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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

.

I
'

as ......

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-11ft AIIJ4f.
r r 5 ......

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'SF 1.. W 55 \J 7
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awI 1· ' l!be a T 7z
.clefl •I ill $ P7 ' I ..... ........
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adopledil..
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�.

,..

I

•

Warning
Issued
·.·- Oil.Tax

3..,. ~Dally
~port;-Pomeroy,
0., 01;1.10, 1972 ,
. . Sentinel,
,..

&amp; TH INB S·

Pro Grid Standings ·
.

NF.L L.. gue Stondings
By Unoled Press lnlernotional
National Conferenc_,
Eute.rn Oivlslqn
w. '1. I. pet. pf'pa
DaI las
3 I 0 .7511 81 49
\'lashlnglon
3 1 .o .7511 as ss
N.Y.Gi,ants 2 2 0 .500102116
St ..LoUis . 2 2 o .500 sa 69
Pholadelphia
0 4 D .000 3S 96

BY PAUL . CRABTREE .
'

'

.

Through the courtesy of Jiroadc~ing Magazine, l'~ b&amp;en,
swnmamtng wh.at the critics, natiOnally' have tbougbt of the
new TV shows, and I'U keep doing it again today.
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) ~ The
h
swung widely this seaaon
state Board of 'Education
As noted, critical review&amp; ave
·
'
. dlvergen,1 opinions on abnost every program, and some
with
warned Monday any attempt to
repeai the state income I8I gelling mixed notices.
.
· Ia 1 1y high
would be detrimental to the
Before you assume that a show which scored re I ve
''
2,700,000 children attending with the Crtlics is assuted permanency on the dial, however,let
. pubUc achoola.
me point out that the critics rank no better than third among tile
"Any · effort to el!nlinate · people who resUy decide what will be on lhe three ma~r netpresent financing would be worb.. ·
detrimenta11o the children and
First are the tim~ buyers at tile ad agencies (and their
would jeopardize school pro- uitlmate clients, American business). !'Jld second are tile net- .
· ·
·
· gram&amp; hnmedlately," the work executives who sometimes ordain that a show llhaU go on
'l'ORI'fADO FANS -Om-joyed, )'OD bet!, were Saulhern
board said. "For these (or come off) because - weU, jus! because they're the
Bl&amp;f! fDatball fans YDUIIII and old after their team rallied in
be less tban .a wordllrllellgtla aDd in amy case are aabj~ I rea100s, the .bo&amp;rd encourages executives of the network.
tbe lleCOIId ball to defeat North Gallia 18-8 Friday night in the
to
edlling
lor
clarity
and
Je1711b.
AU
lelten
mllll
carry
a
I
.
support
of
tile
state
Income
YoU,
genUe
viewer,
are
no
better
thsn
fourth.
~or
am
I.
Tornadoes' !)omecoming battle - Picture by Leo HID:
bona fide algnature. N11111e1 may be wilbbeld from . I taz."
Anyhow, herofare bow some of the new offenngt have b&amp;en
lioa
bu will be
led
·1 With 23 of the 24 state board seen -figuratively and literally -In abol!t20major cities:
publica
upon request I
revea lo. anyo.ne I members ..a~n~''· the vote . . M-A.S.H: Elgh~ gOod reviews, two bad ones, one:mlxed. (I .
upon .de pn~. LelteJ'!I must a\\dress !slUt!', not per· I was201nfavorofsupportofthe
riSed becauseldon~muchcarefortblsone.)
·
sooalltles. 4Q,~.hk,
_
I Income tu, one against and ~=dY~can-Sevenb&amp;drevlews-withonlyonemlzed
· Qu-v~c..::
two abstentions. Abstentions
reclation keeping 11 from being declared uniformly bad. (I
•
counted as not againat the tai, app ·'
th 1972 erslon yet lhis year, but I thought last
• •
•
,.
•
1
but tile appropriateness of the haven t seen e
v
.
kinda te)
1
WASHINGTON (UP! ) board taking a oositlon on tile year'sshow,beforethestarfellill,was
cu-•~ed (Tw bi '
I . ·
rThe Rookies : Two good, nine bad, two uUA •
o g
President Nixon's son-in.Jaw
SECRECY AND NEWSPAPERS
may have relied more on
I JBSThue.e bo ard aso
t d surprises here ·
· .
The ABC stations around . here
1 grane
· aren~
ted ewn
'
'
Cleveland city achools a three- . carrying It in prune time, the reviews - as no
- are
Secrecy and newspapers are mortal enemies.
~ campaign rhetoric than cold
. When government is conducted in secret, the ~ ttallslics when he defended the
month extension on a contract generally bad, yet the audiences, as measured by Neilsen, have
people have no ·way of obtaining information ~ administration 's economic
•-e·
·
T
for a $1.7 miUion aeronautics been generally good and are holding up weU in cities where It is
about what happened.
·
2 record last Saturday in Dear Sir:
center due 1o the death of the being shown.) "
,
'· Freedom requires that the people be fully in- ~ Cleveland. ,
1have been keeping up with the so-called ways of preventing architect.
_
Blll Cosby: An ab80llitely-even split, with four good, ~ur
'formed in order to act in their own best interest. ~ Figures obtained from the drug abuse as far as your proposed Coffee House Is concerned.
Parma city schools were bad, and four mlxedr (·A personal disappointment, because I like
Although freedom of the press and the people's ~ President's Council
of
First, before I get into what lfeell must say, I am a prisoner granted a three-month ex- Cosby. Most of lite critics seem Ill Uke hbn, too, but deplore lite
right to know are constitutional gul!fant~, there ~ Economic Advisers Monday at the United States PenltenUary at Marion, Illinois. Many will tension on a $9 miUion project weak writing on the show.)
ill no guarantee that government buail!en wiD al- ~ sl)owed Edward Finch Cox was
·
displeaSUJg,
. no1 appropnate,
.
· 1y , due to complexities associated
Temperatures Rising: Three "'
•ood,,ei""l
sunp
...,. bad. (A mild. surwaya be conducted in the open.
~ off the · mark when he com- fe~J what I have to say is
h
h 'because of my being a prisoner. But I do want it to be known with community and staff prise, because.tbls was supposed to be a ''nothing" sort of show.
HiatoricaUy, it has been the role of newspapers ~
pared
the
growl
rates
of
t
.
ed m
. helping Involvement.. necessary for At least
' afewpeoplellkel't,itwouldseem.)
.
.
to keep a watch on government and public offi- ~ u. s.oeconomy under the Nixone there is no personal feeling lnvoIved . I am mterest
1
Maude: Six good, three bad, and two mixed. (Better than it
dais by reporting what happens at .public meet- ~ administration with those of with drug abuse. I have experience with drug abuse, and I feel I proper P ammg.
In other board action deserves,ifyouaskme-andyoudldn't.)
·· lnp and diaeuBBions affecting the public interest. ~ the other major industrial should explain my opinion of it.
Only when people are fully informed about ac- ~ powers. ')'he statistics indicate
let me lllart'by saying :
Mondsy: ·
. Paul Lynde: Two good, five bad, and two mixed. (In fairness
tlolil of their public officials can they make' sound ·~ that ~ven Nixon has been a bit
In the first place we live in a social order, or under a social
- Woodridge local schools to Lynde no-favorite of mine, most of his critics admitted he
(Summit County) were
' .
ood
'edlan)
·
judgments and cast i::telligent votes.
;;!. misguided.
order, which Is basicaJ!y anti-euphoric. And althOUgh this social granted permission 10 place a personally 18 a g com
·
And only in this ws.y can democracy function
In his campaign speech, Cox, order is rapidly becoming obeolete (due to fundamental changes $3,500,000 bond l1!8ue ·on the
+++
ll
and·people keep the m~.elves free.
~
husband of Tricia Nixon. aaid: in thl', ecooomlc and teclmologtcal underpinnings of Its culture), ballot and Wayne Township
In case you care, the ratings thus far are Iota Y
local schools (Montgomery meaningless, because of so many blockbuster movies and other
~ "When President Nixon took the people who control this soci~ty - make and enforce its rules CoUnty)
~3:o:=:r~mM..:w.=W:m¥.@'#&amp;:&gt;W/.~&gt;'..m?W/-~.W.97tY/m'/..f. OV'er, the United Sta~ had the - are definitely from the "old school." This is the group that still
were given permission speciala being 'shown to hype the ratings at the beginnmg of the
lowestrateof industrial growth controls and it lstryingtomaintaln control the only way It knows to submit a $1 930 000 issue to season. All It reaDy did was to make the esrly ratings a mlsh- ·
and the highest rate of inflation how.
the voters. ' '
ml!,'h from which nothing worthwhile could be deduced.
in the free world. President
Thill covers a lot of ground, but I am speaking only on drug
_Federal work studY funds
And so ·there you have it, TV fans. Television shows, like
~-···
Nixon has now reversed that a~use. These people actually think that a coffee house, a were apProved for Ashtabula heautY,veryobvloustylleintheeyeoftbebeholder.
+++
trend. Now we have the highest recreation cen.ter, time I,! prison, giving this or that to his son or Joint Vocational School, $2,543;
rate of industrial growth and daughter, or whoever, will cutdown on drug abuse.
canton city sChools, • ; DayON THE TV DIAL: We may have a lltUe reverse snobbery
lowest rate of inAation."
Let it be known we have aU this already. So as far as the ton city schools, $42,829; Tus· for the ultra-rich kids who attend the elite prep scoools of the
By Helen and Sue Boatel
But the council's figures coffee house is concerned, that's just what you have: a coffee ·· caraw:as Valley local schools East, but the plain truth is that many wind up running the
suhowted thast Japan11• hnol "'the house.
$1,401; and Wellston city country. A typical boy Is interviewed on DateUne: America at
1
01
,
ANYONE roa RECORD llliEAXING1
taleS, w
ave e
· The answer to these questions are beyond the scope of what I schools, $1,153. ·
.
8:30, WMtJL.TV ... MarshaU footbaU highlights at 9:30, same
Pe8r SUe:
fastest economic growth rate have said; but is there a point here anywhere?
-A transfer of terrttory was spOt ... And then an opera, "The Old Maid and the Thief," at 10,
d
be'
led
approved
from Ashtabula Area. also WMUL-TV
R'u big fad 110tlld here to break a silly record, lil!e holding in l!l72. of the big industrial
1
My point is that more an more young peop eare tng
district to the Buck·
·
a ldlllmger tban IIIIYOIIe elle. or a college donn floor keeping powers. Japan's economy will and I Will say definitely led - by the people from the old school. city schMI
-,
boom
ahead
at
an
8
to
8.5
pet.
eye
Local
School·
District
of
the haD pbCIIe in cmlinuous lll!le lew fiw days and nighll, no
pace this year while the
All these people are saying :
Ashtabula County.
llkineea, no flanl,upe.
"real," or non-inflated growth
"Here is recreation, use It, here's a coffee house, use it, or .
...... boa d oted t
·
bl ..
- .,...,
r v
o sus1'm looklr~ for a new recml to break - and I'm really not
'U
in the U. S. economy will you get mto trou e.
.
pend for 90 days the teacher
farlaldJig the ltl!gellllhower in biatory or playing Jlngopong 85
q&gt;eallllre between 6 and 6.6
Sure, they speak about ~ha~ . drugs, will, ~o, a!id ther saY. certlllcate of· Mrs, Jennifer
hiKO,.
Q . II ."Wi~-,~~
i:'1°rHO bf''i
P!ct~ ·'ll Clilulcll spolt~sma'n told · ~ ·don't do this. or that.".Thenthey say,;! Stay· away fro~. hbn or, ;:&amp;en\ fc)p ':l\avtng "relll~ea · a .
:fouk1 you suggeSt orie that doesn't need an that exertion or tiP!.
., ,... ,, .. ·· "her;andyou1Jigrow~tobeallheyoung,rnan. prwoma.n .,, "., "•n.•teaching·posltlon af!N'JUJy 10·'
\' \.
~up ,our-? - J;AZY'REOORD BREAKER
Nixon was property cautious
How many of us are guilty of saying this? "Stay away from 1972, without consent of th~
on this point when speaking to hbn or her." We atay away and what have we ~ne? Where's the Circleville Board of Education,
Dear LRB:
TUESDAY. OCT. 10, 1972
finance ministers (rom around help?
.
to •accept a pollitlon In the
Why don't you write a mile~ong leiter? II you use adding
6:00
News
3,
4,
S
, 10, 15.
the world at the annual
The history of mankind Is one of continuous development Lancaster School Dlatrlct.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 15, 6, 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Growing
IIIKIIine rolls ud tate • month, JOI! oould euily break the 1!154 meeiing of the International from existing or bare necessities to the life of freedom.
Him Up 33.
wd Ilia Brooklyn girl wbo wrule a six .ten~ letter ID her
Monetary Fund (IMF) Sept. 25.
You can build all the coffee houses and give an this and that
7:00 - News6, 10; Whars My LineS; Elec. Co. 20; Andy Griffith
aoidla' boyfriend In Korea. - SUE .
15; Beat The Clock 4; I've Got a Secret 13; Truth or Con·
At that ·llme, the President to the young boy or girl, but unless you search and seek the love
The Almanac
sequences 3; Saint 15.
+++
sai~ : ."We .are now ex- and mderstanding be needs, he or she has to carry all the load,
By United Press loternatlonal
7:30- Masterpiece Theatre 33; This Is Your Life 3; Doctors on
NOI'EFRCJMREIEN: But no one caD lop the world's reaird per1encmg one of the lowest not on their back - because that can be taken off - but Inside
Call 4; To Tell The Truth 6; Price is Right 8, 10; Beat the
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 10,
Clock 13.
.
for SHOR1'tJ8T letter ezcluqe: VICtor Hugo, m holiday, rates of inflation 11nd highest where It takes quite a struggle to get it out.
' the 284th day of 1972 with 82 to
S:OO - Bonanza 3, 4, 15; Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8,
••lied to llllowl!olr hllnewi!Oftl,,"lei Mllerablea" W1ll dGing.
For the child who is m!J:ed up or has problems he can't follow.
rates ot: real ecomomc g~owth
10; Age of Anxiety 13.
Tol*puhlilher,hewrote, "?"'I'hereplyf 1'!" - H.
of any industrial nallon.
handle, and can't seem to find anyone that can, coffee houses,
The moon is between its new S:30 - Hawaii Flve-0 S, 10; Movie " Night ,of Terror" 6, 13;
Dateline America 33.
+++
recreation, materialistic things can't help. When a person has a phase ~nd first quarter.
9:00Bold Ones 3, 4, 15.
lle8r Helen 8ild Sue:
The morning stars are Venus, 9:30 - Marshall U. Sports 33; Movie "Visions" S, 10.
hidden problem, drinking coffee or playing sports might delay it.
I eli 1 it peaple II a boliby. And I've COOle mto IIO!llelblng:
Mars and Saturn.
10:00 - NBC Reports 3, 4, IS; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13; Old
But It won't cure it.
Maid &amp; The Thief 33.
The
evening
stars
are
Mercu·
Aboat '10 pet. of mnmety Cll9et weiCIJI people - 1:011ll!)icuGuly
Coffee House is just what you got!
11
:
00
- News, \'leather, Sports 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
back-beed.lly qll 'ionIa: Are lmcd-kneed Jlft''!OI* bllrn with
11 :30 - Dick Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15i VirginianS; Movie. ·
James Stltt-28634-238, P.O. Box 1000, Marlon Illinois, 62959. ry and Jupiter.
a ••
lo pt Ill (.......'*18 In their cell' 4111ritwon,
Those born on this date are
"Sweet Bird of Youth" 10; Movie "Sailor of the King" 13;
P .s. Please feel free to write.
11 :30- Dick Cavett6; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; VIrginianS.
. under the sign of Ubra.
Pit I JW, •IIIOIIt baft Wli8lell]r large hipl and wallb, -ller
1:00 - Your Health 4.
.
·
- *"'a) or does t11e1r welgld p!Jib their legs out Ill line? 1:30 - News, Weather 4; Local News 13.
· DARWIN
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11,1972
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6:15- Farmtlme 10; Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
'1'1!11 J011 wbol Jill! do: taiJe your laDy to the relea!'cb
6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Urban League 10.
I tmeul of .,_ laeal caDov and maybr JDD'II be the iJ&gt;. . as of Sept. 30 tot a led
7:00 - Today, 3, 4, IS; CBS News 8, 10; News6.
7:30
- Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
"'pt«· Ill a new "weiCflllng game." - HELEN'
$21U,292.72, according to the
13.
+++
monthly rzport of ClerkS:OO- Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Timmy &amp; Lassie .6.
Do\R:
Treasurer Gene Grate to
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Bob
Stigwood
who
brought
."Jesua.
Christ
8:30Jack LaLonne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room 8
WIIM Mom m11, .... Ia IIJe doe:sn'I llnow, bill llflhe• lhe did. Middleport Council Monday
DON rr ALL, PAYUP!
"SUperstar" to records, stage, and now the 9:00- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donohue IS; What Every Woman
Me too! - SUE
night. Expenditures totaled
NEW YORK (KF'S) _ A limousine service screen, Is an Australlan who went to London at
Wants to Know 3; Concentration 6: Capt. Kangaroo 8;
. Friendly Junctlort 10; Ben Cosey 13.
+++
J33,956.94, receipts w~r e
here is tipping its dirty mitt : tells slow-pay tile behest of a transplanted leUow Australlan 9:30- Elec. Co. 33; To Tell the Truth 3; Jeopardy 6: Hazel&amp;.
P..S. Beni'l- nae u-,: exln111elmodt.Jinea might
who made him talent agent for all hlsllhoirs - 10:00- Dinah Shore 3, IS; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild
III!IR ' • ic or GdJer 111rm1 or eam. dilfiCult. 1'11111 the · $l~;eceipta, disbursements, clients to pony up - or The Godfather will be
8, 10; Dick Van D~&lt;e 13.
·
t1y Iost them. For~.....a
.... lo scrounge · 10:30 - Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donohue 4; Price Is Right&amp;, 10;
pa- wwld ta.llaflltrm up, especially artiUild wailt lllld hips? rapectively, and the balance 'round to collect ... Yule be congratulating Pia but promp
Split Second 13.
in 'each Ill the funds at the end Undstrom (lngrim Bergman's sprig) . on her around, he fell Info the recordlrig business,
- REUll'i AlQ) SlJE
11
00
: - Sale of Century 3, IS; Love American Style 6: Gambit 8
ol the 111G11th were: general, mama~ood about Cllristmas Day ... We hear where serendipltously, a couple of y,;,•••sters
·-.,.
10; Password 13.
'
,•
$1,161.13, $2,742.o7, $34,439.03; Hizzoner called State ComptroUer Al'thur Levitt brought him a project which Interested him; 11 :30-;- HollywilodSquares4, 1S; Love of LileS, 10; Bewltch0d6,
13, Sesame St 33.
.
· ,
cemetery, $18&amp;.10, $512.71 , to ask an opinion of Jawn's ch8nces to become ."J.C.S." of course- which now has sold more
than
...
•miiUonln
re-"-'aloilep
DllusmllU~·In
12:00Jeopardy
3,
15;
Password
6;
Bob
,
Braun's
50.50
Club 4;
$l;m.M; fife equipment, $10, guvnor. Llndssy didn't like the reply he'd asked
...,
~"'"" ,.. ,..~
••~
News
13;
Contact
8;
News
10.
.
1
$44.11, f469.74; swimming pool, for ... Italy b&amp;med "I'he Sensual Man" book- atage and coocert productl0118,
plus musical 12:30- Split Second 6; Search for Tomorrow a, 10; Who. What,
Where 3, IS; Elec. .Co. 33,
$10UO, $2W.83 ; · $3,994 .23; naUonwide .:. New toy cars in the Yule sales royalties, the Unlver881 picture being filmed 1n
Israel
and
ree"""
aloog
toward
more
prof(•-.
l:OO
- News, Weather, Sports3; All My Chlldren6, 13; It's Your
planning commission, no even have safety belts to prove m!grs. haVe
~.,.
..
Beta;.Green Acr" 10; Watch Your Child 15; French Chief 33.
More Australians -the group called The 1:20- Lucille Rivers 3.
receipts, $161.63; $402.76; educational hearts ... TV clownette Joanne
Bee
Gees, Maurice, Robin and Barry Glbb who 1' 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
· street maintenance, $2,111.14, Worley and actor Roger Perry toUr the hin·
World Turns 8, 10; DesiAnlnA Women 33.
$2,563.1M, $13,983.72; sanitary terlands in "Goodbye, Olarlle" but ,don't say moved Down Under when very YIIWII' and 2:00- Days of Our Llv.es 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
sewer, U.047.68, $~.607.11 , goodbyeofforonstage ... N. Y.Greekjournallst couldn~ make It big even after 13recorda ... AU
Douglas 6; Guiding Light a, ID; Bridge 33.
horrible
Oops,
,...,.,
admit:
"People
even
2:30
- Dating Game 13; Doctors 4, 15; Edge of Nlght ·8 10"
• $%3,002 . 0~; water. $6,824.86, and Met diva ·Teresa Stratas toasted each other
w-1
Sportscope 33.
.
' '
$~.513.07 , $25,729.07; water in champagne (eeaeeglah) at Monstgoore.
· stopped us on the street and advised us to give 3:00 - Ar&gt;Qther World 3, 15; General 1-(ospltal 6, 13; ~ove
meter ilep&lt;mllrusts, $240, $227,
Nixon's lnt'l ecumel)ism seems to be up." Instead they went to London where, Jan- · Splendored Thing 8, 10; Masterpiece ThNtre 33.
·
3
M,3Z9.%3 ; sanitary sewer working: the stylish St. Regis changed the name ding at tile foggy London clocka, they were
' ~~~~e~;m1ot~.ton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
escr"" • $834.04, no disbur· and mood of Its jewel-box La Bolte to La Bolte BpOtted by another muillcal group, Indigent but · ,j; OO - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. ~3; Love 4
semenll, $59,&amp;n.a&amp;; fire house Russe, with food, music. Slavic scenes painted with instrumenta, trying to sleep near aome
American Style 13; Mtorv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6, Gilligan's
...-.
· Island 8; Movie "Broken ArrfiN" 10
C'Onstruction, no receipts, just for the llhift by artist Nino D'Onofrio; Who railroad Ira"""
4: 25 - Sports Club 6.
·
·
.
$16,344, $17,123.40; general he' Ask Ed ard G· Robinson Sinatra and
"Go
back!"
the
reclining
and
decUned
4:30
I
Love
Lucy
6;
Andy
Griffith
15;
Petticoat
J~mctlon 3; ·
bood retirement no receipts
·
w
·
•
Mtorv Griffin I; Daniel Boone 6.
,_..
·
·
ed them." Youcan 'I rna kelthere." 5:00-Mr.
Rogers33;DlckVanDykelkPonderosa3 4·"-nlel
nq disbur menta $17 025 69 ' N.elson RockefeUer - IIley bought Nino's daubs groupwarn
se
' , ' · · . ... Or The Vatican; he painted an pfflclal Pope Maurice Glbb said ''It was rlllht out of MacBoone 6.
,
' ' ""'
!lent 17 Calls made 1 18 me!
Paul portrait ... AI the St. Regis t'11ai.!onette, beth," but no Shakespearean · tragic ending 5: ~SM~ir•ll Dillon 1s; Elec. Co. 33; Dragnet a; Gomer Pyle
The
Middleport Fire Judy Garland's daughter Lorna Luft's here: they landed on &amp;·Monday and by Friday 6;00 - -Truth or Conseq. 6; News3, 4.1, 10, 15; Hlthayoga33. "
Depertment answered 17 calls description by an intimate li: "She has hl!r tile aforenoted canny "J.C.S." br•tnldd . 6.30-. News 3, u, a, 10,15; 8rldge 33; 1 Dream of Jeannle13.
..., News6, 1~; Wlwtrs M~ line 8; Milestones of Pr0111 en 33;
' in September, Bob E. Dyer, mother'uenlltlvlty, her slst!!"'s speaking vplce Stlgwood signed them 1o a five-year ~ct. The 7: oo_
31 Beat The Block 4; Anything You Can Do
rest
has
been
musical
and
fiBca1
blstcry
for
the
{{~~~~~seq:
...,N: .
frre dllef, reported to council - and her father's temper."
.. 7:30- To Tell The Trutll6; The Juctae tO; Eplsodt: Action 33; .
lllllll'wlll&amp; bt . , t..AI Jl'li IJ/' , "''-llfiMliJ, ~ Mondlly fll&amp;h~
Federico FeUinl's getting bunk with .the lads.
The &amp;OoQQed ''anti-war" gang that broulht
. Pollc:e.Surg101)3,4; PraleCtorsl; I!Ntthe Clock 13. ,
.
m ...
9o
'l'bere were lour fire calls, criUcs woo alallhed hiiJ tut. few ntcb .. An· . ·the three
war
prlsonets
back
''rtllly
~on
8.
~:Adem-12
4;
Affair
33;
Paul
L~
6,
13;
C.
rot
Burnell
I.
7 !1\c: •: , ... 7 ..,...-:;...
lndudlng one falae alarm, and llclpallng their negatives
for his
1
.,.
a
ef · ,_ JJ lint aid calla, nine in town autobiographical ' FeUinl's Rome," he dub&amp; . them" to decry the war and tnock Uncle Sun 1:30- BIMc:ek 3, ~ 15; Movie "Litulenllnt Schusltr'l Wife" 6,
•- 7J .., , , . . , '• Rlf
i4W!i ..id fow out of, town; and one · ll)em an a "Str,an"" llrted
.
- If they are
and used'every wll•lo mike them feel aullty of · ,,~::.Medical Con tori, 1o; CMpter33l3
··
·
-~.
·,,
D' #-If ,
'
for an accident Involving a Iilarrled,ashusbandslheyarestlllcritlcs .. They their own happyeJ!dlng ~ llmlhds more Ill 10:00 - Stllrc:IIJ, 4.15: Julie Andrews 6; cannon,, 10; Soul33; 1
our ladl are In VIet 01ng pr1ao11s QDly Oile feU
. Dream ol Jennie 13.
·
.
A ·
motor vehicle. AU of the fire become crazy wit~ power and omnipotence."
for It
'retold
;u' "-"
11:00-News3,~6.I.10,13,· 1S
~
• we
; .,., woq .-oq • ....,, 1llln&amp; 11:30- Johnn~non 3. ·~ .is; Dldt Clvelt 6· Yl'f!!an 1·
I' r1
·. caDs
were In
The
they don'thave
haveMastroianni,
either, here,
· ' - .. helplea
_ _. .......willkdliic'l
~traveled
265 miles
"llorna"will
Magnani
Uvea for enemy propqanda.
Movita "A
Ia Born" 10: ''Whitt Witch Doctor"
' ·
'
1:00"""'
..
.
.
wttlt 10.3 man hours spent on and Gore Vldlll - cameo-playing tllemselws.
1:30 - News 13.
I
tilt fin calli otdy.
.
.

•

Rhetoric

Central Division

.
Green Bay 3
Detroit
3
Mi~nesola I
Chtcago
0

"'

•

•

•

•••

••••••• ......

..

•• • :- ••• •·

• • . :- : ••• :1 ••• ••

There Are Times When

Passas,~re~N~~~4:~ WH

September

Spending

I

a•

;====P='Ii;..~-~r.=.--~-~·~=I •

tow~.

,DEi.iJxE CHAMPION.SUPER
.
,BELT • ORIGI~ EQUIPMENT
'

.,

assisted tackles, also got three,
along with Uneb&amp;cker Randy
Gradlshar, who made eight ·
tackles and assisted on nine
more.

Fed. Ex. Tax
·2~34

E78-14·· ......... ;. '22.83
F7i-14101000000000:0 '23.68
G78-14........... , '24.11

'2.52
'2.69
'2.93

H78-14 ,,,;.,,. '24.97

G78-15 .... , .. , ... '24.54 ·'2.78

USED CARS

·&amp;a DODGE

OORONET
'2 DR. H.T:
V-8 motor, auto. trens. and
power steering.

'1095

,

.

J78-15;,,;,,,,,
'27.96 '3.12
.
'

WHITE WALLS SUGHTLY HIGHER
APPEARANCE BLEMISHES 'ONLY
c

'

REED ON INJUitED USI'
NEW . YORK (UPI)-WUIIB
Reed, the New York Knicb'
captain and star center, was
placed on the injtnd --11at
Mondsy and mUll mias his
team'! flr8t five games of the
National Buketball
.Association seam.
Reed, who Will be replaced
by Jerr Lucaa, will not be
ellglble to play until Oct. 21
when the. Knickl meet
PliUade]Jlbla.
The Kniclls also annomced
thlll Ed Mast, a &amp;-foot, t-4nch
backup forward, has . been
traded to Atlanta for a 19'13
· eecond.dfaft choice.

•·.
Way of Doing Bualnets."
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GMAC FtNANCINQ ·" · ·•
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Monday thru Friday- Sp.m. IIIlO p.m.
Saturday-9 a.m. tilll p.m.
Sunday I p.m. til 8 p.m.

The Daily ·Sentinel
Euc. u .
ROBERT HOEFLICH.
City ldllor

•,

lanett
" You'll Like Our Quality ·

Karr &amp;.Van

YOUR

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· This w~~·· 5fl'cl•l

.

University of Wisconsin
football Coach John Jardine
put his squad through a 25
minute practice in sweat
clothes and said the entire
team was ready to take on
Indiana Saturday.
Indiana Coach John Pont
said hiS team "played good,
solid defense in their 1().2
trilllllph of what was being said
about them and they decided to
do something about it," Pont
said.
Sixth rated Michigan faces
its biggest defensive test of the
season when It plays Michigan
Stale Saturday, Coach Bo
Schembechler said.
"We're going to have to
play a mlstake.free game.
When Michigan State doeSn't
make mistakes, the other team
doesn 't score," he said.

~

1

"Against a team like thB ~
Pirates you just j11111't .lllllle ..! '
litUe ntlstakes Hlte that" lit ~
said "Y
•t
' lain "!
.
ou can comp
•.
about good or bad breob. A:'.
good team · akes 1'Ill 0wn •
m
:;.
lreaks ·"
·
·
•:
Someone asked Roberto cie- ;.
mente if he would prefer to ;;
..,. ()a" d' Det !tin til ~'
ID=• . ouan or
ro
e -:
World Series.
•
"I'm not even thinking aboUt ; ,
th t " h
lled "!'
·~Inking&amp;
'
boe treCinpcinnat.1 tbm
w•
au
.
, e
Reds.They'reagoodclub,ye:o,
even good enough lotaketwolp
· fro
"
a row m us.
That's the kind of tlllnklng
Sparky Anderm IS looking for
· ·

riRE .SALEI

I

Ll 111

Raiders
Triumph

Jor

:Television~L~g

• .,

:·1 didn't think he (Chaney)
could get the ball," SanguiUen
said after the game, "but 1 ran
.
1or a111 was \torth• anyway."
New Orleans .
0 4 0 .000 54 136
SanguiUen's homer over the
American Conference
left
center field fence pulled
· Eastern Division Pittsburgh
to Wl'thin one run of
w.. l. t. pet. pf pa
Miam i
4 0 0 1.000 97 54
Cincinnati, and the Pirates
N.Y.Jets 2 2 0 .500122111
went to work again in the
Buffalo
2., 2 0 .. 500 89 92.
seventh
to tie the game:
New Eng 2 2 0 .soo 66112
Rl
'
chl
'
e
H·'-·r reached fiirst
Baltimore 1 3 0 .2SO 74 77
''"""
when Reds' .reliever Pedro
Borbon knicked hbn on the
•
foot. Sanguillen moved hbn to
second with a lllngle, and both
runners advanced on a·
sacrifice by Gene Alley.
Clay CarroU then replaced
Borbon and intentionally
walked pinch hitter VIc
Dllvalillo to load the bases.
CLEVELAND (UP!) Bubb&amp; Pena would be removed
ReunieStennettbeatoulahtgh
Cleveland Browns Coach Nick from the starting lineup. Pena,
bouncer and Hel:l!er crossed
Skorich says some changes will a rookie from Massachus~tts,
H.O US T 0 N ( U PI ) - stepping out a little bit. I tbe._plate to tie the score.
be made as a result of the 31·7 "has problems," Skorich said. Defensive tackle Art ThomB of couldn't believe it. I just sliced
Both Cincinnati runs came in
Joss to the Kanlias,aty Chiefs.
"I wasn't happy with his Oakland was elated. Coach Bill tbrougb. It was easier the the third when Chaney Jed off
An unhappy Skorich Monday performance on the field," he Peterson of Houston was second tbne because I was
singled out the offensive Une added.
embarrassed. Quarterback ·looking for it."
for lack of blocking. It was reFullback Bo· Scott, absent Dan Pastorlnl of Houston was
The second time was in the
.
BpOnsible for star runner Leroy from the Cleveland backfield frustrated and quarterback third quarter on a {:1-yard
Kelly's limited yardage this for the past two games because Daryle Lamonica of Oakland attempt that was the Oilers'
1
•
season, he said.
of a pulled hamstring, should had a "ho-hum" attitude.
last scoring, opportunity. The
He also revealed tackle Bob be ready to start against the
The Oakland Raiders defeat· Houston defense, which played
McKay, out of the lineup since Bears, SkOrich said.
ed the Houston Oilers, ~.on well, had given the .Oilers of·
suffering a broken leg against
Scott would replace Ken the Monday night nationaUy fense three chances to soore in
the lofinnesota Viktnga in an Brown, who fumbled four televised game which was so the first half by blocking and
exhibition game, "will hopeful· tbnes against the Chiefs.
bad that 'three fourths of the recovering two fumbles in
Jy" be on the field Sunday when
However Skorich said he standing-roomo&lt;Jnly crowd of Raiders territory.
'.
the Browns face the Chicago would continue
to use Brown 51,378 in the Astrodome walked
But the Oilers missed every,
Bears.
and Reese Morrison on kickoff out midway through the fourth chance-wasting one on a fake
CHICAGO (UPI) - Injured
If McKay does start, John returns "because they're the . quarter.
field goal and pass that fell football players at Purdue may
Dermll'ie would move from best we have at that position."
Lamonica, who said he incomplete and another when soon outnumber those ready
tackle to his usual left guard
Skorlch credited the defense played a 80-80 game, was tlie Th\)llls intercepted Pastorinl for action . Veteran center Bob
position and veteran Gene for "bearing · up fairly well offensive star for the Raiders, on the Raiders 26.
Hoidahl was listed Monday as
Hickerson would move to right against the pressure of eight throwing two touchdown , "!was embarrassed, l'U tell doubtful
the Boilermakers
guard, where he has spent turnoyers by the offense. He passes and completi!lg 12 of 26 you," Peterson said, shaking Big Ten game at Minnesota
most of his 15 seasons with the said the turnovers kept the for 166 yards. He hil Fred his head. "When you can't Saturday.
Browns, Skorich said.
defense on the field most of. the Biletnikoff on a 16-yard scoring score from the two-yard line,
Coach Bob DeMoss said
Skorich said if all the first half and "that probably passandrookie Mike Siani on a you ain't got a chance. .We three other players were
changes were made, guard took its toll."
26-yarder.
didn't even get a field goal- scheduled for operations. They
Clarence Davis scored 8 nothingtogi~eourboysallft." were Nick Cannone, a defen·
third touchdown on a 14-yard Halden Had Trouble
sive back with a broken
run and reserve quarterback
But the Raiders had trouble, collarbone, Larry Degennaro,
Ken ~bier passed one yard to too, most of the first half, a defensive back with a knee
tight end Bob Moore for the having only a 46-yard field goal injury and Tim Maloney, a
with a shoulder
finlji,,WIS!Jdi)l"'l· fl91h ,R,, ,IIJe by George Blanda until the linebacker
.
last two l!!'l!~lfS were'oet up )ly. final 10 Seconds of the half: . mjury.
·
Then Villapiano intercepted a
The status of lowa.'s first
OOLUMB
(UP!) - Ohio
Hayes said a balance be- Interceptions...
Defensive Star
Pastorinl pass on the Houston string quarterback senior Kyle
State football coach Woody tween running and passing is
Thoms,
a
6-5,
26().pound
four·
28 and returned it to the 16.
Skogman was also still in doubt
Hayes said Monday quarter· the key to his Bucks' success.
On tile next play, Lamonica Monday.
back Greg Hare had hl8 "best
"We can give confusing year veteran from Syracuse,
Dr . Harvey Feldick, the
game yet" against California problems to the opposing was' the defensive star. He hit Blletnikoff in the corner of
blocked
both
of
Houston's
field
the
end
zone
on
a
pal!lthey
had
team
physician said Skogman
last Saturday and declared defenses," he said.
Scout Esco Sarkkinen de- goal attempts, Intercepted a worked on all week and It was who was Injured early in the
that despite his well-known
style. of play, he was not livered a brief report on ·the pass and deflected a pass that 10..0 with folD' seconds to go, Hawkeyes 2W loss lo Purdue'
against the pass.
Bucks' next opponent, winless Otto Slsttunk, the other defen- Blanda kicked a $-yard field Saturday, has "a mild knee
slve tackle, intercepted on the goal in the third quarter and sprain with a bad bruise. He
'.'Regardless of what attitude Dlinols.
I take on pa"es, there are
Although the Dlini are Q..4, 14, to set up Davis' touchdown. Oakland sealed' It with three said Skogman will be kept out
The Oilers offense was so touchdowns in the final period. of practice another day or two.
times when the pass is need- Sarkkinen said, they are "dan·
Pastorlnl had the worst night
Norlhwestern held line
ed," Hayes said at his weekly gerous" because of their 36 Inept that it couldn't score
from the Oakland 2 after Ward of his career, completing only scrimmages in preparallon for
'press luncheon.
·•
different formations.
"We hit some big passes that
"Illinois makes painful Walsh blocked a Jerry Depoy.r three of 21 passes for 31 yards their home opener against
were very, very decisive in the games 'for us," he said . ter punt in the second quarter. W!Jile having four intercepted Iowa ·
game. We're developing better "They're physical, ex- Pastorinl trled right end on the and being thrown three times · "Iowa's a much improved
balance than at this tbne a eructating battle~. We have to first play, but was thrown l)ack for 26 yards. Reserve Kent Nix football team from last season,
to the three by Unebacker Phil also was sacked once for six especially defensively," Coach
year ago."
keep our guard up."
For Hare's performance, the . Unebacker Rick Middleton VUiaplano, and on tb.e next yards and the OUers finished Alex Agase said.
Both teams are hoping for
Cumberland, Md., redhead and cornerback I.Du Mathis play,a blitzing Gus Otto nailed with a minus one yard passing.
"We ...just did nothing their first conference win.
was gl~en three Buckeye each received three Buckeye Pastorinl on the \1.
On fourth down, Thoms rigbt," Pastorlnl said.
leaves for his hebnet, one for leaves· for their work against
blocked
a 24-yard field goal
BUelnikoff, who played for
being named offensive back of california. Safety Rick Seifer!,
the week by the team coaches. who made nine solo and four attempt by Skip Butler. It was Peterson at Florida State nine
easy, Tholll8 said later.
years ago, had a tip for his old
"The guard opposite me was coach. "TeU hlm to play Rhett
firing out, which he wasn't Dawson (an Oilers rookie
· ~q~poMcl to do," Th011l8 said, receiver from Florida State).
referring to rookie Solomon. He needs somebody to catch
Freelon. "He was almost the l!all."
.

Generation Rap

I

•

IDMssedor
. ganloto~~ baRennsemt'e"l'StJe~
""''"
or
.... speedy San .0
nett . ...e
gw en,
however, beat Morgan's relay .
throw to first, allo""••
pinchGen CJin .. -..,
t
runner
e
es o score
from third with whal proved to
be the wlnn'."" run.
Ttedi:Sewnlh -

with a single, moved to second
onagroundoutandscoredona month, had pitched only five
inning&amp; since Sept, 2 and was
single · by Morgan . After hopingforagoodgameagainst
Morgan stole second, Bobby lite Pirates.
h' • lso
Tolan singled un m a .
"I didn't want to jeopardize
Pittsburgh manager BJU Vir· the K!Uil
. · e with three innings to
don pom
' ted to a throw' from go," Nolan said "uietl• of hl8
~
'
outfielder Stennetl which · departure from the game.
nailed Johnny Bench at home
"! did my best for six inplate in the fo· urlh m
' ning· as a nings '-·t 1't just
'I
d
' ..,
wasn goo
deciding play.
. enough. I didn't want to be a
"I think if he hadn't gotten hero, but I've always expected
Bepch, it would 'have been a a lot .of myself ·and 1 expected
much more wide open game,"
ds
.
moretoy.Iguel!ltbat'swhy
VU"don said.
·
it hurts so much."
TurnlllgPolilt
"SmiUngTomotrow"
Ander9011, was in complete
Anderson remarked after the
with Vlrdo
ha
agreement
non I I game that he didn't haw much
point.
to smUe about, but added,
"That was the whole thing," "I've already predicted l'U be
he said, ''when he didn't knock smiJ;no tomorrow."
- ...
John in from third base with
Anderson also predicted near
IIQbodY out. That's a must." tile end of the season .that the
The Reds put two men 'on in playoff series would go five
the fourth inning with one out, games, and he's 'hoping to be
but were mable to increase proven a prophet.
their 2-0 lead.
Reds' leftflelder Pete Rose,
"That was the turning point always an optlmlst, held the
of the gaine, no doubt about It," same feelings regarding· the .
Anderson said.
tesm's chll!lceS.
!Ale of the most disheartened "We're goMa forget It," the
Reds Monday was Nolan, who veteran fielder said of the loss.
removed . hbnself from the "We ain't gorina die."
game after six innings when Pete , was also wUling to
his arm llliffened.
admit that the Reds beat
Nolan, plagued with arm and themselves in the close game
shoulder problems for over a Mondsy.

Hit Hard
By Grid InjUries

"

'

SangulUen hit a shot to Reds'
shortstop Darrel. Chancy who

p u...·d ue

1

•

Pittsburgh 2 2 o .500 82 79 CINCINNATI (UP!) - Dock behind ID beat the Reds, 3-2, in
Cleveland 1 2 o .500 71 80 Ellis strictly a beer man has Monday's pivotal third game
Houslon
1 J o .250 SolllS
'
'
. Western Division
.
the . opportunity 19 _pop the and .Mamy S.nqulUen, Pitts•
.
w. I. I. pet. pi pa champagne fpr the Pittsburgh burgh's goodoflltured, goodKansas C•ly J 1 o .7511 106 68 Pirates today
h
ed
.
· the k
San Diego 2 I I .625 a!f' $5 Up two g~es lo on.e tbe umor recetver, was
ey
Oakla~d
z 1 1 .625 99 65 .
• ·· figure.
.
.
Denver
I 3 o ·.250' 78120 Pirates need only one more ' HenotonlyputthePirateson
Monday's Results
playoffvictory over the Cincin- the hoard with their first run
Oakland 34 Houston o
nati Reds and it's aU over
IOnlysgandme ~chGeduled)
Cincinnati Manager Spar.ky whthen hhe Jed off theffliCin~ ~intig
.
~ ay s ames
·
.
·WI a orne run o ·
cmna
Allan Ia at New Orleans
Anderson, glum but not diSCOU· - starter Gary Nolan but he also
Dallas al Balli more
aged 18
· · · h' 1 b'
· lied
. .
Chicago at Cleveland
r
'
pmmng Js c u s s~p
the wm~ng run off
Los Ang at Philadelphia
hopes on lefthander Ross loser Clay Carroll m the e1ghth
Minnesota at Denver
GrimSley, a 14-game winner with , an energetic piece of
N.Y. GtantsatSanFran
thisyear
._
. that
dl .
Washington at St. Louis
",
·
,
"
uoserunrung . .sprea goom
Buffalo al. Qakland
I m fme, I m readY, .says among.the standmg room only
Elhs, who won 15 for the crowd of 62 420 In Riverfront
Cincinnall at Kan City
Houslon at Pittsburgh
Pirates this year "I'll go out Stadium '
San .Diego at Miami
th
d do
~
, ·
. ·
N, v. Jets at New England
ere an
my st, that s all
WtiiJ one out and the bases
(Only games scheduled)
you can do."
loadeo in the eighth iMing,
Monday:s G~mes
The Plrat•• e•me from
Green Bay al Detroit, nighlr.
·
(Only game scheduled)

Browns Coach·
Plans Changes

Materialistic Thinns Can't Hel'P

•• • ••

Division

w. 1. I, pet. pf pa
LosAngeles 2 1 ·1 .625 81 65
Atlanta
2 2 o .500 111 71
San Fran 2 2 0 .500 98 63

I

'

·

w. I. I. pet. p1 pa
I .0 .7511 76 60
I · 0 .750 104 97
3. 0 .250 86 69
3 I . m 7S 108

West~rn

---Jr!";;-;":;;;;;;;;;;-.,";i:;;ed,;;;;;:;.-:;w-1

EDITORIALS

;.

~

'

I

••'

�.

,..

I

•

Warning
Issued
·.·- Oil.Tax

3..,. ~Dally
~port;-Pomeroy,
0., 01;1.10, 1972 ,
. . Sentinel,
,..

&amp; TH INB S·

Pro Grid Standings ·
.

NF.L L.. gue Stondings
By Unoled Press lnlernotional
National Conferenc_,
Eute.rn Oivlslqn
w. '1. I. pet. pf'pa
DaI las
3 I 0 .7511 81 49
\'lashlnglon
3 1 .o .7511 as ss
N.Y.Gi,ants 2 2 0 .500102116
St ..LoUis . 2 2 o .500 sa 69
Pholadelphia
0 4 D .000 3S 96

BY PAUL . CRABTREE .
'

'

.

Through the courtesy of Jiroadc~ing Magazine, l'~ b&amp;en,
swnmamtng wh.at the critics, natiOnally' have tbougbt of the
new TV shows, and I'U keep doing it again today.
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) ~ The
h
swung widely this seaaon
state Board of 'Education
As noted, critical review&amp; ave
·
'
. dlvergen,1 opinions on abnost every program, and some
with
warned Monday any attempt to
repeai the state income I8I gelling mixed notices.
.
· Ia 1 1y high
would be detrimental to the
Before you assume that a show which scored re I ve
''
2,700,000 children attending with the Crtlics is assuted permanency on the dial, however,let
. pubUc achoola.
me point out that the critics rank no better than third among tile
"Any · effort to el!nlinate · people who resUy decide what will be on lhe three ma~r netpresent financing would be worb.. ·
detrimenta11o the children and
First are the tim~ buyers at tile ad agencies (and their
would jeopardize school pro- uitlmate clients, American business). !'Jld second are tile net- .
· ·
·
· gram&amp; hnmedlately," the work executives who sometimes ordain that a show llhaU go on
'l'ORI'fADO FANS -Om-joyed, )'OD bet!, were Saulhern
board said. "For these (or come off) because - weU, jus! because they're the
Bl&amp;f! fDatball fans YDUIIII and old after their team rallied in
be less tban .a wordllrllellgtla aDd in amy case are aabj~ I rea100s, the .bo&amp;rd encourages executives of the network.
tbe lleCOIId ball to defeat North Gallia 18-8 Friday night in the
to
edlling
lor
clarity
and
Je1711b.
AU
lelten
mllll
carry
a
I
.
support
of
tile
state
Income
YoU,
genUe
viewer,
are
no
better
thsn
fourth.
~or
am
I.
Tornadoes' !)omecoming battle - Picture by Leo HID:
bona fide algnature. N11111e1 may be wilbbeld from . I taz."
Anyhow, herofare bow some of the new offenngt have b&amp;en
lioa
bu will be
led
·1 With 23 of the 24 state board seen -figuratively and literally -In abol!t20major cities:
publica
upon request I
revea lo. anyo.ne I members ..a~n~''· the vote . . M-A.S.H: Elgh~ gOod reviews, two bad ones, one:mlxed. (I .
upon .de pn~. LelteJ'!I must a\\dress !slUt!', not per· I was201nfavorofsupportofthe
riSed becauseldon~muchcarefortblsone.)
·
sooalltles. 4Q,~.hk,
_
I Income tu, one against and ~=dY~can-Sevenb&amp;drevlews-withonlyonemlzed
· Qu-v~c..::
two abstentions. Abstentions
reclation keeping 11 from being declared uniformly bad. (I
•
counted as not againat the tai, app ·'
th 1972 erslon yet lhis year, but I thought last
• •
•
,.
•
1
but tile appropriateness of the haven t seen e
v
.
kinda te)
1
WASHINGTON (UP! ) board taking a oositlon on tile year'sshow,beforethestarfellill,was
cu-•~ed (Tw bi '
I . ·
rThe Rookies : Two good, nine bad, two uUA •
o g
President Nixon's son-in.Jaw
SECRECY AND NEWSPAPERS
may have relied more on
I JBSThue.e bo ard aso
t d surprises here ·
· .
The ABC stations around . here
1 grane
· aren~
ted ewn
'
'
Cleveland city achools a three- . carrying It in prune time, the reviews - as no
- are
Secrecy and newspapers are mortal enemies.
~ campaign rhetoric than cold
. When government is conducted in secret, the ~ ttallslics when he defended the
month extension on a contract generally bad, yet the audiences, as measured by Neilsen, have
people have no ·way of obtaining information ~ administration 's economic
•-e·
·
T
for a $1.7 miUion aeronautics been generally good and are holding up weU in cities where It is
about what happened.
·
2 record last Saturday in Dear Sir:
center due 1o the death of the being shown.) "
,
'· Freedom requires that the people be fully in- ~ Cleveland. ,
1have been keeping up with the so-called ways of preventing architect.
_
Blll Cosby: An ab80llitely-even split, with four good, ~ur
'formed in order to act in their own best interest. ~ Figures obtained from the drug abuse as far as your proposed Coffee House Is concerned.
Parma city schools were bad, and four mlxedr (·A personal disappointment, because I like
Although freedom of the press and the people's ~ President's Council
of
First, before I get into what lfeell must say, I am a prisoner granted a three-month ex- Cosby. Most of lite critics seem Ill Uke hbn, too, but deplore lite
right to know are constitutional gul!fant~, there ~ Economic Advisers Monday at the United States PenltenUary at Marion, Illinois. Many will tension on a $9 miUion project weak writing on the show.)
ill no guarantee that government buail!en wiD al- ~ sl)owed Edward Finch Cox was
·
displeaSUJg,
. no1 appropnate,
.
· 1y , due to complexities associated
Temperatures Rising: Three "'
•ood,,ei""l
sunp
...,. bad. (A mild. surwaya be conducted in the open.
~ off the · mark when he com- fe~J what I have to say is
h
h 'because of my being a prisoner. But I do want it to be known with community and staff prise, because.tbls was supposed to be a ''nothing" sort of show.
HiatoricaUy, it has been the role of newspapers ~
pared
the
growl
rates
of
t
.
ed m
. helping Involvement.. necessary for At least
' afewpeoplellkel't,itwouldseem.)
.
.
to keep a watch on government and public offi- ~ u. s.oeconomy under the Nixone there is no personal feeling lnvoIved . I am mterest
1
Maude: Six good, three bad, and two mixed. (Better than it
dais by reporting what happens at .public meet- ~ administration with those of with drug abuse. I have experience with drug abuse, and I feel I proper P ammg.
In other board action deserves,ifyouaskme-andyoudldn't.)
·· lnp and diaeuBBions affecting the public interest. ~ the other major industrial should explain my opinion of it.
Only when people are fully informed about ac- ~ powers. ')'he statistics indicate
let me lllart'by saying :
Mondsy: ·
. Paul Lynde: Two good, five bad, and two mixed. (In fairness
tlolil of their public officials can they make' sound ·~ that ~ven Nixon has been a bit
In the first place we live in a social order, or under a social
- Woodridge local schools to Lynde no-favorite of mine, most of his critics admitted he
(Summit County) were
' .
ood
'edlan)
·
judgments and cast i::telligent votes.
;;!. misguided.
order, which Is basicaJ!y anti-euphoric. And althOUgh this social granted permission 10 place a personally 18 a g com
·
And only in this ws.y can democracy function
In his campaign speech, Cox, order is rapidly becoming obeolete (due to fundamental changes $3,500,000 bond l1!8ue ·on the
+++
ll
and·people keep the m~.elves free.
~
husband of Tricia Nixon. aaid: in thl', ecooomlc and teclmologtcal underpinnings of Its culture), ballot and Wayne Township
In case you care, the ratings thus far are Iota Y
local schools (Montgomery meaningless, because of so many blockbuster movies and other
~ "When President Nixon took the people who control this soci~ty - make and enforce its rules CoUnty)
~3:o:=:r~mM..:w.=W:m¥.@'#&amp;:&gt;W/.~&gt;'..m?W/-~.W.97tY/m'/..f. OV'er, the United Sta~ had the - are definitely from the "old school." This is the group that still
were given permission speciala being 'shown to hype the ratings at the beginnmg of the
lowestrateof industrial growth controls and it lstryingtomaintaln control the only way It knows to submit a $1 930 000 issue to season. All It reaDy did was to make the esrly ratings a mlsh- ·
and the highest rate of inflation how.
the voters. ' '
ml!,'h from which nothing worthwhile could be deduced.
in the free world. President
Thill covers a lot of ground, but I am speaking only on drug
_Federal work studY funds
And so ·there you have it, TV fans. Television shows, like
~-···
Nixon has now reversed that a~use. These people actually think that a coffee house, a were apProved for Ashtabula heautY,veryobvloustylleintheeyeoftbebeholder.
+++
trend. Now we have the highest recreation cen.ter, time I,! prison, giving this or that to his son or Joint Vocational School, $2,543;
rate of industrial growth and daughter, or whoever, will cutdown on drug abuse.
canton city sChools, • ; DayON THE TV DIAL: We may have a lltUe reverse snobbery
lowest rate of inAation."
Let it be known we have aU this already. So as far as the ton city schools, $42,829; Tus· for the ultra-rich kids who attend the elite prep scoools of the
By Helen and Sue Boatel
But the council's figures coffee house is concerned, that's just what you have: a coffee ·· caraw:as Valley local schools East, but the plain truth is that many wind up running the
suhowted thast Japan11• hnol "'the house.
$1,401; and Wellston city country. A typical boy Is interviewed on DateUne: America at
1
01
,
ANYONE roa RECORD llliEAXING1
taleS, w
ave e
· The answer to these questions are beyond the scope of what I schools, $1,153. ·
.
8:30, WMtJL.TV ... MarshaU footbaU highlights at 9:30, same
Pe8r SUe:
fastest economic growth rate have said; but is there a point here anywhere?
-A transfer of terrttory was spOt ... And then an opera, "The Old Maid and the Thief," at 10,
d
be'
led
approved
from Ashtabula Area. also WMUL-TV
R'u big fad 110tlld here to break a silly record, lil!e holding in l!l72. of the big industrial
1
My point is that more an more young peop eare tng
district to the Buck·
·
a ldlllmger tban IIIIYOIIe elle. or a college donn floor keeping powers. Japan's economy will and I Will say definitely led - by the people from the old school. city schMI
-,
boom
ahead
at
an
8
to
8.5
pet.
eye
Local
School·
District
of
the haD pbCIIe in cmlinuous lll!le lew fiw days and nighll, no
pace this year while the
All these people are saying :
Ashtabula County.
llkineea, no flanl,upe.
"real," or non-inflated growth
"Here is recreation, use It, here's a coffee house, use it, or .
...... boa d oted t
·
bl ..
- .,...,
r v
o sus1'm looklr~ for a new recml to break - and I'm really not
'U
in the U. S. economy will you get mto trou e.
.
pend for 90 days the teacher
farlaldJig the ltl!gellllhower in biatory or playing Jlngopong 85
q&gt;eallllre between 6 and 6.6
Sure, they speak about ~ha~ . drugs, will, ~o, a!id ther saY. certlllcate of· Mrs, Jennifer
hiKO,.
Q . II ."Wi~-,~~
i:'1°rHO bf''i
P!ct~ ·'ll Clilulcll spolt~sma'n told · ~ ·don't do this. or that.".Thenthey say,;! Stay· away fro~. hbn or, ;:&amp;en\ fc)p ':l\avtng "relll~ea · a .
:fouk1 you suggeSt orie that doesn't need an that exertion or tiP!.
., ,... ,, .. ·· "her;andyou1Jigrow~tobeallheyoung,rnan. prwoma.n .,, "., "•n.•teaching·posltlon af!N'JUJy 10·'
\' \.
~up ,our-? - J;AZY'REOORD BREAKER
Nixon was property cautious
How many of us are guilty of saying this? "Stay away from 1972, without consent of th~
on this point when speaking to hbn or her." We atay away and what have we ~ne? Where's the Circleville Board of Education,
Dear LRB:
TUESDAY. OCT. 10, 1972
finance ministers (rom around help?
.
to •accept a pollitlon In the
Why don't you write a mile~ong leiter? II you use adding
6:00
News
3,
4,
S
, 10, 15.
the world at the annual
The history of mankind Is one of continuous development Lancaster School Dlatrlct.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 15, 6, 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Growing
IIIKIIine rolls ud tate • month, JOI! oould euily break the 1!154 meeiing of the International from existing or bare necessities to the life of freedom.
Him Up 33.
wd Ilia Brooklyn girl wbo wrule a six .ten~ letter ID her
Monetary Fund (IMF) Sept. 25.
You can build all the coffee houses and give an this and that
7:00 - News6, 10; Whars My LineS; Elec. Co. 20; Andy Griffith
aoidla' boyfriend In Korea. - SUE .
15; Beat The Clock 4; I've Got a Secret 13; Truth or Con·
At that ·llme, the President to the young boy or girl, but unless you search and seek the love
The Almanac
sequences 3; Saint 15.
+++
sai~ : ."We .are now ex- and mderstanding be needs, he or she has to carry all the load,
By United Press loternatlonal
7:30- Masterpiece Theatre 33; This Is Your Life 3; Doctors on
NOI'EFRCJMREIEN: But no one caD lop the world's reaird per1encmg one of the lowest not on their back - because that can be taken off - but Inside
Call 4; To Tell The Truth 6; Price is Right 8, 10; Beat the
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 10,
Clock 13.
.
for SHOR1'tJ8T letter ezcluqe: VICtor Hugo, m holiday, rates of inflation 11nd highest where It takes quite a struggle to get it out.
' the 284th day of 1972 with 82 to
S:OO - Bonanza 3, 4, 15; Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8,
••lied to llllowl!olr hllnewi!Oftl,,"lei Mllerablea" W1ll dGing.
For the child who is m!J:ed up or has problems he can't follow.
rates ot: real ecomomc g~owth
10; Age of Anxiety 13.
Tol*puhlilher,hewrote, "?"'I'hereplyf 1'!" - H.
of any industrial nallon.
handle, and can't seem to find anyone that can, coffee houses,
The moon is between its new S:30 - Hawaii Flve-0 S, 10; Movie " Night ,of Terror" 6, 13;
Dateline America 33.
+++
recreation, materialistic things can't help. When a person has a phase ~nd first quarter.
9:00Bold Ones 3, 4, 15.
lle8r Helen 8ild Sue:
The morning stars are Venus, 9:30 - Marshall U. Sports 33; Movie "Visions" S, 10.
hidden problem, drinking coffee or playing sports might delay it.
I eli 1 it peaple II a boliby. And I've COOle mto IIO!llelblng:
Mars and Saturn.
10:00 - NBC Reports 3, 4, IS; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13; Old
But It won't cure it.
Maid &amp; The Thief 33.
The
evening
stars
are
Mercu·
Aboat '10 pet. of mnmety Cll9et weiCIJI people - 1:011ll!)icuGuly
Coffee House is just what you got!
11
:
00
- News, \'leather, Sports 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
back-beed.lly qll 'ionIa: Are lmcd-kneed Jlft''!OI* bllrn with
11 :30 - Dick Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15i VirginianS; Movie. ·
James Stltt-28634-238, P.O. Box 1000, Marlon Illinois, 62959. ry and Jupiter.
a ••
lo pt Ill (.......'*18 In their cell' 4111ritwon,
Those born on this date are
"Sweet Bird of Youth" 10; Movie "Sailor of the King" 13;
P .s. Please feel free to write.
11 :30- Dick Cavett6; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; VIrginianS.
. under the sign of Ubra.
Pit I JW, •IIIOIIt baft Wli8lell]r large hipl and wallb, -ller
1:00 - Your Health 4.
.
·
- *"'a) or does t11e1r welgld p!Jib their legs out Ill line? 1:30 - News, Weather 4; Local News 13.
· DARWIN
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11,1972
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6:15- Farmtlme 10; Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
'1'1!11 J011 wbol Jill! do: taiJe your laDy to the relea!'cb
6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Urban League 10.
I tmeul of .,_ laeal caDov and maybr JDD'II be the iJ&gt;. . as of Sept. 30 tot a led
7:00 - Today, 3, 4, IS; CBS News 8, 10; News6.
7:30
- Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
"'pt«· Ill a new "weiCflllng game." - HELEN'
$21U,292.72, according to the
13.
+++
monthly rzport of ClerkS:OO- Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Timmy &amp; Lassie .6.
Do\R:
Treasurer Gene Grate to
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Bob
Stigwood
who
brought
."Jesua.
Christ
8:30Jack LaLonne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room 8
WIIM Mom m11, .... Ia IIJe doe:sn'I llnow, bill llflhe• lhe did. Middleport Council Monday
DON rr ALL, PAYUP!
"SUperstar" to records, stage, and now the 9:00- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donohue IS; What Every Woman
Me too! - SUE
night. Expenditures totaled
NEW YORK (KF'S) _ A limousine service screen, Is an Australlan who went to London at
Wants to Know 3; Concentration 6: Capt. Kangaroo 8;
. Friendly Junctlort 10; Ben Cosey 13.
+++
J33,956.94, receipts w~r e
here is tipping its dirty mitt : tells slow-pay tile behest of a transplanted leUow Australlan 9:30- Elec. Co. 33; To Tell the Truth 3; Jeopardy 6: Hazel&amp;.
P..S. Beni'l- nae u-,: exln111elmodt.Jinea might
who made him talent agent for all hlsllhoirs - 10:00- Dinah Shore 3, IS; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild
III!IR ' • ic or GdJer 111rm1 or eam. dilfiCult. 1'11111 the · $l~;eceipta, disbursements, clients to pony up - or The Godfather will be
8, 10; Dick Van D~&lt;e 13.
·
t1y Iost them. For~.....a
.... lo scrounge · 10:30 - Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donohue 4; Price Is Right&amp;, 10;
pa- wwld ta.llaflltrm up, especially artiUild wailt lllld hips? rapectively, and the balance 'round to collect ... Yule be congratulating Pia but promp
Split Second 13.
in 'each Ill the funds at the end Undstrom (lngrim Bergman's sprig) . on her around, he fell Info the recordlrig business,
- REUll'i AlQ) SlJE
11
00
: - Sale of Century 3, IS; Love American Style 6: Gambit 8
ol the 111G11th were: general, mama~ood about Cllristmas Day ... We hear where serendipltously, a couple of y,;,•••sters
·-.,.
10; Password 13.
'
,•
$1,161.13, $2,742.o7, $34,439.03; Hizzoner called State ComptroUer Al'thur Levitt brought him a project which Interested him; 11 :30-;- HollywilodSquares4, 1S; Love of LileS, 10; Bewltch0d6,
13, Sesame St 33.
.
· ,
cemetery, $18&amp;.10, $512.71 , to ask an opinion of Jawn's ch8nces to become ."J.C.S." of course- which now has sold more
than
...
•miiUonln
re-"-'aloilep
DllusmllU~·In
12:00Jeopardy
3,
15;
Password
6;
Bob
,
Braun's
50.50
Club 4;
$l;m.M; fife equipment, $10, guvnor. Llndssy didn't like the reply he'd asked
...,
~"'"" ,.. ,..~
••~
News
13;
Contact
8;
News
10.
.
1
$44.11, f469.74; swimming pool, for ... Italy b&amp;med "I'he Sensual Man" book- atage and coocert productl0118,
plus musical 12:30- Split Second 6; Search for Tomorrow a, 10; Who. What,
Where 3, IS; Elec. .Co. 33,
$10UO, $2W.83 ; · $3,994 .23; naUonwide .:. New toy cars in the Yule sales royalties, the Unlver881 picture being filmed 1n
Israel
and
ree"""
aloog
toward
more
prof(•-.
l:OO
- News, Weather, Sports3; All My Chlldren6, 13; It's Your
planning commission, no even have safety belts to prove m!grs. haVe
~.,.
..
Beta;.Green Acr" 10; Watch Your Child 15; French Chief 33.
More Australians -the group called The 1:20- Lucille Rivers 3.
receipts, $161.63; $402.76; educational hearts ... TV clownette Joanne
Bee
Gees, Maurice, Robin and Barry Glbb who 1' 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
· street maintenance, $2,111.14, Worley and actor Roger Perry toUr the hin·
World Turns 8, 10; DesiAnlnA Women 33.
$2,563.1M, $13,983.72; sanitary terlands in "Goodbye, Olarlle" but ,don't say moved Down Under when very YIIWII' and 2:00- Days of Our Llv.es 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
sewer, U.047.68, $~.607.11 , goodbyeofforonstage ... N. Y.Greekjournallst couldn~ make It big even after 13recorda ... AU
Douglas 6; Guiding Light a, ID; Bridge 33.
horrible
Oops,
,...,.,
admit:
"People
even
2:30
- Dating Game 13; Doctors 4, 15; Edge of Nlght ·8 10"
• $%3,002 . 0~; water. $6,824.86, and Met diva ·Teresa Stratas toasted each other
w-1
Sportscope 33.
.
' '
$~.513.07 , $25,729.07; water in champagne (eeaeeglah) at Monstgoore.
· stopped us on the street and advised us to give 3:00 - Ar&gt;Qther World 3, 15; General 1-(ospltal 6, 13; ~ove
meter ilep&lt;mllrusts, $240, $227,
Nixon's lnt'l ecumel)ism seems to be up." Instead they went to London where, Jan- · Splendored Thing 8, 10; Masterpiece ThNtre 33.
·
3
M,3Z9.%3 ; sanitary sewer working: the stylish St. Regis changed the name ding at tile foggy London clocka, they were
' ~~~~e~;m1ot~.ton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
escr"" • $834.04, no disbur· and mood of Its jewel-box La Bolte to La Bolte BpOtted by another muillcal group, Indigent but · ,j; OO - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. ~3; Love 4
semenll, $59,&amp;n.a&amp;; fire house Russe, with food, music. Slavic scenes painted with instrumenta, trying to sleep near aome
American Style 13; Mtorv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6, Gilligan's
...-.
· Island 8; Movie "Broken ArrfiN" 10
C'Onstruction, no receipts, just for the llhift by artist Nino D'Onofrio; Who railroad Ira"""
4: 25 - Sports Club 6.
·
·
.
$16,344, $17,123.40; general he' Ask Ed ard G· Robinson Sinatra and
"Go
back!"
the
reclining
and
decUned
4:30
I
Love
Lucy
6;
Andy
Griffith
15;
Petticoat
J~mctlon 3; ·
bood retirement no receipts
·
w
·
•
Mtorv Griffin I; Daniel Boone 6.
,_..
·
·
ed them." Youcan 'I rna kelthere." 5:00-Mr.
Rogers33;DlckVanDykelkPonderosa3 4·"-nlel
nq disbur menta $17 025 69 ' N.elson RockefeUer - IIley bought Nino's daubs groupwarn
se
' , ' · · . ... Or The Vatican; he painted an pfflclal Pope Maurice Glbb said ''It was rlllht out of MacBoone 6.
,
' ' ""'
!lent 17 Calls made 1 18 me!
Paul portrait ... AI the St. Regis t'11ai.!onette, beth," but no Shakespearean · tragic ending 5: ~SM~ir•ll Dillon 1s; Elec. Co. 33; Dragnet a; Gomer Pyle
The
Middleport Fire Judy Garland's daughter Lorna Luft's here: they landed on &amp;·Monday and by Friday 6;00 - -Truth or Conseq. 6; News3, 4.1, 10, 15; Hlthayoga33. "
Depertment answered 17 calls description by an intimate li: "She has hl!r tile aforenoted canny "J.C.S." br•tnldd . 6.30-. News 3, u, a, 10,15; 8rldge 33; 1 Dream of Jeannle13.
..., News6, 1~; Wlwtrs M~ line 8; Milestones of Pr0111 en 33;
' in September, Bob E. Dyer, mother'uenlltlvlty, her slst!!"'s speaking vplce Stlgwood signed them 1o a five-year ~ct. The 7: oo_
31 Beat The Block 4; Anything You Can Do
rest
has
been
musical
and
fiBca1
blstcry
for
the
{{~~~~~seq:
...,N: .
frre dllef, reported to council - and her father's temper."
.. 7:30- To Tell The Trutll6; The Juctae tO; Eplsodt: Action 33; .
lllllll'wlll&amp; bt . , t..AI Jl'li IJ/' , "''-llfiMliJ, ~ Mondlly fll&amp;h~
Federico FeUinl's getting bunk with .the lads.
The &amp;OoQQed ''anti-war" gang that broulht
. Pollc:e.Surg101)3,4; PraleCtorsl; I!Ntthe Clock 13. ,
.
m ...
9o
'l'bere were lour fire calls, criUcs woo alallhed hiiJ tut. few ntcb .. An· . ·the three
war
prlsonets
back
''rtllly
~on
8.
~:Adem-12
4;
Affair
33;
Paul
L~
6,
13;
C.
rot
Burnell
I.
7 !1\c: •: , ... 7 ..,...-:;...
lndudlng one falae alarm, and llclpallng their negatives
for his
1
.,.
a
ef · ,_ JJ lint aid calla, nine in town autobiographical ' FeUinl's Rome," he dub&amp; . them" to decry the war and tnock Uncle Sun 1:30- BIMc:ek 3, ~ 15; Movie "Litulenllnt Schusltr'l Wife" 6,
•- 7J .., , , . . , '• Rlf
i4W!i ..id fow out of, town; and one · ll)em an a "Str,an"" llrted
.
- If they are
and used'every wll•lo mike them feel aullty of · ,,~::.Medical Con tori, 1o; CMpter33l3
··
·
-~.
·,,
D' #-If ,
'
for an accident Involving a Iilarrled,ashusbandslheyarestlllcritlcs .. They their own happyeJ!dlng ~ llmlhds more Ill 10:00 - Stllrc:IIJ, 4.15: Julie Andrews 6; cannon,, 10; Soul33; 1
our ladl are In VIet 01ng pr1ao11s QDly Oile feU
. Dream ol Jennie 13.
·
.
A ·
motor vehicle. AU of the fire become crazy wit~ power and omnipotence."
for It
'retold
;u' "-"
11:00-News3,~6.I.10,13,· 1S
~
• we
; .,., woq .-oq • ....,, 1llln&amp; 11:30- Johnn~non 3. ·~ .is; Dldt Clvelt 6· Yl'f!!an 1·
I' r1
·. caDs
were In
The
they don'thave
haveMastroianni,
either, here,
· ' - .. helplea
_ _. .......willkdliic'l
~traveled
265 miles
"llorna"will
Magnani
Uvea for enemy propqanda.
Movita "A
Ia Born" 10: ''Whitt Witch Doctor"
' ·
'
1:00"""'
..
.
.
wttlt 10.3 man hours spent on and Gore Vldlll - cameo-playing tllemselws.
1:30 - News 13.
I
tilt fin calli otdy.
.
.

•

Rhetoric

Central Division

.
Green Bay 3
Detroit
3
Mi~nesola I
Chtcago
0

"'

•

•

•

•••

••••••• ......

..

•• • :- ••• •·

• • . :- : ••• :1 ••• ••

There Are Times When

Passas,~re~N~~~4:~ WH

September

Spending

I

a•

;====P='Ii;..~-~r.=.--~-~·~=I •

tow~.

,DEi.iJxE CHAMPION.SUPER
.
,BELT • ORIGI~ EQUIPMENT
'

.,

assisted tackles, also got three,
along with Uneb&amp;cker Randy
Gradlshar, who made eight ·
tackles and assisted on nine
more.

Fed. Ex. Tax
·2~34

E78-14·· ......... ;. '22.83
F7i-14101000000000:0 '23.68
G78-14........... , '24.11

'2.52
'2.69
'2.93

H78-14 ,,,;.,,. '24.97

G78-15 .... , .. , ... '24.54 ·'2.78

USED CARS

·&amp;a DODGE

OORONET
'2 DR. H.T:
V-8 motor, auto. trens. and
power steering.

'1095

,

.

J78-15;,,;,,,,,
'27.96 '3.12
.
'

WHITE WALLS SUGHTLY HIGHER
APPEARANCE BLEMISHES 'ONLY
c

'

REED ON INJUitED USI'
NEW . YORK (UPI)-WUIIB
Reed, the New York Knicb'
captain and star center, was
placed on the injtnd --11at
Mondsy and mUll mias his
team'! flr8t five games of the
National Buketball
.Association seam.
Reed, who Will be replaced
by Jerr Lucaa, will not be
ellglble to play until Oct. 21
when the. Knickl meet
PliUade]Jlbla.
The Kniclls also annomced
thlll Ed Mast, a &amp;-foot, t-4nch
backup forward, has . been
traded to Atlanta for a 19'13
· eecond.dfaft choice.

•·.
Way of Doing Bualnets."
,
GMAC FtNANCINQ ·" · ·•
992·$342 ·
·.Pomeroy, · I
Opon Evonlnta •m l:oo·
s P·!!!·..~•'·

·

rn

r-----------------~~

·VILLAGE GUN SHOPPE
231 MILL ST,
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GUNS .FOR SALE • BUY • TRADE
Handguns
Colt

Smith and Wesson

Publ lshinQ

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price includes Sun.day r.mu.
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Low. to $2000 • The City Loan &amp; a.wtrigl Co. • Flnenclng Cillo l'tf)plt 111tct 1t11

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.

University of Wisconsin
football Coach John Jardine
put his squad through a 25
minute practice in sweat
clothes and said the entire
team was ready to take on
Indiana Saturday.
Indiana Coach John Pont
said hiS team "played good,
solid defense in their 1().2
trilllllph of what was being said
about them and they decided to
do something about it," Pont
said.
Sixth rated Michigan faces
its biggest defensive test of the
season when It plays Michigan
Stale Saturday, Coach Bo
Schembechler said.
"We're going to have to
play a mlstake.free game.
When Michigan State doeSn't
make mistakes, the other team
doesn 't score," he said.

~

1

"Against a team like thB ~
Pirates you just j11111't .lllllle ..! '
litUe ntlstakes Hlte that" lit ~
said "Y
•t
' lain "!
.
ou can comp
•.
about good or bad breob. A:'.
good team · akes 1'Ill 0wn •
m
:;.
lreaks ·"
·
·
•:
Someone asked Roberto cie- ;.
mente if he would prefer to ;;
..,. ()a" d' Det !tin til ~'
ID=• . ouan or
ro
e -:
World Series.
•
"I'm not even thinking aboUt ; ,
th t " h
lled "!'
·~Inking&amp;
'
boe treCinpcinnat.1 tbm
w•
au
.
, e
Reds.They'reagoodclub,ye:o,
even good enough lotaketwolp
· fro
"
a row m us.
That's the kind of tlllnklng
Sparky Anderm IS looking for
· ·

riRE .SALEI

I

Ll 111

Raiders
Triumph

Jor

:Television~L~g

• .,

:·1 didn't think he (Chaney)
could get the ball," SanguiUen
said after the game, "but 1 ran
.
1or a111 was \torth• anyway."
New Orleans .
0 4 0 .000 54 136
SanguiUen's homer over the
American Conference
left
center field fence pulled
· Eastern Division Pittsburgh
to Wl'thin one run of
w.. l. t. pet. pf pa
Miam i
4 0 0 1.000 97 54
Cincinnati, and the Pirates
N.Y.Jets 2 2 0 .500122111
went to work again in the
Buffalo
2., 2 0 .. 500 89 92.
seventh
to tie the game:
New Eng 2 2 0 .soo 66112
Rl
'
chl
'
e
H·'-·r reached fiirst
Baltimore 1 3 0 .2SO 74 77
''"""
when Reds' .reliever Pedro
Borbon knicked hbn on the
•
foot. Sanguillen moved hbn to
second with a lllngle, and both
runners advanced on a·
sacrifice by Gene Alley.
Clay CarroU then replaced
Borbon and intentionally
walked pinch hitter VIc
Dllvalillo to load the bases.
CLEVELAND (UP!) Bubb&amp; Pena would be removed
ReunieStennettbeatoulahtgh
Cleveland Browns Coach Nick from the starting lineup. Pena,
bouncer and Hel:l!er crossed
Skorich says some changes will a rookie from Massachus~tts,
H.O US T 0 N ( U PI ) - stepping out a little bit. I tbe._plate to tie the score.
be made as a result of the 31·7 "has problems," Skorich said. Defensive tackle Art ThomB of couldn't believe it. I just sliced
Both Cincinnati runs came in
Joss to the Kanlias,aty Chiefs.
"I wasn't happy with his Oakland was elated. Coach Bill tbrougb. It was easier the the third when Chaney Jed off
An unhappy Skorich Monday performance on the field," he Peterson of Houston was second tbne because I was
singled out the offensive Une added.
embarrassed. Quarterback ·looking for it."
for lack of blocking. It was reFullback Bo· Scott, absent Dan Pastorlnl of Houston was
The second time was in the
.
BpOnsible for star runner Leroy from the Cleveland backfield frustrated and quarterback third quarter on a {:1-yard
Kelly's limited yardage this for the past two games because Daryle Lamonica of Oakland attempt that was the Oilers'
1
•
season, he said.
of a pulled hamstring, should had a "ho-hum" attitude.
last scoring, opportunity. The
He also revealed tackle Bob be ready to start against the
The Oakland Raiders defeat· Houston defense, which played
McKay, out of the lineup since Bears, SkOrich said.
ed the Houston Oilers, ~.on well, had given the .Oilers of·
suffering a broken leg against
Scott would replace Ken the Monday night nationaUy fense three chances to soore in
the lofinnesota Viktnga in an Brown, who fumbled four televised game which was so the first half by blocking and
exhibition game, "will hopeful· tbnes against the Chiefs.
bad that 'three fourths of the recovering two fumbles in
Jy" be on the field Sunday when
However Skorich said he standing-roomo&lt;Jnly crowd of Raiders territory.
'.
the Browns face the Chicago would continue
to use Brown 51,378 in the Astrodome walked
But the Oilers missed every,
Bears.
and Reese Morrison on kickoff out midway through the fourth chance-wasting one on a fake
CHICAGO (UPI) - Injured
If McKay does start, John returns "because they're the . quarter.
field goal and pass that fell football players at Purdue may
Dermll'ie would move from best we have at that position."
Lamonica, who said he incomplete and another when soon outnumber those ready
tackle to his usual left guard
Skorlch credited the defense played a 80-80 game, was tlie Th\)llls intercepted Pastorinl for action . Veteran center Bob
position and veteran Gene for "bearing · up fairly well offensive star for the Raiders, on the Raiders 26.
Hoidahl was listed Monday as
Hickerson would move to right against the pressure of eight throwing two touchdown , "!was embarrassed, l'U tell doubtful
the Boilermakers
guard, where he has spent turnoyers by the offense. He passes and completi!lg 12 of 26 you," Peterson said, shaking Big Ten game at Minnesota
most of his 15 seasons with the said the turnovers kept the for 166 yards. He hil Fred his head. "When you can't Saturday.
Browns, Skorich said.
defense on the field most of. the Biletnikoff on a 16-yard scoring score from the two-yard line,
Coach Bob DeMoss said
Skorich said if all the first half and "that probably passandrookie Mike Siani on a you ain't got a chance. .We three other players were
changes were made, guard took its toll."
26-yarder.
didn't even get a field goal- scheduled for operations. They
Clarence Davis scored 8 nothingtogi~eourboysallft." were Nick Cannone, a defen·
third touchdown on a 14-yard Halden Had Trouble
sive back with a broken
run and reserve quarterback
But the Raiders had trouble, collarbone, Larry Degennaro,
Ken ~bier passed one yard to too, most of the first half, a defensive back with a knee
tight end Bob Moore for the having only a 46-yard field goal injury and Tim Maloney, a
with a shoulder
finlji,,WIS!Jdi)l"'l· fl91h ,R,, ,IIJe by George Blanda until the linebacker
.
last two l!!'l!~lfS were'oet up )ly. final 10 Seconds of the half: . mjury.
·
Then Villapiano intercepted a
The status of lowa.'s first
OOLUMB
(UP!) - Ohio
Hayes said a balance be- Interceptions...
Defensive Star
Pastorinl pass on the Houston string quarterback senior Kyle
State football coach Woody tween running and passing is
Thoms,
a
6-5,
26().pound
four·
28 and returned it to the 16.
Skogman was also still in doubt
Hayes said Monday quarter· the key to his Bucks' success.
On tile next play, Lamonica Monday.
back Greg Hare had hl8 "best
"We can give confusing year veteran from Syracuse,
Dr . Harvey Feldick, the
game yet" against California problems to the opposing was' the defensive star. He hit Blletnikoff in the corner of
blocked
both
of
Houston's
field
the
end
zone
on
a
pal!lthey
had
team
physician said Skogman
last Saturday and declared defenses," he said.
Scout Esco Sarkkinen de- goal attempts, Intercepted a worked on all week and It was who was Injured early in the
that despite his well-known
style. of play, he was not livered a brief report on ·the pass and deflected a pass that 10..0 with folD' seconds to go, Hawkeyes 2W loss lo Purdue'
against the pass.
Bucks' next opponent, winless Otto Slsttunk, the other defen- Blanda kicked a $-yard field Saturday, has "a mild knee
slve tackle, intercepted on the goal in the third quarter and sprain with a bad bruise. He
'.'Regardless of what attitude Dlinols.
I take on pa"es, there are
Although the Dlini are Q..4, 14, to set up Davis' touchdown. Oakland sealed' It with three said Skogman will be kept out
The Oilers offense was so touchdowns in the final period. of practice another day or two.
times when the pass is need- Sarkkinen said, they are "dan·
Pastorlnl had the worst night
Norlhwestern held line
ed," Hayes said at his weekly gerous" because of their 36 Inept that it couldn't score
from the Oakland 2 after Ward of his career, completing only scrimmages in preparallon for
'press luncheon.
·•
different formations.
"We hit some big passes that
"Illinois makes painful Walsh blocked a Jerry Depoy.r three of 21 passes for 31 yards their home opener against
were very, very decisive in the games 'for us," he said . ter punt in the second quarter. W!Jile having four intercepted Iowa ·
game. We're developing better "They're physical, ex- Pastorinl trled right end on the and being thrown three times · "Iowa's a much improved
balance than at this tbne a eructating battle~. We have to first play, but was thrown l)ack for 26 yards. Reserve Kent Nix football team from last season,
to the three by Unebacker Phil also was sacked once for six especially defensively," Coach
year ago."
keep our guard up."
For Hare's performance, the . Unebacker Rick Middleton VUiaplano, and on tb.e next yards and the OUers finished Alex Agase said.
Both teams are hoping for
Cumberland, Md., redhead and cornerback I.Du Mathis play,a blitzing Gus Otto nailed with a minus one yard passing.
"We ...just did nothing their first conference win.
was gl~en three Buckeye each received three Buckeye Pastorinl on the \1.
On fourth down, Thoms rigbt," Pastorlnl said.
leaves for his hebnet, one for leaves· for their work against
blocked
a 24-yard field goal
BUelnikoff, who played for
being named offensive back of california. Safety Rick Seifer!,
the week by the team coaches. who made nine solo and four attempt by Skip Butler. It was Peterson at Florida State nine
easy, Tholll8 said later.
years ago, had a tip for his old
"The guard opposite me was coach. "TeU hlm to play Rhett
firing out, which he wasn't Dawson (an Oilers rookie
· ~q~poMcl to do," Th011l8 said, receiver from Florida State).
referring to rookie Solomon. He needs somebody to catch
Freelon. "He was almost the l!all."
.

Generation Rap

I

•

IDMssedor
. ganloto~~ baRennsemt'e"l'StJe~
""''"
or
.... speedy San .0
nett . ...e
gw en,
however, beat Morgan's relay .
throw to first, allo""••
pinchGen CJin .. -..,
t
runner
e
es o score
from third with whal proved to
be the wlnn'."" run.
Ttedi:Sewnlh -

with a single, moved to second
onagroundoutandscoredona month, had pitched only five
inning&amp; since Sept, 2 and was
single · by Morgan . After hopingforagoodgameagainst
Morgan stole second, Bobby lite Pirates.
h' • lso
Tolan singled un m a .
"I didn't want to jeopardize
Pittsburgh manager BJU Vir· the K!Uil
. · e with three innings to
don pom
' ted to a throw' from go," Nolan said "uietl• of hl8
~
'
outfielder Stennetl which · departure from the game.
nailed Johnny Bench at home
"! did my best for six inplate in the fo· urlh m
' ning· as a nings '-·t 1't just
'I
d
' ..,
wasn goo
deciding play.
. enough. I didn't want to be a
"I think if he hadn't gotten hero, but I've always expected
Bepch, it would 'have been a a lot .of myself ·and 1 expected
much more wide open game,"
ds
.
moretoy.Iguel!ltbat'swhy
VU"don said.
·
it hurts so much."
TurnlllgPolilt
"SmiUngTomotrow"
Ander9011, was in complete
Anderson remarked after the
with Vlrdo
ha
agreement
non I I game that he didn't haw much
point.
to smUe about, but added,
"That was the whole thing," "I've already predicted l'U be
he said, ''when he didn't knock smiJ;no tomorrow."
- ...
John in from third base with
Anderson also predicted near
IIQbodY out. That's a must." tile end of the season .that the
The Reds put two men 'on in playoff series would go five
the fourth inning with one out, games, and he's 'hoping to be
but were mable to increase proven a prophet.
their 2-0 lead.
Reds' leftflelder Pete Rose,
"That was the turning point always an optlmlst, held the
of the gaine, no doubt about It," same feelings regarding· the .
Anderson said.
tesm's chll!lceS.
!Ale of the most disheartened "We're goMa forget It," the
Reds Monday was Nolan, who veteran fielder said of the loss.
removed . hbnself from the "We ain't gorina die."
game after six innings when Pete , was also wUling to
his arm llliffened.
admit that the Reds beat
Nolan, plagued with arm and themselves in the close game
shoulder problems for over a Mondsy.

Hit Hard
By Grid InjUries

"

'

SangulUen hit a shot to Reds'
shortstop Darrel. Chancy who

p u...·d ue

1

•

Pittsburgh 2 2 o .500 82 79 CINCINNATI (UP!) - Dock behind ID beat the Reds, 3-2, in
Cleveland 1 2 o .500 71 80 Ellis strictly a beer man has Monday's pivotal third game
Houslon
1 J o .250 SolllS
'
'
. Western Division
.
the . opportunity 19 _pop the and .Mamy S.nqulUen, Pitts•
.
w. I. I. pet. pi pa champagne fpr the Pittsburgh burgh's goodoflltured, goodKansas C•ly J 1 o .7511 106 68 Pirates today
h
ed
.
· the k
San Diego 2 I I .625 a!f' $5 Up two g~es lo on.e tbe umor recetver, was
ey
Oakla~d
z 1 1 .625 99 65 .
• ·· figure.
.
.
Denver
I 3 o ·.250' 78120 Pirates need only one more ' HenotonlyputthePirateson
Monday's Results
playoffvictory over the Cincin- the hoard with their first run
Oakland 34 Houston o
nati Reds and it's aU over
IOnlysgandme ~chGeduled)
Cincinnati Manager Spar.ky whthen hhe Jed off theffliCin~ ~intig
.
~ ay s ames
·
.
·WI a orne run o ·
cmna
Allan Ia at New Orleans
Anderson, glum but not diSCOU· - starter Gary Nolan but he also
Dallas al Balli more
aged 18
· · · h' 1 b'
· lied
. .
Chicago at Cleveland
r
'
pmmng Js c u s s~p
the wm~ng run off
Los Ang at Philadelphia
hopes on lefthander Ross loser Clay Carroll m the e1ghth
Minnesota at Denver
GrimSley, a 14-game winner with , an energetic piece of
N.Y. GtantsatSanFran
thisyear
._
. that
dl .
Washington at St. Louis
",
·
,
"
uoserunrung . .sprea goom
Buffalo al. Qakland
I m fme, I m readY, .says among.the standmg room only
Elhs, who won 15 for the crowd of 62 420 In Riverfront
Cincinnall at Kan City
Houslon at Pittsburgh
Pirates this year "I'll go out Stadium '
San .Diego at Miami
th
d do
~
, ·
. ·
N, v. Jets at New England
ere an
my st, that s all
WtiiJ one out and the bases
(Only games scheduled)
you can do."
loadeo in the eighth iMing,
Monday:s G~mes
The Plrat•• e•me from
Green Bay al Detroit, nighlr.
·
(Only game scheduled)

Browns Coach·
Plans Changes

Materialistic Thinns Can't Hel'P

•• • ••

Division

w. 1. I, pet. pf pa
LosAngeles 2 1 ·1 .625 81 65
Atlanta
2 2 o .500 111 71
San Fran 2 2 0 .500 98 63

I

'

·

w. I. I. pet. p1 pa
I .0 .7511 76 60
I · 0 .750 104 97
3. 0 .250 86 69
3 I . m 7S 108

West~rn

---Jr!";;-;":;;;;;;;;;;-.,";i:;;ed,;;;;;:;.-:;w-1

EDITORIALS

;.

~

'

I

••'

�·-

'
4- Tile D111J I 'nl, M""'eport-Puuw, 0., Oct. 10, t9Tl

the Sports .
•

By.Chet Tannehill

Desk

.

•

Brown Still

W.-l&amp;ington Window

Not Saltisfied

N~uclear

walL~

.

.With .Offense

..

...•

."

of enriched concrete and

vast banks of earth, and
continuously ·monitored by
automatic alarm systems that
would detect the tiniest leak .
The · whole · installation is
·earthquake-proof, fire-proof,
tornado-proof and hurricane:

Recycling ·Plants
Will Ease Power. Shortages'.·

.

)

CINCINNATI (UP!) _Paul
prQur. · .
·
;,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. Brown says the .. CinclnnaU
One
safety
issue
raiSed
by
uranium rods used as fuel increase the cost of nuclear·
By WUIS I:ASSEUI
•
Bengals still 11eed more conUalted Plftl late1118tloaal c•Jenoents j., a nuclear power powered electric power, a bill critics in the legisiallve
All lDfGI'DIIItive queslon-answer paper on half.lime in· sistency l.n moving. the bill.
ln fla1 S&lt;~ndy pi11eland near reactor will sustain a chain that ~uuid be borne ultimately c&lt;ilnmittee's public hearings ·
not
satisfied,"
lliuwn
"I'm
!'mllllloa In ·(ootf&gt;lllllld on the football computer ratingt"has
Barnwell, S. C., privpte en· reaction fur about three years. by consumers of electricity. concerned the possibility of
Ileal elreullted to lchoola and the media by the Ohio High School said, although it waa clear be
lcrprise is spending nearly $100 Then the accumulation of
The Allied-Gulf Barnwell accidents involving truck.a or
.
'
was
still
savoring
the
Sunday,
Mbletlc AIIOCiatlon.
"···on was te produc ts - the plant will recover annually an railroad cars which transport
tllillhm pn a recycling plant fl.,,
win over Ile!)v~r that put the
II f~. without abridgement :
!hal will vastly extend "ashes" of nuclear power _ amounl of • nuclear fuel spent fuel elements t~ the plant
Bengals
in
·
the
lead
in
the
·
Qllo
eenior high school football ill played \iSing the
Am eric's potential supply of dampens 1heir reaction to· lhe equipvalenl to that contaioed site.
American
·
C
onference·
'Central
.
AUied-Gulf
officials showed
· electric energy,
Nat!Gnll A)lllance Football Rules.
·
P&lt;•inl where they have to be in 1,500,1100 tons of newly mined
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Division.
urariiwn . II will serve the that the materials ~ill be
Built in partnership by Allied replaced,
Qole of the ·rules In the National Alliance Code .ls Rule 3-1·1
"But there are some encour·
Chemical and Gulf Oil comAt this point, the "spent" fuel recycling needs of more than 30 transported · in . massive steel .
whlclt spedflea the lengtlrof Jlel;iods_and inlennissWns. There
PHONE': 992-3480
.
aging
things,"
he
added.
,
"
We
Cor ner .M.111 -and Secon d Sts. "We Reserve
and lead containers whic!l can .
panies, the ne)V plant will cleOJen1s still contain ' a large nuclear power plants which
The
To Limit Qua~tities" '
hu bien milch abuee of the hlllf,tlme intennission resultiilg Iii
.I'VT.. NICHOLS
recycle spent fuel ~lemelits amount of uranium and on line ur in various stages of withstand · any il)tpact they
atended delays In lltartjng the second half, disagreements made our first five th.ii'd-down
plays, Alld Ken's ability
to
·
H
RT
.
A
FORD,
W.
Va.
~
from
'nuclear power plantS. plutonium. Simply throwing c~&gt;nstruclion in the Southeast. _might conceivably receive in
·. be~n lchools 81'1d ~ between ~ches and officla:ls.
,•
throw,
his
ablllty
to
stand
In
Private
Sandra
·
L.
Nichols,
&amp;heditled for completion in them away would be foolhardy
Wh'en plans for , the project any kind of highway '· or rail
.This year special empltasis was placed upon unifonn ad••
daughter of Mn. Hazel L. 1974, il will be . the third r.. r three reas&lt;Jns. First, in were annOWtced, some cries of accideht. .
ministration of this rule so that it would be consistently applied in there are a:ll important."
The shipping precautions are.
·, Ill games. ApparenUy there is still some misooderatandlng, so· Brown was referring to Ken Walker • . Hartford, has pt·ivately operated nuclear their enormous metar jackets, alarm went up from en'Anderaon, the quarterback
rccl'ivcd a letter ol com· recycling plant in America.
so
elaborate that it win cost:;
!hey would conslilute a for: vironmental protection gr9ups,
. tllis buUetln is be1nJ illped In Queati@n·Answer form answering
who finally engineered a touch·
n~endatlon upon complelioQ
These plans - and others niigabie disposal problem. , But a special committee of the upwards . of" $2,000 0 a ton to
...... '
, the most frequenUy asked queations.
.
down after nine straight of eight weeks of basic like lh~m which are sure to second, it would be an enor· slate. legislature, after a long transport spent fuel elements
',.1
'
i'i · 1- Why did the OHSAA adopt this new rule which shortens quarters without one.
, tralnlag at the Womea's f"llow - are .essential to mous waste of a limited . investigation , r u I e d from nuclear power plants ' in
~ l,h~half~inte'mlalon? ADmr: Thlsino&amp;8 new rule.It has
One of the Anderson p&amp;llleS
Army Corps Ceater, Ft. making . nuclear
.'.
power natur~l resource _ uranium. unanimously that the plant the southeast to the Barnwell
:1bien a P!lrt of the footblll code but has be&lt;!n in.tJIISISlenUy en- waa a 12-yarder to Chip Myers McCiellaa; Ala. She was economicallY
;;
feasibl• . The And finally, it would greatly would be as safe as anyone !acUity. That's an example of
·~: The 0Jl$AA does not write football rules. The rules are that gave !be Bangais theirlasi
ctted for her high academic
·'
could ask.
whatw~'re going to have to pa)'
·'.
~ ~Led, by the National Football Rules Committee. Ohio has one
.,
points of the 21-10 game.
standing during the course.
A personal.inspection of the fur . the
environmental
)Wtlng ~ale on the Football Rules cOmmittee. · · · "
./
"That was probably the pret,
The private Is a lt71
half-finished facility leads to protections · we're
all
,r
2 -' What Is the lengtll of the half-time lnlennission? An- tiest paas I've ~er seen Kenny
graduate of Wahama High
lhe same conclusion. Allied· demanding.
•
.._., Tbe ~If 16 minutes. However, for junior high throw," .
Gulf is bending over back·
said. · "I
School. .
.
MIXED
llld llellio!' high school \!lamS there is an .adaitional three( 3J never had to break stride.
wards, at enormous extra cost,
Across From Upper Flarklng
"The JNI88 was perfect. It
.
' minu~ of tUne for teams to conduct wann-11p activities. Thus
I~ PORK LOIN
to insure that this plant is Lot
was
a
good
play
on
Kenny's
. 1~ total elapsed llalf-tlme lnlennission is 18 mbwles.
super-safe.lt will discharge no
• •
· Walk A Little
radioactive waste into the
· · 3- Wbeq does the half-time inlermlasion start? Allswer: .part becauee be got hit as he ·
Save A Lot At
nearby Savannah River, and
The half-time lntemiission atarts wben hoth teams have cleared·
·. instantly
.
atmosphefic emissions w!U
., lbefleld. In thismam~ !tis equitable for both teams.
badgered
by
reporters
In
o
lb.
raise the natural level of
t - Is it mandatory for the teams to wann-11p for three
Riverfront
Stadium
after
the
811~
·
radioactivity less than a
minutes on the field? Answer: Yes. Wann-1!p In the locker room . win, which made Cincinnati 3-1
Cor. Main fl. Sycamore
WASHlNGTQN (UPJJ
each; and Indiana and Ala- iwninous dial wristwatch does.
or on the '!'•Y to the field does not me~ requirements of the r'ule. for the seasori. What abOut
Senslllv~ Alann~
' '
Since the first of the month, bama, one each.
.5 - WhG is responsible for enforcement of the wann-11p
Kansaa
City
next
sunday
•.
theY
After
chemical
separation
federal · Inspectors have tieen
There w~s no individual
JrOViaHn? Alllftr: ,The Head Coach is, responSible'for h!lving wanted to know.
'
You 'IlL ike Our
'
from still useful fuel, the
daily, and · without fanfare, rantnng of the mines.
his tlqllld return fu the field at the end of 15 minutes. It is also ihe ·"I haven't even thought
LONDON (UPI) - A checklns 58 coal mines in West
&amp;hiick, deputy mines direct- radioactive -wastt materials
Lower Prices! ,
~ty of the coach to ..!e that his squad does participate
about next &amp;utday," be anwill
go.
into
vast
stainieS~~ steel
government
report
has
blamed
·Virginia
which
are
among
122
or
for
healih
and
safety,
said
in warm.q~ activities.
swered. "Let me enjoy this till
amorous, long-haired youths labelled "potentially hazar- the bureau decided to issue the tanks, surrounded by thick
I - What is the penalty If the squad does not utilize the three I get out of here."
for a sharp increase in the dO us." .
list in a new drive toward preminutes period lor wann-11p activity? Aolwer: There is no
•••• CLIP OUT AID USE ••••
number of children in Britain
Donald P. Schlick, the chief venting· mine ' accidents, In·
.penaltjr. Howev~, the rule has been adopted to protect the :~::::::::::~:::::~::;::~::m:::;::::~!!!i».~&gt;.:~{­ with lice In their hair .
•
Offer good thru Oct. 26
• .
safety enforcer for the U.S. stead of reacting after ac·
.~pll)'tl'l. Reaearcb by the National Alliance Football Rules
The report, published Bureau of Mines, said West cldents occur.
STATELINE, Nev. (UPI)
._Committee indicated that an extraordinarily large number of
Munday,saidamedicaisurvey
Virginia led Co8lproducing
"If the mine worker knows
' .
- llarrah's TaHae Race
, .Injuries occurred early In the third quarter. This has been atin
1970,
the
latest
year
'
for
states
with
mines
·
considered
he's
In
a
potentially
hazardous
; trlbutel,l by medical autl)orltlea to a lack of proper W8nn-1!p. Book , Monday listed Pitts' which figures are available, as possible hazards.
mine, .he11 work much safer,"
burglt a. 6-5 favorite. over
,Thus the coach should enforce the rule to protect his playe111. ,
for Tuesday's showed that 223,422 school . &amp;hUck said the new com- &amp;hUck said,
r. 7 - How can the squad wilrm-llp lf the band has not finished Cincinnati
t·
The sixfactors'golng into the
National League playoff children ~ad lice. This com- pliation was based on six
Its hilf-tlmt llhow? Aolwer: The coach should Instruct his squad
pared with 192,896·chiidren who factors and would remain designation were a computer .
game,
·
~
· to go to the end zone and ava:llsble are bey9Rd the goal posts lor
Detroit was recorded as a were found lo be infested with Intact until Jan. '1, when a new listing of the density of mine
l WlrDHip ~vity. In this manner the band can complete their
law violations compared to
13-10 favorite over ·oakland !he vermin the previous year. list Is prepared.
, 'JI'OIP'IID IDd the !elms Clll 8till be ready to play at the end of 18 in the American ,League
The report, prepared by Sir
Throughout that period, he hours of Inspection by the bu·
minutes. .
.
George
Gudber,
lhe
Education
said,
federal bispectors would reau; soother computer listing
•
match.
•
TlltiT
lOX
•
I
If
the
HOme
Team
returns
to
the
field
after
15
minutes
t
Department's chief medical maintain dally inspections of by accident frequency;
•
officer said:
the mines.
number offataUties; excessive
llld Villllng Team aftiJI: 1811 minuteS, is th~e a ~ally? An!IWW: Y•. The vi81UntTeam Ia penalized 15 yards for delay of
"Infestation in senior boys
Pennsylvania ranked second quantitieS of methane gas or
I
tr!i:l :• · - - - - - - - - - - - -. .· - - •
•
used
10
be
uncommon,
but
with
on
the
list,
with
31
mines,
other
explosive
conditions;
G
game. Ina:llcaR~theteamthat Jalaie Is penalized.
SVAC STANDINGS
•
long hair now popular among tr~iled by Virginia, With 8; need
,for
enforcemeQt
I .:. If the band doea not clear the field at the end of 15
. ALL GAMES
I
both
sexes
and
the
habit
of
boys
Kentucky,
7;
Ohio
'
a
nd
Colorapresence,
ilnd
education
and
•
minutes, Ia there 8 penalty? Allsw!lJ:: No. H9Wt!Ver, the band . J'.~~~rn
J" 1L :.S 0! and .
'
.
.:
•
·
·
along
with
do,
5
each;
Dllnois
and
Utah,
3
training
of
miners,
l
•
(Regular
$2.75)
•
•
mUll beclearoftllefleldat the end of 18mlrmtes in order that the K ~reek
23
, • . The Colonel's Thrift Box contains 91arge·p~; •.
• Jl "~ . , 10 "~~u's judgem~\,
•
h
nbeglno!l
. MPrl'I'El{
·,
";\ D fliinJ
~' (ls \!' ,~
26
,.y.."""".....
t II
&amp;:
er
beroneorw
.
, .I
r a lila
93
of
finger
lickin'
good
chicken,
enough
for
a
family
.......
~
'
•• •
;-- .-·
""l.t'' •
· mrl!es Valley
121
mine Iii e country," .llchll
•
of four. One box per family, no' substitutions.
•
D
10a
gain mcri points in the computer Sduth)oestern
u 125 is to
said.
"There
are
mines
that,
at
Urging teen-agers to heed
r-abydefeatlnganopponentby a wide margin? Aaswer: No, , Hannan Tr!ico
0 5 01158
any given time, are potentially
Eacbteamaalnsthesainen~m~berofpolntswhethertheywinby-' TEAM SVAC ON~\ p OP their parents' pleas to use . KIMBAll. TRADED
I
MILWAUKEE (UPI)-Toby. more hazardous ihan others."
-polntar50polnts.lthasbeenpointedoutthataleamwblchis Southern ·
3 o 56 s soap, water and a comb, the
&amp;hiick said the ultimate
·:wtm!ni mould make
effort to keep their opponents Kyger Creek .
3 1105 14 report observed:
.
Kimball a 3CI:yesr-old veteran
D
goal .was to ensure that a:ll
'
Eastern
3 1 64 19
•
"Resistantstrains of had lice of six National Basketball
~ aound lor future gam•. Points are earned when North Galli~
2 2 · 10 56
mines
were
safe
a:ll
the
time.
•
dlftat.d opponenla win. U the opponents are not physically and Symmes Valley 1 2 41 64 llave been suspected in several Association seasons, was"But, until ·such time, we
and
have
been
observed
'•
areas
· ..._..,..
"'"•lnj•--'th
Sou!hwestern
.. ..., . en 11 Ill"'Ierchance they wlllwin·
Hannan Trace
o0 33 32o 103
104 in a resi,denUal boarding school traded by , the Milwaukee need to know Where these po•
•
CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
•
Bucks Monday to the Kansas tentially !JlOre hazardous
••
, 1- Wlllt Vllue ~ p!aced upon a tie In the computer ratings? Totoll
12 12 ue 368
•.,
where
the
infestation·
only
•
POMEROY,O.
•
.
City..()maha
Kings
for
money
;iss : A tie counla as 1 win for both teama. Thus In a tie
Friday- Southern at' Kyger
li
mines are local~ and the
.' "•--''••••• edited bot
Creek; Southwestern at responded to prolonged at- and 8 future draft choice.
OlE COUPOI
PEl PURCHASE
conditions that make them so,"
;PJDe polnll are -~-ow cr
to h teams as per for· Hannan Trace; Green at North tention to personal hygiene and
'
~.HoWWf'!',lttllethlrdlevellnthecalculationanopolntsare
Gallla; and Symmes Valley at fine-combing of the hair."
1
~tedforalleto the team atthe firlt lev~.
Wurtland, Ky.
Soturdor - Eastern at
I
Cadiz.

J

FREE ON-STREET
PARKING
AFTER 5

.,

MARKET ~ Open Daily 9. to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

_..and

are

•
. . .
MIDDlEPORT, 0.

~~- ...~------------~------~--~~~~
SUPERIORS

I

-SUPERIORS
TEI'\IDER
SMOKED

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICJ:. _._

~.,

;

I

My~rs

th~~:ne ba~~~

BUDGET BACON 'PORK

.

I nsp·
· e·c·.·tors
·. .
Lice Spread Ch
k
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p
•
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ec . ItS
Where. H
Is .Longes·t

lb.
'

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

. ..

••
••
~

Visit the Colonel on

1\Akdnesday or Thursday only!

.COFFEE-MATE·

CENTER CUTS
lb.

Everyday Low Price!

I

mE

lb.

SUPERIORS TASTY

lOLA'S

OR

.CHOPS

lb.

'·

HAlf

99~

16oz..69. ~

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~:g

•
•

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•

$225 -·

Visit .the Colonel.

•I

•

Bottles

carton:

PEPSI

.

k
p

II
[
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d
II

•
D

p

[

~
I
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£

••

Duel.Expected
At Waterloo
BRUSSELS (UPI) - The
llnance minister and the
toblcco retailer argued about
taua. It ended, according to
the retailer, with the finance
mlnialer ayiilg "I dci not talk
with an idiot. You ' can drop

dead."
·The result may be a duel. on

the battlefield at Waterloo.'

.The tetailer expects an
apolotrY .If he doesn't get it, he
says two seconds will visit the
finance. minister and make
'rrangern£nls lor the duel.
, Edouard Lekeux, Belgian
ASIOCI1tlon of Tobacco
lletallers chairman, said
. Mooday, '1t's a• question bt
honw, In our family honor is an
Important thing."
A 'spokesman for Finance
Minlater Andries Vierick would
not eamment. "I have not been
able to contaCt the minister on
tllil Dllller," he said.
l.ekllllt, 47., glancing at his
father's nrord, said in an in·
tenlew, "I cannot say I.am a
fenctna cbampion, but if

4·! RECORDS
NEW YORK (UPIJHouaton and Baltimore each
had a 4-0 record as National
Basketba11 Association teams
won '!I of 38 pr~H~eason games
played
with
American
Basketball Association ·teams
this year,
Other club mark.a included 41by Phoel)lx of the NBA and $.2
by Carolina of the ABA

SOX ASK WAIVERS
CHICAGO (UP!) -The Chi·
cago While Sox asked waivers
on veteran relief pitcher Moe
Drabowsky Monday fot the
· purpoee of giving · him his
lllcondltional releaee. ·
Drabowaky, acquired late In
the lleUOI1 from the St. IAuls
C&amp;nlnals, a1ao hal pitched for
tile Chlc•o Cuba, MUnukee
. Braves, Cincinnati Redl, Jean. '
sas aty A'a, Baltimore Orlolea
and Kansas aty Royals cmtng
a 17-year career In the majors.

Minister ·vlerick ·bas the
courage to meet me on the
Waterloo batUefield he will
find 0111 what I can do."
Lekeux's association has
been quarreilng for weeks with DOWNEY WST
the minister about taxes.
SEA'ITLE (UPI) -Running
Saturday the two spoke on the back Darrell Downey will be
phone and Ukeux said he lost to the University of
challenged the minister to a Wli&amp;hini!ton football team for
radio debate. The conversation the remainder of the eeum ford Saturday, lt was Ill'
ended with the insult, Lekeux and receiver Tom' Scott will not ' nounced Monday by Coach Jim
said. ·
be able to play asalnst stan-. Owens.
Duels are illegal under
Belgian law, nevertheless
Lekeux said he 1nnls to meet
VIe rick in Iron t' of the lion of
Waterloo, the monument
commemorating the defeat of
Napoleon by the English in
1815.
KUKAL HIRED '
VIENNI\ (UP!) -Jan Kukal
of Czechoslovakia, whose style
resembles that of U.S. No. 1
star Stan Smith, has been hired
by Romanian tennis officials to
prepare the ho8t country ior
weekend'• Davis Cup 6nal
against the U.S. in Bucharest.

next

CANADA DRY
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•
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IL.!:. '

That's right.
. This "little problem" ties up our central
There are times when you can do it office equipment. It ties up everybody on a
yourself.
party line . And, of course, it ties up your
All you have to do is make certain your phonetoo.
.
phone's handset is placed squarely back in
The result mar be serious, if not tragic.
itscradleaftereachcall.
·
,
. If an emergency should occur you might be
· OurreJlillrr!!CordsshoWthatlbout 10% the last one to find Ollt.
of customer reported phone -troubles are
So, for your !1Nn sake as well as others',
caused by receivers simply being off thei.r be sure to end every conversation with a
hoOk$. . '
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good secur:e hi Oil-UP.

CELERY

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4- Tile D111J I 'nl, M""'eport-Puuw, 0., Oct. 10, t9Tl

the Sports .
•

By.Chet Tannehill

Desk

.

•

Brown Still

W.-l&amp;ington Window

Not Saltisfied

N~uclear

walL~

.

.With .Offense

..

...•

."

of enriched concrete and

vast banks of earth, and
continuously ·monitored by
automatic alarm systems that
would detect the tiniest leak .
The · whole · installation is
·earthquake-proof, fire-proof,
tornado-proof and hurricane:

Recycling ·Plants
Will Ease Power. Shortages'.·

.

)

CINCINNATI (UP!) _Paul
prQur. · .
·
;,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. Brown says the .. CinclnnaU
One
safety
issue
raiSed
by
uranium rods used as fuel increase the cost of nuclear·
By WUIS I:ASSEUI
•
Bengals still 11eed more conUalted Plftl late1118tloaal c•Jenoents j., a nuclear power powered electric power, a bill critics in the legisiallve
All lDfGI'DIIItive queslon-answer paper on half.lime in· sistency l.n moving. the bill.
ln fla1 S&lt;~ndy pi11eland near reactor will sustain a chain that ~uuid be borne ultimately c&lt;ilnmittee's public hearings ·
not
satisfied,"
lliuwn
"I'm
!'mllllloa In ·(ootf&gt;lllllld on the football computer ratingt"has
Barnwell, S. C., privpte en· reaction fur about three years. by consumers of electricity. concerned the possibility of
Ileal elreullted to lchoola and the media by the Ohio High School said, although it waa clear be
lcrprise is spending nearly $100 Then the accumulation of
The Allied-Gulf Barnwell accidents involving truck.a or
.
'
was
still
savoring
the
Sunday,
Mbletlc AIIOCiatlon.
"···on was te produc ts - the plant will recover annually an railroad cars which transport
tllillhm pn a recycling plant fl.,,
win over Ile!)v~r that put the
II f~. without abridgement :
!hal will vastly extend "ashes" of nuclear power _ amounl of • nuclear fuel spent fuel elements t~ the plant
Bengals
in
·
the
lead
in
the
·
Qllo
eenior high school football ill played \iSing the
Am eric's potential supply of dampens 1heir reaction to· lhe equipvalenl to that contaioed site.
American
·
C
onference·
'Central
.
AUied-Gulf
officials showed
· electric energy,
Nat!Gnll A)lllance Football Rules.
·
P&lt;•inl where they have to be in 1,500,1100 tons of newly mined
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Division.
urariiwn . II will serve the that the materials ~ill be
Built in partnership by Allied replaced,
Qole of the ·rules In the National Alliance Code .ls Rule 3-1·1
"But there are some encour·
Chemical and Gulf Oil comAt this point, the "spent" fuel recycling needs of more than 30 transported · in . massive steel .
whlclt spedflea the lengtlrof Jlel;iods_and inlennissWns. There
PHONE': 992-3480
.
aging
things,"
he
added.
,
"
We
Cor ner .M.111 -and Secon d Sts. "We Reserve
and lead containers whic!l can .
panies, the ne)V plant will cleOJen1s still contain ' a large nuclear power plants which
The
To Limit Qua~tities" '
hu bien milch abuee of the hlllf,tlme intennission resultiilg Iii
.I'VT.. NICHOLS
recycle spent fuel ~lemelits amount of uranium and on line ur in various stages of withstand · any il)tpact they
atended delays In lltartjng the second half, disagreements made our first five th.ii'd-down
plays, Alld Ken's ability
to
·
H
RT
.
A
FORD,
W.
Va.
~
from
'nuclear power plantS. plutonium. Simply throwing c~&gt;nstruclion in the Southeast. _might conceivably receive in
·. be~n lchools 81'1d ~ between ~ches and officla:ls.
,•
throw,
his
ablllty
to
stand
In
Private
Sandra
·
L.
Nichols,
&amp;heditled for completion in them away would be foolhardy
Wh'en plans for , the project any kind of highway '· or rail
.This year special empltasis was placed upon unifonn ad••
daughter of Mn. Hazel L. 1974, il will be . the third r.. r three reas&lt;Jns. First, in were annOWtced, some cries of accideht. .
ministration of this rule so that it would be consistently applied in there are a:ll important."
The shipping precautions are.
·, Ill games. ApparenUy there is still some misooderatandlng, so· Brown was referring to Ken Walker • . Hartford, has pt·ivately operated nuclear their enormous metar jackets, alarm went up from en'Anderaon, the quarterback
rccl'ivcd a letter ol com· recycling plant in America.
so
elaborate that it win cost:;
!hey would conslilute a for: vironmental protection gr9ups,
. tllis buUetln is be1nJ illped In Queati@n·Answer form answering
who finally engineered a touch·
n~endatlon upon complelioQ
These plans - and others niigabie disposal problem. , But a special committee of the upwards . of" $2,000 0 a ton to
...... '
, the most frequenUy asked queations.
.
down after nine straight of eight weeks of basic like lh~m which are sure to second, it would be an enor· slate. legislature, after a long transport spent fuel elements
',.1
'
i'i · 1- Why did the OHSAA adopt this new rule which shortens quarters without one.
, tralnlag at the Womea's f"llow - are .essential to mous waste of a limited . investigation , r u I e d from nuclear power plants ' in
~ l,h~half~inte'mlalon? ADmr: Thlsino&amp;8 new rule.It has
One of the Anderson p&amp;llleS
Army Corps Ceater, Ft. making . nuclear
.'.
power natur~l resource _ uranium. unanimously that the plant the southeast to the Barnwell
:1bien a P!lrt of the footblll code but has be&lt;!n in.tJIISISlenUy en- waa a 12-yarder to Chip Myers McCiellaa; Ala. She was economicallY
;;
feasibl• . The And finally, it would greatly would be as safe as anyone !acUity. That's an example of
·~: The 0Jl$AA does not write football rules. The rules are that gave !be Bangais theirlasi
ctted for her high academic
·'
could ask.
whatw~'re going to have to pa)'
·'.
~ ~Led, by the National Football Rules Committee. Ohio has one
.,
points of the 21-10 game.
standing during the course.
A personal.inspection of the fur . the
environmental
)Wtlng ~ale on the Football Rules cOmmittee. · · · "
./
"That was probably the pret,
The private Is a lt71
half-finished facility leads to protections · we're
all
,r
2 -' What Is the lengtll of the half-time lnlennission? An- tiest paas I've ~er seen Kenny
graduate of Wahama High
lhe same conclusion. Allied· demanding.
•
.._., Tbe ~If 16 minutes. However, for junior high throw," .
Gulf is bending over back·
said. · "I
School. .
.
MIXED
llld llellio!' high school \!lamS there is an .adaitional three( 3J never had to break stride.
wards, at enormous extra cost,
Across From Upper Flarklng
"The JNI88 was perfect. It
.
' minu~ of tUne for teams to conduct wann-11p activities. Thus
I~ PORK LOIN
to insure that this plant is Lot
was
a
good
play
on
Kenny's
. 1~ total elapsed llalf-tlme lnlennission is 18 mbwles.
super-safe.lt will discharge no
• •
· Walk A Little
radioactive waste into the
· · 3- Wbeq does the half-time inlermlasion start? Allswer: .part becauee be got hit as he ·
Save A Lot At
nearby Savannah River, and
The half-time lntemiission atarts wben hoth teams have cleared·
·. instantly
.
atmosphefic emissions w!U
., lbefleld. In thismam~ !tis equitable for both teams.
badgered
by
reporters
In
o
lb.
raise the natural level of
t - Is it mandatory for the teams to wann-11p for three
Riverfront
Stadium
after
the
811~
·
radioactivity less than a
minutes on the field? Answer: Yes. Wann-1!p In the locker room . win, which made Cincinnati 3-1
Cor. Main fl. Sycamore
WASHlNGTQN (UPJJ
each; and Indiana and Ala- iwninous dial wristwatch does.
or on the '!'•Y to the field does not me~ requirements of the r'ule. for the seasori. What abOut
Senslllv~ Alann~
' '
Since the first of the month, bama, one each.
.5 - WhG is responsible for enforcement of the wann-11p
Kansaa
City
next
sunday
•.
theY
After
chemical
separation
federal · Inspectors have tieen
There w~s no individual
JrOViaHn? Alllftr: ,The Head Coach is, responSible'for h!lving wanted to know.
'
You 'IlL ike Our
'
from still useful fuel, the
daily, and · without fanfare, rantnng of the mines.
his tlqllld return fu the field at the end of 15 minutes. It is also ihe ·"I haven't even thought
LONDON (UPI) - A checklns 58 coal mines in West
&amp;hiick, deputy mines direct- radioactive -wastt materials
Lower Prices! ,
~ty of the coach to ..!e that his squad does participate
about next &amp;utday," be anwill
go.
into
vast
stainieS~~ steel
government
report
has
blamed
·Virginia
which
are
among
122
or
for
healih
and
safety,
said
in warm.q~ activities.
swered. "Let me enjoy this till
amorous, long-haired youths labelled "potentially hazar- the bureau decided to issue the tanks, surrounded by thick
I - What is the penalty If the squad does not utilize the three I get out of here."
for a sharp increase in the dO us." .
list in a new drive toward preminutes period lor wann-11p activity? Aolwer: There is no
•••• CLIP OUT AID USE ••••
number of children in Britain
Donald P. Schlick, the chief venting· mine ' accidents, In·
.penaltjr. Howev~, the rule has been adopted to protect the :~::::::::::~:::::~::;::~::m:::;::::~!!!i».~&gt;.:~{­ with lice In their hair .
•
Offer good thru Oct. 26
• .
safety enforcer for the U.S. stead of reacting after ac·
.~pll)'tl'l. Reaearcb by the National Alliance Football Rules
The report, published Bureau of Mines, said West cldents occur.
STATELINE, Nev. (UPI)
._Committee indicated that an extraordinarily large number of
Munday,saidamedicaisurvey
Virginia led Co8lproducing
"If the mine worker knows
' .
- llarrah's TaHae Race
, .Injuries occurred early In the third quarter. This has been atin
1970,
the
latest
year
'
for
states
with
mines
·
considered
he's
In
a
potentially
hazardous
; trlbutel,l by medical autl)orltlea to a lack of proper W8nn-1!p. Book , Monday listed Pitts' which figures are available, as possible hazards.
mine, .he11 work much safer,"
burglt a. 6-5 favorite. over
,Thus the coach should enforce the rule to protect his playe111. ,
for Tuesday's showed that 223,422 school . &amp;hUck said the new com- &amp;hUck said,
r. 7 - How can the squad wilrm-llp lf the band has not finished Cincinnati
t·
The sixfactors'golng into the
National League playoff children ~ad lice. This com- pliation was based on six
Its hilf-tlmt llhow? Aolwer: The coach should Instruct his squad
pared with 192,896·chiidren who factors and would remain designation were a computer .
game,
·
~
· to go to the end zone and ava:llsble are bey9Rd the goal posts lor
Detroit was recorded as a were found lo be infested with Intact until Jan. '1, when a new listing of the density of mine
l WlrDHip ~vity. In this manner the band can complete their
law violations compared to
13-10 favorite over ·oakland !he vermin the previous year. list Is prepared.
, 'JI'OIP'IID IDd the !elms Clll 8till be ready to play at the end of 18 in the American ,League
The report, prepared by Sir
Throughout that period, he hours of Inspection by the bu·
minutes. .
.
George
Gudber,
lhe
Education
said,
federal bispectors would reau; soother computer listing
•
match.
•
TlltiT
lOX
•
I
If
the
HOme
Team
returns
to
the
field
after
15
minutes
t
Department's chief medical maintain dally inspections of by accident frequency;
•
officer said:
the mines.
number offataUties; excessive
llld Villllng Team aftiJI: 1811 minuteS, is th~e a ~ally? An!IWW: Y•. The vi81UntTeam Ia penalized 15 yards for delay of
"Infestation in senior boys
Pennsylvania ranked second quantitieS of methane gas or
I
tr!i:l :• · - - - - - - - - - - - -. .· - - •
•
used
10
be
uncommon,
but
with
on
the
list,
with
31
mines,
other
explosive
conditions;
G
game. Ina:llcaR~theteamthat Jalaie Is penalized.
SVAC STANDINGS
•
long hair now popular among tr~iled by Virginia, With 8; need
,for
enforcemeQt
I .:. If the band doea not clear the field at the end of 15
. ALL GAMES
I
both
sexes
and
the
habit
of
boys
Kentucky,
7;
Ohio
'
a
nd
Colorapresence,
ilnd
education
and
•
minutes, Ia there 8 penalty? Allsw!lJ:: No. H9Wt!Ver, the band . J'.~~~rn
J" 1L :.S 0! and .
'
.
.:
•
·
·
along
with
do,
5
each;
Dllnois
and
Utah,
3
training
of
miners,
l
•
(Regular
$2.75)
•
•
mUll beclearoftllefleldat the end of 18mlrmtes in order that the K ~reek
23
, • . The Colonel's Thrift Box contains 91arge·p~; •.
• Jl "~ . , 10 "~~u's judgem~\,
•
h
nbeglno!l
. MPrl'I'El{
·,
";\ D fliinJ
~' (ls \!' ,~
26
,.y.."""".....
t II
&amp;:
er
beroneorw
.
, .I
r a lila
93
of
finger
lickin'
good
chicken,
enough
for
a
family
.......
~
'
•• •
;-- .-·
""l.t'' •
· mrl!es Valley
121
mine Iii e country," .llchll
•
of four. One box per family, no' substitutions.
•
D
10a
gain mcri points in the computer Sduth)oestern
u 125 is to
said.
"There
are
mines
that,
at
Urging teen-agers to heed
r-abydefeatlnganopponentby a wide margin? Aaswer: No, , Hannan Tr!ico
0 5 01158
any given time, are potentially
Eacbteamaalnsthesainen~m~berofpolntswhethertheywinby-' TEAM SVAC ON~\ p OP their parents' pleas to use . KIMBAll. TRADED
I
MILWAUKEE (UPI)-Toby. more hazardous ihan others."
-polntar50polnts.lthasbeenpointedoutthataleamwblchis Southern ·
3 o 56 s soap, water and a comb, the
&amp;hiick said the ultimate
·:wtm!ni mould make
effort to keep their opponents Kyger Creek .
3 1105 14 report observed:
.
Kimball a 3CI:yesr-old veteran
D
goal .was to ensure that a:ll
'
Eastern
3 1 64 19
•
"Resistantstrains of had lice of six National Basketball
~ aound lor future gam•. Points are earned when North Galli~
2 2 · 10 56
mines
were
safe
a:ll
the
time.
•
dlftat.d opponenla win. U the opponents are not physically and Symmes Valley 1 2 41 64 llave been suspected in several Association seasons, was"But, until ·such time, we
and
have
been
observed
'•
areas
· ..._..,..
"'"•lnj•--'th
Sou!hwestern
.. ..., . en 11 Ill"'Ierchance they wlllwin·
Hannan Trace
o0 33 32o 103
104 in a resi,denUal boarding school traded by , the Milwaukee need to know Where these po•
•
CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
•
Bucks Monday to the Kansas tentially !JlOre hazardous
••
, 1- Wlllt Vllue ~ p!aced upon a tie In the computer ratings? Totoll
12 12 ue 368
•.,
where
the
infestation·
only
•
POMEROY,O.
•
.
City..()maha
Kings
for
money
;iss : A tie counla as 1 win for both teama. Thus In a tie
Friday- Southern at' Kyger
li
mines are local~ and the
.' "•--''••••• edited bot
Creek; Southwestern at responded to prolonged at- and 8 future draft choice.
OlE COUPOI
PEl PURCHASE
conditions that make them so,"
;PJDe polnll are -~-ow cr
to h teams as per for· Hannan Trace; Green at North tention to personal hygiene and
'
~.HoWWf'!',lttllethlrdlevellnthecalculationanopolntsare
Gallla; and Symmes Valley at fine-combing of the hair."
1
~tedforalleto the team atthe firlt lev~.
Wurtland, Ky.
Soturdor - Eastern at
I
Cadiz.

J

FREE ON-STREET
PARKING
AFTER 5

.,

MARKET ~ Open Daily 9. to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

_..and

are

•
. . .
MIDDlEPORT, 0.

~~- ...~------------~------~--~~~~
SUPERIORS

I

-SUPERIORS
TEI'\IDER
SMOKED

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICJ:. _._

~.,

;

I

My~rs

th~~:ne ba~~~

BUDGET BACON 'PORK

.

I nsp·
· e·c·.·tors
·. .
Lice Spread Ch
k
.
p
•
.
ec . ItS
Where. H
Is .Longes·t

lb.
'

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

. ..

••
••
~

Visit the Colonel on

1\Akdnesday or Thursday only!

.COFFEE-MATE·

CENTER CUTS
lb.

Everyday Low Price!

I

mE

lb.

SUPERIORS TASTY

lOLA'S

OR

.CHOPS

lb.

'·

HAlf

99~

16oz..69. ~

••
••
.~

~

~:g

•
•

•

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·aecond&amp;
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·Away

•

•

$225 -·

Visit .the Colonel.

•I

•

Bottles

carton:

PEPSI

.

k
p

II
[
I

d
II

•
D

p

[

~
I
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£

••

Duel.Expected
At Waterloo
BRUSSELS (UPI) - The
llnance minister and the
toblcco retailer argued about
taua. It ended, according to
the retailer, with the finance
mlnialer ayiilg "I dci not talk
with an idiot. You ' can drop

dead."
·The result may be a duel. on

the battlefield at Waterloo.'

.The tetailer expects an
apolotrY .If he doesn't get it, he
says two seconds will visit the
finance. minister and make
'rrangern£nls lor the duel.
, Edouard Lekeux, Belgian
ASIOCI1tlon of Tobacco
lletallers chairman, said
. Mooday, '1t's a• question bt
honw, In our family honor is an
Important thing."
A 'spokesman for Finance
Minlater Andries Vierick would
not eamment. "I have not been
able to contaCt the minister on
tllil Dllller," he said.
l.ekllllt, 47., glancing at his
father's nrord, said in an in·
tenlew, "I cannot say I.am a
fenctna cbampion, but if

4·! RECORDS
NEW YORK (UPIJHouaton and Baltimore each
had a 4-0 record as National
Basketba11 Association teams
won '!I of 38 pr~H~eason games
played
with
American
Basketball Association ·teams
this year,
Other club mark.a included 41by Phoel)lx of the NBA and $.2
by Carolina of the ABA

SOX ASK WAIVERS
CHICAGO (UP!) -The Chi·
cago While Sox asked waivers
on veteran relief pitcher Moe
Drabowsky Monday fot the
· purpoee of giving · him his
lllcondltional releaee. ·
Drabowaky, acquired late In
the lleUOI1 from the St. IAuls
C&amp;nlnals, a1ao hal pitched for
tile Chlc•o Cuba, MUnukee
. Braves, Cincinnati Redl, Jean. '
sas aty A'a, Baltimore Orlolea
and Kansas aty Royals cmtng
a 17-year career In the majors.

Minister ·vlerick ·bas the
courage to meet me on the
Waterloo batUefield he will
find 0111 what I can do."
Lekeux's association has
been quarreilng for weeks with DOWNEY WST
the minister about taxes.
SEA'ITLE (UPI) -Running
Saturday the two spoke on the back Darrell Downey will be
phone and Ukeux said he lost to the University of
challenged the minister to a Wli&amp;hini!ton football team for
radio debate. The conversation the remainder of the eeum ford Saturday, lt was Ill'
ended with the insult, Lekeux and receiver Tom' Scott will not ' nounced Monday by Coach Jim
said. ·
be able to play asalnst stan-. Owens.
Duels are illegal under
Belgian law, nevertheless
Lekeux said he 1nnls to meet
VIe rick in Iron t' of the lion of
Waterloo, the monument
commemorating the defeat of
Napoleon by the English in
1815.
KUKAL HIRED '
VIENNI\ (UP!) -Jan Kukal
of Czechoslovakia, whose style
resembles that of U.S. No. 1
star Stan Smith, has been hired
by Romanian tennis officials to
prepare the ho8t country ior
weekend'• Davis Cup 6nal
against the U.S. in Bucharest.

next

CANADA DRY
Low Calorie Sugar Free Pop

•
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SPECIAL

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~

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LARGE
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5 loav81 1.00

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That's right.
. This "little problem" ties up our central
There are times when you can do it office equipment. It ties up everybody on a
yourself.
party line . And, of course, it ties up your
All you have to do is make certain your phonetoo.
.
phone's handset is placed squarely back in
The result mar be serious, if not tragic.
itscradleaftereachcall.
·
,
. If an emergency should occur you might be
· OurreJlillrr!!CordsshoWthatlbout 10% the last one to find Ollt.
of customer reported phone -troubles are
So, for your !1Nn sake as well as others',
caused by receivers simply being off thei.r be sure to end every conversation with a
hoOk$. . '
..
'
'
. .
good secur:e hi Oil-UP.

CELERY

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PICKLES . sa · . ~
;..·~.t 10$
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8 -- 'l'bl~~.lllclclleporH'uy,O.,Oct. .IO,

197Z

New Officers of ( SOciar 1Party
i*' Ca Iend
a
r
I
.
·
.
Pomet;oy .Garden
~ Club Installed

I)ates are Arranged

I

\"' t t r~ns

Dates for vclfrans' parties,
at the • Athens nteeling that nine units In the hospital representaiive; Mrs.
~ .at Jhe Southeastern Ohio ti..~pilal, and on Dee .. 14 the .district have reaehed ·their Virgil Wal~er;Racine, hospital
"All YOU ADD
Mental Health Center and \he birthday party will be held at mernbership goaL A total of representative deputy; Mrs.
IS LOV£"®
TIJESDAY
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital the Chillicothe HospitaL The 1,215 dues have been paid with Riley, Depal'trnent second vice
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 p,m. . were announced by Mrs, district · junior community the district goal being 2,188,
president; and Mrs. 0 . . /1. • .
Tuesday with Southern Board Charles Kessinger, president, service party at Athens was
Featured speaker at the fall Martin, Eight and Forty
of Education members and at )he District 8, American ·announced for Feb, 6, with the ' .conference was . Mrs: Robert Departemental chapeau passe.
Supt. Ralph., .Sayre ' to be ·Legion Auxiliary, fall con- senior community service Riley vf Mount Sterling, the
Mrs: Neutzling. was pianist
present
ference held Thursday at pat·ty at Athens to be held on .department . second . vic.e for tbe..Conference attended by
MEIGS County Women's Lithopolis.
'Aprill2.
·.
president ,- who talked on 1ui Ameriean Legion Auxiliary
New of(icers were install~ Nolan. She displayed ·a small
I;lemocrat
Club,
7:30
p:m.
On
Nov.
9
the
district
juniors
H
was
reported
during
the
Americanism.
A report of the members. Going from Meigs
at a meeting of the Pomeroy Christmas tree made from
national convention was given County were Mrs . Albert ·
Garden Club Monday at the cockleburrs which had been Tuesday at Grace Episcopal ~ill stage a p:trty, for th;·
Parish
House,
Pomeroy,
by Mrs. Ke!!&gt;inger: District
home of Mrs. J. 0. -Roedel.
placed on a tree frame covered
Roush, Mrs. Roger F. Roush,
Installed by Mrs. Fred in red. Miniature red velvet . MIDOLEPORT Lodge, 363,
c hairman
conducted Mrs. · Roy · 1,. Hendricks,
to/tiZM -to/mt
.
workshops for the unit Middleport unit; Mrs. Neutz- ·
BlaeUnar, a past president, birds decorated the tree , Mrs. F&amp;AM, will con.fer the maste~ '
.
.
',
.J , .
.J
chairman in attendance.
were · Mrs. Harold Brown, · Nolan also ·displayed a tree mason degree on one candidate
ling, Mrs. 6. A. Martin, Mrs.
Mrs. Kessinger announced a Catherine Welsh, Mrs: Gerald
president; Mrs. J . w. Me-_, made from t.histles and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
The Salem Center PTA' went Consensus will~ held Oct 25 field service . orientation Wildermuth, Mrs . Harry
Murray, vice president; Mrs. suggested that for making both .Masonic Temple. All master
masons are invited to attend. on record Monday night to at'Melgs High School. The fall meeting to be-held on Nov. 19 Davis, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Harvey
Van
Vrank·en, trees that gloves be worn.
WEDNESDAY
endorse the five mUl oPer-ating festival w~s aetforNov. 4. Mrs. from 2 to 4 p.m. at Junction Olan Knapp, Mrs. George
secretary; and Mrs. Roedel,
Another suggestion given by
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1:30 levy for the Meigs Local School I!OMl.e Johnson reported that City. H was requested that Hackett, Sr., and Mrs. J . M.
.treasurer. In her eeremony, Mrs. Nolan was that whim
Mrs. Blaettnar compared the drying material one of the best p.m. American Legion Hall In District .to be voted on next $41 was made .on the recent units consider presenting a Thornton, Pomeroy unit; Mrs.
'
month. ·
bake sale. n was al$l , ari· candidate for Eighth District Arnold Rlchards, 'Mrs. Ernest
officers with a flower ways to hold the color is to Middleport.
REGULAR Meeting,
Meeting with the PTA to nouneedlhatafii'Staidcourse president at the summer Bowles, Mrs. Con Young, Mrs.
arrangement.
spray it lightly with hair spray
10/2U6M -10/201L
Mrs. Roedel's devotions or a clear acrylic spr,.Y. She Pomeroy-Middleport Lions answer questions on the levy Is being offered at the school. . convention to be held June 7 at William ·Smith, and Mrs. Allen
Mrs. Olive Page introduced Middleport.
were on the topic "Forward · said arran~ements should be Club, Wednesday noon at 'Were.Supt . of Schools George
Hampton, Middleport Unit 363; -41---Hargraves,
Board
of David Bowen, band director,
Extending greetings were and Mrs, Virgil Walker, Mrs.
Day by Day." New program made when the materials are Meigs Inn.
POMEROY . Chapter 80, Edu~ation President Frank wbo explained to the Patents Cmdr. Emil Shellhammer' of Julia Norris, and Mrs. Eunie
books were distributed and two green and Oexible, arid then
RAM,
stated meeting Wed- Porter, and carroll Pierce, attending
about
the Post 677, Lithopolis ; Mayor Brinker, Racine Unit 602.
guests, Mrs. J. Edwattl Foster dried.
Greeter
o(
and Mrs. L. P. Sterrett were
The program chairman also nesday, 7:30p.m. at Pomeroy board member. Plans were Oulophones which the fifth De Wayne
Masonic·
Temple.
All
'officers
niade
for
the
chUdren
to
'make
graders
are
using.
Lithopolis;
and
Robert
Wad·
welcomed. Plans were read ·an article about the multiThe attendanee bamer was dell, the Eighth District
discussed for the annual flora rose and ecological and companions urged to at· promotion 'posters supporting
tend.
the
levy.
won
by the' fourth grade class commander.
Christmas party to be held on damage it is causing. Used
Mrs. Avanell Jlolliday, ofMrs.UnciaHunter. RefresbDistinguished gue s ts
Dec. 11, and members reported originally us a windbreak nr . MIDDLEPORT Amateur
!41( Gold TuTone Wodpresented were Mrs. Clifford
on the Chester Garden Club protective .cover, she said it Garden Club members meet at president, announced that the ments were served·.
dlng Rlng• magnl8contly
Atkins, Mrs. Edward .Marshall,
O&lt;iwer show.
has spread over hundreds of Royal Crown )lottling Co., 8 second phase of thP. Search for
crafted In white and yel·
Mrs. William Brown, and Mrs.
' ···Gifts fr~m the Garden" was acres destroying other plant p.m . Wednesday ~or plant tour:
low gold. ·
SAME DAY
the theme ol· the program life.
Come in and see oUr com·
MlDDLEPORt Literary fJJCCIC
BenNeutzling,allpaStdistrict
SERVICE·
pleto collection In popu·
presented by .Mrs. ·Howard
Refreshments were ser.ved Club, home o( Miss LuclUe yy U
U
presidents; Mrs. Robert
In Af9,--0ut Ats ·
lar
price r••s••·
by the postess :
Waddell, third member of the
Sm1'th , Ches te.r, 2 p.m. Mrs.
children and youth committee
James Titus to review "Nilton . SYRACUSE _ A conUse Our FrM Parking
Loi,.·.
.
in the White Hou.&lt;te," with
Mrs. Weese, lltld Mrs. Don of the Ohio Department; Mrs.
JEWELRY STORE
members to answer roll call tribution of $100 was made on Usle.
Arnold Richards, Department
Court St., Pomeroy
'b
with a comment on the book. the new carpeting for the
The birthday anniversaries national security chainnan;
1t:f
parsonage at a recent meeting of Miss Marcia Karr and Mrs. Mrs. Neil Billing&amp;, Department
TUPPERS PLAINS Com- of the Women's Society of Usle were observed at the
Mrs. Albert Roush anti Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. munity Club meeting, 7:30p.m. Christian Service of the Asbury meeting. It was noted that-45
~ Mobiel", llllilted by ~e Margaret Wise, Mrs. Donna Wednesday at Community United Methodist Church held shut-in calls had been made
·
at
junior American Legion Thcimas, Mrs. Larry Bunce, Bu1'ldl ng.
W the
, home of Mrs. Carl dur'mg the past month . An
AlmliaryDMmboraofFeeney- Mrs. Connie Dailey, Mrs.
MEIGS ATHLETIC
eese.
offering was taken. Mrs.
Bemetti"DDt •· entertained at Brenda Cunningham, Mrs. BOOSTERS, 7:30 tonight at
Announced at the meeting Teaford opened the meeting
!be Mlddltport hall with a aarence King, Mrs. Arland high
schooL
Everyone conducted by Mrs. Virgil · with a poem, "Mothers are
layette lbo- honoring Mrs. King and daughter, Shaula welcome.
Teaford was a workshop to be People.'' Devotions by Mrs.
THURsDAy
held
at Camp
Asbury Willi am . Hou dasheIt v.:ere
aatr lll&amp;ht·
Roulh, apd Mrs. Geraldine
Wed
esd Francis
Oct 18 Reports
.Juni«&lt;a'llilllingwereBecky Kessinger.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter, on
n. ay,
·th ·
t taken from the Upper Room
Roulh, C2lrllll Smith, Melinda
Alllo )l'esentlng gifts to Mrs. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, were g~ven on
e recen with scripturefnim Timothy 2, •
· 7:45 p.m.· Thursd ay district meeting held ai ,.
• 15 verses, an d prayer.
'lbQIIIU, Paula Cwmingham, Might were Mrs. Evelyn meetmg
Nelsonville
and attended
Th e program bY Mrs.
5:00 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
Anllela Ddey, Judy Gilkey, Thomas, Mrs. Ben Rife, Mrs. horne or Mild red Karr, M'd
1 -· M
T G Hilld
Mr Lindby
Kim IIIII Loll Roam, Sandra aara Gilkey, Mrs. Robert ,dleport.
rs. · ·
ore, s,
a Teaford was a film on
Might, Sharon and Carrie Morris, Mrs. John Tyree, Mrs. . AFTERNOON CffiCJ.,E, 2 Ferrell, Mrs. . John Sauvage, "Christian Art in Africa." Sle
e·PRICES IN EFFECT
Karr.
Edna Richmond, Mrs. AseJ p.m. Thursday at the Heath
was assisted by Mrs. Hllldore.
A gteen and white color Searles, Mrs. Helen Kennedy, United Methodist Church. Mrs.
Miss Karr, . spiritual growth
TONIGHT ONLYI
ichtme was carried out in the Mrs. Lelah Weatherby, Mrs. Nan Moore wlll present the
secretary, read excerpts from
decorations
witb
an Edith Spencer, Miss Sharon lesson and the hostesses will be
BANQUET SET
an article "What's ~ew In
.mangement of orange roses McDaniel, Mrs. Narley Hyaell, Mrs. Emerson Jones, Mrs.
A Mother-Daughter banquet Rellgion."
donated by Dudley's FloriBta Mrs. Minnie Clark, Mrs. . Rose McDade.
will be held at 6:30p.m. Thurs- · Refreshments were served
centering the refreshment Eugene Slillth, Mrs. James
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, . day at the Middleport Church by Mrs. Weese and Mrs.
table. Gamel were played with Jngla, Mrs. ·Daryl" Doderal,.. , !: ~OThursd!'f niJMat the hall. of Christ. Those attending are Sauvage io those
and
1
,...... IIIIRI awardad..apl-tlle -Mra., Charles Garckler, Mrs.
J:!!.IJ!Y~--.-- lo' take their ?.~~~-~. ~ervice. :Mr~~~ ]l'il8 wa, won bY Mr,-.. llogl$' Snyder, Mrs. Jean
MARY SH~tNE 3,7., Or~er .of
,.&lt;:.
1
1W~lbam
'
Qitford Might.
Province and Margaret, Mrs. the White Shnne of Jersualem,
W1ll1am
Othen attending the shower Lucy White, Shelly and Usa 8 p.m. Friday at the IOOF hall,
CORRECTION MADE
Capehart,
TUESDAY 7 TO 9 ONLY!
William Patterson, Hen· WinebreMer.
were Mrs. Sharon King, Lemley, Cheryl Barnhart, Mrs. Pomeroy. Material objective
Ouislde paint, Interior latex paint,
Slerrle Turner, Mrs. Florence Charles Lemley, Mrs. Fred night and practice for derson, W. Va., listed as a halfenamel, spray enamel, procb &amp; deck
Reynolds, Dottle Reynolds, Lemley, Betty Lelnley, Mrs. ceremonial. All officers and brother among the survivors of
paint, paint remover ete. Every
Mrs. carl Findling, Mrs. Granville Wamsley and Mrs. members urged to attend. Mrs. Zona Jeffers Powell, is a
Item In our paint lloe on sale for (
Kllnneth Mohler, Mrs. Donald John Hunnel.
Potluck refreshments.
brother.
hours.
·
Karr, Mrs. Mary Hoover, Mrs.
RETURN
JON ATHAN
BffiTHDAY OBSERVED
-·
-·Ruth Karr, Mrs. James
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Don
Mobler, Joan Wise; Diane
SCOUTS POSTPONED
Amerjcan Revolution, 2 p.m.
IN HOLZER
Usle of Syracuse was honored
Fredericka, Mrs. Sidney
The school night for scouting Friday at the home of Mrs. Dor
Joe Martin is undergoing . Sunday night with a surprise
. ·Hayman, Rita ..d Ryan, Mrs. schedu}ed tonight at the Schae(er with Mrs. A. R, observation and treatment at dinner ~rty on her birthday
'lbelmiJeenScboonover,!llra. Midilleport Elemenb)ry School ~night and Mrs. Patrick the Holzer Medical Center. anniversary at the home of Mr.
HUda· McDaniel, Mrs. Freda has been postponed untll next Lochary co-hostesses. Miss Cards may be sent to room 216. and Mrs . Roy Jenkins,
I REGULAR $3.44
:·
'
Sear!J, Peggy Sear!J, Mrs. Tuesday night at 7:30. Cob Bernice Graham to be the
Pomeroy, her son-in-law and
· 'lbeodcln Van Q)oney, Mrs. scouts, boy scouts, and speaker: Members to name an
daughter.
20" TALL
Rolle Searla, Mrs. Faye Fry, webelos, and other boys in- ancestor .for roll call.
LODGE TO MEET
, Assisting with the party were ·
Mrs. Kathem Smith, Mrs. terested in joining the scoutS,
A regular meeting of Shade Mr. and Mrs. John Usle and
CLEAR-GOLD-GREEN
Simon John10n and Peggy, are invited to attend with their
River Lodge 453, F&amp;A.M, wlll son, Todd. Others attending
Mrs. Uarence Might and parents. Bradbury elementary
·be ~eld at 7:30p.m. Thursday were Don Lisle and Mr. and
COLLAR &amp; BURNER!
EA.'
REVIVAL
SET
students are to register at
at the temple. Refreshments Mrs. Harry Potts of Syracuse.
Tbe Rev. carl Radcliff will will be served. All master ·Homemade lee cream and
Middleport.
·
be evangellst for arevival to be masons are invited.
cake were served following the
held sunday through Saturday,
dinner.
Oct. 21, at 7:30 each evening at
VISIT IN POMEROY
.
Graham's Chapel Church, 31&gt;
•
A thought for the day:
Jeray Orth, just home from
miles northeast of Shade. The American author and philosoVIetnam, and his wife, the
IN HOSPITAL
MEET FRIDAY
Rev.
John
Elswick,
pastor,
former Mary Jayne Cotterill
of
A meeUng of the Big Bend
,pher Henry David Thoreau SYRACUSE - Robert A.
;
Carroll, visited Thursday night Neighborhood girl scout ser· extends an invitation to the said, "The mass of men lead Harden II, son of Mr. and Mrs.
'
with her grandmother, Mrs. J. vice team will be held Friday public. There will be special lives of quiet desperation."
Jpes.
Night
On~!
Robert Harden of Syracuse, is
Edward Foster, Pomeroy. Mr. at 10 a.m. at the home of Mrs. vocal music each evening.
a patient at the Marion General
and Mrs. Orlh will visit In . William Ohlinger. Mrs. Noby
Hospital, Room 401, Marlon,
. Carroll with her parents l?efore Sauvage of Athens, the district
43302. He l'!'CenUy underwent
leaving on Oct. 23 for chairman from the Four
surgery there.
California where he will be ·Rivers Girl Scout Council, will
HYMN SING SET
stationed.
be present and all organizers
A
hymn
sing will be held at
and consultants are urged to
Tues.-5 9 P.M.
the Salvation Army at 2 p.m.
attend.
DAUGHTER BORN
Sunday. The public is welcome
lN PARKERSBURG
.
RACINE
~ Mr. and Mrs.
to attend the sing to be held at
Mrs. Paul Grueser and Mrs.
Max Hill, Racine ·Route 2, are
the Army's headquarters,
Mabel Wolfe wer.e .in Parkers.BAKE SALE SET
announcing the birth of an
burg Sunday to visit Mr. and
A bake sale and sale of Butternut AVe., Pomeroy.
eight
pound 5\2 . ounce
Mrs . Mitchell McCale and miscellaneous articles wlll be
daughter, Amy Le Ann on Sopt.
infant daughter. Mrs. McCale held Thursday all day at the
21 at Holzer Medical Center.
TWO-DAY SALE SET
Is Mrs. Grueser's grand- new Middleport firehouse by ·
Take your cbol~ ol llll' of oar - f.n
Grandparents are Mr. and
CHESTER - Women of the
daughter . .
the firemen's Auxiliary.
palut
seta'-and we'll take a big 30 perceat
M~s . Clifford Hlll, Racln.e
· Chester United Methodist ·
ENTIRE STOCK!
off
durlnc
lids mooJIU&amp;bt ule.
Route 2, and Mr. and Mrs,
Church will hold a yard and
poopio want to know . . : Clair Boso, Portland. Greatused clothing sale on Friday When
Four out of five reid a newa- grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
and Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21, peper •• the "best way to find
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. All ar. out" - for everything from Patil Theiss of Dorcaa and Mrs.
ticles donated are to be at the polltlcel news and con..ntlon Dessie Patterson of forUand .
to community happen·
I
church lawn by noon on Thurs- hoople
•
~~...
.
l" .. 't"llbel-.w . .
daf, Oct. 20. If transportation
·lnlllel •l!lul
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
is needed contributors should
call 985-3$16 or ~117 .
'l'leldaJ . ..

'

G"zves $100
.

THAT'S WHAR
ALL TH' OAOOORN
MAiL BOXES
ARE·-

'TH' DADBURN GOVER' MINT •
MAKES US ·MOUNTAIN
MAIL TOTERS PE!lFORM
OVER AN' BEVANO
TH' CALl.
O'DUT'I

Dlb

OQERAN'
B&amp;YAND!!

'1tXJ1

..
HEI&lt;I:S 10NOO PAPER,
MOIHER. BEN HAt&gt; rr.

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PTJ4. Endor.·,re·s' Le
. V11J

:FINISHIN.G.

'ISS, :!&gt;YBI(. ...

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WAAT&lt;. THIS
'cHAR.I&gt;.MA' TH6V
KEEP TAL.KINlii

THIG rrEM TELLt;
OF A GMI0STEI&lt;'

WHO SHOT' HIS

WHAT OOE!&gt; IT
MEAN, FERGY~ .

MOil't!R,JN-IJIN.

THAT'!&gt; CAUCA$1AN

. ' FOR •sou;.•

CHARISM4i

ABOIJH

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. .
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·

DAISY MAE YOKUM BRANDED NATIONAL
HAZARD BY RALPH
NEEDLER!!

GOESSLER

Mrs..Might HOno1i d

TONIGHT!
TUESDAY

PlAN TO BE HERE!

:. GtJIBDEN·
f PAINJ
.

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9HI~~

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w:m

1\11~
./lit.: IN~
s~eep!

CAROl
KEROSENE LAMPS : , --- .
SWEATER
AMERICAN

$

'2~~G~~~ERICE

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to

Each

FALL

PANT SEts·

QUALITY
I

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PAINT
8BtiSHES

I

· YOU'U NEVER BUY QUALITY

FOR LESS ...
TIWI YOU DO AI

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•

.

.'

··BAKER'S
Ane Furniture

SPEAKER NOTED
SYRACUSE - .The Rev. •
Leonard McVey, pastor of the
Union Ridge Chi!I'Ch of the
Nazarene In Vinton County,
will be the featured apeaker at
the October mlasionary lerVIce
at the Syracuae Church of the .
Nazarene, Wednesday, 7;30

LA-Z-BOV

CHAIRS

slltant - was purchased for
the highest price on record.
f5.544,000.

.BAKING·DISHES

Now you can buy · thai

comfortable
La-Z-8oy
chair you've ' elweys .
dreimlld of at our low

prim,

P.m. .

Q-What is .the moneeorv
distinction ot the painter
Diego Velazquez?
~-lila portrait of ltls ..

· or

Authorized

~·
llli-ma110t~

771-SSft

i'

Ma•, W, V1.

12PRICE

Yllllenll1'• Cryptoquole: WHEN THE TID COlli$ 1'0:&amp;
GARDENING, THE FIRST THING A SMART HUSBAND
DIGS UP lS A GOOD EXCUSE.-ARNOLD GLASGOW

by THOMAS ~OSEPH

(0 1172 Ktnr J•t•m Syndlcot., Inc.)

DICK TRACY

or-;:;~;;;:-;.e:;:;;;~~
V

r----"'!"""'!""--.......

ACilOSS
, l, Anxiety
II. Adjust
anew
10. Sur·
rounded
by .
lLGreek
moon
goddess
.IZ. "Street
Scene"
CAREFUL ~T ';'00 SA.V!
playl-IE MAV TAKE HIS
wright '
F'EANVT elJTTelt'AND 13. Appear
GO 1-10111\E,
14. I (Ger.)
15.Hasten
11. Prellx of
Gennan
nlll)es
17. Kentucky
Derby, .
Preakneu
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1f, Genera. tlon
11. Maneuver. able,u ·
aahlp
11. Seottish

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poet,
JameJ-

31. "-

the
Red Red
Robin . .."
. 3t. Antag·
onist
to. Siclllan
vole&amp;no
DOWN
I. Lesser
Antllles

Indian
Z. Uturgical
vestment
3. Have It
coming
(2 wds.)
4. Nigerian
city
5. Convened
once more
6. Eel
(O.E.)
7. See 3
DQl'D
(3 wds.)

Yestenlay'a Amwer
8. Overeat
23. Excteded
9. Concern·
the nor·
lng
malllmlt
ado:U. Appoint·
lescence
ment
11. French
~6. Blanche's
river
companion
15. Noloe·
Zl. Soaring
maker
%9. Ml11 Terry
18. Principal
30. Ro)IIIR
Zl. Whetgoddess •

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3 DESIGIS '!" -

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eeulptor
Bme~dary

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acrootlc
37. Feral
'

AXYDLBAAXR ·
II LONGFELLOW.
· one letter simp]J •tan!ll for another. In tbla .a'mpte A' II
uHd for thl three L'a; X for tbe two 0'1, etc. Sl.nlle totten,
tile lei!Jih llld formeUon of \he woidl ere all
lllntt. Eadl 1117 thl code !etten are \JI«ennt. .

apostrop""'-

caYPToQUOTRS
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WMBLIIH XLL RLLC XL DLXH -KBMTLJI
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stick
French
article
U. Diluted '
31. Before
S%. Incense
31, Asian
river
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WE'LL .GIVE YOU

ON ANY MENS
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8 -- 'l'bl~~.lllclclleporH'uy,O.,Oct. .IO,

197Z

New Officers of ( SOciar 1Party
i*' Ca Iend
a
r
I
.
·
.
Pomet;oy .Garden
~ Club Installed

I)ates are Arranged

I

\"' t t r~ns

Dates for vclfrans' parties,
at the • Athens nteeling that nine units In the hospital representaiive; Mrs.
~ .at Jhe Southeastern Ohio ti..~pilal, and on Dee .. 14 the .district have reaehed ·their Virgil Wal~er;Racine, hospital
"All YOU ADD
Mental Health Center and \he birthday party will be held at mernbership goaL A total of representative deputy; Mrs.
IS LOV£"®
TIJESDAY
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital the Chillicothe HospitaL The 1,215 dues have been paid with Riley, Depal'trnent second vice
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 p,m. . were announced by Mrs, district · junior community the district goal being 2,188,
president; and Mrs. 0 . . /1. • .
Tuesday with Southern Board Charles Kessinger, president, service party at Athens was
Featured speaker at the fall Martin, Eight and Forty
of Education members and at )he District 8, American ·announced for Feb, 6, with the ' .conference was . Mrs: Robert Departemental chapeau passe.
Supt. Ralph., .Sayre ' to be ·Legion Auxiliary, fall con- senior community service Riley vf Mount Sterling, the
Mrs: Neutzling. was pianist
present
ference held Thursday at pat·ty at Athens to be held on .department . second . vic.e for tbe..Conference attended by
MEIGS County Women's Lithopolis.
'Aprill2.
·.
president ,- who talked on 1ui Ameriean Legion Auxiliary
New of(icers were install~ Nolan. She displayed ·a small
I;lemocrat
Club,
7:30
p:m.
On
Nov.
9
the
district
juniors
H
was
reported
during
the
Americanism.
A report of the members. Going from Meigs
at a meeting of the Pomeroy Christmas tree made from
national convention was given County were Mrs . Albert ·
Garden Club Monday at the cockleburrs which had been Tuesday at Grace Episcopal ~ill stage a p:trty, for th;·
Parish
House,
Pomeroy,
by Mrs. Ke!!&gt;inger: District
home of Mrs. J. 0. -Roedel.
placed on a tree frame covered
Roush, Mrs. Roger F. Roush,
Installed by Mrs. Fred in red. Miniature red velvet . MIDOLEPORT Lodge, 363,
c hairman
conducted Mrs. · Roy · 1,. Hendricks,
to/tiZM -to/mt
.
workshops for the unit Middleport unit; Mrs. Neutz- ·
BlaeUnar, a past president, birds decorated the tree , Mrs. F&amp;AM, will con.fer the maste~ '
.
.
',
.J , .
.J
chairman in attendance.
were · Mrs. Harold Brown, · Nolan also ·displayed a tree mason degree on one candidate
ling, Mrs. 6. A. Martin, Mrs.
Mrs. Kessinger announced a Catherine Welsh, Mrs: Gerald
president; Mrs. J . w. Me-_, made from t.histles and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
The Salem Center PTA' went Consensus will~ held Oct 25 field service . orientation Wildermuth, Mrs . Harry
Murray, vice president; Mrs. suggested that for making both .Masonic Temple. All master
masons are invited to attend. on record Monday night to at'Melgs High School. The fall meeting to be-held on Nov. 19 Davis, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Harvey
Van
Vrank·en, trees that gloves be worn.
WEDNESDAY
endorse the five mUl oPer-ating festival w~s aetforNov. 4. Mrs. from 2 to 4 p.m. at Junction Olan Knapp, Mrs. George
secretary; and Mrs. Roedel,
Another suggestion given by
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1:30 levy for the Meigs Local School I!OMl.e Johnson reported that City. H was requested that Hackett, Sr., and Mrs. J . M.
.treasurer. In her eeremony, Mrs. Nolan was that whim
Mrs. Blaettnar compared the drying material one of the best p.m. American Legion Hall In District .to be voted on next $41 was made .on the recent units consider presenting a Thornton, Pomeroy unit; Mrs.
'
month. ·
bake sale. n was al$l , ari· candidate for Eighth District Arnold Rlchards, 'Mrs. Ernest
officers with a flower ways to hold the color is to Middleport.
REGULAR Meeting,
Meeting with the PTA to nouneedlhatafii'Staidcourse president at the summer Bowles, Mrs. Con Young, Mrs.
arrangement.
spray it lightly with hair spray
10/2U6M -10/201L
Mrs. Roedel's devotions or a clear acrylic spr,.Y. She Pomeroy-Middleport Lions answer questions on the levy Is being offered at the school. . convention to be held June 7 at William ·Smith, and Mrs. Allen
Mrs. Olive Page introduced Middleport.
were on the topic "Forward · said arran~ements should be Club, Wednesday noon at 'Were.Supt . of Schools George
Hampton, Middleport Unit 363; -41---Hargraves,
Board
of David Bowen, band director,
Extending greetings were and Mrs, Virgil Walker, Mrs.
Day by Day." New program made when the materials are Meigs Inn.
POMEROY . Chapter 80, Edu~ation President Frank wbo explained to the Patents Cmdr. Emil Shellhammer' of Julia Norris, and Mrs. Eunie
books were distributed and two green and Oexible, arid then
RAM,
stated meeting Wed- Porter, and carroll Pierce, attending
about
the Post 677, Lithopolis ; Mayor Brinker, Racine Unit 602.
guests, Mrs. J. Edwattl Foster dried.
Greeter
o(
and Mrs. L. P. Sterrett were
The program chairman also nesday, 7:30p.m. at Pomeroy board member. Plans were Oulophones which the fifth De Wayne
Masonic·
Temple.
All
'officers
niade
for
the
chUdren
to
'make
graders
are
using.
Lithopolis;
and
Robert
Wad·
welcomed. Plans were read ·an article about the multiThe attendanee bamer was dell, the Eighth District
discussed for the annual flora rose and ecological and companions urged to at· promotion 'posters supporting
tend.
the
levy.
won
by the' fourth grade class commander.
Christmas party to be held on damage it is causing. Used
Mrs. Avanell Jlolliday, ofMrs.UnciaHunter. RefresbDistinguished gue s ts
Dec. 11, and members reported originally us a windbreak nr . MIDDLEPORT Amateur
!41( Gold TuTone Wodpresented were Mrs. Clifford
on the Chester Garden Club protective .cover, she said it Garden Club members meet at president, announced that the ments were served·.
dlng Rlng• magnl8contly
Atkins, Mrs. Edward .Marshall,
O&lt;iwer show.
has spread over hundreds of Royal Crown )lottling Co., 8 second phase of thP. Search for
crafted In white and yel·
Mrs. William Brown, and Mrs.
' ···Gifts fr~m the Garden" was acres destroying other plant p.m . Wednesday ~or plant tour:
low gold. ·
SAME DAY
the theme ol· the program life.
Come in and see oUr com·
MlDDLEPORt Literary fJJCCIC
BenNeutzling,allpaStdistrict
SERVICE·
pleto collection In popu·
presented by .Mrs. ·Howard
Refreshments were ser.ved Club, home o( Miss LuclUe yy U
U
presidents; Mrs. Robert
In Af9,--0ut Ats ·
lar
price r••s••·
by the postess :
Waddell, third member of the
Sm1'th , Ches te.r, 2 p.m. Mrs.
children and youth committee
James Titus to review "Nilton . SYRACUSE _ A conUse Our FrM Parking
Loi,.·.
.
in the White Hou.&lt;te," with
Mrs. Weese, lltld Mrs. Don of the Ohio Department; Mrs.
JEWELRY STORE
members to answer roll call tribution of $100 was made on Usle.
Arnold Richards, Department
Court St., Pomeroy
'b
with a comment on the book. the new carpeting for the
The birthday anniversaries national security chainnan;
1t:f
parsonage at a recent meeting of Miss Marcia Karr and Mrs. Mrs. Neil Billing&amp;, Department
TUPPERS PLAINS Com- of the Women's Society of Usle were observed at the
Mrs. Albert Roush anti Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. munity Club meeting, 7:30p.m. Christian Service of the Asbury meeting. It was noted that-45
~ Mobiel", llllilted by ~e Margaret Wise, Mrs. Donna Wednesday at Community United Methodist Church held shut-in calls had been made
·
at
junior American Legion Thcimas, Mrs. Larry Bunce, Bu1'ldl ng.
W the
, home of Mrs. Carl dur'mg the past month . An
AlmliaryDMmboraofFeeney- Mrs. Connie Dailey, Mrs.
MEIGS ATHLETIC
eese.
offering was taken. Mrs.
Bemetti"DDt •· entertained at Brenda Cunningham, Mrs. BOOSTERS, 7:30 tonight at
Announced at the meeting Teaford opened the meeting
!be Mlddltport hall with a aarence King, Mrs. Arland high
schooL
Everyone conducted by Mrs. Virgil · with a poem, "Mothers are
layette lbo- honoring Mrs. King and daughter, Shaula welcome.
Teaford was a workshop to be People.'' Devotions by Mrs.
THURsDAy
held
at Camp
Asbury Willi am . Hou dasheIt v.:ere
aatr lll&amp;ht·
Roulh, apd Mrs. Geraldine
Wed
esd Francis
Oct 18 Reports
.Juni«&lt;a'llilllingwereBecky Kessinger.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter, on
n. ay,
·th ·
t taken from the Upper Room
Roulh, C2lrllll Smith, Melinda
Alllo )l'esentlng gifts to Mrs. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, were g~ven on
e recen with scripturefnim Timothy 2, •
· 7:45 p.m.· Thursd ay district meeting held ai ,.
• 15 verses, an d prayer.
'lbQIIIU, Paula Cwmingham, Might were Mrs. Evelyn meetmg
Nelsonville
and attended
Th e program bY Mrs.
5:00 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
Anllela Ddey, Judy Gilkey, Thomas, Mrs. Ben Rife, Mrs. horne or Mild red Karr, M'd
1 -· M
T G Hilld
Mr Lindby
Kim IIIII Loll Roam, Sandra aara Gilkey, Mrs. Robert ,dleport.
rs. · ·
ore, s,
a Teaford was a film on
Might, Sharon and Carrie Morris, Mrs. John Tyree, Mrs. . AFTERNOON CffiCJ.,E, 2 Ferrell, Mrs. . John Sauvage, "Christian Art in Africa." Sle
e·PRICES IN EFFECT
Karr.
Edna Richmond, Mrs. AseJ p.m. Thursday at the Heath
was assisted by Mrs. Hllldore.
A gteen and white color Searles, Mrs. Helen Kennedy, United Methodist Church. Mrs.
Miss Karr, . spiritual growth
TONIGHT ONLYI
ichtme was carried out in the Mrs. Lelah Weatherby, Mrs. Nan Moore wlll present the
secretary, read excerpts from
decorations
witb
an Edith Spencer, Miss Sharon lesson and the hostesses will be
BANQUET SET
an article "What's ~ew In
.mangement of orange roses McDaniel, Mrs. Narley Hyaell, Mrs. Emerson Jones, Mrs.
A Mother-Daughter banquet Rellgion."
donated by Dudley's FloriBta Mrs. Minnie Clark, Mrs. . Rose McDade.
will be held at 6:30p.m. Thurs- · Refreshments were served
centering the refreshment Eugene Slillth, Mrs. James
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, . day at the Middleport Church by Mrs. Weese and Mrs.
table. Gamel were played with Jngla, Mrs. ·Daryl" Doderal,.. , !: ~OThursd!'f niJMat the hall. of Christ. Those attending are Sauvage io those
and
1
,...... IIIIRI awardad..apl-tlle -Mra., Charles Garckler, Mrs.
J:!!.IJ!Y~--.-- lo' take their ?.~~~-~. ~ervice. :Mr~~~ ]l'il8 wa, won bY Mr,-.. llogl$' Snyder, Mrs. Jean
MARY SH~tNE 3,7., Or~er .of
,.&lt;:.
1
1W~lbam
'
Qitford Might.
Province and Margaret, Mrs. the White Shnne of Jersualem,
W1ll1am
Othen attending the shower Lucy White, Shelly and Usa 8 p.m. Friday at the IOOF hall,
CORRECTION MADE
Capehart,
TUESDAY 7 TO 9 ONLY!
William Patterson, Hen· WinebreMer.
were Mrs. Sharon King, Lemley, Cheryl Barnhart, Mrs. Pomeroy. Material objective
Ouislde paint, Interior latex paint,
Slerrle Turner, Mrs. Florence Charles Lemley, Mrs. Fred night and practice for derson, W. Va., listed as a halfenamel, spray enamel, procb &amp; deck
Reynolds, Dottle Reynolds, Lemley, Betty Lelnley, Mrs. ceremonial. All officers and brother among the survivors of
paint, paint remover ete. Every
Mrs. carl Findling, Mrs. Granville Wamsley and Mrs. members urged to attend. Mrs. Zona Jeffers Powell, is a
Item In our paint lloe on sale for (
Kllnneth Mohler, Mrs. Donald John Hunnel.
Potluck refreshments.
brother.
hours.
·
Karr, Mrs. Mary Hoover, Mrs.
RETURN
JON ATHAN
BffiTHDAY OBSERVED
-·
-·Ruth Karr, Mrs. James
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Don
Mobler, Joan Wise; Diane
SCOUTS POSTPONED
Amerjcan Revolution, 2 p.m.
IN HOLZER
Usle of Syracuse was honored
Fredericka, Mrs. Sidney
The school night for scouting Friday at the home of Mrs. Dor
Joe Martin is undergoing . Sunday night with a surprise
. ·Hayman, Rita ..d Ryan, Mrs. schedu}ed tonight at the Schae(er with Mrs. A. R, observation and treatment at dinner ~rty on her birthday
'lbelmiJeenScboonover,!llra. Midilleport Elemenb)ry School ~night and Mrs. Patrick the Holzer Medical Center. anniversary at the home of Mr.
HUda· McDaniel, Mrs. Freda has been postponed untll next Lochary co-hostesses. Miss Cards may be sent to room 216. and Mrs . Roy Jenkins,
I REGULAR $3.44
:·
'
Sear!J, Peggy Sear!J, Mrs. Tuesday night at 7:30. Cob Bernice Graham to be the
Pomeroy, her son-in-law and
· 'lbeodcln Van Q)oney, Mrs. scouts, boy scouts, and speaker: Members to name an
daughter.
20" TALL
Rolle Searla, Mrs. Faye Fry, webelos, and other boys in- ancestor .for roll call.
LODGE TO MEET
, Assisting with the party were ·
Mrs. Kathem Smith, Mrs. terested in joining the scoutS,
A regular meeting of Shade Mr. and Mrs. John Usle and
CLEAR-GOLD-GREEN
Simon John10n and Peggy, are invited to attend with their
River Lodge 453, F&amp;A.M, wlll son, Todd. Others attending
Mrs. Uarence Might and parents. Bradbury elementary
·be ~eld at 7:30p.m. Thursday were Don Lisle and Mr. and
COLLAR &amp; BURNER!
EA.'
REVIVAL
SET
students are to register at
at the temple. Refreshments Mrs. Harry Potts of Syracuse.
Tbe Rev. carl Radcliff will will be served. All master ·Homemade lee cream and
Middleport.
·
be evangellst for arevival to be masons are invited.
cake were served following the
held sunday through Saturday,
dinner.
Oct. 21, at 7:30 each evening at
VISIT IN POMEROY
.
Graham's Chapel Church, 31&gt;
•
A thought for the day:
Jeray Orth, just home from
miles northeast of Shade. The American author and philosoVIetnam, and his wife, the
IN HOSPITAL
MEET FRIDAY
Rev.
John
Elswick,
pastor,
former Mary Jayne Cotterill
of
A meeUng of the Big Bend
,pher Henry David Thoreau SYRACUSE - Robert A.
;
Carroll, visited Thursday night Neighborhood girl scout ser· extends an invitation to the said, "The mass of men lead Harden II, son of Mr. and Mrs.
'
with her grandmother, Mrs. J. vice team will be held Friday public. There will be special lives of quiet desperation."
Jpes.
Night
On~!
Robert Harden of Syracuse, is
Edward Foster, Pomeroy. Mr. at 10 a.m. at the home of Mrs. vocal music each evening.
a patient at the Marion General
and Mrs. Orlh will visit In . William Ohlinger. Mrs. Noby
Hospital, Room 401, Marlon,
. Carroll with her parents l?efore Sauvage of Athens, the district
43302. He l'!'CenUy underwent
leaving on Oct. 23 for chairman from the Four
surgery there.
California where he will be ·Rivers Girl Scout Council, will
HYMN SING SET
stationed.
be present and all organizers
A
hymn
sing will be held at
and consultants are urged to
Tues.-5 9 P.M.
the Salvation Army at 2 p.m.
attend.
DAUGHTER BORN
Sunday. The public is welcome
lN PARKERSBURG
.
RACINE
~ Mr. and Mrs.
to attend the sing to be held at
Mrs. Paul Grueser and Mrs.
Max Hill, Racine ·Route 2, are
the Army's headquarters,
Mabel Wolfe wer.e .in Parkers.BAKE SALE SET
announcing the birth of an
burg Sunday to visit Mr. and
A bake sale and sale of Butternut AVe., Pomeroy.
eight
pound 5\2 . ounce
Mrs . Mitchell McCale and miscellaneous articles wlll be
daughter, Amy Le Ann on Sopt.
infant daughter. Mrs. McCale held Thursday all day at the
21 at Holzer Medical Center.
TWO-DAY SALE SET
Is Mrs. Grueser's grand- new Middleport firehouse by ·
Take your cbol~ ol llll' of oar - f.n
Grandparents are Mr. and
CHESTER - Women of the
daughter . .
the firemen's Auxiliary.
palut
seta'-and we'll take a big 30 perceat
M~s . Clifford Hlll, Racln.e
· Chester United Methodist ·
ENTIRE STOCK!
off
durlnc
lids mooJIU&amp;bt ule.
Route 2, and Mr. and Mrs,
Church will hold a yard and
poopio want to know . . : Clair Boso, Portland. Greatused clothing sale on Friday When
Four out of five reid a newa- grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
and Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21, peper •• the "best way to find
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. All ar. out" - for everything from Patil Theiss of Dorcaa and Mrs.
ticles donated are to be at the polltlcel news and con..ntlon Dessie Patterson of forUand .
to community happen·
I
church lawn by noon on Thurs- hoople
•
~~...
.
l" .. 't"llbel-.w . .
daf, Oct. 20. If transportation
·lnlllel •l!lul
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
is needed contributors should
call 985-3$16 or ~117 .
'l'leldaJ . ..

'

G"zves $100
.

THAT'S WHAR
ALL TH' OAOOORN
MAiL BOXES
ARE·-

'TH' DADBURN GOVER' MINT •
MAKES US ·MOUNTAIN
MAIL TOTERS PE!lFORM
OVER AN' BEVANO
TH' CALl.
O'DUT'I

Dlb

OQERAN'
B&amp;YAND!!

'1tXJ1

..
HEI&lt;I:S 10NOO PAPER,
MOIHER. BEN HAt&gt; rr.

~,.

••~

PTJ4. Endor.·,re·s' Le
. V11J

:FINISHIN.G.

'ISS, :!&gt;YBI(. ...

I

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'·'.

WAAT&lt;. THIS
'cHAR.I&gt;.MA' TH6V
KEEP TAL.KINlii

THIG rrEM TELLt;
OF A GMI0STEI&lt;'

WHO SHOT' HIS

WHAT OOE!&gt; IT
MEAN, FERGY~ .

MOil't!R,JN-IJIN.

THAT'!&gt; CAUCA$1AN

. ' FOR •sou;.•

CHARISM4i

ABOIJH

'

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. .ABNER
. .
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-- - - --

·

DAISY MAE YOKUM BRANDED NATIONAL
HAZARD BY RALPH
NEEDLER!!

GOESSLER

Mrs..Might HOno1i d

TONIGHT!
TUESDAY

PlAN TO BE HERE!

:. GtJIBDEN·
f PAINJ
.

' ~
9HI~~

· mmAASN

w:m

1\11~
./lit.: IN~
s~eep!

CAROl
KEROSENE LAMPS : , --- .
SWEATER
AMERICAN

$

'2~~G~~~ERICE

' ----

to

Each

FALL

PANT SEts·

QUALITY
I

I

PAINT
8BtiSHES

I

· YOU'U NEVER BUY QUALITY

FOR LESS ...
TIWI YOU DO AI

e........

•

.

.'

··BAKER'S
Ane Furniture

SPEAKER NOTED
SYRACUSE - .The Rev. •
Leonard McVey, pastor of the
Union Ridge Chi!I'Ch of the
Nazarene In Vinton County,
will be the featured apeaker at
the October mlasionary lerVIce
at the Syracuae Church of the .
Nazarene, Wednesday, 7;30

LA-Z-BOV

CHAIRS

slltant - was purchased for
the highest price on record.
f5.544,000.

.BAKING·DISHES

Now you can buy · thai

comfortable
La-Z-8oy
chair you've ' elweys .
dreimlld of at our low

prim,

P.m. .

Q-What is .the moneeorv
distinction ot the painter
Diego Velazquez?
~-lila portrait of ltls ..

· or

Authorized

~·
llli-ma110t~

771-SSft

i'

Ma•, W, V1.

12PRICE

Yllllenll1'• Cryptoquole: WHEN THE TID COlli$ 1'0:&amp;
GARDENING, THE FIRST THING A SMART HUSBAND
DIGS UP lS A GOOD EXCUSE.-ARNOLD GLASGOW

by THOMAS ~OSEPH

(0 1172 Ktnr J•t•m Syndlcot., Inc.)

DICK TRACY

or-;:;~;;;:-;.e:;:;;;~~
V

r----"'!"""'!""--.......

ACilOSS
, l, Anxiety
II. Adjust
anew
10. Sur·
rounded
by .
lLGreek
moon
goddess
.IZ. "Street
Scene"
CAREFUL ~T ';'00 SA.V!
playl-IE MAV TAKE HIS
wright '
F'EANVT elJTTelt'AND 13. Appear
GO 1-10111\E,
14. I (Ger.)
15.Hasten
11. Prellx of
Gennan
nlll)es
17. Kentucky
Derby, .
Preakneu
. and- .
1f, Genera. tlon
11. Maneuver. able,u ·
aahlp
11. Seottish

r:--------

poet,
JameJ-

31. "-

the
Red Red
Robin . .."
. 3t. Antag·
onist
to. Siclllan
vole&amp;no
DOWN
I. Lesser
Antllles

Indian
Z. Uturgical
vestment
3. Have It
coming
(2 wds.)
4. Nigerian
city
5. Convened
once more
6. Eel
(O.E.)
7. See 3
DQl'D
(3 wds.)

Yestenlay'a Amwer
8. Overeat
23. Excteded
9. Concern·
the nor·
lng
malllmlt
ado:U. Appoint·
lescence
ment
11. French
~6. Blanche's
river
companion
15. Noloe·
Zl. Soaring
maker
%9. Ml11 Terry
18. Principal
30. Ro)IIIR
Zl. Whetgoddess •

LIWLT
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, .AN~-;..'F.:W:_:r;G~~:r-'"'T'"""''

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· ::::::::--.£1..-'---:'
22· e~~tent :: ~=-~~~ch "tDACUDE
' How un ..... cb hUitlm
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the........
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BY "JOlETTE"
3 DESIGIS '!" -

y__.,·~

eeulptor
Bme~dary

_"!'_........

••••o:• .s...,.,., uco..W H...,. •

acrootlc
37. Feral
'

AXYDLBAAXR ·
II LONGFELLOW.
· one letter simp]J •tan!ll for another. In tbla .a'mpte A' II
uHd for thl three L'a; X for tbe two 0'1, etc. Sl.nlle totten,
tile lei!Jih llld formeUon of \he woidl ere all
lllntt. Eadl 1117 thl code !etten are \JI«ennt. .

apostrop""'-

caYPToQUOTRS
XPHCH t!WM XL KLMVHC YB
WMBLIIH XLL RLLC XL DLXH -KBMTLJI
YWQJIHG SLPKGLJI .

WOI'rt.AST
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Willing ·
stick
French
article
U. Diluted '
31. Before
S%. Incense
31, Asian
river
34;Downriiht

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1-., WILIH TACICT AfLOAT IUIIUI '

''Tbe

'l'lllllker~'

-

Deater

MASON

t!f~•"tu(

.

WE'LL .GIVE YOU

ON ANY MENS
. WORK OR DRESS
~sHOES

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·· CI'JCtlletlon- Corrections

' .' Wl.ll bt .ICCIIPted untll9 a·.m.. fQr

· ··

'
..J REGULATIONS .
•
· • :rht':.-' Pubtlther r,serves the
fiGht · to edit ot rtfttt ·any ads
·dttmtd abJectfonal.
The
pUblisher wll_l I"!O~.be responsible.

·'"'''"tton.
· ·
'
. ' -IlliTES

step bumper, ,ln

'

.-t hree

consecutive lnsertA)ffs.

,

. 11 cents per ·word sr.t con·

secutlve i!"ltrtlons. .

·

· ; 25 Ptr Ctnt Discount on paid
·ads and ads 'Paid .w ithin 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO ·for 50 word -minimum .

2 . 1on~

m onth

green finish .

Satur~ev .

NOTICE
·-

, "HEll"

miscellaneous items of all

IO.I0-2tc
YARD Sale, October 12th &amp;
tJth; Thursday .and Frldllr,
· 312 Pearl Street, Middlepor ; '
sponsored by Silver Memorial
Youth.
10·10·31C

Air Conditioners
Hot Water. Healer~.
Plumbing
·Eieclrica,l Work

ARNQLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

nilscellan!i!'OUS.

'

'

HEATING
&amp;
•
COOUNG
Window

kinds.

YARb.' Sale, · Wednesday &amp;
' Thursday, OciQber lllh &amp;
l~h. 761 • Ash Street. Middleport, 9 a.m. till S p.m.;
Avon
bottles
and

write c -1 The Daily Sentinel,

10-lO·IIC '

Pomeroy,O.

ex-

Notice
PORCH SALE. OCtober 12. 13
and 14; crocheted goods ,
some

...

POMEROY LANES- ·&gt;
S.lurcbly Bant•m League
Si~Pfember 3G, 1972
Ball Bombers
Pis.
8
Red Barons
6
All Stars
Banana Spills
~
Cyclones
4
Pin Busters
3
High Ind. Game - David
Burl and Todd Rawlings 121
and. Bobby Williams 119; High
~roes - David Burt 233 and
David Smith 227.
Team High Game 'and. Series
- Ball Bomber;s 712 and 1385.

Nits
. ' Event

'Mr. and Mrs. Orlin Gregory
and family of Columblls and
Mr: and Mfs. Olho Gregory,
Radcliff, visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil C:illogly and family
and Mrs. Goldie Gillogly on
Saturilay evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey were
in Cincinnati for commencement exercises of the
Cincinnati School of Embalming which was held at the
S.lurdlly Senior League
Walnut Hills Avondale United
Sepllmbtr 3G, m2
Pis.
Methodist
Church. Walter
Oing.A.Lings
9'12
Gutter Dusters
9V• · Jordlll\ was a member of the
Pin Crushen
9
graduating class and he and his
Pin Busters
6'h
wife, Kathy Gilkey Jordan,
Herbles
6
Born Losers
~'12 have returned to their home in
High Ind. Game - Mike this community,
Gilmore 191 end Rick Stobart
Miss Lois Gaston who is a
180.
•
High Series-Rick Slobart student at Career Academy in
,..0 and· Rich Bailey 473.
· Colwnbus spent a weekend
Team High Game - Dlng.A. here with her parents, Mr. and
lings 819; Team High Series Mrs. Paul Gaston, Leah and
Gutter Dusters 2263.
Joe.
Mr. arid Mrs. Donald Jones
of Nelsonville spent a day with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Wednesday AHernoon League Starkey and helped Mr.
' October 4, 1971
Won loSt Starkey celebrate his birthday.
Riggs U5ed Cars
26
14
Ney Carpenter has returned
Lodwick's Markel
24
16 to his home ana is cohvalescing
Gual's Shake Haven 21
19
Royal Crown Colo ·
18
24 satisfactorily after spending
Rldenou'r's TV
16
24 several days in Pleasant
Good's Pennzoll . IS
25 Valley Hospital, P.t Pleasant,
High Ind. Game - · Judy
Ginther 135 and Avanell Bass for observation and treatment.
Mrs. Murl Galaway and Mrs.
126; High Series Ind.'- Judy
Ginther 351 end Avanell Bass Mendal Joddan represented
330.
Team High Game and Series Temple Church WSCS at the
- Royal Crown Cola 308 and annual fall meeting for the
853.
district which was held at the
First United Methodist Church
In Nelsonville.. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harrison
and family of Stoutsville
1 *tdnetc~ay .E•rly Bird
visited with her parents, Mr.
• Octobtr 4, 1972
and
Mrs. William Cheadle.
Won Lost
Mr . :.and Mrs. Andrew
Dorothy's Plnneltes · 40 . 8
34
14 Chapman, along with the
. R. H. Rawlings· ,
• Berlha'e (irocery
24
24
· Klngll&lt;!lldllrs Supply 20
78 former Earnestlne Chapman
Royal Crown .
14
34 and her husband, of Mobile,
. Eve1Jl1'S Grocery
12
36 Alabanlil, and Ben Caster of
Hlg~ · Ind. Game - Martha
Charleston, who were camping
INih 113. FIOuie Maxson 169.
at
Royal Oak Park, caDed on
Serin-Martho Nash 474
Mary Von &lt;169.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey &amp;ml
Hl9.h Game end Series other friends and relatives In
- Dorothy 1 Plnneltes 795 and the area.
·
2315.
Mn. Walter Swett vililed her
son-ln·law and daughter, Mr.
"''d Mrs. Arthur. Reedy and
.family who recenUy moved tO
Soutbllde, W.• Va.
Guestaof~, aadMrs. Jt"'l

. Culwell were their children lllii
famlliel, Mr. llld Mrs. Rolcoe

T.lt, lb. Fannie,.,..,,
..... Miry CoDier of Flat.
woOtll, Xy., and Mra. T. R.
. . . . . llld Greg of Jaekal,
Mr. llld Mn. Culwell btiCb ire
V~ryiU.

~aye Jordan ... Ill
........,, ~u.tatlhe bame of

SMflH NELSON
MOTORS,. INC.

lleen Swain residence, County
Rd. 28, just off Rl. 7 above
Eastern High School.
. 10.8-31&lt;
ORGAN and piano instruction
by· graduate of ,Ci~clnnall
Conservatoty of Music. Phone
992-3825.

9-28· 121c
THERE will be no buffet dinner
served at Young's Casual
Catering on Wednesday,
,,October 11th.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1:.._:0
-8.Jic

lEGAl NOTICE

'ORDIN~CE NO. 917-72

.An Ordln nu to Provide for
refuse Coli _'tions &amp; Charges for
Services.
.
I
Be It ordained by the Counc11

of the Vlllage of MiddlepOrt u
follows :
Sec . I. That the Village will to
the
extent possible and
necessary, furnish hauling
services to remove refuse from
the Village for resldenh for all
refuse eKcept garbage.
Sec .
II
The follow.l ng
schedule or charges Is hereby
established for the refuse
removal servIce :
11h Ton Truck : . SlO .OO per

lood .

- ----::---

;========·::·.., .

$

After they
ore Hulled

SaH Worb, Inc.
P.O. Box 267
992-3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

Auto Sales

1970 PLYMOUTH, 4 door, good
Sec . Ill This Ordinance shall tires and exhaust~ air, pOwer
remain In forc:e only until en
b k
d 1 ·
talned lor the Village.

ra es an
s eenng; very
good condition, $1 ,400; phone
afler 6 p.m. or. all day
Salurday or Sunday, 992·5310.
10·6-6tc

Sec . IV This Ordinance shall
take effect and be In force from
and •tter September 25, 1972. ------~-~
Passed the 25th day of Sep .
tember 1972.
'65 FORD Falcon ; phone 742·
Attest : G·ene Grate

_____

HOUSE and trailer space;
contact Don Miller 992·l693.
10.10·61c
TWO
turnlshed
rooms,
available now, _413 Spring
Ave.; phone 992-3429.
10·8·121R

For Sale
11 ACRES In Syracuse ; ad.
jacent to new housing project

on Sand Hill; all utilities
available ; $11,000; call 8652280, New Matamoras, Ohio
before 3 p.m. John H. McCo(..
10-4·6 p

-- -- MODERN Walnut type stereo-

Genoral Fund.

adequate ,Garbage and Retusl!!
collection services can be ob ·

TRAILER space close to new
Meigs High School on old Rt.
33; phone 992·2941 or 992-2689.
__:.._:
11).8./tc

EARLY American stereo-radio
combination, ~M-FM radlo,.4
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer .
Balance $71.54. Use our
Slart Buying October 2, 1972 .. ·
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
10·8·6tc

Excelsior

' 4649 . .

10· lo.Jic

Clerk

Pomeroy

..

SerVices .

EXPERT
Wheel Mttment , .
··;,,,;,· '5.55

·lHE SHOP

.. on'MOsl Amerlclln Clors

NT RIDGI! ROAD
ROY,.O.
Meat Cuttlnt"
Courteous Strvlct

·-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·~094

PometOJ Hoine &amp; AutQ
Open1Tit5

•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHO"NE 992·2550

fAR1H 'MOVING
· Dozer &amp; End toa•r work,
ponds, b•stmtn'l, land·
scaping. We h.,e 2 silt
cloztrs, 2 size loaders. Work
done by, hour or conlr•ct'
· Free Estlm•IH. · We 1tao
·haul flit dirt, lop 1811. Dump
trucks •nd low•boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone "2·3525
after 7 p.m·. or phone 9925232 .

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO ·

·~

992-2094

David W. Ohlinger
President of Council

.'

·~' '·

...

'. '

606 E. Main .. Pomeroy

'

..

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Amelia hrker MeCuiiOIII!h
10.20.1845 -11·17·1915

and

FURNITURE

------

_ _____

Real Estate

- politics aside, It's always a
GOOD DEAL at KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER, Rl. 7
" at caution light," Tuppers
Plains. ·Open to 7; closed
Mondays; phone 667-3858.
Besides usual selecllon . of
clean
used
furnllure,
guaranteed appliances, lust
arrived NEW Huffy 20"
Chesler
Slick
bikes;
discounted to $40; Murray 10·
speed bikes, $79. LAYAWAY
for XMAS.
10.8·61c-

Sale

Cleland ·
·Realty
.

'

WHY PAY RENT?
.You can own this 7'rooms, 3

Real Estate

Sal'

Samuel McCuUough ·
8-27-1840. f·S.ls'31

copied from daguerreotypes made in . February, 1864, at the time of their marriage:

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

.

'
bedroom home for a price so
low you won't believe II. This
2 story frame has 2 porches
•, •
and a nice carport end bath.
r.•
DON'T DELAY. $5,000.
IN SYRACUSE
Stately older place In a good
location. · 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms,
2
baths,
', ' ·
basement, garage, level lol.
$12.500.
GROWING FIIMILY?
' ,•
Your first consideration
must be size. This S bedroom
home may - solve your
problem. Located In a good
neighborhood . 1'12 baths;
garage, utility etc. $12,800.
-RARE OPPORTUNITYA nice 3 bedroom apt. plus a
good business, located In a
town destined to grow. This 5
room apt. has nice kitchen· .
hardwood floors, bath.•
EQUIPMENT· AND STOCK
GOES. S17,900.
TO BUY OR SELL CON.
TACT US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
PHONE 992-21$9

room suife, Phllco record 2 BLACK miniature poodles,
player. Admiral portable Tv;
For
1970
TOYOTA
Corona, males, $25 each; 1 Monogram
reversl,ble
3·speed
fan,
1
lot
of
oil
heater,
33,600
BTU,
$75;
automa1ic
transmission,
(1) 10, 17, 21
small fans, Ecko cookware IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH. Lake
phone 882.3205.
radio and new radial tires .
sel, elec. roaster, pair twin
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
Call 992-7201 after 5 p.m.
10·8·61p
beds, office dtik, two
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
10·8-61p
drawer
filing
cabinet,
5·plece
for'"'
119 mos . Vacation
NOTICE ON FILING
1 MALE Ojllrnatlan pup; phone
molal
wardParadise.
Free Brochure.
breakfast
sef,,5
_ OF INVENTORY
1969 WHITE VW,. excellent 992·5535 after S p.m.
robes, quills, quill lops,
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
AND APPRAISEMENT
condlllon. See at Rutland
10-IO.Jic
dishes. cooking utensils 'and
200100, Alameda, California
The State of Ohio, •· Meigs
County. Probate Court
large
ami.
llf
misc.
Items.
9.S01
.
·
Furniture Store. Phone /42. - FALL special - 1967 Creslllne
To tht -EKeuctors of the
4211 .
ANTIOUI!I
.
16 ft. fiberglas boat with 1967 3-PI ECE parlor set, Wlcker and. - - - - - - ' - - - -10·3·301P,
estate ; to such of the following
-lO-Hic
V-4 Elllnrude motor, Gator.
as are residents of the State ·of
other rockers, ltcllonal book. 5 ROOM house and bath,
OhiO, viz : the surviving
tilllraller ; two gas tanks plus
localed on Brick Street,
case, encyclopocllaund othar
new battery inc11fded; will
spouse, th'e n·e xt of kin , the '68 FIREBIRD, V-8, 4 speep.
boo~s. cast Iron book ends,
Rutland; Interior being
beneficiaries under the wm ;
black with red interior; phone sacrifice tor $1,000; also left
hal rack, hall free, wall· . remodeled ; phone 742· 333~.
ond to the attorney or attorneys
949·2921.
hand
set
of
Sam
Snead
golf
representing any 9f , the
mounted uprlghl clock,'chlme
10-J.I21c
IO·Hip clubs - 5 Irons, 2 wood and
atorementlor1ed ptrsons :
clock. 2 Walnut Empire beds,
puller complete with bag, $60,
Mary Wright, Deceased ,
Emr,lre chest of dr•wers, 2 HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
gOod like new; call992-709.1'afler S 2marb
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Bedford '70 VOLKSWAGEN,
e lop dressers, Kass, 2
985·3529,
p.m.
condition. Call after 6 p m·
Township, No. 20750.
992-3.Wl.
'
.
•
You are hertby notified thet
10-lO.Jic
stand,
drop·lefWalnut
night slend,
the . Inventory
and
Ap ·
cedar chests,
night
J0.9,61p
hend-made baby bed, Walnut
pralsement of the estate of tfut
NEW ~ospltal bed,' S250; new · dining room ' sulfl, dinlnt
atoremel)tloned, de~ased, latt .
.wheelchair, $100; one com.
of said County, was flied In this
'""''
and
6
Eaall•kt
ehelrs,
mode
chalr,
$1!0;
phone
992.
Court. Said lnvtntorr and Mobile Homes For ~le
Walnut atess·door cupbolrd.
. 5736..
'
Appraisement will be for
glan.
-door china clos••·
tlearlng before this Court on the CASH paid lor all makes and
to: IO·liP
square,
round and ov•l
19th day of Oc:tober. 1972, ·at , mqdels of mobile homes.
110 Mechanic Street
library tables, love set, 6
10:00 o'clock I&gt;..M.
Phone area code 61H23·9S31. STERE081rack, 1972 model In • poplar chillrs, hlgh,leggtd
Any person dnlrlng to tile
4·13-llc walnut console/ take over
desk, hump·beck trunk, oak
el&lt;ceptlons ther'eto must file
Ohio
payments Of $6.55 a month or 'kitchen
them at least five days prior to
cabinet, 2 ireadle
pay balance of $94.25; call 992·
the date set for hltrlng .
sewing machines, Wicker
.
NEW LJ'TING
·
5331.
Given undlr mv hand and
porch
swing,
upright
pl•n~
Meigs
Mobile
Homes
'
SYRACUSE
'
1
room
homit
with
'
nice
beth,
3 or ~
seal of said Court, lhls 6th dav of
•
"
10·10·61c
with
bencb,
phonograph,
bedrooms.
CIGHII.
Gaa
furnace
heat.
TV
room,
October 1972. ·
brass and tlatl baaktfa,
Basoment,
2
perchlt
and
g~~r•llf·
Manning D . Webster
SINGE_R sewing machine. Will
Carnival and O.prtttlon
Judg~rand u..offlclo Cltrrk of
HOI' WATIR HUT
,
sell for repair bill of $29.50 or
vl•ss, Anchor Hocklnggleu,
Common Pleas Court,
3
IEDRoOMsNice
kllclltn,
bath,
dining
and
large
paymenls
may
be
arranged;
American RGH China (ser.
Proba'e Division
living.
hfM
Mrd
heat
wlfll
modtrn
IJIII
bolter.
Lots
of
phone 992-5331.
vice for 12) crrstalsllm w•re ·
ci-t
apace.
F.,cad
yard.
C.rport.
·
Bv Ann B. WatsOn
11H0-6tc
set, tklnch bowl, picture anct
-. . .
COUNTRY HOME
r
Deputv Clerk
On Our Last
vase HI, wash bowl and
(10) 10. 17, 21
AKC registered Australian
NEAR
POMEROy3
bed!Wmt
with
larve
clolols.
Nice
pitcher, 1 WOOdin ......... Mt.
1972 MOBILE HOME
terrier puppies, 7 weeks old,
beth.• n•tvrlt fill farced air ful'lllce. Birch -ltchon
2 celluloid dresser sets, wlrther son, and dat~~~hter-in-law,
540 each; phone 691·3202,
· ·left on our lot.
loll of cablnoll and cook unlit. Roc. room wlfll showw.
cteinp 111'1, 4 oil l•mpt, c•sl
· Cllrport.
.
Clinton Gilkey.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan.
ltwn
orn•monia
Iron
10,
i0·6tc
'
GOOD
·
(Greyhollnd) 11!1 service set,
. n,e recent rtnnmage and
2
BEDROOMSBath,
a••
forced
air
furnace.
Shlrm
flower
POll,
si~
Jars,
1,,
bake sale which was held at the
CLOSE 'out on 1971 fuil size zig. _hal pin holcltr, 0 us powder
doors and window$, Aluminum siding. A nNt house on 1
.
Which
.,.
are
ordeflpg
tO..
zag sewing machine. For
·. Townh0111e by the Carpenter' our customers, are approved
nice tol.
. .,
.
ars, toys and &lt;lolls, picture
;
sewing
stretch f•l&gt;riCI, · r•mes, and . many other
Baptist Church group w&amp;a well
.
4
IICREI
'
by "Underwriters
bullonhotos, f•ncy
lltml.
'
attended.
·
·
..
4
BEDROOMS-'t:_,.
T\f
launif,
7
ciGHII,
1111
bllhs. ·.
Labor•tory'-' to lnaure
.etc. Paint sli9hlly btemit .
Larte
kitchen
with
lllfld
oak
calilnell
and
double
sink,
CUIIomen
the
111$1
QUallly
Choice of ·carrying ·cue or
Mn. Gay Johnlon .and, Mrl:
Baa-nt,
ltautlfut
Ylew
of
Rclufl
1
Home:
' sewing atllld. M.IO ·cuh or
Clay Jordan, 4-H advilwl from
lorms ••aiiMie. ""- 9ft.
tllla community, have retwned ...... ""' buy, drl¥1 ..
56-11.
from Wublnclon, D. C., wben TUflflfl'l Plains IIIII chlctl
10.10-tllc
they attended the . Nallenal our Ho- •• PriceJ.
·'
· Leaden Forum at the National
4-H Club C'4nter. Tiley joined
about 2110 f.H Club adviton
.

.

..&lt;·.'

-----...,.--

ESTATE AUCl'ION
PANTS &amp;JEANS
TWO.OAY sale Fri., Ocf. 13end
Sal., Oct. 14, beginning at
MONEY. SAVER
10:00 A.M. each day. ·We will
sell the personal property of
the lale Elsie D. Smith BlackBuy2 Pairsburn al lhe residence at 205
1
PAIR FREE
Lasley St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(next door to lhe former
Sugar Run grade school J In ·An kinds, all sizes for men,
part as follows:
.
women, young men, boys
HOUSEHOLD
and girls. Hurry to ...
WHIRLPOOL side by ·Side
Refrigerator
Freezer,
~
P
. OMERO_Y
,.
.
Kenmore Washer -dryer
combination,
Kelvlnalor
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.'
Elec. range, 3·plece Living ' - - · __P_ho.;,"'..;_992..;_·2:..11.:.11_•..J

etches from Our pioneer past
Ed. Note; Mrs. Robert w.
Columbus, .the for·
. May Amorette Me·
Cullou@~, formerly of Poriland lo Meigs County, ls her
family's ' historian. The
pictures are copies of
daguerreotypes made In IBM
tile tlnle of the couple's
marriage.
The follo\.l'lng Is her account of Its early history:
TUPPERS PLAINS - After
n~~~~;~~Rhodes McCullough,
b
their infant son
was thrown from a
and dragged by a foot
cau;ghtln the stirrup, resulting
both her own death and that
the baby; the grief-stricken
widotwer, John McCullough,
his two small sons Samuel
Joseph and emigrated
,.. "'""""" Beaver, Pa. home to
frontier country of
Ohio (during
•o""''· Here he farmed and his
Both enlisted in the 6~rd Ohio
Voliunteelr...lnf.ontry in.Qdober,.
1861. ~~h, the yo!Qlger, ~s·;
invalided home and died of
dysentery 11-30-64. Samuel
.served until the fighting ended

and was mustered out 7-3-65.
During fll"lough (Jan . and
Feb. 1864) he married Alnoret
Parker, "the prettiest girl that
ever set foot on Long Bottom,"
and after the war they made
their home here and ihere in
the eastern part of Meigs
County. Here Samuel farmed,
and served as Justice of the
Peace, mediating differences
between neighbors, holding
court, and marrying.
Ten children were born to
them, all but the first growing
{o adulthOod. The four boys and
one of the girls taught in the
little country school houses,
attending the academies of the
day to further their own
educations, and laking the
annual, teachers' exams. The
boys, all fine big men, were in
demand for the area's problem
schoo,ls where juvenile
delinquency was a concern,
and discipline necessary.
In lime the eldest, Arthur,
studied for the ministry and
served in the Methodist Church
for many years.
The second .. son, .Walter,
ll\lltlied'lillslness, and was well
known around Pomeroy Bend
where he was engaged in real
estate, insurance, and served

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Wednesday Late
Mixed League
Oct. 4, 1972
Standings
Pis.
25
24

I Game
Men,

23
18
18
12

210, Women,

Virginia Hoyt 168.
Second High Ind. Ga"1e Men, Russ Moore 199; Women,
Belly Fultz 146; third, men,
Jack Carsey .J91; Virginia
Hoyt, Belly Rawlings 145.
High Series - . Russ Moore
542; Virginia Hoyt 430.
Second High Series - Dan
Meadows 520 ; Joy Bentley 376;
third, Roy Holler 511 ; B. FultzNeacli· Carsey 366.
Team High Game
Blakeslee-Hovl 620.

from Ill over the naUon for

dllcuaelona IIIII e~joytd many
polnll oflll'-"1 In the capital

and IW'I'OIIIIdlnl ......

MOIIU

HOMD
TUIIPirt Palfna: 0.

'

... t .~

·. ·

, o·.)

expressed his thanks to the
United Nations, the Red C!:oss
and all governments who
furnished aid to the Philippine
diaster areas. He said these
included countries with which
Ihe Philippines had not as yet
es l a blished diplomatic
re lations, "like the People's
Republic of China and the
Soviet Union, both of which
gave us generous and welcome

Retail value 39¢

o,;. .•

I

-,

\

assistance."
Delivering the
policy
si al ement of his government in
Ihe General Assembly, Romulo
also warned agains t the
growin g trend towards a
"global ghetto" which, he said,
is being formed by the poor
nations.
" The infamous poverty gap
is widening at an accelerated
rate, and the poor, developing
coun tries are in fact on the
verge of living in a global
ghe tto," he said.

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._,

FROM·OUR SUNDAY, OCT. 8 ADVERTISEMENT

ELECTRIC

4~769

"'lh

,...,Q I

~

Corrected Items

PRICE
BDUQD

luv.•

Judge in Pomeroy.
. Of the younger girls one,
Athelia, taught like her
brothers unlil she married Will
Wallace, a widower with small
twin daughters. They had one
daughter of their own who did
·no! live.
The other girls married and
went with their husbands :
Millicent married Victor
Nelson, and lived and reared
their family in Iowa and
Michigan. Leona married
Perry Bonar and lived in Ohio
and West Virginia. Ethel
married the Reverend James
Conkel and reared their family
in West Virginia, Kentucky and
Ohio.
Samuel outlived his beloved
Amoret by fifteen years,
spending his later _ years
visitin g with his children,
keeping his home ·with Athelia
Wallace at whose home he
died, aged ninety years .

.Marcos Battling Foreign
Subversion ·m. l~liilias·

UNITED NATIONS (UP! )Foreigh Secretary Carlos
P . Romulo said Monday that martial law
had been proclaimed in the
Philippines to safeguard the
Team High Series
coun try
from
foreign Blakeslee-Hoyt 1789.
supported subversion.
But he added the Presiden l
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Ferdina~d E. Marcos had also
Oct. 8, 1972
seized
the opportunity to
Standings
Team
W, · L.. revamp the social, political
Eagles Club
26 22 and economic institutions of
Team No ..3
24 24 1he Philippines in response to
Mark V
24 24
Farmers Bank
24 24 the urgent need for social
Racine Food Market
20 28 justice.
Tom's Carry Out
16 32
The seriousness of the
High Individual Game Philippine
situation , he said,
Larry Dugan 231 ; Yita Shuford
had been aggravated by the
188.
.
· Second High Ind. Game worst flood disaster in the
Larry Dugan 224 ; Sonja country's history in July. In the
Wayland 174.
. High Series - Larry Dugan wake o! this disaster, he said,
621 ; Nita Shuford 483.
"I he subversive groups in the
Second High Series - A. L. Philippines intensified their
Phelps 565 ; Betty Smith 476.
Team High Game - Tom's altempts to sow panic and
Carry Out 743.
undennine the conditions of
Team High Series - Tom 's law and order."
Carry Out 2024.
In this context, Romulo

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

1973 HOMES

some lime as County Auditor.
The third · child and first
daughter, Katy, married
Charlie Lee, and this union
produced four sons and three
daughters, all of whom have
served their fellows in
engineering, medicine , and
leaching ,
The third son , Charlie, left
teaching to try business and .
industry briefly, but returned
to school work, and wa~ an
inspiring and beloved teacher
and administrator in Meigs, ·
Ross and Athens Counties.
The fourth son, Fr d,
followed his father-in-law, Old
Doc Hensley, into the practice
of medicine, and truly gave his
life in the service of his
fellowmen . The lure of law
from his childhood observance
of the office of the Justice of the
Peace haunted him all of hist
life, however, and during his
mature years he sat as Probate

Local Bowling

;::::===·=-===6=·1:1~·1f~c~==:======~

Pomer,;,,

, Shares of the mutual fund
are available by prospectus
through agents of Columbia
National Life Insurance
Company, who are registered

.

sc

'

with each·$J sasoliile purchase.
Bold and lively Poppy Red coffee .mugs.
Smart, contemporary styling; Generous 8-ounce size.
· They stack to save yqu storage space.
Oven and dishwasher safe, too.
Start collecting a set now at participating
Ashland Oil stations.

'

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.

DURAL AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC SCIS·
SORS, Gul4t liaht to ••• lin•• and patti'"'• cut•
aku 1 ond hu11y fobr icl, o blAde t ;uord lo protect
toblt tops, long lift bloeln ,of 'IU~1ty htth car~on
Mode in U.S.A. L1tt $9.95 .
I tI I I•

t

.Matchl119 all·purpose canister.
Only 99C wHh any purchase.

'

,.

I

ONLY.

t

.

Tills.. WAS AN ERROR BY 1HE.NEWSPAPER
.

.

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M&amp;R SHOPPING. CENTER

.,

MI-:::RT

Ashland

We honor BtnkAmtrleard' and·
Muter Chirp credit i:1rdt.

=--· - ~j8J
f"Q~

10.1u..tc

. '"·-· "'\:

CLEVELAND (UPI)Lenny Wilkens, the fanner
Seattle SuperSonics pard
obtained by the Clevelancl- ·
Cavaliers, w&amp;a IIIIIPtnded by
the team Monday night for
refusing to report.
Wilkens bas maintained hll
determination not to ~ for
the Cavaliers since the announceinent Aug. 23 that the.·
clubS had made a deal.

L.:.;::::.-.:.::::...::.:.::.:_:_:..:;;:..:;;:.::.:.J :::

O'DELL WHEEL alignment SEWING MACHINES. Repair
localedal Crossroads, Rt. 12~ . service. all makes. 992-2284.
·
Complete . front end service, The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
YAMAHA Enduro250, 9 months
up and brake service. Authorized Singer Sales and
tune
old, like new; S500. Phone '997·
Wheels
balanced ~lee . Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
7109.
tronlc'ally .
All
work '
·
3-29-lfc
10·.S.61c
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 7~·3232' or· 992· AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
3213.
1950 FORD Rlckup !ruck ;
canc.ellt!it?
Lost
your
Marlin rifle; 3 soWs ; phone
"7-27·ffc · operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
247-2161 . '
10.8·31&lt; WILL cut or · trim · lrees,
6·15-tfc
· reasonable; _ also clean out
------~
basements, allies and HUSBAND and wife janitorial
ANTIQUE pump organ, ·all
cellars
; phone 949·3221.
service team . Home and
original except new bellows.
10.4-301c commercial. Walls, windows,
Over 80 years old. Made bv
floors. Call Gallipolis, Ohio
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co.,
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
«6·1607.
Worcester, Mass. One bellows
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
10-5-6tp
type .
Phone
992·3904,
CLEANED ," .REPAIRED.
Syracuse, 0 .
_ _ _ _ _ ____:6f.pd
MILLER SANITATION, SEE U$ FOR: Awnings, storm
STEWARl', · OHIO. PHONE doors and windows, carports,
marqiJO&lt;lS, aluminum siding
1971 KAWASAKI 100, excellent
662-3035.
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
condition, ready to go.
10·4·1fc
representative. For free
Sacrifice lor only $260. Phone
Coolville 667-6214.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE estimates, phone Charies
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
10·S·121C
delivered right to your
project. Fast a.nd easy. Free Johnson and Son, Inc.
.,
COAL, Limeslone, Excelsior
3-2-lfc
estimates . .Phone 992·3284.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891:
Middleport, Ohio.
Septic tanks Installed. George
4-f2.1fc
~-30·
1fc
_.:.._
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2418.
-----~
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
~· 25·1fC
Sewing Machine. Will sell for REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6small balance of S3M1 or
_,
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, '
For _
Owner &amp; Operator.
·
payments may be arranged.
Phone 992·5331.
5-12-lfc· 8 ROOM house and bath, nice ..
9-7-lfc - - - - - - - - large lot, natural gas, bullf,fn
- - - - -- - - C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
cabinets In kitchen. Close to · ,. ':
8 TRACK STEREO, freight
Complelo!Servlce
radio station In Bradbury.
·.
damag'ld. In beautiful .walnut
Phone 949·3821
Phone 992·2602.
,.
console. Will sell for $101.50or
Racine, Ohio
9·29·121c · ·
pay $1.50 per week. Phone 992Crill Bradford
. " ....-! ' I
5331.
5· f.tfc RACINE r..:.. 'fit ' room 'i./iii,., l oR!
__•____..,_~
__._.....:,9
17·tfc _D_O_Z_E_R_a_n_d_ba
_ c_k_h_oe--work,
bath, basetneht, garage, lwb '· , .,:
~
lots.
Phone 949·4313.
·
. ·•
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
ponds and septic tanks, dlf·
.s.tfp
4
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- chlng service; lop soil, fill - - - - - - - - .. ,
5443.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex8·15-lfc cavaling. Phone 992·5367,
1
- -- - -- - - Pick Karr, Jr.
, ·,
APPLES, Flfzpalrlck Or· - - 9·1 ·1fc
chards, State Route 689,
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
8·30-lfc For

Sale .

load" status early in 1972. "Our

por~lion .

WILKENS SUSPENDED

"2·JI74

For Sale

- - --

change from a "load'' to a "no-

shareholders' investments are
no longer reduc&amp;l by sales
commissions," he Said, u'fmd "I
believe our new status appeals
much more dlrecUy · to the ·
demands of ·the contemporary ·
investor ."
Agribuslness . Management
Corporation, the investment
advisor for Comsec Fund, is a
wholly,owned subsidiary of
Columbia National Cor-

DICK

.

6!16 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

56,855.

Due tu favorable investment
results, the ~ompany has
declared a capital gafns
disiJ·ibuliun of net realized
profiis from the sale of port.
f1Jliu securities in tlle amount of
72 cenls per share. In addition,
a cash dividend from income
equaling 8 cents per share was
also declared, .The distribution
was lu Ill! paid on October 9,
1972 tu shareholders of record
on September 7, 1972. .
Jack K. While, president;
attributed the favorable 1972
resulls in part to the fund 's

representatives for
inc., a member flrm of the
National Association ill
Securities Dealers .
Representatives · in thia arq
are . Maurice A. Toler and
Andrew Toler ..

VAUGHN

Monday lhru S.lurdlly

- -- - - -

- - - -- - ' -

ToGo
r,ke Me To

-

, radio, AM·FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, . ~
speed automa .fi~ chang,e r·.
Balance $68 .79 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-708.1.
10·8·61c

- - -- -SQUARE DEAL, NEW DEAL'

If I HAVE

'

~ROOFING .

2 OR 3 BEDROOM home In .
Mason. Calf Point Pleesant
675·16U.
10.6-6

__

Plck.up Truck : $5 .00 per load

20 Gallon Can : $1 .00 per ca'n .
1&gt;.11 monev collectod shall be
deposited to the credit of the

Ph~ tn~2174

.

9-26-lfc TRAILER lot ; Bob's Mobile
Court, Syracuse; p~one 992·
CARHOP . wanted ; apply in 2951.
person; Crow's Steak House. ;__
:...__ 10-6,1fc
10+6lc TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
Park, phone 992-3324.
Musical Instruments
10-3-tfc
GiBSON Guitar, beautiful Les 2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Paul cusfom, sunburst finish,
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
new, 1.':~ price $375; phone 388IO.S-Ifc
8271 .
_ _ _..:__ _ _ _10:..:
·6-61p ~T-RAIL_E_R_spa_c_e_ln-Ra_c_ln-e. All
city ulililles, private lot.
Wanted To Buy
Robert Hill, Racine. Phone
949·31111.
GOOD quallly hay,. 300 to 500
10·5-9tp
bales: phone 992-2789.
·
·
10·8·61c 3 ANO 4 ROOM' furnished and
unfurnished apartments.
OLO Furniture, oak tables,
Phone 992:5434.
'
4·12-tfc
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·627t 3 ROOM furnished apartment,
6·28·ffc
utilities paid, 1 child, no pets;
356 North 4th· St., Middleport,
Wm. Smith, S80 mo.
10·8-atp

WALNUTS

Carpenter

· Notilan \llggs
.Radl•lor
S,.Ciallsl
'
.

~-----

clothing and misc~llaneous ·
ftems ; 7 kittens to g.i ve away;

.

HAYMAN'S Auction- a good
place to Qo each Friday SKATE.AWAY, open Wed· KOSCOT KOSMETICS (MINK
evening, 7 p.m. at. Laurel
nesday, Friday and Saturday
OIL BASEl. We have many
Bring Your Unhulled
Cll!l,on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west evenings from 7: 30 p.m. to
new
products
since
the
for.
of Rock Springs Fairground. 10:30 p.m. Available for
malton of !his Company. Also
,
10-10-lfc p~lvale porites on Monday,
several new ones this month
Tuesday and Thursday
plus monthly specials. All
CARPORT Sale ; Avons and evenings, also •Saturday and
.these In addition to the
miscellaneous; 9 a.m. to 5 Sunday afternoons. Schedule
originals. Ladles, we would
p.m., Thur1day, Oct. 121h:'918 your parties early. Phone 985Iike very much for you to try
3929 Or 985·9996.
TO OUR
So. Jrd St., Middleport.
these cosmetics and to serve
10.1-121c . you. Phone Helen Jane, 992·
10·8-Jic
MECHANICAL
-~---5113.
HULLER
REDUCE safe and fast with
:-::-:-::------~1~0.1.
lfc
GoBtse Tablets &amp;' E-Vap WEEKEND Revival al· Rutland
''water pills," Nelson Drug.
Apostolic Church, Friday, VIRGINIA'S Beauty Salon on
10·9-2fp
Success Road between Your Walnuts will be
Oct. 13 through Oct. 15; 7: 3G
Tuppers . Plains and Long
p.m . Speakers will be
Hulled Free of Charge
NEW Improved "Zipples," the
Bottom . Open 6 days; some and We Will Pay You.
Evangelists Arlen and Mary
great Iron pill now with
evenings . Phone 667·3041,
Hughes
of
Columbus.
Vitamin C. Nelson Drug.
Operator, Virginia Hayman .
Evervone Welcome.
9·14-301c
.
10.9-21p ~------_:1.:.::0
·8·61c
Per Hundred
Pounds

·1.oca1 ,Bowling

Smallest H!':.ter COI'e·.

'-

For Rent

10-IO·Jip

3507 .

10-6.6lp

dishes, . antiques,

·

WOMAN to live In with elderly
lady, good salary, room and
board, phone 992·5397 or 992·

' interior and
. 'PAINTING,
lerior; phone 882-2482, ·
•

:~r,~!:~ · 'a;:~:~r:·r~t~o:k

,L.;,.-----,---~.'.

Box 729-C, Po!)1eroy, Ohio '

45769

~·~- Business
t

wqrk, for molhers and
1220 Washington llvir.
housewives. For Interview, 423-752,1
BELPRE, 0,

Employment Wanted

. .•

phone 992-3652,

SJ~O~ PER hour, Ideal part-lime ) MOilLE HO'ME$,.

OP.EN E~U 1.00 ~.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

&lt;8:30 e.m, .to 5:00,p.m. Dally,
a.m. to 1:1:00 Noon

1 : 30

salary

r e ferences

10-10-Jic 'Complete mobile .home' ·
PARTTIME low allo or bass ,servllce ~, plus glgh•ntrc'
singer for female gospel . dlsp ay o mobile omes
·gr.oup ; willt'ng to travel ,· always avallable,al ...
· phone '192·3089.
MILLER
)Q.f0-3tc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

YARD and Porch Sale, 572 'S .
· 3rd Ave., Middleport starting
at 10 ~.m . Wednesday;
_ Chllctren's games, toys, 45
RPM records, hedge trimmers, universal sprayer ,
height gage, paint, clothing of '
alllypes, household goods and

otd child ;

•i c g t"i ;tbl c;

COLUMBUS ~ Comsec
Fund, Inc., a· no-load mutual
l,; nd
headquartered
in
Colwnbus, announced increas•
l!s in n'et . asset value per_ share, net as·
sets, and 'capital shares
for the Fiscal year ending July
' 31, 1972.
Nol assel value per share
increased i3.8 pet. from $12.50
in 1972 to $13.59 at the close of
the 1972 fiscal period. Net
assets increased from $507,m
w $712,552 during the comparative period, and capital
shared increased from '40,623 to

.

"

.

., Air Conditioners
• Awnings•
'
'.• Underpinni•:!g

WOMAN lo live in and care for 9

1968 CHEVROLET
$1~9
o;, ion, 8' Stepslde, good heavy duly fires, V.8 engine, J.
speed lransmisslon, solid ca~. local 1-owner truck: .

' BLIND ADS
' .
Additional '2.5c .Charg-e per
Advert~s.ment .
,· ·
·.
OFFICE HOIIlt\ •

·

two bedroom, front
~lichen, ucellenl condition . .
P~one 985·3555.
·
10·8-61p

meter arad change dryer wire

Each addJtlonl'l word 2c .

NOTIC~

SOx 10,

to range cable, 370 'Fisher Sf
Middlepod. Phone .992-ma:
10·9·3lc

1969 CHEVROLET .
12295
Han, 102" cab to axle, 792 engine, 15000 lbs. 2-speed axle,
825•20 10 ply tires, foam seats, heavy duty springs, solid
cab. ~as her up ,... and go!

M!nl,num Chetge 7Sc
~ord

ELECTRICIAN. to put in new

r ~qu i red ;

·For Wait' Ad Service
5 antS per Word one Insertion
12 Cents' · p~tr

:965 ATL.AS mobile home,

.

.
S2095
1500 series, v .a engine. ~tartdard transmission , good 1iresj
' cab moUldings, foam seat, chrome fron' bumper &amp; rear

~

'

eom..c,

Comsec Net Showing Increases

Mobile Homes for Sale ·

Help Wanted
'

·.

'1910 GMC.

rncor~e~t

for more. tha" ohe

·'

...

Motor CL

·D.ay Of P')IIICIUon · , '

~-~

Action! .Sentinel·Classifieds. Get Resul~s!

.,.•.,.,

. .WIIIh. ADS. .
INI&lt;OIIMATION
·• DEADliNES . ' ' ·
.S· P.~. Day ettoro Publlcotlo~
· · Mondoy DMdllno r a.m.

..
..

I

'

.

'

�, I

•
··~

.'"~'

'~·''
~ ':.

•('
'

I

~·~• • !

,

'

'

·· CI'JCtlletlon- Corrections

' .' Wl.ll bt .ICCIIPted untll9 a·.m.. fQr

· ··

'
..J REGULATIONS .
•
· • :rht':.-' Pubtlther r,serves the
fiGht · to edit ot rtfttt ·any ads
·dttmtd abJectfonal.
The
pUblisher wll_l I"!O~.be responsible.

·'"'''"tton.
· ·
'
. ' -IlliTES

step bumper, ,ln

'

.-t hree

consecutive lnsertA)ffs.

,

. 11 cents per ·word sr.t con·

secutlve i!"ltrtlons. .

·

· ; 25 Ptr Ctnt Discount on paid
·ads and ads 'Paid .w ithin 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO ·for 50 word -minimum .

2 . 1on~

m onth

green finish .

Satur~ev .

NOTICE
·-

, "HEll"

miscellaneous items of all

IO.I0-2tc
YARD Sale, October 12th &amp;
tJth; Thursday .and Frldllr,
· 312 Pearl Street, Middlepor ; '
sponsored by Silver Memorial
Youth.
10·10·31C

Air Conditioners
Hot Water. Healer~.
Plumbing
·Eieclrica,l Work

ARNQLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

nilscellan!i!'OUS.

'

'

HEATING
&amp;
•
COOUNG
Window

kinds.

YARb.' Sale, · Wednesday &amp;
' Thursday, OciQber lllh &amp;
l~h. 761 • Ash Street. Middleport, 9 a.m. till S p.m.;
Avon
bottles
and

write c -1 The Daily Sentinel,

10-lO·IIC '

Pomeroy,O.

ex-

Notice
PORCH SALE. OCtober 12. 13
and 14; crocheted goods ,
some

...

POMEROY LANES- ·&gt;
S.lurcbly Bant•m League
Si~Pfember 3G, 1972
Ball Bombers
Pis.
8
Red Barons
6
All Stars
Banana Spills
~
Cyclones
4
Pin Busters
3
High Ind. Game - David
Burl and Todd Rawlings 121
and. Bobby Williams 119; High
~roes - David Burt 233 and
David Smith 227.
Team High Game 'and. Series
- Ball Bomber;s 712 and 1385.

Nits
. ' Event

'Mr. and Mrs. Orlin Gregory
and family of Columblls and
Mr: and Mfs. Olho Gregory,
Radcliff, visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil C:illogly and family
and Mrs. Goldie Gillogly on
Saturilay evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey were
in Cincinnati for commencement exercises of the
Cincinnati School of Embalming which was held at the
S.lurdlly Senior League
Walnut Hills Avondale United
Sepllmbtr 3G, m2
Pis.
Methodist
Church. Walter
Oing.A.Lings
9'12
Gutter Dusters
9V• · Jordlll\ was a member of the
Pin Crushen
9
graduating class and he and his
Pin Busters
6'h
wife, Kathy Gilkey Jordan,
Herbles
6
Born Losers
~'12 have returned to their home in
High Ind. Game - Mike this community,
Gilmore 191 end Rick Stobart
Miss Lois Gaston who is a
180.
•
High Series-Rick Slobart student at Career Academy in
,..0 and· Rich Bailey 473.
· Colwnbus spent a weekend
Team High Game - Dlng.A. here with her parents, Mr. and
lings 819; Team High Series Mrs. Paul Gaston, Leah and
Gutter Dusters 2263.
Joe.
Mr. arid Mrs. Donald Jones
of Nelsonville spent a day with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Wednesday AHernoon League Starkey and helped Mr.
' October 4, 1971
Won loSt Starkey celebrate his birthday.
Riggs U5ed Cars
26
14
Ney Carpenter has returned
Lodwick's Markel
24
16 to his home ana is cohvalescing
Gual's Shake Haven 21
19
Royal Crown Colo ·
18
24 satisfactorily after spending
Rldenou'r's TV
16
24 several days in Pleasant
Good's Pennzoll . IS
25 Valley Hospital, P.t Pleasant,
High Ind. Game - · Judy
Ginther 135 and Avanell Bass for observation and treatment.
Mrs. Murl Galaway and Mrs.
126; High Series Ind.'- Judy
Ginther 351 end Avanell Bass Mendal Joddan represented
330.
Team High Game and Series Temple Church WSCS at the
- Royal Crown Cola 308 and annual fall meeting for the
853.
district which was held at the
First United Methodist Church
In Nelsonville.. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harrison
and family of Stoutsville
1 *tdnetc~ay .E•rly Bird
visited with her parents, Mr.
• Octobtr 4, 1972
and
Mrs. William Cheadle.
Won Lost
Mr . :.and Mrs. Andrew
Dorothy's Plnneltes · 40 . 8
34
14 Chapman, along with the
. R. H. Rawlings· ,
• Berlha'e (irocery
24
24
· Klngll&lt;!lldllrs Supply 20
78 former Earnestlne Chapman
Royal Crown .
14
34 and her husband, of Mobile,
. Eve1Jl1'S Grocery
12
36 Alabanlil, and Ben Caster of
Hlg~ · Ind. Game - Martha
Charleston, who were camping
INih 113. FIOuie Maxson 169.
at
Royal Oak Park, caDed on
Serin-Martho Nash 474
Mary Von &lt;169.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey &amp;ml
Hl9.h Game end Series other friends and relatives In
- Dorothy 1 Plnneltes 795 and the area.
·
2315.
Mn. Walter Swett vililed her
son-ln·law and daughter, Mr.
"''d Mrs. Arthur. Reedy and
.family who recenUy moved tO
Soutbllde, W.• Va.
Guestaof~, aadMrs. Jt"'l

. Culwell were their children lllii
famlliel, Mr. llld Mrs. Rolcoe

T.lt, lb. Fannie,.,..,,
..... Miry CoDier of Flat.
woOtll, Xy., and Mra. T. R.
. . . . . llld Greg of Jaekal,
Mr. llld Mn. Culwell btiCb ire
V~ryiU.

~aye Jordan ... Ill
........,, ~u.tatlhe bame of

SMflH NELSON
MOTORS,. INC.

lleen Swain residence, County
Rd. 28, just off Rl. 7 above
Eastern High School.
. 10.8-31&lt;
ORGAN and piano instruction
by· graduate of ,Ci~clnnall
Conservatoty of Music. Phone
992-3825.

9-28· 121c
THERE will be no buffet dinner
served at Young's Casual
Catering on Wednesday,
,,October 11th.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1:.._:0
-8.Jic

lEGAl NOTICE

'ORDIN~CE NO. 917-72

.An Ordln nu to Provide for
refuse Coli _'tions &amp; Charges for
Services.
.
I
Be It ordained by the Counc11

of the Vlllage of MiddlepOrt u
follows :
Sec . I. That the Village will to
the
extent possible and
necessary, furnish hauling
services to remove refuse from
the Village for resldenh for all
refuse eKcept garbage.
Sec .
II
The follow.l ng
schedule or charges Is hereby
established for the refuse
removal servIce :
11h Ton Truck : . SlO .OO per

lood .

- ----::---

;========·::·.., .

$

After they
ore Hulled

SaH Worb, Inc.
P.O. Box 267
992-3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

Auto Sales

1970 PLYMOUTH, 4 door, good
Sec . Ill This Ordinance shall tires and exhaust~ air, pOwer
remain In forc:e only until en
b k
d 1 ·
talned lor the Village.

ra es an
s eenng; very
good condition, $1 ,400; phone
afler 6 p.m. or. all day
Salurday or Sunday, 992·5310.
10·6-6tc

Sec . IV This Ordinance shall
take effect and be In force from
and •tter September 25, 1972. ------~-~
Passed the 25th day of Sep .
tember 1972.
'65 FORD Falcon ; phone 742·
Attest : G·ene Grate

_____

HOUSE and trailer space;
contact Don Miller 992·l693.
10.10·61c
TWO
turnlshed
rooms,
available now, _413 Spring
Ave.; phone 992-3429.
10·8·121R

For Sale
11 ACRES In Syracuse ; ad.
jacent to new housing project

on Sand Hill; all utilities
available ; $11,000; call 8652280, New Matamoras, Ohio
before 3 p.m. John H. McCo(..
10-4·6 p

-- -- MODERN Walnut type stereo-

Genoral Fund.

adequate ,Garbage and Retusl!!
collection services can be ob ·

TRAILER space close to new
Meigs High School on old Rt.
33; phone 992·2941 or 992-2689.
__:.._:
11).8./tc

EARLY American stereo-radio
combination, ~M-FM radlo,.4
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer .
Balance $71.54. Use our
Slart Buying October 2, 1972 .. ·
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
10·8·6tc

Excelsior

' 4649 . .

10· lo.Jic

Clerk

Pomeroy

..

SerVices .

EXPERT
Wheel Mttment , .
··;,,,;,· '5.55

·lHE SHOP

.. on'MOsl Amerlclln Clors

NT RIDGI! ROAD
ROY,.O.
Meat Cuttlnt"
Courteous Strvlct

·-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·~094

PometOJ Hoine &amp; AutQ
Open1Tit5

•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHO"NE 992·2550

fAR1H 'MOVING
· Dozer &amp; End toa•r work,
ponds, b•stmtn'l, land·
scaping. We h.,e 2 silt
cloztrs, 2 size loaders. Work
done by, hour or conlr•ct'
· Free Estlm•IH. · We 1tao
·haul flit dirt, lop 1811. Dump
trucks •nd low•boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone "2·3525
after 7 p.m·. or phone 9925232 .

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO ·

·~

992-2094

David W. Ohlinger
President of Council

.'

·~' '·

...

'. '

606 E. Main .. Pomeroy

'

..

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Amelia hrker MeCuiiOIII!h
10.20.1845 -11·17·1915

and

FURNITURE

------

_ _____

Real Estate

- politics aside, It's always a
GOOD DEAL at KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER, Rl. 7
" at caution light," Tuppers
Plains. ·Open to 7; closed
Mondays; phone 667-3858.
Besides usual selecllon . of
clean
used
furnllure,
guaranteed appliances, lust
arrived NEW Huffy 20"
Chesler
Slick
bikes;
discounted to $40; Murray 10·
speed bikes, $79. LAYAWAY
for XMAS.
10.8·61c-

Sale

Cleland ·
·Realty
.

'

WHY PAY RENT?
.You can own this 7'rooms, 3

Real Estate

Sal'

Samuel McCuUough ·
8-27-1840. f·S.ls'31

copied from daguerreotypes made in . February, 1864, at the time of their marriage:

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

.

'
bedroom home for a price so
low you won't believe II. This
2 story frame has 2 porches
•, •
and a nice carport end bath.
r.•
DON'T DELAY. $5,000.
IN SYRACUSE
Stately older place In a good
location. · 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms,
2
baths,
', ' ·
basement, garage, level lol.
$12.500.
GROWING FIIMILY?
' ,•
Your first consideration
must be size. This S bedroom
home may - solve your
problem. Located In a good
neighborhood . 1'12 baths;
garage, utility etc. $12,800.
-RARE OPPORTUNITYA nice 3 bedroom apt. plus a
good business, located In a
town destined to grow. This 5
room apt. has nice kitchen· .
hardwood floors, bath.•
EQUIPMENT· AND STOCK
GOES. S17,900.
TO BUY OR SELL CON.
TACT US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
PHONE 992-21$9

room suife, Phllco record 2 BLACK miniature poodles,
player. Admiral portable Tv;
For
1970
TOYOTA
Corona, males, $25 each; 1 Monogram
reversl,ble
3·speed
fan,
1
lot
of
oil
heater,
33,600
BTU,
$75;
automa1ic
transmission,
(1) 10, 17, 21
small fans, Ecko cookware IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH. Lake
phone 882.3205.
radio and new radial tires .
sel, elec. roaster, pair twin
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
Call 992-7201 after 5 p.m.
10·8·61p
beds, office dtik, two
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
10·8-61p
drawer
filing
cabinet,
5·plece
for'"'
119 mos . Vacation
NOTICE ON FILING
1 MALE Ojllrnatlan pup; phone
molal
wardParadise.
Free Brochure.
breakfast
sef,,5
_ OF INVENTORY
1969 WHITE VW,. excellent 992·5535 after S p.m.
robes, quills, quill lops,
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
AND APPRAISEMENT
condlllon. See at Rutland
10-IO.Jic
dishes. cooking utensils 'and
200100, Alameda, California
The State of Ohio, •· Meigs
County. Probate Court
large
ami.
llf
misc.
Items.
9.S01
.
·
Furniture Store. Phone /42. - FALL special - 1967 Creslllne
To tht -EKeuctors of the
4211 .
ANTIOUI!I
.
16 ft. fiberglas boat with 1967 3-PI ECE parlor set, Wlcker and. - - - - - - ' - - - -10·3·301P,
estate ; to such of the following
-lO-Hic
V-4 Elllnrude motor, Gator.
as are residents of the State ·of
other rockers, ltcllonal book. 5 ROOM house and bath,
OhiO, viz : the surviving
tilllraller ; two gas tanks plus
localed on Brick Street,
case, encyclopocllaund othar
new battery inc11fded; will
spouse, th'e n·e xt of kin , the '68 FIREBIRD, V-8, 4 speep.
boo~s. cast Iron book ends,
Rutland; Interior being
beneficiaries under the wm ;
black with red interior; phone sacrifice tor $1,000; also left
hal rack, hall free, wall· . remodeled ; phone 742· 333~.
ond to the attorney or attorneys
949·2921.
hand
set
of
Sam
Snead
golf
representing any 9f , the
mounted uprlghl clock,'chlme
10-J.I21c
IO·Hip clubs - 5 Irons, 2 wood and
atorementlor1ed ptrsons :
clock. 2 Walnut Empire beds,
puller complete with bag, $60,
Mary Wright, Deceased ,
Emr,lre chest of dr•wers, 2 HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
gOod like new; call992-709.1'afler S 2marb
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Bedford '70 VOLKSWAGEN,
e lop dressers, Kass, 2
985·3529,
p.m.
condition. Call after 6 p m·
Township, No. 20750.
992-3.Wl.
'
.
•
You are hertby notified thet
10-lO.Jic
stand,
drop·lefWalnut
night slend,
the . Inventory
and
Ap ·
cedar chests,
night
J0.9,61p
hend-made baby bed, Walnut
pralsement of the estate of tfut
NEW ~ospltal bed,' S250; new · dining room ' sulfl, dinlnt
atoremel)tloned, de~ased, latt .
.wheelchair, $100; one com.
of said County, was flied In this
'""''
and
6
Eaall•kt
ehelrs,
mode
chalr,
$1!0;
phone
992.
Court. Said lnvtntorr and Mobile Homes For ~le
Walnut atess·door cupbolrd.
. 5736..
'
Appraisement will be for
glan.
-door china clos••·
tlearlng before this Court on the CASH paid lor all makes and
to: IO·liP
square,
round and ov•l
19th day of Oc:tober. 1972, ·at , mqdels of mobile homes.
110 Mechanic Street
library tables, love set, 6
10:00 o'clock I&gt;..M.
Phone area code 61H23·9S31. STERE081rack, 1972 model In • poplar chillrs, hlgh,leggtd
Any person dnlrlng to tile
4·13-llc walnut console/ take over
desk, hump·beck trunk, oak
el&lt;ceptlons ther'eto must file
Ohio
payments Of $6.55 a month or 'kitchen
them at least five days prior to
cabinet, 2 ireadle
pay balance of $94.25; call 992·
the date set for hltrlng .
sewing machines, Wicker
.
NEW LJ'TING
·
5331.
Given undlr mv hand and
porch
swing,
upright
pl•n~
Meigs
Mobile
Homes
'
SYRACUSE
'
1
room
homit
with
'
nice
beth,
3 or ~
seal of said Court, lhls 6th dav of
•
"
10·10·61c
with
bencb,
phonograph,
bedrooms.
CIGHII.
Gaa
furnace
heat.
TV
room,
October 1972. ·
brass and tlatl baaktfa,
Basoment,
2
perchlt
and
g~~r•llf·
Manning D . Webster
SINGE_R sewing machine. Will
Carnival and O.prtttlon
Judg~rand u..offlclo Cltrrk of
HOI' WATIR HUT
,
sell for repair bill of $29.50 or
vl•ss, Anchor Hocklnggleu,
Common Pleas Court,
3
IEDRoOMsNice
kllclltn,
bath,
dining
and
large
paymenls
may
be
arranged;
American RGH China (ser.
Proba'e Division
living.
hfM
Mrd
heat
wlfll
modtrn
IJIII
bolter.
Lots
of
phone 992-5331.
vice for 12) crrstalsllm w•re ·
ci-t
apace.
F.,cad
yard.
C.rport.
·
Bv Ann B. WatsOn
11H0-6tc
set, tklnch bowl, picture anct
-. . .
COUNTRY HOME
r
Deputv Clerk
On Our Last
vase HI, wash bowl and
(10) 10. 17, 21
AKC registered Australian
NEAR
POMEROy3
bed!Wmt
with
larve
clolols.
Nice
pitcher, 1 WOOdin ......... Mt.
1972 MOBILE HOME
terrier puppies, 7 weeks old,
beth.• n•tvrlt fill farced air ful'lllce. Birch -ltchon
2 celluloid dresser sets, wlrther son, and dat~~~hter-in-law,
540 each; phone 691·3202,
· ·left on our lot.
loll of cablnoll and cook unlit. Roc. room wlfll showw.
cteinp 111'1, 4 oil l•mpt, c•sl
· Cllrport.
.
Clinton Gilkey.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan.
ltwn
orn•monia
Iron
10,
i0·6tc
'
GOOD
·
(Greyhollnd) 11!1 service set,
. n,e recent rtnnmage and
2
BEDROOMSBath,
a••
forced
air
furnace.
Shlrm
flower
POll,
si~
Jars,
1,,
bake sale which was held at the
CLOSE 'out on 1971 fuil size zig. _hal pin holcltr, 0 us powder
doors and window$, Aluminum siding. A nNt house on 1
.
Which
.,.
are
ordeflpg
tO..
zag sewing machine. For
·. Townh0111e by the Carpenter' our customers, are approved
nice tol.
. .,
.
ars, toys and &lt;lolls, picture
;
sewing
stretch f•l&gt;riCI, · r•mes, and . many other
Baptist Church group w&amp;a well
.
4
IICREI
'
by "Underwriters
bullonhotos, f•ncy
lltml.
'
attended.
·
·
..
4
BEDROOMS-'t:_,.
T\f
launif,
7
ciGHII,
1111
bllhs. ·.
Labor•tory'-' to lnaure
.etc. Paint sli9hlly btemit .
Larte
kitchen
with
lllfld
oak
calilnell
and
double
sink,
CUIIomen
the
111$1
QUallly
Choice of ·carrying ·cue or
Mn. Gay Johnlon .and, Mrl:
Baa-nt,
ltautlfut
Ylew
of
Rclufl
1
Home:
' sewing atllld. M.IO ·cuh or
Clay Jordan, 4-H advilwl from
lorms ••aiiMie. ""- 9ft.
tllla community, have retwned ...... ""' buy, drl¥1 ..
56-11.
from Wublnclon, D. C., wben TUflflfl'l Plains IIIII chlctl
10.10-tllc
they attended the . Nallenal our Ho- •• PriceJ.
·'
· Leaden Forum at the National
4-H Club C'4nter. Tiley joined
about 2110 f.H Club adviton
.

.

..&lt;·.'

-----...,.--

ESTATE AUCl'ION
PANTS &amp;JEANS
TWO.OAY sale Fri., Ocf. 13end
Sal., Oct. 14, beginning at
MONEY. SAVER
10:00 A.M. each day. ·We will
sell the personal property of
the lale Elsie D. Smith BlackBuy2 Pairsburn al lhe residence at 205
1
PAIR FREE
Lasley St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(next door to lhe former
Sugar Run grade school J In ·An kinds, all sizes for men,
part as follows:
.
women, young men, boys
HOUSEHOLD
and girls. Hurry to ...
WHIRLPOOL side by ·Side
Refrigerator
Freezer,
~
P
. OMERO_Y
,.
.
Kenmore Washer -dryer
combination,
Kelvlnalor
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.'
Elec. range, 3·plece Living ' - - · __P_ho.;,"'..;_992..;_·2:..11.:.11_•..J

etches from Our pioneer past
Ed. Note; Mrs. Robert w.
Columbus, .the for·
. May Amorette Me·
Cullou@~, formerly of Poriland lo Meigs County, ls her
family's ' historian. The
pictures are copies of
daguerreotypes made In IBM
tile tlnle of the couple's
marriage.
The follo\.l'lng Is her account of Its early history:
TUPPERS PLAINS - After
n~~~~;~~Rhodes McCullough,
b
their infant son
was thrown from a
and dragged by a foot
cau;ghtln the stirrup, resulting
both her own death and that
the baby; the grief-stricken
widotwer, John McCullough,
his two small sons Samuel
Joseph and emigrated
,.. "'""""" Beaver, Pa. home to
frontier country of
Ohio (during
•o""''· Here he farmed and his
Both enlisted in the 6~rd Ohio
Voliunteelr...lnf.ontry in.Qdober,.
1861. ~~h, the yo!Qlger, ~s·;
invalided home and died of
dysentery 11-30-64. Samuel
.served until the fighting ended

and was mustered out 7-3-65.
During fll"lough (Jan . and
Feb. 1864) he married Alnoret
Parker, "the prettiest girl that
ever set foot on Long Bottom,"
and after the war they made
their home here and ihere in
the eastern part of Meigs
County. Here Samuel farmed,
and served as Justice of the
Peace, mediating differences
between neighbors, holding
court, and marrying.
Ten children were born to
them, all but the first growing
{o adulthOod. The four boys and
one of the girls taught in the
little country school houses,
attending the academies of the
day to further their own
educations, and laking the
annual, teachers' exams. The
boys, all fine big men, were in
demand for the area's problem
schoo,ls where juvenile
delinquency was a concern,
and discipline necessary.
In lime the eldest, Arthur,
studied for the ministry and
served in the Methodist Church
for many years.
The second .. son, .Walter,
ll\lltlied'lillslness, and was well
known around Pomeroy Bend
where he was engaged in real
estate, insurance, and served

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Wednesday Late
Mixed League
Oct. 4, 1972
Standings
Pis.
25
24

I Game
Men,

23
18
18
12

210, Women,

Virginia Hoyt 168.
Second High Ind. Ga"1e Men, Russ Moore 199; Women,
Belly Fultz 146; third, men,
Jack Carsey .J91; Virginia
Hoyt, Belly Rawlings 145.
High Series - . Russ Moore
542; Virginia Hoyt 430.
Second High Series - Dan
Meadows 520 ; Joy Bentley 376;
third, Roy Holler 511 ; B. FultzNeacli· Carsey 366.
Team High Game
Blakeslee-Hovl 620.

from Ill over the naUon for

dllcuaelona IIIII e~joytd many
polnll oflll'-"1 In the capital

and IW'I'OIIIIdlnl ......

MOIIU

HOMD
TUIIPirt Palfna: 0.

'

... t .~

·. ·

, o·.)

expressed his thanks to the
United Nations, the Red C!:oss
and all governments who
furnished aid to the Philippine
diaster areas. He said these
included countries with which
Ihe Philippines had not as yet
es l a blished diplomatic
re lations, "like the People's
Republic of China and the
Soviet Union, both of which
gave us generous and welcome

Retail value 39¢

o,;. .•

I

-,

\

assistance."
Delivering the
policy
si al ement of his government in
Ihe General Assembly, Romulo
also warned agains t the
growin g trend towards a
"global ghetto" which, he said,
is being formed by the poor
nations.
" The infamous poverty gap
is widening at an accelerated
rate, and the poor, developing
coun tries are in fact on the
verge of living in a global
ghe tto," he said.

'

'
._,

FROM·OUR SUNDAY, OCT. 8 ADVERTISEMENT

ELECTRIC

4~769

"'lh

,...,Q I

~

Corrected Items

PRICE
BDUQD

luv.•

Judge in Pomeroy.
. Of the younger girls one,
Athelia, taught like her
brothers unlil she married Will
Wallace, a widower with small
twin daughters. They had one
daughter of their own who did
·no! live.
The other girls married and
went with their husbands :
Millicent married Victor
Nelson, and lived and reared
their family in Iowa and
Michigan. Leona married
Perry Bonar and lived in Ohio
and West Virginia. Ethel
married the Reverend James
Conkel and reared their family
in West Virginia, Kentucky and
Ohio.
Samuel outlived his beloved
Amoret by fifteen years,
spending his later _ years
visitin g with his children,
keeping his home ·with Athelia
Wallace at whose home he
died, aged ninety years .

.Marcos Battling Foreign
Subversion ·m. l~liilias·

UNITED NATIONS (UP! )Foreigh Secretary Carlos
P . Romulo said Monday that martial law
had been proclaimed in the
Philippines to safeguard the
Team High Series
coun try
from
foreign Blakeslee-Hoyt 1789.
supported subversion.
But he added the Presiden l
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Ferdina~d E. Marcos had also
Oct. 8, 1972
seized
the opportunity to
Standings
Team
W, · L.. revamp the social, political
Eagles Club
26 22 and economic institutions of
Team No ..3
24 24 1he Philippines in response to
Mark V
24 24
Farmers Bank
24 24 the urgent need for social
Racine Food Market
20 28 justice.
Tom's Carry Out
16 32
The seriousness of the
High Individual Game Philippine
situation , he said,
Larry Dugan 231 ; Yita Shuford
had been aggravated by the
188.
.
· Second High Ind. Game worst flood disaster in the
Larry Dugan 224 ; Sonja country's history in July. In the
Wayland 174.
. High Series - Larry Dugan wake o! this disaster, he said,
621 ; Nita Shuford 483.
"I he subversive groups in the
Second High Series - A. L. Philippines intensified their
Phelps 565 ; Betty Smith 476.
Team High Game - Tom's altempts to sow panic and
Carry Out 743.
undennine the conditions of
Team High Series - Tom 's law and order."
Carry Out 2024.
In this context, Romulo

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

1973 HOMES

some lime as County Auditor.
The third · child and first
daughter, Katy, married
Charlie Lee, and this union
produced four sons and three
daughters, all of whom have
served their fellows in
engineering, medicine , and
leaching ,
The third son , Charlie, left
teaching to try business and .
industry briefly, but returned
to school work, and wa~ an
inspiring and beloved teacher
and administrator in Meigs, ·
Ross and Athens Counties.
The fourth son, Fr d,
followed his father-in-law, Old
Doc Hensley, into the practice
of medicine, and truly gave his
life in the service of his
fellowmen . The lure of law
from his childhood observance
of the office of the Justice of the
Peace haunted him all of hist
life, however, and during his
mature years he sat as Probate

Local Bowling

;::::===·=-===6=·1:1~·1f~c~==:======~

Pomer,;,,

, Shares of the mutual fund
are available by prospectus
through agents of Columbia
National Life Insurance
Company, who are registered

.

sc

'

with each·$J sasoliile purchase.
Bold and lively Poppy Red coffee .mugs.
Smart, contemporary styling; Generous 8-ounce size.
· They stack to save yqu storage space.
Oven and dishwasher safe, too.
Start collecting a set now at participating
Ashland Oil stations.

'

.

.

DURAL AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC SCIS·
SORS, Gul4t liaht to ••• lin•• and patti'"'• cut•
aku 1 ond hu11y fobr icl, o blAde t ;uord lo protect
toblt tops, long lift bloeln ,of 'IU~1ty htth car~on
Mode in U.S.A. L1tt $9.95 .
I tI I I•

t

.Matchl119 all·purpose canister.
Only 99C wHh any purchase.

'

,.

I

ONLY.

t

.

Tills.. WAS AN ERROR BY 1HE.NEWSPAPER
.

.

'

.

M&amp;R SHOPPING. CENTER

.,

MI-:::RT

Ashland

We honor BtnkAmtrleard' and·
Muter Chirp credit i:1rdt.

=--· - ~j8J
f"Q~

10.1u..tc

. '"·-· "'\:

CLEVELAND (UPI)Lenny Wilkens, the fanner
Seattle SuperSonics pard
obtained by the Clevelancl- ·
Cavaliers, w&amp;a IIIIIPtnded by
the team Monday night for
refusing to report.
Wilkens bas maintained hll
determination not to ~ for
the Cavaliers since the announceinent Aug. 23 that the.·
clubS had made a deal.

L.:.;::::.-.:.::::...::.:.::.:_:_:..:;;:..:;;:.::.:.J :::

O'DELL WHEEL alignment SEWING MACHINES. Repair
localedal Crossroads, Rt. 12~ . service. all makes. 992-2284.
·
Complete . front end service, The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
YAMAHA Enduro250, 9 months
up and brake service. Authorized Singer Sales and
tune
old, like new; S500. Phone '997·
Wheels
balanced ~lee . Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
7109.
tronlc'ally .
All
work '
·
3-29-lfc
10·.S.61c
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 7~·3232' or· 992· AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
3213.
1950 FORD Rlckup !ruck ;
canc.ellt!it?
Lost
your
Marlin rifle; 3 soWs ; phone
"7-27·ffc · operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
247-2161 . '
10.8·31&lt; WILL cut or · trim · lrees,
6·15-tfc
· reasonable; _ also clean out
------~
basements, allies and HUSBAND and wife janitorial
ANTIQUE pump organ, ·all
cellars
; phone 949·3221.
service team . Home and
original except new bellows.
10.4-301c commercial. Walls, windows,
Over 80 years old. Made bv
floors. Call Gallipolis, Ohio
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co.,
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
«6·1607.
Worcester, Mass. One bellows
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
10-5-6tp
type .
Phone
992·3904,
CLEANED ," .REPAIRED.
Syracuse, 0 .
_ _ _ _ _ ____:6f.pd
MILLER SANITATION, SEE U$ FOR: Awnings, storm
STEWARl', · OHIO. PHONE doors and windows, carports,
marqiJO&lt;lS, aluminum siding
1971 KAWASAKI 100, excellent
662-3035.
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
condition, ready to go.
10·4·1fc
representative. For free
Sacrifice lor only $260. Phone
Coolville 667-6214.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE estimates, phone Charies
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
10·S·121C
delivered right to your
project. Fast a.nd easy. Free Johnson and Son, Inc.
.,
COAL, Limeslone, Excelsior
3-2-lfc
estimates . .Phone 992·3284.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891:
Middleport, Ohio.
Septic tanks Installed. George
4-f2.1fc
~-30·
1fc
_.:.._
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2418.
-----~
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
~· 25·1fC
Sewing Machine. Will sell for REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6small balance of S3M1 or
_,
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, '
For _
Owner &amp; Operator.
·
payments may be arranged.
Phone 992·5331.
5-12-lfc· 8 ROOM house and bath, nice ..
9-7-lfc - - - - - - - - large lot, natural gas, bullf,fn
- - - - -- - - C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
cabinets In kitchen. Close to · ,. ':
8 TRACK STEREO, freight
Complelo!Servlce
radio station In Bradbury.
·.
damag'ld. In beautiful .walnut
Phone 949·3821
Phone 992·2602.
,.
console. Will sell for $101.50or
Racine, Ohio
9·29·121c · ·
pay $1.50 per week. Phone 992Crill Bradford
. " ....-! ' I
5331.
5· f.tfc RACINE r..:.. 'fit ' room 'i./iii,., l oR!
__•____..,_~
__._.....:,9
17·tfc _D_O_Z_E_R_a_n_d_ba
_ c_k_h_oe--work,
bath, basetneht, garage, lwb '· , .,:
~
lots.
Phone 949·4313.
·
. ·•
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
ponds and septic tanks, dlf·
.s.tfp
4
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- chlng service; lop soil, fill - - - - - - - - .. ,
5443.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex8·15-lfc cavaling. Phone 992·5367,
1
- -- - -- - - Pick Karr, Jr.
, ·,
APPLES, Flfzpalrlck Or· - - 9·1 ·1fc
chards, State Route 689,
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
8·30-lfc For

Sale .

load" status early in 1972. "Our

por~lion .

WILKENS SUSPENDED

"2·JI74

For Sale

- - --

change from a "load'' to a "no-

shareholders' investments are
no longer reduc&amp;l by sales
commissions," he Said, u'fmd "I
believe our new status appeals
much more dlrecUy · to the ·
demands of ·the contemporary ·
investor ."
Agribuslness . Management
Corporation, the investment
advisor for Comsec Fund, is a
wholly,owned subsidiary of
Columbia National Cor-

DICK

.

6!16 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

56,855.

Due tu favorable investment
results, the ~ompany has
declared a capital gafns
disiJ·ibuliun of net realized
profiis from the sale of port.
f1Jliu securities in tlle amount of
72 cenls per share. In addition,
a cash dividend from income
equaling 8 cents per share was
also declared, .The distribution
was lu Ill! paid on October 9,
1972 tu shareholders of record
on September 7, 1972. .
Jack K. While, president;
attributed the favorable 1972
resulls in part to the fund 's

representatives for
inc., a member flrm of the
National Association ill
Securities Dealers .
Representatives · in thia arq
are . Maurice A. Toler and
Andrew Toler ..

VAUGHN

Monday lhru S.lurdlly

- -- - - -

- - - -- - ' -

ToGo
r,ke Me To

-

, radio, AM·FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, . ~
speed automa .fi~ chang,e r·.
Balance $68 .79 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-708.1.
10·8·61c

- - -- -SQUARE DEAL, NEW DEAL'

If I HAVE

'

~ROOFING .

2 OR 3 BEDROOM home In .
Mason. Calf Point Pleesant
675·16U.
10.6-6

__

Plck.up Truck : $5 .00 per load

20 Gallon Can : $1 .00 per ca'n .
1&gt;.11 monev collectod shall be
deposited to the credit of the

Ph~ tn~2174

.

9-26-lfc TRAILER lot ; Bob's Mobile
Court, Syracuse; p~one 992·
CARHOP . wanted ; apply in 2951.
person; Crow's Steak House. ;__
:...__ 10-6,1fc
10+6lc TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
Park, phone 992-3324.
Musical Instruments
10-3-tfc
GiBSON Guitar, beautiful Les 2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Paul cusfom, sunburst finish,
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
new, 1.':~ price $375; phone 388IO.S-Ifc
8271 .
_ _ _..:__ _ _ _10:..:
·6-61p ~T-RAIL_E_R_spa_c_e_ln-Ra_c_ln-e. All
city ulililles, private lot.
Wanted To Buy
Robert Hill, Racine. Phone
949·31111.
GOOD quallly hay,. 300 to 500
10·5-9tp
bales: phone 992-2789.
·
·
10·8·61c 3 ANO 4 ROOM' furnished and
unfurnished apartments.
OLO Furniture, oak tables,
Phone 992:5434.
'
4·12-tfc
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·627t 3 ROOM furnished apartment,
6·28·ffc
utilities paid, 1 child, no pets;
356 North 4th· St., Middleport,
Wm. Smith, S80 mo.
10·8-atp

WALNUTS

Carpenter

· Notilan \llggs
.Radl•lor
S,.Ciallsl
'
.

~-----

clothing and misc~llaneous ·
ftems ; 7 kittens to g.i ve away;

.

HAYMAN'S Auction- a good
place to Qo each Friday SKATE.AWAY, open Wed· KOSCOT KOSMETICS (MINK
evening, 7 p.m. at. Laurel
nesday, Friday and Saturday
OIL BASEl. We have many
Bring Your Unhulled
Cll!l,on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west evenings from 7: 30 p.m. to
new
products
since
the
for.
of Rock Springs Fairground. 10:30 p.m. Available for
malton of !his Company. Also
,
10-10-lfc p~lvale porites on Monday,
several new ones this month
Tuesday and Thursday
plus monthly specials. All
CARPORT Sale ; Avons and evenings, also •Saturday and
.these In addition to the
miscellaneous; 9 a.m. to 5 Sunday afternoons. Schedule
originals. Ladles, we would
p.m., Thur1day, Oct. 121h:'918 your parties early. Phone 985Iike very much for you to try
3929 Or 985·9996.
TO OUR
So. Jrd St., Middleport.
these cosmetics and to serve
10.1-121c . you. Phone Helen Jane, 992·
10·8-Jic
MECHANICAL
-~---5113.
HULLER
REDUCE safe and fast with
:-::-:-::------~1~0.1.
lfc
GoBtse Tablets &amp;' E-Vap WEEKEND Revival al· Rutland
''water pills," Nelson Drug.
Apostolic Church, Friday, VIRGINIA'S Beauty Salon on
10·9-2fp
Success Road between Your Walnuts will be
Oct. 13 through Oct. 15; 7: 3G
Tuppers . Plains and Long
p.m . Speakers will be
Hulled Free of Charge
NEW Improved "Zipples," the
Bottom . Open 6 days; some and We Will Pay You.
Evangelists Arlen and Mary
great Iron pill now with
evenings . Phone 667·3041,
Hughes
of
Columbus.
Vitamin C. Nelson Drug.
Operator, Virginia Hayman .
Evervone Welcome.
9·14-301c
.
10.9-21p ~------_:1.:.::0
·8·61c
Per Hundred
Pounds

·1.oca1 ,Bowling

Smallest H!':.ter COI'e·.

'-

For Rent

10-IO·Jip

3507 .

10-6.6lp

dishes, . antiques,

·

WOMAN to live In with elderly
lady, good salary, room and
board, phone 992·5397 or 992·

' interior and
. 'PAINTING,
lerior; phone 882-2482, ·
•

:~r,~!:~ · 'a;:~:~r:·r~t~o:k

,L.;,.-----,---~.'.

Box 729-C, Po!)1eroy, Ohio '

45769

~·~- Business
t

wqrk, for molhers and
1220 Washington llvir.
housewives. For Interview, 423-752,1
BELPRE, 0,

Employment Wanted

. .•

phone 992-3652,

SJ~O~ PER hour, Ideal part-lime ) MOilLE HO'ME$,.

OP.EN E~U 1.00 ~.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

&lt;8:30 e.m, .to 5:00,p.m. Dally,
a.m. to 1:1:00 Noon

1 : 30

salary

r e ferences

10-10-Jic 'Complete mobile .home' ·
PARTTIME low allo or bass ,servllce ~, plus glgh•ntrc'
singer for female gospel . dlsp ay o mobile omes
·gr.oup ; willt'ng to travel ,· always avallable,al ...
· phone '192·3089.
MILLER
)Q.f0-3tc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

YARD and Porch Sale, 572 'S .
· 3rd Ave., Middleport starting
at 10 ~.m . Wednesday;
_ Chllctren's games, toys, 45
RPM records, hedge trimmers, universal sprayer ,
height gage, paint, clothing of '
alllypes, household goods and

otd child ;

•i c g t"i ;tbl c;

COLUMBUS ~ Comsec
Fund, Inc., a· no-load mutual
l,; nd
headquartered
in
Colwnbus, announced increas•
l!s in n'et . asset value per_ share, net as·
sets, and 'capital shares
for the Fiscal year ending July
' 31, 1972.
Nol assel value per share
increased i3.8 pet. from $12.50
in 1972 to $13.59 at the close of
the 1972 fiscal period. Net
assets increased from $507,m
w $712,552 during the comparative period, and capital
shared increased from '40,623 to

.

"

.

., Air Conditioners
• Awnings•
'
'.• Underpinni•:!g

WOMAN lo live in and care for 9

1968 CHEVROLET
$1~9
o;, ion, 8' Stepslde, good heavy duly fires, V.8 engine, J.
speed lransmisslon, solid ca~. local 1-owner truck: .

' BLIND ADS
' .
Additional '2.5c .Charg-e per
Advert~s.ment .
,· ·
·.
OFFICE HOIIlt\ •

·

two bedroom, front
~lichen, ucellenl condition . .
P~one 985·3555.
·
10·8-61p

meter arad change dryer wire

Each addJtlonl'l word 2c .

NOTIC~

SOx 10,

to range cable, 370 'Fisher Sf
Middlepod. Phone .992-ma:
10·9·3lc

1969 CHEVROLET .
12295
Han, 102" cab to axle, 792 engine, 15000 lbs. 2-speed axle,
825•20 10 ply tires, foam seats, heavy duty springs, solid
cab. ~as her up ,... and go!

M!nl,num Chetge 7Sc
~ord

ELECTRICIAN. to put in new

r ~qu i red ;

·For Wait' Ad Service
5 antS per Word one Insertion
12 Cents' · p~tr

:965 ATL.AS mobile home,

.

.
S2095
1500 series, v .a engine. ~tartdard transmission , good 1iresj
' cab moUldings, foam seat, chrome fron' bumper &amp; rear

~

'

eom..c,

Comsec Net Showing Increases

Mobile Homes for Sale ·

Help Wanted
'

·.

'1910 GMC.

rncor~e~t

for more. tha" ohe

·'

...

Motor CL

·D.ay Of P')IIICIUon · , '

~-~

Action! .Sentinel·Classifieds. Get Resul~s!

.,.•.,.,

. .WIIIh. ADS. .
INI&lt;OIIMATION
·• DEADliNES . ' ' ·
.S· P.~. Day ettoro Publlcotlo~
· · Mondoy DMdllno r a.m.

..
..

I

'

.

'

�.·'
10- 'l'be Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport.J&gt;IIuervy., 0., Oct.IO, 1972

1

'

News . ". • in Briefs :::in~~;r

.'

. (Continued from page I)
· trlp.lt was bred and cOnsigned by Chester Eliff of Victory Jersey
"~nns of Tulia imd sold to the Correctal Sy.ndi&lt;;ate, c:omposed.of
the Northi,rn Ohio Breeders AssOciation and several prominent
Jersey breeders.
•

t

BELFAST- BRITISH ffiOOPS HAVE captured a leader of
. the Provisional wing of the Irish Republican Anny (IRA), the
anny said toqay. Astat~sman in tbe Irish Republic said civU war
looms in Nortlfern Ireland. In spo~adic violence Monday,
masked gunmen bombed the town hall in Strabane near the Irish
Republic border, exteDSively damaging the three story ·building.
There were no ca sualtie~. police said.
ln. Belfast, troops arrested Cornelius McHugh, operations
officer of the Provisionals' 1st Battalion, at ·his home in the
capital's Roman Catholic Andersonstown district Monday, an
army spokesman said. McHugh offered no r~istance, the army
said. In London, Connor Cruise O'Brien, spokesman on Northern
Ireland for the Irish Republic's Labor party, said few people
realize how close he said Northern Ireland is to an ll)lout war be:
tween' its Protestant and Catholic communities. '
CLEVELAND- BROKEN CAMPAIGN PROMISES is a
main reason why President Nixon should not be re-elected, Sen·
Edmund Muskie; D-Maine, told the Cleveland City Club Monday.
"He promised to end the war in those specific word," 1111id
Muskie. "I am suggesting to the country that President Nixon
should be denied on Nov. 7."
Referring torumors of an impending pea\:nettlement at the
Paris Peace Talks, Muskie said they should be dispelled because
"they are easy to float. " Only a bandful of persons showed up tO
greet Muskie when he arrived at Burke Lakefront Airport fQI' his
first Ohio visit since the May 2 primary:

The Rev. Guy Franklin
Say1·e, 51, Racine, died at his
residence Monday night.
The Rev. Mr. Sayre was born
Aprill6, 1921at Racine, the son
of the late Cecil Leroy and
Anna Neigler Sayre. He had
been in ill health sometime.
. He was pastor at the Middleport Church of Christ in
Christian Union nine years and
of Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union six years.
'He is ·survived by his wife,
Betty Woodgerd Sayre; two
sons, Lloyd, Minersville, and
Dale of Hun tington; a
daughter, Mrs . Rebecca
Hensler , Racine; three
grandchildren; three brothers,
Gerald Leroy of Durham, N.
C.; Donald; of Middleport, and
Roy Allen of Racine, and one
sister , Mrs. Leo (Helen) Hill,
Racine.
Funeral services will b!' held
Thursday at I :30 p.m. at the
Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union with the Rev.
Bill Campbell and the Rev.
Cbarles Norris officiating.
Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery, Letart Falls. The
body will be taken to the
church one hour b\!fore services. Friends may·call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home after
2 p.m. Wednesday.

Tom Hennessy, 51.- 242
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, was
injured at his employment at
the Kyger Creek Power Plant
Monday at 4p.m., when he was·
scalded by steam on his arms
and legs: He was taken to
Holzer Me&lt;lical .Center where
he is in isolaijon. '·
Also injured in the accident
was James Rames, 42, of
Wilkesville. They opened a hot
water pipe which bubbled
steam onto them.
REG. 129.95

MEIGS THEATRE

ou lomollcol l ~!

Tonight, October 10

241NCH

20 TINE

BAMBOO RA

LAWN RAKE

CONQUEST OF THE '
PLANET OF
THE APF.S
IT echnicolor)

Roddy McDowall

BONO

Don Murray
C/ H

77~

REGULAR
1.29
Hondy !eol roke has 48" harldl1.

Nixon Ahead 2-l
.

'

Two Men Bumed

"lel Genie do it!" Simply laud,
o butlon and door opens, light
comes on, door closes behind
you and lig111 goes off -: oil

.•.

CLAY PIGEON
(TechnicolorJ
Terry Sava las
Robert Vaughn

GP

R

Show Starts 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
October 11 &amp; 12
·NOT OPEN

Pe~s·onnel

BAGS
PACiiAGE OF 10
1 BUSHEl S.llE

REG. 1.99

97~
Include~

A-Bid two o!Nidoo. You ha..
Anlwtr tomorrow

··-·

REG ,
4 .19

OUrY

HUVYDUIY

D-SIZE ·
BATTERIES

C-SIZE
BATTERIES

f\JG. 35&lt; EA.

lEG. 350 EA.'

$17 95.

a. beautiful wedding or.a college educa·

•

tion.Open an account now! ·

1'-/i\U-l YOU VISIT. PARK I Rf f

.

'

'

•

.

I CYLINDER
lnclvd" Pam

end Lebar

MIDDLEt'ORT, OHIO . , ,.
· Member J'ede...J oepo.it IDMuee c.rpirailoa

SHOCKS
.
. IRAKU ·
MUFFLERS.·
TAli. PIPU

SAIGON ( UP!)-French diplomatic reports Said U:S.
planes bombed the · French
diplomatic mission in the heart
of Hanoi today, but the U.S.
Command . said tonight that
NOfth Vietnamese SAM2 antiaircraft missiles may have
crashed back to earth after
· Qlissii1g U.S. Navy planes and
demolished tbe mission.
Earlier, the command said
only that "we did have air
strikes over North Vietnam
today."

In a statement, the c:onunand
·said, ''&lt;Mr initial operations
reports indicate that U.S. Navy
aircraft struck Wednesday Saigon time North Vietnamese
military targets, including ma-

Gro u to
-e.
.t. .
.
.
.
Inspec ._

jor railroad yards and transhipment points across the Red
River north of the. area of
.Hanoi in which the French
delegation
building
is
located.
"Anumber of enemy surface
to air missiles (SAM) were
fired at the U.S. aircraft. No
U.S. aircraft were lost and the
surface to air missiles could
have impacted on the ground
after missing the aircraft," the
statement said.
Acommand spokesman said
he was unsure whether any of
the American war planes
actually flew over the capital
itself en route to or from their

declined to either confirm or the nearby Algerian embassy.
deny that it was possible that The command usually
American war planes bombed reports raids a day after raids
the French and Algerian occur before reporting them. It
missions in Hanoi.
said monsoon weathe~ on
Hanoi Radio said the French · Tuesday limited U.S. strikes
delegate, Pierre Susini, was against the North to 230, \he
seriously wounded, along with first time in six days they
the Albanian delegate.
dropped below the 300 mark.
Hanoi Radio said the Alba- However, B52s bombed near
nian diplomat, Tremall Rama- Vinh, 150 miles south of Hanoi,
mai or Rambemai, was In their deepest penetration in
visiting tbe French mission six months.
when it was demolished. Hanoi
Asked whether American
Radio also llllid four Viet. planes were over Hanoi today
namese employes of ·the the spokesman would only say,
mission and a French woman "We did have strikes over
official were killed and another North Vietnam today," Asked
Vietnamese employe seriously if an investigation was unt.arge~.
~
wounded.
den,vay of the French and
Earlier, the command had
It said the roof was blown off Soviet reports he repeated his

statement that there were
raids over the North.
A U.S, 7th Fleet spokesman
also had no comment.
South VIetnamese Air Force
planes bombed hamlets 10 and
17 miles north of Saigon today,
dropping 500 pound bombs and
caMisters of napalm, and the
Army hit tbe hamlets with
tanks and artillery shells. U.S
B52s also bombed in the area.
The Communists have occupied a series of hamlets near·
Saigon in a new threat to
harass the city.
.
One hamlet bombed today by
the South VIetnamese was
Huong Phung, 17 miles· from
'Saigon. Another was Thanh
Quy, 10 miles north of Saigon.

The government sald Its
rangers reoccupied Thanh Quy
hut that the Communists infiltrated into the village of
Hung Tho, only 200 yards
·.away.
Military spokesmen said one
South Vietn'amese Infantry
battalion moved Into the area
In late afternoon and sealed off
Viet ~ng escape routes. The
·South Vletnaese also sent lank!
into the area where the
Communists moved Into the
hamlets and set up 51 caliber
antlaircraft guns.
·
U.S. milltary spokesmen
sald they had ''no Information"
on reports by French and
Soviet news agencies out of
Hanoi that American planes

today bombed the . French
diplomatic mission ln · the
center of the city, nearly
destroying the buUding and
injlil'ing the French delt~ale
general. The Tasa newa aa'eney
sald "there are caaualtlea
BI!IOng the personnel of 1111
French general mlaslon. 'l'be ·
French 'delegate general wu
wounded and is now In a
hospital."
South VIetnamese mUJtary
spokesmen said today only two
hamlets outalde · S.lgon remained in CoiiiiiiW1ilt handll
. and that a third was "almolt
Wider the control" of government forces. The three were
identlfled as Xon Suol, Phu
Chanh and An Hoa-.tll I&amp; to II
miles from the &lt;;apltal.

• ··- ~ J.OINS G-MSTAFF - Sgt.
l:;:,,l,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,"'..,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,~,,,,,,,~,~,""''''f.~:':':':':'%~=''~~,,~,,,l,,,,:~,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,l~
·
. , George- (Dan) Henderson,
34, a native of New Concord,
Ohio, ~1111!~4 dU\lel 'With .·ih?..
•
=
$.'
the Gallia-Melp PDSt, State
~'
~
·Highway Patrol Tuesday . .A
:f - .
.
8X . :ill CHICAGO (UPJ )..neorge S. .
graduate . of Chandlersville
But McGovern sald that .
High School (now John
would mean the priso!l"rs of
.. . t ••
Glenn High School), . Sgt. ·
war would never be freed and
t;ii,
:~
J
/1·1
Henderson is a veteran of the
the United States would have to
U. S. Navy. Prior to his
~; voted upon on Nov. 7.
;:;:; the Vietnam War was tan- government hut added that, no pay
tt billion a month.
assignment to the Galllaf:j
Henry Frank, president, sald the· board favors !jj: '!.amount to a surrender hut matter how long the United
He again charged that ·
Meigs Post, he was a
A conunittee made up of x· retaining the state Income tu, ''which," he saki, "means ., conceded that his peace States remained jn Indochina,
WAS!j!NqTc&gt;N· (UP):
', _
member of the Medina Post. representatives from civic ~ voting 119 on luoe z bt the approaching election. The j!j program was "not risk free." eventually 'it would be a . President Nixon "hu never
given any assurance that be More than ,.JOO ,lnlllalel
-~
Sgt. Henderson and his wife, organizations Including . -~ . re'sohttlnn waa palled nnanimoualy.
;~
McGovern pointed out that if decision the South Vieinamese would end the war" and added control of a cellblock a 1111
t
Jean, have four children, perha. ps the Oht'o Eta Phl '
Theboardallowenton record u follows: 'The Meigs ,r:,·,: the United States withdrew all people would have to m ake.
he did not believe that special District ol Columbia jail today
· Kimberly, 13; Teresa, 11; Chapter Of Beta Sl·gma Phi. • ': County Farm Bureau Federation
·
NoOtherWay·
bas endorsed the Meigs :,.·:•.: its forces from Vietnam 90
emissary
.Kiealnger and held the clty'a correeUCIIll
9, and Robin, 7. The SOrlrlty, Xi Gamma Mu, the ,
·
be
:·.·i. days after his inauguration, the
"My proposal is not rlsk free could reachHenry
a
settlemeJ11
with
.~
1
· ,, Local Scbool District operating levy. This levy wll
on
Sal
ld b
sal · b be 1
Jaycees, Chamber .of Com- ~.~
.::.1,·.
gon government wou e -no propo . IS.- . ut t re s the North Vietnamese without 'director• ...epneth HardY,, ~ ·
li::~~t:~i~in thewillnearmove
G
futureto. m.erce and Ministerial Assn. ·,
s; the November ballot. Members of this organization are :.,:1,·. 1eft with an army of more than no othe r way to get ou t," a prior end to tbe bombing.
nlne other pe1'801111 hoalqe. '
a million men plus all the McGovern added.
1 ~ eni!Olll'apd to worUor.aud votefor tbiJ levy.'"
II be f ed
k
Presents PrOP"&amp;I
Hardy was taken prilo{ler
WI
~rm to rna e ann~a §
Several other legillaUve topics were discussed and :;(: equipment that the United
He said that "we have to face
·
when he and a reporter f&lt;r thli
mspectro~s
at the
the board made planJ for the
The Democratlc presidential Washington Poet, William \
County
Children's
Home.Metgs l:i
~ ·
' annual meeting to be held on &lt;(~:(: States has provided to the the uncomfortable factthat the nominee,
who began camMeeting with the com- i!; Oct. 17 at the Cheatvr elementary llebool.
;j; South Vietnamese..
only way we can assure" the paigning before dawn today, Claiborne, went IntO&lt; tht
missioners Tuesday in regard ~;:;:;::::::::~:,:,:,:,:,:::::~;:,:,:,:;~::::::&gt;.:::::::-;::~~:&gt;.:wwwrr .. · :;=;:;:.«;:~~'li:lWW~' Appearing on the Today Saigon regime the govenunent presented hls peace proposal in cellblock to negotiate with 1111
!t.Pvrnl•l car owned to environmenLal conditions,
Show (NBC), McGovern said lt wants would be to remain In
a 30-mlnute prime !lrne ln;h:e~~mates .threaterit ~ ,
ha~1ber, Long Bottom furnishings and necessities at
The commissioners ap· said.
"that 18 not exactly a force ln South VIetnam.
television program TuNifay ·
)'~~h wa•stolen from in front the Children's Home were proved the citizens Committee
night.
· kill Hardy unless they were '"&lt;
Auble, Mitchell and Burgess,
Tuesday at Carol Adaffill, service chair- plan and transferred $4,400 engineering firm for the IandMcGovern said "our · sons given " uncondi,tl~ 'nal • ·'.
recovered at man of the Ohio Eta Phi from ita Emergency Fund to fill, presented blQeprints for i!IJ
have asked for jobs and we freedom," accordffit.t to
the Athens Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi the Children's Home Fund as it design and representatives of,
have sent them to an Asian Claiborne, who was pe~tell
, ~ty
Dep~. at 8:12 sorority, who was spokesman;
jUngle ; oursonshaveaskedfor to come out to the jall •'fard,
h~d only a balance of $885. A the finn explained to the
p·m. the same day.
an 'education and we have The prisoners had rrpecificaU,
Carolyn Satterfield, Texanna total. of $27,000 had been ap- commissioners what had to be
'1Tbe Meigs County Sheriff's Well and Charolette Taunton, propriated to the Children's done.
PARIS (UP!)- Henry A. men! spokesman told a news taught them how to kiD ; our asked that Claibo.,e · P~·.
Dept. said the car had been sorority members; the Rev: Home fund ·at the beginning of
sons have asked for a full ticlpate in the negotla~. · .,, .
Also meeting with the Kiulnger, the U. S. lx:iefing.
a!Wl~oned&lt; The incident is Arthur LUnd, and the Rev. 1972.
presidenlial
adviser,
met.
t
oday
French
Foreign
Minister
measure of tlme~d 50,000 of
A pollee spokflliiJn
1111! l '.
'
commlss.ioners was Jeanette
Wloer investigation.
Robert Card.
. In other bUSiness .the com- Thoma:s, teache~ at the Meigs for a fourth day of private Maurice SchurnaM said at the them have been lost before inmates were -armed . , II ,
· . least . one .38-&lt;:aUber, ~ •· ~
missioners -said a sanitary County Community School at peace Ialka with the North cabin et meeting that the their !line. ..
"So let 118 seiH lhe chance to . nosed revolver, appare"UJ' , ,
landfill site located in Rutland, who reported on the Vietnamese- the longest government had dispatched a
session
of
meetings
since
the
protest
to
u.
s.
Amba~
'
·
UftfromoursoneJIJ!jo~lves
taken from one of the 111111111
Salisbury Township at a striP: progress of the school .. and
priva\e negotiatioN began.
Arthur K. Watson, the spokes- Uie terror of wal' ~d bestow held hostage. One pollctJNI!I
mine · site on the Norman programs being used.
The
·meetings
came
on
the
tnan said.
.
U1e blessings of price/' QWard. also said he saw what appeuetl
Hum6hrey property; just off
Attending were Cliarles R.
French goverrunent ofllclala the Indochina conflict ivlth two to, be a revolver at a cellblad! ,_ ,
143, is awaiting state approval Karr, Bob Clark, and Warden same day the French governBy Ulliled fresi llliernatloul
said
,U.S
.
warplanes
privately
told journallats they new additions.
wmdow,
, .', .,
ment
·
WASiiiNGroN- WITII PRESII)ENT NIXON throwing his . · i\ road ha.s been built leading Ours, commissioners; Martha
beavUy damaged the French did not think the boniblng of the
The South Dakota senatorAbout 180 prisoners were ill · ~
!llll'eupport behind the effort, a Southern-led coalition tries again , to the landfill site, com- Chambers, clerk, alld Susie legation building In Hanoi, legation would affect France's · for a long time considered a the cellblock but oldy to or 10 c(,,, ·.
today to
a Senate f!Ubusl,er threattnlng to kill a bill that missioner Charles 1\. Karr · Andrews, assistant clerk.
wounding .a Frehch diplomat playing host to tile three-ye~~r- one-Issue (the war) can- them tookan activ~ parlin 1111· .1,
would curb busing of school chtldren lcir raclalllllance.
and killing four VIetnamese old Thursday sesiions of 'the didate- . revealed ha would uprising,, police sald.
. •.' '
It seemed certain thlt nO\ even !'limn's Jaat.minute inemployes.
!'aris peace talks and to the
(ConUnued on page !6)
There were no disturb(nce~ i:
terventiim would change the lilind of the Senate, wblch )lowed to
France, host for ,more than private talks between
reported in Ol!ter areu of the
tile wlllci a rnlrjority of Northern liberals Tuesday and refused to
three yean to the neaotiatlons Kissinger and the Hanoi
jail.
' • 1: '· •
1mp01e Ita gag rule to let the controVersial meliaure come to a
.
.
to end the Vietnam nr, Jm. diplomats.
·
•
Tbe Inmates ..aaled to - ·
1
vote:the aecond vote on a motion to lnvo!te·cloture, or shut off
mediately
protested
the
Deaplte
the
bombing,
Kls.!inMIS
Mayor
Walter E. Walhington
Six defendanis have been
emergency
vehicle;
Eddie
bombing
to
the
Unlfed
States.
ger
talked
with
Le
Due
Tho,
·
·
.
.
to
discuss
their demanciJ.
delllte, was 81)iected about noori EDT. Athird was set for Thurs· fined and three others forfeited
Russell
,
Jr.,
34,
Tuppers
French
President
Georges
member
of
the
Communilt
.
Corrections
officials
lll8!d the
day if necesaary,
bonda in the cOIJI't of Mid-.
Plains, stop sign vlolatlon, and Pompidou told .a cabinet Party ruUng Politburo Bureau
mayor wae expected 19 tate •
dlep&lt;rt Mayor Jolm Zerkle.
Francis
ij. Rathburn, 57, meeting the bombing was a inHanol,andXuanThuy, chief
-hand
. in efforts ~ end 1111
.· -'CINCJNNATI-.IIROC'l'E!\ " GAMBLE Co. said Tuesday
Fined $5 and costa each were
uprising, but said he would not
·, Ita labcratAJries hid developed a new proceq that shQuld reduce Bruce 0 . Ju.atlce, 21, Mid· Middleport, improper bac~ing. "deplorable act," a Rovern- . of the North VIetnamese
· Robert R. McDaniel,
delegation to 'the Paris peace The Meigs County Sheriff's be pennltted to go Into the
dieport, runntns .a red · light; Pomeroy,
by one-half the pholpbate c:ontentolita laundry cltlerpllta. .
was fined . $10 and Nease Productio~ , talka.
Department was advised cellblock.
PIG ~ two Gl ita pllnta, 1llliiLC tbe tlplrimental Corbett E. Manlef.l· 71, Mi~­ costa. on conviction of an in,.
As usual neither the Ameri· Tuesday at 9: 02 p.m. by
Hardy recently 'l"lJ t,C·
~ tigul&amp;nent on a plkJt basil, "can p:oblbly 111art within dleport, failure to stop foi' ~n
toxicatlon charge, and Gerald Co .
can nor North VIe'"·-- Martha Hayes; Rt. I, Shade, claimed for peacefull"/
mmg N
· ov; 9•IO peace
·-·~
W. Hammond, 19, Cheshire, '••1o
f!1e next mobth or 10 to llhlp one«" more brandl ~ this .lower
deli!gatlons woUld
con- that Tom Sievers, 15, was negotiating an end to a
· phOiphale ~tergent."
and
costs
each
on
two
counts
of
·A
minstrel
show
sponsored
finn
tbe
talks
were
taking
missing from home. · .
long work stoppa.ge at the 1111111 ,
GOPHGOpen
fai.IJ' ng to transfer. licen.se
H · bell ed to ha 1· ft
by .tbe Eastern Local Athletic place or discl011e their lime or
e 18
ev
ve e
D.C. prison, Lorton .Ref«..
"ASHINGTON - THE MAJORI;rY. Of OHIO'S
Leslie Fultz, chainnan of the plates.
Boosters, directed by Mrs. )ooatlon: 'l'he White House sald ·arou~d noon or alft school.· matory in· suburban Vir81nl*.
con8Jiiiiiden fui!Jday voted bt fa VOl' 01 President Nl ron'• plan to M.eigs County Republican . Forfeiting bonds were lola Alice Nease, long time vocal Tuesday · the talks would The boy is five feel, nine inches
Inmates and. correetlft '.
1re1p fede...J ~pendlnl und.- a SttiO billion remnc t 'I'DQgh next Executive· Committee, said . Mae ConneT, 4a, Ne~ Haven, of mualc teacher and .producer of . continue Wednelday and in the Lall, weighs 155 pounds, has officials reacliecl agt'M!Dellt • •
J11nt •· 1'be HoUle lpPI'OVtd tbe JeajiJatltra «r1 • Z t to 183 roll today the Melg1 County $250 posll!d for dnving while musical ShOll'S, )l'ill . be . a~ce of any annOuncement blond hair of medium length, . a list of refotma aftilr a
cd 10fll with 7l ~~~and 141 Repub~ VI iniiDf and Republican headquarters, mtoxlcated; .James W. Booth, pre!ented Nov. 9 and 10 .at to . the- contrary obaervers blue eyes, and .a scar under his' unusual series of ope11
·· 811111J11ed the private Ialka on lt!fl eye.
;
•bargaining. atlliDM. •
· WI[IM(Crltaandllllepabl..._~ap!aellhr bill.
, including Nixon lor President 45, ~octor.ville, $30, Improper . Eastern 'High School.
2•
Headquarters,arntinrlocaled
·
bac~mg,
andOlteyE.
Klser,•
Everyone
irllerested
in
the
w~~r.
rontinued.
When
last
se&lt;en.
~e
wb
·
How Ohlo'l Mftll Ow'lf'ICilllll and 17 RepubLCaM voted:
taking part, 81ld -particularly
Pe1ce EIIVOJI Relrd
wearing a Levi jack~ brown
~·tiitl apllwl- MIIJii ~.11171; Sleberlliil. limes ·in room 105 at the Mtlgs Inn Ractne, $40,. intoxication.
. those who have served as end . According to ·the !"rencb faded shirt, .lioota d . blue
f&lt;r - IIIIa, . . . jut off the Eul Seccrud Sl
, . . . . ~~ •• Inti v.illk.' ' ;
MA)'lSHOT
,
entr-.
·
men ln the past pro&lt;lucllons of . ·government and lcirelgn news · jeans and may be cal-rymg a
. 1rown. Clane"/, Dntne, 11an1t1t r.r~ Latta, M«&lt;OI!M'b,. The.' .............rten
·.
..
...
be
·
·
L
OCAL
TEMPs
ts
i
H
i
sleepJ·ng
ba" ·
CLEVELAND
(UPJ)·
·--."w
Mrs. Ne~ , is asked to attend age~cy repor
n a no ,
. • ··. ·
111111r Min11Y11, Powell, J. Wlllilm 111ubt tnd W"/lle.
open
MollciJy
lhrott&amp;h
Satur-·
Temperature
In
downtown
the
fltst
cast
meeting
•
p.m.
AmeriCan
war
planet
nearly
Anyone
seem&amp;. this boy or SamuelMurphy,D,Cieu' 4
12
· ........ ap'lnct - Albbtoa, M '-er Iilii Wbllln.
day from Ito .t. Broehura and Pomeroy Tuesday. at 11 a.m. SunciJy at the high school. End leveled the French lepUon. knowing of his ¥hereabouts Is wu ilbOt anclldlW In • infGI'IIIIItlon on ~lei ara , wu 82 degrees under ILIIlny fllen will l!e made up and The damage cinne a ~~c&amp;nt 24 asked to no'!fY the · Meigs side tavern early lliday, ,.U.
a&amp;VILAIII-'1111 ~ AJWIOIIItl1'lltltll"/ hala,ble.
Sllid.
I·
,. ,
llldet.
costumed as clowDJ.
(Continued of page 16)
County Sheriffs ilepl '
(CGIIII JNI • .... II)

. .

tDanuer in Peace ·

Board wants
T. . ;:;(

I1~:OS:;~~':~~:£~~~:~:~

surr~~der.''

Held m·
cellbl.OCA1!

~:!i~:~~e~:~ii:j~~~: ~£r~~~:sa~u~o:fE~:

Boy
smg·
From Home

Senice an.

124 W. Main ,

'"·

..

I ...

•
&lt;,

rene

"'*"

Is your car acting up? H.o the
summer befol hlrd on your ·auto?
Now'I thl time to hlvu tune-up. Wt
can have your car running tmoothly
'In no time. Save rndney at Moore's.

Explltly Instil:

lllbens ,atioi\DI
'

Moore's slnice.Ceriter

re.c

6 Fined by Mayor

PROFESsiONAL TUNE-UP

whether it's . a trip ·around the world,

• •
ISSIOD
J

'*'ak

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, SoOn

an important part of that plan HE~VY

Buater Brown knltl art madt of 100 1/t PFimlum S.Bone Conon.
Bueter Brawn anklett, aocka and knH-hlghtto mla'n malch.wltf'l llltnttmbltl, 410 to tUI,

planning . and working toward your
goals. Very. often, a savings account is

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

:ews•• zn Briefi

•

One way of realizing you.r dreams is by

44

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

LANTERN
with BATTERY

NO. 125

Devoted To The lntere&amp;IJI Of The Meigs· Mason Area
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER II, 1972

Talks EX t en de d

.AK88 ¥AlOZ +KUtAJU
What do you bid now?

Notice
GUN SHOOT, Suhday, .October
15, 1 p.m., Mile Hill road. '
Pulled chokes and sleeve guhs
' .to be handicapped, 20, 16, and
12 gauges. Assorted meals.
Sponsored by Racine Fire
j)epartment.
·
10-10.Sic

VOL XXIV

Home

?

Seltd $1 for IACOIY MODUli flool&lt;
lo: "Win otltllitt," le/o tlrit _ ,;
¢pot), · ,,o. lo• 419, . .io City
Stotion, N.., Yor., N.Y. IOOIP.

Partly cloudy south tonight,
lows in the 50s and low 1101;
Mostly c!Qudy,. breezy · and
turning cooler with a chance Gl
showers Thlirsday, highs in the
60s north to 70S south.

Ruffled Collar Shirl with Puffed Sleeves
and Shoulder Loops. Open Back . Sizes :
tl Mos. to 4. While. 82.00. Boxer Pants of
FlorentlnB Geometric Corduroy Prlnl.
Sizes : 2 to 4. $3.00,
...

lof•

p...
1+
Pass
You, South, hold:

An estimated HO millio~
Americans are of voting age in
this year's presidential eiection , an increase of 20 million
over the 1968 figure,

Nobody knows FALL...
like Buster Brown

'
'
"' '
The bidding
has been:
West
North Eut South

TRASH

Weather

Open Monday to Thursday 9:30 to 5 P.M.
Friday and Saturday 9: 30 to 9 P.M.

· would have gone on to five
hearts. He would have seen
lltUe chance to hurt four
spades. He might have been
allowed to p I a y there or
the opponents might have
gone to flye spades. It would
be too much for East-West
to keep on to slx but they
would have picked up 300 in·
stead of just 100 points.

At Right, Queen Candidates

Now You· Know ·.

ELBERFELDS. IN POMEROY

was pass ."
·
If West had passed East

.

.

.·

Boy's Cap with Vlsqr. One Size. S1 .2S.
Striped Open ShOU lder Pullover. Your
Choice ot Colors. Sizes: 6 Mos. to 4. ·
11.11. Houndstooth Cheek Brushed Den im
Boxer Pants In a Variety of Colora. Poly·
~sterfColton. Siz.es : 2 to.-. $3.00.

.

.
brand Sen. George .S. said he would send bis" vice
ONE OF THESE FIVE MEIGS IUGH SCHOOL senior
McGovern's plan to end the president, Sargent s!U-iver, to
girls will be crowned homecoming queen at the Meigswar a "sellout," "un- Hanoi to speed the return of
Jackson gameatMeigsStadium Friday night. Nominated by
conditional surrender," and a prisoners of war.
.
schem~ that would bring
The address ·. and the
the st~dent bo&lt;ly, the.candidates, I tor, are Julie Hutchison,
AmericaN out of Vietnam response to it pushed the war
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milo B. Hutchison, Rutland·Route
"with our tails between our · back into the forefront of the ,, I ; Ava Sayre, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Layton Sayre,
legs."
presidential campaign. At tile
Pomeroy Route 3; Sherry Lambert, daughter of Mr. and
, ·The harsh criUciSm came in same· time, !be White House
Mrs. ·Gene Lambert, Pomeroy Route 2; nebi Gallagher,
response to tbe Democratic announced ' Dr. Henty A.
daughter of Mt. and Mrs. Charles Smith, MiddlepOrt, and
presidential candidate's televi- Kissinger would stay in Paris
Leta Floyd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orland W. Floyd,
sion address Tuesday night in today for an unprecedented
Pomeroy. Tbe five girls wiD take part in Thursday night's ,
which he said he would end the fourth straight day of secret
parade in Pomeroy, Middleport' and Rutland. The student ·
·American involvement in the peace ~lks, further. increasing
botly voted on the queen Tuesday~ Results of tbe voting will
war within 90 days after laking SpeC)Jiation a _negotiated set- . be kept secret, however, until Friday night's homecoming
office, describing the issue as a
(Ciintinuell on· Page 11 )
ceremonies.

A ·cold Six
Hearts 'H'dden

JUMBO-TAINER

BREAK RESISTANT
WEATHERPR OOF SWITCH
ONE PIECE CASE

By United Press lnteruatlonal choice betWeen "S~~ving face or
President Nixon's · allies S~~Ving lives." McGovern also

Enna.Russell Of Athens Dies ·

Tuition

.

'

Nona Lon a 86 ::
Died on Monda-lr.

24 qA~LON .

I

.

·&amp;re Chang
· . ed.·

(NIWS,APER INTIIPRIII ASSN.)
Ono-ol-a-lime

·McGovern eace. Plan 'Braitded
.
'Sell ~ Out' by,. War Supporte~s

'

Several personnel changes
have been .made recently in
Pomeroy by the Ohio Power
Company, area manager Fred
A. Morrow reported l:Jday.
Ralph L. Neigler', working
foreman in · thj transmlsalon
and distributl6"ri department,
has been promoted to transmission and distribution
foreman, replacing Robert F.
Morris who retired on July I
after 47 years service.
Nelgler was employed on
Aug . 16, 1948 in Pomeroy an~
·has progressed through the
lineman classifications to his
present position. He and his
wife, Edna, daughter, Peggy,
and IJQns Bruce and Kenneth,
reside on Yellowbush Road,
Route 2, Racine.
Donald E. Kouns has been
promoted to T. , and D.
Foreman..Station to supervise
the c:onstructlon and maintenance of new and existing
station facllltles In the
Pomeroy area. Kouns, formerly a working 'foreman at
Ironton, was recently transferred to Pomeroy. He was
employed on July 16, 1948 at
.8742
South Point, Ohio, and
East·
West vulnerable
progressed through the
maintenance man West North Eut South
1¥ 1.
classifications to his present
3¥
4¥
4.
position. He and his wife,
Opening lead-see article
Edna, two sons Mark and
Joseph, and daughter,
Rebecca, reside on Race St. In By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby
Take a look at the West
hand only. Your partner
opens with one heart. South
overcalls with one spade and
you give .a limit jump rais~
(Con.tinued from page I)
to three hearts. The bidding
continues
with three spades;
the building, the board said
four
hearts
by your partner;
further study would have to be
a!ld
four
spades
by South.
made.
It Is obviously your hand.
Frank W. Porter, board Your
partner has opened the
president, said the board was bidding and you are looking
"very much interested" in the right at two aces. What
program and use of any of the should you do?
facilities could be mad~ for one
You don't want to bid five
day a week by making ap- hearts. Y o u r partner can
plication with Hargraves. He have lots of good, s o u n d
pointed out that the Pomeroy opening bids· that leave you
gym is being used for dances no play for U tricks, Then,
do you double 1
each Friday evening.
The West player,'we w~.r.e
Attending were Porter, Joe watching
doubleil. Jast left
Sayre, Don Mullen, Virgil the double ln and· South was
King, Carroll Pierce, board promptly set one trick at his
members ; Hargraves, Larry
Morrison, assistant superin. four-spade contract.
"How could I tell that we
tendent, and Lee McComas, were
cold for six hearts,"
clerk.
asked West.
"You couldn't," was our
reply. "However, you could
have let your partner . into
the game. All you had to do

THOSE DREAMS CAN
•
COME TRUE IF YOU
PLAN •••

LEAF

Walk-away CaptUred

' Robert Vernon Smith, :14, a Calif&lt;rllla,
watk..way from the SeacoviJ!e1 ~ Olflceri said Smith
Texas,
federal correctional acquaintances In ~.leila Ct11111ty;
trailing President Ni1on by a Nixon 60 pet. to 33 pel. f&lt;r the
margin of almost 2 to 1.
Democratic challenger among insUtution lui Jan. 15, was and wu here to lie them.
'l'he Harris survey, .based on l.hose indicaUng ,a preference. apprehended in Middleport was taken to "the federa l;;
detention section of
opinions gathered from 1,5M The 2'1-poli1t Nixon lead was Sunday.
Smith,
a
native
of
North
Washington
County JaU
potential voters Oct. 3-5, gave ' only one poinllea than the 59
to 31 margin he held in the last Carolina, wu arres~ by .FBI will be returned to a JDaJdmiun;;
Harris survey taken Sept. 19- agenta, Sheriff Robert Har- security prilon rather than
.
21.
tenbach and Middleport Polk:e Seacoville prillon. AdiUU!!nlli:
Chief
J. J. Cremeans.
charges may be filed;
;:
Tbe latest Gallup poll made
According to a report of
Smlth wu armed with a .31;:
public last week gave Nixon a
Palmer
J.
Baken,
Jr.,
Cincaliber
revolver when ap.;:
Syracuse.
28-point lead.
Robert i... Deemer, mainThe Harris survey was . cinnali, ~pecial agent in charge pre~nded, but made no · at.:;.
tenllllCe man-A, was recently published today in advance of of the FBI Division, Smlth .was tempt to use it, the FBI sald.!; .
::
trimsreiTed to Pomeroy from McGovern's most important . serving a term in the Texas
:•
Portsmouth. He was .employ.ed broadcast speech of the institution for interstate transon Jan. 16, 1967 at Portllnol¢b campaign to date - a prime- portation o( a-stolen vehicle.
··.
--.,,,
' .•:
and ha~ also progressed time address "~lght. detalllnS When arres~ Sunday he was
througb the n:udnte111111ce man how he would end the Vietnam driving a 1972 model car whi~h
the FBI sald was stolen m ·
1.
classlflcaUona to his present W~r.
~
&lt;·
position. He and his wUe, ·
Nona Long, 86, Long B,ottom;;
Marilyn, and. their son,
Rl.l, dled Monday at Veterall!i:
Christopher, reside on College
' ;·
Road in Sy.rao:use. .
· iMiss Enna N. Russell, 56, 47 Shively Hall at Ohio University Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Long was preceded ti(
St., Athens, formerly of the past IS years. She was a
WIN AT BRibGE Holme
the · Coolville .. ~rea, dled 19M graduate qf Troy High death by her hlllband, Fleni :
Long, and .slx c~.
· ':
Monday evening at the School in Coolville.
She is survived by a son;:
Camden-Clark Hospital ln Surviving are two sisters,
William
of Long Bottom; three ·
Mrs
.
Woodrow
(Grace)
Parkersburg following an
extended illness. She was the Colmer, Ath~ns, and Mrs. sisters, Dessie Webb, BettY.
I
&lt;laughter of the late Campbell Charles (Bess) Wlllet, The Hickel, an'd Myrtle Hoff, all of.
·
and Arminta Boso Russell of Plains; three brothers, Sam. Spencer, W. Va.; 14 grand-.
,---- N-O_R_TH
_ _ _ __, AlbeN. Besides her parenis and Nick of Athens, and Alfred ctuldren, and several great:
10
• Q 108 7 3
she was preceded in death by of Coolville, and several nieces grandchildren. She was a.
' member of the United;
¥ Q6 ·
two brothers, Clyde and and nephews.
+ K6 5 2
Brooks, and two sisters, Leota Funeral services wlll be held Methodist Churt!h.
at 2p.m. Thursday at the White ,Funeral services wiD be held
• 93
and Alice.
WEST
EAST (D)
Miss Russell was a cook at Funeral Home in Coolville with Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Bald
.2
.65
the Rev. Roy. W. Rose of. Knobs Freedom Gospel
¥J743
¥AK10952
LOCAL
TEMPS
·
ficiatlng.
• Burial wlll be In Mission Church with the Rev.
+A984
t73
• A1065
.KQJ
Temperature in downtown Fairview Cemetery, Carthage Edward Griffith officiating.
SOUTH
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m. Township. Friends may call at Burial will be In Bald Knobs'
.AKJ94
was 53 degrees under sunny the funeral home anytime after · Cemetery. Friends may call at
¥8
skies.
Ewing Funeral Home anyUme.
noon on Wednesday.
t QJ'!O
.

United Press lutemallonal .
A new Louis Harris public
opinion poll today, four weeks
from election day; showed
George S. M ~Go vern still

...

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