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The flrll Nobel Prl!e ln
Literature was awarded in 1901
to Rene F . A. (Sully)
Prudbonune of France.

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Now You Know

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VOL XXII -NO. 126
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CARL ROACH HIGIU..Y BUFFS a riDe barrel preparing It for blueing In biB garage llhop
where bil buDds and repairs guns in Pomeroy.
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BY BOB HOEFLICH
Gunsmltbs are as scarce as
hens' teetb tbese days.
however, deaplle the decline
in the demand for gunamltbs
Pomeroy's Carl Roach, a
resident of Wright St., earns his
dallf bread through following
tbs prolesllon.
A native of West Columbia,

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Dean,

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serving now primarily as a
coach for new team members.
He attended four matches with
the team during the past
swnmer including one at Oek
Ridge, Tenn.
Besides working full time flve
days a week as a gunsmltb,
Roach be• converleod bls garage
at bts home Into a workshop
~dlwa..lwayaillteru~ ..wboa, ,ll&amp;."lw"•la •&lt;1111\tdik
iuns. During World War II, he cuotomers. In addition, a
senedasamachlneaU!Jner and danlher of guns are generally
bls lDtereat ln weapolls grew. on hind for repair. He builds
Upon leavlni the ~ce be only rllles but does repair work
jolnad the National Guard and on numerous otber kin&lt;lll of
had become so weD versed on guns.
weaporilltbathewasable to find In this workshop Rosch turns
employment as a gunsmltb with out some 13 to 13 guns a year In
the Weal VIrginia National his spare time for customers in
Guard at Point Pleasant, in many states-of the nation. Some
1941, and aWl is employed there. of his guns have even gone to
A capeble shot, Rqach has Germany.
been a member of the West The Roach guns are built to
VIrginia National Guard Rlfie the specific desires of the
Team for years and sWI travels customer as to caUher, the
wltb the team to various service •ction for lt, the type of barrel,
and non-aervlce matches. stnck and other features, The
However, Roach ts tbe first to local gunsmltb can turn out a
admit tltat bls eye sight isn't gun in a week but this takes
whet II used to be ond he Is some busWng since tbe stocks

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A 8ERJi.s OF I!'IVE EIJIUBHIN8,BOCUD Rochelt!l', N,
y ., early todl¥, heavily ~~ a federal bull4nll, a COtllltJ
cl..-k'• olllce; twQ chun:hell and. a Ulllon olflclal1s home as lhjl
nation's wave ol bomlllnp contlllued.
The flvHtorY atone ledenl blllldlllg, deticrllled by
• "hall dealroYad" bt' tile blut, bad been r.ided Sepl. 6 hy a
pup whlclt called llle1f tb~ "FQtf City GII!IPir•CJ." Offlcel of
lheBelecllveSttvlceBoltd, !be Fl!i and lbe U.S. attorney were

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which are highly finished
require so many coats of
materials wltb a considerable
amount of drying time required
between coats to achieve the
satlJ&gt;.Uke finish for tbe gun.
Barrels for tbe Roach guns
arrive already barreled . A
machine to do tbe barreling
would cost approximately
.Mt,OOQ "-.l!!ll':af;tlle rel!lh~ 0111
local gunsmith. Blueing
procmM are done at the local
shop wllb guns going through
several steps so tbat the barrels
wiD maintain tbe proper appearance for long periods of
time .
Roach personally test fires all

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Maban property near Rlo
Grande, on Georges Creek Rd.,
and in tbe Evergreen and
Cheshire communities. The
system's booeter stations and
treatment plant will cost
$472,132.50.
Other contractors are
Moody's of Dayton, wells;
Crane Company of Cblcsgo,
meters, and Cald,..ll Tanks,
Inc., Louisville, Ky., tbe tanks.
It iB anUcipaiA&gt;d tbe project
will cover a 10 montb span.
Construction will begin at tbe

well site wbere core drllling was
first made on AprU 3, 1969.
Line&amp; will run from Kanauga
to Chesltlre; over to BidwellPorter and surrounding areas;
acroas to Rodney; northwest to
Thunnan; soutbweot to Rt. 218
(within two mliea of Mercervllle) and east to Patriot.
The Initial system will
provide water for 1,100 persons.
Engineers from Sleco, Inc.,
Columbus, btd., designers of the
syatem, reports tbe main well
will produce approDm&amp;tely 700

gall0111 of water por minute.
Officials of tbe rural water
association beve already made
application · to tbe FHA for
additional funds to handle
approximately 500 more
customers. Monday's
ceremonies will end three years
of hard work for the
association's board of directors.
1niUaJ work first began on the
countywide system in 1967.
However, the idea of a water
system originated in 11166 when

the Cheshire Village Council
under the guidance of former
mayor Robert W. Burchett
applied for funds to construct a
sewer system, but was told that
water was a necessity.
Asaociation directors are Ishmael Gillespie, president;
Merrill McCormick, vicepresident; Walter Neal,
secretary; Mrs. Beulah Mitchell, treasurer; Jack Carter,
Kennetb Haner, Scotty Lucas,
Robert Sprlegel, Richard
Cremeens and David McCoy .

384,000 on Asian Front
SAIGON (UPI) - The United
States has reduced its troop
strengtb in Soutb Vietnam
below the 384,000 men called for
in President Nixon's Phase
Four witbdrawal program the
u.s. Military Command 'said
today.
The regular weekly troop
strengtb report showed tbere
were 384,600 u.s. ser&gt;icemen in

The final elements of the sources said in Phnom Penh the area told tbe high command
199tb Light Wantry Brlgede today. One American was kllled immediate sweep operations
departed Vietnsm Sunday along in the crash and another was were being carried out to
witb elements of tbe 2nd and missing.
recover tbe body of the dead
3rd Battali0111, 7tb Marine The sources inside the Cam· Amerlcan.
Regiment, and tbe 3rd Batta- bodlan ltigh Command said the
lion of the lltb Marine aircraft was shot down near tbe Otherwise there was only
Regiment, spokesmen said. city of Samrong 210 miles scattered fighting in Cambodia.
Also leaving witbin the past 24 nortbwest of Phnom Penh. It The official mllltary spokesman
hour~:~ were the last units of the was Identified as an OVIO said a Communi&gt;\ force es3rd Brigade, 9th Wantry Bronco.
tlmated at 500 men attacked
Division, and 2nd Squadron, Is\ According to tbe Cambodian Cambodian positions Sunday
Cavalry,
sources three American OVIII night at Cbhoeu Kach, 38 miles
In Cambodia, Communist rushed to the area where the southeast of Phnom Penh, wltb
below the authorized ceiling of gunners Sunday shot down the plane was brought down but sketchy prellminary reports
ol bls guns and so far has never 384,000 ordered by Nixon for tbird U.S. observation aircraft were driven off by gunfire . indicating at least five Cam·
in 1l days, Cambodian military Cambodian mllltary officers in bodians
Oct. 13.
had one explode on him.
were wounded.
Questioned as to why pur·
chasers prefer Roach guns to "ill:
machine made guns wblch they i,J&gt;,~t
can buy in stores, Roach points
.£'
out that not only can tbe gun be t~'
madetotbespecificationsofthe
individual in his shop but also
RUTLAND- Vernon Weber, Flipped into the air, he came tbe Rutland Methodlst Owrch.
tbat the locally bull\ guns are
-It, proprietor of tbe QuaUty down on bls head.
Two otber accident ..tienll
,fllOI't tiCCUJI!le.·Avilltor ~ 1!f ,,,~~'1!!.
Print
Shop
In
Middleport,
and
Bones
In
the
front
of
th2
head
were
admltleod to Holser
slql during a newspaper in"
Rutland
vlllage
clerk,
is
Medical
Center over the
were
pushed
into
tliJ
slnuses
tervtew highly recommended
scheduled
for
surgery
at
Holzer
and
a
nerve
waa
injlu-ed.
He
weekend.
tbe performance of tbe Roach
Medical Center following an suffered several lacerations
built guns.
accident at bls home Sunday around the eyes.
Norman C. Aher, iiO, Lin·
evening.
He was taken to tbe office of cbburg, suffered an ankle in ~
Believed to be Melg&amp; County's
Mr. and Mrs. Weber were Dr. J. J. Davis by a member of jury in an accident at Bob
only otber gunsmltb is Albert
entertaining
church youtbs wltb tbe family and tben to Holzer Evans Camping Grounds, He
Hartung.
a wiener roast and hayride. A Medical Center.
was admitted at 10 p.m.
trail boss was being ridden hy
The beyride and wiener roast Saturday. Mrs. Warren H.
the young people when It ap- iB an annoal event given by Mr. Rose, 47, Rt. I, Racine, was
parenUy skidded in wet grass, and Mrs. Weber each year for admitted for observation
striking Weber In the beck of members of Mr. Weber's high following a traffic accident on
tbe legs as he walked beside it. school Sunday School Class of Rt. 124.
PT. PLEASANT - Army
tbe roadway and turned over. Warrant Officer eandldate
King and a passenger, 43-year Brady L. Kinder, Zf, oon of
old Bernace King suffered Mr. and Mn. Shermaa L.
minor injuries. Danlage was Klader, Route I, Point
Three higbway accidents car driven by Ada Hackett, 30, reported to both vebicles and
moderate and no charge was Pleasant, bas compleleod a 20- were investigated over the
Pomeroy Route f, was stopped Grace ElliB, a paaseng..- In tbe
filed .
week beUcopter pllol course weekendhytbe~tof in a Une of tralllc wileD her Hackel! car, had Injuries to her
Minor damage resulted from at tbe U. S. Army Primary
Sleriff Robert llartenbach.
veblcle was sll'uck !rom the hack, but was not taken to a
a two vehicle collision at 10:13 Helicopter School, Fl.
The
first was at 3:15 pm. rear of a car driven hy Donald hospital. Randn\plt, who bed
a.m. Saturday on · Johnson Wolters, TOI, 'II'OC Kinder
Saturday on State Route 124 Randolplt, 20, Pomeroy Route 3. head Injuries, was taken to
Ridge Rd., Gallia County, eatered the Army In 1911 aod
near Sbotgun Hollow Road. A
Heavy damages were Veterans Memorial !loopital hy
where vehicles driven by was !lUll stationed at Fl.
Martin ambulance and adMlcbeel D. Barcus, 21, Rt. I, Eustis, Va. He holds the
mitted. ~ bes been died to
Galllpoll;~, and Charles L.
bronoe star meda~ aeveo
court for failing to maintain
Hively, 38, Rt. I, Galllpolls, awanls of the alr medal, aDd
assured clear distance.
Bideswlped on a curve. No one lbe eombal Infantryman
At 11:211 am. &amp;mday two
was injured.
badge.
Foil' members of one famlly dren were critically injured, autos had medium damages in a
Another Saturday accident
and three members of &amp;notber along wltb two otb..- persons. collision 3. 7 mlles east of State
occurred at 4p.m. on Mill Creek
area.
CARNIVAL CIIANGED
were killed during the weekend Two trlple falallty and two Houle 7ln tbe Eagle
Rd., one and nine-lentbs mlles
~Ale car, driven hy Patrick
The
Chester
PTA
Halloween
as
tragedy
stalked
Ohio
streets
double
fataUty
a&lt;'Cldents
,.....
nortb of Gulllpolls where autoo
Morrisey, 19, Racine Rollle I,
driven hy Tbmnas E. Sayre, IB, carnival was erroneously an- and highways. At least 3tl per- alao recorded.
unced earlier for Thursday sons dled ln mishaps, tbe Ohio lA! Saturday Jame• Morrison, :,-"·.-.ling uphill on tbe wrong
Rt. z, Galllpolis, and Roy
Whitehouse, biB wile, carolyn, side of the road, collided wltb
Elllolt, 83, Rt. !, GaiUpotis, ~~ !5 It wiD he held at ~ Highway Patrol reported.
toll was one of the worst 28, and tbelr llknontb-old son, anotber driven by Shirley Long,
s.ldeswiped on .a curve. sc~I ;,, Saturday ' Oct· 17 · of 'lbe
tbe yaar and five more than Mark, w..-e kllled in a two-car 34, Minersville Route I, In a
Moderate damage resulted. No
cune, There were m injiU'les.
the prevloUB weekend. Four of crash In WllUama County.
cltaYon was Issued.
tbe
vlctlms
were
pedestriaM,
Al3:01 pm. Sunday on Route
PISTOL DE'i&amp;"l'ED
three
ill
Cleveland,
and
the
lA!
SwldaJ,
threo
l'llUDII
men
124,
nefO' the int..-...:Uon of
C3UCAGO (UP!)- A Dayton,
were kllled In a twi&gt;OO' &lt;rash Bomnan's Run Road, a car
&lt;lllo, man who allegedly tried fourth in Toledo.
'!be single worst accident of on a.lo 310 south of Xenia. The driVOII hy Robert &lt;leek, 17,
BOND8 FORFEITED
to carry a loaded .22 caliber
Forfelllnl bonds Saturday p1a1o1 aboard 0 TriDI W&lt;l'ltl tbe weekend occurred Sunday victims were Thomas ~e. Z3, Racine, traveling weot, WEill off
night in the court of Pomeroy tllrllnes !Ugbt here Saturda:• 11 mUes west of Zllnesvllle on William B. Jordon, 22, both of the road coming out ol a curve
~ Valley, and Earl Rowe, ..d tben n!lllmed into the Neb·
Mayor Charles Legar were night, was to appear before a U. IJilo 518.
wsy to hlt an ,.."'hound ear
The haad-ooerash of two ....... 22, Xenia,
Frank Goebel, CoolvUle, '18.70, s. aJIIIIIlalloner today. Ranald
post&lt;td lor speadlng: Carl E. Talbott, 28, an 1111111tployed le!l dead James W. Hooper, 35, The Ohlollllbwoy Patrol said driven hy Warren llooe, 50, of
Stewart, Pomeroy, Ull, In- OQtertaln.-, was charged with ZaneaviUe, and Ida 1011.1, Tor- louroftbe~sldlledwere Racine.
toUcatlon, and WUbur Ward, tbefederalolfonMofcarrylnga ranee, 10; stephen, 1: Keltb, e. wearing Mt bellum! 11 others Heavy damage was roported
Mlddleporl, · $11, deleellve conculed weapou aboard an Hooper's wife, BeltJ, 33, and had lbt belt• available but not in both vehicles. Mn. ROle was
two of !be
other chU- fastened.
taken to the lloller MedleaJ
nhausl
aircraft.
Center by the Radne
emer11ency
aquad
lor
~atiGM of the held. Mr.
llooe had a tooth llnocliled 0111.
Cleek baa beeD dte'd to

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Vernon Weber Injured

Four Hurt

Four pertwns were injured,
none serloosly, in as many
weekend traffic accidents investigated by tbe Galllpolls
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first injury mlsbep was at
7:43 a.m. Saturday on Main St.
I
7\T
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I In Rutland where vehicleo
1 1
1 driven by Velma L. Johnson, 32,
I
I Ric I, Dexter, and Joseph D.
Murphy, Rt. I, Washington, W.
By United Preu_ IJderaalloaal
Va., collided. Johnson and a
Rules Nixon Plan UtuJcceptable
passenger, Lucllle Kennedy, 20,
Rt.
I, Rutiand, were trealeod and
PARIS- 'I1IE BEAD of the Viet Cong delep\lon to the Paris
talktJ llllid today the cease-lire olfered by Pnsioont Nlllon is released al tbe Holzer Medical
unacceptable unless It Is coupled wltb a poUtlcal eettlement on Center. Mrs. Johnson was
Communist terms. Madame Nguyen Thl Blnh, ln an Interview charged witb driving left of
wltb tbe French Communist party dewapapor L'llwnanlte, said center.
The otber inJury accident was
Nlloo's flvf!1101nt proposal to 011d the war In Indochina was ''not
acceptable." But site did not Ulll tbe word "reJect" ln referring to on Rt. 160, one and one-tentb
mile west of Galllpolls where
II.
John
D. King, 53, Gallipolis, lost
"We beve analyuld wllb care the speech of Mr. NI:roo and we
control
of Iota car wblch went off
see Ida co-called peace plan Is des!lned neltber to slve prugress to
the Paril cacla'ence nor to aid in ·• peaceful settlement. 'rttat Is Adult Recreation
why we CllltSider It Is not acceptable. We wlab a cease.flre, Mme.
Jljnh said, ''but mly as a first 1\ep towardllasting peace, tbat Is, a
cease-fire 'IIIIIch would, ·~ {ounded 011 a corre&lt;:t pollllcal set- Program to Begin
An adult recreation program
tlomenl, on the 8UIJ'aniee of tbe ft111dsmental national rights of
for
adults will begin tonigllt at
the Vletnamtlll people.
Southern Local High School in
T!llister Debris over Teu•
Racine,
The program wW be held
TEXAS HAD TO CLEAN UP THE DEBRJileft hy SINeral
tomadnee wllh heavy rain ,lalllnl this momtq. The twllters, from 7 to g each Monday wltb
which touched ~ Sunday, loot foret -~ the nl&amp;ht, but Jolm Blake supervisor. Bellideo
!!eftre 11t«m1 porststod tltrou&amp;h mum of •raw and Louisiana. adull:l, the program Ia c:pen to
At Br!dge City, TelL, where a twlstet uprvoled trees and junl&lt;l' high and high school
overturned trallm at a trall!l' part, cotalty olflclall deployed students. Tltooe !liking pat!
tractors to clear 11reeto of - · and tralil!r piecel. Ellbt !*&gt;Pie must ltrlnt! gym shoes.
were Injured wlull the torllado I.IIUched down.

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was to
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Friday
in 1813

BY DALE ROTHGEB
Final 1oaJt cJosin,s and It,.
groundbreaklng ceremony for
Gallla County's $2,113,000 rural
water system will be held
Monday, Oct. 19.
lslunael GUiesple, Rodney,
president of the Galtis County
Rural Water Aasoctation, said
today Farmer's Home Administration (FHA) officials
will close the Insured loan at 10
a.m. in tbe Chesltlre Water
office.
Groundbreaklng ceremonies
are scheduled for 3 p.m. at tbe
Bite of the system's treatment
plant localeod on tbe former
Clark Hager property opposite
the Skyllne Uu!es Bowling Alley
on Roule 7 at Kanauga.
Nardei Contracting Co.,
Bridgeville, Pa., bas be!!""
moving heevy equipment mto
the area to construct the 114mlle system. Nardei's low bld
was ,1,920,12UB for the
system's water mains.
Nardei, under a separate
contract, also will build seven
booster stations on tbe Mike
Denney farm on Betbel Rd., tbe
Bryant property on Rt. 141, tbe

Guns Made in Garaue
at
Home
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organize
of Gall
recognd

70s.

Ground Breaking Next ~;~OndJJy
For '2 Million Water System

Indoor

dreda
whet ha
major I
wlU bel
enormo
... see
perma1
discern

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~bl~ 'clo·id~ aid . '
mUd wltb ~:batlce of ~ · ·
today, IGiliiM and Tueodlly,'/ ..
Hi(Jit·I!I~~ ·MI to: · ,
low 7011 nOrthwest and In 711
elsewhere. Lows loJ!lght in the:· ..
6llJ and higha Tllesday in the ,•

Several Hurt in Wrecks

Tragedy Ran High

Ri•

co•••

Free- Wheeled 13 Miles into Salt Swamp

tbt.

Ju\'lltlle COlli'! 011

lallltw to tleli.on
of the :hlPWllf.

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SATtJRDAY ADMJ!!SIQIIjS -

PaW Rift, Mlddllport; Grae.
Ellla, l'lulland; ~ ;Ran·

PomeroY; Dbnald
o.u.r. Mlddlllpcl-t.
.

dolph,

SATURilAt

IIAIIQES

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·I Voice al~ng . Broadway ,,I

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An advertisement for a movie caUed ·'Tora! Tor a!

Tora!," about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, uses
an interesting sales pl1eh.
.
·'Once upon a ttme America lost," it reads. "Thmk .back
to your classes in American htstory . They were Like TV

shows. with the good guy' always winning. Right? And whn
were the good guys? Us. The white-hatted, clean-llvmg,
two-fisted hombres who never blew JL
"But on December 7, 1941, we blew i\ But good : 'The
Day of Infamy.' Remember Pearl Harbor .
"Remember how the sun rose Utat day? How the planes
came up, and the bombs came down. And down went. the

Pacific Fleet, dowr. went the thousands of ~merlcan fighting men. Remember?
"Here's a chance to take a real close, honest look. To
see that the Americans were not quite so perfect or as com·
potent ao the history books would like us to believe.
"The fact is that this attack, which marked our entry
into World War II, was brought on b~ incredible bungles. A
series of errors that you will not believe ...
"'Tora! 'fora! Tora!' The day the man in the white hat
got his horse shot out from under him."
It comes as a revelation that the history books have been

Ferment Among Bachelors
Under federal law, a head of a household may make up to
gallons of wine a year.'. - ~'~lbi!J
· b or anyre else m the house, :at ·~·
r ble own conptlon.
4'&gt;niousands of ama~ui'vlntnerl taie advantage of the
law, .and some bachelors In Cleveland recently decided that
it sounded like a good Idea, reports the Wall Street Journal.
"Uh-uh," said the Treasury Department. The exception
II open only to heads of households, and bachelors don't
quall!y.
"A most unusual and probably unconstitutional law,"
says one of the men.
But It's eltber go to the Supreme Court or go to the altar.
Eltber proopeet doea not bave the bachelors exactly enthused.

r "' .

Single Jump as
Nonforcing Raise
ly Oswald &amp; James Jocoby
NOBTB

II

• KJB5

•An
• Q97
• Q85

WilT
.1064
.J109
tK4
.A10963

.9

!WIT
.752
tA8532
.K.J74

SOUTH (D)

• AQ7U
• KQ88
• J 108
• 2
Both vulnorable

Wilt

North

1.4.

Elll South

Oswald: "In the first days
of contract, all raises were
linl11 bids. The jump from
one to three invited four
strongly, but it wasn't a foreing b1cf. Then the pendulum
owung the other way and all
jumpa from one to three be·
came game forcing bids."
Jim: ''By the t i m e I
started to learn bridge In
191i0, some sIng le·j u m p
raises had been dropped out
of the forcing category. The
trouble was that everyone
bad hia own group of forces
and nonforces. II was most
c:onfUJing."
Oswald: "Ills today, also.
In standard American, they
IIIU flay forcing jump raises
or a least play moSt JUmp
raises as forcing. Every day
or so, more and more good
players have shifted back to
Drill principles and play all
slnile jump ralse1 as limit
bldl-otrong but not abso·
iutely forcing."
"In JACOBY MOD·
raiset are Jimit
world's champion
of which I am a
limit raises.
the top l•tay·
to pbly

.

later the same nl8hl at the
NEW YORK - Comic Pat Copacabana .... IroiLe Kuo wu
Cooper headllne8 the Cope Oct. asked at her fine Gingko Tree
29: Ha UJed to pick up restaurant wh)' her ampa.uengeri there when he wu a monu didn't lndiiiM aleak and
cabbie .... Playboy lll8'j peddles chops: "My waiters havt dlf.
for. fll an the M - red- !Icull)' will! the 111111e1 of ti)08e
market .... Tbe "Kinb" IIJilup ~ ... she o1ng:,an, .... For
had a sonc "Wa" that~ an ln~Uftg tllvtnioa, go
· · outspoken homo10nal watc:h the~ atll&lt;oofand:
propaaanda .... Look-allkeo: Not only 11re they the best In
Pepel- cbalrman Jim Scuqeral1 town but )heY Ill"!~ wUb ltdy
and Jela' coach Weeb Ewbank bags canlalning tl1elr tpeelal
(Sony,f.UUJ.
dancing llhoes, like llldl at the
Sonr Star Brenda Lee's Ice ralnb.
IDIJIUlier Dub Albrl-'s okay Author Jlllllthan Boa ol the
after 1111jlli' IUfllery at Scolt new chiller noytl"'l!le Deat!olt
Wblte Hoepltal, Temple, Texu 'l1ling Yll!ll!lvtr Saw" Wlll't be
.... Jm .atar Dave !lrubeck'a fllultedfor·factualblclqp'Ot!nd:
son,'• lh pop's hlpoteps: Ha's a Ha )Us! left ""' IAndoa 'police
fine dnmmer .... More Ale of after 311 yean; he U. carloanl
VuJsarlty: Gay tpols now have for Punch, Brllllh lang"'"""'
G-alrung lopii!JI dancers - .... Old N. Y. Mirror relugueea
male. Dime beer's available will attend the 7lh annual wake
apln at Hllly'a on lhe Bowery, and reunion at the W. 57th St.
butllllly Krliftl won't cut the Holiday Inn Oct. II, Mike Adler
price to a dlmelri his Greenwich ebalrman .... Join RIVtni sips
Vlllqe spot; the recession aulotlraphe at the Cqta, "Mrs.
haSn't hit the belltnib yet, only Edgar Roanberg."
the burna.
Darryl Zlunck phoned frQm
The Bowery FoUies' tipot thai his Georgea Sank suite in Paris
cloaed for good last week wu to reserve a table at the
ane of the moat expeno!Ye In . Rainbow Room lor friends.
town: Years aso we went In a Darryl keepo a dlrecl private
gang (14ike Todd, June Havoc, line from Paree to bla
ete.)andpaldalhlrdmorefora Manhattan 20th-Fos offlceo ....
bol:tle of ..,.reb than we did There are Iota of lllly-bl(h

The Film 'Lesson'
Of Pearl Harbor

WIN AT BRIDGE

'

BY JACK O'BRIAN

teaching that Pearl Harbor was an American victory, ~nd
the nation is indebted to the movie producers for setting
the record straight.
It is quite true that the Japanese success at Pearl J:larbor was made possible by a series of incredible American
bungles and errors. And the greatest err~r of ~11 was ~at
a nation like the United States could believe tt could LSolate itseU from the rest of the world in a posture of military
weakness and be left alone in peace.
Ever since that belief went down with the thousands of
American fighting men on December 7, 1941, we have tried
to make sure that the error of the 1930s is never repeated.
For a quarter-century we have maintained a powerful and
expensive miUtary establishment and have Involved ourselves In all kinds of entan~ling forei~n alliances and commitments, "poUce actions, ' 11 brushfrre" wars and shows
of strength.
Ironically, that is the actual implication of the ad-that
a really smart hombre ought to have been so prepared for
war that nobody could have caught him with his guard
down.
But that ls not the message of the ad writers. As usual,
they are pandering to the lowest intellectual level, which
these days takeu lh• form of knocking America under tha
guise of idealism. They are exploiting the popular antimilitarism of young people, who are about the only ones
who go to movies any more. Some of them undoubtedly will
get a kicll: out of seeing how the Americans once got what
was commg to them. But good.
And since history is "irrelevant," they can conveniently
forget that it was precisely because of Pearl Harbor-which was, as It turned out, a Japanese bungle-that there
was a sequel called "Son of Tora! Tora! Tora!" in which
the man in the whit• hat got hack up on his horse and rode
off to become the "war-mongering imperialist" they love
to hate so much.

Tbe Almn•c

By UDited Preao lllternalloaal
Today ls Monday, Oct. 12, the
285th day of 1970. Today ls
Columbus Day.
The moon ls between Us first
quarter and full phase.
Tbe morning stars are
Mercury, Man and Saturn.
Tbe evenlng stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
Thoae born today are under
the sign of Ulx'a .
On thiJ day in history :
In 1492 Olrlstopher Columbus
took poaw•'on of land in the
Illhamas In the name of Spain.
The event ls considered the
dilcovery of America .
In 1870 Confederate hero Gen.
Rebert E. Lee died In
l.alngton, Va .
In 1910 Adolf IDiier pootpmed
the German Invasion of the
Brillah Isles.
In 19111 the Olympic games
opened In Mexico City.
A Thqht for Today: Oliver
WendeD Holmes said, "Life ls
an end In Itself, and the only
question u to whether It ls
worth living II whether you
have enough of it."
wants you to continue to
game and you should do so
with anything more than a
bare minimum." 1•
Jim: "Today's game contract is reached alter a Omit
raise by North. South has
only 12 high-card points for
his opening bid but the singleton is worth two points
add 1tl on al and !be jump
rals.e hal helped him. He
goes on to game cheerfully."
Oswal~: "A kin~ of diamonds lead and d 1a m on d
continuation would beat the
contract but West has a normal heart lead. After that,
South just draws trumps and
concede• two diamonds and
a club."

I.

The &amp;lddinf( has been:

Weot

North

EMI

!Iouth

p.,.
?
You, South hold:
6KJU ••u:. tQt7 foQM5
What do ynu tlo now?

A-Bid I h r e e ttpadet&amp;. In
Jt\COHY MODERN thill itt a
limit ral!!ie lhlil i11 Nlrnnr hut
ntlt •l~tt•lul,..l .¥ f n r f' I n If. See
ardrlr. iLself.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-POLIH!rOy, 0., Oct. 12, lt70

Orioles Hike Winning Streak To 16

I

BALTIMORE (UP!) -The
record book hlnll that the
BaiUmore Orioles have the 1970
World Series locked U(&gt;-lnd if
they do, then Brooks Robinson
II probably lhe goy who turned
lhe key.
'I1le Orioles came hnme today
on the win~a of an amazing 1&amp;game winning streak with a z.G
lead over the C.nctnnaU Reds
In the series which resumes
Tuesday with the third game
here In Memorial Stadium.
And that, the record book
insists, shoo1d cook the Reds'
goose, because no team ever
has lost the first two games of
a World Series at home and
then rallied to win the series.
"Ia that so~" said Orioles'

the bandsomest .. .. Greek
restaurants round town now odd
another phnlll fD their waliJ.of·
fame ; Jackie 0.
Pitiful HWe toucb: Multy
photos of oldtlme alan
tleooraflni a W. tflh Ill quek·
and-&lt;lttty, the "periO!IIUty"
autog~ s,llnaluni ·i)J In
one handwriting •.... Vll'lely
reptried a ...d rt!!'llllori note:
3,0011 !Ibn ln$lalry . jiO{ken
dropped frQm plpillc!l•rolea l.n
lbelutfaur yen~~- lhey
baven't been able ~ lei ea.ouah
work In dej1n11al H'wOOd to
]1llllfy peJ!Denlll •. ,. 'l!le ohow
bll bible IJ]oo !ealurl!d a slllry
thetTVua"youthmedhpn"ll
allllllb: Tnae - .when prle TV
ccmeo round, 1lldl of rocH(e
·are out of the bouat II!; any
Ji~NBI reaJiJu ••.• lldiiiltllc
~ mas blalted Rep.
.Riclw'd Ottlnpr (ICI'IIJibllng
ft.!: .Sella!Gr .fn,m, N. Y.) for
lballaw apbillllttaa of ecOJotty
for ........,t political climbing
.... WublasfAJD1 pols and top
IICienllltll are dallying menbenlllpa In 88IGrted l'llllant
llotJood outflll 011 ~­
Bltcad onto letlerheada.

Your Heart in Good Shape?

maybe the Jerles, also, by
making the kind of pwy they'll
still he talking about after he's
voted lniD Baseball's Hall of
Fame.
What happened briefly was
thiJ:
The Reds, who had been

besten by Robinson's glove and
seventh-Inning homer in Saturdsy's World Series opener,
jumped In front with lltree runs
off Mike Cuellar In the first
inning Sunday. Bobby Tolan the
made It w with a leadoff
homer in the third after which
Jobnny Bench walked with one
out and Tom Phoebus came in
fD pitch fD Lee May, who had
doubled home lwo runs In the
firslinning.
May lashed out at Phoebus'
first pitCh, a fast hall, and hit a
wicked one-hop smaab to
Brooks Robinson's right, his
bad side.
Double Pl•y
Robinson Instinctively backhanded his glove acroas his
body and turned Immediately.
He dove for the ball, somehow

ful."

Reds Lellf 4-t
The Baltimore shnrtatop said
whst he did In the bottom of
the third Inning of Sunday's
ball game which the Orioles
won, 114. He said II at a time

If your health is so bad lty lor the patient with ad- the sex glands start func· noted in the moat vigorous

you can't exercise, the prob- vanced heart disease can be tioning and small adre· forms of athletics). And the
ability is that you can't solved by passive sex. Well, nal g Ian d s over the kid· blood pressure may rtse over
safel.y participate in sexual if it's passive, It's not sex. neys release epinephrine 100.
activtty either. The sex act Besides laboratory studies (adrenaUn) . The heartbeat
Sexual activity, like other
is exercise and causes a show that the increase in may increase to 150 beats forms of athletics, requires
marked increase in the work heart rate and blood pres- per minute Iabout twice norlevel of fitness to do
of the heart. If exercise is -sure comes at climax any- mal levels) and the blood ait good
well
safely. Practice
~ood for you, sexu~J activity way.
pressure increase from a rna[ notand
make everyone perts one way of gettmg_ it. In The emotions have a lot to usual level of 120 to 1110.
fee but it c~uld Improve
fact, If II catches on, 1! may do with how hard the heart AI this point, accordln~ to their game.
replace joggmg.
works in response to sexual the good doctor, all rational
Like other factors that in· stimulation. Your heart rate functions of the brain cease.
Deu D o e to r-I have a
crease the work of the heart, mar qui~ken merely from The changes in heart rate stomach ulcer. Is it all right
sex can al•o be harmful if destre. Then there is the re- and blood pressure represent if I take. aspirin?
you have serious heart trou- sponse to a sensual kiss. Ac· a major increase in work for
Deu R e a d e r-A small
ble. Mm·e than one man has cordin~ to a West German the heart. This way of work· amount of aspirin, particudied jbst afler ~etttng home physlcwn, Dr. Herbert Loell:. iJ!8 lht! h~~rl may be PI~••: larly HIt Ia combined·wit!!•• '·
from the hospttat "~!ter,::l ;gen, the brain sends o~t sill!' LU'alj(e, ..bul-.it Is _not ce to neutr• .;Its ·
- . . · · -,~nals, causing the spme lllj sarlly healthy without _.sub- su~st•~,
heart attack.
ael~.l!Y; ilaually won't cause
Some have suggeited 'that stretch, the nerves influent· sequent physical ~ctivlty. any Jiarm. Aspirin does de·
the problem of sexual acliv· ing the pelvis are activated, The excess adren~bn must crease the normal blood clothe metabolized or 1ts accum·
ulated products rause harm- ling mechanism and, If a
ful effects, just as occurs person takes very much over
from other forma of emo- a period of time, It Is possible to cause bleeding In
tional stress.
some cases. Bleeding from
During sexual activity the the digestive tract occurs In "What is it this time, 11 thought on 11 llomutic iuue
I
rate at climax rises to some people who use large
foreign policy 111 another ciH'f- ldeoi'"
'
1
By Helen Bottel
1 heart
levels between 110 and 180 amounts of aspirin, even if
beats per minute las high as they do not have an ulcer,
lET'S HEAR IT FOR
My wife's mother "actA!pts"
OOCKTAIL WAITRESSES
me. For thiJ I am grateful- at
Memorial Hoopltal.
Harrisonville
Dear Helen:
ftrsl. Now I'm seared to be
Rev, and Mrs. Cltaries Hand
Arecen\letteriDyourcolumn alone with her.
e
fOVe
eW_S, VeDfs andcblldrenofMI.Morlabwere Mr.andMrs.H.D.Gllkeyand
seemed to put down cocktail She never mlases a chance to
Sunday IJUOIIIB of Mr. and Mrs. son Joey of Columbus BINI Mr.
waitressea. '!'he writer, RJP, tellmehowmlsumerstoodshe
ByMrs.HerbertllouaiJ
Erma Wilson called on Mrs. BennyBogseuandWayne.Mr. andMra.F. O.Wbaleyandtwo
said his "sweet young wife" ls, hnw her husband neglecta Mrs. Jess Anderson was Florence Hill Friday aflernoan. Bogsea 11 borne for a tan-day grandchildren of Columbus
became a cold, Insensitive her. There ls only about 10 returned home from a Mrs. Hill wN recently returned vacaUon from bit emploJment spant the weekend with
money-chaser after she started years' diHerence In our ages. Charleston hoopltal where she home from Unlverolty Hoepltal, on the lowbOiat IDka.
relativea here.
work 1n a nl8htclub.
She Is not exactly the underwent eye surgery. She 11 Columbua, where she wu a Mrs. Loyd Sayre of ~ Ray Alkire baa purebued a
Aa a cocktail waitress who is "motherly" type, being recovering saUefaciiJrily.
1IUtlical patient.
vWe llllliltlnc In the care of new traDer and parked II In
suwortlng four yoong cbildren somewhat jealous of my wife. Sandra Taylor of ColumbUI Mr. Hoaea RoUiM of New her (!randmother, Mrs. ,... A~~•- ·
to learn
and also polling heraelf through I know a woman on lhe make spent lhe weekend with her York City vl.!lted Wodway Anderson.
........ are 10ft')'
college, I resent this lm· when !see one, and she's Ill I parenll, Mr. and Mrs. Leo aflemoan with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Boauclr: that Raymood J:loll8lu II an
plication! In faet, my ex- can'talwaysavoldber.Because Taylor.
Early RoUJh. 11 was Mr. andflmilywere&amp;lnday(Uelll cruldleo at the borne of his
hoaband, like RJP, attended we llve close by, we are 01 • Mr. and Mrs. Early Rou.sh RoUin's lira! villi here In 55 of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood, slaler, Sydney. lfil trouble II
college while I worked and peeled fD have frequent get- were visitors at Marietta yean.Hewuaformerreaident Debbie Bostick and Wald goutlnlmees.
cared for the lllds. He bad a ball lotlethers. She's the type whn If Friday.
and llved on the present farm Johnsen.
Mrs. !tflnnle Mc:Grath lptlll
-thecarefreeoldermanallthe I tell her off would twist it Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck en- nowoccupledbyMr.andMra. Rev. Paul Hayman of Car· the WMketld wUb her~.
Hille eager undergreds adored. around so I'd look like the tertained Sunday 1n hanor of Aiel Wheeler.
dington, Ohio, villted Mrs. MoiUe McGrath,! of Legan, 0.
lgoltlredofumerwrlllnl!his aggressor.Butifidon'l,she'II thelrdaughter,Pam'sblrthday. Mrs. 1noo Roy of Racine Feme Bayman and father, James Arnod and Mr.
affairs, and told him to go. keep on lx'eathlng heavy In my A dinner was served to the viii ted her parenll, Mr. and Wesley Bell.s, and Mr, and Mra. Bemard Fultz, moved Cllftord
MaybethatnL'lltesmo cruel and ear. And she could be mighty following, Mr. and Mrs. Early Mrs. Remer wamer, Sr.
Ray Hayman recently. Rev. Cockier Into our vllla&amp;e
mercenary,bulldan1seetheae persuasive ... toanyotherman. Roush, Robert Ritchie of Jeffery Miller spent Friday Hayman bad attended a ~J.oho"'-' ~--='lhe
traits In mo or my fellow This Isn't something you Portland, and Mrs. Cora Buck nlcht wilh bla father, Ilerbotl pulllr'a retreat at Ripley, W.
rl. G·-;~Frlda
workers. We're proud of being discuss with your wife or your and the honored guest.
Miller, at Nitro, w. Va.
Va., and waa enrwte home.
.::::::;::;:'
DY ·-,...
Y
able to dococktalls and be good father-ln-law, so- WHAT DO I Mrs. Junior Salaer, Rita mel Mr. Uoyd Nice received word Mr. and Mrs. Richard Norris ··~-...
at lt.I've noticed that most of us DO NOW?
Mike, •od Barry Tbeill of Salllrday of the death of his and Randy of Collllllbul vlalted Mr. Carlos Cain Is
seem more human and ldnd- Dear What:
Dorcas were Sundsy dinner brother-In-law, Charley lhe former'a molher, Mrs. Ada
after hll
hearted than are women In Correction:
This
IS gueall of Mr. and Mrs. Roy llulonberry at ZanOivlllo, 0. Norris and uslated Mr. and
cpera . ·
other jobo. Many of Ill are something you diacuss with Pearson.
Mra. l!llmer Pickens, Steve Mra. Erwin Gloeckner In M.S.G.F.IIaroi!IGnllamand
working nights because we :lft! yoW' wife- WHO PROBABLY Mrs. St. Clair Hill and Mrs. and KeiUIJ, Mr. and Mn. lllOVfDa Mrs. Norris to her wile · and two dli1dren llpelll
daytime housewives and KNOWS HER MOTHER'S
RusaeU Rou.sh Cindy David trailer home at Eaat Letart .Friday evenin1 with Ava
mothers - II' we're goq to WEAKNESSES BETTER
and Edward, ·Mr. ~ Mrs. Salllrday.
Gilkey.
school. The work doesn't THAN YOU DO, AND UNHerbert Roush attended Todd Rbodea (a former Mr. and Mn. M. A. Epple
"harden" us, and we aren't DERSTANDS HOW TO DEAL
Haymans' AuCtion at Lourel realdenl) 1u purebued the 11pe11l Sunday eveniq with Ava
easy marks.
WITH THEM.
Cliff Friday nichl.
Althea Wlcldlne ....,.... at Gilkey.
'
.
Ontheotherhand,lmeetalot You need the kind of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rou.sh Letart Falla.
Mra.EillaPowellandMinnle
of married college men who are proieeUve CU8tody that only a
eWS, 0 S attended cburcb servlcenl the Mrs Rlcbard Fisher of Mc:Gnlh and Mrs. Slout at.
like my .. - a gal bu to bat 1111te can give! - H.
s
N
Ch h a ...,_; W V 9lllted two da tended the llle at 'l'llua.
a ·'""•e •---. Dear Helen·.
Mrs D H Robeaon of yracuae uarene
urc ,....,., • • a.,
.
Yl u. •a"' ,.._. ..... -them -with
·~
'"""" """"'· '
'
.
Sundaynlgbt,whereRev.O.G. with Mrs. Ada Norrla and Mr. - · ""'..,....... · - ,•~
Eventhen,theylhlnksheisjust I am the mother of two Pomeroy,Mn.RulhLeVIII')'of McKinney of Qlarleston, w. andMn.l!lrwlnGioackner.
pleted his buUdlng on lbt
''leadhing them on." 11 appears children and my hu•band Chicago, Chesler Morrla and Va., wu holding revival ser- David f.:ole of l'«&lt;lmouth Horner Hill and la now open for
that college 1s the place for recently left me. He glvea mono Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morrta rl. vlcel.
vlalted Raymond Adorna. 'I1le IMudws.
married wolves 1bL!1e day9. support. He knew I waa Pomeroy llptllla few dajrs lui Mr, and Mrs, John Rowe and two Ire IChool teaci1en lillhl r=:::;~~==':':'"~
They figure the p~ are pregnant wilh his third child but week travelinll to CUmberland family moved from the '1'lleron Oalllpolls Hilh School.
easy.
that made no dlflerence. Helen, Falla, Kentucky and other In- Johnoon farm to the farm r1. Mr and Mri MJb O'Brien
Maybe wonderful, mlsun- I've thought and thoogh~ and I ~~Jpla,:;. .~•-t of Mrs. Jnoo Hill at Letart, Falla. and ~
-Wille,
derstood RJP ls Ieavq out a feel I should give thiJ baby up
..... o
"' """"'
l1eM Hill bu ........ hla
~it. Mr
lig part of hla story - which for adoptlan because I can't Concord CoiJe&amp;e , AU.... W
y
,...~
0., spent 1!!1
.
, ·
•f II nd
k too V
I the '•-• with~ parenlll, Mr, and Mrs. Dlle Hill and Mrs. l.,uty 0'8!1ell.
may have a lot to do wilh his ta'"' care o a wor , . a., open
at Moore Haven, Fla.
Mr. 1M..,.., r.ul ErWIII and
IMocent UIUe wife's walling up! can a married woman give her parenll, Mr. and Mrf, Cllarley Jeff Ml1lea' r1. Letart IIPflll famlli of lluban·
1 $llldar
_ F.L.
baby away?- Mrs. S. W.
Smith. She returned Tuelday ~y with Bccirlloulh.
withMr."WMr..bin8elland
Dear F.:
Dear Mrs. W:
evening bacause of water Mr. and Mn. George I..oma.
•
Could be ....
Your County Adoption Ser· llh~~~-alandiCboo!:..... "'·- Donah~W and lOili ol Columbua Mr. and Mri
.' • Roy
,· VIII
. M
. eter .
But-'uMr.RJPandhllwife vice of the Children's Home ,.._...
...,~,
!the--with~- and
• ....._ r1. Maml Star
will e:7kMw [Cr aure - and SOCiety offers free COWlllllln8. llpelll Tuesday and overnight llpell
·
and - - .
Ill '
neither will agree with the Whydon'tyoocallandmakean with lhelr grandmother, Mrs. Mra. Roy Donahue. Jeff IIP'!I'I, SaturdaY ~ wilb
othel''s verslan of the story.
appointment? - H.
Lena Knapp rl. Langavill8 •
Dcln9bue U. of CoJumbua wu Ill'. and Mri. ~Adami.
_.,. II
Mra Rulh V LAY~ of a weekend e-t.
Mr. and MIJ. Scolt ._....of '
PS. I agree: Most ....to
au · 11 ~' ~a! Mrs. Vandora KnlghtlitB Porlamoutb, 0:, apellt lite
~:..~ S:ta:e~~ American Poet James do :;'thherslater Mra DJI tpeniSundaywilhMt.andMra. weekend with the Iatter'li
--'d "When Dld brother' ~~ Jim Knl&amp;hllnc at Racine.
parenll, Mr. and Mra. 'lberon
ME that the majority of Whiteomb RileY ... •
M;j.an an
•
Mr. General Hall'• house wu Johnsen.

11

when the Reds were leading, 40. He said it an instant after
Ilt'ooks Robinson, the Orioles'
third baseman, turned the
whole contest aroUild, and

Carbo ph

!Helen Help Us!

I

APP} G

N

E

Pete?" someone askJ.

NHL Slandlnp
By United Prtll lnlet111llonat
lost

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Elrod
Hendricks never hill to I.rt, or
so he
When he does, It's
an accident.
Sunday, Hendricks had an
accidenHil "opposite field"
double that scored the winning
runs u lhe Baltimore Oriola
beat the Cincinnati Reds, u, to
take a ~ lead In the World
Soria.
"11tat's the very Otslllme In
pro ball I can remember hlttlntl
one down the lellfleld line like
lha~" said Hendricks, a left.
handed buller.
"When I hit a bWI fD the
other side rl. lhe field, It's
because I'm fooled on a pltcb."
Hendricks' key hit cllmued a
five-run fifth inning Uiat cUmued lhe Orioles' comeback
frcm a ..a deficit and aeatlhem
an w Baltimore with the

Wolfipen

N fe

of - ..

.p,..

men arent :~~.::..!~:r:.:~
Mra.'Larryllarllandcblldren
fleBr Helen:
fall, instead of words fD blame, of Lengsv!lle vlilled · Monday
What do you do with an or proof of thus and so, let with Mr and Mn Howud
,.
·
·
amorous mother.tn-law? •
something a ood be said ·
Thoma.

'

(~

I

er Jim McGlothlin wu knocked
out by three straight hill In lhe
fifth.
With one out, plncb-hitter
C2llco Salmon, Doll Buford and
Paul Blair aingled In
slon, narrowing the Cincinnati
lead to 4-2.
Beadrlcks lleoNI fwe
·
Boog Powell gretted Wilcox
with a l'lDHCOring lllntle and,
after IIJIOibel' out and Brooks
.· ·-~'""""hit Han
Jlobins on ,••~•·•
,
•
dricks lashed his double put
third baseman
Perez Into
·-v
the leflfleld corner,

t
t

ollbe pte reeefpll from the flnl fear - ·

larieram-.

Oddl: Orlolel ore favored Wte wiD lbe . . - uiH te
wiD the third 1ame.

-~@'m.~
Then Gullet put everything -surely II was everythinghe had oo.bll fast ane.
Robinson's shoulders barely bad lime fD twllch and
Johnny Bench hed the ball in his milt showing II to Frankie. I
don't think the umpire 88Wit, I know Robinson dldn, see It,
and Bench maybe just happened to haw his glove In the
heart of the plate to calch 11.
Koufu surely couldn, have thrown a ball with greater
""lodty. Meybe Bob Feller, or Walter Johoaon, or Lefty
Grove did, but I doubt II.
Robinson didn't beef about the call. How could he, U be
dldn'tsee the ball? The umpire saw that Bench caught the
hall in the strike zone so be called Ita strike.
These, 8lllOillf other eventa of Sunday, Oct. 11, . . a
edded chepter L1 My Legend of Baseball.

Sunday'sBastllall Rnu~s
Marllle Myatery
By United Prnslnftm•tion•l
The oblp Mule C e I eo te
World Series, 2nd game
Ell I (All
000 150 ~ 6 10 2 was discovered In the waten

o between tba Azoreo and lbe
coast of Partqal In Decembowsky 15), Lopez (71. Hall (71 ber, 1872, floating po.tllke,
~nd
Hendricks; McGlothlin,
Wilcox (S), Carroll {5), Gullett without captain or crew. Tbe
(8) and Bench . WP-Phoebus. fate of tba ship remainJ ....,
LP-WIIco• . HRs-Tolan, Powell, of the world'• most famous
Bench.
sea mysterieo.
Cln INLl

301001 ~

s

1

Cuellar, Phoebus (JL Ora-

0 0 0 0

Stewart ph
TDtlll Baltlm5re

1 0 0 0
33575
000 150 C)(Jt)o.4

J(n 001 ooo-s

Cincinnati

E - Belftnger, Blair . OF' Baltimore 1. Cincinnati 2. LOB
- B,altlmore 7, Clnclnl'l&lt;~ti 4.
28 - ~y. McRae, Hen·
drlcks. HRs - Tolan, Powell,
Bench. S - Bravo.

lphrtrbbae
Cuellar
2 1-3 4 4 1 1 1
Phoebus W
1 1-3

I

0

0 0

~

~

0

Drabowsky 2 1-3 2 1 1 1 1
Lopez
1-J 0 0 0 0 0
Hall
2 1-3 o o o o 1

McGlothlin 4 1-3 il

Wilcox ( L)

carroll

Gullett

Seve -

51,531 .

1·3

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2 2

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Hall. T - 2:46. A -

••
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Delrol!

Vancou '"'
New York
Toronto

Los A~otes

~~~~·

Wost

Dale Warner

PoliCY, II
tailored to needs.

,
2

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1 0 0 2

g go 2~

PhlladtiiJhla
1 t
Minnesota
o 1
Pittsburgh
0 I
Ookland
o 2
Sullllav'l Rtsuftl
Vancouver 5'Toronto 3
MonirM12 Philo 1
ChiGI~ 5 Ool&lt;land 1
BosiGri 1 Dttrolt3

0 o
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- 1 ' 1 GIJOII

Von!XJUYOr at St. Louts
(Only gamo ochedultdl

A,.D CAlL •••

No team ever has back
to w1n a Worlcl Serllll after
!oalnl lhe first tw'o
at

sama
'

11.1 they did Sa!U!'daJ, ' the
Rids 1ot elf Qll·.top SUndat, but

~pitching!!~ ffailred .. ..

QtitaUonable ·
,the Nrilll·,
..... ..iulcln•t bold it.
'
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=z.I..Wfll~-" 'the ·IINI) ··.

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Whether you want auto,
life or homeowners insurance, we will desiKn
a policy to fit your indl·
vidual requirements . , .
Discuss your specific
needs with us.

'

.

_,ttz.jm

t4 Coolrl-51.

·

that

PoiMroy ·

thinp

No Tealll 11M eo.e Baek

' ltcme.

Insurance
Agent

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1 1 0 2
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w
.-... ""•

daltroyed by fire Monday. All Samuel
hC1"'JJhold loodl and fttrnlt:ure knoWit al
were deltroyed. Mr. Hall 11 a burled In
medical peUent at Veterana tory, F.lmlra.

W. L. T. I'll

Buffalo
Sol ton
MonlrNI

:'tine:'

-·w

Tbree memorable athleUc feat. wilnelled Sunday In
Baltimore's second victory over Cincinnati In the World
Series will become a part of baseball legend. For me there
was a third.
Brooks Roblnson'sllghtnlng stop of ·[j, May'i screecher
a couple of feet inside the lhlrd base bag and his off.flalance,
blind pes to secand bue fD start a double play bas to be the
greatest fielding play I ewr saw, It's nice to see such e play
an the ldlot box, and remarvet about II on lhe rHUD, but
there's no~ quite like aeelng II happen, knowing lhet
there proabably never will be another play Uke It, or ao
remarksble.
Then there wu Paul Bwir'a catch of Jimmy Stewart's
long drive fD dead center off reliefer Dick Hall's twl)o!wo
pitch In tba boiiDm of the ninth. The drama :
-If Stewart had got around on the ball a miDlonth of a
second earlier so as fD puH lito right (It may ha.. gone out,
and tied the score).
- U Blair's refteJ:es were a milllonth of a second alower
he never would haw got his jump on the ball driven high over
his head so as to get hack to the wall for his wrong-&lt;llde grab
and catch an Instant before slamming Into the wall (and
Stewart would have had at least a double, proabably a triple,
conceivably an inside-the-park borne run).
But I liked another feat as well, thiJ one performed by a
Red.
Doo Gullet, 19-year-old Iefthander who only a year JU{o
pitched in a couple of American Legion games at Bachtel
Fleld in Mason, was facing the Queen City'• 01-darUng Frank
Robinson with two on base In the top of the ninth. They
worked lhe count to 3-2, Hobble fouling off a coople at Z.2 and
one at 3-2.

--II

m.-••tmam•

•:e•
Hendricks Says
••
•
••
Hit 'Accident'
•
••
•Y•·
••
'""'ceaYOU'LL SCORE TOO!
••
•
REACH
INTO
OVER
11,000
HOMES
•
Wtrntr Ins. •
•• fcAs drive eat anai1 1, wear clothes, ialfftl .,...u
••• JUU sell - are liNn. The people JOU want to • JOUr adeli nnri
For Full-Range ..
:• 1he newspaper is a welcari.ed . - in the hame. People buy it " IIIII.
FINANCIAL SERVICE ••• •
••
SOORE WITH THE
lUST·PICK ,u p THE PHONE
••

...=::..

wee.....

w. L. T. Pis
back."
Baltimore
2 0 0 "
Anderson said he thqhllhe Rochester
2 1 0 •
1 0 0 2
defensive pwy of Baltimore Cleveland
Hershey
0
2 0 0
third baseman Brooks Robinson
Sunday's Results
(who didn't fare poorly at bat, Baltmre 3 Provdnce 1
either) cost the Reds the first Tochesler • Monlreol3
Moftdllr'• Gam••
(No (limes scheduled)

Roae, llwa)'ll quick with an
anawer and usually in the form
of a joke, II a bit slow on the
uptake and not the picture of
confidence when he replies:
"ldon'l!eelno..-essure. Two

by Chet Tannehill

,_at!

0 0 0 0

Wosl

are gone, we can't bring tbeln

Sports
Desk

Balllmtn OrWN (Amuioaa I nc- n. Qt.
- · ilelll _
.. Lesipt).
Leqlb tf ...., Bell ,.. . . . ._
'""
llelllll:lllc-e-llaiUIDtreC.CI f nlU; ... . -IIalaa!tn ..
I.
Sek1dn[e' Gamel W at BaiiiJIMn, Oet. JI.IHI.
o-n ., (II .....,. ) Ill Cfw' all, Oet. 17·11.
. .lilllllmeo: 1 pJD. I!DT.
TV and Radio: All . . . . Npdeal lr1 ' 1. .
&lt;'-lpalQ' .... NBC Radle Networl.
Playen fllwel: GeanDieed
perfD wbunn lllUI fi.M mlllfmiDIII per DIU teltilen or alll?te
Team~:

0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0

Gullellp

CINCINNATI(UP~'\!ouget.; ·doom'ujuaHwo down." ... .., two·gBlllM. ·
'· · ·
the lil!Jinji tllal' di'L'S'I!e1~ all":' "'t ·rr·IIIBii poin'te'&lt;F~ ''He's tieaien ua tWo da)'llli ~
over when 11&lt;l11100ne like Pete never- bofore has a team lost row. He's the only dlff•rence.''
RDse tu !rouble convincing · lhe first two games at home Anderson said. "We could have
you thalli ain't.
and cmne back fD win the been z.G right now except for
RDse, the Cincinnati captain World Series. RDse looks him. He's got to be the best
and the man called "Charlie surprised.
I've ever seen at third."
HusUe," ls known lltroughoul "Is that right? I didn't know
What does the Reds manager
bueball as being the type that. That's very Interesting," think of his team's chances
player wbo never gives up.
he says. Then, in not-oo- now!
So he's lhe one to go to to convlilclng fashion, he adds:
"We're notlltrough," he says.
find out whether the Reds, after "Oh well, there's alwa)'lla first "They aiW have to win four
two World Series loaaes to the time for everything."
games. Whoever looes four ls
Baltimore Orioles, feel they can Cincinnati manager Sparky out. That's all."
come back to win the cham- Anderson doesn't come across
plonsltlp.
much better. But he tries.
H(Jckey Standings
Following Sunday's 114 loas to "I don't want to aee any long
AHL Standints
the Oriola, RDse was slttlnti In faces In here," he sa)'ll,
By United Prts1lntern1tlonal
his corner locker compartment greetlnc aportawrllers In his
Ent
looking a bll expreaslonless u office following the game.
.w. L. T. P11
2 0 0 •
he munched a sandwich of cold Then, with his head slightly Springfield
1 1 0 2
cull and drank cola.
bowed, he says of the Reds MonlrNI
Providence
0 , 0 0
0 , 0 0
uls the preunre on now, Series losses: "Those games Quebec

-=

CINCINNATliUPI) - P'adlud flpno • lire W«W

2 0 0 0

Wilcox p
Carroll p
Brevoph

Rose Still Confident

the

1 0 0 0

McGlothlin p

r---------------------------1

:':!~ :~~e

everything."
Reds Manager Sparky Anderson II the man wbo laha
Robinson u the key to the
opening two games of the sertea
in Cincinnati, won by lhe
Orioles, f.3 Saturday and 114
Sunday.
"U It wasn't for Brooks• we'd
be tho ones who are f:wo.up In
th1a aeries," Anderson expwlned. "Look at the scores of

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Writer
BALTIMORE (UP!) -Mark
Belanger, the Baltimore mortstop, II a classY young man.
He's the quiet, refined type,
eucUy the sort you'd Invite
horne for dinner because you'd
be sure he'd slways do and say
the right thing.
For a split second he forgot
himself during the second game
In Cincinnati. II was a Sundsy,
too, but somehow the words
slipped out.
1
'Jeezus Christ!' ' Mark Be..
Ianger said, his eyes wide open
in complete amazement.
"Beautiful. Abaolutely Beautl.

By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

N

Filii Time for l!verylldq
"11 that 10?" echoed Rede'
sparkpJu8 Pela Roae. "Well,
there's a first time for

those two lamto. Tho tt11t1 that
c.me up - ClaAit
Robinson heo taken away from In the flnl Inning, he
us with his fahu1oua fielding anasged Tommy Helnll' sharp
.would have won both gomes for rap for an Inning-ending force
us.
that slopped the Reds' rally at
three ruaa. In the third he
"Ha lilly be the greatest came up with a claulc. With
third baoeman rl. all ·lime. I Johnny llench on first, the
just can't imqlne anyone Reds' Lee May rammed a hard
playing third bue better than grounder aver the third base
he does."
bag and It beaded for the left
On Saturday, Robinson made field corner with "double"
a lltrowlng error early In the written all over it.
game, then turned in several But Robinson, playing for the
fielding gems, and slammed a .Otst lime on an all...lroturf
home nm that broke a 3o3 tie Infield, 1111de a fantastic
and proved to be the winning baclthanded stop and an even
run. Sunday he had only one hit more unbelleveable tltrow back
but scored what proved the to second fD turn the "double"
deciding run asain-and his Into a double play.
fielding wu nearly miraculous. "Charley Dreosen (lhe bite
·
Dodgers - Reds - Tigers
manager 1 once told me Billy
Cos was the best fielding third
baseman he ever saw, and
Charley was a great judge,"
sald Ander80D. "J never saw
Cos, bull car;'! helleve anybody
II better than Robinson."
and then hit the b!Diard table- When the sorlea reswnes here
Hke utroturf surface with his Tuesday, the Orioles' starting
left knee. Up in a twinkling, he pitcher will be 2f1!ame winning
rlfled the ball to second southpaw Dave McNally, while
baseman Davey Johnson, who the Reds turn to veteran
stepped on second for one and righthander Tony Clonqer,
then rewyed to big Boog Powell whn had a 9-7 record and didn't
at first for the double play.
pitch a complete game in 18
U you saw the play either on starts.
TV or at Riverfront Stadium,
BAlTIMORE
1brhbi
then you know why Mark
Buford If
4 I 2 0
Bewnger, the nice refined type, Blaircf
5 1 2 1
said what he did standing only l'owell lb
J 2 2 2
s 0 0 0
20 feet away from Brooks F. Robinson rf
B.
Robinson
lb
4
1 I 1
Robinson.
Hendrickse
3 0 I 2
When Robinson got to the Johnson 2b
J 0 I 0
• 0 0 0
dugout, a place which had Belangerss
p
1 0 0 0
resembled a mortician's front Cuellar
Phoebus p
0 D 0 0
room only moments before, Selmon ph
1 1 I 0
suddenly there was an entirely Drabowsky p
1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
different almoaphere. Every- Lopez p
1 0 0 0
Hall
F,
body was jumping up and down Totas
366106
and pounding Brooke on the
CINCINNATI
lbrhbi
back. Remember, the score still
Roserf
JDOO
was W Reds.
Toland
4 2 1 1
4 1 1 0
The Oriole~ came back with • Perezlb
3111
run In the fourth and five mot-e Benchc
May
1b
' 1 1 2
In the fifth. That wun't any McRae If
o1 o 2 1
joke. Not fD the Reds it wasn't. Helms2b
4 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
Nor was the flnal score: 114 Woodward ss
Clineph
1 0 1 0
Orioles.
Chaneyss
0 o o o

Greatest of All Plays

W~RLD

Sex Activity Requires Fitness

day's."

Today's Sport Parade

KID£ George VI of l!lnglall(l,. who relinqulsbed the
~taprantaln Manhattan now, liUe In 1948, was tba last
but the Rainbow Room aiW Is emperor of India.

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Manager Earl Weavot', plying II
cautiously a a manager should.
"WeD, the only &amp;arne I'm
worryq about now llr Tues-

'

.... \

i~;.P.

~

buy

�•

r---------·-----..----------------"""_...,.___ _.._r"""_ ,
·I Voice al~ng . Broadway ,,I

. A B,eginning
,\

,

I

•

An advertisement for a movie caUed ·'Tora! Tor a!

Tora!," about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, uses
an interesting sales pl1eh.
.
·'Once upon a ttme America lost," it reads. "Thmk .back
to your classes in American htstory . They were Like TV

shows. with the good guy' always winning. Right? And whn
were the good guys? Us. The white-hatted, clean-llvmg,
two-fisted hombres who never blew JL
"But on December 7, 1941, we blew i\ But good : 'The
Day of Infamy.' Remember Pearl Harbor .
"Remember how the sun rose Utat day? How the planes
came up, and the bombs came down. And down went. the

Pacific Fleet, dowr. went the thousands of ~merlcan fighting men. Remember?
"Here's a chance to take a real close, honest look. To
see that the Americans were not quite so perfect or as com·
potent ao the history books would like us to believe.
"The fact is that this attack, which marked our entry
into World War II, was brought on b~ incredible bungles. A
series of errors that you will not believe ...
"'Tora! 'fora! Tora!' The day the man in the white hat
got his horse shot out from under him."
It comes as a revelation that the history books have been

Ferment Among Bachelors
Under federal law, a head of a household may make up to
gallons of wine a year.'. - ~'~lbi!J
· b or anyre else m the house, :at ·~·
r ble own conptlon.
4'&gt;niousands of ama~ui'vlntnerl taie advantage of the
law, .and some bachelors In Cleveland recently decided that
it sounded like a good Idea, reports the Wall Street Journal.
"Uh-uh," said the Treasury Department. The exception
II open only to heads of households, and bachelors don't
quall!y.
"A most unusual and probably unconstitutional law,"
says one of the men.
But It's eltber go to the Supreme Court or go to the altar.
Eltber proopeet doea not bave the bachelors exactly enthused.

r "' .

Single Jump as
Nonforcing Raise
ly Oswald &amp; James Jocoby
NOBTB

II

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• Q97
• Q85

WilT
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.J109
tK4
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SOUTH (D)

• AQ7U
• KQ88
• J 108
• 2
Both vulnorable

Wilt

North

1.4.

Elll South

Oswald: "In the first days
of contract, all raises were
linl11 bids. The jump from
one to three invited four
strongly, but it wasn't a foreing b1cf. Then the pendulum
owung the other way and all
jumpa from one to three be·
came game forcing bids."
Jim: ''By the t i m e I
started to learn bridge In
191i0, some sIng le·j u m p
raises had been dropped out
of the forcing category. The
trouble was that everyone
bad hia own group of forces
and nonforces. II was most
c:onfUJing."
Oswald: "Ills today, also.
In standard American, they
IIIU flay forcing jump raises
or a least play moSt JUmp
raises as forcing. Every day
or so, more and more good
players have shifted back to
Drill principles and play all
slnile jump ralse1 as limit
bldl-otrong but not abso·
iutely forcing."
"In JACOBY MOD·
raiset are Jimit
world's champion
of which I am a
limit raises.
the top l•tay·
to pbly

.

later the same nl8hl at the
NEW YORK - Comic Pat Copacabana .... IroiLe Kuo wu
Cooper headllne8 the Cope Oct. asked at her fine Gingko Tree
29: Ha UJed to pick up restaurant wh)' her ampa.uengeri there when he wu a monu didn't lndiiiM aleak and
cabbie .... Playboy lll8'j peddles chops: "My waiters havt dlf.
for. fll an the M - red- !Icull)' will! the 111111e1 of ti)08e
market .... Tbe "Kinb" IIJilup ~ ... she o1ng:,an, .... For
had a sonc "Wa" that~ an ln~Uftg tllvtnioa, go
· · outspoken homo10nal watc:h the~ atll&lt;oofand:
propaaanda .... Look-allkeo: Not only 11re they the best In
Pepel- cbalrman Jim Scuqeral1 town but )heY Ill"!~ wUb ltdy
and Jela' coach Weeb Ewbank bags canlalning tl1elr tpeelal
(Sony,f.UUJ.
dancing llhoes, like llldl at the
Sonr Star Brenda Lee's Ice ralnb.
IDIJIUlier Dub Albrl-'s okay Author Jlllllthan Boa ol the
after 1111jlli' IUfllery at Scolt new chiller noytl"'l!le Deat!olt
Wblte Hoepltal, Temple, Texu 'l1ling Yll!ll!lvtr Saw" Wlll't be
.... Jm .atar Dave !lrubeck'a fllultedfor·factualblclqp'Ot!nd:
son,'• lh pop's hlpoteps: Ha's a Ha )Us! left ""' IAndoa 'police
fine dnmmer .... More Ale of after 311 yean; he U. carloanl
VuJsarlty: Gay tpols now have for Punch, Brllllh lang"'"""'
G-alrung lopii!JI dancers - .... Old N. Y. Mirror relugueea
male. Dime beer's available will attend the 7lh annual wake
apln at Hllly'a on lhe Bowery, and reunion at the W. 57th St.
butllllly Krliftl won't cut the Holiday Inn Oct. II, Mike Adler
price to a dlmelri his Greenwich ebalrman .... Join RIVtni sips
Vlllqe spot; the recession aulotlraphe at the Cqta, "Mrs.
haSn't hit the belltnib yet, only Edgar Roanberg."
the burna.
Darryl Zlunck phoned frQm
The Bowery FoUies' tipot thai his Georgea Sank suite in Paris
cloaed for good last week wu to reserve a table at the
ane of the moat expeno!Ye In . Rainbow Room lor friends.
town: Years aso we went In a Darryl keepo a dlrecl private
gang (14ike Todd, June Havoc, line from Paree to bla
ete.)andpaldalhlrdmorefora Manhattan 20th-Fos offlceo ....
bol:tle of ..,.reb than we did There are Iota of lllly-bl(h

The Film 'Lesson'
Of Pearl Harbor

WIN AT BRIDGE

'

BY JACK O'BRIAN

teaching that Pearl Harbor was an American victory, ~nd
the nation is indebted to the movie producers for setting
the record straight.
It is quite true that the Japanese success at Pearl J:larbor was made possible by a series of incredible American
bungles and errors. And the greatest err~r of ~11 was ~at
a nation like the United States could believe tt could LSolate itseU from the rest of the world in a posture of military
weakness and be left alone in peace.
Ever since that belief went down with the thousands of
American fighting men on December 7, 1941, we have tried
to make sure that the error of the 1930s is never repeated.
For a quarter-century we have maintained a powerful and
expensive miUtary establishment and have Involved ourselves In all kinds of entan~ling forei~n alliances and commitments, "poUce actions, ' 11 brushfrre" wars and shows
of strength.
Ironically, that is the actual implication of the ad-that
a really smart hombre ought to have been so prepared for
war that nobody could have caught him with his guard
down.
But that ls not the message of the ad writers. As usual,
they are pandering to the lowest intellectual level, which
these days takeu lh• form of knocking America under tha
guise of idealism. They are exploiting the popular antimilitarism of young people, who are about the only ones
who go to movies any more. Some of them undoubtedly will
get a kicll: out of seeing how the Americans once got what
was commg to them. But good.
And since history is "irrelevant," they can conveniently
forget that it was precisely because of Pearl Harbor-which was, as It turned out, a Japanese bungle-that there
was a sequel called "Son of Tora! Tora! Tora!" in which
the man in the whit• hat got hack up on his horse and rode
off to become the "war-mongering imperialist" they love
to hate so much.

Tbe Almn•c

By UDited Preao lllternalloaal
Today ls Monday, Oct. 12, the
285th day of 1970. Today ls
Columbus Day.
The moon ls between Us first
quarter and full phase.
Tbe morning stars are
Mercury, Man and Saturn.
Tbe evenlng stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
Thoae born today are under
the sign of Ulx'a .
On thiJ day in history :
In 1492 Olrlstopher Columbus
took poaw•'on of land in the
Illhamas In the name of Spain.
The event ls considered the
dilcovery of America .
In 1870 Confederate hero Gen.
Rebert E. Lee died In
l.alngton, Va .
In 1910 Adolf IDiier pootpmed
the German Invasion of the
Brillah Isles.
In 19111 the Olympic games
opened In Mexico City.
A Thqht for Today: Oliver
WendeD Holmes said, "Life ls
an end In Itself, and the only
question u to whether It ls
worth living II whether you
have enough of it."
wants you to continue to
game and you should do so
with anything more than a
bare minimum." 1•
Jim: "Today's game contract is reached alter a Omit
raise by North. South has
only 12 high-card points for
his opening bid but the singleton is worth two points
add 1tl on al and !be jump
rals.e hal helped him. He
goes on to game cheerfully."
Oswal~: "A kin~ of diamonds lead and d 1a m on d
continuation would beat the
contract but West has a normal heart lead. After that,
South just draws trumps and
concede• two diamonds and
a club."

I.

The &amp;lddinf( has been:

Weot

North

EMI

!Iouth

p.,.
?
You, South hold:
6KJU ••u:. tQt7 foQM5
What do ynu tlo now?

A-Bid I h r e e ttpadet&amp;. In
Jt\COHY MODERN thill itt a
limit ral!!ie lhlil i11 Nlrnnr hut
ntlt •l~tt•lul,..l .¥ f n r f' I n If. See
ardrlr. iLself.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-POLIH!rOy, 0., Oct. 12, lt70

Orioles Hike Winning Streak To 16

I

BALTIMORE (UP!) -The
record book hlnll that the
BaiUmore Orioles have the 1970
World Series locked U(&gt;-lnd if
they do, then Brooks Robinson
II probably lhe goy who turned
lhe key.
'I1le Orioles came hnme today
on the win~a of an amazing 1&amp;game winning streak with a z.G
lead over the C.nctnnaU Reds
In the series which resumes
Tuesday with the third game
here In Memorial Stadium.
And that, the record book
insists, shoo1d cook the Reds'
goose, because no team ever
has lost the first two games of
a World Series at home and
then rallied to win the series.
"Ia that so~" said Orioles'

the bandsomest .. .. Greek
restaurants round town now odd
another phnlll fD their waliJ.of·
fame ; Jackie 0.
Pitiful HWe toucb: Multy
photos of oldtlme alan
tleooraflni a W. tflh Ill quek·
and-&lt;lttty, the "periO!IIUty"
autog~ s,llnaluni ·i)J In
one handwriting •.... Vll'lely
reptried a ...d rt!!'llllori note:
3,0011 !Ibn ln$lalry . jiO{ken
dropped frQm plpillc!l•rolea l.n
lbelutfaur yen~~- lhey
baven't been able ~ lei ea.ouah
work In dej1n11al H'wOOd to
]1llllfy peJ!Denlll •. ,. 'l!le ohow
bll bible IJ]oo !ealurl!d a slllry
thetTVua"youthmedhpn"ll
allllllb: Tnae - .when prle TV
ccmeo round, 1lldl of rocH(e
·are out of the bouat II!; any
Ji~NBI reaJiJu ••.• lldiiiltllc
~ mas blalted Rep.
.Riclw'd Ottlnpr (ICI'IIJibllng
ft.!: .Sella!Gr .fn,m, N. Y.) for
lballaw apbillllttaa of ecOJotty
for ........,t political climbing
.... WublasfAJD1 pols and top
IICienllltll are dallying menbenlllpa In 88IGrted l'llllant
llotJood outflll 011 ~­
Bltcad onto letlerheada.

Your Heart in Good Shape?

maybe the Jerles, also, by
making the kind of pwy they'll
still he talking about after he's
voted lniD Baseball's Hall of
Fame.
What happened briefly was
thiJ:
The Reds, who had been

besten by Robinson's glove and
seventh-Inning homer in Saturdsy's World Series opener,
jumped In front with lltree runs
off Mike Cuellar In the first
inning Sunday. Bobby Tolan the
made It w with a leadoff
homer in the third after which
Jobnny Bench walked with one
out and Tom Phoebus came in
fD pitch fD Lee May, who had
doubled home lwo runs In the
firslinning.
May lashed out at Phoebus'
first pitCh, a fast hall, and hit a
wicked one-hop smaab to
Brooks Robinson's right, his
bad side.
Double Pl•y
Robinson Instinctively backhanded his glove acroas his
body and turned Immediately.
He dove for the ball, somehow

ful."

Reds Lellf 4-t
The Baltimore shnrtatop said
whst he did In the bottom of
the third Inning of Sunday's
ball game which the Orioles
won, 114. He said II at a time

If your health is so bad lty lor the patient with ad- the sex glands start func· noted in the moat vigorous

you can't exercise, the prob- vanced heart disease can be tioning and small adre· forms of athletics). And the
ability is that you can't solved by passive sex. Well, nal g Ian d s over the kid· blood pressure may rtse over
safel.y participate in sexual if it's passive, It's not sex. neys release epinephrine 100.
activtty either. The sex act Besides laboratory studies (adrenaUn) . The heartbeat
Sexual activity, like other
is exercise and causes a show that the increase in may increase to 150 beats forms of athletics, requires
marked increase in the work heart rate and blood pres- per minute Iabout twice norlevel of fitness to do
of the heart. If exercise is -sure comes at climax any- mal levels) and the blood ait good
well
safely. Practice
~ood for you, sexu~J activity way.
pressure increase from a rna[ notand
make everyone perts one way of gettmg_ it. In The emotions have a lot to usual level of 120 to 1110.
fee but it c~uld Improve
fact, If II catches on, 1! may do with how hard the heart AI this point, accordln~ to their game.
replace joggmg.
works in response to sexual the good doctor, all rational
Like other factors that in· stimulation. Your heart rate functions of the brain cease.
Deu D o e to r-I have a
crease the work of the heart, mar qui~ken merely from The changes in heart rate stomach ulcer. Is it all right
sex can al•o be harmful if destre. Then there is the re- and blood pressure represent if I take. aspirin?
you have serious heart trou- sponse to a sensual kiss. Ac· a major increase in work for
Deu R e a d e r-A small
ble. Mm·e than one man has cordin~ to a West German the heart. This way of work· amount of aspirin, particudied jbst afler ~etttng home physlcwn, Dr. Herbert Loell:. iJ!8 lht! h~~rl may be PI~••: larly HIt Ia combined·wit!!•• '·
from the hospttat "~!ter,::l ;gen, the brain sends o~t sill!' LU'alj(e, ..bul-.it Is _not ce to neutr• .;Its ·
- . . · · -,~nals, causing the spme lllj sarlly healthy without _.sub- su~st•~,
heart attack.
ael~.l!Y; ilaually won't cause
Some have suggeited 'that stretch, the nerves influent· sequent physical ~ctivlty. any Jiarm. Aspirin does de·
the problem of sexual acliv· ing the pelvis are activated, The excess adren~bn must crease the normal blood clothe metabolized or 1ts accum·
ulated products rause harm- ling mechanism and, If a
ful effects, just as occurs person takes very much over
from other forma of emo- a period of time, It Is possible to cause bleeding In
tional stress.
some cases. Bleeding from
During sexual activity the the digestive tract occurs In "What is it this time, 11 thought on 11 llomutic iuue
I
rate at climax rises to some people who use large
foreign policy 111 another ciH'f- ldeoi'"
'
1
By Helen Bottel
1 heart
levels between 110 and 180 amounts of aspirin, even if
beats per minute las high as they do not have an ulcer,
lET'S HEAR IT FOR
My wife's mother "actA!pts"
OOCKTAIL WAITRESSES
me. For thiJ I am grateful- at
Memorial Hoopltal.
Harrisonville
Dear Helen:
ftrsl. Now I'm seared to be
Rev, and Mrs. Cltaries Hand
Arecen\letteriDyourcolumn alone with her.
e
fOVe
eW_S, VeDfs andcblldrenofMI.Morlabwere Mr.andMrs.H.D.Gllkeyand
seemed to put down cocktail She never mlases a chance to
Sunday IJUOIIIB of Mr. and Mrs. son Joey of Columbus BINI Mr.
waitressea. '!'he writer, RJP, tellmehowmlsumerstoodshe
ByMrs.HerbertllouaiJ
Erma Wilson called on Mrs. BennyBogseuandWayne.Mr. andMra.F. O.Wbaleyandtwo
said his "sweet young wife" ls, hnw her husband neglecta Mrs. Jess Anderson was Florence Hill Friday aflernoan. Bogsea 11 borne for a tan-day grandchildren of Columbus
became a cold, Insensitive her. There ls only about 10 returned home from a Mrs. Hill wN recently returned vacaUon from bit emploJment spant the weekend with
money-chaser after she started years' diHerence In our ages. Charleston hoopltal where she home from Unlverolty Hoepltal, on the lowbOiat IDka.
relativea here.
work 1n a nl8htclub.
She Is not exactly the underwent eye surgery. She 11 Columbua, where she wu a Mrs. Loyd Sayre of ~ Ray Alkire baa purebued a
Aa a cocktail waitress who is "motherly" type, being recovering saUefaciiJrily.
1IUtlical patient.
vWe llllliltlnc In the care of new traDer and parked II In
suwortlng four yoong cbildren somewhat jealous of my wife. Sandra Taylor of ColumbUI Mr. Hoaea RoUiM of New her (!randmother, Mrs. ,... A~~•- ·
to learn
and also polling heraelf through I know a woman on lhe make spent lhe weekend with her York City vl.!lted Wodway Anderson.
........ are 10ft')'
college, I resent this lm· when !see one, and she's Ill I parenll, Mr. and Mrs. Leo aflemoan with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Boauclr: that Raymood J:loll8lu II an
plication! In faet, my ex- can'talwaysavoldber.Because Taylor.
Early RoUJh. 11 was Mr. andflmilywere&amp;lnday(Uelll cruldleo at the borne of his
hoaband, like RJP, attended we llve close by, we are 01 • Mr. and Mrs. Early Rou.sh RoUin's lira! villi here In 55 of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood, slaler, Sydney. lfil trouble II
college while I worked and peeled fD have frequent get- were visitors at Marietta yean.Hewuaformerreaident Debbie Bostick and Wald goutlnlmees.
cared for the lllds. He bad a ball lotlethers. She's the type whn If Friday.
and llved on the present farm Johnsen.
Mrs. !tflnnle Mc:Grath lptlll
-thecarefreeoldermanallthe I tell her off would twist it Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck en- nowoccupledbyMr.andMra. Rev. Paul Hayman of Car· the WMketld wUb her~.
Hille eager undergreds adored. around so I'd look like the tertained Sunday 1n hanor of Aiel Wheeler.
dington, Ohio, villted Mrs. MoiUe McGrath,! of Legan, 0.
lgoltlredofumerwrlllnl!his aggressor.Butifidon'l,she'II thelrdaughter,Pam'sblrthday. Mrs. 1noo Roy of Racine Feme Bayman and father, James Arnod and Mr.
affairs, and told him to go. keep on lx'eathlng heavy In my A dinner was served to the viii ted her parenll, Mr. and Wesley Bell.s, and Mr, and Mra. Bemard Fultz, moved Cllftord
MaybethatnL'lltesmo cruel and ear. And she could be mighty following, Mr. and Mrs. Early Mrs. Remer wamer, Sr.
Ray Hayman recently. Rev. Cockier Into our vllla&amp;e
mercenary,bulldan1seetheae persuasive ... toanyotherman. Roush, Robert Ritchie of Jeffery Miller spent Friday Hayman bad attended a ~J.oho"'-' ~--='lhe
traits In mo or my fellow This Isn't something you Portland, and Mrs. Cora Buck nlcht wilh bla father, Ilerbotl pulllr'a retreat at Ripley, W.
rl. G·-;~Frlda
workers. We're proud of being discuss with your wife or your and the honored guest.
Miller, at Nitro, w. Va.
Va., and waa enrwte home.
.::::::;::;:'
DY ·-,...
Y
able to dococktalls and be good father-ln-law, so- WHAT DO I Mrs. Junior Salaer, Rita mel Mr. Uoyd Nice received word Mr. and Mrs. Richard Norris ··~-...
at lt.I've noticed that most of us DO NOW?
Mike, •od Barry Tbeill of Salllrday of the death of his and Randy of Collllllbul vlalted Mr. Carlos Cain Is
seem more human and ldnd- Dear What:
Dorcas were Sundsy dinner brother-In-law, Charley lhe former'a molher, Mrs. Ada
after hll
hearted than are women In Correction:
This
IS gueall of Mr. and Mrs. Roy llulonberry at ZanOivlllo, 0. Norris and uslated Mr. and
cpera . ·
other jobo. Many of Ill are something you diacuss with Pearson.
Mra. l!llmer Pickens, Steve Mra. Erwin Gloeckner In M.S.G.F.IIaroi!IGnllamand
working nights because we :lft! yoW' wife- WHO PROBABLY Mrs. St. Clair Hill and Mrs. and KeiUIJ, Mr. and Mn. lllOVfDa Mrs. Norris to her wile · and two dli1dren llpelll
daytime housewives and KNOWS HER MOTHER'S
RusaeU Rou.sh Cindy David trailer home at Eaat Letart .Friday evenin1 with Ava
mothers - II' we're goq to WEAKNESSES BETTER
and Edward, ·Mr. ~ Mrs. Salllrday.
Gilkey.
school. The work doesn't THAN YOU DO, AND UNHerbert Roush attended Todd Rbodea (a former Mr. and Mn. M. A. Epple
"harden" us, and we aren't DERSTANDS HOW TO DEAL
Haymans' AuCtion at Lourel realdenl) 1u purebued the 11pe11l Sunday eveniq with Ava
easy marks.
WITH THEM.
Cliff Friday nichl.
Althea Wlcldlne ....,.... at Gilkey.
'
.
Ontheotherhand,lmeetalot You need the kind of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rou.sh Letart Falla.
Mra.EillaPowellandMinnle
of married college men who are proieeUve CU8tody that only a
eWS, 0 S attended cburcb servlcenl the Mrs Rlcbard Fisher of Mc:Gnlh and Mrs. Slout at.
like my .. - a gal bu to bat 1111te can give! - H.
s
N
Ch h a ...,_; W V 9lllted two da tended the llle at 'l'llua.
a ·'""•e •---. Dear Helen·.
Mrs D H Robeaon of yracuae uarene
urc ,....,., • • a.,
.
Yl u. •a"' ,.._. ..... -them -with
·~
'"""" """"'· '
'
.
Sundaynlgbt,whereRev.O.G. with Mrs. Ada Norrla and Mr. - · ""'..,....... · - ,•~
Eventhen,theylhlnksheisjust I am the mother of two Pomeroy,Mn.RulhLeVIII')'of McKinney of Qlarleston, w. andMn.l!lrwlnGioackner.
pleted his buUdlng on lbt
''leadhing them on." 11 appears children and my hu•band Chicago, Chesler Morrla and Va., wu holding revival ser- David f.:ole of l'«&lt;lmouth Horner Hill and la now open for
that college 1s the place for recently left me. He glvea mono Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morrta rl. vlcel.
vlalted Raymond Adorna. 'I1le IMudws.
married wolves 1bL!1e day9. support. He knew I waa Pomeroy llptllla few dajrs lui Mr, and Mrs, John Rowe and two Ire IChool teaci1en lillhl r=:::;~~==':':'"~
They figure the p~ are pregnant wilh his third child but week travelinll to CUmberland family moved from the '1'lleron Oalllpolls Hilh School.
easy.
that made no dlflerence. Helen, Falla, Kentucky and other In- Johnoon farm to the farm r1. Mr and Mri MJb O'Brien
Maybe wonderful, mlsun- I've thought and thoogh~ and I ~~Jpla,:;. .~•-t of Mrs. Jnoo Hill at Letart, Falla. and ~
-Wille,
derstood RJP ls Ieavq out a feel I should give thiJ baby up
..... o
"' """"'
l1eM Hill bu ........ hla
~it. Mr
lig part of hla story - which for adoptlan because I can't Concord CoiJe&amp;e , AU.... W
y
,...~
0., spent 1!!1
.
, ·
•f II nd
k too V
I the '•-• with~ parenlll, Mr, and Mrs. Dlle Hill and Mrs. l.,uty 0'8!1ell.
may have a lot to do wilh his ta'"' care o a wor , . a., open
at Moore Haven, Fla.
Mr. 1M..,.., r.ul ErWIII and
IMocent UIUe wife's walling up! can a married woman give her parenll, Mr. and Mrf, Cllarley Jeff Ml1lea' r1. Letart IIPflll famlli of lluban·
1 $llldar
_ F.L.
baby away?- Mrs. S. W.
Smith. She returned Tuelday ~y with Bccirlloulh.
withMr."WMr..bin8elland
Dear F.:
Dear Mrs. W:
evening bacause of water Mr. and Mn. George I..oma.
•
Could be ....
Your County Adoption Ser· llh~~~-alandiCboo!:..... "'·- Donah~W and lOili ol Columbua Mr. and Mri
.' • Roy
,· VIII
. M
. eter .
But-'uMr.RJPandhllwife vice of the Children's Home ,.._...
...,~,
!the--with~- and
• ....._ r1. Maml Star
will e:7kMw [Cr aure - and SOCiety offers free COWlllllln8. llpelll Tuesday and overnight llpell
·
and - - .
Ill '
neither will agree with the Whydon'tyoocallandmakean with lhelr grandmother, Mrs. Mra. Roy Donahue. Jeff IIP'!I'I, SaturdaY ~ wilb
othel''s verslan of the story.
appointment? - H.
Lena Knapp rl. Langavill8 •
Dcln9bue U. of CoJumbua wu Ill'. and Mri. ~Adami.
_.,. II
Mra Rulh V LAY~ of a weekend e-t.
Mr. and MIJ. Scolt ._....of '
PS. I agree: Most ....to
au · 11 ~' ~a! Mrs. Vandora KnlghtlitB Porlamoutb, 0:, apellt lite
~:..~ S:ta:e~~ American Poet James do :;'thherslater Mra DJI tpeniSundaywilhMt.andMra. weekend with the Iatter'li
--'d "When Dld brother' ~~ Jim Knl&amp;hllnc at Racine.
parenll, Mr. and Mra. 'lberon
ME that the majority of Whiteomb RileY ... •
M;j.an an
•
Mr. General Hall'• house wu Johnsen.

11

when the Reds were leading, 40. He said it an instant after
Ilt'ooks Robinson, the Orioles'
third baseman, turned the
whole contest aroUild, and

Carbo ph

!Helen Help Us!

I

APP} G

N

E

Pete?" someone askJ.

NHL Slandlnp
By United Prtll lnlet111llonat
lost

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Elrod
Hendricks never hill to I.rt, or
so he
When he does, It's
an accident.
Sunday, Hendricks had an
accidenHil "opposite field"
double that scored the winning
runs u lhe Baltimore Oriola
beat the Cincinnati Reds, u, to
take a ~ lead In the World
Soria.
"11tat's the very Otslllme In
pro ball I can remember hlttlntl
one down the lellfleld line like
lha~" said Hendricks, a left.
handed buller.
"When I hit a bWI fD the
other side rl. lhe field, It's
because I'm fooled on a pltcb."
Hendricks' key hit cllmued a
five-run fifth inning Uiat cUmued lhe Orioles' comeback
frcm a ..a deficit and aeatlhem
an w Baltimore with the

Wolfipen

N fe

of - ..

.p,..

men arent :~~.::..!~:r:.:~
Mra.'Larryllarllandcblldren
fleBr Helen:
fall, instead of words fD blame, of Lengsv!lle vlilled · Monday
What do you do with an or proof of thus and so, let with Mr and Mn Howud
,.
·
·
amorous mother.tn-law? •
something a ood be said ·
Thoma.

'

(~

I

er Jim McGlothlin wu knocked
out by three straight hill In lhe
fifth.
With one out, plncb-hitter
C2llco Salmon, Doll Buford and
Paul Blair aingled In
slon, narrowing the Cincinnati
lead to 4-2.
Beadrlcks lleoNI fwe
·
Boog Powell gretted Wilcox
with a l'lDHCOring lllntle and,
after IIJIOibel' out and Brooks
.· ·-~'""""hit Han
Jlobins on ,••~•·•
,
•
dricks lashed his double put
third baseman
Perez Into
·-v
the leflfleld corner,

t
t

ollbe pte reeefpll from the flnl fear - ·

larieram-.

Oddl: Orlolel ore favored Wte wiD lbe . . - uiH te
wiD the third 1ame.

-~@'m.~
Then Gullet put everything -surely II was everythinghe had oo.bll fast ane.
Robinson's shoulders barely bad lime fD twllch and
Johnny Bench hed the ball in his milt showing II to Frankie. I
don't think the umpire 88Wit, I know Robinson dldn, see It,
and Bench maybe just happened to haw his glove In the
heart of the plate to calch 11.
Koufu surely couldn, have thrown a ball with greater
""lodty. Meybe Bob Feller, or Walter Johoaon, or Lefty
Grove did, but I doubt II.
Robinson didn't beef about the call. How could he, U be
dldn'tsee the ball? The umpire saw that Bench caught the
hall in the strike zone so be called Ita strike.
These, 8lllOillf other eventa of Sunday, Oct. 11, . . a
edded chepter L1 My Legend of Baseball.

Sunday'sBastllall Rnu~s
Marllle Myatery
By United Prnslnftm•tion•l
The oblp Mule C e I eo te
World Series, 2nd game
Ell I (All
000 150 ~ 6 10 2 was discovered In the waten

o between tba Azoreo and lbe
coast of Partqal In Decembowsky 15), Lopez (71. Hall (71 ber, 1872, floating po.tllke,
~nd
Hendricks; McGlothlin,
Wilcox (S), Carroll {5), Gullett without captain or crew. Tbe
(8) and Bench . WP-Phoebus. fate of tba ship remainJ ....,
LP-WIIco• . HRs-Tolan, Powell, of the world'• most famous
Bench.
sea mysterieo.
Cln INLl

301001 ~

s

1

Cuellar, Phoebus (JL Ora-

0 0 0 0

Stewart ph
TDtlll Baltlm5re

1 0 0 0
33575
000 150 C)(Jt)o.4

J(n 001 ooo-s

Cincinnati

E - Belftnger, Blair . OF' Baltimore 1. Cincinnati 2. LOB
- B,altlmore 7, Clnclnl'l&lt;~ti 4.
28 - ~y. McRae, Hen·
drlcks. HRs - Tolan, Powell,
Bench. S - Bravo.

lphrtrbbae
Cuellar
2 1-3 4 4 1 1 1
Phoebus W
1 1-3

I

0

0 0

~

~

0

Drabowsky 2 1-3 2 1 1 1 1
Lopez
1-J 0 0 0 0 0
Hall
2 1-3 o o o o 1

McGlothlin 4 1-3 il

Wilcox ( L)

carroll

Gullett

Seve -

51,531 .

1·3

J

2 1·l

2

2 2

2 2 0 0

1 o

oo

1

0 0 0 3 I

Hall. T - 2:46. A -

••
••
•

Delrol!

Vancou '"'
New York
Toronto

Los A~otes

~~~~·

Wost

Dale Warner

PoliCY, II
tailored to needs.

,
2

w. L T. PI•

1 0 0 2

g go 2~

PhlladtiiJhla
1 t
Minnesota
o 1
Pittsburgh
0 I
Ookland
o 2
Sullllav'l Rtsuftl
Vancouver 5'Toronto 3
MonirM12 Philo 1
ChiGI~ 5 Ool&lt;land 1
BosiGri 1 Dttrolt3

0 o
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No team ever has back
to w1n a Worlcl Serllll after
!oalnl lhe first tw'o
at

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'

11.1 they did Sa!U!'daJ, ' the
Rids 1ot elf Qll·.top SUndat, but

~pitching!!~ ffailred .. ..

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Whether you want auto,
life or homeowners insurance, we will desiKn
a policy to fit your indl·
vidual requirements . , .
Discuss your specific
needs with us.

'

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t4 Coolrl-51.

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No Tealll 11M eo.e Baek

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Insurance
Agent

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daltroyed by fire Monday. All Samuel
hC1"'JJhold loodl and fttrnlt:ure knoWit al
were deltroyed. Mr. Hall 11 a burled In
medical peUent at Veterana tory, F.lmlra.

W. L. T. I'll

Buffalo
Sol ton
MonlrNI

:'tine:'

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Tbree memorable athleUc feat. wilnelled Sunday In
Baltimore's second victory over Cincinnati In the World
Series will become a part of baseball legend. For me there
was a third.
Brooks Roblnson'sllghtnlng stop of ·[j, May'i screecher
a couple of feet inside the lhlrd base bag and his off.flalance,
blind pes to secand bue fD start a double play bas to be the
greatest fielding play I ewr saw, It's nice to see such e play
an the ldlot box, and remarvet about II on lhe rHUD, but
there's no~ quite like aeelng II happen, knowing lhet
there proabably never will be another play Uke It, or ao
remarksble.
Then there wu Paul Bwir'a catch of Jimmy Stewart's
long drive fD dead center off reliefer Dick Hall's twl)o!wo
pitch In tba boiiDm of the ninth. The drama :
-If Stewart had got around on the ball a miDlonth of a
second earlier so as fD puH lito right (It may ha.. gone out,
and tied the score).
- U Blair's refteJ:es were a milllonth of a second alower
he never would haw got his jump on the ball driven high over
his head so as to get hack to the wall for his wrong-&lt;llde grab
and catch an Instant before slamming Into the wall (and
Stewart would have had at least a double, proabably a triple,
conceivably an inside-the-park borne run).
But I liked another feat as well, thiJ one performed by a
Red.
Doo Gullet, 19-year-old Iefthander who only a year JU{o
pitched in a couple of American Legion games at Bachtel
Fleld in Mason, was facing the Queen City'• 01-darUng Frank
Robinson with two on base In the top of the ninth. They
worked lhe count to 3-2, Hobble fouling off a coople at Z.2 and
one at 3-2.

--II

m.-••tmam•

•:e•
Hendricks Says
••
•
••
Hit 'Accident'
•
••
•Y•·
••
'""'ceaYOU'LL SCORE TOO!
••
•
REACH
INTO
OVER
11,000
HOMES
•
Wtrntr Ins. •
•• fcAs drive eat anai1 1, wear clothes, ialfftl .,...u
••• JUU sell - are liNn. The people JOU want to • JOUr adeli nnri
For Full-Range ..
:• 1he newspaper is a welcari.ed . - in the hame. People buy it " IIIII.
FINANCIAL SERVICE ••• •
••
SOORE WITH THE
lUST·PICK ,u p THE PHONE
••

...=::..

wee.....

w. L. T. Pis
back."
Baltimore
2 0 0 "
Anderson said he thqhllhe Rochester
2 1 0 •
1 0 0 2
defensive pwy of Baltimore Cleveland
Hershey
0
2 0 0
third baseman Brooks Robinson
Sunday's Results
(who didn't fare poorly at bat, Baltmre 3 Provdnce 1
either) cost the Reds the first Tochesler • Monlreol3
Moftdllr'• Gam••
(No (limes scheduled)

Roae, llwa)'ll quick with an
anawer and usually in the form
of a joke, II a bit slow on the
uptake and not the picture of
confidence when he replies:
"ldon'l!eelno..-essure. Two

by Chet Tannehill

,_at!

0 0 0 0

Wosl

are gone, we can't bring tbeln

Sports
Desk

Balllmtn OrWN (Amuioaa I nc- n. Qt.
- · ilelll _
.. Lesipt).
Leqlb tf ...., Bell ,.. . . . ._
'""
llelllll:lllc-e-llaiUIDtreC.CI f nlU; ... . -IIalaa!tn ..
I.
Sek1dn[e' Gamel W at BaiiiJIMn, Oet. JI.IHI.
o-n ., (II .....,. ) Ill Cfw' all, Oet. 17·11.
. .lilllllmeo: 1 pJD. I!DT.
TV and Radio: All . . . . Npdeal lr1 ' 1. .
&lt;'-lpalQ' .... NBC Radle Networl.
Playen fllwel: GeanDieed
perfD wbunn lllUI fi.M mlllfmiDIII per DIU teltilen or alll?te
Team~:

0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0

Gullellp

CINCINNATI(UP~'\!ouget.; ·doom'ujuaHwo down." ... .., two·gBlllM. ·
'· · ·
the lil!Jinji tllal' di'L'S'I!e1~ all":' "'t ·rr·IIIBii poin'te'&lt;F~ ''He's tieaien ua tWo da)'llli ~
over when 11&lt;l11100ne like Pete never- bofore has a team lost row. He's the only dlff•rence.''
RDse tu !rouble convincing · lhe first two games at home Anderson said. "We could have
you thalli ain't.
and cmne back fD win the been z.G right now except for
RDse, the Cincinnati captain World Series. RDse looks him. He's got to be the best
and the man called "Charlie surprised.
I've ever seen at third."
HusUe," ls known lltroughoul "Is that right? I didn't know
What does the Reds manager
bueball as being the type that. That's very Interesting," think of his team's chances
player wbo never gives up.
he says. Then, in not-oo- now!
So he's lhe one to go to to convlilclng fashion, he adds:
"We're notlltrough," he says.
find out whether the Reds, after "Oh well, there's alwa)'lla first "They aiW have to win four
two World Series loaaes to the time for everything."
games. Whoever looes four ls
Baltimore Orioles, feel they can Cincinnati manager Sparky out. That's all."
come back to win the cham- Anderson doesn't come across
plonsltlp.
much better. But he tries.
H(Jckey Standings
Following Sunday's 114 loas to "I don't want to aee any long
AHL Standints
the Oriola, RDse was slttlnti In faces In here," he sa)'ll,
By United Prts1lntern1tlonal
his corner locker compartment greetlnc aportawrllers In his
Ent
looking a bll expreaslonless u office following the game.
.w. L. T. P11
2 0 0 •
he munched a sandwich of cold Then, with his head slightly Springfield
1 1 0 2
cull and drank cola.
bowed, he says of the Reds MonlrNI
Providence
0 , 0 0
0 , 0 0
uls the preunre on now, Series losses: "Those games Quebec

-=

CINCINNATliUPI) - P'adlud flpno • lire W«W

2 0 0 0

Wilcox p
Carroll p
Brevoph

Rose Still Confident

the

1 0 0 0

McGlothlin p

r---------------------------1

:':!~ :~~e

everything."
Reds Manager Sparky Anderson II the man wbo laha
Robinson u the key to the
opening two games of the sertea
in Cincinnati, won by lhe
Orioles, f.3 Saturday and 114
Sunday.
"U It wasn't for Brooks• we'd
be tho ones who are f:wo.up In
th1a aeries," Anderson expwlned. "Look at the scores of

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Writer
BALTIMORE (UP!) -Mark
Belanger, the Baltimore mortstop, II a classY young man.
He's the quiet, refined type,
eucUy the sort you'd Invite
horne for dinner because you'd
be sure he'd slways do and say
the right thing.
For a split second he forgot
himself during the second game
In Cincinnati. II was a Sundsy,
too, but somehow the words
slipped out.
1
'Jeezus Christ!' ' Mark Be..
Ianger said, his eyes wide open
in complete amazement.
"Beautiful. Abaolutely Beautl.

By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

N

Filii Time for l!verylldq
"11 that 10?" echoed Rede'
sparkpJu8 Pela Roae. "Well,
there's a first time for

those two lamto. Tho tt11t1 that
c.me up - ClaAit
Robinson heo taken away from In the flnl Inning, he
us with his fahu1oua fielding anasged Tommy Helnll' sharp
.would have won both gomes for rap for an Inning-ending force
us.
that slopped the Reds' rally at
three ruaa. In the third he
"Ha lilly be the greatest came up with a claulc. With
third baoeman rl. all ·lime. I Johnny llench on first, the
just can't imqlne anyone Reds' Lee May rammed a hard
playing third bue better than grounder aver the third base
he does."
bag and It beaded for the left
On Saturday, Robinson made field corner with "double"
a lltrowlng error early In the written all over it.
game, then turned in several But Robinson, playing for the
fielding gems, and slammed a .Otst lime on an all...lroturf
home nm that broke a 3o3 tie Infield, 1111de a fantastic
and proved to be the winning baclthanded stop and an even
run. Sunday he had only one hit more unbelleveable tltrow back
but scored what proved the to second fD turn the "double"
deciding run asain-and his Into a double play.
fielding wu nearly miraculous. "Charley Dreosen (lhe bite
·
Dodgers - Reds - Tigers
manager 1 once told me Billy
Cos was the best fielding third
baseman he ever saw, and
Charley was a great judge,"
sald Ander80D. "J never saw
Cos, bull car;'! helleve anybody
II better than Robinson."
and then hit the b!Diard table- When the sorlea reswnes here
Hke utroturf surface with his Tuesday, the Orioles' starting
left knee. Up in a twinkling, he pitcher will be 2f1!ame winning
rlfled the ball to second southpaw Dave McNally, while
baseman Davey Johnson, who the Reds turn to veteran
stepped on second for one and righthander Tony Clonqer,
then rewyed to big Boog Powell whn had a 9-7 record and didn't
at first for the double play.
pitch a complete game in 18
U you saw the play either on starts.
TV or at Riverfront Stadium,
BAlTIMORE
1brhbi
then you know why Mark
Buford If
4 I 2 0
Bewnger, the nice refined type, Blaircf
5 1 2 1
said what he did standing only l'owell lb
J 2 2 2
s 0 0 0
20 feet away from Brooks F. Robinson rf
B.
Robinson
lb
4
1 I 1
Robinson.
Hendrickse
3 0 I 2
When Robinson got to the Johnson 2b
J 0 I 0
• 0 0 0
dugout, a place which had Belangerss
p
1 0 0 0
resembled a mortician's front Cuellar
Phoebus p
0 D 0 0
room only moments before, Selmon ph
1 1 I 0
suddenly there was an entirely Drabowsky p
1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
different almoaphere. Every- Lopez p
1 0 0 0
Hall
F,
body was jumping up and down Totas
366106
and pounding Brooke on the
CINCINNATI
lbrhbi
back. Remember, the score still
Roserf
JDOO
was W Reds.
Toland
4 2 1 1
4 1 1 0
The Oriole~ came back with • Perezlb
3111
run In the fourth and five mot-e Benchc
May
1b
' 1 1 2
In the fifth. That wun't any McRae If
o1 o 2 1
joke. Not fD the Reds it wasn't. Helms2b
4 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
Nor was the flnal score: 114 Woodward ss
Clineph
1 0 1 0
Orioles.
Chaneyss
0 o o o

Greatest of All Plays

W~RLD

Sex Activity Requires Fitness

day's."

Today's Sport Parade

KID£ George VI of l!lnglall(l,. who relinqulsbed the
~taprantaln Manhattan now, liUe In 1948, was tba last
but the Rainbow Room aiW Is emperor of India.

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Manager Earl Weavot', plying II
cautiously a a manager should.
"WeD, the only &amp;arne I'm
worryq about now llr Tues-

'

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buy

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49;~-;~SiJ~:pri;;~. LA Rams,, 2~~ . _
JIUD lldiANB ~o~aebdolo••
Ja&amp;es- r J tor tk.
·,...,.un...u t11t Jlfd*lna
two rt11111ninC lllldlfellt..
the Detroit
Wrlllr

111 ID the National
Football Cailcencell.nall)' met
!heir maldl Slmdsy In a pair 11.
'·

q1nc quarterbaCks.
John Brodie II. tile $an
l"rrneeaeo Footy Nlnartl and
Sonny JJirletiiOII of t11e Washlnglon Radakins, both 35-yearsold, were the dlflerence as their
1eaJ111 upaet the Los ADgeles
llama and the Detroit Uons
reepeellvely.
Brodie, of! to 1 senaatlonal
start lbls season, ac:..-ed on a
!Sflrd run and eonneetsd with
Gene Waahlnglon on a H.yard
ac:ootng pase as ~ Footy
Nlners upset the llama, 20-4,
and moved Into a tie wilb Los
ADgeles r..- first pt.ce In the
Weetern Division.

1111t dropped 111m ...........~ t!IIDI! ~ ·p~ In et&amp;bt
~~~man O.briel 1w1ee for :11 ltl.-t hn qarr. owalloped
LIIDI, 31- :rards and inlereePtsd .\Wo Ill ~· ' ..,~n~ 'fQ bomb.
11.
bls ~·
'1'1» Bearul#fereil ,at l!ldltlt~~o
Q1Mr Adla
alloanben i'1mll!l\l baet ~
ID other · NFC action, Min- Jursensen wu even better !!&amp;yen wu
II' llllf be
neeot. blanked Olleago, 24-4; than Brodie, completing It II. 20 ou~filr the
, ,.
·
Dallas shutout AllanIll, 13-0; Sl. attempta for 2211 yarda. Jur• A3loflfCI ft~, at I· ~
Loula beat New Ooleans, H-17; gensen bit on ac:..-lng paaee of by CUff llarriJ ~ a ~
and New Y..-k ediled Pblladel· ~ and 11 yard&amp; to Charlie punt filum bJ Mel ~ •
pbla, 36-23. Green Bay meets Taylor and on a sevetJilarder i!IJ I!&lt;HI:tdt:or
llml..._:
San Diego In an Inter- to Jerry smith
llit! tile ·
~· ~
conterence game tonight.
11te Uons were beld to all.eld the FIIIQcinl to i.dt ,~ yarill ·
Brodie bit on 13 of :Ill passea goal unW only t:IO wu 1elt In total olf~ 1D the game:
for IVS yard and got good the game when Greg Landry, a Jim llarll G) lid td·IJ'II to
protection from bls offensive reserve quarterlieck, moved Jaelde Sllllfll wllb B:ll nmalno
line, who did not allow him to them 80 yards for a touebdown. lng enal!led the Clrdl,l1all to
get hit with a single lou.
Pal• ts 'l1le Star
win their third lllfaiPI pme..
Brodie's top reelever, Washing- MinnesOta's tlefeuslve and The WlnDinll pia)&gt; came 0111
ton, grabbed seven passes for Alan Page was the star of the minute .and liD_ii!:onda .after
Jti yard&amp;.
VIking's victory, reeoverlng two illew Ooleans tied the game qra
The llama managed only two Jumbles and relui'Dinj! one II. an !a.yai'd TD •
_frtlm Edd
field goala by Bruce Qoasett, them 116 yarda for a touchdown. s.-gett to Dave
and the F..-ty Nlners' defensive Flanker Gene Washlnglon alsO ylrd
Ron Johnlon
a .Hrun with tt nn
II!'OIJds
remaining to live tile Giants
their first victory of !lie year

s....

F

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Pvland 12 Sobrlllll 14

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Weotern , Reatrve /I.a • .
I'~· nlalll6
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Hawt&lt;tol• 011Unlltfa

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Unt~ly ·~~ ~\ ~~~mort
Ftr:f:~f. · 20 · CIO\vela~

Luthtl'on· w, u ~ •
.•
20 Ktnl ~IIlli 12 ;
Cltvtland Lulll. E, IS I!Orklh'1
•
Cleveland Banodlcllnt
Cltvtltnd Glonvlllt 12 · •
CleV&lt;IItnd John Adamil' ll
Cll'ltltnd QWd 12
·. '
Ll"lt ·Miami 32 R""' '11
.;
Harrl- 50 Taytcw 13
·
Batlalrt,.. Mouhcf&amp;vlllt !W. V••

Soul-'

,:r.

J. Mhl 0

Mlrlotlt 0 SPrtntfltld Cor!·
Colli. 0 !tltl
:
Akron Flroa!Gne I Allron Cell•·
Howtr6
c. :
Allron Narth 6 Akron .OUIII 1

CIIEEJUN(H!asJel nn- Patti [!olodnger, Diane G....,...., Melanie Deen, and Mary Jo

Woll, Eutem's ebeerlead.... are 11howllln a cheering I'OIIIIne durlrig Frldsy'alm[tal:tant
INAC clulrwllb the K1ger O'eek Bobcats.

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-7~;-W,~~~This Week~
and
:nllirnid
•
HOSPITAL NEWS
punt Bobby
46 yardaDuhon
r... another
Giant
£1 ~ ..J Ba..,ne
ac:ore. N..-m snuc1 hit Hal
una
ucc...

(tit)

.

'

Allron Eolf " Akron Hobin u
Toledo MICIIIIIblr 12 Lcwtln
Soulhvltw 6
.. •
Norwalk St. Paul26 Monroevtllt
12

•

Johnsoll
a s.
and
keepaiJo
tile ta1ited
Ea;lea nnwlnleaa.
yard run In the flrll q..,ter

Col:lege Seores

Weekend
Summary

Patrolman Notes
Bus Safety Rules

:

Conigliaro Traded

.....,... •· •··•

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••

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E•:J

.......

Stanford Eyes Rose Bowl~~!~~:.

'CLEANING

~

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.MA-SON ··

FURNRUR(
w.

· Gf ' taxation or · u·
to •
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fi~ iiHil mlutlvol&gt;' .tor J&gt;Ublie

··fermi.

· Milson.

=. . . .

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·. . .

and

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.... _On
Convenient

V1.

The 7llth anniversary of the lbls SWIUDer were given by four erw w~~rk, .Bapllat uterlture
American Bapllat Women to be members of the B. H. Sanborn ar&gt;J the wblta CI'OIII quota. She

:

Ctovtland lAtin 20 Steubtnvlllo
Colli. '15
II)' u.Jtod Prnl blterutkllll snagged three touchdown
Cttvetand R - 16 ct.... tari:l
Paul Brown, who creatsd the pa.... In the game. Lammlca
Ctlll. 6
Mlylltld 26 ~le Htlghll 0 ;
Qeveland BroWIIB dynasty In rolled up 364 aerial )'BJ'ds on a
Ctl'letand H&amp;rahts 7 Parmt
the early ftllles, relined to ~I.J'I performance.
Normond~ If
'
Oeveland aa coach of the Old pro Johnny Unltas bit Roy
Euclid 16 Br ah 6
,
Jaeksnn m two TD passel in a
By United Prosalnlornaflltltl Cleveland
t.
lgnallua
26
recently mintsd Clndnnatl Ben· Jefferson with a 3i,yard toudllolling efl..-1.
sotuodtl'" -~
· Cleveland Mshl 20
•
Holm' Medical Center, First Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy L. w..-tgala SUnday but came away a down pasa with til aecoods left
Cleveland E. TeCh 14 CtaVIItfid
man, Rl I, Gallipolis, a eon; Ml,.._to at Ohio Slota
Ave. and Cedar St. General Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Toledl! JILWR!f!rn Mlchlll!l• · Kndy I
3M'Iloaer.
to give Baltimore a M-:110 victory
Kent State tl Bawling Groen
visiting hours 24 and 7-11 p.m.
Wyomlflll 36 G.--hills 6
The Browns fought back from over the Oilers.
Bechtle,
Pt.
Pleasant,
a
Ohio
Weolayan
at
Musl&lt;lflllum
Wok..,.n Rosarve U EdiiOII 0
ay
United
Prtll
lnlomtflDOIII
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
a •11 deficit with a 1~, lloustDn (2-21 had taken a •
Ktnlfon 28 Ctntan Lihlnan I
daughter;
Do.
and
Mrs.
Furgul
Oonlson
at
Wooster
.
Eaal
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
fourth-quarter blitzkrieg In- 17 lead on Ron Gerela's nineCreotwood
21 Strtollboro 12
BoJtan u. 13 Mill 10
~"•
ds"••ter
Mlrleffa
at
CIIPIIal
S. Nese, Galli......-.a ,... ; Holdolberll at MI. Union
Nlln McKinley 42 Yaungotown
Pediatrics Ward.
spired by quarterback Bill yard field goal with 3:28
Columbia 21 Horverd 21
Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Beldwin-Waliaee at Kenyon
Rayen 0
•.
Duke 21 West VIrginia 13
Nellen, who hit on 17 of 2!1 remaining In the Wl8l quarter.
BlriU
Fremont St. J'*ph 16 S.nSheets,
Hamden,
a
8011; and Mr. Hiram at Ollorbliln
Dortmoutli
31
Princeton
0
passe~ good 1..- 2211 yards and The w..-ld champion Ollefs
cluaky St. M. 14
,. Lthlgh 7 Rutgors 0
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. nd u. ~vld L Beaver Rt Temple at Stvler
a ...,s. ""
·
' · Buffalo at Dayton
Lima
Stnlor 12 Doylon Dunbor
evoned their record at 2-2 by
.. two tou.bdowna.
Penn st. 28 Bos!on can. 3
Bloomer, Rt. 2, Gallipolla, a 2, GalllpoUs, a daughter.
Indiana
Slota
11
Akron
0
Pltllburgh
10
Nevy
I
In otber AFC games 9mday, beating Boston on a co~linadaughter; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Dlsclwgea
Loke Forest at Oberlin
Mlnater 20 Dolphoa St. John 0
Fordham 7 Adeiph17
llal11moR edged Houstoo M-711 lion of Robert HolmeS buD
Union 31 Lanctallr
Syrecust 23 Maryland 1
Dale Edwards, Gallipolis Oscar Bachtel, CecU C. Findley at WltlenMIberhlI
at Llborty
Remelln
12
.
Kansas
City
tr~unced strength and Jan Stenerud's
Yale 2S Brown o
Ferry, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Burdette, Mrs. Robart B. No~~~slown (~) gan
Newark Cttllollc 12 Eul Knox 6
cornell 32 Penn 31
Booton,
23-10,
Pitts- finesse. Hobnes ac:..-ed twice on
DeMis L. Adkins, Oak Hill, a Casaldy, Mrs. Jamee Conwell C&amp;se Weatorn Reserve at Grove City 29 Baxloy 12
C.lgelo 11 Holy Cfou 13
burgh belted Buffalo, 23-10, short plunges and Stenerud
Dayton PaHenon u Dayton
son; Mr. and Mrs. John R. and infant daughter, Beatrloo J.
Woshlngton a. Jollarson
Temple4t tonnocttcut23
Valley at Ohio
and OaldaDd nDnped Denver, kicked three field goals.
Stivers o
SOulli
Blaker,Mason,adsughter; Mr. Davia, Jeffrey B. Danney, Mn. Delaware
Northern
Dixie
66 Twin Valloy Noolh 14
Aubum
41
Clemson
0
IIWS. M1lml defeated the New KC laterceplil Sis p_.
and Mrs. Jeroll D.Pwe. VInton, Everett J. Elliott, Mrs. David Thiel at John carroll
Woke
Forest
21
A.
Tech
9
Yen Jell. »f. SatwdaY night. The em:ellent Kanaas City
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. H. Fetty and Infant daughter, Hllilldole at Ashland
Vlr9inlo 49 VMt 10 .
Clime Til 1 oloed r.Jcb1
seeondary Intercepted six
H L Kentucky Stale at Ctntrol Stall
Miami (Ohio) 19 Morsllelt 12
Francia 0. Spires, Jackson, a Roherta K. Fowler • .,_
•~ •· · · Doftanee at Manchotter
Cltadel16 MI. Mary 7
San Diego (0.2-1) meets Patriot passes, two of! Joe
son; Mr. and Mrs. Okey A. Garlic, Sr., Haymond H. Glb- Slippery Rock at Wllmlnofon
COOK OPTIONED
'"
so. Car. 35 No. car. 21
Greoll Bay (2-1) In on Inter- Kapp, wh0111 they laced for the
Bluffton at Anct.rsan
Tawney, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, a son ' Mrs . Leona Greene
Loulsvlllel.C
Tulsa
8
Mrs
.'
. N - Night
CINCINNATI (UPI) -, on.
01 ofereooe game on national first time since the SUper Bowl,
Miss. 31 Georgie 21
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Roeor Della Hay, Mrs. Mary Ruth Miami 11 Ohio Unlv.
Cincinnati
Royall hllve optelevlolon (Vp.m. EDT&gt; tonlgbt. and four more off Mike
Tenn 17 Georgie Tech 6
D. Crabtree, Jackson, a son; Huston, Clarence H. Marlin,
tlonecl
Moo~
rookla f!ll'War4
Ata.l5
Venderbillll
lly
Ualtsd
Preu
IDtenatleoal
The llroiiCGII had their un- Tallaferro.
Florida
31
Fla.
St.
'0
Jr.,
Mrs.
Abraham
Par80111,
Doug
Coo1t
to
the
VIrtue Oub of
s.turdsy
beaten bubble burst when Gene Mingo bootell f G-yard
Western K. 45 Eastern Mich. 6
WIWam
F
·
Payton,
Rbonds
J
·
Bologna,
Italy
,In
the flriiiiUeb
w..... Wells snared a •yard field goal In the third period to CINCINNATI (UP)) -The Tampo 18 Norlll Tex. St. 1
Proffitt, Timothy A. Roush,
action by a National Bulretb.n
taudldown pasa from Daryle give the Steel,... their first win Baltimore Orioles edged the Louisiana St. J.4 Paclflt: 0
Furman 23 Richmond 9
Charles
R.
Small,
Mrs.
Steve
Washington
2
2
D
.500
AJtaoelatlonteamtoacluboulcil
Cincinnati
Reds,
H,
to
capture
'""""lea In the fourth quarter after 16 consecutive tosses.
Arkansas .Cl Baylor 7.
AllenTrlppandlnfantson,Mrs.
N.Y.Gianta
1
3
0.250
thecountry.
the
first
game
of
the
1970
Woold
to give Oatlond a 21-23 lead. Pittsburgh bad not won i!lnce
Mid-'
4 0
Bus
safely
was
dlacuued
by
Herman
A.
VanMatre
and
InPhlladelphlecantr~l
.OOO
Bologna Ia in the ltallall
Michigan 29 Purdue 0
Series.
Wella, a five-year veteran, the opening game of 1969.
Notre Dome 51 Army 10
Patrolman Casto of the fantdaughter,Jessa B. Walker,
W. L. T. Pet. Majoo BaakelballiAqlle.
WENTWORTH,
England Ohio St. 29 Mlchlglln St. 0
GalllpoUs
Post
of
the
State
Mrs.
Paul
Wallace,
Lewis
L.
Detroit
3 1 o .750
The Royala wl11 have to cut
Iowa 2A Wlscon1ln U
(UP!) -Jack Nicklaus, who Nortliwntorn41! tlltnolsO
IIJ&amp;Inray Patrol at the Tburs- Walters, Richard L. Wamsley, ~:=~
~ ~
:~ two m..-e players before 111t
has annexed every major Nebr..ka 21 'Misoourl7
day night meet~~~ ,",1 .the ::· Allr~ ~.::er, Mrs. Chlf'!f19 , ,
2 2 . ,q, .•!OCL ..Wedneeda7·111.,.. opener~ will!
~by In the world Ill goU, ~!~':.":~~~=~aS':~~
Brad"". '.
,: ~b!IP.,:,..
' " ' - cat'IOJl
\l..J!~
wo
'
. " - 1 •PTA.
nauey
v . ... '
' ,,.~,
" ;-w:. 'L:l.l·'"'''''l'cl
·' J' '"
. ' N-·¥MI•
... .-: - .
......,!
fiii!I['IJO "'·'"
' . .&gt; '·"
01
11 , .'lUra
colle~ted
..
$13,8QO
..
flrflo4JIIce,
·O&gt;io.M.
11
Dol'lQII.\4.
:•. , ~BALTIMORE(UPI)-Byone -lhe~ , IB . ~· he
· ·' "llltroelucec!·by·Mi's. ·L«raln~ .
., , ·,,_ '
·
k. · Los Angeles
3 1 0 •.7s0 ··•
·' · ·
·
T
Venoy,thespeakeroutllnedbus SellOn, mrs. Sabra C1ar • and Son Francisco · 3 I 0 .750
·,;:.bt . thOII! pure strokes of ' "'
lllii regliJ8r r'lgbt field money wheo he held , off a ' 51'.J... phl~tlo'Poow3
: '1"baaeball Irony Tony CoriJBUaro job
the Red Sox last year, challenge from Lee Trevino to Oklahoma tt":~~ 20
safety rules and answered Mrs. Earl Holbrook.
Atlanta
New Orleans
12 32 0D .500
.250
· bas become a member of the and did even better this year as win the $44,160 Pieeadllly Wocld Texas •1 Oklahoma 9
queallone pertaining to roed
NFL Stendlngs
Sunday's Rosvlll
: California ADgela, the very he drove In 116 runs, bit 38 Match Play golf champ!Clll for Western N.M. 20 Western Colo. regulations.
By United Prelllntornellonol Dallas 13 Allanto o
: saine ball club aplnal whOitl h~ and battsd .2116 In It&amp; the first time.
7Texas Al.l43 Ea•t Tex. St. 21
'l1le pledge to the nag and the
American Conlorlftc.
Belli more 2~ Houston 20
10
he _.-ty lost bls Ufe.
games.
New Max. St. 57 Nortliem Ariz. Lord'o prayer opened the
E-:J. L T. Pet. ~~~ty~11!\'tJr
M..-e Ironic yet, the Z.yoar- Conlgllaro, who leaves bls 23- NEW YORK (UPI) -Limit 13
meeting conduetod by Mrs. Miami
3 1 0 .750 Cleveland 30 Clncl27
Tech 21 Texas AI.M 1
old right fielder told cloee year-old brother Billy behind To Reason, after flnlahlng Teqs
Mildred
Miller.
11
was
decided
Betllmore
3 1 0 .750 Oakland 35 Denver 23
Ariz. I• Brigham Yooog 17
thai ot
than t5 will be N.Y. Jets
I 3 0 .250 Wesh 31 Detroit 10
frlendl that If be eve&lt; had to with the Red Sox had • huneb second, wu awarded first place Now Max. 411 San Jcoe St. 25
n
mooe
Boston
1
3 o .250 Mlnneaoto 2• Chicago 0
leave the Bostoll Red Sox, for he would be traded.
1n the • •025 Champagne Abilene Chrst. 61 E11torn Now spent f..- the door prize each Buffalo
1 3 0 .250 St Louis 24 New Or1eens 17
whom he had played seven "I don't want lo leave Slakaa at Belmont Park when Mox.7
month and that $5 will ba given
centr•w• L T Pet
N:Y. Glants'30 Phlla 23
~th the
• · San Fran 20 Los Ang 6
........ he'd prefer to go with Boston," he had said. "It's my heavlly fav..-ed Holst The Flag Ark. St. 21 Trinity 1~
to the homeroom w•
Cleveland
3 1 o .750
(Oniygameochoduledl
a club like the ADgela.
hDIIIe, It's the city where I .,... disqualified for Interfering Air Fora! 2• Tulano 3
highest
attendance.
Mrs.
Houslon
2 2 o .500
Mondoy's Gomes
Colorado 61 Iowa St. 10
He got bls wllh SUnday night. broke in, and It's where most of with two other horses.
Pbyilla
Hackett's
room
was
the
Pittsburgh
t
3
0
.250
Green
Bey
at San Dleto, twllllo
Wyomlf11116 Colo. St. 6
_.___
C:lnrlnMil
1 3 0 .250
(U11y game schedUled)
Conigliaro wu the key figure my friends are. If the Red Sox
Standford 24 Sou. Cel. 14
wuu-.
Wnl
In a all: player BW'P In which trade me, I won't pull a Curt NEW YORK (UPI) -The Oregon 41 UCLA .Ill
Instead
of
naming
room
W. L T. Pet.
illlitlllo-IIO!I••IIIIII•iitli•:
be, catcher Gory M,_ and Flood and I don't say I won't Miami Dolpblns got two touch- Oreton St. 31 Utah 21
mothen, uwas decided that all Danv•r
3 1 o .750
C&amp;ltl.
31
Wosh.
21
reliever Ra)l Jarvia were go, becaDM baaeballla a great down passes from Bob Griese Ariz. St. '11 Wash. St. 30
parents who desire to aerve will f:~r!~?tv
~
~
traded to the Angela 1..- relief part of my Ufe and I want to and two field goals fr0111 Garo Uloh St. 35 Kentucky 6
be
given
the
opportunity.
Mrs.
San
Diego
0
2
1 .000
ace Kan Tlllum, outfielder play, but I hope If I am traded Yepremlan to heal the Injury· Fresno St. 21 San Fer. Vol. St. Carlene Van Meter won the do..Notional
cantorenee
Jarvia Tlllum and second It's to a club like the ADgele. I riddled New Y..-k Jets, 20-4, 1..- 1Loyola 16 Occldentot 14
prjze. Refreshments were
balll"'"n Doug Grlftln, who like Los ADgelea."
the first time In their history. Montana u Idaho 26.
served by the hospitality
3 ~ To
llpenl most II. last 11eason with The Angels are dellghtsd to
CO!!IIIIiltee.
3 I 0
Hawaii of the Paelflc Coast have him.
PJ'ITSBURGH (UPI) -The Ohio Stall StturtiiY
29 Mlchlllln Stall 0
League.
"He'll help us at the plate Buffalo Salna, playing their Ohio u. 1'1 Doylon fl
Ollly three years ago, Coni- and he'll give us a big Uft at first National Hockey Lague Toledo 20 Bowling Groon 0
42 Xavier 0
gllaro iras given the laal rtles the box office with bls game ever, made It a victory Clnclnnell
LEGAL NOTICE
Ktnl 25 Wottorn Mlchl!lln 12
of bls church shortly alter Jack personality," Walsh said of the by outaerambllng the Pitts- Mleml 19 Marshall 12
(Amended Senate Solnt RHoluUon
lilinols Stato 15 Akrqn 14
HamOIAin II. California bit him good-looking &amp;3 right handed burgh Penguins, 2-1.
No. II
Murray
Stolo
42
Youngstown
In the lo!fl eye with a pitch slugger who bas recorded
.JOlNT RESOLUTION
$toto 32
durlnl! a game at Boston.
several songs, made a number
Sll!lday
wttt.nbort 30 Donlson 0
•
; '•1 10 ...... IMCtin I ot
Aitlc" K1l ot 1M Ceed'b'"Oil ot
AI first, It was feared the of alnging appearances In CINCINNATI (UP!) -Ellie Morteffo 21 Hloam 16
tu.W.oiOWoto~tiW
WCIOIIIIr
1l
OhiO
Wotloyan
13
popui•r Tony c. Would lose bls Booton night eluba and even Hendricks, 8 .:142 bitter c1ur1ng
,-~..._..
Musl&lt;lngum
23 Asllland 6
.....
., ...
,w., llo1 • • • d1-.
1oft eye-end then foc 1 lime authored a book entitled "See- the regular season, rapped an ~)101) J9 Loke Forost 0
Ia ftlU o1 n.t lmanltd .C
a-. nz't·te ~..IOta
,..,. ...
ot
the doelon thought he might lng II Through," wbleh deala opposll&lt; field
double
C&amp;pitat 16 Holdolbllr!l o
... .........
N!)l'lllwood
11
Central
Stalo
12
t
even
.........
he
mlased
with
bls
near
fatal
accident
In
two-run
to
~uulolber''"-.
M._.,
cllmal
a
live-n~~~
filth
Inning
die. bu
Be It nMlved 11 tba General
21 Alloghtny 20
August of 1967.
that propelled the Baltimooe Obtrlln
-biY
ol the Biola of Oblo.
Beth•nv 28 tase W11tern
\bntl·ftffba of lhe memben elected
Orioles to a 6--' victory over the
Reserve 6
1CI Hcb bo\lMI conCIIl'tf.Q therein
Washlnofon a. Jefferson 14 John
tblt uwre lhaD be tubmttted to the
~n: of the ltate in the manner
carrot!
12
a 2-0 lead Beldwln-Wollaee 2l .Holllra 16
pre~Crtbed b)' 11w at the ceneral
eled!On to be held oo the first
Hilllldote 17 Ohio ltorthorn 7
Tl.lttdiJ .dter the ftn1. Monda)' In
N"""''*·
lt'IO,
...- xn of
to
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI)- Findlay 21 Blulllon 7
By STEVE SMILANICH
their third win without a lou,
amtnd teOtton
1 ota ArUcfe
MI. Union .Ill Ottorbliln 19
the ConatltuUon of O!llo to read
UPI Sporll Writer
blanked Michigan State, 2!1-0, In Lee Roy Yarbeougb of Colum- Do'laiiCJI UWIIll111111fo!l 7
.. lollbwl:
"ll's been a long time since Ohio State's Big Ten Confer· bia, S.C., took the lead with
JJITtCLit XII
the Stanl..-d Indians left the once opener. Next opponent !..- nine lapa to go when Bobby
Beotlon J. No pro~rty, taxed
Isaac blew an engine. Yarfarm to villi Plasdena but the But:keyesls Minnesota.
accordlnl to value, man be ao
\utd In •xc- of one per cent; o!
Coach John Ralllon'a football USC was tile only team In boough went on to win tile lith
ill thle \'J.IU.I 1A money 1or all
•~1- and loell ~ . but laWI
,....,.. may have lurned the Unltsdl'rnllnternaUonal'slop annual NaUooal 500 stock car
m•r- 1M NIMd- a\i&amp;bOriZUll addl~
UoiW we. to be t.Yled ou\llde
earner en route to the Roae ten to looe during the past claaslc under a cauUon Dag.
..
.....b)'
- •either
.......
Bowl when they beat an old -kend.
PJO..S
at leut
~Jortty
of ··the
HOCKENHEIM, Germany
1tteet.on 6( tbl tufa~ ~trl"'- voun•
tGrmentor - Southern ·Calli..-- Second-ranked Texas rolled to
P!OI*IU.:. 01' WlliD Jli'O'"
of by tU Cbar*' of a mu~
nla.
Ita :Uth consecutive lrlumph, ( UPI) -Dieter Queater of
~
............... """" ... lm·
Stanl..-d, wbleh hasn't played the Longhorns walloping arch Awitrla drove his Brabham to
~
·
br
nn rWt ~in• to value.
in the granddaddy of all bowl rival Okllhoms, 41-1, and thlrd- victory at the Hoekenhelm
tX.etl
that; li.WI rita)' be ~ 1.0
r.tl
tadl by ~v&amp;dtftl 1m a
pmaa IInce IIIG2, emerged u a rated Notre Dame ran up the Motordrome at an average
'"""""""
tn value
91 Ill•
-~~4
Of .nid4.nll
llxtY..P.ve
yean
Of .,. .
IOIId contender lor the Paelfle bighest score ever recooded speed of 116.3 mllaa per hour to
oi&gt;d
-~and
~
fOrtncom•
El&amp;bt Conrorenee title and the against an Anny learn, eruah- win the last race of the
and '·~
. to obtain
""'b -~~
•
ouwtan4·
Raee Bowl hOIII role thal&amp;oes lng the under-manned Cadets, F..-mula Two oeaaon.
In«~~
·
daj oll-'1. !J\3.
~ 1tif
te ot Oblo or or any City,
wllb the crown by upaetttinC 51-10. The lrlsli, unbeaten In
Vimlo,
II&amp;• ..,...,. or ,...nolllp
1n
tl\ll
,
..
._~ or wb.ldl htv• beal
tile fourtl&gt;ranked Troj8111, M- four games, lace Missouri next
kiWI.-4. .the
. .· .
••bliO
t\ahOdk ' of OhiO
mean•
oe
14, Salurdsy.
Salurdsy.
tna.'hetton in ·aoanteUon thlrt'With.
TO!&gt;fanked Ohio Slate, the
..mtch I:Kindi ....,.. outatandinC Qfl
lho '"' dar ot Januarr. Ull ollll
lavootte to be tile visiting team Elaewhere,ll..-anked Arizona
.u
boil"' , ..... -14 "'"
QOmpeDIItior\ iUJ'I4.•, .lball be exewpt
1D the Role Bowl, alJo State olopped Wasblngton state,
from taxaUon. and wiUI.out llmi&amp;ml
liCfYanced as expeetsd Salur· 31-30; Oregon 11poet IJib.canked
tbe ~al ""er1 IUbJICt to 1be
pro• . o:1 &lt;f\,rU01e J of thLI oon·
dly. The Buekeyee, galnlne UCLA, U-40·
oUtu ~t,o
4~nllln• tllJ NJ)Jeotl

$349.95
ns.aoo.w;;:::

'

'

Tuoctrl'!'ll ' C.n. Calli.

·MIIv•nro

.!:J!

(UpOn Reqllllt)

Women Plan 'Observance

••
~
.,,

~tvniiY

!" ··

The !IIIIIIICCI1!d on a ill-yard
field goal by Grant Gullrle ond
a four-yard run by 0. J. Simpson. Slrnpom, a key to the Bills'
34-31 upaet of the Jets last week,
was held to 60 yards In lt attempts by the tough Stee1er
defense.
The Dolpbins defeated the
lnjury.plngued Jets Salllrday
night as Bob Grleoe bit Paul
Warfield ond Howard Tlrllley
with shoot ac:orlng passel and
Garo Yopremian eontrlbo&amp;ed
two lleld goala.
Jim Turner r"'ap""r""""•'tod the
whole of the Jets' oflenae with
17 and 35 yard field goals.
The win boosted Don Slllla's
Dolphins Into a tie with the Colli
for the lead In the AFC East.
Both leaml have 3-1 rec..-ds.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pmneroy, 0., Qet, l2, lfiO

IJ Uoltod fl&lt;tU t-ttonil

=··

Chargers, Pack On TV

.

v"
"•
,

'

Wo~P. lnltlt\itlonl Used ex.~lullve17 ,., .......bl. . .......... • ••
JiObU•~
·
UHd txchntvt'b' for
i.nY
1c
rpoH, but all such
laW'I
~ tubJ.et to llteratlon
or nplaJ; Mml Ua• nlue ol •II prop·
ertr- iD txompWd . ~11. from ttme
to UIM, be uctrtliJ.nfd lfld pub·

·=

'P••••••••
...
N

.•

0D

.• .

I·

oboorved on Nov. I$ and plana
f..- eelabrallng It were notsd
'l'hunday nl&amp;ht by the Women'o
Mlsslonarv Society of the
Pomeroy First BApllat Church.
Mrs. Joe Cook, president
innounced a aieeung on Oct.
at the Middleport Firlt Baptist
Church when the Rev. Thomas
Olaon wl11 speak on mission
work In Philadelphia. Mrs.
Harry Bailey was appolntsd
vice prealdent of mlaslons and
special Interest missionary
chairman.
,.,lee announced at the
meeting was World Communlty
Day to be held on Nov. 8 at the
Middleport Heath United
Me!bo!IJst Church.
· Mrs. Orval Wllas rep..-ted on
White Croas noting that the
ovetland Ia to go to Baeone
Cdlege, a ac:hool for Jndlans
and the overseas tolndla.ll w..;
suggeetod that a day be aet
aside to wed on fiWng the
qoota.
Connie WIUiamson, a junlor
at Judson College, Judson Hilla,
m., has been named ac:holarl!lilp student for the Asaoelallon.
Hi8hllghta of the Women's
Conference held at Granville

ti

Missionary Society of the
Middleport Bapt111 Church.
Mrs. John Werner, president,
spoke of the theme of the conlerence, "Put Love Into Deeds"
and of various other topics "How the World Gels Around "
and "The Americas, How Many
Worlds?" She announced that
the ne1t conference wiD be at
Otterbein.

.

.

Mrs. Charles Searles
displayed a poster showing the
love gift dollar and 00w It Is
spent: 30 cents lor state
missions; 20 cents for overseas
mleelons; It, general program;
II, home mlasl0111; 9, education
and publication&amp;; 7, clly
mlaslons; 5, mlacellaneous; and
lour, ministers' financial
suppoot. She said W0111en's Day
of Prayer Is Nov. 2.
In her talk, Mra. Dale
Walburn spoke of an Imaginary
bus trip - the bus representing
the church, the driver
representing the mlnlaler, and
the passengers as the
congregation. Her comments
were on ways of Improving the
church, relations between age
groups In the church, the white

dlstrlbutsd • mlaslollal'y letter
from Alaob.
Mrs. Chirlee Simona emphallzed· the anniversary observance on Nov. 11. She
repwted on the II)IO&lt;lallntemt
missionary .....kshop which ti
attended and of offerings lor
two cow• and a cardiac
machine to be aent to South
Amerlea.
Group lllnglq of "Be Strong
We are Not Here to Play" with
Mrs. Kuhn at the plano, opened
the meeting. Devotions on space
travel with aerlplure from 11
Chronicles 7 and Pu1ma %1
were given by Mrs. Ellen
Couch.
Mrs. Cook and Mrs. Kuhn
oerved refreshments of cake,
mints, aesame seed sblcks, lea
and eoflee. Fall flowers and
Iepere In an arrangement made
by Mrs. Kuhn centered the
table.
Attending besides those
named were Wes and Carol
Simons, Mrs. Ge..-ge Skl~UW,
Mrs. J. Edward Foster, Mrs. T.
T. Shelton, Mrs. Ivan Walker,
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett, Mrs.
William W111on, and Mrs.
OUver Michael.

60 at Mother-Daughter Dinner
Jleeognltion of mothers and a Mrs. Grace Pratt welcomed
I!1UIIeal program highlighted the guesla and presentod corthe aruwal mother - daughter sages to Mrs. Genevieve
banquet of the Phllathea . Farmer, the oldest mother
Women Thursday night at the present; Mrs. Leota Hawley,
Middleport Church of ~t. next to the oldest; Mrs. Richard
Appt uxlmately 60 mOthers, Moyer, the youngest; and Mrs.
daughters and guests attended Ray Cunningham, the one with
the banquet wbleh was aerved the most children. The society
by the Homebuilders Claa8 at presented Mrs. Pratt with a
tables decorated with rose corsage.
arrangements made by Mrs. L.
A plano duet by Mrs. Chester
E. lleyttplds and Mrs. Guy Erwin and Mrs. H.orold Lohse,
Reynolds.
program chairmen, "A Garden

Green Thumb

Notes . ...
A weekl1 feature of Melp
County Garden Club memberl.

Annual., Biennial. and Perennial.
BY liJIII. N01111AN WILL
Star Gerdea Clab
Three types II. flowers, aecording to their life epan, ore an-

nuala, blennta1l and permntala.
Atrue amual Ia a plant which atmpletaa Its Ufe cycle from
seed sowing to seed eettlng and dlee naturally within 12 1110111hs.
The great merit of annuala Ia their adaiJfahiJity. '!bey can be
UBed to fill flower and gaps In eelabUslled borden· as
trailing plants In hanging baskets; In window bous
to
provide quickly grown gay flowers in a new garden. The taller
kinds may be grown to provide a temporary. aereen or
background. 1D addition annuals provide an excellent source of
eutflowen. Rows can beSJwnespecla[Jy foolbls parpoae.
Many Oowera grown as annua1a commonly called by this
name are reall,y tender perennlala. In their native lands and in
regions 1&lt;'!tere Hille ..- no 1r0i1t occurs they pera1at from year to
ye ... But in m..-e severe cllmatee, winter cold ldlla lbem. In lbls
gro~ belmg eueh plants u snapdragons, aalvla, verbena and
many others. Elample1 II. true annuals are larbpur, calendula
and cockscomb.
·
BIENNIALS take two years 11'&lt;111 !be -rllng llage to the
production of ripe seed. They grow during the first year Dowers, fruit and die In the second.
One of the most popular biennials Is campanula (beUOower)
especially the Canterbury bell. Others are eblmney beUflower
Chinese forgel-miHiot, foxglove, Engllsh delay and sweet rocket:
Although Althaea (llollyhock) are perennlala,lt 15 often fo111d
moat satlafaetory to grow them as blennlala, for they are so very
IIUI!C8ptible to a dlsllgurlng rust dlseaae. Many pansies are so
grown, too.
PERENNIALS are Oow,...lhot, once plantod, Uve on from
year to year. Moat of them alao Increase In nwnber.
H a reaoonably large eeleetlon Is grown there will be bloom
fr0111 early Spring 111111 late Fall. So -although more expen&amp;ve
to buy than bedding plants oo other amuala- perennials are lea
eootly in file long run. And I !eel that they give more beauty and
joy with less work.
The chrysanthemum Is an lnr:reaslngly popular variety of
perennial. It Ia my favorite, as anyone viewing file thouaancb of
multicolored bloasoms In our gard'"' right now might readUy
suspect. AB alghta grow cold and a killing frost seems Imminent
the plants seem to reallu and try to outdo themselves In one leet
Ding at true splendor.
There's a note of sadness as we view their beauty, rellzlng 11
will soon be gone. But we know, that given a Utile tender loving
care now, they'll be back next fall In beautify our gardena,
churches and homes .
There are different Ideas of how to prepare mums for winter.
Some say not to cut of! the topa,lor then water will enter the stalk
stumpa, go down to the roots and caUJe them to freeze out. Others
S8Y the topa should be cut of!. For If they're left on, the wind will
whip them back and forth and loosen the roots, thereby caustng
some 1011. .
· ,
,11 1J u,2r.r &gt;
cr "'~ ,
We h~:&lt;&gt;e used illth methods and sao: IJ.IW dliereri!ie' ln'-thi
resulta. The past several yearliWe've left the topa m, except when
they were quite unsightly.
Mulching will help mums to ''winter" well. However we have
10 many that we usually go the lazy way and Jet nature mulell
them loo us with leavee blown around them and with snow. If
winter temperatures are severe, we'll need Iota of snow to cover
our perenntala.
TheloeaUon of a garden has muell to do with bow well plants
will come through the winter.
A garden on an exposed hlllalde - where high winds will
sweep away snow and dry out twigs - wiJI probably auffer as
much damage as one In a colder zone. One in a sheltered apot will
come through muell colder weather with less damage.
Though dreading the oomlng winter, I have lately thought of
how It helps ua by killing weeds - especlaiJy In bordera - thus
lessening our spring gardsn ellores.
Then, while reading a paper one day, I came upon this
fllougbt:
"Winter Ia the harsb seaaon thai bares the earth, making It

and

of Roses," was followed by an
original poem pa~ tribute to
several WDIJien of the Soclety.lt
was wrllten lllld read by Mrs.
Beulah Roush. Mrs. Robert
Craig sang "Loo!1 to the
Ralnbow, 11 ''Scarlet Ribbons."
and "An Old Refrain," and Mrs.
Denver Rice preeentod "Go to
the Door." Accompanied by
Mrs. Chester Erwin, Mrs.
Moyer and Mro. Don Erwin
sang "In the Garden." A
meditation, "Helpfulness" and
a poem "Measuring Rod,"
another plano duet by Mrs.
Erwin and Mrs. Lohse, and
prayer by Mrs. Rice concluded
Officers were eleetsd at the special project each quarter. the program.
..-ganlullooal meeting of the Tbla month the members will
Teen Sunday School Claaa of the place Home Ufe, a Christian
During the bui!lness meeting,
Ftr.t sOuthern Baptist Chapel, magazine, In the offices of area an invitation from Heath United
Pameroy·
physicians and dentists. Each Methodist Church women was
The ooganluUonal meeting month the church will preeent read Inviting the Church of
wuhe~at tllebiJI!IIof.Mr.and· "Event," a OjlW magazine for. Chfl•t ~q to join !ffl!t1'or a
Mrs. Herac:heHI!Oiiltite, ·Mrs .•. y&lt;iutlis 12 to47, to the members·, aei:ylce tonlgbt. ~ · -,..
, MeCl~re, teacher, led the• of the class.
made to aerye the annlver~
4WOUOIII wlfll uch member · The young people have been dinner to the Homebuilders
PlrUe!paUnB by reading a lnvltsd to Join youth of the Class on Oct. 20. It was JWtod
li)IICial J1Grtlon of scripture.
French City Baptist Church of that $227 was made on the
Officers oleeted were Marylu GaWpoUs on Oct. 17 foc an all- recent rummage sale.
Milia, chairman; Jerry dsy picnic and outing at Old
ColanWI, aeeretary-traaaurer. Man's cave. The French City Guests at the banquet were
The claaa eeleetsd "Knlghta of Church will ... the church bus Miss Opal Berry, Mrs. Raulln
the KIDg"as the class name and lor transportation. Kim Moyer, Mrs. Narss Van Meter,
sltleld nped pins with the Browning and Klmmy McClure Mrs. Harold Thomas and
lnltlali .K of K. "Do You Really are the other members of the daughter, Teresa, Mrs. Don
Heuter, Mr1. Jean Swett, Mrs.
Cite.? " Ia tbe class eong.
cluB.
Leona
Karr, Mre. Sharon
Meetlnp were aelfor the first Refreshments, songs and
Ruaseii,Mrs.Cralg,Mrs. Ruth
Tburaday lll~~ach month with a fellowship were enjoyed.
Carr, Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mrs.
Earl McKinley, Mrs. James
Souders, Mlsa Ellzaboth Ann
Wolle, Mrs. James Fug•te.
Mrs. Cunningham, Mrs. Mary
Powell, Mrs. Nina Bland, Mrs.
AUce Ellis, Mrs. Mike Gerlaeh, ready for spring's fresh, new birth."
Mlsa Debbie Laney, and Mlsa
&amp;tddenly the inconveniences of winter seemed worth It all.
Sharon Wllaon.
Members of the Home- For -alter all- aren't God's way~beot?
builders Cla1s aervlng the
dinner were Mrs, Edna Evans,
Mack SteW8fl, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kincaid, Chester Posters displayed In Mid- In uniform the boys with
Erwin, and Mn. Milton dleport bustneas windows and a h..-ns and drums marched to
paradebyMiddleportCubSeout the Middleport fire station
Houdashelt
Pack M5 through the com- where they were given a look at
munlty Thuradsy pointed up the !Ire trucks. Fire Chief Tom
Fire Prevention Week.
DsrstandWayneDavlawerem
.
tio
·
hand to talk to the boys about
P8rtic lpa n In
the veblclee.
In the group were Michael
Hlndy, Kevin Angel, Jell
Bazaar is Planned
Laudermllt, Daan Spencer
Parllclpallon In the Healb MltcheU Cart John Bye."
Methodist Church boll- Robbie Parker' John Stewart'
d~ bazaar was planned Danny Smith' John Davis'
~ : : ~ met Jamie Seally: Steve Utile:
oclal
church Keith Black, Donald Geery
s
room.
Mu Geary, Ray Mowery,
arrThe group alao eompletsd Mark Hood. Dan mothers Eula
·u le"';:aments r... a rummage Frances and Mro. Larry
Nov .:~'-!~ aJI the eburcb, Spencer accompanied the
·
• ..... ean Cooke ts group.
chairman. Programa for the
year were reviewed and the
membent ccwnpl!od the year.
The word Is "love."
llobka· Mrs, Jolrn Campton, new
And when yo~~ put it into aciion, it. becom" more than a
[iri!rldent, I8I'Vtd u • boeteas
·-·
.
word, ~ becomn a Ioree. Powerf~l. IJr.aent. And 4irect. ·,
•!0!!11 with Mra. Charlet
Learn hc)w one ~roup~~ concer~ Clli~ens channelll!l·tHe
~ INMtrer. Mrs. John
8lid Mrs.
to~!· And turn!~(~ 'love for their illllgtlli&lt;ir$lntql il~"'w~y
!Cf•w•eaJn
Ia
seeretary.
A
11:
~
=~~
tlle
lllalllitCI
of life.
·' 1;.,}. _,, ' J· ·1.'
',J
• d!nnr~ coune and coffee wve Ft
11tteridsd

Officers Are Elected

Cub Scout Pack Marches Thursday

...!

Two Attend Clinic
G"- ·Gard.eners

To ~~~~.~r our free booklet, "How On~ Town Put Its faith.

t~·blvollcinswereby*".
.

. '.

'

·

11ie
'
det1d

Observance Planned !•

· Social
Calendar

In

MONDAY
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of
Cbrlatlan Service, Hesth United
Metltodlat Olureb, Middleport,
7:30 Monday at the church.
Ecumenical Reality observance. women of other
churchea lnvltod.
RUTLAND P.T.A., Monday,
7:30 pm. RuUand elementary
auditorium. Program on
safety; klnd011arten claaa to
have relreshmen\1, and door
prize to be awarded.
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Seminar on parent..
teacher relallonsltlp and the
sebool PfG11111111.
TUEBDAY
RACINE LODGE NO. tilt
F&amp;AM Tueeday 7:311 p.m. at
Lodge HaD. Wed In EA Degree.
All master 1111110111 lnvltsd.
REVIVAL Monday through
Friday. SnowviUe United
Methodist Chureh, 7:30 p.m.
Rev. CeelJ Cox, evangeUst.
Loeatsd on state Route 811, five
mllaa west Route 33. Public
lnvltsd.
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at high
ac:hool.
MEIGS ATHLETIC Boosters,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at high
school; film of Waverly game.
SYRAC'USE PTA, 7:3~
Tuesday wt the scbool. State
Highway patrobnan to speak.
Committees to be named lor
halloween carnival. First grade
mothers to aerve.
HARRISONVIIJ.E Chapter,
OEA, Tuesday, 8 p.m. a! the
hall. Election of officers.
Bakel... bake sale.
MEIGS COUNTY Ministerial
Assn. Tuesday, 10 a.m. Trinity
Church In Pomeroy.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room, model meeting.
UNITED
METHODIST
W.S.C.S., 7:30 Tuesday night.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Masonic Temple, 7:~ Wednesday night. Mark master and
past master degrees to be
conferred.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lknl Club, United Methodist

Olureh, noon Wecineod&amp;y.

Plans 1..- the observance of
NaUooal Education Week, Oct.
26-31, were made during a
meeting of the Middleport
Elementary PTA room mothers
Friday evening.
It was decided that coffee,
donuts and cookies will be
served at the ac:bool on Wedneadsy, Oct. 28 lo the parents
visiting the school. Robert
Morris, principal, discussed the
observance with the room
mothers.
Guidelines for room parties
were set up at the meeting
presided over by Mrs. Stanley
Does, second vice president,
and hospitality chairman, Mrs.
Eddie Blake and Mrs. William
Demoskey.

Daughter Born to
Couple in Vienna
Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs of
Vienna, W. Vo. are announcing
the birth of their second eblld, a
daughter, ChrisUne Ann, Oct. 7
at the Camden Clark Hospital,
Parkersburg.
The Riggs are former
residents of Tuppers Plains and
have another daughter, Mary
Louise, lour. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Riggs, PDIIIeroy, Route 3, and
the maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. David Hale,
Wichita Falls, Texas.

Suggestions for PTA lmprcvementl and P.lrenl ;.
teacher -student relallonl wetj
offered and p~renta wltj.
problems were ll'ged to see1t
confereneaa as necessary. ··
Attending weoe Mrs.11lci»rd
Slack, Mrs. Jennlnga We11and,
Mrs. Bob Roush, Mra. Palil
Houdashelt, Mrs. Robert
Rlc,hardson, Mrs. Edwa.rd
Kitchen, Mrs. ~ iialley,
Mrs. Leslie Whittington, ~­
Bobby Payne, Mrs. Arlhu1
Stobart,
Mrs.
William
Demoskey, Mrs. Charlee Se&lt;lti,
Mrs. Peggy Hulton, Mra. Ka7
LaudermUt, Mrs. Betty Caney,
Mrs. Joe Rudolph, Mrs. Charles
Simons, Mrs. Jules Biron, Mrs.
TDIII Kelly, Mrs. David ZIRie,
Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs. Gene
Thomas, Mrs. Carl Gardner,
Mrs. David Hlndy, Mrs. Mary
Hoover, and Mrs. Larry
Spencer, PTA president.

HUSH PUPPIES
New Fall Styles

And Colors.

l.aJ AwlJ Now

lHE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are
Sensibly Priced
Middleport,

o.

SPECIAL I

ROOT FOR
lHE REDS

.

nlURsDAY
TWIUGHT GARDEN Club,
7:30 Thursday, Mrs. Eddie
Smith, Wehe Terrace.

Girls' State
Week Reviewed
Highlights of her week at
Buckeye Girls State were
relatsd In a report from Debbie
Crow to XI Gamma Mu Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The report was read at a
recent meeting of the chaplur
held at the home of Margaret
Follrod.MtssCrow attended the
American Legion Aualllary's
program on the democratic
system of government at
Capital University, Columbus,
In June under sponsorsltlp of the
soroolty.
in her repoot she gave a dsyby-day account of the activities,
her Involvement and 1mpresslons, the Inaugural
banquet wbleb was formal, the
specta1 events of the week
which Included a tour of the
State H..., and blghllghta of
the opeakers.
''The IIIJ08ker on Salurdsy
night made us realize the lmp..-tance Ill our great country
and how elfeeUve our political
sy1ttm Is. He brought tears to
the eyaa of many girl &amp;talers,"
Miss Crow's report concludes.
During the blllllnaas meeting,
the aervlce CU1111111tee reportod
on the prospect Ill adopting a
child lhrttugh the Chrlallan
Children's F)lnd. Action was
poalponed untll tbe DOll
matting. Refrelbmenta were
I8I'Vtd by Mildred Karr and
Velmll Rue.
.

......-

-':.~:-·~""'ii,_

A It . 8
......:::..:::;:..:;:~;:...:=:~. ~ W·
1, PHIL P~OtET
l1llnilll N!', G'!RIIdoi,yD, ali exeeu·
10 Uvu aulte Isn't his current
11. girl frleild.
: -

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49;~-;~SiJ~:pri;;~. LA Rams,, 2~~ . _
JIUD lldiANB ~o~aebdolo••
Ja&amp;es- r J tor tk.
·,...,.un...u t11t Jlfd*lna
two rt11111ninC lllldlfellt..
the Detroit
Wrlllr

111 ID the National
Football Cailcencell.nall)' met
!heir maldl Slmdsy In a pair 11.
'·

q1nc quarterbaCks.
John Brodie II. tile $an
l"rrneeaeo Footy Nlnartl and
Sonny JJirletiiOII of t11e Washlnglon Radakins, both 35-yearsold, were the dlflerence as their
1eaJ111 upaet the Los ADgeles
llama and the Detroit Uons
reepeellvely.
Brodie, of! to 1 senaatlonal
start lbls season, ac:..-ed on a
!Sflrd run and eonneetsd with
Gene Waahlnglon on a H.yard
ac:ootng pase as ~ Footy
Nlners upset the llama, 20-4,
and moved Into a tie wilb Los
ADgeles r..- first pt.ce In the
Weetern Division.

1111t dropped 111m ...........~ t!IIDI! ~ ·p~ In et&amp;bt
~~~man O.briel 1w1ee for :11 ltl.-t hn qarr. owalloped
LIIDI, 31- :rards and inlereePtsd .\Wo Ill ~· ' ..,~n~ 'fQ bomb.
11.
bls ~·
'1'1» Bearul#fereil ,at l!ldltlt~~o
Q1Mr Adla
alloanben i'1mll!l\l baet ~
ID other · NFC action, Min- Jursensen wu even better !!&amp;yen wu
II' llllf be
neeot. blanked Olleago, 24-4; than Brodie, completing It II. 20 ou~filr the
, ,.
·
Dallas shutout AllanIll, 13-0; Sl. attempta for 2211 yarda. Jur• A3loflfCI ft~, at I· ~
Loula beat New Ooleans, H-17; gensen bit on ac:..-lng paaee of by CUff llarriJ ~ a ~
and New Y..-k ediled Pblladel· ~ and 11 yard&amp; to Charlie punt filum bJ Mel ~ •
pbla, 36-23. Green Bay meets Taylor and on a sevetJilarder i!IJ I!&lt;HI:tdt:or
llml..._:
San Diego In an Inter- to Jerry smith
llit! tile ·
~· ~
conterence game tonight.
11te Uons were beld to all.eld the FIIIQcinl to i.dt ,~ yarill ·
Brodie bit on 13 of :Ill passea goal unW only t:IO wu 1elt In total olf~ 1D the game:
for IVS yard and got good the game when Greg Landry, a Jim llarll G) lid td·IJ'II to
protection from bls offensive reserve quarterlieck, moved Jaelde Sllllfll wllb B:ll nmalno
line, who did not allow him to them 80 yards for a touebdown. lng enal!led the Clrdl,l1all to
get hit with a single lou.
Pal• ts 'l1le Star
win their third lllfaiPI pme..
Brodie's top reelever, Washing- MinnesOta's tlefeuslve and The WlnDinll pia)&gt; came 0111
ton, grabbed seven passes for Alan Page was the star of the minute .and liD_ii!:onda .after
Jti yard&amp;.
VIking's victory, reeoverlng two illew Ooleans tied the game qra
The llama managed only two Jumbles and relui'Dinj! one II. an !a.yai'd TD •
_frtlm Edd
field goala by Bruce Qoasett, them 116 yarda for a touchdown. s.-gett to Dave
and the F..-ty Nlners' defensive Flanker Gene Washlnglon alsO ylrd
Ron Johnlon
a .Hrun with tt nn
II!'OIJds
remaining to live tile Giants
their first victory of !lie year

s....

F

M

Pvland 12 Sobrlllll 14

•

Ml~~·~~·
IM6

1•·
' .• s.••u•z

Weotern , Reatrve /I.a • .
I'~· nlalll6
.
•
, Oh....
Hawt&lt;tol• 011Unlltfa

,,r..

..

~

Unt~ly ·~~ ~\ ~~~mort
Ftr:f:~f. · 20 · CIO\vela~

Luthtl'on· w, u ~ •
.•
20 Ktnl ~IIlli 12 ;
Cltvtland Lulll. E, IS I!Orklh'1
•
Cleveland Banodlcllnt
Cltvtltnd Glonvlllt 12 · •
CleV&lt;IItnd John Adamil' ll
Cll'ltltnd QWd 12
·. '
Ll"lt ·Miami 32 R""' '11
.;
Harrl- 50 Taytcw 13
·
Batlalrt,.. Mouhcf&amp;vlllt !W. V••

Soul-'

,:r.

J. Mhl 0

Mlrlotlt 0 SPrtntfltld Cor!·
Colli. 0 !tltl
:
Akron Flroa!Gne I Allron Cell•·
Howtr6
c. :
Allron Narth 6 Akron .OUIII 1

CIIEEJUN(H!asJel nn- Patti [!olodnger, Diane G....,...., Melanie Deen, and Mary Jo

Woll, Eutem's ebeerlead.... are 11howllln a cheering I'OIIIIne durlrig Frldsy'alm[tal:tant
INAC clulrwllb the K1ger O'eek Bobcats.

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-7~;-W,~~~This Week~
and
:nllirnid
•
HOSPITAL NEWS
punt Bobby
46 yardaDuhon
r... another
Giant
£1 ~ ..J Ba..,ne
ac:ore. N..-m snuc1 hit Hal
una
ucc...

(tit)

.

'

Allron Eolf " Akron Hobin u
Toledo MICIIIIIblr 12 Lcwtln
Soulhvltw 6
.. •
Norwalk St. Paul26 Monroevtllt
12

•

Johnsoll
a s.
and
keepaiJo
tile ta1ited
Ea;lea nnwlnleaa.
yard run In the flrll q..,ter

Col:lege Seores

Weekend
Summary

Patrolman Notes
Bus Safety Rules

:

Conigliaro Traded

.....,... •· •··•

w

••

-

l

E•:J

.......

Stanford Eyes Rose Bowl~~!~~:.

'CLEANING

~

_

... .. ............

-In

,.''
''

.MA-SON ··

FURNRUR(
w.

· Gf ' taxation or · u·
to •
't . Jn .

~
.. " lnii&gt;IIO'
fi~ iiHil mlutlvol&gt;' .tor J&gt;Ublie

··fermi.

· Milson.

=. . . .

.";; - ·:ra
·. . .

and

..,.

.... _On
Convenient

V1.

The 7llth anniversary of the lbls SWIUDer were given by four erw w~~rk, .Bapllat uterlture
American Bapllat Women to be members of the B. H. Sanborn ar&gt;J the wblta CI'OIII quota. She

:

Ctovtland lAtin 20 Steubtnvlllo
Colli. '15
II)' u.Jtod Prnl blterutkllll snagged three touchdown
Cttvetand R - 16 ct.... tari:l
Paul Brown, who creatsd the pa.... In the game. Lammlca
Ctlll. 6
Mlylltld 26 ~le Htlghll 0 ;
Qeveland BroWIIB dynasty In rolled up 364 aerial )'BJ'ds on a
Ctl'letand H&amp;rahts 7 Parmt
the early ftllles, relined to ~I.J'I performance.
Normond~ If
'
Oeveland aa coach of the Old pro Johnny Unltas bit Roy
Euclid 16 Br ah 6
,
Jaeksnn m two TD passel in a
By United Prosalnlornaflltltl Cleveland
t.
lgnallua
26
recently mintsd Clndnnatl Ben· Jefferson with a 3i,yard toudllolling efl..-1.
sotuodtl'" -~
· Cleveland Mshl 20
•
Holm' Medical Center, First Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy L. w..-tgala SUnday but came away a down pasa with til aecoods left
Cleveland E. TeCh 14 CtaVIItfid
man, Rl I, Gallipolis, a eon; Ml,.._to at Ohio Slota
Ave. and Cedar St. General Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Toledl! JILWR!f!rn Mlchlll!l• · Kndy I
3M'Iloaer.
to give Baltimore a M-:110 victory
Kent State tl Bawling Groen
visiting hours 24 and 7-11 p.m.
Wyomlflll 36 G.--hills 6
The Browns fought back from over the Oilers.
Bechtle,
Pt.
Pleasant,
a
Ohio
Weolayan
at
Musl&lt;lflllum
Wok..,.n Rosarve U EdiiOII 0
ay
United
Prtll
lnlomtflDOIII
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
a •11 deficit with a 1~, lloustDn (2-21 had taken a •
Ktnlfon 28 Ctntan Lihlnan I
daughter;
Do.
and
Mrs.
Furgul
Oonlson
at
Wooster
.
Eaal
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
fourth-quarter blitzkrieg In- 17 lead on Ron Gerela's nineCreotwood
21 Strtollboro 12
BoJtan u. 13 Mill 10
~"•
ds"••ter
Mlrleffa
at
CIIPIIal
S. Nese, Galli......-.a ,... ; Holdolberll at MI. Union
Nlln McKinley 42 Yaungotown
Pediatrics Ward.
spired by quarterback Bill yard field goal with 3:28
Columbia 21 Horverd 21
Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Beldwin-Waliaee at Kenyon
Rayen 0
•.
Duke 21 West VIrginia 13
Nellen, who hit on 17 of 2!1 remaining In the Wl8l quarter.
BlriU
Fremont St. J'*ph 16 S.nSheets,
Hamden,
a
8011; and Mr. Hiram at Ollorbliln
Dortmoutli
31
Princeton
0
passe~ good 1..- 2211 yards and The w..-ld champion Ollefs
cluaky St. M. 14
,. Lthlgh 7 Rutgors 0
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. nd u. ~vld L Beaver Rt Temple at Stvler
a ...,s. ""
·
' · Buffalo at Dayton
Lima
Stnlor 12 Doylon Dunbor
evoned their record at 2-2 by
.. two tou.bdowna.
Penn st. 28 Bos!on can. 3
Bloomer, Rt. 2, Gallipolla, a 2, GalllpoUs, a daughter.
Indiana
Slota
11
Akron
0
Pltllburgh
10
Nevy
I
In otber AFC games 9mday, beating Boston on a co~linadaughter; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Dlsclwgea
Loke Forest at Oberlin
Mlnater 20 Dolphoa St. John 0
Fordham 7 Adeiph17
llal11moR edged Houstoo M-711 lion of Robert HolmeS buD
Union 31 Lanctallr
Syrecust 23 Maryland 1
Dale Edwards, Gallipolis Oscar Bachtel, CecU C. Findley at WltlenMIberhlI
at Llborty
Remelln
12
.
Kansas
City
tr~unced strength and Jan Stenerud's
Yale 2S Brown o
Ferry, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Burdette, Mrs. Robart B. No~~~slown (~) gan
Newark Cttllollc 12 Eul Knox 6
cornell 32 Penn 31
Booton,
23-10,
Pitts- finesse. Hobnes ac:..-ed twice on
DeMis L. Adkins, Oak Hill, a Casaldy, Mrs. Jamee Conwell C&amp;se Weatorn Reserve at Grove City 29 Baxloy 12
C.lgelo 11 Holy Cfou 13
burgh belted Buffalo, 23-10, short plunges and Stenerud
Dayton PaHenon u Dayton
son; Mr. and Mrs. John R. and infant daughter, Beatrloo J.
Woshlngton a. Jollarson
Temple4t tonnocttcut23
Valley at Ohio
and OaldaDd nDnped Denver, kicked three field goals.
Stivers o
SOulli
Blaker,Mason,adsughter; Mr. Davia, Jeffrey B. Danney, Mn. Delaware
Northern
Dixie
66 Twin Valloy Noolh 14
Aubum
41
Clemson
0
IIWS. M1lml defeated the New KC laterceplil Sis p_.
and Mrs. Jeroll D.Pwe. VInton, Everett J. Elliott, Mrs. David Thiel at John carroll
Woke
Forest
21
A.
Tech
9
Yen Jell. »f. SatwdaY night. The em:ellent Kanaas City
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. H. Fetty and Infant daughter, Hllilldole at Ashland
Vlr9inlo 49 VMt 10 .
Clime Til 1 oloed r.Jcb1
seeondary Intercepted six
H L Kentucky Stale at Ctntrol Stall
Miami (Ohio) 19 Morsllelt 12
Francia 0. Spires, Jackson, a Roherta K. Fowler • .,_
•~ •· · · Doftanee at Manchotter
Cltadel16 MI. Mary 7
San Diego (0.2-1) meets Patriot passes, two of! Joe
son; Mr. and Mrs. Okey A. Garlic, Sr., Haymond H. Glb- Slippery Rock at Wllmlnofon
COOK OPTIONED
'"
so. Car. 35 No. car. 21
Greoll Bay (2-1) In on Inter- Kapp, wh0111 they laced for the
Bluffton at Anct.rsan
Tawney, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, a son ' Mrs . Leona Greene
Loulsvlllel.C
Tulsa
8
Mrs
.'
. N - Night
CINCINNATI (UPI) -, on.
01 ofereooe game on national first time since the SUper Bowl,
Miss. 31 Georgie 21
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Roeor Della Hay, Mrs. Mary Ruth Miami 11 Ohio Unlv.
Cincinnati
Royall hllve optelevlolon (Vp.m. EDT&gt; tonlgbt. and four more off Mike
Tenn 17 Georgie Tech 6
D. Crabtree, Jackson, a son; Huston, Clarence H. Marlin,
tlonecl
Moo~
rookla f!ll'War4
Ata.l5
Venderbillll
lly
Ualtsd
Preu
IDtenatleoal
The llroiiCGII had their un- Tallaferro.
Florida
31
Fla.
St.
'0
Jr.,
Mrs.
Abraham
Par80111,
Doug
Coo1t
to
the
VIrtue Oub of
s.turdsy
beaten bubble burst when Gene Mingo bootell f G-yard
Western K. 45 Eastern Mich. 6
WIWam
F
·
Payton,
Rbonds
J
·
Bologna,
Italy
,In
the flriiiiUeb
w..... Wells snared a •yard field goal In the third period to CINCINNATI (UP)) -The Tampo 18 Norlll Tex. St. 1
Proffitt, Timothy A. Roush,
action by a National Bulretb.n
taudldown pasa from Daryle give the Steel,... their first win Baltimore Orioles edged the Louisiana St. J.4 Paclflt: 0
Furman 23 Richmond 9
Charles
R.
Small,
Mrs.
Steve
Washington
2
2
D
.500
AJtaoelatlonteamtoacluboulcil
Cincinnati
Reds,
H,
to
capture
'""""lea In the fourth quarter after 16 consecutive tosses.
Arkansas .Cl Baylor 7.
AllenTrlppandlnfantson,Mrs.
N.Y.Gianta
1
3
0.250
thecountry.
the
first
game
of
the
1970
Woold
to give Oatlond a 21-23 lead. Pittsburgh bad not won i!lnce
Mid-'
4 0
Bus
safely
was
dlacuued
by
Herman
A.
VanMatre
and
InPhlladelphlecantr~l
.OOO
Bologna Ia in the ltallall
Michigan 29 Purdue 0
Series.
Wella, a five-year veteran, the opening game of 1969.
Notre Dome 51 Army 10
Patrolman Casto of the fantdaughter,Jessa B. Walker,
W. L. T. Pet. Majoo BaakelballiAqlle.
WENTWORTH,
England Ohio St. 29 Mlchlglln St. 0
GalllpoUs
Post
of
the
State
Mrs.
Paul
Wallace,
Lewis
L.
Detroit
3 1 o .750
The Royala wl11 have to cut
Iowa 2A Wlscon1ln U
(UP!) -Jack Nicklaus, who Nortliwntorn41! tlltnolsO
IIJ&amp;Inray Patrol at the Tburs- Walters, Richard L. Wamsley, ~:=~
~ ~
:~ two m..-e players before 111t
has annexed every major Nebr..ka 21 'Misoourl7
day night meet~~~ ,",1 .the ::· Allr~ ~.::er, Mrs. Chlf'!f19 , ,
2 2 . ,q, .•!OCL ..Wedneeda7·111.,.. opener~ will!
~by In the world Ill goU, ~!~':.":~~~=~aS':~~
Brad"". '.
,: ~b!IP.,:,..
' " ' - cat'IOJl
\l..J!~
wo
'
. " - 1 •PTA.
nauey
v . ... '
' ,,.~,
" ;-w:. 'L:l.l·'"'''''l'cl
·' J' '"
. ' N-·¥MI•
... .-: - .
......,!
fiii!I['IJO "'·'"
' . .&gt; '·"
01
11 , .'lUra
colle~ted
..
$13,8QO
..
flrflo4JIIce,
·O&gt;io.M.
11
Dol'lQII.\4.
:•. , ~BALTIMORE(UPI)-Byone -lhe~ , IB . ~· he
· ·' "llltroelucec!·by·Mi's. ·L«raln~ .
., , ·,,_ '
·
k. · Los Angeles
3 1 0 •.7s0 ··•
·' · ·
·
T
Venoy,thespeakeroutllnedbus SellOn, mrs. Sabra C1ar • and Son Francisco · 3 I 0 .750
·,;:.bt . thOII! pure strokes of ' "'
lllii regliJ8r r'lgbt field money wheo he held , off a ' 51'.J... phl~tlo'Poow3
: '1"baaeball Irony Tony CoriJBUaro job
the Red Sox last year, challenge from Lee Trevino to Oklahoma tt":~~ 20
safety rules and answered Mrs. Earl Holbrook.
Atlanta
New Orleans
12 32 0D .500
.250
· bas become a member of the and did even better this year as win the $44,160 Pieeadllly Wocld Texas •1 Oklahoma 9
queallone pertaining to roed
NFL Stendlngs
Sunday's Rosvlll
: California ADgela, the very he drove In 116 runs, bit 38 Match Play golf champ!Clll for Western N.M. 20 Western Colo. regulations.
By United Prelllntornellonol Dallas 13 Allanto o
: saine ball club aplnal whOitl h~ and battsd .2116 In It&amp; the first time.
7Texas Al.l43 Ea•t Tex. St. 21
'l1le pledge to the nag and the
American Conlorlftc.
Belli more 2~ Houston 20
10
he _.-ty lost bls Ufe.
games.
New Max. St. 57 Nortliem Ariz. Lord'o prayer opened the
E-:J. L T. Pet. ~~~ty~11!\'tJr
M..-e Ironic yet, the Z.yoar- Conlgllaro, who leaves bls 23- NEW YORK (UPI) -Limit 13
meeting conduetod by Mrs. Miami
3 1 0 .750 Cleveland 30 Clncl27
Tech 21 Texas AI.M 1
old right fielder told cloee year-old brother Billy behind To Reason, after flnlahlng Teqs
Mildred
Miller.
11
was
decided
Betllmore
3 1 0 .750 Oakland 35 Denver 23
Ariz. I• Brigham Yooog 17
thai ot
than t5 will be N.Y. Jets
I 3 0 .250 Wesh 31 Detroit 10
frlendl that If be eve&lt; had to with the Red Sox had • huneb second, wu awarded first place Now Max. 411 San Jcoe St. 25
n
mooe
Boston
1
3 o .250 Mlnneaoto 2• Chicago 0
leave the Bostoll Red Sox, for he would be traded.
1n the • •025 Champagne Abilene Chrst. 61 E11torn Now spent f..- the door prize each Buffalo
1 3 0 .250 St Louis 24 New Or1eens 17
whom he had played seven "I don't want lo leave Slakaa at Belmont Park when Mox.7
month and that $5 will ba given
centr•w• L T Pet
N:Y. Glants'30 Phlla 23
~th the
• · San Fran 20 Los Ang 6
........ he'd prefer to go with Boston," he had said. "It's my heavlly fav..-ed Holst The Flag Ark. St. 21 Trinity 1~
to the homeroom w•
Cleveland
3 1 o .750
(Oniygameochoduledl
a club like the ADgela.
hDIIIe, It's the city where I .,... disqualified for Interfering Air Fora! 2• Tulano 3
highest
attendance.
Mrs.
Houslon
2 2 o .500
Mondoy's Gomes
Colorado 61 Iowa St. 10
He got bls wllh SUnday night. broke in, and It's where most of with two other horses.
Pbyilla
Hackett's
room
was
the
Pittsburgh
t
3
0
.250
Green
Bey
at San Dleto, twllllo
Wyomlf11116 Colo. St. 6
_.___
C:lnrlnMil
1 3 0 .250
(U11y game schedUled)
Conigliaro wu the key figure my friends are. If the Red Sox
Standford 24 Sou. Cel. 14
wuu-.
Wnl
In a all: player BW'P In which trade me, I won't pull a Curt NEW YORK (UPI) -The Oregon 41 UCLA .Ill
Instead
of
naming
room
W. L T. Pet.
illlitlllo-IIO!I••IIIIII•iitli•:
be, catcher Gory M,_ and Flood and I don't say I won't Miami Dolpblns got two touch- Oreton St. 31 Utah 21
mothen, uwas decided that all Danv•r
3 1 o .750
C&amp;ltl.
31
Wosh.
21
reliever Ra)l Jarvia were go, becaDM baaeballla a great down passes from Bob Griese Ariz. St. '11 Wash. St. 30
parents who desire to aerve will f:~r!~?tv
~
~
traded to the Angela 1..- relief part of my Ufe and I want to and two field goals fr0111 Garo Uloh St. 35 Kentucky 6
be
given
the
opportunity.
Mrs.
San
Diego
0
2
1 .000
ace Kan Tlllum, outfielder play, but I hope If I am traded Yepremlan to heal the Injury· Fresno St. 21 San Fer. Vol. St. Carlene Van Meter won the do..Notional
cantorenee
Jarvia Tlllum and second It's to a club like the ADgele. I riddled New Y..-k Jets, 20-4, 1..- 1Loyola 16 Occldentot 14
prjze. Refreshments were
balll"'"n Doug Grlftln, who like Los ADgelea."
the first time In their history. Montana u Idaho 26.
served by the hospitality
3 ~ To
llpenl most II. last 11eason with The Angels are dellghtsd to
CO!!IIIIiltee.
3 I 0
Hawaii of the Paelflc Coast have him.
PJ'ITSBURGH (UPI) -The Ohio Stall StturtiiY
29 Mlchlllln Stall 0
League.
"He'll help us at the plate Buffalo Salna, playing their Ohio u. 1'1 Doylon fl
Ollly three years ago, Coni- and he'll give us a big Uft at first National Hockey Lague Toledo 20 Bowling Groon 0
42 Xavier 0
gllaro iras given the laal rtles the box office with bls game ever, made It a victory Clnclnnell
LEGAL NOTICE
Ktnl 25 Wottorn Mlchl!lln 12
of bls church shortly alter Jack personality," Walsh said of the by outaerambllng the Pitts- Mleml 19 Marshall 12
(Amended Senate Solnt RHoluUon
lilinols Stato 15 Akrqn 14
HamOIAin II. California bit him good-looking &amp;3 right handed burgh Penguins, 2-1.
No. II
Murray
Stolo
42
Youngstown
In the lo!fl eye with a pitch slugger who bas recorded
.JOlNT RESOLUTION
$toto 32
durlnl! a game at Boston.
several songs, made a number
Sll!lday
wttt.nbort 30 Donlson 0
•
; '•1 10 ...... IMCtin I ot
Aitlc" K1l ot 1M Ceed'b'"Oil ot
AI first, It was feared the of alnging appearances In CINCINNATI (UP!) -Ellie Morteffo 21 Hloam 16
tu.W.oiOWoto~tiW
WCIOIIIIr
1l
OhiO
Wotloyan
13
popui•r Tony c. Would lose bls Booton night eluba and even Hendricks, 8 .:142 bitter c1ur1ng
,-~..._..
Musl&lt;lngum
23 Asllland 6
.....
., ...
,w., llo1 • • • d1-.
1oft eye-end then foc 1 lime authored a book entitled "See- the regular season, rapped an ~)101) J9 Loke Forost 0
Ia ftlU o1 n.t lmanltd .C
a-. nz't·te ~..IOta
,..,. ...
ot
the doelon thought he might lng II Through," wbleh deala opposll&lt; field
double
C&amp;pitat 16 Holdolbllr!l o
... .........
N!)l'lllwood
11
Central
Stalo
12
t
even
.........
he
mlased
with
bls
near
fatal
accident
In
two-run
to
~uulolber''"-.
M._.,
cllmal
a
live-n~~~
filth
Inning
die. bu
Be It nMlved 11 tba General
21 Alloghtny 20
August of 1967.
that propelled the Baltimooe Obtrlln
-biY
ol the Biola of Oblo.
Beth•nv 28 tase W11tern
\bntl·ftffba of lhe memben elected
Orioles to a 6--' victory over the
Reserve 6
1CI Hcb bo\lMI conCIIl'tf.Q therein
Washlnofon a. Jefferson 14 John
tblt uwre lhaD be tubmttted to the
~n: of the ltate in the manner
carrot!
12
a 2-0 lead Beldwln-Wollaee 2l .Holllra 16
pre~Crtbed b)' 11w at the ceneral
eled!On to be held oo the first
Hilllldote 17 Ohio ltorthorn 7
Tl.lttdiJ .dter the ftn1. Monda)' In
N"""''*·
lt'IO,
...- xn of
to
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI)- Findlay 21 Blulllon 7
By STEVE SMILANICH
their third win without a lou,
amtnd teOtton
1 ota ArUcfe
MI. Union .Ill Ottorbliln 19
the ConatltuUon of O!llo to read
UPI Sporll Writer
blanked Michigan State, 2!1-0, In Lee Roy Yarbeougb of Colum- Do'laiiCJI UWIIll111111fo!l 7
.. lollbwl:
"ll's been a long time since Ohio State's Big Ten Confer· bia, S.C., took the lead with
JJITtCLit XII
the Stanl..-d Indians left the once opener. Next opponent !..- nine lapa to go when Bobby
Beotlon J. No pro~rty, taxed
Isaac blew an engine. Yarfarm to villi Plasdena but the But:keyesls Minnesota.
accordlnl to value, man be ao
\utd In •xc- of one per cent; o!
Coach John Ralllon'a football USC was tile only team In boough went on to win tile lith
ill thle \'J.IU.I 1A money 1or all
•~1- and loell ~ . but laWI
,....,.. may have lurned the Unltsdl'rnllnternaUonal'slop annual NaUooal 500 stock car
m•r- 1M NIMd- a\i&amp;bOriZUll addl~
UoiW we. to be t.Yled ou\llde
earner en route to the Roae ten to looe during the past claaslc under a cauUon Dag.
..
.....b)'
- •either
.......
Bowl when they beat an old -kend.
PJO..S
at leut
~Jortty
of ··the
HOCKENHEIM, Germany
1tteet.on 6( tbl tufa~ ~trl"'- voun•
tGrmentor - Southern ·Calli..-- Second-ranked Texas rolled to
P!OI*IU.:. 01' WlliD Jli'O'"
of by tU Cbar*' of a mu~
nla.
Ita :Uth consecutive lrlumph, ( UPI) -Dieter Queater of
~
............... """" ... lm·
Stanl..-d, wbleh hasn't played the Longhorns walloping arch Awitrla drove his Brabham to
~
·
br
nn rWt ~in• to value.
in the granddaddy of all bowl rival Okllhoms, 41-1, and thlrd- victory at the Hoekenhelm
tX.etl
that; li.WI rita)' be ~ 1.0
r.tl
tadl by ~v&amp;dtftl 1m a
pmaa IInce IIIG2, emerged u a rated Notre Dame ran up the Motordrome at an average
'"""""""
tn value
91 Ill•
-~~4
Of .nid4.nll
llxtY..P.ve
yean
Of .,. .
IOIId contender lor the Paelfle bighest score ever recooded speed of 116.3 mllaa per hour to
oi&gt;d
-~and
~
fOrtncom•
El&amp;bt Conrorenee title and the against an Anny learn, eruah- win the last race of the
and '·~
. to obtain
""'b -~~
•
ouwtan4·
Raee Bowl hOIII role thal&amp;oes lng the under-manned Cadets, F..-mula Two oeaaon.
In«~~
·
daj oll-'1. !J\3.
~ 1tif
te ot Oblo or or any City,
wllb the crown by upaetttinC 51-10. The lrlsli, unbeaten In
Vimlo,
II&amp;• ..,...,. or ,...nolllp
1n
tl\ll
,
..
._~ or wb.ldl htv• beal
tile fourtl&gt;ranked Troj8111, M- four games, lace Missouri next
kiWI.-4. .the
. .· .
••bliO
t\ahOdk ' of OhiO
mean•
oe
14, Salurdsy.
Salurdsy.
tna.'hetton in ·aoanteUon thlrt'With.
TO!&gt;fanked Ohio Slate, the
..mtch I:Kindi ....,.. outatandinC Qfl
lho '"' dar ot Januarr. Ull ollll
lavootte to be tile visiting team Elaewhere,ll..-anked Arizona
.u
boil"' , ..... -14 "'"
QOmpeDIItior\ iUJ'I4.•, .lball be exewpt
1D the Role Bowl, alJo State olopped Wasblngton state,
from taxaUon. and wiUI.out llmi&amp;ml
liCfYanced as expeetsd Salur· 31-30; Oregon 11poet IJib.canked
tbe ~al ""er1 IUbJICt to 1be
pro• . o:1 &lt;f\,rU01e J of thLI oon·
dly. The Buekeyee, galnlne UCLA, U-40·
oUtu ~t,o
4~nllln• tllJ NJ)Jeotl

$349.95
ns.aoo.w;;:::

'

'

Tuoctrl'!'ll ' C.n. Calli.

·MIIv•nro

.!:J!

(UpOn Reqllllt)

Women Plan 'Observance

••
~
.,,

~tvniiY

!" ··

The !IIIIIIICCI1!d on a ill-yard
field goal by Grant Gullrle ond
a four-yard run by 0. J. Simpson. Slrnpom, a key to the Bills'
34-31 upaet of the Jets last week,
was held to 60 yards In lt attempts by the tough Stee1er
defense.
The Dolpbins defeated the
lnjury.plngued Jets Salllrday
night as Bob Grleoe bit Paul
Warfield ond Howard Tlrllley
with shoot ac:orlng passel and
Garo Yopremian eontrlbo&amp;ed
two lleld goala.
Jim Turner r"'ap""r""""•'tod the
whole of the Jets' oflenae with
17 and 35 yard field goals.
The win boosted Don Slllla's
Dolphins Into a tie with the Colli
for the lead In the AFC East.
Both leaml have 3-1 rec..-ds.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pmneroy, 0., Qet, l2, lfiO

IJ Uoltod fl&lt;tU t-ttonil

=··

Chargers, Pack On TV

.

v"
"•
,

'

Wo~P. lnltlt\itlonl Used ex.~lullve17 ,., .......bl. . .......... • ••
JiObU•~
·
UHd txchntvt'b' for
i.nY
1c
rpoH, but all such
laW'I
~ tubJ.et to llteratlon
or nplaJ; Mml Ua• nlue ol •II prop·
ertr- iD txompWd . ~11. from ttme
to UIM, be uctrtliJ.nfd lfld pub·

·=

'P••••••••
...
N

.•

0D

.• .

I·

oboorved on Nov. I$ and plana
f..- eelabrallng It were notsd
'l'hunday nl&amp;ht by the Women'o
Mlsslonarv Society of the
Pomeroy First BApllat Church.
Mrs. Joe Cook, president
innounced a aieeung on Oct.
at the Middleport Firlt Baptist
Church when the Rev. Thomas
Olaon wl11 speak on mission
work In Philadelphia. Mrs.
Harry Bailey was appolntsd
vice prealdent of mlaslons and
special Interest missionary
chairman.
,.,lee announced at the
meeting was World Communlty
Day to be held on Nov. 8 at the
Middleport Heath United
Me!bo!IJst Church.
· Mrs. Orval Wllas rep..-ted on
White Croas noting that the
ovetland Ia to go to Baeone
Cdlege, a ac:hool for Jndlans
and the overseas tolndla.ll w..;
suggeetod that a day be aet
aside to wed on fiWng the
qoota.
Connie WIUiamson, a junlor
at Judson College, Judson Hilla,
m., has been named ac:holarl!lilp student for the Asaoelallon.
Hi8hllghta of the Women's
Conference held at Granville

ti

Missionary Society of the
Middleport Bapt111 Church.
Mrs. John Werner, president,
spoke of the theme of the conlerence, "Put Love Into Deeds"
and of various other topics "How the World Gels Around "
and "The Americas, How Many
Worlds?" She announced that
the ne1t conference wiD be at
Otterbein.

.

.

Mrs. Charles Searles
displayed a poster showing the
love gift dollar and 00w It Is
spent: 30 cents lor state
missions; 20 cents for overseas
mleelons; It, general program;
II, home mlasl0111; 9, education
and publication&amp;; 7, clly
mlaslons; 5, mlacellaneous; and
lour, ministers' financial
suppoot. She said W0111en's Day
of Prayer Is Nov. 2.
In her talk, Mra. Dale
Walburn spoke of an Imaginary
bus trip - the bus representing
the church, the driver
representing the mlnlaler, and
the passengers as the
congregation. Her comments
were on ways of Improving the
church, relations between age
groups In the church, the white

dlstrlbutsd • mlaslollal'y letter
from Alaob.
Mrs. Chirlee Simona emphallzed· the anniversary observance on Nov. 11. She
repwted on the II)IO&lt;lallntemt
missionary .....kshop which ti
attended and of offerings lor
two cow• and a cardiac
machine to be aent to South
Amerlea.
Group lllnglq of "Be Strong
We are Not Here to Play" with
Mrs. Kuhn at the plano, opened
the meeting. Devotions on space
travel with aerlplure from 11
Chronicles 7 and Pu1ma %1
were given by Mrs. Ellen
Couch.
Mrs. Cook and Mrs. Kuhn
oerved refreshments of cake,
mints, aesame seed sblcks, lea
and eoflee. Fall flowers and
Iepere In an arrangement made
by Mrs. Kuhn centered the
table.
Attending besides those
named were Wes and Carol
Simons, Mrs. Ge..-ge Skl~UW,
Mrs. J. Edward Foster, Mrs. T.
T. Shelton, Mrs. Ivan Walker,
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett, Mrs.
William W111on, and Mrs.
OUver Michael.

60 at Mother-Daughter Dinner
Jleeognltion of mothers and a Mrs. Grace Pratt welcomed
I!1UIIeal program highlighted the guesla and presentod corthe aruwal mother - daughter sages to Mrs. Genevieve
banquet of the Phllathea . Farmer, the oldest mother
Women Thursday night at the present; Mrs. Leota Hawley,
Middleport Church of ~t. next to the oldest; Mrs. Richard
Appt uxlmately 60 mOthers, Moyer, the youngest; and Mrs.
daughters and guests attended Ray Cunningham, the one with
the banquet wbleh was aerved the most children. The society
by the Homebuilders Claa8 at presented Mrs. Pratt with a
tables decorated with rose corsage.
arrangements made by Mrs. L.
A plano duet by Mrs. Chester
E. lleyttplds and Mrs. Guy Erwin and Mrs. H.orold Lohse,
Reynolds.
program chairmen, "A Garden

Green Thumb

Notes . ...
A weekl1 feature of Melp
County Garden Club memberl.

Annual., Biennial. and Perennial.
BY liJIII. N01111AN WILL
Star Gerdea Clab
Three types II. flowers, aecording to their life epan, ore an-

nuala, blennta1l and permntala.
Atrue amual Ia a plant which atmpletaa Its Ufe cycle from
seed sowing to seed eettlng and dlee naturally within 12 1110111hs.
The great merit of annuala Ia their adaiJfahiJity. '!bey can be
UBed to fill flower and gaps In eelabUslled borden· as
trailing plants In hanging baskets; In window bous
to
provide quickly grown gay flowers in a new garden. The taller
kinds may be grown to provide a temporary. aereen or
background. 1D addition annuals provide an excellent source of
eutflowen. Rows can beSJwnespecla[Jy foolbls parpoae.
Many Oowera grown as annua1a commonly called by this
name are reall,y tender perennlala. In their native lands and in
regions 1&lt;'!tere Hille ..- no 1r0i1t occurs they pera1at from year to
ye ... But in m..-e severe cllmatee, winter cold ldlla lbem. In lbls
gro~ belmg eueh plants u snapdragons, aalvla, verbena and
many others. Elample1 II. true annuals are larbpur, calendula
and cockscomb.
·
BIENNIALS take two years 11'&lt;111 !be -rllng llage to the
production of ripe seed. They grow during the first year Dowers, fruit and die In the second.
One of the most popular biennials Is campanula (beUOower)
especially the Canterbury bell. Others are eblmney beUflower
Chinese forgel-miHiot, foxglove, Engllsh delay and sweet rocket:
Although Althaea (llollyhock) are perennlala,lt 15 often fo111d
moat satlafaetory to grow them as blennlala, for they are so very
IIUI!C8ptible to a dlsllgurlng rust dlseaae. Many pansies are so
grown, too.
PERENNIALS are Oow,...lhot, once plantod, Uve on from
year to year. Moat of them alao Increase In nwnber.
H a reaoonably large eeleetlon Is grown there will be bloom
fr0111 early Spring 111111 late Fall. So -although more expen&amp;ve
to buy than bedding plants oo other amuala- perennials are lea
eootly in file long run. And I !eel that they give more beauty and
joy with less work.
The chrysanthemum Is an lnr:reaslngly popular variety of
perennial. It Ia my favorite, as anyone viewing file thouaancb of
multicolored bloasoms In our gard'"' right now might readUy
suspect. AB alghta grow cold and a killing frost seems Imminent
the plants seem to reallu and try to outdo themselves In one leet
Ding at true splendor.
There's a note of sadness as we view their beauty, rellzlng 11
will soon be gone. But we know, that given a Utile tender loving
care now, they'll be back next fall In beautify our gardena,
churches and homes .
There are different Ideas of how to prepare mums for winter.
Some say not to cut of! the topa,lor then water will enter the stalk
stumpa, go down to the roots and caUJe them to freeze out. Others
S8Y the topa should be cut of!. For If they're left on, the wind will
whip them back and forth and loosen the roots, thereby caustng
some 1011. .
· ,
,11 1J u,2r.r &gt;
cr "'~ ,
We h~:&lt;&gt;e used illth methods and sao: IJ.IW dliereri!ie' ln'-thi
resulta. The past several yearliWe've left the topa m, except when
they were quite unsightly.
Mulching will help mums to ''winter" well. However we have
10 many that we usually go the lazy way and Jet nature mulell
them loo us with leavee blown around them and with snow. If
winter temperatures are severe, we'll need Iota of snow to cover
our perenntala.
TheloeaUon of a garden has muell to do with bow well plants
will come through the winter.
A garden on an exposed hlllalde - where high winds will
sweep away snow and dry out twigs - wiJI probably auffer as
much damage as one In a colder zone. One in a sheltered apot will
come through muell colder weather with less damage.
Though dreading the oomlng winter, I have lately thought of
how It helps ua by killing weeds - especlaiJy In bordera - thus
lessening our spring gardsn ellores.
Then, while reading a paper one day, I came upon this
fllougbt:
"Winter Ia the harsb seaaon thai bares the earth, making It

and

of Roses," was followed by an
original poem pa~ tribute to
several WDIJien of the Soclety.lt
was wrllten lllld read by Mrs.
Beulah Roush. Mrs. Robert
Craig sang "Loo!1 to the
Ralnbow, 11 ''Scarlet Ribbons."
and "An Old Refrain," and Mrs.
Denver Rice preeentod "Go to
the Door." Accompanied by
Mrs. Chester Erwin, Mrs.
Moyer and Mro. Don Erwin
sang "In the Garden." A
meditation, "Helpfulness" and
a poem "Measuring Rod,"
another plano duet by Mrs.
Erwin and Mrs. Lohse, and
prayer by Mrs. Rice concluded
Officers were eleetsd at the special project each quarter. the program.
..-ganlullooal meeting of the Tbla month the members will
Teen Sunday School Claaa of the place Home Ufe, a Christian
During the bui!lness meeting,
Ftr.t sOuthern Baptist Chapel, magazine, In the offices of area an invitation from Heath United
Pameroy·
physicians and dentists. Each Methodist Church women was
The ooganluUonal meeting month the church will preeent read Inviting the Church of
wuhe~at tllebiJI!IIof.Mr.and· "Event," a OjlW magazine for. Chfl•t ~q to join !ffl!t1'or a
Mrs. Herac:heHI!Oiiltite, ·Mrs .•. y&lt;iutlis 12 to47, to the members·, aei:ylce tonlgbt. ~ · -,..
, MeCl~re, teacher, led the• of the class.
made to aerye the annlver~
4WOUOIII wlfll uch member · The young people have been dinner to the Homebuilders
PlrUe!paUnB by reading a lnvltsd to Join youth of the Class on Oct. 20. It was JWtod
li)IICial J1Grtlon of scripture.
French City Baptist Church of that $227 was made on the
Officers oleeted were Marylu GaWpoUs on Oct. 17 foc an all- recent rummage sale.
Milia, chairman; Jerry dsy picnic and outing at Old
ColanWI, aeeretary-traaaurer. Man's cave. The French City Guests at the banquet were
The claaa eeleetsd "Knlghta of Church will ... the church bus Miss Opal Berry, Mrs. Raulln
the KIDg"as the class name and lor transportation. Kim Moyer, Mrs. Narss Van Meter,
sltleld nped pins with the Browning and Klmmy McClure Mrs. Harold Thomas and
lnltlali .K of K. "Do You Really are the other members of the daughter, Teresa, Mrs. Don
Heuter, Mr1. Jean Swett, Mrs.
Cite.? " Ia tbe class eong.
cluB.
Leona
Karr, Mre. Sharon
Meetlnp were aelfor the first Refreshments, songs and
Ruaseii,Mrs.Cralg,Mrs. Ruth
Tburaday lll~~ach month with a fellowship were enjoyed.
Carr, Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mrs.
Earl McKinley, Mrs. James
Souders, Mlsa Ellzaboth Ann
Wolle, Mrs. James Fug•te.
Mrs. Cunningham, Mrs. Mary
Powell, Mrs. Nina Bland, Mrs.
AUce Ellis, Mrs. Mike Gerlaeh, ready for spring's fresh, new birth."
Mlsa Debbie Laney, and Mlsa
&amp;tddenly the inconveniences of winter seemed worth It all.
Sharon Wllaon.
Members of the Home- For -alter all- aren't God's way~beot?
builders Cla1s aervlng the
dinner were Mrs, Edna Evans,
Mack SteW8fl, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kincaid, Chester Posters displayed In Mid- In uniform the boys with
Erwin, and Mn. Milton dleport bustneas windows and a h..-ns and drums marched to
paradebyMiddleportCubSeout the Middleport fire station
Houdashelt
Pack M5 through the com- where they were given a look at
munlty Thuradsy pointed up the !Ire trucks. Fire Chief Tom
Fire Prevention Week.
DsrstandWayneDavlawerem
.
tio
·
hand to talk to the boys about
P8rtic lpa n In
the veblclee.
In the group were Michael
Hlndy, Kevin Angel, Jell
Bazaar is Planned
Laudermllt, Daan Spencer
Parllclpallon In the Healb MltcheU Cart John Bye."
Methodist Church boll- Robbie Parker' John Stewart'
d~ bazaar was planned Danny Smith' John Davis'
~ : : ~ met Jamie Seally: Steve Utile:
oclal
church Keith Black, Donald Geery
s
room.
Mu Geary, Ray Mowery,
arrThe group alao eompletsd Mark Hood. Dan mothers Eula
·u le"';:aments r... a rummage Frances and Mro. Larry
Nov .:~'-!~ aJI the eburcb, Spencer accompanied the
·
• ..... ean Cooke ts group.
chairman. Programa for the
year were reviewed and the
membent ccwnpl!od the year.
The word Is "love."
llobka· Mrs, Jolrn Campton, new
And when yo~~ put it into aciion, it. becom" more than a
[iri!rldent, I8I'Vtd u • boeteas
·-·
.
word, ~ becomn a Ioree. Powerf~l. IJr.aent. And 4irect. ·,
•!0!!11 with Mra. Charlet
Learn hc)w one ~roup~~ concer~ Clli~ens channelll!l·tHe
~ INMtrer. Mrs. John
8lid Mrs.
to~!· And turn!~(~ 'love for their illllgtlli&lt;ir$lntql il~"'w~y
!Cf•w•eaJn
Ia
seeretary.
A
11:
~
=~~
tlle
lllalllitCI
of life.
·' 1;.,}. _,, ' J· ·1.'
',J
• d!nnr~ coune and coffee wve Ft
11tteridsd

Officers Are Elected

Cub Scout Pack Marches Thursday

...!

Two Attend Clinic
G"- ·Gard.eners

To ~~~~.~r our free booklet, "How On~ Town Put Its faith.

t~·blvollcinswereby*".
.

. '.

'

·

11ie
'
det1d

Observance Planned !•

· Social
Calendar

In

MONDAY
WOMEN'S SOCIETY of
Cbrlatlan Service, Hesth United
Metltodlat Olureb, Middleport,
7:30 Monday at the church.
Ecumenical Reality observance. women of other
churchea lnvltod.
RUTLAND P.T.A., Monday,
7:30 pm. RuUand elementary
auditorium. Program on
safety; klnd011arten claaa to
have relreshmen\1, and door
prize to be awarded.
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Seminar on parent..
teacher relallonsltlp and the
sebool PfG11111111.
TUEBDAY
RACINE LODGE NO. tilt
F&amp;AM Tueeday 7:311 p.m. at
Lodge HaD. Wed In EA Degree.
All master 1111110111 lnvltsd.
REVIVAL Monday through
Friday. SnowviUe United
Methodist Chureh, 7:30 p.m.
Rev. CeelJ Cox, evangeUst.
Loeatsd on state Route 811, five
mllaa west Route 33. Public
lnvltsd.
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at high
ac:hool.
MEIGS ATHLETIC Boosters,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at high
school; film of Waverly game.
SYRAC'USE PTA, 7:3~
Tuesday wt the scbool. State
Highway patrobnan to speak.
Committees to be named lor
halloween carnival. First grade
mothers to aerve.
HARRISONVIIJ.E Chapter,
OEA, Tuesday, 8 p.m. a! the
hall. Election of officers.
Bakel... bake sale.
MEIGS COUNTY Ministerial
Assn. Tuesday, 10 a.m. Trinity
Church In Pomeroy.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room, model meeting.
UNITED
METHODIST
W.S.C.S., 7:30 Tuesday night.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Masonic Temple, 7:~ Wednesday night. Mark master and
past master degrees to be
conferred.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lknl Club, United Methodist

Olureh, noon Wecineod&amp;y.

Plans 1..- the observance of
NaUooal Education Week, Oct.
26-31, were made during a
meeting of the Middleport
Elementary PTA room mothers
Friday evening.
It was decided that coffee,
donuts and cookies will be
served at the ac:bool on Wedneadsy, Oct. 28 lo the parents
visiting the school. Robert
Morris, principal, discussed the
observance with the room
mothers.
Guidelines for room parties
were set up at the meeting
presided over by Mrs. Stanley
Does, second vice president,
and hospitality chairman, Mrs.
Eddie Blake and Mrs. William
Demoskey.

Daughter Born to
Couple in Vienna
Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs of
Vienna, W. Vo. are announcing
the birth of their second eblld, a
daughter, ChrisUne Ann, Oct. 7
at the Camden Clark Hospital,
Parkersburg.
The Riggs are former
residents of Tuppers Plains and
have another daughter, Mary
Louise, lour. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Riggs, PDIIIeroy, Route 3, and
the maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. David Hale,
Wichita Falls, Texas.

Suggestions for PTA lmprcvementl and P.lrenl ;.
teacher -student relallonl wetj
offered and p~renta wltj.
problems were ll'ged to see1t
confereneaa as necessary. ··
Attending weoe Mrs.11lci»rd
Slack, Mrs. Jennlnga We11and,
Mrs. Bob Roush, Mra. Palil
Houdashelt, Mrs. Robert
Rlc,hardson, Mrs. Edwa.rd
Kitchen, Mrs. ~ iialley,
Mrs. Leslie Whittington, ~­
Bobby Payne, Mrs. Arlhu1
Stobart,
Mrs.
William
Demoskey, Mrs. Charlee Se&lt;lti,
Mrs. Peggy Hulton, Mra. Ka7
LaudermUt, Mrs. Betty Caney,
Mrs. Joe Rudolph, Mrs. Charles
Simons, Mrs. Jules Biron, Mrs.
TDIII Kelly, Mrs. David ZIRie,
Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs. Gene
Thomas, Mrs. Carl Gardner,
Mrs. David Hlndy, Mrs. Mary
Hoover, and Mrs. Larry
Spencer, PTA president.

HUSH PUPPIES
New Fall Styles

And Colors.

l.aJ AwlJ Now

lHE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are
Sensibly Priced
Middleport,

o.

SPECIAL I

ROOT FOR
lHE REDS

.

nlURsDAY
TWIUGHT GARDEN Club,
7:30 Thursday, Mrs. Eddie
Smith, Wehe Terrace.

Girls' State
Week Reviewed
Highlights of her week at
Buckeye Girls State were
relatsd In a report from Debbie
Crow to XI Gamma Mu Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The report was read at a
recent meeting of the chaplur
held at the home of Margaret
Follrod.MtssCrow attended the
American Legion Aualllary's
program on the democratic
system of government at
Capital University, Columbus,
In June under sponsorsltlp of the
soroolty.
in her repoot she gave a dsyby-day account of the activities,
her Involvement and 1mpresslons, the Inaugural
banquet wbleb was formal, the
specta1 events of the week
which Included a tour of the
State H..., and blghllghta of
the opeakers.
''The IIIJ08ker on Salurdsy
night made us realize the lmp..-tance Ill our great country
and how elfeeUve our political
sy1ttm Is. He brought tears to
the eyaa of many girl &amp;talers,"
Miss Crow's report concludes.
During the blllllnaas meeting,
the aervlce CU1111111tee reportod
on the prospect Ill adopting a
child lhrttugh the Chrlallan
Children's F)lnd. Action was
poalponed untll tbe DOll
matting. Refrelbmenta were
I8I'Vtd by Mildred Karr and
Velmll Rue.
.

......-

-':.~:-·~""'ii,_

A It . 8
......:::..:::;:..:;:~;:...:=:~. ~ W·
1, PHIL P~OtET
l1llnilll N!', G'!RIIdoi,yD, ali exeeu·
10 Uvu aulte Isn't his current
11. girl frleild.
: -

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'iaiii~Bariains,

and More Bargai,ns 11,1 sentinel Classifieds

Carpenter News, Event

2 SI&amp;IIS

Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jelfera
aitended tile funeral of her
CCIIIIIn in Combridj!e recenUy.
Enroul.e hame IIley called on hla
niece, Mrs. Frank Emmert and
famlly at Somerset and hla
nephew,

Reverend

David
Woody and family at Bremen.
Walter Jordan accompanied

Mr. and Mrs. Cllnton Gilkey and
Tad to Columbus recently
where IIley attended graduaUon
nercbes at career Academy
where hla flancee, Mils Kathy
Gilkey, was a member of the
graduating claaa. Miss Gilkey,
who graduated cum laude in

Dental Asalstant Training, has
aecured employment In Athens.

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Perry
and IJ'anddaughl.er, Mona Jean,
llllllanll, openl a weekend at
their !ann bere. His brother and
siat.er-la-law, Mr. and Mrs.
VirgO Perry, Columbus, vl.sll.ed

them bere.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kalb,

Minneapolis, Minnesota , are
opending oome time here with
ber brother-In-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas.
Other guests at the Thomas
home during the weekend were
Mrs. Amy Caldwell and Jane.
Columbus.
Mrs. Bernice McKnight,

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

GEORGE NICINSKY and
RUIY JEAN NICINSKY ,
PlaJn11fh.

•••

VICTOR

R.

THOMSON ,

ET

AL.,
No. 14,129
NOTICE BY

Columbus, vlslted her mother,
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly, and other
relatives In the area. She also
called on Mr. and Mrs. D. 0.
McKnlght.
Mrs. Mary Bratton, 116, widow
of David Bratton, passed away
at her home near Albany.
Survivors includt&lt; a son, Henry,
Albany; and two daughters,
Mnr. Jessie Roll and Mrs. Ada
Belle Blackwood, both of
Columbus. Several children
preceded ber In death. Services
were held In Bigony Fwreral
Home, Albany, with burial In
School Lot cemetery.
Guests of Mrs. Murl Galaway
were Mr. and Mrs. D. V.
cummings, Athens, and Mr.
Leon Woodrum, Cathy and
Randy, McArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanlay
and Anna, Lexington, Ky., spent
a week vacaUonlng with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Stanley, Albany, and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith and Nancy,
local. The Stanleys were
enroute to Erie, Pa., where Mr.
Stanley has been transferred In
his work.
The Carpenter
Baptist
Church youth group met at the
Rex Cheadle home a recent
Sunday evening. Nancy Smith
had devoUons. Others . present
were Helen, Mary, Robert and
Allee Peck, Robbie Marklns,
and Don, Kathy, and ReJie
Cheadle along with !heir leader,
Bonnie Cheadle.
Mrs . Clyde Walker and

daughter, Carrie, Thurman,
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Dye one day recently.
Mnr. Walker and Carrie and
Mrs. Dye caUed on Mrs. Freda

PUBLICATION
The unknown heirs, de ... isees, Smith in the afternoon.

ltt'i}atees, administrators,
executors and as!igns of the
fOllowing persons, if deceased,
and If not dena sed, then those
ume persons whost addresses
are unknown. Alva Thomson,
Mrs. Alva Thomson, Keaton
Thomson,
Mrs .
keaton
ThOmson. Robert Thomson,
Mrs. Robert Thomson, Edna
Hansen, Edwa r d Hensen,
Mamie DroudL Oris Droudt.
Nancy E . 'J.homson, kenneth
Th'Dmson, Mau·r~ce Thomson,
and Enos E . Thomson, will ·take
notiu that on the 21st. day of
Septembtr, 1970, George
Nlclnaky and Ruby Jean
Nlclnsky, tiled their Complaint
a;etnst you In the Common
Pleas Court of Mtti'IJI County,
Ohlo,~. r:...rln.; for partittoo, and
requt lifl'tr ·Y,ou to set up vo.u r
tnrtr f.f-""lhirioln, If any, In the
followtftg d'escrlbed
rul
property:

Mr. and Mrs. Preston Hamon
and sons, AtheDB, visited his
brother-In-law and sister, Mr .
and Mrs. Re1 Cheadle and
famlly .
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan ,
Bryan and Keith, were In
Columbus on business a recent
Friday night and Saturday.
They were ovemigbt guesiB of
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice and

sons.
Carl Roos, Circleville, visited

with Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam
,Cheadle and the ReJ; Cheadle
famlly.
...

Parcel No. 2: The following
r .. l estate situated In the
County of Meigs, State ot Ohio.
and In th'e Ohio Company's
Purchase. and bounded and
described as follows. viz :
Bec;t~lnnlng at tha northwest
corner of Alonzo Holt tot and the
wnt line of tt1t south east
qu.rterof Section No. Eight (8),
In Town No . Three (3), In Range
No. Thirtlfen (13), thence north
twenty two rods and nine links
to a stake on west line ot said
Quarter; thence east one
hundred and seventy rods to the
•as111ne Of SilO secnon; thence
south two rods and thirteen
links to the said Hoif's north
eau corner: thence west
II"Venty rods to his northwest
corner Of the same; thence
south twenty rods and eleven
links to a stake on the Holt line ;
thence west one hundred rods to
tht place ol beginning, con
talnlng fifteen acres, more or
tess, If being a part of the. estate
of L. D. Holt, Deceased
Rtftrtnce Oted : Vot. 60,
Page 22.4 and 225, Dted Records
Of Meigs County, Ohio .
Percel No. 3: The following
real e111te situated In the
County of Meigs, State of Ohio,
and In the Ohio Company's
Purchan, and bounded and
dttc:rlbtd 11 follows , vll :
"JPnnlng fifteen rods end
flvt I ks north of the southwnt
corn ot the southeast querter
'Of Stctlan eight (ll. Town ThrH
13), Ranoe Thirteen C13L
thtnct tnt one hundred rodt;
thence north twent)' thrtt rods
end thlrtttn links to the south
Hit corner of land owned by W.
¥1 . Thom PIOn ; thenct west ont
hundred rods to tht w11t lint of
tl'le 10utheest quarter Of said
hction tight; thtnce south
twtnt)' thret rOds end thlrttM
links to tl'lt place ot bttlnnlng,
containing tourtun and stvtn ·
tentht acrfl, more or 1111.
Rtftrtnct DHc:l : Vol. 120,
,.,, 5", Deed Records Meigs
Ohio.

co.;..,,.,.,

You art requlrH to answer
Wlftlln Mentv tight dtys frorn
ttllt datt «)f tht ta1t publlntlon
o1 thl1 notice, tht enswtr dlfa
lltlftt Otctfl'lbtr 7th., 1970.
GE.OAGE NICINSKY anel
RUBY JEAN NICINSKY
PLAINTIFFS
CROW, CROW t. PORTER ,
Attorr.tys ror Plaintiffs

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POMEROY, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION

111111101

Phon•
1o.t-:llc

For 5ale
G.E. refrlgoralor, gpod ton·
dillon. Phone 992-62.17.
10-9-61p

'r

EXPERIENCED
.'Radiator SerVice

$.48.75

cash

or

Monday Oeadllne9a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted unt119a.m . tor
Day of Publlc:allon

From the Lergeot Truek•of '
Bulldoztr Redlator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

VACUUM Oeaner brand new
1970 model. Complete with all
clean lng tools. Small paint
damage In lhlpplng. Will take
$27 cash or term• II dot.lrod.
Phone 992·5641 .
1 9-6tc

.BlAETTNARS
Pomeroy

REGULATIONS

The Publisher rHerves the
right to edit or rejec:t any IdS
deemed objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one lnc:orr&amp;ct
Insertion

SOUIH
TROPICAL ASH

EOONOMY • GEAR DRIVEN

GARDEN TRACTORS
We ha,ve live left - All sizes and most
equipment. Write for lileralure and prices.

ORVIUE_QISON

EXPERT

Have Your Yearly

Wheel Alignment

Air-Conlfltioning

$5.55

Inspection And
Re-Charge

-GUARANTEED-

PIIone 992-2094

And Complete Une
of Supplies

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Ellllyn McDaniel

106 E. Main. Pointnry, 0 .

Mooon.w. vo.
773-5675
Open Dolly 1"i4 p.m.
6:30tll9p.m.

Wanted To Buy

------

Notice

--=c-.

. For Rent

.

•' SJEGlfR

HEATER D!

Help Wanted

__

w.

Real Estate For Sale

- - - -- -

------

Cleland Realty

-------

SALESMAN WANTED
For menswear store.
working conditions and
security. Write Box 1000-X
this newspaper stating
perience etc.

Excellent
good job
in care of
age, ex-

For Sale, Rent

Auto Salas

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

case No. 20,371
Estate of George Otto Sc:hmoll,
Deceased .
Notice Is hereb)' given that
Robert Otho Schmoll. of Mid ·
dleporl. Ohio, has been duly
appointed E111ecutor of the
Estate of George Otto Schmoll.
deceased, tote of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are reQuired to tile
their claims with said fiduciary
within tour months.
Dated this 8th day of October
1970 .

F . H. O'Brien
Probate Judge of said
County
llOJ 12. 19, 26. 3tc

jNo Dot~~n P•yment

For Sale

Thi s can be the most im•
portr. 0, advertisement of your

!He - because il may change
your ecunomic picture Iron
"bleak" to "bright".
Owners who now service
U.l.l. vending machines are

growing from part-time to fuUIime operators with
Piilny's fin&lt;wcmg.

Com-

As little as $600 to $1500

ilarrlllllvWe

in ves tmen t in U.l.l. profit pro·
ducmg vending machinee can

The tractor pull was well
attended bere Saturday evening
in aplte of the rain. The siJ.th
sold refreshmenla.
The Paul Stelmetz famBy has
moved to the Ella Bright !ann

sales calls. The machines do

below town.

lhe se lling for you.

crade

Mr. and Mrs. NeD White are
pareniB of a son, born at Holzer

Hoapltai.
Leonard Lee

iB vloltlng here

among frlenda.

Wo•lded Praldeall
Although 21 U.S. presldenlil were In military servIce at some tlme In their
lives, only three were
wounded In battle. James
Monroe wa1 wounded in tho
Revolutionary Wu; Ruther·
lord B. Hayes was wounded
lour times while serving In
the IJninn Army; John F .
Kennedy sulfered an Injury
while serving In the Navy in
World War II .

YOUR NEW HOME

Business Opportunities

CIRCLE
THIS AD

grow.

Time requirement is 6 to 8
hours per week along with a
aerviceable ca r. No personal
jut~t

give

good service'

. Write, giving name, address,
phone numt-.er and sufficient
referf!'ncea .

U••I Uuerr lrwltlllrlt•. htt'.,
11 tS e m,lre Ctatrel.
Depr. tlt7D
DaiiiiiS.. Te ..s 71247

EXTRA . i'NCOME.
Home
operated, own boll and hours.
Early retirement possible.
Phone 9~· 425 .
10·12-Stc

Little Diomede laland, 2.~
miles from BiJ Diomede or
Ratmanov Island owned by
the U.S.S.R., Ia tile firtlreat
northwestern U.S. land.

Ul2.

HOMEMADE Ice cream by
lfl.6.61p
quarts. R.aclne Fireman
Auxiliary. Phone 949-34171 or
949·3293.
1o.B-6tc TUPPERS PLAINS, 2 now

------Real Estate For Sale

CHINESE rlngneck ph&lt;asanls.
50ctoS2each,atfarm. Phone
Letart. W. Vo. 195-3972 ony
csay except Saturday.

three-bedroom homH

~Ius

carport ond utility room. City
water. total electric. Lot lll41
100x200. J. W. Arbough.
Phone Coolville 667-3289.

, . . - - - - - - - 1 _ ; , 0861p

Ctllttct: Mr. MaNy, Ph. f92,
7114 at owr fllfd office 11
Po:rmll: SJCII'Itrt In Mid·

Edwin s. Cozart
Cl'lllrman

Jl CO AUOC!ATel, IIIC.
ller•trly KIIHIIAIMCitltl,

DOrothy M. Johnston
Clerk
Dated October 1, 1970.
1101 5, 12, lt, 26, ~tc

-( .
t1c.

REGISTERED Black AnGus
bull. 3 years old. Phone UJ.

-·owner.

t•••O•·

.w.ooo.oo

•11 ,

·

.

915--.

a,.

m.-

WHAT PIOOUCT NA
I S\JPPOS&amp;D T' 116
f'ff~IN ', (,ENT6?

•

./

U'L ABNER

Plus
Parts

6.98

BlaeHnar's
Pirone Wl-2141

HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TENN.ol. SERVICE. Phone
992-1522.
6-10-tfc

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE lnsuronc. been
cancelled?
Lost
your
;:.ator's license? Call 9926-IS.Ifc
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI OF ELECTION
011 TAK LIVY Ill
EXCESS OF THE T.N
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is htreby elven thtl
In punuance of a Rllolutlon of
the Bohrtt of Townahlf Trust"'
ot the Town1hlp o Cheater,
Mt~igs County, Ohio, passed on
the 5th day ot June, 1970, there
will be submitted to a vott of the
people of aald Chnter Townsl'llp
of Chester, Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein, on
Tuesdty, the Jrd dar. of
No"Vember, 1970. the qutst on of
levying, In txc:ell of the ten mill
limitation, tor the benefit of
Chester Township for tht
purpose of Current expenses of
the Township.
setd UIK being : • renewal of
an tXIItln; tax of lh mill to run
tor five years al a rate not
exc:"d lh mill for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to five cent• for each
one hundred dollars of
valuation, for Five yean .
The PoUs tor 11ld Election
will b•o-"n at 6-:30 o'clock A.M.
end rtmill"t oper. untfl 6:30 '
o(clock P.M. Eaatern Standlrd
Time of 11id dey .
8y order of the Board of
Electlona, of Meigs County,
OhiO .
Edwin S. Cozart
Chairman

:: ilt~n •1li1faoJL

WINSTON

WM

Homia ·

THE BORN LOSER

Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26. 4tc

P"NOW ll6AA~------~--~----~--~
r)ll~!

...

LEGAL NOTICI!
NOTICE OP e:LRCTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXESS
OP THE TIN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE II hereby given that
In pursuance of a Rttolutlon of
tht Council of the VIllage of
Rutland, Ohio, passed on the 6th
dey of May, 1970, 1htr' will bt
subm ttttd to • vote of the pKPit
of llld VIllage et a Gtntrll
Eltc:tlon to be held In the VItiate
of Rutltnd. Ohio, et lht reuul•r
place of voting thtrtln. on
Tutlday, lht 3rd day at
Nonmber, 1970, tht Qufltton of
levying, In txceu of thtttn mill
lim latlon, for tht benefit of
Rutland VIllage tor the purPQH
01 General cOffltruction, rt·
construction, rnurfeclna and
ttpelr of ttreetl wlthfn tht
VIllage of Rutllnd .
Said tax btlnt : an eddltlonll
tu of Flvt mill• to run tor flwe
ynrstt a r1te not t)tceeding 5.0
mills tor each one dD11er of
watuatlqn, which amount• to
Fifty Ctntt for each ont hun dred dollars Of valuation, for
Flvt ytars.
Tht Polls tor said Election
will btopen 11 1:30o'ctock A.M.
end rtmtln open until ':JQ
o'clock P.M. eastern Standard
Time of Mid dey.
ly order of tht &amp;oard of
Elections, ot Nltltl County,
Ohio.

YJIIaJ!
~lAG! 00R LOYAL PIJ8UC HAS BEfN

DEPRIVED Of OUR J:IRT FORM DOE

TOW!! OF
OASP"

Tl/Rl!ll OUT II&gt;
B1 A MOVIE

TO THf

Std.T5t~

POLICifSOF

UNIMAGII'iiiTIVE MOVIE PRODUCERS!

61JT I'VE KEPT OUR LITTL£ COMPANY
tNn~CT AHD f'ACH DAY WE RfHfARSE,
AWRITIMG THE C'ALL OF ·~
sooo ...
~ !I'!!'

Dorothy M. John1ton
Cltrk
001 S, 12, 19, 26, 4tc

Jim
·Mees,

Yo,u,
and
''

'

'f.M''
m

p

.'lGAIN ..

Sf'£'.111( I

'OJ WiU.
I..JSTel.l!
liD WHQll
~.
'OJ WIU.

S!T ---.dHD

I.AiUit' LASSO

oeef!

AIID TllC
TOIIB!IIIllll:
'tvro CHC&amp;
I'OP!II.AR

1/!mRtl ST4M··

DAILY CROSSWORD
AOBOIIS
1. Overcome
G. Imitator

9. " GBntry''
11. Store event
12. Sloan
Willon'a
"A-''

&lt;la.Feat
1. Inebriate
2. Battle
3. Jordan'•
captl&amp;l

dear
20. Part
of IRS

10. RIJin&gt;ld

-

Hml.

portor
13. Source
H. Corundum

form lour

note

aolar deity
5. Colorado

evont

UMCrambletbelel'aar Jumblet,
one letter to eac:h aquare,

ty

23. Dlo·

at. Hold

7. lluphorta
8.)(11.11oal

.. .............

22. Na.uch-

•• 1iliYJ&gt;IIan

&amp;.Buddy

, .......... ... . . . .

21. J'ace
(81.)

DOWN

ruortetty

l!dwln s. to11rr
Chairmen

and

New

-·

.: !

Rl. I

HOBSTETTER .
REALTY
GEO. HOISTETTEA.

75-ACR E . torm, Iorge houll, 7
roorn11nd beth, 3 well a, blrn,
1htd. Call992·2511alter S p.m.
IROICER
Call 742·5775.
NEW LISTING Nlct 3
, 10-6-6tc
10.9-Jtc
bedroomo, both, carpeting,
Birch kitchen. Forcad olr
:-H-:A-:-Y:-.-:C-Io-ver_o_nd-:-m
:-1-xed--:-.-=-Phone 6 ROOM HOUSE, baltr, &lt;lilt·
furnace. 2 car gar-a•- Nice
992-6172.
ocres. In L.orra Bottom, Ohio.
lot.
__;__
10.9-:llc
Coli
6t4-li5-3325
Ntw
'
Mlltamor11, Olio or Chtlttr IIEW LISTING - 4 btdroomo,
915-414: Ptul
, ~tral heal and air ·con·
10-6-6ip
COAL, llm.otone. Excelolor
dltlonlng. - n kllclron, 2
Soli Works. E. Mlln Sl.,
cer
Mlddlirpart.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
114;101.00
•
2-STORY building wlltr poved
4-9-lfc
porklnO lot. Also, 3 lolt In NIW LISTING - ilo ·tCm 5H lilt''
1971
Recine, Phone 992·- or 1'92·
Nlw ' room home,. one floor,
2G9.
both, lull baoomon!, gas
BASSET pvppleo, AKC, 130. F.
10.11-:llc
A. Benodum, Rtodovll!e,
forcad 1lr furnltt. Dovbll
Ohio. Phone 667·3856.
goragt. Minerals.·
' ·&amp;
10.,..121c 7 ROOM modem houll with
extra lot In flomtroY. Mutt GOOD 8UY ·- ·3 ·bedroom
-ltd homo. Nice kllclrtn,
CRAFTSMAN riding lawn
1111, will toka ball offir.
tlectrlc rontt. Uvlng room lA
Now Dlsplityl mower . Phone 992-2429.
Phona 949·2165 or 1-61.._211tO.ll·:llc
x 22. Lolt of clootll. Goo R
•970 u,...
.. bll
forced tlr IUI'lllte. $12.000.00
eman.lnii
·''I' I
t
9-29·121c
must
be
IRISH ~lero Mid Kan..potototl, Chorloo Hllto~. LOTS WITH
ullllllo,. IUOOM Bltl~~VIII*till-1 mOiled I .
room r~l.,..._. Ill'• t Rifle;
Porllond, Ohio. Phone Ul- · RHirlctid lub diYIIIon. ,,., to
roomo dOwir. Ctnfi'll .hQI. 5
:lm.
?·ocrt loll. , Phone ~llr
g~r~llo.
Exfto tal tOO • 100. 1
915-:1301, night
Only $42;500.00
1 1
'
1+11~
•,
'
~· I
AWNINGS, storm doors 1111d
WA'
N
'
I
'·
A
C:IEA'GI
.I(D
windows, c1rportl,
'i , :111CfJIOMES
marqUHI, blown and balf r!OM!: bultdlng .I ota within
Tupporo
Pretno
W~ltr
ln•ulatlon . Elmer White,
Dlofrlct.
td hlth IChool
101es rer.:Hentotl~o. For lr"
and
lolrgrouridt.
Thlsl1 • , . .,
. ' . ·n•FOIID
tstlma es. phone Cheri••
da~olopmtflt,
eli
1911 llrgo
Lisle, Syrocust. V. ' V·.
'
A~IOct.
ATEI ~YIIA~Yt:-6ta
ond h~v, .good drolrllgo.
Jolrnoon and. Son, Inc.
Phona
•Iter 5 P.tll•
f.3o·lfc
·
'
· ·
10.1' tfc· _......_..:....,_ ___.;~..!-

-·____

Roof Pelntlng &amp;
Repelr, Spouting &amp;
carpenter WorkContact:

Jim - l.ilrry
Kenny - Jake
Phone
992-7044 or 992-5632

READY · MIX CONCRETE
For Want Ad Service
scents per Word one Insertion
delivered right to your
Minimum Charge 75c
pro/ect. Fast and easy . FrH
REEDSVILLE,
OHIO
12 cent!. per word three
est mates. Phone 992-3284.
consecutive Insertions .
Goegle!n Ready-Mix Co.,
18 cents per word six con ·
ELECTRIC re-upholsterlnliJ SEPTIC tanks clooned. Miller
Middleport, Ohio.
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph.
!ecutlve Insertions.
machine, good running
6-JO.IIc
2S Per cent Dlacount on paid
662·3035.
condition, sews leather and
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
2·12-tlc
OLD UPRIGHT pianos. any "VInyl. Phone Chester 985--4132
CARD OF THANKS
NEIGLER Construction. For
or 992-6780.
condition, as long as have not
&amp; OIITUARV
"
w::H::E=-E~L-:H:-o_rs_e-:s:-a-:-le-s-and
building or remodeling your
l().lf
.Jip
SUO tor SO word minimum.
been wet. Paying $10 each.
home, cell Guy Neigler,
Service.
Baum
Lumber
Each addltlon61 word 2c.
First floor only . Mondeys will
Recine, Ohio.
Company, Chester, Ohio .
ILIND ADS
be
plck·UI&gt; day . Write, giving 2 BEDROOM houtttraller.
7·31-tfc
Phone
985-330!.
Additional 25c Charge per
Phone 247-2252.
good directions. Witten Plano
Ad"Vertisement.
S.20-lfc
10.11-6tc
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
OFFICE HOURS
_A_I_R-.,-C-0-N-::D:-1-:T-:!70.,-N..,-IN G.
LEGAL NOTICE
Ohio
43946.
8 :30a.m . to S:OO p.m. Daily.
8 : 30 a .m . to U : OO Noon
8-20.tfc COAL FURNACE, blower and
Refrleeration service. Jack's
NOVICE ON FILING
stoker, 10me pipe and coal.
Saturday .
Refrigeration, New Haven .
OF INVENTORY
Phone New Haven 812-2881.
Phone 882-2079.
AND APPMAISEMENT
OLD furniture. dishes, brass
10-11-ltp
U.tlc Tilt Stitt art Olllo, Meigs
beds, ott. Write M. D. Miller,
County. Probat• Court
HAYMAN'S AUCTION House.
Rt. •· Pomtroy, Ohio. Call. PARKVIEW Kennels. Poodles,
To the Executrix of tht
.,..B.,..RA-:-D=-F=-o=-R=-D=-.-Au~c::tlon-Hr
Laurel Cliff. now open each
992~71.
end bird dogs, AKC. Pel and
tittles;
to such of the following
Complete Service
Friday to receive conas are residents of the Stale Of
9-1-tfc
'~ how puppies. Grooming.
Phone 949-3821
OhiO, vis: - 1111 surviving
signments at 10 a.m. Auction · - - - - - - - Phone 992-S«l.
Racine. Ohio
spouse, the next of ktn, the
starting af J p.m. Let us sell
3-17-tfc
Crltt Bradford
beneflclarlll under the will:
your mercl'landlse.
and to the attorney or attorneys
5·1-llc
3·22·11&lt; 3 ROOM unfurr'shtd apart.
repreuntlng any of the
Jim Pettit says:
---:-~­
ment. Phone 99:t-l288.
aforementioned persons:
SEWING MACHINES . Repair
LET US INST-"LL
WILL give plano lessons In my
7-1-tfc
Theodore H . More, Deceased,
VOUR FUE!'. "")fL
service, all makes. 992-2284. Pomeroy, Ohio R.D ., Chester
'
home. Phone 992·3666.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy. Township, No. 20l•2.
8-16·1ft TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
You are hereby notified that
Authorized Singer Soles and
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
Inventory
and
AP·
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. the
WILL pick up merchandise and
3324.
J-29-tfc pratsemtnt of the estate of the
9-9-tfc
take to auction on a per.
atoremenlloned, deceased, late
centage buts . Call Jim
=oo=zE"'R::-c-W:-cor-k-.-:Ph=-on-.-9=-~-=-=-2171. of 11ld County, waa flltd In this
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland. TRAILER space, one mile from
Said Inventory end
9-13-llc CourL
All sizes in stock.
Phone 7.42-4461.
Appralstmtnl will bt tor
new Meigs High School on old
----~,.,.hearing before this Court on tht
149.95 up. We install. SEPTIC
9-23-tfc
Rt. 33. Phone 992·29~1.
TANKS CLEANED. 21st dey of October, 1970, at
9-20.JO!c
we service, we finance.
Reasonable rates. Phone 10:00 o'cloc:k A.M.
Any person desiring to fila
John Russell, Gallipolis -146·
exceptions
thereto n:tUSt file
NICELY furnished 2·bedroom
-4782
after
5:
30
p.m.
POMU.OY
1htm at Itnt five day• .Rrlor to
HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
a,a rtmen't • . Middle pur'.
~Ar7-Hc
~·
CarHy, M1r. .....:......._
.....:......._.;;.__
tht dill. iollof hut n·g. ·
In II desired.- Goad working
Phone 992-387:.&amp;:
l'h'lllf "'·2111 .
Given under my hand anel
conditions. Phone 992-5251.
9-Ju.tfc
sealofsald Court,thlllstdayof
1~·8· 11C
October 1970
F. H. O'Brien
REMODELED l · bedroom YORKSHIRE pigs. Phone 992·
6279.
Judge and ex-officio
EXPERIENCED beautician .
house on Lincoln H~lghts .
of Hid Court
10-7-6fc
Warner 's Beauty Shoppe,
Phone 992·34-«l.
Pomeroy . Apply in person.
9-27-tfc
By Ann 8 , Wotaon
STEREO, WALNUT -ern ARE YOU LOOKING FOR 2
10-9-Jtc
ACRES?
7
room
frame.
3
Deputy
Clerk
slyle,
-4
speaker
sound
-----~
( 10) S, 12. 2tc
BEDROOM trailer, country
system,
~ speed automatic
HAVE immediate opening tor 2 location
near Pomeroy.
bedrooms, beth, gas floor - - - - - - - - - - changer. Balance ~.15. Use
office secretary, shorthand
furnace, cell•r, gar•ge . All
Available very soon. Phone
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR 17,500.
and
typing
necessary ,
992-7384, 992-7 133 or 992-2318. our budget terms. Call 9923352.
knowledge of bookkeeping
10-11-Jtc
OF &amp;LECTION ON
helpful . Experience not
10·6-61c LITTLE BUT NICE 2 NOTICE
TAX LEVY Ill IXCESS
essential. Interviews will be
bedrooms, bath, utility room,
OF THE TI!N
all are tiled and nice m the
arranged. Write Box 729-L UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom EARLY American Stereo-radio
MILL LIMITATION
house.
Phone
992-3231.
combination, AM &amp; FM radio,
lntlde.. 22 acre. $5,300.
c -o The Dally Sentinel,
NOTICE II hiH'eby Given that
l0.7-61c
Pomeroy, Ohfo, stat ing
4 speaker sound system, 4
In pursuanct Of I ReiOIUtlon Of
speed automatic changer.
training, experience and any
SOME REPAIR- 1'h the Board of Education of the
l ROOM furnished apartment Balance $78.69. Use our NEEDS
other helpful information.
story frame, 5 rooma, bath. 2 Southern Local School District,
Melg1 County, Ohio, palled on
with nice yard In Middleport.
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
porcheo, large lot. $3,500.
the 8th dey of Stpttmbtr, 1970,
Phone 992-211«) or 992-2432.
10-6-6tc
TO BUY OR SELL
there will ba 1ubmltted to 1 vote
10.7·11C
CONTACT US
of lhe people of said School
HENRY CLELAND
WARM MORNING healer, like
District at • Genertl Election to
bt htld In the Southern Local
REALTOR
FURNISHED and unfurnished
new . Bottled gas, $6.5 . Also,
School District, MtiOI county,
OffiCI Wl-2259
apartments. Close to school.
Kenmore with blower, bottled
Ohio, at tht regular placn of
Reo. m.u.a
gas, 170. Phone 7-42-5716.
Phone 992·5-Gf.
ntlng therein, an Tuesday, the
10.11-61c 3rd
10-ll·lfC
9-JO.tfc
dly of Novtmbtf, 1970, the
qu11tlon of ltvytng, In ex cHI of
FURNISHED apartment, -4 GREEN beans. tomatoes. Pick GOOD Investment property. the ten mill llmltetfon. for the
btntflt of the Southern Local
rooms end both . Albert Hill.
your own. Also, potatoes and · HouN with 1hrea furnlahtd School District for the purpo~t
Main St., Racine . Phone 949·
sweet potatoes. BrlnliJ con.
ep.~rtmenft, basement, two Of Current expensn of tht
2261.
talners. Andrew Cross, Letart
garagea. Monthly Income, : subdivision.
10-5-Mc
Falls.
$190. Priced reasonably for·
Slid tax being: an additional
quick 10le. Phone 992-3035. · tax of Two mills to run tor a
10.7-61c
7-19-lfc continuing period at a rate nol
excttdlnt 2.0 mills tor each one
dollar of nluatlon, wl'llch
10 ROOM house, 10-4 Union Ave.
amounts to Twenty Cents ror
Just painted Interior and
each one hundred dollan of
1966
PONTIAC.
GTO,
389,
•exterior. Can be made Into
veluatlon, tar a continuing
J or 4 ltdroonu
speed, $1,100 . Also, 1969
two apartm~nts. Phone 992ptriod.
lullt
to
your
lptclflcatlorts.
5836 or write to Evelyn Im- Toyota Corona 2 door hardTht Poll&amp; for said Election
S
I
ttl anllelllt now.
wlllbtoptn et 4:30o'clock A.M.
boden Landers, 126 Laurel St., top, automatic, 11,500. Phone
Chester 985-3503 after S p.m.
end remain optn until 6:30
Pomeroy.
o'clock P.M. I!QWn Standard
10-6-61p
10-11-5tc
Timt of Hid day.
By ordtr of tht loerd of
1962 RAMBLER c!a111c: Ex·
Mtllttlly l'armtllts
Eltetlonl,
of Mtlas County,
LawerThtniHt
cellent conditio;,. Phone 992.
Ohio.

'

ROOflNG,
BY OOIITRACr

.

REED BROS.

RATES

fMnnllltill or Rtesi."idem~

Free Estimates

term1

arf'anged. Trade·lne ac·
cepled. Phone 992-5641.
10.9-6tc

JOHNSON MASONRY
Brick, Block, ·S!Gnt.
Cl1lern1, Orlmneys, Home
Remodeling, Cement Work,
Garages.

1970 DIAL 'N SEYI ZIG ZAG
sewing mechlne left In
layaway. Beautiful pastel
color, lull SilO model . All
buill-In lo buttonhole, over·
cast andlency stitch. Pay tuat

FOR SALE

DEADLINES

------

GEl

~:r,erwm...;:.ddte.

Business
.
·
Services
\·
L.========~~===::=~==~-;:::::::·-~-~·~=:::::::::;~-

o.

S P .M. Day Before Publication

IDEE!!

WHAT CAN 'IE GIT

FER A MAN THAT'S
GOT EVER' THING?

~~~~:.~~:o.r..~ I

~====~~----~

------

Parcel No. 1: The tollowtno
real estate s ituate In the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs and
Township of Bedford and
bounded and described as
follOW$ :
Being In Secllon No . Eight
(IL Town No. Three {JI, Range
No . Thlrtten (13), of the Ohio
Company's Purchase. to-wit:
Beginning at the southeast
corner of a 15 70-100 acre tract
of land belonging to W. W.
ThOmpson; thence west on the
south line Of said 15 70-100 acre
tract of said W. W. Tl'lomp!on
IOOrods to the center line of said
section. rul\fllng north and
south; thenc' south on the
center line of said section tine l5
rods; to the !Iouth line of said
Section Number El;ht (I);
thenct east on the south line of
said Section Number Eight (8)
to a point and stake In said south
aectlon line ; thence in a nor therly direction 15 rods to the
place of beginning , containing
tbout nine and one .fhlrd (9 J.JJ
ac:res, more or tess.
It being the Intention and
purpose of this deed to convey a
tract of land fifteen (15) rods
wide by onl!' hundred 1 IDOl rods
long.
Rtferenc:e Deed : vot. U6,
Page 256. Deed Records ot
Meigs County, Otllo .

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

OF

AIN'TGOT
TH' SLIGHTEST
I

28. Unprttenllouo

.....

28. Actdu·
30. Greek
loland

31. Coplal&gt;t

.................
32. Untrue
33. J!Nulllt
to tray
38. 'ftlrl..
(Lat.)

18. WIIU&amp;mJ

orcltnarr wo'rdll._

I KEREC :·~-=--

I

(X1 ()I

DULEE

II

a]

) I

II rj

I K]

GOlL4B

Now 111-lho drcloll llltln
tor.r.tltlwajilw
••••

~

P4

'alt.JtM ..... W1

I

1- ..---1" wAs r I I Jr I r I I 1
t•

usa)

··--... I .... ...,.....,_...,._..__;;
J

'I

~-

. . _

c.-.

lA111T . ,. . .

... _...-'Uiii.ICIIr

�,.

'iaiii~Bariains,

and More Bargai,ns 11,1 sentinel Classifieds

Carpenter News, Event

2 SI&amp;IIS

Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jelfera
aitended tile funeral of her
CCIIIIIn in Combridj!e recenUy.
Enroul.e hame IIley called on hla
niece, Mrs. Frank Emmert and
famlly at Somerset and hla
nephew,

Reverend

David
Woody and family at Bremen.
Walter Jordan accompanied

Mr. and Mrs. Cllnton Gilkey and
Tad to Columbus recently
where IIley attended graduaUon
nercbes at career Academy
where hla flancee, Mils Kathy
Gilkey, was a member of the
graduating claaa. Miss Gilkey,
who graduated cum laude in

Dental Asalstant Training, has
aecured employment In Athens.

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Perry
and IJ'anddaughl.er, Mona Jean,
llllllanll, openl a weekend at
their !ann bere. His brother and
siat.er-la-law, Mr. and Mrs.
VirgO Perry, Columbus, vl.sll.ed

them bere.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kalb,

Minneapolis, Minnesota , are
opending oome time here with
ber brother-In-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas.
Other guests at the Thomas
home during the weekend were
Mrs. Amy Caldwell and Jane.
Columbus.
Mrs. Bernice McKnight,

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

GEORGE NICINSKY and
RUIY JEAN NICINSKY ,
PlaJn11fh.

•••

VICTOR

R.

THOMSON ,

ET

AL.,
No. 14,129
NOTICE BY

Columbus, vlslted her mother,
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly, and other
relatives In the area. She also
called on Mr. and Mrs. D. 0.
McKnlght.
Mrs. Mary Bratton, 116, widow
of David Bratton, passed away
at her home near Albany.
Survivors includt&lt; a son, Henry,
Albany; and two daughters,
Mnr. Jessie Roll and Mrs. Ada
Belle Blackwood, both of
Columbus. Several children
preceded ber In death. Services
were held In Bigony Fwreral
Home, Albany, with burial In
School Lot cemetery.
Guests of Mrs. Murl Galaway
were Mr. and Mrs. D. V.
cummings, Athens, and Mr.
Leon Woodrum, Cathy and
Randy, McArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanlay
and Anna, Lexington, Ky., spent
a week vacaUonlng with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Stanley, Albany, and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith and Nancy,
local. The Stanleys were
enroute to Erie, Pa., where Mr.
Stanley has been transferred In
his work.
The Carpenter
Baptist
Church youth group met at the
Rex Cheadle home a recent
Sunday evening. Nancy Smith
had devoUons. Others . present
were Helen, Mary, Robert and
Allee Peck, Robbie Marklns,
and Don, Kathy, and ReJie
Cheadle along with !heir leader,
Bonnie Cheadle.
Mrs . Clyde Walker and

daughter, Carrie, Thurman,
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Dye one day recently.
Mnr. Walker and Carrie and
Mrs. Dye caUed on Mrs. Freda

PUBLICATION
The unknown heirs, de ... isees, Smith in the afternoon.

ltt'i}atees, administrators,
executors and as!igns of the
fOllowing persons, if deceased,
and If not dena sed, then those
ume persons whost addresses
are unknown. Alva Thomson,
Mrs. Alva Thomson, Keaton
Thomson,
Mrs .
keaton
ThOmson. Robert Thomson,
Mrs. Robert Thomson, Edna
Hansen, Edwa r d Hensen,
Mamie DroudL Oris Droudt.
Nancy E . 'J.homson, kenneth
Th'Dmson, Mau·r~ce Thomson,
and Enos E . Thomson, will ·take
notiu that on the 21st. day of
Septembtr, 1970, George
Nlclnaky and Ruby Jean
Nlclnsky, tiled their Complaint
a;etnst you In the Common
Pleas Court of Mtti'IJI County,
Ohlo,~. r:...rln.; for partittoo, and
requt lifl'tr ·Y,ou to set up vo.u r
tnrtr f.f-""lhirioln, If any, In the
followtftg d'escrlbed
rul
property:

Mr. and Mrs. Preston Hamon
and sons, AtheDB, visited his
brother-In-law and sister, Mr .
and Mrs. Re1 Cheadle and
famlly .
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan ,
Bryan and Keith, were In
Columbus on business a recent
Friday night and Saturday.
They were ovemigbt guesiB of
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice and

sons.
Carl Roos, Circleville, visited

with Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam
,Cheadle and the ReJ; Cheadle
famlly.
...

Parcel No. 2: The following
r .. l estate situated In the
County of Meigs, State ot Ohio.
and In th'e Ohio Company's
Purchase. and bounded and
described as follows. viz :
Bec;t~lnnlng at tha northwest
corner of Alonzo Holt tot and the
wnt line of tt1t south east
qu.rterof Section No. Eight (8),
In Town No . Three (3), In Range
No. Thirtlfen (13), thence north
twenty two rods and nine links
to a stake on west line ot said
Quarter; thence east one
hundred and seventy rods to the
•as111ne Of SilO secnon; thence
south two rods and thirteen
links to the said Hoif's north
eau corner: thence west
II"Venty rods to his northwest
corner Of the same; thence
south twenty rods and eleven
links to a stake on the Holt line ;
thence west one hundred rods to
tht place ol beginning, con
talnlng fifteen acres, more or
tess, If being a part of the. estate
of L. D. Holt, Deceased
Rtftrtnce Oted : Vot. 60,
Page 22.4 and 225, Dted Records
Of Meigs County, Ohio .
Percel No. 3: The following
real e111te situated In the
County of Meigs, State of Ohio,
and In the Ohio Company's
Purchan, and bounded and
dttc:rlbtd 11 follows , vll :
"JPnnlng fifteen rods end
flvt I ks north of the southwnt
corn ot the southeast querter
'Of Stctlan eight (ll. Town ThrH
13), Ranoe Thirteen C13L
thtnct tnt one hundred rodt;
thence north twent)' thrtt rods
end thlrtttn links to the south
Hit corner of land owned by W.
¥1 . Thom PIOn ; thenct west ont
hundred rods to tht w11t lint of
tl'le 10utheest quarter Of said
hction tight; thtnce south
twtnt)' thret rOds end thlrttM
links to tl'lt place ot bttlnnlng,
containing tourtun and stvtn ·
tentht acrfl, more or 1111.
Rtftrtnct DHc:l : Vol. 120,
,.,, 5", Deed Records Meigs
Ohio.

co.;..,,.,.,

You art requlrH to answer
Wlftlln Mentv tight dtys frorn
ttllt datt «)f tht ta1t publlntlon
o1 thl1 notice, tht enswtr dlfa
lltlftt Otctfl'lbtr 7th., 1970.
GE.OAGE NICINSKY anel
RUBY JEAN NICINSKY
PLAINTIFFS
CROW, CROW t. PORTER ,
Attorr.tys ror Plaintiffs

Ctl II, (10) S,ll. If. 2f !Ill 2. 61c

QUALITY
1967 CHEVROLET

$1695

Belair 4 Door Sedan, V·8 motor, radio, stand·
ard shift. Real nice for the model.
1967 FORD

$1795

4 Door Sedan L.T. 0., power steering, power
brakes. air-conditioning.
1966 CHEVROLET

$1495

Impala Convertible. V-8 motor, radio, power
steering, automatic transmission. air con·
dllloning.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPn EVES. loGO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION

111111101

Phon•
1o.t-:llc

For 5ale
G.E. refrlgoralor, gpod ton·
dillon. Phone 992-62.17.
10-9-61p

'r

EXPERIENCED
.'Radiator SerVice

$.48.75

cash

or

Monday Oeadllne9a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted unt119a.m . tor
Day of Publlc:allon

From the Lergeot Truek•of '
Bulldoztr Redlator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

VACUUM Oeaner brand new
1970 model. Complete with all
clean lng tools. Small paint
damage In lhlpplng. Will take
$27 cash or term• II dot.lrod.
Phone 992·5641 .
1 9-6tc

.BlAETTNARS
Pomeroy

REGULATIONS

The Publisher rHerves the
right to edit or rejec:t any IdS
deemed objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one lnc:orr&amp;ct
Insertion

SOUIH
TROPICAL ASH

EOONOMY • GEAR DRIVEN

GARDEN TRACTORS
We ha,ve live left - All sizes and most
equipment. Write for lileralure and prices.

ORVIUE_QISON

EXPERT

Have Your Yearly

Wheel Alignment

Air-Conlfltioning

$5.55

Inspection And
Re-Charge

-GUARANTEED-

PIIone 992-2094

And Complete Une
of Supplies

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Ellllyn McDaniel

106 E. Main. Pointnry, 0 .

Mooon.w. vo.
773-5675
Open Dolly 1"i4 p.m.
6:30tll9p.m.

Wanted To Buy

------

Notice

--=c-.

. For Rent

.

•' SJEGlfR

HEATER D!

Help Wanted

__

w.

Real Estate For Sale

- - - -- -

------

Cleland Realty

-------

SALESMAN WANTED
For menswear store.
working conditions and
security. Write Box 1000-X
this newspaper stating
perience etc.

Excellent
good job
in care of
age, ex-

For Sale, Rent

Auto Salas

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

case No. 20,371
Estate of George Otto Sc:hmoll,
Deceased .
Notice Is hereb)' given that
Robert Otho Schmoll. of Mid ·
dleporl. Ohio, has been duly
appointed E111ecutor of the
Estate of George Otto Schmoll.
deceased, tote of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are reQuired to tile
their claims with said fiduciary
within tour months.
Dated this 8th day of October
1970 .

F . H. O'Brien
Probate Judge of said
County
llOJ 12. 19, 26. 3tc

jNo Dot~~n P•yment

For Sale

Thi s can be the most im•
portr. 0, advertisement of your

!He - because il may change
your ecunomic picture Iron
"bleak" to "bright".
Owners who now service
U.l.l. vending machines are

growing from part-time to fuUIime operators with
Piilny's fin&lt;wcmg.

Com-

As little as $600 to $1500

ilarrlllllvWe

in ves tmen t in U.l.l. profit pro·
ducmg vending machinee can

The tractor pull was well
attended bere Saturday evening
in aplte of the rain. The siJ.th
sold refreshmenla.
The Paul Stelmetz famBy has
moved to the Ella Bright !ann

sales calls. The machines do

below town.

lhe se lling for you.

crade

Mr. and Mrs. NeD White are
pareniB of a son, born at Holzer

Hoapltai.
Leonard Lee

iB vloltlng here

among frlenda.

Wo•lded Praldeall
Although 21 U.S. presldenlil were In military servIce at some tlme In their
lives, only three were
wounded In battle. James
Monroe wa1 wounded in tho
Revolutionary Wu; Ruther·
lord B. Hayes was wounded
lour times while serving In
the IJninn Army; John F .
Kennedy sulfered an Injury
while serving In the Navy in
World War II .

YOUR NEW HOME

Business Opportunities

CIRCLE
THIS AD

grow.

Time requirement is 6 to 8
hours per week along with a
aerviceable ca r. No personal
jut~t

give

good service'

. Write, giving name, address,
phone numt-.er and sufficient
referf!'ncea .

U••I Uuerr lrwltlllrlt•. htt'.,
11 tS e m,lre Ctatrel.
Depr. tlt7D
DaiiiiiS.. Te ..s 71247

EXTRA . i'NCOME.
Home
operated, own boll and hours.
Early retirement possible.
Phone 9~· 425 .
10·12-Stc

Little Diomede laland, 2.~
miles from BiJ Diomede or
Ratmanov Island owned by
the U.S.S.R., Ia tile firtlreat
northwestern U.S. land.

Ul2.

HOMEMADE Ice cream by
lfl.6.61p
quarts. R.aclne Fireman
Auxiliary. Phone 949-34171 or
949·3293.
1o.B-6tc TUPPERS PLAINS, 2 now

------Real Estate For Sale

CHINESE rlngneck ph&lt;asanls.
50ctoS2each,atfarm. Phone
Letart. W. Vo. 195-3972 ony
csay except Saturday.

three-bedroom homH

~Ius

carport ond utility room. City
water. total electric. Lot lll41
100x200. J. W. Arbough.
Phone Coolville 667-3289.

, . . - - - - - - - 1 _ ; , 0861p

Ctllttct: Mr. MaNy, Ph. f92,
7114 at owr fllfd office 11
Po:rmll: SJCII'Itrt In Mid·

Edwin s. Cozart
Cl'lllrman

Jl CO AUOC!ATel, IIIC.
ller•trly KIIHIIAIMCitltl,

DOrothy M. Johnston
Clerk
Dated October 1, 1970.
1101 5, 12, lt, 26, ~tc

-( .
t1c.

REGISTERED Black AnGus
bull. 3 years old. Phone UJ.

-·owner.

t•••O•·

.w.ooo.oo

•11 ,

·

.

915--.

a,.

m.-

WHAT PIOOUCT NA
I S\JPPOS&amp;D T' 116
f'ff~IN ', (,ENT6?

•

./

U'L ABNER

Plus
Parts

6.98

BlaeHnar's
Pirone Wl-2141

HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TENN.ol. SERVICE. Phone
992-1522.
6-10-tfc

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE lnsuronc. been
cancelled?
Lost
your
;:.ator's license? Call 9926-IS.Ifc
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI OF ELECTION
011 TAK LIVY Ill
EXCESS OF THE T.N
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is htreby elven thtl
In punuance of a Rllolutlon of
the Bohrtt of Townahlf Trust"'
ot the Town1hlp o Cheater,
Mt~igs County, Ohio, passed on
the 5th day ot June, 1970, there
will be submitted to a vott of the
people of aald Chnter Townsl'llp
of Chester, Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein, on
Tuesdty, the Jrd dar. of
No"Vember, 1970. the qutst on of
levying, In txc:ell of the ten mill
limitation, tor the benefit of
Chester Township for tht
purpose of Current expenses of
the Township.
setd UIK being : • renewal of
an tXIItln; tax of lh mill to run
tor five years al a rate not
exc:"d lh mill for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to five cent• for each
one hundred dollars of
valuation, for Five yean .
The PoUs tor 11ld Election
will b•o-"n at 6-:30 o'clock A.M.
end rtmill"t oper. untfl 6:30 '
o(clock P.M. Eaatern Standlrd
Time of 11id dey .
8y order of the Board of
Electlona, of Meigs County,
OhiO .
Edwin S. Cozart
Chairman

:: ilt~n •1li1faoJL

WINSTON

WM

Homia ·

THE BORN LOSER

Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26. 4tc

P"NOW ll6AA~------~--~----~--~
r)ll~!

...

LEGAL NOTICI!
NOTICE OP e:LRCTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXESS
OP THE TIN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE II hereby given that
In pursuance of a Rttolutlon of
tht Council of the VIllage of
Rutland, Ohio, passed on the 6th
dey of May, 1970, 1htr' will bt
subm ttttd to • vote of the pKPit
of llld VIllage et a Gtntrll
Eltc:tlon to be held In the VItiate
of Rutltnd. Ohio, et lht reuul•r
place of voting thtrtln. on
Tutlday, lht 3rd day at
Nonmber, 1970, tht Qufltton of
levying, In txceu of thtttn mill
lim latlon, for tht benefit of
Rutland VIllage tor the purPQH
01 General cOffltruction, rt·
construction, rnurfeclna and
ttpelr of ttreetl wlthfn tht
VIllage of Rutllnd .
Said tax btlnt : an eddltlonll
tu of Flvt mill• to run tor flwe
ynrstt a r1te not t)tceeding 5.0
mills tor each one dD11er of
watuatlqn, which amount• to
Fifty Ctntt for each ont hun dred dollars Of valuation, for
Flvt ytars.
Tht Polls tor said Election
will btopen 11 1:30o'ctock A.M.
end rtmtln open until ':JQ
o'clock P.M. eastern Standard
Time of Mid dey.
ly order of tht &amp;oard of
Elections, ot Nltltl County,
Ohio.

YJIIaJ!
~lAG! 00R LOYAL PIJ8UC HAS BEfN

DEPRIVED Of OUR J:IRT FORM DOE

TOW!! OF
OASP"

Tl/Rl!ll OUT II&gt;
B1 A MOVIE

TO THf

Std.T5t~

POLICifSOF

UNIMAGII'iiiTIVE MOVIE PRODUCERS!

61JT I'VE KEPT OUR LITTL£ COMPANY
tNn~CT AHD f'ACH DAY WE RfHfARSE,
AWRITIMG THE C'ALL OF ·~
sooo ...
~ !I'!!'

Dorothy M. John1ton
Cltrk
001 S, 12, 19, 26, 4tc

Jim
·Mees,

Yo,u,
and
''

'

'f.M''
m

p

.'lGAIN ..

Sf'£'.111( I

'OJ WiU.
I..JSTel.l!
liD WHQll
~.
'OJ WIU.

S!T ---.dHD

I.AiUit' LASSO

oeef!

AIID TllC
TOIIB!IIIllll:
'tvro CHC&amp;
I'OP!II.AR

1/!mRtl ST4M··

DAILY CROSSWORD
AOBOIIS
1. Overcome
G. Imitator

9. " GBntry''
11. Store event
12. Sloan
Willon'a
"A-''

&lt;la.Feat
1. Inebriate
2. Battle
3. Jordan'•
captl&amp;l

dear
20. Part
of IRS

10. RIJin&gt;ld

-

Hml.

portor
13. Source
H. Corundum

form lour

note

aolar deity
5. Colorado

evont

UMCrambletbelel'aar Jumblet,
one letter to eac:h aquare,

ty

23. Dlo·

at. Hold

7. lluphorta
8.)(11.11oal

.. .............

22. Na.uch-

•• 1iliYJ&gt;IIan

&amp;.Buddy

, .......... ... . . . .

21. J'ace
(81.)

DOWN

ruortetty

l!dwln s. to11rr
Chairmen

and

New

-·

.: !

Rl. I

HOBSTETTER .
REALTY
GEO. HOISTETTEA.

75-ACR E . torm, Iorge houll, 7
roorn11nd beth, 3 well a, blrn,
1htd. Call992·2511alter S p.m.
IROICER
Call 742·5775.
NEW LISTING Nlct 3
, 10-6-6tc
10.9-Jtc
bedroomo, both, carpeting,
Birch kitchen. Forcad olr
:-H-:A-:-Y:-.-:C-Io-ver_o_nd-:-m
:-1-xed--:-.-=-Phone 6 ROOM HOUSE, baltr, &lt;lilt·
furnace. 2 car gar-a•- Nice
992-6172.
ocres. In L.orra Bottom, Ohio.
lot.
__;__
10.9-:llc
Coli
6t4-li5-3325
Ntw
'
Mlltamor11, Olio or Chtlttr IIEW LISTING - 4 btdroomo,
915-414: Ptul
, ~tral heal and air ·con·
10-6-6ip
COAL, llm.otone. Excelolor
dltlonlng. - n kllclron, 2
Soli Works. E. Mlln Sl.,
cer
Mlddlirpart.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
114;101.00
•
2-STORY building wlltr poved
4-9-lfc
porklnO lot. Also, 3 lolt In NIW LISTING - ilo ·tCm 5H lilt''
1971
Recine, Phone 992·- or 1'92·
Nlw ' room home,. one floor,
2G9.
both, lull baoomon!, gas
BASSET pvppleo, AKC, 130. F.
10.11-:llc
A. Benodum, Rtodovll!e,
forcad 1lr furnltt. Dovbll
Ohio. Phone 667·3856.
goragt. Minerals.·
' ·&amp;
10.,..121c 7 ROOM modem houll with
extra lot In flomtroY. Mutt GOOD 8UY ·- ·3 ·bedroom
-ltd homo. Nice kllclrtn,
CRAFTSMAN riding lawn
1111, will toka ball offir.
tlectrlc rontt. Uvlng room lA
Now Dlsplityl mower . Phone 992-2429.
Phona 949·2165 or 1-61.._211tO.ll·:llc
x 22. Lolt of clootll. Goo R
•970 u,...
.. bll
forced tlr IUI'lllte. $12.000.00
eman.lnii
·''I' I
t
9-29·121c
must
be
IRISH ~lero Mid Kan..potototl, Chorloo Hllto~. LOTS WITH
ullllllo,. IUOOM Bltl~~VIII*till-1 mOiled I .
room r~l.,..._. Ill'• t Rifle;
Porllond, Ohio. Phone Ul- · RHirlctid lub diYIIIon. ,,., to
roomo dOwir. Ctnfi'll .hQI. 5
:lm.
?·ocrt loll. , Phone ~llr
g~r~llo.
Exfto tal tOO • 100. 1
915-:1301, night
Only $42;500.00
1 1
'
1+11~
•,
'
~· I
AWNINGS, storm doors 1111d
WA'
N
'
I
'·
A
C:IEA'GI
.I(D
windows, c1rportl,
'i , :111CfJIOMES
marqUHI, blown and balf r!OM!: bultdlng .I ota within
Tupporo
Pretno
W~ltr
ln•ulatlon . Elmer White,
Dlofrlct.
td hlth IChool
101es rer.:Hentotl~o. For lr"
and
lolrgrouridt.
Thlsl1 • , . .,
. ' . ·n•FOIID
tstlma es. phone Cheri••
da~olopmtflt,
eli
1911 llrgo
Lisle, Syrocust. V. ' V·.
'
A~IOct.
ATEI ~YIIA~Yt:-6ta
ond h~v, .good drolrllgo.
Jolrnoon and. Son, Inc.
Phona
•Iter 5 P.tll•
f.3o·lfc
·
'
· ·
10.1' tfc· _......_..:....,_ ___.;~..!-

-·____

Roof Pelntlng &amp;
Repelr, Spouting &amp;
carpenter WorkContact:

Jim - l.ilrry
Kenny - Jake
Phone
992-7044 or 992-5632

READY · MIX CONCRETE
For Want Ad Service
scents per Word one Insertion
delivered right to your
Minimum Charge 75c
pro/ect. Fast and easy . FrH
REEDSVILLE,
OHIO
12 cent!. per word three
est mates. Phone 992-3284.
consecutive Insertions .
Goegle!n Ready-Mix Co.,
18 cents per word six con ·
ELECTRIC re-upholsterlnliJ SEPTIC tanks clooned. Miller
Middleport, Ohio.
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph.
!ecutlve Insertions.
machine, good running
6-JO.IIc
2S Per cent Dlacount on paid
662·3035.
condition, sews leather and
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
2·12-tlc
OLD UPRIGHT pianos. any "VInyl. Phone Chester 985--4132
CARD OF THANKS
NEIGLER Construction. For
or 992-6780.
condition, as long as have not
&amp; OIITUARV
"
w::H::E=-E~L-:H:-o_rs_e-:s:-a-:-le-s-and
building or remodeling your
l().lf
.Jip
SUO tor SO word minimum.
been wet. Paying $10 each.
home, cell Guy Neigler,
Service.
Baum
Lumber
Each addltlon61 word 2c.
First floor only . Mondeys will
Recine, Ohio.
Company, Chester, Ohio .
ILIND ADS
be
plck·UI&gt; day . Write, giving 2 BEDROOM houtttraller.
7·31-tfc
Phone
985-330!.
Additional 25c Charge per
Phone 247-2252.
good directions. Witten Plano
Ad"Vertisement.
S.20-lfc
10.11-6tc
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
OFFICE HOURS
_A_I_R-.,-C-0-N-::D:-1-:T-:!70.,-N..,-IN G.
LEGAL NOTICE
Ohio
43946.
8 :30a.m . to S:OO p.m. Daily.
8 : 30 a .m . to U : OO Noon
8-20.tfc COAL FURNACE, blower and
Refrleeration service. Jack's
NOVICE ON FILING
stoker, 10me pipe and coal.
Saturday .
Refrigeration, New Haven .
OF INVENTORY
Phone New Haven 812-2881.
Phone 882-2079.
AND APPMAISEMENT
OLD furniture. dishes, brass
10-11-ltp
U.tlc Tilt Stitt art Olllo, Meigs
beds, ott. Write M. D. Miller,
County. Probat• Court
HAYMAN'S AUCTION House.
Rt. •· Pomtroy, Ohio. Call. PARKVIEW Kennels. Poodles,
To the Executrix of tht
.,..B.,..RA-:-D=-F=-o=-R=-D=-.-Au~c::tlon-Hr
Laurel Cliff. now open each
992~71.
end bird dogs, AKC. Pel and
tittles;
to such of the following
Complete Service
Friday to receive conas are residents of the Stale Of
9-1-tfc
'~ how puppies. Grooming.
Phone 949-3821
OhiO, vis: - 1111 surviving
signments at 10 a.m. Auction · - - - - - - - Phone 992-S«l.
Racine. Ohio
spouse, the next of ktn, the
starting af J p.m. Let us sell
3-17-tfc
Crltt Bradford
beneflclarlll under the will:
your mercl'landlse.
and to the attorney or attorneys
5·1-llc
3·22·11&lt; 3 ROOM unfurr'shtd apart.
repreuntlng any of the
Jim Pettit says:
---:-~­
ment. Phone 99:t-l288.
aforementioned persons:
SEWING MACHINES . Repair
LET US INST-"LL
WILL give plano lessons In my
7-1-tfc
Theodore H . More, Deceased,
VOUR FUE!'. "")fL
service, all makes. 992-2284. Pomeroy, Ohio R.D ., Chester
'
home. Phone 992·3666.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy. Township, No. 20l•2.
8-16·1ft TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
You are hereby notified that
Authorized Singer Soles and
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
Inventory
and
AP·
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. the
WILL pick up merchandise and
3324.
J-29-tfc pratsemtnt of the estate of the
9-9-tfc
take to auction on a per.
atoremenlloned, deceased, late
centage buts . Call Jim
=oo=zE"'R::-c-W:-cor-k-.-:Ph=-on-.-9=-~-=-=-2171. of 11ld County, waa flltd In this
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland. TRAILER space, one mile from
Said Inventory end
9-13-llc CourL
All sizes in stock.
Phone 7.42-4461.
Appralstmtnl will bt tor
new Meigs High School on old
----~,.,.hearing before this Court on tht
149.95 up. We install. SEPTIC
9-23-tfc
Rt. 33. Phone 992·29~1.
TANKS CLEANED. 21st dey of October, 1970, at
9-20.JO!c
we service, we finance.
Reasonable rates. Phone 10:00 o'cloc:k A.M.
Any person desiring to fila
John Russell, Gallipolis -146·
exceptions
thereto n:tUSt file
NICELY furnished 2·bedroom
-4782
after
5:
30
p.m.
POMU.OY
1htm at Itnt five day• .Rrlor to
HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
a,a rtmen't • . Middle pur'.
~Ar7-Hc
~·
CarHy, M1r. .....:......._
.....:......._.;;.__
tht dill. iollof hut n·g. ·
In II desired.- Goad working
Phone 992-387:.&amp;:
l'h'lllf "'·2111 .
Given under my hand anel
conditions. Phone 992-5251.
9-Ju.tfc
sealofsald Court,thlllstdayof
1~·8· 11C
October 1970
F. H. O'Brien
REMODELED l · bedroom YORKSHIRE pigs. Phone 992·
6279.
Judge and ex-officio
EXPERIENCED beautician .
house on Lincoln H~lghts .
of Hid Court
10-7-6fc
Warner 's Beauty Shoppe,
Phone 992·34-«l.
Pomeroy . Apply in person.
9-27-tfc
By Ann 8 , Wotaon
STEREO, WALNUT -ern ARE YOU LOOKING FOR 2
10-9-Jtc
ACRES?
7
room
frame.
3
Deputy
Clerk
slyle,
-4
speaker
sound
-----~
( 10) S, 12. 2tc
BEDROOM trailer, country
system,
~ speed automatic
HAVE immediate opening tor 2 location
near Pomeroy.
bedrooms, beth, gas floor - - - - - - - - - - changer. Balance ~.15. Use
office secretary, shorthand
furnace, cell•r, gar•ge . All
Available very soon. Phone
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR 17,500.
and
typing
necessary ,
992-7384, 992-7 133 or 992-2318. our budget terms. Call 9923352.
knowledge of bookkeeping
10-11-Jtc
OF &amp;LECTION ON
helpful . Experience not
10·6-61c LITTLE BUT NICE 2 NOTICE
TAX LEVY Ill IXCESS
essential. Interviews will be
bedrooms, bath, utility room,
OF THE TI!N
all are tiled and nice m the
arranged. Write Box 729-L UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom EARLY American Stereo-radio
MILL LIMITATION
house.
Phone
992-3231.
combination, AM &amp; FM radio,
lntlde.. 22 acre. $5,300.
c -o The Dally Sentinel,
NOTICE II hiH'eby Given that
l0.7-61c
Pomeroy, Ohfo, stat ing
4 speaker sound system, 4
In pursuanct Of I ReiOIUtlon Of
speed automatic changer.
training, experience and any
SOME REPAIR- 1'h the Board of Education of the
l ROOM furnished apartment Balance $78.69. Use our NEEDS
other helpful information.
story frame, 5 rooma, bath. 2 Southern Local School District,
Melg1 County, Ohio, palled on
with nice yard In Middleport.
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
porcheo, large lot. $3,500.
the 8th dey of Stpttmbtr, 1970,
Phone 992-211«) or 992-2432.
10-6-6tc
TO BUY OR SELL
there will ba 1ubmltted to 1 vote
10.7·11C
CONTACT US
of lhe people of said School
HENRY CLELAND
WARM MORNING healer, like
District at • Genertl Election to
bt htld In the Southern Local
REALTOR
FURNISHED and unfurnished
new . Bottled gas, $6.5 . Also,
School District, MtiOI county,
OffiCI Wl-2259
apartments. Close to school.
Kenmore with blower, bottled
Ohio, at tht regular placn of
Reo. m.u.a
gas, 170. Phone 7-42-5716.
Phone 992·5-Gf.
ntlng therein, an Tuesday, the
10.11-61c 3rd
10-ll·lfC
9-JO.tfc
dly of Novtmbtf, 1970, the
qu11tlon of ltvytng, In ex cHI of
FURNISHED apartment, -4 GREEN beans. tomatoes. Pick GOOD Investment property. the ten mill llmltetfon. for the
btntflt of the Southern Local
rooms end both . Albert Hill.
your own. Also, potatoes and · HouN with 1hrea furnlahtd School District for the purpo~t
Main St., Racine . Phone 949·
sweet potatoes. BrlnliJ con.
ep.~rtmenft, basement, two Of Current expensn of tht
2261.
talners. Andrew Cross, Letart
garagea. Monthly Income, : subdivision.
10-5-Mc
Falls.
$190. Priced reasonably for·
Slid tax being: an additional
quick 10le. Phone 992-3035. · tax of Two mills to run tor a
10.7-61c
7-19-lfc continuing period at a rate nol
excttdlnt 2.0 mills tor each one
dollar of nluatlon, wl'llch
10 ROOM house, 10-4 Union Ave.
amounts to Twenty Cents ror
Just painted Interior and
each one hundred dollan of
1966
PONTIAC.
GTO,
389,
•exterior. Can be made Into
veluatlon, tar a continuing
J or 4 ltdroonu
speed, $1,100 . Also, 1969
two apartm~nts. Phone 992ptriod.
lullt
to
your
lptclflcatlorts.
5836 or write to Evelyn Im- Toyota Corona 2 door hardTht Poll&amp; for said Election
S
I
ttl anllelllt now.
wlllbtoptn et 4:30o'clock A.M.
boden Landers, 126 Laurel St., top, automatic, 11,500. Phone
Chester 985-3503 after S p.m.
end remain optn until 6:30
Pomeroy.
o'clock P.M. I!QWn Standard
10-6-61p
10-11-5tc
Timt of Hid day.
By ordtr of tht loerd of
1962 RAMBLER c!a111c: Ex·
Mtllttlly l'armtllts
Eltetlonl,
of Mtlas County,
LawerThtniHt
cellent conditio;,. Phone 992.
Ohio.

'

ROOflNG,
BY OOIITRACr

.

REED BROS.

RATES

fMnnllltill or Rtesi."idem~

Free Estimates

term1

arf'anged. Trade·lne ac·
cepled. Phone 992-5641.
10.9-6tc

JOHNSON MASONRY
Brick, Block, ·S!Gnt.
Cl1lern1, Orlmneys, Home
Remodeling, Cement Work,
Garages.

1970 DIAL 'N SEYI ZIG ZAG
sewing mechlne left In
layaway. Beautiful pastel
color, lull SilO model . All
buill-In lo buttonhole, over·
cast andlency stitch. Pay tuat

FOR SALE

DEADLINES

------

GEl

~:r,erwm...;:.ddte.

Business
.
·
Services
\·
L.========~~===::=~==~-;:::::::·-~-~·~=:::::::::;~-

o.

S P .M. Day Before Publication

IDEE!!

WHAT CAN 'IE GIT

FER A MAN THAT'S
GOT EVER' THING?

~~~~:.~~:o.r..~ I

~====~~----~

------

Parcel No. 1: The tollowtno
real estate s ituate In the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs and
Township of Bedford and
bounded and described as
follOW$ :
Being In Secllon No . Eight
(IL Town No. Three {JI, Range
No . Thlrtten (13), of the Ohio
Company's Purchase. to-wit:
Beginning at the southeast
corner of a 15 70-100 acre tract
of land belonging to W. W.
ThOmpson; thence west on the
south line Of said 15 70-100 acre
tract of said W. W. Tl'lomp!on
IOOrods to the center line of said
section. rul\fllng north and
south; thenc' south on the
center line of said section tine l5
rods; to the !Iouth line of said
Section Number El;ht (I);
thenct east on the south line of
said Section Number Eight (8)
to a point and stake In said south
aectlon line ; thence in a nor therly direction 15 rods to the
place of beginning , containing
tbout nine and one .fhlrd (9 J.JJ
ac:res, more or tess.
It being the Intention and
purpose of this deed to convey a
tract of land fifteen (15) rods
wide by onl!' hundred 1 IDOl rods
long.
Rtferenc:e Deed : vot. U6,
Page 256. Deed Records ot
Meigs County, Otllo .

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

OF

AIN'TGOT
TH' SLIGHTEST
I

28. Unprttenllouo

.....

28. Actdu·
30. Greek
loland

31. Coplal&gt;t

.................
32. Untrue
33. J!Nulllt
to tray
38. 'ftlrl..
(Lat.)

18. WIIU&amp;mJ

orcltnarr wo'rdll._

I KEREC :·~-=--

I

(X1 ()I

DULEE

II

a]

) I

II rj

I K]

GOlL4B

Now 111-lho drcloll llltln
tor.r.tltlwajilw
••••

~

P4

'alt.JtM ..... W1

I

1- ..---1" wAs r I I Jr I r I I 1
t•

usa)

··--... I .... ...,.....,_...,._..__;;
J

'I

~-

. . _

c.-.

lA111T . ,. . .

... _...-'Uiii.ICIIr

�1~ The llail)' Stntlllei,Middleport-Puner&lt;ly, 0., Ocl.IZ, 1170

High Court Looks Again to Schools
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
&amp;lpreme Court turned today to
ill 11r1t major euminallon of
ldlool deoegregallon since its
historic 1954 ruling against
separate black and white

talned.
The Nlmn alknintstration has
taken the poaltlon every chlld
should be allowed to attend tbe
school in hiS nelshborhood ev0111f that meMts IIDI!le schoob
schools. The issue now is remain all black, and others all
whether chlldres&gt; should be white. It hss told the court the
bused, district lines redrawn or ConsUtutioo ''does oot require
other metbods used to integrate
acbool5.
The nlne juslices opened two
days of argum011ts on cases Society News
frmn Olarlotte, N.C.; Mobile
County, Ala ., and Clarke
By Mnr. Evelyn Brtckles
County, Ga., in an attempt to
Sunday School attendance at
reoolve an issue which has the United Methodist Church
lroushl the Nlslm adminlslra- was 39, offering was $11.94.
Uon Into conflict with the Worship service attendance
nation's clvU rights leaders.
was 37, offering was f/8.6:1.
The eventual declslons were
Mr. and Mrs. Don Guthrie and
apecled to give the nation's chlldren spent the weekend with
ldlool districts the muimum relatives in Columbua.
steps they will be required to
Mrs. Mae Decker and Mr. and
follow to bring about racl.ally Mrs. Walter Hornbeck of
unified achool s)'l!lllms. The Columbus spent Wednesday
court must decide If a par- with Mrs. Neisel Weatherman.
Ucular black-white attendance Mrs. Weatherman returned to
ratio Is necessary in the schools Colwnbus with them and visited
and, If so, how it should be at- friends and returned home
Saturday.
Mrs. Tom Burroughs and Carl
Barnhill were calling on Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Betzlng
Sunday. Mrs. Betzing just
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
BY BERTHA PARKER
Rally Dal was held Sunday, was a patient several days for
Oct. 4, at the Free Methodist ohaervation.
Church with 130 attending . Mr. and Mrs. Larry Salser
and daughter, Heather , of
Offering was $34.23.
Wyatt Schsefer, Mt. Vernon, Pomeroy were Stmday guests of
and son, David, student at Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Roland Torrence.
University, spent Sunday with Thelma Travis and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schsefer. Lorena Amon of Logan spent
Misses Bertha Parker, Kathy the weekend here with their
PuiUns, Joan Clark, attended aunt, Mrs. Mabel Swartz.
the Rally Sunday at the Rock Mr. and Mrs. Dennard Blake
and daughters . a! Mansfield
Springs Methodist Olurch.
spent
the week&lt;od with his
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Marlon; Mr. and Mrs. Robert parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm
DeConnlck, and Kelli Sue, Blske.
Coltunbw, spent the weekend Mr. and Mrs. Blake were
with Mr. and Mrs. Chsrles involved in a car wreck in
Karr. Mr. Karr, Mr. Bauer, and Parkersburg a week ago and
Mrs. DeConnlck attended Mr. Blake wasn 'I seriously
morning serrice at the local injured, only a cut on the head,
but Mrs. Blake hsd to remain in
church.
the
St. Joseph Hoopltal with a
1be Laurel Cllff Health Club
crushed
right shoulder.
beld Ita 35th anniversary with
Watson was taken to
Everett
potluck at 6:30 Thuraday
Veterans
Memorial Hospital
evening wilb 12 members and
Sunday morning by the
one IIUeBI, Mrs. Judy Spen- Emergency Squad when he

Tuppers Plains

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

cer,

at

the

home

of

Mr. and Mrs. Dick Kerr.
Sunshine sisters were revealed and new nrunes drawn
for the nnt year. Sheets, pillow
CUOI, towels and wash cloths
were donated to the Pomeroy
emergency squad. Mrs. Mabel
Tracy will be host for the
November meeUng.
Word hss been received that
Mrs. Faye Hysell CorUs, that
hsd been injured by a mlni-blke,
broke her hlp. She is a patient In
Toolde Valley Hoopital, Salt
Lake City Utah.
84074.

HANDY DRIVE IN
BANKING

CW!e of U1e many
can serve you best.
In
where the action is. We In-

vite your patronage-.

Fridays Only
The Drive-In Window
is Open
9A.M.to7 P.M.

(Continuously J
otMr Blinking Houn f to 3
and S to 7 •• UINI on
Fridoys.

THE
FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS 00.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member FDIC
Member Federal

RF""Ierve Systam

became seriously lll with a

heart canditioo.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Vance of
Colambus were Sunday guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Mollahsn.
Mrs. Mnbe!Swartz visited her
sister, Mrs. Letha Koblentz at
Veterans Memorial Hospltel.
Emerson Hayes was teken
from the Elmwood Nursing
Horne to Veterans Memorial
Hospital Saturday by the
Emergency Squad alter he
became seriously ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White of
Keno, Mrs. Norman McCain
and Mrs. Mary Reed a! Eastern
called m Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Newell Friday and helped
celebrate Mr. Newell's 87th
blrtltday. Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
Newell and daughter, Bhelah, of
Chester also Vlslted hiS parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeasle Newell on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mra. Robert Burk
and baby of Allred were Friday
guests of ber grandparents, Mr.
and Mra. Verle Tuttle.
Mrs.
Myrtle
Boggess
returned home Saturday after a
two week visit with her
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Garland Brannon of West
Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Edgel of
Long Bottom Vlslted a recent
day with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Babcock.
Leota Massar and Leone
Babcock
attended
the
miacellaneoua shower for Mr.
and Mrs. Mark FlndeUng at the
home a! his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Findellng Friday
evening. A large crowd attended and the couple received
many lovely and uaefuJ gifts.
Kenny Riggs a! Eastern spent
&gt;iiday night with his ount, Mrs.
Oscar Babcock.

ADMIRAL

AON~

REAL SALE
You Won't Believe Your Buys!

GET 1971 lV &amp; STEREO
FOR LESS THAN 1970 PRICES
No Gimmreks
Just Real Savlftlll

... racial balanee In all public
schools rr lntesratlon In every
an-white or all-Negro ldlool."
1be NAACP Legal Defense
Fund (LDF) bas Insisted,
however, that every black
student bas a rtgllt to attend a
school which ClltMI be identified as black. "Nothing Jess

KER

MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

1nd led oo Jan, tf, 1970 to the
&amp;ipnme Court's llr!ll slg111ficant spilt on the subject of
ldlools. Reversing a 5th !lrcult
ru!Jng a. maJority said desegre. gaUon of If school dtstrtcta In
dlstrtcta.
five Soulbern Stales take places
The results fennent oparked 111 Feb. I, not the following
men lower court proceedings September.

Now You Know

In death by her husband, Roy,
two brotllera, and a alroter,
SurviYintJ are a oialer, Mrs.
Nettle Jon01, Akron, and
":veral nieces and. ftept.ewa.
Mra. Thmnpoon worked u a
seamslrar! in the CGIII!nunJI)' 1,
number ~ years.
·
Funeralse~ will be Ml\1
at 2 p.m. Tuesday 11 ihe
Rlw~ll P\metll lbpe
with the Rav. Charletr 811110111
a!ftctaUng. Burial will be In
Gravel Hill Cemelery . al
11
The need to move on these &lt;lleiJhln, Frte!lde 11111 call Ill
bills is long overdue,'' Tallsald. the fllneral home any time.
Taft said Saturday that
TWO DRAW PINE8
Metzenbawn last spring was
"asking students to get mad" Two drtveraltned In the court
but now has changed his tune. of Middleport Mayor c. o.
"Now be says disorders and Fisher over the -kend were
violence are not issues becauae Nancy Lou Pope, 37, Mid·
be deplores violence,'' Taft dleport, $i and COlla, apeedlng,
Mid. "Damocr•tlc pollticians and Cllfford Murray, 31, Mldare suffering from scblz- dlepor~ $10and coots, oqueollng
ophrenln over how to deal tires.
with the campua crises."
Ohio Republlcana say they
are hur:.\ng for campaign funds,
NEW TYPHOON
but an aid to one major can· MANILA (UPI) - Tropical
dldate says It Is not as bad ult storm Joan lntenalfled Into a
once was.
typhoon
early
today.
H. Rlciulrd Niehoff, state Weallrermen l.utted warnings
GOP finance chairman, sent lor the eaatern provinces of the
letters to major contributors Central Phlllpplnes and
saying the party's financial southern part of the main llland
of Luroo Including the populous
situation Is desperate.
"If Republicans are to mount Manila .;....,
a winning campaign in 11170
(and they still can) tlley must
do so via newspapers, radio and
GEl'S 11 TO •
prime time TV," Niehoff said. RAVENNA, Ohio (UPIJ _A
Jamea Duerk, an aid to Roger former Kent State Unim'llty
Cloud, the Repobllcan guber- student, Rick Felber, 21, wu
natorlal candidate, said his aentenced to 2llofO years 1n
candidate hss begun some five prJaon 00 a marijuana &lt;lwga
minute telecasts In major here Saturday, the otlffeat
markets and hopes to air some Berllerrcereturned on the c11arp
six seco.nd and 30 second In Pcrtage Cbunty 0ommoo
commerctals.
!'leu Cburl.

Mra; Eillet G. Thompaon, 91,
Weat Main. SL, Pomeroy,,. dled
Sunday.' l)'lning ot Veter8111
MernortafHoepltal.
Mrs. Tbotnpson was ~
Dec. S, 1871, at Chealllre, the
daughter of tl1e late Mr. ard
Mrs. Mel Coughenour. Bealdes
her parents, aha was preceded

•

at y

e

Pope John m wu elected to
tha papacy while IIIII Ill his
taens and aerwd lrcJm llllii to

\113.

VOL XXII NO. !27

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUfSDAY, OCTOBER 13,

l~h

•

Gilligan Promises New Code of Ethics

zn Cuba

~

By United Press lnternatloaal
John J. Gilligan, Democratic
candidate for governor, said
today be would posh for a code
of ethics for top stele officials If
he is elected.
In a Cleveland news conference, Gilligan publicly
released a statement of his
personal worth and Mid be
would volunlarlly flle It away
with the secretary of stele. He
said he would fUe a personal
disclosure every year, if
elected.
"And I will require every
person l appoint to a high state
position to do the same as a
rondition of that appoinbnent,"
he said. "I will urge my fellow
elected officials to do the same
voluntarily.''
Gilligan said the administration that takes office
in J"anuary
faces
a "confidence crisis" as
the result of the discovery of irregularities in
the state loan program. He said
he would puah lor a cnde ol
ethics to be passed in the state
legislature "to spell out the
conduct expected of both
elected and appointed officials."

Gilligan listed assets of
$175,426 and liabilities of $11,879
lor himself and his wife.
Howard Metzenbaum,
Democratic candidate for U. S.
Senate, chsrged today his opponent hss "consistently and
deliberately voted against the
farmers '
interests"
in
Congress.
Metzenbaum, wha wa.• to
meet today with officers of the
Ohio Farm Bureau, claimed
Republican Rubert Taft Jr.
voted against projects bills
appropriatln~
money for
agricultural research.
"He (Taft) hss praised far·
mers, been photographed with
them, climbed on tractors with
them. But when Mr. Taft hsd to
put his vote on the line to ap-

MUler to V"rsit
In Gallia, Meigs
After Recess
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Congressman Clarence Miller
wlll return to Ohio late this
week for visits In Meigs and
Gellis Counties shortly alter the
House of Representetlves
recesses.
The native Southeastern Ohio
leglslator announced his bosy
scbedule for the coming week, a
schedule which will take him
into a number a! lOth district
counties.
On Friday evenlng, October
16th, Congressman Miller will
be in Lancaater to attend the
Fairfield Cootnty Fair.
He will return to the
Fairgrounds oo Saturday afternoon before departing for
Vinton County where he will
attend the annual zaleski
P.T.A. Chill Supper and Car·
nlval. Later that evening Miller
will attend a Fish Fry in
McArthur sponsored by the
Vinton County Republican
Comrnitlee.
Monday evening, October 19,
the Congreasman will be in
Jackson to address the oat Hill
P.T.A.
On Tueaday afternoon, October 20, the Congreltrman will
be in Meigs County to tour lhe
work site a! the Leading Creek
Conservancy Dlotrlct at
Rutland. Tueaday evening
Miller will be in Galllpolis to
attend a rally being sponsored
by the GaiDa County Young
Republican Club.
On Wednesday, October 21,
the Congreasman will be in
Fairfield County to address the
luncheon meeting ~ the Lancaster Klwanla. '111at evening
Miller will travel to Athens
County to attend the Athens
County Republican Bean
Dinner at Coolville.

MEIGs THEATRE .
TOII)Ihl, f,Tut&amp;.

Oct. ·12·13
THE ONLY

GAME IN TOWN
(Tocllnlcolorl
Elizabeth Taylor

FURNITURE

than total de.....llllm will
sufflce," the LDF Mid.
1be court's new look at
schools is Its llr!ll major reenmlnallon In publlc educa·
Uoo. It attempted to plug some
loopholes In two VIrginia caaes
in 19M and 11168, bit for the moat
part It left enforcement of Its

judgment to lower courts tltltll
late 11169.
A waw of court actlma was
triggered in 11169 by the admlnlstrallon's attempt to ·slow
derregregatlm In 30 Mississippi

Tlwmpson Die&amp;

Werren Beatty
Cor!-:
Such t&amp; Lilt
Molly Moro·

Allor All

SltOW STAIITS 7 P.M.

propria te money to help farmers, he consistently hss voted
no," said Metzenbawn.
Tbe Cleveland businessmen,
in a speech Sunday night In
Akron, said the farmer hss been
WASHINGTON (UPI)
President Nboo, IUirq; ibe
"non-poUUeal" wrap1 off Ml
domeslle trips, turned to
Conneclleat today to lauacb a
CODt:entrated Wbtte HODif

drive almiag to help
RepubHCIDS wiD cODlrol of
the Senate In the Nov. 3
ele&lt;tlons.
N(IOD WBI

expected to

caugbt in a price squeeze that product baa consistently
"threatens his very existence dwindled in the face of Inand proves the !allure of ad- flation."
ministration anti - IoDation
Taft today called on
policy .' '
"His tu:es and operaUng Democratic leadership In
expenses have soared even Congresa to pass the adfaster than those for city minstration's sl1 pending anUresidents," he said. "Mean- crtme bills, a recurring theme
whlle, whst be gets for his In his campaign.

Robbery Was
Daring Drama

spend most of blo time
eampalgolag for GOP canNEW YOBK (UPI)-Sophla
didates dortq lire oellt llrree
Loren
was robbed of an
weeks. Aides said the pace
estimated
$650,000 in jewelry
would a~eelerate after
Congren adjourns Wed· Sunday in a holdup rivaling a
oeoday. Nlsoa ochedaled movie plot in 11&gt;1 daring and
appearances Ia Cbieago execution.
Mother love, brutality and
Thunday aad Friday to boost
terror-all
the ingredients of a
the e..dldacy of Sea. Ralph
succeealul
scenario-were
preT. Smith, oppooed by
Demoerat Adlai Steveasoo sent. Only it was all real and
Miss Loren wasn' acting.
m.
The glamorous !!allan actress
told pollee later she was
"shakins," after the gunmen
came ''Into my bedroom where
I was sleeping. They kepi
saying 'give me tbe big stull,
give me the big stuff."
Movie .mogul Joseph E.
Levine, who prnduced Miss
Loren's last plctW'e, relatr.d

Israel

Calling

For Help
By United Pr011 International
Israel is at the crossroads of
"desb"ucUon w deliverance"
and needs financial aid !rom
American Jews on "an un·
precedented. scale," Israeli
Foreign Mlnlsw Abba Eban
said Sunday.
Ehsn, in a speech at an
Israel bond drive dinner in
Washington, called for "Jewish
solidarity and belghtenlng inUmacy between Israel and the
United Stetes." He added that
"all previous guals are now
irrelevant to the situaUon and
w the needs of Israel" and it ·.
must hsve money to support Its
defense efforts.
While Eban was asking for
money, Premier Golda Meir
said in Jerusalem larael would
not resume the Middle East
peace talks unless Egypt and
the Soviet Unioo withdraw
missiles installed in the Suez
Canaicease.flrezone. However,
abe said Iarael was willing to
conUnue the cease.flre Itself.

MONTREAL I UP!) - Two
poUUcal hostaltl kldaaped
by the terrorl1l Quebec
Liberation Front were
reported allve today by lbe
Fl.Q, deoplte e~plratlon of
deadlines set for their
neeulloa. The oeparatlsl
organluH!ID apparently wu
respondlrl3 to a plea Sanday
atgbl from the Quebec
premier tbat the FLQ
aegotlate wilb the govemmeal rather lbaa klll the
hoatages.
The Fl.Q lorwarded a letter
to Radio Station CKLM from
British Trade Coii!IIIIAioner
Jameo Cross, kidnaped a
week ago. It was the llnl
communlcalloo from blm
since Friday.
In the letter, Cross !banked
pr&lt;~vlnelal Premier Robert
Bouru11 "for saving my IUe
aad thai 01 Mr. LaPorte."
The FLQ Saturday nlgbt
kidnaped Pierre LaPorte,
provlllctal mfnllter of labor
100 lmmlgralloo.

detailS of tbe druma played out
in the IIOOU'y Central Park hotel
suite of the Aacademy Award
winner and lnternallonal
celelrity.
Arolrdlng to Levine, Miss
Loren attempted to liulf tbe
IIUDffien by saying most of her
jeweb were In Italy, but a curt
"Whore's tbe hsby?" by one of
the~~UDIDen, ended the chsrade.
l..evlne said Miss Loren, 36, so
feared for the safety of ber
sleeping cbild, 22-month-old
Carlo "Ollpl" Ponti Jr., that
she gave them more than a half
million dollars of her own
unJnsured jewels, plus $1110,000
worth of gems on loan from Van
Cleef &amp; Arpels.
"Thank God nothing hsppened to my baby,'' the actre..
told reporters Sunday night
outside police headquarters
where she hsd gone to look at
mug shots of known jewel
robbers. !ile told pollee she
recognized none of the plcturea.
Miss Loren was not hurt but
one 11UDffian slugged Miss lnH
Bruscla, the actress' secretary,
lnfllttJII&amp; • head lnjury requirIng four sUtchea.
Ponti was called to Italy
Saturday for the funeral of his
fiO.year-old father. Miss Loren,
who hsd planned to join him
may now remain In New York tO
help pollee, she said.
Asmall portion of the loot was
recovered Sunday night by
some hitchhiking teen-agers in
West New York. N.J. 1be
recovered articles were valued
at about $10,000 and included
gold bracelets, rellglous medals, passporla and some
pivate papers.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Hi~fashion

for the
safety-pin

Timothy Fultz, Tom McGuffin,
Samuel Lutton, Mary Caldwell,
Barbara Oldeaker, Claude
Swann, Sammy Hammack,
Kathy Darst, all Pt. Pleasant;
Ronald White, Chesblre;
Sharon Cundiff, Charleston;
Donna Pinkston, Sissonvllle;
Dell Talbot, Portland, Ohio;
Mrs. Joseph Rayburn, Sr.,
Pompano Beach, Fla.; Mrs.
lvor Farrar, Cheshire; Joiul
Neal, CUlton; George Baker,
Letart; Orman Blackburn,
Parkersburg; Mrs. Roy Smith,
Apple Grove.
DISCHARGES - Lora Lee
Smith, Mrs. Ashley Bishop,
Dixie ErreU, Undo Henry,
Densll Kimhertlng, Jr., Patrick
Hlll, Mark Forshee, Mrs.
Samuel Wright and daughter,
Wllllam Pllsko, Glenn Logan,
Elmer Fife, Mrs. Dorothy
Roush, Sharon Cundiff.

OPEN HOUSE SET
Two Speclal Education Tttie
VI Projecta, the Jnstructtonal
Materials Center and the
Services for Handicapped
Children, will hold an Open
House Tuesday, Oct. 13, 5 to 8
p.m. Both projects are ll&gt;eated
In the Lakeview Compte.; 38
North McKinley, Bulldlng No. f
rooms 010 and 011, Athens. All
persons interested In Jll1ll!rams
for spec:tal education are Invited
to attend.
Mello GeWal H•pltal
SUNDAY ,ADMiliSIONS
None.
SUNDA1r DISCHARGES
Hollie Green.

CONTRAc:J'S RENEWED
Sutton Letart and Lebanon
AUXWARY TO MEI!T
townsiUPs heve renewed fire
The a..Wary of the Ra~ contracts with Racine VIllage
Fire Department will meet at for t11e Delli year, 11 was
7:30 p.m. Tulladay at ihe hsll. reported today. ·

irresponsibly are taking up and
spreading such falalflcatlons
play into the handa a1 the foes
~peace," It Mid.
''Tbe Savlel Union baa not
bull! and II not buJJdlng a
military ....., oo CUba and 111
not doing anything that would
conlradlct ihe understanding
reached between lire governmenta ~ the USSR and the
United Steletr In 1962,'' the
statement said.
1be year 11162 marked the
Cuban misaUe crlsls wben
Pr01ldent John F. Kennedy
ordered their removal In a
tense COIIIrontaUon that appeared at the time to be on the

verge of breaking into direct
conflict.
The Nlson admlnlstratlon
flral raised the submarine base
issue Sept. 25 at a regular
Defenae ~tment bt1eflng. A
l'entegoo spokesman said activity hsd been detected at
Clenfuegoa, on Cuba's BOIIthern
coast, that could be the start a!
a base for oervlng nuclear
Polaris-type submarines.
Later the same day a top
White Houae olflclal also
eEpreaaed serious concern
about the base-l! that was
whst was being bull!. The
official, who did not permll uae

a! his name In accounts by
reporters, said the United
Staletr would regard a base lor
misaile oubmartnea In CUba
"with the ulmoat oertowrnese."
1be Russian newspapera dismissed ihe allegaUons with In a
few days, a.....U. the United
States of trying to sour
relations with Moacow.
ConUnued references among
some U.S. officials to the CUban
acUvlty, together with U.S.
charg01 of Rusalan complicity
In EgypUan violations a! the
Middle East ceaiie-flre, apparenUy further Irritated Soviet
offlctal.t.
These were said to be portly

Police Cruiser Wanted
Mlddleporl Village CouncU
meeUng in regular aesalon
Monday nighl voted to advertise
at ooce for a new pollee cruiser.
Tbe action wu taken after
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
explained to councll that funds
can be made avallable lor the
purchase from tl1e aeneral fund
from a tranlfer money
category. Some money In the
fund hsd been designated to
help with -~ repairs, along
wilb money e:q&gt;ected from a
permtaslva auto taJ: whlclt was
to hsve gcme In effect In
January. However, that taJ:
laaue bola been stymied by a

relerendwn aetion coming up In
the November election.
Bide on the new pollee
cruiser, which must ba by
Middleport auto dealers, will be
accepted until Oct. 29.
Specifications for the new
vehicle were approved.
Councll agreed also to lnvesUgate the new Southe;utern
Councll of Government which
hss been given a federal grant
to help Improve ltical pollee
departments.
Councll dtscusoed a proposal
to buy a 15 to :lkcre plot ~
ground which adjoins the
Riverview Cemetery. 1be land

is being offered by the owner to
the town. Although money for
such a purchsse was not appropriated this year, It was
agreed that Mayor C. 0. Fisher
and Council President John
Zerkle sbould meet with the
cemetery trustees to determine
Interest in the plot as an ••tension to the Riverview
Cemetery, and possible
financing of the purchsse.
It was voted to advertise a
dump truck for sale as soon u a
new truck for uae by the
maintenance department hes
been received. The vUiage will
retain to reject all bids.

Cnuncllman David Ohlinger
dtscuased the need for a standard thread on the fire hydrants
of the town. Firemen now holve
to uae special adapters in order
to hook onto the hydrants.
Ohlinger wu advised that Chief
Tom Darst should gel together
with Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chsse and discuss the
nwnbar of chsng01 needed, the
cost and the source through
which the equipment needed
can be secured.
Chase reported that the
housing development In lower
Middleport by the Jemo Co.,
formerly Kissell Associates,
Inc., does require a con.
slderable amount of labor in

~~4!2f 'J'ROMAS , w~~n.Miflearl)'neal• ~ .. lhtatea.ln IIIPPGI'Iat ~.:"Side oi"P8rk

' WASIIINGTON (UPI) -J're&amp;.
ldl!lll Nlson Gtfldally is 111 ihe
uunpalgn trail.
The White Houae ended any
pretense at presltlenUal poUUcal aloofnea Monday wben It
tuiVelled Nllon'a plan for
marathon campaigning Saturday in four stales -Vermoot,
New Jersey, Pannaylvants and

Nlson Ia . t e d to be m lire
stump aptn In TeJ:U, Nevada,
andpooolblyT-.
Nlsm hu decided to make
the big puah lor Republlcan
collgl'881ional victories In inlenlive campaigning during the
nest two weeks. Preas Secretary Ronald 1•. Ziegler eald the
President may truch base In as

(---------------------------,
I
1\T
•
B . 1-t. I

Win

1
I

1,ews••• 1n ne1 s
117 l1lrfted p,_

&amp;ckar.ged Move Rebuffed

Ci.EYELAND (UPI) _Paul
Brown's return to the city
wbere he gained fame was not
trlumphsnt.
Brown's ClnclnnaU Bengala
lost, 31).%7, Sunday, to the
Cleveland Browns, the team be
coached to unparalleled succeas
in the old All-America Conference and the NaUonal Football
Lea11Ue, and that 'ftred him In
1963.
Behind quarterback Bill Nelsen, who returned from a knee
injury thai sidelined blm two
weeks to complete 17 of 28
passes for 226 yards anrl two
touchdowns, the Browns
avenged a 3144 prH08S011
defeat by ihe Bangals In
Cincinnati.
After the game ended, the
crowd of IM,520 showered
Brown with boOs, when he
walked off the . field wlthoul
slulklng holnds with Cleveland
coach Blanton CoWer. CoWer,
Brown's longllme usislant,
wu appointed to succeed him
No fuhionablo boby would dream of being witbotll
as coach by owner Art Modell,
who fired Brown.
a complete wardrobe of. Kayeer tighttl la "a
"Spleadld Game"
collection of colon ihat are poaltlvely paranteed to
But Brown aounded content
after ihe contest,
make Grandma coo with admiration. To pair
..11 wu a splendid game. we
with ohirto or d,....es. Adorable under ohort pants br
did our beat. 1 told my boys
they put out an all.out effort,''
lnotead of long onet. Of otretch nylon that growo with
ha said.
baby."SIItl for infante, ~oto aod ~irle.
"It looked u If It might have
been an .nlra-oquad game," ba
Elbetfejds First Fl.oor Hosiery Department li
mueed,
"We both know each olherl'
.headquar.ters for the compleht line 111 fine ,
atyl•, . we use the llllle ,
·Key~r hc!sler.v. Carmolon panty ~bse lind , _
numberlng ayatenJ, mueh of our
sl!lt~l~gs, , Agllon panty hose end stci~!ll~· · ,
system Ia Ur.e same,'' he
encl the «lglnaf Su,pp· ~se ppnty . hose' .nd
espWned.
· stockings. Stock..uptoday lor vour Fall :fe~!S!n . ·;
8rown said the fans booed
hosiery needs. · , .
. 1.. , . ,, .
him over a mlsunderstandlng.
He noted he and Collier had
shalten banda with. the oiher
coach after • game for years ·
.
'
and Blanton knows that.
. .. . . . . . ..,~~.,.....,~~-~~·-~

.

Elberfeld&amp;1lt

WASHINGTON - THE Br.NATE'S DEMOCRATIC
leadenrlllp bea rHufled a bacbtlga NiJIIII admlnlalrallon effort
to •lin final puaqe of a new farm blll befure Cbngrlltl begins Ita
Cllmpllgn - - receeslater Ibis weet.
Robert c. Byrd, Dw. Va., ~peatlnc for the leadtnlllp, told lhe lleDate Mooday no
acllon would bo lcheduled 111 tho meuure untll aflor the recesa
enda Nov. IS.
.'lbellDuae wuachedulad lo •ct 111 the fln!l bill~. tUJnc
a flnll wte 111 a COIII(liUIIlae verlllon of the meUUN pn&gt;ducecl
lut - k by a Ser.ate ·Houle conlerloree commlttee.lfouae farm
IDUI'Ilel Mid tha mtUII'e Wll apeded t0 wilt II(JII'Oval by I
camfortablr. IIUI'gin. And atmlnlalratLm ofllelals aaltl lbay
Waited tha Senile to acllhis weak tou • farmet'l eouJd IJo8ln
me)l•elll\llr 18'11 cnp plana.
.

s.n.

Quietstt Day in • · Month.
MIGON-U.8. TIIOI!PI m1,m JINarlh Vlelnmleaei!ICI
VIet CbnC llq So~ V'O•MD'I 11011hft COlli ln flallllng
l'f.PI'Ied toclq. Amlitleltl
llplllrllllly lbeUed frleDdiJ
....,.. In t h e - - by
lwo Alll«&lt;lnlopa •d
Wlllllllllna five.
'11le CIUihodlan MlllW7 O....Wnd llld II wu !be qllleiMI
day on Cam~ blllleltonla In a !lllldh.

""'*'

mJ•·'-.Iillllnt

Apew Recruiting in T~
DAI us - VICII: PRIIIIDINT 1P1R0 T. AGNEW
lchiWied 1 ..teaf!IIIIGilay·raJalnameellnp wllib wu11111 DalJu
btutltl.-lll today 1o . . lhllll to bolp ~ gain caalrol
f!llht U. S. Senalt In !be NoY. S111111'11 eJec!!ima
.
Apow'a Dallu 9lllt ellmnad alwHI)' lUpin Tua~ wltldl
-blmlllb NIIIOIIMofiUtmrllellrpllln theOincrtu ·fiml, WIIUim NbrliJbl, n-pt., Glori• u.Awim, N.D., Mid
EdiJard M. Kemedy, ~. 1ft IIIII allacted I liberal lobby
ltnolom • the Cbllldl fclr a u-1111 Wwld, aaylnc tblleroup
"widch ~ llermllll 1...-qe
memben of the U. S.
Senalt" waa fllplllllllie for MaGovn 'a electlm In lla.

o..,

'

GOP caridldatea Other IOUI'Ces
said the Preal~nt 11 conalderh
Ia to
l 23
=tereqiMll
appear n
8
N;.;. told reporters be
"definitely" will campaign in
California and Florida before
Nov. 3.
Ziegler said aU the Presldent'J pollUcallravelellpNIII!I
will be picked up by the
Republlcan NaUonal Commit-

tee

1 Although the Pre.lldent•o foray Into Connecllcut Monday
I was labeled "noopolltical"

liMutiGOal

the reason why Premier Alenl
I. Koaygln decided not to attend
the United NaUons 2llth anniveraary meeUng whlclt aWls
Wedneaday. This ruled out a
pooolble summll COI!ference
with Prelldent Nlson.
Dlplcmatlc obaenera In Moecow Interpreted Wasbinglon'a
repeated referencea to the
alleged mjuUe baae OJ pooolbly
being besed oo lroader policy
conoldersU0111, Including lire
Middlo East crlsis. Throughout,
the U.S. olllelals acknowledged
thai only dubloua and dated
lnformatloo was availlble to
lndlcate ml.salle sltea might br
being bulll.

Septi!mber Meter
Take at $1,282
Mldlllepori parklq meter
colleetloa• for September
totaled U,ZII. 75 Chief of
Pollee J, J. Cremeans
reported lo Middleport
Couri&lt;O Moaday algbL
Twealy-ulAe IIITOIIa made
lhlrlnc lire mouth fneladed
uvea for speedbal; three,
dlallrriJia&amp; lire peace; lbroe,
....aH arrd battery; two,
-tlorl; two, pel'lllfllfn&amp;
dopto rua '-• one each klr
rectlen operalloa, drtvln&amp; In
u

•

St.•
CouncU 8JIIIl'oved lire report

of Mayor Fisher lor September
showingH02.951nllnesandlees
and $110 in merchant pollee
collections for 8 total of $582.95.
Several lunda transfers were
made. Chief of Pollee J. J.
Cremeans said that the annual
ohaervance of trick or tr..t
night In the commwllty hss
been tentatively aet for Wedneaday, Oct. 28 between 7 and a
p.m. Plans are being made to
hs1•e the observan~ coincide
with other communiti01 of the
county.
11 ,.85 agreed to cancel the
tulcab Dee of Dana Covert

Zieuler said Nlson directed that
half the tab be paid from GOP
nse
'
coffers lest there be crtUclsm Covert has not complled with
He ·-••eel with GOP •
vlllage requirements of
..,.,.....
muin'·'-'"" 8 b office In th
seel&lt;en In motorcades and on
-~... ca
e
platforms In HarUord and town, officlala said.
Stamford, Conn.
Othera attending the meeting
Few enjoy campaignil1g more were Councllmen Chsrles Byer,
than Nixon, who llkea geWng Cllfford Stumbo and Raymond
out of his ''loolatlon booth" to Stewart.
press the llesb. He otanda up In
his llmouatne waving to the
crowd on both sides of the
IIE'COGNITION COMING
otreet, rr he Jumpo on the hood TOKYO ( UPIJ- Canada will
~ hta car, arma strelched to grant dlplomatlc recognition to
l!lo sty, u voters push and Communist China Tuesday,
ohovo to touch his hand.
major news orr,anizations In
Hit Coltll'lbul Day appearall- Japan said.
... In Barll'll'll and Stamford

THESE REPRESENTATIVES of the vocal music department of Meigllligll School are
rehearslag for their roles in lbe Big Bend MiMirel Alloctatlon'o "Fall Fling" to be otaged at
8: lOon Thursday, Oct. 22,andSalurday,Oct. :If, at thelchoolaudltorium. Making up a quartet
which will be making its llr!lllocal public _.-ance are front row, lrcJm the left, Carol
Hargraves and Anita Fultz, and back row, from lire left, Richard Dean and DuiUre Will. The
quartet will be featured oo "SchoolDays" and "Beautlfui Ohio." On the right is Wayne Well,
ba.. , who will be singing ''Old Man River" in the production. Seated at the organ Is Mrs.
Olrlatlne Guthrie, vocal music lnlllructor, who will be IICCOIIIpanying the lludents.

UDIIfe muner; wroq

way

tD

a one

way~

pelly lar&lt;et11, aboeat wlllMul

leave from the senl&lt;e, arrd
iaterferlaa wllh a pollee
tfftcer.

~~~.;;-

It's Politics/

set I

~~~r/~~:~~:u~~ w~ii==i:'. 30-2 7
acting President Anwar Sadat
at ita head. Mohmed Fayek,
Egyptian state minister for
foreign ulfalra, told a pollllcal
rally Sunday Sadat "com~
mltted himself before the
national assembly to the
principle of dlstrlbutlng
responsibility and collective
leadership."
Sadat Sunday said Egypt is
continuing preparations with
the support of the Soviet Union
for "the first electronic war In
htstory" agnlnst Israel. He
apparenUy referred to the
posaible confrontation of Soviet.
suppUed antlalrcraft missiles
and Israeli jet fightera, Dlllll of
them Phantoms supplled by the
Uhlted Statea.
Mohammed Hassaneln Helkal, Egyptian minlloter of
Mtional guidance and editor of
the aernlofflctal newspaper AI
Alrram, said today Egypt would
accept one extension of the flO.
day cease-fire that began Aug.
7 but not "estensloo after
estenslon."
"If we accept that, we are
achieving eJ:acUy what the
lsraella want.
They are aitUng nacUy
where they want, hsppy where
they are, thinking about consolldatlng their front line into
polltlcal Un01. This we are not
going to I!'Cfpl," Helltal seld
In an interview with the
lAndm Times.
·
Hill remarks came shorUy
after Egyptlen Foreign Minister Mahmoud Klad Mid In an
interview Egypt would conUnue
the cease-fire only II Israel
agreed to return to the U.N.spoosored peace talka.

MOSCOW (UPI)-The Soviet
government flfflclally denied
today It wu building a nuclear
oubma.rtne ba10 In Cuba and
lectlled the Nlson admlrdstralion of deUherately or irresponlibly spreading ''falsifications."
A government statement distrlbuted by TOM, the offlclal
Soviet news agency, said the
U.S. reports the Ilusllans were
engaged In bulldlng naval
lnstallltlons In CUba ''play Into
the hands only of thooe who are
In-ted in fanning the war
psychosis and compUcallng lire
ai!JtaUon In that region ~ the
world."
''l'lrole who deUberately or

Unsotved

Ohio highway patrol officers
are sun seeking clues into the
mysterious circumstances
aurrounding l.a stolen 1988
~er;;:rr ~:!n was 8: : : : :
:::; b~ . oon,
:,.. near
:U,tripe ~
Cheshire Twp
dg
·
Accordln u; off'
the to
g
tcers, au
by Harry Eddy • Rt. I,
• was reported stolen
:~~~~:~ W=t parking
A renU
thiev. drov
PPI. y,
es
e
the vehicle to the strip mining
area where they rolled it over
bankme t
an em
n·
It is nothekntherown If tl1e fire was
set or w
the car caught
!Ire as the result of the crash
·

=

ro:;.;
u!

SUIT FILED
A suit for money hss been
flled In Melg.s County Common
Pleas Court by the All State
Insurance Co., Columbua, In the
amount of $1,115.00 against
Karen K. Greene and Ulllan R.
Greene, New Haven, u a result
ol an accident In December 11168
al the lnteraectlon a! SR 7 and
COIDlty road 5.

Teacher Standards Raised
COLUMBUS (UPI) - 1be
state Board of Education has
adopted new teacher certlftcatton llandardat requiring more
thorough preporatioo, effective
Jan. 1,11172.
The action, taken at the
board's regular meeting Monday, followed a thre&amp;-year study
of the proposed standards,
whleh Martin W. Esaes, state
public Instruction superintendent, said will put Ohio ''In
lire vquard of a national trend
toward more ftexibility and
lnnovaUon in teacber training."
"The bnproved requirements

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

I
I
I

IJeat....

I
I
I

i Of the Bend
I

All Middleport fundll as of
Sept, 30 lotaled $181,llli1.87 u of
Sept. 30 accordln1 to lhe
monthly nporl of ClerkTl'euurer Gene Grate ltlbmllted to Mlddleport \'llla8e
C0tu1cU Monday nliJtt, .
Receipts, dilhuroementa and
the balance ill each fund u ol
WOMEN TO MEET
Sept. 30, I'U()eClllvely, Include:
All kay women repoeaenlllle
General, ~72UO, M,D'/.15,
Melp c-1)' ·clturchea are $S1,103M; cemetery, t!IUO,
ubd to-~ 11 '1\oinlty Church ,aM.tt, ..1.12 ovorcUawn;
w~ ill o'dOet 1.: Jan ·parking meter, no r•:tlpta,
lhe !II'GIIi'am ·for World Cam.· f8.7l, fii.U; !Ire equlPIJIIII~ no
munltr Day to be iltll.lat Heath receipts, $%0.87 • $ZIU7;
United Mtw.c' ciNr&lt;ib In awimmlng pool, $17UI, fU7,'4t,
Ml""'--' ......u Jtn. e.
ti70.JJ; planning CGIDI1IisslGO,
_,.... ,•• ._~ ov. e.
no rect~Pta. fllll,ll, •uts.7tl.

!

I

I By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

I
I

I

Mrs. Robert Musser of the New Uma Road area Is e~tendlng
alig thanllrr to the many resldenta who dld so many helpful things
for the (lyde Fitzpatrick famDy .
The lamlly's borne on Leading Qoeelt was heavil)' damaged
by !Ire recently and an appeal wu issued for fond, clothing and
even a house on their behall. Mrs. Musser who beaded the _.1
says that the reaponse was abooiutely overwhelming. So -thanks
a lot.

THERE IS AN EVENING adult recreaUon program underway at Southern lligll School in Racine. 1be evening program
fl'ool 7 to 9 each Monday evening la open not only to adults IN! to
junior and senior high ldlool students as wen a;Kl II for the enUre
'
district. There's only one requirement - you must _ , tennis
Street maintenance, $1,717.fl, shoes. John Blake II supervlaor of !be program.
$l,02U6, ~111.10; alate hlgbway, $130.72, no tllsburaementa,
THE HOME ECONOMICS deparltnlllt of Melp High School
$2,711;
aanltary sewer,
rmder the supervisloo ol Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter and Mra.
$3,7f8.28, $S,lll0.37, $23,11811.53;
Mllihd Bailey got busy lllmday oewing up same cosltr!Dlng for
water, $$,HUI, 16,118.33,
$211,118Uf; water me!BI'IIepoeit lhtl Big Bend MlnBirel Allloclatlon's fall muskallo ba stagad on
truata, $319, $111, f$,113.39; Thtnday, Oct. Z2, and Saturday, Oct. :If, at the new ldlool
water CGIIIIrttctlon, no receipts, IUdttorium.
1be borne eecrtmJica departmenl II only one of IIIMit'al
t197.81, 19,G110.15; aewer c:oodlpulmeall
at ·lhe new blgb achool wlllch have been IUinl an
olruetlon. no receipll, tnt.711,
ICtive
·
I
n
ciltTylns o!K projects for ihe ,._ wlllch Ia rolling
no dlaburaemonll, fll3,r12.7tl;
gmeral bor1d mtremen~ no 1n1o 1111 f11!a1 ~ o1 rehearsal. The ~~e~p Alblellt: 11oan111
receipts, no dlobaroements, 11101110r!JW tha Ji:OIWjon.
Incldlnllll7, !bole altetltllnc the,._ will havu co.._~
•11,1111.91.
atra memben on Sa!ta'daJ nliJtt, 11 laul Il'urrllsl "hcb"
Receipts for the r.1onth Bachtel, wllb tlllll'llladfrrrcatr In~. Mich., will be lrrivlng
tot&amp;led ,15,...21 eomp~re~ to home for the~ Dllbllbow and actGIIIp8D(ed by Ilia wife,
dtsbut'lementa or •t&amp;,ZIO.IO.
Callll Sl:oU Badltel, will be rel1earaed and req to 10 on. On
llllurdiJ -m, aloo _ and posoiNy 00 '!llla'llllly _ Kana
Grllllth, 1 wltran !If 011JW BJa 111nt1 111owo 11111 now aUilltlnC
""'· ..... Ultl ··11111 wiD.... bind
GO
, Kana will be 1!1 II led In
a broad new llllht Ulna tta ,._ ber auJiar llld ftCI1
rendllloo at "Ma,l.Got What 'l'ber've Dane 1o 117 Sq." You'll
X.. In the _new role. llbe Ian, ........ the ltu1llpoi
~--. btJw:over, IIIII wlll111t II to ~ nrt lloiU Olr·
'llldlael'a !'D'M II"D..I'It''lltlr Dlr!ll."

:~=a=:·:: Funds Total to 8161 952

IIGO fl'ool CI'01I'da eallmlted by
poiJ&lt;e at aboal 10,1110. .Bia
mol«clde wu llopped lbne
11mea, iMindlna twtc:e w11eo be
went onr to meet .11hln:lbat"
CGIIItruellm wortera. Once be
bGpped on a bulldOIII'.
."'
TheN ...... lillll domGn(CbiiUnued ... pap 10)

for certlficallon come at a time
when we are reaching a balatce
between laacher ltll1l1l¥ IIIII
demand In !lido," e- tall!.
Prospective t.lachers wUI
hsve to meet 1mproY0t credit
and academic requirements In
almost all areas.
Science and social lludles
teachers will have to study
those subjects for 110 semester
hours instead a! 46. Secondary
achool teaching candldal01 will
holve to take 21 bours In professional
metboda
and
psychology of learning instead
of only 17 hours.

m.

"""'-'* • ..
ua

' l

1\

Future le8c:hers will also undergo a longer and more intallve .w•m teem•11 ~

;ram.

AlletrJIIIICOeverytiv•filii, .
colleges iDvolved in teacher
training will be Vlslted by
evalualloo taams of college
admlnlatraton and (I'Ofeasora,
achool superintendents and
- . , and peraonnel from
the state Department of Educatioo.
In other acllon, lire Board:
-Recommended the appointment of Hllllnd J. Fjord, Onclnnatl, to ltiCCOed Joseph P .
Hurst on the state IJhrary
Board. Hurst, former publlsber
~ the New pbil•deJphin '11mea,
Ollll(lteted • 3l'f88r term on the
boerd 1nd realgned, effective

Oct. 15.
-Unanlmo11sly recommended enlargllllent of the
Plckaway Ross County Joint
Vocational School Boord.
-Aulhorlaed a trll..,...,th ntentrlon of the board's $1.5 mllllm contract East (lew.
land frr c:cnatructlon of Show
lligll School.
-Approved dtslolutlon of the
Monroe County joint vocallonal
IChool dtslrtct.
-Recommended that the
Ohio High School Athletic
Aaaoclatlon bold ennaal
meetings to upgrade high ldlool
coaching methods .

Sennons
On Tour
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College and the Ohio Arts
CouncU will present a year-long
soulheaotern Ohio lour of
''God's Trombonea, 11
a
collection ~ Nearo follt aormot11. The protluction II port at
• I'O"'II!UIIity (I'Ojecl, "Theatre
Arll." aimed at crealllle arrd
~ locallntertst "'· tile
thealra llw:out!h ~ ·and

ln~-1t.

Durllll

the llnrt - · .
will be held ba

perf~

Galupoila, ~tlllbul, Jac:Uon,
oak HIU, Wellalon and Rio
Gramle. Plane for lhe IICOIId
oerneater lnelude appuri~ Portamoulh Poillt
•
r,oy,
and Wmr\1' • al!t tllh

:::r•
~·

· •'Gotl'a

the dll'lt:IIGll 111 ·

... . '
Wider
·""'Nllllll, •

--'·

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