steakery gen1 mgr. Bob being homemakers. This Is mother how to play bridge
1p011t
Sunday with her puenta,
for you. Since they are a
Jenczewskl C. frau penciled in tboir chosen role and a very when we were married back Mrl. Bess Lerklna 'Vill!td source
of air polluUon, I am Mr. and lin. DIDomore Boyles
the stork for March .... Stan and rewarding one. Those who don't in 1932. In those days , ex· with her datq]bter, Mrl. Doris convinced they obould not be and other retau- at Allrad.
Jan Berenstain, ' " - comic should make certain they find a ports ail thought they were MarU of Chester recemly.
allowed In crowded publle
Mill Oelia McCoy llflODt a
panels perk up Good husband who agrees on their far too good to bother with Mr. and Mrl. Dale Newland of places. After all, over hall ol recent weekend with her
Housekeeping magazine, have a career aims. A woman mathematical valuation. In Kansu spent eevero1 dayo with lbe public no longer amotes. puenta, Mr. and lin. I. 0.
Why ohould tbls nonsmoking
new book with an enchanting shouldn't blame a man for her teaching her. I found that Mr. and Mrs. D. c. Riebel.
point
count
helped
my
gsme
R.
E.
William•
wu
patient
1
majority
be aubjeeted to McCoy. Mlas McCoy Ia a student
title : "How To Teach Your unhappy state if she knew alao and I became the first
the
unpleasant
uperlence? I al· Glanvllla Colfe&amp;e, W. Va.
Children Ahout Sex .... Without how he felt before marriage. expert to use it in my bid· at ~ • Clark Holpilal,
Mr. and Mrs. Joaspb Coonally
wish
to
deny
don't
ding."
l'atterlburi, W.Va. fer a lew rette smoker's rl&amp;llttheto cigaMaking a Complete Fool of
poor relunted home recenllf .tier
Younelf."
A woman's way to Identity Jim: "When we decided to doYJ.
health, but it seems reuoD· iplndlns several da71 in
While everything else around and equality in bed with her use the forcing two-dub bid Mr. and Mrs. Otarlel Barn- able his rights lhould 1to,J!
rlartda.
Bdwy. seems to be cuWng husband ts not to shout it from as port of JACOBY MOD· bart and 111111, Vaughan, are where the other person 1
lin. Howanl Clldwell, Sr.,
down, Roseland Ballroom now the rooftops, to picket, or punish ERN l!lld Meade Monroe aug· saylngwltb his pa'elil, Mr, and rights beghl.
bu
relunted .to 1111 bome alter
has three alklay, continuous him by denial. It comes only guesled that we use hil)l· lin. Carl llarnborl. Qlarlea
•
poinlll as the balls of ~ waa tllldtarptllrom
Dear Doelllr-Wbf do you belnc boopllallled atlbe Holler
lflree.&lt;&gt;rcbeslra dance sessions through mutual admiration • card
our Drat response, we felt ..._ 8. . ..._ --'•• .. pill wefeht wbett you atop Medleal Clnller.
(Sat.-&amp;m.·Tlmll.) .... Melican conalderatlon and com- that it was a eadget for the .... u. Navy, ..,..._._ ..,
The Norman McCain fam117
•molina? II there any way
film star Antonio Agu1lar put up municatloo.
public. Then we tried it out lour ,an.
to prevent tbll?
eslled
CJII Mr. and lin. Gale
$5,000,000 of his own cash
I am happily married. UnW with several hundred com·
Jbn Dettiaoa of Rutland and
McCain
and aon at Torch
Dear lteluler- Tobaeco 1J
producing the new "Emillano recently I bald a full time puler hands anrt found that Helen Ardter apetll Sunday with
!son
(It
1J
eveD
uoed
In
Sunday. Mr. and lin, Dina
Zapata," and says he knows posiUon. Now, by my own we ~d improved our bidding Ule Ilmald Coii'D'Iil famll7 of
water to ldll worm• McCain of Lone Bollom were
Columbul.
be 'II take a net profit of decilion, I'm working part time also.
e
no). Wbenever a aiiO callers.
because
we
have
a
Utile
girl
Oswald:
"The
first
reMr. and Mrs. Frederick
f20,000,000 (After tacos?) ....
Dennis Hopper of "Easy Rider" who neede me Do 1 m1as my sponse to a two-club opening llmillt and famiiJ of Ilcme New
No .:_ I have a better in JACOBY MODERN shows York vtalted with IMr ,.;..,
inlame will direct Puccini's "career'"
·
high-card points as foDowa:
''Girl of the Golden Well" apera one at home. And somebow l two diamunds 0-3, two bearll Mr ·
Mrl. Frat* Blae !fnd
"live" at Dallas next year; and feel very sorry for the unhappy U, two spades 7-9, two no- fantlly,IJ\d lin. Mabel Heller.
swears he'll produce a barroom Feminist. - GLAD ro BE A trump 10.12 and three clubs Mr. and lin. Bad Dollfllas of
brawl to end them aU at Ule Drst WOMAN
13 or more. We could go on HarrlsonvUie "''" recent
Dear Helen:
up the line but you won't be 'Villlln It the R. E. WllllatDI
act's finale .
women are not downlrodden. looklllg at 13 points or more home.
We are the moral paCHJetters, ~CU~~w~~or,.ntng
a.c.nt vllltGn of Mn. !Ju1
the strengtheners of family !Ia Jim "H
'·
"''" the Ont_Ue
Larkinl
:
ere .. one o1 nur Larldnl '--"- of C.'- and
- and, becau1e we are haad 1. Plsyins JACOBY
•-~
-.
Bob Fitzpatrick and Lori of atronger, we con aiiO beve MODERN It 1J euy to stop B. W• ......,. of Belpre.
Mn. lawU!a Barnett, a filr.
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Dick outalde careers without falling at fopr hearts. South know1
apart.
Becsuoe
we
are
that
his
partner
doe1n't
hold
mer
r l'eDt of bert, 11 a
!layman and sons of CoolVille,
"special"
we
enjoy
special
an
~e."
lllqieal
patient allbe Oltndel·
1dr. and Mrs. Keith llldenour of
conalder1tlon!rom
men.
Even
a
Oswald:
"Stalldard
Amerl·
Clark
Boapltal.
l'lrlll•lbut •·
Chester, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
bil of pampering See!DI to me can bidden would 1rrtve at W. Va,
Heyman and daughters.
Mr. and lin. 1:¥1 Bllekley
Mr. and Mrs. Dorael Larkins the Uherallon ~ont ts lighting four hearts but a lot of South
to give away our ()edestsla Our players might now try Bisek· . .
at Daytona .
were visiting Mr. and Mrs.
two teenage daughters ~gree ::"".:.
Bndl. l'la. ·
VirgO Wamsley, Cheshire.
with
me.
-Mrs.
B.
aiJpellr
to
be
ufe
but
this
"-----_,_..,.__...,.
Mrs. Perry Cortls, Reedstiine, ail lour trumps In one
ville, Maude Seala, Tuppers Dear Helen:
I'm
very
conttnt
with
the
way
hand, the moat South cen 'IJ.( IIll() ,!i·n /t 'U
Plains, and Ruby McPeek,
things are now
man- make 11 10 trick• and gsme
&amp;elpre, were visiting Ada wi&gt;IIW1wlae,
and 1
this and rubber will have ~~
Tho btddinl boa 1Jotn:
Bissen and Leona Hensley.
goes/or most other girla. Ilook thrown out the window,
WOIII
~%"'
t:•h
Mr . and Mrs. Martin
Pw
2 li' , ,.. . ··~ .
Neaseiroad are •acaijoning in forward to marriage and haVIng tip to their rfChtftd plaeeo,
a
man
who
wiD
keep
me
IJeCUre
Saems
.lo
u.,
''flmintnl"
,
You,
-...111
1111
ltentucky.
· · ·
1 'l!olll: · .' •' 1,
and
happ)'
-·••1
plan
to
keep
gals
do
too
mucll
lnt!erlnC
•rp.u
.,
•AKf.J! .... F
Bernice Prince and Mr. and
Thea•
Women's against the fem!nl1ts who
Whit do y~ 4• -~ 'r. ~ "
Mrs. Steven Poole, Athens, HIM .
A.-.ew IIi- ,....._. '1'1114 •IJ
atteoded a bridal shower lor Uberatora act 18 If they have rot&amp;er., ditaerve PJ"alu ' lor
the
support
of
the
whole
'
f
emale
..........
women
out
of...._.
__
,
........
~.,. · - l1li4
MOlle Burloo of Columbus.
•-·•-·-t
All
1me
~~-"'
.
·
400!:
,...
'"' ,.
'"''
Iu
Rld
~......
~
n, It's much w.,... fill'~ 11'0111111 to ln•t•• ~ .,,.,.
• .,..,.Hril!r
tlir" pt,..
Mary Pierce and Mrs. Larry ....
, ~I
Curtis ~re visiting Mr. ar14.l say Aye! - _AYE, AYE, AYE downgt'adtanolherwoman.lllte te.~l.
should saye IIUCh tllcllcl lor
TODAY'll QUIII'I'ION
Mrs. Hobart Newell of Chester. Dear Helen :
The Women'• Ub group lJ not men -who dae"e tho~ I My
y 0 u, partl'kll'·, l'Untlmli, In
Mike MarUn v!Jdted Mr. and
four diamondll. WhMi 1\cl '-'1111 lin
'.,, J
Mrs. Harold Newlun and putUng other women down. husband agrees with
They're trying to help pull them L.F,L.
now"
-~:---:-"..,-T:-:-;;;-_..,
_.::::..;:;::.2,;;.:.:'?_:_:__
Sandra .

1::':

.,

Forcing Two-Ciub
Holds Down Bid

,.Btl!·'"'
.
i

I
fllms into "hard ticket"
theatres (reserved oeata twice
dally; sometimes eight times
weekly a Ia Bdwy. legit sbows)
is another victim of the
recession: ''Ryan's Daugh!tr"
and "Cromwell," two of the
biggest in any year, will open on
continuous· run basis, known in
the trade as the ''grind" ....
Perle Meola's hometown pride
may suffer at thil: The
Canadian gov't now gives
"hardship money" (combat
pay?) to civil service employes
assigned to W88hlngton, D. C., a
pre.f'ioting choice post.
Tennessee Wllllams' brother,
Dakin, salclat La Petite Malson
he'll run against
Sen. Percy
in '72; file that under Fat
O.ance .... In Jamaica, "mlnl
mini" isn't a tlrlgMtigh Bidrt :
It's the spoil in !root of your
eyee when someone f(ives yw a
klop .... &lt;Do of the female dirty·
book authors says she never
goes out without a wts; we
wondered wby her bead looked
made of vinyl.
Blind singer Jose Feliciano's
wile gave him a motor ICOOier

.... H we con get men m the
moon, why can't we get rid of
dope puoben .... And filthy
fllma .... Adam Caytm Powell
11
Celebrated"
bll
final
fnlllratim- the court deeiaim
that he can't nm for re-electlm
- by being the loudest ap.
plaucler for smgater Val An·
thmy at the Part One plusbery
.. :. Mm. night pro footllallcastJ
aren't just hurting restaurants
..d cafes- but movie and lef(lt
theatres .... A happy 70 to dear
Belen Hayes (Oct. 10) .. ..
Columbia's "Creatures the
Wll"ld Forgot" had the usual
physician m ita African location
- but a witclJ doctor had to be
added at eslru' iMIItence:
They have a VflrY otro~ unlm,
IIJd spear!.
Vlsll&lt;n to Manhattan ........
-'6
the best rock spot to tae their
kida might try lllepheard'l in
IJJew's Drake Hotel: The belt in Several attended the golden
modern noises ln a moat wedding annhersary
respectable premises .... The celebration of Mr. and Mrs.
CIIIIAln of booking blockbuster Fred Larkins held at the home
· of their daughter, Vera Weber,
THE DAILY SENTINEL , Tuppers Plains.
DEVOTED TO
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell
INTEREST OF
entertained with a birthday
MEI G ~ -M'ASON AREA
AI ...... h""""'·· Le
H nsl
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.
uuo~r ~~•"'
0118 e
ey
Exec. Ed.
and Loots Ferrell.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH.
Visitin•a Mr. anrl Mrs. Larry
C:lty Editor
Publishe-d
daily
eKcepf Curtis were Mr. and Mrs.
kturdiY by Tht Ohio Valley M• ·
Walk er, Tuppers
Publishing company. 111 court
rvm
St., Pomeroy. Of11o. 45769. Plalns; Mr. and Mr1. RuueU
Buslneu Office Phone 992·2156,' •I,,.. Meter and Freda ••kJ.
Edltorlel Phon~ P92-21S7
Yli.a•
""
I Setond clan postage paid all dle1worth, PorUand.
Ppm.,-oy,
Ohio. •dvertlllng
M.f, and Mrs , J oe F---•Nitionel
UWIUa,
npresef'tativt Botllnelll · Chandler-·111 M
d Mr
GOIIaoller, Inc .• 12 East"" St.,
•• e, r. an
s.
N... York City, New York.
Dale Newland, lola, Kansas,
~blcrlptlon r1tn : Qellvtrtd and Dorotha
bi' carrier Wh~e available 415
Rt.ebel. Reedsville,
untt ,..,. - k ' one veer In ,.ere dinner guests of Mr. and
ldr:lnct at TM Dell v Sentinel
omcw, S2J.AO. Six montn1 ., Mrs. Wayne Prince .
ltUO. ThrH months. 15.1.5. Bv
NeUie Stethem is a patient at
Motor ~oute 'Where carrier
Hrvlu not available One- Veterans Memorial Hospital.
month tl 50. By malt. One veor
VI . . M'
112.10, ~i\i
$6.~5. Threo
sotmg r . and Mrs. Guy
molllf\s~.OII, · Silbtcrlptlon ~leo Hayman were Mr and Mro C
tnclu'dft SundiV Times. -Sentintl. ·
·
·
· ·
~-- ·
"---- B. Hayman and Mr. and Mrs.

m.

m"""''

tiunt

·* ··.•

me. -

_

410 .800
1 &lt; 0 .200
1 4

o· ~ .200

1 4 d' '.200
Central
W. LT. Pd.
Cleveland
320 .600
Houston
230 .400
Pittsburgh
230 .400
Cincinnati
140 .200
West
Buffalo

W. L. T. Pd.

Denver
4 1 0
Kansas City
3 2 o
Oakland
1 2 I
San Dl0110
I 3 I
National Conference
East
W, L. T,
St. Louis
A 1 0
Dallas
3 2 0
Washington
2 2 0
N.Y. Giants
2 3 0
Philadelphia
0 5 0

••
•I

-~ ·

Minnesota

Detroit
Green Bay

Los Anuetes

Wnf

San Francisco

Atlanta

New Orleans

, ..

i
.. .l·.r

. eoo

.600
.333
.250
Pet.

.800

.600

.500

.400
.000

Central
W. L T. Pet.

Chicago

•

::! \

the loss to Washington and
remained Ued with Minnesota
by blasting Cleveland as Bill
Munson loosed three TD passes
and the Uons intercepted five

........

Surprising Denver remained
a game ahead of Kllnsas City in
the AFC West by clowning
Atlanta. Len Dawsoo came oil
the bench to lead Kanaas City
past Cincinnati.
. In Ule other games: Terry
Bradshaw threw the first
louchdown pasa of his pro
career, a 6'1-yard strike to Ron
Shanklin, to give Pittsburgh the
victory over H11111ton; John
Badl came off the bench and
loosed two 41-yard TD pasaes to
Gary Garrison as San Diego
beat Cblcago, two former
Forty-Niners, Dave Parks and
BUl Kilmer, combined on • 13yard TD pasa with 42 seconds
left go give New Orleans the lie
with San Francisco; the New
York Giants got three field
goalf from Pelt Gogolsk and a
touchdown pass from Fran
Tarkenton to beat Boston.

"We gave it a @ood try but we water on us," Brown comgave away many things in the mented.

first hall," he said. "We haven't
gotten away from being an
npansion team in that
respect."
Brown said he felt the
Bengals still had a good chance
in lhe fourth quarter with the
Chiefs leadlog 24-19 on a third
and nine yards to go situaijon.
A pass interference call gave
Kansas City a first down,
however, and eveninaUy led to a
field goal by Jan Slenerud
which all but eliminated the
Bengal&amp;.
"We were on fire at that polnt
but someone threw a bucket of

4 1 0 .800

Baltimore
N.Y. Jets
BOSton
1

BERRY'S WORLD

:=

W. L. T. Pet .

Miami

anti'

C:::r

Stanford Rips
Washington 63-16

East

News, Notes

";:v:

Yepremian kleked four field
goals as the surprising Mlomi
!tam beat Buffalo to remain
tied with Baltimore.
Green Bay l&lt;led to win on
"Bart Starr Day" and the
Packers came close against Los
Angeles. Bul the Rams snapped
a tie with 10 poinla in the final
two minutes to spoil the
festivities.
Detroit bounced baek from

Pro Standings
American Conference

Reedsville

aca1loninl

Logan ,
Larry Csonka scored two
touchdowns
and
Garo

momentum going for the Chiefs.
"It's very Important to
capture control of the game
whenever possible, " Stram
said, "and we always seemed to
gain the momentum when we
needed it."
Dawson entered the game in
the second quarter and guided
the Chiefs from a 11-0 deficit to a
17-9 hail-time load. This ineluded a Sll-ylll'd pass play to
POdolak down the sidelines.
Uttle Ashamed '
Bengala bead coach Paul
Brown seemed a litUe ashamed
ol the way his players squan·
dered the early nine-point lead
and went on to lose the contest.

NFL Stondlnus

Social Notes

Long Bottom Social Notes

sola took a I~ lat.jler!Od lead
and added 7D points in the
second periOd to make it a rout.
Minnesota's ~t I!Plurge set
a team record.
Baltimore, meeting the Jell
for the ltrat time since Super
BOlli m, aU but guaranteed
that the Jets won't make II to
Super Bowl V this January,
The Colts jumped to a 17~
lead, forcing Joe Namath to the
air in an at!tmpt to get baek in
the game. Namathcompleted 34
of 62 ........ but the Colts in·
tercep!td sb&lt;, three by Jerry

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Hank
Stram said the difference in his
!tam's victory over the Cincinnati Beogala here Sunday
boiled down to making the biB
plsy when it coun!td.
The Kanaas City head coach
said his Chiefs ''made the big
play every time they had to" in
the 2'1·19 win for the pro football
champions.
"We're plsying better each
week," Stram said. "Everything is coming together
very weD."
Str~ pointed out that big
plays from running haek Ed
Podolak and veteran quar·
lerbaek Lenny Dawson kept the

By United Press International

~::•~!:Stt~=~ n~:~:~~~ f:m~:l! .~t~rn Local

•

Baltimll"e and Miami in the
M 'C East; Cleveland (despi!t a
loss) in the AFC Central and
Denver in the AFC West-the
leaders remained on top. In the
NFC Central, Mlitnesota and
Detroit remained tied whlle
Green Bay fell a game back.
In the other NFC games, Loa
Angeles downed Green Bay 31·
21, New Orleans lied San
Fran,_.,--·
M... . - - and st . Louis
rou!td Philadelphia, 35-20.
In the AFC, Baltimore
blse!td the New Yll"k Jets, 2922, KaMas City topped Cincln·
nati 2'1 ·19 Miam( drubbed
Buftalo :i14 arni"Pittsburgh
edged Hous~. 7-3.
In Inter-conference games,
the New York Giants blanked
Buffalo, IS..; Detroit blasted
Cleveland, 41-24, Denver beat
AUanta, 24-10, and San Diego
topped Chicago, llJ.7.
Washington will be at Oakland In tonight's television
game.
'!be Cowboys, who are now 32 thts year, suffered their
second straight loss as Minne.

410
410
320
230

.800
.800
.600
.400

W. L T. Pet.

• 1 o .800

J 1 1 .750

2 3 o .400

1 3 1 .250

Sunday's ResuHs
Baltimore 29 N.Y. Jets 22
Detroit &lt;1 Cleveilrld 24
Miami J3 Buffalo 14
N.Y. Giants 16 Boston o
Sf. Louis 35 Philo 20
San 010110 20 Chicago 7
Los Anu 31 Gt-een Bay 21
Minnesota 54 Oall!s 13
Kan City 27 Cincinnati 19
Sen Fran 20 New Orlean• 20
Pilfoburgh 7 Houston 3
Denver 24 Atlanta 10
!Only uamos scheduled!

By STEVE SlollLANICH
. UP! 8porlll Writer
Last week Jim Plunkett
guided Stanford to Its first win
in 12 seasons ovar USC and he
followed up that performnnce
by writing his name In the
NCAA record book Saturday in
a 63-16 shellacking of Washington Stale.
The sturdy Stanford quarttrhack completed 10 of 14 passes
for 224 yards and rushed for 51
yards to push his career total
to 6,1134 yards, breaking the old
NCAA record of 8,5611 umassed
by Steve Ramsey of North
Texas State.
But while Saturday •aas a day
to remember fot Hei.mlan
candida!t Plunkett, II was a
day Helam•n candidate Archie
Manning of Mlssi!llippi wuld
rather forget.
Manning turned in his usual
sparl&lt;ling performance but Ole
Miss was beaten by llghUy
regarded Southern Misalsslppl,
a school which hadn't def-.a!td
Ole Miss since the two schools

began -~ling one 1r1otber in
191:1.' :!9fl_slilril ~ · the
mighty !l'~els by a ~0-14
margin.
Mississippi's upset was one of
several involving the top-ranked
teams. In other •urprlaes
Oklahoma knocked off 13thranked Colorado, 23-1~; previously winless Maryland
stopped \4th-ranked South Carolina, 21·15; Pittsburgh pulled
out a 36-35 triumph over 19th·
ranked West Virginia and lowly
Syracuse handed Penn Stale its
third loss of the season, 24-7.
Top-ranked Ohio Sial&lt;, third·
rated Notre Dame, No. l
Nebraska, sixth-ranked Air
Force Academy, No. 7 Michi·
gan and No. 8 Auburn all won
as expected.
John Brockington scored
twice and quar!trback Rex
Kern sho\Ved improved consisIeney a• Ohio Sta!t ran ita
record to W with a 28-11
decision over stubborn Minneao-

Th •

College Scores

2 .. 1 Mil
t 1

\'Y,

'2
. 2.,_ ·
··
. Gl
~".

MiJI....t

Ohio St ltl Minnesota 8
North_,.tern 11 Wla. 14
Indiana SO Illlnots II
Nel!nW u Kansas :Ill
Purdue 11 10114 3
"llcb· M Mich. St. 20
lCansas Sl. 171~ $1. 0
Toledo 20 Well. Mich. o .
01)19 U. ;I Miami (0) 211
BOwllnC·tlrn ·44 Kent St. ·O
Notra Dame H Mllsourl 7
.....
I" ·
...._
.. _......
.....,._..,_
..-nm ill

_ VPLA· ·""""""' Jl!llt Calllor·
AlA $1-1!11
'· nla, Ml; ~. Stolt lJeal
ly Ifni~ t'~1. ...-t*wt IltlghalD _ f q.· 2'1~; . and
E•ll ·
, SoiJt!t!n'n .Calllornia dfleated
W2; ·_LI) .
01 •.. W••hiAoton;:JI.a,
~·r,. ,
, . . . · ,. , . ·
Virginia
·Ktntucky
: 2
"Y, , ·~ u..J::~1'.:J::..nlillllt !nUt. 17 All\'a:t 1
' ,
Ftorldl""s . · 2
~q
latt.
•
No.
DM.
1 v.
l'lfflburgh
,"
Wllyn lJ
York
1 ~ Sorlngltitd•.
.....
"''· If
ali~
2
'

,

s

,Ntv&gt;/Car
.

"~·~~.

(\,Oboe\

/.IJoni(U,\ ,, ','

·

CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
Detroit uw ba.. a curious
mastery over the Cleveland
Browns and it was demonstrated again Sunday.
An alert Detroit defense
intercep!td ftve passes and
quorterbaek Bill Munson hit on
nine of 19 p&amp;IIIUI f..- three
louchdowna as Ule Uons
downed the Browns tl-24. II
wu the Uooa' ninth win over
C)eveland in the lset 10 regular
season games.
The Browns marebed 79
)'ll1'da in eight plays with
quarterback Bill Nelsen hitting
Fair Hooker with a 16-yard
touchdown pass to cut the JJons
lead to 17•14 with 6:28 left In
the first half. But those next m
minutes were a nightmare as
the JJons punched across three
TO's.
Larry Walton, who grabbed
four pa.... for 153 yards during
the afternoon, took a 2&amp;-yard
scoring aerial from Munson
with 4:09 left in the half.
Safetyman Mike Weger gave
Detroit a 31-14 lead 95 seconds
later by picklog off a Nelsen
)&gt;86S and racing 29 yards lor
the sccre.
Walton's grab was a leaping
catch between two Clevelsnd
defenders that even surprised
Munson.
Threw It High
"I threw the hall high and
thought there would be trouble
but Walton really went up in
the air and he made a great
catch," said Munson.
"J went deep into the corner
of the end zone and had to
come hack for the baD," said a
smiling Walton, a second year
wide receiver from Arizona
State. "I knew I had to leap
high to gel it snd I Ju•t
outjwnped the other two guys."

by 1:het Tannehill

R'ellmefll" Principal Jimmy Diehl to brulb oil every knob
and blade of graa 011 the hillside above Marauder Stadium oo
wiJleb a footbaU flill may lind a perch.
The Drst of two sbowdoWDI upcmling Ule nat two weekends
begins at I p. m. Friday when the mdefeated Gallipolis Blue
Devlla &lt;XI1IO in to lelt Charley Chancey'eo~ated football
players. 'lbe follo1ri1l(l Friday nl&amp;l&gt;t tlte Marauders go north to
meet the undefeated (as ol now) Lopn a.JeltairuJ.
Not only will Marauder fans tum out In unpreOedented
IIIIDbers. The Old French Ctty ts ecstatic over Johnny Ecker's
1170 Blue Devlla. Gallipolis Friday ni&amp;l&gt;l will r r nble a Nevada
ghost town. The fever ts so !ligh in GalJipolls that the Blue Devils •
footbaU reporter, Hobart Wilson Jr., is 8DIIous to make a deal in
which should GaDipolls win he will write the game report but if
the Marauders win Keith Wisecup of The Senllool staff will do it.
Wilson, a Blue Devil guard in the early 50s, won't have the heart to
describe the game in the wake of a loss.
'lbta apparent enthusiasm for a mere baiUe of gridiron
gladiators of high school age may not be good for the soul. But
what else do we have to be concerned about that llft8 the spirit?
Crime in the streets, fool air thai smarts the eyes and roughens
the throat on approaching New York City, Phiiadelphls, Chicago,
Cleveland and a dozen other ma88ive concentrations of homo
sapiens; war, racism, halt of man toman ... Who could not prefer
a week of anticipating a good footbaU game? We shall escape, for
two weeioJ perhaps, the pain of being human.
'!be Mareuders by defeating Gallipolis and Logan, and finally
Wellston, could insure a tie for the championship, their second in
four years. They won in all in 1967, finished in the pack in 1968,
came in second Last year.
'!be Blue Devils will be tough. They have a fine quarterback
in scramblblg Larry Snowden, lSI lb. junior, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carol Snowden, formerly of Rutlsnd. '!belr fuUbaek is 1115 lb.
speedater Tom Prooe, a senior, whose credenllals from his
sophomoro year were stamped, "Big Ten Material." Their
wingbsck is 1511 lb. Dave Burnett, a senior, and their running
baek, or tailback, is 172 ib. Delbert (Pete ) Neal.
Coach Ecker pula all his backs to work on offense. Against
Ironton last Friday night, which fell 2&amp;-13 to Gallipolis (Meigs
defeated Ironton &amp;.8), Prose hod 611 yards in 10 carries, Burnett :;:;
in 10, Neal114 in 22, and Snowden 161n 39 (the option). This Is
dividing up the job, and complicates Mr. Chancey's problem is
setting up adequate defenses.
One other inb!resting point : Comparative scores against
common opponents will mean little Friday night. On paper,
perhaps, the Marauders are the stronger. For esample, Athens
beat Jackson IU on Sept. 25, Jackson beat Meigs IU on Oct. 2, By united Press International
Outbidding the rival National
MelBa defeated Athens 4U Friday night! Gallipolis defeated
Basketball Association for the
Waverly U, Meigs wrecked Waverly ~!
services of Dan Issei and
Charlie Scott certainly has
f!!i~~
giv~n, ~- &lt;\qlorjl;!lft 1!4s!&lt;ethall

..............

.. 1
~

With I :53 lei! in U,. ~.
linebaeker Mike Lllcci· llillr·
cepted another Nefien 'pu~ on

:"un:"r"'~ ~ton~ -:!

next play to .
give the JJons a st-lt halftime
lead.
The Browns had been the
fire! to ac&lt;ttin.Uie ..... of!ao
recovering 1 fumbled Jlllt on
Ule llatroil 20 yantllne.
end zone on the

PUI l'lolrN 011
The lsed wu lhort U'JOd u
Detroit defenalve end Larry
Hand pleked off a Nelsen IIWing
pa• intended fCC" Bo Scott and
ramb!td liZ yardl fll" the l}'ing
touchdown at 1:11 of the fire!
periOd.
With 3:12 left in the firllt
quarter, Munson passed to Allie
Taylor for two yards to climax
• sb&lt;-play, 77-yard touchdown
drive and the Browns never got
back into the game.
The U001 8lso got a pair of
field goala from Errol' Mann.
who kleked a Slofarder in Ule
second quarter and got the
Uons only score in the IIOCOIId
haU when he booted one from
34 yards.
Bright spot for the Browns
was the play of rookie
quarterback Mike Phlppa.
Phipps, who played the entire
second haU, direc!td the
Browllll' attack that went 70
yards in nine plays for their
finsl touchdown with I :57 left in
the game. He hit on siJ of 13
passes for 141 yards.
" It was good experience for
me but a bad experience for
the Browllll," said Phlppa, who
also carried the ball twice for
17 yards.
Leroy Kelly lugged the ball 24
limes for 1116 yards, including
jaunl.&lt; or 24 and 2Z yarda.

Issei Nets 30, Paces
Colonels To ABA Wzn
113, behind Bill Keller's 32
points and 30 more by Roger
Brown.

'"'c'

Standings

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
By United Prtss International
Independents W L T
Ohio Slate
4 0 o
Akron
4 0 0
Cincinnati
4 o o
Dayton
3 2 1
Ashland
2 3 o

A!sociation a touch of class.
lssel, who starred for the
University of Kentucky and now
very convenien tly displays his

talents lor the Kentucky
Colonels, tallied hall ol his 30
Ohio Conterence

points in the fourth quarter

Leque Overa II Sunday night in leading the
WLT WLT
Capital
3 o o 4 o o Colonels to a 121-115 vic tory
Wooster
3 0 0 4 0 0 over the Carolina Cougars.
Musklngum
3 O0 4 1 0
Issei was helped by Darrel
Wittenberg
2 oo 5 o o
Mt . Union
2 1 o 4 1 o Carrier's 20 pointe; and 18 more
Baldwin-Wallace I I 0 A 1 0 by Oncy Powell as Kentucky
Heidelberg
2 2 o 3 2 o upped its record to 2-1. George
Marietta
2 20 2 3 0
Kenyon
1 2 o 3 2 o Lehmann paced the Cougars
Hiram
1 3 o 1 3 o with 22 points and Bob Verga
Otterbein
1 3 0 1 -4 0 had 21.
&lt;l&gt;erlin
010220
Denison
o 3o 23o
Scott, who played for tHe
Ohio Wesleyan
0 3 o 0 s o University of North Carolina,
Micf...Ohlo Conference
scored 29 poinLs for the second
Laque Overa 11 straight night in helping VirgiWLT WLT
Defiance
2 o o 5 1 o nia down the New York Nets,
Wilmington
1 1 0 2 2 0 •. IIJ3.Illl, and givmg the Squires
Findlay
110130thelf'
· second consecu IveIwm
. .
o
20 0 6 0
Bluffton
Doug Moe tallied 19 poinls for
the Squires who led practically
throughout the entire game.
Oren Taylor paced the Nets'
Hockey Leasue. Bathgate, 31, attack with 17 points.
was a New York Rangers star In the only other ABA games,
Ill" 12 years before he wu lost Mack CalVin's 41 pointa led the
in the expanolon draft .
Floridians past Pittsburgh, 125llaltday
m, and Indian won its third
BONNEVILLE, Utah IUP!) stral8ht by downing Texas, 134- Blue Fl1me rocket car ran a
measured mUe of 621 mllea per
hour .but mi e~ a world land
speed record when it couldn't
make a return run.

Weekend Sports Summary

eek 's

'lua&amp;:f

Sports
Desk

Youngstown State
0 5 0
Xavier
0 6 0
By Unl!td Preu lateruattollal
Mki-Amerlcan COnference
Uague Overall
East
WLT WLT
Penn 31 Lafayel!t 7D
Toledo
300 60 0
Fordham 12 Duquesne 0
ctllo University
2 10 3 2 0
Mi,ml
1 1 0 41 1 0
Syracuse 24 Penn st. 7
Kent State
1 20 23 0
Darlmouth 42 Bro·wn 14
Bowling Green
120131
Pittsburgh iNI West Va 35
Western Mlchlgtn 130 330
Dayton 41 Boffalo 0
Louisvl 16 Marshall 14
Boston U 33 Holy Cross 23
Harvard 27 Cornell 24
BY Ualted Press Jaternatlollal
Air Force 26 Navy 3
Salunlay
Princeton :14 Colgate 14
NEWMARKET, England
Delaware S4 Rutgers 21
(UP!) - Nijinsky lost a leogth
Yale 32 Columbia 15
decision to Lorenzacclo, a 1011-7
Soatb
ioogshot, in the $98,432 ChamDuke 22 No. Car. St. 8
pion Stakes.
MaryiBnd 21 South Car. 15
Wake Forest 31 Clemson :Ill
NEW YORK (UP!) - Fort
TenneSsee 24 Alabama o
Marcy won the $ll6,100 Man 0'
Virginia 21 Army 31
War Stakes at Belmont Park by
Georgia 27 VanderbU1 3
a length and three-quarters
ncrlda :Ill Richmond o
over Loud.
So. Milll. 30 Misaiasippi 14
·
EDINBURGH
ScoUand
Ftirman 31 Davidson 24
Wm .. Mary 24 VMI 10
(UP!) -Tom ' Gorman of
Seatlle, Wash. and Sharon
Eut Ky. 21 Easl Mich. 10
Mlaa St. 311 T.... Tech 18
Walsh of San Rafael, C&amp;llf.,
Sou. m1,• ....
~-- t Car. 12
won lingles Iilla in the Dewar
LSU l4 kentueky 7
Cup indoor tennis tournament.

Games

3 . 01-QOO '

The call was a close one with
both receiver Ollll Taylor and
defender Fletcher Smith going
into the air !or the baD, but
Brown said he had no comment
on the official's decision.
"A JudRement CaD"
" II was a )udgllll\nt caU ,"
said Smith, a veteran defensive
back. "I thought I had a clean
shot at the bail but maybe the
officials thought I hit him
(Taylor) before the ball got
there."
Dawson, who entered the
game in the second quarter
after Mike Livingston was
unable to move the Kansas City
offense, asid his injured leg
"felt fine" during the game.
"l didn't practice much last
week but I was ready to play
today," he said. "We knew they
were an aggressive team so I
was prepared to go into the
game any time."
BOilgali, quar!trhacl: 'llrgU
Car!tr, ~o completed 23 of 44
passes for 1811 yards and the
aerlsi honors for the day, said
Kansas City was )ust as good as
he had expected.
"ll's like p!aylog an aU-pro
team," he explsined. "There
are no weak sisters. Their
defense make• It tough to throw
deep.
"They're a winning team and
they come up with key plays "
•
he said. "If we start wlnniog I

.,

think the momentwn wUl come John Carroll
1 2 1
Central State
1 3 0
our way."
Cillo North&lt;!rn
1 1 0
case West~rn Reserve 0 ) I

ots.

Notre Dan!e, behind the
passing of quarttrbsck Joe
IF)'
Tholamann, tamed MisGorl, 247: Nebrllllkaremaineclunbeaten
IS ,
af!tr tak1ng a 41-31 win OV&lt;r
Kanaas and Air Fll"ce pos!td
ita sisth win without a IOS8 in
sinldng Navy, :IS-3.
Michigan got Ita bi!si often.
By Unltld Pross lnteriHitlonat
Mond8y's GamH
S.turday tOct. l~l
aive
effort of the season in
Wash al Oakland, fwlille
Ohio State at llllnolt
balling
arch rival Miehigar1
Sunct•r'• Gamn
Bowling Green at Miami
Boston at llalfimll"e ·
State, 24-211, and Auburn disToledo at Kent State
Buffalo af N.Y. Jots
Ohio Unlverllty at Clnc:l·nnatl Played an awesome allaek in
Cincinnati at Wash
Wlffonberg ot Beldwln-Wallnce beating Gell"gls Tech 31-7.
Cleveland at Miami
IN)
'
Second-ranked 'l'ew oncl No.
Dallas af 1&lt;41n City
Mutklnuum at Capital
10 Ar,• 10-sas were Idle
Denver ·at Sen Fran
Oberlin at Denison
Detroll at Chicago
Westminster at Heidelberg
H""'fon al San ])logo
Mt. Union at Hiram
Sa~~ games, Tenoessee
New Orleans at Atlanta
Woostet' at Kenyon
Philo vs. Grn Bay af Mllw
otterbein at ,_'\arietta
bisnked Alabama, 24-4; San
Pllfsburuh at O.klend
Wobash at Ohio Wesleyan
Diego St.te beat San JOIII,
Sf. Louis at N.Y. Gionto
Dayton af Akron I Nl
State, SU; ,HoustOn downed
iOnlyJ::d:' scheduled)
Alhtand at Ohio Northern
~ay'sGomos
Oregon
Stott, le.l&amp;; Tulane
Wllmlnglon at Case Woalorn
Los Ang at Mlnn, night
Renrvt
downod ljGrtb C!frollna, 2147;
!Onlygamescheduledl
Central State af West VIrginia l "'Iiiiana Slllte llelll Ken~.
Slott
·14-7; 'I"I!XIII Ell'litl oglacored
Jolin Carroll at All~heny
NIA Standings
xav1or
•I
Tampo
(
N)
·
Colorado State University as
By Unltad ProsslnflmltiOIIIll
Otllance at Bluffton
Atlonttc Division
ter~. Cf!!,&amp; ~
W, I. Pc;t. G. Fl~~t~rN~~h~lll~~.lt . .
"'" ' a ~ ..,......;,. ~· Y•.uo;

Lions Riddle
Browns, 41-~4

the

Chiefs Outlast Bengals

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Voice along Broadway \

:; management training course

:

,.

By vrro ·STELLINo
VPI Sporll Writer
For four consecullve yesn,
the puzzling Dallas Cowboys,
who look so good on paper and
so erratic on the field, have
loolted sharp in the regular
.....,.. and failed in the
playoffs. N.,. they're even
IOIIog their relll!lar aeason
touch. They were trounced by
the Minnesota Vlklnga, 54-13,
Sunday and were dumped out of
fire! place in the NFC Eastern
Divtaion by St. Louis in the only
majll" change in pro footbaU's
six divlaionJ.
The Vlklnga ran CraiB Morton
out of the game in the
first half and then sacked his auccesaor, Roger
Staubach, seven times while
Ed Sharockman led the
defensive effort by running
back a blocked punt and a
Morton pass fer touchdowns.
What was expected to be a
close game turned wt to be the
worst defeat in Cowboy history.
In four of the divisions-Los
Angeles in the NFC West;

r------------------------------------------

BY JACK O'IIIUAN
:.
NEW YORK - First sign of
;: winter : Jules Fodell announced
• his New
Year's
Eve
Copacabana prices : $25 and PI!
per penon .... Bdwy. prostles
dropped their prices .... U. S.
•~ DavlsCuppen Bob !Jltz &amp;Stan
~ Smith
joined the Pepsi
~ Generation the Pepsi
;
;
:

Nejo and Robbie Parker,
Middleport, were wee)lend
R~ests
ol their great·
grandparenta, Mr. and Mrs.
Ney carpenter· '!belr parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. l!obert Parker
and Cindy Joined them ot the
carpenter home on &amp;lnday.
Mr. Cecil Dwelley, Ortanclo,
Fla., llflODt a lew clays here
with his aoM~n-law and
dangblerfl, Mr. and Mrs. Cay
•..•,; ... Jordan, Barbarund Dale, and
. :,·
Mr. and Mrs. Granville Stout,
Jimmie and George.
Deaole
Perry,
Ellen
Facemyre, lllcldl and Ronl
Plekett, and Linda McComas,
visi!td relatives in tha Dayton
area over !he weekend.
Mrs. Ney Carpenter and
daughter, Mrs. Martha Mays
vtal!td with a friend, Mrs.
Charles Fuller, New Plymouth,
and were Joined by other
frlencb, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Faulkner, Athens.
Betty Miller, llebbardVille,
called on Murl Galsway. Mrs.
Eva McKnight, who Ia moving
to Columbus fer the winter, 81so
caUed at the Galaway home.
Kenneth Erickson visi!td his
father, Hamilton Erickson,
near Clinton, Mo., and helped

ly llUCE IIOSSAT
NEA Washington Cor......,dent

'·

'

News, Event

DallasBo.mbed54·1

him celebrat, hla 74th birthday. Included Maxine and -Gloria
Mrs. WiUlan1 Thomas and Haniog, Vivian Gaston, f:llie
llister, Mrs. Fo)'e Kalb,calied to · McVJy, E;mma Whittingt~n ,
see Mrs. Faye Jordan, who was Joann Stout, Minnie Irvin,
visiting her son, Mendal Jordan Wan&lt;la Burke, Sue LoodneJ •
and family.
Mary Loudner, Mary and Helen
Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly Peck and the demonJtrator,
and fanilly were hosta to a Glsdene Ryl!ll.
cookout on Saturds)' evening fer
A family dinner in bon« of
her relatives lncluding Mr. and the ~irthday of illrs. Goldie
Mrs. Harley Haning, Mr. and Gllloglywasbeldatthehomeof
Mra. Marvin Whtte, Denise and Mr. and Mrs. ceell Gillogly and
Brlari, Mrs. Helen Johnson, Mr. family where Mrs. Gillogly also
and Mrs,' Gene Lambert, lives. Others who ,..,. gueata
l'&lt;lllleroy. Mr. and Mrs. ken· included Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
neth(lroverailddaughlerfi, Joy Crabtree, Russell and Kevin
and Jennifer, Cheater, llnd Mr. Crabtree, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
and Mrs. Carl MornlitC. Elyria. Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
Milia Helen Peek, daughter of local; Mrs. llernlce McKnl8ht,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and a Sllaron and Christie, and Mr.
1969 graduate 'of Alexander and Mrs. Roger McKnilht,
High School, haa been accepted Danny, Randy and Darrln,
by the U. S. Air Force and wiD Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
reportsoonfcrbaslctraininKat Frazier, Danny and Jerry,
Lackland Air Force Base, San Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Antonio, Texas.
· Paul Gaston, Lois, Lesh 1111d
Mrs. OruziiJa Woodrum and Joe, Albany.
Mrs. Mae McLead, Albany,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Burnette,
accompanied Mrs. Ma•tha Charleston, W.Va., v!Jdted her
Mays to Athens rec&lt;mUy where brother and sister-In-law, Mr.
they were busineas vtaltora.
and Mrs. Webster Facemyre,
Mr. and Mrs. George Ragan, local, over the weekend.
Wilkesville, were Sunday
dinner guesta of Mr. and Mrs. - - - - - - - - Tom Fauber and sons. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Stevens and
Q-Whllt onlmol if tht
children, Chillioothe, were source of co!rim1
weekend guests at the Fauber A- The Atlantic stur&amp;eo~ .
The average female pro·
home.
duces
in excus of 1.5 mil·
Mrs. Esther Peck entertained Uon eggs;
prepared and
with a Stanley Party on salted, these are known as
Thursday evening. Her guesta caviar.

Your
Insurance
Agent

Dale Warner

PolicJ. is

tailored to needs.
Whether you want auto,
life or homeowners insurance, we will design
a policy to fit your individual requirements ...
Discuss your specific
needs with us.

~"1-114 Court St. ·
Poft.ervy

SAINTE • NOM · LA .
BRETCIIE, France (UPI) Briton Tony Jacklin won
Champions golf tournament
with a 2111 total, beating Arnold
Palmer and Spain's Ramon
Solll by one strok.,,

SYDNEY (UP!) -England's
PllliiBURGH (UP!) - Ve- Briar. Barnes won the WUls
teran Ancly Ba!hi1!t ligned Masters tournament by a
willl PI~ of Ule National stroke wl.th a 288 total.

•

Need an extra paydtzy
tlds-month ?
•• •pidc up the plwne
Cllll

�;

.. .'•.

".,

..

'.

"

•

_.,,

~

""'

'

&lt;(I

... ••

I

•

;':

•

KBrit
Studeiats,
·
.
AgitiJtoFs
So~ht
.by
Courts
25

t-:-'l'biD1117Sominel,.Middle!lort.Y. O.,Oci. IS,Irll

•

III!:NT.OIIIO luPI) - Tbe II ·
.-iel!i togged 11 law brelkers
1ft l!JIIcllbenll handed down by
•·•ll!lt ~onciiiii'Y lnvesUgallng
the May clllordera at Kent State
Unlvllftlil)' . . - IOUilbl lor
arreallnday.
.
Tbe nlmtS of tho aCCUieddoacrlbed u both studonll and
"llltalnn" from outaide tho

. ,.

.

I

.

.

'

wbere the aclinlnllli'aUOo ocled
l't~P"""lbly llllltheeuhould not
go overlooked," Dr. Klmeth
Clement aald.
''AreporlllqlhiRilneuo
wouldbeUI'Mlancedlflldldn'l
llhOW tileR oreu. Tbe baird ol
.,.._. wu not wihappy with
the way idmlnlltraUCIII oll!daJs
riljMIIIded to lbe1r nll!l ~lllblllt.

Clef••·

..ere

carupu.sto be releued acllng In their 01111
No
upon lbeir arrest. Special proto troops wereiiiiDOd In 1111 ~
ecutor Robert L. Balyeat aa1d ment.
,.
the Indictments would be served But unloerllty ofllcltliichlhcl
lndaJ.
at lbe oonlinuing' ciJia't Gl'iln
Tbe compu.s baa remained bannin&amp; dlscusllon oltho nporl

quiet In tho wake ollbe grand llllltheAmerlcanCivll~
JuryC&lt;lDCluston that theNaUon· Unlon(ACLU)ofOhloa! Guardsmen who shot and ed It would seek fedeloal lnterlillled lour aludenta May 4 - • · •·enlion.

In St. Louis sunday night.
"Fr&lt;lm wbence eon1ee tbla
moral .-ljlala thet kept ua,
u 1 llaUon,•trun r1lln&amp; up In
wrathoplnllauchlll'outr11e,"
Mcne aald. .
"I eUII CIIIDOI brine myee11
to beUeve that middle Amerlco'uooa oncl daughten at Kent
Stole werubot down In an open
lleld oo lbelr 01111 CIJIIIIUI·"
Tbe ACLU aa1d It had ulted
for a leden1 tp'oncl Jury In·
veellpUon ollbe May 4 eboot.
lnp beeouee It bellevee civil
rl&amp;bta laws may have been
violated.

leslul......,.."
J'ormerCJmlaod~leUnlv·
enll)' p, IIWtt Boberl w.
Mcne, aJso criUcal ol tho Jury
nporl, callecltho ehoollnp "an
act of a111MjoaUon llaloll
Amorlcall youth" In a epeeeb

Market Report

ACLU EsecuUve Director
Wolmauald ~Y be
bad eenla tetecrlm roqueetlnl
the tp'onci)UI'Y In U. S. A1101'110)1
Robert Krupanety of the
NCII'Ihe!1l W
ol Qhlo; lle
sold both lbe Preeldtnllal
Comrnlaloo on campuellhl'tll ··
onclthe FBI ''hove lllblllnual '
ev1dOQce that aeUOIII' of the
Ohio N1Uonal Guard were
unwarranted."

Oit\on
Personals

..,.,.....,.., """'

'",........v_, ~"'

n.

Tbe reeulta ol tho I&amp;Gi)l tnveetlpUon, during wldcb the
15-member panel queeUCIIIed SGO
penooe oncl pored &lt;¥VI/It volum· ·
lnOUI liiPOi Ia, Wll alJed the
conclullono of a·,.,Utlcally art.
ented" Jury by.· Sen. Sllphell

M. Young, o.oblo.

811iirda7· Od. 17•
SALES REPORT of
l*lo Valley Unlloek c..
M ~- ~. 1180 ••
Mr. IIIII Mrs. Bill WUI1aml
BOGS I
w oncl daughter, Jlill)' vt.lited Mr.
It; 2?ll to 210 lbo. tuo "' 11.10;
d ••- --u .,.........
"""I
17 to II•' lloen IIIII 14- SUnday
an """' "''""' ..,.......,
._.
Pip 5 ID 18; ShoeII 11.50 to
Mr . .;,d Mrs. Uoyd WUI1aml

- .• w........ '

Young, who baa been

crlllcal

o1 National GUIII'IIInlniiiCIII ...
tho Kent Stole Cllllpul, aa1d tho

"bond picked."
'nlejuryreporl, rei..... Frl·

jury Wll

--•

day,
cited "I1YIIftlndnl&amp;enct
"'N
permlsllveneu"
by tho Kent
adm!nlalraUon led to the vi..

lt~Tru-Steera 27 .ii0to30; entertained Mrs. Ora lllalna Jence,

and 11011 Stewort. MeDIIftmlU, II aa1d tho J1WIIalllen "fired
11VI/It tho woekend.
their weopODI In tho honeel
Tbe Alma Zimmerman houee, oncl otncere belle! oncl under
recently v101ted by Chlrlee cii'CIIIDIIIII.ceswhlcbwouldhove
Blake "'N
·-• 1--n..
•·· new luglcollyceuoedlhemlnbellove
...,....., ·oecupaota, Mr. and Mrs. Ray lbe1r 11vee were 1n danger."
Van
Meter
eon.
We•. ~~-------. .
we1eome
them and
back 111
Clllton

Heifers 211 to 211.50; Baby Beel21
to 38; Fat Cowl 17 to IUO;
Canuen 14 to 21 ; Bullo 19 to
:IUO;
Mllli Cowl 175 to 210.
VEALCALVEB-Topo4!.30;
Seconcl8 to 4uo; Medium S2
311
to38.20;Com.&amp;Hve.IIIDIUO;

~30YDownc•LVES.
A

-

My lood

w . ..

10
~MBS
- -BuckaTopsro to...
.~~·40;
·
~

LARRY SPENCER, rlgbl, CldiiPO"'e dlraeiDr, cll8plays
.......
tho Fall Can Foret t&gt;81cb which lbe M.Q.M Boy Scoull ...ovllft tho weekencl Scoula have adopted "Snoopy" from

returned home frOm an .,..
J~ble ·""'I ~th their 11011 --•
•-•· •• •- •10 """I Wta .,. ''"' "'
"'N
;;";":::':: wComm~
.
; _.
•~· lamlly, Mr. oncl Mrs. Walden
22
..... ;
on """"· J'oremanllfSovaonab,Geor"'•.

ChlrUe Brown 88 a palcb feature lor special eventa. With
Spencer Is Jolm Wh!Uey •director of !he laal camporee.

TENTS MADE rJ. plastic were uoed for tho M-G-M District Boy Scout Camporee near
ClleSter. Steve Nease of Syracuse Troop 242lea91!s one of tho tents which, the boys said, did

friendll, Mr. and
Mrs. Leeter J'oremao hove

17 •·"

11 wu dlftlcull lor Leeter :;d
Joy to leave for home and say
"goodbye" In lbelr five tp'onci·

PT. PLEASANT

LIVI2I'I'OCit SALE8 CO.

agoodjobofprotectingthemagalnstfreezlngweathor.

Camn
r Kiashuta Busy Place
Larry Spencer of Middleport
evening when tho Scouts biked was camp director of the
(Continued from Page I)
(rom Chester to Camp Klashuta
and then barbecued. 'nle boys was t&gt;8rents night on Saturday. camlead:;r""s
.. ~?""big~~;~
learned the art of "cooking There was a huge bonfire,
'"'
from
scratch."
Plasti c around which "Indians" danw TroopswerepresentfromPolnt
faahloned inln tent. protected ced. 'nlere were stunts and Pie as an I, Middleport,
the boys frOm dipping, freezing songs with parents "pei ched" Pomeroy, Syracuse, Langsville,
tamperatures.
on the hillside joining In the fun . RuUand, Gallipolis, Mason and
Rio Grande.
Highlighting the weekend,
which got underwoy Friday

Byllerlbal'lrbr
Sabbalh sChool attendance
October 11 at the Free
Methodist ChUrcb wll ICMI;
Offering was $2U 7.
Mr and Mrs Frllr, Stabl of
New
viBited recenUy
with Mr. IIIII Mrs. Norman

i.wshftetd

Letters to Hanoi Do Help ~..~Ua

11arr1aon un·
derwent minor foot surgery at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. vern Story and 11011 JQ!m
of Columbu.s spent o weekend
with her parenta, Mr. and .Mrs.

Lettasln Hanoi in behalf of
American prisoners of war do
help, according to lhe Meigs
County Chapter, American Red

lr.:.r;~~:ii.50; i::1 Bowu-..
u.ooe

L aurc1 Cliff News Notes
their 11011 and daughter-In-law,
Mr. and Mra. Roy HaweD, Jrlf
and Kay
Mr. Wyatt Radford apenl an
evening recenUy with Mr. onc1
Mrs Harm F
Ws.
Mrs. Roy
Howell oncl Mrs. Earl Roush

~on ':~x.

Heavies 11 to 1ur;; IJibta 11 to
19.50; Fat Sowal5 to 16; Boars
13.301DIUO;Pigellnll;Stock
Shoata By Rd. 18 to
CAm.£ - Slel/lte 23.25 In
2UO;Hellers2UOto23.71; Fat
Cows II ID 20; Canners 10 to 18;
Bullo :lUG to 34.80; Stock Cowl
and
171 to l?ll; Stock
Sleen 22.50 to 30; Stock Heifers

22.50.

~110

:.-:.s:~;::s~~:= ~.:~ k~\:=

Oct. 14, 1f7D
Sfandlngl
r ..m
ol6
MorkV

16

26
22

20
11

-

Phyllis Groom• 171

High Sorlet - Belly Boley 501
SeCond High Sarlos - Mary
Voss ..at
Team High Game - Mark V

for Mrs. George SiMon.
calves 211 In :IIIJO.
Mrs. Edna Faulk visited
VEALCALVES-Tope41.7i; 739
Teem High Serleo- Mark V
Sunday wilh her
and Seconcl8
Medium 32.25 lo
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cllllord 38; Common l Heavies 21.75111 2113
Klein.
38.

downed IJ. S. pilot !rom tile
jungles of North Vielllam and
then staggered astt was bit by
enemy ground fire, burst lnln
Cross.
...... ~ . .,.., · . ,. ., flamea from another tit, l'dld NonDID Srba*~··· '""""'·l ···iJ~fl~,'-~4;. Mr~~ ~ ~o_rman : .;-~u"t..:t.J • ..._.._..:'· .
The experience of Mrj( . ~ expiO~;::c.n:"'.: ;\'\ ~
Mr.··and Mrs. Pearl' Jaeobl $Cliae1er VISitea r~lly wiU1 ·o·"c, ;.·,1 'v~
Patrick wood, molher of slx
A parlilledlo•l1D,IIBIIIb101111 apent a weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Scbaef•'a "brother and ,
children, whose helicopter out rJ. the craft and lat2r Mrs. Wlll1am Jacobs and Mr. sister-In-law, Mr. IIIII Mrs.
_ ... 1 211 N0 1
husband is a prisoner, is rescued could provide no In- and Mrs. WU11am Davie and MarkStalllofnearPortamouth. Hop: ,..,...., a. ; 17' •
typical. It follows:
formaijon on the fate of the rest fanillles In Columbus.
Rev. 'and Mrs. Lewis Diehl ol 11.50; 230-:MO, 1II; :M0-280,
17 35 •
On February 6, 1967, an Air of the crew. Since thai dale,
Mra. Thoma• Durst and Kentucky apent a weekend wilh 280-210, lUi; 10-200, · ; Ill).
18
Force hellcoplor plucked a Mrs. Patrick Wood, the motbor children of Milan visited his parenla, Mr. and Mrs. 190, ·211; 160-IIO, IUO; Bowl,
rJ. six cbildreD and the wife c/1 receDtlr with her parents, Mr. Chlrlee Diehl, brolher, Chlrles
Boan. IS.70.U.211.
the helicopter's pilot, has and Mrs. James Gilmore, Anthony, and grandmolber,
Callie: 749 bud, Cbolce
27
waited and wCIIIdered.
Brenda and Dennla.
Mra. Georglalliel,andauended Steen, 3WII.80; good,
·75Her husband ts one of the
Mr. J&lt;'fl Howell hu retumecl morning aerv1ces at tho 1ooa1 21.80; Standard, 2U&amp;·28.n;
eatimeted 1,500 Amerlcelll In home . from Chicago and 11 cburcb.
Chok:e Bellm,
good,
' .'
9
tho Vletna..- conflict either working at the Beacon 8orvlce Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Diehl,
1
mlaat~ In acUon or, perhlps, Station.
Rooenburg, Taaa, are visiting
· • u y,
.... · '
OfFICE HOUR$ 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
beld captive. The wives,
Mr.lllll Mrs. vernon Howell Mr. Diohl'a molher, Georgia Canner IIIII Cutter, 17 down;
NOON ON THUR$.)-Eil$1 COURT ST .. POMEROY
llllllh&lt;n, oncl Iathon rJ. llleoe of canton apent a week with Diehl, onc1 other relatlvee.
Feeder Steers, 27 .l.l).:li; Heavy
men recenUy opened an office
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Diehl and calves, Steers, 27.~. Heavy
In Washington, D. c. Calling
Georgia Diehl and Bertha Calvea, Hellen, !UO.SI;
their organlz&amp;Uon tho NaUCIIIII
·
Parker attended tho Fairfield Cbarolats Steer calvee, 21.50League of Femlllee of aliD1red 111 write. Thil hu County Fair Tbunday.
American Prisoners and trebled In the put a IDOIItlla.
• , ,
Veal caiVOil Ololce, 39.50;
Mlaalug In Soulbeui'AIIa, they 1bere...,. are more 1han soo
You'll al.wov• have
Good, ll'l; Medium, 35; Cool·
bope to assist In the earcy men who are writing lbelr plenlv of colla:erollf vou
mercia!, 30; Baby calves,-;
release of the prleonera, gain famllles, T1U Is not yet on a ~o oul to borrow trouble.
Lamha, 28.
hwnalle treatment lor them regular baala, but II li IIUicb
and call world attention In ~ better than II wu In 1111! pest,
men and the pll&amp;bl rJ. lbelr And \1tlleve me, any Ume •
famUles. Meanwhile, the familY beare lillY ~Uon
Ulbed u Ina)' be dinated bJ laW.
American Red 01188 conUnues on allllhand or 101111 1 worth a
(Ameded. Stnata lolnt ReiOluUOD.
No. 8)
U'J'IC'l"IVE DA'B AND R.J:PU.l,
Ita lntonse efforts to ~de lhoUIIIid or two lelten.
u ~ by • D'Ullorl\.7 of tlM
JOINT RZSOJ..11'l10N
-*'toft votlq oa tlda uitn41:41nt
North VletDIIm to provide ln''Tbe
-.n \d:t • •
..,..... xu ol 11M COdlbdloa .. tba amendment
11 Jfrl, and exaun. ~­
Geneva eonvmUon treatment tha'ir
lllncerecy ~
... ..,.. a~ 01a10 ao ,._... au Januat)'
UOn I Of' Ariact. XII al tM COr'IIUtuUon of Ohio lhall be It~' 'eel
.... _, - ..... ltldllolal
to:,.~.::::".,;., 8 lrJ1DIIIDbelp.ll'athomlJINnll
..._...,p;oo'l'dflor'n' ' •
from Ncb. dectl.ve date.
Ia vabil ol IIMi .,
'n• =apeech Mrs. Wood presented at we ee do. II II neeeuary to
....... elder.
101111 ...
a Red Cross public relaUODI keep 1111 tbla letter ··.11riting
Be
It
NiOlved
tbe
o.erat
cooference In Chlrlotteavllle, campoiiiJI and to wrlto nut I~
.W..bi.Y of tllo
to of ~":!
va
once. liulaaaln and apia. It a
1bNH'If£b. ot the rni'J'Dben •

P~-in-laW

39.50;

~jr{s;'~

Your Pas&amp;book 5avlngs
Can Earn A Big

4%%
PER YEAR
Compoundod Quortwly from
dolo ol ~II to dolo o1

Eorly Bini LHIUO

Rowllngs-Oodgo
Team No.-4
Evelyn's Grocery
T..m No.2
Tum No.6
High lndlvld..,l Geme
Mary Voss 185
Second High Ind. Glmo

NOW!

wltbclriWII II klnl II you
maintain an open ac:c:ount at

Meip Co. Branch

_@
Tho Alhtno County

St•ln" &amp; Loon CAl.
lf6StcGndSI.

Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts lnourod By

Tho Fodorot Sntnga ond
Loin IMUflftCt' Carp.
.• ~t~o, f2D,DOO.D.

· · ':. FiN! Gift:·:
Willi Dtpoollof
25.00 or More

50;

--~,-~-~'!""~-~-----·
..
. COMP

1

N• W•

OPTOMETRI$ T

:J8.21.50;

~~-~~,30;mf:OO ";';'!~

i 2't

•••..,to___. .......

_... _1;7:;; ..

- .

. ~=.~d~=~ :.,~"':.~AIM!~

know thet the Red Q'- 1a one lh8l you can do concerned and lbat lbe IWd tiiCOU1'IIt albers to do. Plhle,

er0111 c:ares.

we, more lhao
anyone appreciate the cllfl.
cultles' 1n meeUng and
negotiating wilb lbe Nqrlb
VIetnamese. We aJso know 111at
moat people do """ about us,
care aboutwholll ~ 111
our men, but they reaiiJ don't

won'l ycia continue to belp us?"
Leltn to IIPoi lboald llll!Y
the JtUowlnl adclrea: · Tbe
Pn. _Ill, Republlc Of lOUth
VIe~ Hlilol, North. Vietnam. Air moll pollile II 21
tenll.

know quite what to c1o aboutlt.
"I feel Ver'J atrongly thai the
wrtllng - encowal!ini olbers to
write, not once, bl!lll&amp;in IIIII

·----------------------

Rtlllfon In Amtrlclft Ufe

475 Fifth Avonuo
Now Yorll, Now York 10017

aeltlbemtowritea~tbeY'II
come bacll with : 'W,O. II It
really working? You

,.....,

rea11J

-w •--w

"".M-elolt?"---'-.
Pll... Hnd me your free booklet, "How One Town Put Itt faith
b1 Just writing • . . . that
To Work."
. you'll come up wilb ~
"~----------------~-------- reelly tiiiiCI'"'?' ~· '1
"Well, my 11-"li ~ II
Md~----------~~----------proof that l!lllllelbbw Ia ~...
the llluaUon ~ .... the Cllly
...
,_ ,. ~- ""'t I. • ....,....

L~:!===-=-=-=-·=·=:::.~:~:'------.---.----=-:z_~'P...----'------..-.J

"~'"

"'""' ,.. '" ""~..,

being done is · leller«!!k'C·
Hanoi II releleq mucllmore
tnf1X1118Uon and hai bee!~ for
the pastfe11 montluJ, FC!!' overt
years, only 100 men were

__

.

~~:""."""_

10 •c:b. b.OUM ooncurrtnl thentn
Plat ~ lha1l be nbmltfed to tbe
e1ecton of tiLe .tat. Jn the mallMl'
.....,...., bf law ot t1&gt;e el~ to be belcl on tile 1nt
.........
- ......
........
.. In
..........
• _
,
to

•

....is

'fl

Fairview News Notes
Hudson and Mrs. Ketie Young
at Minersville.
Mrs. frenellllodes, Mrs. Paul
Wolfe and Tammy of MI.
Moriah called on Mrs. Herbert
Roush Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
and 8011 ' Bobby, of Pomeroy
spent Saturday evening wilh
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim ""'"""""
~ ..... -..
and sons of Racine spent
Sunday evening wllb Mrs.
Vandora Knighllng
\
Mr
'
. IIIII Mrs. Ray Soucie of
cambridge visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Rowe at the home of Mrs.
Kate Rowe and Me Sunday,
Olher vt.litora In tho Rowe home
were Mrs. Anna Wines, Koren
and Jackie, of Racine, Mrs.
SteveClelanclandiOIISIIIII Mrs.
Ruby Hupp of SpUier.

apea.
MEIGS Demolay Chapter,
7:30p.m. Monday, Mlcldleport
Meaonlc Temple. Mothen' Club
m••tln8 same hour In
baeement.
I.ETo\RT FALLS PTA
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at achool. AD parents
ID'ged to auend.
SC(1ITI8H RITE Qub, Meigs
and Gallla, 8:311 p.m. Monday at
the G•lllpolle Shrine Club
Route 35 and Bulavllle Road:
TUESDAY
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxlllary, Racine !'Qat, 7 p.m.
Tueeday. Officers to he In·
st11led by Mrs. Charles
Kealnger, 8th Dtslrlct Junior
AcUvlUeo Chairman.
SAUSBURY PTA, 7:311 p.m.
Tueeday, Salllbury Elementary
School. llevoUona by the Rev.
Donald Brtcldea; program on
educ1tlon, room vt.litaUon 7:30
to 8 p.m.
sourHERN
ATHLETic
Booetera, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
high achool building.
MEIGS ATHLETIC Booeters,
TUesday, 7:30p.m. Meigl High
School; Atroens·Melga game
film slmm.
ODD FELLOWS, annual
Inspection night Tuesday.
Refreslunenll.
FRIENDLY Circle, 8 p. m.
Tuesday at tho Trinity !llurch.
Miss Mary VIrginia Reibel has
program.
WEDNESDAY
SHAKESPEARE
Club,
poUuck luncheon, Wednesday
noon, at the homof)lf Mi8s Lydia
Ehersbach; meeUng, program
to follow; bring own teble

service.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, ~ •
M(J~ Forrest
Bachtel, %~.,m. W~esday ;
Mrs. Emerson Jone• has hook
review.
PAST PRESIDENTS' Club,
Ladies Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
7:30 p. m. Wed·
nesday, home of Mrs. Paul
Cascl.
ROYAL AND SELECT
Masters, Bosworth CouncU,
stated meeting, 7:30 Wed·
neaday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple; followed by a apeclal
moetlng of Pmleroy "'·~ter,
~ ....
RAM,
moll
excellent
masters'
degree to be cmlerred
MEIGS COUNTY · TBlH
IliOn Wedn-•·" 7.30
t
·•
......,, · p.m. a
Mlcldleport village hall to plan
lor 18'10 Clrlalmas Seal Sale

.f!

39,

·

'111URSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Qetter
Heallb Club, I :15 p.m. Thuraday, home ol Mrs. Hllllh
Bearba; pig In polo aale; secret
paJs In he revealed.

HERE J'OR vmrr
Mra. Julian MoUey of
Saratoga, Calif., II In Mid·
cllapwt lor a visit wtth her
molher, Mrs. C. M. Heoneey.
Sbe wu lq Athena Friday night
for tho 4ah annlveraary of her
graduaUng claa at the Ohio
Unlveralty IM. She was 0 .,.
Mr. onc1 Mra. BW Mllebsll o1 C&lt;&gt;lllpll)led bore by Mr. and
Columbu.s
tho Roblneon
-und Mrs. Gordonllarrla, ColliiDbus.
with Mrs. apenl
Berthl
•

Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp hove
IIII1Yed from the Clyde Wines
realdence to lbe Theron Jolulson
lannMr 11 dPlanta.
· an Mrs. Charloa Law1011
apenl &amp;.!day evening with Mr.
IIIII Mrl. Rule Donohue.

., ..;'"" ouo"""' ,.,, .,. """"'
.-.:..,"".,.--•u
.......,.

...... - - . . . XIJ ..
=-~r'tlon of Obto to ~

'""*"" .........
:r;,' .w:.=: .....

.

. . •. ·

Ro~

I" • ·•.

.' .. """'""""'''

i,-,,· ...."··--and'·
Mar'-·
·-

............

__.,

IIIII,, .llllil

WMP~

Oft~jllir;i .· .
ot

;,.eda.

J.O.F. CLAS$, Pomeroy
United MethodiJt Churcb,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
cburcb.
DAUGHTERS OF America,
Theodo~us Council 17, 7:30
Monday nlghl nttho IOOF ball.
~ party, members In
maki a hoi to bs worn at lbe
meeUng,
CHESTER PTA, 7:311 p.m.
MoodaJ, at achool; YislteUon
and Grandporenta Night.
Special program; guest

DAUGHTER BORN
· w~r~ I&gt;CFN Carl
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Dison
,~ R¢lnlon Of ,lbe ·United Slllel ol PollUte, Mlcb.;· are an·
·-'
milt;.,~ Ulllllft Ill tll\1 Ntrii
'"t1 lllltl-=:rad
., N. . o,.;
...,,·va .,
ltl&amp;t 11•
I........ tilt Kt endMn
aA"-'-~ nounclng lbe birth of a
..... =-::.lludd..utlallollltnbJ
daughter, AD8ela Marie, born
~~ ~
..,flllln • .,... Ulchel1e and 'Ci'ell IUiwmth of
011. Ocl 18 at tha S\. Joeepb
• L'l..ll · I: ......
.III.IOI,UI· J'la-OCJd
••..7n 911=0il~·:u·••t.alf.OO: a,;tu. . • .,
a, W. . \1.., "rt. MllltCY Hnlpllal In PonUao. Mrs.
111 •101 ·"'·
_i..,;,,i
_ _ • , 40, e.oo.
..,c: J'lshllr, Molly• nuy
... , ..=·
AM ..
Dison II the lormlir ~
I.
-~-~~
Of
............
..WIIJI-ultulli., ..ltDIIt ...~.,
..... ,,
- . . - - - Pl/ltrln of Mlddlepo(t 'ille·baby
:!t~.:~.:..~-~~~r~ Rldb'd of Rock
Mr. wtllhed eight po~nda, l!'o
011111.
lloll) Ill
ounces. Grllllft&gt;8renta are Mr,
and Mrs. 1'om ··· Perrin,
IA!ijngtoll, l'J., and Mr; and
)!ie. Jdlpi Harrlion, . Ml4·

-·· t if' ......

'''

desert

:/'....,""
""· - ·
" '"""""'·
tori1IUka1 Sunday vlsllnn at
1
........
111faiI .P'flllleiMII
. tho.

ali
I;Sefl
De.i;.
. ~
. ."tl'fi

.

MRS. EDIBON HOLLON
wllohrood Gardea au
If you hove ollen wondered how odd plants and t.- are
lourulln flowllltbeda and lawlll, seeda do ho91! ways of geUing
around. A plant's one chance In travel Is by seed. Very few ever
etoy at home. Some hove cleverly ...-.cted pods while others
can travel under their 01111 power by land, sea, and air. Some ore
hltcbhlken that get rides.
Seeds that like In tho air can travel remarkable dlslances
For,.,.,.mple, eumlne a "fluffy dandeUon ball." The aeec11....;
Ncb lnllde a sheath and atuck In a flat round' plncushfon. When
they are lhoNughly dry the slightest breeze wll11011d lbem flying
away from tho molber plant. Each Is topped by a feathery
perocbute and after they blow away only the bald head remains
Some other planl.'l of similar aeeda are bulterlly weed clematla.
IIIIIN'Hall, wild aster, wild lettuce IIIII mllkweeda. '
'
Some treee havewlngedaeeds that drill hllber and yon glided
by 1be wind. They can go 'lUIIe a dlslance, too! Some aamplea
are maple, cottmwood, and linden.
Some other planta rid thclr seeds like peppershakm. For
Instance tho poppy bas seed pods that ha91! holes almg lbe top
edge lnlleed o1 on the top ttaelf. In wind tho atems IW&amp;y bsck and
lorlh and aeeds ..,.. shaken out. Others like these are larllapur
Ml!!mhiftl '&amp;nd American Lotus.
.
I
Lllles oncllrlleo have pods thalll!llll from the lnp· seeds then
tumble out and blow away,
'
·
Hardy vloleta IIIII pansies hove pods that literelly ..plode
and shoot their seeds! The pods split In three divisions, open llke
three pointed stars, lbe aides dqueeze together so thet preuure
e)&lt;;cta the aeeda, leaving an empty craclle.
TIDIIhllng tumbleweed breaks off at tp'Dund level and wind
tumbles II along acatterlng tho seeda for quite a distance. Tbe
n!IUI'I'eclion plant sheda Its leaves when lbe seeds mature· thus
Ita branches Interlace and forms a ball. It rolls over lhe
1111tlllt reaches a damp opol, moillore softerul It and It uiD'Dlts
!reeq Ita aeede.
'
'
1liE QUEEN ANNE'S LACE, or wild carrot is very similar
Alita seeds dry, lbe flower cluster lookallke a bini's nest· wind
breaks It off lba stem and tumbles II lolong, dlalrlhullng
Thlleven happena after snow and tee aea1001 come
If plants growing near running water shed
In tho water
they ore carried far away. Birds, animals and man alB&lt;&gt; do their
part, Blrdlcarry seeds far from where they originally grew, even
thrGugb their dlgi!IUve tracts. Squirrels that lion 1111ts III8J not
eat lbelr table bare; aomo of lbesemay sprout and IP'D"·
'nle bltcbhlkera are burs thet cling In fUr of anbnals and
clotling of man, ollen lbeae ore freed far from where they tp'OW
Nature II also ..ry lavllh wllb seeds, for example tho orchid
plant Is estimated to produce 3,000,000 aeeda bot the biggest
percentoge never IP'CJW,
Nature can aJso he conservaUve 88 lbe redbud tree produces
new pods In lbe spring whUe some of tho old pods st1U remain 1n
caselbe new crop lallJ lbere
can he reseeding.
~
Th81111,llll ~oltoo """f"ID.elthe Vllio!la acta of. nature.

S"..fn':o"'J;t l':aJ..r.l ~~.,!19me

HAVE YOU

··

m. Monday.

How ,fJee&amp; Travel

l'oolero1

..

r-_ _ _ _.,.__ __,

~~.- .~~ ~

To gnpe is easy. To change things lakes effort. We've pre·
thodo
pared a little booklet thai might start you off. "How One "'"'"wve _,. "" .eao ,,....
Town Put Its Faith To Work" describes what can happen ...... ~orgablzaUoni.IIIIDV
when a few concerned people decide to do something. Write groups, have bten.. p~lnl
lor your free copy, !oday. There's not a moment to lose.
projecta 111cb II JQii' ;wrlll
Honcll' campaiiiJI. Of - ·
wJien you approach peaple alld

I'

·~

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.

A -'l)' feature of Mo1p
Colrlty Gonion Club membsrs .

apent Saturday evening wilh
Mr. IIIII Mn. 00 Booton at
Racine. Mr' oncl Mrs. Herbert
Roush apenl Friday evening
with tho Boolona.
Mr. IIIII Mrs. Dana Lewta of
Cllftm apent Sunday with the
latll/lt'l parenla, Mr, and Mra.
RuaeeD Rouall and family,
Mrs. Joe Manuel, Mrs. Harry
Roush, Mrs. Elva lludalln and
Mrs. KaUe y 0111111 of Mlnemllle
were vlallora In Gallipolis
TueedaJ. They aJso vt.lited Mrs
Marvin McGuire 1 t
enroute home.
'11m IIIII Sid Manuel apenl a
weekend wilb · Mr&amp;. Elva
. -------

UGALNOnCE

. SoCial
Calendar

Green Thumb
Notes •• ••

patient then.
Mr. and Mrs. Doraa P&amp;I'IODI

39.50.

~,.:: ~

I- The DIIIJ Sentinel, Mllldleport·Poml/ltOy, 0., Ocl. It, lrTO

a,Hra. Herbert Road!
Mr. and Mrs. Herold LaWIIOII
and Chlrlel of Letart, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob LaWIIOII
and family, local, Mi8s Evelyn
LaWIIOII of Maiulleld apent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Chlrlel Lawson.
Mrs. Vaodora KnlghUng and
Mrs. Harold Bird were In
Galllpolts on Wednesday. Mrs.
Knighting waa at Holzer
Medlcol Center for a checkup.
They aJso coiled to oee Mra.
Gertie Young who Is a medical

11.2~·18.10;

TON, 0. D.

1
•

voir · ., ·

C~otro ~ l!Airr.
'" o rl, ,....,
i.lloopo-

"':It::' -

'~.......
;..:::,..,!:t~-.;,'ll;. .
.- ctr41 • ...,_. "'
It~. t~l:j liti':!

•et..~

;,i,ft.'~·~ :;. .

.......... .- · · :s•oll - Tty ciimo
,~D.Ik •. Tk;iilrtl ·
""' ot 111• IIOtii,.C.o
h•• itl- •• ,l~o
lotllo !loietlto. '
•AK.EIIi PUtl~ir~li!
•
. of, o. "
.

f

.

.

'

....... . .. - .. - . . . . . _________ ,. . . . . . . . . - . . _. ... . .~ ... -- . . :. - . .... -- . . . - . . ,...-__.. ..:. . ........ ____.. ,_._ . . __.. _,.J..........~~ . ~·~.;;. ..!. ;'!:.~ :,,..,....;~ '+-''""'t'"''·' ':.ll,;,:.:.:....,.,.-.• ..,
.

.. '

.

,,

Shower ~iven to;!B~·;i;:;;~l $25 Contributi_on .Made

Mra. llon Th011111 enlertalned
recenUy at Trinlt._ Churcb .with
a show"' honoring Mila Cheryl
MeLauglllln, bridHiecl of Sgt.
WWlam Howells.
A yellow and green col..ac:heme wu carried out In tho
decontlons
and
fiorol
arrangements. A small threetiered wedding cake centered
the refreshment table, wilh tho
top layer being presented 111 the
honored guest. The cake was
served with a jello aalad.
Games were played wilh

'·a::·

n,;.,.

'·

Sending gifts
Mr
Webster Mi8s :;: ~~
Mra Hugh M Ph"'; M •
Kalatta c~ 1 VIr,;us·
Neu121ing Mr
a
and Kim
Saslnn,
.

Geoile

S.oo"'

'Leland

Bee a-. of the Mlcldleport
Firat Baptist Church..
Meeting Thureday night at
tho home of Mrs. Cor~ Pulllna,
the class membera algned getwell cardl for Mrs. James
Faulkner, Mrs. Laura Seines,
Mrs. Mabel Bennett, Mro.
Genevieve Sulon, Mrs. Jamee
Murray, and Mrs. Marie Milia.
The birthdays of Mrs. Edith
Sauer, Mrs. Nora Milia, Mra.
Beulah White, Mto. Jessie
Houdashelt, and Mrs. Roma

:~;~::s
c::~~bu~:e~:·d~
.. babless" bake sale.

Mrs. WWlam Wtuford and
Mrs. Joe Bolin of tho Rutland
Friendly Gardeners attended
the fourth and final session of
tho Gardeners and Exhibitors'
Clinics of tlv! Ohio Allociation
of Garden Clubs held Wed·
nesday at lhe Athens County
Fairgrounds.
Mrs. Paul Wendell Reed of
Newark, president ol the
O.A.G.C. spoke on flower

Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin
proalded at tho meeting which
opened with prayer and
devollolll enUUed "Trick or
Treat" by Mrs. White.
A poem, "Autmnn Coming
Forth," was read by Mrs.
Moille McGhee. Sbe aJso con·
dueled a Bible quiz wilh Mrs.
Dana llamm, Mrs. White, Mrs.
Ethel Hughes, oncl Mrs. calvin

Dr. and Mra. Cecil Borden of
Columbus entertained Saturday
evening with a dinner party at
the Ple8118nt Point Resort
honoring her sister, Mrs. Goren
Stansbury, on her birthday
anniversary .

BITanging and basic color at the
morning session and conducted
8 Bower arranging workshop In
tho afternoon. Mrs Willford and
Mrs. Bolin particlpated In the
worltshop
and
the
ar
rangementa were Judged u •
on complelioo. They
parliclt&gt;8ted in the testing of
knowledge gained lrom tho
series.
The Athens Garden Club was
host for the clinics providing
coffee and punch. Mrs. Gilbert
Cullen, Marietta, planned the
clinic series for the region.
Representing the Rutland
Garden Club at the final session
were Mrs. Robert Cnnaday and
Mrs. Roy Snowden . 'nley lnot to
Athens with them articles for
the country fair being spon.
sored this month by the Athons
Mento! Health Center AUI·

at!:;

VIsiting Sunday with Mrs.
Stansbury were Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Gerling of Portamoulh. The
Gerlings formerly resided In the lliary.
Stansbury property on Grant St.

Mason Area

New Titles Added

I HOSPITAL

NEWS

I
•

*s.

~.~
-btlkt'
A"""4111(1
, 4hl •·lhoA~;

memben ~ In roll call
by rt!Citing a lilvorlle Bible
verae.
Plans were made for a
potluck dinner at the Nooember
m••eling . Hosla1111 for the
muting ,..,.. Mrs. Pullinl,

!Iahello Wlnellrennu Mrl. •
Charles Wblie, " :Mra. El'"!
H.u:Uey, Mrs. Ne)l, Werner.~
llra. EJecta Soudeh1 Mte. ~
Edith Sauer, MisJ Xa'IIIOIIne'.
Werner, Mrs. Rulll Jobneon •
and Mrs. Lellle Roulb. .' • ;

ITIRID VAlUE
FINE- FURNITURE STYLeD

B..D-BTAH ~BIBB
WITH FM/AMfSTEREO FM RADIO

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. Generol
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity villting hours 2:30 to
4:311 pm. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Blrlbs

Mr . and Mrs. Ivan Lee
Comer, Ewington, a son; and
Mr. ond Mrs. Larry D. Elllott,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, a daughter.
DilehlrJOI

Faye L. Boyle, Mrs. Odls G.
Burris, Elizabeth Cook, Mrs.
Thomas A. Daniels, Evan John
Davis, Mrs. John C. Duncon,
Mrs. George A. Ehman and
infant daughter, Myron R.
Fields, David A. File, Mrs
Lowell Franklin Fisher, John J

Several new books have been
added to tho shelves of Mr.
Eddy Educalnr, bookmobile of
the Meigs Extension Library.
They are "Flying Saucers,
Ancient Writings and the Bible"
Graham, Mrs. Thomas R.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert by Ledric R. Leonard; "Junior
Mossman and fanilly rJ. Win· Plots " by . Gillespie ; "The Lively, Garland Mathews
Marcus M. McKean, Herbert F:
fl.eld, W. Va., visited over the Choice and lhe Challenge" by
Moore, Ezra Jack Ramey, Mrs.
weekend with her parent., Mr. Paley Johnson; "The Children
Leaellyn W. Roush , Mrs .
and Mrs. Patrick Riley.
ollhe Dream" by Bettelheim ;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ollom "Hard Times" by Louis Terkel ; Lelitha M. Stewart, Mrs. James
and daughters of VIncent, Ohio, "Harvard: Through Change Roger Simmons and infant
visited wilh the M0881l18DS on and Through Storm" by Ely daughter, Mrs. Ervin Tolllver,
Sunday In Mason.
Jacques Kehn; the "ASTM Mrs. Flora E. Tolliver, Mrs.
Amy M. Wolf, Barry Alan
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kelvington Standards In Building Codes";
Yeauger,
Mn. Norman E.
andfamUyandMrs. VernaAke, "American Personality and the
Rawley,
Hal Isaac, and George
all of Akron, visited with Mr. Creative Arts" by Joel C.
and Mrs. Wesley Kelvlngton of Mickelson;
''The
Cor,- Jenkin_L_
Letart, W. Va.
quisladora" by Hammond
Mr.Jnd Mrs. Richard Hoover Innes; "The Secret Woman" by
,oncllljlll vlelted hoi- parento, Mr. Eleanor Hlllbsot; and "ldr.
and
.,Stanley Staats. Also . Saminler'8' Planet" ·by :' Saul
vlsillng at ihe Staats home were Bellow.
Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbard Broad·
water of Akron, Ohio.
HAVING SURGERY
Mr. Harry Staats and Mr. Mrs. Kalhern Smith of
Bruce StaatS and children were Pomeroy, Route 3, was ad·
business vt.lilnrs in Wheeling on mil ted Saturday to Mount ,
Saturday.
Carmel Hospital, Columbus for '
hip surgery . She was 'ac ~ ·
216_E. 2nd
Pomeroy
companied to Columbus by her
· Phone m-s.u
sister, Mrs. !llarles Kessinger.
FAIRVIEW NEWS

News, Notes

'*""·•

~ ~r;:, C&lt;llltribu~ to the GtldweU, a guest, being lbe named ·,.were Ura, Lei)ra!
eport Firemen 1 building winners. Several bwnorous . . . . Mrs. Rlllill Hntlnl, .
lund baa bee:omade by the Busy re1dlnge were given and Mrs. Pearl Hoflrilall, Mre. ;

prlzea being won by Mri
Rlchlrd R,ooenbaliiD, Mrs. ~
&amp;bo, Mrs. Dtvid Goodwin and
Mila MeLauglllln. Other g;,..ta
......, Mrs. Robert Elberfeld
Mtl. Karl Kraulter M '
Kenneth McLaughlin
Thomas and u..
y

Exhibitors' Clinic Attended

Dinner at Resort

Mn. Iva Til'..,.,»..

. 2-HOUR .

.CLEANING''

B906W • THE HART
D•stm ct ove Contemporar y st yl ed cabr net m
gen u in ~ od-fm rshed Walnut ven eers and sel ect
hardw ood so lrds. Fea tures 32- watt peak musrc
power amplrfot:H . Specoal Custom · Mat•c 4· speed

record changer ; tape •nout/output jacks plus
proviSIOn for opi!Onal Zenith
extension spea ke rs w1th op tiOnal adapter k11.

l

er·::~:,:~;,::·,::::~:n Soundl
Pr o~ odo5 t11e l•nest '" S tereo f M p lu s con ve rllional
h' l! h· f•delltv FM IA M rect~ ho n . FM AFC tor dloh ·
l ree FM- bv olt·m FMIA M an tennas

e

DUAL-CHANNEL AUDIO AMPLI FICATION

SYSTEM

~()()
.
'

.

·. ·.:~

ZENITH QUALITY SPEAKER SYSTEM
~ ea t ures

two 9·· oval wooler5
B ro ~ d Ran11e

t y ~ 1w~t ers

~tn d

1wo 3'k ' (One ·
70 to

res po n~e o;~l

13.000 H1 .

'

'

.... _

,,·.· ~
.

"I

' '

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON;S
CLEANERS

Mrs . Russell Roush and

daughter, Nancy, attended the
wedding of Miss Shirley Hudson
and Ronald Stephenson st the
Racine BapUst Church Sunday
afternoon. 'nley aJso called on
Mrs. Edna Roush at Racine
enroute home.
SUPPER PLANNEII
A chicken supper will he
served by the Wilkesville
Presbyterian Church Ladies
Circle on Saturday at the
Pythlan Sisters haU, Main st.,
WllkesvWe. Serving will begin
at 4 p. m.

Ingels Furniture
992· 2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
MIDDLEPORT

�;

.. .'•.

".,

..

'.

"

•

_.,,

~

""'

'

&lt;(I

... ••

I

•

;':

•

KBrit
Studeiats,
·
.
AgitiJtoFs
So~ht
.by
Courts
25

t-:-'l'biD1117Sominel,.Middle!lort.Y. O.,Oci. IS,Irll

•

III!:NT.OIIIO luPI) - Tbe II ·
.-iel!i togged 11 law brelkers
1ft l!JIIcllbenll handed down by
•·•ll!lt ~onciiiii'Y lnvesUgallng
the May clllordera at Kent State
Unlvllftlil)' . . - IOUilbl lor
arreallnday.
.
Tbe nlmtS of tho aCCUieddoacrlbed u both studonll and
"llltalnn" from outaide tho

. ,.

.

I

.

.

'

wbere the aclinlnllli'aUOo ocled
l't~P"""lbly llllltheeuhould not
go overlooked," Dr. Klmeth
Clement aald.
''AreporlllqlhiRilneuo
wouldbeUI'Mlancedlflldldn'l
llhOW tileR oreu. Tbe baird ol
.,.._. wu not wihappy with
the way idmlnlltraUCIII oll!daJs
riljMIIIded to lbe1r nll!l ~lllblllt.

Clef••·

..ere

carupu.sto be releued acllng In their 01111
No
upon lbeir arrest. Special proto troops wereiiiiDOd In 1111 ~
ecutor Robert L. Balyeat aa1d ment.
,.
the Indictments would be served But unloerllty ofllcltliichlhcl
lndaJ.
at lbe oonlinuing' ciJia't Gl'iln
Tbe compu.s baa remained bannin&amp; dlscusllon oltho nporl

quiet In tho wake ollbe grand llllltheAmerlcanCivll~
JuryC&lt;lDCluston that theNaUon· Unlon(ACLU)ofOhloa! Guardsmen who shot and ed It would seek fedeloal lnterlillled lour aludenta May 4 - • · •·enlion.

In St. Louis sunday night.
"Fr&lt;lm wbence eon1ee tbla
moral .-ljlala thet kept ua,
u 1 llaUon,•trun r1lln&amp; up In
wrathoplnllauchlll'outr11e,"
Mcne aald. .
"I eUII CIIIDOI brine myee11
to beUeve that middle Amerlco'uooa oncl daughten at Kent
Stole werubot down In an open
lleld oo lbelr 01111 CIJIIIIUI·"
Tbe ACLU aa1d It had ulted
for a leden1 tp'oncl Jury In·
veellpUon ollbe May 4 eboot.
lnp beeouee It bellevee civil
rl&amp;bta laws may have been
violated.

leslul......,.."
J'ormerCJmlaod~leUnlv·
enll)' p, IIWtt Boberl w.
Mcne, aJso criUcal ol tho Jury
nporl, callecltho ehoollnp "an
act of a111MjoaUon llaloll
Amorlcall youth" In a epeeeb

Market Report

ACLU EsecuUve Director
Wolmauald ~Y be
bad eenla tetecrlm roqueetlnl
the tp'onci)UI'Y In U. S. A1101'110)1
Robert Krupanety of the
NCII'Ihe!1l W
ol Qhlo; lle
sold both lbe Preeldtnllal
Comrnlaloo on campuellhl'tll ··
onclthe FBI ''hove lllblllnual '
ev1dOQce that aeUOIII' of the
Ohio N1Uonal Guard were
unwarranted."

Oit\on
Personals

..,.,.....,.., """'

'",........v_, ~"'

n.

Tbe reeulta ol tho I&amp;Gi)l tnveetlpUon, during wldcb the
15-member panel queeUCIIIed SGO
penooe oncl pored &lt;¥VI/It volum· ·
lnOUI liiPOi Ia, Wll alJed the
conclullono of a·,.,Utlcally art.
ented" Jury by.· Sen. Sllphell

M. Young, o.oblo.

811iirda7· Od. 17•
SALES REPORT of
l*lo Valley Unlloek c..
M ~- ~. 1180 ••
Mr. IIIII Mrs. Bill WUI1aml
BOGS I
w oncl daughter, Jlill)' vt.lited Mr.
It; 2?ll to 210 lbo. tuo "' 11.10;
d ••- --u .,.........
"""I
17 to II•' lloen IIIII 14- SUnday
an """' "''""' ..,.......,
._.
Pip 5 ID 18; ShoeII 11.50 to
Mr . .;,d Mrs. Uoyd WUI1aml

- .• w........ '

Young, who baa been

crlllcal

o1 National GUIII'IIInlniiiCIII ...
tho Kent Stole Cllllpul, aa1d tho

"bond picked."
'nlejuryreporl, rei..... Frl·

jury Wll

--•

day,
cited "I1YIIftlndnl&amp;enct
"'N
permlsllveneu"
by tho Kent
adm!nlalraUon led to the vi..

lt~Tru-Steera 27 .ii0to30; entertained Mrs. Ora lllalna Jence,

and 11011 Stewort. MeDIIftmlU, II aa1d tho J1WIIalllen "fired
11VI/It tho woekend.
their weopODI In tho honeel
Tbe Alma Zimmerman houee, oncl otncere belle! oncl under
recently v101ted by Chlrlee cii'CIIIDIIIII.ceswhlcbwouldhove
Blake "'N
·-• 1--n..
•·· new luglcollyceuoedlhemlnbellove
...,....., ·oecupaota, Mr. and Mrs. Ray lbe1r 11vee were 1n danger."
Van
Meter
eon.
We•. ~~-------. .
we1eome
them and
back 111
Clllton

Heifers 211 to 211.50; Baby Beel21
to 38; Fat Cowl 17 to IUO;
Canuen 14 to 21 ; Bullo 19 to
:IUO;
Mllli Cowl 175 to 210.
VEALCALVEB-Topo4!.30;
Seconcl8 to 4uo; Medium S2
311
to38.20;Com.&amp;Hve.IIIDIUO;

~30YDownc•LVES.
A

-

My lood

w . ..

10
~MBS
- -BuckaTopsro to...
.~~·40;
·
~

LARRY SPENCER, rlgbl, CldiiPO"'e dlraeiDr, cll8plays
.......
tho Fall Can Foret t&gt;81cb which lbe M.Q.M Boy Scoull ...ovllft tho weekencl Scoula have adopted "Snoopy" from

returned home frOm an .,..
J~ble ·""'I ~th their 11011 --•
•-•· •• •- •10 """I Wta .,. ''"' "'
"'N
;;";":::':: wComm~
.
; _.
•~· lamlly, Mr. oncl Mrs. Walden
22
..... ;
on """"· J'oremanllfSovaonab,Geor"'•.

ChlrUe Brown 88 a palcb feature lor special eventa. With
Spencer Is Jolm Wh!Uey •director of !he laal camporee.

TENTS MADE rJ. plastic were uoed for tho M-G-M District Boy Scout Camporee near
ClleSter. Steve Nease of Syracuse Troop 242lea91!s one of tho tents which, the boys said, did

friendll, Mr. and
Mrs. Leeter J'oremao hove

17 •·"

11 wu dlftlcull lor Leeter :;d
Joy to leave for home and say
"goodbye" In lbelr five tp'onci·

PT. PLEASANT

LIVI2I'I'OCit SALE8 CO.

agoodjobofprotectingthemagalnstfreezlngweathor.

Camn
r Kiashuta Busy Place
Larry Spencer of Middleport
evening when tho Scouts biked was camp director of the
(Continued from Page I)
(rom Chester to Camp Klashuta
and then barbecued. 'nle boys was t&gt;8rents night on Saturday. camlead:;r""s
.. ~?""big~~;~
learned the art of "cooking There was a huge bonfire,
'"'
from
scratch."
Plasti c around which "Indians" danw TroopswerepresentfromPolnt
faahloned inln tent. protected ced. 'nlere were stunts and Pie as an I, Middleport,
the boys frOm dipping, freezing songs with parents "pei ched" Pomeroy, Syracuse, Langsville,
tamperatures.
on the hillside joining In the fun . RuUand, Gallipolis, Mason and
Rio Grande.
Highlighting the weekend,
which got underwoy Friday

Byllerlbal'lrbr
Sabbalh sChool attendance
October 11 at the Free
Methodist ChUrcb wll ICMI;
Offering was $2U 7.
Mr and Mrs Frllr, Stabl of
New
viBited recenUy
with Mr. IIIII Mrs. Norman

i.wshftetd

Letters to Hanoi Do Help ~..~Ua

11arr1aon un·
derwent minor foot surgery at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. vern Story and 11011 JQ!m
of Columbu.s spent o weekend
with her parenta, Mr. and .Mrs.

Lettasln Hanoi in behalf of
American prisoners of war do
help, according to lhe Meigs
County Chapter, American Red

lr.:.r;~~:ii.50; i::1 Bowu-..
u.ooe

L aurc1 Cliff News Notes
their 11011 and daughter-In-law,
Mr. and Mra. Roy HaweD, Jrlf
and Kay
Mr. Wyatt Radford apenl an
evening recenUy with Mr. onc1
Mrs Harm F
Ws.
Mrs. Roy
Howell oncl Mrs. Earl Roush

~on ':~x.

Heavies 11 to 1ur;; IJibta 11 to
19.50; Fat Sowal5 to 16; Boars
13.301DIUO;Pigellnll;Stock
Shoata By Rd. 18 to
CAm.£ - Slel/lte 23.25 In
2UO;Hellers2UOto23.71; Fat
Cows II ID 20; Canners 10 to 18;
Bullo :lUG to 34.80; Stock Cowl
and
171 to l?ll; Stock
Sleen 22.50 to 30; Stock Heifers

22.50.

~110

:.-:.s:~;::s~~:= ~.:~ k~\:=

Oct. 14, 1f7D
Sfandlngl
r ..m
ol6
MorkV

16

26
22

20
11

-

Phyllis Groom• 171

High Sorlet - Belly Boley 501
SeCond High Sarlos - Mary
Voss ..at
Team High Game - Mark V

for Mrs. George SiMon.
calves 211 In :IIIJO.
Mrs. Edna Faulk visited
VEALCALVES-Tope41.7i; 739
Teem High Serleo- Mark V
Sunday wilh her
and Seconcl8
Medium 32.25 lo
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cllllord 38; Common l Heavies 21.75111 2113
Klein.
38.

downed IJ. S. pilot !rom tile
jungles of North Vielllam and
then staggered astt was bit by
enemy ground fire, burst lnln
Cross.
...... ~ . .,.., · . ,. ., flamea from another tit, l'dld NonDID Srba*~··· '""""'·l ···iJ~fl~,'-~4;. Mr~~ ~ ~o_rman : .;-~u"t..:t.J • ..._.._..:'· .
The experience of Mrj( . ~ expiO~;::c.n:"'.: ;\'\ ~
Mr.··and Mrs. Pearl' Jaeobl $Cliae1er VISitea r~lly wiU1 ·o·"c, ;.·,1 'v~
Patrick wood, molher of slx
A parlilledlo•l1D,IIBIIIb101111 apent a weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Scbaef•'a "brother and ,
children, whose helicopter out rJ. the craft and lat2r Mrs. Wlll1am Jacobs and Mr. sister-In-law, Mr. IIIII Mrs.
_ ... 1 211 N0 1
husband is a prisoner, is rescued could provide no In- and Mrs. WU11am Davie and MarkStalllofnearPortamouth. Hop: ,..,...., a. ; 17' •
typical. It follows:
formaijon on the fate of the rest fanillles In Columbus.
Rev. 'and Mrs. Lewis Diehl ol 11.50; 230-:MO, 1II; :M0-280,
17 35 •
On February 6, 1967, an Air of the crew. Since thai dale,
Mra. Thoma• Durst and Kentucky apent a weekend wilh 280-210, lUi; 10-200, · ; Ill).
18
Force hellcoplor plucked a Mrs. Patrick Wood, the motbor children of Milan visited his parenla, Mr. and Mrs. 190, ·211; 160-IIO, IUO; Bowl,
rJ. six cbildreD and the wife c/1 receDtlr with her parents, Mr. Chlrlee Diehl, brolher, Chlrles
Boan. IS.70.U.211.
the helicopter's pilot, has and Mrs. James Gilmore, Anthony, and grandmolber,
Callie: 749 bud, Cbolce
27
waited and wCIIIdered.
Brenda and Dennla.
Mra. Georglalliel,andauended Steen, 3WII.80; good,
·75Her husband ts one of the
Mr. J&lt;'fl Howell hu retumecl morning aerv1ces at tho 1ooa1 21.80; Standard, 2U&amp;·28.n;
eatimeted 1,500 Amerlcelll In home . from Chicago and 11 cburcb.
Chok:e Bellm,
good,
' .'
9
tho Vletna..- conflict either working at the Beacon 8orvlce Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Diehl,
1
mlaat~ In acUon or, perhlps, Station.
Rooenburg, Taaa, are visiting
· • u y,
.... · '
OfFICE HOUR$ 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
beld captive. The wives,
Mr.lllll Mrs. vernon Howell Mr. Diohl'a molher, Georgia Canner IIIII Cutter, 17 down;
NOON ON THUR$.)-Eil$1 COURT ST .. POMEROY
llllllh&lt;n, oncl Iathon rJ. llleoe of canton apent a week with Diehl, onc1 other relatlvee.
Feeder Steers, 27 .l.l).:li; Heavy
men recenUy opened an office
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Diehl and calves, Steers, 27.~. Heavy
In Washington, D. c. Calling
Georgia Diehl and Bertha Calvea, Hellen, !UO.SI;
their organlz&amp;Uon tho NaUCIIIII
·
Parker attended tho Fairfield Cbarolats Steer calvee, 21.50League of Femlllee of aliD1red 111 write. Thil hu County Fair Tbunday.
American Prisoners and trebled In the put a IDOIItlla.
• , ,
Veal caiVOil Ololce, 39.50;
Mlaalug In Soulbeui'AIIa, they 1bere...,. are more 1han soo
You'll al.wov• have
Good, ll'l; Medium, 35; Cool·
bope to assist In the earcy men who are writing lbelr plenlv of colla:erollf vou
mercia!, 30; Baby calves,-;
release of the prleonera, gain famllles, T1U Is not yet on a ~o oul to borrow trouble.
Lamha, 28.
hwnalle treatment lor them regular baala, but II li IIUicb
and call world attention In ~ better than II wu In 1111! pest,
men and the pll&amp;bl rJ. lbelr And \1tlleve me, any Ume •
famUles. Meanwhile, the familY beare lillY ~Uon
Ulbed u Ina)' be dinated bJ laW.
American Red 01188 conUnues on allllhand or 101111 1 worth a
(Ameded. Stnata lolnt ReiOluUOD.
No. 8)
U'J'IC'l"IVE DA'B AND R.J:PU.l,
Ita lntonse efforts to ~de lhoUIIIid or two lelten.
u ~ by • D'Ullorl\.7 of tlM
JOINT RZSOJ..11'l10N
-*'toft votlq oa tlda uitn41:41nt
North VletDIIm to provide ln''Tbe
-.n \d:t • •
..,..... xu ol 11M COdlbdloa .. tba amendment
11 Jfrl, and exaun. ~­
Geneva eonvmUon treatment tha'ir
lllncerecy ~
... ..,.. a~ 01a10 ao ,._... au Januat)'
UOn I Of' Ariact. XII al tM COr'IIUtuUon of Ohio lhall be It~' 'eel
.... _, - ..... ltldllolal
to:,.~.::::".,;., 8 lrJ1DIIIDbelp.ll'athomlJINnll
..._...,p;oo'l'dflor'n' ' •
from Ncb. dectl.ve date.
Ia vabil ol IIMi .,
'n• =apeech Mrs. Wood presented at we ee do. II II neeeuary to
....... elder.
101111 ...
a Red Cross public relaUODI keep 1111 tbla letter ··.11riting
Be
It
NiOlved
tbe
o.erat
cooference In Chlrlotteavllle, campoiiiJI and to wrlto nut I~
.W..bi.Y of tllo
to of ~":!
va
once. liulaaaln and apia. It a
1bNH'If£b. ot the rni'J'Dben •

P~-in-laW

39.50;

~jr{s;'~

Your Pas&amp;book 5avlngs
Can Earn A Big

4%%
PER YEAR
Compoundod Quortwly from
dolo ol ~II to dolo o1

Eorly Bini LHIUO

Rowllngs-Oodgo
Team No.-4
Evelyn's Grocery
T..m No.2
Tum No.6
High lndlvld..,l Geme
Mary Voss 185
Second High Ind. Glmo

NOW!

wltbclriWII II klnl II you
maintain an open ac:c:ount at

Meip Co. Branch

_@
Tho Alhtno County

St•ln" &amp; Loon CAl.
lf6StcGndSI.

Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts lnourod By

Tho Fodorot Sntnga ond
Loin IMUflftCt' Carp.
.• ~t~o, f2D,DOO.D.

· · ':. FiN! Gift:·:
Willi Dtpoollof
25.00 or More

50;

--~,-~-~'!""~-~-----·
..
. COMP

1

N• W•

OPTOMETRI$ T

:J8.21.50;

~~-~~,30;mf:OO ";';'!~

i 2't

•••..,to___. .......

_... _1;7:;; ..

- .

. ~=.~d~=~ :.,~"':.~AIM!~

know thet the Red Q'- 1a one lh8l you can do concerned and lbat lbe IWd tiiCOU1'IIt albers to do. Plhle,

er0111 c:ares.

we, more lhao
anyone appreciate the cllfl.
cultles' 1n meeUng and
negotiating wilb lbe Nqrlb
VIetnamese. We aJso know 111at
moat people do """ about us,
care aboutwholll ~ 111
our men, but they reaiiJ don't

won'l ycia continue to belp us?"
Leltn to IIPoi lboald llll!Y
the JtUowlnl adclrea: · Tbe
Pn. _Ill, Republlc Of lOUth
VIe~ Hlilol, North. Vietnam. Air moll pollile II 21
tenll.

know quite what to c1o aboutlt.
"I feel Ver'J atrongly thai the
wrtllng - encowal!ini olbers to
write, not once, bl!lll&amp;in IIIII

·----------------------

Rtlllfon In Amtrlclft Ufe

475 Fifth Avonuo
Now Yorll, Now York 10017

aeltlbemtowritea~tbeY'II
come bacll with : 'W,O. II It
really working? You

,.....,

rea11J

-w •--w

"".M-elolt?"---'-.
Pll... Hnd me your free booklet, "How One Town Put Itt faith
b1 Just writing • . . . that
To Work."
. you'll come up wilb ~
"~----------------~-------- reelly tiiiiCI'"'?' ~· '1
"Well, my 11-"li ~ II
Md~----------~~----------proof that l!lllllelbbw Ia ~...
the llluaUon ~ .... the Cllly
...
,_ ,. ~- ""'t I. • ....,....

L~:!===-=-=-=-·=·=:::.~:~:'------.---.----=-:z_~'P...----'------..-.J

"~'"

"'""' ,.. '" ""~..,

being done is · leller«!!k'C·
Hanoi II releleq mucllmore
tnf1X1118Uon and hai bee!~ for
the pastfe11 montluJ, FC!!' overt
years, only 100 men were

__

.

~~:""."""_

10 •c:b. b.OUM ooncurrtnl thentn
Plat ~ lha1l be nbmltfed to tbe
e1ecton of tiLe .tat. Jn the mallMl'
.....,...., bf law ot t1&gt;e el~ to be belcl on tile 1nt
.........
- ......
........
.. In
..........
• _
,
to

•

....is

'fl

Fairview News Notes
Hudson and Mrs. Ketie Young
at Minersville.
Mrs. frenellllodes, Mrs. Paul
Wolfe and Tammy of MI.
Moriah called on Mrs. Herbert
Roush Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
and 8011 ' Bobby, of Pomeroy
spent Saturday evening wilh
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim ""'"""""
~ ..... -..
and sons of Racine spent
Sunday evening wllb Mrs.
Vandora Knighllng
\
Mr
'
. IIIII Mrs. Ray Soucie of
cambridge visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Rowe at the home of Mrs.
Kate Rowe and Me Sunday,
Olher vt.litora In tho Rowe home
were Mrs. Anna Wines, Koren
and Jackie, of Racine, Mrs.
SteveClelanclandiOIISIIIII Mrs.
Ruby Hupp of SpUier.

apea.
MEIGS Demolay Chapter,
7:30p.m. Monday, Mlcldleport
Meaonlc Temple. Mothen' Club
m••tln8 same hour In
baeement.
I.ETo\RT FALLS PTA
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at achool. AD parents
ID'ged to auend.
SC(1ITI8H RITE Qub, Meigs
and Gallla, 8:311 p.m. Monday at
the G•lllpolle Shrine Club
Route 35 and Bulavllle Road:
TUESDAY
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxlllary, Racine !'Qat, 7 p.m.
Tueeday. Officers to he In·
st11led by Mrs. Charles
Kealnger, 8th Dtslrlct Junior
AcUvlUeo Chairman.
SAUSBURY PTA, 7:311 p.m.
Tueeday, Salllbury Elementary
School. llevoUona by the Rev.
Donald Brtcldea; program on
educ1tlon, room vt.litaUon 7:30
to 8 p.m.
sourHERN
ATHLETic
Booetera, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
high achool building.
MEIGS ATHLETIC Booeters,
TUesday, 7:30p.m. Meigl High
School; Atroens·Melga game
film slmm.
ODD FELLOWS, annual
Inspection night Tuesday.
Refreslunenll.
FRIENDLY Circle, 8 p. m.
Tuesday at tho Trinity !llurch.
Miss Mary VIrginia Reibel has
program.
WEDNESDAY
SHAKESPEARE
Club,
poUuck luncheon, Wednesday
noon, at the homof)lf Mi8s Lydia
Ehersbach; meeUng, program
to follow; bring own teble

service.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, ~ •
M(J~ Forrest
Bachtel, %~.,m. W~esday ;
Mrs. Emerson Jone• has hook
review.
PAST PRESIDENTS' Club,
Ladies Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
7:30 p. m. Wed·
nesday, home of Mrs. Paul
Cascl.
ROYAL AND SELECT
Masters, Bosworth CouncU,
stated meeting, 7:30 Wed·
neaday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple; followed by a apeclal
moetlng of Pmleroy "'·~ter,
~ ....
RAM,
moll
excellent
masters'
degree to be cmlerred
MEIGS COUNTY · TBlH
IliOn Wedn-•·" 7.30
t
·•
......,, · p.m. a
Mlcldleport village hall to plan
lor 18'10 Clrlalmas Seal Sale

.f!

39,

·

'111URSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Qetter
Heallb Club, I :15 p.m. Thuraday, home ol Mrs. Hllllh
Bearba; pig In polo aale; secret
paJs In he revealed.

HERE J'OR vmrr
Mra. Julian MoUey of
Saratoga, Calif., II In Mid·
cllapwt lor a visit wtth her
molher, Mrs. C. M. Heoneey.
Sbe wu lq Athena Friday night
for tho 4ah annlveraary of her
graduaUng claa at the Ohio
Unlveralty IM. She was 0 .,.
Mr. onc1 Mra. BW Mllebsll o1 C&lt;&gt;lllpll)led bore by Mr. and
Columbu.s
tho Roblneon
-und Mrs. Gordonllarrla, ColliiDbus.
with Mrs. apenl
Berthl
•

Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp hove
IIII1Yed from the Clyde Wines
realdence to lbe Theron Jolulson
lannMr 11 dPlanta.
· an Mrs. Charloa Law1011
apenl &amp;.!day evening with Mr.
IIIII Mrl. Rule Donohue.

., ..;'"" ouo"""' ,.,, .,. """"'
.-.:..,"".,.--•u
.......,.

...... - - . . . XIJ ..
=-~r'tlon of Obto to ~

'""*"" .........
:r;,' .w:.=: .....

.

. . •. ·

Ro~

I" • ·•.

.' .. """'""""'''

i,-,,· ...."··--and'·
Mar'-·
·-

............

__.,

IIIII,, .llllil

WMP~

Oft~jllir;i .· .
ot

;,.eda.

J.O.F. CLAS$, Pomeroy
United MethodiJt Churcb,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
cburcb.
DAUGHTERS OF America,
Theodo~us Council 17, 7:30
Monday nlghl nttho IOOF ball.
~ party, members In
maki a hoi to bs worn at lbe
meeUng,
CHESTER PTA, 7:311 p.m.
MoodaJ, at achool; YislteUon
and Grandporenta Night.
Special program; guest

DAUGHTER BORN
· w~r~ I&gt;CFN Carl
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Dison
,~ R¢lnlon Of ,lbe ·United Slllel ol PollUte, Mlcb.;· are an·
·-'
milt;.,~ Ulllllft Ill tll\1 Ntrii
'"t1 lllltl-=:rad
., N. . o,.;
...,,·va .,
ltl&amp;t 11•
I........ tilt Kt endMn
aA"-'-~ nounclng lbe birth of a
..... =-::.lludd..utlallollltnbJ
daughter, AD8ela Marie, born
~~ ~
..,flllln • .,... Ulchel1e and 'Ci'ell IUiwmth of
011. Ocl 18 at tha S\. Joeepb
• L'l..ll · I: ......
.III.IOI,UI· J'la-OCJd
••..7n 911=0il~·:u·••t.alf.OO: a,;tu. . • .,
a, W. . \1.., "rt. MllltCY Hnlpllal In PonUao. Mrs.
111 •101 ·"'·
_i..,;,,i
_ _ • , 40, e.oo.
..,c: J'lshllr, Molly• nuy
... , ..=·
AM ..
Dison II the lormlir ~
I.
-~-~~
Of
............
..WIIJI-ultulli., ..ltDIIt ...~.,
..... ,,
- . . - - - Pl/ltrln of Mlddlepo(t 'ille·baby
:!t~.:~.:..~-~~~r~ Rldb'd of Rock
Mr. wtllhed eight po~nda, l!'o
011111.
lloll) Ill
ounces. Grllllft&gt;8renta are Mr,
and Mrs. 1'om ··· Perrin,
IA!ijngtoll, l'J., and Mr; and
)!ie. Jdlpi Harrlion, . Ml4·

-·· t if' ......

'''

desert

:/'....,""
""· - ·
" '"""""'·
tori1IUka1 Sunday vlsllnn at
1
........
111faiI .P'flllleiMII
. tho.

ali
I;Sefl
De.i;.
. ~
. ."tl'fi

.

MRS. EDIBON HOLLON
wllohrood Gardea au
If you hove ollen wondered how odd plants and t.- are
lourulln flowllltbeda and lawlll, seeda do ho91! ways of geUing
around. A plant's one chance In travel Is by seed. Very few ever
etoy at home. Some hove cleverly ...-.cted pods while others
can travel under their 01111 power by land, sea, and air. Some ore
hltcbhlken that get rides.
Seeds that like In tho air can travel remarkable dlslances
For,.,.,.mple, eumlne a "fluffy dandeUon ball." The aeec11....;
Ncb lnllde a sheath and atuck In a flat round' plncushfon. When
they are lhoNughly dry the slightest breeze wll11011d lbem flying
away from tho molber plant. Each Is topped by a feathery
perocbute and after they blow away only the bald head remains
Some other planl.'l of similar aeeda are bulterlly weed clematla.
IIIIIN'Hall, wild aster, wild lettuce IIIII mllkweeda. '
'
Some treee havewlngedaeeds that drill hllber and yon glided
by 1be wind. They can go 'lUIIe a dlslance, too! Some aamplea
are maple, cottmwood, and linden.
Some other planta rid thclr seeds like peppershakm. For
Instance tho poppy bas seed pods that ha91! holes almg lbe top
edge lnlleed o1 on the top ttaelf. In wind tho atems IW&amp;y bsck and
lorlh and aeeds ..,.. shaken out. Others like these are larllapur
Ml!!mhiftl '&amp;nd American Lotus.
.
I
Lllles oncllrlleo have pods thalll!llll from the lnp· seeds then
tumble out and blow away,
'
·
Hardy vloleta IIIII pansies hove pods that literelly ..plode
and shoot their seeds! The pods split In three divisions, open llke
three pointed stars, lbe aides dqueeze together so thet preuure
e)&lt;;cta the aeeda, leaving an empty craclle.
TIDIIhllng tumbleweed breaks off at tp'Dund level and wind
tumbles II along acatterlng tho seeda for quite a distance. Tbe
n!IUI'I'eclion plant sheda Its leaves when lbe seeds mature· thus
Ita branches Interlace and forms a ball. It rolls over lhe
1111tlllt reaches a damp opol, moillore softerul It and It uiD'Dlts
!reeq Ita aeede.
'
'
1liE QUEEN ANNE'S LACE, or wild carrot is very similar
Alita seeds dry, lbe flower cluster lookallke a bini's nest· wind
breaks It off lba stem and tumbles II lolong, dlalrlhullng
Thlleven happena after snow and tee aea1001 come
If plants growing near running water shed
In tho water
they ore carried far away. Birds, animals and man alB&lt;&gt; do their
part, Blrdlcarry seeds far from where they originally grew, even
thrGugb their dlgi!IUve tracts. Squirrels that lion 1111ts III8J not
eat lbelr table bare; aomo of lbesemay sprout and IP'D"·
'nle bltcbhlkera are burs thet cling In fUr of anbnals and
clotling of man, ollen lbeae ore freed far from where they tp'OW
Nature II also ..ry lavllh wllb seeds, for example tho orchid
plant Is estimated to produce 3,000,000 aeeda bot the biggest
percentoge never IP'CJW,
Nature can aJso he conservaUve 88 lbe redbud tree produces
new pods In lbe spring whUe some of tho old pods st1U remain 1n
caselbe new crop lallJ lbere
can he reseeding.
~
Th81111,llll ~oltoo """f"ID.elthe Vllio!la acta of. nature.

S"..fn':o"'J;t l':aJ..r.l ~~.,!19me

HAVE YOU

··

m. Monday.

How ,fJee&amp; Travel

l'oolero1

..

r-_ _ _ _.,.__ __,

~~.- .~~ ~

To gnpe is easy. To change things lakes effort. We've pre·
thodo
pared a little booklet thai might start you off. "How One "'"'"wve _,. "" .eao ,,....
Town Put Its Faith To Work" describes what can happen ...... ~orgablzaUoni.IIIIDV
when a few concerned people decide to do something. Write groups, have bten.. p~lnl
lor your free copy, !oday. There's not a moment to lose.
projecta 111cb II JQii' ;wrlll
Honcll' campaiiiJI. Of - ·
wJien you approach peaple alld

I'

·~

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.

A -'l)' feature of Mo1p
Colrlty Gonion Club membsrs .

apent Saturday evening wilh
Mr. IIIII Mn. 00 Booton at
Racine. Mr' oncl Mrs. Herbert
Roush apenl Friday evening
with tho Boolona.
Mr. IIIII Mrs. Dana Lewta of
Cllftm apent Sunday with the
latll/lt'l parenla, Mr, and Mra.
RuaeeD Rouall and family,
Mrs. Joe Manuel, Mrs. Harry
Roush, Mrs. Elva lludalln and
Mrs. KaUe y 0111111 of Mlnemllle
were vlallora In Gallipolis
TueedaJ. They aJso vt.lited Mrs
Marvin McGuire 1 t
enroute home.
'11m IIIII Sid Manuel apenl a
weekend wilb · Mr&amp;. Elva
. -------

UGALNOnCE

. SoCial
Calendar

Green Thumb
Notes •• ••

patient then.
Mr. and Mrs. Doraa P&amp;I'IODI

39.50.

~,.:: ~

I- The DIIIJ Sentinel, Mllldleport·Poml/ltOy, 0., Ocl. It, lrTO

a,Hra. Herbert Road!
Mr. and Mrs. Herold LaWIIOII
and Chlrlel of Letart, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob LaWIIOII
and family, local, Mi8s Evelyn
LaWIIOII of Maiulleld apent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Chlrlel Lawson.
Mrs. Vaodora KnlghUng and
Mrs. Harold Bird were In
Galllpolts on Wednesday. Mrs.
Knighting waa at Holzer
Medlcol Center for a checkup.
They aJso coiled to oee Mra.
Gertie Young who Is a medical

11.2~·18.10;

TON, 0. D.

1
•

voir · ., ·

C~otro ~ l!Airr.
'" o rl, ,....,
i.lloopo-

"':It::' -

'~.......
;..:::,..,!:t~-.;,'ll;. .
.- ctr41 • ...,_. "'
It~. t~l:j liti':!

•et..~

;,i,ft.'~·~ :;. .

.......... .- · · :s•oll - Tty ciimo
,~D.Ik •. Tk;iilrtl ·
""' ot 111• IIOtii,.C.o
h•• itl- •• ,l~o
lotllo !loietlto. '
•AK.EIIi PUtl~ir~li!
•
. of, o. "
.

f

.

.

'

....... . .. - .. - . . . . . _________ ,. . . . . . . . . - . . _. ... . .~ ... -- . . :. - . .... -- . . . - . . ,...-__.. ..:. . ........ ____.. ,_._ . . __.. _,.J..........~~ . ~·~.;;. ..!. ;'!:.~ :,,..,....;~ '+-''""'t'"''·' ':.ll,;,:.:.:....,.,.-.• ..,
.

.. '

.

,,

Shower ~iven to;!B~·;i;:;;~l $25 Contributi_on .Made

Mra. llon Th011111 enlertalned
recenUy at Trinlt._ Churcb .with
a show"' honoring Mila Cheryl
MeLauglllln, bridHiecl of Sgt.
WWlam Howells.
A yellow and green col..ac:heme wu carried out In tho
decontlons
and
fiorol
arrangements. A small threetiered wedding cake centered
the refreshment table, wilh tho
top layer being presented 111 the
honored guest. The cake was
served with a jello aalad.
Games were played wilh

'·a::·

n,;.,.

'·

Sending gifts
Mr
Webster Mi8s :;: ~~
Mra Hugh M Ph"'; M •
Kalatta c~ 1 VIr,;us·
Neu121ing Mr
a
and Kim
Saslnn,
.

Geoile

S.oo"'

'Leland

Bee a-. of the Mlcldleport
Firat Baptist Church..
Meeting Thureday night at
tho home of Mrs. Cor~ Pulllna,
the class membera algned getwell cardl for Mrs. James
Faulkner, Mrs. Laura Seines,
Mrs. Mabel Bennett, Mro.
Genevieve Sulon, Mrs. Jamee
Murray, and Mrs. Marie Milia.
The birthdays of Mrs. Edith
Sauer, Mrs. Nora Milia, Mra.
Beulah White, Mto. Jessie
Houdashelt, and Mrs. Roma

:~;~::s
c::~~bu~:e~:·d~
.. babless" bake sale.

Mrs. WWlam Wtuford and
Mrs. Joe Bolin of tho Rutland
Friendly Gardeners attended
the fourth and final session of
tho Gardeners and Exhibitors'
Clinics of tlv! Ohio Allociation
of Garden Clubs held Wed·
nesday at lhe Athens County
Fairgrounds.
Mrs. Paul Wendell Reed of
Newark, president ol the
O.A.G.C. spoke on flower

Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin
proalded at tho meeting which
opened with prayer and
devollolll enUUed "Trick or
Treat" by Mrs. White.
A poem, "Autmnn Coming
Forth," was read by Mrs.
Moille McGhee. Sbe aJso con·
dueled a Bible quiz wilh Mrs.
Dana llamm, Mrs. White, Mrs.
Ethel Hughes, oncl Mrs. calvin

Dr. and Mra. Cecil Borden of
Columbus entertained Saturday
evening with a dinner party at
the Ple8118nt Point Resort
honoring her sister, Mrs. Goren
Stansbury, on her birthday
anniversary .

BITanging and basic color at the
morning session and conducted
8 Bower arranging workshop In
tho afternoon. Mrs Willford and
Mrs. Bolin particlpated In the
worltshop
and
the
ar
rangementa were Judged u •
on complelioo. They
parliclt&gt;8ted in the testing of
knowledge gained lrom tho
series.
The Athens Garden Club was
host for the clinics providing
coffee and punch. Mrs. Gilbert
Cullen, Marietta, planned the
clinic series for the region.
Representing the Rutland
Garden Club at the final session
were Mrs. Robert Cnnaday and
Mrs. Roy Snowden . 'nley lnot to
Athens with them articles for
the country fair being spon.
sored this month by the Athons
Mento! Health Center AUI·

at!:;

VIsiting Sunday with Mrs.
Stansbury were Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Gerling of Portamoulh. The
Gerlings formerly resided In the lliary.
Stansbury property on Grant St.

Mason Area

New Titles Added

I HOSPITAL

NEWS

I
•

*s.

~.~
-btlkt'
A"""4111(1
, 4hl •·lhoA~;

memben ~ In roll call
by rt!Citing a lilvorlle Bible
verae.
Plans were made for a
potluck dinner at the Nooember
m••eling . Hosla1111 for the
muting ,..,.. Mrs. Pullinl,

!Iahello Wlnellrennu Mrl. •
Charles Wblie, " :Mra. El'"!
H.u:Uey, Mrs. Ne)l, Werner.~
llra. EJecta Soudeh1 Mte. ~
Edith Sauer, MisJ Xa'IIIOIIne'.
Werner, Mrs. Rulll Jobneon •
and Mrs. Lellle Roulb. .' • ;

ITIRID VAlUE
FINE- FURNITURE STYLeD

B..D-BTAH ~BIBB
WITH FM/AMfSTEREO FM RADIO

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. Generol
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity villting hours 2:30 to
4:311 pm. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Blrlbs

Mr . and Mrs. Ivan Lee
Comer, Ewington, a son; and
Mr. ond Mrs. Larry D. Elllott,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, a daughter.
DilehlrJOI

Faye L. Boyle, Mrs. Odls G.
Burris, Elizabeth Cook, Mrs.
Thomas A. Daniels, Evan John
Davis, Mrs. John C. Duncon,
Mrs. George A. Ehman and
infant daughter, Myron R.
Fields, David A. File, Mrs
Lowell Franklin Fisher, John J

Several new books have been
added to tho shelves of Mr.
Eddy Educalnr, bookmobile of
the Meigs Extension Library.
They are "Flying Saucers,
Ancient Writings and the Bible"
Graham, Mrs. Thomas R.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert by Ledric R. Leonard; "Junior
Mossman and fanilly rJ. Win· Plots " by . Gillespie ; "The Lively, Garland Mathews
Marcus M. McKean, Herbert F:
fl.eld, W. Va., visited over the Choice and lhe Challenge" by
Moore, Ezra Jack Ramey, Mrs.
weekend with her parent., Mr. Paley Johnson; "The Children
Leaellyn W. Roush , Mrs .
and Mrs. Patrick Riley.
ollhe Dream" by Bettelheim ;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ollom "Hard Times" by Louis Terkel ; Lelitha M. Stewart, Mrs. James
and daughters of VIncent, Ohio, "Harvard: Through Change Roger Simmons and infant
visited wilh the M0881l18DS on and Through Storm" by Ely daughter, Mrs. Ervin Tolllver,
Sunday In Mason.
Jacques Kehn; the "ASTM Mrs. Flora E. Tolliver, Mrs.
Amy M. Wolf, Barry Alan
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kelvington Standards In Building Codes";
Yeauger,
Mn. Norman E.
andfamUyandMrs. VernaAke, "American Personality and the
Rawley,
Hal Isaac, and George
all of Akron, visited with Mr. Creative Arts" by Joel C.
and Mrs. Wesley Kelvlngton of Mickelson;
''The
Cor,- Jenkin_L_
Letart, W. Va.
quisladora" by Hammond
Mr.Jnd Mrs. Richard Hoover Innes; "The Secret Woman" by
,oncllljlll vlelted hoi- parento, Mr. Eleanor Hlllbsot; and "ldr.
and
.,Stanley Staats. Also . Saminler'8' Planet" ·by :' Saul
vlsillng at ihe Staats home were Bellow.
Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbard Broad·
water of Akron, Ohio.
HAVING SURGERY
Mr. Harry Staats and Mr. Mrs. Kalhern Smith of
Bruce StaatS and children were Pomeroy, Route 3, was ad·
business vt.lilnrs in Wheeling on mil ted Saturday to Mount ,
Saturday.
Carmel Hospital, Columbus for '
hip surgery . She was 'ac ~ ·
216_E. 2nd
Pomeroy
companied to Columbus by her
· Phone m-s.u
sister, Mrs. !llarles Kessinger.
FAIRVIEW NEWS

News, Notes

'*""·•

~ ~r;:, C&lt;llltribu~ to the GtldweU, a guest, being lbe named ·,.were Ura, Lei)ra!
eport Firemen 1 building winners. Several bwnorous . . . . Mrs. Rlllill Hntlnl, .
lund baa bee:omade by the Busy re1dlnge were given and Mrs. Pearl Hoflrilall, Mre. ;

prlzea being won by Mri
Rlchlrd R,ooenbaliiD, Mrs. ~
&amp;bo, Mrs. Dtvid Goodwin and
Mila MeLauglllln. Other g;,..ta
......, Mrs. Robert Elberfeld
Mtl. Karl Kraulter M '
Kenneth McLaughlin
Thomas and u..
y

Exhibitors' Clinic Attended

Dinner at Resort

Mn. Iva Til'..,.,»..

. 2-HOUR .

.CLEANING''

B906W • THE HART
D•stm ct ove Contemporar y st yl ed cabr net m
gen u in ~ od-fm rshed Walnut ven eers and sel ect
hardw ood so lrds. Fea tures 32- watt peak musrc
power amplrfot:H . Specoal Custom · Mat•c 4· speed

record changer ; tape •nout/output jacks plus
proviSIOn for opi!Onal Zenith
extension spea ke rs w1th op tiOnal adapter k11.

l

er·::~:,:~;,::·,::::~:n Soundl
Pr o~ odo5 t11e l•nest '" S tereo f M p lu s con ve rllional
h' l! h· f•delltv FM IA M rect~ ho n . FM AFC tor dloh ·
l ree FM- bv olt·m FMIA M an tennas

e

DUAL-CHANNEL AUDIO AMPLI FICATION

SYSTEM

~()()
.
'

.

·. ·.:~

ZENITH QUALITY SPEAKER SYSTEM
~ ea t ures

two 9·· oval wooler5
B ro ~ d Ran11e

t y ~ 1w~t ers

~tn d

1wo 3'k ' (One ·
70 to

res po n~e o;~l

13.000 H1 .

'

'

.... _

,,·.· ~
.

"I

' '

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON;S
CLEANERS

Mrs . Russell Roush and

daughter, Nancy, attended the
wedding of Miss Shirley Hudson
and Ronald Stephenson st the
Racine BapUst Church Sunday
afternoon. 'nley aJso called on
Mrs. Edna Roush at Racine
enroute home.
SUPPER PLANNEII
A chicken supper will he
served by the Wilkesville
Presbyterian Church Ladies
Circle on Saturday at the
Pythlan Sisters haU, Main st.,
WllkesvWe. Serving will begin
at 4 p. m.

Ingels Furniture
992· 2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
MIDDLEPORT

�..... .. . .

......... . .......

4" ........ . .., . ........ ..,... '111~-........_

. . . . . ..,

1-Tbe Dell)'s.ntlnel,Mlddleport-Pmttroy,O.,Oct. l9,1970

·Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In:Sentinel Classifieds
.

i

Apple Grove News, Events
11JIIn.llelbol1ao.ll
M:. !livid Cole, a teacher a!
Gallla Academy High Schoo\.
...., a Wednesday dinner guest
of Mr . and Mrs. Marshall
Adorna and Raymond.

-

Wood and Waid John

11011.

Mr. and Mrs. Mike HID at&gt;
Dale Wallace HID visited their
father, Dale HID, of Morre
Haven, Fla . , at Riverside
Mrs. Aiel Wheeler ac · Hospital In Columbus Thurscompanied M:. and Mrs. Larry day. M:. HID WaB relurnln&amp; lo
Fooler and daltlhler, Leah, lo hit home here by plane when he
Edlnboro,Pa.,andspentaweek becllllll! W.
with Mr . and Mrs. Edward
M: . and Mrs. Benny Bosgesa
M&lt;ITia and family , returning and Wayne Roooberry spent
Friday. M:. and Mrs. Fooler Saturday evening with M:. and
and Leah spent the weekend Mrs. Charles Bosgesa al Planta.
with M:. and Mrs. Ales Wheeler
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm and
and Bill and returned to chlldren of Columbus spenl
Columbus Swlday .
Sunday with M:. and Mrs. Don
Mr. and Mrs. Cbarles Smith BeD and Loma.
have moved from Pennsylvania
Mrs. Theron Johnson and
1o the borne they purchased Mrs. Fm10 Hayman spent two
frorn Mrs. Bertha Robinson.
days with Mr. and Mrs. Scott
M:. and Mrs. Homer Warner Wheeler at Wheelersburg and
Sr. and Mrs. Pearl Norrll &amp;Misted In making apple butter.
visited Mrs. Flossie Sober! and
M:. and Mrs. Theron Johnson
friend or SUmmerville, New allended a birthday party given
Jersey, at the home of their In bonor of their grandlon,
slller, M:. and Mrs. Hoyt Brian Joluuon, at the home of
Ferguson, Saturday night at M:. and Mrs. Don Johnson at
New Haven, W. Va.
Porlland Sunday.
Mrs. Horner Warner Sr. and
Mr. andMn. JbnShain, Lisa
daughler, Mrs. Inez Roy, were and Lori, of Gallipolis spent
shopping In Galllpolls Wed· Saturday evening with Mr. and
-•Mrs . BlU Fox and David. Mr.
n.,....y,
M:. and Mrs. Don Findley and and Mrs. Orville Harpold ol
children, Misses Sandra and Belpre spent Sunday with the
Paula Taylor, of Columbus Fo1es.
spent a weekend with their
parents, M: . and Mrs. Leo
Taylor.
Jeff Miller of Letart Falls
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
spent Sunday with Roger COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY,

:(~

-

' Fer Sale

Pomeroy

2 518115'
Of
QUALITY

.,,,Co.

'

''

.

BEAUTIFUL ~rly American
styie, stereo-radio com - ·
blnotlon, AM &amp; FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, .t
speed automatic changer .
Balance .179.~5 . Use our
budget terms . Coli 992·:1352.
11).1J.70

$1495
1966 CHEVROLET
motor,
automatic
Impala Convertible,
transmission, power steering &amp; air con · .
dltlonlng .

v.a

$1495
1966 CHEVROLET
0\evelle Supersport 2 Dr. hardtop, V·8 motor,
4 speed transmission.

$895
1965 CHEVROLET
Corvair 2 dr. hardtop, 6 cyl. , standard shift.

Pomeroy Mot• Co.
OPEN EVI!S. I:GO P.M.
I'CMI!ROY, OHIO .
.

-

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M. Oev Before Publication

-·

®
·-

I· Business Services
·-- """

1970 RICHARDSON mobile
home, 12x63. partially fur ·
nlshed. Washer ond dryer .
Fully carpeted. Toke over
peymenlo. Phone 992·7019.
10.1..3tc

WALNUT, Modern style,
Stereo.radlo, am. tm radio, .t
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer,
.!
separate controls. Balance
174.19. Ute our budget terms.
Coli 992·3352.
10.1J.70

- ·· --

For Rent

EXPERIENCED

.Radiator Service

DIN!JN MASONRY
Commercial cr Residadil
Brick, Block,S!ono.
Clotemo. Chimneys, Home
Remodeling, Cement WOrk,

Garages.
Free Estimates
Jlm- Larry
Kenny- J1ke
From !he Lorges1 Truckiol'
Bulldozer Radiator to 1he
Smallest Heater Core.

~='::'':.992-:;;;;2:;1;:;43;:;;;;:;::;:;:""=""=ro:y~
_ _., ,.,. .

GREEN
boons,
tomot-.
your -n.
Also,
pofoloft Pick
ond .
sweat pi&gt;latoos. Bring con.
t.tlners. Andrew Cross, Letart
Fells.
10.1H1c

992-7044 or 992-5632

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Pome!OJ Home &amp;Auto

- -- - -

Notice

For Sale er Trade

Pets

Sale

,

For Sale

----Real Estate For Sale

.
.Clelan-d___R

Auto Sales

DEMONSTRAlOR
SALE

oar

Want Ad

Business Opportunities

'

I

j

for

I

I

Male Help Wanted

YIIUR NEW HOME

--------------

Notice

Real Estate For Sale

Roof
Painting &amp;
Repair, Spoutlnil &amp;

Work.
Contact:

Dtlllor. 0.

·- ..---

$5.55

Ewlyn McDaniel

ROOFING,
BY OONTRACr

Rl.l

TROPICAL ASH

m.

----,---,
Have Your Yearly

Air.COnditioning
llispection And
R.charge
6.98 Plus
Parts

Blaettnar's
Phone 992·2143

Lose Inches the tiSY way
with the nlw:
SLIM-A-WAY

Free Home Oemonstrltlon
MRS . WENDIIL KAYLOR
112·269'1
N•w Haven, W. Ya.
After 4 WHkiiiYS or
1 Til 1 Saturday

OOZER WORK. Sepllc tanks,
leach beds. Phone 9.49-2171.
10·18·1ft

lnsura11c:e

AUTOMOBILE ln1urance boon
cancelled?
Loit
your
operator's license? Call 992-

2966.

6-15·1ft
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Call No. 21,171
Estate of George Otto SchmolL
Deceased .
Notice IS hereby g iven that
Robert Otho Schmoll , of Mid ·
dleport , Ohio , hn been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of George Otto Schmoll ,
deceased, late ot Meigs County .
Ohio .
Crc.~lt~rs ere required to file
,their ct,(lllms W!fh salct fiduciary
within four months.
Dated thla 8th day of October
1970.
F . H . O'Brien
Probate Judge of ttld
County
( 10) 12, 19, 26, ltc

HOISTEtTER .

Wanted To BUJ

=~· ..e:tn.=~·

Fer Sale

:::~=i=-tr=.~~

REALTY

hut~

WIN¥0N

SALEM
0!1

Hom.• •

Ho-. .,..,.

For Rent

2

be

,

NOTICI OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN IXC.SS
OPTHE TEN

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE II hereby glYtn that
In purtuance of 1 Resolution of
tht Board of Education of ttlt
Southern Local School District,
Meigs County, Ohio, Pitted on
the 8th dey of September, 1970,
there will be submitted to 1 vote
of the people of Uld School
District eta Generel Election to
bt haid In tht Southern Local
School Olatrlct, Meigs County,
Ohio, al the regular places ot
voting ttltrein, on Tuesdly, the
3rd day of November, 1970, the
quutlon of levying, In excess ot
the ten mill llmltttlon, for the
benefit of the southern Local
School Dlatrict for the purpose
ot Current expenses of tht
subdlvltlon.
Slid tn btlng: en addltlonll
tax or Two m ms to run for •
continuing perloC: et 1 rete not
tMceedlnu 2.0 milia tor each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Twtntv cents tor
.. ch one hundred dolltn of
valuation. for • continuing
period .
The Polls tor Slid Election
will bt open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
end remeln open until 4:30
0 1C:i0ck P.M . E11tern Standard
Tlma of ttld day .
8y order of tl'le Boerd of
Eltctlons, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Edwin S. Co11rt
Chairmen
Doroth'f M. Johnston
Clerk
Dated Oc1ober 1, 1970.
noJ s. 12, 19, 26. o4tc

AIOU'I' TO
A !uta&lt;

llMOUSUIE IVI.L OP TWo•
l!OOEl&gt; SERP£Kr J-·

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACJUlllll
1. Secluded
valley
G. Churth part
9. Set of basic
beltet•
10. Haul
11. Schoolbook
12. News blurb
13. Spoke at

2. Imper·

H . Charla-

teet

tano

t . Neither's
compulon
• . ll!ach

e.Endurlnl

le._tb
(2Wdl. )

-.....

product

3. Pa.ra·

!SwdLi

7. Wlll.ter

14. Lavtah

rood

partiea
16. tlle
Terrible
16. Expreue4
without

I . Cowardly
11. aroupot

word8

IIODI

8. Stately

17. Co&amp;)' roOm

18. Symbol
li.Purpoae
20.IlcoWih

.JJt!lJ~~;-r:t.,;::!t!~.c;
r.ur

IJni&lt;ramble theM
Jumblto,
letter to ...h ....... to

16. Syco..

phant
18. 811'
tor
22. Nal'

form four ordina17 . word1.

N.4CAL

ootlc
23. Kip·

I I

Unc'•
Deevor
... Ccm·
.true ted
IIIIIW

llJ. Cout
28. Atllto·

""""

29.IJnpoe.
lure
30.1Jitn •
quent

32. Olrl'l
lllekname

IMMG

0
RODUH

101plonr

2l.llelty

and

!No Down Payment

Help Wanted

r

Fine! We can
u5e thi5
picture! lt'6
a qooc1 one!

LEGAL NOTICE

"2·

Lost

DO

ORVIU£,..,.....
JOHJfSON

Phone

SOU1H

J BEDROOM house-, llh baths,

WUl'H
I'VIONEV,
PPM/

ALL

IS PUT IT UNDER
'lORE PILLER
TONIGHT

C.rpenter

.

BlAE'iTNARS

LEGAL NOTICE

I

DOC PRITCHART GIVE
ME TH' RIFLE BALL THEM
INRJNNEL REVENOOERS
PUT IN MV LEG, MAW

'

mlnl ·chopper bike, 2
available after Nov . I. Ex. SCOUT
-GUARANTEEDmonths old, cost 1200 new.
cellent
neighborhood,
close
to
Mondty Deadline 9a .m .
Phone 992-2094 ,
Will sell for $150. Phone
schools end churches. No
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
6'¥)7.
And Complete Une
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
pets. Write- C·O Dally Sentinel,
10.16-3tc
Oev of Publication
Bo:.: 729·R, Pomeroy, Cillo.
of Supplies
!
REGULATIONS
10.16-ltc
The Publisher renrves the
606 E. Main. Poineroy, 0.
right to edit or reject any ads
700X18 TRUCK tires . Wolk·ln
deemed obJectional.
The TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
cooler unit complete. Electric
Milson, w. Ve.
publisher will not be respon11lble
Park. Minersville. Phone 992·
meet saw. Meat block . 1955
nJ.K71
for more then one Incorrect
332·'Ford 1-ton truck with cattle
REAOV . MIX CONCRETE
Open Dolly 11114 p.m.
Insertion .
9-9·ffc
racks. 2·WIY turn plow for
delivered right to 't_OUr
RATES
1:301119p.m,
- , - - - - - -Cub Trador. Phone 949·3073.
For Want Ad Service
pro/ed. Fast and easy. Free
TRAILER
space,
one
mile
from
tn.J.~trscents per word one Insertion
est
mates . Phone 992·3284.
new Meigs High School on old
Minimum Charge 75c
Goagleln
Roodv·Mix 0&gt;.,
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Rt . 33 . Phone 992-2941 .
12 cents per word three
Middleport,
Ohio.
service,
all
makes.
f92.228.4.
9·20-30fc
conse-cutive lnurtlans.
6·30-lfc
11 cents per word six con .
The Fabric Shop, Pomoroy.
ucutlve insertions .
Authorized
Singer
Soles
and
R E MODELED 3 ·bedroom
lS Per cenl Discount on paid
Service. We Stwlrpen Scissors. NEIGLER Construction . For
house on Lincoln Heights.
ads and ads peld within 10 days .
building or remodeling your
3·29·Hc
Phone 992-3UO .
CARD OF THANKS
home, call Guy Nelgler,
9·27·1fc
&amp; OBITUARY
. A REAL
-'C;-;U;;R~T;-;1S;;:S-;C~o::ll;;:le:-;;:Br::e~edl ng
Recine, Ohio.
Sl.SO for 50 word minimum .
lfREIIZIII
7·3l·lft
N
t"'
c"EC'
L
C'
Y
:-c
f
u
_r_
n,ls,hed
-.,.-:
2
-:·
b
--,ed
room
Service.
Phone
Parker
at992.
additional
word
2c
.
SPECIAL
Each
2264
or
call
station
Coolville
BLIND ADS
apartm e nt. Middleport .
Additional 25c Charge per
667·3251 .
Phone 992-387.4.
LEGAL NOTICE
OHIO
Roush.
Advert isement .
10.18·30tt
9·30.tfc
NICINSKY and
OFFICE HOURS
Vickle Roush, daughter of Mr . GEORGE
RUIY JEAN NICINSKY ,
NOTICii OF ELECTION
8 : 3(1 a .m to S:OO p.m. Daily ,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO.
Plalntlffl,
and Mrs. Lester Roush, wsa
ON TAX LI!VY IN
8 : 30 am. to 12 : 00 Noon J ROOM unfurnished apart.
Reasonable rates . Phone
EXCE$1 OF TH. TEN
Saturday .
ment.
J05'h
Condor
St.,
phone
returned home from Holzer VIC;~R R. THOMSON , ET
MILL LIMITATION
John Russell, Gallipolis ""'·
992·2907 .
Medical Center where she had AL..
NOTICE
IS hertby given that
&lt;782
alter
5:30p
.m
.
10.f8.3fp
Defendants.
Inp11rsuance
of a Resolution of
4-7-tfc
been a medical patienl.
No. 14,729
the Board of Township Trustees
sTOrm
f,O'!ICE BY
TWO BEDROOM mobile home .
Mrs. Jack Ables and daughler
"H7A;:R;:R~ISO~::::N:-::,-:S~Te;;V:;-A;-;N:-;0;-AN. of the Towm'!hlp of Chester,
windows , car
Meigs Co. Farm
PUBLICATIO"
lnqulre at M and G Food
Mela• County, Ohio, Pllted on
took her mother, Mrs. Alice
TENNA SERVICE . Phone the 5th day of June, f910, there
marquees, blown
The unknown heirs. devisees.
Market. J miles south of
Bureau
Federation
992·2522.
insulation . Elmer
Balser 1o Parkersburg Satur· legatees , adm lnist r ators ,
will be subm ltted to .t vote of the
Middleport, Slate Rt. 7.
6-10-tfc people of Uid Chester Townthlp
and nslgns of the
Annual Meeting
sales representative.
day 1o oee a doc lor . Mrs. Balser executors
10-IB·Jtc
following persons. il deceued ,
of Chts1er , Ohio, at the rttultr
es.tim ~ tes, pl'lone Chltrlo&gt;s
Tues. Nlght-7:37 P.M.
hu been aasisting ln the care of and If not deceased , then those
pieces of voting lhertln, on
C.
BRADFORD,
Auclloneer
Lisle,
Syracuse.
persons whose addresses
Ocl.20, 1970
Tuuelay , the 3rd der, ol
Mrs. Laurence Balser at same
Johnson
end
Son,
Inc
.
Complete
Service
are unknown. Alva Tl'lom1on ,
November, 1970, the quest on of
Phone
949·3821
8-30·ffc
Mrs . Alva Thomson , Keaton
New Meivs local
Tuppers Plains.
levying , ln tMCist of the ten mill
1960
OLDSMOBILE
con .
Racine, Ohio
,
Mrs .
Keaton
High School
limitation , for the benefit of
Mrs . Herbert Roush and Thomson
Thomson , Robert Thomson ,
vertlble , good condition . 8x30 HOUSE trailer, very good,
Crltt Bradford
Chtster Township for the
tAdjtcMtto Fefr Grounds)
Roger and Jell Miller were Mrs . Robert Thomson , Edna
5-i -Hc purpose ot Current upen111 of
Phone 992 ·58-4.1.
$195. Brown' s Trailer Park ,
Hans.en
.
Edward
Hansen.
Steak
Dinner
the Township .
10·18-ltc
Minersville, Ohio . Phone 992Athens visilors Sunday .
Mam le Oroudt, Oris Oroudl ,
S.ld taM being : a renewal of
Profe11lonel Entertainment
BACKHOE
and
Endloader
3324.
I0.16-31c
Mrs . Flossie Church or Nancv E . T-hOmson , Kenneth
an existing tax of V: mill to run
Adulttl1.25.
Children
15c
work
.
George
Bill
Pullins
.
Th"Omson, Maurice Thoms.on.
for five ye1rs at a rate not
Marloo, Mrs. Pauline Polland and
C.. II ff2-2111fer ReHrYation
For
1966 NEW MOON traUer, 2
10·16-30tp exceed 1h mltl for each one
Enos E . Thomson. will take
Public Invited
and two chlldren or Mllford notice that on the 21st. day of
bedroom , 10xSL $2,800. Exdollar of vltuatlon, which
BLACK
male
poodle ,
1970,
George
cellent condition . Phon e SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller .amounts to five cents for each
Center visited Mr. and Mrs. September,
registered . Phone 992·6329.
Nlclnskv and Ruby Jean
one hundred dollan of
Mason 773-5193.
Sanitation, Stewar1, Ohio. Ph. valuation , tor Flvt years .
10· f6.Jtc
Marshall Adams and also Nlcinskv. filed their complaint SWAP SHOP, new and used
10·16-6tc
furniture
.
Phone
992·7261.
305
you In the common
662·3035.
The Polls tor said Election
visited graves of loved ones at against
N. 2nd. Ave., Middleport ,
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
2·12·11c will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
Ohio .
Ohio, praying tor partition, and
..~
BASSET pj;les, AKC, S30 . 2 WIGS, one blonde,.,one light
Letart Falls Cemelery .
and remain open until 6:)0
brown . Alto Polarola camera, WHE"E l Hof !fie Sa tea and o'clock P .M. Eastern St.wctar"d
. .. 16·\~1' ~ · ~r·n~ll'.
ifted111'11. phone
requl~f'P,ifeiit
kl
set
up.
your
if!r~ ~ coDed ~ his intert . . li~rf;""lf lny , In the -'---"'--'.C.:.~
one
Kodak
lnstamaflc
·
C!oolv11ie 7·3856. r ;.
service . l&amp;um Lumber Time of said dey.
descr ibed
real WILL give plano lessons In my
~. Mh. Edll8 Roush, and folio
ev order of the 8ot~rd of
camera, one mOvie camera .
10..18·12ic
Company, Chester , Ohio . Elections,
prop rtv :
of Meigs County ,
!Vtan 's suit, size 4.4 . Very good
Gladys Sbleltla at Racine.
hom e . Phone 992 ·3666.
Phone 985·3301.
Ohio.
condition
.
Phone
992-2437.
8·16-tfc
5·20-lfc
Mrs. lloocoe Scarberry and Parcel No . 1: The following
Edwin S. Cozart
10·16·31&lt;
real estate situate In the State of
Chairman
Mrs. (;len TUcker of MI. Moriah Ohio,
County of Meigs and WILL pick up merchandise and PAR KVI EW Kennels, Poodles,
AIR
CONOITIONING,
and bird dogs. AKC. Pet and 1 ROOM house, bath, coal
Dorothy M Johnston
coDed '"' Mrs. Herbert '1\oush Township of Bedford, and !' take to auction on a per.
Refrigeration ser vlc•. Jack't
bounded and described as
furnace. Thomas Fork Road
Cltrk
-.how puppies . Grooming .
centage bas~s . Call Jim
Refrlveratlon,
New
Haven
.
Friday .
follows :
( 10) 5, 12, 19, 26, -He
near Hllend Church. Mrs.
Phone 992 ·5443.
Adams. auctioneer. Rutland .
Phone 882·207'1 .
Being In Section No. Eight
M:. and Mrs. Charles GaskiU
Olfford Jacobs. Phone 9923·17.tfc
Phone
742
·
~1.
u
.tfc
Town No . Three (3), Range
of Wellstm spent two days at {8),
2437.
9.2J.Ifc
No. Thirtee-n {131, of the Ohio
lO·l...lc
LEGAL NOTICE
Company's Purchase. to-wit :
their cabin.
Beginning
at
the
southeast
COAL,
limestone.
Excelsior
Nor
u
Mrs. Edna Parsons Ia • corner ol a IS 70·100 acre tract HAYMAN'S AUCTION tiouse,
1 0 , I!LECTION oN
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
8
NICE
ewes.
20
lot
lambs.
laurel
Cliff,
new
open
each
aurglcal patient at Veler&amp;nl of land belonging to W. W
_ealty~.
TAX o~·~~.'"r::us
Pomeroy. Phone 99'J.J89l.
Phone 992·2630.
Friday to receive con .
Thompson; thence west on the
Memorial Hospital.
4·9-ffc
MILL LIMITATION
south line of said 15 70·100 acre
slgnments at 10 a.m. Auction
10· 1J.61c
NOTICE II hereby given th•t
M:. and Mrs. Robert Wood tract of salct W. W. Thompson
starting at 7 p.m . Let us sell
MINERSVILLE HILL- LII(E In pursuance of 1 Resolution of
100 roda to the center line of said
your merchandise.
CRAFTSMAN riding lawn
and Wald Jolmon spent Swlday section.
rul\,l'llng north and
NEW-s rooms, 2 bedrooms, the Council of the VIllage of
mower
.
Phone
992·2.429.
3·22·tfc
with Mr. and Mrs. Millord south ; thendl south on the
bath, nice kitchen with bullf· Rutland, Ohio, pened on the 6th
10·11-3tc
tine of said section line 15
gar.,.e, Clay of Mty, 1970, ther• Will bt
In rai!e' •·sement,
Frederick and family al center
ua
-•
tubmltted to 1 vote of t~t ptoplt
rods; to the south line of said PIANO tuning. Karl Kebler,
GOIN AT 16,900.
of seid VIllage at e General
Section Number Eight (I);
Mason . Phone 173-5.535 after 5 ELECTRDLUX SWEEPER MlDenville.
Election to be held In tht Vlllagt
thence east on the south tin• of
p.m .
M: . and Mrs. Don Rlffle and said
Comrlete with attachments,
HARRISONVILLE LOW of Rutland, Ohio, at the rttular
Section Number Eight (ll
1Q. J3.JOtc
pain spray, cordwlnder e~~nd
UPKEEP 1 story, tile piece at voting therein, on
lllllly of COOtmbus spent four to a point and stake in said south
throw.away begs. Full cash
section
line
;
thence
In
a
nor·
block,
2
bedrooms,
2 porches, Tundey, the 3rCI Cler, ot
days with M:. and Mrs. Losier therly direction 15 rods to the
price only 131 . Terms
•-- ~s
all furnace In November, 1970, the quest on ot
uam,
...,
w
levying, In excess ot the ten milt
100il Mill WltliA
Roush and family and visited place of beginning, containing
available . Phone 992·5641 .
GOOD CONDITION. $6,500. llmltallon, for tht benefit of
about
nln11
and
one.fhird
(9 \ .3)
10.
16-.lltc
M:. Rlflle's mother, Mrs. Lelia acres. more or less .
FARM - 112 acres, lots of Rutltnd vmega for the purpose
11 PONTIAC
SAV5
timber, barn, outbuilding 01 General construction. rt·
It being the Intention and
Robinson.
Bonneville .4 Or . hardtop,
PAINT
DAMAGE
1970
Zig·
purpose of this deed to coovey e
with cellar, pond, hOUH hal construction, resurfacing and
factory
elr
conditioned,
vinyl
M:. and Mrs. BlU Robinson tract
Zag Sewing Machines. Sllllln
of land fifteen (15) rods
NEW lATH, NEW KIT· rtpelr of str,ets within tl'le
top,
stereo
tape,
low
original cartons. No at ·
are moving from the Andrew wide by one hundred ( 100) rods
of Rutltnd.
CHEN1 Iarge 11 v1f)g room. 2 Vllleve
mileage,
auto.
trunk
rete11e.
Stld tax being: an eddUion•J
tachments, needed. 11 our
.
Cross resldence lo the 'f ormer long
tilt steering wheel, fullv
bedrooms.
COULD
HAVE
4,
teM
of
Five
mills to run for five
Reference Deed : Vol. 1.46,
controls are built-ln. Sews
equipped .
.5,
mile
out
of
Pomeroy,
vean
at
a
rate
not excetdlna 5.0.
Herbert Sayre residence al Page 256. Deed Records of DISTRIBUTORSHIP wllhou1
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
$10,900.
mills for tech one dollar of
Meigs County, Ohio.
buttonholes, sews on buftont,
70 CATALINA
SAY I
Investment . Deluxe candy
Antiquity.
valuation, whlcl'l emount1 to
2 Dr. Hardtop, factory elr
and drug specialties to
monograms and blind hem
llwtoeD Cllne and friend of Parcel No . 2 : The following
POMEROY- WITH INCOME Fifty Cents for eech one hunconditioned,
Reily
II
whftll,
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
taverns, restaurant,, stores,
real estate situated In the
- 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms, dred dOllars of valuation. for
Mt . Moriah spent Friday Countv
or E·Z Terms. Phone 992.~1. vinyl top, low mlleao•.
etc . Direct factory connection
of Meigs , State of Ohio,
2 baths, CQ.RNER LOT, Fi~~,VS,:~I~i for teld Election
ovonlng with M:. and Mrs. and in the Ohio Company's
10.16-6tc
earning high dally cash
garage, full basement, GOOD will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
Purchase,
and
bounded
and
commissions
.
Everything
~-------------- described as follows, viz :
CONDITION. 110,.500.
. and remtln open until 6:3Q
furnished, but must bt bond· SINGER TOUCH &amp; SEW full
. TO BUY OR SELL
o'clock P.M . Ettttrn Stlndard
Beginning at the northwest
1
size
sewing machine. With
able
handling
our
mer·
CONTACT US
Time of ttld day.
corner
of Alonzo Holt lot and the
lUlCK
PONTIAC
I
I west line Of the south eut chandlse and cash. Pert or
s e lf ·wlndlnt bobbin, slant
HENRY
CLELAND
By order 01 the Boord 01
GMC TRUCKS
I
I quarttr Of Section No . Eight (I), full time. Write Chexco, 2910 needle designs, also zlg·IOV
REALTOR
Elect1on1, of Meigl County,
POMEROY
I
brin1 JDU
I In Town No. Three (JJ. In Range N. 16th St .. Philadelphia, Po . equipped. Comet In walnul
Office ft2.22Sf
Ohio .
No . Thirteen (13), thence north
19132.
sewing stand. $72.50 cash or
RH.
99:!·2561
twenty two rods and nine links
Edwin S. Court
10..11-:ttc
termt available. Phone 992·
ertra ush
10.11-61c
to a stake on west line of &amp;eld
1966 MUSTANG, good running
Chairman
56A1 .
I
I auarter; thence eut one
10-IUtc condition. Prtc:od raosonably.
Dorothy M. Johnston
I
I hundred and teventy rods to the
11 lnternled, c;oll 99:!·2306,
east 1me or 111110 secuon; mence
Clerk
shoppinl sprees 1 south
KIRBY
Vacuum
Cleaner
In
10.1J.31c
two rods aM thirteen
3 tr 4 I tel roams
Sales trainee •o
exatllenl condition. Has all :::-:::-:-:::-77:::::-'"7-:flO) 5, 12, 19, 26, 4tc
links to the uid Holt'S north WANTED:
lullt to yoyr spaclflcatlons.
work directly with Manager
ottochmenlo Including buffer 1M7 VALIANT, standard sfllfl.
eut corner; thence west
IIIII
tvllllblt
ROW
.
for advancement to Salas
seventy rods to hit northwest
and domolher . Sells , _ for
Phone 992·3110.
Manager position . Must bo
11).1 ..3tp
corner of the 11me; thence
over $200. Will Nil lor 164.!0
.,.., • awrestlve end willing
south
twenty
rods
and
eliven
c:ath or terms arrlnliled.
RE·OPENING of Mlddlepor1 links to a ttake on tht Holt line;
lowork. Cer necessery. Apply
cab office o1 322 N. Second tt\enct wHt one hundred rodt to
460 MacCorkle, Ave.,- SO.
Phone 992 · 5641 ·
to. 1utc
Monftllr Payments
Ave .. Middleport Compelled the plec;e of beginning, conChao.
·
2-STORY building with paved
Lower Thin •••
to lower fares In town. 2.._hour ttlning fifteen ecrn, more or
10.1Uir.
wt&lt;tng
lof.
Also,
3
loll
In
service hlilabfe. Phone 992- lttt, It being a pt~rl of the Ktltt
NEW ond brush hclgo .
Centact: Mr. Moecty, Pll.
bctno, Phone 992.2131 or m. 7014
3210 or 992-2Sl5. Sharon's of L. D. Holt, Dtc:tlltd ,
Phono992.-.
tt aur flel41 efflct 1t
Rettrenct
Oted
:
Vol.
60,
:tm.
Twin City C.bs.
11).1..31&lt;
Ptrll &amp; SrcllnN'e In Mlf·
Ptge
224
tnd
225,
Dtect
Rtcords
10.1..31c
10·19-61c of Mtlgt County, Ohio.
~IIPtrt.
SOM~ON E to do brush hog
J•MCO AISOCIATe$, INC.
• PIGS, 2 - · " ' - 7fl- - - - - - - Ftrlllerly KIIHII Atlecltttt,
work . Phone 742-4171 .
Ptrcet No. 3: Tht toltowlng
44U. Aollond horl,.,
Inc.
10.1
..
3tc
rtel tttttt tituated In the
A•llond.
County Of Malgt, Stitt Of Ohio,
10.1Uip
LOST, lady's while gold tnd In the 01110 Compjlny's
CONVENIENT but ucludod
wristwatch at Mtlgs . Affltnt Purcn11e, and bounded end
building lo1t on T79 of Rock
game Friday. Phone 99:!-3$01. ctncrlbtd a1 followa, Vll:
sr,rlngs. Within walking
10.19.3tc
Bqlnnlna fifteen rodt end OLD lurnlturit, dllhol. brill PIG5 AND .....,.. C.ll
d 1t1nce ot Melgo High
five ilnkt north Of tht touthwnt
beds, otc. Write M.D. Mill.,,
School, • 5 mlnu1e drlvt tr9m
IIIAT J IIDitOOMI- Bath,
corner of me southtlll querter
Stetht New 1f71
Rl. ~. Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli
Jl.1 ...2tc
new forced 11r furnace.
Pomeroy. Coli or Bill
of Section eight (I), Town Thrtt
992-6271.
U&gt;. Ranve Tnlrt. .n (13),
:-:-C':':=,..-,==~~
Concroto watkl. LandiCipod
Witte -kdays.
- - · Phone
or otter992·5
1965 FORO 2 door sedan, good tntnu 1111 one hundred rocti; _ _ _ _ _ _ _9_· 1·tfc MAS&amp;EY . ,UGUSOII 1U lof. Only tUOO.DO
p.m.
running
c:ondlflon,
1450. thfilU north twenty thr" rOds
6817.
traciO&lt; .
.....
ll!owo, I IEDIIOOMS
H and thirteen llnkt to tht touth OLD UPRIGHT pianos, ony
10-IS.Ifc
Pllone 992-.
II).!P.Jic east corner of lend owned by W.
condition, as 10119 11 hove not
ftooro,
Control
olr
w. Thomp&amp;on; thence wttt one been . wet. Paying $10 ooch . 195i!S1-""*-Irud&lt;, c:ondlllonlng. Full boMmenl.
hundred rods to the west lint of
First floor only. Mondayl will
All for p,IOO, I'INott ~.
Gorogt. v...y nlat. 124.500.00 2 BEDROOM house, nice
the southe..t 1:4uarter of Uid
to&lt;OIIon. SH ol IU 8rattd·
LEGAL NOTICE
bo plck·up dey. Wrl1e, gl•lng
Now Dft~~lavl
Section tight; tl'ltnct south
woy, Mlddl_.t. 992·
tfl.lUic MIDDLEPORT - • bfdtoomt
tood directions, Witten "Plano
twtnty
three
rodt
and
thlrtten
R~l!lil~
1970 ,~l!lle
TIMES FOtt HOLDING
1114.
COmpany, Box lU, Sllrdlit ::,,.,~-=a7
sA:-IIG~-:c:-.-:,:-,-:,::,r-.
ill&gt;lrd
with doteto. living 11 • 11.
COMMON PLEAS COURTS, links to the piece ot btQinnlng,
10.1Utc
conttlnlng fourtHn tnd HYtn ·
l ·, ,must
Ohio 439&lt;6.
Scrambltr 1 3 1 ftl0~ mUll.
Porc:h, gar-a•. ltd,SOO.OO
A. D. "71
tern. more or IHI.
8.20-lfc
11 is ordered that tht terms ot ttntht
Reference OHd : Vol. IH,
f!xcellonllhope. Colltii!CI_.I.'!'! NEW 1 110~ - All GOOD Investment· p~ilperty .
tht Common Pleas Court In the Page
Sff, Dttd Rtcords Mtlgl
Young, New
~
County of ·Me los for the year County, Ohio.
812·2~1.
1100. Firm.
o1ec lrl c h'omo, 2 -•-t~
,,., nlat · ''
,,..,.. . w11h -"''" •.fu rn I•·1971 be tiMed as fottowfl. to -wit .
10.11·3tp dining . erao. Thortli·O,pono
lfllrljnonto, . botll"onl, ¥1
On nit lSI dav of Januar~ •nd
You ere required to tntwtr
.
· "':'':':"'"::":--:-::-::-::-:-GLAU. Ooublo O•••Dt·
gor.ogoo . Monlft[~, lncon'io,
the II~ diY Pf MiiY and tt1e lit within twenty tiOht days from
3 ROOM turnlsfled opartmen1 TRAILER LOT, 100.210, with
Excellent iocollon, sn,f!JO, . $1H, Priced r u - r , : ..lar
dJY of September tnd the said tht dtff of tht l•at publlcltlon
with nice yard '" Middleport.
walor anA shodo lruo. Avo
~ud for your lnsf*Hon. •.. qu!ck "'
. lo. Phone 99:!. • • _.1rc
terms of Slid Court bqln at of 11'111 notice, the 1n1wtr Clttt
19
Phone 992·2780 or 9'12·34!.
G lk
H~ I
Ill 0 Ph 0110
nlmont PIMM
10 ;00 A.M.
being December 7th .• 1910.
. 10.7·b:
~
.~.
orr
IOIIV
'
I
·
WITH
~DHFIOEIICE
,::
...
--~~---""'~
7
GEORGE NICINSKY and
JOHN C BACON
10·11·31t
It fAL:L 992•:utS
LOTS WITH all utlflfllt.' '
RUBY JEAN NICINSKY - - -- - - - JUDGI; OF
"LAINTIFFS
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
E
.
.
EN
111!1
VlltOIL
RHirltlod sub division. V. :lo
COMMON
PLEAS CROW, CROW ~ PORTE~.
l REGIST~ED qu•rter horN
TEAI'OIIO ASSOCIATES
·'•crt !of• . Phone Chttter
hoo
(;OUU,
opartmenlo. CioH to K
'
gelding. Phone 241·2306,
IYIIACUII .
915-3301, night f15.J3112,
..
.
MEIGS COUNT'I', OHIO Attorneys for Pl,.intlfft
Phone 99:!·144.
fO.fUic
10-IWtc
.
1+1ft
flO I If, 26, ( 111 :Z, ltc. 19121, (101 5, 12. 1,, 21 C111 t 6tc
JO.I ..Ifc

Classified Ads

THAT'S

J~
I

Mees,

·You,
and'· '·
..

2t.-2t.N.U.

(2wda.t .
llJ.IIuD-4own
:lt.Oyrato

··-·
ao.-··
.., __
aJ"""'
ll.C"

-~-

Now-lllodn:WIIIIon

tor-~~~~~-••
........ _. . . . . . . . IIIL

I ,... .. ___ I[ I I

r I ,_
Il I

I1

. . _ - PillA Ol-Y _....

..-1--l--ll !loo.....,., 1- . B - I V - - /oio - - I Y R.fX'"t

R

�..... .. . .

......... . .......

4" ........ . .., . ........ ..,... '111~-........_

. . . . . ..,

1-Tbe Dell)'s.ntlnel,Mlddleport-Pmttroy,O.,Oct. l9,1970

·Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In:Sentinel Classifieds
.

i

Apple Grove News, Events
11JIIn.llelbol1ao.ll
M:. !livid Cole, a teacher a!
Gallla Academy High Schoo\.
...., a Wednesday dinner guest
of Mr . and Mrs. Marshall
Adorna and Raymond.

-

Wood and Waid John

11011.

Mr. and Mrs. Mike HID at&gt;
Dale Wallace HID visited their
father, Dale HID, of Morre
Haven, Fla . , at Riverside
Mrs. Aiel Wheeler ac · Hospital In Columbus Thurscompanied M:. and Mrs. Larry day. M:. HID WaB relurnln&amp; lo
Fooler and daltlhler, Leah, lo hit home here by plane when he
Edlnboro,Pa.,andspentaweek becllllll! W.
with Mr . and Mrs. Edward
M: . and Mrs. Benny Bosgesa
M&lt;ITia and family , returning and Wayne Roooberry spent
Friday. M:. and Mrs. Fooler Saturday evening with M:. and
and Leah spent the weekend Mrs. Charles Bosgesa al Planta.
with M:. and Mrs. Ales Wheeler
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm and
and Bill and returned to chlldren of Columbus spenl
Columbus Swlday .
Sunday with M:. and Mrs. Don
Mr. and Mrs. Cbarles Smith BeD and Loma.
have moved from Pennsylvania
Mrs. Theron Johnson and
1o the borne they purchased Mrs. Fm10 Hayman spent two
frorn Mrs. Bertha Robinson.
days with Mr. and Mrs. Scott
M:. and Mrs. Homer Warner Wheeler at Wheelersburg and
Sr. and Mrs. Pearl Norrll &amp;Misted In making apple butter.
visited Mrs. Flossie Sober! and
M:. and Mrs. Theron Johnson
friend or SUmmerville, New allended a birthday party given
Jersey, at the home of their In bonor of their grandlon,
slller, M:. and Mrs. Hoyt Brian Joluuon, at the home of
Ferguson, Saturday night at M:. and Mrs. Don Johnson at
New Haven, W. Va.
Porlland Sunday.
Mrs. Horner Warner Sr. and
Mr. andMn. JbnShain, Lisa
daughler, Mrs. Inez Roy, were and Lori, of Gallipolis spent
shopping In Galllpolls Wed· Saturday evening with Mr. and
-•Mrs . BlU Fox and David. Mr.
n.,....y,
M:. and Mrs. Don Findley and and Mrs. Orville Harpold ol
children, Misses Sandra and Belpre spent Sunday with the
Paula Taylor, of Columbus Fo1es.
spent a weekend with their
parents, M: . and Mrs. Leo
Taylor.
Jeff Miller of Letart Falls
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
spent Sunday with Roger COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY,

:(~

-

' Fer Sale

Pomeroy

2 518115'
Of
QUALITY

.,,,Co.

'

''

.

BEAUTIFUL ~rly American
styie, stereo-radio com - ·
blnotlon, AM &amp; FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, .t
speed automatic changer .
Balance .179.~5 . Use our
budget terms . Coli 992·:1352.
11).1J.70

$1495
1966 CHEVROLET
motor,
automatic
Impala Convertible,
transmission, power steering &amp; air con · .
dltlonlng .

v.a

$1495
1966 CHEVROLET
0\evelle Supersport 2 Dr. hardtop, V·8 motor,
4 speed transmission.

$895
1965 CHEVROLET
Corvair 2 dr. hardtop, 6 cyl. , standard shift.

Pomeroy Mot• Co.
OPEN EVI!S. I:GO P.M.
I'CMI!ROY, OHIO .
.

-

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M. Oev Before Publication

-·

®
·-

I· Business Services
·-- """

1970 RICHARDSON mobile
home, 12x63. partially fur ·
nlshed. Washer ond dryer .
Fully carpeted. Toke over
peymenlo. Phone 992·7019.
10.1..3tc

WALNUT, Modern style,
Stereo.radlo, am. tm radio, .t
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer,
.!
separate controls. Balance
174.19. Ute our budget terms.
Coli 992·3352.
10.1J.70

- ·· --

For Rent

EXPERIENCED

.Radiator Service

DIN!JN MASONRY
Commercial cr Residadil
Brick, Block,S!ono.
Clotemo. Chimneys, Home
Remodeling, Cement WOrk,

Garages.
Free Estimates
Jlm- Larry
Kenny- J1ke
From !he Lorges1 Truckiol'
Bulldozer Radiator to 1he
Smallest Heater Core.

~='::'':.992-:;;;;2:;1;:;43;:;;;;:;::;:;:""=""=ro:y~
_ _., ,.,. .

GREEN
boons,
tomot-.
your -n.
Also,
pofoloft Pick
ond .
sweat pi&gt;latoos. Bring con.
t.tlners. Andrew Cross, Letart
Fells.
10.1H1c

992-7044 or 992-5632

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Pome!OJ Home &amp;Auto

- -- - -

Notice

For Sale er Trade

Pets

Sale

,

For Sale

----Real Estate For Sale

.
.Clelan-d___R

Auto Sales

DEMONSTRAlOR
SALE

oar

Want Ad

Business Opportunities

'

I

j

for

I

I

Male Help Wanted

YIIUR NEW HOME

--------------

Notice

Real Estate For Sale

Roof
Painting &amp;
Repair, Spoutlnil &amp;

Work.
Contact:

Dtlllor. 0.

·- ..---

$5.55

Ewlyn McDaniel

ROOFING,
BY OONTRACr

Rl.l

TROPICAL ASH

m.

----,---,
Have Your Yearly

Air.COnditioning
llispection And
R.charge
6.98 Plus
Parts

Blaettnar's
Phone 992·2143

Lose Inches the tiSY way
with the nlw:
SLIM-A-WAY

Free Home Oemonstrltlon
MRS . WENDIIL KAYLOR
112·269'1
N•w Haven, W. Ya.
After 4 WHkiiiYS or
1 Til 1 Saturday

OOZER WORK. Sepllc tanks,
leach beds. Phone 9.49-2171.
10·18·1ft

lnsura11c:e

AUTOMOBILE ln1urance boon
cancelled?
Loit
your
operator's license? Call 992-

2966.

6-15·1ft
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Call No. 21,171
Estate of George Otto SchmolL
Deceased .
Notice IS hereby g iven that
Robert Otho Schmoll , of Mid ·
dleport , Ohio , hn been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of George Otto Schmoll ,
deceased, late ot Meigs County .
Ohio .
Crc.~lt~rs ere required to file
,their ct,(lllms W!fh salct fiduciary
within four months.
Dated thla 8th day of October
1970.
F . H . O'Brien
Probate Judge of ttld
County
( 10) 12, 19, 26, ltc

HOISTEtTER .

Wanted To BUJ

=~· ..e:tn.=~·

Fer Sale

:::~=i=-tr=.~~

REALTY

hut~

WIN¥0N

SALEM
0!1

Hom.• •

Ho-. .,..,.

For Rent

2

be

,

NOTICI OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN IXC.SS
OPTHE TEN

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE II hereby glYtn that
In purtuance of 1 Resolution of
tht Board of Education of ttlt
Southern Local School District,
Meigs County, Ohio, Pitted on
the 8th dey of September, 1970,
there will be submitted to 1 vote
of the people of Uld School
District eta Generel Election to
bt haid In tht Southern Local
School Olatrlct, Meigs County,
Ohio, al the regular places ot
voting ttltrein, on Tuesdly, the
3rd day of November, 1970, the
quutlon of levying, In excess ot
the ten mill llmltttlon, for the
benefit of the southern Local
School Dlatrict for the purpose
ot Current expenses of tht
subdlvltlon.
Slid tn btlng: en addltlonll
tax or Two m ms to run for •
continuing perloC: et 1 rete not
tMceedlnu 2.0 milia tor each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Twtntv cents tor
.. ch one hundred dolltn of
valuation. for • continuing
period .
The Polls tor Slid Election
will bt open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
end remeln open until 4:30
0 1C:i0ck P.M . E11tern Standard
Tlma of ttld day .
8y order of tl'le Boerd of
Eltctlons, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Edwin S. Co11rt
Chairmen
Doroth'f M. Johnston
Clerk
Dated Oc1ober 1, 1970.
noJ s. 12, 19, 26. o4tc

AIOU'I' TO
A !uta&lt;

llMOUSUIE IVI.L OP TWo•
l!OOEl&gt; SERP£Kr J-·

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACJUlllll
1. Secluded
valley
G. Churth part
9. Set of basic
beltet•
10. Haul
11. Schoolbook
12. News blurb
13. Spoke at

2. Imper·

H . Charla-

teet

tano

t . Neither's
compulon
• . ll!ach

e.Endurlnl

le._tb
(2Wdl. )

-.....

product

3. Pa.ra·

!SwdLi

7. Wlll.ter

14. Lavtah

rood

partiea
16. tlle
Terrible
16. Expreue4
without

I . Cowardly
11. aroupot

word8

IIODI

8. Stately

17. Co&amp;)' roOm

18. Symbol
li.Purpoae
20.IlcoWih

.JJt!lJ~~;-r:t.,;::!t!~.c;
r.ur

IJni&lt;ramble theM
Jumblto,
letter to ...h ....... to

16. Syco..

phant
18. 811'
tor
22. Nal'

form four ordina17 . word1.

N.4CAL

ootlc
23. Kip·

I I

Unc'•
Deevor
... Ccm·
.true ted
IIIIIW

llJ. Cout
28. Atllto·

""""

29.IJnpoe.
lure
30.1Jitn •
quent

32. Olrl'l
lllekname

IMMG

0
RODUH

101plonr

2l.llelty

and

!No Down Payment

Help Wanted

r

Fine! We can
u5e thi5
picture! lt'6
a qooc1 one!

LEGAL NOTICE

"2·

Lost

DO

ORVIU£,..,.....
JOHJfSON

Phone

SOU1H

J BEDROOM house-, llh baths,

WUl'H
I'VIONEV,
PPM/

ALL

IS PUT IT UNDER
'lORE PILLER
TONIGHT

C.rpenter

.

BlAE'iTNARS

LEGAL NOTICE

I

DOC PRITCHART GIVE
ME TH' RIFLE BALL THEM
INRJNNEL REVENOOERS
PUT IN MV LEG, MAW

'

mlnl ·chopper bike, 2
available after Nov . I. Ex. SCOUT
-GUARANTEEDmonths old, cost 1200 new.
cellent
neighborhood,
close
to
Mondty Deadline 9a .m .
Phone 992-2094 ,
Will sell for $150. Phone
schools end churches. No
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
6'¥)7.
And Complete Une
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
pets. Write- C·O Dally Sentinel,
10.16-3tc
Oev of Publication
Bo:.: 729·R, Pomeroy, Cillo.
of Supplies
!
REGULATIONS
10.16-ltc
The Publisher renrves the
606 E. Main. Poineroy, 0.
right to edit or reject any ads
700X18 TRUCK tires . Wolk·ln
deemed obJectional.
The TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
cooler unit complete. Electric
Milson, w. Ve.
publisher will not be respon11lble
Park. Minersville. Phone 992·
meet saw. Meat block . 1955
nJ.K71
for more then one Incorrect
332·'Ford 1-ton truck with cattle
REAOV . MIX CONCRETE
Open Dolly 11114 p.m.
Insertion .
9-9·ffc
racks. 2·WIY turn plow for
delivered right to 't_OUr
RATES
1:301119p.m,
- , - - - - - -Cub Trador. Phone 949·3073.
For Want Ad Service
pro/ed. Fast and easy. Free
TRAILER
space,
one
mile
from
tn.J.~trscents per word one Insertion
est
mates . Phone 992·3284.
new Meigs High School on old
Minimum Charge 75c
Goagleln
Roodv·Mix 0&gt;.,
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Rt . 33 . Phone 992-2941 .
12 cents per word three
Middleport,
Ohio.
service,
all
makes.
f92.228.4.
9·20-30fc
conse-cutive lnurtlans.
6·30-lfc
11 cents per word six con .
The Fabric Shop, Pomoroy.
ucutlve insertions .
Authorized
Singer
Soles
and
R E MODELED 3 ·bedroom
lS Per cenl Discount on paid
Service. We Stwlrpen Scissors. NEIGLER Construction . For
house on Lincoln Heights.
ads and ads peld within 10 days .
building or remodeling your
3·29·Hc
Phone 992-3UO .
CARD OF THANKS
home, call Guy Nelgler,
9·27·1fc
&amp; OBITUARY
. A REAL
-'C;-;U;;R~T;-;1S;;:S-;C~o::ll;;:le:-;;:Br::e~edl ng
Recine, Ohio.
Sl.SO for 50 word minimum .
lfREIIZIII
7·3l·lft
N
t"'
c"EC'
L
C'
Y
:-c
f
u
_r_
n,ls,hed
-.,.-:
2
-:·
b
--,ed
room
Service.
Phone
Parker
at992.
additional
word
2c
.
SPECIAL
Each
2264
or
call
station
Coolville
BLIND ADS
apartm e nt. Middleport .
Additional 25c Charge per
667·3251 .
Phone 992-387.4.
LEGAL NOTICE
OHIO
Roush.
Advert isement .
10.18·30tt
9·30.tfc
NICINSKY and
OFFICE HOURS
Vickle Roush, daughter of Mr . GEORGE
RUIY JEAN NICINSKY ,
NOTICii OF ELECTION
8 : 3(1 a .m to S:OO p.m. Daily ,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO.
Plalntlffl,
and Mrs. Lester Roush, wsa
ON TAX LI!VY IN
8 : 30 am. to 12 : 00 Noon J ROOM unfurnished apart.
Reasonable rates . Phone
EXCE$1 OF TH. TEN
Saturday .
ment.
J05'h
Condor
St.,
phone
returned home from Holzer VIC;~R R. THOMSON , ET
MILL LIMITATION
John Russell, Gallipolis ""'·
992·2907 .
Medical Center where she had AL..
NOTICE
IS hertby given that
&lt;782
alter
5:30p
.m
.
10.f8.3fp
Defendants.
Inp11rsuance
of a Resolution of
4-7-tfc
been a medical patienl.
No. 14,729
the Board of Township Trustees
sTOrm
f,O'!ICE BY
TWO BEDROOM mobile home .
Mrs. Jack Ables and daughler
"H7A;:R;:R~ISO~::::N:-::,-:S~Te;;V:;-A;-;N:-;0;-AN. of the Towm'!hlp of Chester,
windows , car
Meigs Co. Farm
PUBLICATIO"
lnqulre at M and G Food
Mela• County, Ohio, Pllted on
took her mother, Mrs. Alice
TENNA SERVICE . Phone the 5th day of June, f910, there
marquees, blown
The unknown heirs. devisees.
Market. J miles south of
Bureau
Federation
992·2522.
insulation . Elmer
Balser 1o Parkersburg Satur· legatees , adm lnist r ators ,
will be subm ltted to .t vote of the
Middleport, Slate Rt. 7.
6-10-tfc people of Uid Chester Townthlp
and nslgns of the
Annual Meeting
sales representative.
day 1o oee a doc lor . Mrs. Balser executors
10-IB·Jtc
following persons. il deceued ,
of Chts1er , Ohio, at the rttultr
es.tim ~ tes, pl'lone Chltrlo&gt;s
Tues. Nlght-7:37 P.M.
hu been aasisting ln the care of and If not deceased , then those
pieces of voting lhertln, on
C.
BRADFORD,
Auclloneer
Lisle,
Syracuse.
persons whose addresses
Ocl.20, 1970
Tuuelay , the 3rd der, ol
Mrs. Laurence Balser at same
Johnson
end
Son,
Inc
.
Complete
Service
are unknown. Alva Tl'lom1on ,
November, 1970, the quest on of
Phone
949·3821
8-30·ffc
Mrs . Alva Thomson , Keaton
New Meivs local
Tuppers Plains.
levying , ln tMCist of the ten mill
1960
OLDSMOBILE
con .
Racine, Ohio
,
Mrs .
Keaton
High School
limitation , for the benefit of
Mrs . Herbert Roush and Thomson
Thomson , Robert Thomson ,
vertlble , good condition . 8x30 HOUSE trailer, very good,
Crltt Bradford
Chtster Township for the
tAdjtcMtto Fefr Grounds)
Roger and Jell Miller were Mrs . Robert Thomson , Edna
5-i -Hc purpose ot Current upen111 of
Phone 992 ·58-4.1.
$195. Brown' s Trailer Park ,
Hans.en
.
Edward
Hansen.
Steak
Dinner
the Township .
10·18-ltc
Minersville, Ohio . Phone 992Athens visilors Sunday .
Mam le Oroudt, Oris Oroudl ,
S.ld taM being : a renewal of
Profe11lonel Entertainment
BACKHOE
and
Endloader
3324.
I0.16-31c
Mrs . Flossie Church or Nancv E . T-hOmson , Kenneth
an existing tax of V: mill to run
Adulttl1.25.
Children
15c
work
.
George
Bill
Pullins
.
Th"Omson, Maurice Thoms.on.
for five ye1rs at a rate not
Marloo, Mrs. Pauline Polland and
C.. II ff2-2111fer ReHrYation
For
1966 NEW MOON traUer, 2
10·16-30tp exceed 1h mltl for each one
Enos E . Thomson. will take
Public Invited
and two chlldren or Mllford notice that on the 21st. day of
bedroom , 10xSL $2,800. Exdollar of vltuatlon, which
BLACK
male
poodle ,
1970,
George
cellent condition . Phon e SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller .amounts to five cents for each
Center visited Mr. and Mrs. September,
registered . Phone 992·6329.
Nlclnskv and Ruby Jean
one hundred dollan of
Mason 773-5193.
Sanitation, Stewar1, Ohio. Ph. valuation , tor Flvt years .
10· f6.Jtc
Marshall Adams and also Nlcinskv. filed their complaint SWAP SHOP, new and used
10·16-6tc
furniture
.
Phone
992·7261.
305
you In the common
662·3035.
The Polls tor said Election
visited graves of loved ones at against
N. 2nd. Ave., Middleport ,
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
2·12·11c will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
Ohio .
Ohio, praying tor partition, and
..~
BASSET pj;les, AKC, S30 . 2 WIGS, one blonde,.,one light
Letart Falls Cemelery .
and remain open until 6:)0
brown . Alto Polarola camera, WHE"E l Hof !fie Sa tea and o'clock P .M. Eastern St.wctar"d
. .. 16·\~1' ~ · ~r·n~ll'.
ifted111'11. phone
requl~f'P,ifeiit
kl
set
up.
your
if!r~ ~ coDed ~ his intert . . li~rf;""lf lny , In the -'---"'--'.C.:.~
one
Kodak
lnstamaflc
·
C!oolv11ie 7·3856. r ;.
service . l&amp;um Lumber Time of said dey.
descr ibed
real WILL give plano lessons In my
~. Mh. Edll8 Roush, and folio
ev order of the 8ot~rd of
camera, one mOvie camera .
10..18·12ic
Company, Chester , Ohio . Elections,
prop rtv :
of Meigs County ,
!Vtan 's suit, size 4.4 . Very good
Gladys Sbleltla at Racine.
hom e . Phone 992 ·3666.
Phone 985·3301.
Ohio.
condition
.
Phone
992-2437.
8·16-tfc
5·20-lfc
Mrs. lloocoe Scarberry and Parcel No . 1: The following
Edwin S. Cozart
10·16·31&lt;
real estate situate In the State of
Chairman
Mrs. (;len TUcker of MI. Moriah Ohio,
County of Meigs and WILL pick up merchandise and PAR KVI EW Kennels, Poodles,
AIR
CONOITIONING,
and bird dogs. AKC. Pet and 1 ROOM house, bath, coal
Dorothy M Johnston
coDed '"' Mrs. Herbert '1\oush Township of Bedford, and !' take to auction on a per.
Refrigeration ser vlc•. Jack't
bounded and described as
furnace. Thomas Fork Road
Cltrk
-.how puppies . Grooming .
centage bas~s . Call Jim
Refrlveratlon,
New
Haven
.
Friday .
follows :
( 10) 5, 12, 19, 26, -He
near Hllend Church. Mrs.
Phone 992 ·5443.
Adams. auctioneer. Rutland .
Phone 882·207'1 .
Being In Section No. Eight
M:. and Mrs. Charles GaskiU
Olfford Jacobs. Phone 9923·17.tfc
Phone
742
·
~1.
u
.tfc
Town No . Three (3), Range
of Wellstm spent two days at {8),
2437.
9.2J.Ifc
No. Thirtee-n {131, of the Ohio
lO·l...lc
LEGAL NOTICE
Company's Purchase. to-wit :
their cabin.
Beginning
at
the
southeast
COAL,
limestone.
Excelsior
Nor
u
Mrs. Edna Parsons Ia • corner ol a IS 70·100 acre tract HAYMAN'S AUCTION tiouse,
1 0 , I!LECTION oN
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
8
NICE
ewes.
20
lot
lambs.
laurel
Cliff,
new
open
each
aurglcal patient at Veler&amp;nl of land belonging to W. W
_ealty~.
TAX o~·~~.'"r::us
Pomeroy. Phone 99'J.J89l.
Phone 992·2630.
Friday to receive con .
Thompson; thence west on the
Memorial Hospital.
4·9-ffc
MILL LIMITATION
south line of said 15 70·100 acre
slgnments at 10 a.m. Auction
10· 1J.61c
NOTICE II hereby given th•t
M:. and Mrs. Robert Wood tract of salct W. W. Thompson
starting at 7 p.m . Let us sell
MINERSVILLE HILL- LII(E In pursuance of 1 Resolution of
100 roda to the center line of said
your merchandise.
CRAFTSMAN riding lawn
and Wald Jolmon spent Swlday section.
rul\,l'llng north and
NEW-s rooms, 2 bedrooms, the Council of the VIllage of
mower
.
Phone
992·2.429.
3·22·tfc
with Mr. and Mrs. Millord south ; thendl south on the
bath, nice kitchen with bullf· Rutland, Ohio, pened on the 6th
10·11-3tc
tine of said section line 15
gar.,.e, Clay of Mty, 1970, ther• Will bt
In rai!e' •·sement,
Frederick and family al center
ua
-•
tubmltted to 1 vote of t~t ptoplt
rods; to the south line of said PIANO tuning. Karl Kebler,
GOIN AT 16,900.
of seid VIllage at e General
Section Number Eight (I);
Mason . Phone 173-5.535 after 5 ELECTRDLUX SWEEPER MlDenville.
Election to be held In tht Vlllagt
thence east on the south tin• of
p.m .
M: . and Mrs. Don Rlffle and said
Comrlete with attachments,
HARRISONVILLE LOW of Rutland, Ohio, at the rttular
Section Number Eight (ll
1Q. J3.JOtc
pain spray, cordwlnder e~~nd
UPKEEP 1 story, tile piece at voting therein, on
lllllly of COOtmbus spent four to a point and stake in said south
throw.away begs. Full cash
section
line
;
thence
In
a
nor·
block,
2
bedrooms,
2 porches, Tundey, the 3rCI Cler, ot
days with M:. and Mrs. Losier therly direction 15 rods to the
price only 131 . Terms
•-- ~s
all furnace In November, 1970, the quest on ot
uam,
...,
w
levying, In excess ot the ten milt
100il Mill WltliA
Roush and family and visited place of beginning, containing
available . Phone 992·5641 .
GOOD CONDITION. $6,500. llmltallon, for tht benefit of
about
nln11
and
one.fhird
(9 \ .3)
10.
16-.lltc
M:. Rlflle's mother, Mrs. Lelia acres. more or less .
FARM - 112 acres, lots of Rutltnd vmega for the purpose
11 PONTIAC
SAV5
timber, barn, outbuilding 01 General construction. rt·
It being the Intention and
Robinson.
Bonneville .4 Or . hardtop,
PAINT
DAMAGE
1970
Zig·
purpose of this deed to coovey e
with cellar, pond, hOUH hal construction, resurfacing and
factory
elr
conditioned,
vinyl
M:. and Mrs. BlU Robinson tract
Zag Sewing Machines. Sllllln
of land fifteen (15) rods
NEW lATH, NEW KIT· rtpelr of str,ets within tl'le
top,
stereo
tape,
low
original cartons. No at ·
are moving from the Andrew wide by one hundred ( 100) rods
of Rutltnd.
CHEN1 Iarge 11 v1f)g room. 2 Vllleve
mileage,
auto.
trunk
rete11e.
Stld tax being: an eddUion•J
tachments, needed. 11 our
.
Cross resldence lo the 'f ormer long
tilt steering wheel, fullv
bedrooms.
COULD
HAVE
4,
teM
of
Five
mills to run for five
Reference Deed : Vol. 1.46,
controls are built-ln. Sews
equipped .
.5,
mile
out
of
Pomeroy,
vean
at
a
rate
not excetdlna 5.0.
Herbert Sayre residence al Page 256. Deed Records of DISTRIBUTORSHIP wllhou1
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
$10,900.
mills for tech one dollar of
Meigs County, Ohio.
buttonholes, sews on buftont,
70 CATALINA
SAY I
Investment . Deluxe candy
Antiquity.
valuation, whlcl'l emount1 to
2 Dr. Hardtop, factory elr
and drug specialties to
monograms and blind hem
llwtoeD Cllne and friend of Parcel No . 2 : The following
POMEROY- WITH INCOME Fifty Cents for eech one hunconditioned,
Reily
II
whftll,
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
taverns, restaurant,, stores,
real estate situated In the
- 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms, dred dOllars of valuation. for
Mt . Moriah spent Friday Countv
or E·Z Terms. Phone 992.~1. vinyl top, low mlleao•.
etc . Direct factory connection
of Meigs , State of Ohio,
2 baths, CQ.RNER LOT, Fi~~,VS,:~I~i for teld Election
ovonlng with M:. and Mrs. and in the Ohio Company's
10.16-6tc
earning high dally cash
garage, full basement, GOOD will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
Purchase,
and
bounded
and
commissions
.
Everything
~-------------- described as follows, viz :
CONDITION. 110,.500.
. and remtln open until 6:3Q
furnished, but must bt bond· SINGER TOUCH &amp; SEW full
. TO BUY OR SELL
o'clock P.M . Ettttrn Stlndard
Beginning at the northwest
1
size
sewing machine. With
able
handling
our
mer·
CONTACT US
Time of ttld day.
corner
of Alonzo Holt lot and the
lUlCK
PONTIAC
I
I west line Of the south eut chandlse and cash. Pert or
s e lf ·wlndlnt bobbin, slant
HENRY
CLELAND
By order 01 the Boord 01
GMC TRUCKS
I
I quarttr Of Section No . Eight (I), full time. Write Chexco, 2910 needle designs, also zlg·IOV
REALTOR
Elect1on1, of Meigl County,
POMEROY
I
brin1 JDU
I In Town No. Three (JJ. In Range N. 16th St .. Philadelphia, Po . equipped. Comet In walnul
Office ft2.22Sf
Ohio .
No . Thirteen (13), thence north
19132.
sewing stand. $72.50 cash or
RH.
99:!·2561
twenty two rods and nine links
Edwin S. Court
10..11-:ttc
termt available. Phone 992·
ertra ush
10.11-61c
to a stake on west line of &amp;eld
1966 MUSTANG, good running
Chairman
56A1 .
I
I auarter; thence eut one
10-IUtc condition. Prtc:od raosonably.
Dorothy M. Johnston
I
I hundred and teventy rods to the
11 lnternled, c;oll 99:!·2306,
east 1me or 111110 secuon; mence
Clerk
shoppinl sprees 1 south
KIRBY
Vacuum
Cleaner
In
10.1J.31c
two rods aM thirteen
3 tr 4 I tel roams
Sales trainee •o
exatllenl condition. Has all :::-:::-:-:::-77:::::-'"7-:flO) 5, 12, 19, 26, 4tc
links to the uid Holt'S north WANTED:
lullt to yoyr spaclflcatlons.
work directly with Manager
ottochmenlo Including buffer 1M7 VALIANT, standard sfllfl.
eut corner; thence west
IIIII
tvllllblt
ROW
.
for advancement to Salas
seventy rods to hit northwest
and domolher . Sells , _ for
Phone 992·3110.
Manager position . Must bo
11).1 ..3tp
corner of the 11me; thence
over $200. Will Nil lor 164.!0
.,.., • awrestlve end willing
south
twenty
rods
and
eliven
c:ath or terms arrlnliled.
RE·OPENING of Mlddlepor1 links to a ttake on tht Holt line;
lowork. Cer necessery. Apply
cab office o1 322 N. Second tt\enct wHt one hundred rodt to
460 MacCorkle, Ave.,- SO.
Phone 992 · 5641 ·
to. 1utc
Monftllr Payments
Ave .. Middleport Compelled the plec;e of beginning, conChao.
·
2-STORY building with paved
Lower Thin •••
to lower fares In town. 2.._hour ttlning fifteen ecrn, more or
10.1Uir.
wt&lt;tng
lof.
Also,
3
loll
In
service hlilabfe. Phone 992- lttt, It being a pt~rl of the Ktltt
NEW ond brush hclgo .
Centact: Mr. Moecty, Pll.
bctno, Phone 992.2131 or m. 7014
3210 or 992-2Sl5. Sharon's of L. D. Holt, Dtc:tlltd ,
Phono992.-.
tt aur flel41 efflct 1t
Rettrenct
Oted
:
Vol.
60,
:tm.
Twin City C.bs.
11).1..31&lt;
Ptrll &amp; SrcllnN'e In Mlf·
Ptge
224
tnd
225,
Dtect
Rtcords
10.1..31c
10·19-61c of Mtlgt County, Ohio.
~IIPtrt.
SOM~ON E to do brush hog
J•MCO AISOCIATe$, INC.
• PIGS, 2 - · " ' - 7fl- - - - - - - Ftrlllerly KIIHII Atlecltttt,
work . Phone 742-4171 .
Ptrcet No. 3: Tht toltowlng
44U. Aollond horl,.,
Inc.
10.1
..
3tc
rtel tttttt tituated In the
A•llond.
County Of Malgt, Stitt Of Ohio,
10.1Uip
LOST, lady's while gold tnd In the 01110 Compjlny's
CONVENIENT but ucludod
wristwatch at Mtlgs . Affltnt Purcn11e, and bounded end
building lo1t on T79 of Rock
game Friday. Phone 99:!-3$01. ctncrlbtd a1 followa, Vll:
sr,rlngs. Within walking
10.19.3tc
Bqlnnlna fifteen rodt end OLD lurnlturit, dllhol. brill PIG5 AND .....,.. C.ll
d 1t1nce ot Melgo High
five ilnkt north Of tht touthwnt
beds, otc. Write M.D. Mill.,,
School, • 5 mlnu1e drlvt tr9m
IIIAT J IIDitOOMI- Bath,
corner of me southtlll querter
Stetht New 1f71
Rl. ~. Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli
Jl.1 ...2tc
new forced 11r furnace.
Pomeroy. Coli or Bill
of Section eight (I), Town Thrtt
992-6271.
U&gt;. Ranve Tnlrt. .n (13),
:-:-C':':=,..-,==~~
Concroto watkl. LandiCipod
Witte -kdays.
- - · Phone
or otter992·5
1965 FORO 2 door sedan, good tntnu 1111 one hundred rocti; _ _ _ _ _ _ _9_· 1·tfc MAS&amp;EY . ,UGUSOII 1U lof. Only tUOO.DO
p.m.
running
c:ondlflon,
1450. thfilU north twenty thr" rOds
6817.
traciO&lt; .
.....
ll!owo, I IEDIIOOMS
H and thirteen llnkt to tht touth OLD UPRIGHT pianos, ony
10-IS.Ifc
Pllone 992-.
II).!P.Jic east corner of lend owned by W.
condition, as 10119 11 hove not
ftooro,
Control
olr
w. Thomp&amp;on; thence wttt one been . wet. Paying $10 ooch . 195i!S1-""*-Irud&lt;, c:ondlllonlng. Full boMmenl.
hundred rods to the west lint of
First floor only. Mondayl will
All for p,IOO, I'INott ~.
Gorogt. v...y nlat. 124.500.00 2 BEDROOM house, nice
the southe..t 1:4uarter of Uid
to&lt;OIIon. SH ol IU 8rattd·
LEGAL NOTICE
bo plck·up dey. Wrl1e, gl•lng
Now Dft~~lavl
Section tight; tl'ltnct south
woy, Mlddl_.t. 992·
tfl.lUic MIDDLEPORT - • bfdtoomt
tood directions, Witten "Plano
twtnty
three
rodt
and
thlrtten
R~l!lil~
1970 ,~l!lle
TIMES FOtt HOLDING
1114.
COmpany, Box lU, Sllrdlit ::,,.,~-=a7
sA:-IIG~-:c:-.-:,:-,-:,::,r-.
ill&gt;lrd
with doteto. living 11 • 11.
COMMON PLEAS COURTS, links to the piece ot btQinnlng,
10.1Utc
conttlnlng fourtHn tnd HYtn ·
l ·, ,must
Ohio 439&lt;6.
Scrambltr 1 3 1 ftl0~ mUll.
Porc:h, gar-a•. ltd,SOO.OO
A. D. "71
tern. more or IHI.
8.20-lfc
11 is ordered that tht terms ot ttntht
Reference OHd : Vol. IH,
f!xcellonllhope. Colltii!CI_.I.'!'! NEW 1 110~ - All GOOD Investment· p~ilperty .
tht Common Pleas Court In the Page
Sff, Dttd Rtcords Mtlgl
Young, New
~
County of ·Me los for the year County, Ohio.
812·2~1.
1100. Firm.
o1ec lrl c h'omo, 2 -•-t~
,,., nlat · ''
,,..,.. . w11h -"''" •.fu rn I•·1971 be tiMed as fottowfl. to -wit .
10.11·3tp dining . erao. Thortli·O,pono
lfllrljnonto, . botll"onl, ¥1
On nit lSI dav of Januar~ •nd
You ere required to tntwtr
.
· "':'':':"'"::":--:-::-::-::-:-GLAU. Ooublo O•••Dt·
gor.ogoo . Monlft[~, lncon'io,
the II~ diY Pf MiiY and tt1e lit within twenty tiOht days from
3 ROOM turnlsfled opartmen1 TRAILER LOT, 100.210, with
Excellent iocollon, sn,f!JO, . $1H, Priced r u - r , : ..lar
dJY of September tnd the said tht dtff of tht l•at publlcltlon
with nice yard '" Middleport.
walor anA shodo lruo. Avo
~ud for your lnsf*Hon. •.. qu!ck "'
. lo. Phone 99:!. • • _.1rc
terms of Slid Court bqln at of 11'111 notice, the 1n1wtr Clttt
19
Phone 992·2780 or 9'12·34!.
G lk
H~ I
Ill 0 Ph 0110
nlmont PIMM
10 ;00 A.M.
being December 7th .• 1910.
. 10.7·b:
~
.~.
orr
IOIIV
'
I
·
WITH
~DHFIOEIICE
,::
...
--~~---""'~
7
GEORGE NICINSKY and
JOHN C BACON
10·11·31t
It fAL:L 992•:utS
LOTS WITH all utlflfllt.' '
RUBY JEAN NICINSKY - - -- - - - JUDGI; OF
"LAINTIFFS
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
E
.
.
EN
111!1
VlltOIL
RHirltlod sub division. V. :lo
COMMON
PLEAS CROW, CROW ~ PORTE~.
l REGIST~ED qu•rter horN
TEAI'OIIO ASSOCIATES
·'•crt !of• . Phone Chttter
hoo
(;OUU,
opartmenlo. CioH to K
'
gelding. Phone 241·2306,
IYIIACUII .
915-3301, night f15.J3112,
..
.
MEIGS COUNT'I', OHIO Attorneys for Pl,.intlfft
Phone 99:!·144.
fO.fUic
10-IWtc
.
1+1ft
flO I If, 26, ( 111 :Z, ltc. 19121, (101 5, 12. 1,, 21 C111 t 6tc
JO.I ..Ifc

Classified Ads

THAT'S

J~
I

Mees,

·You,
and'· '·
..

2t.-2t.N.U.

(2wda.t .
llJ.IIuD-4own
:lt.Oyrato

··-·
ao.-··
.., __
aJ"""'
ll.C"

-~-

Now-lllodn:WIIIIon

tor-~~~~~-••
........ _. . . . . . . . IIIL

I ,... .. ___ I[ I I

r I ,_
Il I

I1

. . _ - PillA Ol-Y _....

..-1--l--ll !loo.....,., 1- . B - I V - - /oio - - I Y R.fX'"t

R

�I- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct.lt, 1970

Clara Ohlinger Seroices Set
Funeral services for Mrs. Saturday at her residence on
Cllra Ohllnger, 90, who died Locust St. In Pomeroy, wiU he
held at I p.m. Tuesday at the
Mrs. McCullough Ewlf18 Funeral Home.
Mrs. Ohllnger Is SW'Vived by
Services Tuesday
four children, Herman, Emalie,
Graveside services will be Conrad and Troy, all of
held at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy; a sister, Mrs. Dora
Sutton Methodist Cemetery Phillips, Pomeroy, 10 grandnear Racine for Mrs. Margaret. children, and 13 great - grandMcCullough, former Racine children.
resident who died Sunday
Preceding her in. death were

evening at Dover.
Mrs. McCullough is survives
by two daughters, Mrs. Ray
Oliver of Lakewood and Mrs.

her parents, Mlchael
Catherine Bentz Rapp,
husband,
William,
daughters, Clara Mae

V e - Mealorlll BOIIPIIII
SATURDAY AI)Mil!SIONS Edimd lllale1, RadDe; Donlel

SAnRIDAY DISCHARGES
- Amber Lobn, Dorothy
Whaley, Bulb Cltr, Edna

Eric

Paraona,
M...m.
StiNDAY ADMISSIONS - .

Fred Robinson, Pomeroy;
Ethel Woodyard, Athena;
Jlmel Gibbs, Hartford_
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Hurl Hannah~, Beatha Clonch,
Grace Ellll, Harold Adams,
Boy BUlb, Doold llaggtrly.

~0 ·~

~-

and
her
two
and

CLUB TO MEET
Tbe Winding Trail Garden
aub will meet Wednesday at
7:30p.m, at the Ohio Power Co.
office In Pomeroy. Mrs. Leo
Kennedy, &amp;'., will he h01tesa.

Inez Frecker, Colwnbus; a son, Margaret Catherine, and a son,
R. E. McCullough, and several Thurman.

grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
Her huahand, Dr. Silas MeCUllough and two sons, Starling
and George, preceded ber in
death.
Officiating at the services will
he the Rev. Paul Sellers. The

Mrs. Ohlinger was a member
of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ. Officialifl8 at the funeral
will be Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the fWleral home any time.

Ewing FWieral Home is in

SOuthern Jr.

charge.

Funeral Set for
Mrs. Lula Russell
Funeral services for Mrs.
Luis B. Russell, 78, fonner
Bradl&gt;lry resident who died
Saturday at Bethesda Hospital
in Zanesville, will be beld at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Bradbury
Church ci Christ.
Mrs. Russell had been
residing in Crooksville. She was
preceded in death by her
husband, Dana; two sons, a
sister and a brother. She was a
member of the Bradbury
Church of Christ and the
Daughters of America lodge in
Middleport.
Officiating at the services will
be Mr. Roy W. Carter. Tbe body
will be at the church from 12
ooon Tuesday until time of
services. Burial will be in
MUidleport Hill Cemetery. Tbe
Cannon and Cannon Funeral
Home at Crooksville is in
charge.

Suit for Divorce
Filed with Court
A suit for divorce and an
acUoo for support has been filed
in Meigs County Conunoo Pleas
Court. Edward LeMaster,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, filed suit for
divorce against Bonnie
Lemaster, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,
ehargtng gross neglect ol duty
and enreme cruelty.
An action for support under
the Reciprocal Dependency
Law was filed by Beatrice
Rairden, Hartford, against
Harry Graham, Rt. 33,
Pomeroy.
WSCS TO MEET
The WSCS of the Forest Run
Methodist Church will meet at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
church with Mrs. U. S. Nease
and Mrs. Fred Nease hosteases.

MEIGS THEATRE

High is 28-24

Grid Winners
Southern Jwtlor High
School foothell team coached by
Bruce Wallace defeated
Wahama 28-21 Saturday night at
Racine.
Wahama was leading at
halftime 24-8 but Southern
rullied as Mitch Nease scored
four touchdons for Southern and
one extra point. Don Shaffer
scored one extra point for
Southern.
f()uthern took an early 8 to o
lead but soon fell behind where
they stayed until the second half
rally.
1'uesday evening Southern
beat Meigs seventh grade 32-:lli
and was defeated last week by
Glouster 1&amp;-6. Southern plays at
~ p.m. Tuesday at Glouster.
The

Pleasant Valley Hoopltal
ADMITTED - Mrs. Richard
Thomas, Lottie Wllsofl8, Pl.
Pleasant; Charles Stalnaker,
Long Bottom; Richard Fielder,
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs . Ardath
Brinker, Letart; Osborne
Stewart, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs.
Elsie Duncan, Pliney; Mrs.
Spurlock, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. H.
A. Cochran, Buffalo; Linda
Staub, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Curtis Wallace, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mark Blankenship,
Letart; Mildred Woomer,
Letart; Mrs. Doas Hutchinson,
Letart.
DISCHARGES - Surilda
Rumbaugh, Timothy Fultz,
Denzil Kimberling, John
Taylor, Rmald White, Mrs.
Vallie Toney, Elizabeth
Johnson, lasac Wallis, Mrs.
Paul Harmon, Mrs. Robert
Underwood, Burwell McKinney, Linda Chapman, Mrs .
Charles Oliver, Linda K.ay
Chapman.
BIRTHS - A son to Mr. and
Mrs . Roger Spencer, Long
Bottom.

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
October 19-20

THE ADVENTURERS
(Technlcotorl
Candice Bergen

Ernest Borgnine
Coktra rtoons :
Topsy Turvy
Hold That line
Miserable Miseries
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

PATRONS OF THE BIG BEND Mlnstrel Fill Musical will receive cash prizes ranging
from $1 to $5 if they catch the candy klssea wblcb these pretty girls will lbrow from the
runway both on Thursday and Saturday evenings at 8:10p.m. In the new Meigs Hlgh School
Auditorium at Rod: Sp-tngs. The preUy glrla from the left are Peggy O'Brien, Jeanie
Schneider, Nancy Thompson, Milisa Rizer and SheiTY King.

EXPECT TAPER-OFF
COLUMBUS (UP!) - W. J.
Usery Jr .1 asaistant Secretary
&lt;J. Labor, says the spiraling
unemployment is espected to
taper off by the start of 1971, but
that the Nixon administration
would continue Us gradual antiinflationary policy.

DEU.WoUIE, Obit (VPI) - ApGI!olunaaol Wllllalll
AlldenoaldUjNilpata .... reveoledm-dut w.. .:11'
aalrlemlllllllllllrepluloanwiMiertllulertlllaen......,

-~
AMen, wilt left lise •

....,, eorpo 1o taU P eulls.._.NASA (MIIU.., oald Ia a -alii apetdl .. ~
Wealeyu llldveniiJ ben lllflloptallllll dotl'lltDoW wiiJIIse
plaatl 1esp •dod sa "-lleally to lise mooa ._,,
Be oald )1»1 I IIDJ 1111 fll ... moGR dad tile Apollo I
• - I I bnaPt from t1se ID Deeemller • wu
mbed wllll water IDd MmJnMon•l to lise piPta. Iii a ....
trt11oc1 upalmm Ia wlileb olller plata were fed - . I
aalrleall, tile moon dad planta IN" ala m..,h fulor role,
be Ald.

NWce Diet in Colrunbus, Ohio
Mr. and Mr1. Everett
Bachner fll Middleport learned
SoturdaJ fll the desth of their
niece, Mrs. William G. Moon,
47, of Columbuoat the Riverside
Methodllt Haopltal.
Mrs. Moore wu the former
EleanorWeua, daugbter of Mr.
and Mril. Edison Weaaa d.
Colwnbua. The Weaaa famlly
are ronner realdenta of Middleport.
Besides her parenta, Mrs.
Wessa Is survived by ber
lllab.lnd, a 11011, Michael o1

MONTREAL (UP!) - The
Canadian governmmt hunted
two suspect FLQ kidnapers
today despite the chilling
knowledge finding them could
cost the life of British diplomat
Jam.. R. Crosa, who pleaded
for capitulation to his captors'
demands.
But Canadian Prime Minister
Pierre Elliott Trudeau, who
observed his 51st birthday
Sunday in a day of national
mourning and crists, indicated
no willingness ta bargain with
the two small bands of
terrorists who hold Cross and
already have assassinated Que·
bee Labor Minister Pierre
LaPorte.
Denouncing the FLQ as "a
small band of twisted men "
who offer Canada "no solutions
except murder'" Trudeau said
in a television report to the
nation, "we must eq&gt;ect that
these vicious men may ~tempi
again to shake our will." BUt he
prildicted they would faU. "The
FLQ has sown the seeds of
their own destruction,'' he said.
Spurning the demand of the
Quehec Liberation Front which seeks an independent and
Socialist Quehec nation-lor the
release of 23 FLQ agents and
the payment of 1500,000 ransom
in gold bullion, Trudeau would
not go beyond bls earlier offer
of free pasaage to Culp for
Cross' captors if they would
release the 411-year-&lt;Jid Briton.
LaPorte's Body Fouud
LaPurte's bloody body, his
hands bound behind him was
found Saturday night .; the
trunk of the car in which he
had been kidnaped Oct. 10. The
discovery piWlged Canada Into
despair
The ·FLQ kidnap suspects
sought by pollee were cab
driver Marc Carbonnea 37
and teacher Paul Rose, :r'f.' wh~
wears a Castro..tyle beard and
Is known to have twice visited
A pleas from Croaa In two
handwritten notes left In a
telephone hooth Sunday, echoed
the patheUc message LaPurte
addreaaed to his close friend
and political leader, Quebec
Premier Hobert Bourassa, five
days before his murder.
"The success of this search,"
he had written, "would he my
death warrant."

Mrs. VanZant, 93, Dies Today

BONDS FOIU' Ell ED

See The New.

thoro's an excellent reason far his refusal.

Some prescriptions moy not bt refilled with-

I

your phyoicion. Your pharm-

I

your health by followirljj
doctor's orders.

vetur check Is
cashtd, deposit occoptod, all

ELECTRIC .BLANKETS ··;

in•jifty. Na st1ndlng In liM

and ,. parlll"' -rln. 1e
dlfleront, try II -Y·

.'
'

V'JSit Our

VETERINARY

Frld•Yt Only
The Drlv•ln Window
is ()pen
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)
O!htr 11'*1"' Houro ' 1o 1

•rMf S ttl 7 II utUel ..
Frklays.

Smart

111w . . ..,.

In twtn

and lull bod olus. ....II

ood

oloublo . eant"l'

wllhobio
.............
...l..o,' .' .
'
,t!..,.,l

HUSH PUPPIES
New Fall Styles
And CDiors.

Including land and lreah water,

or 3,851,809 square mllea, Is the
largest country in the Weatern
Hemtsphere.

Devoled To The ln~ll

VOL XXII NO. 132

0

I

~llotttnlc, ~~ ~dlutll
rtOm ltill(lffahlre.

to

Of~

were able to chat with Nixon,
who made a surprise half-hour
side trip - the first ever to
the campus by a President in
office.
Even lhe Domocrato aeemed
to take the President's visit In
stride. "Metzenbaum and Gilligan Will Win Without Help,"
s.1id one sign held aloft wblle
Nixon spoke to a noon-llour
r,J;lly in froot of the Statehouse
st.ops.
Finally, those who llke lheir
pollUcs seasoned wilh football
were treated to a speech by
Woody Hayes, coach the No. !ranked Ohio State Buckeyes,
who urged the partisan throng
to get together and win the
election for the Reoubllcans.

Nixon grasped the hands of
broad-grinning Hobert Taft Jr.
and Roger Cloud, the GOP
nominees for the U. S. Senate
and governor, and held them
high as the crowd ;~ared iia
approval.
"AII·Amerlcao"
"To the voters of Ohio, who
are accustomed to jodging 'AllAmericans,' I say that I look
upon these men as 'All·Ameri·
can' candidates," Nixon said.
"I regard their election as a
matter of especially high priority ."
The President then swung
into a speech in which he declared he was working toward
"a generatian of peace."
"One, two, three, four ,"

l'eceDtii ·
were

Weather
Occasional rain sooth likely
spreading over the s'* lly
tonight, continuing W....._y.
High today and W,..._y In
the upper 5Qj and &amp;Oo. Low
tonight in the upper 10s and 5011.

Meigi-Ma1011 A,_

TEN CENTS

•

rnners
chanted a group of young people shouting the familiar antiwar slogan from Wlder a black
banner e:ontalning a white
"peace" sign.
"J know there are those who
are concerned when people
shout four letter obscenities as
this crowd over here is doing ,"
Nixon said. "It Is time for the
great Silent Majority of America to stand up and he COWlted.
"And 111 tell you how - on
Nov. 3 In the quiet Of the polling booth.
"Your answer to the shouting
of obscenities and the throwing
of rocks is the most powerful
-..·olce in the history of mankind
- one vote," he said.

Taft's and Cloud's favorite
campaign subjects in urging
support for them - an end to
violence and a halt to wasteful
government spending.
"Let's have a generation of
peace for the men that are
shouting out there,· · Nixon said.
"Let's cut spending in Washington, D.C. so you 'll have more
money at home here in Colwnbu.s, Ohio. Are we going to be
for the big spenders or are we
going to send Bob Taft to
Washington and elect Roger
CJoud governor?''
Homemade SJg.os
Hundreds of state workers on
their lWlch hours waved signs
passed out by aides to the ReThe President employed publican candidates who were
all on the platform with Nixon.
Some of the signs were home.

News ••• in Brie-'s
J ! Rev. Key is New
p
f Cit h
t

'

Also dlacuaaed waalhe
pnjltt
to reawface eight ~ Ill I'Gmlro)J,
lneludlng Main, wblcb was M dJid Jlr
ClOUIIdl earlier by a 14 tOte. Olltltdl
dlaclued eome cbaapl in tbe I* ,,,.,
but no action 'fll tabD.
Tom Werry, repreuDIIDJ, Ute
emergency aquad, asked ~a~tuidl If
arr.....,..,ll could be made lo lloul' U.
new emergency veblcle
(lUI'·
cbaled. Several IWI_.......Uma
~
even the pooslblllty of buPdloa • ...,.lire
station but no action waa taken,
Attending were Leaar, CoiiiiCIIau!ll
Werry, Franklin Rizer, Bob Hysell, 111111
Donald Collins; aert Jane Walton and
Treuurer l'llyllls Hemeuy.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1970

y

r---------------------------,
I,

torney.
.
Webster, represantA.g Fritz and Mary
Buck, wrote In regen! to a parking .....,
lOcated on the eaat side d. SR 7 near the
Pomeroy-Muon lkidge. The letter staled
Is not
that unieaa the guard r
remov ... , legal actio~ wr
...,,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

very
COLUMBUS (UPI) - - Almost
everybody came up a winner
Monday when President Nixon
made a pre-elecUon vlalt to this
cen1ral Ohio football capital.
Ohio Bepubllcana, ftghling uphill toward Nov. 3, received UJO
presldentlal blessing in front of
an eettmated ~.OOOonlookers at
Capitol Square and colDltieJs
more via radio and television.
Protest demonsb"ators, knotted in several groupo of about
50 each, got a chance to heckle
the chief 01ecuUve first hand.
Jolost of the time, they were
drowned out by his amplified
voice.
Sludenta at Ohio State Unlverslty, If they were In the
right place at the right time,

Legar from Manning Webster, local at-

Legar also read a leiter h'ml Fred W.
Crow, village solicitor, which auggesb!d
that the lot he uaed for employees of the
Dairy Valley. O'ow in a phcne oonveraation to Logar suggf!Med that a
reoo!uti011 be drawn up wblcb would
stipulate lhat the area In question be used
for a parlrlng lot for employees and if nol
uaed for this purpose be declared a
nuisance area.
Councilman Ralpb Werry stated that he
had written a letter to the Stale Highway
Dept., In Columbus ukq if the village
had the authority to place a guardrail In
tldaarea. Council will taU no action on the
matter until it hears !run the State Hlghway Jlepartment.

at y

with a total area,

1

~:~w;.~ki~~~h~::,!:

read one carried by a small

(Continued on Page 10)

CONGRESSMAN CLARENCE Miller, left, and local Republican candidates in the Nov.
3 election, are from left, T. A.(Ted) Downie, for auditor; Jotm C. Racon for common plea&amp;
judge; Ralph Welker, Pumeroy, for district re(I'Osentative to the Ohio legislature (Athens,
Meigs and Gallia CounUes), and Charles R. K.arr, Sr., candidate for Meigs County Commlssioner.

ea.::':.!~!~i:!:~tamartyrin~ ~~~~~ey. educatlon~~m~herofGOP- Advancing In Ohio,--Miller

Canadian unity, l'lerre LaPilrle, wblle the search tn- Jr. of Col11111bus Is the new the Concord choir of that
tellillled ltr bla kiUars alltl tlie kidnapers of Brlllah diplomat pastor of the Mount Moriah church.

Cltttle of

Jame1 L, 0'091, Canadian pollUcal fiiUrea lncludlnl Prime
Minister Pierre Trudeau and opposition leaders from Ottawa,
were Joining LaPorte'l family In paying final respecls to the
Quehec labor mlnllter murdered Saturday, one week after his

abdu&lt;tiOII by the Quehec Liberation Front.
MOIII'IWhlle, 8,000 pollee from throughout Quehec preaaed
theirsearcbforthreemenwanteduauspectsinthekldnapinpof
Crosa and LaPorte. SlnC&lt;! Trudeau Friday decreed emergency
war powers lroadenln&amp; pollee powera and suspending some
C8118dlan civil rllhis, author!Ues have aelzed without charges 341
IUI(leCted FLQ leaders and sympathizers In 1,627 raida
tl!rou8hoot Quehec, They have failed to find the kidnapers or
Cross.

Raptis! Church in Middleport.
Born in Columbus, the son of
Mrs. Helen E. McClain and the
late Henry L. Key, Sr., the Rev.
Mr. Key graduated from
Columbus East High School,

FaV!ft E,nrnt's
New Premier
e;r
OOVEIINMENT SOtJIUEISAID TODAY Prealdent Anwar
Sadat haa chosell Foretan Minister Mahmooo Fawzlas Egypt's
flrot clvlllan (l'emler in 18 years. Faw.l, a '16-year-&lt;lld diplomat,
apparently wuaelected to try to negotlete a peaceful settlement
In the Middle Eaat.
Badal, .,...,. In only Saturday to replace Gamal Abdel
Naar, proposes Fawzl to the central committee of the Arab
SoclaUst Union today, 11 . . expected to pve quick approval. In
Now YCI'i, Secretary of state Wll1lam P. Rogers woa meeting
with 18raell Premier Golda Melt In his continuing efforts to get
the Middle East peeco talb reaumed.

Pruident to Me« Gromyko

REV. UV

NEW YOIIIt - PIIE8IDI!NT NIXON will meet Soviet

Forelan MJrdlter Andrei A. Grom,vko In WasiUngton Thuraday for

...m.

i= .wed at
the curtent tena1ona In SovietAmerican Nlalloni1. Socretary d. stale William P. JloCera anDDunced the meeting Mon~ night alter conferring wltb
Grom.vko for two houn and 45 minutes. "This meeting, Uke any
meeting, we hope will play a part in better omderstancllni,"
Rogan aald.
llopn and Grolllfko remained at Ioqerbeada ,_. the
reporllld SoVJei..EmJUan mllll1e Ylolatlonti, but It """""' ln.....llnaJ;jr Jlkel)r that the Middle Eaat ceuo-flre woukl be ...
llildod on a day-looday bull.

dlac

mlllllloa frGm 1111 &amp;tomatlc rille Into a 1(1'0~ rl. 30 unarmed
Vle.tn=. . oldJDii1, - a n d cblldren her!ledlnto i. ditdllht
to II&amp; fttt ID tronl rl. blm. 'lbe tint pilblk! aecouitt, of the MJ Lal
-en Ill wbldi Amtlrli!b com•t .,ldlen ~ liiUed
(OJntlnued on Pice IO) ' '
1 '

Just drive rttht up, roll down

acist is safeguarding you and

canada,

In other action, ClOIIildl wted to amend
Sedion I of the aalary ordinance for street
employee&amp;, The first of three required
readings also was given that ordinance.
AQ employees of the department will he
pvea a 211 cent an bour Increase. The
atreet aupervl.aor will receive t%.30 per
boW' and two other employees $2 per hour.
In oUter business a letter was read by

•

· W~ Tatify to Shooting
n, 80(11), TEl. -TWOClO'IIEIINMBN'I.....,_ tllllfled
Mllllday tbe;lp s. Silt. Dlvkl MltciteU empty .two dlpl'of 1111·

FULLY AUTOMATIC

out special authari•ation from

fr&lt;m fZI a year to 150.
Ovtrllme parldng tlckell will .be lncreued from 15 centa to 10 centa. Dlegal
parking tlcketa from fl to f2, Tbe IJoa4.tn
periling pel'\alty' mly vlolatiOII Cll the
perking lots, will be rewced from $5 to p_
The only meters thai'will not be cl1ai~Sed
are the red meten near the Pomeroy
Nat1011al Bank and the Pomeroy Post
Office. Tbe rate for lhe red meter Is 12
minutes for I cent.
Mayor Outrles Legar observed that new
meten will not be tnatalled bul ad·
;atmenta made on the present meten. He
also aald It will be "aome lime" before
meters will be placed oo the town parking
area at Fourtb St.

By the Day

Bashan

refilled and had your pllarmacist roluso,

centa; ~ houra for 15 cents will be Ill·
creased to five houra ftr 50 centa; parking
lot meters, river aide, 2 houri ltr 5 cents
will be Increased to I hoiiC for ~ cents, 4
ho,.·lfor IOcents to 2bourl for 10 ceull, 10
holl'l for 15 cenll to 10 boors for 50 cents.
Tbe (I'OilOsed ordinance also provides
that plll')dna meters will be placed as
foUon: approllmately 38 meters on the
peved teetton of the town lot on Fourtb St.,
to register 2hours for 5centa, 4boura for 10
cents and 10 houn for Zi centa. Tbe area
preaenUy has free perklnc.
Parldng permlta for Individual parking
will he Increased from 150 a year to f/5.
Doctor apaces will be lncreaaed from flO a
year to fltiO. Tul Ucense!l will be raised

Now You. Know
·• '

Carmel News,

Cable TV Project Begins Friday

If you 'vo evor attempted to have a proscription

Three.......,.

will be beld Tuesday at the
Jerry Speon Funeral Heme 011
West Broad St., CoJnmbooa,

Mr. and Mrs. Olmer Lee
Roush, Mr. and Mril. Jamu
Circle, all of New Haven, and
Mrs. Hattie Powell, Roger
Beegle and family of Racine R.
D. visited Mrs. Mary Circle oo
Sunday.
In a communique, the FLQ lime In 102 years the harah
When 1,000 galhered In the Montreal to view the body of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Mutti and
repeated its demands.
reality of culd-blooded political chill autumn wtnda under the LaPorte. People stood for hours family of New Philadelphia,
Bourassa Mateo Replyv
assll&amp;'JlnaUon, Canadians dif- window of Trudeau's office on In the cold wblle macbtne gun- Ohio and Mlaa Dixie Circle of
Bourassa went on radio and fered about bow their govern- Parliament Hill wblle he boartng 1roopa and pollee Cleveland apent Saturday and
television and replied: "The ment should respond to the conferred with his ministers, admitted them, in small Sunday with Mr, and Mrs.
government will face this crisis terrorlsts and over whether it some 88fl8 the national anthem, groupo, to the courthouse where Homer Circle.
Mr. and Mro, Leo Taylor of
with linnness and will not let had gone too far in assuming "0, Canada!'• a banner read: the body lay Wltll Tue!&lt;day
Racine R. D. visited Mr. and
ilself be destroyed."
Wlprecedented peacetime pow- "Canada-We Love You."
afternoon's funeral.
Mrs.
Douglas Circle on WedExperiencing for the first ers.
A large crowd gathered in
nesday.
Charles Wayne Brtnter of
Carey, Ohio, vlalted Betty Van
Meter and family and Eunie
Brinker a recent Saturday,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
Continued from p~U!;e 1
Crabtree said the ftrst stepa of con- division) wW follow, and dlatrlbutlon _ and son, Larry, and Florence
He also applauded the high level of struction will he laying olthe trunk Jines, system coostruction for the four other Circle were guesta of Mr. and
cooperation given by the utility companies erection of the tower, and installati-on of communities should begin shortly . Mrs. Garrett Circle of Racine
serving the area. The CATV system will be eJectronic equipment at the tower site. The thereafter. The northern part of the net- Sunday.
attached to poles owned by the local stringing of cable for the distribution work will be known as TwlnVWage Cable
Mrs . Clyde Johnson and
telephone and power companies.
daughter, CoMie, of llamdeJ,
system in Pl. Pleasant (the PoinTVIew Service.
and Mrs. Douglas Johnson of
Racine called al the home d.
Betty
Van Meter and Mr. and
0
Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson and
Patrick on Sunday.
Allee VanZant, 93, wife of the Pomeroy; a brother, GarreU
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Circle and
Friday visitors of Mrs. Harley Knapp, Charles and Kevin.
tateGeoraew.
VanZant,
died
at
Bobo, While Rock, and one daughter, Patrice, of Columlnls
JoltDioD W... Mn, Jauwlll Kail Lao Knapp WOI 'treekend
ts Mr
Hartley of Bunker Hill; Mrs. vlsllorofhlsgrantbolher, Mrs. tile hliine of Her daugbter, sister' VIola Bobo, of Dayton. visited with •••tr
There are two deceased
... paron '
·
Margaret Coughenour,
Harley E. Johnson and Mrs. Lena Knapp of Lanpville.
and Mrs. Homer Circle of
Cheshire,
this
m&lt;rnlng
at
6
p.m.
Larry Barr and children of
Mrs. Lena Knapp and Mr.
sisters, Lovtna Bobo d. White Carmel, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Mrs. VanZant was the Bock, and Nancy Batman, Yo.st of Oak Grove over the
Langsville.
Ralph Knapp were dinMiss Marty Redman of ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. daughter or Francis Marian Cheshire, and two deceaaed weekend.
Bobo and Sarah Am Cuter lrolhers, Leonard Bobo, ol
Columbus, and Mrs. W. Boyce Doyle Knapp and family.
Thirty-two persons were
of Columbus are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy Bobo, A familiar figure In west Florida, and VIncent, of present for Sunday Scbool on
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell. and Bill visited Monday with Meigs County In the !IIIlO's, ahe Hamden.
October II. Offering wu f17.44,
Terry Ruasell of Pomeroy Mrs. Mabel Wood and with Mr. was a member of Laurel
Tbe body will be taken to Happy Birthday wu sung to
was Sunday visitor of her. McElroy, both of Wilkesville. Grange and the Christian Wilkesville by Strong and Son Don Smith and Ted Smith.
grandparenta, Mr. and Mrs.
Church at While Rock.
Funeral Home for preparatiOII,
Dale Hill of Letart spent some
Lincoln Bussell and Guy
She
was
the
motller
d.
four
then
will
be
lrOU8ht
1o
Rawllnp
lime
at the Douglu Circle borne
MAKE8 TWO CALU
Russell.
children.
Helen
Scott,
the
and
Coata
Funeral
borne
tn
recently.
Paul McElroy (Bill), son of The Middleport emergency eldest, (l'eceded her In death. Mlddlepurt Tueaday afternoon.
Calltng at the home of Ewlle
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy, unit anawered two weekend Surviving are Margaret
Vlalling
will
be
tonllht
at
Brinker
over the weekend were
calla. The flrsl was al4:31 p.m.
returned borne Friday after
Strq
and
Son
Chapel,
6
to
9
Mr
·
and
Mrs. 0rvy Gainer, Mr.
Saturday for Boo McKinney, Cougbenour' Cheshire; George
finishing hill service &lt;lilies with
Middleport, apparently suf- VanZant, Huntington, and Mrs. p.m. and at Rawllnp and 0&gt;811 and Mrs. Bennie Gainer and
U. S. Army in Vietnam.
Manning Webster (Mary), Funeral Home !rom 4 p.m. to famUy,allofHebron,B.D.,Mr.
Miss Naomi Jo Smith fering a haart attack, who was
1:38 p.m. Tueaday,
and Mrs. Carl Aotheraon, Lon(]
returned SUnday to Concord taken to Veterana Memorial Minor Ordered to
Tbe
funeral
Is
Wednesday
at
2
Bottom,
B. D. WIIUam Carleton,
College, AtheiiS, W. Va. to Hospital and then tranaterred to
p.m. under the direction of Racine, and Ralph Lao, local.
Holzer Medical Center, and Jail. Till Age 21
reswne studies.
Strong
and Son aaslsted by J E
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Lee and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles lhenat11:34 a.m. &amp;mday, to the
· · family vialted Mr. and Mn.
Charged with falling to attend
McGhee, Lugb and Sandy Kenny Thomas, ill at home tn
~Hru:.~ be In Arthur Orr of Chesler on
McGhee of Columbus were Cheahire. A doctor wu called. achool, a"ellling a dlaturbance,
I
_,.
Sunday,
aod
dlaorderly
conduct
on
Sunday visitors of their wtcle
achool property' and with being Damage Medium to One of Two Cars
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Outrley
ELECI'ION NEAR
Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle The annua1 election of lncOI'I'Iclble toward tiiBci(lllne of
members ci the board of the Ida parents and court, a minor Medium damage a were moving behlnd Pierce'• veltide.
Meigs County Agricultural baa been confined to the Meigs reported to one Cli' and a driver
The Goodwin cor had
Society will he held Thunday, County )all UDtJI May 26, 1171. wu cited to mayor's court
Nov. 12, In the Meigs County Tbe 1011teoce wu handed following a colllal011 &amp;mday at damaae. Pierce wu cited for
commissioners' office in the down by Jooge F. H. O'Brien In the entrance of the upper Improper~.
courlhouae. The paUa will be the Meigs County Juvenile court parking lot, Pameroy pollee
FINED ., 008'1'8
open from 5 to 9 p.m. Petitions fallowing • heating. The minor aald.
baa
been
made
a
ward
or
the
A
car
driven
by
David
Pierce,
Donald
Moore, PouioivJ, wu
for election which may he obcourt
uutll
he
attatna
the
age
of
20,11acine,badlquptopermlt lined . . . . 1!0111 011 Intained lr001 the fair board
secretary, Mrs Marvin King, 21. Whlle confined, he will be Ill OiiCOiiiiDa wblcle lo have IDIIcatlon cbar101 u the l'lllllt
must be flied seven days before required to study the IIICft apace, iilnidl the front of of 1 helrli!l Soltril7 nllbt Ia
curriculum d. the junior and a car drl"n by Pllma Good- the court of Ptmei'Qjl MQW
the Nov. 12 election.
aenltr grades d. biCh scbool.
will, 1'1, Prmeruy, wbldt .... Qlarlel Lept_

W )fipen
News, Notes

BY KATIE CROW
Five cent perking meters may be
coming lo Pomeroy,
Pomeroy Councll Monday night ap(l'oved the fint reading or an dnance
tllal IIW chinle the jreoont pelting
meten fw'l' 'penny to five cent meters.
are needod.
Tbe 14 iljiUied perking meter rea and
lines are: atreet meters would be chan&amp;ed
!rim 12 mlnlileo for me """' to 30 mlnuteo
for five ceilta; one bour from 5 centa to 10
cenll, two boun from 10 cents to 20 centa;
perking lot meterl, - t aide, (l'e8ent
rate one hour for five Cl!lltl will be tnlftlled 30 mtnutA!o for 5 cents, two houri
for IOcenta will he changed to I hour for 10

Columbus, and four cblldren,
Mman, Susan, Tori and Sam at
home. ALso surviving are two
brothers, Mllton and Jobn, boUt
of ColumllWI. Funtn1 services

Trudeau Standing Firm

CUba.

From Your Pharmacist

MAN CHARGED
HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) James A. Findlay, ancJnnatl,
... charged with first degree
murder today in the slaying of
Oleryl Segal, 16, whose nude
and muWated body was found
in a woOOed. area near here on
Sunday. Mlaa Segal, of Cincinnati, was the object or a
search after she failed to return
home from a date on Saturday
night.

Action Begun to Increase Meter Rate
p...,....

Moon Dust Hot Nutrient

Bull,!, Cbo~Nte.

'
'

.,

),'

attended Ohio State University
and the Columbus Baptist
School of Religion (an e.tenslon
of the Simmons University,
Louisville, Ky.) and Is currenlly

The Rev. Mr. Key is a former
assistant chaplain at the
Benjamin Franklin Tuberculosls Hospital and a memher
of the Columbus Baptist
MiniSters Bible League. He
entered the ministry In 1966 and
at that time was granted a
license to preach by the official
bourd of the Second Baptist
Church. He was ordained into
the Baptist ministry on Sept. 2ii,
1970 by the Second Baptist
Church.
The minister is currently
employed at the Defense
Construction Supply Center,
Columbus, as chief of the
distribution section, Director ate of Procurement and
Production. He is married to the
lormer Mary Pinson and they
have two children, David
Russell, two, and Jenny
Rebecca, five. They reside at
27116 Rosbury Road, Columbus.

Women of
Year and

w kN

~~:r:~~~:~: ee

Halloween

the ll'eakfast.

congressman said.
Speaking of student unrest,
Miller said he believes studenta
have a right to expreu themselves and to bring about
constructive change. However,
he stressed that they do not
have a right to violence and
destruction.
"Only about one per cent of
the stodent population Is herd
core," be said. He urg ... a
program to streas what Is liOod
in America and outlined the
steps taken on that program
already.
Touching state level politics
again, Miller stated that Roger
Cloud, tbe Republican candidate, has the experience,
knowledge and ability to make
one of the best goveM¥ll's the
state has ever had. He does lack
the color campaign procedures
of his opponent, however, the
congressman stated.
District 27 Rep. Ralph Welker
remarked that his en&lt;knement
by the Ohio Education
Association appareoUy was oo
the baals of his past record In
support
of
educational
legislstlon. He stressed that he
(Continued on Page 10)

ed m. ·:ll··~ *. '**- »: ,,. "'',, .,, .., . '":::::w:::~m-&lt;!&gt;~W .&amp;.--«,.;:'if.«,
am w::;~~~!~:::=~~'*~/:!~~~-~~ Scottowner

Baptist &lt;hurcb In Colwnbua,
Mrs. Mary Kunzebnan of
the Rev. Mr. Key formerly ;,omeroy has be~~ named
oerved as a880Ciate mlntster Woman of the Year .and Mrs.
d di
Grace Pratt of Middleport,
an
rector of religious "Woman of the Week" by the
Middleport Business and
Profeaalonal Women's Club.
Mra. KWlzebnan and Mrs.
Pratt were ulected (&lt;It the
honors, a feature of NaUonal
Bualness Women's Week, by
Plana lor a
festival vole of the clu~ memberahlp at
to be alaged Salla'day night on e dl!lner meelifl8 Jut night at
Eva's llestatl'ant. Mtl- Pratt Ia
the street In front of the Racine
Post qlfice were lll8lle at a president, of the club and Mrs.
'recent meeting o1 the 'Aindlliry KIDizelnian Is chainnan of the
·Of the RadDe Fire Doplrtment. leglalatlon C&lt;~JU~~ittee:·
Tbe letUval · Wll1 ·feature a Mrs, Edith. F·or res1, • .v1Qt
fortune toller, a fiSh jlood, a preaide!lt; preaeilted buth Mrs.
c:ike '!lib&gt; :Mid Kunzelman and Mlo•· Pratt with
record :
aittliiiOd atanill. coraagea,
ActlYitleo of tbe 'feek
will be .
(I'OOialmed by 'Jd«yor C. 0. (
Fil1her to /lonDi'·Mtip Coonty's
b~inei,l: and· ilf•fe•slopal

FeltivalPlam
Are Completed

CIIArnNG WI111 Cong,Carellce Mlller tldu.-nlng at
The Martin Restaurant In Middleport are Mrs, Cora Beegle,
(I'Osldent of the Meigs Cowtty Republican Women's Club,
and Ftanlt Cleland, right, Racine, master of ceremonies for

''Republicans have made
great strides In Ohio and will
continue to make progreso,"
Congressman Clsrence Miller
l"edicted this morning at a
breakfast at the Martin
Resisurant In Middleport.
Approximately 4~ GOP
leaders, office holders and
candidates attended the coffee
and donuls hour presided over
by Frank Cleland of Racine.
Cong. Miller aaid that the
state's political picture has
been "confused by stirring of
the Democrat party." He explained reapportionment
..-oceaaes, based on population,
which cootinually give the cities
more representation
in
Congress but reduce the
repreaentativ.. of rural areas
since so much area must be
grouped together to make the
needed population fllr a single
representative.
his
party,
Praising
Congressman Miller said, "It Is
the party for the penple with a
program lhat Is good for tbe
country."
"We know you cant throw
money at a problem In the hope
that it will go away,'' tbe

COLUMBUS (VPI) -Tbellllller of llllllcted Kelll stale
Uiilverolty stadeDI presldeat Craig 11orpo, c•raed by ·a
apeclet grand Jury wllll aecond degree riot, bolleveo tbe
iil'iftt Ia symbolic,
''If they (reoldnluf Keal) llilnll tbey can pi back at tbe
atadeats by pene011tlilc a llad"'t Iader, Ill"' they 1ft
ualocldn&amp;alotflllrol1bleforlll011111beo,"oald.liici&lt;Morpo,
a ,......,.. tedil!ldaia wltb tbe Illite Depll'lmUII of Per.-1. 'l11e Mtqalil Uve 1a tipper Arllqtoa, l1ibart&gt; bore.
''Look wllo .....,~ a.e 1r11111 IIII'J _ the people of
lea~ and IIIey jail - t ta pi tbe
of 111o
·
llildelts," Morgan said. CSee pap II for C01111Piete aeeoomt.)
lit ailotlter..........., the lecttll)' ...,... at llmt Slate
IIttlvmiiJ •-'- oalled for aledetal ...lll ' - blveotllttlon
--.
.... '""'
iato ... lata! lbootlap bo nne t .,. Ia! flate lnnd ).,.
01eeeded •...,.. ' 18 aUla 1~·. • n~. •"'''ID'tf_-"
""''
"""" .
..,
'l11e fa..UIJ -te,la I ....1~ piiRII..,JI, also said
llle ''rell*"aNp betw t su
JuJ Pboala• lad tbe
1111-t lly attorMJ pral Nil BroWn thai he
·*Ill apeel,i*lltHall 04 . . . ~" i1lioald
~ be q~ lly &amp; felltnl Jll'l!li,l ~~· , .
·

,,_u. le*'

lilt.,....

Held

On Kidnap Count
Logan, W.Va., State Troopers
Monday afternoon arrested
Ellis Plumley, 23, Scottown,
Gallta County, on a kidnap
warrant issued in Cahell
County.
Piumley, the object of a twostate manhunt since late
Saturday night, was sought In
connection with the alleged
ki~napplng of his ex-wife,
Connie Plumley, who had been
granted a divorce In Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
Oct. 14.

residence near Mercerville
where he apparently became
involved in a fight with hill
brother. He tell there earlY
Sunday morning.
In other sheriff's caaes, approllmately $136 wortb of auto
accessorlea · ...,.. taken In 1
burglary early Monday mornlng at Don Walll' Volbwagell

Alellcy, 'Upper River Rd • .,,

,.
Offlcets aatd IOmeone 'taN
!OW' 12 volt batterlot, iior bUb
caps ft'm&gt; a IIIII M1tllanl;llld
c:brOme parta !rom I Clieftlle,

According
to department,
the Gallia ~:E~!~tliefl
CounQ&gt;
aheriff's
Plumley went to the .11&lt;iine of bla .
sister.jn.Jaw in . Bar~Joursviilio
where his ex-wife - sta~.
He illeaedly alnlok lilr11. -•, ~
Wonll!ll were ~ imd .
MtJtT IN R!/TLAND
, _ LION IS SHOT·
Plltnley and forced her to 8Q
.for • Apublic meetlnll will ba bald Ali!TA, Japan Wf'l·)~A W with him.
rm!iilled ~luli
tonight il
BuUand Legion - pound lloo waJ!te&lt;i out 01 ItS' Plumley then drove to Gallta
~
'
~ , Ute
.at· the Chiltiren'a . ~ .County t,o
•tep-fatllet's
·· ~stem· imd !oloilday when the zoo keeper'
·:.1!1~.~~~
tqlock lliO iloor.
50,

rn-

-

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="717">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11117">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="59003">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="59002">
              <text>October 19, 1970</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="471">
      <name>moore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5676">
      <name>vanzant</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
