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                  <text>· Block-to--Pentagon Papers
by high court

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AMANDA · PANDA

by.
Course &amp; Mill.i e
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earzn.

WlTH ANTL.CRS

WIDE.. .•.

' MH lS..FOR OVR MERR'/~Go-.

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DIREC'OORS TAKE SHOVELS - Pomeroy National
Bank directors took shovels at groundbreaking ceremonies
Saturday in Tuppers Plains where a new branch is to be
constructed. From the left are Edison Hobstetter, president
and director; Manning Webster, Eldon Weeks, AHred
Elberfeld, Roger Morgan and Warren Pickens. Despite
temperatures in the low 40s, over 400 persons lined a
sidewalk to observe the ceremonies. Edison HobsteUer,

president of the bank, presiding, introduced Car!Barnbill, c.
0. Newland, Lindsey Lyons and Larry Millhone of the
Tuppers Plains area. Their remarks emphasized the
progressive step by the .Pomeroy National Bank in con~
structing the new branch. Hobstetter, in his brief talk,
pledged the bank to cooperate with the Tuppers Plains area.
Invocation was by the Rev. Jacob Lehman and the
behediction by the Rev. Eldon Blake. The Eastern High
School Band entertained.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court today opened
the way for an early resump.
lion of the trial· of Daniel
Ells berg and Anthony J. Russo
Jr., under indictment in Los
. Angeles for theft of the Pentagon Papers.
The Court in a brief order
rejected their bid for an open
hearing on whether their right
to a fair trial has been impaired by government eaves·
dropping. Justice William 0.
Douglas dissented to the action .
The Justice Depariment has
acknowledged that a conversation of one of the defendants'
lawyers was overheard

through an unauthorized
wiretap . But U.S. Distric.t
Judge W. Matt Byrne Jr. and
the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
APpeals ·-after being shown
the intercept ·- ruled it had
nothing whatever to do with the
Ellsberg case.
Douglas on July 19 delayed
the trial of the two men until
their claim could be dealt with
by the high court.
Ellsberg and Russo ar~
charged with conspiracy, theft
of government property and
violations of the es{lionage act
in connection with leaking the
Vietnam papers to the press in
1971. A jury had been selected
and opening statements were

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XXV NO. 148
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1972
PHONE 992·2156
TEN CENS
-~OL.
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'

SheGotthe
Me.ssage-'

•
NOW THAtA"-1 PAl D 'YO' A

~IRO'Ri&gt;NTS,TEJ..LME

WHUT AH GOT THAT'LL
Al'TRA~ A STEADY!!

HAIN'rA'BOY
INDOGPATCH
WOULDN'T GO
ANYWH.9oR TO

By United Press International
The Saigon newspaper Tin
Song, believed to reflect the
views of President Nguyen Van
Thieu, said today Thieu's
weekend discussions with
White House peace envoy Gen.
Alexander Haig "have not
made
any
progress."
American sources were more
optimistic.
The American sources sqid

,·

EVEN IR,;.
'IO'WAS
THAR--

GITSOME-

lklc. Who ....!.... In :Waoblng-

PAGEANT LINEUP- Six candidates seeking the title of Meigs County's Junior Miss and
their parents and sponsors were honored at a tea Sunday afternoon at the Trinity Church.
Above are, front row; 1-c, Debbie Stone, and Debbie Jeffers, ·Eastern High School students; and
Julia Hutchison, Meigs High School; back row, Christine Robiilson, Meigs High School, and
Sharon Drake and Lee Ann Nease, .Southern High School. The Junior Miss Pageant will be
Saturday, Nov. 18, at8 p.m. at Southern High School in Racine. Tickets may he purchased from
any contestant for $1.50 in advance and at the door the night of the pageant for $2. Sponsoring
the pageant is Meigs County Junior Misa, Inc., a non.proflt organization.

IT'SNIC~

HAVIN'A

STEADY.
IS IT NICE

&amp;EIN'
ONE?

CGS offering propane
as shortage substitute
CAPTAIN EASY

by

CrooJ~s

015VJOU~l.Y THERE: I~ OtJLY ONE

WAY TO CONVINCE: M~EE THAi M'l
N~W fi./6HT PRINCIPLE ·WO~K?I

&amp; ·Law

'

coming up when the Douglas
order was issued.
Douglas said the government
told him in oral argument that
the telephones of neither the
defendants nor their attorneys
were tapped . But one or more
. conversations of an attorney
were intercepted via a tap in
the "foreign " field, not under a
court order but only on
authorization by the attorney
general.
The appeals court held the
conversations were irrelevant
to the trial and therefore that
the defendants had no standing
to raise the issue . But Douglas

cited a 1968 Supreme Court
ruling that relevancy mwit be
determined in open court.
The lower courts did not
address themselves to the
legality of foreign intelligence
surveillance, an Issue the
Supreme Court has not
decided.
Urging the high court to deny
review, the government said
the question can be raised
again in an appeal should the
men be convicted. It said
defendants should not be
allowed to halt proceedings in
midstream as Ellsberg and
Russo have done.

Inman to talk
here Thursday

"

Devoted To The lnterf!$ts Of The Meigs-Mason Area

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Columbia Gas System,
serving Gallia and Meigs
Counties has launched a
·program to meet new requests
for retail gas service by of.
ferlng propane as a substitute
fuel until the present natural
gas shortage is overcome..
Columbia presenlly has a
complete fr~e on all new
natural gas sales because of
the unavailability of new
supplies.
John W. Partridge, Columbia
·System Chairman, said the
propane program, which will
be restricted to areas now
served natural gas by tl)e
System, will enable it to con.
tinue building profitable sales

volume during the shortage
period, while at the same time
protecting potential . new
markets for natural gas .
.Customers who Install
facilities for propane use can
convert easily to natural gas,
he said, and until such con·
version, propane will offer the
advantages of natural gas as a
clean energy source.
·
He estimated that at least
30,000 new potential natural
gas customers will be served
by propane over the next five •
years, with sales volume
growing to more than 61
million gallons annually by
1977. On a heat content basis, 61

Rep. Bow of Ohio dies
WASHINGTON (UP!)- U.
S. Rep. Frank T. Bow, R.Qhio,
died early today at Bethesda
Naval Hospital here · from
apparent heart failure. He was
71.
Bow, who earlier this year
announced he· was retiring
from the House, was to become
the United States ambassador
to Panama In January.
The . Canton.
Ohio .

Republican was first e1ecled to
the House in 1952.
Bow had been hospi tali~ed
several times in recent years
'with
heart
trouble.
Representing Stark and
Mahonlng counties, Bow was
an Ohio Northern University
graduate. He held honorary
degrees from both Ohio Northern and Mount Union
College.

Second strike was fatal
An unusual deer kill inyolvjng two cars occurred at
7:~ a.m. today on SR 143, Ray
Manley of the Meigs . County
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Sarah J. Nelson, 17, Albany,
Rt. 3, lifll traveling south when
a buck dkr ran In front of her
car was knocked to the ground.
. The deer got up, but . traveling · south driven OJ
Hayri Ablak, St. Paul, Va.,
&amp;!rUCk Inc! Jdlled it.
TberP were no personal

Injuries, but ili!mage .to the
Nelson car was medium and to
Ablak;s v~hicle heavy.
··:-:- . ::-·-:-:;..-.·.·.· ·-·.·.·.· ··.·.·.·.·.-.....·.·.

EXTENDED Otm.OOK .

Oblo' EDeacled Outlook ·-

WedDeldly lUwP Friday.
Cbaace of llbowen WedDelday cleartq Tllundly
aDd ..rtly elftdy Friday.
Daytime hiPs billie 481 ud
aJPtllme lo1ll ID tile mid .

••

:: ;;;;; Jili'i'r:I.IWWR ; ! ''ilini!Wil

million gallons of propane is
equivalent to 5.5 billion cubic
feet of' natural gas.
Part of the propane supply
will te obtained from System
sources but the major part will
be obtained from non-affiliated
companies under long-term
supply contracts.
The availability of propane
for industrial use will make it
possible for companies that
need gas as an energy source in
processing to carry for ward
new building or expansion
plans that had been cut back
because of the natural gas
shortage, Partridge said.
For resldenlial use,
Columbia will supply
propane lo unconnected
single family residences in
areas already piped for gas
or to· new mulli-unil
developments where
propane can be delivered
from a central storage
facility, Partridge said.
Delivery
mains
and
customer service lines In
such developments will be
installed to meet standards
for natural gas service, he
added.
Partridge said tjlat while for
residential use propane. wiD
cost roughly twice as much as
natural gas on a heat content
basis, it will be less expensive
then energy for an all~lectric
house and about a breidi-even
for a combination pf oil and
· electriCity for residential
energy needs . . He .estimated
that the same would hold ttue
for most commercial and in. dustriai use.
· System propane sales in Ohio
will be handled by Columbia
Hydrocarbon Corp.
ln·
formation on propane can . be
Obtained by contacting any
,Columbia Gas of Ohio or Ohio
Valley Gas Co. office.

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ton today from Seoul, is
carrying a letter for President
Nixon giving Nixon conditional
•

Deer hit
car front
Heavy damage was caused
to the right front of a car driven
by Mrs. Ruth Powers, Mid·
dleport, on Pomeroy's East
Main St. at 3:28 p.m. Sunday
when a deer ran into the side of
her vehicle. The deer was
killed.
Mrs. Powers was not injured,
Pomeroy police reported.
Moderate damage was
reported to two cars in an
accident near ·the PomeroyMason Bridge early today.
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Roy Thomas Scar·
berry, New Haven, W. Va.,
coming off the bridge skidded
when Scarberry applied
brakes . The vehicle went
across the road and struck a
parked car owned by Murl
Shain, Fredericktown, Pa .,
parked at the Shamrock Motel.
Scarberry was cited to mayor's
court on a reckless operation
rharge.

BILL CHANEY

approval to sign an agreement Song (Live News) said rumors
with North Vietnam that would about the signing of a peace
permit the return of U.S. treaty soon are groundless
prisoners of war and let South because the discussions beVietnam settle its differences tween the Vietnamese and
later.
Americans have not ended yet.
The sources said Thieu told The newspaper quoted a source
Nixon the American president on the South VIetnamese
could go ahead and work out a National SecuritY Council.
settlement with the Commu·
"The discussions between
nists to help free American the Republic of Vietnam and
l!l'isoners of war as IQfig as it emissary ~lexander Hali in
il.lt!· no\ eol1l!&gt;¥omlae l!ou\1\ !he - llaya lllM 110! ~~
Vietnam's position.
any progress," Tin Song said
There have been persistent its source reported.
reports that Dr. Henry A.
Kissinger, Nixon's No. I
security adviser would return
to Paris soon for a "last" round
of negotiations with the North
Vietnamese, but it was
believed he would await Haig's
return . Kissinger spent a
The official count of the Nov.
private weekend in New York 7 election was completed
attending the theater and a Saturday by the Meigs County
footbaU game.
Board of Elections with only
Haig was reporting today to minor changes noted .
Nixon at Camp David. Saigon
The board did poini' out
repor:ts called the Haig·Thieu following the official count that
talks ·'cordial and con- a total of 8,819 votes were cast
slructive"
but
there instead of the 8,818listed In the
was nothjng to indicate unofricial count. In the Collins·
Haig had persuaded Thieu ." Halliday race, the board noted
to agree to North Viet. that Collins lost five votes in
namese troops remaining in the official count going from
South Vietnam or to any 3,968, unofficial, to 3,963 while
agreement that smacked of a Halliday lost II votes dropping
cnalitlon with the Communists. from the 4,202 unofficial figure
The White House remained to 4,191.
optimistic that "peace is at
hand" \lut continued to decline
all conunent on progress in
Cloudy today with showers
reaching a settlement. The
likely
west, overspreading
White House spokesman
specifically declined to say entire state by evening. Highs
whether there . might be in the mid 40s to the lower 50s.
separate agreements as Rain tonight and Tuesday.
L&lt;Jws tonight in the 40s. Highs
reported in Saigon.
Tuesday
in the upper 40s to the
The Saigon newspaper Tin
mid 50s.

Minor changes
fmmd in count

Weather

ANDY VAUGHAN .

CHUCK FAULK

ALL LEAGUE HONORS -Five Meigs High School Marauder footbaU
play~ were wted honors SWlday at Jacbon, three on the. All Star squad,
and 2 lwnorably mentioned; All aeruors, they are end Bill Chaney, quar·
terback Andy Vaughan and I'UIIIdng back Clllck Faulk, All League, and Lou
McKinney, guard, and Dallas Weber, fuUback, honorable mention,,These

Jack Inman, Jr., director of
the Great La·kes Regional
Office of the Humane Society of
theUnitedstates,willbeguest
speaker at a meeting of the
Meigs County Humane Society
to be held at8p.m. Thursday at
the Meigs Inn. The publtc is
welcome .·
Inman has spent the past
year speaking to various
groups and assisting in the
implementation of obje~tives
of the U. S. Humane Society.
He will stress the Importance
of animal control, shelters and
placement.
In announcing the meeting,
and urging attendance by the
public, Mrs. Clinton Fisher
reports that annually 35 million
puppies and 50 million kittens
are born in this country, and
thai today there are 90 million
. dogs and cats but only 50
million families to take care of
them.
In his talk Inman will stress
what can be done to reduce the

Three accidents investigated
over the weekend by the Meigs
Sheriff's Dept. put only one
person in the hospital, and he
for only treatment of minor
injuries.
At 2:15 p.m. Saturday on
county road 26, four mllas
north of Pomeroy at the in.
tersection of 26 and SR 7, John
William Easterday, Racine,
Rt. 1, and Linda F. Lipscomb,
Syracuse, were both stopwd
when Easterday backed up his
truck and .struck Lipscomb's
car .
There was damage to the
radiator and hood of the Lips.
comb car, none to the
Easterday's truck. There were
no injuries or arrests.
Sunday at 1 p.m. on U. S. 33,
about 100 feet south of the
Rosehill Road, William G.
Sevy, Catlettsburg, Ky .,
driving a freight liner was
traveling north on 33 when his
steering failed as he came into
!he curve there. The truck went
off on the right into a field.
Sevy was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy ER squad where he
was treated and released. No

WU McitiNNI:Y

JACK INMAN JR •

animal populalion and what
action can be taken to prevent
cruelty to animals. A film,
"The Animals are Crying,"
will be shown.

citation was issued. There was
heavy damage to the truck.
At 9:50 p.m. Sunday on
county road 30, five tenths of a
mile east of SR 7, Robert L.
Lewis, . Jr., Middleport, was
Ira vellng east around a curve
when a dog ran across his
front. Lewis, trying to avoid
the dog, hit his brakes, lost
control, went off the highway
on the right and struck an
embankment. The car turned
over on its side in a ditch.
There were no injuries or
citation.
$4,000 WST
Losses were estimated . at
$4,000 in a fire that ' damaged
lhe home of James Parsons,
Lincoln Hill Drive, at 8:43p.m.
Sunday. Pomeroy Fire Chief
Hem')' Werry said faulty wiring
was believed to have started
lhe fire which was confined to
the interior of the frame
structure. Damages to the
house, owned by Ron O'Donnell
of Hatfield, Ill., were set at
$3,000. There was insurance.
Damage to contents were set at
$1,000, on which !here was no
insurance.

DAlLAS WEBER

p... ycn, the squad, Us,. coaches, and the cheerleaders· w1U be honored
tomorrow evening at Meigs High at the Sinh Anooal Ro~ootball '
Banquet. Tippy Dye, athleUc director of Not1hwestem Unlvmll)&lt;', Evanston, Ill. (Pomeroy High,1933)willbe the ~peaker. See Page 3 for &amp;CCOilJII nf
All·League selections.
(PiCtures bv Grover Studi!li

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2_The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 13, 1972

ews. zn
Pteu hlltrMIItul
TOKYO· IUPI) - EMPEROR HIROHn'O FORMALLY
dissolved the 491-6eat HQUSe ol Representatives today, setting
the stage for Prem•er Kakuel Tanaka and bl8 ruling UberalDemocratic Party to seek a new mandate at premature nattonal
elections Dec. 10.
.
The emperor isstied the order oo instructions from Tanaka
and his cabinet.
Tanaka and the cabinet decided ·earlier tOday at an
emergency meeting to disSolve parliament and call elections
now In hopes of Winnjng a fresh four-yeer iilandate on ihe
strength of bl8 Pcldrig and Washington ~eles.

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Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 13,1972

rQnton

By Uolled

MIAMI (UPI) -Tlnrty~ne
jetliner crew and passengers
returned from Cuba Sunday
night to end one of the longest
aru1 m015t btzarre htjaclungs m
' history. Some of them were
bitterly cntical ~f FBI attempts to abort the ht)ackmg
with gunfll'e.
The return fltght from CUba
was made aboard another
jetliner flown to Havana after
the hiJacked Southern Atrways
plane skidded to a landmg on
bullet.rtddled tires. Three passengers were inJured jumpmg
from the crippled all'liner,
which bad crisa-&lt;:rosaed North
America while three black

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·social
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MONDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club
members and guests, 7 30
Monday mght for a demonstratiOn by the Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electric Co
home economtsl on decoratiOns
and foods for Chnstmas
Demonstrutwn to take place at
the Electrtc Co offtce

- POMEROY PTA, 7 30
Monday night at the school.
Fathers' Ntght to be observed.
Davtd Bowen's ftflh grade
flutophone group to perform.
Membership to be stressed and
a ftlm entttled "To Touch a
Child" wtll be shown
RIVERVIEW PTA Monday,
7·30 p.m at Rtvervtew
Elementary School Program
Will mclude a ftlm, "The
Animals Are Crytng" from the
Metgs County Humane SOctety
and program books wtll be
dtstrlbuted. Refreshments by
the teach~rs
REVIVAL 7:30 each evemng
through Nov 13 at Eagle Rtdge
Church wtth Charles Norrts,
evangehst Spemal slngtng by
Bon me and Buren Duncan and
the Btsaell Brothers Pubhc
IOVtted.
MEIGS Chapter 53, DA V,
regular meeting, 7·30 p m
Monday Neal Petty, 9th
dtslnct commander, wtll be
present All members urged to
llltend;
rf!.~'('~·~ ,..-.., ...,,.
~
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' SALISiit!'RV P'i'A, 'TUe~day,
7:30p.m at the school
ANNUAL Stuffmg bee of
Chrtstmas .Seals for Metgs
County Tuberculosts and
Health Assn , 9 am TUesday,
at Pomeroy Unt ted Methodtst
Church
Evangeline Mtsstonacy
SOctety Thanksgtvmg dmner at
home of Etleen Bowers, ·s 30
p m Tuesday
NON-TEACHING personnel
of SOuthern Local w1ll meet
TUesday, 7 30 p m at Southern
Htgh School m Racme
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Democrat Assn , meetmg
Tuesday, 7 30 p m., home of
Mrs Wtlliam Snouffer, Wehe
Terrace, Pomeroy
WEDNESDAY
THIRD
WEDNESDAY
Homemakers Club, Syracuse,
meetmg Wednesday at
meetmg house m Mumctpal
Park. Geneva Nolan and Linda
Ferrell, hostesses. Chrtstmas
trees to be made, Irene Parker
and Vtrgmta Salser, project
leaders Bring new or used
furnace !titers, colored egg
carton, glue and sctsaors.

hiJackers tried to collect $10
millton ransom and speak
personally with President Nixon
The hiJackers got a reported
$2 mt!Uon m ransom, which
apparently was confiscated by
Cuban officials after they
landed in Havana
The coptlot, Btlly Harold
Johnson, 37, of College City,
Ark , sa1d he was shot m the
left arm by the hiJackers after
FBI marksmen tned to
prevent the plane from takmg
off from Orlando, Fla ,
Saturday rught
A passenger, J Frank
Robmson, 47, St . Petersburg,
Fla , said "everything was
okay unltl then (the FBI
shootmg)
" "Everybndy kept hts cool
But when that happened, none
of us knew what was gomg to
happen next. They JUSt about
got us killed by domg tt."
Robmson said he heard the
ptlot say the FBI had "doublecrosaed" hun by shooting at
the plane Robmson InJUred his
leg Jumpmg from the plane m
Havana
Dr. Gale Buchanan, 35, a
professor at Auburn Umverstty
10 Alabama, satd he didn't
think the FBI shoot10g "was a
very wise dectsion Now that I
look back over it, It's frightenlOg. That's the only time I
really thought we were gomg to

die-when the FBI opened fll'e
on the plane."
The hiJackers, who remained
m Havana, were charged wtth
air ptracy by the FBI. They
were idenlifted as accused
raptsls Henry Deewtlliam
Jackson Jr , 27, and Lows
Moore, 'll, both of Detrott, and
Melv10 Charles Cale, 22, a
fugttive from a Tennessee
prtson Havana Radio sa1d the
hijackers were "apprehended"
by CUban militiamen.

grant " The plane refueled at
l.e¥mgton, Ky., and returned
to Knoxvtlle for further
ne~otiation. Then II proceeded
to Chattanooga where 11 took
aboard the alleged $2 million
ransom, seven bulletproof
vests, medical supplies artd 50
meals.

The hiJacked airliner headed
for Cuba Saturday afternoon
and landed in Havana, but took
off immedtately when the
hiJackers saw Cuban militiaThe fugttives, usmg pistols, men awaiting the plane. The
rifles and pruned hand gre- plane refueled at Key West,
nades, commandeered the Fla., requested "a vector to
atrllner over Birmmgham, Swttzerland," and flew to
Ala , about 7:20 p.m. Frtdav McCoy Air Force base at
after takmg off from Mont- Orlando where 11 landed for oil
gomery, Ala The DC9 The plane took off m a hail of
refueled at Jackson, MISS., FBI gunftre that shot away
ctrcled Detr01t whtle the several tires. The only offtctal
htjackers demanded $10 explana!ton for the shooting
milhon and then refueled and came from Orlando pollee
took on supplies at Cleveland chtef Robert Chewning, who
After circling Toronto for 90 said h18 orders were tbat "the
mmutes, the plane landed and plane was not to get off the
the hijackers rejected $500,000 ground."
m ransom flown m by SOuthern
The atrl10er circled south
Atrways offtctals and FBI Flortda while the hiJackers
agents
demanded to talk by radio with
The plane turned south to President Ntxon, who was
Knoxvtlle , Tenn , where 11 vacatiomng at Key B!licayne,
ctrcled for two hours while the Fla. Transportation Secretary
hiJackers threatened to crash John Volpe trted to talk to the
mto the Atomtc Energy Com- men but was unsuccessful. The
mission plant at Oak Rtdge, plane f10ally new to Havana
Tenn., unless they got a $10 aga10 and made an emergency
milhon "U S government land10g,

Haig's Asian trip ends
•

United Press International
The chtef atde to prestdenttal
advtser Henry A Kissmger left
for Washington late Sunday at
the end of an Astan vlstt
domtnated by three daxs of
talks with South Vtetnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu
oo his objections to a proposed
peace package worked out by
the United States and North
Vietnam.
Amertcan sources 10 Saigon
said Gen. Alexander M. Haig
carried a letter from Thieu to
President Ntxon whtch could
lead to breaking down the final
barriers In the way of Vtetnam
peace.
Hatg left Vtetnam for Phnom
Penh earlier Sunday to discuss
the Indoch10a situation wtth
Cambodian Presid@!!t Lon Nol ,
1111d tl\ennew to!l!~\ for talks ~
Wlth &amp;luth Korean Prestdent•
Park Chung~ee He left Korea
By

late Sunday and was expected
10 Washtngton today, where he
was due to report to Ntxon and
Kissinger.
American sources 10 Satgon
S8ld Thteu gave Hatg a letter
which m essence clears the
way for a U.S -North Vtetnamese sigrung of the draft
cease-fll'e proposal. However,
the sources satd, Hatg's efforts
to urge Thteu to go along
completely wtth the draft
proposal apparently were
unsuccessful.
Thieu's apparent objections
lay m fears of a possible unpositton of a Communist
goverrunent in Satgon and the
absence of any spectftcs
regardmg withdrawal of North
Vtetnamese troops from South
Vtetnam " Consequen!)y 1,1!Je"
~~~"f~~:~~lct :rilleu•l;.ntii!r t'Q ,
Ntxon approves a U,S,"stgniOgo
of the cease-fire draft

proVIding 11 does not contain
anythmg regarding pohtical or
further mthtary settlement
that Thteu constders obJectionable.
Such a cease..fll'C between
the North Vietnamese and the
·United States would allow
complete withdrawal of U.S.
forces from Vtetnam wtthin 60
days of the stgnmg, the return
of Amertcan prisoners and an
accounting of those listed as
mtsslng, and the end to U.S.
bombmg of North Vtetnam and
the nunmg of its harbors:

30 - Elec Co 33 , Marshall Dillon 15; Dragnet a. Gomer Pyle
13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
•
6 00 - News3, 4, q, 10, Truth or Conseq 6. News 13, 15, Around
The Bend 33, ~esame Street 20
6 30 - NBC News 3. A, 15, ABC J&gt;lews 6, CBS News 8, JO ,
Hathayoga 33, l Dream of Jeann1e 13
7 00 - News 6, Truth or Conseq 3, Beat The Clock 4. Ctrcus 1
13. lnSighf 33, What's My Line a, Read Your Way Up 33,
Electric Company 20, Saint 15
7· 30- To Tell The Truth 6, Traf!IC Court 10. EpiSoHe Action 33,
Parent Game 3. Hollywood Squares 4; Young Dr Kildare a,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Pollhcal Talk lS, Movie "Tarzan's
New York Adventure" 13
a 00- Gunsmol&lt;e 10, 8; Rowan and Marton's Laugh-In 3, A, UFO
6. Hollywood TV T)lealre 20, 33
,
,
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10, Pro Footbatl6. 13, Mov•e' G1ant 3, 4,
15
WASHINGTON ~11. GROUP OF DEMOCRATIC governors 9 30 - Doris Day 10, 8, Book Beat 20,33
scheduled a meeting in Washington today to discuss the party's 10 oo-News20, FromtheHIIls33, Bill Cosby a, 10
future dll'ection, including the poSSible replacement of National 10 30 - Concerls On the Lawn 33.
OO - News3,A.6,a, 10,15
,
,
.. "On
Chairman Jean We11~00d, the hand.picked cllotce of defeated 11
11 3G-Johnny carson 3. 4, 15, Movies Hornets Nest B
preSidential candidate George S. McGovern.
the Waterfront" 10
12
00
- News 6, 13
The session was called by Arkansas Gov. Dale Bwnpers,
•
12 30- Mov1e "Svengalo" 13
chairman of Ute Den\ocratic Governors Caucus. He described 1 00 - News 4
the Washington meetmg as a prelude to a session of all the 2 30 - News 13
Democratic governors Dec. 3 in St. Lows.
TUESDAY, NOV 14,1972
CINCINNATI -TIIREE ARMED BLACK~ wearing skl
masks mvaded the game room at the Xavier University student
center during the weekend, shot one student to death and robbed
about 30 others. A campus security officer was on duty at the
center late Saturday mght but did not hear the gunshot that
struck freshman Thomas Jenkins, 18, in the chest, killing him.
The robbers disappeared after taking the contents of 10 wallets
and $95 from the room's cash register.
The center at the Roman Catholic school was robbed under
atrikingly similar conditions on Nov. 13, 1971, by two men. No one
was hurt that time and the robbers were never apprehended.
NEW YORK -FOUR U. S. CITIES will hOISt the Shenyang
Acrobatic Troupe, an entourage of 55 acrobats, jugglers and
magicians, next month when they become the first Uteatrical
group from China to tour the United States since the Communist
takeover. The troupe will perfonn in Chicago, IndianapoliS, New
York and Washington.
The troupe offers many unique acts combining magic and
juggling, pasaing all manner of objects about the stage at
lightnmg speed, and the performance of ancient g&amp;JJ~es of skill.
The entertainers will begin their tour in Chicago beginning Dec.
18, followed by performances in Indianapolis begiruting Dec. 'll,
and m New York starting Jan. 2. Perfonnances in Washington
have not been scheduled
GALE WINDS GUSTING UP TO 1M MILES·PER.fiOUR
screamed across much of northern Europe early today, driving
floodwaters mto thousands of homes, sending ships aground and
causing death and destruction in several countries. At least 20
persons were reported kllled in stonn.related accidents in five
countries. Scores more were litjured by flying debris, and
damage to homes and installations ran into major sums,
authorities S&amp;d Brttain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium,
France, East and West Germany took the brunt of the storm the first big one of the winter.

·-

Helen Help

Kissinger returned to Washington Sunday after a ''private
weekend" m New York where
be attended a play and a
football game. It was not
knm;n If o~. ~,1.\en he WQJI)d

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

TV'S WEEKEND SPORTS .. AGAIN'
lfav~1 ~Qr Pdr~1or an ex~~lt\'il ' Df8f Hdle'n 1• Hdl • diV• ,)1 14jt 1rl~!A d" l"~&lt; }! nln !lJJ. ~r,
final meeting Wtth the North
I gather from your not-80-vtilec'f~hllll-ks thllr~bilcare a TY·
Vtetnamese.
weekend+ Monday sports fan. (Small correction. Love
demolition derbtes; snow, ice and water sports; dis-love football
and similar weekend hazard.!! -H.) Why don'tyou enroll in one
of those college extensioo courses destgned to teach women how
to enjoy so-called "men's sports"? Then you could enjoy along
wtth your husband.
I am trymg to 'encourage my wife along those lines but she is
Ftve other JUvemles mstde
resistive Why are you women so darn stubborn?- ARMCHAIR
the estabhshment were
released to the custody of their ATHLETE
parents Spence suffered a
gunshot wound reportedly Dear A A.:
... Because a college sports-appreciation course rilight teach
mfhcted by a 22 caliber ptslol.
Pohce satd the bullet entered us more than we really want to know about those time-eating
above the youth's left ear and teleVIsed games.
Look, friend, you shouldn't force football on your wife any
lodged near the crown of hts
more than she should force Julia Child or Dr. Welby on you. After
head
all, TY togetherness isn't a No. l requisite for marital bliss unless TV Is the only thing that you do together. -H.
+++
Dear Helen:
Sheme on the step-father who wouldn't let his wife's sons
his second attempt In as many have between-meal snacks. DOesn't he know that growing boys
months. Prison officials satd it require about 3800 calories a day, whereas a sedentary man
.
·appeared Schmid and Hudgens needs no more than 2500?
Maybe
a
calorie
counting
book
would
knock some sense in his
jumped a fence at the
education and rehabtlitation head. - MOTHER OF TEENAGE BOYS
portion of the prison and were
not missed for about three Dear Helen:
hours.
I feel for "Wit's End," whose husband won't let her sons near
While state pollee and sher- the refrigerator. I have a similar problem, but from a different
_iff's deputies, including some angle.
m a light plane and a
My hWiband checks out the cupboards and refrigerator ea_ch
helicopter, searched the desert morning, also the garbage can. The minute he comes home, he
around the priSOn, the two does another check and if af\Ything Is missing from one and
convtcts were holed up in a added to the oUter, I'm accused of feeding my relatives, friends,
vineyard nearby, according to or myself! I can't even give my mother a soft drink when she
a conversation overheard later occsslonally visits me, yet he can drop •100 at the race track and
by Clover.
it's "just the breaks."
He never takes me anywhere or buys me anything, even
Clover lives about four miles dresses.! have a cha~efor a job, but he says if I step one foot out
northeest of the prison, and of the house anjl am not here to bake hill !read and fix his fancy
S&amp;d the two men awakened , Italian meat sauces I can keep going. He makes this stick by not
him Sunday morning after
entering through a bathroom even leaving me 25 cents for carfare, What should I do? window. Schmid held a home I;!AREFOOT BUT NOT PG, THANK GOODNESS

Ironton gridder shot Sunday
Gregory Spence, 17, an All was shot m the head whtle
Southeastastern Ohto football tnstde the Sportsman, a pool
star at Ironton Hltlh School, room-bar in the 200 block of
was hsted m sertous conditton South Thtrd St. m Ironton
today at St. Mary's Hospttalm
The bar IS closed on Sunday
Huntmgton where he was Ironton Pohee Captam Homer
admttted Sunday afternoon Fugett, headmg the tnjust hours after he had been vesltgalton, satd he could not
voted an all conference player. release any mformatton on how
Spence, a speedy halfback, the shootmg occurred

Zip gun in face wakener
TEMPE, Ariz (UP!) When Charles Clover, 58,
awoke at 3 a.m., there was a
zip gun stuck m hts face and a
notorious killer of the 1960s
behind it.
That was the way Clover
learned that Charles Schnud
Jr., 30, the "Pted Piper of
TUcson," had entered his ranch
house Sunday through a bathroom window after eseap10g
from the Arizona State Prison,
where Schmid was serving a
life sentence for strangling
three teen..age girls.
With Schmid, Clover told
pohce later, was ~nother
escaped conVlct and convicted
murderer, Raymond I. Hudgens, 32.
Themanhuntforthetwo men

BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Rcyal and Select Masters,
Wednesday 7 30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple All officers
and compamons urged to attend
BAZAAR, Trtntly Church, 9
a m Luncheon to he served
begmmng at II a m
THURSDAY
ltOCK SPRINGS Better
Health Clu)&gt;, Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs
Wtlliam Folmer, wtth Mrs.
DEADLINE SET
Scott Folmer to have the
RACINE - The deadline
program, and Mrs Hugh
lo purchase tickets to the
Bearhs, the contest
annual football banquet at
EPISCOPAL Church
SouthernHighgchoolisNov.
Women, Grace Church, lun21, Bill Hill, presldenl of lhe
cheon, 12:30 p.m. Thursday
southern Alhlelic Boosters,
Mrs. Fred Charles, Manetta,
announced today.
dtstnct chatnnan, to be guest
The banquet spQnsored by
speaker Hostesses, Mrs J . E.
the Boosters will be Dec. 2 In
D. Hartinger, Mrs H. 0
the high school auditorium.
Ewmg, Mrs. Leo Story, Miss
Speaker will he Jim Vennarl
Helen Lochary, Mrs A R.
ol Pomeroy, former Ohio
K,nl_g~t.
coach of the year, football
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
coach at Rutland, and now a
7:30 p m. Thursday, home of
school principal at Rutland
Mrs. Roy ·Hannum Take gifts
and off-season Cincinnati
for Athens Mental Health
R~ acout.
center.
Tickets may be purchased
RUTLAND Volunteer Fire
at Sadie's Market, Syracuse;
Village Cptrate, Racine
Department's annual Thanksgiving turkey dinner, Thurs- , Home National Bank, and
day, Rtnland Grade School-' R'a"clne - Food Market.
Tickets are $2 for adults and
cafetena starting at 5:30p.m.
Tickets from ally firemen or at
tl for students.
the doot. Open to public, •

shifted today to the Tempe
area , where Schmid and
Hudge'ns fled after takmg
Clover, a woman and two teenage boys hostage.
The other three were not
tdentifted to protect them.
Clover said they were forced
at gunpomt to drive the two
fugitives to Tempe from his
home at Florence, about 55
nules away .
In Tucson, where Schnud
was convicted of three murders and sentenced to death in
1965 m one of the sensatiooal
trials of the decade, police said
they were guarding the homes
of some persons involved in the
case, because of his threats at
the time to "come back and get
some people." A police spokesman declined ~ identify those
who received guards ·~or fear
of giving hun (Schmid) Ideas."
Schmid escaped Saturday In

The Dlily Sentinel
DIVOUD TO THI

INTIRISTOF
MEICII·MAION AUA
CHESUII L. TANNIHILL,
... c ld.
ROIIRT HOIHICH,
Clly ldllor
Published dt&gt;ly f~Cipt
Seturdty by Tho Ohio Vallty
Publishing Company, Ill
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio,
•5769 Business Office Phone
992 2156. Editorial Phont 992
2157
Second tla., poslego polcftt
Pomtroy, OhiO
Nttlonol rdvorlltlng
reprtuntatlvt lottlntlll
Golltghor, Inc, 12 &amp;1St •2nd
St, Ntw YOrk City, Ntw York
Subs(rlpl,on rttea Dt
hvtrtd bv c•rrltr whirl
ovollablt SO ctnll per wet~;
8'fl MOtor Routt Whtrt r::arrltr

strvlce not 1v11llblt

Ont

month II 75. By mtll In Ohio
tnd W VI , Ont yttr SIA 00
Sl• monlhl S7 U Thru
months u so Subtcrlpllon

pr1tt Includes Sundly Tlmtl

$tntlnet

made .2kaliber pistol to his
face, Clover told Pinal County
sheriff's deputies.
Schmid and Hudgens apparently were '1ost and half
froze to death," Clover said.
They ate toast and tortlllas
and drank coffee, taking turns
covering Clover with the pistol,
unlil a Scottsdale woman in her
early 40s arrived at the house
&amp;mday &amp;!ternoon. Getting no
answer to her ring, she entered
Ute house and was allo taken
prisoner, deputies said. Shortly
afterward, two 18-ye.&amp;r-old
boys, also from Scottadale,
came to the home and were
captured.
Authorities would not
identify' the woman and boys,
saying Schmid bid wamed
tjlem that if they told police
about the experience before
'Monday mlll'!llng lie would
"come back and get them."

Dear BBNPTG:
~e an appointment for the job interview, borrow carfare,
and take one giant step for womankind! -H.
Dear Helen:
My husband's brother, age 18, is spending the year with UB,
working as a carpenter·~ helper. I like Ute kid, but Helen, he's a
slob!
He takes a shower no more than once a week, never brushes
his teeth, doesn't even wash when he geta up in the morning. His
hair is a disaster, and 10 are hla clothei. He sleeps In his underwear and only changes after hla oeculooal bath. I can't even
sneak hill dirty shorts out, u he always has them m.
1 finally took IDIIten in my own hallls (U my busbml
didn't want to elllbamM biD)). Lali-t I told biD) there were
some lhinP m lhe lllalrcue fCI' blm. I left dtaclorant, -p,
toothpaste, mouthwllh and clean lllldenrw there. Bll reply
was, "Do I have to USE alllhme t!Uip?" I Dell'ly die!!; W88
stumed silence. So what do _I do now?- NOSE PL'IJGGED
Delir N.P.:
YouiDideaiOIJd lllrt, wt youclkln'tc:cry It tlroucb: both
you IJid your hulba"' lboWd make It c:lllr tliat If cerlala
lfandlrdl ct co!eer'b• IIWI't met, Bub eu lllle IU
'-1111 1• til wbwe. You'DIIe401JWblmafa'fari-B.
5

5

15 20 25 30 -

Farm Reporl13, Farmt1me 10
Paul Harvey 13
Fa1fh tor Today 13
Columbus Today 4, B1ble Answers 8, Concern

&amp;

The Ironton Ttgers captured
most Of the glory Sunday as
ftve players from the SEOAL
gndtron champtons were
named to the 1972 All.SEOAL
Football Team and Coach Bob
Lutz was the unammous chotec
as coach of the year
,n grabbmg the unammous
chmce of coach of the year the
29-year old Lutz contmues hts
magtc m producmg football
champtons
He 11as appomted head coach
of the Iron ton Ttgers thts year,
succeeding Bob Bruney,
followmg three years as etther
a champton or co-&lt;:hampton
coach at Ironton St Joseph
htgh school
Lutz graduated from Ironton
St Joe and recetved hts degree
from Marshall Umverstty
before entermg the coachmg
fteld as an assistant at Oak
Htll.
Followmg two years at Oak
Htll he became an asalstant at
St Joe for one year and then
was appomted head coach.
In three years he produced
three champions and now
makes hts debut in the SEOAL
wtth an undefeated champtonshtp team.
Meeltng 10 Jackson the
league's etght head football
coaches and members of the
SEO Sportswnters and
Broadcasters Assoctatton also
ptcked Logan's great fullback
and mtddle-guard, Ken
Culbertson, as the most
valuable player as he beat out
Don Wood of Athens and Ketth
Parker of Ironton for the
honor
Waverly's great pass
recetver, Btll Maloy, who
caught 10 touchdown passes,
led the ballohng for the
bnemen by garnermg all of the
votes to lead 10 that group
Culbertson, Don Wood of
Athens, and Waverly's John
Shoemaker
were
all
unammous chotees among the

Com

ment 10

6 45 6 55 -

Corncob Report 3
Flintstones 13
7 00 - Today3, 4, 15. CBS NewsB, 10 Ne~s6
7 30 - Sleepy Jefters 8, Romper Room 6, Bullwmkte &amp; Rockey
13
B 00 - Capt KanQaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33.
T•mmy &amp; Lass1e 6

8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room B New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4, Phol Donahue IS, Romper Room 8. Con
cenlral1on 6. Friendly Juncloon 10. Ben Casey 13, Mr Rogers
33 What Every Woman Wants to Know 3
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6 Hazel B
10 00 - D1nah Shore 3, 15 D1ck Van Dyke 13 , Joker's Wold B. 10
Columbus Sox Calling 6
10 30- Concentration 3, IS, Ph•l Donahue 4 Splol Second 13,
Proce ts Roghl 8, 10
11 00 - Sale ofthe Century 3, 15 Love Ameman Syle 6, Gambol
8, 10 , Password 13, Electrtc Co 20

30- HollywoodSquares3. 4,15, Love of LrfeB, 10, Bewrlched
6, 13. Sesame Street 20
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15. Password 6, Bob Brauns 50 SO Club 4,
Jackie Oblmger B News 10. 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3 W's Game 3. 15, Split Second6. Search for Tomorrow 8,
10
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13. Its Your Bet B, Green
Acres 10. Watch Your Child IS
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8, 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, A, 15, Newlywed Game 13 M1ke
Douglass 6, Gurd1ng Loght 8. 10
2 30- Doctors 3, 4, IS, Dalmg Game 13, Edge of Night B, 10
3 00 - General Hospital 6, 13, Another World 3, 4, 15 Love os
Sptendored Thmg B, 10. Growong Him Up 33 , Just Generation
20
3 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, Secret Storm B, 10. One
L1feto L1ve6, 13. Magg1e&amp; The Beautiful Machlne20
4·00- Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15. Sesame St 33, 20, Love,
American Style 13, Merv Gnffm 4, Flinlslones 6, Gollogan's
Isle 8. Movie "Drums of Africa" 10
•
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - Love lucy 6; Peffrcoaf Junct1on 3, Danoel Boone 13 .
Merv Griffon 8, Andy Grllf•lh 15
5 00 - DICk Van Dyke 15. Merv Griffin 8, Mr Rogers 33, 20 .
Ponderosa 3, 4, Danoel Boone 6
5 30- Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33, Dragnet B, Gomer Pyle
13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 00- News 3, 4, 10, 15, Sesame Streel20 Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News 3, 4, 6, B, 15, 10; l Dream of Jeannoe 13, Growong
H1m Uo 33
7 00 - What's My Ltne 8, Beat The Clock 4; I've Got A Secret
13, Truth or Conseq. 3, Film IS, Electric Co 20
7 30- ThiS Is Your L•fe 3, Doctors On Call 4, To Tell The Truth
6, Pnce Is Right 8, 10, Beat The Clock 13, Top ot the Month
15, RFD 20, Feast of Language 33.
8 00- Temperatu,es R•song 6, 13, Maude 8, 10, Age of Anxoety
33, Bonanza 3, A, 1§, Ohio This W~
"
8 30- li&lt;!WJIU Eii¥e-.Q~· 0.. 11-t ~Hol~
JOIItlllfl20, !Ia , Mov1e
ll.l!
~
"The Vlctlrn' ' &amp;U~ · . ': " •
9 30 - M~~K~lf Si)lirt~ 13 :· Bt c outnat il(
10 00 - Marcus Welby MD 6, 13 , Ameroca 3. 4, 15 Film 33 ,
News 20
11

NFL Standongs
By Unoted Press International

11 OO - News3,Jt,6,8,10, 15,13

10 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. D1ck Cavett 6 Vorg1man B.
Movoes "Sunday In New York" 10. "Law of the Lawless" 13
1 oo - Your Health
1 30- News A, I~

Nat1onal Conference

East
w. t. I
Washngln B 1 0
Dallas
7 2 0
NY Giants 5 4 0
Sf Louos
2 6 1
2 6 1
Ph•la
Central

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
There comes a time in every little girl's life when that fll'st
little signal of grow10g up appears - if the parents are perceptive enough to catch it. _
And when it happens, Mom and Dad can Slt back for the
assault on the teen years, with a multitude of phone calls, hatr
rollers, records, broken hearts, new clothes and tears. That first
sign means Ute era is about to begin.
It was early 1964. I think, when Daughter Number One, '
Margie, welcomed me home one even10g with a polite invitation
not to bother her, because her girl fnend and she were 10volved
in something far more importanl.
With a rapt, enchanted look on their faces, Margie and friend
listened with what I could only describe as religion-like mtenstly.
The record player was grinding out a slightly hypped-up rock '
rendering by a new (and ooocure, to me) group called the
Beaties.
This was long before George, Paul, John lifld Ringo made the ,
Ed Sullivan Show, and beg1111 some daring experiments in music ·
that have changed the faces of the pop market ever since. The
material was fairly innocuous, wllh the young Beatles imploring
"I Want to Hold Your Hand," and descrtbmg how "I Saw Her
Standing There."
We were only a few months removed from Dr. Seuss and Dr.
Spock, but I recall vividly that I knew somehow - in that
moment - that a profound change was about to take place in '
Margie's life, and mine.
And I was right. The young lady who now Is a Junior at
Marshall University never was quite a little girl again. 'rite
succeeding years were full of orthodootist.s, proms, "boy talk"
and the flowering of a child into a YOU'll woman,
Last Sunday, Daughter NwnberTwo, Vyvyanne, a quletand
introspective little child who seems to be enjoying a perpetual
inside Joke within heraelf, bolted into the family room with ...:: you
guessed It- a record and another little girl.
'
Off went the Raiders-Chiefs game on TV (they let me keep
theplcture on), and the girls Immediately proceeded to listen to a
pleasant-enough little fellow nained Qonny Osmond, singing
these same lhetnes Ill young love, and looking aU of 14 on the
album jacket. Vyvy's eyes toOk on that same mystic look, and
somehow, I se!lled that her dey hu come.
;
This '1181 verified in the next few ciw's, When I was asked :
whether I liked Domy'a 11011p ("Yeah, they're okay") ... ,
whether l thought he wu cute ( "&amp;!re, he's a nlce,loolting boy"),
etc., etc.
Come CIII\OD&amp;,•Vyvy. You'll be \2 in April, and thaee yelll'll
untQ you pa. out af your leellll wlll be ttV~, traumaUc, and ,
fun, I hOpe. And thank )'011 f1r ~ me 111 - ct thaee first •
idgnl that mart the P'INIIt from chlJdhoocl to adolelcence to :
IDiblrlt)r,
tlnil)b
the '"'dlnm ci the lee1111111'1d.~.
-•"'a
:'
k
~~
n'1 a ra_. nice iijlilrience,...ny,llld I am a ~ man to •
... _It twkle inlby life, And, wltlllllci:,l1J1111tt --thatl
aMide +l'U'C af rolll at IIUt 1111 more time in my life. :
n.pw Nwllber Tbree, C.Oie, II aaiJ 111
~

'

+++

'

a:•

ON '1'BE 'IV DIAL: A IP'dal Cll 1111 nUpe llh Ill
Pitl 'JOt mmt:h ,, a:a, ~TV ·- •01!..0 '"'~
meet at t, WB'ftiOTY. ,

•'
•

••
1

'

--

pet pi pa
BB9 227 124
778217149
556 210 191
27B 122 195
278 86 194

w. I. I pet. pi pa
Green Bay 6 3 0 667 179 161
Mmnesota 5 A 0 556 199 135
Detro1t
5 4 0 556213185
ChiCago
3 5 1 389 149 165
West
w. t. t. pet. pi pa
Los Ang
s 3 1 611 177 14B
Atlanta
5 4 0 556 199 183
San Fran 4 4 1 500 232 175
NewOrlns 1 7 1 167 135 253
Amerocan Conference
East
w I. t. pet. pi pa
M1am1
9 0 0 I 000 250 103
N V Jets 6 3 0 667 279 192
Battomore 2 7 0 222 139 186
2 7 0 222'16B 253
Buffalo
New Eng 2 7 0 222 109 296
Central
w. t. I. pet. pf pa
Pollsburgh 7 2 0 778 233 13A
Cleveland 5 3 0 625 141134
Conconnall 5 A 0 556 169 152
1 8 0 111 104 233
Houston
West
w. I. I. pel. pi PI
5 3 1 611 229 169
Oakland
Kan Ctty 5 4 0 556 202 156
3 6 0 333 181 232
Denver
San Diego 2 5 1 .313 152 203

Sunday's Resuns
N Y Jets 41 Buffalo 3
Pollsburgh 16 Kansas C1ly 7
Atlanta 36 New Orleans 20
Miami 52 New England 0
Washington 27 N Y G1ants
13

Oakland 20 Clncmnall 14
Green flay 23 Chocago 17
Philadelphia 18 Houston 17
Dallas 33 St Louis 2A
San Francisco 24 Baltimore

21

Denver 16 Los Ang,les 10
Minnesota 16 Detrolll4
(only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
Cleveland at San Otego
(twilight)
'
{only game scheduled)
Sundiy's Games

Baltimore at Cincinnati
Buffalo at New England
Dallas at Philadelphia

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

--

-·----'"

()minates.

SEOAL FOOTBALL TEAM
LINEMEN
I'LAYER-SCH()OL
w·r. YR.
Alex Toppmg - Athens
155 Sr
Charlie Adkins - Athens
200 Jr
Mike Wolfe - Gallipolis
185 Sr
Keith
ParkerIronton
185 Sr
II backs ptcked to the team
Bill
Markin
Ironton
200 Sr
wtth Culbertson and Wood the
Dave
KriebelIronton
only hoid~ers from last year.
175 Sr
As usual the team was Terry Parker - Ironton
195 Jr
domtnated by semors as 18 of Tom Stevenson - Jackson
170 Jr
the 23 Will graduate wtlh the Dan J'vlorrow - Jackson
175 Sr
class of 1973.
'
Mike Mojzer - Logan
197 Sr
In the spectal honor4ry Bill Chaney - Me1gs
182 Sr
membe~shtp' clasaiftcat1on (wo
Bill
Maloy
Waverly
185 Sr
players were accordmg
BACKS
awards as they were unable to
Les
Champlin
Athens
_
complete the entire league
175 Sr
season due to InJUries, but Don Wood- Athens
200 Sr
would have been strong can- Mike Berridge - Gallipolis
180 Jr
dtdates for the team had they Greg Spence - Ironton
150 Sr
played the enttre season
Ken Valentine - Jackson
160 Sr
Eddte Marttn of Wellston and
Ken
Culbertson
-Logan
206 Sr
Dave Berry of Ironton °wtll
Chuck
Faulk
Meigs
164 Sr
recetve cerltftcates of honor at
Andy Vaughan- Meigs
173 Sr
the all-league banquet
Martm ts a 171)-pound semor John Shoemaker - Waverly
160 Jr
fullback and Berry a strong Larry Dixon - Wellston
170 Sr
22{)-pound JUniOr tackle
Randy Hatton- Wellston
160 Sr
HONORARY MEMBERS
All members named to the
Edd1e Martm- Wellston
170 Sr
team and the honorable
220 Jr
mentton players wtll be guests Dave Berry - Ironton
HONORABLE MENTION
at the Ali.SEOAL Football
ATHENS- Jim Fuller and Phtl Strekal
Banquet to be held m Ironton
on Dec. 7, 1972
GALLIPOLIS- Kaven Sheets and John Walter
Head coaches attend10g
IRONTON- Bruce Carter and Terry Mowery
Sunday's meetmg were Gerald
JACKSON- Doug Jude and Artie DeStephen
Inbody, Athens; John Ecker,
LOGAN - John Bachus and Kevm Berry
Galhpolts, Char he Chancey,
MEIGS - Dallas Weber and Lou McKinney
Metgs, Ron Femck, Jackson,
WAVERLY- John Lawson and Tim Anderson
Jtm Adams, Logan, Wilhs
WELLSTON - W1llie Fox and Bill Starkey
Stemen, Wellston; Bob Lutz,
Ironton and Tom Oyer,
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Waverly
Ken Culbertson- Logan
Members of the sportsCOACH OF THE YEAR
wnters and broadcasters'
Bob Lutz -Ironton
assoctalton cast10g ballots
mcluded
Earl
James,
Waverly; AI Etsnaugle and
Pete Wtlson, Jacksoh , B1ll
Gray and Odte O'Donneli,
Galltpohs; Bob Wtlhs and Sts
Baker, Wellston; Ron Crump
and Frank Houston, Ironton;
Tom Metiers and Bob Tayck,
Athens; Ketth Wtsecup, Metgs,
Harold Roach and Paul
Jossghas, Logan.
The next meetmg of the
asaoctalton wtll be held prtor to
the SEOAL banquet at Ironton
next month.

Green Bay al Houston
Mmnesola at Los Angeles
New Orleans at Detroit
N Y Goants at Sl Louos
N Y Jets at Mram1
Oakland at Denver
Pottsburgh al Cleveland
San D1ego at Kansas 1C1ty

San Francosco at Chocago
(only games schedule~)

United Press International
The 76ers, being creatures of
habit, are back to their losing
ways.
Philadelphia, which bad tied
the National Basketball
Association record for most
losses at the start of a season
wtth 15, fmally won •its first
game of the year on Saturday,
defeating HollSton.
But Charlie Scott, lfho set a
club record tl 20 points in the
third quarter, led Phoenix to a
119-108 wm over Philadelphia
on Sunday, making the 76ers I·
16 thus far.
In the only other ,NBA contests Sunday, Lenny Wilkens
came back to haunt his old ball
club as Cleveland toppled
Seattle, 113-107, an~ Portland
nipped Kansas City.Qmaba,
102-100, as Sidney Wtcks hit a
20-foot jumper 'Jvith four
seconds left In the;game.
The 8-fooHi Scott/who wound
up with 33 points, broke the
Suns' individual scoring mark
for one quarter formerly held
by GaU Goodrich, who tallied
19 in one 12-minute session
against Los Angeles in 1969.
Scott's 20 points In the third
stanza also equalled the
Phoenix Co~ high mark
for a quarter ~ed by Elvin
Hayes, then with San Diego
By

--

-

-----

- --

earn Team'·

1'172

Rockets can
Oust Flashes
BY. United Press International
Kent, needtng a pall' of VICToledo's Rockets, who domt- tortes to wm 1ts ftrst title, took
nated the Mid-Amertcan Con- a gtant step towards that goal
ference the last three years, last Saturday, downmg a tough
wtll have fmal say again who Mtamt team at Oxford, 21-10.
the MAC football champton
The Flashes, now 5+1 overWill be.
all, struck for two hghtning
The Rockets,,!l:;4 th~ ~ljlJO!_I "~~.~M?~Jll!hr ~econd quarafter winning 3~ stralglit ter to overeoo~e a -'HI 1¥1am1,
games, close thetr season next )ead.
Saturday at Kent State, which
w1ll be seek10g its first MAC
Ttght end Gary Pinkel took a
title m tts 22 years m the ftve-yard scormg pass !rom
conference.
quarterback Daryl Hall to lie
A Toledo V!Ctory, however, the score and after linebacker
hands the championship to the Dan Rector recovered a
Rockets' bitter nval, Bowhng fumble by the Redskins' Bob
Green, which fiOtShed tis con- Httchens, Hall agam htt Pinkel
ference schedule with a 3-1-1 With another scormg strike,
mark Kent is currently 3-1
thts one from 14 yards out

76ers now 1-16 on year

'

HUSTLE
AFfER
.
EVERY
FOOTBAI.I.
GAME

----~---

'

Lutz COach-of-Year;
Culbertson named MVP

6 00 - Sunnse Sem1nar .4 , Sacred Heart 10
6
6
6
6

-

for four years, the last three as
player-coach, recetved a twommute standing ovation from
the crowd of 13,174, second
largest in SOnics' history.
Then the 35-year~ld backcourt star helped the Cavaliers
achieve thetr ftrst victory ever
over the Scnics with a 22-polnt
performance replete with his
usual fteld generalsh1p.
By Unoted Press lnternahonat Wtlkens assisted on the fll'St
East
score of the game-a basket by
Amherst 34 Trinity 7
backcourt mate Austm CarrBethany 36 Wash-Jeff 6
and
Cleveland was never
Bowdoin 41 Tulls 6
Bucknell 41 Colgate 7
headed.
Cornell 48 Brown 28
Carr aiso wound up wtth 22
Dartmouth 3B Columbia 8
points as the Cavs snapped a
Delaware 62 Maine 0
,four-game lostng streak.
Fordham 26 Upsala 14
Holy Cross 28 Mass 16
Navy 28 Prtlsburgh 13
N H 26 Springfield 16
Northeastern 29 VI 19
Penn 4B Yale 30
Penn St 37 N C. St 22

and Willis Reed of New York.
The Suns, unproving !hell'
season log to 11-5, actually won
the game at the free throw line,
making 35 of 40 shots from the
cbarity stripe. The 76ers, 16 of
18 at the line, bad 46 field goals
to Phoenix' 42.
Wilkens, who was at Seattle

College Scores

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
long watt for state htgh school
football playoffs ts over and for
some 1t was a bttter dtsappomtment at not bemg mcluded 10
the 12 semt-fmaltSts announced
Sunday by the Ohto Htgh
School Athletic Association
Masstllon, the No I team all
season long m the UP! Class
AAA high school ratmgs: heads
the hst of competmg teams 10
the playoff semt-ftnals which
open wtth Fnday mght's two
Class AA games at Masstllon
and Troy.
The Ttgers of Coach Bob
Commlngs, many bmes the
state champ10n m the coaches'
poll, meet unbeaten but once
tied Cmcmnatt Prmceton 10 the
ftrst game of a blue ribbon
doubleheader Saturday at Ohto
Stadmm on the Ohto State
campus, starting at II am.
Warren Western Reserve,
which matches Massillon's IM
mark , goes agamst Toledo
Scott, 8-I, m the second game
at 2 p.m.
The Frtday mght AA games
fmd Akron St Vincent, 8-2, and
Umontown Lake, 8-2, meeting
at Massillon's 22,000-seat stadium, whtle Columbus Watter!lon, 9~, and Clncmnati Readmg, 10-0, tangle at Troy
The ftrst round of Class A
games are scheduled for Saturday mght at two separate sites
also
Marton Pleasant, the No I
Class A team m the UP!
coaches ratings, wtll pit its 9~
mark agatnst TUscarawas Valley, 6-3-1, at Mansfield. The
second A game sends Mtddles
town Fenwtck, 6-3-1, agamsl
Loram Clearview, 9-1
Stunning Surprises
The ftnal computerized
ratmgs, which were used to
select the 12 semt-finaltSts,

"ff~),~·o ,: .&lt;~INP.lU~~,I~,
s~P,r\8~*· one llJ &lt;;laSs "'? flnd

another m A, with Ha110ibal
Rtver and Newcomerstown,
both unbeaten and lesders m
thetr respective regtons for
some tune, bemg edged out by
Umontown
Lake
and
Tuscarawas Valley
Newcomerstown Coach
Ward Holdsworth, after
wathng fruttlessly for an expected call to infonn him his
team had been selected, made
the tnp to Columbus to attend
the meetmg of competing
coaches.
Holdsworth met wtth OHSAA
offtctals, who agreed to recheck his region's results
"We are extremely dtsa~
po10ted to say the least,''
Holdsworth satd. "We got no
real satisfaction before we left,
but have Ute assurance of the
commissiOner (Dr Harold
Meyer) that if there has been a
correctable error, it would be
ftxed ."
Holdsworth satd the 10-0
mark ran up by hts Trojans
was the ftrst tune a Newcomerstown team had attamed
that mark, adding, "the whole
community Is just heartsick "
The Newcomerstown coach
also said he urged Com-

Massillon's Commings, who
.
gu1ded the Tl gers I 0 the1r second unbeatenseasonm the past
three years, said hiS staff "had
talked about II all year long."
The Masstllon mentor satd
his team's schedule, which he
called "the toughest m the
state,'' was designed wtth the
playoffs m mmd

Cory Rawson
Reg•on II -

I Zoarvdte
Tuscarawas Valley 2 New

If emergenciee
arise, is your family adequately covered? Secure their
well-being with a
revised policy.

Consult Us Soon

Oauis-W.,. Ins.

comerstown 3 Berne Union 4

Newark Catholic, 5 Coal
Grove. 6 Centerburq. 7 Dan
er•lli-ilolllillo,_llillillo,.llllliiiOo.tli...._ _ _o!oliorJII\iOrJII\iO&gt;'IIIIIWW'IIIil'_ _ _lll\,

r

COLUMBUS ( UPI I - Follow
mg are the top 10 teams tn

each reg1on in lhe final com
puterlzed high school football
ratings released Sunday by the
OhiO High School AthletiC As
soc1ahon

Closs AAA
Reg1on 1 - 1 Warren West
ern Reserve , 2 Eastlake
North. 3 Parma Senior, 4
Cleveland St Ignatius; 5 Lake
wood St Edward , 6 Midpark,
7 Wolloughby South 8. Warren
Howland, 9 Cleveland St Jo
seph , 10 Berea
Regoon 2 - 1 Toledo Scott.
2 (lie) Fremont Ross and To
ledo Central Catholic , 4 Co
lumbus Eastmoor, 5 Upper Ar·
longton , 6 Columbus Northland ,
7 L1ma

Shawnee~

SUPERCHRCWACOLOI
Evel}fhing
For '73

8 Sandusky ,

9 Grove City , 10 Ashland
Reg ron 3 - 1 Massillon, 2
Walsh Jesuit. 3 Canton Me
Konley. 4 Zanesville, 5 Akron
Garfield , 6 Bar~ert~n 1 , 7
~~o:Us1J!.l.t~n-:F\1tlil'\: N&lt;irlti ariton ~oo~er , 9 SIPuthers : ill
Youngstown Urs~llne •
Reg1on 4 - I Cincinnati
Pronceton 2 Troy , 3 Keller-

"

rng Fairmont East , 4 Clncln

nato Elder , 5 Cincinnati Moeller , 6 Moddlelown, 7 Dayton
Stebbins , 8 Cincinnati LaSalle ;
9 Oxford Talawanda. 10 Day.
ton Patterson

Tht Homer

Class AA
Reg1on 5 - I Akron St Vln·

Modtl 801583
:WdlaQOntl

wur. Sptct commend

cent. 2 Warren Kennedy, 3

Geneva 4 Lorain Catholic, 5
Chagrin Falls, 6 Cloverleaf. 7
Campbell Memorial, 8 Man
chester 9 East Palestine. 10
Waynedale
Region 6 - 1 Columbus Wat
terson, 2 L1ma Central Catha
l1c, 3 St Marys Memoroat , A
Rossford , 5 Fostoria, 6 Co
lumbus DeSales. 7 Ontario , B
Dublin , 9 Columbus Hartley,
10 Oregon Cardona! Slrltch

rtmott conuolrn Dtrk Oak or "tcl fl

Vtl'lltfl IXCIUII'It Ol dt COIIIIVtlront

A DeposH Will Reserve Your Choice

INGELS FURNITURE
992

2635

MIDDLEPORT

Reg10n 7 - 1 Uniontown
,
Lake , 2 Iron ton , 3 Han nIba I ,.,llllil•&gt;tllllitiiO"Iil&lt;ttliloiiW."""'Iil&lt;o"""'Qi;;l"'llllillo'"~lli•'"llllli•,.•lli•~o~~lil•"'llllil•&gt;tllliilllll"'llill"'"'*"'"'._"'•!lllllltllli--~

Important Announcement

To
Ohio Power Customers

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

South
Alabama 35 LSU 21
C•tadet 19 Furman 13
East Carolona 21 Wm Mary

THE AREAS AFFECTED ARE AS FOLLOWS:
MINERSVIUE, SYRACUSE, RACINE,
E. MAIN ST. IN POMEROY, FROM
MIDWEST STEEL TO VILLAGE LIMITS

Georgia 10 Fla 7
Ga Tech 42 Boston Colt 10
Grambling 39 Norfolk St 6
Johns Hopkins 55 Dickinson
Ky 14 Vanderbilt 13
La Tech 24 E Mlch1gan 17
Md 31 Clemson 6
MemphiS St A9 Cincinnati 24
N C. 23 Va 3
Richmond 20 Davidson 14
Tampa 7 Moam1 0
Tulane 44 Ohio U 6
Wake Forest 9 Duke 7

Sout~west

the ftrst one."

Security_Is_Love

Wednesday, Nov. 15

V1llanova 40 Xav1er 13

Ariz 21 Brigham Young 7
Ariz. St. 60 ~ew MeKICO 7

missioner Meyer to release Rrver 4 M1nerva 5 L1 ckmg
pomt totals m future years "so Valley 6 Fredemktown , 7
It wouldn't he QUite so disa~ LouiSVille St Thomas Aqumas .
,
8 Claymont , 9 New Le,x1ngton,
.
pomtmg tf you lose out.
, 10 New Concord John Glenn
No such totals were releasetl ' Reg10o 8 - 1 Cjnclnnato
thts year in the computer Reading , 2 Loveland. 3 Hamolton Badrn. 4 Molton Unoon , s
ratings, whtch were conducted st Pans Graham, 6 Wyomong .
by National Sca11010g, Inc. of 7 Dayton Jefferson , 8 Corcte
Columbus.
v•lle . 9 Teays Valley , 10
Not All Gloom
Betlefontame
Closs A
Regoon 9 - 1 Loratn Clear
But, not all was gloom
among the coaches present at v1ew . 2 Kirtland , 3 Lowell
the bastilyoealled meetmg of v1lle . 4 Dalton , s East Can
ton. 6 South Range, 7 Moddle
the coaches.
f•eld Cardona!. B Hanoverton
Pet Mancuso, who wtll send Uniled , 9 Jackson M1lfon , 10
his Prmceton Vikmgs against Rochmond Heights
Region 10 - 1 Marion Pleas
the No. I team 10 the state, satd ant, 2 R1verdale 3 Spencer
tl was "a real honor" for his ville 4 Norwalk St Paul. 5
school to be 10cluded m the Sycamore Mohawk. 6 New
, 7. Ada B Arlongton,
pi ayoIfS. "EspectallY smce tis 9London
(lie) Fremont Sl Joseph and

Will Be Necessary On

W Va SO VMI 24

Midwest
Bowling Green 5 Dayton 0
Drake 35 Northeast La 7•
Dubuque 6 Sompson 6 1t1e)
Ill 37 lnd 20
Iowa St 23 Neb 23 {fie)
John Carroll 19 Oberl.n 14
Kent St 21 Mtam• (0 ) 10
Kenyon 34 Centre (Ky.) 0
Kno• 21 Gr1nnell 7
louisville 20 So. Itt . 16
Mlch 31 Iowa 0
Mlcli.St 19 Ohio St 12
Minn. 35 Northwestern 29
Purdue 27 Wis. 6
· Toledo 21 M.!trshall 0
Wsn &amp;~lch. 31 Ball St. 14

6 PQrtsmoofh Notre

Dam e, 7 PlaiD Coty Jonathan
Alder , 8 Prank tort Adena; 9.
Xenoa Woodrow Wilson,, 10.
New Boston GlenwOod

A Planned Service Interruption

Rutgers 51 Boston U 7
Syracuse 27 Army 6
Temple 22 R t 0

20

darville

are announced

Prmceton 10 Harvard 7

15

vrlle . B Millersporj, 9 Lancas
ter Fisher. 10 Beallsville
Regoon 12 - 1 Middletown
Fenwick , 2 Lockland, 3, Cov
ongton , 4 Wrttiamsburg; S Ce-

From 1:30 p.m. until 2:15p.m.

FtEX·O.GLASS
.GLASS·O·NET
~~.~.~. •':) WYR·O·GLASS

:;;.e/'

. . . .':) 5cREEN·Gi.Ass
FLEX·O.PANE

RT. 33, RT. 7, ENTERPRISE, ROSE HILL
From 1:30 p.m. until 3:15p.m.
In case of Inclement weather, service interruption will
16, 1972. and at same hours' as above.

be Thursday, Nov.

This planned Interruption is necessary to 1m prove service in these areas.

Thank You!

�I

I

2_The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 13, 1972

ews. zn
Pteu hlltrMIItul
TOKYO· IUPI) - EMPEROR HIROHn'O FORMALLY
dissolved the 491-6eat HQUSe ol Representatives today, setting
the stage for Prem•er Kakuel Tanaka and bl8 ruling UberalDemocratic Party to seek a new mandate at premature nattonal
elections Dec. 10.
.
The emperor isstied the order oo instructions from Tanaka
and his cabinet.
Tanaka and the cabinet decided ·earlier tOday at an
emergency meeting to disSolve parliament and call elections
now In hopes of Winnjng a fresh four-yeer iilandate on ihe
strength of bl8 Pcldrig and Washington ~eles.

··~-~

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 13,1972

rQnton

By Uolled

MIAMI (UPI) -Tlnrty~ne
jetliner crew and passengers
returned from Cuba Sunday
night to end one of the longest
aru1 m015t btzarre htjaclungs m
' history. Some of them were
bitterly cntical ~f FBI attempts to abort the ht)ackmg
with gunfll'e.
The return fltght from CUba
was made aboard another
jetliner flown to Havana after
the hiJacked Southern Atrways
plane skidded to a landmg on
bullet.rtddled tires. Three passengers were inJured jumpmg
from the crippled all'liner,
which bad crisa-&lt;:rosaed North
America while three black

· rw s· ~~:::::~-.:~{§

·social
i
.
. *
ICalendad
~·

:·:.

MONDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club
members and guests, 7 30
Monday mght for a demonstratiOn by the Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electric Co
home economtsl on decoratiOns
and foods for Chnstmas
Demonstrutwn to take place at
the Electrtc Co offtce

- POMEROY PTA, 7 30
Monday night at the school.
Fathers' Ntght to be observed.
Davtd Bowen's ftflh grade
flutophone group to perform.
Membership to be stressed and
a ftlm entttled "To Touch a
Child" wtll be shown
RIVERVIEW PTA Monday,
7·30 p.m at Rtvervtew
Elementary School Program
Will mclude a ftlm, "The
Animals Are Crytng" from the
Metgs County Humane SOctety
and program books wtll be
dtstrlbuted. Refreshments by
the teach~rs
REVIVAL 7:30 each evemng
through Nov 13 at Eagle Rtdge
Church wtth Charles Norrts,
evangehst Spemal slngtng by
Bon me and Buren Duncan and
the Btsaell Brothers Pubhc
IOVtted.
MEIGS Chapter 53, DA V,
regular meeting, 7·30 p m
Monday Neal Petty, 9th
dtslnct commander, wtll be
present All members urged to
llltend;
rf!.~'('~·~ ,..-.., ...,,.
~
~
lW DA)' "
' SALISiit!'RV P'i'A, 'TUe~day,
7:30p.m at the school
ANNUAL Stuffmg bee of
Chrtstmas .Seals for Metgs
County Tuberculosts and
Health Assn , 9 am TUesday,
at Pomeroy Unt ted Methodtst
Church
Evangeline Mtsstonacy
SOctety Thanksgtvmg dmner at
home of Etleen Bowers, ·s 30
p m Tuesday
NON-TEACHING personnel
of SOuthern Local w1ll meet
TUesday, 7 30 p m at Southern
Htgh School m Racme
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Democrat Assn , meetmg
Tuesday, 7 30 p m., home of
Mrs Wtlliam Snouffer, Wehe
Terrace, Pomeroy
WEDNESDAY
THIRD
WEDNESDAY
Homemakers Club, Syracuse,
meetmg Wednesday at
meetmg house m Mumctpal
Park. Geneva Nolan and Linda
Ferrell, hostesses. Chrtstmas
trees to be made, Irene Parker
and Vtrgmta Salser, project
leaders Bring new or used
furnace !titers, colored egg
carton, glue and sctsaors.

hiJackers tried to collect $10
millton ransom and speak
personally with President Nixon
The hiJackers got a reported
$2 mt!Uon m ransom, which
apparently was confiscated by
Cuban officials after they
landed in Havana
The coptlot, Btlly Harold
Johnson, 37, of College City,
Ark , sa1d he was shot m the
left arm by the hiJackers after
FBI marksmen tned to
prevent the plane from takmg
off from Orlando, Fla ,
Saturday rught
A passenger, J Frank
Robmson, 47, St . Petersburg,
Fla , said "everything was
okay unltl then (the FBI
shootmg)
" "Everybndy kept hts cool
But when that happened, none
of us knew what was gomg to
happen next. They JUSt about
got us killed by domg tt."
Robmson said he heard the
ptlot say the FBI had "doublecrosaed" hun by shooting at
the plane Robmson InJUred his
leg Jumpmg from the plane m
Havana
Dr. Gale Buchanan, 35, a
professor at Auburn Umverstty
10 Alabama, satd he didn't
think the FBI shoot10g "was a
very wise dectsion Now that I
look back over it, It's frightenlOg. That's the only time I
really thought we were gomg to

die-when the FBI opened fll'e
on the plane."
The hiJackers, who remained
m Havana, were charged wtth
air ptracy by the FBI. They
were idenlifted as accused
raptsls Henry Deewtlliam
Jackson Jr , 27, and Lows
Moore, 'll, both of Detrott, and
Melv10 Charles Cale, 22, a
fugttive from a Tennessee
prtson Havana Radio sa1d the
hijackers were "apprehended"
by CUban militiamen.

grant " The plane refueled at
l.e¥mgton, Ky., and returned
to Knoxvtlle for further
ne~otiation. Then II proceeded
to Chattanooga where 11 took
aboard the alleged $2 million
ransom, seven bulletproof
vests, medical supplies artd 50
meals.

The hiJacked airliner headed
for Cuba Saturday afternoon
and landed in Havana, but took
off immedtately when the
hiJackers saw Cuban militiaThe fugttives, usmg pistols, men awaiting the plane. The
rifles and pruned hand gre- plane refueled at Key West,
nades, commandeered the Fla., requested "a vector to
atrllner over Birmmgham, Swttzerland," and flew to
Ala , about 7:20 p.m. Frtdav McCoy Air Force base at
after takmg off from Mont- Orlando where 11 landed for oil
gomery, Ala The DC9 The plane took off m a hail of
refueled at Jackson, MISS., FBI gunftre that shot away
ctrcled Detr01t whtle the several tires. The only offtctal
htjackers demanded $10 explana!ton for the shooting
milhon and then refueled and came from Orlando pollee
took on supplies at Cleveland chtef Robert Chewning, who
After circling Toronto for 90 said h18 orders were tbat "the
mmutes, the plane landed and plane was not to get off the
the hijackers rejected $500,000 ground."
m ransom flown m by SOuthern
The atrl10er circled south
Atrways offtctals and FBI Flortda while the hiJackers
agents
demanded to talk by radio with
The plane turned south to President Ntxon, who was
Knoxvtlle , Tenn , where 11 vacatiomng at Key B!licayne,
ctrcled for two hours while the Fla. Transportation Secretary
hiJackers threatened to crash John Volpe trted to talk to the
mto the Atomtc Energy Com- men but was unsuccessful. The
mission plant at Oak Rtdge, plane f10ally new to Havana
Tenn., unless they got a $10 aga10 and made an emergency
milhon "U S government land10g,

Haig's Asian trip ends
•

United Press International
The chtef atde to prestdenttal
advtser Henry A Kissmger left
for Washington late Sunday at
the end of an Astan vlstt
domtnated by three daxs of
talks with South Vtetnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu
oo his objections to a proposed
peace package worked out by
the United States and North
Vietnam.
Amertcan sources 10 Saigon
said Gen. Alexander M. Haig
carried a letter from Thieu to
President Ntxon whtch could
lead to breaking down the final
barriers In the way of Vtetnam
peace.
Hatg left Vtetnam for Phnom
Penh earlier Sunday to discuss
the Indoch10a situation wtth
Cambodian Presid@!!t Lon Nol ,
1111d tl\ennew to!l!~\ for talks ~
Wlth &amp;luth Korean Prestdent•
Park Chung~ee He left Korea
By

late Sunday and was expected
10 Washtngton today, where he
was due to report to Ntxon and
Kissinger.
American sources 10 Satgon
S8ld Thteu gave Hatg a letter
which m essence clears the
way for a U.S -North Vtetnamese sigrung of the draft
cease-fll'e proposal. However,
the sources satd, Hatg's efforts
to urge Thteu to go along
completely wtth the draft
proposal apparently were
unsuccessful.
Thieu's apparent objections
lay m fears of a possible unpositton of a Communist
goverrunent in Satgon and the
absence of any spectftcs
regardmg withdrawal of North
Vtetnamese troops from South
Vtetnam " Consequen!)y 1,1!Je"
~~~"f~~:~~lct :rilleu•l;.ntii!r t'Q ,
Ntxon approves a U,S,"stgniOgo
of the cease-fire draft

proVIding 11 does not contain
anythmg regarding pohtical or
further mthtary settlement
that Thteu constders obJectionable.
Such a cease..fll'C between
the North Vietnamese and the
·United States would allow
complete withdrawal of U.S.
forces from Vtetnam wtthin 60
days of the stgnmg, the return
of Amertcan prisoners and an
accounting of those listed as
mtsslng, and the end to U.S.
bombmg of North Vtetnam and
the nunmg of its harbors:

30 - Elec Co 33 , Marshall Dillon 15; Dragnet a. Gomer Pyle
13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
•
6 00 - News3, 4, q, 10, Truth or Conseq 6. News 13, 15, Around
The Bend 33, ~esame Street 20
6 30 - NBC News 3. A, 15, ABC J&gt;lews 6, CBS News 8, JO ,
Hathayoga 33, l Dream of Jeann1e 13
7 00 - News 6, Truth or Conseq 3, Beat The Clock 4. Ctrcus 1
13. lnSighf 33, What's My Line a, Read Your Way Up 33,
Electric Company 20, Saint 15
7· 30- To Tell The Truth 6, Traf!IC Court 10. EpiSoHe Action 33,
Parent Game 3. Hollywood Squares 4; Young Dr Kildare a,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Pollhcal Talk lS, Movie "Tarzan's
New York Adventure" 13
a 00- Gunsmol&lt;e 10, 8; Rowan and Marton's Laugh-In 3, A, UFO
6. Hollywood TV T)lealre 20, 33
,
,
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10, Pro Footbatl6. 13, Mov•e' G1ant 3, 4,
15
WASHINGTON ~11. GROUP OF DEMOCRATIC governors 9 30 - Doris Day 10, 8, Book Beat 20,33
scheduled a meeting in Washington today to discuss the party's 10 oo-News20, FromtheHIIls33, Bill Cosby a, 10
future dll'ection, including the poSSible replacement of National 10 30 - Concerls On the Lawn 33.
OO - News3,A.6,a, 10,15
,
,
.. "On
Chairman Jean We11~00d, the hand.picked cllotce of defeated 11
11 3G-Johnny carson 3. 4, 15, Movies Hornets Nest B
preSidential candidate George S. McGovern.
the Waterfront" 10
12
00
- News 6, 13
The session was called by Arkansas Gov. Dale Bwnpers,
•
12 30- Mov1e "Svengalo" 13
chairman of Ute Den\ocratic Governors Caucus. He described 1 00 - News 4
the Washington meetmg as a prelude to a session of all the 2 30 - News 13
Democratic governors Dec. 3 in St. Lows.
TUESDAY, NOV 14,1972
CINCINNATI -TIIREE ARMED BLACK~ wearing skl
masks mvaded the game room at the Xavier University student
center during the weekend, shot one student to death and robbed
about 30 others. A campus security officer was on duty at the
center late Saturday mght but did not hear the gunshot that
struck freshman Thomas Jenkins, 18, in the chest, killing him.
The robbers disappeared after taking the contents of 10 wallets
and $95 from the room's cash register.
The center at the Roman Catholic school was robbed under
atrikingly similar conditions on Nov. 13, 1971, by two men. No one
was hurt that time and the robbers were never apprehended.
NEW YORK -FOUR U. S. CITIES will hOISt the Shenyang
Acrobatic Troupe, an entourage of 55 acrobats, jugglers and
magicians, next month when they become the first Uteatrical
group from China to tour the United States since the Communist
takeover. The troupe will perfonn in Chicago, IndianapoliS, New
York and Washington.
The troupe offers many unique acts combining magic and
juggling, pasaing all manner of objects about the stage at
lightnmg speed, and the performance of ancient g&amp;JJ~es of skill.
The entertainers will begin their tour in Chicago beginning Dec.
18, followed by performances in Indianapolis begiruting Dec. 'll,
and m New York starting Jan. 2. Perfonnances in Washington
have not been scheduled
GALE WINDS GUSTING UP TO 1M MILES·PER.fiOUR
screamed across much of northern Europe early today, driving
floodwaters mto thousands of homes, sending ships aground and
causing death and destruction in several countries. At least 20
persons were reported kllled in stonn.related accidents in five
countries. Scores more were litjured by flying debris, and
damage to homes and installations ran into major sums,
authorities S&amp;d Brttain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium,
France, East and West Germany took the brunt of the storm the first big one of the winter.

·-

Helen Help

Kissinger returned to Washington Sunday after a ''private
weekend" m New York where
be attended a play and a
football game. It was not
knm;n If o~. ~,1.\en he WQJI)d

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

TV'S WEEKEND SPORTS .. AGAIN'
lfav~1 ~Qr Pdr~1or an ex~~lt\'il ' Df8f Hdle'n 1• Hdl • diV• ,)1 14jt 1rl~!A d" l"~&lt; }! nln !lJJ. ~r,
final meeting Wtth the North
I gather from your not-80-vtilec'f~hllll-ks thllr~bilcare a TY·
Vtetnamese.
weekend+ Monday sports fan. (Small correction. Love
demolition derbtes; snow, ice and water sports; dis-love football
and similar weekend hazard.!! -H.) Why don'tyou enroll in one
of those college extensioo courses destgned to teach women how
to enjoy so-called "men's sports"? Then you could enjoy along
wtth your husband.
I am trymg to 'encourage my wife along those lines but she is
Ftve other JUvemles mstde
resistive Why are you women so darn stubborn?- ARMCHAIR
the estabhshment were
released to the custody of their ATHLETE
parents Spence suffered a
gunshot wound reportedly Dear A A.:
... Because a college sports-appreciation course rilight teach
mfhcted by a 22 caliber ptslol.
Pohce satd the bullet entered us more than we really want to know about those time-eating
above the youth's left ear and teleVIsed games.
Look, friend, you shouldn't force football on your wife any
lodged near the crown of hts
more than she should force Julia Child or Dr. Welby on you. After
head
all, TY togetherness isn't a No. l requisite for marital bliss unless TV Is the only thing that you do together. -H.
+++
Dear Helen:
Sheme on the step-father who wouldn't let his wife's sons
his second attempt In as many have between-meal snacks. DOesn't he know that growing boys
months. Prison officials satd it require about 3800 calories a day, whereas a sedentary man
.
·appeared Schmid and Hudgens needs no more than 2500?
Maybe
a
calorie
counting
book
would
knock some sense in his
jumped a fence at the
education and rehabtlitation head. - MOTHER OF TEENAGE BOYS
portion of the prison and were
not missed for about three Dear Helen:
hours.
I feel for "Wit's End," whose husband won't let her sons near
While state pollee and sher- the refrigerator. I have a similar problem, but from a different
_iff's deputies, including some angle.
m a light plane and a
My hWiband checks out the cupboards and refrigerator ea_ch
helicopter, searched the desert morning, also the garbage can. The minute he comes home, he
around the priSOn, the two does another check and if af\Ything Is missing from one and
convtcts were holed up in a added to the oUter, I'm accused of feeding my relatives, friends,
vineyard nearby, according to or myself! I can't even give my mother a soft drink when she
a conversation overheard later occsslonally visits me, yet he can drop •100 at the race track and
by Clover.
it's "just the breaks."
He never takes me anywhere or buys me anything, even
Clover lives about four miles dresses.! have a cha~efor a job, but he says if I step one foot out
northeest of the prison, and of the house anjl am not here to bake hill !read and fix his fancy
S&amp;d the two men awakened , Italian meat sauces I can keep going. He makes this stick by not
him Sunday morning after
entering through a bathroom even leaving me 25 cents for carfare, What should I do? window. Schmid held a home I;!AREFOOT BUT NOT PG, THANK GOODNESS

Ironton gridder shot Sunday
Gregory Spence, 17, an All was shot m the head whtle
Southeastastern Ohto football tnstde the Sportsman, a pool
star at Ironton Hltlh School, room-bar in the 200 block of
was hsted m sertous conditton South Thtrd St. m Ironton
today at St. Mary's Hospttalm
The bar IS closed on Sunday
Huntmgton where he was Ironton Pohee Captam Homer
admttted Sunday afternoon Fugett, headmg the tnjust hours after he had been vesltgalton, satd he could not
voted an all conference player. release any mformatton on how
Spence, a speedy halfback, the shootmg occurred

Zip gun in face wakener
TEMPE, Ariz (UP!) When Charles Clover, 58,
awoke at 3 a.m., there was a
zip gun stuck m hts face and a
notorious killer of the 1960s
behind it.
That was the way Clover
learned that Charles Schnud
Jr., 30, the "Pted Piper of
TUcson," had entered his ranch
house Sunday through a bathroom window after eseap10g
from the Arizona State Prison,
where Schmid was serving a
life sentence for strangling
three teen..age girls.
With Schmid, Clover told
pohce later, was ~nother
escaped conVlct and convicted
murderer, Raymond I. Hudgens, 32.
Themanhuntforthetwo men

BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Rcyal and Select Masters,
Wednesday 7 30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple All officers
and compamons urged to attend
BAZAAR, Trtntly Church, 9
a m Luncheon to he served
begmmng at II a m
THURSDAY
ltOCK SPRINGS Better
Health Clu)&gt;, Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs
Wtlliam Folmer, wtth Mrs.
DEADLINE SET
Scott Folmer to have the
RACINE - The deadline
program, and Mrs Hugh
lo purchase tickets to the
Bearhs, the contest
annual football banquet at
EPISCOPAL Church
SouthernHighgchoolisNov.
Women, Grace Church, lun21, Bill Hill, presldenl of lhe
cheon, 12:30 p.m. Thursday
southern Alhlelic Boosters,
Mrs. Fred Charles, Manetta,
announced today.
dtstnct chatnnan, to be guest
The banquet spQnsored by
speaker Hostesses, Mrs J . E.
the Boosters will be Dec. 2 In
D. Hartinger, Mrs H. 0
the high school auditorium.
Ewmg, Mrs. Leo Story, Miss
Speaker will he Jim Vennarl
Helen Lochary, Mrs A R.
ol Pomeroy, former Ohio
K,nl_g~t.
coach of the year, football
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
coach at Rutland, and now a
7:30 p m. Thursday, home of
school principal at Rutland
Mrs. Roy ·Hannum Take gifts
and off-season Cincinnati
for Athens Mental Health
R~ acout.
center.
Tickets may be purchased
RUTLAND Volunteer Fire
at Sadie's Market, Syracuse;
Village Cptrate, Racine
Department's annual Thanksgiving turkey dinner, Thurs- , Home National Bank, and
day, Rtnland Grade School-' R'a"clne - Food Market.
Tickets are $2 for adults and
cafetena starting at 5:30p.m.
Tickets from ally firemen or at
tl for students.
the doot. Open to public, •

shifted today to the Tempe
area , where Schmid and
Hudge'ns fled after takmg
Clover, a woman and two teenage boys hostage.
The other three were not
tdentifted to protect them.
Clover said they were forced
at gunpomt to drive the two
fugitives to Tempe from his
home at Florence, about 55
nules away .
In Tucson, where Schnud
was convicted of three murders and sentenced to death in
1965 m one of the sensatiooal
trials of the decade, police said
they were guarding the homes
of some persons involved in the
case, because of his threats at
the time to "come back and get
some people." A police spokesman declined ~ identify those
who received guards ·~or fear
of giving hun (Schmid) Ideas."
Schmid escaped Saturday In

The Dlily Sentinel
DIVOUD TO THI

INTIRISTOF
MEICII·MAION AUA
CHESUII L. TANNIHILL,
... c ld.
ROIIRT HOIHICH,
Clly ldllor
Published dt&gt;ly f~Cipt
Seturdty by Tho Ohio Vallty
Publishing Company, Ill
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio,
•5769 Business Office Phone
992 2156. Editorial Phont 992
2157
Second tla., poslego polcftt
Pomtroy, OhiO
Nttlonol rdvorlltlng
reprtuntatlvt lottlntlll
Golltghor, Inc, 12 &amp;1St •2nd
St, Ntw YOrk City, Ntw York
Subs(rlpl,on rttea Dt
hvtrtd bv c•rrltr whirl
ovollablt SO ctnll per wet~;
8'fl MOtor Routt Whtrt r::arrltr

strvlce not 1v11llblt

Ont

month II 75. By mtll In Ohio
tnd W VI , Ont yttr SIA 00
Sl• monlhl S7 U Thru
months u so Subtcrlpllon

pr1tt Includes Sundly Tlmtl

$tntlnet

made .2kaliber pistol to his
face, Clover told Pinal County
sheriff's deputies.
Schmid and Hudgens apparently were '1ost and half
froze to death," Clover said.
They ate toast and tortlllas
and drank coffee, taking turns
covering Clover with the pistol,
unlil a Scottsdale woman in her
early 40s arrived at the house
&amp;mday &amp;!ternoon. Getting no
answer to her ring, she entered
Ute house and was allo taken
prisoner, deputies said. Shortly
afterward, two 18-ye.&amp;r-old
boys, also from Scottadale,
came to the home and were
captured.
Authorities would not
identify' the woman and boys,
saying Schmid bid wamed
tjlem that if they told police
about the experience before
'Monday mlll'!llng lie would
"come back and get them."

Dear BBNPTG:
~e an appointment for the job interview, borrow carfare,
and take one giant step for womankind! -H.
Dear Helen:
My husband's brother, age 18, is spending the year with UB,
working as a carpenter·~ helper. I like Ute kid, but Helen, he's a
slob!
He takes a shower no more than once a week, never brushes
his teeth, doesn't even wash when he geta up in the morning. His
hair is a disaster, and 10 are hla clothei. He sleeps In his underwear and only changes after hla oeculooal bath. I can't even
sneak hill dirty shorts out, u he always has them m.
1 finally took IDIIten in my own hallls (U my busbml
didn't want to elllbamM biD)). Lali-t I told biD) there were
some lhinP m lhe lllalrcue fCI' blm. I left dtaclorant, -p,
toothpaste, mouthwllh and clean lllldenrw there. Bll reply
was, "Do I have to USE alllhme t!Uip?" I Dell'ly die!!; W88
stumed silence. So what do _I do now?- NOSE PL'IJGGED
Delir N.P.:
YouiDideaiOIJd lllrt, wt youclkln'tc:cry It tlroucb: both
you IJid your hulba"' lboWd make It c:lllr tliat If cerlala
lfandlrdl ct co!eer'b• IIWI't met, Bub eu lllle IU
'-1111 1• til wbwe. You'DIIe401JWblmafa'fari-B.
5

5

15 20 25 30 -

Farm Reporl13, Farmt1me 10
Paul Harvey 13
Fa1fh tor Today 13
Columbus Today 4, B1ble Answers 8, Concern

&amp;

The Ironton Ttgers captured
most Of the glory Sunday as
ftve players from the SEOAL
gndtron champtons were
named to the 1972 All.SEOAL
Football Team and Coach Bob
Lutz was the unammous chotec
as coach of the year
,n grabbmg the unammous
chmce of coach of the year the
29-year old Lutz contmues hts
magtc m producmg football
champtons
He 11as appomted head coach
of the Iron ton Ttgers thts year,
succeeding Bob Bruney,
followmg three years as etther
a champton or co-&lt;:hampton
coach at Ironton St Joseph
htgh school
Lutz graduated from Ironton
St Joe and recetved hts degree
from Marshall Umverstty
before entermg the coachmg
fteld as an assistant at Oak
Htll.
Followmg two years at Oak
Htll he became an asalstant at
St Joe for one year and then
was appomted head coach.
In three years he produced
three champions and now
makes hts debut in the SEOAL
wtth an undefeated champtonshtp team.
Meeltng 10 Jackson the
league's etght head football
coaches and members of the
SEO Sportswnters and
Broadcasters Assoctatton also
ptcked Logan's great fullback
and mtddle-guard, Ken
Culbertson, as the most
valuable player as he beat out
Don Wood of Athens and Ketth
Parker of Ironton for the
honor
Waverly's great pass
recetver, Btll Maloy, who
caught 10 touchdown passes,
led the ballohng for the
bnemen by garnermg all of the
votes to lead 10 that group
Culbertson, Don Wood of
Athens, and Waverly's John
Shoemaker
were
all
unammous chotees among the

Com

ment 10

6 45 6 55 -

Corncob Report 3
Flintstones 13
7 00 - Today3, 4, 15. CBS NewsB, 10 Ne~s6
7 30 - Sleepy Jefters 8, Romper Room 6, Bullwmkte &amp; Rockey
13
B 00 - Capt KanQaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33.
T•mmy &amp; Lass1e 6

8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room B New Zoo Revue 6
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4, Phol Donahue IS, Romper Room 8. Con
cenlral1on 6. Friendly Juncloon 10. Ben Casey 13, Mr Rogers
33 What Every Woman Wants to Know 3
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6 Hazel B
10 00 - D1nah Shore 3, 15 D1ck Van Dyke 13 , Joker's Wold B. 10
Columbus Sox Calling 6
10 30- Concentration 3, IS, Ph•l Donahue 4 Splol Second 13,
Proce ts Roghl 8, 10
11 00 - Sale ofthe Century 3, 15 Love Ameman Syle 6, Gambol
8, 10 , Password 13, Electrtc Co 20

30- HollywoodSquares3. 4,15, Love of LrfeB, 10, Bewrlched
6, 13. Sesame Street 20
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15. Password 6, Bob Brauns 50 SO Club 4,
Jackie Oblmger B News 10. 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3 W's Game 3. 15, Split Second6. Search for Tomorrow 8,
10
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13. Its Your Bet B, Green
Acres 10. Watch Your Child IS
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8, 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, A, 15, Newlywed Game 13 M1ke
Douglass 6, Gurd1ng Loght 8. 10
2 30- Doctors 3, 4, IS, Dalmg Game 13, Edge of Night B, 10
3 00 - General Hospital 6, 13, Another World 3, 4, 15 Love os
Sptendored Thmg B, 10. Growong Him Up 33 , Just Generation
20
3 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, Secret Storm B, 10. One
L1feto L1ve6, 13. Magg1e&amp; The Beautiful Machlne20
4·00- Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15. Sesame St 33, 20, Love,
American Style 13, Merv Gnffm 4, Flinlslones 6, Gollogan's
Isle 8. Movie "Drums of Africa" 10
•
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30 - Love lucy 6; Peffrcoaf Junct1on 3, Danoel Boone 13 .
Merv Griffon 8, Andy Grllf•lh 15
5 00 - DICk Van Dyke 15. Merv Griffin 8, Mr Rogers 33, 20 .
Ponderosa 3, 4, Danoel Boone 6
5 30- Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33, Dragnet B, Gomer Pyle
13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 00- News 3, 4, 10, 15, Sesame Streel20 Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News 3, 4, 6, B, 15, 10; l Dream of Jeannoe 13, Growong
H1m Uo 33
7 00 - What's My Ltne 8, Beat The Clock 4; I've Got A Secret
13, Truth or Conseq. 3, Film IS, Electric Co 20
7 30- ThiS Is Your L•fe 3, Doctors On Call 4, To Tell The Truth
6, Pnce Is Right 8, 10, Beat The Clock 13, Top ot the Month
15, RFD 20, Feast of Language 33.
8 00- Temperatu,es R•song 6, 13, Maude 8, 10, Age of Anxoety
33, Bonanza 3, A, 1§, Ohio This W~
"
8 30- li&lt;!WJIU Eii¥e-.Q~· 0.. 11-t ~Hol~
JOIItlllfl20, !Ia , Mov1e
ll.l!
~
"The Vlctlrn' ' &amp;U~ · . ': " •
9 30 - M~~K~lf Si)lirt~ 13 :· Bt c outnat il(
10 00 - Marcus Welby MD 6, 13 , Ameroca 3. 4, 15 Film 33 ,
News 20
11

NFL Standongs
By Unoted Press International

11 OO - News3,Jt,6,8,10, 15,13

10 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. D1ck Cavett 6 Vorg1man B.
Movoes "Sunday In New York" 10. "Law of the Lawless" 13
1 oo - Your Health
1 30- News A, I~

Nat1onal Conference

East
w. t. I
Washngln B 1 0
Dallas
7 2 0
NY Giants 5 4 0
Sf Louos
2 6 1
2 6 1
Ph•la
Central

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
There comes a time in every little girl's life when that fll'st
little signal of grow10g up appears - if the parents are perceptive enough to catch it. _
And when it happens, Mom and Dad can Slt back for the
assault on the teen years, with a multitude of phone calls, hatr
rollers, records, broken hearts, new clothes and tears. That first
sign means Ute era is about to begin.
It was early 1964. I think, when Daughter Number One, '
Margie, welcomed me home one even10g with a polite invitation
not to bother her, because her girl fnend and she were 10volved
in something far more importanl.
With a rapt, enchanted look on their faces, Margie and friend
listened with what I could only describe as religion-like mtenstly.
The record player was grinding out a slightly hypped-up rock '
rendering by a new (and ooocure, to me) group called the
Beaties.
This was long before George, Paul, John lifld Ringo made the ,
Ed Sullivan Show, and beg1111 some daring experiments in music ·
that have changed the faces of the pop market ever since. The
material was fairly innocuous, wllh the young Beatles imploring
"I Want to Hold Your Hand," and descrtbmg how "I Saw Her
Standing There."
We were only a few months removed from Dr. Seuss and Dr.
Spock, but I recall vividly that I knew somehow - in that
moment - that a profound change was about to take place in '
Margie's life, and mine.
And I was right. The young lady who now Is a Junior at
Marshall University never was quite a little girl again. 'rite
succeeding years were full of orthodootist.s, proms, "boy talk"
and the flowering of a child into a YOU'll woman,
Last Sunday, Daughter NwnberTwo, Vyvyanne, a quletand
introspective little child who seems to be enjoying a perpetual
inside Joke within heraelf, bolted into the family room with ...:: you
guessed It- a record and another little girl.
'
Off went the Raiders-Chiefs game on TV (they let me keep
theplcture on), and the girls Immediately proceeded to listen to a
pleasant-enough little fellow nained Qonny Osmond, singing
these same lhetnes Ill young love, and looking aU of 14 on the
album jacket. Vyvy's eyes toOk on that same mystic look, and
somehow, I se!lled that her dey hu come.
;
This '1181 verified in the next few ciw's, When I was asked :
whether I liked Domy'a 11011p ("Yeah, they're okay") ... ,
whether l thought he wu cute ( "&amp;!re, he's a nlce,loolting boy"),
etc., etc.
Come CIII\OD&amp;,•Vyvy. You'll be \2 in April, and thaee yelll'll
untQ you pa. out af your leellll wlll be ttV~, traumaUc, and ,
fun, I hOpe. And thank )'011 f1r ~ me 111 - ct thaee first •
idgnl that mart the P'INIIt from chlJdhoocl to adolelcence to :
IDiblrlt)r,
tlnil)b
the '"'dlnm ci the lee1111111'1d.~.
-•"'a
:'
k
~~
n'1 a ra_. nice iijlilrience,...ny,llld I am a ~ man to •
... _It twkle inlby life, And, wltlllllci:,l1J1111tt --thatl
aMide +l'U'C af rolll at IIUt 1111 more time in my life. :
n.pw Nwllber Tbree, C.Oie, II aaiJ 111
~

'

+++

'

a:•

ON '1'BE 'IV DIAL: A IP'dal Cll 1111 nUpe llh Ill
Pitl 'JOt mmt:h ,, a:a, ~TV ·- •01!..0 '"'~
meet at t, WB'ftiOTY. ,

•'
•

••
1

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pet pi pa
BB9 227 124
778217149
556 210 191
27B 122 195
278 86 194

w. I. I pet. pi pa
Green Bay 6 3 0 667 179 161
Mmnesota 5 A 0 556 199 135
Detro1t
5 4 0 556213185
ChiCago
3 5 1 389 149 165
West
w. t. t. pet. pi pa
Los Ang
s 3 1 611 177 14B
Atlanta
5 4 0 556 199 183
San Fran 4 4 1 500 232 175
NewOrlns 1 7 1 167 135 253
Amerocan Conference
East
w I. t. pet. pi pa
M1am1
9 0 0 I 000 250 103
N V Jets 6 3 0 667 279 192
Battomore 2 7 0 222 139 186
2 7 0 222'16B 253
Buffalo
New Eng 2 7 0 222 109 296
Central
w. t. I. pet. pf pa
Pollsburgh 7 2 0 778 233 13A
Cleveland 5 3 0 625 141134
Conconnall 5 A 0 556 169 152
1 8 0 111 104 233
Houston
West
w. I. I. pel. pi PI
5 3 1 611 229 169
Oakland
Kan Ctty 5 4 0 556 202 156
3 6 0 333 181 232
Denver
San Diego 2 5 1 .313 152 203

Sunday's Resuns
N Y Jets 41 Buffalo 3
Pollsburgh 16 Kansas C1ly 7
Atlanta 36 New Orleans 20
Miami 52 New England 0
Washington 27 N Y G1ants
13

Oakland 20 Clncmnall 14
Green flay 23 Chocago 17
Philadelphia 18 Houston 17
Dallas 33 St Louis 2A
San Francisco 24 Baltimore

21

Denver 16 Los Ang,les 10
Minnesota 16 Detrolll4
(only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
Cleveland at San Otego
(twilight)
'
{only game scheduled)
Sundiy's Games

Baltimore at Cincinnati
Buffalo at New England
Dallas at Philadelphia

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

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-·----'"

()minates.

SEOAL FOOTBALL TEAM
LINEMEN
I'LAYER-SCH()OL
w·r. YR.
Alex Toppmg - Athens
155 Sr
Charlie Adkins - Athens
200 Jr
Mike Wolfe - Gallipolis
185 Sr
Keith
ParkerIronton
185 Sr
II backs ptcked to the team
Bill
Markin
Ironton
200 Sr
wtth Culbertson and Wood the
Dave
KriebelIronton
only hoid~ers from last year.
175 Sr
As usual the team was Terry Parker - Ironton
195 Jr
domtnated by semors as 18 of Tom Stevenson - Jackson
170 Jr
the 23 Will graduate wtlh the Dan J'vlorrow - Jackson
175 Sr
class of 1973.
'
Mike Mojzer - Logan
197 Sr
In the spectal honor4ry Bill Chaney - Me1gs
182 Sr
membe~shtp' clasaiftcat1on (wo
Bill
Maloy
Waverly
185 Sr
players were accordmg
BACKS
awards as they were unable to
Les
Champlin
Athens
_
complete the entire league
175 Sr
season due to InJUries, but Don Wood- Athens
200 Sr
would have been strong can- Mike Berridge - Gallipolis
180 Jr
dtdates for the team had they Greg Spence - Ironton
150 Sr
played the enttre season
Ken Valentine - Jackson
160 Sr
Eddte Marttn of Wellston and
Ken
Culbertson
-Logan
206 Sr
Dave Berry of Ironton °wtll
Chuck
Faulk
Meigs
164 Sr
recetve cerltftcates of honor at
Andy Vaughan- Meigs
173 Sr
the all-league banquet
Martm ts a 171)-pound semor John Shoemaker - Waverly
160 Jr
fullback and Berry a strong Larry Dixon - Wellston
170 Sr
22{)-pound JUniOr tackle
Randy Hatton- Wellston
160 Sr
HONORARY MEMBERS
All members named to the
Edd1e Martm- Wellston
170 Sr
team and the honorable
220 Jr
mentton players wtll be guests Dave Berry - Ironton
HONORABLE MENTION
at the Ali.SEOAL Football
ATHENS- Jim Fuller and Phtl Strekal
Banquet to be held m Ironton
on Dec. 7, 1972
GALLIPOLIS- Kaven Sheets and John Walter
Head coaches attend10g
IRONTON- Bruce Carter and Terry Mowery
Sunday's meetmg were Gerald
JACKSON- Doug Jude and Artie DeStephen
Inbody, Athens; John Ecker,
LOGAN - John Bachus and Kevm Berry
Galhpolts, Char he Chancey,
MEIGS - Dallas Weber and Lou McKinney
Metgs, Ron Femck, Jackson,
WAVERLY- John Lawson and Tim Anderson
Jtm Adams, Logan, Wilhs
WELLSTON - W1llie Fox and Bill Starkey
Stemen, Wellston; Bob Lutz,
Ironton and Tom Oyer,
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Waverly
Ken Culbertson- Logan
Members of the sportsCOACH OF THE YEAR
wnters and broadcasters'
Bob Lutz -Ironton
assoctalton cast10g ballots
mcluded
Earl
James,
Waverly; AI Etsnaugle and
Pete Wtlson, Jacksoh , B1ll
Gray and Odte O'Donneli,
Galltpohs; Bob Wtlhs and Sts
Baker, Wellston; Ron Crump
and Frank Houston, Ironton;
Tom Metiers and Bob Tayck,
Athens; Ketth Wtsecup, Metgs,
Harold Roach and Paul
Jossghas, Logan.
The next meetmg of the
asaoctalton wtll be held prtor to
the SEOAL banquet at Ironton
next month.

Green Bay al Houston
Mmnesola at Los Angeles
New Orleans at Detroit
N Y Goants at Sl Louos
N Y Jets at Mram1
Oakland at Denver
Pottsburgh al Cleveland
San D1ego at Kansas 1C1ty

San Francosco at Chocago
(only games schedule~)

United Press International
The 76ers, being creatures of
habit, are back to their losing
ways.
Philadelphia, which bad tied
the National Basketball
Association record for most
losses at the start of a season
wtth 15, fmally won •its first
game of the year on Saturday,
defeating HollSton.
But Charlie Scott, lfho set a
club record tl 20 points in the
third quarter, led Phoenix to a
119-108 wm over Philadelphia
on Sunday, making the 76ers I·
16 thus far.
In the only other ,NBA contests Sunday, Lenny Wilkens
came back to haunt his old ball
club as Cleveland toppled
Seattle, 113-107, an~ Portland
nipped Kansas City.Qmaba,
102-100, as Sidney Wtcks hit a
20-foot jumper 'Jvith four
seconds left In the;game.
The 8-fooHi Scott/who wound
up with 33 points, broke the
Suns' individual scoring mark
for one quarter formerly held
by GaU Goodrich, who tallied
19 in one 12-minute session
against Los Angeles in 1969.
Scott's 20 points In the third
stanza also equalled the
Phoenix Co~ high mark
for a quarter ~ed by Elvin
Hayes, then with San Diego
By

--

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earn Team'·

1'172

Rockets can
Oust Flashes
BY. United Press International
Kent, needtng a pall' of VICToledo's Rockets, who domt- tortes to wm 1ts ftrst title, took
nated the Mid-Amertcan Con- a gtant step towards that goal
ference the last three years, last Saturday, downmg a tough
wtll have fmal say again who Mtamt team at Oxford, 21-10.
the MAC football champton
The Flashes, now 5+1 overWill be.
all, struck for two hghtning
The Rockets,,!l:;4 th~ ~ljlJO!_I "~~.~M?~Jll!hr ~econd quarafter winning 3~ stralglit ter to overeoo~e a -'HI 1¥1am1,
games, close thetr season next )ead.
Saturday at Kent State, which
w1ll be seek10g its first MAC
Ttght end Gary Pinkel took a
title m tts 22 years m the ftve-yard scormg pass !rom
conference.
quarterback Daryl Hall to lie
A Toledo V!Ctory, however, the score and after linebacker
hands the championship to the Dan Rector recovered a
Rockets' bitter nval, Bowhng fumble by the Redskins' Bob
Green, which fiOtShed tis con- Httchens, Hall agam htt Pinkel
ference schedule with a 3-1-1 With another scormg strike,
mark Kent is currently 3-1
thts one from 14 yards out

76ers now 1-16 on year

'

HUSTLE
AFfER
.
EVERY
FOOTBAI.I.
GAME

----~---

'

Lutz COach-of-Year;
Culbertson named MVP

6 00 - Sunnse Sem1nar .4 , Sacred Heart 10
6
6
6
6

-

for four years, the last three as
player-coach, recetved a twommute standing ovation from
the crowd of 13,174, second
largest in SOnics' history.
Then the 35-year~ld backcourt star helped the Cavaliers
achieve thetr ftrst victory ever
over the Scnics with a 22-polnt
performance replete with his
usual fteld generalsh1p.
By Unoted Press lnternahonat Wtlkens assisted on the fll'St
East
score of the game-a basket by
Amherst 34 Trinity 7
backcourt mate Austm CarrBethany 36 Wash-Jeff 6
and
Cleveland was never
Bowdoin 41 Tulls 6
Bucknell 41 Colgate 7
headed.
Cornell 48 Brown 28
Carr aiso wound up wtth 22
Dartmouth 3B Columbia 8
points as the Cavs snapped a
Delaware 62 Maine 0
,four-game lostng streak.
Fordham 26 Upsala 14
Holy Cross 28 Mass 16
Navy 28 Prtlsburgh 13
N H 26 Springfield 16
Northeastern 29 VI 19
Penn 4B Yale 30
Penn St 37 N C. St 22

and Willis Reed of New York.
The Suns, unproving !hell'
season log to 11-5, actually won
the game at the free throw line,
making 35 of 40 shots from the
cbarity stripe. The 76ers, 16 of
18 at the line, bad 46 field goals
to Phoenix' 42.
Wilkens, who was at Seattle

College Scores

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
long watt for state htgh school
football playoffs ts over and for
some 1t was a bttter dtsappomtment at not bemg mcluded 10
the 12 semt-fmaltSts announced
Sunday by the Ohto Htgh
School Athletic Association
Masstllon, the No I team all
season long m the UP! Class
AAA high school ratmgs: heads
the hst of competmg teams 10
the playoff semt-ftnals which
open wtth Fnday mght's two
Class AA games at Masstllon
and Troy.
The Ttgers of Coach Bob
Commlngs, many bmes the
state champ10n m the coaches'
poll, meet unbeaten but once
tied Cmcmnatt Prmceton 10 the
ftrst game of a blue ribbon
doubleheader Saturday at Ohto
Stadmm on the Ohto State
campus, starting at II am.
Warren Western Reserve,
which matches Massillon's IM
mark , goes agamst Toledo
Scott, 8-I, m the second game
at 2 p.m.
The Frtday mght AA games
fmd Akron St Vincent, 8-2, and
Umontown Lake, 8-2, meeting
at Massillon's 22,000-seat stadium, whtle Columbus Watter!lon, 9~, and Clncmnati Readmg, 10-0, tangle at Troy
The ftrst round of Class A
games are scheduled for Saturday mght at two separate sites
also
Marton Pleasant, the No I
Class A team m the UP!
coaches ratings, wtll pit its 9~
mark agatnst TUscarawas Valley, 6-3-1, at Mansfield. The
second A game sends Mtddles
town Fenwtck, 6-3-1, agamsl
Loram Clearview, 9-1
Stunning Surprises
The ftnal computerized
ratmgs, which were used to
select the 12 semt-finaltSts,

"ff~),~·o ,: .&lt;~INP.lU~~,I~,
s~P,r\8~*· one llJ &lt;;laSs "'? flnd

another m A, with Ha110ibal
Rtver and Newcomerstown,
both unbeaten and lesders m
thetr respective regtons for
some tune, bemg edged out by
Umontown
Lake
and
Tuscarawas Valley
Newcomerstown Coach
Ward Holdsworth, after
wathng fruttlessly for an expected call to infonn him his
team had been selected, made
the tnp to Columbus to attend
the meetmg of competing
coaches.
Holdsworth met wtth OHSAA
offtctals, who agreed to recheck his region's results
"We are extremely dtsa~
po10ted to say the least,''
Holdsworth satd. "We got no
real satisfaction before we left,
but have Ute assurance of the
commissiOner (Dr Harold
Meyer) that if there has been a
correctable error, it would be
ftxed ."
Holdsworth satd the 10-0
mark ran up by hts Trojans
was the ftrst tune a Newcomerstown team had attamed
that mark, adding, "the whole
community Is just heartsick "
The Newcomerstown coach
also said he urged Com-

Massillon's Commings, who
.
gu1ded the Tl gers I 0 the1r second unbeatenseasonm the past
three years, said hiS staff "had
talked about II all year long."
The Masstllon mentor satd
his team's schedule, which he
called "the toughest m the
state,'' was designed wtth the
playoffs m mmd

Cory Rawson
Reg•on II -

I Zoarvdte
Tuscarawas Valley 2 New

If emergenciee
arise, is your family adequately covered? Secure their
well-being with a
revised policy.

Consult Us Soon

Oauis-W.,. Ins.

comerstown 3 Berne Union 4

Newark Catholic, 5 Coal
Grove. 6 Centerburq. 7 Dan
er•lli-ilolllillo,_llillillo,.llllliiiOo.tli...._ _ _o!oliorJII\iOrJII\iO&gt;'IIIIIWW'IIIil'_ _ _lll\,

r

COLUMBUS ( UPI I - Follow
mg are the top 10 teams tn

each reg1on in lhe final com
puterlzed high school football
ratings released Sunday by the
OhiO High School AthletiC As
soc1ahon

Closs AAA
Reg1on 1 - 1 Warren West
ern Reserve , 2 Eastlake
North. 3 Parma Senior, 4
Cleveland St Ignatius; 5 Lake
wood St Edward , 6 Midpark,
7 Wolloughby South 8. Warren
Howland, 9 Cleveland St Jo
seph , 10 Berea
Regoon 2 - 1 Toledo Scott.
2 (lie) Fremont Ross and To
ledo Central Catholic , 4 Co
lumbus Eastmoor, 5 Upper Ar·
longton , 6 Columbus Northland ,
7 L1ma

Shawnee~

SUPERCHRCWACOLOI
Evel}fhing
For '73

8 Sandusky ,

9 Grove City , 10 Ashland
Reg ron 3 - 1 Massillon, 2
Walsh Jesuit. 3 Canton Me
Konley. 4 Zanesville, 5 Akron
Garfield , 6 Bar~ert~n 1 , 7
~~o:Us1J!.l.t~n-:F\1tlil'\: N&lt;irlti ariton ~oo~er , 9 SIPuthers : ill
Youngstown Urs~llne •
Reg1on 4 - I Cincinnati
Pronceton 2 Troy , 3 Keller-

"

rng Fairmont East , 4 Clncln

nato Elder , 5 Cincinnati Moeller , 6 Moddlelown, 7 Dayton
Stebbins , 8 Cincinnati LaSalle ;
9 Oxford Talawanda. 10 Day.
ton Patterson

Tht Homer

Class AA
Reg1on 5 - I Akron St Vln·

Modtl 801583
:WdlaQOntl

wur. Sptct commend

cent. 2 Warren Kennedy, 3

Geneva 4 Lorain Catholic, 5
Chagrin Falls, 6 Cloverleaf. 7
Campbell Memorial, 8 Man
chester 9 East Palestine. 10
Waynedale
Region 6 - 1 Columbus Wat
terson, 2 L1ma Central Catha
l1c, 3 St Marys Memoroat , A
Rossford , 5 Fostoria, 6 Co
lumbus DeSales. 7 Ontario , B
Dublin , 9 Columbus Hartley,
10 Oregon Cardona! Slrltch

rtmott conuolrn Dtrk Oak or "tcl fl

Vtl'lltfl IXCIUII'It Ol dt COIIIIVtlront

A DeposH Will Reserve Your Choice

INGELS FURNITURE
992

2635

MIDDLEPORT

Reg10n 7 - 1 Uniontown
,
Lake , 2 Iron ton , 3 Han nIba I ,.,llllil•&gt;tllllitiiO"Iil&lt;ttliloiiW."""'Iil&lt;o"""'Qi;;l"'llllillo'"~lli•'"llllli•,.•lli•~o~~lil•"'llllil•&gt;tllliilllll"'llill"'"'*"'"'._"'•!lllllltllli--~

Important Announcement

To
Ohio Power Customers

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

South
Alabama 35 LSU 21
C•tadet 19 Furman 13
East Carolona 21 Wm Mary

THE AREAS AFFECTED ARE AS FOLLOWS:
MINERSVIUE, SYRACUSE, RACINE,
E. MAIN ST. IN POMEROY, FROM
MIDWEST STEEL TO VILLAGE LIMITS

Georgia 10 Fla 7
Ga Tech 42 Boston Colt 10
Grambling 39 Norfolk St 6
Johns Hopkins 55 Dickinson
Ky 14 Vanderbilt 13
La Tech 24 E Mlch1gan 17
Md 31 Clemson 6
MemphiS St A9 Cincinnati 24
N C. 23 Va 3
Richmond 20 Davidson 14
Tampa 7 Moam1 0
Tulane 44 Ohio U 6
Wake Forest 9 Duke 7

Sout~west

the ftrst one."

Security_Is_Love

Wednesday, Nov. 15

V1llanova 40 Xav1er 13

Ariz 21 Brigham Young 7
Ariz. St. 60 ~ew MeKICO 7

missioner Meyer to release Rrver 4 M1nerva 5 L1 ckmg
pomt totals m future years "so Valley 6 Fredemktown , 7
It wouldn't he QUite so disa~ LouiSVille St Thomas Aqumas .
,
8 Claymont , 9 New Le,x1ngton,
.
pomtmg tf you lose out.
, 10 New Concord John Glenn
No such totals were releasetl ' Reg10o 8 - 1 Cjnclnnato
thts year in the computer Reading , 2 Loveland. 3 Hamolton Badrn. 4 Molton Unoon , s
ratings, whtch were conducted st Pans Graham, 6 Wyomong .
by National Sca11010g, Inc. of 7 Dayton Jefferson , 8 Corcte
Columbus.
v•lle . 9 Teays Valley , 10
Not All Gloom
Betlefontame
Closs A
Regoon 9 - 1 Loratn Clear
But, not all was gloom
among the coaches present at v1ew . 2 Kirtland , 3 Lowell
the bastilyoealled meetmg of v1lle . 4 Dalton , s East Can
ton. 6 South Range, 7 Moddle
the coaches.
f•eld Cardona!. B Hanoverton
Pet Mancuso, who wtll send Uniled , 9 Jackson M1lfon , 10
his Prmceton Vikmgs against Rochmond Heights
Region 10 - 1 Marion Pleas
the No. I team 10 the state, satd ant, 2 R1verdale 3 Spencer
tl was "a real honor" for his ville 4 Norwalk St Paul. 5
school to be 10cluded m the Sycamore Mohawk. 6 New
, 7. Ada B Arlongton,
pi ayoIfS. "EspectallY smce tis 9London
(lie) Fremont Sl Joseph and

Will Be Necessary On

W Va SO VMI 24

Midwest
Bowling Green 5 Dayton 0
Drake 35 Northeast La 7•
Dubuque 6 Sompson 6 1t1e)
Ill 37 lnd 20
Iowa St 23 Neb 23 {fie)
John Carroll 19 Oberl.n 14
Kent St 21 Mtam• (0 ) 10
Kenyon 34 Centre (Ky.) 0
Kno• 21 Gr1nnell 7
louisville 20 So. Itt . 16
Mlch 31 Iowa 0
Mlcli.St 19 Ohio St 12
Minn. 35 Northwestern 29
Purdue 27 Wis. 6
· Toledo 21 M.!trshall 0
Wsn &amp;~lch. 31 Ball St. 14

6 PQrtsmoofh Notre

Dam e, 7 PlaiD Coty Jonathan
Alder , 8 Prank tort Adena; 9.
Xenoa Woodrow Wilson,, 10.
New Boston GlenwOod

A Planned Service Interruption

Rutgers 51 Boston U 7
Syracuse 27 Army 6
Temple 22 R t 0

20

darville

are announced

Prmceton 10 Harvard 7

15

vrlle . B Millersporj, 9 Lancas
ter Fisher. 10 Beallsville
Regoon 12 - 1 Middletown
Fenwick , 2 Lockland, 3, Cov
ongton , 4 Wrttiamsburg; S Ce-

From 1:30 p.m. until 2:15p.m.

FtEX·O.GLASS
.GLASS·O·NET
~~.~.~. •':) WYR·O·GLASS

:;;.e/'

. . . .':) 5cREEN·Gi.Ass
FLEX·O.PANE

RT. 33, RT. 7, ENTERPRISE, ROSE HILL
From 1:30 p.m. until 3:15p.m.
In case of Inclement weather, service interruption will
16, 1972. and at same hours' as above.

be Thursday, Nov.

This planned Interruption is necessary to 1m prove service in these areas.

Thank You!

�__

_____ ,__

4-Th~ l&gt;auy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; o..Nov.13,1972 ·

•..•

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Open House planned

Steelers increase ·lead
..

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•

BY JOE CARNICELLI .
.UP! Sports,, Writer
The ingredient.&lt;; were different-Pittsburgh used Ham and
Miami used Mercury-but the
results were the same-a step
closer to the National Football
League playoffs.
Jack Ham, the second-year
linebaCker from Penn State
who has been the star of the
PittSburgh defense this season,
recovered two fumbles Sunday
to enable the Steelers to score
10 points in the last six minutes
and upset the Kansas City
Chiefs, IS-7.
The victory, combined with
Oakland's 2Q.14 triumph over
Cincinnati, pushed the surging
Steelers two games in front in
the American Conference Central Division race and dropped
the Chiefs a half-game behind
Oakland in the West.
Miami, meanwhile,
unleashed MerCury Morris on
New England and the elusive
running back from West' Texas
State scored three TOs .in the
first half to set the stage for a
crushing 52-0 rout of the
Patriots. The victory was the
llinth without a loss for the
un~eaten Dolphins, who now
are threathening seriously to
become the first unbeaten
' tesm in the NFL since the 1942
Chicago Bears.
The triumph, the IOOth for
Miami Coach Don Shula, left
the Dolphins three games
ahead of the New York Jets, 41-

.

3 conquerors of Buffalo, in the

AFC East with six games left.
In other action Sunday,
Washington beat the New York
Giant.&lt;;, 27-13, Minnesota held
off Detroit,IS-14, Denver upset
Los Angeles 16-10, San Francisco downed Baltimore, 24-21,
Atlanta ripped New Orleans,
36-20, · Green Bay topped
Chicago, 23-17, Dallas whipped
St.
Louis,
33-24
and
Philadelphia edged Houston,
16-17. ·Cleveland is at San Diego
tonight.
Kansas City led 7-6 on Jun
Kearney's 65-yard return of a
pass interception when Ham
recovered an Ed Podolak
fumble on the Chiefs' 37 to set
up a 49-yard field goal by Roy
Gerela, his third of the game,
with 5:10 remaining. On the
next series, Ham recovered
Jim Otis' fumble on the Kansas
City 18 and Franco Harris ran
seven yards for the crushing

TD.
Morris scored on rurui of
four, four and six yards in the
first half as the Dolphins built a
31~ lead and reserve quarterback Jim Del Gaiw threw two
TD passes in the second half as
the Dolphins clobbered New
England.
Larry Brown powered for
two TDs in the last 63 seconds
that gave Washington its
vlcto!j over the Giant.&lt;;.
Charlie Smith and Clarence
Davis ground out 190 yards and
two touchdowns betwe~n th..,

to lead O~kland over Cin·
cinnati and into first place in
the West and Minnesota
bounced back into the NFC
Central playoff picture on Fred
Cox' 23-yard field goal, his
third of the game, with six
minutes left and Bobby
Bryant's block of a 33-yard
field goal try bv Detroit's Errol
Mann with just five seconds
left.
"Charley Johnson threw a
seven-yard TD pass to Jerry
Simmons and Jim Turner
kicked three field goals to lead
Denver to its upset of Los
Angeles and Steve Spurrier
threw a ~yard TD pa·ss to Ted
Kwallck with ii :20 left for the
winning point.&lt;; in San Francisco's triumph over the Colt.&lt;;.
Emerson Boozer lifted· his
league-leading TD total to 13
with two scores as the Jets
rolled over Buffalo. Joe Namath bad two TO passes for the
Jet.&lt;; to boost his total to Iii, a
league high, while John
Brockington and Scott Hunter
ran for TDS and Chester
Marco! kicked thrtle field goals
to spark Green Bay over the
Bears.
Toni Fritsch 's four field
goals and a 41-yard TO pass
from Craig Morton to Ron
Sellers helped Dallas stop St.
Louis and Tom Dempsey
kicked six field goals to account for all the Philadelphia
scoring in the Eagles' triumph
over Houston.

CHESS WINNERS - Bert Moshier, 1\rst in juniors,; Keith Clemente , second over a 11, and
Charles sili!,'.ii 1::1\ampjon, of thlf'weekend chess tournament at Kyger Creek High School.

Szasz wins K C Chess play
CHESHIRE - Charles
Szasz, Charleston, W. Va. won
open competition Sunday in the
Kyg er Creek High School
Chess Club tournament by
defeating Keith Clemente of
Pt. Pleasant in the fifth round
for a total of 4 ~ points.
Szasz, rated by the United
States Chess Federation al1804
(over 2200 is " master "),
defeated Ed !son of Rio Grande
in the first round; Bill Miller,
Gallipolis, in th e second;
Freeman Locke, Gallipolis, in
the third, and James Vlront,
New Marshfield, in the fourt h
rollhd.
Clemente posted victories
over Jeff Parson, Pt. Pleasant;

Steve Anderson, Pomeroy ;
Harold Carson, Rutland, and
Bert Moshier, before losing to
Szasz.
James Viront, winning the
senior division, had wins over
Donald Lambert, Gallipolis;
Butch Smith, Cheshire; Erwin
Torrico,
Wellston,
and
Clemente.
Moshier, president of the
sponsoring chess club, won the
junior division with victories
over Mark McDan iel and
Rusty Krodel, both of Pt.
Pleasant, and Freeman Locke.
Certificates of merit were
awarded to Robert Saunders,
Northup, second in juniors, and
sixth in ove rall ; Erwin

IN BYESVILLE
Mrs.
Edna Reibel of
Torrico, third in juni_ors, eighth
overall; Robert Shaver, Pomeroy, national
Gallipolis , second in sen- representative of District 13,
ior division , lOth over- Daughters of America, and
all ; Freeman Locke, third Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Middleport,
in senior, 12th overall, and Bill both members of Theodorus
Council 17, were at Byesville
Miller, third overall.
Thursday for a booster
meeting. Mrs. Jeanette Bloor,
state councilor, and other state
OHIO COLLEGE
and district officers were
FOOTBALL SCORES
United Pr~s s Int ernational
present and recognized.
Saturda y

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Michigan State t9 Ohio State 12
Bowling Green 5 Dayton 0
Kent State 2t Mia mi 10
Mus kingum 41 Marietta 12

As hland 55 Northwood (Mic h.)
0

An open house honoring Mr.
and Mrs. Don MuHen on their
25th wedding anniversary wlll
be held from 2 to 4 p, m. Sunday, Nov. 19, at the home of
Mrs. Mullen's parents, Mr. and
. Mrs. · George Ha ckett, Sr.,
South Second Ave., Middleport .
Mr. and Mrs. Mullen have
five sons, Sean , setving with
the U. S. Air- Force in
California ; Charles, emploved
in North Carolina ; Patrick of

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Defiance 16 Olivet 1Mich .) 6
Hei delberg 24 Mount Union 7

WHITE SHRINE OF JERUSALEM, District 16 supreme
inspection look place Friday night at the IOOF hall in
Pomeroy. Worthy high priestesses and district officers above
with Mrs.· Gordon Hawk, deputy supreme worthy high
priestess, tile inspecting officer, are I to r, Mrs. Josephine
Roberts, Huntington Shrine; Mrs. Bessie Gumm, Marietta

Sh~ine

12; Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew, District 16 deputy; Mn;,
Pearl-Reynolds, Mary Shrine 37; Mrs. Hawk; Mrs. Georgene
Childers, Lafayette Shrine 44, Gallipolis; Mrs. Martha Neal,
Gallipolis, district membership committee chairman; and'
Mrs. Bernice Winn, District chairman of material objectives.

District 16 White Shrine inspection held .
Approximately 100 persons
representing six Shrines · attended the supreme inspection
of District 16, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, held Friday night
at the IOOF hall in Pomeroy

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Ceremonial was held for four.
candidates, Mr. and Mrs. craig
Moore, Marietta ; Mrs. Hazel
Thomson, Bradbury, and Mrs.
Helen Pickens, Racine.
A supper was' held following
inspection. Mrs. Maxine
Wingett prepared the table
which featured a fall motif with
basket of fruit and orange
.
a
Boyer, Larry Morrison,
Matthew
Erwin,
Earl tapers. Piano music during the
McKinley,MabelWalburn,and social hour was presented by
Mrs. William Phillips.
Mrs. Margaret Neuman.
A thank you note was read
from Mrs.-Elizabeth Oiler for
Now! Lay It Away
serving a wedding reception .
Mrs. Childs read a letter from
Wa yne and Linda Clark,
missionaries in Michigan.
Named hostesses for the
Sewin&amp;. Machine
December meeting were Mrs.
Childs, Mrs. Regina Swift,
For Christina$ '72
Mrs. Audrey Swett, Mrs. Clyda
Small deposit will hold.
Allensworth, Mrs. Bea
Stewart, and Mrs. Hattie Swift.
Purchases of two new serving tables for the fellowship
115 W. Second
192-2284 '
POMEROY,
OHIO
(Continued on pages)

with Mary Shrine 37 as host. Gallipolis; and Marietta 12.
Mrs. Gordon Hawk, Fair- Members from the Shrines of
born, deputy supreme worthy Colu mbu a,
Clar ksburg,
high priestess, was the in- Huntington, W. Va., Hocking,
specting officer for the Shrines Gallipolis, and Marietta were
of Pomeroy, Lafayette 44 , present for the affair.

A Thanksgiving theme was
carried out in the devotions and
program for the Philathea
Society Thursday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
· Devotions by Mrs. Betty
Cline included ·a reading of the
92nd Psalm; Mrs. Cathryn
Ervin presented a meditation,
"The Importance of Thanksgiving," and Mrs. Cline gave,
"The Art of Thanksgiving" and
" How to Count Your
Blessings."
For roll call each member
told of something for which she
is thankful.
Music by the "Teen Persuaders" opened the program

cond ucted by Mrs. Grace
Hawley . Their selections were
"! Wish We Had All Been
Ready," " The King is
Coming,"
and
"Climb Tomorrow 's Mountain ."
Booklets "A Guide for Living"
were given to each member by
Mrs. Hawley who read "What
to Be Thankful For,'' and
scripture. Poems, "Landing of
the Pilgrims," by Mrs. Martha
Childs, and "A Land of Plenty"
by Mrs. Hawley, concluded the
program .
Reported ill were Mrs .
Martha Searls, Leslie Ervin,
Bob Craig, Elmer Wehrung,
George Nicinsky, Mr. and Mrs.

POMER Y.

s !CLOSE

EAST COURT ST.;

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SINGER

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cl"happiness thing:·

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Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

environmental improvements. Our concern, however, is
best shown by describing just a few of the things we have
been doing to protect our air, larod and water.
AI~ Pollution Control. All 36 coal-fired generating units
bUill on the AEP System since 1950 have incl uded air
pollution control equipment, the latest of which is designed to remove at least 99.5% of all particulate matter
. from the stacks. A program of " upgrading" pollution
control equipment at older plants was also started in
the early 1950's and has been continuing
evE!r since. We've proposed to regulatory bodies the expenditure of some
$5211'lilllon for pollution control equipment in 1973 alone.
The cost to upgrade some old generating units cannot be justified from our
customers' Viewpoint. These
~,tnits are being shut down.
The AEP System has retired
106 old generating units at 36
plants since 1947. The electricity once produced by all these
units is now supplied by just
one of our large new generators at a plant equipped
with the latest dust collec- lion systems available.
Re1earch. We are determined to find an~
swers to the unsolved problems associated with
removal of sulfur 0Xides from plant stacks. This is the
maj~r objective of our air quality research program.
At th1s time, no known sulfur oxide removal system is re-...

THANK YOU

Exclusive Ladies'
Fashions
and Accessories

. \
I want to express my very sincere Thanks to
all who helped me in My campaign and to each
one .for their vote .
A Very Speci.a l Thank You,

Shop The Convenient
Way
U se Our Lay Away

JOE DENISON

lOLA'S

Pd. Pol. Adv .

DR,ESS SHOP
Pomeroy, Ohio

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To All
Of You Who Voted and
Supported Me For
Meigs County·Commissioner. ·
''MANY THANKSn
W. E. SNOUFFER

to 1wcdy children Ihis Chri~tma s . Come
in now - supply ol dolls is limi led- ond
pirk up n free doll. DesiHn nnd ~ew an
outfit lor it, then return it to us. It wi ll
he displayed in pur lobby with nil the
Drt&gt;ss-A-Doll dol ls. Pri zes wil l be

· Pd. Pol. Adv.

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The Farmers Ban.k &amp;1Savings Co.
POMIIIO'f:, OHIO

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, Mtmb:orot Federal R....,s~ .

On FrlllllrsOur ~•t-In Wlnlllw IIO,Uh,
hl7 IL IW. ICitll'
. Ia.
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WMG Mllllilll~m ·-·,.~bell D¢ ._

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ists
years.

iA

2-HOUR
CLEANI.NG

awa
. Don't worry about sewi ng
skil ls. Your doll wi ll find a home in the
arms qf a child on Christmas day, and
be loved.
·
You. niake Dress-A-Doll * , a happiness
t hing. thank you .
·

Sincerely

ron
m ,o re an

The Fabric Shop

Dress-A~DoQ~ i5n~!!C!i~~~"

RACINE - A family observance of the 80th birthday
anniversary of Mrs . Owen
Watson, Racine, was held
Sunday.
IN~AIJ.ATION - Mrs. Helen Milhoan, seated, was installed worthy matron of
Here for the celebration were
Evangeline Chaplet172, Order of the Eastern Star, and Harry Chesher, right, was instalied
her
son-in-law and daughter,
worthy patron of the chapter in ceremonies Thursday night . Seated to !be left of Mrs. Milhoan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
is Paul Darnell, newly installed chaplain . Standing behind the three are the other newly installed officers of the chapter.
and daughter, Nancy, West
Jefferson . A chic.hn dinner
was served. Calling during the
Mrs. Marie Hawkins. Mrs. · afternoon were the Rev. and
Rosetta Redovian and Miss Mrs. Dale McClurg, Gallipolis.
Nellie Zerkle decorated the Mrs. Grace Krider baked the
Mrs. Helen Milhoan and
Other officers installed were chapter room for'the ceremony birthday cake. Cards, gifts and
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ted to Mrs.
Harry Chesher were installed Mrs . Lena Bunce, associate and refreshments were served flowers were presen
as worthy matron and worthy matron; Allen Hughes, by Mrs. Ann Thomas, Mrs. Watson whose birthday was
patron of Evangeline Chapter associate patron ; Mrs. !Ia Lois Cunningham, Mrs. Oma Saturday, Nov. 11 , although no
172, Order of the Eastern Star, Darnell, secretary,· Mrs. Nelson , Mrs. Kathryn Knight, pal·ty was held due to her ill
and Mrs. Clara Criswell.
health.
in installation ceremonies
King, conductress;
tr~asurer; Miss
Thursday night at the Masonic Bessie
Kathy King,
Sue
Temple.
Blaine, associate conductress;
Paul Darnell, chaplain; Mrs. •
Mary Meinhart, marshal ; Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox, organist; Mrs .
Kathryn Evans, Adah; Mrs.
Glenna Crisp, Ruth; Mrs .
Farie Kennedy, Esther; Mrs.
Euvetta Bechtle, Martha ; Mrs.
Jenevee Chesher, Electa; Mrs.
Plans for a yard sale
Evelyn Lewis, warder; and
Saturday at the Bradbury
George Meinhart" sentinel.
Elementary School were anThe installing ' officer was
nounced by the PTA Thursday
Mrs. N~omi King, assisted by
nl~ht. Mrs. Maming Kloes .
Mrs. Lena Davis, inviting
prestded·at the meeting.
marshall; Mrs. Bessie King
It was reported that the
and Robert King, marshalls;
Halloween carnival was a
Euvetta Bechtle, chaplain;
success. Membership dues
Mrs. Roma Hawkins, conwere collected and parents
ductress; Mrs. Mary Hughes,
were encouraged to jotn. Mrs.
wa rder ; Raymond Wilcox ,
Jean Thomas reported on the
sentinel; and Wilma Styer,
recent Meigs County Council of organist.
Parents
and
Teachers
Distinguished guests
meeting. The unit approved
presented included Sarah
payment of Council dues and
Secoy of Bartlett, deputy grand
made a contribution to the matron ; Mrs. June Stanley,
scholarship fund.
Albany, district secretary; and
The children present .Jj!~
ll!~s
:W!!.cox, Midd\el.!_Ott,
• .... ...... •
.lJ lllli!. r.'J&gt;I '•~'ii 1 Hll&gt;1.1 lA'' 1'\
I')IJI l.il
the pledge to the flag an(tgaVe district treasurer.
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the prayer. Officers reports
How
can
you
burn
30,000,000'
tons
of
coal
a
year
and be
Glen Evans sang "How
were given. The attendance Great Thou Art." Jewels from
an environmentalist? The dictionary defines an environaward was won by Mrs. Betty the chapter were presented to
mentalist as one concerned with " the total of ecological ,
Fultz' class.
Jenevee Chesher, junior past
social and cultural conditions that influence the life of a
matron, and Harry Chesher,
community."
junior past patron by Mr. and
On the ecological side, we recognized th e abso lute
Mrs. Robert King.
necessity for concern about the environment when we
Guest.&lt;; were registered by
FELWWSHIP MEETS
Mrs. Rosemary Lyons and
started installing smoke and dust collecting sysfems on
A breakfast and prayer
our stacks more than 30 years ago.
service was held Saturday
morning at the Laurel Cliff
On the social side, which takes in jobs, wages, and an inFree Methodist Church by the
creasing standard of living, we also knew that it would be
Men's Fellowship. Meeting
an absolute necessity to provide 16 times more power to
recenUy at the church, the
meet 1972's power requirements. The conflict between
group discussed general
the need for protection of the environment on one hand
repairs needed around the
and the need for more power production (and its attendparsonage and a program to be
ant pollution potential) on the other was an enormous
held at the Meigs County Infirmary on Nov. 20. Lawrence
problem-and still is.
Smith had prayer, following
But, we've come a long way in finding and applying soludevotions by Robert Barton,
tions. We've already spent one-quarter-billion dollars on
ltO E. 2nd
Pomeroy
president.
Phone m -5428

sale Saturday

Find lay 21 Ohio Nor thern 19
Ten nessee State 41 Cen tral

7009 toW.9 Dilly-8unday
Main • Pomeroy
1·9 . ,
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AT NOON ON THURS.) -

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PTA is having

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IIDIILEPOIT,O.

0FFICE 'HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO

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Thanksgiving theme marks devotions

Wt• tH'ed your help lo bring h&lt;Jppiness

BAKER

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"I W()uldlike to express
my appreciation for the
confidence you have
placed in my reelection"

Officers .installed

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PUINIIUB

OPTOMETHI:il

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is celebrated

cerned, peopl e who
bounce out of bed deserve
to sleep on trampolines.

FOI\ BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I

N. W. CO PTON,·. .D:

80th Birthday

So tar as we are con-

tha

Pomeroy
Brian, at
relatives
invited .

BAZAAR PLANNED
Trinity Chu1·ch women will
h11ve a bazaar Wednesday at
the church in· Pomeroy. }:he
and Michael · and bazaar will open l!t9'a. m. with
home. Friends and needlework and baked goods
of the couple are .. for sa l~ . A luneheon will be
servl'&lt;l starting at 11 a ..111 .

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State o
John Carroll 19 Oberlin 14
Kenyon 34 Centre !Ky. I 0
Joseph McMurray died on Saturday
Baldwin-Wallace 14 Wooster 13
Capi tal 14 Wittenberg 7
RAVENSWOOD .r- Joseph Forrest Poston, and several Wilmington 12 Bluffton 7
Allegheny I Pa .l 32 Hiram 0
Arthur McMurray, 89, Ravens- nieces and nephews.
Memphi s State 49 Cincinnati 24
wood, died Saturday at his
He was preceded in death by Vi llanov a 40 Xavier 13
home in Ravenswood. He was his wife, Rachael Hunt Mc- Denison 52 Washington &amp; Lee
22
born in West Virginia Jan. 10, Murray, in 1971.
·
Toledo
21 Marsha ll o
1883, son of the late William
Funeral services will be held Otterbein 16 Ohio Wesleyan 7
and Elizabeth Sims Mc- Tuesday 2 p.m., at the North Tulane Jl4 Ohio Uni versity 6
Murray.
Ravenswood United Methodist Youngstown State 28
Central Michigan28ltiel
Mr. McMurray, a member of Church with Rev. Paul Qua ntico
Marines 24 Akron 0
the Church of Christ, owned Morrison and Rev. Robert
and operated the J. A. Mc- Holland officiating. Burial will
Murray Grocery in Ravens- be in the Ravenswood
wood from 1914 to 1971.
Cemetery.
Surviving are a daughter,
Friends may call at the
Mrs. Jacqueline M. Poston, Chambers Funeral Home in
R•1•enswood ; three step- Ravenswood between now and
gr~ ..dchildren·: Creg, Cary and' the time of the services.

UJT'S TRUE" .. -

Activities
.
planned
Holiday projects and ac. tivilies were planned Friday
night by the Happy Harvesters
Class of Trinity Church.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs.
Dale Smith will arrange
remembrances for shut-ins.
The dinner party will be held
un Dec. 8 at Crow's Steak
House, a party and program to
fo llow at the church. Devotions
for the party will be by Mrs.
Stella Kloes, and Mrs.
Cl~rence Headley will have the
program, which will include a
gift exchange.
Mrs. Henry Reibel appointed
Mrs. Clara Karr and Mrs.
Kloes to the nomi nating
committee for new officers. A
card of thanks was read from
Mrs. Marie Dailey for flowers
and cards while she was
hospitalized, and a reception
for Beverly June Bates and Bill
Fetty was planned on Dec. 22 at
the church. Named to the
reception committee were
Mrs. · Reibel , Mrs. Roy
Seyfried, Mrs. Karr, Mrs .
Smith, Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs .
John Terrell, Miss Sybil Ebersbach, and Mrs. Clarence
Massar.
Prayer from the yearbook
opened the meeting. Mrs. Phil
Williamson read a poem "A
Breath of Praye(' and gave
scripture from St . Matthew for
devotions.
The program on Thanksgiving was given by Mrs .
Neutzling who opened with
group singing of "Stand Up for
Jesus." She read a story
enlitled "And Thankful Be" by
Lucy Parr and concluded with
a scrapbook of newspaper
clippings on class activilies
since 1957.
Games were conducted with
Mrs. Terrell, Mrs. Smith, Mrs.
Karr, Mrs. Gladys Cuckler,
Mrs. Fred Dessauer, and Mrs.
Oris Ginther winning prizes.
Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Mrs.
Lawrence Lanning, and Mrs.
Reibel serv~d sandwiches and
salad.
Present besides those 'nam.id
were Mrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs.
Carrie Meinhart, Mrs. Freda
Duffy, and Mrs. Lillie Hauck.

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THANKS TO THE
SALEM PRECINCT VOTERS

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WHO SUPPORTED THE DEMOCRAT

CANDIDATES FOR OOUNTY OFFICE
IN 1HE NOVEMBER 7 ELECOON.

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Pd. Pol. Adv. By Willard.Walker ·
Democrat Committeeman. ·
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ilatile.' o'fcdmmef~i~ily feasible'.
a solution is' OUI1if
we will adopt it promptly. In fact, even now the engineering and design work for the installation of a major new
su lfur removal system is nearing completion, and we
hope to start its construction within the next few months.
Until a commercial process is developed, .tall stacks are
the best means available to prevent ground-level buildup
of sulfur oxides. We pioneered the use of tall stacks, starting also in the early 1950's. Tall stacks have for years
been recognized and accepted in Great Britain as the
best available answer to the sulfur oxide problem.
Cooling Towers. Power plants use large amounts of
wate=.t cool steam, raising the water's temperature as
it is r urned to its source. It the river or lake is too small,
the eturn of the water might, under some circumstances,
be harmful. Cooling towers cool the water in a "closed
circuit" system which eliminates warm water discharge.
The AEP System pioneered the use of natural draft, hyperbolic cooling towers in this country. We've built ten
of these towers at plants located on rivers where the
quantity of water was insufficient to prevent thermal
buildup. Three more are under constru ction . .We are constantly studying the effects R,f warm water discharge and
our present program of ecological research on Lake
Michigan, started in 1966, is the most comprehensive
such study ever conducted under utility sponsorship.
Land Conservation. With the ever-i ncreasing
need for electric power, the problem of
del iverlng that power to customers
could have, without the development
of high voltage transmission systems·, created · a forest of utility
towers across our countryside. Our
765,000-volt lines today can carry
3(l times more.power than earlier
138,000-volt Iines. In terms of land
conservation, one 200 foot rightof-way for a 765,000 volt line can
do the same job that 30 rightsot-way did 20 years ago.
Our goal is to do an even
better job in safe-guarding
all the aspects of our
total· environment-air,
water, and land as well
as jobs, wages and a
. high standard of Jiving.

W
h'en'

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4-Th~ l&gt;auy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; o..Nov.13,1972 ·

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Open House planned

Steelers increase ·lead
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BY JOE CARNICELLI .
.UP! Sports,, Writer
The ingredient.&lt;; were different-Pittsburgh used Ham and
Miami used Mercury-but the
results were the same-a step
closer to the National Football
League playoffs.
Jack Ham, the second-year
linebaCker from Penn State
who has been the star of the
PittSburgh defense this season,
recovered two fumbles Sunday
to enable the Steelers to score
10 points in the last six minutes
and upset the Kansas City
Chiefs, IS-7.
The victory, combined with
Oakland's 2Q.14 triumph over
Cincinnati, pushed the surging
Steelers two games in front in
the American Conference Central Division race and dropped
the Chiefs a half-game behind
Oakland in the West.
Miami, meanwhile,
unleashed MerCury Morris on
New England and the elusive
running back from West' Texas
State scored three TOs .in the
first half to set the stage for a
crushing 52-0 rout of the
Patriots. The victory was the
llinth without a loss for the
un~eaten Dolphins, who now
are threathening seriously to
become the first unbeaten
' tesm in the NFL since the 1942
Chicago Bears.
The triumph, the IOOth for
Miami Coach Don Shula, left
the Dolphins three games
ahead of the New York Jets, 41-

.

3 conquerors of Buffalo, in the

AFC East with six games left.
In other action Sunday,
Washington beat the New York
Giant.&lt;;, 27-13, Minnesota held
off Detroit,IS-14, Denver upset
Los Angeles 16-10, San Francisco downed Baltimore, 24-21,
Atlanta ripped New Orleans,
36-20, · Green Bay topped
Chicago, 23-17, Dallas whipped
St.
Louis,
33-24
and
Philadelphia edged Houston,
16-17. ·Cleveland is at San Diego
tonight.
Kansas City led 7-6 on Jun
Kearney's 65-yard return of a
pass interception when Ham
recovered an Ed Podolak
fumble on the Chiefs' 37 to set
up a 49-yard field goal by Roy
Gerela, his third of the game,
with 5:10 remaining. On the
next series, Ham recovered
Jim Otis' fumble on the Kansas
City 18 and Franco Harris ran
seven yards for the crushing

TD.
Morris scored on rurui of
four, four and six yards in the
first half as the Dolphins built a
31~ lead and reserve quarterback Jim Del Gaiw threw two
TD passes in the second half as
the Dolphins clobbered New
England.
Larry Brown powered for
two TDs in the last 63 seconds
that gave Washington its
vlcto!j over the Giant.&lt;;.
Charlie Smith and Clarence
Davis ground out 190 yards and
two touchdowns betwe~n th..,

to lead O~kland over Cin·
cinnati and into first place in
the West and Minnesota
bounced back into the NFC
Central playoff picture on Fred
Cox' 23-yard field goal, his
third of the game, with six
minutes left and Bobby
Bryant's block of a 33-yard
field goal try bv Detroit's Errol
Mann with just five seconds
left.
"Charley Johnson threw a
seven-yard TD pass to Jerry
Simmons and Jim Turner
kicked three field goals to lead
Denver to its upset of Los
Angeles and Steve Spurrier
threw a ~yard TD pa·ss to Ted
Kwallck with ii :20 left for the
winning point.&lt;; in San Francisco's triumph over the Colt.&lt;;.
Emerson Boozer lifted· his
league-leading TD total to 13
with two scores as the Jets
rolled over Buffalo. Joe Namath bad two TO passes for the
Jet.&lt;; to boost his total to Iii, a
league high, while John
Brockington and Scott Hunter
ran for TDS and Chester
Marco! kicked thrtle field goals
to spark Green Bay over the
Bears.
Toni Fritsch 's four field
goals and a 41-yard TO pass
from Craig Morton to Ron
Sellers helped Dallas stop St.
Louis and Tom Dempsey
kicked six field goals to account for all the Philadelphia
scoring in the Eagles' triumph
over Houston.

CHESS WINNERS - Bert Moshier, 1\rst in juniors,; Keith Clemente , second over a 11, and
Charles sili!,'.ii 1::1\ampjon, of thlf'weekend chess tournament at Kyger Creek High School.

Szasz wins K C Chess play
CHESHIRE - Charles
Szasz, Charleston, W. Va. won
open competition Sunday in the
Kyg er Creek High School
Chess Club tournament by
defeating Keith Clemente of
Pt. Pleasant in the fifth round
for a total of 4 ~ points.
Szasz, rated by the United
States Chess Federation al1804
(over 2200 is " master "),
defeated Ed !son of Rio Grande
in the first round; Bill Miller,
Gallipolis, in th e second;
Freeman Locke, Gallipolis, in
the third, and James Vlront,
New Marshfield, in the fourt h
rollhd.
Clemente posted victories
over Jeff Parson, Pt. Pleasant;

Steve Anderson, Pomeroy ;
Harold Carson, Rutland, and
Bert Moshier, before losing to
Szasz.
James Viront, winning the
senior division, had wins over
Donald Lambert, Gallipolis;
Butch Smith, Cheshire; Erwin
Torrico,
Wellston,
and
Clemente.
Moshier, president of the
sponsoring chess club, won the
junior division with victories
over Mark McDan iel and
Rusty Krodel, both of Pt.
Pleasant, and Freeman Locke.
Certificates of merit were
awarded to Robert Saunders,
Northup, second in juniors, and
sixth in ove rall ; Erwin

IN BYESVILLE
Mrs.
Edna Reibel of
Torrico, third in juni_ors, eighth
overall; Robert Shaver, Pomeroy, national
Gallipolis , second in sen- representative of District 13,
ior division , lOth over- Daughters of America, and
all ; Freeman Locke, third Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Middleport,
in senior, 12th overall, and Bill both members of Theodorus
Council 17, were at Byesville
Miller, third overall.
Thursday for a booster
meeting. Mrs. Jeanette Bloor,
state councilor, and other state
OHIO COLLEGE
and district officers were
FOOTBALL SCORES
United Pr~s s Int ernational
present and recognized.
Saturda y

,

Michigan State t9 Ohio State 12
Bowling Green 5 Dayton 0
Kent State 2t Mia mi 10
Mus kingum 41 Marietta 12

As hland 55 Northwood (Mic h.)
0

An open house honoring Mr.
and Mrs. Don MuHen on their
25th wedding anniversary wlll
be held from 2 to 4 p, m. Sunday, Nov. 19, at the home of
Mrs. Mullen's parents, Mr. and
. Mrs. · George Ha ckett, Sr.,
South Second Ave., Middleport .
Mr. and Mrs. Mullen have
five sons, Sean , setving with
the U. S. Air- Force in
California ; Charles, emploved
in North Carolina ; Patrick of

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Defiance 16 Olivet 1Mich .) 6
Hei delberg 24 Mount Union 7

WHITE SHRINE OF JERUSALEM, District 16 supreme
inspection look place Friday night at the IOOF hall in
Pomeroy. Worthy high priestesses and district officers above
with Mrs.· Gordon Hawk, deputy supreme worthy high
priestess, tile inspecting officer, are I to r, Mrs. Josephine
Roberts, Huntington Shrine; Mrs. Bessie Gumm, Marietta

Sh~ine

12; Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew, District 16 deputy; Mn;,
Pearl-Reynolds, Mary Shrine 37; Mrs. Hawk; Mrs. Georgene
Childers, Lafayette Shrine 44, Gallipolis; Mrs. Martha Neal,
Gallipolis, district membership committee chairman; and'
Mrs. Bernice Winn, District chairman of material objectives.

District 16 White Shrine inspection held .
Approximately 100 persons
representing six Shrines · attended the supreme inspection
of District 16, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, held Friday night
at the IOOF hall in Pomeroy

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Ceremonial was held for four.
candidates, Mr. and Mrs. craig
Moore, Marietta ; Mrs. Hazel
Thomson, Bradbury, and Mrs.
Helen Pickens, Racine.
A supper was' held following
inspection. Mrs. Maxine
Wingett prepared the table
which featured a fall motif with
basket of fruit and orange
.
a
Boyer, Larry Morrison,
Matthew
Erwin,
Earl tapers. Piano music during the
McKinley,MabelWalburn,and social hour was presented by
Mrs. William Phillips.
Mrs. Margaret Neuman.
A thank you note was read
from Mrs.-Elizabeth Oiler for
Now! Lay It Away
serving a wedding reception .
Mrs. Childs read a letter from
Wa yne and Linda Clark,
missionaries in Michigan.
Named hostesses for the
Sewin&amp;. Machine
December meeting were Mrs.
Childs, Mrs. Regina Swift,
For Christina$ '72
Mrs. Audrey Swett, Mrs. Clyda
Small deposit will hold.
Allensworth, Mrs. Bea
Stewart, and Mrs. Hattie Swift.
Purchases of two new serving tables for the fellowship
115 W. Second
192-2284 '
POMEROY,
OHIO
(Continued on pages)

with Mary Shrine 37 as host. Gallipolis; and Marietta 12.
Mrs. Gordon Hawk, Fair- Members from the Shrines of
born, deputy supreme worthy Colu mbu a,
Clar ksburg,
high priestess, was the in- Huntington, W. Va., Hocking,
specting officer for the Shrines Gallipolis, and Marietta were
of Pomeroy, Lafayette 44 , present for the affair.

A Thanksgiving theme was
carried out in the devotions and
program for the Philathea
Society Thursday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
· Devotions by Mrs. Betty
Cline included ·a reading of the
92nd Psalm; Mrs. Cathryn
Ervin presented a meditation,
"The Importance of Thanksgiving," and Mrs. Cline gave,
"The Art of Thanksgiving" and
" How to Count Your
Blessings."
For roll call each member
told of something for which she
is thankful.
Music by the "Teen Persuaders" opened the program

cond ucted by Mrs. Grace
Hawley . Their selections were
"! Wish We Had All Been
Ready," " The King is
Coming,"
and
"Climb Tomorrow 's Mountain ."
Booklets "A Guide for Living"
were given to each member by
Mrs. Hawley who read "What
to Be Thankful For,'' and
scripture. Poems, "Landing of
the Pilgrims," by Mrs. Martha
Childs, and "A Land of Plenty"
by Mrs. Hawley, concluded the
program .
Reported ill were Mrs .
Martha Searls, Leslie Ervin,
Bob Craig, Elmer Wehrung,
George Nicinsky, Mr. and Mrs.

POMER Y.

s !CLOSE

EAST COURT ST.;

.

.

SINGER

•

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.,

"
i'' .:

cl"happiness thing:·

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'1., I~

:'1

Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

environmental improvements. Our concern, however, is
best shown by describing just a few of the things we have
been doing to protect our air, larod and water.
AI~ Pollution Control. All 36 coal-fired generating units
bUill on the AEP System since 1950 have incl uded air
pollution control equipment, the latest of which is designed to remove at least 99.5% of all particulate matter
. from the stacks. A program of " upgrading" pollution
control equipment at older plants was also started in
the early 1950's and has been continuing
evE!r since. We've proposed to regulatory bodies the expenditure of some
$5211'lilllon for pollution control equipment in 1973 alone.
The cost to upgrade some old generating units cannot be justified from our
customers' Viewpoint. These
~,tnits are being shut down.
The AEP System has retired
106 old generating units at 36
plants since 1947. The electricity once produced by all these
units is now supplied by just
one of our large new generators at a plant equipped
with the latest dust collec- lion systems available.
Re1earch. We are determined to find an~
swers to the unsolved problems associated with
removal of sulfur 0Xides from plant stacks. This is the
maj~r objective of our air quality research program.
At th1s time, no known sulfur oxide removal system is re-...

THANK YOU

Exclusive Ladies'
Fashions
and Accessories

. \
I want to express my very sincere Thanks to
all who helped me in My campaign and to each
one .for their vote .
A Very Speci.a l Thank You,

Shop The Convenient
Way
U se Our Lay Away

JOE DENISON

lOLA'S

Pd. Pol. Adv .

DR,ESS SHOP
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

To All
Of You Who Voted and
Supported Me For
Meigs County·Commissioner. ·
''MANY THANKSn
W. E. SNOUFFER

to 1wcdy children Ihis Chri~tma s . Come
in now - supply ol dolls is limi led- ond
pirk up n free doll. DesiHn nnd ~ew an
outfit lor it, then return it to us. It wi ll
he displayed in pur lobby with nil the
Drt&gt;ss-A-Doll dol ls. Pri zes wil l be

· Pd. Pol. Adv.

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The Farmers Ban.k &amp;1Savings Co.
POMIIIO'f:, OHIO

.

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, Mtmb:orot Federal R....,s~ .

On FrlllllrsOur ~•t-In Wlnlllw IIO,Uh,
hl7 IL IW. ICitll'
. Ia.
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·~

WMG Mllllilll~m ·-·,.~bell D¢ ._

....

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--.-..
;.

~

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••

t

t

ists
years.

iA

2-HOUR
CLEANI.NG

awa
. Don't worry about sewi ng
skil ls. Your doll wi ll find a home in the
arms qf a child on Christmas day, and
be loved.
·
You. niake Dress-A-Doll * , a happiness
t hing. thank you .
·

Sincerely

ron
m ,o re an

The Fabric Shop

Dress-A~DoQ~ i5n~!!C!i~~~"

RACINE - A family observance of the 80th birthday
anniversary of Mrs . Owen
Watson, Racine, was held
Sunday.
IN~AIJ.ATION - Mrs. Helen Milhoan, seated, was installed worthy matron of
Here for the celebration were
Evangeline Chaplet172, Order of the Eastern Star, and Harry Chesher, right, was instalied
her
son-in-law and daughter,
worthy patron of the chapter in ceremonies Thursday night . Seated to !be left of Mrs. Milhoan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
is Paul Darnell, newly installed chaplain . Standing behind the three are the other newly installed officers of the chapter.
and daughter, Nancy, West
Jefferson . A chic.hn dinner
was served. Calling during the
Mrs. Marie Hawkins. Mrs. · afternoon were the Rev. and
Rosetta Redovian and Miss Mrs. Dale McClurg, Gallipolis.
Nellie Zerkle decorated the Mrs. Grace Krider baked the
Mrs. Helen Milhoan and
Other officers installed were chapter room for'the ceremony birthday cake. Cards, gifts and
'
ted to Mrs.
Harry Chesher were installed Mrs . Lena Bunce, associate and refreshments were served flowers were presen
as worthy matron and worthy matron; Allen Hughes, by Mrs. Ann Thomas, Mrs. Watson whose birthday was
patron of Evangeline Chapter associate patron ; Mrs. !Ia Lois Cunningham, Mrs. Oma Saturday, Nov. 11 , although no
172, Order of the Eastern Star, Darnell, secretary,· Mrs. Nelson , Mrs. Kathryn Knight, pal·ty was held due to her ill
and Mrs. Clara Criswell.
health.
in installation ceremonies
King, conductress;
tr~asurer; Miss
Thursday night at the Masonic Bessie
Kathy King,
Sue
Temple.
Blaine, associate conductress;
Paul Darnell, chaplain; Mrs. •
Mary Meinhart, marshal ; Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox, organist; Mrs .
Kathryn Evans, Adah; Mrs.
Glenna Crisp, Ruth; Mrs .
Farie Kennedy, Esther; Mrs.
Euvetta Bechtle, Martha ; Mrs.
Jenevee Chesher, Electa; Mrs.
Plans for a yard sale
Evelyn Lewis, warder; and
Saturday at the Bradbury
George Meinhart" sentinel.
Elementary School were anThe installing ' officer was
nounced by the PTA Thursday
Mrs. N~omi King, assisted by
nl~ht. Mrs. Maming Kloes .
Mrs. Lena Davis, inviting
prestded·at the meeting.
marshall; Mrs. Bessie King
It was reported that the
and Robert King, marshalls;
Halloween carnival was a
Euvetta Bechtle, chaplain;
success. Membership dues
Mrs. Roma Hawkins, conwere collected and parents
ductress; Mrs. Mary Hughes,
were encouraged to jotn. Mrs.
wa rder ; Raymond Wilcox ,
Jean Thomas reported on the
sentinel; and Wilma Styer,
recent Meigs County Council of organist.
Parents
and
Teachers
Distinguished guests
meeting. The unit approved
presented included Sarah
payment of Council dues and
Secoy of Bartlett, deputy grand
made a contribution to the matron ; Mrs. June Stanley,
scholarship fund.
Albany, district secretary; and
The children present .Jj!~
ll!~s
:W!!.cox, Midd\el.!_Ott,
• .... ...... •
.lJ lllli!. r.'J&gt;I '•~'ii 1 Hll&gt;1.1 lA'' 1'\
I')IJI l.il
the pledge to the flag an(tgaVe district treasurer.
'i
)i ·' '
the prayer. Officers reports
How
can
you
burn
30,000,000'
tons
of
coal
a
year
and be
Glen Evans sang "How
were given. The attendance Great Thou Art." Jewels from
an environmentalist? The dictionary defines an environaward was won by Mrs. Betty the chapter were presented to
mentalist as one concerned with " the total of ecological ,
Fultz' class.
Jenevee Chesher, junior past
social and cultural conditions that influence the life of a
matron, and Harry Chesher,
community."
junior past patron by Mr. and
On the ecological side, we recognized th e abso lute
Mrs. Robert King.
necessity for concern about the environment when we
Guest.&lt;; were registered by
FELWWSHIP MEETS
Mrs. Rosemary Lyons and
started installing smoke and dust collecting sysfems on
A breakfast and prayer
our stacks more than 30 years ago.
service was held Saturday
morning at the Laurel Cliff
On the social side, which takes in jobs, wages, and an inFree Methodist Church by the
creasing standard of living, we also knew that it would be
Men's Fellowship. Meeting
an absolute necessity to provide 16 times more power to
recenUy at the church, the
meet 1972's power requirements. The conflict between
group discussed general
the need for protection of the environment on one hand
repairs needed around the
and the need for more power production (and its attendparsonage and a program to be
ant pollution potential) on the other was an enormous
held at the Meigs County Infirmary on Nov. 20. Lawrence
problem-and still is.
Smith had prayer, following
But, we've come a long way in finding and applying soludevotions by Robert Barton,
tions. We've already spent one-quarter-billion dollars on
ltO E. 2nd
Pomeroy
president.
Phone m -5428

sale Saturday

Find lay 21 Ohio Nor thern 19
Ten nessee State 41 Cen tral

7009 toW.9 Dilly-8unday
Main • Pomeroy
1·9 . ,
.

AT NOON ON THURS.) -

·

PTA is having

'

IIDIILEPOIT,O.

0FFICE 'HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO

,

r-------------------....L----------------------:------------------

Thanksgiving theme marks devotions

Wt• tH'ed your help lo bring h&lt;Jppiness

BAKER

..

"I W()uldlike to express
my appreciation for the
confidence you have
placed in my reelection"

Officers .installed

•

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PUINIIUB

OPTOMETHI:il

..

is celebrated

cerned, peopl e who
bounce out of bed deserve
to sleep on trampolines.

FOI\ BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS I

N. W. CO PTON,·. .D:

80th Birthday

So tar as we are con-

tha

Pomeroy
Brian, at
relatives
invited .

BAZAAR PLANNED
Trinity Chu1·ch women will
h11ve a bazaar Wednesday at
the church in· Pomeroy. }:he
and Michael · and bazaar will open l!t9'a. m. with
home. Friends and needlework and baked goods
of the couple are .. for sa l~ . A luneheon will be
servl'&lt;l starting at 11 a ..111 .

·

,

State o
John Carroll 19 Oberlin 14
Kenyon 34 Centre !Ky. I 0
Joseph McMurray died on Saturday
Baldwin-Wallace 14 Wooster 13
Capi tal 14 Wittenberg 7
RAVENSWOOD .r- Joseph Forrest Poston, and several Wilmington 12 Bluffton 7
Allegheny I Pa .l 32 Hiram 0
Arthur McMurray, 89, Ravens- nieces and nephews.
Memphi s State 49 Cincinnati 24
wood, died Saturday at his
He was preceded in death by Vi llanov a 40 Xavier 13
home in Ravenswood. He was his wife, Rachael Hunt Mc- Denison 52 Washington &amp; Lee
22
born in West Virginia Jan. 10, Murray, in 1971.
·
Toledo
21 Marsha ll o
1883, son of the late William
Funeral services will be held Otterbein 16 Ohio Wesleyan 7
and Elizabeth Sims Mc- Tuesday 2 p.m., at the North Tulane Jl4 Ohio Uni versity 6
Murray.
Ravenswood United Methodist Youngstown State 28
Central Michigan28ltiel
Mr. McMurray, a member of Church with Rev. Paul Qua ntico
Marines 24 Akron 0
the Church of Christ, owned Morrison and Rev. Robert
and operated the J. A. Mc- Holland officiating. Burial will
Murray Grocery in Ravens- be in the Ravenswood
wood from 1914 to 1971.
Cemetery.
Surviving are a daughter,
Friends may call at the
Mrs. Jacqueline M. Poston, Chambers Funeral Home in
R•1•enswood ; three step- Ravenswood between now and
gr~ ..dchildren·: Creg, Cary and' the time of the services.

UJT'S TRUE" .. -

Activities
.
planned
Holiday projects and ac. tivilies were planned Friday
night by the Happy Harvesters
Class of Trinity Church.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs.
Dale Smith will arrange
remembrances for shut-ins.
The dinner party will be held
un Dec. 8 at Crow's Steak
House, a party and program to
fo llow at the church. Devotions
for the party will be by Mrs.
Stella Kloes, and Mrs.
Cl~rence Headley will have the
program, which will include a
gift exchange.
Mrs. Henry Reibel appointed
Mrs. Clara Karr and Mrs.
Kloes to the nomi nating
committee for new officers. A
card of thanks was read from
Mrs. Marie Dailey for flowers
and cards while she was
hospitalized, and a reception
for Beverly June Bates and Bill
Fetty was planned on Dec. 22 at
the church. Named to the
reception committee were
Mrs. · Reibel , Mrs. Roy
Seyfried, Mrs. Karr, Mrs .
Smith, Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs .
John Terrell, Miss Sybil Ebersbach, and Mrs. Clarence
Massar.
Prayer from the yearbook
opened the meeting. Mrs. Phil
Williamson read a poem "A
Breath of Praye(' and gave
scripture from St . Matthew for
devotions.
The program on Thanksgiving was given by Mrs .
Neutzling who opened with
group singing of "Stand Up for
Jesus." She read a story
enlitled "And Thankful Be" by
Lucy Parr and concluded with
a scrapbook of newspaper
clippings on class activilies
since 1957.
Games were conducted with
Mrs. Terrell, Mrs. Smith, Mrs.
Karr, Mrs. Gladys Cuckler,
Mrs. Fred Dessauer, and Mrs.
Oris Ginther winning prizes.
Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Mrs.
Lawrence Lanning, and Mrs.
Reibel serv~d sandwiches and
salad.
Present besides those 'nam.id
were Mrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs.
Carrie Meinhart, Mrs. Freda
Duffy, and Mrs. Lillie Hauck.

---.·

THANKS TO THE
SALEM PRECINCT VOTERS

'

WHO SUPPORTED THE DEMOCRAT

CANDIDATES FOR OOUNTY OFFICE
IN 1HE NOVEMBER 7 ELECOON.

'•

Pd. Pol. Adv. By Willard.Walker ·
Democrat Committeeman. ·
I.

-I

ilatile.' o'fcdmmef~i~ily feasible'.
a solution is' OUI1if
we will adopt it promptly. In fact, even now the engineering and design work for the installation of a major new
su lfur removal system is nearing completion, and we
hope to start its construction within the next few months.
Until a commercial process is developed, .tall stacks are
the best means available to prevent ground-level buildup
of sulfur oxides. We pioneered the use of tall stacks, starting also in the early 1950's. Tall stacks have for years
been recognized and accepted in Great Britain as the
best available answer to the sulfur oxide problem.
Cooling Towers. Power plants use large amounts of
wate=.t cool steam, raising the water's temperature as
it is r urned to its source. It the river or lake is too small,
the eturn of the water might, under some circumstances,
be harmful. Cooling towers cool the water in a "closed
circuit" system which eliminates warm water discharge.
The AEP System pioneered the use of natural draft, hyperbolic cooling towers in this country. We've built ten
of these towers at plants located on rivers where the
quantity of water was insufficient to prevent thermal
buildup. Three more are under constru ction . .We are constantly studying the effects R,f warm water discharge and
our present program of ecological research on Lake
Michigan, started in 1966, is the most comprehensive
such study ever conducted under utility sponsorship.
Land Conservation. With the ever-i ncreasing
need for electric power, the problem of
del iverlng that power to customers
could have, without the development
of high voltage transmission systems·, created · a forest of utility
towers across our countryside. Our
765,000-volt lines today can carry
3(l times more.power than earlier
138,000-volt Iines. In terms of land
conservation, one 200 foot rightof-way for a 765,000 volt line can
do the same job that 30 rightsot-way did 20 years ago.
Our goal is to do an even
better job in safe-guarding
all the aspects of our
total· environment-air,
water, and land as well
as jobs, wages and a
. high standard of Jiving.

W
h'en'

1

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�·'
IVATCJl TOO. MilCH

· DR. Fh:ltt&gt;! I OUGHT

I

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-1'omeroy, o., Nov .13; 1972

Sen.tinel ClaRsifieds .Get Action! Sentinel Classifietls Get R esul~s!
..

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUAliTY

For Sale

Notice

AKC Toy Poo)l!les . Phone 742- COMFORTABLE two story
lr~tcsl
is
" One
Day "
3812 :
home, full basement, bath
lra grcuice- . Othe_rs ir)clude
11-12-12tc
an~ '~'· attached garage, and
'' K" and The Lemon Grove .
extra lot. In a good localion .
Al so new children's products. I NEW hB5pital bed, $250, new
Basic furniture available .
Phnnc Helen Jane. 992 -5113.
wheelchair, $100. Phone 9'12·
Phone 992.7384 or 992-7133 lor

We'd like to serve you.

10-24-llc

350 V-8 engine, auto. trans .,' P.S., P. B., Cheyenne equip .•

REDUCE safe~ &amp;- iast-wilh
GoBese Tablels &amp; E-Vap

..:hrome front bumper, rear step bumper, radio, beautiful
black accented with white. This is an extremely low
mileaqe truck . Real beautv .

m• B·ulcK

" water pills," Nelson Drug .

ll ·13-2fp

s2s49

Sportwagon. Beautiful cbral finish with vinyl interior,
factory air conditioned, luggage rack , radio. 350 V-8
engine. automatic trans., power steering &amp; ~rakes , like
new w-w tires, If you want a show piece &amp; plenty of luxury
try this outstanding buy.

\liAR R I F. D couple want lo rent

1971 PINTO FORD

Lost

,

farm or country house. Call

collect 614-299-6908.
1l-5-9tc

SI69S

Two door. local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires. clean
Interior, green finish. t:~dio, 2.000 c.c . P11qine, 4-speed.

.Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
1'tlloiEROY, OHIO

·

1

W'
.
---Can t In
NORTH (D)
.Q843
.A7 2
tKQJ 104
.. 9

enough for a small rowboat.

P .M . Qay Before Publ icat ion .

Monday Deadline 9 a.m .

Cancellation - Corrections
REGULATIONS

Reasonable price

and

deemed oblectioneL
The
pub! is her will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

3219 .

cessible. Write fully to Box
729· W, C·O The Daily Sentinel.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
JJ . 12·6fp
Furniture, oak tables ,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass

residence . Contac Sam Clark

992-6306.

11 -IO·IIC
HEREFORD

11 ·9-6fc

sleers, FIVE ROOM house and bath;

weigh approx. 450 lb . each;

interior
comp l etely
remodeled ; located on Brick

good 4-H project ; phone 985·
3846. Virgil Windon .

Sfreel in Rutland ; phone 74211 -12-3tp 3334.
11 ·12-121c
TWO RABBIT dogs; also set ol - - - - -- - - 14" plows or trade for rotary
mower; Nate Vanaman; 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, built-in
phone 742·5322.

cabine ts In kitchen . Close to

11 -12-3fc

radio station in Bradbury.

Phone 992·2602.

RINGNECK pheasanls on foot
or dressed. Roger Leifheit,
Rock Springs Rd., Pomeroy,
Phone 992-3446.
11 -12-3fp

10·29·12fc

·18 cents per word six con
secutlve Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
sds and ads paid within 10 clays .

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

lb .;

Carl

Cheva lier ,

Main

Street. Walerlord , Ohio.
11 -7-1'1tc

Employment Wanted

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a ,m, to 5:00p .m. Dally, YOONG man age 23 wanls radio
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
dispatcher 's job with or
Saturday .

without office work . Phone

992·7541.
11 -12-6fc

In Memory
WE BREATHE a sigh and shed

BY Oewald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: " The 'nothing'
play is any play which can
only cost you a trick. It differs from a bad 1&gt;\!rcentage
play In that a bad percentage play will win on occa-

a tear, it seems like every

we do, But we know lhal
heaven ' s

brighter.

son,

'because II now holds you .
In loving memory of our

son, George, who was killed
one year ago. Mom, Dad,

·

convention trips to mature
man In Pomeroy area.

Regardless of experience, air
mail A. I. Read, Pres .,
American Lubricants Co ..
Box 696, Daylon, Ohio 45401.
11 -12·4fp

REALTY .

l

608 E. Main

Pomeroy

•

•PLEASANT RIDGE ROAD
.
P.O MEROY, o;
' ·"Custom Me•t Cutting"
Q~ick

and Courteous Service

OALE
LITTLE

DICK
VAUGHN

992-3884

992·3374

Lei Click and Dale Help Yau
.with Your Meat Problems.

DRIVE A LITTLE
-SAVE A LOT!

Kuhl's Bargain Center
Rt.7"a1.caution light"

~
.Jill'

•

closels .
Kitchen
has
everything. Dining R., large

STER.EO, freight

damaged, in beauHful walnut

console. Will sell for 1101.50 or
pay $1.50 per week, Phone 9925331. "
9-7-tfc
=-=~---­

POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
5443.
8-JS.tfc

scanner. Dailey 1 S Radio Shop.

Box 21 · B, Long Bottom , Ohio.
11 -8-6tc

EARLY American stereo.radlo

combinalion, AM.FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer.

Balance $79.31. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
11 ·12-6tc

L.R. wilh fireplace, ulllify,
ceramic bath &amp; shower.
Patio, basement. Level lot

100x l20. Electric heat.
carpeled . ASKING $23.000.
CORNER LOT
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 story
lrame, 3 B.R., bath, utility
R., gas F .A. heal. Paneled .
Tiled. Garage . Cellar .
ASKING $11,000 , .
JUST RENOVATED
POMEROY - 2 story frame ,
2 B.R., dining R., bath. New
kilchen. Paneled. Tiled ,
porches, level lol. Carpeled.
$8,500.'
30 ACRES
NEAR TUPPE'RS PLAINS
- All fenced, nice 4 B.R .
home, all new plumbing, new

drilled well, cislern, sprlf\9 .

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Ra9iator Specialist

Small~st

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. -~omeroy
INC.
992-2174 ·

-£ARTH MOVING

TUPPERS PlAINS

'dozers, 2 size loaders. Work

Clean used furniture
Guaranteed appliances

Free E'stimates. We also
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Dump
trucks and low. boy tor hire.
See Bob or ROQer Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m. or phone m .

Virgil B.

o.

WI'TK&gt;UT SIN

~~ KE:

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars
-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy. Home &amp; Auto
Open 8Til5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,O.
SEW ING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.

•ROOFING
•HEATING '
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING ·
•PAINTING

For Free Estimate
PHONE 992!2550

... OR Hs:'S .
WORK IN(; ON
A RESEARCH

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Aulhorized Singer Sales and

HOME &amp; AUTO

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

992-2094

3-29-ffc.

- - - - - - __
SEE US FOR: Awnings,•sform

doors and windows. carports,
marquees, aluminum sidln~.

and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. For free
estimates , phone Charles

606 E. Main

HOWDY, BOuNCE'f·BEI..LE!!
MEET UP WI FOUR &lt;;ll'Z.ZIN,
HAN'50ME HARR'!''J'OKUM-

State of Ohio, DePartment of In,_
ur·
;mce, Cert.lflca.t e or Compllanc~ , The
unaersurned, :o;uoerinte_ndent of Insur·
ancc of the State of Obl.oFherebY f~f·
"~;.~T tra~uc.?.i~~dAto~~fN~ ~ cc:lumbta. State of South Car~Una has
CQmPJJed wtth the laws o£ th1!1 Statd•
liPPiJcable to it and Is a,uthor1ze
c;lunJtM: the curren t year
transact
in this s tate H&amp; auoroprla e buslneu
of lmnuance. Its rinanclal conc;lltlon
i.s ahown bY Its annual statement to
' have been as lollows on Def;em__ber
',\ 31 . 1911: Admitted Aueh 133t?92,705.91 : Liabilities Sl6.816.ll4.48o .roe\ 9Ao·
ets 116,976,591.43: CIIPital Sl,l8 • ,..
.00; Surplus 114.99UI68 .43;
ncome
1131 ,565,49\.20 : ExPenditures 127.244,•
M}n.35 Witness Whereof. I have here·
unto subscribed rzur: name tmd eau•ed
my Jel!l to be aCCixed at Colu mblll.
Ohl~, thlo doy ·~• date, ,July 1. 1912.
ISeau Kenneth E. DeSneUer, Suoer·
lntendent of Insurance o! Ohio. M-38

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

------

•1*1...

Reai Estate

pSsr.rr-

HEHAIN'T
GOTA
FACE!;;

~uCt&lt;i.E!-'10' NOTICED THAT.

DID'fO'?-WAL,I-\EGOT TI-l'
HAN'50MEST FACE. 'fO'EVER
SEEN .:::bi\IL'!'
'{O'CAIN'T
SEE IT

Sale

-lo

11·1'3 '

HIERITANct! FROM
Wit AUSTitALIAN
UNc;u;: ...

WINNIE WINKLE

YOU MEAN

A MAN OF COURSe.
WELL, OUT WITH ITI

&amp;uCC~~AT
L.A~T, WENDY.

AND PON'T -..M'IMPON
PETAilS!

L FINALLY

FIND YOU
AT HOME!

Stale of Ohio, Department of lnL\Jf·
&lt;t nte, ~ertltltate o! Comoliance. The
undera111ned. Superintendent or Insur·

~"f: ~· '""ot'.llfAoJ !i'JI"tWlf'LWii
.~.aRiUc~ COMPlNv of Chi"••·
State of 1 lnols has como/led wt\lh

tho lawo o thll Stole aoo e&gt;ble o
rent year to transl:lct In this state ltl
aooropr[at~ bJ.Jslness of insurance on
the M\1 ua Plan. 11s financial con·
dltlon 11 1 own bY 1VJ annual state·
ment to have been .as follows on DeIt and It authorized durlnll tne cur-

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

II.,.,.,~

ilf.~~e[.38i~al:~r~but\re~ittlf1.7A~!l\~

a3· ur:tut.~.S56802. 10; Income 125.B£4.1
8. : &lt;xoondltu." 122.624.270.65.

In W tneu Whereof, I have here·
unto su scribed mY name and caused
11\Y 1e~ to be affixed aj C&lt;&gt; lu"lbu2o.
OhiO: t Is da~ and date ulY 1 9'i .
&lt;S!III enneth E. Doshotl"i SUPOI0•
In endenl of Insurance of Oh o. M·7~
State of Ohio, Deoartme_nt of InLuh•· •
ance, Certificate of Com.Diianee. T e
undersJ.cned, Suoerlntende~of In•ur·
ance of the ~taU of Ohtou erelifsffi'

~~w.
t~*. o~ l •.'~'lt.M " Niw
YORK, of Bln.lhamton. St.ate of r.•w

II• 13

York has complied with. fhe aw•
of thll State aoo lcable to t and !1
AUthortted durln.lt the current Year
to \ransart In this . alate Its aPVfO•
pfln e business of maurance on \'"'
Mutual PI/M. U1 financial c:ondlt on
shown,
Ita ~~.nnual sta,ent to
&amp;11 jollows on
ctmber
..£,!I,Ve.~~eAiTr
1 lb· ' 'Admll od Au•tl 3,908 ..,7·
.'K '
II IIJtieJ S2.634-i9! 17; SUrPlUS
Sf:27?f;,~ ·tl: Inoonfo 0!,587.0117.&lt;91 E&lt;·
uefn'l 'Wjf~"'~~·\ek:~:ot I have heN'!·
unto •ubse rlbed mY name and ·c•used
my •eal to be af£1~• •j Columb•ll,
Ohlll. thll daY and qlf!i. ub' 1~, 19'l2.
rSP.alJ Kenneth E .
eSne ll"r• oul)f'r·
intenc;lent of Insuranc:e of Ohio. M-71

·y

State ol Ohio, Department of lnt.Ur·
~nee, Certificate of Compllancf, The
undersUmed, Suoerin~'"'~ o lnsur·
lh' PRE.ER.
"'''' of 0hlo.
.,.., W·
II OS of
that
M TUAL
IN·
S RANCE COMPANY ot New BerliiJ,
StRte of New York has complied wl\lh
the laws of thil State app\lc;able o
It and Is authorized durhlll the current ;ven to t.ransact In this ttate ttl
appr9_prlalf buslnel'l.' of' lneuri!nce Qr.
the Mutual Plan. Its nnaodal cond ·
tlon Is 11hown bY ltJ annual atatement
to bave been as follows on December
31J 1971: AttmUted Aneta tl0.~DS.908AJ' LlabiUUeJ 17.222 702113:
urnlu1
$3,~73-205.90; Income 1'7 ,4'13,848. 1: Ex·
vendltures 16.230.930.68.
In Witness Whereof, I have here·
unto s ubscribed m)': name and uused
my St:l!l to be affi~ed al Columblll·
Ohio. this d e ~ and ff~ll'!, July 1. 1972.
(Seal) Kenne h E, DeSheUu. Super·
lntendent of nsurance of Ohio. M·llD

''ill'

u

~n

~
o\CROSS
1. Got a
head start
4, Medical
group
(abbr.)
'-Soak
10. Minda-

"il'

j

nao's

ftnancla

volcano
11. Inferior
horse

~nnua

DICK TRACY

12. "Ben OUR .JOB NC/tN
1'5 TO . I!IRI NG

HIM DOWN-

State o£ Ohio. Department of lnt.ur·
ance. CertUIUte of Comoliancc. The
unden}'~d. suoerlnM'nde~.. of Inaur·
0

r,;,~·. t~.,· ~WUl,ch'i:;u'fL'.l'r

','il:

~URAN E COMPANY of Kanna Clb',

Kanus has complied with
of thlo Stale oool &lt;ablo to
au thorized durllllf lbe cur·
to transact In thl~ 1tate Ill
a~PPrQpr at~ buelness or lnaurrnce on
e Mutua Plan.
!Inane al con·
ltlon is a own by te 11r,nual 1t~•·
ment to have been as
ow1 pn e·
f;ember
19'Jl : AdmU ed Aa~t1 1.·
44l,464;w6 : Llablll\'•• 1826.!11 ; Sur·
P:lus I 1 .653.0JJ nc:_ome • .1! ....u~ :
E""' tum ..20.01U3.
In
ltraf!ltl Whereof, ( hayt here·
unto eubserlbed my name and caused
m7
be ao_d d~ atJ~LY
Colu"l'"'"
Ohio."~
t Isloda~
1 972 ·
Seal) enne h E, eshet ~r. tuoer:
ntendenl or naurance or hlo. M·12'J
Slate o
he Iowa
t and 11
rent :verr

l

1\s

!1.

!

101

'"'1J'"

State of Ohio, Dt:PIIrtm~::nt of ln.t_ur.
anre, Certi.Cicate or Comvllancr· The
undenl.1ned. SuDerintende~ o ln1ur·
'"" ofthft
the TIMii
Stato ofINIUIItA
Ohio. ·~eyCOMm ·
tlllil
P'A Y o Milwaukee, ·statfl o
J~eon·
In hOf t&lt;&gt;mollfd "l!h thO laws of
. hi• s,_ate JIP"P leable to It and Ia
auUloru.ed durin• the current Year
to · tran~act In this ahte ttl
prlate bus1ne11 of Jn,urahct.
u fl ·
nancial ~ndltion ta ahow~ b'y ita anpual ata ment to llavl een aa fol·
Iowa on e~.t,mberJI• 9 l ·,.b-~m~d

!

t••.,.

::
......
]
•.
-••.
.
u~r!.' 1.a.'lra~~. . ~a.e7D.aa: E""•Pen~·
·su.,,:

as. Bay

A~t~ .• , 'll'of..· ~ ..ua·~~

8v.'l'ijoi ..... ~at~~

I

.,

I i· I• I!.-) tJI{i f rVIf

• (OIHI ltlq r.olllnt IJdloalo,lat.)

40. Greek leiter
41. Norse
sky god
42. Assortment .
43. Grassland
44, Attention
45. Indian
farmer
46. SUp up

wearing

star
{2 wds.)
4,- France
5, Famous
queen.

Unac:rambie thtat (GQr Jumbi..,
one leiter tG each aquare, to
form lour ordinary word•.
Yesterday'• Answer

DOWN
1. Times
around
the track
2.Monu·
mental
literary
works
3.Famous
sarong-

movie

JllJroiD~;u..J ==~..Jc::

6. Eastern
title
7. Famous
child
star
(2 wds , I
8. Result
9. More
abundant
17. Like·
wise
18. Dunder·
head
23. Appease
24. Iron
Curtain

12 wds.)

country

26. Site ollhe
Canadian.
National
Exhlbl·
tion
29, Melric land

measure

31. Knightly

I
I
I I L(J .

I CAiBS

title

34. Powerful
light
beam
37. Truth

I I. I

A KIND OF SJ~f'EAN

CIJR'TAIN MAiEJII:iAL.,'

rear·
ranger
39. Germ8n
city

Happy
Fella"
U . Swedish
wine

7

In ~~.. Whereof. I. have hereunto IUicrJ~d ~(! '!Sme a~tl cal~
~ 0 •efi!, 1t~ 1 ~e 1 ad 'i:t; •j Jyolf,~l'
&lt;s.oud'~•,'•,• h '1!. b"elhatY;,,
nten en o nauranee ot Ohto. M·13'i'

measure

window,
15. Made the

scene

S&amp;. RaUonal
SL Black
wckoo(var.f ·
19. Large vue

o.:-

I'M

tiOING

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

Sale

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands lor a~olher. In tbla umple A il
Uled for lhe three L'o, X lor the two O's, ett. Sln&amp;le letten,
· aposlropbea, the lencth ond formation of the wonls are all
1111111, Each da7 the code lettera are dillerent.

Sale

my~u~u

JVfE~HJC

BVKifAT.

RUTIMD FURNITURE ·;!~.~~~t

ON YOUR DIAL

"

13. Mohammedan
saint
.14.Macaw
15. Suffix lor
meteor
18.Famed
baritone
of yesteryear
11. Rellq~ary
chest
19, Low seat
20. Animal's
track
21. Saintly
22. Scattered
(her. )
.23, Be a ,
anoop
U, Suffix for
depend
1'1. Suffix for
law
Z8. "Damn
Yankees"
lemptress

so..._

l

1l• if

'"'"l'f ~t

Yttler4a1'1 CmJtot!IIOie: MUCH SMOKING KILLS L1VJ:
MEN AND CUDS DEAD SWINE.-GEORGE D. PRENTICE

by THOMAS JOSEPH

State of Ohio, Department of InllJl'·
ance, Certificate or Com~Hancf· Tbo
undenl•ned, Suoerintendelio Inaur·
'"'"
of tne SLato Of Ohlol ••bY
till" tOtl PUIOTAN L F
INIU ·
ANCE COMf.ANY Qf Provldep,c:e ~ Shte
of Rhode aland Jlas comPiled wl\h
the low• o£ thlo Stole oooll"blo o
IL l!nd Ia authorized durlplf \he cu~
rent year to transact In Lhla ttate
appropriate business of luurance.

c:ondtuon Ill ahown by te
s&amp;tement to haye been at fol·
lowa on ecembf'!r 31. 1971 : Admit!'"
Allset&amp;
.230,329.19: Llnbllltlt~ts I ~ ••
822~59 . 191 Noft:JA"el' I ,&lt;0'7 ,970 00'
C_1pJtal 12,750
.00; surp us 11.M7,·
970.00; Income 14.348.331.82; Ex.Pend·
tturea 113,178.215,&amp;1.
In Wltneas Whereof, I have hereunto subscribed m,- name and c .. UBI!d
m_y ee~ to be affixed at Colu"jb'lf.
Ohlol t Ia da~ and dfllf'!1 JulY 1~, Q'la.
enne b E. DeSnetlP.r_, ;:,_q~J"!
.( Seal
J ntend~nt of nsurance of Ohio. M·Ulti

"&lt; I

"""'

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'''"'l•,rtlt

WMP0/1390

FUSTnME.
FOLKSOON'T
SEE. ME.
TI-lE'!' IS
SURPRISED
- BUT THE.'/
GI'TSUSED
TOll-

LE'S SEE, 'fA LOST
V.R WALLET'" 'f&amp;(:t
liXPECTIN' AN IN•

1

Real Estate

•

WU A 11CKET R)R
RECKL.EG6 DRIVING.

ll'L ABNER

TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS ... _ ...
CLEANED,- REPAIRED.
MILLER SAN ITAT ION,
STEWART, OHie. PHONE
662·3035.
10-4-tlc

POMEROY

1.

1220

ll-IEY DON'T AL'TER'
THE FN:.T...

CASI '11-lE FIR'i&gt;f
91of\lel

~-.. .~AT 11M
SfiL.L. OOII'G 10 GIVE

LEGAL NOTICE

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Local Bowling

OF Wi$DOM . 6UI

5232.

n
ft't."tl;;;

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

iHOGE Af!E. \\ORDG

LET HE 'MiO IS

done .by hour or contract. ' · SEPTIC

II

We talk to JOU
like a perSon.

i.
:!
:t

GRANT!

POMEROY, OHIO

scaping. We have 2 size

HEATING &amp;
COOLIN.G

&amp;~~-l~~::n~~e~itbo~d~~~:

~~~I

TI-lE
PROF£SSOit IS PAYING OFF
AN E"~ION BET•.

SHAM MrS
CATERING SER~ICE

Dozer &amp; End loader work,'
ponds, basement, land·

Help

~

•

CALL 992-5786

Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. Stotf In and See Our
Jim : "I see you are leadBasement porches. Garage
brothers, slsfers and families.
Johnson and Son, Inc .
1
Ing up to a hand where there
and other buildings. $12,900.
' 11 · 13-lfp
3.2.1fc Floor Display.
HENRY E. CLELAND,
are three ways to play the
MODERN Walnut slyle stereoWanted
REALTOR
radio, AM·FM radio, 4
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
trump suit in a slam con- N t'
EARN
$25
lo
SlOO
per
week
al
0
LEGAL NOTICE
HENRY
E. CLELAUD, Jr.
Septic tanks installed. George -•
speaker sound system, 4
tract. The bad percentage
ICe
home In your spare lime
Salesman
speed
automatic
changer.
I
Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992·2478,
TIMES FOR HOLDING
play Is to lay down the ace ]~"----:-.--''---....__ _"""'
mailing
our
P.roducf
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND,
4·25-tfc COMMON PLEAS COURTS,
Balance $68.57 . Use our
and try to drop a singleton
brochures. For applications
A. D. 1973
budget terms. Phone 992·7085.
Saleslady, 985-4209
send your name and address
ng. his wm gain a trtck
U~
It ls.brdered ,that the terms of
•,,
11 ·12'-&lt;ltc
!92·2259
it
nun.~wer
992·2568
·
R
e":f,~~~l
xil!il!e'NCR
ETE
to: UNLIMITED eHJLil&gt;&gt;
the Common Pleas Court in th e
for u the 13 per cent of the'
·•
·-~----------' · delivered ri9h-~'' to your County of Meigs !:ounty, tor t he'
DEPT
.
MP
.
2741
INC..
that the singleton king ,
·
pro1ect. Fast and easy. Free year 19 73 be fixed as follows. to MICHIGAN ROAD, EATON TWIN needle sewing machine
esllmales . Phone 992·3284 .' wit : On the 1st day of January,
is back of the ace. It breaks
1972 model in warnul stand. SPECIAL : Move in before
RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 48827.
winter. 4 bedroom ranch
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ., and the 1st day of May and the
even the 13 per cent of the
All features built -in to make
11 · 13-lfp
Jrd day of September and the
home on 3JA acre lot. Bath and
Middleport, Ohio.
fancy
designs
and
do
stretch
time that the singleton king
said terms of said court begin at
a
hall.
builf.in
kitchen,
wall
to
6-JO.tfc
se wing . Also buttonholes,
10:00 o'clock A .M .
Is in front of the ace and 1!
..
wall carpet and garage, Price
BUTCHER
part-lime,
blind hems , etc. $43.35 cash
John C. Bane
loses the 37 per cent of the
Wi l)dow
Tuesdays and Fridays for
$20.750.00 ; also a 5 bedroom SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
price or terms available .
Judge of Common
local store; write to P.O, Box
time that the guarded king
Air Conditioners
colonial house on a 'I• acre lpf. REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446Pleas Court,
Phone 9'12·5641.
729·M, C·OThe Da ily Sentinel,
Balh
and
a
hall
,
builf.in
4782,
Gallipolis,
John
Russell,
Meigs
County,
Ohio
11
·7·6tc
Is in front~~ the ' ace." .
'
Hot Watel) Healers
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 .
kitchen, dining room , family
Owner. &amp; Uperator.
Oswald : The not h 1n.g
Plumbing
11·7·1fc VACUUM CLEANER . Electro
room and the works, priced
5·12-tfc 110) 30, (111,,6, 13, 31
$30,000,00.
Call
Sherman
E.
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Electrical Work
Summerlield, 985-3598 or 985- C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer
NOTICE OF
has all cleaning attachmen ts
For
Rent
APPOINTMENT
4177
.
Complete
Service
Electro
Suds
for
plus
th
e
new
hand. When actually played,
Case No. 20804
11 -2-301c
Phone 949-3821
South won the heart lead in
ft
s hampooing carpet. Only
UNFURNISHED 5 room and
Estate
Of
ADA
CRAY, De Racine,
Ohio
S27 .SO cash price or terms
dummy and played a low
ceased.
bath house . Phone 992·2780 or
Crill
Bradford
available.
Phone
992-5641.
Notice is hereby given that
992·3432.
spade. East played the seven
l ·l·IIC Bernard V. Fultz, of Pomeroy,
11 -7-61c
and South finessed the jack.
11 -12·flc
Ohio. has been dul y appointed
West showed out and South
992-2446
AdminiStrator of the Estate of
DOZER
and
back
hoe
work,
APPLES, Fitzpatrick Or ·
had no way to avoid the loss
HOUSETRAitER
in
Clifton,
Ada
Cray, deceased , lat e- of
ponds and septic tanks, ditPomerov .
chards, State Route 689 ,
of a trump trick as well as 1
•
Middleport. , Meigs County,
adulls only ; phone 773-5146,
ching
service;
top
soil,
fill
.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
Gertrude Gibbs Preston.
the ace or diamonds."
dirl, limestone; B&amp;K Ex' Ohio
Creditors ere required to file
8-30-tlc
11 ·10-3tp
,
PRE · CHRISTMAS sale :
cavafing . Phone 992-5367, their claims with said fiduciary
J\m : Had South led dum· Crushed velvet, polyester,
Dick Karr, Jr.
within four months.
my s Q.IJ.~~n of spades and bonded acrylic, all reduced. APARTMENTS near new
Dated th is 27th day of October
9.1 -ttc
SCHNAUZER
puppies,
AKC,
won wlili the ace if East Will give gift certlflcales. The
1972.
Meigs High School; call 773Salt &amp; Pepper. ears chopped/
Manning D. Webster, Judge
played high he would have
Sew and Go Shop In lhe Allred
5268 after 5 p.m.
RUSSELL 'S
Furnllure
wormed and shots; healthy
Probate Division
110 Mechanic St.
been able to go back to dum· area. Owner, Mrs. E. T.
10·29· 12fp
Uphol stery; free pickup and
185
;
phone
Coolville
667·6214.
Common
Pleas Court,
Pomeroy, Ohio4S769,
my and finesse against Calaway .
delivery; phone 992-5771,
Meigs County, Ohio
11 -5·12tp
11
.'1'
2
-6tc
East's 10-spot. The queen
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
10·27-3otc 110 1 30 1111 6, 13. 31
NEW HOME
unfurnished apartments .
play would guard against the REVIVAL in progress at
2 BEDROOMS - All paneled
Phone 992·5434 ,
3~ break."
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
Langsville Christian Church .
TWO
G70
x
14
6·ply
tires,
w-w
inside, elec tric heat, nice
4·12·lfC
localed at Crossroads, Rt . 124 .
Services nightly, 7:30 p. m.
NOTICE ON FILING
(Htws•••E• ENTUPlltiS£ AssN.l
Atlas radial , 150. Phone 9'12·
balh . Full basement . School
Complete
front end service,
OF INVENTORY
Everyone
welcome .
3904,
bus and
mail
routes
ANO
APPRAISEMENT
tune
up
and
brake
service
.
Evangelist, Pal rick Eads and TRAILER in country, large
11 -10-3fc
$12,000.00.
The State of Ohio, Meigs
Wheels
balanced
elec• Pastor, Robert Musser, ·
yard and garden ; phone 992NEW LISTING
tronically ,
All
work County. Probilte Court.
6658.
11 ·9·61c
1
ACRE
On
T.P.
wa
ler·
To the Administratrix of the
The bidding has been:
guaranteed .
Reasonable estate;
11 -12·3tc
to such of the following
line . Trees for shade .
For
Sale
or
Trade
rates. Phone 742·3232 or 992· as are residents of the State of
w..i North East South REVIVAL al Eagle Ridge
Trailers welcome . S25()(l for
3213.
Church November 13th lhru MODERN 3·room furnished WILL sell cheap or trade 13"
Ohio . viz : the surviving
the
1st
acre,
then
$500,00
per
7·27·1fC
spouse,
the
next
ot kin, the
'""
Pass
18th ; 7: 30 p.m .; Evangelist,
tires
.
like
new,
ior
14"
,
Phone
?
Pua 1•
Pass
aparlment, bath ; very
acre up to 4 more.
beneficiaries
under
the will ,·
Charles Norris ; special
949-441 1.
desirable ;
downtown
You, ·South, hold:
HOT
WATER
HEAT
and to the attorney or Bttorneys
singers. Bonnie and Bureri
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
been'
11 ·10-31c 3 NICE BEDROOMS Pomeroy; no children ; phone
any of the
.QIU.KH3tA765"-3
cancelled?
·Lost
your· repres.entlng
Duncan and the Bissell
992-2623,
aforementioned persons :
Balh,
large
living
and
dining
operator's
license?
Call
992Brothers ;
everyone
What do you do?
Charles
E.
Larkins,
11 ·12-3fc
2966.
.
area. Moder n kitchen,
welcome .
Deceased
,
Chester,
Ohio,
A-Bid tbr~
Even II
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
basement, carpprt , and
6· 15·1fC Chester Township , No . 20794 .
11 · 10-3fp
you play thls 15 !orcin&amp; you : : - : - - - - - TRAILER lot, Bob's Mobile
fenced yard , Only $20,000.00.
You are hereby notified that
Court, Syracuse ; phone 992- CASH paid for all makes and
&lt;ID't IIford to juot roile to two. HAY MAN'S Auction - a gOOd
the
Inventory
and
Ap ·
NEAR
POMEROY
ATTENTION FARMERS. pralsement
/!'Odels of mobile homes .
2951.
of the estate of the
TODAY'S QUESTION
ONE
FLOOR
3
or
4
place to go each Friday
Largesl choice of ail breeds of aforementioned, deceased , late
Phone area code 61H23·95:il.
JQ.JJ .Ifc
You bid three spades and your evening, 7 p.m . at Laurel
bedrooms ,
bath,
nice
A. I. Sires by phoning Leland of said County , was filed in this
4-J3.flc
Clifl on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west
p a r t n e r rebids to four clubs.
modern birch kitchen with
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or Court . Sa id Inventory and
of Rock Springs Fairground . FURNISHED 2 bedroom ' 1970 MOBILE home with air ·cook units . Rec. room,
What do you do now?
· call station for service, ln. Appraisement will be tor
apartment, adults only,
JQ.JO.tfc
hearing before th is Court on the
formation or direct sales.
carport and barbecue pit,
conditioning, washer , ex.
Anawer tomorrow
15th day of November, 1972, e&lt;t
Middleport ; phone 1'92 · 387~.
11-9.30fc
cellent condition, lot can be $16,500.00.
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
10·22-ffc
SO ACRES
rented . Phone 1'92·7387.
Any person desiring to file
FOR HUNTING - Rutland
JJ.J2-6tp
exceptions thereto must file
For
them at least· five dliys prior to
Township . All minerals
Wednesday Afternoon League
Auto
Sales
the date set for hearing .
November a, 1972
except coal. 5100.00 an acre.
FOUR or five bedroom home,
Given under my h&amp;nd and
ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
Won Lost
TUPPERS PLAINS
1970 FIAT Sport Spider - con.
seal of sald Court, this Jrd day
• Air Conditioners. 1
·five
mileS
west
of
Athens
near
Lodwick's Markel
50 30
MODERN - 3 bedrooms,
vertible, $1,250; phone 773Route 50-W; bullf.ln ap. 'of November 1972.
Rlqgs Used Co rs
45 35
•Awnings
with
large closets, Nice size
Manning 0 , Webster
5613.
separate dlnlnQ
piiances,,
Gaul's Shake Haven
42 38
Buy 2
Judge and ex -officio Cle"k
living, front porch, and lot
•'Underpinning
ll
·12·3fc
room, carpeted, central air;
Ridenour's TV
39 41
Meigs Counly
~a;;t Pairs
100x400. Asking $16,000.00.
Athens City Schools; call593·
R. C. Cola
34 &lt;6
Common Pleas Court,
1t5ACRES
;1-P.AIR FRE~
'70 BONNEVILLE, 2 door Complete mQblle hQme:
3881 or 594·4296 lor ap.
Probate Division
Good's Pennzoil
30 50
WILD AND WOOLY - Old 6
poinfment, $29,900.
SVIOO,
factory
air;
service
~
plus
gigantic'
I
Hardtop,
High Ind. Game - Judy
The best buy In the area.
room frame house, barn, and
Ann B. Watson
11-JQ.JOtc
phone 992-5934.
· display ot mobile homes
Ginther 142 and Hazllee Riebel
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
outbuildings.
Free
Deputy Cl•rk
severa
l
11 · 12-6tc alway$ available-at ...
139 .
whole family. Save One1111 6, 13
Only
S20,ooo.oo,
gas.
'
&gt;
High Series ~ Judy Ginther
Third.'
30 ACRES
1970PL YMOUTH 4 door Fury I, 1
MILLE'R
:
361 and Avanell Bass 360.
'1'..
POMEROY
4
BEDROOMS
- Bath, large
Big CopaCII)
Team High Series - Gaul's
while, ex.pafrol car, $1,400.
M
·BILE
OMES
Ail
Jack
W.
tarsey,
Mvr
dining,
3
rooms
paneled.
Moytat
Phone, 992·5310.
·
0
H
i
Shake Haven 842.
· · ' Phone 992-2111
Autom1tlcs
well
with
plenty
of
Free
gas
Team High Game - Lod·
11 ' 10·6fc
·
.
Washingtoft Blvd, ' 2'sp~&amp;ed operetlon .
gas . Large gard~n . All
wick's Market 297.
423-7521
BELPRE •.
Choice
of v.'ater
minerals. $15,000.00. This is a
. ne days are much 1965 PONTiAC Bonneville, 2
temps.
Auto ,
good buy.
shorter. for which nongarw • t·e r
1
e ve 1
door
hardtop.
Factory
air,
A~~J~~~~Mo:NT
NEW LISTING
,cqntrol _.
Lint .
deners
give
profound
thanks.
low
mileage,
new
fires.
Like
Cue No. 20,100
HOBSON
6
room
frame
Filter
or
Power
new condition Inside and out.
For
Eatote of . William Bailey
home. bath, 3 bedrooms. gas
Fin Aoltotor. ·
Phone .98p112 .
Dec" Sid ,
furnace
,
porches,
end
'NotiCe Is httreby gillen thlt
11 ·9·6tp HOUSE In Long Bottom;"phohe'
Moytlt
besement . Level lot. Drilled
Betty Lou Lovett of Reedsville,
985·3529.
I
Halo of Hoot
well.
Only
$9,000.00.
Melg$ County, Ohio, hn been
_ _ _ _ _ _ _6-_11.,tfc·.
DrYers
dUIV oppolnlod Executrix of the
F
.
o
r
Surround' ctothet
Eafllt of William Bailey ,
• ROOM house &amp; balh, nl~ WE HAVE MANY OTHER
CIKeltedJ tete of Aeedsvlll•,
With gentle, even
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
large lot, natural gas, bulft.ln PROPERTIES FdR YOU
Melp County; OhiO.
hut. No hot apols,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Crectltora 1r1 required to file
cabinets In kitchen, clos• to TO SEE. GIVE US A CALl
·no ovordrylng .
ltlllr clolma with said fiduciary
Pomero~ . Phone 992·3891.
Fine Moth Lint
radio station ih Bradbury. AND WE WiLL HELP YOU
wlltllft tour months. · ·
'
4·'12·ffc
Fllttr.
· FINO A HOME. PICTURES
Phone 992.2602:- -Doted thll tth day of
, WI l!llclallatln
·
11
·12·12tc
November 1972.
OF OUR OFFERINGS ON
JUST TAKEN IN , .Singer
•
MAYnG
OUR
OFFICE
WALL.
Sewing
Machine.
Will
sell
for
'POMEROY - House, 6 rooms
·
Mlnnlllt o. Webllor;
HELEN L. TEAFOIID, ·
small balance of Sl6.21 or
JuCIIUflht
6nd bath, 2 large porches,
ASSOCIATE
paymenl$ mat. be arranged.
large
lot,
newly
painted;
Cllllfll~l
COutl '
.
p
It IVIIIOtl
Phone 992-533 .
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
p~one 992.3394.
Mtlll
• OhiO
· 19-7-tfc
"2-3:125
'41-4211
·
11·12·3tc .
\rnolct Grafe.
Rutllncf '
1111 ... 10, .,, fi

U

LOOK'S

Care - Free
Party
Preparations at a Low.
Low Cost- Whether it
be a Wedding · Anniversary get-together
or a Special Holiday.
we will cater delicious
dishes to your home
or party rooms.

From the Ia rgest

l

2 YEARS OLU
MIDDLEPORT - Excellent
localion. 3 B.R. double

----CB RADIO, anlenna, also police

Salesmen Wanted

day. If slill does 'not seem AN OH 10 OIL CO. oilers OP·
possible that he has gone to
portunlty for high income
stay. We hear his voice and
PLUS cash bonuses and

see his face no matter what

8 TRACK

THE SHOP ·

• LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Dpen to 7; Closed Mondays

rcLELAN~

tree walker coon hound .

11 ·9·61c

Sl.50 for SO word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .
WILL babysit in my home .
BLIND ADS
Phone 99H4R
Additional 25c Charge per
1J .JQ -3fc
Advertisement .

MOR6 ! .

CLATTER

CATERING

Take Me To

p~iC:es.

ONE REGISTERED female
Phone 949-4761.

If I HAVE
To Go

BIKES Huffy' 20",
Murray 10 speeds- discount

beds, or complele households , AKC registered St. Bernard
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
pup, female, very lovable, 5
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
mos. old. Make a lovely
RATES
6-28-tlc
For Want Ad Service
Christmas gift . Also Toy
5 cents per Word one Insertion. - - - - - - - - - Poodle , female, spayed.
Minimum Charoe 75c
Phone 992-5947,
12 cents per word three BEEF hides, $8 each, raw lurs ;
11 ·12-21c
Ginseng S52 lb .. Goldseal S3
consec:utlve Insertions .

13

PARTY PlANNING?
LET US DO TliE

11 -10-61c

HONOA S&lt;J, Phone 992·3374.
6 ROOM house with bath, lull
11 -10-31c
basement, see to appreci~te.
Phone 882-2829 New Haven,
w. va .
NOW WRECKING the former
Epple's Grocery Store
building in Pomeroy , All
kinds of building materials 6 ROOM hou.se and balh, sun
for sa le on the job including 2
porch, 2 extra lots, aluminum
and 3 in. heavy material ,
siding . Rt . 1, Middleport,
sheeting and cherry stair
Ohio.
Charier·
Clark

TWO

FI;.OFU;

Business Services

appointment .

11 · 12-31c

ac-

The Publisher reserves thE
right to edit or reject any ads OLD

EAST
WEST
• Kl07
• Void
.K98 3
.QJ10654
t A83
• 965
.. Q1073
"-J62
SOUTH
.AJ96 52
•Void
• 72
.AK854
Both vulnerable
w..t North East South
It
Pass 1•
Pass 3.
Pass 6.
Pus Pass
Pass
Opening lead-• Q

sion ."

Wanted To Buy
woods with a stream deep

Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
Oayof Publication

1

tag . Lost on Wehe Terrace .

Call Marcia Houdashell , 9923612 ,
11 ·12-3tc

5 TO 50 ACRES or more of nice

WANT ADS_
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

WIN AT BRIDGE

'N oth•1ng, PI ay .s

@),:___]:

5736.

railing ; ca ll 992-5946 or 882·

LOST - BLACK cat wearing
red collar wilh Identification

GIIT O(Jr I&gt;U&gt; MEET

AFTER CALEB THROWED
SAIR11'5 BISCUITS IN TH 1
HOG PEN .. WHAT HAPPEII!T
THEN, ELVINEV?

Real Estate For Sale

KOSCOT KOS.METICS . Our

u89&gt;

1971 CHEV. 8' FLEETS IDE

\

UVIIAK ' OWGT

ENVJ

PGOHJC

EHUA

WJ

/!

IJh;.h . ..;:· 1;
..

~~~~~~

CW

HE . -

BTVlB.DHJ ll. QWJAK

'

'

j

l

"

.

\

�·'
IVATCJl TOO. MilCH

· DR. Fh:ltt&gt;! I OUGHT

I

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-1'omeroy, o., Nov .13; 1972

Sen.tinel ClaRsifieds .Get Action! Sentinel Classifietls Get R esul~s!
..

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUAliTY

For Sale

Notice

AKC Toy Poo)l!les . Phone 742- COMFORTABLE two story
lr~tcsl
is
" One
Day "
3812 :
home, full basement, bath
lra grcuice- . Othe_rs ir)clude
11-12-12tc
an~ '~'· attached garage, and
'' K" and The Lemon Grove .
extra lot. In a good localion .
Al so new children's products. I NEW hB5pital bed, $250, new
Basic furniture available .
Phnnc Helen Jane. 992 -5113.
wheelchair, $100. Phone 9'12·
Phone 992.7384 or 992-7133 lor

We'd like to serve you.

10-24-llc

350 V-8 engine, auto. trans .,' P.S., P. B., Cheyenne equip .•

REDUCE safe~ &amp;- iast-wilh
GoBese Tablels &amp; E-Vap

..:hrome front bumper, rear step bumper, radio, beautiful
black accented with white. This is an extremely low
mileaqe truck . Real beautv .

m• B·ulcK

" water pills," Nelson Drug .

ll ·13-2fp

s2s49

Sportwagon. Beautiful cbral finish with vinyl interior,
factory air conditioned, luggage rack , radio. 350 V-8
engine. automatic trans., power steering &amp; ~rakes , like
new w-w tires, If you want a show piece &amp; plenty of luxury
try this outstanding buy.

\liAR R I F. D couple want lo rent

1971 PINTO FORD

Lost

,

farm or country house. Call

collect 614-299-6908.
1l-5-9tc

SI69S

Two door. local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires. clean
Interior, green finish. t:~dio, 2.000 c.c . P11qine, 4-speed.

.Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
1'tlloiEROY, OHIO

·

1

W'
.
---Can t In
NORTH (D)
.Q843
.A7 2
tKQJ 104
.. 9

enough for a small rowboat.

P .M . Qay Before Publ icat ion .

Monday Deadline 9 a.m .

Cancellation - Corrections
REGULATIONS

Reasonable price

and

deemed oblectioneL
The
pub! is her will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

3219 .

cessible. Write fully to Box
729· W, C·O The Daily Sentinel.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
JJ . 12·6fp
Furniture, oak tables ,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass

residence . Contac Sam Clark

992-6306.

11 -IO·IIC
HEREFORD

11 ·9-6fc

sleers, FIVE ROOM house and bath;

weigh approx. 450 lb . each;

interior
comp l etely
remodeled ; located on Brick

good 4-H project ; phone 985·
3846. Virgil Windon .

Sfreel in Rutland ; phone 74211 -12-3tp 3334.
11 ·12-121c
TWO RABBIT dogs; also set ol - - - - -- - - 14" plows or trade for rotary
mower; Nate Vanaman; 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, built-in
phone 742·5322.

cabine ts In kitchen . Close to

11 -12-3fc

radio station in Bradbury.

Phone 992·2602.

RINGNECK pheasanls on foot
or dressed. Roger Leifheit,
Rock Springs Rd., Pomeroy,
Phone 992-3446.
11 -12-3fp

10·29·12fc

·18 cents per word six con
secutlve Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
sds and ads paid within 10 clays .

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

lb .;

Carl

Cheva lier ,

Main

Street. Walerlord , Ohio.
11 -7-1'1tc

Employment Wanted

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a ,m, to 5:00p .m. Dally, YOONG man age 23 wanls radio
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
dispatcher 's job with or
Saturday .

without office work . Phone

992·7541.
11 -12-6fc

In Memory
WE BREATHE a sigh and shed

BY Oewald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: " The 'nothing'
play is any play which can
only cost you a trick. It differs from a bad 1&gt;\!rcentage
play In that a bad percentage play will win on occa-

a tear, it seems like every

we do, But we know lhal
heaven ' s

brighter.

son,

'because II now holds you .
In loving memory of our

son, George, who was killed
one year ago. Mom, Dad,

·

convention trips to mature
man In Pomeroy area.

Regardless of experience, air
mail A. I. Read, Pres .,
American Lubricants Co ..
Box 696, Daylon, Ohio 45401.
11 -12·4fp

REALTY .

l

608 E. Main

Pomeroy

•

•PLEASANT RIDGE ROAD
.
P.O MEROY, o;
' ·"Custom Me•t Cutting"
Q~ick

and Courteous Service

OALE
LITTLE

DICK
VAUGHN

992-3884

992·3374

Lei Click and Dale Help Yau
.with Your Meat Problems.

DRIVE A LITTLE
-SAVE A LOT!

Kuhl's Bargain Center
Rt.7"a1.caution light"

~
.Jill'

•

closels .
Kitchen
has
everything. Dining R., large

STER.EO, freight

damaged, in beauHful walnut

console. Will sell for 1101.50 or
pay $1.50 per week, Phone 9925331. "
9-7-tfc
=-=~---­

POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
5443.
8-JS.tfc

scanner. Dailey 1 S Radio Shop.

Box 21 · B, Long Bottom , Ohio.
11 -8-6tc

EARLY American stereo.radlo

combinalion, AM.FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
speed automatic changer.

Balance $79.31. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
11 ·12-6tc

L.R. wilh fireplace, ulllify,
ceramic bath &amp; shower.
Patio, basement. Level lot

100x l20. Electric heat.
carpeled . ASKING $23.000.
CORNER LOT
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 story
lrame, 3 B.R., bath, utility
R., gas F .A. heal. Paneled .
Tiled. Garage . Cellar .
ASKING $11,000 , .
JUST RENOVATED
POMEROY - 2 story frame ,
2 B.R., dining R., bath. New
kilchen. Paneled. Tiled ,
porches, level lol. Carpeled.
$8,500.'
30 ACRES
NEAR TUPPE'RS PLAINS
- All fenced, nice 4 B.R .
home, all new plumbing, new

drilled well, cislern, sprlf\9 .

Bulldozer Radiator to the
Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Ra9iator Specialist

Small~st

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. -~omeroy
INC.
992-2174 ·

-£ARTH MOVING

TUPPERS PlAINS

'dozers, 2 size loaders. Work

Clean used furniture
Guaranteed appliances

Free E'stimates. We also
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Dump
trucks and low. boy tor hire.
See Bob or ROQer Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m. or phone m .

Virgil B.

o.

WI'TK&gt;UT SIN

~~ KE:

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars
-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy. Home &amp; Auto
Open 8Til5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,O.
SEW ING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.

•ROOFING
•HEATING '
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING ·
•PAINTING

For Free Estimate
PHONE 992!2550

... OR Hs:'S .
WORK IN(; ON
A RESEARCH

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Aulhorized Singer Sales and

HOME &amp; AUTO

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

992-2094

3-29-ffc.

- - - - - - __
SEE US FOR: Awnings,•sform

doors and windows. carports,
marquees, aluminum sidln~.

and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. For free
estimates , phone Charles

606 E. Main

HOWDY, BOuNCE'f·BEI..LE!!
MEET UP WI FOUR &lt;;ll'Z.ZIN,
HAN'50ME HARR'!''J'OKUM-

State of Ohio, DePartment of In,_
ur·
;mce, Cert.lflca.t e or Compllanc~ , The
unaersurned, :o;uoerinte_ndent of Insur·
ancc of the State of Obl.oFherebY f~f·
"~;.~T tra~uc.?.i~~dAto~~fN~ ~ cc:lumbta. State of South Car~Una has
CQmPJJed wtth the laws o£ th1!1 Statd•
liPPiJcable to it and Is a,uthor1ze
c;lunJtM: the curren t year
transact
in this s tate H&amp; auoroprla e buslneu
of lmnuance. Its rinanclal conc;lltlon
i.s ahown bY Its annual statement to
' have been as lollows on Def;em__ber
',\ 31 . 1911: Admitted Aueh 133t?92,705.91 : Liabilities Sl6.816.ll4.48o .roe\ 9Ao·
ets 116,976,591.43: CIIPital Sl,l8 • ,..
.00; Surplus 114.99UI68 .43;
ncome
1131 ,565,49\.20 : ExPenditures 127.244,•
M}n.35 Witness Whereof. I have here·
unto subscribed rzur: name tmd eau•ed
my Jel!l to be aCCixed at Colu mblll.
Ohl~, thlo doy ·~• date, ,July 1. 1912.
ISeau Kenneth E. DeSneUer, Suoer·
lntendent of Insurance o! Ohio. M-38

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

------

•1*1...

Reai Estate

pSsr.rr-

HEHAIN'T
GOTA
FACE!;;

~uCt&lt;i.E!-'10' NOTICED THAT.

DID'fO'?-WAL,I-\EGOT TI-l'
HAN'50MEST FACE. 'fO'EVER
SEEN .:::bi\IL'!'
'{O'CAIN'T
SEE IT

Sale

-lo

11·1'3 '

HIERITANct! FROM
Wit AUSTitALIAN
UNc;u;: ...

WINNIE WINKLE

YOU MEAN

A MAN OF COURSe.
WELL, OUT WITH ITI

&amp;uCC~~AT
L.A~T, WENDY.

AND PON'T -..M'IMPON
PETAilS!

L FINALLY

FIND YOU
AT HOME!

Stale of Ohio, Department of lnL\Jf·
&lt;t nte, ~ertltltate o! Comoliance. The
undera111ned. Superintendent or Insur·

~"f: ~· '""ot'.llfAoJ !i'JI"tWlf'LWii
.~.aRiUc~ COMPlNv of Chi"••·
State of 1 lnols has como/led wt\lh

tho lawo o thll Stole aoo e&gt;ble o
rent year to transl:lct In this state ltl
aooropr[at~ bJ.Jslness of insurance on
the M\1 ua Plan. 11s financial con·
dltlon 11 1 own bY 1VJ annual state·
ment to have been .as follows on DeIt and It authorized durlnll tne cur-

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

II.,.,.,~

ilf.~~e[.38i~al:~r~but\re~ittlf1.7A~!l\~

a3· ur:tut.~.S56802. 10; Income 125.B£4.1
8. : &lt;xoondltu." 122.624.270.65.

In W tneu Whereof, I have here·
unto su scribed mY name and caused
11\Y 1e~ to be affixed aj C&lt;&gt; lu"lbu2o.
OhiO: t Is da~ and date ulY 1 9'i .
&lt;S!III enneth E. Doshotl"i SUPOI0•
In endenl of Insurance of Oh o. M·7~
State of Ohio, Deoartme_nt of InLuh•· •
ance, Certificate of Com.Diianee. T e
undersJ.cned, Suoerlntende~of In•ur·
ance of the ~taU of Ohtou erelifsffi'

~~w.
t~*. o~ l •.'~'lt.M " Niw
YORK, of Bln.lhamton. St.ate of r.•w

II• 13

York has complied with. fhe aw•
of thll State aoo lcable to t and !1
AUthortted durln.lt the current Year
to \ransart In this . alate Its aPVfO•
pfln e business of maurance on \'"'
Mutual PI/M. U1 financial c:ondlt on
shown,
Ita ~~.nnual sta,ent to
&amp;11 jollows on
ctmber
..£,!I,Ve.~~eAiTr
1 lb· ' 'Admll od Au•tl 3,908 ..,7·
.'K '
II IIJtieJ S2.634-i9! 17; SUrPlUS
Sf:27?f;,~ ·tl: Inoonfo 0!,587.0117.&lt;91 E&lt;·
uefn'l 'Wjf~"'~~·\ek:~:ot I have heN'!·
unto •ubse rlbed mY name and ·c•used
my •eal to be af£1~• •j Columb•ll,
Ohlll. thll daY and qlf!i. ub' 1~, 19'l2.
rSP.alJ Kenneth E .
eSne ll"r• oul)f'r·
intenc;lent of Insuranc:e of Ohio. M-71

·y

State ol Ohio, Department of lnt.Ur·
~nee, Certificate of Compllancf, The
undersUmed, Suoerin~'"'~ o lnsur·
lh' PRE.ER.
"'''' of 0hlo.
.,.., W·
II OS of
that
M TUAL
IN·
S RANCE COMPANY ot New BerliiJ,
StRte of New York has complied wl\lh
the laws of thil State app\lc;able o
It and Is authorized durhlll the current ;ven to t.ransact In this ttate ttl
appr9_prlalf buslnel'l.' of' lneuri!nce Qr.
the Mutual Plan. Its nnaodal cond ·
tlon Is 11hown bY ltJ annual atatement
to bave been as follows on December
31J 1971: AttmUted Aneta tl0.~DS.908AJ' LlabiUUeJ 17.222 702113:
urnlu1
$3,~73-205.90; Income 1'7 ,4'13,848. 1: Ex·
vendltures 16.230.930.68.
In Witness Whereof, I have here·
unto s ubscribed m)': name and uused
my St:l!l to be affi~ed al Columblll·
Ohio. this d e ~ and ff~ll'!, July 1. 1972.
(Seal) Kenne h E, DeSheUu. Super·
lntendent of nsurance of Ohio. M·llD

''ill'

u

~n

~
o\CROSS
1. Got a
head start
4, Medical
group
(abbr.)
'-Soak
10. Minda-

"il'

j

nao's

ftnancla

volcano
11. Inferior
horse

~nnua

DICK TRACY

12. "Ben OUR .JOB NC/tN
1'5 TO . I!IRI NG

HIM DOWN-

State o£ Ohio. Department of lnt.ur·
ance. CertUIUte of Comoliancc. The
unden}'~d. suoerlnM'nde~.. of Inaur·
0

r,;,~·. t~.,· ~WUl,ch'i:;u'fL'.l'r

','il:

~URAN E COMPANY of Kanna Clb',

Kanus has complied with
of thlo Stale oool &lt;ablo to
au thorized durllllf lbe cur·
to transact In thl~ 1tate Ill
a~PPrQpr at~ buelness or lnaurrnce on
e Mutua Plan.
!Inane al con·
ltlon is a own by te 11r,nual 1t~•·
ment to have been as
ow1 pn e·
f;ember
19'Jl : AdmU ed Aa~t1 1.·
44l,464;w6 : Llablll\'•• 1826.!11 ; Sur·
P:lus I 1 .653.0JJ nc:_ome • .1! ....u~ :
E""' tum ..20.01U3.
In
ltraf!ltl Whereof, ( hayt here·
unto eubserlbed my name and caused
m7
be ao_d d~ atJ~LY
Colu"l'"'"
Ohio."~
t Isloda~
1 972 ·
Seal) enne h E, eshet ~r. tuoer:
ntendenl or naurance or hlo. M·12'J
Slate o
he Iowa
t and 11
rent :verr

l

1\s

!1.

!

101

'"'1J'"

State of Ohio, Dt:PIIrtm~::nt of ln.t_ur.
anre, Certi.Cicate or Comvllancr· The
undenl.1ned. SuDerintende~ o ln1ur·
'"" ofthft
the TIMii
Stato ofINIUIItA
Ohio. ·~eyCOMm ·
tlllil
P'A Y o Milwaukee, ·statfl o
J~eon·
In hOf t&lt;&gt;mollfd "l!h thO laws of
. hi• s,_ate JIP"P leable to It and Ia
auUloru.ed durin• the current Year
to · tran~act In this ahte ttl
prlate bus1ne11 of Jn,urahct.
u fl ·
nancial ~ndltion ta ahow~ b'y ita anpual ata ment to llavl een aa fol·
Iowa on e~.t,mberJI• 9 l ·,.b-~m~d

!

t••.,.

::
......
]
•.
-••.
.
u~r!.' 1.a.'lra~~. . ~a.e7D.aa: E""•Pen~·
·su.,,:

as. Bay

A~t~ .• , 'll'of..· ~ ..ua·~~

8v.'l'ijoi ..... ~at~~

I

.,

I i· I• I!.-) tJI{i f rVIf

• (OIHI ltlq r.olllnt IJdloalo,lat.)

40. Greek leiter
41. Norse
sky god
42. Assortment .
43. Grassland
44, Attention
45. Indian
farmer
46. SUp up

wearing

star
{2 wds.)
4,- France
5, Famous
queen.

Unac:rambie thtat (GQr Jumbi..,
one leiter tG each aquare, to
form lour ordinary word•.
Yesterday'• Answer

DOWN
1. Times
around
the track
2.Monu·
mental
literary
works
3.Famous
sarong-

movie

JllJroiD~;u..J ==~..Jc::

6. Eastern
title
7. Famous
child
star
(2 wds , I
8. Result
9. More
abundant
17. Like·
wise
18. Dunder·
head
23. Appease
24. Iron
Curtain

12 wds.)

country

26. Site ollhe
Canadian.
National
Exhlbl·
tion
29, Melric land

measure

31. Knightly

I
I
I I L(J .

I CAiBS

title

34. Powerful
light
beam
37. Truth

I I. I

A KIND OF SJ~f'EAN

CIJR'TAIN MAiEJII:iAL.,'

rear·
ranger
39. Germ8n
city

Happy
Fella"
U . Swedish
wine

7

In ~~.. Whereof. I. have hereunto IUicrJ~d ~(! '!Sme a~tl cal~
~ 0 •efi!, 1t~ 1 ~e 1 ad 'i:t; •j Jyolf,~l'
&lt;s.oud'~•,'•,• h '1!. b"elhatY;,,
nten en o nauranee ot Ohto. M·13'i'

measure

window,
15. Made the

scene

S&amp;. RaUonal
SL Black
wckoo(var.f ·
19. Large vue

o.:-

I'M

tiOING

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

Sale

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands lor a~olher. In tbla umple A il
Uled for lhe three L'o, X lor the two O's, ett. Sln&amp;le letten,
· aposlropbea, the lencth ond formation of the wonls are all
1111111, Each da7 the code lettera are dillerent.

Sale

my~u~u

JVfE~HJC

BVKifAT.

RUTIMD FURNITURE ·;!~.~~~t

ON YOUR DIAL

"

13. Mohammedan
saint
.14.Macaw
15. Suffix lor
meteor
18.Famed
baritone
of yesteryear
11. Rellq~ary
chest
19, Low seat
20. Animal's
track
21. Saintly
22. Scattered
(her. )
.23, Be a ,
anoop
U, Suffix for
depend
1'1. Suffix for
law
Z8. "Damn
Yankees"
lemptress

so..._

l

1l• if

'"'"l'f ~t

Yttler4a1'1 CmJtot!IIOie: MUCH SMOKING KILLS L1VJ:
MEN AND CUDS DEAD SWINE.-GEORGE D. PRENTICE

by THOMAS JOSEPH

State of Ohio, Department of InllJl'·
ance, Certificate or Com~Hancf· Tbo
undenl•ned, Suoerintendelio Inaur·
'"'"
of tne SLato Of Ohlol ••bY
till" tOtl PUIOTAN L F
INIU ·
ANCE COMf.ANY Qf Provldep,c:e ~ Shte
of Rhode aland Jlas comPiled wl\h
the low• o£ thlo Stole oooll"blo o
IL l!nd Ia authorized durlplf \he cu~
rent year to transact In Lhla ttate
appropriate business of luurance.

c:ondtuon Ill ahown by te
s&amp;tement to haye been at fol·
lowa on ecembf'!r 31. 1971 : Admit!'"
Allset&amp;
.230,329.19: Llnbllltlt~ts I ~ ••
822~59 . 191 Noft:JA"el' I ,&lt;0'7 ,970 00'
C_1pJtal 12,750
.00; surp us 11.M7,·
970.00; Income 14.348.331.82; Ex.Pend·
tturea 113,178.215,&amp;1.
In Wltneas Whereof, I have hereunto subscribed m,- name and c .. UBI!d
m_y ee~ to be affixed at Colu"jb'lf.
Ohlol t Ia da~ and dfllf'!1 JulY 1~, Q'la.
enne b E. DeSnetlP.r_, ;:,_q~J"!
.( Seal
J ntend~nt of nsurance of Ohio. M·Ulti

"&lt; I

"""'

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'''"'l•,rtlt

WMP0/1390

FUSTnME.
FOLKSOON'T
SEE. ME.
TI-lE'!' IS
SURPRISED
- BUT THE.'/
GI'TSUSED
TOll-

LE'S SEE, 'fA LOST
V.R WALLET'" 'f&amp;(:t
liXPECTIN' AN IN•

1

Real Estate

•

WU A 11CKET R)R
RECKL.EG6 DRIVING.

ll'L ABNER

TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS ... _ ...
CLEANED,- REPAIRED.
MILLER SAN ITAT ION,
STEWART, OHie. PHONE
662·3035.
10-4-tlc

POMEROY

1.

1220

ll-IEY DON'T AL'TER'
THE FN:.T...

CASI '11-lE FIR'i&gt;f
91of\lel

~-.. .~AT 11M
SfiL.L. OOII'G 10 GIVE

LEGAL NOTICE

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Local Bowling

OF Wi$DOM . 6UI

5232.

n
ft't."tl;;;

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

iHOGE Af!E. \\ORDG

LET HE 'MiO IS

done .by hour or contract. ' · SEPTIC

II

We talk to JOU
like a perSon.

i.
:!
:t

GRANT!

POMEROY, OHIO

scaping. We have 2 size

HEATING &amp;
COOLIN.G

&amp;~~-l~~::n~~e~itbo~d~~~:

~~~I

TI-lE
PROF£SSOit IS PAYING OFF
AN E"~ION BET•.

SHAM MrS
CATERING SER~ICE

Dozer &amp; End loader work,'
ponds, basement, land·

Help

~

•

CALL 992-5786

Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. Stotf In and See Our
Jim : "I see you are leadBasement porches. Garage
brothers, slsfers and families.
Johnson and Son, Inc .
1
Ing up to a hand where there
and other buildings. $12,900.
' 11 · 13-lfp
3.2.1fc Floor Display.
HENRY E. CLELAND,
are three ways to play the
MODERN Walnut slyle stereoWanted
REALTOR
radio, AM·FM radio, 4
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
trump suit in a slam con- N t'
EARN
$25
lo
SlOO
per
week
al
0
LEGAL NOTICE
HENRY
E. CLELAUD, Jr.
Septic tanks installed. George -•
speaker sound system, 4
tract. The bad percentage
ICe
home In your spare lime
Salesman
speed
automatic
changer.
I
Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992·2478,
TIMES FOR HOLDING
play Is to lay down the ace ]~"----:-.--''---....__ _"""'
mailing
our
P.roducf
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND,
4·25-tfc COMMON PLEAS COURTS,
Balance $68.57 . Use our
and try to drop a singleton
brochures. For applications
A. D. 1973
budget terms. Phone 992·7085.
Saleslady, 985-4209
send your name and address
ng. his wm gain a trtck
U~
It ls.brdered ,that the terms of
•,,
11 ·12'-&lt;ltc
!92·2259
it
nun.~wer
992·2568
·
R
e":f,~~~l
xil!il!e'NCR
ETE
to: UNLIMITED eHJLil&gt;&gt;
the Common Pleas Court in th e
for u the 13 per cent of the'
·•
·-~----------' · delivered ri9h-~'' to your County of Meigs !:ounty, tor t he'
DEPT
.
MP
.
2741
INC..
that the singleton king ,
·
pro1ect. Fast and easy. Free year 19 73 be fixed as follows. to MICHIGAN ROAD, EATON TWIN needle sewing machine
esllmales . Phone 992·3284 .' wit : On the 1st day of January,
is back of the ace. It breaks
1972 model in warnul stand. SPECIAL : Move in before
RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 48827.
winter. 4 bedroom ranch
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ., and the 1st day of May and the
even the 13 per cent of the
All features built -in to make
11 · 13-lfp
Jrd day of September and the
home on 3JA acre lot. Bath and
Middleport, Ohio.
fancy
designs
and
do
stretch
time that the singleton king
said terms of said court begin at
a
hall.
builf.in
kitchen,
wall
to
6-JO.tfc
se wing . Also buttonholes,
10:00 o'clock A .M .
Is in front of the ace and 1!
..
wall carpet and garage, Price
BUTCHER
part-lime,
blind hems , etc. $43.35 cash
John C. Bane
loses the 37 per cent of the
Wi l)dow
Tuesdays and Fridays for
$20.750.00 ; also a 5 bedroom SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
price or terms available .
Judge of Common
local store; write to P.O, Box
time that the guarded king
Air Conditioners
colonial house on a 'I• acre lpf. REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446Pleas Court,
Phone 9'12·5641.
729·M, C·OThe Da ily Sentinel,
Balh
and
a
hall
,
builf.in
4782,
Gallipolis,
John
Russell,
Meigs
County,
Ohio
11
·7·6tc
Is in front~~ the ' ace." .
'
Hot Watel) Healers
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 .
kitchen, dining room , family
Owner. &amp; Uperator.
Oswald : The not h 1n.g
Plumbing
11·7·1fc VACUUM CLEANER . Electro
room and the works, priced
5·12-tfc 110) 30, (111,,6, 13, 31
$30,000,00.
Call
Sherman
E.
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Electrical Work
Summerlield, 985-3598 or 985- C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer
NOTICE OF
has all cleaning attachmen ts
For
Rent
APPOINTMENT
4177
.
Complete
Service
Electro
Suds
for
plus
th
e
new
hand. When actually played,
Case No. 20804
11 -2-301c
Phone 949-3821
South won the heart lead in
ft
s hampooing carpet. Only
UNFURNISHED 5 room and
Estate
Of
ADA
CRAY, De Racine,
Ohio
S27 .SO cash price or terms
dummy and played a low
ceased.
bath house . Phone 992·2780 or
Crill
Bradford
available.
Phone
992-5641.
Notice is hereby given that
992·3432.
spade. East played the seven
l ·l·IIC Bernard V. Fultz, of Pomeroy,
11 -7-61c
and South finessed the jack.
11 -12·flc
Ohio. has been dul y appointed
West showed out and South
992-2446
AdminiStrator of the Estate of
DOZER
and
back
hoe
work,
APPLES, Fitzpatrick Or ·
had no way to avoid the loss
HOUSETRAitER
in
Clifton,
Ada
Cray, deceased , lat e- of
ponds and septic tanks, ditPomerov .
chards, State Route 689 ,
of a trump trick as well as 1
•
Middleport. , Meigs County,
adulls only ; phone 773-5146,
ching
service;
top
soil,
fill
.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
Gertrude Gibbs Preston.
the ace or diamonds."
dirl, limestone; B&amp;K Ex' Ohio
Creditors ere required to file
8-30-tlc
11 ·10-3tp
,
PRE · CHRISTMAS sale :
cavafing . Phone 992-5367, their claims with said fiduciary
J\m : Had South led dum· Crushed velvet, polyester,
Dick Karr, Jr.
within four months.
my s Q.IJ.~~n of spades and bonded acrylic, all reduced. APARTMENTS near new
Dated th is 27th day of October
9.1 -ttc
SCHNAUZER
puppies,
AKC,
won wlili the ace if East Will give gift certlflcales. The
1972.
Meigs High School; call 773Salt &amp; Pepper. ears chopped/
Manning D. Webster, Judge
played high he would have
Sew and Go Shop In lhe Allred
5268 after 5 p.m.
RUSSELL 'S
Furnllure
wormed and shots; healthy
Probate Division
110 Mechanic St.
been able to go back to dum· area. Owner, Mrs. E. T.
10·29· 12fp
Uphol stery; free pickup and
185
;
phone
Coolville
667·6214.
Common
Pleas Court,
Pomeroy, Ohio4S769,
my and finesse against Calaway .
delivery; phone 992-5771,
Meigs County, Ohio
11 -5·12tp
11
.'1'
2
-6tc
East's 10-spot. The queen
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
10·27-3otc 110 1 30 1111 6, 13. 31
NEW HOME
unfurnished apartments .
play would guard against the REVIVAL in progress at
2 BEDROOMS - All paneled
Phone 992·5434 ,
3~ break."
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
Langsville Christian Church .
TWO
G70
x
14
6·ply
tires,
w-w
inside, elec tric heat, nice
4·12·lfC
localed at Crossroads, Rt . 124 .
Services nightly, 7:30 p. m.
NOTICE ON FILING
(Htws•••E• ENTUPlltiS£ AssN.l
Atlas radial , 150. Phone 9'12·
balh . Full basement . School
Complete
front end service,
OF INVENTORY
Everyone
welcome .
3904,
bus and
mail
routes
ANO
APPRAISEMENT
tune
up
and
brake
service
.
Evangelist, Pal rick Eads and TRAILER in country, large
11 -10-3fc
$12,000.00.
The State of Ohio, Meigs
Wheels
balanced
elec• Pastor, Robert Musser, ·
yard and garden ; phone 992NEW LISTING
tronically ,
All
work County. Probilte Court.
6658.
11 ·9·61c
1
ACRE
On
T.P.
wa
ler·
To the Administratrix of the
The bidding has been:
guaranteed .
Reasonable estate;
11 -12·3tc
to such of the following
line . Trees for shade .
For
Sale
or
Trade
rates. Phone 742·3232 or 992· as are residents of the State of
w..i North East South REVIVAL al Eagle Ridge
Trailers welcome . S25()(l for
3213.
Church November 13th lhru MODERN 3·room furnished WILL sell cheap or trade 13"
Ohio . viz : the surviving
the
1st
acre,
then
$500,00
per
7·27·1fC
spouse,
the
next
ot kin, the
'""
Pass
18th ; 7: 30 p.m .; Evangelist,
tires
.
like
new,
ior
14"
,
Phone
?
Pua 1•
Pass
aparlment, bath ; very
acre up to 4 more.
beneficiaries
under
the will ,·
Charles Norris ; special
949-441 1.
desirable ;
downtown
You, ·South, hold:
HOT
WATER
HEAT
and to the attorney or Bttorneys
singers. Bonnie and Bureri
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
been'
11 ·10-31c 3 NICE BEDROOMS Pomeroy; no children ; phone
any of the
.QIU.KH3tA765"-3
cancelled?
·Lost
your· repres.entlng
Duncan and the Bissell
992-2623,
aforementioned persons :
Balh,
large
living
and
dining
operator's
license?
Call
992Brothers ;
everyone
What do you do?
Charles
E.
Larkins,
11 ·12-3fc
2966.
.
area. Moder n kitchen,
welcome .
Deceased
,
Chester,
Ohio,
A-Bid tbr~
Even II
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
basement, carpprt , and
6· 15·1fC Chester Township , No . 20794 .
11 · 10-3fp
you play thls 15 !orcin&amp; you : : - : - - - - - TRAILER lot, Bob's Mobile
fenced yard , Only $20,000.00.
You are hereby notified that
Court, Syracuse ; phone 992- CASH paid for all makes and
&lt;ID't IIford to juot roile to two. HAY MAN'S Auction - a gOOd
the
Inventory
and
Ap ·
NEAR
POMEROY
ATTENTION FARMERS. pralsement
/!'Odels of mobile homes .
2951.
of the estate of the
TODAY'S QUESTION
ONE
FLOOR
3
or
4
place to go each Friday
Largesl choice of ail breeds of aforementioned, deceased , late
Phone area code 61H23·95:il.
JQ.JJ .Ifc
You bid three spades and your evening, 7 p.m . at Laurel
bedrooms ,
bath,
nice
A. I. Sires by phoning Leland of said County , was filed in this
4-J3.flc
Clifl on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west
p a r t n e r rebids to four clubs.
modern birch kitchen with
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or Court . Sa id Inventory and
of Rock Springs Fairground . FURNISHED 2 bedroom ' 1970 MOBILE home with air ·cook units . Rec. room,
What do you do now?
· call station for service, ln. Appraisement will be tor
apartment, adults only,
JQ.JO.tfc
hearing before th is Court on the
formation or direct sales.
carport and barbecue pit,
conditioning, washer , ex.
Anawer tomorrow
15th day of November, 1972, e&lt;t
Middleport ; phone 1'92 · 387~.
11-9.30fc
cellent condition, lot can be $16,500.00.
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
10·22-ffc
SO ACRES
rented . Phone 1'92·7387.
Any person desiring to file
FOR HUNTING - Rutland
JJ.J2-6tp
exceptions thereto must file
For
them at least· five dliys prior to
Township . All minerals
Wednesday Afternoon League
Auto
Sales
the date set for hearing .
November a, 1972
except coal. 5100.00 an acre.
FOUR or five bedroom home,
Given under my h&amp;nd and
ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
Won Lost
TUPPERS PLAINS
1970 FIAT Sport Spider - con.
seal of sald Court, this Jrd day
• Air Conditioners. 1
·five
mileS
west
of
Athens
near
Lodwick's Markel
50 30
MODERN - 3 bedrooms,
vertible, $1,250; phone 773Route 50-W; bullf.ln ap. 'of November 1972.
Rlqgs Used Co rs
45 35
•Awnings
with
large closets, Nice size
Manning 0 , Webster
5613.
separate dlnlnQ
piiances,,
Gaul's Shake Haven
42 38
Buy 2
Judge and ex -officio Cle"k
living, front porch, and lot
•'Underpinning
ll
·12·3fc
room, carpeted, central air;
Ridenour's TV
39 41
Meigs Counly
~a;;t Pairs
100x400. Asking $16,000.00.
Athens City Schools; call593·
R. C. Cola
34 &lt;6
Common Pleas Court,
1t5ACRES
;1-P.AIR FRE~
'70 BONNEVILLE, 2 door Complete mQblle hQme:
3881 or 594·4296 lor ap.
Probate Division
Good's Pennzoil
30 50
WILD AND WOOLY - Old 6
poinfment, $29,900.
SVIOO,
factory
air;
service
~
plus
gigantic'
I
Hardtop,
High Ind. Game - Judy
The best buy In the area.
room frame house, barn, and
Ann B. Watson
11-JQ.JOtc
phone 992-5934.
· display ot mobile homes
Ginther 142 and Hazllee Riebel
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
outbuildings.
Free
Deputy Cl•rk
severa
l
11 · 12-6tc alway$ available-at ...
139 .
whole family. Save One1111 6, 13
Only
S20,ooo.oo,
gas.
'
&gt;
High Series ~ Judy Ginther
Third.'
30 ACRES
1970PL YMOUTH 4 door Fury I, 1
MILLE'R
:
361 and Avanell Bass 360.
'1'..
POMEROY
4
BEDROOMS
- Bath, large
Big CopaCII)
Team High Series - Gaul's
while, ex.pafrol car, $1,400.
M
·BILE
OMES
Ail
Jack
W.
tarsey,
Mvr
dining,
3
rooms
paneled.
Moytat
Phone, 992·5310.
·
0
H
i
Shake Haven 842.
· · ' Phone 992-2111
Autom1tlcs
well
with
plenty
of
Free
gas
Team High Game - Lod·
11 ' 10·6fc
·
.
Washingtoft Blvd, ' 2'sp~&amp;ed operetlon .
gas . Large gard~n . All
wick's Market 297.
423-7521
BELPRE •.
Choice
of v.'ater
minerals. $15,000.00. This is a
. ne days are much 1965 PONTiAC Bonneville, 2
temps.
Auto ,
good buy.
shorter. for which nongarw • t·e r
1
e ve 1
door
hardtop.
Factory
air,
A~~J~~~~Mo:NT
NEW LISTING
,cqntrol _.
Lint .
deners
give
profound
thanks.
low
mileage,
new
fires.
Like
Cue No. 20,100
HOBSON
6
room
frame
Filter
or
Power
new condition Inside and out.
For
Eatote of . William Bailey
home. bath, 3 bedrooms. gas
Fin Aoltotor. ·
Phone .98p112 .
Dec" Sid ,
furnace
,
porches,
end
'NotiCe Is httreby gillen thlt
11 ·9·6tp HOUSE In Long Bottom;"phohe'
Moytlt
besement . Level lot. Drilled
Betty Lou Lovett of Reedsville,
985·3529.
I
Halo of Hoot
well.
Only
$9,000.00.
Melg$ County, Ohio, hn been
_ _ _ _ _ _ _6-_11.,tfc·.
DrYers
dUIV oppolnlod Executrix of the
F
.
o
r
Surround' ctothet
Eafllt of William Bailey ,
• ROOM house &amp; balh, nl~ WE HAVE MANY OTHER
CIKeltedJ tete of Aeedsvlll•,
With gentle, even
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
large lot, natural gas, bulft.ln PROPERTIES FdR YOU
Melp County; OhiO.
hut. No hot apols,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Crectltora 1r1 required to file
cabinets In kitchen, clos• to TO SEE. GIVE US A CALl
·no ovordrylng .
ltlllr clolma with said fiduciary
Pomero~ . Phone 992·3891.
Fine Moth Lint
radio station ih Bradbury. AND WE WiLL HELP YOU
wlltllft tour months. · ·
'
4·'12·ffc
Fllttr.
· FINO A HOME. PICTURES
Phone 992.2602:- -Doted thll tth day of
, WI l!llclallatln
·
11
·12·12tc
November 1972.
OF OUR OFFERINGS ON
JUST TAKEN IN , .Singer
•
MAYnG
OUR
OFFICE
WALL.
Sewing
Machine.
Will
sell
for
'POMEROY - House, 6 rooms
·
Mlnnlllt o. Webllor;
HELEN L. TEAFOIID, ·
small balance of Sl6.21 or
JuCIIUflht
6nd bath, 2 large porches,
ASSOCIATE
paymenl$ mat. be arranged.
large
lot,
newly
painted;
Cllllfll~l
COutl '
.
p
It IVIIIOtl
Phone 992-533 .
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
p~one 992.3394.
Mtlll
• OhiO
· 19-7-tfc
"2-3:125
'41-4211
·
11·12·3tc .
\rnolct Grafe.
Rutllncf '
1111 ... 10, .,, fi

U

LOOK'S

Care - Free
Party
Preparations at a Low.
Low Cost- Whether it
be a Wedding · Anniversary get-together
or a Special Holiday.
we will cater delicious
dishes to your home
or party rooms.

From the Ia rgest

l

2 YEARS OLU
MIDDLEPORT - Excellent
localion. 3 B.R. double

----CB RADIO, anlenna, also police

Salesmen Wanted

day. If slill does 'not seem AN OH 10 OIL CO. oilers OP·
possible that he has gone to
portunlty for high income
stay. We hear his voice and
PLUS cash bonuses and

see his face no matter what

8 TRACK

THE SHOP ·

• LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Dpen to 7; Closed Mondays

rcLELAN~

tree walker coon hound .

11 ·9·61c

Sl.50 for SO word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .
WILL babysit in my home .
BLIND ADS
Phone 99H4R
Additional 25c Charge per
1J .JQ -3fc
Advertisement .

MOR6 ! .

CLATTER

CATERING

Take Me To

p~iC:es.

ONE REGISTERED female
Phone 949-4761.

If I HAVE
To Go

BIKES Huffy' 20",
Murray 10 speeds- discount

beds, or complele households , AKC registered St. Bernard
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
pup, female, very lovable, 5
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
mos. old. Make a lovely
RATES
6-28-tlc
For Want Ad Service
Christmas gift . Also Toy
5 cents per Word one Insertion. - - - - - - - - - Poodle , female, spayed.
Minimum Charoe 75c
Phone 992-5947,
12 cents per word three BEEF hides, $8 each, raw lurs ;
11 ·12-21c
Ginseng S52 lb .. Goldseal S3
consec:utlve Insertions .

13

PARTY PlANNING?
LET US DO TliE

11 -10-61c

HONOA S&lt;J, Phone 992·3374.
6 ROOM house with bath, lull
11 -10-31c
basement, see to appreci~te.
Phone 882-2829 New Haven,
w. va .
NOW WRECKING the former
Epple's Grocery Store
building in Pomeroy , All
kinds of building materials 6 ROOM hou.se and balh, sun
for sa le on the job including 2
porch, 2 extra lots, aluminum
and 3 in. heavy material ,
siding . Rt . 1, Middleport,
sheeting and cherry stair
Ohio.
Charier·
Clark

TWO

FI;.OFU;

Business Services

appointment .

11 · 12-31c

ac-

The Publisher reserves thE
right to edit or reject any ads OLD

EAST
WEST
• Kl07
• Void
.K98 3
.QJ10654
t A83
• 965
.. Q1073
"-J62
SOUTH
.AJ96 52
•Void
• 72
.AK854
Both vulnerable
w..t North East South
It
Pass 1•
Pass 3.
Pass 6.
Pus Pass
Pass
Opening lead-• Q

sion ."

Wanted To Buy
woods with a stream deep

Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
Oayof Publication

1

tag . Lost on Wehe Terrace .

Call Marcia Houdashell , 9923612 ,
11 ·12-3tc

5 TO 50 ACRES or more of nice

WANT ADS_
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

WIN AT BRIDGE

'N oth•1ng, PI ay .s

@),:___]:

5736.

railing ; ca ll 992-5946 or 882·

LOST - BLACK cat wearing
red collar wilh Identification

GIIT O(Jr I&gt;U&gt; MEET

AFTER CALEB THROWED
SAIR11'5 BISCUITS IN TH 1
HOG PEN .. WHAT HAPPEII!T
THEN, ELVINEV?

Real Estate For Sale

KOSCOT KOS.METICS . Our

u89&gt;

1971 CHEV. 8' FLEETS IDE

\

UVIIAK ' OWGT

ENVJ

PGOHJC

EHUA

WJ

/!

IJh;.h . ..;:· 1;
..

~~~~~~

CW

HE . -

BTVlB.DHJ ll. QWJAK

'

'

j

l

"

.

\

�. .

8- The O.ily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Nov .13,1972 ..

Two

school~~v-andalized ·-.

MASON -Police Chief John
Harrah and Sheriff Troy
Huffman are continuing in·
vestiga tion today of a double
breaking and entering of the
Wahallla junior and senior high
school buildings resulting in
appa~ent heav y property

Thanksgiving

dillll&lt;Jgt• and Ihe loss uf about
$.100 cash.
Occurring
apparently
some lime Friday evening, the
va ndalis m w.as di scovered
Saturday.
· Entrance was ·gained in the
old junior high building by
breaki ng lgass in a door.
Several rooms were ransacked
and dour lucks tampered with.
There was nothing determined
missing.
The sen ior high building was
nor so fortunate.

(Continued from Page 4)
hall and of additional flatware
were approved. The bazaar
and mar.ke.t of the Loyal
· Women's Class was announced
for Nov. 17 at Dudley's Flower
. Shop,
,
r' r·ederick William Ohlinger,
Mrs. Cline, Mrs. Ella Reuter,
Mrs. Ervin, Mrs . Bessie 72, Walnul St., Middleport, a
Ashley, and Mrs. L&lt;&gt;rena Rice . retired New York Central
rai lroad engineer, died
were hosU!sses.
Salnrday nigllt at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Veterans Memorial Hospl1al
Mr. Ohlinger was born in
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Middleport on Jan. 30, 1900, the
-Cheryl Barrett, Langsville ; sun of the late William and
John Blosser , ·Middleport; Mar·y Ann Jenkinson Ohlinger.
Ellen Couch, Pomeroy ; Tyllc He was also preceded in ~eath
. ..., ...
Roush, New Haven; Dorothy by lwo sisters and a brother.
Snyder , · Hockingport;
Mr. Ohlinger was a member
Catherine Roach, Middleport; of the Brotherhood of Railroad
Leveda Yost,
Rutland; Trainmen and belonged to
Michael Still, Minersville; Middleport Lodge 363, Free
Herman Jones, Cheshire; and Accepted Masons. He
Harold K:ing, Po111eroy.
al.lended the Middleport First
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
John . Hayes, Melvin
Cremeans, Charles Beegle,
LODGE TO MEET
Landon McDaniel , Martha
A special meeting of Shade
Searls.
Riv er Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will be
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - held Wednesday at 7:30 p. m.
Raymond La111bert, Rutland; for work in the Fellow Craft
Carolyn Adams, Racine; Edna degree. All master masons are
Hart, Pomeroy; John Thomas, invited.
1
Middleport; Barbara Fetty,
Langsville.
.
LODGE TO MEET
"SUNDAY DISCHARGES Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will
Michael Still, Lilly Coates, meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m.
Mila
Hudson ,
Cynthia wheM election of officers will be
Jacobson, Edward Bowen, held. Annual dues are also due.
Melania Walding.
All master masons are
welco111e.

Here the vandals apparently
gut in through an unlocked
duor. They smashed glass in
lhc door·s of five class rooms,
lore up a !lUmber of roonls,
leaving scatlered litter frt1m
teachers' desks, and round an ,
eslimated $.100 in teachers'
desk drawers.
One theory advanced is that
lhe persons were looking for
gr·ade records. Report cards.
were to have been made up
early this week.

Frederick Ohlinger dies

" If

you I eel that

you have no faults,
• go no further . That

was a good one to
start with!"

up to the next tall job
lw•ith
a
WERNER
ALUMINUM LADDER
from the Pomeroy Cement

Block Company, the Home
of the " FRIENDLY
ONES". From Utility to
El&lt;tension you' ll never find

fault with a WERNER
UMINUM
LADDER.

United Presbyterian Church.
Survivors are his wife, Ada
Virginia Zahl Ohlinger ; three
daughters, Mrs. Albert (Mary)
Schleicher, Cleveland; Mrs.
James ( Martha ) Vennari;
Pumeroy, and Mrs . Joe
!Mildred) Bailey, Pomeroy;
three sisters, Mrs. Howard
(Mary Ann ) Poole of Stow,
Mrs . George
(Stinard)
Magadore, and Mrs. Nellie
Bradley, Columbus.
Funeral services will be held
al 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings.Coats Funeral Home
wilh the Rev. Dwight Zavitz
ulficiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery. Masonic
services will be held at 7:30 this
evening by the Middleport
Lodge. Friends may call at the
funeral home aoy time.

Open Every Week Day 9:30 a..m. to 5 p.~. - and .on Fridays and Saturdays
9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. ·
-------.. . ------~~---------~------------~---·----------~---·--·-·-·--·~::-·--·~"1
. . . 'fUtf'

IN HOLZER
Lee Johnson, Racine Route I,
is a patient at the Holzer
Medical tenter. His room
number is 420.

Too Late to Classify

OIIDER

TWELVEGRADUATE-Nomore than 12 seniors will·be leaving the Marauder Marching
• Band next spring, guaranteeing Director Dwight Goins a "veteran unit " when the 1973 foot ba II
: season opens. Four of the 12 are majorettes, including head majorette and field commander
: Julia Hutchison. Above, I tor, kneeling, are Leta Floyd, Miss Hutchison, Brenda,lJ!y!or, and
•· Mindy YoWlg; second row, Liz Blaettnar, Sheila McKnight, Donna Francis, Patti Well, Diana
" Young; third row, Scott VanVranken,Dennis Glaze and Phil Moon. -Picture by Gary Walker·.

LCCD bids
to be asked

You'll enioy a visit to the TOY STORE and so
will your children. You'll find a really ex·
cellent selection of toys, books, games,
bicycles, tricycles, wagons, puzzles, and dolls.
You'll find excellent quality, names and
brands that are known for creating and
building toys that the children really enioy.

-

· Drinks and
oesserl E.tra .

Lay-Awa5' Plant !
You can select toys now and they will be ready for you
to pick up at Christmas lime.
You ' ll like the way the toys are arranged for your
easy selection. You'll find ca pable sa les people to help
you make your selections.

&amp;der our regul~r m&amp;hu every nl_ghi s io .10_.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629

POMEROY

f ·

The Barr Construction Cu. of
Gallipoli~ was authorized to
proceed with its plans to build
lwo JO.unit apartment houses
in Middleport by Middleport
Council Monday nighl.
Meeting with council in the
mar ter were Tony Barr of the
construction firm, and Dean
Circle, builder , both of
Gallipolis, a'nd Edison Baker of
lhe Middlepor t Plannin g
Commission. The visilors
displayed plans for the two
apartment complexes which
are tu be built at the corner of
Walnul and First Sts. on lots 5,
6, 7 and 8.
Council, upon the recom.
mendation of the Planning
Commission, changed the
wning of the lots from business
to residential, and it was
agreed to abandon the present
sidewalk. Part of where the
present sidewalk is located will
be 'used to provide head.in
parking near the apartment

(Tochnicolor)
John Finch
Alec McCowen
Thr ills Galore! That's
HITCHCOCK!
(Rf
Colorcartoon:
Tilt First Telephone
Adullo: Sl.l8 Chitdrtn: 75c
Show Start• I P:M.

houses, and a new walk will be
built.
Parking will be provided in
frunl and at the rear of the
buildings and there will be a
play area for children living in
them. Four me«!rs on Walnut
Sr. will be removed to per111il
the change in the sidewalk and
to complement lhe parking
plan.
Cosl of I he housing projec l is
eslimalcd at around $270,000,
Circle sa id.
Coun cil suspended rules and
gave all three readings to an
ordinance to set up a '~ £ederal
general revenue 'sharing trust
fnnd" as required . by the
village if it is to participate in
rhe reven ue sharing program
uf the federal government.
Council approved the Oc·
Iuber report of Mayor John
Zerkle showing receipts of $147
in merchant police collections
and $2,227.50 in fines and fees
fur a total of $2,374.50.

Request.&gt;; fur street lights on
Hailroa d, Fain•iew a,nd a~ the
marint~ were referred , to the
lighl committee by Mayor
Ze rkl e. Mayor- Zerkle also said
thai the street sweeper is
·~beyo nd repair.'' Maintenance
Su pervisor Harold Chase
eslimated that $2,000 would be
RALPH WERRY, CO-CIIAIRMAN of the annual Meigs
required to repair the sweeper.
County
Junior Miss Pageant, right, hands an advance ticket
It also was noted tha t even with
to William Reed at Bill end ue's Music Center in Pomeroy.
the expe nditure the sweeper
would no t be efficient. Mayor • The advance sale tickets, being sold at a price under door
admission, can also be purchased at the New York Clothing
Zerkle referred the matter to
House in Pomeroy and at Dutton Drugs and the Village
Ihe equipment committee.
Pharmacy in MidcUeport. The pag~nt will be held at 6
II was agreed to purchase an
Saturday
night at Southern llil!ll School in Racine ..
addit iona l 200 feet of guard
rail ing from Ben:rom Corp.
F'uur hundred feet were in,
stall ed up Middl eport Hill al lhe sewage disposal lagoon gravel from Letart Falls .
r·ecently and the additional 200 so lltat workers will be able to
Attending were Mayor
feel will complete the job, the reach the river bank area to Zerkle, Clerk·Treasurer Gene
mayor sa id . The railing will make repairs . If repairs are Grate, Chase, Police Chief J. J.
add tu the safety of travelers nol made, the lagoon will be Cremeans, Barr, Circle, and
over Middleport Hill , he noted. "going into the river," Chase council members Lawrence
. Chase discussed with council war· ned.
SU!wart, Mrs. Roger Morgan,
1he need uf some 15 truckloads
It was agreed to secure the David Ohlinger, Fred Hoffman
or gravel to use on a roadway services of a large h·uck to haul and William Walters.

School Board appreciative .of levy vote

The board also approved necessary for the board to use Dixon as instructor of the
The Meigs Local District
The high school tutoring
Board of Education Monday applications for water service the entire building.
Ca rpenter Apprentice class program was reviewed. It was
Mrs. Thomas asked the (his salary will be paid partly suggested that James Diehl,
'
night approved a resolution for Bradbury, Salem Center·
•
.
thanking all persons who and Harrisonville from board for two downstairs and by the union and partly from a principal, meet with the board
worked for the passage of the Leading Creek Conservancy two upstairs rooms .
special state subsidy with no at the next meeting to discuss
Porter explained that the local funds involved), and the program further.
five mill sehoul operating levy District and an easement for
and also thanking voters for Leading "Creek Conservancy board could take no action until approved the request of the
Hargraves said 20 names
further
study
is
made.
He
District
to
construct
and
repair
their
support.
American
Bankers
Life
have
been submitted for the
•
••
Board president Frank W. water lines on the Salem suggested that Mrs. Tho111as Assurance Co . of Miami, Fla., Rio Grande College com·
Porter, and Don Mullen, vice Center, Harrisonville and meet with Supt. Hargraves as to sell sheltered annuities to mittee.
• Advertisements for bids to
The bids will be for raw
president, expressed their Bradbury school properties. to what actually is needed, and employes and have the
The board also approved a
lluild a new rural water supply water transmission main and
the
board
will
act
later.
Mrs.
Porter
said
Salem
Center
will
thanks
to
voters
,
board
payments deducted from the ·resolution requested by Ohio
and distribution system will be appurtenanc~s; treated water
Thomas
said
there . ~re senior
be
the
first
school
to
be
served
~!:~~~~~~,::a
!l,'
l
nd
Supt.
George
pa~roll~
. University conQernins student
jilac~IL' 11\la , w•~ by lh~ , malno, ~ oervlcea,· anti ap~·
tititens
who
cart
heTp
wltlt\1\e
from
lhe
new
water
system
.
..
·
ana
kst.
Supt.
It
was
suggest
ed
that
the
Lee
· ·te«chers a,..uring there is no
Leading_ Creek: Conseryll!lCY purtenances ; steel water
high
school
tutoring
program
The
treat111ent
plant
will
be
Larry
Morrison
who,
ac.
McComas, clerk, check and see discrimination due to race,
rlistrict,
•
storage tanks and foundations;
as
we
ll
as
in
the
remedial
located
near
mine
No.
1,
Porter
cording
to
Porter,
"worked
like
how many deductions are color, national origin or sex in
Bids on the project estimated the treatment plant ; wells and
reading program.
said
.
.
trojans"
to
pass
the
levy.
prese
ntly being made and the schools.
t1J cost in excess of $4 million well pumps ; service meters;
She also said that the first report at the next meeting.
M
eeting
with
the
board
was
In
other
business
the
board
The board agreed to further
will be opened at 12 noon on treated water mains, services
senior
citizens
com111ittee
to
be
Mrs.
Eleanor
Thomas
of
the
approved
Hargraves
report
on
Louie
M.
Christian
was
study
a letter from the Meigs
Dec. 15 at the Rutland and appurtenances, steel water
formed
was
the
one
at
M
eigs
County
Council
on
Aging
the
Comprehensive
Special
appointed . as substitute Local Chapter of the Ohio
EI e m e n t a r y S c h o o I storage tank and foundations,
Harrisonville.
who
asked
for
additional
rooms
Education
Program
for
han·
custodian who wlll be working Association of Public School
SAMUEL B. MAY
auditorium .
and service meters.
In
other
business
the
board
the
Pomeroy
Junior
High
at
dicapped
children
as
required
at Rutland, and the resignation Employees requesting the
': Attorney Frank W. Porter
Separate ' copies of the
took the followin g action of C'harles Pullins as present right to represent and
building
for
one
year.
The
by
the
state.
said Monday tliat if bids are . complete bidding documents
Hargraves said a plan to be board at its last meeting following Hargraves ' custodian at Rutland was negotiate for non·certifled
accepU!d, contracts will be and plans for each division of
carried out for the education of agreed to the use of the home recommendations:
accepted.
employees and the hiring of an
a)Varded shortly after Jan . I, the work may be obtained at
Accepted
the
resignation
of
economics
room
as
an
office
in
these
children
must
be
sub·
Substitute
bus
driver
ap·
additional maintenance man .
1973, raw water would be the office of the Engineer,
Thelma Grueser, cook at pointrnents, pending approval
order
that
application
may
be
mit
ted
to
the
state
by
Dec
.
I.
Attending were Porter,
available about June I, 1973, Commonwealth Systems
Pomeroy, due to ill health; of the county board, were Mullen, Carroll Pierce, Virgil
made
to
receive
federal
funds
Implementation
will
follow
.
A
'and treated water about Nov. I, Corp., 1000 N. Madison Ave.,
resolution to act as the fiscal for the program by Jan . 1, with accepted the resignation of Robert Pickett, Fred Ruth, King, and Joe Sayre board
1973,
Greenwood, Indiana .
Samuel Bruce May, master agent in some areas of the the understanding that the Louise Kahn as French and Warren Black and John members ; Hargraves, and
maintenance man at the Ohio program and to participate in office space would have to be English teacher at the high Bentley.
McComas .
-~~1!\'11&lt;\WI~~;~~~t~w.:r.
... m-:::::.~J: ~ c
: ~-~~:::::::::::::::::::::::1
Valley Electric Corp., Kyger the other areas was approved. relinquished If it became school; approved Herbert
Creek plant, will be installed as
Master of Middleport Lodge
363, Free and Accepted
.••
Masons, Middleport, on Nov.
By United Press lntematlonal
The Middleport Police Dept. stop signs, three each;
28, at 7:30p.m. at Middleport
ST. TIIOMAS, V.I.- SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN said Masonic HaiL
made 56 arrest.&gt;; during the speeding, three; left of center
today "it would be a nustake" for Democrats to oust Jean
month of October, Police Chief and improper backing, two
Installing officer will be Ben
Westwood as Democratic national chairman now.
J.
J . Cremeans reporU!d when each; disturbing the peace and
H. Philson, Racine, District
· Any decision about the leadership of the party structure Deputy Grand Master of the
Middleport Village Council met assault and battery, four each,
should be postponed u,ntU after the first of the year, the defeated Twelfth Masonic District of
and one each for following too
Monday night.
Democratic presidential nominee, who chose her for the job last Ohio. May, who has been a
The greatest number of closely, disregarding safety,
July, told reporters at hls post-election retreat in the Virgin Mason five years, was elected
offenses •!Dong the arrests was and failure to transfer plates.
for intoxication with 19 arrests Charges were dropped in one
fillands. Five governors -members of the executive committee to the Lodge's top post Nov. 7.
'
made while driving while in· instance.
Qf the Democratic Governors Conference - recommended that
Other olficers of the Lodge
The department Investigated
toxicated was second with
Mrs.'Westwood step.down before a National Committee meeting are Darrell Bechtle; Senior
17
accidents and the cruiser
eight arrests being made on
Warden ; John Nash, Junior
Dec. 9.
•
that charge. Arrest, for other was driven 4,716 miles during
Warden; · Ja111es Euler,
charges included fa!lure to the month . Parking meter
• DAVENPORT, .IOWA - RISING WATERS from the Treasurer; Paul Darnell,
· yield the right of way, five ; collections totaled $1,387.50.
MississipPi River and the closing of the old city dump created a Secretary ; Carl Taylor,
running red light and running
!Duchy situation for Davenport officials - an invasion of 1,000 to Chaplain ; Paul' Roush, Senior
Deacon ; Allen Page, Junior
1,500 rats.
However, Public Works Director Rex Mathews says there's Deacon; George F. Stewart,
m reason for concern as the migration of rats poses "no Sen ior Steward; Charles
Winebrenner, Junior Steward;
~roblem,nohealth danger" at present, as long as residents don't
CoWlcil approved a first
James
Criswell, Tyler, and
Following tradition, lllid·
' Qllnic."Mathews said Monday so far no one has come close to
reading
of an ordinance which
Carl Taylor, Trustee. James S. .
dleport's parking meU!rs will
being attacked by a rat and poisoned food has been placed in
Buchanan is the outgoing
be free for shoppers during the raises the penalty for overtime
sewers and catch basins to eliminate,the·vagabonds.
parking meter violations from ·
Master.
Christmas season.
25
cents to 50 cento .
May and wile, Joan, and two
.Middleport village council
.chi ldren, De.bra Jo, . who is a
Monday night agreed to the
EDGAR VAN INWAGEN ,right, a survivor of World War II's Bataan Qeath March, wUI be
lreshman "a t Ohio University,
request
of the Middleport
·one of the members of Drew· We~er Post 391 American uglon, taking part in Thursday
and
Michael,
a
junior
at
Meigs
Chamber of Commerce to free
The total in aU Middleport •water merer trusts, $225, $160,
get
evening's annual "dough for dough" program. Through the program, post members will move
High
School
reside
in
Rutland
.
$6,394.23;
fire
house
con·
the
meters
from
Dec.
11
Village funds as of Oct. 31 was
through Pomeroy distributing loaves of bread at homes. In exchange they will accept con·
through Dec. 24. The cham·
~,276.18,
Clerk·Treasurer struction , no receipts, $457,71, The installation service is an
tributions which go to the · ''Gifts for the Yanks Who Gave" project designed to provide
open
meeting
to
all
Master
$16,665.69;
general
bond
ber wlll make a cash
Gene Grate reported Monday
remembrances for hospitalized veterans. Hank Cleland, Jr., chairman of the project, asks th~t
contribution
to the vii·
night to Middleport Council. retirement, $3,945.36, $3,423.36, Masons and In vited guests.
post members participating meet at the post home at 6:45p.m. Thursday. W1th Van lnwage~ lS
$17,547.71.
!age. Council also agreed
Over o~e·fourth of the balance,
George Grate, manager of the Betsy Ross Baking Co., Middleport, which w111 be prov1dtng
Receipts in October were
to decide at its next regular
or $58,671.86, is in the un·
CALLED TWICE
bread
for
Thursday
night's
activity.
Middleport
Fire
meeting whether meters will _ The
touchable sanitary sewer $3,945.36 and disbursements
The Pomeroy E·R squad
' .
.$3,423.36.
no
fire
Department
answered
be
made
free
during
the
answered
a
call
at
8:06
a.m.
escrow l~md.
alarms in October but its first
.holiday season in 1973.
, Becelpts, disbursements,
today to _H;~rrisonvlll~ for Mrs.
aid Wlit went out 20 times
~tively, and the balance
Guy Bolin. who was taken to
according to Fire Chief Bob
of each fund as of Oct. 31 In·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
DIVORCE ASKED
Byers' report to Middlejloi"t
and · admitted as a medical
elude:
.·
·
A
,suit
for
divorce
and
an
'l'HUI\MONT, Md. (UPI) - meeting at the !'resident's to comment on the travels:• of Veterans Meinorlal Hospital Council Monday night.
patient. At 10:55 p.m. Monday,
: General, $9,154.93, $6,776.92,
.action for money has been filed the squad was called to Bailey With a shroud of .secrecy Maryland mountain retre~t. KiSsinger. Whelihan said that
ADMITTED - Amy Eynon,
Of 19 emergency .calls, 16
f.l6,818.04; cemetery, $166.88,
in Meigs County common pleas
protecting
the
whereabouts
of
Hanoi announced that it had Kissinger went to Camp David Syracuse; Jason Drenner, were in town and three were
t!9\l 40 $789.42; fire eqwp- court. Minnie Wise, Rt. 2, Run for Mrs. Paula VanMeter,
Henry
A.
Kissinger:
President
dispatched
key North Vletna· Monday -"'You have photos of Langsville;
Donald out.. Three calls for accidents
a maternity .patient. She Was
ITle~t,' no receipts, U%2.94,
Cheshire,
was
granted
a
t'UA so· swimming pool, $26.64,
taken to Veterans Memorial Nixon worked at · hls Camp mese peace negotiator Le .Duc him getting off the helicopter" Blankenship, Albany; Roberta involved motor vehicles.
divorce from Wesley L. Wise,
One miscellaneous call was
~i~3s,' $3,971.41; plan~ing Middleport, on charges of Hospital, \hen translerred to David retreat tooay on the Tho to Paris to resume talks -but hi! would not corriment on Daile1, Middleport: William
VIetnam
peace
negcillations.
with
the
United
States,
whether
Kissinger
was
stU!
at
Hobstetter,
Rutland
;
Edna
for
a gasoline spill on Route 5$4
the Holzer Medical Center.
eommission, . no rece~pts,
JII'OIII neglect or duty and ex·
The President met. Monday
was
not
known
if Kissinger the Maryland retre~t tooay. Stiles, Pomeroy; Emma in Cheshire ·Township where a
It
f29.76, $373.
with KiBsinger and Ki88inger 's was going to Paris to confer
the President met with Jacobs, Middleport; Wanda storage tank was discovered '·
LOCAL TEMPS
Street . ma"lntenance, treme cruelty. Keith Goble
Ford, Inc., Middleport, filed
Gen.
Alell8nder
M.
Haig
with
Tho.
Kissinger
and Haig fe!' 90 Campbell, Hartford ; Charles leaking. Eight men anaw\ll"ed
aide,
Temperature In downtown
$2 071.51, $3,138.74, $12,123.49; IIIII for money plus interest
White House spokesman minutes, Deputy r-ress Hendefhan, Marietta.
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m. Jr., who had just returned from
that calL The department
ia'n!tarY sewer, . $3,1191.110,
lllalnlt
William
T.
Soulsby,
was ~9 degrees, under cloudy dlsc1188lona in Saigon.
Bruce Whelihan said in Wash· Secretary Gerald L, Warren
DISCHARGED
Ross traveled 392.7 'l)iles during
$3 112.09, tU,IIC!.M; water, Pomeroy' Rt: I. .
Several
hours·.
after
the
skies
.
ingtpn
that
''we're
not
going
·.
(Con\inueo
on
Page
10)
October. ·
Nofris,
Mary
Still.
..:•.71, ..
"!1....57;

install May

ews•• in· Briefst

CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Shrihe Club in
Racine . All Shriners are urged
to at«!nd.

F"RENZY

TEN CENTS

Lodge will

Many, Many
Items
For
Your Selection!

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 52 degrees, under
cloudy skies.

Allred Hitchcock's

PHONE 992-2 156

.

Use Elberfelds

Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted for
1rea t111ent.

Tonight a~d Tuesday .
. November tl-14

Cloudy, colder, diminishing.
winds toni~ht and Wednesday.
Chance of snow western sec·
lion and snow flurries, likely
eastern sections. Low tonight
in the lower 30s. High Wed·
nesday in the 30s.

'

dies at Holzer

MEIGS THEATRE
Wide Menu ·
Chofce

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

entine

Devoted To The lntere6t.' Of The"Meigs-Mason Area
TUESDAY; NOVEMBER 14, 1972

Charles Cornwell

CRIMINAL SUBSIDIES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state paid out $115,937 to 52 ·
counties in October for the cost
of trying indigent felony
defendants, Auditor Joseph
Ferguson announced today.
The subsidies cover attorney
fees, court expenses, travel
cos)s for witnesses and trans·
portatlon of the prisoner to his
place of confinement, and are
paid when the penniless
defendant is convicted.

s to 9: JG-$2.50 all you can eal, lor Ala Carte) .

NO. 149

Weather

New apartment
complex is go

BUFFET

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

~VOL XXIV
•

For Rent
12 X 60 MOBILE home, inquire
NEED AGREEMENT
at Baer's Market, Syracuse.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Rep.
11·13·tlc ·william Keating, R.Qhio, !laid
Sunday hijackings will not stop
until all countries agree to
eliminate sanctuaries. "I think
it's going to take international
agreeme nt and some sanctions
by this country on those
countries that provide sane·
tuary," Keating said.

DINING

-••

~sl\er,Price Toys

PT. PLEASANT - Charles
B. (Jr.) Cornwell, 54, of 142
Park Drive, Pt. Pleasant, died
unexpectedly this morning at
3:40 in ·the Holzer Medical
Center of a heart attack.
Mr. Cornwell was a masU!r
maintenance man in the
IWLATOMEET
Maintenance Department of
Directors of the Ken Am· the Central Operating Com·
sbary. Chapter, lzaak Walton pany at the Philip Sporn Plant
League of America, will meet at New Haven where he had
at 7 tonight at the farm . Gun been employed 22 years.
tickets are to be turned in .
The funeral services will be
al 2 p.lll. Wednesday at the
CLUB TO MEET
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
The Middleport Literary Point Pleasant with Rev .
Club will meet at 2 p. m. Norville White officiati ng .
Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Burial will be in the Suncrest
Nan Moore . Mrs . Richard Cemetery.
Owen will review, "The
Friends may call, at the
Peaceable Kingdom" by Jan funeral home after 4 p.m.
De Hart.og. Members will give Tuesday. Mr . Cardwell is
comments on the book in an· survived by his wife, Eloise,
swer to roll calt
anci OHe Slster, Mi's. H&amp;iiiet
Lowe, Sr. '
PTA TO MEET
RUTLAND - The Rutlimd
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
PTA wlll meet at 7:30 this
The Pomeroy E·R squad
evening in the school gym. answered a call to the Harold
nasium . The third grade of King residence on Route 33 at
Mrs. Ann WebsU!r will present 7:10p.m. Saturday. Mr. King,
a program.
who was ill, was taken to
WHALEY CONFINED
Donald E. Whaley, Darwin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Whaley, is confined to the
Holzer Medical Center. His
room number is 308.

••

The 3rd century Greek •
astronomer
Fratosthenes
h lculated the earth's cir·
;cwnference to within 70 miles
~ its correct distance. ·

58 Arrests recorded

Meters to he freed

..

• •"

~ &amp;o f

~··

SPILL AND SPELL •

'

•

"famous Brands!

Clerk makes his report ·

ROADMASTER
MURRAY
PLAYSCHOOL

CHRISTMAS
.
.

DECO~ATIONS
An excellent selection of

Big Sflection
O{GaTJ~esL

•

Christmas
tree
Or·
naments,
Christmas
decorations, trims, tree
lights and outdoor lights.

,,

Electric Trains "*•
&gt;

.MANY SPECIAL VALUES

ELBE.RFELDS IN POMEROY
.•

Firemen

month off but

not E-R unit

President in seclusion.

.-u.

'

.

\

'

.I

•·

\

~! '

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