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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom ~roy, 0., Sept. 25, 1~72

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Reeds ville News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
recently honored Mr: and Mrs.
Carl Buckley with an anniversary dinner. Other guests
included . Mrs. Alice FouUy,
Mr. and Mrs. Rome Sandy,
Mrs. Lawrence Rose and Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Reed.
Mrs. Mamie Buckley and
Mrs. Vema Rose visited with
Mrs. Eunice Sprague at the
Arcadia Nursing Home at
CooiVtne.
Mrs. Nell Wilson and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel were recent
visitors of Mrs. Shellie Petty at
Christian Anchorage Nursing
Home at Marietta.
Mrs. Effie Hauber attended
the wedding of Anita Bond anq

Bad Everywhere

McGJs Corner
1

1

Has Red Flasher
Blll'CE IIIOSS1\1'

ll_1

W-IS III NGTOI\ 1NEAI

Bu o~ tld 1)\ ,:; uw! ' r o\\tl . S('ll t;enrgt• .\1d~ow m on the
road r~ riH't'! lull\· -..1~ lPt: ill's "t urned tlu• cur·ner '' in hi s

b~1tt k• lor II~·· J•lo._·:-rd, 111' 1\nt . 1 ' IH'l'h ol about a thit'd of
th e ~t~k, i'ltldu, l' ),. ·L,ll'l, d: . . rnal report s o n his
camp~ it!ll

So n~ t' Dt·rtl·H ''.th ',\J'" ~ 1 .t\~' vt·tl ;r llo1 k of pn\ ;ltl' polb
CU\Pnrr g ltldl '.' n:dr•, rriu;i] .J,rlt ~ :-~:1' l 'h·~ iJI' I' th • \'a st~lting
for Mdio' L'l n - \-\ (T:-, r· 1!' •tllll t' l'iL'i\'S tl wn Uw :14 -point

sprcnd shuwn 111 till' puhl1 c r :d lh rp &lt;111d 1/ ~JITi:-; pol ls.
All .nfilll..'!dral H(•pt tblt• ~'' '·,\Ji ll ;w, (''&gt;'&gt; \ 11 Sl lllii&lt;Jr priva t e
GOP pull ~ 1 L'JWI t ~ Ow .~ ; ! lll l' !!1111 ~~ 1'ht• n w rl!l!lS lo1 P rcsJdt'lll :"JiX1•JI fJ\l'l I\Jvi;d\•' rl l ;d \' :-ill li'LI Sfil llt.! lJ IJl party

kmh.•r:-:

!ti ld 11 l1:nd

A~ &lt;HI t'"Xi.ll llpl\'

!•"'·'·'

.~ rll&lt;lt •rtt

crati(' nuJJ ,i t•l''-' II\

Just Received! Big Shipment

d ~)li to :?:.~

Nubon~ •·x:J•··! · \J. 1;,1\('111 lo I:JI,f' Okl:lhoma. wh ich
h a~ _been :.;u HJL: l tt•ptihltl&lt;~ tl v•• ll !-i 1S i e n1l ~ 111 !'!'&lt; 'Pill pre si-

dcn t wl dcl't H111 ·

ti le

d S .~ t:H '[!P J"itl~.
111 ~~ tl'll•pho tH· sut·vev as 1
l •JJil:l lt ' lt! w·.l '-~'' ;J s t'uni s ll-

,\ J\!:1r.vl.111d 11 •'

111 , , ,,

1 .1

di~·.:l s l tT art•a bv

,t

(;on•rrr "

·

1 ti11J"- dl' :.;t ·r i iH•s

Mc -

lfw srm!lo r 's

l"a J IJ]J&lt;~J g n

·It'.~ IIH' d t~'H'I•·dt 1 rr1•:.'i', l\ t· L' \t·t

~l'i·n

Thl'n• an·
cle!'eclit)[l&lt;.; :Ill P\• r lht• jol.ut· \ld ,U\I' J'II \ (')'\' td. Con 1t•
hLllllC', .\11\f'l IL.I. 1~11·1 ;1 !f,t'llll" •:· Cl ~ l o"~l/1 , 11 s d lanH•Jll "
This !Jmno:I \l'leran !! h~t'l\!'r 1n ~ ; l, ~~·Ja .
'' M cGti\'L'l'IJ s.t, :-. 1;e••r ·1~1 l'i tH H' td l11s l&gt;c Jt1le gr ouncl
S1(J 1l':i 111 tht· Srti JIIJ . I I" II 1'. lrP';.; 111 lt'ITl hiL• shapl' . ll is
ca nrp;u gn lw r t• i 'i IIH \\oJ 1 tl.rrJ!! , .,.(' rvrr r un inlo
~~ J1 lt':l ... 1

1 Ill J \'1\tllt ·

'J'p:x:rs is t•llf rd tilt· lJ · ·~ •' .t 11''• lilt i\Jc.:GO\t'l ll proplc
con sr.c lt•nt_!y :11 biiV l'.tn lrt• ll tt ' l1 " l"h t·y L' Uli!Jl hupetu !ly on
a bll•11d OJ S11ppo l I rn Ill l ol;H·b ('Jiir·~ltlO'i . llfb&lt;Jn )Jbera Js.
l~tli on _!IH'll sp1 rJ"J t•d it .\ '' ' ):'' ' ''lis lc1hoJ' o r·~~~l ni za tiuns popu I Is l · lllll td~d lr1lk Ill E el. \ t'X.ts and l'ls eWill~n·
A fr _es li l'lH't:l\ I!Jt't't hn\\f'\+'J, d•ws Jttl{ prod tJCL' Si lppo J!
for tlw, lropp Mr . \iJ.~o.••ll 1.~ l ''Hl~!tkred to lw stron gly i n
the IPt1tl 1.'1w J·:,1 c.t Tv\clll~ whn ] I Jt !\ id l' tf ( ;ov . (;f'Or g0
J

\Vctlla cr wrt!J lliLJ di ut I h 11H r·d l •;lrl~ ::; uppurt 111 t ~JtiH ,
udtmll .v sN•m to hL' ll'&lt;liiJil g ,\ It Ni&gt;-.on\ wa). In th;H
ar.L'Q , thr n ty of BC&gt; DI III lunl f avor.-; llw Pn",idC' Ill Dlld li kes
Vrc e l' n· ~ Jdenl Agnrw c\t'll !Jette r.
Amo11 g tlt l' Hortht'l'll br ~· sr:l( (•&lt;;, unl\ Ca l rl orn 1~1 at the
mon~ ~:~n ~ ili~PCill"S I n oflrr i\old ;nvcrn rnuc li prom ise. By
pollulfllcatlorl and ut!Jt~ J obS('I \'L.IIiorJ. ~lr .\J ixon is a hpad
in tlw sJ:I IC' todn y But ('a!i/l;rnta is 11otrniouslv vola tile .
Mr . Nixrm' . .: ~ ~~rp n rl 1, th•! 1 tJ..ht 1(1 ht • t'.'&gt;Jlf&gt;Ct8 !! _~ : soft. and
o m • pr :KIIL{'d llh o.:t•nt•r ··.11 d. "I c',lll "' 't ' llow he cou ld lo!je
i l ..
AI th i!'J writ lll)..: I ,1n1 ·.ldl kwk (iH'I k u1~ on thr. other

bi g "&gt;l &lt;ll• 's Nv\I'JIIrt·v'.~. 'i t'111Ji t: &lt;Jsldl' r\-l ~s:..: ;rclll t sett !-i as
c hara l"IPI isli L_cdh J 1, nt •L"l ,t!J1.. 1 IIl ii ti d i\lr . .r-..l 1xo n lt~ adl/J g
C\'~' r)WIJ rl r. JJJ t· !JJdJn ~ til l' 11\ lr( r .~!&lt;Ill'~ llr1111phn·y wun in
19()8- ~&lt;.&gt; W ) ork P t' lll h\ I\ &lt;t l'J.J, \ l u.· ll q~:l /1 .
M~ q tl"\L'.I ~ ~~ l!~( · s r ~ \h ( ;tt \'PI"Il ~ ~S t il l nut well off in
pl:lces whl''.'' lw rJ'J~ht !11 IJ,·. "-IIl ii :1s ~1i1 J f1CS ()ta tg~Jini n g
but not .' Tt L:1u)dr. /0 111de I'\I:J11d l lf'!Tlblc J. J I~:JWalt t bad
divisrons 1 • \rr sn n J"- 11 1 ;\it f,.,., , n r ovll'r::t tt&gt;Jl. Washin gton
stnte 1supptJrt \\·l' ~'~ 1'1111::., 1
·
Mct ;O\ P/"!1 S t'l 1 ~ .'i11Illl'!llJ11~' In rgll l l'J' than &lt;ill thi s
around ll1at curn&lt;•r 1,,. "~'\ ~ It''"' t i P rn•d lw most hm ('
infrJ -rrd \'1:-1 ' ' 11 I C&lt;lll 't find 11

rr

I ~E'WS f&gt;APE R

£NH'l.PR IS[ A5Stl 1

v,~ tera us 1\h· mori&lt;.~l Uu ~ vital

More than

,\lJ~Il SS ION~

SATURDAY

0 . J. (: ~wl , Had t t~": IJ(:IVJd

-

Gri ncbtufl ,
Tay lor,

H&lt;lr int•: l.t' r•rri t·

150 Reds

San nt ·~·

Hutl:111d:

Sa lscl', lia('llll' Allan 1-\ unyt•J t.
Athens.

SATU!\D.\\' lJJS('J L\ Bt :f.'S
-

fl azt&gt;l

,\r.nvlf,•
Kn1 ~ht. Ha,kPII \V hil&lt;·.
h
McCian1, Uil\'!d (;r uJUsr.tJI.
Kar£!n Br olh E.'rs , i\l.tn~tln·t

Sn11 1h,

n,., ,,,

Mabd Wulfi:. ~lili'IOf'l{" I hint.
Al1£~n H un~ on. Lrl J"l'lt ~J l':u:kt·lt,

ARTIST IllES
CIN('JN NATI r!' Pl

&gt;

Harold N:1sh . a
known ili'IIS! \\ho

H;Jt

run. ill\

sr-I

up Lht·

Uni ven:illy

C ill ('lfll•&lt;~ll

of

cc ramtr.'i

dt P&lt;H'1JHl'J.l
years ago. dil'd SunL.i&lt;t,\

!J
1!t·

News.

••

U. S. Near Zero

Are Killed
S,\ ]t ;( &gt;\

1

Ul'll

Allied

Growth Of
Population
WASHJ NGTON I UPI ) - A

AI the airport the group was met by three officials of the North
Vietnamese Embassy in Peking and a Viet Cong diplomatic
representative.The group was taken to the Chien Men Hotel in
Peking, not far from the Chinese capital's famous Tien An Mien
Square.
All of the prisoners said they elated at being released, but
expressed regret that their fellow prisoners were still in cap.
tivity.

~ow YQu Know

Umted Si.&lt;tles may be nearing a
poi nt

of

•

The mechamcal hare usea in
greyh ound racing was first
tes ted in 1909 at a track in
Tucson, Ariz.

d (•l ilpust ;rl /J a Tu,
:1buu t l~O llllh,s nor!h(•&lt;.J s t of

fn~irlf · r bt1lllh{'~ \\ t.: rc credited
'•IIIII k1llrrH~ :l5 Co tumum st
II Ulljl:; ,111r) klllil" kii i J~ OU t fl\' C

their life times.

The Census Bureau came up
will1 an an ticipated birth rate
each woman,

pected childbearing and actual
births in previOus studies.

Agency officials said the 2. 1
lmth rc1tc eventually would

hw ;r nti .: ~tr·cr~ ft

claims as of July 1, 1972, the
beginning of the fiscal yea r. He
said wha t was owed the sta le
was up $1.6 million from the
same lime 111 1971. Ferguson
said the si.&lt;t te has more than
48,000 clai ms aga inst individual s and companies in

tilt' Cll !llp.
S n tll tl.ar~ · •;&lt;turces ~oi cl

Ohio and other states, an increase of ahout3,000 since June
30, 1971. Most of the claims,

I''" UHWhl Com-

accordin g to Ferguson , were

rrrum.st IJJ IIL'l tr;.mg lo move
l1t, ,,, llOnu n dll l ller~ p1cces
!11 f. tl.! h 1,n•1HHI Sunday in an

for delinquent sales taxes owed
the sl&lt;t te.

ITI!II't;ll

;111d

ji 11'-IIIHII'i (JIJI•ii)t•
1

\tttl'll• .111

ai\(•Jitpt to 'l llcll reoccupied

TEACHER KILLED
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!)
Mrs. Edith Swan, 72, a retired
~··u rtl' s;Hcl t!JP U.S. airmen
school teac her' was round
I ,H i ' l{h :trrn \\lll'd of the
stra ngled in her home
1', IJII!ililtJst
rno\1'
fr om
Saturday
and police said today
pr , Jill 1 .l ii!('II "P~.: dion a nd
th ey were baffled as to a
n'!lt·t 1liltif'1!1:dl1•n Wl' wpre
motive lot· slaying . Money was
h !o•J 1111'111
fpund in the woman's purse,
her home was not ransacked
and there were no signs o:
II&lt; t \ll:n 1~ 11 'If; SET
forced entry.
Quar w 'l t'l t "r h an d destroyed
.1 1 h•;t"-1 :-; 1 ~ orf tl!i' !J1~~ ~:uns. One

II

1

It,·"

I h1 H \Ill I
,tJ tit· lh tiii!Jt

llumecCJming

Chu rch
~~trH I ;I\
\\Tl 1t f'la1rc h a mi
\ur It\ ~i 1,r,1r! tn tile morning

" Hall of our tt·ouhiL c,

( irt tV{'

IIH) d•tllli'l ;1{ J~.;\Q !") ll1 ., a
uHHP

from wattl tng ou t ow11 w.1y

The other hall com"" f• o1"
be ing oliiOwr d to hnvt II '
Be rnq 1111 nh•1. ,, Ji,IJ
(wdll l r• n11 nrjc 1
t'L'I ·•q
po\\'Cr) ., r• •"'II "hr lo
1
to

k

1lh ,

lo

1r

.n1y m••'d yc J ''lo~
ha '-'C
! he
f RI r NL t
ONE S" " I lh~.- ron,. , ,
Cement Blot"- ( o ~dr lf
W E ;( AV [ Nl l·l'l- IT

almost

FOR YOU, WF ll G • 1•
FOR YOU OR HElf' YO t,
0

11: '..:t .. rl· 111 l··llll\\ ;1l 2 p. m .
h 11 ~[" ' lt· fllS:--.1• 11 Br·o thcrs .
! ~~I I I I . . '.\\I&lt; f)l\\{'

·--··- --.
MEIGS THEATRE

MARRIAGE LICENSES
David Keith Ga rdner, 20,
R1rtland, and Wanda Yvonne
Cardill o, t7. La ngsville:
Wllltmn llockford Williams, 21,
Pomeroy Rt. 4, and Terri L.ynn
Ash. t8. Minersv ille: Dennis
.James Carol , 22, Detroit,
Mtch., and Sandra Lee Zerkle,
21. Syraeusc.

I " IPqlll b. l'U('SdJy

O:. cJJ I l S 16

W.1l l D1sney 's

NAPO LEON &amp; SAMA NTHA

nechni color )
Mrrllncl Douglas
\II,' rll

FINO IT".

VC&gt;e r

Also

W.1 11 Dtsney's
IAY ilE iliES OFT HE

DEE P

OisrJcy CMioon: Bc.:~r l v

A !!. lv ~p

Adnl tss ion :
Adutrs l l .lO
C ~iidr en 75c
Show Slarls 7 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Lady Devon-The Mix Masters!
.\
0

News, Notes

ill'l\\'een lhe ages of 18 to 24
conducted in June that showed
they expected to have an
ave~·•ge of 2.3 children during

fr tdll

rlul'dlt·tlt

0

Housewares Department First Flilor

K uhn Takes

with 50,000 wives

re-s upply, f1eld
$17.3 MILLION DUE
l1'1'' rts s:dd tud(ly .
COLUMBUS t UPI ) - State
\ I·. S \i r Force Cl30 tnws- Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson
port pl ane tricd to parachute said today $11.3 million was
"-! ! pp!it'
!uda )
to one due the state in delinquent
JII'"l'i

Choose your flower bulbs now from the big
selection of tulips, hyacinths, crocus,
narcissus and many others.

BOB KUHN

du:::;wns were based on interv iews

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES: Mrs . Edward Hughart, Point Pleasant·
Vern Mullens. App le Grove:
Mrs. Okey Roush. Le tart ·
Ronald Bush, Lemi: Fulto~
Spears, Henderson: Mrs.
Cha rles Redman , Point
Pl casnnt; Way lan·d Jones
Haze l Boster, Mrs . Larry
Simpkins, Point Pleasan t ·
Okey Jordan , Henderson, and
Harold Lawson, Letart.

Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Johnson took his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson to
visit with his sister, Mrs.
Mamie Reuter and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Lovell Blake of
Charleston, W. Va. Mr. and
Mrs. Harley E. Johnson and
family returned on Sunday for
a short visit and to bring his
parents home.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp
and lamily visited Wednesday
evening with Mrs. Vira Barr of
Langsville. Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barr and children were also
visiting.
Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell on Monday .
Mrs. Paul Pierce and lamily
ol Mason are visiting Thursday
with Mrs . Geneva Shwnate and
Mrs . Larry Johnson and
ramily.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roush and
family of Logan were Sunday
visitors o[ Mrs. Helen Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Russell .

GSI Post
Robert W. Kuhn , pastor of
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church si nce June, 1969, has
accepted employment as a lull·
lime chaplain at the Gallipolis
State Institute .
A member o[ the Middleport.
Pomer oy Rotary Club, of
which he is treasurer, and
presiden t of the Rio Grande
Baphst Association, the Rev.
Mr. Kuhn will contin ue to serve
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church on a part·lime basis.
The Rev. Mr . Kuhn and his
wile, Bea, have four children ,
David, 23, se rvin g at the
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia ; Karla, 19, a freshman at Morehead State;
Janelle, 17, a senior al Meigs
High School where she is a
varsi ty che erleader , and
Robin, 15, a sophomore at
Meigs High. The family resides
on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy.
P~~w.~mw.::::!*-.:.s:~·

u:

SAIGON (UPI)- The U.S.
command diverted more than
than one-third or the 852 force
In Indochina from targets over
Laos and Vietnam and sent
them on one of the heaviest
raids yet over southeastern
Cambodia, military sources
said today.
The 30-plane strike force
Monday night and today
dumped more than two million
tons of bombs on Communist
base camps just across the
South Vietnamese border,
spokesmen said. U.S. military
authorities fear the Communists may renew their offensive
from the camps within the next
three weeks in a pre-U.S.
election effort.
Command spokesmen also
said Air Force jets demolished
a fuel storage dump outside
Hanoi Monday with laser.
guided bombs and leveled an
area the size of four city
blocks, sending black smoke
rising to 13,000 feet.
fn South Vietnam; government rangers today punched
through a Conununlst ring to
reach a besieged battalion that
had been isolated lor nine days
at the central coast district
town o!Ba To, military sources
said. But 12 miles east of Ba
To , UP! reporter Edward
Bassett said North Vietnamese
troops attacked three outposts
early today at Due Pbo, 300
miles north of Saigon .
F4 Phantom lighter-bomber
pilots struck the La Danh
petroleum storage area 46
miles north or the North
Vietnamese capital for the first
time since President Nixon
April 6 ordered a renewal of
bombing above the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating
the two Vietnams, the spokesmen said.
The spokesmen also said !wo
American planes were shot
down at opposite ends or South

..... ,.

Utdted Preas International
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT NIXON TODAY accelerates
his re-election effort by paying tribute to American Immigrants
- the ancestors of this year's key ethnic vote - and helping to
raise additional millions for his already well-Btocked campaign
coffers.
·
Beginning another of the brief campaign forays he In·
tersperses with his While House duties, Nixon dedicates the new
American Musewn ol Inunlgratlon near the Statue of Liberty In
New York harbor before addressing a $1,000 a plate dinner In
New York City tonight. Following the day in New York, Nixon
Dies to California Wednesday for a luncheon speech In San
Francisco and a dinner speech in Los Angeles. Both are $1,000 a
plate events.
By

By Mrs. Opha Otrutl
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Hines and sons ol
Belpre and attended the Band0-Rama at Marietta on
Saturday. The participating
Belpre High School Band look
first place in show in their class
and tied for second place in the
parade. David Hines, the elder
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hines
is a band member .
Jerrie Gre~ser of Pomeroy
and Marla Grueser have
returned after spending two
weeks at Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina.
Don Lambert recently was
discharged from service . He
arrived home on his birthday,
Sept. 15.
Ice cream and cake were
enjoyed by several having
birthdays the past week . They
were Robert Paulsen, Gene
Lamber, Don Lambert, Mrs.
Leota Smith, Charles Johnston,
Dick Sargent and Robert
Roush. Others attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Cullwns
and Ginger, Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Sargent, Mrs. Robert
Roush, Mrs. Charles Johnston
and Erica, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert, Charlotte, Sherry
and David, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Cullwns, Todd and Heather,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Midkiff,
Don . Cullums and Duane
Brickles.

Play the match game with these very pair-able pieces from Lady
Devon. You'll look like a winner however you wear them 1
Everything's made of polytron, a machine washable blend of
polyester and ~ntr~n nylon that's all fashion and absolutely no-fuss
eve~. T~e tops m s1zes 38 to 44. The skirt and pants in sizes 30 to 38.You II fmd a large and complete selection of sportswear In regular
and large sizes in our 2nd Floor Ready-to-Wear Department.
SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5:00P.M.
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY9:30T09:00P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POM

PARIS - HENRY A. KISSINGER, President Nixon's lop
foreign policy adviser, conferred privately with two North
Vietnamese diplomats today In an apparent new attempt to
lreak the stalemate over a VIetnam peace settlement.
The meeting was amounced first by ·the While House.
Neither a presidential spokesman nor Paris representatives of
the two sides would give any detalls, "In accordance with our
agreement with the other side," as While House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler putlt. It appeared Ukely that Kissinger and the
North VIetnamese negotiators, De Due Tho and Xuan Thuy,
agreed to discuss for the second lime in 11 days a CommiUI!st
statement Sept. 11 that as pari of a_Vietnam peace, ''neither a
Conunun!st regime nor a U. S. stooge regime'' should be imposed
·1n South VIetnam.
NORWOOD, OtnD - PICKEl' LINES AT THE General
Motors Corp. assembly plant here remained up today, bit the
llrlklng United Auto Worken were conceding the longest work
stopping In GM history was 1111 but over,
Atentative contract ap-eement wu hammered out Monday
in Detroit to end the strike that began April 8, Idling 10me 4,000
workers. Its details were not revealed pending ratification.

COWMBUS - 'l1IE PRBIIIDENT OF THE American
Dlr!tal AJIOCiatlon charge!~ lodl7 lhat many of the nation's.
(Continued 111 Jllll 10)

South Vietnamese strike into
Cambodia in 1970. The twl).
month campaign cleared the
Communists !rom the sanctua.
ries in the three provinces, bot
they reoccupied them this fall
and winter.
The -strikes Monday and
today hit just across the border
!rom South Vietnam's Tay
Ninh Province within 75 miles
of Saigon.

··

"A Hell ofa Deal"
Gartley said he would be "glad to get back to the United
States," adding, ''it's a hell of a deal."
All of the members of the group were willing to talk to
newsmen, but Chinese officials who met them at the airport
persistently pushed them ahead to try to gel them away from the
pursuing reporters.
The group which arranged their release is the Committee of
Uaison for U.S. Servicemen Detained in Vietnam.ln addition to
Dellinger, other members or the group are Mrs. Cora Weiss, the
Rev . William Sloane Coffin, and Prof. Richard F.alk.
The members of the group 511id they did not know their travel
schedule out or Peking yet. But it was believed they would leave
Wednesday morning on a Chinese civil airct·art flight to Irkutsk
in the Soviet Union where they would transfer to a Soviet Aeroflot
passenger plane which would lake them to Moscow.
If they take this route, they would be scheduled to arrive in
Moscow in late afternoon Wednesday, Moscow time.

Weather

.We~s-Mwon

Cooler tonight, likely. Low
tonight in the upper 50s to the
lower 60s. Variable cloudiness,
cooler Wednesday. Hig hs in the
mid 60s.

Area

PHONE 992-2156

ases

TEN CENTS

aste

Military sources said the
$5,000 "smart" bombs that hit
the La Danh facility were
directed against 60 partially
buried storage tanks each
containing 5,000 gallons or fuel.
Pilots said they could not make
a
complete
damage
assessment because heavy
smoke from " numerous"
seco ndary explosions
(Continued on Page 10)

Truck Purchased
Middleport Village Council,
acting upon the recommendation of the Board of
Public Affairs, accepted the
bid or Darryl Stumbo on a used
three-quarter ton, lour-speed,
1911 truck.

Purcha se price or the vehicle
is $2,500. Also bidding were
Goebel Ford and Rawlings and
Sons Motor Co. However, it
was reported th at neither
company met specilications.
Council gave a third reading

D()_uhle Safety
Record Scored
Ohio Valley Elec tric Corporation and its subsidiary
company, Indiana-Kentucky
Electric Corporation, scored a
double
salety
record
achievement over the past two
days.
As of Sunday noon, Sept. 24,
the company at its three major
locations recorded a total or
one million man-hours worked
without a disabling injury. AI
midnight Monday , September
25, OVEC's Kyger Creek Plant
near Gallipolis, Ohio, com·
pleted a lull calendar year
without a lost-time accident.
It was the fourth time in the
company's relatively young
history (full-scale operation in
1956) that the achievement of

one million man-hours of work
without a disabling injury had
been attained. The last time
was in February , 1970. Helping
to complete the record were
the 290 employees or the Kyger
Creek Plant, the 349 employees
at Clifty Creek Plant at
Madison, Ind ., and the 11
em ployees of the System
Headquarters Division near
Piketon, Ohio.
It was also the fourth lime in
the history of Kyger Creek
Plant that employees there
completed a lull-year or work
without a disabling injw-y .
of
the
Commenting
achieveme nt, Plant Manager
L. R. Ford, Jr., had this to say:
(Continued on Page 10)

Concrete Needed

. .

ews .• in Briefi

ROCK SPRINGS

Vietnam. One of the pilots was
known killed and the other
oflicially listed as missing in
action.
Command spokesmen said
the B52s on the Cambodian
mission hit base camps in
Kampong Cham, Prey Veng
and Svay Rieng Provincesjump-&lt;~!! points for attacks on
Saigon and Tay Ninh lor live
years before the joint U.S.·

tan

the same as anywhere.'\

enttne

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1972

••

11

•

at y

VOL XXIV NO. 114

zer o population

produce " population of fixed

1\ HII"I'

Plant Dutch Bulbs Now!

f~ru wth.

The agency sa id its con-

Elias, from Little Rock, Ark., was the onty one not accom·
vanied by a relative. Asked how he felt about being [reed, he
replied, "I'm elated, or course. But I'm thinking about the people
back there."
When asked how many prisoners were in his camp, Elias 1
answered, "I'm afraid that's something 1should not talk about."
Asked about his plans for the future, and particularly whether
he would remain in military service, Elias said, "I'll stay in the
Air Force. Why not ?"
Charles, who was accompanied by his wife Olga, appeared in a
more relaxed and happy mood than the others.
"I'm overwhelmed at being released. I don 't know what to
say," he said.
Charles' wife carried a box containing a chess set she had
purchased lor him during one of their tours around Hanoi
following the prisoners' release.
Charles said that when they walked through Hanoi's streets,
people were aware that they were American pilots who had been
engaged in bombing North Vietnam. But he said the reaction was

Devoted To The Interests O(The

Wolfpen

young wives showed today tile

stze. But they cautioned that
the projection was subject to
unknow n vana bles and was at
best of only limited reliability .

[

olprr1

the capital of China's Kwangsi Province which borders on North
Vietnam, before flying to Peking today.
Both at the airport and at their Peking hotel, Chinese officials
trled to prevent them from talking with newsmen. Dellinger did
not elaborate on why they had come to China.
There was speculation that the group switched to the China
route for fear that U.S. authorities in Vientiane would take the
prisoners there and ship them hack to the United States by
military aircraft, a move that might endanger the release of
other U.S. POWs held by North Vietnam .

For A Lovelier Spring

d uldbeanng expectations of

( 'llt ll nrlll11-.ts 111 l"t.'ll tnd coast

krJ!1•d

·!t':ll \"J!;Ji li11~h·.r ay 1 befor e
!hi' .qr p!'(t;rt · hinJ~ t t~im· :-:il'ason
r·uh () I! kn g•Jr&lt;'rnmcnt out-

was 16.

30,000

PEKING (UP!) - Three American prisoners of war released
by North Vietnam arrived in Peking today on their way home.
The leader of a U.S. antiwar group that flew to Hanoi to get the
trio said the Peking trip was "arranged" for them.
Originally the released POWs and theii- relatives and compa·
nio1111bad been expected to leave Hanoi and return to the Unib!d
States by way of Laos. But plans were suddenly changed and
their itinerary was switched to return them home via China and
Moscow. They are expected to arrive back in the United States
Thw-sday night.
David Dellinger, a member of the Chicago Seven and leader of
the antiwar group that went to Hanoi to gel the men, told
newsmen who asked why they had come to China, "It wasn't in
our hands. Someone arranged it."
The three men, released !rom prison eight days ago, were Air
Force Maj. Edward K. Elias, Navy Lt. Markham L. Gartley and
Navy Lt. Norris A. Charles. Gartley's mother and Charles' wife
were members of the group traveling with the POWs.
The group left Hanoi Monday and stayed overnight in Nanning,

Cen.-.us Bw·cau survey of the

t!J;ll\ 50

fdii"P::i

in -Briefs

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Wednesday through Friday:
Fair Wednesday and
Thursday wlth a chance of
showers Friday. Slow
warming with highs in the
lower 70s and lows In the
upper 40s and lower 50s.

makin g adjustments for dif-

S:11grrn, btrt \1 i11d::; rWT!ed th e
r·;rq'.o IJt'llind Communi::; t lines,
llif' r c·porls &gt;;aid But allied

W llli : un.'-'

FIREMEN CALLED
The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called Saturday at 8 p. m.
to the corner of Page and Park
Sts. , where lightning had
IConttnued from Page I )
proposals already have been rejected several times by both struck a power pole and se t a
houses or Congress. But he said everyone who has studied the fuse box on fire. Sunday at 4:34
a. m. the E-R squad was called
national debt situation knows taxes must go up.
·'The question is whether it will be raised by tax reform . lo 550 South Third St. for Mrs.
- taxing those Americans who through loopholes escape A. B. Ray who was taken to
pa ying lheir [air sha re of taxes, or by raising the taxes or the Holzer Medical Center .
already overburdened average taxpayer, " Nelson said. "The
administration by promising no tax increase is playing pollical
The berries of the mistle·
games with the American people."
toe are poisonous to man.

of 2. 1 children for

IIJ'h!u ~~ ;md bP~:1fl &lt;I push to

Stanley,
l'tll llt'l'lli:
RH.:Iia rd Hathbur n. '\1id
die po r t: Dr•rothy i\ rr1iliJJI\
Midd [(•pfrrl , .Jul11t '\111• 11'•'
Pum e r u~, 1 (rrr• lta Br&gt; l'. l t•;..
Neu- II H\1..' 11: ]);ut;t \lr r'·111r
Long Bottom
SUNIJJ\ \' DISCH AHt ;J·.S
Jo('

SOUTIIERN JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS are l.r, Rhonda West, Megan Brown
and Debbie Roush. Absent was Ronda Ash.

ferem:es noted between ex-

Fields, Hex Arg&lt;tbn te.
SU"'O,\Y MJMlSSIO:\.&lt;;

1\lar.\·

American POWs in PekiJtg; Next Stop Moscow

J•f11 1 IJ:'tll•

Sai d i.Hl ]11 1,\ :1 plllll l' l.t:J
"T I Ii ~ &lt;.. I,JIP .1/lt•li ld h1· d· r·,;nl·d

Goorgid

DUTCH FLOWER BULBS

\ • 1 .t ]'"ll spl e ,td uJ (jO tu J5 111 fa\ m· of

J\.Jr 1\ilXOil h..t'i lU ),,,pill ,j,,\~11
\Vhp n ~·ou 11111 lh l' l" :, 111,1p
lw vc JUSt dnnP \"Oil vi'L ,,, 11 1t"

in g 11s

David Hall at lbe Eden Church.
Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Hayman
visited with Mr. and MrsWilliam Gardner of DUncan
.Falls, Sunday. Mrs. aardner
w~ the former Cecil Brain of
the Dultts Run area.
Mr. and Mrs. Llnloul
John90nandMr.andMrs.J. D.
Hayman attended a hymn sing
at the Eagle Ridge Church
Saturday evening when the
Duncan Family of Tampa,
Fla., were featured. They are
fonnerly from Eagle Ridge.
IN TRAINING
Alpha Smith Is a patient at
Connie Radford, Jill Harris
the St. Joseph Hospital,
and
Connie Grueser left today
Parkersburg.
for nurses training at Holzer
Mrs. Bess Larklrui spent
Sunday · with her daughb!r, Medical Center.

](I)!, J,r'\ 1

1!1

th ~~ hd \l' ;, pt t•lt.\

pri\',lt L' ]'oil lllt-r~._·

l/1(· 111
.u. 11 ti ll' \k~;,J\L'Ill lorll':i think
't·•ld -.;h(l t ·•t loW~l. a n.:'S J)I)Ilc:iib lc
!\IJ \jxo n !Padtng t h~.: Demu-

Mrl. Doril ..... flll'helter.
Mr. IIICI Mn. John Riebel
and chlldren of Pomeroy R. D.,
were recent vl.lllon of Mr, and
Mrs. D. C. Riebel. A deccraled
blrthdaycakewaspresentedto
Mrs. D. c. Riebel by the John
Riebel family. Other guests
Included Mr. lind Mrs. Wayne
Prince of I.Mg Bottom.
!\ln. BW Orr Is a patient at
_St. Joseph Hospital.
-Mn. Lyle Balderson

Anyone for donating a yard'
A yard or concrete, that is.
The Middleport Fire Dept.
is appealing for concrete to be
used in a service pad area at
the rear of its new fire
department headquarters and
a driveway from the rear of the
building onto Fourth Ave.
Bob Byer, lire chief, said
Monday 35 yards of concrete
are needed to complete the
area. The concrete was
stri cken from the original
plans due to costs. Volunteer

labor now will do the work
involved in making the service
pad area and driveway.
Total cost of a yard or concrete will be $20. With 35 yards
needed, the concrete area will
run $700, using volunteer labor.
Everyone wishing to con·
tribute a yard, or even a part of
a yard of concrete, is asked to
contact Byer, Pete Kloes or
telephone their intentions to
Middleport Village Hall. The
liremen have set a 3iklay goal
lor raising the contributions.

.
and accepted a new ordinance
which sets the rate to be
charged by the village in
hauling away refuse lor
residents other than garbage.
Under no condition will gar·
bage be accepted, -officials
have stated. The legislation
was passed in order to provide
revenue for the village hauling
away refuse not acceptable by
garbage collectors, it was
reported .
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase said a number of
signs denoting speed, children
playing and other subjects
have arrived and are ready for
pla cement. Chase was
requested to be advised by
police when any emergency
occurs to any utility . He
pointed out that damages to
power lines, particularly by
fire, can damage village
pumps, motors and lilt
stations. It was agreed that
police will notily him or any
incidents which might result in
any damages to such equip·
ment.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor John Zerkle, Chiel of
Police J . J. Cremeans , Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate and
council members, Mrs. Roger
Mor ga n, David Ohlinger,
Lawrence Stewart, Fred
Hoffman , William Walters and
Dick Vaughan. Council moved
into executive
session
lollowing a short session.

, 'II
MEIGS DELEGATES - Southern High School at Racine was among more than teo tM:hoola
in Dhio participating in the 7th amual Youth and Science Conference held at Mershon
Auditoriwn on The Ohio Stale University campus, Saturday, September 23. Delegates !rom
Meigs County attending were, L to R, Elisa McMWan, Connie Roush, Vickie Johnston and
Carla Salser, math teacher. Host for the group was Thereon Johnson or the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, a member of the Ohio Agrlcultural Council from Pomeroy. The
more than 1500 youths focused attention on new developments and heard several distinguished
scientists speak on career opportunities. Sponsors of the conference were the College of
Agriculture and Home Economics, The Ohio State University, and the Ohio Agricultural
Council.

Talk Range Wide

PEKING (UP! ) - Chinese
Premier Chou En-lai and ~::~:~:::::::::::o:::;:::::::;.-*=x:::.~:m!:~~i:::!~:£:~:;.~:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::
I
Japanese Prime Minister ~
Kakuei Tanaka held wideranging discussions today in
their efforts to bring about
TOKYO (UPI) - The Nationalist Chinese
normalization
of SinoNavy today seized a Japanese fishing boat in
Japanese relations.
the South China sea, the Maritime Safety
The talks took place on the
second day of Tanaka's stay in
Agency reported. The seizure occurred on the
Peking, a visit which has 90
second day of Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei
impressed the Japanese leader
Tanaka's visit to Peking to normalize relations
that he wrote a poem on his ~;; with China.
impressions or China.
~
The Maritime Safety Agency said the ~
Japanese sources said that
the second round or talks be- ,. Japanese vessel had a crew of t6. It gave no i*
tween Tanaka and Chou ~- further details except to identify the vessel as ~
resulted in a "very !rank ex· ~ the 47-ton Hocho Maru, a tuna fishing boat.
AT LANCERS
~
change of views."
A football schedule
The sources said the two ;.;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::-.:::::::::::::::~:i!!::&amp;3!!:!:!:!:~::::::~~::!:&amp;:~~~:;::;;;;:::::::::..-.::::
correcllon announced
Monday for Eastern Higb
leaders discussed "very
School affects tbe away·
seriously" each of the Japanese summit conference Japan and Taiwan and a forgame Ibis coming Friday,
' 'proble!Dlt" which face China is ''proceeding smoothly" in mal declaration of an end to the
The schedule now calls for
and Japan In their relations, the spirit of reaching war between China and Japan.
Eastern lo play at Federal
but the sources declined to agreement on issues of com·
Chou bas insisted that Japan
Hocking, not at Cadiz.
specify what the problems are. mon Interest.
could not maintain diplomatic
The Cadiz game is moved
The sources said the mood of
Tanaka arrived In Peking ties with Taiwan once China
baek to Oct. 14.
the talks remained " very Monday, the first Japanese and Japan agreed to normalize
warm and cordial," despite the premier in office to visit China. relations.
President Chiang Kai-llhek's
wide·ranging topics which · He told his Chinese hosts that
covered bilateral and in· Japanese aggression against Nationalist Chinese governlemational relations.
China before and during World ment has threatened to take
Tanaka was 90 elated by the War n was ''regrettable" and "all necessary actions"
cordiality of his first meeting a cause for deep self. against Japan if the Tokyo
off the ground. He staled that with Chou that he wrote a poem examination and reHection government abrogated the 1952
Kermit Walton and Earl Ingels expressing his sentiments . which he himself was un. peace treaty it signed with the
Taiwan regime.
had agreed to help with the Tanaka disclosed the poem dergoing.
during
an
early
morning
Both
Chou
and
Tanaka
ex·
Tanaka
and
FQreign
promotion.
Also discussed was the lack meeting with intimate friends pressed optimistic views on the Minister Masayoshi Ohira said
of interest shown in chamber among the Japanese press normalization of relations before they left for Peking that
between Peking and Tokyo,- but the ties between Tokyo and
meeting attendance. It was corps.
Olief
Cabinet
Seer&amp;.
they
were stm confronted with Taipei would be severed if
Japan
's
suggested that perhaps a
tary
Susumu
Nikaido
told
such
key issues as the existing China and Japan establlslted
program could be offered at
meetings along with guest newsmen today the Sino· dlplcmatic relatiODB between ' diplomatic relations.
speakers to create more in·
teres!.
Kerr noted that Don Pearch
who was elected as one of the
new directors for a two year
Prellident Nllun today began Republican nomination for retenn had declined to accept. By United Pren Inlernatloul
With
one
public
opinion
poll
hla
~nd campaign trip In election and Uke the other two
Named to flU the post was
:showing
Sen.
George
S.
Me·
five days to a populous state- was IICheduled to be brief, the
Dennis Keney.
Attending were Kerr, Henry Govern gaining on President New York. The President went White House said.
Cleland, Richard Chambers, C. Nixon, the Democratic pres- to Texas last Friday . He
Despite the swings to New
E. Blakeslee, Fred Crow, Bob Idential candidate ·campaigned planned to stump through York and later California, the
White House said, the
Jacobs, Jack Carsey, Dennis with Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey CaUfornia Wednesday,
through defense-oriented West
Today's trip was only Prellident would not be among
Keney and Tom Cassell.
Coast stales.
Nlmn'alhlrd IIDce be Wlll the
(Continued on page 10)

!! Fishing Boat Seized

I

ij

.

Otamber Election Expected
Actions to elect a president,
hire a secretary and plan the
annual Chrislmas promotion
were taken by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Monday at noon in the Meigs
Inn.
Jack Kerr, president, said he
had round it difficult to set up a
meeting with directors who
elect the president. However,
Monday the directors were
contacted and a meeting was to
be held today at noon at the
Meigs Inn to elect a new
president and discuss hiring a
secretary for the chamber
office located on the ground
floor of the court house.
Asecretary was provided - ~
chamber through funds
_allocated through ~ Com.
munlty Action Program
(CAP). However, the federal

runds for the program are
exhausted, forcing the closing
' office .
or the Chamber
Chamber members are
considering hiring a secretary
and paying her a salary with
chamber funds. A secretary is
" very · valuable" to the
chamber, members said .
Duties oullined for the
secretary were collecting
membership from local
merchants and assisting with
the
annual
Christmas
promotion.
Richard Chambers reported
that there was approximately
$1100 in the Regatta fund. Kerr
is to contact Marge Hoffner to
see what money is .in the
chamber account.
Kerr noted that it was time to
.get the Christmas promotion

Polls also Arguing

�•- I he Dally Sentinel, Mtddleporl·Pomeroy, o ,Sept 26,1972

EDITORIALS
Need Soine New
Values, He Says
Herman Kahn f~rst ga med fame - some would say
notortety - by thmkmg about the unthmkable" - anal
yzmg the posstbtllhes and consequences of a thermo
nuclear war
As d1rector of the Hudson lnst1tute a preshg1ous 'th10k
tank' m New York Kahn JS still th1~k10g unth10kable or
at least unfashwn able thoughts He expressed some of
them m an 10terv1ew m the September Intellectual D1gest
Asked about the mood of hopelessness that allegedly 10
feels Americans today, Kahn says that the mood IS not as
deep as •t looks to the upper m1ddle class m the ctty-the
mtellectuals and reformers and po10ty headed professors
among whom Kahn mcludes h•mself
"The upper m1ddle class the group runn10g the media
educators city planners some students - all are bas1cal
ly out of touch w1th reality It's a very spect!Jc Illness of
a ve~y spec11Jc group less than 10 per cent of the
comt!fy '
The pendulum has swung too far m this country thmks
Kahn We ve abandoned too many tradJtJOnal values and
we haven t replaced them With satiSfactory new values
The average Amencan ' he says, ' 1s extremely con
cerned about the future of the countr) He also feels that
somethmg IS gomg wrong but what's gomg wrong IS the
upper m1ddle class
"The average Amencan 1s ask10g why the Harvard
graduate \\ants lo burn down th e school Why doesn t
anybody understand that bemg agamst busmg does not
mean bemg agamst Negroes' Why don't newspapers and
televiSIOn and mov1es reflect the world as 11 "'
Ameucans a1 e bothered by a credJbthty gap Not the
gap between the hippies and the President, not the gap
between Sptro Agnew and the press but between the
average Amencan and the prestige newspapers and the
docum entary on telev•swn That s where the gap IS "
Kahn s thou ghts could be expanded on mdef1mtely As
he savs, the average Amencan JS more concerned than
hopeless but he s also fed up
In a na!Jon which has made tremendous stndes m the
last 10 years 10 1eve1s10g dJScnm•na!Jon he's fed up wtth
be10g told he s a sunple raciSt
In a nation which has spent ten s of b1lhons of dollars
and g•ven the hves of tens of thousands of 1ts sons 10 a
no end war that the bnght boys sold m the name of free
dom he s fed up w1lh be10g told that Americans are
devoted to •mpenahsm fasciSm and war prof•teermg
He's fed up With bemg told that h1s ancestors stole the
countr) from Its ong10al owners and then proceeded to
rape 1l and that he IS thoughtlessly contmumg the process
He's fed up w1th be10g afraid to walk the decaymg ctly
streets at mght and then bemg told that urban blight and
cnme are hts fault and that he doesn't care about the
poor and the diSadvantaged
He's fed up wtth seemg h1s hard-earned money wasted
by spendthnft polltJctans on dub1ous programs whde the
value of the dollar erodes and then bemg told that the
country has gotten off the track because of h1s false sys
tern va lues
Above all, as a member of a soc1ety wh1ch has pro
v1ded more opportumttes and more good thmgs for more
human be10gs m history he s fed up w1th bemg told he's
had 11 as a people
There's a counter reformahon, a ' counter-countercult
ure' bmldmg says Kahn
' It's the b1ggest thmg gomg m Amenca today and 1t
wdl e1ther dommate or heavily mfluence the next decade
or two '

WIN AT BRIDGE

Generation Rap

&amp; TH/1168

BERRY'S WORLD

By Helen and Sue Bottel
ENOORE FOR "MO'l'lfER THE NIJT"
Dear Helen and Sue
Long before you started "GeneraUon Rap" - about six
years ago, I believe - a letter appeared in "Helen Help Us" that
I've "treasured" to tatters
~
You see, my children cut 1t out and placed it on my dinner
plate They told me 11 reminded them of me I felt so complimented that l have camed the cbppmg ever smce In my
wallet, but now It Is in such bad shape l can no looger read It
Can you please reprmt 1t, not only for me, but for many
fa mUtes who have successfully bridged the genera lion gap (I'm
sending the shreds to give you an idea which letter I mean ) MOTHER NUT
Dear Mother Nut
My mother told me about the strange coinCidences that make
column writers feel somebody up there Is pulllng strings Now I
know what she means 1
CQuple weeks ago we received this letter
Dear Rap Remember the column about the ''nutty mother"
who sometimes cleans house at mldnijht and Is a "collector of
useless information" but an all-aroWld terrific person' It was
written by her daughter a long time ago, and I wonder if you
could dig 1t out and reprint 1t• Now that I'm marr1ed, I want to be
that kind of mother, too - EXPEcriNG
"Dig out'" It would take an act of proVIdence to find such a
letter among the thousands In Morn's back files'
And whatayaknow• You were the act of provtdence ''Mrs
1
Nut '' Thanks for sending the shreds We put them together and
here tl IS - SUE

+++
+++

Dear Helen
My mother IS a nut I wouldn 'I have her any other way
Uvmgmour house Is like livmg With AunUe Marne And boy, am
l thankful that she IS the way she JS Instead of like a few other
mothers I know
Our house IS never what you'd call sp1c and span Not dirty
but not one to Uppy~oe m either bved In, sometimes on ~
cluttered s1de Mom ISJI't the type to turn down a tnp or a good
talk session just because she has to get the bouse cleaned up
Sometimes she's cleaning at midnight Sometimes, when we
want to talk, she hands us a broom or dust cloth and we all work
Without realizing tt - chattermg away because she's fun to be
aroWld and makes us feel unportant
She hates schedules Sa)'ll they slow you down and make you

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Jn
-

The new television season Is in full swing, and although! plan
to continue occasional reviews of the new shows, some passmg
comments might be in order
CBS deserves a slap oo the wrist for continumg to present Its
most adult P'OgrtllllB in time slots when the klddles are still up
Last year,lt did 1t with All m the Family That haSII't changed,
still on at 8 on Saturdays, and they've added Maude, at 8 on
Tuesday, and M·A.s.H at 8 on Sunday. Ill there any real reason
why these jrOgralllB couldn't be scheduled for 9·30, or later
Adults deserve some adult entertainment, without waiting up for
Johnny Carson or Dick Cavett, so the networks should show
restraint m planning their schedules

l

+++
The season opener on Mannix continued to oonvlDCe me that
this Is the best-photographed program on televlston

+++
Ponderosa, the program whtch Is another name for rei'WIS of
Bonanaza, Is listed at four spots in the local edition of TV Gwde
(We get two of those Stations on cable ) All four stations are
showing different episodes each night, but all of them have the
program scheduled at 5 p m It Isn't terrtbly Important, but we
wonder why •

+++

"Don't worry, dear, I bought If w1th my own money-lund
ol a (ucuse the exptess•onl 'secret lund'."

RAY CROMLEY

Did U.S. Miss
Early China Tie?

Wondermg where all the new shows on Public Broadcasting
System are' Be patient- they're cormng soon Because of a
shortage of funds, PBS JS makmg Its d1p Into the new season
rather late, and even such proven hits as "Sesame Street" and
"The Electric Company" will continue w1th reruns for several
weeks yet Actually, for progralllB like this, reruns are almost as
productive as new material After all, you're only five years old
once -and that little one In diapers would learn just as much
from Erme, Bert, Big Bird, et al., in 1975 from watching the 1970
"Sesame Street" senes as he would from something brand new, r
would aS8Wlle

+++
With all the pracllce they got in one..season activities, the
network crews covermg the opening weekend of play .for-keeps
NFL football were bogged down with techmcal problelllB Color
levels came and went, mstant-replay machines were malfunc·
tionlng, and post-game Interviews had the appearance of bemg
hastily-rigged
May he they'll get all the bugs out by the Super Bowl

By RAY CROMLEY

WASHINGTON (NEA)
As hJStonan Barbara Tuchman reports 10 the October
ISsue of Fore1gn AffairS on Jan 9, 1945 I transmttted by
Wire a request by Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Chou En la1
+++
of
Commumst
Chma
that
they
be
mv1ted
to
Washmgton
for
'~rigid "
WCHS-TV m Charleston deserves a pat on the back for
exploratory talks With President Franklm D Roosevelt
persuading
John Hutchinson, Democratic mayor of Charleston,,
Other day, I found a blown-up balloon m the freezer you see
I took th1s actwn as thP actmg commanding off1cer of
to appear on Its phone-in "Contact" program - m effect, an eyeshe IS a "II
co ector of worthless information" and she discovered' the Umted States wartime m1htary (and dlplomabc) m1s
SJon
to
Commumst
Chma
{the
US
Army
Observer
Sec
~ye, ear~o-ear encounter With the public - which ISII't too
thiS way, that a balloon never "loses tis wann" even when 1ce
lion,
code
name
OperatiOn
Dme
)
stahoned
at
Mao's
happy
with the mayor
forms on the outside
m1lltary political headquarters m the caves of Yenan m
Hutchinson, troubled by a garbage workers strtke which has
She is forever "discovering" little thmgs like thiS, and can the north of Chma
aroused deep public feelings m both directions, and has washed
always talk about somethmg mterestmg, but she listens even
It was already clear by that t1me, as the result of our
out his longtime friendship with gubernatorial cand1date Jay
Intelligence
reports
that
once
the
war
wtth
Japan
was
better All the kids come to our house because she let.'! them be
over
Mao
s
forces
would
control
more
than
half
of
Chma
Rockefeller, could have declined easily But he didn 't and both
themselves and knows when to disappear She JSn't like some
and
be
m
a
pos1t10n
to
take
over
wtthm
a
few
years
the
mayor and the station deserve commendation
mothers who have to be the center of the party- she lets us come
Observations
on
both
Sides
of
the
lines
10
Chma
had
to HER
+++
made 1t obv1ous that m m1lltary strength and m local poh
ON
TiiE
TV
DIAL
The
use
of light and colors to dramatize
She has a zany sense of humor and a lot of pahence She even heal orgamzatlon the Chmese Commumsts were cons1d
class•cal music makes an mterestlng experunent on "Vtdeo
turns family ftghts mto funmes, and we end up laughing at erably stronger than the Nationalist forces of Genera·
llss1mo Ch1ang Kai·shek and that Mao's men had bwlt up
VarJation," 8 30, WMUirTV Marshall football highlights at
ourselves
a
maJor
underground,
1mposs1ble
for
Ch•ang
to
dislodge
9
30, same station (Marshall and West Vlrguua Umvers1ty are
Morn ts not perfect, and adnu!.'! 11 She gets herself mto some m those parts of Chma occup1ed by Japanese troops Th1~
exchangmgfootball films for showmg thiS fall - a stgn of thaw m
hilartous messes wtth her odd arJthmetJc and her love of occup1ed terr•tory co,tamed most prmc1pal c1t1es, mdus
a
freeze that lasted far too long )
bargains Dad sometimes calls her "my Idiot wife' and thinks try populatwn and agriCUlture of Chma
she's wonderful
Therefore we believed 11 necessary for the preSident
to
have the first hand mformahon necessary to set U S
She sure Isn't the matr~arch type, and while we all look up to
pohcy toward Chma as war With Japan drew to an end
her and respect her suggestions (orders too she can get tough
At th1s stage of the war, we knew that netther Mao s
when It's called for), we know she'lllisien ro our Side
Ch10ese Commumsts nor Chiang's Nationalists trusted
Reading so many complatnts about parents 1 thought you
U S oll•c•als over all although there were some strong
two hearts, a d•amond and nught like to hear of our nutty mother who can stuff e1ght ktds
mdJvJdual relationships
a Club What feat of magic
So many semor and Jumor Amencan officials respons•·
can make one of these losers Into a station wagon, stuff a turkey, and fed us stuff and nonsense
ble for reporting facts to Washmgton had become emo
With equal ease - OOlLEGE GIRL
diSappear•
t1onally turned off by or attached to one s1de or the other
Actually no mag•c IS
and conversely that •t was most certamly tmposs•ble for
TUESDAY SEI&gt;1"EMBER 26 , 1f72
necessary Just a little btt
President Roosevelt and hiS adv1sers m Washmgton to
NOTE FROM HELEN Aren 1t comc1dences fascmating?
6
00 - News 3 4 8, 10 15
of luck
make declswns on U S -Chma policy m a rahonal manner
6 30 - News 3 4 15, 6 8 10 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Growing
South wms the trump and Uncannily often, when I embark on an unposs1ble search, an
Yet to Roosevelt a strong Chma was to be the cornerHim Up 33
unknown
correspndent
comes
forth
wtth
the
exact
mformation
leads a low diamond toward
stone of U S policy 10 As•a m the years ahead
7
00
- News6, 10 What's My LineS Elec Co 2C Andy Grtfllth
dummy West s best play IS ESP or JHS (Happenstance) ' - HELEN
It therefore seemed clear that the Pres1dent and his
15 , Beat The Clock 4 I ve G'ot A 5e&lt;:ret 13 , Truth or Con
to hop up w1th h1s kmg He
sequences 3 Sa tnt IS
prmc•pal adviSers m Washmgton must be enabled to ~et
does JUSt that and leads a
7 30 - Masterpiece Theatre 33 This Is Your Life 3 Doctors On
the mformahon first hand We were convmced the White
second trump
Call 4 To Tell The Truth 6 Price Is Right 8 10 Beat The
House would not get the story straight through channels
Clock 13
With th•s SJtuatwn m mmd, the time had come to move
South wms thts m h1s own
S
00
- Bonanza3, 4,15 Temperatures Rlslng6 13 Maude a 10
the dtscusSJons to Washmgton and to have the pnnc•pal
hand also and plays a low South wouldn't have been distribution
6 30- Hawaii Five 0 8, 10 Movie Moon of The Wolf' 6 13
parties on both s1des represented at these meetings
club If West clatters up w1th able to d1scard thai club
Video Variations 33
'
TODAY'S QUESTION
To repeat, the problem was that Chiang, for all his per·
9 00 - Bold Ones 3 4 15
the ace, South's womes are from dummy and would
Your partner contmues to sonal ab1llty dtd not have a untfied government able to
over
9 30- Movie ' Deadly Harvest 8 10 Marshall U Sports 33
have had to be set
three
clubs What do you do reSJSt the Commumsts Ch1ang chatred a coaht10n of sem1
10
00 - NBC Reports 3, 4 15 Marcus Welby M D 6 13 Firing
But West pla ys low Dum
(NEWSPAPER IHTERPRISE ASSN )
Line 33
'
now1
mdependent
commanders
each
a
provmc1al
power
my s kmg wms the tnck and
11 00 - News,Weather,Sporl$3 4,6,810,13,15
South 1s ready wtth the
l130 - 0ickCavett6.JohnnyCarson3 4 15 VIrg inians Mov ie
mag•c
They Made Me A Criminal 10 Mov ie River of No Retu rn
13
He plays out the rest of
The
b1ddmg
has
been
I 00 - Your Heatth 4
the diamonds d1scardmg one
w
..
t
North
East
South
1
30 - News Weather 4 Local News 13
of dumm y's clubs on the last
one Then he plays h1s queen
Pass I +
Pass
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972
of clubs
'
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart tO
You
South
hold
West IS on lead agam and
6 1S- Farmllme 10, Farm Report 13
no matter what he does, one 6AK65¥AIOZ +KS3.AJ6
BY JACK O'BRIAN
known Catskills hotel really ls to become aN , y
6 2S - Paul 'iarvey 13
of South's heart losers has
What do you do now'
State college complex
Pals of Ed Wynne, 6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League IO
vamshed
ho
llarwyn
1 OO - Today3,4 1S CBSNews8.10 News6
A-Bid lwo no-trump You do
AN AGNEW·IZINGDAY
w se
club ooce tried vainly to com- 7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers s Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
What was the bit of luck not show your spade sult be·
AT 11IE WALDORF
pete with the Stork-EI Morocco, are worried,
13
we menlloned earlier' If cause a bid of 1 second suit
l!iin't
find
him
8
00
- Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33
NEW YORK (KFS) - Watch Dem·
d•amonds had broken badly here would Imply unbalanced
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
conmpt1ons when it's announced Spiro Agnew
Honolulu cafes (notably the Royal 8 30 - Jack Lalanne 13, New Zoo Revue6 Romper Room 8
will be the mam haranguer at the Conservative Hawaiian's) have warnings, "Sbirt:t and Shoes 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15, What Every woman
Must Be Worn In lobby"•, what about nonts?
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6, Capt Kangaroo 8
Party's0ct.I3bashat the Waldorf Groucho's
.-•
Friendly Junction 10. Ben Casey 13
'
hosp1tali2aUon was for a stroke
Baseball
GreenwichVIIlagespotsdlsplayslmllarslgns . P 30 - Elec Co 33 , ToTelllheTrulh3 Jeopordy6, HazelS
Uptown, only two Manhattan restaurants still 10 00 - Dinah Shore3 15, Columbus 51• Calling 6 Joker's Wild
great Gabby Hartnett's at bat In his gamest
ba
8, 10, Dick Van Dyke t3
Inning Juliet Prowse made the bit decisions
ngalainslaJ: theverychlcCoteBaaque,and 10 30 - Concentrotlon3 15 Phil Donol!ue4, Price is RightS 10
- the date of her marnage to the poppa of her Lafayette Jackie Coogan's stunning former
Split Second 13
11 00 - SaleofCenlury 3, 15 Love Amerlcon Style 6 Gomblt a 1
to
return
to
"'""'"g
baby, John McCook, and a nat'l tour In "Sweet wife Ann McCormack h""""
- ...IX.Iae,ua
Pessword 13
'
Charity"
The new "Dean Martin Produc- after 8111'gery in Hawaii She's Mrs. very rich· 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 15 Love of Life a 10 Bewitched 6
13 Sesame SJ 33
·
tions"IS!l't a Upsy-Dino firm, Jimmy Dean and lroker Paul livermore
12
00
The Olympics almo-'
-·perstar Cathy
- Jeopordy
3, IS8, Password
ooe Lenny Martin lncorped
Nifty press
• ....,.
News
13, Contact
News 10 6, Bob Braun's so 50 Club 4
release Rtvka Raz of the Casino Rosse Boor- Rigby, 19, Is nunored engaged to Redsktns 12 30 - Spllf Second 6, Search for Tomorrow a 10 Who What
Where 3. 1S, Elee Co 33
'
'
show sa)'ll she starred In the Israeli "My Fair running back Torn Mason, 33 Ted Wllllama
1 00B- News, Weather, Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Its Your
haSII't
said
he'll
quit
managing
in
T-··
after
Lady" m 5724, true - that's Jewish for 1966
et 8, Green Acres 10, Watch Your Child 1S French Chef 33
when that shoena punim (pretty face) danced
this season but Dave Bristol's tops on the guess- I 20 - Lucille Rivers 3
list Introducttoo of a new oral cootraceptlw 1 30 - 3 Ul A Match 3• 4• IS, Let's Make A Deal 6 13 As The
all night and won Israel's "David," kosher
World Turns 8, 10, Designing Women 33
verSion of Bdwy 's "Tony" best-&lt;&gt;f.all
In San Antonio turned out to be Texa11 Roulette: 2 OODou Da ys of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 Mike
1 6, Guiding Light 8, 10, Bridge 33
It was Yuletide al the Camelot for lunch Docstested398galsandgave97aclwnmypill gas
2
~po~~~~g3;ame 13, Doctors 4, ts, Edge of Night 8 10,
Connie Stevens arrived toting big F.A 0 Sch- and 10 got pregsle . The Mulcan eamomy ls
wartz toy..shopping bags brimming wtth Christ- sturdy - nobankfaUuresin38yen-andlhey 3 00 - Another World 3, 15 Genera! Hospital 6 13 Love
pay 10\2 to 12\2 pet interest! Great country
Splendored Thing 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 33'
mas toys for her Joely and Trlcla, by Eddie
3 ~re~eJl';mtot~~ton Place3, 4• IS , One Life to Live 6, 13
ThisseasonlsManhattanatltspretllelllnd
Fisher Half a dozen midtown shopwindows
are awash with Christmas cards· trifle early·
Mr Cartoon 3. Somerset 15, Sesame st 33 Love
' Tanya (Miss World) Wilson at the Rainbow 4 00Am-erdlcen
Style 13, Merv Griffin 4 Fllnlslones 6, Gilligan's
but then, Avon TV commercials are Yule- Grill and Terry Ame (Miss America)
1•1an 8, Move
"Gun Fury' 10
pitching already. Here's why local nightclub.ot' Meeuwsen at BlllCban'anewGold Coin JI'OYe it 4 25 - Sports Club 6
all over can't lure stars Sonny &amp; Oler expect to
Alfred Gwynne Vander~!'&amp; forgetting lady 4 3,~:- I GLo1v11e Lucy 6, Andy Griffith 15, Petti coot Junction 3
jockey Robyn Smith with even cutl!l' ~thla
,..,rv r 1n 8, 0 anlel Boone 1
•
mtake '150,000 for one day (two perfil) at the big
Cole, niece of the late rich art dealer E Jay S ~;;.~r6 Rogers 33 , Dick Van Dykel5 Ponderosa 3, 4 Daniel
new Nassau Coliseum In exurban N. Y
Hugh Hefner's $29.000,000 Playboy Hotel In
RUSIOuk
Qouelest thieves the heartless 5 ~sM't'r:hall Dillon 1s . Elec Co 33 Dragnet a, Gomer Pyle
New Jersey discovered therearen'tenough bl!g·
punkri wllo heisted TV sets a JJeCOIId time from 6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6, News3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Halhllyoga 33
eyed prurlents to flll that big resort and It's
the 6th fioor patienlll' reluatlon room at ~ ~ - ~ews 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 , Bridge 33, I Dream of JeaMie13
pitching for the parentH!ddies trade, com·
Women's Hospital . AI me ould Irilh mother
T - th e~10, Whllt'sM~Ine8, Milestones of Progrh•33
used 1o say, they'll have no lt!Ct.
,;,u s.l'rit 1s seq 3• Beat • Clock 4, Anything You Can 0.:.
pared to the toplesa.aervtce jernts now
everywhere Hef's old Bunny-costumes are
Anne Bancroft toted the "Alpha, Betz" play 7 30 - To Telt the Truth 6, The Judge 10, EpiSOde Action 33
script lo Au Tmnel. It's the London ' IIIIUh
Pollee Surgeon 3, 4. Protectors 8, Beatlhe Block 13
\ •
veritable Mother Hubbards
Anita Louise's
starring
Rachel
Roberta
and
Albert
Flmey
.
.
8
~Adam
12
4,
Affair
33,
Paul
Lynde
6,
13
Carol
Burne«
8,
widower, Henry Berger, almost ran out of
celebrities to date and then Unda Ouisttan
Pianist AI Griner needs a bicycle: pllys IC· 8 ~-·~'1:.~~ ~ 4, 15, Movie• "Say Goodbye, /Mggle Coil " 6,
1
arrived .. Hume Q-onyn had enough hard luck companlment for Alan Dale at the new Hawan 9 oo :... ~tC.1 Center a.
10
lately without the agony when a workman
Thnee Square cafe, then dashes lo the Door- 10 00-Search 3, 4, 15, JulleAndrews6, 13, Cannone 10 , ~t
rebulldlng hill new Pound Ridge estate died In a
JJhow window at the Ttmee Square Autlllnat lo 1l
News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
' ' \
construction crush.
pink for oldtlmer Edna Thayer's turna, then 11 30 - Johnn'y 'car~n· 3 'o~, 15 Dick c
{
Rod McKuen's writing a new comic strip,
back to Dale Thl!l'e's a half-buc:t minimum at
Movies ' Brlgadoon" 10, "R~ Skitt ~v1J!..~i~\~g~; an 81
his poetry's fumy, too Doo't tell us the best·
the Alltomat - to keep out the riHraff,
: ~:
~3

Bit of Luck Good as Magic
26

NORm

.KQ9 2
¥742
• Q1 5

.K 63
~T

.8 6
¥AQ1 06J
+K98
.AJ9

SOUTH

EAST
.7 3
¥J98
+ J42

.108542
( D)

.AJJ0 54
¥K 5
+A 1063
.Q7
None vulnerable
We. I North East South

Dble 3 •

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

1.4.

Openmg lead-• 8
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here IS another Jannersten
hand South IS 10 four spades
and West has doubled the
one spade openmg b•d and
has opened a tr ump
South looks ove r dummy
carefully It looks as •I West
Will hold all mJSSJDg h1 gh
cards and South •s faced
With the prospect of los mg

Television Log

I.

I

"Who's Got the Spot Iight?"

1

.

g:_

::!

•

I

•I

, 3- The Dlil19eltlnel, Mlddleport-Pm~eroy, 0 , Sept 26, 1972

,,

,. S;:~ Parade ~ Chiefs Rally To ~srBfo.T~ Ryan Fans
12, Posts
'":,.::r~:::::._•....,)Whip New Orleans

: . . . YORK
manager of the Philadelphia Ph1ll1es breaks the news to his field
manager
He's going to f~re hun
"I'm gonna let myself go, ' says Paul Owens, laughmg about 11
a little
The reason Paul Owens laughs IS because he's both general
manager and field manager of the Philltes nght now and as the
former he's about to fJre htmself as the latter
The last tune anybody remembers anythmg hke th1s happenmg was nearly 50 years ago when Casey Stengel, prestdent of
the Worcester ball club, canned Casey Stengel, the Worcester
manager
'Remember tl hke 1t was the other day, • says Casey ' Hadda
go tiw6ugh the COmffiiSSJOner, Judge LandiS "
But let's get back to Paul Owens He has led pracllcally two
hves smce succeeding Frank LuccheSI as manager and taking on
both JObs last July 10
Drops 10 Pounds
From a phySical standpo10t, he has dropped nearly 10 pounds
off a frame that was lean to begm w1th, and 11 hasn't been too
easy mentally e1ther trymg to keep track of 15 thmgs at the same
time
"People k1d me about loSJng my marbles, ' Owens says sllll
smJitng "I tell them tf they ever see me talkmg to myself m the
hotel lobby not to pay any attenhon, really, because 1t's only the
general manager gJvmg the manager hell '
When the 48-year-&lt;&gt;ld Owens acceded to the w1shes of club
owner Bob Carpenter and took over fo r Lucchesi, now on spec1al
ass1gnment for the club, the Ph1llles had lost 40 of the1r last 50
games and seemed headed stra1ght for the bottom of the Western
Carolmas League
They st1ll w11l finish last m the Nahonal League East next wee k
but now, Owens feels, at least they do have some hope of movmg
up next year
' What I wanted most was for thts club to get nd of 11.'! losmg
attttude," says Owens, under whom the Phtls have won 29 and
lost 42 That comes out to a 408 percentage, and the Phils "ere
crawlmg along at 342 when Owens became the manager
Wanted 500 Ball
' I wanted us wplay 500 ball," he says 'That may not sound
like much, but I felt If we could play 500, we could get our self
respect back To me, that was Important and I tned to convey
that to the players We were almost doomed to fuush last when 1
took over and I wid the players, let's not k1d ourselves, we can't
change the nature of our standmg, but In the 80 games left let s
at least try to play 500 It wasn't so much a case of wmnmg 40
and losmg 40,1 sa1d to them, as a case of executmg better-(Jr at
least well enough to play 500 ball '
Owens goes back to bemg solely general manager next week
but there won 't be any vacallon lor h1m He realizes the Ph1llles
will have to make trades this wmter-0ne rumor already has 11
they 're gomg to deal theJr super southpaw Steve Carlton to
Pit!.'!burgh for Dock Elhs, Renme Stennett and M1il May--and
because of wha t he has been dmng these past three months no
general manage r will brmg a fresher f~rst hand knowledge of the
players to the tradmg table than Owens
I know Na ltonal League players so much better havmg
watched them fr om JO feet away • he says I hea r and see
thmgs mthe dugout I couldn t have any posSible way of kno\\ mg
If I didn't have the umform on, and I know 1t's gonna help
tremendously "

The First Thing
The first thing Owens has to do now IS ftnd h1mself a new fteld
man ~ge r He already has had dozens of appbcatlons for the JOb
and talked to four or ftve candidates personally
Dave Bristol, let out by Milwaukee earber m the year would
seem to he the No I candidate although Owens does not say that
Other ca ndidates who have been mentioned are Bobby Wme,
Tom LaSorda, Danny Ozark, Frank Robmson, Maury Wtlls, Jtrn
Bunning Btll White, Dick Howser, Harry Walker
Owens has an open mind He says tf he ca n get the nght man
black or whtte, that man w1ll get the job
'Yes, 1 would conside r a man wtthout previous managenal
expenence ' he sa)'ll "We want a strong man, one who s ftrrn
and can handle people What we're looking forts a man who ca n
teach yoWlg players such as we have You know, m this day and
age a manager has to reabze that Simply because a ballplayer
put.'! on a b1g league unlfonn one thst ssys Phillles across 11
that doesn t necessanly mean he s a polished performer
From the sound of it, Paul Owens 1s lookmg for another Walter
Alston That's !me, but there's only one h1tch
There aren 'I too many around

By Umted Press tnternat•onal
Natmna I League
East

w I pel gb

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-It
wasn't a parttcularly 1mpres
SJve wm on the scoreboard but
for Kansas City Coach Hank
Stram 11 proved hJS Ch1efs have
the makmgs of champions
" H you're not a mature team
w1th pride and purpose you

Bucks Should Be
Ready For Heels
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Coach
Woody Hayes sa1d Monday his
Oh10 State football team should
be pretty close to full
strength" for Saturdays game
agamst unbeaten North Caroh·
na
The s1xth-ranked Buckeyes
1dle smce an opemng 21.() wm
over Iowa Sept 16, worked
'overly hard " last week m

prachce m an effort, Hayes
sa1d, to make up for the open
date
Hayes sa1d however, he
planned to ease up this week to
try to avmd any IDJUrJes
' We will be at a disadvantage Saturday agamst North
Carohna, ' Hayes satd, "be
cause they hsve played three
limes as much football as we
have
The Tar Heels have already
played three games postmg

RECORD SET
ASTl, Calif (UPJ )-A four·
man learn led by Olymp1an
John Howard, Springfield, Mo ,
set a record Monday m the 100.
kilometer race at the opemng
of the Italian SwiSS Colony 100
bicycle races
The team was clocked at
2 18 0to break the U S mark of
2 24 00 97 over the near 8Q.mlle
distance The other team
members were Rick Ball,
MadiSOn, Wis., Ron Skarin,
Van Nuys, Calif , and Mike
Neel, Oakland , Calif Ball and
Skarln were also Olympic
competllors

Browns ftrst wm th1s year, a
21·17 VIctory over the Ph1la
delphia Eagles, Sunday
'It very deftmtely was his
ftnest and most consistent per·
formance," smd Coach N1ck
Skonch Monday "He threw
them well dld a good JOb of
reading the1r defense and I am
very encouraged
'l dtdn't even thmk about
taking him out late m the
game, ' Skor1ch sa1d
Phtpps has been groomed to
take over for veteran BIU Nel·
sen, whose perenmal knee
problems caused the Browns to
look for youth to lead them
"Next week Will be another
challenge," Phipps satd, 'and
I will be the No I quarterback
only if l prove I can do the job
every week "
Meanwhile m Cincmnatt, the
focus was on Horst Muhlmann,
whose sure and accurate toe
gave the Bengals theJr second
wlnoftheseason,lii-10over the
Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday
.All the Bengal points were

Tar Heels' game last Saturday
aga1nst North Carolina State
and sa1d, "I recogmzed some of
the thmgs they d1d "
Sarkkinen saJd NC Coach B1ll
Dooley, after gettmg the Tar
Heel JOb, took hJS staff to both
Oh1o State and M1c)ligan to get
help m settmg up hiS slot-! of.
fense
The Carolina offense looks
hke the offense (Rex ) Kern and
company ran here m 1968, '
Sarkkinen srud
Dooley, Sarkkmen sa1d IS
highly respected by all of us '
and w11l have a sound game
plan "

The rebmlt North Carolina
defense w1th seve n new faces
from a year ago has been
touched for 11 pomts m the ftrst
three games It has, how-eve1,
been tough agamst the run,
allowmg only 332 yards
w1ns
over
Ri chmond ,
V1dnovJc the Key
Maryland and North Carolma
The offense, led by slick JUn
State
wr quarterback Ntck V1dnovtc
We flgure tlus to be a real and a corps of runnmg backs,
tough game and we don t In· has 693 yards on the ground m
tend to take 11 lightly at all " three games, 215 m 58 cames
Hayes sa1d at his weekly press by 5-10, 182-pound tailback
luncheon
Billy Htle and another 104 by
No Losses
V1dnovJc m 28 tnps
Hayes sa td about the only
Other backs who have seen
good thmg we saw out of hav- conSiderable ac llon are
mg an open date was "we ta ilback Ike Oglesby and
didn t lose over the weekend ' fu llbacks Ttm K1rkpatnck,
Esco Sarkkmen Hayes end D1ck Oliver and Sam my
coach and top scout, sa w the Johnson

Red-Hot AL East
Action To Resume
By United PI'Ns International
The red hot Am enca n
League East DIVISIOn race
resumes tomght but two of the
four contenders fmd them
selves w1th another day of
mactVJty
Wtth New York and DetrOit
geltmg ready for a key two
game senes begmrung Wednesday mght m the Motor City,
Boston IS at home agamst
Milwaukee whtle Balt1m ore
entertams Cleveland
Boston st!.'! atop the AL East
WIth a precariOus one-game
lead, But, for whst 1t's worth,
the Red Sox have the knowledge they can determme the1r
ow n desllny and at the
moment do not have to rely on
others Boston s next three

Skorich Praises Phipps
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mike
Phipps Is realls!Jc "I Will be
the No 1 quarterback only if I
prove l can do the job every
week ''
The three-year man on the
Cleveland Browns w11l get his
next chance here Sunday
against the Cincmnatl Bengals
Ph1pps eng ineered th e

could fold under those ctrcumstances," Stram said
Those circumsta nces were
three Ch1efs' fumbles that New
Orleans changed mto scores
The scrambling Samts led
three thnes and held a 11·11 tie
Wlttl Jan Stenerud booted a 22-

scored by Muhlmann - f1ve
f1eld goals
' There was no reason wget
ne rvous,' Muhlmann sa1d m
]OS(

Coach Paul Brown called the
enco unter w1th Pittsburgh
'about as tough and hard
fought a football game as you'll
see "
"Etther team could have
won ," Brown sa1d "We hap.
pened to get our !Jeld goals off
and they dido 't '
Mublmann made good on
kicks from 41, 34, 32, 32 and 20
yards He was 5-5 for the day,
but "I don't worry whether I
make s•x out of SIX or 20 m a
row," lhe German-born k1cker
SaJd "I JUSt want to wm I don 't
like lOSing "

Shoes are measured by
barleycorns A barleycorn IS
an early English measure
equahng approximately onethird of an inch

ga mes are at home , two
agatnst Milwaukee and one
aga10st Kansas City, but the
Red Sox must play the1r !mal
SIX contests on the road, three
at Baltunore and the !mal
three at DetrOit
Unlike prev10 us seaso ns,
where all teams mvolvcd m a
pennant chase played the same
amount of games thiS year
because of the players' strike,
fmds Detroit haVJng 156 ga mes,
Boston and New York w1th 155
and Bal!Jmore w1th a 154 Wtlh
thiS s1tuatwn, Detr01t has a
chance to "'" more games
than any of the ot hers but
equally true, they could lose
the extra game or two
At thJS stage, the Tigers have
played two more games than
Boston and fmd themselves
with an equal number of w•ns
but two extra losses or cou rse,
Detro1t can make up those
losses m the !mal senes of the
season agamst Boston The one
other advantage the Tigers
have ts that the1r remmmn g
etght games are all at home,
two aga1nst New York, three
agalDSt Milwaukee and the
!mal three aga1nst Boston
Detr01t trails Boston by one
game wtth Baltunore 21&gt; back
and New York three behmd
Ba!Umore, trrulmg both Boston
and DetrOJt, needs help 1f 11 IS
to wm tis fourth straight
diVISIOn title The Onoles have
three left w•th Boston, but w1th
thetr four other games agamst
Cleveland, they must look to
New York, Mtlwaukee or
Boston to beat DetrOit
The Yankees find themselves
m sJmJiar stra1L'! Except for
two games agmnst Detrmt,
New York finishes up w1th
Cleveland and Milwaukee The
Yankees, like the Orioles, must
play the game of "scoreboard
watching" while meetmg the
Brewers and Indians
Oakland, rained out Monday
rught, still holds a 3\&gt;.game
edge over the Chicago White
Sox In the Western DIVISion

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
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MIDDLEPORT, O.

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yard field goal w1th I 21left m
the game for the Ch1efs' 2().11
VICtory Monday ntght
Stram SaJd quarterback Len
Dawson, who brought tho
Chtefs' from behmd tw1ce w1th
scormg passes of three and 22
yards to W1ll1e Frazter and Otis
Taylor, "d1d a good job of
taking what they gave us "
After a scoreless f1rst penod,
Stenerud's 12-yard field goal
matched a 31-yard boot by
Charlie Durkee and Dawson's
pass to Fraz1er caught up w1th
Doug Wyatt's :!&gt;-yard fumble
return to knot the score !().!Oat
the half
Sam!.'!' quarterback Arch1e
Manmng then htt tight end
Dave Parks w1th an e1ght-yard
scormg pass late m the third
penod but Kansas City tied It
at 11·11 three mmutes later
w1th Dawson s scormg pass to
Taylor
We JUSt needed to wm,'
Stram sa1d, obviously thlnkmg
of last week's 2().10 loss to
M1am1 'We needed a good
offenstve game and we had 1t
tomght
'When you are a good
football team like we are, you
play a little ttght," Stram sa1d
But the longer the game went
on, the more we loosened up
and went after people '
Stram praJsed the Samts as
'a fme young growmg team'
and called Manmng a ' one of
the bnlllant young quarter·
backs
'We gave them three
fumbles and you have to gJve
them credit for taking them m
to score," Stram satd
Wyatt, a three-year veteran

at safety who scored his first
NFL touchdown on the fumble
return late 10 the second
pertnd, sa1d Kansas City was a
good team 'but I thmk we
played well enough to wm '
I don t th1uk 11 was our
supreme game," Samts' defenSive end R1chard Neal added,
' but 1t was a good effort '

College Ratings
NEW

YORK

13rd weeki

Team

Potnts

I Southern Cal {20) (3 0)332
2 Okla homa {12) 12 0) 319
3 Colorado (I) (3 O)
252
4 Tennessee (3 O)

Alabama I1) (2 01
Oh to Sl Ill II 01
Nebraska 12 11
8 Mtchtgan 12 O)
9 LouiS tan a 51 12 O)
10 Notre Dame (I 01
II Arozona 51 (2 0)
12 Wash 1nglon (3 0)
13 Floroda 51 (3 01
14 Texas II OJ
15 Iowa 51 12 0)
16 Penn 51 (11)
17 IT1el Atr Force 12 01
ITie) W Va (3 0)
19 UCLA (2 I)
5
6
7

II
7

5
4

4

3
2

Mator league l ea ders

Untted Press International
Le admg Batters
Naltonal League

g ab
144 550

r h pet
91 184 335
132 535 101 174 325
120 415 60 135 325
127 521 82 167 321
133 536 84 169 315
146 S99 79 187 312
147 617 103 19 1 310
127 442 63 137 310
142 529 71 163 308
130 466 72 142 305

Amencan l eague

g ab
Carew M1n 135 517
D Allen Cht 145 498
Rudo Oak 142 577
5hblm KC 128 429
Pntela KC 143 543
May Ch t
144 515
F!Sk Bos
123 430
OtiS KC
135 507
Mabery KC 141 478
Berry Cal 11 2 382

r
60
90
P3

h pet
167 323
1S4 309
176 308
59 132 308
63 166 306
81 155 301
72 129 300
70 150 296
59 140 293
38 112 293

Home Runs

Nal1onal League Colberl SO
38 Bench C1n 37 W1 il1ams
Ch o34 Stargell Pitt 33 Aaron
Atl 31
0 Allen

Amertcan League

Cht

37

Murcer

K tl lebrew

Mmn

NY 30

Epstem and

Jackson, Qak 2S
Runs Batted tn
Nattonal League

)( Ctnc 1nnat1
Hous ton
Los Angeles
A tl anta
San Franctsco

91

San Doego

~l: :

56

619

81 65

555

80 68

541 11 ~

68 79
63 85

463 23
462 28

9h
2

57 89 390 33 /'

x Chnched dtv1s1onal fltle
Monday s Result
San DIPQO 5 Los Ang J

(Only game scheduled)

Today s Probable P11chers

lA It T1mes EDT)

New York ( Koosman 9 12 ) at
Sf Louts (B i bby I 1) 9 p m
San Franc1sco {Mc0owe ll 8 8)
at Hou ston (Reuss 9 12) 8 30

pon

San Doego (Caldwell 7 9) at
Los

Angeles

(Stnger 6 16 or

Str ahler 0 21 l 1 p m
Atlanta (Stone 6 10) at
Ctnctnnalt IGult ell 8 9) 8 05
pm
Chtcago I Pappas 15 7) at
M on t real (Torrez

pm

P1ttsburgh

Phlladelph ta
7 35 p m

16 11)

8 05

(Blass 18 7) at
(Twdchell 58)

Wednesday s Games
New York at Sf Lou1s

Ch at Montreal mghl
Ptllsburgh at Phtla ntg hl
At lanta at Ctnc ntghl
San Fran at Houston n1ght
San D 1ego at Los Ang n1ghf
Amencan League
Boston

Detroit
Balftm ore

New York
Cleveland

Mil waukee

Oa kl and
Cht cago
M nnesota
Kansas C1 ty
Callforn ta

Texas

East
w t pet g b
80 66 548
80 68 541
78 69 531 2h
78 70 527 3
67 83 447 15
61 87 412 20
West
wlpclgb
87 60 592
83
75
72
70

63
70
74
78

568 3112
517 11
493 J41 2
473 18

52 95 354 35

Monday s Resu lts
Ca ltfornta 2 Texas 1
Mtnn at Oak

ppd

ra tn

!Only games schedul ed!
Today s Probable PJ!chers
I At! Times EDT!
M tnnesota ( Biy tev m 1516) at

Oakland1Blue 6P) 1lpm

M Iwaukee (Parsons 13 12) at
Boston ( Pat hn 15 12) 7 30 p m
Cleveland (T tdrow 13 15) a t

Ball more (Cuellar 1711) 7 30
pm
Kansas Ctty I Nelson 9 6) al
Chtcago !Bahnsen 20 15) 9 p m
Califor nia (Messersmtth 7 10)

Bench, Ctn

Wtlltams Ch1 114 Stargell
Pott 112 Col bert SO 105 May

117

Hou 97

Kansas Clly at

Ch cago

Milwaukee at Boston
Mm n at Oclk l and night
Ca l 1f at Texa s ntgh t
New York at Detro1t n 1g hf
Cleve at Balltmore n 1ght

193

165
164
137
90
69
64
53
16
13

20 Mt SSISSI PP (2 0)

Wilms Ch1
Cdeno Hou
Baker At l
Garr All
Clover Pol
Brock 51 L
Rose Ctn
Santo Ch1
Walsn Hou
Slrgel Ptt

92 65
81 66
76 70

al Texas I Paul 7 8) 8 30 p m
games sc hedul ed)
( UPI )- The (Only
Wednesday 's Games

Untied Press lnternattonat top
20 mat or cot lege f ootball teams
wtlh f st place votes and won
lost
ecords tn parentheses

By

626
551
521
51 Lou s
71 78 477
Man trea I
67 79 459
Pht ladelphta 55 92 374 37
West
w I pel g b
x P11tsburgh
Chtcago
New York

A11jencan League D Allen
Ch o 112 Mayberry KC P4
Murcer NY 90 Scott Mil 83
Powell Bait and Oarwm Mlnn
78

Court Case
Transferred
CHICAGO(UPI) - A federal
court case challengmg the
Natwnal Hockey League
reserve clause has been transferred to U S Dtstnct Court m
Phil adelphia where a Similar
SUI! IS pendmg
U S Disln ct Court Judge
Bernard M Decker Monday
ordered the case brought
agamst the Chtcago Black
Hawks of the NHS by the
Ch1cago Couga rs of the World
Hockey AssociatiOn and player
Bobby Hull heard '" th e
Ph•ladelplua court
Decker also asked the
Phlladelphta court to hear a
requ es t by the Cougars'
lawyers that he 1ssue a
restrammg order prohJbtting
the Black Hawks fr om trymg to
en£orce the reserve clause m
Hull s contract
Hull, who has s1gned a $1
million plus contract to play for
and coach the Wmmpeg Jet.'! of
the' WHA, effective Oct. I, has
been sued by the Black Hawks,
who cla1m they still have the
nght to hiS talents That su1t IS
sh U pendmg In federal court
here
The Phlldelph1a case asks
the court to declare the NHL
reserve clause vole because 11
allegedly VIolates federal anlt·
trust law A rulmg was ex·
peeled next month, Ch1cago
court sources sa1d

18th Win
United Press International
A change of scenery was all
that Nolan Ryan needed
Ryan, an mconsJStent, me·
diocre pitcher w1th the New
York Mets for the past few
seasons, hss developed mto a
star now that he s gotten a
chance to p1tch regularly wtth
the Callforma Angels He
proved 11 Monday mght by
becommg only the sixth p1tcher
m American League hiStory to
surpass the 300.stnkeout mark
for a season as the Angels
edged the Texas Rangers, 2-1
Ryan, one of the hardest
throwers m baseball, struck
out 12 batters to boost his total
to 302 and wrest the maJOr
league lead from Steve Carlton
of Philadelphia The VIctory
was h1s 18th a career high
I thmk 11s the htghllght of
my ca reer, Ryan sa1d I
was actually more concerned
abou I getting 20 than the
stnkeouts, but 1!' s gomg to be
tough gettmg 20 wms, that's all
there IS to 1t ' Ryan must wm
his last two start.'! agamst
Mmneso ta and Oakland to
reach the charmed 2().vJctory
c1rcle
Ryan traded to Califorma
w1th three nunor leaguers for

J1m Fregos1, has p1lched 283
1nnmgs th1s season
Texas took a 1.() lead m the
second Without a hit as Ted
Ford was safe on an error,
stole second, took third on a
sacrifice bunt and scored on
Dalton Jones' sacnf1ce fly The
Angels tied 11 m the seventh on
Mtckey Rivers' smgle and
Vada Pmson's double and
Ryan tgmted the wmnmg rally
m the e1ghth wtlh a double He
moved to third on an mfteld out
and scored on Larry Bittner's
error
In the only other major
league game played Monday
rught, the San D1ego Padres
edged the Los Angeles
Dodgers 5-3 Mmnesota at
Oakland was ramed out
Pinch-lutter Randy Elliott
tr1pled home Fred Stanley w1th
the he-breaking run m the
etghth mmng as the Padres
downed the Dodgers Elliott
scored the f1fth run when a
relay throw went astray, one of
five Dodger errors
In the tomd Amencan
League pennant race, Boston
holda a one-game lead over
Detr01t w1th Baltimore 21&gt;
back and the Yankees three
games beh1nd

Hawks Refuse
To Pay Fine
ATLANTA (UPI )-Nahonal
Ba s ketball As soc1a1Jon
Commtss1oner Walter Kennedy
Monday fin ed the Atlanta
Hawks $25,000 for 1gnonng his
direcllve not to play Julius
ErVIng, but the Hawks countered w1th an antitrust su1t
ETVJng played last season
With the V1rg101a SqUires ol the
Amencan Basketball Assocwtlon, then signed a $1 million
contract w1th the Hawks a
couple of days before the
Milwaukee Bucks made him
thetr first-round chmce m the
annual NBA draft
Kennedy ordered the Hawks
to release Ervmg last week
after the NBA's board of
governors ruled Ervmg
belongs to the Milwaukee
Bucks
But the Hawks refused to
obey the board's directive and
when Kennedy slapped the
$25,000 !me the Hawks came
back by ftling a swt agamst the
NBA m federal court m Atlanta
askmg $2 m1ihon damages and

The

Oat~

Sentmel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTERE ST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,

seekmg an InJUnction to
prevent the NBA from unposmg the !me for playmg
ErVIng
Kennedy's !me agamst the
Hawks for usmg Ervmg Satur·
day and Sunday In games with
the Kentucky Colonels was the
largest the COll1llUSStoner has
1r0posed without league approval The league's b1ggest !me
was $1;00,000 against. Seattle In
the Spencer Haywood case
"I have sent the followtng
telegram to William Putnam,
president of the Atlanta club,''
Kennedy said Monday in New
York
For playmg Julius Erving
m two games over the past
weekend m violation of my
dtrecttves of Sept 21·22,
Atlanta IS hereby fmed t25,000
Please be advised that those
directives are still In full force
and effect '
ThiS We&gt;k's Special

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EDITORIALS
Need Soine New
Values, He Says
Herman Kahn f~rst ga med fame - some would say
notortety - by thmkmg about the unthmkable" - anal
yzmg the posstbtllhes and consequences of a thermo
nuclear war
As d1rector of the Hudson lnst1tute a preshg1ous 'th10k
tank' m New York Kahn JS still th1~k10g unth10kable or
at least unfashwn able thoughts He expressed some of
them m an 10terv1ew m the September Intellectual D1gest
Asked about the mood of hopelessness that allegedly 10
feels Americans today, Kahn says that the mood IS not as
deep as •t looks to the upper m1ddle class m the ctty-the
mtellectuals and reformers and po10ty headed professors
among whom Kahn mcludes h•mself
"The upper m1ddle class the group runn10g the media
educators city planners some students - all are bas1cal
ly out of touch w1th reality It's a very spect!Jc Illness of
a ve~y spec11Jc group less than 10 per cent of the
comt!fy '
The pendulum has swung too far m this country thmks
Kahn We ve abandoned too many tradJtJOnal values and
we haven t replaced them With satiSfactory new values
The average Amencan ' he says, ' 1s extremely con
cerned about the future of the countr) He also feels that
somethmg IS gomg wrong but what's gomg wrong IS the
upper m1ddle class
"The average Amencan 1s ask10g why the Harvard
graduate \\ants lo burn down th e school Why doesn t
anybody understand that bemg agamst busmg does not
mean bemg agamst Negroes' Why don't newspapers and
televiSIOn and mov1es reflect the world as 11 "'
Ameucans a1 e bothered by a credJbthty gap Not the
gap between the hippies and the President, not the gap
between Sptro Agnew and the press but between the
average Amencan and the prestige newspapers and the
docum entary on telev•swn That s where the gap IS "
Kahn s thou ghts could be expanded on mdef1mtely As
he savs, the average Amencan JS more concerned than
hopeless but he s also fed up
In a na!Jon which has made tremendous stndes m the
last 10 years 10 1eve1s10g dJScnm•na!Jon he's fed up wtth
be10g told he s a sunple raciSt
In a nation which has spent ten s of b1lhons of dollars
and g•ven the hves of tens of thousands of 1ts sons 10 a
no end war that the bnght boys sold m the name of free
dom he s fed up w1lh be10g told that Americans are
devoted to •mpenahsm fasciSm and war prof•teermg
He's fed up With bemg told that h1s ancestors stole the
countr) from Its ong10al owners and then proceeded to
rape 1l and that he IS thoughtlessly contmumg the process
He's fed up w1th be10g afraid to walk the decaymg ctly
streets at mght and then bemg told that urban blight and
cnme are hts fault and that he doesn't care about the
poor and the diSadvantaged
He's fed up wtth seemg h1s hard-earned money wasted
by spendthnft polltJctans on dub1ous programs whde the
value of the dollar erodes and then bemg told that the
country has gotten off the track because of h1s false sys
tern va lues
Above all, as a member of a soc1ety wh1ch has pro
v1ded more opportumttes and more good thmgs for more
human be10gs m history he s fed up w1th bemg told he's
had 11 as a people
There's a counter reformahon, a ' counter-countercult
ure' bmldmg says Kahn
' It's the b1ggest thmg gomg m Amenca today and 1t
wdl e1ther dommate or heavily mfluence the next decade
or two '

WIN AT BRIDGE

Generation Rap

&amp; TH/1168

BERRY'S WORLD

By Helen and Sue Bottel
ENOORE FOR "MO'l'lfER THE NIJT"
Dear Helen and Sue
Long before you started "GeneraUon Rap" - about six
years ago, I believe - a letter appeared in "Helen Help Us" that
I've "treasured" to tatters
~
You see, my children cut 1t out and placed it on my dinner
plate They told me 11 reminded them of me I felt so complimented that l have camed the cbppmg ever smce In my
wallet, but now It Is in such bad shape l can no looger read It
Can you please reprmt 1t, not only for me, but for many
fa mUtes who have successfully bridged the genera lion gap (I'm
sending the shreds to give you an idea which letter I mean ) MOTHER NUT
Dear Mother Nut
My mother told me about the strange coinCidences that make
column writers feel somebody up there Is pulllng strings Now I
know what she means 1
CQuple weeks ago we received this letter
Dear Rap Remember the column about the ''nutty mother"
who sometimes cleans house at mldnijht and Is a "collector of
useless information" but an all-aroWld terrific person' It was
written by her daughter a long time ago, and I wonder if you
could dig 1t out and reprint 1t• Now that I'm marr1ed, I want to be
that kind of mother, too - EXPEcriNG
"Dig out'" It would take an act of proVIdence to find such a
letter among the thousands In Morn's back files'
And whatayaknow• You were the act of provtdence ''Mrs
1
Nut '' Thanks for sending the shreds We put them together and
here tl IS - SUE

+++
+++

Dear Helen
My mother IS a nut I wouldn 'I have her any other way
Uvmgmour house Is like livmg With AunUe Marne And boy, am
l thankful that she IS the way she JS Instead of like a few other
mothers I know
Our house IS never what you'd call sp1c and span Not dirty
but not one to Uppy~oe m either bved In, sometimes on ~
cluttered s1de Mom ISJI't the type to turn down a tnp or a good
talk session just because she has to get the bouse cleaned up
Sometimes she's cleaning at midnight Sometimes, when we
want to talk, she hands us a broom or dust cloth and we all work
Without realizing tt - chattermg away because she's fun to be
aroWld and makes us feel unportant
She hates schedules Sa)'ll they slow you down and make you

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Jn
-

The new television season Is in full swing, and although! plan
to continue occasional reviews of the new shows, some passmg
comments might be in order
CBS deserves a slap oo the wrist for continumg to present Its
most adult P'OgrtllllB in time slots when the klddles are still up
Last year,lt did 1t with All m the Family That haSII't changed,
still on at 8 on Saturdays, and they've added Maude, at 8 on
Tuesday, and M·A.s.H at 8 on Sunday. Ill there any real reason
why these jrOgralllB couldn't be scheduled for 9·30, or later
Adults deserve some adult entertainment, without waiting up for
Johnny Carson or Dick Cavett, so the networks should show
restraint m planning their schedules

l

+++
The season opener on Mannix continued to oonvlDCe me that
this Is the best-photographed program on televlston

+++
Ponderosa, the program whtch Is another name for rei'WIS of
Bonanaza, Is listed at four spots in the local edition of TV Gwde
(We get two of those Stations on cable ) All four stations are
showing different episodes each night, but all of them have the
program scheduled at 5 p m It Isn't terrtbly Important, but we
wonder why •

+++

"Don't worry, dear, I bought If w1th my own money-lund
ol a (ucuse the exptess•onl 'secret lund'."

RAY CROMLEY

Did U.S. Miss
Early China Tie?

Wondermg where all the new shows on Public Broadcasting
System are' Be patient- they're cormng soon Because of a
shortage of funds, PBS JS makmg Its d1p Into the new season
rather late, and even such proven hits as "Sesame Street" and
"The Electric Company" will continue w1th reruns for several
weeks yet Actually, for progralllB like this, reruns are almost as
productive as new material After all, you're only five years old
once -and that little one In diapers would learn just as much
from Erme, Bert, Big Bird, et al., in 1975 from watching the 1970
"Sesame Street" senes as he would from something brand new, r
would aS8Wlle

+++
With all the pracllce they got in one..season activities, the
network crews covermg the opening weekend of play .for-keeps
NFL football were bogged down with techmcal problelllB Color
levels came and went, mstant-replay machines were malfunc·
tionlng, and post-game Interviews had the appearance of bemg
hastily-rigged
May he they'll get all the bugs out by the Super Bowl

By RAY CROMLEY

WASHINGTON (NEA)
As hJStonan Barbara Tuchman reports 10 the October
ISsue of Fore1gn AffairS on Jan 9, 1945 I transmttted by
Wire a request by Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Chou En la1
+++
of
Commumst
Chma
that
they
be
mv1ted
to
Washmgton
for
'~rigid "
WCHS-TV m Charleston deserves a pat on the back for
exploratory talks With President Franklm D Roosevelt
persuading
John Hutchinson, Democratic mayor of Charleston,,
Other day, I found a blown-up balloon m the freezer you see
I took th1s actwn as thP actmg commanding off1cer of
to appear on Its phone-in "Contact" program - m effect, an eyeshe IS a "II
co ector of worthless information" and she discovered' the Umted States wartime m1htary (and dlplomabc) m1s
SJon
to
Commumst
Chma
{the
US
Army
Observer
Sec
~ye, ear~o-ear encounter With the public - which ISII't too
thiS way, that a balloon never "loses tis wann" even when 1ce
lion,
code
name
OperatiOn
Dme
)
stahoned
at
Mao's
happy
with the mayor
forms on the outside
m1lltary political headquarters m the caves of Yenan m
Hutchinson, troubled by a garbage workers strtke which has
She is forever "discovering" little thmgs like thiS, and can the north of Chma
aroused deep public feelings m both directions, and has washed
always talk about somethmg mterestmg, but she listens even
It was already clear by that t1me, as the result of our
out his longtime friendship with gubernatorial cand1date Jay
Intelligence
reports
that
once
the
war
wtth
Japan
was
better All the kids come to our house because she let.'! them be
over
Mao
s
forces
would
control
more
than
half
of
Chma
Rockefeller, could have declined easily But he didn 't and both
themselves and knows when to disappear She JSn't like some
and
be
m
a
pos1t10n
to
take
over
wtthm
a
few
years
the
mayor and the station deserve commendation
mothers who have to be the center of the party- she lets us come
Observations
on
both
Sides
of
the
lines
10
Chma
had
to HER
+++
made 1t obv1ous that m m1lltary strength and m local poh
ON
TiiE
TV
DIAL
The
use
of light and colors to dramatize
She has a zany sense of humor and a lot of pahence She even heal orgamzatlon the Chmese Commumsts were cons1d
class•cal music makes an mterestlng experunent on "Vtdeo
turns family ftghts mto funmes, and we end up laughing at erably stronger than the Nationalist forces of Genera·
llss1mo Ch1ang Kai·shek and that Mao's men had bwlt up
VarJation," 8 30, WMUirTV Marshall football highlights at
ourselves
a
maJor
underground,
1mposs1ble
for
Ch•ang
to
dislodge
9
30, same station (Marshall and West Vlrguua Umvers1ty are
Morn ts not perfect, and adnu!.'! 11 She gets herself mto some m those parts of Chma occup1ed by Japanese troops Th1~
exchangmgfootball films for showmg thiS fall - a stgn of thaw m
hilartous messes wtth her odd arJthmetJc and her love of occup1ed terr•tory co,tamed most prmc1pal c1t1es, mdus
a
freeze that lasted far too long )
bargains Dad sometimes calls her "my Idiot wife' and thinks try populatwn and agriCUlture of Chma
she's wonderful
Therefore we believed 11 necessary for the preSident
to
have the first hand mformahon necessary to set U S
She sure Isn't the matr~arch type, and while we all look up to
pohcy toward Chma as war With Japan drew to an end
her and respect her suggestions (orders too she can get tough
At th1s stage of the war, we knew that netther Mao s
when It's called for), we know she'lllisien ro our Side
Ch10ese Commumsts nor Chiang's Nationalists trusted
Reading so many complatnts about parents 1 thought you
U S oll•c•als over all although there were some strong
two hearts, a d•amond and nught like to hear of our nutty mother who can stuff e1ght ktds
mdJvJdual relationships
a Club What feat of magic
So many semor and Jumor Amencan officials respons•·
can make one of these losers Into a station wagon, stuff a turkey, and fed us stuff and nonsense
ble for reporting facts to Washmgton had become emo
With equal ease - OOlLEGE GIRL
diSappear•
t1onally turned off by or attached to one s1de or the other
Actually no mag•c IS
and conversely that •t was most certamly tmposs•ble for
TUESDAY SEI&gt;1"EMBER 26 , 1f72
necessary Just a little btt
President Roosevelt and hiS adv1sers m Washmgton to
NOTE FROM HELEN Aren 1t comc1dences fascmating?
6
00 - News 3 4 8, 10 15
of luck
make declswns on U S -Chma policy m a rahonal manner
6 30 - News 3 4 15, 6 8 10 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Growing
South wms the trump and Uncannily often, when I embark on an unposs1ble search, an
Yet to Roosevelt a strong Chma was to be the cornerHim Up 33
unknown
correspndent
comes
forth
wtth
the
exact
mformation
leads a low diamond toward
stone of U S policy 10 As•a m the years ahead
7
00
- News6, 10 What's My LineS Elec Co 2C Andy Grtfllth
dummy West s best play IS ESP or JHS (Happenstance) ' - HELEN
It therefore seemed clear that the Pres1dent and his
15 , Beat The Clock 4 I ve G'ot A 5e&lt;:ret 13 , Truth or Con
to hop up w1th h1s kmg He
sequences 3 Sa tnt IS
prmc•pal adviSers m Washmgton must be enabled to ~et
does JUSt that and leads a
7 30 - Masterpiece Theatre 33 This Is Your Life 3 Doctors On
the mformahon first hand We were convmced the White
second trump
Call 4 To Tell The Truth 6 Price Is Right 8 10 Beat The
House would not get the story straight through channels
Clock 13
With th•s SJtuatwn m mmd, the time had come to move
South wms thts m h1s own
S
00
- Bonanza3, 4,15 Temperatures Rlslng6 13 Maude a 10
the dtscusSJons to Washmgton and to have the pnnc•pal
hand also and plays a low South wouldn't have been distribution
6 30- Hawaii Five 0 8, 10 Movie Moon of The Wolf' 6 13
parties on both s1des represented at these meetings
club If West clatters up w1th able to d1scard thai club
Video Variations 33
'
TODAY'S QUESTION
To repeat, the problem was that Chiang, for all his per·
9 00 - Bold Ones 3 4 15
the ace, South's womes are from dummy and would
Your partner contmues to sonal ab1llty dtd not have a untfied government able to
over
9 30- Movie ' Deadly Harvest 8 10 Marshall U Sports 33
have had to be set
three
clubs What do you do reSJSt the Commumsts Ch1ang chatred a coaht10n of sem1
10
00 - NBC Reports 3, 4 15 Marcus Welby M D 6 13 Firing
But West pla ys low Dum
(NEWSPAPER IHTERPRISE ASSN )
Line 33
'
now1
mdependent
commanders
each
a
provmc1al
power
my s kmg wms the tnck and
11 00 - News,Weather,Sporl$3 4,6,810,13,15
South 1s ready wtth the
l130 - 0ickCavett6.JohnnyCarson3 4 15 VIrg inians Mov ie
mag•c
They Made Me A Criminal 10 Mov ie River of No Retu rn
13
He plays out the rest of
The
b1ddmg
has
been
I 00 - Your Heatth 4
the diamonds d1scardmg one
w
..
t
North
East
South
1
30 - News Weather 4 Local News 13
of dumm y's clubs on the last
one Then he plays h1s queen
Pass I +
Pass
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972
of clubs
'
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart tO
You
South
hold
West IS on lead agam and
6 1S- Farmllme 10, Farm Report 13
no matter what he does, one 6AK65¥AIOZ +KS3.AJ6
BY JACK O'BRIAN
known Catskills hotel really ls to become aN , y
6 2S - Paul 'iarvey 13
of South's heart losers has
What do you do now'
State college complex
Pals of Ed Wynne, 6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League IO
vamshed
ho
llarwyn
1 OO - Today3,4 1S CBSNews8.10 News6
A-Bid lwo no-trump You do
AN AGNEW·IZINGDAY
w se
club ooce tried vainly to com- 7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers s Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
What was the bit of luck not show your spade sult be·
AT 11IE WALDORF
pete with the Stork-EI Morocco, are worried,
13
we menlloned earlier' If cause a bid of 1 second suit
l!iin't
find
him
8
00
- Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33
NEW YORK (KFS) - Watch Dem·
d•amonds had broken badly here would Imply unbalanced
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
conmpt1ons when it's announced Spiro Agnew
Honolulu cafes (notably the Royal 8 30 - Jack Lalanne 13, New Zoo Revue6 Romper Room 8
will be the mam haranguer at the Conservative Hawaiian's) have warnings, "Sbirt:t and Shoes 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15, What Every woman
Must Be Worn In lobby"•, what about nonts?
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6, Capt Kangaroo 8
Party's0ct.I3bashat the Waldorf Groucho's
.-•
Friendly Junction 10. Ben Casey 13
'
hosp1tali2aUon was for a stroke
Baseball
GreenwichVIIlagespotsdlsplayslmllarslgns . P 30 - Elec Co 33 , ToTelllheTrulh3 Jeopordy6, HazelS
Uptown, only two Manhattan restaurants still 10 00 - Dinah Shore3 15, Columbus 51• Calling 6 Joker's Wild
great Gabby Hartnett's at bat In his gamest
ba
8, 10, Dick Van Dyke t3
Inning Juliet Prowse made the bit decisions
ngalainslaJ: theverychlcCoteBaaque,and 10 30 - Concentrotlon3 15 Phil Donol!ue4, Price is RightS 10
- the date of her marnage to the poppa of her Lafayette Jackie Coogan's stunning former
Split Second 13
11 00 - SaleofCenlury 3, 15 Love Amerlcon Style 6 Gomblt a 1
to
return
to
"'""'"g
baby, John McCook, and a nat'l tour In "Sweet wife Ann McCormack h""""
- ...IX.Iae,ua
Pessword 13
'
Charity"
The new "Dean Martin Produc- after 8111'gery in Hawaii She's Mrs. very rich· 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 15 Love of Life a 10 Bewitched 6
13 Sesame SJ 33
·
tions"IS!l't a Upsy-Dino firm, Jimmy Dean and lroker Paul livermore
12
00
The Olympics almo-'
-·perstar Cathy
- Jeopordy
3, IS8, Password
ooe Lenny Martin lncorped
Nifty press
• ....,.
News
13, Contact
News 10 6, Bob Braun's so 50 Club 4
release Rtvka Raz of the Casino Rosse Boor- Rigby, 19, Is nunored engaged to Redsktns 12 30 - Spllf Second 6, Search for Tomorrow a 10 Who What
Where 3. 1S, Elee Co 33
'
'
show sa)'ll she starred In the Israeli "My Fair running back Torn Mason, 33 Ted Wllllama
1 00B- News, Weather, Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Its Your
haSII't
said
he'll
quit
managing
in
T-··
after
Lady" m 5724, true - that's Jewish for 1966
et 8, Green Acres 10, Watch Your Child 1S French Chef 33
when that shoena punim (pretty face) danced
this season but Dave Bristol's tops on the guess- I 20 - Lucille Rivers 3
list Introducttoo of a new oral cootraceptlw 1 30 - 3 Ul A Match 3• 4• IS, Let's Make A Deal 6 13 As The
all night and won Israel's "David," kosher
World Turns 8, 10, Designing Women 33
verSion of Bdwy 's "Tony" best-&lt;&gt;f.all
In San Antonio turned out to be Texa11 Roulette: 2 OODou Da ys of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 Mike
1 6, Guiding Light 8, 10, Bridge 33
It was Yuletide al the Camelot for lunch Docstested398galsandgave97aclwnmypill gas
2
~po~~~~g3;ame 13, Doctors 4, ts, Edge of Night 8 10,
Connie Stevens arrived toting big F.A 0 Sch- and 10 got pregsle . The Mulcan eamomy ls
wartz toy..shopping bags brimming wtth Christ- sturdy - nobankfaUuresin38yen-andlhey 3 00 - Another World 3, 15 Genera! Hospital 6 13 Love
pay 10\2 to 12\2 pet interest! Great country
Splendored Thing 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 33'
mas toys for her Joely and Trlcla, by Eddie
3 ~re~eJl';mtot~~ton Place3, 4• IS , One Life to Live 6, 13
ThisseasonlsManhattanatltspretllelllnd
Fisher Half a dozen midtown shopwindows
are awash with Christmas cards· trifle early·
Mr Cartoon 3. Somerset 15, Sesame st 33 Love
' Tanya (Miss World) Wilson at the Rainbow 4 00Am-erdlcen
Style 13, Merv Griffin 4 Fllnlslones 6, Gilligan's
but then, Avon TV commercials are Yule- Grill and Terry Ame (Miss America)
1•1an 8, Move
"Gun Fury' 10
pitching already. Here's why local nightclub.ot' Meeuwsen at BlllCban'anewGold Coin JI'OYe it 4 25 - Sports Club 6
all over can't lure stars Sonny &amp; Oler expect to
Alfred Gwynne Vander~!'&amp; forgetting lady 4 3,~:- I GLo1v11e Lucy 6, Andy Griffith 15, Petti coot Junction 3
jockey Robyn Smith with even cutl!l' ~thla
,..,rv r 1n 8, 0 anlel Boone 1
•
mtake '150,000 for one day (two perfil) at the big
Cole, niece of the late rich art dealer E Jay S ~;;.~r6 Rogers 33 , Dick Van Dykel5 Ponderosa 3, 4 Daniel
new Nassau Coliseum In exurban N. Y
Hugh Hefner's $29.000,000 Playboy Hotel In
RUSIOuk
Qouelest thieves the heartless 5 ~sM't'r:hall Dillon 1s . Elec Co 33 Dragnet a, Gomer Pyle
New Jersey discovered therearen'tenough bl!g·
punkri wllo heisted TV sets a JJeCOIId time from 6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6, News3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Halhllyoga 33
eyed prurlents to flll that big resort and It's
the 6th fioor patienlll' reluatlon room at ~ ~ - ~ews 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 , Bridge 33, I Dream of JeaMie13
pitching for the parentH!ddies trade, com·
Women's Hospital . AI me ould Irilh mother
T - th e~10, Whllt'sM~Ine8, Milestones of Progrh•33
used 1o say, they'll have no lt!Ct.
,;,u s.l'rit 1s seq 3• Beat • Clock 4, Anything You Can 0.:.
pared to the toplesa.aervtce jernts now
everywhere Hef's old Bunny-costumes are
Anne Bancroft toted the "Alpha, Betz" play 7 30 - To Telt the Truth 6, The Judge 10, EpiSOde Action 33
script lo Au Tmnel. It's the London ' IIIIUh
Pollee Surgeon 3, 4. Protectors 8, Beatlhe Block 13
\ •
veritable Mother Hubbards
Anita Louise's
starring
Rachel
Roberta
and
Albert
Flmey
.
.
8
~Adam
12
4,
Affair
33,
Paul
Lynde
6,
13
Carol
Burne«
8,
widower, Henry Berger, almost ran out of
celebrities to date and then Unda Ouisttan
Pianist AI Griner needs a bicycle: pllys IC· 8 ~-·~'1:.~~ ~ 4, 15, Movie• "Say Goodbye, /Mggle Coil " 6,
1
arrived .. Hume Q-onyn had enough hard luck companlment for Alan Dale at the new Hawan 9 oo :... ~tC.1 Center a.
10
lately without the agony when a workman
Thnee Square cafe, then dashes lo the Door- 10 00-Search 3, 4, 15, JulleAndrews6, 13, Cannone 10 , ~t
rebulldlng hill new Pound Ridge estate died In a
JJhow window at the Ttmee Square Autlllnat lo 1l
News3 4 6 8 10 13 15
' ' \
construction crush.
pink for oldtlmer Edna Thayer's turna, then 11 30 - Johnn'y 'car~n· 3 'o~, 15 Dick c
{
Rod McKuen's writing a new comic strip,
back to Dale Thl!l'e's a half-buc:t minimum at
Movies ' Brlgadoon" 10, "R~ Skitt ~v1J!..~i~\~g~; an 81
his poetry's fumy, too Doo't tell us the best·
the Alltomat - to keep out the riHraff,
: ~:
~3

Bit of Luck Good as Magic
26

NORm

.KQ9 2
¥742
• Q1 5

.K 63
~T

.8 6
¥AQ1 06J
+K98
.AJ9

SOUTH

EAST
.7 3
¥J98
+ J42

.108542
( D)

.AJJ0 54
¥K 5
+A 1063
.Q7
None vulnerable
We. I North East South

Dble 3 •

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

1.4.

Openmg lead-• 8
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here IS another Jannersten
hand South IS 10 four spades
and West has doubled the
one spade openmg b•d and
has opened a tr ump
South looks ove r dummy
carefully It looks as •I West
Will hold all mJSSJDg h1 gh
cards and South •s faced
With the prospect of los mg

Television Log

I.

I

"Who's Got the Spot Iight?"

1

.

g:_

::!

•

I

•I

, 3- The Dlil19eltlnel, Mlddleport-Pm~eroy, 0 , Sept 26, 1972

,,

,. S;:~ Parade ~ Chiefs Rally To ~srBfo.T~ Ryan Fans
12, Posts
'":,.::r~:::::._•....,)Whip New Orleans

: . . . YORK
manager of the Philadelphia Ph1ll1es breaks the news to his field
manager
He's going to f~re hun
"I'm gonna let myself go, ' says Paul Owens, laughmg about 11
a little
The reason Paul Owens laughs IS because he's both general
manager and field manager of the Philltes nght now and as the
former he's about to fJre htmself as the latter
The last tune anybody remembers anythmg hke th1s happenmg was nearly 50 years ago when Casey Stengel, prestdent of
the Worcester ball club, canned Casey Stengel, the Worcester
manager
'Remember tl hke 1t was the other day, • says Casey ' Hadda
go tiw6ugh the COmffiiSSJOner, Judge LandiS "
But let's get back to Paul Owens He has led pracllcally two
hves smce succeeding Frank LuccheSI as manager and taking on
both JObs last July 10
Drops 10 Pounds
From a phySical standpo10t, he has dropped nearly 10 pounds
off a frame that was lean to begm w1th, and 11 hasn't been too
easy mentally e1ther trymg to keep track of 15 thmgs at the same
time
"People k1d me about loSJng my marbles, ' Owens says sllll
smJitng "I tell them tf they ever see me talkmg to myself m the
hotel lobby not to pay any attenhon, really, because 1t's only the
general manager gJvmg the manager hell '
When the 48-year-&lt;&gt;ld Owens acceded to the w1shes of club
owner Bob Carpenter and took over fo r Lucchesi, now on spec1al
ass1gnment for the club, the Ph1llles had lost 40 of the1r last 50
games and seemed headed stra1ght for the bottom of the Western
Carolmas League
They st1ll w11l finish last m the Nahonal League East next wee k
but now, Owens feels, at least they do have some hope of movmg
up next year
' What I wanted most was for thts club to get nd of 11.'! losmg
attttude," says Owens, under whom the Phtls have won 29 and
lost 42 That comes out to a 408 percentage, and the Phils "ere
crawlmg along at 342 when Owens became the manager
Wanted 500 Ball
' I wanted us wplay 500 ball," he says 'That may not sound
like much, but I felt If we could play 500, we could get our self
respect back To me, that was Important and I tned to convey
that to the players We were almost doomed to fuush last when 1
took over and I wid the players, let's not k1d ourselves, we can't
change the nature of our standmg, but In the 80 games left let s
at least try to play 500 It wasn't so much a case of wmnmg 40
and losmg 40,1 sa1d to them, as a case of executmg better-(Jr at
least well enough to play 500 ball '
Owens goes back to bemg solely general manager next week
but there won 't be any vacallon lor h1m He realizes the Ph1llles
will have to make trades this wmter-0ne rumor already has 11
they 're gomg to deal theJr super southpaw Steve Carlton to
Pit!.'!burgh for Dock Elhs, Renme Stennett and M1il May--and
because of wha t he has been dmng these past three months no
general manage r will brmg a fresher f~rst hand knowledge of the
players to the tradmg table than Owens
I know Na ltonal League players so much better havmg
watched them fr om JO feet away • he says I hea r and see
thmgs mthe dugout I couldn t have any posSible way of kno\\ mg
If I didn't have the umform on, and I know 1t's gonna help
tremendously "

The First Thing
The first thing Owens has to do now IS ftnd h1mself a new fteld
man ~ge r He already has had dozens of appbcatlons for the JOb
and talked to four or ftve candidates personally
Dave Bristol, let out by Milwaukee earber m the year would
seem to he the No I candidate although Owens does not say that
Other ca ndidates who have been mentioned are Bobby Wme,
Tom LaSorda, Danny Ozark, Frank Robmson, Maury Wtlls, Jtrn
Bunning Btll White, Dick Howser, Harry Walker
Owens has an open mind He says tf he ca n get the nght man
black or whtte, that man w1ll get the job
'Yes, 1 would conside r a man wtthout previous managenal
expenence ' he sa)'ll "We want a strong man, one who s ftrrn
and can handle people What we're looking forts a man who ca n
teach yoWlg players such as we have You know, m this day and
age a manager has to reabze that Simply because a ballplayer
put.'! on a b1g league unlfonn one thst ssys Phillles across 11
that doesn t necessanly mean he s a polished performer
From the sound of it, Paul Owens 1s lookmg for another Walter
Alston That's !me, but there's only one h1tch
There aren 'I too many around

By Umted Press tnternat•onal
Natmna I League
East

w I pel gb

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-It
wasn't a parttcularly 1mpres
SJve wm on the scoreboard but
for Kansas City Coach Hank
Stram 11 proved hJS Ch1efs have
the makmgs of champions
" H you're not a mature team
w1th pride and purpose you

Bucks Should Be
Ready For Heels
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Coach
Woody Hayes sa1d Monday his
Oh10 State football team should
be pretty close to full
strength" for Saturdays game
agamst unbeaten North Caroh·
na
The s1xth-ranked Buckeyes
1dle smce an opemng 21.() wm
over Iowa Sept 16, worked
'overly hard " last week m

prachce m an effort, Hayes
sa1d, to make up for the open
date
Hayes sa1d however, he
planned to ease up this week to
try to avmd any IDJUrJes
' We will be at a disadvantage Saturday agamst North
Carohna, ' Hayes satd, "be
cause they hsve played three
limes as much football as we
have
The Tar Heels have already
played three games postmg

RECORD SET
ASTl, Calif (UPJ )-A four·
man learn led by Olymp1an
John Howard, Springfield, Mo ,
set a record Monday m the 100.
kilometer race at the opemng
of the Italian SwiSS Colony 100
bicycle races
The team was clocked at
2 18 0to break the U S mark of
2 24 00 97 over the near 8Q.mlle
distance The other team
members were Rick Ball,
MadiSOn, Wis., Ron Skarin,
Van Nuys, Calif , and Mike
Neel, Oakland , Calif Ball and
Skarln were also Olympic
competllors

Browns ftrst wm th1s year, a
21·17 VIctory over the Ph1la
delphia Eagles, Sunday
'It very deftmtely was his
ftnest and most consistent per·
formance," smd Coach N1ck
Skonch Monday "He threw
them well dld a good JOb of
reading the1r defense and I am
very encouraged
'l dtdn't even thmk about
taking him out late m the
game, ' Skor1ch sa1d
Phtpps has been groomed to
take over for veteran BIU Nel·
sen, whose perenmal knee
problems caused the Browns to
look for youth to lead them
"Next week Will be another
challenge," Phipps satd, 'and
I will be the No I quarterback
only if l prove I can do the job
every week "
Meanwhile m Cincmnatt, the
focus was on Horst Muhlmann,
whose sure and accurate toe
gave the Bengals theJr second
wlnoftheseason,lii-10over the
Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday
.All the Bengal points were

Tar Heels' game last Saturday
aga1nst North Carolina State
and sa1d, "I recogmzed some of
the thmgs they d1d "
Sarkkinen saJd NC Coach B1ll
Dooley, after gettmg the Tar
Heel JOb, took hJS staff to both
Oh1o State and M1c)ligan to get
help m settmg up hiS slot-! of.
fense
The Carolina offense looks
hke the offense (Rex ) Kern and
company ran here m 1968, '
Sarkkinen srud
Dooley, Sarkkmen sa1d IS
highly respected by all of us '
and w11l have a sound game
plan "

The rebmlt North Carolina
defense w1th seve n new faces
from a year ago has been
touched for 11 pomts m the ftrst
three games It has, how-eve1,
been tough agamst the run,
allowmg only 332 yards
w1ns
over
Ri chmond ,
V1dnovJc the Key
Maryland and North Carolma
The offense, led by slick JUn
State
wr quarterback Ntck V1dnovtc
We flgure tlus to be a real and a corps of runnmg backs,
tough game and we don t In· has 693 yards on the ground m
tend to take 11 lightly at all " three games, 215 m 58 cames
Hayes sa1d at his weekly press by 5-10, 182-pound tailback
luncheon
Billy Htle and another 104 by
No Losses
V1dnovJc m 28 tnps
Hayes sa td about the only
Other backs who have seen
good thmg we saw out of hav- conSiderable ac llon are
mg an open date was "we ta ilback Ike Oglesby and
didn t lose over the weekend ' fu llbacks Ttm K1rkpatnck,
Esco Sarkkmen Hayes end D1ck Oliver and Sam my
coach and top scout, sa w the Johnson

Red-Hot AL East
Action To Resume
By United PI'Ns International
The red hot Am enca n
League East DIVISIOn race
resumes tomght but two of the
four contenders fmd them
selves w1th another day of
mactVJty
Wtth New York and DetrOit
geltmg ready for a key two
game senes begmrung Wednesday mght m the Motor City,
Boston IS at home agamst
Milwaukee whtle Balt1m ore
entertams Cleveland
Boston st!.'! atop the AL East
WIth a precariOus one-game
lead, But, for whst 1t's worth,
the Red Sox have the knowledge they can determme the1r
ow n desllny and at the
moment do not have to rely on
others Boston s next three

Skorich Praises Phipps
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mike
Phipps Is realls!Jc "I Will be
the No 1 quarterback only if I
prove l can do the job every
week ''
The three-year man on the
Cleveland Browns w11l get his
next chance here Sunday
against the Cincmnatl Bengals
Ph1pps eng ineered th e

could fold under those ctrcumstances," Stram said
Those circumsta nces were
three Ch1efs' fumbles that New
Orleans changed mto scores
The scrambling Samts led
three thnes and held a 11·11 tie
Wlttl Jan Stenerud booted a 22-

scored by Muhlmann - f1ve
f1eld goals
' There was no reason wget
ne rvous,' Muhlmann sa1d m
]OS(

Coach Paul Brown called the
enco unter w1th Pittsburgh
'about as tough and hard
fought a football game as you'll
see "
"Etther team could have
won ," Brown sa1d "We hap.
pened to get our !Jeld goals off
and they dido 't '
Mublmann made good on
kicks from 41, 34, 32, 32 and 20
yards He was 5-5 for the day,
but "I don't worry whether I
make s•x out of SIX or 20 m a
row," lhe German-born k1cker
SaJd "I JUSt want to wm I don 't
like lOSing "

Shoes are measured by
barleycorns A barleycorn IS
an early English measure
equahng approximately onethird of an inch

ga mes are at home , two
agatnst Milwaukee and one
aga10st Kansas City, but the
Red Sox must play the1r !mal
SIX contests on the road, three
at Baltunore and the !mal
three at DetrOit
Unlike prev10 us seaso ns,
where all teams mvolvcd m a
pennant chase played the same
amount of games thiS year
because of the players' strike,
fmds Detroit haVJng 156 ga mes,
Boston and New York w1th 155
and Bal!Jmore w1th a 154 Wtlh
thiS s1tuatwn, Detr01t has a
chance to "'" more games
than any of the ot hers but
equally true, they could lose
the extra game or two
At thJS stage, the Tigers have
played two more games than
Boston and fmd themselves
with an equal number of w•ns
but two extra losses or cou rse,
Detro1t can make up those
losses m the !mal senes of the
season agamst Boston The one
other advantage the Tigers
have ts that the1r remmmn g
etght games are all at home,
two aga1nst New York, three
agalDSt Milwaukee and the
!mal three aga1nst Boston
Detr01t trails Boston by one
game wtth Baltunore 21&gt; back
and New York three behmd
Ba!Umore, trrulmg both Boston
and DetrOJt, needs help 1f 11 IS
to wm tis fourth straight
diVISIOn title The Onoles have
three left w•th Boston, but w1th
thetr four other games agamst
Cleveland, they must look to
New York, Mtlwaukee or
Boston to beat DetrOit
The Yankees find themselves
m sJmJiar stra1L'! Except for
two games agmnst Detrmt,
New York finishes up w1th
Cleveland and Milwaukee The
Yankees, like the Orioles, must
play the game of "scoreboard
watching" while meetmg the
Brewers and Indians
Oakland, rained out Monday
rught, still holds a 3\&gt;.game
edge over the Chicago White
Sox In the Western DIVISion

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yard field goal w1th I 21left m
the game for the Ch1efs' 2().11
VICtory Monday ntght
Stram SaJd quarterback Len
Dawson, who brought tho
Chtefs' from behmd tw1ce w1th
scormg passes of three and 22
yards to W1ll1e Frazter and Otis
Taylor, "d1d a good job of
taking what they gave us "
After a scoreless f1rst penod,
Stenerud's 12-yard field goal
matched a 31-yard boot by
Charlie Durkee and Dawson's
pass to Fraz1er caught up w1th
Doug Wyatt's :!&gt;-yard fumble
return to knot the score !().!Oat
the half
Sam!.'!' quarterback Arch1e
Manmng then htt tight end
Dave Parks w1th an e1ght-yard
scormg pass late m the third
penod but Kansas City tied It
at 11·11 three mmutes later
w1th Dawson s scormg pass to
Taylor
We JUSt needed to wm,'
Stram sa1d, obviously thlnkmg
of last week's 2().10 loss to
M1am1 'We needed a good
offenstve game and we had 1t
tomght
'When you are a good
football team like we are, you
play a little ttght," Stram sa1d
But the longer the game went
on, the more we loosened up
and went after people '
Stram praJsed the Samts as
'a fme young growmg team'
and called Manmng a ' one of
the bnlllant young quarter·
backs
'We gave them three
fumbles and you have to gJve
them credit for taking them m
to score," Stram satd
Wyatt, a three-year veteran

at safety who scored his first
NFL touchdown on the fumble
return late 10 the second
pertnd, sa1d Kansas City was a
good team 'but I thmk we
played well enough to wm '
I don t th1uk 11 was our
supreme game," Samts' defenSive end R1chard Neal added,
' but 1t was a good effort '

College Ratings
NEW

YORK

13rd weeki

Team

Potnts

I Southern Cal {20) (3 0)332
2 Okla homa {12) 12 0) 319
3 Colorado (I) (3 O)
252
4 Tennessee (3 O)

Alabama I1) (2 01
Oh to Sl Ill II 01
Nebraska 12 11
8 Mtchtgan 12 O)
9 LouiS tan a 51 12 O)
10 Notre Dame (I 01
II Arozona 51 (2 0)
12 Wash 1nglon (3 0)
13 Floroda 51 (3 01
14 Texas II OJ
15 Iowa 51 12 0)
16 Penn 51 (11)
17 IT1el Atr Force 12 01
ITie) W Va (3 0)
19 UCLA (2 I)
5
6
7

II
7

5
4

4

3
2

Mator league l ea ders

Untted Press International
Le admg Batters
Naltonal League

g ab
144 550

r h pet
91 184 335
132 535 101 174 325
120 415 60 135 325
127 521 82 167 321
133 536 84 169 315
146 S99 79 187 312
147 617 103 19 1 310
127 442 63 137 310
142 529 71 163 308
130 466 72 142 305

Amencan l eague

g ab
Carew M1n 135 517
D Allen Cht 145 498
Rudo Oak 142 577
5hblm KC 128 429
Pntela KC 143 543
May Ch t
144 515
F!Sk Bos
123 430
OtiS KC
135 507
Mabery KC 141 478
Berry Cal 11 2 382

r
60
90
P3

h pet
167 323
1S4 309
176 308
59 132 308
63 166 306
81 155 301
72 129 300
70 150 296
59 140 293
38 112 293

Home Runs

Nal1onal League Colberl SO
38 Bench C1n 37 W1 il1ams
Ch o34 Stargell Pitt 33 Aaron
Atl 31
0 Allen

Amertcan League

Cht

37

Murcer

K tl lebrew

Mmn

NY 30

Epstem and

Jackson, Qak 2S
Runs Batted tn
Nattonal League

)( Ctnc 1nnat1
Hous ton
Los Angeles
A tl anta
San Franctsco

91

San Doego

~l: :

56

619

81 65

555

80 68

541 11 ~

68 79
63 85

463 23
462 28

9h
2

57 89 390 33 /'

x Chnched dtv1s1onal fltle
Monday s Result
San DIPQO 5 Los Ang J

(Only game scheduled)

Today s Probable P11chers

lA It T1mes EDT)

New York ( Koosman 9 12 ) at
Sf Louts (B i bby I 1) 9 p m
San Franc1sco {Mc0owe ll 8 8)
at Hou ston (Reuss 9 12) 8 30

pon

San Doego (Caldwell 7 9) at
Los

Angeles

(Stnger 6 16 or

Str ahler 0 21 l 1 p m
Atlanta (Stone 6 10) at
Ctnctnnalt IGult ell 8 9) 8 05
pm
Chtcago I Pappas 15 7) at
M on t real (Torrez

pm

P1ttsburgh

Phlladelph ta
7 35 p m

16 11)

8 05

(Blass 18 7) at
(Twdchell 58)

Wednesday s Games
New York at Sf Lou1s

Ch at Montreal mghl
Ptllsburgh at Phtla ntg hl
At lanta at Ctnc ntghl
San Fran at Houston n1ght
San D 1ego at Los Ang n1ghf
Amencan League
Boston

Detroit
Balftm ore

New York
Cleveland

Mil waukee

Oa kl and
Cht cago
M nnesota
Kansas C1 ty
Callforn ta

Texas

East
w t pet g b
80 66 548
80 68 541
78 69 531 2h
78 70 527 3
67 83 447 15
61 87 412 20
West
wlpclgb
87 60 592
83
75
72
70

63
70
74
78

568 3112
517 11
493 J41 2
473 18

52 95 354 35

Monday s Resu lts
Ca ltfornta 2 Texas 1
Mtnn at Oak

ppd

ra tn

!Only games schedul ed!
Today s Probable PJ!chers
I At! Times EDT!
M tnnesota ( Biy tev m 1516) at

Oakland1Blue 6P) 1lpm

M Iwaukee (Parsons 13 12) at
Boston ( Pat hn 15 12) 7 30 p m
Cleveland (T tdrow 13 15) a t

Ball more (Cuellar 1711) 7 30
pm
Kansas Ctty I Nelson 9 6) al
Chtcago !Bahnsen 20 15) 9 p m
Califor nia (Messersmtth 7 10)

Bench, Ctn

Wtlltams Ch1 114 Stargell
Pott 112 Col bert SO 105 May

117

Hou 97

Kansas Clly at

Ch cago

Milwaukee at Boston
Mm n at Oclk l and night
Ca l 1f at Texa s ntgh t
New York at Detro1t n 1g hf
Cleve at Balltmore n 1ght

193

165
164
137
90
69
64
53
16
13

20 Mt SSISSI PP (2 0)

Wilms Ch1
Cdeno Hou
Baker At l
Garr All
Clover Pol
Brock 51 L
Rose Ctn
Santo Ch1
Walsn Hou
Slrgel Ptt

92 65
81 66
76 70

al Texas I Paul 7 8) 8 30 p m
games sc hedul ed)
( UPI )- The (Only
Wednesday 's Games

Untied Press lnternattonat top
20 mat or cot lege f ootball teams
wtlh f st place votes and won
lost
ecords tn parentheses

By

626
551
521
51 Lou s
71 78 477
Man trea I
67 79 459
Pht ladelphta 55 92 374 37
West
w I pel g b
x P11tsburgh
Chtcago
New York

A11jencan League D Allen
Ch o 112 Mayberry KC P4
Murcer NY 90 Scott Mil 83
Powell Bait and Oarwm Mlnn
78

Court Case
Transferred
CHICAGO(UPI) - A federal
court case challengmg the
Natwnal Hockey League
reserve clause has been transferred to U S Dtstnct Court m
Phil adelphia where a Similar
SUI! IS pendmg
U S Disln ct Court Judge
Bernard M Decker Monday
ordered the case brought
agamst the Chtcago Black
Hawks of the NHS by the
Ch1cago Couga rs of the World
Hockey AssociatiOn and player
Bobby Hull heard '" th e
Ph•ladelplua court
Decker also asked the
Phlladelphta court to hear a
requ es t by the Cougars'
lawyers that he 1ssue a
restrammg order prohJbtting
the Black Hawks fr om trymg to
en£orce the reserve clause m
Hull s contract
Hull, who has s1gned a $1
million plus contract to play for
and coach the Wmmpeg Jet.'! of
the' WHA, effective Oct. I, has
been sued by the Black Hawks,
who cla1m they still have the
nght to hiS talents That su1t IS
sh U pendmg In federal court
here
The Phlldelph1a case asks
the court to declare the NHL
reserve clause vole because 11
allegedly VIolates federal anlt·
trust law A rulmg was ex·
peeled next month, Ch1cago
court sources sa1d

18th Win
United Press International
A change of scenery was all
that Nolan Ryan needed
Ryan, an mconsJStent, me·
diocre pitcher w1th the New
York Mets for the past few
seasons, hss developed mto a
star now that he s gotten a
chance to p1tch regularly wtth
the Callforma Angels He
proved 11 Monday mght by
becommg only the sixth p1tcher
m American League hiStory to
surpass the 300.stnkeout mark
for a season as the Angels
edged the Texas Rangers, 2-1
Ryan, one of the hardest
throwers m baseball, struck
out 12 batters to boost his total
to 302 and wrest the maJOr
league lead from Steve Carlton
of Philadelphia The VIctory
was h1s 18th a career high
I thmk 11s the htghllght of
my ca reer, Ryan sa1d I
was actually more concerned
abou I getting 20 than the
stnkeouts, but 1!' s gomg to be
tough gettmg 20 wms, that's all
there IS to 1t ' Ryan must wm
his last two start.'! agamst
Mmneso ta and Oakland to
reach the charmed 2().vJctory
c1rcle
Ryan traded to Califorma
w1th three nunor leaguers for

J1m Fregos1, has p1lched 283
1nnmgs th1s season
Texas took a 1.() lead m the
second Without a hit as Ted
Ford was safe on an error,
stole second, took third on a
sacrifice bunt and scored on
Dalton Jones' sacnf1ce fly The
Angels tied 11 m the seventh on
Mtckey Rivers' smgle and
Vada Pmson's double and
Ryan tgmted the wmnmg rally
m the e1ghth wtlh a double He
moved to third on an mfteld out
and scored on Larry Bittner's
error
In the only other major
league game played Monday
rught, the San D1ego Padres
edged the Los Angeles
Dodgers 5-3 Mmnesota at
Oakland was ramed out
Pinch-lutter Randy Elliott
tr1pled home Fred Stanley w1th
the he-breaking run m the
etghth mmng as the Padres
downed the Dodgers Elliott
scored the f1fth run when a
relay throw went astray, one of
five Dodger errors
In the tomd Amencan
League pennant race, Boston
holda a one-game lead over
Detr01t w1th Baltimore 21&gt;
back and the Yankees three
games beh1nd

Hawks Refuse
To Pay Fine
ATLANTA (UPI )-Nahonal
Ba s ketball As soc1a1Jon
Commtss1oner Walter Kennedy
Monday fin ed the Atlanta
Hawks $25,000 for 1gnonng his
direcllve not to play Julius
ErVIng, but the Hawks countered w1th an antitrust su1t
ETVJng played last season
With the V1rg101a SqUires ol the
Amencan Basketball Assocwtlon, then signed a $1 million
contract w1th the Hawks a
couple of days before the
Milwaukee Bucks made him
thetr first-round chmce m the
annual NBA draft
Kennedy ordered the Hawks
to release Ervmg last week
after the NBA's board of
governors ruled Ervmg
belongs to the Milwaukee
Bucks
But the Hawks refused to
obey the board's directive and
when Kennedy slapped the
$25,000 !me the Hawks came
back by ftling a swt agamst the
NBA m federal court m Atlanta
askmg $2 m1ihon damages and

The

Oat~

Sentmel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTERE ST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,

seekmg an InJUnction to
prevent the NBA from unposmg the !me for playmg
ErVIng
Kennedy's !me agamst the
Hawks for usmg Ervmg Satur·
day and Sunday In games with
the Kentucky Colonels was the
largest the COll1llUSStoner has
1r0posed without league approval The league's b1ggest !me
was $1;00,000 against. Seattle In
the Spencer Haywood case
"I have sent the followtng
telegram to William Putnam,
president of the Atlanta club,''
Kennedy said Monday in New
York
For playmg Julius Erving
m two games over the past
weekend m violation of my
dtrecttves of Sept 21·22,
Atlanta IS hereby fmed t25,000
Please be advised that those
directives are still In full force
and effect '
ThiS We&gt;k's Special

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�4- Tbe Dafty Sentinel, Mlddleporl·Pomeroy, 0., Sept. :IIi, 1972

Limbert -.-113 , . .
where a timeout was
immediately called.
.An
incomplete pass stopped the
off by runs of 12 and 8 yards by
clock once again. A smith to
Llllribert pass of 12 . yards
Rob Lambert, the latter being
a touchdown joint with 2:14 forced Wahama to call their
left. The extra point kick was final liJReoul with 0:12
wide leaving the score at 1~ . remaining. At this point the
When Wahwna attempted an While Falcon's elected to use
on-sides kick there was a mad the quail. Terry smiUt threw
scramble for Ute ball with complete to Rob Lambert for
White Falcons players joyously 13 yards. Rob had seemingly
declaring it as Wahama•s went out of bounds with five
football. As the pile-up was seconds left but the officials
uncovered the officials failed to stop the clock. The
declared it as Duval's . game ended with the White
possession . Duval began Falcons on the Duval 18 yard
killing the clock it seemed to be outstanding game catching
Especially in the
all over. With 0:36left In the record.
14
tackles.
Don Machir and
game Wahama caused a
Yellow Jacketfumble with Don
Wahama 0 0 0 6 6
Machir recovering on the
Duval 6 8 0 0 _!4
Wahama 44.
On the White Falcons first Mathews II yd. run-EP. good;
Fellowhip"
and
play from scrimmage Rob Coin

ON SALE AT MARK V THIS WEEK

Profiles in Coal Committee Gives Falcons Defeated 14-6
"Three and one·half years
qo, I came to the United
States because the op.
portuni ties in the field of mine
engineering are greater here
than anywhere else in the
world." That's how Harry
Lester, planning engineer for
the . Southern Ohio Coal
Olmpany since last January,
explained - in a stiff British
accent - his leaving Englimd.
Lester, born in Cramlington,
Northumberland, England,
emigrated to the U. S. arid
accepted employment as
Assistant Superintendent of
Itman No. 3 Mine with
Pocahontas Fuel Company
near Beckley, W. Va. His prior
employment was with the
National Coal Board of
England as assistant mine
foreman at the Clipstone Mine
in Nottingham and as mine
foreman of the South Kirkby
Mine in Yorkshire.
Upon finishing high school in
Northumberland County,
Lester attended Ashington
Technical College in Northeast
England for five years where
in 1958 he received an HNC and
HND in mining (Higher
National Certificate and
Higher National Diploma). He
then attended the Institute of
Mining Engineers in London
where he graduated as an
Associate
Member and
Chartered Engineer in 1959.
Continuing his education, he
has since become a registered
professional engineer in Ohio
and West Virginia.
"I really enjoy sports," said
lester, "but I'm particularly
fond of American basketball.
It's a game they don't play
very much in England."
Besides sports, he is a "fair"
chess player and enjoys stamp

'
LEANESSDIES
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)Dr. William P. "Pete"
l.eaness, coach of Temple
University's soccer teams for
41 years, died Monday. He was
65.
l.eaness, a practicing
chiropodist, coached Temple
from 1930 until his retirement
after the 1970 season. His
teams won national championships in 1951 and 1953 and
~ colllliled an tlverall·record
cl249-W~7.
1

Thirty.iux of his players were

designated All-Americas and
many of his squads went on to
become ouistanding coaches
and professional players.
Leaness, a 1930 graduate of
Temple's School of Chiropody,
was an All-America in soccer
and baseball at the university
and captained both teams in
1929.
SPRAINS ANKLE
DALLAS (UPI )- The Dallas
Q&gt;wboys Monday listed punter
Marv Bateman as questionable
for next Sunday's game with
Green Bay because· of a
sprained right ankle.
Bateman was hit by a New
York Giant lineman last
Sunday on a punt that was
almost blocked, and he was
nolicably limping as he went to
the sidelines.
Offensive tackle tackle
Ralph Neely had a bruised
right hand, flanker Bob Hayes
was suffering from a ham·
string pull, running hack Walt
Garrison has a charle) horse
and rookie Jean Fugett also
has a strained hamstring.
ROOKIE NAMED
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Rook ie 1eflhander John
Matlack of the New York Mets
was named National League
Player of the Week Monday by
league President Charles S.
Feeney.
Matlack pitched two com·
plete game victories during the
week of Sept. 18-24 and did not
yield an earned :-Jn in 18 innings. He gave up c.nl.y 10 hits
in the wins, 1.0 over Pittsburgh
and 1).3 over Philadelphia.
The
victories
upped
Matlack's season record to 14-9
with a 2.31 earned run average.

Away Broad Power

HARRY LESTER
collecting. "Actually, I've just
got an average stamp
collection, however I want to
start spending more time on
it," he said.

Lester and his wife, the
former Elizabeth Margaret
Cowan, also
of
Northumberland, have purchased
a home at 43 Briarwood Drive,
Athens . "We certainly like the
university.town atmosphere,"
remarked the planning
engineer, "and the children do,
too."

The !.esters' two daughters,
Alison Jane, 7, and Beverly
Anne, 6, enjoy school. "My wife
and !are extremely happy with
the way the children have
adjusted to living in America"
lester said .
11
1 have a pennanent visa
now and in a year-ando&lt;J·half
we 'll all be able to get our U.S.
citizenship. And that is
something that we 'll be very
proud of."

WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon won approval
from a ltey congressional
conunittee Monday of his $250
billion ceiling on federal
spending, but a critic said the
proposal would give Nixon
"dictatorship" ,powers to cut
any federal program· he
chooses.
The House Ways &amp; Mea!IS
Committee voted 21).6 for Ute
ceiling In the exact language
sought by Nixon and which
administration spokesmen
conceded \YOU!d give him
authority to cut items such as
Social Security and veterans
benefits and even the salaries
of congressmen.
The spokesmen told the
panel earlier, however, Nixon
would not cut Social Security
benefits, revenue sharing or
the interest on the national
debt.
The sweeping authority in
the measure, which administration sources conceded
privately' was the strongest
ever given any President in Ute
area of spending, was attacked
by Rep. James Burke, !).
Mass., a conunitte~ member
as "heading toward a dictatorship."
The spending ceiling is part
of an overall bill approved by
the committee that would give
Nixon the $15 billion increase
he seeks through next June 30
in the temporary $450 billion
limit that the government can
now go into debt.
The bill would also create a

Market Report

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, Sept. 23, 1972
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
N&lt;YI' INTIMIDATED
QOGS- 175 to 220 ibs. 28 to
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. 28.75; 220 to.. 250 ibs. 28.35 to
(UPl) -Betty Wood Btoom· 29.25; Light 25 to 27; Fat Sows
field, 52, isn't a woman to be 24 to 27; Stags 21 Down; Boars
intimidatedbyayouthfulpurse 18 to 23; Pigs 8 to 24; Shoats
snatcher.
18.50 to 38.
The housewife was walking
CATTLE- Steers 34 to 44;
near her horne when a teen .age
Heifers 28 to 37.50; Baby Beef
boy grabbed her pocketbook 39 to 50; Fat Cows 20 to 25.20;
and ran. Mrs. Broomfield look Canners 18 to 27.40; Bulls 26.75
off after him.
to 32; Milk Cows 200 to 450.
The woman gained on the
VEAL CALVES - Tops
boy of about 18 and was about 54.50; Seconds 47.50 to 51;
to grab :~lrn:J:!t.e~l!!! thief :_ Med,!tu.n.!'! '!&gt;56;: Com, .!. Hvs.
dropped the purse into a trash 49 .50 to 51; CullS 46 bilwn.
can.
'
BABY CALVES - 35 to 77.
He continued to flee, but Mrs.
LAMBS - Tops 29.75;
Broomfield recovered her Seconds 27 to 28.50; Light Wts.
purse without a loss of its 25 to 28.75; Common 25 Down.
contents, she told police
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Monday.
Steers : Choice 35.25-3:..70;
good, 34.10-34.90; standard,
29.50-32 .50 . Heifers : Choice,
34 .40; good, 31-33.50. Cows :
COLPAERT ACQUIRED
Commercial,
26.50-30.10;
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)utility,
23.75-25.75.
Canner and
Dick Q&gt;lpaert, a right-handed
reliever, was acquired Monday cutter, 18.50-21. Bulls: Comby the Kansas City Royals and mercial, 29-33.60. Stockers and
placed on their Omaha roster feeders: Steer calves, 43.10from Charleston of the Interna- 57 .50; heifer calves, 34.50-42;
yearlings, 36 .50-42.60. Veal
tional League.
calves
: Choice, 51.51J.65, good,
O&gt;lpaert will go to spring
44.50-49.
training with Kansas City.
Lambs : Choice, 29.35.
In the last four years in the
Hogs:
200-230, 28.90; No . I,
Pittsburgh chain, O&gt;lpaerl has
won 41, lost 16 and recorded 44 29.15; 230-240, 28.65; sows,
saves in the International 22.60-26.75; boars, 21.60-22.
league. The 28-year-&lt;Jld palmballer was 14-7 with 21 saves
PASSING INTEREST
and a 2.31 earned run average
Entering the 1972 season,
this season.
John Unitas of the Baltimore
Colts led all active American
Football Conference passers
in career attempts 14,953),
completions 12,708), yards
IN FIFl'H PLACE
gained (38,657), lowest inNEW YORK (UP! )-Grier terception percentage (0.451
Jones ' victory in last and touchdowns 1283) . len
weekend 's Robinson Fall Golf Dawson had the best comClassic moved him from 12th pletion percentage among
passers with 1,000 or more
place to fifth in the latest list of attempts
, .562, and Dawson
pro golf's top money winners also had the best average
for 1972, acCording to figures gain at 7.93 yards per pass .
released Monday by the PGA
Tournament Players Division.
Jones' triumph was worth
$2Q,OOO and upped his earnings
for the year to $122,826. It was
his second tour victory this
season, his first coming in the
Hawaiian Open in February.
.Jack Nicklaus, who skipped the
Robin'!On Classic, rcmair..d ·
atop the list with $280,482
followed by Lee Trevino with
$199,168 and George Archer
with $140,102.
·

31knember Joint House-senate
Q&gt;mmlllee that would study
how to handle future spending
ceilings and report back to the
new Congress by next Feb. 15
with recommendations.

This Kitten
Doing Favors

Uh, .Naturally
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Fran-

ces "Kitten" Natividad held a
news conference Monday but it
wasn't what she had to say that
brought newsmen to the
conference room of a local
motor hotel.
'~Kitten," 24, Miss Nude
Q&gt;smopolitan, held the news
conference in the buff.
There was a noticeable lack
of questions when Miss Natividad, 36-22-35, shrugged out of a
tight floor-length dress.
Then some embarrassed
queries were ventured.
Was she cold?
"I was cold when I first came
into the room," she said/' "but
I'm not a bit cold now. Must be
the TV lights."
She said she entered the Miss
Nude Cosmopolitan contest in
California because "I liked the
idea of the $1,000 first prize."
Is she self-conscious undressing in front of strange
men? Someone asked.
"No, men can look at me all
they want," she replied. "I feel
I'm doing them a favor."
"Kitten," a onetime go--go ·
dancer in Los Angeles, now is a
stripper, appearing In nearby
Newport, Ky.

Local Bowling
Wednesday Early Bird
Sept. 20, 1972
Standings:
Team
W L
R. H. Rawlings
28 '

Dorothy's Pinnettes
Bertha's Grocery

26 6
14 18

King Builders Supply

12 20

Royal Crown
Evelyn 'sG rocery

8 24
8 24

High Ind. Game - Clarice
Kravetta 211, Flossie Maxson

175.

High

Series

-

BY RANDY CLARK
The Wahama White Falcons
failed to contain the rigid ball
control offense of the Duval
Yellow Jackets as they fell to
defeat I~ Saturday night.
The White Falcon's managed
to run only 31 offensive plays
tlJroughout the entire ball
game,-inc)uding only five plays
in the thirrl nuarter. Weather
conditions and some crucial
calls cost .the White Falcons
dearly.
Jus I prior to kickoff the rains
began to fall. . As Wahama
received, they fumbled the
kick managing ta gain
possession on their own seven
yard line. After three plays,
the White Falcon's punted with
Duval taking over on the
Wahama 43 yard line.
Duval ruled off 12 plays
capped by PaUlino's nine yard
touchdown run with 4:31 left in
the quarter.
Botliteams battled
throughout the first quarter
and the beginning of the
second. In the middle of the
"""ond quarter, Rob Lambert
fumbled a Duval punt giving
the Yellow Jackets excellent
field position on the While
Falcon 17 yard line.
Four
plays
later
Quarterback Kim Mathews
scrambled in from the eleven.
His pass for the extra point was
good giving the Yellow Jackets
a 14-0 lead.

DETROIT
(UPI )Democratic presidential
nominee George McGovern
has narrowed the gap between
himself and President Nixon
by 6 per cent since Sept. I,
national pollster Louis Harris
said Monday.
''Ifl were Richard Nixon, I'd
be afraid," Harris told the
Economic Club of Detroit in a
speech.
Harris said his latest poll,
Sept. 19-21, showed Nixon with
59 per cent, McGovern with 31
per cent and 10 per cent unRECORD SET

ASTI, Calif. ( UPI )-A four·
man
learn led by Olympian
Team High Game - R. H.
Rawlings 812.
John Howard, Springfield, Mo.,
Team High Series - King set a record Monday in the 100..
Bu ilders 2227.
kilomett!r race at the opening
Wed . Early Mixed
of the Italian Swiss Colony 100
bicycle races.
Sept. 20, 1972
Standings :
The team was clocked at
Team
Oiler's Sohio
20 2:18.0to break the U.S. mark of
Team No.6
20 2:24.00.97 over the near 6Q.mile
Team No . 4
20 distance. The other · team
Smith-Nelson Motor s
18
Young's Mkt.
10 members were Rick Ball,
Team No. 5
8 Madison, Wis. , Ron Skarin,
High Ind. Game - IMenl Jr . Van Nuys, Calif., and Mike
Phelps 212. Jr . Phelps 190;
IWomen I Carolyn Bashner 200, Nee!, Oakland, Calif. Bali and
Skarin were also Olympic
Carolyn Bashner 190.
High Series - IMen) Jr . competitors.
Phelps 581, Willard Boyer 5'0;
Maxson 481, Mary Voss 474.

No. 5. 696 .

learn to Sew With

r-..''---..
SH._ 1Rt --..
fl NISHI NG

Sept . 20, 1972

Superiors

lb.

SLICED
·aoLOGNA

CHUCK

Team
Rosenbaum-Meadows

16

Casself.Carsey
Blakeslee.Hoyt

16
15

Halter-Rawling s

11

Fulfz.Bentley

10

Moore -Morrow

4

High Ind. Game - (Men I C.
Blakeslee 212, Dick Rosen·
baum 211. Dan Meadows 20' ;
(Women) Joy Bentley 161,

RC
8
16 0L 69~
bottles

8

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16
bottles

POTATO CHIPS

16

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591 Pkg.

With 13 Purchase

No Purchase Necessary

Cotton Knits

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CANDY SPECIAL!

Acrylic Knits

Jersey Knits

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FAIRMONT

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Rosenbaum 550, Tom Cassell

525. Dan Meadows . C.
Blakeslee SOB ; !Women) Joy
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Ina Meadows 425.
Team

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PHONE: 992·3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. "We Reserve The Right To Umlt Quantities"

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Team High Series - Young's

SAUSAGE

CHOPPED .

SUPERIORS PORK

COKE

decided.
Harris did not give details of
how the poll was conducted, the
groups interviewed or the size
of the sampling involved.
In a Sept. I poll, Harris said,
McGovern trailed Nixon by 34
percentage points and in last
week's poll McGovern had
picked up six points to trail
Nixon by 28 per cent.
While declining to speculate
on the outcome of the election
with six weeks of campaigning
left, Harris did say that if
McGovern is to improve his
standings, he must regain his
"anti-politics" image, hurt
badly by his recent courting of
De mo c r a t i c p a r I y
professionals.

CUBE STEAK

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FRIDAY ONLY

Gap Narrowed Says Harris

Flossie

(Women) Carolyn Bashner 561,
Pat Carson 500.
Team High Game - Team

' After Wahama received the
kick off they hegan moving the
hall through the air. The White
Falcons moved the pigskin to
the Duval 38 ~ard line on
aerials of 13, 26, and 14 yards to
J.amherl, lewis and Mitchell.
At this point Duyallookover on
downs.
On their second play from
scrimmage, Mike Lewis
seemingly intercepted a
Yellow Jacket pass. Mike
leap,ed hi~h into the air to oi~k
off the Duval aerial. leWIS
was tackled immediately with
both players going to the
ground.
When the official
arrived he ruled dual
possession, thus giving the bali
to Duval.
Only a key
interception
by
Danny
Litchfield in the end-zone
prevented the Yellow Jackets
from scoring.
As the second half began, so
did the monsoons. The rain fell
in torrents the entire third
quarter flooding the field
quickly.
Both teams
desperately tried to at least
look like they were playing
football. As the fourth quarter
began the rains slackened
somewhat.
The While Falcon defense
stiffened but the weather
prevented the offense from
ga ining much ground until
three minutes more left in the
game. A fine punt return by
Mike Lewis of 34 yards gave
the White Falcons excellent
field position. It was capped

.

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�4- Tbe Dafty Sentinel, Mlddleporl·Pomeroy, 0., Sept. :IIi, 1972

Limbert -.-113 , . .
where a timeout was
immediately called.
.An
incomplete pass stopped the
off by runs of 12 and 8 yards by
clock once again. A smith to
Llllribert pass of 12 . yards
Rob Lambert, the latter being
a touchdown joint with 2:14 forced Wahama to call their
left. The extra point kick was final liJReoul with 0:12
wide leaving the score at 1~ . remaining. At this point the
When Wahwna attempted an While Falcon's elected to use
on-sides kick there was a mad the quail. Terry smiUt threw
scramble for Ute ball with complete to Rob Lambert for
White Falcons players joyously 13 yards. Rob had seemingly
declaring it as Wahama•s went out of bounds with five
football. As the pile-up was seconds left but the officials
uncovered the officials failed to stop the clock. The
declared it as Duval's . game ended with the White
possession . Duval began Falcons on the Duval 18 yard
killing the clock it seemed to be outstanding game catching
Especially in the
all over. With 0:36left In the record.
14
tackles.
Don Machir and
game Wahama caused a
Yellow Jacketfumble with Don
Wahama 0 0 0 6 6
Machir recovering on the
Duval 6 8 0 0 _!4
Wahama 44.
On the White Falcons first Mathews II yd. run-EP. good;
Fellowhip"
and
play from scrimmage Rob Coin

ON SALE AT MARK V THIS WEEK

Profiles in Coal Committee Gives Falcons Defeated 14-6
"Three and one·half years
qo, I came to the United
States because the op.
portuni ties in the field of mine
engineering are greater here
than anywhere else in the
world." That's how Harry
Lester, planning engineer for
the . Southern Ohio Coal
Olmpany since last January,
explained - in a stiff British
accent - his leaving Englimd.
Lester, born in Cramlington,
Northumberland, England,
emigrated to the U. S. arid
accepted employment as
Assistant Superintendent of
Itman No. 3 Mine with
Pocahontas Fuel Company
near Beckley, W. Va. His prior
employment was with the
National Coal Board of
England as assistant mine
foreman at the Clipstone Mine
in Nottingham and as mine
foreman of the South Kirkby
Mine in Yorkshire.
Upon finishing high school in
Northumberland County,
Lester attended Ashington
Technical College in Northeast
England for five years where
in 1958 he received an HNC and
HND in mining (Higher
National Certificate and
Higher National Diploma). He
then attended the Institute of
Mining Engineers in London
where he graduated as an
Associate
Member and
Chartered Engineer in 1959.
Continuing his education, he
has since become a registered
professional engineer in Ohio
and West Virginia.
"I really enjoy sports," said
lester, "but I'm particularly
fond of American basketball.
It's a game they don't play
very much in England."
Besides sports, he is a "fair"
chess player and enjoys stamp

'
LEANESSDIES
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)Dr. William P. "Pete"
l.eaness, coach of Temple
University's soccer teams for
41 years, died Monday. He was
65.
l.eaness, a practicing
chiropodist, coached Temple
from 1930 until his retirement
after the 1970 season. His
teams won national championships in 1951 and 1953 and
~ colllliled an tlverall·record
cl249-W~7.
1

Thirty.iux of his players were

designated All-Americas and
many of his squads went on to
become ouistanding coaches
and professional players.
Leaness, a 1930 graduate of
Temple's School of Chiropody,
was an All-America in soccer
and baseball at the university
and captained both teams in
1929.
SPRAINS ANKLE
DALLAS (UPI )- The Dallas
Q&gt;wboys Monday listed punter
Marv Bateman as questionable
for next Sunday's game with
Green Bay because· of a
sprained right ankle.
Bateman was hit by a New
York Giant lineman last
Sunday on a punt that was
almost blocked, and he was
nolicably limping as he went to
the sidelines.
Offensive tackle tackle
Ralph Neely had a bruised
right hand, flanker Bob Hayes
was suffering from a ham·
string pull, running hack Walt
Garrison has a charle) horse
and rookie Jean Fugett also
has a strained hamstring.
ROOKIE NAMED
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Rook ie 1eflhander John
Matlack of the New York Mets
was named National League
Player of the Week Monday by
league President Charles S.
Feeney.
Matlack pitched two com·
plete game victories during the
week of Sept. 18-24 and did not
yield an earned :-Jn in 18 innings. He gave up c.nl.y 10 hits
in the wins, 1.0 over Pittsburgh
and 1).3 over Philadelphia.
The
victories
upped
Matlack's season record to 14-9
with a 2.31 earned run average.

Away Broad Power

HARRY LESTER
collecting. "Actually, I've just
got an average stamp
collection, however I want to
start spending more time on
it," he said.

Lester and his wife, the
former Elizabeth Margaret
Cowan, also
of
Northumberland, have purchased
a home at 43 Briarwood Drive,
Athens . "We certainly like the
university.town atmosphere,"
remarked the planning
engineer, "and the children do,
too."

The !.esters' two daughters,
Alison Jane, 7, and Beverly
Anne, 6, enjoy school. "My wife
and !are extremely happy with
the way the children have
adjusted to living in America"
lester said .
11
1 have a pennanent visa
now and in a year-ando&lt;J·half
we 'll all be able to get our U.S.
citizenship. And that is
something that we 'll be very
proud of."

WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon won approval
from a ltey congressional
conunittee Monday of his $250
billion ceiling on federal
spending, but a critic said the
proposal would give Nixon
"dictatorship" ,powers to cut
any federal program· he
chooses.
The House Ways &amp; Mea!IS
Committee voted 21).6 for Ute
ceiling In the exact language
sought by Nixon and which
administration spokesmen
conceded \YOU!d give him
authority to cut items such as
Social Security and veterans
benefits and even the salaries
of congressmen.
The spokesmen told the
panel earlier, however, Nixon
would not cut Social Security
benefits, revenue sharing or
the interest on the national
debt.
The sweeping authority in
the measure, which administration sources conceded
privately' was the strongest
ever given any President in Ute
area of spending, was attacked
by Rep. James Burke, !).
Mass., a conunitte~ member
as "heading toward a dictatorship."
The spending ceiling is part
of an overall bill approved by
the committee that would give
Nixon the $15 billion increase
he seeks through next June 30
in the temporary $450 billion
limit that the government can
now go into debt.
The bill would also create a

Market Report

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, Sept. 23, 1972
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
N&lt;YI' INTIMIDATED
QOGS- 175 to 220 ibs. 28 to
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. 28.75; 220 to.. 250 ibs. 28.35 to
(UPl) -Betty Wood Btoom· 29.25; Light 25 to 27; Fat Sows
field, 52, isn't a woman to be 24 to 27; Stags 21 Down; Boars
intimidatedbyayouthfulpurse 18 to 23; Pigs 8 to 24; Shoats
snatcher.
18.50 to 38.
The housewife was walking
CATTLE- Steers 34 to 44;
near her horne when a teen .age
Heifers 28 to 37.50; Baby Beef
boy grabbed her pocketbook 39 to 50; Fat Cows 20 to 25.20;
and ran. Mrs. Broomfield look Canners 18 to 27.40; Bulls 26.75
off after him.
to 32; Milk Cows 200 to 450.
The woman gained on the
VEAL CALVES - Tops
boy of about 18 and was about 54.50; Seconds 47.50 to 51;
to grab :~lrn:J:!t.e~l!!! thief :_ Med,!tu.n.!'! '!&gt;56;: Com, .!. Hvs.
dropped the purse into a trash 49 .50 to 51; CullS 46 bilwn.
can.
'
BABY CALVES - 35 to 77.
He continued to flee, but Mrs.
LAMBS - Tops 29.75;
Broomfield recovered her Seconds 27 to 28.50; Light Wts.
purse without a loss of its 25 to 28.75; Common 25 Down.
contents, she told police
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Monday.
Steers : Choice 35.25-3:..70;
good, 34.10-34.90; standard,
29.50-32 .50 . Heifers : Choice,
34 .40; good, 31-33.50. Cows :
COLPAERT ACQUIRED
Commercial,
26.50-30.10;
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)utility,
23.75-25.75.
Canner and
Dick Q&gt;lpaert, a right-handed
reliever, was acquired Monday cutter, 18.50-21. Bulls: Comby the Kansas City Royals and mercial, 29-33.60. Stockers and
placed on their Omaha roster feeders: Steer calves, 43.10from Charleston of the Interna- 57 .50; heifer calves, 34.50-42;
yearlings, 36 .50-42.60. Veal
tional League.
calves
: Choice, 51.51J.65, good,
O&gt;lpaert will go to spring
44.50-49.
training with Kansas City.
Lambs : Choice, 29.35.
In the last four years in the
Hogs:
200-230, 28.90; No . I,
Pittsburgh chain, O&gt;lpaerl has
won 41, lost 16 and recorded 44 29.15; 230-240, 28.65; sows,
saves in the International 22.60-26.75; boars, 21.60-22.
league. The 28-year-&lt;Jld palmballer was 14-7 with 21 saves
PASSING INTEREST
and a 2.31 earned run average
Entering the 1972 season,
this season.
John Unitas of the Baltimore
Colts led all active American
Football Conference passers
in career attempts 14,953),
completions 12,708), yards
IN FIFl'H PLACE
gained (38,657), lowest inNEW YORK (UP! )-Grier terception percentage (0.451
Jones ' victory in last and touchdowns 1283) . len
weekend 's Robinson Fall Golf Dawson had the best comClassic moved him from 12th pletion percentage among
passers with 1,000 or more
place to fifth in the latest list of attempts
, .562, and Dawson
pro golf's top money winners also had the best average
for 1972, acCording to figures gain at 7.93 yards per pass .
released Monday by the PGA
Tournament Players Division.
Jones' triumph was worth
$2Q,OOO and upped his earnings
for the year to $122,826. It was
his second tour victory this
season, his first coming in the
Hawaiian Open in February.
.Jack Nicklaus, who skipped the
Robin'!On Classic, rcmair..d ·
atop the list with $280,482
followed by Lee Trevino with
$199,168 and George Archer
with $140,102.
·

31knember Joint House-senate
Q&gt;mmlllee that would study
how to handle future spending
ceilings and report back to the
new Congress by next Feb. 15
with recommendations.

This Kitten
Doing Favors

Uh, .Naturally
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Fran-

ces "Kitten" Natividad held a
news conference Monday but it
wasn't what she had to say that
brought newsmen to the
conference room of a local
motor hotel.
'~Kitten," 24, Miss Nude
Q&gt;smopolitan, held the news
conference in the buff.
There was a noticeable lack
of questions when Miss Natividad, 36-22-35, shrugged out of a
tight floor-length dress.
Then some embarrassed
queries were ventured.
Was she cold?
"I was cold when I first came
into the room," she said/' "but
I'm not a bit cold now. Must be
the TV lights."
She said she entered the Miss
Nude Cosmopolitan contest in
California because "I liked the
idea of the $1,000 first prize."
Is she self-conscious undressing in front of strange
men? Someone asked.
"No, men can look at me all
they want," she replied. "I feel
I'm doing them a favor."
"Kitten," a onetime go--go ·
dancer in Los Angeles, now is a
stripper, appearing In nearby
Newport, Ky.

Local Bowling
Wednesday Early Bird
Sept. 20, 1972
Standings:
Team
W L
R. H. Rawlings
28 '

Dorothy's Pinnettes
Bertha's Grocery

26 6
14 18

King Builders Supply

12 20

Royal Crown
Evelyn 'sG rocery

8 24
8 24

High Ind. Game - Clarice
Kravetta 211, Flossie Maxson

175.

High

Series

-

BY RANDY CLARK
The Wahama White Falcons
failed to contain the rigid ball
control offense of the Duval
Yellow Jackets as they fell to
defeat I~ Saturday night.
The White Falcon's managed
to run only 31 offensive plays
tlJroughout the entire ball
game,-inc)uding only five plays
in the thirrl nuarter. Weather
conditions and some crucial
calls cost .the White Falcons
dearly.
Jus I prior to kickoff the rains
began to fall. . As Wahama
received, they fumbled the
kick managing ta gain
possession on their own seven
yard line. After three plays,
the White Falcon's punted with
Duval taking over on the
Wahama 43 yard line.
Duval ruled off 12 plays
capped by PaUlino's nine yard
touchdown run with 4:31 left in
the quarter.
Botliteams battled
throughout the first quarter
and the beginning of the
second. In the middle of the
"""ond quarter, Rob Lambert
fumbled a Duval punt giving
the Yellow Jackets excellent
field position on the While
Falcon 17 yard line.
Four
plays
later
Quarterback Kim Mathews
scrambled in from the eleven.
His pass for the extra point was
good giving the Yellow Jackets
a 14-0 lead.

DETROIT
(UPI )Democratic presidential
nominee George McGovern
has narrowed the gap between
himself and President Nixon
by 6 per cent since Sept. I,
national pollster Louis Harris
said Monday.
''Ifl were Richard Nixon, I'd
be afraid," Harris told the
Economic Club of Detroit in a
speech.
Harris said his latest poll,
Sept. 19-21, showed Nixon with
59 per cent, McGovern with 31
per cent and 10 per cent unRECORD SET

ASTI, Calif. ( UPI )-A four·
man
learn led by Olympian
Team High Game - R. H.
Rawlings 812.
John Howard, Springfield, Mo.,
Team High Series - King set a record Monday in the 100..
Bu ilders 2227.
kilomett!r race at the opening
Wed . Early Mixed
of the Italian Swiss Colony 100
bicycle races.
Sept. 20, 1972
Standings :
The team was clocked at
Team
Oiler's Sohio
20 2:18.0to break the U.S. mark of
Team No.6
20 2:24.00.97 over the near 6Q.mile
Team No . 4
20 distance. The other · team
Smith-Nelson Motor s
18
Young's Mkt.
10 members were Rick Ball,
Team No. 5
8 Madison, Wis. , Ron Skarin,
High Ind. Game - IMenl Jr . Van Nuys, Calif., and Mike
Phelps 212. Jr . Phelps 190;
IWomen I Carolyn Bashner 200, Nee!, Oakland, Calif. Bali and
Skarin were also Olympic
Carolyn Bashner 190.
High Series - IMen) Jr . competitors.
Phelps 581, Willard Boyer 5'0;
Maxson 481, Mary Voss 474.

No. 5. 696 .

learn to Sew With

r-..''---..
SH._ 1Rt --..
fl NISHI NG

Sept . 20, 1972

Superiors

lb.

SLICED
·aoLOGNA

CHUCK

Team
Rosenbaum-Meadows

16

Casself.Carsey
Blakeslee.Hoyt

16
15

Halter-Rawling s

11

Fulfz.Bentley

10

Moore -Morrow

4

High Ind. Game - (Men I C.
Blakeslee 212, Dick Rosen·
baum 211. Dan Meadows 20' ;
(Women) Joy Bentley 161,

RC
8
16 0L 69~
bottles

8

0L69

16
bottles

POTATO CHIPS

16

Regular
591 Pkg.

With 13 Purchase

No Purchase Necessary

Cotton Knits

SPECIAL BUY!

CANDY SPECIAL!

Acrylic Knits

Jersey Knits

MILNOT CANNED

REESE
PEANUT BUnER

Easy wear and easy care all the way. Stripes,
plaids, solids. Machine washable . Simplicity
and McCall's patterns for knits. Instruction
books for knits . Come in and Jet us help you!

FAIRMONT

54" to 60" 2.49 to 5.98 yd.
RIBBING FOR NECKLINE -

MILK

DAIRY BUYS!

ICE CREAM

llc inch

Cherry Nut,

SERVItE
In AI9-0ut At 5

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use Our Free !Jirking Lot

Robinson:S Cleaners

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216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

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quart
bot.

79¢

16b:89t

BONUS BUY!

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Taster's Choice

EOON BRAND

2 OZ. FREE

TOILET
TISSUE
•Rolls.,$ ,..,
for

ORANGE DRINK

BROUGHTON'S lWIN PACK
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WAGNER'S

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ROOT BEER

10 oz. Jar

LOW, LOW PRICE!

1

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Black Walnut

OL

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Polyester Knits

SAME DAY

is lhe most extensive and extraordina ry selection of fun
and fa shion slyles for the second phone lh al. honeslly , every
home shou ld have. G•ve your life more pleasure . more
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High Series - IMen l Dick

CHESTPHONE ... a tea l man-type
de cora tor phone l or tt1 e l ivi ng
room . llis specia l room. desk or
table. Mod ern stylize d inst rume nt
handsomely set in a black leather
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carved walnut .
or even with a
sardonyx stone hunting scene in·
set on the l1d'

....'
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Rosenbaum 550, Tom Cassell

525. Dan Meadows . C.
Blakeslee SOB ; !Women) Joy
Benlley 460, Nea ci l Carsey '28,
Ina Meadows 425.
Team

High

Game
Rosenbaum -Meadows 654.

Team

High

Series

-

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PAPER SPECIAL!

SCOT LAD

SCOT LAD

ALUMINUM
FOIL

PAPER
TOWELS

jumbo$1

ft.$1

25
Rolls

Rolls

U.S. NO. 1 GRADE

SMALL EGGS

POTATOES

3

dOL

89e

FAYGO SUGAR FREE

•••••••••••••
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bag

POP$
8 cans

••
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SUPE~ MARKET • Open

•••

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. "We Reserve The Right To Umlt Quantities"

..•
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Rosenba um - Meadows 1857.

''

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Bucky ... The Original 111 Banana Man!

Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. 10 to 10
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

GOLDEN RIPE

CANDLESTICK PHONE ... !he

BANANAS ,---------------,
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rt@e® I
I

new·

fa shion o ld -fas hioned phone
styled right out of tbe roar ing
twenties in Black Bottom Black.
Wh iflen poof White and Razzam a·
tazz Red . Except that we did away
with the separate big ol d bell box.

the

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FOR BIG DISCOUNt SAVINGS I

F~!~.I!~.1E
m-ssn Muon, w. v..

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always

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SUPERIORS SLICED

Standings:

Authorized Dealer

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TURKEY LEGS. .!~:29~

General Telephone's
extension extravaganza

Wed. lale Mixed

dreamed of at our low
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~

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•

Team High Series - Young's

SAUSAGE

CHOPPED .

SUPERIORS PORK

COKE

decided.
Harris did not give details of
how the poll was conducted, the
groups interviewed or the size
of the sampling involved.
In a Sept. I poll, Harris said,
McGovern trailed Nixon by 34
percentage points and in last
week's poll McGovern had
picked up six points to trail
Nixon by 28 per cent.
While declining to speculate
on the outcome of the election
with six weeks of campaigning
left, Harris did say that if
McGovern is to improve his
standings, he must regain his
"anti-politics" image, hurt
badly by his recent courting of
De mo c r a t i c p a r I y
professionals.

CUBE STEAK

POLISH

LUNCH MEAT

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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chalf

FROM USDA CHOICE .BEEF

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

KNITS

LA-Z-BOV
comfortable

FRIDAY ONLY

Gap Narrowed Says Harris

Flossie

(Women) Carolyn Bashner 561,
Pat Carson 500.
Team High Game - Team

' After Wahama received the
kick off they hegan moving the
hall through the air. The White
Falcons moved the pigskin to
the Duval 38 ~ard line on
aerials of 13, 26, and 14 yards to
J.amherl, lewis and Mitchell.
At this point Duyallookover on
downs.
On their second play from
scrimmage, Mike Lewis
seemingly intercepted a
Yellow Jacket pass. Mike
leap,ed hi~h into the air to oi~k
off the Duval aerial. leWIS
was tackled immediately with
both players going to the
ground.
When the official
arrived he ruled dual
possession, thus giving the bali
to Duval.
Only a key
interception
by
Danny
Litchfield in the end-zone
prevented the Yellow Jackets
from scoring.
As the second half began, so
did the monsoons. The rain fell
in torrents the entire third
quarter flooding the field
quickly.
Both teams
desperately tried to at least
look like they were playing
football. As the fourth quarter
began the rains slackened
somewhat.
The While Falcon defense
stiffened but the weather
prevented the offense from
ga ining much ground until
three minutes more left in the
game. A fine punt return by
Mike Lewis of 34 yards gave
the White Falcons excellent
field position. It was capped

.

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teiephone puts the
works riglll In !he palm of your
hand . .. handsel, dial and recall
bullon, Make call aller call wllhoul
selli~O down lhe phone. Comes ;n
while, green: Ivory, yellow. pink.
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6- Tile Dally Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Sept. 26, 1972
. ~~.:=;me:~ . ~, ,q~·

-

«

Community l:
Corner By Charlene Hoeflich !

CCL Endorses Local Levy

The Middleport Child Conserva tion League has endorsed
·::: the one-fourth of one mill
renewa l levy for operation of
the Mei~s Community Classes
Meigs County j:arden clubB are being asked to do their part to
for
Retarded Children.
IDiure a successful country fair at the Southeastern Ohio Mental
The
action ·to support the
Health Center in Athens.
1be fair is one way in which the hospital auxiliary raises funds levy was taken following a ta lk
far Ouistmas gifts for the patients. Everything is donated -and by Mrs. Jeanette Thomas,
It's like a giant Oea market - and then all the proceeds are set superv isor of the Meigs
aBide to buy those things which put a little happiness into the life Community Classes , at the
Thursday night meeting of the
Gl some mentally distiD'bed, and oft forgotten, soul.
CCL held al the horne of Mrs.
AOower mart is a feature of lhe country fair and clubs here are Don Grueser, president.
asked to give houseplants, bulbs, dried materials, flower
In · her talk Mrs. Thomas
mangements, containers, arranging accessories, etc.
urged the group to recognize
The fair is oo be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on ThiD'sday , Oct. the streng th of the mentally
12, but the Auxiliary will be working all day on Wednesday set- retarded rather than to dwell
ting up and that 's when they would like the donations.
on their limitations. She said to
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county contact chairman for the Meigs remember that the mentally
County ClubB, received a letter yesterday from Mrs. Paul A. retarded are first and foremost
Tipton, who is the Athens County contact chairman for garden child ren with the same basic
clubs, asking for contributions to the flower mart which is always needs for self-esteem, fa mily
a part of the fair. Just contact Mrs. Kuhn if you need more in- affection, communi ty information, or oo work out something about getting the things to vo lv e me n t , voca ti ona l
usefu lness and socal acAthens.
And, by the way, if you have that day free, drive over and ceptance.
"They are different, to be
take in the fair . l's quite a'thing , we understand.
sure, but these differe nces

NO ONE, BUT no one, could have been more delighted than
Edith Burton of Middleport when she received a birthday card
from President and Mrs. Richard Nixon. She commented that
she knew centenarians got carda - but she wasn 't quite that far
along.
Coming Sunday for her birthday celebration were Mrs.
loolse Scott and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wbeeler and daughter,
Rhonda, of Nevada, and Mrs. Fred Rowalt of Bucyrus. They also
attended the 50th wedding aMiversary of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Grover of Cheshire.
IF YOU UKE flower showS)o.you 'II be able to take in one a
month right here in little ole Meigs County. The Chester Garden
Club has one scheduled for the weekend of Oct. 7; the Rutland
Garden Club will have one Nov. 18 and 19:. and the Meigs
County Garden Clubs' Chrtstmas show is slated for the first
weekend in December,
"Sing a Song of Christmas" is the theme of the Rutland Club's
allow which will be held in Rutland Methodist Church sOcial
room. Margaret Ella Lewis is general chairman, and any day
we'll be announcing the show schedule.

Presbyterial is Set
The 1972 fall district meeting
of the Scioto Presbytertal will
be held Tuesday, Oct. 3,
beginning at 10 a.m. at the
Middleport First Presbyterian
Church.
"Firmly Bound, Forever
Free" wiU be !he theme of the
mee ting which will follow a
coffee hour and registration at
9:15 a.m. with tbe Syracuse

• Church group as hostesses.
The morning session will
include presentations, "Personal Mission and Bible Study"
by Ullian Knudson; "National
Missions" by Anna Lee Fields,
and "Ecumenical Missions" by
Mae Russell.
The afternoon session will
include a service of dedication
of "The Least Coin" offering,
special music, and an address
by Mrs. Anne Tewksbary, who

with her husband, George,
returned in July from West
Pakistan, They are making
their home in Wooster.
The host church will be
servin g a luncheon. Reservations should be sent to the
Presidert of the host church,
Mrs. Thomas Kelly, who can be
contacted at 992-:!507.

should not be used as a
justification for segrega tion
from society or deprivation of
their basic rights," em-

phasized Mrs. Thomas. She IJ-&gt;e ed ucation of mentally
stressed that the retarded don't retarded children cumes not
need less ed ucation because under the Depa r tme nt of
they are retarded, but they Educa tion, but under· the
need more and
better Depar tment of Mental Hygiene
education.
and Correction, lo whom the
Arter reviewing the local Meigs County Board of Menta l
history of the organization of Retardation is accoun table,
the three classes. Mrs. Thomas
She gave the projected
~outlined the goals for traina ble fig ures for 1970 for Meigs
mentally retarded children. County's mentally retarded as
She listed se lf-realization, the total ing 331. Of this number 230
right of dignity of the in- are classified as educab le
dividual; huma n r~lati ons h ips , mentally retarded and 83 as
the abili ty to functinn in the trainable. In the age from six
society through learning socia l to 20 the projected figure is 21.
skills; economic efficiency, the In the three classes there are 21
opportunity to learn vocationa l students in that age range. The
skills; and civic responsibility, projected fi gures further point
the need to understand the out that there are 49 over 21
social structure in which we year s of age for whom
li ve.
sheltered workshop would be
She said that the program is feasible, and tOin the county of
divided into eight majo r a pre -school age.
curriculum areas - self-help
In her talk, Mrs. Thomas
skill s~ soc'ia l skills 1 com- poin ted out that what the
munica tion skills, basic in- retarded ch1id needs is supformation, recrea tion and por t, not pi ty; not overphysical educa tion, music arts pr otection , but financia l
and crafts, and vocational support for education, train ing
occupational skills.
and care , ''No amount of
Mrs. Thomas ex plained that money or trainin g manpower
can substi tut e for the most

SEATrLE, Wash. (UPI)- A
new sales record for commercial jetliners was reached
when orders lor Boeing's 'I'll
tri-jet reached the 1,010 mark,
compan y officials reported
Monday.
Boeing said three orders
within the last week, including
a $40 mllllon contract by
Nippon Airways for five advanced 727s, established the
record.

vention was announced for Oct.
II and 12 al the Sheraton Hotel

in Cincinnati. Guest speaker
for the meeting will be Dr.
Joyce Brothers. Theme of the
si&lt;Jle session will be "Changing
World of Today for Women."
Plans were made during the
meeting to provide juice for
snack lime at the Community
Classes with Mrs. Don Thomas
tO make arrangements.
For roll call members gave
their favorite school subject.
The travelinl prize donated by
Mrs. Susan Blaker was won by
Mrs . Lo ui s Osborne. Mrs .
Kenneth Harris, Mrs. Blaker,
and Mrs. Robe rt Sc hm oll
se rved refreshments to the t1
members attendin g and three
guests, Mrs. Harold Blackston ,
Mrs. Tom Grueser, and Mrs.
Sandra Cobb.

Report Given WCTU by Youths
A report on the Teenage
Institute on Alcohol and Drugs
was given by Stephen
McGuffin and David Gerard at
the Sunday afternoon annual
mee ting of the Meigs County
Christian Temperance Union
held at the home of Mrs.
Robert Warner, Pomeroy,
The boys, students at Meigs
High School, commented on the
speakers at the Institute held
at the Ohio Dominican College
and the films which they
viewed. Representatives of the
Coiwnbus Police Department
were there to give sta tistics.
All three high schools of the
coun ty had students at the
Teenage Institute.
McG uffi n and Ger ard

repor ted that a drug in formati on group is bei ng
organized at Meigs Hig h
SchooL They also spoke of the
work of th e Dr ug Abuse
Commi ttee which meets each
thi rd Thursday of every month
at Sl. Paul 's Lutheran Ch urch.
Officers were elec ted and
commi ttee chairm en named
during the meeting. They are
Mrs. Betty Cline, president ;
Mrs. Be ulah Wh ile, vice
Mrs.
Le na
president;
McKin ley, secretary ; and Mrs.
Warner, treasurer. Mrs.
Audrey Miller was named
church and school education
chairman; Miss Lucr etia
Gen heimer, visual program
chairman; Mrs. Joseph Cook,

•

SALES RECORD

needed commodity- a person
who cares," she concluded, .
Mrs . Don Thomas introduced
the speaker.
During the business meeting
which opened · with the pledge
to the flag and the Mother's
Prayer, the state CCL con-

t
•

POLLY'S POINTERS

public re lations, and Mrs. Warner for hosting the annual
Warner, Christian outreach. meeting. Devotions by Mrs.
Mrs . Warn er reporting for Arnold Richards incl uded a
the Pomeroy Union noted that duel, " In Times Like These ."
th ere are 26 memb ers. Her theme was ''My Task as a
Highli ghl' of the past year Christian." She spoke of serincluded the Frances Wi llard vice to God and others, of living
lea, placing a book in the a Chri stian life , and of giving
library of a deceased member, talent in the Christian work.
presentin g two fi lms in the
Refreshments were served
schools and dis tribu ting by the Pomer oy Union
literature on temperance . The members.
Mi ddleport Uni on report
sho wed that pamphlets on
literat ure had been di stributed.
Pinons for the meeting were
the whi te bows of puri ty. On
display was a large picture of
Frances Willard, founder of the
WCTU. Mrs. Cline welcomed
·The annual banquet was set
the guests and thanked Mrs.
for Oct. 17 wh en the
Home bu ilders Class met
rece ntly al th e Middleport
Church of Christ.
Committees appointed for
the banquet were Mrs. William
Gruese r, tickets ; Mrs. Chester
Erwin, Mrs. Norman Yeauger,
an d Mrs . Carl Roa c h,
pr ogram;
Mrs.
Sh irle y
' Bumgardner and Mrs. Coleen
Van Meter, decorations. The
Bible study was taken from
Matthew .
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Roa ch, Mrs. Yeaugcr ,
and Mrs. Raymond Cole to
those named and Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence M. Stewart, Mr.
Raullin Moyer, Raymond Cole,
and Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Ki ncaid.

Banquet Date

Is October 1 7

Lack of Service

At Filling Station
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- 1 am answerin g the widow who feels
she does not get enough service, such as windshield wiping, etc. , when she buys a full tank of gas. The simplest
solution is to wr ite a note to the major gasoline supplier
for the station and ask what services one should expect
when bu¥ing gas. Do not beg for help or whine to them
about bemg a widow but take the easiest and straightest
.. route to gettin g the services you would like and need.- AGNES
'•

·'"

Polly's Problem I'IIW'J~W;;,
· ..

DEAR POLLY- 1 wonder if any faithful readers '
of the column know of a way to pull apart insulated ,
draperies that got damp on the insulated side and \1
then were pressed together. The curtains ar.e new M~,
and I need help badly.-MRS. L. W.
·.

U®:~~~~J!I~~~~:~g;ua;.

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with people (both
adults and children) who borrow books from the library
and abuse them by smearing dirt on the pages, tearing
them and then returning the books with no effort at making repairs to the damage they have done.-CA ROLE

•

;
•
•
·;

DEAR POLLY-My husba.:d is a minister and is afraid
the ties that clip on will
c o m e loose while he is
preaching. I have re medied this by attaching a
piece of elastic which goe"
under ilis collar and does
.not show but gives him
needed security.
We do not have an extra
bathroom for our m a n y
guests so I keep a clean
plastic cup in the bathroom
which has "Guest" written on it wit h ·1 marking pen,
Last Christmas several guests were coming to visit
and ·were to arrive before we were to return from a trip.
To let them know which rooms were theirs and which
towels to use I c ut up old Christmas card s with appropri ate pictures and verses and used a marking pen to print
a guest's nam e on the bottom of each card. I used masking tape to put these cards on the bedroom doors and
above the towels in the bathroom. Our. guests were immediately welcomed, really enjoyed the personal touch
and did not have to guess where they belonged or what
they should use.-VELMA

DEAR POLLY- My Pointer takes care of old powder
pulfa and scraps of 1oap at the 1ame time. 1 cut a slit
Ia the llniDI of 1 puff and.ID1ert odd 1llven o! 10ap sew
' It cloled 11\d then Ult thla for a washcloth in the bathroom. Saves on buying wa~hclothea , too.-MRS. E. G.
tNIWI,.,.l lNTllP l iSI AIIN.)
Voa will neelve a doDar If PoUy uses your favorite
bomemaklDJidea, Pet Peeve, PoUy'1 Problem or aoluti~n
to a problem. Wrfte PoUy In care of lhll newspaper.

HAVEN HOMEMAKERS - Accompanied by the Rev, Herle Capehart of near Kanawha,
the New Haven Homemakers Club recenUy visited The Meigs County Infirmary. The Rev. Mr .
Capehart presented Bible readings and there was hymn singing with the residents. Gifts of
fruit, candy , gum , cookies and mints were presented !he residents. Club members pictured at
the entrance of the infirmary are, from the left, lna Capehart, Sadie Warth, Roberta May nard,
Gladys Hart and Anna Johnson , Preparing the gift packages were Mrs. Hart, Mrs. Maynard,
Mrs. Capehart, Mrs. Warth, Mrs. Dennis Broyles and Mrs. Aubrey NewelL
NEW PATROLMAN
Bobby Klein, a member of
the fifth grade of Don Stiver's
at the Pomeroy Elementary
---,;,hoot has been made a suppor ting member of the school
patrol and is the first fifth
grader taking part in the patrol
generally composed of sixth
grade rs. Bobby will have
charge of patrol activities in
the Minersville Hill area where
there is no sixth grader living.
He was chosen to take charge
of the duties !here,
CLOTHING OFFERED
Free clothing day will be
held from 10 a.m. to noon
Th ursday at the Salvation
Army on Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy, Anyone needing
clo thing in the area is
welcome.
HERE FROM FRANCE
The Rev , John Jesburg , a
missionary in France, will
speak at the Carle ton Church
on Kingsbury Road at 7:30p.m.
Thursday. The Kings bury
Missionary Club of the church
is spon1oring the Rev. Mr.
JesbiD'g. The public is Invited.

TROOP TO FORM
Fourth, fift h and sixth grade
girls at the Pomeroy
Elementary School interested
in becoming a girl scout are
invited lo atte nd a meeting at 3
p.m. Friday at the schooL
Junior Troop 247 under the
leadersh ip of Mrs. Connie
Curnutt will be organized at
that time. Any girl is eligible to
join the troop and having bee n
a Brownie sco ut is not
required.

SALE PLANNED
Racine Chapter 134, OES,
will hold a rumma ge sale
Friday and Saturday at the
Isabel Simpson building beside
the Club Restauran t in Racine
from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Articles may be taken to the home
of Mrs . Ralph Webb un til
Wednesday evening . Afte r tha i
articles are to be Ia ken to the
Sale Building , Members are
asked to be on hand to help wi th
the sale. A pick up service for
contributions can be arranged.

j~~~=»&gt;.~:.::: ..:-.··

•:•:•:•:•

J'

•,•.

:' • ,

•• ,
I

"TUCKER" PLASTIC5-BUSHEL SIZE

l ·social Calendar · ·~ ·
TUESDAY
AME RI CAN , Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30 at the hall.
Mrs. catherine Welch, music
chairman to have charge of
program.
RAC INE AMER ICAN
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday night at the hall.
Potluck refreshments ,
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F', and A.M. ann ual father-son
banquet, 6: 15p .m. Tuesday at
the Midd lepor t Masonic
Temple.
POME;ROY Past Matrons,
7:30 Tuesday, home of Mrs.
Trell Schoenleb. Devotions by
Woodard ;
Mrs,
Albert
Progra m by Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, Fee ney-Bennett
Post 128, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
ha ll.
MEIGS Athletic Booste rs
mee ting, 7:30 p.m. tonig ht at
Meigs High School.
SOUTHERN Loca l Ba nd
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
high schooL All members
asked to attend.
WEDN ESDAY
AMER I CAN LEG I ON
Auxi liary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport hall, 7:30
p. m. potluck with meeting to
follow .. Covered dish to be
taken by each member.
POME ROY - Midd leport
Lions Gl!!-b. 11oon luncheon al ·
Meigs Inn ,

OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knight Te mpla r, stated
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Open in full form with members to lake sword and belt.
THURSDAY
RIVERVIEWGarden Club to
tour the ga rden of Mrs. Ada
Holter, Pomeroy Rd ., Thursday evening, Sept. 28 at 6:30.
Mrsc Holter will also demonstrate flower arranging to the
members. The members will
return to the home of Mrs .
Gene Wilson fo r a business
meeting and refreshments.
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSN ~. Mid·
dlepo r l
First
Uni te d
Presbyterian Chu rc h, 6:30 .
p.m. Thursday potluck supper.
Members to take a covered
dish. Dedication of the Least
Coin ; devotions by Mrs. Joseph
Bailey, Hostesses, Mrs. Myron
Miller, Mrs. Michael Zirkl e,
Mrs. Plum mer Beeson, and
Mrs. Ed Smith.
WEEKEND
Reviva l ,
starting Thu rsday throug h Oct.
I, 7:30 each evening at Faith
Tabe rn acle Ch urch, Bailey
Run Road. Me lvin Holl ey,
evangelist. Public invited.
ME IGS Christia n Women's
Fe ll owship Thursday , 7:30
p.m. at Rutland Church of
Ch ris t. Ro lf Sta ngel guest
speaker, will speak on the new
coffee house to be opened in
Pomeroy.

Officers Installed
stallin g officer, presented each
of the new officers with a bud
vase containing a fl ower in a
color symbolic of the duties of
the office . Insta lled were Mrs.
Charles Carr, president; Mrs.
Harold Ma ssar, vice president;
Mrs. Glen Stout, treasurer ;
Mrs. Frederick Goebel,
secre tary ; and Mrs . John
Arbaugh, news reporter.
Mrs . Barnhill, the reti ring
presid en t, presided at the
meeting which opened wi th
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry devotions by Mrs. Kenneth
were in Chester, W. Va . ove r Griffith . She gave a meditation
the weekend to visit Mr. and ;md members said the Lord's
Mrs. Herman Gower. Their Prayer in unison. Roll call was
daughter, Kathy, spent the answered with a favor ite
weekend with Jan Holter.
television program.
·,
Karla Kuhn, fre slmmn at
Mrs. Glen Stout read the
Morehea d Stale Univer si ty, verse of the month, and Mrs.
Morehea d, Ky . wa s the Clarence Headley gave garweeke nd guest of her parenL&lt;, denin g tips. Guests were Mrs.
the Rev , and Mrs. Robert Ja cob Lehman and Mrs. Harry
Kuhn . Here the weekend before Ha rmon.
was Sgt. David Kuhn who is
A white elephan t sale was
stationed at Langley Air Force held witl1 Mrs. Massar as the
Base in Virginia .
au ctioneer. The traveling prize
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich donated by Mrs. Robert Dorst
and daughter, Jayne, visited wa s won by Mrs. John Arover the weekend with Mr . and baugh. Mrs. Barnhill will host
Mrs. Mike Hamm er and the October meeting. Refreshdaughters, Colwnbus.
ments were served by the
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferrell of hostess to the 12 members and
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. tw o guests attending.
William Will of Ml. Herman
were Sunday visi tors of M1ss
Frieda Faehnle.
Installation of offi cers for the
1972-73 year highlighted the
September meeting of the Rose
Garden Club of Tuppe rs Plains
held al the home of Mrs. John
Arbaugh.
Mrs. Carl Barnhill, the in-

LAUNDRY BASKET

SING ING PLANNED
MASON - A hymn sing will
he held Saturday begin11ing at 8
p.m. al the Good Shepherd
Church, Point Pleasant Route
2. Among the sp~cial singers
wilt be the Happy Four
Quartet, Logan, W. Va .; Dan
Hayman and the Rou sh
Family ; the McDaniel Trio;
Sid and Carol ; Heavenly Highway Trio, and the Shaffer
Family. The public is invited.

CAN

LINERS

C?N SALE TUESDAY,S PM

DEPARTMENT STOlt£

ALMOST A YEA RS
SUPPLY

¢

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON

REUNION SET
The Arnold Whaley family
reun ion will be held Sunday,
Oct 8 at the State Park, west
side of Route 33. A basket
dinner will be held at noon.

ATIEND MEETING
Clarence Struble, Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas, and Mrs.
Eddie Arcar o and Bill Geneva Yates attended the
Hartark were the only two recent meeting of the Regional
jockeys ever to win the Ken- Council on Aging held at Rio
tucky Derby five times.
Grande College.

•

NOTE BOO
PAPER
. ---

• SPECIAL

~
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¢

SAVE
20c

.-

.........

5 DAYS ONLY!!!
...

FALL
SLACKS

.., , ...'!~

.

--·--

PRI CES AR E
IN EFFECT
TUESDA Y
S PM
THRU
SUNDA Y

,TEENS AND WOMENS .

~VERY DAY VALUES TO $3.941!'!!!~!"!!'!~~~~~~'!!!!'"~~~-----..

"SH. RINK" SWEATER VESTS

Jean cuts.
elastic
waist styles.
and
other
models
in solids
or prints.
Right oul of our regular stock,
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A VERY SPECIAL PURCHASE!

~~ -~ "MARKSON"7 TRANSISTOR

PORTABLE RADIO

OR LON ACRYLIC
BEAUTIFUL
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SAVE
72c

SAVE $1.32!

$ 22

AM in stant sound,
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quality .

Complete

with

battery, carry straps

$ 66

5 DAYS ONLY!

$ 00 ot:I~E

a nd ea rphone.

OF ANY

COMPARE! JUST TRY TO FIND LOWER OVERALL PRICES ANYWHERE!
DISPOSE THEM OR WASH AND RE-USE!

-

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PLASTIC TUMBLERS

He!~--

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7 OUNCE SIZE- PERFECT FOR
HOME, POOLS, COCKTAIL PARTIES

I •

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WOMENSFALL

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"DURAL" BRAND-MADE IN U.S.A.

ELECTRIC SISSORS

REGULAR

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WITH GUIDE LIGHT TO SEE
LINES AND PATTERNS !
Fully
automatic .

~88

TO s1ra

'

UM BRELLAs$1

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.__....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... · - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
. - - - - -.... r-----!!"'-_.,· "TUCKE R" PLASTICS-REGULAR $1.29!
MENS FLARE LEG
MULTI -COLOR 36" SPAN

WASTE BASKET
~

MINIATURE
ANTIQUE

THE lOc SIZE

OR&amp;c EACH

AVACADOOR GOLDON SALE TUES. S PM!

GLASS
BOTTLES
VERY DAINTY

8!ACH
BELTS FOR JENES
TO FIT TEENS &amp; WOMEN

,, A useful size for kitchen,
~J bedroom
'

.

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home. Get
"' several at this tow price

or burgandy . Look these ov er---you'll
save cash.

SIZE

29
TO

$ 44

36

MAGNETIC
PHOTO ALBUM

OTHERS
TO

PAIR

&gt;'' '· ..

$2.99

ALL METAL FITTINGS !

WOMENS SEAMLESS
EXTRA LARGE

SPONGE MOP
4FT. WOOD HANDL.E
REGULAR $1.34

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FOR.&amp;IRlS

array of model s and colors. Most of

PANTS FOR
NOW THRU
WINTER

bell · . so select nowt

TO $2.94

+BONDED ACRYLICS

MENS WORK WEIGHT

lSIZE
FITS

1X.to4X

99¢

PR.

+BEAT DENIMS
+POL VESTER &amp;
COTTON

Available in gold or green. 3

different designs in a deco rators

classic boHle. They go on sale
Tuesday at S p.m.---so get youro
then!

Our selection i s now

complete---come shop for
her pants--- you'll like our

PAIR

COLORS OF
CINNAMON,
TAUPE
OR BEIGE!

24

$ 00

To 1314

KITCHEN
GADGETS

Fruit !ulcers, tube squeezers, corn holders, can and
boHie opontno, Gl1nt Popar Clips, mixing spoon iets,
laundry hooks, soap dishes, party picks, ice cracker,
soap holders, push pins, self stick towel rocks, opple
slicer, tooth pick dlspanser, magnetic memo holder,
cookie cutter, 111tand pepper set, twist out I" trays. A

w.•••.,·-:;. $100

Even some direclly from China. Bread baskets, handled
baskets, horn shape baskets .• plus many others. Very well
constructed---dark bro~ lacquer $ish, ait7t finish .

- WHILE THEY LAST!

huge array -- we thipk
you'll buy! Sizes 3 to 14.

EACH

·MELAMINE
DINNERWARE

VAWES TO 49' EACH

A HUGE
ASSORTMENT
OF STYLES!

DECANTER
BOTTLES WICKER

+BRUSHED DENIMS

$ 87

EACH

18 INCHES TALL • DECORATORS

NYLONS

SIZE 8 TO 12

$ 00

Sized for the larger woman .
Extra widlh, extra lh igh widlh,
e;w;tra length . . fits women
weighing 160 to 185. Perfect
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4 BUCKLE ARTICS
GREYSOLE!
ALL RUBBER-

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to handle your waste
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Suedes, viny Is, leathers in a wide

THE
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LEAF RAKE

Choose from color s of na vy, t an , brown

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or other areas

your

TO
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STORM
WINDOWS
CUT HEAT BILL

34 PIECE IN EACH SET!

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SET

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PANTS

JUNBO 44 QT. SIZE

ALL YOUR
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CANDY
BARS

POLYESTER

COMPLETE SERVICE FORa
MEETING POSTPONED
A regular 111eeting of Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority originally
sched uled for Thursday , Sept.
28, has been postponed un til
7:45p.m., Oct. 4, at the home of
Mrs. Virgil Brown.

500 SHEETS

PKG.

your new jeans need the wider width

SPEAKER COMING
The Rev. Don Streets, pastor
of the Church of the Nazarene
in Lain!fllburg, Mich., will be
evange list fo r revival services
which begin at 7: 30 thi s
even ing at the Racine Church
of the Nazarene, and continue
each eve ning through Oct. 1.
Special music will be prov ided
each evening by a soloist or a
group . The Racine pastor, the
Rev. Morris M. Wolfe, ex tends
an invitation to the public.

TRASH

47c EVERY DAY

A DISCOUNT

5 HOLE PUNCHED-R EG. 97c

JUMBO PACK OF 40

8 plates, 8 sauceno, 8 dessert dishes, senilng plater and
Iorge serving bowl. Select from 5 patterns. Dlshwaslier

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WEATHER·PROOF • DRAFT-PROOF • DIRT·PROOF

POLYETHENE VINYL
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WINDOW COVERS IN
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WITH RUSTPROOF NAILS
AND FIBRE BOARD STRIPS

�t

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6- Tile Dally Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Sept. 26, 1972
. ~~.:=;me:~ . ~, ,q~·

-

«

Community l:
Corner By Charlene Hoeflich !

CCL Endorses Local Levy

The Middleport Child Conserva tion League has endorsed
·::: the one-fourth of one mill
renewa l levy for operation of
the Mei~s Community Classes
Meigs County j:arden clubB are being asked to do their part to
for
Retarded Children.
IDiure a successful country fair at the Southeastern Ohio Mental
The
action ·to support the
Health Center in Athens.
1be fair is one way in which the hospital auxiliary raises funds levy was taken following a ta lk
far Ouistmas gifts for the patients. Everything is donated -and by Mrs. Jeanette Thomas,
It's like a giant Oea market - and then all the proceeds are set superv isor of the Meigs
aBide to buy those things which put a little happiness into the life Community Classes , at the
Thursday night meeting of the
Gl some mentally distiD'bed, and oft forgotten, soul.
CCL held al the horne of Mrs.
AOower mart is a feature of lhe country fair and clubs here are Don Grueser, president.
asked to give houseplants, bulbs, dried materials, flower
In · her talk Mrs. Thomas
mangements, containers, arranging accessories, etc.
urged the group to recognize
The fair is oo be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on ThiD'sday , Oct. the streng th of the mentally
12, but the Auxiliary will be working all day on Wednesday set- retarded rather than to dwell
ting up and that 's when they would like the donations.
on their limitations. She said to
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county contact chairman for the Meigs remember that the mentally
County ClubB, received a letter yesterday from Mrs. Paul A. retarded are first and foremost
Tipton, who is the Athens County contact chairman for garden child ren with the same basic
clubs, asking for contributions to the flower mart which is always needs for self-esteem, fa mily
a part of the fair. Just contact Mrs. Kuhn if you need more in- affection, communi ty information, or oo work out something about getting the things to vo lv e me n t , voca ti ona l
usefu lness and socal acAthens.
And, by the way, if you have that day free, drive over and ceptance.
"They are different, to be
take in the fair . l's quite a'thing , we understand.
sure, but these differe nces

NO ONE, BUT no one, could have been more delighted than
Edith Burton of Middleport when she received a birthday card
from President and Mrs. Richard Nixon. She commented that
she knew centenarians got carda - but she wasn 't quite that far
along.
Coming Sunday for her birthday celebration were Mrs.
loolse Scott and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wbeeler and daughter,
Rhonda, of Nevada, and Mrs. Fred Rowalt of Bucyrus. They also
attended the 50th wedding aMiversary of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Grover of Cheshire.
IF YOU UKE flower showS)o.you 'II be able to take in one a
month right here in little ole Meigs County. The Chester Garden
Club has one scheduled for the weekend of Oct. 7; the Rutland
Garden Club will have one Nov. 18 and 19:. and the Meigs
County Garden Clubs' Chrtstmas show is slated for the first
weekend in December,
"Sing a Song of Christmas" is the theme of the Rutland Club's
allow which will be held in Rutland Methodist Church sOcial
room. Margaret Ella Lewis is general chairman, and any day
we'll be announcing the show schedule.

Presbyterial is Set
The 1972 fall district meeting
of the Scioto Presbytertal will
be held Tuesday, Oct. 3,
beginning at 10 a.m. at the
Middleport First Presbyterian
Church.
"Firmly Bound, Forever
Free" wiU be !he theme of the
mee ting which will follow a
coffee hour and registration at
9:15 a.m. with tbe Syracuse

• Church group as hostesses.
The morning session will
include presentations, "Personal Mission and Bible Study"
by Ullian Knudson; "National
Missions" by Anna Lee Fields,
and "Ecumenical Missions" by
Mae Russell.
The afternoon session will
include a service of dedication
of "The Least Coin" offering,
special music, and an address
by Mrs. Anne Tewksbary, who

with her husband, George,
returned in July from West
Pakistan, They are making
their home in Wooster.
The host church will be
servin g a luncheon. Reservations should be sent to the
Presidert of the host church,
Mrs. Thomas Kelly, who can be
contacted at 992-:!507.

should not be used as a
justification for segrega tion
from society or deprivation of
their basic rights," em-

phasized Mrs. Thomas. She IJ-&gt;e ed ucation of mentally
stressed that the retarded don't retarded children cumes not
need less ed ucation because under the Depa r tme nt of
they are retarded, but they Educa tion, but under· the
need more and
better Depar tment of Mental Hygiene
education.
and Correction, lo whom the
Arter reviewing the local Meigs County Board of Menta l
history of the organization of Retardation is accoun table,
the three classes. Mrs. Thomas
She gave the projected
~outlined the goals for traina ble fig ures for 1970 for Meigs
mentally retarded children. County's mentally retarded as
She listed se lf-realization, the total ing 331. Of this number 230
right of dignity of the in- are classified as educab le
dividual; huma n r~lati ons h ips , mentally retarded and 83 as
the abili ty to functinn in the trainable. In the age from six
society through learning socia l to 20 the projected figure is 21.
skills; economic efficiency, the In the three classes there are 21
opportunity to learn vocationa l students in that age range. The
skills; and civic responsibility, projected fi gures further point
the need to understand the out that there are 49 over 21
social structure in which we year s of age for whom
li ve.
sheltered workshop would be
She said that the program is feasible, and tOin the county of
divided into eight majo r a pre -school age.
curriculum areas - self-help
In her talk, Mrs. Thomas
skill s~ soc'ia l skills 1 com- poin ted out that what the
munica tion skills, basic in- retarded ch1id needs is supformation, recrea tion and por t, not pi ty; not overphysical educa tion, music arts pr otection , but financia l
and crafts, and vocational support for education, train ing
occupational skills.
and care , ''No amount of
Mrs. Thomas ex plained that money or trainin g manpower
can substi tut e for the most

SEATrLE, Wash. (UPI)- A
new sales record for commercial jetliners was reached
when orders lor Boeing's 'I'll
tri-jet reached the 1,010 mark,
compan y officials reported
Monday.
Boeing said three orders
within the last week, including
a $40 mllllon contract by
Nippon Airways for five advanced 727s, established the
record.

vention was announced for Oct.
II and 12 al the Sheraton Hotel

in Cincinnati. Guest speaker
for the meeting will be Dr.
Joyce Brothers. Theme of the
si&lt;Jle session will be "Changing
World of Today for Women."
Plans were made during the
meeting to provide juice for
snack lime at the Community
Classes with Mrs. Don Thomas
tO make arrangements.
For roll call members gave
their favorite school subject.
The travelinl prize donated by
Mrs. Susan Blaker was won by
Mrs . Lo ui s Osborne. Mrs .
Kenneth Harris, Mrs. Blaker,
and Mrs. Robe rt Sc hm oll
se rved refreshments to the t1
members attendin g and three
guests, Mrs. Harold Blackston ,
Mrs. Tom Grueser, and Mrs.
Sandra Cobb.

Report Given WCTU by Youths
A report on the Teenage
Institute on Alcohol and Drugs
was given by Stephen
McGuffin and David Gerard at
the Sunday afternoon annual
mee ting of the Meigs County
Christian Temperance Union
held at the home of Mrs.
Robert Warner, Pomeroy,
The boys, students at Meigs
High School, commented on the
speakers at the Institute held
at the Ohio Dominican College
and the films which they
viewed. Representatives of the
Coiwnbus Police Department
were there to give sta tistics.
All three high schools of the
coun ty had students at the
Teenage Institute.
McG uffi n and Ger ard

repor ted that a drug in formati on group is bei ng
organized at Meigs Hig h
SchooL They also spoke of the
work of th e Dr ug Abuse
Commi ttee which meets each
thi rd Thursday of every month
at Sl. Paul 's Lutheran Ch urch.
Officers were elec ted and
commi ttee chairm en named
during the meeting. They are
Mrs. Betty Cline, president ;
Mrs. Be ulah Wh ile, vice
Mrs.
Le na
president;
McKin ley, secretary ; and Mrs.
Warner, treasurer. Mrs.
Audrey Miller was named
church and school education
chairman; Miss Lucr etia
Gen heimer, visual program
chairman; Mrs. Joseph Cook,

•

SALES RECORD

needed commodity- a person
who cares," she concluded, .
Mrs . Don Thomas introduced
the speaker.
During the business meeting
which opened · with the pledge
to the flag and the Mother's
Prayer, the state CCL con-

t
•

POLLY'S POINTERS

public re lations, and Mrs. Warner for hosting the annual
Warner, Christian outreach. meeting. Devotions by Mrs.
Mrs . Warn er reporting for Arnold Richards incl uded a
the Pomeroy Union noted that duel, " In Times Like These ."
th ere are 26 memb ers. Her theme was ''My Task as a
Highli ghl' of the past year Christian." She spoke of serincluded the Frances Wi llard vice to God and others, of living
lea, placing a book in the a Chri stian life , and of giving
library of a deceased member, talent in the Christian work.
presentin g two fi lms in the
Refreshments were served
schools and dis tribu ting by the Pomer oy Union
literature on temperance . The members.
Mi ddleport Uni on report
sho wed that pamphlets on
literat ure had been di stributed.
Pinons for the meeting were
the whi te bows of puri ty. On
display was a large picture of
Frances Willard, founder of the
WCTU. Mrs. Cline welcomed
·The annual banquet was set
the guests and thanked Mrs.
for Oct. 17 wh en the
Home bu ilders Class met
rece ntly al th e Middleport
Church of Christ.
Committees appointed for
the banquet were Mrs. William
Gruese r, tickets ; Mrs. Chester
Erwin, Mrs. Norman Yeauger,
an d Mrs . Carl Roa c h,
pr ogram;
Mrs.
Sh irle y
' Bumgardner and Mrs. Coleen
Van Meter, decorations. The
Bible study was taken from
Matthew .
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Roa ch, Mrs. Yeaugcr ,
and Mrs. Raymond Cole to
those named and Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence M. Stewart, Mr.
Raullin Moyer, Raymond Cole,
and Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Ki ncaid.

Banquet Date

Is October 1 7

Lack of Service

At Filling Station
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- 1 am answerin g the widow who feels
she does not get enough service, such as windshield wiping, etc. , when she buys a full tank of gas. The simplest
solution is to wr ite a note to the major gasoline supplier
for the station and ask what services one should expect
when bu¥ing gas. Do not beg for help or whine to them
about bemg a widow but take the easiest and straightest
.. route to gettin g the services you would like and need.- AGNES
'•

·'"

Polly's Problem I'IIW'J~W;;,
· ..

DEAR POLLY- 1 wonder if any faithful readers '
of the column know of a way to pull apart insulated ,
draperies that got damp on the insulated side and \1
then were pressed together. The curtains ar.e new M~,
and I need help badly.-MRS. L. W.
·.

U®:~~~~J!I~~~~:~g;ua;.

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with people (both
adults and children) who borrow books from the library
and abuse them by smearing dirt on the pages, tearing
them and then returning the books with no effort at making repairs to the damage they have done.-CA ROLE

•

;
•
•
·;

DEAR POLLY-My husba.:d is a minister and is afraid
the ties that clip on will
c o m e loose while he is
preaching. I have re medied this by attaching a
piece of elastic which goe"
under ilis collar and does
.not show but gives him
needed security.
We do not have an extra
bathroom for our m a n y
guests so I keep a clean
plastic cup in the bathroom
which has "Guest" written on it wit h ·1 marking pen,
Last Christmas several guests were coming to visit
and ·were to arrive before we were to return from a trip.
To let them know which rooms were theirs and which
towels to use I c ut up old Christmas card s with appropri ate pictures and verses and used a marking pen to print
a guest's nam e on the bottom of each card. I used masking tape to put these cards on the bedroom doors and
above the towels in the bathroom. Our. guests were immediately welcomed, really enjoyed the personal touch
and did not have to guess where they belonged or what
they should use.-VELMA

DEAR POLLY- My Pointer takes care of old powder
pulfa and scraps of 1oap at the 1ame time. 1 cut a slit
Ia the llniDI of 1 puff and.ID1ert odd 1llven o! 10ap sew
' It cloled 11\d then Ult thla for a washcloth in the bathroom. Saves on buying wa~hclothea , too.-MRS. E. G.
tNIWI,.,.l lNTllP l iSI AIIN.)
Voa will neelve a doDar If PoUy uses your favorite
bomemaklDJidea, Pet Peeve, PoUy'1 Problem or aoluti~n
to a problem. Wrfte PoUy In care of lhll newspaper.

HAVEN HOMEMAKERS - Accompanied by the Rev, Herle Capehart of near Kanawha,
the New Haven Homemakers Club recenUy visited The Meigs County Infirmary. The Rev. Mr .
Capehart presented Bible readings and there was hymn singing with the residents. Gifts of
fruit, candy , gum , cookies and mints were presented !he residents. Club members pictured at
the entrance of the infirmary are, from the left, lna Capehart, Sadie Warth, Roberta May nard,
Gladys Hart and Anna Johnson , Preparing the gift packages were Mrs. Hart, Mrs. Maynard,
Mrs. Capehart, Mrs. Warth, Mrs. Dennis Broyles and Mrs. Aubrey NewelL
NEW PATROLMAN
Bobby Klein, a member of
the fifth grade of Don Stiver's
at the Pomeroy Elementary
---,;,hoot has been made a suppor ting member of the school
patrol and is the first fifth
grader taking part in the patrol
generally composed of sixth
grade rs. Bobby will have
charge of patrol activities in
the Minersville Hill area where
there is no sixth grader living.
He was chosen to take charge
of the duties !here,
CLOTHING OFFERED
Free clothing day will be
held from 10 a.m. to noon
Th ursday at the Salvation
Army on Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy, Anyone needing
clo thing in the area is
welcome.
HERE FROM FRANCE
The Rev , John Jesburg , a
missionary in France, will
speak at the Carle ton Church
on Kingsbury Road at 7:30p.m.
Thursday. The Kings bury
Missionary Club of the church
is spon1oring the Rev. Mr.
JesbiD'g. The public is Invited.

TROOP TO FORM
Fourth, fift h and sixth grade
girls at the Pomeroy
Elementary School interested
in becoming a girl scout are
invited lo atte nd a meeting at 3
p.m. Friday at the schooL
Junior Troop 247 under the
leadersh ip of Mrs. Connie
Curnutt will be organized at
that time. Any girl is eligible to
join the troop and having bee n
a Brownie sco ut is not
required.

SALE PLANNED
Racine Chapter 134, OES,
will hold a rumma ge sale
Friday and Saturday at the
Isabel Simpson building beside
the Club Restauran t in Racine
from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Articles may be taken to the home
of Mrs . Ralph Webb un til
Wednesday evening . Afte r tha i
articles are to be Ia ken to the
Sale Building , Members are
asked to be on hand to help wi th
the sale. A pick up service for
contributions can be arranged.

j~~~=»&gt;.~:.::: ..:-.··

•:•:•:•:•

J'

•,•.

:' • ,

•• ,
I

"TUCKER" PLASTIC5-BUSHEL SIZE

l ·social Calendar · ·~ ·
TUESDAY
AME RI CAN , Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30 at the hall.
Mrs. catherine Welch, music
chairman to have charge of
program.
RAC INE AMER ICAN
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday night at the hall.
Potluck refreshments ,
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F', and A.M. ann ual father-son
banquet, 6: 15p .m. Tuesday at
the Midd lepor t Masonic
Temple.
POME;ROY Past Matrons,
7:30 Tuesday, home of Mrs.
Trell Schoenleb. Devotions by
Woodard ;
Mrs,
Albert
Progra m by Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, Fee ney-Bennett
Post 128, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
ha ll.
MEIGS Athletic Booste rs
mee ting, 7:30 p.m. tonig ht at
Meigs High School.
SOUTHERN Loca l Ba nd
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
high schooL All members
asked to attend.
WEDN ESDAY
AMER I CAN LEG I ON
Auxi liary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport hall, 7:30
p. m. potluck with meeting to
follow .. Covered dish to be
taken by each member.
POME ROY - Midd leport
Lions Gl!!-b. 11oon luncheon al ·
Meigs Inn ,

OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knight Te mpla r, stated
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Open in full form with members to lake sword and belt.
THURSDAY
RIVERVIEWGarden Club to
tour the ga rden of Mrs. Ada
Holter, Pomeroy Rd ., Thursday evening, Sept. 28 at 6:30.
Mrsc Holter will also demonstrate flower arranging to the
members. The members will
return to the home of Mrs .
Gene Wilson fo r a business
meeting and refreshments.
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSN ~. Mid·
dlepo r l
First
Uni te d
Presbyterian Chu rc h, 6:30 .
p.m. Thursday potluck supper.
Members to take a covered
dish. Dedication of the Least
Coin ; devotions by Mrs. Joseph
Bailey, Hostesses, Mrs. Myron
Miller, Mrs. Michael Zirkl e,
Mrs. Plum mer Beeson, and
Mrs. Ed Smith.
WEEKEND
Reviva l ,
starting Thu rsday throug h Oct.
I, 7:30 each evening at Faith
Tabe rn acle Ch urch, Bailey
Run Road. Me lvin Holl ey,
evangelist. Public invited.
ME IGS Christia n Women's
Fe ll owship Thursday , 7:30
p.m. at Rutland Church of
Ch ris t. Ro lf Sta ngel guest
speaker, will speak on the new
coffee house to be opened in
Pomeroy.

Officers Installed
stallin g officer, presented each
of the new officers with a bud
vase containing a fl ower in a
color symbolic of the duties of
the office . Insta lled were Mrs.
Charles Carr, president; Mrs.
Harold Ma ssar, vice president;
Mrs. Glen Stout, treasurer ;
Mrs. Frederick Goebel,
secre tary ; and Mrs . John
Arbaugh, news reporter.
Mrs . Barnhill, the reti ring
presid en t, presided at the
meeting which opened wi th
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry devotions by Mrs. Kenneth
were in Chester, W. Va . ove r Griffith . She gave a meditation
the weekend to visit Mr. and ;md members said the Lord's
Mrs. Herman Gower. Their Prayer in unison. Roll call was
daughter, Kathy, spent the answered with a favor ite
weekend with Jan Holter.
television program.
·,
Karla Kuhn, fre slmmn at
Mrs. Glen Stout read the
Morehea d Stale Univer si ty, verse of the month, and Mrs.
Morehea d, Ky . wa s the Clarence Headley gave garweeke nd guest of her parenL&lt;, denin g tips. Guests were Mrs.
the Rev , and Mrs. Robert Ja cob Lehman and Mrs. Harry
Kuhn . Here the weekend before Ha rmon.
was Sgt. David Kuhn who is
A white elephan t sale was
stationed at Langley Air Force held witl1 Mrs. Massar as the
Base in Virginia .
au ctioneer. The traveling prize
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich donated by Mrs. Robert Dorst
and daughter, Jayne, visited wa s won by Mrs. John Arover the weekend with Mr . and baugh. Mrs. Barnhill will host
Mrs. Mike Hamm er and the October meeting. Refreshdaughters, Colwnbus.
ments were served by the
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferrell of hostess to the 12 members and
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. tw o guests attending.
William Will of Ml. Herman
were Sunday visi tors of M1ss
Frieda Faehnle.
Installation of offi cers for the
1972-73 year highlighted the
September meeting of the Rose
Garden Club of Tuppe rs Plains
held al the home of Mrs. John
Arbaugh.
Mrs. Carl Barnhill, the in-

LAUNDRY BASKET

SING ING PLANNED
MASON - A hymn sing will
he held Saturday begin11ing at 8
p.m. al the Good Shepherd
Church, Point Pleasant Route
2. Among the sp~cial singers
wilt be the Happy Four
Quartet, Logan, W. Va .; Dan
Hayman and the Rou sh
Family ; the McDaniel Trio;
Sid and Carol ; Heavenly Highway Trio, and the Shaffer
Family. The public is invited.

CAN

LINERS

C?N SALE TUESDAY,S PM

DEPARTMENT STOlt£

ALMOST A YEA RS
SUPPLY

¢

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON

REUNION SET
The Arnold Whaley family
reun ion will be held Sunday,
Oct 8 at the State Park, west
side of Route 33. A basket
dinner will be held at noon.

ATIEND MEETING
Clarence Struble, Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas, and Mrs.
Eddie Arcar o and Bill Geneva Yates attended the
Hartark were the only two recent meeting of the Regional
jockeys ever to win the Ken- Council on Aging held at Rio
tucky Derby five times.
Grande College.

•

NOTE BOO
PAPER
. ---

• SPECIAL

~
• SheeiS

¢

SAVE
20c

.-

.........

5 DAYS ONLY!!!
...

FALL
SLACKS

.., , ...'!~

.

--·--

PRI CES AR E
IN EFFECT
TUESDA Y
S PM
THRU
SUNDA Y

,TEENS AND WOMENS .

~VERY DAY VALUES TO $3.941!'!!!~!"!!'!~~~~~~'!!!!'"~~~-----..

"SH. RINK" SWEATER VESTS

Jean cuts.
elastic
waist styles.
and
other
models
in solids
or prints.
Right oul of our regular stock,
Don't Miss These!

REDUCED FOR 5 DAYS

A VERY SPECIAL PURCHASE!

~~ -~ "MARKSON"7 TRANSISTOR

PORTABLE RADIO

OR LON ACRYLIC
BEAUTIFUL
MULTI COLORS!
SAVE
72c

SAVE $1.32!

$ 22

AM in stant sound,
pe rcis ion

quality .

Complete

with

battery, carry straps

$ 66

5 DAYS ONLY!

$ 00 ot:I~E

a nd ea rphone.

OF ANY

COMPARE! JUST TRY TO FIND LOWER OVERALL PRICES ANYWHERE!
DISPOSE THEM OR WASH AND RE-USE!

-

•·

PLASTIC TUMBLERS

He!~--

CLEAR STYRENE PLASTIC
7 OUNCE SIZE- PERFECT FOR
HOME, POOLS, COCKTAIL PARTIES

I •

BLACK STEEL WORKMANS

~:

WOMENSFALL

PANT SE

"DURAL" BRAND-MADE IN U.S.A.

ELECTRIC SISSORS

REGULAR

.

WITH GUIDE LIGHT TO SEE
LINES AND PATTERNS !
Fully
automatic .

~88

TO s1ra

'

UM BRELLAs$1

, ALADDIN" QUALITY
.__....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... · - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
. - - - - -.... r-----!!"'-_.,· "TUCKE R" PLASTICS-REGULAR $1.29!
MENS FLARE LEG
MULTI -COLOR 36" SPAN

WASTE BASKET
~

MINIATURE
ANTIQUE

THE lOc SIZE

OR&amp;c EACH

AVACADOOR GOLDON SALE TUES. S PM!

GLASS
BOTTLES
VERY DAINTY

8!ACH
BELTS FOR JENES
TO FIT TEENS &amp; WOMEN

,, A useful size for kitchen,
~J bedroom
'

.

,~ of

home. Get
"' several at this tow price

or burgandy . Look these ov er---you'll
save cash.

SIZE

29
TO

$ 44

36

MAGNETIC
PHOTO ALBUM

OTHERS
TO

PAIR

&gt;'' '· ..

$2.99

ALL METAL FITTINGS !

WOMENS SEAMLESS
EXTRA LARGE

SPONGE MOP
4FT. WOOD HANDL.E
REGULAR $1.34

.,:::,G:;~.~ 177 p~~~!.!,z~~'~E
FOR.&amp;IRlS

array of model s and colors. Most of

PANTS FOR
NOW THRU
WINTER

bell · . so select nowt

TO $2.94

+BONDED ACRYLICS

MENS WORK WEIGHT

lSIZE
FITS

1X.to4X

99¢

PR.

+BEAT DENIMS
+POL VESTER &amp;
COTTON

Available in gold or green. 3

different designs in a deco rators

classic boHle. They go on sale
Tuesday at S p.m.---so get youro
then!

Our selection i s now

complete---come shop for
her pants--- you'll like our

PAIR

COLORS OF
CINNAMON,
TAUPE
OR BEIGE!

24

$ 00

To 1314

KITCHEN
GADGETS

Fruit !ulcers, tube squeezers, corn holders, can and
boHie opontno, Gl1nt Popar Clips, mixing spoon iets,
laundry hooks, soap dishes, party picks, ice cracker,
soap holders, push pins, self stick towel rocks, opple
slicer, tooth pick dlspanser, magnetic memo holder,
cookie cutter, 111tand pepper set, twist out I" trays. A

w.•••.,·-:;. $100

Even some direclly from China. Bread baskets, handled
baskets, horn shape baskets .• plus many others. Very well
constructed---dark bro~ lacquer $ish, ait7t finish .

- WHILE THEY LAST!

huge array -- we thipk
you'll buy! Sizes 3 to 14.

EACH

·MELAMINE
DINNERWARE

VAWES TO 49' EACH

A HUGE
ASSORTMENT
OF STYLES!

DECANTER
BOTTLES WICKER

+BRUSHED DENIMS

$ 87

EACH

18 INCHES TALL • DECORATORS

NYLONS

SIZE 8 TO 12

$ 00

Sized for the larger woman .
Extra widlh, extra lh igh widlh,
e;w;tra length . . fits women
weighing 160 to 185. Perfect
Quality .

+DOUBLE KNIT

4 BUCKLE ARTICS
GREYSOLE!
ALL RUBBER-

BLACK STEEL
WITH WOOD HANDLE
FOR YOUR FALL
LEAF CHORES!

Won't sag or wrinkle, full y washable.

to handle your waste
· paper needs .

Suedes, viny Is, leathers in a wide

THE
WANTED
WID~
WIDTHS!

LEAF RAKE

Choose from color s of na vy, t an , brown

¢

or other areas

your

TO
ALWAYS--SOMETHING NEW
AND DIFFERENT AT
YOUR NEAREST SHOPPERS MART!

STORM
WINDOWS
CUT HEAT BILL

34 PIECE IN EACH SET!

POLY PLASTIC • 3 PIECE

MIXING BOWL
SET
WHITE
OR
AVACADO
COLORS

¢
SET

\.

YOU'LL NEED ONE SOON

PANTS

JUNBO 44 QT. SIZE

ALL YOUR
FAVORITES

CANDY
BARS

POLYESTER

COMPLETE SERVICE FORa
MEETING POSTPONED
A regular 111eeting of Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority originally
sched uled for Thursday , Sept.
28, has been postponed un til
7:45p.m., Oct. 4, at the home of
Mrs. Virgil Brown.

500 SHEETS

PKG.

your new jeans need the wider width

SPEAKER COMING
The Rev. Don Streets, pastor
of the Church of the Nazarene
in Lain!fllburg, Mich., will be
evange list fo r revival services
which begin at 7: 30 thi s
even ing at the Racine Church
of the Nazarene, and continue
each eve ning through Oct. 1.
Special music will be prov ided
each evening by a soloist or a
group . The Racine pastor, the
Rev. Morris M. Wolfe, ex tends
an invitation to the public.

TRASH

47c EVERY DAY

A DISCOUNT

5 HOLE PUNCHED-R EG. 97c

JUMBO PACK OF 40

8 plates, 8 sauceno, 8 dessert dishes, senilng plater and
Iorge serving bowl. Select from 5 patterns. Dlshwaslier

Safe, break reslslant.

A$12.95VALUE!

UP T0

50%

READY ' TO INSTAll • EASY TO PUT UP
WEATHER·PROOF • DRAFT-PROOF • DIRT·PROOF

POLYETHENE VINYL
2 SIZE 36"x72"
WINDOW COVERS IN
EACH PACKAGE- COMPLETE
WITH RUSTPROOF NAILS
AND FIBRE BOARD STRIPS

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-PCilleroy, 0.,.Sept. 216, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resultst
,

WAN't'ADS.
li""&lt;lRMATION
, , I&gt;EAD\.INES
IS P.M . Dov ~elore Pu~lcoflorl
Monday Deadline 9

,

.m .

Cancellation- Corre ·lions

.Wfll be accepted until '9 .m . for
Day of PIJbl!cat
AEGULATIONS Tht!" Publisher reserves the

right to ecm or reject any ads

detmed

objectional.

Ttle

_publisher will not. be responsible

for more than one incorrect
Insertion .

··'Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY
1!70 GMC

$229S

1500 series, V-8 engine, standard transmission, good tires,
cab mouldings, foam seat, chrome front bumper, &amp; rear
step bumper. in 2-tone green finish.

R-ATES
~"For Wan' Ad Service

·

12 cen Is

per

word

three

consecutive inseort~ri's .
·" 18 cents pe-r 'word de con·
,secutlve Insertions . •
''· 25 Per C~nt Discount on pa id
Ids and ads paid within 10 days.

·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 for 5~ word minimum .
Each addJtiona1 word 2c .

825x20 10 ply t ires, foam seats. heavy duty springs, solid

cab. Gas her up - and go!

5113.

8-17-tfc

. . Eastern
M1am1
2
N.Y . Jets
2
Buffalo
1
New England
I
Baltimore 0
Central

We sell
Special

Pi
20
31
27
53

Division
0 0 1.000 54 23
0 01.000 85 58
1 0 .500 51 61

0 .500 28 51
2 0 .000 37 54
Division
W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa
Cincinnati 2 0 0 1.000 46 17
' Pittsburgh I 1 0 .500 44 43
· Cleveland I 1 0 .500 37 43
Houston
o 2 0 .000 30 64
Western Division
W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa

Oakland
San Diego

1 I 0 .500 ot8 48
1 I 0 .500 40 48

Denver

1 I 0

.500 44 54

Window
Air Conditioners

like ~ fH!IDj..

WMP0/1390
tJN YOUR DIAL.
'.

TO
OHIO
PAI.l£T 00.

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

welc'ome to all

dealers! Follow the crowd,

Friday evening. Sept. 29th
just olf the Pomerov·
Middleport By-pass on old
Rt . 7 at Laurel Cliff.
Sale Starts all : 30 p.m.

gauge shotgun, modified,
$175 ; Warm Morning coal

On Old Rt. 33
Phoile 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2448

Pomeroy.

Ph: 992-2174

burner, good condition, SJO;
phone 992-5044.

1967

WILL · CUT or trim trees.

9 24J tp
truck , F700 ,

FORD

reasonable ; also clean OlJI
basements,
a tti cs
and

o.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

cellars; phone 949-3221. ·
8-29-JOtc
O'bELL WHEEL alignment
localed at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
· Complele front end service,

9-24-31p

On Most American Cars

tune up and brake service.

SOME SAY DISCOUNT!
We Say It's Our

Wheels
balanced
tronically.
All

elec work

glJaranteed ._ R~;~~c.nn;~~~kl~
· rates . Phone 742 · 3232 or

SLACKS
SPECIAL

992·3213.
READY -MIX

Open B Tit 5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

CONCRETE

deltv~red right to )'(lu1
projec:lt. Fast and easy. Fret

estimafes. Phone 992-328o 'St::WING MACHIItES. Repati
Goegle in Readv -Mix Co .
service, all makes. 992-2284
Middleport, Ohio.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
6-30-ttc
Authorized Singer Sales an&lt;

POMEROY
'1'. _ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.~~iii~ Phone 992-2181

---;-----

'

foervice. We Sharpen Scissors .

·sEPTIC IA,.I\&gt; CLEANED
. 3-!9-tfc
REII.SONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
.
...-...--·
4782, Gallipoll5, John Russell. OOZE R and back hoe work.
ponds and septic tanks, dlt·
Owner &amp; Operator.
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
ching service; top soil, fill
5-12-ff&lt;
.
Sew ing Machine. Will sell for
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex sma l! ba lance of $36.21 or
cava
ting . Phone 992 -5367,
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
payments may be arranged.
Dick Karr, Jr.
Complete Service
Phone 9'12·5331.
9-1-ttc
9.).tfc
Phone949-3821

- - ----"o____

Racine', Ohio

8 TRACK STEREO, freight

'Crill Bradford

.

_B'ACKHOE AND DOZER' wor~

5-l·ff&lt;

damaged, in beautiful walnut
console . Will se ll tor SlOl.SOor .

Bad ,..,ooth
1

Success
Tuppers

Road
between
Plains and Long
Bottom . Open 6 days; some
even ings . Phone 667 ·3041.
Operator, Virgin ia Hayman .

Sept1c tanks mstalled. Georoe.
(..BHI) Pullins . Phone 9?.2.:147~ d

••

paySl .SOperweek . Phone'~&lt;~2 · ·AUTOMOBILE .
..,,_..
'25-tfc
5131
Insurance ~r.
·
cancelled?
Los t
your 'SEPTIC tanks· C1ean eci. M111er1
9 7 tf
· · c
operator' s license? Call 992-Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. PM~'
2966
FOUR beautiful songs by John
· ·
662·3035.
9

6-15-tfc

2·12-tf

·

~

May Have
BeeR.llO
1\T la '
ns
Droblem
r,
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Gary
Nolan's arm problems may
have been caused by an ab·
scessed tooth, which was
pulled Monday, Cincinnati
Reds team physicia n Dr.
George Ballou said.
The infection from the abscess, which had not bothered
the Reds ace righthander,
"very likely caused the

TWO OPERATED
PHILADELPffiA (UPI)Phlladelphla punter Tom
McNeill became the second
Eagle in as many days to
undergo knee surgery when he
was operated on Monday at
Graduate Hospital.
Rookie defensive back Pat
Gibbs underwent surgery Sunday night for Ugament and
cartilage damage.
Both players were Injured in
Sunday's 27-17 loss to the
Oeveland Browns.
McNeill led the National
Football League in punting last
season with a 42-yard average.
Coach Ed Khayat said GibbB
would be out for the rest of the
season. It was not known wben
Me Neill would return to action .

9-14-30tc

GALLIPOLIS resident wants to
buy a business . Will buy
busioess and property or
business with lease . Call

Gallipolis 446-4408.
9-20-12tc

REDUCE safe and last with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap

(Sacred) "Our Lord God

pan gas range, $15 ; breakfas t
set, $25; goss ip bench, $10 ;

Bring Your Unhulled

3 YOUNG male Beegle dogs and
l registered blue t i ck coon

dog . Phone 949-4761.
9-25-6tc

Real Estate Fo; Sale
7 ROOM house and l acre of
land , located on Portland·
Bashan Road . Can be seen by
appointment . See George
Holter at Minersvi lle , Ohio .

9-25-6tc

Auto Sales

WALNUTS
TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER
Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

T.V. table, $10 ; Maytag
washer, $25 ; G. E . Dryer,
$150 ; G . E . i r oner. $20 ;
ironing board , $5 ; Com pressor , $10 ; farm wagon - 2
beds, SSO ; window fan, $5 ;
can ister sweeper. S40 ; sewing
mac hi ne,
$7 5,
other
household items.

9-24-Jip
MAPLE Stereo .radio co m .
bination , AM.FM radio, 4
spea ker so und system , 4
speed automa t ic cha ng er,
sepa rat e controls . Belance
$78 .29 . Use our budget terms .

ca ll

_ _ _ __ _ __ 9.::.::
2S-6tp
1969 HONDA Scrambler, 115 cc ;

$

Per Hundred
Pounds

After they
are Hulled

phone 992-7016.

9-26-Stc
'70 CHEVELLE SS 396. 427 cam ,
456 posi ·l ractlon. 4 speed,
factory type and gauges, plus
lots of extras ; phone 742·5943
or contact Ron Grate .

9-26-Jtc
'67 OLDS Delta Cus tom 88, 2
door hardtop, very good
condition, Kate M cNickle, Rt.
2 Racine, Ohio ; phone 949·

238 1.

9-26-3tp

-1967--=----FORD Tru ck, F700 ,
Reynolds 7'11 x 12 dump,
chea ter axle , new tires, A· l

-

WAITRESSES. full and pari t i me ;
no
experience
necessary ; night shift; apply
in person, Blue Tartan .

9-19-6tc
WOMAN to live in with elderlv
lady, good salary, room and

Excelsior

Salt Works, Inc.
9!2-3891

Pomeroy, Ohio

Only $7,500.00.

bas~ment:

MIDDLEPORT
Nice kitchen, breakfast nook. utility

3 BEDROOMS -

room, carpettng and paneling . Old fashion bath. Concrete
front porch . Nice yard.

.

LARGE HOME

PLUS - A large one story building 40x70. n~ acres of
level land. 4 bedroom home, 11!2 baths, modern kitchen ,
wa ll to wa ll carpeting . Asking only $23,000.00.

COUNTRY HOME
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, enclosed porch, garage. Level Lot.
Plai ns water. Only $4 ,000.00 .

3BEDROOMS
ROUTE 338 - An older home that can be renovated into a
comfortable place . Has a large lot. Give us a good offer .

WHAT A DEAL
3 BEDROOMS - Modern home. bath.

fireplace

( modern) , and 4 room block blJilding for a business on Rt .
7 bu siness loop. Asking only $25 ,000 .00 for both.

2 HOUSES -

165 ACRES
Plenty of pasture and hunting land. All

Hill farm for beef

Shahan, Great Bend , Ohi o.

97 ACRES
EASTERN SC HOOL DI STRICT -

9-24-3fp

cattle . B room modest home, with modern bath, furnace
and semi-modern kitchen . 40 acres of meadow . All

TRUMPET and Trombone ;
phone 992-5461.
9-24-Jic

minerals. NOW ONLY $19,500.00.
CALL AND HAVE A LOOK AT ONE OF THE SE . SOME
ARE A REAL BARGAIN, OTHERS A GOOD BUY. THEN
LI ST WITH US FOR BEST RESULTS .

2 SE TS metal kitchen cabinets,
Sl2 ; 1 Sea r s Wall Gas Heater

HELEN L. TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE
•
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

NEW all electric home by
owner , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
$20 ; 2 end tables , 110; 1
fireplace, carpet, near Meigs
balhroom chrome towel pole,
High School, 125,000 firm .
$3 ; l finished, like new in.
Ph one 992 3183.
terior door with hardware

9!2 -332S

608 E. Main Sf.

~

Pomeroy

~ .. ·992-22S!

......

house ; gas for ced air furnace,

Fitzpatrick

Or -

chards, State Route 689 .

Ph one

For Rent or Sale

family
room ,
carport.
ai r
gas
furnace,
car.
peting in kitchen, bath,
bedroom
and
living
room i contact Robert Beegle

949-2891.
9-24-31p

For Rent

'72 ;

,

Wilkesv ille 669-3785.
8-30-tfc

•,

·~··

'

~

.

-- ...

POODL'E puppies, Silver To~.
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
5443.

~

8-15-tfc

---~-....:.._

STEREO-rocker co nsole, 4

acre lot, Rl. 7 &amp; Old Chester
Rd . . $5,500; phone 992-3874.
8-29-lfc

'I•

POMEROY - Qo,&lt;, &gt;acres.
2 baths . Dining 18xl2. Living
27x30, fireplace . Kitchen has
Stainless Steel range, oven,
sink, dishwasher, all built-i n
17ft. of base cabinets, 20 tt .'
of upper . FlJII basement with,
large Rec . room~ flrepl ace .1
Ut ility room . 2 car garage .'
$35,000.00.
i

OUT OF STATE . IDEAL s.
ACRE RANCH. Lake Conchas, New Mexico. S2975 . No
down . No interest. S25 per mo .
for 119 mos.
~acation
Paradise . Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake Conhas: Box

200 1DD, Alameda, California

MIDDLEPORT
bedrooms, Master

speed intermixed changer,
94501.
dual volume control, 4
8-29-JOtp
speaker
sound
sys tem,
beautiful hand rubbed WalnlJf
f inish . Balance S66.34. Use our 5 ROOM house for sale, one
third acre ground , front
budget terms. Call 992-7085.

9-24-6tc

3
has'

console
lavatory
and
dressing table, all have large
closets. Bath has cera mic
tile,
shower,
console
la va tory and other features .
liv ing 12)(20. Kitchen has 15

porch. full basement. S. D.
Buskirk, 341 Page St.. Mid ·

dleport.

Mobile Homes For Sale

ft. · base.

9-24-3tp

15

fl.

upper

cabinets, blJilt-in range,
oven, d isposal and air
1965 ATLAS mobile home ; 50 x S ROOM house, double garage, 1 condi
tioner . Utility . Car10; 2 bedroom ; front kitchen ;
double lot , Anderson Street,
peted
throughout . Gas F.A.
excellen1 condit ion; phone
Ma son, W. Va ., phone 1-304· furnace. Carport and palio.

985-3555.

9-26-6tp

r---------&lt;"1
.~Air Conditioners
• Awnings
·• Underpinrtina

773-5606.

$18,500.00.

9-24-6tc
BY OWNER: price reduced for
quick sale; owner leaving
sta te; 3 bedroom holJse, living
room, dining room , kitchen
furnace, Chester water. on

good blacktop road; small
barn and llsh pond ; phone 8432194. .
9-24-6tc

mobile hQm ,
~ plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at ...

.

MIDDLE PORT - 2 story
frame . 5 large bedrooms
W.C. l'/2 baths. Cellar .
Garage .. Carport. Nice
kitchen. Cibse to shopping
and playground. $12,800.

and bath, full basemen t, gas

'Complete
serv.ice

POMEROY - 2 story frame .
3 bedrooms. bath. 6 rooms In
all. Porches. Furnace Heat
(Gas) . Good neighborhood .
Garage . Going at ju5t
56,900.00.

HOUSE i'n lv11g Uut tom , phOne•
~85- 3529.
. .
6-tl -tfc, WE HAVE MANY OTHER
·
· PROPERTIES, CALL US
PT
PLEASANT
6.
room
. TODAY . TO BUY DR SELL
1220Woshington Blvd.
US
BE
YOUR
house, l 'h baths, recreation · LET
.423-7521
BELPRE,O..
room, new buill-in kitchen, BROKER .
,
•
·- _ ·
must sell , leaving town. Days
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
phone 992·3502. evenings ~
REALTOR
CAS11 paid tor all mal&lt;es ·anclo
phone 675-2372.
'
PHONE "2·22S9
models of mobile homes,;
•
8-30-lfc L--..:....:.:::::.:.:..:.:.::::::.:.._.:J
·Phone area code 61••• 23!95~·

MILLER
~
· MOBILE ·HOMES
''

So loin our Playhouse Porly For Sale
gang,
Earn money and Green Stamps, 16' CAMPING TRAILER
.
..
. 4-13,
loo ;
·
Shasta. like' new . Phone 985:
~--~--------- ·
Gtve Santa Claus a helping
3849.

1

'

:-::-:=----=:-:---~·..::.·tc Real Estate For Sale
This Christmas '72.
CALL Margaret Fortune, 949- COAL Limestone. ExcelSIOr ;.RACINF - 1u ruu, .. housei
5414 or Barbara Lambert,
Salt Works. E. Main St., bath, basement, garage, lwo
•46:lm .
•
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891. · &lt;ots. Phone 949-4313.
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _9·....:
10-tfc .--------·~·
12-11&lt;:
4-S-tfp&lt;
9 7 30

IT'S MY

\:J

- -- - - - -

8 ROOM HOUSE, nice large lot,
natural gas, builf -'in cabinets

in ki tchen. Close to radio
station in Bradbury. Phone

992-2602.
9-14-12tp

·.... . ...

. ·-~~
\\OULD )t)U PRETEND
I'M REALL'Y UNDER
ARREST?

CAMPUS CLATI'ER
I'P N~VER MAK~ IT
THROUGH THE
UNIVERSITY OF
i&gt;ITT58tlf?G#

RoALLY~ ARE OUR
ACADEMIC STANDA~DS
TOO ~~~H FOI'- YOU~

IN FOLICE
WORK,

FRED.
YOUR 'CATI-IEl&gt;RAL
OF LEARN!N~" IS TOO
HIGH FORM~!

after 7 p .m . or phone 992·

sm.

'S'EE. US FOR: Awnings, ·l1orn'/
·doors and windows, c&amp;rptrls,

m·orquee5. ~lumlnum "llldlngl
and railing. 'A. Jacob, sales,
representative . . F-or · fr.e~

estimates, ·· phone Charle,llj
Lisle ~
Syracuse. V
~'· :
Johnson and Son. Inc.
.:
J.2·1fl

BUT QNL.'( IF SHE MARRIES

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Public Not ice is nereby given
th.at Columb i a Gas of Ohio, Inc .
ha flied a Compla int with the
Pub lic Utilities Commission of
Ohio In which It alleges that Its
elCisfing rates and charges tor
i ts Rurc!!l and Unincorporated
Community General Serv ice
customers in Meigs County are
unreasonably tow In relation to
its area and charges tor s_e rvlce
within
the
Incorporated
municipalit ies of Meigs County.
Columbia ta•s asked the
Commission to fix the rates of
its Rural and Unincorporated
comm unity G&amp;nerat Service
customers In Meigs County at
the same level as the rate In
elle c t i n the muni cipa lity
nearest to SlJch customers. and
thereafter to m&amp; intain such
rates at the level of rates within
such mun iclpallfy .
Present rate '
Meigs Coun tv :
Thirty Cents (30c) per one
hundred &lt;1001 cubic feet tor the
first 500 cubic feet , used through
each meter each month.
Seven Ce nts (7c) per one
hundred ( 1001 cubic feet for the
next 4,500 cubic feet , used
through each meter each
montf1 ;
Seven and one .ha lf Cents
(7 1f1C ) per one hundred ( 100 )
cubic feet for th e next 95,000
cubic feet. used tt1rough each
meter ea ch month ;
Seven Cents Pe l per one
hundred ( 1001 cub ic feet for all
In e:.~cess of 100,000 ClJblc fe et.
used through each meter each
month ;
A Minimum Charge for each
custom er each month of One
Dollar and Filly Cents (S1.50 l
shall be made .
Bradbury :
First 800cubic feet , per meter
per month , 25 .0c per 100 cubic
feet,
Ne)(f 4,200 cubic feet. per
meter per month , 7.Dc per 100
cubic feet ,
Next 45,000 cu bic feet, per
meter per month , 7.5c per 100
cubic feet ,
Over 50,000 cub ic feet, per
meter per month , 6.Sc per 100
cubic feet.
M inimum Monthly Charge

THE WIOALTHIEST MAN IN TI-lE
WORLD-AND YOU CAN
MAKE HER DO IT!!

LI'L AI!&gt;NER AN'
HONEST AI!&gt;E
TRAPPED IN
Tli'MiNE?

WfNNIES IMDE

l THINK WINNIES 7JI't) MISTAKES ! l'}IE
11\1\DE A 61G MIS - FIRST WA~ WilEN &amp;HE
lAKE GIVtN(7
AGREED 1D LET
BESSIE A PRIVATE
'AUNT1 6E551f WORK

OFF=ICEAND
DAAWIN(7

HERE!

WEL! 1 ~i LEAST
SHE vvuN'T KEEP
OTHER PEOPLE
FROM DOIN(7
THEIR
WORK!

I WONDER WHAT
WINNIE WILL DO
IF 13E.551E. COMES

uP wrrn fJOME:

DESIGNS.;;=.~

flOARDJ

Apprentice

to Pert?

workinq
n1qht5

for
Pert,
Slim?

12 .00.

Reedsv ill e:
F lrst 2.000 cub ic feet, per
meter per month , 35.812c per
100 cubic feet,
Next 98 ,000 cubic feet, per
meter per month, 9.822c per 100
cubic feel ,
Over 100.000 cubic feet , per
meter per month , 7.872c per 100
cubic feet.
Minimum Monthly Charge

13.50 .

~LAN.D REA~

size 6' ·8" x 2' ·8", $15 ; call992:
9· 15·12tc
241 3.
_ _ _ __ _ _ _
9._24-Jtp 5 ROOMS &amp; bath, 2 story block
APPLES ,

board, phone 992-5397 or 992·
7 ROOMS and bath , 175 a
3507.
month ; ca ll after 5 p .m. 992 ·
9-26-ttc
3247.
9-26-3tp
HAVE Immediate opening for
part time office girl ; tvping
essential. shorthand helpful HOUSETRAILER in Rutland.
adults only .; ph one 742-4'463.
but not required ; Write Box
9-26-Jtc
129-A, c-o The Dally Sentinel.
Pomerov. Ohio •5769, giving 4 ROOM furn i shed apartment ;
full resume with references,
phone 992 -3658.
previous employment, and
9-22-6tc
tralnlng .
'
9-3-tlc
FURNI SHED 3 room apartment. pr iv ate en tran ce.
ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
car
peted ; phone 992-2780 or
Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
9&lt;12 -3432.
December with the oldest Toy
9-24-lfc
Party Plan In the Country.
Highesl commissions, No 3""'"A""
' N-=
0- 4:-ROO
::-::-.-M
- fu:. r-nf-sh_ed
_ a"rf!J
Cash Outlav. Call or write
~~santa's Parties", Avon Ct. · unfurnished. · apartments.
."'hone. 992-54~.
· •
~1. Tel . I (203) 673-3455.
n~ttc
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
9-1-tfc
.
3 ROOM apartm~nl , un )
HELP WANTED, Toy Coun:
furnished, 408 Spnng Ave..
setors. Santa Claus just told
Pomeroy .
8-10-ffc .
me, something to tell you .
Hels very busy, this Chri5tma5 .--------~

hand,

and nice kitchen . Front and back porches . Full

electric 3 speed floor scrubber
&amp; waxer with all attachments,

condition; phone 614-887-2165. HOUSE at 1618 Lincoln Hts ..
9-26-Jtp Avai lable after Sept. 25; 3
- - - --bedroo ms , laundry room ,

Help Wanted

WORKING MAN'S SPECIAL
POMEROY - Large 8 rocm house with 5 bedrooms bath

7' ' ACRES mixed hay ; C. B.

I 1,000 BTU). SIS; I Kenmore

P.O. Box 267

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

M i.ne~als . 2 houses, J springs, 4 farm ponds. Several
buildmgs. Good gravel road, school and mail routes .

- --- - - --=Start Buying October 7, 1972.

110 Mechanic Street

9·24·61c

Call 992-7085.

1970 VOLKSWAGEN. good
condit)on, new paint,
after 6 p.m. 992-3401.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

Physician" and "God's Swee t
Love." Specia l! Pick up your
record i ng now at Bill &amp; Lee 's
Mu sic Center at BRW Hard ware Bldg .• Pomeroy , Ohio ;
only Sl.50. save 50c.
9-24·6fc

OLD Furniture, oak tables,
"water pills ," Nelson Drug .
organs. d ishes. clocks, brass YARD SALE. 6 mi. E. of
9-25-2 tp
beds . or comp lete households.
Chester on Rt. 248 ; Ella
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . 4. Hannum
, phone 985 ·3354 ;
YARD Sale , Friday and
Pomerov. Oh io. Call 992 -6271.
Sept. 28, 29 and 30th ; Walnul
Saturdav. Sept. 29th and 30th,
6-28-ftc
bedroom suite , S40 ; Wine
571 Laurel Street. Middleport .
livi ng room suite, $20 ; Tap.
9-26-Jic

For Sale

Real Estdte For Sale

" Rainbow
Valley "
and
"Snowballs in the Rocki es";

Wanteti To Buy

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, llndscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 si:r:e loaders. Work
done by hour or conlroct.
Free Estimates. We also
haul flit dirt, tap soil. Dump
trucks and low-boY for hire.
See Bub or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
pondsf

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

1·27 -TIC

Mohler on 45 r.p.m . Acfion .

VIRGINIA's Beautv Salon on

BONES, PAW

LONG ENUFF--

EARTH MOVING

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Records No. AC1043A. (C&amp;Wl .

(Onlvgames schedu led)

'we·talk:.to JOU,

DEUVERED

Hot Water Heater~
Plumbing
Electrical Work

retail &amp; wholesale!

Kan . City
1 I 0 .500 30 37
Sundar's Results
New Eng . 21 Atlanta 20
Cleve 27 Philadelphia 17
soreness in Nolan's arm,"
Dallas 23 NY Giants 14
. :san Diego 37 Denver 14
Ballou said.
~Miami 34 HolJsfon 13
Ballou said the abscess was
Los Angeles 13 Chicago 13
found
in an x-ray taken as part
Minnesota 34 Detroit 10
of a routine examination of
NY Jets 44 Baltimore 34
Oakland 20 Green bay 14
Nolan. Nolan, 14-5, will begin a
Cincl 15 Pittsburgh 10
s trengthening program and
Wash ington 24 St. Loui s 10
hopefully will he able to take
Buffalo 27 San Fran 20
(Only games scheduled)
part in the National League
Monday's Results
playoffs aga inst Pittsburgh.
Kan . City 20 New Orleans 17
Nolan had complained of
(Only game scheduled)
Sunday's Games
soreness in his arm prior to
Bal timore at Buffalo
Sunday's game at Hous ton and
Cincinna ti at Cleveland
Reds Manager Sparky AnDal vs Green Bay at M ilw
Detroit at Chicago
derson had indicated he
Kansas City at Denver
probably would he held out of
Los Angeles al Allanta
the playoff pitching rotation .
Miami at Minnesota
NY Jets at Houston
Pitts at St. Louis
San Diego at Oakland
GULLETI ON MOUND
San Fran at New Orleans
Washington at New Eng .
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
(Only games schedul ed)
Cincinnati Reds and Atlanta
Monday's Games
Braves open a two-game series
NY Giants at Phila, night
(Only games scheduled)
here tonight.
The Reds plan to send Don
Gullett ( 8-9 ) to the mound
Major League Results
against
the Braves. George
By United Press International
Nation a I League
Stone (6-10).
San Diego
000 120 02o- S 11 I
The Reds were idle Monday.
Los Ang
000 Oil l!JO- 3 8 s
Norman, Ross (7}, Schaeffer
(7), Simpson (8) and Kendall ;
Osteen, Hough (8 ) and Fergu·
BATI'LE TONIGHT
son. WP- Schaeffer (2-0). LPBALTIMORE
(UPI) - The
Osteen ( 18·1ll .
Cleveland Indians play the
(Onlvgame sc'heduled)
Baltimore Orioles tonight .
American League
The Indians were scheduled
Minn at Oak ppd, rain .
to pit Dick Tidrow (13-15)
Californ ia 000 000 11o- 2 6 1 aga in st the Orioles' Mike
Texas
010 000 ooo- 1 J 1
Ryan ( 18-15) and Torborg , Cuellar (17-11 ).
The Indians were idle
Stephenson (6) ; Bosman. Pan·
ther (9 ) and Fahey . LP- Monday.
Bosman (7-10) .

Migrating Whales
Gray whales are 50-ton 50foot·long mammals of ' the
sea. They migrate 12,000
m1les every year, from their
feedmg waters in the Arctic
Ocean to their breeding
gro~nds oil Mexico 's Baja
Cahforma .

&amp;.00 Per Ton

5

COOLING

If you haven't been to

United Press International
National Conference
Eastern Division

American Conference

WINCHESTER Model 12, 12.

All kindsr all sizes for men,
women , young men, boys
and girls. Hurry to

Largest End

Specialist .

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR~ INC.
Pomeroy

Buy 2 Pairs and
Getl PAIR FREE

10" on

HEATINt: &amp;

Auction

NFL STANDINGS

0 2 0 .000 31 54

Poles
Maximum
Diameter

"HEll"

Hayman's

Radl~1or

Reynolds
71f2X12
dump,
Chester axle, new tires . A-1
cond iti on. Phone 614 ·887-2165 .

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

wigs, more new produ,cts
coming soon. For free I
demonstration, phone 992·

Hayman's Auction,
you are missing out on
some great bargains .

New Orleans

KOSMETICS and

· Nathan Biggs

- -----

,/

Sale At

9-26-ltp

Los Angeles 1 0 1 .667 47 27
San Fran . I 1 0 .500 54 JO
Atlanta
I 1 o .soo 57 •2

L__ _ __.::_ _ _ _ _.J

KOSCOT

Another Big

Evelyn Roush ; arso thanks to
the doctors and nurses at
Pl easa nt Vall ey Hospital,
especia lly thank i ng the
pallbearers and the Rev .
McCloud for his consoling
words and help in our sad
bereavement of a loving
mother .
George
Roush
and
Raymond Roush and family

Western Division
W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa

Sentinel

Wanted

LOOK!

after the death of Ruth

W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa
Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 55 34
Green Bay 1 1 0 .500 40 30
Detroit
1 1 o .5oo 40 so
Chicago
o 1 1 .333 34 so

Dai~

Bulldozer Radiator to

?-21 ·6tc

Notice

WE WISH to extend our heart·
felt than ks and appreciation
for the acts of kindness,
messa9es of sym pathy and
beau.hful floral offerings
rece 1ved from neighbors
relatives and many friend~

Cnetral Division

The

OHIO

Card · ~~ Thanks

Pet. PI
1.000 51
1.000 ot8
.500 20
.000 30

PHONE 992-2 156

OPEN EVES. 1.00 I'.M.

-s~ tur~a y .

W. L. T.'
Dallas
2 0 0
Washington 2 0 0
St . Louis
1 I 0
N. Y. Giants o 2 0

W' Va•
Hart'ord
I'
'

speed transmission, solid cab, local 1-owner truck.

. · i'PMIIIO~.

eROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

Sma llest Heater Core .

model Safari, $1,400 ; phone

992-5492.

Clifton and

1968 CHEVROLET
$1469
J;.. ton, 8' Stepside, good heavy duty tires, V_, engine, 3-

9-IS-121p

1970 TRAVELMATE Camper,

IN

Pomeroy Motor Co.

BLIND ADS
'
Additional 25c · Char'ge · per
Advertisement .
·
·
OFFICE HOIJ'R!
-t8 :30 a.m1 IQ 5:00'\}J.m · l)aily.
.1 : 30 a.m. to 1~ : 00 Noor

--- -

9-17-121p

CARRIERS
WANTED

1969 CHEVROLET
$2291
2-ton , 102" cab .to axle. 292 engine, 15000 lbs . 2-speed axle,

· 5 cll!nts per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc

organically grown tomatoes ;
B. Quisenberry has large
ones. JOe pound at the old Post
Office building , Syracuse,
Ohio.

- - -=======~ 1971 KAWASAKI 100 excellen t
,-co ndition . Ready to go,
sacr ifice for only $285 . ,
Coolville 667-6214.
From the largest

1

•

.

9-26-3tp

YE BEEN TOTIN' TATER

·Business Services.·

EMPLOYED person . Repair FOR YOUR health's sake ea t
typewriters
part
time .
Training , tools furn ished.
Local in terview. Application
mailed. Write : Typewriters,
Lower Burrell. Pa .

BLESS YORE
THOUGHTY '\:)

TARN NOW!!

· For Sale

Help Wanted

DURN YORE HIDE, MAW'!

TWO homes tor sale; I mile
North of Eastern High
School; both have bath and a
half ; 4 bedrooms; b.\Jitf-ln
kitchens and wall -to -wall
carpet ; call 985·3598.
9-17·121c·

Rates to apply if request ls
granted :
Customers who re side nearest
to Coolvill e, Ohio ·
First 2.000 cub ic feel, per
meter per month , 36.176c per
100 cubic feet.
Nel(t 8,000 cubic feel , per
meter per month , ll . l76c per
100 cu bic feet ,
Next 10,000 cubic fee t, per
meter per month, ll .676c per
100 cubic feet .
Next 80 ,000 cubic feet, per
meter per month , 12.176c per
100 cubic fe et,
Over 100,000 cubic feet, per
meter per mon!h , 8.576c per 100
cubic feel .
Minimum Monthly Charge

13 .60.

.

Customers who reside nearest
to Middleport, Ohlo ~
First 2,000 cubic feel , per
meter per month, JO .Oc per 100
cubic feet,
Next 98 ,000 cubic feet. per
meter per month , 9.5c per 100
cu bic feet ,
Over 100,000 cubic teet, per
meter per month , 1.25c per 100
cubic feet .
Minimum Monttlly Charge

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1. Perch
6. Masticate
10. Blunder
11. Open
space in
the woods

1Z. Al~ska's
state

DICK TRACY

flower

wds.)
p.;:;H;'iE~N~,WWil:rT:;;H~;:Apji;ci;'llf. Length
times
01= SHARP GUl•l&gt;:&gt;,
width
I CUT MY WAY
15. Alabama's
01= Tl-4 E BAG ..JUST
state
IN TIME."
ftower
ZO. Capable
(3

~I

BROKI! TWE L.ENS

BY HITTtNO IT WITH
MY LUCKY OOLLII.R:'

.. ,

~

of move·

ment
Zl. Oath

zs. Vacuous

U. Stanza;
verse

S2.SO.

Customers who res ide nearest
to Pomeroy, Ofllo :
First 2,300 cubic feet, per
meter per month, 31 .012c per
100 cubic feet,
Next '97,700 cubic feet, per
meter per month, 10.782c per
100 cubic feet,
Over 100,000 cubic feet , per
meter per month, B.332c per 100
cub ic feet.
Minimum Monthly Charge

13.00.

Note (1 l: The proposed rates
reflect applicable escalation for
cost of fuel .
Note (2) : Any customer who
needs assistance In determining
his nearest munlclpalltv for
purposrs of rate classification
should cohtact any local office
in the county,
In addition to lht above
change In rates. the Rural and
Unlncorporatect Community
Customer:s would bteome
subfect to the followlno
reconnectlon chargt;
Reconnectlon Cherge:
tf service under this rate
sctledute Is discontinued at the
reque1t of cuslomer, the
Company shall not be undtr any
Obligation to re&amp;ume service to
the same customer on the same
premises until the customer h11
made payment of an emount
equal to the minimum monthly
charge for each month of the
Intervening period, but not to
exceed twelve {12) months.
The Commission will give 1
further notice of ttlt time and
place of hearinG, which will bt
at Its office In Columbus, Ohio,
the
Comm Inion
un,leu
otherwise orders .
Furth,r Information may bt·
secured by eddrenlng en

lnqulrv to the Public Utllllln
Commission of Ohio. 111 Norlh
~3'/l~ . Street, Columbus, Ohio

+++

.

Publ ished bv : Columbia Goa

Of OhiO, Inc .• 99 North Front'

Strttt, Cotumbua. Ohio •3215-.
t~l

12, 1t, 26, 3tc

Yeoterday's Cryploquote: THE TEACHER IS ONE WHO '
YAKES TWO IDEAS GROW WHERE ONLY ONE GREW ·
BEFORE.-ELBERT HUBBARD .
·

Z6. Final

4. Soak

(C 1972 Kior Feature• S;vndicate, Inc.)

5. Foot lever
8. Limpid
1. Chinese
dynasty
B. Taro root
9. Moisten
11. Cagney
film

~lYMmlYE;"'-~ ~

"IIIIHII I I I t

llll

form four ordinary wordo.

I TIDEF

classic

Tr

Yesurday's Answer
Z4. Spilled
25. Hebrew
letter
27. Esau's
father·
ln·law

Z9.Pop
30. Hills of
Shrop·
shire,
Eng.

3Z. Columbia,
in a song
33. Eggs
31. Swedish
county
35. Mining
ftnd
36. Goat god
37. Greek letter
31. Right
you are!

•:.:!!,-.;:""1 I·-

BOMUG '

I I

IFUGDYl

·zs. Vermont's

"

rJ

I
) I II
1

tREBUPS

.Z1. Euphoric

WHAT 5HOESOFTEI-J
A~E,AI=TER

ISEIN6 50U6Hi.

urance the
to
form
(
[
)
I J
I the ourprloe

state

Rower

Now

circlod !etten
INWer, ·u ' '

11 b7 the abovecutoon,
I_~=·~-~-~~~~~=·=Ujftlllted
FlillltiSifiUISWEIIIIt
( I Ill)"

(2wds.)
31. Drooping

32. Cali·
fornia's

VEA~! 5HOW90ATIHG'...
NO MATTER HOW MAHY
COP51'0U HAD AROIJN17 '
FOR 5fCURI T~
A 1'!'5PERATE
=--.,...-'

1\HN ~

UnacramblelhHe four Jumble&amp;.
one letter to uch oquare, to

13. Corner

15. One
beyond
hope
16. Eared
11. Waterfall
(Scot.)
II. Egg.
shaped
19. Strait
ofZO. 60 sees.
zz. Take to
wife

....,.., .-1,....

'''»'Ill ".1111

state
Hower
(2 wds.)
39. Dodge
40. Expunge
U .Numerous

(Aaewen ao•orrowJ
Yntnotla1'•

ltunl&gt;ift, IOOUS fOYIII TAWDIY llfOIII

btwer1 SOIIIICl. UU tAU trod r,,.•r in.
da"o!"r- A SAfl 1101111

42. France's
patron

AND 6i/ES5 WHAT I'VE BRoUGHT

saint

llJPAI{l I HAVE 1HIN$ IN I-I ERE

'ltllliRILL '1IXI AND CHtU.I(OU! I

DOWN
1. Ring

HAVE 1HIN651N HERE TO ALL
'100 IIJF!H FEAI:, WtTHTEIIROR,Wrlll
IIOI!Q!I AAYE1111NG5lNHEREll1 ••

arbiter

(sl.)

2. Gold

. (Sp.)

3. Hockey
great

~

''

•
,.. UNLE;Sl&gt; IT
WAS PUT THe~
MUCH MOIOtt:

RECENTI.Y!

fti6Hn !MYBE:

DURIN6 THOSe
BI.ANK YSAR:7
BEFOJ'(E HIS NieCe
CAME TO LIVe
WITH HIMI

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sa mple A b
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPTOQUOTBS
SLFTCW

TLF

Z U AJPFLFU I

OTLIZTH
MFURTCZU

JL

UJIPZUQ

MKI

z 'SFTW J A ATW ZJ U F S M X'
ZCOFLBFAI

LKWP

WHFFO .-

.. ....

,,

,
•• •

., . .

• • •

'

.,, '

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-PCilleroy, 0.,.Sept. 216, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resultst
,

WAN't'ADS.
li""&lt;lRMATION
, , I&gt;EAD\.INES
IS P.M . Dov ~elore Pu~lcoflorl
Monday Deadline 9

,

.m .

Cancellation- Corre ·lions

.Wfll be accepted until '9 .m . for
Day of PIJbl!cat
AEGULATIONS Tht!" Publisher reserves the

right to ecm or reject any ads

detmed

objectional.

Ttle

_publisher will not. be responsible

for more than one incorrect
Insertion .

··'Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY
1!70 GMC

$229S

1500 series, V-8 engine, standard transmission, good tires,
cab mouldings, foam seat, chrome front bumper, &amp; rear
step bumper. in 2-tone green finish.

R-ATES
~"For Wan' Ad Service

·

12 cen Is

per

word

three

consecutive inseort~ri's .
·" 18 cents pe-r 'word de con·
,secutlve Insertions . •
''· 25 Per C~nt Discount on pa id
Ids and ads paid within 10 days.

·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 for 5~ word minimum .
Each addJtiona1 word 2c .

825x20 10 ply t ires, foam seats. heavy duty springs, solid

cab. Gas her up - and go!

5113.

8-17-tfc

. . Eastern
M1am1
2
N.Y . Jets
2
Buffalo
1
New England
I
Baltimore 0
Central

We sell
Special

Pi
20
31
27
53

Division
0 0 1.000 54 23
0 01.000 85 58
1 0 .500 51 61

0 .500 28 51
2 0 .000 37 54
Division
W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa
Cincinnati 2 0 0 1.000 46 17
' Pittsburgh I 1 0 .500 44 43
· Cleveland I 1 0 .500 37 43
Houston
o 2 0 .000 30 64
Western Division
W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa

Oakland
San Diego

1 I 0 .500 ot8 48
1 I 0 .500 40 48

Denver

1 I 0

.500 44 54

Window
Air Conditioners

like ~ fH!IDj..

WMP0/1390
tJN YOUR DIAL.
'.

TO
OHIO
PAI.l£T 00.

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

welc'ome to all

dealers! Follow the crowd,

Friday evening. Sept. 29th
just olf the Pomerov·
Middleport By-pass on old
Rt . 7 at Laurel Cliff.
Sale Starts all : 30 p.m.

gauge shotgun, modified,
$175 ; Warm Morning coal

On Old Rt. 33
Phoile 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2448

Pomeroy.

Ph: 992-2174

burner, good condition, SJO;
phone 992-5044.

1967

WILL · CUT or trim trees.

9 24J tp
truck , F700 ,

FORD

reasonable ; also clean OlJI
basements,
a tti cs
and

o.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

cellars; phone 949-3221. ·
8-29-JOtc
O'bELL WHEEL alignment
localed at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
· Complele front end service,

9-24-31p

On Most American Cars

tune up and brake service.

SOME SAY DISCOUNT!
We Say It's Our

Wheels
balanced
tronically.
All

elec work

glJaranteed ._ R~;~~c.nn;~~~kl~
· rates . Phone 742 · 3232 or

SLACKS
SPECIAL

992·3213.
READY -MIX

Open B Tit 5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

CONCRETE

deltv~red right to )'(lu1
projec:lt. Fast and easy. Fret

estimafes. Phone 992-328o 'St::WING MACHIItES. Repati
Goegle in Readv -Mix Co .
service, all makes. 992-2284
Middleport, Ohio.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
6-30-ttc
Authorized Singer Sales an&lt;

POMEROY
'1'. _ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.~~iii~ Phone 992-2181

---;-----

'

foervice. We Sharpen Scissors .

·sEPTIC IA,.I\&gt; CLEANED
. 3-!9-tfc
REII.SONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
.
...-...--·
4782, Gallipoll5, John Russell. OOZE R and back hoe work.
ponds and septic tanks, dlt·
Owner &amp; Operator.
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
ching service; top soil, fill
5-12-ff&lt;
.
Sew ing Machine. Will sell for
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex sma l! ba lance of $36.21 or
cava
ting . Phone 992 -5367,
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
payments may be arranged.
Dick Karr, Jr.
Complete Service
Phone 9'12·5331.
9-1-ttc
9.).tfc
Phone949-3821

- - ----"o____

Racine', Ohio

8 TRACK STEREO, freight

'Crill Bradford

.

_B'ACKHOE AND DOZER' wor~

5-l·ff&lt;

damaged, in beautiful walnut
console . Will se ll tor SlOl.SOor .

Bad ,..,ooth
1

Success
Tuppers

Road
between
Plains and Long
Bottom . Open 6 days; some
even ings . Phone 667 ·3041.
Operator, Virgin ia Hayman .

Sept1c tanks mstalled. Georoe.
(..BHI) Pullins . Phone 9?.2.:147~ d

••

paySl .SOperweek . Phone'~&lt;~2 · ·AUTOMOBILE .
..,,_..
'25-tfc
5131
Insurance ~r.
·
cancelled?
Los t
your 'SEPTIC tanks· C1ean eci. M111er1
9 7 tf
· · c
operator' s license? Call 992-Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. PM~'
2966
FOUR beautiful songs by John
· ·
662·3035.
9

6-15-tfc

2·12-tf

·

~

May Have
BeeR.llO
1\T la '
ns
Droblem
r,
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Gary
Nolan's arm problems may
have been caused by an ab·
scessed tooth, which was
pulled Monday, Cincinnati
Reds team physicia n Dr.
George Ballou said.
The infection from the abscess, which had not bothered
the Reds ace righthander,
"very likely caused the

TWO OPERATED
PHILADELPffiA (UPI)Phlladelphla punter Tom
McNeill became the second
Eagle in as many days to
undergo knee surgery when he
was operated on Monday at
Graduate Hospital.
Rookie defensive back Pat
Gibbs underwent surgery Sunday night for Ugament and
cartilage damage.
Both players were Injured in
Sunday's 27-17 loss to the
Oeveland Browns.
McNeill led the National
Football League in punting last
season with a 42-yard average.
Coach Ed Khayat said GibbB
would be out for the rest of the
season. It was not known wben
Me Neill would return to action .

9-14-30tc

GALLIPOLIS resident wants to
buy a business . Will buy
busioess and property or
business with lease . Call

Gallipolis 446-4408.
9-20-12tc

REDUCE safe and last with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap

(Sacred) "Our Lord God

pan gas range, $15 ; breakfas t
set, $25; goss ip bench, $10 ;

Bring Your Unhulled

3 YOUNG male Beegle dogs and
l registered blue t i ck coon

dog . Phone 949-4761.
9-25-6tc

Real Estate Fo; Sale
7 ROOM house and l acre of
land , located on Portland·
Bashan Road . Can be seen by
appointment . See George
Holter at Minersvi lle , Ohio .

9-25-6tc

Auto Sales

WALNUTS
TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER
Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

T.V. table, $10 ; Maytag
washer, $25 ; G. E . Dryer,
$150 ; G . E . i r oner. $20 ;
ironing board , $5 ; Com pressor , $10 ; farm wagon - 2
beds, SSO ; window fan, $5 ;
can ister sweeper. S40 ; sewing
mac hi ne,
$7 5,
other
household items.

9-24-Jip
MAPLE Stereo .radio co m .
bination , AM.FM radio, 4
spea ker so und system , 4
speed automa t ic cha ng er,
sepa rat e controls . Belance
$78 .29 . Use our budget terms .

ca ll

_ _ _ __ _ __ 9.::.::
2S-6tp
1969 HONDA Scrambler, 115 cc ;

$

Per Hundred
Pounds

After they
are Hulled

phone 992-7016.

9-26-Stc
'70 CHEVELLE SS 396. 427 cam ,
456 posi ·l ractlon. 4 speed,
factory type and gauges, plus
lots of extras ; phone 742·5943
or contact Ron Grate .

9-26-Jtc
'67 OLDS Delta Cus tom 88, 2
door hardtop, very good
condition, Kate M cNickle, Rt.
2 Racine, Ohio ; phone 949·

238 1.

9-26-3tp

-1967--=----FORD Tru ck, F700 ,
Reynolds 7'11 x 12 dump,
chea ter axle , new tires, A· l

-

WAITRESSES. full and pari t i me ;
no
experience
necessary ; night shift; apply
in person, Blue Tartan .

9-19-6tc
WOMAN to live in with elderlv
lady, good salary, room and

Excelsior

Salt Works, Inc.
9!2-3891

Pomeroy, Ohio

Only $7,500.00.

bas~ment:

MIDDLEPORT
Nice kitchen, breakfast nook. utility

3 BEDROOMS -

room, carpettng and paneling . Old fashion bath. Concrete
front porch . Nice yard.

.

LARGE HOME

PLUS - A large one story building 40x70. n~ acres of
level land. 4 bedroom home, 11!2 baths, modern kitchen ,
wa ll to wa ll carpeting . Asking only $23,000.00.

COUNTRY HOME
2 BEDROOMS - Bath, enclosed porch, garage. Level Lot.
Plai ns water. Only $4 ,000.00 .

3BEDROOMS
ROUTE 338 - An older home that can be renovated into a
comfortable place . Has a large lot. Give us a good offer .

WHAT A DEAL
3 BEDROOMS - Modern home. bath.

fireplace

( modern) , and 4 room block blJilding for a business on Rt .
7 bu siness loop. Asking only $25 ,000 .00 for both.

2 HOUSES -

165 ACRES
Plenty of pasture and hunting land. All

Hill farm for beef

Shahan, Great Bend , Ohi o.

97 ACRES
EASTERN SC HOOL DI STRICT -

9-24-3fp

cattle . B room modest home, with modern bath, furnace
and semi-modern kitchen . 40 acres of meadow . All

TRUMPET and Trombone ;
phone 992-5461.
9-24-Jic

minerals. NOW ONLY $19,500.00.
CALL AND HAVE A LOOK AT ONE OF THE SE . SOME
ARE A REAL BARGAIN, OTHERS A GOOD BUY. THEN
LI ST WITH US FOR BEST RESULTS .

2 SE TS metal kitchen cabinets,
Sl2 ; 1 Sea r s Wall Gas Heater

HELEN L. TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE
•
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

NEW all electric home by
owner , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
$20 ; 2 end tables , 110; 1
fireplace, carpet, near Meigs
balhroom chrome towel pole,
High School, 125,000 firm .
$3 ; l finished, like new in.
Ph one 992 3183.
terior door with hardware

9!2 -332S

608 E. Main Sf.

~

Pomeroy

~ .. ·992-22S!

......

house ; gas for ced air furnace,

Fitzpatrick

Or -

chards, State Route 689 .

Ph one

For Rent or Sale

family
room ,
carport.
ai r
gas
furnace,
car.
peting in kitchen, bath,
bedroom
and
living
room i contact Robert Beegle

949-2891.
9-24-31p

For Rent

'72 ;

,

Wilkesv ille 669-3785.
8-30-tfc

•,

·~··

'

~

.

-- ...

POODL'E puppies, Silver To~.
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
5443.

~

8-15-tfc

---~-....:.._

STEREO-rocker co nsole, 4

acre lot, Rl. 7 &amp; Old Chester
Rd . . $5,500; phone 992-3874.
8-29-lfc

'I•

POMEROY - Qo,&lt;, &gt;acres.
2 baths . Dining 18xl2. Living
27x30, fireplace . Kitchen has
Stainless Steel range, oven,
sink, dishwasher, all built-i n
17ft. of base cabinets, 20 tt .'
of upper . FlJII basement with,
large Rec . room~ flrepl ace .1
Ut ility room . 2 car garage .'
$35,000.00.
i

OUT OF STATE . IDEAL s.
ACRE RANCH. Lake Conchas, New Mexico. S2975 . No
down . No interest. S25 per mo .
for 119 mos.
~acation
Paradise . Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake Conhas: Box

200 1DD, Alameda, California

MIDDLEPORT
bedrooms, Master

speed intermixed changer,
94501.
dual volume control, 4
8-29-JOtp
speaker
sound
sys tem,
beautiful hand rubbed WalnlJf
f inish . Balance S66.34. Use our 5 ROOM house for sale, one
third acre ground , front
budget terms. Call 992-7085.

9-24-6tc

3
has'

console
lavatory
and
dressing table, all have large
closets. Bath has cera mic
tile,
shower,
console
la va tory and other features .
liv ing 12)(20. Kitchen has 15

porch. full basement. S. D.
Buskirk, 341 Page St.. Mid ·

dleport.

Mobile Homes For Sale

ft. · base.

9-24-3tp

15

fl.

upper

cabinets, blJilt-in range,
oven, d isposal and air
1965 ATLAS mobile home ; 50 x S ROOM house, double garage, 1 condi
tioner . Utility . Car10; 2 bedroom ; front kitchen ;
double lot , Anderson Street,
peted
throughout . Gas F.A.
excellen1 condit ion; phone
Ma son, W. Va ., phone 1-304· furnace. Carport and palio.

985-3555.

9-26-6tp

r---------&lt;"1
.~Air Conditioners
• Awnings
·• Underpinrtina

773-5606.

$18,500.00.

9-24-6tc
BY OWNER: price reduced for
quick sale; owner leaving
sta te; 3 bedroom holJse, living
room, dining room , kitchen
furnace, Chester water. on

good blacktop road; small
barn and llsh pond ; phone 8432194. .
9-24-6tc

mobile hQm ,
~ plus gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at ...

.

MIDDLE PORT - 2 story
frame . 5 large bedrooms
W.C. l'/2 baths. Cellar .
Garage .. Carport. Nice
kitchen. Cibse to shopping
and playground. $12,800.

and bath, full basemen t, gas

'Complete
serv.ice

POMEROY - 2 story frame .
3 bedrooms. bath. 6 rooms In
all. Porches. Furnace Heat
(Gas) . Good neighborhood .
Garage . Going at ju5t
56,900.00.

HOUSE i'n lv11g Uut tom , phOne•
~85- 3529.
. .
6-tl -tfc, WE HAVE MANY OTHER
·
· PROPERTIES, CALL US
PT
PLEASANT
6.
room
. TODAY . TO BUY DR SELL
1220Woshington Blvd.
US
BE
YOUR
house, l 'h baths, recreation · LET
.423-7521
BELPRE,O..
room, new buill-in kitchen, BROKER .
,
•
·- _ ·
must sell , leaving town. Days
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
phone 992·3502. evenings ~
REALTOR
CAS11 paid tor all mal&lt;es ·anclo
phone 675-2372.
'
PHONE "2·22S9
models of mobile homes,;
•
8-30-lfc L--..:....:.:::::.:.:..:.:.::::::.:.._.:J
·Phone area code 61••• 23!95~·

MILLER
~
· MOBILE ·HOMES
''

So loin our Playhouse Porly For Sale
gang,
Earn money and Green Stamps, 16' CAMPING TRAILER
.
..
. 4-13,
loo ;
·
Shasta. like' new . Phone 985:
~--~--------- ·
Gtve Santa Claus a helping
3849.

1

'

:-::-:=----=:-:---~·..::.·tc Real Estate For Sale
This Christmas '72.
CALL Margaret Fortune, 949- COAL Limestone. ExcelSIOr ;.RACINF - 1u ruu, .. housei
5414 or Barbara Lambert,
Salt Works. E. Main St., bath, basement, garage, lwo
•46:lm .
•
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891. · &lt;ots. Phone 949-4313.
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _9·....:
10-tfc .--------·~·
12-11&lt;:
4-S-tfp&lt;
9 7 30

IT'S MY

\:J

- -- - - - -

8 ROOM HOUSE, nice large lot,
natural gas, builf -'in cabinets

in ki tchen. Close to radio
station in Bradbury. Phone

992-2602.
9-14-12tp

·.... . ...

. ·-~~
\\OULD )t)U PRETEND
I'M REALL'Y UNDER
ARREST?

CAMPUS CLATI'ER
I'P N~VER MAK~ IT
THROUGH THE
UNIVERSITY OF
i&gt;ITT58tlf?G#

RoALLY~ ARE OUR
ACADEMIC STANDA~DS
TOO ~~~H FOI'- YOU~

IN FOLICE
WORK,

FRED.
YOUR 'CATI-IEl&gt;RAL
OF LEARN!N~" IS TOO
HIGH FORM~!

after 7 p .m . or phone 992·

sm.

'S'EE. US FOR: Awnings, ·l1orn'/
·doors and windows, c&amp;rptrls,

m·orquee5. ~lumlnum "llldlngl
and railing. 'A. Jacob, sales,
representative . . F-or · fr.e~

estimates, ·· phone Charle,llj
Lisle ~
Syracuse. V
~'· :
Johnson and Son. Inc.
.:
J.2·1fl

BUT QNL.'( IF SHE MARRIES

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Public Not ice is nereby given
th.at Columb i a Gas of Ohio, Inc .
ha flied a Compla int with the
Pub lic Utilities Commission of
Ohio In which It alleges that Its
elCisfing rates and charges tor
i ts Rurc!!l and Unincorporated
Community General Serv ice
customers in Meigs County are
unreasonably tow In relation to
its area and charges tor s_e rvlce
within
the
Incorporated
municipalit ies of Meigs County.
Columbia ta•s asked the
Commission to fix the rates of
its Rural and Unincorporated
comm unity G&amp;nerat Service
customers In Meigs County at
the same level as the rate In
elle c t i n the muni cipa lity
nearest to SlJch customers. and
thereafter to m&amp; intain such
rates at the level of rates within
such mun iclpallfy .
Present rate '
Meigs Coun tv :
Thirty Cents (30c) per one
hundred &lt;1001 cubic feet tor the
first 500 cubic feet , used through
each meter each month.
Seven Ce nts (7c) per one
hundred ( 1001 cubic feet for the
next 4,500 cubic feet , used
through each meter each
montf1 ;
Seven and one .ha lf Cents
(7 1f1C ) per one hundred ( 100 )
cubic feet for th e next 95,000
cubic feet. used tt1rough each
meter ea ch month ;
Seven Cents Pe l per one
hundred ( 1001 cub ic feet for all
In e:.~cess of 100,000 ClJblc fe et.
used through each meter each
month ;
A Minimum Charge for each
custom er each month of One
Dollar and Filly Cents (S1.50 l
shall be made .
Bradbury :
First 800cubic feet , per meter
per month , 25 .0c per 100 cubic
feet,
Ne)(f 4,200 cubic feet. per
meter per month , 7.Dc per 100
cubic feet ,
Next 45,000 cu bic feet, per
meter per month , 7.5c per 100
cubic feet ,
Over 50,000 cub ic feet, per
meter per month , 6.Sc per 100
cubic feet.
M inimum Monthly Charge

THE WIOALTHIEST MAN IN TI-lE
WORLD-AND YOU CAN
MAKE HER DO IT!!

LI'L AI!&gt;NER AN'
HONEST AI!&gt;E
TRAPPED IN
Tli'MiNE?

WfNNIES IMDE

l THINK WINNIES 7JI't) MISTAKES ! l'}IE
11\1\DE A 61G MIS - FIRST WA~ WilEN &amp;HE
lAKE GIVtN(7
AGREED 1D LET
BESSIE A PRIVATE
'AUNT1 6E551f WORK

OFF=ICEAND
DAAWIN(7

HERE!

WEL! 1 ~i LEAST
SHE vvuN'T KEEP
OTHER PEOPLE
FROM DOIN(7
THEIR
WORK!

I WONDER WHAT
WINNIE WILL DO
IF 13E.551E. COMES

uP wrrn fJOME:

DESIGNS.;;=.~

flOARDJ

Apprentice

to Pert?

workinq
n1qht5

for
Pert,
Slim?

12 .00.

Reedsv ill e:
F lrst 2.000 cub ic feet, per
meter per month , 35.812c per
100 cubic feet,
Next 98 ,000 cubic feet, per
meter per month, 9.822c per 100
cubic feel ,
Over 100.000 cubic feet , per
meter per month , 7.872c per 100
cubic feet.
Minimum Monthly Charge

13.50 .

~LAN.D REA~

size 6' ·8" x 2' ·8", $15 ; call992:
9· 15·12tc
241 3.
_ _ _ __ _ _ _
9._24-Jtp 5 ROOMS &amp; bath, 2 story block
APPLES ,

board, phone 992-5397 or 992·
7 ROOMS and bath , 175 a
3507.
month ; ca ll after 5 p .m. 992 ·
9-26-ttc
3247.
9-26-3tp
HAVE Immediate opening for
part time office girl ; tvping
essential. shorthand helpful HOUSETRAILER in Rutland.
adults only .; ph one 742-4'463.
but not required ; Write Box
9-26-Jtc
129-A, c-o The Dally Sentinel.
Pomerov. Ohio •5769, giving 4 ROOM furn i shed apartment ;
full resume with references,
phone 992 -3658.
previous employment, and
9-22-6tc
tralnlng .
'
9-3-tlc
FURNI SHED 3 room apartment. pr iv ate en tran ce.
ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
car
peted ; phone 992-2780 or
Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
9&lt;12 -3432.
December with the oldest Toy
9-24-lfc
Party Plan In the Country.
Highesl commissions, No 3""'"A""
' N-=
0- 4:-ROO
::-::-.-M
- fu:. r-nf-sh_ed
_ a"rf!J
Cash Outlav. Call or write
~~santa's Parties", Avon Ct. · unfurnished. · apartments.
."'hone. 992-54~.
· •
~1. Tel . I (203) 673-3455.
n~ttc
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
9-1-tfc
.
3 ROOM apartm~nl , un )
HELP WANTED, Toy Coun:
furnished, 408 Spnng Ave..
setors. Santa Claus just told
Pomeroy .
8-10-ffc .
me, something to tell you .
Hels very busy, this Chri5tma5 .--------~

hand,

and nice kitchen . Front and back porches . Full

electric 3 speed floor scrubber
&amp; waxer with all attachments,

condition; phone 614-887-2165. HOUSE at 1618 Lincoln Hts ..
9-26-Jtp Avai lable after Sept. 25; 3
- - - --bedroo ms , laundry room ,

Help Wanted

WORKING MAN'S SPECIAL
POMEROY - Large 8 rocm house with 5 bedrooms bath

7' ' ACRES mixed hay ; C. B.

I 1,000 BTU). SIS; I Kenmore

P.O. Box 267

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

M i.ne~als . 2 houses, J springs, 4 farm ponds. Several
buildmgs. Good gravel road, school and mail routes .

- --- - - --=Start Buying October 7, 1972.

110 Mechanic Street

9·24·61c

Call 992-7085.

1970 VOLKSWAGEN. good
condit)on, new paint,
after 6 p.m. 992-3401.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

Physician" and "God's Swee t
Love." Specia l! Pick up your
record i ng now at Bill &amp; Lee 's
Mu sic Center at BRW Hard ware Bldg .• Pomeroy , Ohio ;
only Sl.50. save 50c.
9-24·6fc

OLD Furniture, oak tables,
"water pills ," Nelson Drug .
organs. d ishes. clocks, brass YARD SALE. 6 mi. E. of
9-25-2 tp
beds . or comp lete households.
Chester on Rt. 248 ; Ella
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . 4. Hannum
, phone 985 ·3354 ;
YARD Sale , Friday and
Pomerov. Oh io. Call 992 -6271.
Sept. 28, 29 and 30th ; Walnul
Saturdav. Sept. 29th and 30th,
6-28-ftc
bedroom suite , S40 ; Wine
571 Laurel Street. Middleport .
livi ng room suite, $20 ; Tap.
9-26-Jic

For Sale

Real Estdte For Sale

" Rainbow
Valley "
and
"Snowballs in the Rocki es";

Wanteti To Buy

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
basement, llndscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 si:r:e loaders. Work
done by hour or conlroct.
Free Estimates. We also
haul flit dirt, tap soil. Dump
trucks and low-boY for hire.
See Bub or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3525
pondsf

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

1·27 -TIC

Mohler on 45 r.p.m . Acfion .

VIRGINIA's Beautv Salon on

BONES, PAW

LONG ENUFF--

EARTH MOVING

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Records No. AC1043A. (C&amp;Wl .

(Onlvgames schedu led)

'we·talk:.to JOU,

DEUVERED

Hot Water Heater~
Plumbing
Electrical Work

retail &amp; wholesale!

Kan . City
1 I 0 .500 30 37
Sundar's Results
New Eng . 21 Atlanta 20
Cleve 27 Philadelphia 17
soreness in Nolan's arm,"
Dallas 23 NY Giants 14
. :san Diego 37 Denver 14
Ballou said.
~Miami 34 HolJsfon 13
Ballou said the abscess was
Los Angeles 13 Chicago 13
found
in an x-ray taken as part
Minnesota 34 Detroit 10
of a routine examination of
NY Jets 44 Baltimore 34
Oakland 20 Green bay 14
Nolan. Nolan, 14-5, will begin a
Cincl 15 Pittsburgh 10
s trengthening program and
Wash ington 24 St. Loui s 10
hopefully will he able to take
Buffalo 27 San Fran 20
(Only games scheduled)
part in the National League
Monday's Results
playoffs aga inst Pittsburgh.
Kan . City 20 New Orleans 17
Nolan had complained of
(Only game scheduled)
Sunday's Games
soreness in his arm prior to
Bal timore at Buffalo
Sunday's game at Hous ton and
Cincinna ti at Cleveland
Reds Manager Sparky AnDal vs Green Bay at M ilw
Detroit at Chicago
derson had indicated he
Kansas City at Denver
probably would he held out of
Los Angeles al Allanta
the playoff pitching rotation .
Miami at Minnesota
NY Jets at Houston
Pitts at St. Louis
San Diego at Oakland
GULLETI ON MOUND
San Fran at New Orleans
Washington at New Eng .
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
(Only games schedul ed)
Cincinnati Reds and Atlanta
Monday's Games
Braves open a two-game series
NY Giants at Phila, night
(Only games scheduled)
here tonight.
The Reds plan to send Don
Gullett ( 8-9 ) to the mound
Major League Results
against
the Braves. George
By United Press International
Nation a I League
Stone (6-10).
San Diego
000 120 02o- S 11 I
The Reds were idle Monday.
Los Ang
000 Oil l!JO- 3 8 s
Norman, Ross (7}, Schaeffer
(7), Simpson (8) and Kendall ;
Osteen, Hough (8 ) and Fergu·
BATI'LE TONIGHT
son. WP- Schaeffer (2-0). LPBALTIMORE
(UPI) - The
Osteen ( 18·1ll .
Cleveland Indians play the
(Onlvgame sc'heduled)
Baltimore Orioles tonight .
American League
The Indians were scheduled
Minn at Oak ppd, rain .
to pit Dick Tidrow (13-15)
Californ ia 000 000 11o- 2 6 1 aga in st the Orioles' Mike
Texas
010 000 ooo- 1 J 1
Ryan ( 18-15) and Torborg , Cuellar (17-11 ).
The Indians were idle
Stephenson (6) ; Bosman. Pan·
ther (9 ) and Fahey . LP- Monday.
Bosman (7-10) .

Migrating Whales
Gray whales are 50-ton 50foot·long mammals of ' the
sea. They migrate 12,000
m1les every year, from their
feedmg waters in the Arctic
Ocean to their breeding
gro~nds oil Mexico 's Baja
Cahforma .

&amp;.00 Per Ton

5

COOLING

If you haven't been to

United Press International
National Conference
Eastern Division

American Conference

WINCHESTER Model 12, 12.

All kindsr all sizes for men,
women , young men, boys
and girls. Hurry to

Largest End

Specialist .

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR~ INC.
Pomeroy

Buy 2 Pairs and
Getl PAIR FREE

10" on

HEATINt: &amp;

Auction

NFL STANDINGS

0 2 0 .000 31 54

Poles
Maximum
Diameter

"HEll"

Hayman's

Radl~1or

Reynolds
71f2X12
dump,
Chester axle, new tires . A-1
cond iti on. Phone 614 ·887-2165 .

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

wigs, more new produ,cts
coming soon. For free I
demonstration, phone 992·

Hayman's Auction,
you are missing out on
some great bargains .

New Orleans

KOSMETICS and

· Nathan Biggs

- -----

,/

Sale At

9-26-ltp

Los Angeles 1 0 1 .667 47 27
San Fran . I 1 0 .500 54 JO
Atlanta
I 1 o .soo 57 •2

L__ _ __.::_ _ _ _ _.J

KOSCOT

Another Big

Evelyn Roush ; arso thanks to
the doctors and nurses at
Pl easa nt Vall ey Hospital,
especia lly thank i ng the
pallbearers and the Rev .
McCloud for his consoling
words and help in our sad
bereavement of a loving
mother .
George
Roush
and
Raymond Roush and family

Western Division
W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa

Sentinel

Wanted

LOOK!

after the death of Ruth

W. L. T. Pet. PI Pa
Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 55 34
Green Bay 1 1 0 .500 40 30
Detroit
1 1 o .5oo 40 so
Chicago
o 1 1 .333 34 so

Dai~

Bulldozer Radiator to

?-21 ·6tc

Notice

WE WISH to extend our heart·
felt than ks and appreciation
for the acts of kindness,
messa9es of sym pathy and
beau.hful floral offerings
rece 1ved from neighbors
relatives and many friend~

Cnetral Division

The

OHIO

Card · ~~ Thanks

Pet. PI
1.000 51
1.000 ot8
.500 20
.000 30

PHONE 992-2 156

OPEN EVES. 1.00 I'.M.

-s~ tur~a y .

W. L. T.'
Dallas
2 0 0
Washington 2 0 0
St . Louis
1 I 0
N. Y. Giants o 2 0

W' Va•
Hart'ord
I'
'

speed transmission, solid cab, local 1-owner truck.

. · i'PMIIIO~.

eROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

Sma llest Heater Core .

model Safari, $1,400 ; phone

992-5492.

Clifton and

1968 CHEVROLET
$1469
J;.. ton, 8' Stepside, good heavy duty tires, V_, engine, 3-

9-IS-121p

1970 TRAVELMATE Camper,

IN

Pomeroy Motor Co.

BLIND ADS
'
Additional 25c · Char'ge · per
Advertisement .
·
·
OFFICE HOIJ'R!
-t8 :30 a.m1 IQ 5:00'\}J.m · l)aily.
.1 : 30 a.m. to 1~ : 00 Noor

--- -

9-17-121p

CARRIERS
WANTED

1969 CHEVROLET
$2291
2-ton , 102" cab .to axle. 292 engine, 15000 lbs . 2-speed axle,

· 5 cll!nts per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc

organically grown tomatoes ;
B. Quisenberry has large
ones. JOe pound at the old Post
Office building , Syracuse,
Ohio.

- - -=======~ 1971 KAWASAKI 100 excellen t
,-co ndition . Ready to go,
sacr ifice for only $285 . ,
Coolville 667-6214.
From the largest

1

•

.

9-26-3tp

YE BEEN TOTIN' TATER

·Business Services.·

EMPLOYED person . Repair FOR YOUR health's sake ea t
typewriters
part
time .
Training , tools furn ished.
Local in terview. Application
mailed. Write : Typewriters,
Lower Burrell. Pa .

BLESS YORE
THOUGHTY '\:)

TARN NOW!!

· For Sale

Help Wanted

DURN YORE HIDE, MAW'!

TWO homes tor sale; I mile
North of Eastern High
School; both have bath and a
half ; 4 bedrooms; b.\Jitf-ln
kitchens and wall -to -wall
carpet ; call 985·3598.
9-17·121c·

Rates to apply if request ls
granted :
Customers who re side nearest
to Coolvill e, Ohio ·
First 2.000 cub ic feel, per
meter per month , 36.176c per
100 cubic feet.
Nel(t 8,000 cubic feel , per
meter per month , ll . l76c per
100 cu bic feet ,
Next 10,000 cubic fee t, per
meter per month, ll .676c per
100 cubic feet .
Next 80 ,000 cubic feet, per
meter per month , 12.176c per
100 cubic fe et,
Over 100,000 cubic feet, per
meter per mon!h , 8.576c per 100
cubic feel .
Minimum Monthly Charge

13 .60.

.

Customers who reside nearest
to Middleport, Ohlo ~
First 2,000 cubic feel , per
meter per month, JO .Oc per 100
cubic feet,
Next 98 ,000 cubic feet. per
meter per month , 9.5c per 100
cu bic feet ,
Over 100,000 cubic teet, per
meter per month , 1.25c per 100
cubic feet .
Minimum Monttlly Charge

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1. Perch
6. Masticate
10. Blunder
11. Open
space in
the woods

1Z. Al~ska's
state

DICK TRACY

flower

wds.)
p.;:;H;'iE~N~,WWil:rT:;;H~;:Apji;ci;'llf. Length
times
01= SHARP GUl•l&gt;:&gt;,
width
I CUT MY WAY
15. Alabama's
01= Tl-4 E BAG ..JUST
state
IN TIME."
ftower
ZO. Capable
(3

~I

BROKI! TWE L.ENS

BY HITTtNO IT WITH
MY LUCKY OOLLII.R:'

.. ,

~

of move·

ment
Zl. Oath

zs. Vacuous

U. Stanza;
verse

S2.SO.

Customers who res ide nearest
to Pomeroy, Ofllo :
First 2,300 cubic feet, per
meter per month, 31 .012c per
100 cubic feet,
Next '97,700 cubic feet, per
meter per month, 10.782c per
100 cubic feet,
Over 100,000 cubic feet , per
meter per month, B.332c per 100
cub ic feet.
Minimum Monthly Charge

13.00.

Note (1 l: The proposed rates
reflect applicable escalation for
cost of fuel .
Note (2) : Any customer who
needs assistance In determining
his nearest munlclpalltv for
purposrs of rate classification
should cohtact any local office
in the county,
In addition to lht above
change In rates. the Rural and
Unlncorporatect Community
Customer:s would bteome
subfect to the followlno
reconnectlon chargt;
Reconnectlon Cherge:
tf service under this rate
sctledute Is discontinued at the
reque1t of cuslomer, the
Company shall not be undtr any
Obligation to re&amp;ume service to
the same customer on the same
premises until the customer h11
made payment of an emount
equal to the minimum monthly
charge for each month of the
Intervening period, but not to
exceed twelve {12) months.
The Commission will give 1
further notice of ttlt time and
place of hearinG, which will bt
at Its office In Columbus, Ohio,
the
Comm Inion
un,leu
otherwise orders .
Furth,r Information may bt·
secured by eddrenlng en

lnqulrv to the Public Utllllln
Commission of Ohio. 111 Norlh
~3'/l~ . Street, Columbus, Ohio

+++

.

Publ ished bv : Columbia Goa

Of OhiO, Inc .• 99 North Front'

Strttt, Cotumbua. Ohio •3215-.
t~l

12, 1t, 26, 3tc

Yeoterday's Cryploquote: THE TEACHER IS ONE WHO '
YAKES TWO IDEAS GROW WHERE ONLY ONE GREW ·
BEFORE.-ELBERT HUBBARD .
·

Z6. Final

4. Soak

(C 1972 Kior Feature• S;vndicate, Inc.)

5. Foot lever
8. Limpid
1. Chinese
dynasty
B. Taro root
9. Moisten
11. Cagney
film

~lYMmlYE;"'-~ ~

"IIIIHII I I I t

llll

form four ordinary wordo.

I TIDEF

classic

Tr

Yesurday's Answer
Z4. Spilled
25. Hebrew
letter
27. Esau's
father·
ln·law

Z9.Pop
30. Hills of
Shrop·
shire,
Eng.

3Z. Columbia,
in a song
33. Eggs
31. Swedish
county
35. Mining
ftnd
36. Goat god
37. Greek letter
31. Right
you are!

•:.:!!,-.;:""1 I·-

BOMUG '

I I

IFUGDYl

·zs. Vermont's

"

rJ

I
) I II
1

tREBUPS

.Z1. Euphoric

WHAT 5HOESOFTEI-J
A~E,AI=TER

ISEIN6 50U6Hi.

urance the
to
form
(
[
)
I J
I the ourprloe

state

Rower

Now

circlod !etten
INWer, ·u ' '

11 b7 the abovecutoon,
I_~=·~-~-~~~~~=·=Ujftlllted
FlillltiSifiUISWEIIIIt
( I Ill)"

(2wds.)
31. Drooping

32. Cali·
fornia's

VEA~! 5HOW90ATIHG'...
NO MATTER HOW MAHY
COP51'0U HAD AROIJN17 '
FOR 5fCURI T~
A 1'!'5PERATE
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UnacramblelhHe four Jumble&amp;.
one letter to uch oquare, to

13. Corner

15. One
beyond
hope
16. Eared
11. Waterfall
(Scot.)
II. Egg.
shaped
19. Strait
ofZO. 60 sees.
zz. Take to
wife

....,.., .-1,....

'''»'Ill ".1111

state
Hower
(2 wds.)
39. Dodge
40. Expunge
U .Numerous

(Aaewen ao•orrowJ
Yntnotla1'•

ltunl&gt;ift, IOOUS fOYIII TAWDIY llfOIII

btwer1 SOIIIICl. UU tAU trod r,,.•r in.
da"o!"r- A SAfl 1101111

42. France's
patron

AND 6i/ES5 WHAT I'VE BRoUGHT

saint

llJPAI{l I HAVE 1HIN$ IN I-I ERE

'ltllliRILL '1IXI AND CHtU.I(OU! I

DOWN
1. Ring

HAVE 1HIN651N HERE TO ALL
'100 IIJF!H FEAI:, WtTHTEIIROR,Wrlll
IIOI!Q!I AAYE1111NG5lNHEREll1 ••

arbiter

(sl.)

2. Gold

. (Sp.)

3. Hockey
great

~

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•
,.. UNLE;Sl&gt; IT
WAS PUT THe~
MUCH MOIOtt:

RECENTI.Y!

fti6Hn !MYBE:

DURIN6 THOSe
BI.ANK YSAR:7
BEFOJ'(E HIS NieCe
CAME TO LIVe
WITH HIMI

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sa mple A b
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPTOQUOTBS
SLFTCW

TLF

Z U AJPFLFU I

OTLIZTH
MFURTCZU

JL

UJIPZUQ

MKI

z 'SFTW J A ATW ZJ U F S M X'
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�10- Tile Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.; Sept. 26,19'12

News • • . in Briefs

•

(Continued from page 1)
suppoeedly fluoridated water supplies may not be fluoridated.
"Ollldren in these COmnl\lllitles are growing up with far more
decayed teeth than expected," Or. Carl A. Laughlin of Clarks·
burg, W.Va.
Laughlin said spot checks of water suppljes in six sillies
revealed that "many conununlties that were supposedly
Buorlllating were not doing so at aU or only sporadically.•'
"What was found in these six states has application in every
state In the nation," Laughlin said in an address at the annual
"scientific session" of the Ohio Dental Association here.

us1ness
1 -. 1
I I

'
n'!W - PRIME MINISTER TRYGVE
BRATIELI conceded defeat today in his regime's efforts to get Norway into the
European Common Market, and said the voters' rejection of the
proposal meant his Labor government would resign.
Almost complete results from a two-day natiional relerendJJil showed 53.6 pet. of the voters rejected membership in the
Common Market while 46.4 pel. supported it.

\

I

11111 ·
i •. I , ,
r · 1· .

p

Lawsuit Filed For Money Due
A court action asking for
money allegedly due on a
promissory note of $3,800 has
been filed in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Charles R. and Margaret C.
Sheets against Wayne Chappelear and Patti C. Chappelear.
Divorce decrees have been
filed for Patricia A. Groves
from John M. Groves, on
_

grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelly, and
granting restoration of her
maiden name of plaintiff,
Yates; Vicki Deem from Roger
Deem, on cross complaint for
gross neglect of duty, and
custody of one child to Mrs.
Deem; Wilrria M. Barth from
Elmer J. Barth, neglect of
duty, restoration of plaintiff's
maiden name of Ginther, and
Donna M. Carr from Ronald L.
Carr, gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty with custody
of one child to plaintiff.

THE ABC's
OF DIAMONDS
BEGINS WITH Martha Gilmore
THE LETTER
Dies Tuesday

NOCTURNE SET

Before you select your
diamond ring, know the
"4C:S of diamond quality
and vafue:
Color, From shades of yellow to finest white.
Clarity. The measurement
of imperfections.
Cut. Determines the degree
of brilliance.
Carol Weight, The measure of a diamond's size.

Mrs. Martha Gilmore, 70,
Middleport Route 1, died early
today at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Gilmore was born Jan.
3, 1902 in Gallipoli~, the
daughter of the late William
and Laura Goodman Bartrum.
She was also preceded in death
by two brothers and three
sisters . Mrs. Gilmore, a
practical nurse, had been
employed by the Meigs Geneal
Hospital 15 years.
Surviving are her husband,
Leonard; two sisters, Mrs.
Viola Edwards and Mrs .
Virginia McDaniels, both of
Pomeroy; two brothers, Jack
Bartrum, of near Middleport,
and Leroy Bartrum, of near
Pomeroy, and several nieces,
nephew• and cousins.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. 0. H. Cart officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

SUSAN BAER WITII ASTORY BOOK castle which she
and Jean Morgan created as a part of the decorations to
carry out the story book character theme of Tuesday night's

Now You Know

c:.Art Carved

LARGEST FRESHMAN CLASS - The largest freshman class in the history of Holzer
Medical Center's School of Nursing began classes Monday. Forty-five fulitime and one parttime student make up this year's class. Pictured above, front row, left to right are : Anna
Jackson, Oak Hill ; Rhonda Merrow, Marietta; Rebecca Bailey, Ironton ; Peggy Saunders,
Ironton; Diana Bonecutter, Pl. Pleasant; Terri Daugherty, Pl. Pleasant; Linda Putney, Pt.
Pleasant; RoxAnne Wallis, Mason; Jo Ellen Burnett, Gallipolis; Rebecca Stump, Gallipolis ;
Shirley Hodges, Huntington; Debbie McCoy, Oak Hill. Second Row - Connie Radford,
Pomeroy; Connie Grueser, Pomeroy; Jill Harris, Mason; Janet Slagle, Waterloo ; Ida Mills,

~·
R. Parsons Packages
Died on Monday
NEW HAVEN - William R.
Parsons, 34, formerly of New
Haven, died Monday at his
residence at RD I Greenfield,
Ohio
Mr. Parsons was a driver lor
the Hodge Trucking Co. at
Greenfield. He was a member
of the St. Paul Lutheran
Church and the Riverview
Saddle Club at New Haven. He
graduated from Wahama High
School in 1956.
Mr . Parsons was born on
Jan. 22, 1938, at Gallipolis, the
son of the late Clifford
Lawrence Parsons who died in
1969, and Lucille B. Bumgarner
Parsons who died in 1962. He
was also preceded in death by a
brother, Robert, in 1963.
Surviving are his wife,
Bernice Nease Parsons; · a
daughter, Brenda, and two
sons, Bobby and Brent, and an
aurt and urcle, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Parsons, West Columbia.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev . John · Haeberle officiating . Burial will be in the
Union Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
package mailed from Modena,
Utah to Panaca, Nev ., a
distance of 20 miles, will have
to cover a 2,30!Hnile route
before delivery under the U.S.
Postal Service's new bulk mail
system, a critic charged today.
The extreme example was
one of 52 instances cited by
Rep. Robert N.C. Nix, D-Pa.,
of added travel time lor parcels that will result in some
sections of the nation when the
new
system
becomes

Polls
(Contin ued from page t)

GOESSLER

...---·---··--·-------------------,

Put Your Foot

Down ...

Gallipolis; Carla Burns, Ashland, Ky.; Pat Kinder, Gallipolis; Karen Smith, Chillicothe; Sue
Lyon, Portsmouth; Mamie McNeer, Portsmouth; Nancy Lease, Gallipolis; Margaret Ehman,
Gallipolis; Judy McGoviley, Portsmouth; Deborah Lavalley, Racine; Jane Cochran,
Chillicothe; Susie Budd, Beverly; Janet Woodard, Waterford. Third Row - Julie Rice,
Parkersburg; Susan Wiseman, Parkersburg; Rhea Dean, Athens; Kim Moses, Irooton;
Deborah Peters, New Plymouth; Nancy Tippens, Belpre; Kathryn Picketts, Columbus; Susan
Sheets, Parma; Mrs. Donna Rose, Jackson; Joan Buck, Jackson; Sosan Copley, Jackson ;
Sandy Terry, Jackson.

Go Long Way

the package will go from
operational in 1976. .
Modena
to Salt Lake City,
Nix, chairman of a House
Postal
Facilities
sub- Utah, then to Denver, Colo.,
committee, made the claims in then to Los Angeles, then to
prepared remarks as his panel Las Vegas and finally to
renewed hearings on the Postal Panaca, a distance of 2,309
Service's construction miles.
A package mailed from
program.
The system calls lor con- C11apel Hill, N.C. to Carrboro ,
struction of 21 large sorting N.C., a dislllnce of one mile,
centers around the nation and will "under the new po.stal
12 auxiliary centers where all organization, with its businessparcels will be shipped for like methods, travel 160 miles
sorting by machines before to arrive at the same destinabeing sent ou t again for tion a mile away," said Nix.
delivery.
The Postal Service claims
machine sorting will greatly
speed handling of parcels and
(Continued from Page 1)
result in quicker delivery. Nix
blanketed
the area. But they
conceded that it will probably
said they believed the facility
Hbe nefit mass mailers."
was wre!!ked and said one of
~~ we are not interested,
the
bombs sent smoke swirling
however, in what, if any service can be obtained by big to 13 •000 feet. .
business mailing houses," said- Spokes~en sa1d a Navy A7
Nix. "The standard for the Corsair Jet was shot down
Postal Service as a govern- Sonday 12 miles northwest of
ment agency is what, if Quang Tn Ctty below _the DMZ
anything, such an agency will and . the pilot lS ~~sled ~
accomplish directly for the m1ss1ng. An OVID Bronco
American mail patron."
propeller-dnven armed reconIn the Modena case, a truck natSsance plane was shot down
would now deliver the package today m the Mekong .Della 55
the 20 miles to Panaca. Under mtles southwest of Satgon and
the new bulk system, said Nix, the pilot ktlled, spokesmen
sa id .

FIRE DOUSED
,
The Middleport Fire Dept. a fire in a cab owned by O'Dell
was called to Rutland St. at Blake. There was medium
9:13p.m. Monday to extinguish damage.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Exlended Outlook Thursday
throu g h
Saturday
Partly cloudy Thursday
and Friday with a chance of
showers Saturday. Highs
will be In the 70s and lower
80s- and lows will be in the
upper 40s and lower 50s
Thursday and In the 50s
Friday and Saturday.

Safety
(Continued from Page I )
" It is a pleasure to work with
people as sincere and consc ienti ous in their eff orts
toward preventing accidents as
. we are at Kyger. I am proud of
our record , and all due credi t
must be given to all employees
for their interest and attitude
in performing their work in
conformance with good safe ty
practices".

liibens ,alional
MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

_____________ ___
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depollil lasurance Corporation

__.._.,
..

_.

CLUB TO MEET
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Ada Holter.

VOL. XXIV NO. 115

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Henry A. Kll!alnger
extended his stay in Paris today for a second private meeting
with Hanoi's chief peace negotiators . It was the first time the
private llllks have lasted more than a day.
The place and time of the meeting were not disclosed. U. S.
and Communist officials remained silent on the content of the
Kissinger-North Vietnam llllks, which have been kept private
since they began in 1969. In the United Sillies, White House Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler declined to say whether the decision
to continue indicated any break-through in peace negotiations.
PARJI- I!RII:IIIDENTIAL ADVIIII!la

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knit cape of 100% Wintuk* Orlonll acrylic.
Button front style, with deep fringe. Whiteto wear with all colors. One size that fits
everyone.
• Ou Pom cert , mark.

See our complete selection of Capes. Ponchos,
and Shawls in our First Floor Accessories
Department .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ROME -LEGEND HASITTIIATwhen the Colosseum falls,
the world will tumble with it. The Colosseum has not fallen yet,
but such big chunks of stone and masonry have come crashing
down from its cornices and arches that the superintendency of
antiquities ordered the 1,892-year-old arena closed to the public
Tuesday.
Romans and tourists reacted with shock to the measure,
which followed a brief closure of the Roman Forum and Palatine
Hill. "Is all of Rome faDing to pieces all of a sudden'" asked a
horse cab driver outside the Colosseum. "If this goes on, I will be
left without places to take tourists to. What's the matter with this
city?" The answer, experts said, was a combination of heavy
traffic, record rainfall, weeds Wld an acute shortage of funds lor
the upkeep of Italy's unique monuments.
HELENA,MONT. -BIG DOROTIIY HAS a $500 city urban
renewal grant to renovate her establishment, but critics say her
bouse is no home and "Dorothy's Rooms" should get the
wrecking ball. Red-faced city fathers in Montana's capital city,
stung by accusations that they are helping to pay for the
renovation of the local house of ill repute, aren't saying much at
all.
Buildings have been falling to tbe wrecking ball around Big
Dorothy's house and the well-beaten path up the alley behind her
rooms was blocked by debris. But at a recent City Commission
meeting officials approved an urban renewal plan that allowed
$500 to Dorothy Josephine Baker for refurbishing her place of
business.
Mayor Steve Kiem said, "I was out of town during that
meeting, but I understand she wants to use it to establish some
sort of retaU business." AI Ahman, urban renewal project
director, added: "Whenever a property owner can restore a
!Continued on page 16)

'.

li1J

Big Selection of Furniture to Decorate Your Home

By Makers You Will Know!

BAKER FURN_ITURE
MIDDLEPORT, O.

· -L
'·

Bureau on Move
Sybene. South Webster,
Piketon, Oak Hill Vin to n
Albany, Glouster . '
'
This movable employment
bureau operates on a rotating
two week sehedule . .
The unit will be in Rutland on
Monday, Oct. 2, from II a.m.,
until 4 p.m., and in Vinton on
Wednesd&lt;Jy, Oct . II , from 9
;un ., until 3 p.m.

Weather

enttne

Cloudy, chance of showers
south, tonight. Lows in the 50s.
sday, chance of showers in the
south. Highs in the low 80s in
the south .

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1972

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

President Appeals
For '72 Landslide
By United Press International
PEKING -PREMIER KAKUEI TANAKA of Japan visited
the Great Wall today before the third roun~ of talks with Prime
Minister Chou En-lai of China. There was speculation the two
nations may announce establishment of diplomatic relations
Thursday.
Tanaka, who arrived in Peking Monday to normalize SinoJapanese relations, was accompanied by Foreign Minister
Masayoshi Ohira and Chief Cabinet Secretary Susumu Nikaido.

The Great Knit Cape

cent was the largest since the
first quarter of 1971 , when the ·
economy was rebounding from
the auto strike," Passer said.
The index stood at 145.5 for
August compared to 142.3 in
July.

Devoted To The Jnteresu Of The· Meigs-Mason Area

ews•• rn Brrefsl

Cambodia

business trends. The August leveled off in June and July but
Passer said the magnitude of
signal strong growth for the the August gain showed that
eco nomy in the future," the over-all trend was still
Assistant Commerce Secretary strongly upward.
Harold C. Psser said .
"On a quarterly basis, the
Of the eight indicators second quarter gain of 4.2 per
available for today's report,
only contracts and orders for
. plunt and equipmen t was
down. Tiwse increasing were
"The Ohio Bureau of Emthe length of the average work pl oy ment Services I OBES )
week, new orders for durable Mobile Unit will tour a ninegoods, building permits, indus- cuunty area to bring job optrial materials prices and the portunitie s an d trainin g
price-labor cost ratio.
possibilities to area s not served
Initial claims for unemploy- by full time local offices,
ment insurance declined in District 5 Manager Ralph
August but that was considered Hammond said today .
a favorable sign for the
The mobile unit will operate
business index. The index ir1 Rutl and, Pr oc torv ille,
figures "are co ntinuing to

•

at y

.::;::::-::::-.::::::::::-..,..;::x:~~~:~~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::~l

INSIST ON AN
INTELLIGENT
BANKING
PROGRAM

'

•

The first major income tax in
the world was introduced in
Great Britain by William Pitt
in 1799 to help finance war
against France.

the public for long. He will
attend
fundraising banquets in
Every AriCaNed diamond
each state.
is carefully selected and
McGovern stumped through
graded for superior color,
the Western states Monday
reaffirming in Seattle his
darily and cut. The carat
proposal to cut the federal
weight of the diamond is
arms budget by $30 billion .
Tonight, Sept. 26
permanenlly engraved
Nixon Using ''La~keys ''
Walt Disney's
He
also told a Seattle crowd
on the inside of 'eac h
NAPOLEON&amp;SAMANTHA
that
Nixon was using
ITechnicolorJ
ArtCarved ring, providing
"lackeys" to "do his dirty work
Michael Douglas
lasting value for your
Will Geer
for him" in debating
Also
McGovern on the prisoner-oflasting lave.
Walt Disney's
war issue. McGovern made the
MYSTERIES OF THE
sllltement
when he was asked
DEEP
Disney Cartoon: Dearly
to
co
mment
on Defense
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Asleep
ADMITTED - Diane Pope, Secretary Melvin R. Laird's
Admis sion :
Vinton ; Virgil Yarbrough, charges that the South Dakota
Adults $1.50
Children 75c
Rutland; Diana Ridgway , senator was apparently acting
Show Slarts 1 P.M .
Pomeroy; Diane Jones, as an "agent" for Hanoi in the
JEWELRY STORE
dispute over the release of
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Racine .
Court St., Pomeroy
Sept. 27-28
DISCHARGED - Dorothy three American POWs.
NOT OPEN
Monday night he flew to San
McCloud, June Preston,
Francisco
where he look a
Shawnee Salser.
walking tour of Fisherman's
Wharf with Humphrey, his
chief rival for the Democratic
nomination virtually decided
by a narrow McGovern victory
in the California primary June
6.
McGovern got a boost from
pollster Louis Harris, who
reported that the Democratic
candidate had cut Nixon's
percentage lead by six points.
Despite a still sizable Nixon
advantage in a Sept. 19-21 poll,
Harris told the Economic Club
of Detroit Monday, "H I were
Richard Nixon, I'd be afraid."
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew and Sargent Shriver
were both stumping through
You're s.'rwrt.
Texas today.
Shriver told a Corpus Christi
And, we're
gathering that the November
election would be the most
wi,,e to it.
partisan since 1932. "Not so
much Democrats versus
It's kind of
Republicans, but the working
people versus wealthy people."
like a meeting
Agnew Speaks to 1,500
Speaking to 1,500 delegates to
of the minds. Money minds. We're here
the National Defense Transportation
Association Forum
to ease your money mind with a full range of
in San Antonio, Agnew said
McGovern's position on negotl·
complete banking services.
ating with the Russians "is so
naive that it is nothing short of
frightening ." In Fort Worth,
WHE~ YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
Agnew said Hanoi was using
American prisoners as instruments of propaganda, with
disregard to their feelings.
....C.CIHCINHATI

MEIGS THEATRE

rush party conducted by the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. See Page II for more pictures and account of event by Bob Hoeflich.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
goverrunent 's index of leading
business indicators jwnped 2.2
per cent last month, biggest
rise in the closely watched
economic report since last
spring, the Commerce Depart·
ment said today.
The August rise in the
composite inde·x of leading
economic indicators was the
biggest gain since March. It
compared with an average
monthly increase of 1.3 per
cent since the index began
moving up about two years
ago.
The
index
sa mples
movement in 12 diverse areas
of the economy and is considered a key guide to later

etter

F1o)'ll Weber, Long Bottom Route !,left, Ia welcomed to
the Slate Highway Department In Meigs County by Sopt.
James Bailey. Weber, a new employe of the department In
the oolUity and Ia assigned to the maintenance and repair
aection.

'r
'

By EUGENE V. RISHER
NEW YORK (UPI)-President Nixon, embarked on a
campaign through the nation 's
two most populous states,
appealed Tuesday for a big
enough victory in November to
overcome congressional roadblocks and "finish the work we
have begun."
He to ld Republican campaign contributors in 28 cities
that his domestic programs
had been thwarted by a
Democratic
cont rolled
Cona:resa whicl) frequenUy

reminded him he did not have a
majority mandate in 1968 when
he won office with less than
half the vote.
" What we need now and what
we ask for is not simply the
support of a party, but the
support of a clear majority of
the American people so that we
can do those things that
America needs to have done for
it," he sa id.

Nixon spoke from the grand
ballroom of the Mericana Hotel
over closed-circui t television
that carried his t·emarks to
fund-raising dinner s
throughout the coun try.
More than 1,500 persons paid
$1,000 each to hear Nixon and
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew,
at a similar dinner in Chicago,
extol the accomplishments of
their first term in office and
promise to guide the nation to a
generation of peace in the next.
The dinners enriched the
already affluent Republican
war chest by an estimated $5

million to $7 million and Ntxon
was scheduled to attend
similar fund-raising affairs
today in San Francisco and Los
Angeles.
Nixon echoed the themes he
set in earlier campaign appearances, citing his visits to
Peking and Moscow as
evid€nce that a new era of
negotiations has arrived, and
claiming significant progress
in stabilizing the economy and
curbing crime.
He said the nation now "has

explain the program.
In other business , the
commissioners accepted a bid
for gasoline from the Standard
Oil Company. No other bid was
su bmi !ted.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Bob Clark, Warden Ours,
commissioners, and Susie
Andrews, assistant clerk.

California Campaigning
Cut Short by McGovern
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. George McGovern
followed his own slogan today

' .v

..

JACK KERR, left, was re-elected president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce and Dennis Keney, right ,
vice president Tuesday at a luncheon meeting of the directors at the Meigs Inn.

Ule lowest rate of inflation, the

highest. rate of growth, the
highest real income for its
workers of any industrial
nation in the world."
On crime, he said, "we have
finally turned the corner,"
chiefly because of vigorous law
enforcement by the Justice
Department and his appointment of Supreme Court
justices " who have recognized
their primary responsibility is
to protect the first civil right of
every American, the right to be
free from domestic violence."
The dinner capped a day of
campaigning in the New York
area. Earlier he met with
Jewish
representatives
backing his candidacy and
pledged to keep Israel strong
enough to defend itself against
hostile neighbors.
But he sought to tone down
demands for U.S. action
against Russia's recently instituted "exit tax" for Jewish
emigrants leaving that
country.

Road 450 Vacated
A resolution to vacate Salem
Twp. road 450 was submitted
by County Judge Frank W.
Porter and approved by the
county commissioners
Tuesday.
·Mrs. Leafy Chasteen, Meigs
County field representative in
the new five county area-wide
Model Project on Aging also
met with the commissioners to

(

dinner in Los Angeles,
McGovern hammered on his
pledge to end · the war in
and "came home" - a few Vietnam, including an imdays early - to reflect on his mediate halt to the air war.
drive for the presidency after "We're going to halt this
nearly four weeks of hard murderous bombardment and
campaigning.
we're going to do it in the first
He wolUid up his grueling five minutes after lhe
tour in Southern California inauguration," he said.
with ex-rival Hubert H. Humphrey Pleads For Funds
Humphrey staunchly at his
Humphrey urged workers to
side, going together over the accept his backing of
same ground where they McGovern, and pleaded untU
fought a bitter primary his .voice went hoarse with
campaign.
former financial backers to
McGovern
sought
to donate flUids to McGovern.
reassure organized labor
groups - W'awn by the appeal
of Humphrey - that his
SALE SET
proposed defense spending
RACINE
- The Racine Fire
cuts would not throw thousands
Dept.
Auxiliary
will sell
out of work .in California - a
charge made originally by homemade ice cream in
con tainers at the lire house
Humphrey.
At a $250-a-plate fund-raising from 6 to 8 p.m. Saturday.

CAROLYN TI!OMAS HAS BEEN hired as secretary by
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce for its office on the
grourd floor of the court house, beginning Monday. Office
hours will be announced. Carolyn will assist the chamber in
its membership drive, the annual Christmas promotion, and
the Big Bend Regatta next June.

George
Har g raves,
superintendent of Meigs Local
School District, spoke on the
five mill levy to be voted on in
the November election for the
operation of the district at the
regular meeting Tuesday night
of the Meigs Athletic Boosters.
Following an open discussion
on the levy, the boosters went

Kerr, Keney to
Lead Chamber
Jack Kerr was re~lected
president of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and
Dennis Keney vice-president at
a special meeting of the
directors following a luncheon
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
In other business the
directors employed Mrs. Don
(Carolyn )
Thomas
as
secretary to siJlff the Chamber
office located on the ground
floor of the Court House. The
chamber office will be open
five days a week, three hours a
day. Office hours will be announced later. Mrs. Thomas
will begin her duties Monday.
Bill Grueser and Jack
Carsey were named cochairmen for the 1973 Regatta
on Jure 15, 16, and t7.
Christmas promotion ideas
were reviewed but a definite
program was not established.
Local merchants will be asked
for
suggestions.
Kerr
suggested a merchants
committee be organized to
work out several promotions
each year.
He also proposed that
merchan ls set up a "community fund " to reduce
soliciting. It was suggested
that merchants who pay
chamber membership perhaps

would prefer to contribute
additional money to cover
donations
to
soliciting
organizations. Such donations
then would be paid by the
chamber. No decision was
made on the matter, however .
It was also suggested that
Pomet·oy Council be contacted
in regard to two weeks free
parking before Christmas.
Kerr . reported there are 15
paid memberships. Attending
were Kerr, Marge Hoffner,
Fred Crow, Earl Ingels, Bob
Jacobs, Bill Grueser, Dennis
Keney, Louis Osborne, Ralph
Graves , Tom Casse ll , and
Katie Crow.

Conference to

. Th ..]_
B egrn
ursuay

"

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Clinton
Smith, Portland; Evelyn
Wilson, Columbus ; Ja ckie
Lyons, Racine; Hyllia Eblin,
Pomeroy; Bessie Gilmore,
Rutland ; Wanda Adams,
Pomeroy; Mary Williams,
Gallipolis; Mary Ford, Letart,
W. Va.
DISCHARGED - Jerry
Ward, Maude Young, Leora
Zwilling, Diane Jones.

The first of a series of four
parent-teacher conferences
sched uled this school year in
the Meigs Local School District
will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday .
Teachers of the schools in the
district will be on hand to
confer with parents. George
Hargraves, supt. of schools,
invites all parents to attend
and confer
with teachers
rega rdless of whether their
children
have
specific
problems. Schools of the
district will be dismissed at
noon Thursday because of the
evening conference.

on record in support of it.
A film of the Meigs-Logan
game was shown to the 20
persons who attended by Asst.
Coach John Bentley.
All parents and members are
urged to attend the Booster
meetings being held each
Tuesday during football
season. Guy Morris, president,
presided .

Foundation
Money Here
Meigs County's three school
di stricts have received
$177,474.08 from the State
School Foundation subsidy
payments for September, State
Treasurer Joseph Ferguson
reported Tuesday.
The Eastern Local School
Dis trict received a net
payment of $34,802.04 !rom a
tol21 of $39,845.47 (less employes' retirement of $763;
teachers
retirement
of
$3,322.57 and $957.116 to the
(Continued on page 16)

4-H Achievement
'

Wins Recognition
Medals and awards for
outstanding achieve111ent in 4H work during the past year
were presen~d Tuesday night ·
when the annual Meigs County
4-H awards program was held
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Speaker for the occasion was
the Rev. Robert Kuhn,
chaplain of Gallipolis State
Institute, and pastor of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, county

extension
agent,
home
economics, led .group singing.
Presenting the awards were
Dorsey Jordan, Margie Jef·
fers , Jennifer Butcher and
Randall Roberts. Steven
Stanley, secretary of the 4-H
advisory committee, gave the
welcome. The Naylors Run
Jets led the 4-H pledge and the
pledge of· allegiance.
Receiving awards were:
·Achievement, medals lfom .
Ford Motor Co., Jan Hot'le~
· (Continued on page · •) ·

SUE WOOD, DAUGIITER of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Wood, Pomeroy Route 4, and steven Stanley, son·of Mr. and
Mrs. Duane Stanley, Pomeroy Route •. W9Jl the Buckeye
Junior Leader Awards, jewelry and certiflcatea, at Tuesday
n,ight's Meigs County 4-H Awarda program at
Pomeroy
Elementary Sdlool.
·

lb'

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