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                  <text>this school helps
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Through U!e generooity of U!e
public, there have been many
parties staged at the Meigs
County Community School
since it began six years ago.
.However, all is not play at
U!e school in the Rutland
Elemenlary building that
provides education and
training for retarded· young
people. Adedicated staff works
with the children through a
program which, hopefully, will
teach these youngsters to
function in daily living
situations, and frequently
learning vocational skills.
The school began with 10
students six years ago, supported solely through local
contributions. A room in the
Rutland building was provided
by the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education. A

.A MANDA .PANDA
by
C.
o
u:rse.
·
&amp; .M illie
r ---------------------.;,··-.. ·'
· · ·. . ··: ~ · ' ·' ·
'

'

PANDAS FAK\NG ... ARMS.AC~I

•

CH\L.L.. WINDS '

I

BLOW I

·fLOWER;
0ROWlN0 •••

small tax levy was placed
before Meigs Countians after
the school opened and was
given strong approval. Additional small tax levies has
been approved since today the
school operates on collections
from a one mill levy.
Renewal - not added - of
one-fourth of one miil will be
before Meigs voters at U!e Nov.
7 election .
In the fall of the 1970-71
school year, enrollment had
increased and two rooms were
provided at the Rutland
building so that the local
operation ccula meet state
requirements. This fall a third
rooin was opened to 21 enrolled
students. The state requires
that students with more than
five years between their ages
should not be in the same
classroom .

Progress with retarded
children is slow but re·•:arding. Tran sportation
is · a
problem .
Two
buses, traveling over the
county to pick up the 21
students, cover a little over 100
miles a day.
The school classroom~ are
divided now into three levels
including primary for students
from six tc 10; imtermediate
for students from It through 15,
and advanced for students
from 16 through 21.
Teaching ranges from such
self-help skills as putting on
coats and tying shoes to arts
and crafts for the more advanced .
Mrs. Jeanette Thomas of
Middleport is the ad ministrator and teaches the
primary children. Mrs. Carol
(Continued on page 6)

THIS YOUNGSTER at the Meigs Community School practices speech before a mirror .o
insure U!at his tongue is moving properly,

•

CATE.RPI LLARS
SPlNNlN6 •••

ANIMALS SOoN HtBE.RNATING •••

aty

MRS. CAROL WOLFE trains advanced students at the
Meigs Community School in learning basic words familiar in
U!eir envirorunent, preparing them tc cope with everyday
problems.

Devoted To The

VOL XXV

THIS NEW BUS tc conform to all state requirements has
been put into use at U!e Meigs Community School. Two buses
travel over 100 miles each day picking up and delivering the
21 students enrolled at U!e school.

The Spirits
Are Willing -OWElA5Tl!NGERIN'

DoGMT&lt;r;_C.::H::::.-r---

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NO
Rl':FlECTION 0' NO
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THAR'SASCIENTIFIC
El&lt;.PlANII,TION FO'
T.H IS'.- '10' 15

GJ.IOST5 !I-

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MG0£5,
AHWANTS

TO SNEAK--

·- . . .

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VOICES
CAIN'T
H URT
NOBODY!!

THERE'.q. NOTHIN£1 EL-5E
'I'QU'Q LIK.E ~... "'OT
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.
ANVTHIA/61'1

Peter H. Dominick, R.Colo.,
chairman of the GOP
aenatorial campaign committee, and Rep . Bob Wilson,
R-Calif., the GOP House
ca{Jlpaign chief.
Recent polls give Nixon as
much as 63 pet. of the vote over
Democrat
George
S.

··w:_._•., ··x~··
...,.
•'·"'~»

ews .. in Briefs
WE NEEDS YORE FINE
TENOR VOICE TO MAKE A
QUARTET, A'-I'GO ON A
GHOST -TO ~ GHOST TOUR
FO'TH' U.S.O.(UNIT£0
STIFFS OIKiiVVIZATION)

DARLI~6, A~E YOU ?URB

By United Press International
SAN ANTONIO - OUSTEDGEN.John D. Lavelle and Army
Chief of Staff.;~ppointee Gen. Creightcn W. Abrams jointly ordered an Wlauthorized air strike against a radar site in North
Vietnam last spring, according to Sen. Barry Goldwater R-Arlz.
"When the site was finally destroyed, it was on the order~ of Gen.
Abrams and Gen. Lavelle and they both caught hell from the
·Joint Chiefs of SU.ff - not because the JCS disagreed with the
strike, but because the orders said you can't do it," Goldwater
said during the weekend.
Abrams has denied ord~ring the attacks. Goldwater, a
member of the Armed Services Committee and a retired Air
Force Reserves general, said both men acted honorably and
their actions were justified.
COLUMBUS - A THREE-YEAR CONTRACf covering
nearly 13,000 operating engineers in Ohio and giving them an u
pet. wage increase the first year has been approved by the
Federal Construction Stabilization Board.
Charles Rinehart, industrial relations manager for the Ohio
Contractors Association, said the pact with the OCA involves
heavy - highway operating engineers.

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence
COUL.I? ! MAYBE HAVE A REFILL
OF THI? ICf

C!lEAM $0PA?

LOOK,CAFtOL! WMH O!JL.Y TOOK THI?
JOS' FOR THS

HU(;E ~/U~RY HE CAN

?Et..ID 1-IOME: TO 'tOU AND.THE: 1WIN?!
! ME:At.J••Tf.IERE:'.?

THE BEIRI.I'I' AFI'ERNOON NEWSPAPER Lissan AI-Hlll
&amp;aid today the weekend Israeli raids intc southern Lebanon killed
"hundreds" of persons and caused damage tc towns and villages
estimated in the millions of dolla!s. Howeve1 the newspaper AI
Nahar put the death tell closer tc 80.
Israel today marked Judaism's most solemn holy day, Yom
Kippur, w1th a report of even more fighting on the northern
fronti er following the weekend raid into southern Lebanon and

NO CAU?S TO
I

curtail their use of water,
although there was hope of
completing repairs today .
Both Wahama High and
Junior High Schools , and
Mason Grade School, which ·
togetl!er involve some 1,000
students, have dismissed
classes on recommendation

'

United Press lntenlational
If President Nixon wins 60
pet. of .the vote 1!'1• _year,
control of Cong ress will pass to
the
Republi cans,
GOP
congressional ca mpaign
chairmen believe.
The optimistic forecas ts
were made Sunday by Sen.

,.

CAPTAIN EASY

MASON - An emergency
continued today here in
Mason's water supply after a
main pwnp shorted out Sunday
in a deep well that supplies
about 700 homes, small industries and schools.
Mayor Roy Harless said
users have been asked to

GOP Can Take Congress
:-m:-:-:·:·:·:·:'•'"'"''""''""~-·
..... . ...........·~·••• ...r.~ ·· , .. · ·

OH Yf':AH, WISE GIJY !!

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JE'ALOLJ7

(Continued on Page 10)

McGovern. Both houses now
are controlled by the
Democrah
with
the
Republicans needing to win
five additional seats to take
control of the Senate and 41
seats to gain a majority in the
House.
" I think it would take at least
a 60 pet. majority by President
Nixon to win control of the
Congress," Wilson said.
Dominick and Wilson were
interviewed on NBC's "Meet
the Press. "
But Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill,
D-Mass ., chairman of the
House Democratic campaign
committee, disputed the
analysis of Dominick and
Wilson. He predicted in a UPI
Washington Window interview
that the Democrats would
retain control of the House by
winning 8 minimwn " or 50
seats over the GOP.
O'Neill said McGovern would
be running on the coattails of
the Democratic congressional
candidates and that "the
strength that they show locally
will help him immensely."
McGovern today was on U!e
first leg of a second two-week
nationwide campaign swing.
11

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday Through Friday
Warm Wednesday, cooler
on Thursday and Friday with
highs In the 80s ~ednesday,
dropping to the 70s Friday.
Lows In the upper 50s and
low 60s. A chance of shov!•rs
north Wednesday, fair
Thursday and Friday.

He planned today to tour the
coa lfields of southwestern
West Virginia and then travel
to Cincinna t;','Carbondaie : ·ru.,
and Chicago.
At Marshall University in
Huntington, W. Va., Sunday
night McGovern told a student
audience that "we are going tc
win this election .'' He was

cheered by an audience of 2,1100
when he criticized the
American bombing campaign
in Indochina .
Nixon received a warm
welcome Sunday when he
made a surprise appearance
before 10,1100 persons at an
Italian-American festival at
Mitchellville, Md., near
Washington ,
But Nixon, who has limited
his campaign appearances,
planned to stay in Washington
until Friday when he will
travel tc a Democrats for
Nixon meeting in Texas.
Democratic vice presidential
candidate Sargent Shriver
spoke Sunday to a crowd of
8,000 at an Essex County
Democratic picnic at Parsippany, N. J . He blamed the
Republicans for inflation and
said a McGovern-Shriver
administration would provide
"a job for every American man
and woman who wants to go to

work. ''

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight with a
chance of thunderstcrms in the
north. Lows in the upper 80s
and 70s. Mostly sunny, warm
and humid Tuesday, highs in
the 80s and low 90s.

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'•

OHo DA~N If.~ WHY
. PRETEND~! ... EA?-y,'
CAL.t. M&lt;:KEE INOU~TRIE:?

AND ORDER ONE OF
DADDY'' COMPANY
HEL.I COPTERS&lt; l

Of The Meig5-Mason Area

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Schools, Businesses Closed
By Failure ofPump inMason

q ,,

LOOK AT MAJ.&lt; I!JELUVV!D

NO. 108

Interest~

er1tine

~
~

Sylvester Heads Junior Miss Inc. ,.

Robert Sylvester, Syracuse,
is the new president of the
Meigs County Junior Miss,
Inc ., for 1973.
Other officers elected for the
1973 Junior Miss pageant which
has been set for Nov . 18 are
Ralph Werry, first vice
president; Roger Young,
second vice president; Earl
Ingels, third vice president; .
Mrs. Roger Young, secreU.ry;
Mrs. Robert· Sylvester,
lreasurer, and Mrs. Earl
Ingels, assistant secreU.ry •
treasurer.
Sylvester has named these
committee chairmen for th•
1973 pageant; Earl Ing~ls,
contestants; Sylvester and
Ingels, advertising; Young and
Ingels, staging; Sylvester and
Young,. costumes; Werry and

~./)~:..

Mrs. Ingels, choreographers,
and Werry and Sylvester,
general chairmen.
Werry and Sylvester were In
Mount Vernon on Saturday to
attend the 1973 Ohio Junior
Miss, Inc. Fall Seminar where
state officers discussed the
1973 Ohio Junior Miss Pageant
w~ich will be held at Mount
Vernon, Jan. 13 through Jan.
20. The finals of the sUite event
will be on Jan. 19 and 211. Other
phases reviewed were tb~
national sponsors, Kraft,
Breck and Kodak.
Meantime, the rules and
regulations to govern the 1973
pageant were announced.
'J'hese are : · ·
A contestant must be ~irigle
and neYer been married,

divorced or had a marriage
annulled.
A contestant must be a bona·
fide high school senior and be
enrolled in the senior class of a
high school or other institution
of equivalent scholastic
standing and will not receive
her diploma from there prior to
· May 1, 1973.
The contestant's age on
March 1, 1973 shall not be less
than 16 yeal'll nor shall she
attain her 19th birthday prior
to May 31, 1973.
A con(!lstant must be of good
chllracter and p!!S9ess poise,
personality, intelligence, attractiveness
and . good
grooming.
A contestant must po!ISe!S
and display a talent such as
singing, dancing, playing a

musical instrument, dramatic
reading, art, dress designing or
oratory, Any contesU.nt whose
talent routine exceeds three
and one half minutes could be
disqualified from receiving
any points in the creative and
performing arts category at
the discretion of the local and
stage pageant.
No contestanl shall be denied
the right to participate in the
local conteSt because of race,
color or creed.
A eontesU.nt must be a
citizen of the United Slates and
a bona fide resident of Ohio.
Entry blanks may be obtained from any of the Junior
Miss officers · of the local
pageant who plan tc visit area
high schools ro recruit con·
testants .

from the office of County Supt.
Charles Withers.
Mayor Harl ess said a
laundromat, car wash, and
other business places have
been closed "because we have
very little water." A limited
supply is being made through
the use of auxiliary pwnps, he
said. The situation "could
become critical," the mayor
said.
The trouble was discovered
about 10 a.m. Sunday when a
main pwnp shorted in a well
some 100 feet deep located
under the pwnp house along U.
S. 33 in the lower section of
Mason. It was believed that an
electrical storm early Sunday
may have caused the problem .
That pwnp has worked six
years without failure .
Workmen, with Tom Lewis
and his crew, are pulling the
pump out of the well today to
investigate the problem and to
make necessary repairs if
possible . Lewis, who heads
Tom Lewis Drilling Inc., has
moved in special equipment.
Workmen started on the
project Sunday and worked
through the night.
Mayor Harless expressed
concern over inadequate
facilities in view of the town 's
growth. He said, "I'm afraid
the situation is going to get

:-f\;t?:J~''''!:i:t'=t~==~~:;~:~::~:~:i:=~::r::~~:~::~:;i=i,J!!!''!:itm:m::~m=:~m:lil~*j
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. TEMPLE, Tex. (UPI)- America must listen to its yoWig and be
w•llmg to accept change if it Is to remain great, former President Lyndon
B: Johnson said in a weekend address . It was his first public speech since
his heart attack last March, "!'his nation came into being because people
wanted change," Johnson told 1,800 persons at ceremonies marking the
75th anniversary of Scott and White Hospital in Temple . He is a former
trustee of the hospital.
"The moot frightening thing that could happen to ns today would be
for us to close our eyes to new Idea and close our ears to those - par· ·
ticularly the young-ln whom we have Invested so much hope and effort
through the years of our existence, and who are trying to teU us how they
would go about perfecting the visions of America the beautiful America
the just, America the land of the free and the home ol the brave,;, Johnson

~
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································· · · · · · ·················:·~·:·?&gt;:

POWs Freed in Hanoi

TOKYO (UP! ) - North
Vietnam Sunday released
three American prisoners of
war to their waiting relatives
and a U. S. peace group in
Hanoi, the Communist Vietnam News Agency (VNA ) said.
The
VNA
dispatch,
monitored in Tokyo, said a
"moving moment followed"
when two of th e three men- all
pilots- were reunited with
member of their families in the
down town ceremon y.
critical."
The three men, all pilots,
The town is being protected were Navy Lt. j.g. Markham L.
In case of fire, according to Gartley of Dunedin, Fla.,
Ross Roush, fire chief, through captured Aug. 17, 1969; Navy
U!e cooperation of volunteer Lt. Norris Alphonzo Charles of
firemen from New Haven, San Diego, Calif., captured
Pomeroy and Middleport, who Dec. 30, 1971, and Air Force
are on standby.

Maj . Edward Knight Elias, of
Valdosta, Ga., captured April
20 ,

'

The report said the prisoners
"joyfully greeted " peace
committee members David
Dellinger, Mrs. Cora Weiss,
Princeton University Prof.
Richard Falk and The Rev.
William Sloane Coffin Jr. of
Yale University.
Charles' wife and Gartley's
mother accompanied the peace
group, called "The Committee
of Liaison with the Families of
American Servicemen
Detained in North Vietnam,"
to Hanoi to meet the prisoners.
VMA said that after the
ceremony the pilots, "their
families and the peace group

drove to the hotel reserved for
them. " A Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) radio
report from Hanoi said the
pilots and the visiting
American group were expected
to take "some tours of
damaged areas" before
returning to the United States .
It was not know what route
the group would take out of
Hanoi, but it was considered
likely they would fly to•
Moscow on the Soviet Aeroflot
airline next Saturday through
Vientiane, Loos.
VNA quoted Gartley as
saying "the news of my release
came as a complete surprise to
me, As long as this conflict
(Continued on Page 10)

Invaders
Repulsed
KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI)Ugands said today it had
routed an invading force of
1,500-Ugandan exiles from
Tanzania and that its bombers
had struck at their base in the
neighboring country,
(A Dar-Es-salaam dispatch
said one of two planes believed
tc he Ugandan hit the Tan.
zanian tcwn of Bukova on Lake
Victoria 20 miles south of the
Uganda border and that unconfirmed reports said four
persons were killed.)
A military spokesman ' in
Kampala said Ugandan tanks,
infantry and paratroopers,
supported'by its small air force
and navy, had retaken three
towns overrun by the invaders .
&amp;mday night and driven the
atU.ckers off from the admlnlstratlve center of Mbarara, 160
mUes southwest of here.
He said casualty figures by
mid-day were 200 enemy troops
killed, including three identified aa Israelis, with nine
Ugandan soldiers killed.
(In Dar·Es-&amp;!Jaam, the capi·
tal of Tanzania, an anny
source said 1,000 troopli had
been moved to the Ugandan
border with instructions not to
'JX'OVOke any incidents or cross
Into Uganda.)
The Ugandan spokesman
iContinued on Page 10)

::$;:;:

BEST Of SHOW AWARD - Mrl. Tom Stewart's abWty to make beautiful Bower
arrangements is. recognized in ahnost every show she enters. Here she displays ber
arrangement of glads and mums in shades of orange entered in the "Beautiful Brideamalda"
class which won her the Best of Show Award at the RuUand Frlendly Gardeners' Dower alloW
Saturday. See Page 7for more pictures and Charlene Hoeflich's accoont of the show.

�z-The Deily Sentlni!l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sept 18, 1972

WiN AT 8N1bdi!

Be It Ever So Humble

EDITORIAl.$

An Olympiad
Fund Hand

It's the Undecideds
Who Win Elections
Bv HOYT KIN!:

tR
.107
.732
tAJ987
.652
WEST
EAST
.9432
.KQJ86
NORTH

Predtchons helm e electtons change stretch the predicted margiD lowet tl, do one thiDg and another de
pendmg on who ts predtctmg, and on behalf of whom
But actually doesn t tt seem logtcal to reason that
elections are dectded by the undectdeds, and m good
part at the moment of entermg the polhng booth •
There are a whole lot of dtehards Democrats and
Republicans who probably wouldn't vote for Jesus 11 he
represented the other party They are 10 the kitty of their
party s 'counted ' votes
They don I need any appeals or arguments They don't
heed any appeals or arguments from the other Side They
vote nght whatever
But let s constder the undectded voter A lot of themmaybe most-are undec1ded as they enter the polling
booth They have last mmute thoughts 'N1xon has done
as welt as anyone could ' 'People say the country needs
a change to a new order a new politics " 'McGovern
McGovern
you can't tell what he wants from
;, one day to the next " Should I take a chance on
;, McGovern•• 'Ntxon 1s tested 10 the JOb "
How many voters do such reasomng nght up to the
~ last moment can never be known, but tt's got to be a
::; whole lot If you go back to 1948 you remember that
~ nght up to elecllon day you could get up to 25 to I odds
•1 that Thomas E Dewey would defeat Pres1dent Harry S

,Campaign
Asides
•

: It's a strange pohhcal campa1gn Not who you hke
,most but who you dtshke least
People crlhctze McGovern because they can t tell tf
he's nght on some of the tssues Or left
: You have some 1dea of course where Ntxon stands
'Washmgton Key Btscayne San Clemente
' McGovern ts way short of campatgn money He's
suffer•ng from a kmd of buck ague
, A Democratic hero IS helpmg N1xon s campatgn coffers
· Pictures of Andrew Jackson
••: How about the rellabtltty of the candidates• Anyone
:wanbng to be pres1dent these days must be crazy
'

(NEWSPAPU ENTERPRISE ASSN l

~Dear Helen

PERFEC110N IS NO FUN, EITHER

'

I've read a lot about unperfect m-laws, but what do you do
'When yours are PERFECT• I mean really, I'm not being sarcastic. It's tough lollowtng an act like that
My mother-m-law can entertam wtth no apparent effort,
practically runs three SOCI81 and political clubs, looks gorgeous,
even when she's scrubbing out the bathtub, and manages to read
all the latest books besides
But my Slster-m-law outshines her' She works, keeps house
so you can eat off the floors (if you can assume Lotus
Position), she makes a master chef blush with shame the way
she whips up homemade cream pulls, ets ; she wallpapers the
house when she can't liM anything better to do, like racmg
arOWJd playmg Lady Bountiful to elderly awtto, with a bowl of
chicken soup under her ann (homemade naturally)
Don't tell me I shouldn't feel inferior to them hell, I AM
Inferior So IS everyone else The amazing psrt Ia I like them But
I dread the day when my hllllband wakes up and sees he married
a -KLUTZ
Dear Klutz
It's just possible your husband would rather have you
''klutzy" !ban any other way ''Tough following an act like that,"
aaya you? Think how much tougher lt l.s UVING with it, if one
can't match the perfection
Admire your m-laws but don't compete Perhaps for the first
time 10 his life, your man IS able to relax - H

+++
Dear Helen
Class reunions' Why don't they update them I've never heard
of one yet that doesn1 offer prizes fer
I Most children and (or) grandchildren,
2 Who has travelled the greatest distance Then they uauaUy
introduce the guy who was the star quarterback; but never the
class valedlctorlan
In these days when producing vast numbers of offspring isn't
the zenith of achievement and the raiH'aha are getting the hawhaws, why don't reun1on planners single out people who have
done most for therr communities; tell a few success atoriu?
Maybe then they 'd draw more of the interesting alumni back to
those now somewhat ghastly affairs - TRIED lT, DIDN'T LIKE
IT

DEARTIDU
Maybe Instead of asking "how many children'" reunioolals
should offer combat ribbons lor most divorces, hlgheat chlJd
aupport payments, greatest number of vlsito to payehlatrlals .
Seriouly, I doubt we'll ever change the fonnat of class
reunlona They're as locked into tradition as ''The Star Spangled
Banner" rendition - before major football games. - H
Dear Helen
My heart goes out to the epUeptic who lost many job op.
portunltiee and finally had to lie on his application form before he
could find rewarding work And to "Shunned," who was ukad to
resign from a church choir, due to "fits " By the grace of God,
thla has not happened to me
I went to a normal employment agency alter flnlahlng
eollege and got a job as secretory, with the acency ltnowiDgl an;
1n epileptic (which Is now almollt completely undercoatrol).
Aside from being the mother of three children, I work fer a
Cultural Council, am Chairwoman of a local club, and aecretary
for the County Epilepsy SocietY, whoee aim Is to broaden
people's outlook toward epileptics When I have a petit mal
lllzure people show coocern and warmth, not shock.
There is hope for epileptics What people understand they no
longer fear. May y911r correspondents soon receive auch un1derstanding - p c

'

t106

.AI0873

SOUTH (D)
•As
.AKQI064
tQ32
.KQ
Norlh-South vulnerable

We•t

North

Ea.•l South

Pass
Pass

3NT

Pass

2NT

Pass

Opemng lead-• 2

~ Truman

'

.J

.985
t K54
.J94

F

'I On elecllon eve Truman took to the a1rwaves wtth
,·some down to earth reasomng ThiDk of how many un
!dec1deds • he must have won over wtth hts The Repub
beans say they w11t
etc Don't you believe It 1" Th1s
;catchlme repeated 10 h1s speech
• Somewhat the same predtcted Imbalance ts true today
.wtth the Ntxon McGovern election commg up People
' say, 'I don't want to vote for Ntxon
'I don't want to
'vote for McGovern '
: Has there ever heen a prestdenttal elechon 10 which
,so many people had so httle enthusiasm for the candt
dates•
· Why• Welt, reasons can be cited but reasons don't
·really matter, now What each candidate needs to do
' Is hnd some way to reach deep mto the thoughts, the
' ideas the I hke that' responses of the undectdeds He
~ most surely wtll be addressed as • Mr Prestdent '

.

'

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SHIRLEY GAILUPS AWAY
IN THE WESI'
NEW YORK (KFS) - Shrrley MacLame
and her latest mcumhent compamon Pete
Ham1ll did all the Last Vegas floor shows (5th
DlffienSlon at the Rmera Johnny Carson at the
Sahara, Sammy DaviS at the Sands, Tom Jones
at Caesars Palace etc ) and explatned she was
"sampling pubhc optmon regardmg
McGovern" Carson stands on TV fence, the
5th Dunenaion hasn't gone on record yet,
Sammy Davts IS a fevertsh NlXoman and Tom
Jones votes m Br1tam, gad' she loses agam
Pasta exports in Italy have zoomed 2,130
pet in 2tl years But Italians themselves are
cutting down dangerously (for the domesllc
spaghetti trade) The 19-year-old male fashton
model mentioned but never named as MISS
Vicki's boyfr1end when she busted up With Tiny
Tim has come out of the secret closet he'sJohn
Carmen (real name Carmen Ambrogto ), who
broke his cover to "debunk" Miss V 's demals
John swears on a stack of 8 by 10 glosstes they
planned to get marrted m Ha1t1, addmg "I know
we still love each other " Awwww
WliH rumor arourid the, V~mce F1lm
Festival linked Sylvia Miles and Tennessee
Williams, er, romantically Biggest laugh of the
desultory fete Beau and Julie Bndges are
scoffing at the rumors A Lortllard veep tells
us a woman can not he TVd smok10g a ctgaret
outdoors m Australian commerctals, tndoors,
she's pemutted one drag Joan R1vers' spht
wtth husband Edgar has her slavmg over new
and reversed routines - her entire cormc attack
was launched from her at-last-I'm-mamed
pomt for the seven seasons ol her mamage
(Bye, honey, the season's over) Cormcs Pat
Cooper and Stanley Brock at Dowmng Square
were shop.talkmg -of the days when both were
N Y cabdnvers
Writer tr1ed to document bow much certa10
husbands added to thetr w1ves' stardom, actually all but a few of the breed have contrtbuted
to the oppoSite One of the great all time stars
was s1gned at huge salary and her pass10g
groom groused "The network doesn't come up
wtth a format " We suggested he f10d a format
Vlll thetr splendidly high-fees "That's thetr
Jli'Oblem," the subsequently dumped husband
cymcized We opmed tl was hiS and he never
Wlderstood 1t The ultimate solut1on was an
histeric sadness

Gil D1Lue1a, owner of famed V1Uage
hangout, 0 Henry's, IS heavy mto ecology and
spendmg lots of profits to start a glass-cecycling
station outstde hiS restaurant, where the public
may turn ID used bottles, old monocles, swizzle
slicks and eyes Thin Rossano Brazzi ordered
a charred-outs1de steak at the Pen &amp; Pencil, and
his commodious wife ordered lobster smothered
ID butter
Screen-TV character actor Jack
Somack's cup runneth over Warners optioned
him for three more flicks and hts microbiologist
son Ralph just was awarded an American
Cancer Society research grant at Berkeley
6th Ave at 32nd St men's shop's Sign needles,
HYou Want to Dress Uke a Mannik10, That Is
Your Busmess If You Want to Dress Like a
Man 's That's Our BuSiness " The Pierre Hotel s addmg a dtscotek (Inn La Forte) along
w1th 1ts styhsh supper club La Foret
Ftrst father--son collaboration on fiction 10
publishing memory w1ll be "Cornered at Six,"
from Slmon &amp;Schuster, by MaJ Brtan ratrtck
McMahon, US A F , (and Notre Dame '57) and
his pop Thomas Patr1ck McMahon, certainly
the one done at greatest diStance - 1,800 rrules,
son m San Antomo, dad m Westchester
John Wayne's already agreed to be grand
marshal of the 84th Tournament of Roses Jan I
W1th half a mtllton there for her namlng as
Mtss Somesuch 10 her home town of Seattle,
Carol Chanrung, asked how come her success,
rephed, "Horace Greeley told me to 'Go East,
yoWJg lady' "
Alfred Hitchcock says he's
deftmtely not 70 but contmues his youth kick wrote hiS ftrst him script at 22, directed at 25
' and when people say I'm 70, 1t's a confoWJded
lie 1 I m twtce 35, that's all'"
Yogt Berra's Yoo Hoo soft drmk lli'ID's
doiDg better than hts Mets 1ts 1972 half-year
proftts were b1gger than all of last year's
G1rls - short dresses w1ll be back for next
spriDg and summer
Jean Westwood,
McGovern's Dem committee head, IS "Madam
Chatrbroad" to her husband
Most McGuff
zealots are deep 10to ecology and f1ght furcoatwearmg women, but chrurbroad Jean has a new
full length blackglama mink, an autUIIUl haze
Jacket and even Mil hostess a fall fur show for
herfurrter pal, Ben Kahn Jean's the lass who
shafted Tom Eagleton even as McGulf was
'behind hlm 1,000 pet " Here goest McGulf's
for-the-little-man unage Philly glutton gang
have a 'Gourmets for McGovern" cookbook,
egad, we thought all h1s followers were starving
for hamburgers

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
It Can Ruin a Life

why some teenagers have to
go through thts hell I too
can say hell for all the sleep
less mghts I spent not
knowmg anymore where to
turn for help
Dr Lamb, we tned many
avenues for help from ptlls
to f 1n a II y dermabrasiOn,
Which only left more scars
and heartaches One doctor
even made a culture from
the pus and used 1t as a
serum to lDJect back mto
her body One well known
dermatologtst tned X rays
and hnally gave up saymg
he lrted all the knowledge
that God gave htm and
couldn t do any more
My daughter came out of
tt all well adJusted m mmd
and body, but acne had taken
1ts toll on both of us for
almost 20 years I'm wntlng
this letter to you because
when I see a teenager with
acne my heart goes out, be·
cause I know what that person feels lns1de I sympathize
with the mother who wrote
to you and 1! there ever was
a dnve for funds on trymg
to cure or curb acne, I
would certainly support tl,
even if I have no teenagers
or children at home now

may help to educate other
mothers about acne You
have explamed beautlfully
JUSt how much real damage
th1s problem can cause m
IOdlVlduals' hves The story
you have shared w1th the
other readers, exemplifies
why a young person With ac

The Almanac
By United Press IDternational
Today IS Monday, Sept 18,
the 262nd day of 1972 with 104
to follow
The moon as approaching its
full phase
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn
The evening star Is Jupiter
Those born on this date are
Wtder the s1gn of Virgo.
British poet and lexlcographer Samuel Johnson, writer of
the ftrst English dictionary,
was born Sept. 18, 1709
,
On thiS day in history
In 1850, the Fugitive Slave
Act was p~d by Congress,
allowmg a slave-owner with
certificate to reclaim any slave
Dear Reader-Your letter who escaped mto another state

Television Log
MONDAY, SEPT. 11, 1972
6 oo - News 3, 4 8, 10 Truth or Consoq 6, New• 13 News 15,
Hathayoga 3
6 30 - NBC News 3 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS Newo 8, 10, Folk
Guitar 33, I Dream of Jeannie 13
1 oo - Elec co 20, New• 6, Truth or Conoeq 3, Beat the Clock
4 Clrcusll3 lnslght33, What's My Llno 8, Saint 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, Traffic Court 10 Episode Action
33 Parent Game 3, Hollywood Square! 4, Young Or Kildare
a,' Movie 11 Tarzan and the Merf!i~ld5" 13

8 oo - Gunsmoka8, 10. Rowan and /l'lllrfln's Laugh In 3, 4 UFO
6 , Baseball 15. The Rstless Earth 33
,
9 oo - Here's Lucy 8. 10, Movie "With SIK You Get Eggroll. 3
Pro Football 6, 13, Movie "Back Track 4
9 30 - Doris Day 8, 10
10 00 - Bill Cosby 8, 10 Societies In Tranoltlon 33
10 30 - Human Dlmenslons33, Death Valley Days 15
11 OO - News3,4 6. News8, tO, 15
,
11 30 - Dick CaveH 6, Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 Movie The
World, the Flesh end the Devil" 8, Movie "The Sisters" 10
12 30 - Movie' The Rlslnl oflhe Moon" 13
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
1 30 - News 13
TUESDAY, SEPT l9
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heort 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmtlme 10
6 20 - Paul Harvey l 3
6 25 - Faith For Today 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment to
6 o1.1 - Corncoll Report 3
6 55- Fllntstcnos 13
1 00 - Today3 4.15 CBS News8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Bullwlnkle &amp; Rock)
13
8 oo - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue6 13 Sesame St 33,
Ttmmy &amp; Lassie 6
8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Romper Room 8 Con
centratlon6, Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 Mr Rogers
33 What Every Woman Wants to Know 3
9 30 - ToTeillheTruth3,Jeopardy6 HazelS
10 00- Dinah Shore 3 15, Dick Van Dyke 13, Joker's Wild 8 10
Columbus Six Calling 6
10 30- Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Split Second 13
Price Is Right 8 10
11 00 -Saieoflhe Century 3 15 Love American Style6 Gambit
8, 10 Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 Love of Llle 8, 10 Bew1tched

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald • Lets d lSC u ss
some of the hands from the
Amencan Contract Br1dge
League's nabonwtde Olympiad fund game '
Jtm These hands are
played all over the country
and the ACBL staff attempts
to predict what will happen
Thts ts a thankless JOb "
Oswald 'They predtcted
that most Sou t h players
w o u I d wmd up at four
hearts After a spade lead,
South would draw trumps
6, 13
and at t a c k d1amonds He 12 00
- Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,
would lead the queen frrst
Jackie Oblinger 8, News 10, 13
and West would make h1s 12 25 - CBS News 8
best play by cover10g w1th 12 30 - 3 Ws Game 3, 15 Split Second 6, Search for Tomorrow
the kmg
8, 10
"Then a South who had I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13, Its Your Bet 8 Green
Acres 10 Walch Your Ch1ld 15
played out three rounds of 1 303 On a Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
trumps would probably lay
World Turns 8. 10
down the Jack and wmd un 2 00- Days of Our Lives 3 4 lS Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglas 6 Guiding Light 8 10
w1th 12 tr1cks
"Those who had played 2 30-Doctors3 4 15 DatlngGome13 Edgeo1Night8. 10
only two rounds of trumps 3 00 - General Hosp1lal 6 13 Another World 3 4 15 Love Is
Splendored Thlnq 8 10 Grow1ng Him Up 33
m1ght return to therr hand 3 30One L1le to L1ve 6, Return to Peyton Place 3, 4 l 5 Jeff s
w1th a th1rd m order to take
Collie 13, Secret Storm 8, 10
an unsuccessful fmesse for 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Love
the d1amond 10 and would
American Style 13, Merv Griffin 4, Fllntstones 6 Gilligan's
wmd up losing a d1amond, a
Island 8, Movie The Fastest Guitar Alive, 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
spade and a club '
J 1m "ThiS would be dis- 4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Political Junction 3 Danl•l Rr.one 13
Grill in 8, Andy Griffith 15
astrous for those Sou t h s 5 00Merv
Dick
Van Dyke 15 Merv urlttln 8 Mr Rogers 33
who let East and West push
Ponderosa 3 4 Daniel Boone 6
them to the ftve level, others 5 30 - Marshall Dillon IS Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
who doubled a defens1ve
13 -four spades would collect 6 00 - News3 4, 8,10 15 Hathayoga33
300 to 500 pomts - not as 6 30- News 3 4 15 6 8 10 I Dream ol Jeanle13 Growing H1m
Up 33
good as a heart game "
7
00News 6 10 What s My L1ne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat The
Oswald "We watched one
Clock 4 I ve Got a Secret 13 Truth or Consequences J
South get a top score by
Mayor s Report lS
openmg two no-trump He 7 30-Masterptece Theatre 33, This Is Yo" Life 3 Doctors On
won the spade opening
Call 4 To Tell The Truth 6 Price Is Righi 8 10 Beat The
cashed hts hearts, led the
Clock 13
d1amond queen, West played 8 00 - Bonanza J, .t 10 Temperatures R• slng 6, 13 Maude 8
10 BaseballlS
the kmg and dummy the ace
- Hawaii F1ve 0 8 10 Evening al Pops 33 Mov1e No
He next played dummy's 8 30Place
to Run ' ~ 13
]ack of hearts to make sure 9 00 - Bold
Ones 3 4
of h1s mnth tnck, dropped 9 30 - Movie The Woman Hunter 8 10 Can You Hear Me'
East's 10 ,for stx np trump "
33
r J 1 J1J
10 00 - NBC Reports 3 4 IS Marcus Welby MD 6, 13 F~rlng
(NEWSPAPlR ENTUPRIS~ ~SSN J
Line 33
d ~··
II 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 V~rpinlan 8 Movie
' Johnny Gu itar ' 10 Movie Flying Tigers 13
I 00 - Your Health 4
The b1dd1ng has been
West North East South I 30 - News Weather 4 Local News 13
It
Dble
Pass
1•
Pass
You, South hold

?

&amp; THINGS

.AQ87 .KJ4 t3Z .K986
What do you do now?
A-B•d two spades This Is a
slight stretch but your very
good spades make the call a de·

!nrable one
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do btd two spades Your
partner goes to three spades
What do you do now?
Answer tomorrow

In 1851, the New York Times
was pubhshed for the hrst
ttme
In 1928, tt was estimated that
4,000 persons had been killed
and property damage amountIng to more than $30 million
had been caused by a
devastatmg humcane which
lashed Flonda and the West
lndtes for f1ve days starting
Sept 12

Acne Cries for Expert Care
By Lawrence Lamb, M D.
Dear Dr Lamb-1 enJOY
your articles Immensely and
they have educated me
many times Your article on
acne was very mterestiDg to
me as I have a daughter who
went through the agomes of
a severe acne case My hus
band and I both have very
g~od complextons but our
daughter developed acne
when she was 11 years old
and tt got worse She be·
came ugly in her own eyes
although she was not be
cause of lovely features but
this condition wreaked havoc
w1th her heart
Boys d1d shy away from
her for one thmg Job open
mgs where she would meet
the pubhc were closed to
her, m sp1te of a very mtelllgent mmd and college
credits Her teachers even
tried to get her jobs, although employers anx1ous
lor business thou~ht other
wtse She did find emptor·
ment though and excelled m
her work When she advanced as far as she could
they took her into the com
pany
My daughter fmally marned m her late 30s and
ts happy but still has a very
scarred face and wonders

'

ne should rece1ve expert
care unless the acne ts
rnerely a transitory thmg
which can be controlled by
washing the face with hot
water and soap two or three
hmes a day
There are some things
which spec1alists In skin
dIseases (dermatologists)
can do In difficult cases to at
least mlrumlze the amount
of damage which occurs
How a person lookB Is indeed very Important to the
person, and It affects their
success In life Some parents
1gnore this problem In their
boys thinking It's not important whether men are
nice looking or not This Is
untrue. A person's mdlvldual
appearance Is important to
everyone, male or female,
and It does lnfiuence their
succesa Thank you lor taking time to write your letter
tNtwSPAPJt •"'nPltsl ASSN l
Stllfl , .., q..st~u to Dt ~.
lo core ol t~11 _.,.,, 'Q ...

1551, ••diG C11y StlltiGit, H~ York,
H Y 111019 ,., o .., ol Dt, lomll's

a ,_.,or

0!1

lotiof woltllf trtrt4 50

coott to tflo -

,., "Loti.,

pil,.., oit4 ..t

w..,~r· Witt

BY PAUL CRABTREE
MONDAY, SEPI'. 18
Continuing our review of this fall's TV offerml!ll (Frtday we
reviewed the Weather Channel), let's look at a couple of the new
(' )quiz programs, night and day
''The Joker Is Wild" barely edges mto the category of shows
that are slightly educational (and sometlffies slightly entertaining)
The educational value lies in the fact that the program will
teach your five-year-old the baste principle in playing a slot
machine.
The format is straight out of "Jeopardy" - one of the decent
quiz programs That Is, It poses questions in specific categories
to contestants competing against each other But there, the
sunllarity ends
There are all sorts of gliDllllcks, bigger prizes, "wild cards,"
etc , etc And commercials, conunerclals, commercials
If you must see it, try WCHS-TV at lOam weekdays

+++
The other shows are ''The Price Is R1ght" and "The New
Price Is Right "
''The New, etc "Is a network show, appearmg on CBS weekday mornlnga at 10 30. Bob Barker Is the host
''Tiie Price Is Right," IS a syndicated show, with Dennis
James as host
It's on at 7 30 p m , Tuesdays
Both shows are much like their hoary predecessor, and are
founded upon the same principle of human behavior - naked
lUlrestralned greed.
'
Partlcipstory television Is an mtegral part of these shows _
with the studio audience cheering and hooting, to persuade the
contestants to be greedier and greedier
(Penonally,I find the UtUe old ladle&amp; who used to cUmb into
the ring and beat unpopular wrestlers with their umllrellas more
satisfyq In the "participatory" category )
Revival of this oldie Is bad enough, but ita resurrection In two
separate fonnats Is sufficient to bring tears to the eyes

+++
I'm fully aware that thOUI8nda of housewives (and quite a
few men, too) go for thlasort ol thing, in spite olthe quli&lt;ICandals
of the Filtles the aameness of so many shows of this genre ..
and the hoked-up glnunicka used If that's your cup of tea drink
It and psy nolurtherattentioo to my crltlclam
'
But the truth Is that intelllaent, witty, 1111d reapectable quiz
programs CAN be done, as witnessed by "Jeopardy" and
"Piuword.'' Others, admitting the "conleatilllto" are briefed 1n
adv~. are merely frameworktt for aome fatrly~lertaining
repartee, 111ch u ''Hollywood Squares."
That's reaDy why I can't understand how these aubilar efforts ever make !ton thealr,letalone stay there

+++

ON 1HE TV DIAL: The schedule changeth, with "Colwnbua
Six Clllllns" ·~weekdays at 10, WTVN·TV. Mike DoucJu
occuplea the old Virginia Graham llpOI, 2p.m weelttlaya, WTVNTV · Plratee-MetsbueballaU:IIOilWTAP·TV, .andHowllll
Dandy Don, and Facele• FraM . . bldl wilh ABC M~
ntcht football, Redakbw-VIklltp ' 'JM at t 011 Wln'N-TV
(True confelllcm, two r&lt;l!lt 1
tiM lb HoWard ec.n

~~!~ ABCiutwu lncr+C\ 11111r 11 ~-nan;
---~ Plllel

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

,)

3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sept 18, 1972

SEO Newsmen Pick Ironton To Repeat
Jackson Ranked
2nd, Meigs 5th;
Elect Officers

Robmson knows some of the !lungs people are saYing about

Today's

him

~Sport

Parade

,
,l

'•

By MILTON RICHMAN

UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Theorettcally , this should he Brooks
RobuJSOn 's time
JACKSON - In what appears to be a "down"
It generally comes down to that every year th1s time when the
season m football talent m the SEOAL the Ironton leaves begm turnmg brown, the topcoats emerge from the mothTtgers were ptcked Sunday as the potential league! balls and the World Sertes approaches
champiOn for 1972 by members of the Southeastern
That's usually the time everybody re-discovers the sheer
Oh10 League Sportswrtters and Broadcasters arhstry and magmftcence of Baltlffiore's gifted third baseman
Four tlffies m the past SIX years Brooks Robmson has used the
Assoc1at10n
Meetmg at Jolly Lanes m Jackson the sports- World Sertes to sparkle like some rare gemma showcase
Now thiDgs look different
writers and play-by-play broadcasters from every
Now Brooks RobiDson tlffie IS w1th us agaiD, but from the
c1ty tn the league heard a brtefmg on the strength
general look or things, wtth the days dwindling down to only a
and weakness of each team before placmg the
precious few and the Ortoles sttll three games back ID the vttal
Ttgers tn a very tough battle to nose out Jackson,
loss column there ts a good chance there'll be no Brooks
Athens, and Logan m the f1rst divts!On
Robinson in the World Sertes this t1me
The Jackson lronmen were of Radto WLMJ, Jack
He's not conceding that yet
picked to flmsh second (desptle son, as vtce president, and
"We're sttll think10g we're gonna get m11, 'he says
recetvmg stx ftrst place votes reelected Odte 0 Donnell of the
' We're not making any other plans "
to Ironton s three) whtle Galhpohs Tnbune secretary
Whether the Or10les get mto this World Sertes or not Rob1nson
Athens was a close thtrd wtth treasurer
already has checked in w1th his reservation for next year's
four hrst place votes
Members attendmg tncluded
He's gomg to try to make 11
Lo~an wtth a 1-1 season
the three olltcers named and
Why not '
mark, was ptcked fourth to Tom
Metiers,
Athens
round out the ftrst dtvtston
Messenger, Bob Tayck,
Heading up the second
WOUB Athens, Sts Baker,
division are the Meigs
Wellston Sentry, Bob Willis,
Marauders lor fifth place,
Wellston Telegram Jtm
far ahead of sixth place
Davts, WKOV, Wellston, Ke1th
Galltpolis, while Waverly
Wtsecu p, Pomeroy · Mtd·
was tabbed for seventh, and
dleport Sentmel Don Saul and
By VITO STELLINO
stx wtth Boston Smce DetrOit
the Wellston Rockets acRon Crwnp Ironton Trtbune ,
UPI Sports Writer
and Balhmore don I play eaeh
corded the league basement
Harold Roach, Logan Datly
The Detrmt Ttgers and the other and New York plays 11 of
After hearmg the reports tl News Paul Jossoghas, WLGN, Balttmore Onoles both have tis last 13 wtth Cleveland and
was the consensus that 1972 Logan, Pete Wtlson, Jackson Boston on thetr m10d
Mtlwaukee the Red Sox are
SEOAL football wtli not be Sun Journal Rex Corn WIBO
'It wtll all depend on our gomg to be the team on the spot
nearly as strong as m recent Waverly , and Btl! Gray , seven games wtth Boston, ' all the way down the stretch
years due to the large number WJEH, Galhpohs
sa1d Dtck McAuhffe Sunday
The tenston conhnues tomght
of under class men breakmg
In the balloting for the after he htttwo homers to pace when the Red Sox host
mto the slartmg hneups and
annual prognostications one Detrott to a 6-2 v1ctory over the Balttmore tn the only game
" f1ve ne" coaches who are
scribe predicted a he be· Mtlwaukee Brewers that scheduled
teachtng new systems
tween last year's co-champs, moved the Ttgers to wtthm 001
In the other three games
Thts fact ts borne out by the
Athens and Ironton, "hlle of the Red Sox m the ttght Sunday, Oakland stopped
pre season record aga10st non
another voted a tie between Amencan League Eastern Texas 4-1, Kansas Ctty edged
league opponents which shows
Ironton and Jackson, and D1vaswn ra ce
Minnesota 10-6, tn 10 mnmgs
the SICOAL teams wmnmg only
another saw a tie between
We ve got to wm ftve of our and Cahforma edged Chtcago,
four whtle losmg 12 contests
Logan and Meigs lor second stx games wtth Boston 1f were 3-1
It was noted that Ironton
place
gmng to make up three games
In the Nattonai League
possibly has the toughest
Based on etght pomts for a 1n the loss column "Baltimore contests, Houston oullasted
defensive unit In the league
f1rst place vote seven for Manager Earl Weaver satd
Los Angeles, 15-11 Chtcago
at present while Meigs and
second, stx for tht rd, etc th1s after the On oles lost a 2·1
Jackson have displayed the ts the order of flmsh prcdtcted dectswn to the New York topped New York, 6-4,
Phtladelphta mpped Montreal
best offensive teams
for the !972 league season
Yankees and remamed lh
3-2 St Louts stopped PtltLogan and Athens may have Pos Team
PoiDts games back m thtrd place
sburgh, :i-4 San D1ego downed
the best balance between of I Ironton
102
The Red Sox lost some Ctncmnalt 10-7 and Atlanta
fense and defense, and that 2 Jackson
1001'. ground wtth a 9-2 loss to the beat San Franc1sco 7-4
Galhpohs has the youngest 3 Athens
99 1'. Cleveland Indtans and Gaylord
McAufhffe's two homers
group of players ID the loop
4 Logan
741'. Perry but tHey're still the team
In other bustn~ss Sunday the 5 Metgs
701', wtth the best chance of supported the six-hit pttchmg
of Joe Coleman 17-15 as the
group reelected Earl James of 6 Galhpohs
46
dec tdm g thetr own late
Ttgers
downed Mtlwaukee It
the Waverly News and 7 Waver!)
31
Of 1\s ftnal 16 ga mes, Boston was Detrmt's ftfth stratght
Watchman as pres tdent 8 Wellston
16
plays seven wtth Delrotl and VICtory
AI
Etsnaugle
named
l

He knows they're saYing he's 35, he 's lost at least a step, maybe
more, go10g down to f1rst base, and he ISn't anywhere nea r the
ballplayer he used to he
" 'Tam'! so," he says, those chma blue eyes of hts lookmg
stratght at you
"In the f1eld I play as good as I ever have I would've liked to
have done better at bat, true I've got 8 homers now, last year I
had 20, I've got 62rtbbtesso far, last year I had 90 My average ts
aroWJd 2li0and 1t'sbeen between that and 260since we started I
never had that one good hot streak "
Measured agawt the entire Baltimore club thiS season
Robmson hasn't really slumped at all The Orioles' hitting ha;
heen pathetic all year Bobby Grtch, wtth hts 280 ftgure leads the
club, which reposes next to last m httt10g among all Amertcan
League clubs
It IS strtctly 10 keepmg w1th Brooks Robinson's character
that he never mentions hts most remarkable statisllc, one he
certamly could use to fire back at all those who suggest he's
sllppmg more and more
The statis\tc has to do wtth the number of games he has
played for Baltimore th1s season
Robmson has pleyed 10 142 - every s10gle game the Orioles
have engaged m thts year
No other Bal\tmore player has taken part m every game the
club has played th1s year Only a handful of players m the maJors
own such a statisttc What's more, Robmson played every one of
those games at third base--a posthon some thought at the
hegmmng of this year Grtch rrught take away from him

34 28, San Franc1sco npped
San Otego 34-3, Dallas downed
Phtladelphta, 28-il, Los Angeles
routed New Orleans, 34 14, the
New York Jets crushed Buffal o, 41 24, De trot! trounced the
New York Gtants, 30-16, Green
Bay romped over Cleveland,
26 I0
Denver tnmmed
Houston 30-17, Cmcmnall beat
New England, 31 7, Atlanta
outlasted Ch1cago, 37-21, and
St Louts upset Balt~more, 10-3
Washmgton 1s at MIDnesota
tomght
Terry Bradshaw ran for two
touchdowns and threw 57 yards
to Ron Shankhn for the
dec1d10g score as the Steelers
upeneded Okaland
John Brodte threw three TO
passes to Gene Washmgton as
the Forty Nmers stunned San
Otego
Dallas opened defense of tis

Super Bown crown as Cratg
Morton threw a patr of thtrd
quarter TD passes to spark a
vtctory over the Eagles
Bob Thomas ran for two
scores and Roman Gabrtel
passed for another to lead the
Rams over New Orleans
Archie Manmng had a patr of
TD passes for the Samts
Emerson Boozer scored
three TDs and John Riggms
rushed for a career-htgh 125
yards as the Jets rolled over
Buffalo Chm Farasopoulos
returned a punt 65 yards for a
score, the ftrst Jet to score on a
punt return ID 10 years 0 J
Sunpson threw a touchdown
pass for the Btlls
Greg Landry s three TD
passes boosted Detrott over the

Football Scores
Un1ted Press I t ernaflona l
Zanesv1lle Ro secrans 11 R1 ch•
wood 8
Can t on Central Ca tho l •c B
Youngstown North 0
M al vern 25 Northwest 0
Tuscarawas
Valley
12

Indian Va lley South 11 (tie)
L1nsly IW Va) 6 Bndgeporl 0

Cleveland St Joseph 34 Mentor
0

Hawken School 14 Beachwomi n
Cleveland Lutheran West 28
Cleveland Lutheran East 0
G1lmour Academy 0

Your
Insurance
Atoot

P1ltsburgh I Pa I ShadySide 0

1t1e)

Berea 42 Rock y R1ver 0

Port smouth NO 57 Wellston 0

Security Is Love

Steubenv ill e Ca tholi c 6 Brooke

Gaylord Perry ptcked up hts
21st vtctory wtlh a seven-httter
as Cleveland routed Boston
Cleveland erupted for ftve runs
m the first four mmngs off loser
John Curtts mcludmg Buddy
Bell's etghth homer
Fehpe Alou htt a two-run
homer m the fourth tnniDg and
Sparky Lyle bed an Amencan
League record wtth hts 34th
save as New York downed
Balhmore Lyle blanked the
Onoles on three htts over the
last three mn10gs to save Frttz
Peterson's 16th wm
Jtm Hunter pttched a twohttter for hiS 20th wiD as
Oakland beat Texas
Andy Messersmith pttched z
four-htlter and Cahforma
scored two unearned runs to
beat Wtlbur Wood and the
Wh1te Sox The loss dropped
Chtcago ftve games back tn the
Western DlVlston and JUSt
about ended tts hopes of catchiOg Oakland
Fred Patek's run-sconng
double 1gmted a four run
upnsmg 10 the lOth IDnmg and
handed Kansas Ctty the WID

Dolphins Humble Chiefs,20-1 0
Bob Grtese threw a 14 yard
TD pass to Marhn Bnscoe tn
lhc first penod and the
Dolplnns then broke open the
game m the last mmute of the
ftrst half as Garo Yepremtan,
the hero of the Dolphms'
Chrtstmas upset, k1cked a 47yard fteld goal and Larry
Csonka plunged over from the
one alter safety Jake Scott's
mterception had gtven Mtam1
the ball
Yepremtan ktcked a 15-yard
fteld goalm the thtrd pertod to
gtve M1am1 a 20-0 lead before
Kansas !malty scored on Jan
Stenerud's 411-yard f1eld goal
The only Kansas Ctty touchdown came "tth only ntne
seconds left when Len Dawson
passed mne yards to light end
Wtllle Frazter
In other opening day actwn
Pittsburgh stunned Oakland,

Oh1o H1gh School

M1dv1ew 42 Elyn c Cathol ic 0
Ashtabula Edgewood 20 Lake
Catholi c 8
Be la 1re 42 St Cla•rsv1lle 0
Bu ckeye North 29 Mmgo 6

Tigers Trail By .001 Mark

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
All the mollvallon was there
- revenge, pnde a new season
- for Kansas Ctty but when 11
was all over it was the Chtefs
nat on thetr faces agam and the
M1am1 Dolphms celebrallng
Chmtmas m September
The settmg was perfect for
the Chtefs Here was a chance
to avenge thetr Chnstmas Day
Amencan Football Conference
IItle loss to Mtamt ID the
longest pro game m htstory
he!ore a home crowd of close to
80,000 In thetr new homeArrowhead Stadium
But tt was Mtam1 whtch
proved that last Chnstmas was
no fluke as the Dolphms
manhandled the Ch1efs 20-10,
Sunday on the opemng day of
the Nahonal Football League
season

Hardly a day goes by that somebody, even hiS own 11-yearold son Brooks, Jr , doesn't ask Robmson what's wrong wtth the
Ortoles
'What's amatter, Dad, how come you're not winning?"
young Robmson wants to know
' I tell hime the same thmg I tell everyone else, that when the
club ts hlttmg 220 all year, 1t's gonna be a struggle," says the
man many clatm ts the best thtrd baseman of all tlffie
' We're gonna have our shot though We play Boston SIX
times, so all1sn t lost yet We still thmk we re gonna get m it
None of us here has gtven up '
Certamly not Brooks Robmson
Thts ts his time The World Sertes wouldn't qrnte seem like
the World Senes wtthout him makmg all those gold medal dives
around third base

over Mmnesota Patek's errol
had en abled Mmnesota to he
the game tn the mnth

Temple 16 Xav1er 12
Kenyon 17 Otterbetn 14
Bethany 25 Case Western
Reserve 14

The

Da1~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
E Kec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Echtor

IW Val 6 11 el

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arise, is your fam·
ily adequately covered? Secure their
well-being with a
rev18ed policy.

ENDS HOLDOUT
BUZZARDS BAY, Mass
I UP!) - John Havhcek ended
a one week holdout Sunday by
stgmn g hts contract wtth the
Boston Celttcs for the 1972-73
season l erms were not
dtscuslosed
The former Oh10 State
standout was the 17th and last
Celtic to s1gn

Consult Us Soon

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Middleport.

o.

Gtants and rookte Chester
Marco! s four held goals and
two TD passes by Scott Hunter
enabled Green Bay to rout the
Browns Steve Ramsey threw
for one TD and ran for another
and Jtm Turner k1cked three
fteld goals as Denver gave new
coach John Ralston a v1ctory 1n
hts debut by hestiDg the Oilers
Lemar Parrish's 51-yard punt
return for a score htghllghted a
21 pomt second half that hfted
C10c10nall over the Palrtots
Bob Berry passed for two
TDs and ran for another as
Atlanta beat Chicago and
Donme Anderson bulled lour
yards m the thtrd period for the
dec1d1Dg score m the Cardmals' upset of Baltlffiore

Padres Do It Again, 10-7
CINCINNATI (UP!) Wayne Simpson's pltchtng
troubles are more mental than
phys1cal
At least, thts seems to be the
belief of C10cmnah Reds pitchmg coach Larry Shepard
"I think Wayne's only
solution ts to pitch ball
somewhere thts wmter," said
Shepard
"Either m one of the Lahn
leagues or m the Flor1da lnstruchon league "
As Shepard sees tt, "Wayne
Is thmkmg so much about hts
pttching rhythm that he's
forgetting to throw the ball "
Simpson, g1ven a four • run
lead by his teammates 10 the
first innmg Sunday, was
rapped for six hlts, Including
homers by Nate Colbert and
Leron Lee, before departing
with none out In the third inning
And, to add to the Reds'
woes, the San Diego Padres
went on to win the !male of the
three-game series 10-7 with a
three-run splurge m the ninth
at the expense of relief pitcher
Ed Sprague
'fttl.t 1111 •Iter Hal McRae'a
third pinch hllllltr of the -1011
lild the ICflft ln the bottom of

the etghth mmng
Maybe Good Omen
The Reds' loss, coupled wtth
Houston 's victory, left the
magtc number at stx as the Jlffi
McGlothlin faces the San
Francisco Gtants m the opener
of a three-game series tomght
' Maybe ," said Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson ,
"the loss to the Padres was a
good omen'
The victory was the Padres'
lOth in the 18 meetings between
the two clubs this season And
as Anderson pomted out, thts ts
the same number the Padres
took durmg the Reds' pennant
winning season of 1970
Thts IS one of several
similarities between this vear
and the 1970 season Outside of
the Padres, the Chtcago Cubs
are the only other club to gain
the edge over the Reds in a 1972
season aenes, just as It was m
1970 And there 's Pittsburg:'
The Reds beat the Pirates
eight ol 12 games during the
season sertes m 1970 and
matched that mark thts year
"I JUSt hope," said Anderson,
"the similarities continue and
that we beat the Pirates in the
playoffs again tbls year "
Borboa S&amp;rllck

Dems Menke 's mabtllty to
handle Johnny Bench s throw
enabled Jerry Morales and
Colbert to race home wtth
a pa1r
of
msm a nee
runs 10 the niDth mnmg Thls was alter Dave
ConcepciOn's throwmg error on
Dave Roberts' mf1eld s10gle
and Morales ' subsequent
double broke a 7-7 tie
'We lost the game when
Pedro Borbon was hit on the
arm," sa1d Anderson
Borbon who took over when
S1mpson departed in the thtrd
10mng, was struck on the rtght
arm by a Mike Caldwell pitch
m the sixth mmng One inmng
later, he left the game when h1s
arm stiffened
Before struck by the pitch,
Pedro didn't yield a hit in four
innmgs However, he was
mcked for a run in the top of the
seventh when the Padres went
ahead 5-4
Three hits, including a tr1ple
by Tony Perez, gave the Reds a
6-5 lead in the bottom of the
seventh
The Padres matched that In
the top of the ei&amp;hth when
rookie Randy Elliott doubled
off Clay Carroll to send San
Diego ahead '1~.

Mator League Standmgs
Umted Press International
National League

East
WLPciGB
P1tlsburgh 89 51 636
Ch tcago
78 64 549 12
New York
72 67 518 16'12
Sf LouiS
69 74 483 21'1•
Montrea l
64 77 454 25'12
Ph1iadelph1a 52 89 ' 369 37'12
Wast
WLPciGB
C1nc1nnat1
86 55 610
Houston
79 62 560 7
Los Angeles 75 66 532 11
Atlanta
66 76 465 20'12
San Fran
63 79 444 23'1l
San Otego
53 86 381 32
Sunday s Results
Sf Lou1s 5 Pittsburgh 4
Ch1cago 6 New York 4
Philadelphia 3 Montreal 2
San Diego 10 Cincinnati 7
Houston 15 Los Angeles 11
Atlanta 7 San FranciSco 4
Saturday's Results
Ch1cago 18 New York 5
St Louis 4 Pittsburgh 0
San Francisco 8 Atlanta S (lsi)
Atlanta 5 San Francisco 2 (2nd)
Cincinnati 6 San Diego 3
Los Angeles 10 Houston o
Philadelphia 3 Montreal 0
Today's Probable Pttchers
tAll Times EDT)
National Leoaue
Pittsburgh (Ellis 14 7) at New
York (Koosman 9 11). 8 05
pm
San Francisco I Barr 7 8) at
Cinctnnall (Billingham 10 12)
805p'"
Los Angeles (John 11 5) at
San Diogo (Arlin 8 20), 10 30
pm
!Only gamn scheduled)

Amer~can

League

East
WLPctGB
Boston
76 63 547
De trod
77 64 546
Ball1more
76 66 535 l'll
New York
75 67 528 211l
Cleveland
64 79 448 14
~Milwaukee
58 86 403 20'1•
West
WLPctGB
Oakland
84 67 596
Ch1cago
79 62 560 5
Minnesota
71 69 507 1211l
Kansas Cily 68 71 489 15
California
67 74 475 17
Texas
52 89 369 32
Sunday's Results
Cleveland 9 Boston 2
Detr01t 6 Milwaukee 1
New York 2 Baltimore I
Oakland 4 TeKas I
Calilornta 3 Ch1cago 1
Kansas C1ty 10 M1nnesota 6 ( 10
1nn1ngs)

Saturday's Results
Boston 10 Cleveland 0
Balhmore 7 New York 3
Detroit 2 Milwaukee 1
Oakland 4 TeKas 0
Mmnesota 11 Kansas City 1
Ch1cago 2 California 0
Today's Prolloblo Pitchers
All T1mes EDT
Baltimore (Dobson 15 16) at
Boston (McGlothen 7 5), 7 30
pm
!Only game scheduled)
Tuesday 1s Games

Balf1more at Boston (ntght)
Detroil al Cleveland 2 (twl
n1ghl)
New York at Milwaukee
lntghl)
ChiCago at Oakland (nlg~f)
Tuas at Mmnesota (n ig ht)
Kansa• City at California
lntghtl

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out of dreams And, US Savmgs
Bonds have been helping to make
happy dreams come true for years
Now, Bonds mature m less than
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You can buy shares m your particular dream by JOining the Payroll
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Before you know tt, your Amencan
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Public Service by The Dally Sentinel

•

"·

�z-The Deily Sentlni!l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sept 18, 1972

WiN AT 8N1bdi!

Be It Ever So Humble

EDITORIAl.$

An Olympiad
Fund Hand

It's the Undecideds
Who Win Elections
Bv HOYT KIN!:

tR
.107
.732
tAJ987
.652
WEST
EAST
.9432
.KQJ86
NORTH

Predtchons helm e electtons change stretch the predicted margiD lowet tl, do one thiDg and another de
pendmg on who ts predtctmg, and on behalf of whom
But actually doesn t tt seem logtcal to reason that
elections are dectded by the undectdeds, and m good
part at the moment of entermg the polhng booth •
There are a whole lot of dtehards Democrats and
Republicans who probably wouldn't vote for Jesus 11 he
represented the other party They are 10 the kitty of their
party s 'counted ' votes
They don I need any appeals or arguments They don't
heed any appeals or arguments from the other Side They
vote nght whatever
But let s constder the undectded voter A lot of themmaybe most-are undec1ded as they enter the polling
booth They have last mmute thoughts 'N1xon has done
as welt as anyone could ' 'People say the country needs
a change to a new order a new politics " 'McGovern
McGovern
you can't tell what he wants from
;, one day to the next " Should I take a chance on
;, McGovern•• 'Ntxon 1s tested 10 the JOb "
How many voters do such reasomng nght up to the
~ last moment can never be known, but tt's got to be a
::; whole lot If you go back to 1948 you remember that
~ nght up to elecllon day you could get up to 25 to I odds
•1 that Thomas E Dewey would defeat Pres1dent Harry S

,Campaign
Asides
•

: It's a strange pohhcal campa1gn Not who you hke
,most but who you dtshke least
People crlhctze McGovern because they can t tell tf
he's nght on some of the tssues Or left
: You have some 1dea of course where Ntxon stands
'Washmgton Key Btscayne San Clemente
' McGovern ts way short of campatgn money He's
suffer•ng from a kmd of buck ague
, A Democratic hero IS helpmg N1xon s campatgn coffers
· Pictures of Andrew Jackson
••: How about the rellabtltty of the candidates• Anyone
:wanbng to be pres1dent these days must be crazy
'

(NEWSPAPU ENTERPRISE ASSN l

~Dear Helen

PERFEC110N IS NO FUN, EITHER

'

I've read a lot about unperfect m-laws, but what do you do
'When yours are PERFECT• I mean really, I'm not being sarcastic. It's tough lollowtng an act like that
My mother-m-law can entertam wtth no apparent effort,
practically runs three SOCI81 and political clubs, looks gorgeous,
even when she's scrubbing out the bathtub, and manages to read
all the latest books besides
But my Slster-m-law outshines her' She works, keeps house
so you can eat off the floors (if you can assume Lotus
Position), she makes a master chef blush with shame the way
she whips up homemade cream pulls, ets ; she wallpapers the
house when she can't liM anything better to do, like racmg
arOWJd playmg Lady Bountiful to elderly awtto, with a bowl of
chicken soup under her ann (homemade naturally)
Don't tell me I shouldn't feel inferior to them hell, I AM
Inferior So IS everyone else The amazing psrt Ia I like them But
I dread the day when my hllllband wakes up and sees he married
a -KLUTZ
Dear Klutz
It's just possible your husband would rather have you
''klutzy" !ban any other way ''Tough following an act like that,"
aaya you? Think how much tougher lt l.s UVING with it, if one
can't match the perfection
Admire your m-laws but don't compete Perhaps for the first
time 10 his life, your man IS able to relax - H

+++
Dear Helen
Class reunions' Why don't they update them I've never heard
of one yet that doesn1 offer prizes fer
I Most children and (or) grandchildren,
2 Who has travelled the greatest distance Then they uauaUy
introduce the guy who was the star quarterback; but never the
class valedlctorlan
In these days when producing vast numbers of offspring isn't
the zenith of achievement and the raiH'aha are getting the hawhaws, why don't reun1on planners single out people who have
done most for therr communities; tell a few success atoriu?
Maybe then they 'd draw more of the interesting alumni back to
those now somewhat ghastly affairs - TRIED lT, DIDN'T LIKE
IT

DEARTIDU
Maybe Instead of asking "how many children'" reunioolals
should offer combat ribbons lor most divorces, hlgheat chlJd
aupport payments, greatest number of vlsito to payehlatrlals .
Seriouly, I doubt we'll ever change the fonnat of class
reunlona They're as locked into tradition as ''The Star Spangled
Banner" rendition - before major football games. - H
Dear Helen
My heart goes out to the epUeptic who lost many job op.
portunltiee and finally had to lie on his application form before he
could find rewarding work And to "Shunned," who was ukad to
resign from a church choir, due to "fits " By the grace of God,
thla has not happened to me
I went to a normal employment agency alter flnlahlng
eollege and got a job as secretory, with the acency ltnowiDgl an;
1n epileptic (which Is now almollt completely undercoatrol).
Aside from being the mother of three children, I work fer a
Cultural Council, am Chairwoman of a local club, and aecretary
for the County Epilepsy SocietY, whoee aim Is to broaden
people's outlook toward epileptics When I have a petit mal
lllzure people show coocern and warmth, not shock.
There is hope for epileptics What people understand they no
longer fear. May y911r correspondents soon receive auch un1derstanding - p c

'

t106

.AI0873

SOUTH (D)
•As
.AKQI064
tQ32
.KQ
Norlh-South vulnerable

We•t

North

Ea.•l South

Pass
Pass

3NT

Pass

2NT

Pass

Opemng lead-• 2

~ Truman

'

.J

.985
t K54
.J94

F

'I On elecllon eve Truman took to the a1rwaves wtth
,·some down to earth reasomng ThiDk of how many un
!dec1deds • he must have won over wtth hts The Repub
beans say they w11t
etc Don't you believe It 1" Th1s
;catchlme repeated 10 h1s speech
• Somewhat the same predtcted Imbalance ts true today
.wtth the Ntxon McGovern election commg up People
' say, 'I don't want to vote for Ntxon
'I don't want to
'vote for McGovern '
: Has there ever heen a prestdenttal elechon 10 which
,so many people had so httle enthusiasm for the candt
dates•
· Why• Welt, reasons can be cited but reasons don't
·really matter, now What each candidate needs to do
' Is hnd some way to reach deep mto the thoughts, the
' ideas the I hke that' responses of the undectdeds He
~ most surely wtll be addressed as • Mr Prestdent '

.

'

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SHIRLEY GAILUPS AWAY
IN THE WESI'
NEW YORK (KFS) - Shrrley MacLame
and her latest mcumhent compamon Pete
Ham1ll did all the Last Vegas floor shows (5th
DlffienSlon at the Rmera Johnny Carson at the
Sahara, Sammy DaviS at the Sands, Tom Jones
at Caesars Palace etc ) and explatned she was
"sampling pubhc optmon regardmg
McGovern" Carson stands on TV fence, the
5th Dunenaion hasn't gone on record yet,
Sammy Davts IS a fevertsh NlXoman and Tom
Jones votes m Br1tam, gad' she loses agam
Pasta exports in Italy have zoomed 2,130
pet in 2tl years But Italians themselves are
cutting down dangerously (for the domesllc
spaghetti trade) The 19-year-old male fashton
model mentioned but never named as MISS
Vicki's boyfr1end when she busted up With Tiny
Tim has come out of the secret closet he'sJohn
Carmen (real name Carmen Ambrogto ), who
broke his cover to "debunk" Miss V 's demals
John swears on a stack of 8 by 10 glosstes they
planned to get marrted m Ha1t1, addmg "I know
we still love each other " Awwww
WliH rumor arourid the, V~mce F1lm
Festival linked Sylvia Miles and Tennessee
Williams, er, romantically Biggest laugh of the
desultory fete Beau and Julie Bndges are
scoffing at the rumors A Lortllard veep tells
us a woman can not he TVd smok10g a ctgaret
outdoors m Australian commerctals, tndoors,
she's pemutted one drag Joan R1vers' spht
wtth husband Edgar has her slavmg over new
and reversed routines - her entire cormc attack
was launched from her at-last-I'm-mamed
pomt for the seven seasons ol her mamage
(Bye, honey, the season's over) Cormcs Pat
Cooper and Stanley Brock at Dowmng Square
were shop.talkmg -of the days when both were
N Y cabdnvers
Writer tr1ed to document bow much certa10
husbands added to thetr w1ves' stardom, actually all but a few of the breed have contrtbuted
to the oppoSite One of the great all time stars
was s1gned at huge salary and her pass10g
groom groused "The network doesn't come up
wtth a format " We suggested he f10d a format
Vlll thetr splendidly high-fees "That's thetr
Jli'Oblem," the subsequently dumped husband
cymcized We opmed tl was hiS and he never
Wlderstood 1t The ultimate solut1on was an
histeric sadness

Gil D1Lue1a, owner of famed V1Uage
hangout, 0 Henry's, IS heavy mto ecology and
spendmg lots of profits to start a glass-cecycling
station outstde hiS restaurant, where the public
may turn ID used bottles, old monocles, swizzle
slicks and eyes Thin Rossano Brazzi ordered
a charred-outs1de steak at the Pen &amp; Pencil, and
his commodious wife ordered lobster smothered
ID butter
Screen-TV character actor Jack
Somack's cup runneth over Warners optioned
him for three more flicks and hts microbiologist
son Ralph just was awarded an American
Cancer Society research grant at Berkeley
6th Ave at 32nd St men's shop's Sign needles,
HYou Want to Dress Uke a Mannik10, That Is
Your Busmess If You Want to Dress Like a
Man 's That's Our BuSiness " The Pierre Hotel s addmg a dtscotek (Inn La Forte) along
w1th 1ts styhsh supper club La Foret
Ftrst father--son collaboration on fiction 10
publishing memory w1ll be "Cornered at Six,"
from Slmon &amp;Schuster, by MaJ Brtan ratrtck
McMahon, US A F , (and Notre Dame '57) and
his pop Thomas Patr1ck McMahon, certainly
the one done at greatest diStance - 1,800 rrules,
son m San Antomo, dad m Westchester
John Wayne's already agreed to be grand
marshal of the 84th Tournament of Roses Jan I
W1th half a mtllton there for her namlng as
Mtss Somesuch 10 her home town of Seattle,
Carol Chanrung, asked how come her success,
rephed, "Horace Greeley told me to 'Go East,
yoWJg lady' "
Alfred Hitchcock says he's
deftmtely not 70 but contmues his youth kick wrote hiS ftrst him script at 22, directed at 25
' and when people say I'm 70, 1t's a confoWJded
lie 1 I m twtce 35, that's all'"
Yogt Berra's Yoo Hoo soft drmk lli'ID's
doiDg better than hts Mets 1ts 1972 half-year
proftts were b1gger than all of last year's
G1rls - short dresses w1ll be back for next
spriDg and summer
Jean Westwood,
McGovern's Dem committee head, IS "Madam
Chatrbroad" to her husband
Most McGuff
zealots are deep 10to ecology and f1ght furcoatwearmg women, but chrurbroad Jean has a new
full length blackglama mink, an autUIIUl haze
Jacket and even Mil hostess a fall fur show for
herfurrter pal, Ben Kahn Jean's the lass who
shafted Tom Eagleton even as McGulf was
'behind hlm 1,000 pet " Here goest McGulf's
for-the-little-man unage Philly glutton gang
have a 'Gourmets for McGovern" cookbook,
egad, we thought all h1s followers were starving
for hamburgers

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
It Can Ruin a Life

why some teenagers have to
go through thts hell I too
can say hell for all the sleep
less mghts I spent not
knowmg anymore where to
turn for help
Dr Lamb, we tned many
avenues for help from ptlls
to f 1n a II y dermabrasiOn,
Which only left more scars
and heartaches One doctor
even made a culture from
the pus and used 1t as a
serum to lDJect back mto
her body One well known
dermatologtst tned X rays
and hnally gave up saymg
he lrted all the knowledge
that God gave htm and
couldn t do any more
My daughter came out of
tt all well adJusted m mmd
and body, but acne had taken
1ts toll on both of us for
almost 20 years I'm wntlng
this letter to you because
when I see a teenager with
acne my heart goes out, be·
cause I know what that person feels lns1de I sympathize
with the mother who wrote
to you and 1! there ever was
a dnve for funds on trymg
to cure or curb acne, I
would certainly support tl,
even if I have no teenagers
or children at home now

may help to educate other
mothers about acne You
have explamed beautlfully
JUSt how much real damage
th1s problem can cause m
IOdlVlduals' hves The story
you have shared w1th the
other readers, exemplifies
why a young person With ac

The Almanac
By United Press IDternational
Today IS Monday, Sept 18,
the 262nd day of 1972 with 104
to follow
The moon as approaching its
full phase
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn
The evening star Is Jupiter
Those born on this date are
Wtder the s1gn of Virgo.
British poet and lexlcographer Samuel Johnson, writer of
the ftrst English dictionary,
was born Sept. 18, 1709
,
On thiS day in history
In 1850, the Fugitive Slave
Act was p~d by Congress,
allowmg a slave-owner with
certificate to reclaim any slave
Dear Reader-Your letter who escaped mto another state

Television Log
MONDAY, SEPT. 11, 1972
6 oo - News 3, 4 8, 10 Truth or Consoq 6, New• 13 News 15,
Hathayoga 3
6 30 - NBC News 3 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS Newo 8, 10, Folk
Guitar 33, I Dream of Jeannie 13
1 oo - Elec co 20, New• 6, Truth or Conoeq 3, Beat the Clock
4 Clrcusll3 lnslght33, What's My Llno 8, Saint 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, Traffic Court 10 Episode Action
33 Parent Game 3, Hollywood Square! 4, Young Or Kildare
a,' Movie 11 Tarzan and the Merf!i~ld5" 13

8 oo - Gunsmoka8, 10. Rowan and /l'lllrfln's Laugh In 3, 4 UFO
6 , Baseball 15. The Rstless Earth 33
,
9 oo - Here's Lucy 8. 10, Movie "With SIK You Get Eggroll. 3
Pro Football 6, 13, Movie "Back Track 4
9 30 - Doris Day 8, 10
10 00 - Bill Cosby 8, 10 Societies In Tranoltlon 33
10 30 - Human Dlmenslons33, Death Valley Days 15
11 OO - News3,4 6. News8, tO, 15
,
11 30 - Dick CaveH 6, Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 Movie The
World, the Flesh end the Devil" 8, Movie "The Sisters" 10
12 30 - Movie' The Rlslnl oflhe Moon" 13
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
1 30 - News 13
TUESDAY, SEPT l9
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heort 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmtlme 10
6 20 - Paul Harvey l 3
6 25 - Faith For Today 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment to
6 o1.1 - Corncoll Report 3
6 55- Fllntstcnos 13
1 00 - Today3 4.15 CBS News8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Bullwlnkle &amp; Rock)
13
8 oo - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue6 13 Sesame St 33,
Ttmmy &amp; Lassie 6
8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Romper Room 8 Con
centratlon6, Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 Mr Rogers
33 What Every Woman Wants to Know 3
9 30 - ToTeillheTruth3,Jeopardy6 HazelS
10 00- Dinah Shore 3 15, Dick Van Dyke 13, Joker's Wild 8 10
Columbus Six Calling 6
10 30- Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Split Second 13
Price Is Right 8 10
11 00 -Saieoflhe Century 3 15 Love American Style6 Gambit
8, 10 Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 Love of Llle 8, 10 Bew1tched

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald • Lets d lSC u ss
some of the hands from the
Amencan Contract Br1dge
League's nabonwtde Olympiad fund game '
Jtm These hands are
played all over the country
and the ACBL staff attempts
to predict what will happen
Thts ts a thankless JOb "
Oswald 'They predtcted
that most Sou t h players
w o u I d wmd up at four
hearts After a spade lead,
South would draw trumps
6, 13
and at t a c k d1amonds He 12 00
- Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,
would lead the queen frrst
Jackie Oblinger 8, News 10, 13
and West would make h1s 12 25 - CBS News 8
best play by cover10g w1th 12 30 - 3 Ws Game 3, 15 Split Second 6, Search for Tomorrow
the kmg
8, 10
"Then a South who had I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13, Its Your Bet 8 Green
Acres 10 Walch Your Ch1ld 15
played out three rounds of 1 303 On a Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
trumps would probably lay
World Turns 8. 10
down the Jack and wmd un 2 00- Days of Our Lives 3 4 lS Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglas 6 Guiding Light 8 10
w1th 12 tr1cks
"Those who had played 2 30-Doctors3 4 15 DatlngGome13 Edgeo1Night8. 10
only two rounds of trumps 3 00 - General Hosp1lal 6 13 Another World 3 4 15 Love Is
Splendored Thlnq 8 10 Grow1ng Him Up 33
m1ght return to therr hand 3 30One L1le to L1ve 6, Return to Peyton Place 3, 4 l 5 Jeff s
w1th a th1rd m order to take
Collie 13, Secret Storm 8, 10
an unsuccessful fmesse for 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Love
the d1amond 10 and would
American Style 13, Merv Griffin 4, Fllntstones 6 Gilligan's
wmd up losing a d1amond, a
Island 8, Movie The Fastest Guitar Alive, 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
spade and a club '
J 1m "ThiS would be dis- 4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Political Junction 3 Danl•l Rr.one 13
Grill in 8, Andy Griffith 15
astrous for those Sou t h s 5 00Merv
Dick
Van Dyke 15 Merv urlttln 8 Mr Rogers 33
who let East and West push
Ponderosa 3 4 Daniel Boone 6
them to the ftve level, others 5 30 - Marshall Dillon IS Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
who doubled a defens1ve
13 -four spades would collect 6 00 - News3 4, 8,10 15 Hathayoga33
300 to 500 pomts - not as 6 30- News 3 4 15 6 8 10 I Dream ol Jeanle13 Growing H1m
Up 33
good as a heart game "
7
00News 6 10 What s My L1ne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat The
Oswald "We watched one
Clock 4 I ve Got a Secret 13 Truth or Consequences J
South get a top score by
Mayor s Report lS
openmg two no-trump He 7 30-Masterptece Theatre 33, This Is Yo" Life 3 Doctors On
won the spade opening
Call 4 To Tell The Truth 6 Price Is Righi 8 10 Beat The
cashed hts hearts, led the
Clock 13
d1amond queen, West played 8 00 - Bonanza J, .t 10 Temperatures R• slng 6, 13 Maude 8
10 BaseballlS
the kmg and dummy the ace
- Hawaii F1ve 0 8 10 Evening al Pops 33 Mov1e No
He next played dummy's 8 30Place
to Run ' ~ 13
]ack of hearts to make sure 9 00 - Bold
Ones 3 4
of h1s mnth tnck, dropped 9 30 - Movie The Woman Hunter 8 10 Can You Hear Me'
East's 10 ,for stx np trump "
33
r J 1 J1J
10 00 - NBC Reports 3 4 IS Marcus Welby MD 6, 13 F~rlng
(NEWSPAPlR ENTUPRIS~ ~SSN J
Line 33
d ~··
II 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 V~rpinlan 8 Movie
' Johnny Gu itar ' 10 Movie Flying Tigers 13
I 00 - Your Health 4
The b1dd1ng has been
West North East South I 30 - News Weather 4 Local News 13
It
Dble
Pass
1•
Pass
You, South hold

?

&amp; THINGS

.AQ87 .KJ4 t3Z .K986
What do you do now?
A-B•d two spades This Is a
slight stretch but your very
good spades make the call a de·

!nrable one
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do btd two spades Your
partner goes to three spades
What do you do now?
Answer tomorrow

In 1851, the New York Times
was pubhshed for the hrst
ttme
In 1928, tt was estimated that
4,000 persons had been killed
and property damage amountIng to more than $30 million
had been caused by a
devastatmg humcane which
lashed Flonda and the West
lndtes for f1ve days starting
Sept 12

Acne Cries for Expert Care
By Lawrence Lamb, M D.
Dear Dr Lamb-1 enJOY
your articles Immensely and
they have educated me
many times Your article on
acne was very mterestiDg to
me as I have a daughter who
went through the agomes of
a severe acne case My hus
band and I both have very
g~od complextons but our
daughter developed acne
when she was 11 years old
and tt got worse She be·
came ugly in her own eyes
although she was not be
cause of lovely features but
this condition wreaked havoc
w1th her heart
Boys d1d shy away from
her for one thmg Job open
mgs where she would meet
the pubhc were closed to
her, m sp1te of a very mtelllgent mmd and college
credits Her teachers even
tried to get her jobs, although employers anx1ous
lor business thou~ht other
wtse She did find emptor·
ment though and excelled m
her work When she advanced as far as she could
they took her into the com
pany
My daughter fmally marned m her late 30s and
ts happy but still has a very
scarred face and wonders

'

ne should rece1ve expert
care unless the acne ts
rnerely a transitory thmg
which can be controlled by
washing the face with hot
water and soap two or three
hmes a day
There are some things
which spec1alists In skin
dIseases (dermatologists)
can do In difficult cases to at
least mlrumlze the amount
of damage which occurs
How a person lookB Is indeed very Important to the
person, and It affects their
success In life Some parents
1gnore this problem In their
boys thinking It's not important whether men are
nice looking or not This Is
untrue. A person's mdlvldual
appearance Is important to
everyone, male or female,
and It does lnfiuence their
succesa Thank you lor taking time to write your letter
tNtwSPAPJt •"'nPltsl ASSN l
Stllfl , .., q..st~u to Dt ~.
lo core ol t~11 _.,.,, 'Q ...

1551, ••diG C11y StlltiGit, H~ York,
H Y 111019 ,., o .., ol Dt, lomll's

a ,_.,or

0!1

lotiof woltllf trtrt4 50

coott to tflo -

,., "Loti.,

pil,.., oit4 ..t

w..,~r· Witt

BY PAUL CRABTREE
MONDAY, SEPI'. 18
Continuing our review of this fall's TV offerml!ll (Frtday we
reviewed the Weather Channel), let's look at a couple of the new
(' )quiz programs, night and day
''The Joker Is Wild" barely edges mto the category of shows
that are slightly educational (and sometlffies slightly entertaining)
The educational value lies in the fact that the program will
teach your five-year-old the baste principle in playing a slot
machine.
The format is straight out of "Jeopardy" - one of the decent
quiz programs That Is, It poses questions in specific categories
to contestants competing against each other But there, the
sunllarity ends
There are all sorts of gliDllllcks, bigger prizes, "wild cards,"
etc , etc And commercials, conunerclals, commercials
If you must see it, try WCHS-TV at lOam weekdays

+++
The other shows are ''The Price Is R1ght" and "The New
Price Is Right "
''The New, etc "Is a network show, appearmg on CBS weekday mornlnga at 10 30. Bob Barker Is the host
''Tiie Price Is Right," IS a syndicated show, with Dennis
James as host
It's on at 7 30 p m , Tuesdays
Both shows are much like their hoary predecessor, and are
founded upon the same principle of human behavior - naked
lUlrestralned greed.
'
Partlcipstory television Is an mtegral part of these shows _
with the studio audience cheering and hooting, to persuade the
contestants to be greedier and greedier
(Penonally,I find the UtUe old ladle&amp; who used to cUmb into
the ring and beat unpopular wrestlers with their umllrellas more
satisfyq In the "participatory" category )
Revival of this oldie Is bad enough, but ita resurrection In two
separate fonnats Is sufficient to bring tears to the eyes

+++
I'm fully aware that thOUI8nda of housewives (and quite a
few men, too) go for thlasort ol thing, in spite olthe quli&lt;ICandals
of the Filtles the aameness of so many shows of this genre ..
and the hoked-up glnunicka used If that's your cup of tea drink
It and psy nolurtherattentioo to my crltlclam
'
But the truth Is that intelllaent, witty, 1111d reapectable quiz
programs CAN be done, as witnessed by "Jeopardy" and
"Piuword.'' Others, admitting the "conleatilllto" are briefed 1n
adv~. are merely frameworktt for aome fatrly~lertaining
repartee, 111ch u ''Hollywood Squares."
That's reaDy why I can't understand how these aubilar efforts ever make !ton thealr,letalone stay there

+++

ON 1HE TV DIAL: The schedule changeth, with "Colwnbua
Six Clllllns" ·~weekdays at 10, WTVN·TV. Mike DoucJu
occuplea the old Virginia Graham llpOI, 2p.m weelttlaya, WTVNTV · Plratee-MetsbueballaU:IIOilWTAP·TV, .andHowllll
Dandy Don, and Facele• FraM . . bldl wilh ABC M~
ntcht football, Redakbw-VIklltp ' 'JM at t 011 Wln'N-TV
(True confelllcm, two r&lt;l!lt 1
tiM lb HoWard ec.n

~~!~ ABCiutwu lncr+C\ 11111r 11 ~-nan;
---~ Plllel

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

,)

3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sept 18, 1972

SEO Newsmen Pick Ironton To Repeat
Jackson Ranked
2nd, Meigs 5th;
Elect Officers

Robmson knows some of the !lungs people are saYing about

Today's

him

~Sport

Parade

,
,l

'•

By MILTON RICHMAN

UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Theorettcally , this should he Brooks
RobuJSOn 's time
JACKSON - In what appears to be a "down"
It generally comes down to that every year th1s time when the
season m football talent m the SEOAL the Ironton leaves begm turnmg brown, the topcoats emerge from the mothTtgers were ptcked Sunday as the potential league! balls and the World Sertes approaches
champiOn for 1972 by members of the Southeastern
That's usually the time everybody re-discovers the sheer
Oh10 League Sportswrtters and Broadcasters arhstry and magmftcence of Baltlffiore's gifted third baseman
Four tlffies m the past SIX years Brooks Robmson has used the
Assoc1at10n
Meetmg at Jolly Lanes m Jackson the sports- World Sertes to sparkle like some rare gemma showcase
Now thiDgs look different
writers and play-by-play broadcasters from every
Now Brooks RobiDson tlffie IS w1th us agaiD, but from the
c1ty tn the league heard a brtefmg on the strength
general look or things, wtth the days dwindling down to only a
and weakness of each team before placmg the
precious few and the Ortoles sttll three games back ID the vttal
Ttgers tn a very tough battle to nose out Jackson,
loss column there ts a good chance there'll be no Brooks
Athens, and Logan m the f1rst divts!On
Robinson in the World Sertes this t1me
The Jackson lronmen were of Radto WLMJ, Jack
He's not conceding that yet
picked to flmsh second (desptle son, as vtce president, and
"We're sttll think10g we're gonna get m11, 'he says
recetvmg stx ftrst place votes reelected Odte 0 Donnell of the
' We're not making any other plans "
to Ironton s three) whtle Galhpohs Tnbune secretary
Whether the Or10les get mto this World Sertes or not Rob1nson
Athens was a close thtrd wtth treasurer
already has checked in w1th his reservation for next year's
four hrst place votes
Members attendmg tncluded
He's gomg to try to make 11
Lo~an wtth a 1-1 season
the three olltcers named and
Why not '
mark, was ptcked fourth to Tom
Metiers,
Athens
round out the ftrst dtvtston
Messenger, Bob Tayck,
Heading up the second
WOUB Athens, Sts Baker,
division are the Meigs
Wellston Sentry, Bob Willis,
Marauders lor fifth place,
Wellston Telegram Jtm
far ahead of sixth place
Davts, WKOV, Wellston, Ke1th
Galltpolis, while Waverly
Wtsecu p, Pomeroy · Mtd·
was tabbed for seventh, and
dleport Sentmel Don Saul and
By VITO STELLINO
stx wtth Boston Smce DetrOit
the Wellston Rockets acRon Crwnp Ironton Trtbune ,
UPI Sports Writer
and Balhmore don I play eaeh
corded the league basement
Harold Roach, Logan Datly
The Detrmt Ttgers and the other and New York plays 11 of
After hearmg the reports tl News Paul Jossoghas, WLGN, Balttmore Onoles both have tis last 13 wtth Cleveland and
was the consensus that 1972 Logan, Pete Wtlson, Jackson Boston on thetr m10d
Mtlwaukee the Red Sox are
SEOAL football wtli not be Sun Journal Rex Corn WIBO
'It wtll all depend on our gomg to be the team on the spot
nearly as strong as m recent Waverly , and Btl! Gray , seven games wtth Boston, ' all the way down the stretch
years due to the large number WJEH, Galhpohs
sa1d Dtck McAuhffe Sunday
The tenston conhnues tomght
of under class men breakmg
In the balloting for the after he htttwo homers to pace when the Red Sox host
mto the slartmg hneups and
annual prognostications one Detrott to a 6-2 v1ctory over the Balttmore tn the only game
" f1ve ne" coaches who are
scribe predicted a he be· Mtlwaukee Brewers that scheduled
teachtng new systems
tween last year's co-champs, moved the Ttgers to wtthm 001
In the other three games
Thts fact ts borne out by the
Athens and Ironton, "hlle of the Red Sox m the ttght Sunday, Oakland stopped
pre season record aga10st non
another voted a tie between Amencan League Eastern Texas 4-1, Kansas Ctty edged
league opponents which shows
Ironton and Jackson, and D1vaswn ra ce
Minnesota 10-6, tn 10 mnmgs
the SICOAL teams wmnmg only
another saw a tie between
We ve got to wm ftve of our and Cahforma edged Chtcago,
four whtle losmg 12 contests
Logan and Meigs lor second stx games wtth Boston 1f were 3-1
It was noted that Ironton
place
gmng to make up three games
In the Nattonai League
possibly has the toughest
Based on etght pomts for a 1n the loss column "Baltimore contests, Houston oullasted
defensive unit In the league
f1rst place vote seven for Manager Earl Weaver satd
Los Angeles, 15-11 Chtcago
at present while Meigs and
second, stx for tht rd, etc th1s after the On oles lost a 2·1
Jackson have displayed the ts the order of flmsh prcdtcted dectswn to the New York topped New York, 6-4,
Phtladelphta mpped Montreal
best offensive teams
for the !972 league season
Yankees and remamed lh
3-2 St Louts stopped PtltLogan and Athens may have Pos Team
PoiDts games back m thtrd place
sburgh, :i-4 San D1ego downed
the best balance between of I Ironton
102
The Red Sox lost some Ctncmnalt 10-7 and Atlanta
fense and defense, and that 2 Jackson
1001'. ground wtth a 9-2 loss to the beat San Franc1sco 7-4
Galhpohs has the youngest 3 Athens
99 1'. Cleveland Indtans and Gaylord
McAufhffe's two homers
group of players ID the loop
4 Logan
741'. Perry but tHey're still the team
In other bustn~ss Sunday the 5 Metgs
701', wtth the best chance of supported the six-hit pttchmg
of Joe Coleman 17-15 as the
group reelected Earl James of 6 Galhpohs
46
dec tdm g thetr own late
Ttgers
downed Mtlwaukee It
the Waverly News and 7 Waver!)
31
Of 1\s ftnal 16 ga mes, Boston was Detrmt's ftfth stratght
Watchman as pres tdent 8 Wellston
16
plays seven wtth Delrotl and VICtory
AI
Etsnaugle
named
l

He knows they're saYing he's 35, he 's lost at least a step, maybe
more, go10g down to f1rst base, and he ISn't anywhere nea r the
ballplayer he used to he
" 'Tam'! so," he says, those chma blue eyes of hts lookmg
stratght at you
"In the f1eld I play as good as I ever have I would've liked to
have done better at bat, true I've got 8 homers now, last year I
had 20, I've got 62rtbbtesso far, last year I had 90 My average ts
aroWJd 2li0and 1t'sbeen between that and 260since we started I
never had that one good hot streak "
Measured agawt the entire Baltimore club thiS season
Robmson hasn't really slumped at all The Orioles' hitting ha;
heen pathetic all year Bobby Grtch, wtth hts 280 ftgure leads the
club, which reposes next to last m httt10g among all Amertcan
League clubs
It IS strtctly 10 keepmg w1th Brooks Robinson's character
that he never mentions hts most remarkable statisllc, one he
certamly could use to fire back at all those who suggest he's
sllppmg more and more
The statis\tc has to do wtth the number of games he has
played for Baltimore th1s season
Robmson has pleyed 10 142 - every s10gle game the Orioles
have engaged m thts year
No other Bal\tmore player has taken part m every game the
club has played th1s year Only a handful of players m the maJors
own such a statisttc What's more, Robmson played every one of
those games at third base--a posthon some thought at the
hegmmng of this year Grtch rrught take away from him

34 28, San Franc1sco npped
San Otego 34-3, Dallas downed
Phtladelphta, 28-il, Los Angeles
routed New Orleans, 34 14, the
New York Jets crushed Buffal o, 41 24, De trot! trounced the
New York Gtants, 30-16, Green
Bay romped over Cleveland,
26 I0
Denver tnmmed
Houston 30-17, Cmcmnall beat
New England, 31 7, Atlanta
outlasted Ch1cago, 37-21, and
St Louts upset Balt~more, 10-3
Washmgton 1s at MIDnesota
tomght
Terry Bradshaw ran for two
touchdowns and threw 57 yards
to Ron Shankhn for the
dec1d10g score as the Steelers
upeneded Okaland
John Brodte threw three TO
passes to Gene Washmgton as
the Forty Nmers stunned San
Otego
Dallas opened defense of tis

Super Bown crown as Cratg
Morton threw a patr of thtrd
quarter TD passes to spark a
vtctory over the Eagles
Bob Thomas ran for two
scores and Roman Gabrtel
passed for another to lead the
Rams over New Orleans
Archie Manmng had a patr of
TD passes for the Samts
Emerson Boozer scored
three TDs and John Riggms
rushed for a career-htgh 125
yards as the Jets rolled over
Buffalo Chm Farasopoulos
returned a punt 65 yards for a
score, the ftrst Jet to score on a
punt return ID 10 years 0 J
Sunpson threw a touchdown
pass for the Btlls
Greg Landry s three TD
passes boosted Detrott over the

Football Scores
Un1ted Press I t ernaflona l
Zanesv1lle Ro secrans 11 R1 ch•
wood 8
Can t on Central Ca tho l •c B
Youngstown North 0
M al vern 25 Northwest 0
Tuscarawas
Valley
12

Indian Va lley South 11 (tie)
L1nsly IW Va) 6 Bndgeporl 0

Cleveland St Joseph 34 Mentor
0

Hawken School 14 Beachwomi n
Cleveland Lutheran West 28
Cleveland Lutheran East 0
G1lmour Academy 0

Your
Insurance
Atoot

P1ltsburgh I Pa I ShadySide 0

1t1e)

Berea 42 Rock y R1ver 0

Port smouth NO 57 Wellston 0

Security Is Love

Steubenv ill e Ca tholi c 6 Brooke

Gaylord Perry ptcked up hts
21st vtctory wtlh a seven-httter
as Cleveland routed Boston
Cleveland erupted for ftve runs
m the first four mmngs off loser
John Curtts mcludmg Buddy
Bell's etghth homer
Fehpe Alou htt a two-run
homer m the fourth tnniDg and
Sparky Lyle bed an Amencan
League record wtth hts 34th
save as New York downed
Balhmore Lyle blanked the
Onoles on three htts over the
last three mn10gs to save Frttz
Peterson's 16th wm
Jtm Hunter pttched a twohttter for hiS 20th wiD as
Oakland beat Texas
Andy Messersmith pttched z
four-htlter and Cahforma
scored two unearned runs to
beat Wtlbur Wood and the
Wh1te Sox The loss dropped
Chtcago ftve games back tn the
Western DlVlston and JUSt
about ended tts hopes of catchiOg Oakland
Fred Patek's run-sconng
double 1gmted a four run
upnsmg 10 the lOth IDnmg and
handed Kansas Ctty the WID

Dolphins Humble Chiefs,20-1 0
Bob Grtese threw a 14 yard
TD pass to Marhn Bnscoe tn
lhc first penod and the
Dolplnns then broke open the
game m the last mmute of the
ftrst half as Garo Yepremtan,
the hero of the Dolphms'
Chrtstmas upset, k1cked a 47yard fteld goal and Larry
Csonka plunged over from the
one alter safety Jake Scott's
mterception had gtven Mtam1
the ball
Yepremtan ktcked a 15-yard
fteld goalm the thtrd pertod to
gtve M1am1 a 20-0 lead before
Kansas !malty scored on Jan
Stenerud's 411-yard f1eld goal
The only Kansas Ctty touchdown came "tth only ntne
seconds left when Len Dawson
passed mne yards to light end
Wtllle Frazter
In other opening day actwn
Pittsburgh stunned Oakland,

Oh1o H1gh School

M1dv1ew 42 Elyn c Cathol ic 0
Ashtabula Edgewood 20 Lake
Catholi c 8
Be la 1re 42 St Cla•rsv1lle 0
Bu ckeye North 29 Mmgo 6

Tigers Trail By .001 Mark

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
All the mollvallon was there
- revenge, pnde a new season
- for Kansas Ctty but when 11
was all over it was the Chtefs
nat on thetr faces agam and the
M1am1 Dolphms celebrallng
Chmtmas m September
The settmg was perfect for
the Chtefs Here was a chance
to avenge thetr Chnstmas Day
Amencan Football Conference
IItle loss to Mtamt ID the
longest pro game m htstory
he!ore a home crowd of close to
80,000 In thetr new homeArrowhead Stadium
But tt was Mtam1 whtch
proved that last Chnstmas was
no fluke as the Dolphms
manhandled the Ch1efs 20-10,
Sunday on the opemng day of
the Nahonal Football League
season

Hardly a day goes by that somebody, even hiS own 11-yearold son Brooks, Jr , doesn't ask Robmson what's wrong wtth the
Ortoles
'What's amatter, Dad, how come you're not winning?"
young Robmson wants to know
' I tell hime the same thmg I tell everyone else, that when the
club ts hlttmg 220 all year, 1t's gonna be a struggle," says the
man many clatm ts the best thtrd baseman of all tlffie
' We're gonna have our shot though We play Boston SIX
times, so all1sn t lost yet We still thmk we re gonna get m it
None of us here has gtven up '
Certamly not Brooks Robmson
Thts ts his time The World Sertes wouldn't qrnte seem like
the World Senes wtthout him makmg all those gold medal dives
around third base

over Mmnesota Patek's errol
had en abled Mmnesota to he
the game tn the mnth

Temple 16 Xav1er 12
Kenyon 17 Otterbetn 14
Bethany 25 Case Western
Reserve 14

The

Da1~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
E Kec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Echtor

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BUZZARDS BAY, Mass
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Boston Celttcs for the 1972-73
season l erms were not
dtscuslosed
The former Oh10 State
standout was the 17th and last
Celtic to s1gn

Consult Us Soon

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o.

Gtants and rookte Chester
Marco! s four held goals and
two TD passes by Scott Hunter
enabled Green Bay to rout the
Browns Steve Ramsey threw
for one TD and ran for another
and Jtm Turner k1cked three
fteld goals as Denver gave new
coach John Ralston a v1ctory 1n
hts debut by hestiDg the Oilers
Lemar Parrish's 51-yard punt
return for a score htghllghted a
21 pomt second half that hfted
C10c10nall over the Palrtots
Bob Berry passed for two
TDs and ran for another as
Atlanta beat Chicago and
Donme Anderson bulled lour
yards m the thtrd period for the
dec1d1Dg score m the Cardmals' upset of Baltlffiore

Padres Do It Again, 10-7
CINCINNATI (UP!) Wayne Simpson's pltchtng
troubles are more mental than
phys1cal
At least, thts seems to be the
belief of C10cmnah Reds pitchmg coach Larry Shepard
"I think Wayne's only
solution ts to pitch ball
somewhere thts wmter," said
Shepard
"Either m one of the Lahn
leagues or m the Flor1da lnstruchon league "
As Shepard sees tt, "Wayne
Is thmkmg so much about hts
pttching rhythm that he's
forgetting to throw the ball "
Simpson, g1ven a four • run
lead by his teammates 10 the
first innmg Sunday, was
rapped for six hlts, Including
homers by Nate Colbert and
Leron Lee, before departing
with none out In the third inning
And, to add to the Reds'
woes, the San Diego Padres
went on to win the !male of the
three-game series 10-7 with a
three-run splurge m the ninth
at the expense of relief pitcher
Ed Sprague
'fttl.t 1111 •Iter Hal McRae'a
third pinch hllllltr of the -1011
lild the ICflft ln the bottom of

the etghth mmng
Maybe Good Omen
The Reds' loss, coupled wtth
Houston 's victory, left the
magtc number at stx as the Jlffi
McGlothlin faces the San
Francisco Gtants m the opener
of a three-game series tomght
' Maybe ," said Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson ,
"the loss to the Padres was a
good omen'
The victory was the Padres'
lOth in the 18 meetings between
the two clubs this season And
as Anderson pomted out, thts ts
the same number the Padres
took durmg the Reds' pennant
winning season of 1970
Thts IS one of several
similarities between this vear
and the 1970 season Outside of
the Padres, the Chtcago Cubs
are the only other club to gain
the edge over the Reds in a 1972
season aenes, just as It was m
1970 And there 's Pittsburg:'
The Reds beat the Pirates
eight ol 12 games during the
season sertes m 1970 and
matched that mark thts year
"I JUSt hope," said Anderson,
"the similarities continue and
that we beat the Pirates in the
playoffs again tbls year "
Borboa S&amp;rllck

Dems Menke 's mabtllty to
handle Johnny Bench s throw
enabled Jerry Morales and
Colbert to race home wtth
a pa1r
of
msm a nee
runs 10 the niDth mnmg Thls was alter Dave
ConcepciOn's throwmg error on
Dave Roberts' mf1eld s10gle
and Morales ' subsequent
double broke a 7-7 tie
'We lost the game when
Pedro Borbon was hit on the
arm," sa1d Anderson
Borbon who took over when
S1mpson departed in the thtrd
10mng, was struck on the rtght
arm by a Mike Caldwell pitch
m the sixth mmng One inmng
later, he left the game when h1s
arm stiffened
Before struck by the pitch,
Pedro didn't yield a hit in four
innmgs However, he was
mcked for a run in the top of the
seventh when the Padres went
ahead 5-4
Three hits, including a tr1ple
by Tony Perez, gave the Reds a
6-5 lead in the bottom of the
seventh
The Padres matched that In
the top of the ei&amp;hth when
rookie Randy Elliott doubled
off Clay Carroll to send San
Diego ahead '1~.

Mator League Standmgs
Umted Press International
National League

East
WLPciGB
P1tlsburgh 89 51 636
Ch tcago
78 64 549 12
New York
72 67 518 16'12
Sf LouiS
69 74 483 21'1•
Montrea l
64 77 454 25'12
Ph1iadelph1a 52 89 ' 369 37'12
Wast
WLPciGB
C1nc1nnat1
86 55 610
Houston
79 62 560 7
Los Angeles 75 66 532 11
Atlanta
66 76 465 20'12
San Fran
63 79 444 23'1l
San Otego
53 86 381 32
Sunday s Results
Sf Lou1s 5 Pittsburgh 4
Ch1cago 6 New York 4
Philadelphia 3 Montreal 2
San Diego 10 Cincinnati 7
Houston 15 Los Angeles 11
Atlanta 7 San FranciSco 4
Saturday's Results
Ch1cago 18 New York 5
St Louis 4 Pittsburgh 0
San Francisco 8 Atlanta S (lsi)
Atlanta 5 San Francisco 2 (2nd)
Cincinnati 6 San Diego 3
Los Angeles 10 Houston o
Philadelphia 3 Montreal 0
Today's Probable Pttchers
tAll Times EDT)
National Leoaue
Pittsburgh (Ellis 14 7) at New
York (Koosman 9 11). 8 05
pm
San Francisco I Barr 7 8) at
Cinctnnall (Billingham 10 12)
805p'"
Los Angeles (John 11 5) at
San Diogo (Arlin 8 20), 10 30
pm
!Only gamn scheduled)

Amer~can

League

East
WLPctGB
Boston
76 63 547
De trod
77 64 546
Ball1more
76 66 535 l'll
New York
75 67 528 211l
Cleveland
64 79 448 14
~Milwaukee
58 86 403 20'1•
West
WLPctGB
Oakland
84 67 596
Ch1cago
79 62 560 5
Minnesota
71 69 507 1211l
Kansas Cily 68 71 489 15
California
67 74 475 17
Texas
52 89 369 32
Sunday's Results
Cleveland 9 Boston 2
Detr01t 6 Milwaukee 1
New York 2 Baltimore I
Oakland 4 TeKas I
Calilornta 3 Ch1cago 1
Kansas C1ty 10 M1nnesota 6 ( 10
1nn1ngs)

Saturday's Results
Boston 10 Cleveland 0
Balhmore 7 New York 3
Detroit 2 Milwaukee 1
Oakland 4 TeKas 0
Mmnesota 11 Kansas City 1
Ch1cago 2 California 0
Today's Prolloblo Pitchers
All T1mes EDT
Baltimore (Dobson 15 16) at
Boston (McGlothen 7 5), 7 30
pm
!Only game scheduled)
Tuesday 1s Games

Balf1more at Boston (ntght)
Detroil al Cleveland 2 (twl
n1ghl)
New York at Milwaukee
lntghl)
ChiCago at Oakland (nlg~f)
Tuas at Mmnesota (n ig ht)
Kansa• City at California
lntghtl

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•

"·

�5-The DeUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept, 18, 1972

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�7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 11,1972

Green Thumb

Notes • ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
Colinty Garden Club members.

Fall Care and Planting of Roses
.
THIS IS WHAT THE K&amp;M DEPOT at RuUand looked like manyyears ago. Standing at the
Depot are the late Will Plummer, right, and Floyd Dunfee. The picture was submitted by
Dwight Kennedy of RuUand,
.

MRS. KATE JARRELL, the new teacher at the Meigs Community School and her aide
Jean Wood, teach simple social skills such as shaking hands to intermediate students.
'

PRIMARY STUDENTS at the Meigs Community School
are taught such tasks as putting on coats and sweaters,
eating with utensils, and tying shoes.

knowing ofa child needing the
training provided by the school
should contact Mrs. Thomas.
The advisory board of the
school is composed of Ed
Mrs. Thomas said sev•ral Kenn edy , chairman; Mrs.
children have made "good Denver Weber, vice chairman ;
progress" over the years, some · Mrs. Denver Rice, secretary;
everi becoming able to advance Mrs. Pearl Williams, reporter;
into special education classes Mrs. Iris Carr and the Rev. Bill
of the regular school sys tem. Perrin.
Classes are open to any
retarded child.
The planet Jupiter is the
New enrolees are generally
biggest
object in the solar
received through referrals
system except for the sun
from agencies, but anyone itself.

a school that helps
(Continued from page I)
Wolfe of Rutland has an ad·
vanced class and Mrs. Kate
Jarrell, Pomeroy, the newest
teacher, has the intermediate.
Aides are Jean Wood, Pomeroy
Route 4, Dee Brown of Miners·
ville, both of whom also drive
the buses, and Alice Wolfe,
Racine, who is also a substitute
bus driver.

Redmen Fourth In Meet
Rio Grande College's cross
country team finished fourth in
a quadrangular meet Saturday
at Morehead State in Kentucky. It was the first taste of
competition for the college's
cross country squad this fall.
The lour way meet was won
by
Eastern
Kentucky,
Morehead State placed second,
and Vincennes, Indiana took
third place.
Jim Maloney of Eastern
Kentucky won the five mile
event; and in the process
established in a new course
record at Morehead State with
a winning time of twenty.four
minutes and fifty-three
seconds.
Eastern Kentucky wrapped
up the meet by placing runners
in the first three spots .
Morehead State runners
finished fourth and fifth among
the thirty-nine thinclads.

For Rio Grande, the highest
finish individually went to
junior Jack Finch. Finch was
the tenth man to cross the
finish line; however his time
was only forty-five seconds
behind the winner. Finch
completed the course in
twenty-five minutes and
thirty-eight seconds.
Also for Rio Grande, Ken
Sanders was 16th , Stacy
Osborne, 23rd, Kevin Honnald,
24th, and Mike Gross, 27th.
First year cross country
coach Dr. Buce Curtis termed
Rio Grande's performance as
"a fair showing against some
really tough competition."
Curtis feels Eastern Kentucky
could be a powerhouse in cross
country this fall .
The Redmen in losing one
mee t practiced last week
without the services of a coach
at times as Curtis was battling

Falcons To Face
'Skins Saturday
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Bowling Green Coach Don
Nehlen, who had his team sky·
high for its upset 17-14 win over
Purdue Saturday, must now
find a way to bring it back to
earth.
The Falcons have a very
important Mid-America n
Conference game coming up
Saturday against Miami, a
regionall y televised game
which could decide the conferen ce title, and Nehien knows
that what goes up must come
back down .
"It's going to be awfully
tough,.. Nehlen said of the
upcoming week 's
preparations.
"We've got to find a way to
get our kids' feet back on the
ground. I know Miami has an
excellent football team."
Nehlen, a former quarterback at Bowling Green, said
the victory over the Big Ten
Boilermakers was "probably
the most prestigious win for
our university in its football
history."
"I was awfully proud of our
football team," Nehlen said •
"they played inspired football.
Our defense was absolutely
superb. They had an awfully
big line coming at them and
some big, fast backs, too."
Nehien said Saturday's game
against Miami, a 34-7 winner
over Dayton, "could be the big
one, no doubt about that.
Looking back through the
years, the winner of the BGMiami game usually has a
good shot at ·the championship."
In Miami's easy opening
~~me win over Dayton, Bob
Hichens tied a school record by
scoring the Redsklns first four
touchdowns as tliey built up a
27~ lead early in the fourth
Quarter.

Hltchena, who ended the day
with 143 yardJ In 34 carrlea,
ICored on runs of 2, 10, 9 and 5
yard~, with the other Miami
~eore coming on a 23-yard pass
from Stu Showalter to flanker

John Wiggins.
Dayton, now 11 on the
season, got its only score in the
final quarter on a fi ve-yard run
by Walt Wingard.
Toledo, which saw its 35game winning streak snaooed
a week ago bf Tampa,
rebounded for a 16-0 vic tory
over Eastern Michigan .
Senior Joe Schwartz scored
from the three on a quarterback keeper late in the tirird
quarter and, running from
ta ilback, raced 48 yards for the
clinching TD with I :21 left in
the game. George Keirn's 42yard field goal gave the
Rockets a 3-0 halftime lead.
Ohio University went down to
defeat for the first time
dropping a 17-14 decision t~
Idaho after leading 14-7 going
in to the final quarter. The
Rohcats are now 1·1 for the

season.

Ohio U.'s two touchdowns
both came on passes from
quarterback Rich Bevly, one
covering 55 yards to split end
Cleve Moutry and the other II
yards to L. C. Lyons.
Idaho's Steve Tanner ac·
counted for the winning margin
with on 18-yard field goal with
3:25 remaining.
Cincinnati held a 7.0 lead at
the end of the first quarter and
trailed only 21·14 early in the
third quarter, but wilted under
a five-touchdown Colorado
barrage a~ the third-ranked
Buffaloes rolled to a 56-14
victory.
The Bearcats ' Reggie
Harrison, who ga ined 109 yards
on the day, capped a 69-yard
fi rst perind drive wilh a oneyard TD run to give Cincinnati
its only lead of the day. The
other Bearcat tally came on a
15-yard Mike Shoemaker t,
Mike White pass.
Louisville, behind the
passing of John Madeya and
the running of Howard Stevens,
biU"ied Kent State with a lOW"·
touchdown second period
barrage, handing the Flashes
their first iossto go along with
a tie last week with Akron.

the flu bug.
The college team, even
though young, is expecting a
good season. Rio Grande, in
their fourth year of cross
country, had an impressive, 112 mark in dual meets in 1971.
The top five runn ers for Rio
Grande Saturday were all
underclassmen with two
juniors, a pair of freshmen and
a sophomore leading the way.
Finch and Sanders, a couple
of veterans from last season,
will lead the way for Rio
Grande again with help from a
mu ch improved
Stacy
Osborne. Osborne is onlv a
sophomore.
·
Ri o Grande's cross coun try
team will return to action
Friday at West Virginia Tech
to defend their title in the
Golden Bear Invitationa; Hill
Climb .

This Week's
Grid Games
United Press ln1ernalional

!Saturday)

Bow l ing Green at Miami (TV)
Ohio Universi ty at Ken t State
Tex as Arling ton a t Toledo (nl
Western Ill inois at Akron (n)
Ashland at Edinboro State

I Pa .l
Blufft on at Adr ian (Mich 1 In I
Thiel I Pa.) at Case Western

Reser ve
Central State at Way ne State

IMich.t

Xavier at Cincinnati (n)
M arshall at Dayton (n)

Alma !Mich. I at Defiance
Findlay at Manchester (Ind .)

Oberlin at Hir am

Allegheny IPa .l at John

Carroll
Ohio

Northern

at

!Mich.)

Hillsda le

Big Four Post
Easy Triumphs
United Press International
Oklahoma. Southern Cal,
Colorado and Ohio State - the
Big Four of college football this
year - displayed awesome
power Saturday as they rolled
over relatively weak opponents
and they could be setting the
sta ge for some titanic
struggles later in the year.
Oklahoma, No. !·rated, and
led in rushing by a pair of
fres hm en backs - Kerry
Jackson and Joe Washingtonoverwhelmed Utah State, 49-Q,
in the Sooners' first game of
the year.
Colorado, No. 3-rated, was
explosive as junior tailback
Charlie Davis roared lor 102
yards and two touchdowns to
lead the Buffalos to a 56-14
shellacking of Cincinnati.
In Boulder on October 21,
Oklahoma and Colorado, Big-8
contenders both , will clash in a
ga me that probably will
determine the league cham·
pionship. Both schools have
dynamic teams and poise on
the field is the thing the
coaches are looking to develop
now.
Ja ckson rushed for 109 yards
on 10 carries, including a 34yard scra mble on a broken ply,
and complete three of 12 passes
for 50 yards.
Washington carried 12 limes
lor 86 yards, while senior All·
American Greg Pruitt rushed
15 times for 80 yards.
Co lorado go t diversified
scoring, with two TD's by
Davis, two more by 5-foot-8
reserve quarterback Joe
Due nas, and four other
players .
A long way off but nevertheless a possibility is a con·
frontation betw ee n USC
second-ranked, and Ohio State'
fourth-ranked, in the Ro~
Bowl next January .
USC, which is favored to win

Saturday's
Scores

In)

Youngs town State at

North Dakota State (n)
Muskingum

Wallace (n)

at

Baldw in ·

Capital at Marietta (n)
Juniata ( Pa .) at Deni son

Otterbein al Heidelberg (n )
W&amp;J at Kenyon

East

Betllany 25 Case
Reserve 14

Depauw

Woos ter at Albion !Mich.)

West Virginia 28 Richmond 7

night game

Ohio College

Football Scores
United Press International

Saturday
Ohio State 21 Iowa 0

Bowling Green 17 Purdue 14
Miami 34 Dayton 7
Idaho 17 Oh io Univers ity 14
Louisvil le 34 Kent State o

Toledo 16 Easlern Michigan 0

Col orado 56 Cincinnati 14
Akron 34 But ler 7
Heidel berg 1.4 Ohio Wesleyan 3

Ashland 17 Capital 7
Ohio Northern 7 Mount Union

6
Baldwin -Wal lace 28 Evansville

I Ind. I 0
Denison 21 Thiel 7
Marie tta 27 Allegheny 7

West Uberty 14 Musk ingum 6

Centre I Ky .) 7 Oberlin 6
Western Kentu cky 19 Wll·
tenberg 7

John Carroll 34 W &amp; J 0
Findlay 24 Earlha m 0
Defiance 22 Adrian IMich.l 0
Bluffton 12 Taylor 0

M-deya threw three touch·
down passes while hitting on 13
of 29 attempts, while Stevens
picked up 115 yards in 20 trles
and scored tire Cards first
touchdown on a seven yard
scamper.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S

CLEANERS

2t0 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone n2 -5421

East Carolina 16 Sout hern
Il linois 0
Fl orida St. 37 Miami 14
Georgia 24 Baylor 14
Georgia Tech 34 South Carolina
6

Ken tucky 25 Villanova 7

Beman's 5-foot putt rimmed
the cup for a bogey on the fifth
hole, but he sa nk a Jl).footer on
the following \wle for a birdie.

STUDENTS!
Be the first to have your
Picture here

n~xTH E

r oRDEROF'- ------ - ----------------------------

FOTO ICCENT CHECKS

3 Win Top Awards
Mrs. Tom Stewart, Mrs .
Robert Snowden and · Ja y
Ca rpente r sha red top honors in
the Rutland Friendly Gar·
deners ' flower show , "A
Sununer Wedding" Saturday
in the Rutland Elementary
School gymnasium .
Mrs. Stewart won the Best of
Show Award for
her
in
th e
ar rangements
"Beau ti fu l Bridesmaids "
class, Mrs. Snowden took the
Horticulture Sweeps takes
Award for an ou:sta ndin g
ar ray of hybrid tea rose
specimens, and Ja y Carpenter
was the winner of the Green
Thumb Award for the best
specimen entry by a junior .
Particul arly attractive
was the theme display
prepared by Mrs . James
Carpenter fea turing a bride in
an altar se tting. The altar
appointments and po tted
palms with urns of whi te
gladioli on Marbled pedestals
were provided by Francis
Florist of Pomeroy . Costumed
in Mrs. Carpente r's wedding
gown was a mannequi n from
Elberfelds.
The ensemble was accented
by the bride's colonial basket
of white pompon mums and
baby's breath with American
Bea uty roses and iea therleaf
fern designed by Mrs .
Snowden.
Ca rryi ng out the theme of the
flow er show were soecial

MONDAY
MEIGS Band Booster s
Monday, 8 p.m. at high school.
MIDDLE PORT Business
(.' 1nd • Profeaolonal Women 's
Club, 7:30 .,p. m. Monday ,
Colwnbla Gas Co. Program by
the public relations committee
with Mrs. Nellie Vale. chairman .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Candystrlpers, 7 p.m. Monday
night in the hospital cafeteria .
New members invited.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Monday at
high school, Racine. Ali W"ged
to attend.
MEIGS LOCAL District
Chapter of OAPSE, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Meigs Junior High
cafeteria, Middleport . Fred
Haynes, field representative of
OAPSE, and Dan Smith, active
Southern Local Chapter
member, will be guests. All
non-certified personnel of the
Meigs Local District invited.
RACINE PTA, 7:30 Monday,
at the school. Film: "If These
Were Your Children."
REVIVAL Servi ces,
Snowvllie United Methodist
Church, on State Route 681,
west of Route 33, 7:30 each
evening, Sept. 17 through Sept.
23. Slides of Holy Land shown
Sunday evening.
RACNE Elementary PTA
meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday at
school.
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday at Middleport
Masonic Temple. Mothers Club
meeting at same hour in

CC I DISCIPLES Quartet
from Chillico the Cor rectional
institute will prese nt musical
prog ram at Sept. meeting of
Men's Fellowship , Meigs
County Churches of Christ, at
7: 30 p.m. Monday, at Zion
Church of Christ on PomeroyHa rrisonville Road . Public
invited .
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
Monday at the Elementary
School.
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA, PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Cultura l program
on self analysis by Debbie
Ger lach and Sue Zirkle;
hos tesses, Karen Stanley ,
Linda Sauvage, and Kathy
Kin g.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 8 p.m.
Tuesda y, Mrs. Roy Mayer,
program chairman; hostesses,
Mrs. Albert Woodard, Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, Jr. Meeting at
the Trinity !burch.
SALISBURY ELE MENTARY School PTA , 7:30
Tuesday
evening,
getacquai nted meeting.
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
Webster Post American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30 Wednesday at
the home of Mrs . Ellen Couch.

Nor th Carolina St. 43 Syracuse

and 200 Foto Accent Checks will be yours

Committees and room
mothers for the Middleport
Elementary School PTA have
been named.
The room mothers are as
follows:
Mrs. Bradford Maag's first
grade : Mrs . Ruth Riffle, Mrs.
Nita Seelbach , Mrs. Kay Rupe,
Mrs. Mary Walburn , Mrs.
Marilyn Epple, Mrs. Sharon
Wise, Mrs. Sharon McMillion,
and Mrs. Ella Roush.
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter 's
fir st grade: Mrs. Mary
Harrison, Mrs. Diana George,
Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, Mrs. Lois
Cunningham, and Mrs. Cheryl
Burdette.
Mrs. Jennifer Butcher's
second grade : Mrs. Bonnie
Pickens, Mrs. Judy Crc~l&lt;s,
Mrs. Shirley Roush, Mrs. R. C.
Rinehart, Mrs. Bernice May,
Mrs . Bonnie Neville, Mrs.

FREE.

Tennessee 28 Penn St . 21
Virginia 24 Virgin ia Tech 20

Midwest
Bowlin? Green 17 Purdue 1.4
Franklm 25 Rose-Hulman 6

Gr innell 16 Coe 13

Indiana 27 Minnesota 23
M ichigan 7 Northwestern 0

Mi chi9an St. 24 Illinois 0
Miam1 10) 34 Dayton 7
Nebraska 37 Texas A&amp;M 7
Ol1io St. 21 Iowa 0
Tampa 34 Northern Michigan
21
Temple 16 Xavier 10.1 11
Toledo 16 Eastern Michigan 0
Wisconsin 31 Northern Illinois 7
Southwest
Arizona St. 33 Houston 28
Now Mex ico 55 New Mexico St.

20

Oklahoma 49 Utah St. 0
SMU 56 Wake Forest 10
Texas Tec h 45 Utah 2
Tulsa tO Wl chlra St. 9

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see on~
of the Friendly Tellers ...
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Fodorof Rtur .. System
On Fridays Our brlv•tn WJ!Niowts
0Ptn h .m. to7 p.m., fContlnuoustyl .
SlO.OOII\Itxlmum Insurance

For Eocll Dopasltor

IIARJWI(IMlU£ IUGH SCHOOL, 1115-'lbll old picture was BUbmltted by Torn Wells,
PlimaO)'.Frantrvw,k', arellerthaPiaott. Myrtle Suan, Nora ReDman, Lona Green,Amber
AdkiM, Artbur Ptttlt, Hattie Halllling, Leah Ptttlt; second row, David French, unidentified,
JoellllwiiJ,LtllleCbul, URI Tumer,Evelyn Dye, UllanGoalen, Helen Hanning; third row,
Mllll Gntbam,leleber, Rowud !lark, Howard Hull, Robert Rowley, Clifiord Cuckler, Alfred
Greealer, Bvel7n ~~~. 0.,
8lld Dale XMpp.

ar-

&gt;I•

educational displays including
step-by-ste p instr uctions on '
making a wedding corsage by
Mrs. Snowden .
There was a garden therapy
display of work done with the
special educational class at the
Rutland Elementa ry School
prepared by Mrs. William
Willford with Bird feeders,
wall plaques, placemats, pine
cone crafts being included .
Projects of the Merry
Gardeners displayed were seed
propagation in egg cartons ,
dried fl oral arrangements, and
ceramic co nt ainers. Mrs .
Larry Edwards is advisor of
the junior club which is
sponsored by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.
Mrs. Homer Parker showed
books on floral design, hor·
ticuiture. dried mate rials,
weather wood and OAGC
publications in the educational
division of the show,
Mrs . Earl Bend er of
Marietta, an accredited OAGC
judge, selected winners from
the J:iO exhibits. The ribbon
winners listed first, second,
third and fourth respectively,
were as follows:
Artistic Arrangements
At a Country Church: Mrs.
James Carpenter, Mrs. Robert
Snowden, Mrs . William
Willford,
Mrs.
Fred
Williamson.
The Wedding Guests: Mrs.
Homer Parker. Mrs. Richard

Fetty, Jr ., Mrs . Willford, and
Mrs . Howard Birchfield.
The Bridegroom Awaits :
Mrs. Tom Stewart, Mrs.
Carpenter, Mrs. Snowden, and
Mrs. Birchfield.
Here Comes the Bride: Mrs.
Joe Bolin, Mrs. Birchfield,
Mrs . Fred Williamson, and
Mrs. William Brown.
The Bea utiful Bridesmaids :
Mrs . Stewart, Mrs . Snowden,
Mrs . Parker, and Mrs. Car·
penter.
A Band of Gold: Mrs.
Snowden, Mrs. Brown, Mrs.
James Quillen, and Mrs. Bolin.
Something Old, Something
New: Mrs. Stew ar t. Mrs.
Fetty, Mrs. Parker, and Mrs.
Harold Wolfe.
The Wedding Gifts: Mrs.
Parker, Mrs. Snowden, 'Mrs.
Carpenter, and Mrs. Stewart.
Honeymoo n at Niagara
Falls: Mrs. Wilson Ca rpenter
of the Bend 0 ' the River Club ;
Mrs. Fetty, Mr s. Robert
Canaday of the Rutland
Garden Club; and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine of the Rutland
Garden Club.
Bearer
The

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES award winner at the flower show was Mrs. Robert
. Snowden, who received 11 ribbon awards for her exhibit of roses, zinnias, and marigo lds from
the Snowden garden.
division): Debbie Williamson, fourth.
Rutland, fir st; no other Zinnia: Mrs. Snowden, first,
third and four th ; Mrs_ Stewart,
awards.
The Flower Girl : Jay Car- a second .
Marigolds : Mrs. Willford,
penter, Coolville; Kimberly
Birch field, Lorri Snowden, first and second; Mrs.
Merry Gardeners; with Beth Snowden, third ; no fourth.
Unclassified : Mrs . Robert
An n Wolfe and Darin Wolfe in a
Snowden, first and second ;
tic for fourth place.
Mrs. Roy Snowden, Rutland
Educational Displays
Garden
Club, third; and Mrs.
Sixteen entri es in the division
ca rri ed out the theme - "Let's Fred Williamson, fourth.
Houseplants: Blooming,
Take a Honeymoon Trip
Mrs.
Hen ry Turner, Star
to - ." Winners first through
Garden Club ; Mrs. Bolin, Mrs.
four th were as follows :
Cypress Gardens, a dish Chris Diehl, Rutland Garden
garden : Mrs . James Car- Club , and Mrs. Robert
penter, Mrs. Willford, Mrs . Ca naday, Rutland Garden
Roy Snowden, Rutland Garden Club_
Foliage: Mrs . William
Club, Mrs . Homer Parker .
Appalachia, handcrafted or Willford, Mrs. James Car·
homemade containers: Mrs . penter, second and third, and
Stewa rt , Mrs. Bolin, Mr s. Mrs. Roy Snowden, Rutland
Garden Club.
Fetty, Mrs. Parker.
.Junior Horticulture
Wayne National Forest,
Zinnia : Jay Carpenter, first,
weathered or driftwood : Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs. Bolin, "Mrs. · second, third aild"loilrth.
Marigolds : Jay Carpenter,
Robert Snowden, and Mrs.
fi rst and second.
Carpente r.
Unclassified : Jay Caroenter,
Horticulture Division
Hybrid tea roses, yellow,
orange and blends : Mrs.
Robert Snowden , all four

Debbie Williamson, Rutland _
Preceding the judging, the
club hosted a judges luncheon
planned by Mrs. Bruce Davis.
Persons other than members
of the sponsoring club who
entered the open classes we re·
Mrs. Larry Barr of th e
Homestead Club, Mrs . Anna
Turner, Mrs. Roy Snowden,
Mrs. Chris Diehl, Mrs. Robert
Ca naday , Mrs.
Harvey
Er lewine, Rutlan d Garden
Club; Mrs. Henry Turner of the
Start Garden Club, Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, Bend 0 ' the River
Club; Mrs . Hattie Swift,
Pomeroy; Kimberly Birchfield·
and Lorri Snowden, Merry
Gardeners; and Jay Car.
pen ter, Darin Wolle, Debbie
Williamson, and Beth Ann
Wolfe .
Among the out-of-t ow n
visitors at the show were Mr . .
and Mrs. John Reese of
Gallipolls. Mrs'' Ree~i\' 1 'is" a
former Region II dlrector'"or
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs.

N. W. COMPTON, 0.0.
OPTOMETRIST

ribbon awards.

Hybrid tea roses, pinks and
reds: Mrs , Larry Barr,
Homestead Club, first, seco:.
and third, with Mrs. Snowden,

OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST. ;
POMEROY.

Committees Named

If you have a Ch.eckiD.g Account with us, come in or if you
don't, come in and open one with the "Wide-Awake Bank"

20

ASUMMER WEDDING - The tireme display at tire RuUand Friendly Gardeners' nower
show Saturdsy was a highlight for show viewers. Mrs. James Carpenter prepared the display
which features a bride wearing her own wedding gown.

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
Thursday. Mrs. Edith Jividen
to have t~e lesson. Mrs .
basem~nt.
Emerson Jones, Mrs . Rose
CHESTER PTA, 7:30 p.m. McDade, and Mrs. Roy
Monday Instead of usual 8 p.m. Cassell, hostesses.
at school. Teachers to present
outUne of ~ork for year; Mrs. India leads the world in
Maline Goeglein, president, cattle population , with the
will present county fair United States ranking second.
premluma to a!Ddenta.

Loui sv i l le 34 Kent St. 0

LSU 31 Pacific 13
Mississippi 34 Memph is St. 29

You can prepare your bushes for the winter temperature of
I! degrees or below by bringing soil in and mounded around each
l"Oie bush about 10 inches high . For added protection dd some
straw or hardwood leaves on top of the mound which helps
JI"Otect the union and that portion of canes above the bud union.
A preventive medicine for rose bushes containing lime
IIUlphiU" can be applied in wipter . It is a dormant spray .
You can plant roses either in the spring or fail. It has bee n
JI"Oved that a fall-aet plant has a head start on the one planted in
the Spring; growth proceeds more naturally and with greater
vigor, also the soil is in better condition for planting.
Even· if you prefer to wait until Spring you should prepare
new beds and planting spots now, where you plan to set bushes
then.
Dig a hole 18 inches in diameter and 18 inches deep, then
loosen the soil in that spot and mix with it a considerable amount
of peat m08S-rotted compost or rotted catUe manure with a
blndful each superphosphate and bone meal.
Three main important locations to plant are where drainage
II good, it must receive a minimum amount or rive hours of daily
sunshine and .it should be fre2 from danger of root invasion of
nearby trees and shrubs.
Roses do best when planted in a rich, loamy soil, but they are
quite tolerant of various types of soil.

Social Calendar 1

South
14

ping.

..

UCLA 38 Pittsburgh 18

Alcorn A&amp;M 9 Gramb ling 6
Citadel 28 Appa lac llian St. 21
Davidson 18 Virgin ia Military

BY HELEN DORST
Rose Garden Club
Each fall many questions arise coocerning tbe best ways lo
manage roses. Here are a few suggestions that may help you:
Gardeners should discontinue feeding rose bushes about 2'h
months before the first hard freeze, about the latter part of
Auguat. As a result, the shooting out of soft cane growth will
cease and the bushes will become somewhat hardened in their
natural approach to winter. If you have fed your rose bushes well
mrtng apring and summer you will continue to receive lovely fall
blooma while this natural preparatioo for winter is going on.
U you have a long fall dry spell you should water the rose
bushes occasionally; it will aid your roses in fall hardening, if
artificial watering is reduced.
When possible, severe pruning of rose bushes should be left
until early spring, except for cutting frozen blJ(j:l at their necks.
You can Ue the long canes together to avoid winter wind whip-

W:~l&gt;.':;:w.-::~:f:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:

31

Va lpa raiso (Ind.) at Wit ·
n -

CLEANING

Navy 13 William and Mary 9

Southern
Co nn ect i cu t
Wesleyan 21

tenberg

2-HOUR

negie -Mellon 0
Holy Cross 2.4 Rutgers 14

Ohio

at

Deane Bemen sat dejectedly on
his bag of clubs at the 13th hole
Sunday and watched as
cheerful Lee Trevino strolled
by on his way to victory in the
$150,000 St. Louis Golf Classic.
Beman had led since the
beginnin g of the four-day
tournament at Norwood Hills
Country Club but saw his onestroke advantage vanish early
in the final round Sunday. The
$30,000 in top prize money went
with it.
Trevino, with Orville Moody
in th e twosome minutes ahead
of Beman and Bob Goaiby,
wasted no time in taking over.
The merry Mexican needed
only two holes and 16 minutes.
While Beman parred the first
two holes, Trevino sank putts
of 3 and 2 feet for birdies.

Leonard , legislative agent, and
Mrs . Robert Louks, pianist.
The charter was draped in
me mory of Harry Caton,
secretary of the national
grange. II was noted that a new
~iano has been purchased for
the grange hall. Sympathy was
ex tended to Mrs . Homer
Radford and it was note&lt;!' that
Mrs. Clifford Leifheit Is Ill.
Refreshments were served.

Delaware 28 Lehigh 22
Delaware St. 27 C. W. Post 7
Fordham 34 Manhattan 18 ·
Franklin &amp; Marshal l 22 Car.

Slippery Rock 54 Brockpor t 0

Wes leyan

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP!)

Fred Goeglein was re-elected
master of Rock Springs
Grange at the Thursday night
meeting held at the hall on the
fairgrounds.
Other officers elected were
Willi am Grueser, overseer;
Mrs. W. A. Morgan, lecturer;
Amos Leonard. steward ;
James Conkle, ass istant
steward; Mrs . William
Grueser, chaplain.; Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, treas urer;
Mrs. Frances Goeglein,
secretary; Homer Radford,
ga tekeeper; Mrs . Lewis
Grueser. Ceres; Mrs. Homer
Radford, Pomona; Leigh Ann
Enevo ldse n, Flora ; Mrs .
James Conkle, lady assistant
steward; Homer Radford,
exec utive co mmittee; Mrs.
Darwin Enevoldsen , home
economics chair man ; Mrs.
Luc ille Leifheit, yo uth
chairman; Mrs. Conkle ,
juvenile chairrr1an ; Amos

Western

Marsha ll 27 Morehead St. 24

I Ind .)

Trevino
Captures
Honors

Goeglein Re-elected

BOX 94
RACINE. OHIO 45171

Moun t Union at Grove City

IPa.l

ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lake,
West Jefferson, Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Bailey and Mike and Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Bailey of
Springfield were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kennedy
and Mrs. Bill Sprouse and
Terri. They came especially
for the funeral services of
William Bailey .

JENNY PROFFITT

United Press Interna tional

Taylor (Ind .) at Wilmington

the Pacific-8, unless UCLA
_upsets their applecart as the
Bruins did to former No. 1
Nebraska last week, is eager
for a return to the New Yea r's
Day classic as is Ohio State,
which is favored to win the Big
Ten .
Ohio State had a little trouble
scoring against a surprisingly
strong Iowa team but out.
muscled the Hawkeyes with 252
yards rushing. The Buckeyes
passed only eight times,
completing four, for 67 yards.
In other top college games
Satur day, sixt h-rank ed
Tennessee defea ted 7thranked Penn St. (the only top
ten !hat lost by a close 28-21
margin ,) eig hth -ra nk ed
Louisiana St. defeated Pacific,
31-13, ninth-rated Nebraska
rebound from their firs t game
setback to kayo Texas A&amp;M,
37-7, lOth-rated Mic higan
defeated Northwes te.n, 7·0,
and this year's su rpr ise
package. 11th-ranked UCLA
beat Pittsburgh, 38-28.

.

l"

Gerald Hart.
Mrs. Barbara Logan's
second grade: Mrs. Norma
Custer, Mrs. Nola Swisher,
Mrs. Martha Fox, Mrs. Ruth
Ann Plants, Mrs . Sharon Doss,
Mrs. Bessie Darst, and ·Mrs.
Lucretia Stobart.
Mrs. Julia McComas' third :
Mrs. Pauline Reuter, Mrs.
Polly Hysell, Mrs. Patsy Oiler,
Mrs. Frances Whittington,
Mrs. Reva Bunce, Mrs. Maxine
Darst, Mrs. Mary Pooler.
Mrs. Carol Helbling's third
grade : Mrs. Sibley Slack, Mrs .
Ruth Spencer, Mrs . Barbara
Murray, Mrs. Pat Kitchen,
Mrs. Dorothy Boyer, Mrs.
Robert Halley, Mrs. Pauline
Hoffman .
Mrs. Mary Ann Watson's
fourth grade: Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Mrs. Donna Stewart,
Mrs. Iris Payne, Mrs. Beverly ·
Long, Mrs. Ruth Moyer, Mrs.
Carol Demoskey, Mrs. Donna
Byer,andMrs. Dorothy Baker.
Mrs. White's fourth grade:
Mrs1 Doris Beiley, Mrs. Vicki
Houchins, Mrs . Faye McDaniel, Mrs. Jean Thomas,
Mrs . Joan Edwards, Mrs.
Elaine Miller, Mrs. Janet
Sigman, and Mrs. Betty Glass.
The committees are: Mrs.
Sharon Doss, ·Mrs. Frances
Whittington, ways and means ;
Mrs. Nola Swisher, Mrs. Jean ·
Thomas, Mrs . Iris Payne,
membership ; Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan, Mrs. Mary Wise, and
Mrs . Sharon McMillion,
cultural arts; l)lrs. Helen
Maag, Mrs. Benice Carpenter,
legislation; Mrs . Christine
Simons,o characte r and
spiritual; Milford Hyse ll,
safety committee; Mrs. L. W.
McComas, music ; Mrs .
Beverly Long, publicity ; Mrs.
Pat Kitchen, publications and
magazines, and Mrs. Judy ·
Crooks, program.

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�7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 11,1972

Green Thumb

Notes • ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
Colinty Garden Club members.

Fall Care and Planting of Roses
.
THIS IS WHAT THE K&amp;M DEPOT at RuUand looked like manyyears ago. Standing at the
Depot are the late Will Plummer, right, and Floyd Dunfee. The picture was submitted by
Dwight Kennedy of RuUand,
.

MRS. KATE JARRELL, the new teacher at the Meigs Community School and her aide
Jean Wood, teach simple social skills such as shaking hands to intermediate students.
'

PRIMARY STUDENTS at the Meigs Community School
are taught such tasks as putting on coats and sweaters,
eating with utensils, and tying shoes.

knowing ofa child needing the
training provided by the school
should contact Mrs. Thomas.
The advisory board of the
school is composed of Ed
Mrs. Thomas said sev•ral Kenn edy , chairman; Mrs.
children have made "good Denver Weber, vice chairman ;
progress" over the years, some · Mrs. Denver Rice, secretary;
everi becoming able to advance Mrs. Pearl Williams, reporter;
into special education classes Mrs. Iris Carr and the Rev. Bill
of the regular school sys tem. Perrin.
Classes are open to any
retarded child.
The planet Jupiter is the
New enrolees are generally
biggest
object in the solar
received through referrals
system except for the sun
from agencies, but anyone itself.

a school that helps
(Continued from page I)
Wolfe of Rutland has an ad·
vanced class and Mrs. Kate
Jarrell, Pomeroy, the newest
teacher, has the intermediate.
Aides are Jean Wood, Pomeroy
Route 4, Dee Brown of Miners·
ville, both of whom also drive
the buses, and Alice Wolfe,
Racine, who is also a substitute
bus driver.

Redmen Fourth In Meet
Rio Grande College's cross
country team finished fourth in
a quadrangular meet Saturday
at Morehead State in Kentucky. It was the first taste of
competition for the college's
cross country squad this fall.
The lour way meet was won
by
Eastern
Kentucky,
Morehead State placed second,
and Vincennes, Indiana took
third place.
Jim Maloney of Eastern
Kentucky won the five mile
event; and in the process
established in a new course
record at Morehead State with
a winning time of twenty.four
minutes and fifty-three
seconds.
Eastern Kentucky wrapped
up the meet by placing runners
in the first three spots .
Morehead State runners
finished fourth and fifth among
the thirty-nine thinclads.

For Rio Grande, the highest
finish individually went to
junior Jack Finch. Finch was
the tenth man to cross the
finish line; however his time
was only forty-five seconds
behind the winner. Finch
completed the course in
twenty-five minutes and
thirty-eight seconds.
Also for Rio Grande, Ken
Sanders was 16th , Stacy
Osborne, 23rd, Kevin Honnald,
24th, and Mike Gross, 27th.
First year cross country
coach Dr. Buce Curtis termed
Rio Grande's performance as
"a fair showing against some
really tough competition."
Curtis feels Eastern Kentucky
could be a powerhouse in cross
country this fall .
The Redmen in losing one
mee t practiced last week
without the services of a coach
at times as Curtis was battling

Falcons To Face
'Skins Saturday
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Bowling Green Coach Don
Nehlen, who had his team sky·
high for its upset 17-14 win over
Purdue Saturday, must now
find a way to bring it back to
earth.
The Falcons have a very
important Mid-America n
Conference game coming up
Saturday against Miami, a
regionall y televised game
which could decide the conferen ce title, and Nehien knows
that what goes up must come
back down .
"It's going to be awfully
tough,.. Nehlen said of the
upcoming week 's
preparations.
"We've got to find a way to
get our kids' feet back on the
ground. I know Miami has an
excellent football team."
Nehlen, a former quarterback at Bowling Green, said
the victory over the Big Ten
Boilermakers was "probably
the most prestigious win for
our university in its football
history."
"I was awfully proud of our
football team," Nehlen said •
"they played inspired football.
Our defense was absolutely
superb. They had an awfully
big line coming at them and
some big, fast backs, too."
Nehien said Saturday's game
against Miami, a 34-7 winner
over Dayton, "could be the big
one, no doubt about that.
Looking back through the
years, the winner of the BGMiami game usually has a
good shot at ·the championship."
In Miami's easy opening
~~me win over Dayton, Bob
Hichens tied a school record by
scoring the Redsklns first four
touchdowns as tliey built up a
27~ lead early in the fourth
Quarter.

Hltchena, who ended the day
with 143 yardJ In 34 carrlea,
ICored on runs of 2, 10, 9 and 5
yard~, with the other Miami
~eore coming on a 23-yard pass
from Stu Showalter to flanker

John Wiggins.
Dayton, now 11 on the
season, got its only score in the
final quarter on a fi ve-yard run
by Walt Wingard.
Toledo, which saw its 35game winning streak snaooed
a week ago bf Tampa,
rebounded for a 16-0 vic tory
over Eastern Michigan .
Senior Joe Schwartz scored
from the three on a quarterback keeper late in the tirird
quarter and, running from
ta ilback, raced 48 yards for the
clinching TD with I :21 left in
the game. George Keirn's 42yard field goal gave the
Rockets a 3-0 halftime lead.
Ohio University went down to
defeat for the first time
dropping a 17-14 decision t~
Idaho after leading 14-7 going
in to the final quarter. The
Rohcats are now 1·1 for the

season.

Ohio U.'s two touchdowns
both came on passes from
quarterback Rich Bevly, one
covering 55 yards to split end
Cleve Moutry and the other II
yards to L. C. Lyons.
Idaho's Steve Tanner ac·
counted for the winning margin
with on 18-yard field goal with
3:25 remaining.
Cincinnati held a 7.0 lead at
the end of the first quarter and
trailed only 21·14 early in the
third quarter, but wilted under
a five-touchdown Colorado
barrage a~ the third-ranked
Buffaloes rolled to a 56-14
victory.
The Bearcats ' Reggie
Harrison, who ga ined 109 yards
on the day, capped a 69-yard
fi rst perind drive wilh a oneyard TD run to give Cincinnati
its only lead of the day. The
other Bearcat tally came on a
15-yard Mike Shoemaker t,
Mike White pass.
Louisville, behind the
passing of John Madeya and
the running of Howard Stevens,
biU"ied Kent State with a lOW"·
touchdown second period
barrage, handing the Flashes
their first iossto go along with
a tie last week with Akron.

the flu bug.
The college team, even
though young, is expecting a
good season. Rio Grande, in
their fourth year of cross
country, had an impressive, 112 mark in dual meets in 1971.
The top five runn ers for Rio
Grande Saturday were all
underclassmen with two
juniors, a pair of freshmen and
a sophomore leading the way.
Finch and Sanders, a couple
of veterans from last season,
will lead the way for Rio
Grande again with help from a
mu ch improved
Stacy
Osborne. Osborne is onlv a
sophomore.
·
Ri o Grande's cross coun try
team will return to action
Friday at West Virginia Tech
to defend their title in the
Golden Bear Invitationa; Hill
Climb .

This Week's
Grid Games
United Press ln1ernalional

!Saturday)

Bow l ing Green at Miami (TV)
Ohio Universi ty at Ken t State
Tex as Arling ton a t Toledo (nl
Western Ill inois at Akron (n)
Ashland at Edinboro State

I Pa .l
Blufft on at Adr ian (Mich 1 In I
Thiel I Pa.) at Case Western

Reser ve
Central State at Way ne State

IMich.t

Xavier at Cincinnati (n)
M arshall at Dayton (n)

Alma !Mich. I at Defiance
Findlay at Manchester (Ind .)

Oberlin at Hir am

Allegheny IPa .l at John

Carroll
Ohio

Northern

at

!Mich.)

Hillsda le

Big Four Post
Easy Triumphs
United Press International
Oklahoma. Southern Cal,
Colorado and Ohio State - the
Big Four of college football this
year - displayed awesome
power Saturday as they rolled
over relatively weak opponents
and they could be setting the
sta ge for some titanic
struggles later in the year.
Oklahoma, No. !·rated, and
led in rushing by a pair of
fres hm en backs - Kerry
Jackson and Joe Washingtonoverwhelmed Utah State, 49-Q,
in the Sooners' first game of
the year.
Colorado, No. 3-rated, was
explosive as junior tailback
Charlie Davis roared lor 102
yards and two touchdowns to
lead the Buffalos to a 56-14
shellacking of Cincinnati.
In Boulder on October 21,
Oklahoma and Colorado, Big-8
contenders both , will clash in a
ga me that probably will
determine the league cham·
pionship. Both schools have
dynamic teams and poise on
the field is the thing the
coaches are looking to develop
now.
Ja ckson rushed for 109 yards
on 10 carries, including a 34yard scra mble on a broken ply,
and complete three of 12 passes
for 50 yards.
Washington carried 12 limes
lor 86 yards, while senior All·
American Greg Pruitt rushed
15 times for 80 yards.
Co lorado go t diversified
scoring, with two TD's by
Davis, two more by 5-foot-8
reserve quarterback Joe
Due nas, and four other
players .
A long way off but nevertheless a possibility is a con·
frontation betw ee n USC
second-ranked, and Ohio State'
fourth-ranked, in the Ro~
Bowl next January .
USC, which is favored to win

Saturday's
Scores

In)

Youngs town State at

North Dakota State (n)
Muskingum

Wallace (n)

at

Baldw in ·

Capital at Marietta (n)
Juniata ( Pa .) at Deni son

Otterbein al Heidelberg (n )
W&amp;J at Kenyon

East

Betllany 25 Case
Reserve 14

Depauw

Woos ter at Albion !Mich.)

West Virginia 28 Richmond 7

night game

Ohio College

Football Scores
United Press International

Saturday
Ohio State 21 Iowa 0

Bowling Green 17 Purdue 14
Miami 34 Dayton 7
Idaho 17 Oh io Univers ity 14
Louisvil le 34 Kent State o

Toledo 16 Easlern Michigan 0

Col orado 56 Cincinnati 14
Akron 34 But ler 7
Heidel berg 1.4 Ohio Wesleyan 3

Ashland 17 Capital 7
Ohio Northern 7 Mount Union

6
Baldwin -Wal lace 28 Evansville

I Ind. I 0
Denison 21 Thiel 7
Marie tta 27 Allegheny 7

West Uberty 14 Musk ingum 6

Centre I Ky .) 7 Oberlin 6
Western Kentu cky 19 Wll·
tenberg 7

John Carroll 34 W &amp; J 0
Findlay 24 Earlha m 0
Defiance 22 Adrian IMich.l 0
Bluffton 12 Taylor 0

M-deya threw three touch·
down passes while hitting on 13
of 29 attempts, while Stevens
picked up 115 yards in 20 trles
and scored tire Cards first
touchdown on a seven yard
scamper.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S

CLEANERS

2t0 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone n2 -5421

East Carolina 16 Sout hern
Il linois 0
Fl orida St. 37 Miami 14
Georgia 24 Baylor 14
Georgia Tech 34 South Carolina
6

Ken tucky 25 Villanova 7

Beman's 5-foot putt rimmed
the cup for a bogey on the fifth
hole, but he sa nk a Jl).footer on
the following \wle for a birdie.

STUDENTS!
Be the first to have your
Picture here

n~xTH E

r oRDEROF'- ------ - ----------------------------

FOTO ICCENT CHECKS

3 Win Top Awards
Mrs. Tom Stewart, Mrs .
Robert Snowden and · Ja y
Ca rpente r sha red top honors in
the Rutland Friendly Gar·
deners ' flower show , "A
Sununer Wedding" Saturday
in the Rutland Elementary
School gymnasium .
Mrs. Stewart won the Best of
Show Award for
her
in
th e
ar rangements
"Beau ti fu l Bridesmaids "
class, Mrs. Snowden took the
Horticulture Sweeps takes
Award for an ou:sta ndin g
ar ray of hybrid tea rose
specimens, and Ja y Carpenter
was the winner of the Green
Thumb Award for the best
specimen entry by a junior .
Particul arly attractive
was the theme display
prepared by Mrs . James
Carpenter fea turing a bride in
an altar se tting. The altar
appointments and po tted
palms with urns of whi te
gladioli on Marbled pedestals
were provided by Francis
Florist of Pomeroy . Costumed
in Mrs. Carpente r's wedding
gown was a mannequi n from
Elberfelds.
The ensemble was accented
by the bride's colonial basket
of white pompon mums and
baby's breath with American
Bea uty roses and iea therleaf
fern designed by Mrs .
Snowden.
Ca rryi ng out the theme of the
flow er show were soecial

MONDAY
MEIGS Band Booster s
Monday, 8 p.m. at high school.
MIDDLE PORT Business
(.' 1nd • Profeaolonal Women 's
Club, 7:30 .,p. m. Monday ,
Colwnbla Gas Co. Program by
the public relations committee
with Mrs. Nellie Vale. chairman .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Candystrlpers, 7 p.m. Monday
night in the hospital cafeteria .
New members invited.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Monday at
high school, Racine. Ali W"ged
to attend.
MEIGS LOCAL District
Chapter of OAPSE, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Meigs Junior High
cafeteria, Middleport . Fred
Haynes, field representative of
OAPSE, and Dan Smith, active
Southern Local Chapter
member, will be guests. All
non-certified personnel of the
Meigs Local District invited.
RACINE PTA, 7:30 Monday,
at the school. Film: "If These
Were Your Children."
REVIVAL Servi ces,
Snowvllie United Methodist
Church, on State Route 681,
west of Route 33, 7:30 each
evening, Sept. 17 through Sept.
23. Slides of Holy Land shown
Sunday evening.
RACNE Elementary PTA
meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday at
school.
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday at Middleport
Masonic Temple. Mothers Club
meeting at same hour in

CC I DISCIPLES Quartet
from Chillico the Cor rectional
institute will prese nt musical
prog ram at Sept. meeting of
Men's Fellowship , Meigs
County Churches of Christ, at
7: 30 p.m. Monday, at Zion
Church of Christ on PomeroyHa rrisonville Road . Public
invited .
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
Monday at the Elementary
School.
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA, PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Cultura l program
on self analysis by Debbie
Ger lach and Sue Zirkle;
hos tesses, Karen Stanley ,
Linda Sauvage, and Kathy
Kin g.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 8 p.m.
Tuesda y, Mrs. Roy Mayer,
program chairman; hostesses,
Mrs. Albert Woodard, Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, Jr. Meeting at
the Trinity !burch.
SALISBURY ELE MENTARY School PTA , 7:30
Tuesday
evening,
getacquai nted meeting.
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
Webster Post American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30 Wednesday at
the home of Mrs . Ellen Couch.

Nor th Carolina St. 43 Syracuse

and 200 Foto Accent Checks will be yours

Committees and room
mothers for the Middleport
Elementary School PTA have
been named.
The room mothers are as
follows:
Mrs. Bradford Maag's first
grade : Mrs . Ruth Riffle, Mrs.
Nita Seelbach , Mrs. Kay Rupe,
Mrs. Mary Walburn , Mrs.
Marilyn Epple, Mrs. Sharon
Wise, Mrs. Sharon McMillion,
and Mrs. Ella Roush.
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter 's
fir st grade: Mrs. Mary
Harrison, Mrs. Diana George,
Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, Mrs. Lois
Cunningham, and Mrs. Cheryl
Burdette.
Mrs. Jennifer Butcher's
second grade : Mrs. Bonnie
Pickens, Mrs. Judy Crc~l&lt;s,
Mrs. Shirley Roush, Mrs. R. C.
Rinehart, Mrs. Bernice May,
Mrs . Bonnie Neville, Mrs.

FREE.

Tennessee 28 Penn St . 21
Virginia 24 Virgin ia Tech 20

Midwest
Bowlin? Green 17 Purdue 1.4
Franklm 25 Rose-Hulman 6

Gr innell 16 Coe 13

Indiana 27 Minnesota 23
M ichigan 7 Northwestern 0

Mi chi9an St. 24 Illinois 0
Miam1 10) 34 Dayton 7
Nebraska 37 Texas A&amp;M 7
Ol1io St. 21 Iowa 0
Tampa 34 Northern Michigan
21
Temple 16 Xavier 10.1 11
Toledo 16 Eastern Michigan 0
Wisconsin 31 Northern Illinois 7
Southwest
Arizona St. 33 Houston 28
Now Mex ico 55 New Mexico St.

20

Oklahoma 49 Utah St. 0
SMU 56 Wake Forest 10
Texas Tec h 45 Utah 2
Tulsa tO Wl chlra St. 9

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see on~
of the Friendly Tellers ...
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Fodorof Rtur .. System
On Fridays Our brlv•tn WJ!Niowts
0Ptn h .m. to7 p.m., fContlnuoustyl .
SlO.OOII\Itxlmum Insurance

For Eocll Dopasltor

IIARJWI(IMlU£ IUGH SCHOOL, 1115-'lbll old picture was BUbmltted by Torn Wells,
PlimaO)'.Frantrvw,k', arellerthaPiaott. Myrtle Suan, Nora ReDman, Lona Green,Amber
AdkiM, Artbur Ptttlt, Hattie Halllling, Leah Ptttlt; second row, David French, unidentified,
JoellllwiiJ,LtllleCbul, URI Tumer,Evelyn Dye, UllanGoalen, Helen Hanning; third row,
Mllll Gntbam,leleber, Rowud !lark, Howard Hull, Robert Rowley, Clifiord Cuckler, Alfred
Greealer, Bvel7n ~~~. 0.,
8lld Dale XMpp.

ar-

&gt;I•

educational displays including
step-by-ste p instr uctions on '
making a wedding corsage by
Mrs. Snowden .
There was a garden therapy
display of work done with the
special educational class at the
Rutland Elementa ry School
prepared by Mrs. William
Willford with Bird feeders,
wall plaques, placemats, pine
cone crafts being included .
Projects of the Merry
Gardeners displayed were seed
propagation in egg cartons ,
dried fl oral arrangements, and
ceramic co nt ainers. Mrs .
Larry Edwards is advisor of
the junior club which is
sponsored by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.
Mrs. Homer Parker showed
books on floral design, hor·
ticuiture. dried mate rials,
weather wood and OAGC
publications in the educational
division of the show,
Mrs . Earl Bend er of
Marietta, an accredited OAGC
judge, selected winners from
the J:iO exhibits. The ribbon
winners listed first, second,
third and fourth respectively,
were as follows:
Artistic Arrangements
At a Country Church: Mrs.
James Carpenter, Mrs. Robert
Snowden, Mrs . William
Willford,
Mrs.
Fred
Williamson.
The Wedding Guests: Mrs.
Homer Parker. Mrs. Richard

Fetty, Jr ., Mrs . Willford, and
Mrs . Howard Birchfield.
The Bridegroom Awaits :
Mrs. Tom Stewart, Mrs.
Carpenter, Mrs. Snowden, and
Mrs. Birchfield.
Here Comes the Bride: Mrs.
Joe Bolin, Mrs. Birchfield,
Mrs . Fred Williamson, and
Mrs. William Brown.
The Bea utiful Bridesmaids :
Mrs . Stewart, Mrs . Snowden,
Mrs . Parker, and Mrs. Car·
penter.
A Band of Gold: Mrs.
Snowden, Mrs. Brown, Mrs.
James Quillen, and Mrs. Bolin.
Something Old, Something
New: Mrs. Stew ar t. Mrs.
Fetty, Mrs. Parker, and Mrs.
Harold Wolfe.
The Wedding Gifts: Mrs.
Parker, Mrs. Snowden, 'Mrs.
Carpenter, and Mrs. Stewart.
Honeymoo n at Niagara
Falls: Mrs. Wilson Ca rpenter
of the Bend 0 ' the River Club ;
Mrs. Fetty, Mr s. Robert
Canaday of the Rutland
Garden Club; and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine of the Rutland
Garden Club.
Bearer
The

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES award winner at the flower show was Mrs. Robert
. Snowden, who received 11 ribbon awards for her exhibit of roses, zinnias, and marigo lds from
the Snowden garden.
division): Debbie Williamson, fourth.
Rutland, fir st; no other Zinnia: Mrs. Snowden, first,
third and four th ; Mrs_ Stewart,
awards.
The Flower Girl : Jay Car- a second .
Marigolds : Mrs. Willford,
penter, Coolville; Kimberly
Birch field, Lorri Snowden, first and second; Mrs.
Merry Gardeners; with Beth Snowden, third ; no fourth.
Unclassified : Mrs . Robert
An n Wolfe and Darin Wolfe in a
Snowden, first and second ;
tic for fourth place.
Mrs. Roy Snowden, Rutland
Educational Displays
Garden
Club, third; and Mrs.
Sixteen entri es in the division
ca rri ed out the theme - "Let's Fred Williamson, fourth.
Houseplants: Blooming,
Take a Honeymoon Trip
Mrs.
Hen ry Turner, Star
to - ." Winners first through
Garden Club ; Mrs. Bolin, Mrs.
four th were as follows :
Cypress Gardens, a dish Chris Diehl, Rutland Garden
garden : Mrs . James Car- Club , and Mrs. Robert
penter, Mrs. Willford, Mrs . Ca naday, Rutland Garden
Roy Snowden, Rutland Garden Club_
Foliage: Mrs . William
Club, Mrs . Homer Parker .
Appalachia, handcrafted or Willford, Mrs. James Car·
homemade containers: Mrs . penter, second and third, and
Stewa rt , Mrs. Bolin, Mr s. Mrs. Roy Snowden, Rutland
Garden Club.
Fetty, Mrs. Parker.
.Junior Horticulture
Wayne National Forest,
Zinnia : Jay Carpenter, first,
weathered or driftwood : Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs. Bolin, "Mrs. · second, third aild"loilrth.
Marigolds : Jay Carpenter,
Robert Snowden, and Mrs.
fi rst and second.
Carpente r.
Unclassified : Jay Caroenter,
Horticulture Division
Hybrid tea roses, yellow,
orange and blends : Mrs.
Robert Snowden , all four

Debbie Williamson, Rutland _
Preceding the judging, the
club hosted a judges luncheon
planned by Mrs. Bruce Davis.
Persons other than members
of the sponsoring club who
entered the open classes we re·
Mrs. Larry Barr of th e
Homestead Club, Mrs . Anna
Turner, Mrs. Roy Snowden,
Mrs. Chris Diehl, Mrs. Robert
Ca naday , Mrs.
Harvey
Er lewine, Rutlan d Garden
Club; Mrs. Henry Turner of the
Start Garden Club, Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, Bend 0 ' the River
Club; Mrs . Hattie Swift,
Pomeroy; Kimberly Birchfield·
and Lorri Snowden, Merry
Gardeners; and Jay Car.
pen ter, Darin Wolle, Debbie
Williamson, and Beth Ann
Wolfe .
Among the out-of-t ow n
visitors at the show were Mr . .
and Mrs. John Reese of
Gallipolls. Mrs'' Ree~i\' 1 'is" a
former Region II dlrector'"or
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs.

N. W. COMPTON, 0.0.
OPTOMETRIST

ribbon awards.

Hybrid tea roses, pinks and
reds: Mrs , Larry Barr,
Homestead Club, first, seco:.
and third, with Mrs. Snowden,

OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST. ;
POMEROY.

Committees Named

If you have a Ch.eckiD.g Account with us, come in or if you
don't, come in and open one with the "Wide-Awake Bank"

20

ASUMMER WEDDING - The tireme display at tire RuUand Friendly Gardeners' nower
show Saturdsy was a highlight for show viewers. Mrs. James Carpenter prepared the display
which features a bride wearing her own wedding gown.

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
Thursday. Mrs. Edith Jividen
to have t~e lesson. Mrs .
basem~nt.
Emerson Jones, Mrs . Rose
CHESTER PTA, 7:30 p.m. McDade, and Mrs. Roy
Monday Instead of usual 8 p.m. Cassell, hostesses.
at school. Teachers to present
outUne of ~ork for year; Mrs. India leads the world in
Maline Goeglein, president, cattle population , with the
will present county fair United States ranking second.
premluma to a!Ddenta.

Loui sv i l le 34 Kent St. 0

LSU 31 Pacific 13
Mississippi 34 Memph is St. 29

You can prepare your bushes for the winter temperature of
I! degrees or below by bringing soil in and mounded around each
l"Oie bush about 10 inches high . For added protection dd some
straw or hardwood leaves on top of the mound which helps
JI"Otect the union and that portion of canes above the bud union.
A preventive medicine for rose bushes containing lime
IIUlphiU" can be applied in wipter . It is a dormant spray .
You can plant roses either in the spring or fail. It has bee n
JI"Oved that a fall-aet plant has a head start on the one planted in
the Spring; growth proceeds more naturally and with greater
vigor, also the soil is in better condition for planting.
Even· if you prefer to wait until Spring you should prepare
new beds and planting spots now, where you plan to set bushes
then.
Dig a hole 18 inches in diameter and 18 inches deep, then
loosen the soil in that spot and mix with it a considerable amount
of peat m08S-rotted compost or rotted catUe manure with a
blndful each superphosphate and bone meal.
Three main important locations to plant are where drainage
II good, it must receive a minimum amount or rive hours of daily
sunshine and .it should be fre2 from danger of root invasion of
nearby trees and shrubs.
Roses do best when planted in a rich, loamy soil, but they are
quite tolerant of various types of soil.

Social Calendar 1

South
14

ping.

..

UCLA 38 Pittsburgh 18

Alcorn A&amp;M 9 Gramb ling 6
Citadel 28 Appa lac llian St. 21
Davidson 18 Virgin ia Military

BY HELEN DORST
Rose Garden Club
Each fall many questions arise coocerning tbe best ways lo
manage roses. Here are a few suggestions that may help you:
Gardeners should discontinue feeding rose bushes about 2'h
months before the first hard freeze, about the latter part of
Auguat. As a result, the shooting out of soft cane growth will
cease and the bushes will become somewhat hardened in their
natural approach to winter. If you have fed your rose bushes well
mrtng apring and summer you will continue to receive lovely fall
blooma while this natural preparatioo for winter is going on.
U you have a long fall dry spell you should water the rose
bushes occasionally; it will aid your roses in fall hardening, if
artificial watering is reduced.
When possible, severe pruning of rose bushes should be left
until early spring, except for cutting frozen blJ(j:l at their necks.
You can Ue the long canes together to avoid winter wind whip-

W:~l&gt;.':;:w.-::~:f:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:

31

Va lpa raiso (Ind.) at Wit ·
n -

CLEANING

Navy 13 William and Mary 9

Southern
Co nn ect i cu t
Wesleyan 21

tenberg

2-HOUR

negie -Mellon 0
Holy Cross 2.4 Rutgers 14

Ohio

at

Deane Bemen sat dejectedly on
his bag of clubs at the 13th hole
Sunday and watched as
cheerful Lee Trevino strolled
by on his way to victory in the
$150,000 St. Louis Golf Classic.
Beman had led since the
beginnin g of the four-day
tournament at Norwood Hills
Country Club but saw his onestroke advantage vanish early
in the final round Sunday. The
$30,000 in top prize money went
with it.
Trevino, with Orville Moody
in th e twosome minutes ahead
of Beman and Bob Goaiby,
wasted no time in taking over.
The merry Mexican needed
only two holes and 16 minutes.
While Beman parred the first
two holes, Trevino sank putts
of 3 and 2 feet for birdies.

Leonard , legislative agent, and
Mrs . Robert Louks, pianist.
The charter was draped in
me mory of Harry Caton,
secretary of the national
grange. II was noted that a new
~iano has been purchased for
the grange hall. Sympathy was
ex tended to Mrs . Homer
Radford and it was note&lt;!' that
Mrs. Clifford Leifheit Is Ill.
Refreshments were served.

Delaware 28 Lehigh 22
Delaware St. 27 C. W. Post 7
Fordham 34 Manhattan 18 ·
Franklin &amp; Marshal l 22 Car.

Slippery Rock 54 Brockpor t 0

Wes leyan

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP!)

Fred Goeglein was re-elected
master of Rock Springs
Grange at the Thursday night
meeting held at the hall on the
fairgrounds.
Other officers elected were
Willi am Grueser, overseer;
Mrs. W. A. Morgan, lecturer;
Amos Leonard. steward ;
James Conkle, ass istant
steward; Mrs . William
Grueser, chaplain.; Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, treas urer;
Mrs. Frances Goeglein,
secretary; Homer Radford,
ga tekeeper; Mrs . Lewis
Grueser. Ceres; Mrs. Homer
Radford, Pomona; Leigh Ann
Enevo ldse n, Flora ; Mrs .
James Conkle, lady assistant
steward; Homer Radford,
exec utive co mmittee; Mrs.
Darwin Enevoldsen , home
economics chair man ; Mrs.
Luc ille Leifheit, yo uth
chairman; Mrs. Conkle ,
juvenile chairrr1an ; Amos

Western

Marsha ll 27 Morehead St. 24

I Ind .)

Trevino
Captures
Honors

Goeglein Re-elected

BOX 94
RACINE. OHIO 45171

Moun t Union at Grove City

IPa.l

ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lake,
West Jefferson, Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Bailey and Mike and Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Bailey of
Springfield were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kennedy
and Mrs. Bill Sprouse and
Terri. They came especially
for the funeral services of
William Bailey .

JENNY PROFFITT

United Press Interna tional

Taylor (Ind .) at Wilmington

the Pacific-8, unless UCLA
_upsets their applecart as the
Bruins did to former No. 1
Nebraska last week, is eager
for a return to the New Yea r's
Day classic as is Ohio State,
which is favored to win the Big
Ten .
Ohio State had a little trouble
scoring against a surprisingly
strong Iowa team but out.
muscled the Hawkeyes with 252
yards rushing. The Buckeyes
passed only eight times,
completing four, for 67 yards.
In other top college games
Satur day, sixt h-rank ed
Tennessee defea ted 7thranked Penn St. (the only top
ten !hat lost by a close 28-21
margin ,) eig hth -ra nk ed
Louisiana St. defeated Pacific,
31-13, ninth-rated Nebraska
rebound from their firs t game
setback to kayo Texas A&amp;M,
37-7, lOth-rated Mic higan
defeated Northwes te.n, 7·0,
and this year's su rpr ise
package. 11th-ranked UCLA
beat Pittsburgh, 38-28.

.

l"

Gerald Hart.
Mrs. Barbara Logan's
second grade: Mrs. Norma
Custer, Mrs. Nola Swisher,
Mrs. Martha Fox, Mrs. Ruth
Ann Plants, Mrs . Sharon Doss,
Mrs. Bessie Darst, and ·Mrs.
Lucretia Stobart.
Mrs. Julia McComas' third :
Mrs. Pauline Reuter, Mrs.
Polly Hysell, Mrs. Patsy Oiler,
Mrs. Frances Whittington,
Mrs. Reva Bunce, Mrs. Maxine
Darst, Mrs. Mary Pooler.
Mrs. Carol Helbling's third
grade : Mrs. Sibley Slack, Mrs .
Ruth Spencer, Mrs . Barbara
Murray, Mrs. Pat Kitchen,
Mrs. Dorothy Boyer, Mrs.
Robert Halley, Mrs. Pauline
Hoffman .
Mrs. Mary Ann Watson's
fourth grade: Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Mrs. Donna Stewart,
Mrs. Iris Payne, Mrs. Beverly ·
Long, Mrs. Ruth Moyer, Mrs.
Carol Demoskey, Mrs. Donna
Byer,andMrs. Dorothy Baker.
Mrs. White's fourth grade:
Mrs1 Doris Beiley, Mrs. Vicki
Houchins, Mrs . Faye McDaniel, Mrs. Jean Thomas,
Mrs . Joan Edwards, Mrs.
Elaine Miller, Mrs. Janet
Sigman, and Mrs. Betty Glass.
The committees are: Mrs.
Sharon Doss, ·Mrs. Frances
Whittington, ways and means ;
Mrs. Nola Swisher, Mrs. Jean ·
Thomas, Mrs . Iris Payne,
membership ; Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan, Mrs. Mary Wise, and
Mrs . Sharon McMillion,
cultural arts; l)lrs. Helen
Maag, Mrs. Benice Carpenter,
legislation; Mrs . Christine
Simons,o characte r and
spiritual; Milford Hyse ll,
safety committee; Mrs. L. W.
McComas, music ; Mrs .
Beverly Long, publicity ; Mrs.
Pat Kitchen, publications and
magazines, and Mrs. Judy ·
Crooks, program.

Superbly Upholstered
and Quality-built by

FLEXSTEEL

Enhance your living wi th beautiful Traditional! This 87' sofa
is designed for sumptuous comfort with o plufllp loose pillow·
back and reversible T·cushion seat! Companion lounge choirs
feature biscuit tufted backs and channel tufted, reversible seat
cushions. Each boasts famous Flexsteoi e construction with
patented Flexsteel e blue ateel spring, finest cushioning ma•
terials, a solid hardwood frame and quality decorator fabrics ...
mast pratectod against soil and stains .

o••, .... ,.,.,
t'o.. .,..,1 ••1

BAKER
FURNITURE
..._._...-i....__ _ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO _ _ _ _ __.._
"·

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.

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lhe oa111 ~~~~:~port.P~~Y. o .,jlept.J8,J972

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Get
Results!
Senti~el:.: Cl8ssifieds\_· Get Ac.t@rt'! '~IIti~t{;lassifieds
.
.
.
local Bowling ·
· . . . . ..
s.!vrc~av J~nior L~aoue
1:1!\. 2
. . Pomeroy
IW'
&amp;
iiidl
;~!;;,;~::r;
~:
u
·
sm·
ess
Services
Help Wanted
___
'

t~~!:'•rs .

Pis~ -~ ..·

· · Dromers
· ~Hey Cats·

2
·.2

Api~hes

1

..· High tndivldu~l .Qame
s~•• Bac~net 179.
..
·SI!COI1d t;~ i~ h ·ind,. G•me .--:
Jeff W~r.net ' 1~1: '' . '·
, ·
. Hlg~ Series ,..,·st~ve ;Bachner
.oi78, .

~·.

,:. ,' ... ·:·

:~·.

'

.

Second.High Setl..•-" qndy
Hlndy 4~.
· ··:
.. '
Team Hfgh' Gam~·-'"- lmpaots
878.'
. :- •· :.
·..
Team High Series ~ Impact$ ·
2•16.

•·

Of
QUAliTY .

Motor Co.

··
'
'tt70Ci1l!VROlET.
Monte Carlo, ·loc&lt;&gt;l 1-owner car and less t~n 21,000 miles,
rlew white-w(tfl .tlf'es, radory air cQndltloned, aqua (inish,
.. black vlnyl)op,' disc brakes, po\;l~r steering, .turbohydr,amatl~: · radio, wheel coyers, truly luxury and .
. PRICED TO: SUIT!
197i .PtNTO FORO .
·.
.
.
sms
Q - ~.oor, tacal i-owner, low mileage, ,good tt~es c ~lean · ln·
terlor; green finish, radio, 1000cc engine, .4 speed :
··
· 197.0CAMAR.O· . . . . ·' · . .
$2295
HardtoP, couPe&gt;lo&lt;!al ·lt&gt;W. mileage, t-owner car, JSO V-B
engine, 4 _speed· transmission, power steering, (not
tee-nage driven). green vinyl bucket ·seats, cOnsole, rear
air
~flee tor,.sharp green
is ttie word!'
.
. finish, radio. Sharp
.

..

'

.

'

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.

..

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.

.

TH ' DADBURN TERMITES
ARE ABOUT TO WRECK
MV 01\DBURN HOUSE,
MIZ LEDBETTER

'

·B·· ·.

9 17-3tp
HAYE iml)iedia te opening for ·
.
.
pari time ollice girl ; lyping POODLIO -puppies,' Sliver toy,
. one992·
·essenli&lt;&gt;l. shorthand . helpful
Par k v1ew
· Kenne Is, Ph
5443.
but' not re~ulr,ed ; Write Box
8-t's.lfr
729-A, c-oThe.' Daily Sentinel,
Pon\eroy, Ohio 45769, giving
Nil resUme wi.lh references, APPL·ES, . Fil ~palrlck Orpi-evious empl_
oyment, · and· .. ch~~ds ,. Sta·te Route '689.
training·.
·
PhOilll ·: Wilkes.ville ~9;37~5 , .
9-J.tk
B-30-ttc
..
_;,·~-

..

..
;

HOUSEWIFE ~ &lt;&gt;~~epl phone FOR :YOUR hearth'! sake · eat
orders_for"·candy and deliv~r · ·';g,.~lcally grown tomatoes;
c~ndy . .High commission. no
. ·Quisenberry' . has large ·
investment. Car; Phone ones •. IOc pound ollhe old Post
Miss Office building, Syracuse,
neCessary. ·. Write
· Shawn~S Cah(jies, Box 3674, Ohio:
Des Moines, Iowa 50322.
9-17-12tp
9-1,7-41p

EXPERT
. .

.'

Wheel·-Alignment
'5.5.$
On Moit Ame~i-can Cars
~GU.ARANTEED-

Phone 99.2·2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

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

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, la~d ·
scaping. We have 2 $lie
dozers , 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt', top soli. Dump
trucks and low-boy lor hH-e.
See Bob or Roger 'Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 · p.m. or phone 992·

Pomeroy ·Motor·. Co.

F1t£D ! vou've

CAMPUS CLA1TER

~HAVED

YfS.i MORE T~AN HA"F
OUR GRADUATES SPEND Sl)(
MONT~S AT ONE OF OUR I'WE
EUROPeAN CAMPUSES

FOil. T~OSE W~O
TO STUb¥ AT A
KC:A.L.LY DJ FFEO!ENT,
UJol8eL. t 5VAB~5,.

vou

YOUR

1.001&lt;

a=Aw.t

-THERE'S OUJ:t

BEING DROPPED

1HI6 16 Hl6 WAY
OF RESELL ING
PGAINSr CAMI&gt;UG
CONFORMiiY,

FROM 'THE RIOT'
TEAM HURT HIM,
DAP ...

STANFORD-tN·WASI-/!NGTON
PR.OGRAM

WAY-OUT PI.ACJ;

Open8Til5
For Free Estimate
S.lurdoy·. Bantam League .
Monday lhru Saturday
5232 .
•. . .Sept.· 9; . 1971 ..
606 E. Main, Pom~roy, 0 .
PHONE
992-2550
Standings
Bargain Fclr .You!
ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
.Team
. 4.
Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
Ball. Bombers
· SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller SEWING Machine Service,
QP-EM EYES. .a:o0 , .M.
December wit~ the oldest Toy
Red Barons
3
PANTS
JEANS
clean, oil, &lt;&gt;d(ust, $399, in your
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
'f'PMEROY, 0111.0
. Party Plan in the Country.
2
Banana Splits
home ; phone 992-5331.
662-3035.
Highest commissions, No
Pin Busies
2
8-11 -301c
2-12-lfc
SPECIAL
AII ·S tars ·
I
Cash ·Outlay. Call . or write
· Cydones ·
"Santa,'s Parties", Avon Ct.
0
Buy 2 Pairs and
.
O'tlELL WHEEL alignment From the largest
'High Individual Game
Memory
.. WANT A.o s:
06001. TeL I (103) 673-3455.
Get 1 PAIR FREE
located at Crossroads. Rt . 124. Bulldozer Radiator
' BACKHOE AND DOZER work'·
Todd. Ravllings 15l.
INFORMATION
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES .
Complete
front end service,
Sepfic
tanks
installed
.
Georae:
Second High Ind. Game
IN MEMORY of Eugene 'Ebers,
Heater Core.
• DEAD\.INES
9-1-lfc All kinds. all sizes lor men,
(JliH! Pullins. Phone 992-2478 .
tune up and brake serv ice. Sma llestNalhan
Mike Hlndy 1.0.
women, young men, boys
bach · ~he passed _away · . 5 .S P.M. Day Before Publlcatlort. - - - ' - -- - - - - -Biggs
Wheels
balanced elec4·25-tfc
High Series - Mike Hlndy
· years ago today, ·september
and girls. Hurry to
Monday Oeactllne 9 a.m.
HELP WANTED T0 C
Radiator
Specialist
Ironically.
All
work
Canc!tlation - Corrections
·
Y oun 264.
18th: We cannot forget you,
POMEROY
R~,_c.nn::~.hl~
Will
be
aCcepted
until
9
a.m
.
for
.
se!ors.
Santa
Claus
1ust
told
guaranteed
.
Second High Series- Kevin
our loved one so dear, Your
Oa't' of Publication
me, something to tell you.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr. SEE US FOR : Awnings, slonr.
rates . Pho ne 742-3232 or
Yeauger 230.
· memory grows sweeter year
•·
REGULATIONS
He
is
very
busy
,
this
Christmas
Phone
992-2181
J."J.f . fi C
992
-3213.
Red
Team High Game
~fter year .
doors and windows, carPorts.
The· Publisher reserves the
'72;
Bar()(\s 7S5. '·
mar q uees, aluminum 'sldlno.
Dearly loved and sadly right to edit or reject any ads . so · ioin our Playhouse Party
CONCRETE Ph.J92·2174
Pomeroy
Team High Series
Red
ml ..ed by his mother , Mrs . d!emed Ob iec tlonal. The' gang.
4,000 BUSHELS of ear corn,
and railing. ··A. Jacob, sales READY-MIX
dellv~red
right
to
)'Our
BarOns 1452.
$1.25 a bu. at the crib. Harry
representative. For free
Carl E.bersbach, brother. publisher will not be responsibfe. Earn money and Green Stamps,
project. Fast and easy . Free
too:
Pugsley, South Solon, Ohio.
sisters. nieCes and nepheWs . for more than one Incorrect
estimates, phone Charle&gt;
estimates. Phone 992-32U, AUTOMOBILE insurance lieen .
Ph
.
870374.
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V.
V
9-IB-llc Insertion.
•
R·ATES
Give Santa Claus a helping
Goeglein Ready -Mi x Co.,_.
Saturday Senior League
Johnson and Son, Inc .
9-IHic
cancelled'?
Lost
your
•For Wanl Ad Service
hand,
Middleport. Ohio.
Sept. 9, 1972
IN MEMORY of my' dear 5 cents per Word one inser~on This Christmas '72.
operator's licerlSe? can 992-6·30-Hc
Standings
husband. Everett M. Bates
Min imum Charge 75c ·
CA LL Margaret Fortune, 949· 1973 CAMPERS &lt;&gt;nd low profile
2966.
Pis.
Team
wh_o passed away 1 year ago
6-15-Hc
12 cents per word three
5414 or Barbara Lambert, travel trailers, in stoc k ,
5
No.3
Sep tember 18th: Not being . consecutive lnsertloris
446.3411.
lowes t price in tri.state area;
4
No.5
able to say goodbye will
18 cents per ·word sl~ con
9·10-lfc 1972 tra ilers, huge discount .
Real
Sale
WILL CUT or trim trees,
No. 1
3
always bring regrets, But secutlve insertions ..
Camp Conley Starer aft Sales,
rea sonable ; also clean out
25
Per
Cent
Discount
on
pard
·
--No. 6
2
lh0$e who. loved you dearly
Rt. 62, north of Pt. Pleasant
basements,
at tics
and
ads paid with in lOdays .
2
No. •
are the ones who won't forget. ads and
behind Red Carpet Inn.
CARD
OF
THANKS
BABY
SITTER
in
my hom e lor
cellars
;
phone
949-3221.
No. 2
2
Sadly missed by your loving
9-13-7\c
&amp; OBITUARY
3 month old child. Must have
B-29-JOtc
High Individual Game
wife , Eleonore .
$1.50 for SO word minimum .
references. Phone 992-3779.
Peggy O'Brien 178.
-;;P:;;Rc;l:=
C:=E--;C:-;0::-;N:cS;:-:T;:-:R
; -U
;-;-.C T I0 N,
9-18-ltc
Each addjllonal word 2c .
1964 PICK UP lf2. lon , pos it ive
110 Mechanic Street
Second High Ind. Game
BLIND ADS
traction, and Camper , 13 ft .
roofing
,
parch
repa
ir and
Tina Nleri 173.
· .
Additional · 25c Charge per . r------------, aluminum boat tra iler , sold
electri
cal
;
phone
742-4286.
To
Buy
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Advertisement.
High Series - Rick Slobart
8·16-JOtc
as a unit. Also, 1967 BonOFFICE HO\Ill~,
4ol7 • .
WANTED :.... Old upright
·.8:30 a.m_, to S:OO.p .m, Daily ,
nev ille Pontiac (2 door ) ail
NEW
LISTING
Second· High 5!&gt;rles .- Tina
pianos, grand pianos, old 8 : 30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
power. Call after 5 p.m. lor a
'&gt;EW IN G MACHINES . Repair:
115 ACRES - 120 ol good hunting woods . Some saw
Nlerl 441.
look, 992-6256.
pump_or~an . Any condition ~ Saturday.
serv ice. all makes . 992·2284.
timber
.
All
mineral
s.
Good
9
room
home
,
2
baths.
gas
• Team High Game ~ No. I
Paying SIO each. Write giv ing
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
790.
.
Drilled
well.
A
plaC:e
of
privacy.
Large
garden
and
heat.
IN
~~-..,----9-_
IHip
directions. Witten Piano Co .,
Authorized Singer Sales and
plenty of room for the chi ldren, and pon ies. Asking
Team High Series. - No. 6
Box 188, Sardis. Ohio, 43946. Lost
CAIRN TERRIERS, AKC
~ervice . We Sharpen Scissors.
$26,000.00.
2214.
registered, sho ts. Contact
9-15-6\c
3·29-lfc
Clifton
NEW LISTING
LOST - male while P&lt;lOdle
Phoebe Roberts, Phone 949·
6 ACRES - Dn 124 west. No buildings. Has fence. Asking
Harrisonville area . t&lt;ewara'
3342 or 247-2641.
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
Wednesday Lite
$3,500.00.
3EPTIC TANKS CLE~NED
ottered. Ph one 741-3592.
9-IHic
organs
,
dishes,
clocks.
brass
Mixed league
RE.&lt;SONABLE
rate&gt;. Ph. 446·
106
ACRES
30
acres
of
meadow
.
Balance
In
pasture,
9-12-6\p
.beds. or complete households.
Sept. 13, 1972
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
and other. Good renovated 4 bedroom modern home.
Write
M.
D.
Miller
,
Rt.
4,
16'
CAMPING
TRAILER
,
Standings
Owner &amp; Operator. 1
PHONE 992-2156
Enclosed bath, with larg e utility room . Beaut iful kitchen .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. Notice
Shasta, like new . Phone 985. Pl5.
Team
&gt;-12-tfl
Barn
room
for
6
horses.
All
minera
ls.
La
rge
garage.
6-18-lfc
3849.
PORCH and Yard sale , al lhe
Cassell-Carsey
u
517,000.00
.
Asking
9-7-30tc
corner of 681 and 124 in
Rosenbaum -Meadows
10
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
NEW LISTING
-----Reedsville, starts Sunday,
Hotter-Rawll nils
9
Complete Ser\llce
30 ACRES - Several in cultivation. Gas well. owned by
Sale
Sept. 17, at 10 &lt;&gt;.m. Cider
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
Blakeslee-Hoy!
9
Phone 949 -3821
owner. All minerals . Good fences . 7 room home, bath,
press and pink hoi ida y Employment 1'/ante~
Sewmg Mach ine. Will sell for
4
Moore-Morrow
Racine', Oh io
excellenl aua lilv,
some paneling, and ceiling til e. Front porch. Located on
glassware.
sma ll balance of $36.2 1 or
Fultz-Bentley
2 POTATOES,
'C•i
II Bradtord
home
grown
Kennebecs
and
UCENSED
beauti
ci
an
,
1972
good gravel road. Only $15,000.00.
payments may be arranged .
9-17-31c
High Individual Game
5-1-tfc
graduate
of
Meigs
High
Ir
ish
Cobblers,
nice
supply,
991-5331.
Phone
NEW LISTING
Tom Cassell 193 ; Neacll
Vocational Schoo l taguht by
ius! dug . Order within next VIRGINIA's Beauty S&lt;&gt;lon on
9-7- ll c
8 ACRES - On 143. Ha s 3 spr ings. R.E.A. eleclr&lt; c
Carsey_164.
Mrs . Pauline Hysell ; phone
two weeks. Phone 843-2286.
DOZt R and bac k hoe work ,
available. Some good fenc es and tra iler spots. All or a
Second High Ind . Game Su,cess
Road
betw
een
992
6188.
Paul
Sayre,
Porll&lt;&gt;nd,
Ohio,
ponds and septic tanks, dit 8
TRACK
STEREO,
lreight
part.
Dick Rawllngs 189; Lois
·Tuppers Plains and Long
Great Bend Road, Rt. 338, 1
9-17-61c
ching
ser\lice ; top soil, fill
in
beautiful
walnut
damaged,
NEAR
SHOPPING
Rosen~~U!" 154; third- Chuck
Bottom . Open 6 days; some - - - - - mile
betow
Ravenswood
·ferry
dirt,
limes
tone ; B&amp;K Ex console
.
Will
sell
for
S101
.SO
or
Blakeslee 167: Mory M.. Pat
evenings. Ph one 667 ·3041,
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, bath, wood burning fireplace
landing.
caveHng
.
Phone 992 ·5367 ,
pay $1.50 per week. Phone 992H., va. Hoyt 150.
Operator, Virginia Hayman . BLOCK Laying by contra ct. 5331
with bookshelves and built-In· stereo. Gas forced a ir
.
9-18-3tc
Dic
k
Karr
,
Jr
1
!=)hone 992-3364
H gh Series- Dick Rawlings
9-14-30\c
furnace , full 'basement with garage and 3 rooms. Asking
9·1·11C
536; l'jeacll Carsey 448.
just $11.000.00 .
____________9_·_
7·__
121c --------~-------9--7--·lfc
Second High Series - Tom
A BARGAIN
UNION Optical Center has
LENNOX FUEL OIL turnace
Cassell 506; VIrginia Hoyt 415;
P_OME ROY - 2 ni ce bedrooms, bath , living , dining and
switched to the normal winter
with blower and all at third - Roy Holler 503; Lois
Rent
hours as posted on your
ktt chen . Front porch, basement and ut ility bui lding. Nice
lachmenls. Call 985 -3907.
Rosenbaum ~7 .
NOTICE OF
yellow Union discount card. 3 ROOM
lot in back tor garden or yard . Only $5 ,500.00.
apartment , un Team High Game - Cassell ·
9·14-61p
APPOINTMENT
Closed Wednesday. open
NEW HOME
.
ORDINANCE TO
furni
shed,
Case No. 2075_.
408
Spring
Ave
.,
Carsey 627.
Saturday.
VACATE STREET
LARGE
ROOMS
3
nice
bedrooms,
with
larg e closets.
Pomeroy.
Team High Series- Cassell . , Estate Of JANIE ELIZABETH
1971 KAWASAKI 100 excellenl
To '1aco1te 20 tee t alley , from
9-11-61c
Spacious kitchen with din ing area, 1!'1 baths, large ut ili ty,
SNIDER:, Deceased .
Carsey 1777.
8-10-lfc conditi on . Ready to go ,
Ea st Main Street to Ctifh.
Notice is hereby given that
2
car
garages.
AI!
electri
c.
For
only
S25,000.00
.
-Whereas. on th e 17th day ot
sac
r
ifice
for
only
S285
.
Carolyn Janet Reeves, of
HURRY AND BUY NOW WHI LE PROPERT Y IS
J uly. 1972, a peti tion b'r' persons
Coolvi lle 667 -621 4.
Pomeroy , Ohio , has been duly
2 TRAILER spaces in Racine.
REASONABLE . TOMORROW IT PROBABLY WILL BE
own ing lots in the immediate
9-15-12\p
appointed Executrix of the
Al bert Hill , phone 9-49-226 1.
" 'cini t.,. of a 20 f eel allev . ty ing
A
LOT
HIGHER,
AND
SOLD,
AND
YOU
'
LL
BE
Estate
of
J&amp;"nle
Elizabeth
Teach me, 0 Lord, the way
9·14-6lc
be tw een lots ~ 40 and 241 and
WITHOUT . CALL US TODAY .
Snider,
deceued,
late
of
Meigs
of Tl1y statutes and I wil! County, Ohio.
lead ing fr om Eas t Main Street,
COAL, Lim estone, Excelsior
throug h sai d lots toward the
Sail Work s. E. Main St.,
keep it to the end. Give me
Creditors are required to file
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3315
cliff beh ind said toa. was duty
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
AVAILABLE tra iler (mobile
understanding, that I ma~ their claims with su ch fudiciary
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
prese nted to counc il pray ing
hom~) parking space. Inquire
4-11-llc
keep Thy law and obser11e tt Within four month s.
lh al said alley , between the
Dated this 13th day of Sep evenmgs 992 -3429.
------poin ts ncuncd, be vaca ted ; and
with my whole hear I.- tember,
1972 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _9_-1_2-6tp 1970 KAWASAKI Avenger 350, PT PLEASANT - 6 roo m .-----------~ nolice ot the pendancy and
Psalms 119: 3.1, 34.
Manning D . Webster
house, 1112 baths , recreation
pray er ot sa1d petiti on has been
Window,
Judge
•• •
new sprocket , chain, battery
FURNISHED
2
bedroom
new
built
-in
kitchen
,
~
gi
ven as required by law by
room
,
Court
of
C()m
man
Pleas,
and
tires,
S550
;
Robert
Air
Conditioners
To live In the presence of
publ ic at ion in · the Sentine l, a
Probate Div ision
apartment , adults on ly ,
Paulsen , 992·6977 .
must sell, leaving town . Days
CLELAND REALTY
newspaper of genera l ci r
great truths and eternal 191 18, 25 1101 2, 3tc
Middleport, 992 3874.
Hot Water Heaters
phone 992 ·3502, evenings
E M . ,. 1
culation in the co rporation for
9-17-61p
8
laws, to be led by permanent
9-10-lfc
phone 675·2372.
' 0 · am"" ·
Sl)l;
consec utive wee~s ending
Plumbing
ideals-that Is what keeps a
8·30-tfc
Pomeroy
August 28th, 1972, and ,
NOTICE OF
Electrical Work
~92-2259
Wher eas , Cou nc il, upon
man patient when the world
APPOINTMENT
3 AND 4 ROUM furnished an'li MobJ'Ie Homes For Sale
NEW
a
il
electric
home
by
.
.
-..........,,.
.
.,,.,.,,..
hearing
is sati sfied that there is
ignores him, and calm and
Case No. 20,772
unfurnished apartments .
owner, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths·.
good cause for !ouc h vacation as
unspoiled when the world Estate ()f William R . Bail!y
'hone
992-5434.
•,
1970
3
BEDROOM
lolal
-eleclric,
r I
I
M
prayed lor , that it Will not be
trep ace, carpe , near eigs
2 YEARS OLD
detr imental to th e general in .
4·12-tfc J t2 x 60, with expan do living
praises him.-Honore de Bal· Deceased.
Notrce Is hereby given that
High School, $25,000 firm .
l story frame, alum . siding .
terest, ano ought to be made ,
----~~---room and bedroom, excellent
zac, French writer.
Clar!n ce R . Bailey of 119
Phone 992-3183.
Large living with fireplace . now th erefore .
cond
ition
,
price
$7,000;
for
Seever, Springfield. has been
4 ROOM furn ished apartment
9·15-12tc
Kitchen has built.in range.
Be It Ordained by the Co unci!
more Information call West
In 1961, U.N. Secretary duly appointed Administrator
and bath located on Second
double oven, ref . and of lh e:Vil lageof Pomeroy, state
With the Will Anneud of the
Jefferson,
0
.
879-7593.
992
-2448
St., Pome roy ; references
of Oh10,
General Dag Hammarskjold Estate Of William R . Bailey,
9-17-61c 5 ROOM house for sale, one
freezer.
3 large bedroom s,
Section 1· Tha t th e 20 teet
req
ui
red
;
phone
992-5293.
Pomeroy,
0
.
deceased
,
late
of
Middleport
,
third
ac
re
ground
,
front
was killed when his plane
walk
in
closet
s.
Bath
with
al
le
y, lying betw een loh 240 and
9-6-lfc
Meigs County, Ohio .
porch, fu ll basement, S. D.
crashed in Northern Rhodesia .
241
,
from Main s1ree tto the cliff
shower,
ceramic
tile
,
double
Creditors are requ ired to file KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
Bu skirk, 341 Page St., MidMOBILE Home, 50 x 10, '66
con so le lavatories . All be and th e sa me is hereby
their claims with said fidu ci ary
dl eporl.
wigs, more new products
va cuted .
model, Kentuck ian, pi ckup
with in four months .
Sale
carpeted
except
kitchen
and
sec tion 7 That thi s ord inan ce
A thought for the day:
9-IS-31p
co
ming
soon.
For
free
camper,
De
l
Ray
,
Clifford
Dated lh ls 12th day of Sep Utility
room
.
beandr
emain,n force fromMd
bath
.
demonstra
tion,
phone
992
Hil l, Letart Fall s, Phone 247 American poet Wall Whitman tember 1972 .
1969 HONDA Scrambler, 175 cc,
Basement.
Large
level
lot.
after
the
eM I lest period allowed
TWO
hOmes
for
sale;
1
mile
1511.
Manning
0 . Webster
5113.
ph one 991-7016.
·said, "Once fully enslaved, no
$23,000.00
.
by
law
.
MIDDLEPORT.
Nor
th
of
Eastern
High
J udge of
B-17-ttc
9-15-3tc
9-15-3tc
TUPPERS PLAINS
Meigs county
nation, stale, city of this earth
School ; both have bath and a
COU N CIL OF V ILLAGE
Common Pleas Court
half ; 4 bedroom s; b"uilt-in
2 story frame . 4 la rge
ever afterward resumes its
OF POMEROY
Probat e Division REDUCE safe &amp; fast with NEW 1971 Zig -zag sew ing ·cASfj paid lor &lt;&gt;II makes ana.
kitchens and wall -to .wall
bedrooms, dining , living ,
Donald Collins
191 18, 25 1101 2. lt
Uberty."
machine i~ orig inal fa ctory
models of mobile homes . carpet ; c&lt;&gt;l l 985-3598.
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Va p
bath with shower. Cellar.
President of Council
carton
.
Ztg
·zag
to
make
Ph
·,
"wa ter pills" at Nel son
9-17-11\c
Large workshop . 1 acre level A !lest :
buttonholes, sew on buttons.
Qne ar~'-' ~"l'lde 614-423-9531'.
Walton
Drugs .
ground
. On main street. JaneClerk
monograms , and make fancy
4-13-tfcr 5 ROOMS &amp; bath , 2 story block
9-18-11p
Sll ,SOO.OO.
desiqns with tust the twist of a
house; gas forced air furnace,
2 BEDROOM BRICK
· (9) 18 , 25, 21c
single-dial. Left In lay-away r---------:-~
•;, acre lot, Rl. 7 &amp; Old Chesler
MIDDLEPORT
- l'h story .
WILL GIVE away fr ee lor lhe
and never been used . Will sell
• Air Conditioners
Rd. · $5,500; phone 991-3874.
Ca rpeted and pan eled,
moving, used electric range
for on ly $47 cash or credit
8-29-llc
dining room . Level lot.
in Syracuse. Call 992 -3986.
• Awnings
terms available . Phone 992Concrete front porch. Gas
9-18·31c
OUT OF STATE . IDEAL 55641.
··Underpinning
heat. Storage bu ild ing. JU ST
9·17·6fc
ACRE I&lt;ANCH. Lake Con yOU
$7,000.00
.
chas, New Mexico. $2975. 'No
'
ELECTROLUX Vacuum Complete mobile hqm·e
Rl.
I
MIDDLEPORT
down . No interest. $25 per mo .
Cleaner complete with at. serv,ice - plus gigantic
I
story,
3
large
bedroom
s.
for 119 mos . Vacation
tachments, cordwinder and 'display of mobile homes
New bath . New forced a ir
., V tecnnician, must be e~~: ­
Paradi se. Free Brochure .
paint spray. Used but in like always available at ,,
furnace, ni ce kitch en.
perienced, good salary. good
Ranchos Lake Conhas : Box
new condition. Pay $34 .45
benefits, equ.t:l opporlunity
Paneling, ulillly room. Fruit
2001DO , Alameda, California
cash
or budget terms
MILLER
employer . Apply in person or
94501.
room . Large re creation
available. Phone 992-5641.
c&lt;&gt;JI Sears In Gall ipolis, Ohio
room . GOOD AT JUST
8-29-30tp
9·17-61c
446-2770.
$9,800.00.
9-IB-61c
RACINE - .10 roam housr)
r
1220 Washington Blvd.
HENRY E'. CLELAND SR .
BOAT &amp; trailer , Johnson 90 423-7521
bath, basement, garage, two
BELPRE,
0.
REALTOR
horse inboard and outboard
.lots. Phone 949-.013.
'
PHONE 992-2259
Seasport , trailer and boat ,. ' - - - - - - - - - - _ _ ,
4-S·tfp'
good shape; ca ll 992-3371 or
Business Opportunities
:::----~-993 -3889.
Auto Sales
8 ROOM HOUSE, nice l&lt;&gt;rge lor,
9-17-3tc
natural gas, bu llt·ln cabinets
1966 CHEVROLET Impala, 4
Big Capacity
in kitchen. Close to radio
TRY US . YOU ' LL LIKE US dr . sedan, power steer ing,
Maytao
stati on in Bradbury. Phone
brakes,
a ir ·
good select ion of used fur · power
Automatics
992
-2602
.
niture , clean appliances at condit'oned : phone 992·2980 or
2 speed opera non ,
9-14-12\p
LDWEST prices in the area . 992 -6157.
Choi ce of water
KUHL 'S BARGAIN CEN·
9-17-6\p
temps .
Auto.
HOUSE in Long ~oltom , phanf
TER, "at caution light." Rt .
·
water
level
.
control.
Lint
7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Open '69 PLYMOUTH. 4 speed, good : 985-3529.
6·11 -tlc
Filter or Power
to 8 p.m.; closed Monday s. condition; phone 99:2-762.4.
Fill Agllator . ·
Phone: 667-3858.
9-17-6\p
Ptrma-Prtn
9-17·61c - - - - - - - -Auto
Maytog
1967 V.W. SQUAREBACK, lair
H1loot Ht1t
MUST
SEiL,
1v1u
v.w.
deluxe
MODERN Walnul stereo, AM- condition, $450 or best offer ;
· Dryers
"Fo ·mula Vee," dark blue,
FM rad io, 4 speed changer, ..a phone 992-6564.
Surround' clothes
while
Interior;
all
chromo
s~aker
sound
system.
9-17-3tp
Wllh gentle, ·even
Applications now being
~xtras, ' du~l Alpine horns,
Balance $68 .27 . Use our - - - - -- - - - heat . No not apots;
mag wheels, sport Shiller,
taken for men &amp;
hudg et terms . Cal l 992-7085. 1967 CAMARO convertible, 396,
no overdrylng . .
new F-60 RWL !Ires, new
Fine MeSh Lint
9·17-6tc
standard,
new
paint.
Phone
women.
Immediate
muffler, just tuned ; excellent
rmer .
992·5637.
condition; phone 992-7173 or
openings. Must be neat
Wt Speclallttln
MAPLE stereo -radic com .
9· 12·6\p
992-7066 evenings ,
.
MAYTAG
binalion, AM. F M r&lt;&gt;dlo, 4
&amp; dependable. Call
9· 17-3\p
1970
while
Plymouth
4
door,
4
speed
changer,
4
spea~er
Personnel Dept., 9
"WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT7 A lid with lw«es on his
.'.
sound system . Balance $73.45. barrol -alitomollc, air, P.B.
'63
VOLKSWAGEN;
phone
992.
a.m.
to
9
p.m.,
Monday
steering.
Good
condition,
Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
teeth just told mt
VOTE is filing to can(t/
6529,
'
. 992-7085.
$1,475 . Phone 992·5310.
,•.
.
out
MINEr'
.
and Tuesday, 446-0694.
. '
9·17-Jic
I
,
741-4211
9-1Hic
9·15-3tc
Arnold Grafe
Rutland

,.,s.

WELCOME
TO TH'
CLUB

&amp;

ln

1:.

"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Estate For

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

Wanteli

CARRIERS
WANTED

I DON'T MEAN 10 ~E­
RUDE , 13UT ! CAN'T
WORK WHEN ANY·
ONE'S e&gt;NCOPING

I

OVER. MY.
.sHOUlDER!

and
Hartford, W. Va.

- - - -- -

The Daily Sentinel

For

LEGAL NOTICE

For

9 · 19

P'QuiCK, t»l' THE

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

~

/

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
IIAADliHG

'WCC~SS

COMES EASILY TO
'T~AT !W\N. AN"NIE ·"
IT'S ~I&gt;/ "E FACES
1'1 SAS'IfR 1'111\T I
8E 'lliE REAL

L

we·talk.to

like il~·

WMP0/1390

· .,~

lfiS

Unscramble lheoe four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.
Yellerday's Answer
9. Glorify
27. Wind in·
12. Grandiio·
strument
qulzed
29. Merciless
1ti. Anthony
30. Non·
or
meta!Uc
Barbara
element
19. Withered
(var.)
22. Germanic 31. Betel
goddess
palm
23. Reliable
36. New
24. Kind
Mexican
of
Indian
jelly
37. Man's
Z5. Cupola
nickname

ORRUJ

,J)ru
rUJWEY

] I

tniSCEll

1

t

II
CJ I

SOUNDS LIKE THEY'~E
FO~

t:IRINKIN&amp; IN JAil.

Now arran1• the circled Jetlert
to form the surprise anower,

aa
]
J
I
I
I
~~===~~~~;:~~·~u~gg~e;•t:ed;;;:b~y,
I ~----. I(X I I XI J KX I I )

the above cartoon,

(A111wen tomorrow)

S11111rtl•y1t

Junrhlu• HEDGE NIECE LICHEN

DAHLIA

Annu:r; lf'hof tl1e nnu.:l•• y bny u·n• tfoing-lu
a&amp;~oid

one- HIDING

PI \ \ l

I~

33.. "Three"
in Napoli

St. Main star
35. London's
11
The
Sea
Wolf"

'CAPl'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

A WORM lWO FEET LONG

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
· used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all .
blots. Each day the code iettert are different.

1'HAT'5

RiDICULOUS

!

CltYPTOQUOTES
K lKV KTRKFC LKC NRH EGKCHVC
SHE

MHUVY

EGKCHV KVM

0.

·"

-

:

ilV HlNfU AllNO l O ' " " I 008 U £

country
12. One of the
"unmen·
tionables"

.

------'"'"""'------·
.

~t1JMJ1j~® 1kJ ~tGwlLJ -.t4 ,_

measure

Sales

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~:·'

(0 1972 King Feature11 Sy ndicate, Inc .)

_

Z9. African

'ON YOUR DIAL' ·

$MONEY$
Full or

Saturday's Cryploquote: EVERYONE SHOULD KEEP A
MENTAL WASTEPAPER BASKET, AND THE OLDER HE
GROWS. THE MORE THINGS WILL HE PROMPTLY CON- .
SIGN TO lT.-SAMUEL BUTLER

37. CUrrent
38. Complete

1.1{ow
39. Of the ear
fllllny!
40.Former
5. Golfer's
U .N.
problem
secretary10. Fulda
general
tributary U. Asiatic
11. Grapestarling
fruit
13. EconoDOWN
mist
1. Found
Smith
out:
14, Df greater 2. Snake
.size
3. Blissful
15. Warm
existence
up
(3 wds.)
an
4. Pitcher's
engine
asset
1ti. Genera·
5.Exempted
tion
6. Mlller's
17. Wagner·
salesman
ian
7. Devilkin
heroine
8. Zion;
18. German
New
city
Jerusalem
20. Perched
(2 wds .)
21. lndiJ1ence
22. Femmine
suffix
23. Disdain
· 25. Desiccated
26. Melody
Z7. Concludingmusi·
cal pas·
sage
Z8. Metric
land

BfRRY'S WORlD

MOBILE HOMES

ti"u•~w
ACKOSS

For

Wanted

I

. by THOMAS JOSEPH

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Part Time

U~! WI" lH6 WJJ6!

LEGAL NOTICE

"HEll"

•

GASOUNE AILEY

A.

VHNLUVY -

K

YHHM

NLG EGKT EGKCHV . -

IHEYKV

.

'

I

I'

&gt;•

'I

.

�.

a-

.

~

..... '

lhe oa111 ~~~~:~port.P~~Y. o .,jlept.J8,J972

•

,~

· •

· . ·

·

'

•

.c~"'

' . ,
! Jt'

' o ~L

,., .

.• P.-.

'li'''r

"-

'I

._,.,

-· ltr
t:

I

"'

•

'

,..~ ,

•&gt;

,

./!

...

..
'

Get
Results!
Senti~el:.: Cl8ssifieds\_· Get Ac.t@rt'! '~IIti~t{;lassifieds
.
.
.
local Bowling ·
· . . . . ..
s.!vrc~av J~nior L~aoue
1:1!\. 2
. . Pomeroy
IW'
&amp;
iiidl
;~!;;,;~::r;
~:
u
·
sm·
ess
Services
Help Wanted
___
'

t~~!:'•rs .

Pis~ -~ ..·

· · Dromers
· ~Hey Cats·

2
·.2

Api~hes

1

..· High tndivldu~l .Qame
s~•• Bac~net 179.
..
·SI!COI1d t;~ i~ h ·ind,. G•me .--:
Jeff W~r.net ' 1~1: '' . '·
, ·
. Hlg~ Series ,..,·st~ve ;Bachner
.oi78, .

~·.

,:. ,' ... ·:·

:~·.

'

.

Second.High Setl..•-" qndy
Hlndy 4~.
· ··:
.. '
Team Hfgh' Gam~·-'"- lmpaots
878.'
. :- •· :.
·..
Team High Series ~ Impact$ ·
2•16.

•·

Of
QUAliTY .

Motor Co.

··
'
'tt70Ci1l!VROlET.
Monte Carlo, ·loc&lt;&gt;l 1-owner car and less t~n 21,000 miles,
rlew white-w(tfl .tlf'es, radory air cQndltloned, aqua (inish,
.. black vlnyl)op,' disc brakes, po\;l~r steering, .turbohydr,amatl~: · radio, wheel coyers, truly luxury and .
. PRICED TO: SUIT!
197i .PtNTO FORO .
·.
.
.
sms
Q - ~.oor, tacal i-owner, low mileage, ,good tt~es c ~lean · ln·
terlor; green finish, radio, 1000cc engine, .4 speed :
··
· 197.0CAMAR.O· . . . . ·' · . .
$2295
HardtoP, couPe&gt;lo&lt;!al ·lt&gt;W. mileage, t-owner car, JSO V-B
engine, 4 _speed· transmission, power steering, (not
tee-nage driven). green vinyl bucket ·seats, cOnsole, rear
air
~flee tor,.sharp green
is ttie word!'
.
. finish, radio. Sharp
.

..

'

.

'

'

.

..

,. .

'\.

.

.

TH ' DADBURN TERMITES
ARE ABOUT TO WRECK
MV 01\DBURN HOUSE,
MIZ LEDBETTER

'

·B·· ·.

9 17-3tp
HAYE iml)iedia te opening for ·
.
.
pari time ollice girl ; lyping POODLIO -puppies,' Sliver toy,
. one992·
·essenli&lt;&gt;l. shorthand . helpful
Par k v1ew
· Kenne Is, Ph
5443.
but' not re~ulr,ed ; Write Box
8-t's.lfr
729-A, c-oThe.' Daily Sentinel,
Pon\eroy, Ohio 45769, giving
Nil resUme wi.lh references, APPL·ES, . Fil ~palrlck Orpi-evious empl_
oyment, · and· .. ch~~ds ,. Sta·te Route '689.
training·.
·
PhOilll ·: Wilkes.ville ~9;37~5 , .
9-J.tk
B-30-ttc
..
_;,·~-

..

..
;

HOUSEWIFE ~ &lt;&gt;~~epl phone FOR :YOUR hearth'! sake · eat
orders_for"·candy and deliv~r · ·';g,.~lcally grown tomatoes;
c~ndy . .High commission. no
. ·Quisenberry' . has large ·
investment. Car; Phone ones •. IOc pound ollhe old Post
Miss Office building, Syracuse,
neCessary. ·. Write
· Shawn~S Cah(jies, Box 3674, Ohio:
Des Moines, Iowa 50322.
9-17-12tp
9-1,7-41p

EXPERT
. .

.'

Wheel·-Alignment
'5.5.$
On Moit Ame~i-can Cars
~GU.ARANTEED-

Phone 99.2·2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

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

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, la~d ·
scaping. We have 2 $lie
dozers , 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt', top soli. Dump
trucks and low-boy lor hH-e.
See Bob or Roger 'Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 · p.m. or phone 992·

Pomeroy ·Motor·. Co.

F1t£D ! vou've

CAMPUS CLA1TER

~HAVED

YfS.i MORE T~AN HA"F
OUR GRADUATES SPEND Sl)(
MONT~S AT ONE OF OUR I'WE
EUROPeAN CAMPUSES

FOil. T~OSE W~O
TO STUb¥ AT A
KC:A.L.LY DJ FFEO!ENT,
UJol8eL. t 5VAB~5,.

vou

YOUR

1.001&lt;

a=Aw.t

-THERE'S OUJ:t

BEING DROPPED

1HI6 16 Hl6 WAY
OF RESELL ING
PGAINSr CAMI&gt;UG
CONFORMiiY,

FROM 'THE RIOT'
TEAM HURT HIM,
DAP ...

STANFORD-tN·WASI-/!NGTON
PR.OGRAM

WAY-OUT PI.ACJ;

Open8Til5
For Free Estimate
S.lurdoy·. Bantam League .
Monday lhru Saturday
5232 .
•. . .Sept.· 9; . 1971 ..
606 E. Main, Pom~roy, 0 .
PHONE
992-2550
Standings
Bargain Fclr .You!
ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
.Team
. 4.
Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
Ball. Bombers
· SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller SEWING Machine Service,
QP-EM EYES. .a:o0 , .M.
December wit~ the oldest Toy
Red Barons
3
PANTS
JEANS
clean, oil, &lt;&gt;d(ust, $399, in your
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
'f'PMEROY, 0111.0
. Party Plan in the Country.
2
Banana Splits
home ; phone 992-5331.
662-3035.
Highest commissions, No
Pin Busies
2
8-11 -301c
2-12-lfc
SPECIAL
AII ·S tars ·
I
Cash ·Outlay. Call . or write
· Cydones ·
"Santa,'s Parties", Avon Ct.
0
Buy 2 Pairs and
.
O'tlELL WHEEL alignment From the largest
'High Individual Game
Memory
.. WANT A.o s:
06001. TeL I (103) 673-3455.
Get 1 PAIR FREE
located at Crossroads. Rt . 124. Bulldozer Radiator
' BACKHOE AND DOZER work'·
Todd. Ravllings 15l.
INFORMATION
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES .
Complete
front end service,
Sepfic
tanks
installed
.
Georae:
Second High Ind. Game
IN MEMORY of Eugene 'Ebers,
Heater Core.
• DEAD\.INES
9-1-lfc All kinds. all sizes lor men,
(JliH! Pullins. Phone 992-2478 .
tune up and brake serv ice. Sma llestNalhan
Mike Hlndy 1.0.
women, young men, boys
bach · ~he passed _away · . 5 .S P.M. Day Before Publlcatlort. - - - ' - -- - - - - -Biggs
Wheels
balanced elec4·25-tfc
High Series - Mike Hlndy
· years ago today, ·september
and girls. Hurry to
Monday Oeactllne 9 a.m.
HELP WANTED T0 C
Radiator
Specialist
Ironically.
All
work
Canc!tlation - Corrections
·
Y oun 264.
18th: We cannot forget you,
POMEROY
R~,_c.nn::~.hl~
Will
be
aCcepted
until
9
a.m
.
for
.
se!ors.
Santa
Claus
1ust
told
guaranteed
.
Second High Series- Kevin
our loved one so dear, Your
Oa't' of Publication
me, something to tell you.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr. SEE US FOR : Awnings, slonr.
rates . Pho ne 742-3232 or
Yeauger 230.
· memory grows sweeter year
•·
REGULATIONS
He
is
very
busy
,
this
Christmas
Phone
992-2181
J."J.f . fi C
992
-3213.
Red
Team High Game
~fter year .
doors and windows, carPorts.
The· Publisher reserves the
'72;
Bar()(\s 7S5. '·
mar q uees, aluminum 'sldlno.
Dearly loved and sadly right to edit or reject any ads . so · ioin our Playhouse Party
CONCRETE Ph.J92·2174
Pomeroy
Team High Series
Red
ml ..ed by his mother , Mrs . d!emed Ob iec tlonal. The' gang.
4,000 BUSHELS of ear corn,
and railing. ··A. Jacob, sales READY-MIX
dellv~red
right
to
)'Our
BarOns 1452.
$1.25 a bu. at the crib. Harry
representative. For free
Carl E.bersbach, brother. publisher will not be responsibfe. Earn money and Green Stamps,
project. Fast and easy . Free
too:
Pugsley, South Solon, Ohio.
sisters. nieCes and nepheWs . for more than one Incorrect
estimates, phone Charle&gt;
estimates. Phone 992-32U, AUTOMOBILE insurance lieen .
Ph
.
870374.
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V.
V
9-IB-llc Insertion.
•
R·ATES
Give Santa Claus a helping
Goeglein Ready -Mi x Co.,_.
Saturday Senior League
Johnson and Son, Inc .
9-IHic
cancelled'?
Lost
your
•For Wanl Ad Service
hand,
Middleport. Ohio.
Sept. 9, 1972
IN MEMORY of my' dear 5 cents per Word one inser~on This Christmas '72.
operator's licerlSe? can 992-6·30-Hc
Standings
husband. Everett M. Bates
Min imum Charge 75c ·
CA LL Margaret Fortune, 949· 1973 CAMPERS &lt;&gt;nd low profile
2966.
Pis.
Team
wh_o passed away 1 year ago
6-15-Hc
12 cents per word three
5414 or Barbara Lambert, travel trailers, in stoc k ,
5
No.3
Sep tember 18th: Not being . consecutive lnsertloris
446.3411.
lowes t price in tri.state area;
4
No.5
able to say goodbye will
18 cents per ·word sl~ con
9·10-lfc 1972 tra ilers, huge discount .
Real
Sale
WILL CUT or trim trees,
No. 1
3
always bring regrets, But secutlve insertions ..
Camp Conley Starer aft Sales,
rea sonable ; also clean out
25
Per
Cent
Discount
on
pard
·
--No. 6
2
lh0$e who. loved you dearly
Rt. 62, north of Pt. Pleasant
basements,
at tics
and
ads paid with in lOdays .
2
No. •
are the ones who won't forget. ads and
behind Red Carpet Inn.
CARD
OF
THANKS
BABY
SITTER
in
my hom e lor
cellars
;
phone
949-3221.
No. 2
2
Sadly missed by your loving
9-13-7\c
&amp; OBITUARY
3 month old child. Must have
B-29-JOtc
High Individual Game
wife , Eleonore .
$1.50 for SO word minimum .
references. Phone 992-3779.
Peggy O'Brien 178.
-;;P:;;Rc;l:=
C:=E--;C:-;0::-;N:cS;:-:T;:-:R
; -U
;-;-.C T I0 N,
9-18-ltc
Each addjllonal word 2c .
1964 PICK UP lf2. lon , pos it ive
110 Mechanic Street
Second High Ind. Game
BLIND ADS
traction, and Camper , 13 ft .
roofing
,
parch
repa
ir and
Tina Nleri 173.
· .
Additional · 25c Charge per . r------------, aluminum boat tra iler , sold
electri
cal
;
phone
742-4286.
To
Buy
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Advertisement.
High Series - Rick Slobart
8·16-JOtc
as a unit. Also, 1967 BonOFFICE HO\Ill~,
4ol7 • .
WANTED :.... Old upright
·.8:30 a.m_, to S:OO.p .m, Daily ,
nev ille Pontiac (2 door ) ail
NEW
LISTING
Second· High 5!&gt;rles .- Tina
pianos, grand pianos, old 8 : 30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
power. Call after 5 p.m. lor a
'&gt;EW IN G MACHINES . Repair:
115 ACRES - 120 ol good hunting woods . Some saw
Nlerl 441.
look, 992-6256.
pump_or~an . Any condition ~ Saturday.
serv ice. all makes . 992·2284.
timber
.
All
mineral
s.
Good
9
room
home
,
2
baths.
gas
• Team High Game ~ No. I
Paying SIO each. Write giv ing
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
790.
.
Drilled
well.
A
plaC:e
of
privacy.
Large
garden
and
heat.
IN
~~-..,----9-_
IHip
directions. Witten Piano Co .,
Authorized Singer Sales and
plenty of room for the chi ldren, and pon ies. Asking
Team High Series. - No. 6
Box 188, Sardis. Ohio, 43946. Lost
CAIRN TERRIERS, AKC
~ervice . We Sharpen Scissors.
$26,000.00.
2214.
registered, sho ts. Contact
9-15-6\c
3·29-lfc
Clifton
NEW LISTING
LOST - male while P&lt;lOdle
Phoebe Roberts, Phone 949·
6 ACRES - Dn 124 west. No buildings. Has fence. Asking
Harrisonville area . t&lt;ewara'
3342 or 247-2641.
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
Wednesday Lite
$3,500.00.
3EPTIC TANKS CLE~NED
ottered. Ph one 741-3592.
9-IHic
organs
,
dishes,
clocks.
brass
Mixed league
RE.&lt;SONABLE
rate&gt;. Ph. 446·
106
ACRES
30
acres
of
meadow
.
Balance
In
pasture,
9-12-6\p
.beds. or complete households.
Sept. 13, 1972
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
and other. Good renovated 4 bedroom modern home.
Write
M.
D.
Miller
,
Rt.
4,
16'
CAMPING
TRAILER
,
Standings
Owner &amp; Operator. 1
PHONE 992-2156
Enclosed bath, with larg e utility room . Beaut iful kitchen .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. Notice
Shasta, like new . Phone 985. Pl5.
Team
&gt;-12-tfl
Barn
room
for
6
horses.
All
minera
ls.
La
rge
garage.
6-18-lfc
3849.
PORCH and Yard sale , al lhe
Cassell-Carsey
u
517,000.00
.
Asking
9-7-30tc
corner of 681 and 124 in
Rosenbaum -Meadows
10
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
NEW LISTING
-----Reedsville, starts Sunday,
Hotter-Rawll nils
9
Complete Ser\llce
30 ACRES - Several in cultivation. Gas well. owned by
Sale
Sept. 17, at 10 &lt;&gt;.m. Cider
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
Blakeslee-Hoy!
9
Phone 949 -3821
owner. All minerals . Good fences . 7 room home, bath,
press and pink hoi ida y Employment 1'/ante~
Sewmg Mach ine. Will sell for
4
Moore-Morrow
Racine', Oh io
excellenl aua lilv,
some paneling, and ceiling til e. Front porch. Located on
glassware.
sma ll balance of $36.2 1 or
Fultz-Bentley
2 POTATOES,
'C•i
II Bradtord
home
grown
Kennebecs
and
UCENSED
beauti
ci
an
,
1972
good gravel road. Only $15,000.00.
payments may be arranged .
9-17-31c
High Individual Game
5-1-tfc
graduate
of
Meigs
High
Ir
ish
Cobblers,
nice
supply,
991-5331.
Phone
NEW LISTING
Tom Cassell 193 ; Neacll
Vocational Schoo l taguht by
ius! dug . Order within next VIRGINIA's Beauty S&lt;&gt;lon on
9-7- ll c
8 ACRES - On 143. Ha s 3 spr ings. R.E.A. eleclr&lt; c
Carsey_164.
Mrs . Pauline Hysell ; phone
two weeks. Phone 843-2286.
DOZt R and bac k hoe work ,
available. Some good fenc es and tra iler spots. All or a
Second High Ind . Game Su,cess
Road
betw
een
992
6188.
Paul
Sayre,
Porll&lt;&gt;nd,
Ohio,
ponds and septic tanks, dit 8
TRACK
STEREO,
lreight
part.
Dick Rawllngs 189; Lois
·Tuppers Plains and Long
Great Bend Road, Rt. 338, 1
9-17-61c
ching
ser\lice ; top soil, fill
in
beautiful
walnut
damaged,
NEAR
SHOPPING
Rosen~~U!" 154; third- Chuck
Bottom . Open 6 days; some - - - - - mile
betow
Ravenswood
·ferry
dirt,
limes
tone ; B&amp;K Ex console
.
Will
sell
for
S101
.SO
or
Blakeslee 167: Mory M.. Pat
evenings. Ph one 667 ·3041,
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, bath, wood burning fireplace
landing.
caveHng
.
Phone 992 ·5367 ,
pay $1.50 per week. Phone 992H., va. Hoyt 150.
Operator, Virginia Hayman . BLOCK Laying by contra ct. 5331
with bookshelves and built-In· stereo. Gas forced a ir
.
9-18-3tc
Dic
k
Karr
,
Jr
1
!=)hone 992-3364
H gh Series- Dick Rawlings
9-14-30\c
furnace , full 'basement with garage and 3 rooms. Asking
9·1·11C
536; l'jeacll Carsey 448.
just $11.000.00 .
____________9_·_
7·__
121c --------~-------9--7--·lfc
Second High Series - Tom
A BARGAIN
UNION Optical Center has
LENNOX FUEL OIL turnace
Cassell 506; VIrginia Hoyt 415;
P_OME ROY - 2 ni ce bedrooms, bath , living , dining and
switched to the normal winter
with blower and all at third - Roy Holler 503; Lois
Rent
hours as posted on your
ktt chen . Front porch, basement and ut ility bui lding. Nice
lachmenls. Call 985 -3907.
Rosenbaum ~7 .
NOTICE OF
yellow Union discount card. 3 ROOM
lot in back tor garden or yard . Only $5 ,500.00.
apartment , un Team High Game - Cassell ·
9·14-61p
APPOINTMENT
Closed Wednesday. open
NEW HOME
.
ORDINANCE TO
furni
shed,
Case No. 2075_.
408
Spring
Ave
.,
Carsey 627.
Saturday.
VACATE STREET
LARGE
ROOMS
3
nice
bedrooms,
with
larg e closets.
Pomeroy.
Team High Series- Cassell . , Estate Of JANIE ELIZABETH
1971 KAWASAKI 100 excellenl
To '1aco1te 20 tee t alley , from
9-11-61c
Spacious kitchen with din ing area, 1!'1 baths, large ut ili ty,
SNIDER:, Deceased .
Carsey 1777.
8-10-lfc conditi on . Ready to go ,
Ea st Main Street to Ctifh.
Notice is hereby given that
2
car
garages.
AI!
electri
c.
For
only
S25,000.00
.
-Whereas. on th e 17th day ot
sac
r
ifice
for
only
S285
.
Carolyn Janet Reeves, of
HURRY AND BUY NOW WHI LE PROPERT Y IS
J uly. 1972, a peti tion b'r' persons
Coolvi lle 667 -621 4.
Pomeroy , Ohio , has been duly
2 TRAILER spaces in Racine.
REASONABLE . TOMORROW IT PROBABLY WILL BE
own ing lots in the immediate
9-15-12\p
appointed Executrix of the
Al bert Hill , phone 9-49-226 1.
" 'cini t.,. of a 20 f eel allev . ty ing
A
LOT
HIGHER,
AND
SOLD,
AND
YOU
'
LL
BE
Estate
of
J&amp;"nle
Elizabeth
Teach me, 0 Lord, the way
9·14-6lc
be tw een lots ~ 40 and 241 and
WITHOUT . CALL US TODAY .
Snider,
deceued,
late
of
Meigs
of Tl1y statutes and I wil! County, Ohio.
lead ing fr om Eas t Main Street,
COAL, Lim estone, Excelsior
throug h sai d lots toward the
Sail Work s. E. Main St.,
keep it to the end. Give me
Creditors are required to file
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3315
cliff beh ind said toa. was duty
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
AVAILABLE tra iler (mobile
understanding, that I ma~ their claims with su ch fudiciary
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
prese nted to counc il pray ing
hom~) parking space. Inquire
4-11-llc
keep Thy law and obser11e tt Within four month s.
lh al said alley , between the
Dated this 13th day of Sep evenmgs 992 -3429.
------poin ts ncuncd, be vaca ted ; and
with my whole hear I.- tember,
1972 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _9_-1_2-6tp 1970 KAWASAKI Avenger 350, PT PLEASANT - 6 roo m .-----------~ nolice ot the pendancy and
Psalms 119: 3.1, 34.
Manning D . Webster
house, 1112 baths , recreation
pray er ot sa1d petiti on has been
Window,
Judge
•• •
new sprocket , chain, battery
FURNISHED
2
bedroom
new
built
-in
kitchen
,
~
gi
ven as required by law by
room
,
Court
of
C()m
man
Pleas,
and
tires,
S550
;
Robert
Air
Conditioners
To live In the presence of
publ ic at ion in · the Sentine l, a
Probate Div ision
apartment , adults on ly ,
Paulsen , 992·6977 .
must sell, leaving town . Days
CLELAND REALTY
newspaper of genera l ci r
great truths and eternal 191 18, 25 1101 2, 3tc
Middleport, 992 3874.
Hot Water Heaters
phone 992 ·3502, evenings
E M . ,. 1
culation in the co rporation for
9-17-61p
8
laws, to be led by permanent
9-10-lfc
phone 675·2372.
' 0 · am"" ·
Sl)l;
consec utive wee~s ending
Plumbing
ideals-that Is what keeps a
8·30-tfc
Pomeroy
August 28th, 1972, and ,
NOTICE OF
Electrical Work
~92-2259
Wher eas , Cou nc il, upon
man patient when the world
APPOINTMENT
3 AND 4 ROUM furnished an'li MobJ'Ie Homes For Sale
NEW
a
il
electric
home
by
.
.
-..........,,.
.
.,,.,.,,..
hearing
is sati sfied that there is
ignores him, and calm and
Case No. 20,772
unfurnished apartments .
owner, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths·.
good cause for !ouc h vacation as
unspoiled when the world Estate ()f William R . Bail!y
'hone
992-5434.
•,
1970
3
BEDROOM
lolal
-eleclric,
r I
I
M
prayed lor , that it Will not be
trep ace, carpe , near eigs
2 YEARS OLD
detr imental to th e general in .
4·12-tfc J t2 x 60, with expan do living
praises him.-Honore de Bal· Deceased.
Notrce Is hereby given that
High School, $25,000 firm .
l story frame, alum . siding .
terest, ano ought to be made ,
----~~---room and bedroom, excellent
zac, French writer.
Clar!n ce R . Bailey of 119
Phone 992-3183.
Large living with fireplace . now th erefore .
cond
ition
,
price
$7,000;
for
Seever, Springfield. has been
4 ROOM furn ished apartment
9·15-12tc
Kitchen has built.in range.
Be It Ordained by the Co unci!
more Information call West
In 1961, U.N. Secretary duly appointed Administrator
and bath located on Second
double oven, ref . and of lh e:Vil lageof Pomeroy, state
With the Will Anneud of the
Jefferson,
0
.
879-7593.
992
-2448
St., Pome roy ; references
of Oh10,
General Dag Hammarskjold Estate Of William R . Bailey,
9-17-61c 5 ROOM house for sale, one
freezer.
3 large bedroom s,
Section 1· Tha t th e 20 teet
req
ui
red
;
phone
992-5293.
Pomeroy,
0
.
deceased
,
late
of
Middleport
,
third
ac
re
ground
,
front
was killed when his plane
walk
in
closet
s.
Bath
with
al
le
y, lying betw een loh 240 and
9-6-lfc
Meigs County, Ohio .
porch, fu ll basement, S. D.
crashed in Northern Rhodesia .
241
,
from Main s1ree tto the cliff
shower,
ceramic
tile
,
double
Creditors are requ ired to file KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
Bu skirk, 341 Page St., MidMOBILE Home, 50 x 10, '66
con so le lavatories . All be and th e sa me is hereby
their claims with said fidu ci ary
dl eporl.
wigs, more new products
va cuted .
model, Kentuck ian, pi ckup
with in four months .
Sale
carpeted
except
kitchen
and
sec tion 7 That thi s ord inan ce
A thought for the day:
9-IS-31p
co
ming
soon.
For
free
camper,
De
l
Ray
,
Clifford
Dated lh ls 12th day of Sep Utility
room
.
beandr
emain,n force fromMd
bath
.
demonstra
tion,
phone
992
Hil l, Letart Fall s, Phone 247 American poet Wall Whitman tember 1972 .
1969 HONDA Scrambler, 175 cc,
Basement.
Large
level
lot.
after
the
eM I lest period allowed
TWO
hOmes
for
sale;
1
mile
1511.
Manning
0 . Webster
5113.
ph one 991-7016.
·said, "Once fully enslaved, no
$23,000.00
.
by
law
.
MIDDLEPORT.
Nor
th
of
Eastern
High
J udge of
B-17-ttc
9-15-3tc
9-15-3tc
TUPPERS PLAINS
Meigs county
nation, stale, city of this earth
School ; both have bath and a
COU N CIL OF V ILLAGE
Common Pleas Court
half ; 4 bedroom s; b"uilt-in
2 story frame . 4 la rge
ever afterward resumes its
OF POMEROY
Probat e Division REDUCE safe &amp; fast with NEW 1971 Zig -zag sew ing ·cASfj paid lor &lt;&gt;II makes ana.
kitchens and wall -to .wall
bedrooms, dining , living ,
Donald Collins
191 18, 25 1101 2. lt
Uberty."
machine i~ orig inal fa ctory
models of mobile homes . carpet ; c&lt;&gt;l l 985-3598.
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Va p
bath with shower. Cellar.
President of Council
carton
.
Ztg
·zag
to
make
Ph
·,
"wa ter pills" at Nel son
9-17-11\c
Large workshop . 1 acre level A !lest :
buttonholes, sew on buttons.
Qne ar~'-' ~"l'lde 614-423-9531'.
Walton
Drugs .
ground
. On main street. JaneClerk
monograms , and make fancy
4-13-tfcr 5 ROOMS &amp; bath , 2 story block
9-18-11p
Sll ,SOO.OO.
desiqns with tust the twist of a
house; gas forced air furnace,
2 BEDROOM BRICK
· (9) 18 , 25, 21c
single-dial. Left In lay-away r---------:-~
•;, acre lot, Rl. 7 &amp; Old Chesler
MIDDLEPORT
- l'h story .
WILL GIVE away fr ee lor lhe
and never been used . Will sell
• Air Conditioners
Rd. · $5,500; phone 991-3874.
Ca rpeted and pan eled,
moving, used electric range
for on ly $47 cash or credit
8-29-llc
dining room . Level lot.
in Syracuse. Call 992 -3986.
• Awnings
terms available . Phone 992Concrete front porch. Gas
9-18·31c
OUT OF STATE . IDEAL 55641.
··Underpinning
heat. Storage bu ild ing. JU ST
9·17·6fc
ACRE I&lt;ANCH. Lake Con yOU
$7,000.00
.
chas, New Mexico. $2975. 'No
'
ELECTROLUX Vacuum Complete mobile hqm·e
Rl.
I
MIDDLEPORT
down . No interest. $25 per mo .
Cleaner complete with at. serv,ice - plus gigantic
I
story,
3
large
bedroom
s.
for 119 mos . Vacation
tachments, cordwinder and 'display of mobile homes
New bath . New forced a ir
., V tecnnician, must be e~~: ­
Paradi se. Free Brochure .
paint spray. Used but in like always available at ,,
furnace, ni ce kitch en.
perienced, good salary. good
Ranchos Lake Conhas : Box
new condition. Pay $34 .45
benefits, equ.t:l opporlunity
Paneling, ulillly room. Fruit
2001DO , Alameda, California
cash
or budget terms
MILLER
employer . Apply in person or
94501.
room . Large re creation
available. Phone 992-5641.
c&lt;&gt;JI Sears In Gall ipolis, Ohio
room . GOOD AT JUST
8-29-30tp
9·17-61c
446-2770.
$9,800.00.
9-IB-61c
RACINE - .10 roam housr)
r
1220 Washington Blvd.
HENRY E'. CLELAND SR .
BOAT &amp; trailer , Johnson 90 423-7521
bath, basement, garage, two
BELPRE,
0.
REALTOR
horse inboard and outboard
.lots. Phone 949-.013.
'
PHONE 992-2259
Seasport , trailer and boat ,. ' - - - - - - - - - - _ _ ,
4-S·tfp'
good shape; ca ll 992-3371 or
Business Opportunities
:::----~-993 -3889.
Auto Sales
8 ROOM HOUSE, nice l&lt;&gt;rge lor,
9-17-3tc
natural gas, bu llt·ln cabinets
1966 CHEVROLET Impala, 4
Big Capacity
in kitchen. Close to radio
TRY US . YOU ' LL LIKE US dr . sedan, power steer ing,
Maytao
stati on in Bradbury. Phone
brakes,
a ir ·
good select ion of used fur · power
Automatics
992
-2602
.
niture , clean appliances at condit'oned : phone 992·2980 or
2 speed opera non ,
9-14-12\p
LDWEST prices in the area . 992 -6157.
Choi ce of water
KUHL 'S BARGAIN CEN·
9-17-6\p
temps .
Auto.
HOUSE in Long ~oltom , phanf
TER, "at caution light." Rt .
·
water
level
.
control.
Lint
7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Open '69 PLYMOUTH. 4 speed, good : 985-3529.
6·11 -tlc
Filter or Power
to 8 p.m.; closed Monday s. condition; phone 99:2-762.4.
Fill Agllator . ·
Phone: 667-3858.
9-17-6\p
Ptrma-Prtn
9-17·61c - - - - - - - -Auto
Maytog
1967 V.W. SQUAREBACK, lair
H1loot Ht1t
MUST
SEiL,
1v1u
v.w.
deluxe
MODERN Walnul stereo, AM- condition, $450 or best offer ;
· Dryers
"Fo ·mula Vee," dark blue,
FM rad io, 4 speed changer, ..a phone 992-6564.
Surround' clothes
while
Interior;
all
chromo
s~aker
sound
system.
9-17-3tp
Wllh gentle, ·even
Applications now being
~xtras, ' du~l Alpine horns,
Balance $68 .27 . Use our - - - - -- - - - heat . No not apots;
mag wheels, sport Shiller,
taken for men &amp;
hudg et terms . Cal l 992-7085. 1967 CAMARO convertible, 396,
no overdrylng . .
new F-60 RWL !Ires, new
Fine MeSh Lint
9·17-6tc
standard,
new
paint.
Phone
women.
Immediate
muffler, just tuned ; excellent
rmer .
992·5637.
condition; phone 992-7173 or
openings. Must be neat
Wt Speclallttln
MAPLE stereo -radic com .
9· 12·6\p
992-7066 evenings ,
.
MAYTAG
binalion, AM. F M r&lt;&gt;dlo, 4
&amp; dependable. Call
9· 17-3\p
1970
while
Plymouth
4
door,
4
speed
changer,
4
spea~er
Personnel Dept., 9
"WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT7 A lid with lw«es on his
.'.
sound system . Balance $73.45. barrol -alitomollc, air, P.B.
'63
VOLKSWAGEN;
phone
992.
a.m.
to
9
p.m.,
Monday
steering.
Good
condition,
Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
teeth just told mt
VOTE is filing to can(t/
6529,
'
. 992-7085.
$1,475 . Phone 992·5310.
,•.
.
out
MINEr'
.
and Tuesday, 446-0694.
. '
9·17-Jic
I
,
741-4211
9-1Hic
9·15-3tc
Arnold Grafe
Rutland

,.,s.

WELCOME
TO TH'
CLUB

&amp;

ln

1:.

"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Estate For

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

Wanteli

CARRIERS
WANTED

I DON'T MEAN 10 ~E­
RUDE , 13UT ! CAN'T
WORK WHEN ANY·
ONE'S e&gt;NCOPING

I

OVER. MY.
.sHOUlDER!

and
Hartford, W. Va.

- - - -- -

The Daily Sentinel

For

LEGAL NOTICE

For

9 · 19

P'QuiCK, t»l' THE

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

~

/

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
IIAADliHG

'WCC~SS

COMES EASILY TO
'T~AT !W\N. AN"NIE ·"
IT'S ~I&gt;/ "E FACES
1'1 SAS'IfR 1'111\T I
8E 'lliE REAL

L

we·talk.to

like il~·

WMP0/1390

· .,~

lfiS

Unscramble lheoe four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.
Yellerday's Answer
9. Glorify
27. Wind in·
12. Grandiio·
strument
qulzed
29. Merciless
1ti. Anthony
30. Non·
or
meta!Uc
Barbara
element
19. Withered
(var.)
22. Germanic 31. Betel
goddess
palm
23. Reliable
36. New
24. Kind
Mexican
of
Indian
jelly
37. Man's
Z5. Cupola
nickname

ORRUJ

,J)ru
rUJWEY

] I

tniSCEll

1

t

II
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SOUNDS LIKE THEY'~E
FO~

t:IRINKIN&amp; IN JAil.

Now arran1• the circled Jetlert
to form the surprise anower,

aa
]
J
I
I
I
~~===~~~~;:~~·~u~gg~e;•t:ed;;;:b~y,
I ~----. I(X I I XI J KX I I )

the above cartoon,

(A111wen tomorrow)

S11111rtl•y1t

Junrhlu• HEDGE NIECE LICHEN

DAHLIA

Annu:r; lf'hof tl1e nnu.:l•• y bny u·n• tfoing-lu
a&amp;~oid

one- HIDING

PI \ \ l

I~

33.. "Three"
in Napoli

St. Main star
35. London's
11
The
Sea
Wolf"

'CAPl'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

A WORM lWO FEET LONG

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
· used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all .
blots. Each day the code iettert are different.

1'HAT'5

RiDICULOUS

!

CltYPTOQUOTES
K lKV KTRKFC LKC NRH EGKCHVC
SHE

MHUVY

EGKCHV KVM

0.

·"

-

:

ilV HlNfU AllNO l O ' " " I 008 U £

country
12. One of the
"unmen·
tionables"

.

------'"'"""'------·
.

~t1JMJ1j~® 1kJ ~tGwlLJ -.t4 ,_

measure

Sales

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~:·'

(0 1972 King Feature11 Sy ndicate, Inc .)

_

Z9. African

'ON YOUR DIAL' ·

$MONEY$
Full or

Saturday's Cryploquote: EVERYONE SHOULD KEEP A
MENTAL WASTEPAPER BASKET, AND THE OLDER HE
GROWS. THE MORE THINGS WILL HE PROMPTLY CON- .
SIGN TO lT.-SAMUEL BUTLER

37. CUrrent
38. Complete

1.1{ow
39. Of the ear
fllllny!
40.Former
5. Golfer's
U .N.
problem
secretary10. Fulda
general
tributary U. Asiatic
11. Grapestarling
fruit
13. EconoDOWN
mist
1. Found
Smith
out:
14, Df greater 2. Snake
.size
3. Blissful
15. Warm
existence
up
(3 wds.)
an
4. Pitcher's
engine
asset
1ti. Genera·
5.Exempted
tion
6. Mlller's
17. Wagner·
salesman
ian
7. Devilkin
heroine
8. Zion;
18. German
New
city
Jerusalem
20. Perched
(2 wds .)
21. lndiJ1ence
22. Femmine
suffix
23. Disdain
· 25. Desiccated
26. Melody
Z7. Concludingmusi·
cal pas·
sage
Z8. Metric
land

BfRRY'S WORlD

MOBILE HOMES

ti"u•~w
ACKOSS

For

Wanted

I

. by THOMAS JOSEPH

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Part Time

U~! WI" lH6 WJJ6!

LEGAL NOTICE

"HEll"

•

GASOUNE AILEY

A.

VHNLUVY -

K

YHHM

NLG EGKT EGKCHV . -

IHEYKV

.

'

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.

�•• - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sepl.18, 1972

Kitts ·Ifill
Youth Dies

Agenda Heavy in Congress
WASHiNGTON (UP! ) Co ngress, fa cing • heavy
age nda, will attempt to
complete action this week on a
$30.1 billion federal revenue
sharing bill and a 13-year plan
to clean up the nation's rivers,
lakes and streams.
An eff or t will also be made to
brea k
a
long-s tanding
sta lemate on a minimum wage
bill.
The revenue sharing plan
was worked out by Senate and
House conferees last week,
nea rly three years after
President Nixon (irs! proposed
the measure to Congress.
Under the bill, the 50 states
and 38,700 ci ties, counties,

Both houses ·have passed
minimwn wage bills but a snag
developed two ruonlhs ago in
drafting a comprom;•e version
in joint committee.
House conservatives have
blocked the appointment of
House conferees to work out

towns and townships would

sha1·e in the distribution of
fu nds from the federal
treasury over a five year
period . The amount of money
would depend on lhe urbanru ra l makeup of the locality.
i\dininistration officials have
snid the first installments
could be forwarded as early as
nex t month.
The water cleanup bill calls
fo r expenditures of $24 billion
in an effort to eliminate

pollution in the nation's waters
1985. It includes a provision
to fi ne major polluters $25,()()().
a.&lt;Jay for violations.
by

SWIMS 16 MILES
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP!) A 33.year-old housewife
re turned to long distance
swimming Sunday after a 13year· retirement and swam 16
miles against a strong ocean
cur rent in 10 hours, 7 minutes,
26 seconds. She was Carol
SI&lt;Irke who swam from Sea
World al Mission Bay Park ID
Harbor Island.

Frl•ndlr

" No man 's opinion Is better
than the information he

has."

,

The ideal gift at any time of
ye [lr is a Personality

Des;gned KITCHEN. At the
PO MERO Y CEMENT
BLOC K CO. we believe that
ki t chen cabinets should fit
not only the k itchen working
space, but also the person
who will be usi ng them .
Come in and have one of the

" FRIENDLY ONES" help

you plan a kitchen you can
li11e with for years to come.

The House Democratic
leadership , how ever, now
thinks it has the strength to
outvote the conservatives, send
the bills to conference and pave
the way for enactment of a $2
an hour minimwn wage.

M. Scherer, R-Cincinnali, who
guided the measure through
the General Assembly earlier
this year.
"We 're not going after the
person who has a brush with
the law, or even a couple of
brushes; ~ he said . "We 're
going after the person who has
a complete disregard for the
law.''
The current " point'' system
will be retained, with six points
fur major violations such as
driving while intoxicated, hit·
and-run driving or vehicular
homicide ; four points for
reckless driving , and two
points for speeding and olher
infractions.
Unlike under the old law
where a driver has his record
cleaned after two years or
license suspension , the
motorist's record is not erased
Wltil years are up or a five·
year suspension begins.

Ralph L. Estes, 15, Kitts Hill, County deputy sheriff, secured
became Gallia County's an ambulance from a local
seventh highway fatality of funeral home, and returned
with the Injured boy to Holzer
1972 Sunday morning.
Young Estes, who was Medical Center. Later,
fatally injured when he was Deckard was to find out the
struck by a car while riding his Lawrence County boy was his
bicycle on Rt. 141 Friday third cousin (by marriage).
evening, died at 9:20 a.m. Deckard remained with the
Stinday in the Holzer Medical boy overnight at the hospital,
Center.
and returned with the youth's
According to Dr. Donald R. mother Saturday afternoon.
The Gallia County sheriff's
Warehime, Gallia County
Coroner, death was caused by department was praised by
a fractured skull.
local relatives of the youth for
its
efforts under existing
. The State Highway Patrol
emergency
care circumlate Sunday charged James A.
Lane.• 23, Gallipolis, driver of stances In GaUia County.
Young Estes had spent a few
the vehicle, with first degree
vehicular homicide. Earlier he days with his aunt, Mrs. Derry
had been charged with DWJ. (Dottle) Adams, of 355 Circle
Lane, through court-appointed Dr ., Plants Subdivision, less
MRS. FLORENCE TRAINER, Rt. 160, Gallipolis, a retired Gall1a County school teacher,
counsel, Thomas S. Moulton, than a month ago. At that lime,
has a busy and interesting bobby. Mrs. Trainer has just finished making 300 wood fiber roses
entered not guilty pleas to both he wanted to ride his bike
for the retired teachers' meeting scheduled Oct. 4 at Burr Oak. It took Mrs. Trainer about a
charges this morning in home, but 'Mrs. Adams said no,
month to make the favors. A member of the French City Garden Club, she has been interested
Gallipolis Municipal Court . bt.cause of the curving road
in the flower hobby for 20 years. She formerly taught at Green Elementary School in the city
Judge Robert S. Betz will hold between here and Kitts Hill.
school system. Mrs. Trainer is the aunt of Mrs. John (Awilda ) Werner of Middleport.
a hearing at 9 a.m. tomorrow.
ll&lt;Jnd was set at $2,500 on the
He was reportedly enroute to
homicide charge and $308 for the Adams home at the time of
OWl.
the accident Friday. Estes was
The accident occurred on Rt. also a nephew of Mr. and Mrs.
141 near the junction of Uncoln Charles F. Sanders, Garfield
Pike. Estes, traveling east on Ave., Gallipolis.
MASON - Wahama High's the lith annual Band.Q-Rama following: Class A - First Rt. 141, was thrown from his
Funeral arrangements will
White Falcon Band again came Saturday in MariettaUnder the place, Berne Union; second, bicycle onto the hood of Lane's be announced by the Phillips
home with honors in com .. guidance of co-direc tors Paden City; third, Liberty car, then into a ditch.
Funeral Home, Iron ion, after 5
petition with 32 other bands in Gerald Simmons and Charles Union, fourth, Wirl County .
Ken Deckard, a Gallia p.m., today.
Yeago.
Class AA - First, Belpre,
Parade marching and mus1c second, Wahama High; third,
was judged on instrumental Fairfield Union; fourth,
intona tion, general pla ying Shenandoah.
ability, cornering, rank and
Open Class, first, and honor
(Continui!d from Page I )
file,
and
instrument
carrying
.
hand for next year : Grove City, said there were artillery duels with Syrian guns in the Iaraeli·
Padua game. None of the
Eac h band could receive 100 second, Pickerington ; third, occupied Golen Heights. Llssan Al-Hal, commenting on the af.
wounds was seri ous.
Wintersville; fourth , Wads· termath of the 36-hour Israeli incursion Into Lebanon, said the
Mrs. Lee Rodin , mother of points for marching.
In
Class
A,
Paden
City
won
worth High School.
one of the injured boys, said
government had not issued a final casually toll because reports
While the judges were of dead and injured were still arriving In the capital.
she would ask the West Tech first; Berne Union, second ;
Parent-Teacher Associa tion to Liber ty Union , third and arriving at their decisions the
require the games to be played Glouster High School, four th. large audience was entertained
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.- SEN. GEORGES. McGovern
In Class AA, Shenandoah by Columbus, Ohio West High
during the day .
Sunday called on President Nixon to BUSpend AgrlcuJture
"I think the games would be High School at Sarahsville, 0. School's "Buss and Brown" 100 Secretary Earl Butz and other federal officials who look part In
safer durin g th e day with more won first; Wahama Hig h and . member band.
the Russian wheat sales because they allgedly gave Inside Jn..
school personnel around to Belpre tied [or second. Fair·
formation to large grain traders.
APPEALS FOR LOVE
keep an eye on things," Mrs. field Uni on, of Lancaster, Ohio
In a telegram to the President, released by McGovern's
WASHINGTON (UP! ) third .
Rodin said .
In th e open class, Grove City Eun ice Shriver appealed for campaign office In Wasblngtoo, the Democratic IX'esldentlal
Three Avon La ke students
were treated after a fight won first; Pi ckerin gton, ''love, wisdom and com- candidate said Butz had admitted ''that his department supfo llowing the Avon Lake-John second place ; Wintersv ill e, passion" in the world Sunday pressed an Economic Re3earch Service report which would have
Marshall game Friday night th ird and Wadsworth, ;ourth. at a Jewish rally . She spoke to alerted farmers to hold their wheat for higher prices and would
In the evening maneuvers at about 2,000 persons gathered have disadvantaged certain grain traders."
and a 15-year-old boy was
struck by a bottle afler the 6 p.m. in Don Drumm Stadium behind the White House to
SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE marines who today
Cleveland Heights · Valley Wahama presented an out- protest the emigration tax secured another key sector near the Citadel at reoccupied Quang
Forge game, requi rin g 10 standin g performan ce of levied on Jews in the Soviet Tri City, prepared to push farther north. They 11Bld Commwlist
stitches to close the wound continuous precision marchin g Uni on.
resistance was at Its lowest point In nearlY 111ne months. But
to a medley of concert numbers
above his eye.
other Communist troops launched a wafe of attackJ against
COUNCIL TO MEET
in cludin g Valdr es , Cr own
goverrunent outposts aloog the central coast and
strategic
McCoy Helping on Imperial, and British Eight. Ches te r Co uncil 323,
correspoodents
were warned II was not advlaable to try ro reach
Bo th directors were " well Daughters of America, will the area.
Flood Recovery
pleased" with their bands ' meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
U. S. warplanes stayed well away from the Hanoi area
LONG BO'ITOM - Darrell marching saying that com- the hall. Practice will be held Sunday hecaWM! of the release ceremony for three American war
V. McCoy, Long Bottom is one petiti on was very "keen this for balloting and receiving prisoners but flew 330 bombing strikes elaewhere acrOIIII North
sta te and national officers and
of 13 Arm y Corps of Engineer year.''
In the three classes com- quarterly birthdays will be Vietnam, the U. S. command said. One American jet was shot
employes on voluntary flood
down by a surface-to-air (SAM) mlasile and the two crewmen
recovery duly in the Gilbert, peting in the field maneuvers observe d. Potl uck refr esh- were
listed as missing. .
ments
will
be
served
.
the judges aw arded the
W. Va . area
The Corps was called on by
th e Office of Emerge ncy
Preparedn ess for debris
removal and bridge restoration
after the president decla red
four West Virginia counties a
disaster area following floods
of Aug. 18 and 19. McCoy is a
co nstru ction inspec tor normally assigned to the Alum
The Bigger the Mattress the Better the Savings
Creek Lake project the corps
has under construction north of
on these nationally-advertised
Columbus.

News . • . in Briefs

LORAIN, Ohio (UP!) -Two
high school football players
were stabbed by a spectator
when hundreds of fans swarmed onto the field after a game
ended 19-18.
Victor Garcia, 17, a halfback
for victorious Lorain Catholic,
was reported in good condition
today at St. Joseph Hospital
with a stab wound in the abdomen.
Frank Rosalez, 17, an end for
Clearview, was released
Sunday after treatment for a
woWJd on the left thigh.
The Lorain County Sheriff's
Detective Martin Mahoney
said one man was believed to

The Middleport Fire Dept.
answered a call at 6:15 p.m.
Sunday to the Don Roach
residence, Hudson St., where
food in an oven caught fire .
There was minor smoke
damage.
At 8:51 p.m. the squad went
to 591 Broadway for 20-mpnthold Nicki Whitlatch, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Max
Whitlatch, who had suffered a
laceration of the forehead in a
fall. She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated
and released.
MEET THURSDAY
The Rock Springs Better
Health Club will meet Thursday at the home of Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs at 1:15 p.m. Mrs.
James Conkle is in charge of
the program and Mrs. Harold
Blackston of the contest.

By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Buffet .. .

AN EVENING
BUFFO

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
Slo 9: 3Q--S2 .50 all you can eat, lor AI a Carte) .

have attacked both players
Saturday night. He was
grabbed by one of eight
depu ties at the game, but
others on the field wrested the
man away and he escaped .
Two players had been
ejected from the game after a
fight in the fourth quarter.
Athletic officials of both
schools said they would review
the in cident and decide
whether to put an end to the
football series.
A number of similar incidents were reported in th e
Cleveland area durin g the
weekend .
Three Cleveland West Tech
students were stabbed after the
Friday night West Tech-Parma

Invaders

(Continued from Page 1)
said air force planes had
bombed enemy positions in the
northwest Tanzanian town of
Bukoba, 20 miles south of the
Uganda border on the shores of
Lake ViciDria . All planes had
returned safely, he said .
Ugandan President idi
Amin, in his first public
comment today on the fighting,
said Britain was planning to
send troops to Uganda to figh t
alongside the estimated 1,500
invaders who he said crossed
the border fro·m Tanzania
early Sunday .
The Foreign Office in London
denied the charge.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
REVIVAL SET
Monday was 77 degrees under
SYRACUSE - Evange listic
cloudy skies.
services will be he ld nightly at
the Asbury United Methodist
MEET WEDNESDAY
Church here beginning Sunday,
Syracuse Third Wednesday
Homemakers Club will mee t Sept. 24, to Oct. 1 at 7: 30p.m.
Wednesday at 10 a.m. with The Rev. Wendell Stuttler will
be the guest speaker with
potluck dinner at noon. All
specia
l music each eve ning.
homemakers are invited.
Nursery ser vice will be
avu ilable.
CLUB TO MEET
The Winding Trail Garden
CLASS TO DINE
Club will meet at 8 p.m.
The Rev. Bill Perr in's
Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Sunday School Class of the
Allard Pratt . Conservation Trinity Church of Pomeroy will
slides will be shown .
hold a potlu ck supp er at
Globoka r's camp si te Wed·
nesday al6 p.m. Those needin g
transportati on a1·e lo call 992·
(Continued from Page 1)
3777 or 992·2808.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

THE COST OF SLEEPING HAS JUST GONE DOWN

· Twin or Full Size
mallrnsor box sprin1. ~~~ . pc.

reduced from ~9.95 oo $59.95

POWs Free

Wide Menu
Choice

-

Drinks and
Dessert Extra .

Order our regular menu every nlgflt 5 to 10.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Am y Eynon, Syra cuse;
Leo ra Zwilling, Pomeroy;
Homer Searls, Rutl and ;
Robert Neil, Gallipolis.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- William Buchanan, Willa
Jacobs, Dixie Baldwin. Ed·
ward Sanders, Veneva Gilliam,
Paul Hud son, Harrison
Rohinson, Marvin Darst,
Lawrence Harrison, Charles
FaiJ!k , William Slove r,
Ka tllfyn Miller, Linda Lute,
William Hayes, Helen Diener,
Gloria Cross, Harry Swartz.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS James Lawhorn, Mason ; Earl
Werner , Middleport; Pearl
Tonight&amp; 7uesday
Thomas, West Columbia ; Lucy
.Sept. 18·19
Harrison, Clifton ; Robin
SK'tN GAME
Caspers, Middleport ; Ri ta
lTechnicotorl
James Garner
Gaspers. Middleport ; Thomas
Lou Gossett
Gaspers, Middleport ; Mildred
Colorca rtoons :
Barnell, Pomeroy; Mary
Cowardly Walch Oog
Stivers,
Middleport.
Give Me Liberty
Show Starts 7 P. M.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,., Steven Stanley Dorsel Miller.

e---------..

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR

MEIGS lHEATRE

MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
PRETZELS&amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.

You'll be happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629

continues, the suffering of th ~
Vietnamese people will continue, and dissensions and
WJresl in the U. S. will continue, and more American
pilots will be killed and caplured. "
VNA said Gartley "promised
that back home he will make
every effort to end this war and
to gel his fellow pilots
repatriated."
·, The only way to get them all
captured pilots home is end the
war, " VNA quoted Mrs . Weiss
as sa ying.

POMEROY

Twin or Full Size 2-pc. sctl
r«lu&lt;ed fromS 139.90 lo $119.90

2·~ .

Queen Siu: Set
reduced from 3189.9llo

~~~e •59!~ ··"'~'"''""";,,
r. ;,s;,,

Sleep b~ttcr. 0~" posturc·typc. mattress designed to give you the
kind of fi rm. hcnhhful support doct ors recommend . It's easy
on this nntionnliy·nd vcrti scd Scrtnpcdic mattress that's carefully
constructed for years of slee ping comfort . So good looking, too,
wj th a smnrtly·styicd. d~c p·quih cd decorator fl oral pri·nt cover.

Elberfelds lrd FlOor Furniture Department, Pomeroy, 0.

J·pt . .Kina Size Sc'

rtdoced from Sl99.9ll~ $~59.95

LIMITED TIME
ONLY DURING
THI-'APEDIC

.. '
'

$159.95

Cemetery to
Look Better

mtng
ater
•
0
est etgs
The Economic Development
Administration (EDA) and
Cong. Clarence Miller today
announced approval of a longawaited $2,370,700 grant to the
Leading Creek Conservancy
District, based in Meigs
County, for the construction of
a regional water system to
aerve public and private in·
leresis throughout a threecounty area of southeastern
Ohio.
EDA officials advised Miller
that the project will include the
construction of 53 miles of
water line.
According to EDA, the project had received priority
attention by the Nixon Ad·
ministration. Miller praised

· River will also serve as a
source of water for the system.
The Farmers Home Administration (FHA) approved
a $1 million loan for the project
in May, 1971. FHA is presently
reviewing a proposed subsequent additional $1,121,0011
loan for the project. The
request for lbe subsequent
loan, according ID the FHA, is
now under consideration in
Washington, D. C. Review ol
that application Is expected ID
take about two weeks.
The local share In the project
is set at $31,0011. Total cost of
the project Is estimated at over
$4 million.
Representative Miller called
(Continued on page 10)

the Administration and EDA area eventually will extend to
for "Recognizing the econ(lllllc private and public users in
value of this Important western Meigs, Including
Rutland, northwest parts of
project."
The project will supply water Gallia County, and into
to both . residential and Jn.. southern VInton County.
Three wells on property
dustrial users, Including the
Southern Ohio Company's owned by the Ohio Power Co. at
the site of the new Gavin Power
Meigs Coal Mines.
It is expected the service Plant at Cheshire will supply
the system with an anticipated
peak production of 900 million
galloos of water per year. Of
that total, an estimated 600
Partly cloudy today with million gallons will be used
highs in the 71ls in the north and annually by Mslgs Mine Nos. 1
80s in the south. Clear tonight and 2. Over 500 residential
with lows In the upper 50s and cusromers have been listed as
60s. Fair and warmer wed .. subscribers to the system as of
nesday with highs in the upper Mid.JWJe this year.
AccOrding 1D EDA, the Ohio
70s and 60s.

Weather

•

Cong. Clarence Miller, Tenth District, who armounced
approval today in Washington of federal assistance assuring
Immediate construction of a water system serving home and ·
industrial users in western Meigs and parts of Gallia
Counties.

enttne

il' on._ u

VOL. XXV NO. 109

-·

•

at y

e

Falcon Band Wins Honors

Stabbings Mar Grid Games

Firemen Called
I

tl1c difference.

DWI 12-Pointers
In Trouble Now
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A new
law whose backers believe
could save up to 183 lives on
Ohio highways in the first year
goes into effect Friday.
The law, similar to ones in
seven other states, calls for a
six-month suspension of the
driver's license of a motorist
accumulating 12 points or more
for moving violations during a
two-year period.
The driver who accrues 24
points In 10 years is classified
as an "habitual offender" and
loses his license for five years,
and if he is caught driving
during the suspension period
could spend one-to-three years
in prison and draw a $500 to
$2,500 fine.
"The habitual offender
represents a very small
segment of Ohio drivers in
terms of numbers, but a very
large number in terms of highway safely," said Rep. Gordon

'

•

&amp;voted To 17ae lnteratl O'J HW meigs•,.,CJMJR Area
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1972
11

PHONE 992·215b

TEN CENTS

~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--------~~~~------~~==

'Cemetery will be cut, P001eroy Cow;cil told ·lhe cemetery
plots in Beech Grove Cemetery will be cut, Pomeroy Council told
the cemetery trustees at a meeting of the council Monday night.
Meeting with the council were two of the three trustees, Roy
Mayer and Phil Globokar. Mayer told council they had instructed
the sexton at the cemetery ID cut only the lots for which owners
had paid a fee of $5.
The condition of the cemetery has been criticized for some
lime due ID this arrangement because out"&gt;f-town owners were
not aware ofll, or being aware, did not pay.
CoWJcil advised the trustees
In other business Mayor
to cut the lots and bill those Baronick . said that he had
who have not paid the $5. received a letter from the
Mayer told coWJcil it would be clearing house, Columbus,
done immediately.
office that plans for the new
CoWJcil learned that per- village fire station are in order
petual care bonds totaling and approval of a federal grant
$4&gt;,600 matured Sept. 15 and is all that is needed.' The letter
only the interest from the also informed Pomeroy Village
bonds can be used for cemelery to go ahead with plans for the
care . Phyllis Hannessy, construction of a new city hall.
treasurer, said the bonds have
Jed Webster, Police Chief,
been reinvested in federal said a new policeman had been
bonds at 5\'z pel. interest.
hired and sworn in. Council
Mayor William Baronick approved the appointment of
reported $712 In $5 fees had the officer, Ron Jeffers.
been received for cemetery
Several complaints were
. maintenance this year.
heard by council.
Helen Norris also met with
Mrs. Mary VanMeter asked
coWJcil in regard to the con- that council do something
dilion of her cemetery lot. She about the entrance to Ebenezer
explained a pipe had been St. off West Main St.
removed in front of the lot and at Monkey Run. She said
she asked that the lot be it is a dangerous inter·
,restored to its former con- section because In order to
10
dition .
&lt;continued on Page )

Meany Hits

World's Best Flying
Chickens Coming to
International Meet
RIO GRANDE - The First
International Chicken Flying
Meet (ICFM ) will be held
during the Farm Festival at
Bob Evans Farms, Route 35,
Rio Grande, Ohio, starting at
10 a.m. on Oct. 14. "Chicken
Feed," that is, cash prizes, will
be awarded.
This meet, under auaplcea of
newly.formed
International
Chkken Flying Association
(ICFA) was inspired by the
fond boyhood recollections of
Bob Evans. Farm boys for
counUess years have flown
chickens from haylofts, trees,
cliffs, and other places. This
meet will be the first organized
International Meet held under
humane rules and conditions.
The French Division of the
ICFA has already submitted
ill entry, a Houdan Chicken
owned by Phllllpe Simon of

McGovern
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)- incomes of more than $25,0011 a

ICFA Inspired by Bob Evans;
First Meet to be Held under
Humane Rules and Conditions
Paris, lhe France Division
Commander. The Peruvlaa
Dlvlsloa hiS lndleated lbat It
too wlll be enlerlag a
Dlvlsloa Champion, Jack
Chamberlala, Peru Division
Commander announced In
Lima, Peru.
The ICFM will be held under
the direction of the Ohio State
University Department of
Poultry Sciences, Dr. Glyde
Marsh, Professor Poultry
Science, said. Dr . Marsh and
his staff and students will act
as judges for the meet.
The meet is being held to
perpetuate this sport under

INews
. . . -..•. in Br,iefs
. . J.
By UDlted Preu lntemational
WASHINGTON- THE CHAIRMAN OF President Nixon's
Council of Economic Advisers said today eHorts to halt Inflation
and cut unemployment will fall unless Congress adheres to a
!X'Oposed S250 billloo limit on federal apendiJ\g this fiscal year.
If spending Is held down, Herbert Stein told the House Ways
and Means Committee, unemployment can be reduced to the
neighborhood of 5pel. by the end ol the yeat. II now Ia estimated
at 5.6 pet. He said a spending llmll also would lead ID ''progress
on the Inflation front."

WASHINGTON -SIXDEMOCRATICsenatorsmoved today
to bloci President Nixon from reminding 28 mllllon Social
Security recipients- one month before election day -that he
signed the law boollting their benefits by 20pct.
·
The senators introduced a resolution that would forbid the
President from Inserting such a notice in envelopes bearing the
fatter benefit checks that will be delivered Oct. 3. Sen. Frank
Qlurch, 0-!daho, author both of the benefit hike and the
resolution, said the traditional presidential notice was In this
lnatance nothing but a ''narrow, partisan attempt" by the White
House ro claim credit for something It stroogly opposed.
SAIGON - COMMUNIST TROOPS MONDAY lsuncbed
beavy attackJ on the Central Coast against defenders of a district
capital and nearby outposts in South Vietnam's least secure
province, military sources said today.
The U. S. command dlaclOMd that two U. S. Navy airmen
were missing In tbe cra8h olthelr Nl Intruder jet northeast ol
Hanoi &amp;mday only hours before lbe North Vietnamese government released three American prisoners of war In a ceremony In
lhe capital. Spokesmen said the exact location of the crash and
Ita cause were oow known.

LOS ANGELES - LARRY O'BRIEN, national campaign
cllalrman for George McGovern, predicted Mooday ~
prettldenlial electioo would be "one of the clOIIIIII in history" with
callfomla'seelector~ votes the key to victory, O'Brien, former
Democratic National ct.lrman, made ~ predlct10111 In a
ulepbooe oows conference from his office In New York with
reporters In IAe !J!geles.
.
.
"0111' own polling operatioo lhowl that we have been IIIBilng
tdgnifieant progress In the paat two or 111m weeb," O'Brler
18id. "lt lhowl wbat we IIi Itnow -;-that we're In a dlfftCIIlt uphlll
ftchl. SUI it also 8howl it's a winnable fl8ht. that the &amp;ep~n~tlon
be~n Sen. McGovern and Prilttldent Niton Ia not u great u
the Glllup poliJ have lndleated."

OOWMBVS - A RE8TRAIN1NG ORDER wu luued by
Franklin County Qmmon Pleu Court Mondlly aplnat Pay ln
CUb, me., a ~firm wlddl della In caJb dilcount

(Cl • tM oo. Page 10)

humane conditions. All entrants (chickens) will fly under
their own volition . No
mechanical, electrical or
electronic devices are allowed,
Bob Evans, International
Commander, emphasized.
The meet is open to all. Entry
blanks may be obtained by
writing : Gene Haug, ICFA
Promoter, 66 South Sixth
Street, Columbus, Ohio, 43215.
All
persons
entering
chickens in the meet will
receive a copy of the By-Laws
and Rules of Contest of the
association . Automatic charter
memberships in the In·
ternational will also be issued.
There are no en try fees or
membership dues.
Entries must be in by Oc·
Iober 6.

VARS1TY CHEERLEADERS of Southern High School who will be chee~ their team
vdward this Friday night when Eastern hosts the Southern team are, front ID back, Judi
Roberts, Becky Kouns, Roma Nease and Barbara Nease. The girls attended American
Cheerleaders Association Camp this summer for one week at Glenville State College . Sandra
Boothe is the advisor.

AFL·CIO President George
Meany made his strongest
attack yet on Democratic
!X'esldentlal candidate George
McGovern Monday, calllng his
economic policies antilabor
and his backers unwashed
intellectuals and homosexuals.
Speaking to the convention of
the United Steelworkers of
Alllerlca, Meany said the
Democratic Cllllventlon that
nominated McGovern did not
give organized labor Its proper
voice, and instead:
"We listened to the gay lib
people . .. We listened to the
abortion people, we listened to
the people who looked like
jacks, acted like jills and had
the odor of johns."
Reportedly fighting back
against pressures within the
labor movement In favor of
McGovern, Meany described
delegates to the convention as
"the so-called intellectual
elite," saying 39per cent of the
delegates had postgraduate
college experience, and 31 per
cent came from families with

year.
"But the working people are
the backbone of the Alllerican
econoiny, and the working
people will not be bypasled or
shunted aside by the so-called
intellectual elite or any other
elite."
Meany IIBid tbat w~.Ue the
economic policies ol Nixon and·
those advqcated by McGovern
''may differ here and there on
details, they agree on cootrols
and compulsloo for workers,
but they leave the lat.-cat
coupon-cutters alone."
He said McGovern favors
''more guideline on workers'
wages but no controls on food."
The main task of organiZed
labor In the upcoming elections
Bhoilld be to elect friendly
congressmen and senators,
and prevent congress from
being dominated by. the conservatives, he said.
The steelworkers union president, I.W. Abel, joined the
attack on McGovern, denounc·
lng those "who condemn big
(Continued on Page 10)

Three Races, Tax Levies Highlighting Election
Aside from the na tlonal
polllical contest, Meigs
Countians have their own
grassroois reasons to go to the
polls on Nov. 7.
There are three races for
county offices to be decided.
And there are a variety of tax
measures facing voters.
The three races for county
posts are: Ralph Warden Ours,
incumbent, R., against Wllliam
Snouffer, D., for the county
, commissioner term beginning
Jan. 2, 1973; Robert Clark, in·
cumbenl, R., against Joe
Denison, D., for the county
commissioner term beginning
Jan. 3, 1973 and Larry E.

Spencer, R., against Mary
Martin, D., for the clerk of
courts post.
Unopposed candidates are
Bernard Fultz, R., incumbent,
for prosecuting attorney;
Robert H. Hartenbach, R. ,
incumbent, for sheriff ;
Eleanor Robson, R., incumbent, for recorder;
Howard Frank , R., incumbent,
for treasurer; Theodore
Beegle, R., incumbent, for
engineer; Ray R. Pickens, R.,
incumbent, for coroner, and
Manning D. Webster, incumbent, non -partisan, for
probate court judge.
Tax measures to be voted

Gasoline Tax Distributed.
Meigs County towns received
$5,186 as their share of the
gasollne
excise
tax
distributions to counties,
townships and munlcipalilles
wblch totaled $8,235,215 in
September.
According to State AudiiDr

Joseph T. Ferguson, each of
the 88 counties received $30,000
each and townships received
$800 each. Amounts receivoo
by the village( Include Middleport, $1,9li~; Pomeroy,
$1,976; Hacine,."$.398; Rutland,
$432, and Syra~Use, $478.

upon are:
renewal.
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE RUTLAND VILLAGE Permissive auto license tax, $5 Two and one-half mill current
additional license fee on each operating expense levy, five
vehicle owned by a resident of years, a renewal.
the commWJity; a new tax, for
LETART TWP. - One mill
street repair and maintenance current operating expenses,
only.
five years, a renewal.
POMEROY VILLAGE RUTLAND TWP. - One-hall
Two mill mill current mill current operating exoperating expenses levy, live penses, live years, a renewal.
years, a renewal.
SUTI'ON TWP. - One-half
RACINE VILLAGE - Two mill current operating ex·
mill. current operating ex- penses , five years, a renewal.
penses levy, five years, a
OLIVE TWP. - One-half
mill, current operating expenses (cemetery maintenance ), five years, a new tax.
OLIVE TWP. - One-half
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
mill
, current operating exOhio Extended Outlook
Thursday through Salurday. penses (fire protection) , five
Warm with a chance of years, a new tax.
The only county-wide tax
showers and thundershowers
measure
1o be voted upon is a
Thursday. Clearing and
one-quarter
mill renewal levy,
cooler Friday and Salurday.
Highs Ia the 80s Thursday, for operation of the Meigs
dropping to lhe upper 60s and County Community School, a
mid 70s by Saturday. Lows In school for retarded children. It
the 60s Thursday morning is for· a five year period .
Tax measures will be
dropping to the 50s and upper
decided upon in two local
40s Saturday morning.
school districts. These are in

Band Going to Apple Festival
The Meigs Marauder
Marching Band will attend the
Jackson County Apple Festival
Saturday, Dwight Goins,
director, told the Band
Boosters at a meeting Monday
night.
Goins also announ~· that
the band will participate In
competition at West JeHerson,
Ohio, on Saturday, Sept. 30,
and at Manhill Univenlty oo

Saturday, Oct. 14.
Goins displayed raincoats
Buses will leave for West that could be bought for band
Jefferson at 9:30a.m. The hand members. No action was taken
will perform and friends who by the Boosters. Mrs. Ken
allend the West Jefferson · McLaughlin,
president,
Parade will be charged ad· presided.
·mission. He sttld the trip to
The Boosters voted to
Lebanon was ]1. "warm up" for sponsor dances the last
the up&lt;o'!lin&amp; events. The Satur~ay of each month except
Meigs Band j\'as one of two· in December.
bands at LebanOn thai received
Mrs. Don Thomas, chairman
of.workers for the food booth at
a superior rating.

.

Meigs Stadium made an appeal
for help on Friday nights at
home games. Assignments
were made for workers for the
Wellston and Jackson games.
Anyone wishing to assist in the
booth are to call 992-3128.
William Witte ·a member of
lhe Boosters, commended the
band director and his assistant
for the fine work they are
accomplishing. .

. measures. Both areas a.re now
dry. Racine Vlllage will vote on
the sale of beer by holders of C
and D Permits. In Rutland
Township, excluding Rutland
Village, voters wlll decide on
four separate local options
including the sale of malt
beverages and wine and mixed
beverages by the package,
Two areas of the county will which authorize sale for off the
vote on "wet and dry" premises consumption only.

the Southern Local District
where voters will cast ballots
on the renewal of a five mill
continuing levy, and the Meigs
Local School District where a
five mill new tax levy for
• operating expenses, continuing, will be before voters
for the third time.

7 Plead Innocent
By ISABELLE HALL
June 17.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two
All seven men were Indicted
former White House aides and on charges of conspiring to
five other men Indicted in the steal documents and to bug the
break-in of Democratic national Democratic offices.
headquarters pleaded innocent
The defendants along With
today to the charges.
. Uddy and Hunt are: Bernard
The former White House L. Barker, a Miami real estate
aides are G. Gordon Uddy, 42, man; James W. McCord, Jr., a
also was formerly financial former security chief fo'r the
counsel for the Committee to Nixon re-election commfltee;
Re-elect the President, and Eugenio R. Mattinez, an
Howard E. Hunt, M, and who employe of Barker, Crank A.
likewise was formerly coMect- Sturgis, an associate of Bark·
ed with the re-election commit- er's, and Virgilio R. Gonzalez, a
tee.
Miamllockamlth.
Lawyers for Uddy and Hunt Slrrica, In a brief order,
asked a federal judge, at their announced . that he would
arraignment, to release both strlcUy enforce U.S. District
men on their own recognizance, Court rules Involving a widely •
but the government objected. publicized or sensational cue.
Chief Judge John J. Sirrica · They require thaf the court
recessed the hearing unW later may isaue special orders ·
in the day so tbat all seven .governing extra judicial statemen accused in the incident menta by anyorie Involved in
could be interviewed by baU the caae and seating In the
officials.
courtroom ol repor~, plua
The other five men Indicted anything else the coort deems
last Friday by a federal grand appntprlate.
· jury in the alleged buaging of
Uddy, HunI and the five
the Democratic offices were olhers all pleaded "not guilty"
arrested In the headquarters by
pollee early on the mornlnR of
(Continued on Page 10)

·~

I

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