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                  <text>Church Addition
Dedicated Su~day
Approximately 200 personS included selectims by a 1rio of
witnessed the dedication of the Mrs. Debbie Gerlach, Miss
ti3,000 addition to lhe Mid- Peggy McKinney, and L. R.
clepor.t Clunh of Cllist &amp;in- W"tley. Wilbur TheobOI led in
day.
the responsive reading. InDr. Lowell Lusby, JRsident lroduced were lbe out«-tmm
· of lbe Kentucky Christian guests including Mrs. Freda
College ·at Graysm College, Welling of Punta Gorda, F1a.;
pve tbe address after Om Mrs. Clara ~. Ceveland:
Erwin, architect of tbe building, Mrs. Bruce Ward, Akron, and
had the dedication.
the Rev. ·c. E. Shepherd,
The call to worship was given Winston Salem College, a
by tbe Rev. Raullin Moyer, former pastw rlthe clurch.
pastor, after an crgB.Jiiliano William Tolbert gave the
JRlude by Mrs. Olester Erwin benediction wilb the choir
and Mrs. Harold Lohse, and the concluding lbe dedicatory
Jrocessional ol the choir.
program planned by Mrs. Pearl
Following the welcome by Reynolds with "Tbe LArd's
Tbm~as Kelly, special music Prayer."

Tb~

Homebuilders Class

under the cbainnanship of Mrs.

William Grueser and Mrs.
[)elner Rice had Charge of the
feDowsbip hour. While refresbmenta were served, Mrs. Alice
Roo esm )llayed the organ.
Baskets of Dowers sent by tbe
Barr Comtructim Co., emlracf.CI's of ~ buildif«, the
Pomeroy FloWer Shop and
Dudley Florists were ~~e~~t to the
sict aDd sbut-i.n rnem""'} of the
dllftiL
Copies rl the church

biStwy

deticated in mem&lt;ry of Mrs.
William Bradford, long-time
primary supervisor, were
distributed at the service.

DR. LOWEU LOSBY, right, president of Kentucky Clristian College, Grayson, Ky.,
congratulated Dm Erwin, Middleport, •ho designed tbe new addition to the Middlll)l&lt;lit ChUrch
of Oris! dedieated &amp;1nday aflernom. At left ill the Rev. Raullin Moyer, pastor of the church.
Dr. Lusby was speaker f« tbe dedication service.

MRS. PEARL REYNOLDS, left, general chairman f~
lhe dedicati.m and q1e11 house of the new $93,000 addition to
lhe MiddlepCI't Olurc:h of Olrist, takes a 1um at lhe punch
bowl during lbe q1e11 hruse, to sene Mrs. Stella Grueaser,
Minersville, whomakesber homeatjll'esentwithber son and
cllqhter.tn.law, Mr. aDd Mrs. W"Jlllam " - ·

NO.

~IY

NO. 115

DeiiOiftl To '17ulln~Nesb Of'l7ul ~-MfiiOII Area
POMEROY-MIDDlfPORT. OH!O
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1971
PHONE 992·2156

•

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'
INE.I4AD A ·RUN O' ,HAR.t&gt;
TtMES-50 WE HAD ,T01 •

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI)
-President Nixon flew back to
Washington today after a swing
through four Northwestern
states, some high-level initiatives on the Western economy
and an historic meetiag with
Japan's Emperor Hirohito.
Tbe President was to arrive
at Andrews Air Force Base
outside Washington at 7:50p.m.
EDT after a six-hour flight in
Air Force One from Ebnendorf
AFB near Anchora~e .
- The meeting in Anchorage,
Alaska, between Nixon and

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By Ullited ~ Jnferii!IUoaal

I
1

'I

Last Ditch Conference
LONDON - THE PRIME MINISJ'ERS of Great Britain,
Ncrthem Ireland and tbe Irish Republic conferred together for

the first time today in a last ditch bid to save the violence-torn
NcrthfrCIII tbe tlftatof civil war. Tbeymetatnoonat Chequers,
British Prime Minister Edward Heath's official country
residence. Each was acccmpanied by me adviser.
The talks were espected to cmtinue all day today and to end
Tuesday afternoon. Northem Ireland Prime Minister Brian
Faulkner had a preliminary tbree-bwr meeting at Chequers
&amp;lnday evening with Heath, Home Sec{etary Reginald Maudling
and Defense Secletary LOrd Carrington.

Aspinall's Strip Bill Backed

CAPTAIN EASY

by· Cr~oks &amp; Lawrence.

ome

Alllmic Energy Commission's
Hanford, Wash., facility. He
look the occasion to announce
the U.S. government, in conjunction with private business,
would build two prototype
''fast-breeder" reactors to bar·
ness the atom for peaceful

uses.
to build one prototype,
costing about $500 million, were
announced in June but the
decision to expand the project
Plans

NIXon coupled his trip to
Alaska with down-~th stops
during the weekend in Montana,
Oregon and Washington.
The President staged another
first when he stopped Saturday
in PorUand. He interceded in
the 8lklay-old West Coast dock
strike. It was the first time
ever that Nixon had personaUy
become involved in strike
negotiaUons in his capacity as
President.
His 2().minute meeoog with
longshore labor leader Harry
Bridges and shippers negotiator
Ed F1ynn brought pledges from
them to try and end the strike
by this weekend.
The strike by 15,000 members
of the InternaUonal Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's
Union (ILWU) has tied up 25
West Coast ports and idled

Pr. PLEASANT -The Union
Carbide mine at Elmwood in
Mason County today shut down
production
leaving
ap. proximately IM to a.l perslliiS
jobless.
A Union Carbide official said
lhe mine for the time being will
be on a standby, or ''motbhall"
basis. J . L. Knight, minir«
manager for Unim Carbide
Corp., Ferro-Alloy Division,
said when workmen reported at
work today at 8 a.m., they were
noUfied of the closing.
He said, " this was made
necessary wben lbe last order
was filled for American
Electric Power Corp., which
had been the mine's only·
customer the past four to six
months." He said AEP bas

placed no new orders for the
COi'J being produced there, a
bituminws product with high
ash CU).Ienl.
The deep mine began
producing coal early in 1969
wilb normal production
averaging 50 000 tons per
mmth.
'
Knight aplained the ''mothhall basis" as one in which
productimcouldberesumed in
a shcrl lime. The office will be
open and a smaD force of employes for maintenance will be
retained.
NOW YOU KNOW
English is the most widely
used language in the PhiliPpines, although Tagalog is the
rfflciallanguage.

Es~pes
RACINE - Dan Ericb. l9,
Columbus, escaped probable
death early today when he

managed to cra..t out a rear
window of his car after it was
swept into a raiJHrwollm aeek
the "'---les vost farm
011
''
near
here "'""
~ department ol Sheriff

:

CLEVELAND tUPI) - Jdla Salllvu piDcbed
. . limself lo mate sure, bat deelded medkare olflclall
:
wen wreag wbea lbey notified 1111 wife he w• dad.
:
Mn.Salllvupltllltdblmalwori;recenllyloiDfOnllblm
:
lba tlllltdlcare bad refilled payme~~lfor a ·~ldedor bW.
:.
''Oar lft~uolbow
-a..
lbe heaeficlary aamed above II
·
de~" tbe nollee uld, addlag ~~~GaP. thai Mn.
Slllllvu was enUIIed 1o .-e ID barial beaeflla.
Viii tiDe tbe Soelal Secm1ty offlee, u rlflclal told the
Slllliva. ·"BalUmcre woUld bave to be CODtacted
~- tbal's where flies of deceued pen111111 lllat bad
beelt covered by medicare 1ft kept
''llllllmlft bu decided 1omelaow tllat yon are
d£ftued," tbe rlfldal !tid bJm.. '"BBat I'm 111ft
somelltD&amp; co be worlled eat. Leave everylldJic 1o me.
G• bae aad fqetahoatlt." Sall1vu llu •lded te
hftgo lbe bviiJ beueflll, f~ DOW.
=
·

:,~:;:

==t:::!:;.:

23· The swiftly moving wata'
washed his auto into the c:r t ,
then down its coarse approximately 100 feet. Eridl

!'i:';!.eda! =b~~;a'

Weather
Partly cloudy aod warm
tanight and Tues'ay. O!ance ol
lbowas IICI'Ih portim tonight
lnd Tuesday. Lows lmigbt in
the upper 58s and as. Higbs
Tuesday in the upper "Ills aDd

a.

WASHINGTON - FORMER FIRST Lady Mamie
Eisenhower, radiant as ever, will be honored tonight by many ~
ber admirers with a "Diamond Jubilee" dinner and establl.shmentofascholarshipfundinbername. President and Mrs. Nixon
were expected tore1umfromtheirtrip through the Pacific Northwest in time to put in a late appearance at the $101Hl-plate affair.
Proceedw friiD the benefit will go into the scholarship fund to
help studeilta at Eisenhower College, Seneca Falls, N. Y. Mrs.
Eisenhower long has been active in eff~ts to aid the school, which
was named after ber lusband, President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

~

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i

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Judge Howard issued a temporary injuncUon requested by
the university when the strike
started,buttheworkersremalned off their jobs and reaffirmed
their intentim to stay off In a
vote held Saturday. McGee was
es bact to w~k.
cited for cmtempt of lbe court
Cmmim Pleas Court Judge order for urging the strike
llonrd Goldsberry from Ross to cmtinue and Goldsberry
CouoJewastopresideata hearing
today on a cmtempt of warned more cltaUons may be
cow1citationissuedagalnst0s- in·~~·re. hound to prooeed
car McGee, president of the against the order of the court,
lllim m strike.
don't come bact and ask for
G&lt;+JF.a 17 was called into the mercy," GoiA•.._, sat"d.
Albelts County court at the reSowle, who suggested the
·quest of Judge Lowell Howard, union go to courl to show ita diswbo disqualified himself from pleasure over dealings with the
bearing the trikMelated
.
formerly::
a laculty member at the 19,000 that they had voted to cmtinue
student university.
. the strike into this week.
The walkout by the some 900 The union aCCU3eS the univa-members ol_LOca11699, Ameri- sity of diacriminating against
can Fedaatim of State, County women in cafeteria work, a1Jo.
and Municipal Employes, last ing supervisors to wort in non11ullday over nm - monetary supervisory paeltions and failing
grievances so far bas had little to submit a list of workers laid
~ ~ tbe state: supported off this summer.
~~~~YWS~ty, but President Claude Sowle, however, countered
Sowle has warned the campus that it was his belief the
wuuld he closed by a prolmged university "had acted within
a••"' of janitors, service the letter and spirit of the
wriers,clertsandstenograph- agreement" witb the union.
ers.
He said tbe unlm, instead of
- - - - - - - - - striking, should seek an injunction If it felt tbe school was not
TAG DAY SET
Tbe anm1al Tag Day of the carrying out Its responsibility
for grievance procedures and ,
Meigs High SdJool Band will he
obseued Saturday. As has been promised the university "will
tbe custom the past few years, definitely abide by a court ...~
during Ibis week members of der on that issue."
"We could be forced to cJoee
the Meigs Band Boosters will
down
the university since we
contaet business houses in
Ptma OJ, Rutland and Mid- would be faced with major~
dlepcrt to aa:ept cmlribuUons lema concemlng food, refue
and
olber
necessary
hNpescmpu want to mal:e.
operations," Sowle said In
warning qainst a long walllout.
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) -With

sludentslllld~inV.tratorscm,;..,;- to take - the jobs of
-.......
-·
s1riking blue and white collar
wriers at Ohio University toREobehrt C. 8dri~~nba~~. suugh
"d day, the cow1 JJIOC-eeded in its
rtc was
VtDg "" 0
efforts 1o force the 900 employ-

telephone pole and a fire
llydrant near the Don Lisle
ty before moving bact
::"'the highway. The vdticle
turned over 00 its lop acn155 the
rwdway. It was a total loss.
McFarland was cited 1o the
court of Syracuse Mayor
Berman Lmdcm m a charge o1
a:c:essive speed fOi' conditioos.

at Dinner

~

OU Stalemated

-·r

=~t r;,ew. : :!-.!•; ~~he

MORGNATOWN, W. Va.-SEAROIERScombed the rugged
terrain of Cooper's Rock Stale F~st today for two missing boys
who wandered frCIII the family's campsite.
The boys, Billy Smythe, 8, Alliance, Ohio, and Oluclde
CUnningham.9, Weirtm,werelastseenatnom&amp;lmlay.
An estimated 150 police and volunteer searchers, aided by a
bloodhound,spentmostof tbe night in the area.
Police said some tracks were foond at midnight, about four
milesfriiD the main cmcessimarea ol the state fQrest.

LOCAL~

The tenJpeAtln .in downtown
Pomeroy al u a.m. Monday
was 73 degi es IRlCier d:Judy

Iiles.

::r:~::e~' :: ~:::~

Real HeU o[Fire

Krek 'l'hreatened

IMF Session in Crisis Air
WASIIINGtON - WITH TREASURY Secretary John B.
Cmnally aY!ng "flexibility and fairness" fer the dollar, the 111
members o1 the faternatimal Mmetary Fund began their arullal
mee- today in search rl a new wcrkl currency system. Six
weea lifter President Nixon eDded the internaUmal payments
syatem that hu prevailed since Wm-ld War n by Slllpellding the
cmverliblllty rl dolllrs into gold, the JMF delegates gathered in
what Canadian Finance Minister Edgar J. Benson described

afternoon, said tberehadbeennocbangein the U. S.paellion.

made it possible lo order
production of the first "fastbreeder" nuclear reactor.
Scientists believe tbe reactor
offers tbe hope of avoiding a
global energy crisis within 50
years. "Fast-«"eeder" reactors
produce their own fuel by
turning nm.fissimable unminm
into fissionable plvtonimn and
offer tbe prospect ol adequate
supplies of non-polluting tDti &amp;7 •

w• ......-_

Boys Sought in Forest

&amp;lnclay. u a "aisla" allnOIIphere.
BeiiiOII predicted the outbreak of a trade war among the
1118j« eccJUIII)c powers If their currencies continued to ':tJoat"
outalde the parities fixed by the IMF. And, Bensm added, "there
woo 't be a realignment of currencies ao long as the U. 1). Import
111rlu Ia there." But CCIIIIIlly, taiJriDI with reporters &amp;lnday

:!E =~:E1-;;,~;:;;t;:;:;;;;;:··:u;·

Erich •s lruslt with tragedy
OCCUlTed at 6·45 p.m.
At 2:30 a~ Sunday, "an Slate
' Route 1.24 in Syraaase 8 car
driven by Otarles

WASHINGTON -THE UNITED Mine Wcrkers (UMW) have
endorsed "with enthusiasm" the prO)lOISed strip mine cmtrol act
of 1971 introduced by Rep. Wayne Aspinall, D-Colo., chairman ol
lhe House Interior Ommit1ee. UMW President W. A. "Tony"
Boyle said the legislation "is consistent with the environmental,
energy and ecmmlic needs of the nation." Resaid it would create
needed new jobs through cleanup of stripped out lands and protect
lhe jobs ol thousands ol miners.
Boyle said ''Tbe craters of tbe moon are duplicated in the
Minnesota iron range and the copper mines · of Montana.
Envirorunental considerations af!! as serious in these areas
as In Appalachia and lbe need f~ effective land restorati.on is 11
great."

Mamie Center Stage

to two was new.

ine Closed Driver

En~::i.:r:::~e~ 1111
'~ I

MRS. AIJCE R0Bf3&gt;N presented subdued
crgan selectims Sunday afternoon during an open house held
following the dedicaijm of tbe new addiijm to the Middleport
Olurcb of Clrilt.

I

nearly 2011 ships since July 1.
Nixon said his face.to.fa ce
meeting was "to bring to their
attention the urgency of reaciJ..
ing a settlement."
If East Coast dock worker.;
strike when their contract
expires Thursday, said tbe
President, he would consider it
a national emergency and
invoke the ll().day "cooling off"
injunction provisions of the
Taft-Hartley Act.
Sunday, Nixon toured tbe

TEN CENTS .

SAIGOO (UPI)-Narly two dlvililiii alliCI'th
· ~~e•
u replar hapnuteda "raJ hell rl
lire" today Ill the •• JUred Salilb VIet.
••r eWer len aflleCw•• arlilnJilllber tan
clink, cut tlteiruainliJIIIII)I ID8Dd8(11118nd
tit be tryinclo6ift lltaaGIItaf&amp;u•.ma
The SolllhVII'INm iGt•w•., ill thesaid i t - the ...... fl&amp;bliic Pee the ....
rlfensi~ into CaJnhedie to 4I1XV the
IIUiist IIIII:% ia lhn ia Jill.
"bt the IIIII• ~,.- ..te item lilq
UDder a real heB II fft," GeiL lfpJa x.t
Tl.nh, CCIIIDJPnder II the S.th V'11:1Mn
25lb

'

GRANDOIAMPION-DilllaGutJD,detgN«ofllr. Pidllrs.eer.JdGalhrie,Oiolville
Route 3, was the grand cMIIIpiOD ol Salllrday's
twilling contest at E•d )II High School.
MlsaGulhrie, receiving tbe champicllllblp troplly from Mrs. Judy Rigs, cantestdirecl«, won
10 flnt places, one aecond, and received tbe rN.n4i+Nwhip II UjiiJ, U in .U for ber Saturday
particlpati.on. She now ownsapprolimate)J' 2251lv,lblesaa twirlinghiDn.. Sbe'also received a
$25 savings bond for wlnt!q Saturday's championship. The ct +- PrA spu1WEd the contest. (See Page 2f« pcture of traveling sisters.)

•ton

"

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cam.

Divis1011, said In an Interview at bJa headqaar- · ·
ten in Tey Nlnb City, acna the bcadtr fnm
Ink in South VIetnam.
He delc:ribed tlte Qi.m.nlot allaaft, wl*b
hepn •!!Jnley. 881D\ft .nc.llu the drift
wllicb p•+e.t 11te s.th yjplnr- aat of a 1,
1111111w hilld pllillallaa town about • mllaa
..,. rt II Ink,
lti* Ia lllout. miles Jalli:aert of Ba)J I ..S
ei&amp;ftl llillll
the ,bwda. Tbe .... alitlaaal lbse are the llllr iiiiiiD 11rce·811111
V!e
11!it IIIII ill Cw• .. !Ia
''11!t wlll!a114111 II mon - - . lha lr ztI "

last...,,

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Lailllt
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LIIIAL NOTIC:I
LEGAL NOTICE
S...t.d 'bleb will be received
ORDINANCE NO. &lt;10
-_, the Village Of Middlepprt*
Declar.l ng that It Is necessary
Ohio. 237 Race StrHt vntll 4i 1
th
t t rre t
· P .M. (\ ·tober 27, 1971 tor the expenses
or
e pay
cu
"ot
of ·men
the Vi llage

°

IAII

of

the

foUowlng

Estate
:
Tht followlno Real

Rtll

Estlte.
t .i tvlte In 65·-acre Lot 157,
5ectlon 2t. Town 1, Range 13,
MtiVS County, Ohio, bouridtd IS

Pomeroy , Ohio, and declaring
the. amount of taKes that m.ay be
levied at the maximum rate
authorized by taw wi thout ~
vote of electon to be In ' suHicienl aOd declaring the

lotiOWI:
ntCHSity of. levy ln. excess of
Beginning 11 lht norlhwest such rate.
cornorOfhidStcllon29;ttoence
BE IT RESOLVED by the
•tong ttot north line .of utd Council of the Village ot
...c:tlon to the northnst corner Pomeroy, state of Ohio. all
Of Kerrs 6-acre lot; thence along members thereto concurring:
hid Korrs eost line 245 feet ;
soc, 1: That 11 Is necessary 10
thence north 85\6. deg. east 389 have acfdltlonal mon ies for the
fHt; thtnce south 61\1\ d.eg. ea:st · payment of current expenses of

279tMI.to a Locust Tr"'' ttoence
south 7_71f&gt; dog. "'' 143 Itt! to
Powells west line; thence along
hid Powell's west line Otlf&gt;
feet to to uld Powell's norfhwHI corner; thence north 21f&gt;
deg. eest3221Htto.tho.center. of
,
I road; ttoence along tho center
of .said rQa~ in a northwest
direction to the east side of ltot
Thomas Fork road near Miles
M-s lot; thence along ttot east
side Of the said Thomas Fork
road In I southwHt direction to
thoplocoofbeglnnlng,saveand
except '"' acres sold to Miles
Moors by V. B. Horton ; also a
rlght-of.way granted to the Ohio
• Central Railroad, the land ·••
convoyed being 32 9·100 acres.
more or less.
.
Also the lollowlng real estate
~
situate In Meigs .County, Ohio,
.: and Is the 65 acre part of 100
! acre lot 157. bounded and
docr11btedt 1os 11o flows: The one
~
acre o Y ng n the west end of
hid part of sold IOO.acr.e lot;
• Beginning ot a stoke at a run on
ttoe out side of the· rood, south
..
of the bridge over Thomas
• For1k.290
· the nce oohuth 59 degrees
, us . 1eet; 1 once south 49
• d19rees west 150 feet; thence
north 59 degrees Wtll 290 teet to
•no roa d ; t•nence north 49
, 'degrMo oost along said rood 150
, ltet to1 1the P11oce of beg1Inning ,
• ' con 1an
ng
acre. A so the
; lollowlng lot od(olnlng said 1·
, ocrt lot Situate In Soc. 30, In the
• 65·acre P&lt;trlottoo acrelo1157 in
, Slid Count~ ond State: Begin .
: ~~r~1 ,'.~~r."f~r/t':."e~e 0~~~l~
: JJ'h degrees east dO teetthence
south 53 degrees east u teet;
ttoence south 70 degrees east 246
; IHt; thence south 49'h deg.
• WKt 108 f.H t to the ••st cor~er
: Of hid J.ocre lot; thence ~ort~
59 dog. wnt IOIIHI to ttoo east
cornerofsald 1-acrelot; thence
north 59 dog . west 290 lettto the
, ploce ot beginning, containing
• , If&gt; aero: Save and txcept the
, rlght·of.woy granted by, sold
• Moors · to ttoo Ohio Control
Rollroed. being the some reel
estoto conveyed by v. 8. Horton
l ond D•bnoy heirs to hid Miles
Moors
recorded
In Vol.
Peges and
349, 350
and 352.
Also 39,
In
Vol. 56, Pogn 102, 103, end IO.t.
Also Vol.County
18, Pages
and 394,
Mtlgo
Deed393 Records.
Save and except 3.079 ocrn
conveyed
to theInState
Ohio
by
deed recorded
Vol. of
22A,
Page
f:l:Cord':.•;::..~g:~~Ywhl~~·i~
her.ebv mode lor definite
description of the exception.
Sa•e and
except .tandacre.
con·
••xed
to orville
Mildred

tho Village ot Pomeroy, Ohio .
Sec. 2: That the amount o.f
taKes that may be raised by the
levy of taKes at the maximum
rate authorized by SectJQn
5705 02 of the Revised Code on·
ttoe 'taxable property 'in sold
Village will be Insufficient to
provide an· adequate amount for
tht necHsary requirements of
said VIllage, and that It is
necessary lor the rurpose or
providing addition• funds tor
ttoe payment ot current ex·
penses of the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, OS provided in
section 5705.19 of the Revised
Code that taxes be levied on the
taxable property within the
Village tor a period olfive years
at a rate in ucess of such
maximum rote authorized in
secllon 5705.02 of the Rev ised
Code
sec. 3, That 11 is necessary to
levy the taxes tor the year$ 1971,
1972, 1973, 1974_and 1975 at the
rate of one·half mill on each
dollar of t~e tax valuation of the
taxable property within the
village of Pomeroy in excess of
tht rote authOrized by the Uld
section 5705.02 of the Revised
COde. That there would be
levo'•" the sum ot 5 cenls on each
~ of the taxable property
stoo.oo
with In the sold vi II age ot
Pomeroy .
Sec. 4: That the Clerk be and
she is hereby directed to certify
a copy of thos Ordinance to the
Deputy state supervisors and
Inspectors of elections ot Meigs
~:~~:~is~~~o~~nd 0~~:~~~t~tr:a~~
elections may meke the
necessoryorrongementsrorthe
submission of such question to
the electors of sold Village, as
provided t)y law. (See 5705 .17).
sec. 5: That this Ordinance Is
hereby declared to be an
emergency Ordinance
necessary lor the safety and
welfare of the said VIllage ot
Pomeroy .
sec. 6: That the Clerk be and
she Is hereby directed to cause
notice ot such election to be
published. as required by low.
Charles Legar
Passed : Sept. 8. 1971 Mayor
Alles! : Jone Walton
Clerk
191 13, 20, 27, Jt

NOTICE oF
APPOINT~~~:~ •. 20555
Estate 01 Ida c. Wolfe,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that

~~~~~;st:l ~:'. r~.rd:0 1~~ Anno M. Ryther, ot P. o. Box

Count•
Oeed
Records,
.,
reterenco to which Is hereby
made lor dtllnlt'e dHcrlptlon .ot
ttofl oxceptlon. Exct~llng and
reserving to the rantors,
Henry Millirons and Marie
Millirons, t.57 of the above
diiCrlbtd real estate, more or
los•
described
lollows : ·
Beginning
at as
0 point on Slate
Hlohwoy rl9ht.ot.woy 234.13
right of centerline station 169
pluo 17.5; ttoenct bearing south
- u deg. 29' 07" east Ull' to
t1~1d hub ; thence north 32
dog . 50' 53" ..., 301.8' to Iron
pin In centerline of t-n•hlp

130, Pomeroy, Ohio has been
01 the Estate 01 Ida c. Wolle,
deceased , late of Letart
Township, Meigs County. Ohio.
Creditors ore required to file
lh
I 1fo:J:.•
1 ;:ont~:.
llh ld I'd
·
wt'f..'i.:'
' ucoory
Dated this ISth day 01 Sep.
tember 1971.
. ?;ob~i~~~~gle~
(9) 20, 27 IIOl 4, ;',~old County
-·
duty 1ppolnted Administratrix

Nurses
T 0 L earn
Jth FM
.

w·

Me~

·

'

District Goal.Set

Property

·

.

The Eighth District American awarcls from Mrs. X lncer at
Legion Aulllan: membership lhe . fall confeteuce wbidl Is
goal baa been ~et at 2,1tlt. Mrs. !llated for next IIICilthat Albena.
Diaries Kenlnger, Pwleloy, .Mri. DcNid Miller, flnt vice
Route 2, district P'
who pi ealdetlt, nepartmeut of Ohio,
recently attended an eucuilve will lie tbe gueat 8pMlrer.
board meeting in Colmuhts,
An award will be giveD IAl the
aald membenbip, acUvities, unit having the bfgbelt per·
ani awuds for Ibis year were centage over goal by Dec. 31..On
discusoecl
.
Jan. 10, dues will Increase.
Currently the Eighth District Units are f!!mlnc""l tbat ~
· oi' wbich a&amp;eiea Coonty is a part Oepartmeut president's
lslnseeutdplice in lbeatate on
birthday is F~b. 15,
membership. When district and
units
are :asked
membership g~ are reached to send a birthday card
the district president will and . at that lime . report .an
receive $50 If tbe goal is reached membership. Unlll reaching
by N'*. 10; P5 by Dec. 31; $II goal by May 31 will receive a
by JaD. fl; $15 by Feb. 15; S10 ~oal ribiMll' at !he snmmer
by April 12, IJid S5 by May 31. diatrict cmvention. . .
The district president firSt to This year the Jane Gill
attain goal will bave the Trop~ will be p~e~~e~~ted to the
priv.lltg~ of carrying the unit haviug the largest ..
American flag at tbe 1972 numerical Increase over ·last
national convention. The one )'ear. Awards will go to lhe unit
eom1ng in second will carry the member securing ~ ~new
American Legion Auxiliary ·members, to the umt havmg the
banner.
greatest percentage over goal,
Goal units will receive andtomembenslgning1JIIOVer
100 members. Tbla year a baHcentury awat:d will be given to
members signing up between 50
and 99 members.

Transfers

.

e...,...'-

Harriet B. SterreU, Com., .
Carl A. Ebersbach, dec. io
Leona M. Ebersbach, Parcels,
Bradbury.

As part of its ·in«rvlce •

program for nurses, Holzer
.Medical Center ' with the
cooperation of ratiio station
WJEH·FM, Is parllclpating in
the Ohio Nurses' Continuing
Education program series for
1971·72. .
,.
These. prograins,. lroadcast
over the Ohio . Medical
Education Network, originate
from the Center for Continuing
Medical Education on the Ohio
Stale University campus. They
are carried by the WOSU·FM
radio station and other FM
radio stations in the listening
area of the network hospitals.
Nurses in the hospital
di
ill ha
an opau ences w
ve
portunlly through
their
·
·
moderator to join the discussion
and to ask questions by radio.
tel bon E h
ti 1. lm'g
ep e. ac par Cpa
h ita!'18 f •·~·A a quantity
osp
urn""n:uand a set of
of pnn
· led ou'"-··
.....,.,
2x2 slides. During the first baH
h
th slides
shown and
our e
are
the panelists present in·
·
formation pertinent to pallenl
care. The last baH hour Is open
for discussion between the
audience and the panelists.
With emphasis on continuing
education in all professt
. ·ons and
for all people, the radiO·
telephone network has been
successful in providing nurses
the opportunity to continue
learning while working. Since
th
...,.
presented
e pr..,..ams are
over FM radio stations, nurses
and allied health professionala
withFMreceiversmay listen to
the broadcasts at home, in
offices or In automobiles. In·
terest and enthusiasm for the
programs has been a
motivating factor in the con·
tinualion and expansion of the
network.
Nurses in the community are
invited .. to attend these
programs which will be held in
th d to • dinin'g room at
e oc rs
Holzer Medical Center. The
programtimeisfrom2to3p.m.
and the program subject and
date are as follows:
October 15, Social Change:
Tuned In Tuned Out
•
·
November 12, Decisions,
Dec' ·
Decis'
LStons, .
lODS.

WIN AT BRIDGE

~~~~=~~3if~~i~~

!.~ Tbe ~Sentinel, M!Meport-PcQeroy, 0., &amp;!pt. 27, 1971

Franklin Wayne Brinker,
Donna Jean Brinker to Denzil
Eugene Boggess, Agnes
Boggess, Lots 5..&amp;, Letart•
Antiquity.
George A Barkstall dec to
·
'
·
William Barkstall, Cert. of
Trans., Middleport-Rutland. 1
Julia Ann Jackson, Hefl!C(Iel
E. Jackson to Ohio Power Co.,
Ease., Lebanon.
Douglas J. Wetherholi, Janet
,
B. Wetherholt to Franklin Real
Estate Co 13850A-• Salem
·• ·
~-··
Hallie Cross to John ·RusseD,
Magdelene Russell, Lot No. 20,
Nye's Add., Pomeroy.
Milo B. Hutchison, Betty A.
Hutchison to Wilbur D. Young,
Ruth A. Young, Acre Sec. 7,
Rutland.
Oallas B. Cleland, Geraldine
Cle' land to Racm
' e Gas •- ~.-...•ce
"'""' ..
Co., Right of Way, Suttoo.
Alice F'ttch to Robert Fitcb,
Do
F'lch 5 A
Leban
nna 1 • • ere,
m.
Betty Gene Miller to Bobby J.
Miller, Lot, Lincoln His. Add.,
Pomeroy.
Alpha Russell, Esta Russell to
Leland E. Clonch, Reatha V.
Clonch, 65.37 Acres, Rutland.
Kenneth H. Payne, Carolyn
Payne to Milo li. Hutchison,
Betty A. Hutchison, Parcels,
Harrisonville-Scipio
·

*

B
1
rethren,
do not con·
sider that I have made it on
m"• own; but one thing I do,
forgetting what lies ehind
and straining forward to
what lies ahead. I press on
toward the goal for the prize
·
of th e uvward ca !! of God m
Christ J e s us.-Pht!ippians
3:J3• 14·
---------December
10,
The
Hospitalized Addict.
January 14, After the
Coronary Care Unit.
. . for
February II, Prescnption
Living : Cancer Chemotherapy.
March 10, A Time To Die.
April 7, Arthritis, Ankylosis
or Adaptation.
Further information
regarding these programs may
be obtained from the Holzer
Med'tea 1 center mo dera 1ors,
Mr. Delmar Gingerich or Mrs.
Barbara Betz, at First and
Cedar Street, Gallipolis, Ohio.

Wedding Party

Is Entertained

Locating the Trump Queen

•

t

•J

:':

hte

m;

Po::rr:;,

I

Cbun:h.

G ts
Mr IJid Mrs
ues were
·
'
'T'l--ne
A~ A
Elton Clevenger, parents of the
.1 fH/t:.l
T~
brl~--lect • · - Cle
...,.., ;
venger,
Mrs. Albert ROush, Eighth as a guide. The department who will serve as an usher;
District 1'unior activities j'unior president, SUe ""'""
~.n, ..,_ Patty Clark BDd Mills
""""
chairman, Mrs. Charles was present and brought Karen Porter, the Dower girls;
Kessmger,
·
district presl'den1• greeting s. ·A recep ti on hononng
·
Ml.8ll J.anet .p or ter, a
and Mrs. Harry Davis attended ber at Grand Rapids on Ocl3,1 brl(lesnund; David Keathley;
·
Legton
· A"·"'·-·
to 4 p.m., was announced·
Miss Unda. Dye.and Miss Misty
an Amencan
~,
school of instruction on junior The Eighth District junior Ward, juruor bridesmaids; ~
activities held at the Neil House conference will be held in Steele,~ S~le, and PatriCia
recently.
PomeroyonthelastSaturdayin Steele, p181USI, all of New
Mrs. 0 avts
.
d
April
serve
as
. ....
.,..,_ Department con• Haven, W. Va.
f th
h 1 hi h f
will be t •-~•--A
Gallipo
. lis
secretary or esc oo w c erence
a ,........w on
Chuck E. Hill of
·
;
opened with greetings from June 3.
Debbie Laney, a bridesmaid;
Ia
·
Ann -'-A
tw
bes
Mrs. Row nd Emmons, m·
oun..... were
o new Mr. ·and Mrs. Don Roush,
t
structor, Mrs. Donna Miller, contests, both involving man and matron of honor;
' gbooks being
' distributed .
. if
d Dann Abbott
0 epar 1men 1 Auxt.11 ary v1ce colonn
David F e an
y
'
'd
1,
d
Mrs
Ra
ond
b
the
W
te
and
So
them
M
Reed
Mrs
prest en an
·
ym
Y
es m
u
ushers; Mrs. W. ·
•
·
Sloan, president.
Insurance Co., one on Frank Powers and children,
J umor
·
' and one on ...,.
--•ety. Pam and Bob , and Mrs . Grace
programs were Americarusm
outlined by the instructor who Judging will be done In four age Prall.
urged that advisors pennit the groups tots through age four,
junior to take over their own and four"through eight.
I
programs using the handbook
I

!I

Atte-

Schoo/

voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
the soup. If he had put him·
self in East position he
TRAVEL IS THE INN TRING
uld
h
I'
ed
th
t
wo
ave reatz
a
NEWYORK-ThesecondbestJI'ofessional
East's failure to lead a third delight in our life, next to an opening night of a
club could only mean that really fine Bdwy. show, Is !ravel, wblch we
East held the q u e e n of accomplish for prrl.essional and not enlirely
~~:!'J'8 iru~~ ~ot~i~g h~d subliminally personal satisfaction. We're
East would surely have led brought to this topic today upon perusing an
that third club."
Esquire Magazine piece by Dick Joseph, veteran
Oswald: "East had made travel maven, wbo therein selected what he
things easy for South. If claims are ''The Three Greatest Hotels in the
East had led a middle sized Wcrld."
club or even his smaJJest at
Dick's picb are the Ritz in Paris; we prefer
0
;:i~~a::f:·p~:: ~ 3f!m~~d~ the Bristol in Paris. The Westgale Plaza in San
Then, South would have had Diego, calif., which we've never seen, therefore
to really guess in. trumps can give no argument; IJid Las Brisas in
and could be excused if he Acapulco, which we have seen _ maybe ex·
went wrong."
perienced Is a better word, for ills a spec(NlWSPAPll lNTlRPRISl ASSH.}
tacularly luxuriouS hotel. Not much argument
Ohio, has been duly appointed
there, either.
Administratrix of the Estate of By Oswald &amp;: James Jacoby
Dick Joseph and I share a powerful
Ruth I. Cundiff, deceased, late
of Meigs County, Ohio.
1
Jim : "When I was learnJl'eferencef«alittleresortl4milesfromRome
Creditors art required to file
The bidding has been: "
in the Alban Hills, called Helio Cabala. This is a
their claims with said fiduciary lng bridge you told me that
within tour months.
I would be trying to locate We.t North
Eut South little resort' that started out as a luncheon-mid.
Doted this 23rd day of Sep.
the
queen
of
trumps
on
thou·
Pass
•
Pass ~
swim spot only a dorr.en or m.re years ago, then
tember, 1971 .
2
F . H.O'Brlen sands of occasions. You said Pass
Pass
?
2'
1'Is owner, Tony Pran!era ' a dded a dozen small
Probate Judgo the way to get good at the
of said County problem was to charge myYou, South, hold:
villas draped down his mini-mountain, with
(9) 27, (10) 4, 11 . 31
self with an error every lime
11' 2 •2 •A K 10 81 •A Q lovely views of Rome from each villa's terrace.
I failed to locate it."
What do you do now?
Lalelyhe'saddedatiny(30rooms)hotelatophls
NOTICE oN FILING
Oswald: "I watched a fair·
A-Bid three diamonds. If personal mountain, and he has facilities for just
OF INVENTORY
ly good player go down at the band is to play in • suit abwt anylhq you'd like to do short of tennis,
noANs~atePPo~Al:~~E~Telgs ~~'!:'d. ~~~on~ cl~~~~ ~~. wn":: :t!O:.~~~~
golf IJid boating. It's not on Dick's Best Tlree
Cnnty.
Proboto
Court
wt
'
th
the
ace
and
returned
play
in
no·
trump
your
band
list, n« Is It on ours. Justa no-in•
rave.
To the Executor of the estate ;
........,..~
to such of the to flowing os ore the eight. West ruffed. He belonp on the table.
As to hotels we would put on such a list, we'd
residents
of
the
state
of
Ohio,
read
th
1
b
·
ht
h'
h
viz: _ ttoesurvlvlng spouse, the
e c U etg as a tg
TODAY'S QUESTION
have ID say lhe Ritz In Madrid is tbe finest hotel
nut of kin , the bentllclarles 'card and led back a spade. Your partner continues to we've ever stayed in,« eveu have seen. We're
under the will; end to the at. East took his ace and play•ed
torney
or
attorneys a second spade. sOuth won three no-trump. What do you told the Ritz In Lisbon Is even better than Its
representing any of the in dummy, led a low trump do now?
related Madrid Ritz.
afortmtntloned pers~s:
T
orville. E. Wot10n, Deceased, to the ace and played the
Aruwer omorrow
New York (lly has few great hotels; bigyes, but great Ia another wcrd. The, st. Regis
Rttdlvllle, Ohio R. o. '· Olive trump king. He complained
TO:.":~r.; ~:re~~~;, 1111 !d that about bad luck when West
(now owned by Sheraton) Is a fine hotel, perhaps
the
Inventory
and
AP · showed out."
. ·
.
greatagaln. It went through a perlodpi'evious to
Pralsemtnt 01 the est a.te oft he
was n
,
ownerahlp whlch tried severa1 )'e!II'S
atorementioned,deceosod,lote d Jim·
f' lt' l "Thts
bad time
lay1t that
u
redtheJI'esent
1
1
~0: ~ c~':/~y ·~~~~~~~:~;n !~ ~ c:~:ede ~uth t /wind up in UaUg.
r nOnO
ago to reduce It to a cmventlon..type .hotel for
:ff.\:~!:.%~~'thi~~~ur~':.n :~~
which It lacks both facilities and ambiance. It
tJtto doy 01 october. 1971 , ot
•
r Mrs. Norma Custer en· has no huge ballroom and too few rooms BDd
10 ~o,:'y"'~~~~"o'!itrlng
The Dlly S1111itel
tertained Friday with a party suites to justify a large gathering of playful
10 me ,
exception• ttoereto must life ·
DEVOTED TO THE
J honoring her daughter Bar· fellows with identlflcatioo· lags In their lapels.
10
1
~:"J;~ :!r',!~v~:,~y~:,rlor ; · .ME l:l.~~~~~ ~~ EA · . bara, on her ~ birthday.
The St. Regis baa the best headwaiter In New
Given undllf my hand ond
CHESTERL. TANNIHILL . .• Ice cream and cake .were Yorlt,oneMr.Burt,anurbane,polishedcllnq
!:"~~~::.~·Wilhls 241h day
ROBE~~·~oEEdFLICH,
j served and prizes were room diplomat whose lmg run in the splencld
F· H ·O'Brien .
. City Editor
· awarded to the game winners King Cole Rocm (27 years) seeJIIS to lack even
.Judge and ox'ofllclo Clerk
Pubhs'-td do flo eJcep; I
· .
of said court Saturdoy by The .Ohio Vollty . Gifts were presented to Bar· one smudge on his sophisticated escutcheon. For
By Ann B. watson , ~~~~~shslt~.g . P~":.~:;.Y· O~i~~ bara.
us, Mr. Burt Is the c•tent auggesUon of St.
Deputy Clerk 45769. Busin~ss Dllice Phone
Guests were Jody Custer, Regia eiCellence.
2156• Editorial Phone '92. Ricky and Mike Chancey,
19) 27, (10! 4, 21
Ita other rooms, 1be bandsoinely 1111·
Second cion postage paid at , Charles Davia, Craig Brown, flamboyant lobby, the abaolutely beautiful roof,
'i1le Abauae
~r 10 0 d ve rill Ing Becky and Billy Harris, Kelly Ute Intimately stylish Ma~tle downstairs,
IIJUnlted~lnternational ; (;".':f."::."r~a:~~~ t 2 B:!~1n:J~~ 1 andc tewesl~y ~thM Me~ ~pennanentalgNofanadmlrablele¥elofflne
Tada:yla Monday, Sept, fl, ' st.,NowYorkCity.NewYork.
us r, r. an
rs. oe mnkeeplng. Another Insightful sign of
1111 fth day oflm with 95 to . ·11 Sub~crlption rates : Dt· Custer, Mr. and Mrs. R4y supremacy is lhefactthalllapublic rooms, most
foiiGw.
· j;:~;bto b~ c~~~;~r ':.~:~~ Roush, Mrs. Marie Amberger, especially the King Cole Room, welcome more
The moon 11 In Ita first 1::.~:Orn:ru~v:~:~Ve~·r~~~ EsMrtherdJ';:ph,w::P :ep~, New Yorkers than out-of-town guests. And New
qauter.
·
. month Sl.75. By moil In Ohio
· an
rs.
m
rr ' Yorkers are finicky, even anobblsy, about
The llllll'lllnll stars are · •nd w. v• .• One year su.oo. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith, rilbb'"" tailored elbows with hinterlanders
Sox months 17.25 , Three Jerry Custer Myrna Searles
u"'
'
II WI) llld Saturn.
months suo .. Subscription
•
• We've been both, 1111d we are aenslllve to the
'J'IIe evening liars are Venus I r~ct~n~~ludts Sonday Tom••·. ~ le~r. and Mrs. Theodore ambivalence.
.
.
.
llld Jupiter.
•.
--. • us ·
The Plaza Hotel in New Yorlt also Is a IIDe

I

._,._

-·&gt;

,.-----------------------------------------~

Of.way 252' right of station 110
plus 71; th .. ce south .u dog. 30' , . . - - - - - - - - - . . ,
30" west' 22.71' to a point on
rlght.ot.way 251.75' right of 170
NORTH
Z1
Plu•
56.2;
lhonct
aout~ 61 deg .
•
KQJ10
26' It" wost so.tA' to point on
•
rlght.ot.war. 230' rlghf.of.
+1103
A 97 2
ototlon
170
P us OO; thence south
3ht-. II' 53 .. 75 .13• 10 point 01
• J4
••
b•glnnlng,
containing 1.57 Wi:ST
EAST
ac~~;,::'.o:e ':.,~~!~, to all • 7543 2
• A 98
65
'QB 2
nMmenl1 and rlghl1.ot.way 01 '
record . 227,
Deed
+ Q1086 4
+ JA83 76 3
Volume
Pogo Rtlerence:
577, Meigs
County
Deed relect
Records.
SOtrl11 (D)
Therlghtto
any, and or
all bids Is reserved by the
• 6
Village of Middleport. ,
• A K 9 74
Gene
Grote.
+K5Q 1092
Clork,Treosurer
•K
191 20 27
4 11 11 ' 51
' ' (IO) ' '
North-South vulnerable
West
North Eut South
NOTICE OF
1'
APPOINTMENT
Pass 1•
Pass 2 •
C••• No. 2155t
Eslllt of RUTH I. CUNDIFF.
p..., 3 •
Pass 4
•
Deceased.
Pass Pass
Pass
Notice Is hereby given that
Opening lead- · 5
Helen L. Teeford, of Syracuse,

•5

Mr. BDdMrs. Walter Roush of
Mldd,l
t
tertalned
epor
en
Salunla7 evening at their home
with a buffet dinner preceding
tbe rebearsal for the wedding of
their
n - to•••-"'-·-'otte
ICII,nc.a, """""'""'
Clevenger.
The .-.Yinl'l will be
ent
... - . . .
an ev
of Friday, at 7:30 p.m. at lbe
N Ha
U 'led Methodist
ew
ven ru

aiAMPIONTRAVELERS -Dlaaa K:OCIIII,eenter,anl
her sister, MOGica, lraveled 410 milea from their heme In
N Y to take part in the c:--"Um of a
baton twtr~ contest Saturday at lhe F.a.t D Hlgb Sebool.
Mrs JMv Vlnllll director of the coot-t
Is lhe
· -.. · - ·
~-. pueu
"lraveling trophy" to the sistera. The Chester PTA spill·
sored ~.:.t..rdav'
t
.,._,...... s even ·

Oteet•-··
_w..,.., ' ''

H~bySa/on

!.

hotel, iX senUy s'-'"'- f« a New •-·.:.e. We
·-~..
..._
trust it wm't lose its old one as It cbaDges so
to lhe
many details fr om lhe "-'-.,.• ....., n.IWWII
staff's unlf(l'Q)S. There's the appointment of
TV's Betsy PaJme r as" Piaza Den Mother," and
Betsy's a charmer, but f« lhe Plaza - Den
Mother?
The Plaza has called in cwturiel' O!llald
Brooks to spiff up lhe ··-"
wwcrms rl. everyone
except lhe manager, Ar11wr Dooley. All its
rooms upstairs are beq redme at a 200 a year
pace. The GrBDd Ballrocm's beeu reelu'ed to Its
criglnalelegance, wbldlllcanslderable. An "Ice
Cream Center" rl. the lobby baa beeu Injected
near the 58th St. entrance (good -don'tfool with
the 5th Ave. and Cenlral Park South iogr'eiiii!S).
The fine old Oat Room Ia being left 81 Is;
perfect. The stately, blg...nndowed Edwardian
Rocm,amarvelwsdinlngrocmwblcbforiOIIIe
reasm few people Jl'efened.• they do the Oak
and Penlan Rooms, baa strained to bect1ne an
obviously Swqlng Spot. If It's a big success,
wmderful; if we dcn't like its new decor, what
lhe hey, we I'IIJ'ely dlued there anyhow.
Now It's to be called "The Greeu Talip." It's
tobefllledwilll-tgobsof ... tellti·wbichwill
... "'
'
matdtthemagniflcentviewacrGIIICeulralPark
South inlo green, If Uttered, Ceolrll Park. To
carry out its "ecological balance," tbe Great
Tulip will feaiUre ".rganic saladl IJid organic
lread" on Ita memJB. It will WJe waltr res for
lhefirstall-maJe.belptime. Tbey'llbegnnjeclup
in brandolleW OCIIIald Broob coatumea, juat one
of lhe 56 new~otbes classlficatlcm !QiltMig lhe
Pia za '8 1•""
emp1oyes. "'-door
,....,
.,. • .,..men
ani
elevator jocli:ies are being redone.
Pia
za 9, tbe downstairs cabaret, will aet
'!Jlew" entertainmellt- NOIItalgia. That's new
at Ibis ''No, No, Nanette" point? · The Palm
Cour~ a fabulous place fCI' tea or cocli:talla and
nwled music IJid og~ r1. visiting VIPa, local
and'-led baabee redecor led
.
.......- ,
n
a ; as have tbe·main !VULOQ,
........•
The Pierre Hotel, acr0118 Grand Army Plaza
and acr01111 5th Ave., also baa .had 1 top.IG.
baaement redecoration at a cost ol miDlma by
new OWIJelll Serge Semenenko BDd Robert
Oowllns. Itc:onlalnsSCIDe celebratedperllllllmt
tenants (COOJpwter Richard Rod&amp;en just moved
ln)aswellulmowledgeahlelrstnslenls.IIIIIew
dowmlalrs cabaret, La FOret, Is i Iw..,_ly
lrlght spot with au a:cepUoully IIDe Jlllltre d
.,._. -"'rl.ffrom _._..
'
me..,...o, ..a ,_...ld tralDJJg IChoal,
lhe cllic Colony Restaurant.
The Drake Hotel og Parli: Ave. alao merlll
iDcluaiOD In our brief lilt ,rl. fine M••U.U
hotela. Ill F.gpUan-mood Sbepbeard's Ia lhe
miJ ditafelt: Ill tow&amp; thai featuna Pllllic Ill

Mrs. Mary Martin, chapeau

tal""·~t--~F-'departemen ""'6" auu _,,,

and Mrs. MyrUe Walter,
departmental Ia secrelalre·
canlere, were bon«ed at a
dinner of lbe Scioto County
Salon 116, Friday night it the
. .
J- n_._
Sha11!1ee Restaurant w r.,...,.
mouth.
·
Installed the
Mrs. Martin
salon's new officers and
the
for the
ouUined
prog~am
year. Mrs. Walter also
brought greetings and urg·
eel the Salon to get
dues
1 Both of the
· •uo ear y.
M
. a;as "-·-ty women were
• .., """''
presented
with ccnages and
gifts
. They were guests at the
hoiue· of Mrs. Hazel EDiott, a
deparlemental chapeau passe,
now serving as national pouvior
member.

d

Tbe rung of a lad er was
t to rest
never mean
upon,
but on·ly to bold a man's
foot long enough to enable
him to put the other somewhat higher.- Tbomas Hux·
ley, English biologist.

r---------------------. ______1
I
I
l ·
.
I
II
lI
By Helen Bottel

HeIen
' HeIp. Us

PREJUDICE lOSES OUT

ALMOST TWO TO ONE
Dear Helen:

•

You made an Ignorant predictim -'-""''" yog aald tbat the ,
jorlly
of
....._..
ho
-----'
the
Jetter from ''Nonrna
,....,... w .,,.,..,.,.
Prejudiced" woold agree with her that a boy ani a girl of dlf.

ferent races can be friends.
·
laayhurrahf«the "Archie Bunli:ers."It's toodani bad there '!
can't be mCI'e oflhem. Then maybe we'd see an end to tbe pintos
and bleeding bearta who IIPOUt equality. I'm fm' God, Ill)' Country
and the American Way Of Life, and if God bad meant blacb,
reds , Yell0118 to mq1e willllll, He'd· have Dillie them all me
color-while! YwCOIIllllleswould'lll'edtlliaCOUDiry, accepting
balf-breedmaogrels, lheresullaofthese ''friendflhlps." -D.
P.S. Y011wm'tprlnt UU,juatas you won't tell the truth about
bow many similar letters you got. You newSjMilper peclp)e are aD
alike -slanting the news, or "ceiiiOI'ing" letters like mine that
leD the TRUTH!
Dear D.:
I had to cell90r the language a bit, but truly, I wouldn't MISS
printingyourletter!N«willldlgnlfyitwitban8111Wer,exceptto
say that Ill)' predicllon came true - though of COUJ'3e you won't
believe me.
·
Letters In fav~r r1. frlendshlps acnJIIII tbe Hnes outnumbered
tb111e agaimt,two to one. Keep In mind ''Non-Pre'-"--'" said
FRIENDSHIP ot -·""'·,.01-ln J~~
,n ~·-..• «even-.,. 1ow. And If you
lhll*. Blicb a !bing doesn't exist between boy and girl, you don't
know today;s generation - wboee members value mental
closenenalm011tmore than thep~sicalklnd(becaUBeit'sharder
to achieve, perha)ll!).
-- ~:
"-·
uau Hi!leu:
When will peq!ie learn that a persou's race Cl' color has
no- todowilbhispenonallly.He'sabuman be~ first.
For theflnt Ume inOIII'South Carolla towu,a black anv will
a"'
be abiclellt body presldeut. He's a wondaful, frleudly person,
Tbere waa bad-mwlblng fr&lt;m IOIJle li:lda, but !ram lhe start we
knew he was our man ani he'll be a great, hanHrortlng
president! _ AN&lt;fi'HER NOT-PRE,JUDICED
Dear Helen:
I agree entire~)' with ''Non-Prejudiced" that black while or
'
anycol«canbefriends. Iamancmlychlldanlhadagreatneed
f« a brother or sister. Well, now I have myaelf a brother. He's18,
ldnd, undentlllllng, lhe l'fl81est guy 1 lmow.
'
Wecllllliderourselveuialeriii!Cibiolherbecauaerl.ourclose
relatlmsl!lp, I speak oflll)'brotheroflentolrimds,audwben they
meet him, they're llhocked- bu.tnot f« loug -toaeeiJela blaclt
To me, col« mali:es NO difference. -PROUD OOLORBLINI:i

GIRL

Dear Helen:
I Wllll a Japcneae war bride back In lhe '4111. The - • - r1.
-•
prejlldlce lasted Cllly a shCI't wblle -1111111111)' ht.....,'a family
and friends got to know me. Now, all around me I aee Ortental·
wltl.te lllll'l'lages.' Radatance &amp;eeiiiiiiiOI'e with Orieulals.tban
willl wbilea these dlys.
.
If two peap1e are atrq In their love .tid In their r.ltb that
1bci1e ,'Wbo coaut will Ullda'atand ani aecept, they'D· ma1te it,

~~-to~~~·t~~JG~rprlmiUeutacbiln reprdlella r~ col«.

.__......._e_........,..,
veiOaal
ncnenae.IIallrakeRocmis&lt;lleoflhefewqulet,
reslralned, flrst.cla• dltdug 1'0011111 with ez.
cellent plano IIIUik: at a decibel pltdl jDat
pleMIIItly short of apologellc.
Another day we'D discuaa a few other line
.holela: lhe new Park Lane, lhe AigGnquln, f«
instahce.
Incldeulally, Utey're all etLpeMive.
own

•

Nomatlllrwhatracelheboylalllat-·deiPte'WIIIIsto
date Cl' DWI), if lie Ia a IIDe periaa, we'll,.,....... oar-derfalldllrlqe, ani be jl'OIIII. -ONE ·WORLD

Dear Belen:

:
BothiOCieUes are DOt very tolerant o1 milled couP~-. even If
they are talerat rl. each other'• eec!et!te. -.... "-"" -....
. ...
,,_
""'
1"',-v
change abOGt the Ume a l&gt;lldlblrd IDitilt wtthlhe oriole In the
next~. Aialalack,Ipnfertolllii*-IILACKISBEAtn'IPUL,
UNAOOLTERA1BD

.

the Sports
Desk

The lKimer waa me oflltne
hits by Diel&amp;, who •
W a
trio of singleuflel'lelut I 1 to
. the lineup Silturday fCI' lhe flnt
time since being lllrack lu 1111
.
.
.
head last 'lUesday by . . . . .
Gtanls numbering hcmers by pilche J II: Billlngiwu
Dietl, Willie Ma~s ~ Bobby "Wi~ :;:=at ~e ~ locD
~ among theJr 17 ~Is. Juan like the 'Spirit of 76',''said P011.
didn't have to be at hjs bes~
The Reds were leading 2 • 0
Ma~es· nut SC«ed waa the when the Giants erupted In !be
2,000th m his career, leaving fifth inning
him behind only Ty Cobb and After~· homer pulled lhe
!labe Ruth.
Reds within two nms of tbe
Pete Rose also hit a homer Gianls in the bottom of the flftb
for the Reds, ~ting his aver· inning, the Giants c.Une baclt: in
'!ge to .307 while bangmg out the sixth to score four runs off
four hits and assuring himself rookie righthander Steve Blatof a .300 plus average for the eric on two-run homers by Mays
seventh straight year.
and Bonds.
GraDel Slam 1D F1ftb
The Reds beat the Giants 1&gt;-6
Dietz'grandslamrnercante,off Saturday when Hal Mcll4e sock·
Wa~e~r~ger~c~eda ed two homers and Lee May
fifth mnmg m which the Gl8Dts and George Foster each Slamscored seven runs to rout start· 'mecl one.
er ·Gary Nolan.

Giants Unload On Reds, 12-5

ed the ball his last two days in
Cincinnati, he maY never ells.
By Chet Tannehill
card the headband be has been
since being beaned by
a pitch in Houston last Tuesday.
Dietz, still carrying ten
slitchers in his forehead and a
piece of foam rubber beneath a
'l1IE MONDAY MORNING QUARTERBACK'S NOTES:
socked three hils, one
bandage,
Friday mgbt, feeling In my bmes lhe Marauders would have a
a grand slam homer, Sunday as
goodnight at WellsiDn-whicb they dici'~Idrove to Logan to see
the Giants salvaged the windup
two leams play thought to be s~er than Meigs, the Chiefs and
of a lhree-iame series with an
the Blue Devils. Gallipolis pulled It out 23-20. My !lunch: Logan
U.S triumph.
will be had.again befCI'e the season Is elided; Gallipolis will not
The victory enabled the Giants
whitewash ·the SEOAL In 1971 as it did In 1970. A chief mystery of
to retain their orie • game lead
lhe Chiefa' game plan: wby did 201 lb. junior fullback Ken
over the second place Los An·
OJ!herlalll get cm1y ~,our caDs to carry the ball? On those four
geles Dodgers in the ftghl for
opportunities be collected 18 yarda, a 4.5 average. On the other
theNationalLeagueWestem Di·
hand, Rick KreiB, IIIII .lb. seuiCI' tailback, carried 29 times for 116
vision
title.
By United Press International
yards, an a-.ge of %.9. Oh well, things always lool&lt; different on
Americ1n League
MCIIday morning.
East
LATE FRIDAY NIGHT Coach Otarley Olancey, cuddling ·a
W. L. Pel. GB
98 57 .632 ...
•·Baltimore
cheeseburger and fries, waa c0118iderably mere content than the Detroit
~ 69 .556 10
week before wben his team had aqueaked past Belpre. His Boston
85 74 .535 15
80 79 .503 20
Marauders put together 48 minutes of a lot better football against New York
Washington
62
94 .397 36'1&gt;
Wellaton, admittedly a weali:er team than Belpre. "We executed Cleveland
50 101 .365 42
better," he said. He seemed especially pleased recalling how the
West
W. L. Pel. GB
Marauder defensive ends harassed the Rocket wblzzer Danny
9'1 60 .623 ...
x.Qakland
BALTIMORE (UPI) - The
Settles who probably spent as much time on his back as on his Kans City
85 74 .535 14 Cleveland Browns had a lot of
feel
Chicago
77 81 .487 21'12
hustle Sunday when they met
Then the thwgbt of Iron too Ibis coming Friday night! There Minnesota 73 84 .465 25
California
73 85 .462 25'h the Baltimore Colts and it made
wasn't much cheer in thal
Milwaukee 68 ~ .430 30'12 up for a lot of sins.
•·Clinched Division Ttiel
"~ (Hal Spears, strong candidate for all.4Jtate quar.
BatUing it out at soggy MemoSunday's ResuHs
terback recognitim) puis tremendous pressure on your ends," he New York
rial Stadium here, the Browns
3 Detroit 2
said. "The classic modern option, run, pltchout, or pass is Minnesota 6 Kansas City 2 (lsi) managed a 14--13 victory over
executed well bx Mr. Spears, who has the talents to make all three Kansas City 5 Minn 3 (2 nd)
the Colts in a game marked by
Baltimore 5 Cleveland 0
acllm plays work, namely, speed, a good arm, strength, and Oakland 7 Milwaukee 0
interceptions.
Chicago 6 Calif 5 ( 10 inns)
experience.
.
Cleveland tinebacker Bill An·
"We'll have to do something," Chancey said. "We can't just Boston 8 Washington 1
drews, who received the game
stand therealidlelhim bring II to us."
hall, commented in a post-game
Monday's Games
I
No
games
scheduled)
Marauder lockerrocm notes: Mark Werry, the 244 lb. junior
interview, "The whole defense
Tuesday's GamH
and
offense made up for mls·
offensive tackle who suffered a shoulder separation against Kans City
at Oakland (night)
takes with husUe."
Beip'e, will be outfor the season. Surgery may be necessary ; a California at Minnesofa
Milwaukee
at
Chicago
(night)
The scrambling Cleveland de·
decision that will be delayed pending the shoulder's progress the
Detroit at Cleveland (suspended fensi'le unit and a poor Balli·
next few weeks. M011l everybody now agrees, including Mark,
game and regular gamemore passing game held the
that the Injury did not come upon Mark's stumbling and falling night
once.feared Colt aerial attack to
coming wt r1. lbe lockerroom at the end of the halftime rest at Basion at Baltimore (night)
New
York
at
Wash
lnlghl)
only three completions. Five at.
Belpre. Films show th&amp;t Werry delivered a befty charge with that
templs resulted in Brown inter·
shoulder m the first play rl. the second hall, then took a blow on it
Today's Probable Pitchers
ceptions.
(No games scheduled)
mthe next play, a sweep. Cbuck Faulk, an alternate hack who
However, leading H • 13 with
baa beeu getting a lot of action with Tiny W'llliams playing partTuesday's Games
less than two minutes left to
lime on offell!le, waa down but not out at Wellstoo. Ills expected Kansas City at Oakland
play in the game, Cleveland deCalifornia at Minnesota
he will be ready f.r Ironton. And Tiny Is ready.
Milwaukee at Chicago
Detrolt at Cleveland
AFTER SUNDAY'S ROUND by the play for pay fellows, my Boston at Baltimore
iiickel bet with (Rich) Jones is a wee bit IIIOI'e secure on two New York at Washington
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
next thing yciu know they'D be
saying Dick Dietz has gone hippie.
Because, the way the Son
FranicscoGiantscatcherpound·

wearing

· The loss put the Reds a game
behilid the third place Braves,
who they will play in the final
two games of the season begiJl..
ning Tuesday in Atlanta.
"I would sure like IAl see· the
Dodgers and Giants play their
final three games against each
other," said the Reds' Tony
Perez Sunday after the paiil
turnout of 45,072, on hand for
the club's final home game, fil.
ed out of Riverfront Stadium.
Better Than Series
"That," exclaimed the Reds
third baseman whose lhree-nm
homer in the fifth inning pulled
the Reds within two runs of the
Giants, "would be better than

a World Series."
However, it won't he the Dod·
~ers Bl(alnst the Gainls. From
here, the Giants move on to
San Diego, where they wind up
the season wilh three games
against the Padres while the
Dodgers are playing in Houston.
"I will start Gaylord Perry,"
said Giant Manager Charlie
Fox. "Then, I'll foUow with Don
Carrithers and wind up with
(Juan) Marichal.
"That is," added Charlie, "if
I need Marichal."
It was Marichal who beat the
Reds Sunday, notching his I 7th
victory against lllosses.
II was not one of Marichal's
better efforls, but with the

Apil'rr n1D
INSURE'·- .• . .•

Browns Trip Colts

grounds: the Browns seem to be a new team Wider Mr. Skorich,
and lhe Bengals were CCIISistenlly outplayed at Pittsburgh.
Clevelalid takes an early lead In the Ohio jX'O football cham·
plonshlp race. What Paul Brown does now will be interesting to
follow.

Dodgers Still
Trail By One
By STEVE WILSTEIN
UPI Sports Writer
The San Francisco Giants will
win tbe pennant in the National
League West if...
The Los Angeles Dodgers will
win the pennant In tbe National
League West If...
H the bandages hold back the
pain, If Willie Mays becomes
young again, If Bobby Bonds
and Dick Dietz keep rapping
the ball, and If Juan Marlchal
pitches all the remaining
games, the Giants will win.
If the season somehow
extends beyond the three
games each of the teams is
scheduled to play, if In some
way the momentum that
carried the Dodgers from nine
games behind to only a game
behind can be tapped once
again before Thursday's fmal
bells, the Dodgers will win.
The pennant that no one
wanted suddenly has become
very valuable again and the
Giants l!howed their eagerness
by trouncing the Cincinnati
Reds, 12-S, Sunday as Mays,
Bonds and Dietz all cracked
homers in support of Juan
Marichal, who now owns three
of the Giants' six victories in
the last 21 games, and kept San
Franclaco one game ahead of
Los Angeles.
Dietz, who Is catching with 10
stitches in his head, a sponge
cushion and a bandage to hold
II all together. whacked a
grand-4llam home run that
highlighted a seve1H'1111 fifth
Inning .outburst and Mays and
Bonds each belled a two-run
homer in a four.,run sixth to
help Marichal to his 17th

vic)orY.

Saturday's Results
Detroit 10 New York 1
Baltimore 6 Cleveland 4 I 11
Inns)
Boston 6 Washington 3
Milwauk~ 8 Qakland 6
MM11nnesolta 7 KanKsas Cityc2·tyllst)
7
ansas 1 0
12 n~Jeso a
Callforni~ .3 Chicago 2.
National League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
•·PiHs
96 64 .600

~~iZ~~~s

:~ ~~ ::~ ~~~:

New York
82 77 .516 13'h
Montr.,.l
69 89 .437 26
Philadelphia :/nr ·413 30
Charlie Fox, San Francisco's
w. L. Pet. GB
manager, says Dietz "looks like San Francisco 88 11 .553
lhe spirit of '76" and the 3(). ~r/'a:t~geles :~ ~ :~ 8'1
2
year-()ld signal&lt;aller, whose Cincinnati
79 81 .AU 9'12
three hits Sunday matched the
Houston
78 81
10
Diego
60
98 .491
.380 28
number he got Saturday, San
Division Tille
answers, "I may never take the x·Cllnched
Sunday's Results
bandage off."
New York 3 Piltsbur~h 1
Mays' run scored was the
1
~~~~~~:~~~~~:~:r~
2,000th of his career, leaving Los Angeles 5 Allanla 2
him behind only Ty Cobb and San Francisco 12 Cincinnati 5
(only games scheduled)
Babe Ruth. Bonds' homer was
Today•s Probable Pitchers
his 33rd of the season, a career
St. Louis (Guzman 0.0) at
high.
New York (Sadeckl 7.7), night.
Richie Allen and Duke Sims
IOnlygamescheduled)
gave Claude Osteen an early 5-0
TuHday's Games
lead, but be needed relief help St. Lou Is at New York
from 43-year old Hoyt Wilhelm Chicago at Montreal (night)
Pitts at Phlla (night)
and Jim Brewer to stave off Clnclnnallat
Atlanta (night)
Atlanta's late·innlng comeback Houston at Los Angeles (night)
attempt, and keep pace in the San Francisco at San Diego
race.
(night)
Saturday's RHults
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
New York 2 Pittsburgh 1 115
FOOTBALL SCORES
Inns)
Br United Press lnlern•tionol Chicago
4 Philadelphia 2
Saturday
St.
Louis
Montreal 6
Newark Catholic 29 Lancaster Clncinnall86 San
Francisco 5
Fisher 0
Los
Angeles
5
Atlanta
4
Vermilion 26 Brookside 0
Houston
5
San
Diego
1
Youngstown
Wilson
28
Youngstown East 26
Poland 33 Columbiana 0
SVAC STANDINGS
Canfield 56 Lakeview 8
ALL GAMES
Akron ·Buchtel16 Akron Eifel 0
W L T POP
Akron Kenmore 27 Akron East TEAM
Eastern
3
0 0 110 6
24
Kyger
Creek
2
0
1 65 18
Fairport Harbor 6 Richmond
North
Gallla
1
2
0
44 40
Heights 6 llle
0 3 0 20 60
Highland 42 Cleveland Lutheran Soulhern
Southwestern 0 3 0 8 94
West o
Cleveland Central Catholic 14 Hannan Trace 0 3 0 0 102
SVAC ONLY
Cleveland Rhodes 14 (!)e)
W L T POP
Bedtcrd o43 University School 18 TEAM
Eastern
2
0 0 69 0
Bedtcrd Chanel 24 Painesville
Kyger Creek
2 0 0 59 12
Harvey 9
1 1 0 38 26
Hawken School 30 Western North Gallia
Southern
0
1 0 12 a
Reserve Academy 6
Southwestern
0
1 0 0 38
Perry 39 Southington 0
Cleveland Sf. lgnallus 6 Hannan Trace 0 2 0 0 88
5 5 o 178 171
Cleveland Cathedral ·Latin 6 Totals
FRIDAY'S
GAMES
(tiel
Kyger
Creek
at
North Gallia
Cleveland Holy Name 33
Wahama at Southern
Madison 6
Glouster at Eastern
Canton McKinley 37 Cincinnati
Symmes
Valley at South.
Taft 0
Canton Lehman 7 St. Thomas wes1ern
Green Local at Hannan Trace
Aquinas 6

fensive hack Clarence Scott in·
tercepled a fourth-down J5..yard
desperation toss by Johnny
Unitas on the Brown 15 and ran
it back to his own six before he
was tackled, instead of simply
hatting the ball into the mud.
But Don Cockcroft, who had
previouslymlssedfieldgoaltires
of 44 and 35 yards and had a
punt blocked and relllmed for
the only Colt touchdown, made
partial amends by booming a
54-yard punt to get,the Browns
out of the jam with only 30 sec.
onds remaining.
But again with only five sec..
onds left Walt Swnner picked
off a Unilas bomb and threw a
lateral past Scott which was recovered by the Colts' R4y Perk·
ins on the Cleveland 27. Fortu·
nately for the Browns, the Colts
had run out of timeouts and the
clock expired before Baltimore
could attempt a field goal.

The victory continued the
Browns' jinx over the Colts in
Baltimore as Cleveland has won
all four contests played here.
The Colis also suffered the
possible loss of middle lineback·
er Mike Curtis and their lead·
ing rusher, Norm Bulaich.
Curtis fractured his thumb in
the ftrst quarter and may be out
of aclionfor three weeks, while
Bulaichsuffered a sprained knee
at the offset of the second half
after gaining 63 yards in II car·
ries in the ftrst baH. The in·
jury will probably sideline Bu·
laich for at least a week.
Baltimore took the lead in the
second quarter as Bulaich lug·
ged the ball to the Cleveland 20
to set up a 27-yard field goal by
Jim O'Brien.
Ken Brown fumbled the ensu·
ing kickoff on his own 4.2
but the Colts Tom Matte reciprocated as the Browns regained

Steelers Triumph

·
PITI'SBURGH (UPI) - Jon
Staggersrelllms punts for a liv·
ing but, to bear him tell it the
least Important man on a punt
return play is the guy with the
ball.
"Everything depends on the
coverage and the blocks." he
says. "It's all set up for you."
Staggers,whosefive.yardaverageasarookielastyearhardly
was breathtaking, returned
a punt &amp;7 , yards for
a third quarter touch·
down Sunday to spark the
Pittsburgh Steelers to a 21-10
upset of the Cincinnati Bengals.
"Everything was sort of a ·
blur," said Staggers who ad· •
milled he never saw Chuck
Allen and Rocky Bleier throw :
the key blocks that spring him.
Coach Paul Brown of the Ben·
gals said Dave Lewis his pun·
.
'
ter, was kicking the ball too low
and making it too easy to return. But Chuck Noll, the Steel·
ers' coach, said his team W8ll
due to "break" a return for a
touchdown.
"That's the thing aboul ·punl
returns and kickoff returns"
NoU said. "You have to keep
husUing on them. You never
know when you'll make the big

play. Today we made one."
Staggers' touchdown run put
Pittsburgh ahead 14--10 and provided most of the excitement in
what otherwise was a sluggish
defensivve game. Terry Brad·
shaw passed for the other two
Pittsburgh touchdowns and
Lemar Parrish, a Cincinnati
cornerback,
scored
the
Bengals' touchdown on a 14-yard run after stealing the ball
from Preston Pearson.
TheSteelers, whogaveuponly
45 yards on the ground to the
ChlcagoBearsinalosslastweek
limited Cincinnati to 'II.

''Our defense hasn 't given up
anything in two games," Noll
beamed.
"It's nothing special," said
tackle Joe Green. "We're just
playlngourdefense.l'mbeginn.
ing more and more ID see wllll
Noll's been talking about. Ever
since be's been hete, he's been
stressing pattern defense, play·
ing your sports. I think it's ()e..
ginning to pay off."
Although the setback ended
an eight game, regular.,season
winning streak for the Bengals,
Brown took it in stride.

possession on their 22.
· Baltimore'sEddieHinton, who
dropped three paS'I"S during the
game, helped set up the first
Brown score. A Morrall pass
bounced from his grasp and
Cleveland tinehacker Dale Unci·
sey intercepted, returning the
hall to the Colt six.
Leroy KeUy scored from three
yards out on a left end sweep
to give the Browns a 7-3 baH·
lime lead. ,
O'Brien closed the gap to 7~
in the third quarter with a :JZ.
yard field goal, but the Browns
increased their margin to I~
when KeUy plunged over from
the Colt one to cap a l!l.yard
drive in a steady rain.
The Colts scored their only
touchdown late in the fourth
quarter when Ted Hendricks
blocked Cockroft's punt on the
Brown 25 and rookie Don Nottingham raced 20 yards for a
touchdown after scooping up the
loose ball.

Your

.,.,

lnSIII'Iftca

'Dele Warner

Whether you want
auto.
life
homeowners
In
~urance, we will design
a policy .to fit your
individual
requirements ...
Discuss your specl.flc
needs with us.

Dans Wimer Ins.
Pflont ff2·2"'
114 Celwl 51,
Pomeroy .

You supply

the need...
we'll supply the

992.2171
125 E. MAIN

POMEROY,O.

r----~--------------------------:-----------

This Week's
College Games
By United Press ln...,..tional
Saturdlly

California at Ohio State
Western Michigan at Bowling
Green
lowa Stale at Kent Stale
Marhsall at Miami
Ohio University at Toledo
Quantico Marines at Xavier
Youngstown Slale at Tampa
Ball State at Akron lnl
Ashland at Central State
Baldwin-Wallace at Musklngum
Capital at Denison
Heidelberg at Hiram
Kenyon at MarleHa
Wooster at Mount Union
Ohio Wesleyan at Clarion ( Pa .)
Wittenberg at Otterbein In)
Thiel at Case
Cincinnati at Texas A &amp; M (nl
Dayton at l.aUisville (n)
Defiance at Findlay (n)
Bethany at John Carroll
Carnegle·Mellon at Oberlin
Taylor af Ohio Northern (n)
Bluffton at Wilmington (n)
n - Indicates night game

Chicago Stuns Vikings, 20-17
BJ vrro STEUINO
UPI Sports Writer
The Minnesota Vikings' defense was too good for Its own
good Sunday.
"Purple People Eaters" devoured another quarterback
when they knocked Jack
eancannonn of the Chicago
Bears out of the game while
jl'Otecting a 17-ll lead in the
final period.
But Kent Nix replaced the
shaken up Concannon, who
wasn't seriously injured, BDd
tossed two touchdown passes to
give lhe Bears a stunning :1&amp;-17
lriwn(•h over the Vikings.

\
~-- ·

•

The Vtlrlngs, who've posted
12--2 records the past two
seasons, seemed ready to pick
up right where they left off last
vear when they rallied to
beat Detroit last Monday
night. But Nix's TO passes of
36 and 42 yards to Dick Gordon
-the second coming with 1:42
remaining -highlighted a 17·
point final period splurge that
carried the Bears to the
victory.
. It was the secoJKI straight
week that Nix, who threw. only
one pass all last season for the
Bears, has come off the bench
to bring p!Icago from behind to

the victory. His eight.yard m
pass with 44 seconds left beat
Pittsburgh last week.
· There were only three other
mild upsets Sunday except for
the Chicago shocker ~ vivid
contrast to last week's round of
upsets. Pittsburgh surprised
Cincinnati, 21·10, Cleveland
nipped Baltimore, 14--13, and
AUanta tied Los Angeles, 26-20,
in the only reversals of form.
The oddmakers were right in
the other games as Detroit
routed New Englalid :J4..7, Son
Francisco blasted New Orleans,
38-20, Oakland routed San
Diego, 34.0, Kansas City edged

Houstoo, :1&amp;-16, Washington
blasted New York, 30-3, Dallas
routed Philadelphia 42--7, Green
Bay ripped Denver, :J4..13, and
Miami downed Buffalo, 29-14.
· Jim Plunkett and Archie
Manning, the stars of the fii'St
weekend of acllon, both suf.
fered their flnt pro defeats
although Plunkett managed one
TO pan and Manning had a
pair. Manning played only four
minutes in the first baH
because. of an eye injury.
The weekelid of action · will
wind up Monday nl$t when St.
Lo!ils l1011ta the New Ycll'k Jeta
in the TV game.

Fastening solely belts saves necks,
Not to mention lives.
We estimate that 8.000 to 10,000 lives could be
saved every year it everyone usedsalety belts.
1\s new car dealers, il's not only lrustrating tor us
to see people ignore their safety bells-it"s heart·
breaking when we think of the senous injuries that
could be prevented.
And the lives that could be saved.
Buckling your salety belts should be the first thing
OM in

t Mft.i

,;t;;nled

by

you. do. Every time you gel in your car. tllaltaiO!IIY a
second. And it's a I'IUii1 that becomes
second ...cure. So pl1111 gel tile l8f1lly
belt habit.
For the ride ol your life.

--.............._
tocJiot....._PtKtic:a.Adchlltoi• ;a litre
Rtt&amp;tiota s.Mcl, 2000 "11: • S...... N.W_ ...... 5

•C--•
a.
D.C. -

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t • 'ioual AutDmoble DEllers •
Ol'oc · ..... , _ , _

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ec

..

N.A,D.A., 11le Daily Son- awd lilt Tri-C:.Unlt Atl II oltlll ...... '

~

1

�..
._-...........
Lailllt
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•
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. , . _ . , , 0 ., .._._.,.. ••,,a,.&amp;.
LIIIAL NOTIC:I
LEGAL NOTICE
S...t.d 'bleb will be received
ORDINANCE NO. &lt;10
-_, the Village Of Middlepprt*
Declar.l ng that It Is necessary
Ohio. 237 Race StrHt vntll 4i 1
th
t t rre t
· P .M. (\ ·tober 27, 1971 tor the expenses
or
e pay
cu
"ot
of ·men
the Vi llage

°

IAII

of

the

foUowlng

Estate
:
Tht followlno Real

Rtll

Estlte.
t .i tvlte In 65·-acre Lot 157,
5ectlon 2t. Town 1, Range 13,
MtiVS County, Ohio, bouridtd IS

Pomeroy , Ohio, and declaring
the. amount of taKes that m.ay be
levied at the maximum rate
authorized by taw wi thout ~
vote of electon to be In ' suHicienl aOd declaring the

lotiOWI:
ntCHSity of. levy ln. excess of
Beginning 11 lht norlhwest such rate.
cornorOfhidStcllon29;ttoence
BE IT RESOLVED by the
•tong ttot north line .of utd Council of the Village ot
...c:tlon to the northnst corner Pomeroy, state of Ohio. all
Of Kerrs 6-acre lot; thence along members thereto concurring:
hid Korrs eost line 245 feet ;
soc, 1: That 11 Is necessary 10
thence north 85\6. deg. east 389 have acfdltlonal mon ies for the
fHt; thtnce south 61\1\ d.eg. ea:st · payment of current expenses of

279tMI.to a Locust Tr"'' ttoence
south 7_71f&gt; dog. "'' 143 Itt! to
Powells west line; thence along
hid Powell's west line Otlf&gt;
feet to to uld Powell's norfhwHI corner; thence north 21f&gt;
deg. eest3221Htto.tho.center. of
,
I road; ttoence along tho center
of .said rQa~ in a northwest
direction to the east side of ltot
Thomas Fork road near Miles
M-s lot; thence along ttot east
side Of the said Thomas Fork
road In I southwHt direction to
thoplocoofbeglnnlng,saveand
except '"' acres sold to Miles
Moors by V. B. Horton ; also a
rlght-of.way granted to the Ohio
• Central Railroad, the land ·••
convoyed being 32 9·100 acres.
more or less.
.
Also the lollowlng real estate
~
situate In Meigs .County, Ohio,
.: and Is the 65 acre part of 100
! acre lot 157. bounded and
docr11btedt 1os 11o flows: The one
~
acre o Y ng n the west end of
hid part of sold IOO.acr.e lot;
• Beginning ot a stoke at a run on
ttoe out side of the· rood, south
..
of the bridge over Thomas
• For1k.290
· the nce oohuth 59 degrees
, us . 1eet; 1 once south 49
• d19rees west 150 feet; thence
north 59 degrees Wtll 290 teet to
•no roa d ; t•nence north 49
, 'degrMo oost along said rood 150
, ltet to1 1the P11oce of beg1Inning ,
• ' con 1an
ng
acre. A so the
; lollowlng lot od(olnlng said 1·
, ocrt lot Situate In Soc. 30, In the
• 65·acre P&lt;trlottoo acrelo1157 in
, Slid Count~ ond State: Begin .
: ~~r~1 ,'.~~r."f~r/t':."e~e 0~~~l~
: JJ'h degrees east dO teetthence
south 53 degrees east u teet;
ttoence south 70 degrees east 246
; IHt; thence south 49'h deg.
• WKt 108 f.H t to the ••st cor~er
: Of hid J.ocre lot; thence ~ort~
59 dog. wnt IOIIHI to ttoo east
cornerofsald 1-acrelot; thence
north 59 dog . west 290 lettto the
, ploce ot beginning, containing
• , If&gt; aero: Save and txcept the
, rlght·of.woy granted by, sold
• Moors · to ttoo Ohio Control
Rollroed. being the some reel
estoto conveyed by v. 8. Horton
l ond D•bnoy heirs to hid Miles
Moors
recorded
In Vol.
Peges and
349, 350
and 352.
Also 39,
In
Vol. 56, Pogn 102, 103, end IO.t.
Also Vol.County
18, Pages
and 394,
Mtlgo
Deed393 Records.
Save and except 3.079 ocrn
conveyed
to theInState
Ohio
by
deed recorded
Vol. of
22A,
Page
f:l:Cord':.•;::..~g:~~Ywhl~~·i~
her.ebv mode lor definite
description of the exception.
Sa•e and
except .tandacre.
con·
••xed
to orville
Mildred

tho Village ot Pomeroy, Ohio .
Sec. 2: That the amount o.f
taKes that may be raised by the
levy of taKes at the maximum
rate authorized by SectJQn
5705 02 of the Revised Code on·
ttoe 'taxable property 'in sold
Village will be Insufficient to
provide an· adequate amount for
tht necHsary requirements of
said VIllage, and that It is
necessary lor the rurpose or
providing addition• funds tor
ttoe payment ot current ex·
penses of the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, OS provided in
section 5705.19 of the Revised
Code that taxes be levied on the
taxable property within the
Village tor a period olfive years
at a rate in ucess of such
maximum rote authorized in
secllon 5705.02 of the Rev ised
Code
sec. 3, That 11 is necessary to
levy the taxes tor the year$ 1971,
1972, 1973, 1974_and 1975 at the
rate of one·half mill on each
dollar of t~e tax valuation of the
taxable property within the
village of Pomeroy in excess of
tht rote authOrized by the Uld
section 5705.02 of the Revised
COde. That there would be
levo'•" the sum ot 5 cenls on each
~ of the taxable property
stoo.oo
with In the sold vi II age ot
Pomeroy .
Sec. 4: That the Clerk be and
she is hereby directed to certify
a copy of thos Ordinance to the
Deputy state supervisors and
Inspectors of elections ot Meigs
~:~~:~is~~~o~~nd 0~~:~~~t~tr:a~~
elections may meke the
necessoryorrongementsrorthe
submission of such question to
the electors of sold Village, as
provided t)y law. (See 5705 .17).
sec. 5: That this Ordinance Is
hereby declared to be an
emergency Ordinance
necessary lor the safety and
welfare of the said VIllage ot
Pomeroy .
sec. 6: That the Clerk be and
she Is hereby directed to cause
notice ot such election to be
published. as required by low.
Charles Legar
Passed : Sept. 8. 1971 Mayor
Alles! : Jone Walton
Clerk
191 13, 20, 27, Jt

NOTICE oF
APPOINT~~~:~ •. 20555
Estate 01 Ida c. Wolfe,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that

~~~~~;st:l ~:'. r~.rd:0 1~~ Anno M. Ryther, ot P. o. Box

Count•
Oeed
Records,
.,
reterenco to which Is hereby
made lor dtllnlt'e dHcrlptlon .ot
ttofl oxceptlon. Exct~llng and
reserving to the rantors,
Henry Millirons and Marie
Millirons, t.57 of the above
diiCrlbtd real estate, more or
los•
described
lollows : ·
Beginning
at as
0 point on Slate
Hlohwoy rl9ht.ot.woy 234.13
right of centerline station 169
pluo 17.5; ttoenct bearing south
- u deg. 29' 07" east Ull' to
t1~1d hub ; thence north 32
dog . 50' 53" ..., 301.8' to Iron
pin In centerline of t-n•hlp

130, Pomeroy, Ohio has been
01 the Estate 01 Ida c. Wolle,
deceased , late of Letart
Township, Meigs County. Ohio.
Creditors ore required to file
lh
I 1fo:J:.•
1 ;:ont~:.
llh ld I'd
·
wt'f..'i.:'
' ucoory
Dated this ISth day 01 Sep.
tember 1971.
. ?;ob~i~~~~gle~
(9) 20, 27 IIOl 4, ;',~old County
-·
duty 1ppolnted Administratrix

Nurses
T 0 L earn
Jth FM
.

w·

Me~

·

'

District Goal.Set

Property

·

.

The Eighth District American awarcls from Mrs. X lncer at
Legion Aulllan: membership lhe . fall confeteuce wbidl Is
goal baa been ~et at 2,1tlt. Mrs. !llated for next IIICilthat Albena.
Diaries Kenlnger, Pwleloy, .Mri. DcNid Miller, flnt vice
Route 2, district P'
who pi ealdetlt, nepartmeut of Ohio,
recently attended an eucuilve will lie tbe gueat 8pMlrer.
board meeting in Colmuhts,
An award will be giveD IAl the
aald membenbip, acUvities, unit having the bfgbelt per·
ani awuds for Ibis year were centage over goal by Dec. 31..On
discusoecl
.
Jan. 10, dues will Increase.
Currently the Eighth District Units are f!!mlnc""l tbat ~
· oi' wbich a&amp;eiea Coonty is a part Oepartmeut president's
lslnseeutdplice in lbeatate on
birthday is F~b. 15,
membership. When district and
units
are :asked
membership g~ are reached to send a birthday card
the district president will and . at that lime . report .an
receive $50 If tbe goal is reached membership. Unlll reaching
by N'*. 10; P5 by Dec. 31; $II goal by May 31 will receive a
by JaD. fl; $15 by Feb. 15; S10 ~oal ribiMll' at !he snmmer
by April 12, IJid S5 by May 31. diatrict cmvention. . .
The district president firSt to This year the Jane Gill
attain goal will bave the Trop~ will be p~e~~e~~ted to the
priv.lltg~ of carrying the unit haviug the largest ..
American flag at tbe 1972 numerical Increase over ·last
national convention. The one )'ear. Awards will go to lhe unit
eom1ng in second will carry the member securing ~ ~new
American Legion Auxiliary ·members, to the umt havmg the
banner.
greatest percentage over goal,
Goal units will receive andtomembenslgning1JIIOVer
100 members. Tbla year a baHcentury awat:d will be given to
members signing up between 50
and 99 members.

Transfers

.

e...,...'-

Harriet B. SterreU, Com., .
Carl A. Ebersbach, dec. io
Leona M. Ebersbach, Parcels,
Bradbury.

As part of its ·in«rvlce •

program for nurses, Holzer
.Medical Center ' with the
cooperation of ratiio station
WJEH·FM, Is parllclpating in
the Ohio Nurses' Continuing
Education program series for
1971·72. .
,.
These. prograins,. lroadcast
over the Ohio . Medical
Education Network, originate
from the Center for Continuing
Medical Education on the Ohio
Stale University campus. They
are carried by the WOSU·FM
radio station and other FM
radio stations in the listening
area of the network hospitals.
Nurses in the hospital
di
ill ha
an opau ences w
ve
portunlly through
their
·
·
moderator to join the discussion
and to ask questions by radio.
tel bon E h
ti 1. lm'g
ep e. ac par Cpa
h ita!'18 f •·~·A a quantity
osp
urn""n:uand a set of
of pnn
· led ou'"-··
.....,.,
2x2 slides. During the first baH
h
th slides
shown and
our e
are
the panelists present in·
·
formation pertinent to pallenl
care. The last baH hour Is open
for discussion between the
audience and the panelists.
With emphasis on continuing
education in all professt
. ·ons and
for all people, the radiO·
telephone network has been
successful in providing nurses
the opportunity to continue
learning while working. Since
th
...,.
presented
e pr..,..ams are
over FM radio stations, nurses
and allied health professionala
withFMreceiversmay listen to
the broadcasts at home, in
offices or In automobiles. In·
terest and enthusiasm for the
programs has been a
motivating factor in the con·
tinualion and expansion of the
network.
Nurses in the community are
invited .. to attend these
programs which will be held in
th d to • dinin'g room at
e oc rs
Holzer Medical Center. The
programtimeisfrom2to3p.m.
and the program subject and
date are as follows:
October 15, Social Change:
Tuned In Tuned Out
•
·
November 12, Decisions,
Dec' ·
Decis'
LStons, .
lODS.

WIN AT BRIDGE

~~~~=~~3if~~i~~

!.~ Tbe ~Sentinel, M!Meport-PcQeroy, 0., &amp;!pt. 27, 1971

Franklin Wayne Brinker,
Donna Jean Brinker to Denzil
Eugene Boggess, Agnes
Boggess, Lots 5..&amp;, Letart•
Antiquity.
George A Barkstall dec to
·
'
·
William Barkstall, Cert. of
Trans., Middleport-Rutland. 1
Julia Ann Jackson, Hefl!C(Iel
E. Jackson to Ohio Power Co.,
Ease., Lebanon.
Douglas J. Wetherholi, Janet
,
B. Wetherholt to Franklin Real
Estate Co 13850A-• Salem
·• ·
~-··
Hallie Cross to John ·RusseD,
Magdelene Russell, Lot No. 20,
Nye's Add., Pomeroy.
Milo B. Hutchison, Betty A.
Hutchison to Wilbur D. Young,
Ruth A. Young, Acre Sec. 7,
Rutland.
Oallas B. Cleland, Geraldine
Cle' land to Racm
' e Gas •- ~.-...•ce
"'""' ..
Co., Right of Way, Suttoo.
Alice F'ttch to Robert Fitcb,
Do
F'lch 5 A
Leban
nna 1 • • ere,
m.
Betty Gene Miller to Bobby J.
Miller, Lot, Lincoln His. Add.,
Pomeroy.
Alpha Russell, Esta Russell to
Leland E. Clonch, Reatha V.
Clonch, 65.37 Acres, Rutland.
Kenneth H. Payne, Carolyn
Payne to Milo li. Hutchison,
Betty A. Hutchison, Parcels,
Harrisonville-Scipio
·

*

B
1
rethren,
do not con·
sider that I have made it on
m"• own; but one thing I do,
forgetting what lies ehind
and straining forward to
what lies ahead. I press on
toward the goal for the prize
·
of th e uvward ca !! of God m
Christ J e s us.-Pht!ippians
3:J3• 14·
---------December
10,
The
Hospitalized Addict.
January 14, After the
Coronary Care Unit.
. . for
February II, Prescnption
Living : Cancer Chemotherapy.
March 10, A Time To Die.
April 7, Arthritis, Ankylosis
or Adaptation.
Further information
regarding these programs may
be obtained from the Holzer
Med'tea 1 center mo dera 1ors,
Mr. Delmar Gingerich or Mrs.
Barbara Betz, at First and
Cedar Street, Gallipolis, Ohio.

Wedding Party

Is Entertained

Locating the Trump Queen

•

t

•J

:':

hte

m;

Po::rr:;,

I

Cbun:h.

G ts
Mr IJid Mrs
ues were
·
'
'T'l--ne
A~ A
Elton Clevenger, parents of the
.1 fH/t:.l
T~
brl~--lect • · - Cle
...,.., ;
venger,
Mrs. Albert ROush, Eighth as a guide. The department who will serve as an usher;
District 1'unior activities j'unior president, SUe ""'""
~.n, ..,_ Patty Clark BDd Mills
""""
chairman, Mrs. Charles was present and brought Karen Porter, the Dower girls;
Kessmger,
·
district presl'den1• greeting s. ·A recep ti on hononng
·
Ml.8ll J.anet .p or ter, a
and Mrs. Harry Davis attended ber at Grand Rapids on Ocl3,1 brl(lesnund; David Keathley;
·
Legton
· A"·"'·-·
to 4 p.m., was announced·
Miss Unda. Dye.and Miss Misty
an Amencan
~,
school of instruction on junior The Eighth District junior Ward, juruor bridesmaids; ~
activities held at the Neil House conference will be held in Steele,~ S~le, and PatriCia
recently.
PomeroyonthelastSaturdayin Steele, p181USI, all of New
Mrs. 0 avts
.
d
April
serve
as
. ....
.,..,_ Department con• Haven, W. Va.
f th
h 1 hi h f
will be t •-~•--A
Gallipo
. lis
secretary or esc oo w c erence
a ,........w on
Chuck E. Hill of
·
;
opened with greetings from June 3.
Debbie Laney, a bridesmaid;
Ia
·
Ann -'-A
tw
bes
Mrs. Row nd Emmons, m·
oun..... were
o new Mr. ·and Mrs. Don Roush,
t
structor, Mrs. Donna Miller, contests, both involving man and matron of honor;
' gbooks being
' distributed .
. if
d Dann Abbott
0 epar 1men 1 Auxt.11 ary v1ce colonn
David F e an
y
'
'd
1,
d
Mrs
Ra
ond
b
the
W
te
and
So
them
M
Reed
Mrs
prest en an
·
ym
Y
es m
u
ushers; Mrs. W. ·
•
·
Sloan, president.
Insurance Co., one on Frank Powers and children,
J umor
·
' and one on ...,.
--•ety. Pam and Bob , and Mrs . Grace
programs were Americarusm
outlined by the instructor who Judging will be done In four age Prall.
urged that advisors pennit the groups tots through age four,
junior to take over their own and four"through eight.
I
programs using the handbook
I

!I

Atte-

Schoo/

voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
the soup. If he had put him·
self in East position he
TRAVEL IS THE INN TRING
uld
h
I'
ed
th
t
wo
ave reatz
a
NEWYORK-ThesecondbestJI'ofessional
East's failure to lead a third delight in our life, next to an opening night of a
club could only mean that really fine Bdwy. show, Is !ravel, wblch we
East held the q u e e n of accomplish for prrl.essional and not enlirely
~~:!'J'8 iru~~ ~ot~i~g h~d subliminally personal satisfaction. We're
East would surely have led brought to this topic today upon perusing an
that third club."
Esquire Magazine piece by Dick Joseph, veteran
Oswald: "East had made travel maven, wbo therein selected what he
things easy for South. If claims are ''The Three Greatest Hotels in the
East had led a middle sized Wcrld."
club or even his smaJJest at
Dick's picb are the Ritz in Paris; we prefer
0
;:i~~a::f:·p~:: ~ 3f!m~~d~ the Bristol in Paris. The Westgale Plaza in San
Then, South would have had Diego, calif., which we've never seen, therefore
to really guess in. trumps can give no argument; IJid Las Brisas in
and could be excused if he Acapulco, which we have seen _ maybe ex·
went wrong."
perienced Is a better word, for ills a spec(NlWSPAPll lNTlRPRISl ASSH.}
tacularly luxuriouS hotel. Not much argument
Ohio, has been duly appointed
there, either.
Administratrix of the Estate of By Oswald &amp;: James Jacoby
Dick Joseph and I share a powerful
Ruth I. Cundiff, deceased, late
of Meigs County, Ohio.
1
Jim : "When I was learnJl'eferencef«alittleresortl4milesfromRome
Creditors art required to file
The bidding has been: "
in the Alban Hills, called Helio Cabala. This is a
their claims with said fiduciary lng bridge you told me that
within tour months.
I would be trying to locate We.t North
Eut South little resort' that started out as a luncheon-mid.
Doted this 23rd day of Sep.
the
queen
of
trumps
on
thou·
Pass
•
Pass ~
swim spot only a dorr.en or m.re years ago, then
tember, 1971 .
2
F . H.O'Brlen sands of occasions. You said Pass
Pass
?
2'
1'Is owner, Tony Pran!era ' a dded a dozen small
Probate Judgo the way to get good at the
of said County problem was to charge myYou, South, hold:
villas draped down his mini-mountain, with
(9) 27, (10) 4, 11 . 31
self with an error every lime
11' 2 •2 •A K 10 81 •A Q lovely views of Rome from each villa's terrace.
I failed to locate it."
What do you do now?
Lalelyhe'saddedatiny(30rooms)hotelatophls
NOTICE oN FILING
Oswald: "I watched a fair·
A-Bid three diamonds. If personal mountain, and he has facilities for just
OF INVENTORY
ly good player go down at the band is to play in • suit abwt anylhq you'd like to do short of tennis,
noANs~atePPo~Al:~~E~Telgs ~~'!:'d. ~~~on~ cl~~~~ ~~. wn":: :t!O:.~~~~
golf IJid boating. It's not on Dick's Best Tlree
Cnnty.
Proboto
Court
wt
'
th
the
ace
and
returned
play
in
no·
trump
your
band
list, n« Is It on ours. Justa no-in•
rave.
To the Executor of the estate ;
........,..~
to such of the to flowing os ore the eight. West ruffed. He belonp on the table.
As to hotels we would put on such a list, we'd
residents
of
the
state
of
Ohio,
read
th
1
b
·
ht
h'
h
viz: _ ttoesurvlvlng spouse, the
e c U etg as a tg
TODAY'S QUESTION
have ID say lhe Ritz In Madrid is tbe finest hotel
nut of kin , the bentllclarles 'card and led back a spade. Your partner continues to we've ever stayed in,« eveu have seen. We're
under the will; end to the at. East took his ace and play•ed
torney
or
attorneys a second spade. sOuth won three no-trump. What do you told the Ritz In Lisbon Is even better than Its
representing any of the in dummy, led a low trump do now?
related Madrid Ritz.
afortmtntloned pers~s:
T
orville. E. Wot10n, Deceased, to the ace and played the
Aruwer omorrow
New York (lly has few great hotels; bigyes, but great Ia another wcrd. The, st. Regis
Rttdlvllle, Ohio R. o. '· Olive trump king. He complained
TO:.":~r.; ~:re~~~;, 1111 !d that about bad luck when West
(now owned by Sheraton) Is a fine hotel, perhaps
the
Inventory
and
AP · showed out."
. ·
.
greatagaln. It went through a perlodpi'evious to
Pralsemtnt 01 the est a.te oft he
was n
,
ownerahlp whlch tried severa1 )'e!II'S
atorementioned,deceosod,lote d Jim·
f' lt' l "Thts
bad time
lay1t that
u
redtheJI'esent
1
1
~0: ~ c~':/~y ·~~~~~~~:~;n !~ ~ c:~:ede ~uth t /wind up in UaUg.
r nOnO
ago to reduce It to a cmventlon..type .hotel for
:ff.\:~!:.%~~'thi~~~ur~':.n :~~
which It lacks both facilities and ambiance. It
tJtto doy 01 october. 1971 , ot
•
r Mrs. Norma Custer en· has no huge ballroom and too few rooms BDd
10 ~o,:'y"'~~~~"o'!itrlng
The Dlly S1111itel
tertained Friday with a party suites to justify a large gathering of playful
10 me ,
exception• ttoereto must life ·
DEVOTED TO THE
J honoring her daughter Bar· fellows with identlflcatioo· lags In their lapels.
10
1
~:"J;~ :!r',!~v~:,~y~:,rlor ; · .ME l:l.~~~~~ ~~ EA · . bara, on her ~ birthday.
The St. Regis baa the best headwaiter In New
Given undllf my hand ond
CHESTERL. TANNIHILL . .• Ice cream and cake .were Yorlt,oneMr.Burt,anurbane,polishedcllnq
!:"~~~::.~·Wilhls 241h day
ROBE~~·~oEEdFLICH,
j served and prizes were room diplomat whose lmg run in the splencld
F· H ·O'Brien .
. City Editor
· awarded to the game winners King Cole Rocm (27 years) seeJIIS to lack even
.Judge and ox'ofllclo Clerk
Pubhs'-td do flo eJcep; I
· .
of said court Saturdoy by The .Ohio Vollty . Gifts were presented to Bar· one smudge on his sophisticated escutcheon. For
By Ann B. watson , ~~~~~shslt~.g . P~":.~:;.Y· O~i~~ bara.
us, Mr. Burt Is the c•tent auggesUon of St.
Deputy Clerk 45769. Busin~ss Dllice Phone
Guests were Jody Custer, Regia eiCellence.
2156• Editorial Phone '92. Ricky and Mike Chancey,
19) 27, (10! 4, 21
Ita other rooms, 1be bandsoinely 1111·
Second cion postage paid at , Charles Davia, Craig Brown, flamboyant lobby, the abaolutely beautiful roof,
'i1le Abauae
~r 10 0 d ve rill Ing Becky and Billy Harris, Kelly Ute Intimately stylish Ma~tle downstairs,
IIJUnlted~lnternational ; (;".':f."::."r~a:~~~ t 2 B:!~1n:J~~ 1 andc tewesl~y ~thM Me~ ~pennanentalgNofanadmlrablele¥elofflne
Tada:yla Monday, Sept, fl, ' st.,NowYorkCity.NewYork.
us r, r. an
rs. oe mnkeeplng. Another Insightful sign of
1111 fth day oflm with 95 to . ·11 Sub~crlption rates : Dt· Custer, Mr. and Mrs. R4y supremacy is lhefactthalllapublic rooms, most
foiiGw.
· j;:~;bto b~ c~~~;~r ':.~:~~ Roush, Mrs. Marie Amberger, especially the King Cole Room, welcome more
The moon 11 In Ita first 1::.~:Orn:ru~v:~:~Ve~·r~~~ EsMrtherdJ';:ph,w::P :ep~, New Yorkers than out-of-town guests. And New
qauter.
·
. month Sl.75. By moil In Ohio
· an
rs.
m
rr ' Yorkers are finicky, even anobblsy, about
The llllll'lllnll stars are · •nd w. v• .• One year su.oo. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith, rilbb'"" tailored elbows with hinterlanders
Sox months 17.25 , Three Jerry Custer Myrna Searles
u"'
'
II WI) llld Saturn.
months suo .. Subscription
•
• We've been both, 1111d we are aenslllve to the
'J'IIe evening liars are Venus I r~ct~n~~ludts Sonday Tom••·. ~ le~r. and Mrs. Theodore ambivalence.
.
.
.
llld Jupiter.
•.
--. • us ·
The Plaza Hotel in New Yorlt also Is a IIDe

I

._,._

-·&gt;

,.-----------------------------------------~

Of.way 252' right of station 110
plus 71; th .. ce south .u dog. 30' , . . - - - - - - - - - . . ,
30" west' 22.71' to a point on
rlght.ot.way 251.75' right of 170
NORTH
Z1
Plu•
56.2;
lhonct
aout~ 61 deg .
•
KQJ10
26' It" wost so.tA' to point on
•
rlght.ot.war. 230' rlghf.of.
+1103
A 97 2
ototlon
170
P us OO; thence south
3ht-. II' 53 .. 75 .13• 10 point 01
• J4
••
b•glnnlng,
containing 1.57 Wi:ST
EAST
ac~~;,::'.o:e ':.,~~!~, to all • 7543 2
• A 98
65
'QB 2
nMmenl1 and rlghl1.ot.way 01 '
record . 227,
Deed
+ Q1086 4
+ JA83 76 3
Volume
Pogo Rtlerence:
577, Meigs
County
Deed relect
Records.
SOtrl11 (D)
Therlghtto
any, and or
all bids Is reserved by the
• 6
Village of Middleport. ,
• A K 9 74
Gene
Grote.
+K5Q 1092
Clork,Treosurer
•K
191 20 27
4 11 11 ' 51
' ' (IO) ' '
North-South vulnerable
West
North Eut South
NOTICE OF
1'
APPOINTMENT
Pass 1•
Pass 2 •
C••• No. 2155t
Eslllt of RUTH I. CUNDIFF.
p..., 3 •
Pass 4
•
Deceased.
Pass Pass
Pass
Notice Is hereby given that
Opening lead- · 5
Helen L. Teeford, of Syracuse,

•5

Mr. BDdMrs. Walter Roush of
Mldd,l
t
tertalned
epor
en
Salunla7 evening at their home
with a buffet dinner preceding
tbe rebearsal for the wedding of
their
n - to•••-"'-·-'otte
ICII,nc.a, """""'""'
Clevenger.
The .-.Yinl'l will be
ent
... - . . .
an ev
of Friday, at 7:30 p.m. at lbe
N Ha
U 'led Methodist
ew
ven ru

aiAMPIONTRAVELERS -Dlaaa K:OCIIII,eenter,anl
her sister, MOGica, lraveled 410 milea from their heme In
N Y to take part in the c:--"Um of a
baton twtr~ contest Saturday at lhe F.a.t D Hlgb Sebool.
Mrs JMv Vlnllll director of the coot-t
Is lhe
· -.. · - ·
~-. pueu
"lraveling trophy" to the sistera. The Chester PTA spill·
sored ~.:.t..rdav'
t
.,._,...... s even ·

Oteet•-··
_w..,.., ' ''

H~bySa/on

!.

hotel, iX senUy s'-'"'- f« a New •-·.:.e. We
·-~..
..._
trust it wm't lose its old one as It cbaDges so
to lhe
many details fr om lhe "-'-.,.• ....., n.IWWII
staff's unlf(l'Q)S. There's the appointment of
TV's Betsy PaJme r as" Piaza Den Mother," and
Betsy's a charmer, but f« lhe Plaza - Den
Mother?
The Plaza has called in cwturiel' O!llald
Brooks to spiff up lhe ··-"
wwcrms rl. everyone
except lhe manager, Ar11wr Dooley. All its
rooms upstairs are beq redme at a 200 a year
pace. The GrBDd Ballrocm's beeu reelu'ed to Its
criglnalelegance, wbldlllcanslderable. An "Ice
Cream Center" rl. the lobby baa beeu Injected
near the 58th St. entrance (good -don'tfool with
the 5th Ave. and Cenlral Park South iogr'eiiii!S).
The fine old Oat Room Ia being left 81 Is;
perfect. The stately, blg...nndowed Edwardian
Rocm,amarvelwsdinlngrocmwblcbforiOIIIe
reasm few people Jl'efened.• they do the Oak
and Penlan Rooms, baa strained to bect1ne an
obviously Swqlng Spot. If It's a big success,
wmderful; if we dcn't like its new decor, what
lhe hey, we I'IIJ'ely dlued there anyhow.
Now It's to be called "The Greeu Talip." It's
tobefllledwilll-tgobsof ... tellti·wbichwill
... "'
'
matdtthemagniflcentviewacrGIIICeulralPark
South inlo green, If Uttered, Ceolrll Park. To
carry out its "ecological balance," tbe Great
Tulip will feaiUre ".rganic saladl IJid organic
lread" on Ita memJB. It will WJe waltr res for
lhefirstall-maJe.belptime. Tbey'llbegnnjeclup
in brandolleW OCIIIald Broob coatumea, juat one
of lhe 56 new~otbes classlficatlcm !QiltMig lhe
Pia za '8 1•""
emp1oyes. "'-door
,....,
.,. • .,..men
ani
elevator jocli:ies are being redone.
Pia
za 9, tbe downstairs cabaret, will aet
'!Jlew" entertainmellt- NOIItalgia. That's new
at Ibis ''No, No, Nanette" point? · The Palm
Cour~ a fabulous place fCI' tea or cocli:talla and
nwled music IJid og~ r1. visiting VIPa, local
and'-led baabee redecor led
.
.......- ,
n
a ; as have tbe·main !VULOQ,
........•
The Pierre Hotel, acr0118 Grand Army Plaza
and acr01111 5th Ave., also baa .had 1 top.IG.
baaement redecoration at a cost ol miDlma by
new OWIJelll Serge Semenenko BDd Robert
Oowllns. Itc:onlalnsSCIDe celebratedperllllllmt
tenants (COOJpwter Richard Rod&amp;en just moved
ln)aswellulmowledgeahlelrstnslenls.IIIIIew
dowmlalrs cabaret, La FOret, Is i Iw..,_ly
lrlght spot with au a:cepUoully IIDe Jlllltre d
.,._. -"'rl.ffrom _._..
'
me..,...o, ..a ,_...ld tralDJJg IChoal,
lhe cllic Colony Restaurant.
The Drake Hotel og Parli: Ave. alao merlll
iDcluaiOD In our brief lilt ,rl. fine M••U.U
hotela. Ill F.gpUan-mood Sbepbeard's Ia lhe
miJ ditafelt: Ill tow&amp; thai featuna Pllllic Ill

Mrs. Mary Martin, chapeau

tal""·~t--~F-'departemen ""'6" auu _,,,

and Mrs. MyrUe Walter,
departmental Ia secrelalre·
canlere, were bon«ed at a
dinner of lbe Scioto County
Salon 116, Friday night it the
. .
J- n_._
Sha11!1ee Restaurant w r.,...,.
mouth.
·
Installed the
Mrs. Martin
salon's new officers and
the
for the
ouUined
prog~am
year. Mrs. Walter also
brought greetings and urg·
eel the Salon to get
dues
1 Both of the
· •uo ear y.
M
. a;as "-·-ty women were
• .., """''
presented
with ccnages and
gifts
. They were guests at the
hoiue· of Mrs. Hazel EDiott, a
deparlemental chapeau passe,
now serving as national pouvior
member.

d

Tbe rung of a lad er was
t to rest
never mean
upon,
but on·ly to bold a man's
foot long enough to enable
him to put the other somewhat higher.- Tbomas Hux·
ley, English biologist.

r---------------------. ______1
I
I
l ·
.
I
II
lI
By Helen Bottel

HeIen
' HeIp. Us

PREJUDICE lOSES OUT

ALMOST TWO TO ONE
Dear Helen:

•

You made an Ignorant predictim -'-""''" yog aald tbat the ,
jorlly
of
....._..
ho
-----'
the
Jetter from ''Nonrna
,....,... w .,,.,..,.,.
Prejudiced" woold agree with her that a boy ani a girl of dlf.

ferent races can be friends.
·
laayhurrahf«the "Archie Bunli:ers."It's toodani bad there '!
can't be mCI'e oflhem. Then maybe we'd see an end to tbe pintos
and bleeding bearta who IIPOUt equality. I'm fm' God, Ill)' Country
and the American Way Of Life, and if God bad meant blacb,
reds , Yell0118 to mq1e willllll, He'd· have Dillie them all me
color-while! YwCOIIllllleswould'lll'edtlliaCOUDiry, accepting
balf-breedmaogrels, lheresullaofthese ''friendflhlps." -D.
P.S. Y011wm'tprlnt UU,juatas you won't tell the truth about
bow many similar letters you got. You newSjMilper peclp)e are aD
alike -slanting the news, or "ceiiiOI'ing" letters like mine that
leD the TRUTH!
Dear D.:
I had to cell90r the language a bit, but truly, I wouldn't MISS
printingyourletter!N«willldlgnlfyitwitban8111Wer,exceptto
say that Ill)' predicllon came true - though of COUJ'3e you won't
believe me.
·
Letters In fav~r r1. frlendshlps acnJIIII tbe Hnes outnumbered
tb111e agaimt,two to one. Keep In mind ''Non-Pre'-"--'" said
FRIENDSHIP ot -·""'·,.01-ln J~~
,n ~·-..• «even-.,. 1ow. And If you
lhll*. Blicb a !bing doesn't exist between boy and girl, you don't
know today;s generation - wboee members value mental
closenenalm011tmore than thep~sicalklnd(becaUBeit'sharder
to achieve, perha)ll!).
-- ~:
"-·
uau Hi!leu:
When will peq!ie learn that a persou's race Cl' color has
no- todowilbhispenonallly.He'sabuman be~ first.
For theflnt Ume inOIII'South Carolla towu,a black anv will
a"'
be abiclellt body presldeut. He's a wondaful, frleudly person,
Tbere waa bad-mwlblng fr&lt;m IOIJle li:lda, but !ram lhe start we
knew he was our man ani he'll be a great, hanHrortlng
president! _ AN&lt;fi'HER NOT-PRE,JUDICED
Dear Helen:
I agree entire~)' with ''Non-Prejudiced" that black while or
'
anycol«canbefriends. Iamancmlychlldanlhadagreatneed
f« a brother or sister. Well, now I have myaelf a brother. He's18,
ldnd, undentlllllng, lhe l'fl81est guy 1 lmow.
'
Wecllllliderourselveuialeriii!Cibiolherbecauaerl.ourclose
relatlmsl!lp, I speak oflll)'brotheroflentolrimds,audwben they
meet him, they're llhocked- bu.tnot f« loug -toaeeiJela blaclt
To me, col« mali:es NO difference. -PROUD OOLORBLINI:i

GIRL

Dear Helen:
I Wllll a Japcneae war bride back In lhe '4111. The - • - r1.
-•
prejlldlce lasted Cllly a shCI't wblle -1111111111)' ht.....,'a family
and friends got to know me. Now, all around me I aee Ortental·
wltl.te lllll'l'lages.' Radatance &amp;eeiiiiiiiOI'e with Orieulals.tban
willl wbilea these dlys.
.
If two peap1e are atrq In their love .tid In their r.ltb that
1bci1e ,'Wbo coaut will Ullda'atand ani aecept, they'D· ma1te it,

~~-to~~~·t~~JG~rprlmiUeutacbiln reprdlella r~ col«.

.__......._e_........,..,
veiOaal
ncnenae.IIallrakeRocmis&lt;lleoflhefewqulet,
reslralned, flrst.cla• dltdug 1'0011111 with ez.
cellent plano IIIUik: at a decibel pltdl jDat
pleMIIItly short of apologellc.
Another day we'D discuaa a few other line
.holela: lhe new Park Lane, lhe AigGnquln, f«
instahce.
Incldeulally, Utey're all etLpeMive.
own

•

Nomatlllrwhatracelheboylalllat-·deiPte'WIIIIsto
date Cl' DWI), if lie Ia a IIDe periaa, we'll,.,....... oar-derfalldllrlqe, ani be jl'OIIII. -ONE ·WORLD

Dear Belen:

:
BothiOCieUes are DOt very tolerant o1 milled couP~-. even If
they are talerat rl. each other'• eec!et!te. -.... "-"" -....
. ...
,,_
""'
1"',-v
change abOGt the Ume a l&gt;lldlblrd IDitilt wtthlhe oriole In the
next~. Aialalack,Ipnfertolllii*-IILACKISBEAtn'IPUL,
UNAOOLTERA1BD

.

the Sports
Desk

The lKimer waa me oflltne
hits by Diel&amp;, who •
W a
trio of singleuflel'lelut I 1 to
. the lineup Silturday fCI' lhe flnt
time since being lllrack lu 1111
.
.
.
head last 'lUesday by . . . . .
Gtanls numbering hcmers by pilche J II: Billlngiwu
Dietl, Willie Ma~s ~ Bobby "Wi~ :;:=at ~e ~ locD
~ among theJr 17 ~Is. Juan like the 'Spirit of 76',''said P011.
didn't have to be at hjs bes~
The Reds were leading 2 • 0
Ma~es· nut SC«ed waa the when the Giants erupted In !be
2,000th m his career, leaving fifth inning
him behind only Ty Cobb and After~· homer pulled lhe
!labe Ruth.
Reds within two nms of tbe
Pete Rose also hit a homer Gianls in the bottom of the flftb
for the Reds, ~ting his aver· inning, the Giants c.Une baclt: in
'!ge to .307 while bangmg out the sixth to score four runs off
four hits and assuring himself rookie righthander Steve Blatof a .300 plus average for the eric on two-run homers by Mays
seventh straight year.
and Bonds.
GraDel Slam 1D F1ftb
The Reds beat the Giants 1&gt;-6
Dietz'grandslamrnercante,off Saturday when Hal Mcll4e sock·
Wa~e~r~ger~c~eda ed two homers and Lee May
fifth mnmg m which the Gl8Dts and George Foster each Slamscored seven runs to rout start· 'mecl one.
er ·Gary Nolan.

Giants Unload On Reds, 12-5

ed the ball his last two days in
Cincinnati, he maY never ells.
By Chet Tannehill
card the headband be has been
since being beaned by
a pitch in Houston last Tuesday.
Dietz, still carrying ten
slitchers in his forehead and a
piece of foam rubber beneath a
'l1IE MONDAY MORNING QUARTERBACK'S NOTES:
socked three hils, one
bandage,
Friday mgbt, feeling In my bmes lhe Marauders would have a
a grand slam homer, Sunday as
goodnight at WellsiDn-whicb they dici'~Idrove to Logan to see
the Giants salvaged the windup
two leams play thought to be s~er than Meigs, the Chiefs and
of a lhree-iame series with an
the Blue Devils. Gallipolis pulled It out 23-20. My !lunch: Logan
U.S triumph.
will be had.again befCI'e the season Is elided; Gallipolis will not
The victory enabled the Giants
whitewash ·the SEOAL In 1971 as it did In 1970. A chief mystery of
to retain their orie • game lead
lhe Chiefa' game plan: wby did 201 lb. junior fullback Ken
over the second place Los An·
OJ!herlalll get cm1y ~,our caDs to carry the ball? On those four
geles Dodgers in the ftghl for
opportunities be collected 18 yarda, a 4.5 average. On the other
theNationalLeagueWestem Di·
hand, Rick KreiB, IIIII .lb. seuiCI' tailback, carried 29 times for 116
vision
title.
By United Press International
yards, an a-.ge of %.9. Oh well, things always lool&lt; different on
Americ1n League
MCIIday morning.
East
LATE FRIDAY NIGHT Coach Otarley Olancey, cuddling ·a
W. L. Pel. GB
98 57 .632 ...
•·Baltimore
cheeseburger and fries, waa c0118iderably mere content than the Detroit
~ 69 .556 10
week before wben his team had aqueaked past Belpre. His Boston
85 74 .535 15
80 79 .503 20
Marauders put together 48 minutes of a lot better football against New York
Washington
62
94 .397 36'1&gt;
Wellaton, admittedly a weali:er team than Belpre. "We executed Cleveland
50 101 .365 42
better," he said. He seemed especially pleased recalling how the
West
W. L. Pel. GB
Marauder defensive ends harassed the Rocket wblzzer Danny
9'1 60 .623 ...
x.Qakland
BALTIMORE (UPI) - The
Settles who probably spent as much time on his back as on his Kans City
85 74 .535 14 Cleveland Browns had a lot of
feel
Chicago
77 81 .487 21'12
hustle Sunday when they met
Then the thwgbt of Iron too Ibis coming Friday night! There Minnesota 73 84 .465 25
California
73 85 .462 25'h the Baltimore Colts and it made
wasn't much cheer in thal
Milwaukee 68 ~ .430 30'12 up for a lot of sins.
•·Clinched Division Ttiel
"~ (Hal Spears, strong candidate for all.4Jtate quar.
BatUing it out at soggy MemoSunday's ResuHs
terback recognitim) puis tremendous pressure on your ends," he New York
rial Stadium here, the Browns
3 Detroit 2
said. "The classic modern option, run, pltchout, or pass is Minnesota 6 Kansas City 2 (lsi) managed a 14--13 victory over
executed well bx Mr. Spears, who has the talents to make all three Kansas City 5 Minn 3 (2 nd)
the Colts in a game marked by
Baltimore 5 Cleveland 0
acllm plays work, namely, speed, a good arm, strength, and Oakland 7 Milwaukee 0
interceptions.
Chicago 6 Calif 5 ( 10 inns)
experience.
.
Cleveland tinebacker Bill An·
"We'll have to do something," Chancey said. "We can't just Boston 8 Washington 1
drews, who received the game
stand therealidlelhim bring II to us."
hall, commented in a post-game
Monday's Games
I
No
games
scheduled)
Marauder lockerrocm notes: Mark Werry, the 244 lb. junior
interview, "The whole defense
Tuesday's GamH
and
offense made up for mls·
offensive tackle who suffered a shoulder separation against Kans City
at Oakland (night)
takes with husUe."
Beip'e, will be outfor the season. Surgery may be necessary ; a California at Minnesofa
Milwaukee
at
Chicago
(night)
The scrambling Cleveland de·
decision that will be delayed pending the shoulder's progress the
Detroit at Cleveland (suspended fensi'le unit and a poor Balli·
next few weeks. M011l everybody now agrees, including Mark,
game and regular gamemore passing game held the
that the Injury did not come upon Mark's stumbling and falling night
once.feared Colt aerial attack to
coming wt r1. lbe lockerroom at the end of the halftime rest at Basion at Baltimore (night)
New
York
at
Wash
lnlghl)
only three completions. Five at.
Belpre. Films show th&amp;t Werry delivered a befty charge with that
templs resulted in Brown inter·
shoulder m the first play rl. the second hall, then took a blow on it
Today's Probable Pitchers
ceptions.
(No games scheduled)
mthe next play, a sweep. Cbuck Faulk, an alternate hack who
However, leading H • 13 with
baa beeu getting a lot of action with Tiny W'llliams playing partTuesday's Games
less than two minutes left to
lime on offell!le, waa down but not out at Wellstoo. Ills expected Kansas City at Oakland
play in the game, Cleveland deCalifornia at Minnesota
he will be ready f.r Ironton. And Tiny Is ready.
Milwaukee at Chicago
Detrolt at Cleveland
AFTER SUNDAY'S ROUND by the play for pay fellows, my Boston at Baltimore
iiickel bet with (Rich) Jones is a wee bit IIIOI'e secure on two New York at Washington
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
next thing yciu know they'D be
saying Dick Dietz has gone hippie.
Because, the way the Son
FranicscoGiantscatcherpound·

wearing

· The loss put the Reds a game
behilid the third place Braves,
who they will play in the final
two games of the season begiJl..
ning Tuesday in Atlanta.
"I would sure like IAl see· the
Dodgers and Giants play their
final three games against each
other," said the Reds' Tony
Perez Sunday after the paiil
turnout of 45,072, on hand for
the club's final home game, fil.
ed out of Riverfront Stadium.
Better Than Series
"That," exclaimed the Reds
third baseman whose lhree-nm
homer in the fifth inning pulled
the Reds within two runs of the
Giants, "would be better than

a World Series."
However, it won't he the Dod·
~ers Bl(alnst the Gainls. From
here, the Giants move on to
San Diego, where they wind up
the season wilh three games
against the Padres while the
Dodgers are playing in Houston.
"I will start Gaylord Perry,"
said Giant Manager Charlie
Fox. "Then, I'll foUow with Don
Carrithers and wind up with
(Juan) Marichal.
"That is," added Charlie, "if
I need Marichal."
It was Marichal who beat the
Reds Sunday, notching his I 7th
victory against lllosses.
II was not one of Marichal's
better efforls, but with the

Apil'rr n1D
INSURE'·- .• . .•

Browns Trip Colts

grounds: the Browns seem to be a new team Wider Mr. Skorich,
and lhe Bengals were CCIISistenlly outplayed at Pittsburgh.
Clevelalid takes an early lead In the Ohio jX'O football cham·
plonshlp race. What Paul Brown does now will be interesting to
follow.

Dodgers Still
Trail By One
By STEVE WILSTEIN
UPI Sports Writer
The San Francisco Giants will
win tbe pennant in the National
League West if...
The Los Angeles Dodgers will
win the pennant In tbe National
League West If...
H the bandages hold back the
pain, If Willie Mays becomes
young again, If Bobby Bonds
and Dick Dietz keep rapping
the ball, and If Juan Marlchal
pitches all the remaining
games, the Giants will win.
If the season somehow
extends beyond the three
games each of the teams is
scheduled to play, if In some
way the momentum that
carried the Dodgers from nine
games behind to only a game
behind can be tapped once
again before Thursday's fmal
bells, the Dodgers will win.
The pennant that no one
wanted suddenly has become
very valuable again and the
Giants l!howed their eagerness
by trouncing the Cincinnati
Reds, 12-S, Sunday as Mays,
Bonds and Dietz all cracked
homers in support of Juan
Marichal, who now owns three
of the Giants' six victories in
the last 21 games, and kept San
Franclaco one game ahead of
Los Angeles.
Dietz, who Is catching with 10
stitches in his head, a sponge
cushion and a bandage to hold
II all together. whacked a
grand-4llam home run that
highlighted a seve1H'1111 fifth
Inning .outburst and Mays and
Bonds each belled a two-run
homer in a four.,run sixth to
help Marichal to his 17th

vic)orY.

Saturday's Results
Detroit 10 New York 1
Baltimore 6 Cleveland 4 I 11
Inns)
Boston 6 Washington 3
Milwauk~ 8 Qakland 6
MM11nnesolta 7 KanKsas Cityc2·tyllst)
7
ansas 1 0
12 n~Jeso a
Callforni~ .3 Chicago 2.
National League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
•·PiHs
96 64 .600

~~iZ~~~s

:~ ~~ ::~ ~~~:

New York
82 77 .516 13'h
Montr.,.l
69 89 .437 26
Philadelphia :/nr ·413 30
Charlie Fox, San Francisco's
w. L. Pet. GB
manager, says Dietz "looks like San Francisco 88 11 .553
lhe spirit of '76" and the 3(). ~r/'a:t~geles :~ ~ :~ 8'1
2
year-()ld signal&lt;aller, whose Cincinnati
79 81 .AU 9'12
three hits Sunday matched the
Houston
78 81
10
Diego
60
98 .491
.380 28
number he got Saturday, San
Division Tille
answers, "I may never take the x·Cllnched
Sunday's Results
bandage off."
New York 3 Piltsbur~h 1
Mays' run scored was the
1
~~~~~~:~~~~~:~:r~
2,000th of his career, leaving Los Angeles 5 Allanla 2
him behind only Ty Cobb and San Francisco 12 Cincinnati 5
(only games scheduled)
Babe Ruth. Bonds' homer was
Today•s Probable Pitchers
his 33rd of the season, a career
St. Louis (Guzman 0.0) at
high.
New York (Sadeckl 7.7), night.
Richie Allen and Duke Sims
IOnlygamescheduled)
gave Claude Osteen an early 5-0
TuHday's Games
lead, but be needed relief help St. Lou Is at New York
from 43-year old Hoyt Wilhelm Chicago at Montreal (night)
Pitts at Phlla (night)
and Jim Brewer to stave off Clnclnnallat
Atlanta (night)
Atlanta's late·innlng comeback Houston at Los Angeles (night)
attempt, and keep pace in the San Francisco at San Diego
race.
(night)
Saturday's RHults
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
New York 2 Pittsburgh 1 115
FOOTBALL SCORES
Inns)
Br United Press lnlern•tionol Chicago
4 Philadelphia 2
Saturday
St.
Louis
Montreal 6
Newark Catholic 29 Lancaster Clncinnall86 San
Francisco 5
Fisher 0
Los
Angeles
5
Atlanta
4
Vermilion 26 Brookside 0
Houston
5
San
Diego
1
Youngstown
Wilson
28
Youngstown East 26
Poland 33 Columbiana 0
SVAC STANDINGS
Canfield 56 Lakeview 8
ALL GAMES
Akron ·Buchtel16 Akron Eifel 0
W L T POP
Akron Kenmore 27 Akron East TEAM
Eastern
3
0 0 110 6
24
Kyger
Creek
2
0
1 65 18
Fairport Harbor 6 Richmond
North
Gallla
1
2
0
44 40
Heights 6 llle
0 3 0 20 60
Highland 42 Cleveland Lutheran Soulhern
Southwestern 0 3 0 8 94
West o
Cleveland Central Catholic 14 Hannan Trace 0 3 0 0 102
SVAC ONLY
Cleveland Rhodes 14 (!)e)
W L T POP
Bedtcrd o43 University School 18 TEAM
Eastern
2
0 0 69 0
Bedtcrd Chanel 24 Painesville
Kyger Creek
2 0 0 59 12
Harvey 9
1 1 0 38 26
Hawken School 30 Western North Gallia
Southern
0
1 0 12 a
Reserve Academy 6
Southwestern
0
1 0 0 38
Perry 39 Southington 0
Cleveland Sf. lgnallus 6 Hannan Trace 0 2 0 0 88
5 5 o 178 171
Cleveland Cathedral ·Latin 6 Totals
FRIDAY'S
GAMES
(tiel
Kyger
Creek
at
North Gallia
Cleveland Holy Name 33
Wahama at Southern
Madison 6
Glouster at Eastern
Canton McKinley 37 Cincinnati
Symmes
Valley at South.
Taft 0
Canton Lehman 7 St. Thomas wes1ern
Green Local at Hannan Trace
Aquinas 6

fensive hack Clarence Scott in·
tercepled a fourth-down J5..yard
desperation toss by Johnny
Unitas on the Brown 15 and ran
it back to his own six before he
was tackled, instead of simply
hatting the ball into the mud.
But Don Cockcroft, who had
previouslymlssedfieldgoaltires
of 44 and 35 yards and had a
punt blocked and relllmed for
the only Colt touchdown, made
partial amends by booming a
54-yard punt to get,the Browns
out of the jam with only 30 sec.
onds remaining.
But again with only five sec..
onds left Walt Swnner picked
off a Unilas bomb and threw a
lateral past Scott which was recovered by the Colts' R4y Perk·
ins on the Cleveland 27. Fortu·
nately for the Browns, the Colts
had run out of timeouts and the
clock expired before Baltimore
could attempt a field goal.

The victory continued the
Browns' jinx over the Colts in
Baltimore as Cleveland has won
all four contests played here.
The Colis also suffered the
possible loss of middle lineback·
er Mike Curtis and their lead·
ing rusher, Norm Bulaich.
Curtis fractured his thumb in
the ftrst quarter and may be out
of aclionfor three weeks, while
Bulaichsuffered a sprained knee
at the offset of the second half
after gaining 63 yards in II car·
ries in the ftrst baH. The in·
jury will probably sideline Bu·
laich for at least a week.
Baltimore took the lead in the
second quarter as Bulaich lug·
ged the ball to the Cleveland 20
to set up a 27-yard field goal by
Jim O'Brien.
Ken Brown fumbled the ensu·
ing kickoff on his own 4.2
but the Colts Tom Matte reciprocated as the Browns regained

Steelers Triumph

·
PITI'SBURGH (UPI) - Jon
Staggersrelllms punts for a liv·
ing but, to bear him tell it the
least Important man on a punt
return play is the guy with the
ball.
"Everything depends on the
coverage and the blocks." he
says. "It's all set up for you."
Staggers,whosefive.yardaverageasarookielastyearhardly
was breathtaking, returned
a punt &amp;7 , yards for
a third quarter touch·
down Sunday to spark the
Pittsburgh Steelers to a 21-10
upset of the Cincinnati Bengals.
"Everything was sort of a ·
blur," said Staggers who ad· •
milled he never saw Chuck
Allen and Rocky Bleier throw :
the key blocks that spring him.
Coach Paul Brown of the Ben·
gals said Dave Lewis his pun·
.
'
ter, was kicking the ball too low
and making it too easy to return. But Chuck Noll, the Steel·
ers' coach, said his team W8ll
due to "break" a return for a
touchdown.
"That's the thing aboul ·punl
returns and kickoff returns"
NoU said. "You have to keep
husUing on them. You never
know when you'll make the big

play. Today we made one."
Staggers' touchdown run put
Pittsburgh ahead 14--10 and provided most of the excitement in
what otherwise was a sluggish
defensivve game. Terry Brad·
shaw passed for the other two
Pittsburgh touchdowns and
Lemar Parrish, a Cincinnati
cornerback,
scored
the
Bengals' touchdown on a 14-yard run after stealing the ball
from Preston Pearson.
TheSteelers, whogaveuponly
45 yards on the ground to the
ChlcagoBearsinalosslastweek
limited Cincinnati to 'II.

''Our defense hasn 't given up
anything in two games," Noll
beamed.
"It's nothing special," said
tackle Joe Green. "We're just
playlngourdefense.l'mbeginn.
ing more and more ID see wllll
Noll's been talking about. Ever
since be's been hete, he's been
stressing pattern defense, play·
ing your sports. I think it's ()e..
ginning to pay off."
Although the setback ended
an eight game, regular.,season
winning streak for the Bengals,
Brown took it in stride.

possession on their 22.
· Baltimore'sEddieHinton, who
dropped three paS'I"S during the
game, helped set up the first
Brown score. A Morrall pass
bounced from his grasp and
Cleveland tinehacker Dale Unci·
sey intercepted, returning the
hall to the Colt six.
Leroy KeUy scored from three
yards out on a left end sweep
to give the Browns a 7-3 baH·
lime lead. ,
O'Brien closed the gap to 7~
in the third quarter with a :JZ.
yard field goal, but the Browns
increased their margin to I~
when KeUy plunged over from
the Colt one to cap a l!l.yard
drive in a steady rain.
The Colts scored their only
touchdown late in the fourth
quarter when Ted Hendricks
blocked Cockroft's punt on the
Brown 25 and rookie Don Nottingham raced 20 yards for a
touchdown after scooping up the
loose ball.

Your

.,.,

lnSIII'Iftca

'Dele Warner

Whether you want
auto.
life
homeowners
In
~urance, we will design
a policy .to fit your
individual
requirements ...
Discuss your specl.flc
needs with us.

Dans Wimer Ins.
Pflont ff2·2"'
114 Celwl 51,
Pomeroy .

You supply

the need...
we'll supply the

992.2171
125 E. MAIN

POMEROY,O.

r----~--------------------------:-----------

This Week's
College Games
By United Press ln...,..tional
Saturdlly

California at Ohio State
Western Michigan at Bowling
Green
lowa Stale at Kent Stale
Marhsall at Miami
Ohio University at Toledo
Quantico Marines at Xavier
Youngstown Slale at Tampa
Ball State at Akron lnl
Ashland at Central State
Baldwin-Wallace at Musklngum
Capital at Denison
Heidelberg at Hiram
Kenyon at MarleHa
Wooster at Mount Union
Ohio Wesleyan at Clarion ( Pa .)
Wittenberg at Otterbein In)
Thiel at Case
Cincinnati at Texas A &amp; M (nl
Dayton at l.aUisville (n)
Defiance at Findlay (n)
Bethany at John Carroll
Carnegle·Mellon at Oberlin
Taylor af Ohio Northern (n)
Bluffton at Wilmington (n)
n - Indicates night game

Chicago Stuns Vikings, 20-17
BJ vrro STEUINO
UPI Sports Writer
The Minnesota Vikings' defense was too good for Its own
good Sunday.
"Purple People Eaters" devoured another quarterback
when they knocked Jack
eancannonn of the Chicago
Bears out of the game while
jl'Otecting a 17-ll lead in the
final period.
But Kent Nix replaced the
shaken up Concannon, who
wasn't seriously injured, BDd
tossed two touchdown passes to
give lhe Bears a stunning :1&amp;-17
lriwn(•h over the Vikings.

\
~-- ·

•

The Vtlrlngs, who've posted
12--2 records the past two
seasons, seemed ready to pick
up right where they left off last
vear when they rallied to
beat Detroit last Monday
night. But Nix's TO passes of
36 and 42 yards to Dick Gordon
-the second coming with 1:42
remaining -highlighted a 17·
point final period splurge that
carried the Bears to the
victory.
. It was the secoJKI straight
week that Nix, who threw. only
one pass all last season for the
Bears, has come off the bench
to bring p!Icago from behind to

the victory. His eight.yard m
pass with 44 seconds left beat
Pittsburgh last week.
· There were only three other
mild upsets Sunday except for
the Chicago shocker ~ vivid
contrast to last week's round of
upsets. Pittsburgh surprised
Cincinnati, 21·10, Cleveland
nipped Baltimore, 14--13, and
AUanta tied Los Angeles, 26-20,
in the only reversals of form.
The oddmakers were right in
the other games as Detroit
routed New Englalid :J4..7, Son
Francisco blasted New Orleans,
38-20, Oakland routed San
Diego, 34.0, Kansas City edged

Houstoo, :1&amp;-16, Washington
blasted New York, 30-3, Dallas
routed Philadelphia 42--7, Green
Bay ripped Denver, :J4..13, and
Miami downed Buffalo, 29-14.
· Jim Plunkett and Archie
Manning, the stars of the fii'St
weekend of acllon, both suf.
fered their flnt pro defeats
although Plunkett managed one
TO pan and Manning had a
pair. Manning played only four
minutes in the first baH
because. of an eye injury.
The weekelid of action · will
wind up Monday nl$t when St.
Lo!ils l1011ta the New Ycll'k Jeta
in the TV game.

Fastening solely belts saves necks,
Not to mention lives.
We estimate that 8.000 to 10,000 lives could be
saved every year it everyone usedsalety belts.
1\s new car dealers, il's not only lrustrating tor us
to see people ignore their safety bells-it"s heart·
breaking when we think of the senous injuries that
could be prevented.
And the lives that could be saved.
Buckling your salety belts should be the first thing
OM in

t Mft.i

,;t;;nled

by

you. do. Every time you gel in your car. tllaltaiO!IIY a
second. And it's a I'IUii1 that becomes
second ...cure. So pl1111 gel tile l8f1lly
belt habit.
For the ride ol your life.

--.............._
tocJiot....._PtKtic:a.Adchlltoi• ;a litre
Rtt&amp;tiota s.Mcl, 2000 "11: • S...... N.W_ ...... 5

•C--•
a.
D.C. -

...u.....--............. 011' "011

t • 'ioual AutDmoble DEllers •
Ol'oc · ..... , _ , _

_.._.~

ec

..

N.A,D.A., 11le Daily Son- awd lilt Tri-C:.Unlt Atl II oltlll ...... '

~

1

�..

,

I

·-Till Dally 9eallliel, ......... t.Pcmeroy, 0., Sepl. 27,lt71

"

•

&amp;ntinel
Classifieds
Get
Action
!
Sentinel
Classifie4s
Get
ResrJtS
'
.

L!!GAL,,NO.TICE
No.

:u

,.......,.to--JOINT I\ESOLUTION

lr 'ot

AdloloHolllle~ol

lhl-o!Oidoto.....W.a.....
""r IIi 1Ift of ...U •lice of

JaW.._...... Jaws. ............ ,

. . a=mb to tiM Coi:II!INIIoa
ftCI'IInd to M sqhmltt9dl lo •
wte of tU ... ~..
Be U resolved by the General AJJaanbly of the State of Ohio, three-

ftfthl of the .memben elected to
each hoUH concUI'l'int' therein, that
there Jhall be 1ubmitted to the elec-

ton o.t the state 1n the manner

pretertbed by Jaw at the reneral
election to be held on the first
Tu.Hclay after the first M:bnday in

November 19'11, a proposal to amend
aeetton lC of Article U ol the Con&amp;tJtuUon ot Ohio to read as 1oUowa:
ARTICLE II
SeeUon lg. Any initiative, sup.

plernentar-y or reteret~dum petition
may be presented 1n aeparate parts
but eaeh part shall C011Ulin a full
and correct copy of the uue. and
text of tbe laW. ~eetion or twn
th.eNOl a&gt;Uibt to be referred, or
the . propos*t law or proposed •
amendment to the consbtution.

For Sale ·

For Rett

Pomeroy.
'Motor Co.

(Amaided. Sena~ iOtnt RaoluUon

with · ulllit, APPLES · Fltzpatritk Or.
T~~~~ Inspace
Chesler, phone
chords,
State
Route 689,
985-~106.
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
9-22-6tc
9-3-tl&lt;
3 ROOMS .and bath. furnished,----'--~-170,h Mulberry, phone 992- HALF RUNNER beans, $1.50
2431 after 5 p m
bushel, pic~ yitur ·OWn ,
Potatoes.
Clarence Prolfift,
· · , 9-23-llc
p
ortland. Phone 843-22S..
1970 DODGE POLARA
$2495
APARTMENT, furnished room - --..,.---,-- ---9_::
-22-llc
4 Dr., V-8 engine, automatic trans., P.S.. factory air, good
with bath, phone 992-2780 or
tires. radio &amp; other extras, white finish, i:lean Interior.
992-3432.
~OAL. limestom.: Excelsloj
1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1595
9-17-llc · . ~all Works, E. Main Sf;, HT Cpe., 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine. wide oval tires, · .
' r'omeroy . Phone 992-3891 . ·
P.S.. P. B.• factory air cond., radio &amp; other utras .
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer ·
·
.
...L9-tfc,
IH8 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
. $1495 ·
Park. Minersvllie phone 992- •
270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish, all good tires. 6 cyi.,
' , 3324.
·1
1965 ELCAR, 2 bedroom mobile
automatic trans., radio, cl.e an Interior.
t -19-6tc
home, awnings, cement
porch, garage, storage
TRAILER space. desirable
building, fruit trees, garden
neighborhood, phone 992-208ol.
area, on approximately 2
9-19-tlc
acres - Langsville 667-3978.

... .

-=:-:---c:--~---:....
FURNISHED and unlum~
apartments. Close to school.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.

·

, Phone 992-5434. ·

Comer Union AW..
and Stale Rt. 7 •
Hours-Monday, Tuesday,
~dl'es4oy and Fridoy
8:30a.m. lo6p.m.
Thur&gt;day
10 a.m. toi:JO p.m.
Saturday
8:30a.m. ID 1 p.m.
l'HONE
.
. m -7474

anted T B

'lio'::"e:cl~ij~~~·~~ ~:,:\~l:

WriteM. D. Miller. Pomeroy.
pallty, the street and number, 1f
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
·
8-25-tlc
any, of bla residence. The names of
au
I!Cnerot to such petitions shaD be - - - -- - - - -wrttten ln Ink. each airner for him·
LEGAL NOT C

Hit. To each part of such petlUon
I E
llbaii be attached the affidavit of the
ORDINANCE NO. 971-71
person .oUcJUq the signatures to An Ordinance to authorize the
the aame, which aftldavit •ball con~ sale of Village Real Estate not

~ ~':::m:''.u.O:h th~W:1bt:u~ needed

peUUon and llhall atate that each ot. Purpose.
the lllnatures attached to such part

for any Mun icipal

was made In tb.e presence of the
Be_lt ordained by the Counc i l
alftant, tbat to the best of his of the VIllage of Middleport as

WANT AD
IN FORMAT. ION
DEADLINI:S
S P .M. Pay Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a.m.
'· J;!l~llatlon ~ Correcllons
Will be ill:~led until9'a.iri . lor1
Da~ol Publication
R UL
G

VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 model. Complete with an
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will take
1
publisher will not be res~sible· 1962 FORO h ton pickup truck $27 cash or budget plan
$ol50.
Phone
9~-4551
.
for more than one incorrect
available. Phone 992-5641 .
insertion.
_
_ __ __ _ _
9-2_1-61~
1970 DODGE Dart Swinger, V.IJ,
RATES
aulomatlc, 20,000 miles .
For W~nt Ad Service
Phone 992-7092.
FARM and home laleK house
· 5centsp~Wordone insertion
9-26-3tc
pain! sale. King Builders
. Minimum Charge 75c
Supply,
Middleport.
"12 :ents per word three 1969 CHEVROLET pickup
9-2- 2~tc
consecqtlve Insertions.
topper Included, automatic,
18 ~enh per word six con-... ., cyl. , 21,000 actual mites, . .111111111111111111111111111111!'!!J!IPI
secut1ve Insertions.
, ' spotlights, fogllghts, $2,3011.
25 Per Cent Dlscou~t on paid
Phone 992-6029 or see . at
ads and ads paid wllhtn 10 days. - Waller Wilson's on Peach
CARD OF THANKS
Fork Road
&amp; OBITUARY
.
9-26-31p
Sl.SO for 5Q word minimum.
Each additional word 2c . .
'63 FORD Van Truck- $175, .65
BLIND ADS
Mustang - $200, '66 A-1 Ford
Additional 25c Charge "per
$400. Contact Albert
Adverllseml!nt.
L2~
Roseberry,
Bashan-Keno Rd.,
OFf·fCE HOURS
Long Bottom.
8:30a.m . to 5: 011 p.m. Daily,
9-26-3tp
8:30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.

Notice

th1S ex~eptlon . Excepting and

left In Jayawar. Beautiful
pastel color, lui size model.
All built-In to buttonhole,
overcast and fancy stitch.
Pay i'ust $48.75 cash or terms
avai able. Trade-Ins ac. cepted. Phone 992-5641.
9-2l-61c

rate. ·

-~-'---'-­

ATtONS

The Publisher ' reserves the
right to edit or reject any ad$·,
deemed objectional
The'

knowledp and beliel each s.IJDa· follows :
ture on such part JS the genuine Sec. I. That the following real
Jilnature of the person whose name estate, belonging to the Village
It purports to be, that be lHilleves of Middlerort is not needed for
the pertona who have silned it to
·
'
· .
be electors that they 80 signed aald mun 1clpa purposes , to -w1t.
peUUon wtth knowledge o.t tbe con- Si~uate In 65-acre Lot 157,
lentl thereof that each siJller Sechon 29, Town 1, Range 13,
atcned the same on the date stated Meigs County, Ohio, bounded as
opJ)Oiite his name; and no other follows:
allldavJt thereto shall be required.
Beginning at the northwest
The petition and signatures upon corner of said Section 29; thence
IUCh petiUons, so verifted, &amp;hall be along the north line of said
pruumed to be tD all resP&lt;Cts sur- s t· t th e Nor th east corner
ftctent unlea not later lhan forty ec IOn o
daya before the election, It shall be of _K~rrs 6·acre lot;_thence along
otherwise proved and 1n aueh event satd Kerrs east line 245 feet:
ten addiUonal da'fs shall be allowed thence north 853N deg. east 389
for the 1Wn1 o additional siena· feet ; thence south 681h deg. east
tura to tuch petition. No law or 279 feetto a Locust Tree; thence
amendment to the constitution aulr south 77112 deg _ east 8-43 feet to
m.Jtted to the elrcton by lnitiativ1 Powell's west line ; thence along
and 1Upplem.entary ,PetlUon and re- said Powell's west line _.28112
eelvina' an affirmative maJority of feef to said Powell's northweSt
the vota cut thereon, shall be
th ence north 2'"
d
held unconatttuUonal or void on al:!- corner,
1-,.
eg .
count of the lnsufftcteney o1 the east 322 feet to the center: of a
peUtlom: by which aueh submission road; thence along the center of
of tbe same wu procrured; nor said road in a northwest
lball the reJecuon of any law aub- direction to the east side of the
mltted. by referen.dwn petition be Thomas Fork road near Miles PIANO tuning , reference,
Meigs Local Schools. Phone
held lnvaUd for IUch lnsuftlelericy. Moore lot ; thence along the east
Upon all JnitaUve, supplementary side of the said Thomas Fork
992-5509.
IID4 re(erendum peUtloas provided
for
m any of the tectiona of tbil roa d ·1n a sou th wes t dl rec tlon to
9-26-31p
arUc:le, tt lhall be necessary to ftle the place of beginning, save ~nd
tram eadt of one-half of the eoun- except 11f1 acres sold to M1les
U• a1 the state, peUUona beAr1na Moore by V. B. Horton ; also a PEP-UP with new Zippies Iron
pills. Non-habit lormtng. 011y
1be lilnatures ot not less tban one- right-of-wily granted to the Ohio
$1.98, Nelson Drugs.
ball ol1he daip.ated. percentate of Central Railroad, the land so
the etecton ot such county. A true conveyed being 32 9-100 acres
9-22-JOtp
copy of allii.WI or proposed laws or more or less
propoMd amendments to the eonat1· Also the following real estate REDUCE sale and last with
tuti:Oo, topther with an argument situate in Meigs County , Ohio,
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Ol' uplanaUon, or both. for, and. allo and In the 65 acre part of 100
anarrwnentoruplanation,orboth. acre lot 157 , bounded and · Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
9-22-JOip
aainlt
1he 1811le,
lhall be wbo
prepared,
The
penon
or penona
pre- described as follows ·· The one
pare .the arrwnent or ,explanatton1 ac~e lot lying in the west end of
or both, qa1n1t any law srctlon or sard part of said 100-acre lot; KOSCOT Kosmetlcs . SepIMm; IUbmltted. to the e1ecton: by Beginning at a stake at a run on
tember
Sales
Special :
referendum peUtlon, may be named the east side of the road, south
Kreamy
lip
Kate
$2 now
tp ~ petition and the penona of the bridge over Thomas
$1.50, Frostlucent Lip Kate
who. prepare Pte . Pa:Ument or ex- Fork.; thence . touJh 59 degrees
$2.50 - now $2, 23 delicious
a'la:na.Uori. or bOth,- ~ any proposed ltiSf, 290 -feet : thence south 49
law-Or Propowd amendment to tbe degrees west 150 feet · thence
colors.
Call 992-5113 or come
eoDIUtu.tton may be named ln the
'
petition proPOitnt the same. The north 59 degrees west 290 feet to
see al 161 1h "' ·•h Ave.,
per.on or peno111 who prepare the the road ; thence north _.9
Middleport, Oh
UJUPttnt or explanation, or both, degrees east along Said road 150
B-29-tlc
for the law, RCUon or Item, sub· feet to th.e place of beginning, -:-:--~-----mUted to the electon by referen- containing 1 acre . Also the
dum petiUon, or aratnst any pro- following lot adjoining said 1- SAVE up to one hall. Bring your
sick TV lo Chuck 's TV Shop,
PDied. law ubmJtted by supplemen- acre lot situate in Sec. 30, in the
bry ~Ution, shall be named by 65-acre part of 100 acre lot 157 in
151 Bu•l•rnut Ave .. Pomeroy,
the 1eneral a.aembly, 1t in aession,
"d
C
·
phone 9'92-5080.
and lf not 1n ~e~~ton then by the sa1 _
ounty
and
State;
~vernor. The law, or proposed law, 8egu:ming at the North corner
9.24_11c
or pro~ amendment to the eon- of satd Moors 1-acre lot; tl1ence - - -- - -- -- .tltution, toeether with the arcu- North 331f:r degrees east 60 feet i
mentl and explanations. not ex- thence south SJ degrees east 84 WILL DO light hauling, phone

•Ceedtnc a total of three hundred. feet ; thence south 70 degrees
words for each, and also the argu- east 2•6 feet; thence south 491f2
men~and explanation•. not ex- deg. west 108 feet to the east
eeed
a total of three hundred corner of said 1-acre lot · tl1ence
wordl
It eaeh, shall be pubt
d
'
lilb.ed o~ a week for five consecu- nor h 59 eg , .we~t 290 feet t~ !he
tive weeka Precedtn( the elec:tlon Place of begmn.ng; contammg
.in at leut one newspaper of a:eneriii 1f2 acre. Save and except the
cl.rculaUon in each county of the right-of-way granted by said
•tate, where a newspaper Ia pub- Moore to the Ohio Central
Ulhed. Unle. otherwise provided Railroad, being the same real
by law. the secretary ot. state ahall estate conveyed by V _ B. Horton
cause to be placed upon the ballotl, and Dabney heirs to said Miles
the Utle of any IUcb law, or pro- Moore and recorded In Vol 3"
DOMd law, or pfOPORd amendment p
- .r.
to the coutttutton to be submitted ages 349, 350, and 352. Also 1n
Be 1ba1J a11o eauM the ballots 10 tO VoL 56, Pages 102, 103, and 10~ ­
be Printed • to permit an atllrma- Also Vol. 88, Pages 393 and 394,
Uve or neaauve vote upon each Meigs County Deed Records.
law, HCtlon of law, or item 1n a Save and except 3.089 acres
law appropriatlnt money, or pro- conveyed to the State of Ohio by
J)Oeed law, or propelled amendment deed recorded in Vol. 22_., Page
to the conetltullon. The style of 605
Meigs county . Deed
111 lawa aubmttted. by inJUattve R: ' d
1
hi h
and tupplementary petition shall ecor s, reference o w ~ . is
be: "Be Jt Enacted by the People hereby made for def1n1te
of the State of Obio," and of all description of the exception .
conaUtuUonat amendmentl: ''Be 1t Save and except .8 acre con llaolved. by the People of the State veyed to Orville and Mildred
o1 Ohlo." The buta upon which the Millirons by deed recorded in
reQUired nwnber of petiHoners tn Volume 16P, page · 164, Meigs
any cue lhaU be detennlned lhall County
Deed
Records ,
be the total number of votes cast reference to which is hereby
tor .Precedlnc
the olllce el~tton
of governor
at The
the made
for definite description
of
la.d
therefor.
_
_

ourt, Rt . 124, Syracuse. ·
Ohio. 992·2951.
4-2-tfc

8

· 14' • 24' • WIDE:

Mobile Homes fur Sale

MILLER
MOBil£ HOMES

1220 Washington Blvd..
Gl FINANCING. AVAILABLE.
Belpre,Dhlo _
No down payment, 12 years to 11.111111111111i.11111111.i.11111111•
pay to qualified G I. Up to
$2,500 available fer lot ·lmprovemenh if you own a lot.
Get your new mobile home·
now. See James Simpkins, 3 BEDROOM brick home .
Valley Estates Mobile Home
Choice location In Middleport. ·
Seen by appointment only. '
Sales, Rt. 50 East Athens Phone 992-5523 alter 4 p.m.
593-8762.
5-7-tfc
9-19-37tc
----------$2.3011 WILL buy ·,. acres in
Bedford Township, Wolfpen
Road . 20 minutes from
EARLY American stereo, AMPomeroy. &gt;4 of land In timber,
FM radio. 4-speed changer, 4balance in pasture. No
speaker sound system,
buildings. Call 992-2152 and
Balance $79.32. Use our
ask lor Dick.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
9-22-llc
9-27-6tc
STEREO-RADIO combination, NEW. 3-bedroom home In
Middleport. Built-in kitchen,
lovely Walnut finish, 4-speed
ceramic
tile bath, all-electric
intermixed changer,
4heat,
good
neighborhood. Can
speaker sound system.
arrange
FHA financing .
Balance $63.99. Use our
Telephone 992-3600 or 992budget terms . Call 992-7085.
2186.
9·27-6tc
7-25-tlc
- - - -- - - - --

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

WW.T~

ditianing.
241. LiiiCIIIn St.•.Middle!IOft

"tttU TIIINK $0,
OFFICER
IIEEBE 1

~-

'.
•

Phone 992-2550

Insured- Experienced :
Work Guaranteed
See us icii- - Fr.ee
Estimate on Furnadj
lnstalalion.
~CEU&gt;T

.--.:..-----...c......
11'!7 NO FUN PLAYINe

EXPERT ·

( 1i:NNIG WfTH '&lt;\?U,
LANCS:!

·--~

-GUARANTEED- :
Phone 992-2094
BILL NELSON
HILTON WOLFE
992-3657
Mt-3211
l..ii_iiiii______________

iiiilii.-'

Pamen!J tbni &amp; Ant;
' ()peR I Til'S

'•

. DINSON MASPDY .
f:o!ftpfete
Re_1f!O~~~

.

'

and Anienni.'

1HARRis0N'S TV
, Service, Phone 992-2522.

•
6-10-llc

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

Kitchefts, Baths
Room Additians
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work
Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

POMEROY
HOME&amp; AUtO

Monday"'"' Saturday
" ' E. Main. f'llnlloroy, o . ,

OFFICE SUPPUES
And

FuRIIOURE
' I

AWNINGS, storm doors and
w i n d 0 w s , c a r P0 r 1 s ,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
sal~s representative. For free ·
e~ltmales, phone Charles
Ltsle Syracuse
V
V
Joh '
nd Son j
·
·
nson a
, nc.
'
_ _ __ _ __ _5-:._1:_7...:.
·«c

..

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display_

-NEIGLER Construction. For
building or '1":J1011eilng your
home. Call Guy Nelgte(,
Racine, Ohio.
·
7-31
-lfi
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph. ·
662-JOJ5.
tl
2· 12· c
NOTICE ON
SEWING MACHINES. Re_pair
FILING OF
service. all makes, 992-221-l,
INVENTORY
AND
The F
APPRAISEMENT
abrlc Shop, Pometoy. The State ol 0-lo, Mtlts
Authorized Singer Sales and Cotutry.
Prob•te Court.
Service. ~Sharpen Scissors.
Ta the Administrators Of the
3-29-llc ntates. ; to such of the following
as are- residents of the St11te· of

LEGAL NOTICE

ROSEBERRY furnace In stallation. Free estimates on
Ohio. v is : the surviving
new furnaces, oil or gas. O'DELL WHEEL a lignment spouse,
the noxt of kin, the
Service work . Call Cecil
located at Cros..-oads, Rt. 124. benefic iaries under the will ;
. Roseberry, Racine. Ohio.
Complete front end serYice, and to the attOrney or •ttorn&amp;ys
Phone 614-843-2274.
tune up and brake service. represent ing 1ny of the
9-8-JO!p
h 1
b 1
persons.
W
·
ee s
a anced e 1ec- aforementioned
Augusta M. Wolfe. Deceased,
Ironically. · All
work Letart Township, Meigs County,
THE SHOP. Custom meat
guaranteed.
Reasonable Ohio, No. 205S..
CiJIIin!f,'1'1iasant Ridge Road.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
,
Ida · C . Wolfe, Oece•sed ,
Pomerov. Dick Vaughan, 9927-27-Hc Letart Townsh ip, Ntelgs County,
Ohio, No. 20555.
3374 and Dale Little, 992-6346.
You are herebv notified that
9-12-JO!c
AUTOMOBILE1~m · been · tho
Inventories and Ap caAcelled?
Lost
your
,
:~::r,~
1!:n°~~~!:!:~~~f ~~:
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
operator's
IICietlse?
Call
992·
of
said
County,
wore flied in this
Reasonable rates. Ph . .u6-ol782,
2966.
Court. Said Inventor ies and
Gallipolis. John Russett.
6-15-ffc • Appra.isements will be for
Owner &amp; Operator.
- - - ' hNring betore th is Court on the
5-13-11•
6th day of OctOber, 1971, al10 :00
O'CIO&lt;k A.M.
C. BRADFORD, Aucti.._,.- Any person desiring to file
exceptions th«eto must tn•
Complete Servi~
them at least five days prior t~
Phone 949-JI:Il
the date set for hearing .
.~
Racine, Ohio
Given
under
my
bond
and
sllff
Crill Bradford
of said Court, th is 16th day 'Of
HOUSE - Two apts .. 4 rooms
5-1-Hc . September 1971 .
•
and bath each. near new -----~---F. H. O'Brlan
housing project. Trade lor
Judge and ex-offlcie1
smaller house. Phone 992- BACKHOE AND OOZER
Clerk of sa id Cour (
2608.
.~
Septic lanks Installed. George
By Ann B. W•tsool
9-26-JOtc
I Bill I Pullins, Phone 992-2odl.
Deputy Clerk·
4-2.5-Hc 191 20, 27. 2t

1

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

Male Help Wanted

Cleland
_Realty

Virgil B.

TEAfORD
SR.

"""'•ror.

- -----

reserv 1ng to the Gra11tors,
Henrv Millirons and Marie
Millirons. 1.57 acres of the
operation, but In no way Umlttnr above described real eslate,
or restricting either such pro- An Ordinance to authorize the
vbtons or the powers herein re- salt! of Village Real Estate not
aerved.
needed for anv Municipal
time work In exciting new 70,0110 B. T.U. floor furnace, like
COUNTRY
RACINE - 1 story lrame, 3 LUXURIOUS
Purpose.
business In area . Must be able
new, 4 circulating gas heaters
HOME - New 4 bedrooms, 2
bedrooms,
sforage
space
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
to read and write English
from 30,000 lo 65,000 B.T. U.,
baths, tamlly room with
galore, carpeted, bath, nice
u
adopted
by
a
maJority
of
the
more
or
less
described
as
lan~uage with moderate
electon: votlne on thJs amendment follows :
commode, drop In double
fireplace. 2 car garage. 15
kitchen, large garage, .75
the amendment shall lake effed Beginning at a point on State
pro iclency, type a little, and
acres. Asking $37,5011.00.
sink. Albert Hilt, Racine;
ACRE of ground, IN FIRST
J"anuary 1, 1972, and existing section Highway right -of -way 234 . 13
provide transportation. Hours
Ohio, phone 9~-2261.
CLASS CDNDtliDN. GOING
of Article 11 of the Constitution right of centerline station 169
about 10·3 dally. Write P. 0 .
9-2Htc
Business
AT $20,500. THIS YOU POMEROY
o Ohio thaU be repealed from such plus 11.5; thence bearing south
Box 106, Pt. Pleasant, or call
building with 3 rentals .
MUST SEE.
eflecUve date.
•• deg . 29' 07" east 360' Jo
675-3398.
Asking $25,000.00.
tacked hub ; thence north 32
1
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA dog . 50' 53" east 308.8' to Iron
9-22-7 c
BEAT the COLD WINTER · HAVE
A
SELLING
STATE OF OHIO
PROBLEM? PLACE THE 120 ACRES - Dairy farm.
and IT'S COST WITH
pin in centerline of township WOMEN to do housework In
road No . 194 ; thence following
Clean and productive. Plenty
SALE
OF
YOUR
HEATi'NG OIL FROM
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
centerline
of townsh ip road and
Pomeroy area . Write Fran,
of barn and building space. 5
OF STATE
PROPERTY
IN
COMLANDMARK.
exist ing property line northwest
Box 23, Pomeroy, Ohio. .
bedroom home . 2 ponds,
PETENT
HANDS.
1, TED w. BROWN, Secretary of to point on,st~te highway right- .
9-24-Jtp
We have the fines! Budget
drilled
welt, and Chester
CLELAND
HENRY
E.
State ot the Slate of Ohio, do here- of -way 252 r1ghl of stat ion 170 - - - - -- -- - Pay Plan, Delivery Services,
water.
A REAL FARM.
REALTOR
by certify thai the forerolng ts plus 78 ; thence south •6 deg . 30' WOMAN to live In, light
Automatic Degree Day
$60,000.011.
a true copy of Amended Senate 30" west 22 .78' to a point on
ho
Office m-2259
Joint Retolutton No. 2 tued tn the right -of -way 251.75' right of 110
usekeeplng and cooking,
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Residence 992-2568'
oft'lce of the Secretary of State and plus 56.2; thence south 68 deg .
room and board, weekly pay.
Equipment.
9-2~-6tc
propoalnt to amend the above .ec- 26' 11'' west 50.14' to point on
Phone 992·~2.
We
also have a complete line
Uona of the Constitution of Ohio. right -of -way 230 ' right -of 9-21 -61c
TESTIMONY
WHERI!QF,
' · 170 pf us 00 ; Jh ~nee sou th
IN hereunto
of Siegler Fuel 011 Heaters
have
sublcrtbed
my nameI st a t 10n
and Furntces.
and atftxed. my official seal at Co- 3P d~g. ,18' 53" 7S . ~3: I~ po int of
Jumbus thillOth day of September beg , nnmg, contammg 1.57
POMEROY
19?'J .
' acres .. more or less . Further
, · • . Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
TED w. BB.OWN s~bject to all easements and SEMI DRIVER TRAINING. We
.
Phone n2-2111 · .
Secretary of State nght -ot -way of record. Deed
are currently offering tractor
Referen
ce:
Volume
227
,
Page
trailer training through the
(Seal)
577 ,
Me igs County Deed
facilities
of the following
(9) 27 (10) 4, 11. 18, 25, ·5tc
Records .
truck
lines.
Truck Line
SEC . II That tl'le Counci l Of
Distribution Systems, Inc.,
the Village of Middleport , by jt :;
Express Parcel Deliveries,
President and the Mayor be and
hereby is autl1orize(f to sell' said
Inc .• Skyline Deliveries, Inc.
For application and in HOUSE, 6 rooms and llath, real eslate to the highest bidder
9-21 -JOtp
to law upon the
lerview, call 304-344-8843; or
modern kllchen and bath, according
tollow;ng
terms
:
Cash in hand
write School Safety DlvisiOI),
buill-in cabinets, fuel oil upon del ivery of deed . That the
furnace ; 7 acres just off U. S. Mayor ot said Village and the
Uniled Syslems. Inc ., e -o
Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland
33 by Enterprise United Presld,ntof Council be and they
Drive, Charleslon, West
Methodlat Church. Phone 992- are hereby authorized to convey
I ft:M: MDrnmg_ A
said real estate to the highest
Virginia . 25306.
5679 alter 5 p.m .
9-27 -2tc 'z!)stful time for some
9-27-21c bidder therefor accord ing lo
Downdismal
people.
Double
------------------taw.
------------------Sa Ia nc;e 'On
sec . 11 t Th is Ordinance shalt
for others. Jim Mees
take effect and be in force from •
Convenient
and after the earliest period SECOND-HAND riding mower,
somellow
gets
··
us
all
TermsA man should never be allowed by low.
Ray -Hartley. Racine, phone
together every day.Passed lhe 13th day of Sep .
949-2855.
ashamed to own he has been lember
1971.
in the wrong, which is but
9-26-31p
My!Dg In other words that Attest : Gene Grate
Clerk
he Is Wiser today than he
Wll yttterday.- Alexander
John w . Zerkle HOUSE in country, phone 992,
Pope, Englllh essayist.
President of (()un c i/
6407 .
Mason. W. Va.
(9 ) 20, 27 110) 4, Jt
9-26-3tp . ._ . . ._ _ _ __

Help Wanted

If

II..

Instruction

ntEY A5KED IF ntE'1'
GOULD GET A CAKE ...

Auto Sales

8 ROOM house on Union Ave. RACINE, 10 room house and
Phone 992-5641.
bath. Two ldts, basement.
9-23-6tp
garage. Phone 949-4313 alter
- - - - -- - - 5:30p.m.
992-6870.
9-23-121p
FOAM
mattress
and
ln
9-24-Jtp
nersprings lor lwin bed, good
condition, $20 lor the set. HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Phone 985-3900.
Call Danny Thompson, 9922196.
9-24-Jtp
IMMEDIATE opening lor a
7-18-llc
man over 21 years old to work
In our store. Must have good CONN trumpet and 52" pony,
Myia Powell, 992;2622.
personalltf. like to meet
9-24-Jtc
public, wl ling to assume
responsibility, vacation plan,
hospitalization plan and other EARN AT home addressing ·
fringe benefits. Please slate
envelopes. Rush stamped
salary requirements. Send
sell-addressed envelope. The
resume of present and past
Ambrose Co .• 4325 Lakeborn,
608 East Main
employers to Box 729-L. c-o
Davisburg. Mich .. 48019.
POMEROY
The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
9-8-JOtp
Ohio.
TOWNSHIP ROAD T•29 -11:-16
ACRES, beautiful site lor
9-26-121c DAVENPORT and chair $20.
housing
pro'lecl or trailer '·
Frigidaire refrigerator, $30.
Br.Oker
court, Ideal s te lor exclusive
Phone 992-387 4.
110 Mechanic SlrH:
home .
ALMOST
IN
9-24-Jtp
POMEROY AND LEVEL.
Ohio
NEEDED NOW - Women with
Just $12,900.
ambition to earn money. Good
NEW LISTING -6 room frame
income. Part lime. Write POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy, RUTLAND-~ ACRE, good
home. Garage. 1 acre at
Parkview
Kennels.
Phone
992Personal Shopper Dept., Box
Burlingham. ~. 500. 011 .
neighborhood,
Nl:W
5-143.
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
aluminum
siding
and
storm
8-15-llc
Winona. Minnesota 55987.
doors and windows. large NEW LISTING- 2 apartments
9-27-ltc
- one 6 rooms, bath, large
front
porch,
3
large
'65 V. W. ENGINE, runs goodporch. down. other 5 rooms,
bedrooms,
bath.
THIS
IS
AN
$135. Phone 985-3310.
bath.
up.
Middleport.
EXCEPTIONAL
BUY
AT
9-21 ·61p
$23,500.00.
JUST
$5,900.
WANTED - Person for part-

Female Help Wanted

NEW &amp; OLD WORK ' ·
All Wother troofhlt - ~
CGnsiTvct;,. C.. ancl Alllhany J&gt;himbing &amp; ....~...'
Complete
Phoinbl~ ••
Keating •nd AJr Con-

Rl. 2

FOUR NEW HOMES ·
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
morithly payment a slow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.011 and three chlldretL 7V. Pet. annual

- - --'--- -

bla name the date of signing and ··
bla J&gt;la"'outside
of residence.
Aicipality
signor ·
0 Uy
relidlng
ot. a mun
·
ohall stale the town.shlp and county OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks.
, Jn whJch h~ resides. A ,..sldent of
and-or complete households.

ROOF PAIImJIG

::::::::::~~========::

Phone 992-5262 evenings.

BACt&lt; ~THEN-- EVER' BODY
STIWS AFTER SCHOOL FER,
ONE 501.1D HOUR

·srounfiG, .

24 Hour.$ervice

.

I'U.TARN M1 BACK AN' COUNT
TO A HONNeRT AN'IF IT AIN'T

11011

Residential,
Com menial
and
Industria 1Wiring

9-21-6tc I

~- GAS circulating heaters.

&lt;

.
-.
.
TilE WRN
WSER
.
.

~AAT

IS IT~ IT'S
A UKUL.~t..6!

OOII'T~Y
1110111 ME! I
..llST ti:IPE. ... M

JIOl 100 HfAYY
FOilltll.l!

work:

·.

•-"•'-t.II.-.UM•

The 'Other ~W
who did something ·

DAILY CROSSWORD

..

ACBOIIS

1. Future
knight
5. Chic shop
_.., 10. 43,560
sq. ft.
11. Unlv.ln

•

Most people never consider themselves as
part of the pollution problem. But chances are
they're as much to blame as smokestacks and
automobiles.
Because people-not things-start pollution. We are the ones who forget to have the
automobile tuned or its anti-pollution devices
checked. We are the ones who vote against sewage treatment plants in our communities because they push up the taxes_ We're the ones
who litter the streets, burn leaves, put the trash
out in containers that the animals can easily
overturn.
We're the ones who point the finger at the
"guy down the street" or "the government" or
"industry." And wit hout ever considering ourselves.
. . Wouldn't you like to be one of the "other
guys" who did something about pollution! Write
for a free booklet, "71 Things You 1 Can Do To
Stop Pollution," Box 1771,' Radio City Station,
New York, N.,Y_

LoulaliUI&amp;

12. Hooaegow

AJ~"IlURE

1349.95

m:oo

"'anted

•

Wanted To Rent

.

13. Small
aealed
bottle
14. Weight

~~~~~;:::&gt;~·~

;
·•
.••
-;.

15. Liquor

16.lollnced

O&amp;th
17.Jackaon

::~

novel

::1

19. Actor

Holbrook

·&lt;

.-··.

20. Kind of egg
21. Cheap
bistro
22. Warbucka
of the
comics

•

··

40. - - out
(added to)

11. Tanta·
llze

DOWN
I. Beyond

15. Opti-

2. Extraor

mistic
18. An-

heavy
3. Putup.
with
((wda.)

4 . .uwaya.

pOetically
5. - -cum
Ja.ude
6. Hlllt

&lt;CI 117_1 X1111 Features Syadiate, Ia(.)

UnHramblelhelefuarJn•h!el,

Per-

one

sian

21. Spanllh
ltidy'a

tiUe
22. Letter

opener

mounW.n

26. sy•tem

letter to eadl square, to

form four ordlna17 word•28.. Bishop's
hat
29. Cavalry

URIOC

IIWOnl.
Brttillh

style
·33. Indlgence_
36. Girl's name
36. NW
Guinea

port

WIT

(J

~CHENUQ~

(m~r­

.·

1GANBIK

ated)
I

26. ''Rat"

Justice

28.Swamp

30. Turmeric
31. I.oland
(Ji'r,)

U . Coffee-

---

oo1ored
Sf. Printing

.
:-

biWldera
II- Bar part.
S'I. Fom10r
coin of the
Nelberlanda
ll8.1..-,e\1 port L-........................_

3t.MoD&amp;Ioi

DAILY CRYPTOQtJOTE-Here'a bow to work 1&amp;:
AXYDLBAAXB
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter atmply atando for another. In thll ample A II
11104 for Ute throe L'o, X !or the two O'o, etc. Stncte leUen,
apMtnlpltea, pae leDJUt and formation of the wonlo are all
blat.o. Each day Ute code letters are diUeront.

,•

•·.'

A Co)pto;l •

q.etaa..

THRHMT Lltl XPH CWYYQX ' G lLLX

.WMP0/1390 FURNITURE

Ql BLF EQKK, YFX CHJHJYHC QX
TQTM.'X BLCZ li.C XPH CWYYQ _X.-

C . H. GPWB

i

t

DE&amp;&amp; lin

Fortas

MASON

\

.

27. ll'onner

· People start pollution. People can stop it.

•

,

~llJJ-~Il;J!,.~, f..J

cient

?. Objector · 23.Canaridicule
dlan
prov8. VacaInce
tioning,
2f. Poop
military

·style
(2wds.)

......,... ~:IF A XAN WHO ,CA:NNOT : ·
COUNT FINDS A FOUR-LEAF CLOVER JS HI:. LUCKTT
-8TANIBLA.W LEC

9.Goaded

2f. - - down

3 ·IJQOMs
.NEW

R.eal Estate Fcir Sale

•

a

OWIIEII
.ElfCIIIC

-=-=====-'=----,---=:. :.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

'. .

t

·Buslitess .5erviceS.~~

Each ~er of any initiative, IUP·
MMEROY, OHIO
10-18-llc :
9-21 -llc
plementary or referendum peUUon
1
must be
an elector
the staleafter
and 1-----~-------------------:-' · TRAILER
LOTS, Bob's Mob'7tle 1911 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
ahall
pJace
on .suchof pet1Uon
C

fore101n1 provllto01 of thts section
lhall be aelf-executinc e..-~eept as
herein otherwise proVided. Laws
may be pUled to tacllltate their

~

-.

•

Now orr p lilt cheW...._

jtof-JMIIIIJI'IM•
···......tad bJIIIt ..... artJ
I

lriiiiiiiD

�..

,

I

·-Till Dally 9eallliel, ......... t.Pcmeroy, 0., Sepl. 27,lt71

"

•

&amp;ntinel
Classifieds
Get
Action
!
Sentinel
Classifie4s
Get
ResrJtS
'
.

L!!GAL,,NO.TICE
No.

:u

,.......,.to--JOINT I\ESOLUTION

lr 'ot

AdloloHolllle~ol

lhl-o!Oidoto.....W.a.....
""r IIi 1Ift of ...U •lice of

JaW.._...... Jaws. ............ ,

. . a=mb to tiM Coi:II!INIIoa
ftCI'IInd to M sqhmltt9dl lo •
wte of tU ... ~..
Be U resolved by the General AJJaanbly of the State of Ohio, three-

ftfthl of the .memben elected to
each hoUH concUI'l'int' therein, that
there Jhall be 1ubmitted to the elec-

ton o.t the state 1n the manner

pretertbed by Jaw at the reneral
election to be held on the first
Tu.Hclay after the first M:bnday in

November 19'11, a proposal to amend
aeetton lC of Article U ol the Con&amp;tJtuUon ot Ohio to read as 1oUowa:
ARTICLE II
SeeUon lg. Any initiative, sup.

plernentar-y or reteret~dum petition
may be presented 1n aeparate parts
but eaeh part shall C011Ulin a full
and correct copy of the uue. and
text of tbe laW. ~eetion or twn
th.eNOl a&gt;Uibt to be referred, or
the . propos*t law or proposed •
amendment to the consbtution.

For Sale ·

For Rett

Pomeroy.
'Motor Co.

(Amaided. Sena~ iOtnt RaoluUon

with · ulllit, APPLES · Fltzpatritk Or.
T~~~~ Inspace
Chesler, phone
chords,
State
Route 689,
985-~106.
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
9-22-6tc
9-3-tl&lt;
3 ROOMS .and bath. furnished,----'--~-170,h Mulberry, phone 992- HALF RUNNER beans, $1.50
2431 after 5 p m
bushel, pic~ yitur ·OWn ,
Potatoes.
Clarence Prolfift,
· · , 9-23-llc
p
ortland. Phone 843-22S..
1970 DODGE POLARA
$2495
APARTMENT, furnished room - --..,.---,-- ---9_::
-22-llc
4 Dr., V-8 engine, automatic trans., P.S.. factory air, good
with bath, phone 992-2780 or
tires. radio &amp; other extras, white finish, i:lean Interior.
992-3432.
~OAL. limestom.: Excelsloj
1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1595
9-17-llc · . ~all Works, E. Main Sf;, HT Cpe., 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine. wide oval tires, · .
' r'omeroy . Phone 992-3891 . ·
P.S.. P. B.• factory air cond., radio &amp; other utras .
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer ·
·
.
...L9-tfc,
IH8 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
. $1495 ·
Park. Minersvllie phone 992- •
270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish, all good tires. 6 cyi.,
' , 3324.
·1
1965 ELCAR, 2 bedroom mobile
automatic trans., radio, cl.e an Interior.
t -19-6tc
home, awnings, cement
porch, garage, storage
TRAILER space. desirable
building, fruit trees, garden
neighborhood, phone 992-208ol.
area, on approximately 2
9-19-tlc
acres - Langsville 667-3978.

... .

-=:-:---c:--~---:....
FURNISHED and unlum~
apartments. Close to school.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.

·

, Phone 992-5434. ·

Comer Union AW..
and Stale Rt. 7 •
Hours-Monday, Tuesday,
~dl'es4oy and Fridoy
8:30a.m. lo6p.m.
Thur&gt;day
10 a.m. toi:JO p.m.
Saturday
8:30a.m. ID 1 p.m.
l'HONE
.
. m -7474

anted T B

'lio'::"e:cl~ij~~~·~~ ~:,:\~l:

WriteM. D. Miller. Pomeroy.
pallty, the street and number, 1f
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
·
8-25-tlc
any, of bla residence. The names of
au
I!Cnerot to such petitions shaD be - - - -- - - - -wrttten ln Ink. each airner for him·
LEGAL NOT C

Hit. To each part of such petlUon
I E
llbaii be attached the affidavit of the
ORDINANCE NO. 971-71
person .oUcJUq the signatures to An Ordinance to authorize the
the aame, which aftldavit •ball con~ sale of Village Real Estate not

~ ~':::m:''.u.O:h th~W:1bt:u~ needed

peUUon and llhall atate that each ot. Purpose.
the lllnatures attached to such part

for any Mun icipal

was made In tb.e presence of the
Be_lt ordained by the Counc i l
alftant, tbat to the best of his of the VIllage of Middleport as

WANT AD
IN FORMAT. ION
DEADLINI:S
S P .M. Pay Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a.m.
'· J;!l~llatlon ~ Correcllons
Will be ill:~led until9'a.iri . lor1
Da~ol Publication
R UL
G

VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 model. Complete with an
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will take
1
publisher will not be res~sible· 1962 FORO h ton pickup truck $27 cash or budget plan
$ol50.
Phone
9~-4551
.
for more than one incorrect
available. Phone 992-5641 .
insertion.
_
_ __ __ _ _
9-2_1-61~
1970 DODGE Dart Swinger, V.IJ,
RATES
aulomatlc, 20,000 miles .
For W~nt Ad Service
Phone 992-7092.
FARM and home laleK house
· 5centsp~Wordone insertion
9-26-3tc
pain! sale. King Builders
. Minimum Charge 75c
Supply,
Middleport.
"12 :ents per word three 1969 CHEVROLET pickup
9-2- 2~tc
consecqtlve Insertions.
topper Included, automatic,
18 ~enh per word six con-... ., cyl. , 21,000 actual mites, . .111111111111111111111111111111!'!!J!IPI
secut1ve Insertions.
, ' spotlights, fogllghts, $2,3011.
25 Per Cent Dlscou~t on paid
Phone 992-6029 or see . at
ads and ads paid wllhtn 10 days. - Waller Wilson's on Peach
CARD OF THANKS
Fork Road
&amp; OBITUARY
.
9-26-31p
Sl.SO for 5Q word minimum.
Each additional word 2c . .
'63 FORD Van Truck- $175, .65
BLIND ADS
Mustang - $200, '66 A-1 Ford
Additional 25c Charge "per
$400. Contact Albert
Adverllseml!nt.
L2~
Roseberry,
Bashan-Keno Rd.,
OFf·fCE HOURS
Long Bottom.
8:30a.m . to 5: 011 p.m. Daily,
9-26-3tp
8:30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.

Notice

th1S ex~eptlon . Excepting and

left In Jayawar. Beautiful
pastel color, lui size model.
All built-In to buttonhole,
overcast and fancy stitch.
Pay i'ust $48.75 cash or terms
avai able. Trade-Ins ac. cepted. Phone 992-5641.
9-2l-61c

rate. ·

-~-'---'-­

ATtONS

The Publisher ' reserves the
right to edit or reject any ad$·,
deemed objectional
The'

knowledp and beliel each s.IJDa· follows :
ture on such part JS the genuine Sec. I. That the following real
Jilnature of the person whose name estate, belonging to the Village
It purports to be, that be lHilleves of Middlerort is not needed for
the pertona who have silned it to
·
'
· .
be electors that they 80 signed aald mun 1clpa purposes , to -w1t.
peUUon wtth knowledge o.t tbe con- Si~uate In 65-acre Lot 157,
lentl thereof that each siJller Sechon 29, Town 1, Range 13,
atcned the same on the date stated Meigs County, Ohio, bounded as
opJ)Oiite his name; and no other follows:
allldavJt thereto shall be required.
Beginning at the northwest
The petition and signatures upon corner of said Section 29; thence
IUCh petiUons, so verifted, &amp;hall be along the north line of said
pruumed to be tD all resP&lt;Cts sur- s t· t th e Nor th east corner
ftctent unlea not later lhan forty ec IOn o
daya before the election, It shall be of _K~rrs 6·acre lot;_thence along
otherwise proved and 1n aueh event satd Kerrs east line 245 feet:
ten addiUonal da'fs shall be allowed thence north 853N deg. east 389
for the 1Wn1 o additional siena· feet ; thence south 681h deg. east
tura to tuch petition. No law or 279 feetto a Locust Tree; thence
amendment to the constitution aulr south 77112 deg _ east 8-43 feet to
m.Jtted to the elrcton by lnitiativ1 Powell's west line ; thence along
and 1Upplem.entary ,PetlUon and re- said Powell's west line _.28112
eelvina' an affirmative maJority of feef to said Powell's northweSt
the vota cut thereon, shall be
th ence north 2'"
d
held unconatttuUonal or void on al:!- corner,
1-,.
eg .
count of the lnsufftcteney o1 the east 322 feet to the center: of a
peUtlom: by which aueh submission road; thence along the center of
of tbe same wu procrured; nor said road in a northwest
lball the reJecuon of any law aub- direction to the east side of the
mltted. by referen.dwn petition be Thomas Fork road near Miles PIANO tuning , reference,
Meigs Local Schools. Phone
held lnvaUd for IUch lnsuftlelericy. Moore lot ; thence along the east
Upon all JnitaUve, supplementary side of the said Thomas Fork
992-5509.
IID4 re(erendum peUtloas provided
for
m any of the tectiona of tbil roa d ·1n a sou th wes t dl rec tlon to
9-26-31p
arUc:le, tt lhall be necessary to ftle the place of beginning, save ~nd
tram eadt of one-half of the eoun- except 11f1 acres sold to M1les
U• a1 the state, peUUona beAr1na Moore by V. B. Horton ; also a PEP-UP with new Zippies Iron
pills. Non-habit lormtng. 011y
1be lilnatures ot not less tban one- right-of-wily granted to the Ohio
$1.98, Nelson Drugs.
ball ol1he daip.ated. percentate of Central Railroad, the land so
the etecton ot such county. A true conveyed being 32 9-100 acres
9-22-JOtp
copy of allii.WI or proposed laws or more or less
propoMd amendments to the eonat1· Also the following real estate REDUCE sale and last with
tuti:Oo, topther with an argument situate in Meigs County , Ohio,
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Ol' uplanaUon, or both. for, and. allo and In the 65 acre part of 100
anarrwnentoruplanation,orboth. acre lot 157 , bounded and · Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
9-22-JOip
aainlt
1he 1811le,
lhall be wbo
prepared,
The
penon
or penona
pre- described as follows ·· The one
pare .the arrwnent or ,explanatton1 ac~e lot lying in the west end of
or both, qa1n1t any law srctlon or sard part of said 100-acre lot; KOSCOT Kosmetlcs . SepIMm; IUbmltted. to the e1ecton: by Beginning at a stake at a run on
tember
Sales
Special :
referendum peUtlon, may be named the east side of the road, south
Kreamy
lip
Kate
$2 now
tp ~ petition and the penona of the bridge over Thomas
$1.50, Frostlucent Lip Kate
who. prepare Pte . Pa:Ument or ex- Fork.; thence . touJh 59 degrees
$2.50 - now $2, 23 delicious
a'la:na.Uori. or bOth,- ~ any proposed ltiSf, 290 -feet : thence south 49
law-Or Propowd amendment to tbe degrees west 150 feet · thence
colors.
Call 992-5113 or come
eoDIUtu.tton may be named ln the
'
petition proPOitnt the same. The north 59 degrees west 290 feet to
see al 161 1h "' ·•h Ave.,
per.on or peno111 who prepare the the road ; thence north _.9
Middleport, Oh
UJUPttnt or explanation, or both, degrees east along Said road 150
B-29-tlc
for the law, RCUon or Item, sub· feet to th.e place of beginning, -:-:--~-----mUted to the electon by referen- containing 1 acre . Also the
dum petiUon, or aratnst any pro- following lot adjoining said 1- SAVE up to one hall. Bring your
sick TV lo Chuck 's TV Shop,
PDied. law ubmJtted by supplemen- acre lot situate in Sec. 30, in the
bry ~Ution, shall be named by 65-acre part of 100 acre lot 157 in
151 Bu•l•rnut Ave .. Pomeroy,
the 1eneral a.aembly, 1t in aession,
"d
C
·
phone 9'92-5080.
and lf not 1n ~e~~ton then by the sa1 _
ounty
and
State;
~vernor. The law, or proposed law, 8egu:ming at the North corner
9.24_11c
or pro~ amendment to the eon- of satd Moors 1-acre lot; tl1ence - - -- - -- -- .tltution, toeether with the arcu- North 331f:r degrees east 60 feet i
mentl and explanations. not ex- thence south SJ degrees east 84 WILL DO light hauling, phone

•Ceedtnc a total of three hundred. feet ; thence south 70 degrees
words for each, and also the argu- east 2•6 feet; thence south 491f2
men~and explanation•. not ex- deg. west 108 feet to the east
eeed
a total of three hundred corner of said 1-acre lot · tl1ence
wordl
It eaeh, shall be pubt
d
'
lilb.ed o~ a week for five consecu- nor h 59 eg , .we~t 290 feet t~ !he
tive weeka Precedtn( the elec:tlon Place of begmn.ng; contammg
.in at leut one newspaper of a:eneriii 1f2 acre. Save and except the
cl.rculaUon in each county of the right-of-way granted by said
•tate, where a newspaper Ia pub- Moore to the Ohio Central
Ulhed. Unle. otherwise provided Railroad, being the same real
by law. the secretary ot. state ahall estate conveyed by V _ B. Horton
cause to be placed upon the ballotl, and Dabney heirs to said Miles
the Utle of any IUcb law, or pro- Moore and recorded In Vol 3"
DOMd law, or pfOPORd amendment p
- .r.
to the coutttutton to be submitted ages 349, 350, and 352. Also 1n
Be 1ba1J a11o eauM the ballots 10 tO VoL 56, Pages 102, 103, and 10~ ­
be Printed • to permit an atllrma- Also Vol. 88, Pages 393 and 394,
Uve or neaauve vote upon each Meigs County Deed Records.
law, HCtlon of law, or item 1n a Save and except 3.089 acres
law appropriatlnt money, or pro- conveyed to the State of Ohio by
J)Oeed law, or propelled amendment deed recorded in Vol. 22_., Page
to the conetltullon. The style of 605
Meigs county . Deed
111 lawa aubmttted. by inJUattve R: ' d
1
hi h
and tupplementary petition shall ecor s, reference o w ~ . is
be: "Be Jt Enacted by the People hereby made for def1n1te
of the State of Obio," and of all description of the exception .
conaUtuUonat amendmentl: ''Be 1t Save and except .8 acre con llaolved. by the People of the State veyed to Orville and Mildred
o1 Ohlo." The buta upon which the Millirons by deed recorded in
reQUired nwnber of petiHoners tn Volume 16P, page · 164, Meigs
any cue lhaU be detennlned lhall County
Deed
Records ,
be the total number of votes cast reference to which is hereby
tor .Precedlnc
the olllce el~tton
of governor
at The
the made
for definite description
of
la.d
therefor.
_
_

ourt, Rt . 124, Syracuse. ·
Ohio. 992·2951.
4-2-tfc

8

· 14' • 24' • WIDE:

Mobile Homes fur Sale

MILLER
MOBil£ HOMES

1220 Washington Blvd..
Gl FINANCING. AVAILABLE.
Belpre,Dhlo _
No down payment, 12 years to 11.111111111111i.11111111.i.11111111•
pay to qualified G I. Up to
$2,500 available fer lot ·lmprovemenh if you own a lot.
Get your new mobile home·
now. See James Simpkins, 3 BEDROOM brick home .
Valley Estates Mobile Home
Choice location In Middleport. ·
Seen by appointment only. '
Sales, Rt. 50 East Athens Phone 992-5523 alter 4 p.m.
593-8762.
5-7-tfc
9-19-37tc
----------$2.3011 WILL buy ·,. acres in
Bedford Township, Wolfpen
Road . 20 minutes from
EARLY American stereo, AMPomeroy. &gt;4 of land In timber,
FM radio. 4-speed changer, 4balance in pasture. No
speaker sound system,
buildings. Call 992-2152 and
Balance $79.32. Use our
ask lor Dick.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
9-22-llc
9-27-6tc
STEREO-RADIO combination, NEW. 3-bedroom home In
Middleport. Built-in kitchen,
lovely Walnut finish, 4-speed
ceramic
tile bath, all-electric
intermixed changer,
4heat,
good
neighborhood. Can
speaker sound system.
arrange
FHA financing .
Balance $63.99. Use our
Telephone 992-3600 or 992budget terms . Call 992-7085.
2186.
9·27-6tc
7-25-tlc
- - - -- - - - --

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

WW.T~

ditianing.
241. LiiiCIIIn St.•.Middle!IOft

"tttU TIIINK $0,
OFFICER
IIEEBE 1

~-

'.
•

Phone 992-2550

Insured- Experienced :
Work Guaranteed
See us icii- - Fr.ee
Estimate on Furnadj
lnstalalion.
~CEU&gt;T

.--.:..-----...c......
11'!7 NO FUN PLAYINe

EXPERT ·

( 1i:NNIG WfTH '&lt;\?U,
LANCS:!

·--~

-GUARANTEED- :
Phone 992-2094
BILL NELSON
HILTON WOLFE
992-3657
Mt-3211
l..ii_iiiii______________

iiiilii.-'

Pamen!J tbni &amp; Ant;
' ()peR I Til'S

'•

. DINSON MASPDY .
f:o!ftpfete
Re_1f!O~~~

.

'

and Anienni.'

1HARRis0N'S TV
, Service, Phone 992-2522.

•
6-10-llc

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

Kitchefts, Baths
Room Additians
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work
Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

POMEROY
HOME&amp; AUtO

Monday"'"' Saturday
" ' E. Main. f'llnlloroy, o . ,

OFFICE SUPPUES
And

FuRIIOURE
' I

AWNINGS, storm doors and
w i n d 0 w s , c a r P0 r 1 s ,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
sal~s representative. For free ·
e~ltmales, phone Charles
Ltsle Syracuse
V
V
Joh '
nd Son j
·
·
nson a
, nc.
'
_ _ __ _ __ _5-:._1:_7...:.
·«c

..

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display_

-NEIGLER Construction. For
building or '1":J1011eilng your
home. Call Guy Nelgte(,
Racine, Ohio.
·
7-31
-lfi
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph. ·
662-JOJ5.
tl
2· 12· c
NOTICE ON
SEWING MACHINES. Re_pair
FILING OF
service. all makes, 992-221-l,
INVENTORY
AND
The F
APPRAISEMENT
abrlc Shop, Pometoy. The State ol 0-lo, Mtlts
Authorized Singer Sales and Cotutry.
Prob•te Court.
Service. ~Sharpen Scissors.
Ta the Administrators Of the
3-29-llc ntates. ; to such of the following
as are- residents of the St11te· of

LEGAL NOTICE

ROSEBERRY furnace In stallation. Free estimates on
Ohio. v is : the surviving
new furnaces, oil or gas. O'DELL WHEEL a lignment spouse,
the noxt of kin, the
Service work . Call Cecil
located at Cros..-oads, Rt. 124. benefic iaries under the will ;
. Roseberry, Racine. Ohio.
Complete front end serYice, and to the attOrney or •ttorn&amp;ys
Phone 614-843-2274.
tune up and brake service. represent ing 1ny of the
9-8-JO!p
h 1
b 1
persons.
W
·
ee s
a anced e 1ec- aforementioned
Augusta M. Wolfe. Deceased,
Ironically. · All
work Letart Township, Meigs County,
THE SHOP. Custom meat
guaranteed.
Reasonable Ohio, No. 205S..
CiJIIin!f,'1'1iasant Ridge Road.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
,
Ida · C . Wolfe, Oece•sed ,
Pomerov. Dick Vaughan, 9927-27-Hc Letart Townsh ip, Ntelgs County,
Ohio, No. 20555.
3374 and Dale Little, 992-6346.
You are herebv notified that
9-12-JO!c
AUTOMOBILE1~m · been · tho
Inventories and Ap caAcelled?
Lost
your
,
:~::r,~
1!:n°~~~!:!:~~~f ~~:
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
operator's
IICietlse?
Call
992·
of
said
County,
wore flied in this
Reasonable rates. Ph . .u6-ol782,
2966.
Court. Said Inventor ies and
Gallipolis. John Russett.
6-15-ffc • Appra.isements will be for
Owner &amp; Operator.
- - - ' hNring betore th is Court on the
5-13-11•
6th day of OctOber, 1971, al10 :00
O'CIO&lt;k A.M.
C. BRADFORD, Aucti.._,.- Any person desiring to file
exceptions th«eto must tn•
Complete Servi~
them at least five days prior t~
Phone 949-JI:Il
the date set for hearing .
.~
Racine, Ohio
Given
under
my
bond
and
sllff
Crill Bradford
of said Court, th is 16th day 'Of
HOUSE - Two apts .. 4 rooms
5-1-Hc . September 1971 .
•
and bath each. near new -----~---F. H. O'Brlan
housing project. Trade lor
Judge and ex-offlcie1
smaller house. Phone 992- BACKHOE AND OOZER
Clerk of sa id Cour (
2608.
.~
Septic lanks Installed. George
By Ann B. W•tsool
9-26-JOtc
I Bill I Pullins, Phone 992-2odl.
Deputy Clerk·
4-2.5-Hc 191 20, 27. 2t

1

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

Male Help Wanted

Cleland
_Realty

Virgil B.

TEAfORD
SR.

"""'•ror.

- -----

reserv 1ng to the Gra11tors,
Henrv Millirons and Marie
Millirons. 1.57 acres of the
operation, but In no way Umlttnr above described real eslate,
or restricting either such pro- An Ordinance to authorize the
vbtons or the powers herein re- salt! of Village Real Estate not
aerved.
needed for anv Municipal
time work In exciting new 70,0110 B. T.U. floor furnace, like
COUNTRY
RACINE - 1 story lrame, 3 LUXURIOUS
Purpose.
business In area . Must be able
new, 4 circulating gas heaters
HOME - New 4 bedrooms, 2
bedrooms,
sforage
space
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
to read and write English
from 30,000 lo 65,000 B.T. U.,
baths, tamlly room with
galore, carpeted, bath, nice
u
adopted
by
a
maJority
of
the
more
or
less
described
as
lan~uage with moderate
electon: votlne on thJs amendment follows :
commode, drop In double
fireplace. 2 car garage. 15
kitchen, large garage, .75
the amendment shall lake effed Beginning at a point on State
pro iclency, type a little, and
acres. Asking $37,5011.00.
sink. Albert Hilt, Racine;
ACRE of ground, IN FIRST
J"anuary 1, 1972, and existing section Highway right -of -way 234 . 13
provide transportation. Hours
Ohio, phone 9~-2261.
CLASS CDNDtliDN. GOING
of Article 11 of the Constitution right of centerline station 169
about 10·3 dally. Write P. 0 .
9-2Htc
Business
AT $20,500. THIS YOU POMEROY
o Ohio thaU be repealed from such plus 11.5; thence bearing south
Box 106, Pt. Pleasant, or call
building with 3 rentals .
MUST SEE.
eflecUve date.
•• deg . 29' 07" east 360' Jo
675-3398.
Asking $25,000.00.
tacked hub ; thence north 32
1
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA dog . 50' 53" east 308.8' to Iron
9-22-7 c
BEAT the COLD WINTER · HAVE
A
SELLING
STATE OF OHIO
PROBLEM? PLACE THE 120 ACRES - Dairy farm.
and IT'S COST WITH
pin in centerline of township WOMEN to do housework In
road No . 194 ; thence following
Clean and productive. Plenty
SALE
OF
YOUR
HEATi'NG OIL FROM
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
centerline
of townsh ip road and
Pomeroy area . Write Fran,
of barn and building space. 5
OF STATE
PROPERTY
IN
COMLANDMARK.
exist ing property line northwest
Box 23, Pomeroy, Ohio. .
bedroom home . 2 ponds,
PETENT
HANDS.
1, TED w. BROWN, Secretary of to point on,st~te highway right- .
9-24-Jtp
We have the fines! Budget
drilled
welt, and Chester
CLELAND
HENRY
E.
State ot the Slate of Ohio, do here- of -way 252 r1ghl of stat ion 170 - - - - -- -- - Pay Plan, Delivery Services,
water.
A REAL FARM.
REALTOR
by certify thai the forerolng ts plus 78 ; thence south •6 deg . 30' WOMAN to live In, light
Automatic Degree Day
$60,000.011.
a true copy of Amended Senate 30" west 22 .78' to a point on
ho
Office m-2259
Joint Retolutton No. 2 tued tn the right -of -way 251.75' right of 110
usekeeplng and cooking,
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Residence 992-2568'
oft'lce of the Secretary of State and plus 56.2; thence south 68 deg .
room and board, weekly pay.
Equipment.
9-2~-6tc
propoalnt to amend the above .ec- 26' 11'' west 50.14' to point on
Phone 992·~2.
We
also have a complete line
Uona of the Constitution of Ohio. right -of -way 230 ' right -of 9-21 -61c
TESTIMONY
WHERI!QF,
' · 170 pf us 00 ; Jh ~nee sou th
IN hereunto
of Siegler Fuel 011 Heaters
have
sublcrtbed
my nameI st a t 10n
and Furntces.
and atftxed. my official seal at Co- 3P d~g. ,18' 53" 7S . ~3: I~ po int of
Jumbus thillOth day of September beg , nnmg, contammg 1.57
POMEROY
19?'J .
' acres .. more or less . Further
, · • . Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
TED w. BB.OWN s~bject to all easements and SEMI DRIVER TRAINING. We
.
Phone n2-2111 · .
Secretary of State nght -ot -way of record. Deed
are currently offering tractor
Referen
ce:
Volume
227
,
Page
trailer training through the
(Seal)
577 ,
Me igs County Deed
facilities
of the following
(9) 27 (10) 4, 11. 18, 25, ·5tc
Records .
truck
lines.
Truck Line
SEC . II That tl'le Counci l Of
Distribution Systems, Inc.,
the Village of Middleport , by jt :;
Express Parcel Deliveries,
President and the Mayor be and
hereby is autl1orize(f to sell' said
Inc .• Skyline Deliveries, Inc.
For application and in HOUSE, 6 rooms and llath, real eslate to the highest bidder
9-21 -JOtp
to law upon the
lerview, call 304-344-8843; or
modern kllchen and bath, according
tollow;ng
terms
:
Cash in hand
write School Safety DlvisiOI),
buill-in cabinets, fuel oil upon del ivery of deed . That the
furnace ; 7 acres just off U. S. Mayor ot said Village and the
Uniled Syslems. Inc ., e -o
Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland
33 by Enterprise United Presld,ntof Council be and they
Drive, Charleslon, West
Methodlat Church. Phone 992- are hereby authorized to convey
I ft:M: MDrnmg_ A
said real estate to the highest
Virginia . 25306.
5679 alter 5 p.m .
9-27 -2tc 'z!)stful time for some
9-27-21c bidder therefor accord ing lo
Downdismal
people.
Double
------------------taw.
------------------Sa Ia nc;e 'On
sec . 11 t Th is Ordinance shalt
for others. Jim Mees
take effect and be in force from •
Convenient
and after the earliest period SECOND-HAND riding mower,
somellow
gets
··
us
all
TermsA man should never be allowed by low.
Ray -Hartley. Racine, phone
together every day.Passed lhe 13th day of Sep .
949-2855.
ashamed to own he has been lember
1971.
in the wrong, which is but
9-26-31p
My!Dg In other words that Attest : Gene Grate
Clerk
he Is Wiser today than he
Wll yttterday.- Alexander
John w . Zerkle HOUSE in country, phone 992,
Pope, Englllh essayist.
President of (()un c i/
6407 .
Mason. W. Va.
(9 ) 20, 27 110) 4, Jt
9-26-3tp . ._ . . ._ _ _ __

Help Wanted

If

II..

Instruction

ntEY A5KED IF ntE'1'
GOULD GET A CAKE ...

Auto Sales

8 ROOM house on Union Ave. RACINE, 10 room house and
Phone 992-5641.
bath. Two ldts, basement.
9-23-6tp
garage. Phone 949-4313 alter
- - - - -- - - 5:30p.m.
992-6870.
9-23-121p
FOAM
mattress
and
ln
9-24-Jtp
nersprings lor lwin bed, good
condition, $20 lor the set. HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Phone 985-3900.
Call Danny Thompson, 9922196.
9-24-Jtp
IMMEDIATE opening lor a
7-18-llc
man over 21 years old to work
In our store. Must have good CONN trumpet and 52" pony,
Myia Powell, 992;2622.
personalltf. like to meet
9-24-Jtc
public, wl ling to assume
responsibility, vacation plan,
hospitalization plan and other EARN AT home addressing ·
fringe benefits. Please slate
envelopes. Rush stamped
salary requirements. Send
sell-addressed envelope. The
resume of present and past
Ambrose Co .• 4325 Lakeborn,
608 East Main
employers to Box 729-L. c-o
Davisburg. Mich .. 48019.
POMEROY
The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
9-8-JOtp
Ohio.
TOWNSHIP ROAD T•29 -11:-16
ACRES, beautiful site lor
9-26-121c DAVENPORT and chair $20.
housing
pro'lecl or trailer '·
Frigidaire refrigerator, $30.
Br.Oker
court, Ideal s te lor exclusive
Phone 992-387 4.
110 Mechanic SlrH:
home .
ALMOST
IN
9-24-Jtp
POMEROY AND LEVEL.
Ohio
NEEDED NOW - Women with
Just $12,900.
ambition to earn money. Good
NEW LISTING -6 room frame
income. Part lime. Write POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy, RUTLAND-~ ACRE, good
home. Garage. 1 acre at
Parkview
Kennels.
Phone
992Personal Shopper Dept., Box
Burlingham. ~. 500. 011 .
neighborhood,
Nl:W
5-143.
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
aluminum
siding
and
storm
8-15-llc
Winona. Minnesota 55987.
doors and windows. large NEW LISTING- 2 apartments
9-27-ltc
- one 6 rooms, bath, large
front
porch,
3
large
'65 V. W. ENGINE, runs goodporch. down. other 5 rooms,
bedrooms,
bath.
THIS
IS
AN
$135. Phone 985-3310.
bath.
up.
Middleport.
EXCEPTIONAL
BUY
AT
9-21 ·61p
$23,500.00.
JUST
$5,900.
WANTED - Person for part-

Female Help Wanted

NEW &amp; OLD WORK ' ·
All Wother troofhlt - ~
CGnsiTvct;,. C.. ancl Alllhany J&gt;himbing &amp; ....~...'
Complete
Phoinbl~ ••
Keating •nd AJr Con-

Rl. 2

FOUR NEW HOMES ·
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
morithly payment a slow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.011 and three chlldretL 7V. Pet. annual

- - --'--- -

bla name the date of signing and ··
bla J&gt;la"'outside
of residence.
Aicipality
signor ·
0 Uy
relidlng
ot. a mun
·
ohall stale the town.shlp and county OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks.
, Jn whJch h~ resides. A ,..sldent of
and-or complete households.

ROOF PAIImJIG

::::::::::~~========::

Phone 992-5262 evenings.

BACt&lt; ~THEN-- EVER' BODY
STIWS AFTER SCHOOL FER,
ONE 501.1D HOUR

·srounfiG, .

24 Hour.$ervice

.

I'U.TARN M1 BACK AN' COUNT
TO A HONNeRT AN'IF IT AIN'T

11011

Residential,
Com menial
and
Industria 1Wiring

9-21-6tc I

~- GAS circulating heaters.

&lt;

.
-.
.
TilE WRN
WSER
.
.

~AAT

IS IT~ IT'S
A UKUL.~t..6!

OOII'T~Y
1110111 ME! I
..llST ti:IPE. ... M

JIOl 100 HfAYY
FOilltll.l!

work:

·.

•-"•'-t.II.-.UM•

The 'Other ~W
who did something ·

DAILY CROSSWORD

..

ACBOIIS

1. Future
knight
5. Chic shop
_.., 10. 43,560
sq. ft.
11. Unlv.ln

•

Most people never consider themselves as
part of the pollution problem. But chances are
they're as much to blame as smokestacks and
automobiles.
Because people-not things-start pollution. We are the ones who forget to have the
automobile tuned or its anti-pollution devices
checked. We are the ones who vote against sewage treatment plants in our communities because they push up the taxes_ We're the ones
who litter the streets, burn leaves, put the trash
out in containers that the animals can easily
overturn.
We're the ones who point the finger at the
"guy down the street" or "the government" or
"industry." And wit hout ever considering ourselves.
. . Wouldn't you like to be one of the "other
guys" who did something about pollution! Write
for a free booklet, "71 Things You 1 Can Do To
Stop Pollution," Box 1771,' Radio City Station,
New York, N.,Y_

LoulaliUI&amp;

12. Hooaegow

AJ~"IlURE

1349.95

m:oo

"'anted

•

Wanted To Rent

.

13. Small
aealed
bottle
14. Weight

~~~~~;:::&gt;~·~

;
·•
.••
-;.

15. Liquor

16.lollnced

O&amp;th
17.Jackaon

::~

novel

::1

19. Actor

Holbrook

·&lt;

.-··.

20. Kind of egg
21. Cheap
bistro
22. Warbucka
of the
comics

•

··

40. - - out
(added to)

11. Tanta·
llze

DOWN
I. Beyond

15. Opti-

2. Extraor

mistic
18. An-

heavy
3. Putup.
with
((wda.)

4 . .uwaya.

pOetically
5. - -cum
Ja.ude
6. Hlllt

&lt;CI 117_1 X1111 Features Syadiate, Ia(.)

UnHramblelhelefuarJn•h!el,

Per-

one

sian

21. Spanllh
ltidy'a

tiUe
22. Letter

opener

mounW.n

26. sy•tem

letter to eadl square, to

form four ordlna17 word•28.. Bishop's
hat
29. Cavalry

URIOC

IIWOnl.
Brttillh

style
·33. Indlgence_
36. Girl's name
36. NW
Guinea

port

WIT

(J

~CHENUQ~

(m~r­

.·

1GANBIK

ated)
I

26. ''Rat"

Justice

28.Swamp

30. Turmeric
31. I.oland
(Ji'r,)

U . Coffee-

---

oo1ored
Sf. Printing

.
:-

biWldera
II- Bar part.
S'I. Fom10r
coin of the
Nelberlanda
ll8.1..-,e\1 port L-........................_

3t.MoD&amp;Ioi

DAILY CRYPTOQtJOTE-Here'a bow to work 1&amp;:
AXYDLBAAXB
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter atmply atando for another. In thll ample A II
11104 for Ute throe L'o, X !or the two O'o, etc. Stncte leUen,
apMtnlpltea, pae leDJUt and formation of the wonlo are all
blat.o. Each day Ute code letters are diUeront.

,•

•·.'

A Co)pto;l •

q.etaa..

THRHMT Lltl XPH CWYYQX ' G lLLX

.WMP0/1390 FURNITURE

Ql BLF EQKK, YFX CHJHJYHC QX
TQTM.'X BLCZ li.C XPH CWYYQ _X.-

C . H. GPWB

i

t

DE&amp;&amp; lin

Fortas

MASON

\

.

27. ll'onner

· People start pollution. People can stop it.

•

,

~llJJ-~Il;J!,.~, f..J

cient

?. Objector · 23.Canaridicule
dlan
prov8. VacaInce
tioning,
2f. Poop
military

·style
(2wds.)

......,... ~:IF A XAN WHO ,CA:NNOT : ·
COUNT FINDS A FOUR-LEAF CLOVER JS HI:. LUCKTT
-8TANIBLA.W LEC

9.Goaded

2f. - - down

3 ·IJQOMs
.NEW

R.eal Estate Fcir Sale

•

a

OWIIEII
.ElfCIIIC

-=-=====-'=----,---=:. :.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

'. .

t

·Buslitess .5erviceS.~~

Each ~er of any initiative, IUP·
MMEROY, OHIO
10-18-llc :
9-21 -llc
plementary or referendum peUUon
1
must be
an elector
the staleafter
and 1-----~-------------------:-' · TRAILER
LOTS, Bob's Mob'7tle 1911 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
ahall
pJace
on .suchof pet1Uon
C

fore101n1 provllto01 of thts section
lhall be aelf-executinc e..-~eept as
herein otherwise proVided. Laws
may be pUled to tacllltate their

~

-.

•

Now orr p lilt cheW...._

jtof-JMIIIIJI'IM•
···......tad bJIIIt ..... artJ
I

lriiiiiiiD

�'

a.:- Tile~ Sea~!.

w"'

-

•t.Pwwuy, o.,llepl. 'll,lt'll

An Era Awaited
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI)
-In an historic meeting in an
Air Force hangar, President
Nixon and Emperor Hlrohilo of
Japan e~:changed warm greet.
lngs Sunday night to signal a
new era in diplomatic relations
strained by America's new
OCOIICifDlc and China poHcies.
"Our visit this evening also
symbolizes the friendship between Japan and lbe United
States," Nixon told some ~.000
persons and scores of newsmen
januned in the fourofltory high,
gaily-decorated hangar at ElmendoriAirForceBase.
Hlrohilo said, "I am deeply
moved by your presence here
with Mrs. Nixon .. "
When Hlrohilo's jetliner landed at 9:47 p.m. Alaska lime
toda EDT) and he
(2,., a.m.
Y
stepped on American soil, It
marked the first time that a
Japanese emperor left his
homeland to travel to another
nation in Japan's l!lkeniury
history.
In the brisk 35-degree weather the President, wearing a
topcoat, greeted Rirohito as he
wiill&lt;ed down the ramp and
said, "Your Majesty, we are
most happy to have you on
Ameri~n soil and as you go on
your journey, our thoughts and
our prayers go with you."
'lbe emperor, looking frail
and appearing every bit of his
70 years, also wore a topcoat
over a conservative suit.
Both Nixon and Hlrohito
stood stiffly at altenlion on a
red carpet as 21 guns boomed a
salute. A Marine band played
the Japanese ahd U.S. national
anthems. Both chiefs of state
then reviewed the colorful
Marine Drum and Bugle Corps.
Thundering applaW!e greeted
Nixon and tbe emperor as they
walked into the hangar.
Nixon, 58, a 6.footer, towered
over the 5,fooW Hlrohlto as
they stood on the velvetcarpeted platfona in Hangar
Five.
Tbe pomp and pageantry
overshadowed memOries of
World War U when Japanese
soldiers invaded and occupied
for a short time the Aleutian
Islands off the Alaska coast.
But a grim reminder of the war
days was at nearby Ft.
Wainwright, where there Is a
burial ground for 235 Japanese
soldiers.
Nb:on, winding up a two-day
Western l!lur; ssld in the
cavernous hangar: "We meet
~ evening in a part of the
United States which Is appronmately the same distance from
Tokyo ·as it Is from our own
~pital in Washington, D.C.
"This fact reminds us that
our two counlries are not only
friends but neighbors as well,
separated by an ocean which
grows smaUer every day."
'lbe President also said, "a
year ago the great exposition at
Osaka ~ught the Imagination
of the entire world. The theme
of that exposition was this:
'Progress And Hannony For
All Mankind .•
'"l'bese words express the
hope which- unites our peopleand people every:where." .

. MEIGS lHEAnif
Tonlo~t ,..,..

Tuesdly

Sept. 27-21
Wall Disney's
"SI,OOO,OOO DUCK"

(Technicolorl
De&lt;!n Jones
Sandy Duncan
Walt Disney's
BONGO
(Technicolorl

"G"

"G"
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

I '

~-

1

\ 1 '

I

\

&lt;

COURI. NEWS

Anti-Thieu Pressure Mounting

EXTENDEDOU'J'LOOI(
1111t. Emr • d OIIIINller

Wet ,._7 ......., Friday:
Quite wana Wr ' y. A

: ;::'!~:.~c::

HOSPITAL NEWS

1

1
1

=

•

Fourtdn - caaea were tel'·
milia led and ooe wu -IIDD!!II-·
this moi'Ding In GalUpoUs
confrooled disllbled veterans Municipal Court. Paul PlriiUpe,
and high school students who 311, Rt. 2, Q'OWn City, entered a
1ried to march oo a main street liot guilty plea to a ..trol .
carryingantl-1bleubannersand charge of driving wiBie qnder
picbres ol the presided with a suspenalon. Acting Judge
crossdrawnacrCIOIIhisface.
'11lcmu S. Moulton agreed to•
Police fired tear gas to break bear the case m Oct. '5.
up the demoostratioo and the
WlUlam R. BoDey, 25, Rt. 2,.
students responded by IAJssing Galllpolls, Was bned $10 and:
;
firebombs and at least two costa fer clefective bnkea.
&amp;agment.atim grenades, ooly
Forfel~ boods were Walter:
one of wllich went off. One N. Bentz, 58, Pomeroy, "8,;
policeman was slightly wound- speed; Russell Fillinger, Rt. 1,'
ed.
Crown City, $51, littering; ;
lAter the demonstrators, who James K. H&lt;rloll, 63, Atbells,
retreated intO their headquar· . $28,passingwithouttheaasured:
ters, tried to bring the banners clear distance; Gary R. BaUr,
out again. At that point the rt, Galllpolla, "'· defective
police puUed oot and regular muffler; Robe~ E. Wolfcrd, 36,
South Vietnamese anny troops, St. Albans, $211, speed; Edward
anned wilb machineguns, were Leroy . Workman, 28, Worbrougbt in for another confron.. tbinglon, $23, speed; James
tation. A third grell8!le was Foster Smilb, 30, GaUipolis
thrown and five IIHII'O ·persons Ferry, $18, no driver's Ucense;
were slightly wounded, but Denver .c. Uvely, 35, Rt. I,
there was no gwlfire and the BidweU, "'· no muffler; Perry
(lrotest broke up at mid- C. C8rdwell, 25, Rt. 2, O'OWD
afternoon.
City, $18, disobeying traffic
signal; Bernard L. Rossiter, 25,
BONDS FORFEITED
Rt. I, Galllpdis, $18, ~;
l&gt;:orleiting bonds in Pomeroy Randy L. 4'ach, 24, ParterMayor Olarles Legar's Court shurg, $14, stop sign vlolatioo;
Saturday night were .Emma Charles Edward Gleason, :1&amp;,
Williams, Mason, W. Va., "5, Circleville, $28, speed; Charles
posted for reddess operation, A. Bates, Gallipdis, $211, inand George Hoschar, Jr., West ton~tion,andJamesWmmm
Columbia, $25, lor squealing Malona, 24, Mineral Wells, W.
tires.
Va., " ' squeaUng tires.
, Meigs Marriage Ueeue
WDGETOMEET
Marvin Leon Randolph, 32,
Bethel62, International Order
Pomeroy, Route 2, and Alice
of Jobs Daughters, will meet at
May Addison 33 Pomeroy 7:30 this evening at the
Route 2.
'
'
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

Young Voters Heavily for Idea of Peking Trip

Fred Dessauer Died on Sunday

Douglas Newton
Died on S

in the U. N. itself - and
irrespective of wbether it will
even want to, in the new cir-

cumstances.
By

vetoing the initial
Cong~o. IBI act submitting to
lbe states the constiiUtional
amendment to lower the voting
age, Mr. Nixon in aU probability
could have staUed the whole
issue, at least until after the
1972 elections. Th.ere were
people in the palace guard itself
who were amazed that he did
not put in such a veto; as were a
good many people among
detached onlookers, such as Ibis
columnist.
Now, the man who more than
any other in this country once
personified unyielding oppositio~ to ~g Red
China in any circwnstancea is
twice recognizing it - first by
going there at aU and second, of
course, by the policy line he has
taken up in the U.N. debates.
This, or so it is assumed at lbe
White House, has shaken up lbe
cliche images heretofore held
by "the kids" - constructively
so, from the President's
viewpoint.

VIsit Elba: felcls 3rcl Floor· Fumltur8 Depart:nant

TV picture!
CABINET!

Conlempor1ry lly\ed

compacl console.

S"' x 3~ Twin-Cone
S.,.aker.

'49995
ZENITH CUSTOMIZED TUNING

Ingels Furniture
•·

.· .. ·.·.· .· . . . . . ..

.

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

GENUINE
WOOD

.
0pen Fri. &amp;
Ph. 992-2635

.·.·.·..·.· .· .·

. ...

Nixon said Hirohlto's journey
SAIGON (UPI)--Demonstra- Delta city of Can Thus where tonight to erodorse his one-man
"also has great coolemporary elouee ., ......... ... lions against the one-man re- three U.S. vehicles wm! race based oo the c:ountry's
signifleance. Fer It helps to :.... eeoler 'l'lla:rHay- election race of· PI ·dent firebombed.
progress 18lder lour years of
symbolize Japan's growing Cleartq .... - - Friday. Npyen Van Thleu broke out 1bieu forces organivd their his leaclership. It was the fourth
position In world affairs."
lfl&amp;U from llle IPPfJI' 'ltl to today in five of South Viet- own pr'O-gOfti'DIIIelll ........._ national broatbst in three
Speaking In Japanese, Hlrohi· llle IPPfJI' •
WetntiJ, nam's . biggest cities. Tbe stration in SalgGo llut only days by the 41-year-old presto told Nixon, "you have come dn!lt~ to llle apper • to demonatrationa toot an anti- allout 25 veleralls lmDed up.
ident.
over a long way to meet us · llle mid '111 by Fnty. •Low American tone in lhe Metong 1bieu .Sed his c:ountrymen 1bieu began his . speech by
per101l811y on the occasion of IIIOIIIy Jew ud .ud •
cleclaring, '1 · am not a
our stopover here on our way to Wedaesday ..d Tbrsday
1 watrnonger,Iarnseeld.ngpeace
seven European countries, moralq ud ...... Friday
when you are so pressed on moralq.
olber matters of state.
I lity ... tben we are seUing the
"I appreciate it as a special .·.· .·... ·. ·.·,·.·.·...... ·.·.·.·.·.·.····.·.-.·.· .
eountry to the Cooununists."
manlfeslation of your very
JU
TO
Velerau M-ui 81 .-caJ
Fl
atV.U.yHIIpltal
A leading opposition senator
specialgoodwillandinlerestfor
RY BESEATED .
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ADMISSIONS Donna told the g_overnment today to
the Japanese people ' and
A jury w!IB being sealed this Vivian Johnson, Racine; Wanda Wilson, Middleport; Mrs. slop blaming its mistakes on
morning
IR Meigs County Smith U"'-''--'· Clair' ru-~ ~-'-- Warner Pl "'--unt·
ourse Ives."
. Common Pleas Court to bear
' D....._..,..,
. "''" .,.,...... , ' ....,.._ ' the Cooununists, and criticized
'lbe emperor said, "I bave no the suit of the Ohio Department mo~d, RuUand; Hamson Roy Clark, Vloloa; Mrs. police for using ucesslve force
doubt whatever that the friend- of Higbwrys against Dennis L. Robinson, ~tart, W. Va.; Carl Kenneth Flemming, Dme in putting down anti-governly relationa between our two Facemyer, et a!. Tbe bighwfy Alley, .Racme; Carl Gardner, Errett, Pt. ~t; Harold ment demonstrations.
COWllries, cultivated the past departm 1, offer of ., 0 ""If Jr., Middleport; Wilbur Nap- Woyan, Southside; Mrs. Mary
In Da Nang, tbe country's
1er of
h~ will be
en 8
•• ,... or per, Pomeroy. · .
Byus, Pl Pleasant; Sanue! secood largest city, police
quar
a cen-,,
property owned by the delen- ' SATURDAY DISCHAR
.
GES OJdater Leon·VenJCIIIWinlenl
increasingly strengthened by dants has been refused. Tbe
•
•
•
clW!e contact and cooperation ...~ will d 'd the .
Lyle HyseU, George Buffalo; Mrs. Ed Bannon, Pt. Taken tQ Ho~r
ecJ e
pnce.
Nesselroad, PatriCia' Edwards,· Pleasant·, ~'---'ta ~·-.......,_,
between our governmenta and •-'
peoples."
,
NO SPANiliH TAXFORMS Hattie Nesselroad, Clara GaUipolis; Mrs. Everyn
Ronald Searles, Rutland,
Nixon and his wife, Pat
Garland, Donald Combs, Ethel Rawson, Southalde; Mrs. suffering chest pains, was taken
arrived at this jet age
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ Tbe Nelson, Hazel Slone.
Norman Nicholson, Evans; to Holzer Medical Center by
"crO&amp;Voads of the world" decilnU:malded Revenoffue Service has SuNDAY ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Godfrey Moore, Pt. Marlin ambulance after being
about 4~ hours ahead of the
not to er income lu Millard Ball, Long Bottom; Roy Pleasant; James McClure, given6rstaidbytheMiddleport
emperor. 'lbe President flew lormsiJ!Spanisb, even though it Sears, Middleport; William Letart.
&amp;R unit at 10:43 a.m. Sunday.
from WaUa WaUa, Wash., in Is the . most widely spoken Reynolds Jr Pomeroy
DISCHARGES - Merrill
At 9:57 p. m. Saturday the
Air .Force One. Hlrohito and foreign language In the United . SUNDAY lliSCHAaGES - Oark, Elza McCar!J, ElviD Middlepllrt squad was called to
Empress Nagako, 68, flew from States.
Wanda Smith, Betty I. Moore, Late, Joseph Neal, Olarles North Second St., near the
Tokyo in a Japan Airlines DC8
KILLS MAN
Janice Capehart, Judilb Bacon, Warner, Mrs. James Roosh, Watne . Shop, where Carl
jeWner.
SHEFFIELD, England (UPI) Carl Gardner, Jr.
Mrs. Josie Rwsh, Mrs. O..le$ Gardner, Jr., Middleport, was
'lbe 21Hninute public mee"ftO
·
McCulloeh, Ill, James R. found lying on a sidewalk
-... - A whirlwind damaged
Mrs Gord Bennett,
was followed by a mile-long trip hundreds of homes and facliOOSTERs TO MEET
PoweU,
·.
on
bleeding about his nose · and
by car to the home of U. Gen. tories in Sheffield, Rotherham
A meeting of Southern Band ·Tammy Adkins, Mrs. Lora mouth. He was taken to
Robert G. Ruegg, commander and other South Yorkshire Boosters will be held at 7:30
~,.:!~ ~- ~ Veterans Memorial Hospital
in chief of the Alaska com- ('O!!lmunlties today, killing
" at p.m Tuesday at the high school
where he was admitted. Gardmand, f6r a private mee""n.
·
Ra.
·
Dyer
and Mrs. Paul Smith.
ner was discharged Sund!iY · •
-.,. least one man, JIOlice said.
m cme.
Part of the roadway was paved
especially for the ceremony,
and special lighting was Installed so that the thousands of
Alaskans who turhed out could
get a glimpse of the two chiefs
overwhehning public approval thinking the heretofore un- the bact by a resounding 78 pet. World War broke out - and
BY WILLIAM S. WWIE
of state. Nb:on's bubbletop,
bulle!ilroof limousine was WASHINGTON -A sort of o! the President's forthcoming thinkable, which is that maybe Well aware as they are that would never glow again in his
visit to CommWlist China. But the President will get some " the kids" are probably the lime.
flown here for the motorcade.
the
White
Paper
this good feeling is not simply or considerable backing from "the most volatile of aU voting
'lbe present attiiUde among
Outside Ruegg's quarters
sober
semi-elation
is
·moving
even
primarily
because
of
the
kids,"
after
aU,
in
his
1972
groups, and aware, too, that the Nixon people is not
were a careluUy sculptured
lhrough
the
Nixon
White
House
fact
of
that
approval
itseH.
~mpaign
lor
re-election.
A
saying
that tbe President is necessarily that this proposition
replica of a Japanese bonsai
CJ!/er
·
recent
polis
indicating
The Nixon men are now Louis Harris poll indicates a 68 right to go to China . is not is now incorrect It is simply
garden and a version of coloolal
pet. endorsement by the people equivalent to saying that he that it is not necessarily correct
WilliamsbiJfg, Va., as symbols
generaUy of the N"o:on mission ought to be re-elected, the any more and that maybe, just
of both nati0118.
- which is, in truth, a tumaboot President's principal political maybe, there are some votes to
Nixon look the occasion to
Fred Dessauer, Bli, died drici&lt;s, Winfield, w. Va., and in American high foreign policy advisers are nevertheless be had out there in the land of
re8881Jl'e the Japanese that his
of incalculable depth and im- bucked up by that fJgure of 78 academe, if only because Mr.
new economic and China Sunday morning at his several nieces and nephews.
pet.
.
Nixon is acting upon the
Funeral services will be at plications.
poUcles did not mean the residence at 4 West Cave St. in
United States had turned Its Pomeroy. A member of the 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing . A confidential poD ~ To be sure, Ibis is in part proposition, held by many
bact on Japan. 1\e two nations Pomeroy Trinity· Olurch, Mr. Funeral Home where friends c1dentaUy taken by the White simply because they had, in among the young as nothing
now are military allies but Dessauer was the son of the late may call any time. Graveside House !tself ~d ~an o~­ spite of themselves, become short of a religion, that we need
with
the a lot of "changes." And, of
their economic rivalry has Carl and Charlotte Weber services will be at the Union- a)l affmnalive public reaction indoctrinated
widespread
dogma
that
lbe
best
dale
Cemetery
in
Pittsburgh
at
of
67
pel
or
parenthetically,
Dessauer.
course, the President's decision
become Increasingly bitterSurviving are his wife, Eva; • 2 p.m. Wednesday. Officiating acluaHy one pet. short of what Mr. Nixon could possibly expect to go to Peking is a change,
pafticularly as a result of
three
sons, Harry and Albert, of ·at the service Tuesday ni8ht Harris found. But aU this, both from the campus crowd would indeed ~ so great a one as to
Nixon's wage-price freeze
which also cootalned a ll).per PIIIBburgh, Pa., and WJibert in will be the Rev. W. H. Perrin. the Harris report and the White be that they would stay home, make sterile and academic the
Hawaii; a sister-in-law,
House's own findings, forms or otherwise "do their thing" debale in the United Nations
cent implrt llll'tu charge.
one way or another, on election upon •!.&gt;
..,._ admissi'on of Red
only the cake.
'lbe president's plaiined trip Roberta Dessauer, Pmneroy;
day.
TAKENTOHOSPITAL
The forsting lies in lbe cirChina.
!o China has touched off a three step-sons, Carl and
Pomeroy
E·R
squad
cumstance
that
the
opinion
Harley
Hendricks,
both
of
The
Of coune, Red China is
An undeniably " square "
poUtical swirl in Japan .. Japan
bas never recognized the Pomeroy, and Albert Hen· answered a caU at 4:40 .P·. m. probes made by the White President with an equally CMiing in; oi eourse, Red auna
Sunday to the Wilham House itself (and at first read ''square" staff had reckoned is going to be given the "perCommUnist government estaReynolds, Jr., home on State there with a good deal of In- that on the campus the light&amp; manent" seat on the SecuritY
bllshed by Mao Tse-tung. It has
St.,
from where Mr. Reynolds, credulous head shaking) In- were turned off so far as Mr. Cooncil so long be.ld with our
had diplomatic relations with
who had suHered head injuries dicated that amilng the newly Nixon was concerned - to total support by Nationalist
the· Nationalist OUnese of
~--JIn a faU earHer Sunday, was enfranchisedprospectivevoters paraphrase a remark made by Ch.ina on Taiwan. This is
Taiwan since 1952.
UIJUaY
taken to Veterans Memorial in the 18-W,.~year-old bractet a British statesman aboot the irrespective of whether
Nixon's surtu seriouSly af.
Hospital and admitted. .
lbe President was given a pat on lights of the world when the first Nationalist China can even stay
lected Japan's private industry
which claims the United States DougJas William Newlon, 51,
for one of its biggest uport Plum St., Middleport, died
markets.
Sunday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
He was born June 15, 1920, at
YOUTHKUJ.ED
Charleston, W. Va., ·~'"
'"" son of
CIRCLEVIU.E, Ohio (UPI) the late Douglas and Mary
-. Jeffrey Watldns, 16, Wor- Newlon. Mr. Newton was a
thington, was tilled during the veteran of World Warn having
weekend when his parachute served In the Navy. H~ was a
failed to open wblle he was sky member of Local 667 of the
diving with the Columbus Boilersmakers' Union .
Sport&amp; Parachute Club In norlbSurviving are his wife Alma·
western Pickaway County.
two daughters, Mrs. 'Rar~
(Unda) Pitchford, and Mrs.
Jan (Mary Kay) Haddox, both
PRISoN REFORM
_of Point Pleasant; a son,
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Rep. Charles (Oiuet) Newlon of
F. Bradford Morse, R-Maas., Ashland, Ky.; a step-son,
said he would Introduce James L. Hendricks, Cirlegislation today to set up a cleville; a brother, Olartes,
conunlaion to Investigate the Orange, Calif. ; two grandAmerican pri5on system. More children, and two step·
than 50 members of Congress grandchildren.
have put in bills to relonn
Funeral services will be held
prisons,
at I p.m. Tuesday at UMi
RawUngs-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. James Lewis and
the Rev. Gecrge Hoosier of.
ficlating. Burial will be In
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

?,.}'giant-screen console
featll'i'lg world's ·

..

'

:.at. Nigllts
Middleport

'

Now You ·KnOw ·

..Weather

MUch of lk!etllonn's greatest
music, including the Ninth
Symphony and the Missa
Solemnis, was ~ wben
be was so deaf it was possible to
eDIDJIWnicate with him only in
writing.

Variable d~ fonigbt,
chance of showers mainly ftSt.
Low tonight in the 60s. Cloady.
chance of showers Wednesday,
IUrning cooler late in the day.

,.

VOL XXIV NO. 116

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, SEPTE~BER 28, 1971

•
ID szent

C0 8 Says
.d
Taxes P ai
.

.

.

·

'COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Sen. Oatley C. Collins, R-Itonlon, part owner of the Collins
Mining Co., says be bas "fulfilled every legal laJ: obligation" due from him.
Collins denied newspaper reports that be was released from
laJ: liens totaling more than
$30,000 "aparently without payment of money." 'lbe Dayton
Daily News said Sunday in a
coprighted story several release
certificates were marked "satisfied."
"They (reporters) have gone
over courlbouse records which
they either do not understand
or choose to intentionally distort," said Collins, wbo is chair-

man of the Senate Educatioo
CommiUee.
"If they wanted to pr IS!D~
facts fairly, they would have to
print that I lllll'e no taxes whatsoever to Lal\rence County. I
have canceUed cbeclis to prove
this."

The paper said two weeks
earlier Collins had gotten IIHII'O
than $9,000 in laJ: remittances
and penalties, which Collins later denied, Saying he bad not
been refunded penalty payments
for deliquent lues.

"Contrary to inferences, rumors,' gusses and innuendo 00.
ing printed by these aUeged
big city newsmen, I bave ful-

OU Will Try
Another Judge
~'!'HENS, Ohio (UPI) - 'lbe
strike by some 900 DlliHICad~c employes of Oliio Univers1ty went into its siJ:th day
today with the school adminislration stiU trying to break the
walkout in the courts.
OU officials, thwarted in their
first attempt to have Oscar MeGee of Local 111!19, American
Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employes, cited
for contempt of court, fUed a
second charge Monday. A hear·
ing tin -the charge was scheduled (at 2 p.m.) today before
visiting Coounon Pleas Judge
Harvey Meyer from Hoelting
County.
'lbe 19,000 - siUdent campus
here has remained open despite
picketing by- the werters and
the resulting !act of services
such as trash collection and
mealservice.Somestudentsand
staff members are being used,
however, to fill key positiona.
- Judge Harvey toot over -jurisdiction of the case after an-

other visiting . judge, Howard
Goldsberry from Ross County,
returned home becalll!e of prior
court commitments. Goldsberry
had been given the spedal as.signment after Judge LoweU
Howard of the Athens County
court bere disqualified himself
because of prior connectiona
with ou.

e

Aucanquilcha, Chile, which
lies 17,500 feet above sea
level, is said to be the hi~h·
est town on earth.

n

IUPI) -

Mnpllen of the

slrlklag

Y•••cstown
ralioa Aoa«jatita voted

E'
~~~to~

p ......... ~-olcoart
i&amp;olued aepllatieal.
'l1le tea&lt;kn met for abolll

u IJo.- befeno votmg to
relanl to llleir dassnoms.
~-

l'dtiJDj RJUJJJUbJUJ~-.;s

6IJed every legal 1u obligation
due from me," be said.
The.newspaperstarted ebecking Collins' 1u recflrll.s after
clisclosing U.S Forest rangers
last June accused him of illegaUy mining oo 43.6 acres of
lbe Wayne Natiooal Forest adjacenl to land be mined under
lease. Tbe paper said Collins
owaed aboot ao pel of land
in Lawrence County and is the
County's largest individual
tupayer.
A suit was filed by the Dayton Daily News against the
countyauditorandtreasurerafler they closed their records to
inspecli&lt;ln by reporters_
Ray Waller, Lawrence
County.auditor, said today the
colleetion of lues is not up to
lbe auditor llut that be had
checked the treasurer's office
and fonad that Sen. Collins does
not owe lAwrence County any
taxes. Waller termed the whole
issue political.

vz·
.
.
R
.
.r zes ,o
ome
I

BUDAPEST (UPI)- Canlinal Jomef Mintventy left the U.
S. Embassy here today after oearly 15years ((self-imposed exile
and flew to the Vatican, Budapest radio announced.
Tbe ~year-()Jd cardinal bad lived in tbe rmbassy since be
fled there as Soviet tants neared Boutapest Wring the 1958
Hungarian uprising. Tbe radio said hisdl!parturewastbe result of
an arra~l between the Communist regime of Hungary and
tbe Vall~.
Mindventy left Budapest by ait'!Uneat I p.m. (8 a.m. EDT ),
buthisdepar1urew!ISnotannounceduntiltwohourslater.
The Vatican has negotiated
for years with Mindszenty and
the Hungarian government for became a forgotten man-his
a solution to the diplomatic name was never used in
obstacles placed by Mindszen- HUngarian newspapers and
ty's refusal to give up his self- lhere probably were young
imposed refuge. However, ::i:t•;::mwho had never
Mindszenty in past years
·
.
.
insisted on walking out of the . BHut lo the CommuniSt regune
10 . unglll! he remained as a
embassy a free man.
Mindszenty had been sen- VIVId reminder of. the suppre&amp;fenced to life imprisonment in Slon ~ lbe H~ganan ~volt.
1949 by the Hungarian regime .Ironically, It was ~nty
for aUeged high treason and himseH wbo ~locked his own
black marketeering, but he was freedom.
freed briefly by Hungarian The stern ol~ man re{used to
freedom fighters before he surrender his_ ~lion as
received asylum in what was Roman Catholic Primate of
lben the U.S. legation.
Hungary despite Vatican urgThrough the years his pre- mgs that he give up his_asyl~
sence lhere was a deep and. '?ve lor htme. Arid so he
embarrassment to the United reniained ISOlated for 15 years
States, to Hungary and to the until at .tbe end he relented and
Vatican. And in Hungary he
Continued on Page 8

""-- - - -

~~

TO CROWN QUEEN- Ahomecoming queen will be ctowlled by the Mei&amp;s High School Ill
pre.gamecemnonies~ the Meigs-lroolon game in Pooleroy Friday night. Candidates
are .fr&lt;m the left, Sherry King, daughter &lt;I Mr. and Mrs. WJlliam King, Bradbury; Carty
NiCIDSlty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Nicinsky, Middlepcrt; Pat Harris, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Gen.; Harris and Susie Sonlsby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J8Jl)es Soulsby, Pomeroy.
'lbe fifth candidate, out of town Mooday, is J"Jll Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter B.
Harris of Mason County. 'lbe student body members have cast baUots to select the queen .

Future o Playground Up to Board

A decisioo whether or not to told council Monday night In a work neeiled af the Middleport
Godsberry djsmjqed the univ- close the pla,ground at Mid- regular meeting that, in spite of pool. He urged Harold Chase, job" as Middleport park The two street improvements
ersity's Drst legal action against dleport ·Elementary School a shortage of police personnel, maintenance supervisor, to director the past summer. II will be on North Second Ave.
McGee Monday 111 grounds OU because of alleged "loodness his department has been make certain repairs at this was reported that for the fJrst near the A. and P. Store and at
failed to show it was "suffer- and profanity" by adults using malting more " checks" on the time. Chase said, however, that time in several years the pool the corner of Fourth and
jug im!parable hann" by the it at night today was returned to playground than at any other his employes do not have time shiiWed a profit in summer Palmer Sis.
ChiefCremeansastedcouncil
strike as it had claimed. Tbe the Mei&amp;s Local Dislrict Board place in town. He said the school now to wen at the pool because operations.
to
meet and update village
Locations 10bere sidewalks
new motion asks lbe court to of Education.
board would have to proceed of other projects which must be are needed were reviewed, but ordinances. A discussion was
fine McGee and other union
Last week, the board, through wilh its threatened closing if it completed. Council asked no action was taken.
beld on the need lor such upleaders.
Middleport CounciiQlan Diet is not satisfied by the super- Vaugha!J. to mate up a list of
dating but no meeting set.

'lbe unioo went on strike last
Tbursdayoverunresolvedgrievances that included alleged discrimination against female
kitchen weners use of super.
visors in n~ jobs
and failure of the university to
submit a list of wrders laid off
during the summer.

TEN CENTS

~=.n~;·t;~ R_oman Cardinal

Vaughan, said it would close the
playground unless local police
maintained order. 'lbe school
board at the time bad before it a
petitioo signed by residents of
tbe neighhorbood asking that
" baskets" for playing baskelbaU be ~Olief of Police J. J. Oemeans

vision of the playground by
police.
It appe;u:ed to be a concensus
of council that children would
continue to use lbe playground,
even if the board of edu~tion
closed it.
POOL REPAIRS
Vaughan also reviewed repair

improvementa that should be
made and submit it with lbe
possibility of employing a
carpenter to go ahead with the
work.
Chase, a member of lbe
Recreation Commission ,
commended Vaughan's wife,
Ruby, who,besaid,dida "good

Billed as an "Ole Country
Gatherin' " Bob Evans will host
the first amma1 Bob Evans
Fann Festival, October 1~. 16,
and 17.
Evans,lnowo thnlughout the
midwest lor cc e~wlion ef.
forts, pure-bred Cbarolais
cattle and his sausage ~ts.

thought it would be a good idea
to provide people with a living
example of life on the midwest
!ann of yesteryear.
"In this day when much
emphasis is placed on the
commercial aspects of such
eventsitwouldbelunlortidslo
see just how farm life was

without aU lbe man-made
amusements and clutter," said
Evans.
The "gatherin" at the Bob
Evans Homestead located on

&lt;llase told council that, according to regulations of the
village, he will lose his vacation
time if he doesn't go on vacation
within the next several days.
However, council authorized
&lt;llase to proceed with two
street improvement projects
and to start his vacation later.

Solicitor Bernard Fullz will
have to draw ·up the new or·
dinances after council decides
what eourse it is to follow.
Councilman David Oblinger
suggested an increase in fines
for violatioos when the or-

Rt. 35 in Rio Grande, will be
open from I p.m. to 6 p.m. on
Friday and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday.
Jive entertainment for lbe
three day festival will include
~~ t f . •CbcUZ.dm'~i:::=i The Flowers Family, The
EXIENDEO Olm.OOK
Grande Squares Dancers, folk
Warm fianday and musicians and a special French
Friday wUI1 a diuce of Art Colony Art Auction, and
sbowen Frltlly. CHier concerts by four bands.
Salllrday. llf&amp;IJI !rem tile
'lbe authentic theme will he
11ppel' 7ls ~ tile mid •
carried out with antique
ftarsday ... Friday alld ill displays, art and crafts
... 'ltl Salllrday. Lows ill tile exhibits, the making of apple
as aad .._. • 'lhnday cider and many more eumples
... Friday moralap aad of"An Old Country Gatherin' ".
mestly ill tile 511 Salarday Also in the tradition of tbe
merJdJJC.
country, lbe Bob Evans Farm
. ·.···.·· ·. ·.·.··.· .· ·.·.·.· •,•, ',',',',',','',',,, Festival is free to the public.

'lbe services of Comservco, a.
commerci.al service fum for
industry located at Marietta,
were outlined by Ralph I. Leaf,
the d~tor, when the Pomeroy
Olamber of Conunen:l! met
Monday for a luncheon at
Bowers Restaurant
Leaf said that · Comservco
puts lbe image of an industry on
paper through its commercial
services. Tbe finn provides
mailing lists, ad reply services,
bulk and first class mailings, a
literature service center and
creative .promotionals in its
operatioos.
Accompanying Leaf to the
meeting was Tyson Carpenter,
director of sales.

dinances are redraWn.

It was reported that the cable
television service is expected to
be started in the l;i&amp;IIIDIIIlity
next month. 'lbe Crabtree and
Associates firm wiU bave
representatives visit homes to
determine who wants the
service, it was reported.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor C. 0 . Fisher, CJert.
Treasurer Gene Grate, Chase,
Chief Cremeans, Allen Lee
King,
and
Councilman
Vaughan, Ohlinger, LawreJtce
Slewart, John Zerkle and Mrs.
Roger Mcrgan.

I

:

•
Bne
. l.f.s . :
,ews••• zn
1

1\T
1

I

By UDiled Pftla IJJimlaU-.1

SUlallow Co&amp;t of Protection
HARTFORD, OONN. - JACQUES YVESCOUSTEAU, a
man who has seen poUutioo in seven world oceans from below the '
surface, says Americans should swallow the ligh cast of
protecting lhe envirmmenl
Tbe noted ocea'JOBI'Ipber and subject of the televisioo series
"Tile Underseas World" said Monday that if Americans can af.
fcrd the IIgb c111t of credit card li~. they can afford to lead the
Continued on Page a
/

During the meeting, presided

over by Jack Kerr, president,
the chamber made plans to
form a group of five business
people who will establish
promotional programs, not ooly
during the Chrlslmas holiday
season, but for other special
events. Two members already
have volunteered to wen in the
new group which will be a part
of the overaU chamber public
service program.
Others attending the meeting
were James Danner, Jack
Carsey, . Bill Grueser, Earl
Ingeb, WendeD Hoover, Fred
Crow, Mrs. Emerscn Jooea,
Richard Chambers, and James

Mees.

Ful Size a.tm llndhad, Fullld Twill Sizl hnelleds, Sillllllll Doullle
Drums, Chest Desks, 3 lid 4 Draaer a. ·,,, Open ""*c n, Huldt, Sidin&amp; "- 0. Cabinlt5

I

I I
y"r
ELBER.FELDS IN POMEROY

3rd Floor Furniture Department

.

Prompt delivery to

•

home. Sensible credit.

'

r-~-------------------------,

CLIMBER CASUALTIES
AMECAMECA, Mexico
(UPI)- More tban 500 persons
were treated SUnday fer frost
bite, exposure and minor Injuries in a mass attempt to
scale 17,1183-foot extinct volcano
Popocateptl -s part of a
Mexican national hoUday, the
Red Crass said. Only a handful
of climbers reached the snowcapped swnmlt.

TRAIN DERAD.ED
CRESTON, Ohio (Ul'l)
Four engines and a caboolle
derailed on the Erie·
Lackawana Railroad Une near
here in Wayne County late
Sunday, causing minor damage
to the tracks and equlpn\ent.
'lbe train was en route from
Marlon to Kent.

PHONE 992-2156

I
OBSERVERS EN'IERTAINED - AJipnaimaWy a
jaDicn ft. the QJlo Uohalllt,'l DllpartDat ol EAacatian
wwe eoflertalned by II r ""• at the ~Weuy E'oflutay
School Mooday DliBnllC befCin! beq ICm' to fliwaOJ
aDd Jillcltdeport etbools of till! lleip Local School Dillrict.
'l1le •-s~Dc~enls wiD &lt;0 te r!
t!ol 4J
dube
111o11r -ter d •lodJ but wiD lll1l do llll' lhdent tea fllriC.
I
.

.

'

Acllnd at llle receptian Mooday are Melanie Beegle,
Radle,
.,.... "' llle Middlep«rllbird grade; Durward .
Alllell, 0 -~~·-.
.ped to llle siJ:tb grade .of Mrs.
M leoe Filii, Powa o, FJementa-y, wbo is ~ ;
RGbert.., ds, priuclpal af tbt achools in whlcb lhl' studenta
will be ~ and ..,. Amer, Akron, Uligned to the
fint ....., af lin. WIWi Clrpepter at Middleport. .

;

JNSI'AIJ.Aft)N -Mrs. Jahn Reese, Gflllpoiiii,IUgiGii
11, Olio AI I I ~lalkiD a( Ga'den Cluba installed aflicen of
tbt )hlp CGantJ Ganim Club Associali&lt;ln Mooday mpt.
Inslalled by lin. Reese, left, were Mn. Robert Itaim, Bend .
0' tbt Rmr Club, COUDiy cootact chsirman; Mrs. Inn

Walter, '() I ' Olr Ill «:WW,
t' J 4
, a..
Hiram Fllbar, Wilda 1 Oa I C», llwU t ....
- ; lin. JEd Jllrt, ...... 0111, ...... I 11 I 5
duirmarl, _. 11n. ' • aws 1 • • •• , r (- -4
Gal m,C 13"' I s,llftll'ltlk (I II ttt
. . , _ ,. . .

3

. . . .,

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