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these wondrous fall ·

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· plants' caroteno'ids

favoring formation of brilliant' red
leaf in numerous cells containing the autiunn co! or ·are warm sunny days
· pigment chlorophyll, which gives the followed by cool nights with tern·
leaf its green color. This chlorophyll peatures below 4.5 degrees F. Much
absorbs energy from sunlight an~ uses sugar is made in the leaves .during the
it in transforming carbon dioxide and daytime, but cool nights prevent
· water to carbohydrates, suchas sugars· movement of sugar from the leaves .
and starch.
From the sugars trapped in 'the leaves
. Along wlth the green pigment, the red pigment called anthocya!'iin is
, leaves also contain yellow or orange formed. Familiar trees with red or
carotenoids -which for example, give scarlet leaves in •utumn are red maple,
,thecarrotltsfamiliarcolor. Mostofthe · silver maple, flowering dogwood,
year these yellowish colors are masked sweetgum, black tupelo or blackgum,
by the greater amount of green northern red oilk, scarlet oak, and
coloring..
sassTafhrads.
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1
But in the . fall, partly because of
e egree o co or may vary rom
changes in the period of daylight and tree to , tree. · For example, leaves
chlinges in temperature, the leaves stop dirde'cUhylexhposed tohethehsudn r;&gt;day fturhn
their food ·making process . The re , w 1 e 1 ose on 1 s a y s1 co 1 e
·chlorophyll breaks down, the green same trees Oi' on other trees in the
color disappears, and' lhe yellowish shade may be yellow. The foliage of
colors become visible and give the some trees species just turns dull
leaves part of their fall splendor.
· brown from death and decay and never
At the same time other chemical shows bright colors.
changes may occur and cause the
ALSO, COLORS ON the same tree
formation of additional pigments !hat· may va~y from year to year, depending
vary'from yellow to red to blue. Som.e of upon the combination of weather
them give rise to the reddish and . conditions. When. there is much warm,
purplish fall colors of leaves of trees. cloudy, rainy weather in the fall , the
such as dogwoods and sumacs.
., (eaves may have less red coloration.
Still others given the sugar maple The smaller amount of sugar made in
its brilliant orange or fiery red and the reduced sunlight moves out of the
yellow. The autumn foliage of some leaves during the warm night. Thus, no
trees, such as quaking aspen, birch, excess sugar remains in the leaves to
and hickory, shows only yellow colors. form the pigments.
Many oaks and others are mostly
With the full bloom of the fall colors
brownish, while beech turns golden rapidly approaching we encourage you
bronze.
to lour the Wayne National Forest. As a
THESE COLORS ARE DUE' to lhe break from the "hustle and bustle" of
mixing of varying amounts of everyday life, not~ing can be m?re
chlorophyll and other pigments in the refreshmg or relaxmg than observmg
leaf during lhe fall season.
thts phenomena of nature on a cool,
FALL WEATHER conditions sunny, fall afternoon.

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PRESENTED TROPHY - Don L. ~tiwrs, 1;;, .on of Mr.
and Mrs. Don F. Stivers, MiddlepOrt, Saturday was
presented a trophy for picking up lhe big 4 split ~i Pometoy
llowling Lanes recently. Young Stivers bowls in lhe Saturday
·senior lea!lue (15 to 22 age group). He Is the.second bowler of
the youth division to pick up lhe rare split. Presenting Stivers
his trophy iB his coach, Betty Smith.
·

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QUEEN JANE ANN KARR AND COURT -Jane Ann . .
Karr, daughter of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Horace Karr, Pbmeroy, Rt. 4,
was crowned homecoming queen of Eastern High School
during homecoming ceremonies at the Eastern-Kyger Creek
football game Friday night. Queen and court are, front row, J.

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Center.
Funeral services will be
conducted today at 1 p.m . at
the Church of Christ in
Christian Union in Point
Pleasant by the Rev. Paul
Chapman and lhe Rev. Gene
Martin. Burial wlll he in Coon
Cemetery at Comfrot, W. Va.

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COLUMBUS - Clark, Boggs,
63, of Columbus, a former
resident of Vinton, died last
week In a Columbus hospital
following an extended illness.
.The son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Jacob Boggs, he was a
World War II veteran, and had
been employed by the
-Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
He Is survived by his wife,
Anna; one son, Clark, of
Miami, Fla.; a daughter, Mrs.
· Arlene Sexton, Jackson ; a
step-son, Milford Stanley .
Jackson ; a· ·step-daughter,
Dorothy, of Florida; 11
grandchildren; four sisters,
Mrs. Ruby Cox, · and Mrs.
Gussie McGuire, both of
Columbus; Mrs. Salley Oiler,
Vinton, and Mrs. Alice Speak·
man, Zanesville.
Funeral services were held

Carol K. Snowden
Park Conlrol
Hottllulldill!l
StconciAvtnuo

Gallipolis

IrATI fUM

A

INn UNCI

STATE

FA~

Insurance Companies

LoneOakCemetery.
A
retired
practical
nurseMrs. Woodyard was born
Nov. 6,1892 at Teuna Vista,
Ohio. a daughter oi the late
Jaeob and Elizabeth Hoobing
Heib.
Survivors include a son;
Richard Woodyard of Point
PleaS&amp;nt; two daughters, Mrs.
Eleanor White of Point Pleas·
and an,dollhs. Dorothy Meeder
of Louisville, _Ky.. five
grandchildren and four great
grandchildren.

r, Jodi Smith and D8vld Yowig; $1!Cond row, 1-r, Nancy
Sexson, Steve Boston, Queen Jane, Randy Wolf, Melinda
·Amsbary, and Bob Grossnickle; third row, Marylu Mills,
Craig Reed, Martie caldwell, Steve Dill, Jan Wilson, and
Mark Mora. ·

She was born June 19,1900, at Walter Haws of Clearwater,
Paintcreek, W.Va ., a daughter Fla., George Haws of
of the late Walter and Martha Brooklyn, Ohio, Thomas Haws
Jane Bonds Farley. She was a of AshtabUla, Ohio, and
member of the Church of God Clifford · Haws of Alexander,
Prophecy Church in Point Ind., five daughters, Mrs.
Pleasant.
Her husband, Martha Whittington of
George Haws, preceded her In · Southaide;-Mrs: Daisy Gardner
death.
of Point Pleasant, Mrs. Juanita
Survivors include four sons, Waggoner of Gall!J)Olis. Mrs.

Charlotte Sanders and Mrs. ;
Frances Miller of Alexander, :
Ind., two brothers, Andy :
Farley of Cheylan, w. va. and :
Sylvestor· Farley of Artie, w. :
Va.;· a sister, Mrs. Flora :
Petery of Dry Creek,:W. Va. 29 :
grandchildren and 18 great :
grandchildren.
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whom she married on Aug. 23,
1913, at Cheshire, and a son,
James E. Sprague, Rt. 1,
Bidwell. Four brothers
preceded her in death .
She spent all her life in Gallia
County. She was a member of
Mrs. ' Richardson the Evergreen Westerman
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. 0 . W. Church and a charter member
(Bertha Eileen) Richardson, of the Springfield Grange. ·
Funeral services will be held
50, of 5730 Sinclair Rd .,
Columbus, 11\ed F~lday mar· 2 p.r;{. Tuesday at lhe Waugh·
ning at 'Riverside Hospital in Halley-Wood Funeral' Home . Ora ~. Hnsrhar
Columbus. She had been ill Burial will be in Prospect
Mrs. Ora B. Hoschar, 77, 545
Cemetery. Friends may call at
since June, 1971.
A registered nurse and a the funeral home from 2-4 and Park Street, Middleport,
Mason County native, died
native of Gallia County, Mrs. 1·9 p.m . on Monday.
Friday in H61zer Medical
Richardson was born Dec. 4,
Center.
1922, daughter of Clark Gillie Tumbleson
Funeral services will be held
Chevalier, Gallipolis, who
today at 1:30 p.m. at the
survives, and lhe late Hattie
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs . Gillie
Middleport Church of Christ in
J. Tumbleson, 89, Rt. I, Crown
Chevalier.
Christian Union. The Rev.
Mrs. Richardson graduated City, died at3 a.m. Saturday in Jack Finnicum and the Rev.
from Gallia Academy High the Cabell·Huntington Hospital
Lawrence Manley will officiate
School, and the Holzer Hospital following an extended illness. and burial will follow in the
She was the daughter of the Riverview Cemetery at
School of Nursing. After ser·
ving the local hospital, she late Alonzo o~~nd Rachel Middleport.
became an Army nurse during Chapman Rossiter. She was
Funeral arrangements are
World War II. She was em· preceded by her husband, under the direction of the
played at a Columbus hospital James, a son, and a grandson. Mason Fogl esong Funeral
at the time of her death.
Survivors include three Home.
brothers,
Lonnie, Ora, and
She married Bill Richardson
Mrs. Hoschar was born May
24 years ago. He survives, as Emmett Rossiter, and a sister, 28, 1895, in Mason County and
do five children, Sandra, Jody, Mrs. Elijah Watson , all of was a daughter of Esla Oliver
Becky, Jeff and Sherri, a Crown City, and five grand and and Virginia .Rollins. Her
granddaughter; and these ll great-grandchildren.
husband died in 1958.
Last rites will be held at I
brothers and · sisters, · Cleo,
Survivors include one son,
Jacob and Paul Olevalier, all p.m. Monday from the Good
Laonard
Hoschar, Centerburg,
of Gallipolis; Joe Chevalier, Hope Baptist Church with Rev.
Columbus, and Virginia Bane, _Raymond Dillon· officiating. 0.,; two daughters, Mrs.
Burial will follow in the church Dorothy Bigelow, Middleport;
Gallipolis.
Friends may call at the cemetery. calling hours will be Naomi Hoschar, Middleport;
Rutherford Funeral Home, held at the F. L. Sievers three sisters, Mrs. Cora Peery,
Worthington, between 2-1 and Funeral Home in Mercerville Sandy, Utah; Mrs. Raynfond
Kennedy, _South Zanesville, 0.,
7-9 p.m. tOday. ServiCes will be after 4 p.m. today.
and
Mrs . Marian Wood,
held at the funeral home ·at
11:30 a.m. Monday. Burial will Woodyard Rites Marion, 0.; two brothers, ·
Kenneth Oliver, Kenton, 0., ·
bt in Columbus.
Mrs. Clara Helb Woodyard, and Jasper Oliver, Gallipolis;
79, of Point Pleasant, died 48 granchlldren and ·eigltt
Lela Sprague
. Friday morning In Pleasant great-grandchildren. ·
GALLIPOLIS - Lela M. Valley Hospital after a long
Sprague, 89, Rt. I, Bidwell, illness.
·
Louise Haws
died at 2 p.m. Saturday at her
Funeral services will be
home. She had been in failing conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at
health the past three months. the Crow Russell Funeral . Mrs. Louis~ Haws, 72, of 2633
She· was born Feb. 7, 1883, in Home by the Rev. Charles S. Lincoln Ave., Point Pleasant,
'cheshire Twp., Galli a County, Thompson. Burial wlll be in died Friday in Holzer Medical
at the. Sperry Funeral Home,
Jackson. Burial was In
Greenlawn Memory Gardens,
Coalton.

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
EVERYBODY LOVES

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INN
SATURDAY NIGHT

long gown·

Matching skirt

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(not shown) •

·10 P.M. • 2 A.M~

COme in and register lor the ..

,,

WHIRLPOOL "SHOPPERS SWEEPSTAKES"

The Amber Lounge Opens At 11&amp;00 A.M.

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37 Gti£ST ROOMS - NEW; .MODERN, QY DAY OR WEEK
PAm AND
BMQUET ROOMS - .BY RESERVATION
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,·, ·

·,

No purchase necessary.

See the 'large select.lon . of .Whirlpool Refrigerators .. . Washers and
. , Dryers and Dishwashers. Available In white · avocado. Harvest gold
r;and .Edged copper:
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ELBERFELDS IN !OMEROY
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o' ~n..-;-....INO)'i!o'o"~u~u~u~n:~"ij$"01:Q"fol"fol,.-folPI:I"
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PHONE 992·2156

Adults' Basic-ed Class
Begins Tuesday Evenzng

a

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES _ Mrs. Richard
Barton, Olester, amassed lhe moat points with her flower
specimens to be lhe .horticultural sweepstakes winner in !he
weekend flower show, "Autumn Magic.', ·

Mostly sunny and cool today
with a chance of showers in
extreme northeast. Highs
today In lhe 50s and low 60s,
Clear and cold. tonight with
scattered light frost. Lows
tonight in the mid 30s and low
40s. Partly sunny and not as
cool Tuesday with hlgha ln the
60s.
TEN CENTS

BEST OF SHOW award atlhe C)1eller Garth~~ Club'1 weekend flower lbow went to Mn.
Roy Holter,standlng, for her exhlbll In the "Autumn Magic" clua. llle Ul8d yellow dahlias,

wisteria vine, corn tasael and ears of com In the interpretive cia liS. The reserve belt of show
. award went to Mrs. Earl Dean, seated, for her colorfui111811S arrangement In a wooden bucket
In lhe "Indian swnmer" class.

T~enagers Hurt ':':'~~::~~7'~ Autumn Magic
Campatgn Plans

In Auto Crash

The fun and adventure thatboys find in CUb Scouting and
Scouting.may arrive tomorrow
night for hundreds of boys in
. the Tri-State Area who want to
be Cub Scouts and Scouts.
School Night for Scouting in
•
selected· local schools is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
" ..
.
Tuesday, Oct. 10, when boys
• and patents are Invited to
The Meigs Local School wish only to satisfy a perso~al come to their neighborhood
·District again is offering a need. Whatever the reason for school , "to join the Scouts.' •
program In Adult Basic enrolling, the "Learning ' Robert Oils, 'School Night
Educa tion. All who want to .Laboratory" ca~ improve your chairman for · the Tri.State
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
continue !heir education are life.
·
·
·
The "P.earning La. bora tory" America, said Addavllle,
eligible
to attend this free
will be housed In lhe Mid· Cheshlre·Kyger, VInton,
c=. claas, called "Learn; dleport Central · School Centerville, Rio Grande,
~ Lablratory," 11 d¢gned Building. It will open Tueaday Wash'ing.ton, Middleport, .
to satisfy a wide ~ange of in· and ·'ffiursday .evenings from Pomeroy, Salisbury, Beale,
dlvldual objectives. Through 6:3Q to 9:30p.m. !nstnlctor for Ordnance, Central, Roosevelt,
. tbe use of special progr~ed the cla11 will be Bill Coffman·. Sllnnyside and New- Haven
· malel'lala, the stullentls able to · lisoiated by: Lela CurtiS. , . elementary school! will be
workathlsownratelnareaBof,. ' The first meeting will be open ~
t
Tuesday, efening, Oct. 10. · "Scou ti~. g is mo,re an
hlaown 'interes.
.
Some l'eiiiOIII for attending Everyone interested in educational than recreational
tbecllllllinlahtillcludea dealJ-e . enrolling · can drop In ·that program,'' · Oils · said·, ·~and
to imprOve re~~dlng, writing, evening ot any evening that the parents find th81 the fun and
and math llklllac Others might, laboratory Ia open. H any in- activities of Scouting all have a
nnt w begin alepl toward tbe formation Ia desired, pleaae basis of character developHigh . School Equivalency call ~ In the' day or •
ment, cltizel!lhlp train~g. and
Eaamlnatlon. Some mlgbl Min the evening.
mental and physical fitness.''
HONOWLU - STRIKING LONGSHOREMEN announced
SUnday night they had reached agreement with one of lhe-major
(Continued on Page 10)

Shop Weekdays 9:30 to' s p.m.
Open Both Friday and Saturday
9:30 to 9:00p.m.

· (Buffet LunGh~n .11:00 to'l: 30~ Monday thru Saturdayl

continuing

Looking on while Nixon
addressed a Washington-area
federation of Italian-American
organizations · was AFL-CIO
President George Meany, a
tacit Nixon supporter. .
In
separate
surveys
published on the weekend, the
New York Times and tbe
Washington fost concluded
after hatlonwlde lnterviewi
with voters and polltical observers that McGovern ap.
Both candidates paid their peared to be trailing at present
respects to Italian-Americans in nearly ·every slate.
SUnday in commemoration of
The Tinoes, which endorsed
Columbus Day, Nixon wilh a McGovern recently, said Nixon
brief speech in Washington .
praising them for exemplifying was "in a commanding
a work ethic which ''made this position all across the nstlon"
and appeared headed for "one
country what it Is."
McGovern called In a state- of the great electoral ·sweeps
d
i in1
American
prest
ent
a
ment for lhe news and en·
tertainment industries to take
more note of Italian-American
contributions to this country
and stop conveying an unba·
lanced picture by highlighting
"a tiny segment" of 'their
number who have been associ·
ated with crinoe.

New,.... Scouts
Invited Out

) Baby doll

issues."

Vietnam War is scheduled for
evening broadcast on network
television. Aides said it would
conform largely to previously
stated views and likely would
contain no surprises.
In the Nixon camp campaign
strategists moved ahead with
an Intensified program of
television spots and expanded
efforts to boost Republican
voter registration.

Two
persons
were
hasp.itaiized following a singlecar accident Sunday on SR 143,
three tenths of a mile north of
By United Press Inlernatloaal
Wolf Pen.
W~GTON- SENATE BUSING FORCES lhls week try · Bradley Steven Kraft, 18,
to beat a deadline for congresslo1111l adjournment and pass over ' Columbus, drove his Yolks·
the opposition of a liberal bloc a tough anti-&lt;~chool busing bill that wagen off the highway on the
was approved by lhe House in August. •
right went another 120 feet and
The Senate scheduled debate on the Issue today, and no one across the highway for 100
disputed lhe claim of Sen. Robert P. Griffm, R-Mich., lhat·there . more feet. His auto then hit an
were probably 55 votes for the bill in the 1IJO.member chamber. embankment, and·turned over
Howev«, Griffin and his forced apparently litcked lhe two-thirds twice while caroming 75 more
majority needed to shut off a liberal~ed filibuster designed to feet.
keep the 'measure from coming .to a vote.
·
Prolonged debate could doom the bill, because congressional
leaders hoped to wrap up business and adjourn for the year by'
lhls weekend. The Senate antibusing bloc hoped for help from
President Nixon, although they had been unable to get Nixon to
meet with lobbyists working for their cause.

Short gown
P·S·M·L

MEIGS

P.M., DINNIRS 5 TO 10 '""· .·

Devoted To The lnterestA Of The Meigs· Maaon Area
MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1972

ews .. in Briefs .

Long robe

2

N~on;

abo-te tbe !ray, scheduled only
one campaign appearance for
the week, a quick trip to
Atlanta.
After a weekend rest and
bouyed by a good reception In
MisSouri and growing crowds
at other stops last week, Me·
Govern headed first for New
York for a Columbus Day
parade. Later stops were
planned during the week in
Michigan, Pennsylvania and
DllnoiB, winding up with three
days of campaigning in
camornia.
Tuesday a taped address
detailing
McGovern's
proposals for ending the

Irresistible: the sugaring of narrow white lace on colors
that know all about what's wild and flattering. The
temptation to collect these pretty nylon
kni ts is too strong:
trx.

a

· "Secoitd, this seems to be
negatlve year with many
candidates attacking their op.
ponents' positions .Instead of
taking a positive stand on the

/

to remaln for the moat part

BY FORMFIT ROGERS

year fQl' the Great stamp
Robbery," he said. "~dy.
'half ivay through the 1972
campaign, the Cl!ffimittee bas
received . more complaints ·
about' members of Congresl
abusing lhelr free mailing
privllege than we received
throughout the entire campaign period ID previous years.

Coast-tO-Coast
•
Canvass Opens
Prealdent

P·S·M·L

~oM~ TO

-------------------------POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

alatea.

New

LUNCHES 11

VOL XXIV . NO. 123

With lhe presidential voting
just four weeks away and new
surveys Indicating he is stlll far
behind, Sen. George S. Me·
Govern - still optimistic embarked today on an In·
tensive coast-to-coast canvass
of vote-rich northern industrial

FORMFIT ROGERS
LINGERIE AND
FOUNJjATIONS

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.99N629

two weeks of lhe campaign,"
Taft said. ''If the present trend
continues, we will ·have a new
high 'in political .Jow blows
during 1972." .
The commlttee handled complaints of violations of the 20.. year-old Code of Fair Cam·
palgn Practices filed by
candidates .or their campaign
aides In races for president, tor
seats In the U.S. Senate and
House and for governorships.
Taft . said there were two
possible reasons for the surge
In complaints.
.
.
"First, this appears to be the

Weath~r

History's first mass attack.
by tanks, ·at Cambrai, France,
in November, 1917, was in·
tended to open up a hole in the
German
lines for
a
· breakthrough by British
cavalry.

By United Press International

HomeOflices:Bioomington, Illinois ,

T~e

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· zrtzer.

Now You Know

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·r------------------..,------ daughter'of the late James A.
and Thena A. Hamilton Moore.
She is survived by her
'1
Area Deaths !I husband,
I
Otho E. Sprague,

· announced that ' a proi&gt;elloro(jriven OV10 "Bronco" anned
recoMaissance plane crashed Friday Into tbe South China Sea
off Da Nang on South VIetnam's northern coast and lhe two
crewmen were missing.
·
Spokesmen said an F4 crew.Sunday sboi down a MIG21lihlle
flying cover for other U.S. planes on bombing missions around
Thai Nguyen. The MIG was hit by 2(krun cannon fire and the pilot
managed to parachute to safety before It crashed. The U.S.
airmen involved In the downing declined to be identified.

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Clark Boggs

SAIGON (UP!)-South VIetnamese troops recaptured a · "'· attack on a truck ,park 35 mil~ norihwest of .Vinh lind
· han\Iet 10 miles north of Saigon from Viet Cong guerrillas but destroyed ai least two piers In raids on.ihe Phuc Loi Navy Base,
Communist ·soldiers clung to at least three other hamlets near six miles northeast of the city, spokesmen said.
the capi!al despite intensified air strikes inclQdirll( BS2 born·
In another major strike, Air Force pilots reported triggering a
ller raids, field reports said today.
nurri~ ¢secondary explosions al)d touchlllg off a major fire in
Answering the threat to the South Vietnamese capital, U.S. a raid on lhe Na San airfield 120mlles west of Hanoi.
commanders ordered heavy bombing missions ove!" North
U.S. spokesmen disclosed that an F4 Phantom was shot down
·Vietnam and concentrated Sunday's strikes around the port of Friday by a SAM missile on a raid ro miles northwest of Hanoi .
Vinh. U.S. warplanes flew 310 tactical air strikes across the The two,man crew was listed as missing. The command also
Norib and.B51&amp;-&lt;Is.reported Sunday-hltwithin 10 mUes .of Vinh
in their deepest raids over lhe North in six months.
·
Military sources said more !han 150 Conimunist troops were
killed Sunday in fighting along the Saigon River north of the
capital, at least one-third of them by air strikes. Four govern·
ment soldiers were known dead and nine wounded in the fighting.
Fighting around the capi!al &amp;mday was reportedly the ¢loses! in
(UPI)-The mlltee said, it had received 21
3\!t years.
·
1972 political campaigns ap. complaints of violation of the
Field reports said goVernment Rangers Sunday pushed pear .to be the dirtiest in recent Code of Fair campaign PractJ.
Conunuilist 110ldiers out of the hamlet of Thanh ·Quy, 10 miles · years, the Fair Campaign ct:s.
''This is more than twice as
north of Saigon on Highway 13, after three days of fighting. The ·PraCtices Collljllittee said today.
many complaints as we re·
highway has been cut at Phu CUong, a province capitall3 miles
Committee spokesmen said ceived at the same poir)t.ln the
. north of Saigon. .
·
·
Military sources said govenunenl militiamen early Sun&lt;illy mid-campaign analysis 1966 campaign year and an
were forCed to abandon an outpost at Phu Trung, 17 miles north' showed the committee had increase of 50 per cent over
of Saigon. The Viet Cong were in control of three.haiulets in lhe handled more complaints 1968, the last presidential
about dirty politics in the first campaign year," said commitsame region, government spokesmen said.
five weeks of the race than tee Chairman Charles P. Taft.
The U.S. command ordered five overnight 852 bomber
were handled during a comTaft said that on the com.
missions as close as 21 miles north of Saigon. A37 "Dragonfly" parable period since the
parable
date in 1970 only 15
and F5 "Freedom Fighter" jets also struck VIetCong positions in committee started keeping
complaints had been received.
marshlartds along the Saigon River.
statistics.
,
"Historically, dirty polltics
Navy pilots touched off 20 minutes of secondary explosions in
Since Labor Day, lhe com. always peaks during the last

. ~:: . .

·

i

Bombers Hold o · Push on Saigon

:~~
, ..

National Forest

1

•

,

colors derive from

BY T. A: WOLTER
District Ranger
IRONTON - Today's article is
written by Lincoln Ruhinen; Lands
Forester on the Ironton Ranger
District.
Now that Jail is here, we
·. enter a most pleasurable time
of the year. This is the' time
~ . when the . leaves are changing
~ color and many families spend their
. , idle hours on a weekend just driving
·through the forested areas in
. . sofulhteastem Ohio to ~iew this splendor
:§' o na ure.
~
As we revel at the beauty of the fall
[ ftuo!ia ge, one hthea~ to wontderha.what acr~
a11y causes
eaves o c nge co10
'-&gt;. and why there are so many different
colors.
Many people suppose that Jack
Frost is responsible for lhe color
change, but he is not. Some of the
·leaves begin to tUrn before we have any
· frosts . According to an Indian legend,
celestialliunters slew the Great Bear in
the autumn, and his blood, dripping on
lhe forests, changed many leaves to
red.
.
Other trees were turned yellow by
' the fat that splattered out of the kettle
as the hunters cook.id lhe meat. Other
peoples had other legends, but we now
know that change In coloring is lhe
~ result of chemical processes which lake
:li place in the tree as the season changes
from summer to winter.
S:
All during spring and summer the
~ leaves ha.ve served as factories where
~ most of the foods necessary for ~e
ees' growth are manufactured. This
food-making process takes place in the

'

.
~:;~cc.O:S:WQJm~mg~x::::-::::::~~

.

Your Wayne ·
r

J

,

Ttme. ~ SemJnel', Suilday.
Oct. a, 1m
.

'

I

'•

A passenger,

carol R. MC·
Dougal, 19, Cheshire, Rt. 2
went through the roof of'lhe car
and was thrown SO feet into a
yard against a stump.
Witnesses said the car was
traveling at a high rate of
speed. Kraft told investigating
officers of the Sheriff's Dept. a
car pulling a camper traveling
in the opposite direction was
acrosS ·the center line and
forced him off.
Kraft and Miss McDougal
were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy E·R squad where
they were admitted. Both are
listed in satisfactory condition.
Kraft was cited to court on
charges of excessive speed. His
car was den.~llshed.
Dale C. Teaford, 28.
Syracuse, was traveling west
on SR 124 Sunday, one mile
west or Racine corp. line, when
a 1$-polnt buck deer jumped in
front of his ca~ and was killed.
There was medium damage
to Teaford's car. Teaford was
not Injured.

~~1~~~:~::.~~~~=r:;

· ventlon, whlcil opens here
today, is expected to outUne
· plans to defeat eflorls to
repeal the state Income tax.
"PTA's view the proposal
to jeopardize the state Income tax as a full scale

Features Show

JUST DON'T CARE
YOUNGSTOWr'
Oblo
(UP!) - J,.awreoco J'Brlea,
aational campaign diftcter
for Sea. GtorJe McGevem,
uld Suaday a recent Gallup
Poll 1how1 that Amerlcau
"simply doa't care" about
poHiical ocandalr.
O'Brien
1ald
tbe
Watergate bu&amp;gi"' lncW,at
was "tbe m011 appelllns
sltualloa by far that hu ever
. b,een seen
Ia
thl1
demO(racy" but 11 bad aol
· been received willl oulrage
by tbe general public. ·
"What tbt Gallup Poll 11
reflecting -· i1 that the
America• people -simply
doa't care about wbetbor
politicians or political
partiea engage In crlmiaal
acts/' O'Brien saki. uAnd
that would •adden anyoae."

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
"Autumn Magic," tlleme of the Chester G•rden Clu~·s
weekend flower show, was resplendently presented In dozena of
elegant arrangements of colorful fall fiowers and a variety of
specimen exhibits and special displays.
The show was In the spacloua recreation building at Royal
emergency/t said Mrs .
Fraakle Ross, legislative Oak Park,ltself a showcase of color In a priBtlne pastoral setting.
One end of the hall was devoted to the theme dlaplay where a
chalnnan of the slate group.
replica of Jack Frost created by Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Oladwell
"If the lacome tax were
was used wllh corn shucks, pumpkins, fall leaves, alllf flowers on
,repealed; many Ohio schools
would face lastaat havoc. I greenery.
.
am cerlalo many good
Mrs. Dorsey BUillgamer of ClrolevlUe judged lhe show orally
districts would aot be able to
Saturday afternoon, using the standard system of ·the Ohio
pas• emergeacy property
Association of Garden Cluba. Four special awardl. .were
ta• lacreases to keep schools Jresented. ,
functioning.''
Mrs. Roy Holter, Five Points, won the "best of show" for ber
''X,~N~.V./O:Ho'/jl~~·
401&gt; ~ '
..• •*
~·-"'·::~~...u....,......x.
arrangement
of
yellow
dahlias
in
the
"Autumn
Magic"
claiiS.
&amp;.&amp;..~1. ;w.rfW:&gt;."@'#.&lt;'~~:::~
tbe
rd f her
Mrs. Earl Dean, Sumner, took
reserve awa or
mass arrangement In the "Indian Summer" cla111.
. STEP·UPURGED
LOCAL TEMPS
The creativity award went t&lt;J Mrs. Reid Young,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
The temperature In down.
president of the Ohio Savings Minersville RD, for a novel miniature of purple asters with town Pomeroy at 11 a. m. .
and Loan Laague lo!lay urged some greenery in a wood and wire container painted In orall8e Monday was 49 degrees under
members to step up their flourescent.
sunny skies.
financing of low cost housing
Winning lhe )lorticulture sweepatakea award was Mrs.
projects and said the league Richard Barton, Olester, who compiled the most points for
could act as a "clearing house" specimen exhibits baaed on the number of rlllbons won.
Veterans Memorial HO.pital
for !hem. ·
(.ConUnued on Page 2)
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Donna Briggs, Pataskala;
William Arthur Orr, Chester;
Nellie Hysell; Rutland; Eldon
OPEN CAMPAIGN
StandardS for judging the Will., Syracuse; Emmett
RACINE -Band directors of and have never been married,
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
the three Meigs County school divorced or had a marriage local' pageant have.. been Bartels, Syracuse; GarY.
Assistant Natural ~ources districta will. make a team to annulled . They will not . outUned by Ralph · H. Werry · Richards, New Haven.
·Director David Meeker begins provide a band for the 1973 graduate prior to May 1, 1973. and Robert R. Sylvester, who
SATURDAY DISCIIARGES
a five-week leave of absence Junior Miss Pageant Nov. 18 at Contestants must have bood head the event.
· - Anna Taylor, JoyL-e Sluon,
today to · actively campaign the .Southern High School.
character, ,possess pose,
Fifteen percent of the · Robert Staats, Margaret
against repeal of lhe state
Cooperating on tbe project . personality, Intelligence, at- judging I&amp; based on scholastic Rudolph, Marvin Oarst, Jolin
Income tax.
will be Dwight Goins, Meigs tractlveness and be well achievement based on a . Houdashelt, Sheila Roush,
carefui review of high school Cl.ovll Doerfer, Daniel Talbott,
Local District; Tom Phillips, groomed.
WINS TITLE
Deadline
for
enterin~·
tbe
·
transcripts of grades and· Marcus Gentry • Martha
·Soutbem Local, and Olarles
~OLUMBUS (UP!)
1973 pageant Ia Oct. a. The college board examlnati0111 by McElroy, Evelyn Bou•.and
Debbie Mohler, 19, of Wills, Eastern Local. The
orientation meeting will qualified educators. Thirty- ~eeUNnD~~~
Columbus, Ind., won the Miss band, composed of students first
be
Oct.
15. Junior Mlsa Inc. · five percent Ia 'based on an
""MISSIONS Columbwi title here dtirlng a frol!j each of lhe 'three high officials will be in schoola this Imerview with the judges when Frances Howery, Albany;
weekend of ColUillbus Day school marching bands wlU week to talk to senior girl!.
the JUdges 'look for a iense of Leora Zwilling, Pomeroy;
provide music for the opening
"~·4vlties:
Prizes for the local pageant .. values, clarity or. expreulon, Njlllcy Ackerman, f'ulwavy1
of lhe pagent, for the poise and
appearance and youth fitness will total over $400 with ·the knowledge' and perception, :r~ ~offman, Pw
DIRECTORS TO MEET
segments and for the crowning Meigs County winner corn· per.sonal appearance and · 8 a~ r::n, '=ari e;
Directors of U1e . Ken Am· of the 11173 Junior Mlsa.
petlng for $2,~ In prizes, ablllty In hwnan relationa.
~~~~ ~ ; ~
sbary Chapter ·of the Izaak · The pageant is open to all scholarships and bonds at the
The pniae and IP!Jear~ .
•
•
Walton League will meet at 7 high school senior gii'ls In Ohio Junior Mlsa Pageant Jan. segment of the PMeant makes =~ani~~'!.
(Cciodalled 011 Pip 1t)
• ..,,_ .. _ .
tonight at the farm.
Meigs County who are single 1$.20 In Mount Vernon.

3-School Band to Perfonn

u';

.......

.-

�•

'

3-ThellBilySentinel,Middleport Pcmeroy,O., Oct. 9,1912
(

The
.. 'Feel of
'the Table'

(Continued from page I)
RlbOO!l winners In the varlous.divlsio!IS of the show,ltsted
first thtouch fourth, respectively, were:
r
ARTISTIC DESIGN
Allen, blue and red
" Autumn
Magtc,u
in
Mums Single bloom, Mrs
terprelahon of the show Ada Holler, blue, red, white
theme Mrs Roy Holter , Mrs and yellow, spray, Mrs
Earl Dean, Mrs Donald Mora, Horace Karr, wh1te and blue,
Mrs. Pearl Mora
Mrs Earl Dean, yellow and
"Woodland Fantasy " , red
weathered wood WIth fresh
Asters Mrs Buel R1den011r,
planl materials /oks Re1d blue
Young, Mrs I B Walker, Mrs
Zonnlas large, Mrs R~er
Dale Kautz and Mrs Rose Gaul, blue. Mrs Purtey Karr,
Ginther
red , Mrs Rose Gmther. white
:'Fall Storm:• an abstracl and yellow. small. Mrs Ros'
des•gn usmg plant matertal m Gtnther, red and blue, Mrs
an unusual way Mrs Re•d
Rochqrd Sarton, white, and
Young, Mrs Roy Holler, Mrs Mrs Roger Gaul, yellow
Earl Dean, Mrs Paul Baer
Mangolds
large, Mrs

'

NOR'I11
• Q 1073

t

.4t

A965
.8642

WIST

EAST

.654
.2
¥KQ!0963 .AJ5
·
t J
t KQ10742
.KQ9
.173
SOUTH (D)
• AKJ98

.872

.A

't83

"lndtcm Summer," featunng

lOS

None vulnerable

Weot

North

Eost

z• z• ••
••
Pass
Pass

3.

Autumn Magic is

the fall colors Mrs Dean,
Mrs. Pur ley Karr, Mrs Roy
Holler, Mrs Donald Mora

1.

South

"Fall of '72/' a modern, free

style, 'deSign Mrs Paul Baer,

Pass
Pass
Pass Pass

3.

Mrs Horace Karr , Mrs Earl

l;)ean, and Mrs Roy Holler

"Autumn Flight," a line
arrangement, ltmited to those

Pass
Openmg lead_. K

who previOusly have never won

a blue robbon
Walker, Mrs

' '

IJirs

I B

Karl Krautter,

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Mrs Purley Karr. and Mrs

Oswald "In compehtlve
situatiqns when each s i d e
has 1ts own §WI and approximately half the h1gh-card
strength no one knows ex·
acUy what he or his oppo,
nents can make In such situations, the wmmng player is
the man w1th that mdefinable
something known as 'feel of
the table' "
Jim : "East could have
jumped nght to four hearts
over North's spade bid, but
East wanted to get to play
at four hearts. Also East
wanted to lind out something
about the enemy strength to
help h1m decide about the
possibility of saving at f1ve
hearts. Therefore, he JUSt b1d
three hearts."
Oswald: "North decided to
compete to three spades and
East went on to the four
beam he bad wanted to bid
from the start."
Jim: "South passed He
had ~ o o d defense agamst
hearts but nothing that
looked like a double. This put
11 right ' UP to North North
knew his partner wouldn't be
hurt at four spades and went
to four spades."
Oswald. "This threw the
baU hack to East. Was North
bidding four spades to make
or as a save• FmaUy, East
decided North was savmg
but East did not double. He
was gomg to be satisfied to
beat the band one trick undoubted wbich is just what
he did."

' Nature Speaks," a favonte

Ror, Moiler

arrangement, also tor non -blue
ribbon wmners Mrs Richard

Barton, Mrs Roy Moiler. Mrs

Gordon Anderson, and Mrs
Karl Krautter

"Fall Madness," a floor
arrangement at least ftve feet

tall Mrs. Roy Holler, Mrs
Wyall Chadwell , Mrs Dale

Kautz and Mrs Paul Baer
"After the Game." '"
terpre1ive for jUniOrs 13 and
over Jamce Holter, Den1se

'l1IE "AUTUMN MAGIC" theme dilpllly d. the flower !!how d. 01ester Garden Club was
outstanding. It featured Jack Frost, created by Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, pictured, and her

-

You, South, hold

?

.AK86 .AlOZ tK5 ... AI64
What do you b1d?

A-One club. You have 19
hi&amp;h card points and lour cords
each in elubs and $pades.

TODAY.S QUESTION
You h1d one dub and your

partner responds one d1amond
What do you do now?
Answ§J:. tomorrow

ENDORSE'.'! MCGOVERN
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
nation's largest Yiddish language daily newspaper, the
Jewish Daily Forward, Sunday
endorsed Democratic
pl"esidentlal candidate George
McGovern and his ruruung
" mate Sargent Shriver
''Our support for the Democratic candidate IS based
mainly on the fact that the
Democratic party, since the
time of PreSident Roosevelt's
' New Deal, has been the party
i which stands by the people, Ill
! contrast to the Republican,
which often serves the mj,erests of big busmess," the
newspaper said

" Surpnse for the Teacher,''

12 and under Eddie Holler,
__h_us_ban_d_wl_th_sym
__bo_Js_o_f_fa~n_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - blue . and Paula Hysell, red
" Fall Weather

Kissinger Warms
Up Peace Pace
PARIS (UPI)-PreSldential
adVlllel' Henry A. KisSinger has
stepped up the pace of Vietnam
peace discuSsions, plaMing a
second day of private pesce
talks with North VIetnamese
negotiators today and possibly
an unprecedented third
straight day of meetings
Tuesday.
The newest pl"ivate talks
marked the 19th time KisSinger
has made the trip to Paris and
the third time U.S. and Hanoi
representatives have
privately m the last 24 days-a
substantial jump in the rate of
nonpublic meetings.

w1th our agreements wtth the
other s1de, I have no other
information to provide you."
Haig met In Saigon last week
with President Nguyen Van
Thleu. Following their
meeting, there were news
reports that Thieu would aoon
step down as South Vretnam's
chief as part of a new U. S.Saigon pesce offer. The White
House labeled the reports

MEXICALI, Mexico (UPI)An assassin killed the son of the
mayor of this border town,
shooting h11n twice with a
p!Siol.
Ricardo Mazon, 21, an attorney and director of the
Mexican-American Institute,
was cut down at hiS desk by an
assailant who walked mto his
office Saturday. Mazon's
father 1s Roberto Mazon
Nor1ega, mayor of this city of
half a million residents,

Forecast,"
1nterpretrve Mrs Robert
Lew1s , W1nd1ng Tra1l Garden

Club, blue . Mrs Nancy Collins,
Walk In Garden Club. red, and
Mrs Ada Holter, Chesler and
W1ldwood Garden Clubs, whole
'
HORTICULTURE
SPECIMENS
Roses Hybrod lea, Paula

Sayre, Mrs tforace Karr, Mrs
R1chard Barton, Mrs Horace
Karr, flonbunda , Mrs Earl

Ingels, blue . Mrs Barton, red
and white
Dahlias large, Mrs Roy
Holter, blue and yellow, Mrs

Clarence Neutzlmg, red and
wh1te, cactus, Mrs Goldie

Wolfe , blue , Mro Clance
Allen, red and yellow, and Mrs
"speculative" and Communist Ada Holter, whole; porn pon,
negotiators in Paris derued any Mrs R1chard Barton, blue, red
breakthrough In achieving a and wh1le, ball, Mrs Clance
peace settlement was immment.

IJ18llltairied siJeDCe aoou ~llllday's meeting, refusing even to
acknowledge the new BeSSIOn
was takmg place. But m
Washington Sunday night,
White House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler sa1d the two
sides had agreed to meet agam
today for a second day of talks
and "possibly a third day"
Tuesday.
Kissinger and the North
Vietnamese met for a lull day
of negotiations on his last trip
to PariS Sept. 2:i and extended
their meeting another day, the
longest session SliiCe the secret
talks began m 1969.
Ziegler said Kissinger's
deputy, Maj . Gen. Alexander
Haig, attended the Sunday
session With Hanoi's special
envoy, Le Due Tho, and Xuan
Thuy, head of the North
Vietnamese delegation to the
weekly Paris peace talks
The extensiOn of the session,
COltling so soon after their last
meetings, prompted
speculallon that some progress
was bemg made. But Ziegler
declined to characterize the
seSSions m any way, telling
reporters : "In accordance

VILLAGE GUN SHOPPE
231 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

Helen Help

· us. • •

Al!d4.1 1,1lt!U

•i .lh\U,J

... ~ 1 .Ll
J!

) •

By Helen Bottel

HOW NOW, LEFTIST, RIGHTIST?
Dear Helen:
I've been wondermg · what's the or1gm of the pobhcal terms
"left" and "right"•- MIDDLE OF THE ROADER
Dear M1d
Says my friend, the political SCience professor "Durmg the
French Revolution, opposing s1des metfor a parlay on the palace
tennis courts. The rad1cals chose the left Side, royalists the right
- and that's how it has been ever since: left for Uberation,
somet11nes violent; right for malntamlng the status quo,
somet11nes oppressively
"Well, anyway," he adds, "It's a good story, and should do
until a better one comes along."
Much better, say I, than White's Political Dictionary versiOn
which offers somethmg dull about European Parliamentary
seating arrangements- extreme conservatives to the far right;
extreme liberals to the far left, while less radical government
leaders cluster toward the center of the room.
Enough of politics. Next question, please ? - H.

+++
Dear Helen :
My supposed fiance and I had a great relatiOnship at f1rst,
but the closer we got to each other physically the farther apart
mentally we became.
Now, the only t11ne we can talk ISm bed. I just don't reach
him on any other level. He gets mad, or acts bored at whatever I
try to discuss.
Shoulil I cool the bed scene for a whlle and see what hap~?
-UNSURE
Dear Unsure
If you cool the bed scene, don 't be surprised at the dlsappearmg act which soon follows. What you've had, my friend, is a
prologue to marriage. It doesn't sound like a Wlllller, so why not
walk out before you're legally !rapped?
· Couples wbo can communicate only wtlh their bodies lead
'
very lonely Uves. - H.

+++

GUNS FOR SALE • BUY .'TRADE
Handguns.
Rifles and Shotguns
Colt
Winchester
Smith and Wesson Remington
Charter Arms
Ithaca
and Others
Browning

ALL TYPES OF AMMO
HOURS:
Monday thru Frid;~y-5 p.m. til10 p.m.
Saturday-9 e~.m. tit 11 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. ti18 p.m.

.

OWNER,
CAROL W.
MANLEY·

Dear Helen:.
My brother was drowned m a boating a'ccident. I can't begin
to tell you the number of times may family and I were brought
down by well-meaning people who asked, "Have they found the
body yet•"
If friends would think before they speak, I'm sure much
misery would be averted. How AWFUL it is to be reminded
there's a body in the fiVer, exposed to the elements, battered,
partially devoured. Each time someone questioiiS, I thl{lk of
having to face it, of knoWlllg my brother must be identified when
found, of how he's out there alone and torn up.
Please pl"int this to let everyone know that sympathy needa
tact. The same goes for accident cases where there Is mutilation
or burning. Don't ask questions! - MOURNING
Dear Helen:
I'm happtly married. Our son Is two l'llOnths old. I love my
husband, but ... Last week while h~ was at work, my ex-fiance
came to se~ m~ . Ed says he doesn't love his wife -It's me he
cares lor.
He talks about the four years we went tosether, and I'm
getting afraid of my emotio!IS. Fred, my husband, is fl(eady,
dependable, kind, but there's excitement in knowing Ed finally
wants ME. can you please help me? -CONFUSED
Dear Con:
.
You can help yourself-by seeing Ed as the opposite of Fred
- unfaithful, changeable, a potential marriage breaker. Then,
be bon~ about how he sees YOU- ("A little more talk and I'll
havehermadei"J -and don't answer hllrql - H.

J

Dean, Mrs Pearl Mora, Mrs

white

R1chard Barton, and Mrs.
Donald Mo&lt;a .
Jun1or

Horticulture

rose,

Nancy Miller, blue and red;
dahlias, Jan1ce Holler, blue for
lar9e. V1ckoe Gaul, blue, red,
whole and yellow for small,

"Time Marches On", plant

LoCal Bowling
Po01eroy Bowling Lonel

preserved plant material, Mrs
Earl Dean, Mrs Rose Ginther,
and Mrs. Roy M1ller

Afncan

VIOlets, Single, Mrs

Karl

Krautter, blue ; African violets,

double, Mrs Krautter, blue,
Houseplants, flowenng, Mrs

R1chard Barton, blue and red,
Mrs Dale Kautz, wh1te, Mrs

Ada
Holter,
yellow,
Houseplants, foliage, Mrs
Paul Baer, blue, Mrs Ada
Holter, red and while, and Mrs
Roger Gaul. yellow
HORTICULTURE
COLLECTIONS
Succulants and.or Cacl1

Programs for Tonight

Buffet," food&amp; for

birds Mrs. Buel Ridenour,
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, Mrs
Paul Baer, and Mrs. Pur ley
Karr

ON EXHIBIT at the show
.was a special display prepared
by Dudley's Florist of Parkers
•burg.
Cook1es and coffee: I(Vere
served •to the vis1tors. Mrs

Paul Baer and Mrs. Horace
Karr were general chairmen

A total of .u persons exh1b1ted
on the show. Elghl of th ~se
were tun lor exhibitors, whlle16
were not affiliated w1th' the
sponsonng club

Veterans .

~?. ··r:Tb Falcons

Quiz

Horse Show Announced

&lt;True, False)

PARKERSBURG
Nmeteen divisiOns in Halter
classes and 23 In Performance
classes Will feature a SEOfLA
approved horse show Sunday,
Oct 15 at Cox's Field, Rt. 2,
G1hon Rd begmnmg at 10 a.m.

Any deceased Veteran,
whbse last period of Service
was tennmated Honorably, IS
ehg1ble for a Government
Headstone to mark his -grave.
(TRUE)
'
2 A Veteran who served
durmg Peacetime IS entitled to
The Daily Sentinel
VA Disability Pens10n If he
OEVOTED TO THE
should become disabled and
INTEREST OF
unable to work. (FALSE) ,
MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTERL TANNEHILL,
3.AWidowofaWarVeteran
E.ec Ed
1s not enlltled to VA Hosp1ial
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
care. (TRUE).
C.Jt';' Editor
PubiiSned dao Iy except
4 A Widow of a war Veteran,
Sttur&lt;tav by The OhiO Vallev
whotsnowre.
ceiViii, gaWtdow's
Pub hsh.ng Company, 111
~
Court St. Pomeroy Ohio, .Pension, and who'!" disabilities
115769 8us1ness Oft1ce Phone
are such that they , reqwre
992 2156. Ed1tor1al Phone 992
2157
regular a1d and attendance of
Second class postage pa1d al
another
person, may be
Pomeroy, Oh 10
N a' 1on a 1 advert 1 s 1 n g
ehgible for an extra allowance
represen tatove Boll,nello
from the VA. (TRuE) '
GAllAgher , Inc 12 East t12nd
St. New York Coly, New York
5 Honorable and General
Subscr lpflon rales
De
Di ha
'tl
11ve-red by carrier where
sc rges gtve enll ement
available SO cents per week , to VA Benefits The VA must
By Motor Route where carroor make a specifiC determination
serv1ce not available One
montn 11 IS By mad on Onoo on. other types of discharges.
and W Va , One year 11~ 00
(TRUE)
-I

SDh months S7 25
Three ~ '-' llh-J 9~);
v • _.
&lt;::•l•'!&lt;...r t."t
21 ~ n n 6 7' " 1
months u so Svbscropllon " ' Nr'f!\;'len~d , 41' a wee"'y
proce oncludos Sunday r .mes
Pubh~
•-··~ ·"" your Me 1
·gs
•I
;&gt;tn t 1 v
Senl,nel
~, og\l'I._..,_"""V
~=======--~=~*:l#l@IINI!P~..
County Veterans Off1ce)
MONDAY, OCT. 9, 1972
7 00 - News6 , TruthorConseq 3, BealtheCiock4, Circus• 13,
lnsoght 33. What's My Lme8 , Sal nilS, Read Your Way Up 33
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, TraffiC Court 10, Episode Action 33,
Parent Game 3, Hollywood Squares 4, Young Dr Kildare 8,
,..

a'-'.d' To'h.'bft()w

.. .

·&amp;·THINGS

S OO - Gunsmoke8,10, RowanandMa•lln'sLaugh.ln 3,4, UFO
6, VD Blues 33
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10, Pro Football 6, 13, Movie "The
' BY PAUL CRABTREE
Beguiled" 3, 4, 15
9 30 - Oris Day 8, 10
What's your favorite show of the new season (If any)?
10 00 - Bill Cosby a, 10
•
10 30 - Concerts In The Lawn 33
Which one do you find you really .can't stand (If any) •
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, News 8, 10, IS
If these two questions start a hot debate around your dinner
11 30- Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movie "To Sir
table, don't hit Aunt Tillie with the gravy ladle, or dump the
With Love" 18; "Palm Springs Weekend" 10
12 00 - News 6
broccoU au gratin down the front of Junior's T.Qlirt.
12 30- Movie "7 Surprises" 1l
The critics can't agree, either- by a long shot.
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
2 00- News 4
Thanks to an annual sampling by Broadcasting Magazine of
2 30 - News 13
the general critical views of the new TV season from as many as
TUESDAY, OCT. 10,1972
6 oo - sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
20major cities. I can tell you that, on most of the new programs,
6 IS - Farm Report 13, Farmtlme 10
thereisanight-and-daydlfferenceofoplllionamongmanyofthe
6 20 _
- Paul
Harvey
13
''" or
cr1'ti cs. Generally, however, th e pa ttern tr ends one w.,,
6 25 Faith For Today 13.
1
6 30- Columbus Today 4, Bible Answer. e. Concern &amp; Com. another
·
,
men I,10
Interested in knoWlllg what the so-called elll'frts think of tqe
66 ss45 - Corncob Report 3
new
programs? Okay,I'Utryto go over them in this column, arld
Fllntstones 13.
700-Today3,4,1S,CBSNews8,IO.News6
possiblythenextone:
' •
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Bullwlnkle &amp; Rocky
Only one new program got uniformly good reviews, Without
13
e oo - Capt. Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 6, 13, Sesame St 33, any dissent - the Julie Andrews Show. No one had anything
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
really bad to say about Miss Julie, and some of the critics "Here
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8, New Zoo Revue 6 ecstatic (It's on CBS Wednesdays at 10)
9 00- Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Romper Room 8, Con·
'
'
.
centraflon 6; Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13, What
• And only one show got nothing but bad reviews: Search (on
Every Woman Wants to Know 3.
NBC, Wednesdays at 10). Not a single crtuc found anything
9 30 - ToTeiiTheTruth3, Jeopard y6; HazelS
redeeming 1n Its quaUUes.
10 ~olu~~sh ~~~oCea~il~~· 6Dick llan Dyke\3 , Joker's Wild 8, 10, ,
(My appraisal: Jufie's great, but can Me keep It up• 1
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Spill Second 13, Jiaven't seen Search, and may not bother to.)
Pnce IS Right 8, 10.
'
•
11 00 - Sale ol the Century 3, 4, 15, Love American Style 6,
The Little People: Four good, four bad, and one il\IXed. (I
Gambit e, 10, Password 13
thoughtthiswowdbeabomb,apparently,it'slfotbad.) , , '
11 30-Hollywood Squares3,4,1S, Love of Llle8,10. Bewitched
Banyan: One good, six bad, one mixed.
' \
f
12 ~·Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's so so Club 4;
Banacek: Five good, one bad. (!liked it v~ry much, rut
Jackie Oblinger 8. News 10, 13.
noted that It dragged a little. Several critics singled out the same
12 25- CBS News 8
fiaw.)
V
no
'
12 ;~- 3W'sGame3, IS, SplltS~cond6; SearchlorTomorrow8,
f:host Story: Three good, seven bad, one mixed.
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13, Irs Your Bel8; Green
Ghost Story? Three. good, seven bad, one mtied. , , ,
Acres 10; Watch Your Child IS.
1.30 - 3 On A Match 3, ~. 15, Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
Bridge! Loves Bernie: Eight good, two bad, one mlxf!i. (I
World Turns e. 10
didn't want to like this one, ootlt's making it, at'leUt b~ lirttib'
2 00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike 'standards.)
Douglass 6, Guiding Light 8, 10.
"'
•
!21tl....
2.30-Doctors3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13; Edge of Night e, 10.
ooreetsof San Francisco: Three good, four bad?,W.fe IJljxed.
3.00- General Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3, 4, IS; ~ove Is (This was the most-divided group of oplnloiiS in t~ iJC/hoae
3· :le~,C:t1,:~~~v~ 6~ 0Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, IS; SO(ret who liked It thought it was socko. Those who (lidh't wllnted to
Storm 8, 10
dump It off the Bay Bridge.)
",l ' 1 '
' I• 1
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3; Somerset IS ; Sesame St 33, Love
The Waltons: Joy of Jo11l Thll program, basecl;on
credible,
~G':;~~~.!,'Y-1~ 013 , Merv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Movie wholesome famlly entertainment, and eaa11y my IIVOI'it.e of !he
4 2s- sports Club 6
season, got 13 raws and ooly two bad reviews. Sevej:al 'crilka
4 30- I Love Lucy 6; Pefflcoat Junction 3, Daniel Boone 13; singled It out Btl the "sleeper" hit of the IJeiiSOII. I cllilldn't a Merv Griffin 8, Andy Griffith 15
.,.5 00 '- Dick Van Dyke 15; Mr Rogers33, Ponderosa 3, 4, Daniel more.
:
' '
Boone 6
Bob Newhart: Four good, two bad, two miJied,,(lf you IJte
s 30- Marshall Dillon 15; Elec Co. 33. Dragnet 8, Gomer Pyle Newhart, tate hope in the fact thatlts filii are raaily he-*" up
13.
....1
6 00- News 3. 4, 8, 10, IS
about lhll.tel.)
·
·•
1
6 30 - News 3, 4, 15, 6, 8, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing
AliDa and the King: Four good, one bad, and four lnilld.
Him Up 33
'
..,.,_ ---'•• _......,., ......,.... ,..._
7 00 - News6, 10; What's My Lines. Elec. Co 20, Andy Griffith ( """ - crlticll to ceaie ip wWI a ·
IS ; Beat The Clock 4, I've Gof a Secret 131 Truth or Con- deacrlptktn-aroplnlon-moreth.nanymtha'fCbldple,) ''•
!5e&lt;1Uences 3; Saint 15
'1111111-"'1-·•-·
I'D", ...._ !"
7 30-MaslerpleceThealre33;T~IslsYOI.ir~llt3, Doctors on
..---·
Call 4, To Tell The Truth 6; Price Is Right a, 10, Beat the
Blltlhii•IIIV" lblt lftha crltkll"vltwa ol]Giir faWitlt
Clock 13
(arllllllll "•"M)Ibowoltlte-TVII lldldD\ft!a'$.JII!Ill'
8 oo- Bonanza 3, 4, IS , Temwatures Rising 6, 13; ~IM a, pea....t ,._. 1 a, jail niB: One to .a )oil wiD Ia•'---.
10, Aile of Anxltty 13
"
8·30- .Ftawall Flve-0 8, 10, Movie "Night of Terror". 6, 13,
-l
Da"llnt America 33
·
+++

f;

tl

1"'.,....., .,....,.. "'"

_..•IIIGI'I•-· ' ' '

l

9 30 - Marshell U. Sports 33, Movle"VIslona"l, 10.
109 oo
00 - NBC
Reports
4, IS, Marcus Wolby, M D 6, 13, Old
Bold Ones
3, 4,3, 15.
Maid &amp; The Thltl 33.
11,00-News, WHihtr, Sporl$3,4,6,1, 10, 13, 15.
11 30- Dick Caveff6; Johnny t:araon 3, 4, 15; VIrginian 8; Movie
"Sweet Bird of YOI.ilh" 10; lllovlt "Sailor ollht l&lt;il'lfl" 13.
11:30- Dick Cavetl6; Johnny Carson3, 4 15; Vlrginltnl.
1.00- Your Healll\4.
1. 30 - Newa, W..lhtr 4. Local News 13.

&lt;IC TIIIU'V DIAL:

~~$iiiii~Eii

WIIJ'at lp.m., ftAZ.TV
' '" lllllk

mebtl,tlaaa

trophy and five nbbons worth
$6, $4, $3, $2and $1. Youth entry
fee here Will be 50 cents, offermg ,a trophy and f1ve ribbons only.
Gate admiSSIOn IS $1. Don
Coe, Alb1on, Ind., has been
signed as judge, and Roger
Cummings nngmaster, with
Jack Radcliff, announcer.
For more infonnation call
Walter Sams ~3, or
Russ Fagan, 304-122-1771.

..,.

Entry fee m the Halter
classes wiD be 50 cents in which
five ribbons wlll be awarded,
and $1 50 in the performance
classes the latter offermg a

United Press International
The last rema1nmg wlnnmg
streak from Toledo's threeyear re1gn as M1d-Amencan
Conference cbamp1ons came to
an end Saturday mght at the
hands of unbeaten Bowlmg
Green.
The Falcons, who reclaimed
flfSt place in the MAC race
With lis 19-8 wm, snapped the
Rockets' 17-game home winnmg streak which dated back
to 1968 and the first Bow ling

Weekend Sports Results
National Hockey League
OHIO COL~EGE
Standings
FOOTBALL RECORDS
By United Press lnlernaltonat
Untied Press International
East
Conference All Games
w I I pis
WLT WL T
Eastern Division
Montreal
1 0 0 2
Bowl
mg
Green
w. I. I. pel. pf pa
1 0 0 2
2 0
3 0 1 Buffalo
Dallas
3 1 o 7SO 81 49
Detro1t
1 0 0 2
Western Michigan
Washongton
Vancouver
1
0 0 2
101311
3 I 0 7SO 85 55
0 10 0
Ohoo Unlv
110 320 N Y Islanders
NY Giants
0 1 0 0
1 '1 0 I 3 1 Toronto
2 2 0 500102 86 Kent State
0 1 0 0
010 310 Boston
St. Louis 2 2 0 500 ,58 69 M1aml
vl'ii'11
til 4b 0in•oOO''':ls 96 1Toledo
020 23Q NY Rangers
JL ~ o•.•o
West
. ''
Big Ten
'
Centrai •Oivlslon '
w 11 pts
Conference All Games
w. I. I. pel. pf pa
2 0 0 4
W~T WLT Ch1cago
Grflln Bay 3 I 0 7SO 76 60
P1ttsburgh
1' 0 0 2
Oh&gt;O
State
1
0
0
3
o
o
Detro11
3 1 o 7SO 104 97
1 1o 2
I 0 0 4 o o Los Angeles
M1nnesota 1 3 0 2SO 86 69 Michigan
Atlanta
1 1o 2
1 0 0 3 I 0
Ch1cago o 3 1 125 75 108 lnd1ana
Philadelphia
o
o 1 1
WISconsm
I 0 0 3 I 0
Western Oivtslon
St
Louis
0
0
1 1
Mich
State
1
o
o
1
3
o
w I. t. p&lt;t. pf pa
0 10 0
100130 California
Purdue
Los Angeles
0 1o o
) 1 0 o 4 o M1nnesota
2 1 1 625 81 65 Minnesota
Sunday's
Results
Illinois
0
1
0
0
4
0
Atlanta
2 2 0 500 111 71
020130 Chtcago S New York Rangers
San Fran 2 2 0 500 98 63 Iowa
Northwestern 0 2 0 1 3 0
New Orleans
Los Angeles 4 Boston 2
Others
0 4 0 .000 54 136
Buffalo 5 Atlanta 3
WLT
American Conference
Ionly games scheduled)
5 0 0
Eastern DiviSion
Ashland
Today's Games
4 0 0
w. 1. '1. pet pi pa He1delberg
I
no
games
scheduled)
4 0 0
Miami
4 0 0 1.000 97 54 Baldwon Wallace
4
0
0
N.Y.Jets 2 2 0 .500122111 De"'son
4 0 0 A m P. r i c a n Hockey League
Buffalo
2 2 0 500 89 92 Bluffton
Standtngs
3 0 1
New Eng 2 2 0 500 66 112 Kenyon
By
United
Press International
3 I 0
Baltimore 1 3 0 250 74 77 Marietta
East
Central Division
Ohoo Northern
3 I 0
w I !pis
Hiram
2 1 0
W. I. I. pc.ppa
I
f
Spglld
2 0 I 3
2 1 0
Cincinnati 3 I 0 7SO 73 54 Wooster
1 1 0 2
Pittsburgh
Findlay
2 2 0 Boston
1 1 0 2
2 2 0 Prvdence
2 2 0 500 82 79' John Carroll
1 1 0 2
Cleveland 2 2 0 500 71 80 Ohio Wesleyan
2 2 0 Rchester
Nova
Scla
0
0 1 1
Houston 1 2 o 333 56 84 W1ttenberg
2 2 0
0 2 0 0
Western Division
Case Western
2 2 0 New Haven
West
2 2 0
w. I. t. pet. pi pa Defiance
w I I pis
2 2 1
Kan City 3 I 0 750 106 68 Dayton
Tidewater
3
0 0 6
I
1
2
San Diego 2 1 I 625 80 85 Akron
I 0 1 l
2 3 0 Bltmore
Oakland 1 1 1 500 65 65 xavier
1 2 1 3
2 3 0 Clvland
Denver
1 3 0 .2SO 78 120 Cincmnal1
Cmcmt.
1 0 0 2
I
2
0
Sunday's Results
Wilmington
0 2 0 0
1 3 1 Hershey
Dallas 17 Plllsbur9h 13
Mount Un1on
0 2 0 0
I 3 0 Richmond
' .Washington 14 Philadelphia o Oberlm
Sunday's
Results
1 3 0
New York Giants 45 New Capital
Clncmnat1 S Prov1dence 2
I 3 0
Orleans 21
Youngstown Stale
Baltimore 2 New Haven 1
0 3 0
St Louis 19 Min~esola 17
Central State
Boston 3 Rochmond 0
0 4 0
Green Bay 20 Chicago 17
Muskirgum
Rochester
4 Cleveland 2
0
4
0
Detroit 26 Atlanta 23
Otterl~in
T1dewaler
4
Hersher, 3
·Los Angeles 31 San Francisco
(onlygameHchedu ed)
7
Monday's Games
Miami 27 New York Jets 17
I
no
games
scheduled)
Buffalo 38 New England 14
San Diego 23 Baltimore 20
By Un1ted Press International
Cincinnati 21 Denver 10
East
Southwest
KanMs City 31 Cleveland 7
Amherst 21 American lnl'l 7
(only games scheduled)
Arkansas 27 TCU 13
Army 26 ,Lehlgh 21
Today's G1mes
Baylor 10 Miami (Flo l 3
Bos Coli 21 VIllanova 20
Grambling
27 Tenn St 18
Oakland at H011slon (night)
Brown 28 Penn 20
(only game scheduled)
LSU 12 Rice 6
Bucknell 23 Gettysburg 0
Oklahoma St 17 Mo 16
Columb1a 0 Princeton o
Pac1fic 17 Fresno St 0
Conn 10 N.H 7
SMU
SS N M Sf 6•
Cornell 36 Rutgers 22
Texas 27 Utah State 12
Dartmouth 17 Holy Cross 7
Texas Tech 35 Tulsa 18
Delaware 27 Lafayette o
Tulane 38 P1tl 6
Harvard 33 Boston U. 14
Hir~m 26 Wash Jefferson 6
West
Indiana 10 Syracuse 2
OHIO COLLEGE
Air Force 52 Col Sf 13
Ma•ne 10 R I. 7
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Amona St 38 Ore St 7
Mass 33 Vermont 14
United Prt1$S lnlernallona I
lewis· Clark 24 Ore Coli 6
Miami
10
J
22
Marshall
7
llllnol$ at Ohio State
Montana 12 Weber St. 7
Trinity IConn ) 25 Bates 0
Kent State at Bowling Green
Montana 51 23 No. Ariz. 9
W Va 4'1 Wm. &amp; Mary 34
Miami al Ohio University
New Mexico 17 Wyoming 14
Yale
27
Colgate
7
Toledo at Western Michigan
Ohio
St 35 California 18
Clnclnnalj at Wichita Stale
USC
Cal
30 Stanford 21
South
Dayton Ball Slate
UCLA
42
Arizona
31
Alabama 25 Georgia 7
Marshall at Xavier
Utah
39
Texas
I
El
Paso) 20
Ala.
St.
13
Fla
A&amp;M
8
Nor them Michigan at Akron In)
Wash 23 Oregon 17
Auburn 19 Miss. 13
Central State at Ashland In)
Dav1dson 10 Appalach. St 10 Wash St. 35 lda~o 14
Deflan~c~ at Bluffton In)
East Carolina 21 Richmond 0
Case WVj!lem at Kenyon
Florida 42 Florida St. 13
Muslclngllrii at Findlay In)
Ga Tech 31 Clemson 9
Hiram li Bethany
Grove City I Pa .) a) John Grambling 27 Tenn St 18
Kenlucky 17 Miss. St. 13
• Carroll 1 '
Louls¥111e
17 Tampa lA
Ohio ~thern lll Anderson
Maryland
23 Wake Forest o
(Ind.) '
Tenn.
38
Meml&gt;bl1
St. 7
Wllml,ggori •' Obel'lln
Saturday Junior LtiOut
Vanderbilt
!OVa.
7
.Wittenblr9 •' Baldwin· Wallace
Soptember :10, 1972
Miclwtsl
Pis
Ball St. 21 Indiana St. 10
t~eldtlber9
lrn~cts
13
·Ohl'c:
.., at Denlton
Bowling GrHn 1J Toledo 8
Bali'Busters
10
Colo. 31 Kansa1 St. I7
•.otiWt\ ~lelia
~ams
6
Mount ion ., Wooster
Ill St. 31 Ean. Ill. 11
Dreamers
Sth
Kansas 34 Minn. 28
tnl nl!lhl geme
Alleches •
S'h
Michigan 35 tMivy 7
IIIIey Cats
s
N.D. 69 Morningside 0
High Ind. Game - Steve
No. Ill. 20 X.vltr (0.) 7
Bachller 177 and Stever
Notre OerM U Mlch St. 0
Bachner and Dick Owen 167.
Ohio U. 21 Clnclnn•tl 14
High Series - Slev• Bachner
'"-"n St. :15 llllnola 17
503 and Kolly Wlnebr•Mer ~.
• Purtlut 24 iOW4I 0
Team High Game - Alley
South Dlllola 21 Drake 23
Cats 894.
So. Ill. 6
6
Tttm High Serlts - R•m•
Win. Mich.
~I St. 12
2502.
Wll, 21 Nat ...... II 14
N a I 1o n 1 I Football League
Slandtngs
By United Press lnternahonal
National Conference

•

Movie " Tarzan Escapes" 13

"sure, that's wbat I'm hoping during the regular season with a single to right. Speedy
for."

Point Wins 20-14

"MemQdes of Sum'mer,"

"B~rd

dressing room at Three Rivers
Stadium here Sunday, Bench
l'eallled the first half Of his
wish already had been
achieved-a 1-1 spilt with the
Pirates at Pittsburgh.

against ~ne 01f the most
Nolan was ticketed to start respected lineups In the major
today against Pittsburgh's leagues, and Nolan's recent
Nelaon Briles, although Cln- arm trouble-caused by an
cmnati manager ~rky An- absc\lssed tooth - apparently
derson said he rrught also go was gooe.
But now Bench was saying with Ross Grimsley If Nolan ' Although the Pirates haven't
that while he "wouldn't even Isn't ready.
scored a run for him in his last
put odds" on a two-game
"I'm looking forward to , 29 mnlngs, Briles owns a !.()
Cincinnati sweep at home, this," insisted Nolan. "I feel regular season record ag8lnst
great. I've been fairly success- Cincinnati and the Reds'
ful against the Pirates. I don't respect.
fear them and I'm sure they
Today's get-together at
don't fear me."
Riverfront follows a pitching
The big righthander was ~ fest in which the Buc'S' Bob
A severe football aliment with a touchdown m each of the
known as fumblehhs was fmal two quarters whlle the
Johqson was supurb, Bruce
Major League Results
blamed for the Me1gs reserves' · Utlle Blacks added their !mal
Kison was as fast as ever,
By Untied Press lnternahonal Ramon Hernandez was at his
26-14 loss to the Pt. Pleasant s1x-pomter m the third period. National
Leaaue Championship
reserves at Marauder Stadium
usual best.lJut "The Moose"
Sophomore quarterback
Playoff
Saturday night.
Cmcmnal1
&lt;100
000
01o5
8
1
was wild That was all the Reds
Lonme Coates ran four yards
Coach Fenton Taylor's l1ttle for Me1gs' f1rst touchdown. Potlsburgh 000 Ill 000- 3 7 1 needed for a four-run f1rst
Billingham, Hall IS) and
Marauders, 'now 1-1 on the Jumor M1ke Hoffman's run for Bench, Moose, Johnson (11, umlng that put game two on the
year, fumbled away the ball the extra points was stopped KISon (6). Hernandez(7).G,us shell
fo(9) and May WP.Hall tP
several t11nes, some rn im- short
Bob Moose didn't even p1tch
Moose HR Morgan.
a third of an mnlng, but the
portant Sltuatjons. Me1gs, who
defeated Wellston 6-&amp; IIllis first
'A mer• can League
stuff that gave him a 13-10
Sophomore tackle Mike
Champ1onshtp Playoff
season and a 2 90 earned run
game, plays at Jackson next Haley scored the Marauders'
Detrool
000 000 000-0 3 1
&amp;!turday night.
!mal Six-pointer when he Oakland
100 040 oox- 5 8 0 average just wasn't there, and
The Pt. Pleasant htUe Blacks recovered an enemy fumble m
Fryman, Zachary (5), Scher the Big Red Machme clanked
man
(5), H1ller (7) and Sims, away.
scored e1ght m the f1rst quarter the end zone. B1g and tough
Odom
and Tenace LP Fryman
and added SIX more m the sophomore fullback Jack Oller
Leltlielder Pete Rose opened
second period to hold a commanding 14-0 edge at the hall.
Me1gs came back, however,

'"

growth Mrs Roy Miller, Mrs
Purley Karr; Mrs Rose 'Gin
_!her.
ill ~ 1

Q-W hat annual sportmg
event m Waslnngton 1s the
only one of tiS kind'
A - The congressiOnal
baseball
game, Republicans
Anderson, red, Mrs . Rose
vs
Democrats,
m June
Gmther, wh1fe, Mrs Roger
Gaul, yellow, for yew, Mrs
Q-What metal IS ltqu1d
Donald Mora , Mrs
Rose
at
ordtnary temperatures'
G1nfher, Mrs. Pearl Mora,
Mrs Earl Ingels, pfotzor, Mrs
A-Mercury
Rochard Barton, blue and red,
Mrs Dale Machler, white, and
Q-Has there ever been
Mrs Earl Dean, yellow
a
perpetual
mot10n device'
Berned and or frUit bran.
A-No, and sc1ent1sts
ches Mrs R1chard Barton,
Mrs Pur ley Karr, Mrs Paul thmk there never \VIII be
Baer and Mrs Pearl Mora
plants

'

' PITTSBURGH (UP!)Jol)nnyBeDChhadawishtoday
aa the Cincinnati Reds
returned home to friendly
Riverfront Stadlwn for the
third game of the National
League playoffa. Starter Gary
Nolan 118ld he'll do everything
pollllble to make It come true.
Munching on a ham sandwich in the RA!ds' jubilant

EDUCATIONI!L
"Gelling It All T.&lt;&gt;gether,l'
flo~o~~er arrang1ng ~ulpment
Mrs Guy Summerfield, blue
"L1v1ng Plclures.'l•Mrs. Roy
M1ller, Mrs Howard Knight.
and Mrs Rose G1nlher

Mrs Paul Baer, blue , Mrs
Richard Barton, red and while,
and Mrs Gordon ~Anderson,
yellow, narrowleaf, Mrs
Richard Barton, blue, red and
wh1te , needled , Mrs Earl
Dean, blue, Mrs Gordon

House

Reds Even SerieS, Return Home

Mrs Paul Baer, blue.
marigolds, VIckie Gaul, blue
Guards Mrs Ada Holter. and red for small, Paula
blue , Mrs Horace Karr, red, Hyoell, blue, Eddie Holter,
Mrs, Richard Barton, wh1le red. and Denloe Dean, white,
for large , mums, OeniStt Deal'!,
and yellow
Plant materials for dried all four ribbons: annuals,
arrangements
Mrs
Earl VIckie Gaul, blue, 'red an~

Lamplighters League
wh1fe, Mrs Roy Holler,
October 9, 1972
yellow , dwarf, Mrs Rose
Slond1ngs
G1nther, blue, while and Team
Pis.
yellow, w1lh Mrs Roger Gaul, Oddballs
23
red
Voss·Dugan
22
Perrenlals
Mrs.
Rose Smith-Nelson
18
G1nther, blue. while and Hllltoppers
12
yellow, Mr~ Roger c;&gt;aul, red. Tyree-RIIchle
12
1
Annuals cockscomb, Mrs 4 Deuces
Tr
9
Ada Holler, blue, Mrs Richard
High Individual Game Barton, red. Mrs Earl Ingels, Fred Ritchie 229 , Maxine
white, other, Mrs Richard Dugan 191
Barton, blue, Mae Holter, red,
Second High lnd Game and Mrs. Dale Machler, white Bill Nelson 217; Mary Voss 178.
and yellow. gladioli, Mrs .
High Series - Larry Dugan
R1chard Barton, red, blue, 601. Maxine Dugan 482.
wh1te and yellow ; snap·
Second High Series - Fred
dragons, Mrs Earl Dean, blue, Ritchie 571; Mary Voss 473
Mrs Dale Kautz. red , Mrs.
Team High Game - TyreeDonald Mora, wh1le and Rifchle 749.
yellow
.
Team High Series - TyreeEverqreens broad leaf. RIIchle 2128.

Television Log

met

de~.S~tliJ:~o-~Y~f-~,
~
eg 01) ' "1!11",..," !M!·

The btddmg has been
w..t North Eost South

Dean, Melanoe Dean, and Lola
Walker

R1chard Barton, red, blue and

Resplendent~

1

. ,,

College Scores

This .Week's
OJUege Games

a

l.ocai Bowling

Sf!L,$
'

Dillion

Jve Morgan followed with
another Single, and moved to
second on Roberto Clemente's
relay to third. Then Bobby
Tolan hit a two-run double and
stopped at third when Bench
followed
with
another
double.
Tony Perez, grateful to a
reluctant fan who almost
refUsed to return his favorite
bat that he accidentally let'fly
mto the stands, drove Bench
and Tolan home with a third
double and Moose took an early
shower w1th the Reds leading 40.
Clncmnati starter Jack Bil.
Ungham held up well until the
Bucs slowly crept up with
smgle runs m the fourth on
catcher Mllt May's RBI
double, m the fifth on
Clemente's scormg sacrifice
and ·~ the sixth on a sharp
smgle by second baseman
Dave Cash.
Morgan cushioned the
Cincmnall lead at ~-3 off
reUever ~mon Hernandez in
the e1ghth.

Playoff
. Schedules

Martin Wants
Suspension

Champ1onsh1p Playoff
Sland10gs
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI)- calmest man m the ball pari!:;
By United Press International
!Best of F1vel
Flaring tempers over the be never had left tbe mound.
Nahonal League
When the Tigers reali&amp;ed
w. I. pel "Bert Campanens mcident" what happened, they came
P1ttsburgh
1 1 500 shot new life mto the American
Cmcmnatl
1 1 500 League playoffs today just runnjng agam. Martin started
Sunday's Result
when the Oakland A's had hollering; Willie Horton 4\ood
Concinnaf1 5 P1ttsburgh 3
almost left the Detroit Tigers in front of the mound with his
Saturday's Result
arms spread, blocking the
Plltsburgh 5 Cm~lnnat1 1
for dead.
Today's Probable P1lchers
With a 5-o triumPh on Blue umpires
Pittsburgh IBroles) at Clncon
But La Grow got thumbed
Moon ' Odom's three-lilt pitnalo INol•nJ , 3 p m
ching Sunday, the amazing A's out anyway.
Tuesday's Game
Pitlsburgh al Cincinnati, 1 30 need only one wm m the three
The rule says an umpire can
pm
possible games m Detroit throw a pitcher out If he thlnb
starting Tuesday to enter the the pitcher threw at a batter
Amencan league
w. I pet. World Series for the first time "mtentlonally." But plate umO.kland·
2 0 1.1100 since 1932 when they were the pire Nestor Chylak Insisted, "I
Detrod
0 2 000
don't know about intention. I
Philadelphia A's.
Sunday's Results
didn't
read his mtnd:
O.kland 5 Delrolt 0
But what Wit! happen now m
Saturday's Results
"1 threw him (La Grow) out
Oakland 3 Detroit 2 ( 11 Inn) the wake of the Campanerls to even things up and keep the
bat-tossing Sunday was anyToday's Probable Ptfchers
crowd In the stands and get t1!f1
No game scheduled
body's guess.
Tuesday's Game
For one thing, Detroit mana- game continued and finllhild
O.kland at Detroit, 1 30 p m ger Billy Martin was demand- without further Incident," O!yIng Campanerls be suspended lak S8ld
Cronin hinted other punishfor the rest of the playoffa
because "he could have killed ments when he said, "I noticed
my pitcher." American three umpires holding Mlrtln
League President Joe Cronin and a couple of other Incidents
promised a ruling ''ll!'Obably out there."
All the uproar detracted
late Monday" on that and on
pitcher Lerrin La Grow of the from a brilliant performance
bf Odom that eventually
!rom lhe two-yard line for one Tigers.
of BG's two touchdowns. Reid
And maybe Martin, who had sealed the 11gers' doom. Ht
Lamport's 39-.yard TD aenal to to be restrained bY three retired the last 16 battel'll In a
Roger Wallace and two Don umpires when he admittedly row in his threeollltter. Cam·
Teylor field goals accounted "went after" Campaner!S, will panerts gave the A's their 11r1t
run In the first Inning when he
for the Falcons' other scores. hilnself draw punishment
singled, stole sec:ond and
Scores OR Pass
What hap]lened was this·
Toleda's only score came on
With the A's leading by their and rode home on Joe lWdl'a
a 26-yard pass from Bruce eventual s-o !ina! score, smgle The A's put the pme
Arthur to Jef(, Calabrese. Joe rellever La Grow served the away wlth a four-run ezp!OIIon
Schwartz gamed 105 yards m 24 first pitch Of the A's seventh that kayoed Detroit starter
carries for the Rockets
umlng low and mside and it Woody Fryrtum in the fifth.
Miles' 37 carries broke the rapped Campaneris on the left
old BG record set m 1952 ankle. At that point, the pepaga mst Bradley by Fred pery Cuban was the star of the
Dung.
game with three hits, two
Q- What ts a taw'
Ohio University sophomore stolen bases, and two runs
A- The marble used as
quarterback RICh Bevly ran scored.
Campanerls rose slowly the "shooter" in the game
lor 141 yard$ and two touchf
downs to lead the Bobcats to a from the dirt, picked up his bat, or marbles
23-14 victory over Cmc1nnati. and fired it overhand directly
Bevly, who also passed for 77 at La Grow-''head high but off
yards, had TD runs of 19 and 9 to the side" was the
yards, while L C LyonS and professional description of
Larry Hummer also ran for OU pitcher La Grow.
scores.
With that both benches
Cmcinnati's two scores both erupted onto the field, Martin
came In the third quarter, after leading the Tigers' charge,
trailing 21-o at halftime, with Three' umpires grabbed
M1ke White gomg in from the Martin, who has been Involved
two and fullback Dick Janies ''lallil\fl!r'all)t'tUI!8 oil liM off the
scormg on a 31-yard screen fle)d over \lie years.
"You bet I was a'tler him,"
pass !rom Mike Shoemaker.
snapped
Martin later. "AnyDayton's Greg Schwarber
kicked 39 and 25-yard field body throws a bat at my pit- ·
goals, his seventh and eighth of cher I'm going after him. He
the season, to provide the could have killed my pitcher.
("I dCIII't Uke Billy Martin
Flyers with a ~ lie with
because he plays tough,"
Southem Illinois
SIU's Gregg Goodman, who commented A's slugger Reggie
also kicked a pair of field goals, Jackson afterward. "I'd
missed a 48-yard attempt pl"Obably love him If I played
wh1ch would have given the lor him. He stands up for his
Saiuk1s v•ctory w1th five player.")
If emergencie•
campaneris, who Ullderwent
seconds left
arise, ia your ,fam·
Northern Illino1s, led by ankle X-rays that proved
ily adequately COY•
Fullback Mike Keller who had negative and said he'd be
ered? Seeure their
118 yards and three touch- "okay" for the rest of the
playoffs,
said,
''That
pitcher
well.being with a
downs, overpowered Xavter 26Just
made
me
mad."
7, htnding the Musketeers
revised policy.
"
Things were just calming
their third loss In five games.
Con~ult U• Soon
Xavier's only tally came on a down when they erupted. again.
one.yard run by Dwight The umpires had signalled
Chapma n after a blocked Campanerls was thrown out,
Northern punt and a pass in- and 'then they advanced tow:ard
the mound to give the same
terference penslty
Demson's Ed Exler, the word to La Grow-probably the
leadmg rusher among the Ohio
Conlerence teams, exploded
By the Popular Success of Our Noon
lor 240 yards and lhree touchdowns to lead the B•g Red to a
44-0 rout of Cap1ial
Buffet .
In other games involving
Ohw Conference teams,
Muskingum dropPed - a 23-10
deciswn to Ashland, the fifth
straight wm for the Eagles,
Oberlin lost 21-12 to Hamilton
(N Y ), Wooster trimmed John
Carroll 20-14, Heidelberg
blanked Oh1o Wesleyan 17.(),
Kenyon downed Mt Union 21sto 9 »--$2 SO all you can eat, lor Ala Cartel
12, and Olterhem lost w Oh1o
Northem 14-7

Reuain
Lead
·
e.

Green VICtory over Toledo
since 1966.
Toledo entered the aeason
With 35 wins m a row but that
mark fell m the opener agamst
Tampa The Rockets' threeyear conference wmnmg
streak was broken last week by
Ohto University

The Falcons, who host Kent
State next week m their f1rst
home game of the season, used
bread ana butter runner Paul
Miles a school record 37 times
m pounding the Rockets mto
subm1ss1on.
Miles picked up 108 hardlought yards and went over

Bengals Drop
Broncos 21-10
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cmcinnati Bengals, unable to
score a touchdown mne stratght
quarters, exploded Sunday to
heat the Denver Broncos and
give the1r conl1dence a shot m
the arm.
"That f1rst touchdown really
meant somethmg to our boys,"
sa1d Bengals Coach Paul
Brown after the 21-10 win
"They knew they could
sc!ll)e," he sa1d "For awhile
there 'tHey were begmmng· to
believe some of the thmgs they
read about the poor offense."
The viCtory; Cmqnnall's third
against one loss, propelled the
Bengals into the lead m the
Central D1vls10n of the Ameflcan Conference. It made Denver 1-3,last In the conference's
Western DiviSion
"! don't thmk the offense
ever lost confidence m 1tself,"
Bengal quarterback Ken Anderson sa1d. "We had some hard
times, but we never lost con-

season With a one-yard run m
the second quarter
Anderson completed '12 of 20
passes for 148 yards, lncludmg
a 12-yard toss to Chip Meyers
for a touchdown, but admitted
that "some of my passes could
have been a little better."
Rookie safety Tommy Casanova broke the game open in
the third petlod when he returned a Denver Punt 66 yards
for the go-ahead touchdown.
: "He's a goer, a real competitor," Brown sa1d The Bengal
offense chalked up 199 yards
while the defense held the
Broncos to 167 yards.
Denver coach John Ralswn
satd "we seemed to lose our
pmse m the second half and
couldn 't get anythmg started."
"We apparently are not domg a good JOb on pass protection because thiS ISn't the f~rsl
team that has done well

agamst us/' he sa1d.

Commentmg on Casanova's
fidence ."
punt return, Ralston said "we
Essex Johnson scored the oulkicked our coverage and alfirst touchdown for the Bengals lowed them to pick their
smce the1r flfst game of the holes"

Chiefs Crush
Browns 31-7
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
chalkboard In the Kansas City
Chiefs' locker room Sunday
read - "alert aggresSive play
meant the ball game... r
Hank Slram was correct In
his summation of the Oliefs'
31-7 rout of the Cleveland
Browns.
"It's always nice to beat a
team of the Browns' caliber oot
especially when you are playIng without men Uke Len Dawson and Ed Podolak," said
Stram.
Back-up quarterback Mike
Uvlngston Jtept the Injured
Dawson on the beDCh throughout tile game by tol!8ing three
toUchdown pauses and picking
up 39 yards In five rushing attempts.
Uvlngston, a five-year
veteran, ran his unbeaten
streak as a starting signalcaller to nine games. The 6-4,
212-pounder from Southern
Methodist hit on eight of 18
passes for 81 yards, Including
firsthalf scoring strikes to
Willie FraZier, Morris stroud
and Otis Taylor.
Able Replacemeatt
Mike Adamle, sqbbing for
Podolak, capped the final Kan111 a1y touchdown drive in the
third cjuarter by going aver
from the one-yard nne. He
picked up ae yardl in~ carr1e1
and pbbed three 'P''""' far
ten yards.
"I CC1Illd have played Dlwlon
or Podolak but with such able
replaceaMnts, more time fer

=:..:emed

advf¥ble,"

All lnibiJity to hold Clllto tbe
football, ~)' by 131 OWIII
fllllllldl XeD l!l'oWD, opened

"

the door to the ChiefS early In
the game. Brown Ued a team
record set by Otto Graham In
1953 by fumbling ~ ball four
times
"You can't beat anybody
with eight turnovers, especially a team like Kansas City,"
said Cleveland Coach Nick

Skorich.
Brown's first miscue came
oo the opening kick-off and
Clyde Werner recovered lor
the Chiefs on the Cleveland 31.
Uvlngston hit Dennis Homan
for 22 yards to the nine and
three plays later found Frazier
all alone In the end zone from
three yards out.
Picks Off Pm
Jim Marsalis p1cked off a
Mike Phipps pasa and returned
to the Browns' 16 late in the
first quarter and Uvlngston hit
Stroud with an eight yarder in
the second period

HUS'ILE
AFTER

EVERY
FOOfBAIJ.
GAME

To Get Your
Goodies From

third;

Security h Lon

Dt&amp;Jis.Wiin.- Ins.

AN EVENING
BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

In other games, Bluffton won
1ts fourth w1tn a 24-0 victory
over Findlay, Deftance edged
Wilmington 14-13, H1ram took
W&amp;J 26-4!, Case Western beat
Allegheny 14-6, Youngstown
State mpped
Northern
Michigan 37-36 and Northwood
(Mich.) beat Central State '!121
Drlnksand
Wide Menu
Dessert
Extra.
Choice
&gt;
I
&amp;der our regular menu every alghi S io 10.

Have You Heard?

.
HAPPY HOUR
MON~FRI.

4- TO 6 PM
.

PRI!TZELS&amp; PEANUTS ON IAR.

You'll lie NPP'/lWMn you comt hert.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629

POM~ ·

�•

'

3-ThellBilySentinel,Middleport Pcmeroy,O., Oct. 9,1912
(

The
.. 'Feel of
'the Table'

(Continued from page I)
RlbOO!l winners In the varlous.divlsio!IS of the show,ltsted
first thtouch fourth, respectively, were:
r
ARTISTIC DESIGN
Allen, blue and red
" Autumn
Magtc,u
in
Mums Single bloom, Mrs
terprelahon of the show Ada Holler, blue, red, white
theme Mrs Roy Holter , Mrs and yellow, spray, Mrs
Earl Dean, Mrs Donald Mora, Horace Karr, wh1te and blue,
Mrs. Pearl Mora
Mrs Earl Dean, yellow and
"Woodland Fantasy " , red
weathered wood WIth fresh
Asters Mrs Buel R1den011r,
planl materials /oks Re1d blue
Young, Mrs I B Walker, Mrs
Zonnlas large, Mrs R~er
Dale Kautz and Mrs Rose Gaul, blue. Mrs Purtey Karr,
Ginther
red , Mrs Rose Gmther. white
:'Fall Storm:• an abstracl and yellow. small. Mrs Ros'
des•gn usmg plant matertal m Gtnther, red and blue, Mrs
an unusual way Mrs Re•d
Rochqrd Sarton, white, and
Young, Mrs Roy Holler, Mrs Mrs Roger Gaul, yellow
Earl Dean, Mrs Paul Baer
Mangolds
large, Mrs

'

NOR'I11
• Q 1073

t

.4t

A965
.8642

WIST

EAST

.654
.2
¥KQ!0963 .AJ5
·
t J
t KQ10742
.KQ9
.173
SOUTH (D)
• AKJ98

.872

.A

't83

"lndtcm Summer," featunng

lOS

None vulnerable

Weot

North

Eost

z• z• ••
••
Pass
Pass

3.

Autumn Magic is

the fall colors Mrs Dean,
Mrs. Pur ley Karr, Mrs Roy
Holler, Mrs Donald Mora

1.

South

"Fall of '72/' a modern, free

style, 'deSign Mrs Paul Baer,

Pass
Pass
Pass Pass

3.

Mrs Horace Karr , Mrs Earl

l;)ean, and Mrs Roy Holler

"Autumn Flight," a line
arrangement, ltmited to those

Pass
Openmg lead_. K

who previOusly have never won

a blue robbon
Walker, Mrs

' '

IJirs

I B

Karl Krautter,

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Mrs Purley Karr. and Mrs

Oswald "In compehtlve
situatiqns when each s i d e
has 1ts own §WI and approximately half the h1gh-card
strength no one knows ex·
acUy what he or his oppo,
nents can make In such situations, the wmmng player is
the man w1th that mdefinable
something known as 'feel of
the table' "
Jim : "East could have
jumped nght to four hearts
over North's spade bid, but
East wanted to get to play
at four hearts. Also East
wanted to lind out something
about the enemy strength to
help h1m decide about the
possibility of saving at f1ve
hearts. Therefore, he JUSt b1d
three hearts."
Oswald: "North decided to
compete to three spades and
East went on to the four
beam he bad wanted to bid
from the start."
Jim: "South passed He
had ~ o o d defense agamst
hearts but nothing that
looked like a double. This put
11 right ' UP to North North
knew his partner wouldn't be
hurt at four spades and went
to four spades."
Oswald. "This threw the
baU hack to East. Was North
bidding four spades to make
or as a save• FmaUy, East
decided North was savmg
but East did not double. He
was gomg to be satisfied to
beat the band one trick undoubted wbich is just what
he did."

' Nature Speaks," a favonte

Ror, Moiler

arrangement, also tor non -blue
ribbon wmners Mrs Richard

Barton, Mrs Roy Moiler. Mrs

Gordon Anderson, and Mrs
Karl Krautter

"Fall Madness," a floor
arrangement at least ftve feet

tall Mrs. Roy Holler, Mrs
Wyall Chadwell , Mrs Dale

Kautz and Mrs Paul Baer
"After the Game." '"
terpre1ive for jUniOrs 13 and
over Jamce Holter, Den1se

'l1IE "AUTUMN MAGIC" theme dilpllly d. the flower !!how d. 01ester Garden Club was
outstanding. It featured Jack Frost, created by Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, pictured, and her

-

You, South, hold

?

.AK86 .AlOZ tK5 ... AI64
What do you b1d?

A-One club. You have 19
hi&amp;h card points and lour cords
each in elubs and $pades.

TODAY.S QUESTION
You h1d one dub and your

partner responds one d1amond
What do you do now?
Answ§J:. tomorrow

ENDORSE'.'! MCGOVERN
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
nation's largest Yiddish language daily newspaper, the
Jewish Daily Forward, Sunday
endorsed Democratic
pl"esidentlal candidate George
McGovern and his ruruung
" mate Sargent Shriver
''Our support for the Democratic candidate IS based
mainly on the fact that the
Democratic party, since the
time of PreSident Roosevelt's
' New Deal, has been the party
i which stands by the people, Ill
! contrast to the Republican,
which often serves the mj,erests of big busmess," the
newspaper said

" Surpnse for the Teacher,''

12 and under Eddie Holler,
__h_us_ban_d_wl_th_sym
__bo_Js_o_f_fa~n_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - blue . and Paula Hysell, red
" Fall Weather

Kissinger Warms
Up Peace Pace
PARIS (UPI)-PreSldential
adVlllel' Henry A. KisSinger has
stepped up the pace of Vietnam
peace discuSsions, plaMing a
second day of private pesce
talks with North VIetnamese
negotiators today and possibly
an unprecedented third
straight day of meetings
Tuesday.
The newest pl"ivate talks
marked the 19th time KisSinger
has made the trip to Paris and
the third time U.S. and Hanoi
representatives have
privately m the last 24 days-a
substantial jump in the rate of
nonpublic meetings.

w1th our agreements wtth the
other s1de, I have no other
information to provide you."
Haig met In Saigon last week
with President Nguyen Van
Thleu. Following their
meeting, there were news
reports that Thieu would aoon
step down as South Vretnam's
chief as part of a new U. S.Saigon pesce offer. The White
House labeled the reports

MEXICALI, Mexico (UPI)An assassin killed the son of the
mayor of this border town,
shooting h11n twice with a
p!Siol.
Ricardo Mazon, 21, an attorney and director of the
Mexican-American Institute,
was cut down at hiS desk by an
assailant who walked mto his
office Saturday. Mazon's
father 1s Roberto Mazon
Nor1ega, mayor of this city of
half a million residents,

Forecast,"
1nterpretrve Mrs Robert
Lew1s , W1nd1ng Tra1l Garden

Club, blue . Mrs Nancy Collins,
Walk In Garden Club. red, and
Mrs Ada Holter, Chesler and
W1ldwood Garden Clubs, whole
'
HORTICULTURE
SPECIMENS
Roses Hybrod lea, Paula

Sayre, Mrs tforace Karr, Mrs
R1chard Barton, Mrs Horace
Karr, flonbunda , Mrs Earl

Ingels, blue . Mrs Barton, red
and white
Dahlias large, Mrs Roy
Holter, blue and yellow, Mrs

Clarence Neutzlmg, red and
wh1te, cactus, Mrs Goldie

Wolfe , blue , Mro Clance
Allen, red and yellow, and Mrs
"speculative" and Communist Ada Holter, whole; porn pon,
negotiators in Paris derued any Mrs R1chard Barton, blue, red
breakthrough In achieving a and wh1le, ball, Mrs Clance
peace settlement was immment.

IJ18llltairied siJeDCe aoou ~llllday's meeting, refusing even to
acknowledge the new BeSSIOn
was takmg place. But m
Washington Sunday night,
White House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler sa1d the two
sides had agreed to meet agam
today for a second day of talks
and "possibly a third day"
Tuesday.
Kissinger and the North
Vietnamese met for a lull day
of negotiations on his last trip
to PariS Sept. 2:i and extended
their meeting another day, the
longest session SliiCe the secret
talks began m 1969.
Ziegler said Kissinger's
deputy, Maj . Gen. Alexander
Haig, attended the Sunday
session With Hanoi's special
envoy, Le Due Tho, and Xuan
Thuy, head of the North
Vietnamese delegation to the
weekly Paris peace talks
The extensiOn of the session,
COltling so soon after their last
meetings, prompted
speculallon that some progress
was bemg made. But Ziegler
declined to characterize the
seSSions m any way, telling
reporters : "In accordance

VILLAGE GUN SHOPPE
231 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

Helen Help

· us. • •

Al!d4.1 1,1lt!U

•i .lh\U,J

... ~ 1 .Ll
J!

) •

By Helen Bottel

HOW NOW, LEFTIST, RIGHTIST?
Dear Helen:
I've been wondermg · what's the or1gm of the pobhcal terms
"left" and "right"•- MIDDLE OF THE ROADER
Dear M1d
Says my friend, the political SCience professor "Durmg the
French Revolution, opposing s1des metfor a parlay on the palace
tennis courts. The rad1cals chose the left Side, royalists the right
- and that's how it has been ever since: left for Uberation,
somet11nes violent; right for malntamlng the status quo,
somet11nes oppressively
"Well, anyway," he adds, "It's a good story, and should do
until a better one comes along."
Much better, say I, than White's Political Dictionary versiOn
which offers somethmg dull about European Parliamentary
seating arrangements- extreme conservatives to the far right;
extreme liberals to the far left, while less radical government
leaders cluster toward the center of the room.
Enough of politics. Next question, please ? - H.

+++
Dear Helen :
My supposed fiance and I had a great relatiOnship at f1rst,
but the closer we got to each other physically the farther apart
mentally we became.
Now, the only t11ne we can talk ISm bed. I just don't reach
him on any other level. He gets mad, or acts bored at whatever I
try to discuss.
Shoulil I cool the bed scene for a whlle and see what hap~?
-UNSURE
Dear Unsure
If you cool the bed scene, don 't be surprised at the dlsappearmg act which soon follows. What you've had, my friend, is a
prologue to marriage. It doesn't sound like a Wlllller, so why not
walk out before you're legally !rapped?
· Couples wbo can communicate only wtlh their bodies lead
'
very lonely Uves. - H.

+++

GUNS FOR SALE • BUY .'TRADE
Handguns.
Rifles and Shotguns
Colt
Winchester
Smith and Wesson Remington
Charter Arms
Ithaca
and Others
Browning

ALL TYPES OF AMMO
HOURS:
Monday thru Frid;~y-5 p.m. til10 p.m.
Saturday-9 e~.m. tit 11 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. ti18 p.m.

.

OWNER,
CAROL W.
MANLEY·

Dear Helen:.
My brother was drowned m a boating a'ccident. I can't begin
to tell you the number of times may family and I were brought
down by well-meaning people who asked, "Have they found the
body yet•"
If friends would think before they speak, I'm sure much
misery would be averted. How AWFUL it is to be reminded
there's a body in the fiVer, exposed to the elements, battered,
partially devoured. Each time someone questioiiS, I thl{lk of
having to face it, of knoWlllg my brother must be identified when
found, of how he's out there alone and torn up.
Please pl"int this to let everyone know that sympathy needa
tact. The same goes for accident cases where there Is mutilation
or burning. Don't ask questions! - MOURNING
Dear Helen:
I'm happtly married. Our son Is two l'llOnths old. I love my
husband, but ... Last week while h~ was at work, my ex-fiance
came to se~ m~ . Ed says he doesn't love his wife -It's me he
cares lor.
He talks about the four years we went tosether, and I'm
getting afraid of my emotio!IS. Fred, my husband, is fl(eady,
dependable, kind, but there's excitement in knowing Ed finally
wants ME. can you please help me? -CONFUSED
Dear Con:
.
You can help yourself-by seeing Ed as the opposite of Fred
- unfaithful, changeable, a potential marriage breaker. Then,
be bon~ about how he sees YOU- ("A little more talk and I'll
havehermadei"J -and don't answer hllrql - H.

J

Dean, Mrs Pearl Mora, Mrs

white

R1chard Barton, and Mrs.
Donald Mo&lt;a .
Jun1or

Horticulture

rose,

Nancy Miller, blue and red;
dahlias, Jan1ce Holler, blue for
lar9e. V1ckoe Gaul, blue, red,
whole and yellow for small,

"Time Marches On", plant

LoCal Bowling
Po01eroy Bowling Lonel

preserved plant material, Mrs
Earl Dean, Mrs Rose Ginther,
and Mrs. Roy M1ller

Afncan

VIOlets, Single, Mrs

Karl

Krautter, blue ; African violets,

double, Mrs Krautter, blue,
Houseplants, flowenng, Mrs

R1chard Barton, blue and red,
Mrs Dale Kautz, wh1te, Mrs

Ada
Holter,
yellow,
Houseplants, foliage, Mrs
Paul Baer, blue, Mrs Ada
Holter, red and while, and Mrs
Roger Gaul. yellow
HORTICULTURE
COLLECTIONS
Succulants and.or Cacl1

Programs for Tonight

Buffet," food&amp; for

birds Mrs. Buel Ridenour,
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, Mrs
Paul Baer, and Mrs. Pur ley
Karr

ON EXHIBIT at the show
.was a special display prepared
by Dudley's Florist of Parkers
•burg.
Cook1es and coffee: I(Vere
served •to the vis1tors. Mrs

Paul Baer and Mrs. Horace
Karr were general chairmen

A total of .u persons exh1b1ted
on the show. Elghl of th ~se
were tun lor exhibitors, whlle16
were not affiliated w1th' the
sponsonng club

Veterans .

~?. ··r:Tb Falcons

Quiz

Horse Show Announced

&lt;True, False)

PARKERSBURG
Nmeteen divisiOns in Halter
classes and 23 In Performance
classes Will feature a SEOfLA
approved horse show Sunday,
Oct 15 at Cox's Field, Rt. 2,
G1hon Rd begmnmg at 10 a.m.

Any deceased Veteran,
whbse last period of Service
was tennmated Honorably, IS
ehg1ble for a Government
Headstone to mark his -grave.
(TRUE)
'
2 A Veteran who served
durmg Peacetime IS entitled to
The Daily Sentinel
VA Disability Pens10n If he
OEVOTED TO THE
should become disabled and
INTEREST OF
unable to work. (FALSE) ,
MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTERL TANNEHILL,
3.AWidowofaWarVeteran
E.ec Ed
1s not enlltled to VA Hosp1ial
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
care. (TRUE).
C.Jt';' Editor
PubiiSned dao Iy except
4 A Widow of a war Veteran,
Sttur&lt;tav by The OhiO Vallev
whotsnowre.
ceiViii, gaWtdow's
Pub hsh.ng Company, 111
~
Court St. Pomeroy Ohio, .Pension, and who'!" disabilities
115769 8us1ness Oft1ce Phone
are such that they , reqwre
992 2156. Ed1tor1al Phone 992
2157
regular a1d and attendance of
Second class postage pa1d al
another
person, may be
Pomeroy, Oh 10
N a' 1on a 1 advert 1 s 1 n g
ehgible for an extra allowance
represen tatove Boll,nello
from the VA. (TRuE) '
GAllAgher , Inc 12 East t12nd
St. New York Coly, New York
5 Honorable and General
Subscr lpflon rales
De
Di ha
'tl
11ve-red by carrier where
sc rges gtve enll ement
available SO cents per week , to VA Benefits The VA must
By Motor Route where carroor make a specifiC determination
serv1ce not available One
montn 11 IS By mad on Onoo on. other types of discharges.
and W Va , One year 11~ 00
(TRUE)
-I

SDh months S7 25
Three ~ '-' llh-J 9~);
v • _.
&lt;::•l•'!&lt;...r t."t
21 ~ n n 6 7' " 1
months u so Svbscropllon " ' Nr'f!\;'len~d , 41' a wee"'y
proce oncludos Sunday r .mes
Pubh~
•-··~ ·"" your Me 1
·gs
•I
;&gt;tn t 1 v
Senl,nel
~, og\l'I._..,_"""V
~=======--~=~*:l#l@IINI!P~..
County Veterans Off1ce)
MONDAY, OCT. 9, 1972
7 00 - News6 , TruthorConseq 3, BealtheCiock4, Circus• 13,
lnsoght 33. What's My Lme8 , Sal nilS, Read Your Way Up 33
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, TraffiC Court 10, Episode Action 33,
Parent Game 3, Hollywood Squares 4, Young Dr Kildare 8,
,..

a'-'.d' To'h.'bft()w

.. .

·&amp;·THINGS

S OO - Gunsmoke8,10, RowanandMa•lln'sLaugh.ln 3,4, UFO
6, VD Blues 33
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10, Pro Football 6, 13, Movie "The
' BY PAUL CRABTREE
Beguiled" 3, 4, 15
9 30 - Oris Day 8, 10
What's your favorite show of the new season (If any)?
10 00 - Bill Cosby a, 10
•
10 30 - Concerts In The Lawn 33
Which one do you find you really .can't stand (If any) •
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, News 8, 10, IS
If these two questions start a hot debate around your dinner
11 30- Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movie "To Sir
table, don't hit Aunt Tillie with the gravy ladle, or dump the
With Love" 18; "Palm Springs Weekend" 10
12 00 - News 6
broccoU au gratin down the front of Junior's T.Qlirt.
12 30- Movie "7 Surprises" 1l
The critics can't agree, either- by a long shot.
1 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
2 00- News 4
Thanks to an annual sampling by Broadcasting Magazine of
2 30 - News 13
the general critical views of the new TV season from as many as
TUESDAY, OCT. 10,1972
6 oo - sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
20major cities. I can tell you that, on most of the new programs,
6 IS - Farm Report 13, Farmtlme 10
thereisanight-and-daydlfferenceofoplllionamongmanyofthe
6 20 _
- Paul
Harvey
13
''" or
cr1'ti cs. Generally, however, th e pa ttern tr ends one w.,,
6 25 Faith For Today 13.
1
6 30- Columbus Today 4, Bible Answer. e. Concern &amp; Com. another
·
,
men I,10
Interested in knoWlllg what the so-called elll'frts think of tqe
66 ss45 - Corncob Report 3
new
programs? Okay,I'Utryto go over them in this column, arld
Fllntstones 13.
700-Today3,4,1S,CBSNews8,IO.News6
possiblythenextone:
' •
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Bullwlnkle &amp; Rocky
Only one new program got uniformly good reviews, Without
13
e oo - Capt. Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 6, 13, Sesame St 33, any dissent - the Julie Andrews Show. No one had anything
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
really bad to say about Miss Julie, and some of the critics "Here
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8, New Zoo Revue 6 ecstatic (It's on CBS Wednesdays at 10)
9 00- Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Romper Room 8, Con·
'
'
.
centraflon 6; Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13, What
• And only one show got nothing but bad reviews: Search (on
Every Woman Wants to Know 3.
NBC, Wednesdays at 10). Not a single crtuc found anything
9 30 - ToTeiiTheTruth3, Jeopard y6; HazelS
redeeming 1n Its quaUUes.
10 ~olu~~sh ~~~oCea~il~~· 6Dick llan Dyke\3 , Joker's Wild 8, 10, ,
(My appraisal: Jufie's great, but can Me keep It up• 1
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Spill Second 13, Jiaven't seen Search, and may not bother to.)
Pnce IS Right 8, 10.
'
•
11 00 - Sale ol the Century 3, 4, 15, Love American Style 6,
The Little People: Four good, four bad, and one il\IXed. (I
Gambit e, 10, Password 13
thoughtthiswowdbeabomb,apparently,it'slfotbad.) , , '
11 30-Hollywood Squares3,4,1S, Love of Llle8,10. Bewitched
Banyan: One good, six bad, one mixed.
' \
f
12 ~·Jeopardy 3, 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's so so Club 4;
Banacek: Five good, one bad. (!liked it v~ry much, rut
Jackie Oblinger 8. News 10, 13.
noted that It dragged a little. Several critics singled out the same
12 25- CBS News 8
fiaw.)
V
no
'
12 ;~- 3W'sGame3, IS, SplltS~cond6; SearchlorTomorrow8,
f:host Story: Three good, seven bad, one mixed.
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13, Irs Your Bel8; Green
Ghost Story? Three. good, seven bad, one mtied. , , ,
Acres 10; Watch Your Child IS.
1.30 - 3 On A Match 3, ~. 15, Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
Bridge! Loves Bernie: Eight good, two bad, one mlxf!i. (I
World Turns e. 10
didn't want to like this one, ootlt's making it, at'leUt b~ lirttib'
2 00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike 'standards.)
Douglass 6, Guiding Light 8, 10.
"'
•
!21tl....
2.30-Doctors3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13; Edge of Night e, 10.
ooreetsof San Francisco: Three good, four bad?,W.fe IJljxed.
3.00- General Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3, 4, IS; ~ove Is (This was the most-divided group of oplnloiiS in t~ iJC/hoae
3· :le~,C:t1,:~~~v~ 6~ 0Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, IS; SO(ret who liked It thought it was socko. Those who (lidh't wllnted to
Storm 8, 10
dump It off the Bay Bridge.)
",l ' 1 '
' I• 1
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3; Somerset IS ; Sesame St 33, Love
The Waltons: Joy of Jo11l Thll program, basecl;on
credible,
~G':;~~~.!,'Y-1~ 013 , Merv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Movie wholesome famlly entertainment, and eaa11y my IIVOI'it.e of !he
4 2s- sports Club 6
season, got 13 raws and ooly two bad reviews. Sevej:al 'crilka
4 30- I Love Lucy 6; Pefflcoat Junction 3, Daniel Boone 13; singled It out Btl the "sleeper" hit of the IJeiiSOII. I cllilldn't a Merv Griffin 8, Andy Griffith 15
.,.5 00 '- Dick Van Dyke 15; Mr Rogers33, Ponderosa 3, 4, Daniel more.
:
' '
Boone 6
Bob Newhart: Four good, two bad, two miJied,,(lf you IJte
s 30- Marshall Dillon 15; Elec Co. 33. Dragnet 8, Gomer Pyle Newhart, tate hope in the fact thatlts filii are raaily he-*" up
13.
....1
6 00- News 3. 4, 8, 10, IS
about lhll.tel.)
·
·•
1
6 30 - News 3, 4, 15, 6, 8, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing
AliDa and the King: Four good, one bad, and four lnilld.
Him Up 33
'
..,.,_ ---'•• _......,., ......,.... ,..._
7 00 - News6, 10; What's My Lines. Elec. Co 20, Andy Griffith ( """ - crlticll to ceaie ip wWI a ·
IS ; Beat The Clock 4, I've Gof a Secret 131 Truth or Con- deacrlptktn-aroplnlon-moreth.nanymtha'fCbldple,) ''•
!5e&lt;1Uences 3; Saint 15
'1111111-"'1-·•-·
I'D", ...._ !"
7 30-MaslerpleceThealre33;T~IslsYOI.ir~llt3, Doctors on
..---·
Call 4, To Tell The Truth 6; Price Is Right a, 10, Beat the
Blltlhii•IIIV" lblt lftha crltkll"vltwa ol]Giir faWitlt
Clock 13
(arllllllll "•"M)Ibowoltlte-TVII lldldD\ft!a'$.JII!Ill'
8 oo- Bonanza 3, 4, IS , Temwatures Rising 6, 13; ~IM a, pea....t ,._. 1 a, jail niB: One to .a )oil wiD Ia•'---.
10, Aile of Anxltty 13
"
8·30- .Ftawall Flve-0 8, 10, Movie "Night of Terror". 6, 13,
-l
Da"llnt America 33
·
+++

f;

tl

1"'.,....., .,....,.. "'"

_..•IIIGI'I•-· ' ' '

l

9 30 - Marshell U. Sports 33, Movle"VIslona"l, 10.
109 oo
00 - NBC
Reports
4, IS, Marcus Wolby, M D 6, 13, Old
Bold Ones
3, 4,3, 15.
Maid &amp; The Thltl 33.
11,00-News, WHihtr, Sporl$3,4,6,1, 10, 13, 15.
11 30- Dick Caveff6; Johnny t:araon 3, 4, 15; VIrginian 8; Movie
"Sweet Bird of YOI.ilh" 10; lllovlt "Sailor ollht l&lt;il'lfl" 13.
11:30- Dick Cavetl6; Johnny Carson3, 4 15; Vlrginltnl.
1.00- Your Healll\4.
1. 30 - Newa, W..lhtr 4. Local News 13.

&lt;IC TIIIU'V DIAL:

~~$iiiii~Eii

WIIJ'at lp.m., ftAZ.TV
' '" lllllk

mebtl,tlaaa

trophy and five nbbons worth
$6, $4, $3, $2and $1. Youth entry
fee here Will be 50 cents, offermg ,a trophy and f1ve ribbons only.
Gate admiSSIOn IS $1. Don
Coe, Alb1on, Ind., has been
signed as judge, and Roger
Cummings nngmaster, with
Jack Radcliff, announcer.
For more infonnation call
Walter Sams ~3, or
Russ Fagan, 304-122-1771.

..,.

Entry fee m the Halter
classes wiD be 50 cents in which
five ribbons wlll be awarded,
and $1 50 in the performance
classes the latter offermg a

United Press International
The last rema1nmg wlnnmg
streak from Toledo's threeyear re1gn as M1d-Amencan
Conference cbamp1ons came to
an end Saturday mght at the
hands of unbeaten Bowlmg
Green.
The Falcons, who reclaimed
flfSt place in the MAC race
With lis 19-8 wm, snapped the
Rockets' 17-game home winnmg streak which dated back
to 1968 and the first Bow ling

Weekend Sports Results
National Hockey League
OHIO COL~EGE
Standings
FOOTBALL RECORDS
By United Press lnlernaltonat
Untied Press International
East
Conference All Games
w I I pis
WLT WL T
Eastern Division
Montreal
1 0 0 2
Bowl
mg
Green
w. I. I. pel. pf pa
1 0 0 2
2 0
3 0 1 Buffalo
Dallas
3 1 o 7SO 81 49
Detro1t
1 0 0 2
Western Michigan
Washongton
Vancouver
1
0 0 2
101311
3 I 0 7SO 85 55
0 10 0
Ohoo Unlv
110 320 N Y Islanders
NY Giants
0 1 0 0
1 '1 0 I 3 1 Toronto
2 2 0 500102 86 Kent State
0 1 0 0
010 310 Boston
St. Louis 2 2 0 500 ,58 69 M1aml
vl'ii'11
til 4b 0in•oOO''':ls 96 1Toledo
020 23Q NY Rangers
JL ~ o•.•o
West
. ''
Big Ten
'
Centrai •Oivlslon '
w 11 pts
Conference All Games
w. I. I. pel. pf pa
2 0 0 4
W~T WLT Ch1cago
Grflln Bay 3 I 0 7SO 76 60
P1ttsburgh
1' 0 0 2
Oh&gt;O
State
1
0
0
3
o
o
Detro11
3 1 o 7SO 104 97
1 1o 2
I 0 0 4 o o Los Angeles
M1nnesota 1 3 0 2SO 86 69 Michigan
Atlanta
1 1o 2
1 0 0 3 I 0
Ch1cago o 3 1 125 75 108 lnd1ana
Philadelphia
o
o 1 1
WISconsm
I 0 0 3 I 0
Western Oivtslon
St
Louis
0
0
1 1
Mich
State
1
o
o
1
3
o
w I. t. p&lt;t. pf pa
0 10 0
100130 California
Purdue
Los Angeles
0 1o o
) 1 0 o 4 o M1nnesota
2 1 1 625 81 65 Minnesota
Sunday's
Results
Illinois
0
1
0
0
4
0
Atlanta
2 2 0 500 111 71
020130 Chtcago S New York Rangers
San Fran 2 2 0 500 98 63 Iowa
Northwestern 0 2 0 1 3 0
New Orleans
Los Angeles 4 Boston 2
Others
0 4 0 .000 54 136
Buffalo 5 Atlanta 3
WLT
American Conference
Ionly games scheduled)
5 0 0
Eastern DiviSion
Ashland
Today's Games
4 0 0
w. 1. '1. pet pi pa He1delberg
I
no
games
scheduled)
4 0 0
Miami
4 0 0 1.000 97 54 Baldwon Wallace
4
0
0
N.Y.Jets 2 2 0 .500122111 De"'son
4 0 0 A m P. r i c a n Hockey League
Buffalo
2 2 0 500 89 92 Bluffton
Standtngs
3 0 1
New Eng 2 2 0 500 66 112 Kenyon
By
United
Press International
3 I 0
Baltimore 1 3 0 250 74 77 Marietta
East
Central Division
Ohoo Northern
3 I 0
w I !pis
Hiram
2 1 0
W. I. I. pc.ppa
I
f
Spglld
2 0 I 3
2 1 0
Cincinnati 3 I 0 7SO 73 54 Wooster
1 1 0 2
Pittsburgh
Findlay
2 2 0 Boston
1 1 0 2
2 2 0 Prvdence
2 2 0 500 82 79' John Carroll
1 1 0 2
Cleveland 2 2 0 500 71 80 Ohio Wesleyan
2 2 0 Rchester
Nova
Scla
0
0 1 1
Houston 1 2 o 333 56 84 W1ttenberg
2 2 0
0 2 0 0
Western Division
Case Western
2 2 0 New Haven
West
2 2 0
w. I. t. pet. pi pa Defiance
w I I pis
2 2 1
Kan City 3 I 0 750 106 68 Dayton
Tidewater
3
0 0 6
I
1
2
San Diego 2 1 I 625 80 85 Akron
I 0 1 l
2 3 0 Bltmore
Oakland 1 1 1 500 65 65 xavier
1 2 1 3
2 3 0 Clvland
Denver
1 3 0 .2SO 78 120 Cincmnal1
Cmcmt.
1 0 0 2
I
2
0
Sunday's Results
Wilmington
0 2 0 0
1 3 1 Hershey
Dallas 17 Plllsbur9h 13
Mount Un1on
0 2 0 0
I 3 0 Richmond
' .Washington 14 Philadelphia o Oberlm
Sunday's
Results
1 3 0
New York Giants 45 New Capital
Clncmnat1 S Prov1dence 2
I 3 0
Orleans 21
Youngstown Stale
Baltimore 2 New Haven 1
0 3 0
St Louis 19 Min~esola 17
Central State
Boston 3 Rochmond 0
0 4 0
Green Bay 20 Chicago 17
Muskirgum
Rochester
4 Cleveland 2
0
4
0
Detroit 26 Atlanta 23
Otterl~in
T1dewaler
4
Hersher, 3
·Los Angeles 31 San Francisco
(onlygameHchedu ed)
7
Monday's Games
Miami 27 New York Jets 17
I
no
games
scheduled)
Buffalo 38 New England 14
San Diego 23 Baltimore 20
By Un1ted Press International
Cincinnati 21 Denver 10
East
Southwest
KanMs City 31 Cleveland 7
Amherst 21 American lnl'l 7
(only games scheduled)
Arkansas 27 TCU 13
Army 26 ,Lehlgh 21
Today's G1mes
Baylor 10 Miami (Flo l 3
Bos Coli 21 VIllanova 20
Grambling
27 Tenn St 18
Oakland at H011slon (night)
Brown 28 Penn 20
(only game scheduled)
LSU 12 Rice 6
Bucknell 23 Gettysburg 0
Oklahoma St 17 Mo 16
Columb1a 0 Princeton o
Pac1fic 17 Fresno St 0
Conn 10 N.H 7
SMU
SS N M Sf 6•
Cornell 36 Rutgers 22
Texas 27 Utah State 12
Dartmouth 17 Holy Cross 7
Texas Tech 35 Tulsa 18
Delaware 27 Lafayette o
Tulane 38 P1tl 6
Harvard 33 Boston U. 14
Hir~m 26 Wash Jefferson 6
West
Indiana 10 Syracuse 2
OHIO COLLEGE
Air Force 52 Col Sf 13
Ma•ne 10 R I. 7
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Amona St 38 Ore St 7
Mass 33 Vermont 14
United Prt1$S lnlernallona I
lewis· Clark 24 Ore Coli 6
Miami
10
J
22
Marshall
7
llllnol$ at Ohio State
Montana 12 Weber St. 7
Trinity IConn ) 25 Bates 0
Kent State at Bowling Green
Montana 51 23 No. Ariz. 9
W Va 4'1 Wm. &amp; Mary 34
Miami al Ohio University
New Mexico 17 Wyoming 14
Yale
27
Colgate
7
Toledo at Western Michigan
Ohio
St 35 California 18
Clnclnnalj at Wichita Stale
USC
Cal
30 Stanford 21
South
Dayton Ball Slate
UCLA
42
Arizona
31
Alabama 25 Georgia 7
Marshall at Xavier
Utah
39
Texas
I
El
Paso) 20
Ala.
St.
13
Fla
A&amp;M
8
Nor them Michigan at Akron In)
Wash 23 Oregon 17
Auburn 19 Miss. 13
Central State at Ashland In)
Dav1dson 10 Appalach. St 10 Wash St. 35 lda~o 14
Deflan~c~ at Bluffton In)
East Carolina 21 Richmond 0
Case WVj!lem at Kenyon
Florida 42 Florida St. 13
Muslclngllrii at Findlay In)
Ga Tech 31 Clemson 9
Hiram li Bethany
Grove City I Pa .) a) John Grambling 27 Tenn St 18
Kenlucky 17 Miss. St. 13
• Carroll 1 '
Louls¥111e
17 Tampa lA
Ohio ~thern lll Anderson
Maryland
23 Wake Forest o
(Ind.) '
Tenn.
38
Meml&gt;bl1
St. 7
Wllml,ggori •' Obel'lln
Saturday Junior LtiOut
Vanderbilt
!OVa.
7
.Wittenblr9 •' Baldwin· Wallace
Soptember :10, 1972
Miclwtsl
Pis
Ball St. 21 Indiana St. 10
t~eldtlber9
lrn~cts
13
·Ohl'c:
.., at Denlton
Bowling GrHn 1J Toledo 8
Bali'Busters
10
Colo. 31 Kansa1 St. I7
•.otiWt\ ~lelia
~ams
6
Mount ion ., Wooster
Ill St. 31 Ean. Ill. 11
Dreamers
Sth
Kansas 34 Minn. 28
tnl nl!lhl geme
Alleches •
S'h
Michigan 35 tMivy 7
IIIIey Cats
s
N.D. 69 Morningside 0
High Ind. Game - Steve
No. Ill. 20 X.vltr (0.) 7
Bachller 177 and Stever
Notre OerM U Mlch St. 0
Bachner and Dick Owen 167.
Ohio U. 21 Clnclnn•tl 14
High Series - Slev• Bachner
'"-"n St. :15 llllnola 17
503 and Kolly Wlnebr•Mer ~.
• Purtlut 24 iOW4I 0
Team High Game - Alley
South Dlllola 21 Drake 23
Cats 894.
So. Ill. 6
6
Tttm High Serlts - R•m•
Win. Mich.
~I St. 12
2502.
Wll, 21 Nat ...... II 14
N a I 1o n 1 I Football League
Slandtngs
By United Press lnternahonal
National Conference

•

Movie " Tarzan Escapes" 13

"sure, that's wbat I'm hoping during the regular season with a single to right. Speedy
for."

Point Wins 20-14

"MemQdes of Sum'mer,"

"B~rd

dressing room at Three Rivers
Stadium here Sunday, Bench
l'eallled the first half Of his
wish already had been
achieved-a 1-1 spilt with the
Pirates at Pittsburgh.

against ~ne 01f the most
Nolan was ticketed to start respected lineups In the major
today against Pittsburgh's leagues, and Nolan's recent
Nelaon Briles, although Cln- arm trouble-caused by an
cmnati manager ~rky An- absc\lssed tooth - apparently
derson said he rrught also go was gooe.
But now Bench was saying with Ross Grimsley If Nolan ' Although the Pirates haven't
that while he "wouldn't even Isn't ready.
scored a run for him in his last
put odds" on a two-game
"I'm looking forward to , 29 mnlngs, Briles owns a !.()
Cincinnati sweep at home, this," insisted Nolan. "I feel regular season record ag8lnst
great. I've been fairly success- Cincinnati and the Reds'
ful against the Pirates. I don't respect.
fear them and I'm sure they
Today's get-together at
don't fear me."
Riverfront follows a pitching
The big righthander was ~ fest in which the Buc'S' Bob
A severe football aliment with a touchdown m each of the
known as fumblehhs was fmal two quarters whlle the
Johqson was supurb, Bruce
Major League Results
blamed for the Me1gs reserves' · Utlle Blacks added their !mal
Kison was as fast as ever,
By Untied Press lnternahonal Ramon Hernandez was at his
26-14 loss to the Pt. Pleasant s1x-pomter m the third period. National
Leaaue Championship
reserves at Marauder Stadium
usual best.lJut "The Moose"
Sophomore quarterback
Playoff
Saturday night.
Cmcmnal1
&lt;100
000
01o5
8
1
was wild That was all the Reds
Lonme Coates ran four yards
Coach Fenton Taylor's l1ttle for Me1gs' f1rst touchdown. Potlsburgh 000 Ill 000- 3 7 1 needed for a four-run f1rst
Billingham, Hall IS) and
Marauders, 'now 1-1 on the Jumor M1ke Hoffman's run for Bench, Moose, Johnson (11, umlng that put game two on the
year, fumbled away the ball the extra points was stopped KISon (6). Hernandez(7).G,us shell
fo(9) and May WP.Hall tP
several t11nes, some rn im- short
Bob Moose didn't even p1tch
Moose HR Morgan.
a third of an mnlng, but the
portant Sltuatjons. Me1gs, who
defeated Wellston 6-&amp; IIllis first
'A mer• can League
stuff that gave him a 13-10
Sophomore tackle Mike
Champ1onshtp Playoff
season and a 2 90 earned run
game, plays at Jackson next Haley scored the Marauders'
Detrool
000 000 000-0 3 1
&amp;!turday night.
!mal Six-pointer when he Oakland
100 040 oox- 5 8 0 average just wasn't there, and
The Pt. Pleasant htUe Blacks recovered an enemy fumble m
Fryman, Zachary (5), Scher the Big Red Machme clanked
man
(5), H1ller (7) and Sims, away.
scored e1ght m the f1rst quarter the end zone. B1g and tough
Odom
and Tenace LP Fryman
and added SIX more m the sophomore fullback Jack Oller
Leltlielder Pete Rose opened
second period to hold a commanding 14-0 edge at the hall.
Me1gs came back, however,

'"

growth Mrs Roy Miller, Mrs
Purley Karr; Mrs Rose 'Gin
_!her.
ill ~ 1

Q-W hat annual sportmg
event m Waslnngton 1s the
only one of tiS kind'
A - The congressiOnal
baseball
game, Republicans
Anderson, red, Mrs . Rose
vs
Democrats,
m June
Gmther, wh1fe, Mrs Roger
Gaul, yellow, for yew, Mrs
Q-What metal IS ltqu1d
Donald Mora , Mrs
Rose
at
ordtnary temperatures'
G1nfher, Mrs. Pearl Mora,
Mrs Earl Ingels, pfotzor, Mrs
A-Mercury
Rochard Barton, blue and red,
Mrs Dale Machler, white, and
Q-Has there ever been
Mrs Earl Dean, yellow
a
perpetual
mot10n device'
Berned and or frUit bran.
A-No, and sc1ent1sts
ches Mrs R1chard Barton,
Mrs Pur ley Karr, Mrs Paul thmk there never \VIII be
Baer and Mrs Pearl Mora
plants

'

' PITTSBURGH (UP!)Jol)nnyBeDChhadawishtoday
aa the Cincinnati Reds
returned home to friendly
Riverfront Stadlwn for the
third game of the National
League playoffa. Starter Gary
Nolan 118ld he'll do everything
pollllble to make It come true.
Munching on a ham sandwich in the RA!ds' jubilant

EDUCATIONI!L
"Gelling It All T.&lt;&gt;gether,l'
flo~o~~er arrang1ng ~ulpment
Mrs Guy Summerfield, blue
"L1v1ng Plclures.'l•Mrs. Roy
M1ller, Mrs Howard Knight.
and Mrs Rose G1nlher

Mrs Paul Baer, blue , Mrs
Richard Barton, red and while,
and Mrs Gordon ~Anderson,
yellow, narrowleaf, Mrs
Richard Barton, blue, red and
wh1te , needled , Mrs Earl
Dean, blue, Mrs Gordon

House

Reds Even SerieS, Return Home

Mrs Paul Baer, blue.
marigolds, VIckie Gaul, blue
Guards Mrs Ada Holter. and red for small, Paula
blue , Mrs Horace Karr, red, Hyoell, blue, Eddie Holter,
Mrs, Richard Barton, wh1le red. and Denloe Dean, white,
for large , mums, OeniStt Deal'!,
and yellow
Plant materials for dried all four ribbons: annuals,
arrangements
Mrs
Earl VIckie Gaul, blue, 'red an~

Lamplighters League
wh1fe, Mrs Roy Holler,
October 9, 1972
yellow , dwarf, Mrs Rose
Slond1ngs
G1nther, blue, while and Team
Pis.
yellow, w1lh Mrs Roger Gaul, Oddballs
23
red
Voss·Dugan
22
Perrenlals
Mrs.
Rose Smith-Nelson
18
G1nther, blue. while and Hllltoppers
12
yellow, Mr~ Roger c;&gt;aul, red. Tyree-RIIchle
12
1
Annuals cockscomb, Mrs 4 Deuces
Tr
9
Ada Holler, blue, Mrs Richard
High Individual Game Barton, red. Mrs Earl Ingels, Fred Ritchie 229 , Maxine
white, other, Mrs Richard Dugan 191
Barton, blue, Mae Holter, red,
Second High lnd Game and Mrs. Dale Machler, white Bill Nelson 217; Mary Voss 178.
and yellow. gladioli, Mrs .
High Series - Larry Dugan
R1chard Barton, red, blue, 601. Maxine Dugan 482.
wh1te and yellow ; snap·
Second High Series - Fred
dragons, Mrs Earl Dean, blue, Ritchie 571; Mary Voss 473
Mrs Dale Kautz. red , Mrs.
Team High Game - TyreeDonald Mora, wh1le and Rifchle 749.
yellow
.
Team High Series - TyreeEverqreens broad leaf. RIIchle 2128.

Television Log

met

de~.S~tliJ:~o-~Y~f-~,
~
eg 01) ' "1!11",..," !M!·

The btddmg has been
w..t North Eost South

Dean, Melanoe Dean, and Lola
Walker

R1chard Barton, red, blue and

Resplendent~

1

. ,,

College Scores

This .Week's
OJUege Games

a

l.ocai Bowling

Sf!L,$
'

Dillion

Jve Morgan followed with
another Single, and moved to
second on Roberto Clemente's
relay to third. Then Bobby
Tolan hit a two-run double and
stopped at third when Bench
followed
with
another
double.
Tony Perez, grateful to a
reluctant fan who almost
refUsed to return his favorite
bat that he accidentally let'fly
mto the stands, drove Bench
and Tolan home with a third
double and Moose took an early
shower w1th the Reds leading 40.
Clncmnati starter Jack Bil.
Ungham held up well until the
Bucs slowly crept up with
smgle runs m the fourth on
catcher Mllt May's RBI
double, m the fifth on
Clemente's scormg sacrifice
and ·~ the sixth on a sharp
smgle by second baseman
Dave Cash.
Morgan cushioned the
Cincmnall lead at ~-3 off
reUever ~mon Hernandez in
the e1ghth.

Playoff
. Schedules

Martin Wants
Suspension

Champ1onsh1p Playoff
Sland10gs
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI)- calmest man m the ball pari!:;
By United Press International
!Best of F1vel
Flaring tempers over the be never had left tbe mound.
Nahonal League
When the Tigers reali&amp;ed
w. I. pel "Bert Campanens mcident" what happened, they came
P1ttsburgh
1 1 500 shot new life mto the American
Cmcmnatl
1 1 500 League playoffs today just runnjng agam. Martin started
Sunday's Result
when the Oakland A's had hollering; Willie Horton 4\ood
Concinnaf1 5 P1ttsburgh 3
almost left the Detroit Tigers in front of the mound with his
Saturday's Result
arms spread, blocking the
Plltsburgh 5 Cm~lnnat1 1
for dead.
Today's Probable P1lchers
With a 5-o triumPh on Blue umpires
Pittsburgh IBroles) at Clncon
But La Grow got thumbed
Moon ' Odom's three-lilt pitnalo INol•nJ , 3 p m
ching Sunday, the amazing A's out anyway.
Tuesday's Game
Pitlsburgh al Cincinnati, 1 30 need only one wm m the three
The rule says an umpire can
pm
possible games m Detroit throw a pitcher out If he thlnb
starting Tuesday to enter the the pitcher threw at a batter
Amencan league
w. I pet. World Series for the first time "mtentlonally." But plate umO.kland·
2 0 1.1100 since 1932 when they were the pire Nestor Chylak Insisted, "I
Detrod
0 2 000
don't know about intention. I
Philadelphia A's.
Sunday's Results
didn't
read his mtnd:
O.kland 5 Delrolt 0
But what Wit! happen now m
Saturday's Results
"1 threw him (La Grow) out
Oakland 3 Detroit 2 ( 11 Inn) the wake of the Campanerls to even things up and keep the
bat-tossing Sunday was anyToday's Probable Ptfchers
crowd In the stands and get t1!f1
No game scheduled
body's guess.
Tuesday's Game
For one thing, Detroit mana- game continued and finllhild
O.kland at Detroit, 1 30 p m ger Billy Martin was demand- without further Incident," O!yIng Campanerls be suspended lak S8ld
Cronin hinted other punishfor the rest of the playoffa
because "he could have killed ments when he said, "I noticed
my pitcher." American three umpires holding Mlrtln
League President Joe Cronin and a couple of other Incidents
promised a ruling ''ll!'Obably out there."
All the uproar detracted
late Monday" on that and on
pitcher Lerrin La Grow of the from a brilliant performance
bf Odom that eventually
!rom lhe two-yard line for one Tigers.
of BG's two touchdowns. Reid
And maybe Martin, who had sealed the 11gers' doom. Ht
Lamport's 39-.yard TD aenal to to be restrained bY three retired the last 16 battel'll In a
Roger Wallace and two Don umpires when he admittedly row in his threeollltter. Cam·
Teylor field goals accounted "went after" Campaner!S, will panerts gave the A's their 11r1t
run In the first Inning when he
for the Falcons' other scores. hilnself draw punishment
singled, stole sec:ond and
Scores OR Pass
What hap]lened was this·
Toleda's only score came on
With the A's leading by their and rode home on Joe lWdl'a
a 26-yard pass from Bruce eventual s-o !ina! score, smgle The A's put the pme
Arthur to Jef(, Calabrese. Joe rellever La Grow served the away wlth a four-run ezp!OIIon
Schwartz gamed 105 yards m 24 first pitch Of the A's seventh that kayoed Detroit starter
carries for the Rockets
umlng low and mside and it Woody Fryrtum in the fifth.
Miles' 37 carries broke the rapped Campaneris on the left
old BG record set m 1952 ankle. At that point, the pepaga mst Bradley by Fred pery Cuban was the star of the
Dung.
game with three hits, two
Q- What ts a taw'
Ohio University sophomore stolen bases, and two runs
A- The marble used as
quarterback RICh Bevly ran scored.
Campanerls rose slowly the "shooter" in the game
lor 141 yard$ and two touchf
downs to lead the Bobcats to a from the dirt, picked up his bat, or marbles
23-14 victory over Cmc1nnati. and fired it overhand directly
Bevly, who also passed for 77 at La Grow-''head high but off
yards, had TD runs of 19 and 9 to the side" was the
yards, while L C LyonS and professional description of
Larry Hummer also ran for OU pitcher La Grow.
scores.
With that both benches
Cmcinnati's two scores both erupted onto the field, Martin
came In the third quarter, after leading the Tigers' charge,
trailing 21-o at halftime, with Three' umpires grabbed
M1ke White gomg in from the Martin, who has been Involved
two and fullback Dick Janies ''lallil\fl!r'all)t'tUI!8 oil liM off the
scormg on a 31-yard screen fle)d over \lie years.
"You bet I was a'tler him,"
pass !rom Mike Shoemaker.
snapped
Martin later. "AnyDayton's Greg Schwarber
kicked 39 and 25-yard field body throws a bat at my pit- ·
goals, his seventh and eighth of cher I'm going after him. He
the season, to provide the could have killed my pitcher.
("I dCIII't Uke Billy Martin
Flyers with a ~ lie with
because he plays tough,"
Southem Illinois
SIU's Gregg Goodman, who commented A's slugger Reggie
also kicked a pair of field goals, Jackson afterward. "I'd
missed a 48-yard attempt pl"Obably love him If I played
wh1ch would have given the lor him. He stands up for his
Saiuk1s v•ctory w1th five player.")
If emergencie•
campaneris, who Ullderwent
seconds left
arise, ia your ,fam·
Northern Illino1s, led by ankle X-rays that proved
ily adequately COY•
Fullback Mike Keller who had negative and said he'd be
ered? Seeure their
118 yards and three touch- "okay" for the rest of the
playoffs,
said,
''That
pitcher
well.being with a
downs, overpowered Xavter 26Just
made
me
mad."
7, htnding the Musketeers
revised policy.
"
Things were just calming
their third loss In five games.
Con~ult U• Soon
Xavier's only tally came on a down when they erupted. again.
one.yard run by Dwight The umpires had signalled
Chapma n after a blocked Campanerls was thrown out,
Northern punt and a pass in- and 'then they advanced tow:ard
the mound to give the same
terference penslty
Demson's Ed Exler, the word to La Grow-probably the
leadmg rusher among the Ohio
Conlerence teams, exploded
By the Popular Success of Our Noon
lor 240 yards and lhree touchdowns to lead the B•g Red to a
44-0 rout of Cap1ial
Buffet .
In other games involving
Ohw Conference teams,
Muskingum dropPed - a 23-10
deciswn to Ashland, the fifth
straight wm for the Eagles,
Oberlin lost 21-12 to Hamilton
(N Y ), Wooster trimmed John
Carroll 20-14, Heidelberg
blanked Oh1o Wesleyan 17.(),
Kenyon downed Mt Union 21sto 9 »--$2 SO all you can eat, lor Ala Cartel
12, and Olterhem lost w Oh1o
Northem 14-7

Reuain
Lead
·
e.

Green VICtory over Toledo
since 1966.
Toledo entered the aeason
With 35 wins m a row but that
mark fell m the opener agamst
Tampa The Rockets' threeyear conference wmnmg
streak was broken last week by
Ohto University

The Falcons, who host Kent
State next week m their f1rst
home game of the season, used
bread ana butter runner Paul
Miles a school record 37 times
m pounding the Rockets mto
subm1ss1on.
Miles picked up 108 hardlought yards and went over

Bengals Drop
Broncos 21-10
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cmcinnati Bengals, unable to
score a touchdown mne stratght
quarters, exploded Sunday to
heat the Denver Broncos and
give the1r conl1dence a shot m
the arm.
"That f1rst touchdown really
meant somethmg to our boys,"
sa1d Bengals Coach Paul
Brown after the 21-10 win
"They knew they could
sc!ll)e," he sa1d "For awhile
there 'tHey were begmmng· to
believe some of the thmgs they
read about the poor offense."
The viCtory; Cmqnnall's third
against one loss, propelled the
Bengals into the lead m the
Central D1vls10n of the Ameflcan Conference. It made Denver 1-3,last In the conference's
Western DiviSion
"! don't thmk the offense
ever lost confidence m 1tself,"
Bengal quarterback Ken Anderson sa1d. "We had some hard
times, but we never lost con-

season With a one-yard run m
the second quarter
Anderson completed '12 of 20
passes for 148 yards, lncludmg
a 12-yard toss to Chip Meyers
for a touchdown, but admitted
that "some of my passes could
have been a little better."
Rookie safety Tommy Casanova broke the game open in
the third petlod when he returned a Denver Punt 66 yards
for the go-ahead touchdown.
: "He's a goer, a real competitor," Brown sa1d The Bengal
offense chalked up 199 yards
while the defense held the
Broncos to 167 yards.
Denver coach John Ralswn
satd "we seemed to lose our
pmse m the second half and
couldn 't get anythmg started."
"We apparently are not domg a good JOb on pass protection because thiS ISn't the f~rsl
team that has done well

agamst us/' he sa1d.

Commentmg on Casanova's
fidence ."
punt return, Ralston said "we
Essex Johnson scored the oulkicked our coverage and alfirst touchdown for the Bengals lowed them to pick their
smce the1r flfst game of the holes"

Chiefs Crush
Browns 31-7
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
chalkboard In the Kansas City
Chiefs' locker room Sunday
read - "alert aggresSive play
meant the ball game... r
Hank Slram was correct In
his summation of the Oliefs'
31-7 rout of the Cleveland
Browns.
"It's always nice to beat a
team of the Browns' caliber oot
especially when you are playIng without men Uke Len Dawson and Ed Podolak," said
Stram.
Back-up quarterback Mike
Uvlngston Jtept the Injured
Dawson on the beDCh throughout tile game by tol!8ing three
toUchdown pauses and picking
up 39 yards In five rushing attempts.
Uvlngston, a five-year
veteran, ran his unbeaten
streak as a starting signalcaller to nine games. The 6-4,
212-pounder from Southern
Methodist hit on eight of 18
passes for 81 yards, Including
firsthalf scoring strikes to
Willie FraZier, Morris stroud
and Otis Taylor.
Able Replacemeatt
Mike Adamle, sqbbing for
Podolak, capped the final Kan111 a1y touchdown drive in the
third cjuarter by going aver
from the one-yard nne. He
picked up ae yardl in~ carr1e1
and pbbed three 'P''""' far
ten yards.
"I CC1Illd have played Dlwlon
or Podolak but with such able
replaceaMnts, more time fer

=:..:emed

advf¥ble,"

All lnibiJity to hold Clllto tbe
football, ~)' by 131 OWIII
fllllllldl XeD l!l'oWD, opened

"

the door to the ChiefS early In
the game. Brown Ued a team
record set by Otto Graham In
1953 by fumbling ~ ball four
times
"You can't beat anybody
with eight turnovers, especially a team like Kansas City,"
said Cleveland Coach Nick

Skorich.
Brown's first miscue came
oo the opening kick-off and
Clyde Werner recovered lor
the Chiefs on the Cleveland 31.
Uvlngston hit Dennis Homan
for 22 yards to the nine and
three plays later found Frazier
all alone In the end zone from
three yards out.
Picks Off Pm
Jim Marsalis p1cked off a
Mike Phipps pasa and returned
to the Browns' 16 late in the
first quarter and Uvlngston hit
Stroud with an eight yarder in
the second period

HUS'ILE
AFTER

EVERY
FOOfBAIJ.
GAME

To Get Your
Goodies From

third;

Security h Lon

Dt&amp;Jis.Wiin.- Ins.

AN EVENING
BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

In other games, Bluffton won
1ts fourth w1tn a 24-0 victory
over Findlay, Deftance edged
Wilmington 14-13, H1ram took
W&amp;J 26-4!, Case Western beat
Allegheny 14-6, Youngstown
State mpped
Northern
Michigan 37-36 and Northwood
(Mich.) beat Central State '!121
Drlnksand
Wide Menu
Dessert
Extra.
Choice
&gt;
I
&amp;der our regular menu every alghi S io 10.

Have You Heard?

.
HAPPY HOUR
MON~FRI.

4- TO 6 PM
.

PRI!TZELS&amp; PEANUTS ON IAR.

You'll lie NPP'/lWMn you comt hert.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629

POM~ ·

�,

\
BY JACK 0 BRIAN

Jelled to N1mes France where the name
origmated to g1ve N1mes Mayor Jourdan a
scroll of apprec1at10n and he in turn gave Terry
Lhe town medal The now :;ooo.Amencan blue
Jeans malenal populanzed by Old West peddler
Lev1 Strauss who tatlored the flfst LeviS m Its
French creaUon was called Serge de N1mes
You Don t Have to Be Jewish 1tem very
Chmese restaurateuse Irene Kuo (Gmgko Tree)
was lapped for a senes of lectures on Chmese
CUisme at Scarsdale s Mid-Chester , Young
Men s &amp; Women s Hebrew Ass n thiS month
Irene s food too wtll be kosher

~Sport

Parade

three quarters Gr~ese threw a
17 yard IDuchdown pass 10
Howard Twilley a last minute
starter, and a pass m
terference on Twilley by Steve
Tamen put the Dolphir!S In
position for Klick s SIX yard TD
run for a lead they never
relinquished
The M1am1 v1ctory gave the
Dolphins a two1lame lead m
the American Football Confer
ence East over the Jets New
England and Buffalo which
upended the Patr10ts 38-14 All
three teams are at 2-2
M11111esota meanwhile contlnues to go nowhere Ex
Vikmg Gary CUozzo threw two
24-yard TD passes tD rookie
Bobby Moore the secood with
I 38 le£1 10 play to spark the
Cardinals to victory But 11 was
M1mesota which sealed 118 own
doorp when Fred Cox missed a
26-yard held goal w1th four

Wrestling
Tournament
J. I

Set Oct. 18

seconds left banging tl:' ball
against the right upright
The loss left Minnesota two
games behind Detroit, which
beat AUanta 26-23 and Green
Bay a 20-17 conqueror of
Clucago in the NFC Centrat
In other games Dallas edged
Pittsburgh, 17 131 Washmgton
blanked PhUadelphla IW the
New Y~k Giants clobbered
New Orleans 45-21 Los An
'
geles ripped San Francisco
31
7 San Diego nipped Baltunore
23-20 Cincmnati beat Denver
2110 and Kansas City crushed
Cleveland 31 7 Oakland is at
Houston ton1ght
Rtmnmg back Calvm fill and
Ron Sellers combmed on a 55yard option pass touchdown m
the third quarter that enabled
the Cowboys to beat the
Steelers
Rookie Tommy Casanova
returned a punt 66 yards for
one score and brought back
another 37 to set up a second as
the Bengals downed Denver
DenniS Partee s 'l/ yard field
goal with four seconds ie£1 gave
San D1ego 1ts tnumph over the
Colts Baltimore s third loss m

TO
THE CONSTITUTION
AM~NDMENT

J

'

0

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v

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I

G
h

j '

'

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than the famoua
original Zenith
Chromacolor
olcture lube

Stargell Keeping His Cool

••

SHIRt
FINISHING

The EXETER • D3722W

American Walnut color cabinet
High Performance Chassis Super Video
Range Tuner Automatic Fine-Tuning Control

INGELS FURNITURE
PH 992 2635

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puts 1t out
It's about techm
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don't take four
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prepare for
Careers that
pay double what a htgh school graduate
usually earns As much as so~pe colleg~
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If you can't swmg four years of college
tUitiOn, you can sttll help your ktds to a great
career
Send for the gutde, today It's free

Robinson's Cleaners

•

EVERY MDNDAY

TfU~E: f~UE

WITH EMPHASIS ON PUBLIC AFFAIRS,
CULTURE RELIGION, AND EDUCATION OF OUR
AREA HOW TO GIVE BLOOD
ThiS WHk,
~1gs

for example A drug educat1on session at

High School lnterv~ew with a mayor • and

much, much

c

Q-What nonor IS be
stowed upon a natzon on
tis t~rst day of U N mem
bersh1p?
A-Its flag is diSplayed
centrally and higher than
the othera on that day

0·--

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"COOKIE SHACK"

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I 't'o Careers Washington, D C 20202

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POR BIG DllqOUNT SAVINOSf

700t leW.t DUly
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• I

MIDDLEPORT

If your kids
don't know where
they're going,
this guide can help
point the way. .,..

Stirring:

I
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L-------------~----------J

f.t

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ThtAMrii .... GOIMII . . . IIM ........ Na:l l"l:::
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earnmg over S18 500

lua

LEGA~ NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ISSUE l W LL CAUSE
ON TAX LEVY
HIGHER TAXES FOR THE
IN
EXCESS OF TilE
SMA LL BUSINESSMAN
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Text of the Proposed
H Qh prof t
corpor;,t
ons
s hereby g ¥en that
Conttitutlonal 1\rtl,ndment
would save about SlSO m 11 on f n NOTICE
pursuance
a Reso ut on Qf
ssue '2 passes A flat rate n he Board of ofEducat
on of the
Af'TICLE XII Section 8
cbme
tax
tor
a
I
bus
nesse$
8~ IT RESOLVED bV lhe nc ud ng piJrtnersh ps and Me gs L~cal Schoof, D str ct
gs County Oh o pas$ed on
~:Jeopte Ot the State of Ohio
proprietorsn ps would force al Me
the 14th day of August 1972
Laws may l;le passed prov d ng bus nesses to pay the same rate
there w I be subm ffed to a vote
tor the taxat on by the state or
anv pol t cal subd vis on thereat SSUE 2 WILL REDUCE of lhe people of sa d School
of the ncomes of both (1) STA TE SUPPORT TO YOUR D str ct at a Genera ELEC
TION to be held n the Me gs
natural persons and (2) cor COMMUN TY
Local School D str ct Oh o at
porat ons
other bus ness
Don
t
vote
for
a
p
g n a poke
orga,.lutlons and taxa b e I the ncome tax 1s repea ed t he regulal" places ol vot ng
ent t es l!lnd anv such lax sh&lt;~~ll must ether be replaced by a there n on Tuesday the 7th day
of November 1972 the Quest on
be at a non gr'aduated rat.e FLAT RATE INCOME TAX
of
n excess of the ten
with n ea.ch of the two
NCREASES
IN
REAL. m le11ying
II m tal on for the benef t of
c asslf cat ons and may be ESTATE TAXES CITY IN
applied to sucli ncomes as may COME TAXES SAI.ESTAXES Me gs Loca School Oislr ct for
the purpose of Current expenses
be des gnatect by aw Pro-y ded TUIT ONS ETC::
or curri!nt of
the subd v son
however that w th the ex state ad must decrec;.se for
Sa
be n{l an add I on a
cept on of nvestments n n
CITIES COUNTIES AND tax ofd tax
5o mills to run for a
tang ble persona property no TOWNSHIPS
con t nu ng per ad
ja w shall be enacted by t.he
SCHOOLS AND UNIVER
General Assembly and no SIT ES
at a rate not exceed ng s 0 m lis
ex sf ng or future law shall be
MENTAL HEALTH
each one do ar of valuat on
enforced by ~my off cer of th s
HOSPITALS PUBLI C for
wh ch amounts to F tty Cents
state ot subd v s on thereof ASS STANCE
for each one hundred dollars of
mpos ng
c:o ect ng
or
CLEAN A R AND WATER valuat on for a coni nu ng
otherwise levying any taM on or
measur ng any tax by ncome SSUE 2 WILL ELIM NATE per od
Potts for sa d E ect on
of natural persons cor FAIRNESS AND JUSTICE IN w The
I open at 6 30 o c ock A M
poratlons or other bus ne!;.s OH 0 S TAX SYSTEM
and rem a n open unt 1 6 30
organ tat ons and taxable
Issue 2 perm ts only a flat o clock P M Eastern Standard
enllt es or ncrea~ ng the rates rate ncome tax 1 ke the c tv T me of sa d day
thereof unless sucn tax or r1 ncome tax t e m nates the
By orde of the Board of
crease St approved by at least a pr nclp1 e that Oh o voters Elect
ma lority of the e ectros of the adopted n 191 2 that ncome Oh o ons of Me gs County
state or of the subd v son taxes be based on ab tv tn p~
vot ng on such proposlat on
Edw n 5 Cozart
Noth ng cont,a ned here n sha 1 DON T BE M SLED NTO
Cha rman
prevent the col lection of or the PAYING
MORE THAN YOUR
enforcement of the aw re at ng FA R SHARE
Dorothy M Johnston
to any tax I abl ty wh ch has GOVERNMENT FOR GO OD
0 rector
accrued prior to the effect ve
Vote no on Issue 2
Oa ed Sept 29 971
date of this section
Comm ttee aga nsf the
The quest ons at such a tax on Amendment
II am W Taft
(10) 2 9 16 23 4t
neon es or ncrease n the rates James J F W
annery
01
ver
thereof sha I be subm tted at a
Qenera election to the e ectors Ocasek E W Lampson
of th s state or of tM subd v son
UNJTED STATES
NOTICE OF ELECTION
for the r approval or re1ect on
OF
AMERICA
ON TAX LEVY IN
n a manner prescr bed by law
STATE
OF
DHIO
EXCESS OF THE
Prov ded further however
OFFICE OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
tpat tl'lls sect on sha ll not affect
SECRETARY OF STATE
NOT c E s hereby g \len that
the author tv of mun clpal t es
I
TEO
W
BROWN
n
of a Reso vt on of
subtect to the prov slons of Secretary of State of the State of thepursuance
Board of Educat on of the
Sect on 6 Art c e XII and Oh
o do hereby cert fy that the Southern Local School D str ct
Sect on 13 Article XVIII Of lh s forego
s a true copy of the Me gs County Oh o passed on
Canst tut on to Impose collect text of angproposed
canst tut ona the 21h day of August 1972
or otherw se levy any ta x on or amendment Inflated
by there w be subm tted o a vo e
to measure any tax by ncome pet t on
toget her
w th of the people of sa d School
of natural persons cor arguments for ts adopt on and 0 str ct at a General ELEC
porat ons or other bus ness arguments aga nst ts adopt on
ON to be he d n the Southern
organ zat ons and taxable I ed n the Off c;e of the T
Local
Schoo D str ct Ohio at
ent t e~ or to ncrease the rates Secretary of State and the regular
places of vat ng
thereof
propos ng to amend the above there n on Tuesday the 7th day
Sect on of the Canst tut on of of November 1912 th e questton
ARGUMENT IN
Oh o
of levy ng n e11.cess of the ten
FAVOR OF
m I m tat on for the benef t of
PROPOSED AMENDMENT
IN TE ST IM ONY WHEREOF Southern Loca Schoo D str ct
If approved by the voters at I have hereunto subscr bed by to'r the purpose of Current
the November elect on the name and aft xed my off cal expenses
proposed amendment to Oh o s seal at Colum bus the twenty
tax be ng a renewal of
cooshtut on would great y fourth day of September 1972 anSad
ex st ng tax of 50 m s to run
mprove the opportvn ty of the
for a cont nu ng per od at a rate
publ c to partie pate n the
TED W BROWN not e11.ceed ng 5o m lis for each
dec s on as. to how and how
Secretary of State one dollar of valuat on wh ch
much t s to be taxed For the (Sea l)
amounts to F tty Cents for each
f rst t me the publ c would have
one hundred dol a s of
the r ght to vote on taxaf on and (91 25 (10) 2 9 16 23 5lc
valuat on for a cont nu ng
government spend ng at th e
per od
state leve
The Flo Is for sad Elect on
NOTICE OF ELECTION
The law a ready guarantees
w be open at 6 30o clock AM
ON
TAX
LEVY
IN
the pub c th s right of control at
and rem a n open unt I 6 30
EXCESS OF THE
the local level n the f eld of real
o clock P M Eastern Standard
TEN
MILL
LIMITATION
estate taxes and mun c pal
T me of sa d day
NOT
CE
s
hereby
g
ven
that
income taKes
By o der of th e Board of
n
pursuance
of
a
Resolut
on
of
If approved the con sf tut on
Elect ons of Me gs County
the
Council
of
the
V
llage
of
would then prov de tha t the rate Rac ne Oh o passed on th e 3rd Oh o
of state ncome Ia Kat on must day
of August 1972 th ere w I
be the same for all natural be subm
Edw n S Coza t
to a vote of the
persons The cons t tut on people oftted
Cha rman
sa
d
V I age at a
already requ res that the rate General ELECT ION to be held
and va uat n for property taxes n the V II age of Rae ne Oh o at
Dordthy M Johnston
must be the same for all tax the regular places of vat ng
0 rector
payers
Dated sept 29 1972
there
n
n
Tuesday
the
7th
day
The amendment would
November 1972 the quest on
provide for Income taxat on of
of
levy ng n excess of the ten (101 2 9 16 23 41
based upon ability to pay that milllmitaton
----------s the greater a taxpeyer s Rae ne VIllage forthebeneftof
for
the
purpose
ncome the more tax he would
Current Expenses
pay the smaller a taxpayers of Sa1d
NOTICE OF ELECTION
tax be no a renewa of
ncome the less tax.. he would ap.. ~~~,it!n
tax
of
Two
m
li
s
to
pay 1
W.
'tlo
~'k:~A:...~~V~~~ I
A ~ YES vote onl he tssue '' "" I!!Jl'l.''&lt; ~'-ors I TEN
Ml .l.t~I~ITAtl,l)~ 1
neceSsary to aet6mpl sh the at a r,ate not ew.ceed ng 2 0 mils
NOTICE
'He~ebvov~nthel
follow ng
for each one dollar of valuat on n pursuance of a Reso ut on of
111 Proh bit collect on of the wh ch amounts to Twenty Cents the Board of Township Trustees
present ncome and ncome for each one hundred dollars of of the Townsh P of Rutland
related tax
Oh o passed on the 31st day Of
on for Five years
m G velhe public the rlghtto veluat
May 1972 there w I be sub
The
Polls
for
said
Elect
on
vote on any proposed ncome w I be open at 6 30 o c ock A M m lied to a vol• of lhe people of
tax n the future (except and rem a n open unt I 6 30 sad Townsh P at a General
mun clpal tax )
o clock P M Eastern Standard ELECTION to be held in lhe
(3) Requ re public approval Time of sa d day
Townsh p of Rut land Oh o at
before any proposed ncreese of
the regular paces of vot ng
By
order
of
the
Board
of
any such tax cou d take effect Elections of Me gs County therein on Tuesday the 7th day
The effect If any which Oh o
of November 1972 the ouestlon
approval of the constitutional
of levying n exc:ess of the ten
amendment m ght have on
Edw n S Cozart m II imitation forthebenef tot
current state expenditures will
and Township lor the
Chatrman Rut
only last for s x months But the
Purpose of Current Expenses
control by the publ c over ex
Sad tax be ng a renewal of
Dorothv M Johnston
cesslve sta te government
Director an ex st ng tax of 50I V• l mill &lt;o
spend ng will be a permanent Dated Sept 29 1972
run
for
f ve
Years
part of Ohio s canst tution that
at a rate not exceeding 50 m II
ne ther
governor
nor (lQ) 2 9 16 23 .tt
leg slature now or In the future - - - - - - - - - - - for each one dollar of valuation
wh ch amounts to Five Cents for
can ever take away from the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
each one hundred dollars of
pe~~~e No"Yember elect on mav
ON TAX LEVY IN
valuation for Five years
EXCESS OF THE
The Polls for .said Election
be the last chance thet Oh oans
TEN MILL LIM"ATION
ever get to control directly
NOTICE Is hereby g ven that w 11 open at 6 30 o c ock A M
runaway spending at the state In purs.uance of a Resolution of and remain open until 6 30
cock P M Eastern Standard
le(~mm ttee for the Amend the Board of Township Trustees oTime
of sa d day
of the Township of Ol ive Ohio
By order of the Bo,ard of
ment Chester T Cruze Robert passed on the 11th day of Sep
E Le\1 tt Josep h P TulleA tember 1972 there wi I be Etect19ns of Meigs County
Raymond P Luther Howard
subm tted to" vote of the people Oh o
Kn ght
of said Townsh p at a General
Edwin S Coz,art
ARGUMENT IN
ELECTION to be held In the
Chairman
OPPOSITION TO
Townsh p of Olive Oh o at the
PROPOSED AMENDMENT regutarp aces of voting there n
Dorothy M Johnston
Vote NO on Issue 1
on Tuesday the 7th day of
Approv nn Issue 2 wIt hurt November 1972 the questiOn Of Dated Sept 29 1972 Director
levy ng n excess of the ten m 11
You
lim tat on for the benefit of ( 101 2 9 16 23 41
ISSUE 2 WILL DESTROY THE Olive Township for the purpose
HOMESTEAD EXEMPT ON of mainta nlng and operating
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Townsh p Cemeter es
AND 10 PCT PROPERTY TAX
Sa s tax be ng en additional
DN TAX LEVY IN
REDUCTION
,
tax of 50( 'h) mIt to run for
zEXCESS OF THE
Loss of the real estate tax F ve years
tEN 1,\ILL LIMil'~TION
reduct o s the corporate and
NOTICE Is hereby given that
persona Income taus made at a rate not exceeding so m II In pursuance of a Resolution of
possible
wouiQ
cost for each one dollar of valuat on the Board of Township Trustees
homeowners who are over 64 wh ch amounts to Five Cents for of the Townsh p of 01 ve Oh o
yearly tax sav ngs amounting to each one hundred dol ars of passed on the 11th dey of Sep
as much as 80 pet of the r \laluat on tor F ve years
tember 1972 th ere wll be
property taxes and would takt!
The Polls for safd Election subm If ted to a vote of the people
away ell other taxpayers 10 w11t be open at 6 30 o clock AM of said Townsh p at a General
pet real estate tax rollback
and remeln open until 6 30 ELECTION to bo held In
o clock P M Entern Standard Township of 01 ve Ohio at the
ISSUE 2 WILL CAU~E OTHER T me of sad doy
regular places of voting therein
NEW AND INCR:EASED
By order of the Board of on Tue-sday the 7th day of
TAXES FOR INDIVIDUALS Elecllons of Me gs County November 1972 the question ot
supporters of ssue 2 don t Ohio
levying in excess of the ten mil
want rtduced spend ng They
EdwIn S Cozart I mltation for the benef t of
want to Sh ft the burden or
Cha irman 01 ve Townsh p for the purpose
taxation from the wealthy to the
of prov ding end manta nfng
average taxpayer b-; • flat
Dorothy M Johnston fire apparatus appliances
Inco me tax which would
bu ld ngs or sites therefor or
DOUSLE taxes for famll es Dated Sept 29 1972 0 rector sources of water supply and
earning S9 000 or ess and would
mater als therefor or the
reduu taxes ONLY for tam II es (10) 3 9 16 23 .,
establ shment and ma ntenance
of I nes of fire a arm telegraph
'
or the payment of permanent
.
part time or volunteer f rem en
or f re fighhng com pan es to
operate the same
Said tex being an add t1onal
tax of 50( !,) mil to run for
1 dynamic bualnell opportunity
F ve vears
Blllmt ponnen wkh olomlly- firm who SELECT_..
at a rate nat uceedlng SO mIll
.._. upon tholr OUALIFICATIONS and not upon wllot thoy
for each one dollar of valuation
Which
amounts to Five Cents for
· - - · tht VENDING BUIINES&amp;
each one hundred dollars of
WE REQUIRE
valuation for F ve Years
WE OFFER
The Polls for sa d Elect on
'A
DEIIRE
FOR
SUCCUS
•A JOIId-"' 11uo1w II beop~M et 6 30o clock AM
•TiiM
routl
•La tlooll oblolnod b¥ """'"""'
and remain open unrn 6 30
'F--Pn!ll""'
o
clock P M Eastern .St,andard
"Cccll¥ltlo
A.B C
'ln-ontofl800.. 1800
T me of said day
- t v ....
lllulpmlnl
By order of the Board of
•\Iindo ..,..ioo, oondioo, poonutl
for
prodUct
Elect ons of Me gs County
"CCrnpony nn...lnl h&gt;r IJOWih
Oh o
OUR IUCCEa II IAIED LWON YbUR SUCCESS
Edw n S Coz~rt
Cha rman
A *lknwllll flrwl wfth !t'_lppl. . ..,..,..,. ~ 1M natlo~,
, 11,.. .,..,_ • 1 urul """•"· lnlll
unoe whln Yotl
Dorothy M Johnston
Dlrtctor
Daltd Sept 29 1972
.... yw:wll tho '"'""""" for tho LAIIOUT
• .... 11f 1111 ..... orill With I 0 p tad ftwith
ftw lUCCI. M
...,.. MIIW I I llon IIIII 11o1o.a. llf ........ b¥ our -

1

The Alpha Delta Epsdon
Fralermty of Rio Grande
College
IS
sponsoring
professwnal wrestling on
Wednesday Oct 18 111 the Paul
R Lyne Center
The event 15 bemg held to
raiSe money for the !rater
mty s Annual Handicap
Children s Basketball Tour
nament Four action packed
matches have been scheduled
for fan mterest
The f1rst match begms at 8
p m w1th a 15 minute tune
hm1t It features Masked Angel
Number I 270 pounds agamst
Roger Vest of Ch1lhcothe
another heavyweight
The second event also a one
PITl'SBURGH (UPI) -The
fall 15 mmute hme lunii fmds
Pltllbursb Pirates lost the last
Masked Angel Number Two
tllree J'ellll)ar games
tangling With the Hlllb11ly of
wben lbey faced the Reds m
Kentucky Both wrestlers
ClnclnnaU but slugger WUUe
weigh 250 pounds each
The lh1rd match pits
llqeiJ does not regard that 1111 V1rdon said We bad a b1g during the season Anderson make you want 10 play for a man
man 11f.o when we had rumers replied
Everybody needs to know he s appreCJated some'Jmes
promoter wrestler Hank Vest
. . tiiDIII
we
d1dn
I
hit
We
played
a
Halls
record
speaka
for
but
"I doa't think that makes any
Everybody not only me Sometimes I can use a pat on the back
of Chillicothe agamst Big
jlffaeuce," stargell said re- good game but tbey played Itself -he was!~! for the year and sometimes 1can use a kick in the rear It sall in the way both Daddy Dean from Sprmgfield
lulng In front of hla locker better There should be a lot of But I thought he d come aroun~J are administered
Vest t1ps the scales at 255
even if he was involved in four
Smday after the Reds evened baseball left m the playoffs
Joe Morgan mutilated the Pirate's ~l'FI"" J1t;hll :fill ¥gll!"s~ , JI&lt;Jilllds wh1re Deaw)W!f!bs 300
Reds Ma~ger)l~IJkY t,p• no decisions jlgaln!j.t the litem and hla eighth fflttffQi oofrie run rof&amp; ~lievcr Ramon Rep, 11 .p&lt;fun~ l;r!JJ.i Ne~lfd b'~t df
the Natlooal ~~~~offs
Pirates and h1s earned run na•tu~~'§Jhday WRhJS' StXtll hcilfter of file yl!lir'agailit 11\em _, l~ree falls With a 45 mtnute
with a 5-3 victory 1'lle tearrur derson had a prophesy
I sa1d before the game that average was 10 23 agamst
meet apln today at Cincumati
He didn t do so badly against the other clubs m lbe league lime hm1t
stargell went o.for-3 Sunday if we wm today (SUNDAY) them
either finishing With 161hits 122runsscored 73rbl s !&amp;homers
The b1g main event wdl be a
we II wm it all I still feel that
Anderson described secood 58 stolen bases and a right respectable 292 batting average
bill he kept his cool
tag team match'With the team
baseman Joe Morgan as one
We win like men and we way he said
It sa rather commonly known fact Joe Morgan wasn t happy of the Masked Blue Angels
m Ho1111ton where he and Harry Walker the manager didn t batthng the team of Roger Vest
always see eye-to-eye Morgan was glad when the Aatros sent and the H11lbllly ThiS will be
him tD the Reds in that elght.player swap last November He two out of three falls With the
doesn 1 mind talking about that either
usual one hour tune hm1t
Everybody says I've had a great season this year he says
Tickets are now on sale from
I have but I don t think 11 s better thai! two years I bad m any fratermty member at a
Houston Its justthat now 1 ve got Tolan Bench and Perez
reduced pnce for the adult
ticket
The advance tickets sell for
NO
SLEEPING
IN
C~
$1
50 each cost at the door is
of the top 10 players m the
LONDON (UPI )-Some $2 Tickets may be purchased
game today
male
students at London s at Bob Saunders Quaker State
I want the whole country tAl
see Morgan in the World Waltham Technical College Ser-vice Center Price and Son
attend art claases tbefC only tAl Pharmacy DICk Brown s
Series
A Great New Cable TV Presentation
Morgan hit homers m the ogle nude female models a Nat1onw1de Insurance
The Tri-County's Own Show
first two playoff games but he member of the distr~ct s Thomas Clothiers Rucker
(
Montgomery Barber Shop
could not explain the pitch he municipal council said
They attend these sesswns Scott s Grocery H1gley s
belted off reliever Ramon
only
for the titlllation said Barber Shop m Kanauga and
Hernandez in the eighth Inning
Councillor Cllarles Paley Phil the Redman Inn
of Sunday s game
lips
They are certai~ly not
I don t know what 11 was
Morgan said Some type of there m the name of art
Paley Philllps opposed the
lreaking pitch or sometljing
Roberto Clemente, who has models demands they be paid
faUed to hit In seven times at $150 an hour for posing, In
r
bN in the playoff, tned to stead of the $1 25 the govern
SAME
DAY
mentoilwned college paid
explain his faUure
SERVICE
why should the rate (tax)
If I bave my body alive l
In At 9-0ut At$
play well ' he said But now payer fork out even more to
gJve
these
110-called
students
a
my body ls.oot good I m down
Use Our Free Pork&lt;ng Lot
bl,t of a thrill 1 Paley PhllliJX!
to about 172 pounds
THE PEOPLE OF MEIGS, GALLIA MASON
But 1don t worry a lot like I demanded
The council s education com
used to Now I just go out and
COUNTIES, • •with Paul Gerard and Danny
216 E 2nd, POIMroy
mlltee has approved the new
do my best
K1ng as your co-hosts weekly
Virdon, loilng pitcher Bob rates
Moose and Riehle Hebner
insiBted that Bobby Tolan s
double in the first inning, which
drove In two runs, was foul
I couldn t believe it when
I
•
the umpire in left field (Harry
Wendelltadt) called it lair,
Moose said
I asked the
umpire at tlird about It but he
told me It Willi not his call
Those two runs made the
difference
A NEW CONCEPT IN LOCAL TV PROGRAMING,

Oct 9 1972

Proposed by
tn1h1tlve Petition

four games
Steve OWens ran three yards
for the winning touchdown with
34 seconds left to lift the Uons
over Atlanta
Mike Uvingston threw three
TD passes for the second
_straight week as tbe Qdefs
ripPed Cleveland
Chesler Marco! s 37 yard
field goal with 30 seconds left
pushed Green Bay past ltle
Bears
Los Angeles moved littD first
place m the NFC West by
beatmg San FranciSco behind
Roman Gabriel s two TD
passes to Jack Snow Reserve
Bob Thomas gamed 142 yards
fo· the Rams
Jun BraxtDn ran for two TDs
and 0 J Sunpson drove for
another durmg a 28-point
second per1od that enabled
Buffalo to crush New England
Charlie Evans scored three
TDs during a 31-pomtfirst half
118 the G1anls routed New
Orleans and Sonny Jurgensen
threw a 36-yard TD PBIIIl to Roy
Jefferson and set up the other
TD as the Redskins blanked
Phlladelplua
p

o

LEGAL NOTICE

DolPhins Roll On, 27-17

NEW YORK (UPI)-The Fran Tarkenton continued 10
Miami Dolphins hive their stumble this time dropping a
eyes set on Super Bowl agam 19-17 decislon to the St lows
but someone seems tAl have )lUI Cardinals their third loss m
the. blindfolds oo the Minnesota four games
Vikmgs
M1aml w1th Bob Gnese
The Dolphins continued to throwing one TD pass and
cruiSe along !hell' merry way setting up a pall" of short
&amp;mday beatmg the New York scormg runs by Jun Klick
Jets 'l/17 to remam pro spotted New York an early
football s only unbeaten team touchdown and then outplayed
atW
the Jets who entered the ~me
But the Vikings the pre With tbe highest scormg of
The late famed drama wile Ward season Super Bowl p1cks after fense m tbe league for the last
the acqUISition of quarterback
Morehouse s Widow Rebecca had serious
surgery at Harkness Pavilion Newsweek says
"
Nixon s 111 reach of wmmng 50 states The U
&lt;
S Br1tam and W Germany have a common
T~y's
,
dedicated yen to put the fiSCal squeeze to Japan
to revalue (a t least 10 pet) 1ts currency
'i
Lorna Luft Judy Garland s other smgmg
&lt;
daughter opens at the St RegiS Maisonette w1th
By MILTON RICHMAN
lhe comfortable encouragement of knowmg half
lJPJ ~rts F..ditor
u J.r•en maJOr cafes where shes worked
CINCINNATI (UP!) -They call Joe Morgan a vauety of
already have booked her for return triumphs
Houston s Shamrock Hilton San Francisco s names like Sweet Pea Uttle B1g Man and B1g Joe
His Cincinnati Red teammates call their Hoot 7 !50-pound
Fa1rnwnt Hotel the Concord m the Catskills
second
baseman these names With warm affection because he s
Lake Geneva Playboy Hotel and more Cafe
owners don I fall under the spell of Judy Uza an easy Individual 10 like aud they all like hbn
They llke hun even when he s not part1cularly domg the thmgs
showbiZ 1elallvlly - they look at the bottom hne
on the cash regiSter Lorna s just f1mshing with he d1d &amp;lnday in Pittsburgh where be delivered a b1g hit m that
Danny Thomas at the Las Vegas Sands Dan four-run firSt mnfug rally uncorked a home run later on turned
ny s also keepmg her m N Y for his week at tbe m several sparklers m the field and literally was all over the
place m a 5-3 wm that squared the National League playoffs for
Westbury Music Fa1r Oct 30
The mostly mdestructible octogenarian the Reds at one game apiece
The reason everybody Jumps on Joe Morgans bandwagon Is
Artur Rubmstem cancelled several weeks of h1s
because
he always hustles Well maybe not always but cer
American tour - f~rst time m 40 years he s
tainly 999 tbnes out of 1000
Dllssed a concert on account of Illness The
This IS a little story about a tbne he didn t that one time little
great plllmst IS llJ Par1s with an agonizmg
slungles attack
Dame! Barenbo1m replaces Joe Morgan dogged 1t a little and didn t grmd and churn all his
him as plano solmst Oct 11 w1th the Israel guts out barreling down to f1rst base Joe Morgan doesn t
Ph1lharmomc at Carnegie Hall
Thomas generally advertise this Story but if you start him off he fur
Patr~ck McMahon and hiS son MaJ Br1an nishes aU the little details
It happened during our last series with Atlanta he says
Patnck McMahon (of Westchester and the Air
I popped the ball up to the first baseman Hank Aaron and
Corps respectively) just sol&lt;t the~r The Issue of
the Bishop s Blood novel to the moom p1t ran down the line about th•ee-quarters speed I don t know why I
chubs The upstate authors are the first father did 11 but anyway I did lflt had been a ground ball I would ve
son literary collaboratiOn In 50 years Senior gone all out I koow that for sure
Anyway even running the way I was I crossed the bag JUS! as
McMahon 1s JUStice m the times! N Y State
Aaron
caught lhe ball When I came back m the dugout Sparky
hamlet (which one T P ?)
(manager Sparky Anderson) came over to me and sa1d quietly
You ve gQt too much class to make yourself look that bad I
said 'you re right It wont happen agam
Joe Morgan pauses a moment at this point m the story Then he
offers a Uttle insight mto himself
lose like men he said
Questioned why he sent
'That was the only time smce I ve been With the Reds Sparky
Pirate Manager Bill VIrdon southpaw Tom Hall to relieve
everhadtotellmeanythlng he says 'The unportant thing was
also kept hiS composure
starter Jack Blllingham dethe way he did it GenUy and quleUy Uke a man He dldn t get
We had a couple of good spite Hall s previOus lack of
allover
me althoughhecertainlycould ve Utile things like tbat
shots but didn t make 11
success against the Pirates

JANE GETS A PROTEST
OFF HER CHEST
NEW YORK (KFS)- Jane Fonda phoned
Ogden Phipps secretary to confide she m1ght
just show up at NIXon s $1 OOtJ..a-plate Waldorf
dinner last week - topless - to dramatiZe her
protests Jane reconSidered ~eaders wonder
why we don I lake after Jame-one note w1th a
journalistic bludgeon sunply because we
f'efuse to escalate an hystencal Imla!IOn to
martyrdom Rodney Dangerfield IS begmmng to
believe hiS c0m1c g1mm1ck that he Gets No
Respect he can I understand why he doesn l
gel wnting credit on the Dean Martin Show
inasmuch as he wntes all his matenal plus hiS
exchanges With Martin
Barbra Slrelsand
didn t move mto her own Manhattan townhouse
whtle making her new ruck here - took over the
Plaza Hotel s laviSh penthouse {OJ: two months
Former G1ant gnd star and network sports
caster Kyle Rote IS working on a TV senes
Cell Block 11 Kyle and partner Jack Wmter
want to use Alcatraz for realism- If the Jnd1an
squatters WII!)et em Gleason s ex-&lt;l~rector
Frank Bunetta would do h1s honors 1! and when
June Allyson s actress daughter (also D1ck
Powells) Pam Powell and Bob Podesta son of
lhe ass t Sec of the InteriOr share a happy
ulterior motive
Len £anou last m AP
plause ' on Bdwy celebrated at the UniCorn
after stgmng as male lead m Hal Prmce s new
Sm1les of a Swnmer N1ght musical the t1lle
alone sounds like an old fashiOned operetta
Dr Solomon Bensabat JUSt was adm1tted to
lhe Spanish bar Notable - 11 makes h1m the
first Jew m modern limes to manage 11 Ac
tress Jade Hagen really appreciates Manbat
lan s pollution - her mult1-allerg1es forced her
tAl CBIIf -where shes working steadily for the
first tune m multi TV films
Hot UN rumor - Mao s ready to step down
filness B1ll Me1gs 1s a huge (SIX f1ve) H wood
Western screen TV villain mvadmg N Y for a
Nov 15 C8rneg1e Hall concert of romantic duets
With ClaUdia Genteel a Ia Earl Wr~ghtson and
Lo1s Hunt Why IS he cast as a v1llam so con
listenUy• Wben you re th1s b1g If you re not a
hero what else IS there'
Denim Council fashion exec Terry Mayer

'

5-The DaOy Sentinel Middleport..Pomeroy

to.,.,.

""'"'""nt ...
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WIIITI POll DITAILI NO OILIOATI~: INCLOIII'HONI
_ _ . 11 AND ITIIIIT ADDIIEa ltw nrollllolo...,.

•••• Industries, Inc

'

536

Monroe. Lou-71201

Hallie I
Nesselroad
Charles Nesselroad to Wilham
L Harl Jean N Hart Ease
Bedford
George Cummms Opal
Cummms to Arch1e R Jarrell
IJnda C Jarrell Sayre s Add
Lelart
Zerkle Trucktng Co to John
at a rate not exceed n9 1 0 m Zerkle Hallie Zerkle Nellie
for each one do ar of valuat on Zerkle Lot 6J Middleport
wh ch amounts to Ten .... ents for
eac;h one hundrecl dollars of
Berren Duncan Bonme
vatuat on'J""fo
Vl!t--¥ell!lf&lt;!IThe Po s for sa1d Elect on Duncan to Eber R Rieber
w II be open at 6 30 a clock A M Rulh M Rieber 1 Acre Sutton
and rem a n open until 6 JO
Forrest M Wh1te Northa A
o clock P M Eastern Standard
T me of sa d day
Wh1te to Loren Clark V1rgm1a
By order of tlie Board of
Elect ons of Me gs Countv Clark Parcel Columbia
Oh o
Russell Randolph Bertha
Edw n S Cozart Randolph to John RaY1JlQnd
Cha rman Berry Goldie Mane Berry 10
Dorothy M Johnston Acres Ohve
D rector
P R Randolph Bertha
Dated Sep 29 1972
Randolph to John Rayn.ond
:.(1;.:0:.1.:.2:...::9_1:.:6:..2::3::....:.":.....---- Berry Goldie MarJe Berry 37
Acres Olive
Kenneth E R1ggs Judith A
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
R1ggs to Dav1d N R1ggs
IN EXCESS OF THE
Audrey L R1ggs 302 Acre
TEN MlLL LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven hat Orange
n pursuance of a Resolu t on of
the Counc 1 of the v aoe of
Pomeroy Oh o passed on the
2tst day of August 1972 there
w II be subm tted to a vole of the
people of sa d v I! age al a
Genera ELECTION to be held
n the V llage of Pomeroy Oh o
at the regular places of vot ng
there n on Tuesday the 7th day
of No\lember 1972 the quest on
of levying n excess of the ten
By Mrs Lyle Balderson
m II m tat on for the benet t of
Mr
and Mrs P R Randolph
Pomeroy Village for the pu
pose of Current Expenses
Sa d tax be ng e renewa of celebrated their 60th weddmg
an e• Sf ng tax of Two m lis to anmversary on Sunday Sept
run for f ve years
23 at their home A dmner w1th
at a rate not e•ceed ng 2 o mi s lwo decorated cakes (from
for each one do tar of valuat on fnends and daughter ) were
wh ch amounts to Twenty Cents
for each one hundred dollars of served to Clarestme Randolph
11aluahon for F ve vears
of Reedsville Mr and Mrs
The Polls for sa d E ecf on
Keebaugh
and
w be open at 6 30 o clock AM Marvm
and rem a n open unt 6 30 daughter Tonya of Chester
o clock P M Eastern Standerd
Mr and Mrs Robert Buck and
Time of sad day
By order of the Board of daughter Jenmfer Lyn of
E ect ons of Me gs County
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Oh o
Edwin s cozort Erwm Cain of Columbus and
Cha rman
Ihe honored guests Mr and
Dorothy M Johnston Mrs p R Randolph The
D rector
Dated S•pt 29 1972
Randolphs
have
two
daughters one granddaughter
110 ) 2 9 16 23 41
lwo great granddaughters and
one
great great
granddaughter Mr Randolph
1s ret1red from the old U S
Lock 20
Mrs Dr~c1lla House of
lN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
Columbus and Mrs Dorothy
MEIGS couNTY OHIO
Harden of Syracuse and Mrs
IN THE MATTER OF CON Edna Ne1gler Of Racine spent

Reedsville

News, Notes

~~n~'!.'i.~u'?{E 'il~RTt"\.!~ &lt; JI!LI!fl~~nlljlAW!11!.,1'r!fS 0" ~

SII'R'AGU'SE ll _,&lt;ffiTI'f.o d::S§tQ;I'el!eRI/,yJ 1 l o
bi1 B
METHODIST
CHURCH
Mr
'lind
Mrs
OtisK
Casto
SYRACUSE
OHIO
SUC
CESSOR
TO
THE were tn Manetta where Mrs
EvANGEL 1cAL u N1TED Casto consulted an eye
BRETHREN CHURCH AT
SYRACUSE
OHIO
A specia)ISl
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY DULY
Mr and Mrs H 0 Powers
ORGANIZED UNDER' THE
LAWS OF THE STATE DF VISited the Castos recently
OHIO
Mrs Powers is a SISter of Mr
No u 149
NOTICE BY
Casto
PUBLICATION
Mr ~nd Mrs Dale Kibble of
N1 5h b
e 1 lh
off ~e~: aneJe ;{,~~b~r~ 0~ East Liverpool VlSited wtth
svracuse un led Methodist Mrs
C oil
Randolph
Church Syracuse Oh o and to
U arr
the former off cers and recen Y
members 1 any ol The
Mrs Gladys Mor•an
and
0
E
1
u 1 d 8 th
vange atta Syracuse
n e Ohreo ,and
ren Debb1e of Columbus VISited
Church
to all others whom It moy w1th Mrs Carroll Randolph
concern lhat on lhe 6lh doy ol
M L Boston is a patient at
Oc1ober 1972 the Trustees of
the Syracuse United Methodlst the St Joseph Hospital in
Church successor In nterest to Parkersburg
the
Evangelical
United
•rethr&lt;n Church at .§yracuse
Mrs Hazel Balderson of
Oh o fled In the common Pitas Vienna
Va spent a
Court of Metgs County Oh o
Case No 1S 149 their certain weekend at the Williams
Pet tlon proylng tor an order Balderson home
glv no them authority to $ell
and convey n fee s mp e to
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and
Q-What IS the fame of
Elizabeth Ann Hemstev the
fol ow ng described real estate Commodore Matthew Perry'
s tuate in the County of Meigs
A-He opened Japan to
State of Ohio and V II age of
world trade by salllng a US
Syracuse to wit
Be ng the surface only of the sh1p mto Tokyo Bay on July
following descr bed real estate 8 1853
Beo lnnmg at the south east
corner of Lot No 31 in High
Lawn Subdlv son to the V llage
of Syracuse Ohio thence along
the south boundary line of said
Lot No 31 to a point ntersect ng
the western boundary line of the
(With mformallon from the
lot now owned by the
Evangelical Un ited Brethren Middleport Public Library)
Church (Syracuse United
(I) Can you name the great
Methodist Church) at Syracuse
Ohio thence north along a story teller of our lime who
prolected line of the western
boundary line of said Church wrote the exc1tmg political
Lot acfoss Lot 31 to • point In ---------"'""":Lot No 32 15 feet from the
LEGAL NOTICE
northern boundary line of Lot IN THE
MATTER OF SET
No 32 In H gh Lawn Subdivision
TLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS
of the Village of Syracuse Ohio
PROlATE COURT MEIGS
thence east follow no a lint 15 COUNTY
OHIO
feet from the north boundary
Accounts and vouchers of the
1ne of Lot 1 11 32 and parallel
w th the north line of sa d Lot fotlowlno named ffduc ares
No 32 to College Road Street have been fled In the Pobate
Court Meigs County Oh o for
thence southeas.terlv tot owing approval
and utHement
the meander ngs of Colleoe
CASE
NO
19 925 Third An
Road Street to the southeast
corner of Lot No 31 or to the nua Account of Dorothy
Gilmore Guard an of Delbert
place of beginning
Norman Catt an incompetent
Reference Deed Vol 211 person
Paoe 45 Deed Records of Meigs
CASE NO 20 157 Fourth and
County Oh o
Account of Wayne D
But reserv ng (rom the Flna
Seal Guardian of the Guar
prem ses the nght to use for dl&amp;nshlp
ol William G Bee
church park no an area e)l
CASE NO 20 286 F rst anct
tending west a depth of forty Final
of Marga,..et
feet from the boundery line Brown Account
Guard
an
of Naomi J
atono College Road Street and
an ncompetent
extend no the ent re width of the Pickens
CASE NO 20 602 F rst and
property conveyed tor as ong Fina
l Account of Sarah Gibbs
as the rem~tln ng church Adm
nlstratr )I of 1he Estate of
property to the south and ad Georgia
WIIJ amson Deceased
lacent to the property herein
CASE NO 20 621 First and
conveyed belongs to the United Final
A&lt;.count of Laura Baker
Methodist Church Grantor Executrix
of the Estate of Milo
here in
McDole Deceased
sad Pet tlon and cause w II H CASE
NO 20 66i F rat and
be heard on the 8th day of Final Account
Adams
November 1972 or as soon Executrix of oftheC ara
Estate ot
thereafter u mav be
D Adam~ Deceased
SYRACUSE UNITED Ctertnct
Unless eXcept ons are flied
METHODIST CHURCH thereto
said accounts- w II be
BY R:aymond Kr der
htlr ng befora sad Court on
Ed th Hood for
the 7th day of November 1912
Mabel P c:kens It
t mesad accounts w II
8tn Qulstnbtrry bt which
consllsered 1nd cant nt.,~ed
Thtlma Hlwlty
!rom doy lo dav until llnaliy
(101 9 16 21 30 41
dlspoud ol
Any ptrscn nterested mar.
me written exctptiOr)S to sa d
accounts ot to matters per
f• nlng to the t)lecutlon of th•
trust not len then flve days
prior to the date set for f')ear lng
Menning Webster
JUDGE
TO 12,2 T05 (CLOSE
MEIGS COUNTY

w

CARNIVAL

by D1ck Tumer.

OPTOMETRIST

.

(10) '

PROBATE DIVISION
COMMONPL.EASCOURT
11

Apple Grove
•
,
News, Events

/0

"That'• my

w1fe • brldft club • • referred to
he Med1a' 1"

locally aa '

Chester News Notes
spent a few days w1th Ml' and
By Clarice Allen
The Chester Volunteer Mrs John Fick
Greg and Bruce Allen
firemen held their annual
Col
umbus spent a recent
p1cmc Sunday evemng Sept
17 at the firehouse Guests weekend with Mr and Mrs
Included all persons who Clayton Alien
Mr and Mrs James Weber
helped at the County Fall"
Middleport
called on Mrs
fam1lles of the firemen and the
Aux1hary members and their Eldon Gaul recently
Mrs On a Osborne A!hens
families A covered dish dmner
was served with the firemen spent several days w1th Mrs
furmshmg ba•becued steaks Letha Wood
Mr ;~nd Mrs Charles
mashed potatoes gravy baked
beans hot dogs coffee and Ice E1chmger Columbus were
cream Games were enjoyed weekend v1sitors of Mrs Opal
w1th pmes gomg to many Eichinger and family
Mr and Mrs Dayton W11l
Door pnzes were won by Erma
recently
Cleland John WICkham Jane Bradenton Fla
called
on
Denzil
Cleland
and
Bahr and Marcy Sexson
Nearly 100 persons attended Clance Allen
Mr and M1s John Wickham
the p1cmc
Mr and Mrs Carl Moore and Mr and Mrs Ronald Clay
p
omeroy were recent viSitors and Todd recently attended a
ol Chester W11l and Mary ball game m Cincmnall
p k
Miss Hilda Weber Colum
ar er
bus
spent several days with
Mrs W1bna Ginther and Mr
and Mrs Jack Gmther and son Mr and Mrs Ralph Keller
Mr and Mrs Clayton Allen
spent a few days m Cary Ill
Wllh Mr and Mrs Ray Gmther called on Mr and Mrs Ralph
Frank and Mrs Oma Allen
and fam1ly
Mrs Opal Eichinger Don
Miss
Knstle
Hawk
Hockingport spent Monday and Laura Jean recently al
tended a ball game in em
Wll hMran d Mrs Roy ChfiSty
Mr and Mrs Bernard cmna tl and spent the weekend
E1selstein Cleveland recently there

ea'rmet",..1,e'wls,

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111

IJVIOIH "" '

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T

By the Day
Florence C~rcle spent Sun
day with Mrs Ohve Ullom of
Belpree
Betty Van Meter and Eun1e
Bnnker v1s1ted w1th Mr and
Mrs Ray Byers of Tanners
Run a recent Sunday
Mr and Mrs Glenn Tu!Ue
and son of Eagle Ridge
Chester Van Meter of Mormng
Star Mrs Jim Patterson and
sons of Racme R D and Kinn
Follrod local v1s1ted Mr and
Mts Douglas Circle on
Saturday
George C1rcle of New Haven
visited his mother Mrs Mary
Circle on a recent Sunday
Mr and Mrs Douglas Circle
v1s1ted with Mr and Mrs Ray
Byers Tanners Run Thurs
day

Sharpen your mind:

OFFICE HOURS 9 30
AT NOON ON THURS l-EAST COURT ST

.10 Hill I t -

DII'T:

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE s herebv !iii ven that
n pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board Of Tow lSh p Trustees
of the Townsh p of Letart Oh o
passed on tt'le 7th dav of August
1972 there will be s.ubm tted to
a vote of the people of said
T~nShip
at a Gen_era
E
CTION to be held n the
To nsh p of Letart Oh o at the
regu ar places of vat ng there n
on Tuesday the 7th day of
November 1972 the quest on of
levy no n excess of the ten mi
I m tat on for the benet t of
Letart Townsh p for the pur
pose of Current Expenses
Sa d tax be ng a renewa ot
an ex st ng lu ot One m II to
ru n for F ve years

Meigs
Property
Transfers

novel In High Places'
(2) What Amer~can stales
man who was born in 1782 near
Abbeville South Carolina
became the most promment
leader of the South before the
Civil War•
{3) What date did lhe Enola
Gay a United States B 29
rurplane drop the first atomic
bomb over ~nemy temtory•
(4) Who was the f1rst Umted
States presidential candidate
Lo fly to a pohllcal conventiOn
to make an acceptance
speech?
( 5) Name the French
composer who wrote the
popular opera Carmen
(See answers on Page 6)

IS UNED

~~~ '"ll il

By Mrs Herbert Roush
AFC Jeff Donohew of Ft
Meade Md spent the weekend
w1t~ h1s parenll! Mr and Mrs
Roy Donohew and Greg
Steve Norns was "" Sunday
dmner guest of h1s grand
parents Mr and Mrs Floyd
Noms
Mr and Mrs Herbert Roush
and son Roger Jeff Miller and
Mrs Iva Orr spent Saturday
evemng with Mr and Mrs
Dana Lew1s at Chiton Sharon
and Cmdy Roush spent 11!•
weekend w1th the Lewlses
Mrs Everette Ransom
retur1 ed home Thursday from
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mrs Zelpha Boggess v1s1ted
her Sunday
Guests of Mr and Mrs Jess
Anderson Sunday were Mr and
Mrs Uoyd Sayre and children
of Mmersvllie Orville Jarrell
and Mrs Benny Boggess
Mrs Dorothy Johnson
daughter of Mr and Mrs
Robert Smith is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital for
observation and treatment
Mrs Smith IS ass1stmg m the
care of Jenny Johnson while
her mother IS hospitalized
Mrs Herbert Roush and
Mrs Iva Orr VISited Mr and
Mrs Ott Boston at Racine
recently
Shelly Johnson of Racine
spent the weekend with her
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Robert Smith
Howard Roush a former
resident now living in MallSfield is a patient at MallSfield General Hospital
Members of the Letart Foils
Melhodisl Church held a
reception for their new pastor,
Rev and Mrs Shively and sons
of Racme at the community
hall on Wednesday evening
Mrs Eula Wolfe attended the
Homecommg at Sutton
Methodist Church on Sunday
F..arly Roush Has buill a new
barn on his farm
Mr and Mrs Hoyt Ferguson
of Camp Conley spent Sunday
w1 th Mr and Mrs Homer
Warner
Mrs
Grace Holsinger
assisted Mrs Eula Wolfe with
housecleaning
Mrs Eula Wolfe and son
Aa1 on called on relatives In
West Virginia Wednesday

II

"boll

visited recently with Margaret
Sinclair of Pomeroy
Mrs Larry Barr daughter
and Mrs Alpha Barr of
Langsville were Monday al
ternoon visitors of Mr and
Mrs Harley Johnson
Across From Upper Parking
Lot

Walk A Little
Save A Lot At

,_lOLA'S
Cor Main &amp; Sycamore

You'll L1ke Our
Lower Prrcesl
.

"IT'S TRUE" ~ .. I

lmll

A.

VALWS
POUND

AT

BAKER

FOR YOU
in the

PUINIIUII
MIIIDI.UoiT, 0.

Yellow
Pages

1

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Silt ,,n. 'tJI nl)l!.

Wolfpen ' News, Nates lunOil•l'
Mrs William Boyce of
Columbus spent a few days
with her parents Mr and Mrs
Howard Russell
Sunday callers of Mr and
Mrs Harley Johnson were Mr
and Mrs Charley Smith
Donald Jeffers Ricky and
Robert Murphy
Mrs Stella Atkins .M!Hy and
Ruby D1chl were Thursday
visitors of Mr and Mrs Harley
Johnson
Mr and Mrs Howard Thoma
were Saturday evening visitors
of Mr and Mrs Harley
Johnson
Mr
Dale Hussell of
Columbus were recent visitors
of Mr and Mrs Lmcoln
Russell
Mr and Mrs Howard Thoma

t

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111

�,

\
BY JACK 0 BRIAN

Jelled to N1mes France where the name
origmated to g1ve N1mes Mayor Jourdan a
scroll of apprec1at10n and he in turn gave Terry
Lhe town medal The now :;ooo.Amencan blue
Jeans malenal populanzed by Old West peddler
Lev1 Strauss who tatlored the flfst LeviS m Its
French creaUon was called Serge de N1mes
You Don t Have to Be Jewish 1tem very
Chmese restaurateuse Irene Kuo (Gmgko Tree)
was lapped for a senes of lectures on Chmese
CUisme at Scarsdale s Mid-Chester , Young
Men s &amp; Women s Hebrew Ass n thiS month
Irene s food too wtll be kosher

~Sport

Parade

three quarters Gr~ese threw a
17 yard IDuchdown pass 10
Howard Twilley a last minute
starter, and a pass m
terference on Twilley by Steve
Tamen put the Dolphir!S In
position for Klick s SIX yard TD
run for a lead they never
relinquished
The M1am1 v1ctory gave the
Dolphins a two1lame lead m
the American Football Confer
ence East over the Jets New
England and Buffalo which
upended the Patr10ts 38-14 All
three teams are at 2-2
M11111esota meanwhile contlnues to go nowhere Ex
Vikmg Gary CUozzo threw two
24-yard TD passes tD rookie
Bobby Moore the secood with
I 38 le£1 10 play to spark the
Cardinals to victory But 11 was
M1mesota which sealed 118 own
doorp when Fred Cox missed a
26-yard held goal w1th four

Wrestling
Tournament
J. I

Set Oct. 18

seconds left banging tl:' ball
against the right upright
The loss left Minnesota two
games behind Detroit, which
beat AUanta 26-23 and Green
Bay a 20-17 conqueror of
Clucago in the NFC Centrat
In other games Dallas edged
Pittsburgh, 17 131 Washmgton
blanked PhUadelphla IW the
New Y~k Giants clobbered
New Orleans 45-21 Los An
'
geles ripped San Francisco
31
7 San Diego nipped Baltunore
23-20 Cincmnati beat Denver
2110 and Kansas City crushed
Cleveland 31 7 Oakland is at
Houston ton1ght
Rtmnmg back Calvm fill and
Ron Sellers combmed on a 55yard option pass touchdown m
the third quarter that enabled
the Cowboys to beat the
Steelers
Rookie Tommy Casanova
returned a punt 66 yards for
one score and brought back
another 37 to set up a second as
the Bengals downed Denver
DenniS Partee s 'l/ yard field
goal with four seconds ie£1 gave
San D1ego 1ts tnumph over the
Colts Baltimore s third loss m

TO
THE CONSTITUTION
AM~NDMENT

J

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0

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v

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I

G
h

j '

'

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than the famoua
original Zenith
Chromacolor
olcture lube

Stargell Keeping His Cool

••

SHIRt
FINISHING

The EXETER • D3722W

American Walnut color cabinet
High Performance Chassis Super Video
Range Tuner Automatic Fine-Tuning Control

INGELS FURNITURE
PH 992 2635

&amp;

I
The government
puts 1t out
It's about techm
cal careers that
don't take four
years of college to
prepare for
Careers that
pay double what a htgh school graduate
usually earns As much as so~pe colleg~
graduates make
If you can't swmg four years of college
tUitiOn, you can sttll help your ktds to a great
career
Send for the gutde, today It's free

Robinson's Cleaners

•

EVERY MDNDAY

TfU~E: f~UE

WITH EMPHASIS ON PUBLIC AFFAIRS,
CULTURE RELIGION, AND EDUCATION OF OUR
AREA HOW TO GIVE BLOOD
ThiS WHk,
~1gs

for example A drug educat1on session at

High School lnterv~ew with a mayor • and

much, much

c

Q-What nonor IS be
stowed upon a natzon on
tis t~rst day of U N mem
bersh1p?
A-Its flag is diSplayed
centrally and higher than
the othera on that day

0·--

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v

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"COOKIE SHACK"

'

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I 't'o Careers Washington, D C 20202

'
POR BIG DllqOUNT SAVINOSf

700t leW.t DUly
MainB•day
• Pomeroy
1..

,•

""':'}'!:"'"

~-----------------~---~--~

thl

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II'

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MIDDLEPORT

If your kids
don't know where
they're going,
this guide can help
point the way. .,..

Stirring:

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ThtAMrii .... GOIMII . . . IIM ........ Na:l l"l:::
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earnmg over S18 500

lua

LEGA~ NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ISSUE l W LL CAUSE
ON TAX LEVY
HIGHER TAXES FOR THE
IN
EXCESS OF TilE
SMA LL BUSINESSMAN
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Text of the Proposed
H Qh prof t
corpor;,t
ons
s hereby g ¥en that
Conttitutlonal 1\rtl,ndment
would save about SlSO m 11 on f n NOTICE
pursuance
a Reso ut on Qf
ssue '2 passes A flat rate n he Board of ofEducat
on of the
Af'TICLE XII Section 8
cbme
tax
tor
a
I
bus
nesse$
8~ IT RESOLVED bV lhe nc ud ng piJrtnersh ps and Me gs L~cal Schoof, D str ct
gs County Oh o pas$ed on
~:Jeopte Ot the State of Ohio
proprietorsn ps would force al Me
the 14th day of August 1972
Laws may l;le passed prov d ng bus nesses to pay the same rate
there w I be subm ffed to a vote
tor the taxat on by the state or
anv pol t cal subd vis on thereat SSUE 2 WILL REDUCE of lhe people of sa d School
of the ncomes of both (1) STA TE SUPPORT TO YOUR D str ct at a Genera ELEC
TION to be held n the Me gs
natural persons and (2) cor COMMUN TY
Local School D str ct Oh o at
porat ons
other bus ness
Don
t
vote
for
a
p
g n a poke
orga,.lutlons and taxa b e I the ncome tax 1s repea ed t he regulal" places ol vot ng
ent t es l!lnd anv such lax sh&lt;~~ll must ether be replaced by a there n on Tuesday the 7th day
of November 1972 the Quest on
be at a non gr'aduated rat.e FLAT RATE INCOME TAX
of
n excess of the ten
with n ea.ch of the two
NCREASES
IN
REAL. m le11ying
II m tal on for the benef t of
c asslf cat ons and may be ESTATE TAXES CITY IN
applied to sucli ncomes as may COME TAXES SAI.ESTAXES Me gs Loca School Oislr ct for
the purpose of Current expenses
be des gnatect by aw Pro-y ded TUIT ONS ETC::
or curri!nt of
the subd v son
however that w th the ex state ad must decrec;.se for
Sa
be n{l an add I on a
cept on of nvestments n n
CITIES COUNTIES AND tax ofd tax
5o mills to run for a
tang ble persona property no TOWNSHIPS
con t nu ng per ad
ja w shall be enacted by t.he
SCHOOLS AND UNIVER
General Assembly and no SIT ES
at a rate not exceed ng s 0 m lis
ex sf ng or future law shall be
MENTAL HEALTH
each one do ar of valuat on
enforced by ~my off cer of th s
HOSPITALS PUBLI C for
wh ch amounts to F tty Cents
state ot subd v s on thereof ASS STANCE
for each one hundred dollars of
mpos ng
c:o ect ng
or
CLEAN A R AND WATER valuat on for a coni nu ng
otherwise levying any taM on or
measur ng any tax by ncome SSUE 2 WILL ELIM NATE per od
Potts for sa d E ect on
of natural persons cor FAIRNESS AND JUSTICE IN w The
I open at 6 30 o c ock A M
poratlons or other bus ne!;.s OH 0 S TAX SYSTEM
and rem a n open unt 1 6 30
organ tat ons and taxable
Issue 2 perm ts only a flat o clock P M Eastern Standard
enllt es or ncrea~ ng the rates rate ncome tax 1 ke the c tv T me of sa d day
thereof unless sucn tax or r1 ncome tax t e m nates the
By orde of the Board of
crease St approved by at least a pr nclp1 e that Oh o voters Elect
ma lority of the e ectros of the adopted n 191 2 that ncome Oh o ons of Me gs County
state or of the subd v son taxes be based on ab tv tn p~
vot ng on such proposlat on
Edw n 5 Cozart
Noth ng cont,a ned here n sha 1 DON T BE M SLED NTO
Cha rman
prevent the col lection of or the PAYING
MORE THAN YOUR
enforcement of the aw re at ng FA R SHARE
Dorothy M Johnston
to any tax I abl ty wh ch has GOVERNMENT FOR GO OD
0 rector
accrued prior to the effect ve
Vote no on Issue 2
Oa ed Sept 29 971
date of this section
Comm ttee aga nsf the
The quest ons at such a tax on Amendment
II am W Taft
(10) 2 9 16 23 4t
neon es or ncrease n the rates James J F W
annery
01
ver
thereof sha I be subm tted at a
Qenera election to the e ectors Ocasek E W Lampson
of th s state or of tM subd v son
UNJTED STATES
NOTICE OF ELECTION
for the r approval or re1ect on
OF
AMERICA
ON TAX LEVY IN
n a manner prescr bed by law
STATE
OF
DHIO
EXCESS OF THE
Prov ded further however
OFFICE OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
tpat tl'lls sect on sha ll not affect
SECRETARY OF STATE
NOT c E s hereby g \len that
the author tv of mun clpal t es
I
TEO
W
BROWN
n
of a Reso vt on of
subtect to the prov slons of Secretary of State of the State of thepursuance
Board of Educat on of the
Sect on 6 Art c e XII and Oh
o do hereby cert fy that the Southern Local School D str ct
Sect on 13 Article XVIII Of lh s forego
s a true copy of the Me gs County Oh o passed on
Canst tut on to Impose collect text of angproposed
canst tut ona the 21h day of August 1972
or otherw se levy any ta x on or amendment Inflated
by there w be subm tted o a vo e
to measure any tax by ncome pet t on
toget her
w th of the people of sa d School
of natural persons cor arguments for ts adopt on and 0 str ct at a General ELEC
porat ons or other bus ness arguments aga nst ts adopt on
ON to be he d n the Southern
organ zat ons and taxable I ed n the Off c;e of the T
Local
Schoo D str ct Ohio at
ent t e~ or to ncrease the rates Secretary of State and the regular
places of vat ng
thereof
propos ng to amend the above there n on Tuesday the 7th day
Sect on of the Canst tut on of of November 1912 th e questton
ARGUMENT IN
Oh o
of levy ng n e11.cess of the ten
FAVOR OF
m I m tat on for the benef t of
PROPOSED AMENDMENT
IN TE ST IM ONY WHEREOF Southern Loca Schoo D str ct
If approved by the voters at I have hereunto subscr bed by to'r the purpose of Current
the November elect on the name and aft xed my off cal expenses
proposed amendment to Oh o s seal at Colum bus the twenty
tax be ng a renewal of
cooshtut on would great y fourth day of September 1972 anSad
ex st ng tax of 50 m s to run
mprove the opportvn ty of the
for a cont nu ng per od at a rate
publ c to partie pate n the
TED W BROWN not e11.ceed ng 5o m lis for each
dec s on as. to how and how
Secretary of State one dollar of valuat on wh ch
much t s to be taxed For the (Sea l)
amounts to F tty Cents for each
f rst t me the publ c would have
one hundred dol a s of
the r ght to vote on taxaf on and (91 25 (10) 2 9 16 23 5lc
valuat on for a cont nu ng
government spend ng at th e
per od
state leve
The Flo Is for sad Elect on
NOTICE OF ELECTION
The law a ready guarantees
w be open at 6 30o clock AM
ON
TAX
LEVY
IN
the pub c th s right of control at
and rem a n open unt I 6 30
EXCESS OF THE
the local level n the f eld of real
o clock P M Eastern Standard
TEN
MILL
LIMITATION
estate taxes and mun c pal
T me of sa d day
NOT
CE
s
hereby
g
ven
that
income taKes
By o der of th e Board of
n
pursuance
of
a
Resolut
on
of
If approved the con sf tut on
Elect ons of Me gs County
the
Council
of
the
V
llage
of
would then prov de tha t the rate Rac ne Oh o passed on th e 3rd Oh o
of state ncome Ia Kat on must day
of August 1972 th ere w I
be the same for all natural be subm
Edw n S Coza t
to a vote of the
persons The cons t tut on people oftted
Cha rman
sa
d
V I age at a
already requ res that the rate General ELECT ION to be held
and va uat n for property taxes n the V II age of Rae ne Oh o at
Dordthy M Johnston
must be the same for all tax the regular places of vat ng
0 rector
payers
Dated sept 29 1972
there
n
n
Tuesday
the
7th
day
The amendment would
November 1972 the quest on
provide for Income taxat on of
of
levy ng n excess of the ten (101 2 9 16 23 41
based upon ability to pay that milllmitaton
----------s the greater a taxpeyer s Rae ne VIllage forthebeneftof
for
the
purpose
ncome the more tax he would
Current Expenses
pay the smaller a taxpayers of Sa1d
NOTICE OF ELECTION
tax be no a renewa of
ncome the less tax.. he would ap.. ~~~,it!n
tax
of
Two
m
li
s
to
pay 1
W.
'tlo
~'k:~A:...~~V~~~ I
A ~ YES vote onl he tssue '' "" I!!Jl'l.''&lt; ~'-ors I TEN
Ml .l.t~I~ITAtl,l)~ 1
neceSsary to aet6mpl sh the at a r,ate not ew.ceed ng 2 0 mils
NOTICE
'He~ebvov~nthel
follow ng
for each one dollar of valuat on n pursuance of a Reso ut on of
111 Proh bit collect on of the wh ch amounts to Twenty Cents the Board of Township Trustees
present ncome and ncome for each one hundred dollars of of the Townsh P of Rutland
related tax
Oh o passed on the 31st day Of
on for Five years
m G velhe public the rlghtto veluat
May 1972 there w I be sub
The
Polls
for
said
Elect
on
vote on any proposed ncome w I be open at 6 30 o c ock A M m lied to a vol• of lhe people of
tax n the future (except and rem a n open unt I 6 30 sad Townsh P at a General
mun clpal tax )
o clock P M Eastern Standard ELECTION to be held in lhe
(3) Requ re public approval Time of sa d day
Townsh p of Rut land Oh o at
before any proposed ncreese of
the regular paces of vot ng
By
order
of
the
Board
of
any such tax cou d take effect Elections of Me gs County therein on Tuesday the 7th day
The effect If any which Oh o
of November 1972 the ouestlon
approval of the constitutional
of levying n exc:ess of the ten
amendment m ght have on
Edw n S Cozart m II imitation forthebenef tot
current state expenditures will
and Township lor the
Chatrman Rut
only last for s x months But the
Purpose of Current Expenses
control by the publ c over ex
Sad tax be ng a renewal of
Dorothv M Johnston
cesslve sta te government
Director an ex st ng tax of 50I V• l mill &lt;o
spend ng will be a permanent Dated Sept 29 1972
run
for
f ve
Years
part of Ohio s canst tution that
at a rate not exceeding 50 m II
ne ther
governor
nor (lQ) 2 9 16 23 .tt
leg slature now or In the future - - - - - - - - - - - for each one dollar of valuation
wh ch amounts to Five Cents for
can ever take away from the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
each one hundred dollars of
pe~~~e No"Yember elect on mav
ON TAX LEVY IN
valuation for Five years
EXCESS OF THE
The Polls for .said Election
be the last chance thet Oh oans
TEN MILL LIM"ATION
ever get to control directly
NOTICE Is hereby g ven that w 11 open at 6 30 o c ock A M
runaway spending at the state In purs.uance of a Resolution of and remain open until 6 30
cock P M Eastern Standard
le(~mm ttee for the Amend the Board of Township Trustees oTime
of sa d day
of the Township of Ol ive Ohio
By order of the Bo,ard of
ment Chester T Cruze Robert passed on the 11th day of Sep
E Le\1 tt Josep h P TulleA tember 1972 there wi I be Etect19ns of Meigs County
Raymond P Luther Howard
subm tted to" vote of the people Oh o
Kn ght
of said Townsh p at a General
Edwin S Coz,art
ARGUMENT IN
ELECTION to be held In the
Chairman
OPPOSITION TO
Townsh p of Olive Oh o at the
PROPOSED AMENDMENT regutarp aces of voting there n
Dorothy M Johnston
Vote NO on Issue 1
on Tuesday the 7th day of
Approv nn Issue 2 wIt hurt November 1972 the questiOn Of Dated Sept 29 1972 Director
levy ng n excess of the ten m 11
You
lim tat on for the benefit of ( 101 2 9 16 23 41
ISSUE 2 WILL DESTROY THE Olive Township for the purpose
HOMESTEAD EXEMPT ON of mainta nlng and operating
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Townsh p Cemeter es
AND 10 PCT PROPERTY TAX
Sa s tax be ng en additional
DN TAX LEVY IN
REDUCTION
,
tax of 50( 'h) mIt to run for
zEXCESS OF THE
Loss of the real estate tax F ve years
tEN 1,\ILL LIMil'~TION
reduct o s the corporate and
NOTICE Is hereby given that
persona Income taus made at a rate not exceeding so m II In pursuance of a Resolution of
possible
wouiQ
cost for each one dollar of valuat on the Board of Township Trustees
homeowners who are over 64 wh ch amounts to Five Cents for of the Townsh p of 01 ve Oh o
yearly tax sav ngs amounting to each one hundred dol ars of passed on the 11th dey of Sep
as much as 80 pet of the r \laluat on tor F ve years
tember 1972 th ere wll be
property taxes and would takt!
The Polls for safd Election subm If ted to a vote of the people
away ell other taxpayers 10 w11t be open at 6 30 o clock AM of said Townsh p at a General
pet real estate tax rollback
and remeln open until 6 30 ELECTION to bo held In
o clock P M Entern Standard Township of 01 ve Ohio at the
ISSUE 2 WILL CAU~E OTHER T me of sad doy
regular places of voting therein
NEW AND INCR:EASED
By order of the Board of on Tue-sday the 7th day of
TAXES FOR INDIVIDUALS Elecllons of Me gs County November 1972 the question ot
supporters of ssue 2 don t Ohio
levying in excess of the ten mil
want rtduced spend ng They
EdwIn S Cozart I mltation for the benef t of
want to Sh ft the burden or
Cha irman 01 ve Townsh p for the purpose
taxation from the wealthy to the
of prov ding end manta nfng
average taxpayer b-; • flat
Dorothy M Johnston fire apparatus appliances
Inco me tax which would
bu ld ngs or sites therefor or
DOUSLE taxes for famll es Dated Sept 29 1972 0 rector sources of water supply and
earning S9 000 or ess and would
mater als therefor or the
reduu taxes ONLY for tam II es (10) 3 9 16 23 .,
establ shment and ma ntenance
of I nes of fire a arm telegraph
'
or the payment of permanent
.
part time or volunteer f rem en
or f re fighhng com pan es to
operate the same
Said tex being an add t1onal
tax of 50( !,) mil to run for
1 dynamic bualnell opportunity
F ve vears
Blllmt ponnen wkh olomlly- firm who SELECT_..
at a rate nat uceedlng SO mIll
.._. upon tholr OUALIFICATIONS and not upon wllot thoy
for each one dollar of valuation
Which
amounts to Five Cents for
· - - · tht VENDING BUIINES&amp;
each one hundred dollars of
WE REQUIRE
valuation for F ve Years
WE OFFER
The Polls for sa d Elect on
'A
DEIIRE
FOR
SUCCUS
•A JOIId-"' 11uo1w II beop~M et 6 30o clock AM
•TiiM
routl
•La tlooll oblolnod b¥ """'"""'
and remain open unrn 6 30
'F--Pn!ll""'
o
clock P M Eastern .St,andard
"Cccll¥ltlo
A.B C
'ln-ontofl800.. 1800
T me of said day
- t v ....
lllulpmlnl
By order of the Board of
•\Iindo ..,..ioo, oondioo, poonutl
for
prodUct
Elect ons of Me gs County
"CCrnpony nn...lnl h&gt;r IJOWih
Oh o
OUR IUCCEa II IAIED LWON YbUR SUCCESS
Edw n S Coz~rt
Cha rman
A *lknwllll flrwl wfth !t'_lppl. . ..,..,..,. ~ 1M natlo~,
, 11,.. .,..,_ • 1 urul """•"· lnlll
unoe whln Yotl
Dorothy M Johnston
Dlrtctor
Daltd Sept 29 1972
.... yw:wll tho '"'""""" for tho LAIIOUT
• .... 11f 1111 ..... orill With I 0 p tad ftwith
ftw lUCCI. M
...,.. MIIW I I llon IIIII 11o1o.a. llf ........ b¥ our -

1

The Alpha Delta Epsdon
Fralermty of Rio Grande
College
IS
sponsoring
professwnal wrestling on
Wednesday Oct 18 111 the Paul
R Lyne Center
The event 15 bemg held to
raiSe money for the !rater
mty s Annual Handicap
Children s Basketball Tour
nament Four action packed
matches have been scheduled
for fan mterest
The f1rst match begms at 8
p m w1th a 15 minute tune
hm1t It features Masked Angel
Number I 270 pounds agamst
Roger Vest of Ch1lhcothe
another heavyweight
The second event also a one
PITl'SBURGH (UPI) -The
fall 15 mmute hme lunii fmds
Pltllbursb Pirates lost the last
Masked Angel Number Two
tllree J'ellll)ar games
tangling With the Hlllb11ly of
wben lbey faced the Reds m
Kentucky Both wrestlers
ClnclnnaU but slugger WUUe
weigh 250 pounds each
The lh1rd match pits
llqeiJ does not regard that 1111 V1rdon said We bad a b1g during the season Anderson make you want 10 play for a man
man 11f.o when we had rumers replied
Everybody needs to know he s appreCJated some'Jmes
promoter wrestler Hank Vest
. . tiiDIII
we
d1dn
I
hit
We
played
a
Halls
record
speaka
for
but
"I doa't think that makes any
Everybody not only me Sometimes I can use a pat on the back
of Chillicothe agamst Big
jlffaeuce," stargell said re- good game but tbey played Itself -he was!~! for the year and sometimes 1can use a kick in the rear It sall in the way both Daddy Dean from Sprmgfield
lulng In front of hla locker better There should be a lot of But I thought he d come aroun~J are administered
Vest t1ps the scales at 255
even if he was involved in four
Smday after the Reds evened baseball left m the playoffs
Joe Morgan mutilated the Pirate's ~l'FI"" J1t;hll :fill ¥gll!"s~ , JI&lt;Jilllds wh1re Deaw)W!f!bs 300
Reds Ma~ger)l~IJkY t,p• no decisions jlgaln!j.t the litem and hla eighth fflttffQi oofrie run rof&amp; ~lievcr Ramon Rep, 11 .p&lt;fun~ l;r!JJ.i Ne~lfd b'~t df
the Natlooal ~~~~offs
Pirates and h1s earned run na•tu~~'§Jhday WRhJS' StXtll hcilfter of file yl!lir'agailit 11\em _, l~ree falls With a 45 mtnute
with a 5-3 victory 1'lle tearrur derson had a prophesy
I sa1d before the game that average was 10 23 agamst
meet apln today at Cincumati
He didn t do so badly against the other clubs m lbe league lime hm1t
stargell went o.for-3 Sunday if we wm today (SUNDAY) them
either finishing With 161hits 122runsscored 73rbl s !&amp;homers
The b1g main event wdl be a
we II wm it all I still feel that
Anderson described secood 58 stolen bases and a right respectable 292 batting average
bill he kept his cool
tag team match'With the team
baseman Joe Morgan as one
We win like men and we way he said
It sa rather commonly known fact Joe Morgan wasn t happy of the Masked Blue Angels
m Ho1111ton where he and Harry Walker the manager didn t batthng the team of Roger Vest
always see eye-to-eye Morgan was glad when the Aatros sent and the H11lbllly ThiS will be
him tD the Reds in that elght.player swap last November He two out of three falls With the
doesn 1 mind talking about that either
usual one hour tune hm1t
Everybody says I've had a great season this year he says
Tickets are now on sale from
I have but I don t think 11 s better thai! two years I bad m any fratermty member at a
Houston Its justthat now 1 ve got Tolan Bench and Perez
reduced pnce for the adult
ticket
The advance tickets sell for
NO
SLEEPING
IN
C~
$1
50 each cost at the door is
of the top 10 players m the
LONDON (UPI )-Some $2 Tickets may be purchased
game today
male
students at London s at Bob Saunders Quaker State
I want the whole country tAl
see Morgan in the World Waltham Technical College Ser-vice Center Price and Son
attend art claases tbefC only tAl Pharmacy DICk Brown s
Series
A Great New Cable TV Presentation
Morgan hit homers m the ogle nude female models a Nat1onw1de Insurance
The Tri-County's Own Show
first two playoff games but he member of the distr~ct s Thomas Clothiers Rucker
(
Montgomery Barber Shop
could not explain the pitch he municipal council said
They attend these sesswns Scott s Grocery H1gley s
belted off reliever Ramon
only
for the titlllation said Barber Shop m Kanauga and
Hernandez in the eighth Inning
Councillor Cllarles Paley Phil the Redman Inn
of Sunday s game
lips
They are certai~ly not
I don t know what 11 was
Morgan said Some type of there m the name of art
Paley Philllps opposed the
lreaking pitch or sometljing
Roberto Clemente, who has models demands they be paid
faUed to hit In seven times at $150 an hour for posing, In
r
bN in the playoff, tned to stead of the $1 25 the govern
SAME
DAY
mentoilwned college paid
explain his faUure
SERVICE
why should the rate (tax)
If I bave my body alive l
In At 9-0ut At$
play well ' he said But now payer fork out even more to
gJve
these
110-called
students
a
my body ls.oot good I m down
Use Our Free Pork&lt;ng Lot
bl,t of a thrill 1 Paley PhllliJX!
to about 172 pounds
THE PEOPLE OF MEIGS, GALLIA MASON
But 1don t worry a lot like I demanded
The council s education com
used to Now I just go out and
COUNTIES, • •with Paul Gerard and Danny
216 E 2nd, POIMroy
mlltee has approved the new
do my best
K1ng as your co-hosts weekly
Virdon, loilng pitcher Bob rates
Moose and Riehle Hebner
insiBted that Bobby Tolan s
double in the first inning, which
drove In two runs, was foul
I couldn t believe it when
I
•
the umpire in left field (Harry
Wendelltadt) called it lair,
Moose said
I asked the
umpire at tlird about It but he
told me It Willi not his call
Those two runs made the
difference
A NEW CONCEPT IN LOCAL TV PROGRAMING,

Oct 9 1972

Proposed by
tn1h1tlve Petition

four games
Steve OWens ran three yards
for the winning touchdown with
34 seconds left to lift the Uons
over Atlanta
Mike Uvingston threw three
TD passes for the second
_straight week as tbe Qdefs
ripPed Cleveland
Chesler Marco! s 37 yard
field goal with 30 seconds left
pushed Green Bay past ltle
Bears
Los Angeles moved littD first
place m the NFC West by
beatmg San FranciSco behind
Roman Gabriel s two TD
passes to Jack Snow Reserve
Bob Thomas gamed 142 yards
fo· the Rams
Jun BraxtDn ran for two TDs
and 0 J Sunpson drove for
another durmg a 28-point
second per1od that enabled
Buffalo to crush New England
Charlie Evans scored three
TDs during a 31-pomtfirst half
118 the G1anls routed New
Orleans and Sonny Jurgensen
threw a 36-yard TD PBIIIl to Roy
Jefferson and set up the other
TD as the Redskins blanked
Phlladelplua
p

o

LEGAL NOTICE

DolPhins Roll On, 27-17

NEW YORK (UPI)-The Fran Tarkenton continued 10
Miami Dolphins hive their stumble this time dropping a
eyes set on Super Bowl agam 19-17 decislon to the St lows
but someone seems tAl have )lUI Cardinals their third loss m
the. blindfolds oo the Minnesota four games
Vikmgs
M1aml w1th Bob Gnese
The Dolphins continued to throwing one TD pass and
cruiSe along !hell' merry way setting up a pall" of short
&amp;mday beatmg the New York scormg runs by Jun Klick
Jets 'l/17 to remam pro spotted New York an early
football s only unbeaten team touchdown and then outplayed
atW
the Jets who entered the ~me
But the Vikings the pre With tbe highest scormg of
The late famed drama wile Ward season Super Bowl p1cks after fense m tbe league for the last
the acqUISition of quarterback
Morehouse s Widow Rebecca had serious
surgery at Harkness Pavilion Newsweek says
"
Nixon s 111 reach of wmmng 50 states The U
&lt;
S Br1tam and W Germany have a common
T~y's
,
dedicated yen to put the fiSCal squeeze to Japan
to revalue (a t least 10 pet) 1ts currency
'i
Lorna Luft Judy Garland s other smgmg
&lt;
daughter opens at the St RegiS Maisonette w1th
By MILTON RICHMAN
lhe comfortable encouragement of knowmg half
lJPJ ~rts F..ditor
u J.r•en maJOr cafes where shes worked
CINCINNATI (UP!) -They call Joe Morgan a vauety of
already have booked her for return triumphs
Houston s Shamrock Hilton San Francisco s names like Sweet Pea Uttle B1g Man and B1g Joe
His Cincinnati Red teammates call their Hoot 7 !50-pound
Fa1rnwnt Hotel the Concord m the Catskills
second
baseman these names With warm affection because he s
Lake Geneva Playboy Hotel and more Cafe
owners don I fall under the spell of Judy Uza an easy Individual 10 like aud they all like hbn
They llke hun even when he s not part1cularly domg the thmgs
showbiZ 1elallvlly - they look at the bottom hne
on the cash regiSter Lorna s just f1mshing with he d1d &amp;lnday in Pittsburgh where be delivered a b1g hit m that
Danny Thomas at the Las Vegas Sands Dan four-run firSt mnfug rally uncorked a home run later on turned
ny s also keepmg her m N Y for his week at tbe m several sparklers m the field and literally was all over the
place m a 5-3 wm that squared the National League playoffs for
Westbury Music Fa1r Oct 30
The mostly mdestructible octogenarian the Reds at one game apiece
The reason everybody Jumps on Joe Morgans bandwagon Is
Artur Rubmstem cancelled several weeks of h1s
because
he always hustles Well maybe not always but cer
American tour - f~rst time m 40 years he s
tainly 999 tbnes out of 1000
Dllssed a concert on account of Illness The
This IS a little story about a tbne he didn t that one time little
great plllmst IS llJ Par1s with an agonizmg
slungles attack
Dame! Barenbo1m replaces Joe Morgan dogged 1t a little and didn t grmd and churn all his
him as plano solmst Oct 11 w1th the Israel guts out barreling down to f1rst base Joe Morgan doesn t
Ph1lharmomc at Carnegie Hall
Thomas generally advertise this Story but if you start him off he fur
Patr~ck McMahon and hiS son MaJ Br1an nishes aU the little details
It happened during our last series with Atlanta he says
Patnck McMahon (of Westchester and the Air
I popped the ball up to the first baseman Hank Aaron and
Corps respectively) just sol&lt;t the~r The Issue of
the Bishop s Blood novel to the moom p1t ran down the line about th•ee-quarters speed I don t know why I
chubs The upstate authors are the first father did 11 but anyway I did lflt had been a ground ball I would ve
son literary collaboratiOn In 50 years Senior gone all out I koow that for sure
Anyway even running the way I was I crossed the bag JUS! as
McMahon 1s JUStice m the times! N Y State
Aaron
caught lhe ball When I came back m the dugout Sparky
hamlet (which one T P ?)
(manager Sparky Anderson) came over to me and sa1d quietly
You ve gQt too much class to make yourself look that bad I
said 'you re right It wont happen agam
Joe Morgan pauses a moment at this point m the story Then he
offers a Uttle insight mto himself
lose like men he said
Questioned why he sent
'That was the only time smce I ve been With the Reds Sparky
Pirate Manager Bill VIrdon southpaw Tom Hall to relieve
everhadtotellmeanythlng he says 'The unportant thing was
also kept hiS composure
starter Jack Blllingham dethe way he did it GenUy and quleUy Uke a man He dldn t get
We had a couple of good spite Hall s previOus lack of
allover
me althoughhecertainlycould ve Utile things like tbat
shots but didn t make 11
success against the Pirates

JANE GETS A PROTEST
OFF HER CHEST
NEW YORK (KFS)- Jane Fonda phoned
Ogden Phipps secretary to confide she m1ght
just show up at NIXon s $1 OOtJ..a-plate Waldorf
dinner last week - topless - to dramatiZe her
protests Jane reconSidered ~eaders wonder
why we don I lake after Jame-one note w1th a
journalistic bludgeon sunply because we
f'efuse to escalate an hystencal Imla!IOn to
martyrdom Rodney Dangerfield IS begmmng to
believe hiS c0m1c g1mm1ck that he Gets No
Respect he can I understand why he doesn l
gel wnting credit on the Dean Martin Show
inasmuch as he wntes all his matenal plus hiS
exchanges With Martin
Barbra Slrelsand
didn t move mto her own Manhattan townhouse
whtle making her new ruck here - took over the
Plaza Hotel s laviSh penthouse {OJ: two months
Former G1ant gnd star and network sports
caster Kyle Rote IS working on a TV senes
Cell Block 11 Kyle and partner Jack Wmter
want to use Alcatraz for realism- If the Jnd1an
squatters WII!)et em Gleason s ex-&lt;l~rector
Frank Bunetta would do h1s honors 1! and when
June Allyson s actress daughter (also D1ck
Powells) Pam Powell and Bob Podesta son of
lhe ass t Sec of the InteriOr share a happy
ulterior motive
Len £anou last m AP
plause ' on Bdwy celebrated at the UniCorn
after stgmng as male lead m Hal Prmce s new
Sm1les of a Swnmer N1ght musical the t1lle
alone sounds like an old fashiOned operetta
Dr Solomon Bensabat JUSt was adm1tted to
lhe Spanish bar Notable - 11 makes h1m the
first Jew m modern limes to manage 11 Ac
tress Jade Hagen really appreciates Manbat
lan s pollution - her mult1-allerg1es forced her
tAl CBIIf -where shes working steadily for the
first tune m multi TV films
Hot UN rumor - Mao s ready to step down
filness B1ll Me1gs 1s a huge (SIX f1ve) H wood
Western screen TV villain mvadmg N Y for a
Nov 15 C8rneg1e Hall concert of romantic duets
With ClaUdia Genteel a Ia Earl Wr~ghtson and
Lo1s Hunt Why IS he cast as a v1llam so con
listenUy• Wben you re th1s b1g If you re not a
hero what else IS there'
Denim Council fashion exec Terry Mayer

'

5-The DaOy Sentinel Middleport..Pomeroy

to.,.,.

""'"'""nt ...
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WIIITI POll DITAILI NO OILIOATI~: INCLOIII'HONI
_ _ . 11 AND ITIIIIT ADDIIEa ltw nrollllolo...,.

•••• Industries, Inc

'

536

Monroe. Lou-71201

Hallie I
Nesselroad
Charles Nesselroad to Wilham
L Harl Jean N Hart Ease
Bedford
George Cummms Opal
Cummms to Arch1e R Jarrell
IJnda C Jarrell Sayre s Add
Lelart
Zerkle Trucktng Co to John
at a rate not exceed n9 1 0 m Zerkle Hallie Zerkle Nellie
for each one do ar of valuat on Zerkle Lot 6J Middleport
wh ch amounts to Ten .... ents for
eac;h one hundrecl dollars of
Berren Duncan Bonme
vatuat on'J""fo
Vl!t--¥ell!lf&lt;!IThe Po s for sa1d Elect on Duncan to Eber R Rieber
w II be open at 6 30 a clock A M Rulh M Rieber 1 Acre Sutton
and rem a n open until 6 JO
Forrest M Wh1te Northa A
o clock P M Eastern Standard
T me of sa d day
Wh1te to Loren Clark V1rgm1a
By order of tlie Board of
Elect ons of Me gs Countv Clark Parcel Columbia
Oh o
Russell Randolph Bertha
Edw n S Cozart Randolph to John RaY1JlQnd
Cha rman Berry Goldie Mane Berry 10
Dorothy M Johnston Acres Ohve
D rector
P R Randolph Bertha
Dated Sep 29 1972
Randolph to John Rayn.ond
:.(1;.:0:.1.:.2:...::9_1:.:6:..2::3::....:.":.....---- Berry Goldie MarJe Berry 37
Acres Olive
Kenneth E R1ggs Judith A
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
R1ggs to Dav1d N R1ggs
IN EXCESS OF THE
Audrey L R1ggs 302 Acre
TEN MlLL LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven hat Orange
n pursuance of a Resolu t on of
the Counc 1 of the v aoe of
Pomeroy Oh o passed on the
2tst day of August 1972 there
w II be subm tted to a vole of the
people of sa d v I! age al a
Genera ELECTION to be held
n the V llage of Pomeroy Oh o
at the regular places of vot ng
there n on Tuesday the 7th day
of No\lember 1972 the quest on
of levying n excess of the ten
By Mrs Lyle Balderson
m II m tat on for the benet t of
Mr
and Mrs P R Randolph
Pomeroy Village for the pu
pose of Current Expenses
Sa d tax be ng e renewa of celebrated their 60th weddmg
an e• Sf ng tax of Two m lis to anmversary on Sunday Sept
run for f ve years
23 at their home A dmner w1th
at a rate not e•ceed ng 2 o mi s lwo decorated cakes (from
for each one do tar of valuat on fnends and daughter ) were
wh ch amounts to Twenty Cents
for each one hundred dollars of served to Clarestme Randolph
11aluahon for F ve vears
of Reedsville Mr and Mrs
The Polls for sa d E ecf on
Keebaugh
and
w be open at 6 30 o clock AM Marvm
and rem a n open unt 6 30 daughter Tonya of Chester
o clock P M Eastern Standerd
Mr and Mrs Robert Buck and
Time of sad day
By order of the Board of daughter Jenmfer Lyn of
E ect ons of Me gs County
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Oh o
Edwin s cozort Erwm Cain of Columbus and
Cha rman
Ihe honored guests Mr and
Dorothy M Johnston Mrs p R Randolph The
D rector
Dated S•pt 29 1972
Randolphs
have
two
daughters one granddaughter
110 ) 2 9 16 23 41
lwo great granddaughters and
one
great great
granddaughter Mr Randolph
1s ret1red from the old U S
Lock 20
Mrs Dr~c1lla House of
lN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
Columbus and Mrs Dorothy
MEIGS couNTY OHIO
Harden of Syracuse and Mrs
IN THE MATTER OF CON Edna Ne1gler Of Racine spent

Reedsville

News, Notes

~~n~'!.'i.~u'?{E 'il~RTt"\.!~ &lt; JI!LI!fl~~nlljlAW!11!.,1'r!fS 0" ~

SII'R'AGU'SE ll _,&lt;ffiTI'f.o d::S§tQ;I'el!eRI/,yJ 1 l o
bi1 B
METHODIST
CHURCH
Mr
'lind
Mrs
OtisK
Casto
SYRACUSE
OHIO
SUC
CESSOR
TO
THE were tn Manetta where Mrs
EvANGEL 1cAL u N1TED Casto consulted an eye
BRETHREN CHURCH AT
SYRACUSE
OHIO
A specia)ISl
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY DULY
Mr and Mrs H 0 Powers
ORGANIZED UNDER' THE
LAWS OF THE STATE DF VISited the Castos recently
OHIO
Mrs Powers is a SISter of Mr
No u 149
NOTICE BY
Casto
PUBLICATION
Mr ~nd Mrs Dale Kibble of
N1 5h b
e 1 lh
off ~e~: aneJe ;{,~~b~r~ 0~ East Liverpool VlSited wtth
svracuse un led Methodist Mrs
C oil
Randolph
Church Syracuse Oh o and to
U arr
the former off cers and recen Y
members 1 any ol The
Mrs Gladys Mor•an
and
0
E
1
u 1 d 8 th
vange atta Syracuse
n e Ohreo ,and
ren Debb1e of Columbus VISited
Church
to all others whom It moy w1th Mrs Carroll Randolph
concern lhat on lhe 6lh doy ol
M L Boston is a patient at
Oc1ober 1972 the Trustees of
the Syracuse United Methodlst the St Joseph Hospital in
Church successor In nterest to Parkersburg
the
Evangelical
United
•rethr&lt;n Church at .§yracuse
Mrs Hazel Balderson of
Oh o fled In the common Pitas Vienna
Va spent a
Court of Metgs County Oh o
Case No 1S 149 their certain weekend at the Williams
Pet tlon proylng tor an order Balderson home
glv no them authority to $ell
and convey n fee s mp e to
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and
Q-What IS the fame of
Elizabeth Ann Hemstev the
fol ow ng described real estate Commodore Matthew Perry'
s tuate in the County of Meigs
A-He opened Japan to
State of Ohio and V II age of
world trade by salllng a US
Syracuse to wit
Be ng the surface only of the sh1p mto Tokyo Bay on July
following descr bed real estate 8 1853
Beo lnnmg at the south east
corner of Lot No 31 in High
Lawn Subdlv son to the V llage
of Syracuse Ohio thence along
the south boundary line of said
Lot No 31 to a point ntersect ng
the western boundary line of the
(With mformallon from the
lot now owned by the
Evangelical Un ited Brethren Middleport Public Library)
Church (Syracuse United
(I) Can you name the great
Methodist Church) at Syracuse
Ohio thence north along a story teller of our lime who
prolected line of the western
boundary line of said Church wrote the exc1tmg political
Lot acfoss Lot 31 to • point In ---------"'""":Lot No 32 15 feet from the
LEGAL NOTICE
northern boundary line of Lot IN THE
MATTER OF SET
No 32 In H gh Lawn Subdivision
TLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS
of the Village of Syracuse Ohio
PROlATE COURT MEIGS
thence east follow no a lint 15 COUNTY
OHIO
feet from the north boundary
Accounts and vouchers of the
1ne of Lot 1 11 32 and parallel
w th the north line of sa d Lot fotlowlno named ffduc ares
No 32 to College Road Street have been fled In the Pobate
Court Meigs County Oh o for
thence southeas.terlv tot owing approval
and utHement
the meander ngs of Colleoe
CASE
NO
19 925 Third An
Road Street to the southeast
corner of Lot No 31 or to the nua Account of Dorothy
Gilmore Guard an of Delbert
place of beginning
Norman Catt an incompetent
Reference Deed Vol 211 person
Paoe 45 Deed Records of Meigs
CASE NO 20 157 Fourth and
County Oh o
Account of Wayne D
But reserv ng (rom the Flna
Seal Guardian of the Guar
prem ses the nght to use for dl&amp;nshlp
ol William G Bee
church park no an area e)l
CASE NO 20 286 F rst anct
tending west a depth of forty Final
of Marga,..et
feet from the boundery line Brown Account
Guard
an
of Naomi J
atono College Road Street and
an ncompetent
extend no the ent re width of the Pickens
CASE NO 20 602 F rst and
property conveyed tor as ong Fina
l Account of Sarah Gibbs
as the rem~tln ng church Adm
nlstratr )I of 1he Estate of
property to the south and ad Georgia
WIIJ amson Deceased
lacent to the property herein
CASE NO 20 621 First and
conveyed belongs to the United Final
A&lt;.count of Laura Baker
Methodist Church Grantor Executrix
of the Estate of Milo
here in
McDole Deceased
sad Pet tlon and cause w II H CASE
NO 20 66i F rat and
be heard on the 8th day of Final Account
Adams
November 1972 or as soon Executrix of oftheC ara
Estate ot
thereafter u mav be
D Adam~ Deceased
SYRACUSE UNITED Ctertnct
Unless eXcept ons are flied
METHODIST CHURCH thereto
said accounts- w II be
BY R:aymond Kr der
htlr ng befora sad Court on
Ed th Hood for
the 7th day of November 1912
Mabel P c:kens It
t mesad accounts w II
8tn Qulstnbtrry bt which
consllsered 1nd cant nt.,~ed
Thtlma Hlwlty
!rom doy lo dav until llnaliy
(101 9 16 21 30 41
dlspoud ol
Any ptrscn nterested mar.
me written exctptiOr)S to sa d
accounts ot to matters per
f• nlng to the t)lecutlon of th•
trust not len then flve days
prior to the date set for f')ear lng
Menning Webster
JUDGE
TO 12,2 T05 (CLOSE
MEIGS COUNTY

w

CARNIVAL

by D1ck Tumer.

OPTOMETRIST

.

(10) '

PROBATE DIVISION
COMMONPL.EASCOURT
11

Apple Grove
•
,
News, Events

/0

"That'• my

w1fe • brldft club • • referred to
he Med1a' 1"

locally aa '

Chester News Notes
spent a few days w1th Ml' and
By Clarice Allen
The Chester Volunteer Mrs John Fick
Greg and Bruce Allen
firemen held their annual
Col
umbus spent a recent
p1cmc Sunday evemng Sept
17 at the firehouse Guests weekend with Mr and Mrs
Included all persons who Clayton Alien
Mr and Mrs James Weber
helped at the County Fall"
Middleport
called on Mrs
fam1lles of the firemen and the
Aux1hary members and their Eldon Gaul recently
Mrs On a Osborne A!hens
families A covered dish dmner
was served with the firemen spent several days w1th Mrs
furmshmg ba•becued steaks Letha Wood
Mr ;~nd Mrs Charles
mashed potatoes gravy baked
beans hot dogs coffee and Ice E1chmger Columbus were
cream Games were enjoyed weekend v1sitors of Mrs Opal
w1th pmes gomg to many Eichinger and family
Mr and Mrs Dayton W11l
Door pnzes were won by Erma
recently
Cleland John WICkham Jane Bradenton Fla
called
on
Denzil
Cleland
and
Bahr and Marcy Sexson
Nearly 100 persons attended Clance Allen
Mr and M1s John Wickham
the p1cmc
Mr and Mrs Carl Moore and Mr and Mrs Ronald Clay
p
omeroy were recent viSitors and Todd recently attended a
ol Chester W11l and Mary ball game m Cincmnall
p k
Miss Hilda Weber Colum
ar er
bus
spent several days with
Mrs W1bna Ginther and Mr
and Mrs Jack Gmther and son Mr and Mrs Ralph Keller
Mr and Mrs Clayton Allen
spent a few days m Cary Ill
Wllh Mr and Mrs Ray Gmther called on Mr and Mrs Ralph
Frank and Mrs Oma Allen
and fam1ly
Mrs Opal Eichinger Don
Miss
Knstle
Hawk
Hockingport spent Monday and Laura Jean recently al
tended a ball game in em
Wll hMran d Mrs Roy ChfiSty
Mr and Mrs Bernard cmna tl and spent the weekend
E1selstein Cleveland recently there

ea'rmet",..1,e'wls,

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111

IJVIOIH "" '

I

1

T

By the Day
Florence C~rcle spent Sun
day with Mrs Ohve Ullom of
Belpree
Betty Van Meter and Eun1e
Bnnker v1s1ted w1th Mr and
Mrs Ray Byers of Tanners
Run a recent Sunday
Mr and Mrs Glenn Tu!Ue
and son of Eagle Ridge
Chester Van Meter of Mormng
Star Mrs Jim Patterson and
sons of Racme R D and Kinn
Follrod local v1s1ted Mr and
Mts Douglas Circle on
Saturday
George C1rcle of New Haven
visited his mother Mrs Mary
Circle on a recent Sunday
Mr and Mrs Douglas Circle
v1s1ted with Mr and Mrs Ray
Byers Tanners Run Thurs
day

Sharpen your mind:

OFFICE HOURS 9 30
AT NOON ON THURS l-EAST COURT ST

.10 Hill I t -

DII'T:

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE s herebv !iii ven that
n pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board Of Tow lSh p Trustees
of the Townsh p of Letart Oh o
passed on tt'le 7th dav of August
1972 there will be s.ubm tted to
a vote of the people of said
T~nShip
at a Gen_era
E
CTION to be held n the
To nsh p of Letart Oh o at the
regu ar places of vat ng there n
on Tuesday the 7th day of
November 1972 the quest on of
levy no n excess of the ten mi
I m tat on for the benet t of
Letart Townsh p for the pur
pose of Current Expenses
Sa d tax be ng a renewa ot
an ex st ng lu ot One m II to
ru n for F ve years

Meigs
Property
Transfers

novel In High Places'
(2) What Amer~can stales
man who was born in 1782 near
Abbeville South Carolina
became the most promment
leader of the South before the
Civil War•
{3) What date did lhe Enola
Gay a United States B 29
rurplane drop the first atomic
bomb over ~nemy temtory•
(4) Who was the f1rst Umted
States presidential candidate
Lo fly to a pohllcal conventiOn
to make an acceptance
speech?
( 5) Name the French
composer who wrote the
popular opera Carmen
(See answers on Page 6)

IS UNED

~~~ '"ll il

By Mrs Herbert Roush
AFC Jeff Donohew of Ft
Meade Md spent the weekend
w1t~ h1s parenll! Mr and Mrs
Roy Donohew and Greg
Steve Norns was "" Sunday
dmner guest of h1s grand
parents Mr and Mrs Floyd
Noms
Mr and Mrs Herbert Roush
and son Roger Jeff Miller and
Mrs Iva Orr spent Saturday
evemng with Mr and Mrs
Dana Lew1s at Chiton Sharon
and Cmdy Roush spent 11!•
weekend w1th the Lewlses
Mrs Everette Ransom
retur1 ed home Thursday from
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mrs Zelpha Boggess v1s1ted
her Sunday
Guests of Mr and Mrs Jess
Anderson Sunday were Mr and
Mrs Uoyd Sayre and children
of Mmersvllie Orville Jarrell
and Mrs Benny Boggess
Mrs Dorothy Johnson
daughter of Mr and Mrs
Robert Smith is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital for
observation and treatment
Mrs Smith IS ass1stmg m the
care of Jenny Johnson while
her mother IS hospitalized
Mrs Herbert Roush and
Mrs Iva Orr VISited Mr and
Mrs Ott Boston at Racine
recently
Shelly Johnson of Racine
spent the weekend with her
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Robert Smith
Howard Roush a former
resident now living in MallSfield is a patient at MallSfield General Hospital
Members of the Letart Foils
Melhodisl Church held a
reception for their new pastor,
Rev and Mrs Shively and sons
of Racme at the community
hall on Wednesday evening
Mrs Eula Wolfe attended the
Homecommg at Sutton
Methodist Church on Sunday
F..arly Roush Has buill a new
barn on his farm
Mr and Mrs Hoyt Ferguson
of Camp Conley spent Sunday
w1 th Mr and Mrs Homer
Warner
Mrs
Grace Holsinger
assisted Mrs Eula Wolfe with
housecleaning
Mrs Eula Wolfe and son
Aa1 on called on relatives In
West Virginia Wednesday

II

"boll

visited recently with Margaret
Sinclair of Pomeroy
Mrs Larry Barr daughter
and Mrs Alpha Barr of
Langsville were Monday al
ternoon visitors of Mr and
Mrs Harley Johnson
Across From Upper Parking
Lot

Walk A Little
Save A Lot At

,_lOLA'S
Cor Main &amp; Sycamore

You'll L1ke Our
Lower Prrcesl
.

"IT'S TRUE" ~ .. I

lmll

A.

VALWS
POUND

AT

BAKER

FOR YOU
in the

PUINIIUII
MIIIDI.UoiT, 0.

Yellow
Pages

1

I

i
!

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Silt ,,n. 'tJI nl)l!.

Wolfpen ' News, Nates lunOil•l'
Mrs William Boyce of
Columbus spent a few days
with her parents Mr and Mrs
Howard Russell
Sunday callers of Mr and
Mrs Harley Johnson were Mr
and Mrs Charley Smith
Donald Jeffers Ricky and
Robert Murphy
Mrs Stella Atkins .M!Hy and
Ruby D1chl were Thursday
visitors of Mr and Mrs Harley
Johnson
Mr and Mrs Howard Thoma
were Saturday evening visitors
of Mr and Mrs Harley
Johnson
Mr
Dale Hussell of
Columbus were recent visitors
of Mr and Mrs Lmcoln
Russell
Mr and Mrs Howard Thoma

t

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111

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. 1- Tbe~ Sentinel,tlfiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 9,1972

. Mrs. Carrie
Elberfeld Dies

Bazaar Set NOV: 9

Green Thu?b .
•

1

'

Notes • ...
A .,eekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Cl~b members.

Leaves
ByMRS.STACIEARNOLD
.WUdwOOd Garden'&lt;lub '
During the coming days MaUler Nature is going to put on her
nlol!t majestic show of the year. The trees, shrubs and vines .will
be reaplendent in their shades of autunm. There will be Ute Red
Ollis, the Maples wiUt their shad(lll of gold, tangerine, peach and
red; the ash trees In Uteir beautiful shades of gold, and don't
furget the swe@tgum with her calico·colors.
Thedogwoo'ds'wuit.IUO!I anew look in their shades of dusky
red and green; anch~·e'can~ talk about color without mentioning
the hielrories and elrils.
.-- Now also take a close look at all the shrubs that bloomerll"st
spring. They're putting on their final show now witn their colorful
foliage. .
·
aimbing up the trunks of many trees, you will. find the
IICBl'let fiame fqliage of the Virginia Creeper and Poison ivy . .
Later will come the bittersweet with her bright orange befries.
Now let's talk a little bit about leaves. They are the nutritive
cqans of the plant. Their principal activity is to absorb as much
IUiiligbtas possible. Chlorophyll iS what .oakes Ute leaves green.
Leaves are placed In two categories, simple and compound.
Briefly, in the simple group are those whose blades form one
c:GIItinUOIIII piece, such as the poplar, an&lt;! in the compound group
·are those which consist of several leaflets, such as the locust.
Laeves are either ne\ted veined as the sycamore, or parallel
veined, as the elm.
The prime function of the leaf is to create sugar and starch for
feeding the plant.
In order to do this, carbon dioxide is absorbed from the air.
llld energy from Ute sun is absorbed by chlorophyll; this energy
In tum.generating Ute power to rearrange the caroon, l!ydrogen
IIIII oxygen of the crude materials resulting in asimple organic

procmct.

With further chemical change it becomes sugar and starch.
'Ibis miracle of nature can only take place in the light, and is
true, with few exceptions, qnly of plants containing chlorophyll.
'Ibis abljorptlon of carbon dioxide from the air is helpful In Ute
fight against air pollution.
Awry Important result of the leaf is that of transpiration, or '
giving oft water into the air. In hot, dry weather, plants often
give elf more water Ulan they obtajn from the soil, which results
In the wilting of Ute plant. An interesttng example of adaptation
to thiiWIIUiclbethe leaves of com plant which often roll up, since
a Cll'led leaf exposes much less surface to the process of
evapoi-atlon tlla!l one whose blade is expanded.
An apple treeof average size trallSilires four ~allons of water
per hour Into the air and a com plant transpires fifty gallons
. during ill growing · This transpiration Is best explained
by studying a terrarilllll.•
The reaaon for the change in color of leaves is that certain
chemical changes take place In the decaying chlorophyll. As the
weather gets colder, the tree8 begin to manufacture a layer of
drler,corkymaterlal at the base of the leaf stem. When the wind
blows, the Ieafbreaka away and salls to the groun.
During the coming days,look out the window at the changing

The annual holiday bazaar of
theeathQlicWomen'sCiobwas
set for Nov. 9 and committees
we•enainedat a meeting ofthe
club · Thursday nighl at the
Sacred Heart OlUrch. .
it was decided during the
·
lQ.eeti~ to change the dimer
charge to $1.75 per person.
. Appointed to committees were
Dorothy Gloeckner, Cecelia
Mitch, Phyllis Hennesy, cochairmen, Barbara Mnll • n

Mary MQrrow, Betty Ohlinger, M•rthli Howell, and Roberta
Doris . Rinehart , ·· Emma Dailey; ·kitchen; . and Rose
. Radford,
Katie
Biron, Sisson, chairman, Janet Duffy,
Philomena Goodwin, Hilda Slirley Huston, Phyllis Knopp,
Harris, Elizabeth Horak; Opal Sandy Kovalchik, Barbara
· Morris, Kathleen . Wells,. &amp;nith, )'Ietty Wehrung, Alny
Pauline Greathouse, Angela Hamm, Julie Hamm, Marilyn
Eblin, Heleqa Brlck:les, Em.na · Meyer, Susan Blaker, Sharon
Broderlck,Gemma Gasci, Ann Michael, Susie stewart, Jane
Colburn, Philomina Follrod, Miller, Agnes Sellers, Susan
Vidia Girolami, ·Josephine Ba er, Anna Blackwood, Rita
Hargrav es , Katie Grueser, and Ida Casci, Alice (1reeman,
Nancy Grueser, Helen Handley, Amy Huston, Tina Dufiv,
'
Tina Nieri, Rose Colburn,
Maureen Hennesy, Jo .Ellen
Roush and Sonya Ohlinger,
waitresses.
Pat -McKnight, Dorothy
Thompson, Christine O'Don.
nell and Vera Buchanan have
The Right to Read program Windon, and Mr s. Phyllis been named to the baked goods
as it is being carried out in Dugan. Cultural arts e~hibits committee, and Marjorie Goett
Meigs County was explained by - winners in Meigs CoWIIy - will have charge of soft drinks.
Mrs. Nellie Vale, county are being J'udged at the con- Catherine Welch is coffee
elementary school supervisor. vention.
chairman
. and
R
h
Geo
K, Mrill
h dl Mrs.
.~
at a meeting Thursday night of
eports on t e workshop,
r.ge om w
an e "'e
tl)e Meigs County Council of "How to Conduct a Campaign" fish pond; Carol McCullough,
Parents and Teachers at the held recentl; at Ohio Vicki Gloeckner, and Rita
Salem Center school.
University were given by Mrs. Hamm will take care · of Ute
Mrs .
Vale
described Goeglein and Mrs. Avanell fancy work booth . Martha
progress in the various schools Halliday. In a communication Gress, Lois Lancaster, ·Joan
of implementing the program , from the Ohio PTA, Meigs
and Brenda Brown
charge of the parcel
being parti;l;ltlarly com- County was urged to increase
plimentary 'lit the Chester membership this year. The post sale and Ruth H. ThornElementary School where the Salem Center Will was an- ton, Ruth Hennesy and Rhoda
program has received · finan - nounced recipient of a Hackett will have the religious
cial resources to move ahead magazine award from the slate article sale.
The 6:30 ·supper will be
more rapidly than in some organization.
It
was
decided
that
the
host
handled
by Phyllis Hackett And
other schools.
Mrs . Richard Vaughan, WI it will lead devotions at ~ach lda biehl. Members of Ute
president, reported that the meeting. Mrs. Goeglein kitchen committee are to
cultural arls theme this year reported on a recent executive report Wednesday, Nov. 8, at 10
will be "Reflections of the committee and the recom- a'.m. and Thursday, Nov. 9, at
Young." Judging at Ute council mendation was made that each 9:30 a.m. The waitresses will
level will take place at the May Wiil report on activities at the work at 6:30p.m. on Nov. 8,
meeting. As yet a county county council meeting . and are to report at 4 p.m. on
cultural arls chairman has not Suggestions for the spring Nov. 9. All booUts are to be set
conference program were up on Ute evening preceding
been named.
· the bazaar and will open on
It was noted that Ute second solicited.
Council dues are payable Nov. 9 at 4:30p.m.
phase of the Search for ConIn view of Ute bazaar, the
sensus meetings will be held at now as well as scholarship
Meigs High School on Oct. 25. donations . Several units regular meeting of Ute CWC
This will be a county-wide displayed program booklets at will be held on Nov. 2. Mrs.
meeting. The next meeting of the meeting. Mrs. Halliday, Mullep had charge of the
the Council will be held on Nov. Salem Center PTA president, meeting during . which time
2 at the Salisbury Elementary extended a welcome to open reports were giVen on Ute
the meeting . Refreshments nunmage sale, Ute repair of
School.
the kitchen stove, Ute laying of
The Ohio PTA convention were served.
tile in the kitchen. It was voted
this week in Columbus was
Q- What d oes "recto .. to purchase coloring materials
announced . Attending from
for the kindergarten religion
Meigs County are Mrs . mean ?
A- The righ\hand page of education cl~. Hilda Haj'ris,
Vaughan, Mrs. Charles
a
book
or publication .
Christine Grueser, Ruth
Goeglein, Mrs . Kathryn
Thornton, and Jane Frymyer
served refreshments.
Named to the hostess
colors of the trees and plan to take the time to take a walk
through the woods and marvel at Ute beauty and just take a committee for the November
moment to stop and think of how nice it is to live in the hills of meeting were Mrs. ~;Mrs.
Hackett, Mrs. Mitch, ind Mrs.
southeastern Ohio.
Welch .

PTA Council Hears
Right-to-Read Story

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State Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson announced the
quarterly distribution.to Ohio's
88 counties of funds for county
general relief and'local welfare
administration costs totaling
$6,961,483.48.
Meigs County received
$6,230.Qol of the total. Ferguson
said the state contributes
statewide about 80 p'ct. of Ute
costs of operating county
welfare departments and Utelr
general relief programs. The
counties put up the remainder
of the money. No federal funds
are involved in general relief,
Ferguson reports.

MONDAY

NO~·DENOMINATIONAL

•· ·

revival' at Nease Settlement
United Brethren Church
starting .7:30 . p.m. Monday: .
Rev. George S. Oiler speaking
11 each service. Public invited.
C RL HYSELL
k' ·
A ··
spea mg
and showing film on drUg
abuse wlien Riverview PTA
mee. ..
,_ a1·7.·30 p.m. Monday a1
h 1 0
h
'll be
~seiv'ed. pen ouse WI
LARRY Morrison and Frank
W p.1
Ill be
.k
.h orRer wd PTA speaIs ers
1
11
w en u an
mee a
7' 30 p.m. Monday at the
elem. entary scho?l g.ymnas•um
REGULAR October meeting
fM · DAV illbe · · ·f
omembers
elgs and w
or
wives, PICDIC
6:30p.m.
Monday at oW~erican. Legio-11
Park next,to Middleport Post
Office.
POMEROY Elementary
· 7:30 p.m. at the
School PTA,
school. John Reece to shQw
film on new Gavin plant;
George Hargraves, superintendent to speak on the school
levy.
·
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Monday at Met'gs
Inn at noon.
WSCS 7:30 P.M. Monday,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport. Mrs. Ruth
Baumgardner, leader; Mrs.
Fern Cheesebrew, speaker.
Hostesses, Mrs. Grace French,
Mrs: Lorena Davis, Mrs. Ruth
Euler and Mrs. Mary Wise.
' MEIGS County 4-H Pleasure
Riders meeting 7:30 p.m.
Monday, home of Mrs. A. R.
Knight. OUter 4-H riding club
members to be guests. Duane
Plymale will be guest speaker.

VISIT CANADAYS
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Witt of
Ashtabula and Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Porter of Middletown
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Delmar A. Canaday.
Mrs. Witt is the former EdiUt
Bowen, a Meigs County school
teacher. Mrs. Porter is the
former Jody Wildermuth of
Pomeroy.

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.I .· Social Galendar · ~ .

Mrs. CarrieR. Elberftild, 77,
of 3496 Westerville Rd .,
Colulnbus, 11 forrrier Pomeroy .
r esiden.l , died Sundar·ll)orning
a.t the Riverside Methodist
Hospttal following . a short
illness
Sh . i s · d b h
e s urv•ve
Y er
husband , RaylJlo~d F.;. a
.daughter, Mrs. Camene Price,
Col urnbus ; two sons, J ames of
Columbus and Raymond C.,
(Pete) of Chester, and three
gram!ch~ldren. Funeral ser.
'li be held at th.e
vices
WI
Schoedinger Funeral Home,
. 2741 Cleveland Ave., Columbus' at ] P.m.. Wednesday.
B~ial will be in the Forest
Lawn Cemetery .
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TUESDAY
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 ·p.m.
TueSday with &amp;luUtern '!Oar&lt;l
of Education members and
Supt. Ralph ·sayre to lie .
present.
MEIGS County Women's
Democrat Club, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Gra~ EplliCO·pal
'"
Parish House, Pomeroy .
MIDDLEPORT
Lodge
363,
·
.~
,_ ·
F&amp;AM, will confer "'e mas ....
mason degree on one candidate
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Ute
Masonic Temple. All master
masons are invited to allen d.
NESDAY
WH WED · Lodg 1 30
ITE Rose
e, :
p.m. American Legion Hall in
Middleport.
REGULAR Meeting,
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
CJ
· noon at·
, ~.b •·:,YJ..£'d~~~d. ay
Meigs Inn. , ·
POMEROY· Chapter 80,
RAM , stated _11,1eetin g Wed•
ne· sday, 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Ali officers
and companions urged to at·
tend.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Garden Club members meet at
Roy al Crown Bottlin g Co ·• 8
p.m. Wednesday for plant·tour.

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MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, home of Miss Lucille
Smith, Chester, 2 p.m. Mrs.
James Titus to review "Nixon
in the White House," wiUt
members to answer roll call
with a comment on the book.

.,
ANSWERS
11) ArUtur Halley
(2) John Caldwell Calhoun
(3) August 6, 1945
( 4)
Franklin
Delano
Roosevelt
(5) Georges Bizet

•

Football On Ch. 51

MEIGS vs.
IRONTON

HOME FROM WALES
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Jones
have returned from Milford ,
Haven, Wales, where Utey
were guests of their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Davidson and children. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jones in Ute Utree
weeks there toured England
and Wales.

Complete TV Replay
Of The Gama .Tonlght
. At 5:30P.M. On

:1

CABLE TV-CH. 5!

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Flip a switch. The lights come on. The range heats
up. The
- factories hum. That's the way -it's always
been around here. But last summer, some other
parts of the country had power reductions (brownouts) because of electric power shortages.

. '

N·WEEK=
EWSPAPER

DO WE HAVE AN .ELECTRIC POWER SHORTAGE
IN . THIS AREA? No, we don't ... and. there's no
good reason why we ever should. After all, we believe we have
the country's strongest electric utility system. We have entirely
adequate generating capacity, including ample reserves, with
more capacity under construction. We have the natiofl'S highest voltage, highest capacity transmission system, We have
access to virtually unlimited supplies of coal needed to make
electricity.

WILL THERE BE A ~OWER SHORTAGE IN THIS AREA?
There needn't be, but there could be and if there is a shortage it will be totally unnecessary. Any power shortage here
would be because certain new extreme and impractical governmentai regulation,s would make it impossible by 1,975 for
us to burn the coal available to make electricity to meet your
demands. ·.
·
·
..'

New regulations say that when we burn coal to generate power
we put too much of t,he, sulfur oxides into the air, and that thi~ is
.·harmful. The fact is that only high concentrations of sulfur oxides
at gr.ound
in the upper atmosphere-can be harm~ul.
.. · · ·.Sulfur.oxides included i.n gases exhausted from plant stacks tii~h
;,~ ; into the a'mosphere,;are quickly. diffused and, in part, chemically
·· changed so tt1at ground-level concentrations meet strict governmental
. regul~tions. ·:· .
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level--noi.

.,

• • •THE FULL
.IN
TION
IUM •••
•

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of America's

-

That's the responsibility and the honored privilege
.

free press.

As world events move

··We sre. protecting a,nd will continue

.

unbiased ·coverage becomes more vital. If a startlin.g

"

scientific
breakthrough
is annou"'ced, when. .a no.. . - ...•
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·,

· tion's government to·pples overnight, as families are
. reunited-- your newspt;Jpers speed that information .·
to .you. Information brings know.ledg~. · Knowledge
gives

all ·of

-

TODAY'S

·..

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PHONE 992·2156

OR 992,2157

CIRCULATION
,.

to protect against harmful
· .ground:-level concentrations of sulfur oxides, but there's no com mer.
. ..~lty 'soccessful way rig.ht now to remove sulfur oxides from stack
'
.· -:g&amp;Mi:ori a e~~tl{iuous b~sis,and h1 the amounts specified by exist- ·
. · ·.lag :gov.ernm~nt~l re.gida~iohs. Millions are being spent on rese~rch
J • . · :· .to: tlild.a.way, ·and we ~re playing a significant part in that research .
·. .:·..·.. ,; ·.we have:no:dO'ubi a way will t&gt;e fou,nd, but more time is l')eeded.
·w~e.n. aclonce : ti~dl'. a'way, we will J)romptly adopt [t . .
", . . .

.,.:... : . ·. . . ... . ·. ·. .
..

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us freedom of ·choice.

THE DAILY SENT'INEL.

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IN THE MEANTIME-You. our customers, will continue to demand electricity for everyday- living as
well as an improved environment.
We believe the neecj for electricity and the need
for environmental improvement go hand In hand.
Anything less would be disastrous. The prope.r balancing of power need and environmental improvement-should-and in the final an~lysis, will-be made
by the public, not by us. Understanding of the possible and the impossible is the first step toward
changing unrealistic regulations controlling the burning of coal in power plants.
The simple fact is that there is enough
coal in the United States to provide us .
with needed fuel for power for the next
600 years-and if we have informed and
balanced judgement, there'll be enough
electric power for our eyery need. .
On the other hand, in the words of a
distinguished public servant, the Honorable James R. Smith, Assi.stant Sec·
retary, Water and Power Resources, U.S.
Department of the Interior, ''If fossil fuels
·are not used in whatever needed quantities
between tnis year 'and approximately 1990,
a power catastrophe will o~cur. Without,ex- ·
tensive utilization of fossil fuels 1 there is no
way this nation will b~ able to avert a major
energy shortage."

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at a geometric pace -the need
for thorough, fast,
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. We know you're counting on us to bring you
dependable electric power ... both now and
in the years to come. We will be able to do it
with your support and realistic governmental
regulations.

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. 1- Tbe~ Sentinel,tlfiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 9,1972

. Mrs. Carrie
Elberfeld Dies

Bazaar Set NOV: 9

Green Thu?b .
•

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Notes • ...
A .,eekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Cl~b members.

Leaves
ByMRS.STACIEARNOLD
.WUdwOOd Garden'&lt;lub '
During the coming days MaUler Nature is going to put on her
nlol!t majestic show of the year. The trees, shrubs and vines .will
be reaplendent in their shades of autunm. There will be Ute Red
Ollis, the Maples wiUt their shad(lll of gold, tangerine, peach and
red; the ash trees In Uteir beautiful shades of gold, and don't
furget the swe@tgum with her calico·colors.
Thedogwoo'ds'wuit.IUO!I anew look in their shades of dusky
red and green; anch~·e'can~ talk about color without mentioning
the hielrories and elrils.
.-- Now also take a close look at all the shrubs that bloomerll"st
spring. They're putting on their final show now witn their colorful
foliage. .
·
aimbing up the trunks of many trees, you will. find the
IICBl'let fiame fqliage of the Virginia Creeper and Poison ivy . .
Later will come the bittersweet with her bright orange befries.
Now let's talk a little bit about leaves. They are the nutritive
cqans of the plant. Their principal activity is to absorb as much
IUiiligbtas possible. Chlorophyll iS what .oakes Ute leaves green.
Leaves are placed In two categories, simple and compound.
Briefly, in the simple group are those whose blades form one
c:GIItinUOIIII piece, such as the poplar, an&lt;! in the compound group
·are those which consist of several leaflets, such as the locust.
Laeves are either ne\ted veined as the sycamore, or parallel
veined, as the elm.
The prime function of the leaf is to create sugar and starch for
feeding the plant.
In order to do this, carbon dioxide is absorbed from the air.
llld energy from Ute sun is absorbed by chlorophyll; this energy
In tum.generating Ute power to rearrange the caroon, l!ydrogen
IIIII oxygen of the crude materials resulting in asimple organic

procmct.

With further chemical change it becomes sugar and starch.
'Ibis miracle of nature can only take place in the light, and is
true, with few exceptions, qnly of plants containing chlorophyll.
'Ibis abljorptlon of carbon dioxide from the air is helpful In Ute
fight against air pollution.
Awry Important result of the leaf is that of transpiration, or '
giving oft water into the air. In hot, dry weather, plants often
give elf more water Ulan they obtajn from the soil, which results
In the wilting of Ute plant. An interesttng example of adaptation
to thiiWIIUiclbethe leaves of com plant which often roll up, since
a Cll'led leaf exposes much less surface to the process of
evapoi-atlon tlla!l one whose blade is expanded.
An apple treeof average size trallSilires four ~allons of water
per hour Into the air and a com plant transpires fifty gallons
. during ill growing · This transpiration Is best explained
by studying a terrarilllll.•
The reaaon for the change in color of leaves is that certain
chemical changes take place In the decaying chlorophyll. As the
weather gets colder, the tree8 begin to manufacture a layer of
drler,corkymaterlal at the base of the leaf stem. When the wind
blows, the Ieafbreaka away and salls to the groun.
During the coming days,look out the window at the changing

The annual holiday bazaar of
theeathQlicWomen'sCiobwas
set for Nov. 9 and committees
we•enainedat a meeting ofthe
club · Thursday nighl at the
Sacred Heart OlUrch. .
it was decided during the
·
lQ.eeti~ to change the dimer
charge to $1.75 per person.
. Appointed to committees were
Dorothy Gloeckner, Cecelia
Mitch, Phyllis Hennesy, cochairmen, Barbara Mnll • n

Mary MQrrow, Betty Ohlinger, M•rthli Howell, and Roberta
Doris . Rinehart , ·· Emma Dailey; ·kitchen; . and Rose
. Radford,
Katie
Biron, Sisson, chairman, Janet Duffy,
Philomena Goodwin, Hilda Slirley Huston, Phyllis Knopp,
Harris, Elizabeth Horak; Opal Sandy Kovalchik, Barbara
· Morris, Kathleen . Wells,. &amp;nith, )'Ietty Wehrung, Alny
Pauline Greathouse, Angela Hamm, Julie Hamm, Marilyn
Eblin, Heleqa Brlck:les, Em.na · Meyer, Susan Blaker, Sharon
Broderlck,Gemma Gasci, Ann Michael, Susie stewart, Jane
Colburn, Philomina Follrod, Miller, Agnes Sellers, Susan
Vidia Girolami, ·Josephine Ba er, Anna Blackwood, Rita
Hargrav es , Katie Grueser, and Ida Casci, Alice (1reeman,
Nancy Grueser, Helen Handley, Amy Huston, Tina Dufiv,
'
Tina Nieri, Rose Colburn,
Maureen Hennesy, Jo .Ellen
Roush and Sonya Ohlinger,
waitresses.
Pat -McKnight, Dorothy
Thompson, Christine O'Don.
nell and Vera Buchanan have
The Right to Read program Windon, and Mr s. Phyllis been named to the baked goods
as it is being carried out in Dugan. Cultural arts e~hibits committee, and Marjorie Goett
Meigs County was explained by - winners in Meigs CoWIIy - will have charge of soft drinks.
Mrs. Nellie Vale, county are being J'udged at the con- Catherine Welch is coffee
elementary school supervisor. vention.
chairman
. and
R
h
Geo
K, Mrill
h dl Mrs.
.~
at a meeting Thursday night of
eports on t e workshop,
r.ge om w
an e "'e
tl)e Meigs County Council of "How to Conduct a Campaign" fish pond; Carol McCullough,
Parents and Teachers at the held recentl; at Ohio Vicki Gloeckner, and Rita
Salem Center school.
University were given by Mrs. Hamm will take care · of Ute
Mrs .
Vale
described Goeglein and Mrs. Avanell fancy work booth . Martha
progress in the various schools Halliday. In a communication Gress, Lois Lancaster, ·Joan
of implementing the program , from the Ohio PTA, Meigs
and Brenda Brown
charge of the parcel
being parti;l;ltlarly com- County was urged to increase
plimentary 'lit the Chester membership this year. The post sale and Ruth H. ThornElementary School where the Salem Center Will was an- ton, Ruth Hennesy and Rhoda
program has received · finan - nounced recipient of a Hackett will have the religious
cial resources to move ahead magazine award from the slate article sale.
The 6:30 ·supper will be
more rapidly than in some organization.
It
was
decided
that
the
host
handled
by Phyllis Hackett And
other schools.
Mrs . Richard Vaughan, WI it will lead devotions at ~ach lda biehl. Members of Ute
president, reported that the meeting. Mrs. Goeglein kitchen committee are to
cultural arls theme this year reported on a recent executive report Wednesday, Nov. 8, at 10
will be "Reflections of the committee and the recom- a'.m. and Thursday, Nov. 9, at
Young." Judging at Ute council mendation was made that each 9:30 a.m. The waitresses will
level will take place at the May Wiil report on activities at the work at 6:30p.m. on Nov. 8,
meeting. As yet a county county council meeting . and are to report at 4 p.m. on
cultural arls chairman has not Suggestions for the spring Nov. 9. All booUts are to be set
conference program were up on Ute evening preceding
been named.
· the bazaar and will open on
It was noted that Ute second solicited.
Council dues are payable Nov. 9 at 4:30p.m.
phase of the Search for ConIn view of Ute bazaar, the
sensus meetings will be held at now as well as scholarship
Meigs High School on Oct. 25. donations . Several units regular meeting of Ute CWC
This will be a county-wide displayed program booklets at will be held on Nov. 2. Mrs.
meeting. The next meeting of the meeting. Mrs. Halliday, Mullep had charge of the
the Council will be held on Nov. Salem Center PTA president, meeting during . which time
2 at the Salisbury Elementary extended a welcome to open reports were giVen on Ute
the meeting . Refreshments nunmage sale, Ute repair of
School.
the kitchen stove, Ute laying of
The Ohio PTA convention were served.
tile in the kitchen. It was voted
this week in Columbus was
Q- What d oes "recto .. to purchase coloring materials
announced . Attending from
for the kindergarten religion
Meigs County are Mrs . mean ?
A- The righ\hand page of education cl~. Hilda Haj'ris,
Vaughan, Mrs. Charles
a
book
or publication .
Christine Grueser, Ruth
Goeglein, Mrs . Kathryn
Thornton, and Jane Frymyer
served refreshments.
Named to the hostess
colors of the trees and plan to take the time to take a walk
through the woods and marvel at Ute beauty and just take a committee for the November
moment to stop and think of how nice it is to live in the hills of meeting were Mrs. ~;Mrs.
Hackett, Mrs. Mitch, ind Mrs.
southeastern Ohio.
Welch .

PTA Council Hears
Right-to-Read Story

=

&gt;·

M •

R

•

oii'U~

as

are

eigs eceiVeS
~t: '&gt;30
Sh

State Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson announced the
quarterly distribution.to Ohio's
88 counties of funds for county
general relief and'local welfare
administration costs totaling
$6,961,483.48.
Meigs County received
$6,230.Qol of the total. Ferguson
said the state contributes
statewide about 80 p'ct. of Ute
costs of operating county
welfare departments and Utelr
general relief programs. The
counties put up the remainder
of the money. No federal funds
are involved in general relief,
Ferguson reports.

MONDAY

NO~·DENOMINATIONAL

•· ·

revival' at Nease Settlement
United Brethren Church
starting .7:30 . p.m. Monday: .
Rev. George S. Oiler speaking
11 each service. Public invited.
C RL HYSELL
k' ·
A ··
spea mg
and showing film on drUg
abuse wlien Riverview PTA
mee. ..
,_ a1·7.·30 p.m. Monday a1
h 1 0
h
'll be
~seiv'ed. pen ouse WI
LARRY Morrison and Frank
W p.1
Ill be
.k
.h orRer wd PTA speaIs ers
1
11
w en u an
mee a
7' 30 p.m. Monday at the
elem. entary scho?l g.ymnas•um
REGULAR October meeting
fM · DAV illbe · · ·f
omembers
elgs and w
or
wives, PICDIC
6:30p.m.
Monday at oW~erican. Legio-11
Park next,to Middleport Post
Office.
POMEROY Elementary
· 7:30 p.m. at the
School PTA,
school. John Reece to shQw
film on new Gavin plant;
George Hargraves, superintendent to speak on the school
levy.
·
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Monday at Met'gs
Inn at noon.
WSCS 7:30 P.M. Monday,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport. Mrs. Ruth
Baumgardner, leader; Mrs.
Fern Cheesebrew, speaker.
Hostesses, Mrs. Grace French,
Mrs: Lorena Davis, Mrs. Ruth
Euler and Mrs. Mary Wise.
' MEIGS County 4-H Pleasure
Riders meeting 7:30 p.m.
Monday, home of Mrs. A. R.
Knight. OUter 4-H riding club
members to be guests. Duane
Plymale will be guest speaker.

VISIT CANADAYS
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Witt of
Ashtabula and Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Porter of Middletown
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Delmar A. Canaday.
Mrs. Witt is the former EdiUt
Bowen, a Meigs County school
teacher. Mrs. Porter is the
former Jody Wildermuth of
Pomeroy.

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.I .· Social Galendar · ~ .

Mrs. CarrieR. Elberftild, 77,
of 3496 Westerville Rd .,
Colulnbus, 11 forrrier Pomeroy .
r esiden.l , died Sundar·ll)orning
a.t the Riverside Methodist
Hospttal following . a short
illness
Sh . i s · d b h
e s urv•ve
Y er
husband , RaylJlo~d F.;. a
.daughter, Mrs. Camene Price,
Col urnbus ; two sons, J ames of
Columbus and Raymond C.,
(Pete) of Chester, and three
gram!ch~ldren. Funeral ser.
'li be held at th.e
vices
WI
Schoedinger Funeral Home,
. 2741 Cleveland Ave., Columbus' at ] P.m.. Wednesday.
B~ial will be in the Forest
Lawn Cemetery .
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~::::.:. D ...1E~'I!U!HlS.'~·l\'~"' :.·xMm

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TUESDAY
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 ·p.m.
TueSday with &amp;luUtern '!Oar&lt;l
of Education members and
Supt. Ralph ·sayre to lie .
present.
MEIGS County Women's
Democrat Club, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Gra~ EplliCO·pal
'"
Parish House, Pomeroy .
MIDDLEPORT
Lodge
363,
·
.~
,_ ·
F&amp;AM, will confer "'e mas ....
mason degree on one candidate
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Ute
Masonic Temple. All master
masons are invited to allen d.
NESDAY
WH WED · Lodg 1 30
ITE Rose
e, :
p.m. American Legion Hall in
Middleport.
REGULAR Meeting,
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
CJ
· noon at·
, ~.b •·:,YJ..£'d~~~d. ay
Meigs Inn. , ·
POMEROY· Chapter 80,
RAM , stated _11,1eetin g Wed•
ne· sday, 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Ali officers
and companions urged to at·
tend.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Garden Club members meet at
Roy al Crown Bottlin g Co ·• 8
p.m. Wednesday for plant·tour.

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MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, home of Miss Lucille
Smith, Chester, 2 p.m. Mrs.
James Titus to review "Nixon
in the White House," wiUt
members to answer roll call
with a comment on the book.

.,
ANSWERS
11) ArUtur Halley
(2) John Caldwell Calhoun
(3) August 6, 1945
( 4)
Franklin
Delano
Roosevelt
(5) Georges Bizet

•

Football On Ch. 51

MEIGS vs.
IRONTON

HOME FROM WALES
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Jones
have returned from Milford ,
Haven, Wales, where Utey
were guests of their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Davidson and children. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jones in Ute Utree
weeks there toured England
and Wales.

Complete TV Replay
Of The Gama .Tonlght
. At 5:30P.M. On

:1

CABLE TV-CH. 5!

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Flip a switch. The lights come on. The range heats
up. The
- factories hum. That's the way -it's always
been around here. But last summer, some other
parts of the country had power reductions (brownouts) because of electric power shortages.

. '

N·WEEK=
EWSPAPER

DO WE HAVE AN .ELECTRIC POWER SHORTAGE
IN . THIS AREA? No, we don't ... and. there's no
good reason why we ever should. After all, we believe we have
the country's strongest electric utility system. We have entirely
adequate generating capacity, including ample reserves, with
more capacity under construction. We have the natiofl'S highest voltage, highest capacity transmission system, We have
access to virtually unlimited supplies of coal needed to make
electricity.

WILL THERE BE A ~OWER SHORTAGE IN THIS AREA?
There needn't be, but there could be and if there is a shortage it will be totally unnecessary. Any power shortage here
would be because certain new extreme and impractical governmentai regulation,s would make it impossible by 1,975 for
us to burn the coal available to make electricity to meet your
demands. ·.
·
·
..'

New regulations say that when we burn coal to generate power
we put too much of t,he, sulfur oxides into the air, and that thi~ is
.·harmful. The fact is that only high concentrations of sulfur oxides
at gr.ound
in the upper atmosphere-can be harm~ul.
.. · · ·.Sulfur.oxides included i.n gases exhausted from plant stacks tii~h
;,~ ; into the a'mosphere,;are quickly. diffused and, in part, chemically
·· changed so tt1at ground-level concentrations meet strict governmental
. regul~tions. ·:· .
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level--noi.

.,

• • •THE FULL
.IN
TION
IUM •••
•

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e1

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of America's

-

That's the responsibility and the honored privilege
.

free press.

As world events move

··We sre. protecting a,nd will continue

.

unbiased ·coverage becomes more vital. If a startlin.g

"

scientific
breakthrough
is annou"'ced, when. .a no.. . - ...•
. /'
·,

· tion's government to·pples overnight, as families are
. reunited-- your newspt;Jpers speed that information .·
to .you. Information brings know.ledg~. · Knowledge
gives

all ·of

-

TODAY'S

·..

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PHONE 992·2156

OR 992,2157

CIRCULATION
,.

to protect against harmful
· .ground:-level concentrations of sulfur oxides, but there's no com mer.
. ..~lty 'soccessful way rig.ht now to remove sulfur oxides from stack
'
.· -:g&amp;Mi:ori a e~~tl{iuous b~sis,and h1 the amounts specified by exist- ·
. · ·.lag :gov.ernm~nt~l re.gida~iohs. Millions are being spent on rese~rch
J • . · :· .to: tlild.a.way, ·and we ~re playing a significant part in that research .
·. .:·..·.. ,; ·.we have:no:dO'ubi a way will t&gt;e fou,nd, but more time is l')eeded.
·w~e.n. aclonce : ti~dl'. a'way, we will J)romptly adopt [t . .
", . . .

.,.:... : . ·. . . ... . ·. ·. .
..

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us freedom of ·choice.

THE DAILY SENT'INEL.

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rt)I M,d \ MI ')flj . ~Wold

nc1

IN THE MEANTIME-You. our customers, will continue to demand electricity for everyday- living as
well as an improved environment.
We believe the neecj for electricity and the need
for environmental improvement go hand In hand.
Anything less would be disastrous. The prope.r balancing of power need and environmental improvement-should-and in the final an~lysis, will-be made
by the public, not by us. Understanding of the possible and the impossible is the first step toward
changing unrealistic regulations controlling the burning of coal in power plants.
The simple fact is that there is enough
coal in the United States to provide us .
with needed fuel for power for the next
600 years-and if we have informed and
balanced judgement, there'll be enough
electric power for our eyery need. .
On the other hand, in the words of a
distinguished public servant, the Honorable James R. Smith, Assi.stant Sec·
retary, Water and Power Resources, U.S.
Department of the Interior, ''If fossil fuels
·are not used in whatever needed quantities
between tnis year 'and approximately 1990,
a power catastrophe will o~cur. Without,ex- ·
tensive utilization of fossil fuels 1 there is no
way this nation will b~ able to avert a major
energy shortage."

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at a geometric pace -the need
for thorough, fast,
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. We know you're counting on us to bring you
dependable electric power ... both now and
in the years to come. We will be able to do it
with your support and realistic governmental
regulations.

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B- The DailySenlillei,Middleport·Pomeroy,O., Oct. 9, 1972

.Sentinel Classifieds Get ·A ctionl.$en tine~ ·Classifieds f]-et' R.esults.!
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Help ·Wanted .

PoMeroy .
Motor eo.

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

C,O.R HOP . wlmied i . apply In
per5on ; CrOw's Steak Hou$e.

I0-6-6tc

·-- · ~

Musical Instruments
Paul. custom. sunburst fioish.
new, 1 2 pri ce SJ7S ~ phorle '388·

$1795

Convertible, local 1-owner, low mileage ca·r . beautiful
cteam finish with black top. bucket seah 1 with console,
. new white-wall tires, po\\ler steering and automatic trans.

,1970 CHEVROLET

GOOD quality h~y. 300 to 500 2 BEDROOM mobile home In
~ales; phone 992.2789..
Racine area. Phone 992..6329.
10-8-61c.
10·5"1fc

y~ Ton pickup. V-8 ,englrie, automatic transmission, power

steering, 8'. wide body, custom comfort and· · conv.

organs, dishes, clocks, brass

be&lt;b. or complete households.
Wrile M. D. Miller , R1. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
6·28·1fC

Pomeroy
Motor
~··
~
IVES. 1:00 ,,M,
~
OPEN

0,1110

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·'

WANT ADS
Employment Wanted
IN FORMA i ION
. , DEAD\.INES
PA INTING, inferior and eX· ' ~ P .M:
Day Betorit Publicellorr.
terior ; phone 882-2482.
Monday
Deadline 9 a .m .
1
.
10-6·61p
Cancellation ""7"' Corrections

I

Bring Your Unhulled

WALNUTS
TO OUR

Will be acc:epttd untll9 a.m . tor

Dey of Publicallon
. REGULATIONS

M~CHAIQICAL

· The. Publisher reserves the
CARPORT Sale ; Avons and right
to edit or i"eiect I!"IY ads
miscellaneous ; 9 a.m. to 5 .deemed oblettlon4L
Th~
p.m., Thursday, Oct. 121tl ; 918 publisher will not be responsible
So. 3rd Sl., Middlepor-t.
for more than ohe Incorrect'
10·8·31c Insertion .
'
R'ITU
-----~
_.For Wan' Ad Service

5 cents per Word one lnser!Jon
MinimUm Charge 75c
12 cents pll!r word three

consecutive lnsertibrls.
18 ce-nts p&amp;r ' word sbt con·
aecutlve Insertions . 1
. 25 Per Cent D'scount On paid
ads and ads paid wltl'lln 10 days .

HULLER
Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

Advertlsemen t.

$

Affer they
are Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1972.

OFFICE HOU11" •

1:30 a.m . to
Satur9ay .

12 : 00

All kinds, all sizes for men,
women, young men, boys.
and girls. Hurry to ... ·

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

Daily,~

Noon

Notice
REDUCE safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
"water pills," Nelson Drug,
lo.9-2fp

Excelsior ·
SaH Works, Inc.
P.O. Box 267

992·3891

Pomeroy, Ohio

FU.RNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

cart , porch swi ng, lawn
chairs.
mattresses and .

springs, )adders, dishes, briC·
a-brae, odds and ends; 10
a.m..to 6 p.m .; Oclober 61h &amp;
7th, 462 S. 51h Sl., Middleport,
Ohio.
10. Htc

all ·

' electric apartment, down ·
stairs. Available this week.

Phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
ID·6·3tc

SQUARE DEAL, NEW DEAL
- politics aside, it's always a

GOOD DEAL al KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER, Rt. 7
"at caution light," Tuppers
Plains. Open to 7 ; closed
Mondays ; phone 667 ·3858.
Besides usual selection of
clean
used
furniture,
guaranteed appliances, iust

zig -zag sewing machine. This
machine makes buftonholes,
darns, embroideries. Pay

balance of $38.80 or pay $5.55
per mo. Phone 992-5331 .
10.3-61c
ESTATE AUCTION
TWO. DAY sa le Fri., Oci.J3 and
Sat., Oct. 14, begin ning at

10:00 A.M. each day . We will
sell lhe personal property of
lhelate Elsie D. Smith Black·

burn at the residence at 205

Lasley Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
(nexl door to lhe former
Sugar Run grade school) in
pari as follows : .
HOUSEHOLD
WHIRLPOOL side by side
Refrigerator
Freezer,

arrived NEW Huffy 20"
Slick
bikes ;
Chester
discounted lo $40 ; Murray 10· Kenmore Washer -dryer
speed bikes, $79. LAYAWAY combi nation ,
Kelvinator
for XMAS. ·
Elec. range, J-piece Living
10·8·61C . room suite, Ph ilco record
player, Admiral portable TV,
2 BLACK minialure poodles, reversible 3-speed fan, 1 lot of
males, $25 each ; 1 Monogram small fans, Ecko cookware
oil healer, 33,600 BTU, $75 ; set, elec. roaster, pair twin
phone 882·3205.
beds, office desk , two
10·8·61p drawer filing cabinet, S~ piece

=

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a relson. One we don't un-

cfanland. We Miss You Deb.
Brothers &amp; Sisters; Mrs.
Pearl Sisson Mrs Helen
·
Sauvage, Mr. ' Fred Vandale,
Jell Vandllle, Mr. Jack
IVendille, Mrs. Deloris Roy.

,Auto Sales
'70 VOLKSWAGEN, good
condition. Call afler 6 p. m.
992·3~01 .

10-Htp

H!!lp Wanted
ELECTRICIAN to pul In new
meier and ch4nge dryer wire
· lo range cable, 370 Fisher St.,
, Middleport. Phone 992·2998.
. '
10·9·31c

.: F81l'Vlew
. .
Ne~s

Notes

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by graduate of

Cincinrlati

round and oval
tables. love seat, 6

"Custom Meat Cuttlnl.iJ"
Quick and Courteous Service

DALE
LITTLe

DICK
VAUGHN

992 -6346

992-3374

Oeland
. Realty

'

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
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Mill Ada Rowe was a &amp;m·

~ueet of her lielel:, )Irs. Help. Wanteil

NATIONAL concern seeks (2)
.full -time ·career ·· minded

wom&amp;n. $150 salary during
company !raining prOgram .
Excellenl fringe benefit. anJ
advancemenl . oppQrtunlty.
For Interview: wrile C·O The
Daily Sentinel, Box 729. 8,
Pomeroy, Ohio ~576.9 .
10·6·3tp
WOMAN to live In .with elderly
lady, good salary, room and
board, phone 992·5397 or '192·
3507.
9·26'flc

WHY PAY RENT?
You can oWn this 7 rooms, 3
bedroom home for a price so

low you won'l believe if . This
2 story frame has 2 porches
and a nice carport and bath.

DON 'T DELAY . $5,000.
IN SYRACUSE
Slalely older place in a good
location. · 7
bedroom s,

·r ooms,
4
2
baths ,

basemen!, garage, level lot.
$12,500. '
·•
GROWING
IL Y?
YOur ' first c n deration
must be size. This 5 bedroom
home may ·solve your

problem . Located in a good
neighborhood . p;, baths,
garag~ . utility etc. $12,800.
- RARE OPPORTUNITYA nice 3 bedroom apf. plus a
good business, located In a

·'

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8 tRACK STEREO, freight HOUSE In Long Boltom , Phone RACINE - 10 room house,
damaged, In beautiful walnut
985-3529' .
667-3891 Tuppers Plilins10.
bath, basement, garage, two
console: Will sell for $101.50or
.6·11 -lfc
lois. Phone 949-4313.
pay SI.SQ per week. Phone 992...._,.
4-5-lfp
MObile Homes for sale ·
5331.
CASH paid for all makes and
9-7-lfc
models of mobile homes.
Phone a•ea code 614-423-9531. POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
4-13-ffc • Park view Kennels, Phdne 992·
5443.
8-15-tfc
1965 ATLAS mobile home,
110 Mechanic Street
50x10, lwo bedroom, front
kllchen, excellent condlllon . APPLES, Flhpatrlc~ Or·
chards, Slale Roule 689,
Phone 985·3555.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
10-8-6tp
NEW LISTING
·• 8-JO. tfc
SYRACUSE - 7 room home with nice bath, 3 cir 4
I
bedrooms. Closets. Gas furnace heat. TV room .
Needle sew'i~g machine
• Air Conditioners · TWIN
Basement, 2 porches and garage.
1972 model In .walnut stand.
HOT WATER HEAT
•Awnings
All ·features built In to make
3
BEDROOMS
Nice kitchen, bath, dining and large
fancy designs ond do stretch
· • Underpirlniflg
living. BasebOard hNt with modern gas boiler. Lots of
sewing . Also buttonholes,
r.
. • '
closet spoce. Fenced yard. Carport.
,
bflnd hems, elc. $.43.35 cash
Complete mjjblle hQme·
COUNTRY HOME
price or lerms iwailable. .
urvlct ~ plys gigantic'
NEAR POMEROY -3 bedrooms with large closets. Nice
Phone 992-5641.
'dlspla~ of mobile homes ,
IO-J.6tc
bath, natural gas forced air furnace . Birch kitchen with
always available at ...
•
lots of cabinets and cook units. Roc. room with shower.
VACUUM Clean&amp;r . Electro , Carporl.
•
MILLER
Hygiene New Demonstrator
GOOD
.
.
I
',
has all cleaning attachments
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace. Storm
; MOBILE HOMES
plus lhe new Efeclro Suds for
doors and windows. Aluminum siding. A neat hoU!Ie on a·
sh,mpoolng carpel. Only
. 12'.10 W1shlntfvit •lvd.
nice lol.
·
S27.50 cash pdce or terms
,BELPRE, 0.
. 423-7521
~ACRES ·
available. Phone 992·5641.
4
BEDROOMS
Large
TV lounge, 7 clostts.' 1'1&gt; baths.
10·3-6tc
Large kitChen with solid oak cabinets and dOuble sink.
S.sement. Buutlful vltw of Route 7.
Rent
II ACRES In Syracuoe; ad·
iacenlto new housing protect
3 ROOM furnished apartmeritln
HOUSES DON'T SELL THEMSELVES, THEY CAN'T
on Sa~d Hill; all utlllllu . • SAY A WORD. SOMETIMES IT TAKES A PRO WHO
Romeroy. Phon• 992-3962.
1
~·~liable ; Sll,OOO; call 865.
10·5-tf
I HAS TRAINING TO DO THE JOB. LET US DO YOUR
2280;
New
Malamorn
Ohio
'-----:-----' TALKING FOR ·A CHANGE. THE SIGN BELOW COULD .
2 BEDROOM unlurnlsheij ,before 3 p.m . John H. McCoy. · APPE,AR ON YOUR PRO!'ERTY NEXT WEEK.
10-Hip
house ; phone 992-2780 or 992·
3~32.
PHONEt92·m5
IO·I·Ifc 1972 REPOSSESSED 8 track
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
slereo, jusl like new. Take
TWO
furnished
roo111s,
ASSOCIATE
.over payments of S7.2S -per
available now, 413 Spring
1110. or pay balance o11Bft.~7.'
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
Ave.; phone 992·3429. ·
Phone 992-SJJ).
10·8·12tp
10.3-6tc

__ ____

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

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NOW, I KNOW WHY
THS'I'RE CALI..Etl
•pocKe;T SOOK!&gt;'

-THAT'S WHoRE

. LAST Wt;:EK.

HOUR$ EARl.'!'

e..... BL.O'i'1'!:R ,,,

THEY !liT

s,&amp;IE!

10NIGHT.

i

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

·EARlll MOVING ·
' loado!r work, ·
Dozer &amp; End
. ponds, bas•menl, laftd·
scaping. We have 2 si1e
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
dorie by hour or controd:
Fre.e Estimates. We also
INiulllll dirt, top soil. Dvmp
trucks and low-boy lor hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeioy. Phone 992·3525
,after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232.
'

-THAT, IN tof.JTRAST, ALl.

OTHEP. HOUSE.WIVE.S ARE
FICKlE ILL· TEMPE'.RED
SLOBS .~'r-----

RALPH NS::DI..ER
HASCALLE'.D A
PRESS

CO"lFI=.RENCE.

/0 ·'1 '

WEL!:,I'IlNNIE. ...
WHA1 DO')OU

OH, I'M60 GLAD '10U

.

liKE IT! WELL,. MCK

'THINK OF IT?

TO "THE DRAWIN&amp;-

READY .MIX
CONCRETE
delivered ·right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
esl1mates. Phone 992·3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6.JO.!fc

NOTICE is herebY given that
in pursuance of a Resolution , of
tl)e Board of County Com 'missioners of the County of
Meigs , Ohio, passed on the 5th
day of September, 1972, there
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
will be submit ted to a vote ot the REASONABLE rates. Ph , 446·
people of said Meigs County at a
4'782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
General ELECTION to be held
Owner
&amp; Operator.
.
in the County of Meigs, Ohio, at
5-12-tfc
the regular places of vot·ing
.t.here ln, on Tuesday , the 7th day
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
0f November . 10.12. the aue~dj'on
of levying, 10 excess of the en
Complete Service
mil l I Jm itation , lor the benefit of
P~g~:,~~~1
.,.J
Meigs County for the purpose Of
the malntenante and operation
· Crill Brldford
•
of schools, training centers or
. 5·1·ffc
work shops for mentally
retarded persons.
_ Said tax being : a renewal of DOZER and back hoe wprk,
an existing tax of .25(t;,.) mill to
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
rup for five Years .
chlng service; top soli, fill

,

~

"""

. ,.

dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
cava1ing. Phone 992·5367,
Dick Karr , Jr.

9·1·ffC
·NOT'iCE OF ELECTION

IJmE ORPHAN ANNIE

ON TAX LEVY IN

TEN MIL~XL~~~STAOTFIOTNHE
NOTICE is hereby given that
In pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Tr111tees
of the Township of Sutton, Otii0 1
passed on· the 1st dey of August,
.1972, there will bl submitted to
1t vote of the people or old
Township at •
General

Salardoy'o CI'JPIO'IUole: A SINGLE BAD HABIT WILL KA1t

AN OTHERWISE FAULTLESS CHARACTER, AS AN

ELECTION to bo held In the

at a rate not exceeding .50 ·mlll

for each one dollar· of valuation,
which amounts to Five Cents for
each one hundred dollars of
valuation , for Five Years .
~
The Polls for se ld Election

(0 1972 Klnt Featu,., Syndlealo, Inc.)

·ACROSS
l.Fam.ed
London
gallery
5. Brownish
yellow
La Gio·

conda's

DICK TRACY

will be open 11 6 :~ 0 o'clock A.M.

a~d remain open until 6: 30
o clock P.M . Eastern Staridard
Time of said diy.
.
By order of .the Board of
Elections, or Meigs County
Ohio. ,
'

'

k 16,

p, ..

......,. tiMIRLI'
In! A FRU!If CA'

~·PliO!

WI10
IIIIP Olf(]! !llfMI'
lflfl'!llt HIM,

tN fOUR DIAr
'•
II~ C:lpiC)ty

Moyi..l . .·

. Auttatatlca .

2 sp..r crpo'rollcin.

Cholet bf ••ter
temps.
Auto.
water
level ··

·cont•ol. , dni .
F Jlfor . or Pol"... Fin Agltotor,

,.,....

~'"'

Mori•f
HIIUfMHI

Dr,.n

lurfounct clolll•
Wflft 1111111, tytft
ftHI. 11011411 - " •

no owerdrl'lnt, .
f'lno Mllll Llnl
Fllttf, ·
Wtii!Hiatlltlll
MATTA I

... c•.,.,
hnlct

'741·4211

lUdiC I!IIUTI' RlR
11t! WR All&gt; CHI.I'
Of 1JI! 'NIII!I~ 1M

:wMP0/1390;
•

CO. Standard
DOWN
1. David's
daughter
2. Place
for a
bullftght
3. Marrying
(colloq.)
(3 wd•.r
f, Consume
5. In the
least way
(2 wds.)
~ - Soldiers

1. Incur a

responsi·

billty
(3 wdB.) .
8. Ennoble
9. Consiin· ·
guineous
11. Surmount

~&amp;M[;ll!J£;::t=:~:: ~-=
u-ramble theM four Jumbltl,
one letter to eaeh 1quue, to
form four ordln1ry words.

, SJJ'EHL

•:.::~.~=·-

Yeaterday's Anawer
15. Numerous %4. Nobleman
%6. Sales pitch
18. Love to
zs. HThe
dis· '
Evil One''
traction
29.'"
- Lily''
21. Tommy
30.
Vitality
Hitch(colloq .)
cock's
35;
Upward
sport
(comb.
2Z. Con•
form)
'nubia\
36. U.nending
U.Quaran·
time
tine

YACKTI

I

o

~FAWTA ~

) I

tr

.

III
II

D;;;.U;:r:B=.U::.;S::E:...t--r---,--, . Now .,..,.,. thl clrcW 1etttn

I

~

I I I to the....,...........
f-

!

Mll . . . . IIIS)B..

1

orxxrJ

(....,_n .....uew)

Fly alone
Fish eggs
Upstarts
Sort
Succor
Young
insect
Japanese
wild dog
36. Advari·
. tage
37. Unmelo·
dious

38. Great
': Barrier

Island

3t. Pretend

(2 wds.)

. . DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE -Here's !low. towork It;
AX ·YDLIAAXR '
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stinds for another. In thlo Sl!ilple A II
used for tlie tllree L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Slncle let~
apostrophes, tlle length and formation of tlle wotdl .ue
hlnll. Each dll)' tlle c¢e·letterure dUlereut.
· .

DWUP

CIYPTOQUOTBS ·
KWU ·. K ·vxu O(&gt;XUI

HI, 5WEET1S!

l[GF

NRFYUPVP.N, KWU_ HVFIK KWVJ'N R
IXRFK WCISRPY YVN ,I C~ VI R NGGY

..~.::.::.,.UTO.CIU .-RFPGZY NZRIN,GD

'

'

.I

u

· ~~A==~~~~-~~-~~-~·:u:~==l.~UM~•~

poet

Edwin S. Cozarl

2,

Call orr
Black
cuckoo
Sickness

covering

.JiM ~ P•UL i

1101

THE SIGGI!ST
AUOIENCE.

Out ofth(s
world
(sl.)
Clarinetbt
Fountain
U.Thurber
cbar•cter
u.'Lobate
25.Englisb

VN;.:to JOU

Ot~ted

r
="'=.,..,

Eggs
Actor
Tony
Floor

·---------:--1'k

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Sept. 29, 1972.

essayist
1 TAKE T~E STANO
~~~~~~~~· r;.--....,~~-=....,~·u.
English
TAAi CiETS ME
Fulfill

(Fr.)

Dorothy M . Johnston
Director
Dated Sept. 29, 1972 ·
·

Chairman

"Suicidio''

'::~00:.:=

Edwin s. Cotart
· Chairman

.

INJ[.

SPOT SOILETHTHEPURE WHITE PAGE.-HOSEABALLOU

Township of Sut1on, Ohio, et the
reqularDiacesof votlna th~rttln .
on Tuesday, the 7th day ot NO ·
vember, 1972, the question of
l~vylng , in excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Sutto('l Township for the purpose
of Current ~xpenses.
Said t•x being : ·I renflwal of
an existing tax of .S0(1h ) mlll ·to
run for five years .

at a rate not exceeding 2112 mills
for eaCh one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to twenty -~lve
cents for each one hundred . (10) 2, 9, 1.6• .23, 4t
dollars of valuation for five
years .
·
I'
The Polls for .said Election
will be open at 6: 30 o'clock A.'M.
and rem&amp;4n open until 6:30 ,
o'clock P.M . Eastern Standar d
T ime of said day ,
By order of the Board ot
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio.

For

~SOLD

LESS E~~ENS I VE , T~E.
PFI.OFSIHINK YO\I CAN
9UY SEVERAL

'3TORE 16 HAVIt&gt;i&lt;S A DR#i6

NEED 10 I.SAVE.
A COUPLe OF

Open8TIIS
Mondayfhru Saturday

NOJ~C~A~F LwvcT~ON
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILl LIMITATION

run for five years .

--------

BECAUSE TH5Y 1~E

BUT I R€ALLY

AND I DID 14AVE

SOME 11ME OI'F

.

L

MEIGS
MOBILE'
HOMES

At:&gt;t:&gt; UP!

~EAH 1

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm SEWING MACHINES .· Repair O'DELL WHEEL alignment
service, all makes. 992-2284.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
doors and windows, carports,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
marquees, aluminum siding
Complete front end service,
Authorized Singer Sales and
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
lune up and brake service:
Service.·We Sharpen Scissors.
represer] .f atlve . For free
Wheels balanced .elec·
estimales , phone Charles
3·29·1fC
Iron ically .
All
work
Lisle, Syracuse , V. V. .
guaranteed .
Reasonable
Johnson and Son, Inc.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
rales. Phone 742·3232 or 992·
J-2-tfc
can celled?
Lost
yoLJr
3213.
- - - - - -- , - , ope,alor's license? Call 992·
7·27-ffc
BACKHOE ANO DOZER work.
2966.
·r.
· Septic Janko- Installed. George
6· 15·1fc WILL cut or I rim trees,
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. ---,.-~-.reasonable; also clean out
4·25.tfc HUSBAND and wile jani.forial
basements, attics and
· -- - - - - - - service team . Home and
cellars. phone 949·3221. ·
commercial. Walls, windows,
10+30tc
floors. Call Gallipolis, Ohio
Real Estate For Sale
446·1607.
·.SEPTIC TANKS
AROB!C
10·5-6tp
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
-------CLEANED, · REPAIRED .
,' .
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
662·3035.
LEGAL NOTICE
· 10.4·ffC

1973 HOMES

'

' '

square,

•
POM~~Irv~~ .ROAD

I

·-HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

Willll at Racine.

4

THE SHOP

PRICE
REDUaD

"HEll"

temoon.

speaker sound system,

ToGo
Take Me To

· WOW1 T~ESE
LITTLS I'IOOKb

1 Ki'ON M'l D£COi
~AD WORK IG
IMPORTANT, 5GT.

Pomemy Hlime .&amp;Aulo

eROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
.· FOr Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

Ill HAVE

FOGAR"TY!S DJ:PAAn'MENr

·-GUARANTEI;DPhone 992-2094

·sMITH ·.NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pfl, 992-2174
Pomeroy

r--==--------,

"

On Most American Cars

Conservatory of Music. Phone
·
10-5-61c
speed avloma1ic changer·. libre~ry
992·3825.
Balance $68 .79 . Use our
poplar chairs, high -legged
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
at a rate not exceeding .25m Ills
desk,
hump-back trunk, oak
9·28·121c '68 FIREBIRD, V·8, 4 speed,
for each one dolt~r of valuation,
kitchen cabinet, 2 treadle
bl ac k w1' lh red interior; phone
10·8-6tc
which amounts to Two and one sewing mach ines, Wicker
half cents for each one hundred
KOSCOT KOSMETICS IMINK
949-2921.
porch swing, upright plano town destined to grow. This 5
~qllar.s of valuation, for Five
10-Hip YAMAHA Enduro 250, 9 months
OIL BASE) . We have many
wilh
bench, phonograph, room apt. has nice kitchen
vears .
old, like new, $500. Phone 992·
new products since the forbrass
and
glass
baskets
,
7109.
ha
l
dwood
floors,
bath
,.
malion of this Company. Also
The Polls for said Election .
Carnival and Depression
10-5.61c
EQUIPMENT AND STOCK
several new ones this month Mobile Homes For Sale
will
be open at 6' 30 o'clock A.M.
glass, Anchor Hocking glass,
GOES. $17,900.
plus monlhly specials. All
and remain open until 6 : 30
American Rose China (ser·
TO BUY OR SELL CON· ·~ o ' clock ~ .M. Eastern Standard
lhese In addition lo the
TWO
reglslered
polled
vice for 12) crystal stem ware
Time of said day .
Meigs Mobile Homes
originals. Ladles, we would
TACT
US.
Herefords, one year ol d ; onE!
set, punch bowl , plclure and
av order ot the Board of
like very much for Jou to fry
HENRY E. CLELAND
bull, one heifer; call after 5 vase set, wash bowl and
Elections , of Meigs county
these cosmetics an to serve
, REALTOR
p.m. 985.3538. Paul Karr ,
Oh io.
' ·
pitcher, 1 wooden dresser set,
you. Phone Helen Jane, 992·
Chester, Oh io.
Edwin s. Cozart
PHONE 992-2259
2
celluloid
dresser
sets,
wire5113.
Chairman
10·6·3fp
clamp jars, 4 oil lamps, cast
10-1-tfc
Iron
lawn
ornamen ts
D th M J h 1
ANTIQUE
pump
organ,
all
!Greyhound!
lea
service
set,
oro Y • 8 1 r~~t~~
VIRGINIA'S . Beauty Salon on
original except new bellows. flower pots, stone /ars, jugs,
Oated Sept. 29, 1972
On
Our
Last
Success Road belween
Over 80 years old. Made by
hat pin holder, Goo us powder IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH. Lake
Tuppers Pla.ins and Long
Conchas; New Mex ico. $2,975. 1101 2, 9, 16, 23. 41
Taylor
and
Taylor
Organ
Co.,
1972 MOBILE HOME
ars, toys and dolls, plcfure
Botlom . Open 6 days; some
No down . No Interest. S25 mo.
Worcester,
Mass.
One
bellows
rames
,
and
many
other
left on our lot.
evenings. Phone, 667·.3041,
119 mos . Vacalion
for
type. Phone 992·3904.
Items.
Operator, VIrginia Hayman.
Paf'adlse.
Free Brochure .
NOTICE OF ELECTION
10·5-tfc
ON TAX LEVY
..,.
•
9·14-301c
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Bo~
SMALL miscellaneous ilems
.
IN
EXCESS OF THE
2001DD,
Alameda.
California
1971 KAWASAKI 100, excellent
Including small antiques and . 94501.
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Which
we
are
'
ordering
for
SKATE-AWA'Y, open Wed·
condition, ready to go.
collectibles will sell on Fri.,
NOTICE Is htireby given that
our customers, are approved
nesday, Friday and Salurday
Sacrifice for only 5260. Phone
Oct. 13, large furnllure Items
10·3-JOtp in pursuance ot a Resolution of
by
" Underwrllers
the Council of the VIllage bf
evenings from 7:30 p.m . to
Coolville 667·6214.
both antique and modern will - - - - - -- - 5 ROOM house and bath, Rutland, Ohio, passed on the
10: 30 p.m. Available for
Laboratory"
to · Insure
sell on Sal., Oct. 14.
10·5· 12tc
located on Brick Street, 2nd day of August , 1972, there
private parties on .V.Onday,
customers the best Quality
ATTENTION DEALERS AND
Rutland ; Interior being· willbesubmlttedtoavoteofthe
Tuesday and Thursday
Home.
COAL, Limestone. Excelsior
COLLECTORS: This Is a sale remodeled;
phone 742-3334. people of sold VIllage ot •
evenings, also Saturday and
Salt Works, E. Main Sf.,
ou can't afford to miss.
10·3·121c General ELECTION lobo held
Sunday aflernoons. Schedule
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3191 .
unch served. Not respon .
Before you buy, drive to
in the Village of Rutland , Oh io,
•
your parties early . Phone 985·
sible for accldenls. Theo L,'
' 4·12·tfc
at the regular place of voting
Tuppers Plains and check
3929 or 985·999~
Smllh, Exec. I. 0 . "Mac" 8 ROOM house and bath, nice therein , on Tuesday, the 7th day
our Homes and Prices.
10-l-12tc
November, 1972, the question
JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
McCoy, auctioneer. Phone
large .lol, nalural gas, builf.ln of
of levying , In excess of the ten
Sewing Machine. Will sell tor
985·394~ .
cabinels lr\ kitchen. Close lo mllllim ltation, tor Ihe benefit of
small balance of $36.21 or
19-8-Jfc radio station In Bradbury. 'Rutland VIllage for the purpose
~ayments may be arranged.
Phone 992·2602.
of Current Expen!es .
Phone 9'12·5331.
9-29-12tc · Said tax being : a renewal of
.9·7·tfc Real Estate For Sale
'
--------e~n existing tax of 21!2 mills to

, By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Edward and David Roush
spent Friday night with their
:sister, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis Clifton.
I
; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy.of
·!Akron visited Mr.s. Nancy
'ltussell and Mandy~~ the home
of Mr. an,d Mrs. Russell Roush '
Sunday morning. Mr. and )lfrs.
Dana Lewis were dinner guests
.Or the Roushes on Sunday.
Window .
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Air
Conditioners
Laudermilt visited the for·
.
mer's father, Ted Laudennilt,
Hot Water Healers '
'at a Huntington hospital '
Plumbing ,
Sunday.
:Eieclrical Work
, Paul Sayre qf Columbus was
a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs .
....
.
Herbert Sayre on Sunday.
.
rr . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
:1~nd son, Chuck, of .Letart, W.
•· Va., spentSunday will\ Mr. and
YY2-~441f
I' Mrs . Charles Lawson and
·Pomeroy,
0. ·
'
"
,' •.am1y.
·
,
'f 'I
; 1 Mrs. Bertha Robinson was a WEEI&lt;END Rev ival at Rutland
Apostolic Church, Friday,
: dinner guest Sunday of Mr, and
Oct.
through Del. IS; 7:30
! Mrs. Herbert. Shields. Mr. and p.m . 13 Speakers
will be
; jMrs. Philip Radforil and
Evangellsls Ariel! and Mary
·1;stephame, Pomeroy Route, Hughes of Columbus.
. ~
' llecl on the ~ields in tlle af·. Everyon!a! welcome.
' ' Joii!lltCo

at

4211

From the .largest
Bulldozer Radialor, to the
Sm~ll~f Heater. Ccll'e.
. · . Nathan Biggs ·
Radl1tor specialist

Let Dick and Dale Help You
with Your Meat Problems.

NEW Improved "Zlppies," the
breakfast set, 5 metal ward·
great iron pill ~ow with Auto Sales
1950 FORD pic kup lruck ; robes, quills, quilt tops,
VItamin C. Nelson Drug.
dishes, cooking utensils and
Marl in rifle ; 3 sows ; phone
10"9' 21P 1970 PLYMOUTH, 4 door, good
large amt. of misc. Items.
247-2161.
ANTIQUES
PORCH SALE, October 12, 13 llres and exhaust, air, power
10·8-31c 3.PIECE parlor
sei,'Wicker and
and 141 crocheted goods,
brakes and steering ; very
other
r
ockers,
sectional book·
dishes. antiques, some
good condition, Sl.'IOO; phone
ACRE lol ; 1965 Ford LTO;
case, encyclopedias and other
clolhing and miscellaneous
after 6 p.m. or all day 1.72
new 22 rifle ; phone 742·3656. books, cast iron book ertds,
Items; 7 killens to give away :
Saturday or Sunday, 992-5310.
10·8-21p hat rack, hall tree, wall· ·
lleen Swain residence, County
10·6·61c
mounted uprighl clock, chime
Rd. 28. jusl off Rl. 7 above - - - - - - - - EARLY American stereo-radio clock, 2 Walnut Empir~ beds,
Eastern High School.
1970
TOYOTA . Corona ,
combinallon, AM-FM radio, 4 2 Empire cl)est of drawers, 2
==:-----:--c-:10~·8·3tc
automallc
transmission ;
speaker sound system, · 4 marble top dressers, Kass, 2
Tl'l
radio and new radial tires.
speed aulomatlc changer . ceaar chesfs, Walnut night
~~~~:
· ser,
EREwlllbenobufieldlnner
Caii992-720I after 5 p.m . - -· ., Di
Bala,
n~e $,7,1.54.,
I,Jse our
sla8d, drop.feaf night stand,
Ved at Young's Casual
d ;t ··t
~ ._ c 11
hand.made baby bed, Walnut
·..II&lt;Wp • .:.j1111o.l~ "a1erlng i . ..,.. A Wedne~y,_,
10-8-61p
u
ge
errti~
.
·
a
992-7085.
1
who was
-in
October 1111:
' • : · - - ·--· ~ ·10·8·61c , dining room suite, . dining
lable and 6 Eastlake chairs,
MArysville, Ohio, Oct. 9,
10·8·31c 1969 WHITE VW , excellent MODERN W I I 1
1971 .
condition . See at Rutland .
.
a nu ype ~1ereo- walnut glass-door cu pboard,
We knew God must have hid ORGAN and plano inslruction
Furniture Store. Phone 742·
rad1o , AM·FM rad1o. 4 glass -door china closet ,

'i

i
•

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

.

992-2094

Phon~"l-2181 ·-·

i
•

!l"'J,I-~ ~

. 606 E. Main . Pomeroy

9'. _ . POMEROY
lfflid Jack W. Carsey , Mgr :

.

.

HOME&amp;. AUTO

3 ROOM furnished apartment,
utilities paid, I chllq, no pets ;
356 North 4lh Sl., Middleport.
Wm. Smilh, S80 mo.
16' CAMPING TRA ILER •
10-S.Stp
Shasta, like new. Phone 985·
3849 .
TRAI.LER space close to new
9-7-30tc
Meigs High School on old R1.
33 ; phone 992-2941 or 9~2· 2689.
·
I0-8-71c LEFT in 'lay-away, 1972 .model

For Sale
Per Hundred
Pounds

$1.50 for 50 Word minimum .
Each addJtlona1 Word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

:-'::':7":"-~--

.'

POMEROY

Sunbeam deep fryer , ufllily

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished
apartmen1s .
Phone 992-5434.
4· 12-ffc

.

,.

city utilities , private .t ot. MISCELLANEOUS SALE. Old
Robert Hill , Racine. Phone picture frames , depression
949.3811 '
glass, chrome breakfast set,
10-l-91p washer, sofa, Conlon .mangle,

2 BEDROOM, ·Furn .,

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY .

&lt;t8:30 a .m1 tQ s:oo.p .m.

Buy 2 Pairs1 PAIR FREE

OLD Fornilure, oak tables, TRAIL'ER space in : Racine. Ail

tires, radio. Sharp white &amp; orange paint.

NOTJ'CE

LOWEE!'I·•WHV DON'T

..

.,

~
~

'IOU AN' SNUFFY
JINEUS?

-B1Isiriess Services.

'•

~

PIC.t.IIC:KIN' .OVER {IT
WILLER FA.LLS tODAV,

MONEY · SAVER

::---,---·'---~

equipment, fu.ll wheel covers, chrome fri&gt;nt bumper &amp;
rear step bu·mper, heavy duty wheels 8- 15" commercial

FIE~?

Me AN' LUKEY ARE G.OIN'

'

PANTS &amp; JEANS

Court, Syracuse ; phone 9922951.

10·6-ffc
10-Hip •
.
.
- - - - - -- TRAILER, Brown 's Trailer
Park, phone 992·3324.
Wanted To Buy
'
·10c3.ffc

$2395

In Memory

home In
Ma$0n. Call Point Pleasant
675·1684.
10·6·6

no,'{,

I:S!J'T II,

For Sale

8271 .

(lllsslon. Radio. ONE OF THE SCARCE ONE$, AND AS
NICE AS iHEY COME .
,
,
.

~PMERDY,

'for Rent
2 OR J BEDROOM

GIBSON Guilar, beauliful Les TRAILER lol ; Bob's Mobile

1961 CAMARO

'

'

IJI~

,

�,,f,· .• ,
I

'

B- The DailySenlillei,Middleport·Pomeroy,O., Oct. 9, 1972

.Sentinel Classifieds Get ·A ctionl.$en tine~ ·Classifieds f]-et' R.esults.!
..

.

'

.

.

Help ·Wanted .

PoMeroy .
Motor eo.

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

C,O.R HOP . wlmied i . apply In
per5on ; CrOw's Steak Hou$e.

I0-6-6tc

·-- · ~

Musical Instruments
Paul. custom. sunburst fioish.
new, 1 2 pri ce SJ7S ~ phorle '388·

$1795

Convertible, local 1-owner, low mileage ca·r . beautiful
cteam finish with black top. bucket seah 1 with console,
. new white-wall tires, po\\ler steering and automatic trans.

,1970 CHEVROLET

GOOD quality h~y. 300 to 500 2 BEDROOM mobile home In
~ales; phone 992.2789..
Racine area. Phone 992..6329.
10-8-61c.
10·5"1fc

y~ Ton pickup. V-8 ,englrie, automatic transmission, power

steering, 8'. wide body, custom comfort and· · conv.

organs, dishes, clocks, brass

be&lt;b. or complete households.
Wrile M. D. Miller , R1. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
6·28·1fC

Pomeroy
Motor
~··
~
IVES. 1:00 ,,M,
~
OPEN

0,1110

I

'-'----"-·-----~·~-

·'

WANT ADS
Employment Wanted
IN FORMA i ION
. , DEAD\.INES
PA INTING, inferior and eX· ' ~ P .M:
Day Betorit Publicellorr.
terior ; phone 882-2482.
Monday
Deadline 9 a .m .
1
.
10-6·61p
Cancellation ""7"' Corrections

I

Bring Your Unhulled

WALNUTS
TO OUR

Will be acc:epttd untll9 a.m . tor

Dey of Publicallon
. REGULATIONS

M~CHAIQICAL

· The. Publisher reserves the
CARPORT Sale ; Avons and right
to edit or i"eiect I!"IY ads
miscellaneous ; 9 a.m. to 5 .deemed oblettlon4L
Th~
p.m., Thursday, Oct. 121tl ; 918 publisher will not be responsible
So. 3rd Sl., Middlepor-t.
for more than ohe Incorrect'
10·8·31c Insertion .
'
R'ITU
-----~
_.For Wan' Ad Service

5 cents per Word one lnser!Jon
MinimUm Charge 75c
12 cents pll!r word three

consecutive lnsertibrls.
18 ce-nts p&amp;r ' word sbt con·
aecutlve Insertions . 1
. 25 Per Cent D'scount On paid
ads and ads paid wltl'lln 10 days .

HULLER
Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

Advertlsemen t.

$

Affer they
are Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1972.

OFFICE HOU11" •

1:30 a.m . to
Satur9ay .

12 : 00

All kinds, all sizes for men,
women, young men, boys.
and girls. Hurry to ... ·

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

Daily,~

Noon

Notice
REDUCE safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
"water pills," Nelson Drug,
lo.9-2fp

Excelsior ·
SaH Works, Inc.
P.O. Box 267

992·3891

Pomeroy, Ohio

FU.RNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

cart , porch swi ng, lawn
chairs.
mattresses and .

springs, )adders, dishes, briC·
a-brae, odds and ends; 10
a.m..to 6 p.m .; Oclober 61h &amp;
7th, 462 S. 51h Sl., Middleport,
Ohio.
10. Htc

all ·

' electric apartment, down ·
stairs. Available this week.

Phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
ID·6·3tc

SQUARE DEAL, NEW DEAL
- politics aside, it's always a

GOOD DEAL al KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER, Rt. 7
"at caution light," Tuppers
Plains. Open to 7 ; closed
Mondays ; phone 667 ·3858.
Besides usual selection of
clean
used
furniture,
guaranteed appliances, iust

zig -zag sewing machine. This
machine makes buftonholes,
darns, embroideries. Pay

balance of $38.80 or pay $5.55
per mo. Phone 992-5331 .
10.3-61c
ESTATE AUCTION
TWO. DAY sa le Fri., Oci.J3 and
Sat., Oct. 14, begin ning at

10:00 A.M. each day . We will
sell lhe personal property of
lhelate Elsie D. Smith Black·

burn at the residence at 205

Lasley Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
(nexl door to lhe former
Sugar Run grade school) in
pari as follows : .
HOUSEHOLD
WHIRLPOOL side by side
Refrigerator
Freezer,

arrived NEW Huffy 20"
Slick
bikes ;
Chester
discounted lo $40 ; Murray 10· Kenmore Washer -dryer
speed bikes, $79. LAYAWAY combi nation ,
Kelvinator
for XMAS. ·
Elec. range, J-piece Living
10·8·61C . room suite, Ph ilco record
player, Admiral portable TV,
2 BLACK minialure poodles, reversible 3-speed fan, 1 lot of
males, $25 each ; 1 Monogram small fans, Ecko cookware
oil healer, 33,600 BTU, $75 ; set, elec. roaster, pair twin
phone 882·3205.
beds, office desk , two
10·8·61p drawer filing cabinet, S~ piece

=

~

a relson. One we don't un-

cfanland. We Miss You Deb.
Brothers &amp; Sisters; Mrs.
Pearl Sisson Mrs Helen
·
Sauvage, Mr. ' Fred Vandale,
Jell Vandllle, Mr. Jack
IVendille, Mrs. Deloris Roy.

,Auto Sales
'70 VOLKSWAGEN, good
condition. Call afler 6 p. m.
992·3~01 .

10-Htp

H!!lp Wanted
ELECTRICIAN to pul In new
meier and ch4nge dryer wire
· lo range cable, 370 Fisher St.,
, Middleport. Phone 992·2998.
. '
10·9·31c

.: F81l'Vlew
. .
Ne~s

Notes

'

by graduate of

Cincinrlati

round and oval
tables. love seat, 6

"Custom Meat Cuttlnl.iJ"
Quick and Courteous Service

DALE
LITTLe

DICK
VAUGHN

992 -6346

992-3374

Oeland
. Realty

'

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
.

.

. ,.

·'

'{ . 'l

Mill Ada Rowe was a &amp;m·

~ueet of her lielel:, )Irs. Help. Wanteil

NATIONAL concern seeks (2)
.full -time ·career ·· minded

wom&amp;n. $150 salary during
company !raining prOgram .
Excellenl fringe benefit. anJ
advancemenl . oppQrtunlty.
For Interview: wrile C·O The
Daily Sentinel, Box 729. 8,
Pomeroy, Ohio ~576.9 .
10·6·3tp
WOMAN to live In .with elderly
lady, good salary, room and
board, phone 992·5397 or '192·
3507.
9·26'flc

WHY PAY RENT?
You can oWn this 7 rooms, 3
bedroom home for a price so

low you won'l believe if . This
2 story frame has 2 porches
and a nice carport and bath.

DON 'T DELAY . $5,000.
IN SYRACUSE
Slalely older place in a good
location. · 7
bedroom s,

·r ooms,
4
2
baths ,

basemen!, garage, level lot.
$12,500. '
·•
GROWING
IL Y?
YOur ' first c n deration
must be size. This 5 bedroom
home may ·solve your

problem . Located in a good
neighborhood . p;, baths,
garag~ . utility etc. $12,800.
- RARE OPPORTUNITYA nice 3 bedroom apf. plus a
good business, located In a

·'

-::-----~

8 tRACK STEREO, freight HOUSE In Long Boltom , Phone RACINE - 10 room house,
damaged, In beautiful walnut
985-3529' .
667-3891 Tuppers Plilins10.
bath, basement, garage, two
console: Will sell for $101.50or
.6·11 -lfc
lois. Phone 949-4313.
pay SI.SQ per week. Phone 992...._,.
4-5-lfp
MObile Homes for sale ·
5331.
CASH paid for all makes and
9-7-lfc
models of mobile homes.
Phone a•ea code 614-423-9531. POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
4-13-ffc • Park view Kennels, Phdne 992·
5443.
8-15-tfc
1965 ATLAS mobile home,
110 Mechanic Street
50x10, lwo bedroom, front
kllchen, excellent condlllon . APPLES, Flhpatrlc~ Or·
chards, Slale Roule 689,
Phone 985·3555.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
10-8-6tp
NEW LISTING
·• 8-JO. tfc
SYRACUSE - 7 room home with nice bath, 3 cir 4
I
bedrooms. Closets. Gas furnace heat. TV room .
Needle sew'i~g machine
• Air Conditioners · TWIN
Basement, 2 porches and garage.
1972 model In .walnut stand.
HOT WATER HEAT
•Awnings
All ·features built In to make
3
BEDROOMS
Nice kitchen, bath, dining and large
fancy designs ond do stretch
· • Underpirlniflg
living. BasebOard hNt with modern gas boiler. Lots of
sewing . Also buttonholes,
r.
. • '
closet spoce. Fenced yard. Carport.
,
bflnd hems, elc. $.43.35 cash
Complete mjjblle hQme·
COUNTRY HOME
price or lerms iwailable. .
urvlct ~ plys gigantic'
NEAR POMEROY -3 bedrooms with large closets. Nice
Phone 992-5641.
'dlspla~ of mobile homes ,
IO-J.6tc
bath, natural gas forced air furnace . Birch kitchen with
always available at ...
•
lots of cabinets and cook units. Roc. room with shower.
VACUUM Clean&amp;r . Electro , Carporl.
•
MILLER
Hygiene New Demonstrator
GOOD
.
.
I
',
has all cleaning attachments
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas forced air furnace. Storm
; MOBILE HOMES
plus lhe new Efeclro Suds for
doors and windows. Aluminum siding. A neat hoU!Ie on a·
sh,mpoolng carpel. Only
. 12'.10 W1shlntfvit •lvd.
nice lol.
·
S27.50 cash pdce or terms
,BELPRE, 0.
. 423-7521
~ACRES ·
available. Phone 992·5641.
4
BEDROOMS
Large
TV lounge, 7 clostts.' 1'1&gt; baths.
10·3-6tc
Large kitChen with solid oak cabinets and dOuble sink.
S.sement. Buutlful vltw of Route 7.
Rent
II ACRES In Syracuoe; ad·
iacenlto new housing protect
3 ROOM furnished apartmeritln
HOUSES DON'T SELL THEMSELVES, THEY CAN'T
on Sa~d Hill; all utlllllu . • SAY A WORD. SOMETIMES IT TAKES A PRO WHO
Romeroy. Phon• 992-3962.
1
~·~liable ; Sll,OOO; call 865.
10·5-tf
I HAS TRAINING TO DO THE JOB. LET US DO YOUR
2280;
New
Malamorn
Ohio
'-----:-----' TALKING FOR ·A CHANGE. THE SIGN BELOW COULD .
2 BEDROOM unlurnlsheij ,before 3 p.m . John H. McCoy. · APPE,AR ON YOUR PRO!'ERTY NEXT WEEK.
10-Hip
house ; phone 992-2780 or 992·
3~32.
PHONEt92·m5
IO·I·Ifc 1972 REPOSSESSED 8 track
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
slereo, jusl like new. Take
TWO
furnished
roo111s,
ASSOCIATE
.over payments of S7.2S -per
available now, 413 Spring
1110. or pay balance o11Bft.~7.'
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
Ave.; phone 992·3429. ·
Phone 992-SJJ).
10·8·12tp
10.3-6tc

__ ____

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

---------,.

..

....

. .;.

NOW, I KNOW WHY
THS'I'RE CALI..Etl
•pocKe;T SOOK!&gt;'

-THAT'S WHoRE

. LAST Wt;:EK.

HOUR$ EARl.'!'

e..... BL.O'i'1'!:R ,,,

THEY !liT

s,&amp;IE!

10NIGHT.

i

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

·EARlll MOVING ·
' loado!r work, ·
Dozer &amp; End
. ponds, bas•menl, laftd·
scaping. We have 2 si1e
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
dorie by hour or controd:
Fre.e Estimates. We also
INiulllll dirt, top soil. Dvmp
trucks and low-boy lor hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeioy. Phone 992·3525
,after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232.
'

-THAT, IN tof.JTRAST, ALl.

OTHEP. HOUSE.WIVE.S ARE
FICKlE ILL· TEMPE'.RED
SLOBS .~'r-----

RALPH NS::DI..ER
HASCALLE'.D A
PRESS

CO"lFI=.RENCE.

/0 ·'1 '

WEL!:,I'IlNNIE. ...
WHA1 DO')OU

OH, I'M60 GLAD '10U

.

liKE IT! WELL,. MCK

'THINK OF IT?

TO "THE DRAWIN&amp;-

READY .MIX
CONCRETE
delivered ·right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
esl1mates. Phone 992·3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6.JO.!fc

NOTICE is herebY given that
in pursuance of a Resolution , of
tl)e Board of County Com 'missioners of the County of
Meigs , Ohio, passed on the 5th
day of September, 1972, there
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
will be submit ted to a vote ot the REASONABLE rates. Ph , 446·
people of said Meigs County at a
4'782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
General ELECTION to be held
Owner
&amp; Operator.
.
in the County of Meigs, Ohio, at
5-12-tfc
the regular places of vot·ing
.t.here ln, on Tuesday , the 7th day
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
0f November . 10.12. the aue~dj'on
of levying, 10 excess of the en
Complete Service
mil l I Jm itation , lor the benefit of
P~g~:,~~~1
.,.J
Meigs County for the purpose Of
the malntenante and operation
· Crill Brldford
•
of schools, training centers or
. 5·1·ffc
work shops for mentally
retarded persons.
_ Said tax being : a renewal of DOZER and back hoe wprk,
an existing tax of .25(t;,.) mill to
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
rup for five Years .
chlng service; top soli, fill

,

~

"""

. ,.

dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
cava1ing. Phone 992·5367,
Dick Karr , Jr.

9·1·ffC
·NOT'iCE OF ELECTION

IJmE ORPHAN ANNIE

ON TAX LEVY IN

TEN MIL~XL~~~STAOTFIOTNHE
NOTICE is hereby given that
In pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Tr111tees
of the Township of Sutton, Otii0 1
passed on· the 1st dey of August,
.1972, there will bl submitted to
1t vote of the people or old
Township at •
General

Salardoy'o CI'JPIO'IUole: A SINGLE BAD HABIT WILL KA1t

AN OTHERWISE FAULTLESS CHARACTER, AS AN

ELECTION to bo held In the

at a rate not exceeding .50 ·mlll

for each one dollar· of valuation,
which amounts to Five Cents for
each one hundred dollars of
valuation , for Five Years .
~
The Polls for se ld Election

(0 1972 Klnt Featu,., Syndlealo, Inc.)

·ACROSS
l.Fam.ed
London
gallery
5. Brownish
yellow
La Gio·

conda's

DICK TRACY

will be open 11 6 :~ 0 o'clock A.M.

a~d remain open until 6: 30
o clock P.M . Eastern Staridard
Time of said diy.
.
By order of .the Board of
Elections, or Meigs County
Ohio. ,
'

'

k 16,

p, ..

......,. tiMIRLI'
In! A FRU!If CA'

~·PliO!

WI10
IIIIP Olf(]! !llfMI'
lflfl'!llt HIM,

tN fOUR DIAr
'•
II~ C:lpiC)ty

Moyi..l . .·

. Auttatatlca .

2 sp..r crpo'rollcin.

Cholet bf ••ter
temps.
Auto.
water
level ··

·cont•ol. , dni .
F Jlfor . or Pol"... Fin Agltotor,

,.,....

~'"'

Mori•f
HIIUfMHI

Dr,.n

lurfounct clolll•
Wflft 1111111, tytft
ftHI. 11011411 - " •

no owerdrl'lnt, .
f'lno Mllll Llnl
Fllttf, ·
Wtii!Hiatlltlll
MATTA I

... c•.,.,
hnlct

'741·4211

lUdiC I!IIUTI' RlR
11t! WR All&gt; CHI.I'
Of 1JI! 'NIII!I~ 1M

:wMP0/1390;
•

CO. Standard
DOWN
1. David's
daughter
2. Place
for a
bullftght
3. Marrying
(colloq.)
(3 wd•.r
f, Consume
5. In the
least way
(2 wds.)
~ - Soldiers

1. Incur a

responsi·

billty
(3 wdB.) .
8. Ennoble
9. Consiin· ·
guineous
11. Surmount

~&amp;M[;ll!J£;::t=:~:: ~-=
u-ramble theM four Jumbltl,
one letter to eaeh 1quue, to
form four ordln1ry words.

, SJJ'EHL

•:.::~.~=·-

Yeaterday's Anawer
15. Numerous %4. Nobleman
%6. Sales pitch
18. Love to
zs. HThe
dis· '
Evil One''
traction
29.'"
- Lily''
21. Tommy
30.
Vitality
Hitch(colloq .)
cock's
35;
Upward
sport
(comb.
2Z. Con•
form)
'nubia\
36. U.nending
U.Quaran·
time
tine

YACKTI

I

o

~FAWTA ~

) I

tr

.

III
II

D;;;.U;:r:B=.U::.;S::E:...t--r---,--, . Now .,..,.,. thl clrcW 1etttn

I

~

I I I to the....,...........
f-

!

Mll . . . . IIIS)B..

1

orxxrJ

(....,_n .....uew)

Fly alone
Fish eggs
Upstarts
Sort
Succor
Young
insect
Japanese
wild dog
36. Advari·
. tage
37. Unmelo·
dious

38. Great
': Barrier

Island

3t. Pretend

(2 wds.)

. . DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE -Here's !low. towork It;
AX ·YDLIAAXR '
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stinds for another. In thlo Sl!ilple A II
used for tlie tllree L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Slncle let~
apostrophes, tlle length and formation of tlle wotdl .ue
hlnll. Each dll)' tlle c¢e·letterure dUlereut.
· .

DWUP

CIYPTOQUOTBS ·
KWU ·. K ·vxu O(&gt;XUI

HI, 5WEET1S!

l[GF

NRFYUPVP.N, KWU_ HVFIK KWVJ'N R
IXRFK WCISRPY YVN ,I C~ VI R NGGY

..~.::.::.,.UTO.CIU .-RFPGZY NZRIN,GD

'

'

.I

u

· ~~A==~~~~-~~-~~-~·:u:~==l.~UM~•~

poet

Edwin S. Cozarl

2,

Call orr
Black
cuckoo
Sickness

covering

.JiM ~ P•UL i

1101

THE SIGGI!ST
AUOIENCE.

Out ofth(s
world
(sl.)
Clarinetbt
Fountain
U.Thurber
cbar•cter
u.'Lobate
25.Englisb

VN;.:to JOU

Ot~ted

r
="'=.,..,

Eggs
Actor
Tony
Floor

·---------:--1'k

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Sept. 29, 1972.

essayist
1 TAKE T~E STANO
~~~~~~~~· r;.--....,~~-=....,~·u.
English
TAAi CiETS ME
Fulfill

(Fr.)

Dorothy M . Johnston
Director
Dated Sept. 29, 1972 ·
·

Chairman

"Suicidio''

'::~00:.:=

Edwin s. Cotart
· Chairman

.

INJ[.

SPOT SOILETHTHEPURE WHITE PAGE.-HOSEABALLOU

Township of Sut1on, Ohio, et the
reqularDiacesof votlna th~rttln .
on Tuesday, the 7th day ot NO ·
vember, 1972, the question of
l~vylng , in excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Sutto('l Township for the purpose
of Current ~xpenses.
Said t•x being : ·I renflwal of
an existing tax of .S0(1h ) mlll ·to
run for five years .

at a rate not exceeding 2112 mills
for eaCh one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to twenty -~lve
cents for each one hundred . (10) 2, 9, 1.6• .23, 4t
dollars of valuation for five
years .
·
I'
The Polls for .said Election
will be open at 6: 30 o'clock A.'M.
and rem&amp;4n open until 6:30 ,
o'clock P.M . Eastern Standar d
T ime of said day ,
By order of the Board ot
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio.

For

~SOLD

LESS E~~ENS I VE , T~E.
PFI.OFSIHINK YO\I CAN
9UY SEVERAL

'3TORE 16 HAVIt&gt;i&lt;S A DR#i6

NEED 10 I.SAVE.
A COUPLe OF

Open8TIIS
Mondayfhru Saturday

NOJ~C~A~F LwvcT~ON
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILl LIMITATION

run for five years .

--------

BECAUSE TH5Y 1~E

BUT I R€ALLY

AND I DID 14AVE

SOME 11ME OI'F

.

L

MEIGS
MOBILE'
HOMES

At:&gt;t:&gt; UP!

~EAH 1

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm SEWING MACHINES .· Repair O'DELL WHEEL alignment
service, all makes. 992-2284.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
doors and windows, carports,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
marquees, aluminum siding
Complete front end service,
Authorized Singer Sales and
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
lune up and brake service:
Service.·We Sharpen Scissors.
represer] .f atlve . For free
Wheels balanced .elec·
estimales , phone Charles
3·29·1fC
Iron ically .
All
work
Lisle, Syracuse , V. V. .
guaranteed .
Reasonable
Johnson and Son, Inc.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
rales. Phone 742·3232 or 992·
J-2-tfc
can celled?
Lost
yoLJr
3213.
- - - - - -- , - , ope,alor's license? Call 992·
7·27-ffc
BACKHOE ANO DOZER work.
2966.
·r.
· Septic Janko- Installed. George
6· 15·1fc WILL cut or I rim trees,
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. ---,.-~-.reasonable; also clean out
4·25.tfc HUSBAND and wile jani.forial
basements, attics and
· -- - - - - - - service team . Home and
cellars. phone 949·3221. ·
commercial. Walls, windows,
10+30tc
floors. Call Gallipolis, Ohio
Real Estate For Sale
446·1607.
·.SEPTIC TANKS
AROB!C
10·5-6tp
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
-------CLEANED, · REPAIRED .
,' .
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
662·3035.
LEGAL NOTICE
· 10.4·ffC

1973 HOMES

'

' '

square,

•
POM~~Irv~~ .ROAD

I

·-HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

Willll at Racine.

4

THE SHOP

PRICE
REDUaD

"HEll"

temoon.

speaker sound system,

ToGo
Take Me To

· WOW1 T~ESE
LITTLS I'IOOKb

1 Ki'ON M'l D£COi
~AD WORK IG
IMPORTANT, 5GT.

Pomemy Hlime .&amp;Aulo

eROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
.· FOr Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

Ill HAVE

FOGAR"TY!S DJ:PAAn'MENr

·-GUARANTEI;DPhone 992-2094

·sMITH ·.NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pfl, 992-2174
Pomeroy

r--==--------,

"

On Most American Cars

Conservatory of Music. Phone
·
10-5-61c
speed avloma1ic changer·. libre~ry
992·3825.
Balance $68 .79 . Use our
poplar chairs, high -legged
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
at a rate not exceeding .25m Ills
desk,
hump-back trunk, oak
9·28·121c '68 FIREBIRD, V·8, 4 speed,
for each one dolt~r of valuation,
kitchen cabinet, 2 treadle
bl ac k w1' lh red interior; phone
10·8-6tc
which amounts to Two and one sewing mach ines, Wicker
half cents for each one hundred
KOSCOT KOSMETICS IMINK
949-2921.
porch swing, upright plano town destined to grow. This 5
~qllar.s of valuation, for Five
10-Hip YAMAHA Enduro 250, 9 months
OIL BASE) . We have many
wilh
bench, phonograph, room apt. has nice kitchen
vears .
old, like new, $500. Phone 992·
new products since the forbrass
and
glass
baskets
,
7109.
ha
l
dwood
floors,
bath
,.
malion of this Company. Also
The Polls for said Election .
Carnival and Depression
10-5.61c
EQUIPMENT AND STOCK
several new ones this month Mobile Homes For Sale
will
be open at 6' 30 o'clock A.M.
glass, Anchor Hocking glass,
GOES. $17,900.
plus monlhly specials. All
and remain open until 6 : 30
American Rose China (ser·
TO BUY OR SELL CON· ·~ o ' clock ~ .M. Eastern Standard
lhese In addition lo the
TWO
reglslered
polled
vice for 12) crystal stem ware
Time of said day .
Meigs Mobile Homes
originals. Ladles, we would
TACT
US.
Herefords, one year ol d ; onE!
set, punch bowl , plclure and
av order ot the Board of
like very much for Jou to fry
HENRY E. CLELAND
bull, one heifer; call after 5 vase set, wash bowl and
Elections , of Meigs county
these cosmetics an to serve
, REALTOR
p.m. 985.3538. Paul Karr ,
Oh io.
' ·
pitcher, 1 wooden dresser set,
you. Phone Helen Jane, 992·
Chester, Oh io.
Edwin s. Cozart
PHONE 992-2259
2
celluloid
dresser
sets,
wire5113.
Chairman
10·6·3fp
clamp jars, 4 oil lamps, cast
10-1-tfc
Iron
lawn
ornamen ts
D th M J h 1
ANTIQUE
pump
organ,
all
!Greyhound!
lea
service
set,
oro Y • 8 1 r~~t~~
VIRGINIA'S . Beauty Salon on
original except new bellows. flower pots, stone /ars, jugs,
Oated Sept. 29, 1972
On
Our
Last
Success Road belween
Over 80 years old. Made by
hat pin holder, Goo us powder IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH. Lake
Tuppers Pla.ins and Long
Conchas; New Mex ico. $2,975. 1101 2, 9, 16, 23. 41
Taylor
and
Taylor
Organ
Co.,
1972 MOBILE HOME
ars, toys and dolls, plcfure
Botlom . Open 6 days; some
No down . No Interest. S25 mo.
Worcester,
Mass.
One
bellows
rames
,
and
many
other
left on our lot.
evenings. Phone, 667·.3041,
119 mos . Vacalion
for
type. Phone 992·3904.
Items.
Operator, VIrginia Hayman.
Paf'adlse.
Free Brochure .
NOTICE OF ELECTION
10·5-tfc
ON TAX LEVY
..,.
•
9·14-301c
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Bo~
SMALL miscellaneous ilems
.
IN
EXCESS OF THE
2001DD,
Alameda.
California
1971 KAWASAKI 100, excellent
Including small antiques and . 94501.
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Which
we
are
'
ordering
for
SKATE-AWA'Y, open Wed·
condition, ready to go.
collectibles will sell on Fri.,
NOTICE Is htireby given that
our customers, are approved
nesday, Friday and Salurday
Sacrifice for only 5260. Phone
Oct. 13, large furnllure Items
10·3-JOtp in pursuance ot a Resolution of
by
" Underwrllers
the Council of the VIllage bf
evenings from 7:30 p.m . to
Coolville 667·6214.
both antique and modern will - - - - - -- - 5 ROOM house and bath, Rutland, Ohio, passed on the
10: 30 p.m. Available for
Laboratory"
to · Insure
sell on Sal., Oct. 14.
10·5· 12tc
located on Brick Street, 2nd day of August , 1972, there
private parties on .V.Onday,
customers the best Quality
ATTENTION DEALERS AND
Rutland ; Interior being· willbesubmlttedtoavoteofthe
Tuesday and Thursday
Home.
COAL, Limestone. Excelsior
COLLECTORS: This Is a sale remodeled;
phone 742-3334. people of sold VIllage ot •
evenings, also Saturday and
Salt Works, E. Main Sf.,
ou can't afford to miss.
10·3·121c General ELECTION lobo held
Sunday aflernoons. Schedule
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3191 .
unch served. Not respon .
Before you buy, drive to
in the Village of Rutland , Oh io,
•
your parties early . Phone 985·
sible for accldenls. Theo L,'
' 4·12·tfc
at the regular place of voting
Tuppers Plains and check
3929 or 985·999~
Smllh, Exec. I. 0 . "Mac" 8 ROOM house and bath, nice therein , on Tuesday, the 7th day
our Homes and Prices.
10-l-12tc
November, 1972, the question
JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
McCoy, auctioneer. Phone
large .lol, nalural gas, builf.ln of
of levying , In excess of the ten
Sewing Machine. Will sell tor
985·394~ .
cabinels lr\ kitchen. Close lo mllllim ltation, tor Ihe benefit of
small balance of $36.21 or
19-8-Jfc radio station In Bradbury. 'Rutland VIllage for the purpose
~ayments may be arranged.
Phone 992·2602.
of Current Expen!es .
Phone 9'12·5331.
9-29-12tc · Said tax being : a renewal of
.9·7·tfc Real Estate For Sale
'
--------e~n existing tax of 21!2 mills to

, By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Edward and David Roush
spent Friday night with their
:sister, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis Clifton.
I
; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy.of
·!Akron visited Mr.s. Nancy
'ltussell and Mandy~~ the home
of Mr. an,d Mrs. Russell Roush '
Sunday morning. Mr. and )lfrs.
Dana Lewis were dinner guests
.Or the Roushes on Sunday.
Window .
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Air
Conditioners
Laudermilt visited the for·
.
mer's father, Ted Laudennilt,
Hot Water Healers '
'at a Huntington hospital '
Plumbing ,
Sunday.
:Eieclrical Work
, Paul Sayre qf Columbus was
a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs .
....
.
Herbert Sayre on Sunday.
.
rr . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
:1~nd son, Chuck, of .Letart, W.
•· Va., spentSunday will\ Mr. and
YY2-~441f
I' Mrs . Charles Lawson and
·Pomeroy,
0. ·
'
"
,' •.am1y.
·
,
'f 'I
; 1 Mrs. Bertha Robinson was a WEEI&lt;END Rev ival at Rutland
Apostolic Church, Friday,
: dinner guest Sunday of Mr, and
Oct.
through Del. IS; 7:30
! Mrs. Herbert. Shields. Mr. and p.m . 13 Speakers
will be
; jMrs. Philip Radforil and
Evangellsls Ariel! and Mary
·1;stephame, Pomeroy Route, Hughes of Columbus.
. ~
' llecl on the ~ields in tlle af·. Everyon!a! welcome.
' ' Joii!lltCo

at

4211

From the .largest
Bulldozer Radialor, to the
Sm~ll~f Heater. Ccll'e.
. · . Nathan Biggs ·
Radl1tor specialist

Let Dick and Dale Help You
with Your Meat Problems.

NEW Improved "Zlppies," the
breakfast set, 5 metal ward·
great iron pill ~ow with Auto Sales
1950 FORD pic kup lruck ; robes, quills, quilt tops,
VItamin C. Nelson Drug.
dishes, cooking utensils and
Marl in rifle ; 3 sows ; phone
10"9' 21P 1970 PLYMOUTH, 4 door, good
large amt. of misc. Items.
247-2161.
ANTIQUES
PORCH SALE, October 12, 13 llres and exhaust, air, power
10·8-31c 3.PIECE parlor
sei,'Wicker and
and 141 crocheted goods,
brakes and steering ; very
other
r
ockers,
sectional book·
dishes. antiques, some
good condition, Sl.'IOO; phone
ACRE lol ; 1965 Ford LTO;
case, encyclopedias and other
clolhing and miscellaneous
after 6 p.m. or all day 1.72
new 22 rifle ; phone 742·3656. books, cast iron book ertds,
Items; 7 killens to give away :
Saturday or Sunday, 992-5310.
10·8-21p hat rack, hall tree, wall· ·
lleen Swain residence, County
10·6·61c
mounted uprighl clock, chime
Rd. 28. jusl off Rl. 7 above - - - - - - - - EARLY American stereo-radio clock, 2 Walnut Empir~ beds,
Eastern High School.
1970
TOYOTA . Corona ,
combinallon, AM-FM radio, 4 2 Empire cl)est of drawers, 2
==:-----:--c-:10~·8·3tc
automallc
transmission ;
speaker sound system, · 4 marble top dressers, Kass, 2
Tl'l
radio and new radial tires.
speed aulomatlc changer . ceaar chesfs, Walnut night
~~~~:
· ser,
EREwlllbenobufieldlnner
Caii992-720I after 5 p.m . - -· ., Di
Bala,
n~e $,7,1.54.,
I,Jse our
sla8d, drop.feaf night stand,
Ved at Young's Casual
d ;t ··t
~ ._ c 11
hand.made baby bed, Walnut
·..II&lt;Wp • .:.j1111o.l~ "a1erlng i . ..,.. A Wedne~y,_,
10-8-61p
u
ge
errti~
.
·
a
992-7085.
1
who was
-in
October 1111:
' • : · - - ·--· ~ ·10·8·61c , dining room suite, . dining
lable and 6 Eastlake chairs,
MArysville, Ohio, Oct. 9,
10·8·31c 1969 WHITE VW , excellent MODERN W I I 1
1971 .
condition . See at Rutland .
.
a nu ype ~1ereo- walnut glass-door cu pboard,
We knew God must have hid ORGAN and plano inslruction
Furniture Store. Phone 742·
rad1o , AM·FM rad1o. 4 glass -door china closet ,

'i

i
•

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

.

992-2094

Phon~"l-2181 ·-·

i
•

!l"'J,I-~ ~

. 606 E. Main . Pomeroy

9'. _ . POMEROY
lfflid Jack W. Carsey , Mgr :

.

.

HOME&amp;. AUTO

3 ROOM furnished apartment,
utilities paid, I chllq, no pets ;
356 North 4lh Sl., Middleport.
Wm. Smilh, S80 mo.
16' CAMPING TRA ILER •
10-S.Stp
Shasta, like new. Phone 985·
3849 .
TRAI.LER space close to new
9-7-30tc
Meigs High School on old R1.
33 ; phone 992-2941 or 9~2· 2689.
·
I0-8-71c LEFT in 'lay-away, 1972 .model

For Sale
Per Hundred
Pounds

$1.50 for 50 Word minimum .
Each addJtlona1 Word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

:-'::':7":"-~--

.'

POMEROY

Sunbeam deep fryer , ufllily

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished
apartmen1s .
Phone 992-5434.
4· 12-ffc

.

,.

city utilities , private .t ot. MISCELLANEOUS SALE. Old
Robert Hill , Racine. Phone picture frames , depression
949.3811 '
glass, chrome breakfast set,
10-l-91p washer, sofa, Conlon .mangle,

2 BEDROOM, ·Furn .,

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY .

&lt;t8:30 a .m1 tQ s:oo.p .m.

Buy 2 Pairs1 PAIR FREE

OLD Fornilure, oak tables, TRAIL'ER space in : Racine. Ail

tires, radio. Sharp white &amp; orange paint.

NOTJ'CE

LOWEE!'I·•WHV DON'T

..

.,

~
~

'IOU AN' SNUFFY
JINEUS?

-B1Isiriess Services.

'•

~

PIC.t.IIC:KIN' .OVER {IT
WILLER FA.LLS tODAV,

MONEY · SAVER

::---,---·'---~

equipment, fu.ll wheel covers, chrome fri&gt;nt bumper &amp;
rear step bu·mper, heavy duty wheels 8- 15" commercial

FIE~?

Me AN' LUKEY ARE G.OIN'

'

PANTS &amp; JEANS

Court, Syracuse ; phone 9922951.

10·6-ffc
10-Hip •
.
.
- - - - - -- TRAILER, Brown 's Trailer
Park, phone 992·3324.
Wanted To Buy
'
·10c3.ffc

$2395

In Memory

home In
Ma$0n. Call Point Pleasant
675·1684.
10·6·6

no,'{,

I:S!J'T II,

For Sale

8271 .

(lllsslon. Radio. ONE OF THE SCARCE ONE$, AND AS
NICE AS iHEY COME .
,
,
.

~PMERDY,

'for Rent
2 OR J BEDROOM

GIBSON Guilar, beauliful Les TRAILER lol ; Bob's Mobile

1961 CAMARO

'

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IJI~

,

�'

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'

'

Wednesday througll Friday.
Cool .nlghts and mild days
with a chance. of showers In BY 'united Press lnlen~~~tloaal Mao 'l'le-tung. He- specificaUy whOse ~itorials in a Sh~nghai
Jlroad Run held iheir regular hostesses. .
Premier Chou En-lal says lll!med the chief editor of the newspaper sparked 'the
the north 'wednesday. Highs ·
·neeting on Septemberl9th in
GOV~RNORSPEAKS
China
must turn to the nation's People's · .Dally-Yao Wen- Cultural Revolution, ·is a
the basement of .the Ch\ll'ch.
Mrs . George . Eubanks, . mid 60s to low 70s. · Lows '
for ne.w leaders to yuan,
.. lnember. of the Central Com·
'l'hoi' devotions were in charge ·District Governor Ill Rotary ~f .6!!.~t~~J.~,l~~-~~~:-,•Fo:&lt;·:-:......._, youth
replace
himself
and
Chaitman
Olou apoke to a group of ~ · mittee, the Politburo and has
of Mrs. James Smith who was New Martinsville, W.Va., was y,w,.__Y~ w.".-.v""'"'Fo~.w.w.
Americannewapaperedltorsin
been chl~f editor of th.e
a1ao hostess at the meeting.
guest speaker a!the Th\li'Sday
Peldng Saturday In a 3 'f.t bour People's Daily since March,
The club members have evening dinner meeting of the
Interview. J. Edwird Murray 1967. Olou described him as a
purchased new carpet for .the New Haven Rotary Club.
and Don Carter of the Knight member of the "over 30"
church and are seUing plaques Among the many thinga that
NewSpapers today ga¥e deialls groilp. His exact age was not
· and napkins to help with the Mr. Eubanks discussed was the
of what Olou told the American available but he has been a
cost of it. .Those attending the . fact that interest should be
Society
of NeWspaper Editors writer since 1951.
.
meeting were .~rs. DorSey created so that new members
members wl!o are on a 23-4ay
Yab was rumored to have
Roush and Emogene, Mrs. would come mto .the club. Mr.
vi3lt
lei
Olina;
married
the, daught~r of Mao
Eddie Edwards, Mrs. Lloyd Euganks Is a very talented
They said Olou ''talked of andhiswife,ChiangChing, and
Smi.th, Mr.s. Willie Grinstead, speaker .and .a.dded ;St!Veral · .
many
thinga... but what seemed was seen voting ninth in line
Mrs. Ray Goodnite, Mrs. Jack humorous .Stories m h1s talk.
..
to interest him most was the behind Mao during the 1969
C'rd and the hostess.
He was accompanied to the
. .
qUestion
o.f who will succeed Party Congress, the edltor:s
HOMEMAKERSMF;ET
.meeting by Mr. Leland
.
Chairman Mao and hlmself. He said. However, the rumor of his
Mrs. John Smith ~nd Mrs. Stewart, a neighbor Rotarian,
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI)--Sgt.
entered
through
·a
bathroom
returned
to the subject repea- marriage to Cbou's daughter
Harry Staats were co-hostesses who came along just for the Claude Trubey, a police cha·
window. and told the family · tedly, always stressing the was denied in China.
at the September meeting of ride. .
. ,
. plain who holds the coveted which had been watching need for younger men to
During the interview at the
the Avalanche Homemaker's
"Ladles Night was also black belt in karate, had never
television, "This is a stickup." replace the present aging Great Hall of the People, Cbou
Club. Devotions were in charge observed andin~ membeMrrs andd struck anyone in anger until he
In the following 16 hours leadership."
touched on several in·
of Mr. Alton Roush, the subject guests allen g were · an faced a teen-age gunman
members of two families and
Chou is 74 and Mao 78.
ternational and internal issues,
of which was "Watch That Mrs. Harry Miller, Mr .. and ·holding 1 ~ hostages.
their friends were bound with
Murray and Carter said "he but not on Vietnam. Among the
Critical Finger," taken from Mrs. Russell capehart, Mr.
'!'hen Trubey decided, "It's
strips of bedsheets and beld at mentioned one name which topics
discussed
were
the book of Isaiah. She also and Mrs. John Thorne, Mr. and now or never," and grabbed the
gl!npoint; two of \.he hostages stood out like a lighthouse in a President Nixon's visit, the
read an article entitled, ''Two Mrs. James N. Roush, Mr. and youth's.. hand in a deadly wereraped,andpolicefoiledan fog of hiStory and remln- problem of Nationalist China,
Thinl(s Bad for the Heart- Mrs. Donald ,F . Roush, Mr. and struggle lor a .31k!aliber police attempt to collect ~.ooo in scences aboui old comrades, China's needs of me0!1j!· Running up the Stairs and Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mr . . and
.
spec1a1.
ransom money through an now sick or going blind or chanlzation
and
'in·
La
Mr
d
the Other Running Down Mrs. Herman yne,
· ~n
"It went off and 1 thought, elaborate scheme involving an already dead" .- Yao Wen· dustrlallzation, doctor ex·
People."
· Mrs. Rome Williamson, Dick 'Oh my God! Please don't let ' imposter, helicopters, snipers . )'Uan.
·
change programs between the
The lesson for the day, "Your Ord, M~. and Mrs . John anyone be shot,'" said Trubey, and a stakeout in the back · ·Yao, a weD-known writer United States and China and
Own Health" was discussed by Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Jack who learned karate while room of a neighborhood bar.
the exchange of newspaper
Mrs. Leo Thompson.
Flesher, 1'dr. and Mrs. Ray serving with the Army in
Under guard at a local
At the conclusion of the Weaver, Mr. Eubanks and Mr. J
apan.
hospital
was Jackson Stallings,
program
and · bu~iness Stewart.
.
When Trubey made his move 17, believed from Jacksonville,
meeting, a baby shower was
CLUII MEETS
Saturday, one of the hostages Fla., who police said told his
held for ·MrS. Glen Johnson.
Mrs. Melvin Knapp was smashed a window with his fist hostages he needed the money
Prizes for winners of centesis hostess 10 the members of the to signal sheriff's deputies because he was 11 running away
were awarded to Mrs. George GoodwlU Club on Wednesday, outside and the other hostages from the law. "
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Zona
' Hoffman , Mrs. Lyle Me· Sept. 2oth. The group played some ~ith their hands tied
Stallings, listed in fair Jeffers Powell, 72, Syracuse,
cormich, Mrs. Lieulo Roush . games during the evening and behind their backs, ran scream· condition from his gunshot
died Sunday at Pleasant Valley
and Mrs. Leo Thompso_n.
pr~~s . were awarded. ~rs, ing lor the exits.
wounds, is charged with two Hospital.
Present at the meeting were Chff Roush won the door pnze.
Trubey a tall and slender counts of rape; kidnaping for
Mrs. Powell is survived by
Mrs. Ray Thompson, Mrs. Leo
Refreshments were serv.ed to mustachi~d man, said when he ransom; 'breaking and entering
three
sons, Carl L. Jeffers,
Thompson, Mrs. Howard Mrs. Floyd Miller of Manetta, grabbed the gun he "flipped the and lesser charges.
Syracuse.; Howard 0. Jeffers,
Roush, Mrs. Alton Roush, Mrs. Mrs. Cliff Roush,t.Jrs. ~o~as man onto my back trying to
Pomeroy, and Robert L.
Ralph Thompson, Mrs. Hattie Grinstead, Mrs. Wrlllam keep the weapon in front of
Trubey, who joined the Jeffers, Syracuse; three
Reed, Mrs. Lyle McCormick, McFarland, Mrs. John C. Fry, me."
sheriff's department live years daughters, Mrs. Ethel Mae ·
Mrs. Lieulo Roush, Mrs. Wlllle Mrs. Thelma capeharl, Mrs.
The 17-year-old gunman was ago after retiring from the
Grinstead, Mrs. George Eberl\oush,Mrs.Ray Weaver, biting Trubey on the back and Army and serves as the Oliver, Mason; Mrs. Coley
Knapp, West Columbia, and
Hoffman and children, Benny Mrs. Mary Aumiller, Mrs. gouging deep scratches in his department's assistant chaand Jane, Mrs. Don Meadows, Pansy Fry, Mrs . l-eone arm when Sgt. Delbert C. plain; .t~Jked his way into the PonnaJean Jeffers, Hilliard; a
1\olrs. Glen Johnson and Doug, Jacques, Mrs. Cecil Duncan, Fisher, sharpshooter for the house by posing as . the brother, Shelton Patterson,
Letart Falls; a half-brother,
Mrs. Willie Grinstead , Mrs. · Orange County sheriff's depart· ·employer of a female hostage William Patterson, Henderson,
Harold Fry • Mrs. Kenneth men!, burst through a back sent 'outside to collect the $5,000 W.Va.; 17 grandchildren, eight
Vickers and Kenny and the door and shot him in the right ransom.
great-grandchildren; and
' SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
hostess.
shoulder.
"I just prayed to God that I several nieces and .nephe\'IS.
Steers: 735. cattle: Choice,
SUPPER HELD
The gunman slumped to the wouldn't make a mistake and
Funeral services will be at 10
A joint covered dish supper floor, ending an ordeal which cause any of those poor people a. m. Tuesday at the Ewing
36-36.60; , Good, 34.50-35.25;
of the members and guests of had begun at midnight Salur· to be harmed," said Trubey. "I Funeral Home where friends
Standard, 29-31.50.
Heifers : Choice,, 34-34.85; the New Haven Garden Club day, when a youth broke into
Good, 31.56-33.85; 'Standard, and the Julia T. Bryant Sewing the small white frame house on move,
andoneall
would be jn ~~'!..~ll_l~ Cemetery.
knew that
slip,hell
one wrong
Club was held Tuesday • Sept. old Winter Garden Road, erupt.''
25.S0..28.50.
Cows: Commercial, 27.10.29; 19, in the social room of the
Utility, 24-26; Canners and Hartford United Methodist
Church wllh Mrs. w. T. Stone,
Cutters, 19.S0..22.50.
t •
Bulls: Commercial, 28-32. Mrs. N. 0. Weln and Mrs. Lena 1 l 4
Knight
as
h011teue~,
'
StOckers arid'Feeders: Steer
.
(Continued from Page 1)
Mem~tr'l
''~'n'd'
'guests
atcalves, 35-50; Heifer calves,
tending were Mr. and Mrs. shipping lines serving Hawail, hit with its first major dock strike
28.50-45.50.
Andrew Hume, Mr. and Mrs. since 1949.
Heavy Feeders: 24.W-37.
Robert McElrath, ,regional director for the International
Veal calves: Choice, 54; Lloyd Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman
Layne,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Longshoremen's and Warehouseman's Union, said pickets would
Good, 43.50-47.
John
Fry,
Mrs.
F.
A.'.
B
atey,
be removed from Seatrain Lines' wharfs. They will remain on
Lambs: Good, 28.75.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harry
Layne,
other docks in Honolulu harbor.
·
Hogs: 200-2301 28.75; No. I,
Mrs.
John
Layne
and
son,
Mr.
McElrath said Seatrain workers would vote today on the new
29; 230..240, 28.50; Sows 24.90and
Mrs.
W.
T.
Stone,
A.
K.
contract which union sources said ·covered all the major ILWU
26.30; Boars, 20.90.
McClung, Mrs. Dorothy demands.
James, Jenny and Bill James,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Mrs. Donald Smith,. Diana
Saturday, Oct. 7, 1972
DAYTON -CLASSES WERE TO RESUME today at Stivers
Roush and the hostesses.
SALES REPORT OF
· l:llgh SchoOl after an·outbreak of fights between black and white
PERSONALS
Ohio Valley 1Jvest¥k Co.
Myra Roush of Hilnlington studenta last Friday resulted in 10 arrests and seven injuries,
HOGS- 175 to 220 lbs. 28 to
foUowing a protest by blacks that the entire homecoming court
29; 220 to 250 lbs. 28.50 to 29.25; spent a weekend with her was white. "It's just a reflection of wbat Is happening in .Dayton
Light26.50 to28; Fat Sows 21.50 mother, Mrs. Velma Roush and and America,'' said Schools Superintendent Wayne Carle during
· to 24; Stags 19.50 Down; Boars family.
Mr. and Mrs. , Max Brown the weekend.
17~50 to 20.50; Pigs 14 to 20;
''What happened at Stivers can just as well happen at any
who have completed their
Shoats 20 to 37.50.
other school in this ctmmunlty unless we eradicate the system by
CA'ITLE - Steers 36 to 44; studies at Ohio University have
Heifers 28' to 37.50; Baby Beef been visiting the latter's which minorities have been made to feel excluded," he salJl.
45 to 54; Fat Cows 20 to 24; mother, Mrs. Frances Brown. Silvers has about !50 black sl!ldents and 1,500 whites.
Canners 17 to 27.25;.Bulls 28.50 Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bwngarner
to 31.50; Milk Cows 200 to 425. of ColwnbUs spent the weekend
HONOLULU - HOUSEWIVES IGNORED "Don't Hoard"
VEAL CALVES - A few here with relatives.
Mr.
and
·
Mrs.
Karl
Wiles
appeals
and sloe ked up on staples today as Hawaii was hll with
singles 57 .50; Tops 54.10;
have
returned
home
.
aner
a
Its
first
major dock strike since 1949.
Seconds 49 to 51; Mediwn 46.50
vacation In Florida.
Picket lJiles were_se.l.J!p In ~onoJulu har!&gt;o!: after R!lbert
to 49; Com. &amp; Hvs. 48 to 54.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McComb of -McElrath, regional director of International Longshoremen's
BABY CALVES - 35 to 80.
Pittsburgh were recent guests and Warehousemen's Union (ILWU) amounced early sunday,
of Mr . and Mrs. Donald F. "The strike 1s on." HawaU residents, who watched as supplies
Roush .
dwindled during the West Coast dock strike, wasted no time in
Henry Cunningham has rushingtostorestopurchasericeandtolletpaper. .
returned home after being a
patient at Holzer Medical
. Center.
[\1r. and Mrs. Bill Howard
CHESTER '- Ralph E. daughter, Mrs. Helen Parker
and Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Parker,
87,
Chester, Hart, Shade; a sister, Mrs.
Adams, Jr., spent the weekend throughout his adult life a
Ethel Stout, Tuppers Plains; 24
in Cleveland where they vi3ited Meigs County ' farmer, died grandchildren, one greatMr. and Mrs. Larry LeMasters Saturday evening at the Kimes
grandchild, and several nieces
• and son.
Conval_.nt Center in Athens. and nephews.
William PoweU Jr. is a
Mr. Parker was a member of
Mr. Parker was preceded in
medical
patient at Pleasant the Cheater United Methodist
I
death by his wife, Mary Smith
Valley .Hospital.
I
Church, the Junior Order of the Parker In 1967, and a son,
M'r. and Mrs. Bethel Vance United American Mechanics, George.
·
left Weooesday for Poplar and was a charter member of
Funeral services will be held
Branch, N. C., where they wlll Chester Subordinate Grange
at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the
visit his mother, Mrs. L. F. 2609. He was a 50-year member
Chester United Methodist
Vance.
of the Modern Woodmen of Church with the Rev. Robert
' ,,
,
Am
enca.
card officiating. Burial will be
sORORITY TO MEET
Surviving are four· sons, in lhe Chester Cemetery.
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of
Albert E., Roy F., and Leland, Friends may call at the Ewing
the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
all of Pomeroy Route 3, and Funeral Home anytime \llltil
wlll meet at 7:45 p.m .
Wr• nPed your help to bring happiness
Thursday at the home of Harold V., of Coal Grove; a noon Tuesday.
lo ntwly children this Chri stmas . Come
Mildred Karr In ' Middleport.
Tbe Zion Women's Club of c 1\fril. Herbert Sayre and Paul,
the Zion Lutheran Church at Mrs. Dort.ald Haynes and the

Ch~plain in

H ero
.· . 's·.

Role

Tbe word assassin, origiriaUy ·
hashhashin, derives from the
use of the drug hashish to inspire members of a band of
professional kUlers in the .
Middle East at the time of the
· · Crusades,

correspondents between the ry and especiaUy pleased with
China's developing foreign
two countries.
.
The Knight editors reported ·policy. . . .
He
said
Olll)a
was
.prepared
Chou as saying he was
generaUy satisfied wltb in- to absorb Taiwan gra!NaUY
creased U,S ..O.ina contacts and assume Its flOG million
budget without lncreulns
sln~e Nixon's visit last Februa·
taxes and said the · imall
island's Jiving standarda could
even rise.,
editor:&amp; said.
Chou told the edltorJ he had
, (Continued from Page I)
discussed with ·Nllon a proup 15 pet. of the judging. This is gram for exchanging doctors,
based on the appearance of the research on cancer, heart and
contestant in evening gown, ciculatory, diseases,
poise, grace, ·groofi1ing, good respiratory problems, the
taste, carriage and posture.
common ·cold and even. a
Youth fitness m~kes up monthly birth control pill.
another i5 pet. based on
Chou also said no ·excluinge
coordination, appearance, of newspaper correspondents
posture, carriage and grace in can come until after settlement
sportswear.
of the Taiwan Issue -and exThe creative and performing pulsion of the ·Nationalists ,
arts makes up 20 pet. of the representatives from the
judging with each contestant to United Stat@.
present a three minute talent
Murray and carter said at
act. Originality, technical the end of the· interview Chou
ability, appropriateness of looked relaxed and unfatlgued.
selection and costume, per· They quoted hlm as llliying, "I
formance and presentation are think I have aMwered your
chief factors.
questions frankly, more
· High school senior girls lrankly In fact than when ·I
wishing to enter the pageant answered (Secretary of State
may do so by writing Meigs William P.) Rogers or
County Junior Miss, Inc., 296 (preSidential adviser Henry
West Second St., Pomeroy.
A.) Kissinger or Nllon."

lntere~ll

VOL XXIV -NO. 124

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Supreme Court struck down as
unconstitutional today Ohio's
plan lor reimbursing parents of
nonpublic school children from
public funds.
Citing earlier decislo~ on
· the same subject, the Court in a
brief order upheld a ruling of
April 17, 1972, by a special
three-judge federal panel in
Columbus which held the
program was an unconstitutional "establishment
of religion."
Justice Byron R. White voted
in favor of hearing the case. '
The law provided for a

Market Report

For A Lovelier ,
wlorful Spring!

.

\

I

Choose your flower bulbs now from the big
selection of· tulips, hyacinths, crocus, ,
narcissus and many others.

~m~a~y~c~a!ll~a~ny~tim~e~.~B~ur:ia=l~w~i~ll~~=:::::::::::::~;;~:::::::::~

*· ·
Dress-A-Doll
IS
-

in Briefs

'

. WOIUC IS PROGRESSING on the drive-through facility on the south side of the Citizens
National Bank in Middleport. Concrete has been poured in the interior of the drive-through
Which Is located inside the adjoining structure of the bank. The building being converted was
last occupied by tbe ShOe Box and was vacated following a fire.

Street Materials
Boughto Shelly

Housewares Department First Ffoor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1\.Tews •.

.

a happiness thing.
Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest.

Middleport Village Council
Monday night accepted the bid
of the Shelly Co. of Thornville
on materials to resurface·
several village streets.
The Shelly Co., the only
bidder, agreed to furnish 600
tons of. asphalt at •12.45 a ton;
aOO gallons of prime coat and·
200 gallons of (jlck, both at 60
cents a gallon. All of the
materials are to be delivered in
place.
Mayor
John
Zerkle
recommended
that the
materials be placed on Park

St., Fairlane Drive and in the
alley running from Mill St. to
Race St., at the rear of a
number of business houses.
Work on the project is expected
to begin soon.
Council agreed to purchase
500 feet of new guard rail for
the Middleport Hill area and
approved the report of Mayor
Zerkle showing receipts
totaling $3,083.70 in September
including $2,928.70 in fines and
fees and $155 in merchant
police collections.
Mayor Zerkle announced a

•

Council Delays

TorT Ruling
· Pomeroy councllln a special to ask that the posts be moved,
session Monday night reviewed as they pose a traffic hazard.
at length whether or not to
Paul ' Coffee, who wlll be
permit trick or treat night.
removing stone from behind
Clerk Jane Walton said a the Pomeroy Post Office was
letter was sent to village granted permission to drive
council from the Third Monday over village stree,ts providing
Dinner Club asking council to he wlll be responsible for any
abolish trick or treat and hold damages caused by falling
instead a "trick or treat stones or dirt from his truck
party" on the vlllage parking andhealsoistocleandlrtfrom
- g tr ts
Jot.
VI 11a e s ee .
Council tabled the matter
Mayor William 1laronick wiU
.
,
until the next regular meeting attend the Oh•o. Valley Mayors
on Monday, Oct. 16.
Assn. w1th Chtef Webster at·
·
h'
t
Meeting With counCil was tend 1~g as IS gues . 111 e
Larry Eblin, Osborne St.,. in meeting will be held tomorrow
· the
·
regard to metal posts that.have · IO A ns.
·
·
been placed .on villa~e· street .Attending were Mayor
right-of-way. Eblin satd he has Baromck, Ralph Werry,
ruined two tires because of the William Snouffer, Elma
posls and other residents have RusseU, Jim Mees, and Don
reported slfllilar damage.
Colllns, council members;
Pollee Chief Jed Webster Is Jane Walton, 'clerk, and
to meet with Fred Crow, Phyliss Hennessy, treasurer,
solicitor, today, and Webster is and Webster.

the

Ralph Parker Died Saturday

•

ews.. in Brie
ByUnltedl'reulnleraatlonal
• SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS rooted Viet
Cong guerrillas from a hamlet only 15 miles north Of S.igon and
were moving to "surround" other Communist units outside the
capital, military spollllllllen said today. Field reports said
flghtJn8 bared today just outside Thanh Quy, a hamel\ 10 miles
north~ the capital recaptured by government troops Mond8y.
The VIet fling'• clandeatlne Uberatlon Radio said the Com·

.,....

Alice R. Fink Died Saturday
.

. MEIGS THEATRE
Tonlth.t &amp; Tuesif.y
Oc-t,IO
CONQUEST OF THE ...
'.
PLANET OF

.lHt: APU
ITtdlnlcolor)
· • Roddy Me Dowoll
DonMurroy
"·

. CLAY PIGEON

OP

ITtdlltlcolorl
Twry Savel11. ·
R'llllsrt Vaughn
R

llllwiii,.7P.M.

RACINE - Mrs. Alice
Rhoda Fink, 79, Racine Rt. 11
· died Saturday evening ' at
· Veterans M~morial · llospltal.
Mrs. Fink, 'the daughter of
tpe late Hiram and Lillie Oliver
Hy~ll, was born Feb. II, 1893,
. in Mason Cowity, W.. Va.
Besides her parents, Shf was
· priceded · i~ death· by her
husband, Herbert Fink·, In ·
1969; a son, and a brother. Mrs.
Fink was a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Surviving are a daughter,.
. ¥n. lloward (Nancy) Etvln,
Racine Route I; two sons,

111ll'iait•••••··

lallfl!lalr'

Owen of Middleport, · and
Richard of . Cheshire; two
sisters, Miss Mabel "Hy~U of
Middleport, lind Mrs. George
(Goldla) Fry, AshVIlle ; 13
grandchildren, 10 ·greatgrandchildren, arid several
nieces ·and ·nephews.
.
Funeral Services will be held ·
at 2 p. m. •Tuesday at' the ·
RawUn~oats Funeral Home
with . Mr. Raullin Moyer of,
Relating. Burial will. be In
Gravel Hill . Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home 111ytlme.

in now .., supply of dolls is limited - and
' pk:k up a free dolL Design and sew an
outfit ior it, then retum il ro us: It .will
dis'played in .our lobby with till the
Dress-A-Drill dolls . Pri;!:es w;ll be.

be

awarded. Don't worry about . sewing·
skil ls. Your' doll will find a home in lhe
al'rm of a chi ld on Christmas day, ~nd
beloved .
You:. make Dress;A-Doll•
a happiriess
. ~
'
.
.
' ·. thi hg. Thankyoq.
· . . .,
··

.

::n-:'-00:::.!=:'the~~w:~~cc:::, .

senlor

Cammunlltcontrolandthatafourth,ThanhPIJu9cKhanh,about
16 ·mna lrllm the capital, Wfl reoccupied late Monda)'. In
Cambocla, the high ~~~~ Mid today Communlat troops
overi'MU80Yetnmentpolitiolllwithln 10 miles_of Phnom.Penh ·
lntbelrdee(IDIIpenetratlonintotheMekongDeltain2'f.tyeanof

··! ·AD£~~~ .. C, ~a"ytighl 1P7i II Vl ld•N d ;,•bbl&lt;n co nd ln~l&lt;i111o, 1~.

.

-

.

nr.

..

•
.
COWMBUI -A S£Vi:N-MONTB.()LD JERSEY bull was .

aoldfllrtlo,~.~Mon·Aia~_t"'1nheiJeneyndcawblghe~e~ced'atevthere

-~

. POMEROY, QtCIO .
Member or FIC!arol Reserve Svtt•m

'

' On Frid1ys Our Drivt-lii WIIII!Ciw loOjlenta: m: to 1 p.m. lctntl. .i,:i.:

· .·

·

S2D,OOO Mixlm•ni illllll'ancti .,.; t:acfl.._.....,

.'

meeting of the Board of Public
Affairs in Nelsonville Friday
with the State Health Department on the subject of water
pollution. Representatives of
other communities will be
present. Mayor Zerkle said
tha l Richard Gress of the
board and .· Maintenance
Supervisor Harold Chase will
attend. He invited members of
council to attend.
Chase was directed to have
his employes collect fees due
the village urder a new ordinance providing that
residents pay for wastes, other
than garbage, hauled away
from them. Council said that
payment should be made at the
time the hauling is done and if
payment is not made then the
hauling shouldn't be done.
Council discussed the $5
permissive auto license tax to
be voted upon at the November
7 election and Mayor Zerkle
_.}lamed Mrs. Roger M~rgan,
Fred Hoffman. and Wilham
Walters, coun.cll members! to
plan a promo liOn Of some kmd.
Ag~m, Mayor Zerkle em·
phaslzed that ·cdllectlons from
Ule tax would be ea~arked for
street repair and mamtenance
only. It was reported that the
Middleport Chamber of
Commerce has agreed to
'd $
· hel ··
to
provl e I 00 10
pmg
promote the tax measure.
Others attending the meeting
'd
. k V ha
were ·0 IC
aug n 0 av1
Ohlin er and . Clarence
St g 1
.
Cl k
ewar ~ counct1men; er
Treasurer Gene Grate and
Chief of Police J. J. Cre;.eans.

Arrested
58

By police
Drugs - the liquid kind figures In 26 of 58 arrests made
by Middleport Pollee In SeP: ·
tember.
Police Chief J. J. Cremeans
in his monthly report to council
Monday nlg.ht at town hall
showed '58 arrests had been
made of which 10 were for
driv~g a motor vehicle while
mtoxic~ted and 16 for m. toxicatiOn.
, .
1

minimum $600 per pupil
allocation for students in public
schools 'ani! $90 for those in
private schools.
The legislature enacted the
statute ip DeCember, 1971,
after the U. S. Supreme Court
had invalidated state sup~
plements to salaries of
parochial school teachers In
cases from Pennsylva~ia and
Rhode Island.
ln other actions, the court
refused to re-examine the
Pentagon Papers case In·
volving the appearance of Sen.
MikeGravelandanalde before
a Boston grand jury.

'

llate fldrponw. '"""
.,.y, . 1!eCO
... .....
. •·
paid far a Jft181.
. ,
The ball - flown to Columbo&amp; during the weeken:l from
.Tulll, r.., bee- It wu ~ n1urlble to rilk on a Iolli! road
·
·.
(Oarltltiillld 011 Pale 10)
.

The Pomeroy Chamber' of
Commerce went pn record
Monday In "full support" of the
five mill levy to be voted on the
third lime. in the .Meigs Local
School District on Nov. 7.
District Superintendent
George Hargraves met with
the chamber to explain reasons
for the additional five mills.
Hargraves, using a projector
showing actual · records of
Ohio's 88 counties, Hargraves
showed the amount of money
the state has calculated that is
needed to operate a schoql the
size of Meigs Local.
He showed that presently
$481 per pupil is received from
the stale while Meigs County
only pays $127 per pupil. The
taxpayers of Meigs ~ounty pay
less per child than any of the 88
counties in Ohio.
If lhe levy falls to pass by
July 1, 1973 the state will place
Meigs Local in either Eastern
or Southern l,.ocal District and
1
Meigs ~sldents will have to.
pay the additional five mills,
whether they vpte for its
passage or not since both
Eastern and Southern district
have approved five mill in·
creases.
Hargraves said failure to
pass the levy in November wlll
place a financial hardship on
the school district. If it Is not
passed by J~ly I ol!973, Meigs

$75,2()0
Awarded

Local will be placed In another
school district.
The i"'lue to be voted on In
November will be the third
time It has bee~ placed on the
ballot. In a special election on
June 20 it was defeated by 12
votes.
. IN OTHER business Jack
Kerr, president, introduced
carolyn Thomas, secretary of
the chamber office located on
the ground floor of the courtboose. It is open three hours a
day live days a week. ·
Kerr said plans for the annual Christmas promotion wlll

•

TEN CENTS

of Boston, asked the court to

reconsider.
He
said
Rehnqulst's participation was
"entirely unseemly and lmproper" since he was actively
involved In various phases of
Pentagon Papers matters
when he was assistant attorney
general.
The Court also dismissed an
attempt by three Ohio
Republicans tQ obtain a reView
of the latest reapporlll!llment
plan for the state l~ture.
The court acted
a brief
Ql'der, without opinion.
The three wanted the courtto
review orders of a Special

m

three-judge federal panel in
Youngstown which foUnd an
earlier plan unconstitutional
and approved a later one.
Alan E. Norris, a GOP stste
representative
from
Westerville, Jacob A. Shawan
of Dublin, ani! Lloyd George
Kerns,
also a ,, state
representative of ·llaymond,
were not permitted by the
panel to Intervene in the case.
. The lawsuit was Initiated by
Samuel J. JQI'dan, a Democrat
r:J. Austin Township. Urglng.the
high court to deny review, he
said the three. did not have
standing to ask lt.

be made at the next meeting.
The chamber will meet again
on Monday, Oct. 30, at the
Meiga Inn at noon.
Kerr expressed appreciation
to Virgil Teaford, local realtor,
for supplying a list of houses
for rent and for sale to the
chamber which are sent to the
new mine site each week.
Teaford . suggested that
chamber members could meet
with Pomeroy Village Council
in regard to additional parking
space and proper street
markings. Teaford also
suggested that parking areas

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Eoended OUtloot Thursday through S.turday:
Chance of showeN aad
turning cooler Tbunday.
.Clearing Friday and
Saturdl!y. Hl&amp;hll In lbe •
norih to low '1111·i!Outll Tllunday llld .mid 50s to IIIIi Jtl
Friday aad S.tunlay. Lows
In the Sh Tllanday moilllq,
dropping to lbe 301 Friday
and Saturday mOI'IIII&amp;a.
db

17 Calls Made
On Fire Dept. .
The Middleport Fire
Department answered 17 calls
in September, Bob E. Byer,
lire chief, reported to council
Monday night.
·
There were four fire calls,
Including one false alarm, and
13 first aid calls, nine in town
and lour out of town; and one
for an accident involving a
motor vehicle. All of the fire
calls were In town. The
department traveled 265 miles
with 10.3 man hours spent on
· the lire calls only.

WASHINGTON - Cong.
Clarence Miller today was
advised of the approval of a
$15,000 grant from the
Economic Development Administration to the village of
Pomeroy to assist In the
'construction of a new fire ,
station, Total cost of the
project Is an esUmated 894,000.
CHILD KILLED
Construction is expected to
Jill Ellen Spires, 13-year old
begin within 90 days.
daughter of Mr. and fdi's. Ted
The building would be Spires of Defiance, Ohio was
constructed on Butternut Ave. killed Monday evening when
on property formerly owned by ' she was repOrted to have
John ~uvage . who sold It to ridden her mlni.!Jlke Into the
Mannmg Webster. Webster side of a train near· her home.
several months ago sold the lot The Spires are former
to the Pomeroy Fire Dept. A residents of this area.
steel structure Is planned.

in Middleport at 6:~ and from jockeys, fire trucks, decoraled .
the Rutland Elementary student body cars, and studen1
School at 7:10. At 7:30 p.m. walkers.
·
·there 1riil be a pep raUy with a
~ tt the Rullai!4buebail
Studenta with the btst
field.
decorated tm' will rieeln free
Included in the parade will adlllillllnce to PriciQ nlcbl'a
be the police car from the game anllthe - - followltw.
respeetive towns, the high Tile dance will be beld in the
school band, footbaU bu, PCIJIIefOy J1nlor High
ma)'or 's
tar,
vanit)' audltortmn. Tile i:I'OWftinll of
The parade will move from cheerleadel'1!, queen'a car, the bomecominc ..- will
the Pomeroy Junior High reserve cheerleadele, jllnlor take place , In pre-came
Sc~ool al6 p.m., from the A&amp;:P high band, WMPO dlac Cleftmoniea,

Fenton Taylor, assistant
Meigs High School prlnclpal,
annoUnced plans today for a
homecoming parade, the firs1
to be held In tllil Meies l..ooal
School DistriCt,
'Thurlda)'
evening in three CGIDIIIUIIltlea.
Friday evening, Jac:bon Is the
opposition, In the 1171
homecoming game.

·on

·Board Sets Tuition Rates
The Meiga Local District
board of education Monday
. night set a tuition rate
of $12.80 per · month
for the school year and
approved Aug. 1 as the
deadUne eacll year for writlien
requests for early grad~~alion
with the exception of transfer
stu~ents.

Tiie bo.rd alsO acled on .!be
following recoounendallons by
the superintendent, George
Hargra\'es:
Appointed Mrs. Lela OlrUs
as secretarial aide in the adllll
basic education PI111P 1m at P
per hour, 8 hours per week, fur
25 weeks.
Approved the request of
American Family Life
Assurance CIJOI!WI)' to oft«
Insurance to the staff, and
approved payroll deductlano if
requested by the emp~ .
Accepted Debbie Jalmitllr u
a tu!Uon student releued by
Vinton County schools 81 kl'l
as she wiD furnish lrant-

MeiiB

liCbool Hl&amp;h ICbool by Harold Goddard
of Bartlett, Ohio fur a l'l!lltal fee .
Approved as· subltila141 of flOG plraa janitor r-.
teadeaalllbcao r--Iled by
SUpt. IINJra'vtll and bolrd·
the cwnl,y ~ and llll!l1lber CIITaii Pierce 1re to
Othera itiii(Oial by 111m 81 the aelect II IIIDICI far the Rio
yqr Pllllf IS I.
Gnnde Ccllnnalit)' ('«! ll
In other br 111, tbe ..... Oomm!Uee by Oct 15,
at Salem Cenllr - repw led
Mn. ElM- Tlllllllu of the
sale on Sept. • 111 tbe JWp ...... CNIIJ Oulcll at A&amp;bw
Qlunl,y Healtb Ott* lutilt Md •hritb tht oo.rd in I $ dto
the CliJ ·~ and Fuel Co. Is Gbtalnlliltwo and ~~­
pooceedlns wllll anler'ing c:hellatthealdP«nerotJallar
materials Ill nplir the fw. lfilb lllalltl 1 fur tile .W
naas at Pwaot ,_...HIP dU...,.... fur-,_,
SclloGI and to -1&amp;1 twa of
lin. ""'
llid - ....
them to fllel Gil
Is I 1e JeJ fur .. Gllice in anirl'
A I q tt fnm lin. IJa7i! that Jill :Ilion 1118)' lie lllldo
fur the nl r• of bet twa to reldwdednl r.dl for tile
clliJdren Ill ~ Cftdt (!IICIIDI by ..... I. 1be ban
~down 31D t. l'be 14 I .eed ID the- rl lile Jane
millie ill ....... lllat
+8 . . . . hr • Glllce
cllilllren
COIId be lr I I tal willllbe I I r &amp;IW the
.
by JC.rpr Qtolk .... 1be Glllce . . .
haft to lie
reqaat wu dealed " · reli!lllllilhed If It bitame ·
Pldltilltlll.
e
1 fa:-llle ban 1D •
Apprvta1 - II- fur • 111e a1ire lrf' 1
antiqllew:taaualt•Oct.lJ.
All fur lllfill .... of
11-ltatlllealdt'Wot J .
(,....1 I Iii
portaUon to the
bus route.

I

the ..

......a

Pile.,

.

Students Needn't Salute Flag ·
COLUMBUS (Ul'I) _Public
school . students can wear
political buttons, refuse . to
salute the nag and have rights
that wUJ be "taken very
seriously by the courts," a aet
of guidelines issued by a
commltteeofthestateBoardof
Education says.

The guidelines for 1Cboo1 tl.· w!i!n die 1i1ir _,a·... ""'ite- niD rl aei Mdlu t f h
..._... n~Uy e.. ;t...... ... ... d • • .
flclalscameo14Gtar---...
study •'"' are being aent to all ldlrllil, .:11 •.., pcor '' 1
- • I 1 ww $ ; a ·
achoo;,.aaw; ·1 •.......
1 57 lilt lie • """".aw ...
ThelltudyDIIlre'lltclesr~
Blk&lt;tCI ... ..,beal •· 2 t4iiC"' •,..
'.illie
school boardl can adopt · a1 hr • 5 I 01 I 1... ill _. 1lllilel rl I Pan _.
0 . . . . I 17 I 3 I . .
''reasollable regulationll" blll I 5 I ial ....
•
aaid they mut be delr llid ,and u;. a •• ...-. ·
" , ' 1 , I II 1 . ..
.
ted in a"---.
.........._
7
5
5
_P
~
...._
adop
UYAm.~
~ C£ I
•
.
4
4

nc
or
rea
·FoUowfag paltem
other Mejp Co~aty cOm-

apeedl and -bly,hlllrt
public, stop sign violation, no
1
In
I . newsplpen,pbyllcalg II ee,
operations license, and faUur~
m~aldea, lbe Zerkle pdmhdlll'lllon Ia Mkllle(IDI'\
off-campns cuildDct, ...:1! fl.
.to stop for pOlice . .There -..:as
. MOnday night hdormaJI~ 11Jreed tbal .there will _be ao
lltudenl kK:ten IDd ' 1' ·dbdione arrest each for squealing
"trick or treat" obiervace In tlluoiamul&amp;y lhllyesr.
allty of lltudentreoorda.
fires, foliowing too closely,
Mayor Joi.a.zenle Ald ' tlle vllll&amp;e woaid 111111
The ri&amp;llt 01 a ·~~~~~~~a Ill
permitting dogs to. rwt loose,
memben ofF___._...., POll us, American l4Jorl,
regutaiebls lfWdiiW ''willlh
•
l
th
•J
..--K
'
In
the bomda and ... .." da tl.
disc arg1~g a gun n · e
In every way polllllle lathe. dllilt of die polt'l IDBIII
village, parking on private ~ · commuity Halloween. (lli'IY Ia Ilea of tbe ''trkk oitrat" '
comnion di!CI!IIC:t'' is cmlllbprdopefi rty, and f.ailure to pay an ~. al&amp;ht. ·
.
·
.·· . · .
::':O~r.a~~~~:.r~r:!
01
me.
'·
several Mete• Co~aty cemmultlelbave dllcoatlallal
''will be taken very ,.,r~ous~y
Parking metA!r collecUons
''trick or treat" lllgbt u a protective mea!Rft far
by .th~ ..;...........
totaled $1,165for the month and
...... ~
the police cruiser was driven
ch0..o.
Scmol tx.rda, it .-id, mq
4,386 miles ~uting the mooth. .
·.··..· ... -.. :-·-·-. ·.·.···.. ···-·-·-· ..... -. ·,· .·.-.. ·.·..·.·.·.·.· .-.-....-.-.-...-.. lldopt rulflr rqW!Intc bllrt4il

./

the

at the · courthouse. was well
attended. He said full support
of the programs offered should
be given.
Kerr indicated that coinmitteea serving the Interests of
merchants, Industry, and
agriculture, should be functioning soon.
Attending the noon luncheon
meeting .at the Meigs Inn were
Kerr, Hargraves, Bob J•cobs.
Grueser, N. W. Compton,
WalterGruaer, Ralph Graves,
Teaftl'd, Earl Ingels, Jack
Carsey, Carolyl\ Thomas,
Beulah Jones and KaUe Crvw.

Homecoming is Friday

.
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
ADMITTED - Rebecca
South , Minersvllle; Charles
carroll, Long Bottom; Rosalie
Clark, New Haven; Mary
Oldaker, Hartford; Leona
Kennedy, Middleport; Wendell
Evans, Cheshire. .
DISCHt.RGED - Gary
Richards, Shirley Bishop,
Mary Williams.

·could be made at the C&amp;O
railway station and at the
Beacon Service Station to be
used for . people employed in
Pomeroy, leaVing the parking
lots open for customers. In
order to transport workers
from the parking areas to
Pomeroy he suggested one or
two cars could transport all
employee!!, thus leaving more .
parking spjlces to customers.
Also discussed was lhe
possibility of erecting another
parking lot.
Bill Grueser reported that
the meeting of the Task Force

'AA'."?.~:;.:.&amp;S.AA~"'&gt;.~'Wi

.
· · -"t

The Court acted In a brief
Ql'der, without comment exCept
.that Justice Wllliam H.
Rehnqulstrefused to disqualify
liimself as requested.
A Justice Department of.
ficial at ,the lime the case
originated, Rehnqulsl was on
. the majority side of a 5-4
decision ~nded down June 29,
1972, which establlshed a
guideline for senatorial immunlty from questioning by
courts and grand juries.
Tbe Alaska seriator, who
arranged for publication of
some of the once secret Penlagon Papers by Beacon Press

~::::~~~i~; !~1~~ -~~:~//&amp;:
T
. ~~~x~k·.~ilim.!':'i.~~""'T
: :,;~«&lt;: - .,;: :; ~*.s"t;':;mOu
~;:;~~:; ;~~:t;:;:;:~;:?.;:;:;~~~ m~~=s~:e:!."':

Bulq.t~commandllidonl)'three~amletswereunder lor petty lllrceny, fighting in

'

·The Farmers. Bank &amp;· Savi~gs Co.

tonight with a ·cbance of
scatten.:l frost in extreme
eastern ~lions, lows in the
upper 31111 to inid 4GB. Partly
cloudy and warmer Wednesday with JUshsJn the 'lk

C Supports School Levy

FLOWER ~ BULBS

'•

Partly cloudy and not as ceid

Ohio's Plan to Help Catholic
Schools Banned by High Court

Plant Them Now!

DUTCH

Weather.

"'-/
PHONE 992-2156

------------~--~----------------~~~

Zona Powell

Died Sunday

.
enttne

Deooted To. De
OfDeMeifP.-M- Area
POMrROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1972

'

the

Bands

.,

,.
at

Now You Know

Cho.u Wants Youths to -Take Over China

~w~~~~.. ~::::;l'::::~~

New Haven SOelal Events

,,

•

'

10- Tbe Dally Selltinel, Middleport-Ptlntroy, o., Oct. 9,1m

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