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Good mayors, governors -needed
if Federal Sharing'i~ . to work

'.

AMANDA.
· PANDA
.

.

Cou~se

•

.1l:ttS ·KIND OF
.1kUCK CARRIES

MA'l, LOOK AT Al.l.. THOSE
' ~OCK5 ON THE F(1)0R/

&amp; K:lll:le

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn . revenue ·sharing program· to beca!ISe no one else will do it necessary,•
Referring to the defeat of the ·
(UP!) - Ohio Gov . Jolui J. the stales and the wiUingness for us."
·
"I chose not to believe that income tax repeal effort in
GU!igan today criticized the of the stales to return funds
He referred to the theory of the people didn't want to pay
Ohio on Nov, 7, Gilligan said he
federal Revenue Sharing received to tlieir cities.
· the "taxpayers revolt" and
for adequate services," he believes the state learned
Program as "just another
"I don't believe for a minule said many political leaders sa id . "I chose instead to
federal grant to local govern- that the Congress will continue react to the revolt by holding believe what people were tired something.
"We were forced to rejeCt
ments" and said if the system to take the responsibility for ' the line on taxes and culling of paying for were unfair
many of the old ste~types of
Is to work, the initiative of approving big handouts to the back on state services if taxes.''
·
(Continued on Page 8)
mayors and governors stales," said Gilligari:·"Nor do
throughout the nation must I believe-the stlltes are ready to 3.,. JJ: !~ H U'f"£11''·8:·· ··~.:.c.~.::::::~":-"!t~:;:;:::::..z:~~.::::::::::::::::~~~:~~~~:m~-:m:~~~ ·
make it .work,
take the responsibiUty £or simTHE COLONEL'S-Belpre h8$,Jl new Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant operated l&gt;y Mr.
111 remarks prepared for del- ply turning over big chunks of
and Mrs. Danny Crow, fonner residents of Meigs County. The new operation offers a dining-in
ivery at the National Municipal their revenues to municipal
and carry-i)ut service, Associated in the business is Tom Crow of Grow's Steak House,
League·Conference on Govern- governments.
Pomeroy. The new restaurant offers· the regular Kentucky Fried chicken, the new crispy
ment here, Gilligan said effec"If each state can deal with
chicken, fish and chips a!ld an assortment of salads and sandwiches. The Colonel's is the first
live ways would have to be the problems on their own,
"image building" built from the ground up. Located at 2500 Washington Blvd., it is open seven
found to use resources to surely · we can deal with the
days a week from 11 a, m. to 9 p, m, Anew unit is planned in the near future in Ripley, w. Va.
provide services to people.
problems on the national
Danny is the son of Mrs. Jean Stout of Syracuse. Mrs. Crow is a graduate of Marshall
. He . que~tioned the con- level," he added, "We m!ISt
University.
tmuance m designing the · begin that process of change,

THIS ONE TAKE.S
LOTS OF MONE.'/
To THE

OIL IN ITS

TANK.
'

'

BANid

··..·AMANDA.
.
. , I'L.t..
~ow: '{Ot:J WHAT
GoMe·:.(:n;:THEM
ARe.·FOR.
'

'

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.

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Now You Know

THt~TRUC~
~Nc;;.".:Ta

MAKE..

w~th~

The average adult radiates
the same amount of heat into
the environment as a 125-watt
light bulb.

: lNSI. ~E
'

AND IHI? IS

Devoted To The Interests OfTheMeigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIV NO. 157

A BUS WHERE I '
CAN TAK£ ~­

Cloudy, cold tonight, chance
of snow flurries, lows in the
lower 30s: Tuesday cloudy,
little temperature change,
chance of snow flurries
southeast Highs Tuesday in
lower 40s extreme south,

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

JEN CENTS

·K(;;;7t~'~ciz~;;;;w.N;:~~M. :s~:r~=~:;~:~f Strike at GOodyear ends

RIC/E.! .,,_

,

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out of the gas was-corundum," he said.
"CK rundwn whep colored by im- ::;:
purities, is known a~ sapphire or ruby, ~~ .
and "the deep interior of the moon has ~
PT . PLEASANT -;- The company today said :
contract also provides that contract was reached Nov, 22
abundances of these minerals," An- ~~ stnke at the Goodyear Ttre and
"Members of the United Local644 employes will receive by company and union
derson said.
~ Rubber Company's Apple Rubber Workers Local 644
the same benefits package that negotiators. Approval by a
'Anderson said the young moon's orbit
Grove plant was settled Sun- yesterday ratified a new three results from Goodyear's
"carried it above and below the dense \!! day when members of Local year contract with Goodyear's Company wide negotiation majority of the union members
was required to make the
part of the disc so that it dipped into the ~ 644, Umted Rubber Workers, Point Pleasant Ghemical Plant with the URW next year,
contract
effective. Employes
disc only twice a year," he said. "As the · ~-: voted to accept a three-year ending a 179 day strike, the
began returning to work at the
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) - The
He said the solar system was once .a moon grew, ita orbit-gradually levelled ~ contract calling for 50 cents per longest continuous strike in
"T h ~ agreement provides an 8 a.m. shift today,"
moon may be younger than the earth rota ling disc of very hot gas which off into the plane where the dust was
hour wage hikes over three Goodyear history .
18-cent per bout wage increase
Goodyear's negotiating team
but made of older materials and may cooled during billions of years, The thickest. Since the moon's orbit and the ~ · Years.
"The contract ratified by a the first year and 16 cents per .·")Vas ' headed by James L.
contain large deposits of sapphires and planets, moons and other heavenly earth's orbit crossed, the moon would ~ Workers began reporting on vole of 170 to 140 provides a 50
rubies, a scientist said today,
bodies condensed out of the hot gas as it eventually be captured by (the ~ the job at 8 a.m . today for the cent per hour wage increase hour increases for each of the Yocum, personnel manager.
next two years.
Chief negotiator for the union
Dr. Don L. Anderson, director of the cooled and reached temperatures at gravitational pull of) the earth."
~; first time since June L
over a three year period. The
''1'enl&lt;llive agreement on the was paniel L. Christian.
seismological laboratory of the which the elementa turned to solids.
But by that time, he estimated, "the ~ Daniel Christian, Local 644
California Institute of Technology,
The center of the gas cloud, or earth was more than half assembled" &amp;~ president, said 170 favored the
revealed his new theory of the moon's nebula, became the sun. ·
and "had swept up most of the iron in
contract offer while 140 voted
origin, composition and evolution in the
"Moonlike bodies probably were its vicinity," explaining why the earth ~ against it during the special
scientific periodicals "Nature" and abundant in the early solar system and has an iron core, and the moon does not. !!l meeting held in the Point
"Science," Cal 'tech said.
fanned the nuclei upon which later
The moon's path, however, took it !~ Pleasant High gymnasium .
He also said the moon's interior may condensates accreted to form the through areas where it swept up r.~ The local represents 492 hourly
be so hot at the present time that it is planeta," he said, "Most of the interiors "older" materials, th~s explaining why
· employes.
mollen, and Ita outer shell may be 120 of earth and the other inner planets- the moon is younger than earth but :· Christian did not comment
miles thick, compared with the 50- Mercury, Venus and Mars--are made of older elements; Anderson said ,
on the vote other than to say
mile thick slieu of earth,
composed mostly of laler condensateS
Ander$(ln said his theory Is partly
that workmen would be
'i'ba.II!8GD (11!1 no~ b!t.i!l..lo IOI'ql unl!l • ·&amp;lid lower .te~p~rature ~lne_rak, . feundail .., lbe ...,.. !ICldla -11 llbllo
"""'"''"' to work~'·
1IJ l!'allel 1'.rW .,.,_., ol - 1'liN
. M
the earth was halfway "assembled." ·although thetr ortgmal nuclet would be ear'lh by astronauts, and his research
Negotiators began meeting
President Nixon confers to- embllSily spokesman refused to In the SoUth would In effect be a
Anderson said.
moonlike."
was partly sponsored by NASA.
April 18 in an attempt to work day with Henry A. Kissinger, discuss the nature of \he .
coalition government that
...................·.......... .
. ..
~Wi:i~:W.%."&lt;m::~!!l~~::::;:o:;.;~~:'&lt;illi~WW«-.W::::::m:mw,::w.&gt;.r.~m$~~:$:r.~:s~::':-$m&gt;: out a new three-year contract his chief Vietnam peace meeting but Saigon govern- woul~ UIUrp hla authority .
that would cover wages and negotiator, in their third ment sources said Thieu's Kissinger Dew beck from Parll
:.....
~:*'~::::.~..~-,., .., ... ~· :····m::::&amp;=::::::::t.
•
benefits. Then finally, on June meeting since the interruption closest adviser, Hoang Due late Saturday and' cooferred
I, p:cketa were set up and the Saturday of Kissinger's secret Nha, flew to Paria Sunday to with Nixon for an hour. The two
strike began when their labor talks in Paris with Hanoi confer with South Vietnamese met for another hour Sunday in
contract expired at midnight diplomata. Nixon was to meet officials and added: "Thla Is of the presidential suJie at the ·May 31 without agreement on a with Kissinger at the course connected with the Waldorf-Astoria Holel where
By United Press International
new one.
presidential . retreat at Camp Paris talks."
the First FamUy stayed for a
FT. BENNING, GA.- A THREE-MAN clemency review
Since then there has been
David,
Md.
In
Jakarta,
Foreign
Mlnfsler
· weekend of Christmas shopboard from the Army's main prison at Ft. Leavenworth; Kan.,
number of talks between the
The latest round of private Adam Malik said Sunday ping and theatergoing in New
begins hearings today to consider the possible release of Lt.
MASON - Darrell Lake,
A brother, Richard Lake, of company and union with Paris negotiations, which President Suharto told Klssin- York.
Wllllam Calley, Jr. The 29-year-old Calley was convicted in 1971
federal mediators. The began a week ago, was ger in Brussels last week ~t
Press Secretary Ronald L,
and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for the mass murder of Mason, 21, ··was found dead Mason was enroute to the scene workers rejected a contract suspended until Dec. 4 to give Indonesia was prepared to help
Ziegler would not comment on
Sunday afternoon at the home with other relatives and was
at least 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lsi.
of his father-in-law, Harry involved in a minor mishap, offer in an overwhelming vote both sides time for such con- monitor any Indochina cease- the Kissinger-Nll:on talks, say-.
The board, composed of Lt. Col. Harvey C. Johnson, Capt.
fire but that Jakarta first ing only that another sesalon
Reitrnire, Jr. near Hartford, but was not injured. First November 5. The vote at that sultations.
James E. Brawner and Capt. Ray V, Smith, will conduct intime
was
374
against
and
20
to
Nixon also wanted time to wanted clarification on a would be held today , He said
when the car he was working reports were that Richard was
lervlews "to · determine such factors as Calley's behavior in on apparently slipped from a
accept.
respond
to objections in the number of points, MaUk said there were no plans for
also seriously hurt, but this
confinement, hlu physical, mental and emotional health, and his bumper jack and crushed him. was in error.
A prepared release by the Washington-Hanoi accord these points mainly concern Kissinger to travel to Saigon
prospects for rehabiUtatlon. The panel's findings lviu go to the
raised by South Vietnamese the specific tasks Indonesia for further consultations with
Lake, transferred in a Mason
Mr. Lake was horn August 2,
commander of Ft. Benning for review and then tQ the Secretary Emergency Squad ambulance, 1951 at Marietta, Ohio and was
President Nguyen Van Thieu, was expected to perfonn and Thleu. The JX'esldentlal advlaer
of the Army. The report Could include a reeommendatlon was dead on arrival at a son of Gene and Joan ScarNixonwastomeetwlthThleu's who would pay the costs for flies to Paris next Sunday for
·
personal emissary, Nguyen Jakarta's participation on a resumption of his private Ialka
ranging frOm Calley's unconditional release to the continuation Pleasant Valley Hospital. berry Lake of Mason, who
Phu
Due, this week .at Camp control commission in Viet-' the following day. .
of his present stat!JS,
County Coroner Dr . John survive, An army veteran who
David for ~ direct report on nam.
Indonesia's Armed li'orces
Grubb said Lake's death was served two years in Vietnam,
Thteu's
posttion.
Due
went
to
In
his
meeting
with
Nixon,
Dally, an official aovernment
OSW -PRIME MINISTER LARS KORVALD said Sunday caused by a skull fracture .
he was an employe of the lrby
Paris
early
last
week
for
Due
was
expected
to
discuss
publication,
listed three
night his government allowed a foreign submarine lurking in a
Special deputy sheriff Fred Construction Company of
A Middleport man was
briefings
by
Kissinger
on
his
Thien's
demand
for
more
preconditions for such parfjord for 14 days to slip out of Norwegian waters, an escape Taylor'. wh_o investigated, said Letart.
charged with
reckless
seqr~t -- talks lJIIJh Hanoi .assurances that North Vietna- t!cl(l$tlon-aU parties involved
inllllary sources said was mtant to prevent. any niajlll' _ldr•. Rettrntre ·found hts son.Jn, · .. Other .survivors include his -.• operation .of .~ motor vehicle
diplomatic incidents. ·· ·
· ·
.
. Ia w _under the car he was wife, Kathy Rei !mire Lake, in following a single car accid~nt polltliuro member Le'Duc Tho. · mese troops in South' Vietnam· in the oonfli.Ct -muat agree on--U.S, Ambassador Ellsworth be withdrawn before a cease- Indonesia's appointment, 'ilelp
Officials did not identify the submarine, but high navy workmg on at 3 p.m. He addition to his parents and Sunday at 12:05 a.m .
The Meigs County Sheriff's C. Bunker and Thieu met in fire goes Into effect. Thleu baa bear the cost and insure that
110urces said it was Russian- "undoubtedly a convention sub of su~moned the emergency brother.
Funeral services will he at Dept. said Gary R. Cooper, 19, Saigon today for 15 minutes, also expressed fear that a only a limiled number of Inthe 'F' or 'W' class." The•F type Is a conventional attack sub. untt.
1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the driving east uphill on county apparently to discuss the three-party agency that would donesian troops be required. ·
marine while the W type Is an older-generation guided missile
Foglesong Funeral Home with road 5 went of the road on his
sub, During the hunt for the submarine in a 124-mile-long fjord in
the Rev. James H. Lewis of- right, 40 feet on the edge of the
western Norway, sea and navy forces used radar and sonar
ficiating. Burial will follow in highway, struck a fence, went
equipment and depth charges without success, then announced
Blaine Memorial Cemetery at over an embankment and hit a
the vessel was allowed to leave.
Cottageville. Friends may call · tree.
SAIGON (UPI)-South Viet- recapture the mouth of the cua 36 of the big planes struck in'
at
the funeral home afler 3 Cooper was not injured.
HElSINKI- WESTERN DIPWMATS said today they will
namese
marines supported by Viet and deny it to the North the panhandle region In the 1S.
p.m. Tuesday.
There was heavy damage to
override Soviet objections and adopt a set of rules on how to run in penitentiary
U.S. jets rolled back a North Vietnamese, who use It as a hour period ending at noon
the front of his car.
the forthcoming proposed European security conference, The 34
Vielllamese
counter-attack to- supply .route. U.S, jets have today-the average number of
Saturday at 6 p.m. in Letart
Gene Buckley and John
FOUR TO PLAY
ambassadors froin the Un!ted States, Canada and 32 European
day in the heaviest fighting been dropping mines into the strikes the 8511! have been
Arthur Wilt convicted on four
Four high school bands will Tbwnship .Ioyce White, Racine, around Quang Tri City In two Cua Viet to hamper North flying. since Tuesday. But the
nations are now in the fourth day of their Ialka on outlining the
coun t:s each of breaking and take part in the parade in
Rt. 2, was driving easl months, field reports said,
Vietnamese supply craft, UP! 24-IJout total Sunday was 'Only
ground rules for the conference.
entering each have been Middleport this evening to
on SR 338 when a
communist gunners fired correspondent DonaldA. Davis 15 planes and there was no
"Even a Boy ~out troop must have rules of procedure," one· sentenced by Common Pleas
welcome
in
the
holiday
season
,
150
pound
buck
deer
ran
3
400
rounds Into inarine and said,
·.
explanation for the lelup.
diplomat said in explaining why a So~etattempt to have no rules Judge John C. Bacon tO a lenn
Bands.
participating
will
be
In
front
of
her
car
and
was
•
~ratroo.
p
positions
in
the
24
In
the
air
war,
bad
weather
at all collapeed. He 1!3ld hopes were htgh that these rules could be of not less than one year or
The command also reported
adopted today ...; abnost recor~ speed for an international more than 15 years on each of Eastern, Kyger Creek , killed. There was damage to hours ending at 6 a.m. today, held U.S. jet fighler-bomber
and
Meigs.
The
the
front
end
of
her
vehtcle.
the
reports
said.
It
was
the
strikes
agalrult
North
Vietnam
Southern
the
loss of the ninth plane In
meeting of this complexity - with the 34. ambassadors then the counta, the sentence to
parade wiU move from the
most intensive barrage in down to 30 sorties for the IndOchina in eight days. It said
getting down to the real business of a security conference run concurrenUy.
WATER OFF
. A&amp;P parking lot at 6:30 p. m.
Quang
Ttl Province, 435 miles second straight day, the U.S. a U.S. Na\.y F8 Crulllder
Tuesday.
Buckley and Wilt were found
SYRACUSE - Repair of the north of Saigon, since the North command ·said. But the com- developed mechanical trouble
guilty of breaking and ~ntering
water line on First and Second VIetnamese offensive began mand said B52 bombers during while returning from a atrafin8
A UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL count at 6 a.m. EST on Nov. 20. They were arrested
Sts. here will result in ·water there . March 30 with 3,500 the night resumed heavy mission Sunday over South
showed at least 619 persons had dted in traffic accidents.
by the Middleport. Police.
being turned off on First and rounds a day,
bombardment of suspected Vietnam and the pUot ejected
A breakdown: Traffic 619, Planes 12, Fires 34, Others 75, Broken into were Kay's Beauty
Second Sts., only on Tuesday at
The biggest battle in the Communiat supply points over from his crippled plane near
Shop, Osste's Recreation
Total 740.
8 a.m. until the work Is com- province since Quang 1'rl City the
North
Vietnamese the carrier Oriakany. He wu .
eaUfornla rep«ted 58 traffic deaths. Ohio had 32, Texas 31, Center, all three school
pleted.
was recaptured by the marines panhandle! af,ter an unex- fWted unhurt out of the South
WiscOIIIin 28, and Florida and Tennessee each reported 26. Sll: buildings, the office of the
Sept, 16 began at sundown · plainedone-daydecreaseln_the China Sea by a rescue
states had no traffic deaths. They were Wyoming, . Vermont, Church of the Nazarene and a
HEADS AUTO CLUB
Saturday, It centered on 'Vinh number of raids over the area. helicopter,
South Dalwta, North Dakota, New Hampehli'e and Alaska.
· parking meier and several
George
D.
Massar, Hoa Phuong, a farming and ·A commanll spokesman said
newspaper racks were stolen,
Columbus attorney, and a 1939 fishing village, now largely
r
NEW YORit -A SPOJ[ESMAN for the Commitlee of Liaison
graduate of Pomeroy High · ruil)ed, on the salt Oats and
MEET TUESDAY
CASES DISMISSED
with Famillel of Servk:emen Detained in North Vielllam
School, has been elected sand dUnes seven miles north
The
Meigs
County
Four divorce cases have
dllcJneod &amp;Jnday that North Vietnam will permit American
president of the Columbus of Quang Trt Clly and five
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Automobile Club. He succeeds mUes south of the &lt;lla Viet Alcoholism and Dr)ljJ Abuae
POW• to receive both Dlrillmaa plllllellll and cardl thl.l year, been dismiued In Meigs
The Pomeroy E-R sqlllld
Dr. Judson D. Wilson, chair- River, The government troo}lll Committee will meet at 7:30 p, answered a call at 7:58 p. m.
Mi'l. Ccll'll Weill, co-cbalrnlu of the committee, said the North County Common Pleas Court,
Martha Jo Gilkey vs Kermit E.
· · man of tl\e board of trustees. are staging their deepest m. Tuesday at the St. Paul Sunday to the MIUer realdence
~ gtmi'I1JIItllt prcmiled in a te1esram delivered
Gilkey,
Martha
L,
Fo1
vs
,
to allcnt' each American prilo~r to receive a sincle
~~~~~~~~~ Mr. Massar,partnerlnthelaw northward drive ·in seven Lutheran Church. A film, on Cook's Gap· Hill from wbare
"Careline" wiU be shown and Minnie MiUer, Bufferin&amp; chest
barry L. Fox, Carol WiU va t,
firm - of Gingher and-- months In the JX'Ovlnce.
Jllcble, wel8blnl! up to 11 ~~
the
Carellne program ex- pains, was taken to Velerlna
For the pal! two .weeks the
·Christensen, is the son of Mr.
·'lbe only lllpulatlco, accoulq to the telegram, Is that James A. WiU and Janice
Louise Smith vs Lewis . w..
an!l Mrs. Clarence Massar, marines have been edging plained. Election of officers Memorial HOipltal and ""'
· (Continued on Pase 1).
Smith.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
slowly northward trying to will be held,
mit~.

the Moon is full of

sapphires and rubies

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Heavyll-

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THA55 . FORMERL'/ KNO ED.AS-BLUSI-!fGOOD;SHIRLEY STINKWEED-n-l'6ABIE':S
BECUZ
GOT MIXED UP IN TH.'HOSPJTAL
T,_. IS
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President,.Kissinger in
Camp David huddles

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DOlT
Rl(lHTAWAY.
AI1HAIN'T
USED TO

MARRIES
UPWIF

JACKIE
MOLASSIS,

Al;1 T'ou=: 'fQ' A
1-\Uf.lDRED TIMES

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HEIRESS

ews•• in Briefsf Mason man d1es
underneath car

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MiddlepOrt
man charged

Quarig Tri fight flares

Two sentenced
to 1-15 years

FORM~K

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2- '1111 0.0, Senlil~tl, MkUeport-Pcmeroy, 0., Nov. 21,19'12

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Dr. Buff.sees Boyle winning, mbters losing no matter who wins

3- Tile Dlil)o lloa!lrpl,Ml&lt;!11tpuct-Pameroy, o., Nov. 'f1,1m

Eastmoor defeats

•

CHARLESTO.N, J W.Va.
(UPI) -M8rkedlyabsentfrom

lbe United Mine Workers
E.
Bull, no1'111111y one of the most
vvcal elements in the nation's
a.lflelde.
BUff, a bousehold word in
every coal camp of America
and 10me abroad as well, has
laken a neutral stand in the
llhowdown between incwnbent
Preaident W. A. ''Tony" Boyle
llld his challenger, Arnold Mil·
lei' of Ohley, Kanawha County.
And, with the fits! balloting
less than a week away in the
court-ordered, week-long electioos, it doesn't appear that
Bull is about to lean toward
lllber man.

.."'P'Icn lhlB year is Dr. l

,

......

lri fact, the voice of Buff has lion," Buff 8IIS'Ill'ers. "Since ing union funds, Buff said the. not ask for a court test now but
tt is diHicult for
not been heard, except for a
small, unheralded prediction
that Boyle would win reelection, as he did three years
ago, when Buff actively
campaigned f01; the late UMW
rebel · leader Joseph A.
Yablonski.
In an interview With United
Press International, the
Charleston heart specialist
known for his "black lung"
crusade explained he would
remain uncwunttted because
he felt neither candidate should
be placed at the helm of the
miners unlon.
'"lbe coal miners of Aml!ric:a
bave no cbolce in lhlB elec-

they do not, what good would it
be flir those of us who are
concerned about their welfare
to speak out for either candidate. Neither one of them
should head the union."

most coal
wait until after Mr. Boyle is re- miners lo comprehend this
elected to cry foul," said Buff. swn much less manage it,"
"There shonld be .a court test said Buff. ''Mr. Boyle's op'
now."
ponent could never, In any
Buff said if the Labor manner or form, do this. ·
Department truly was in"In negotiations with some of
terested In protecting the ihe best educated, best inworking man, it would not have formed of our citizens-who
pennitted Boyle to seek re- are always legally correct but
election. "They themselves most of the time not moraUy
would have gone to court and concerned-he would be a
had him thrown out," he said. pigeon. You camot negotiate
The Charleston heart with brains ci that type unless
specialist said Boyle will be re- you yourself ar~ very inelected"because 80,000 pen- telligent," he said,
sioners look upon Mr.' Boyle as
Buff said Miller has made
'Daddy' and as the person re- many promises which can
sponsible for their receiving never be fulfilled. That
$150 a month in welfare pay- practice, he added, ts what can
JDenb."
be expected from any
''The coal mmers are very politician, and Buff also
loyal, will never vote against criticiZed MW~r further.
their father, even though Mr.
"His group and the Black
Boyle basically has nothing to Lung group supported Jay
do with the $150 grant," he Rockefeller for governor," he
said.
said. "Miners' health and welWhat Miller Lacb
fare must always be kept nonBuff ts just as critical of MIJ. politicaf"
ler as he ts of Boyle, sayin,; the
Buff made it clear that in his
cbabled miner is "not strong view Miller doesn 'I live up to
enough" to defeat Boyle.
Yablonski's standards. "Mr.
"There are many things he Yablonski, if he had been electiacks, but basically he's just ed, could have assumed the
not prepared to asswne the presidency of the union without
position of president," Buff any difficulty," he said. "He
said.
was capable and he had exThe UMW has an income of perience in all of the different
nearly $300 million a year, and facts of miners' welfare."

inewnbent p1·esident "is not
really eligible to run, even
though he uses as an exeliSe the
fact that his case is under
appeal.
" According to the constitution of the UMW, any
union official found guilty of
misappropriating union funds
can never run for office
again," said Buff, who
criticized the union, Miller and
the U.S. Department of Labor
for not 'fighting Boyle's candidacy on legal gruunds in the
first place.
"In my opinion, many peqple
know that Mr. Boyle is ineligible and that his oppoaltioo will

Miner Loses
In Buff's view, the miner will
be the loser, no matter who
Wins, and in either case, the
UMW will c:ontinue to neglect
health and welfare of the
miner. Buff said th~ only way
the UMW weHare fund will
ever benefit miners is for it to
be severed from the union and
run by the federal government.
Noting that Boyle has been
fauDd IJUIIty of mlajija ... lolt-

'

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

by Patterson and Patrick
up ~~~ \lcxandcr llnmtlton undt-r Prestdent
1\ ashmgtun . This 1nstit ution 's ultraconsen ati1 e
polictts h.1d made 11 1cry unpopul.1r, .md Congress
h.1d .tllm1 ed 1ts charter to expire, JUSt 11 ~at Jackson
mtt·ndcd to do to the second h:tnk ti•r the same
rl' . l~1ms

Seventh President Andrew Jock son

(St&lt;ond Administration March 4, 1833-Morch 3, 1837)

"To tbt victors belong the spoilr"
Presitknt Jackson's mack ot "Faron m.1lari.t"
signill!~ ~I&amp;C!.~&lt;I the procedure of the Prcslllency and •
cnnsl!'qbcntly the scope of \meri'cao nist ory hy gil'ing the tempestuous Tennessean · .1 plausible exnlse
for bypassing his official C.thint·t in fa10r of h1s
Kitchen Cabinet.
With the exception of Lewis Cass, Mmin Van
Buren and Roger B. Taney, the rL-gular Cabmet
. was cnmposcd of men of al'cragc cali her. But in
Francis lllair, Duff Green and \mos Kendall,
together \1 ith Van Buren and Taney, "Old Hickory" had a cutene of .thle men he liked and trusted.
Follmnog the abatement of the nullification
threat, in 11 hkh hoth s1des retreated to a "cold war"
position, Jackson turned his attention to his fight
against the Bank of the United States .
The hank was p.ttterned .tfter the first hank set

Tht· Prtstdent's .mgtr ag.unst the hank-11 bore
rlw nation's n.unc , largely controlled Jts credit
puli ~· ies , hm 11 .ts ,tlmost cnnrcly he yond federal
l1 111trnl- 1:ts fanned 11 hen llcnry Clay made the
h.mk tight .m election 1ssue. Clay had become the
prcsitlcnti.tl nommcc of the '\ational Rcpuhlie.m
Parry ,u the first national cwn ention m \merican
pohtics, at llalt1morc 111 December, IHll
J:tckson met the challenge head-on hy · semltng
, the hill tor a nc\1 charter hack to Congress unsigned
11ith his t&gt;mtous 1cto message. \\'ith Van Buren
.1s his runnmg marc-\ '1cc Prestdenr Calhoun had
resigned his office, the only man to do so--Jackson
t.tsily defeated Clay
Fxccpt for troubled Indian affairs and a dtsputc
11 ith France alxmr reparations m·er the '\apoleonic
\1 ars, ltmh c&gt;f 11 h1ch Jackson handled arrogantly hut
successfully, the second term \las rclatll·cly unt'lentful . The national debt \1 as paid off-Jackson
hittcrly opposed personal and public debts all hts
lifc-,md some $2H milium in surplus funds were
distrihuted t&lt;1 the 26 states .
In .\lay, IH12 , "Republican delegates from the
sc1 cr.1l st.Jtes" had met in Baltimore fi1r the sole
purpose of selecting a liCe presidential candidate
to repl:tce Calhoun, 11 ho had resigned to serl'c in
the Senate. h ·cn more 'p.Jrticularly, the comention
11 .IS held to nominate President Jackson's friend and
"heir
afJ"'arcm'
,' "M~rtnt"'\ ' :tn ' l!iircn,
dc\ilc •'lin' tbe "
1:
'
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IH1 !01 J l«l i i i S " "' II

New senator would change BIA

•

7

Mrs. M1ldred Frank, Mrs.
Inez Carson and Mrs. Murl
Ours were the Fnday af.
lernoon guests of their brother
and sJster-m-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Trussell.
Mrs. Inez Carson, Bashan,
spent the weekend m Pomeroy
"with her sister, Mrs. Mildred
Frank,
Spendmg part of hJS holiday
vacation with h1s grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ours, was Mark Hall of
Chester.

,TeleVision Log·
.

TUESDAY, NOV. 28, 1'72
6. oo- Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6·15- Farm Report 13; Farmllme 10.
6:20 - Paul Harvey 13.
·
,
6:25 - Fa•ltj,for Today 13.
6'30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers S; Concern &amp;·Comment 10.
6 45 - Corncob Report 3.
6 55 - Fllnlslones 13.
7 oo - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10. News6.
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers a: Romper Room 6; Builwinkle &amp; Rockey
13.
B: oo- Capt. Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
T1mmy &amp; Lassie 6
•
·
S.30- Jack La La nne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
9 00 - Paul Di~on 4; Phil Donahue 15, Romper Room 8; Con.
centratlon 6; Frlendly 'Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; Mr. Rogers
33; What Every Woman Wants to Know 3.
9 30 - To Tell The Truth3; Jeopardy 6, HazelS.
10 oo- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Dick Van Dyke 13; Joker's·WIId S, tO:
Columbus Six Calling 6
10 30 - Concenlral!on 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4: Spl1t Second t3 ;
Prtce Is Rcght S, 10.
11: oo - Sale olthe Century 3, tS; Love American Style 6; Gambit
8, tO; Password 13; Electric Co . 20
·
II ' 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Lcfe 8; Bewitched 6,
13; Sesame Street 20.
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, IS; Password 6; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4;
Jackie Oblinger a, News 10, 13.
12 25 - CBS News S.
SON BORN OCT. 22
t2: 30-3 W's Game 3, 15, Split Second 6; Search for Tomorrows,
10.,
Mr. and Mrs. Danny
News 3, Ail My Children 6, 13; Irs Your Bet 8; Green
1:00Robinson, Pomeroy, Route 2,
Acres 10, Watch Your Child 15.
are announcing the birth of
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, IS; Let's Make A Deal 6, 13; As The
World Turns a, 10.
{
their first child, a son, Danny
2.00
Days
of
Our
Lives
, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Wayne, Jr. on Oct. 22 at the
Douglass 6, Guiding Light 8, 10.
Holzer Medical Center .
2·30-Doctors3,4,15. DatlngGamel3; EdgeofNightS, 10
3 00 - General Hospital 6, t3; Another World 3, 4, IS; Love is
Maternal grandmother is Mrs.
Splendored Thing S, 10; Just Generation 20.
Marcia Capehart, Pomeroy,
3· 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4; 15, Secret Storm s, 10; One
Route 2, and the maternal
Life fa Live 6, 13; Maggie&amp; The Beautiful Machine 20.
4. 00- Mr. Cartoon 3: Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33,' 20; Love,
great-grandmothers are Mrs.
American Style 13; lkrv Griffin 4: Piinlstones 6; Gilligan's
Eva Hysell and Mrs. Carrie
IsleS, Mov•e "Inside Straight" 10.
Hysell, also of Pomeroy, Route
4· 25 - Sports Club 6.
4:30 - Love Lucy 6; Petticoat Junction 3; Daniel Boone 13:
2 Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
Merv Griffin S; Andy Griffith IS.
Robinson, •Jr., Clifton, are the
5:00- Dick Van Dyke 15; Merv Griffin a: Mr. Rogers 33, 20;
paternal grandparents, and
Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6.
5:30
- Marshall Dillon IS: Elec. Co. 33; DragnetS, Gomer Pyle
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
13,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
• Robinson, Sr. of New Haven,
6.00 - News 3, 4, 10, IS; Sesame Sfreel20; Around the Bend 33.
and Mrs. Clara Staats, Clifton,
6. 30- News 3, 4, 6, s. 15. 10. I Dream of Jeannie 13; Growing
H1m Up 33.
W. Va. are the paternal great7
00What's My LineS; I've Got A Secret 13; Film 15, Electric
grandparents.
Co. 20. Billy Graham Crusade3; Beatthe Clock 4. ·
7 30- This Is Your Lite 3; Doctors On Call 4; To Tell The Truth
6, Price is Rights, 10; Beat The Clock 13; Top of the l'(!onth
15; RFD 20; Feast of Languoge 33
·
S 00- Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8, 10; Age of Anxiety
33: Bonanza 3, 4, IS; Ohio· This Week 20.
S 30 - Hawaii Five 0 8, 10; Bill Mqyer's Journal 20, 33; Movie
"Home lor the Holldavs" 6, 13, Billy Graham Crusade 8.
9 00 - Bold Ones 3, 4; Behind the Lines 20.
.; •• 9.110.- Marshaii ,Spo•ts•33; Black Journal 20; Movie "Pretty
Po\sqr:; s. )O.
,.
10:00 - Marcus Welby M.D. 6, t3, Aro•rl&lt;~
3,.4.~5; Film 33;
11 1

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News 20~ •

TO DIE WITH DIGNITY ...
Dear Helen:
I havewritten a JegaUy wilnessed directive to my next of kin
and I'd like to share It with your readers. It states:
"Should I become incurably iU or senile to the point where
prolonging my We has no validity, (i.e., my mind is gone; or my
body in so much pain that I must be kept drugged) I hereby
direct my cl~st living relative to Jet me die with dignity. No
machines, drugs or extraordinary procedures will be used to
keep me alive. If euthanasia ts legal (as I hope it will be) at the
time, my permission for mercy~ath is hereby granted to at.
tending doctors, This is written to relieve my kin from a decision
which might otherWise bring them condeiTUl8tion or gull!
feelings."
Medical advancement can now keep a body aUve long after it
is of no use to Its tenant. If there's no hope, no mentaUty, I don't
want to linger on as a burden to my family, yet I have seen
elderly "vegetables'! or tenninal cases forced to last far past
"living."

WASHINGTON (UPI)
· Abourezk, a Democrat, said something different done."
economically self-aufflclent as
I think a ''right to die" note ls as necessary as a will these
Jamea Abourezk, a newly on UPI's "Washington WinIn a separate interview, a reservation. O.Ur goal is to cut dsys, when medical advances can turn dying into a long, ghastly
elected Senator who was born dow" Sunday that the slx.Qy Peter MacDonald, Chairman down the 65 per cent unemploywalt. - THINKING AHEAD
and ~red on a Sioux reser- siege at the BIA which caused of the Navajo NaUon, said the ment on the reservation to
vation in South Dakota, has an estimated $2 million occupation and destruction of what it is m America ."
Dear T.A.:
suggested that Indians be damage showed "there is the BIA building in Washington
MacDonald said American
We think alike!
allowed to run the govern- something very seriously demonstrated the extensive Indians, faced with inadequate
_when the mind is Irrevocably gone, the body sh01•ld be
ment's Bureau of Indian Af. wrong with the way we've '!~spair and frustration" felt sChools and health facilities;
fairs (BIA), the rec'ent target · bandied Indians affairS and · by
Indians
throughout higher than average infant allowed to follow it. If lengthened life Is mei'e!Y prolonged death, "
of Indian hoetlllUes.
that there ought to be America.
mortality and unemployment then most definitely the machines (or whatever) should be
Abourezk, whose Lebanese rates, are now awakening to turned off. Many doctors agree but can't act becauae the decjsion
father ran a trading post on the more than 100 years of unfilled to stop lifwustaining procedures rests with relatives, who ''don't
Rosebud reservation where he promises and troken treaties. want to feelllke murderers." Your legal directive would make
dying easier- for all concerned.lt gets my vote. -H.
was born, said the government
must stop trying ''to wrench
+++
them (the Indians) away, pull
Dear Helen:
I ran away and. got married at 15. I'm 18 now, and hate
them away from their
00.... o
culture."
.myself even more than I hate my baby and my husband.
One solution, he said, would
By Ualled Prell IDieraaUoaal Kitty Aldrich, 28, of Cleveland,
He ts nlnc years older than me. I soon found out he was
RIO GRAND~ :- Rio Grande sleeping with every girl he oould sweet talk. From the start he
At 1e1at 33 per10111 were kill· drowiled In a motel's indoor be to remove1he BIA from the
ed in lralllc aooldents In Ohio swimming pool In Colwnhus control of the Interior De_part- College is offering a course called me a dwnb stupid kid who was no good for anything, but I
~ the 1os.hour 'lbankaglv· Sunday. In Cleveland Friday a • ment. ''There ought to be 10111e about Ohio laws pertaining to couldn't go back home because everyone would say "I told you
system of electing Indian real estate transactions during soP'
~ weekend, two more than man slipped from a loading
dock
and
drowned
in
Lake
people by the Indian people the spring semester, It will
llllfety ofllctall had predicted.
It got to bad he hadn't come near me for a month, and then he
themselves 5o that they can satisfy the needs of persons
Twenty-eeven died during the Erie.
was
gone for two days lind I took a bunch of nerve piUs, hoping I'd
At least one shooting ac- run as a commission or board, seeking a permanent real
1871 holiday period.
never wake up. But they just lu!od:ed me out. I Yag~tely
At leaat three others died In cident marred the holiday. they C!ln run the Bureau of estate salesman's license and
those who w1sh only to furth~r remember him coming in the room. His "help" was to get me
flrel and there were seven Gary NWer 13, of Rootatown, ' Indian Affairs."
pregnant.
This is needed, he added, the1r knowledge.
other acddeatal deaths iii the was shot and killed while
I resented the baby before It was born, and it's two years old
bunting Saturday.
because all the government
The colise may be taken for
ltate daring the 4¥• days.
Among the dead are:
agencies and institutl0111 from two semesler hours college now and I can't change. I ecoid ltfor things that shouldn't bother
Tbe wont milbap of the long
· bolldl7 - a lwo-QI' crash in THURSDAY - AI Me· the presidency dowll to the BIA credit or on a non;(!redlt basis. me .I'm so mean, I've made It mean. It Ji.ta people for no reason,
Olio 1bUI'IIday Connelsville, Marlowe Sells. have faDed in their steward- The cost is $110 if for credit and and bites other kids. WhenlteDittoaltdown,ltacreams and hill.
43, Marietta; Bonnie Farns.
$70 'f t It ill
t
h
ldlllclllve penon~, four worth, 18, and Phyllis Farhs· ships of the Indlsn people.
I no .
w mee eac me, and spanking doeln't help. I'm afratd I'll do 10111ething
worth, 10, both of Cool Run, and
Abourezk rejected a proposal Thursda~ night from 7-9 p.m. terrible becalise I take out my feelinp against my husband on
.... tram 0111 family.
Ann
Farnsworth
and
Ronald
bysomeindlanleadersthltthe
in Allen Hall, Room 214, his kid.
Tft ei"'"ll Sulllay near
Farnsworth,
22, on
Marietta
each r'elmed two Uvea. two.car
I don't want to be lbta way bit I can't help lll)'lelf. My
crash
Ohio , In
266,a BIA be aboUshed beca"- that beginning Thursday, January
south of here.
would make many lndia111 II, and continue 15 weeks.
husband doesn't stay horne mueh lnd li.l talk is IIIOIIIIy sweanng
""""'· S7' Troy' and
Friday. at Lancaster, Henry Insecure ud would "have a
Persons interested In or cunplainlng. I can't work becau.tle I'm too ~ ·and
11, New car42, Blairsville, Pa., when -ry damaging e....ct on moet registering by mall may do so
_ . ldllld In I four-car aRhea,
uneducated tnd I ctn't run -Y wltb a kid taaJni aionc and I
crane boom fell on hill'( a! a ••
""
at tile
at Inter· construct ton sift, and Harry of tha Indians of thiJ C:OUO, anv time. Send name, address, can't leave it anywhere becau.t1e no one wanli 111ch a mean one.
IIGI'tb ollbe city. ~~~~,.~~s ~ :"~r
try ... "
social security nwnber, and a
Is there uy WI)' out fllcept enough pills to llnlllt me tJi.l
'IV, Dl7t.on. at tt&gt;e Crown-Zellerbach Corp.
MacDonald, intervlewad on check lor either f70 or $11Q to time? - HOPEIFA\1
II, 111- paper mill at Baltimore.
CBS-TV'a "Face the Nation," theD!rectorofAdmisslons,Rio
Stturday.at Chtlllcotht, Art ealled lor tralft of tile B1A Grande College, Rio Grande, Ow' Hopelea:
llalclty. Nlhistr, Q, rural Chillicothe. tram the Interkir Dlpu1ment Ohio 45874, or register in
Clll tbe Oll1d Welfare J:leptrtm,ent and uk for help_ wltcb
a0
:;:~~: l~m.~r~~c!!t~~ to the uecutive olllce of the person on the regular mJcht IDdude 8 wwnr:v !CIIIer -.!or yaw: t.b)' and 1 . . . . . . dlflti, Charles E. Moss, 51, Ashville, Prealdent. He crlttciaed Co&amp; Jregls91rbeattweeion da9y, Tutoesday, envtrOdlli.t, pial tbaJijiJ, for JOU.
In 1 two-car crash ""r here. (ll'elll lor ~ to CCIJie to ~n. •
n a.m. noon,
Amotber~na llmedtluosnetthahbetbinltlofher
I, .... .. .AIIIIIer Sunday, at Chillicothe. Judy &amp;ripe with the apecial problem.s I.J p.m., or 8:3().1 p.m.
tw
-dd _... "It"
'""'"•"
for* •
Ardlzon. 27. Chillicothe, in a of America's Indltna _,_ __ for- further Information - O:Yllll' .....,11
-• Cll
~t-atr II ern~ htr~, ancr a'l- The ultimate goal llldlans contact the Office of Ad-. -in tlnat ID lllnellllld tbe cli.ld. You're wile -ell tuee
I' ••
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MacDonald said, is
mlsaions and Records at the thls.
rl* IIIIOIIler day's delly in II ' "• pntf1 ..0011 ald.
Ohio 76 In Musklngum County.
college.
for Ill your Akee! -H.

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Slides of her trip to Ejlrope
were shown by Mrs. Harold
Brown at a recent meeting of
the Pomeroy Garden Club held
at the home of Mrs. Fred
Blaettnar.
Plans were made for the
annual Christmas party and
gift exchange to be held on
Dec. II at the Meigs Inn.
Participation in the Meigs
County Christmas flower show
to be held Saturday and Sunday
was discussed. Mrs. Blaettnar
used the Thanksgiving theme
for her devotions. She read
Psalm 92 and gave a
meditation "Celebrate Your

it 46 in row
By United Press International
The college basketball
season has opened in predictable fashion With to)Hanked
UCLA flexing Us muscles.
The powerful Bruins, gunning for their seventh straight
NCAA basketball championship, opened their campaign Saturday night With a
crushing 94-5S rout of
WiscOnsin to run their winning
streak over a threeyear period
to 46.
The game marked the
opening ci Coach John Wooden's 25th season at UCLA. His
teams have won eight of the
last nine NCAA championships
and this year the Bruins are
gunning for tbe NCAA record
of 60 straight victories set by
the University of San Francisco from 11155-57.
Most teams don't bel!ill their
campaigns until next weekend,
but Saturday night Minnesota
opened With a 93-71 victory
over UC Irvine, North Carolina
defeated Biscayne, 107-62, and
Southern California toppled
Loyola of California, 113-69.

Four more scheduled to play
tonight are Ohio State, which
hosts UW Milwaukee, Houston
entertains Southern
Mississippi, Kansas State hosts
San Diego State and Texas at
El Paso is home against New
Mexico State.
Minnesota, expected to
battle Ohio State for the Big
Ten title, got 26 points from
Ron Behagen and 20 from
Olympic star Jim Brewer in
downing UC Irvine. The
Gophers raced to a 20-6 lead in
the first eight minutes and
were ahead 49-23 at the half.
North Carolina, with only
two starters returning from the
squad that finished third in the
NCAA last season, unveiled a
talented sophomore named
Donald Washington, who
poured in 26 points to lead the
rout of Biscayne. George Karl,
one of the returnees from last
season'steam, added 24polnta.
Southern California got 18
points and 13 rebounds from
junior Mike Westra in downing
Loyola of Los Angeles. Bill
Boyd, 6-7 sophomore forward
and son of Trojan Coach Bob
· · Bo,U 'made b!W•varalty debut
and score\\ ib [lOllilll:-'
"'
~
I t"
~
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..ollege F'oorDaliKesutJs
In other action, Furman, a
By United Press International potential power of the future,
,
East
routed WWism and Mary, llZ.
Columbia 28 Brown 12
Cornell 22 Princeton 15
90; Bradley defeated Wabash,
Dartmouth 31 Penn 17
92-75;
and
Missouri
Holy Cross 20 Conn 10
inaugursted its new $11 million
Mass 2S Boston Coli 7
multipurpose auditorium with
Penn St. 49 Pill 27
Rutgers 43 Colgate 13
an 87-75 victory over Ohio
Yale 28 Harvard 17
University:
!,

'

Life, It is a Gift of God." She
served a desaert course at the
conclusion of the ml!l!ting;

~ON,

defense itt the final period.
Spiva, a 5-foot-8, 150-pound
running back, exploded for
three touchdowns in the fourrth
quarter to lead Warren to a
convincing 37-6 victory for the'
first amual playoff trophy,
Warren led only 12-6 at the
end of the three periods, but
Spiva broke the game open
with touchdown runs of 26, 13
Saturday Ohio H. S.
and silt: yards. Neal Hall added
Baskelb•ll Scores
By United Press International another TO on a three-yard run
Maple Heights S7
with eight seconds left in the
Painesville Harvey 65
game to provide the final. marCleveland St. Joseph 72
Erie ( Pa ) Tech 66
gin.
.
Columb•a 58 Lorain Cath 56
Warren had built a 12-6 lead
Cleveland South 6S
Cleveland Ma~ Hayes on a three yard TO run by John
Hickman and two 3Z.yard fle!d
57
Parma 63 Euclid 48
1 goals by Bill Willisms. CinLakewood St. Edward 73
Cleve. West Tech 46 cinnati scored in the first .
period on a five-yard pass from
Berea 55 Rock( River 36
Kent ·Roosevel 89 W. Geauga Guy Wright to Rick While.
55
The victory gave Warren a
Borromeo Seminary 49
perfect
12-0 mark for the seaLake Catholic 47
Ashtabula 7S Erie (Pa .) Acad. son. The defeat was the first of
68
•
the year for once-tied PrinceFirelands 58 Amherst 57
ton tlnd the losers finished with
Shaker Heights 49 Brush 4S
a 11)·1·1 slate.
Cardinal 60 Garrettsville 48
· Kirtland 74 Ashtabula St John
The game was played on a
50
.
muddy . field !n the rain and
Willoughby South 61
snow
before 15,56&amp; fans at the
Painesville Riverside 58
Medina 67 Brunswick 58
Akron Rubber Bowl.
Berkshire 83 Bristol 6 t
In the Class A championship
Cleveland Lutheran East 66
game,
played Friday afternoon
.,
Buckeye 53
J North Ridgeville 60 Avon 59 at Delaware, Marlon Pleasant
Cleve. Heights 76
Parma Valley Forge 6S edged Lorain Clearvlew 20-14.
Parma Norma~dy 79
Garfield Heights 67
E. Cleve Shaw 68 Lakewood 62
Wickliffe 53 Mayfield 49 (oil
S1ntlnel
Beachwood 61 Hawken School
DIYOTID TO TNI
Ohio (UP!) -The
Ohio&gt;high school Class AAA
football championship game
Satu~day
night between
Warren Western Reserve and
Cincinnati Princeton was a
cJose 'affair for three quarters
- untll Warren's Mike Spiva
shredde'd the Cincinnati

(Upon Requ,est)

ROBINSON'S
a.EANERl·

210 E. 2nd
PGmeroy
Phone 992-5421
.

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
ENROLLMENT OPENING HERE
Sen1~r citizens here hove an opportunity 1o enroll In 1
hosp1tal •"'! rest-home program which wortcs to 1111 the
JI"PS on ~1care and protect you from the burden of ever.tncreasu~g medical expenses.
IN HOSPITAL BENEFITS
FROMS401ol80 DAILY FOR36.S DAYS
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Here ore some of tile lmport1nf t..tures of tho Medic1re
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•
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eNo ht1llh requirements
eProtecls you lor ony condition you now hive.
Even covers CANCER, STROKES, HEART CONDITION, '
DIABETES or any other illnus lmmldilltly.
BENEFIT EFFECTIVE ON ENROLLMENT
DATE-NO WAITING PERIODS
You do not pay txtro regordless of ogt or condition.
Guuantted renewoble for life, can never be tlncelled by
the comp1ny.
Lictnsld by tho Stilt of Ohio
Good onywloert onywhtre Medicare is I&lt;·
ceplecllhe Mtdlcart S-lemtnlii ICctpfld.
P1ys in addition lo 1ny cover~~gt you- htve.
All benefits to yow.
All btnelits plld lo you,
UnclffWI'ilhll by C. pltol Insurance ComHnY of Ohio,
foundtd In 1931.

Tilt Dllf

49

Erie (Pa .) McDowell 69
Conneaut 56
Pymatunlng Valley AI · Badger
':

ADDITIONAL BENEFITS: P1ys lor doctor blli.,.; '
Surtf!"Y-tpallent dllgnostlc strvicu,

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4fGO Euclid Aven"'

ere..._., Olllo441n
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N•m•

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West Holmes 68 Ridgewood .w
Springfield 79 Akron So. 75
Akron Central Hower 65
Sf. Thomas Aquinas st
Akron Eifel 72 Stow AI
• Doylestown 70 Coventry .W
Tuslaw 39 Fairless ~3
Waterloo 15 East Qlhlon 64
Ravenna 75 Crestwood 55
Talmadge 77 Fields 73
· Medina 67 Brunswick 5I
Luthtran East 66 Buckeye
Kent Roosevelt 19 West

53

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Toi. Scott il

-~'" "p~a. J'~'-"'T53
..
11ltnry 62
ulding 55
Ayr:esvlllt .. Halget. 55
Liberty Cenllr 70 Fayette 60
Oef~ SJ Archbold 4
·· WauiiOri 60 Fatrv;,w !0
Htmllton (Ind. I~ Edgerton 6J

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City t•lltr
Publtshtd dilly tkct~tt
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•s1.,, lusiness Offlct Phont
992·21U, ldllorlal Phont "2·
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.,.,a

Reserve -

Athens 2a

BY KEITH WISECUP
SOUTH POINT- The Meigs
Marauders opened the1r 1972-73
cage season on a sour note
Saturday mght here where the
Pomters breezed to their
second straight wm, 61-50,
desp1te a bnlltant 26-poinl
performance by Meigs' J1m
Boggs
Coach M1ke
Hughes'
p om ters ha d opene d th e1r
·
season last Wednesday w1th an
82-39 romp over vtsJtmg Northwest. South Pomt, undefeated
tn regular season game's last
year, and top-ranked of "AA"
schools most of the year, may
have another powerhouse.
Led by all.{)hto candidate
Ken Hurst who had 20 points,
South Pomt w1dened an early
17·13 second quarter lead to 2913 w1th s1x stra1ght held goals
in a four mmute span. The
Marauders were never close
after that.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders were forced to

Eastman 50,

Security h love ;
7

o.• ... Ins.

Reserves wm· over Pom·t
""':':J

=r\

FAVORiTE ",.

STOP FOR

COOL REFRESHMENTS ·

McCLURE'S

o.

-

'Cats open season at SW Tuesday

Coach Paul Dillon's Hannan
Trace Wtldcats, picked by
many observers to wln the
1972-73 championship In the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference, will open their
season Tuesday mght at SOuthwestero.
Coach Richard Hamilton's
Highlanders will be attempting
College BKB Results
By United Press International
Texas A&amp; ISO No. Mich. 79
No.Car. 107 Biscayne 62
Minn . 93 UC lrvne 71
LeMoyne 85 Kings, Pa. 64
Towsn Sl 75 Shpnsbrg 55
Toledo 77 UW Green Bay 66
Otterbn 72 Oberln 69
Queens 58 York 44
Samlrd 71 Armstrng St. 67
Ab. Chris. 103 Svannh St. 81
Shrfr Coli. S2 Hanover 80
Catwba 62 Lenoir Rhyne 5'1
Furman 112 Wm .&amp;Mary 90
Utah St. 97 lnd.SI . 96, ot
Crsn-Nwmn 93 Grdnr Webb 80
Wheeling 74 St Vine .. Pa . S8
Ala . St. 82 Dillard 76
UCLA 94 Wisconsin 53
Sou. Cal 83 Loyla, Cal. 69
Okla. St. 76 N.W Mo. 72
Wis-Eau Claire S7 St. Cloud
72
Moorhead St. S7 Huron St. 61
Ill Bndiclne 94 Chicago 79
Wheaton 87 De Pauw 74
Bradl~y 92 Wabash Coli . 75
S. E. Okla.SI. 68 S.W. Tex. 67
Georgia Tech,.,_ Auburn 83
Bldwn-WIIce 78 Ohio Wslyn 69
Pepperdine101 Doane (Neb.)

ot

GraysenCo. Tourn1ment
At Denison, Tex.
Lamar JC 71 Dlcar Rose 70
Cowboy Classic
At Dodge CI!Y. Kan.
N. E.. Colo. 70 Dodge Cly 62
E Ariz. 66 Trinidad St. SS
Amrllo 81 Grdn Cty Coli. 75,
Jolin Brown Unlvt'nity

Holldly Tou1111mtnl
Hndrx Coli. 87 St. Coli , Ark:

S7
1-SCIII of Ozarks 92 John Brown

a.

.

S.W. St. 77 Okla. Chris. 71
, Miltan ToUI'IIIIIIInt 1Champlllllllipl
MKndrtt103 Millon 72
Soulhtno SttiH T_,..ment
At WilH1m11Mq, Ky.
(Consoltlioll)
Cdarvl 71 Lncln Mtm. 77

••

formatiOn in regular season
play.
Following Sunday's action,
Miami, unbeaten in 10 games,
has the AFC East tttle, Pittsburth and Cleveland are lied
for the Central lead and
Oakland has all but put away
the Western title , The "wild
card" seems to be between the
PJttsburgh.Cleveland loser and
the New York Jets .
In the NFC, Washington has
a two .game edge , in the East,
Green Bay and Detroit are tied
In the Central and meet Sunday
and San Francisco holds a halfgame edge m the West. No less
than ftve teams have a solid
shot at the wild card playoff
slot.

shoot from far outs1de over a
st1cky zone defense employed
MEIGS-SOUTH POINT CAGE STATISTICS
by the Pomters. Boggs, who hit
MEIGS:
FG FTA FT-FTA RB PF TP
10 of hts II buckets from the 21). Mike Sayre
f. 4
o. 0 1 s 2
25 foot range, was the only Andy Vaughan
I 4
2 4
2
2 4
06 3· 6 ll
2 3
Marauder hitting with con- B1ll Chaney
J1m Boggs
ll -22 4· 4 3 3 26
ststency
B1ll Vaughan
1· 10
s6 s 3 9
The Pointers appeared to let Rich Bailey
3-10 0- 0 2 1 6
0· 6 o. o 2 I
0
Boggs ftre his long bombs, but Bill Myers
Mark
Werry
00
0·
0
0
1
0
held the remaming Marauders Floyd Burney
0- 4 0- 2 4 2 0
to forced shots. Boggs uses a TOTALS
IS-66 14-22 30 20 50
· k tngger fmger wh'IC h SOUTH POINT:
qu1c
Patrick
4· 8
2· 4
2
3 10
complicates stopping h1m. Tennant
5 10
0 3 15
I
10
Meigs' defense, varymg from Hurst
7-la 6 7 7 5 20
man-to-man to a zone, did play Sherp
o. l 0 1 0
0 ·2
Shope
0· I
0 0
1
0 0
a good game however.
Morns
3 4
0 0 2 3 6
South Pomt, by far the Johnson
]. 3
6· 6
s 3 13
quicker team, tnade 26 of 53 Winters
o. 0 I 3 2
1· 2
Hurd
0 0
0 0
0
I 0
shots from the field for a hol49 Honeycutt
o. 0 0 0 0 0 0
pet. Many of the misses came TOTALS
26-53 9-18 36 21 61
By Quarters
1n the fourth quarter when the
If emergeiiciee '
Meigs
II 7 22 21 - 50
game had been dec1ded. The South
Point
IS 15 21 10-61
arise, is your fam·
Marauders made only,ffa of 66
Ofllclals, Hyland and Neuman .
ily adequately cov
for an 1cy 27 pet.
~~":::~Whm:'~&lt;''='='~m:s.~:lM'Jmm:J&amp;:ml
ered? Seeure their
Meigs was 14-22 from the foul
lme, Pmnters g_18 .
pulling down 15. Meigs picked second quarter to score 13. Bill
well.beins with 1
South Point, also a little 30 missed shots o'f
' the boards, Vaughan seconded Boggs In
revised policy.
taller than Meigs, had 36 the hard-nosed forward Bill sconng with nine points.
rebounds with Ron Tennant Chaney getting the most, 11.
The Mal'auders play the
Coruult U• Soon
The score was close through Jackson lronmen 1n the Meigs
the f1rst penod. 'l'he home opener Friday . It is the
Marauders scored the ft' rst two league opener for both teams.
pointsofthegameon thetrfirst South Pomt plays at Rock Hill
114
possession, the only time they next Friday.
SOUTH POINT - The Meigs throw to ice the win in the final led.f
h
lr"'_.~~~·-••••~tt~lttiMIMtollll!lil••.,
SDea~rForllaJnlc,Nscyo JJleDisa 2rr~s 10
· t he score"""'
•• "'in
A ter t e Pointers' six(Only games scheduled)
Marauder reserves, with seconds . W1th
Sunday's Results
freshmen Terry Qualls and favor of Meigs, a Pointer basket break-away In the
Cleveland
27
Buifalo
10
Jerrv' Cremaellll
the · a ~
••o.looal
•'""'a "'• •
A~lenta 23 Ortn'ler 20
m~ 1
~· r&gt; - .
Washill!llon n G~~ Bay 16~ way, openeU"- sea , with orea !or the little Marauders.
·
NY Gl'ants 62 Ph11a' 1o' ' '
a 36-34 wift'over the South'i'oint
Meigs hit on 14 of 33 from the seculive pomts scored by tl1e
P1tlsburgh 23 M1nnesota to
reserves here Saturday night: field for 42pct. and South Point Pointers came on set 10-foot
c I
C~ncinnal1
13
Ch1cago
3
.
f
M
i
jumpers
around
the
lane
Balt1more 31 New Eng o
QuaDs, a guard, led the little mad_e 13 of 26 or 36 pc1• e gs
New Orleans 19 Los Ang 16 Marauders in scoring with 13 was 8-19 from the line and
The biggest South Point lead
Oakland 26 Kansas Cily 3
pomts and forward Cremeans South Point 8-18.
came in the lh1rd quarter at 51·
San
D1ego
34
Houston
20
had
'gh
MEIGS
(3S)
Q
Us
•113
{Onlygamesscheduledl
e1 I.
ua "'", 27 Me1gs played Jts best in the ·
I
I
I
Monday's Games
Cremeans 3-2-8, Ebersbach 1,0. fourth penod, still against the
Sl LouiS al Miami, night
Coach Roger Birch's lads 2, Dodson 1-1-.'1, Ault 2-1-5, S. Pointers' first five . If Meigs
!Only game scheduled)
built up a five point lead at the Walbum 1-3-5. Totals 1~. should contmue to play as it did
half and led 27-22 midway in
SOUTH POINT (34) _ in this final eight minutes, It
the third period. The little Gibson 0-0·0, Evans 2-3·7, could be tough.
Pomters came hack to tie the Vance 2·1-5, Draier 2-0-4,
Other double figure scorers
score in the fourth quurter, 3Z. Howard J-2-4, Ramsey 5-2-12, for South Potnl were Marty
32, w1th a shade over two Hagley 1,0.2. Totals 134l-34.
Patrick and Tennant with 10
minutes left.
By Quarters
pomts each wh1le Phil Johnson
4th &amp; Locust
992·5248
Middleport,
QuaDs intercepted a South Meigs
7 16 4 9-36 came off the bench m the
Akron St. Vincent won the
6 12 8 8--34
Class AA tiUe Friday night at Point pass late in the game and South Point
Officials, Canterbury and
Massillon, whipping Colwnbus drove the length of the court to
score. Perk Ault added a free Lahoun.
Watterson 28-7.
Bv United Press lnternalional
Na11onal Conference
East
w I t pet. pi pa
Washngln 10 1 0 909 272 153
Dallas
3 0 27 255 187
NYGcanls sI 4 0 .7636 285 208
Sl. LOUIS
2 7 1 250 129 208
Phil a
2 s I .227 103 284
'!"1'~ 1 pet. pi pa
Detroit
7 4 o .636 277 219
Green Bay 7 4 o 636 218192
Mtnnesota 6 5 0 .545 254 199
3 7 1 .318 173 212
Ch1cago
West
w I. f pel. pi pa
San Fr.an 66 54 0I .591
Allanla
545 297
235 206
227
Los Ang
5 5 1 .5oo 23 4 212
NewOrlns 1 B 1 217168 296
Amerccan Conference
East
w 1 1 pel pi pa
x-M1am1
10 0 o 1.000 27S 127
NY Jets
6 5 0 .545 323 257
Balttmore 4 7 0 364 190 5
20
Buffalo
3 8 0 ·.273 205 304
New Eng 1 9 o .1S2 133 354
C!n\r~l pel. pi pa
P1tl;brgh 8 3 0 711 2 170
·
SO
Cleveland
8
3
0
.727
215
Cincinnati 6 5 o .545 201 185
175
Houston
I 10 o 091 134 290
West
Oakland
;'"3'·1 P~:2 ~~ ~~~
Kan C1ty
5 6 o .455 221209
San Diego 4 6 1 409 230 261
De nver
8 o .273
•·Clinched 3division
title221 292
Thursday's Results

90

ltOIIIIT NOI,LICH,

victory over Denver. Art
Malone had two Falcon TDs.
Carter Returns
Virgil Carter, released by the
Bears three ye~rs ago,
returned to Chicago to lead the
Bengals to victory. Carter
threw a ~yard TO pass to
Essex Johnson and engmeered
two long drives whtch resulted
in field goals.
Cid Edwatds scored two
touchdowns to spark San Diego
over the Oilers and Murty
Domres threw three TO passes
and Mike O!rtis returned an
interception for a score as
Baltimore beat New England
for its first home win this
season. The game marked the
debut of the wishbone-

Coach Charles McAfee's
Ath~ns B~lldogs gave visitina·
Columbus Eastmoor a good·
first half battle before falllnc · ,
61-47 at The Plains gym
SatMrday night.
The loss left the BulldOCJ
with a 1-1 sea~on record as they
prepare
for
Friday's .
Southeastern Ohio League
opener w1th the GAHS Blue
·Devtls.
Mark Mace was the big gun
for Athens with 12 points.
O'Hanian paced the visitors
with 16 points.
Eastmoor led 13-10, 31-26 and
49-36 at the quartermarks.
In the preliminary game,
Eastmoor romped 50-28 over
the Athens Bullpups.
By Quarters:
Athens
10 16 10 11-.47
Col. East
IJ 18 IS 12-41

Pointers put it to Meigs 61-50

"'W arren cops AAA Crown

2-HOUR
CLEANING
.

1r--~-------------------~·
FOR FAEE INFORMATION
Jlf.J
I

goals for the Raiders.
"I was apprehensive right defeat the Bills. Phipps threw a
Kansas City Coach Hank down to the final gun," said 13-yard TO pass to Leroy Kelly
Stram, in danger of his first Steeler Coach Chuck Noll. "It for one F and set up Ken
rlosing season in 13 years as a , was a defenSive victory and the Brown's one-yard run for the
head coach, refused to alibi for offense came up with the big go-ahead sCore with a 30-yard
his team. "The Raiders con- plays."
pasa to Bo Scott. O.J. SIIDpson
trolled the line of scrimmage
Other Games
had 93 yards for Buffalo to go
from the start and it was hard
Elsewhere, Cleveland ripped over the I,OOO.yard mark.
to get it back. They played very Buffalo, 27-10, the New York Norm Snead threw three TO
well. We just got beat."
GiaDI'L humiliated passes and reserve quarRookie sensation Franco Pltiladelphia, 62·10, New terWclt Randy Johnson threw
Harris scored one touchdown Orleans stunned Los Angeles, for two scores and ran for
and ~~ up another with a 67- 19-16, Atlanta topped Denver, another as the Giants set a club
yard run to lead the Steelers• 23-20, Cincmnati defeated scoring mark with their victory
upset of Minnesota which just Chicago, 13-3, San Die~o over the Eagles.
about killed the Vikings' NFC clubbed Houston, '34-20 and
Happy Feller's 33-yard field
Central playoff chances. Baltimore trounced New En- goal with silt: seconds left gave
Hams ran 12 yards for Pitts- gland, 3l.j), St. Louis is at New Orleans its upset of the
burgh's first TO and wtth the Miami tonight.
Rams and Bob Berry passed
score tied at 10-10, he dashed 67
Mike
Phipps
rallied for one TO and set up two more
yards to the Viking one, where Cleveland from a I~ deficit to m Atlanta's come.frombehlnd
Terry Brsdshaw plunged over.
Bradshaw added an insurance
TD with a 17-yard screen pass
to Frank Lewis.

NFL Standings

Trip to Europe shown on slides

Rio offering
study ,,...e

'\:\F;.,wr::

" '~

down passes and WaShington's
defense harrassed young
Green Bay quarterbacks into
errQ&lt;S to beat the Packers. The
victory gave the Redakins a
twQ.f:ame lead in the NFC East
and assured them of a playoff.
slot while the Packers fell into
a tie for the NFC Central lead
with Detroit, which beat th~
New York Jets Thanksgiving
Day.
Oakland Beats Rivals
Oakland, humiliated by a 21·
141oss to the Chiefs at Kansas
City earlier this sea!lon, beat
their bitter rivals physically
Sunday. Daryle Lamonica
threw two .TO passes, Charlie
Smith ran for one score and
George Blanda kicked two field

UCLA makes

II 00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, 13
10.30- Johnn? Carson 3, 4, IS, Virginian 8; Comedy News 6,
Movie "Spencer's Mountain" 10; Movie " Deadline U S.A."
13
1 00 - Your Health
1:30- News 4, 13.

33 Die in Ohio's bloody

Thanksgiv;ing 4 holidays

BY JOE CARNICEUJ
UPI Sports Writer
Washington got ita Wish,
Oakland got its revenge and
Pitl,ilburgh got just a little
closer Sunday.
That was the result of the
three Diggest games of the day
in National Football League
action as the Washington
Redskins clinched a playoff
slot with a 21-16 victory over
the Atlanta Falcons, the
Oakland Raiders avenged an
earlier loss to Kansas City with
a 211-J rout of the Chiefs and the
Pittaburgh Steelers set up a
showdown for their first title in
40 Y~ by upending the
Minnesota Vlkings, 23-10.
Bill Kilmer threw two touch--

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1972
5 30-Eiec Co. 33: Marshall Dillon tS ; Dragnet&amp;; Gomer Pyle
13. Hodqepod!le lodqe 20.
6:0Q-News 3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; News t3, 15; Around
the Bend 33: Sesame St. 20.
6. 30-NBC News 3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; CBS News 8, tO;
Halhayoga 33; I Dream of Jeannie 13.
7·oo-News 6; Circus! 13; Insight 33: Whars My Line 8: Read
Your Way Up 33: Elec. Co. 20; Saint 15; Billy Graham
Crusade 3; Little Women 4.
7:30-To Tell the Truth 6; Traffic CourtlO; Episode Action 33:
Hollywood Squares 4, Young Dr. Kildare 8, Hodgepodge
Lodae 20. Tarzan's Secret Treasure 13.
s·oo-Gunsmoke 10; Row.an &amp; Marlin's Laugh-In 3, 4; UFO 6:
Billy Graham Crusade S, 10.
.
9 DO-Here's Lucy 8. 10. Pro Football 6, 13; Movie "The Private
Navy of Sgf O'Farrell" 3, 4, 15.

Helen Help

''

So personally popular anJ' p&lt;~lticaii_Y''~~~~ ~rful .
11 as President Jackson that \ 'an Buren "as an easy
1 ictor m the election of l H36 against four Whig_,
candidates.
'\e,crthelcss , on March 4, 1837, 11hcn .\mire\\
Jackson rode .d&lt;lll n Pennsyh·ania \1enuc to the
Capitol to sec Van Buren maugurated President,
so great 11 as the contrast her\\ ecn the polite
applause th.tt greeted the dandyish \ 'an Buren and
the "thunderclaps" that greeted the rnugh-hewn
Jackson that Sen. Thomas H Benton of .\llissouri
was mm ed to remark:
"For once, the rising 11 as eclipsed by the scttmg
:-~un.

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Bulldogs 61-47

to break a 38-game losmg
streak. Hannan Trace ts led by
three tall returmng lettermen,
Mike Caldwell, 6·6 senior
forward ; Don Wells, 6-5 juniOr
center and John Lusher, 6-()
jumor. guard .
The· Wildcats fimshed in
fourth place last season w1th a
5-7 league mark and 9-9 slate
overall.
The . Highlanders' returning

lettermen are Mike Dillon, f&gt;-10
senior forward ; Ron Stephens,
5-11 senior center; Phil Lewis,
6-l junior forward ; Larry
Frasher, 5·9 junior guard;
Mike Crouse, 5-7 junior guard
and sophomores, Kevin
Walker, 5-10 forward; poyd
Wood, S.l center and Terry
Carter, f&gt;-9 guard.
Action hegins at 6:30 p.m.
with the reserve game.

I

BUFFET
•

DINING
TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5lo9. 30- S2.50all you can eat, (or Ala Cartel .

Wide Menu
Choice
-

Drlnksand
Dessert Extra.

order""' regUlar menu every nlgfif slo to,

-The-·M.EIGS -INN -•

PH. 992-3629

POMEROY

�.. I

•

••

2- '1111 0.0, Senlil~tl, MkUeport-Pcmeroy, 0., Nov. 21,19'12

.

Dr. Buff.sees Boyle winning, mbters losing no matter who wins

3- Tile Dlil)o lloa!lrpl,Ml&lt;!11tpuct-Pameroy, o., Nov. 'f1,1m

Eastmoor defeats

•

CHARLESTO.N, J W.Va.
(UPI) -M8rkedlyabsentfrom

lbe United Mine Workers
E.
Bull, no1'111111y one of the most
vvcal elements in the nation's
a.lflelde.
BUff, a bousehold word in
every coal camp of America
and 10me abroad as well, has
laken a neutral stand in the
llhowdown between incwnbent
Preaident W. A. ''Tony" Boyle
llld his challenger, Arnold Mil·
lei' of Ohley, Kanawha County.
And, with the fits! balloting
less than a week away in the
court-ordered, week-long electioos, it doesn't appear that
Bull is about to lean toward
lllber man.

.."'P'Icn lhlB year is Dr. l

,

......

lri fact, the voice of Buff has lion," Buff 8IIS'Ill'ers. "Since ing union funds, Buff said the. not ask for a court test now but
tt is diHicult for
not been heard, except for a
small, unheralded prediction
that Boyle would win reelection, as he did three years
ago, when Buff actively
campaigned f01; the late UMW
rebel · leader Joseph A.
Yablonski.
In an interview With United
Press International, the
Charleston heart specialist
known for his "black lung"
crusade explained he would
remain uncwunttted because
he felt neither candidate should
be placed at the helm of the
miners unlon.
'"lbe coal miners of Aml!ric:a
bave no cbolce in lhlB elec-

they do not, what good would it
be flir those of us who are
concerned about their welfare
to speak out for either candidate. Neither one of them
should head the union."

most coal
wait until after Mr. Boyle is re- miners lo comprehend this
elected to cry foul," said Buff. swn much less manage it,"
"There shonld be .a court test said Buff. ''Mr. Boyle's op'
now."
ponent could never, In any
Buff said if the Labor manner or form, do this. ·
Department truly was in"In negotiations with some of
terested In protecting the ihe best educated, best inworking man, it would not have formed of our citizens-who
pennitted Boyle to seek re- are always legally correct but
election. "They themselves most of the time not moraUy
would have gone to court and concerned-he would be a
had him thrown out," he said. pigeon. You camot negotiate
The Charleston heart with brains ci that type unless
specialist said Boyle will be re- you yourself ar~ very inelected"because 80,000 pen- telligent," he said,
sioners look upon Mr.' Boyle as
Buff said Miller has made
'Daddy' and as the person re- many promises which can
sponsible for their receiving never be fulfilled. That
$150 a month in welfare pay- practice, he added, ts what can
JDenb."
be expected from any
''The coal mmers are very politician, and Buff also
loyal, will never vote against criticiZed MW~r further.
their father, even though Mr.
"His group and the Black
Boyle basically has nothing to Lung group supported Jay
do with the $150 grant," he Rockefeller for governor," he
said.
said. "Miners' health and welWhat Miller Lacb
fare must always be kept nonBuff ts just as critical of MIJ. politicaf"
ler as he ts of Boyle, sayin,; the
Buff made it clear that in his
cbabled miner is "not strong view Miller doesn 'I live up to
enough" to defeat Boyle.
Yablonski's standards. "Mr.
"There are many things he Yablonski, if he had been electiacks, but basically he's just ed, could have assumed the
not prepared to asswne the presidency of the union without
position of president," Buff any difficulty," he said. "He
said.
was capable and he had exThe UMW has an income of perience in all of the different
nearly $300 million a year, and facts of miners' welfare."

inewnbent p1·esident "is not
really eligible to run, even
though he uses as an exeliSe the
fact that his case is under
appeal.
" According to the constitution of the UMW, any
union official found guilty of
misappropriating union funds
can never run for office
again," said Buff, who
criticized the union, Miller and
the U.S. Department of Labor
for not 'fighting Boyle's candidacy on legal gruunds in the
first place.
"In my opinion, many peqple
know that Mr. Boyle is ineligible and that his oppoaltioo will

Miner Loses
In Buff's view, the miner will
be the loser, no matter who
Wins, and in either case, the
UMW will c:ontinue to neglect
health and welfare of the
miner. Buff said th~ only way
the UMW weHare fund will
ever benefit miners is for it to
be severed from the union and
run by the federal government.
Noting that Boyle has been
fauDd IJUIIty of mlajija ... lolt-

'

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

by Patterson and Patrick
up ~~~ \lcxandcr llnmtlton undt-r Prestdent
1\ ashmgtun . This 1nstit ution 's ultraconsen ati1 e
polictts h.1d made 11 1cry unpopul.1r, .md Congress
h.1d .tllm1 ed 1ts charter to expire, JUSt 11 ~at Jackson
mtt·ndcd to do to the second h:tnk ti•r the same
rl' . l~1ms

Seventh President Andrew Jock son

(St&lt;ond Administration March 4, 1833-Morch 3, 1837)

"To tbt victors belong the spoilr"
Presitknt Jackson's mack ot "Faron m.1lari.t"
signill!~ ~I&amp;C!.~&lt;I the procedure of the Prcslllency and •
cnnsl!'qbcntly the scope of \meri'cao nist ory hy gil'ing the tempestuous Tennessean · .1 plausible exnlse
for bypassing his official C.thint·t in fa10r of h1s
Kitchen Cabinet.
With the exception of Lewis Cass, Mmin Van
Buren and Roger B. Taney, the rL-gular Cabmet
. was cnmposcd of men of al'cragc cali her. But in
Francis lllair, Duff Green and \mos Kendall,
together \1 ith Van Buren and Taney, "Old Hickory" had a cutene of .thle men he liked and trusted.
Follmnog the abatement of the nullification
threat, in 11 hkh hoth s1des retreated to a "cold war"
position, Jackson turned his attention to his fight
against the Bank of the United States .
The hank was p.ttterned .tfter the first hank set

Tht· Prtstdent's .mgtr ag.unst the hank-11 bore
rlw nation's n.unc , largely controlled Jts credit
puli ~· ies , hm 11 .ts ,tlmost cnnrcly he yond federal
l1 111trnl- 1:ts fanned 11 hen llcnry Clay made the
h.mk tight .m election 1ssue. Clay had become the
prcsitlcnti.tl nommcc of the '\ational Rcpuhlie.m
Parry ,u the first national cwn ention m \merican
pohtics, at llalt1morc 111 December, IHll
J:tckson met the challenge head-on hy · semltng
, the hill tor a nc\1 charter hack to Congress unsigned
11ith his t&gt;mtous 1cto message. \\'ith Van Buren
.1s his runnmg marc-\ '1cc Prestdenr Calhoun had
resigned his office, the only man to do so--Jackson
t.tsily defeated Clay
Fxccpt for troubled Indian affairs and a dtsputc
11 ith France alxmr reparations m·er the '\apoleonic
\1 ars, ltmh c&gt;f 11 h1ch Jackson handled arrogantly hut
successfully, the second term \las rclatll·cly unt'lentful . The national debt \1 as paid off-Jackson
hittcrly opposed personal and public debts all hts
lifc-,md some $2H milium in surplus funds were
distrihuted t&lt;1 the 26 states .
In .\lay, IH12 , "Republican delegates from the
sc1 cr.1l st.Jtes" had met in Baltimore fi1r the sole
purpose of selecting a liCe presidential candidate
to repl:tce Calhoun, 11 ho had resigned to serl'c in
the Senate. h ·cn more 'p.Jrticularly, the comention
11 .IS held to nominate President Jackson's friend and
"heir
afJ"'arcm'
,' "M~rtnt"'\ ' :tn ' l!iircn,
dc\ilc •'lin' tbe "
1:
'
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IH1 !01 J l«l i i i S " "' II

New senator would change BIA

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7

Mrs. M1ldred Frank, Mrs.
Inez Carson and Mrs. Murl
Ours were the Fnday af.
lernoon guests of their brother
and sJster-m-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Trussell.
Mrs. Inez Carson, Bashan,
spent the weekend m Pomeroy
"with her sister, Mrs. Mildred
Frank,
Spendmg part of hJS holiday
vacation with h1s grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ours, was Mark Hall of
Chester.

,TeleVision Log·
.

TUESDAY, NOV. 28, 1'72
6. oo- Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6·15- Farm Report 13; Farmllme 10.
6:20 - Paul Harvey 13.
·
,
6:25 - Fa•ltj,for Today 13.
6'30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers S; Concern &amp;·Comment 10.
6 45 - Corncob Report 3.
6 55 - Fllnlslones 13.
7 oo - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10. News6.
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers a: Romper Room 6; Builwinkle &amp; Rockey
13.
B: oo- Capt. Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
T1mmy &amp; Lassie 6
•
·
S.30- Jack La La nne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
9 00 - Paul Di~on 4; Phil Donahue 15, Romper Room 8; Con.
centratlon 6; Frlendly 'Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; Mr. Rogers
33; What Every Woman Wants to Know 3.
9 30 - To Tell The Truth3; Jeopardy 6, HazelS.
10 oo- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Dick Van Dyke 13; Joker's·WIId S, tO:
Columbus Six Calling 6
10 30 - Concenlral!on 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4: Spl1t Second t3 ;
Prtce Is Rcght S, 10.
11: oo - Sale olthe Century 3, tS; Love American Style 6; Gambit
8, tO; Password 13; Electric Co . 20
·
II ' 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Lcfe 8; Bewitched 6,
13; Sesame Street 20.
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, IS; Password 6; Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4;
Jackie Oblinger a, News 10, 13.
12 25 - CBS News S.
SON BORN OCT. 22
t2: 30-3 W's Game 3, 15, Split Second 6; Search for Tomorrows,
10.,
Mr. and Mrs. Danny
News 3, Ail My Children 6, 13; Irs Your Bet 8; Green
1:00Robinson, Pomeroy, Route 2,
Acres 10, Watch Your Child 15.
are announcing the birth of
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, IS; Let's Make A Deal 6, 13; As The
World Turns a, 10.
{
their first child, a son, Danny
2.00
Days
of
Our
Lives
, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Wayne, Jr. on Oct. 22 at the
Douglass 6, Guiding Light 8, 10.
Holzer Medical Center .
2·30-Doctors3,4,15. DatlngGamel3; EdgeofNightS, 10
3 00 - General Hospital 6, t3; Another World 3, 4, IS; Love is
Maternal grandmother is Mrs.
Splendored Thing S, 10; Just Generation 20.
Marcia Capehart, Pomeroy,
3· 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4; 15, Secret Storm s, 10; One
Route 2, and the maternal
Life fa Live 6, 13; Maggie&amp; The Beautiful Machine 20.
4. 00- Mr. Cartoon 3: Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33,' 20; Love,
great-grandmothers are Mrs.
American Style 13; lkrv Griffin 4: Piinlstones 6; Gilligan's
Eva Hysell and Mrs. Carrie
IsleS, Mov•e "Inside Straight" 10.
Hysell, also of Pomeroy, Route
4· 25 - Sports Club 6.
4:30 - Love Lucy 6; Petticoat Junction 3; Daniel Boone 13:
2 Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
Merv Griffin S; Andy Griffith IS.
Robinson, •Jr., Clifton, are the
5:00- Dick Van Dyke 15; Merv Griffin a: Mr. Rogers 33, 20;
paternal grandparents, and
Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6.
5:30
- Marshall Dillon IS: Elec. Co. 33; DragnetS, Gomer Pyle
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
13,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
• Robinson, Sr. of New Haven,
6.00 - News 3, 4, 10, IS; Sesame Sfreel20; Around the Bend 33.
and Mrs. Clara Staats, Clifton,
6. 30- News 3, 4, 6, s. 15. 10. I Dream of Jeannie 13; Growing
H1m Up 33.
W. Va. are the paternal great7
00What's My LineS; I've Got A Secret 13; Film 15, Electric
grandparents.
Co. 20. Billy Graham Crusade3; Beatthe Clock 4. ·
7 30- This Is Your Lite 3; Doctors On Call 4; To Tell The Truth
6, Price is Rights, 10; Beat The Clock 13; Top of the l'(!onth
15; RFD 20; Feast of Languoge 33
·
S 00- Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8, 10; Age of Anxiety
33: Bonanza 3, 4, IS; Ohio· This Week 20.
S 30 - Hawaii Five 0 8, 10; Bill Mqyer's Journal 20, 33; Movie
"Home lor the Holldavs" 6, 13, Billy Graham Crusade 8.
9 00 - Bold Ones 3, 4; Behind the Lines 20.
.; •• 9.110.- Marshaii ,Spo•ts•33; Black Journal 20; Movie "Pretty
Po\sqr:; s. )O.
,.
10:00 - Marcus Welby M.D. 6, t3, Aro•rl&lt;~
3,.4.~5; Film 33;
11 1

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News 20~ •

TO DIE WITH DIGNITY ...
Dear Helen:
I havewritten a JegaUy wilnessed directive to my next of kin
and I'd like to share It with your readers. It states:
"Should I become incurably iU or senile to the point where
prolonging my We has no validity, (i.e., my mind is gone; or my
body in so much pain that I must be kept drugged) I hereby
direct my cl~st living relative to Jet me die with dignity. No
machines, drugs or extraordinary procedures will be used to
keep me alive. If euthanasia ts legal (as I hope it will be) at the
time, my permission for mercy~ath is hereby granted to at.
tending doctors, This is written to relieve my kin from a decision
which might otherWise bring them condeiTUl8tion or gull!
feelings."
Medical advancement can now keep a body aUve long after it
is of no use to Its tenant. If there's no hope, no mentaUty, I don't
want to linger on as a burden to my family, yet I have seen
elderly "vegetables'! or tenninal cases forced to last far past
"living."

WASHINGTON (UPI)
· Abourezk, a Democrat, said something different done."
economically self-aufflclent as
I think a ''right to die" note ls as necessary as a will these
Jamea Abourezk, a newly on UPI's "Washington WinIn a separate interview, a reservation. O.Ur goal is to cut dsys, when medical advances can turn dying into a long, ghastly
elected Senator who was born dow" Sunday that the slx.Qy Peter MacDonald, Chairman down the 65 per cent unemploywalt. - THINKING AHEAD
and ~red on a Sioux reser- siege at the BIA which caused of the Navajo NaUon, said the ment on the reservation to
vation in South Dakota, has an estimated $2 million occupation and destruction of what it is m America ."
Dear T.A.:
suggested that Indians be damage showed "there is the BIA building in Washington
MacDonald said American
We think alike!
allowed to run the govern- something very seriously demonstrated the extensive Indians, faced with inadequate
_when the mind is Irrevocably gone, the body sh01•ld be
ment's Bureau of Indian Af. wrong with the way we've '!~spair and frustration" felt sChools and health facilities;
fairs (BIA), the rec'ent target · bandied Indians affairS and · by
Indians
throughout higher than average infant allowed to follow it. If lengthened life Is mei'e!Y prolonged death, "
of Indian hoetlllUes.
that there ought to be America.
mortality and unemployment then most definitely the machines (or whatever) should be
Abourezk, whose Lebanese rates, are now awakening to turned off. Many doctors agree but can't act becauae the decjsion
father ran a trading post on the more than 100 years of unfilled to stop lifwustaining procedures rests with relatives, who ''don't
Rosebud reservation where he promises and troken treaties. want to feelllke murderers." Your legal directive would make
dying easier- for all concerned.lt gets my vote. -H.
was born, said the government
must stop trying ''to wrench
+++
them (the Indians) away, pull
Dear Helen:
I ran away and. got married at 15. I'm 18 now, and hate
them away from their
00.... o
culture."
.myself even more than I hate my baby and my husband.
One solution, he said, would
By Ualled Prell IDieraaUoaal Kitty Aldrich, 28, of Cleveland,
He ts nlnc years older than me. I soon found out he was
RIO GRAND~ :- Rio Grande sleeping with every girl he oould sweet talk. From the start he
At 1e1at 33 per10111 were kill· drowiled In a motel's indoor be to remove1he BIA from the
ed in lralllc aooldents In Ohio swimming pool In Colwnhus control of the Interior De_part- College is offering a course called me a dwnb stupid kid who was no good for anything, but I
~ the 1os.hour 'lbankaglv· Sunday. In Cleveland Friday a • ment. ''There ought to be 10111e about Ohio laws pertaining to couldn't go back home because everyone would say "I told you
system of electing Indian real estate transactions during soP'
~ weekend, two more than man slipped from a loading
dock
and
drowned
in
Lake
people by the Indian people the spring semester, It will
llllfety ofllctall had predicted.
It got to bad he hadn't come near me for a month, and then he
themselves 5o that they can satisfy the needs of persons
Twenty-eeven died during the Erie.
was
gone for two days lind I took a bunch of nerve piUs, hoping I'd
At least one shooting ac- run as a commission or board, seeking a permanent real
1871 holiday period.
never wake up. But they just lu!od:ed me out. I Yag~tely
At leaat three others died In cident marred the holiday. they C!ln run the Bureau of estate salesman's license and
those who w1sh only to furth~r remember him coming in the room. His "help" was to get me
flrel and there were seven Gary NWer 13, of Rootatown, ' Indian Affairs."
pregnant.
This is needed, he added, the1r knowledge.
other acddeatal deaths iii the was shot and killed while
I resented the baby before It was born, and it's two years old
bunting Saturday.
because all the government
The colise may be taken for
ltate daring the 4¥• days.
Among the dead are:
agencies and institutl0111 from two semesler hours college now and I can't change. I ecoid ltfor things that shouldn't bother
Tbe wont milbap of the long
· bolldl7 - a lwo-QI' crash in THURSDAY - AI Me· the presidency dowll to the BIA credit or on a non;(!redlt basis. me .I'm so mean, I've made It mean. It Ji.ta people for no reason,
Olio 1bUI'IIday Connelsville, Marlowe Sells. have faDed in their steward- The cost is $110 if for credit and and bites other kids. WhenlteDittoaltdown,ltacreams and hill.
43, Marietta; Bonnie Farns.
$70 'f t It ill
t
h
ldlllclllve penon~, four worth, 18, and Phyllis Farhs· ships of the Indlsn people.
I no .
w mee eac me, and spanking doeln't help. I'm afratd I'll do 10111ething
worth, 10, both of Cool Run, and
Abourezk rejected a proposal Thursda~ night from 7-9 p.m. terrible becalise I take out my feelinp against my husband on
.... tram 0111 family.
Ann
Farnsworth
and
Ronald
bysomeindlanleadersthltthe
in Allen Hall, Room 214, his kid.
Tft ei"'"ll Sulllay near
Farnsworth,
22, on
Marietta
each r'elmed two Uvea. two.car
I don't want to be lbta way bit I can't help lll)'lelf. My
crash
Ohio , In
266,a BIA be aboUshed beca"- that beginning Thursday, January
south of here.
would make many lndia111 II, and continue 15 weeks.
husband doesn't stay horne mueh lnd li.l talk is IIIOIIIIy sweanng
""""'· S7' Troy' and
Friday. at Lancaster, Henry Insecure ud would "have a
Persons interested In or cunplainlng. I can't work becau.tle I'm too ~ ·and
11, New car42, Blairsville, Pa., when -ry damaging e....ct on moet registering by mall may do so
_ . ldllld In I four-car aRhea,
uneducated tnd I ctn't run -Y wltb a kid taaJni aionc and I
crane boom fell on hill'( a! a ••
""
at tile
at Inter· construct ton sift, and Harry of tha Indians of thiJ C:OUO, anv time. Send name, address, can't leave it anywhere becau.t1e no one wanli 111ch a mean one.
IIGI'tb ollbe city. ~~~~,.~~s ~ :"~r
try ... "
social security nwnber, and a
Is there uy WI)' out fllcept enough pills to llnlllt me tJi.l
'IV, Dl7t.on. at tt&gt;e Crown-Zellerbach Corp.
MacDonald, intervlewad on check lor either f70 or $11Q to time? - HOPEIFA\1
II, 111- paper mill at Baltimore.
CBS-TV'a "Face the Nation," theD!rectorofAdmisslons,Rio
Stturday.at Chtlllcotht, Art ealled lor tralft of tile B1A Grande College, Rio Grande, Ow' Hopelea:
llalclty. Nlhistr, Q, rural Chillicothe. tram the Interkir Dlpu1ment Ohio 45874, or register in
Clll tbe Oll1d Welfare J:leptrtm,ent and uk for help_ wltcb
a0
:;:~~: l~m.~r~~c!!t~~ to the uecutive olllce of the person on the regular mJcht IDdude 8 wwnr:v !CIIIer -.!or yaw: t.b)' and 1 . . . . . . dlflti, Charles E. Moss, 51, Ashville, Prealdent. He crlttciaed Co&amp; Jregls91rbeattweeion da9y, Tutoesday, envtrOdlli.t, pial tbaJijiJ, for JOU.
In 1 two-car crash ""r here. (ll'elll lor ~ to CCIJie to ~n. •
n a.m. noon,
Amotber~na llmedtluosnetthahbetbinltlofher
I, .... .. .AIIIIIer Sunday, at Chillicothe. Judy &amp;ripe with the apecial problem.s I.J p.m., or 8:3().1 p.m.
tw
-dd _... "It"
'""'"•"
for* •
Ardlzon. 27. Chillicothe, in a of America's Indltna _,_ __ for- further Information - O:Yllll' .....,11
-• Cll
~t-atr II ern~ htr~, ancr a'l- The ultimate goal llldlans contact the Office of Ad-. -in tlnat ID lllnellllld tbe cli.ld. You're wile -ell tuee
I' ••
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MacDonald said, is
mlsaions and Records at the thls.
rl* IIIIOIIler day's delly in II ' "• pntf1 ..0011 ald.
Ohio 76 In Musklngum County.
college.
for Ill your Akee! -H.

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Slides of her trip to Ejlrope
were shown by Mrs. Harold
Brown at a recent meeting of
the Pomeroy Garden Club held
at the home of Mrs. Fred
Blaettnar.
Plans were made for the
annual Christmas party and
gift exchange to be held on
Dec. II at the Meigs Inn.
Participation in the Meigs
County Christmas flower show
to be held Saturday and Sunday
was discussed. Mrs. Blaettnar
used the Thanksgiving theme
for her devotions. She read
Psalm 92 and gave a
meditation "Celebrate Your

it 46 in row
By United Press International
The college basketball
season has opened in predictable fashion With to)Hanked
UCLA flexing Us muscles.
The powerful Bruins, gunning for their seventh straight
NCAA basketball championship, opened their campaign Saturday night With a
crushing 94-5S rout of
WiscOnsin to run their winning
streak over a threeyear period
to 46.
The game marked the
opening ci Coach John Wooden's 25th season at UCLA. His
teams have won eight of the
last nine NCAA championships
and this year the Bruins are
gunning for tbe NCAA record
of 60 straight victories set by
the University of San Francisco from 11155-57.
Most teams don't bel!ill their
campaigns until next weekend,
but Saturday night Minnesota
opened With a 93-71 victory
over UC Irvine, North Carolina
defeated Biscayne, 107-62, and
Southern California toppled
Loyola of California, 113-69.

Four more scheduled to play
tonight are Ohio State, which
hosts UW Milwaukee, Houston
entertains Southern
Mississippi, Kansas State hosts
San Diego State and Texas at
El Paso is home against New
Mexico State.
Minnesota, expected to
battle Ohio State for the Big
Ten title, got 26 points from
Ron Behagen and 20 from
Olympic star Jim Brewer in
downing UC Irvine. The
Gophers raced to a 20-6 lead in
the first eight minutes and
were ahead 49-23 at the half.
North Carolina, with only
two starters returning from the
squad that finished third in the
NCAA last season, unveiled a
talented sophomore named
Donald Washington, who
poured in 26 points to lead the
rout of Biscayne. George Karl,
one of the returnees from last
season'steam, added 24polnta.
Southern California got 18
points and 13 rebounds from
junior Mike Westra in downing
Loyola of Los Angeles. Bill
Boyd, 6-7 sophomore forward
and son of Trojan Coach Bob
· · Bo,U 'made b!W•varalty debut
and score\\ ib [lOllilll:-'
"'
~
I t"
~
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..ollege F'oorDaliKesutJs
In other action, Furman, a
By United Press International potential power of the future,
,
East
routed WWism and Mary, llZ.
Columbia 28 Brown 12
Cornell 22 Princeton 15
90; Bradley defeated Wabash,
Dartmouth 31 Penn 17
92-75;
and
Missouri
Holy Cross 20 Conn 10
inaugursted its new $11 million
Mass 2S Boston Coli 7
multipurpose auditorium with
Penn St. 49 Pill 27
Rutgers 43 Colgate 13
an 87-75 victory over Ohio
Yale 28 Harvard 17
University:
!,

'

Life, It is a Gift of God." She
served a desaert course at the
conclusion of the ml!l!ting;

~ON,

defense itt the final period.
Spiva, a 5-foot-8, 150-pound
running back, exploded for
three touchdowns in the fourrth
quarter to lead Warren to a
convincing 37-6 victory for the'
first amual playoff trophy,
Warren led only 12-6 at the
end of the three periods, but
Spiva broke the game open
with touchdown runs of 26, 13
Saturday Ohio H. S.
and silt: yards. Neal Hall added
Baskelb•ll Scores
By United Press International another TO on a three-yard run
Maple Heights S7
with eight seconds left in the
Painesville Harvey 65
game to provide the final. marCleveland St. Joseph 72
Erie ( Pa ) Tech 66
gin.
.
Columb•a 58 Lorain Cath 56
Warren had built a 12-6 lead
Cleveland South 6S
Cleveland Ma~ Hayes on a three yard TO run by John
Hickman and two 3Z.yard fle!d
57
Parma 63 Euclid 48
1 goals by Bill Willisms. CinLakewood St. Edward 73
Cleve. West Tech 46 cinnati scored in the first .
period on a five-yard pass from
Berea 55 Rock( River 36
Kent ·Roosevel 89 W. Geauga Guy Wright to Rick While.
55
The victory gave Warren a
Borromeo Seminary 49
perfect
12-0 mark for the seaLake Catholic 47
Ashtabula 7S Erie (Pa .) Acad. son. The defeat was the first of
68
•
the year for once-tied PrinceFirelands 58 Amherst 57
ton tlnd the losers finished with
Shaker Heights 49 Brush 4S
a 11)·1·1 slate.
Cardinal 60 Garrettsville 48
· Kirtland 74 Ashtabula St John
The game was played on a
50
.
muddy . field !n the rain and
Willoughby South 61
snow
before 15,56&amp; fans at the
Painesville Riverside 58
Medina 67 Brunswick 58
Akron Rubber Bowl.
Berkshire 83 Bristol 6 t
In the Class A championship
Cleveland Lutheran East 66
game,
played Friday afternoon
.,
Buckeye 53
J North Ridgeville 60 Avon 59 at Delaware, Marlon Pleasant
Cleve. Heights 76
Parma Valley Forge 6S edged Lorain Clearvlew 20-14.
Parma Norma~dy 79
Garfield Heights 67
E. Cleve Shaw 68 Lakewood 62
Wickliffe 53 Mayfield 49 (oil
S1ntlnel
Beachwood 61 Hawken School
DIYOTID TO TNI
Ohio (UP!) -The
Ohio&gt;high school Class AAA
football championship game
Satu~day
night between
Warren Western Reserve and
Cincinnati Princeton was a
cJose 'affair for three quarters
- untll Warren's Mike Spiva
shredde'd the Cincinnati

(Upon Requ,est)

ROBINSON'S
a.EANERl·

210 E. 2nd
PGmeroy
Phone 992-5421
.

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
ENROLLMENT OPENING HERE
Sen1~r citizens here hove an opportunity 1o enroll In 1
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IN HOSPITAL BENEFITS
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Even covers CANCER, STROKES, HEART CONDITION, '
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BENEFIT EFFECTIVE ON ENROLLMENT
DATE-NO WAITING PERIODS
You do not pay txtro regordless of ogt or condition.
Guuantted renewoble for life, can never be tlncelled by
the comp1ny.
Lictnsld by tho Stilt of Ohio
Good onywloert onywhtre Medicare is I&lt;·
ceplecllhe Mtdlcart S-lemtnlii ICctpfld.
P1ys in addition lo 1ny cover~~gt you- htve.
All benefits to yow.
All btnelits plld lo you,
UnclffWI'ilhll by C. pltol Insurance ComHnY of Ohio,
foundtd In 1931.

Tilt Dllf

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Erie (Pa .) McDowell 69
Conneaut 56
Pymatunlng Valley AI · Badger
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ADDITIONAL BENEFITS: P1ys lor doctor blli.,.; '
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4fGO Euclid Aven"'

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West Holmes 68 Ridgewood .w
Springfield 79 Akron So. 75
Akron Central Hower 65
Sf. Thomas Aquinas st
Akron Eifel 72 Stow AI
• Doylestown 70 Coventry .W
Tuslaw 39 Fairless ~3
Waterloo 15 East Qlhlon 64
Ravenna 75 Crestwood 55
Talmadge 77 Fields 73
· Medina 67 Brunswick 5I
Luthtran East 66 Buckeye
Kent Roosevelt 19 West

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Toi. Scott il

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11ltnry 62
ulding 55
Ayr:esvlllt .. Halget. 55
Liberty Cenllr 70 Fayette 60
Oef~ SJ Archbold 4
·· WauiiOri 60 Fatrv;,w !0
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.,.,a

Reserve -

Athens 2a

BY KEITH WISECUP
SOUTH POINT- The Meigs
Marauders opened the1r 1972-73
cage season on a sour note
Saturday mght here where the
Pomters breezed to their
second straight wm, 61-50,
desp1te a bnlltant 26-poinl
performance by Meigs' J1m
Boggs
Coach M1ke
Hughes'
p om ters ha d opene d th e1r
·
season last Wednesday w1th an
82-39 romp over vtsJtmg Northwest. South Pomt, undefeated
tn regular season game's last
year, and top-ranked of "AA"
schools most of the year, may
have another powerhouse.
Led by all.{)hto candidate
Ken Hurst who had 20 points,
South Pomt w1dened an early
17·13 second quarter lead to 2913 w1th s1x stra1ght held goals
in a four mmute span. The
Marauders were never close
after that.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders were forced to

Eastman 50,

Security h love ;
7

o.• ... Ins.

Reserves wm· over Pom·t
""':':J

=r\

FAVORiTE ",.

STOP FOR

COOL REFRESHMENTS ·

McCLURE'S

o.

-

'Cats open season at SW Tuesday

Coach Paul Dillon's Hannan
Trace Wtldcats, picked by
many observers to wln the
1972-73 championship In the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference, will open their
season Tuesday mght at SOuthwestero.
Coach Richard Hamilton's
Highlanders will be attempting
College BKB Results
By United Press International
Texas A&amp; ISO No. Mich. 79
No.Car. 107 Biscayne 62
Minn . 93 UC lrvne 71
LeMoyne 85 Kings, Pa. 64
Towsn Sl 75 Shpnsbrg 55
Toledo 77 UW Green Bay 66
Otterbn 72 Oberln 69
Queens 58 York 44
Samlrd 71 Armstrng St. 67
Ab. Chris. 103 Svannh St. 81
Shrfr Coli. S2 Hanover 80
Catwba 62 Lenoir Rhyne 5'1
Furman 112 Wm .&amp;Mary 90
Utah St. 97 lnd.SI . 96, ot
Crsn-Nwmn 93 Grdnr Webb 80
Wheeling 74 St Vine .. Pa . S8
Ala . St. 82 Dillard 76
UCLA 94 Wisconsin 53
Sou. Cal 83 Loyla, Cal. 69
Okla. St. 76 N.W Mo. 72
Wis-Eau Claire S7 St. Cloud
72
Moorhead St. S7 Huron St. 61
Ill Bndiclne 94 Chicago 79
Wheaton 87 De Pauw 74
Bradl~y 92 Wabash Coli . 75
S. E. Okla.SI. 68 S.W. Tex. 67
Georgia Tech,.,_ Auburn 83
Bldwn-WIIce 78 Ohio Wslyn 69
Pepperdine101 Doane (Neb.)

ot

GraysenCo. Tourn1ment
At Denison, Tex.
Lamar JC 71 Dlcar Rose 70
Cowboy Classic
At Dodge CI!Y. Kan.
N. E.. Colo. 70 Dodge Cly 62
E Ariz. 66 Trinidad St. SS
Amrllo 81 Grdn Cty Coli. 75,
Jolin Brown Unlvt'nity

Holldly Tou1111mtnl
Hndrx Coli. 87 St. Coli , Ark:

S7
1-SCIII of Ozarks 92 John Brown

a.

.

S.W. St. 77 Okla. Chris. 71
, Miltan ToUI'IIIIIIInt 1Champlllllllipl
MKndrtt103 Millon 72
Soulhtno SttiH T_,..ment
At WilH1m11Mq, Ky.
(Consoltlioll)
Cdarvl 71 Lncln Mtm. 77

••

formatiOn in regular season
play.
Following Sunday's action,
Miami, unbeaten in 10 games,
has the AFC East tttle, Pittsburth and Cleveland are lied
for the Central lead and
Oakland has all but put away
the Western title , The "wild
card" seems to be between the
PJttsburgh.Cleveland loser and
the New York Jets .
In the NFC, Washington has
a two .game edge , in the East,
Green Bay and Detroit are tied
In the Central and meet Sunday
and San Francisco holds a halfgame edge m the West. No less
than ftve teams have a solid
shot at the wild card playoff
slot.

shoot from far outs1de over a
st1cky zone defense employed
MEIGS-SOUTH POINT CAGE STATISTICS
by the Pomters. Boggs, who hit
MEIGS:
FG FTA FT-FTA RB PF TP
10 of hts II buckets from the 21). Mike Sayre
f. 4
o. 0 1 s 2
25 foot range, was the only Andy Vaughan
I 4
2 4
2
2 4
06 3· 6 ll
2 3
Marauder hitting with con- B1ll Chaney
J1m Boggs
ll -22 4· 4 3 3 26
ststency
B1ll Vaughan
1· 10
s6 s 3 9
The Pointers appeared to let Rich Bailey
3-10 0- 0 2 1 6
0· 6 o. o 2 I
0
Boggs ftre his long bombs, but Bill Myers
Mark
Werry
00
0·
0
0
1
0
held the remaming Marauders Floyd Burney
0- 4 0- 2 4 2 0
to forced shots. Boggs uses a TOTALS
IS-66 14-22 30 20 50
· k tngger fmger wh'IC h SOUTH POINT:
qu1c
Patrick
4· 8
2· 4
2
3 10
complicates stopping h1m. Tennant
5 10
0 3 15
I
10
Meigs' defense, varymg from Hurst
7-la 6 7 7 5 20
man-to-man to a zone, did play Sherp
o. l 0 1 0
0 ·2
Shope
0· I
0 0
1
0 0
a good game however.
Morns
3 4
0 0 2 3 6
South Pomt, by far the Johnson
]. 3
6· 6
s 3 13
quicker team, tnade 26 of 53 Winters
o. 0 I 3 2
1· 2
Hurd
0 0
0 0
0
I 0
shots from the field for a hol49 Honeycutt
o. 0 0 0 0 0 0
pet. Many of the misses came TOTALS
26-53 9-18 36 21 61
By Quarters
1n the fourth quarter when the
If emergeiiciee '
Meigs
II 7 22 21 - 50
game had been dec1ded. The South
Point
IS 15 21 10-61
arise, is your fam·
Marauders made only,ffa of 66
Ofllclals, Hyland and Neuman .
ily adequately cov
for an 1cy 27 pet.
~~":::~Whm:'~&lt;''='='~m:s.~:lM'Jmm:J&amp;:ml
ered? Seeure their
Meigs was 14-22 from the foul
lme, Pmnters g_18 .
pulling down 15. Meigs picked second quarter to score 13. Bill
well.beins with 1
South Point, also a little 30 missed shots o'f
' the boards, Vaughan seconded Boggs In
revised policy.
taller than Meigs, had 36 the hard-nosed forward Bill sconng with nine points.
rebounds with Ron Tennant Chaney getting the most, 11.
The Mal'auders play the
Coruult U• Soon
The score was close through Jackson lronmen 1n the Meigs
the f1rst penod. 'l'he home opener Friday . It is the
Marauders scored the ft' rst two league opener for both teams.
pointsofthegameon thetrfirst South Pomt plays at Rock Hill
114
possession, the only time they next Friday.
SOUTH POINT - The Meigs throw to ice the win in the final led.f
h
lr"'_.~~~·-••••~tt~lttiMIMtollll!lil••.,
SDea~rForllaJnlc,Nscyo JJleDisa 2rr~s 10
· t he score"""'
•• "'in
A ter t e Pointers' six(Only games scheduled)
Marauder reserves, with seconds . W1th
Sunday's Results
freshmen Terry Qualls and favor of Meigs, a Pointer basket break-away In the
Cleveland
27
Buifalo
10
Jerrv' Cremaellll
the · a ~
••o.looal
•'""'a "'• •
A~lenta 23 Ortn'ler 20
m~ 1
~· r&gt; - .
Washill!llon n G~~ Bay 16~ way, openeU"- sea , with orea !or the little Marauders.
·
NY Gl'ants 62 Ph11a' 1o' ' '
a 36-34 wift'over the South'i'oint
Meigs hit on 14 of 33 from the seculive pomts scored by tl1e
P1tlsburgh 23 M1nnesota to
reserves here Saturday night: field for 42pct. and South Point Pointers came on set 10-foot
c I
C~ncinnal1
13
Ch1cago
3
.
f
M
i
jumpers
around
the
lane
Balt1more 31 New Eng o
QuaDs, a guard, led the little mad_e 13 of 26 or 36 pc1• e gs
New Orleans 19 Los Ang 16 Marauders in scoring with 13 was 8-19 from the line and
The biggest South Point lead
Oakland 26 Kansas Cily 3
pomts and forward Cremeans South Point 8-18.
came in the lh1rd quarter at 51·
San
D1ego
34
Houston
20
had
'gh
MEIGS
(3S)
Q
Us
•113
{Onlygamesscheduledl
e1 I.
ua "'", 27 Me1gs played Jts best in the ·
I
I
I
Monday's Games
Cremeans 3-2-8, Ebersbach 1,0. fourth penod, still against the
Sl LouiS al Miami, night
Coach Roger Birch's lads 2, Dodson 1-1-.'1, Ault 2-1-5, S. Pointers' first five . If Meigs
!Only game scheduled)
built up a five point lead at the Walbum 1-3-5. Totals 1~. should contmue to play as it did
half and led 27-22 midway in
SOUTH POINT (34) _ in this final eight minutes, It
the third period. The little Gibson 0-0·0, Evans 2-3·7, could be tough.
Pomters came hack to tie the Vance 2·1-5, Draier 2-0-4,
Other double figure scorers
score in the fourth quurter, 3Z. Howard J-2-4, Ramsey 5-2-12, for South Potnl were Marty
32, w1th a shade over two Hagley 1,0.2. Totals 134l-34.
Patrick and Tennant with 10
minutes left.
By Quarters
pomts each wh1le Phil Johnson
4th &amp; Locust
992·5248
Middleport,
QuaDs intercepted a South Meigs
7 16 4 9-36 came off the bench m the
Akron St. Vincent won the
6 12 8 8--34
Class AA tiUe Friday night at Point pass late in the game and South Point
Officials, Canterbury and
Massillon, whipping Colwnbus drove the length of the court to
score. Perk Ault added a free Lahoun.
Watterson 28-7.
Bv United Press lnternalional
Na11onal Conference
East
w I t pet. pi pa
Washngln 10 1 0 909 272 153
Dallas
3 0 27 255 187
NYGcanls sI 4 0 .7636 285 208
Sl. LOUIS
2 7 1 250 129 208
Phil a
2 s I .227 103 284
'!"1'~ 1 pet. pi pa
Detroit
7 4 o .636 277 219
Green Bay 7 4 o 636 218192
Mtnnesota 6 5 0 .545 254 199
3 7 1 .318 173 212
Ch1cago
West
w I. f pel. pi pa
San Fr.an 66 54 0I .591
Allanla
545 297
235 206
227
Los Ang
5 5 1 .5oo 23 4 212
NewOrlns 1 B 1 217168 296
Amerccan Conference
East
w 1 1 pel pi pa
x-M1am1
10 0 o 1.000 27S 127
NY Jets
6 5 0 .545 323 257
Balttmore 4 7 0 364 190 5
20
Buffalo
3 8 0 ·.273 205 304
New Eng 1 9 o .1S2 133 354
C!n\r~l pel. pi pa
P1tl;brgh 8 3 0 711 2 170
·
SO
Cleveland
8
3
0
.727
215
Cincinnati 6 5 o .545 201 185
175
Houston
I 10 o 091 134 290
West
Oakland
;'"3'·1 P~:2 ~~ ~~~
Kan C1ty
5 6 o .455 221209
San Diego 4 6 1 409 230 261
De nver
8 o .273
•·Clinched 3division
title221 292
Thursday's Results

90

ltOIIIIT NOI,LICH,

victory over Denver. Art
Malone had two Falcon TDs.
Carter Returns
Virgil Carter, released by the
Bears three ye~rs ago,
returned to Chicago to lead the
Bengals to victory. Carter
threw a ~yard TO pass to
Essex Johnson and engmeered
two long drives whtch resulted
in field goals.
Cid Edwatds scored two
touchdowns to spark San Diego
over the Oilers and Murty
Domres threw three TO passes
and Mike O!rtis returned an
interception for a score as
Baltimore beat New England
for its first home win this
season. The game marked the
debut of the wishbone-

Coach Charles McAfee's
Ath~ns B~lldogs gave visitina·
Columbus Eastmoor a good·
first half battle before falllnc · ,
61-47 at The Plains gym
SatMrday night.
The loss left the BulldOCJ
with a 1-1 sea~on record as they
prepare
for
Friday's .
Southeastern Ohio League
opener w1th the GAHS Blue
·Devtls.
Mark Mace was the big gun
for Athens with 12 points.
O'Hanian paced the visitors
with 16 points.
Eastmoor led 13-10, 31-26 and
49-36 at the quartermarks.
In the preliminary game,
Eastmoor romped 50-28 over
the Athens Bullpups.
By Quarters:
Athens
10 16 10 11-.47
Col. East
IJ 18 IS 12-41

Pointers put it to Meigs 61-50

"'W arren cops AAA Crown

2-HOUR
CLEANING
.

1r--~-------------------~·
FOR FAEE INFORMATION
Jlf.J
I

goals for the Raiders.
"I was apprehensive right defeat the Bills. Phipps threw a
Kansas City Coach Hank down to the final gun," said 13-yard TO pass to Leroy Kelly
Stram, in danger of his first Steeler Coach Chuck Noll. "It for one F and set up Ken
rlosing season in 13 years as a , was a defenSive victory and the Brown's one-yard run for the
head coach, refused to alibi for offense came up with the big go-ahead sCore with a 30-yard
his team. "The Raiders con- plays."
pasa to Bo Scott. O.J. SIIDpson
trolled the line of scrimmage
Other Games
had 93 yards for Buffalo to go
from the start and it was hard
Elsewhere, Cleveland ripped over the I,OOO.yard mark.
to get it back. They played very Buffalo, 27-10, the New York Norm Snead threw three TO
well. We just got beat."
GiaDI'L humiliated passes and reserve quarRookie sensation Franco Pltiladelphia, 62·10, New terWclt Randy Johnson threw
Harris scored one touchdown Orleans stunned Los Angeles, for two scores and ran for
and ~~ up another with a 67- 19-16, Atlanta topped Denver, another as the Giants set a club
yard run to lead the Steelers• 23-20, Cincmnati defeated scoring mark with their victory
upset of Minnesota which just Chicago, 13-3, San Die~o over the Eagles.
about killed the Vikings' NFC clubbed Houston, '34-20 and
Happy Feller's 33-yard field
Central playoff chances. Baltimore trounced New En- goal with silt: seconds left gave
Hams ran 12 yards for Pitts- gland, 3l.j), St. Louis is at New Orleans its upset of the
burgh's first TO and wtth the Miami tonight.
Rams and Bob Berry passed
score tied at 10-10, he dashed 67
Mike
Phipps
rallied for one TO and set up two more
yards to the Viking one, where Cleveland from a I~ deficit to m Atlanta's come.frombehlnd
Terry Brsdshaw plunged over.
Bradshaw added an insurance
TD with a 17-yard screen pass
to Frank Lewis.

NFL Standings

Trip to Europe shown on slides

Rio offering
study ,,...e

'\:\F;.,wr::

" '~

down passes and WaShington's
defense harrassed young
Green Bay quarterbacks into
errQ&lt;S to beat the Packers. The
victory gave the Redakins a
twQ.f:ame lead in the NFC East
and assured them of a playoff.
slot while the Packers fell into
a tie for the NFC Central lead
with Detroit, which beat th~
New York Jets Thanksgiving
Day.
Oakland Beats Rivals
Oakland, humiliated by a 21·
141oss to the Chiefs at Kansas
City earlier this sea!lon, beat
their bitter rivals physically
Sunday. Daryle Lamonica
threw two .TO passes, Charlie
Smith ran for one score and
George Blanda kicked two field

UCLA makes

II 00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, 13
10.30- Johnn? Carson 3, 4, IS, Virginian 8; Comedy News 6,
Movie "Spencer's Mountain" 10; Movie " Deadline U S.A."
13
1 00 - Your Health
1:30- News 4, 13.

33 Die in Ohio's bloody

Thanksgiv;ing 4 holidays

BY JOE CARNICEUJ
UPI Sports Writer
Washington got ita Wish,
Oakland got its revenge and
Pitl,ilburgh got just a little
closer Sunday.
That was the result of the
three Diggest games of the day
in National Football League
action as the Washington
Redskins clinched a playoff
slot with a 21-16 victory over
the Atlanta Falcons, the
Oakland Raiders avenged an
earlier loss to Kansas City with
a 211-J rout of the Chiefs and the
Pittaburgh Steelers set up a
showdown for their first title in
40 Y~ by upending the
Minnesota Vlkings, 23-10.
Bill Kilmer threw two touch--

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1972
5 30-Eiec Co. 33: Marshall Dillon tS ; Dragnet&amp;; Gomer Pyle
13. Hodqepod!le lodqe 20.
6:0Q-News 3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; News t3, 15; Around
the Bend 33: Sesame St. 20.
6. 30-NBC News 3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; CBS News 8, tO;
Halhayoga 33; I Dream of Jeannie 13.
7·oo-News 6; Circus! 13; Insight 33: Whars My Line 8: Read
Your Way Up 33: Elec. Co. 20; Saint 15; Billy Graham
Crusade 3; Little Women 4.
7:30-To Tell the Truth 6; Traffic CourtlO; Episode Action 33:
Hollywood Squares 4, Young Dr. Kildare 8, Hodgepodge
Lodae 20. Tarzan's Secret Treasure 13.
s·oo-Gunsmoke 10; Row.an &amp; Marlin's Laugh-In 3, 4; UFO 6:
Billy Graham Crusade S, 10.
.
9 DO-Here's Lucy 8. 10. Pro Football 6, 13; Movie "The Private
Navy of Sgf O'Farrell" 3, 4, 15.

Helen Help

''

So personally popular anJ' p&lt;~lticaii_Y''~~~~ ~rful .
11 as President Jackson that \ 'an Buren "as an easy
1 ictor m the election of l H36 against four Whig_,
candidates.
'\e,crthelcss , on March 4, 1837, 11hcn .\mire\\
Jackson rode .d&lt;lll n Pennsyh·ania \1enuc to the
Capitol to sec Van Buren maugurated President,
so great 11 as the contrast her\\ ecn the polite
applause th.tt greeted the dandyish \ 'an Buren and
the "thunderclaps" that greeted the rnugh-hewn
Jackson that Sen. Thomas H Benton of .\llissouri
was mm ed to remark:
"For once, the rising 11 as eclipsed by the scttmg
:-~un.

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Bulldogs 61-47

to break a 38-game losmg
streak. Hannan Trace ts led by
three tall returmng lettermen,
Mike Caldwell, 6·6 senior
forward ; Don Wells, 6-5 juniOr
center and John Lusher, 6-()
jumor. guard .
The· Wildcats fimshed in
fourth place last season w1th a
5-7 league mark and 9-9 slate
overall.
The . Highlanders' returning

lettermen are Mike Dillon, f&gt;-10
senior forward ; Ron Stephens,
5-11 senior center; Phil Lewis,
6-l junior forward ; Larry
Frasher, 5·9 junior guard;
Mike Crouse, 5-7 junior guard
and sophomores, Kevin
Walker, 5-10 forward; poyd
Wood, S.l center and Terry
Carter, f&gt;-9 guard.
Action hegins at 6:30 p.m.
with the reserve game.

I

BUFFET
•

DINING
TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5lo9. 30- S2.50all you can eat, (or Ala Cartel .

Wide Menu
Choice
-

Drlnksand
Dessert Extra.

order""' regUlar menu every nlgfif slo to,

-The-·M.EIGS -INN -•

PH. 992-3629

POMEROY

�•

•

;

•
,.

,.

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov . 27,1972

.

•

..

~ - Tile Dally Sentinel; Midcleport-POineroy, 0 ., Nov: 27, 1972

.Miss Biddle honored

.

I Social II

. .

•

'A .bridal shower honoring

Robert Molden. Mrs. Wayne
1!1iss Joy!'! Anli Biddle. bride- . Turner, Mrs. Jerry Eads, Mrs.
elect Rodney Davis, was held . Clarence Lambert. Mrs. Chet
recently at thr home or Mrs. f!ougland, Mrs. Rumileld,
Kenneth Davis, Rutland . Miss Opal Dyer, Miss Patti
· Hostesses were Mrs. Sally Dyer, Miss Brenda Lee Holter,
Lambert a n~ Mrs. Maxine Miss Donna Lambert, Mrs.
Dyer.
Uoyd Biddle, Miss Natalie
The door prize was awarded Lambert, Mrs. William Buck,
to Mrs. Jerry Eads and Mrs. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis.
Homer Parker and Mrs. Gary
Others prese~ti ng girts to
Holter won the game prizes. Miss Biddle were Mrs. Eugene
.Attending the showe r besides _Fink, Mrs. Lillie Robinson,·
those named were Mrs. Basil · Mrs . Harold Rice , Mrs.
Crem~ans., Mrs. Pearl Hysell, William fjobstetter, Mrs.
Mrs. Bruce May, Mrs, 'E,rnest Robert Canaday, Mrs~ •Edna
Molden, Mrs. Nic~ · Grueser, Russe ll, Mrs. Allan Gibson,
Mrs . Jim Carpenter, Mrs. Mrs. Bill Carter, Mrs. Carol
Milton Hood, Mrs. Worley Hysell, Mrs. Harold Hysell,
Davis, Mrs. Arvil Holter, Mrs. Mrs. Carl Nichols, Mrs. F;ileen .
Hawkins, Mrs. Mary Beard,
Mrs. Victor Braley, Miss Edna
Swick, Mrs: Robert Davis,
Mrs. Curtis Riffle, Mrs. Uoyd
You with qua lity and va lue is
Wright, Miss Janice Biddle,
our· aim!
Mrs. Donald Kennedy, Miss
Brenda Turner, Mrs. Perry
COME IN,
Kennedy, Mrs. John Hood,
WE'LL PROV E IT!
Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Mr·s.
Purl Van Meter, Mrs. Richard
Grueser,
Mrs.
Robert
Hawkins, Mrs. Janet Mm-ris,
DRESS SHOP
Mrs. Eileen Thompson, and
Mrs. James Hood .
POMEROY

I

'

..

'.•
'I •

.~ .

il:

l'o ndidate.

...

•
•

.N. w.

•

liable, or commercially feasible. When a solution·is found
we will adopt it promptly. In fact, even now the engineering arid design work for· the installation of a major new
sulfur removal system is nearing completion, and we
hope to start its construction within the next few months.
Until a commercia.l 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.

How can the American Electric Power System burn
30,000,000 tons of coal a year and be an environmentalist? The dictionary defines an environmentalist as one
concerned with "the total of ecological, social and cultural conditions .that influence the life of a community."
On the ecological side, we recognized th.e absolute
necessity for concern about the environment when we
started installing smoke and dust collecting systems on
our stacks more than 30 years ago.
On the social side, which takes in jobs, wages, and an increasing standard of living, we also knew that it would be
an absolute necessity to provide 16 times more power to
meet 1972's power requirements. The conflict between
the need for protection of the environment on one hand
and the need for more power production (and its attendant pollution potential) on the other was an enormous
problem-and still is.
But, we've come a long way in finding and applying solu~

\I

"'\t

1···- -·

tion~. We'v~talr_~·aQb' ~SJlen ' One-Q:!;l.Me,f-Q.~I·I iPfJII dl~ :llar$

e;r·1','

envtronmentaH mprovemehts. Our concern, however, I·S
best shown by describing just a few of the things we have
been doing to protect our air, land and water.

Air Pollution Control. All 36 coal-fired generating units
built on the AEP System since 1950 have included 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
ever since. We've proposed to regula-.
tory bodies the expenditure of some
tr,
$52 million for pollution control equipII' · ·
ment in 1973 alone.
The cost to upgrade some old generating units cannot be justified from our
customers' viewpoint. These
units 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 collection systems available.
Research. We are determined to find answers to the unsolved problems associated with
removal of sulfur oxides from plant stacks. This is the
major objective of our air quality research program.
At this time, no known sulfur oxide removal system is re-

.

.

,

coOPTOMETRIST
. PTOC~, · 0.0~

OFF(CE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 T0 5 (CLOSE
:AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.

"!.'----------..1

~Y....

p M

ContributionS r--~---~-:--.~.
·arc made

Green
.
. Thumb
.

_.,.

Contributions
to
the
Southeoslern Ohio Mental
Hea lth Center at Athens for
('Operation Santa Claus,'' to
the Racine Firmen, and to
UNICEF were made at a
meeting of the Racine Grange
he ld Wednesday nigh! at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl

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

Christmas Trees

Cr uss .

·

The business meeting
followed a turkey dinner attended by the grange members
and guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Holter, Akron. A pig-ina-poke auction sale proceeds
were added to the treasury.
Celebrated was the golden
wedding anniversary or Mr.
and Mrs. Garrell Circle who
were presented a gift and a
wedding cake in the shape of a
pianO.
Mrs . Le la · Easterday
repor·ted on a telephone call ·
from Mrs . Edna Boroughs '
Walburn in Colorado, and it
was noted that C. S. Morris and
Mrs. Harold Carna han are ill.
Next meeting will be held on
Dec. 13.

TUF.SDAY
·JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Middleport hall.
FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS
Club Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Charles Werry. Members to
take articles for an auction.
AMER ICAN LEGION
Auxiliary , Drew Webster Post
39, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at hall.
Covered dish to be ta ken, meat
'furn ished by hos tess commi ttee . .Initiation or new
members.
RACINE AMER ICA·N
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at halL
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Cha pte r OES, 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday, home of Mrs. Dale
Smith, Spring Ave., Pomeroy .
SOUT HERN
BAND
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the hig h schooL There will be
entertainment and a guest
speaker. Band members are
inv ited to attend.

lOLA'S

~

Calendar!

MUNDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCil. 46,
Hoyal and Select · Masters,
' pccialme&lt;!ting, Monday 7:30
jun . P0111eroy
Masonic
Temple, to confer royal and
select master degree on one

PLEASING

•
•

'' {?t$~~~~

I

tbe

FOR lUG l)ISCOUNT SAVINGS'

.700 W. Main - Pomeroy

. · » to 9 Daily~unday 1-9

·.

PRACTICAL GIFTS
FOR YOUR
Shop The Fr~endly One~ .

4 fOOl• 8 FOOT
PA NEl

Cooling Towers. Power plants use large amounts of
water to cool steam, raising the water's temperature as
it is returned to its source. If the river or lake is too small,
the return of the water might, under some circumstances,
be harmful. Cooling towers cool the water in a "cl_osed
circuit" system which eliminates warm water discharge.
The AEP System pioneered the use of natural draft, hyperbolic cooling· towah in thi :eeu·ntry ... we.'ve 15uilt ten ..,•
1
of "these towers at 'prants located on rivers· where the
quantity of water was insufficient to prevent thermal
buildup. Three more are under construction. We are constantly studying the effects of warm water discharge and
our present program of ecologicai · research on Lake
Michigan, started in 1966, is the most comprehensive
" such study ever conducted under utility sponsorship.

'•

'.'

••
r,'•

..•

SALE
,
PRICE ,

;•
q

•,,

'

649

BIR.CH VENEER

j~

'r

»
~~
~··
J ~·

LAU,I\N

G

~~
·;

Shelf Kit

'"

INClUDES:
. 2 - l!I " •U' SHHVE S
, SIANOAROS
• BR.i.CKUS
• AIIACHMENIS

.,.

f.~~

, WH EAT

.~,'

, CA RAMEl

:I .~,,

J'~

·~
[~

SALE

PRICE

., rj

MAHOGANY
SHELVES
3/~

INC H •II INCH
• 2-4 INCH

REG. 10.95

YOUR CHOICE
&lt;l' • 8' PANH

J

g~z.

589

OTHER SIZES
AYA ILA8lE

C/ H

f''

Land Conservation. With the ever-increasing
need for electric power, the problem of
delivering 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
30 times more power than earlier
138,000-volt lines. In terms of land
conservation, one 200 foot rightof-way for a 765,000~vplt line c~n
do the same job that 30 rightsof-way did 20 years ago.

..·~·

I '

p~

S.t·tm~

''
. t.••I

3-1/ 2 FOOT

'..

BURLAP

BULLETIN BOARDS

,.

.. .

DOOLEY

99ti1!H

Shtl.'"' or• r•ody to flol•h to fit
onr d"or. In natural or walnut

c

'·

.:t
TY~E

Ill

DU TY

~ATIN G

200 liS,

17 1NCH •

25 INCH

•

REG. 4.99
C/N

p.,J,(;r

&lt;l:Y••N·~

Md:.;:r~~:~,'::"•.

W ide, nor~ slip sleps. Fo lds to J"
flol .

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 living.

elOOCJ, FREE.O·FROST
t TWO AUTO-' ATIC CONTROLS
.• TWO BIG CRISPERS

497

]97

P~ sl ' y o ur notiett on thou· ~o lorlu l
unfln i1h uU pinewood framed
bwn.h .

REGULAR
4.95

DOOR
MIRROR

Choose From
Copper, Gold
or Avocado

16 1HCH 1
60 INCH •

1'1/(J t/! IS

~~~E 1Q88

Now! Lay It Away

' " " ,,.,,. 1\f

5-LIGHT

HAMILTO N

SINGER

-· '

2188

Stolloped cl1ar glou &lt;himney1 .
b10U o1ms, wolnul 'te m. tLeu
bul bs).

SET OF

EXTENSION CORDS
'6FT.• 9 FT.· 12 FT.

•

,

CHANDELIER
REG.
33.95

und Piro lts ploqu .. p•r

~II .

1/2 HORSEPOWER

DISPOSER

UNDER-CABINET

LIGHT

REG.
1.69

.'

. ''

' '
;.•

·'

·'
''

l'

.

Bank Rate

. F'mancing

*

• f

'fl

()pen'

lt

'I·
'
••
••J
•'••

,,...:

'l}j

~~~~
~

..

'•

·'
:~
1/.;
H o'

~•
DEPO•IT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT 1912 PINTO
•
ToBeGiven
Awey

GifT IIOfWaA

STORE~

fridlyand

'

'

.SlluntaJ .

WIITER
DRAFTS!
r .....,.l..t P111t1o
For

rmKits
WINDOWS DOORS
And

STORM
WINDOW

~

STORM

~ OOOR KIT

;.~.~~~~~:l;;:~r.~-::
"c

t ic shMt. ll lt. tlM
$hMt, 21 lt. libN'
moutdl"' and Milt.
mou411nt and n1111.

·worp. - · ClllciiO 10611
PtOMII'S IIi Plntk:t l4ncl 1924

NWds

.

AT YOUR HARDWARE, LUMBER
'

&amp; .BUILDING SUPPLY STORE ·
'

REG. 59.95

......~~~·-.,...

J ·ou tlat tordl. or• a
shopplr19 li1t I

~US T

on

REG.
6.29

488

0 Whiirlaw•J'
Quiat op•rollon!

Ch romt~ lored

tvrnlob l• orw.:l t)alnltss 1t.t1l
lmpallen.

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO•
''Tfie Department Store of Buildiiitf . Since 1915"

~--------------~-------'

!

I

�•

•

;

•
,.

,.

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov . 27,1972

.

•

..

~ - Tile Dally Sentinel; Midcleport-POineroy, 0 ., Nov: 27, 1972

.Miss Biddle honored

.

I Social II

. .

•

'A .bridal shower honoring

Robert Molden. Mrs. Wayne
1!1iss Joy!'! Anli Biddle. bride- . Turner, Mrs. Jerry Eads, Mrs.
elect Rodney Davis, was held . Clarence Lambert. Mrs. Chet
recently at thr home or Mrs. f!ougland, Mrs. Rumileld,
Kenneth Davis, Rutland . Miss Opal Dyer, Miss Patti
· Hostesses were Mrs. Sally Dyer, Miss Brenda Lee Holter,
Lambert a n~ Mrs. Maxine Miss Donna Lambert, Mrs.
Dyer.
Uoyd Biddle, Miss Natalie
The door prize was awarded Lambert, Mrs. William Buck,
to Mrs. Jerry Eads and Mrs. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis.
Homer Parker and Mrs. Gary
Others prese~ti ng girts to
Holter won the game prizes. Miss Biddle were Mrs. Eugene
.Attending the showe r besides _Fink, Mrs. Lillie Robinson,·
those named were Mrs. Basil · Mrs . Harold Rice , Mrs.
Crem~ans., Mrs. Pearl Hysell, William fjobstetter, Mrs.
Mrs. Bruce May, Mrs, 'E,rnest Robert Canaday, Mrs~ •Edna
Molden, Mrs. Nic~ · Grueser, Russe ll, Mrs. Allan Gibson,
Mrs . Jim Carpenter, Mrs. Mrs. Bill Carter, Mrs. Carol
Milton Hood, Mrs. Worley Hysell, Mrs. Harold Hysell,
Davis, Mrs. Arvil Holter, Mrs. Mrs. Carl Nichols, Mrs. F;ileen .
Hawkins, Mrs. Mary Beard,
Mrs. Victor Braley, Miss Edna
Swick, Mrs: Robert Davis,
Mrs. Curtis Riffle, Mrs. Uoyd
You with qua lity and va lue is
Wright, Miss Janice Biddle,
our· aim!
Mrs. Donald Kennedy, Miss
Brenda Turner, Mrs. Perry
COME IN,
Kennedy, Mrs. John Hood,
WE'LL PROV E IT!
Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Mr·s.
Purl Van Meter, Mrs. Richard
Grueser,
Mrs.
Robert
Hawkins, Mrs. Janet Mm-ris,
DRESS SHOP
Mrs. Eileen Thompson, and
Mrs. James Hood .
POMEROY

I

'

..

'.•
'I •

.~ .

il:

l'o ndidate.

...

•
•

.N. w.

•

liable, or commercially feasible. When a solution·is found
we will adopt it promptly. In fact, even now the engineering arid design work for· the installation of a major new
sulfur removal system is nearing completion, and we
hope to start its construction within the next few months.
Until a commercia.l 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.

How can the American Electric Power System burn
30,000,000 tons of coal a year and be an environmentalist? The dictionary defines an environmentalist as one
concerned with "the total of ecological, social and cultural conditions .that influence the life of a community."
On the ecological side, we recognized th.e absolute
necessity for concern about the environment when we
started installing smoke and dust collecting systems on
our stacks more than 30 years ago.
On the social side, which takes in jobs, wages, and an increasing standard of living, we also knew that it would be
an absolute necessity to provide 16 times more power to
meet 1972's power requirements. The conflict between
the need for protection of the environment on one hand
and the need for more power production (and its attendant pollution potential) on the other was an enormous
problem-and still is.
But, we've come a long way in finding and applying solu~

\I

"'\t

1···- -·

tion~. We'v~talr_~·aQb' ~SJlen ' One-Q:!;l.Me,f-Q.~I·I iPfJII dl~ :llar$

e;r·1','

envtronmentaH mprovemehts. Our concern, however, I·S
best shown by describing just a few of the things we have
been doing to protect our air, land and water.

Air Pollution Control. All 36 coal-fired generating units
built on the AEP System since 1950 have included 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
ever since. We've proposed to regula-.
tory bodies the expenditure of some
tr,
$52 million for pollution control equipII' · ·
ment in 1973 alone.
The cost to upgrade some old generating units cannot be justified from our
customers' viewpoint. These
units 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 collection systems available.
Research. We are determined to find answers to the unsolved problems associated with
removal of sulfur oxides from plant stacks. This is the
major objective of our air quality research program.
At this time, no known sulfur oxide removal system is re-

.

.

,

coOPTOMETRIST
. PTOC~, · 0.0~

OFF(CE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 T0 5 (CLOSE
:AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.

"!.'----------..1

~Y....

p M

ContributionS r--~---~-:--.~.
·arc made

Green
.
. Thumb
.

_.,.

Contributions
to
the
Southeoslern Ohio Mental
Hea lth Center at Athens for
('Operation Santa Claus,'' to
the Racine Firmen, and to
UNICEF were made at a
meeting of the Racine Grange
he ld Wednesday nigh! at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl

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

Christmas Trees

Cr uss .

·

The business meeting
followed a turkey dinner attended by the grange members
and guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Holter, Akron. A pig-ina-poke auction sale proceeds
were added to the treasury.
Celebrated was the golden
wedding anniversary or Mr.
and Mrs. Garrell Circle who
were presented a gift and a
wedding cake in the shape of a
pianO.
Mrs . Le la · Easterday
repor·ted on a telephone call ·
from Mrs . Edna Boroughs '
Walburn in Colorado, and it
was noted that C. S. Morris and
Mrs. Harold Carna han are ill.
Next meeting will be held on
Dec. 13.

TUF.SDAY
·JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Middleport hall.
FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS
Club Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Charles Werry. Members to
take articles for an auction.
AMER ICAN LEGION
Auxiliary , Drew Webster Post
39, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at hall.
Covered dish to be ta ken, meat
'furn ished by hos tess commi ttee . .Initiation or new
members.
RACINE AMER ICA·N
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at halL
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Cha pte r OES, 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday, home of Mrs. Dale
Smith, Spring Ave., Pomeroy .
SOUT HERN
BAND
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the hig h schooL There will be
entertainment and a guest
speaker. Band members are
inv ited to attend.

lOLA'S

~

Calendar!

MUNDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCil. 46,
Hoyal and Select · Masters,
' pccialme&lt;!ting, Monday 7:30
jun . P0111eroy
Masonic
Temple, to confer royal and
select master degree on one

PLEASING

•
•

'' {?t$~~~~

I

tbe

FOR lUG l)ISCOUNT SAVINGS'

.700 W. Main - Pomeroy

. · » to 9 Daily~unday 1-9

·.

PRACTICAL GIFTS
FOR YOUR
Shop The Fr~endly One~ .

4 fOOl• 8 FOOT
PA NEl

Cooling Towers. Power plants use large amounts of
water to cool steam, raising the water's temperature as
it is returned to its source. If the river or lake is too small,
the return of the water might, under some circumstances,
be harmful. Cooling towers cool the water in a "cl_osed
circuit" system which eliminates warm water discharge.
The AEP System pioneered the use of natural draft, hyperbolic cooling· towah in thi :eeu·ntry ... we.'ve 15uilt ten ..,•
1
of "these towers at 'prants located on rivers· where the
quantity of water was insufficient to prevent thermal
buildup. Three more are under construction. We are constantly studying the effects of warm water discharge and
our present program of ecologicai · research on Lake
Michigan, started in 1966, is the most comprehensive
" such study ever conducted under utility sponsorship.

'•

'.'

••
r,'•

..•

SALE
,
PRICE ,

;•
q

•,,

'

649

BIR.CH VENEER

j~

'r

»
~~
~··
J ~·

LAU,I\N

G

~~
·;

Shelf Kit

'"

INClUDES:
. 2 - l!I " •U' SHHVE S
, SIANOAROS
• BR.i.CKUS
• AIIACHMENIS

.,.

f.~~

, WH EAT

.~,'

, CA RAMEl

:I .~,,

J'~

·~
[~

SALE

PRICE

., rj

MAHOGANY
SHELVES
3/~

INC H •II INCH
• 2-4 INCH

REG. 10.95

YOUR CHOICE
&lt;l' • 8' PANH

J

g~z.

589

OTHER SIZES
AYA ILA8lE

C/ H

f''

Land Conservation. With the ever-increasing
need for electric power, the problem of
delivering 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
30 times more power than earlier
138,000-volt lines. In terms of land
conservation, one 200 foot rightof-way for a 765,000~vplt line c~n
do the same job that 30 rightsof-way did 20 years ago.

..·~·

I '

p~

S.t·tm~

''
. t.••I

3-1/ 2 FOOT

'..

BURLAP

BULLETIN BOARDS

,.

.. .

DOOLEY

99ti1!H

Shtl.'"' or• r•ody to flol•h to fit
onr d"or. In natural or walnut

c

'·

.:t
TY~E

Ill

DU TY

~ATIN G

200 liS,

17 1NCH •

25 INCH

•

REG. 4.99
C/N

p.,J,(;r

&lt;l:Y••N·~

Md:.;:r~~:~,'::"•.

W ide, nor~ slip sleps. Fo lds to J"
flol .

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 living.

elOOCJ, FREE.O·FROST
t TWO AUTO-' ATIC CONTROLS
.• TWO BIG CRISPERS

497

]97

P~ sl ' y o ur notiett on thou· ~o lorlu l
unfln i1h uU pinewood framed
bwn.h .

REGULAR
4.95

DOOR
MIRROR

Choose From
Copper, Gold
or Avocado

16 1HCH 1
60 INCH •

1'1/(J t/! IS

~~~E 1Q88

Now! Lay It Away

' " " ,,.,,. 1\f

5-LIGHT

HAMILTO N

SINGER

-· '

2188

Stolloped cl1ar glou &lt;himney1 .
b10U o1ms, wolnul 'te m. tLeu
bul bs).

SET OF

EXTENSION CORDS
'6FT.• 9 FT.· 12 FT.

•

,

CHANDELIER
REG.
33.95

und Piro lts ploqu .. p•r

~II .

1/2 HORSEPOWER

DISPOSER

UNDER-CABINET

LIGHT

REG.
1.69

.'

. ''

' '
;.•

·'

·'
''

l'

.

Bank Rate

. F'mancing

*

• f

'fl

()pen'

lt

'I·
'
••
••J
•'••

,,...:

'l}j

~~~~
~

..

'•

·'
:~
1/.;
H o'

~•
DEPO•IT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT 1912 PINTO
•
ToBeGiven
Awey

GifT IIOfWaA

STORE~

fridlyand

'

'

.SlluntaJ .

WIITER
DRAFTS!
r .....,.l..t P111t1o
For

rmKits
WINDOWS DOORS
And

STORM
WINDOW

~

STORM

~ OOOR KIT

;.~.~~~~~:l;;:~r.~-::
"c

t ic shMt. ll lt. tlM
$hMt, 21 lt. libN'
moutdl"' and Milt.
mou411nt and n1111.

·worp. - · ClllciiO 10611
PtOMII'S IIi Plntk:t l4ncl 1924

NWds

.

AT YOUR HARDWARE, LUMBER
'

&amp; .BUILDING SUPPLY STORE ·
'

REG. 59.95

......~~~·-.,...

J ·ou tlat tordl. or• a
shopplr19 li1t I

~US T

on

REG.
6.29

488

0 Whiirlaw•J'
Quiat op•rollon!

Ch romt~ lored

tvrnlob l• orw.:l t)alnltss 1t.t1l
lmpallen.

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO•
''Tfie Department Store of Buildiiitf . Since 1915"

~--------------~-------'

!

I

�i·

'
UllHii

&amp;-The DallySentinei,Mldcleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 'll, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Ac.tion! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!'
WIN AT BRIDGE

Makes His
Own Breaks

Pomeroy
Motor co.·

ZSIGNS

@.IUAlllY
Of

$1599

1911 PINTO FORD

2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage. good fires, clean interior , green fini sh, radl~, 2000cc engine, 4-speed.

NORTH
.961
¥J92
tQ762
.AK7

.

$1795

1970 FORD GALAX IE 500

. WEST
EAST
• .Q75
.J83
¥K4
¥AQ 753
tJ854
tl09
.J954
.1063
SOUTH (D)
.AK102
¥1086
tAK3

•Qu

North-South vulnerable
Weal · North Eat South
lN.T.
Pass · 3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead-• 4
By O•wald &amp; James Jaeoby
Oswald: "There are two
ways for South to play today's band. The first is the
conservative w·a y. South
looks over dummy and sees
that the heart suit is wide
open against 111m. He tries
to cash the first nine tricks,
but when diamonds fail to
break he can only collect

eight."

Hardtop coupe, V-B engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white finish, black vinyl top,
vinyl Inferior, whlte.wall tires. llke new, radio.

1968 CHEVELLE
51695
Mallilu sport coupe, air cond llloned, 307 engine, power
sle!)ring, power brakes, red lin ish with black vinyl top and
black vinvl Interior, radio, good white.wall

tlrP.~.

·Po111eroy Motor Co.

MOBILE Home with lot and 35 COPPERTONE double oven
II . patio; Albert Hill , Racine. stove, like new, SlSO; phone
949-2261.
992-6796 after 6 p.m. or 992·
11 ·26-7tc 5187 any lime.
11 -19-ffc

beds, or complete households.
Write .M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6-28-tlc

OPEN EVIL 1:00 P.M.
i'GII!ROY, OHIO

- - - -- ---'.Help Wanted

WANT ADS.
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

LEGAL NOTICE

8-3 to R-•.

wurmay

(MIWS,APIR ENTEIPliSI ASSN.)

The bidding has been:
WMI North
Eat

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
oblect ronal.
The .
pub lisher will not be responsible ·
for more than one incorrect
insertion ."

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con ·secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Dlscoun.t on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days

11 -24-Jic

- - ···-- ···

low

wrnte.r prices ; furnaces,

S87.50 ; porta-potties, 585 ;
awnings and hitches 20 pet.

SPEND TIME
SAVES's

ott ; Camr Conley Starcrall
Sales, R . 62 N of Point
Pleasant behind Red Carpel

Carrier Needed
•
m
Syracuse

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

Inn.

11-22-31c

Rt ..7 "at caution light"
TUPPERS PLAINS

Apples, all kinds. Ap.l'
plebutler and applebutter
apples.

Free Cider &amp; An
Apple To Everyone

Care -Free
Party
Pr.eparations 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.
CALL 992-5786

Sentinel
992-2156

"HEll"

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
CONTROL
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work
::j,~·

~RMQLO - ...

BROTHERS

with their agreement to con .

992-2448
HAYMAN'S Auction - a QoOd

ctalned that this Ordinance Is

evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel

Pomeroy. 0.
place

to

Qo

each

tachments, cordwinder and

Fnday

yoar partnership methods. take effect and

be In force from

We oU,htly favor the two IIO· and after November 13, 1912.
Passed the 13th da'f' of •
Inunp call.

November 197'2.
TODA \''S QUESTION
David W. Ohlinger
You do bid lwo no-trump and
President of Council
your partner jumps to four no- Attest : Gene Grate
Clerk
trump. What do you do now?

Answer tomorrow

1111 27 (121 4, 2t

S..d SI lot JACOIY MODERN hoolc
ro: uw;, , ·a,;J,.," (c/o tllit ""''" - -- - - - -- - - /101M''· P.O. Jox 419, Roflio Cit)
ORDINANCE NO. 990-72
Station, Now York, N.y. 10019.
An Ordln•nce to ESTABLISH

looal Bowling

A SPECIAL FUND KNOWN AS
THE FEDERAL GENERAL
REVENUE SHARING TRUST
FUND

Pomeroy 8owlifl9 Lones
Be It ordained by the Council
Saturday St11ior League
of the VIllage of Middleport. as
Nov. ,., . 1972
follOws :
.
.
." Sec . L That w.hereas , the
Standings
Pis. Congress has enacted the State
Team
and Local Fiscal Assistance Act
26
Gutter Dusters
of 1972 providing a system ot
20°12 general revenue sharing with
Pin Crushers
17112 states and units of local
Dlfi9·A· Lings
15112
Born Losers
government, and
Whereas, Section 12J (aJ (1)
Pin Busters
15'12
of the federal act requires each
13
Herbie's
unit of local povernment to
High Individual Game establish
a trust fund to receive
Rich Bailey, 167.
federal
revenue
sharlhg, and
Second High Ind. Game Whereas. the- Sure-au of In Melanie Burl 166.
spection and Supervision of
High Series - Rich Bailey Public Offices has approved the
46.
establishment of a '' Federel
Second Hlqh Series General Revenue Sharing Trust
Fund" In each municipal
Me!onle Burt 438.
Team High Game - Gutter co"rporatlon recelv' t ng
assistance under the federal
Dusters 795.
act, a5 -•required bv sectlot~
Team High" Series - Pin 5705.12,
of the Ohio Revised
Crushers 2224. ·
Code:
Now Therefore 6e 11 Ordained

by lhe Council of-the Village of
. Middleport, State of Ohio that :
Saturday Junior League
Sec . II . There Is hereby
Nov. 11, 1972
established
a special fund to be
Standings
known as the "Federal General
Pis.
T~om
,
Revenue Sharing Trust Fund "
24
Ball Busters
under the provisions of section
23
Impacts
5705.12 Of the Ohio Rev ised
"Drdmers
16'h Code.
16
Sec . 111. All monies paid to the
Alley Cat•

VIllage under the State and
Local Fiscal Assistance Act of
1972 shall be credited to seld
fund and expended in IC ·
cordance wilh the terms and
provisions of said federal act.
Sec . IV . This ordinance Is
hereb~ declared to be an
tmergencv measure neceaury
439.
Second High Series ,- Chuck for the preserva~ion of
the public· p1ace, health ,
Follrod ol39.
safety
and welfare, such
TNm High Game- Impacts
emerotnc:v arising out of
.
need . to
provide
TNm Hlgb Series - Impacts athelawful
fund Into which
2557.
ffderal general revenue sharing
' payments can be crtdlted for
PARTY SET
exptndlturtl In the manner and

~ches

14112

14
Rams
High Individual Game Chuck Follrod 118.
Second High· Ind. Game Dick Owen IN.
HIQh Sarles - Steve Bachner

.... ,

......
an-·-· Chrlltmas party
.,,. ,....

""the
' Put ~·--'1 - Club 'Of

"'

lor tht purposes provided under
the Slate end Local Fiscal
Aaslstanct

~ct

of

1972 ;

"""'"""""
whortlort this ordinance shall
Daallhtera of tokt ollect and btln Ioree from
•--&lt;- wiD be held on Dec · and after Its passage.
--·
·
Soc . V. This Ordlnonco shall
II at
llltlwoad Ill Belpre. tiki tlllct and bl In lorca from
p
t tin a to be IJIIIde . 1nd lfttr Nov1mbtr 13, 1912.
. ..-., u-. a..-.
....,.
Polled lho 13th dly of
.,... 7 wnn .u·• •-••1 Novtmbtr 1972.
u- • ....._. ancluDav!dW.Ohllngor
!"
_.., __.
"""'
President of Council
11aJ11 ol TheGtlorUI Attest : Gent Grift

Dlltrlcl 13,

a.

....!JIL

·~==-~~will

do

table

Clark
(Ill 27 !12) • 21

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

and Tuesday

evenin~s;

phone

Mobile Homes For Sale

and 3 in . heavy material ,
sheeting and cherry stair

railing ; ca ll 992-5946 or 882·
3219.
11 -10-ttc

985·4141 for appomlmenl; CASH paid for all makes and
operat or, Sandra Trussell
Kerns.

11 -26-12tc

models of mob i le homes .

Phone area code 614-423-95ol .
4-13-ffc
ON PANTS&amp; JEANS

Open to 7; closed Mondays.

SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS .
CLEANED, · REPAIRED.
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART. OHI0. PHONE
662-3035.

operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

REALTY

~K ON A CAR!:ER

PISIJARREI'/

REAbS.!

iN POLmcs.

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

lHE SHO!J

From the largest T ...;..
Bulldozer Radiator
Small~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radia.tor Specialist_

Le:i"Dicic and Date
_with_ Your M _e at

SMlTH NELSON

9!~9RS, ~~!:roy

Phone 949-3221.

11 -22-301c

You

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094 '

606 E~ Main

SOit,E

Pomeroy

.

OFFICE SUPPLIES

601 E. Meln

DON'T BUY AT
INFLATED PRICES.
SEE US TODAY FOR
YOUR BEST BUY
IN REAL ESTATE.

MANY PROPERTIES TO
CHOOSE FROM .
WANT YOUR PEOPERTY '
ADVERTISED OR SOLD?
IF YOU WANT IT SOLO
CONTACT US TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-2259 if no answer 992-2568

In

We talk to JOU
!ike a

·WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

~'/ YoA.'LL.

7H..WMEF.R

MAI&lt;IN' VA PR.ACI'IC&amp;'
VIR. VIOL.IN INS"TV.D
0' PLAYIN' FOO'TIIAU..
Wt'TW iH' t&lt;IDSl

WINNIE WlNKLE

and

~

WIN,JERRY .
I!LL 11\LK 10 MR.
PLATT, BUT I
DOU5T IF HE. ~LL
5E INTERE:;rED.

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

·. ·.EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, land- .
scapilfg. We hove 2 sire , ·
dozers, 2 size loaders. Wor~
done by hour or contr~ct.
Free Esttm·ates. We also ·
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hir~ .
See Bob or Roger ·Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9925232. .
ponds.,

'· •

Tedford,.,,Sr. •..
Broker
110 Mechanic St.

... Pomeroy

I WILL make baby doll clothes, MOBILE home located on large
by the order for Christmas;
lot. Main Street, Rulland ;
phone 992-7537.
phone
992-6615.
·
11 -26-3fc
Buy 2
HENRY E. CLELAND, Jr.
ll -24-31c
.._...,., Pairs
Salesman 985-4209
SKATE-A-Way Holiday Par.
'
.I .PAIR FREE
lies; Thanksgiving, Dec. lsi, 1971 65 • 12 WINDSOR mobile
home with expando on large
The best buy in the area.
Christmas. Dec. 15th ; New
lo t, localed on old Rt. 33 ;
Year's, Sal., Dec. 30th ; open
Have slacks &amp; teans for the
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
phone 992-6615.
Wed ., Fri .. Sat .. 7:30-10:30;
~Yhole family. Save OneSalesman 985-4209
available lor private parlles,
11 -24-Jic
Third.
Mon .. Tues .. Thursday
'l'a_
POMEROY
evenings, Sal. and Sun. af· 1970 46xl2, 2 BEDROOM
WE LIST NEW PROPER!
housefrailer, washer and air6:.1 Jack~. Carsev, Mgr
lernoons; PhOne 985-3929, 985TIES EACH AND EVERY
conditio~er ; phone 992-7387 or ·,__ _ _P_ho=n~e.:.;99:.:2c.:·2.:.;11:.:1:_-l
9996 or 985·4141 .
WEEK. CALL FOR YOUR
985-4248 ; lbl can be renled . ·
11 -26-1 2tc
NEEDS IN REAL ESTATE.
1J.24-6tp
Pets
For
Sale
I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by
POODLE
puppies
AKC; SPECIAL : Move in before
anyone other than myself,
apricot, black, silver; will
winter . 4 bedroom ranch
effecllve Nov . 22nd. Signed :
·Air Conditioners
hold till Christmas; phone
home on l;.. acre lot . Bath and
Robert L. Boggess, Bo• 4,
992-5443.
a
half, built-in kitchen, wall to
•Awnings
Racine, 0 .
11 -19-tfc
wall
carpet and garage. Price
11 c26-3tp
• Underpirmi.f!g
S20,750.00 ; also a 5 bedroom
AKC foy Poodle puppies,
colonial house on a 3!"' acre lot.
WE THE undersigned hereby Complete mobile hom•
wormed and shots, well -bred
Bath and a half, built-In
give notice of no hunflng or •ervlce ~ plus glganli•
and healthy, 575. Phone
kitchen, dining room , familY.
frespasslng wlthouf per. 'display of mobile home'
Coolville 667·6214,
room and the works, priceO
mission : John J. Rose, Arvll ·-vways available at ...
11 -n 12tp
$30,000.00. Call Sherman E.
Holler, A. 0 . Tuttle, Gary R.
Summerfield, 985·3598 or 985Dill, Glenn Tuflle, Gary
.4117 .
M.
I
LLER
Griffith and Alva Coats.
Auto Sales
11 -2-30tc
11 -26-3tc
MOBILE HOMES 1969 DODGE pickup lr•ck In - - - - - - - ' - first class condition : 2 new HOUSE fOR SALE, 114 Brick
1220 Woshington Blvd.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
snow
tires, good . tires all
BELPRE, 0.
We .take orders and we will 423-7521
house, 3 bedrooms, e.cellent
round
;
'65 Dodge Station
deliver . Could we place you on ,,'-'---------~-' Wagon ; will sell .reasonable;
l~ation , c,lose to school and
, our
list
of
satisfied
crly: contact Lou Osborne or
phone
992-2897.
·
'Customers? Specials monthly. For Sale
call 992- 58~8 .
11 - 2~ · 31c
Rhone Helen Jane 992-5113,
·
11 ·26-tfc
Middleport, Ohio.
AKC Toy Poodle• . Phone 742- 1967 2 DOOR Ponllac Bon11-15.tfc
3872.
neville ; power steering , 8 ROOM house &amp; bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, built-In
11-12-121c power br,kes, ~lndows and
" Walght watchers " &lt;R&gt; i~ a
cabinets
In kitchen , close to
air-conditioning ; good conregistered trademark of Weioht
radio
station
in Bradbury .
1970
HONDA
3SOS,
700
miles,
dition
;
very
reasonable:
Watchers International , Great
S700; phone 992·5421 after 5 phone Arthur Smith 1·30H82· · Phone 992-2602.
Neck; N. Y .
11-12-lllc
p.m.
2052.
till 27 (12) I .
11 -26-61c
ll -26·3lp
FIVE ROOM house end both;
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...... APPLES, Flhpafrlck Or· 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
Interior
completely
chards, State Route 689, door hardtop, factory a ir, low
Let Weight Watcher . ( R1 . help
remodeled ; located on Brick
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785. · mllea!)e, new fires , like new
you In our local classes. For
Street In Rutland ; phone 7~2 ·
8·30·ffc condition Inside and out ; $650 ;
mformation call toll -free 8003334.
582-7026 - No charge to
phooe 985·3912.
11·12-121c
.,
caller.
·
PUREBRED Beagle pups,
.
11-24-61p
11-27-51c
females, S5 each: Howard
.
.
Caldwell, Jr., Tuppars Plains, 1951 · FORD pickup with 1953·
Memory
rO,one 667-:1493.
llathead V-8; see George Hill i
·11 ·26-ltc 949-4381 .
IN LOVING memory of our
1'1 -21-51c
mother and grandmother, --~----'Erla (Chris) Pickens, whn 1970 TRUCK camper, 8 ft., 2
double bed•, 2 burner stove, 1963 CHEVROLET V.a, air
passed away one ·yNr ego,
gas .e!ectrlc relrlgerofor,
Nov. 27, 1971: Your memory
conditioning, good body.
Pnli.
furnace ; phone 992-7378.
Is our keepsake, with which
11·26-llp Needs motor work, $150.
we'll never part, God has you
. Phme 992-2718.
· In His keeping, we have you in ·
H
&amp;
N
DAY
old
·or
started
ll-2Utc
our heart. Sadly m!ssed by
family and lrltnds. ~ -~ - Leghorn pullets. Both floor or ~=-~------­
cage grown
avelleble.
11-27-lfc
Poultry
housing
&amp;
automation. Modern Poultry,
For Sale
UTILITY building and shower, · 399 W. Meln, Pomeroy, 992,
complete. Phone 992·5205.
. 2164.
11-26-llc
, 11.27·Jic
!.,-----~---~~
•

GE1'f1NG MS

1DTALL'I INEPT.

caooDNES

! CAN ALWA% f'AU..

NEW BIKES

\ '

Store
Epple's Grocery
building in Pomeroy . ·All
kinds of building materials
for sale on the job including 2

lkANK

TALK A€!0UT

'!HE BieR AG60CIA'OON
HAt; 6POKEN OUT
"6AINSr ME ,!GAIN . .

Virgil B.

house. lb baths, living room ,
din ing room, kitchen and
538.10 or make payments ol
utility room ; completely . 51.25 per week; phone 992·
carpeted ,
cherry
wood -:1331.
paneling ; electric heat; must
11 -21 ·61c
see to appreciate , in Hartford
laci ng Ohio River ; phone 1- NOW WRECKING .the former

W&amp;'VE IlEAl&gt; ON 'T~E
SUBJECT l&gt;iJiliNG T~e
PAST WeEK .•

Open 8Til S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

POMEROY, OHIO

paint spray. Used but in like DOZER and back hoe work ,
new condition ; pay $34.45 ponds and sepfic tanks. dit- Rea I Estate For Sale
Court, Syracuse; phone 992cash or budget plan available.
2951.
ching service; top soil, fill HOUSE In Long Bottomi 'phono.
Phone
992.5641.
985-3529.
.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex.'
10-31 -llc
6-11 -tfc
11 -21-6lc
cavati~g. Phone 992-5367 •.
Di ck Karr, Jr.
TRAILER, Brow n' s Trailer
9-l·lfC
JU
ST
taken
in,
lovely
8
track
Park. phone 992-3324.
:
stereo
in
walnut
console;
will
11 -21 -tlc
sell lor small balance of $86.41
or pay $5.55 per month ; phone Real Estate For Sale
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and 992-5331.
unfurn is hed apartments .
11 -2 1-610 c
Phone 992-5434:'""
~-=~~-=----~·
4-12-ttc 1972 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine ;
·cl't'AND·
'
this machine makes but tonholes , darns, embroideries
and hems ; pay balance of

...AN~ 'IOU KNOW i1ir=="""""'1"'11
. ~OW FAST HE

.,.ON ALL T~E · 800KS

lliERE\;; EVEN

Pomeroy. Home &amp; Auto

CATERING SERVICE

TRAILER lot. Boo's Mobile

declared to be an emergency
30H82·3235.
Cliff on old Rl . 7, I mile west
~nd It Is, therefore, ordered that
11 ·24-tfc
of Rock Springs Fairground.
the rules be dispenses with
10·10-IIC
.AKU ¥AKU UZ .KQ3 provided IS receives an af HOUSETRAILER, adults only.
firmative vote Of two -th irds of
$25 a week all utilities paid;
Whal do' you do now?
Parasol
the members of Council, and ANNOUNCING
Boutique Beauty Salon . phone 992-7142.
A-Bid two no-trvmp, two shall take effect at the earliest
11 ·24-41c
date
allowed
by
law.
openinQ Nov . 28th ne•t to
s........ two bearla, ilepondiD,

Skate-A-Way Roller Rink ;
open Tuesday thru Saturday

AN
OPEN·IIOOK. EXAM IN
, . PHILOSOPJ.IY.••

1HEV 6#:( I'M ~LY
mAINED, POORLY
QI.IALifiEP AND

Discount prices on Huffy
20"; German or American

- - ----

apartment, adults only,
Middleport ; phone 992-3874. ELECT,ROLUX Vacuum
10-22-lfc
Cleaner complete with at-

UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom

struct a five -toot Wide sidewalk
along the westerly side of the
vacated portion of the street
extending from Front Street to
the alley .
.

Sec. IV . This Ordinance shall

WAGNER
FRUIT FARM

~AVING

On Most Ameri~n Car&lt; ·

SHAMMY'S

Notice

Side Walk purposes , together

Sec. Ill. Be it further or ·

Dai~

OF SUGAR

Used furniture, appliances.
Clean &amp; guaranteed .

10-speeds.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS

SWEET CIDER

CATERING

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
•

For Rent

Paa
lt
Pass
You, South, hold:

.j!

27)8.

PAR PLANNING?
LET US DO THE.

Sec . II . ~e It further ordained
'
that this Ordinance Is d~clared
to be an emergency and It is.
Ph.
10 .~-lfc
therefore . ordered that the rules
be dlspelised with provided it
receives an affirmative vote of
ATTENTION FARMERS .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; E APPLIANCE Repair;
two .thlrds of the members ot
Largest choice of all breeds of Grepair
LAYMAN,
OHIO
&amp; OBITUARY
·of all laundry equip·
Council. arid shall take effect at
Sl .SO for 50 word minimum
A.
I.
Sires
by
phoning
Leland
On U. S. SO-A between
m
ent.
refrigerat ion equip.
the earliest date allowed by law .
Each additional word 2c .
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
Marietta and Athens.
Sec. Ill. This Ordinance shall
ment and house wiring; call
BLIND
ADS
call station for service, intake eJfect and be In force from
614·992·6050.
Additional 2Sc Charge per
formation or direct sales.
and a'f ter November 13, 1912. Advertisement .
NEW 1972 Zig -Zag sewing
11 -24-30ip
Passed the 13th day of
3 ROOM house, adults only . machine in original factory
11 -9-30tc
OFFICE
HOURS
November 1972.
Phone 992-5592.
8 :30a .m . to 5 :00p .m. Daily ,
carton. Zig -zag to make
ELNA and White Sewing
David W. Ohlinger 8 : 30 e.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
11 -16-llc buttonholes, sew on buttons. SEWING MACHINES. Repal•
Ma c hin es ... service on all
President of Council Saturday.
se rvice. all makes. 992-228monograms and make fancy
makes. Rea sonable rates .
Attest : Gene Grate
The Fabric· Shop, Pomero~
designs with just lhe twist of a
The Sewi ng Center, Mid.
Clerk
4 ROOM unfurnished house,
Authorized Singer Sales and dleporl, Ohio.
single-dial. Left in layaway
1650 Lincoln Heights; phone
! 111 21 ! 12 4, 21
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
and never been used . Will sell
11 -16-tlc
992-3874.
·
·
3-29-llc
for
only
S47
cash
or
credit
\
11 -19-lfc
term s available. Phone 992·
WILL CUT or trim trees ,
5641.
----------AUTOMOBILE insurance been reasonable . Also clean out
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
ca ncelled.?
Lost
your
11 ·21-61c
basements, attics and cellars.

· Jim: " A more enterpris·
lng South decides that since
West didn't open a heart he
probably won't find a heart
Shift If let in early. S o u t h
wins the club in dummy and
plays hiS eight-spot so that
West won't be sure that
East's three-spot play had
not been · made from queen.
three-two. Then South leads
the four of spades from dum·
my and sticks In his 10-spot.
West Is in with the queen
and if he Is gifted with second siglit will shift to the
king of hearts and beat South
two tricks."
Oswald: "If West is just
a normal good bridge player
OROINANCE NO. 989·72
An Ordlnanc:e to Vacate a
he will Iead ano ther CIUb• Portion
of Walnut Street
Now South will have two
chances to co II e c t nine
Be it ordained by Ihe council
tricks. All he will. need is a of the VIllage of Middleport as
follows :
break In either spades or
Sec . I. That a port ion of ·
diamonds. The diamonds Walnul Slreet be and lhe same
haven't shifted around any Is hereby vacated ; being thai
portion ot Walnul Street e• So they don 't break, but ·the tendlng
from Front Street
Spades Were divided nicely westerly to. the Olley , being a
and the game makes."
.slrlp 20 teet wide olopg lhe
Jim· "South mav even southerly stde of Walnut streel.
•,
•
1
Sec . II . Be It further ordained
wind, up With 10 tr1cks on that the vocation of this portion
~till&amp; Une of. DlavJ£ be. runa ot WalnuJ...§.I,i;eeL~.f" qtcpPJ.•.
tlliiOdH
Suat -rt
..., _ , , onoV"lill"oln ho owner.
.
,
r - · of the adlacent property con r-·wtth· a diam~nd · w~n the ve'llng l to tho\ V~llage of Mid -'
fourth spade IS led.
dleport , a live .toot easement lor

Ob

5 WEEK old Holstein bull call,
352 Ford engine. Phone· 843·

WANT son'leone lo take car~ of
ORDINANCE NO. 981-72
Invalid man ; will pay gOod COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
.S r'J .M. Day Before Publication .
salary ; ca ll 992-7268.
An Ordinance 1o Re·Zone Lois
Monday Oea.p iine 9 a.m,
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
S. 6, 1. and 8 From B-3 toR ... .
11 ·21 -6tc, Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Cancellation - Corrections
accepted until9 a.m . for
4-12-ttc
Be it ordained by the Counc il Will beDay
of Publication
of the Village of M iddleport a!
REGULATIONS
follows :

Sec. I. Th-at the zoning or ·
dinance heretofore adopted ;
being No. 960-70 be and it is
herebv modified as follows :
Lots Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 8, located
between Walnut Street on the
north and Coal Street on the
South and Front Street on the
East, ~re hereby re .zoned from

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate ·
PHONE 992.:2550

NOVEMBER SPE CIALS. 1971
WANTED beel hides. Phone
IB fl. 7 in . Starcraft trailer,
773-5600. Grover C. Roush ,
se
lf -co ntained, sleeps si x,
Pomeroy St ., Mason, W. Va .
converter,
special S2199 ; 18ft.
11 ·16-151p
lhru 27ft. 1973 model and told
OLD Furniture, oak tables, . down campers at our special
organs, dishes, clocks, brass

A THIRD Lue·~

ELSE?

Business Services

____ ___

WANTED. deer hides , will
pickup; phone 667-3236 or 66(·
3891.
11 -26-61p

VEP .. ONE AN'

DO 'IE· NEED
ENN'ITHING

.

MA\.E loKhound, pure white. (.iU N. collec lion, 1687 Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy. Phone 992Reward , phone 247-1201,
2J0&lt; .
Herschel Roush .
11 ·26-31p
, 11 ·24. ttc

Wanted To Buy

SHORE-'IE CAN USE MY
NEW PLASTICA L
TWO,CUPPER,
ELVINEV--

For Sale

Lost

' 'IE GOT
. HAVE
A MEASURIN '
CUP COULb

7-27.1fc

Pomeroy, Ohio45769

BUNGALOW
LINCOLN HTS. - Nice 2
bedroom well cared tor
home. Aluminum siding,
basement , nice bath, gas
forced air furnace . $1,000.00
down . Balance $77 .16 a

'month . Only $7500 .00.
A BARGAIN
5 ROOMS - Q nice size
bedrooms, good bath, 2 room
1basement, outbuilding, and

backyard . Would you bel ieve
only S5,500.00.
INCOME PROPERTY
MODERN - 3 bedroom
paneled home with lois of
closet space: Nice kitchen.
wood burning fireplace, 4
room
block
business

building . All tor just
$25.000.00.
125 ACRES
MOSTLY WOODS - Good 9
room home. 2 baths, lots of
closets. Double liv ing ,
double cellar with large
room over. Drilled well . A
real family selling wllh
privacy. $26,000.00.
NEW LISTING
ONE FLOOR - 3 bedrooms,
new bath, new wall-to-wall
carpeting. Nl'c e kitchen ,
ulilify and cellar. Level lot.
&lt;Jrly S15,000.00.
NEW LISTING
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, TV,
llv.ing and large kitchen.
Basement, stocker furnac.e
on large corner tot. Asking
$9,500.00.
SPECIAL
3
BEDROOMS
2
fireplaces , large k i tchen ,

hall acre of sandy land.
Some fruit, cellar on hard
road. Under $5,000.00.
NEW HOME
3 BEDROOMS - Beautiful
kitchen

with

stove ,

refrigerator , double sink,
and lots ol .cupboard spac~ .
Dining area. closets galore.
Gas forced air furnace .
Asking only $16,000.00 with 2

lots .

·

._..

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows, •carporfs,

, marquees, aluminum siding;
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representative.

For . free

estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

.

.:;· UT'!'LE ORPIIAoN ANNIE

1

3·2-ffc'

Bic: KHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks lnslal!ed. George
(Bill! Pullins. Phone 992-2~78.
4·2t ttc

. .,. READY-MIX ·
de l ivered

'.
Y ..terday'o Cryploquote: EVERY IMPROVEMENT IN COM·
MUNICATION MAKES THE BORE MORE TERRIBLEFRANK MOORE COLBY
.

CONtRETE

right

to

your

project. Fast and easy. Free
es timates. Phone 992·3284:
Goeglein Ready -MIK Co .,.
.
Middleport, Ohio.

{0 lt72 Xlnr Feature• Syndleat.t, be.)

ACROSS
1. Mono·
logist
Mort
5. In the

6-30-tf~ ·

_S
_ E_P_T-IC. _T_A_N_K_S_C_L_E_A-NEDI .
REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6-·
4782, Gallleol!s, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
·
5·12-tfc

· van

DICK TRACY

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-Hfc

· PAW, THE SllERIFF
ANOMR.. TRACY ARE' ON
WAY HERE!

TU'"''"

------

RUSSELL'S ' Furniture
Upholstery ; free pickup and
delivery ; phone 992-5771.
10-27·301c

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
cue No. 20,IDO

Es tate of William -bailey
Deceased .
·
Not ice Is hereby given that
Bet.ty Lou Loven of R:eeosvllle,
Me1gs Count~ , Ohio, has been
duly appointed Executrix Of the
Estate of William Bailey,
dec.eased, late of Reedsville.
Mtl_515. County, OhiO. '\
C,redUors are r.equlred to file
the~r claims With Sl!lid fiduciary
within four months.

Dated

lhls

November 1972.

8th

dey

·

of

!lll IJ, 20 , 2~.·~~· County, Ohio
lit Capacity
Maytot
Automatics
2 spead oparatlon .

·- .

. Cholet of water

tom ps·.

Auto .

level

Unscramble.theM four Jumblet,
one letter to eoch jquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

born
Israeli
2. Gracie 3. Business
reorgani·
zation
(sl. )
(hyph.
wd.)
4. Grant's.'
opposite
number
5. Bring

Yesterday's Answer
9. Hand

over

12. Feel
contrite
into
harmony . 16. Shofar,
e.g.
6. Lena 7. Spire
19. Wasteornament
land
8. One cur·
.22.Magnum
rying
favor
23. Eli's
( 2 wds.)
mentor

24. Like some
bills
25. Ascend
27. Had a
dread
29. Struck
30. Moon
goddess
31. Macaroni
style
38. Designate
37. Circle
segment

control.
Lint
Fitter or Po~Mtr
Pin A~IIIIOr . .'
lttrtnl·,ren
Mayrat
HIIOOI H..t
Dryora · ·
·surround' clot~"

••or-tylnt . 1
l.lnt i
~lltar .
j
~Ina " Moll!

work

DSUBKFIWLD BUHFV Y·L FUMLFC TK

lervife

..

ORLC BLZLS'O DU
'·

"·

,,

FLACIE

· r~ ·•r

II

WHAT TH~T l'O!nU6UESE
NEieHeQit

15.

I~-~I~K~l~l~l~~~i~=~=...]~~.:"~·
YARNEL?

Now_.thaetrtlodlottm

l [I I I I ]

Mtllt I IISliiiSWIUn

=====::j

~~':;j,~'i~~===-::.:__j l:=:::::

'-

DRUMLFC. - riHORUZ

HSWSU BS

r Arnold Grett
Iuiie.... ·
11
,..
u.741-4211
_ _. ____,
.......;..;;;;,.;;;..:.;.;:_, _:-....;.;-.;,;;;';.;.;;........

.o I

It:

CR~U~S

··-:~"'''
INC...,.t ,.

f

lomblno INACT Dlc,lT liCAMI I'Aml

II LONGFELLOW
One Ieite( simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Single letters!
apostrophes, the length and fonnatton of th.e word• are a! ·
htnta. Each day the code letters are dlf!erent.

no

0

(Aatwen

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.- Here's how to
AX\'DLBAAXR

wtth gentl•, tven
~.. t. No ~ott~~ota. •

SNUKK

I_

spender
241. Assever·
ate
21.-play
a . - culpa
H. Resort
selling
IZ. Pottery
piece
U. Spoil
14. Yellow
ocher
U . Magazine
. employee
37. King who
wed
Jezebel
38. Crescent.
shaped
39. Nevada
city
41. - on
(Incited )

Manning D. Webster,
Judgtof the
Common Pleas Court .
Probate Division

WJt·tr

r---------..

~WIJOOID111!;"-'=~..J=

DOWN
1. Native·

tor
25. Big

·

HELEN L. ·TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-3325

10. Medicinal
plant
11. Lady's
coat
THEY i:l&amp;S TO CCW.E DOWN 13. Melancholy
ROUTE 64, AND I WANT
14. ThreeTO GET TillS
fold
01"1" NW
15. Matter
. (law )
16. Vandal
17.1mpu·
dence
18. Crowfoot
family '
' plant
20. Night
preced in g
21. Gist
22. Accessible
%1. Legisla-

fl. Bird's
crop

•

••

'

.

.

t. . .rnw)

�i·

'
UllHii

&amp;-The DallySentinei,Mldcleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 'll, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Ac.tion! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!'
WIN AT BRIDGE

Makes His
Own Breaks

Pomeroy
Motor co.·

ZSIGNS

@.IUAlllY
Of

$1599

1911 PINTO FORD

2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage. good fires, clean interior , green fini sh, radl~, 2000cc engine, 4-speed.

NORTH
.961
¥J92
tQ762
.AK7

.

$1795

1970 FORD GALAX IE 500

. WEST
EAST
• .Q75
.J83
¥K4
¥AQ 753
tJ854
tl09
.J954
.1063
SOUTH (D)
.AK102
¥1086
tAK3

•Qu

North-South vulnerable
Weal · North Eat South
lN.T.
Pass · 3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead-• 4
By O•wald &amp; James Jaeoby
Oswald: "There are two
ways for South to play today's band. The first is the
conservative w·a y. South
looks over dummy and sees
that the heart suit is wide
open against 111m. He tries
to cash the first nine tricks,
but when diamonds fail to
break he can only collect

eight."

Hardtop coupe, V-B engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white finish, black vinyl top,
vinyl Inferior, whlte.wall tires. llke new, radio.

1968 CHEVELLE
51695
Mallilu sport coupe, air cond llloned, 307 engine, power
sle!)ring, power brakes, red lin ish with black vinyl top and
black vinvl Interior, radio, good white.wall

tlrP.~.

·Po111eroy Motor Co.

MOBILE Home with lot and 35 COPPERTONE double oven
II . patio; Albert Hill , Racine. stove, like new, SlSO; phone
949-2261.
992-6796 after 6 p.m. or 992·
11 ·26-7tc 5187 any lime.
11 -19-ffc

beds, or complete households.
Write .M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6-28-tlc

OPEN EVIL 1:00 P.M.
i'GII!ROY, OHIO

- - - -- ---'.Help Wanted

WANT ADS.
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

LEGAL NOTICE

8-3 to R-•.

wurmay

(MIWS,APIR ENTEIPliSI ASSN.)

The bidding has been:
WMI North
Eat

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
oblect ronal.
The .
pub lisher will not be responsible ·
for more than one incorrect
insertion ."

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con ·secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Dlscoun.t on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days

11 -24-Jic

- - ···-- ···

low

wrnte.r prices ; furnaces,

S87.50 ; porta-potties, 585 ;
awnings and hitches 20 pet.

SPEND TIME
SAVES's

ott ; Camr Conley Starcrall
Sales, R . 62 N of Point
Pleasant behind Red Carpel

Carrier Needed
•
m
Syracuse

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

Inn.

11-22-31c

Rt ..7 "at caution light"
TUPPERS PLAINS

Apples, all kinds. Ap.l'
plebutler and applebutter
apples.

Free Cider &amp; An
Apple To Everyone

Care -Free
Party
Pr.eparations 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.
CALL 992-5786

Sentinel
992-2156

"HEll"

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
CONTROL
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work
::j,~·

~RMQLO - ...

BROTHERS

with their agreement to con .

992-2448
HAYMAN'S Auction - a QoOd

ctalned that this Ordinance Is

evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel

Pomeroy. 0.
place

to

Qo

each

tachments, cordwinder and

Fnday

yoar partnership methods. take effect and

be In force from

We oU,htly favor the two IIO· and after November 13, 1912.
Passed the 13th da'f' of •
Inunp call.

November 197'2.
TODA \''S QUESTION
David W. Ohlinger
You do bid lwo no-trump and
President of Council
your partner jumps to four no- Attest : Gene Grate
Clerk
trump. What do you do now?

Answer tomorrow

1111 27 (121 4, 2t

S..d SI lot JACOIY MODERN hoolc
ro: uw;, , ·a,;J,.," (c/o tllit ""''" - -- - - - -- - - /101M''· P.O. Jox 419, Roflio Cit)
ORDINANCE NO. 990-72
Station, Now York, N.y. 10019.
An Ordln•nce to ESTABLISH

looal Bowling

A SPECIAL FUND KNOWN AS
THE FEDERAL GENERAL
REVENUE SHARING TRUST
FUND

Pomeroy 8owlifl9 Lones
Be It ordained by the Council
Saturday St11ior League
of the VIllage of Middleport. as
Nov. ,., . 1972
follOws :
.
.
." Sec . L That w.hereas , the
Standings
Pis. Congress has enacted the State
Team
and Local Fiscal Assistance Act
26
Gutter Dusters
of 1972 providing a system ot
20°12 general revenue sharing with
Pin Crushers
17112 states and units of local
Dlfi9·A· Lings
15112
Born Losers
government, and
Whereas, Section 12J (aJ (1)
Pin Busters
15'12
of the federal act requires each
13
Herbie's
unit of local povernment to
High Individual Game establish
a trust fund to receive
Rich Bailey, 167.
federal
revenue
sharlhg, and
Second High Ind. Game Whereas. the- Sure-au of In Melanie Burl 166.
spection and Supervision of
High Series - Rich Bailey Public Offices has approved the
46.
establishment of a '' Federel
Second Hlqh Series General Revenue Sharing Trust
Fund" In each municipal
Me!onle Burt 438.
Team High Game - Gutter co"rporatlon recelv' t ng
assistance under the federal
Dusters 795.
act, a5 -•required bv sectlot~
Team High" Series - Pin 5705.12,
of the Ohio Revised
Crushers 2224. ·
Code:
Now Therefore 6e 11 Ordained

by lhe Council of-the Village of
. Middleport, State of Ohio that :
Saturday Junior League
Sec . II . There Is hereby
Nov. 11, 1972
established
a special fund to be
Standings
known as the "Federal General
Pis.
T~om
,
Revenue Sharing Trust Fund "
24
Ball Busters
under the provisions of section
23
Impacts
5705.12 Of the Ohio Rev ised
"Drdmers
16'h Code.
16
Sec . 111. All monies paid to the
Alley Cat•

VIllage under the State and
Local Fiscal Assistance Act of
1972 shall be credited to seld
fund and expended in IC ·
cordance wilh the terms and
provisions of said federal act.
Sec . IV . This ordinance Is
hereb~ declared to be an
tmergencv measure neceaury
439.
Second High Series ,- Chuck for the preserva~ion of
the public· p1ace, health ,
Follrod ol39.
safety
and welfare, such
TNm High Game- Impacts
emerotnc:v arising out of
.
need . to
provide
TNm Hlgb Series - Impacts athelawful
fund Into which
2557.
ffderal general revenue sharing
' payments can be crtdlted for
PARTY SET
exptndlturtl In the manner and

~ches

14112

14
Rams
High Individual Game Chuck Follrod 118.
Second High· Ind. Game Dick Owen IN.
HIQh Sarles - Steve Bachner

.... ,

......
an-·-· Chrlltmas party
.,,. ,....

""the
' Put ~·--'1 - Club 'Of

"'

lor tht purposes provided under
the Slate end Local Fiscal
Aaslstanct

~ct

of

1972 ;

"""'"""""
whortlort this ordinance shall
Daallhtera of tokt ollect and btln Ioree from
•--&lt;- wiD be held on Dec · and after Its passage.
--·
·
Soc . V. This Ordlnonco shall
II at
llltlwoad Ill Belpre. tiki tlllct and bl In lorca from
p
t tin a to be IJIIIde . 1nd lfttr Nov1mbtr 13, 1912.
. ..-., u-. a..-.
....,.
Polled lho 13th dly of
.,... 7 wnn .u·• •-••1 Novtmbtr 1972.
u- • ....._. ancluDav!dW.Ohllngor
!"
_.., __.
"""'
President of Council
11aJ11 ol TheGtlorUI Attest : Gent Grift

Dlltrlcl 13,

a.

....!JIL

·~==-~~will

do

table

Clark
(Ill 27 !12) • 21

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

and Tuesday

evenin~s;

phone

Mobile Homes For Sale

and 3 in . heavy material ,
sheeting and cherry stair

railing ; ca ll 992-5946 or 882·
3219.
11 -10-ttc

985·4141 for appomlmenl; CASH paid for all makes and
operat or, Sandra Trussell
Kerns.

11 -26-12tc

models of mob i le homes .

Phone area code 614-423-95ol .
4-13-ffc
ON PANTS&amp; JEANS

Open to 7; closed Mondays.

SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS .
CLEANED, · REPAIRED.
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART. OHI0. PHONE
662-3035.

operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

REALTY

~K ON A CAR!:ER

PISIJARREI'/

REAbS.!

iN POLmcs.

If I HAVE
ToGo
Take Me To

lHE SHO!J

From the largest T ...;..
Bulldozer Radiator
Small~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radia.tor Specialist_

Le:i"Dicic and Date
_with_ Your M _e at

SMlTH NELSON

9!~9RS, ~~!:roy

Phone 949-3221.

11 -22-301c

You

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094 '

606 E~ Main

SOit,E

Pomeroy

.

OFFICE SUPPLIES

601 E. Meln

DON'T BUY AT
INFLATED PRICES.
SEE US TODAY FOR
YOUR BEST BUY
IN REAL ESTATE.

MANY PROPERTIES TO
CHOOSE FROM .
WANT YOUR PEOPERTY '
ADVERTISED OR SOLD?
IF YOU WANT IT SOLO
CONTACT US TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-2259 if no answer 992-2568

In

We talk to JOU
!ike a

·WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

~'/ YoA.'LL.

7H..WMEF.R

MAI&lt;IN' VA PR.ACI'IC&amp;'
VIR. VIOL.IN INS"TV.D
0' PLAYIN' FOO'TIIAU..
Wt'TW iH' t&lt;IDSl

WINNIE WlNKLE

and

~

WIN,JERRY .
I!LL 11\LK 10 MR.
PLATT, BUT I
DOU5T IF HE. ~LL
5E INTERE:;rED.

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

·. ·.EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, land- .
scapilfg. We hove 2 sire , ·
dozers, 2 size loaders. Wor~
done by hour or contr~ct.
Free Esttm·ates. We also ·
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hir~ .
See Bob or Roger ·Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9925232. .
ponds.,

'· •

Tedford,.,,Sr. •..
Broker
110 Mechanic St.

... Pomeroy

I WILL make baby doll clothes, MOBILE home located on large
by the order for Christmas;
lot. Main Street, Rulland ;
phone 992-7537.
phone
992-6615.
·
11 -26-3fc
Buy 2
HENRY E. CLELAND, Jr.
ll -24-31c
.._...,., Pairs
Salesman 985-4209
SKATE-A-Way Holiday Par.
'
.I .PAIR FREE
lies; Thanksgiving, Dec. lsi, 1971 65 • 12 WINDSOR mobile
home with expando on large
The best buy in the area.
Christmas. Dec. 15th ; New
lo t, localed on old Rt. 33 ;
Year's, Sal., Dec. 30th ; open
Have slacks &amp; teans for the
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
phone 992-6615.
Wed ., Fri .. Sat .. 7:30-10:30;
~Yhole family. Save OneSalesman 985-4209
available lor private parlles,
11 -24-Jic
Third.
Mon .. Tues .. Thursday
'l'a_
POMEROY
evenings, Sal. and Sun. af· 1970 46xl2, 2 BEDROOM
WE LIST NEW PROPER!
housefrailer, washer and air6:.1 Jack~. Carsev, Mgr
lernoons; PhOne 985-3929, 985TIES EACH AND EVERY
conditio~er ; phone 992-7387 or ·,__ _ _P_ho=n~e.:.;99:.:2c.:·2.:.;11:.:1:_-l
9996 or 985·4141 .
WEEK. CALL FOR YOUR
985-4248 ; lbl can be renled . ·
11 -26-1 2tc
NEEDS IN REAL ESTATE.
1J.24-6tp
Pets
For
Sale
I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by
POODLE
puppies
AKC; SPECIAL : Move in before
anyone other than myself,
apricot, black, silver; will
winter . 4 bedroom ranch
effecllve Nov . 22nd. Signed :
·Air Conditioners
hold till Christmas; phone
home on l;.. acre lot . Bath and
Robert L. Boggess, Bo• 4,
992-5443.
a
half, built-in kitchen, wall to
•Awnings
Racine, 0 .
11 -19-tfc
wall
carpet and garage. Price
11 c26-3tp
• Underpirmi.f!g
S20,750.00 ; also a 5 bedroom
AKC foy Poodle puppies,
colonial house on a 3!"' acre lot.
WE THE undersigned hereby Complete mobile hom•
wormed and shots, well -bred
Bath and a half, built-In
give notice of no hunflng or •ervlce ~ plus glganli•
and healthy, 575. Phone
kitchen, dining room , familY.
frespasslng wlthouf per. 'display of mobile home'
Coolville 667·6214,
room and the works, priceO
mission : John J. Rose, Arvll ·-vways available at ...
11 -n 12tp
$30,000.00. Call Sherman E.
Holler, A. 0 . Tuttle, Gary R.
Summerfield, 985·3598 or 985Dill, Glenn Tuflle, Gary
.4117 .
M.
I
LLER
Griffith and Alva Coats.
Auto Sales
11 -2-30tc
11 -26-3tc
MOBILE HOMES 1969 DODGE pickup lr•ck In - - - - - - - ' - first class condition : 2 new HOUSE fOR SALE, 114 Brick
1220 Woshington Blvd.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
snow
tires, good . tires all
BELPRE, 0.
We .take orders and we will 423-7521
house, 3 bedrooms, e.cellent
round
;
'65 Dodge Station
deliver . Could we place you on ,,'-'---------~-' Wagon ; will sell .reasonable;
l~ation , c,lose to school and
, our
list
of
satisfied
crly: contact Lou Osborne or
phone
992-2897.
·
'Customers? Specials monthly. For Sale
call 992- 58~8 .
11 - 2~ · 31c
Rhone Helen Jane 992-5113,
·
11 ·26-tfc
Middleport, Ohio.
AKC Toy Poodle• . Phone 742- 1967 2 DOOR Ponllac Bon11-15.tfc
3872.
neville ; power steering , 8 ROOM house &amp; bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, built-In
11-12-121c power br,kes, ~lndows and
" Walght watchers " &lt;R&gt; i~ a
cabinets
In kitchen , close to
air-conditioning ; good conregistered trademark of Weioht
radio
station
in Bradbury .
1970
HONDA
3SOS,
700
miles,
dition
;
very
reasonable:
Watchers International , Great
S700; phone 992·5421 after 5 phone Arthur Smith 1·30H82· · Phone 992-2602.
Neck; N. Y .
11-12-lllc
p.m.
2052.
till 27 (12) I .
11 -26-61c
ll -26·3lp
FIVE ROOM house end both;
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...... APPLES, Flhpafrlck Or· 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
Interior
completely
chards, State Route 689, door hardtop, factory a ir, low
Let Weight Watcher . ( R1 . help
remodeled ; located on Brick
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785. · mllea!)e, new fires , like new
you In our local classes. For
Street In Rutland ; phone 7~2 ·
8·30·ffc condition Inside and out ; $650 ;
mformation call toll -free 8003334.
582-7026 - No charge to
phooe 985·3912.
11·12-121c
.,
caller.
·
PUREBRED Beagle pups,
.
11-24-61p
11-27-51c
females, S5 each: Howard
.
.
Caldwell, Jr., Tuppars Plains, 1951 · FORD pickup with 1953·
Memory
rO,one 667-:1493.
llathead V-8; see George Hill i
·11 ·26-ltc 949-4381 .
IN LOVING memory of our
1'1 -21-51c
mother and grandmother, --~----'Erla (Chris) Pickens, whn 1970 TRUCK camper, 8 ft., 2
double bed•, 2 burner stove, 1963 CHEVROLET V.a, air
passed away one ·yNr ego,
gas .e!ectrlc relrlgerofor,
Nov. 27, 1971: Your memory
conditioning, good body.
Pnli.
furnace ; phone 992-7378.
Is our keepsake, with which
11·26-llp Needs motor work, $150.
we'll never part, God has you
. Phme 992-2718.
· In His keeping, we have you in ·
H
&amp;
N
DAY
old
·or
started
ll-2Utc
our heart. Sadly m!ssed by
family and lrltnds. ~ -~ - Leghorn pullets. Both floor or ~=-~------­
cage grown
avelleble.
11-27-lfc
Poultry
housing
&amp;
automation. Modern Poultry,
For Sale
UTILITY building and shower, · 399 W. Meln, Pomeroy, 992,
complete. Phone 992·5205.
. 2164.
11-26-llc
, 11.27·Jic
!.,-----~---~~
•

GE1'f1NG MS

1DTALL'I INEPT.

caooDNES

! CAN ALWA% f'AU..

NEW BIKES

\ '

Store
Epple's Grocery
building in Pomeroy . ·All
kinds of building materials
for sale on the job including 2

lkANK

TALK A€!0UT

'!HE BieR AG60CIA'OON
HAt; 6POKEN OUT
"6AINSr ME ,!GAIN . .

Virgil B.

house. lb baths, living room ,
din ing room, kitchen and
538.10 or make payments ol
utility room ; completely . 51.25 per week; phone 992·
carpeted ,
cherry
wood -:1331.
paneling ; electric heat; must
11 -21 ·61c
see to appreciate , in Hartford
laci ng Ohio River ; phone 1- NOW WRECKING .the former

W&amp;'VE IlEAl&gt; ON 'T~E
SUBJECT l&gt;iJiliNG T~e
PAST WeEK .•

Open 8Til S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

POMEROY, OHIO

paint spray. Used but in like DOZER and back hoe work ,
new condition ; pay $34.45 ponds and sepfic tanks. dit- Rea I Estate For Sale
Court, Syracuse; phone 992cash or budget plan available.
2951.
ching service; top soil, fill HOUSE In Long Bottomi 'phono.
Phone
992.5641.
985-3529.
.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex.'
10-31 -llc
6-11 -tfc
11 -21-6lc
cavati~g. Phone 992-5367 •.
Di ck Karr, Jr.
TRAILER, Brow n' s Trailer
9-l·lfC
JU
ST
taken
in,
lovely
8
track
Park. phone 992-3324.
:
stereo
in
walnut
console;
will
11 -21 -tlc
sell lor small balance of $86.41
or pay $5.55 per month ; phone Real Estate For Sale
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and 992-5331.
unfurn is hed apartments .
11 -2 1-610 c
Phone 992-5434:'""
~-=~~-=----~·
4-12-ttc 1972 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine ;
·cl't'AND·
'
this machine makes but tonholes , darns, embroideries
and hems ; pay balance of

...AN~ 'IOU KNOW i1ir=="""""'1"'11
. ~OW FAST HE

.,.ON ALL T~E · 800KS

lliERE\;; EVEN

Pomeroy. Home &amp; Auto

CATERING SERVICE

TRAILER lot. Boo's Mobile

declared to be an emergency
30H82·3235.
Cliff on old Rl . 7, I mile west
~nd It Is, therefore, ordered that
11 ·24-tfc
of Rock Springs Fairground.
the rules be dispenses with
10·10-IIC
.AKU ¥AKU UZ .KQ3 provided IS receives an af HOUSETRAILER, adults only.
firmative vote Of two -th irds of
$25 a week all utilities paid;
Whal do' you do now?
Parasol
the members of Council, and ANNOUNCING
Boutique Beauty Salon . phone 992-7142.
A-Bid two no-trvmp, two shall take effect at the earliest
11 ·24-41c
date
allowed
by
law.
openinQ Nov . 28th ne•t to
s........ two bearla, ilepondiD,

Skate-A-Way Roller Rink ;
open Tuesday thru Saturday

AN
OPEN·IIOOK. EXAM IN
, . PHILOSOPJ.IY.••

1HEV 6#:( I'M ~LY
mAINED, POORLY
QI.IALifiEP AND

Discount prices on Huffy
20"; German or American

- - ----

apartment, adults only,
Middleport ; phone 992-3874. ELECT,ROLUX Vacuum
10-22-lfc
Cleaner complete with at-

UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom

struct a five -toot Wide sidewalk
along the westerly side of the
vacated portion of the street
extending from Front Street to
the alley .
.

Sec. IV . This Ordinance shall

WAGNER
FRUIT FARM

~AVING

On Most Ameri~n Car&lt; ·

SHAMMY'S

Notice

Side Walk purposes , together

Sec. Ill. Be it further or ·

Dai~

OF SUGAR

Used furniture, appliances.
Clean &amp; guaranteed .

10-speeds.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS

SWEET CIDER

CATERING

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
•

For Rent

Paa
lt
Pass
You, South, hold:

.j!

27)8.

PAR PLANNING?
LET US DO THE.

Sec . II . ~e It further ordained
'
that this Ordinance Is d~clared
to be an emergency and It is.
Ph.
10 .~-lfc
therefore . ordered that the rules
be dlspelised with provided it
receives an affirmative vote of
ATTENTION FARMERS .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; E APPLIANCE Repair;
two .thlrds of the members ot
Largest choice of all breeds of Grepair
LAYMAN,
OHIO
&amp; OBITUARY
·of all laundry equip·
Council. arid shall take effect at
Sl .SO for 50 word minimum
A.
I.
Sires
by
phoning
Leland
On U. S. SO-A between
m
ent.
refrigerat ion equip.
the earliest date allowed by law .
Each additional word 2c .
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
Marietta and Athens.
Sec. Ill. This Ordinance shall
ment and house wiring; call
BLIND
ADS
call station for service, intake eJfect and be In force from
614·992·6050.
Additional 2Sc Charge per
formation or direct sales.
and a'f ter November 13, 1912. Advertisement .
NEW 1972 Zig -Zag sewing
11 -24-30ip
Passed the 13th day of
3 ROOM house, adults only . machine in original factory
11 -9-30tc
OFFICE
HOURS
November 1972.
Phone 992-5592.
8 :30a .m . to 5 :00p .m. Daily ,
carton. Zig -zag to make
ELNA and White Sewing
David W. Ohlinger 8 : 30 e.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
11 -16-llc buttonholes, sew on buttons. SEWING MACHINES. Repal•
Ma c hin es ... service on all
President of Council Saturday.
se rvice. all makes. 992-228monograms and make fancy
makes. Rea sonable rates .
Attest : Gene Grate
The Fabric· Shop, Pomero~
designs with just lhe twist of a
The Sewi ng Center, Mid.
Clerk
4 ROOM unfurnished house,
Authorized Singer Sales and dleporl, Ohio.
single-dial. Left in layaway
1650 Lincoln Heights; phone
! 111 21 ! 12 4, 21
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
and never been used . Will sell
11 -16-tlc
992-3874.
·
·
3-29-llc
for
only
S47
cash
or
credit
\
11 -19-lfc
term s available. Phone 992·
WILL CUT or trim trees ,
5641.
----------AUTOMOBILE insurance been reasonable . Also clean out
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
ca ncelled.?
Lost
your
11 ·21-61c
basements, attics and cellars.

· Jim: " A more enterpris·
lng South decides that since
West didn't open a heart he
probably won't find a heart
Shift If let in early. S o u t h
wins the club in dummy and
plays hiS eight-spot so that
West won't be sure that
East's three-spot play had
not been · made from queen.
three-two. Then South leads
the four of spades from dum·
my and sticks In his 10-spot.
West Is in with the queen
and if he Is gifted with second siglit will shift to the
king of hearts and beat South
two tricks."
Oswald: "If West is just
a normal good bridge player
OROINANCE NO. 989·72
An Ordlnanc:e to Vacate a
he will Iead ano ther CIUb• Portion
of Walnut Street
Now South will have two
chances to co II e c t nine
Be it ordained by Ihe council
tricks. All he will. need is a of the VIllage of Middleport as
follows :
break In either spades or
Sec . I. That a port ion of ·
diamonds. The diamonds Walnul Slreet be and lhe same
haven't shifted around any Is hereby vacated ; being thai
portion ot Walnul Street e• So they don 't break, but ·the tendlng
from Front Street
Spades Were divided nicely westerly to. the Olley , being a
and the game makes."
.slrlp 20 teet wide olopg lhe
Jim· "South mav even southerly stde of Walnut streel.
•,
•
1
Sec . II . Be It further ordained
wind, up With 10 tr1cks on that the vocation of this portion
~till&amp; Une of. DlavJ£ be. runa ot WalnuJ...§.I,i;eeL~.f" qtcpPJ.•.
tlliiOdH
Suat -rt
..., _ , , onoV"lill"oln ho owner.
.
,
r - · of the adlacent property con r-·wtth· a diam~nd · w~n the ve'llng l to tho\ V~llage of Mid -'
fourth spade IS led.
dleport , a live .toot easement lor

Ob

5 WEEK old Holstein bull call,
352 Ford engine. Phone· 843·

WANT son'leone lo take car~ of
ORDINANCE NO. 981-72
Invalid man ; will pay gOod COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
.S r'J .M. Day Before Publication .
salary ; ca ll 992-7268.
An Ordinance 1o Re·Zone Lois
Monday Oea.p iine 9 a.m,
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
S. 6, 1. and 8 From B-3 toR ... .
11 ·21 -6tc, Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Cancellation - Corrections
accepted until9 a.m . for
4-12-ttc
Be it ordained by the Counc il Will beDay
of Publication
of the Village of M iddleport a!
REGULATIONS
follows :

Sec. I. Th-at the zoning or ·
dinance heretofore adopted ;
being No. 960-70 be and it is
herebv modified as follows :
Lots Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 8, located
between Walnut Street on the
north and Coal Street on the
South and Front Street on the
East, ~re hereby re .zoned from

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate ·
PHONE 992.:2550

NOVEMBER SPE CIALS. 1971
WANTED beel hides. Phone
IB fl. 7 in . Starcraft trailer,
773-5600. Grover C. Roush ,
se
lf -co ntained, sleeps si x,
Pomeroy St ., Mason, W. Va .
converter,
special S2199 ; 18ft.
11 ·16-151p
lhru 27ft. 1973 model and told
OLD Furniture, oak tables, . down campers at our special
organs, dishes, clocks, brass

A THIRD Lue·~

ELSE?

Business Services

____ ___

WANTED. deer hides , will
pickup; phone 667-3236 or 66(·
3891.
11 -26-61p

VEP .. ONE AN'

DO 'IE· NEED
ENN'ITHING

.

MA\.E loKhound, pure white. (.iU N. collec lion, 1687 Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy. Phone 992Reward , phone 247-1201,
2J0&lt; .
Herschel Roush .
11 ·26-31p
, 11 ·24. ttc

Wanted To Buy

SHORE-'IE CAN USE MY
NEW PLASTICA L
TWO,CUPPER,
ELVINEV--

For Sale

Lost

' 'IE GOT
. HAVE
A MEASURIN '
CUP COULb

7-27.1fc

Pomeroy, Ohio45769

BUNGALOW
LINCOLN HTS. - Nice 2
bedroom well cared tor
home. Aluminum siding,
basement , nice bath, gas
forced air furnace . $1,000.00
down . Balance $77 .16 a

'month . Only $7500 .00.
A BARGAIN
5 ROOMS - Q nice size
bedrooms, good bath, 2 room
1basement, outbuilding, and

backyard . Would you bel ieve
only S5,500.00.
INCOME PROPERTY
MODERN - 3 bedroom
paneled home with lois of
closet space: Nice kitchen.
wood burning fireplace, 4
room
block
business

building . All tor just
$25.000.00.
125 ACRES
MOSTLY WOODS - Good 9
room home. 2 baths, lots of
closets. Double liv ing ,
double cellar with large
room over. Drilled well . A
real family selling wllh
privacy. $26,000.00.
NEW LISTING
ONE FLOOR - 3 bedrooms,
new bath, new wall-to-wall
carpeting. Nl'c e kitchen ,
ulilify and cellar. Level lot.
&lt;Jrly S15,000.00.
NEW LISTING
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, TV,
llv.ing and large kitchen.
Basement, stocker furnac.e
on large corner tot. Asking
$9,500.00.
SPECIAL
3
BEDROOMS
2
fireplaces , large k i tchen ,

hall acre of sandy land.
Some fruit, cellar on hard
road. Under $5,000.00.
NEW HOME
3 BEDROOMS - Beautiful
kitchen

with

stove ,

refrigerator , double sink,
and lots ol .cupboard spac~ .
Dining area. closets galore.
Gas forced air furnace .
Asking only $16,000.00 with 2

lots .

·

._..

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows, •carporfs,

, marquees, aluminum siding;
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representative.

For . free

estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

.

.:;· UT'!'LE ORPIIAoN ANNIE

1

3·2-ffc'

Bic: KHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks lnslal!ed. George
(Bill! Pullins. Phone 992-2~78.
4·2t ttc

. .,. READY-MIX ·
de l ivered

'.
Y ..terday'o Cryploquote: EVERY IMPROVEMENT IN COM·
MUNICATION MAKES THE BORE MORE TERRIBLEFRANK MOORE COLBY
.

CONtRETE

right

to

your

project. Fast and easy. Free
es timates. Phone 992·3284:
Goeglein Ready -MIK Co .,.
.
Middleport, Ohio.

{0 lt72 Xlnr Feature• Syndleat.t, be.)

ACROSS
1. Mono·
logist
Mort
5. In the

6-30-tf~ ·

_S
_ E_P_T-IC. _T_A_N_K_S_C_L_E_A-NEDI .
REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6-·
4782, Gallleol!s, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
·
5·12-tfc

· van

DICK TRACY

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-Hfc

· PAW, THE SllERIFF
ANOMR.. TRACY ARE' ON
WAY HERE!

TU'"''"

------

RUSSELL'S ' Furniture
Upholstery ; free pickup and
delivery ; phone 992-5771.
10-27·301c

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
cue No. 20,IDO

Es tate of William -bailey
Deceased .
·
Not ice Is hereby given that
Bet.ty Lou Loven of R:eeosvllle,
Me1gs Count~ , Ohio, has been
duly appointed Executrix Of the
Estate of William Bailey,
dec.eased, late of Reedsville.
Mtl_515. County, OhiO. '\
C,redUors are r.equlred to file
the~r claims With Sl!lid fiduciary
within four months.

Dated

lhls

November 1972.

8th

dey

·

of

!lll IJ, 20 , 2~.·~~· County, Ohio
lit Capacity
Maytot
Automatics
2 spead oparatlon .

·- .

. Cholet of water

tom ps·.

Auto .

level

Unscramble.theM four Jumblet,
one letter to eoch jquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

born
Israeli
2. Gracie 3. Business
reorgani·
zation
(sl. )
(hyph.
wd.)
4. Grant's.'
opposite
number
5. Bring

Yesterday's Answer
9. Hand

over

12. Feel
contrite
into
harmony . 16. Shofar,
e.g.
6. Lena 7. Spire
19. Wasteornament
land
8. One cur·
.22.Magnum
rying
favor
23. Eli's
( 2 wds.)
mentor

24. Like some
bills
25. Ascend
27. Had a
dread
29. Struck
30. Moon
goddess
31. Macaroni
style
38. Designate
37. Circle
segment

control.
Lint
Fitter or Po~Mtr
Pin A~IIIIOr . .'
lttrtnl·,ren
Mayrat
HIIOOI H..t
Dryora · ·
·surround' clot~"

••or-tylnt . 1
l.lnt i
~lltar .
j
~Ina " Moll!

work

DSUBKFIWLD BUHFV Y·L FUMLFC TK

lervife

..

ORLC BLZLS'O DU
'·

"·

,,

FLACIE

· r~ ·•r

II

WHAT TH~T l'O!nU6UESE
NEieHeQit

15.

I~-~I~K~l~l~l~~~i~=~=...]~~.:"~·
YARNEL?

Now_.thaetrtlodlottm

l [I I I I ]

Mtllt I IISliiiSWIUn

=====::j

~~':;j,~'i~~===-::.:__j l:=:::::

'-

DRUMLFC. - riHORUZ

HSWSU BS

r Arnold Grett
Iuiie.... ·
11
,..
u.741-4211
_ _. ____,
.......;..;;;;,.;;;..:.;.;:_, _:-....;.;-.;,;;;';.;.;;........

.o I

It:

CR~U~S

··-:~"'''
INC...,.t ,.

f

lomblno INACT Dlc,lT liCAMI I'Aml

II LONGFELLOW
One Ieite( simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Single letters!
apostrophes, the length and fonnatton of th.e word• are a! ·
htnta. Each day the code letters are dlf!erent.

no

0

(Aatwen

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.- Here's how to
AX\'DLBAAXR

wtth gentl•, tven
~.. t. No ~ott~~ota. •

SNUKK

I_

spender
241. Assever·
ate
21.-play
a . - culpa
H. Resort
selling
IZ. Pottery
piece
U. Spoil
14. Yellow
ocher
U . Magazine
. employee
37. King who
wed
Jezebel
38. Crescent.
shaped
39. Nevada
city
41. - on
(Incited )

Manning D. Webster,
Judgtof the
Common Pleas Court .
Probate Division

WJt·tr

r---------..

~WIJOOID111!;"-'=~..J=

DOWN
1. Native·

tor
25. Big

·

HELEN L. ·TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-3325

10. Medicinal
plant
11. Lady's
coat
THEY i:l&amp;S TO CCW.E DOWN 13. Melancholy
ROUTE 64, AND I WANT
14. ThreeTO GET TillS
fold
01"1" NW
15. Matter
. (law )
16. Vandal
17.1mpu·
dence
18. Crowfoot
family '
' plant
20. Night
preced in g
21. Gist
22. Accessible
%1. Legisla-

fl. Bird's
crop

•

••

'

.

.

t. . .rnw)

�'

t

I'- The Daily Sentinel, Middlewrt-Pomeroy, o.. Nov. '!/, 1972

AD~ny Schuler

d~oo on Saturday
..

COLUMBUS '-- Anlllony L.
Schuler, 57, of 81 N. Westgate,
a former Pomeroy resident,
died ·saturday at Doctor's
HOl&gt;pital.
.
He was born in Pomeroy on
Feb. 16, 1915, the son of Mrs.
Daisy Schuler, pomeroy, and
the late Jacob Leo Schuler,
who died May 20, 1971. Surviving, besides his mother, are
his wife , Maxine Clark
Schuler: a daughter, Linda ; a
brolller, Paul, of Portland, and
a nephew, Jacob Schuler, also
of Por.tland .
Funeral services will be held
at 1 ·p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev . Chester Lemley officiating . Burial will b!' in
Gravel Hill Cemete ry at
Cheshire. Mr. Schuler was
employed at General Motors
where he had 25 years service.

••

_

p ar·a}·yzeu
j)l~ Wall ·
ace

MIAMI (UP!) - Alabama
Gov . George W;tllace confirmed Sunday he probably will
never be able to walk again,
but said his paralysis would not
be a factor 'in his possible
candidacyfor the presidency in
1976.
Walla ~· said be has not made
any decjsion about rurming for
President, but "I'm still in·
terested in 1976. My doctors tell
me I'm going to be physically
able to do what I want to do by
1976 or even sooner.
Wallace, wounded last May
in an assassination attempt at
Laurel,Md., said he has not yet
decided whether to seek reelection as governor of Alabama, but he indicated he
would like to stay in office.
Wallace told a television
news conference ("Meet the
Press NBC-TV) he goes to his
office and handles his duties as

't•t
W0fi -.q01

governor, although he is still in considt&gt;r switching to the
the reeuperative stage Republican party .
following the shooting. ·
He said ·he . might have
- "I would be physically able considered a -third party
to be politically involved from candidacy this year if he had
now on," he said. But he added, not been woilnded .
"I recognize the~'s not much
"! would've considered runchance I'll walk again. I'm rung, but llle chances are I
paralyzed from the waist would not have," Wallace said.
down."
He said his acceptance and llle
Wallace said he is using an Democratid convention had
office opened by some of his
supporters in Washington,
al9ng with his political contacts, to work for the
replac·ement of Democratic
National Chairman Jean
Westwood and the reorganizalion of the party.
"The party must be reorgaPT. PLEASANT - Jack
nized from top · to bottom,"
Wallace said. "If this party Molino of Huntington won the
doesn't do what it ought to do, I Poin t Pleasant Open Chess
to urnament Sunday on a
would be through as a national
of five wins.
l'ecord
Democrat."
LOCAL TEMPS
Playing black in his fifth
He would not say if he would
The temperature in downgame, Molino used an actown Pomeroy at 11 a, m.
celerated king side fianchetto
opening that transposed into a
MOnday was 52 degrees under
Sicilian dnigon defense to
sunny skies.
defeat Roy White, former Pt.
(Continued from Page I)
Pleasan t High School Math
packages must be sent "in confonnity with the al:cady set teac her, now teaching at
regulations of shipment, " which includes routing them through Williamstown, W. Va .
Tonight&amp; Tuesday
Moscow.
The two-day, U.S.C.F. rated
November 27-38
event held at Tu-Endi-Wei
Wall Disney's
NEW YORK - THOUGH JACQUELINE KENNEDY Manor, was directed by
101 DALMATIANS
Onassis shrugged off the possibility she may have been Charles Szasz, former West
I Jechnicolor)
All-Cartoon Fea1ure
photographed In llle nude, her husband conceded llle opwrtunity Virginia State champion,
Also
for such pictures exist on the Greek island of Skorpios, News- assisted by his wife, Roy
SWISS FAMILY
week magazine reported Sunday. Playmen, ah Italian magazine, White, and Bert Moshier of
ROBINSON
1Technicolor&gt;
published 14 'color photographs of Mrs. Onassis - or someone Kyger Creek High School.
2 Walt DisneY Classics "G"
Thirty-nine players competed
f'!aymen claimed was Mrs. Onassis - in the nude and near-nude.
Runni11gi tiri'l e Jlh Hrs.
Though lllere is no proof llle woman was Mrs. Onassis, her eight of the 13 Ohio.ans from
Adm.: AdullsSI.SO Children
husband, Aristotle Onassis, conceded lllat "I have to tilke off my Gallia County and six were of
75c
Show St• .-ts 7 P.M.
pants to put on my bathing suit sometimes. She does too."

News.

••

altered llle conditions lllat led
to, his 19611 race under the
banner of the American Independent party.
·
Wallace said a new party
"might come into heing" if llle
Democrats did not reorganize,
but he said he had faith that the
party would ma(le the
necessary changes.
·

qpen at Point

in Briefs

MEIGS THEATRE

1

Forth~;

holidays, you should be decked out in green.
With money to buy all the gifts you want to give .

And if you join our wide-awake Christmas Club now.
you can have tlQO, $200, even $500 to spend next year .
Make the smal I payments regularly for the next forty nine weeks and we Will make the 50th one free . And at
, Christmas, your Christmas Club money will leave you in
the ptnk.
. Which does much more. l()r you than red .

.

'.

50th ·Payment
FREE
The wide-owoke

. Ghristmas Glub

mokes i!ffj_so_~.9'_:

LEGION TO MEET
RACINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602 will
meet in a special session at
7:30p. m. Thursday at llle post
home to plan Christmas and
New Year's activities. Oyster
stew will be served. Commander Harry Wilford asks all
members to attend.
.
GIFTS NEEDED
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Hir .:.n Fisher with Mrs. Paul
r assisting. Gifts for the
eastern Ohio Mental
1 Center are to be taken .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Shirley Matson , Rutland;
Rufus Browning, Middleport;
Maude Erwin, Middleport ;
William Snyder, Middleport:
Kathleen Arnott, Racine ; Waid
Spencer, Long Bottom and
Ruth Walker, Rutland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Clarence Nichols, Edna
Sizmore, Oliver McKinley,
James Stewart, Estner l'ltzer,
Paul Burns, Gladys Blackwood, Mary Grady and Stella
Rood.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Minnie Miller, Pomeroy ; Ada
Wears, New Haven ; Rebecca
Broderick, Middleport ; Bobbie
Roy, Racine ; Iris Carr ,
Coolville, and Earl Cremeans,
Reedsville.
SUNDAY D!SCHARGES Rebecca Autherson, Edna
Stiles, Maurice Robinson ,
Christy Laudermill and
Rhonda Hager.

lhe
Farmers
Bank
&amp;
Savings
Co.
'
POMEROY. OHIO

Member of Federal Reserve Svsiem
On

:-;:-*=·~·~a.

Molino wins chess

fJn/y Janta belongs in the red

'

.

Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open !a . m. to7 p. m. !Continuously).
S20,0DD Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor

Pt. Pleasant.
Taking second with 4¥. was
Bernard Kierman, Princeton,
and third through sixth were
Roy White, Alfred Hinkle, John
Scherer and Bill Miller of
Athens High School, whose four
wins also earned top Junior
ran~ for him. Joe Anchrile,
Vienna, was seventh with I%.
Among the 11 tied for eight
through 18 were, Mark
Hathaway and Gail Hodges,
Pl. Pleasant; Ray Spring,
Athens, and Dowe Daniels and
Ernest Criner, Gallipolis.
Sharing in a four way tie of
19-22 were Robert Sa~nders,
Hannan Trace High, and
Charles
Ashworth,
Pt.
Pleasant.
Other Gallians were Donald
Lambert and Freemon Locke,
and from Crown City, Jimmy
Ross and Robert Shaver, who
each won two matches in this
their firs t tournament.

17's crew
in final
·tune ups

e e :o:~.~»":W~~~

.. •.·.·.·.· ......·...·.

..

.~ Now You Know

.

'

The party was an exercise . in camp,
necessarily, for it celebrated in publicity and
deportJllent of the celebrities and gawkers who
turned out at Abercrombie &amp; Fitch mostly the
latter-years' self-imposed unfortunate image,
not of Tallulah Bankhead, actress, but Talloo,
international radical drinking-party cartoon.
· Jl was almost as interesting as Tallulah's
entire career to read subsequent reports of the
A. &amp; F. party, tossed in celebration of Brendan
Gill's new not coffee-table but symbolically barsize $25 biolgraphy or Bank~ead which A. &amp; F.
will peddle amid a welter of wading boots and
fishnel.s. Newspapers mostly gave it a flying
touch of ridicule . TV covered it with unglory,
showing il.s ignorance and shallow sense of
theatrical history . The ABC-TV coverage
showed a few eager fawning faces yearning to
get free publicity among the Tallulah artifacts
and fictions and somehow myopically failed to
show the marvelous Augustus John portrait
painwd in London in Talloo's early swinging
years. Leonard Harris' CBS-TV proclamations,
delivered as if he suspected he must sound like
the 'definitive Tallulah-watcher, was a limping
exercise in misstorical memory : he proclaimed
she wasn' t an actress.
Not an actress? Plainly Harris hadn't seen
her in "The Little Foxes" or possibly he was
down to his usual standard of PJ,1!tentious
dramatic attack, attempting to Be Tough to
prove some mystical lofty standard of esthetic
~

.. · ~ uperiority.

The General . Court of
Massachusetts set up the first
postal system in the Amer.ican
colonies in 1639 when it or-.
dered that all overseas mail be
' brought tu the house of Richard
Fairbanks of Boston,

·Not an actreSs? Tallulah carried many a
dramaturgical misfit into the hit class.
Talloo not an actreSs? He might have
checked quickly, furtively, at llle party wllll
TaUulah's Boswell Brendan Gill, the best dr4IJIIII
critic now practicing, as to whether Typhoon
Tallulah could act.
A personality, a character, ultimately, .
unfortunately at the last a caricature of herself
- certainly. But even there she played Talloo
better than all her dabling-dotty imitators even
.s Brendan GiU playsi a•critic better Ulan llle
imitators. But at the party, the certainly
campiest bash of the season so far, certainly a
pahty tossed for llle world's champion pahtylover, there were scads of characters who did
know Talloo..
Joan Crawford knew her far only a party or
two but had respect for her acting until Talloo
became the brownette version of Dorothy
Parker 's Big Blonde; Joan came late, out of
respect, as if to a gay wake, and left early as
befitted not too long an acquainlllnce with llle
lively ·corpse.
Eugenia Rawfs. who acted with her in "The
Little . Foxes," was there to laugh poignantly
and testify sincerely that indeed, dahling, here
was an actress. Mahel Mercer, the definitive
saloon singer of all Talloo!s time, was lllere to
smile a small tear for her everlasting fan of the
touching musical obscurities that Mabel digs
out of her rich intelligence n~ver to be fooled by
the transiently meretricious. Hope Hampton,
who denies being an octogenarian and settles
for sexagenarian tho septuagenarisn is the
bottom line, switched on her sequins and lit up
A. &amp; F. more than its el~ctric signs. Truman
Capote saluted the last of the red hot daughters
who lit up lhe saloon ceilings and dances on
tables.
Joan Fontaine, a constant but restrained
party nymph to this belated day, was there for a
tip of the coirr to Talloo. Cornelia Otis Skinner
noted the excellence of Tallulah in times of
onstage stress. Patsy Kelly had romped in
Talloo parties and romps still on stage and off.
Ethel Merman knew and liked and respected
Talloo else she wouldn.'t've been.lllere. In A. &amp;
F. ? Never. The Merm doesn'thunt. Or fish. Not
even for compliments. Brian Aherne was there;
he dated Tallulah.

VOL XXIV

Success ·is getting what you
want; happiness is wanting

what. you get."

Happiness Is shop'plng with
the "FRIENDLY ONES"
at the Pomeroy Cement
Block Company . The
Friendly,
Co"urleous
~rvlce you find will make
your shopping trip a success ...

'

NO. 158

CAMP DAVID, Md. (UP!) President Nixon is expected to ·
announce today that Elliot L.
Richardson , currently
secretary of health, education
and welfare , will replace
Melvin R. Laird as defense
· secretary in the second Nixon
term, administration sources
said.
The sources said Nixon
would armounce the Cabinet
change from his Maryland
mountain retreat and at the
same · time reveal
a
replacement for Richardson at
HEW. They said Nixon might
announce two .other changes as
well.
Nixon met willl newsmen for -

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

25 minutes Monday and said he

will disclose before Dec. 15 all
of his new Cabinet ajlpointments and tbe structure of the
lean new federal bureaucracy
)1e is plarming. He promised the
changes would be significant
ones that would infuse hew.
vitality into the government
and overcome the traditional
slump of second term adminis!rations.

"The tendency is for administrations to run out of
steam after llle first four years
and then to coast and usually
coast downhilL ·This is particularly true when there is
what you call a landslide

Some Can't Use Sugar

Sharing

WANTS DETAILS
REVEALED
WASHINGTON ( UPI) ' Rep . Les Aspln, D.-Wis., wants
the Pentagon to make pubUc
the details of 78 "substantiated" war crimes
commi tted by U. S. forces in
Vietnam. Aspin said Sunday he
had written Defense SecreU.ry
Melvin R Laird urging hlm to
release details of the substantiated investigations. He
said Laird also should sU.w
what if any action has been
taken against the men involved.
MEETING SET
The Twin City Shrlnettes will
meet at 7:30p.m, Thursday at
the soclal room of the~
· Ccilumbua and Southern Ohio ·
Electric Co. o\11 members are
asked to be present.

.

'

Devoted To The ln.teresu Of The,Meigs-Mason Area
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1972

PHONE 992-2156

·JEN CENTS

victory," he said.
"What I am trying to do is to
change that historical pattern.
The only way that historical
pattern can be ch;mged is to
change not• only some or llle
players but also some of llle
plays."

The President appeared relaxed and restect. He has spent
most of tbe time since the Nov.
7 elections at Camp David
. planning for his second term.
He completed a series of
meetings with tlie members of
the current .cabinet Monday
when he met willl Attorney
Standing in the helicopter General Richard Kleindienst.
hangar at Camp David, he said
no significance should he atHe also conferred lfor more
tached to llle order in which the than two heurs with Henry A.
Cabinet appointments are Kissinger, his chief Vietnam
announced because this negotiator, in preparation for a
depended on getting the meeting Wednesday with
necessary clearance from Nguyen Phu Due, the personal
Congress and completing llle emissary of South Vietnamese
evaluation of their sub&lt;;abinet President Nguyen Van
assistants.
Thieu.

At the request of the Board of
Public Affairs, Middleport
Village Council Monday night
voted to employ the
engineering firm of Floyd G.
Browne and Associ'ates to
conduct a study of the community's sanitary and storm
sewers.
The study has been
requested by the State
Department of Health to
determine the efficiency of the
present sewers. Cost of the
study will be about $2,000.
However, it was pointed out,
the Browne firm was employed
because that company has
drawings of the present system
from earlier work in the
communltf. A firm wl\holit
such drawings 'would have to
complete them, for which the
cost would be considerably
more.
Council agreed to apply for
participation in the Federal
Emergency Flood Insurance
Program . Gene Grate, clerktreasurer, presented detailed ,
inrormation on the FEF!
program under which Middleport residents would be
eligible to purchase flood insurance which they cannot do

When ~ody Can't Absorb It

CAPE KENNEDY (UP! ) Apollo 17's astronauts begin
their final week of scheduled
training today py rehearsing
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. chemkal laxative causing
the precise procedures they
d1stentton parllcularly, as
Dr.
Lamb-In
a
rewell as diarrhea and irritaDear
will lead to their desce.1t to the
cent
article
you
mentioned
ble colon. The symptoms
moon in two weeks.
that there are rare individ- vary in different individuals,
Eugene A: Cernan, Ronald u~ls who cannot handle or- but they can include 1evere
E. Evans and Dr. Harrison H. dmary sugar because they abdominal pain.
"Jack" Schmitt are scheduled can't absorb it from the into set out on llle final Apollo testines. WI!! you please give 0£ course the body reexpedition Dec. 6. They con- me more information about quires energy to function so
this condition and how it i~ if :YOU are not absorbing
. sider themselves ready to go treated.
I suspect that I may enough food elements there
now, but training ~oordinators be a victim of this condition is a tendency to fatigue.
have scheduled brush up work in addition to a lack of lacNow. none of these sympfor the rest or the week.
tase which was proved by a
toms
may be related to your
Today's schedule included a ' lactose tolerance test.
problem. However, a simple
lunar descent simulation in · My symptoms improved test that you can do is to stop
spacecraft trainers with flight after eliminating milk and using sugar and foods that
controllers at the Mission all milk products from my contain sugar, such as those
Control Center in Houston diet, but I have found that that you mentioned. For
I must also eliminate most
directing the exercise as if it of the ordinary sugar and sweets you can use honey,
were real.
e v e n fresh fruits such as since all 'of the sugar in
The lllree astronauts relaxed pears, grapes, apples , and honey is of the monosacchain their quarters Sunday and oranges in prder to be com- ride or single sugar variety.
the Kennedy Space Cenoor fortable. Even a single bite That means it can be ablaunch crew also had the day of a sweet dessert can cause sorbed directly from the di·
me to wake in the night with gestive W. a c t without an
off. The ground crewmen a bad taste in my mouth and enzyme
'K'Ctlon as is needed
concentrated
today 'on a reeling of nausea. A small to absorb ordinary t a b I e
preparations for the start of the amount of sugar at the eve- sugar . If you still have
countdown Thursday morning. ning meal causes me to have symptoms after using honey
this problem . Is there a test instead of sugar, your probtojl_rove this lack? Doctors lem is not related to an in·
I have consulted t e n d to ability to absorb sugar, but
think "it is all in my head," may be related to problems
(Con tiriued from Page I )
which I doubt.
of low blood sugar or other
difficulties.
voting behavior," he said, "We
Dear Reader- Lactose, the
were forced to realize that we milk sugar, and ordinary
While intolerance to the
are in need of a thorough re- table sugar are both double milk sugar lactose, is fairly
examination of what the people s u gars, technically called common, intolerance to orexpect in terms of government disaccharides, which 'lleans dinary table sugar and the
they have to ~e split into
services and what they are single s u gars, technically double sugars present in
willing to pay for tbose ser- called ~onosaccharides, be- fruits is relatively rare, but
it does occur. Spe~iallabora­
'vices'."
fore they can be absorbed, tory tests can be utilized to
from the digestive tract. If test for this problem, but to
HEARINGS OPENED
they are not absorbed. then accomplish these you would
WASHINGTON (:JPI)
they act somewhat like a
Three days of informal
hearings on reform of Congress
will be opened Dec. 4 by Sens.
Charles MeC. Mathias, R-Md.,
and Adlai E. Stevenson lfl, D.lll. "We need to find ways to
make the Congress more
representative of the popular
will, more accountable to the
public and more efficient and
effective in the discharge or its
con s titutional responsibilities," tlle senators said in
a weekend statement.

•

New sewer study ordered

probab1y need to see either a
specialist in gastroenterology
or metabolism.
Individuals who cannot eat
fruit for any reason must be
particularly careful to eat
tomatoes or ot.h~r foods th{lt
c o II t li hl'.\1\tamln"C· or-el1e
take adequate amounts in
vitamin supplements.
Your symptoms may be
related to regurgitation of ·
gastric contents Into your
lower esophagus because of
a hiatal hernia or ()!her problem in proper closure of the
v a I v e at the inlet of the
stomach.
.;...·.•.·• .... . ....·...·....:-::.:·.·:· ...;.:-:-:-:.;.·.;.:EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended outlook
Wednesday through Frlc!Jy.
Cold with a chance of allow ·
flurries mainly northeaot.
High temperatures In lbe
30s. Oven)lght lows mostly In
the 20s.
. ·.· ·.•.· ·.·...·.· ·. .........·.· ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.

•
This 28!lb. buck deer was bagged by Edward Andmon
of Dexter Monday as the deer season, which ends Dec. 6, got
m~derway in Meigs County. One shot felled it. Two of Its 10
wints had been broken away.

....

... ..

INSTALLATION SET
Middleport Lodge 363,
F &amp;AM, will install officers at
7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
Masonic Temple fn Middleport.
The meeting is open to all
Master Masons, their ladies,
DeMolay members and Invited
guests.

;w-;::-;!'""'.

, """ ~~

ews •• zn Brzefsl
By United Press lnt~rnatlonal
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - REFORM-MINDED Arnold
Miller holds a razor-thin lead over incumbent President W. A.
"Tony" Boyle with tlle United Mine Workers election just days
off, the ''Miners for Democracy" claimed Monday. Miller has 41
pet. of the votes in his pocket, Boyle has 40 pet., and 19 have not
decided,- the MFD asserted, based on a telephone survey of 407
coal miners in representative areas.
Miners were polled in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Tennessee and Illinois by Cambridge Survey Research for
The Miner's Voice, a newspa(ll:r dedicated to the refonn
movement in the UMW. Miller's campaign manager Ed Man·
borne and wll director David Page said at a news conference
that the survey was made Nov. 17-20 in a sample of seven UMW
districts that contain 53 pet. of the UMW members. OveraU, the
five states used for the poll represent 78 pet. of all union miners.

To co77U! home late at
night without recrimination makes you either the
world's best story-teller or
your wife the champion
sleeper in toW11.

Sale! Kimba ·Pianos

·· ~dl ~

at

One to three inches of snow in
the contra! a.nd south today·.
Ghance of snowflurries tonight
. a~d tomorrow. Lows tonight in
the mid 20s. Highs tomorrow in
the low 30s.
··

Richardson avored
to get Laird's job

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'·' • I

Weather ;

.

I Voice along .B r'Way I
BY JACK O'BRIAN
TALLULAH - THERE WAS
. ONLY ONE
NEW YORK (KFS) - The Jaw Tallulah
Bankhea d tossed a party for whatever
celebrities were around here the other late
aftern oon and evening, black lie of co~rse and
.
'
as with many of her parties an unusual locale naturally. At Abercrombie &amp; Fitch, a Madison
Avenue store normally devoted to peddling
guns, fishing rods, electric razors that barecheck you in a minute, excessively sensible
women 's clothes and hardly anything Tallulah
Bankhead might have purchased in .ihe entire 65
years of her ego-flung exiswnce as · child,
adolescent, miss and woman with a Talent for
Being Noticed .

.

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE and Senate scheduled
full floor sessionsforthisafternoon (I :30 p.m.) to begin the drive
toward final adjournment of the 109th regular session, the
longest in the history of llle Ohio General Assembly. Both
chambers held brief housekeeping sessions Monday in
preparation for llle start of a ··lameduek" session expected to
lasl about three weeks.
The Senate today was expected to concentrate on apwintments of Gov. John J. Gilligan. Several gubernatorial apwintment.s were sent to the Senate Rules Committee Monday,
including former astronaut John Glenn to the Transportation
Reseatch Board of Ohio and Dav!d C. Sweet as director of
economic and community development, a WSition he already ·
holds unofficiaUy. Main thrust of tbe year-end le~tlve session
is expected to be enactment of a revised criminal code and approval of constitutional amendments on a state lottery and
legislative wwers to clear the way for their appearances on the
·May, 1973 baUot.
.'

Music
Department on the 2nd
floor. Select the
plano you want
now for yourself
or your family
and really save
during the sale.

WASHINGTON:... THE UNITED STATES imported ~15
million more In goods than it exported last monlll, and U.S. officials silld the nation Is certain to run up its seeond annual trade
deficit of the m century this year.
The flnt annual deficit d this century was recorded in 1971
when Imports exceeded ext)orta by an estimated $2 billion. The
October deficit pulhed the imbalance for this year to a much
larger f5,2'15 ·1illlon.

There's a fine selection of styles and wood finishes and you'll like the good
looks and fine tone of these Kimball planoil.

SAIGON -A SOOTH VIETNAMF.11E drive to recapture JOlt
. --g;.ound In Quangi'ii Province- before declaratiOn ol aeease.fire.

ELBERFELD$ IN

(Continued on Page 10) ,

now. Grate sa id that the
present zoning program would
provide some or the in formation needed to qualify in
the program,
Amap of the community and
a history of areas flooded over
the past 100 years will also be
needed to apply for participation . Under present law,
$17,500 in flood insurance, $200
\leductible, is the maxin.um
that could be purchased . Cost
would be 50 cents per $100 on
building contents and 40 cents
per $100 on buildings.
Danny Thompson and Larry
Queen asked council per·
mission to place two mobile
home ~ near an apartment
hou"' 9wned , Q.y Qllejln . on
North Fourth Ave. Thompson
said space is adequate for the
two-homes and there would be
very little excavation required.
Maintenance;;:~ Supervisor
Harol&lt;,) , Chase said llle Planning Commission had turned
down Queen's request on Nov .
13 for a change in zoning from
high density residential to a
category which would perm'it
th e mobile homes in the
location ; also, that the com(Continued on Page 10)

-

SCORING HIS TRADmONAL HIT with )'IIWig and old
alike in Middleport Monday night was Santa who distributed
treats to youngsters following the annual parade.

Santa sets down in Middleport:

THE SOUTHERN HrGH SCHOOL band of Racine took part in Middlewrt's Christmas
parade Monday night.

Youngster stricken by mystery illness
Jeff Brown, 12, son of Mr.
and Mrs, Bill Brown, 112 State
St., Gallipolis, was reported in
fair condition at 10:45 a.m.
today at Children's .Hospital,
Columbus, after he was rushed
there by helicopter Monday.
Young Brown, a seventh
grade student in Gallia
Academy junior high school,
became 'ill Sunday evening,
according to reports, and wa•
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center. Brown 's illness has not
yet been diagnosed.
!

Brown ,-a promising football ,
basketball and baseball player,
reportedly became ill Sunday
after eating a candy bar.
Everything pertaining to his
illness remained a mystery as
or 10:45 a.m. today .
After several tests were
performed on Brown at Holzer
Medical Center, he failed to
respond. Local officials then
made arrangements to transfer Brown to Child,en 's
Hospital.
Gallipolis official s • ere

informed 1t would take more
than tlu·ee ·hours by motor
ve hicle, due to wet conditions
or the highway , thus
arrange ments · were made to
fly Brown tu Columbus by
mediropter.
, With the Ohio Na tiona l
Gu ard
furnishi ng
the
helicopter ,
the
chi ef
'pediatvician resident or
Children's Hospital and lllree
assistanl'"i .arrived _at Holzer
Medica l Center as a team
around 2:30 a.m. Monday to

perform what·is believed to be
the fi rst air-emergency tran s~
fer of a rwtient fr om Galli polis
1o Columbus.
The mcdicoptcr la nded in the
employee's parking Jot to the
rear or the new hospital af ter
the lot was cleared or vehicles.
Ga ll ia Coun ty Sheriff 's
Depa rtme nt
ai ded
the
medicopte r's landi ng by
placin g f l a r e ~ in various
l i,~:ation s in the parking lot
a rCll.

By Unlted Press Intematlonal
Presidenl Nixon conferred
for more than two hours
Monday willl Henry Kissinger,
his chief Vietnam peace
negotiator, In preparation for a
meeting Wednesday willl tlle

personal emissary of South Paris to report to Hanoi
Vietnamese· President Nguyen leaders on private talks with
Kissinger, which broke off
Van Thieu.
Saturday until next Monday to
give
both sides time to consult
At llle same time, North
Vietnam's Deputy Foreign Mi· willl their respective leaders.
Nixon met twice willl Kissinnister, Nguyen Co Thach, left
ger at the presidential retreat
at Camp David, Md.- the
fourlll consecutive day the two
have conferred on progress in
tlle secret peace talks. KissinNo one was injured in two truck north at Sycamore
accidents investigated by the Grove, had her hand slip off llle
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. steering wheel in a curve. Her
0) )} SHCPPi~r
Monday.
vehicle went off the road to the
_&amp; )) DAYS Lff I
At 11 a.m. In Lebanon Twp. right, over an embankment,
Roy R: Smith, Rt. 1, Portland,. and into a creek, Mrs, Boso
and Sheryn J. Lawrence, Rt. 2, said she was not u8ed to driving
Circleville, were driving their · a pickup truck. There was
cars north on SR · 124. Smith heavy damage !o the truck.
went to tnake a left hand turn
into a private drive as. the &gt;$-X$~ .
. . .... ·.· . ·.· •'
Lawrence vehicle · was atEXTENDED OI.ITL()()K
tempting to pass.
Ohio Extended Outlook There was medium damage
to Smith's car anil heavy to
Thursday through Salbrday:
Lawrence's. Sheryn 1Lawrence
A warming trend . with
was cited to court for failure to
highs In the 30s Thursday,
·
rising to the 40. and low 50s
give . a proper signal when
by Saturday and lows mootly
paAsstm8g;.
SR · 12, .
·n the 20s. A chance of
~ZJ:~~~~~~!2,
· '"" Jhl1l on
• m - 1- -Sutton.lwp.: ~n Boso, 42, Rt.
showers Saturday. .
1, Portland, driving a light
.iW&amp;.:.!iil:.:w;m-7..:::::::&lt;.::::

Wrecks are injury-free

ge r also mel with Secretary or nam's demand for removal of
State William P. Rogers at the Norlll Vietnamese troops from
state Department prior to his South Vietnam , Laos and
session with Nixon and a Cambodia . as a peace condepartment spokesman said dition .
the Kissinge r-Rogers talks
Tho, accompanied by Xuan
were de voted entirely to Thuy, head of 'the regular
Ki ss in ge r 's pri va t e Norlll Vietnamese delegation
negotiation s wi th Hanoi to llle weekly Paris peace
politburo member Le Due Tho. talks, conferred Monday in
Wednesday, Nixon meets Paris with Madame Nguyen
with Ni,'llyen Phu Due, Thieu's TI1i Binh, the VietCong foreign
personal representative and minister. Their session was to
Kissinger 's Vietnamese equi- prepare for Thursday's regolar
valent. Thieu asked Nixon to talks, the !69th such meetingmeet with Du~ and the none or which have produced
President agreed. Thien ol&gt;- frui tful results.
jects to certain provisions of an
In Saigon, U.S. Ambassador
.accord drafted by Kissinger Ellsworlll Bunker met for 15
and llle North Vietnamese last minutes Monday" with Thieu
month-especially a provision · but llle results of -llle meeting
that would allow Hanoi to keep were not disclosed. The status
troops in South Vietnam after a of the Paris talks was believed
cease-fire. Hls objections were to have been·the subject of the
reportedly what caused session .
Delegate General Vo Van
suspension of the-latest secret
Paris talks.
Sung, Hanoi's permanent
Thach refused to discuss the diplomatic represenwtlve in
tile
reasons for the Su. spensl·on France, conferred during
· F oretgn
·
h
·et
at
Orly.
day
with
Frenc
When he boarded a J
. Sch
trip to Minister Maunce
urnann
Airport l'n Pa,is for ••e
u•
f th
0
Hanoi·. Commun1'st diplomats, on •tlle current
stage
kin g effort-. Re.w
--•tse ,
'
d
they
·"ould
noficonfirm
of
peace--rna
sal
w
•L
""
lik ·
deny reports that Hanoi -would of "'at mee.Urg were ewiSC
refuse to bow to Soutl) Viet- not disclosed.
·

."
!

'

Mr. and Mrs. Brown early
Monday drove to Columbus
where they remained today by
the hoy's bedsid".

President prepares for Thien emissary

I

'

Young Brown , reportedly
un conscious at the time of the
medieopter's arrival, regained
consciousness hefore arriving
at the hos pital in Columbus. He
was, however, placed in an
inte nsive c e~re unit upon
arri val in Columbus. Later,
young Brown was placed in a
r·egular room.

I .

\

Middleport's business seclion was packed Mill spectators Monday evening as the
community offici~lly
welcomed in the Christmas
season.
Again proving himself · a
"most popular fellow" was
San.ta who made hls ap·
pearance In llle parade which
marked the opening of the
Ieason and lllen ~lflbuted
treats to y01111gsters Who linea
llle area beside· the Citizens
National Bank awaiting llleir
personal "conference" with old
St. Nick.
The parade with four bands,
Eastern , Southern, Kyger
Creek and Meigs moved
smoothly through the business
section with sharp marching
units - the Glo-ettes and the
Riggs Royal Kadetws - ad·
ding color to the event. The
Glo-ettes were attractive in
silv er and red costuming,
many twil'ling large Linse)
hoops. Many or the Kadettes
were costumed as brightly
wrapped Christmas packages
to really carry out the festive
U1eme. A group of Meigs High
School cheerleaders, Girl
Scouts, entries by the Royal
Crown Bottling Co., and the
fire department units rounded
out the annual parade lead by
the
Middleport
Police
Department.
The weather was crisp but
not cold, adding to the success
of the official holiday season
welcome. Mayor John Zerkle
observed that it was the largest
crowd on hand he 'Had ever
seen for the event.
Middleport merchanl.s who
sponsored the parade and other
ac tivities under the chairmanship or Mrs. June Kloes,
conducted a moonlight sale
during the evening.

Parade to
start at 7·
A parade welcoming Santa

will be held In Pomeroy Thurs- ·
day , leaving the Pomeroy
Junior High School at 7 p.m. It
is sponsored by llle Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce kicking
off the annual Christmas
promotion . Earl Ingels said
today those who plan to take
part are (o meet behind the
building at 6:30p.m.
Following the parade Santa
will distribute tr~ats . to
children on u,e upper parking
lot &gt;\Sltistlng Santa will be
•Meigs High cheerleaders.

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs . Phyllis Hennessy,
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
treasurer of Pomeroy Village;
· d a heart attack .Mon. _
_suffer~
day and is confined to the
Holzer Medical r.enter.

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