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' AK~NDA .PANDA
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IT~ FUN 1o DRAW

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THIN68·IN'THE.

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Over 4% million votes expected .in Ohio 'fuesday
. COLUMBUS (UP!) :._ Ohioans wUl vote
Another state wide question on the ballot
Tuesday on a variety of issues ranging is whether a Constitutional Convention
from the presidential contest to con- should be called.
·
gressional races to whether the state inAlso there are countless local races and
come tax should re repealed.
a nllfllber of school bond issues and
Sec;retary of State Ted w. Brown has operating levies in ·communities across
predicted a ~ecord turnout of 4,504,000 Ohio.
voters - 300,000 more than the record
Nixon Favored
number for a general elecUon in 1960
Nfioii; who carried Ohio in that election
Ohio will furnish 25 electoral votes to.the by 273,000 votes against John,F. Kennedy,
winner of the Presidential race between is given a good chance of defeating
' George McGovern and President Nixon. . McGovern. Polls have shown the
Ohio voters will also select 23 members President with up to 60 per cent of the
of the U. S. House of Representatives, 17 popular vote in Ohio ,
members of the Ohio Senate and aU 99
Nixon, teamed with Vice President Spiro
members of the Ohio House of Agnew, faces· McGovern and R. Sargent
Representatives.
Shriver in· 'the Demo~ratic column and
But the closest race will probably be on John C. Schniitz, California congressman,
the attempt to repeal the state.income tax. and Thomas J. Anderson, Tennessee
The question was placed on ihe ballot newsman, from the AmericAn Party.
through the efforts of five conservative
Also on the Ohio ballot are : Louis Fisher
members of the state House of and Genevieve Gunderson of the Socialist
Representatives.
Labor Party; U. S. Communist Party

leader Gus Hall and Jar1·is Tyner running ·
as an independent teain, al)d Socialist
Worker Party representatives Linda
Jenness and Andrew Pulley running as
another independent team.
Twenty-one Ohio congressmen are
seeking re~lection, and Republicans are
favored to retain the 16-7 margin in the
delegation . ·New districts were drawn
earlier this year by the state legislature.
State Jssne 1, proposes a question
automatically on the ballot every 20 years
- shall a Constitutional Convention be
called. The last convention was in 1912. A
special commission is now studying
possible reforms of the state's.charter.
State Issue 2 is possibly the most controversial item on the ballot.
adoption
would curtail collection of the one-half to
3Y.! per cent graduated personal inrome
tax and the 4 and 8 per cent corporate net
income tax.

Its

People Would Vote
Any further income . taxes, except
municipal income taxes, -would have to be
approved by a vote of the people. Also,
they could only be levied at a single flat
percentage for all incomes.
Proponents maintain the public
deserves to be able to vote on the state
taxes, and that repeal of tbe income tax
would not reduce spending but merely
trtm a surplus brought about by a growth
in other taxes.
Qpponents claim there is no such sur·
pl~s. and repeal of the ·income tax will
wreck government programs, taking $1.3
billion from the state and forcing a 25 per
cent cutback in services.
Adding to the voter's 'confusion, a "yes"
vote is for repeal, not for the income tax. A
"no" vote is gains! repeal and in favor of
retaining the current tax.
Two Republican Supreme Court justices
and one Democrat are seeking reelection.

- Justice Louis J . Schneider, a Cincinnati
l{epublican, is seeking rf.&lt;!iection to a full
six.-year term. His opponent is William B.
Brown, a Chillicothe Democrat and former
court of appeals jud~e.
Brown vs. Brown
Justice Uoyd 0. Brown, Cleveland
Democrat, is opposed for a full term by
Paul W. Brown, Colwnbus Republican and
former state attorney general.
Paul Brown held the same seat on the
court before reslgni)lg in 1969 to become
attorney general. Uoyd Brown, the only
Democrat on the bench, was named last
year by Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Justice Robert E. Leach, Columbus
Republican, faces Frank D. Celebrezze,
Cleveland Demor;rat, for the remaining
two years of the unexpired term to which
Leach was appointed in 1970.
Legislative races will be curried out
under new districts mapped by a

Democratic-controlled Apportionment
Board late last year.
·
Democrats figure to pick up a couple of
seats from the 20 now controlled by
Republicans, but the GOP needs to win
only eight of the 17 races to control the
Senate.
Each party gives itseH a good chance of
capturinlf55 of the 99 House seats, and the
outcome could be close. Republicans now
dominate the chamber, 54-4ii, but they will
need good performances from nonincumbents to repeat.
Only 35 GOP House members are
seeking r~!-i!lection, while 38 of the 45
Democrats are trying again.
Asplit in the legislature would be a help
to the Gilligan administration, which
fought a Republican House and Senate for
two years. Republican domination of both
chambers presumably would bring two
more years of the same, as both parties
prepare for the 1974 gubernatorial race •.

Now You Know

Weather

A roorback is a 19th Century
political term describing" a
phony campaign accusa lion
Issued just before an election.
The term was first used in the
1844 Presidential campaign
against James Polk. ·

VOL. XXIV

Increasing cloudiness
tonight, low 40 to 45. Mostly
cloudy Tuesday with Intermittent rain likely west all!l
south and chance of rain
northeast. High M to 65.

NO. 143

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Devoted To 1'lw Interests OfTiwMeigJ-Mason Area
~UNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1972

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Alp;a B. '.s
1/enrp /(issin;er ·-:

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) -President Nixon, confident he will be returned to
power and.going easy to avoid
disturbing his hig lead in the
polls, told voters Tuesday's
election gives them a "clearcut
and momentous" choice of
principles, policies and men.
Nixon prepared today to
wind up his last campaign for
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public office with a taped 3D- Long Beach airport tonight for is on Tuesday, I intend to
minute television statement an hour-long rally before support our elected leaders as I
bolstered by film clips.
heading for his home state of have always done. r intend to
Nixon and his rival, Demo- South Dakota.
stand up for national unity, as I
crat George McGovern, were
Nixon, making the 13th in his have always done, because
due to spend part of election series of radio campaign America is bigger than any one
eve within 60 miles of each speeches, said Sunday that man or any one party," Nixon
other. McGovern, making ()Is "the choice of policies, of said in an apparent jab at
fifth visit to California, a principles and of candidates in McGovern 's statement he
crucially important state to his this election is clear cut and would not necessarily abide by
campaign, was flying into the momentous.
the tradition of the loser ap.
"! think the people under- pealing for nationaL unity
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stand what Is at stake. I have behind the winner .
confidence in their ability to
The President, buoyed by his
make a wise decision.
wide lead over McGovern in
"And whatever that decision the polls, was keeping a low

ew~ .• in

TEN CENTS

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PHONE 992-2156

profile for his last time around
the political track . Seeking a
landslide, he was determined
not to rock the boat.
Nixon and his wife Pat will
cast their ballots early
Tuesday at a nearby
elementary school, then fly
hack to the White House for a
family reunion to await the
returns . Their daughters,
Tricia Cox and Julie
Eisenhower, Nixon's proud
surrogate campaigners, will be
voting OJ! the East coast.

Briefs :

By United Press International
NEW YORK - THE COLUMBIA Broadcasting System
described as sabotage Sunday the slashing of cables which
Jl'•!_1!nted the telecut of a pro football game. The network said,
bowever;lt will be able to proceed with 'its election cOverage
Tuesday night despite the strike of cameramen, technicians and
engineers. The strike by the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers (IBEW), which begim Friday, also resulted
in the cancellation of a political interview show and a number of
other pro football games.
CBS said the strike "will not affe:ct our broadcasting of returns
to the fullest extent" on election night Tuesday. The network
alleged that cables at Shea Stadium in New York had been cut,
preventing televising the game between the Washington Red·
skins and the New York Jets. CBS carried the Chicago Bears Detroit Uons contest inBtead. Authorities alleged one man tried
to unhook a cable and when police attempted to arrest him two
other members .of a 11earby IBEW picket line intervened,
resulting in the arrests.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Sen. O::eorge S. McGovern
canceled plans to appear on a CBS interview show, Aides of both
men said the candidates did not want to cross picket lines. The
candidates originally were to appear separately for 30 minutes
each on "Face the Nation."

Upset promised
NEW YORK - Fighting the
pollsters but drawing cheer·
ing crowds, Sen. George S.
McGovern opened a final day
of coast-to-coast campaigning
today before returning to South

Dakota to await the voters'
verdict.
McGovern planned vislt.s to
Philadelphia and Los Angeles
in the last day of his 22-month
effort to win the White House
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Greatest sweep in history
possible for the President

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By UDlted Prells International
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Two leading public opinion organizations and several ~
?~ newspapers conducting surve,r.s give President Nb:on a i~
~-: massive lead In final pnH!leCtlon projections.
:?
According to the Gallup poll Nixon leads his ~
WASHINGTON- ABOUT 500 DETERMINED American @
§
Democratic
opponent, Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, by 81 per ~
Indians loudly rejected the government's final offer to voluntarily vacate the Bureau of Indian Affairs building early today ~ cent to 35 per cent. Three per cent of tlwse tallied were ;;
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and requested President Nixon to intervene in the fiv~y ~~~: IUideclded and one per cent was for otber parties.
The Harris survey &amp;bowed Nb:on ahead by 59 per cent
dispute. Th.e Indians, who have occupied the building four blocks f~;
to
35
per cent with 6 per cent undecided.
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from the White House since Thursday, were given an ultimatum
The Washlngt011 Post said the gap was lhe second ;~;
by the ln!erior Department to leave by 8 a.m. ES1' ,. or risk
~ largest In history. Only tbe differential preceding Lyndon
violation of a federal court order.
B. Johnson's victory In 18M was larger.
The Indians, who earlier had torn down barricades, hastily ~
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. The New York Times said Sunday a survey of Its
re.fortlfled the building with furniture, business machines, E~
~ correspoodenta across the nation suggested Nixon would
desks, and display cases following their overwhelming decision
,!ij, carry at least 48 alate~ In Tuesday's election.
to Ignore the government settlement prop()S81. The Indilins sent
"There remains a possibility lhat he will carry all 50 for
telegram to Nixon in San Clemente, Calif., requesting that he fly ~:: .
back to meet with their leaders today. They also urged,Nixon to ;;:: the greatest sweep In American p&amp;Utical blstory," tbe
newspaper said.
appoint a special 12-member commls8lon, comprised of seven\
government appointed mernben and five Indians, to negotiate a

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(Contllud 011 f'lle 12)

lfi+Ni P'' *ILl- 0"' •• of &amp;be ...... Allie
No. 11n Frlltll'llll 01'11!!!' fl. i ! p Ill PGciwtDJ J!il lUted ,
chec'• to nine - volUnteer fire depar1meiU SUnday af18110011 In r« opltiOII of tbtlr c-m,.enlty .met. Front •
row, I to r, Benlli'd Neulllln&amp; I* I ltllnl; Harry Mlller,
~rU~tee,udT.Stane, Jr.,lllnllr)'~ o1 Aerie 2171;
~ Roulb, .... rlre Dlplrtinent; Homer Smith, 2171
trutee; ClrllAie, 111• Fin Depirlmert: ~row,

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&lt;*!~Dan

'"• Mew Hawn Plre Depwlulert; Jim NeuiiJina,
Pllmeroy Plre 'Oepltllllent; Bob Woodl, Olelter Fire
·Department; beck roW, Pete Kloes, MldcDeport Fire
Depar trufilt; DuM Kennedy, Rutl8111 Fire Depai-tment;
Doulla• Jolllllon, Jr., Racine Fire Department, and
Lawrence Diddle, Syrac~~~e Fire Department. Amounts
donated were Pomeroy and Middleport, each fiS; Racine,
• ; S)'rlcuae, tz; &lt;llester, $30; Rutlaqd, New Hawn and
,Muon, each ... and Ba!han no.

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from Richard Nixon.
Figl\ting his underdog
image, McGover'n told enthusiastic supporters in New
York Sunday night that the
political polls, most of which
are predicting a Nixon land·
slide, are dead wrong .
"We're going to give those
public opinion pollsters the
surprise·of their lives," he told
a blue collar audience of
several thousand at a Brooklyn
housing complex.
"We want George," they
shouted back. Secret Service
agents and police had to
strongarm McGovern into his
car as the spectators jostled to
shake his hand.
While hitting hard on
government corruption,
wiretapping and presidential
vetoes, McGovern used his
toughest language against
Nixon'&amp; failure to end the
Vietnam War. The administration's peace plan "is
an election ~ear ploy," the
senator told .a follow-up rally at
a Bronx high school. "Peace is
not at hand.''

·Fire truck
hid bought

BOW STRING MAKING is another one of the arts done by Wallace. The bow string Wallace
Is making is made from dacron string.

Hobby is turned to business
By KATIE CROW .
It's called Wallace's Sports
Shop. It is located in a room of
tile apartment home of Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Wallace, Mid ·
dleport.
What is not generally known
is the skill and patience involved in making the bows and
arrows he sells from his sports
shop.
Wallace, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, Middleport,
has put his special talent.s to
use .
He begins making a glass,
wood or aluminum arrow with
a shaft (bare arrow). Next he
glues on one end of the arrow a
nock, which also requires
considerable time. The second

Voters offered
permissive tax

RACINE - The bid of the
Middleport voters, among
Sutphen Fire Equipment Co. of
other
important decisions,
Columbus on a new fire truck
at a price of $26,&amp;81 has been will decide Tuesday whether
accepted by Racine Town or· not the chief users will
help directly to provide
Council.
·
The council also has pur- money needed to repair and
chased from Walter Burke a maintain streela properly.
The $5 permissive license
small tractor for $1,450, to be
used for mowing, snow tag tax would produce about
removal and "small jobs." $10,000 annually wb!cb,
Complaints were aired at the . under law, would be used
regular meeting of mini bikes entirely for . street main·
ridden on the streets and tenance and repair.
Many other communities,
private properties. The
marshall has asked that the lncludhig Pomeroy, have
continuing . lev.les against
practice be dl!ieontlnued .
Coilncll voted to endorse' the properly for , street repair.
Middleport
ad•
live nilll liehool operating levy, The
ministration,
headed
by
a renewal, and Is· asking
.-c!ents to support renewal of Mayor John Zerkle, believe~
a two mill levy for current properly already is over
tiP'fiSilS in the vUlage, in· burdened by tax levies, and
the 'more fair source of
c:hlding street lighting.
A labor bill of ~ .50 for money for street repair Is the
roofing Installed On the new $5 permissive llcedse tax.
llddltion to the fire house was-- ,ll!fSII!IWM\!IWilill
. !ISo,o;;.~
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., ;; iillii&amp;U M!t!:.ibi
approv ed for paymen t. It was
.I
announced that new Christmas
LEVY ENDORSED
street decorations have ·~n , RACINE -:- Racine villa.;~
received. Council also voted to council· has voted to endorse
support the Bend 0.' the River renewal !if the five mill
Garden Club in a Christmas operating levy in the Southern
home lighting contest.
'Local Sehoul Disllict.

slep is flelchlng it, (placing
feathers on tile shaft) which is
done in a "multi-flelcher"
which holds six arrows.
To flelch a single arrow
~kes one and one-half hours.
On the multi-!lelcher, six are
completed in that time.
The next step is to trim the
feathers on tile arrow which Is
done by an electric feather
trimmer. Then the final work
on the arrows is done by hand.
Wallace Installs several
types of points on the arrows

depending on what the
customer wants. He also has a
spine tester that determines
lhe strength of an arrow.
Wallace said many people
beginning In archery are
discouraged because they lack
knowledge of the archery art.
Abow has to be tuned the same
as the motor of a car In order to
get best performance.
After placing the point on the
. arrow, it .is fully tested . "I
(Continued on Page 6)

First two named .
The first two contestants in Miss Nease is a class officer,
the 1973 Meigs County Junior treasurer of the student council
Miss 'Pageant were announced and a cheerleader, She will
today . They are Sharon . present the song, "Kids" as her
Elizabeth Drake and Lee Ann talent.
The annual pageant will be
Nease.
Miss Drake, daughter of Nov. 18 at Southern High
Melvin and Marjorie Drake of School in Racine. Tickets will
Racine Route 2, is a student of go on sale this week for $1.50 in
Southern High School where advance. Admission at the door
she is active In the marching will be $2. Contestants for the
band, pep and concert bands, pageant will be honored at the
tile FHA, Pep, and French annual J unlor Miss Tea to be
Clubs. For her talent In the held Sunday at Trinity Church
pageant she will present a in Pomeroy.
baton twirling act.
Miss Nease, daughter of l':'O::«~$-:W'.&amp;;f.@"~,S
Fred and Mary Nease,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Minersville Route 1, also is a
Oblo Extended Outlook student at Southern High
Wednesday
through Friday:
· School where she is active in
Partly cloudy and · cool
the Pep Club, school paper,
Wednesday
and Thunday
glee club, choir and she is
editor . of the school annual. wllh a chance ·of. showers
eastern sectlona Wedllesday.
A little warmer Friday wllh ·
chance of sliowers by !ale In
the day. Hlgbs In the upper
50s Wednesday and ThurSnotiff~r
sday and In lhe lower io.
More results of recent mock Friday. Overnl~t low1 In ·
elections at the Meigs High the upper 30!1 nor1h and
School Wl!re announced today. lower 40s ·~outh.
· On the local level, William
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Snouffer defeated Warden
Ours by IOvotes, ;jfi7 12 366 for~
LEAF SOIEDULE
commissioner's Beat while
The schedule for the leal
Rober) Cl&amp;rk defeated Joe
scavenger
In Middleport has II
Denison, 422-293 for the other
commissioner seat, and In Ward 1 today, Tueeday,
Spencer · defeated !4ary Ward 2; ,Wednesday, Ward 3;
Martin, ~262 for Clerk of .'11nnday, Ward 4, and Fri.dlf
In Ward 5.
·
Courts·.

Students liked
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2- The Dally Sentmel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Nov 6, 1972

Four More Years

EDITORIAL

Parochiaid Still
Unsolved Problem
One of the few thmgs both presidential candidates
agreed upon m 1972 was the need for some 101m of tax
ard or tax rehef for parents of parochral schoolchtld ren
It remams to be seen 11 h,ethe1 a pr estdent so mcltned
and a Congt ess favora bly disposed can come up with
a form ula whtch wtll meet the Fu s! Amendment test ul
separation of church and stat e m the eyes of the Sup! eme
Court
In the meantime, a case fo1 public ard to 1eltgwus
educal!on was made recently by the authot of a lettet
to The Amencan School Board Journal
"Some people do mdeed believe m God wrote James
J Mason, · and consider the relationship between man
and God to be of such pnmary concern that tl should
permeate the educatiOnal process
'Other people believe differently , and either consider
God to be a myth or unrmportant They belreve that edu
calion should be silent on the subject
"Why should the latter group, any more than the
former, expect to have their postl!on taught at the ex
pense of those who don t share It ? The money taken hom
parochial school parents for pubhc schools IS spent on a
rebgwn- secular humamsm- Just as truly as would be
the converse There IS simply no such thmg as a 'neutr al'
posrtton on relrgton "
The only farr system he concluded , would be for each
taxpayer to earmark hts taxes for the school he wants to
support That way no one' s conscience would be t1 odden
upon
The baste fallacy m this ar~ument ts the assumpllon
that the questiOn rs one of believers In God versu&lt; nonbehevers It IS not It IS a question of what rs the best
educational compromise rn the pluralistic socrety that ts
Amenca. a plurahsm which mcludes many different
kmds of behevers as well as nonbelrevers
At one lime. dally prayers , Btble readmgs and re.
teased lime for relrg10us mstrucl!on were normal practices m public schools Even then, however, many Catholrc parents chose to send their chrldren to the schools
marntamed by their church
Many non·Catholrc parents were hkewtse unhappy with
a religious curnculum which of necessity had to be nondenominatiOnal and noncontroversial or tf you will
watered down almost to meanrnglessness
Expenence has dictated that the public schools whrch
are supported by all the people for the benefit of all chtl
dren, must str1ve for neutrality m thrs sphere When
parents have trouble agreemg on a srmple thmg like a
nondenominational prayer, certaml1 there 1s no way to
"permeate the educabonal process' wtth reiigrous teach
mg that would not arouse mtense dtsputat10n ,m the com·
mumty and probably offend believers more than nonbelievers
If this has resulted, as some allege, m a btas tow at d
"secular humamsm " rn the schools, 11 IS also true that
large numbers of parents seem to have adbrcated their
own responsrbllrly for overseemg the religious or moral
trammg of !herr chtldren m the best place for It- the
home.
In thts country parents are and always have been free
to send thetr children to prrvate schools, for religiOus
reasons or for reasons qUite unconnected with religiOn
Nerther that freedom nor beltef m God as opposed to
nonbebef m God 1s at issue
FJrst Amendment consrderatlons asrde, the only legrtr
mate issue for public debate IS whether or not 1! woutd
be m the best interest of the majority of Americans to
perm1t dtversion of tax monies awa~ , from the ~ublic
schools t&amp;,asstst a mmor1ty wh1ch, for whatever reasons,
does not Wish to avail Itself of the eaucal!on provided by
those schools

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Helen Help

Us. • •

By Helen Bottel

SAME MUSIC, DIFFERENT LYRICS
Dear Helen
I've written several tunes, but have never seen a reply mthe
paper Then you suspected a boy with a sumlar problem of
hoaxmg you, so perhaps you thmk I'm a hoaxer too. Please answer
I'm a m~~rrled businessman and well thought of locally It all
started when my wife kidded me about bemg a matd because I
helped with the dishes. One thing led to Mother and she made me
up like a woman, with her clothes, wig, cosmetics, etc It was all
in fun, but somehow 1t got to be a habrt
Through the years, she has bought women's clothes for me
lllld these are what I relax in at home. (My whole personality
chllllges when I'm in feminine attire.)
They were so comfortable that I began wearlfl~ women's
clothing when I went out-of-town on busmess trips. After the
day's work was done, I'd doll up "fejllale," and walk around
!own Sometunes I'd stnke up a conversation wtth another
woman but never with a man I am NOT homosexual
Well, my wtfefound out She discovered my women's clothes
in my suitcase, and now she wants to divorce me as she says I'm
tWisted
If she enjoyed my charade at home, why then does she think
I'm erazy when I carry it on outside - where no one wrll know?
Does she really like the tdea of a woman companion, but wants to
keep it seeret? - S S.P
DearS :
Yours IS a question for a clo8e-!Jl counselor; that rs why I
have avoided usmg It in the eolumn. A fetish can best be treated
by a psychiatrist, and that goes double If your wife also shared
the aberration '· or perhaps you two are completely r1ght for
each other, who knows?
One thing comes on strong, however, m all my letters from
part-time or beginning transvestites: they always blame !hell'
first cross-over on a member of the opposite sex - s1ster, wife,
girlfriend, mother - after whjch they either "just Cllll't help
themselves" or else they're still being "forced agamst their
wills."
If your preference for women's clothes threalells lo blight
your life, S S.P ., thljll I'd suggest first, honest self-apprausal
(slop blaming your wife - she Isn't the cause of your "spill
personality," though she may have encouraged tt); and second,
therapy.
Where therapy will lead, I don't know, but I can't help you
king-distance. Sorry ! - H.

+++

Dear Helen.

Jay .00 I have been engaged almost five years. We're
mature adults and have gotten along fine· we had a perfect,
placid rellticmblp SeX was no problem. We both d~cic!_~ 11 cOUI&lt;!_

1;111 uiiW lllliiTiage. '
~
But now, wltb the wedding date let for spring, we are con~1111&amp;. We l!llrt Ollt llice llld then the bomb drops
'Olen an jeeJouti'l, l'lvalry, doubll, re~~e~~bnenta. Yet we are
. . we loft Hcb other
,
With lllch 1 '-•
1
-'II
U~lp, sOOuid !helle hateful times
Mj PI IT - FIGHI'ERB

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BY JACK O'BRIAN
A COWARDLY WAY
TO MAKE MONEY
NEW YORK (KFS) - The new and
delrghtful "Oh Coward" mtm-revue of some 50
Noel Coward songs and verbal spangles exports
about $1,000 a week to Srr Noel m tax-happy
Swtlzerland It's at the l!hy New Theatre (E.
54th St ), grosses $14,000 a week and even sells
oulltsmatmess, umque among off-Bdwy shows
- even Its h1ts
It cost $25,000 to open .
"Dude" flopped for about $900,000 Art Carney's flymg htgh above hts TV sewer his 10 pet.
of theW Coast "Prrsoner of 2nd Ave " pard Art
$10,200 last week Tnm Lopez' press agents
are feedmg colummsts tales of three-gals-a-day
tnumphs; that's Hugh O'Bnan-style and
George Hamtltor.-rut publrctty which turned
satd gents mto targets of ridicule
Go see "Butley" whtch opened at the
Moresco Theater for the fmest actmg, by Alan
Bates, on any N Y stage
It's a merry
tragedy, a tale of a failed passmg heterosexual ,
whose pllght, as so often m real lrfe, htdes
behrnd cymcal, b1tchy destructiveness of
constant pseudo-w1tty msults
A London
Umverstly teacher's student-seductions are
mterrupled by brief marriage and fatherhood,
whereupon, as "Buttey" begms he IS cymcally,
lrghtly savaging that !mal rahonahzatron of hrs
horno,fate . The comedy IS there and lrke all
wrt, teeters on the sharpened blade between
comedy and destruction
Wtthrn a quick few hours, Sutley's w1fe
demands a dtvorce to marry a stable bore , hrs
submrsstve homosexual mate qurls him , an&lt;! he
bears up wtth constant laceratmg attacks on
hunself, and all others, friendless at the frnal
curtam, one of the subtlest upbeat endmgs
ever the next vulnerable youth on his seduction list proves too revollmg even for hts termmally untidy state, mentally and physically
Alan Bates manages to keep thrs srckly
pmwheel adazzle wrth one of the most
amazrngly compleat tour de weaknesses ever
seen on a stage, makes the usual homo-play
exported from London's West End seem d1stant,
ugly vulgartlles
Author S1mon Gray rates mtramural
raggmg - he 's also, as IS hts "Butley," a
teacher of Engl!J;h at London Umverstty , but
Gray boasts a w1fe and two children This Is
less a play than a br11lrant character exposrtron,
the litle character desperately strong m hts
sleazrness, It's never a glamomer of per-

Q!~sru

~

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t

version, for he Is a vrcttm full of protectrvely
dtsctphned aggressive hysterta The total heartbreak IS there, negatrves ftrmly rn place as
Butley slithers through hrs pntecttve armor of
sickly abuse, too old to weep, too cormmtted to
hts drab fate to manage a heteroseKual escape
The rest of a fme effectual cast plays tt
splendidly, but It's Alan Bates who domrnates rn
hts hopeless portrait of a man sentenced to
despair for life
Word of the London triwnph of "Sutley"
I Bates won all last season's stage laurels m tt)
broug~t out all the oldtune serious dramalovers
In a rare Frrst Ntght Audtence - dressed well,
no kooks apparent, even scads of evenmg
togged respecfurs of the durably mvaiided
serious legthmale theater
South Africa's self-termed "spare-paris
surgeon " Dr. ChriStraan Barnard blasted the
media for ballyhoomg his heart-transplant
experiments, Irony mdeed; he alone snatched at
every chance to appear m all medra from the
press to any TV or radto talk show in relentless
exploitatiOn of hrs spare-party manners
Otymprcs multti:old-medahst Mark, Sp1tz
Signed a "hfetlme" pact to pitch Schtck razors
In "21," multt-z!l1Iona1re horseman Alf
Vanderbrlt looked teddtbly sertous wtth lovely
Cynthta Cole of Cleveland, Baltunore and
Manhattan , Cynth's m the "crvtllzed" set, we
.111et her a few mghls l)gfore in P J. (:Iarke's
wtth her ex-husband Phil Iselin's beautiful
wtfe m "21" passed her loyalty test to '1er N Y
Jets-owner husband by enthusmg about a young
lady's ternftc taste in wearmg Jels-eolored
green whrle Phil bantered with h1s landlord, N
Y Mets-boss Donald Grant (The Mets enjoy
pnmary proprtetorshtp at Shea Stad1um) . Ed
and Sylvia Sullrvan gave a rrrrreally-big hello
to a former antagomst (critiC) of the days when
Ed dommated vaudeville on TV
G1fted comic George Carlin's strange mststence on brutalizmg hiS inventive clowning
wtth verbal frlth got hun mdtcted In Milwaukee
on obscemty charges last sununer wh1ch can't
be quashed he'll stand trial Dec 6 Most
celebrated N Y detecl!ve smce Johnny
Broderick, Edd1e Egan of "French Connection"
true-tale, has a TV sertes draped en hts more
than 5,000 narco-arresls while on the force; but
just as m "Connection," Eddte was pronounced
not the type Actor Gene Roche se~mlngly Is and
wtll play th~ colorful Ed&lt;jie . Jack E Leonard
phoned to announce he'~ lost another person and
IS down to 205 agnm Had to : drabetes

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AIMB
No Person Is Perfectly Built

10 ,30 -

Elecf ton Prevtew 20

11 "oo ~ News3 4, 6

a, 10. r5

11 20 ...,... Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 Movte

8, Movte

The Two Faces of Dr

Strocco' 10

TUESDAY, NOV 7,1972
6 00 - Sunnse Sem mar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmt1me 10

2•
4NT
SNT.

7•

Openmg lead-+ Q

x-;~·;owo:0X-Y,o"o;oo

MONDAY NOV "6, 1972
6 30 - NBC News 3 4, 15, ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10
Dream ol Jeanme 13 Hathayoga 33
·
7 00 - News 6 Truth or C011seq, 3 B&lt;at The Block 4 C1rcus 1
13 , InSight 33, What's My Lone B. R!ead Your Way Up 33,
Eleclm Company 20 Andy Gnll1th 15
7 30 - To Tell The fruth6 Trafltc Court 10, Ep1sode Acllon 33.
Parenl Game 3 Hollywood Squares 4 Young Or K1tdare 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Pollt1cat Talk 15 Movie "Tarzan's
Desert Mystery,' 13
8 00 - GunsmokeB, 10, RowanandMartm sLaugh ln3,4 UFO
6 Topol the Month8, Hollywood TV Theatre20 33
9 00 - Here's Lucy a, 10, Pro Football 6, 13 MOVIe ' Ma~IC
Carpet 3 4, 15
9 30 - Dons Oay 10, Poll!! ca l Ta tk 8
10 00 - News20 , From lhe Hills 33 Pol•l•'"l Talk 8 10
Jekyll

North-South vulnerable
West Nortll, East South
Pass

- - - - - --

Television Log

WIN AT BRIDGE

Everyone Irked
by This One

~--

6 20 - Paul Har vey 13
6 25 ~ Fa1th For Today 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Btble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment 10

45 - Corncob Report 3
6 55 - F l1ntstones 13
700 - Tpday 3,4,15 CB5 News810 News6
7 30- Sleepy Jellers 8 Romper Room 6 Bu.tw~nkle &amp; Rocky
13
a oo ~ Capt Kan9oaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame Sf 33,
6

Lasste 6

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15, Romper Room 8 Con
cenlrahon 6 Fnendty Junct1on 10 Ben Casey 13 Whal

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Every Woman Wants to Know 3
Oswald " Here IS a rubber
ToTeii TheTrulhJ Jeopardy6 Hazet8
brrdge hand that got all four 109 3000 - Omah Shore 3, :5 Dtck Van Dyke 13 Jokers Wild 8, 10
players mad. South took one
Stx Calltng 6
look at dummy and asked 10 30Columbus
- Concentration 3, 15 Ph1l Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13
why his partner couldn't
Pnce Is R1ghl 8, 10
have rebtd to three clubs m- 11 00 - Sate ol the Century 3 4, 15 Love Amen can Style 6
Ga mbtt 8 10 Password 13
stead of ~1vmg an 1mmed1ate
11
30
- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Love of Ltle 8 10 Bew•lched
ratse wrth three s m a 11
6,
trumps North replied to the 12 00 -13 Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Ctub 4
effect that he had a bad hand
Jackte Obltnger 8 News 10 13
and wanted to make a mtnl- 12 25 - CBS News 8
mum rebtd and that tf South 12 30- 3 W's Gamel 15 Split Second6 Search for Tomorrow8
drdn't like the grand slam
10
contract, no one had made 1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13 It's Your Bet 8, Green
Acres 10, Watch Your Ch1ld 15
hrm btd it "
I 30 - 3 On A Mat ch 3, 4 15 Lei's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
Jtm "I see why East and
World Turns 8, 10
West got mad Undoubtedly 2 00 - Days of Our L•ves 3, 4 15 Newlywed Game 13, M1ke
Douglass 6, Gu1dmg L1ght 8, 10
South made the grand slam
2
30
- Doctors 3, 4, 15, Dating Game l3 Edge of N1ght 8, 10
by takrng the best percentJust
Generat•on 20
age play "
3 00 - General Hosp1tal 6, 13 Another World 3 4, 15 Love
Splendored Thtng 8 10 Just Generaf•on 20
Oswald "Exactly He won
the dramond lead , entered 3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4, 15 One L•fe to Live 6, 13
Secret Storm 8, 10 Magg•ea nd the Beautiful Ma ch me 20
dummy w1th the queen of 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20, 33 Love
clubs . led the rime of trumps
American Style 13 Merv Gnffm 4 Fllntstones 6 Glll1gan s
and let tt ride after East
Isle 8, Mov•e· "Three Faces West 10
played low When both op- 4 25- Sports Club 6
ponents followed to the sec- 4 30 - t Love Lucy 6 Petltcoat Junct1on 3 Damet Boone 13
Grltftn 8 , Andy Gnfflth 15
ond trump lead there were 5 00Merv
DICk
Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers 20 33 Ponderosa 3 4
no further problems He
Daniel Boone 6
made the slam whtle the op- 5 30 - Marshatl D1llon 15, Elec Co 33 DragnetS Gomer Pyle
ponents glowered and com13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
plamed about hts bemg able 6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 Around The Bend 33
to fall in a river and come 6 30 - News 3, 4, 6 8, 10, 15 I Dream of Jeannte 13 Growmg
H1m Up 33
up wtth a f1sh m his mouth "
7 oo - News 6, 10, What's My Lines, Elec Co 20 Andy Gnfflfh
J 1m "I can't blame them
15, Beatthe Clock 4, I've Got ASecret 13 Truth or Conseq 3,
Sa1nl 15 Elec Co 20
The less declarer says the
better Of course, he dld take 7 30 ~ ThiS ts Your Ltfe3, To Tell The Truth 6 Prtee Is Rtght 8
10, BeafTheCiock 13 , RFD20, Feast of Language33
the best line of play, but 8 00
- Bonanza 3 4, 15, Temperatures R• s•ng 6, lJ, Mauoe 1$
even w1th that lme hts
10 Age of Anx1ety 13, Oh1o ThiS Week 20 Age of Anx1ety 33
chance for success was less 8 30 - Elect1on Coveraae 20 Dateline Amenca 33
than 25 per cent but the 25 9 00 - Behind The Lines 33
per cent chance had maten- 9 30- Marshall Sports 33
10 OO - NBCReport3, 4, 15 MarcusWelby,M D 6,13 News20
alized ''
11 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 14 15
(HEW5PAPEl lioiTUPitiSl ASSN)
11 30 - Election Coverage 3, 4, 8, 10,~1 o, 15
' I
11 00 - Your Health 4
'
,f,
1 30- News, W~fher, 4) ~oca'f(~ews 13 ',1 1

-

The b1dd1ng has been
West

North

2.

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&amp; THINGS

South

l!bt

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You, South, hold
.AK882 ¥AZ +5 ,foAK862

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Do your country a favor today and help someone to vote.
I mean really give some sort of assrstance, in one way or
What do you do now'
A-Bid six apadea only. U another, to a voterwhonught not otherwise make rt to the polls
This doesn't mctude the husband who gives his wife a lift to
your partner held lour spades
to the queen, an aoo and two the polling place, or looks after the kids while she's gone No
kiDfl he would hove bid aevon fudging, please, because this couple c11res enough to vote,
spodes directly over your live
no-trump.. He can't have the llllyway.
Try to think of somebody m your netghborhood, or your
queen of apodes.
TODAY'S QUESTION
community, who might want to vote, but maybe JUSt ISD't able to
Your partner opens one club lo do so. Then get m touch With them - thiS evenmg, if possible What do you respond wrth
.Q84Z¥K153 +A71S,fo3 and make arrllllgements lo see that they have that chance to cast
a ballot
Anawer tomorrow
And try, for a moment, to forget what party they belong to.
Try lo look at the bigger ptcture, and remember that castmg
your
vote IS the REAL "participatory democracy" the kltm have
About Coyotes
been screaming about
Coyotes are about three
Don't predicate your asststance on support for any parfeet long, lncludlng a bushy
16-inch tail, we1gh about 30 ticular candidate or cause. Take them anyway Electioneer them
pounds, and have a shaggy on the phone, or m the car, but make it clear that you, YOU, Y-Obuff coat w1th white under- Ucare enough about Amenca lo see that they exercise one of the
sides Their life 11pan 1s about most precious of Uberties, regardless.
13 years.
Don't count on your local political orglllllzatlon 1o get out the
vote. They'll be working, anyhow, and thiS IS good Two offers
are better than none.
Don't let anyone pre-empt tbe Job you, lllld you alone, are
going to do : Get at least one fellow American Into that votmg
booth.
Maybe It'll be that young mother down the street, who could
get away If she bad someone to babySit for an hour, or meet the
kids when they get home from school.
Maybe it's that senior citizen who doesn't own a car
Maybe It's the convalescent, or shut-In, who failed to cast an
Another exercise device ts absentee ballot. With help, maybe tbe person 1B strong enough to
the tension or stretch sprmgs getout-lfsomeonecaresenoughtobelpenough.
• Maybe It's the young voter, who regtstered with stars in his
that you can hold between
your hands and stretch the (or her) e""s but needs 8 littl d 1o t
springs out using the mus,. '
e nu ge s rengtben hiS (or her)
cles between your shoulder resolution to work within the system, Instead of denouncing it.
blades. Most trapeze work,
Maybe it's the family that simply doesn't care. It could be
or any type of exercise like that lf you showed them that you care, then tbey would care
climbing ropes ·hand over enough to cast their ballots
hand are useful in developThink about it this evening. Do somethmg about It, tonight or
lng the shoulder muscles tomorrow.
•
You do not need exercises
But d011 'I it til
that will develop the muscles
qu lUI you.ve accomplished your IDISSion and
over the front of the chest helped someone to vote.
'
They may already be too
Even if your allegiance 1B totailly ~trong and unremitting to
strong in eompartson to your the Republican or tbe Democratic Party,I'll give you odds that
weaker muscles between the within five years (ten at the most), you'll be saying and proudly
shoulder blades.
"Well, I'm a stl'()llg Dem~at (or Republican), bui baCk in 1wi
I am sure your physical I cared enough about my collntry that I made sure that one
education teaclier wolild be Republlcan (or DemOcrat) got to the piJlla and voted •becauae
glad to help you with a set of lhllll the flneat thing a citizen cap do _ pick hla '
exercises that would help you IIM!IIt bued 111 hll own cOIIBCI
,
own governalong thl1 line But In the
'
ence.
meantime Ilk· your family
You'll he.- Iota 01 "get-out-the-vote" 111e11111gee thla linie of
doctor to dlri!ct you to an Ylll'· Molt wDI be rtlncere. SGiDe wiD be apeclai pleadings. Some
orthopedic apeclalllt If you . wDJrepr ntnarrowlntereata.ButlllwDJberjght
an really concerned about
Thlalln'toneoflhose lamnotaaklngyouto ·but
the pouibiUty of a deformity Yoa're too lntelllgenl to
OllrfJellgo and YOte.
In your back.
··"'do
Y
, right? What I
(MlWIPAP!l iNTUiliSI ASSN. I
ID
IIi II t0 &amp;et IOmtone else to \'Ote- to tale illl
the lllpl Dilled to fllllke certain that penon §ell to the...,,. Do
lt.
Pie•.
~
..-:
........
I

Is 16-Year-Old HUJ!!pbacked?
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb -- I am 16
years old and very physically fit About two years ago
someone made a remark
about me bemg "humpbacked " The tdea was tQtally new to me Later I was
told by others also that I was
humpbacked I was also told
to hold up my- shoulders and
I soon discovered that I was
In fact humpbacked. The
hump had developed I think
from the shoulders stumpmg,
It 1s situated a httle below
my shoulder blade It lsn!t
noticeable when I wear a
shirt, but without a shirt the
hump is faidy obvious. It
seems like, since I am young,
the problem could be corrected with the nght treatment Is there anything I can
do to straighten my back•

Dear Reader - It ts dlffr- Take a look at some of your
cult to say how much can be - friends' photographs that are
done wrthout lmowmg how taken face on and cover up
much of a deform1ty you the right h~lt ,with a sheet of
really have Your letter sug- paper and look at the left
gests to me that 11 is not a s1de of the body. Now revery marked deformity, 1f tt verse the procedure and you
can't be noticed when your wtll see that many people
sh1rt rs on. As ltnportant as look entirely different on the
1t ts to you, I doubt very r1ght and left halt Jf their
much that tt makes a differ- bOdy.
ence to anybOdy else Some- I wish you would see an
times people f1x their atten- orthop~1c specialist and let
tton on a mmor defect or the him look at the amount of
bo&lt;ly and exaggerate tts im- curvature you have and see
portance
tf 11 is really something that
Practically no one has a you should concern yourself
completely normal, symmet- about or not
rlcal bOdy You may be
ded
surprised to know that al- t.s f~ as your roun
most everybody has at least slioullfers are concerned, this
a little shortening of one leg suggests poor posture habits
You could do quite a bit for
There is a tendency for one this by becoming more t:onhalf of the body to be slightlf. scious about botdlng your
larger than the other 1hal shoulders back. You could
...,:.--.:-----__.,-~--....:...--__,---- also take 1 series of exer·
cises to strengthen the musDear Fighters:
Though you won't admit it, I'd ~ 38 sex probably IS~ big cles between your sboulder
part of the problem. Now that the time gt'l)WS short, you're no blades Since your letter suggests you are athletically 111doubt growing Slllllous, bit.perhaps in a way you don't SUlljlecl. cllned
this woUld be a good
Are you so Jockell lilto a pJacid, Jjlltonlc frleildshlp that you program for yci\1. You can
subconscloualy quelltlon your love for esch other? Maybe you use pulley weights Ill a gym·
don't really want the "till death do us part" thing because you nasium to weight your arms
and then sw!q your arms
8uspeel that It COULD be deadly dull ·
backward or 'rotate them in
Why not talle a good long look at your relatlgnship and,lf it
a backward circle using the
IIPPrailll!l more "habi\" than desire, either change your attitudes muacles between the I shoul•
pl'9lllpt1y or CIIICe1 the wedAin..,,
...,.., . - H.
der bladea.

Wanchlae

_.,.you

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...... Ill tllit .......,..,
1551, hllo Citr Slllfiao, H"' Yori,
H Y. 111019. fw • .., Ill Or• ..._.,
....,_ .. ,.., ....... $0

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lw ....... IV..... Wilt.

'

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'"lbb• thing nee IIIW')' for the triqmph ri evil is for good
IIM!II to do IIOIJinl." - Edmund Burke.
+++

ON THE TV DIAL: Tolly ~en apecJal on WC!fS.'l'V at a
bit ''Go_." Clll be fluid 1111 WBNS.TV
'
WI, WBI'N-TV.
.,. Colti-Patrlota

--,-the Daily 8elltinei, Mlddle~rt-Pomeroy, o,Nov 6, 1972 Pro Standings

Steelers talk

NFL Standings
By Un1ted Press International

Nattonal Conference

Washg ton
Dallas
NY G1ants
Sf

LOUI S

Ph1la

Detro•t
BY JOE CARNICEILI
UP! Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Steelers, who
haven't smelled a htle In 40
years In the National Football
League, suddenly are tallung
Super Bowl-and people are
listemng
The Sleelers, who have
never won a litle of
any sort smce they
entered the league m 1933,
look a b1g step 1ow11rd thell'
fll'st one Sunday when they
trampled the Cincinnati !limgals, 40-17 Terry Bradshaw
threw three touchdowns passes
and rookte Franco Harris
rushed for 101 yards 1o spark
the vtc!oty and move the
Steelers a game ahead of the
Bengals 111 the Amertcan
Conference Central DIVISion.
The sound d1-ubbmg of the
Bengals, who had beaten
Pittsburgh, 15-10, earlier this
season on five Horst
Muhlmann field goals, touched
off er1esof "Super Bowl" m the
Pittsburgh dressmg room but
young Coach Chuck Noll, who
has bull! the club from a 1-13
disaster four years ago, was
more realisttc
"We have another big game
next week," Noll satd,
referrmg to the meetmg w1th
Kansas City. "It's a little too
early for things like that. We
played very well today and

Terry had one of his best days 27 to Efd Podolak for a third as
as a pro."
the Chrefs beat Oakland
Bradshaw threw TO ~sses
Btll Kibner, subbmg for the
of 28 and 34 yards to Frank InJured Sonny Jurgensen,
LewiS and l3 to Larry Brown to threw TD passes of 45, 70and 89
highlight the rout The Steeters yards to lead the Redksms over
built a ~ lead before Cm- the Jets
cinnat1 was able to score
Dallas remamed a game
Fll's\place was on the lme m behind Washmgton m the NFC
.two other dtvtsrons and both East as Cr:ug Morton ran
were decided rather hlllldily seven y~~rds for one score and
Len Dawson threw three ID passed one-yard to Mike D1tka
passes to spark the Kansas for a.1other to defeat San
Ctty Chiefs to a 27-14 vtctory Drego
over the Oakland Ratde,·s and
Mercury Moms ran for two
frrst place m the AFC West and TDs and Garo Yeprem1an
W1ll1e ElliSOn and Jun Ber- kicked thrte fll'st half fteld
telsen rllll for short TDs to hft goals as Mtamt ran 1ts record
lie Los Angeles Rams to a 'JJJ-7 to 8-0 wtth a victory over the
tnumph over the Atlanta B1lls Morrts scored on runs of
Falcons and the NFC Western 22 and four yards
lead
John Brockmgton ran for 133
Elsewhere, Washmgton yards and seared three ms to
drubbed the New York .Jets, 35- lead the Packers over the
17, Dati~~ downed San Otego, 49ers
34-28, Green Bay beat San
DetrOit remamed tied wtlh
Francrsco, 34-24, DetrOit shut Green Bay for the NFC Central
out Chicago, 14-0, M1am1 lead as Steve Owens and Greg
remamed unbeaten wrth a 30-16 Landry each plunged a yard
romp past Buffalo, Cleveland for scores and Leroy Kelly's
blanked Houston, 20-0, Mmnn- two IDs helped the Browns
sola trounced New Orleans, 37- down
Houston
Fran
6, the New York Gtants Tarkenton's two TO passes
defeated Denver, 29-17, and St enabled the Vtkmgs to rout
LouiS and Philadelphra lied, 6- New Orleans and Joe Orduna's
6 Baltunore IS at New England one-yard run and a 37-yard
tomght
mterceptron return for a score
Dawson passed 29 y~~rds to by Jun F1les within the last 35
Wendell Hayes for one score, 42 _ seconds of the first half boosted
to Robert West for another and the Gtants over Denver

Browns remain alive
by posting 20-0 AFC win
erowd smce Dec 4, 1966 lo
watch the Browns, 61,985,
dtdn't see much offenstve
action m the first half by the
12th and 13th ranked offensive
teams 111 the NFL
Fifteen punts were booted by
both clubs durmg the first
three quarters.
The only sconng m the frrst
30 mmutes ll(as a 19-)(ard I1eId
goal by Cockroft after Bo
;l'JOrlj~ iti"l1/iwed a;'liimlJled
purit on the' ltouston n-yard
Ime m the f1rst quarter.
"We started to call more
plays
from the bench rn the
By Chet Tannehill
second half to help Mtke
Ph1pps get off those tough
, second and etght calls," sa1d
.-,,...,...,.,....,....,......,_."'1....~""'-;..,~.....,.....,~....~~ Skorrch, whose club has now
whipped the 01lers SIX strarght
We will watt another year to watch a southeastern Oh1o ttmes.
"Phipps moved the team
football team of any class In the regiOnal and state championship
games Even our SEOAL champion, Ironton, is rated by com- outside because the Ollers
puter as llllOther also-ran. The Tigers' Joss to Triple A Ports- were pluggmg the mstde
mouth early mthe season didn't help Hanmbal River (where the runmng game. He used more
heck ts that!') IS No 1 m our Region 7 Class AA Iron!on 1s play acbon passes and they
ranked •th. Warren Kennedy of Reg10n 1 (8-8-0) IS ranked No 1 worked great,'' sa1d Skonch
The Browns' offensive show
in Ohio of Class AA schools
Even so, some fans may want to catch the state's best teams sputtered and stalled rn the
m action. To that end, the followmg schedule of play-offs IS frrst half and It took a stiff
defensive stlllld m·the openmg
printed below
sesston lo keep Houston from
scoring
CLASS 'A' SEMI·FINALS
Trailing ~ the Orlers moved
At Mansfield, Saturday, Nov. 18, 1972, 7:30pm, Reg10n II from tl1ell' three yard lme to
wiMer vs Region 10 winner, Game Mllllager, Wilham E the Browns' seven Three
Frazter, Supervisor, H. PE &amp; R., Mansfteld City Schools, 270 W running plays put the hall on
6th St., Mansfield, Ohto (419) 5~11
the one but Fred W1llts was
AI Upper Arlington, Saturday, l')ovember 18, 1972,7 30p.m, stopped for no gam on fourth
Region 12 winner vs. Regton 9 wmner , game manager, Richard down.
Fryman, Athletic Direclor, Upper Arlington H S , 1650
Phipps, who connected on
Rulgevtew, Cohunbus, Oh1o 43221 (614) 488-3105 Ext 47
nine of 20 passes for 152 yards,
CLASS 'A' CHAMPIONSHIP
used his throwmg lo set up
At Ohro Wesleyan UruverSlty, Delaware, Friday, November Cockroft's second filed goal
24, 1972, 1:30 p.m. game manager, Robert Struner, Department and Kelly's first touchdown
"We looked bad m that first
of Athletics, Ohio Wesleyan Umverstty, Delaware, Oh1o 43015
half because we mrxed up
(814) 363-1261 Ext 393
signals
on three occasiOns, and
CLASS 'AA' SEMI·FINALS
At Massillon,Fridily, November 17, 1972, 7 30 p.m, Regton 7 had a few nuxed assignments
wiMer vs. Reg1on 5 wmner, game manager, Roger Price, We should have scored 20
Faculty Manager, Washington H. S., 340 First St, S E , points," satd Phtpps
The third year quarterback
Massillon, Ohio 44646 (216) 832-506-4
from
Purdue hit Fatr Hooker
At Troy, Friday, November 17, 1972, 7 30 p m., Regron 6
Winner vs. RegiOQ 8 winner; game manager, Norvin Smith, with a JQ;yard pass the fll'st
Athletic Director, 'rrqy lfigh School, Staunton Rd , Troy, Ohro play of the second half and frve
plays later Cockroft kicked a
tsr/3 (513) 335-5802.
32-yard f1eld goal to grve the
CLASS 'AA' CHAMPIONSHIP
Browns a 6-11 lead.
At Massillon, Friday, November 24, 1972, 7 30 p m., game
A IO.yard pass to Bo Scott
manager, Roger Price (see abOve) .
1111d a 2!)-yarder lo Milt Morm
CLASS 'AAA' SEMI·FINALS-DOUBLE HEADER
put the ball on the Houslon
AI Ohio State Uruverllity, Columbus, Saturday, November 18, three and Kelly capped the 671972, Ua.m.,Region 3wlnnervs. Region 4wmner.
yard drive by diving over from
At Ohio State University, Columbus, Saturday, Nov 18, 1972, the one
2p.m., Region I wimer vs. Regron 2wmner.
Games Manager Richard Delaney, Asst Director, Dept of
Athletics, OSU","St. John Arena, ColUmbus, Ohio 43210 (614) 42211316.
CLASS 'AAA' CHAMPIONSHIP
At Akron, Rubber Bowl, Saturday, November 25, 1972, 1 30
.
'
p.m., game manager, GofdOil Lai'!On, Athletic Director, Dept "Of
Athletics, Akron Universtty, 320 E. Buchtel Ave., Akron, Ohio
4430t (218) 762-2441, Ext. 558.
CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Browns coach Nick
Skor1ch started calling the
plays lit the second half Sunday
and helped his team contlllUe
its mastery over the Houston
Oilers.
A pair of f1eld goals by Don

Cockroft were the only pomts
the Browns put on the
scoreboard before Leroy Kelly
scored fourth quarter touchdowns on runs of one and 14
yards to give the Browns a 28-0
vtclory over the Oilers
The smallest hometown

the ·sports"''"

Desk

Green Bay

Mtnneso ta

Ch1cago

Los Ang
Atlanta
San Fran
NewOrlns

East
wltpct pfpa
7 1 0 875 100 111
6 2 0 750 184 125
5 3 0 625 197 164
2 5 1 313 98 162
1 6 I 188 68 177
Central
wlt pctplpa
5 3 0 6?5 199 169
53 0 625t56 144
4 4 0 500 183 121
3 4 I 438 132 142
West
wtt pctpfpa
5 2 1 688 167 '32
4 4 0 500 163 163
3 4 I 438 208 154
1 6 I 188 115 217

Amen can Conference

East
w It pet pf pa
Mtamt
8 0 0 1000 198 103
N Y Jets 5 3 0 625 238 189
New Eng 2 5 0 286 92 220
Buffal o
2 6 0 250 165 212
Battmre
1 6 0 143 94 145
Central
w t t pet pf-pa
P•tlsbgh 6 2 0 750 217 127
CtnCinnaft 5 3 0 625 155 132
Cleveland 5 3 0 625 141 134
Hou ston
1 7 0 125 87 215
West
w t I pel pf pa
Kan C1ty 5 3 0 625 195 140
Oakland
4 3 I 563 209 155
San D•ego 2 5 1 313 152 203
Denver
2 6 0 250 165 222
Sunday's Results

TICKET INFORMATION
Student Tickets, Students may ptrchase tickets from their
high school for any !If the champi011shlp games at a price of $1
per ticket if pli'ChUed in advance. The lchooll making tbe ptayl«• ~ obt1Jn additlonetllludeni tickets to be 10ld at $lin ad'P.nce of the ~· No student tklleta will be ~vallable at any
game site tbe CliY bf the game.
J
· Adult Tlcketa, Adulll may obtain pre-game t!cttets at $2.50
tram any l!llb IChool prior to November 6, 1972 or from achools
selected fGr the plq.ofra after N~ber 12, 1872.
Alllidrt!UtNr:h game lite wiD be $3. No student ticketl wiD
be 101c1 eiCJ •-lite tbe rilly of tile game.

McCLURE'
S
'

4111&amp; Locust

By MIKE RABUN
UP! Sports Writer
SAN ANTONIO, Tex (UP! ).
- Mtke Htll dtd not really owe
the second victory of hts pro
golf Career to a kmd gesture by
Lee Trevmo Htll was playmg

too good to lose, anyway
But Htll , who captured the
$25,000 ftrst pnze at the Texas
0pen Sunday, wanted tt known
how much he apprecl8ted what
Trevmo had done for hrm
dunng the frna l round.

Htll had a four stroke lead
He flmshed two shots IQ front
over Trevmo to start the !mal of Trevmo, who had a frnal
round over the 7,011-yard, par- round of flve-under 67, and four
72 Woodlake Golf Club course, shots m front of chargmg Phll
and the two were parred Rodr,l••, ,,!walso had a closmg
together for the last 16 holes 67
The crowd which turned out
Tre•mo won $14,300 and
under murky sktes was ali for Rodgers took home $8,850
Lee and Lee knew tl
Tied m fourth place wtth 278s
Lee realized that each lime were Ch1 Cht Rodnguez, Ben
he holed 'l putt, even If Htll sllll Kern, Bobby Nichols, Brad
had a putt left to make, the Anderson and Charles Coody,
bulk of the gallery would begm who had been only three
rushmg to the next hole
st1 okes off the pace to start the
"You go ahead and pull out day
fust each lime," Trevmo said
Hill wrapped up the tourto Htll
namcnt wrth three straight
"That JUSt shows )OU what a btrdtes begmmng at the 12th
Franklin, mcludmg a fourth gentleman Lee 1s," said Hrll, hole
quarter t1e-br eaker, to beat 33, who seldom gets the
At that pomt rrevmo had
Indiana , 21-7, and No 4 Ohw publicity on the course or off closed the deficit to two
State raUted to top Mumesota the course tha t hiS brother strokes, but Htll, who hit 17
27·19
Dave does "That was a super greens, got hot with hts putter
Mtclugan and Oh1o State both th mg he dtd He was trymg to
He ran m a 10-footer at the
have 5-0 conference records and beat me just as hard as he 12th, a 10-footer at the 13th and
t11 ree games to play Purdue IS could, too, and he was domg an etght-footer at the 14th That
4-1 and Mtchtgan State 3·1-1
somelhmg to help me "
boosted hrm to a ftve sttoke
A Mtchtgan State vtclory over
Htllneeded little help, though, lead over Trevmo and not even
the Buckeyes m thetr regronal- m frnng his fourth straight the whoops and yells from the
ly.lclevtsed meetmg Saturday 1ound In the 60s to post a 72- , gallery could help Trevino
at East Lansmg would leave hole total of 15 under 273
make up that margm
Mtclugan In qndtsputed possesSion of the confe1 ence lead,
assummg the Wolvennes beat
weak Iowa
Daugherty said he was 'mo1 e
relaxed ' Saturda) than! had

Spartans eye

win over OSU

CHICAGO I UPI )- It would be
tromc If Duffy Daugherty's
resignatiOn as the MIChigan
State football coach helped ease
archnval Mrclugan's path to
the Rose Bowl, but that rs
exact!) what mtght be happenmg
The Spartans gave !herr
outgomg coach the game ball
after beatmg Purdue 22-12
Saturday to knock the Botler
makers from a three-way l!e
Oetrott 14 Ch tcago o
lot
the Btg len lead, and thrs
Pttlsburgh 40 Ct ncmna ft 17
week they get a chance to do
N Y G•anls 29 Denver 17
Cleve land 20 Hou slon o
lhe same thmg to Ohw State
M1am1 30 Bu ff alo 16
We won 1t for Duffy," sa1d
Wash~ngton 35 NY Jets 17
quarterback
Mark Niesen, who
Mmnesota 37 New Orleans 6
Philadelphia 6 St LoUis 6
scored touchdowns on runs of
Green Bay 34 San Franctsco 57 and 61 yards "We flgur e
24
he's a goud coach It \\as us
Los Angeles 20 Atlanta 7
Kansas City 27 Oakland 14
who had to change, not lnm
Dallas 34 San D•ego 28
We wete dow n, and 1t wasn t
I only games scheduled)
Duffy s fault '
Monday's Games
Ba lltmore at New England Daugherty announced Fr tday
ln•g hf l
mght he was 1 estgn mg at the
(only game scheduled 1
end
of thiS season, hrs 19th as
Sunday's Games
the Mtchtgan State coach, and
Balttmore at San Franctsco
Buffalo at N Y Jets
safety Brad Van Pelt sard the
Denver at Los Angeles
dectswnspurred l.ts teammates
Detrolf at M1nnesota
on Saturday because "We owed
Green Bay at Ch tcago
Ka nsas C1ty at Plltsburgh
It to h1m ''
New England at Mtamt
We want to do our best to
New Orleans al Atlanta
help
hun go out a wmner ,"Van
N Y G1antsat Wash1ngton
Oakland at Cmcmnaft
Pelt satd
Ph dadelph ta at Houston
Mtchrgan , btddmg to become
St LOUIS at Dallas
the first Btg Ten team to make
lonty games schedul ed
a repeat trtp to the Rose Bowl
ABA Standmgs
now that the non-repeat rule
By United Press International has been lifted, and OhiO State
East
w t Pel g b remamed unbea tenand lied for
Carolma
9 - 4 692 the conference lead with
Kentucky
5 6 455 3
boon sh vrctones Saturday
V1rgm1a
6 8 429 3112
New York
5 7 417 3,12 TheWolvermes,rankedNo a
MemphiS
3 8 273 5
In the natron, got two touchWest
b downsfromquarterback Denms
Utah
w.9 15 P~!i 9
lndtana
7 4 636 '2
The Dai~ Sentinel
San D1ego
7 6 538 1
DEVOTED
TO THE
I
INTEREST OF
, Denver
Dallas ,
, J7 76 538
300 4
MEJGS·MASON AREA
Sunday's Results
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Ent Ed
1, Denver 137 New York 107
ROBEU H'OEFLICH,
San D1ego 132 Vlrg ~nta 121
C•tyo Ed•tor
!Only games scheduled)
P1Jbl 1shed da•ly e xc ept
Monday's Games
by The Oh10 Valley
Utah vs Carolma at Rale1gh Saturday
Publishing Company , 111
!Only game scheduled)
Court St
Pomeroy Oh io

been Ill some tune "
'I m JUSt gomg to prepare

fur Ohw State and let (athletic
dn ector) Burt Smtih do all the
work on fmdmg a successor for
me '
llhnms also made Its coach,
Bob Blackman, happy Saturday
by wmmng Its first game of the
season after losmg seven
Quar let backMtke Wells ran for
two touchdowns and passed for
two more as the llhm walloped
Not thwestern , 43-14, scormg
four touchdowns m less than
seven mmules m the third
quarter
Iowa made a goallme stand
late in the fourth quarter but
then gave up a safety with JUSt
3 42 to play to allow Wtsconsm
lo escape wtth a 16-14 victory m
the other Big Ten eame

So what?
They're insured.

You've heard the expression . It's a ratiOnalization as common as a cliche. And as
hollow. There is more at issue than property. What the rat iona li zing phrase
glosses over is the sacredness of all thm gs
within the community of man. The respect
and kindness we owe one another as birthright. When we break this trust we contribute to moral pollution.

1

NBA Standmgs
By Umted Press lnlernahonal
Eastern Conference

Allanite DrviSion
w I. pet g b
Boston
10 1 909
New York
10 2 833 'h
Buffalo
3 8 273 7
Ph !I a
0 13 000 11
Central

Houston
Atlanta
Balt1 more
Cleveland

DIVISIOn

wlpctgb
7 4 636
6 6 500 ! 1/2
5 6 455 2
4 10 286
4112

Western Conference

MidWest DIVISIOn

wlpctgb
M1lwaukee
9 2 818
Ch•cago
8 4 667 1'12
~1 Z':;aha
; ~
~
PaCJitc DrviSlon
w 1 pet g b
GoldenSlate 8 2 soo •12
Los Angeles ro 3 769 Phoen•x
5 5 500 3'12
Seattl e
4 a 333 5112

m

PortlandSunday's1Results
10 091

8

131 Ph1tadelphla
PhoeniX 107 Cleveland
106
11 ~1iwaukee
Los Angeles 124 Seattle 115
(only ga mes scheduled)

Canada ranks second m
area among the nations of
the world It IS exceeded only by the Sov1et Umon

1

Your

Agent

.U769 Bus1ness Olf..tce Phone
992 2156 Ed 1torial Phone 992

2157

Second class postage Pb•&lt;l at

Pomero y Oh10
Nat 1o nal advert1S1no
repruentattYe
Bott•ne lt.
Gallagher , '" ' , 12 East .42nd
St New York City New York
Subscr•ptton rates
De
I I Yered by ca rr 1er where
~~h allabl e SO cents per week
By Motor Rou te where ca rr •er
One
sery 1ce not available
month S1 7S By ma•l In Oh 10
and W Va One )leer SU 00
Snc months $7 25 Three
months U 50 Subscrq:. t1on
pr,ce 1ncludes Sunday T1mes
Sent• nel

Arkenwyke Yew
The E_ngltsh barons compelled Krng John to stgn the
Magna Carta (cornerstone of
Anglo-Saxon hbertres) under the Arkenwyke yew tree
at Runnymede England

Security Is Love
If emergencies
arise, is your family adequately cov·
ered? Secure their
well-being with a
revised policy

U1n1ult U1 Soon

The community of man . God's club.
You're a life member.

RIAL

Davis-Wner Ins.

.......
II.

RELIG ION IN AMERICAN LI FE
Ad'viHII sl ng contrlbuleel for tl}e PLiblic rood In ~oopmtlon wfth
The Achertlslng Counc11 and tht International Newspaper Adverthlna: E~ e cutl~u

'

••lllllll~llll!~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~-~~~~~~!'11-~1111-••••••••

KINGS ARMs NITE CLUB
3 MILES SOUTH OF MIDDLEPORT ON ST. RT. 7

Monday's G.:,mes

New York at Port Iand
(only game scheduled)

SHIRt
FINISHING

PRESENTS

REVUE '72
2 Big Weeks • Beginning Tonight Thru 18th.

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ul At 5

~~-~

'

1HE NEW IMPRESSIONS

' Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners,

''Thr~

Record Bre8king Years
in Daytona Beach"

116 E. lnd, Pom..roy

With the great Freddie Spicer on drums
(comparable to Lours Bellson) , plus Harry
Kinzey on sax, Boots Randolph style, with
specialties by

IIUSTLE

AFfEB
EVERY
FOOTBAIJ.
GAME
To Get Your
Goodies FI'Orn

Mike Hill captures Texas Open

Exotic Midori Ashikawa and Lovely Joni Craig

AND STARRING
JAY HARVEY
'", _____......./ ,.' ·• '

"One of the Best Comedians of our Time"
Danclog an_d continuous entertainment 9 p.m. to 2 a m.::nltely.- l!opular
prIces - small cover charge.

GEORGE HAJ..L AND THE HALLMARKS
Come and

0.

,I

I

I

�•
--~--

~--+---~,---~-

- - - -- - -----

2- The Dally Sentmel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Nov 6, 1972

Four More Years

EDITORIAL

Parochiaid Still
Unsolved Problem
One of the few thmgs both presidential candidates
agreed upon m 1972 was the need for some 101m of tax
ard or tax rehef for parents of parochral schoolchtld ren
It remams to be seen 11 h,ethe1 a pr estdent so mcltned
and a Congt ess favora bly disposed can come up with
a form ula whtch wtll meet the Fu s! Amendment test ul
separation of church and stat e m the eyes of the Sup! eme
Court
In the meantime, a case fo1 public ard to 1eltgwus
educal!on was made recently by the authot of a lettet
to The Amencan School Board Journal
"Some people do mdeed believe m God wrote James
J Mason, · and consider the relationship between man
and God to be of such pnmary concern that tl should
permeate the educatiOnal process
'Other people believe differently , and either consider
God to be a myth or unrmportant They belreve that edu
calion should be silent on the subject
"Why should the latter group, any more than the
former, expect to have their postl!on taught at the ex
pense of those who don t share It ? The money taken hom
parochial school parents for pubhc schools IS spent on a
rebgwn- secular humamsm- Just as truly as would be
the converse There IS simply no such thmg as a 'neutr al'
posrtton on relrgton "
The only farr system he concluded , would be for each
taxpayer to earmark hts taxes for the school he wants to
support That way no one' s conscience would be t1 odden
upon
The baste fallacy m this ar~ument ts the assumpllon
that the questiOn rs one of believers In God versu&lt; nonbehevers It IS not It IS a question of what rs the best
educational compromise rn the pluralistic socrety that ts
Amenca. a plurahsm which mcludes many different
kmds of behevers as well as nonbelrevers
At one lime. dally prayers , Btble readmgs and re.
teased lime for relrg10us mstrucl!on were normal practices m public schools Even then, however, many Catholrc parents chose to send their chrldren to the schools
marntamed by their church
Many non·Catholrc parents were hkewtse unhappy with
a religious curnculum which of necessity had to be nondenominatiOnal and noncontroversial or tf you will
watered down almost to meanrnglessness
Expenence has dictated that the public schools whrch
are supported by all the people for the benefit of all chtl
dren, must str1ve for neutrality m thrs sphere When
parents have trouble agreemg on a srmple thmg like a
nondenominational prayer, certaml1 there 1s no way to
"permeate the educabonal process' wtth reiigrous teach
mg that would not arouse mtense dtsputat10n ,m the com·
mumty and probably offend believers more than nonbelievers
If this has resulted, as some allege, m a btas tow at d
"secular humamsm " rn the schools, 11 IS also true that
large numbers of parents seem to have adbrcated their
own responsrbllrly for overseemg the religious or moral
trammg of !herr chtldren m the best place for It- the
home.
In thts country parents are and always have been free
to send thetr children to prrvate schools, for religiOus
reasons or for reasons qUite unconnected with religiOn
Nerther that freedom nor beltef m God as opposed to
nonbebef m God 1s at issue
FJrst Amendment consrderatlons asrde, the only legrtr
mate issue for public debate IS whether or not 1! woutd
be m the best interest of the majority of Americans to
perm1t dtversion of tax monies awa~ , from the ~ublic
schools t&amp;,asstst a mmor1ty wh1ch, for whatever reasons,
does not Wish to avail Itself of the eaucal!on provided by
those schools

•• .·.·.•

t. •

• •,•,·.·,•,•,··,·,,·,·,·.··.•,•,v·

•,·,•• ',','.'./'.'

•,• •,.,.,·, · ·.·.v·.·......... ·••

Helen Help

Us. • •

By Helen Bottel

SAME MUSIC, DIFFERENT LYRICS
Dear Helen
I've written several tunes, but have never seen a reply mthe
paper Then you suspected a boy with a sumlar problem of
hoaxmg you, so perhaps you thmk I'm a hoaxer too. Please answer
I'm a m~~rrled businessman and well thought of locally It all
started when my wife kidded me about bemg a matd because I
helped with the dishes. One thing led to Mother and she made me
up like a woman, with her clothes, wig, cosmetics, etc It was all
in fun, but somehow 1t got to be a habrt
Through the years, she has bought women's clothes for me
lllld these are what I relax in at home. (My whole personality
chllllges when I'm in feminine attire.)
They were so comfortable that I began wearlfl~ women's
clothing when I went out-of-town on busmess trips. After the
day's work was done, I'd doll up "fejllale," and walk around
!own Sometunes I'd stnke up a conversation wtth another
woman but never with a man I am NOT homosexual
Well, my wtfefound out She discovered my women's clothes
in my suitcase, and now she wants to divorce me as she says I'm
tWisted
If she enjoyed my charade at home, why then does she think
I'm erazy when I carry it on outside - where no one wrll know?
Does she really like the tdea of a woman companion, but wants to
keep it seeret? - S S.P
DearS :
Yours IS a question for a clo8e-!Jl counselor; that rs why I
have avoided usmg It in the eolumn. A fetish can best be treated
by a psychiatrist, and that goes double If your wife also shared
the aberration '· or perhaps you two are completely r1ght for
each other, who knows?
One thing comes on strong, however, m all my letters from
part-time or beginning transvestites: they always blame !hell'
first cross-over on a member of the opposite sex - s1ster, wife,
girlfriend, mother - after whjch they either "just Cllll't help
themselves" or else they're still being "forced agamst their
wills."
If your preference for women's clothes threalells lo blight
your life, S S.P ., thljll I'd suggest first, honest self-apprausal
(slop blaming your wife - she Isn't the cause of your "spill
personality," though she may have encouraged tt); and second,
therapy.
Where therapy will lead, I don't know, but I can't help you
king-distance. Sorry ! - H.

+++

Dear Helen.

Jay .00 I have been engaged almost five years. We're
mature adults and have gotten along fine· we had a perfect,
placid rellticmblp SeX was no problem. We both d~cic!_~ 11 cOUI&lt;!_

1;111 uiiW lllliiTiage. '
~
But now, wltb the wedding date let for spring, we are con~1111&amp;. We l!llrt Ollt llice llld then the bomb drops
'Olen an jeeJouti'l, l'lvalry, doubll, re~~e~~bnenta. Yet we are
. . we loft Hcb other
,
With lllch 1 '-•
1
-'II
U~lp, sOOuid !helle hateful times
Mj PI IT - FIGHI'ERB

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BY JACK O'BRIAN
A COWARDLY WAY
TO MAKE MONEY
NEW YORK (KFS) - The new and
delrghtful "Oh Coward" mtm-revue of some 50
Noel Coward songs and verbal spangles exports
about $1,000 a week to Srr Noel m tax-happy
Swtlzerland It's at the l!hy New Theatre (E.
54th St ), grosses $14,000 a week and even sells
oulltsmatmess, umque among off-Bdwy shows
- even Its h1ts
It cost $25,000 to open .
"Dude" flopped for about $900,000 Art Carney's flymg htgh above hts TV sewer his 10 pet.
of theW Coast "Prrsoner of 2nd Ave " pard Art
$10,200 last week Tnm Lopez' press agents
are feedmg colummsts tales of three-gals-a-day
tnumphs; that's Hugh O'Bnan-style and
George Hamtltor.-rut publrctty which turned
satd gents mto targets of ridicule
Go see "Butley" whtch opened at the
Moresco Theater for the fmest actmg, by Alan
Bates, on any N Y stage
It's a merry
tragedy, a tale of a failed passmg heterosexual ,
whose pllght, as so often m real lrfe, htdes
behrnd cymcal, b1tchy destructiveness of
constant pseudo-w1tty msults
A London
Umverstly teacher's student-seductions are
mterrupled by brief marriage and fatherhood,
whereupon, as "Buttey" begms he IS cymcally,
lrghtly savaging that !mal rahonahzatron of hrs
horno,fate . The comedy IS there and lrke all
wrt, teeters on the sharpened blade between
comedy and destruction
Wtthrn a quick few hours, Sutley's w1fe
demands a dtvorce to marry a stable bore , hrs
submrsstve homosexual mate qurls him , an&lt;! he
bears up wtth constant laceratmg attacks on
hunself, and all others, friendless at the frnal
curtam, one of the subtlest upbeat endmgs
ever the next vulnerable youth on his seduction list proves too revollmg even for hts termmally untidy state, mentally and physically
Alan Bates manages to keep thrs srckly
pmwheel adazzle wrth one of the most
amazrngly compleat tour de weaknesses ever
seen on a stage, makes the usual homo-play
exported from London's West End seem d1stant,
ugly vulgartlles
Author S1mon Gray rates mtramural
raggmg - he 's also, as IS hts "Butley," a
teacher of Engl!J;h at London Umverstty , but
Gray boasts a w1fe and two children This Is
less a play than a br11lrant character exposrtron,
the litle character desperately strong m hts
sleazrness, It's never a glamomer of per-

Q!~sru

~

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t

version, for he Is a vrcttm full of protectrvely
dtsctphned aggressive hysterta The total heartbreak IS there, negatrves ftrmly rn place as
Butley slithers through hrs pntecttve armor of
sickly abuse, too old to weep, too cormmtted to
hts drab fate to manage a heteroseKual escape
The rest of a fme effectual cast plays tt
splendidly, but It's Alan Bates who domrnates rn
hts hopeless portrait of a man sentenced to
despair for life
Word of the London triwnph of "Sutley"
I Bates won all last season's stage laurels m tt)
broug~t out all the oldtune serious dramalovers
In a rare Frrst Ntght Audtence - dressed well,
no kooks apparent, even scads of evenmg
togged respecfurs of the durably mvaiided
serious legthmale theater
South Africa's self-termed "spare-paris
surgeon " Dr. ChriStraan Barnard blasted the
media for ballyhoomg his heart-transplant
experiments, Irony mdeed; he alone snatched at
every chance to appear m all medra from the
press to any TV or radto talk show in relentless
exploitatiOn of hrs spare-party manners
Otymprcs multti:old-medahst Mark, Sp1tz
Signed a "hfetlme" pact to pitch Schtck razors
In "21," multt-z!l1Iona1re horseman Alf
Vanderbrlt looked teddtbly sertous wtth lovely
Cynthta Cole of Cleveland, Baltunore and
Manhattan , Cynth's m the "crvtllzed" set, we
.111et her a few mghls l)gfore in P J. (:Iarke's
wtth her ex-husband Phil Iselin's beautiful
wtfe m "21" passed her loyalty test to '1er N Y
Jets-owner husband by enthusmg about a young
lady's ternftc taste in wearmg Jels-eolored
green whrle Phil bantered with h1s landlord, N
Y Mets-boss Donald Grant (The Mets enjoy
pnmary proprtetorshtp at Shea Stad1um) . Ed
and Sylvia Sullrvan gave a rrrrreally-big hello
to a former antagomst (critiC) of the days when
Ed dommated vaudeville on TV
G1fted comic George Carlin's strange mststence on brutalizmg hiS inventive clowning
wtth verbal frlth got hun mdtcted In Milwaukee
on obscemty charges last sununer wh1ch can't
be quashed he'll stand trial Dec 6 Most
celebrated N Y detecl!ve smce Johnny
Broderick, Edd1e Egan of "French Connection"
true-tale, has a TV sertes draped en hts more
than 5,000 narco-arresls while on the force; but
just as m "Connection," Eddte was pronounced
not the type Actor Gene Roche se~mlngly Is and
wtll play th~ colorful Ed&lt;jie . Jack E Leonard
phoned to announce he'~ lost another person and
IS down to 205 agnm Had to : drabetes

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AIMB
No Person Is Perfectly Built

10 ,30 -

Elecf ton Prevtew 20

11 "oo ~ News3 4, 6

a, 10. r5

11 20 ...,... Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 Movte

8, Movte

The Two Faces of Dr

Strocco' 10

TUESDAY, NOV 7,1972
6 00 - Sunnse Sem mar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmt1me 10

2•
4NT
SNT.

7•

Openmg lead-+ Q

x-;~·;owo:0X-Y,o"o;oo

MONDAY NOV "6, 1972
6 30 - NBC News 3 4, 15, ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10
Dream ol Jeanme 13 Hathayoga 33
·
7 00 - News 6 Truth or C011seq, 3 B&lt;at The Block 4 C1rcus 1
13 , InSight 33, What's My Lone B. R!ead Your Way Up 33,
Eleclm Company 20 Andy Gnll1th 15
7 30 - To Tell The fruth6 Trafltc Court 10, Ep1sode Acllon 33.
Parenl Game 3 Hollywood Squares 4 Young Or K1tdare 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Pollt1cat Talk 15 Movie "Tarzan's
Desert Mystery,' 13
8 00 - GunsmokeB, 10, RowanandMartm sLaugh ln3,4 UFO
6 Topol the Month8, Hollywood TV Theatre20 33
9 00 - Here's Lucy a, 10, Pro Football 6, 13 MOVIe ' Ma~IC
Carpet 3 4, 15
9 30 - Dons Oay 10, Poll!! ca l Ta tk 8
10 00 - News20 , From lhe Hills 33 Pol•l•'"l Talk 8 10
Jekyll

North-South vulnerable
West Nortll, East South
Pass

- - - - - --

Television Log

WIN AT BRIDGE

Everyone Irked
by This One

~--

6 20 - Paul Har vey 13
6 25 ~ Fa1th For Today 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Btble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment 10

45 - Corncob Report 3
6 55 - F l1ntstones 13
700 - Tpday 3,4,15 CB5 News810 News6
7 30- Sleepy Jellers 8 Romper Room 6 Bu.tw~nkle &amp; Rocky
13
a oo ~ Capt Kan9oaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame Sf 33,
6

Lasste 6

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15, Romper Room 8 Con
cenlrahon 6 Fnendty Junct1on 10 Ben Casey 13 Whal

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Every Woman Wants to Know 3
Oswald " Here IS a rubber
ToTeii TheTrulhJ Jeopardy6 Hazet8
brrdge hand that got all four 109 3000 - Omah Shore 3, :5 Dtck Van Dyke 13 Jokers Wild 8, 10
players mad. South took one
Stx Calltng 6
look at dummy and asked 10 30Columbus
- Concentration 3, 15 Ph1l Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13
why his partner couldn't
Pnce Is R1ghl 8, 10
have rebtd to three clubs m- 11 00 - Sate ol the Century 3 4, 15 Love Amen can Style 6
Ga mbtt 8 10 Password 13
stead of ~1vmg an 1mmed1ate
11
30
- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Love of Ltle 8 10 Bew•lched
ratse wrth three s m a 11
6,
trumps North replied to the 12 00 -13 Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Ctub 4
effect that he had a bad hand
Jackte Obltnger 8 News 10 13
and wanted to make a mtnl- 12 25 - CBS News 8
mum rebtd and that tf South 12 30- 3 W's Gamel 15 Split Second6 Search for Tomorrow8
drdn't like the grand slam
10
contract, no one had made 1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13 It's Your Bet 8, Green
Acres 10, Watch Your Ch1ld 15
hrm btd it "
I 30 - 3 On A Mat ch 3, 4 15 Lei's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
Jtm "I see why East and
World Turns 8, 10
West got mad Undoubtedly 2 00 - Days of Our L•ves 3, 4 15 Newlywed Game 13, M1ke
Douglass 6, Gu1dmg L1ght 8, 10
South made the grand slam
2
30
- Doctors 3, 4, 15, Dating Game l3 Edge of N1ght 8, 10
by takrng the best percentJust
Generat•on 20
age play "
3 00 - General Hosp1tal 6, 13 Another World 3 4, 15 Love
Splendored Thtng 8 10 Just Generaf•on 20
Oswald "Exactly He won
the dramond lead , entered 3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4, 15 One L•fe to Live 6, 13
Secret Storm 8, 10 Magg•ea nd the Beautiful Ma ch me 20
dummy w1th the queen of 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20, 33 Love
clubs . led the rime of trumps
American Style 13 Merv Gnffm 4 Fllntstones 6 Glll1gan s
and let tt ride after East
Isle 8, Mov•e· "Three Faces West 10
played low When both op- 4 25- Sports Club 6
ponents followed to the sec- 4 30 - t Love Lucy 6 Petltcoat Junct1on 3 Damet Boone 13
Grltftn 8 , Andy Gnfflth 15
ond trump lead there were 5 00Merv
DICk
Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers 20 33 Ponderosa 3 4
no further problems He
Daniel Boone 6
made the slam whtle the op- 5 30 - Marshatl D1llon 15, Elec Co 33 DragnetS Gomer Pyle
ponents glowered and com13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
plamed about hts bemg able 6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 Around The Bend 33
to fall in a river and come 6 30 - News 3, 4, 6 8, 10, 15 I Dream of Jeannte 13 Growmg
H1m Up 33
up wtth a f1sh m his mouth "
7 oo - News 6, 10, What's My Lines, Elec Co 20 Andy Gnfflfh
J 1m "I can't blame them
15, Beatthe Clock 4, I've Got ASecret 13 Truth or Conseq 3,
Sa1nl 15 Elec Co 20
The less declarer says the
better Of course, he dld take 7 30 ~ ThiS ts Your Ltfe3, To Tell The Truth 6 Prtee Is Rtght 8
10, BeafTheCiock 13 , RFD20, Feast of Language33
the best line of play, but 8 00
- Bonanza 3 4, 15, Temperatures R• s•ng 6, lJ, Mauoe 1$
even w1th that lme hts
10 Age of Anx1ety 13, Oh1o ThiS Week 20 Age of Anx1ety 33
chance for success was less 8 30 - Elect1on Coveraae 20 Dateline Amenca 33
than 25 per cent but the 25 9 00 - Behind The Lines 33
per cent chance had maten- 9 30- Marshall Sports 33
10 OO - NBCReport3, 4, 15 MarcusWelby,M D 6,13 News20
alized ''
11 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 14 15
(HEW5PAPEl lioiTUPitiSl ASSN)
11 30 - Election Coverage 3, 4, 8, 10,~1 o, 15
' I
11 00 - Your Health 4
'
,f,
1 30- News, W~fher, 4) ~oca'f(~ews 13 ',1 1

-

The b1dd1ng has been
West

North

2.

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&amp; THINGS

South

l!bt

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You, South, hold
.AK882 ¥AZ +5 ,foAK862

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Do your country a favor today and help someone to vote.
I mean really give some sort of assrstance, in one way or
What do you do now'
A-Bid six apadea only. U another, to a voterwhonught not otherwise make rt to the polls
This doesn't mctude the husband who gives his wife a lift to
your partner held lour spades
to the queen, an aoo and two the polling place, or looks after the kids while she's gone No
kiDfl he would hove bid aevon fudging, please, because this couple c11res enough to vote,
spodes directly over your live
no-trump.. He can't have the llllyway.
Try to think of somebody m your netghborhood, or your
queen of apodes.
TODAY'S QUESTION
community, who might want to vote, but maybe JUSt ISD't able to
Your partner opens one club lo do so. Then get m touch With them - thiS evenmg, if possible What do you respond wrth
.Q84Z¥K153 +A71S,fo3 and make arrllllgements lo see that they have that chance to cast
a ballot
Anawer tomorrow
And try, for a moment, to forget what party they belong to.
Try lo look at the bigger ptcture, and remember that castmg
your
vote IS the REAL "participatory democracy" the kltm have
About Coyotes
been screaming about
Coyotes are about three
Don't predicate your asststance on support for any parfeet long, lncludlng a bushy
16-inch tail, we1gh about 30 ticular candidate or cause. Take them anyway Electioneer them
pounds, and have a shaggy on the phone, or m the car, but make it clear that you, YOU, Y-Obuff coat w1th white under- Ucare enough about Amenca lo see that they exercise one of the
sides Their life 11pan 1s about most precious of Uberties, regardless.
13 years.
Don't count on your local political orglllllzatlon 1o get out the
vote. They'll be working, anyhow, and thiS IS good Two offers
are better than none.
Don't let anyone pre-empt tbe Job you, lllld you alone, are
going to do : Get at least one fellow American Into that votmg
booth.
Maybe It'll be that young mother down the street, who could
get away If she bad someone to babySit for an hour, or meet the
kids when they get home from school.
Maybe it's that senior citizen who doesn't own a car
Maybe It's the convalescent, or shut-In, who failed to cast an
Another exercise device ts absentee ballot. With help, maybe tbe person 1B strong enough to
the tension or stretch sprmgs getout-lfsomeonecaresenoughtobelpenough.
• Maybe It's the young voter, who regtstered with stars in his
that you can hold between
your hands and stretch the (or her) e""s but needs 8 littl d 1o t
springs out using the mus,. '
e nu ge s rengtben hiS (or her)
cles between your shoulder resolution to work within the system, Instead of denouncing it.
blades. Most trapeze work,
Maybe it's the family that simply doesn't care. It could be
or any type of exercise like that lf you showed them that you care, then tbey would care
climbing ropes ·hand over enough to cast their ballots
hand are useful in developThink about it this evening. Do somethmg about It, tonight or
lng the shoulder muscles tomorrow.
•
You do not need exercises
But d011 'I it til
that will develop the muscles
qu lUI you.ve accomplished your IDISSion and
over the front of the chest helped someone to vote.
'
They may already be too
Even if your allegiance 1B totailly ~trong and unremitting to
strong in eompartson to your the Republican or tbe Democratic Party,I'll give you odds that
weaker muscles between the within five years (ten at the most), you'll be saying and proudly
shoulder blades.
"Well, I'm a stl'()llg Dem~at (or Republican), bui baCk in 1wi
I am sure your physical I cared enough about my collntry that I made sure that one
education teaclier wolild be Republlcan (or DemOcrat) got to the piJlla and voted •becauae
glad to help you with a set of lhllll the flneat thing a citizen cap do _ pick hla '
exercises that would help you IIM!IIt bued 111 hll own cOIIBCI
,
own governalong thl1 line But In the
'
ence.
meantime Ilk· your family
You'll he.- Iota 01 "get-out-the-vote" 111e11111gee thla linie of
doctor to dlri!ct you to an Ylll'· Molt wDI be rtlncere. SGiDe wiD be apeclai pleadings. Some
orthopedic apeclalllt If you . wDJrepr ntnarrowlntereata.ButlllwDJberjght
an really concerned about
Thlalln'toneoflhose lamnotaaklngyouto ·but
the pouibiUty of a deformity Yoa're too lntelllgenl to
OllrfJellgo and YOte.
In your back.
··"'do
Y
, right? What I
(MlWIPAP!l iNTUiliSI ASSN. I
ID
IIi II t0 &amp;et IOmtone else to \'Ote- to tale illl
the lllpl Dilled to fllllke certain that penon §ell to the...,,. Do
lt.
Pie•.
~
..-:
........
I

Is 16-Year-Old HUJ!!pbacked?
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb -- I am 16
years old and very physically fit About two years ago
someone made a remark
about me bemg "humpbacked " The tdea was tQtally new to me Later I was
told by others also that I was
humpbacked I was also told
to hold up my- shoulders and
I soon discovered that I was
In fact humpbacked. The
hump had developed I think
from the shoulders stumpmg,
It 1s situated a httle below
my shoulder blade It lsn!t
noticeable when I wear a
shirt, but without a shirt the
hump is faidy obvious. It
seems like, since I am young,
the problem could be corrected with the nght treatment Is there anything I can
do to straighten my back•

Dear Reader - It ts dlffr- Take a look at some of your
cult to say how much can be - friends' photographs that are
done wrthout lmowmg how taken face on and cover up
much of a deform1ty you the right h~lt ,with a sheet of
really have Your letter sug- paper and look at the left
gests to me that 11 is not a s1de of the body. Now revery marked deformity, 1f tt verse the procedure and you
can't be noticed when your wtll see that many people
sh1rt rs on. As ltnportant as look entirely different on the
1t ts to you, I doubt very r1ght and left halt Jf their
much that tt makes a differ- bOdy.
ence to anybOdy else Some- I wish you would see an
times people f1x their atten- orthop~1c specialist and let
tton on a mmor defect or the him look at the amount of
bo&lt;ly and exaggerate tts im- curvature you have and see
portance
tf 11 is really something that
Practically no one has a you should concern yourself
completely normal, symmet- about or not
rlcal bOdy You may be
ded
surprised to know that al- t.s f~ as your roun
most everybody has at least slioullfers are concerned, this
a little shortening of one leg suggests poor posture habits
You could do quite a bit for
There is a tendency for one this by becoming more t:onhalf of the body to be slightlf. scious about botdlng your
larger than the other 1hal shoulders back. You could
...,:.--.:-----__.,-~--....:...--__,---- also take 1 series of exer·
cises to strengthen the musDear Fighters:
Though you won't admit it, I'd ~ 38 sex probably IS~ big cles between your sboulder
part of the problem. Now that the time gt'l)WS short, you're no blades Since your letter suggests you are athletically 111doubt growing Slllllous, bit.perhaps in a way you don't SUlljlecl. cllned
this woUld be a good
Are you so Jockell lilto a pJacid, Jjlltonlc frleildshlp that you program for yci\1. You can
subconscloualy quelltlon your love for esch other? Maybe you use pulley weights Ill a gym·
don't really want the "till death do us part" thing because you nasium to weight your arms
and then sw!q your arms
8uspeel that It COULD be deadly dull ·
backward or 'rotate them in
Why not talle a good long look at your relatlgnship and,lf it
a backward circle using the
IIPPrailll!l more "habi\" than desire, either change your attitudes muacles between the I shoul•
pl'9lllpt1y or CIIICe1 the wedAin..,,
...,.., . - H.
der bladea.

Wanchlae

_.,.you

s.fll ,.., _ ..... Or........
...... Ill tllit .......,..,
1551, hllo Citr Slllfiao, H"' Yori,
H Y. 111019. fw • .., Ill Or• ..._.,
....,_ .. ,.., ....... $0

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lw ....... IV..... Wilt.

'

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'"lbb• thing nee IIIW')' for the triqmph ri evil is for good
IIM!II to do IIOIJinl." - Edmund Burke.
+++

ON THE TV DIAL: Tolly ~en apecJal on WC!fS.'l'V at a
bit ''Go_." Clll be fluid 1111 WBNS.TV
'
WI, WBI'N-TV.
.,. Colti-Patrlota

--,-the Daily 8elltinei, Mlddle~rt-Pomeroy, o,Nov 6, 1972 Pro Standings

Steelers talk

NFL Standings
By Un1ted Press International

Nattonal Conference

Washg ton
Dallas
NY G1ants
Sf

LOUI S

Ph1la

Detro•t
BY JOE CARNICEILI
UP! Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Steelers, who
haven't smelled a htle In 40
years In the National Football
League, suddenly are tallung
Super Bowl-and people are
listemng
The Sleelers, who have
never won a litle of
any sort smce they
entered the league m 1933,
look a b1g step 1ow11rd thell'
fll'st one Sunday when they
trampled the Cincinnati !limgals, 40-17 Terry Bradshaw
threw three touchdowns passes
and rookte Franco Harris
rushed for 101 yards 1o spark
the vtc!oty and move the
Steelers a game ahead of the
Bengals 111 the Amertcan
Conference Central DIVISion.
The sound d1-ubbmg of the
Bengals, who had beaten
Pittsburgh, 15-10, earlier this
season on five Horst
Muhlmann field goals, touched
off er1esof "Super Bowl" m the
Pittsburgh dressmg room but
young Coach Chuck Noll, who
has bull! the club from a 1-13
disaster four years ago, was
more realisttc
"We have another big game
next week," Noll satd,
referrmg to the meetmg w1th
Kansas City. "It's a little too
early for things like that. We
played very well today and

Terry had one of his best days 27 to Efd Podolak for a third as
as a pro."
the Chrefs beat Oakland
Bradshaw threw TO ~sses
Btll Kibner, subbmg for the
of 28 and 34 yards to Frank InJured Sonny Jurgensen,
LewiS and l3 to Larry Brown to threw TD passes of 45, 70and 89
highlight the rout The Steeters yards to lead the Redksms over
built a ~ lead before Cm- the Jets
cinnat1 was able to score
Dallas remamed a game
Fll's\place was on the lme m behind Washmgton m the NFC
.two other dtvtsrons and both East as Cr:ug Morton ran
were decided rather hlllldily seven y~~rds for one score and
Len Dawson threw three ID passed one-yard to Mike D1tka
passes to spark the Kansas for a.1other to defeat San
Ctty Chiefs to a 27-14 vtctory Drego
over the Oakland Ratde,·s and
Mercury Moms ran for two
frrst place m the AFC West and TDs and Garo Yeprem1an
W1ll1e ElliSOn and Jun Ber- kicked thrte fll'st half fteld
telsen rllll for short TDs to hft goals as Mtamt ran 1ts record
lie Los Angeles Rams to a 'JJJ-7 to 8-0 wtth a victory over the
tnumph over the Atlanta B1lls Morrts scored on runs of
Falcons and the NFC Western 22 and four yards
lead
John Brockmgton ran for 133
Elsewhere, Washmgton yards and seared three ms to
drubbed the New York .Jets, 35- lead the Packers over the
17, Dati~~ downed San Otego, 49ers
34-28, Green Bay beat San
DetrOit remamed tied wtlh
Francrsco, 34-24, DetrOit shut Green Bay for the NFC Central
out Chicago, 14-0, M1am1 lead as Steve Owens and Greg
remamed unbeaten wrth a 30-16 Landry each plunged a yard
romp past Buffalo, Cleveland for scores and Leroy Kelly's
blanked Houston, 20-0, Mmnn- two IDs helped the Browns
sola trounced New Orleans, 37- down
Houston
Fran
6, the New York Gtants Tarkenton's two TO passes
defeated Denver, 29-17, and St enabled the Vtkmgs to rout
LouiS and Philadelphra lied, 6- New Orleans and Joe Orduna's
6 Baltunore IS at New England one-yard run and a 37-yard
tomght
mterceptron return for a score
Dawson passed 29 y~~rds to by Jun F1les within the last 35
Wendell Hayes for one score, 42 _ seconds of the first half boosted
to Robert West for another and the Gtants over Denver

Browns remain alive
by posting 20-0 AFC win
erowd smce Dec 4, 1966 lo
watch the Browns, 61,985,
dtdn't see much offenstve
action m the first half by the
12th and 13th ranked offensive
teams 111 the NFL
Fifteen punts were booted by
both clubs durmg the first
three quarters.
The only sconng m the frrst
30 mmutes ll(as a 19-)(ard I1eId
goal by Cockroft after Bo
;l'JOrlj~ iti"l1/iwed a;'liimlJled
purit on the' ltouston n-yard
Ime m the f1rst quarter.
"We started to call more
plays
from the bench rn the
By Chet Tannehill
second half to help Mtke
Ph1pps get off those tough
, second and etght calls," sa1d
.-,,...,...,.,....,....,......,_."'1....~""'-;..,~.....,.....,~....~~ Skorrch, whose club has now
whipped the 01lers SIX strarght
We will watt another year to watch a southeastern Oh1o ttmes.
"Phipps moved the team
football team of any class In the regiOnal and state championship
games Even our SEOAL champion, Ironton, is rated by com- outside because the Ollers
puter as llllOther also-ran. The Tigers' Joss to Triple A Ports- were pluggmg the mstde
mouth early mthe season didn't help Hanmbal River (where the runmng game. He used more
heck ts that!') IS No 1 m our Region 7 Class AA Iron!on 1s play acbon passes and they
ranked •th. Warren Kennedy of Reg10n 1 (8-8-0) IS ranked No 1 worked great,'' sa1d Skonch
The Browns' offensive show
in Ohio of Class AA schools
Even so, some fans may want to catch the state's best teams sputtered and stalled rn the
m action. To that end, the followmg schedule of play-offs IS frrst half and It took a stiff
defensive stlllld m·the openmg
printed below
sesston lo keep Houston from
scoring
CLASS 'A' SEMI·FINALS
Trailing ~ the Orlers moved
At Mansfield, Saturday, Nov. 18, 1972, 7:30pm, Reg10n II from tl1ell' three yard lme to
wiMer vs Region 10 winner, Game Mllllager, Wilham E the Browns' seven Three
Frazter, Supervisor, H. PE &amp; R., Mansfteld City Schools, 270 W running plays put the hall on
6th St., Mansfield, Ohto (419) 5~11
the one but Fred W1llts was
AI Upper Arlington, Saturday, l')ovember 18, 1972,7 30p.m, stopped for no gam on fourth
Region 12 winner vs. Regton 9 wmner , game manager, Richard down.
Fryman, Athletic Direclor, Upper Arlington H S , 1650
Phipps, who connected on
Rulgevtew, Cohunbus, Oh1o 43221 (614) 488-3105 Ext 47
nine of 20 passes for 152 yards,
CLASS 'A' CHAMPIONSHIP
used his throwmg lo set up
At Ohro Wesleyan UruverSlty, Delaware, Friday, November Cockroft's second filed goal
24, 1972, 1:30 p.m. game manager, Robert Struner, Department and Kelly's first touchdown
"We looked bad m that first
of Athletics, Ohio Wesleyan Umverstty, Delaware, Oh1o 43015
half because we mrxed up
(814) 363-1261 Ext 393
signals
on three occasiOns, and
CLASS 'AA' SEMI·FINALS
At Massillon,Fridily, November 17, 1972, 7 30 p.m, Regton 7 had a few nuxed assignments
wiMer vs. Reg1on 5 wmner, game manager, Roger Price, We should have scored 20
Faculty Manager, Washington H. S., 340 First St, S E , points," satd Phtpps
The third year quarterback
Massillon, Ohio 44646 (216) 832-506-4
from
Purdue hit Fatr Hooker
At Troy, Friday, November 17, 1972, 7 30 p m., Regron 6
Winner vs. RegiOQ 8 winner; game manager, Norvin Smith, with a JQ;yard pass the fll'st
Athletic Director, 'rrqy lfigh School, Staunton Rd , Troy, Ohro play of the second half and frve
plays later Cockroft kicked a
tsr/3 (513) 335-5802.
32-yard f1eld goal to grve the
CLASS 'AA' CHAMPIONSHIP
Browns a 6-11 lead.
At Massillon, Friday, November 24, 1972, 7 30 p m., game
A IO.yard pass to Bo Scott
manager, Roger Price (see abOve) .
1111d a 2!)-yarder lo Milt Morm
CLASS 'AAA' SEMI·FINALS-DOUBLE HEADER
put the ball on the Houslon
AI Ohio State Uruverllity, Columbus, Saturday, November 18, three and Kelly capped the 671972, Ua.m.,Region 3wlnnervs. Region 4wmner.
yard drive by diving over from
At Ohio State University, Columbus, Saturday, Nov 18, 1972, the one
2p.m., Region I wimer vs. Regron 2wmner.
Games Manager Richard Delaney, Asst Director, Dept of
Athletics, OSU","St. John Arena, ColUmbus, Ohio 43210 (614) 42211316.
CLASS 'AAA' CHAMPIONSHIP
At Akron, Rubber Bowl, Saturday, November 25, 1972, 1 30
.
'
p.m., game manager, GofdOil Lai'!On, Athletic Director, Dept "Of
Athletics, Akron Universtty, 320 E. Buchtel Ave., Akron, Ohio
4430t (218) 762-2441, Ext. 558.
CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Browns coach Nick
Skor1ch started calling the
plays lit the second half Sunday
and helped his team contlllUe
its mastery over the Houston
Oilers.
A pair of f1eld goals by Don

Cockroft were the only pomts
the Browns put on the
scoreboard before Leroy Kelly
scored fourth quarter touchdowns on runs of one and 14
yards to give the Browns a 28-0
vtclory over the Oilers
The smallest hometown

the ·sports"''"

Desk

Green Bay

Mtnneso ta

Ch1cago

Los Ang
Atlanta
San Fran
NewOrlns

East
wltpct pfpa
7 1 0 875 100 111
6 2 0 750 184 125
5 3 0 625 197 164
2 5 1 313 98 162
1 6 I 188 68 177
Central
wlt pctplpa
5 3 0 6?5 199 169
53 0 625t56 144
4 4 0 500 183 121
3 4 I 438 132 142
West
wtt pctpfpa
5 2 1 688 167 '32
4 4 0 500 163 163
3 4 I 438 208 154
1 6 I 188 115 217

Amen can Conference

East
w It pet pf pa
Mtamt
8 0 0 1000 198 103
N Y Jets 5 3 0 625 238 189
New Eng 2 5 0 286 92 220
Buffal o
2 6 0 250 165 212
Battmre
1 6 0 143 94 145
Central
w t t pet pf-pa
P•tlsbgh 6 2 0 750 217 127
CtnCinnaft 5 3 0 625 155 132
Cleveland 5 3 0 625 141 134
Hou ston
1 7 0 125 87 215
West
w t I pel pf pa
Kan C1ty 5 3 0 625 195 140
Oakland
4 3 I 563 209 155
San D•ego 2 5 1 313 152 203
Denver
2 6 0 250 165 222
Sunday's Results

TICKET INFORMATION
Student Tickets, Students may ptrchase tickets from their
high school for any !If the champi011shlp games at a price of $1
per ticket if pli'ChUed in advance. The lchooll making tbe ptayl«• ~ obt1Jn additlonetllludeni tickets to be 10ld at $lin ad'P.nce of the ~· No student tklleta will be ~vallable at any
game site tbe CliY bf the game.
J
· Adult Tlcketa, Adulll may obtain pre-game t!cttets at $2.50
tram any l!llb IChool prior to November 6, 1972 or from achools
selected fGr the plq.ofra after N~ber 12, 1872.
Alllidrt!UtNr:h game lite wiD be $3. No student ticketl wiD
be 101c1 eiCJ •-lite tbe rilly of tile game.

McCLURE'
S
'

4111&amp; Locust

By MIKE RABUN
UP! Sports Writer
SAN ANTONIO, Tex (UP! ).
- Mtke Htll dtd not really owe
the second victory of hts pro
golf Career to a kmd gesture by
Lee Trevmo Htll was playmg

too good to lose, anyway
But Htll , who captured the
$25,000 ftrst pnze at the Texas
0pen Sunday, wanted tt known
how much he apprecl8ted what
Trevmo had done for hrm
dunng the frna l round.

Htll had a four stroke lead
He flmshed two shots IQ front
over Trevmo to start the !mal of Trevmo, who had a frnal
round over the 7,011-yard, par- round of flve-under 67, and four
72 Woodlake Golf Club course, shots m front of chargmg Phll
and the two were parred Rodr,l••, ,,!walso had a closmg
together for the last 16 holes 67
The crowd which turned out
Tre•mo won $14,300 and
under murky sktes was ali for Rodgers took home $8,850
Lee and Lee knew tl
Tied m fourth place wtth 278s
Lee realized that each lime were Ch1 Cht Rodnguez, Ben
he holed 'l putt, even If Htll sllll Kern, Bobby Nichols, Brad
had a putt left to make, the Anderson and Charles Coody,
bulk of the gallery would begm who had been only three
rushmg to the next hole
st1 okes off the pace to start the
"You go ahead and pull out day
fust each lime," Trevmo said
Hill wrapped up the tourto Htll
namcnt wrth three straight
"That JUSt shows )OU what a btrdtes begmmng at the 12th
Franklin, mcludmg a fourth gentleman Lee 1s," said Hrll, hole
quarter t1e-br eaker, to beat 33, who seldom gets the
At that pomt rrevmo had
Indiana , 21-7, and No 4 Ohw publicity on the course or off closed the deficit to two
State raUted to top Mumesota the course tha t hiS brother strokes, but Htll, who hit 17
27·19
Dave does "That was a super greens, got hot with hts putter
Mtclugan and Oh1o State both th mg he dtd He was trymg to
He ran m a 10-footer at the
have 5-0 conference records and beat me just as hard as he 12th, a 10-footer at the 13th and
t11 ree games to play Purdue IS could, too, and he was domg an etght-footer at the 14th That
4-1 and Mtchtgan State 3·1-1
somelhmg to help me "
boosted hrm to a ftve sttoke
A Mtchtgan State vtclory over
Htllneeded little help, though, lead over Trevmo and not even
the Buckeyes m thetr regronal- m frnng his fourth straight the whoops and yells from the
ly.lclevtsed meetmg Saturday 1ound In the 60s to post a 72- , gallery could help Trevino
at East Lansmg would leave hole total of 15 under 273
make up that margm
Mtclugan In qndtsputed possesSion of the confe1 ence lead,
assummg the Wolvennes beat
weak Iowa
Daugherty said he was 'mo1 e
relaxed ' Saturda) than! had

Spartans eye

win over OSU

CHICAGO I UPI )- It would be
tromc If Duffy Daugherty's
resignatiOn as the MIChigan
State football coach helped ease
archnval Mrclugan's path to
the Rose Bowl, but that rs
exact!) what mtght be happenmg
The Spartans gave !herr
outgomg coach the game ball
after beatmg Purdue 22-12
Saturday to knock the Botler
makers from a three-way l!e
Oetrott 14 Ch tcago o
lot
the Btg len lead, and thrs
Pttlsburgh 40 Ct ncmna ft 17
week they get a chance to do
N Y G•anls 29 Denver 17
Cleve land 20 Hou slon o
lhe same thmg to Ohw State
M1am1 30 Bu ff alo 16
We won 1t for Duffy," sa1d
Wash~ngton 35 NY Jets 17
quarterback
Mark Niesen, who
Mmnesota 37 New Orleans 6
Philadelphia 6 St LoUis 6
scored touchdowns on runs of
Green Bay 34 San Franctsco 57 and 61 yards "We flgur e
24
he's a goud coach It \\as us
Los Angeles 20 Atlanta 7
Kansas City 27 Oakland 14
who had to change, not lnm
Dallas 34 San D•ego 28
We wete dow n, and 1t wasn t
I only games scheduled)
Duffy s fault '
Monday's Games
Ba lltmore at New England Daugherty announced Fr tday
ln•g hf l
mght he was 1 estgn mg at the
(only game scheduled 1
end
of thiS season, hrs 19th as
Sunday's Games
the Mtchtgan State coach, and
Balttmore at San Franctsco
Buffalo at N Y Jets
safety Brad Van Pelt sard the
Denver at Los Angeles
dectswnspurred l.ts teammates
Detrolf at M1nnesota
on Saturday because "We owed
Green Bay at Ch tcago
Ka nsas C1ty at Plltsburgh
It to h1m ''
New England at Mtamt
We want to do our best to
New Orleans al Atlanta
help
hun go out a wmner ,"Van
N Y G1antsat Wash1ngton
Oakland at Cmcmnaft
Pelt satd
Ph dadelph ta at Houston
Mtchrgan , btddmg to become
St LOUIS at Dallas
the first Btg Ten team to make
lonty games schedul ed
a repeat trtp to the Rose Bowl
ABA Standmgs
now that the non-repeat rule
By United Press International has been lifted, and OhiO State
East
w t Pel g b remamed unbea tenand lied for
Carolma
9 - 4 692 the conference lead with
Kentucky
5 6 455 3
boon sh vrctones Saturday
V1rgm1a
6 8 429 3112
New York
5 7 417 3,12 TheWolvermes,rankedNo a
MemphiS
3 8 273 5
In the natron, got two touchWest
b downsfromquarterback Denms
Utah
w.9 15 P~!i 9
lndtana
7 4 636 '2
The Dai~ Sentinel
San D1ego
7 6 538 1
DEVOTED
TO THE
I
INTEREST OF
, Denver
Dallas ,
, J7 76 538
300 4
MEJGS·MASON AREA
Sunday's Results
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Ent Ed
1, Denver 137 New York 107
ROBEU H'OEFLICH,
San D1ego 132 Vlrg ~nta 121
C•tyo Ed•tor
!Only games scheduled)
P1Jbl 1shed da•ly e xc ept
Monday's Games
by The Oh10 Valley
Utah vs Carolma at Rale1gh Saturday
Publishing Company , 111
!Only game scheduled)
Court St
Pomeroy Oh io

been Ill some tune "
'I m JUSt gomg to prepare

fur Ohw State and let (athletic
dn ector) Burt Smtih do all the
work on fmdmg a successor for
me '
llhnms also made Its coach,
Bob Blackman, happy Saturday
by wmmng Its first game of the
season after losmg seven
Quar let backMtke Wells ran for
two touchdowns and passed for
two more as the llhm walloped
Not thwestern , 43-14, scormg
four touchdowns m less than
seven mmules m the third
quarter
Iowa made a goallme stand
late in the fourth quarter but
then gave up a safety with JUSt
3 42 to play to allow Wtsconsm
lo escape wtth a 16-14 victory m
the other Big Ten eame

So what?
They're insured.

You've heard the expression . It's a ratiOnalization as common as a cliche. And as
hollow. There is more at issue than property. What the rat iona li zing phrase
glosses over is the sacredness of all thm gs
within the community of man. The respect
and kindness we owe one another as birthright. When we break this trust we contribute to moral pollution.

1

NBA Standmgs
By Umted Press lnlernahonal
Eastern Conference

Allanite DrviSion
w I. pet g b
Boston
10 1 909
New York
10 2 833 'h
Buffalo
3 8 273 7
Ph !I a
0 13 000 11
Central

Houston
Atlanta
Balt1 more
Cleveland

DIVISIOn

wlpctgb
7 4 636
6 6 500 ! 1/2
5 6 455 2
4 10 286
4112

Western Conference

MidWest DIVISIOn

wlpctgb
M1lwaukee
9 2 818
Ch•cago
8 4 667 1'12
~1 Z':;aha
; ~
~
PaCJitc DrviSlon
w 1 pet g b
GoldenSlate 8 2 soo •12
Los Angeles ro 3 769 Phoen•x
5 5 500 3'12
Seattl e
4 a 333 5112

m

PortlandSunday's1Results
10 091

8

131 Ph1tadelphla
PhoeniX 107 Cleveland
106
11 ~1iwaukee
Los Angeles 124 Seattle 115
(only ga mes scheduled)

Canada ranks second m
area among the nations of
the world It IS exceeded only by the Sov1et Umon

1

Your

Agent

.U769 Bus1ness Olf..tce Phone
992 2156 Ed 1torial Phone 992

2157

Second class postage Pb•&lt;l at

Pomero y Oh10
Nat 1o nal advert1S1no
repruentattYe
Bott•ne lt.
Gallagher , '" ' , 12 East .42nd
St New York City New York
Subscr•ptton rates
De
I I Yered by ca rr 1er where
~~h allabl e SO cents per week
By Motor Rou te where ca rr •er
One
sery 1ce not available
month S1 7S By ma•l In Oh 10
and W Va One )leer SU 00
Snc months $7 25 Three
months U 50 Subscrq:. t1on
pr,ce 1ncludes Sunday T1mes
Sent• nel

Arkenwyke Yew
The E_ngltsh barons compelled Krng John to stgn the
Magna Carta (cornerstone of
Anglo-Saxon hbertres) under the Arkenwyke yew tree
at Runnymede England

Security Is Love
If emergencies
arise, is your family adequately cov·
ered? Secure their
well-being with a
revised policy

U1n1ult U1 Soon

The community of man . God's club.
You're a life member.

RIAL

Davis-Wner Ins.

.......
II.

RELIG ION IN AMERICAN LI FE
Ad'viHII sl ng contrlbuleel for tl}e PLiblic rood In ~oopmtlon wfth
The Achertlslng Counc11 and tht International Newspaper Adverthlna: E~ e cutl~u

'

••lllllll~llll!~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~-~~~~~~!'11-~1111-••••••••

KINGS ARMs NITE CLUB
3 MILES SOUTH OF MIDDLEPORT ON ST. RT. 7

Monday's G.:,mes

New York at Port Iand
(only game scheduled)

SHIRt
FINISHING

PRESENTS

REVUE '72
2 Big Weeks • Beginning Tonight Thru 18th.

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ul At 5

~~-~

'

1HE NEW IMPRESSIONS

' Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners,

''Thr~

Record Bre8king Years
in Daytona Beach"

116 E. lnd, Pom..roy

With the great Freddie Spicer on drums
(comparable to Lours Bellson) , plus Harry
Kinzey on sax, Boots Randolph style, with
specialties by

IIUSTLE

AFfEB
EVERY
FOOTBAIJ.
GAME
To Get Your
Goodies FI'Orn

Mike Hill captures Texas Open

Exotic Midori Ashikawa and Lovely Joni Craig

AND STARRING
JAY HARVEY
'", _____......./ ,.' ·• '

"One of the Best Comedians of our Time"
Danclog an_d continuous entertainment 9 p.m. to 2 a m.::nltely.- l!opular
prIces - small cover charge.

GEORGE HAJ..L AND THE HALLMARKS
Come and

0.

,I

I

I

�•

__._._...__~-~__,_

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

-

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

'

.

---·--~----

~--- ~

~---

-

~

---

- - Tlie - - -- - 3-

' Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov 6, 1972
2- Til! Datly

Four More Years

EDITOR. I AI.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Everyone Irked
by This One

Parochioid Still
Unsolved Problem
One of the few things both plestde ntlai candidat es
agreed upon m 1972 was the need fo r some fo rm of lax
atd or tax relief for parents of pa1 och1al schoolchtldt en
It remams to be seen whe thet a ptes•denl so mchned
and a Cong1 ess favorably disposed can come up With
a !01 mula whl~ h Will meet the Fn st Amendment tes t of
separahon of church and state mthe eyes of the Sup1 eme
Court
In the meantime a case lot pubhc a1d to re ligious
educatiOn was made recently by the auth01 of a lelte1
to The Amettcan School Board Journal
"Some people do mdeed believe m God, ' wrote James
J Mason, and cons1der the relationship between man
and God to be of such pnmary concern thai 11 should
permeate the educational process
"Other people beheve differently, and e1ther constder
God to be a myth or ummportant '1hey beheve that edu
cahon should be sllent on the subject
' Why should the lalte1 group, any m01 e than the
former, expect to have lhe1r pos1tton taught at the ex
pense o( those who don't sha1 e 1t' The money taken II om
parochtal sc hool parents f01 pubhc schools IS spent on a
rehgwn-secular humamsm-)usl as truly as would be
the converse There ts s1mply no such thmg as a 'neull a!
posllton on rehgwn "
The only fatr system , he concluded would be for each
taxpayer to earmark hiS taxes for the school he wants to
support That way no one's consc1ence w o ~ld be trodden
upon
The basic fallacy 111 thts argument 1s the ass umptiOn
that the questwn IS one of believers tn God versu• non
behevers It IS not It IS a quesllon of what •s the best
educational compromtse 111 the plurahsllc soc1ety that JS
Amenca, a plurahsm whtch 111cludes man y d1ffet ent
k111ds of behevers as well as nonbelievers
At one time, dally prayers Bible 1ead111gs and teleased lime for rehgwus 111strucbon were normal practices m public schools Even then, however, many Catha
be parents chose to send then ,chtldren to the sc hools
ma111ta111ed by thetr church
Many non-Cathohc parents were likewiSe unhappy w1th
a rehgwus curnculum whtch of necesstty had to be non
denom111atwnal and noncontroversial or 1f you wtll
watered down almost to meamnglessness
Expertence has dtclated that the public schools , wh1ch
are supported by all the people for the benef1t of all ch1l
dren, must stnve for neutrahty 111 this sphere When
parents have trouble agree111g on a stmple lh111g hke a
nondenommatwnal prayer, certamlr there 1s no way to
"permeate the educahonal process' w1th rehgwus teach
mg that would not arouse 111tense disputation 111 the com
mumty and probably offend behevers more than nonbehevers
If this has resulted, as some allege, 111 a btas towatd
"secular humamsm " 111 the schools , tl ts also true that
large m1mbers of parents seem to have adb1cated their
own respons1bthty lor overseemg the rehg10us or moral
trammg of thetr chtldren m the best place for 1t- the
home
• "'
In th1s country parents are and always have been free
to send the1r children to pnvate schools, for rehgwus
reasons or lor reasons qu1te unconnected w1th rehgwn
Ne1ther that freedom nor bebef 111 God as opposed to
nonbelief in God Is at Issue.
First Amendment cons1deratwns aside, the only legtltmate issue lor public debate 1s whether or not tt would
be in the best interest of the maJOrity of Amencans to
permit diVersiOn of tax monies away from the pub)Jc
schools to ass1st a mlnonty which , l or whatever reasons,
does not wish to avatl tlself of the educallon provtded by
those schools

.,

6

NORTH (D)
• 983
.AQ654

WFST

EAST

• 42

.QJ5

.10863
tQJJ072
.103

.975
• 94 3

.J982

soum

.AK1076
.A4
+AK86
.K7
North-South vulnerable
West North East South
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1.

Pa.s

2.

3.
5
6t
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

4NT
5 N T.
7• ·

+

Openrng

leall- + Q

I Voice along Br'Way

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

SAME MUSIC, DIFFERENT LYRICS
Dear Helen ·
I've wntten several tunes, but have never seen a reply m the
paper Toon you suspected a boy with a sumlar problem of
hoaxing you, so perhaps you thmk I'm a hoaxer too Please answer.
I'm a marrted bus111essman and well thought of locally It all
started when my wife kidded me a bout bemg a matd because I
helped with the dishes. One thing led to another and she made me
up like a woman, with l&gt;!r clothes, w1g, cosmettcs, etc, It was all
In fun, but somehow 11 got to be a habit
Through the years, she has bought women's clothes for me
and these are what I relax m at home (My whole personality
changes wren I'm m fenunme attire )
They were so comfortable that I began wearmg women's
clothing when I went out-of-town on business tr1ps. After the
day's work was done, I'd doll up "female," and walk around
town Sometimes I'd stnke up a conversation with another
woman but never wilh a man I am NOT homosexual
Well, my w1fe found out. She diSCQvered my women's clothes
In my su1tcase, and now she wants to divorce me as she says I'm
twtsted
If she enjoyed my charade at home, why then does she think
I'm crazy when I carry it on outside - where no one w1ll know?
Does she really like the tdea of a woman comparuon, but wants to
keep it secret? - S S P

.,

DearS.·
Yours Is a question lor a close.Jn counselor, that Is why I
have avotded using It 111 the column A fetish can best be treated
by a psychiatrist, and that goes double If your wife also shared
the aberration .. or perhaps you two are completely nght for
each other, who knows?
One thing comes on strong, however, m all my letters from
part-time or beguming transvestites they always blame !herr
first cross-over on a member of the oppostte sex - stster, wife,
girlfriend, mother - after which they either "just can't help
themselves" or else they're still bemg "forced aga111st !herr
wills."
If your preference for women's clothes threatens to blight
your life, S S.P., then I'd suggest first, honest self-appraisal
(stop blaming your wife - she isn't the cause of your "split
penonality," though she may have encouraged It); and second,

therapy.
Where therapy will lead, I don't know, but I can't I&gt;!Ip you
klng-dlltance Sorry' - H.

+++ '

Dear Helen:
Jay and I have been engaged almost ftve years We're
mature lldulli and have gotten aloog fine : we had a perfect,
pllldtlreiiiiCIIIIhlp.sexwtll no problem. We both decided It could
Wilt IJIIIIIIIIII'I'IIIle.- - ~
:
But-. with the wedding date set for spnng, we are con'1 ny fllllllnl. We ltlrt out nice and then the bomb &lt;k'opa,
'I1MN.,. jelkMIIiea, rlvllr)', doobla, resenbnenta. Yet we are
- . we low each other.
Wllh IUCh a long relatiooahlp, should these hateful times
blppeDT - FIGifl'ERS

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
No Person Is Perfectly Built

Is 16-Year-Oid Humpbacked?
Take a look at some of your
friends' photographs that are
taken face on and cover up
the right half with a sheet of
paper and look at the left
side of the body. Now reverse the procedure and you
will see that many people
look entirely different on the
right and left half ~f their
body
I wish you would see an
orthopedtc specialist and !Pot
him look at the amount of
curvature you have and see
tltt Is really somethmg that
you should concern yourself
about or not
As far as your rounded
shoulders are concerned, thts
suggests poor posture habits.
You could do quite a bit for
this by becoming more ~'On·
sc1ous about holding your
shoulders back You could
also take a series of exerDear Fighters:
.
cises to strengthen the musThough you won't admit it, I'd gueas seJ: probably IS a big cles between your shoulder
part of the problem Now that the time growslhort, you're no blades. Smce your letter sug:
doubt growing anxious but-perhapa '"a way you don't SU8pl!ct___gests ;)IOU are 41thletlcany In'
· cUnei! this would be a &amp;ood
Ate you so locked Into a placid, platooic friendship that you
program for you You can
subconscloualy question your love for each other? Maybe you use pulley weights in 'a gymdon't reaDy want the ''till death do us part" thing becalllle you naslum to weight your arms
suspect that It COULD be deadly dull.
and then sw!Jlg your arms
Why not take a good long look at your relaUgnshlp and if 1t backYi'ard or rotate them In
" b ,
'
a ba&lt;!kward circle using the
appraises more ha it than desire, either change your attitudes muscles between the aboul·
promptly or cancel the IV~ ' - H.
der blades.

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. {.8mb -- I am 16
years old an\1 very physically fit About two years ago
someone made a remark
about me bemg "humpbacked " The Idea was t 0tally new to me Later I was
told by others also that I was
humpbacked I was also told
to hold up my shoul~ers and
I soqn discovered that I was
m la~t humpbacked The
hump had developed I thmk
from the shoulders slumpmg,
It IS Situated a httle below
my shoulder blade It tsn't
nottceable when I wear a
shirt, but without a shirt the
hump IS fairly obv10us It
seems like, smce I am young,
the problem could be corrected with the right treatment. Is there anythmg I can
do to stratghten my back?

Dear Reader - It 1s difficult to say how much can be
done without knowmg how
much of a deformity you
really have. Your letter sug.
gests to me that it is not a
very marked deform1ty, 1f it
can't be noticed when your
shirt IS on As Important as
1t 1s to you, I doubt very
much that it makes a difference to anybody else Sometimes people f1x thetr attentlon on a mmor defect of the
body and exaggerate its im·
portance
Practically no one has a
comrletely normal, symmetric&amp; body You may be
surprised to know that- al·
most everybody has at least
a little shortening of one leg.
There Is a tendency for one
half of the body to be slightly
larger than the other hall

8 00 -- Gunsmoke8, 10, Rowan and Marlin 's Laugh In 3, 4, UFO
6, TopollheMonth8 . HollvwoodTVThealre20 33 ..
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8 tO , Pro Football 6, 13, Mov1e Ma~'c
Carpet" 3, 4 15
9 30 - Dons Day 10 Political Talk 8
10 00 - News20 From the Htlls 33 Pol 1t1cal Talk 8 10
10 30 - Election Prev•ew 20
11 OO - News 3,4 6,8.10 IS
11 20 - Johnny Carson 3, 4J 15, Mov1 e ' The Two Faces at Dr
Jekyll" 8, Mov1e S1 rocco" 10
TUESDAY, NOV 7, 1972
6 00 - Sunnse Sem•nar 4 Sacred Hearl 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmflme 10
6 20 -

Pau l Harvey 13

6 25 - Fatth For Today 13

6 30 - Columbus Today 4 81ble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment 10
6 45 - Corncob Report 3

6 55 - ~l,ntstones 13
7 OO - Today3,, 15 CBSNews8 10 News 6

7 30 - Sle epy Jeffer s 8 Romper Room 6 Bu dwmkle &amp; Rocky

13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Rev ue 6, 13, Sesame 51 33
9 00 - Paul D1x0n 4 Phil Donahue IS , Romper Room B Con
centraflon 6 Fnendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 What
Every Woman Wants to Know 3

30 - ToTeiiTheTrulh3 Jeopardy6 Hazel8
10 00 - D~nah Shore 3 ;s 01ck Van Dyke 13 Jokers Wild 8 10
Columbus Stx Calling 6
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue ' Spill Second 13
Pnce is Rtghl 8. 10
11 00 - Sale of the Century 3 4 15 , Love Amencan Styte 6
9

Gambit 8, 10 Password 13

11

30 - Hollywood Squares 3 • 15 Love of L1fe 8, 10 Bewtlched
6 13

12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4
Jack•e Oblinger 8, News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3W'sGameJ 15 Spl1tSecond6 SearchforTomorrowa

10
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 II s Your Bel 8 Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3, ' 15 Let s Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our L1ves 3 4, 15 Newl ywed Game 13 Mtke
Douglass 6, Guldmg Ltghl 8, 10
2 30 - Doctors 3, ' · 15, Dat1ng Game 13 Edge of N1ghl 8, 10
Just Generat1on 20

3 00 - General Hosptta l 6 13 Another World 3 4, 15, Love
Splendored Thtng 8, 10 Just Generation 20
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3. 4, 15 One L1fe to Ltve 6, 13
Secret Storm 8 10, Magg1e and I he Beaultful Mach1ne 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love
Amer~can Style 13 Nlerv Gr1ffm 4 Fl~ntstones 6 Gilligan's
Isle 8 Mov1e" "Three Faces West" 10

4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Pellteoal Juncllon 3 Dan1el Boone 13,
Merv Grfffm 8, Andy Grlff1!h 15
S 00 - 01ck Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers 20. 33 Ponderosa 3, 4
Daniel Boone 6
5 30 - Marshall Dtllon 15, Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 oo - News3 ,,8, 10,15 AroundTheBend33
6 30 - News 3, .4 6, 8, 10 15 , I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Growmg

H1m Up 33
7 00 - News 6, 10, What s My Lme 8 Elec Co 20 Andy Gr1fhth
15 BeattheCiock4, l'veGotASecrell3 , TruthorConseq 3.
Satnt 15, Eiec Co 20
7 30 - ThiS Is You' Ltfe3 , To Tell The Truth 6 Pme Is R1ghl 8
10, Beat The Clock 13, RFD 20 Feast of Language33
8 00 - Bonanza 3, 4, 15 Temperatures RISmg 6 IJ Mauae •
10, Age of Anxtely 13, Oh10 ThiS Week 20 Age of Anxtely 33
8 30 - Election Coveraoe 20 Dateline Amenca 33
9 00 - Behind The Lmes 33
9 30 - Marshall Sports 33
10 oo - NBC Report 3. 4, 15, Marcus Welby, M D 6, 13, News 20
11 oo - News,Weather,Sporls3,,,6810 14, 15
11 30 - Eledlon Coverage3, 4, 8, 10, 13,1 5
11 00 - Your Health 4
v•
1 30 - News 'Ue?lher 4, loc:'l, JIIews 13 ~-

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Do your country a favor today and help someone to vote
I mean really g~ve some sort of assistance, In one way or
another, to a voter who might not otherwise make 1t to the polls.
Tins doesn't Include the husband who Blves his wife a lift to
the polling place, or looks after the kids while she's gone No
fudging, please, because this couple cares enough to vote,
snyway
Try to thmk of somebody 111 your netghborhood, ot your
commuruty, who ought want to vote, but maybe just ISn't able to
to do so Then get m touch with them - this evening, if possible and make arrangements to see that they have that chance to cast
a ballot
And try, for a moment, to forget what party they belong to.
Try to look at the b1gger picture, and remember that casting
your vote IS the REAL "participatory democracy" the kl&lt;ls have
been screaming about
Doli't predicate your asststance on support for any par·
ticular candidate or cause. Take them anyway Electioneer them
on the phone, orm too car, but make 11 clear that you, YOU, Y.O.
U care enough about Amertca to see that they exerctse one of the
most prectous of hberttes, regardless.
Doo't count on your local political organiZ8tion to get out the
vote. They'D be working, anyhow, and thiS IS good Two offers
are better than none
Doo't let anyone pr~mpt the JOb you, and you alone, are
going to do Get at least one fellow Amertcan Into that votmg
booth.
Maybe it'll be that young mother down the street, who could
get away if she had someone to babysit for an hour, or meet the
kids wren they get home from school
Maybe It's thatseruor citizen who doesn't own a car
Maybe it's the convalescent, or shut-m, who failed to cast an
absentee ballot. W1th help, maybe the person Is strong enough to
get out - if someone cares enough to help enough.
Maybe it's til! young voter, who registered' with stars In his
(or her) eyes, but needs a little nud~e to strengthen his (or her)
resolution to work within the system, Instead of denouncing 11.
Maybe It's the fainlly that simply doesn't care. It could be
that if you showed them that you care, then trey would care
enough to cast their ballots.
Think about It this evening. Do something about It, tonight or

Another exercise device 1s
the tens1on or stretch springs
that you can hold between
your hands and stretch the
springs out using the muscles between your shoulder
blades Most trapeze work,
or any type of exercise like
climbing ropes hand over
hand are useful In develop.
mg the shoulder muscles tomorrow.
•
You do not need exerc1ses
But don't qutt untll you.ve accompiJilhed your mission, and
that Will develop the muscles
over the front of the chest l&gt;!lped someone to vote.
Even If your aUegtance is totally strong and unremitting to
They may already be too
strong m compar1son to your the Republican or the Delilocratlc Party, l'U give you odds that
weaker muscles between the within five years (ten at til! most), you'll be saying, and proudly,
shoulder blades.
"Well, I'm a strong Democrat (or Republican), but back in 19'12,
I am sure your physical I cared enough about my country that I made sure that one
education teacher would be Republican (or Democrat) got to the polla and voted, becalllle
glad to help you with a set of
exercises that would help you thla Ia the finest thing a citizen can do - pick his own aovemlilong this line. But in the ment, bued oo his own conaclence .''
You'll hear Iota of "get-out-the-vote" Jlleltlages this time of
meabtlme ask your family
doctor to direct you to an ~ar. MOlt wiD be llincere, Some wiD be special pleadlnlls. Some
orthopedic specialist lf you will reprmntriarrow lnla'esta. But all wiD be right.
are really ~'Oncerned about
Tlilllln'tone al thotle. I am not llklnc you to go out and wte.
the posslblllty of a deformity
You're too ~ent to dilentranchlle yOUI'IIelf, right? What I
In your back.
am - - you to do Ia to get 111meone elle to vote -to take aiJ
(HIWS~AI'll lHTllHISl ASSH)
ihe.,._nndedtomakecertain tll8t paou gets to the po11a, no
it. PleMe,
''The llllly thing nem ary for the triumph ot evil Ia lor good •
-_,.,,
- · .. Ot, 0"""'·
io See~
..,. ,_
ol IWt
lu
JSSJ, I!Wio Clfr Sflrt100, Ntw YOit, men to do nothing."- Edmund Burke.
H Y. 10019 For • copr ol Or l.atrtb'r
+++
ON TilE TV DIAL: 'tony Rlndall~peelal on WCJIS.TV at 8,
floollot "' Jorhtt wtirAI, ..~ 5D
~ to litO ..... Ml •" but "GIIMIIOke" Rill be folllllm WBNS.TV .,. Colta-Patrlotl
·~.oo~or
wr.t.
footbaiJ, I, WHTN·TV.
•

"'

w....-

.,..._..,.

-~--

---

DaUy Sentlnel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Nov. 6,1972

Pro Standings

Steelers talk

NFL Slandtngs

BY' JOE CARNICEUJ
Terry had one of his best days
UPI Sports Writer
as a pro "
The Pittsburgh Steelers, who
Bradshaw threw TD passes
haven't smeUed a IItle m 40 of 28 and 34 yards to Frank
years m the Nallonal Football Lewts and 13 to Larry Brown to
League, suddenly are talkmg highligh! the rout. The Steelers
Super Bowl-and people are bu!lt a 2IHl lead before Cmbstenmg
cmnall was able to score
The Steelers, who have
Frrst place was on the !me m
never won a title of two other dtVIStons and both
any
sort
smce
they were decided rather handtly
entered the league m 1933, Len Dawson threw three TD
took a big step toward !herr passes to spark the Kansas
first one SWJday wren tooy City Chiefs to a 27-14 victory
trampled the Clncumat1 Ben· over the Oakland Ratde,s and
gals, 40-17. Terry Bradshaw ltrst place m the AFC West and
threw three touchdowns passes W!lhe Ellison and Jun Berand rook1e Franco Harns telsen ran lor short TDs to hft
rushed for 101 yards to spark lie Los Angeles Rams to a 20-7
the vtctory and move the tnumph over the Atlanta
Steelers a game ahead of the Falcons and the NFC Western
Bengals m the Amencan lead
Elsewhere,
Washmgton
Conference Central Dlvlstdn
The sound drubbmg of the drubbed the New York .ets, 35·
Bengals, who had beaten 17, Dallas downed San D1ego,
Pittsburgh, 15-10, earlier this 34-28, Green Bay beat San
season on ftve Horst Franctsco, 34-24, Detrotl shut
Muhlmann field goals, touched out Ch1cago, 14-0, M1am1
off crtes of "Super Bowl" m the remamed unbeaten wtth a 30-16
Pittsburgh dressmg room but romp past Buffalo, Cleveland
young Coach Chuck Noll, who blanked Houston, 20-0, Mmnnhas bUilt the club from a 1-13 sota trounced New Orleans, 37disaster four years ago, was 6, the New York G1ants
defeated Denver, 29-17, and St
more realistic
"We have another big game Lams and Phtladelphta lied, 6·
next week," Noll sa1d, 6 Baltunore IS at New England
referring to the meetmg wtlh tomght.
Dawson passed 29 yards to
Kansas City "It's a little too
Wendell
Hayes for one score, 42
early for things like that. We
played very well today and to Robert West for another and

Nahona I Conference

East
wltpclpfpa
Washg lon 7 I 0 875 200111
Dallas
6 1 0 750 184 125
NY Gtanls 5 3 0 625 197 164
St L OUIS
2 5 1 313 98 162
Phil a
1 6 1 188 68 177
Central
w I 1 pet pi pa
Delr01t
5 3 0 625 199 169
Green Bay S 3 0 625 156 U4

Tl to Efd Podolak for a thrrd as

M m nesola , 4 4

Ch1cago

the Chtels beat Oakland
Btll Ktlmer, subbmg for the
mjured Sonny Jurgensen,
threwTDpasses of 45,70 and 89
yards to lead the Redksms over
the J~ts
Dallas remamed a game
behind Washmgton m the NFC
East as Cr.tlg Morton ran
seven yards lor one score and
passed one-yard to Mike D1tka
for a.1other to defeat San
D1ego
Mercury Morns ran for two
TDs and Garo Yepremtan
kicked three ftrst half fteld
goalS as M1am1 ran 1ts record
to 0-0 wtth a vtctory over the
Bills Morris scored on runs of
22 and four yards
John Brockmgton ran for 133
yards and scored three TDs to
lead the Packers over the
49ers
Detrotl remamed tied With
Green Bay lor the NFC Central
lead as Steve Owens and Greg
Landry each plunged a yard
for scores and Leroy Kelly's
two TDs helped the Browns
down
Houston
Fran
Tarkenton's two TD passes
enabled the Vtkmgs to rout
New Orleans and Joe Orduna's
one-yard run and a 37-yard
mterceptlon return for a score
by Jtm Files w1thin the last 35
seconds of too ltrst half boosted
the Gtants over Denver

crowd smce Dec 4, 1966 to
watch the Browns, 61 ,985,
dtdn't see much offens1ve
action m the ftrst half by the
12th and 13th ranked o[fenstve
teams m the NFL
Fifteen punts were booted by
both clubs during the ftrst
three quarters
The only scormg m the first
30 mmutes was a 19-yard l1eld
goal by Cockroft after Bo
;'Ciltnell' re&lt;:Qv,ef~d liimbled
J· •
punt on the Houston !.j.;yard
!me m the frrst quarter
"We started to call more
~ . plays from the bench m the
By Chet Tannehill
second hall to help Mtke
Plupps get off those tough
, second and etght calls," said
'
'
.,.#o#o~----P..~o.po~~.,- _-"-'~""&lt;~~.....,,1) Sk:onch, whose club has now
whipped the Otlers stx stratght
We will wmt another year to watch a southeastern Ohto tunes
"Phtpps moved the team
football team of any class In the regwnal and state champwnsh1p
games Even our SEOAL champion, Ironton, IS rated by com- outstde because the Oilers
puter as another also-nn. The Tigers' loss to Trtple A Ports- were plugging the mstde
mouth early In the season didn't help Hanrubal Rtver (where the runmng game He used more
beck 1s that!') IS No. lm our Regton 7 Class AA Ironton IS play action passes and they
ranked 4th Warren Kennedy of Reg~on I (840) ts ranked No 1 worked great," satd Sk:onch
The Browns' olfenstve show
In Ohio of Class AA schools
Even so, some fans may want to catch the state's best teams sputtered and stalled in the
m actiOn To that end, the foUowmg schedule of playo(}ffS 1s ftrst half and It took a stiff
defenstve stand 111 the opening
prmted below
sesswn to keep Houston from
scormg
CLASS 'A' SEMI·FINALS
Trading :J..O til! Oilers moved
At Mansfield, Saturday, Nov 18,1972, 7:30pm, Reg10n 11 from thetr three yard line to
wmner vs. Region 10 winner, Game Manager, William E
the Browns' seven Three
Frazter, Supervisor, H PE. &amp; R , Mansfield Ctty Schools, 270 W runnmg plays put the ball on
6th St , Mansfield, Ohio ( 419) 522-0011.
the one but Fred Wilhs was'
At Upper Arlington, Saturday, November 18, 1972, 7 30 p m., stopped for no gam on fourth
Region 12 wmner vs Regton 9 wmner ; game manager, Rtchard down
Fryman, Athletic Director, Upper Arlington H S, 1850
Phipps, who connected on
RidgeVIew, Columbus, Oh1o 43221 (614) 4118-3105 Ext 47
nine of 20 passes lor 152 yards,
CLASS 'A' CHAMPIONSHIP
used his throwmg to set up
At Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Fr1day, November Cockroft's second filed goal
24, 1972, 1·30 p m game manager, Robert Struner, Department and Kelly's first touchdown
"We looked bad m that frrst
of Athletics, Ohio Wesleyan UmverSity, Delaware, Oh1o 43015
half because we miXed up
(614) 363-1261 Ext 393.
signals
on three occastons, and
CLASS 'AA' SEMI·FINALS
At Massillon, Friday, November 17, 1972, 7:30pm., Reg1on 7 had a few rmxed assignments,
'
winner vs Reg1on 5 winner, game _manager, Roger Price, We should have scored 20
Faculty Manager, Washington H S , 340 Frrst St , S E , pomts," sa1d Phtpps
The third year quarterback
Massillon, Ohio 44346 (216) 83~
At Troy, Friday, November 17, 1972, 7 30 p.m , Reg10n 6 from Purdue hit Fall' Hooker
winner vs. Regton 8 winner; game manager, Norvm Smith, Wlth a 30-yard pass too frrst
play of the second half and five
AthletiC Director, Troy High School, Staunton Rd., Troy, Ohto
plays later Cockroft kicked a
45373 (513) :JM.5602.
32-yard field goal to give the
CLASS 'AA' CHAMPIONSHIP
Browns a (j..() lead
At Ma88illon, Friday, November 24, 1972, 7 30 p.m , game
A 10-yard pass to Bo Scott
manager, Roger Price (see above).
and a 29-yarder to Mtlt Morm
CLASS 'AAA' SEMI·FINAUI-DOUBLE HEADER
put the ball on the Houston
At Ohio State University, Columbus, Saturday, November 18, three and Kelly capped the 67·
Ui72, na.m., Region 3winner vs Region 4wmner
yard drive by divmg over from
At Ohio State Umverslty, Columbus, Saturday, Nov 18, 1972, the one.
2p.m., Region I winner vs. Reg1on 2winner.
Games Manager Richard Delaney, Asst Director, Dept of
Athletics, OSU, St. John Arena, Columbus, Ohio 43210 (614) 4228316.
- CLASS 'AAA' CHAMPIONSHIP
"At Akron, Rubber Bowl, Saturday, November 25, 1972, 7 30
p.m., garnemanager,Gordon Lar3on,Athletic Director, Dept of
Athletics, Akron University, 320 E. Buchtel Ave., Akron, Ohio
44304 (216) 762-2441, Ext. 558.

..

By MIKE RABUN
UI'I Sports Wnter
SAN ANTONIO, Tex (UP!)
- M1ke H!ll d1d not reall) owe
the second vtctory of hts pro
golf carect to a kmd ges ture by
Lee Trevmo H1il was playmg

too good to lose, anyway
But H1il, who ca ptured the
$25,000 !trsl pnze at the Texas
()pen Sunday, wanted 11 known
how much he apprec1ated what
1'1 evmo had done for htm
dUlmg the fmal round

500 183 121

West

Spartans eye
win over OSU

CHICAGO (UP! )- II ..ould be
1romc 1! Duff) Daugherty's
resigna tiOn as the M!chtgan
State football coach helped ease
archnval M1ciugan's path to
the Rose Bowl, but that IS
exactly what might be happenmg
The Spartans gave their
uutgmng coach the game bail
after beating Purdue 22-12
Saturday to knock the Bmler
Sunday 's Resulls
makers from a three-way he
Detrotl 14 Ch1cago 0
f01 the B1g Ten lead and llus
Pittsbu rgh 40 Cmcmnat1 17
week they gel a chance to do
N Y G1ants 29 Denver 17
Cleveland 20 Houston 0
the same thmg to Ohio State
M1am1 30 Buffalo 16
"We won Jl for Duffy,' sa1d
Was hmglon 35 N Y Jets 17
M1 nnesota 37 New Orl eans 6 qua1 lel back Mark N1esen, who
Phtladelph1a 6 51 LouiS 6
scmed touchdowns on runs of
Green Bay 34 Sa n Franc1sco 57 and 61 yards We figure
2&lt;
he's a goud coach It 11as us
Los Angeles 20 Atlanta 7
Kansas Ctly 27 Oakland 14
who had to change, not hm1
Dallas 34 San D1ego 28
We we1e down , and 1! wasn !
(only games scheduled)
Duffy 's fault '
Monday 's Games
Ba lhmor e at New Eng lan d
Daugherty announced F11da)
ln,ghl)
mght he was 1 e~ng mn g at the
(only game scheduled I
end of thiS season, hiS 19th as
Sunday's Games
the M1ch1gan State coach, and
Balilmor e at San Franc1sco
Bulfalo at N Y Jels
safety Brad Van Pelt sa td the
Denver at Los Angeles
deciSion spurred hiS teammates
Detroit at M1nnesota
on Saturday because ' We owed
Green Bay at ChiCago
Kansas City al P1ttsburgh
11 to !urn "
New Eng land at Miami
' We want to do our best to
New Orleans at Atlanta
help htm go out a wmner,' ' Van
N Y G1anlsat Wa shington
Oak land at Clncmnat1
Pelt sa1d
Ph ila delphia at Houston
Mtch1gan, b1ddmg to become
St Lou1s at Dallas
the
ftrst B1g Ten team to make
(only games scheduled
a repeal trtp to the Rose Bowl
ABA Standmgs
now that the non-1 epeat rule
By Um1ed Press 1n1erna1•onal has been hfted, and Ohto State
East
w. I Pet g b remamed unbeaten and lied for
9 - ' 692
Carolma
the conference lead wtth
Kentucky
5 6 !i~ ~•;, boonsh VIClones Saturday
V1rg 1n1a
6 8
New York
s 7 41 7 3,12 The Woivennes, ranked No 5
Ill the natwn, got two touchMem ph 1s
3 8 273 5
West
dO\\
nsf rom quarterback Denms
wlpctgb
Ulah
9 5 643
ind iana
7 4 636
•;,
The Dai~ Sentinel
San Otego
7 6 538 1
DEVOTED TO THE
Denver
7 6 538 1
INTEREST OF
' Dallas
3 7 300 4
ME!GS·MASON AREA
Sunday's Results
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed
Denver 137 New York 107
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Sari Otego 132 Vlrgm1a 121
C•tv Ed1tor
(Only games scheduled)
Published dally except

Cockroft were the only pomts
the Browns put on the
scoreboard before Leroy Kelly
scored fourth quarter touchdowns on runs of one and 14
yards to giVe the Browns a 20-0
VIctory over the Oilers
The smallest hometown

the ·SPorts·

a

3 4 1 •38 132 142

wlfpctpfpa
Los Ang
S 2 1 688 167 132
Allan Ia
' ' 0 500 163 163
San Fran 3 4 1 438 208 154
NewOrlns 1 6 1 188 115 217
Amencan ConfQrence
East
wltpclpfpa
M1amr
8 0 0 1 000 198 103
N Y Jets
5 3 0 625 238 189
New Eng
2 50 286 92 220
Buffalo
2 6 0 250 165 212
Baltmre
1 6 0 1&lt;3 9' 145
Central
w I I pet pf. pa
P1tlsbgh
6 2 0 750217127
Cmc~nnat1
5 3 0 625 155 132
Cleveland 5 3 0 625 141 134
Houston
I 7 0 125 872 15
West
wltpclpfpa
Kan Ctly
5 3 0 625 195 1•o
Oakland
4 3 I 563 209 155
San D1ego 2 5 1 313 152 203
Dfnver
2 6 0 250 165 222

Browns remain alive
by posting 20-0 AFC win
CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Browns coach Ntck
Skorich started calling the
plays In the second half Sunday
and helped hiS team contmue
Its mastery over too Houston
Oilers,
A parr of f1eld goals by Don
: .
.._·_-

Mike Hill captures Texas Open

By Untte-d Press ln1ernaf•onal

7 oo - News 6, Truth or Conseq 3 Beat The Block' Circus'
13 InSight 33. What s My Lme 8. Read Your Way Up 33,
Electnc Company 20 , Andy Gnff tth 15
7 30 - ToTeiiThe Trulh6 , TraffiC Court 10 EpiSode Act ton 33
Parent Game 3 Hollywood Squares'· Young Dr Ktldare 8,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Poilllcal Talk 15, Mov1e "Tarzan's

Lass1e 6

2.

Helen Help

----~-

"' Dream of Jeanme 13 Hathayoga 33

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald "Here ts a rubber
brtdge hand. that got all four
players mad South took one
look at dummy and asked
why hts partner couldn't
have reb1d to three clubs instead of ~1vmg an tmmedlate
ratse w1th three s m a II
trumps North rephed to the
effect that he had a bad hand
and wanted to make a mml~·""-~~,~-"'""'
mum reb1d and that 1f South
dtdn't hke the grand slam
contract, no one had made
htm b1d 11 "
J1m "! see why East and
versiOn, lor he IS a vtctim lull of protecllvely West got mad Undoubtedly
BY JACK O'BRIAN
disCtphned aggresstve hyster1a The total heart- South made the grand slam
A COWARDLY WAY
break ts there, negatives ltrmly m place as by takmg the best percentTO MAKE MONEY
Butley slithers through hts pntecllve armor of age play "
NEW YORK (KFS) - The new and
Sickly abuse, too old to weep, too commttted to
Oswald. "Exactly He won
debghtful "Oh Coward" m1m-revue of some 50
h1s
drab
fate
to
manage
a
heterose!&lt;ual
escape
the
d1amond lead , entered
Noel Coward songs and verbal spangles exports
The rest of a lme effectual cast plays 1t dummy w1th the queen of
about $1,000 a week to Str Noel m tax-happy
splendtdly but tt's Alan Bates who dommates m clubs' Jed the mne of trumps
Switzerland It's at the !my New Theatre (E
'
and let 1t r1de after East
:14th St ), grosses $14,000 a week and even sells
hiS hopeless portrait of a man sentenced to , played low. When both op·
out tis matmess, umque among off-Bdwy. shows
despatr lor life.
ponents followed to the secWord of the London trmmph of "Sutley" ond trump lead there were
- even !Is htls
It cost $25,000 to open
"Dude" flopped for about $900,000 Art Car- (Bates won all last season's stage laurels 1n it) no further problems He
brought out all the oldllme senous dramalovers made the slam whtle the opney's llymghtghabove hts TV sewer h1s 10 pel
ponents glowered and comof theW Coast "Prtsoner of 2nd Ave "patd Art
Ill a rare Ftrst Ntght Audtence - dressed well, plained about hts b~ing able
$10,200 last week . Trm1 Lopez' press agents
no kooks apparent, even scads of evemng to fall m a nver and come
togged respecters of the durably mvahded up w1th a ftsh "in his mouth "
are feedmg colummsts tales of three-gals-a-day
tnumphs, that's Hugh O'Bnan-style and
senous legtllmate theater
Jtm "I can't blame them
South Afnca's self-tprmed "spare-parts The less declarer says the
George Ham1ltor.-rut publlctty whtch turned
surgeon" Dr Chnsttaan Barnard blasted the better Of course, he did take
sa1d gent.s mto targets of nd1cule
medta lor ballyhoomg hts !&gt;!art-transplant the best line of play, but
Go see "Butley" whtch opened at the
even wtth that line h1s
Morosco Theater for the lmesl actmg, by Alan
expenments, trony mdeed, he alone snatched at chance for success was less
Bates, on any N Y stage . It's a merry every chance to appear m all media from the than 25 per cent but the 25
press to any TV or radiO talk show 1n relentless per cent chance had matentragedy, a tale of a failed passmg heterosexual,
ahzed ''
whose pltght, as so often m real life, h1des exp 1mtatton of his spare-party manners
Olymp1cs multl-gold-medahst Mark Spitz
IHEWSPAPll lHTERPRIIE A!!H 1
behmd cynical, bitchy destructiveness of
stgned a "llfellme" pact to pitch Schtck razors
constant pseudO-'fllty msults
A London
Umverstty teacher's student-seducttons are
In "21," -mulll-ztlhonarre horseman Alf
Vanderbilt looked tedd1bly seriOUS with lovely
mlerrupted by bnef marnage and fatherhood ,
Cynthta
Cole of Cleveland, Baltunore and
The b!ddmg has been
whereupon, as "Butley" begms he IS cymcally,
South
Manhattan; Cynth's m the "ctvlhzed" set, we West North
East
hghtly savaging that !mal rallonahzallon of h1s
U•
met her a lew mghts before m P J Clarke's Pass 1•
homo-late The comedy 1s there and hke all
Pass
4NT
wtl, teeters on the sharpened blade between
wtth her ex•husband . Phtl Iselin's beautiful Pass 4 •
Pass
SNT
Pass
5
t
Pass
wtfe
m
"21"
passed
her
loyalty
test
to
'1er
N
Y
comedy and destruchon
?
Pass
Jets-owner husband by enthusmg about a young Pass 6•
Wtthm a quick few hours, Sutley's wtfe
You, South, hold
lady's temltc taste m wearmg Jets~olored
demands a dtvorce to marry a stable bore, hts
.AK862 .A2 +5 .AK862
green whtle Phil bantered with h1s landlord, N
submtss1ve homosexual mate qmts h1m , and he
What do you do now'
bears up wtlh constant laceratmg attacks on
Y Mets-boss Donald Grant (The Mets enJOY
A-Bid six opades only. U
pnmary proprietorship at Shea Stadium) . Ed your partner held four spades
htmself, and all others, !nendless at the lmal
cur tam, one of the subtlest upbeat endmgs and Sylvta Sullivan gave a rrrrreally-big hello to tho queen, an ... and two
ever the next vulnerable youth on h1s seduc- to a former antagomst (critic) of the days when kina's he would have bid seven
opodes dl...,tly over your five
twn list proves too revoltmg even for hts ter- Ed domtnated vaudeville on TV
no ..tru.mp. He can't have the
Gtfted com1c George Carl111's strange m- qu .. n of spoodes.
mmally unlldy stale, mentally and phystcally
ststence on brutahzmg h1s mventlve clowmng
Alan Bates manages to keep thts stckly
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your
partner opens one club
pmwheel adazzle w1th one of the most wtth verbal ftlth got hun mdtcled 1n Milwaukee
What
do
respond wtth
amazmgly compleat tour de weaknesses ever on obscemty charges last summer which can't .Q8U you
.K953 tA765&lt;1o3
seen on a stage, makes the usual homo-play be quashed he'll stand trial Dec. 6 Most
Answer tomorrow
exported from London 's West End seem dtstant, celebrated N Y detective smce Johnny
ugly vulgarities
Broderick, Eddte Egan of "French Connection"
Author S1mon Gray rates mtramural
true-tale, has a TV ser1es draped en hts more
About Coyotes
ragg111g - he's also, as ts hts "Butley," a than 5,000 narco-arrests while on the force; but
Coyotes are about three
teacher of Enghsh at London Umvers1ty, but )ust as m "Connecllon," Eddie was pronounced feet long, includmg a bushy
Gray boasts a wile and two children Thts IS not the type Actor Gene Roche seenungly is and 16-lnch taU, weigh about 30
less a play than a brtlliant character expostlwn, will play th~ colorful Eddie . Jack E Leonard pounds, and have a shaggy
the IItle character desperately strong m hts phoned to announce he's lost another person and buff coat With white underSides Thetr hfe llpan 1s about
sleazmess, tl's never a glamortzer of per- IS down to 205 agam Had to diabetes
13 years

._,., ""

6

MONDAY NOV 6, 1972
30 - NBC News 3 ' 15, ABC News 6, CBS News 8, 10

\

-----

Desert Mystery," 13

-

.KQJ 2

Television Log

------

a

Monday's Games

Ulah vs Carolma at Rale1gh
(Only game scheduled )

Desk

NBA Standmgs
By United Press lnternattonal

. . .,.

Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
Boston

New York
Buffal o
Phil a

wlpctgb
10 1 909
10 2 833
,,,
3 8 273 7
0 13 000 11

Central DIVISIOn

Houston
Atlanla
BaiiJmore

wlpclgb
7 • 636
6 6 500 l'h
5 6 •55 2

Cl eveland
4 10 286
VYeslern Conference

411:!

M1dwesl DIVISIOn
wlpclgb
Milwaukee
9 2 818
Chtcago
8 ' 667 l'h
KC Omaha
5 7 "7 4
Detr01 t
4 8 333 5
PacifiC DIVISIOn
w I pel 9 b
Golden Stale 8 2 800 •;,
Los Angeles 10 3 769
Phoen1x
5 s 500 3'12
Seatlle
' 8 333 51h
Portland
I 10 091 8
Sunday's Results
Phoemx 107 Cleveland 106
Mtlwaukee 131 Phlladelphta
113

Los Angeles 124 Seallle 115
(only games scheduled!
Monday ' s Games

llhnms also made 1ls coach
Bob Blackman, happy Sa lUI da)
by wmmng tls ftr sl game of the
season after los mg seven
Quarle1bdck M1ke Wells ran for
two touchdowns and passed for
two more as the llhm walloped
Nm thw est.ern, 43-14, scormg
!uUl touc hdowns m less than
seven mmutes m the thn d
qu,u tm
Iowa made a goal hne stand
late Ill the fourth quarter but
the n gave up a safety wtlh JUst
3 42 to play to allow Wtsconsm
to escape with a 16-14 vtctory m
the other B1g Ten game

So what?
They're insured.
You've heard the expression. It's a 1 atwnalization as common as a cliche. And as
hollow. There is more at issue th an property. What the rationalizing phrase
glosses over is the sacredness of all things
within the community of man. The respect
and kindness we owe one another as bn'thright. When we break this trust we contribute to moral pollution.
PHOTOGRAPH BY LARRY SI LVER
I

"""'

Second ctass pos1a9e pa 1d et
Pomeroy Ohro
Nat rona! advertising
rtpresentatrve
eottrnettr
Gallagher lnr 12 East 42nd
St New York C1ty New York
Subscrtpt10n rates
De
livered bv carrrer where
avartable SO cents per week.
By Motor Route where carrrer
servrce not avarlable
One
month Sl 75 Bv mall rn Oh10
and W Va One ~ear Sl.t 00
Srx months S7 25
Three
months U SO Subscr rp t10n
pr rc e 1nctudes Sunday T1mes
Sentrnel

Security Is love
It emergencies
arise, is your fam·
ily adequately cov:
ered? Secure their
well-being with a
revtsed policy

Arkenwyke Yew
The Enghsh barons compelled Kmg John to s1gn the
Magna Carta (cornerstone of
Anglo-Saxon hberlles) under the Arkenwyke yew tree
at Runnymede, England

The community of man .. God's club.
You're a life member.

Cqnault Ua Soon

RIAL

Davis-Warner Ins.

-

RELIG ION

1

I

IN AMERI CA N LI FE

KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
3 MILES SOUTH OF MIDDLEPORT ON ST. RT. 7

PRESENTS

REVUE '72
2 Big Weeks • Beginning Tonight Thru 18th.
q.~

In AI9-0ul At 5

THE NEW IMPRESSIONS

' use Our Free Parklna Lat

Robinson's Ceaners

"Three Record Breaking Years
in Daytona Beach"

m E 2nd, Pomeroy

Wlfh the great Freddie Spicer on drums
(comparable to Louis BellsonL plus Harry
Kinzey on sax, Boots Randolph style, with
specialties by

EVERY

Exotic Midori Ashikawa and Lovely Joni Craig

FOOTBAIJ.
GAME

AND STARRING

McQ.URE'S
•
"" &amp; Locutl

JAY HARVEY
"One of the Best Comedians of our Time"
•

Dancing and continuous entertainment 9 p.m to 2 a.m nltely. Popular
prices - small cover charge
~

0. ·

......

~

Admthi nli corr trlbuted for th e pubUc aood In ~ooperaUon with
He Adverhslns Counc1t and the lnternal1onat Newspaper Advertlslni E•e c ut1~es

114 COurt St.

SAME DAY
SERVICE

To Get Your
Goodies From

,m
.

.•

'

FINISHING

I

I

\

HUS'ILE
AFrER

TICJUI,:I' INroRMATION
Student 1\ckets, Students may p1rchase tickets from their
blgh school for any of the champloosl)lp games at a price of $1
per ticket if pli'Chaled In advance. 'lbe schoclla making til! play•
offs wUJ obtain llddltionllllltudenl ticketa to be 10ld at $1 In ad·
V!'Jlce of the game. No llludent tlcketa will ~vallable at any
pJJie site' the day of the 1ame.
Adult Tlckela, Adulli may obtain pr~
cketa at $2 50
fi.om any blgh IIChool ~ to November 6, 1972 or from schoola
Jlelecled lor the pil)'-offl after November 12, 1m.
All tlcbt• at each game lite will be $3. No ltudent Uckets will
1 be IOid at •name lite the day ol the pme.

He flmshed two shots m front
of Trevino, who had a final
round of f1ve-under 67, and four
shots m front of chargmg Phtl
Rod~&lt;!&lt;., ,, ~ o also had a closing
67
Trevmo won $14,300 and
Rodgers took home $8,850
T1ed m fourth place wtth T/Bs
were Ch1 Ch1 Rodnguez, Ben
Kern Bobby N1chols, Brad
Anderson and Charles Coody,
who had been only three
st1 okes off the pace to start the
day
Htll wrapped up the tournament wtth three straight
birdies begmnmg at the 12th
hole
At that poml Trevmo had
closed the deficit to two
strokes, but Htll, who h1t 17
greens , got hot wtth hts putter
He ran m a !().!doter at the
12th, a tO-footer at the 13th and
an etght-footer at the 14th That
1 boosted h1m to a fiVe stroke
lead over Trevmo and not even
the "hoops and yells from the
gallery could help Trevino
make up that margm

Your

2157

Canada ranks second m
area among the nat10ns of
the world It 1s exceeded only by the Sov1et Umon

~HIRt

me'

Saturday by The Ohro Vattev
,ubi1Sh1ng Companv
Ill
Court St, Pomeroy Oh10
45769 Busrness Off1ce Phone
992 2156 Ed 1l0r 1bl fJhone 991

New York at Porllat\d
(only game scheduled)

'

Franklin, mcludmg a fourth
quarte r lte-breake1, to beat
lnd1ana, 21-7, and No 4 Ohw
Stale rallied to lop Mmnesola
27-19
Mtch1gan and OhiO State both
have 5 Oconfercnce records and
th1 ce ga mes to play, Purdue IS
4-1and M1dugan State 3-1-J
AMtchtgan Slate victory ove1
the Buckeyes m thetr •egwnally-televlsed meetmg Saturday
at East Lans mg would leave
MiciHganm undtsputed possesSIOn of !he conference lead,
assunn ng the Wolvennes beat
wea k Iowa
Daugherty sa1d he was more
relaxed" Saturday than I had
been m some tune ''
I'm JUSt gomg to p1 epare
fo1 Oluo Slate and let (athletic
rtu ectm) BUI t Sm1th do ail the
wm k un fmdmg a successor for

Htll had a four stroke lead
over T1 evtno to start the !mal
round over the 7,011-yard, par72 Woodlake Golf Club course
and the two were paired
together for the last 16 holes
The crowd whtch turned out
under murky sktes " as ail lor
Lee and Lee knew 11
Lee realized that each ltme
he holed a null even 1! Hill sllll
had a pull left to make, the
bulk of the gallery would begm
rushmg to the next ]\ole
You go ahead and putt out
f1rst each hmc,11 Trevmo sa 1d
to H1ll
' That JUSt shows you what a
gentleman Lee ts," satd Htll,
33, who seldom ge ts the
publlctty on the course or off
the cours• that hts brother
Dave docs "1hat was a super
thmg he d1d He was trymg to
beat me JUSt as hard as he
could , too and he was domg
somethmg to help me "
Hill needed little help, though,
m flnng hts fourth strmght
round m the 60s to post a 72hole total of 15-under 273

·GEORGE HAl.L AND THE HALLMARKS
wmeand
I

I

,~

'

�•

__._._...__~-~__,_

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

-

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

'

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---·--~----

~--- ~

~---

-

~

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- - Tlie - - -- - 3-

' Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov 6, 1972
2- Til! Datly

Four More Years

EDITOR. I AI.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Everyone Irked
by This One

Parochioid Still
Unsolved Problem
One of the few things both plestde ntlai candidat es
agreed upon m 1972 was the need fo r some fo rm of lax
atd or tax relief for parents of pa1 och1al schoolchtldt en
It remams to be seen whe thet a ptes•denl so mchned
and a Cong1 ess favorably disposed can come up With
a !01 mula whl~ h Will meet the Fn st Amendment tes t of
separahon of church and state mthe eyes of the Sup1 eme
Court
In the meantime a case lot pubhc a1d to re ligious
educatiOn was made recently by the auth01 of a lelte1
to The Amettcan School Board Journal
"Some people do mdeed believe m God, ' wrote James
J Mason, and cons1der the relationship between man
and God to be of such pnmary concern thai 11 should
permeate the educational process
"Other people beheve differently, and e1ther constder
God to be a myth or ummportant '1hey beheve that edu
cahon should be sllent on the subject
' Why should the lalte1 group, any m01 e than the
former, expect to have lhe1r pos1tton taught at the ex
pense o( those who don't sha1 e 1t' The money taken II om
parochtal sc hool parents f01 pubhc schools IS spent on a
rehgwn-secular humamsm-)usl as truly as would be
the converse There ts s1mply no such thmg as a 'neull a!
posllton on rehgwn "
The only fatr system , he concluded would be for each
taxpayer to earmark hiS taxes for the school he wants to
support That way no one's consc1ence w o ~ld be trodden
upon
The basic fallacy 111 thts argument 1s the ass umptiOn
that the questwn IS one of believers tn God versu• non
behevers It IS not It IS a quesllon of what •s the best
educational compromtse 111 the plurahsllc soc1ety that JS
Amenca, a plurahsm whtch 111cludes man y d1ffet ent
k111ds of behevers as well as nonbelievers
At one time, dally prayers Bible 1ead111gs and teleased lime for rehgwus 111strucbon were normal practices m public schools Even then, however, many Catha
be parents chose to send then ,chtldren to the sc hools
ma111ta111ed by thetr church
Many non-Cathohc parents were likewiSe unhappy w1th
a rehgwus curnculum whtch of necesstty had to be non
denom111atwnal and noncontroversial or 1f you wtll
watered down almost to meamnglessness
Expertence has dtclated that the public schools , wh1ch
are supported by all the people for the benef1t of all ch1l
dren, must stnve for neutrahty 111 this sphere When
parents have trouble agree111g on a stmple lh111g hke a
nondenommatwnal prayer, certamlr there 1s no way to
"permeate the educahonal process' w1th rehgwus teach
mg that would not arouse 111tense disputation 111 the com
mumty and probably offend behevers more than nonbehevers
If this has resulted, as some allege, 111 a btas towatd
"secular humamsm " 111 the schools , tl ts also true that
large m1mbers of parents seem to have adb1cated their
own respons1bthty lor overseemg the rehg10us or moral
trammg of thetr chtldren m the best place for 1t- the
home
• "'
In th1s country parents are and always have been free
to send the1r children to pnvate schools, for rehgwus
reasons or lor reasons qu1te unconnected w1th rehgwn
Ne1ther that freedom nor bebef 111 God as opposed to
nonbelief in God Is at Issue.
First Amendment cons1deratwns aside, the only legtltmate issue lor public debate 1s whether or not tt would
be in the best interest of the maJOrity of Amencans to
permit diVersiOn of tax monies away from the pub)Jc
schools to ass1st a mlnonty which , l or whatever reasons,
does not wish to avatl tlself of the educallon provtded by
those schools

.,

6

NORTH (D)
• 983
.AQ654

WFST

EAST

• 42

.QJ5

.10863
tQJJ072
.103

.975
• 94 3

.J982

soum

.AK1076
.A4
+AK86
.K7
North-South vulnerable
West North East South
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1.

Pa.s

2.

3.
5
6t
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

4NT
5 N T.
7• ·

+

Openrng

leall- + Q

I Voice along Br'Way

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

SAME MUSIC, DIFFERENT LYRICS
Dear Helen ·
I've wntten several tunes, but have never seen a reply m the
paper Toon you suspected a boy with a sumlar problem of
hoaxing you, so perhaps you thmk I'm a hoaxer too Please answer.
I'm a marrted bus111essman and well thought of locally It all
started when my wife kidded me a bout bemg a matd because I
helped with the dishes. One thing led to another and she made me
up like a woman, with l&gt;!r clothes, w1g, cosmettcs, etc, It was all
In fun, but somehow 11 got to be a habit
Through the years, she has bought women's clothes for me
and these are what I relax m at home (My whole personality
changes wren I'm m fenunme attire )
They were so comfortable that I began wearmg women's
clothing when I went out-of-town on business tr1ps. After the
day's work was done, I'd doll up "female," and walk around
town Sometimes I'd stnke up a conversation with another
woman but never wilh a man I am NOT homosexual
Well, my w1fe found out. She diSCQvered my women's clothes
In my su1tcase, and now she wants to divorce me as she says I'm
twtsted
If she enjoyed my charade at home, why then does she think
I'm crazy when I carry it on outside - where no one w1ll know?
Does she really like the tdea of a woman comparuon, but wants to
keep it secret? - S S P

.,

DearS.·
Yours Is a question lor a close.Jn counselor, that Is why I
have avotded using It 111 the column A fetish can best be treated
by a psychiatrist, and that goes double If your wife also shared
the aberration .. or perhaps you two are completely nght for
each other, who knows?
One thing comes on strong, however, m all my letters from
part-time or beguming transvestites they always blame !herr
first cross-over on a member of the oppostte sex - stster, wife,
girlfriend, mother - after which they either "just can't help
themselves" or else they're still bemg "forced aga111st !herr
wills."
If your preference for women's clothes threatens to blight
your life, S S.P., then I'd suggest first, honest self-appraisal
(stop blaming your wife - she isn't the cause of your "split
penonality," though she may have encouraged It); and second,

therapy.
Where therapy will lead, I don't know, but I can't I&gt;!Ip you
klng-dlltance Sorry' - H.

+++ '

Dear Helen:
Jay and I have been engaged almost ftve years We're
mature lldulli and have gotten aloog fine : we had a perfect,
pllldtlreiiiiCIIIIhlp.sexwtll no problem. We both decided It could
Wilt IJIIIIIIIIII'I'IIIle.- - ~
:
But-. with the wedding date set for spnng, we are con'1 ny fllllllnl. We ltlrt out nice and then the bomb &lt;k'opa,
'I1MN.,. jelkMIIiea, rlvllr)', doobla, resenbnenta. Yet we are
- . we low each other.
Wllh IUCh a long relatiooahlp, should these hateful times
blppeDT - FIGifl'ERS

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
No Person Is Perfectly Built

Is 16-Year-Oid Humpbacked?
Take a look at some of your
friends' photographs that are
taken face on and cover up
the right half with a sheet of
paper and look at the left
side of the body. Now reverse the procedure and you
will see that many people
look entirely different on the
right and left half ~f their
body
I wish you would see an
orthopedtc specialist and !Pot
him look at the amount of
curvature you have and see
tltt Is really somethmg that
you should concern yourself
about or not
As far as your rounded
shoulders are concerned, thts
suggests poor posture habits.
You could do quite a bit for
this by becoming more ~'On·
sc1ous about holding your
shoulders back You could
also take a series of exerDear Fighters:
.
cises to strengthen the musThough you won't admit it, I'd gueas seJ: probably IS a big cles between your shoulder
part of the problem Now that the time growslhort, you're no blades. Smce your letter sug:
doubt growing anxious but-perhapa '"a way you don't SU8pl!ct___gests ;)IOU are 41thletlcany In'
· cUnei! this would be a &amp;ood
Ate you so locked Into a placid, platooic friendship that you
program for you You can
subconscloualy question your love for each other? Maybe you use pulley weights in 'a gymdon't reaDy want the ''till death do us part" thing becalllle you naslum to weight your arms
suspect that It COULD be deadly dull.
and then sw!Jlg your arms
Why not take a good long look at your relaUgnshlp and if 1t backYi'ard or rotate them In
" b ,
'
a ba&lt;!kward circle using the
appraises more ha it than desire, either change your attitudes muscles between the aboul·
promptly or cancel the IV~ ' - H.
der blades.

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. {.8mb -- I am 16
years old an\1 very physically fit About two years ago
someone made a remark
about me bemg "humpbacked " The Idea was t 0tally new to me Later I was
told by others also that I was
humpbacked I was also told
to hold up my shoul~ers and
I soqn discovered that I was
m la~t humpbacked The
hump had developed I thmk
from the shoulders slumpmg,
It IS Situated a httle below
my shoulder blade It tsn't
nottceable when I wear a
shirt, but without a shirt the
hump IS fairly obv10us It
seems like, smce I am young,
the problem could be corrected with the right treatment. Is there anythmg I can
do to stratghten my back?

Dear Reader - It 1s difficult to say how much can be
done without knowmg how
much of a deformity you
really have. Your letter sug.
gests to me that it is not a
very marked deform1ty, 1f it
can't be noticed when your
shirt IS on As Important as
1t 1s to you, I doubt very
much that it makes a difference to anybody else Sometimes people f1x thetr attentlon on a mmor defect of the
body and exaggerate its im·
portance
Practically no one has a
comrletely normal, symmetric&amp; body You may be
surprised to know that- al·
most everybody has at least
a little shortening of one leg.
There Is a tendency for one
half of the body to be slightly
larger than the other hall

8 00 -- Gunsmoke8, 10, Rowan and Marlin 's Laugh In 3, 4, UFO
6, TopollheMonth8 . HollvwoodTVThealre20 33 ..
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8 tO , Pro Football 6, 13, Mov1e Ma~'c
Carpet" 3, 4 15
9 30 - Dons Day 10 Political Talk 8
10 00 - News20 From the Htlls 33 Pol 1t1cal Talk 8 10
10 30 - Election Prev•ew 20
11 OO - News 3,4 6,8.10 IS
11 20 - Johnny Carson 3, 4J 15, Mov1 e ' The Two Faces at Dr
Jekyll" 8, Mov1e S1 rocco" 10
TUESDAY, NOV 7, 1972
6 00 - Sunnse Sem•nar 4 Sacred Hearl 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13 Farmflme 10
6 20 -

Pau l Harvey 13

6 25 - Fatth For Today 13

6 30 - Columbus Today 4 81ble Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment 10
6 45 - Corncob Report 3

6 55 - ~l,ntstones 13
7 OO - Today3,, 15 CBSNews8 10 News 6

7 30 - Sle epy Jeffer s 8 Romper Room 6 Bu dwmkle &amp; Rocky

13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Rev ue 6, 13, Sesame 51 33
9 00 - Paul D1x0n 4 Phil Donahue IS , Romper Room B Con
centraflon 6 Fnendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13 What
Every Woman Wants to Know 3

30 - ToTeiiTheTrulh3 Jeopardy6 Hazel8
10 00 - D~nah Shore 3 ;s 01ck Van Dyke 13 Jokers Wild 8 10
Columbus Stx Calling 6
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue ' Spill Second 13
Pnce is Rtghl 8. 10
11 00 - Sale of the Century 3 4 15 , Love Amencan Styte 6
9

Gambit 8, 10 Password 13

11

30 - Hollywood Squares 3 • 15 Love of L1fe 8, 10 Bewtlched
6 13

12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4
Jack•e Oblinger 8, News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3W'sGameJ 15 Spl1tSecond6 SearchforTomorrowa

10
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 II s Your Bel 8 Green
Acres 10 Watch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3, ' 15 Let s Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our L1ves 3 4, 15 Newl ywed Game 13 Mtke
Douglass 6, Guldmg Ltghl 8, 10
2 30 - Doctors 3, ' · 15, Dat1ng Game 13 Edge of N1ghl 8, 10
Just Generat1on 20

3 00 - General Hosptta l 6 13 Another World 3 4, 15, Love
Splendored Thtng 8, 10 Just Generation 20
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3. 4, 15 One L1fe to Ltve 6, 13
Secret Storm 8 10, Magg1e and I he Beaultful Mach1ne 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love
Amer~can Style 13 Nlerv Gr1ffm 4 Fl~ntstones 6 Gilligan's
Isle 8 Mov1e" "Three Faces West" 10

4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Pellteoal Juncllon 3 Dan1el Boone 13,
Merv Grfffm 8, Andy Grlff1!h 15
S 00 - 01ck Van Dyke 15 Mr Rogers 20. 33 Ponderosa 3, 4
Daniel Boone 6
5 30 - Marshall Dtllon 15, Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 oo - News3 ,,8, 10,15 AroundTheBend33
6 30 - News 3, .4 6, 8, 10 15 , I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Growmg

H1m Up 33
7 00 - News 6, 10, What s My Lme 8 Elec Co 20 Andy Gr1fhth
15 BeattheCiock4, l'veGotASecrell3 , TruthorConseq 3.
Satnt 15, Eiec Co 20
7 30 - ThiS Is You' Ltfe3 , To Tell The Truth 6 Pme Is R1ghl 8
10, Beat The Clock 13, RFD 20 Feast of Language33
8 00 - Bonanza 3, 4, 15 Temperatures RISmg 6 IJ Mauae •
10, Age of Anxtely 13, Oh10 ThiS Week 20 Age of Anxtely 33
8 30 - Election Coveraoe 20 Dateline Amenca 33
9 00 - Behind The Lmes 33
9 30 - Marshall Sports 33
10 oo - NBC Report 3. 4, 15, Marcus Welby, M D 6, 13, News 20
11 oo - News,Weather,Sporls3,,,6810 14, 15
11 30 - Eledlon Coverage3, 4, 8, 10, 13,1 5
11 00 - Your Health 4
v•
1 30 - News 'Ue?lher 4, loc:'l, JIIews 13 ~-

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Do your country a favor today and help someone to vote
I mean really g~ve some sort of assistance, In one way or
another, to a voter who might not otherwise make 1t to the polls.
Tins doesn't Include the husband who Blves his wife a lift to
the polling place, or looks after the kids while she's gone No
fudging, please, because this couple cares enough to vote,
snyway
Try to thmk of somebody 111 your netghborhood, ot your
commuruty, who ought want to vote, but maybe just ISn't able to
to do so Then get m touch with them - this evening, if possible and make arrangements to see that they have that chance to cast
a ballot
And try, for a moment, to forget what party they belong to.
Try to look at the b1gger picture, and remember that casting
your vote IS the REAL "participatory democracy" the kl&lt;ls have
been screaming about
Doli't predicate your asststance on support for any par·
ticular candidate or cause. Take them anyway Electioneer them
on the phone, orm too car, but make 11 clear that you, YOU, Y.O.
U care enough about Amertca to see that they exerctse one of the
most prectous of hberttes, regardless.
Doo't count on your local political organiZ8tion to get out the
vote. They'D be working, anyhow, and thiS IS good Two offers
are better than none
Doo't let anyone pr~mpt the JOb you, and you alone, are
going to do Get at least one fellow Amertcan Into that votmg
booth.
Maybe it'll be that young mother down the street, who could
get away if she had someone to babysit for an hour, or meet the
kids wren they get home from school
Maybe It's thatseruor citizen who doesn't own a car
Maybe it's the convalescent, or shut-m, who failed to cast an
absentee ballot. W1th help, maybe the person Is strong enough to
get out - if someone cares enough to help enough.
Maybe it's til! young voter, who registered' with stars In his
(or her) eyes, but needs a little nud~e to strengthen his (or her)
resolution to work within the system, Instead of denouncing 11.
Maybe It's the fainlly that simply doesn't care. It could be
that if you showed them that you care, then trey would care
enough to cast their ballots.
Think about It this evening. Do something about It, tonight or

Another exercise device 1s
the tens1on or stretch springs
that you can hold between
your hands and stretch the
springs out using the muscles between your shoulder
blades Most trapeze work,
or any type of exercise like
climbing ropes hand over
hand are useful In develop.
mg the shoulder muscles tomorrow.
•
You do not need exerc1ses
But don't qutt untll you.ve accompiJilhed your mission, and
that Will develop the muscles
over the front of the chest l&gt;!lped someone to vote.
Even If your aUegtance is totally strong and unremitting to
They may already be too
strong m compar1son to your the Republican or the Delilocratlc Party, l'U give you odds that
weaker muscles between the within five years (ten at til! most), you'll be saying, and proudly,
shoulder blades.
"Well, I'm a strong Democrat (or Republican), but back in 19'12,
I am sure your physical I cared enough about my country that I made sure that one
education teacher would be Republican (or Democrat) got to the polla and voted, becalllle
glad to help you with a set of
exercises that would help you thla Ia the finest thing a citizen can do - pick his own aovemlilong this line. But in the ment, bued oo his own conaclence .''
You'll hear Iota of "get-out-the-vote" Jlleltlages this time of
meabtlme ask your family
doctor to direct you to an ~ar. MOlt wiD be llincere, Some wiD be special pleadlnlls. Some
orthopedic specialist lf you will reprmntriarrow lnla'esta. But all wiD be right.
are really ~'Oncerned about
Tlilllln'tone al thotle. I am not llklnc you to go out and wte.
the posslblllty of a deformity
You're too ~ent to dilentranchlle yOUI'IIelf, right? What I
In your back.
am - - you to do Ia to get 111meone elle to vote -to take aiJ
(HIWS~AI'll lHTllHISl ASSH)
ihe.,._nndedtomakecertain tll8t paou gets to the po11a, no
it. PleMe,
''The llllly thing nem ary for the triumph ot evil Ia lor good •
-_,.,,
- · .. Ot, 0"""'·
io See~
..,. ,_
ol IWt
lu
JSSJ, I!Wio Clfr Sflrt100, Ntw YOit, men to do nothing."- Edmund Burke.
H Y. 10019 For • copr ol Or l.atrtb'r
+++
ON TilE TV DIAL: 'tony Rlndall~peelal on WCJIS.TV at 8,
floollot "' Jorhtt wtirAI, ..~ 5D
~ to litO ..... Ml •" but "GIIMIIOke" Rill be folllllm WBNS.TV .,. Colta-Patrlotl
·~.oo~or
wr.t.
footbaiJ, I, WHTN·TV.
•

"'

w....-

.,..._..,.

-~--

---

DaUy Sentlnel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Nov. 6,1972

Pro Standings

Steelers talk

NFL Slandtngs

BY' JOE CARNICEUJ
Terry had one of his best days
UPI Sports Writer
as a pro "
The Pittsburgh Steelers, who
Bradshaw threw TD passes
haven't smeUed a IItle m 40 of 28 and 34 yards to Frank
years m the Nallonal Football Lewts and 13 to Larry Brown to
League, suddenly are talkmg highligh! the rout. The Steelers
Super Bowl-and people are bu!lt a 2IHl lead before Cmbstenmg
cmnall was able to score
The Steelers, who have
Frrst place was on the !me m
never won a title of two other dtVIStons and both
any
sort
smce
they were decided rather handtly
entered the league m 1933, Len Dawson threw three TD
took a big step toward !herr passes to spark the Kansas
first one SWJday wren tooy City Chiefs to a 27-14 victory
trampled the Clncumat1 Ben· over the Oakland Ratde,s and
gals, 40-17. Terry Bradshaw ltrst place m the AFC West and
threw three touchdowns passes W!lhe Ellison and Jun Berand rook1e Franco Harns telsen ran lor short TDs to hft
rushed for 101 yards to spark lie Los Angeles Rams to a 20-7
the vtctory and move the tnumph over the Atlanta
Steelers a game ahead of the Falcons and the NFC Western
Bengals m the Amencan lead
Elsewhere,
Washmgton
Conference Central Dlvlstdn
The sound drubbmg of the drubbed the New York .ets, 35·
Bengals, who had beaten 17, Dallas downed San D1ego,
Pittsburgh, 15-10, earlier this 34-28, Green Bay beat San
season on ftve Horst Franctsco, 34-24, Detrotl shut
Muhlmann field goals, touched out Ch1cago, 14-0, M1am1
off crtes of "Super Bowl" m the remamed unbeaten wtth a 30-16
Pittsburgh dressmg room but romp past Buffalo, Cleveland
young Coach Chuck Noll, who blanked Houston, 20-0, Mmnnhas bUilt the club from a 1-13 sota trounced New Orleans, 37disaster four years ago, was 6, the New York G1ants
defeated Denver, 29-17, and St
more realistic
"We have another big game Lams and Phtladelphta lied, 6·
next week," Noll sa1d, 6 Baltunore IS at New England
referring to the meetmg wtlh tomght.
Dawson passed 29 yards to
Kansas City "It's a little too
Wendell
Hayes for one score, 42
early for things like that. We
played very well today and to Robert West for another and

Nahona I Conference

East
wltpclpfpa
Washg lon 7 I 0 875 200111
Dallas
6 1 0 750 184 125
NY Gtanls 5 3 0 625 197 164
St L OUIS
2 5 1 313 98 162
Phil a
1 6 1 188 68 177
Central
w I 1 pet pi pa
Delr01t
5 3 0 625 199 169
Green Bay S 3 0 625 156 U4

Tl to Efd Podolak for a thrrd as

M m nesola , 4 4

Ch1cago

the Chtels beat Oakland
Btll Ktlmer, subbmg for the
mjured Sonny Jurgensen,
threwTDpasses of 45,70 and 89
yards to lead the Redksms over
the J~ts
Dallas remamed a game
behind Washmgton m the NFC
East as Cr.tlg Morton ran
seven yards lor one score and
passed one-yard to Mike D1tka
for a.1other to defeat San
D1ego
Mercury Morns ran for two
TDs and Garo Yepremtan
kicked three ftrst half fteld
goalS as M1am1 ran 1ts record
to 0-0 wtth a vtctory over the
Bills Morris scored on runs of
22 and four yards
John Brockmgton ran for 133
yards and scored three TDs to
lead the Packers over the
49ers
Detrotl remamed tied With
Green Bay lor the NFC Central
lead as Steve Owens and Greg
Landry each plunged a yard
for scores and Leroy Kelly's
two TDs helped the Browns
down
Houston
Fran
Tarkenton's two TD passes
enabled the Vtkmgs to rout
New Orleans and Joe Orduna's
one-yard run and a 37-yard
mterceptlon return for a score
by Jtm Files w1thin the last 35
seconds of too ltrst half boosted
the Gtants over Denver

crowd smce Dec 4, 1966 to
watch the Browns, 61 ,985,
dtdn't see much offens1ve
action m the ftrst half by the
12th and 13th ranked o[fenstve
teams m the NFL
Fifteen punts were booted by
both clubs during the ftrst
three quarters
The only scormg m the first
30 mmutes was a 19-yard l1eld
goal by Cockroft after Bo
;'Ciltnell' re&lt;:Qv,ef~d liimbled
J· •
punt on the Houston !.j.;yard
!me m the frrst quarter
"We started to call more
~ . plays from the bench m the
By Chet Tannehill
second hall to help Mtke
Plupps get off those tough
, second and etght calls," said
'
'
.,.#o#o~----P..~o.po~~.,- _-"-'~""&lt;~~.....,,1) Sk:onch, whose club has now
whipped the Otlers stx stratght
We will wmt another year to watch a southeastern Ohto tunes
"Phtpps moved the team
football team of any class In the regwnal and state champwnsh1p
games Even our SEOAL champion, Ironton, IS rated by com- outstde because the Oilers
puter as another also-nn. The Tigers' loss to Trtple A Ports- were plugging the mstde
mouth early In the season didn't help Hanrubal Rtver (where the runmng game He used more
beck 1s that!') IS No. lm our Regton 7 Class AA Ironton IS play action passes and they
ranked 4th Warren Kennedy of Reg~on I (840) ts ranked No 1 worked great," satd Sk:onch
The Browns' olfenstve show
In Ohio of Class AA schools
Even so, some fans may want to catch the state's best teams sputtered and stalled in the
m actiOn To that end, the foUowmg schedule of playo(}ffS 1s ftrst half and It took a stiff
defenstve stand 111 the opening
prmted below
sesswn to keep Houston from
scormg
CLASS 'A' SEMI·FINALS
Trading :J..O til! Oilers moved
At Mansfield, Saturday, Nov 18,1972, 7:30pm, Reg10n 11 from thetr three yard line to
wmner vs. Region 10 winner, Game Manager, William E
the Browns' seven Three
Frazter, Supervisor, H PE. &amp; R , Mansfield Ctty Schools, 270 W runnmg plays put the ball on
6th St , Mansfield, Ohio ( 419) 522-0011.
the one but Fred Wilhs was'
At Upper Arlington, Saturday, November 18, 1972, 7 30 p m., stopped for no gam on fourth
Region 12 wmner vs Regton 9 wmner ; game manager, Rtchard down
Fryman, Athletic Director, Upper Arlington H S, 1850
Phipps, who connected on
RidgeVIew, Columbus, Oh1o 43221 (614) 4118-3105 Ext 47
nine of 20 passes lor 152 yards,
CLASS 'A' CHAMPIONSHIP
used his throwmg to set up
At Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Fr1day, November Cockroft's second filed goal
24, 1972, 1·30 p m game manager, Robert Struner, Department and Kelly's first touchdown
"We looked bad m that frrst
of Athletics, Ohio Wesleyan UmverSity, Delaware, Oh1o 43015
half because we miXed up
(614) 363-1261 Ext 393.
signals
on three occastons, and
CLASS 'AA' SEMI·FINALS
At Massillon, Friday, November 17, 1972, 7:30pm., Reg1on 7 had a few rmxed assignments,
'
winner vs Reg1on 5 winner, game _manager, Roger Price, We should have scored 20
Faculty Manager, Washington H S , 340 Frrst St , S E , pomts," sa1d Phtpps
The third year quarterback
Massillon, Ohio 44346 (216) 83~
At Troy, Friday, November 17, 1972, 7 30 p.m , Reg10n 6 from Purdue hit Fall' Hooker
winner vs. Regton 8 winner; game manager, Norvm Smith, Wlth a 30-yard pass too frrst
play of the second half and five
AthletiC Director, Troy High School, Staunton Rd., Troy, Ohto
plays later Cockroft kicked a
45373 (513) :JM.5602.
32-yard field goal to give the
CLASS 'AA' CHAMPIONSHIP
Browns a (j..() lead
At Ma88illon, Friday, November 24, 1972, 7 30 p.m , game
A 10-yard pass to Bo Scott
manager, Roger Price (see above).
and a 29-yarder to Mtlt Morm
CLASS 'AAA' SEMI·FINAUI-DOUBLE HEADER
put the ball on the Houston
At Ohio State University, Columbus, Saturday, November 18, three and Kelly capped the 67·
Ui72, na.m., Region 3winner vs Region 4wmner
yard drive by divmg over from
At Ohio State Umverslty, Columbus, Saturday, Nov 18, 1972, the one.
2p.m., Region I winner vs. Reg1on 2winner.
Games Manager Richard Delaney, Asst Director, Dept of
Athletics, OSU, St. John Arena, Columbus, Ohio 43210 (614) 4228316.
- CLASS 'AAA' CHAMPIONSHIP
"At Akron, Rubber Bowl, Saturday, November 25, 1972, 7 30
p.m., garnemanager,Gordon Lar3on,Athletic Director, Dept of
Athletics, Akron University, 320 E. Buchtel Ave., Akron, Ohio
44304 (216) 762-2441, Ext. 558.

..

By MIKE RABUN
UI'I Sports Wnter
SAN ANTONIO, Tex (UP!)
- M1ke H!ll d1d not reall) owe
the second vtctory of hts pro
golf carect to a kmd ges ture by
Lee Trevmo H1il was playmg

too good to lose, anyway
But H1il, who ca ptured the
$25,000 !trsl pnze at the Texas
()pen Sunday, wanted 11 known
how much he apprec1ated what
1'1 evmo had done for htm
dUlmg the fmal round

500 183 121

West

Spartans eye
win over OSU

CHICAGO (UP! )- II ..ould be
1romc 1! Duff) Daugherty's
resigna tiOn as the M!chtgan
State football coach helped ease
archnval M1ciugan's path to
the Rose Bowl, but that IS
exactly what might be happenmg
The Spartans gave their
uutgmng coach the game bail
after beating Purdue 22-12
Saturday to knock the Bmler
Sunday 's Resulls
makers from a three-way he
Detrotl 14 Ch1cago 0
f01 the B1g Ten lead and llus
Pittsbu rgh 40 Cmcmnat1 17
week they gel a chance to do
N Y G1ants 29 Denver 17
Cleveland 20 Houston 0
the same thmg to Ohio State
M1am1 30 Buffalo 16
"We won Jl for Duffy,' sa1d
Was hmglon 35 N Y Jets 17
M1 nnesota 37 New Orl eans 6 qua1 lel back Mark N1esen, who
Phtladelph1a 6 51 LouiS 6
scmed touchdowns on runs of
Green Bay 34 Sa n Franc1sco 57 and 61 yards We figure
2&lt;
he's a goud coach It 11as us
Los Angeles 20 Atlanta 7
Kansas Ctly 27 Oakland 14
who had to change, not hm1
Dallas 34 San D1ego 28
We we1e down , and 1! wasn !
(only games scheduled)
Duffy 's fault '
Monday 's Games
Ba lhmor e at New Eng lan d
Daugherty announced F11da)
ln,ghl)
mght he was 1 e~ng mn g at the
(only game scheduled I
end of thiS season, hiS 19th as
Sunday's Games
the M1ch1gan State coach, and
Balilmor e at San Franc1sco
Bulfalo at N Y Jels
safety Brad Van Pelt sa td the
Denver at Los Angeles
deciSion spurred hiS teammates
Detroit at M1nnesota
on Saturday because ' We owed
Green Bay at ChiCago
Kansas City al P1ttsburgh
11 to !urn "
New Eng land at Miami
' We want to do our best to
New Orleans at Atlanta
help htm go out a wmner,' ' Van
N Y G1anlsat Wa shington
Oak land at Clncmnat1
Pelt sa1d
Ph ila delphia at Houston
Mtch1gan, b1ddmg to become
St Lou1s at Dallas
the
ftrst B1g Ten team to make
(only games scheduled
a repeal trtp to the Rose Bowl
ABA Standmgs
now that the non-1 epeat rule
By Um1ed Press 1n1erna1•onal has been hfted, and Ohto State
East
w. I Pet g b remamed unbeaten and lied for
9 - ' 692
Carolma
the conference lead wtth
Kentucky
5 6 !i~ ~•;, boonsh VIClones Saturday
V1rg 1n1a
6 8
New York
s 7 41 7 3,12 The Woivennes, ranked No 5
Ill the natwn, got two touchMem ph 1s
3 8 273 5
West
dO\\
nsf rom quarterback Denms
wlpctgb
Ulah
9 5 643
ind iana
7 4 636
•;,
The Dai~ Sentinel
San Otego
7 6 538 1
DEVOTED TO THE
Denver
7 6 538 1
INTEREST OF
' Dallas
3 7 300 4
ME!GS·MASON AREA
Sunday's Results
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed
Denver 137 New York 107
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Sari Otego 132 Vlrgm1a 121
C•tv Ed1tor
(Only games scheduled)
Published dally except

Cockroft were the only pomts
the Browns put on the
scoreboard before Leroy Kelly
scored fourth quarter touchdowns on runs of one and 14
yards to giVe the Browns a 20-0
VIctory over the Oilers
The smallest hometown

the ·SPorts·

a

3 4 1 •38 132 142

wlfpctpfpa
Los Ang
S 2 1 688 167 132
Allan Ia
' ' 0 500 163 163
San Fran 3 4 1 438 208 154
NewOrlns 1 6 1 188 115 217
Amencan ConfQrence
East
wltpclpfpa
M1amr
8 0 0 1 000 198 103
N Y Jets
5 3 0 625 238 189
New Eng
2 50 286 92 220
Buffalo
2 6 0 250 165 212
Baltmre
1 6 0 1&lt;3 9' 145
Central
w I I pet pf. pa
P1tlsbgh
6 2 0 750217127
Cmc~nnat1
5 3 0 625 155 132
Cleveland 5 3 0 625 141 134
Houston
I 7 0 125 872 15
West
wltpclpfpa
Kan Ctly
5 3 0 625 195 1•o
Oakland
4 3 I 563 209 155
San D1ego 2 5 1 313 152 203
Dfnver
2 6 0 250 165 222

Browns remain alive
by posting 20-0 AFC win
CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Browns coach Ntck
Skorich started calling the
plays In the second half Sunday
and helped hiS team contmue
Its mastery over too Houston
Oilers,
A parr of f1eld goals by Don
: .
.._·_-

Mike Hill captures Texas Open

By Untte-d Press ln1ernaf•onal

7 oo - News 6, Truth or Conseq 3 Beat The Block' Circus'
13 InSight 33. What s My Lme 8. Read Your Way Up 33,
Electnc Company 20 , Andy Gnff tth 15
7 30 - ToTeiiThe Trulh6 , TraffiC Court 10 EpiSode Act ton 33
Parent Game 3 Hollywood Squares'· Young Dr Ktldare 8,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Poilllcal Talk 15, Mov1e "Tarzan's

Lass1e 6

2.

Helen Help

----~-

"' Dream of Jeanme 13 Hathayoga 33

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald "Here ts a rubber
brtdge hand. that got all four
players mad South took one
look at dummy and asked
why hts partner couldn't
have reb1d to three clubs instead of ~1vmg an tmmedlate
ratse w1th three s m a II
trumps North rephed to the
effect that he had a bad hand
and wanted to make a mml~·""-~~,~-"'""'
mum reb1d and that 1f South
dtdn't hke the grand slam
contract, no one had made
htm b1d 11 "
J1m "! see why East and
versiOn, lor he IS a vtctim lull of protecllvely West got mad Undoubtedly
BY JACK O'BRIAN
disCtphned aggresstve hyster1a The total heart- South made the grand slam
A COWARDLY WAY
break ts there, negatives ltrmly m place as by takmg the best percentTO MAKE MONEY
Butley slithers through hts pntecllve armor of age play "
NEW YORK (KFS) - The new and
Sickly abuse, too old to weep, too commttted to
Oswald. "Exactly He won
debghtful "Oh Coward" m1m-revue of some 50
h1s
drab
fate
to
manage
a
heterose!&lt;ual
escape
the
d1amond lead , entered
Noel Coward songs and verbal spangles exports
The rest of a lme effectual cast plays 1t dummy w1th the queen of
about $1,000 a week to Str Noel m tax-happy
splendtdly but tt's Alan Bates who dommates m clubs' Jed the mne of trumps
Switzerland It's at the !my New Theatre (E
'
and let 1t r1de after East
:14th St ), grosses $14,000 a week and even sells
hiS hopeless portrait of a man sentenced to , played low. When both op·
out tis matmess, umque among off-Bdwy. shows
despatr lor life.
ponents followed to the secWord of the London trmmph of "Sutley" ond trump lead there were
- even !Is htls
It cost $25,000 to open
"Dude" flopped for about $900,000 Art Car- (Bates won all last season's stage laurels 1n it) no further problems He
brought out all the oldllme senous dramalovers made the slam whtle the opney's llymghtghabove hts TV sewer h1s 10 pel
ponents glowered and comof theW Coast "Prtsoner of 2nd Ave "patd Art
Ill a rare Ftrst Ntght Audtence - dressed well, plained about hts b~ing able
$10,200 last week . Trm1 Lopez' press agents
no kooks apparent, even scads of evemng to fall m a nver and come
togged respecters of the durably mvahded up w1th a ftsh "in his mouth "
are feedmg colummsts tales of three-gals-a-day
tnumphs, that's Hugh O'Bnan-style and
senous legtllmate theater
Jtm "I can't blame them
South Afnca's self-tprmed "spare-parts The less declarer says the
George Ham1ltor.-rut publlctty whtch turned
surgeon" Dr Chnsttaan Barnard blasted the better Of course, he did take
sa1d gent.s mto targets of nd1cule
medta lor ballyhoomg hts !&gt;!art-transplant the best line of play, but
Go see "Butley" whtch opened at the
even wtth that line h1s
Morosco Theater for the lmesl actmg, by Alan
expenments, trony mdeed, he alone snatched at chance for success was less
Bates, on any N Y stage . It's a merry every chance to appear m all media from the than 25 per cent but the 25
press to any TV or radiO talk show 1n relentless per cent chance had matentragedy, a tale of a failed passmg heterosexual,
ahzed ''
whose pltght, as so often m real life, h1des exp 1mtatton of his spare-party manners
Olymp1cs multl-gold-medahst Mark Spitz
IHEWSPAPll lHTERPRIIE A!!H 1
behmd cynical, bitchy destructiveness of
stgned a "llfellme" pact to pitch Schtck razors
constant pseudO-'fllty msults
A London
Umverstty teacher's student-seducttons are
In "21," -mulll-ztlhonarre horseman Alf
Vanderbilt looked tedd1bly seriOUS with lovely
mlerrupted by bnef marnage and fatherhood ,
Cynthta
Cole of Cleveland, Baltunore and
The b!ddmg has been
whereupon, as "Butley" begms he IS cymcally,
South
Manhattan; Cynth's m the "ctvlhzed" set, we West North
East
hghtly savaging that !mal rallonahzallon of h1s
U•
met her a lew mghts before m P J Clarke's Pass 1•
homo-late The comedy 1s there and hke all
Pass
4NT
wtl, teeters on the sharpened blade between
wtth her ex•husband . Phtl Iselin's beautiful Pass 4 •
Pass
SNT
Pass
5
t
Pass
wtfe
m
"21"
passed
her
loyalty
test
to
'1er
N
Y
comedy and destruchon
?
Pass
Jets-owner husband by enthusmg about a young Pass 6•
Wtthm a quick few hours, Sutley's wtfe
You, South, hold
lady's temltc taste m wearmg Jets~olored
demands a dtvorce to marry a stable bore, hts
.AK862 .A2 +5 .AK862
green whtle Phil bantered with h1s landlord, N
submtss1ve homosexual mate qmts h1m , and he
What do you do now'
bears up wtlh constant laceratmg attacks on
Y Mets-boss Donald Grant (The Mets enJOY
A-Bid six opades only. U
pnmary proprietorship at Shea Stadium) . Ed your partner held four spades
htmself, and all others, !nendless at the lmal
cur tam, one of the subtlest upbeat endmgs and Sylvta Sullivan gave a rrrrreally-big hello to tho queen, an ... and two
ever the next vulnerable youth on h1s seduc- to a former antagomst (critic) of the days when kina's he would have bid seven
opodes dl...,tly over your five
twn list proves too revoltmg even for hts ter- Ed domtnated vaudeville on TV
no ..tru.mp. He can't have the
Gtfted com1c George Carl111's strange m- qu .. n of spoodes.
mmally unlldy stale, mentally and phystcally
ststence on brutahzmg h1s mventlve clowmng
Alan Bates manages to keep thts stckly
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your
partner opens one club
pmwheel adazzle w1th one of the most wtth verbal ftlth got hun mdtcled 1n Milwaukee
What
do
respond wtth
amazmgly compleat tour de weaknesses ever on obscemty charges last summer which can't .Q8U you
.K953 tA765&lt;1o3
seen on a stage, makes the usual homo-play be quashed he'll stand trial Dec. 6 Most
Answer tomorrow
exported from London 's West End seem dtstant, celebrated N Y detective smce Johnny
ugly vulgarities
Broderick, Eddte Egan of "French Connection"
Author S1mon Gray rates mtramural
true-tale, has a TV ser1es draped en hts more
About Coyotes
ragg111g - he's also, as ts hts "Butley," a than 5,000 narco-arrests while on the force; but
Coyotes are about three
teacher of Enghsh at London Umvers1ty, but )ust as m "Connecllon," Eddie was pronounced feet long, includmg a bushy
Gray boasts a wile and two children Thts IS not the type Actor Gene Roche seenungly is and 16-lnch taU, weigh about 30
less a play than a brtlliant character expostlwn, will play th~ colorful Eddie . Jack E Leonard pounds, and have a shaggy
the IItle character desperately strong m hts phoned to announce he's lost another person and buff coat With white underSides Thetr hfe llpan 1s about
sleazmess, tl's never a glamortzer of per- IS down to 205 agam Had to diabetes
13 years

._,., ""

6

MONDAY NOV 6, 1972
30 - NBC News 3 ' 15, ABC News 6, CBS News 8, 10

\

-----

Desert Mystery," 13

-

.KQJ 2

Television Log

------

a

Monday's Games

Ulah vs Carolma at Rale1gh
(Only game scheduled )

Desk

NBA Standmgs
By United Press lnternattonal

. . .,.

Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
Boston

New York
Buffal o
Phil a

wlpctgb
10 1 909
10 2 833
,,,
3 8 273 7
0 13 000 11

Central DIVISIOn

Houston
Atlanla
BaiiJmore

wlpclgb
7 • 636
6 6 500 l'h
5 6 •55 2

Cl eveland
4 10 286
VYeslern Conference

411:!

M1dwesl DIVISIOn
wlpclgb
Milwaukee
9 2 818
Chtcago
8 ' 667 l'h
KC Omaha
5 7 "7 4
Detr01 t
4 8 333 5
PacifiC DIVISIOn
w I pel 9 b
Golden Stale 8 2 800 •;,
Los Angeles 10 3 769
Phoen1x
5 s 500 3'12
Seatlle
' 8 333 51h
Portland
I 10 091 8
Sunday's Results
Phoemx 107 Cleveland 106
Mtlwaukee 131 Phlladelphta
113

Los Angeles 124 Seallle 115
(only games scheduled!
Monday ' s Games

llhnms also made 1ls coach
Bob Blackman, happy Sa lUI da)
by wmmng tls ftr sl game of the
season after los mg seven
Quarle1bdck M1ke Wells ran for
two touchdowns and passed for
two more as the llhm walloped
Nm thw est.ern, 43-14, scormg
!uUl touc hdowns m less than
seven mmutes m the thn d
qu,u tm
Iowa made a goal hne stand
late Ill the fourth quarter but
the n gave up a safety wtlh JUst
3 42 to play to allow Wtsconsm
to escape with a 16-14 vtctory m
the other B1g Ten game

So what?
They're insured.
You've heard the expression. It's a 1 atwnalization as common as a cliche. And as
hollow. There is more at issue th an property. What the rationalizing phrase
glosses over is the sacredness of all things
within the community of man. The respect
and kindness we owe one another as bn'thright. When we break this trust we contribute to moral pollution.
PHOTOGRAPH BY LARRY SI LVER
I

"""'

Second ctass pos1a9e pa 1d et
Pomeroy Ohro
Nat rona! advertising
rtpresentatrve
eottrnettr
Gallagher lnr 12 East 42nd
St New York C1ty New York
Subscrtpt10n rates
De
livered bv carrrer where
avartable SO cents per week.
By Motor Route where carrrer
servrce not avarlable
One
month Sl 75 Bv mall rn Oh10
and W Va One ~ear Sl.t 00
Srx months S7 25
Three
months U SO Subscr rp t10n
pr rc e 1nctudes Sunday T1mes
Sentrnel

Security Is love
It emergencies
arise, is your fam·
ily adequately cov:
ered? Secure their
well-being with a
revtsed policy

Arkenwyke Yew
The Enghsh barons compelled Kmg John to s1gn the
Magna Carta (cornerstone of
Anglo-Saxon hberlles) under the Arkenwyke yew tree
at Runnymede, England

The community of man .. God's club.
You're a life member.

Cqnault Ua Soon

RIAL

Davis-Warner Ins.

-

RELIG ION

1

I

IN AMERI CA N LI FE

KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
3 MILES SOUTH OF MIDDLEPORT ON ST. RT. 7

PRESENTS

REVUE '72
2 Big Weeks • Beginning Tonight Thru 18th.
q.~

In AI9-0ul At 5

THE NEW IMPRESSIONS

' use Our Free Parklna Lat

Robinson's Ceaners

"Three Record Breaking Years
in Daytona Beach"

m E 2nd, Pomeroy

Wlfh the great Freddie Spicer on drums
(comparable to Louis BellsonL plus Harry
Kinzey on sax, Boots Randolph style, with
specialties by

EVERY

Exotic Midori Ashikawa and Lovely Joni Craig

FOOTBAIJ.
GAME

AND STARRING

McQ.URE'S
•
"" &amp; Locutl

JAY HARVEY
"One of the Best Comedians of our Time"
•

Dancing and continuous entertainment 9 p.m to 2 a.m nltely. Popular
prices - small cover charge
~

0. ·

......

~

Admthi nli corr trlbuted for th e pubUc aood In ~ooperaUon with
He Adverhslns Counc1t and the lnternal1onat Newspaper Advertlslni E•e c ut1~es

114 COurt St.

SAME DAY
SERVICE

To Get Your
Goodies From

,m
.

.•

'

FINISHING

I

I

\

HUS'ILE
AFrER

TICJUI,:I' INroRMATION
Student 1\ckets, Students may p1rchase tickets from their
blgh school for any of the champloosl)lp games at a price of $1
per ticket if pli'Chaled In advance. 'lbe schoclla making til! play•
offs wUJ obtain llddltionllllltudenl ticketa to be 10ld at $1 In ad·
V!'Jlce of the game. No llludent tlcketa will ~vallable at any
pJJie site' the day of the 1ame.
Adult Tlckela, Adulli may obtain pr~
cketa at $2 50
fi.om any blgh IIChool ~ to November 6, 1972 or from schoola
Jlelecled lor the pil)'-offl after November 12, 1m.
All tlcbt• at each game lite will be $3. No ltudent Uckets will
1 be IOid at •name lite the day ol the pme.

He flmshed two shots m front
of Trevino, who had a final
round of f1ve-under 67, and four
shots m front of chargmg Phtl
Rod~&lt;!&lt;., ,, ~ o also had a closing
67
Trevmo won $14,300 and
Rodgers took home $8,850
T1ed m fourth place wtth T/Bs
were Ch1 Ch1 Rodnguez, Ben
Kern Bobby N1chols, Brad
Anderson and Charles Coody,
who had been only three
st1 okes off the pace to start the
day
Htll wrapped up the tournament wtth three straight
birdies begmnmg at the 12th
hole
At that poml Trevmo had
closed the deficit to two
strokes, but Htll, who h1t 17
greens , got hot wtth hts putter
He ran m a !().!doter at the
12th, a tO-footer at the 13th and
an etght-footer at the 14th That
1 boosted h1m to a fiVe stroke
lead over Trevmo and not even
the "hoops and yells from the
gallery could help Trevino
make up that margm

Your

2157

Canada ranks second m
area among the nat10ns of
the world It 1s exceeded only by the Sov1et Umon

~HIRt

me'

Saturday by The Ohro Vattev
,ubi1Sh1ng Companv
Ill
Court St, Pomeroy Oh10
45769 Busrness Off1ce Phone
992 2156 Ed 1l0r 1bl fJhone 991

New York at Porllat\d
(only game scheduled)

'

Franklin, mcludmg a fourth
quarte r lte-breake1, to beat
lnd1ana, 21-7, and No 4 Ohw
Stale rallied to lop Mmnesola
27-19
Mtch1gan and OhiO State both
have 5 Oconfercnce records and
th1 ce ga mes to play, Purdue IS
4-1and M1dugan State 3-1-J
AMtchtgan Slate victory ove1
the Buckeyes m thetr •egwnally-televlsed meetmg Saturday
at East Lans mg would leave
MiciHganm undtsputed possesSIOn of !he conference lead,
assunn ng the Wolvennes beat
wea k Iowa
Daugherty sa1d he was more
relaxed" Saturday than I had
been m some tune ''
I'm JUSt gomg to p1 epare
fo1 Oluo Slate and let (athletic
rtu ectm) BUI t Sm1th do ail the
wm k un fmdmg a successor for

Htll had a four stroke lead
over T1 evtno to start the !mal
round over the 7,011-yard, par72 Woodlake Golf Club course
and the two were paired
together for the last 16 holes
The crowd whtch turned out
under murky sktes " as ail lor
Lee and Lee knew 11
Lee realized that each ltme
he holed a null even 1! Hill sllll
had a pull left to make, the
bulk of the gallery would begm
rushmg to the next ]\ole
You go ahead and putt out
f1rst each hmc,11 Trevmo sa 1d
to H1ll
' That JUSt shows you what a
gentleman Lee ts," satd Htll,
33, who seldom ge ts the
publlctty on the course or off
the cours• that hts brother
Dave docs "1hat was a super
thmg he d1d He was trymg to
beat me JUSt as hard as he
could , too and he was domg
somethmg to help me "
Hill needed little help, though,
m flnng hts fourth strmght
round m the 60s to post a 72hole total of 15-under 273

·GEORGE HAl.L AND THE HALLMARKS
wmeand
I

I

,~

'

�•

&amp;-TheDeUySentmel Mlddlep01t Pomeroy 0 Nov 6 1972

•-The Ollily Sentinel Middleport--Pomeroy 0 Nov 6 1m

I Socia I .JI Pre~arattons
Z'??

Great team,

Saturda1 s ColleGe
ResuHs

Football

By Un1ted PreS$ lnternattonal

We Have Taken On A
New Line •••

CAMELOT

shall came with I 09 to play
when Herb Page kicked a 29yard field goal after the
Thundermg Herd had gone
ahead w1th two fourth quarter
touchdowns
Kent scored 10 the first quar
ter on an II yard run by John
Matsko and on a fouryard
scamper by Renard Harmon
With one mmute left In the half
Paul Miles was the blg noiSe
agam for Bowling Green In the
Falcons wm over OU The junIor tailback who scored four
times last week rushed for 194
yarda In 30 attempts and
scored the first BG touchdown
on a three-vard run
Fullback Phil Polak rambled
17 yards for the other BG tally
while freslunan Don Taylor
booted a '!I yard field goal The
loss dropped Oh1o Umversity 36 overall and 1-4 m the MAC
Western Wblpped
Mlanu Wiped out any chance
Western Michigan had for a
p1ece of the conference hUe
w1th a 38-8 drubbing of the
Broncos
'lbe Redskins Dan Rebsch
Intercepted five Western
passea tying the national
record held by three other
players but which had not
been accomplished llillce 1962
when Byron Beaver of Houston
turned the trick against
Baylor
Browns
Walt
~tuS28k had five thefts In
1949 against Rhode Island and
Lee Cook of Oklahonta State
had five against Detroit In 1942
Fullback Joe Booker scored
twice for the Redsklns now 6-2
overall and Z.2 In the MAC
while fallback Bob Hlthcens
the nation s leading rusher got
111 yards 10 34 carries
Toledo
lfhich ruined
Miami s conference title hopes
last week wu buried 31).7 by
Northern lllinols Saturday
night
The Huskies quarterback
Mark Carlaon scored on runs
of one. and 32 yards to give NIU
a 16-0 halftbpe margin Nor
them fallback Mark Keller l'lll1
for 149 yards and Jerry Latin
added 118 Toledo 1 only score
came on a four yard run by

George Keirn

Dayton behind the rumf.n&amp;

~~~~t ~ P~ts~~r~~ ~

Mondiy s games
(no games scheduled)

I

heritag• house ,
~~,.~~

Lebanon has the highest
YOUR
5TORE
h ter ac y rate among the
Near East ern countrtes
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
About 75 out of every 100
good for 337 yards and one people can read and write
wuchdown but suffered three
mtercepllons
Clncy Loses
CincllUIIIti fell to 2-6 on the
year takmg a 27 25 defeat at
the hands of North Texas State
Teh Bearcats rallied from a 130 deficit commg within two
pomts With S 16 rem11111111g on a
two yard run by Qulnch
Daniels but were unable to
score ag1110
Ashland
ranked mnth
among the nation s college
diviSion teams won its nmth
game 10 a row w1th a 41-4! rout
of Waynesburg (Pa)
Mike Collins ran for two Ashland TDsandMark Nlederhau
ser caught a pair of scoring
passes to lead the Eagle at
tack
n1e Ohio Conf•rence diVISIOn
winners were decided with
Musklngum winning over Ohio
Wesleyan 21~ for the Blue
Divls1on title and Heidelberg
posting a 7.0 deciSion over
Wittenberg for the Red
DiviSion title The Muskles and
Princes meet Nov 18 at Tlffbt
In the cinference s title game
Quarterback Ben Chapman
and spill end Brenln Hill team
ed up lor a pair .:4 touchdown
passes 10 Muaklngum s victory
over Wesleyan 'lbe other M\18The S5 add1t1onal tax on all vehicles licensed m Mid·
lde TD came on a 44-yard rundleport would brmg m approximately $10,000 annually to the
back of a pass Interception by
v1llage as there are approximately 2,000 licensed vehicles in
Bob Early
Middleport
Heidelberg unbeaten In
eight gamea scored In the flrat
Th1s $10,000 would be used exclusively for upkeep and
quarter against Wlttenbel-g on
add1honal pavmg of streets m the village. Th1s would be 1n
a four yard pau from Jbn Ruth
add1hon to the money wh1ch 1s spent annually by the village
to Mike Mullins arid the tough
street dept Th1s would be a much needed add1hon to the
Prince defense held on for the
Victory
vt llage street department fund and much more could be done
In other games Saturday
to 1mprove the streets
Oh1o Slate ootluted Mlnnelota
Our streets are not m the bad cond1flon they were several
?:119 Irltllana Stale tripped
years ago but thiS WOUld giVe US the money needed to
AKron 21 17 Northwood
properly mamtam the streets m good condition.
(Mich ) edged Bluffton U-21
Case Western ~e and
Middleport IS one of the few villages whtch does not have
Oberlin tied 21-21, YGI_II1Piown
a tax levy for operation of the VIllage Pomeroy has a 2 mill
State downed Centrll Slate alevy for current expenses, plus severa Iother taxes for village
8, Defiance edged Ohio Nor
expenses
them 24-20 Hiram beat John
Carroll 18-8, Kenyon downed
These are your streets and your VIllage Cooperatlpn1of
Wllmbtgton 10·7, Baldwill·
everyone 1s needed to Improve not only our village
W1111ace routed Mount Union
but also our v1llage government and our entire village:
47 21, Capllal beat WOOllier 51'
By the payment of th1s S5 tax, people actually using
14, Denlaon outacored Ot-terbein 33 21, Weatmlnater
$treets would be paying a part of t...lr cost, ratbtrl.ht
(Pa ) nqed Mllrletta 21 It
relying entirely upon the property own~rs. $5 Is not a big
and Fillllllly and Taylor (Ind.)
price for each of us to pay to provide SlO,OOO annually In our
played to • 7 7 tie

of Denny Whitehead who
scored three times and l'Uibed
for 139 yards downed Xavier
3113
Sockeye Ia another DIDle
Xtivler a Jim Dydo CQIIl
for
tbe Paclftc ulmoa
pleted 31 ps II bt 801tfenpk

FOR THE '5 LICENSE PLATE TAX

FOR ONLY $5 PER CAR
ATOTAL OF $10,000 ANNUALLY
WOULD BE MADE AVAILABLE
FOR ADDITIONAL STREET

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR.

•

i ,Ca~~,dar! for Bazaar
THEODORUS Council 17
Daughters of Amer~ca 7 30
1\!onday IOOF hall Obhgatwn
mght games 60th anmversary
observance to be planned
POMEROY Garden Club
7 30 p m Monday at home of
Mrs Fred Blaettnar
TUESDAY
ELECTION Day dmner at
Masonic Hall
Chester
Tuesday by Chester Umted
Methodist Church Soup
sandwiches p1e cake coffee
plate lunches
SOUP DINNER Tuesday
Syracuse Presbyter~an Church
annex starling at 11 30 am
Vegetable soup sandwiches
p1e coffee
SOUP Dmner Pomeroy
Umted Methodist Church 11 to
3 p m servmg t1me Soup
sandwiches pie and coffee
Soup also available by the
quart
ELECTION Day Dmner
Tuesday
at
Syracuse
Presbyterian
Church
Homemade vegetable soup hot
dogs ham salad sandwiches
coffee tea Kool Aid and pie
Will be sold Soup w1il be sold
for carry·&lt;)Ut but con tamers
must be furmshed by con
tamers The dmner IS bemg
sponsored by members of the
Sunshme Makers Class
OffiO ETA PHI Chapter
Beta s1gma Phi Soror~ty 8 15
p m Tuesday Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electric Co
Sarah Bechtle and Charlotte
Taunwn w have the cultural

prg:~~ER

coUNciL 323

Daughters of \mema 7 30
p m Tuesday at the hall F1rst
nommallon of officers Layette
shower for Kathy Tuttle
Johnson
ELECTION DAY dmner at
Racme Wesleyan Umted
Metllod1st Church Tuesday at
11 30 a m and 4 30 p m 10
church annex Sponsored by
Iad1es of the church
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Chmt
ThanksgiVIng dmner (potluck)
Tuesday 6 30 p m home of
Mrs Frances Eskew
WEDNJCSDAY
POMEROY
~?~art

:;everal sewmg sessions have
been held by the Loyal
Women s Class at the Mid
dieport Church of Chr~st m
preparahon for the holiday
bazaar to be held on Nov 17 at
Dudley s Florists
A bake sale w1ll be held m
conJuncllon w1th the bazaar
w1th Mrs Martha Childs w
serve as treasurer Mrs
Audrey Swett Mrs Helen
Reynolds Mrs Herman Lohse
and Mrs E L Lallance w1ll
work on the bake sale
One of the sewmg sessiOns
was held m conJunction With a
regular monthly meetmg ~f the
class Members sang Happy
Birthday to Mrs Oscar
Roush president and Mrs
C~llds teacher
Plans were made for the
annual Christmas dmner to be
held at the church on Dec 8
Mrs Roush appomted Mrs
Reynolds Mrs Swett and
Mrs Lallance to handle the
dmner arrangements Mrs
Lohse and Mrs Childs Will
have charge of the program
and also the love gift offermg
and Mrs Lohse Will handle the
shut m boxes
The 1llne~s of Robert Craig
Mrs Jean Swett Mrs Blanche
G1lkey and Mr and Mrs
Boyer was noted Sack lun
cheons were enJoyed at the
sewmg sesswns
"$,.-..:,v ,,-om::::::::me:~&gt;:~mme:~l\&lt;

3:
~

~

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~

Middleport
Personal Notes

Mrs Nma Bland has
returned here to be w1th
her s1ster Mrs
Pearl
Reynolds after spend10g sev
era! weeks 10 Akron w1th
her fam1ly there
Mrs Luc10da Dames and
Mrs Frank Betz have returned
to their home after spend10g
two weeks m Columbus VISiting
Richard Reed who has been
hosp1tahzed
Mr and Mrs Frank Powers
and fam1ly and Mrs Grace
Pratt spent last weekend at a
cab10 on the !'uskmgum River

ct$t.llll~~sti!IY a(!\~~1 1fil l'"E'J".:.' ~b

l tons
the Me1gs Inn
POMEROY Chapter 80
Royal Arch Masons 7 30
WedneSday at the Masomc
Temple Officers and com
pamons urged to attend
WHITE ROSE LODGE I 30
p m •Wednesday at the M1d
dieport Legwn Hall

'lpURSDAY
ANNUAL Bazaar of Sacred
Heart Cljllrch at auditorium
ThursdaY' Dmners start10g at 4
p m g~mes prizes fancy
stands baked gOods Public
invited
PAST Councilors Theodorus
Council D of A 7 30 p m
Thursday home of Mrs Mabel
Wolfe
Sandy Koudax 1s the sole
baseball pitcher to receiVe
the Cy Young Award three
tiii)es-1963 1965 and 1966

SHOP THE

EASY WAY
USE OUR

LAY-AWAY

PLAN
JOLA'S
Matn &amp;

Sycamore&lt;

DaiQ JXIIO

\

Pd Pol AIJv by The Middleport 0!11n._ Of Con'llnet et

'

NeWS N0tes
Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel M1ss10n Oct
29 was 35 Offermg $11 21
Sunday School IS held each
Sunday mormng at 9 30
Sunday evemng worship at
7 30 Prayer meeting each
Tuesday evemng at 7 30 A
reviVal swted Nov 2 w1th
Rev George Hoschar as
evangelist
Mr and Mrs
James
Autherson and Patflcla Mrs
Elva Dalley of Syracuse VISited
Mr and Mrs Carl Autherson
Mr and Mrs Zembera
Baker of Malta 0 Mary B1rch
of Gallipolis 0 Leota Birch
local VISited Mr and Mrs
D1lllon Taylor
Mr and Mrs Blll Clonch and
famlly of Rutland 0 Mr
Charles Hilton of Columbus
0 Mr and Mrs Donald Hupp
of Letart Falls 0 Mr and
Mrs Charles Cra1g and
daughter of Portland 0 Mary
B1rch of Gallipolis 0 Leota
B1rch local VISited Mr and
Mrs George Hupp
Mrs Mary Dalley and sons
local M1ssy Van Meter of
Mmersvlile Rt VISited their
grandmother Mrs Ada Van
\Ieier

RACINE - The Rev Charles
Norr1s pastor of the Rac10e
F1rst Baptist Church has
accepted a call to serve the
pulpit of the llapllst Church at
South Pomt OhiO
The son of the Rev and Mrs
Freeland Noms of Racme the
Rev Mr Norr1s attended
Racme Elementary School and
graduated from Racme H1gh
&amp;hool m 19&amp;0 He ~ttended
Oh10 Umvers1ty RIO Gl8nde
College and completed
semmary level stud1es 10
rellg10n as required for
hcensmg 10 the Umted
Methodist Church
After spendmg several years
as a school teacher and prm

PORTLAND - Purchase of
a record player for each
classroom at the Portland
Elementary School was approved when the Portland
P T 0 met Wednesday mght at
the school
Mrs Don Johnson presided
at the meeting dunng wh1ch
ttme f1ve basketballs were also
approved for purchase It was
noted that blinds have been
ordered for the gymnasium
and that drapenes have been

The Rev Mr Norris last
sprmg published a book of
sermons enlltled Chr1st IS the
Answer He IS a Iarmer clerk
of the Southern Local Board of
Educahon
The Rev and Mrs Norrla
and their lour daughters are
expectmg to move to South
Po10t m January

Polh 's Bee Problem
Needs Stinging Amm ers
Bv POLLY CRAMER

Polly's Problem

m!W&lt;Mf11"-DEAR POLLY- Some bees have made a home on
the outdoor ba1 becue on our backyard and we were
not aware of th1s unhl I wa&gt; mowong the yard It
must have been the no1se from the mower that up
set them fo1 they came nght after me gettmg m
my ha1r and g1vmg me a really bad stong We have
\ tr~ed burnmg them out smokong them out and
spraymg them but they are st1li there Please Will
W someone help us'r B M K

8'8io:.'."'' '·"·'' '1•
DEAR POLLY- 1 would hke to add a Pet Peeve to your
list and guess I am hke some of the others who have
many but only wnte m the most 1rr1tatmg Mme IS w1th
those rude neighbors who send the1r children to play
w1th my son and Without ask10g 1f 1! 1s convement They
go off shoppmg and p1ck up the ch1idren on the way
home wh1ch ona) be hours later How d d they know l
d1d not want to go someplace too? I may be old rash
10ned but 11 seems the mother could stop call or w111e
a note Thanks for hstenmg - VERA
DEAR POLLY-As a daily reader of your column I am
answenng Barb \\ ho wants to restore a yellowed lamp
shade to 1ts ongmal whiteness For 45 years I have been
domg the followmg pamt them w1th any good enamel
I have three gomg now and they look beau\lful Good
luck -SYLVIA
DEAR GIRLS-Barb did not say but l am assuming
she meant paper or so called parchment shades l too
have painted many such shades but have never used
enamel as Sylvia does Just flat paint Now shiny shades
are quite popular and that wet shiny look would be ob
lalned with enamel The only trick 1s being sure that the
paint covers smoothly with no runs After one coat Is
dry put the shade on the lamp with bulbs turned on and
see If t)jer,e ~~~ any S,!!O.I~ of light coming through Often
the jolJ ~otili!j g~eat !I'll~ the light Is not turned on and
then later ft Is a dln~e' :wllen the lamp Is lighted More
than one coat has always been needed for rome Be care
ful not to get 'any paint on the Inside -POLLY
DEAR POLLY-I save all
those cans that the new
fangled potato ch1ps come
m and fill them w1th pea
nut butter and chocolate
ch1p cookies They are
ready for the children to
take back to college when
they come home or they
could be ma1led The cook
1es do not break for the
Sides are cush10ned and
the a1rhght can keeps them
mce and fresh -MRS C P

hung on the stage. Mobons
were made to sell refresh
ments at basketball games and
Larry Wolfe was authorized to
purchase needed first a1d
supplies
It was reported that the
P T 0 made $500 on the fall
festival held Oct 28 The affair
mcluded games homemade
1ce cream cake c1der donuts
a country store a candy shop
a clothmg shop an auctiOn and

Holiday events set
REV NORRIS

Honor pupils
at Salisbury
announced

Hobday proJects were
discussed durmg a meeting of
the Sew R1te Sewmg Club held
recently at the home of Mrs
B1ll McDamel
It was decided to take
homemade cookies and m
diVidual frml baskets to the
Elmwood Nursmg Home The
club members are also making
card holders from frmt cans
and decorat10g potato ch1p
cans to be used for cookie
contamers
Mrs George Hoffman cohostess for the meehng
presided at the sess1on w1th
Mrs Don Collms giVIng the
treasurer s report and Mrs
Elza Gilmore Jr
the
secretary s report Members
exchanged names for the
Christmas party Mrs Elmer

Wh1te and Mrs Robert Potter
w1ll host the next meetmg
Others attendmg were Mrs
Edward Wells Mrs Don
McKmght
Mrs
Flo
Strickland Mrs Charles
Hoffman Mrs Willard Boyer
Mrs Larry Wehrung Mrs Ray
Ba1 ty and Mrs Ronald
Browning
Wednesday the club mem
bers went to Parkersburg for a
Halloween d10ner party and
then shopped at the Mall
Blfthday g1fts were presented
wMrs llrowmng Mrs George
Hoffman and Mrs Gilmore

The SaliSbury Elementary
School honor roil for the first
SIX weeks has been announced
Makmg a B or above m ail
.he1r subjects to be named to
the roil were (first grade no
g1ven letter grades) were
SECOND - &amp;ott Hamson
Angela Hatfield Nalahe
Lambert Shem Marshall
Brenda Pugh John Smith
POMEROY - Fifty-seven
THIRD - Dale Br1ckles persons have enrolled for the
Steve Wood Kathleen Parker f1rst evening art class at the
FOURTH - Dav1d Kennedy Salisbury School bemg conCarol Morris Laura Ohlinger ducted by Mr and Mrs David
Steve Ohhnger
Camille Lynas
Swmdell Jena Welker
01 the total 38 were in the
FIFTH - Kathie Qmvey and elementary group and 29ln the
S1xth Sharon Buckley and
adult part of the session
Jana Burson
Enrollment in the Monday
evemng class Is closed at the
INSPECTION SET
moment However if response
Mrs Mary Hawk of Fair warrants a second class will
born deputy supreme worthy be started on another evening
h1gh priestess of the Wh1te Those mterested in par
Shnne of Jerusalem will tic1patmg may call the school
conduct wspechon for the and leave the1r name and
Mary Shrme Pomeroy the address
Lafayette Shr10e GallipoliS
and the Manetta Shrme at 8
DINNER TUESDAY
p m Friday night at the IOOF
RUTLAND - An Election
ha 11hall m Pomeroy A potluck Day dinner w1ll be held
supper w1ll be held followmg Tuesday at the Rutland
1nspecUO!l.
Methodist Church Soup '"Pie
and coffee wlll be served Soup
The f1rst A t1 a n h c C1ty w1il be available for carryoul
boardwalk was completed 10 orders with purchasers to
1870 Its present length Is provide their own containers
about seven m1Ies
Servmg w1ll begm at 9 a m

~~[l'l&lt;;2~

Frank Holter of Racme Rt
VISited Chnt Birch and
daughters
Leota and Mary B1rch VISited
Mr and Mrs Roscoe Hollon
Mrs Iva Smger Mrs Charles
Bissell at Chester 0 Mr and
Mrs Michael Evans and
family Mrs Betty Ward and
fam1ly local

BUFFET
DINING
TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5 to9 3D--$2 50 all you can eat (or AI a Carte)

57 persons are
studyzng art

(

,
FOil BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I

700 W. Main • Pomeroy
I let Uady 8UDCiay 1..

Drinks and
Dessert Extra

&amp;der our regular me.nu every n gh\ S to 10

The MEIGS INN PH 992 3629

Small deposit will hold

The Fabric Shop

6 Poll on da ea you c:&amp;an any c:a P&lt;EJ
a p e o deep dense aha~

JUST

Medel
2Q12 ..

Now In The Mail
Christmas Club
CHECKS FOR

'55,000.00
START YOUR
CHRISTMAS
SAVINGS CLUB.
.TOINNOW
'

NEW CLUB STARTS NOVEMBER 6

49 PROMPT WEEKLY PAYMENTS, THE

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Sew1ng Maeh1ne
For Christmas

EUREKA AUTOMATIC UPRIGHT WITH
DIAL A NAP MADE EVEN BETTER
FOR MORE CONVENIENCE

FOR EACH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES

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FOR YOUR MONEY!

OUR GIFT TO 1973 CLUB MEMBERS

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NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

Wide Menu
Cho ce

door pmes Mter bemg cloled
for four years the school netdt
are many and the proceeds wiU
be used to supply some of the
needs
It was noted that the P T 0
would send out letters to Ill
fam1hes m the school area
urg10g them wvote for the live
mill renewal levy Mlu
W1lson s first and second grade
won the room count The
pnnmpal commented on school
actiVIlles and answered
quesllons from those at the
meeting
The secretary s report Wlls
g1ven by Mrs Paul Evans and
Mrs Clarence Lawrence gave
the treasurer s report

om ow

$5995
INGELS
Furniture
MIDDlEPORT
Bank Rate fltlllltlll

,.'Jit'... ----··--.................................................................... , .,

DEAR POLLY-I always save at least one or two flip
up cars from dlshwashmg detergent bottles and then
when buy a brand that does not have such a top I find
those I have saved Will f1t on most bottles Prestoflip up caps on my brand -MRS R W

MISS Mary Birch of
Galllpohs 0 spent ten days
w1th her father Clmt B1rch and
s1ster Leota
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
L1pps and Tom of L1ttle
Hockmg 0 Mr and Mrs Joe
Lipps of Vmcent 0 Mr and
Mrs Thomas Birch and Randy
of Waterford 0 Mr and Mrs

Record players bought for rooms

c1pal before entermg the
m1mstry mne years ago he has
served as pastor and
evangelist m several churches
He was ordamed at the Racine
F1rst Baptist Church where he
has been pastor the past nine
years 10 add1hon w pastorlng
the Bethlehem Baptist Church

POLLY'S POINTERS

'

•I
stt-'ts
ttte

street department fund.

Rev. Norris accepts
call to South Point

~ bezng made

·

East
Amhersl 49 Tutls 0
Army 17 Air Force 14
Boston Col 37 Syracuse 0
Bowdoin 37 Bates 10
Bucknell 28 Mass 15
Colgate 42 Lehigh 34
Columbia 14 Cornell o
Del 14 Villanova 7
Del St 26 Hotstra 7
J Hopkins 30 Swarthmore 8
Kent St 16 Marshall 14
New Hampsh re t4 R I 10
Penn 38 Harvard 27
Penn St 46 Nul 16
Pr nceton 31 Brown 10
Rutgers 21 Conn 13

l!Jf:Jshes eye 1~t
MAC' grid crown
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
Kent State Coach Don James
has his Golden Flashes 10 a
very unusual position
AJllllf of WillS In the final two
games and Kent will have 1ts
first Mul-Amencan Conference
football tltle m 22 years of
trying but 1t 1sn t gomg w be
easy
Kent 4-4-1 overall and 2-110
the MAC traUs Bowling Green
which finished Its conference
schedule Saturday with a 17-4!
victory over Ohio University
and a 3-11 mark
The Flashes 16-14 WUIIlers
over Marshall In a non-confer
ence contest Saturday travel
to Millnu this coming weekend
and wmd up the season at home
against Toledo
I m sure Bowling Green
feels real good right now
James 881d We II probably be
underdogs In both games
M1aml has a good deal more
strength than we do
While James is not overcome
with optimism he Is thankful
for the opportunity and
believes his team will be ready
We were pleased after the
Bowling Green game (won by
Kent 14-10) that we didn~ have
to rely on anybody else to win
the t1tle James couttnued 11
Is right In our hands now We
can t blame anyone else
The second year Flash
coach sho feels his program IS
making progress sa1d he
thmks being in contention for
the title Is good for the school
E&amp;clliDg Week
1t will be an exciting week
he said I believe 11 s what the
university needed - something
to get fired up and excited
about
James however IS worried
that his team hasn t shown any
unprovement llillce the BG
game beating Xavier and
marshall and dropping a 28-7
deciJion to Northern ntlnols bt
that spread
We ve rolled the hall back
on p111ta had quarterback
Slllpback problema things like
that
James said 'These
were tbe things we lrere
lllpellll ol clearlnc up
James said MWnl bid lllms
of Kenl alalt thne 1ames and
added 'they may have a hard
tlme selling their kids on how
good wt are from those films
We ve ju4t looked lmlble
SatUrday a wJn over Mar

76ers now 0-13

The 1972-73 verston of the
The 76ers dropped their 13th
ByUaltedPresslnternatlonal
consecullv~gameSundaY.
mght
Gall
and Jerry Show bombed
The Philadelphia 76ers are
rapidly closmg mona National absorbmg a 131113 pasting at before an audience of II 250 at
Basketball Assoc13tion record the hands of the Milwaukee Seattle Jerry West hit lor 35
pomts and Gall Goodrich
that no member of the team Bucks
The
loss
left
Philadelphia
two
popped m 25 mostly from long
wants any part of
short of the dubiOus mark of I&amp; range as the Lakers ran their
the shadow of Ail Amenca
Amerocan Hockey League , straight defeats at the start of 1ecord to 10-3 and stayed hot on
Lydeii Mitchell shrugged off
Slandongs
a season That distinction IS the heels of Golden State m the
questions about bemg a con ten
By Unofed Press lnternatoonal shared by the Denver Nuggets Pacific DIVISion
East
derfor Rook1e-of the Year hon
who dropped their f1rst IS at
Neal Walk sank a pair of foul
w I I pis gf ga
ors
Boston
8 3 0 16 &lt;IS 34 the start of the 1949 season and shots :.Vlth two seconds left in
Bradshaw who Noll de
Nova
Scot
a
6 43 15 54 42 the Cleveland Cavaliers who the game following a jump ball
Vermont 15 Ma ne 14
Rochester
7 4115 5046 began the 1970 season 10 between teanunate Clem Hasscnbed as havmg one of his
W Va 38 Poll 20
Prov dence
7 3 1 15 57 43
Yale 45 Darlmoulh 14
best days attrobuted the
kins and Cleveland s Lenny
Spr
ngf
e
d
4 6 I 9 51 58 wmless fashiOn
South
1ttsburgh success wa strong
New
Haven
2
12
2
6
47
80
The
76ers
are
also
only
four
Wllkms
10 front of the Suns
Alabama 58 M ss St 14
West
runnmg attack wh1ch has
Auburn 26 Florida 20
short of the NBA tecord for the basket
w I t pts gf ga
gamed more than 200 yards m Dayton 31 Xavier I 0 ) 13
D1ck VanArsdale led PhoeniJ:
T
dewater
9 5 1 19 64 55 longestlos10g streak shared by
Duke 20 Ga Tech 14
the last four games all of
C
nc
nnat
7
5
0
14
46
46
San
Fr!incisco
and
San
D1ego
scorers w1th 28 pomts and Walk
LSU 17 Miss 16
Cle"eland
5 6 3 13 57 51 The Warnors lost 17 10 a row canned ?:1 Wilkins had 29 for
wh1ch the Steelers have won to
No carolina 26 Clemson 10
Hershey
4 5 2 10 ~7 33
boost their mark w 6-2 The&gt; No Car Sf 35 Virginia 14
R chmond
4 8 I 9 45 56 from Dec 20 1004 w Jan 26 the Cavs while Carr added 24
S
C
35
Wake
Forest
3
Bengals are now 5-3
Ball
more
3
53 9 114.&lt; 1965 The Rockets lost a like
The New York Knicks 11).2
Southwestern 14 Wash &amp; Lee
Sunday s Results
The runmng attack takes 0
number from Jan 21 to Feb and trailing Boston by one half
Boston 3 Richmond 2
the pressure off my passmg
Tampa 26 Flor da A&amp;M 9
16 1968
game m the Atlantic Division
Cle"eland 10 Sprlngfoeld 5
Tennessee 14 Georgia 0
game sa1d Bradshaw who has
In other contests on a light meet the Portland Trail Blaz
C nc nnat 6 New Haven 5
Tusk~ee 41 M les 8
tossed e1ght touchdown passes
Rochester
3
Hershey
3
(t
e)
s.;bedule
Los Angeles dropped ers 110 the last place team In
VMI 31 Furman 7
Pro" dence 7 Baltimore 4
ti 1s season
Wm II. Mary S6 Da • dson 9
Seattle I 124 115 and PhoeniX tjle Pacific DiVISion 10 the only
(onljl games scheduled)
Midwest
When told about Brown s
edged Cleveland 107 100
contest tomght
Monday s ~ames
Bowl ng Green 17 Oh o U 0
comment that the Steelers
(No games scheduled)
Den son 33 Otterbeon 21
looked like a Super Bowl
Drake 19 Southern J I 9
Ill 43 Northwestern 13
contender Bradshaw JUSt sat
World Hockey Assocoatoon
M
amo (0) 38 Wsn M ch 8
~tanding
back and sm1led That sounds
M ch gan 21 lnd ana 7
By Un1ted Press ln1ernahonal
JUSt great
M chlgan St 22 Purdue 12
East
M ssoun 31 Kansas St l4
w I I plsgfga
Pittsburgh has not had a
Musk
ngum
21
Ohoo
Wslyn
8
Cleveland
8
3 I 17 50 33
wmnmg season smce 1963 when
Northern Ill 30 Toledo 7
Quebec
7
3
I 15 41 29
Buddy Parker was coach and
Notre Dame 42 Navy 23
7 4 0 14 46 35
New Ehg
Oh o St 27 M nn 19
has not won a dll,lslon
New York
7 6 0 14 59 49
6 4 1 13 51 48
Oltawa
champ10nsh1p m the tlub s 39- Okla 20 Iowa St 6
W s 16 Iowa 14
2 11 0 4 3767
Phola
year history
Southwest
West
LEISURE FOOTWEAR
Baylor 42 TCU 9
wttptsgfga
San
Jose
14
N
M
7
Wnnop~
7 5 1 15 45 43
Tradmg 26-0 at the half
Texas 17 SMU 9
Los
Ang
7 4 I 15 43 32
VIrgil Carter replaced Ken
Texas A &amp; M 10 Arkansas 7 Alberta
6 6 1 13 40 47
Anderson at quarterback and
Texas Tech 10 Rice 6
Houston
5 7 0 10 35 41
West
M nnesota
4 6 1 9 27 36
marched h1s team 62 yards m
Brogham Young 33 Wyo 14
Ch
cago
2
8 1 5 24 36
16 plays for the Bengals fu-st
Ca 31 Oregon 12
Sunday s Results
score Of the game Carter went
Mont St 21 Montana 3
W nn p~ 3 New York 1
Nebraska 33 Colo 10
Ottawa 5 Alberta 3
over from the one on a rollout
USC 44 Wash St 3
Los Angeles 4 Houston 0
for the score
UCLA 28 Stanford 23
Quebec 3 Ch cago 2
But Bradshaw came fight
Utah 28 Arizona 27
M nnesota 3 Ph ladelph a I
Utah St 51 Idaho 7
(Only games scheduled)
back hitting LewiS w1th h1s
Wash
23
Ore
St
16
Mondays Games
second touchdown grab of the
W
nn
p~ at New England
day
(Only games scheduled)
Carter wssed a two-yard
IHL Standings
touchdown pass wCh1p Myers Descendanls of Abraham
By
Unoted
Press lnternatoonal
late m the th1rd quarter and
North
Abraham IS the progemtor
Horst Muhimann kicked a 37 of both the Arabs and Jews
w It pts gf ga
10 3 0 20 61 45
yard f1eld goal for the f10al The Arab world has traced Fl nt
Port Huron
7 4 1 15 41 34
score of the game
1ts descent from Abraham Toledo
7 2 1 15 38 27
Roy Gerela kicked f1rsl half through h1s elder son Ish Sognaw
6 6 0 12 48 49
l1eld goals of 15 and 22 yards w mae! Isaac h1s younger Muskegon
I 10 I 3 36 54
Southern
round out the scormg for son IS regarded as the an
w I t pis gf ag
cestor of the Jews
Pittsburgh
Dayton
8 3 2 18 59 45
Brocade wtth salon lonong and quilled satin
Des Moones
5 6 1 11 48 64
sock
Matchong salon bow Colors Gold Hot
Fort Wayne
S 6 0 10 41 34
Ptnk
Columbus
1 10 o 2 30 54
Sunday s Results
S1zes AA w1dth 5 to 10 B w1dth 4 to 10
Fort Wayne 5 Dayton 7
Fl nt 7 Columbus 2

Brown says
PITTSBURGH( UP! )-Every
body was talkmg about the
Su~r Bowl Sunday after the
Pittsburgh Steelers rolled mto
sole possessiOn of the AmeriCan
Football Conference s Central
DIVISIOn
Thai Is-everybody except
Steeler Coach Chuck Noll
We have aqother b1g game
next week Noli sa1d w1th a
sm1Ie after h1s team trounced
the Cmcmnall Bengals 41).17
before a sellout crowd at Three
R1vers Stadium
Bengal Coach Paul Brown
was a httle more candid saymg
the Steeiers looked like a
Super Bowl team
They re great Brown said
Tbey gave us a sound defeat
In a game for the division
lead that was rated a tossup
turned mw a rout w1th the
Steelers Jumpmg off w a 7-4!
lead w1th only 3 35 gone on the
clock Defensive and Dwight
Wh1te recovered a fumble on
Cmcmnati s f1rst offensive play
and John Frenchy Fuqua
then slanted off tackle for a
seven yard score to start off
Pittsburgh s biggest offensive
output smce Noll took over 10
1969
From then on in 1t was the
Steelers ali the way w1th Terry
Bradshaw r1ddhng the AFC s
top defensive team with three
wuchdown passes and Franco
Hams runmng for 101 yards
and another touchdown
Bradshaw completmg 10 of
20 passes for 190 yards fired
scormg passes of !UI and 34
yards to Wide receiver Frank
Lew1s and a 13-yarder to tight
end Larry Brown
Hams the Steelers No I
dra!tch01ce broke the 100-yard
mark for the th1rd time to pace
a rushmgattack wh1ch account
ed for 230 yards
The former Penn State
fullback who once played m

Grid results

'~w

POMEROY

BANK WILL MAKE THE 50TH PAYMENT

Citizens National Bank
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

�•

&amp;-TheDeUySentmel Mlddlep01t Pomeroy 0 Nov 6 1972

•-The Ollily Sentinel Middleport--Pomeroy 0 Nov 6 1m

I Socia I .JI Pre~arattons
Z'??

Great team,

Saturda1 s ColleGe
ResuHs

Football

By Un1ted PreS$ lnternattonal

We Have Taken On A
New Line •••

CAMELOT

shall came with I 09 to play
when Herb Page kicked a 29yard field goal after the
Thundermg Herd had gone
ahead w1th two fourth quarter
touchdowns
Kent scored 10 the first quar
ter on an II yard run by John
Matsko and on a fouryard
scamper by Renard Harmon
With one mmute left In the half
Paul Miles was the blg noiSe
agam for Bowling Green In the
Falcons wm over OU The junIor tailback who scored four
times last week rushed for 194
yarda In 30 attempts and
scored the first BG touchdown
on a three-vard run
Fullback Phil Polak rambled
17 yards for the other BG tally
while freslunan Don Taylor
booted a '!I yard field goal The
loss dropped Oh1o Umversity 36 overall and 1-4 m the MAC
Western Wblpped
Mlanu Wiped out any chance
Western Michigan had for a
p1ece of the conference hUe
w1th a 38-8 drubbing of the
Broncos
'lbe Redskins Dan Rebsch
Intercepted five Western
passea tying the national
record held by three other
players but which had not
been accomplished llillce 1962
when Byron Beaver of Houston
turned the trick against
Baylor
Browns
Walt
~tuS28k had five thefts In
1949 against Rhode Island and
Lee Cook of Oklahonta State
had five against Detroit In 1942
Fullback Joe Booker scored
twice for the Redsklns now 6-2
overall and Z.2 In the MAC
while fallback Bob Hlthcens
the nation s leading rusher got
111 yards 10 34 carries
Toledo
lfhich ruined
Miami s conference title hopes
last week wu buried 31).7 by
Northern lllinols Saturday
night
The Huskies quarterback
Mark Carlaon scored on runs
of one. and 32 yards to give NIU
a 16-0 halftbpe margin Nor
them fallback Mark Keller l'lll1
for 149 yards and Jerry Latin
added 118 Toledo 1 only score
came on a four yard run by

George Keirn

Dayton behind the rumf.n&amp;

~~~~t ~ P~ts~~r~~ ~

Mondiy s games
(no games scheduled)

I

heritag• house ,
~~,.~~

Lebanon has the highest
YOUR
5TORE
h ter ac y rate among the
Near East ern countrtes
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
About 75 out of every 100
good for 337 yards and one people can read and write
wuchdown but suffered three
mtercepllons
Clncy Loses
CincllUIIIti fell to 2-6 on the
year takmg a 27 25 defeat at
the hands of North Texas State
Teh Bearcats rallied from a 130 deficit commg within two
pomts With S 16 rem11111111g on a
two yard run by Qulnch
Daniels but were unable to
score ag1110
Ashland
ranked mnth
among the nation s college
diviSion teams won its nmth
game 10 a row w1th a 41-4! rout
of Waynesburg (Pa)
Mike Collins ran for two Ashland TDsandMark Nlederhau
ser caught a pair of scoring
passes to lead the Eagle at
tack
n1e Ohio Conf•rence diVISIOn
winners were decided with
Musklngum winning over Ohio
Wesleyan 21~ for the Blue
Divls1on title and Heidelberg
posting a 7.0 deciSion over
Wittenberg for the Red
DiviSion title The Muskles and
Princes meet Nov 18 at Tlffbt
In the cinference s title game
Quarterback Ben Chapman
and spill end Brenln Hill team
ed up lor a pair .:4 touchdown
passes 10 Muaklngum s victory
over Wesleyan 'lbe other M\18The S5 add1t1onal tax on all vehicles licensed m Mid·
lde TD came on a 44-yard rundleport would brmg m approximately $10,000 annually to the
back of a pass Interception by
v1llage as there are approximately 2,000 licensed vehicles in
Bob Early
Middleport
Heidelberg unbeaten In
eight gamea scored In the flrat
Th1s $10,000 would be used exclusively for upkeep and
quarter against Wlttenbel-g on
add1honal pavmg of streets m the village. Th1s would be 1n
a four yard pau from Jbn Ruth
add1hon to the money wh1ch 1s spent annually by the village
to Mike Mullins arid the tough
street dept Th1s would be a much needed add1hon to the
Prince defense held on for the
Victory
vt llage street department fund and much more could be done
In other games Saturday
to 1mprove the streets
Oh1o Slate ootluted Mlnnelota
Our streets are not m the bad cond1flon they were several
?:119 Irltllana Stale tripped
years ago but thiS WOUld giVe US the money needed to
AKron 21 17 Northwood
properly mamtam the streets m good condition.
(Mich ) edged Bluffton U-21
Case Western ~e and
Middleport IS one of the few villages whtch does not have
Oberlin tied 21-21, YGI_II1Piown
a tax levy for operation of the VIllage Pomeroy has a 2 mill
State downed Centrll Slate alevy for current expenses, plus severa Iother taxes for village
8, Defiance edged Ohio Nor
expenses
them 24-20 Hiram beat John
Carroll 18-8, Kenyon downed
These are your streets and your VIllage Cooperatlpn1of
Wllmbtgton 10·7, Baldwill·
everyone 1s needed to Improve not only our village
W1111ace routed Mount Union
but also our v1llage government and our entire village:
47 21, Capllal beat WOOllier 51'
By the payment of th1s S5 tax, people actually using
14, Denlaon outacored Ot-terbein 33 21, Weatmlnater
$treets would be paying a part of t...lr cost, ratbtrl.ht
(Pa ) nqed Mllrletta 21 It
relying entirely upon the property own~rs. $5 Is not a big
and Fillllllly and Taylor (Ind.)
price for each of us to pay to provide SlO,OOO annually In our
played to • 7 7 tie

of Denny Whitehead who
scored three times and l'Uibed
for 139 yards downed Xavier
3113
Sockeye Ia another DIDle
Xtivler a Jim Dydo CQIIl
for
tbe Paclftc ulmoa
pleted 31 ps II bt 801tfenpk

FOR THE '5 LICENSE PLATE TAX

FOR ONLY $5 PER CAR
ATOTAL OF $10,000 ANNUALLY
WOULD BE MADE AVAILABLE
FOR ADDITIONAL STREET

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR.

•

i ,Ca~~,dar! for Bazaar
THEODORUS Council 17
Daughters of Amer~ca 7 30
1\!onday IOOF hall Obhgatwn
mght games 60th anmversary
observance to be planned
POMEROY Garden Club
7 30 p m Monday at home of
Mrs Fred Blaettnar
TUESDAY
ELECTION Day dmner at
Masonic Hall
Chester
Tuesday by Chester Umted
Methodist Church Soup
sandwiches p1e cake coffee
plate lunches
SOUP DINNER Tuesday
Syracuse Presbyter~an Church
annex starling at 11 30 am
Vegetable soup sandwiches
p1e coffee
SOUP Dmner Pomeroy
Umted Methodist Church 11 to
3 p m servmg t1me Soup
sandwiches pie and coffee
Soup also available by the
quart
ELECTION Day Dmner
Tuesday
at
Syracuse
Presbyterian
Church
Homemade vegetable soup hot
dogs ham salad sandwiches
coffee tea Kool Aid and pie
Will be sold Soup w1il be sold
for carry·&lt;)Ut but con tamers
must be furmshed by con
tamers The dmner IS bemg
sponsored by members of the
Sunshme Makers Class
OffiO ETA PHI Chapter
Beta s1gma Phi Soror~ty 8 15
p m Tuesday Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electric Co
Sarah Bechtle and Charlotte
Taunwn w have the cultural

prg:~~ER

coUNciL 323

Daughters of \mema 7 30
p m Tuesday at the hall F1rst
nommallon of officers Layette
shower for Kathy Tuttle
Johnson
ELECTION DAY dmner at
Racme Wesleyan Umted
Metllod1st Church Tuesday at
11 30 a m and 4 30 p m 10
church annex Sponsored by
Iad1es of the church
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Chmt
ThanksgiVIng dmner (potluck)
Tuesday 6 30 p m home of
Mrs Frances Eskew
WEDNJCSDAY
POMEROY
~?~art

:;everal sewmg sessions have
been held by the Loyal
Women s Class at the Mid
dieport Church of Chr~st m
preparahon for the holiday
bazaar to be held on Nov 17 at
Dudley s Florists
A bake sale w1ll be held m
conJuncllon w1th the bazaar
w1th Mrs Martha Childs w
serve as treasurer Mrs
Audrey Swett Mrs Helen
Reynolds Mrs Herman Lohse
and Mrs E L Lallance w1ll
work on the bake sale
One of the sewmg sessiOns
was held m conJunction With a
regular monthly meetmg ~f the
class Members sang Happy
Birthday to Mrs Oscar
Roush president and Mrs
C~llds teacher
Plans were made for the
annual Christmas dmner to be
held at the church on Dec 8
Mrs Roush appomted Mrs
Reynolds Mrs Swett and
Mrs Lallance to handle the
dmner arrangements Mrs
Lohse and Mrs Childs Will
have charge of the program
and also the love gift offermg
and Mrs Lohse Will handle the
shut m boxes
The 1llne~s of Robert Craig
Mrs Jean Swett Mrs Blanche
G1lkey and Mr and Mrs
Boyer was noted Sack lun
cheons were enJoyed at the
sewmg sesswns
"$,.-..:,v ,,-om::::::::me:~&gt;:~mme:~l\&lt;

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Middleport
Personal Notes

Mrs Nma Bland has
returned here to be w1th
her s1ster Mrs
Pearl
Reynolds after spend10g sev
era! weeks 10 Akron w1th
her fam1ly there
Mrs Luc10da Dames and
Mrs Frank Betz have returned
to their home after spend10g
two weeks m Columbus VISiting
Richard Reed who has been
hosp1tahzed
Mr and Mrs Frank Powers
and fam1ly and Mrs Grace
Pratt spent last weekend at a
cab10 on the !'uskmgum River

ct$t.llll~~sti!IY a(!\~~1 1fil l'"E'J".:.' ~b

l tons
the Me1gs Inn
POMEROY Chapter 80
Royal Arch Masons 7 30
WedneSday at the Masomc
Temple Officers and com
pamons urged to attend
WHITE ROSE LODGE I 30
p m •Wednesday at the M1d
dieport Legwn Hall

'lpURSDAY
ANNUAL Bazaar of Sacred
Heart Cljllrch at auditorium
ThursdaY' Dmners start10g at 4
p m g~mes prizes fancy
stands baked gOods Public
invited
PAST Councilors Theodorus
Council D of A 7 30 p m
Thursday home of Mrs Mabel
Wolfe
Sandy Koudax 1s the sole
baseball pitcher to receiVe
the Cy Young Award three
tiii)es-1963 1965 and 1966

SHOP THE

EASY WAY
USE OUR

LAY-AWAY

PLAN
JOLA'S
Matn &amp;

Sycamore&lt;

DaiQ JXIIO

\

Pd Pol AIJv by The Middleport 0!11n._ Of Con'llnet et

'

NeWS N0tes
Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel M1ss10n Oct
29 was 35 Offermg $11 21
Sunday School IS held each
Sunday mormng at 9 30
Sunday evemng worship at
7 30 Prayer meeting each
Tuesday evemng at 7 30 A
reviVal swted Nov 2 w1th
Rev George Hoschar as
evangelist
Mr and Mrs
James
Autherson and Patflcla Mrs
Elva Dalley of Syracuse VISited
Mr and Mrs Carl Autherson
Mr and Mrs Zembera
Baker of Malta 0 Mary B1rch
of Gallipolis 0 Leota Birch
local VISited Mr and Mrs
D1lllon Taylor
Mr and Mrs Blll Clonch and
famlly of Rutland 0 Mr
Charles Hilton of Columbus
0 Mr and Mrs Donald Hupp
of Letart Falls 0 Mr and
Mrs Charles Cra1g and
daughter of Portland 0 Mary
B1rch of Gallipolis 0 Leota
B1rch local VISited Mr and
Mrs George Hupp
Mrs Mary Dalley and sons
local M1ssy Van Meter of
Mmersvlile Rt VISited their
grandmother Mrs Ada Van
\Ieier

RACINE - The Rev Charles
Norr1s pastor of the Rac10e
F1rst Baptist Church has
accepted a call to serve the
pulpit of the llapllst Church at
South Pomt OhiO
The son of the Rev and Mrs
Freeland Noms of Racme the
Rev Mr Norr1s attended
Racme Elementary School and
graduated from Racme H1gh
&amp;hool m 19&amp;0 He ~ttended
Oh10 Umvers1ty RIO Gl8nde
College and completed
semmary level stud1es 10
rellg10n as required for
hcensmg 10 the Umted
Methodist Church
After spendmg several years
as a school teacher and prm

PORTLAND - Purchase of
a record player for each
classroom at the Portland
Elementary School was approved when the Portland
P T 0 met Wednesday mght at
the school
Mrs Don Johnson presided
at the meeting dunng wh1ch
ttme f1ve basketballs were also
approved for purchase It was
noted that blinds have been
ordered for the gymnasium
and that drapenes have been

The Rev Mr Norris last
sprmg published a book of
sermons enlltled Chr1st IS the
Answer He IS a Iarmer clerk
of the Southern Local Board of
Educahon
The Rev and Mrs Norrla
and their lour daughters are
expectmg to move to South
Po10t m January

Polh 's Bee Problem
Needs Stinging Amm ers
Bv POLLY CRAMER

Polly's Problem

m!W&lt;Mf11"-DEAR POLLY- Some bees have made a home on
the outdoor ba1 becue on our backyard and we were
not aware of th1s unhl I wa&gt; mowong the yard It
must have been the no1se from the mower that up
set them fo1 they came nght after me gettmg m
my ha1r and g1vmg me a really bad stong We have
\ tr~ed burnmg them out smokong them out and
spraymg them but they are st1li there Please Will
W someone help us'r B M K

8'8io:.'."'' '·"·'' '1•
DEAR POLLY- 1 would hke to add a Pet Peeve to your
list and guess I am hke some of the others who have
many but only wnte m the most 1rr1tatmg Mme IS w1th
those rude neighbors who send the1r children to play
w1th my son and Without ask10g 1f 1! 1s convement They
go off shoppmg and p1ck up the ch1idren on the way
home wh1ch ona) be hours later How d d they know l
d1d not want to go someplace too? I may be old rash
10ned but 11 seems the mother could stop call or w111e
a note Thanks for hstenmg - VERA
DEAR POLLY-As a daily reader of your column I am
answenng Barb \\ ho wants to restore a yellowed lamp
shade to 1ts ongmal whiteness For 45 years I have been
domg the followmg pamt them w1th any good enamel
I have three gomg now and they look beau\lful Good
luck -SYLVIA
DEAR GIRLS-Barb did not say but l am assuming
she meant paper or so called parchment shades l too
have painted many such shades but have never used
enamel as Sylvia does Just flat paint Now shiny shades
are quite popular and that wet shiny look would be ob
lalned with enamel The only trick 1s being sure that the
paint covers smoothly with no runs After one coat Is
dry put the shade on the lamp with bulbs turned on and
see If t)jer,e ~~~ any S,!!O.I~ of light coming through Often
the jolJ ~otili!j g~eat !I'll~ the light Is not turned on and
then later ft Is a dln~e' :wllen the lamp Is lighted More
than one coat has always been needed for rome Be care
ful not to get 'any paint on the Inside -POLLY
DEAR POLLY-I save all
those cans that the new
fangled potato ch1ps come
m and fill them w1th pea
nut butter and chocolate
ch1p cookies They are
ready for the children to
take back to college when
they come home or they
could be ma1led The cook
1es do not break for the
Sides are cush10ned and
the a1rhght can keeps them
mce and fresh -MRS C P

hung on the stage. Mobons
were made to sell refresh
ments at basketball games and
Larry Wolfe was authorized to
purchase needed first a1d
supplies
It was reported that the
P T 0 made $500 on the fall
festival held Oct 28 The affair
mcluded games homemade
1ce cream cake c1der donuts
a country store a candy shop
a clothmg shop an auctiOn and

Holiday events set
REV NORRIS

Honor pupils
at Salisbury
announced

Hobday proJects were
discussed durmg a meeting of
the Sew R1te Sewmg Club held
recently at the home of Mrs
B1ll McDamel
It was decided to take
homemade cookies and m
diVidual frml baskets to the
Elmwood Nursmg Home The
club members are also making
card holders from frmt cans
and decorat10g potato ch1p
cans to be used for cookie
contamers
Mrs George Hoffman cohostess for the meehng
presided at the sess1on w1th
Mrs Don Collms giVIng the
treasurer s report and Mrs
Elza Gilmore Jr
the
secretary s report Members
exchanged names for the
Christmas party Mrs Elmer

Wh1te and Mrs Robert Potter
w1ll host the next meetmg
Others attendmg were Mrs
Edward Wells Mrs Don
McKmght
Mrs
Flo
Strickland Mrs Charles
Hoffman Mrs Willard Boyer
Mrs Larry Wehrung Mrs Ray
Ba1 ty and Mrs Ronald
Browning
Wednesday the club mem
bers went to Parkersburg for a
Halloween d10ner party and
then shopped at the Mall
Blfthday g1fts were presented
wMrs llrowmng Mrs George
Hoffman and Mrs Gilmore

The SaliSbury Elementary
School honor roil for the first
SIX weeks has been announced
Makmg a B or above m ail
.he1r subjects to be named to
the roil were (first grade no
g1ven letter grades) were
SECOND - &amp;ott Hamson
Angela Hatfield Nalahe
Lambert Shem Marshall
Brenda Pugh John Smith
POMEROY - Fifty-seven
THIRD - Dale Br1ckles persons have enrolled for the
Steve Wood Kathleen Parker f1rst evening art class at the
FOURTH - Dav1d Kennedy Salisbury School bemg conCarol Morris Laura Ohlinger ducted by Mr and Mrs David
Steve Ohhnger
Camille Lynas
Swmdell Jena Welker
01 the total 38 were in the
FIFTH - Kathie Qmvey and elementary group and 29ln the
S1xth Sharon Buckley and
adult part of the session
Jana Burson
Enrollment in the Monday
evemng class Is closed at the
INSPECTION SET
moment However if response
Mrs Mary Hawk of Fair warrants a second class will
born deputy supreme worthy be started on another evening
h1gh priestess of the Wh1te Those mterested in par
Shnne of Jerusalem will tic1patmg may call the school
conduct wspechon for the and leave the1r name and
Mary Shrme Pomeroy the address
Lafayette Shr10e GallipoliS
and the Manetta Shrme at 8
DINNER TUESDAY
p m Friday night at the IOOF
RUTLAND - An Election
ha 11hall m Pomeroy A potluck Day dinner w1ll be held
supper w1ll be held followmg Tuesday at the Rutland
1nspecUO!l.
Methodist Church Soup '"Pie
and coffee wlll be served Soup
The f1rst A t1 a n h c C1ty w1il be available for carryoul
boardwalk was completed 10 orders with purchasers to
1870 Its present length Is provide their own containers
about seven m1Ies
Servmg w1ll begm at 9 a m

~~[l'l&lt;;2~

Frank Holter of Racme Rt
VISited Chnt Birch and
daughters
Leota and Mary B1rch VISited
Mr and Mrs Roscoe Hollon
Mrs Iva Smger Mrs Charles
Bissell at Chester 0 Mr and
Mrs Michael Evans and
family Mrs Betty Ward and
fam1ly local

BUFFET
DINING
TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5 to9 3D--$2 50 all you can eat (or AI a Carte)

57 persons are
studyzng art

(

,
FOil BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I

700 W. Main • Pomeroy
I let Uady 8UDCiay 1..

Drinks and
Dessert Extra

&amp;der our regular me.nu every n gh\ S to 10

The MEIGS INN PH 992 3629

Small deposit will hold

The Fabric Shop

6 Poll on da ea you c:&amp;an any c:a P&lt;EJ
a p e o deep dense aha~

JUST

Medel
2Q12 ..

Now In The Mail
Christmas Club
CHECKS FOR

'55,000.00
START YOUR
CHRISTMAS
SAVINGS CLUB.
.TOINNOW
'

NEW CLUB STARTS NOVEMBER 6

49 PROMPT WEEKLY PAYMENTS, THE

-(,

Sew1ng Maeh1ne
For Christmas

EUREKA AUTOMATIC UPRIGHT WITH
DIAL A NAP MADE EVEN BETTER
FOR MORE CONVENIENCE

FOR EACH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES

'

SINGER

MORE
FOR YOUR MONEY!

OUR GIFT TO 1973 CLUB MEMBERS

-

Lay Away Your

EUREKA GIVES YOU

~

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

Wide Menu
Cho ce

door pmes Mter bemg cloled
for four years the school netdt
are many and the proceeds wiU
be used to supply some of the
needs
It was noted that the P T 0
would send out letters to Ill
fam1hes m the school area
urg10g them wvote for the live
mill renewal levy Mlu
W1lson s first and second grade
won the room count The
pnnmpal commented on school
actiVIlles and answered
quesllons from those at the
meeting
The secretary s report Wlls
g1ven by Mrs Paul Evans and
Mrs Clarence Lawrence gave
the treasurer s report

om ow

$5995
INGELS
Furniture
MIDDlEPORT
Bank Rate fltlllltlll

,.'Jit'... ----··--.................................................................... , .,

DEAR POLLY-I always save at least one or two flip
up cars from dlshwashmg detergent bottles and then
when buy a brand that does not have such a top I find
those I have saved Will f1t on most bottles Prestoflip up caps on my brand -MRS R W

MISS Mary Birch of
Galllpohs 0 spent ten days
w1th her father Clmt B1rch and
s1ster Leota
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
L1pps and Tom of L1ttle
Hockmg 0 Mr and Mrs Joe
Lipps of Vmcent 0 Mr and
Mrs Thomas Birch and Randy
of Waterford 0 Mr and Mrs

Record players bought for rooms

c1pal before entermg the
m1mstry mne years ago he has
served as pastor and
evangelist m several churches
He was ordamed at the Racine
F1rst Baptist Church where he
has been pastor the past nine
years 10 add1hon w pastorlng
the Bethlehem Baptist Church

POLLY'S POINTERS

'

•I
stt-'ts
ttte

street department fund.

Rev. Norris accepts
call to South Point

~ bezng made

·

East
Amhersl 49 Tutls 0
Army 17 Air Force 14
Boston Col 37 Syracuse 0
Bowdoin 37 Bates 10
Bucknell 28 Mass 15
Colgate 42 Lehigh 34
Columbia 14 Cornell o
Del 14 Villanova 7
Del St 26 Hotstra 7
J Hopkins 30 Swarthmore 8
Kent St 16 Marshall 14
New Hampsh re t4 R I 10
Penn 38 Harvard 27
Penn St 46 Nul 16
Pr nceton 31 Brown 10
Rutgers 21 Conn 13

l!Jf:Jshes eye 1~t
MAC' grid crown
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
Kent State Coach Don James
has his Golden Flashes 10 a
very unusual position
AJllllf of WillS In the final two
games and Kent will have 1ts
first Mul-Amencan Conference
football tltle m 22 years of
trying but 1t 1sn t gomg w be
easy
Kent 4-4-1 overall and 2-110
the MAC traUs Bowling Green
which finished Its conference
schedule Saturday with a 17-4!
victory over Ohio University
and a 3-11 mark
The Flashes 16-14 WUIIlers
over Marshall In a non-confer
ence contest Saturday travel
to Millnu this coming weekend
and wmd up the season at home
against Toledo
I m sure Bowling Green
feels real good right now
James 881d We II probably be
underdogs In both games
M1aml has a good deal more
strength than we do
While James is not overcome
with optimism he Is thankful
for the opportunity and
believes his team will be ready
We were pleased after the
Bowling Green game (won by
Kent 14-10) that we didn~ have
to rely on anybody else to win
the t1tle James couttnued 11
Is right In our hands now We
can t blame anyone else
The second year Flash
coach sho feels his program IS
making progress sa1d he
thmks being in contention for
the title Is good for the school
E&amp;clliDg Week
1t will be an exciting week
he said I believe 11 s what the
university needed - something
to get fired up and excited
about
James however IS worried
that his team hasn t shown any
unprovement llillce the BG
game beating Xavier and
marshall and dropping a 28-7
deciJion to Northern ntlnols bt
that spread
We ve rolled the hall back
on p111ta had quarterback
Slllpback problema things like
that
James said 'These
were tbe things we lrere
lllpellll ol clearlnc up
James said MWnl bid lllms
of Kenl alalt thne 1ames and
added 'they may have a hard
tlme selling their kids on how
good wt are from those films
We ve ju4t looked lmlble
SatUrday a wJn over Mar

76ers now 0-13

The 1972-73 verston of the
The 76ers dropped their 13th
ByUaltedPresslnternatlonal
consecullv~gameSundaY.
mght
Gall
and Jerry Show bombed
The Philadelphia 76ers are
rapidly closmg mona National absorbmg a 131113 pasting at before an audience of II 250 at
Basketball Assoc13tion record the hands of the Milwaukee Seattle Jerry West hit lor 35
pomts and Gall Goodrich
that no member of the team Bucks
The
loss
left
Philadelphia
two
popped m 25 mostly from long
wants any part of
short of the dubiOus mark of I&amp; range as the Lakers ran their
the shadow of Ail Amenca
Amerocan Hockey League , straight defeats at the start of 1ecord to 10-3 and stayed hot on
Lydeii Mitchell shrugged off
Slandongs
a season That distinction IS the heels of Golden State m the
questions about bemg a con ten
By Unofed Press lnternatoonal shared by the Denver Nuggets Pacific DIVISion
East
derfor Rook1e-of the Year hon
who dropped their f1rst IS at
Neal Walk sank a pair of foul
w I I pis gf ga
ors
Boston
8 3 0 16 &lt;IS 34 the start of the 1949 season and shots :.Vlth two seconds left in
Bradshaw who Noll de
Nova
Scot
a
6 43 15 54 42 the Cleveland Cavaliers who the game following a jump ball
Vermont 15 Ma ne 14
Rochester
7 4115 5046 began the 1970 season 10 between teanunate Clem Hasscnbed as havmg one of his
W Va 38 Poll 20
Prov dence
7 3 1 15 57 43
Yale 45 Darlmoulh 14
best days attrobuted the
kins and Cleveland s Lenny
Spr
ngf
e
d
4 6 I 9 51 58 wmless fashiOn
South
1ttsburgh success wa strong
New
Haven
2
12
2
6
47
80
The
76ers
are
also
only
four
Wllkms
10 front of the Suns
Alabama 58 M ss St 14
West
runnmg attack wh1ch has
Auburn 26 Florida 20
short of the NBA tecord for the basket
w I t pts gf ga
gamed more than 200 yards m Dayton 31 Xavier I 0 ) 13
D1ck VanArsdale led PhoeniJ:
T
dewater
9 5 1 19 64 55 longestlos10g streak shared by
Duke 20 Ga Tech 14
the last four games all of
C
nc
nnat
7
5
0
14
46
46
San
Fr!incisco
and
San
D1ego
scorers w1th 28 pomts and Walk
LSU 17 Miss 16
Cle"eland
5 6 3 13 57 51 The Warnors lost 17 10 a row canned ?:1 Wilkins had 29 for
wh1ch the Steelers have won to
No carolina 26 Clemson 10
Hershey
4 5 2 10 ~7 33
boost their mark w 6-2 The&gt; No Car Sf 35 Virginia 14
R chmond
4 8 I 9 45 56 from Dec 20 1004 w Jan 26 the Cavs while Carr added 24
S
C
35
Wake
Forest
3
Bengals are now 5-3
Ball
more
3
53 9 114.&lt; 1965 The Rockets lost a like
The New York Knicks 11).2
Southwestern 14 Wash &amp; Lee
Sunday s Results
The runmng attack takes 0
number from Jan 21 to Feb and trailing Boston by one half
Boston 3 Richmond 2
the pressure off my passmg
Tampa 26 Flor da A&amp;M 9
16 1968
game m the Atlantic Division
Cle"eland 10 Sprlngfoeld 5
Tennessee 14 Georgia 0
game sa1d Bradshaw who has
In other contests on a light meet the Portland Trail Blaz
C nc nnat 6 New Haven 5
Tusk~ee 41 M les 8
tossed e1ght touchdown passes
Rochester
3
Hershey
3
(t
e)
s.;bedule
Los Angeles dropped ers 110 the last place team In
VMI 31 Furman 7
Pro" dence 7 Baltimore 4
ti 1s season
Wm II. Mary S6 Da • dson 9
Seattle I 124 115 and PhoeniX tjle Pacific DiVISion 10 the only
(onljl games scheduled)
Midwest
When told about Brown s
edged Cleveland 107 100
contest tomght
Monday s ~ames
Bowl ng Green 17 Oh o U 0
comment that the Steelers
(No games scheduled)
Den son 33 Otterbeon 21
looked like a Super Bowl
Drake 19 Southern J I 9
Ill 43 Northwestern 13
contender Bradshaw JUSt sat
World Hockey Assocoatoon
M
amo (0) 38 Wsn M ch 8
~tanding
back and sm1led That sounds
M ch gan 21 lnd ana 7
By Un1ted Press ln1ernahonal
JUSt great
M chlgan St 22 Purdue 12
East
M ssoun 31 Kansas St l4
w I I plsgfga
Pittsburgh has not had a
Musk
ngum
21
Ohoo
Wslyn
8
Cleveland
8
3 I 17 50 33
wmnmg season smce 1963 when
Northern Ill 30 Toledo 7
Quebec
7
3
I 15 41 29
Buddy Parker was coach and
Notre Dame 42 Navy 23
7 4 0 14 46 35
New Ehg
Oh o St 27 M nn 19
has not won a dll,lslon
New York
7 6 0 14 59 49
6 4 1 13 51 48
Oltawa
champ10nsh1p m the tlub s 39- Okla 20 Iowa St 6
W s 16 Iowa 14
2 11 0 4 3767
Phola
year history
Southwest
West
LEISURE FOOTWEAR
Baylor 42 TCU 9
wttptsgfga
San
Jose
14
N
M
7
Wnnop~
7 5 1 15 45 43
Tradmg 26-0 at the half
Texas 17 SMU 9
Los
Ang
7 4 I 15 43 32
VIrgil Carter replaced Ken
Texas A &amp; M 10 Arkansas 7 Alberta
6 6 1 13 40 47
Anderson at quarterback and
Texas Tech 10 Rice 6
Houston
5 7 0 10 35 41
West
M nnesota
4 6 1 9 27 36
marched h1s team 62 yards m
Brogham Young 33 Wyo 14
Ch
cago
2
8 1 5 24 36
16 plays for the Bengals fu-st
Ca 31 Oregon 12
Sunday s Results
score Of the game Carter went
Mont St 21 Montana 3
W nn p~ 3 New York 1
Nebraska 33 Colo 10
Ottawa 5 Alberta 3
over from the one on a rollout
USC 44 Wash St 3
Los Angeles 4 Houston 0
for the score
UCLA 28 Stanford 23
Quebec 3 Ch cago 2
But Bradshaw came fight
Utah 28 Arizona 27
M nnesota 3 Ph ladelph a I
Utah St 51 Idaho 7
(Only games scheduled)
back hitting LewiS w1th h1s
Wash
23
Ore
St
16
Mondays Games
second touchdown grab of the
W
nn
p~ at New England
day
(Only games scheduled)
Carter wssed a two-yard
IHL Standings
touchdown pass wCh1p Myers Descendanls of Abraham
By
Unoted
Press lnternatoonal
late m the th1rd quarter and
North
Abraham IS the progemtor
Horst Muhimann kicked a 37 of both the Arabs and Jews
w It pts gf ga
10 3 0 20 61 45
yard f1eld goal for the f10al The Arab world has traced Fl nt
Port Huron
7 4 1 15 41 34
score of the game
1ts descent from Abraham Toledo
7 2 1 15 38 27
Roy Gerela kicked f1rsl half through h1s elder son Ish Sognaw
6 6 0 12 48 49
l1eld goals of 15 and 22 yards w mae! Isaac h1s younger Muskegon
I 10 I 3 36 54
Southern
round out the scormg for son IS regarded as the an
w I t pis gf ag
cestor of the Jews
Pittsburgh
Dayton
8 3 2 18 59 45
Brocade wtth salon lonong and quilled satin
Des Moones
5 6 1 11 48 64
sock
Matchong salon bow Colors Gold Hot
Fort Wayne
S 6 0 10 41 34
Ptnk
Columbus
1 10 o 2 30 54
Sunday s Results
S1zes AA w1dth 5 to 10 B w1dth 4 to 10
Fort Wayne 5 Dayton 7
Fl nt 7 Columbus 2

Brown says
PITTSBURGH( UP! )-Every
body was talkmg about the
Su~r Bowl Sunday after the
Pittsburgh Steelers rolled mto
sole possessiOn of the AmeriCan
Football Conference s Central
DIVISIOn
Thai Is-everybody except
Steeler Coach Chuck Noll
We have aqother b1g game
next week Noli sa1d w1th a
sm1Ie after h1s team trounced
the Cmcmnall Bengals 41).17
before a sellout crowd at Three
R1vers Stadium
Bengal Coach Paul Brown
was a httle more candid saymg
the Steeiers looked like a
Super Bowl team
They re great Brown said
Tbey gave us a sound defeat
In a game for the division
lead that was rated a tossup
turned mw a rout w1th the
Steelers Jumpmg off w a 7-4!
lead w1th only 3 35 gone on the
clock Defensive and Dwight
Wh1te recovered a fumble on
Cmcmnati s f1rst offensive play
and John Frenchy Fuqua
then slanted off tackle for a
seven yard score to start off
Pittsburgh s biggest offensive
output smce Noll took over 10
1969
From then on in 1t was the
Steelers ali the way w1th Terry
Bradshaw r1ddhng the AFC s
top defensive team with three
wuchdown passes and Franco
Hams runmng for 101 yards
and another touchdown
Bradshaw completmg 10 of
20 passes for 190 yards fired
scormg passes of !UI and 34
yards to Wide receiver Frank
Lew1s and a 13-yarder to tight
end Larry Brown
Hams the Steelers No I
dra!tch01ce broke the 100-yard
mark for the th1rd time to pace
a rushmgattack wh1ch account
ed for 230 yards
The former Penn State
fullback who once played m

Grid results

'~w

POMEROY

BANK WILL MAKE THE 50TH PAYMENT

Citizens National Bank
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

�..
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•

•

•

•

••

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~wallace

·
·
BAND SENIORS RECOGNIZED - Wahwna Higb School recognlzed·its
Wriston ; second row, Gerald Simmons, band director ; linda Roush, J~yne
senior band members at the Wahama-Parkersburg Catholic contest Friday
Hart, Chuck Wood, Kent Sayre, Lawrence Weaver, Dianna Harris, Marilyn
evening. Front row, left to right, Pam Weaver, Steve carpenter, Mike
Goodnite, ,Chris Hoffman, Carol Circle, and Charles Yeago, assistant
Foreman, Unda Van Maire, Mike Ohlinger, John Burris, and Frances
director . - PHarO BY SAM NICHOLS, Ill.
' •'•:•'•'•'•'"•"•'•:O:O'o'o'oWo'o'o"o'o!&gt;"o~····· .xo ·o~o ' • • •
':,~ .......•••••••••.............!•'•'•!·~~-~·:·:o:t:·=-=·;o~·:·=·:·;··

Otarles Lanham died on Sunday
Charles Leonard Lanham,
64, Pomeroy Route 3, died
Sunday . at the Veterans
HOSpllal m Clarksburg, W.Va.
Mr. Lanham was a retired
farmer and timber cutter.
Surviving are his wife,
Lenore; four sons, Eugene of
Belpre; Lennie of Little
Hocking ; Roger of Route 3,
Pomeroy, and Marvin, serving
in the u.s. Army at Fort Knox,
Ky., and two daughters, Mrs.
Alma Pooler, Pomeroy, Route,
3 and Mrs. Barbara Davis,
Elkins, w. va.

Funeral serviceswillbeheld %
at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the &gt;$
Mellon , w. va., Baptist
Church . flnends may call at ~::
the Burdette. and Lindsey
Fun~ral Home 1n Parkersburg i:J
after 7 this evening.
(:j

l

ill

CLUB TO MEET
The Amateur Garden Club
will meet at Bp. m. Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Harold
Lohse.

A Demoerat VOTE NQvember 7

FOR

JOE
&lt;

DENISON .
FOR

County Commissioner
Term Commencing

Is a vote tor Meigs County progress. Ja nuary 3. 1973
Pd . f'lil. Adv. by the Candidate

RE-ELECT

ROBERT CLARK
Republican candidate for

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
'
full term commencing January 3, 1973- Eiec tion Nov. 7,
1912

Semi. Retired, Unlimited lime to devote to the duties of the

...

uttice. Vote tor a full-time

Commi ssit~ner

-

Vote for

ROBERT CLARK. Your Vole and Influence Deeply Ap.
predated.

.

~ Goodyear ~~:

Pd. Pol. Adv . By The Candi date

, . ··

Delegates lo .the Family
Living Conference lo be held
Thursday and Friday in
Colun1bus were elected ·at the
Thursday night meeUng of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers held at
the Salisbury Elementary
School. ·

POINT PLEASANT
Strik ing wor kers ·of the
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company 's chemical plant at
Apple Grove voted overwhelmingly Sunday to defeat
the lates t contract offer which
would have ended the 159-{(ayold work stoppage.
The 492 hourly members of
Uni ted Rubber Workers local
644 rejected .by a vote of 95 per
cent opposed the latest
proposal which was not " that
much different" from previous
proposals, according to a union
spokesman.
The
new
proposal
deliniated a four per cent wage
increase for the employes. This
figure would break down to an
18 'cent hourly increase fro m
Nov. 1972 to Nov. 1973 with 16 .
cent hourly increases for each
of the following two years.
An issue which evolved out of
lhe strike situation and has
taken the spotlir ht in recent
negotiations,' involves five
employes who allegedly caused
a disturbance while on the
picket line. The company, after
agreeing to reinstate three of
them, refuses to rehire the
remaining two.

Driving Drinkers
Peter the Great tried to encourage sobriety among 18th·
century Russians by insisting that men j a i I e d for
drunkenness had to wear a
" medal for hard drinking"
around their necks all the
time they were incarcerated.
The medal weigh e d 18
pounds .

the Helmsman." You see signs
giving the direction of the
tunnel and the name of the
particular shop to whic~ a
nearby entrance' or exit leads.
Conference Table
After a 10-minute w~lk
through the maze you arrive at
a large, well-lighted room
(about 30by 75 feet) with a long
conference table covered with
maroon velvet material. The
temperature there and
throughout the tunnel system,
according to thermometers on
the walls, is 58 degrees.
There, while one girl ' pours
red tea, a salesgirl from the
store, Yao Min, tells you that
you are directly underneath
the Red Flag children's
clothing store.
" It i~ pur plan to turn this
(the conference room) into a
regular ~op so people can
come and buy clothing lor their
children here as well as above
ground."
"During time of war," she
adds, "we will use it for a
storage area and first aid
station."
.More than 1,800 persons work
in the shops on the street. But
since it is an impprtant
shopping area, mure than
80,000 persons visil the street
on an average day. On holidays
the number is more than
200,000.
" At any given moment
durin g the daytime there are
about 10,000 people on the
street," Miss Yao says. That is
the number the system is
designed to handle.
Chang Chin~iang, a middleaged male member of the
commerce bureau of the ljsuan
Wu district, says, "In response
to a diret'tive from Chairman
Mao, we started building a
network of air raid shelters
which connect all the shops in
Tashala Street."

Mrs. Hettie Mae · Matheny,
80, Route 1, Stewart, (Athe!L'I.
County), died Sunday af·
ternoon at her residence
following an extended illness.
Mrs. Matheny was born at
Clover, W. Va. , the daughter of
. the late Acie and Senna Webb
Holland. She was preceded in
· death by three sons and three
brothers. Mrs. Matheny was a
member of the Banner Advent
Christian Church at Clover.
She had resided in Ohio 27
years,
Surviving are her husband,
John C. at home ; a son, Donze!
R., stewart; three da"Jghters,
Mrs . . Eugene (June) Bock,
. Parkersburg; Mrs . Robert
(Lucille) Villars, Stewart, and·
Mrs. Lewis (Bessie) Armstrong, Rockport, W. Va.; a
grandson, William Boyd
Matheny , Stewart; a orolher,
Herbert Holland , Mineral
Wells, W. Va.; two sisters,
Ethel Hickel, Clover, and Mrs.
Retha Coe, also of Clover: 19
grandchildren, six step·
, grandchildren, 10 greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Banner Advent Christian
Church at Clover and burial
will~ held there. friends may
. call at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville after 3 p, m.
Tuesday.
·

FOR OUR KIDS
l

FOR THE

.!
l

•

MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL LEVY
~

--'--·-

This week's college tilts

:;::

The first phase began in
December, 1!169, after a series
of clashes between Chinese and
Soviet troops on the 5,000inile
Sino-Soviet border and when
the fear of a Soviet nuclear
strike bung heavy over Peking.
The first turmels were four
yards below the surface. Later
they went double that depth.
''During air raid exercises,''
Miss Yao explains, it takes
from five to six minutes to get
everyone underground."
The Tashala tunnels were
built by people of the district
with advice and technical
assistance-llut no moneyfrom the Civil Defense Office
and other bureaus of Peking
municipality.
·
"The tunnel system has
many shortcomings and
weaknesses," Chang said.
"For instance, the first tunnels
we dug were rather shallow,
too near the surface and also
too narrow. They need further.
improvement. Of course, our
system is not yet finished and
we can make these improvements."
These improvements, he
said, include cormecting all the
tunnel systems in Peking,
building underground power
stations, installing better
ventilation . and filtering
systems and providing better
protection against radiation.
The systems 'also would he
connected with the Peking
subway which was basically
completed two years ago but
still is not in operation for the
public.
Power presenUy comes from
the Peking municipal grid
system but generators are
being installed, Chang said.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Aaron , the elder brother of
Moses, was · the first high
priest of Israel.

Oayfon at Bowling Green

Ashland Oil, has accepted the
chairmanship of the Explorers'
Impact Dinner to be held
Tuesday, Nov. 21, at the
A s h 1a n d c o r p o r a t e
headquarters in Bellefonte .
The Explorers Is a separate
division of the Tri.State Area
Council, Boy Scouts of
America.
Yancey wiD be inviting the
heads of some 32 businesses,
industries and professional ·
groups from the Tri-State area
to hear the story of the Ex·
plorers, and to enllst their
support in sponsoring a career
• interest Explorer group

Ohio Universify at Tulane

related to their firm .
Sales people are also being
recruited to organize these
groups and they will be
oriented at a special dinner
meeting to be hosted by tYmco
Steel on November 8.
The organization of Explorer
groups brings a contemporary
approach to young !lien and'
women, "ages 15 through 20;
who want to test themselves~
and their futures while they are
still young enough to change
their minds about the courses:
they'll choose. As Explorer~.
they wiD become members of a
national program that has over'
300,000 membe~.

Marshall at Toledo lnl
Ci'ncinnall at Memphis State
Xavier at Villanova

Quantico Marines at Akron InI
Northwood (Mich.) at Ashland
Wilmington at Blulllon
Tennessee State at Central
State
Defiance at Olivet
Findlay at Ohio Northern
Hiram at Allegheny !Pa.J
John Carroll al Oberlin

Central Michl ..,an at Youngs.

town State lnl

B~ldwin· Wallac e at Wooster
Capital at Wittenberg
Denisbn at Wash lngton &amp; Lee

1854.

Going from here.will be Mrs . . Mrs. Vaughan . reported .to
Phyllis Dugan and Mrs. Nancy the group on conditions at the
Ervin, delegates from' council, Meigs County Children 's
and Mrs. Ruby Vaughan , Home. She represents the PTA
council president and District on a Citizens' Committee
16 director. The conference is organized to recommend
sponsored by the Nationa l improvements at the Home. A
PTA, the Ohio PTA, and the request was also made lor
March of Dimes.
clothing for youngsters involved in the foster parents
In 1953, U.S. Attorney Gener- program.
al Herbert Browne)! lodged
A concentrated membership
serious charges against former drive was urged by Mrs.
President Harry Truman in the Vaughan who reported that
naming ol Harry Dexter White las t year 1,300 persons
as head of the International belonged to PTA. She urged
Monetary Fund. Brownell said that membership chairmen get
Truman appointed White to the busy and double membership
post knowing he was "a in local units. It was announced
Russian spy. ''
that state dues will increase by
10 cents alter Jan. I. Mrs.
ln. 1968, Richard Nixon was Vaughan also asked that each
elected president of the ·United unit sell at least five magazine
States, defeating Democrat subscriptions.
Hubert Humphrey .
A report on the recent Ohio

On this day in history:
P•••lllllllll!!l
In 1860, Abrahan. Lincoln was
elected preside nt of the United .
Stales.
In 1869, in the fi rst formal
intercollegiate football game,
Rutgers beat Princeton, 6-4.

DONlOtiDILlS
!!.

1 ~:.:ong .

District

~~~

The miniinum b~t at all
m,ajor U.S. race tracks is $2.

On the Ballot it reads:
Current Expenses. This is for
the upkeep and maintenance
of the cemeteries in Sutton
Township.

Cast your ballot for experience .... Cast your ballot
for a man who will represent you as a special interest ••.

Vole for Oakley Collins for House District 91.

ADMA KRAHEL
Pd. Pol. Adv., Adam Krahel, Chairman
Educator's Poiillcol Action committee for the
92nd Ho\'Se District

Adv.

' .,

)1 I!'

I

~ Un-official, Sample Ballots
'

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I

RALPH'""""'
WARDEN OURS

Non-Partisan Ballot

REPUBLICAN
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Term Commencing January 2, 1973

..

Pd. Pol . Adv .

•

pteai4eo.t 1114 .tce-pralda.L

C. If ~ lftr,~. roll, &amp;e!oce, ot crroneouol1 mar~ lhll ballot, tt11n
prtciact electioa. omccn aD4 obtain auotb.er ballot.
(Vote not more than once)

(PULL 'TERM COMMI!NClNG JANUARY I, 1973)
(Yolo For lfol -

ELECT

n ...

X

WilLIAM B.

Don L. Dilts

I

LARRY EUGENE SPENCER

CLARENCE E. MUJ,ER

MARY MARTIN

}'or State Representative

SPIRO T. AGNEW

(92nd, DISTRICT)

.Rcvaf&gt;licn

'u I
JOHN C. !ICHMITZ
For p,

Tlloa ·OM)

J.merieao Io4opel!4tol

For Sheriff

JOHN E. HALLIDAY

Przll'

X

· ·Far VIce Pi uiJ Dt

1HOMAS J. ANDERSON

For County.Recorder
(FULL TERM COMMENCIN&lt;NANUARY 2. 19731

.
''•t

(Vote Fen Wot MOH Ttiaa- ODe)

Soclolbt Labor Pvtr

r .. VIce p,

Don Dilts, elected 3 times as Musklngum County Auditor , now a v iCe
President of 1st National Bank, Zanesville.

Patti

•

FRANK D. CELEBREZZE

ROBSON

-

WILLIAM E. SNOUFFER

GENEVIEVE GUNDERSON
!odllilt t.abor

(Vote Por •ot ICoN Tlaaa: O..)

F'or County Commissioner

LOUIS F1SHER

Democrats, Concerned 'Educators, and Legislators.

For ProoW=t

Fo,r County Treasurer

RALPH W. OURS

X

!Vol•

GUS HALL

To Serve Taxpayers . and lmp1011e the Quality of Education
in Ohio We Need Someone On This Board Who Is Not
Another Retired Educator.

For Judge of the Court of Appeals

~·

........

F•Pr

,

Common Pleas ·
.

;'•,

Don L. Dilts In 1970 was Selected as one of the outstanding YOII'I{I men i~'

Ohio .

·.

.

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.

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Foo'Vioo Pr il I

.

R. SARGtNT SHRIVER

Probate Division

Demoer~t

, .... 'II I

.(\'ole For Wol -

X

'
r

-~~

F..r

"'

•

ror ... -'1'11-.-1

THEODORE BEEG~•.

CLARK

For. Coroner

For Prosecutin1 Attorney

.

(PULL
COMMIJNCINO
PIIAUARY
f, 1m1
. TIRM
Cftll,.
___
_l

·

X

Ylot""

1J

BERNARD

'ti.oa

OM)

v. FULTZ

II

(Yolo For ·Ro.l -

.

X

ftu ODol

RANKIN RAY

PICK~S

•.

. '

'

'

IT IS LEGAL '00 TAKE THIS SAMPLE BALWT TOmE POU.SWHENYOUVOTEONELECI'IONDAY,NOVEQER 7,1972

R. E. Zeller, Rt. 6 ~ville. Olio. Chelrmen

.,

...

~)

!Yo,.

'

letter Education-Nat Just llg. .r lducatloft ··

Xot lion Tbu.

For County Etlgineer

•

'

T1lila ODe)

'I IEPUBLICAII

I

GEORGE S. McGOVF.ttN

State .Board of Eduation o~~

l·

(FULL TERM COMMINCING JANUAII.Y I, 1973)
(Vote

For Judie of the Court of

·~

JARVIS TYNER

·

-·

~

..

DON L.... DILTS

For County Commissioner

(PULL TIRM CO'WMNCINO PIIRUARY 9,. 1973)
jY•rw•ol _ f t u _OMI

ror •o• -

HOWARD E. FRANK

, ... VIce p, , . t

. (4th. DISTRICT) .

.

Don L. Dilts, has the Experience, Trainina and Education tii
Sene the People of the 1001 Disbitt on the Board of Education

..

"

'l'ba OM) '

OAKLEY C. COlLINS

For Pm"'rt

'- -

llaftt

ROBERT C. HARTENBACH ·

J.morica• ladcpcod'"' Pat17.

Endorsed by County Officials, Republicans,

Jloto 'l'hu 0.01

F&lt;w Vioo Pnrl hill

(FULL TIRM COMMaNCING JANUARY 2, 1973)

38 Yrs. old, a family man, married, father of 4 school-age children, Don L
Dilts is over 20 yrs·. younger th.,n his opponent.
.

ro. ...

(VDie For Rot

LLOYD 0. BROWN

.."""

CommonPleu

IVo.lo

(Vol• Fot Koi Mon Than OD.e)

(Yolo Pol ... -

."

Rey.bliaa

.For Jwtiee of the Supreme Court

Member
STATE BOARD OF
EDUCATION·

·

ROBERT H. WHEALEY

X

For P1 II I
RICliARD M. NIXON

.

(10th. DISTRICT!
IVole Few lfol Mon Tblft OM)

II "' tbo

0..)

•

..."'

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For Clerk of Court of

For Representative to Congres8

: B. To Me for eudidatu ror president and Tite-pruldtlllt Ill the bluk IPlct
lteknr mart "'X" ia tbe left m:taaautu apa« and wntc the um1 of :row dloite
for p;ai4eat ao4/or Tiee·pre.idcut· ...... the re.peetlie badin&amp;t oroftded. far
tboae oflicea. Such write-ill will be coantcd u a 'tOte for tN c:aoclfdate'• pr...,ol
dentlal electon whon oam• han bceu. propcrl;r certi6cd W tbt ScctetuT

Uae "X" Only in Marking Ballot

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MEIGS COUNTY

U1e ;,X,~ Only in Marking Ballot

•ta

the cencll~a nome In the space provided. ·
·
c. If you ·fHr, .tl, dofaco or'orroMoualy. mork tftla ballot, ,...
tum It to tho PN&lt;Inct el..,tlon officers and obtain onolhtr
lNllot.

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A. To me for the caDdldates for prclideDt anlf Tloe'\PI'aldelt Wt.e IWDoiOI
are prlated below awt "X" ill. tbe rectanplu IPICe at tlle teft of tbl . - "
... c.Ddidatca. ha MJ:" tUrk wlliN coaated u a 90te for ..U. af lbe caa4for predda~tla.l tlector whole oamet l».'fe beeD ctrdltd 10 tiN teerCtarr
of 1tatc aacl wbo are attmben o{ the tuDe politic.al PlttJ u 11M
'"M foi'

It the left ef the no,... of such conclidate,
It, To· not 1 write-In vote ploce "X" In tho left blonk ond .write

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INSTRtJCnDftS TO VOTER

a. To vote for • conclldotte piece "Xu In ,.,. rectollfUlor .,...

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a candidate place "X" In the r!!(tangular space at
the left of the name of such candidate.
B. To cast a write-In vote place "X" In the left blank and write
the candidate's name in the space provided.
C. If you tear, aoil, defaee or erroneously mark this baUot, retam
it to the precinct election officers and obtain another ballot.

PRESIDENTIAL BALLOT

MEIGS COUNTY

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OFFICE TYPE BALLOT

Issued by MEIGS COUNTY REPUBUCAN EXECUTIVE COl\IMITTEE, Leslie F. Fultz, Chairman
llO High Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 A. To vote for

For Jwtiee of the Supreme Court

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FOR THE GOOD OF THE NATION· OHIO AND MEIGS COUNTY.

Slate.

X

!

terests!! ! I I

. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES
WILLIAM F.
CLERK

Friends of Dilts-R. Zellar, Charm ., Rt. 6,
Zanesville.

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doubled its support of all levels of education In Ohio. TM &lt;'
major portion of this aid has been aimed at the rural
·school.
Collins' Senate Bill 350 passed in 1967 wu the first
break through for vastly improved education In South.
eastern Ohio. II boosted state support tor pupils In poorer
school districts and provided funds for disadvantaged and
handica pped children.
.
You as taxpayers have realized tax •••11195 In lm.
proved educational opportunities tor your children by o
man who represents special interests · · · You t0 xp1yl119
citizens of Southeastern Ohio are the Special ln.

MILL

Give The Taxpayers
A Voice on the
State Bd. of Education

.

SPECIAL
INTERESTS? ??
Senate Education Committee, the state has more than

NOVEMBER 7th FOR

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pet. unit participation Is ej.couraged. Council dues are
payable before Dec. 1, Mil.
Vaughan announced. She aliO
again requested· that llsta 6f
new officers be submitted lb'
the local units to her. U.ta 'Of
films available on familY
planning were distributed. '
John Lisle, principal, gave
the welcome to open tlie
meeting. Miss Rosalie SJOOy
had devotions using porti~ns Of
the book, "The Prophet," 1ill'd
prayer.
~
Refreshments were servl\(l
by the hoot unit.

districts. He has resisted str0119 efforts by big city com- •
· bines to take over educational proceu.
:
Also since Senator Collins became Chairman of tile •

VOTE YES"

Ohio Wesleya n at Otterbein (n)
1nl night game.

PTA convention held in
Columbus was given by Mrs.
Charles G&lt;Jeglein and Mrs.
Dugan . Mrs. Goeglein also ·
presented facts regarding the
financial structure of the PTA.
Members were urged to take
the PTA manual study course.
Materials for individual
member study are available
from Mrs. Vaughan.
It was noted that the cultural
arts display wlll be at the April
meeting instead of the May
meeting as was previously
announced. The theme is
·:Reseonding to Ufe," and 100

mittee in , lhe Senate "has lo'!9 represeftted special ln-.
lerests.'' He is, known as a protector of the smaller school

11

DON .L

Heidelberg at Mount Un ion

Centre (Ky.) at Kenyon ·
Marietta at Muskingum

'

Taxpayers of Southeastern Ohio
Oakley Collins as Chairman of the Education Com-

SUTTON TOWNSHIP

Put The BANKER on the BOAR(}

First Pitch
The earliest reference to
the use of pitch for water·
proofing is in the Bible. The
Good Book says Noah used
pitch, a natural form of asphalt; to seal the seams of
the ark before the deluge
covered the earth.

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VOTE FOR AND _REIAIN
TUESDAY~ NOV. 7

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United Press International

Ohio State at Michigan State
Kent State at Miami

.
Robert Yancey, President of

Hettie Matheny
died on Sunday

t

&amp;poMOred by the Ladles Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Le5ion. Front left to
right, front row, Mrs. Fox, Paige Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Willillm Curnutt and Ronnie
Carf-, Jayne Lee Hoeflich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, fourth graders at Pomeroy
Elementary Sch~l, who tied but were each awarded·$3; back row, Todd Morrison, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Morrison, Bradbury, fifth and sixth grade school, Fifth grade and Cynthia Sue
Pitzeer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clin!on Pitz~r. sixth grade, Chester Elementary. Mrs. Fox,
Americanism Chairman of !he auxiliary stated that :here were over 150 entries for the grade
levels of the entire county. Judges were Mrs. W. P. Lochary. Kenneth Harris and Robert
Wingett.

BRUCE WAJ,LACE Is Retelling an arrow (plllclllg ':
feathen on arrows) at hls Sports Sllop located In hll apart.
ment home located on South Third Street, Middleport. The •
work Is tedious and requires patience and skill.

~!.

PEKING (UPI) -On the
corner of Precious Pearl Street
and Big Fence Road, shoppers
in the Chien Men clothing store
try on padded cotton jackets
for protection againt the harsh
north China winter.
Asales clerk there can reach
behind a long, gray cotton coat
with a camel hair collar and
push a ~utton hidden on the end
of a clothing rack .
A four-foot-square section of
the red tile floor slides silently
under the rack'. There In front
of you is a cOncrete stairway
leading underground, to one of
the air raid shelter systems
that the Chinese have built
recently as a protection
against nuclear attack.
· In talking about the shelters
·- which we were told extended
throughout the capital and
couldaccommodate80percent
of the 4 million urban residents
- the Chinese made it clear
that they were built as
proteCtion against Soviet attack.
Americans, said Wu Wei·
kuo, an officer of the Chinese
People's Liberation Army no
longer are regarded · as
enemies and are welcome to
tour the shelters with friends
from other countries.
Down the stairway from the
clothing shop, you encounter a
maze of passageways about
one yard wide and barely six
feet high which lead eventually
to wider and deeper turmels.
As you walk, a loudspeaker
system along t~e corridors
blares recorded music"Melody for Welcome" and
"Sailing the Seas Depends on

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Nov. 6, the
311th day of 1972 with 55 to
follow.
. The moon is between iis new
phase and first quarter.
· The morn in~ stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the ·sign of Scorpio.
American band leader John
Philip Sousa was born Nov. 6,

~OF AN AMERICANISM euay oontelll held for fourth, fifth and sixth graders of
Melga Couitty were presented $3 each Friday by Mrs. Edith Fox, chairman of the project,

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Mao
s
people
ready
for
war
prOpOSa}
.
b ut Wit• 'h R USSia,
• not U• S•
•
d
~
re1ecte i?!
Impact dinner set
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·Delegates to PTA conference named

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(Continued from page l)
wouldn't sell anything that I
:wouldn 't use myself," Wallact
said.
.
Wall;!c~,· an .ardent sporll!·
man, loves the work he is
doing; wbich really started out
as a hobby. In addition to
making·arrows he also makes
bow ~trings of dacron string . .
Wallace, former head
football coach at Southern High
Schoo1, where the fruits of his
labor are paying off this season
in a championship team, is an
inspector
for
Harza
Engineerihg, Inc ., Union
Boiler Company, at a dam at
mine No. I at Salem Center.
Wallace sells from his shop
all types of bows and arrows
and all archery accessories.
Customers can pick up suppli28
any evening.
'
Wallace ·hopes 'someday to
open a Sports Shop. In addition
to his love for archery is also
interested in deer hunting, bow
.ami arrow and g-an, squirrel
hunting and rabbit hunting,
Wallace
is ' married
.
Buck. to the
former
Glor1a

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Pd. Pol. Adv.

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~wallace

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BAND SENIORS RECOGNIZED - Wahwna Higb School recognlzed·its
Wriston ; second row, Gerald Simmons, band director ; linda Roush, J~yne
senior band members at the Wahama-Parkersburg Catholic contest Friday
Hart, Chuck Wood, Kent Sayre, Lawrence Weaver, Dianna Harris, Marilyn
evening. Front row, left to right, Pam Weaver, Steve carpenter, Mike
Goodnite, ,Chris Hoffman, Carol Circle, and Charles Yeago, assistant
Foreman, Unda Van Maire, Mike Ohlinger, John Burris, and Frances
director . - PHarO BY SAM NICHOLS, Ill.
' •'•:•'•'•'•'"•"•'•:O:O'o'o'oWo'o'o"o'o!&gt;"o~····· .xo ·o~o ' • • •
':,~ .......•••••••••.............!•'•'•!·~~-~·:·:o:t:·=-=·;o~·:·=·:·;··

Otarles Lanham died on Sunday
Charles Leonard Lanham,
64, Pomeroy Route 3, died
Sunday . at the Veterans
HOSpllal m Clarksburg, W.Va.
Mr. Lanham was a retired
farmer and timber cutter.
Surviving are his wife,
Lenore; four sons, Eugene of
Belpre; Lennie of Little
Hocking ; Roger of Route 3,
Pomeroy, and Marvin, serving
in the u.s. Army at Fort Knox,
Ky., and two daughters, Mrs.
Alma Pooler, Pomeroy, Route,
3 and Mrs. Barbara Davis,
Elkins, w. va.

Funeral serviceswillbeheld %
at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the &gt;$
Mellon , w. va., Baptist
Church . flnends may call at ~::
the Burdette. and Lindsey
Fun~ral Home 1n Parkersburg i:J
after 7 this evening.
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CLUB TO MEET
The Amateur Garden Club
will meet at Bp. m. Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Harold
Lohse.

A Demoerat VOTE NQvember 7

FOR

JOE
&lt;

DENISON .
FOR

County Commissioner
Term Commencing

Is a vote tor Meigs County progress. Ja nuary 3. 1973
Pd . f'lil. Adv. by the Candidate

RE-ELECT

ROBERT CLARK
Republican candidate for

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
'
full term commencing January 3, 1973- Eiec tion Nov. 7,
1912

Semi. Retired, Unlimited lime to devote to the duties of the

...

uttice. Vote tor a full-time

Commi ssit~ner

-

Vote for

ROBERT CLARK. Your Vole and Influence Deeply Ap.
predated.

.

~ Goodyear ~~:

Pd. Pol. Adv . By The Candi date

, . ··

Delegates lo .the Family
Living Conference lo be held
Thursday and Friday in
Colun1bus were elected ·at the
Thursday night meeUng of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers held at
the Salisbury Elementary
School. ·

POINT PLEASANT
Strik ing wor kers ·of the
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company 's chemical plant at
Apple Grove voted overwhelmingly Sunday to defeat
the lates t contract offer which
would have ended the 159-{(ayold work stoppage.
The 492 hourly members of
Uni ted Rubber Workers local
644 rejected .by a vote of 95 per
cent opposed the latest
proposal which was not " that
much different" from previous
proposals, according to a union
spokesman.
The
new
proposal
deliniated a four per cent wage
increase for the employes. This
figure would break down to an
18 'cent hourly increase fro m
Nov. 1972 to Nov. 1973 with 16 .
cent hourly increases for each
of the following two years.
An issue which evolved out of
lhe strike situation and has
taken the spotlir ht in recent
negotiations,' involves five
employes who allegedly caused
a disturbance while on the
picket line. The company, after
agreeing to reinstate three of
them, refuses to rehire the
remaining two.

Driving Drinkers
Peter the Great tried to encourage sobriety among 18th·
century Russians by insisting that men j a i I e d for
drunkenness had to wear a
" medal for hard drinking"
around their necks all the
time they were incarcerated.
The medal weigh e d 18
pounds .

the Helmsman." You see signs
giving the direction of the
tunnel and the name of the
particular shop to whic~ a
nearby entrance' or exit leads.
Conference Table
After a 10-minute w~lk
through the maze you arrive at
a large, well-lighted room
(about 30by 75 feet) with a long
conference table covered with
maroon velvet material. The
temperature there and
throughout the tunnel system,
according to thermometers on
the walls, is 58 degrees.
There, while one girl ' pours
red tea, a salesgirl from the
store, Yao Min, tells you that
you are directly underneath
the Red Flag children's
clothing store.
" It i~ pur plan to turn this
(the conference room) into a
regular ~op so people can
come and buy clothing lor their
children here as well as above
ground."
"During time of war," she
adds, "we will use it for a
storage area and first aid
station."
.More than 1,800 persons work
in the shops on the street. But
since it is an impprtant
shopping area, mure than
80,000 persons visil the street
on an average day. On holidays
the number is more than
200,000.
" At any given moment
durin g the daytime there are
about 10,000 people on the
street," Miss Yao says. That is
the number the system is
designed to handle.
Chang Chin~iang, a middleaged male member of the
commerce bureau of the ljsuan
Wu district, says, "In response
to a diret'tive from Chairman
Mao, we started building a
network of air raid shelters
which connect all the shops in
Tashala Street."

Mrs. Hettie Mae · Matheny,
80, Route 1, Stewart, (Athe!L'I.
County), died Sunday af·
ternoon at her residence
following an extended illness.
Mrs. Matheny was born at
Clover, W. Va. , the daughter of
. the late Acie and Senna Webb
Holland. She was preceded in
· death by three sons and three
brothers. Mrs. Matheny was a
member of the Banner Advent
Christian Church at Clover.
She had resided in Ohio 27
years,
Surviving are her husband,
John C. at home ; a son, Donze!
R., stewart; three da"Jghters,
Mrs . . Eugene (June) Bock,
. Parkersburg; Mrs . Robert
(Lucille) Villars, Stewart, and·
Mrs. Lewis (Bessie) Armstrong, Rockport, W. Va.; a
grandson, William Boyd
Matheny , Stewart; a orolher,
Herbert Holland , Mineral
Wells, W. Va.; two sisters,
Ethel Hickel, Clover, and Mrs.
Retha Coe, also of Clover: 19
grandchildren, six step·
, grandchildren, 10 greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Banner Advent Christian
Church at Clover and burial
will~ held there. friends may
. call at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville after 3 p, m.
Tuesday.
·

FOR OUR KIDS
l

FOR THE

.!
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MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL LEVY
~

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This week's college tilts

:;::

The first phase began in
December, 1!169, after a series
of clashes between Chinese and
Soviet troops on the 5,000inile
Sino-Soviet border and when
the fear of a Soviet nuclear
strike bung heavy over Peking.
The first turmels were four
yards below the surface. Later
they went double that depth.
''During air raid exercises,''
Miss Yao explains, it takes
from five to six minutes to get
everyone underground."
The Tashala tunnels were
built by people of the district
with advice and technical
assistance-llut no moneyfrom the Civil Defense Office
and other bureaus of Peking
municipality.
·
"The tunnel system has
many shortcomings and
weaknesses," Chang said.
"For instance, the first tunnels
we dug were rather shallow,
too near the surface and also
too narrow. They need further.
improvement. Of course, our
system is not yet finished and
we can make these improvements."
These improvements, he
said, include cormecting all the
tunnel systems in Peking,
building underground power
stations, installing better
ventilation . and filtering
systems and providing better
protection against radiation.
The systems 'also would he
connected with the Peking
subway which was basically
completed two years ago but
still is not in operation for the
public.
Power presenUy comes from
the Peking municipal grid
system but generators are
being installed, Chang said.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Aaron , the elder brother of
Moses, was · the first high
priest of Israel.

Oayfon at Bowling Green

Ashland Oil, has accepted the
chairmanship of the Explorers'
Impact Dinner to be held
Tuesday, Nov. 21, at the
A s h 1a n d c o r p o r a t e
headquarters in Bellefonte .
The Explorers Is a separate
division of the Tri.State Area
Council, Boy Scouts of
America.
Yancey wiD be inviting the
heads of some 32 businesses,
industries and professional ·
groups from the Tri-State area
to hear the story of the Ex·
plorers, and to enllst their
support in sponsoring a career
• interest Explorer group

Ohio Universify at Tulane

related to their firm .
Sales people are also being
recruited to organize these
groups and they will be
oriented at a special dinner
meeting to be hosted by tYmco
Steel on November 8.
The organization of Explorer
groups brings a contemporary
approach to young !lien and'
women, "ages 15 through 20;
who want to test themselves~
and their futures while they are
still young enough to change
their minds about the courses:
they'll choose. As Explorer~.
they wiD become members of a
national program that has over'
300,000 membe~.

Marshall at Toledo lnl
Ci'ncinnall at Memphis State
Xavier at Villanova

Quantico Marines at Akron InI
Northwood (Mich.) at Ashland
Wilmington at Blulllon
Tennessee State at Central
State
Defiance at Olivet
Findlay at Ohio Northern
Hiram at Allegheny !Pa.J
John Carroll al Oberlin

Central Michl ..,an at Youngs.

town State lnl

B~ldwin· Wallac e at Wooster
Capital at Wittenberg
Denisbn at Wash lngton &amp; Lee

1854.

Going from here.will be Mrs . . Mrs. Vaughan . reported .to
Phyllis Dugan and Mrs. Nancy the group on conditions at the
Ervin, delegates from' council, Meigs County Children 's
and Mrs. Ruby Vaughan , Home. She represents the PTA
council president and District on a Citizens' Committee
16 director. The conference is organized to recommend
sponsored by the Nationa l improvements at the Home. A
PTA, the Ohio PTA, and the request was also made lor
March of Dimes.
clothing for youngsters involved in the foster parents
In 1953, U.S. Attorney Gener- program.
al Herbert Browne)! lodged
A concentrated membership
serious charges against former drive was urged by Mrs.
President Harry Truman in the Vaughan who reported that
naming ol Harry Dexter White las t year 1,300 persons
as head of the International belonged to PTA. She urged
Monetary Fund. Brownell said that membership chairmen get
Truman appointed White to the busy and double membership
post knowing he was "a in local units. It was announced
Russian spy. ''
that state dues will increase by
10 cents alter Jan. I. Mrs.
ln. 1968, Richard Nixon was Vaughan also asked that each
elected president of the ·United unit sell at least five magazine
States, defeating Democrat subscriptions.
Hubert Humphrey .
A report on the recent Ohio

On this day in history:
P•••lllllllll!!l
In 1860, Abrahan. Lincoln was
elected preside nt of the United .
Stales.
In 1869, in the fi rst formal
intercollegiate football game,
Rutgers beat Princeton, 6-4.

DONlOtiDILlS
!!.

1 ~:.:ong .

District

~~~

The miniinum b~t at all
m,ajor U.S. race tracks is $2.

On the Ballot it reads:
Current Expenses. This is for
the upkeep and maintenance
of the cemeteries in Sutton
Township.

Cast your ballot for experience .... Cast your ballot
for a man who will represent you as a special interest ••.

Vole for Oakley Collins for House District 91.

ADMA KRAHEL
Pd. Pol. Adv., Adam Krahel, Chairman
Educator's Poiillcol Action committee for the
92nd Ho\'Se District

Adv.

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~ Un-official, Sample Ballots
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RALPH'""""'
WARDEN OURS

Non-Partisan Ballot

REPUBLICAN
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Term Commencing January 2, 1973

..

Pd. Pol . Adv .

•

pteai4eo.t 1114 .tce-pralda.L

C. If ~ lftr,~. roll, &amp;e!oce, ot crroneouol1 mar~ lhll ballot, tt11n
prtciact electioa. omccn aD4 obtain auotb.er ballot.
(Vote not more than once)

(PULL 'TERM COMMI!NClNG JANUARY I, 1973)
(Yolo For lfol -

ELECT

n ...

X

WilLIAM B.

Don L. Dilts

I

LARRY EUGENE SPENCER

CLARENCE E. MUJ,ER

MARY MARTIN

}'or State Representative

SPIRO T. AGNEW

(92nd, DISTRICT)

.Rcvaf&gt;licn

'u I
JOHN C. !ICHMITZ
For p,

Tlloa ·OM)

J.merieao Io4opel!4tol

For Sheriff

JOHN E. HALLIDAY

Przll'

X

· ·Far VIce Pi uiJ Dt

1HOMAS J. ANDERSON

For County.Recorder
(FULL TERM COMMENCIN&lt;NANUARY 2. 19731

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(Vote Fen Wot MOH Ttiaa- ODe)

Soclolbt Labor Pvtr

r .. VIce p,

Don Dilts, elected 3 times as Musklngum County Auditor , now a v iCe
President of 1st National Bank, Zanesville.

Patti

•

FRANK D. CELEBREZZE

ROBSON

-

WILLIAM E. SNOUFFER

GENEVIEVE GUNDERSON
!odllilt t.abor

(Vote Por •ot ICoN Tlaaa: O..)

F'or County Commissioner

LOUIS F1SHER

Democrats, Concerned 'Educators, and Legislators.

For ProoW=t

Fo,r County Treasurer

RALPH W. OURS

X

!Vol•

GUS HALL

To Serve Taxpayers . and lmp1011e the Quality of Education
in Ohio We Need Someone On This Board Who Is Not
Another Retired Educator.

For Judge of the Court of Appeals

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F•Pr

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Common Pleas ·
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Don L. Dilts In 1970 was Selected as one of the outstanding YOII'I{I men i~'

Ohio .

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Foo'Vioo Pr il I

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R. SARGtNT SHRIVER

Probate Division

Demoer~t

, .... 'II I

.(\'ole For Wol -

X

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r

-~~

F..r

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ror ... -'1'11-.-1

THEODORE BEEG~•.

CLARK

For. Coroner

For Prosecutin1 Attorney

.

(PULL
COMMIJNCINO
PIIAUARY
f, 1m1
. TIRM
Cftll,.
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X

Ylot""

1J

BERNARD

'ti.oa

OM)

v. FULTZ

II

(Yolo For ·Ro.l -

.

X

ftu ODol

RANKIN RAY

PICK~S

•.

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IT IS LEGAL '00 TAKE THIS SAMPLE BALWT TOmE POU.SWHENYOUVOTEONELECI'IONDAY,NOVEQER 7,1972

R. E. Zeller, Rt. 6 ~ville. Olio. Chelrmen

.,

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!Yo,.

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letter Education-Nat Just llg. .r lducatloft ··

Xot lion Tbu.

For County Etlgineer

•

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T1lila ODe)

'I IEPUBLICAII

I

GEORGE S. McGOVF.ttN

State .Board of Eduation o~~

l·

(FULL TERM COMMINCING JANUAII.Y I, 1973)
(Vote

For Judie of the Court of

·~

JARVIS TYNER

·

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DON L.... DILTS

For County Commissioner

(PULL TIRM CO'WMNCINO PIIRUARY 9,. 1973)
jY•rw•ol _ f t u _OMI

ror •o• -

HOWARD E. FRANK

, ... VIce p, , . t

. (4th. DISTRICT) .

.

Don L. Dilts, has the Experience, Trainina and Education tii
Sene the People of the 1001 Disbitt on the Board of Education

..

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'l'ba OM) '

OAKLEY C. COlLINS

For Pm"'rt

'- -

llaftt

ROBERT C. HARTENBACH ·

J.morica• ladcpcod'"' Pat17.

Endorsed by County Officials, Republicans,

Jloto 'l'hu 0.01

F&lt;w Vioo Pnrl hill

(FULL TIRM COMMaNCING JANUARY 2, 1973)

38 Yrs. old, a family man, married, father of 4 school-age children, Don L
Dilts is over 20 yrs·. younger th.,n his opponent.
.

ro. ...

(VDie For Rot

LLOYD 0. BROWN

.."""

CommonPleu

IVo.lo

(Vol• Fot Koi Mon Than OD.e)

(Yolo Pol ... -

."

Rey.bliaa

.For Jwtiee of the Supreme Court

Member
STATE BOARD OF
EDUCATION·

·

ROBERT H. WHEALEY

X

For P1 II I
RICliARD M. NIXON

.

(10th. DISTRICT!
IVole Few lfol Mon Tblft OM)

II "' tbo

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For Clerk of Court of

For Representative to Congres8

: B. To Me for eudidatu ror president and Tite-pruldtlllt Ill the bluk IPlct
lteknr mart "'X" ia tbe left m:taaautu apa« and wntc the um1 of :row dloite
for p;ai4eat ao4/or Tiee·pre.idcut· ...... the re.peetlie badin&amp;t oroftded. far
tboae oflicea. Such write-ill will be coantcd u a 'tOte for tN c:aoclfdate'• pr...,ol
dentlal electon whon oam• han bceu. propcrl;r certi6cd W tbt ScctetuT

Uae "X" Only in Marking Ballot

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MEIGS COUNTY

U1e ;,X,~ Only in Marking Ballot

•ta

the cencll~a nome In the space provided. ·
·
c. If you ·fHr, .tl, dofaco or'orroMoualy. mork tftla ballot, ,...
tum It to tho PN&lt;Inct el..,tlon officers and obtain onolhtr
lNllot.

i'

i

A. To me for the caDdldates for prclideDt anlf Tloe'\PI'aldelt Wt.e IWDoiOI
are prlated below awt "X" ill. tbe rectanplu IPICe at tlle teft of tbl . - "
... c.Ddidatca. ha MJ:" tUrk wlliN coaated u a 90te for ..U. af lbe caa4for predda~tla.l tlector whole oamet l».'fe beeD ctrdltd 10 tiN teerCtarr
of 1tatc aacl wbo are attmben o{ the tuDe politic.al PlttJ u 11M
'"M foi'

It the left ef the no,... of such conclidate,
It, To· not 1 write-In vote ploce "X" In tho left blonk ond .write

I

I

INSTRtJCnDftS TO VOTER

a. To vote for • conclldotte piece "Xu In ,.,. rectollfUlor .,...

.~

a candidate place "X" In the r!!(tangular space at
the left of the name of such candidate.
B. To cast a write-In vote place "X" In the left blank and write
the candidate's name in the space provided.
C. If you tear, aoil, defaee or erroneously mark this baUot, retam
it to the precinct election officers and obtain another ballot.

PRESIDENTIAL BALLOT

MEIGS COUNTY

-•

OFFICE TYPE BALLOT

Issued by MEIGS COUNTY REPUBUCAN EXECUTIVE COl\IMITTEE, Leslie F. Fultz, Chairman
llO High Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 A. To vote for

For Jwtiee of the Supreme Court

\

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1

FOR THE GOOD OF THE NATION· OHIO AND MEIGS COUNTY.

Slate.

X

!

terests!! ! I I

. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES
WILLIAM F.
CLERK

Friends of Dilts-R. Zellar, Charm ., Rt. 6,
Zanesville.

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doubled its support of all levels of education In Ohio. TM &lt;'
major portion of this aid has been aimed at the rural
·school.
Collins' Senate Bill 350 passed in 1967 wu the first
break through for vastly improved education In South.
eastern Ohio. II boosted state support tor pupils In poorer
school districts and provided funds for disadvantaged and
handica pped children.
.
You as taxpayers have realized tax •••11195 In lm.
proved educational opportunities tor your children by o
man who represents special interests · · · You t0 xp1yl119
citizens of Southeastern Ohio are the Special ln.

MILL

Give The Taxpayers
A Voice on the
State Bd. of Education

.

SPECIAL
INTERESTS? ??
Senate Education Committee, the state has more than

NOVEMBER 7th FOR

m
X

pet. unit participation Is ej.couraged. Council dues are
payable before Dec. 1, Mil.
Vaughan announced. She aliO
again requested· that llsta 6f
new officers be submitted lb'
the local units to her. U.ta 'Of
films available on familY
planning were distributed. '
John Lisle, principal, gave
the welcome to open tlie
meeting. Miss Rosalie SJOOy
had devotions using porti~ns Of
the book, "The Prophet," 1ill'd
prayer.
~
Refreshments were servl\(l
by the hoot unit.

districts. He has resisted str0119 efforts by big city com- •
· bines to take over educational proceu.
:
Also since Senator Collins became Chairman of tile •

VOTE YES"

Ohio Wesleya n at Otterbein (n)
1nl night game.

PTA convention held in
Columbus was given by Mrs.
Charles G&lt;Jeglein and Mrs.
Dugan . Mrs. Goeglein also ·
presented facts regarding the
financial structure of the PTA.
Members were urged to take
the PTA manual study course.
Materials for individual
member study are available
from Mrs. Vaughan.
It was noted that the cultural
arts display wlll be at the April
meeting instead of the May
meeting as was previously
announced. The theme is
·:Reseonding to Ufe," and 100

mittee in , lhe Senate "has lo'!9 represeftted special ln-.
lerests.'' He is, known as a protector of the smaller school

11

DON .L

Heidelberg at Mount Un ion

Centre (Ky.) at Kenyon ·
Marietta at Muskingum

'

Taxpayers of Southeastern Ohio
Oakley Collins as Chairman of the Education Com-

SUTTON TOWNSHIP

Put The BANKER on the BOAR(}

First Pitch
The earliest reference to
the use of pitch for water·
proofing is in the Bible. The
Good Book says Noah used
pitch, a natural form of asphalt; to seal the seams of
the ark before the deluge
covered the earth.

.

VOTE FOR AND _REIAIN
TUESDAY~ NOV. 7

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United Press International

Ohio State at Michigan State
Kent State at Miami

.
Robert Yancey, President of

Hettie Matheny
died on Sunday

t

&amp;poMOred by the Ladles Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Le5ion. Front left to
right, front row, Mrs. Fox, Paige Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Willillm Curnutt and Ronnie
Carf-, Jayne Lee Hoeflich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, fourth graders at Pomeroy
Elementary Sch~l, who tied but were each awarded·$3; back row, Todd Morrison, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Morrison, Bradbury, fifth and sixth grade school, Fifth grade and Cynthia Sue
Pitzeer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clin!on Pitz~r. sixth grade, Chester Elementary. Mrs. Fox,
Americanism Chairman of !he auxiliary stated that :here were over 150 entries for the grade
levels of the entire county. Judges were Mrs. W. P. Lochary. Kenneth Harris and Robert
Wingett.

BRUCE WAJ,LACE Is Retelling an arrow (plllclllg ':
feathen on arrows) at hls Sports Sllop located In hll apart.
ment home located on South Third Street, Middleport. The •
work Is tedious and requires patience and skill.

~!.

PEKING (UPI) -On the
corner of Precious Pearl Street
and Big Fence Road, shoppers
in the Chien Men clothing store
try on padded cotton jackets
for protection againt the harsh
north China winter.
Asales clerk there can reach
behind a long, gray cotton coat
with a camel hair collar and
push a ~utton hidden on the end
of a clothing rack .
A four-foot-square section of
the red tile floor slides silently
under the rack'. There In front
of you is a cOncrete stairway
leading underground, to one of
the air raid shelter systems
that the Chinese have built
recently as a protection
against nuclear attack.
· In talking about the shelters
·- which we were told extended
throughout the capital and
couldaccommodate80percent
of the 4 million urban residents
- the Chinese made it clear
that they were built as
proteCtion against Soviet attack.
Americans, said Wu Wei·
kuo, an officer of the Chinese
People's Liberation Army no
longer are regarded · as
enemies and are welcome to
tour the shelters with friends
from other countries.
Down the stairway from the
clothing shop, you encounter a
maze of passageways about
one yard wide and barely six
feet high which lead eventually
to wider and deeper turmels.
As you walk, a loudspeaker
system along t~e corridors
blares recorded music"Melody for Welcome" and
"Sailing the Seas Depends on

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Nov. 6, the
311th day of 1972 with 55 to
follow.
. The moon is between iis new
phase and first quarter.
· The morn in~ stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the ·sign of Scorpio.
American band leader John
Philip Sousa was born Nov. 6,

~OF AN AMERICANISM euay oontelll held for fourth, fifth and sixth graders of
Melga Couitty were presented $3 each Friday by Mrs. Edith Fox, chairman of the project,

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Mao
s
people
ready
for
war
prOpOSa}
.
b ut Wit• 'h R USSia,
• not U• S•
•
d
~
re1ecte i?!
Impact dinner set
·

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·Delegates to PTA conference named

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(Continued from page l)
wouldn't sell anything that I
:wouldn 't use myself," Wallact
said.
.
Wall;!c~,· an .ardent sporll!·
man, loves the work he is
doing; wbich really started out
as a hobby. In addition to
making·arrows he also makes
bow ~trings of dacron string . .
Wallace, former head
football coach at Southern High
Schoo1, where the fruits of his
labor are paying off this season
in a championship team, is an
inspector
for
Harza
Engineerihg, Inc ., Union
Boiler Company, at a dam at
mine No. I at Salem Center.
Wallace sells from his shop
all types of bows and arrows
and all archery accessories.
Customers can pick up suppli28
any evening.
'
Wallace ·hopes 'someday to
open a Sports Shop. In addition
to his love for archery is also
interested in deer hunting, bow
.ami arrow and g-an, squirrel
hunting and rabbit hunting,
Wallace
is ' married
.
Buck. to the
former
Glor1a

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Pd. Pol. Adv.

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t - The DeUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

Democrat Party exp~cted to sUrvive McGovern

IN PREPARATION FOR the annual Meigs County
Junior Miss Pageant to be held at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.
18, at :'so~ihern High School, contestants are ~eceiving free
instruction on hair, makeup and general groommg from Mrs.
. lola Bartrum at her beauty shop in Pomeroy. Mrs: Bartrum,
above, is work.ing with one of the contestants, MISs Debbte
Jeffers, of Eastern High School.

Mrs. Nixon takes
own special role
as the first lady
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pat
Nixon, veteran campaigner
and world traveler, has
· emerged as a personality in
her own right during" her four
years at the WhiteHouse, while
the vice president'~ wife, Judy
Agnew, has remained in the
backgroWl~ as she prefers.
If the president Is r~lected,
Mrs. Richard M. Nixon can be
expected to become increasingly active. Her
daughters, Tricia and Julie,
are now married and away,
. leaving her more time for the
job.
Also, because of her performances on the presidential
trips to Olina and Russia this
year plus successes on the
campaign trail, she has
become confident of her role in
the, higltest non-paid, nonelective political job in the
United States.
Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew, as the
nation's second lady, joins her
husband on political trips
around the country and maintains a limited official schedule
of her own, but she rarely
sabstitutes foe Mrs. Nixon at
White House functions, a
common practice in other
administrations.
Pat and Judy
The two women are friendly,
rut not close.
Since she ·moved into 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue with
some trepidation and awe on
Jan. 20, 1969, Mrs. Nixon has
vigorously promoted an "open
door" policy based on the idea
that everyone is.welcome, "not
just the big shots." ·
At first, she was under
tremendous pressure to take on
some project like Jacqueline
Kennedy, who made her mark
by restoring the White House to
its colonial elegance, or Lady
Bird Johnson who promoted
outdoor beautification.
Determined to be herself and
confident of her own abilities,
Mrs. Nixon resisted, although
she did carry on the campaign
of her precedessors to preserve
and enhance the beauty and
antiquity of the White House.
She redecorated the state
rooms and had floodlights

WASHINGTON (UP!)~ The
present tw(}-jlll rty sy.Btem in
the United States-matching
Democrats against
Republicans--luis survived for
morr than a century despite
election disasters which have
prompted predictions of death
for the losers.
If the reports from polltakers are correct and undergo
no major changes by ·Nov. 7,
GeorgeS. McGovern is leading
his Democratic party to a
crushing presidentiill election
loss almost sure to cause
convulsions for the Democrats,
rut the party is not likely to go
the way of the 19th century
American Whigs.
. Mter past disasters, the two
major parties have regrouped
and live{ to fight again. If the
Democrats retain control of
. Corlgress, as the polls also
indicate, they hardly could be
pronoWJced dead.
McGovern hiplself could do
much to avert predictable
warfare between a bloc of
congressional Democrats and
state party organizations
· against the "national Democratic party" represented by
the enlarged and reorganized
Democratic National Committee dominated by McGovern
partisans.
A McGovern Yield?
The question might be:
Would McGovern yield to
pressures for new leadership
and innovations as the con-

Mor~ty

servaiive Barry M. Goldwater ·
did after the GOP catastrophe
of 1964? A .test of his attitudes
might c"me as soon as
December,• whim the party is
supposed to resume the reform
process that caused so much
controversy at the 1972
National Convention.
Here is a list of the
presidential election landslides
in the 20th century, ·with the
winner's percentage of th e
popular vote:
Theodore Roosevelt, R, 56.4
percent over. Alton B. Parker,
D, ,n 1904; Woodrow Wilson, D,
41.9, over Theodore Roosevelt,
Progress! ve (Bull Moose
Republicans ) and William
Howard
Taft,
regular
Republicans, in 1912; Warren
G. Harding, R, 60.3, over
James M. Cox, D, in 1920 ;
Herbert Hoover, R, 58.2; over
Alfred E. Smith, D, (first
Catholic nomine~) in 1928;
Franklin D. Roosevelt, D, 57.4,
over Hoover in 1932; Roosevelt,
60.8,over Alfred M. Landon, R,
in 1936; Dwight D. Eisenhower,
R, 55.1, over ·Adlai E. Stevenson, D, In 1952; Eisenhower,
57.4, over Stevenson, in 1956,
Lyndon B. Johnson, D, · 61.1
overBarryM.Goldwater, R, in
1964.
A presidential vote is classed
as a landslide if the winner

·Able

•
Educated .
•
· Qualified
•

·CLERK.,·OF COURTS

Decision rests
in small :group

Democratic policy councils
The Democratic refo~l!!_§!!Cceeded him.
·
d th chaiJ:'man,
l.argely
by
Members
of
Congr
.
ess.
.and
operated
un
e . chalt·· ,
mov.ement, gu 1·."ed
"'
f t1 er
nal .n•.-ty
Mc:Go
.
ver·
n
m
·
t
'
ts
early
s.
t
ages,
administration
.
offlctals
.
ship
o
na
o.
'·
.,...
.
.
p ul M su·tter from 1957 ·
minimized convention violence figured in even greater man a · ·
·
t·n 1972 but offended many scand.als uncovered a century to 1960 and
of
Hubert
H.
Hum968 -sldentlal noml·
.- • to 1972
· With
· no
Veteran Democrats who were ago when tnysses S. Grant was phreyfr' 1 1969
denied delegate seats, and TV President, but the Democrats nee om
·
from party
Watchers Who saw the proceed- !ailed .to win_ the presidency endouragement
. Corlgress
""'
'tngs as chaot1'c.
~un~tiitj.l;iljl•····l!!!!ilil"!'!l!"'~~!!'t!i!le~a=de!!iril!s'=m~
. ~ '"__. . . . . . .
1924
The exhausting
Demop~QN
cratic convention dispelled
,ft~
1'
;. . • ~
gloom that bad prevailed
·
·
,.
among Republican leaders who_
OPTOMEJ.RIST , ' , .· ·
were worried because ad.
OFFICE HOURS 9;30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE:
ministration scandals before
, AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST•.
Harding died and Vice
POME · Y.
'
President Calvin · Coolidge
.------------------------------,

W.

RESIDE in the

WAS$NGTON (UPI) - For presidential election, but the
the 48th time in 193 years, the fact that some states permit
American pe~ple on Nov. 7 will electors to exercise their own
choose. a,small group of men discretion has provoked critiand women to elect the next cism of the system and
president of the United States. prompted proposals to abolish
As all schoolchildren are or reform the electoral method.
supposed to know and some
While some critics have
citizens remember, the United called for direct election of the
States does not elect its president, the most seriously
president ~irectly . Instead, the considered proposals have
chiefexecutive is chosen by the calledformodifyingthe.present
indirect electoral system.
..system. Some would simply
There·are 538 e)ectoral votes eliminate the slates of electors
-one for each senator and who cast the states' votes and
member of the House of automatically award the votes
Representatives, plus three for to the winning candidates.
the District of Columbia. One
Others would permit division
more than half-270 electoral of a state's electoral votes
votes-is needed to win.
according to the proportiOn of
Each state gets two electoral the 'popular vote received by
votes fill' lts two senators, plus the candidates. E;lectoral reone for each of its House form or abolition would require
members. New York for years amendment of the Constitution,
had the largest electoral vote, and recent attempts to change
but as a result of the 1970 the system have not even made
census, California moved into it through Congress for fubmisthe lead, . with 45 electoral sion to the state legislatures.
votes. New York now has 41.
This year, electors chosen in
The entire electoral vote of a the Nov. 7 balloting will meet
state is supposed to go to the Dec. 16 in the state capitals to
presidential and vice presiden- cast their votes for pr.esident
., tial candidates who get the and vice president. These
largestnumbero(popularvotes results will be sent to Washingin that state in the general ton and formally coWJted in a
election. In some states, how. joint session of Congress on
ever, electo•s 'hav.e balked at Jan. 6, 1973. Two weeks later,
casting their votes for their the winners declared then but
party's official nominees and · actually known since Nov. 7 or
voted for others. This never has .8 take their oaths of office on
changed the outcome of a the steps of the Capitol.

D'

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Yellow
Pages

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c anges
b
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0 VIOUS

erected so tourists could see
the mansion at night.
Despite her unassuming
style, her impact on the public
consciousness has grown
slowly. Meantime, her travels
- more ambitious than those
'
of any First Lady in history HOLI;.YWOOD ( UPI) have made her a celebrity Nothing reflects the change in
abroad. Olina and Russia were moral standards of the nation
the 74th and 75th countries she as clearly as the tribulations of
haS visited.
Hollywood stars.
Whether at home or overseas
A half-century ago Francis
her aim is simple: "!want to X. Bushman was wtdone as a
meet the people." In return, matinee idol when he owned up
she has harvested much good · to being a married man with a
will for her husoond.
houseful of kids.
Mrs. Nixon was born March
Ingrid Bergman was
16, 1912 in Ely , Nev. Her proud branded a scarlet woman less
Irish-American father, than 25 years ago when she
William Ryan, a miner, deserted her husband to run
decided her naine, Thelma away with Italy's Roberto
Catherine Pat Ryan, was too Rosselini and bore him a child
'long He&lt;LIIIIllli!d ·hili'"'Plit'." ,_6\lt onvedlock.
She worked her way through
Elizabeth Taylor and
college and was graudated Richard Burton, only a decade
cum laude with a bachelor of ago, scandalized the populace
arts degree from the by living openly together while
University of Southern Eddie Fisher sang the blues of
California. One of her parttlme his cuckold role.
jobs was a walk-&lt;&gt;n role in the
More recently Vanessa
movie "Becky Sharp." That Redgrave gave birth to Franco
interest in drama led to a Nero's child after they had coromance with Richard M. starred in "Camelot." When
Nixon, a young lawyer who they decided against marriage
shared the leading roles with eyebrows were lifted.
her in a mystery drama, "The
Nobody Cares Much
Dark Tower."
Now nobody cares much
Mrs. Nixou was a pretty, either way.
· redhaired business teacher at
Ali MacGraw and Steve
whitter, Calif. , High School at McQueen left their spouses and
the time. The Nixons were now appear to be lovers and
married June 21, 1940 in a maybe even square enough to
Quaker ceremony at the Old consider matrimony.
Mission Inn in Riverside, Calif.
No shock there.
When they recently celebrated
Maybe the wildest escap&amp;de
their 32nd wedding an- of them all is the Juliet Prowse
niversary, Mrs . Nixon said her adventurelntomotberhoodand
married life was "still exciting marriage in that order.
because Dick never bores me."
''It sounds like a press
Asked recen\!y if she was agent's stunt in retrospect,"
happy ,she replied, "Yes, I am. said the actress-singer-dancer.
I've got the greatest guy in the "But the whole thing was just a
world ."
matter of circumstance.
Mrs. Agnew, unlike her
"John McCook and I weren't
predecessor Muriel Humphrey sure about getting married
whose "cause" was mental after I discovered I was
retardation, prefers to stay in pregnant. But what could we
the background. She did all her do? John was still married and
own cooking until Agnew was we couldn't be married ourelected Maryland governor in selves until his divorce was
1966 and they moved into a 54- final.
room mansion in Annapolis
"The day his divorce came
with a staff of 11.
through we decided to ~
married immediately in a quiet
ceremony at Lake Tahoe . But
on my way to the bot~! where
we were going to meet the
justice of the peace I began
having labor pains.
went to Hospital Instead
"So Instead of getting married I went to the hospital and
had our baby, Seth (who is now
13 weeks old) ."
Instead of being married
Aug . 2, Juliet and John ex.changed vows Sept. 10 while
Seth slept peacefully through
the rites.
Had tbe series of events
taken place 20 years ago, Juliet
would have been banished
from the company of Godfearing folk. John might have
been tarred and feathered .
Not even aQ eyebrow was
arched. The only possible
negative consequences might
be Juliet's disqualification for
YOUR REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
. membership in the Planned
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
Pal'l!llthood Asaociation.
"I'm grateful that times
have changed," 'Juliet said
with a warm look In . the
direction of her husband. "For
sure
I'd be cQJLSidered some
Your Vote Appreciated!
kind of tan:lble woman if this
ivld happened a few years
Pd. Pol. Adv. By The Candlqate
agd."

Larry Eu·gene Spencer

polls over 55 per cent of the
popular. vote'. Wilson's · 1912
percentag~ was much lower
but he wori 435 electoral votes
compared with 88 for Roosevelt
and only eight for the\ incuritbent, Taft. Of other 20th century landslide victims, Landon
carried on Iy two states wt'th
eight electoral votes and
Goldwater had six with 52.
Election Dlasters
Convention splits and tumult
contributed to some election
disasters. Government
scandals may have influenced
the vote in some years, but the
results· ,are not easy to
measure.
A walkout and formation of
the Bull Moose movement in
1912 bled the GOP when t11e
Democrats already seemed on
the ascent . Yet a three-way
division among Democrats in
1948 failed to prevent victory
by Democrat Harry S Truman.
Deep divisions in the Democratic party put 1924 convention delegates through a
marathon count of 103 ballots,
giving a worthless nomination
to John W. Davis and the
election to Calvin Coolidge.
The uproar at the 1968
Democratic convention over
Vietnam was counted a factor
in President Nixon's narrow
victory in a three-man race.

6., Nov. 6,1972

Meigs Local School Voters:
·.

One of the first things we need for the future is
a good education for children. Our children
are the future. We have a good school system.
I feel we have an-excellent school board, but
they need help. Let's vote for the future of our
children, our school, and our community.

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Let's Vote Yes
for the School Levy

J
Route

No.2~

Pomeroy
. PD. POL AOV.

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1

2

. REI 4TIVE TO CONDITIONS FOR AND PROHIBI·
'TIONS UPON THE LEVY OF 4 TAX ON INOOME,
EXCEPT A . MUNICIPAL INCOME TAX, OR IN·
CREASING THE RATES THEREOF, WITHOUf THE
APPROVAL OF A MAJORITY OF DIE VOTING

l

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ELECI'ORS.

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(Propo... t.r hutioti" polltioa)

A IDajorit:J .a;,..ti.. •ote ia MCeiiU'J' for

Yes

No

iI

PMAI'•·

..

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF
OHIO RELATIVE TO CONDI·
TIONS FOR AND PROHIBI·
TIONS UPON THE LEVY OF A
TAX ON INCOME, EXCEPT A
MUNICIPAL INCOME TAX, OR
INCREASING THE RATES
THEREOF, WITHOUT THE AP. PROVAL OF A MAJORITY OF
THE VOTING ELECTORS, BE
ADOPTED?

,

FOR PROGRESS
1

'

Sample Ballot

When you vote ':No" on Issue 2 November 7, you
will also be voting against the strong possibility of
an Increase In sales and property taxes and against
a flat rate Income tax that would tax rich and poor
at the same rate.
Elimination of the present graduated corporate and
personal state income tax means hundred,s of mil·
lions of dollars must be raised by other means or
there will be a sharp curtailment .,fl essential ser·
.vices, such as state aid to education•.
. Among alternative means of raising funds available
to the Legislature would be a BIG BOOST in the
state sales tax; elimination of the 10% property tax
'

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I

rollback; or elimination of the recently granted
homestead exemption for senior citizens.

It does not elimlnat4:1 the possibility of another In·
come tax at a later date, providing II is on a flat rate
basis only. Such an income tax would not be based
on ability to pay, such as is true with the present
graduated income tax for Individuals and corporalions alike. Rather it would lax those who earn the
least at the same rate as the highest salaried exec.
utive.
Stop the switch to unfair ta)tes. Vote "NO" on Issue
2 when you go to the polls November 7. ·
'

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OHIO,(NS FOR
FAIR TAXATION

oN·2.

' .

Albert H. Sealy, Chairman,
41 S. High St., Columbus, Ohio 43215

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VOTE FQR ,

it

NO
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,J.'·

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WILLIAM .(Bill) SNOUFFER
DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE FOR - -,

MEIGS COUNTY ·COMMISSIONER
TUE5PAY, NOV. 7
If you believe In these principles and this system ot
government, I earnestly ask tor your support and sln·
cerely promise that. If elected, l will do everything in my
power as commissioner of. Meigs County to fulfill our
desir~ for a better place in which to live.
'
.
· SeVeral other lsoues that are facing Meigs Countians
which 1would like to touch upon Is the drug problem. For
too long this problem has been Ignored by practically all
Meigs Countlans. It's a dirty thing and something, Instead
of being brought out out Into the light, is kept in the dark
and shoved back Into dark places. I believe that special
qualified deputl~ should be appointed to enforce the law
against drugs, pushers, and users. This Is another area
where federal money Is available. ·
.
.
Another area that Meigs County could share In Is a
comprehensive, federal assisted program to atfra.ct new
Industry Info Meigs County. The greater the population
and the 'greater the Industry, the greater are the
problems, but, also, the revenue for these projects Is. also, .
greater... I know of no programs that are now underway In
.
1 the county to carry this program forward.
. Also, In the way of recreational faclllll~ .for young ·
people Meigs County ranks at the.bottom of the list with
. your n~lghborlng Counties. I ask you the voters just what
do we have ln Meigs County to otter our young people? I
t./llove that It Is tar beHer to spend 50 or 100 thousand
dollars for a recrNtlonal project tor young people and to·.
mold their cheractero to become good citizen• while
young rather tllan to sptnd the same amount of money or
more in tow enforcement and rehabilitation of those same
yo\1119 people alter they become drug addicts.
.

Why Did the Incumbent Commissioners
Refutt to Discuss ·tilt Issues on W.M. P.O.?

Pd. Pol. Adv.

proposed

hy new committee

. HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) - The
Fledgling and Futuristic Commillee for the Future isn't
giving up its plans to establish
a multinational, non-governmental colony on the moon
within two generations.
"We will keep the pressure
on Congress and NASA (National Aeronautics and Space
Admin istratio n)
be.'
cause
eventually
we
want ' a
non-govern,
ment
space
mission, ,.,
said John Whiteside, a former
chief Air Force public information officer at Cape Kennedy
who now is co-director of ·the
committee.
"There is new room for
growth," he said. "We can
demonstrate to NASA that
space is a frontier open to all.

"Mankind has never done
anything in its history as one.
We're not talking about governments, we're talking about
people, and it would be a crime .
if NASA didn 't investigate this
(the prop~al)," Whiteside, of
Phtladelphta, added.
The committee admittedly
hasn't inet with great success
in convincing NASA or the
merits of its plans. NASA
recently turned down a request
by the committee to purchase a
surplus Apollo mission packet,
complete with Saturn V booster
and command module.
However, Whiteside said the
committee now is looking for
Earth orbital equipment and
still plans to carry .on with the
private space venture.
He said the first mission
would be financed by "transnationa! subscriptions" and hopefully subsequent launchings
could be financed by bringing
back lunar material and selling
it to people who probably never
will be able to leave the planet.
Likening the project to a
"giant National Georgraphic
expedition," Whiteside said, at
some. point the people of Earth ·
"must be given a choice in the
space venture."
The Committee's project, he
said, would have an international crew and the ship would be
called "Mankind One."
"With an international crew,
it'll bring out a latent sense of
oneness throughout the world,"
Whiteside added. " It will be a
mankind event, perhaps the
most unifying in modern

#

.

DICK STETTLER

Stettler is
commended.
Aletter of Commendation (or
high perforr.1ance on the 1971
Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test - National Merit
Scholarship Qualifying . Test
( PSAT -NMSQT) has been
awarded to Richard J. Stettler,
a senior at Eastern High
sChool. Dick is the son. of Mr.
and Mrs . Gordon Ridenour.
The
National
Merit
Scholarship Corporation has
named 37,000 Commended
students in the United States.
This student is among the
upper 2 pet. of those who are
expected to graduate from high
school in 1973. Commended
students rank high, but below
the 15,000 semifinalists announced in Stepember by the
National Scholarship Corporation. Edward C. Smith,
presideni of the National Merit
Scholarship Corporation, said:
"Although Commended
students advance no further in
the nationwide program, their
standing deserves public
recognition. Their high performance on the test shows
promise of continued success
in college.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL SCORES
United Press International
Malvern 21 Indian Valley
North 0

Tuscarawas Valley 22 West

Muskingum o
Portsmouth Notre Dame 16
Portsm outh West 6
Canton Lincoln 52 Youngstown

Rayen 6
Canton Central Catholic 26
,
Toledo Libbey 6
East Canton 12 West Branch 12
Minerva 12 Poland 12 (tie)
Tusky Valley 22 West
Muskinaum n
Warren Western Reserve 20
Cuyahoga Falls 0
Akron Kenmore 22 Akron
Centra l Hower 0
Mogadore 16 Crestwood 0
Akron St. Vincent 14 Barberton
6
Canton lincoln 52 Youngstown
Rayen 6

Lake Catholic

12

Cleveland Central CatholicO

VISIT BAKER'S

~roups

didn't· communicate with each other
until the final day of
the experiment. Until then they
stayed in their cubicles-eating
stretching, debating, playing
chess, working on various
problems or listening to the
emotionless voice over a
television monitoring network
that announced the passage or'
time.
"We are six hours into
syncon ," said the voice in
countdown fashi on.
Barbara Marx Hubbard,
daughter of toymaker Louis
Marx and the other leader of
the group, said Synergy was
"seeing mankind as a global
community- unified by the
same problems" and the
Syncon, which stands for
SynergisticConvergance, was a
"coming together to overcome
them (the problems) .

RJRNITURE

· Mldcilaport,.O.·

Cleveland J.F.K. 14 Cleveland
John Hay 0
history."
Cleveland Holy Name 0
The committee gathered here
Cleveland John Marshall o
last week for a five-day, $40,000
(tiel
Parma 13 Garfield Heights 8 social experiment involving
Kldland 0 Cleveland Luthera n hundreds of men and women.
East 0
It was conducted on a
North Ridgeville 18 Brookside 0
Cleveland Lutheran West 33 sprawling, musty movie sound
Avon 0
stage where a huge wheel
fanned out over most of the
floor . The wheel was divided
into ''slices'' or cubicles, inside
whichexperts in space, governmen !,industry and environment
and community members tried
to work out sollutions to
Several area farmers were stated: "Almost 2'h billion planetary needs.
Paid For By The Miller For Congress Committee,
.
de signa ted as represen- pounds of members ' milk
There was one difference,
John
Huddle,
Treasurer,
154 W. Main St., Lancaster, Ohio
of
their
fel- marketed during the fiscal
' tatives
however, from other such
low nillk produc ers to year of July 1, 1971 to June 30,
s~rve on.,. tl)e Board of
1972, had a gross value of br~a~·~~~-=se~s~
si~on~s~.,~Th~el............................................................. '
Delel(ales of "Milk,' Inc. ' iit '$i55,591,000. The average blend
recent dinner meetings of the price per hundredweight
membership. Chosen as throughout all markets of the
delegates for the cooperative's association was $6.33. The
district No. 6 were William volume of milk marketed inBarker, Southside, W. Va.; creased 5.2 pet. over the
•
Dale Nibert, Apple Grove, W. previous year, and the gross
Va .; Marcus Weaver, R. D. 2, value was up 6.2 pet. The
Letart, W. Va ., and T. A. average blend price was 5
Williamson, Southside.
cents per hundredweight
The annual meeting of higher. Our efforts as a
members of the large 7,000 member of Great Lakes producer cooperative is held at Southern Milk F•deration .
the sites of the respective local made possible Clasa I prices
At tomorrow's election you. will be asked for the third time this year to ap·
units, several of which are above the Federal Order
prove a 5 mill increase in operating millage for the Meigs Local School District.
located in each director minimums .''
We lost this issue in the May primary and by a dozen votes at a special election in
district. The size of each
The membership of the
district is determined by the cooperative is located in
June. Tomorrow is our last chance to pass this levy in 1972. Its passage is vital to
number of member dairymen northern and eastern Ohio,
the future of Meigs Local.
in the area and ranges from 350 western Pennsylvania, West
Let's look at the facts . A change In the · state law is what is forcing this
to 400.
Virginia, northeastern Indiana
request for an Increase of 5 mills from 17.5 to 22 .5. The new law sets 22 .5 mills as
A representative from the and southeastern Michigan .
the local share of the total school support formula . Not many districts have had
District to the Board of There are a few members in
to pass millage to get to this figure. /1/vJst were well above 11. The stale average is
Directors of the cooperative each of Western Maryland and
about 29 mills. By the way, that state average has gone up nearly 7 mills since
will be chosen by means of western New York.
January 1. 1966 when Meigs Local came into existence. Our operation millage
mail ~alloting to be conducted
has gone up 7 tenths of one mlllln that same period of time and that was because
early in November. Nominees Gallians blank
of a change in slate law in 1967. So. In those six years the state average has gone
for this position on the Board of
up about 10 times the increase in Meigs Local. /1/vJst districts that had to vole an
Directors from District 6 are Meigs reserves
increase did so last spring. Southern and Eastern did this, as you recall . We are
John E. Teets, Rt. 1, ·sox 328,
one of the few who are still seeking voter approval.
Elgon, W. Va.; Ishmael The Gallipolis reserves
Only ·one Ohio county spends fewer dollars per pupil per year to operate
· Gillespie, R. D. 1, Gallipolis; football team blanked Meigs
schools than does Meigs. The state average is $790 per pupil per year . Perry
and S. B. Wells, New England, ~ at Gallipolis Saturday
County spends $595. Meigs and Pike spend $608. The other 85 spend more. Where
W. Va.
night.
does that $608 come from now? About 79 per cent comes from the state, that Is,
At the meetings held In this
Scoring for the Gallians were
the other 87 counties. About 2l percent Is raised by taxes in Meigs. Our Courity is
area a report of the David Graham, Tim Weaver
number one in the 88 In getting slate money for operation. The stale average is
cooperative 's business and and Ken Collier. Graham ran
$279 per pupil and we receive $481. Meigs is number 88 In the 88 when it comes'lo
marketing program was ~two extra points. The Blue
local support per pupil for operation . The state averag e for local support is $511
presented by staff members ' Imps finished 4-1 on the year,
per
pupil and we pay $127 . Meigs County has the lowest lola! per capita property
and producer leaders.
losing only to Athens, 14..(),
tax of all the 88 counties. The state average Is $177 and we pay $71 per person .
A report from General Meigs dropped to 2-3~ on the
These are the financial facts .
Manager C. K. Laughton year.
The new law states maT we must have at least 20 mills voted by June 30, 1973.
If we don't, we will lose all stale money and will be assigned to another dlstirct .
The other dlsfricts In Meigs County have already approved enough millage to get
to 22 .5 mills . Assuming that we would be assigned to one of these districts, our \
operating lax would then be 22.5 mills. So, it looks like we pay the 5 mill inqease
or 22 .5 mills in 1974, no maller what happens. Nevertheless, we need the 5 mills in
1973 to maintain full support for the district's program .
We have worked han~ to improve our sc hools this year and with considerable
Why wouldn't the present county
success. Many problems of last year have been solved and things are running
commissioners explain their ac quite smoothly at lhjs lirre. We need your support as we try to solve our
remaining problems and improve our programs at all levels.
complishments in the last 2 terms and

4 West Virginians are
no~ated as delegates

Dear Meigs Local Voter:

l1

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

Multinational Moon colony ·

Fd. Fol. ~v. B

'the Candl~te

Bill and Joe
WERE THERE!

their plans for the future betterment of
Meigs County?
WMPO granted an hour or more free
time as a public service. They did not
show Thursday at 1 p.m. and Monday
at -1 p.m. ·

PLEASE, GIVE
TOMORROW.

THAT

SUPPORT

BY

VOTING

YES

PLEAS~,- FOR OUR KIDS .- VOTE YES FOR THE MEIGS
LOCAL 5 MILL LEVY.

The program had to be cancelled!! ·
Thank you for your consideration and for your YES vote.
We apologize for this · last minute
notice - too. late for the Sun'd&lt;!Y
Edition.
VOTE· FOR Joe Denlsbrl
Snouffer who will tell you like it is.
· Paid

the Melgo County 'aemocrat E•ecutlve_Com·
A. Wingett, chairman, Racine. 0 ., Bruce
· Rutland, 0 .

·sincerely yours,
George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
'------~---~ ~-

-

~-· ·---~

P~ l d tor by the Meigs Local Levy Campaign Fund'-George Hargrfves,
Secy .• Tres.
.

�, _j

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t - The DeUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

Democrat Party exp~cted to sUrvive McGovern

IN PREPARATION FOR the annual Meigs County
Junior Miss Pageant to be held at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.
18, at :'so~ihern High School, contestants are ~eceiving free
instruction on hair, makeup and general groommg from Mrs.
. lola Bartrum at her beauty shop in Pomeroy. Mrs: Bartrum,
above, is work.ing with one of the contestants, MISs Debbte
Jeffers, of Eastern High School.

Mrs. Nixon takes
own special role
as the first lady
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pat
Nixon, veteran campaigner
and world traveler, has
· emerged as a personality in
her own right during" her four
years at the WhiteHouse, while
the vice president'~ wife, Judy
Agnew, has remained in the
backgroWl~ as she prefers.
If the president Is r~lected,
Mrs. Richard M. Nixon can be
expected to become increasingly active. Her
daughters, Tricia and Julie,
are now married and away,
. leaving her more time for the
job.
Also, because of her performances on the presidential
trips to Olina and Russia this
year plus successes on the
campaign trail, she has
become confident of her role in
the, higltest non-paid, nonelective political job in the
United States.
Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew, as the
nation's second lady, joins her
husband on political trips
around the country and maintains a limited official schedule
of her own, but she rarely
sabstitutes foe Mrs. Nixon at
White House functions, a
common practice in other
administrations.
Pat and Judy
The two women are friendly,
rut not close.
Since she ·moved into 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue with
some trepidation and awe on
Jan. 20, 1969, Mrs. Nixon has
vigorously promoted an "open
door" policy based on the idea
that everyone is.welcome, "not
just the big shots." ·
At first, she was under
tremendous pressure to take on
some project like Jacqueline
Kennedy, who made her mark
by restoring the White House to
its colonial elegance, or Lady
Bird Johnson who promoted
outdoor beautification.
Determined to be herself and
confident of her own abilities,
Mrs. Nixon resisted, although
she did carry on the campaign
of her precedessors to preserve
and enhance the beauty and
antiquity of the White House.
She redecorated the state
rooms and had floodlights

WASHINGTON (UP!)~ The
present tw(}-jlll rty sy.Btem in
the United States-matching
Democrats against
Republicans--luis survived for
morr than a century despite
election disasters which have
prompted predictions of death
for the losers.
If the reports from polltakers are correct and undergo
no major changes by ·Nov. 7,
GeorgeS. McGovern is leading
his Democratic party to a
crushing presidentiill election
loss almost sure to cause
convulsions for the Democrats,
rut the party is not likely to go
the way of the 19th century
American Whigs.
. Mter past disasters, the two
major parties have regrouped
and live{ to fight again. If the
Democrats retain control of
. Corlgress, as the polls also
indicate, they hardly could be
pronoWJced dead.
McGovern hiplself could do
much to avert predictable
warfare between a bloc of
congressional Democrats and
state party organizations
· against the "national Democratic party" represented by
the enlarged and reorganized
Democratic National Committee dominated by McGovern
partisans.
A McGovern Yield?
The question might be:
Would McGovern yield to
pressures for new leadership
and innovations as the con-

Mor~ty

servaiive Barry M. Goldwater ·
did after the GOP catastrophe
of 1964? A .test of his attitudes
might c"me as soon as
December,• whim the party is
supposed to resume the reform
process that caused so much
controversy at the 1972
National Convention.
Here is a list of the
presidential election landslides
in the 20th century, ·with the
winner's percentage of th e
popular vote:
Theodore Roosevelt, R, 56.4
percent over. Alton B. Parker,
D, ,n 1904; Woodrow Wilson, D,
41.9, over Theodore Roosevelt,
Progress! ve (Bull Moose
Republicans ) and William
Howard
Taft,
regular
Republicans, in 1912; Warren
G. Harding, R, 60.3, over
James M. Cox, D, in 1920 ;
Herbert Hoover, R, 58.2; over
Alfred E. Smith, D, (first
Catholic nomine~) in 1928;
Franklin D. Roosevelt, D, 57.4,
over Hoover in 1932; Roosevelt,
60.8,over Alfred M. Landon, R,
in 1936; Dwight D. Eisenhower,
R, 55.1, over ·Adlai E. Stevenson, D, In 1952; Eisenhower,
57.4, over Stevenson, in 1956,
Lyndon B. Johnson, D, · 61.1
overBarryM.Goldwater, R, in
1964.
A presidential vote is classed
as a landslide if the winner

·Able

•
Educated .
•
· Qualified
•

·CLERK.,·OF COURTS

Decision rests
in small :group

Democratic policy councils
The Democratic refo~l!!_§!!Cceeded him.
·
d th chaiJ:'man,
l.argely
by
Members
of
Congr
.
ess.
.and
operated
un
e . chalt·· ,
mov.ement, gu 1·."ed
"'
f t1 er
nal .n•.-ty
Mc:Go
.
ver·
n
m
·
t
'
ts
early
s.
t
ages,
administration
.
offlctals
.
ship
o
na
o.
'·
.,...
.
.
p ul M su·tter from 1957 ·
minimized convention violence figured in even greater man a · ·
·
t·n 1972 but offended many scand.als uncovered a century to 1960 and
of
Hubert
H.
Hum968 -sldentlal noml·
.- • to 1972
· With
· no
Veteran Democrats who were ago when tnysses S. Grant was phreyfr' 1 1969
denied delegate seats, and TV President, but the Democrats nee om
·
from party
Watchers Who saw the proceed- !ailed .to win_ the presidency endouragement
. Corlgress
""'
'tngs as chaot1'c.
~un~tiitj.l;iljl•····l!!!!ilil"!'!l!"'~~!!'t!i!le~a=de!!iril!s'=m~
. ~ '"__. . . . . . .
1924
The exhausting
Demop~QN
cratic convention dispelled
,ft~
1'
;. . • ~
gloom that bad prevailed
·
·
,.
among Republican leaders who_
OPTOMEJ.RIST , ' , .· ·
were worried because ad.
OFFICE HOURS 9;30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE:
ministration scandals before
, AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST•.
Harding died and Vice
POME · Y.
'
President Calvin · Coolidge
.------------------------------,

W.

RESIDE in the

WAS$NGTON (UPI) - For presidential election, but the
the 48th time in 193 years, the fact that some states permit
American pe~ple on Nov. 7 will electors to exercise their own
choose. a,small group of men discretion has provoked critiand women to elect the next cism of the system and
president of the United States. prompted proposals to abolish
As all schoolchildren are or reform the electoral method.
supposed to know and some
While some critics have
citizens remember, the United called for direct election of the
States does not elect its president, the most seriously
president ~irectly . Instead, the considered proposals have
chiefexecutive is chosen by the calledformodifyingthe.present
indirect electoral system.
..system. Some would simply
There·are 538 e)ectoral votes eliminate the slates of electors
-one for each senator and who cast the states' votes and
member of the House of automatically award the votes
Representatives, plus three for to the winning candidates.
the District of Columbia. One
Others would permit division
more than half-270 electoral of a state's electoral votes
votes-is needed to win.
according to the proportiOn of
Each state gets two electoral the 'popular vote received by
votes fill' lts two senators, plus the candidates. E;lectoral reone for each of its House form or abolition would require
members. New York for years amendment of the Constitution,
had the largest electoral vote, and recent attempts to change
but as a result of the 1970 the system have not even made
census, California moved into it through Congress for fubmisthe lead, . with 45 electoral sion to the state legislatures.
votes. New York now has 41.
This year, electors chosen in
The entire electoral vote of a the Nov. 7 balloting will meet
state is supposed to go to the Dec. 16 in the state capitals to
presidential and vice presiden- cast their votes for pr.esident
., tial candidates who get the and vice president. These
largestnumbero(popularvotes results will be sent to Washingin that state in the general ton and formally coWJted in a
election. In some states, how. joint session of Congress on
ever, electo•s 'hav.e balked at Jan. 6, 1973. Two weeks later,
casting their votes for their the winners declared then but
party's official nominees and · actually known since Nov. 7 or
voted for others. This never has .8 take their oaths of office on
changed the outcome of a the steps of the Capitol.

D'

,

Yellow
Pages

•

•

h
c anges
b
•
0 VIOUS

erected so tourists could see
the mansion at night.
Despite her unassuming
style, her impact on the public
consciousness has grown
slowly. Meantime, her travels
- more ambitious than those
'
of any First Lady in history HOLI;.YWOOD ( UPI) have made her a celebrity Nothing reflects the change in
abroad. Olina and Russia were moral standards of the nation
the 74th and 75th countries she as clearly as the tribulations of
haS visited.
Hollywood stars.
Whether at home or overseas
A half-century ago Francis
her aim is simple: "!want to X. Bushman was wtdone as a
meet the people." In return, matinee idol when he owned up
she has harvested much good · to being a married man with a
will for her husoond.
houseful of kids.
Mrs. Nixon was born March
Ingrid Bergman was
16, 1912 in Ely , Nev. Her proud branded a scarlet woman less
Irish-American father, than 25 years ago when she
William Ryan, a miner, deserted her husband to run
decided her naine, Thelma away with Italy's Roberto
Catherine Pat Ryan, was too Rosselini and bore him a child
'long He&lt;LIIIIllli!d ·hili'"'Plit'." ,_6\lt onvedlock.
She worked her way through
Elizabeth Taylor and
college and was graudated Richard Burton, only a decade
cum laude with a bachelor of ago, scandalized the populace
arts degree from the by living openly together while
University of Southern Eddie Fisher sang the blues of
California. One of her parttlme his cuckold role.
jobs was a walk-&lt;&gt;n role in the
More recently Vanessa
movie "Becky Sharp." That Redgrave gave birth to Franco
interest in drama led to a Nero's child after they had coromance with Richard M. starred in "Camelot." When
Nixon, a young lawyer who they decided against marriage
shared the leading roles with eyebrows were lifted.
her in a mystery drama, "The
Nobody Cares Much
Dark Tower."
Now nobody cares much
Mrs. Nixou was a pretty, either way.
· redhaired business teacher at
Ali MacGraw and Steve
whitter, Calif. , High School at McQueen left their spouses and
the time. The Nixons were now appear to be lovers and
married June 21, 1940 in a maybe even square enough to
Quaker ceremony at the Old consider matrimony.
Mission Inn in Riverside, Calif.
No shock there.
When they recently celebrated
Maybe the wildest escap&amp;de
their 32nd wedding an- of them all is the Juliet Prowse
niversary, Mrs . Nixon said her adventurelntomotberhoodand
married life was "still exciting marriage in that order.
because Dick never bores me."
''It sounds like a press
Asked recen\!y if she was agent's stunt in retrospect,"
happy ,she replied, "Yes, I am. said the actress-singer-dancer.
I've got the greatest guy in the "But the whole thing was just a
world ."
matter of circumstance.
Mrs. Agnew, unlike her
"John McCook and I weren't
predecessor Muriel Humphrey sure about getting married
whose "cause" was mental after I discovered I was
retardation, prefers to stay in pregnant. But what could we
the background. She did all her do? John was still married and
own cooking until Agnew was we couldn't be married ourelected Maryland governor in selves until his divorce was
1966 and they moved into a 54- final.
room mansion in Annapolis
"The day his divorce came
with a staff of 11.
through we decided to ~
married immediately in a quiet
ceremony at Lake Tahoe . But
on my way to the bot~! where
we were going to meet the
justice of the peace I began
having labor pains.
went to Hospital Instead
"So Instead of getting married I went to the hospital and
had our baby, Seth (who is now
13 weeks old) ."
Instead of being married
Aug . 2, Juliet and John ex.changed vows Sept. 10 while
Seth slept peacefully through
the rites.
Had tbe series of events
taken place 20 years ago, Juliet
would have been banished
from the company of Godfearing folk. John might have
been tarred and feathered .
Not even aQ eyebrow was
arched. The only possible
negative consequences might
be Juliet's disqualification for
YOUR REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
. membership in the Planned
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
Pal'l!llthood Asaociation.
"I'm grateful that times
have changed," 'Juliet said
with a warm look In . the
direction of her husband. "For
sure
I'd be cQJLSidered some
Your Vote Appreciated!
kind of tan:lble woman if this
ivld happened a few years
Pd. Pol. Adv. By The Candlqate
agd."

Larry Eu·gene Spencer

polls over 55 per cent of the
popular. vote'. Wilson's · 1912
percentag~ was much lower
but he wori 435 electoral votes
compared with 88 for Roosevelt
and only eight for the\ incuritbent, Taft. Of other 20th century landslide victims, Landon
carried on Iy two states wt'th
eight electoral votes and
Goldwater had six with 52.
Election Dlasters
Convention splits and tumult
contributed to some election
disasters. Government
scandals may have influenced
the vote in some years, but the
results· ,are not easy to
measure.
A walkout and formation of
the Bull Moose movement in
1912 bled the GOP when t11e
Democrats already seemed on
the ascent . Yet a three-way
division among Democrats in
1948 failed to prevent victory
by Democrat Harry S Truman.
Deep divisions in the Democratic party put 1924 convention delegates through a
marathon count of 103 ballots,
giving a worthless nomination
to John W. Davis and the
election to Calvin Coolidge.
The uproar at the 1968
Democratic convention over
Vietnam was counted a factor
in President Nixon's narrow
victory in a three-man race.

6., Nov. 6,1972

Meigs Local School Voters:
·.

One of the first things we need for the future is
a good education for children. Our children
are the future. We have a good school system.
I feel we have an-excellent school board, but
they need help. Let's vote for the future of our
children, our school, and our community.

'

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Let's Vote Yes
for the School Levy

J
Route

No.2~

Pomeroy
. PD. POL AOV.

I
1

2

. REI 4TIVE TO CONDITIONS FOR AND PROHIBI·
'TIONS UPON THE LEVY OF 4 TAX ON INOOME,
EXCEPT A . MUNICIPAL INCOME TAX, OR IN·
CREASING THE RATES THEREOF, WITHOUf THE
APPROVAL OF A MAJORITY OF DIE VOTING

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ELECI'ORS.

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(Propo... t.r hutioti" polltioa)

A IDajorit:J .a;,..ti.. •ote ia MCeiiU'J' for

Yes

No

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PMAI'•·

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SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF
OHIO RELATIVE TO CONDI·
TIONS FOR AND PROHIBI·
TIONS UPON THE LEVY OF A
TAX ON INCOME, EXCEPT A
MUNICIPAL INCOME TAX, OR
INCREASING THE RATES
THEREOF, WITHOUT THE AP. PROVAL OF A MAJORITY OF
THE VOTING ELECTORS, BE
ADOPTED?

,

FOR PROGRESS
1

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Sample Ballot

When you vote ':No" on Issue 2 November 7, you
will also be voting against the strong possibility of
an Increase In sales and property taxes and against
a flat rate Income tax that would tax rich and poor
at the same rate.
Elimination of the present graduated corporate and
personal state income tax means hundred,s of mil·
lions of dollars must be raised by other means or
there will be a sharp curtailment .,fl essential ser·
.vices, such as state aid to education•.
. Among alternative means of raising funds available
to the Legislature would be a BIG BOOST in the
state sales tax; elimination of the 10% property tax
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rollback; or elimination of the recently granted
homestead exemption for senior citizens.

It does not elimlnat4:1 the possibility of another In·
come tax at a later date, providing II is on a flat rate
basis only. Such an income tax would not be based
on ability to pay, such as is true with the present
graduated income tax for Individuals and corporalions alike. Rather it would lax those who earn the
least at the same rate as the highest salaried exec.
utive.
Stop the switch to unfair ta)tes. Vote "NO" on Issue
2 when you go to the polls November 7. ·
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OHIO,(NS FOR
FAIR TAXATION

oN·2.

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Albert H. Sealy, Chairman,
41 S. High St., Columbus, Ohio 43215

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VOTE FQR ,

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NO
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WILLIAM .(Bill) SNOUFFER
DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE FOR - -,

MEIGS COUNTY ·COMMISSIONER
TUE5PAY, NOV. 7
If you believe In these principles and this system ot
government, I earnestly ask tor your support and sln·
cerely promise that. If elected, l will do everything in my
power as commissioner of. Meigs County to fulfill our
desir~ for a better place in which to live.
'
.
· SeVeral other lsoues that are facing Meigs Countians
which 1would like to touch upon Is the drug problem. For
too long this problem has been Ignored by practically all
Meigs Countlans. It's a dirty thing and something, Instead
of being brought out out Into the light, is kept in the dark
and shoved back Into dark places. I believe that special
qualified deputl~ should be appointed to enforce the law
against drugs, pushers, and users. This Is another area
where federal money Is available. ·
.
.
Another area that Meigs County could share In Is a
comprehensive, federal assisted program to atfra.ct new
Industry Info Meigs County. The greater the population
and the 'greater the Industry, the greater are the
problems, but, also, the revenue for these projects Is. also, .
greater... I know of no programs that are now underway In
.
1 the county to carry this program forward.
. Also, In the way of recreational faclllll~ .for young ·
people Meigs County ranks at the.bottom of the list with
. your n~lghborlng Counties. I ask you the voters just what
do we have ln Meigs County to otter our young people? I
t./llove that It Is tar beHer to spend 50 or 100 thousand
dollars for a recrNtlonal project tor young people and to·.
mold their cheractero to become good citizen• while
young rather tllan to sptnd the same amount of money or
more in tow enforcement and rehabilitation of those same
yo\1119 people alter they become drug addicts.
.

Why Did the Incumbent Commissioners
Refutt to Discuss ·tilt Issues on W.M. P.O.?

Pd. Pol. Adv.

proposed

hy new committee

. HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) - The
Fledgling and Futuristic Commillee for the Future isn't
giving up its plans to establish
a multinational, non-governmental colony on the moon
within two generations.
"We will keep the pressure
on Congress and NASA (National Aeronautics and Space
Admin istratio n)
be.'
cause
eventually
we
want ' a
non-govern,
ment
space
mission, ,.,
said John Whiteside, a former
chief Air Force public information officer at Cape Kennedy
who now is co-director of ·the
committee.
"There is new room for
growth," he said. "We can
demonstrate to NASA that
space is a frontier open to all.

"Mankind has never done
anything in its history as one.
We're not talking about governments, we're talking about
people, and it would be a crime .
if NASA didn 't investigate this
(the prop~al)," Whiteside, of
Phtladelphta, added.
The committee admittedly
hasn't inet with great success
in convincing NASA or the
merits of its plans. NASA
recently turned down a request
by the committee to purchase a
surplus Apollo mission packet,
complete with Saturn V booster
and command module.
However, Whiteside said the
committee now is looking for
Earth orbital equipment and
still plans to carry .on with the
private space venture.
He said the first mission
would be financed by "transnationa! subscriptions" and hopefully subsequent launchings
could be financed by bringing
back lunar material and selling
it to people who probably never
will be able to leave the planet.
Likening the project to a
"giant National Georgraphic
expedition," Whiteside said, at
some. point the people of Earth ·
"must be given a choice in the
space venture."
The Committee's project, he
said, would have an international crew and the ship would be
called "Mankind One."
"With an international crew,
it'll bring out a latent sense of
oneness throughout the world,"
Whiteside added. " It will be a
mankind event, perhaps the
most unifying in modern

#

.

DICK STETTLER

Stettler is
commended.
Aletter of Commendation (or
high perforr.1ance on the 1971
Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test - National Merit
Scholarship Qualifying . Test
( PSAT -NMSQT) has been
awarded to Richard J. Stettler,
a senior at Eastern High
sChool. Dick is the son. of Mr.
and Mrs . Gordon Ridenour.
The
National
Merit
Scholarship Corporation has
named 37,000 Commended
students in the United States.
This student is among the
upper 2 pet. of those who are
expected to graduate from high
school in 1973. Commended
students rank high, but below
the 15,000 semifinalists announced in Stepember by the
National Scholarship Corporation. Edward C. Smith,
presideni of the National Merit
Scholarship Corporation, said:
"Although Commended
students advance no further in
the nationwide program, their
standing deserves public
recognition. Their high performance on the test shows
promise of continued success
in college.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL SCORES
United Press International
Malvern 21 Indian Valley
North 0

Tuscarawas Valley 22 West

Muskingum o
Portsmouth Notre Dame 16
Portsm outh West 6
Canton Lincoln 52 Youngstown

Rayen 6
Canton Central Catholic 26
,
Toledo Libbey 6
East Canton 12 West Branch 12
Minerva 12 Poland 12 (tie)
Tusky Valley 22 West
Muskinaum n
Warren Western Reserve 20
Cuyahoga Falls 0
Akron Kenmore 22 Akron
Centra l Hower 0
Mogadore 16 Crestwood 0
Akron St. Vincent 14 Barberton
6
Canton lincoln 52 Youngstown
Rayen 6

Lake Catholic

12

Cleveland Central CatholicO

VISIT BAKER'S

~roups

didn't· communicate with each other
until the final day of
the experiment. Until then they
stayed in their cubicles-eating
stretching, debating, playing
chess, working on various
problems or listening to the
emotionless voice over a
television monitoring network
that announced the passage or'
time.
"We are six hours into
syncon ," said the voice in
countdown fashi on.
Barbara Marx Hubbard,
daughter of toymaker Louis
Marx and the other leader of
the group, said Synergy was
"seeing mankind as a global
community- unified by the
same problems" and the
Syncon, which stands for
SynergisticConvergance, was a
"coming together to overcome
them (the problems) .

RJRNITURE

· Mldcilaport,.O.·

Cleveland J.F.K. 14 Cleveland
John Hay 0
history."
Cleveland Holy Name 0
The committee gathered here
Cleveland John Marshall o
last week for a five-day, $40,000
(tiel
Parma 13 Garfield Heights 8 social experiment involving
Kldland 0 Cleveland Luthera n hundreds of men and women.
East 0
It was conducted on a
North Ridgeville 18 Brookside 0
Cleveland Lutheran West 33 sprawling, musty movie sound
Avon 0
stage where a huge wheel
fanned out over most of the
floor . The wheel was divided
into ''slices'' or cubicles, inside
whichexperts in space, governmen !,industry and environment
and community members tried
to work out sollutions to
Several area farmers were stated: "Almost 2'h billion planetary needs.
Paid For By The Miller For Congress Committee,
.
de signa ted as represen- pounds of members ' milk
There was one difference,
John
Huddle,
Treasurer,
154 W. Main St., Lancaster, Ohio
of
their
fel- marketed during the fiscal
' tatives
however, from other such
low nillk produc ers to year of July 1, 1971 to June 30,
s~rve on.,. tl)e Board of
1972, had a gross value of br~a~·~~~-=se~s~
si~on~s~.,~Th~el............................................................. '
Delel(ales of "Milk,' Inc. ' iit '$i55,591,000. The average blend
recent dinner meetings of the price per hundredweight
membership. Chosen as throughout all markets of the
delegates for the cooperative's association was $6.33. The
district No. 6 were William volume of milk marketed inBarker, Southside, W. Va.; creased 5.2 pet. over the
•
Dale Nibert, Apple Grove, W. previous year, and the gross
Va .; Marcus Weaver, R. D. 2, value was up 6.2 pet. The
Letart, W. Va ., and T. A. average blend price was 5
Williamson, Southside.
cents per hundredweight
The annual meeting of higher. Our efforts as a
members of the large 7,000 member of Great Lakes producer cooperative is held at Southern Milk F•deration .
the sites of the respective local made possible Clasa I prices
At tomorrow's election you. will be asked for the third time this year to ap·
units, several of which are above the Federal Order
prove a 5 mill increase in operating millage for the Meigs Local School District.
located in each director minimums .''
We lost this issue in the May primary and by a dozen votes at a special election in
district. The size of each
The membership of the
district is determined by the cooperative is located in
June. Tomorrow is our last chance to pass this levy in 1972. Its passage is vital to
number of member dairymen northern and eastern Ohio,
the future of Meigs Local.
in the area and ranges from 350 western Pennsylvania, West
Let's look at the facts . A change In the · state law is what is forcing this
to 400.
Virginia, northeastern Indiana
request for an Increase of 5 mills from 17.5 to 22 .5. The new law sets 22 .5 mills as
A representative from the and southeastern Michigan .
the local share of the total school support formula . Not many districts have had
District to the Board of There are a few members in
to pass millage to get to this figure. /1/vJst were well above 11. The stale average is
Directors of the cooperative each of Western Maryland and
about 29 mills. By the way, that state average has gone up nearly 7 mills since
will be chosen by means of western New York.
January 1. 1966 when Meigs Local came into existence. Our operation millage
mail ~alloting to be conducted
has gone up 7 tenths of one mlllln that same period of time and that was because
early in November. Nominees Gallians blank
of a change in slate law in 1967. So. In those six years the state average has gone
for this position on the Board of
up about 10 times the increase in Meigs Local. /1/vJst districts that had to vole an
Directors from District 6 are Meigs reserves
increase did so last spring. Southern and Eastern did this, as you recall . We are
John E. Teets, Rt. 1, ·sox 328,
one of the few who are still seeking voter approval.
Elgon, W. Va.; Ishmael The Gallipolis reserves
Only ·one Ohio county spends fewer dollars per pupil per year to operate
· Gillespie, R. D. 1, Gallipolis; football team blanked Meigs
schools than does Meigs. The state average is $790 per pupil per year . Perry
and S. B. Wells, New England, ~ at Gallipolis Saturday
County spends $595. Meigs and Pike spend $608. The other 85 spend more. Where
W. Va.
night.
does that $608 come from now? About 79 per cent comes from the state, that Is,
At the meetings held In this
Scoring for the Gallians were
the other 87 counties. About 2l percent Is raised by taxes in Meigs. Our Courity is
area a report of the David Graham, Tim Weaver
number one in the 88 In getting slate money for operation. The stale average is
cooperative 's business and and Ken Collier. Graham ran
$279 per pupil and we receive $481. Meigs is number 88 In the 88 when it comes'lo
marketing program was ~two extra points. The Blue
local support per pupil for operation . The state averag e for local support is $511
presented by staff members ' Imps finished 4-1 on the year,
per
pupil and we pay $127 . Meigs County has the lowest lola! per capita property
and producer leaders.
losing only to Athens, 14..(),
tax of all the 88 counties. The state average Is $177 and we pay $71 per person .
A report from General Meigs dropped to 2-3~ on the
These are the financial facts .
Manager C. K. Laughton year.
The new law states maT we must have at least 20 mills voted by June 30, 1973.
If we don't, we will lose all stale money and will be assigned to another dlstirct .
The other dlsfricts In Meigs County have already approved enough millage to get
to 22 .5 mills . Assuming that we would be assigned to one of these districts, our \
operating lax would then be 22.5 mills. So, it looks like we pay the 5 mill inqease
or 22 .5 mills in 1974, no maller what happens. Nevertheless, we need the 5 mills in
1973 to maintain full support for the district's program .
We have worked han~ to improve our sc hools this year and with considerable
Why wouldn't the present county
success. Many problems of last year have been solved and things are running
commissioners explain their ac quite smoothly at lhjs lirre. We need your support as we try to solve our
remaining problems and improve our programs at all levels.
complishments in the last 2 terms and

4 West Virginians are
no~ated as delegates

Dear Meigs Local Voter:

l1

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

Multinational Moon colony ·

Fd. Fol. ~v. B

'the Candl~te

Bill and Joe
WERE THERE!

their plans for the future betterment of
Meigs County?
WMPO granted an hour or more free
time as a public service. They did not
show Thursday at 1 p.m. and Monday
at -1 p.m. ·

PLEASE, GIVE
TOMORROW.

THAT

SUPPORT

BY

VOTING

YES

PLEAS~,- FOR OUR KIDS .- VOTE YES FOR THE MEIGS
LOCAL 5 MILL LEVY.

The program had to be cancelled!! ·
Thank you for your consideration and for your YES vote.
We apologize for this · last minute
notice - too. late for the Sun'd&lt;!Y
Edition.
VOTE· FOR Joe Denlsbrl
Snouffer who will tell you like it is.
· Paid

the Melgo County 'aemocrat E•ecutlve_Com·
A. Wingett, chairman, Racine. 0 ., Bruce
· Rutland, 0 .

·sincerely yours,
George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
'------~---~ ~-

-

~-· ·---~

P~ l d tor by the Meigs Local Levy Campaign Fund'-George Hargrfves,
Secy .• Tres.
.

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Sentinel Classifieds Get Actiont Sentin~l Classifieds-Get
Results!
.
..

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•
- ~••

_i_ · lli\RNEY -

.

·Racine

•'
•'·1

u
•
ll

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t,...
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....•L

,,,.'

Social Events

· Pomeroy'.
Motor ·Co,

2SIGNS
OF
_,

QUALITY

;

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'.

.

For Sale

Wanted To Buy
OLO Furniture; oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,

REGISTERED

. .

German

-

"

.

"

·Business Services·

shorthair Pointer Birdd6g
puppies. Expensi ve but worth
it . Ready any tim~ . Ver11on

Weber . 742·5625 .

'

BALLS O'FIRE!!
·x CAN'T WAIT ENNY
LONGER FER !'LVINEY
TO GIT OUT HERETO TH' GOSSIP

I

TO GIT

BACK INTH' .
H0USE AN' FIX ,
PAW SOME
VITTlES .

·'

FENCE--

I.

r·

l

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

EARTH MOVING

'

Al..L. HIS IN·t..AWE&gt;
V'IIL.L. 8E. Ai3!..E 10

.CAMPUS CLA'ITER

!1AN:il ON 10 -n-IEIR'

-

IN!&gt;IDE JOB5.
..r~EY'~E BOTfl

C~AMELEONS!

-

-~

r-:=-----...., ®

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

I
f

I

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
..
197l .CHEVROLET
'$299S
By Mrs. Francis Morris
ll -5-6tc
6·28-tf~
Mal ibu hardtop covpe , low mileage, new car title , san·
The choir, approximately
DRIVE A UTILE
EARLY American stereo-radio
dalwood fini sh with brown vinyl roof, vinyl saddle in·
thirty people, of Racine First
-SAVE A LOTI
combinat ion , AM-FM radio, 4
terior, 4-season air conditioning , turbohydramatic, power
1963 FORD T:Bird Converlible
Baptist Church went to sing at
speaker sound sys tem , 4
steer ing, wh ite. w.:ill tires. r ally wheel s, front &amp; rear
for parts: phone 985-3333.
Kuhl's Bargain Center
speed automalit: changer .
the service of the ordina lion of
guards, power brakes, rad io.
ll -3-6tc
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
Balan ce $77 . 54 . Use our
Rt. ·7"at caution fight"
1968CHEVELLE
11795
Mr . William P. Rollyson •
budget terms . Call 992-7085. ponds, basement, landMalibu
Spt.
Cpe
..
air
cond
itioned.
307
engine,
power
SWJday alternoon at the First
ll -5·6fc sea ping. We have 2 size '
stee ring &amp; brake s. red f ini sh with black vinyl top &amp; blk .
Employment
Wanted
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work '
TUPPERS PlAINS
Baptist Church, Marietta,
--~---------------vi nyl interi or , 'radio, good w-w t ir es.
don, by hour or contra&lt;:t. . : On Mo$1 American Cars
1V repairman ; Write c-o P. 0 .
AUCTION
Ohio.
Clean used furniture
free. Estimates. We also
1968 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE
117V5
Box 729-L, The Daily Sentinel, SATURDAY, Nov. fl. beginning
- GUARANTEEDMrs. MaudL Young has
Guaranteed appliances
Pomeroy .
Local J.owner low mileag~ car, bea utiful cream liilish
at 10:00 A.M. 3'12 miles NE of · haut fill dirt, top soil. Dump
Phone 992-2Q94
trucks and low-boy for hire.
Huffy' 20",
returned home from Holzer
with bla ck lop, bu'cket seats, with console, new white. wall
11 -5·31c , Chesler, Ohio on Stale Route
BIKES
See
Bob
or
R09,er
JeHers,
l.
have
sold
my
farm
and
will
tires,
power
steering
and
automatic
transm
ission.
Radio.
Murray
t
0
speeds
- discount
Medica.! Center.
Pomeroy.Home Auto .
sell the following:
' Pomeroy. Phone 992-352S
ONE
OF
THE
SCARCE
ONES.
AND
AS
NICE
AS
THEY
prices.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart
Open8Til5
after 7 p.m . or phone m ·Help
Wanted
·
~OME .
.
.
·.LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Mon~ay
thru Saturday
went to Delaware, Ohio where
1964 VB Ford pick -up, 7 HP
5232.
Open to 7; Closed Mondays
BABYSITTER , live in or drive. Homko riding mower, 20 in.
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.
Mrs. Hart will enter the
phone 992-5709.
Rotary mower, J HP .Homko
hospital for minor surgery.
ll -3-3fc , garden tiller. 4 x 8 utility
Mrs. Anna (Cross) Giblin
OPEN EVE$, 1:00 P.M.
frailer, corn she ller with
POMEROY
BABYSITTER wanted in my elec tri c motor, electric
J'~E~Ot, OHIO
and Miss Jeanne Prahl of
If
I
HAVE
home, .5 days a week ; 1 boy;
grinder, Ram 7 in. power saw,
Painesville, Ohio spent several
ToGo
phone evenings 992·5844.
HOME &amp; AUTO
electr ic drill. chain hoist, 3-pt,
days with Mrs. Addie Petrel.
NOTICE ON FILING
11 -3-3tc - hitch potato plow, 24 ft. ext.
Take
Me
To
OF INVENTORY
992-2094
, WANT ADS
Other guests spending a day
ladder, elec,t ric fen cer, 6-amp
ANO APPRAISEMENT
From
the
largest
lNFORMATUlN
battery charger, 1 lot 4 in.
606 E. Main · Pomeroy
were Mr. and Mrs. Gordon The State of Ohio, Meigs
THE
SHOP
DEADLINES
Bulldozer
Radiator
to
the
plastic
pipe,
feed
bin
1
lot
of
Cowdery of Washington C. H. County. Probate Court.
,5 P.M . Day, Before Publication .
Smail~st Heater Cor•.
good hand tools, tool boxes,
To !he Admihistrat,ri x of th e
T RlOGE ROAD
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Thoren, Sr. estate ; 10 svch of the following
Nathan Biggs
$MONEY$
wheel
barrow,
platform
EROY,O.
Cancellation - Corrections
sca les.
Radiator Specialist
"Custom Meat Cutting"
and
of Nease Settlement were as ;.,re residents of !he State ot Will be accepted untll9 a.m. tor.
Ohio , viz : the sur\living
Quick
and
Courteous
Service
HOUSEHOLD
Day
of
Publication
FULL OR
guests Sunday of Mrs. Ethel spouse, the next of kin, the
DAL.E
DICK
REGULATIONS
TAPPAN gas range (like new).
NE~N
FURNITURE
beneficiar
ies
under
the
wilt
;
PART
TIME
LITTLE
VAUGHN
Wheeler and Mrs. Ada Bays.
The Publisher reserves the
Kelvinator
and
Westinghouse
and to the attorney or aflorneys right to edit or reject any ads
992-3884 .
992·' 3"
refrigerators, Maytag auto.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swift of representing any of the deemed objectional. The
St0tf' In and See Our
Let
Dick
and
Dale
Hetp
You
washer,
Signature
Dryer
,
aforementioned
persons
:
Columbus spent Sunday with
publisher wilt not be responsib le ·
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
Floor Display .
.w ith Your Meat Problems.
'3.50 PER HOUR
cabine t sink, utili ty cabinet, 3
Charles
E.
Larkins ,
more than one lncorrec•
Mrs. Swift's parents, Mr. and Deceased, Chester . Ohio , for
bedroom sui tes, odd beds and
Insertion .
Chester Township, No . 2079-t .
bedding, 2-piece living room
Mrs. Francis Morris.
RATES
No e~eperience necessary .
You are hereby nol lf ied that
For Want Ad Service
suite, chair and ot~oman, end SEW ING MACHINES . Repair WILL cut or trirn trees,
Must have car and be willing
Mrs. Loe Tisdale and Mr. the ln¥entory and Ap - 5 cents
service, atl makes. 992·2284.
reasonable; also ·clean out
per Word one insertion
and coffee tables. folding
to learn business.
The
Fabric
Shop.
Pomeroy
:'
attics
and ' •ROOFING
basements,
Charles Moody of Buckeye praisement of the estate of the
Minimum Charge75c
cha
irs,
ta
bl
e
with
four
chairs.
aforementioned , deceased , la te
Authorized Singer Sales and
cellars; phone 949-3221.
12 cents per werd threE
Lake came to attend the one of said Coun t y, was filed in this comoecutive
lawn furniture, piano with
eHEATING
Insertions.
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
10-4-30fc
bench, 23 in. Zenith TV,
hundredth anniversary or the · Court . Said Inventory and
18 cents per word sl&gt;c con
CALL
··
3·29-tfc
Appraisemen t will be tor
porlable TV. portable stereo,
Insertions.
•PLUMBING
SEPTIC
TANKS AROBIC
Bethany Church at Dorcas and hearing before this Court on the secutlve
3-s peed 20 in. fan, motorized
25 Per Cent Discount on paic
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
visited Mrs. Hazel Carnahan .• 15th day of November, 1972, at ads and ads paid within 10 days
grill. 2 girl's bicycles, arid O'DELL WHEEL alignment
PERSONNEL
CLEANED: REPAIRED.
•CARPENTRY
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
·
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
CARD
OF
THANKS
other
household items.
Also Mrs. Fern Gilmore of
Any person desiring to file
MLLLER
SANITATION,
&amp; OBITUARY
Complete
front
end
service,
GUN5 AND COLLECTIBLES
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
51 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Columbus came for the an- exceptions thereto must file
•SPOUTING
MANAGER
tune up and brake ser11lce.
MODEL
17 Remington 20 gauge
them at least live days prior to
Each
additional
word
2c.
662-3035.
Wheels
balanced
elecniversary and spent a week the date set .tor hearing .
pump
gun,
22
Winchester
BLIND ADS
10-4-tfc
All
work
tronically .
•PAINTING
Given under my hand and
single shot rif le, 2 glass -door
with her sister, Mrs, Carnahan.
Additional 25c Charge per
-guaranteed.
Reasonable
seal of said Court, this Jrd da 1 Advertisement.
446-0677
cupboard~, quilting fram es,
. Mrs. Nellie Heft and Mrs. of November 1972 .
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992- DOZER and back hoe work,
For Free Estimate
t;lFFICE HOURS
kraut cutter, stee l-yards,
Mann
ing
D.
Webste
ponds and septic tanks, dit·
321J.
8:30a .m. to 5:00 'p.m . Dally,
Charles Covey of Belpre visited
insulators.
large
amount
of
Judge and e)C ·Off icio Clerk 8: 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
ching service; top soil, fill .
7-27-tfc
PHONE 992!2550
misc. items noJ listed. Lunch
their sister-in-law, Mrs. Ada
Meigs County Saturday .
dirt,
limestone
:
B&amp;K
Ex·
-served. Not respoos lble for
Common Pleas Court,
Bays and also Mrs. Ethel
For Rent
cavating . Phone 992 -5367,
accidents . L. D. Bird, owner. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
Probate Div ision
Dick Karr, Jr .
Wheeler on Thursday af·
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Los1
your
I. 0 . "Mac" McCoy, auc - cancelled?
TRAILER space. Phone '192Notice
9·1-tfc
doors and windows, carpor1s,
Ann
B.
Watson
operator's
license?
Call
992ti oneer . 985-3944.
ternoon.
2324.
Deputy Clerk
aluminum siding,
marquees,
2960.
11 -5-3tc
I WILL NOT be responsible for
ll -2·6fc
Mrs. Talmadge Evans and I II I 6, 13
RUSSELL'S
Furnitur-;
and
railing.
A. Jacob, sale!·
6·15-tfc
any debts con tracted by any
Upholstery; free pickup and
children, Dennis, John and
representative
. For free
one o I her than myself . 3 AND 4 ROOM furnist.ed and 66 STARCRAFT tent trailer;
phone
992-5771.
delivery;
estimates,
phone
Charles
Karen of Oak Hill visited her
Signed : Ralstoo D. Hemsley.
unfurnished
apartments .
sto ve , refrigerator, sink,
10-27-JOtc
Li sle, Syracuse, V. V .
Notice
aunt, Mrs. Esther Piper.
11·3-3fp
Phone 992-5434.
double dinette ; sleeps 8, 5900 Real Estate For Sale
Johnson and Son, Inc .
=-:-:~---­
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Piatt of GARAGE SALE, Thursday,
or besl offer : phone 367-753().
4·12-Hc
3-2-tfc
Nov. 9th, sl• mites east of PIANO and organ lessons by
Real
Estate
For
Sale
11
-5-6fc
Columlius were recent guests
graduate of
Cincinnati
Chester on Rl. 2.QI, Ronald
SPEC IA L: Move in before BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
of Rev. and Mrs. Frank
.Conservator
y
of
Music;
phone
Osborne; depression ware,
Septic lanks Installed. George
APARTMENTS near new HENS, phone 843-2435.
winter . 4 bedroom ranch
992-3825.
Cheesebrew. Mrs. Piatt is a
clothing, antiques and
11 -5-3tc
{Bill) Pullins. Phone 992,2478.
Meigs High School; call 773home on Jf.. acre lot. Bath and
10-25-12fc
miscellaneous items. Good
4-25-tfc
5268 after 5 p.m.
sister of•Mrs. Cheesebrew.
a half, buill·in kilchen, walllo
used
Selmer
cornet
and
case,
2
END
tables
and
1
coffee
table,
10-t9
-12tp
wall
carpet
and
garage.
Price
Mr. Charles ·Mallory of
1966 Dodge automatic trans - HAYMAN'S Auclion - a good
maple ; like new ; phone 992.
CONCRETE
$20,750.00; also a 5 bedroom READY -M,IX
Riverdale, Georgia is visiting
place to ~o each Friday
mission, SJO.
3120.
delivered right to your
colonial house on a :1f.. acre lot.
11+3tp evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel
11 -5-31p
two weeks with his parents,
project. Fast and easy. Free
Bath and a half, bullt.ln
Cliff on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west APARTMENT, 3 ROOMS AND - - -- - -estimales. Phone 992·3264."
kitchen. dining roor:n, family
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Mallory
of Rock Springs Fairground.
BATH, MUST BE SEE N TO
Gciegleln Ready-MI• Co.,
room and the works, priced
and other relatives.
10-10-lfc
BE APPRECIATED, PHONE
Middleport, Ohio.
$30,000.00.
Call
Sherman
E.
110 Mechanic St . .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle
992-2053.
6-30-lfc
Summerfield,
985-3598
or
985·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
MARRIED couple want to rent
ll -S-31c
4177.
spent a few days In Gallipolis
farm or country house. Call
11 -2-:rotc SEPT!~ TANKS CLEANED
. w,l lh Mr. an9 !&gt;lr.s . 1 Bill
cotl~ct 6H·2'1H908.
,, ·
NEW LISTING
5 ROOMS anq bath , un '.REASOfo!A·Bt:'E: rate·s, Ph. 446McKenzie and ramify. '
Mr . and Mrs. Harley Haning
fu r nished, $65 a month ; phone
BUNGALOW - 2 bedrooms, "FfOUSE in Long Bottom, phone 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
ll-5-9tc
.
992 -5)24 afle r 2 p.m.
985-3529.
: Owner 5o Operator .
"ice bath, large living and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland of Flatwoods were Sunday
ll
-5-5tc
6-11
-ffc
5-12-tfc
kitchen. Slore next door.
spent a week's vacation in afternoon visitors of her sister,
Only
$4500.00.
Fontana, N. C.
- - -- - -- - C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer .
Mrs . Helen Johnson and Mr .
NEW 2-bedroom mobile home
NEW LISTING
in Mason , $27 .50 a week.
Complete Service
Mrs . Lillian Lee and and Mrs . Lee Roush and
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP Phone
675-1684.
Phooe 949-3821
daughter, Bootie, or Cincinnati family .
Meigs sc hool district, 2 or 4
Racine, Ohio
11-5-31p
T~CTOR
spent over the weekend at her
Mrs . Helen Johnson, Mr. and
bedrooms. bath, automatic
Crill Bradford
furnace heat. Full basenient,
home here.
5·1-ffc
Mrs. Lee Roush and family
•
SIITI.S"FY YOIIR NEEDS"
acre
of
land
.
Asking
1
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Miss were SWJday evening visitors
Pomeroy, 0 .
~-.iiii.ilft-,
TRAILER lol, Bob's Mobile 992-2915
$12.000.
Sybil Ebersbach of Pomeroy of Mr. and Mrs . Larry Johnson
Window
Court. Syracuse; phone 992·
BOTTOM LAND
LEGAL NOTICE
~~were Sunday afternoon callers and family.
2951.
'
6 ACRES - 1 mile from
Air Conditiotoers
APPLES,
Fitzpatrick
Or
10-31 -tfc
NOTICE OF
or Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Mr . Ray Roush of Lexington,
route 7 just off 124. Now
chards , State Route 689 ,
APPOINTMENT
Hot
Wa~~
Heaters
Ada Bays.
being offered for 53,000.00.
Ky . was Monday visitor of Mr.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
Case No. 20804
TRA IL ER in Mason. couples
Plumbing
NEW LISTING
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Birch and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Estate of ADA CRA Y, De.
only ; phone 1·614-367-7622
8-30-tfc
ceased.
8 ROOM ANTIQUE BRICK Mobile Homes For Sale
Electrical Work
after 9 p.m .
visited Mr . and Mrs. Bob Birch
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
Noticf! is hereby given that
4
large
bedrooms,
bath,
10-31 -6tc NOW WRECKING lhe former
PRICED for quick sale. 1965 51 Bernard V. Fultz, of Pomeroy,
at Bellevue.
were Sunday dinner guests of
furnace . Living room 16x36,
• 10 New MDon Mobile Home, Ohio. has been duly appointed
Epple 's
Gro cery
Store
Mr. and Mrs. Price Wolfe of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson .
with
gas
fireplace.
Large
furnished;
call 992-2076.
AdminiStrator of the Estate of
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
bui lding i n Pomeroy. All
Ada Cray, deceased, late of
Lexington spent over the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
basement,
3
car
garage,
·
11
·5·6fp
apartment, adults only,
kinds of build ing materials
Middleport, Meigs County,
Middleport ; phone 992·3874. fnr sa le on the iOb. Call 992·
barn for horses and about 2 - - -- - -weekend with Mrs. Hazel Bryan, of Syracuse were
Ohio.
10·22-tfc 5946 or 882.3219.
acres of land . All for CASH paid for all makes and
Creditors are required to tile
Carnahan .
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
models of mobile homes. their
10-26-121c
992-2448
$21
,500.00.
cla ims with said fiduciary
Mr. and Mrs. Hollie Horner Mrs. James Reeves and Linda.
'Phone area code 614·423-9531. within four months .
------ ~---NEW
LISTING
Pomeroy, o.
4· 13-ffc
Dated this 27th day of October
or Akron · spen I the weekend Mrs. Paul Pierce and family .
For Sale
98 ACRES - Of vacant land - -- - - 1972.
.
with Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch. or Mason were recent visitors
on townsh ip road 141. most of
'
Mannino
0
.
Webster
, Judge
ONE
YOUNG
beel
cow.
weight
KOSCOT KOSMETICS . Our
Probate DiviS ion
Mr. and Mrs. Chester of Mrs. Larry Johnson and
it fenced . Producing gas well
850 lo 900 lbs .• price $225.
lal es l
is " One
Day"
Common Plea's Court,
Phone 742-4459.
with fr ee gas for one
• Air Conditioners
Simpson spent the weekend family and Geneva Shumate.
fragran ce . Others include
Meigs County. Oh lo
ON
PANTS&amp;
JEANS
11
-5-31c
residence
.
All
minerals.
" K" and The Lemon Grove.
•Awnings
1101 JO 1111 6, 13, 31
with their son and daughter-inMr. and Mrs. Steve Hag gy ,
Also new children 's products. - - - - - ' - Trailer space with electric
•·Underpinmng
law, Mr. and Mrs . Brian Canton, were weekend visitors
Ph one Helen Jane, 992·5113. REGISTERED Angus calve;; 2
and dug wel l. Asking
Simpson and children at of Mr. and Mrs . Robert
bulls of breeding age ; Erisco
We'd like to serve you.
Buy 2
$16,500.00.
TIMES FOR HOLOJNG
Complete mQblie hQm•
and Wye blood lines ; Bill
10-24-lfc
Baltimore .
..._.,.Pairs
Russell.
WE
ARE
GLAD
TO
BE
COMMON
PLEAS COURTS,
service ~ plus gigantic
Witte, Rock Springs. Ohio ;
A. D. lf73
SALES
PEOPLE
IN
THE
Ronnie Russell returned to IF THE person that Is sleallng
I
·1-PAIR
FREE
·
'display
of
mobile
homes
phone 992-2789.
It is ordered that the lerms of
COU NTY. WANT TO SEE ;always..avallable·af ... .
Fort Mead, Md. after spending
The best buy in the area.
food out of my deep freeze is
10-25-12tc
the Common ~leas Courl In the
THE PLACE GROW THEN
County of Meigs County, for the ·
hungry. If they will knock on
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
Straight kerosene is used a few days with his wife,
year 1973 be fixed as follows , to .·
LIST
WITH
US
.
DON'T
pump
your
sluggish
MILLER
my
d.
o
or
I
will
give
it
to
them
.
whole family: Save Oneas fuel by commercial jet Nancy, and daughter, also his
wit: On the lst day of January,
tank
.
Get
Klean
-Emseptic
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
They
won
't
have
to
steal
it.
Third.
aircraft.
.
the 1st day of May and the
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
AII Septic Tank Cleaner.
[ MOBIU HOME$] and
Mrs. James Mash
ASSOCIATE
day
of September and the
Jrd
'1'..
POMEROY
Landmark Farm Bureau ,
Russell .
ll -6·3fc
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
said terms of said court begin at
1220
Washington
Blvd.
""'
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr
..
Pomeroy.
-:-::::,-,--.,-,:c---..,.
10 :00 o'clock A.M.
992-3325
'423-7521
BE~PRE, D.
Phone 992,2181
NEW Improved "Zippies,'' lhe
ll -3-3tc
John c . Bane

Pomeroy Motor .co. · ~

i

r

'

&amp;

•

L

.\ .

10-The D'dily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Nov. 6, 1972 ·

•

-o

'b't.L PROe.'L'/
U: GITTif.l' A
OFFER ANY

::::»f&gt;,DIE HAWKINS
WAS Tl-lE DAUGHTER
OFTHEFIRST

~'/NOW-

AH 1-\AIN'T GOT ONE
't'E.T. LOOKS t.l KE
'fO'LU-\A\IE ME ON
'fORE HANDS FO'

TH' RESTO' 'ltlRE

MAYOR OF

NATCI-\ERAL LIFE!!

DOG PATCH-

t

••r..

.'

'
'
''

I

..

•
'

.

''
'
•'

j
•
:

~
~·

~·.
~

~

~
:'
...

,.'
'

MR. M'IRT, REN PLATT .
JUST SAILED BY AND ....
OKAY, I'LL HOLD 1HE
CALLS AND
APPOINTMENTS.

,,

,.

- -- -- - -

,.'

••
WELJ,~ETHING'S

BOUND

'10 10VME .o.L0Na i&gt;HO
CHANGii 'THAT FOR US!

Virgil B. ·
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

SHOTGUNS
RIFLES

Wolfpen

'

·-

"

AND
AMMUNITION
GRAVELY

..

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

I'
~

WINNIE 'WINKLE

SALES AND SERVICE

.

iron pil l

now

&lt;

,I,..:...----.,---::---U,:

with - - -·-'-- ' -

------

..-

"DADDV" SICK
... AN' '""' ...,

.
CLELAND·
RtALTY
'··

. 608 E. Main •

Pomeroy ,.

washer, air·condlfion'er and ·
ott)er extras included; ex·

1'h STORY BRICK
SYRACUSE - 4 B.R. New
bath, utility, kitchen ha s
din ing bar, NEW F.A.G.
furnace, air cond.

Roofed

patio. porch, 2 level lois,
near school. Asking $17,900.
TRAILER SETUP ·
RURAL - 10 ACRES ..:_
wafer. septic, patio, dug
basement with 3300 tile
blocks, cabin, Natural gas

return to Mrs. Lorena Dunn,
95 Pearl St ,, Middleport.

60&gt;12 GREGORY mobile home,
2 bedrooms, froht kitchen, on
88 x 200 lot, with outbuilding,
• available Immediately;
conlact Gene Hudson, Racine,
0. or phone 949-3334.
ll -3-3fc

'

DICK TRACY

play- .
wright
13. Senorita 's

name

box

16..Girl's
name
17. Express·

ing feel ing
19. Sheep

'-1\C.KEl-... WAWT ANlCKa ...

(C 1972 Kinl' F.. t11rn Syndicate, Inc:.)

38. Monthly
disbursement
39.Ciassy
behavior
40. Greek
river

U~~~eramble lhete l'our Jumblu,
one le\ter tq each equm, to
forlll four ordlnar1 worda.

DOWN
t. Muck and
mire

Yesterday's Answer
2.Summer
U . Literacy
8. Reach
hat
musketeer
9. Former
3. Among.
25. Conse;
·name of
one's 1peers
quem:e
Angola's
(collO&lt;I .)
26. Savoircapllal
{3 wds.)
~ 1. Campaign
27. Levant
4. Dulfer's
29. Greek
15.-of
item
Island
paradise
5.Sierra-,
30. Gossipy
18. Rubber·
Africa
necldng
womart,
6. Written
Yiddish
time
letter
style
Zl. Receive
7. Involved
35.
Femme
in a courtwag eo
36. Refrain
ship (2
syllable
2:1. Debark
wds.)

20. Worship
21. Sicilian
volcano
22. Rumi·

J

•11 Capacity
Martag
Autorn•tlcs

2 speed operation
Chol ce. of
temps .
A,u o:
.wat -e r
.levet
control.
l-Int· ·
F liter or Power '
Fin AQitator . · '
·

••f•;..

NYOME

UNDOB

I

IEMFONT

I

KIJ I I I

. I (J I I
GANDI/.
~
I I I

I
tr1=:::Pritl~tt~•~v~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~•;_::~1 "( XI I I r
~

nant's

food
Indo·Chl·
nese I an·
guage
U . "LOve" in
Tampico
28. City iri
North
.
Dakota
. Z8. Gypsy
29, Food
~3.

l

~T ANICI&lt;ft.... \IIAIIT A

Yesterday's CrypiO&lt;Iuole: IT IS TRUE THAT HUMILITY
IS HARD TO COME BY. BUT SOME OF US HAVE NO
CHOICE.- ARNDLD GLASGOW

..

disease

"

COSJUM.E jewelry, round earrln~, yellow gold; return to
Shoe Bo&gt;c for reward; 'sen. ·
flmental value.
.
11·5-2tc

12. " Picnic"

1t. - Tse·
tung
15. Storage

- WMP0/13~

WHITE .FACE Hereford calf In
Sllversvllle area ; Phone 643·
2145, L. Glusencamp If found .
1t-5,5tc

.

.

.

Now arran1e the circled lettera
to form the surprlte anower, aa
ouueated by thubo•ecartoon.

(Antwe.:. tomorrow)

I

Jumblno HUMAN TIITY ltATION PINCIL

:lalurd•r'•

·

A.r~~~wtrl ·u.cuuld connecl ut

I)()CTO~,

lng plant
31. Electrical
term
32. Disen·
cumber
33. Attach
34. Just about
.• enough
38.1n those
.days
37. Cong~ni·
tal

.,
.eitla dttJI ll.lomanf -

"US.HII"

f!OWEI'E~. 1'VE COM£ TO 5Ef '(OV

'IOII'RE M&lt;(

process·

~

SIR,

AND 1 ~fi;f'ECf
I/OV ...

6ECAV5E I HAVE To KNOW WIH

I(OV AND THE SCII:Xll.(!(lMD
MNNED "THE ~~~ 9VNN'I lii'JNNtE5
FREAK OUT'F~M OUR LIB~ARV...

Yo:
•C•

,,_,

· Ptrmi· P'ren .

Maytot
•
HotiOIHtat
1
Dr\oors
. :S.Urrounct clothea
' Wifh lin fit, IVIn
heat. No hot opoto,
no ovordrylng . .
Fine Mtoh Lint
Fllltr.
·
Wt Speclalhtln
MAYTAG

BLACK Scoll!sh dog in Mid·
dleport ' answers lo Amos ;
reward for safe re1urn ; pt.one

992·2420.
· · 11 -5-i&gt;tc

MUTIAND FURNITURE ·:~v~~~

For ·Rent
2 BEDROOM mobile home,
phooe Albert Hill 949-2261.
'
.11.6-6tc

741-4111
I

I

rod

like aI*SOfi.

ll -l-6tc

ll!_~.:..J.;l ~~·~5. Licit
~IM"IIllllill 10. Bowling
alley
It. Spanish
explorer

We talk·to JOU

ON YOUR _DIAL

--,r--:==-;

ACROSS
1. Barbecue

Judge of Common
Pleas Court ,
Meigs COunty, Ohio

c.ellent condition; phooe 992·
7387 or 985·3565. ll·3-6tp

\IJNIT A
!Jim!-..

by THOMAS JOSEPH

8 , "· COMPLETELY fur .1
nis hed, 2 bedrooms, Inside
bath, kitchen, living room and 1101 30, nn.6, t3. 3t
TV, $800 call or coolacl Larry
Hubbard, Syracuse. Ohio 992·. 1'"-"''-,---,.....-~-f'lo
3364.
ll -3-6tc \
-19_7_0_ M_O_B
_ I_L_E_H
_o_m_e_wilh 1 /

.

1,\J\J SOUND Ll I({; ,~o.
6!WI&lt;e~ ~?WJRD!

FIRST IT'€.
THAT WORD
THAT MAKES

'

VItamin C. Nelson Drug .
MIXED hay ; 1956 Ford pickup, COAL. Limestone, E.celsior
11 ·6-2tp
'" ton, $150 ; Allis Chalmers
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
tractor with plows and
Pomeroy. Phooe 992-3891 .
-=---=-=-=~-:-:-::­
PUREBRED SALE : Wesl
culti vators, 5600 ; phone 9494-12-tfc
3746 .
Virginia Polled Herefore 2nd
.~::-:-::-:-:---::--:annual fall sale on November
11 -3-3tc JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
10, 1972 starling at 6:30 EST - - - - - - - - Sewing Machine. Will sell for
Friday even1119 at the Delmar '65 PONTIAC Catalina, good small balance of $36.21 or
Pursley Farm in Ripley, 1 condition, new paint job : al•o paymenls may be arrahged.
mile from 1-77. Selling 9 bulls
71 Honda 350 chopper, plus Phone 992-5331.
and 39 hellers .
e.tras; phone 742-5943.
9-7·tfc
ll -6-41c
11 -J.Jic - - - - - - - - ---:-:::---- - ----,;---- - - -SCH NAUZER puppies, AKC,
REDl.JCE safe and last with 8 TRACK STEREO, frelghl
Salt &amp; Pepper, ears choooed.
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
damaged, in beautiful walnut
wormed and shots; healthy
"water pills,'' Nelsoo Drug .
console. Will sell for $101.50 or $85 ; phone Coolville 667-6214.
11 ·6·21p
pay Sl.50per week. Phone 992·
ll -5·1_2tp
5331."
9-7-tfc
Lost
CHOCOLATE brown billfold, ::-:-::::-::---~
Real Estate For Sale
gold clasp oo front : contai ns POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992pi.ctures and other valuable
5443.
.
Items; lost in lower Mid·
8-lS·tfc
dleport; anyone finding ·

BUT I ())(.'I

. ,•

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

great

tJ0UJ SlOP t&gt;.S\&lt;1~! ...

I

'

nokiGr•f•·

Rutlllld ' . '
. ,,

~~~------~----~~~--~------~._·------~~--~--~~----~------~------~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR '
Is LONGFELLOW
, One letter simply stands for another. In this ~ample A Is
•· uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fllrm~tlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlfterent.
\
CBYrrOQpOTES
DNQLRtJV
ACCR
PO

PI

LV

PRE

LZLOPO~ NR

CWNTJL VLRY

PQUPSV
NH

BPV

UPf ~ PLZCE

•

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Sentinel Classifieds Get Actiont Sentin~l Classifieds-Get
Results!
.
..

~

•
- ~••

_i_ · lli\RNEY -

.

·Racine

•'
•'·1

u
•
ll

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,•

.

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,,,.'

Social Events

· Pomeroy'.
Motor ·Co,

2SIGNS
OF
_,

QUALITY

;

.

'.

.

For Sale

Wanted To Buy
OLO Furniture; oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,

REGISTERED

. .

German

-

"

.

"

·Business Services·

shorthair Pointer Birdd6g
puppies. Expensi ve but worth
it . Ready any tim~ . Ver11on

Weber . 742·5625 .

'

BALLS O'FIRE!!
·x CAN'T WAIT ENNY
LONGER FER !'LVINEY
TO GIT OUT HERETO TH' GOSSIP

I

TO GIT

BACK INTH' .
H0USE AN' FIX ,
PAW SOME
VITTlES .

·'

FENCE--

I.

r·

l

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

EARTH MOVING

'

Al..L. HIS IN·t..AWE&gt;
V'IIL.L. 8E. Ai3!..E 10

.CAMPUS CLA'ITER

!1AN:il ON 10 -n-IEIR'

-

IN!&gt;IDE JOB5.
..r~EY'~E BOTfl

C~AMELEONS!

-

-~

r-:=-----...., ®

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

I
f

I

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
..
197l .CHEVROLET
'$299S
By Mrs. Francis Morris
ll -5-6tc
6·28-tf~
Mal ibu hardtop covpe , low mileage, new car title , san·
The choir, approximately
DRIVE A UTILE
EARLY American stereo-radio
dalwood fini sh with brown vinyl roof, vinyl saddle in·
thirty people, of Racine First
-SAVE A LOTI
combinat ion , AM-FM radio, 4
terior, 4-season air conditioning , turbohydramatic, power
1963 FORD T:Bird Converlible
Baptist Church went to sing at
speaker sound sys tem , 4
steer ing, wh ite. w.:ill tires. r ally wheel s, front &amp; rear
for parts: phone 985-3333.
Kuhl's Bargain Center
speed automalit: changer .
the service of the ordina lion of
guards, power brakes, rad io.
ll -3-6tc
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
Balan ce $77 . 54 . Use our
Rt. ·7"at caution fight"
1968CHEVELLE
11795
Mr . William P. Rollyson •
budget terms . Call 992-7085. ponds, basement, landMalibu
Spt.
Cpe
..
air
cond
itioned.
307
engine,
power
SWJday alternoon at the First
ll -5·6fc sea ping. We have 2 size '
stee ring &amp; brake s. red f ini sh with black vinyl top &amp; blk .
Employment
Wanted
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work '
TUPPERS PlAINS
Baptist Church, Marietta,
--~---------------vi nyl interi or , 'radio, good w-w t ir es.
don, by hour or contra&lt;:t. . : On Mo$1 American Cars
1V repairman ; Write c-o P. 0 .
AUCTION
Ohio.
Clean used furniture
free. Estimates. We also
1968 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE
117V5
Box 729-L, The Daily Sentinel, SATURDAY, Nov. fl. beginning
- GUARANTEEDMrs. MaudL Young has
Guaranteed appliances
Pomeroy .
Local J.owner low mileag~ car, bea utiful cream liilish
at 10:00 A.M. 3'12 miles NE of · haut fill dirt, top soil. Dump
Phone 992-2Q94
trucks and low-boy for hire.
Huffy' 20",
returned home from Holzer
with bla ck lop, bu'cket seats, with console, new white. wall
11 -5·31c , Chesler, Ohio on Stale Route
BIKES
See
Bob
or
R09,er
JeHers,
l.
have
sold
my
farm
and
will
tires,
power
steering
and
automatic
transm
ission.
Radio.
Murray
t
0
speeds
- discount
Medica.! Center.
Pomeroy.Home Auto .
sell the following:
' Pomeroy. Phone 992-352S
ONE
OF
THE
SCARCE
ONES.
AND
AS
NICE
AS
THEY
prices.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart
Open8Til5
after 7 p.m . or phone m ·Help
Wanted
·
~OME .
.
.
·.LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Mon~ay
thru Saturday
went to Delaware, Ohio where
1964 VB Ford pick -up, 7 HP
5232.
Open to 7; Closed Mondays
BABYSITTER , live in or drive. Homko riding mower, 20 in.
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, Q.
Mrs. Hart will enter the
phone 992-5709.
Rotary mower, J HP .Homko
hospital for minor surgery.
ll -3-3fc , garden tiller. 4 x 8 utility
Mrs. Anna (Cross) Giblin
OPEN EVE$, 1:00 P.M.
frailer, corn she ller with
POMEROY
BABYSITTER wanted in my elec tri c motor, electric
J'~E~Ot, OHIO
and Miss Jeanne Prahl of
If
I
HAVE
home, .5 days a week ; 1 boy;
grinder, Ram 7 in. power saw,
Painesville, Ohio spent several
ToGo
phone evenings 992·5844.
HOME &amp; AUTO
electr ic drill. chain hoist, 3-pt,
days with Mrs. Addie Petrel.
NOTICE ON FILING
11 -3-3tc - hitch potato plow, 24 ft. ext.
Take
Me
To
OF INVENTORY
992-2094
, WANT ADS
Other guests spending a day
ladder, elec,t ric fen cer, 6-amp
ANO APPRAISEMENT
From
the
largest
lNFORMATUlN
battery charger, 1 lot 4 in.
606 E. Main · Pomeroy
were Mr. and Mrs. Gordon The State of Ohio, Meigs
THE
SHOP
DEADLINES
Bulldozer
Radiator
to
the
plastic
pipe,
feed
bin
1
lot
of
Cowdery of Washington C. H. County. Probate Court.
,5 P.M . Day, Before Publication .
Smail~st Heater Cor•.
good hand tools, tool boxes,
To !he Admihistrat,ri x of th e
T RlOGE ROAD
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Thoren, Sr. estate ; 10 svch of the following
Nathan Biggs
$MONEY$
wheel
barrow,
platform
EROY,O.
Cancellation - Corrections
sca les.
Radiator Specialist
"Custom Meat Cutting"
and
of Nease Settlement were as ;.,re residents of !he State ot Will be accepted untll9 a.m. tor.
Ohio , viz : the sur\living
Quick
and
Courteous
Service
HOUSEHOLD
Day
of
Publication
FULL OR
guests Sunday of Mrs. Ethel spouse, the next of kin, the
DAL.E
DICK
REGULATIONS
TAPPAN gas range (like new).
NE~N
FURNITURE
beneficiar
ies
under
the
wilt
;
PART
TIME
LITTLE
VAUGHN
Wheeler and Mrs. Ada Bays.
The Publisher reserves the
Kelvinator
and
Westinghouse
and to the attorney or aflorneys right to edit or reject any ads
992-3884 .
992·' 3"
refrigerators, Maytag auto.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swift of representing any of the deemed objectional. The
St0tf' In and See Our
Let
Dick
and
Dale
Hetp
You
washer,
Signature
Dryer
,
aforementioned
persons
:
Columbus spent Sunday with
publisher wilt not be responsib le ·
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
Floor Display .
.w ith Your Meat Problems.
'3.50 PER HOUR
cabine t sink, utili ty cabinet, 3
Charles
E.
Larkins ,
more than one lncorrec•
Mrs. Swift's parents, Mr. and Deceased, Chester . Ohio , for
bedroom sui tes, odd beds and
Insertion .
Chester Township, No . 2079-t .
bedding, 2-piece living room
Mrs. Francis Morris.
RATES
No e~eperience necessary .
You are hereby nol lf ied that
For Want Ad Service
suite, chair and ot~oman, end SEW ING MACHINES . Repair WILL cut or trirn trees,
Must have car and be willing
Mrs. Loe Tisdale and Mr. the ln¥entory and Ap - 5 cents
service, atl makes. 992·2284.
reasonable; also ·clean out
per Word one insertion
and coffee tables. folding
to learn business.
The
Fabric
Shop.
Pomeroy
:'
attics
and ' •ROOFING
basements,
Charles Moody of Buckeye praisement of the estate of the
Minimum Charge75c
cha
irs,
ta
bl
e
with
four
chairs.
aforementioned , deceased , la te
Authorized Singer Sales and
cellars; phone 949-3221.
12 cents per werd threE
Lake came to attend the one of said Coun t y, was filed in this comoecutive
lawn furniture, piano with
eHEATING
Insertions.
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
10-4-30fc
bench, 23 in. Zenith TV,
hundredth anniversary or the · Court . Said Inventory and
18 cents per word sl&gt;c con
CALL
··
3·29-tfc
Appraisemen t will be tor
porlable TV. portable stereo,
Insertions.
•PLUMBING
SEPTIC
TANKS AROBIC
Bethany Church at Dorcas and hearing before this Court on the secutlve
3-s peed 20 in. fan, motorized
25 Per Cent Discount on paic
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
visited Mrs. Hazel Carnahan .• 15th day of November, 1972, at ads and ads paid within 10 days
grill. 2 girl's bicycles, arid O'DELL WHEEL alignment
PERSONNEL
CLEANED: REPAIRED.
•CARPENTRY
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
·
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
CARD
OF
THANKS
other
household items.
Also Mrs. Fern Gilmore of
Any person desiring to file
MLLLER
SANITATION,
&amp; OBITUARY
Complete
front
end
service,
GUN5 AND COLLECTIBLES
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
51 .50 for 50 word minimum .
Columbus came for the an- exceptions thereto must file
•SPOUTING
MANAGER
tune up and brake ser11lce.
MODEL
17 Remington 20 gauge
them at least live days prior to
Each
additional
word
2c.
662-3035.
Wheels
balanced
elecniversary and spent a week the date set .tor hearing .
pump
gun,
22
Winchester
BLIND ADS
10-4-tfc
All
work
tronically .
•PAINTING
Given under my hand and
single shot rif le, 2 glass -door
with her sister, Mrs, Carnahan.
Additional 25c Charge per
-guaranteed.
Reasonable
seal of said Court, this Jrd da 1 Advertisement.
446-0677
cupboard~, quilting fram es,
. Mrs. Nellie Heft and Mrs. of November 1972 .
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992- DOZER and back hoe work,
For Free Estimate
t;lFFICE HOURS
kraut cutter, stee l-yards,
Mann
ing
D.
Webste
ponds and septic tanks, dit·
321J.
8:30a .m. to 5:00 'p.m . Dally,
Charles Covey of Belpre visited
insulators.
large
amount
of
Judge and e)C ·Off icio Clerk 8: 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
ching service; top soil, fill .
7-27-tfc
PHONE 992!2550
misc. items noJ listed. Lunch
their sister-in-law, Mrs. Ada
Meigs County Saturday .
dirt,
limestone
:
B&amp;K
Ex·
-served. Not respoos lble for
Common Pleas Court,
Bays and also Mrs. Ethel
For Rent
cavating . Phone 992 -5367,
accidents . L. D. Bird, owner. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
Probate Div ision
Dick Karr, Jr .
Wheeler on Thursday af·
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Los1
your
I. 0 . "Mac" McCoy, auc - cancelled?
TRAILER space. Phone '192Notice
9·1-tfc
doors and windows, carpor1s,
Ann
B.
Watson
operator's
license?
Call
992ti oneer . 985-3944.
ternoon.
2324.
Deputy Clerk
aluminum siding,
marquees,
2960.
11 -5-3tc
I WILL NOT be responsible for
ll -2·6fc
Mrs. Talmadge Evans and I II I 6, 13
RUSSELL'S
Furnitur-;
and
railing.
A. Jacob, sale!·
6·15-tfc
any debts con tracted by any
Upholstery; free pickup and
children, Dennis, John and
representative
. For free
one o I her than myself . 3 AND 4 ROOM furnist.ed and 66 STARCRAFT tent trailer;
phone
992-5771.
delivery;
estimates,
phone
Charles
Karen of Oak Hill visited her
Signed : Ralstoo D. Hemsley.
unfurnished
apartments .
sto ve , refrigerator, sink,
10-27-JOtc
Li sle, Syracuse, V. V .
Notice
aunt, Mrs. Esther Piper.
11·3-3fp
Phone 992-5434.
double dinette ; sleeps 8, 5900 Real Estate For Sale
Johnson and Son, Inc .
=-:-:~---­
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Piatt of GARAGE SALE, Thursday,
or besl offer : phone 367-753().
4·12-Hc
3-2-tfc
Nov. 9th, sl• mites east of PIANO and organ lessons by
Real
Estate
For
Sale
11
-5-6fc
Columlius were recent guests
graduate of
Cincinnati
Chester on Rl. 2.QI, Ronald
SPEC IA L: Move in before BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
of Rev. and Mrs. Frank
.Conservator
y
of
Music;
phone
Osborne; depression ware,
Septic lanks Installed. George
APARTMENTS near new HENS, phone 843-2435.
winter . 4 bedroom ranch
992-3825.
Cheesebrew. Mrs. Piatt is a
clothing, antiques and
11 -5-3tc
{Bill) Pullins. Phone 992,2478.
Meigs High School; call 773home on Jf.. acre lot. Bath and
10-25-12fc
miscellaneous items. Good
4-25-tfc
5268 after 5 p.m.
sister of•Mrs. Cheesebrew.
a half, buill·in kilchen, walllo
used
Selmer
cornet
and
case,
2
END
tables
and
1
coffee
table,
10-t9
-12tp
wall
carpet
and
garage.
Price
Mr. Charles ·Mallory of
1966 Dodge automatic trans - HAYMAN'S Auclion - a good
maple ; like new ; phone 992.
CONCRETE
$20,750.00; also a 5 bedroom READY -M,IX
Riverdale, Georgia is visiting
place to ~o each Friday
mission, SJO.
3120.
delivered right to your
colonial house on a :1f.. acre lot.
11+3tp evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel
11 -5-31p
two weeks with his parents,
project. Fast and easy. Free
Bath and a half, bullt.ln
Cliff on old Rl. 7, 1 mile west APARTMENT, 3 ROOMS AND - - -- - -estimales. Phone 992·3264."
kitchen. dining roor:n, family
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Mallory
of Rock Springs Fairground.
BATH, MUST BE SEE N TO
Gciegleln Ready-MI• Co.,
room and the works, priced
and other relatives.
10-10-lfc
BE APPRECIATED, PHONE
Middleport, Ohio.
$30,000.00.
Call
Sherman
E.
110 Mechanic St . .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle
992-2053.
6-30-lfc
Summerfield,
985-3598
or
985·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
MARRIED couple want to rent
ll -S-31c
4177.
spent a few days In Gallipolis
farm or country house. Call
11 -2-:rotc SEPT!~ TANKS CLEANED
. w,l lh Mr. an9 !&gt;lr.s . 1 Bill
cotl~ct 6H·2'1H908.
,, ·
NEW LISTING
5 ROOMS anq bath , un '.REASOfo!A·Bt:'E: rate·s, Ph. 446McKenzie and ramify. '
Mr . and Mrs. Harley Haning
fu r nished, $65 a month ; phone
BUNGALOW - 2 bedrooms, "FfOUSE in Long Bottom, phone 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
ll-5-9tc
.
992 -5)24 afle r 2 p.m.
985-3529.
: Owner 5o Operator .
"ice bath, large living and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland of Flatwoods were Sunday
ll
-5-5tc
6-11
-ffc
5-12-tfc
kitchen. Slore next door.
spent a week's vacation in afternoon visitors of her sister,
Only
$4500.00.
Fontana, N. C.
- - -- - -- - C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer .
Mrs . Helen Johnson and Mr .
NEW 2-bedroom mobile home
NEW LISTING
in Mason , $27 .50 a week.
Complete Service
Mrs . Lillian Lee and and Mrs . Lee Roush and
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP Phone
675-1684.
Phooe 949-3821
daughter, Bootie, or Cincinnati family .
Meigs sc hool district, 2 or 4
Racine, Ohio
11-5-31p
T~CTOR
spent over the weekend at her
Mrs . Helen Johnson, Mr. and
bedrooms. bath, automatic
Crill Bradford
furnace heat. Full basenient,
home here.
5·1-ffc
Mrs. Lee Roush and family
•
SIITI.S"FY YOIIR NEEDS"
acre
of
land
.
Asking
1
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Miss were SWJday evening visitors
Pomeroy, 0 .
~-.iiii.ilft-,
TRAILER lol, Bob's Mobile 992-2915
$12.000.
Sybil Ebersbach of Pomeroy of Mr. and Mrs . Larry Johnson
Window
Court. Syracuse; phone 992·
BOTTOM LAND
LEGAL NOTICE
~~were Sunday afternoon callers and family.
2951.
'
6 ACRES - 1 mile from
Air Conditiotoers
APPLES,
Fitzpatrick
Or
10-31 -tfc
NOTICE OF
or Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Mr . Ray Roush of Lexington,
route 7 just off 124. Now
chards , State Route 689 ,
APPOINTMENT
Hot
Wa~~
Heaters
Ada Bays.
being offered for 53,000.00.
Ky . was Monday visitor of Mr.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
Case No. 20804
TRA IL ER in Mason. couples
Plumbing
NEW LISTING
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Birch and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Estate of ADA CRA Y, De.
only ; phone 1·614-367-7622
8-30-tfc
ceased.
8 ROOM ANTIQUE BRICK Mobile Homes For Sale
Electrical Work
after 9 p.m .
visited Mr . and Mrs. Bob Birch
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
Noticf! is hereby given that
4
large
bedrooms,
bath,
10-31 -6tc NOW WRECKING lhe former
PRICED for quick sale. 1965 51 Bernard V. Fultz, of Pomeroy,
at Bellevue.
were Sunday dinner guests of
furnace . Living room 16x36,
• 10 New MDon Mobile Home, Ohio. has been duly appointed
Epple 's
Gro cery
Store
Mr. and Mrs. Price Wolfe of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson .
with
gas
fireplace.
Large
furnished;
call 992-2076.
AdminiStrator of the Estate of
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
bui lding i n Pomeroy. All
Ada Cray, deceased, late of
Lexington spent over the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
basement,
3
car
garage,
·
11
·5·6fp
apartment, adults only,
kinds of build ing materials
Middleport, Meigs County,
Middleport ; phone 992·3874. fnr sa le on the iOb. Call 992·
barn for horses and about 2 - - -- - -weekend with Mrs. Hazel Bryan, of Syracuse were
Ohio.
10·22-tfc 5946 or 882.3219.
acres of land . All for CASH paid for all makes and
Creditors are required to tile
Carnahan .
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
models of mobile homes. their
10-26-121c
992-2448
$21
,500.00.
cla ims with said fiduciary
Mr. and Mrs. Hollie Horner Mrs. James Reeves and Linda.
'Phone area code 614·423-9531. within four months .
------ ~---NEW
LISTING
Pomeroy, o.
4· 13-ffc
Dated this 27th day of October
or Akron · spen I the weekend Mrs. Paul Pierce and family .
For Sale
98 ACRES - Of vacant land - -- - - 1972.
.
with Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch. or Mason were recent visitors
on townsh ip road 141. most of
'
Mannino
0
.
Webster
, Judge
ONE
YOUNG
beel
cow.
weight
KOSCOT KOSMETICS . Our
Probate DiviS ion
Mr. and Mrs. Chester of Mrs. Larry Johnson and
it fenced . Producing gas well
850 lo 900 lbs .• price $225.
lal es l
is " One
Day"
Common Plea's Court,
Phone 742-4459.
with fr ee gas for one
• Air Conditioners
Simpson spent the weekend family and Geneva Shumate.
fragran ce . Others include
Meigs County. Oh lo
ON
PANTS&amp;
JEANS
11
-5-31c
residence
.
All
minerals.
" K" and The Lemon Grove.
•Awnings
1101 JO 1111 6, 13, 31
with their son and daughter-inMr. and Mrs. Steve Hag gy ,
Also new children 's products. - - - - - ' - Trailer space with electric
•·Underpinmng
law, Mr. and Mrs . Brian Canton, were weekend visitors
Ph one Helen Jane, 992·5113. REGISTERED Angus calve;; 2
and dug wel l. Asking
Simpson and children at of Mr. and Mrs . Robert
bulls of breeding age ; Erisco
We'd like to serve you.
Buy 2
$16,500.00.
TIMES FOR HOLOJNG
Complete mQblie hQm•
and Wye blood lines ; Bill
10-24-lfc
Baltimore .
..._.,.Pairs
Russell.
WE
ARE
GLAD
TO
BE
COMMON
PLEAS COURTS,
service ~ plus gigantic
Witte, Rock Springs. Ohio ;
A. D. lf73
SALES
PEOPLE
IN
THE
Ronnie Russell returned to IF THE person that Is sleallng
I
·1-PAIR
FREE
·
'display
of
mobile
homes
phone 992-2789.
It is ordered that the lerms of
COU NTY. WANT TO SEE ;always..avallable·af ... .
Fort Mead, Md. after spending
The best buy in the area.
food out of my deep freeze is
10-25-12tc
the Common ~leas Courl In the
THE PLACE GROW THEN
County of Meigs County, for the ·
hungry. If they will knock on
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
Straight kerosene is used a few days with his wife,
year 1973 be fixed as follows , to .·
LIST
WITH
US
.
DON'T
pump
your
sluggish
MILLER
my
d.
o
or
I
will
give
it
to
them
.
whole family: Save Oneas fuel by commercial jet Nancy, and daughter, also his
wit: On the lst day of January,
tank
.
Get
Klean
-Emseptic
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
They
won
't
have
to
steal
it.
Third.
aircraft.
.
the 1st day of May and the
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
AII Septic Tank Cleaner.
[ MOBIU HOME$] and
Mrs. James Mash
ASSOCIATE
day
of September and the
Jrd
'1'..
POMEROY
Landmark Farm Bureau ,
Russell .
ll -6·3fc
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
said terms of said court begin at
1220
Washington
Blvd.
""'
Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr
..
Pomeroy.
-:-::::,-,--.,-,:c---..,.
10 :00 o'clock A.M.
992-3325
'423-7521
BE~PRE, D.
Phone 992,2181
NEW Improved "Zippies,'' lhe
ll -3-3tc
John c . Bane

Pomeroy Motor .co. · ~

i

r

'

&amp;

•

L

.\ .

10-The D'dily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Nov. 6, 1972 ·

•

-o

'b't.L PROe.'L'/
U: GITTif.l' A
OFFER ANY

::::»f&gt;,DIE HAWKINS
WAS Tl-lE DAUGHTER
OFTHEFIRST

~'/NOW-

AH 1-\AIN'T GOT ONE
't'E.T. LOOKS t.l KE
'fO'LU-\A\IE ME ON
'fORE HANDS FO'

TH' RESTO' 'ltlRE

MAYOR OF

NATCI-\ERAL LIFE!!

DOG PATCH-

t

••r..

.'

'
'
''

I

..

•
'

.

''
'
•'

j
•
:

~
~·

~·.
~

~

~
:'
...

,.'
'

MR. M'IRT, REN PLATT .
JUST SAILED BY AND ....
OKAY, I'LL HOLD 1HE
CALLS AND
APPOINTMENTS.

,,

,.

- -- -- - -

,.'

••
WELJ,~ETHING'S

BOUND

'10 10VME .o.L0Na i&gt;HO
CHANGii 'THAT FOR US!

Virgil B. ·
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

SHOTGUNS
RIFLES

Wolfpen

'

·-

"

AND
AMMUNITION
GRAVELY

..

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

I'
~

WINNIE 'WINKLE

SALES AND SERVICE

.

iron pil l

now

&lt;

,I,..:...----.,---::---U,:

with - - -·-'-- ' -

------

..-

"DADDV" SICK
... AN' '""' ...,

.
CLELAND·
RtALTY
'··

. 608 E. Main •

Pomeroy ,.

washer, air·condlfion'er and ·
ott)er extras included; ex·

1'h STORY BRICK
SYRACUSE - 4 B.R. New
bath, utility, kitchen ha s
din ing bar, NEW F.A.G.
furnace, air cond.

Roofed

patio. porch, 2 level lois,
near school. Asking $17,900.
TRAILER SETUP ·
RURAL - 10 ACRES ..:_
wafer. septic, patio, dug
basement with 3300 tile
blocks, cabin, Natural gas

return to Mrs. Lorena Dunn,
95 Pearl St ,, Middleport.

60&gt;12 GREGORY mobile home,
2 bedrooms, froht kitchen, on
88 x 200 lot, with outbuilding,
• available Immediately;
conlact Gene Hudson, Racine,
0. or phone 949-3334.
ll -3-3fc

'

DICK TRACY

play- .
wright
13. Senorita 's

name

box

16..Girl's
name
17. Express·

ing feel ing
19. Sheep

'-1\C.KEl-... WAWT ANlCKa ...

(C 1972 Kinl' F.. t11rn Syndicate, Inc:.)

38. Monthly
disbursement
39.Ciassy
behavior
40. Greek
river

U~~~eramble lhete l'our Jumblu,
one le\ter tq each equm, to
forlll four ordlnar1 worda.

DOWN
t. Muck and
mire

Yesterday's Answer
2.Summer
U . Literacy
8. Reach
hat
musketeer
9. Former
3. Among.
25. Conse;
·name of
one's 1peers
quem:e
Angola's
(collO&lt;I .)
26. Savoircapllal
{3 wds.)
~ 1. Campaign
27. Levant
4. Dulfer's
29. Greek
15.-of
item
Island
paradise
5.Sierra-,
30. Gossipy
18. Rubber·
Africa
necldng
womart,
6. Written
Yiddish
time
letter
style
Zl. Receive
7. Involved
35.
Femme
in a courtwag eo
36. Refrain
ship (2
syllable
2:1. Debark
wds.)

20. Worship
21. Sicilian
volcano
22. Rumi·

J

•11 Capacity
Martag
Autorn•tlcs

2 speed operation
Chol ce. of
temps .
A,u o:
.wat -e r
.levet
control.
l-Int· ·
F liter or Power '
Fin AQitator . · '
·

••f•;..

NYOME

UNDOB

I

IEMFONT

I

KIJ I I I

. I (J I I
GANDI/.
~
I I I

I
tr1=:::Pritl~tt~•~v~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~•;_::~1 "( XI I I r
~

nant's

food
Indo·Chl·
nese I an·
guage
U . "LOve" in
Tampico
28. City iri
North
.
Dakota
. Z8. Gypsy
29, Food
~3.

l

~T ANICI&lt;ft.... \IIAIIT A

Yesterday's CrypiO&lt;Iuole: IT IS TRUE THAT HUMILITY
IS HARD TO COME BY. BUT SOME OF US HAVE NO
CHOICE.- ARNDLD GLASGOW

..

disease

"

COSJUM.E jewelry, round earrln~, yellow gold; return to
Shoe Bo&gt;c for reward; 'sen. ·
flmental value.
.
11·5-2tc

12. " Picnic"

1t. - Tse·
tung
15. Storage

- WMP0/13~

WHITE .FACE Hereford calf In
Sllversvllle area ; Phone 643·
2145, L. Glusencamp If found .
1t-5,5tc

.

.

.

Now arran1e the circled lettera
to form the surprlte anower, aa
ouueated by thubo•ecartoon.

(Antwe.:. tomorrow)

I

Jumblno HUMAN TIITY ltATION PINCIL

:lalurd•r'•

·

A.r~~~wtrl ·u.cuuld connecl ut

I)()CTO~,

lng plant
31. Electrical
term
32. Disen·
cumber
33. Attach
34. Just about
.• enough
38.1n those
.days
37. Cong~ni·
tal

.,
.eitla dttJI ll.lomanf -

"US.HII"

f!OWEI'E~. 1'VE COM£ TO 5Ef '(OV

'IOII'RE M&lt;(

process·

~

SIR,

AND 1 ~fi;f'ECf
I/OV ...

6ECAV5E I HAVE To KNOW WIH

I(OV AND THE SCII:Xll.(!(lMD
MNNED "THE ~~~ 9VNN'I lii'JNNtE5
FREAK OUT'F~M OUR LIB~ARV...

Yo:
•C•

,,_,

· Ptrmi· P'ren .

Maytot
•
HotiOIHtat
1
Dr\oors
. :S.Urrounct clothea
' Wifh lin fit, IVIn
heat. No hot opoto,
no ovordrylng . .
Fine Mtoh Lint
Fllltr.
·
Wt Speclalhtln
MAYTAG

BLACK Scoll!sh dog in Mid·
dleport ' answers lo Amos ;
reward for safe re1urn ; pt.one

992·2420.
· · 11 -5-i&gt;tc

MUTIAND FURNITURE ·:~v~~~

For ·Rent
2 BEDROOM mobile home,
phooe Albert Hill 949-2261.
'
.11.6-6tc

741-4111
I

I

rod

like aI*SOfi.

ll -l-6tc

ll!_~.:..J.;l ~~·~5. Licit
~IM"IIllllill 10. Bowling
alley
It. Spanish
explorer

We talk·to JOU

ON YOUR _DIAL

--,r--:==-;

ACROSS
1. Barbecue

Judge of Common
Pleas Court ,
Meigs COunty, Ohio

c.ellent condition; phooe 992·
7387 or 985·3565. ll·3-6tp

\IJNIT A
!Jim!-..

by THOMAS JOSEPH

8 , "· COMPLETELY fur .1
nis hed, 2 bedrooms, Inside
bath, kitchen, living room and 1101 30, nn.6, t3. 3t
TV, $800 call or coolacl Larry
Hubbard, Syracuse. Ohio 992·. 1'"-"''-,---,.....-~-f'lo
3364.
ll -3-6tc \
-19_7_0_ M_O_B
_ I_L_E_H
_o_m_e_wilh 1 /

.

1,\J\J SOUND Ll I({; ,~o.
6!WI&lt;e~ ~?WJRD!

FIRST IT'€.
THAT WORD
THAT MAKES

'

VItamin C. Nelson Drug .
MIXED hay ; 1956 Ford pickup, COAL. Limestone, E.celsior
11 ·6-2tp
'" ton, $150 ; Allis Chalmers
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
tractor with plows and
Pomeroy. Phooe 992-3891 .
-=---=-=-=~-:-:-::­
PUREBRED SALE : Wesl
culti vators, 5600 ; phone 9494-12-tfc
3746 .
Virginia Polled Herefore 2nd
.~::-:-::-:-:---::--:annual fall sale on November
11 -3-3tc JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
10, 1972 starling at 6:30 EST - - - - - - - - Sewing Machine. Will sell for
Friday even1119 at the Delmar '65 PONTIAC Catalina, good small balance of $36.21 or
Pursley Farm in Ripley, 1 condition, new paint job : al•o paymenls may be arrahged.
mile from 1-77. Selling 9 bulls
71 Honda 350 chopper, plus Phone 992-5331.
and 39 hellers .
e.tras; phone 742-5943.
9-7·tfc
ll -6-41c
11 -J.Jic - - - - - - - - ---:-:::---- - ----,;---- - - -SCH NAUZER puppies, AKC,
REDl.JCE safe and last with 8 TRACK STEREO, frelghl
Salt &amp; Pepper, ears choooed.
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
damaged, in beautiful walnut
wormed and shots; healthy
"water pills,'' Nelsoo Drug .
console. Will sell for $101.50 or $85 ; phone Coolville 667-6214.
11 ·6·21p
pay Sl.50per week. Phone 992·
ll -5·1_2tp
5331."
9-7-tfc
Lost
CHOCOLATE brown billfold, ::-:-::::-::---~
Real Estate For Sale
gold clasp oo front : contai ns POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992pi.ctures and other valuable
5443.
.
Items; lost in lower Mid·
8-lS·tfc
dleport; anyone finding ·

BUT I ())(.'I

. ,•

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

great

tJ0UJ SlOP t&gt;.S\&lt;1~! ...

I

'

nokiGr•f•·

Rutlllld ' . '
. ,,

~~~------~----~~~--~------~._·------~~--~--~~----~------~------~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR '
Is LONGFELLOW
, One letter simply stands for another. In this ~ample A Is
•· uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fllrm~tlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlfterent.
\
CBYrrOQpOTES
DNQLRtJV
ACCR
PO

PI

LV

PRE

LZLOPO~ NR

CWNTJL VLRY

PQUPSV
NH

BPV

UPf ~ PLZCE

•

UPT .-ZPYi•'i :(/''Sf:.JNQL

I .

�•

12:--~he-~ SenUnel, Mlddleport-Ptinero_y! 0., Nov, &amp;, 1972

Ceci1ia Goett Died·~urday
Mra. Cecilia Wippel 'Goett,
531 died unexpectedly Saturday
afternoon at her home, 106
· ., Union Ave., ·pomeroy. The
daughter of the late Albert and
Mary Fugate Wippel, she was
also preceded in death by a
sister, Margaret-Cosier.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
John Wayne in

"THE COWBOYS"

GP

Colorcar1oon: Invitation ·

Adults: $1.50 Children : 75c
Show Starts 1 P.M.

A member of the Sacred
Heart Church and the Catholic
Women's Club, Pom~roy, M~s .
Goetl is survived. by her
husband, Jobn S. Goett, Jr.; a
son, · Thomas S. Goett,
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews. Funeral services
will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday
at the Sacred Hearl Church
with the Rev. Father Bernard
Kracjovic officiating. Friends
may call at th.e Ewing Funeral
Home anytime." Burial will be ·
in Sacred Heart Cemetery.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
A meeting of the Eastern
Athletic Boosters will be held
at 8 p. m. Tuesday at the high
school. Video tape will be
discussed and voted upon.

·.··-···-:-::.···..·.·:·... :.

Rex Argahrite age 76, dies
REEDSVILLE - Rex D.
Argabrite, Sr., 76, Reedsville
· Route I, . died Satutilay afternoon at Veterans Memorial
~ospi lal following ,an extended
' illness.
Mr. Argabrite was born at
Spencer, W. Va., the son Or the
late Floyd and Fairlena Lowe
Argabrite. He was also
preceded in death by his first
wife,
Bessie
Spencer
Argabrite; a son, a daughter,
two brothers, and lour sisters.
Mr. Argabrite, a retired
employe of the Ohio Research
Center in Wooster, also had
worked in Akron and Rittman
several years. He was a

member ol the Spencer
Methodist Church. ·
$urviving are. his wife, Cora
Bailey Arg&lt;tliri te; six . sons,
John L. of Belpre; Russell R.,
Norfolk, Va.; William F. of
Kingston, Md.; Clarence K. of
Marietta; Stanley D. ol
Wooster, and Rex, Jr., .at
home; 19 grandchildren, two
great-grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
White Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robert Wyatt~ officiating.
Burial will be In the Reedsville
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and' from 7 to 9 p. m. today.

:

.

.

Died on Sunday

Bradley Meek, 95, Parkersburg, formerly of Frost
(Meigs County, Ohio J was
pronounced dead on arrival at
the St. Joseph Hospital here
Sunday afternoon .
Mr. Meek was born in Athens
County, son of the late Nancy
Johnson and Lewis Van Buren
Meek. He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Annabelle, in
1910, and four brothers.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Rose officiating. Burial will be
in Coolville. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 3 p.
m. Tuesday. Mr. Meek was a
member of the Coolville United
Methodist Church.

••

4 Copter

crewmen

killed
SAIGON (UP I) - Four
American helicopter crewmen
were killed and another was
wounded in clashes with
Communist troops who shot
down three U. S. helicopters
Sunday below Da Nang, field
reports said.ltwas the highest
American death toll in recent
months in dir.,ct combat with
the Communista.
A crash last Tuesday of a
CH41 Chinook helicopter in the
Meko•Jg Delta took 22
American lives, but U. S. of. ,
ficials have never announced
an official cause. A heat- '
seeking rocket is suspected.
Radio Hanoi reported ioday
aU. S. Air Force B52 bomber '
and two A7 Corsair jet fighterbombers were downed over
North Vietnam the past two
days.
A command spokesman said ·
B52s had carried out more
strikes against North Vietnam
during the past three days than
at any other time during the
entire war. Through noon
today the B52s made 32 strikes, ·
four more than the previous .
high of 28 reported Aug. 1().13.
Hanoi Radio called them '
"an nihilation raids" and
coupled the charge with a
blistering commentary
criticizing the United States for
not signing a proposed truce
agreement. The broadcasts,
monitored in Saigon, charged
"the logic of gangsters'' was
being used by America in
stalling a peace treaty while
rushing huge new arm~
shipments into South Vietnam.
1
1

If you are eighteen (18) years of age or older, and have full
rights of citizenship on November 7, 1972, you can become one of the
most important people in the country - a voter in the U. S. general
elections..
·
.
,
You can try to blame the ills of this country on the politicians
the establishment, the pressure group, or the weirdos. You haven~
right to complain if you do not vote . Do not stay on the sidelines and
let other people run your country. Get yourself fully informed and
then VOTE.
.
One vote does count!
One vote made Oliver Cromwell Lord Protector of the Commonwealth.
One vote caused Charles I to be executed.
One vote decided that Americans speak English rather than
.
German.
One vote kept Aaron Burr, later charged with treason, from
becoming President.
One vote elected Marcus Morton Governor of Massachusetts .
One vote made Texas part of the U.S.
One vote saved President Andrew Johnson from impeachment.
One vote changed France from a monarchy to a republic.
One vote admitted California, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon to
the Union.
·
On~ vote elected Rutherford B. Hayes to the· Presidency. And the

man 1n the electoral college who cast that vote was an Indiana
Congressman elected by one vote.
One vote made Adolph Hitler head of the Nazi party.
One vote saved the selective service system only 12 weeks before
Pearl Harbor.
One vote put over a thousand students into a modern school.
Yes, one vote DOES count. And if you constder ten, a hundred, or a thousand votes, it
screams a demand; for in our democracy, the
people get the kind of government they deserve.

Weekend full of
minor accidents
Pomeroy police Investigated
a wave of minor traffic accidents over the weekend.
There were no Injuries or
arrQsts in any of the accidenls
and damages were light. :A car ·
owned by Harold Grate,
Langsville, drifted Into another
parked car owned by John
Burns, Columbus, on Ci'ow's
Steak Hou·se parking lot
Sunday.
At 9:15p.m. Saturday, a car
driven by Roger Abbott,
Pomeroy, pulled from a stop
street and struck a southbound
car on Mulberry Ave. driven by
Michael Van Meter, Syracuse.
At 3 a. m. Saturday a car
driven by Earl L. &amp;ush,
Pomeroy, struck a utility pole
on Mulberry Ave.
Veterans Memorial dosptal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Mark Tillis, Pomeroy; Mary
Russell, Pomeroy; Eloise
Matson, Rutland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Carolyn Thompson, Viola
Roush, Sandra Hoffman,
Louise Yates, Georgia Smith,
Willard Clay.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Carl Sibley, Gallipolis; Ruth
Spaun, Pomeroy; Mila Hudson, Syracuse.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Mark Tillis, Gladys Taylor.
Each cell of a honeycomb
has six sides. Th~ walls are
1/BOth of an inch thick but
can support 30 times their
own weight.

I

STORM IN PHILIPPINES
MANILA (UP!) -Typhoon
Pamela plowed through the
Philippines just south of Luzon
island Sunday and moved into
the South China Sea early today
on a course roughly in the
direction of Hong Kong.
The Philippine weather
bureau placed the typhoon, with
winds of 72 miles an hour, at
about 192 miles west southwest
of Manila at 1 p.m. Em' and
said it was moving at 18 miles
an hour.
There were no immediate
reports of damage.

Taken lo HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called at 10:42 p. m. Saturday
for Carl Sibley, Gallipolis, who
became ill whlle hunting
between Langsvllle and
Dexter. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

WEDDING PLANNED
NEW YORK (UP!)
Television personality David
Frost and singer Diahann
Carroll announced plans
Sunday to marry in London
next Easter. The couple, whose
two-year off-again on-again,
romance spanned two continents, made the announcement at a news conference in the lobby Of the posh
Plaza Hotel. ,
SEEKS SUPPORT
LONDON (UP!) - Prime
Minister Edward Heath took
his battle to check soaring
inflation and faltering confidence in the pound to
Parliament and the nation
today. Parliamentary sources
predicted an immediate payprice freeze . Heath reshuffled
his cabinet Sunday in
preparation for his promised
annoUncement in Parliament
detailing government
measures to control prices and
incomes. He will address
Parliament at 10:30 a. m. EST
and appear on television five
hours later to explain his action
to the nation.

News

make between fhe time we

get out of It and the time we
hit II."

. {ss.ued A~ A Public Service By . . .

'

..

I

The Farmers Bank &amp;' Savings Co.
POMEROY. OHIO
Member of Federal R~rve Svstem .
c

"

On Frld1ys Our Dr i v~··'·• ·Window isOptn '"· m. toi p. m. (Conllnuouiirl.

$20,000 Maximunr .nsuronce t'o; Each ofpOsitor · ,

•

J I,

·

For those small home
repair lobs that should
have been done already.
visit the "F RIEND.LY
ONES" at the Pomeroy
Cement !\lock Company for
the tools and materials you
need. (Now is !he lime to
" make hay" while the sun
Is still shining I. .

DEER KILLED
Adeer was killed by a car in
an accident on Route 7 north of
county road 30 at 9:30 a.m.
today. Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's Dept. said the deer
ran into the psth of a car driven
south by Rebecca Mankin,
Pomeroy Route 3. The driver
was not injured . Property
damage was medium.
·
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature In downtOwn Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 62 degrees under
SWlny skies. '
MARRIAGE lJCENSES
Rodney Ray Sayre, 24,
Middleport, -nd ·Kathy Lynn
Boyd, 18, Racine; Stephen
Michael Oiler, 20, Middleport,
and Unda Sherrell Sue Workmart, · 20, Pomeroy; William
Thomas Bates, 18, Colwnbua,
and Peggy Pauline Priddy, 17,
Rutland; Ronald Vincent
.
'
Jones, 23, Racine Route I, and
Mary Marie Bradshaw, 17,
Pomeroy.

broadcast also reported a Joint
ml!t!ting of two major Viet
Cong political arms that caDed
for stepped-up war ln South
Vietnam.
The National Liberation
Front (NFL) and the Alliance
of National Democratic and
Pea.ce Forces concluded that
"the
development
of
revolutionary warfare cannot
be stopped," Radio Hanoi said.
The joint 1:9nference called
on the United Statea to sign the
draft pea.ce treaty, but warned
the Viet Cong were )repared to
continue !ightiilg ''to complete
victory" If necessary.
Radio Slilgon said today the
Souih Vietnamese people "oppose a shameful peace agreement, a nonguaranteed cea~~&amp;­
flre and any form of coalition
with the Communists."
The giwernment radio said ln
a second broadcast that South
Vietnam's ''resaonsble . peace
stand ...has remained unchanged. The passive attitude
of Hanoi to (this stand) has
cyeated doubts ln the public
mind about the slneerity and
honesty of the Communists ln
implementing not only~ cea~~&amp;­
flreagreementbutabo!orany
solution for the Vietnam war."
Jn Washington, Rogers characterized as "Irresponsible"
contentions by Sen. George S.
McGovern that President Nixon's administration Is only
pretending the war Is near a
settlement.
As to the nearness of a settlement, &amp;gers said, ''I think
It wlll be several weeks.
Whether it runs Into more than
that I am not sure. But I think It
Is quite possible we will have
one, as I say ln the near I
future."
As to McGovern's suggestion
that Nixon had practiced
"cruel deception" regarding
the peace settlement, &amp;gers
said, " ...1think that charge by
Mr. McGovern was very
irresponsible, and I think it
shows it was an act of
desperation ln the final days of
the campaign."
·

.

•••

in Briefs

First Family will v~te
in Califorftia, fly, to

.

appeal for peace plan~
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
·( UP!) -President Nixon
awaited a landslide victory
today, saying the Vietnam War
is ahnost over bot appealing to
voters to "sef'K( a message" to
Hanoi that the nation stands
behind his demand for "peace
With honor" ln Southeast Asia.
Nixon continued campaigning on election day itself
buying radio· time around th~
nation for replays of his "look
to the future" address.
The President and Mrs.
Nixon were to cast their ballots
at the Concordia Avenue
Elementary School on Avenida
del Presidente-named in his
honor-c-two blocks from the
Western White House.
They were to vote at 10 a.m.
Em'.
The Nil&lt;ons planned to return
to Washington after voting,
apparently calm and confident
that the massive victory
predicted by the pollsters
would he theirs tonight.
Mrs. Nixon's Comment
"We're not calling the movers yet," was Mrs. Nixon's
comment.
Nixon addressed the nation
on television on the eve of !he
election, repeating his
assurances
that
a
breakthrough had been
achieved in the peace talks
with the North Vietnamese
government "which will lead to
peace."
"There are some details that
we are Insisting still be worked
out," he said. "We insist ·
because we want to be sure
that this will be not simply a
temporary peace, but a peace
that will last.
"But I am completely con-

fident that we will soon reach
an agreement which will end
the war in Vietnam. ·
"You can help achieve that
goal," he told IIi~ nation's
voters.
"By your votes.• you can send
a message to those with whom
we are negotiating, and to the
leaders of the world, that you
back the President of the
United States as he insists that
we seek peace with honor and
never peace with surrender."
Implies. Waste
Without mentioning George
McGovern by name, Nixon
implied that aU the patient
diplomacy which went into
working out an agreement with
Hanoi to end the fighting,
return prisoners and provide
for a post-war government ln
the South Vietnam would go to
waste if McGovern won the
election.
Reporters have not seen
Nixon since he rang down the
curtain on his public campaigning Friday night but his
mood was described as "calm
and positive" by his
spokesman:
His strategists mostly fear
voter apathy.
The President and Mrs.
Nixon were looking forward to
a celebration dinner tonight
With their daughters Tricla Cox
and Julie Eisenhower, who are
voting on the East Coast. Their
husbands,· Edward Finch Cox
and Lt. David Eisenhower also
will be on hand.
Late . ln tbe evening, the
presidential entourage will
drive to the Shoreham Hotelln
Washington to thank campaign
supporters.

VOL XXV NO. 144

TOKYO- JAP~E POlJCE DISGUISED as airport
workers today overpowered and subdued a balding, 47-year&lt;&gt;id
Japanese who hijacked a domestic airliner and held 126 persons
hostage for eight hours at Tokyo International Airport with a
demand for $2 mlllion ransom and a fllghtto Cuba. He tolcl pollee
he was Tatsuji Nakaoka, 47, who left Japan ln September,1971, to
reside ln the United States. Nakaoka said his wife, Takeilo,llves
ln Los Angeles.
The daylong drama, watched by milllona over television,
halted air traffic Into the world's largest city. The hijacker seized
a short range Boeing 'l'r1 and then demanded an Intercontinental
DC8 for the flight to Cuba. It was the transfer that led to his
Wldoing. Polic;e hid aboard the DC8 and subdued Nakaoka as
darkness feU over the smog blanketed airport.
DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL candidate Sen. George McGovern Is heading for "a crushing defeat
in Ohio," according to a poll conducted by Ohio's largest newspaper, the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The resulls of the poll, published Sunday, show President
Nixon has 54 pet. of the vote, McGovern has 33.7 pet., American
Party candidate Rep. John Sclunitz .3pet. and Communist Party
candidate Gus Hall only .I pet. Another 11.9 pet, of the l,:m
r~glstered voters questioned said they were silii undecided.

.

'

.

HeadquarteB For
H~nes
r

'.

...

UNDERWEAR
Ptclured is the new Henn Thermal
"shirt and drawers made of 50 per:
cent Kodel and 50 percent Cotton.
- Alr·pockels seal In warmth • ..,, out
cold, shrink resistant, easily--·
washed, . heat resistant, elastic
waistband. Sizes small, ·medium,
large, ·e•fra large and e•tra, extra
large.
Be sure to see all the other styles of
Hanes undet .,.ar for men and boys
In the mons department, 1st floorT-shlrts, briefs, union suits, mid
length shorts, athi.Uc shim,-·-.
stoevelou llndershlrts. 5oe the new
calor undlo ,...., In illllk tap, briefs,
tee shirts, lfhtellc shirts. You'll find
a complete stlldlon of style lnd
·you'll find evwy llzt.

..•

. ;.?mt;-;~~.:.:f&gt;Je w W 'lW c®'B~m: ·••·. ,

By United Preas tnlernatiooal

MIAMI - MEYER LANSKY, REPUTED financial brain of
the Wlderworld's gambling empire, was arrested by federal
agenls today when be returned to the United States from a futile
quest on two conoinents for sanctuary from American justice.
Lansky, 70, was escorted off a Braniff jetliner from South
America by Kenneth Whittaker, special agent in charge of the
Miami FBI office, and several other agenls.
He left Israel late Sunday, five days before authorities said
they would deport him if he tlid not leave voiuntarily. Lansky's
arrest ended a 12,700-mlle flight in search of a new home, where
he could find asylum outside the United States. His last bid failed
when Peru joined Israel, Switzerland, Argentina and Paraguay
In rejecting him.
·

-·

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

lnteres~

before going to nearby Sioux Nixon 'COattailsn were not
Falls for election night.
copsidered long enough to pull
Vice President Spiro T. in sufficient Republican senaAgnew and the Democratic torial and House candidates to
vice-presidential candidate, let the GOP win congressional
Sargent Shriver, both were control.
expected to vote in their home
state ol Maryland and stay in
The Republicans need a net
the Washington area.
_gain of five Senate seats and 39
Although the Nixon-Agnew House seats.
ticket was considered an
overwhelming favorite, the
Final surveys by pollsters
1

brought grim news to McGovern Monday as he completed 22 montbs of campaigning for the presidency.
The Gallup poll put him 26
points . behind Nixon; the
Harris poll showed a deficit of
24; a United Press International poll . showed
McGovern lucky \O ca..ry
(Continued on page 4)

OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

llJESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENS

or revenue share
An ordinance setting up a
fund for •·eceiving revenue
sharing money from the
Federal Government was
adopted under emergency
measures by Pomeroy council
in regular session Monday
night.
'
The new fund, known as the
"Federal General Revenue
Sharing Trust Fund" is
required under guidelin es
established in U1e new sharing
program.
Mrs. Jane Walton, clerk.,
who attended a day-long
session to study the program in
Columbus, reported to council
there are many acceptable
ways the new money may be
spent. She sa id , however, local
officials were strongly urged to
spend the nfoney so as to aid
"the most people. "
Council may spend th&lt;
n10ney received in the
remainder of 1912 as it sees lit,

as )ong as guidelines are
followed.
However, in January, 1973,
council must outline and
publish how funds received
during the year will be spent,
which cannot be deviated from.
The revenue sharing
program is of a five-year
dUJ·ation . Money must be spent
on projects which will involve
no local operating costs after
they are established, the clerk
said.
Council accepted the bid of
the Meigs Equipment Co. for a
new street department dump

truck at a price of $5,299. The
only other bid received on the
vehicle was from the Pomeroy
Motor Co. The bid of the Meigs
Equipment Co. on the International truck was the lower
bid.
A number of residents attended the council session to
discuss problems.
Fred Blaettnar, retired auto
agency owner' complained of
the narrowness of Spring Ave.
and of a slip in it beyond a
building he owns in Naylors
Run. Council had no firm idea
(ConUnued on Pag• :4)

Delegate Ball
of·Point dies

i

operator here. He had
represented Mason County in
the House since 1969, · com*1
pleting the second year of his
Presidents of Manifest course ol history. [I avoids the
second lwo-year term.
Destiny, an illuminating and dry biographica l approac h
House , Speaker Lewis Me- ·
historical election year series found in so many textbooks
Manus,. upon learning of Mr.
based on the times and lives of (studen ts and teachers, please
Ball's death, said : "He was a
the various men chosen to lead note) and instead focuses on
line legislator and a good man.
the Republic, is appearing what major issues faced each
He wlll be badly missed."
daily and Sunday in this news- President when he took office
McManus added, "It was a
paper beginning today.
and how capably he coped with
real pleasure to serve with him
Presidents of Manifest these issues.
when I was chairman of the
Destiny is written by Wallace
Election year, 1972, will
Finance Committee, because
Palterson,
author,
historian
mark
the
47th
presidential
of
his conscientious and
(
•
and consul tant in psychology election of our Republic, and
positive attitude."
and education for the Bureau of · Presidents of Manifest Destiny
A spokesman for Secretary
Auditory Education. He is the wi ll enable our readers to
of State John D. Rockefeller IV
co. founder of Creative En.' examine the course of events
also expressed deep regret :
\
te1·prises which applies and personalities that shaped
,upon learning of Mr. Ball's
EUGENE BALL
I
modern technology to the the last 196 years of our
death .
Wallace Patter son
Sam Patrick
creation
of
recorded histor·y.
Mr. Ball was owner of Gene
educational materials.
Plan on taking this
PT. PLEASANT _ Del. Ball's Restaurant and Drive.In
Palterson is currently educational look at our Eugene "Gene" Ball, D- and was a representative lor
working on an intriguing book presidential history each day, Mason, 51, seeking his third the John Hancock Insurance •
based on the extent to which an election-year exclusive term in the Stale House of Company.
each President's personality appearing only in these pages. Delegates in todats election,
He graduated from Hannan ·
affected his performance in
died of an apparent heart at- High School in the Class of 1938
office and place in history.
tack early Tuesday morning at · and from Marshall University
The series' illustrati ons
SPECIAL COMING
home.
in 1949. A member of the
MASON - Burning of leaves smaller stones are to be added are by Sam Patrick, three·lirne
The regular meeting of the
Mr . Ball, of 116 Highland Marshall Universily Alumni
in Mason today had prompted later.
winner of the Freedoms Meigs County Humane Society Ave., was dead on arrival at Association, he' was president ,
town officials to ask area
Council agreed to install a Foundation award for hi s this Thursday has been post· Pleasant Valley Hospital at of its Mason County brlmch.
residents to stop and to help streetlight by the city building. syndicated newspaper series poned unti l a week ahead, Nov. 3:40 a.m. He had a history of
Active in Masonic bodies, he
getting rid of the annual
Bernard Scarberry, water " Dur Presidents ," "Jesus 16, when a special program heart lllness, but was believed was a member of Minturn
autumn fallout in other ways. supervisor, said workmen are .Loved Them." He had had a opened to the public - to be to have recovered, and had Lodge No. 19 AF &amp; AM,
It was during a regular , installing a new 15·horsepower long career as staff artist for announced - will be given.
completed h\s third campaign member of the Franklin
meeting of the Mason Town pump at the pump house to the Los Angeles Times.
against Michael Shaw, his Commandery No. 11 Knighls
Council Monday ~yening that replace o~e which recently Pres idents of Manifest
Republican opponent.
:]'emplar, Chapter 1 of the
the problem was called to the became defective. He also Destiny,
shows
how
Rain over entire state this
Should Mr. Ball win today's Royal Arch Masons, Beni
attention of town officials. Due reported Jhat one water and presidentia l power developed afternoon. Cooler tonig ht, rain election, a successor would be Kedem Shrine at Charleston
to the hazardous smoke sewer tap have been made and •nd how the Chief Executive likely. Lows in the upper 30s named by Gov. Arch Moore . and the Pat Wilson Shrine Club
problem experienced in the town workmen have been used th•t power, both wisely and lower 40s. Cloudy, cooler
A prominent businessman, of Point Pleasant.
community
last
night, engaged
in
spreading and unwisely , to influence the tomorrow.
Mr. Ball was a restaurant
He was immediate past
residents are being requested limestone .
president of the Poinl Pleasant
to bag their leaves and place
The town and water
Kiwanis Club and was a
them next to the street where department financial reports
member of the Kiwanis Board
the town truck will make were made as follows:
of Directors. He held tnempickups Friday of this week.
Town of Mason - balance as
berships in the Loyal Order of
It was specified that this is of September 30, '$2,929.43;
A membership committee Monday , · Wed nesday and committee be formed the first the Moose Club in Point
for leaves only. No garbage is receipts, $5,028.29; expenses, was organized and Carolyn Friday from 12 to 3 and of the year to plan a work Pleasant, of the Board of
to he in 1/Je baggage.
$3,182.58; balance as of Oc- Th'omas, secretary, was em- Tuesday and Thursday from 9- schedule for the year 1973 and Directors of Pleasant Valley
It was . pointed out that tob~r 31, $4,m.l4.
ployed fuli' time beginning 12. It is located on the ground present the program to local Hospital, and was a former
several persons experienced . Water D~par(!ll~nt balance Wednesday by the Pomeroy floor of the courthouse.
~ merchanls and chamber president of the Point Pleasant
re,.Piratoiy problems due to as of September 30, $3,292.31; . Chamber of Commerce
Mrs. Thomas suggested that members.
- Mason .CoWlty Chamber of .
the heavy smoke hanging over receipts, ·$4,619.40 ; expenses, Monday following its regular the seventh and eighth grade . It also was suggested that the Commerce. He was a.member
the area.
.,
$4,374.28; balance as of Oc· . luncheon a\ the ,Meigs Inn .
cheerleaders of Meigs Jr . High Pom.eroy firemen, Cable TV or of . the: West Virginia
Councilman Richard Fowler tober 31, $3,537.52.
Named to the membership assist . Santa in distributing the telephone company be ' Restaurant Association and of
reported that materials have · Town bills will be paid in the committee were Ralph Graves, candy treats on his arrival on contacted In regard to pullipg Trinity United Methodist
been purchased for the .amount of $1,394.44 and water Bob Jacobs and Henry Cleland . . Thursday, Nov. 30, which is the up Chrisimas lighting.
'
Church.
·
remodeling of the city building department bills in the amount Mrs. Thomas, who was hired kickoff of the annual Christmas
Attending were Jack Kerr, ' A Navy veteran of World
and that brick work sho'!Jd of $2,745.83. ·
for ,three hours per day, five season promotion.
president; N. w. compton, War 1), ,he belonged to. the
begin t~is week. It was
MayorRoyHarlesspresided, days a week, was placed on a·
The, chamber, in other Ingels; Dennis Keney, Bill . American Legion Point
disc~o~d that · to dl!ll! ap- assisted -by Recorder Gary full time basis for two weeks to business, voted,to purchase the Grueser, Virgil Teaford, Ralph Pleasant Post No. 23.
·proximately 171 tons of. Gibbs with Councihnen Joe assist -the 'memoorship com- annual tickets for the ''tiold- Graves, Henry Cleland, Bob - He was porn Jillre 6, 1921 in
limestone have been put on ' Jone;, · Richard Fowler; mittee and in Christmas Star Christmas Give-A.way" Jacobs, Ted Re,ed, Louis Mason County, a son of Roy
alleys. All alleys have been Russell Barton and Thomas promotion work.
from Bob Jacobs.
Osoorne, Beulah Jones and and Myrtia Rowsey a.JI of
covered with l•rge stones and Layton present.
The Chmllber office is Open
Earl Jn~ds suggested a Carolyn Thomas.
(Continued on page 10)

Presidential series begins today

1

4 .

1

Leaf burning in
Mason now no-no

BONN - EAST .AND WEST GERMAN envoys completed
nesotiaUons Monday night on a treaty governing relations
between the two countries and said a draft agreement would go
to their respective governments today for approval.
The Bonn government was announcing today whether it
found the treaty ready for initiailiog or whether it should go back
for further negotiations. "I would say the chances are :i0-50,"
said deputy goverrunent spokesman Ruredlger von Wechmar. ·
The decisive day for the treaty followed five months of
negotiation ln Berlin between State Secretaries Egon Bahr of
West Germany and Michael Kohl of East Germany.

Weather

Cham'her commJ•ttee named

MOSCOW -THE SOVIET UNION MARKED the 55th an-niversary of lis Bolshivlk Revolution today by ,parading wellknown military hardware and declaring that International
tensions are relaxing. The !Oornlnute military display o! ·rockets,
· tanks inti guns through Red Sq~ produ~ no surprises. The
oratory from the tribune of Lenin's mawtOieum was mild comP!Ired to psst years and did not assail the United ,States or China

name. .

vote in a San Clemente, Calif.,
schoolhouse when the polls
open at 7 a.m. He then was
scheduled to fly lo Washington .
-arriving late in the afternoon
-and watch the returns.
McGovern, the 5().year&lt;&gt;ld
South Dakota senator who
broke out of obscurity to win
the Democratic presidential
nomination, planned to vote at
his home. Mitchell. S.D..

r;:;:;::;~:~,~~&gt;.&gt;,::::;::::~~:::::.&lt;~~,~~)~~,~~:::~~::::::::::~::::::::::~:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::m:i::::::::::::::::i::::::i::::::::::::i:::::::::~~:::~i.::~;;::::~:&gt;,:;~~

MOSCOW - TilE SOVIET UNION marked the 55th anniversary of its Bolshevik Revolution today with a traditional
military parade through Red Square and a pledge to defend the
"great gains of socialism" with its armed might.
Western military experts who viewed several dress
rehearsals of the parade past the Lenin mausoleum said they
expected little new ln the roUpast of tanks, gWls and missiles. It
is the IOOth such parade since the revolution.
Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko, in an order&lt;&gt;f-the.&lt;Jay
to his troops reported by the Tass news agency, said the Commoolst party and the government paid particular attention to
Increasing the nation's defensive capacity and strengthenning its
army and navy.

b).

.

FIRST SALE - Walter Grueser of Pomeroy purchased the fir.lt two tickets sold for the
"Fall Follies" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association when they went on sale Monday afternoon
from Rose Sisson at the New York Clothing House. Mrs. Robert Lewis, Pomeroy, is advance
ticket sales chairman for the production sponsored by the Meigs High School Band Boosters to
be stagedat8p.m., Friday, Nov. 24. Advance tickets are being sold at $1 each while admission
at the door on show night will be $1.25. Tickets may be purchased from Nelson's Drugs, Swisher
and Lohse DrUgs and !he New York ClothinS HOUS! )!I Pomeroy; Villagei\lij~macy, Dutton
Drugs and Bahr Clothier in Middleport, and at the Rutland Furniture Store. Grueser has
purchased the first tickets to the annual presentation the past two years. Mrs. Ronald
Williams, Rutland, is in charge of ticket sales in the.western areas of the county.

SAIGON- AU. S. FILL SWING-WIN JET vanished early
today over North Vietnam, the third of the controversial $15
million planes lost since they returned to action in Indochina
Sept. 28 for the first time in four years.
It was the second U. S. jet lost over North Vietnam in' 24
hours. AU. S. Navy A7 Corsair was downed by "probable antiaircraft lire" Monday 120 miles south of Hunoi, the U: S.
COIIIIIUind said. Its pilot Is missing. The missing Fill was Oylng
fast and low on a solo ''penetration mission" - meaning it was
supposed to be over the target before North Vietnamese air
defense could detect it - when It ~lsappeared, military sources
said. Both cyewmen were missing.

ELBERFELDS ·tN POMEROY

.

•

CLEVELAND -

SAIGON - A HIGHLY PLACED American civUtan source
said today that failure of the White House to keep the Defenae
Department Informed of truce taJb )rogress led to a last minute
stampede to get new weapons Into South Vietnam before a truce
went Into effect. The source said Defense Department offlclals
apparently had not been Informed of the terms of the proposed
agreement unW it was ready for slgning. When they learned it
would ban Introduction of any new or addlU911ai weapons and
)rovide only for replacement of existing weapona ln the South
Vietnamese army, they protested.
At that point, the stampede begsn to bring ln new weapons
)rior to signing of an accord. In Washington, the Defenae
Department annoooced that It was "borrowing" F~ Freedom
Fighter jet altack bombers from Iran, Taiwan and South·Korea
for the South V.ietnameae Air Force.

'

an

Pomeroy ready

~.t.

seltlement.

-·

· Devoted To The

.
B
.
ews•• ln rre1sJ

. .. .

ectin

WASHINGTON (UP!)
the 18-to-2J'year&lt;&gt;lds.
Richard M. Nixon was rated a
The National Weather
prohibitive favorite to defeat Service predicted mild temGeorgeS. McGovern today and peratures throughout most of
win a second term in what he the nation. There may be
called the "clearest choice" in showers over a third of U1e
a century · ol presidential country but no winterlike
elections.
storms that could cui the voter
An estimated 60 to 85 million turnout.
Americans were expected to
Staying overnight in the
vote, including, for the first Western White House, Nixon
time in a presidential election, planned to get up early and

Capital tonight; makes

(Continued from Page I)

.

" Hay Is something we must

·resz ent

Hanoi claiming: 'I:~ul'

FOLLIES' CHANGE
Due. to the use ol the
Pomeroy Elementary School
as · a voting location, By Uolted Press. International 'oThiS act of war runs counter
Tuesday's rehearsal of the . North Vietnam said today to the spirit and conteols of !he
· "Fall Follies" has been the U.S. strengthening of South complete provlsioruJ of the
cancelled, According to the Vietnamese armed forces en- agreement which should have
revised schedule, aU dance dangers any peace agreement been signed by now," the of.
lines will rehearse at the because it is In violation of the flcial North Vietnamese radio
school this eveniug begin- spirit of the accord, ''which .said.
ning with ihe fourth grade should have been signed by · The broadcast came one day
after Secretary of State WU- '
group at 6:30 p. m. On now."
Wednesday evening, a
The Viet Cong again ap. liam P. &amp;gers said peace
program to be' glveo at the pealed for the United Statea to negotiations would resume
Soil and Water District sign the agreement bot llltid ll . shortly, but ex)ressed caution
meeting on Thursday wlU be was ready otherwise to fight · that the war Itself would end
· rehearsed at 6:30 p. m. All on.
before several more weeks.
The
North
Vietnamese
.
s
tate-.
The Engllsh~anguage Hlllloi
dancers wlll rehearse from 7
to 8 and all soloists are to ment,was broadcast by Radio
report irom 8 to 9 p. m. at the Hanoi and heard ln Saigon. It
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Pomeroy
Elementary said the U.S. buildup of Saigon
The Middleport E-R squad
building.
forces "also threatens . the answered a call to North
breaking of the agreement." Second St. at 10:42 a. m.
Sunday for Kimberly Lewis, 1~.
who was ill and ruoniog a high
Bradley Meek, 95
. temperature. She was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

'

~·

"'11tanks to the principled and Oexible foreign 'policy of the
SoViet Union and other Socilllist states, as well as to the vigorous
activities of pntgresslve forces of the world, some .relaxation of
_,-..intem.tloaal tension has been- ~!Uevta Of J!tte/' said Defense
Minllter ~ Anchl A. Grechko.
"How;;a, 1111 lte imperlalilt force~ are atiU active ln
(CGrltinued on page 10)

EIBERfEIIIIN POIEIJY·'
\

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